{"@context":{"@language":"en","AggregatedSourceRepository":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","Collection":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","Contributor":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/contributor","DateAvailable":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DateIssued":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","FileFormat":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","FullText":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Genre":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","GeographicLocation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","Identifier":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","IsShownAt":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","Language":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","Latitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","Longitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","Notes":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Provider":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","Publisher":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","Rights":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","SortDate":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","Source":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","Title":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","Type":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","Translation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description"},"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"Contributor":[{"@value":"Gibbon, A. W.","@language":"en"},{"@value":"Ramsden, C. W.","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2023-07-25","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1962-11-23","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0434591\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" \u2022\n60\nYears of\nDaily Service\nto the Kootenays.\nqptJH,\"  \u00bb   .   \u00ab.   J J    -,l    JU-MHaWWHWU _   iW\n5B%S|\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKootenay Variable cloudiness.\nA few showers. Little change in\ntemperature. Winds light. Low\nand high at Cranbrook and\nCrescent Valley 20 and 40.\nPublished at Nelson, tn!\nVoL61\n- *m6\u00a3?,ernrnent' financial and trading centre of the Kootenay-Columhia area\ntifts*? \u25a0\t\nEight Slaughtered\nIn Race Violence\n89 jSSp*\nCANADA\u2014FRIDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 23, 1962\n10 Cent-\nNo. 181\nGirl Dragged From Bed, Beaten\nto Death; Would-Be Rescuer Killed\nBy HENDERSON GALL\nPAARL, South Africa (Reuters)\u2014A savage, three-\nhour outbreak of race violence Thursday claimed the\nlives of at least eight persons, including a white teenage girl dragged from her bed,\nPolice said they believed the sudden outburst\nof Negro rioting was a reprisal for a series of arrests\nof Negroes in connection with alleged political murders\nof Negroes.\nPolice and white civilians\nshot and killed at least six\nNegroes as a rioting crowd\nhacked and bludgeoned to death\ntwo  young  whites\u2014a   17-year- . .\nold girl schoolteacher, who was \\ we\u201ere,_!_nIu_red\u201eseverfy\ndragged from her bed in  her\nnightdress,  and  a  youth  who\ntried to help her.\nAdenauer\nUrges\nVigilance\nmiles from Cape Town. Paarl\npolice would not confirm this. ,,\nThirty Negroes were reported c?use }be\u2122 is,  \"n0 re,al ?r\u00b0\u00b0.\nBERLIN - Chancellor Adenauer warned the West Thursday\nnight to keep up its guard be-\ncial-separatist government, prepared  to  appoint   a  Supreme\nA South African radio report Court judge to investigate the\nsaid eight Negroes were killed ! rioting.\nln this wine-making town 30 j in the wake of the violence,\nPaarl whites went about their\nbusiness armed. A police helicopter hovered overhead and\npolicemen with sub - machine-\nguns patrolled the streets.\nAbout 100 Negroes armed\nwith long knives, spears and\nclubs set stores ablaze, broke\ninto   white-owned   houses   and\narrested. At least six of them!?' a ??v'et <*\u00ab\u00ab? of \"}^-'\nwere   wounded.   Three   whites i \"e s\u00a3ld ,lt, w\u00b0ud be stu?'d 'or\nthe West to let up on its de-\nBalthazar V o r s t e r, justice !fen.\u2122,?\" \"\u00b0W-   \u25a0     \u201e\nminister  in South Africa's ra-1, *df\"H \u00b0ccasl.\u00b0nal'y    \"\"\nheckled as he spoke to 10,000\nMothers'\nCampaign\nWins Support\nVICTORIA (_T) \u2014 Two young\nVictoria mothers said Thursday\nnight they had received almost\n1000 telephone calls from persons supporting their campaign\nto stop the early \"exploitation\"\nof Christmas.\nMrs. George MacMinn and her\nneighbor Mrs. Allen Collins, said\nthey had been so swamped with\ncalls since the campaign began\nWednesday that they had to\nleave their phones off the hook\nin order to attend to household\nchores.\nIn their three-point campaign\ntie worm, urged in'erested citl-\nlens to telephone them'in\u25a0 support of the program asking merchants to hold off Christmas decorations and advertising until\nat least Dec. 1; refrain from\nplaying Christmas Carols in the\nstores until Dc. 16 and abolish\nstunt arrivals of store Santa\nClauses.\nThe women Thursday night\nasked persons intending to support the campaign to write a\nletter to them instead of phoning.\nAt the same time the manager of the Victoria Chamber of\nCommerce said that the response to the campaign has been\nso great that a special meeting\nof the Chamber's retail merchants' group will be called early\nnext week to discuss tlie situation.\nJohn Copipinger said that chopping centre representatives and\nother merchants not in the\nChamber would also be invited\nto attend the meeting.\nNIELS BOHR, called \"the\nfather of atomic energy\" for\nunlocking the secret of the\natom's structure, which won\nhtm a Nobel Prize ln 1913, is\ndead In Copenhagen at 77.\nnembers of his Christian Demo,\ncratic Party in Deutschland\nHall.\nOutside the big indoor sports\narena police clashed with demonstrators demanding Adenauer's resignation because of\nthe celebrated Der Spiegel affair. The hecklers also had in\nmind the recent arrest of that\nnews magazine's editors.\nThe   chancellor   warned   the\nRussians they would meet \"the\nsame  firm,  determined  resist-\ntried to storm the Paarl police '\u25a0 ance as in Cuba\" if they moved\nstation.\nPolice said the rioters were\ntrying to free seven Negroes\narrested Wednesday and held in\nthe station. The police opened\nfire twice, finally dispersing\nthe rioters at daybreak.\nSouth African Police Commissioner Johannes Keevy reported that police killed two\nNegroes when they tried to\nbreak into the police station\nand two more later during\n\"mopping up\".\nA night watchman shot a\nNegro, Keevy said, while a\nwhite householder ran outdoors\nand fired six bullets into another Negro, killing him. \"     \u25a0'\nA gang of eight rioters tried\nto smash their way into several\nhouses. In one home, schoolteacher Renschia Vermuelen\neither panicked or decided to\nrun for help.\nThe girl was caught in the\nstreet and killed with iron bars\nand clubs.\nHearing her screams, other\nwhites ran to help her. One,\nlocal rugby player Francis\nRichard, 22, was killed.\nSEARCH HALTED\nHOPE (CP) \u2014 The search for\nWilliam Marr, 29, believed to\nbe from Calgary, missing in\nrugged bushland near here since\nSunday was halted by snow\nThursday. Marr was on a hunting trip.\nagainst isolated Berlin.\nLabor Party\nScores\nTwo Upsets\nLONDON (Reuters! \u2014 The\nopposition labor party upset Conservative incumbents in two by-\nelections Thursday but the Conservative government managed\nto maintain its hold c i a third\n$e?t,witha: greatly reduced marl\njority.\nLabor party candidates were\nvictorious in the English constituency of south Dorset and\nin Woodside, Glasgow. The\nConservative candidate held his\nseat in Chippenham.\nThe constituencies were\numong five involved in byelec-\ntions Thursday. The government\nhad hoped to hold all of them\nexcept Woodsijle, which was regarded as a lost cause.\nIn Woodside, Labor's Neil\nCarmichael garnered 8303 votes\nto 6935 tor Conservative Norman\nGlenn and 5000 for Liberal Jack\nHouse.\nThe Labor plurality greatly\nexceeded party forecasts and\ntopped the margin indicated by\npiiblic opinion polls.\nPhilpott Says China\nMoved in Self Defence\nREGINA (CP)-Elmore Philpott, 66, a Vancouver newspaper\ncolumnist, said Thursday Red\nChina sent her troops across the\nMcMahon Line in self defence.\nIndia claims the McMahon Line\nas her border with China.\nMr. Philpott. who has visited\nCommunist China several times\nand was in the country prior to\nthe recent outbreak of fighting\nwith India, was speaking at a\nservice club dinner.\nHe said that in July India made\na \"most calamitous mistake\" by\nmoving her troops north of the\nMcMahon Line. He said this\nmove provoked a defensive attack by the Chinese.\nNo Chinese government had\nrecognized the McMahon Line\nsince it was established in 1914\nbut until Sept. 8 Red Chinese\ntroops had not gone beyond it,\nMr. Philpott said.\nPrior to Oct. 20 battles between\nIndian and Chinese troops were\nwell north of the McMahon Line\ninside territory recognized by\nIndia as Chinese. Mr. Philpott\nsaid.\nHe accused the North American press of inadequately and\nincompetently handling the news\nand facts of the India-China\ncrisis and quoted from Red\nChinese dispatches to tell \"the\nother side of the story about\nhordes of Indian troops attacking China' in the disputed territories.\"\nMr. Philpott is a syndicated\nnewspaper columnist, a former\nnews commentator for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation and a member of parliament from 1953-57.\nTHE WEST can expect near-normal temperatures and moderate precipitation in the next three\nweeks. Below-normal temperatures are predicted for\nEastern Canada and most of the Prairies from mid-\nNovember to mid-December, according to the 30-\nday outlook of the United States weather bureau.\nHeavy precipitation is expected through Northern\nQuebec and Newfoundland. Normal readings are\ngiven in inches of rain; one inch of rain equals 10\ninches of snow. (CP Newsmap)\n\\\\\nn\nChary of Russ\nPeace Probes\nBy JOHN M. HIGHTOWER\nWASHINGTON (AP) \u2014 Kennedy administration\nleaders are- investigating the possibility of new agreements with Russia on major East-West issues\u2014ranging\nfrom Berlin to nuclear testing \u2014 now that the Cuban\ncrisis appears drawing to a close.\nSoviet Premier Khrushchev has given various indications to President Kennedy through personal and\ndiplomatic channels that he thinks the United States-\nSoviet confrontation over Cuba should now be made\nto yield some more-permanent results for world peace.\nKennedy's diplomatic advisers are reported highly\nskeptical  of   the   Soviet\npeace probes.'\nFrom the end of the first\nweek of the Cuban crisis, nevertheless, U.S. administration policy-makers have been interested in the opportunity for new\ndiplomatic initiatives which\nmight be opening up.\nSET UP GROUPS\nAs it became evident that the\ncrisis would not lead to nuclear\nwar, study groups were set up\nunder the direction of Walt W.\nRostow, state department chief\nof policy planning. Their work\nis continuing. They are assessing, potential Soviet moves and\nsearching for possible new U.S.\ninitiatives.\nThe first test of what the\nfuture may bring is expected to\ncome when the 17-nation disarmament talks reopen in Gen\nU.S., Russia\nDrafting Cuba\nDeclaration\nUNITED NATIONS (AP) -\nThe United States and Soviet\nUnion were reported Thursday\nto be discussing a 1-point joint\ndeclaration proposed bv the Russians to wind up tin. Cuban crisis. But there were indications\nthe Americans consider parts of\nit unadaptable.\nSources familiar with the Soviet position said the declaration\nwould have U. S. agree to discuss witli Cuba the question of\nU. S. withdrawal Lorn Guantanamo naval base in eastern\nCuba.\nSources informed on the U. S.\nposition said that such a commitment- would reflert Cuban\nPremier Castro's five demands\nand that the U. S. is unwilling\nto discuss any clause that contains any part of those demands.\nInformants who reported the\nSoviet proposal said it would\nhave the two big powers agree\nthat U Thant, UN acting secretary general, talk with the Americans, Russians and Cubans on\ninspection to verity that all Soviet offensive weapons were tak\nen out of Cuba.\nCease-Fire\nNot Letting Down\nOn Military Buildup\nsembly meeting in New York.\nThey were scheduled to be\nresumed Nov. 12 but were\ndelayed two weeks because of\nthe continuing Cuban crisis.\nOther negotiations are possid\nble. There could be, for example, a foreign ministers' meeting on Berlin in the coming\nmonths if exploratory talks\nshowed there is something to\nnegotiate  about.   1 1\nKennedy is expected to wait\nfor Khrushchev to make any\nnew move on Berlin, however,\nfor two reason: 1. It was the\nRussians who deadlocked the\nlast talks by demanding that\nthe Western powers abandon\nWest Berlin; 2. U.S. Allies,\nespecially West German Chancellor Adenauer and French\nPresident de Gaulle, are fundamentally  opposed  to  Western\nLabor-industry\nFeud Causes\nBonner Concern\nVANCOUVER (CP)-The pro\nvincial government is .considering; action to improve, {fce,general climate between labor and.\nmanagement in B.C., Attorney-\nGeneral Robert Bonner said\nThursday.\nMr. Bonner, who is also minister of industrial development,\ntrade' and commerce, held several meetings with Vancouver\nBoard of Trade officials this\nweek and has submitted the entire question of labor demonstrations for study by his department.\n\"I am not in a position to say\nwhat will be done or when action will be taken,\" the attorney-\ngeneral said, \"but I am concerned about the future of both\nlabor and industry in B.C.\n\"I am not concerned about the\nmerits or demerits of the labor\ndisputes but about the atmos\nphere generated by tactics that\nhave no place in settlement of\nthese disputes.\"\nIt was the government's duty\nto protect the standard of living\nin B.C. which Mr. Bonner described as the best in Canada\nThe attorney-general said that\nin his view the trouble was caus\ned mostly by a \"handful of pork-\nchopping labor agitators who\nhaven't been on' the production\nline in years and who hope they\nnever have to go back to it.'\n\"They have been making wild\nstatements and are jeopardizing\nthe jobs of people who pay their\nsalaries.\"\nman said Indian troops were\n\"in contact with the enemy\"\nsouth of the northeastern town\nof Bomdila, captured by the\nChinese earlier this week.\nBut when asked if \"contact\"\nmeant an exchange of fire, the\nspokesman said \"not necessarily.\"\nThe battlefront also was reported quiet in the Ladakh region of Kashmir at the extreme\nwestern end of the mountainous\nHimalayan border.\nNOT LETTING UP\nIndia however, was not letting\nup in its big war effort.\nAmerican and Canadian\ntransport planes flew here for\ntroop- and supply-carrying missions as Indian troops in the\nNortheast Frontier bolstered defence lines near Missamari,\nnorth of Tezpur on the edge cf\nthe Assam plains.\nMissamari is about 30 miles\nfrom the village of Foothills\nwhich was nearly overrun by\nthe Chinese whose frontline is\nabout four miles away at Dan-\nimara.   ,\nBy PETER JACKSON\nNEW DELHI (Reuters)\u2014Indian and Red Chinese\ntroops appeared Thursday night to be respecting China's\nunilateral cease-fire despite reports of continued \"contact\" in the Northeast Frontier area.\nLatest reports reaching Gauhati in the battlefront\nstate of Assam said no clashes have occurred in the\nneighboring Northeast Frontier area since the Chinese\ndeadline for a cease-fire passed at midnight Wednesday.\nAn Indian government spokes\nPrime Minister Nehru told\nParliament that border fighting\nhad stopped \"even before\" the\npassing of the midnight Wednesday cease-fire deadline.\nCommunist China also an\nnounced in a Peking radio\nbroadcast that the cease-fire\nhad come into effect \"along the\nentire border.\"\nHowever, the Red Chinese\nNew China news agency\ncharged that two Indian military planes \"provocatively intruded\" over Chinese posts in\nthe Lake Spanggur area in the\nLadakh region at the western\nend of the 2,500-mile Himalayan\nfront.\nBut the agency said the Chinese frontier guards held their\ntire.\nSTILL PREPARED\nDespite the cease-fire, the Indian nation still was on a war\nfooting and preparing for a long\nstruggle with the Chinese in\ntlieir border dispute.\nThe nation's defence needs\nwere being sized up by top-level\nAmerican and British missions\nwhich arrived here in response\nto Nehru's appeal for further\naid. < -\nThe U.S. Mission was headed,\nby assistant state secretary for\nPar Eastern affairs, Averell\nHarriman, and . Gen: Paul D.\nAdams, commander of the' U.S.\nStrike Command which specializes in long \u25a0 distance troop\nmovements.\nThe leader of the British mission is John Tilney. He was accompanied by Gen. Sir Richard\nHull, chief of the British Imperial Staff.\nBritain along with the U.S.\nand Canada also was sending\nplanes to India.\nSix RCAF DC planes arrived\nin New Delhi and Jamnagar\nafter an 8,000-mile flight from\nTrenton, Ont. They will be used\nto carry troops and supplies.\nFormer French\nPresident Dies\neva Monday. The talks were overtures on Berlin unless\nrecessed Sept. 8 in advance of j Khrushchev shows signs of soft-\nthe United Nations General As-  ening his stand.\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Bank\nsavings manager Ean (CCT)\nPaterson was sentenced Thurs\nday to 18 months' jail for stealing from his employers.\nPaterson's lawyer told the\ncourt his client took the money\nto try to win back his divorced\nwife.\nPaterson, 39, pleaded guilty\nto stealing the money from a\ndowntown branch of the Royal\nBank of Canada between Aug\n31, 1981, and Nov. 2 this year.\nParliament\nThursday\nBy The Canadian Press\nTransport Minister Balcer declined to give details about a\nplan to continue a Prairie air\nroute which the present carrier\nplans to drop.\nHealth Minister Monteith declined a suggestion by James E.\nWalker (L-York Centre) that\nsale of the drug preludin be\nstopped due to possible dangers.\nLabor Minister ' Starr introduced legislation for a manpower consultation service and\na council on manpower adjustment.\nTom Berger (NDP \u2014 Vancouver Burrard I said this move\ndoes not get to the root of Can\nada's problems.\nLE HAVRE, France <AP>-\nRene Coty, 80, former president\nof France, died Wednesday\nnight of heart complications following an attack of the flu.\nCoty served as president of\nthe French Republic from. December 1953, .until January,\n1959, when he- was succeeded\nby President de Gaulle.\nCoty was the last president\npf the Fourth Republic and was\ninstrumental in bringing de\nfiaulle back to power after the\nMay, 1958, uprising of Europeans in Algiers.\nUnder the Fourth Republic,\nthe post of president was\nlargely honorary.\nTHE WEATHER\nCanada High-Low   .\nHalifax 57\nThe Pa\u00bb BT\nNelson\n30 .39   -\nWinnipeg\n10  28   -\nRegina\n16  40   -\nCalgary\n. 24  38   \u2014\nVancouver\n39   47   .12\nVictoria\n40   50   .01\nWhitehorse\n17  32   .02\nSan Francisco\n45 es   -\nSpokane\n31   40   .04\nNew York\n45   50   .09\nB.C. Must Double Power\nOutput in 9 Years-Shrum\nVANCOUVER (CP) - British\nColumbia must double her power\noutput in the next nine years if\nshe is to meet demands, B.C.\nHydro and Power Authority co-\nchairman Dr. Gordon Shrum\nsaid Thursday.\nHe told a Kiwanis club lun\ncheon the province now has 22\nhydro projects underway including the giant $850,000,000 Peace\nRiver project that would produce\n2,300,000 kilowatts.\nDr. Shrum said that some said\nPremier Bennett already had the\nnecessary money. But even il\nhe didn't he would have no\ntrouble getting it.\nNo utility in Canada or the\nU.S. seeking money to produce\npower to meet load growth had\ntrouble getting funds. Every\nnew house must have power and\nB.C. Hydro had no competition\nin the province.\nSenator Suggests Reservation for Sons\nOTTAWA (CP)-Senator Donald Cameron suggested Thursday that the Sons of Freedom\nDoukhobors in British Columbia might be placed on a reservation on one of the Queen\nCharlotte Islands and provided\nwith special education to rescue\nthem from their maladjustment.\n\"The only road to the salvation of these people is through\neducation,\" the Alberta independent Liberal said in the\nSenate. \"It can only be done\nthrough an instructional program that is adapted to their\npeculiar needs and circumstances and which is carried\nout under the direction of people who have been carefully\nand especially trained for the\ntask.\"\nSenator Cameron, director of\nthe Banff School of Fine Arts,\nspoke in support of a motion\nproposed by Senator David\nCroll (L\u2014Ontario) calling for\nthe appointment of a Senate\ncommittee to study the Doukhobor problem.\nHe said numerous experiments have been tried in an ef\nfort to find a solution to the\nproblem. All had failed including a recent one in which children were separated from then-\nparents and sent to school at\nNew Denver.\nSenator Cameron said it had\nbeen hoped that by taking the\nchildren away from their parents they would become adjusted to the Canadian way of\nlife. But the New Denver experiment only resulted in the\nchildren becoming more confirmed and illiterate rebels.\n\"Ii we are to rescue these\npeople from their present maladjusted course, the commonly\nsuggested plan of taking the\nchildren away from the parents\nis definitely not the answer,\"\nhe said.\n\"Our answer must be found\nthrough the establishment in the\nDoukhobor community of some\nform of vocational training.\nThis could be a combination of\nagricultural and trades training\nfor the boys and household'\nmanagement for the girls.\n\"It must be carried out with\nthe children living with their\nparents. It must be carried out\nby people who are especially\ntrained for this particular task.\nIt must be carried out with\nsympathy and understanding\nand we must not expect spectacular results in a short period\nof time.\"\nSenator Cameron said that\nas a.teacher he felt it would\nbe necessary to employ both\nteachers and social workers.\nHe said he welcomed the decision of the B.C. Supreme\nCourt in v a li d a ting a bylaw\npassed by the municipality of\nKent prohibiting the Doukhobors from moving into Agassiz.\n\"Anyone who has examined\nthis bylaw from the very beginning realizes it\" was a'very\nbad law and the product of unstable but panic thinking. It\nserves to illustrate the {act as\nto how easy it is for well-meaning Canadians, under the stress\nof emotional panic, to do things\nwhich are neither sound in law\nnor in the public interest.\"\nOTTAWA (CP) - Justice Minister Fleming told the Commons\nThursday it would be an intrusion in provincial and municipal\nfields if the federal government\ninspected conditions among Sons\nof Freedom' Doukhobors camped\nnear Hope, B. C.\nArthur Laing (L-Vancouver\nSouth) asked if the justice minister would investigate, but Mr.\nFleming said it was not a federal government responsibility.\nMr. Fleming also told Mr. Laing\nthat he had had n< discussions\nwith municipal authorities or\nB. C. Attorney General Robert\nBonner about the camp.\nBut it did have a big responsibility to produce low-cost power.\nWith the development of the\nPeace would come the largest\nsource of cheap power in the\nprovince, a tremendous thing\nfor development of industry.\nWith cheap power B.C. could\nbecome a major exporter ot processed raw materials, providing\njobs and prosperity.\nUp to now B.C. had developed\nonly one-twenty-second of its\ntotal water resources for power.\nDevelopment must be stepped\nup because atomic power was\nonly a mere 20 years away.\nAs well as power he saw the\nPeace with a tourist potential\nsecond to none. The much-visited\nGrand Coulee damsite i in the\nU.S. was only 550 feet, high\ncompared to the proposed Peace\ndam of 600 feet. All the preliminary work was being done by\nB.C. -engineers and Dr. Shrum\nsaid he hoped a B.C. firm ,_ot\nthe contract for the main damsite project.\nAnd in This Corner . ,, .\nLONDON (Reuters)-The Labor opposition congratulated\nEdward Heath, Britain's chief Common Market negotiator, on\nhis \"triumph\" in getting tariffs on tinned kangaroo meat an*\ntinned rabbit abolished if Britain joins the European trade unit.\nThe congratulations were conveyed amid laughter in the\nCommons by Harold Wilson, Labor party expert on foreign\naffairs, after Heath reported to the House on the latest round\nof his negotiations this week in Brussels.\nMISSOULA, Mont. (AP)\u2014Thanksgiving went to the dogs in\nLee Johnson's home Thursday.\nMrs. Johnson partially roasted the turkey and left the oven\ndoor ajar.\nThe family's cocker spaniel pulled the roast pan out-on the\nfloor. Then the spaniel and her six pups went to work on the\nturkey.\nLA SPEZIA, Italy (AP)\u2014Capt. Pepe Baldassarre and his\n12 shivering, hungry seamen were sitting It out Thursday for\nthe 13th day aboard a little freighter which they vow won't go\nto scrap until they've been paid.\nSince the 1300-ton Tarqutnia put to here Nov. 9 at the end\nof her last voyage before the sprapyard, the crew has used up\nall her fuel and eaten the last carefully hoarded rations,\nBut they said they would not budge from the ship until they\nreceive three months' back pay they claim is due. ;;\nThey operated the vessel for her owner, Raffaele Romano,\nof Naples. He sold her to a Milan agency which bad the slip\nbrought here to be broken up for scrap.\nThe crew said either the old owner or the new one must\npay them.\n\u25a0'\u25a0\u2022 '   '-'\u25a0\nJ.\nmiMMm\na _  11 I\n ^'r^r''.. >T?. --'\u25a0 \\ ,,_\u2014-\u25a0.\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0   |     -\n_. _______ -\n . , . ... . n_-\n____ -__ ,\n2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, NOV. 23, 1962\nCommunication\nCourse Covers\nMany Subjects\nSuccessful candidates in the\nCivil, pefence communication\ncourse starting Nov. 27 will receive restricted radio-telephone\nopergtprs' licences.\nW, H. Anderson, Nelson CD\ncoordinator, said Thursday that\ncommunication covers a wide\nrange of subjects such as procedure, tnessage-writing and receiving, radio transmitted operation, mobile operator training\nfor department of transport restricted licence and control centre setup.\nMr. Anderson said communications, of vital importance in\nany society, are more so when\ndisaster or any form of emergency calls for help. The trained\nhelper is also of vital importance, he said.\nInstructor in the courses at\nthe CD headquarters in the old\nhospital will be Victor Weeks,\nwho w*h high- commendation\nfrom L. R. A. Hart, director\nof training in British Columbia,\nat Exercise Advance 4 in Nelson\nlast week.\nNeed of trained helpers was\n\"emphatically demonstrated\" at\nthe exercise, Mr. Anderson said.\nNEW FACES\n?l}ff* were about 1,700,000\nnew elethentary and secondary\nschool pupils in the United\nSUtes fit 1962-63. -\nKootenay Oldtimer,\nDenis StDenis Dies\nA familiar figure in Nelson's\nbusiness district and an ardent\nhockey and curling supporter,\nDenis StDenis died in Kootenay\nLake General Hospital Thursday\nat the age of 84.\nMr. StDenis participated in\nmost of the activities which contributed to the growth W the\nKootenays during his 65 years'\nresidence in this part of the\ncountry, including politics, lumbering, real estate and sports.\nHe took his first airplane ride\nat 78, when he visited his son in\nCalgary.\nHe came to Nakusp as a\nyoung man in 1897 and worked\nat lumbering there and later, in\n1903, at Slocan City. He married\nin 1900. Two of his children\nwere born at Nakusp, two at\nSlocan City and two in Nelson.\nHe became interested in politics during his residence in Nakusp, and cast his first vole in\n1900. He had not missed voting\nin a provincial or federal election since. During his political\nactivities, he was at one time\ncampaign manager for the late\nSenator R. F. Green and W. K.\n(Billy) Esling.\nTO NELSON IN 1911\nHe became manager of the\nlumber mill at Slocan City until\nthe company closed the operation in 1906. He became city\nclerk and law officer until de-\ndeciding to move his family to\nNelson in 1911. He was justice\nSKATING\n\",.  NELSON CIVIC ARENA\n7:30 p.m.\n\u2022\nSkate to the latest \"Tops in Pops\"\nFor His Christmas\nGive Him\nPHILISHAVE\nSPEED-FLEX\nRotary Electric\nShaver\n'26.95 _\u00a3\nMake, your   selection   now   \u2014   and   use   our\nLAY-AWAY PLAN\nNo Trade-In Needed\nWhile Present Stock Lasts You Can  Buy\nat    Only $26.95\nEvery  Man Should  Own  at  Least One\nPHILISHAVE   SHAVER   -  Other   Models   Are\nSPEEDSHAVER at $21.95\nTOWN and COUNTRY at $19.95\nSAMPLE'S\nNELSON\nPHARMACY LTD.\nI\n'Your Fortress ot Health\"\n639 Baker St.      Nelson       Phone 352-2313\nX t*. \u2022*. v.  ?.?  -.-..-..\u25a0   ;o, t'^ \u25a0-, ::. y_^-? \"i. -., ^v^_^'s\n_'!\u25a0!_.12-!_.'.\u2022!\u25a0_..\u00ab, \u25a0\u25a0..i_\/_\u2022.\u201e\u25a0\u25a0_\"___. *-.>-..__.Sv..-._.. fi_Y>[^|\u00a3V_\u00bb_2??W__.'\nDENIS StDENIS\nof  the  peace  from  1909  until\n1916 and was acting sheriff.\nThey settled in Fairview and\nMr. StDenis opened a real es\ntale office in what is now the\nGelinas block, in an office with\nengineer Andrew McCullough\nLater he went into partnership\nwilh James H. Lawrence and\nthey added insurance to their\nbusiness, with offices at various\ntimes in the McCullough building and the Madden building.\nThe firm became a brokerage\nfirm and in 1918, he bought out\nMr. Lawrence. Mr. StDenis stayed in the brokerage business\nuntil 1926.\nFrom 1921 until 1952, Mr.\nStDenis was a trustee in bankruptcy for the East and West\nKootenay and the County of\nYale. He was a trustee longer\nthan any other individual in\nCanada and was instrumental in\nhaving an amendment to the\nBankruptcy Act accepted, whereby workmen employed and as\nclaimants had priority of distribution against the estate before\nIhe government.\nMr. StDenis was a member\nof the Nelson school board from\n1924 to 1926. He has served on\nfive conciliation boards involving wage disputes. He was third\npresident of the Nelson Rotary\nClub and as a life member of\nthe Nelson Curling Club, to\nwhich he belonged for 25 years\nHe was first secretary-manager\nof. the Cjvic Centre from 1935\nuntil 1942.\nSPORTS ENTHUSIAST\nAlways interested in sport, he\nwas first secretary of the Nelson\nAmateur Athletic Club and its\npresident for three years. He\nwas on the executive of the provincial athletic association.\nA member of the Slocan City\nRifle Association and the Nelson\nLegion Frontiersman Association, he won five first-class\nmarksmen certificates and the\nDominion Canada Salver. He\nwon also the bronze medal for\nthe provincial shoot.\nIn curling, he was a member\nof the Blackwood rink, including\nC. D. Blackwood, George Doug\nlas, and Scotty Williamson\nDuring the First World War,\nhe served on the Home Guard\nBorn in June, 1878, in the\nVillage of Vanleek Hill, County\nPrescott, Ontario, he left home\nat the age of 15 and worked in\nlumber camps in Ontario. Hc\nleft for Ontario when he was 18\nand worked on farms there until\ncoming   west.\nHis wife predeceased him in\n1928 and he married again in\n1932, his second wife predeceasing him in 1950.\nHe is survived by two daughters, Mrs. Edith Edgar of Nelson and Mrs. Doreen Cosby of\nPortland, Oregon; four sons,\nLyman G. StDenis of Trail, Cameron C. StDenis of Spokane,\nJohn Orin (Tony) StDenis of\nVictoria and Robert M. StDenis\nof Roberts Creek, B.C.; two sisters, Mrs. Margaret Reid of\nMontreal and Mrs. Kate Jean-\nLouis of Verdun, Quebec; three\nhalf-brothers, George of Salt\nSprings Island, B.C.. Michael of\nSalmon Arm and Lawrence of\nMontreal; one half-sister in\nMontreal; 12 grandchildren and\n28 great-grandchildren.\nHeather\nRecovering\nObject of a two day search,\nHeather Kitto, 15, is reported\nto be making good progress to\nnormal recovery from Shock and\nexposure of 41 hours in rain and\nsnow swept bush.\nA searching force totalling\nsome 1,000 volunteers probed\nthe southern outskirts of the city\nfor the grade ten student and\nwere s u c c e s sful Wednesday\nwhen she was discovered semiconscious near the Nelson Ski\nHill.\nThe date of her release from\nKootenay Lake General Hospital is not yet known but it is\nexpected to be soon.\nThere are 400 short and full-\nlength entries in the 1962 specialized film festival at Rome\nUniversity.\n'Sons' Appear\nSellling in\nTill Spring\nHOPE (CP) - The trekking\nSons of Freedom Doukhobors\nappear to be settling down in a\nchurch summer camp here until\nspring, a member of the RCMP's\nD (for Doukhobor) squad said\nThursday.\nThe 1000 sect memhers who\nleft their burned-out Kootenay\nhomes early in September bound\nfor Agassiz, moved into the Seventh Day Adventist summer\ncamp near here when forced out\nof nearby Coquihalla Municipal\nPark by the rain-swollen Coquihalla Rivers.\nChurch officials said they offered the accommodation on a\ntemporary basis only and asked\ngovernment assistance for the\nDoukhobors.\nThursday the sect appointed a\nfire chief and held a fire drill.\nCamp caretaker Henry Chris-\ntianson said he was satisfied\nwith the drill \u2014 \"they inspected\nlhe seven hydrants, rolled out\n500 feet of hose and studied the\nlay of the land.\"\nSaid a member of the squad:\n\"Their present quarters are\nnear-ideal and no one expects\nthem to continue the trek until\nthe end of winter.\"\nMeanwhile two groups of the\nsect went to Agassiz, site of a\nnew special federal prison which\nholds 63 Freedomites convicted\nof terrorism. One of the groups\nsought to see the prisoners but\nwas refused entry as a group.\nIt will return Friday to work out\nindividual arrangements.\nThe other group inspected possible campsites for the sect in\nthe area but Kent municipal officials said no deal was made.\nKent municipality earlier passed\nan emergency bylaw barring the\nsect from the area but it was\nruled invalid by the courts.\nBand Plays for\nSchool Dec. 3\nNelson Junior High School's\nprogram featuring the Nelson\nCily Band will be held Dec. 3.\nThe concert, sponsored by the\nschool music department, will\nbe under direction of B. E. Ryall, with proceeds going to the\nJunior \"High School band fund\nraising campaign. The school\nband will also perform.\nCastlegar Asks Agency\nTo Assess Air Pollution\nCASTLEGAR - A government\nagency to determine what constitutes justifiable, fair and reasonable pollution of the air by\nCelgar has been suggested by\nthe Castlegar Village Commission.\nThe commission has asked\nthat the parent company Columbia Cellulose Company endorse\nthe suggestion to receive an\nequitable, impartial decision in\nthe matter. \u2022\nIn the commission's correspondence with the company, it\nadmitted that \"it is dangerous\nand unrealistic for the commis\nsion to attempt to decide what\nconstituted justifiable pollution\non the basis of public answers\nto isolated questions on this\nsubject.\"\nIn past discussion Celgar has\nconceded that some improvement in the degree of pollution\ncontrol at various points in the\nplant is technically possible and\npossibly even justifiable and\npractical. However it cautioned\nagainst misinterpreting this to\nmean that the characteristic\nodor of a kraft mill could be\neliminated by expediture of suf-\nficent funds.\nNorth Shore Bylaw\nMisses Deadline\nPorteous Tosses\nHat Into Ring\nThere will be no North Shore\npower system improvement\nmoney bylaw on the ballot at the\nmunicipal elections December 6.\nTime limitations in preparation and publication of the bylaw, conforming to the Municipal\nAct, forced the dropping of the\nissue from the December polling.\nA bylaw of assent and two\nreferendums of opinioh will fill\nout tbe ballot along with the\naldermanic race and possibly a\nschool trustee race.\nThe assent of the owner-electors wil be sought in the leasing\nfor 10 years a portion of Lakeside Park to Theatre Confections\nLtd., Ior the purpose of construction and operation of a confectionery concession there.\nConcession bylaw 1353 has received three readings already\nand will be given its fourth\nreading at Monday's regular\ncouncil meeting. It does not require the approval of the Lieutenant-Governor to become official. A Daily News report to\nthe effect that it did require the\nLieutenant-Governor's approval\nwas erroneous.\nThe referendums will ask fhe\nquestions:\nAre you in favor of selling the\nVernon St. Memorial Park?\nAre you in favor of moving the\nTransients\nImprisoned\nThree transients received\nprison terms in city magistrate's\ncourt Wednesday.\nFor unlawfully riding a CPR\nfreight train, N. D. Burton and\nRobert Pearce, both of no fixed\naddress, were sentenced to five\ndays' imprisonment. The arrests\nwere made by J. E. T. Slack,\nCPR constable.\nNick Barilko, of no fixed address, received a five-day prison\nterm when convicted on a vagrancy charge.\nAMALGAMATION?\nSALMON ARM (CP) - Possible amalgamation of the village and district municipality of\nSalmon Arm has been discussed\nbetween municipal officials and\nthe civic voters association.\nChairman George Sperle said if\namalgamation was approved by\nboth electorates it could be a\nreality in two years.\ncenotaph from its present position on boulevard in 400 block\nVernon St?\nOnly one candidate has filed\npapers for one of the three city\nschool trustee positions at stake\nthis December. R. A. Phillips,\nwith four, years trustee service,\nhis. last two as its chairman,\nis the only trustee candidate to\nfile papers, He did not seek reelection on completion of his\nsecond term of office in 1960.\nTrustee G. B. Arnesen has\nstated he will not seek re-election\nwhile trustee D. F. Porteous has\nentered the aldermanic race.\nTrustee G. J. Anderson is undecided about seeking re-election.\nIn the past two elections little\ninterest has been shown in the\ntrustee race. Whereas four candidates battled for two positions\nin the 1959, in 1960 the city almost had to draft their new\ntrustees.\nOnly one person filed papers\nthat year and under a special\nsection of the Municipal Act two\ntrustees were appointed to fill\nthe vacancies. In 1961 only two\npersons filed papers for the two\ncity vacancies on the board and\nthereby won by acclamation.\nIndications are that, even\nthough several sets of nomination papers are out, the city will\nhave a difficult task to fill its\nvacancies.\nIn the aldermanic race a full\nslate of candidates has been\nachieved but a fourth nominee\nis needed to make it a contest.\nNomination papers are circulating for the fourth candidate.\nNone of the candidates has\nstarted official campaigning,\ncontent to wait tintil nomination\ndeadline, before hammering\ntheir planks into their platforms\nin public.\nWith less than two weeks remaining until election day, D.\nF. Porteous Thursday became\nthe first candidate to file his\naldermanic papers with returning officer C. W. R. Harper.\nThe 44-year-old public accountant is the third person to announce his candidacy for one of\nthe three aldermanic seats vacant at the municipal elections\nDecember 6. Aid. F. A. Beresford, seeking his second two-\nyear term and city business\nmachine agent J. T. \"Tex\"\nMowatt, making his debut in\ncivic politics, are the other two\nmen who have signified their\ncandidacy. Deadline for nominations is Monday.\nA school trustee for the past\ntwo years, Mr. Porteous is making his first bid for aldermanic\noffice.\n\"I have enjoyed the last\ntwo years on the school board.\nI feel It Is about as important\nas council work,\" said Mr.\nPorteous, who was chairman\nD. F. PORTEOUS\nof the transportation and main-] fore  hjs discharge in  1945f  he\nSto|en Car\nFound During\nSearch\nThe Heather Kitto search was\nsuccessful in more than one way.\nNot only was the 15-year-old\ngrade ten student of L. V. Rogers High School discovered Wednesday but also a stolen car.\nMrs. Sylvia Brashear two\nweeks ago had reported her car\nstolen. While searchers were\nprowling the back roads in the\nSilver King Ski hill area, they\nstumbled across the vehicle,\nhidden in the bush on a road\nthat is used infrequently.\nClassified Ads Get Results!\ntenance committee. He also\nserved on tbe salary negotiating committee.\nA member of the Nelson Advisory Planning Commission for\nthe past two years, he is inter\nFreedomites \"Not\nDoukhobors11\nNelson Civic Centre\nand\nRecreation Commission\nSCHEDULE\nFriday, Nov. 23\nARENA:\n7:00- 8:15\u2014Figure Skating\n3:45- 4:55-Figure Skating\n5:00- 5:45-Mites\n5:45- 6:45\u2014Rangers -\nRed Wings\n7:30- 9:30-GUYS' & DOLLS'\nSKATING\nRECREATION HALL:\n9:30-11:30\u2014Civic Playschool\n7:30 Senior Citizens\ni Blue Room i\nA thousand-member group of\nDoukhobors has strongly denied\nthat actions taken by Sons of\nFreedom are those of Doukhobors.\nThe Doukhobor Society of Canada, meeting at Taghum for\ntheir 13th annual convention,\nwent on record to:\n. \"Strongly object to the acts\nof the so-called Sons of Freedom\nand to bring to the attention of\nthe press and the public that\nit strongly objects to the implications by them that they are\ndoing this as Doukhobors. A\nDoukhobor is a non-violent person.\"\nA three-man delegation was\ninstructed to go to Hope to plead\nwith the Sons of Freed that for\nAuto-Vue Drive-ln\nTRAIL, B. C.\nCLOSED\nFOR THE SEASON\nCASTLE  Theatre\nCASTLEGAR, B.C.\nLast Times Tonight\n\"THE TRAP FAMILY\"\n(Color)\nNEWS and CARTOON\nShows at 6:45 and 9:00 p.m.\nhumanitarian reasons they\nshould have proper housing for\ntheir children.\nThis committee is composed\nof Stanley Petroff of Canora,\nSask., John Androsoff of Blaine\nLake, Sask. and Willian Caza-\nkoff of Blewett.\nThe convention took a stand\nfor world peace and total disarmament.\nDelegates from Saskatchewan,\nAlberta and the Kootenays attended as well as a two-man\ndelegation headed by John J.\nVerigen of Grand Forks, leader\nof tlie Union of Spiritual Communities of Christ.\nAmong the problems discussed\nwere: a Sunday School program;\nthe Sons of Freedom; the \"misuse\" of the name Doukhobor by\nthe press, radio and television;\nsetting up a public relations\ncommittee together with the\nother Doukhobor group, Unibn\nof Spiritual Communities of\nChrist.\nthe idea of the committee is\nto co-ordinate efforts in acquainting the Canadian public with\nDoukhobers.\nA new central executive committee was formed. John Post-\nnikoff, Salmo was elected president; Peter Reibin of Blewett,\nvice-president, ind John J.\nChernenkoff, Salmo, secretary.\nIn the Courts\nDouglas E. Johnson of Nelson,\ncharged with failure to return\nhis driver's licence and licence\nplates to the Motor Vehicles\nBranch was fined $10 and costs\nThursday by provincial magistrate William Evans.\nJ. K. Barkes of Nelson, charged with speeding near Apex was\nfined $10 and costs.\nHans Grunwald, Halls Siding,\nwas also fined $10 and costs\nfor speeding near Apex.\nGiovanni Dean of Burnaby\nwas fined $15 and costs for\ncrossing a solid double line near\nApex.\nPete Makyoff, Salmo was fined\n$15 and costs for crossing a\nsolid double line near South Slocan.\nA juvenile was fined $20 and\ncosts for driving without a\na drivers licence.\nested in implementing some of\nthe parking and traffic recommendations of the commission\npresented to council. A member\nof the parking and transportation committee of NAPC, Mr.\nPorteous with P. E. Poulin compiled the brief on parking and\ntraffic flow in the city area.\nTaking an active role in promoting boundary extension in\nhis area he is also anxious to\nsee their services program carried out to completion\nschedule.\nwas flying anti-submarine patrol\noff the east coast of Canada.\nOn return to Nelson he rejoined the bank where he gained\nhis accounting experience. Faced\nwith the prospect of having to\nleave JMelson via bank transfer,\nhe left the bank's employ in\n1947. From 1947-1956, he worked\nas an accountant for various city\nfirms and in 1956 entered public\naccounting.\nIn 1958 he assumed the duties\nof president of the Nelson Asphalt Paving Company and also:\nhas taken a keen interest in\nmining in this area.\nSPORTS INTEREST\nActive in his younger days in\non hockey and baseball, Mr. Porteous has been associated with\nminor hockey association and\nhas been an enthusiastic curler\nSUPP-HOSE\nby ROLANE\nThe sheer all-nylon stockings\nthat ease tired legs.\nCOLORS:\nWhite and Beige\nSIZES:\nSmall, Medium, Large,\nExtra Large\n$4.95\nAt\nFleury's Pharmacy\nHarold Mayo, Prop.\nlorner Baker and Ward Sts\nPhone 352-2613\nYOUR  BEST\nCOAL BUY\nIs Now At\nQUEEN CITY\nFUEL\nDial 352-5018 - Nelson\n23-YEARS RESIDENCE\nA resident of the city for the\noast 23 years. Mr. Porteous was for the past 15 years. He served\nborn in Weyburn, Saskatchewan.las curling club president durin;\nAs a young marf he arrived in\nNelson in 1939 and was employed by the Imperial Bank of Commerce. He had joined the bank\non the Prairies and was transferred here.\nIn 1941 he joined the RCAF\nand was a pilot of flying boats on\nanti-submarine patrol for convoys, operating out of Scotland\nfor most of World War II. Be,\nLoad Factors\nBoost Gas Cost\nTo Columbia\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Load\nfactors slightly below original\nestimates raised the cost of Natural gas delivered to Columbia\nNatural Gas Ltd., some 10 per\ncent above estimates, company\nofficials told the annual meeting\nhere Thursday.\nThe company, which serves\nsix communities in the East\nKootenay area, receives gas\nfrom the Alberta Natural Gas\nLtd., pipeline which links Alberta fields with the El Paso\nline to California. Companies using the gas get it on a cost-of-\nservice basis.\nRobert G. Graham, executive\nvice-president, said the company\nis not unduly concerned. It was\nexpected additional throughput\nwould cut the cost.\nAt Nov. 19 the company has\n875 customers connected and\n1,533 applicants, he reported.\nColumbia has also made a proposal to serve Consolidated Mining and Smelting Company operations at Kimberley and was\nawaiting a reply.\nNelson Jubilee year, when it\nacted as host for the B.C. Curling Championships.\nA Jaycee for ten years, he\nserved as president in 1956.\nMr. Porteous, with his wife,\nthe former Miss Fern Openshaw,\na native of Nelson and their\nfour children, Lee, Neil, Lorraine and Janice, reside in Lake-\nview subdivision, an area which\nhe assisted in organizing. The\nhome he constructed there in\n1953 was the second building in\nthe sub-division.\nMr. Porteous' candidacy\nmeans two new faces will be\nrequired to fill the vacancy on\nthe Board of Trustees of School\nDistrict No. 7 (Nelson). His\nterm, like G. B. Arnesen, not\ncontending the election this year,\nand G. A. Anderson ended this\nDecember.\nRENTAL & SALES\n1500   Garments\nto choose from.\n\u2022 Full Dress\n\u2022 Morning, Directors'\nCoats\n\u2022 White and Blue Coats\n\u2022 Shirts and Accestoriei\n\u2022 Mail Orders Invited\nE. A. LEE Ltd.\nOno Stare Onlv!\n623 HOWE, MU 3-2457\nIn Nelson Contact\nEMORY'S LTD.\nKINQ\nSTOKER BLEND\nCOAL\n.or Carefree Automatic Heal\nTOWLER\nCliri       and      TRANSFER\nlUCL 394 Baker St. \u2014 Nelson, B.C.\nNelson's Leading Coal Dealers\u2014Est. Over 25 Years\nThere's somethin\nSPECIAL\nabout\nSeagram's\nSPECIAL OLD\nFiner Taste is a Seagram's Tradition\nAvailable in 12 oz. <__\u2022 25 oz. tizea\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed' by tht Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia\n ..#pl\n'*\u25a0'\n\u25a0      \u25a0  \u25a0 \u25a0 . -'..;.\nr^ppS:!^.*\nPPP^M''\".   \u2022 \"\u2014? ! -l\".^^.\"!\n\u2014\t\n\u25a0-..:, I\nTruck Plunges Through\nBridge, Men Escape Death\nKIMBERLEY - Two Kimberley men had a brush with death\nMonday morning when their\ntruck broke through a wooden\nbridge on Cherry Creek. The\nmen, Gordie Turlik and George\nPatterson were returning to\nKimberley with a truckload of\nbulldoze sticks when the near\ntragedy occurred.\nThe bridge, constructed by\nthe army about five years ago,\nwas   built   of   tamarack   logs\nSilver King\nBeverages\nNelson \u2014 Phone 352-6737\nIN TRAIL\u2014\nSnappy Service\nPhone 368-5353\nIN\nCRANBROOK-\nNatlonal Fruit\nPhone JU-6-2251\nwhich over the years slowly\nrotted away. The truck, driven\nby Patterson, was coming towards town. It was completely\non the bridge when the left-\nhand side stringers gave way,\nplunging the truck upside-dpwn\nsome thirty feet into the ice-\ncold waters of the creek' below.\nThe cab was crushed down to\nthe level of the hood, but the\nright-hand door flew open and\nthe men were able to scramble\nto safety when the cab filled\nwith water from the creek.\nIn its plunge the truck missed\ntwo large boulders which lined\neach side of the creek. Six\ninches either way, and it- is\ndoubtful if the men would have\nescaped with their lives.\nThe noise of the crash alerted\nW. W. Duncan, who was working\nat the pole camp, and he brought\nthe two men to Kimberley and\nDistrict Hospital, where they\nwere treated for shock and\nbruises. Mr. Turlik was discharged, but Mr. Patterson was\nkept in hospital for further treatment.\nTuesday morning a work party\nfrom CM. & S., witli a winch\ntruck, hauled the demolished\nvehicle out of the creek bed and\nbrought it back to Kimberley.\nHuhters in this area are advised not to use the Cherry\nCreek Road, as the bridge is impassible even for foot traffic.\nGordie Turlik is the son of\nMr. and Mrs. A. Turlik of Fernie, B.C. and is a well-known\nhockey player in Kimberley.\nGeorge Paterson resides at Lois\nCreek.\nIn Air Pollution Battle\nAKM Committee Asks lor\nSupport of Castlegar\nTRAIL \u2014 An Association of\nKootenay Municipalities pollution study committee has appealed for support for the Village of Castlegar in the village's\nbattle to control air pollution\nfrom the Celgar pulp mill.\nSpend a Warm Winter\nOrder Your\nSTORM\nWINDOWS\nNOW!!\nSAVE ON   FUEL\nWHEN  THE   EXTREME\nCOLD  WEATHER  COMES!\nT. H. Waters & Co. Ltd.\nPhone 352-7717\nNelson, B. C.\nCarl Loeblich, speaking for\nthe committee to the Inter-Unit\nBoards of Health meeting here,\npointed out that the village is\nalmost the sole fighter for\nlessening of the air pollution.\nThis was odd, he said, because Castlegar was dependent\non the mill for its economy.\n\"Public opinion is perhaps tl \\\nonly pressure that can be ol\nany assistance to alleviate the\npresent pollution problem,\" Mr.\nLoeblich said.\nThe AKM committee, Mr.\nLoeblich said, was formed only\n\"to bring information to light.\"\nThe committee is to keep the\nProvincial Pollution Control\nboard well informed, he said.\nTo keep the provincial board\ninformed, the committee would\ncatalogue all known sources of\npollution and would report on\nthis pollution \"at least annually.\"\nMr. Loeblich asked health\nboard support for the committee.\nMr. Loeblich is Kinnaird village commission chairman.\nAirport or No Flyash?\nInjunction Deadline Near\ncontinue uninterrupted air service.\nMayor James White of Fernie expressed deep concern\nand said 'he ha.t been assured\nevery possible avenue was being\nexplored.\nOther correspondence on the\nmatter claimed that closing of\nCranbrook airport \"would be\ndisastrous to East Kootenay\"\nand practical solution would be\nregulations governing height of\nstructures in vicinity of an airport flight path.\nCreston village commission\nhas also requested immediate\n\"temporary\" action until plans\nto develop an airport there can\nbe gone Into.\nPOPULAR PARKS\nSome 7,000,000 visitors were\nregistered at Ontario's provincial parks in 1962, a 10 per cent\nincrease over 1961.\nCRANBROOK \u2014 The case of citizens vs. Crestbrook Timber Ltd. has drawn attention of east and west\nKootenay municipalities and a more involved conflict\narises out of the situation with the City of Cranbrook,\nCrestbrook, Canadian Pacific Airlines and the prosecuting party, the citizens of Slaterville.\nWith Nov. 30 deadline for settlement of the fly-\nash problem from Crestbrook burner, which prompted\nan injunction against the company by 24 citizens of\nSlaterville, protests continue to pour in over possible\nloss of Canadian Pacific Airlines service to the East\nKootenay,\nMayor George 'Haddad says\nthat Cranbrook will continue to\nkeep 'fighting to retain passenger\nplane service to the municipal\nairport here. Kimberley, Marysville, Fernie and other East Kootenay municipalities are express'\ning mounting concern and most\nhave joined the fight solidly behind Cranbrook.\nFocal point of the controversy\nis Crestbrook'n burner, which, if\nmoved any closer to the airport\nflight path, will cause CPA to remove its service.\nOn Oct. 4, Mr. Justice Lord\nbrought an injunction against\nCrestbrook which offered three\nalternatives that had to be carried out by Nov. 30.\nTo commence construction and\ninstallation of necessary and appropriate chipping equipment at\nits mill premises at Crartbrook or\nTo commence the removal of\nthe burner to the northerly portion of the defendant's said property at Cranbrook, approximately 700 teet from its present\nocation, or\nTo have commenced alterations Of the construction or operation of said burner to the satisfaction of the solicitors for the\nplaintiffs.\nOtherwise the company will be\n\"restrained and enjoined from\nusing the said burner in any\nmanner which will permit the\ndeposit on the properties of tlie\nplaintiffs of raw, partly burned,\nor burning sawdust, ash or burning wood particles, until the trial\nof this action (alleged damage\ncaused by flyash.)\"\nThe case against Crestbrook\nwas  originally   scheduled  for\nthe fall assizes here, but the\ncompany's solicitors asked for\nan adjournment because it was\nthought that a chip contract\ncould be worked out with Cel-\ngfi'. This has fallen through\nfor the tint, being.\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\nEXPERIMENTING\nV. C. Brown, Crestbrook general manager, this week said his\ncompany is still trying to solve\nwith new installations the flyash\nproblem that has drawn protests\nfrom a number of Slaterville residents.\nMr. Brown said that over the\nweekend tlie company has been\nmaking alterations to the burner\nwith hopes of coming up with an\nanswer. He said it will be sev..\neral days before it is known if\nthe modifications will be effective.\nMayor Haddad says that the\nmoving of the burner will result In discontinuance of CPA\nservice here and while the airport Is owned and operated by\nthe city of Cranbrook, it serves\nthe entire area, and suspension\nwould be a catastrophe.\nThe mayor also said that Crestbrook has heen fighting and co-\nopreating in every way possible\nto keep from interfering with the\noperation of the airport but terminology of the injunction laid\nleaves the company no choke.\nSome of the residents involved\nin the suit and injunction against\nCrestbrook had no comment to\nmake but suggested their lawyers, Hislop, M -Kay and Lazen\nbe contacted.\nCranbrook Lions Club said\nthey were \"perturbed\" about\nloss of air service and the upsetting effect CPA Slight suspension would have on mail\nschedules throughout the area.\nCity council last week sought\nthe support of Kootenay East\nMP Jim Byrne and MLA's Leo\nNimsick and Harry McKay and\nmunicipal .leads in E. K.\nMESSAGE!;\nThis week numerous replies\ncame expressing sympathy on\nCranbrook's position and advocating air service be maintained here and East Kootenay.\nInvermere voiced concern\nand wrote that it was contacting the minister of transport in\nan effort to prevent Crestbrook\nTimber Ltd., from moving its\nburner into the airport flight\npath.\nIn more recent developments\nMarysville village commission\nsaid it had written to tlie minister of transport urging that\nall expedient steps be taken to\nNew Warfield\nCommissioner\nInstalled\nWARFIELD - New village\ncommission member R. F. Guillaume Monday night was officially installed by C. W. MacBey, who has been performing\ntlie installation ceremony since\nincorporation of the village in\n1952.\nCommission chairman Arnold\nLauriente appinted the new commissioner chairman of the publicity committee and as village\nrepresentative to the Trail-\nTadanac Hospital Board.\nComm. Guillaume was also\nappointed to serve on the village's fire, light and traffic\ncommittee, the works committee and the finance committee.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, NOV. 23, T962 \u2014 3\n3\u00ab33\nNew Program for Judging Queen\nCommittee Plans All Types\nOf Events for Snow Fiesta\nKIMBERLEY - The executive of the Snow Fiesta met\nMonday night, and came up with\na new deal which they hope\nwill have the fullest support\nfrom everyone in Kimberley'and\ndistrict. If successful, the plan\nshould provide for the biggest\nand best carnival Kimberley has\nyet had.\nApart from donations from\ngroups who have assisted in\nthe past, and agreements with\nother organizations who will be\nputting.on special programs to\ncoincide with Snow Fiesta Week,\nall funds for the spectacular\npageant will he raised hy selling booster tickets. A booster\nticket holder will be entitled to\nsee all events controlled by\nthe Snow Fiesta without further charges. Some Of these events will be free; others will\nlevy a charge on non-booster\nticket holders.\nIf plans work out, the citizens\nof Kimberley will be approached\nBeer Plebiscite Will Take\nThree Months' Preparation\nKINNAIRD \u2014 At Tuesday\nnight's meeting of the Kinnaird\nvillage commission, it was decided to apply for a plebiscite\nfor the sale of beer by the\nglass.\nTwo applications for such a\nNO   SIGNAL\nVANCOUVER (CPI - Howard Gilfoil, found wet and\nhungry after becoming lost on\nGambler Island Sunday, said it\nwouldn't have happened if he\nhad had a third shot to fire the\nhunter's distress signal. But\nwhen he realized he had lost\nhis five hunting companions he\nfired his two remaining shots.\nHis colleagues waited but never\nheard a third.\nParries Request\nFor Survey of\nHospital Staff\nTRAIL \u2014 A request from the\nTrail-Tadanac Hospital for an\nindependent survey on nursing\nin the hospital has been answered by a letter which asks several statistical questions of the\nboard.\nThe reply came from Donald I\nM. Cox, deputy minister of hos- i\npital insurance, who refused to I\napprove such a survey until the I\nquestions were answered. J\nThe board requested the sur-\nvey to determine the level ofj\nnursing service in the hospital\nin an effort to gain the \"recog-\n\u2022 nitlon\" that the board feels the\nhospital deserves from BCHIS.\nTrail representative Leo Levey\nasked if possibly Mr. Cox was\n\"throwing a red herring\" in the\npath of the survey by responding to the request with a series\nof questions.\nDr. A, F. Alvarez, medical\nstaff chairman, agreed and\nwarned the board that this reply\nmight be \"the first of many\"\nsuch responses.\nplebiscite have been received,\none from International Land\nCorporation of North Vancouver\nand the other from M. Moran,\nrepresenting Castlegar Holdings\nCo. Ltd.\nIt was felt that the lavish\nmotor motel to be built by International Land which had been\nplanned for the area will be a\ngreat asset to the district and\nwill make it a definite stopping\npoint for tourists.\nTlie motor motel will be located near the Castleaird Plaza.\nIt will take approximately\nthree months to set up such a\nplebiscite, the meeting was\nInformed.\nCommissioners also discussed\nat great length the metering of\nwater and finally arrived at a\nj rale of .0004 per gallon which\n| amounts to a monthly minimum\nof $12.\n,   Tlie metering of water will\ninvolve only commercial premises.\nSNOW BLOWER\nMembers of the village com-\nmissioa last Saturday attended\na   demonstration   of   a   small\nsnow-blowing machine.\nThey were forced  to travel\n$45,000\nSubdivision\nPlanned\nGRAND FORKS - A new subdivision has been proposed for\nthe development of 33 lots adjoining the airport lo the north\nand extending west from the\narena to near the end of the\nairport. The whole project wil!\ncost approximately $45,000.\nProposed for the project is a\ncomplete underground electrical\ndistribution system at a cost of\n$16,000. Overhead wiring for\nsame would be $4125. The sewer\nsystem would be $13,000. Three\nwater hydrants are in the plans.\nIf approval of the by-law for\nthe above is received by this\nweek from Victoria, a plebiscite\ncan be held in December.\nStockyard To\nOpen South\nOf Creston\nCRESTON - Stockmen in the\nCreston Valley are pleased to\nhear of the construction of a\nnew and modern livestock auction sale barn and pens, which\nis being built south of Creston\non the Port Hill Road.\nOwners of the Auction will be\nLloyd Kressly of Kingsgate and\nCyril Colonel of Wynndel, who\nwill also operate the business.\nDue to increased stock raising\nin the Creston Valley these type\nof facilities have been needed\nfor some time.\nLine Defect\nCause of\nBlackout\nCASTLEGAR ^ Failure of a\ndefective line splice was responsible for an unscheduled\npower outage November 2,\nwhich worked a hardship on\nlocal businesses open on Friday\nnight.\nCastlegar commissioners\nlearned the reason for the blackout through a letter from West\nKootenay Power and Light Company in reply to a request from\nlhe commission for an explanation of the incident.\nThe company noted that it\nalways schedules any power\noutages for an area at a time\nwhen this will cause its customers the least inconvenience, and\nthe blackout which occurred\nhad been scheduled for the\nafternoon of November 2.\n\"The defect in this line was\nnot detectable from the ground,\ntherefore we had no way of\nknowing it would fail. This type\nof failure very rarely occurs,\"\nlhe letter stated.\nPREPARATION\nFOR LAGOOON\nUNDER WAY\nCRESTON \u2014 Creston Property\nOwners' Association will be told\nby the commission in answer to\nits letter that land negotiations\nfor lagooning purposes are now\nunder way and lagooning of raw\nsewage will be under way within\nfive years.\nIn the majority of sections of\nthe town the present sewage system will handle raw sewage\nwhen the time comes, and there\nare sufficient storm sewers, en\ngineered by the government, to\nhandle the surface drainage of\nthe town.\nAll utility lines have been Installed where paving is to take\nplace and the patching of hard\nsurface where lines have been\ninstalled, is included in the contract with Columbia Natural Gas\nLtd.\nsome distance up the new highway in search of enough snow\nto give an adequate demonstration.\nCommissioners are attempting\nto find a suitable means of removing snow from the sidewalk\nand although the machine\nproved effective and quite versatile in that it could also cut\ngrass as well as plough, it was\ndecided that it was too small.\nA. Selbie, village clerk, stated\nlhat one reason why the sidewalks have been built is to keep\nchildren off the highway and if\nIhey wished to continue keeping\nIhem off the highway, sidewalks\nmust be kept clear of snow.\nAfter a great deal of discussion, members of the council\ndecided to investigate other\nmeans of keeping them clear,\nsuch as a small farm tractor or\na jeep.\nPARSLOW'S\nGUNSMITHING\nLOCKSMITHING\nFISHING SUPPLIES\n1319 Bay Ave.      Ph. 368-5025\nTRAIL, B.C.\n11 Kill 1 111! 11 Ml) 11111III \u25a0 111 11 It\nHAZLEWOOD DRUGS Ltd.\nPRESCRIPTIONS\nStationery, Toiletries, Books\n943 Spokane St.\nPh. 364-1313    Trail, B.C.\niiiiiiiiiiiiii.iiiiiiiiMiiiiimmiiiiii\nonly once to purchase tickets.\nThe Queen contest, a sore point\nin past years, will be run on the\nbasis of talent and personality.\nIn order that everyone may have\na voice in choosing the queen,\nspectators at the talent show\nwill also be allowed to vote\nfor their favorite candidate, but\nthese votes will count for only\nforty percent of the total. Final\nselection will be made by a\npanel of judges.\nAmong the many events scheduled for Snow Fiesta week are\na minor hockey tournament,\nbob-sled competition, a pet parade and childrens' day in the\ndowntown area.\nICE EVENTS\nIn addition, it is hoped to have\na ski tournament, bonspiel, ice\ncarnival and senior hockey\ngame. These last events will\nall have an admission charge.\nPlans are underway to organize a display of boxing, judo,\nweight lifting, tumbling and\nbasketball.\nFour dances are planned for\nthe week; two for adults and two\nfor teeagers. The talent show;\nif there, is a sufficient number\nof candidates, will take place\nover a period of three evenings;\ntwo weeks before the Fiesta.\nLetters have already been sent\nto several groups asking them\nto nominate a candidate .for\nQueen, and additional..groups\nwill be asked to participate.\nThe next meeting of the committee will be held at the Snow\nFiesta Hut on Nov. 26, and representatives of interested groups\nand the general public have been\ninvited to attend.\nYOU\nCAN'T\nBEAT\nELECTRIC\nHEAT\nFREE ESTIMATES\nSatisfaction Guaranteed\nCOLEMAN\nELECTRIC\nPhone 352-3175\nGive a fast, M\ninsulated,  '*\nprofessional-looking\nfinish to your walls\nwith\nDONNACONA\nWALL PANELS\n\u2022 Big handsome 4'x8' Panels i\" and i\" thick\n\u2022 Flush edges tor a tast, smooth, flat finish.\n\u2022 Easy  to   install,   kilned,   compressed   wood\nfibre insulating panels.\nLUMBER\nCO.  LTD.\nBURNS\nNELSON PHONE 352-6661\nCRANBROOK PHONE 426-3305\nYOUR  DOMTAR  BUILDING  SUPPLY  DEALERS\nATTENTION\nRESIDENTS and BUSINESSES\nof the\nSLOCAN VALLEY and DISTRICT\nBoundary Electric - Castlegar Ltd.\nIs Pleased To Announce\nThat Through a Progressive Expansion of Equipment\nond Trained Personnel We Can Now Bring You\nThe Following Services\n\u2022 MODERN ELECTRICAL INSTALLATIONS\nFROM RESIDENTIAL TO INDUSTRIAL\n\u2022 PLUMBING AND HEATING\n\u2022 ELECTRIC HEAT SPECIALISTS\n\u2022 PUMPS \u2014 RESIDENTIAL TO  INDUSTRIAL\n\u2022 USED EQUIPMENT\n\u2022 G.E. APPLIANCE DEALERS\nPhone 365-5919\nCastlegar, B.C.\n 1 \u25a0'.'\u25a0\n' \u25a0 \"\u25a0'\nJPPWW.\n-____\n\u25a0:\u25a0;\nNf lamt   Satltl   Nmta Interpreting the News\nZJ By CARMAN CUMMING again on Oct. 24, is to pu\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nEstablished April 22   190! Nelson. B. C.\nPublished by the NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n266 Bukei Street, Nelson, British Columbia, mornings except\nSundays and holidays in the centre oi the Kootenays with\nthe largest daily circulation in the Interioi ol B.C.\nAuthorized as Second Class Mall. Post Office Department, Ottawa,\nand for Payment ot Postage in Cash.\nC W. RAMSDEN, Publisher.\nA. W. GIBBON. Editor.\nMEMBER OB  THE CANA )1AN PRESS\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN DAlLi  NEWPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION\nMEMBER OF THE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS\nTbe Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use tor republication ol all news\ndispatches credited to it or to Tbe Associated Press ot Reuters id this\npaper and also the local news published therein.\nFriday, November 23, 1962\nCanadian Aggressiveness in US.\nIt is a matter of conjecture as to\nwhat would happen if every country\nin the world was required to withdraw the capital it had invested in\nforeign countries. The probability is\nthat there would be chaos in the\nfinancial world, for capital is not\nnationalistic and even small countries -invest abroad.\n' The' larger countries, with more\nmoney available for investment,\nhave- more capital abroad and the\nUnited States is often accused of\neconomic imperialism, exploiting the\nresources of smaller countries and\nreducing their peoples to servitude.\nCanadians sometimes have the feeling thaf ihey are entirely at the\nmercy of American capital, which\nisn't entirely true. There is another\nside to the picture.\n\u25a0 Statistics on Canadian investment in ihe U.S. have recently been\nreleased by the U.S. Commerce Department. These show, for instance,\nthat Canada is second in the value\nof\" direct investments behind Britain,\nwith something more than $2000\nmillion invested this year.\nThey show that Canada has the\nlargest of any foreign investment in\nboth manufacturing and utilities,\nthat the net Income from the Cana\ndian direct investment last year was\n$106 million and that U.S. taxes on\nthe Canadian investment took $147\nmillion.\nNot only that but Canada has\ndirect investments in 259 different\nenterprises in the U.S., almost all of\nthem subsidiaries of Canadian firms.\nOf these there are 59 U.S. subsidiaries of Canadian firms in manufacturing and Ihree branch plants,\n45 companies in trade, 58 in finance\narid insurance, 39 in petroleum, 25\nin transportation and utilities, and\nthe rest in miscellaneous industries.\nThe U.S. Commerce Department\nreport goes into further details but\nenough has been quoted here to\nshow that Canada is very much a\nforeign investor where the U.S. is\nconcerned. It iriay be surprising to\nmany people but it will, perhaps,\nhelp to correct the impression that\nthe U.S. is overwhelming Canada by\nsheer power of money.\nIt might also help to increase our\npride in Canadian business, which\ntoo often is represented as lacking\nin aggressiveness. Two hundred and\nfifty-nine Canadian businesses in the\nU.S. is not bad for a country with\nonly one-tenth the population of that\ncountry.\nBirth and\nThree times every second, somewhere in the world, the torment ends,\nand a baby is born.\nNearly two million babies were\nborn last week, enough to double\nthe population of Toronto.\nThis growth of humanity is often\ncalled \"the population explosion.\" It\nis a growth of about two per cent\na year. In itself that seems small,\nbut it is more than double the rate\nof 15 years ago, and the cumulative\neffect is staggering.\nWorld population used to be held\nin check by what has been called\nthe iron law of war, famine and\npestilence. It reached about 1000 million until 1830, but it climbed to\n2000 million in 1930, and to 3000 million last year. The increase for 1961\nalone will be more than the entire\npopulation of Britain.\nAnd.By the year 2000 the world is\nexpected to have some 6200 million\nMore for the Moon\nIt 'Will- surprise most people to\nlearn that a Western Europe space\nrocket may be sent off to hit the\nmoon in .'the comparatively near future. The impression has been that\nthis realm was the particular prerogative of the U.S.A. and the U.S.S.R.\nA NATO conference in Paris recently was told that the European\nspace research agency comprising\nsome 10 nations, including France,\nGermany and Britain, hopes to\nlaunch a space satellite in 1966 and\nhave a shot at the moon two years\nlater. A program of rocket firing\nwill be initialed next year.\nSome $40,000,000 will be spenl\nannually on these experiments, a\nsum which puts European space research into the field in a big way.\nSoon they will need traffic robots\nin the ether to keep control of the\nvehicles whirling in space.\nOne reassuring note perhaps in\nthis multiplication of space rocketing is. the statement that the European, program is aimed purely as\nscientific research without military\nconnotations. Would that all current\nventures in space had no sinister\nimplications.\u2014Victoria Colonist.\nIt's Been Said\nJealousy is the fear of apprehension\nof superiority; envy our uneasiness under\nit.\u2014Williai.i Shenstone.\nBirthright\npeople \u2014 double its present population. Most of the population increase\nis centred on some of the poorest\nlands of the southern hemisphere,\nwhere hunger and hardship are a\nway of life \u2014 and an intolerable\none.\nIn the U.S. with its growth of 1.7\nper cent a year, they are hard pressed to create the 60,000 new jobs required every week and to build\nhew schools for the million additional children entering the kindergarten each year.\nThe president of Pakistan calls\npopulation \"problem number one.\"\nHe appealed to Washington to solve\nthe problem which they are not\neager to take up. Said the undersecretary of state, Ball: \"We cannot\nsolve the problem today, but we can\nat least define our goal. We want\na world in which every birth is accompanied by a birthright.\"\n\u2014Kamloops Sentinel.\nProtection\nA Shakespeare buff of our\nacquaintance reports that when he\nattended a performance of \"King\nLear\" in Central Park, on a clear,\nstarry night, he was distracted by\na fidgety lady seated beside him. At\nthe beginning of Lear's mad scene,\nwhich was accompanied by flashes\nof man-made lightning and stentorian claps of backstage thunder, the\nwoman stared querulously al the\nsky, dug into her purse, extracted\none of those collapsible plastic rain\nhats, and wore it throughout the remainder of the scene.\u2014New Yorker.\nGems of Thought\n-   WORK OF ART\nGreat art is the contempt of a great\nman for small art.-F. Scott Fitzgerald.\n* *      *\nThe true work of art Is but a shadow\nof the divine perfection.\u2014Michelangelo.\n* *      *\nWhen love and skill work together expect a masterpiece.\u2014John Ruskin.\n* *      *\nThe Bible is the learned man's masterpiece, the ignorant man's dictionary, the\nwise man's directory.\u2014Mary Baker Eddy.\n* *      \u2666\nA work of art is a corner of creation\nseen through a temperament.\n\u2014Emile Zola.\n* *      *\nWhat artists call posterity is the posterity of the work of art.\u2014Marcel Proust.\nBy CARMAN CUMMING\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nWhatever the reasons for\nCommunist China's announced\ndecision to halt its advance on\nthe Indian frontier\u2014and it has\nbeen called everything from a\ndramatic turnaround to obvious\ntrickery\u2014the action has put\nIndia's Prime Minister Nehru\nin a difficult position.\nIf he rejects outright the\nChinese proposals f o r new\ntalks, he must accept these\nresults:\n1. Probable renewal of fighting with an enemy of proven\ntoughness, with no assurance\nthat it will improve India's\nposition.\n2. Criticism from India's\nnon-aligned Allies for not responding to Peking's peace\ngesture, and the possible collapse of India's neutral position\nwith the acceptance of Western\narms.\n3. Scrapping of cherished\nplans for economic improvement as the country throws its\nfull effort into the conflict with\nChina.\nHARD TO ACCEPT\nOn the other hand, if Nehru\naccepted the Chinese proposals\nit would mean a backdown\u2014\nwith serious loss of prestige\u2014\nfrom his stand that India would\nnot negotiate until the Chinese\npull back to positions held Sept.\n8.\nWhile India appears to have\nlittle to gain from more fight-\ni n g, its citizens are fully\naroused against the Chinese\nand will not take kindly to\nanything resembling defeat.\nA possible way out lies in\nNehru's statement that any\nnegotiations would be in stages,\nwith the first stage designed\nonly to create conditions under\nwhich formal negotiations\nmight be held.\nThis   would   allow   time   for\npassions   to   cool,   creating   a\nbetter   climate   for   give   and\ntake.\nHOLD LADAKH AREA\nThe Chinese offer, similar to\nproposals   made  in   1959   and\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIII\nDiscovery\nShocks\nBritish (our)\nLONDON (AP)-The Sunderland magistrates court\nwas shocked to learn Wednesday that inmates of Her\nMajesty's hospilal for the\ncriminally insane, Broadmoor, have been making\nand passing counterfeit\nmoney.\nThree persons were committed for trial for having\npassed pound ($3.00) notes\nmanufactured by inmates\nwith permission of hospital\nauthorities. The prosecutor\nsaid the bank notes were\nfor use by the prison amateur theatrical society.\n\"I understand,\" he told\nthe court, \"that the prisoners have a very strong\namateur dramatic group.\"\nAccording to testimony,\nprisoners passed the notes\non to visitors who then used\nthem to buy liquor.\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiu\nagain on Oct. 24, is to pull back\non the eastern end of the border while holding the 12,000\nsquare miles at the western\nend, in the Ladakh section of\nKashmir, that it seized in campaigns of 1957-98.\nChina has built a strategic\nroad linking Tibet and Sinkiang\nprovince through this hump of\nterritory. Some observers think\nconsolidation of control in that\narea is Peking's immediate\nobjective.\nBut this would leave the\nquestion of why China would\nundertake a costly campaign at\none end of the border and then\ngive up its gains simply to get\nfirm control of an area at the\nother end which it already, in\nfact, controlled.\nMany in India and the West\nbelieve the cease-fire is designed only to lull India into a\nfalse sense of security while a\nnew drive is prepared. Another theory is that the halt\nwas called to avoid an open\nbreak with Russia which has\nstrongly deplored the fighting.\nThere is considerable evidence to back up this last\nsuggestion. Criticism between\nthe two Communist giants has\nincreased in bitterness in recent weeks and there is every\nreason to believe that Russia\nhas put strongest pressure on\nChina to end the fighting.\nTlie recent Cuban situation\nbrought many inquiries to\nCivil Defence as to what can\nand should be done. Ask your\nCivil Defence Co-ordinator\nabout literature and courses of\ninstruction. If no courses are\nplanned and there is enough\ninterest shown, steps will be\ntaken to provide them.\nLitters to\nThe Editor\nLetters to the editor on any\ntopio ol genuine Interest are\nwelcome U they are brief,\naccurate and fair. The; may\nbe published over a nom de\nplume, but the name of tbe\nwriter must be given to the\nEditor as evidence of good\nfaith. Anonymous letters go\nInto the wastepaper basket.\nTypewritten letters must be\ndouble-spaced.\nOn Behavior\nIn Legion\nTo the Editor:\nSir \u2014 Reference to the complaint of clergy re Legion behavior at Prince George. This\nwriter attended a Provincial\nLegion Convention at Nanaimo\nsome 15 years ago when discussion arose re acceptance of\nguest membership for the purpose of obtaining sufficient revenue to get beverage facilities\non a paying basis. Unfortunately\nNanaimo, like other growing\ntowns, had gone all out in obtaining facilities much beyond\ntheir financial abilities, and\nwere  then  in  serious  trouble.\nAfter about an hour of bickering the convention by a close\nvote recommended that 60 per\ncent guest membership be allowed. Such members would of\ncourse have no voting power\nin Legion matters and would be\nsponsored by Legion members\nin good standing.\nWhile it is not suggested hers\nthat the trouble at Prince\nGeorge was due to guest membership, lt is the feeling of a\nnumber of World War 1 veterans that guest membership has\nnot been too successful in carrying on the aims and objects\nlaid down in Legion constitution.\nIt must be remembered that\nwar one membership has largely disappeared arid the mandate\nof the Legion with its pledge to\nfoster the needs of war veterans\nwill in a matter of time becon.j\nobsolete and there \u2022Will be no\nexcuse to carry on glorified beverage outlets under Legion sponsorship.\nWhatever the circumstances\nof Prince George it is certain\nour Provincial Command will\ntake proper action and receive\nsolid backing from all Legion\nBranches.\nWar One Veteran,\nBranch 101\nHUBERT\nln.\u201eHC_,Wo.H Hi-Mi r\u00bblCT_. j\nTHE CORPORATION OF THE CITY OF NELSON\n'    SYNOPSIS OF: BY-LAW NO. 1349\n\"This is a By-law to authorize the submission of a question\nto obtain the assent of the owner electors upon the question\nwhether or not they are in favor of the sale by the Corporation\nof the City of Nelson of Lots 2, 3, and part of Lot 1, Block 9,\nOfficial Plan, Nelson City, better known as Memorial Park\nsituated between the Hume Hotel and Hood's Bakery.\"\nNOTICE\nTake Notice that the above is a synopsis of a By-law that may\nbe inspected at the following places and at the times indicated, namely on the Notice Boards of the City Hall, between\nthe hours of 8:30 A.M. and 6 o'clock, P.M., the City Police\noffice between the hours of 8:30 A.M. and 5 o'clock P.M. and\nthe Provincial Court House between the hours of 8:30 A.M.\nand 5 o'clock, P.M., Daily, except Saturdays and Holidays\nfrom November 23, 1962, till December 6th, 1962, and that the\nsynopsis is not intended to be and is not to be deemed to\nbe an interpretation of the By-law.\nDated at Nelson, B. C,\nthis 22nd day of November,\n1962.\nC.  W.   R.  HARPER,\nCity Clerk,\nCity Hall,\n Nelson, B. C.\nTHE CORPORATION OF THE CITY OF NELSON\nSYNOPSIS OF: BY-LAW NO. 1350\n\"This is a _y-law to authorize the submission oi a question\nto obtain the assent of the owner electors upon the question\nwhether or not they are in lavour ol moving the War Memorial\nfrom Its present location on 400 Block, Vernon Street in the\nCity of Nelson.\"\nNOTICE\nTake Notice that the above is a synopsis of a By-law that\nmay be Inspected at the following places and at the times indicated, namely on the Notice Boards of the City Hall, between\nthe hours of 8:30 A.M. and 5 o'clock, P.M., the City Police\nOffice between the hours of 8:30 A.M. and 5 o'clock P.M. and\nthe Provincial Court House between the hours ol 8:30 A.M.\nand 5 o'clock P.M., Daily, except Saturdays and Holidays\nfrom November 23, 1962, till December 6th, 1962, and that\nthe synopsis is not intended to be and is not to be deemed to\nbe an interpretation nf the By-law.\nDated at Nelson, B. C,\nthis 22nd day of November,\n1962.\nC.   W.   R.   HARPER,\nCity Clerk,\nCitv Hall,\nNelson, B. C.\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nl Continued)\nTHE CORPORATION OF THE CITY OF NELSON\nBY-LAW NO. 1353\nA BY-LAW TO ENTER INTO A LEASE TO RENT\nTO THEATRE CONFECTIONS LIMITED FOR A\nTERM OF TEN YEARS REAL PROPERTY HELD\nBY THE MUNICIPALITY FOR THE COMMUNITY\nUSES OF THE PUBLIC.\nWHEREAS it is deemed expedient that the Municipality\nenter inlo a lease to rent to Theatre Confections Limited for\na term of ten years, real property held by the Municipality;\nNOW THEREFORE the Municipal Council of The Corporation of the City of Nelson in open meeting assembled enacts\nas follows:\n(1) That The Corporation of the City of Nelson do enter into\nand execute a lease to rent to Theatre Confections Limited\nfor a term of ten years from the 1st day of January, 1963,\nreal property held by the Municipality for the community\nuses of the Public comprising more or less the area\noccupied by the existing confectionery stand situate upon\npart of District Lot 58A, Kootenay District, as described\nin Deeds Deposited 6627 in the Nelson Land Registry\nOffice, commonly known as Lakeside Park, in the form\nof lease hereunto attached and forming part of this\nBy-Law upon the rent and subject to the terms, conditions, covenants, provisos and stipulations therein contained.\n(2) This By-Law, before adoption thereof, shall receive the\nassent of the owner-electors as provided by the \"Municipal\nAct\".\n(3) This By-Law shall come into force and effect on date of\nits adoption by the Council.\n(4) This By-Law may be cited for all purposes as \"City of\nNelson Concession Site Lease By-Law No. 1353\".\nREAD a Iirst and second time the 20th day of November, 1962,\nREAD a third time the 20th day of November, 1962,\nRECEIVED the assent of the owner-electors the day\nof December, 1962.\nRECONSIDERED, FINALLY PASSED AND ADOPTED this\nday of December, 1962.\nCity Clerk.\nTHIS INDENTURE made the day of December\nin the year of our Lord one thousand njne hundred and sixty-\ntwo. IN PURSUANCE OF THE \"SHORT FORM OF LEASES\nACT\"\nBETWEEN:\nAND:\n\"I tried to dance the mashed potato, but she was\ndoing the string-bean stomp.\"\nTHE CORPORATION OF THE CITY OF\nNELSON, a Municipal Corporation duly incorporated under the laws ol British Columbia\nhereinafter called the \"Lessor\",\nOF THE FIRST PART,\nTHEATRE CONFECTIONS LIMITED, a\nCompany duly incorporated under the laws\nof Canada, having its registered office at\n284 Kings Street East, Toronto, Ontario,\nhereinafter called the \"Lessee\",\nOF THE SECOND PART.\nWHEREAS the Lessee has agreed to and with the Lessor\nto erect at its expense a building to be used as a retail food\nand refreshment concession upon the lands hereinafter described in consideration of the Lessor granting to it a lease for\nthe term of ten (10) years upon the rent, terms, conditions\nand covenants hereinafter set forth;\nWITNESSETH that in pursuance of the said agreement\nand in consideration of the rents, terms, conditions, covenants\nand. agreements hereinafter respectively reserved and contained the Lessor doth demise unto the Lessee all and singular\nthat portion of the parcel or tract of land and premises.situated\nin the City of Nelson, Province of British Columbia, or particularly known and described as part of District Lot 58A\nKootenay District, as described in deeds deposited 6627 in the\nNelson Land Registry Office, commonly known as Lakeside\nPark, consisting of not more than 1400 square feet in area and\ncomprising more or less the area presently occupied by the\nexisting confectionery stand situate thereon and also with all\nways, paths, passages, waters, watercourses, privileges,\nadvantages and appurtenances whatsoever to the said premises\nbelonging or otherwise appertaining.\nTo have and to hold the same unto the Lessee for the term\nof ten (10) years from the 1st day of January, 1963.\nYielding therelor the rent of Ten ($10.00) Dollars (bqine at\nthe annual rent of One ($1.00) Dollar) payable forthwith after\nthe execution thereof.\nThe Lessee covenants with the Lessor to pay rent and to\npay any tax assessed in respect to the said premises and to\npay rates for water, electric light, gas, and telephone and\nany other rates or charges resulting from the occupation and\nuse of the said premises by the Lessee.\nAnd fo repair.\nAnd to insure from fire, in the joint names of the said\nLessor and the said Lessee, to show receipts; and to rebuild\nin case of fire.\nAnd will not assign without leave and will not sublet\nwithout leave.\nAnd that it will not carry on any business that shall be\ndeemed a nuisance on the premises.\nAnd that it will not use the said premises for any purpose\nother than a retail food and refreshment concession without\nleave.\nProviso for re-entry by the said Lessor on non-payment\nof rent, or non-performance of covenants.\nProviso for re-entry on seizure or forfeiture of the said\nterm.\n(Continued in next columnl\nThe said Lessor covenants with the said Lessee for quiet\nenjoyment.\nThe Lessor covenants that it will not during the term\nhereof enter into and demise any other part of the said District\nLot 58A Kootenay District as described in deeds deposited\n6627 in the Land Registry Office for the purpose of a retail\nfood and refreshment concession.\nProvided that if the term hereby granted shall be at any\ntime seized or taken in execution or in attachment by any\nCreditor of the Lessee, or if the Lessee shall make any assignment for the benefit of \"creditors, or becoming bankrupt or\ninsolvent, shall take the benefit of any act that may be in\nforce for bankrupt or insolvent debtors the said term shall\nimmediately become forfeited and void.\nThe Lessor covenants to remove the existing confectionery\nstand at its own expense.\nThe Lessor covenants to and with the Lessee that the\nLessor will within one month of the expiration of the term\nhereby demised make payment to the Lessee of the sum of\nTwo thousand ($2,000.00) Dollars in consideration of a Quit\nClaim Deed to be executed and delivered by the Lessee grant- L\ning and quitting claim to the Lessor of all the Lessee's right, SL\ntitle and interest in and to that part of the said District i_ot'.v\"\n58A Kootenay District as described in deeds deposited 6627\nin the Nelson Land Registry Office and in and to the building\nhereinafter referred to.\nIn consideration whereof the Lessee covenants that it\nwill upon tender or payment to it of the aforesaid sum of\nTwo thousand ($2,000.00) Dollars within one month of the\nexpiration of the term hereby demised execute and deliver\nto the Lessor a Quit Claim Deed granting and quitting claim\nto the Lessor of all the Lessee's right, title and interest in and\nto that part of the said District Lot 58A Kootenay District\nas described in deeds deposited 6627 in the Nelson Land\nRegistry Office and in and to the building hereinafter referred to.\nThe Lessee covenants with the Lessor to construct upon\nthe lands hereby demised a building of frame construction\nto be erected upon a concrete foundation, the same to be\nsuitable for the purposes of a retail food and refreshment\nconcession, to be in conformity with the annexed sketch, to\nbe constructed of such materials and in such manner that it\nwill have a reasonably attractive appearance, to be constructed\nat a cost of not less than Eight thousand ($8,000.00) Dollars\nand to be completed on or before the 1st day of July, 1963.\nThe Lessee covenants with the Lessor to operate the said\nbusiness of a food and refreshment concession in a proper\nand efficient manner having regard to the needs and convenience of the public and that it will in any event operate\nthe same during the whole of the months of July and August\nin each and every year during the term hereof.\nThis Indenture and every matter and thing herein contained\nshall enure to the benefit of and be binding upon not only the\nparties hereto but also the successors and assigns of the\nLessor and the successors and permitted assigns of the Lessee.\nIN WITNESS WHEREOF the corporate seals of the parties\nhereto have been hereunto affixed under the hands of the\nrespective officers first duly authorized in that behalf the\nday and year first above written.\nTHE CORPORATION OF THE CITY OF NELSON\nMayor.\nCity Clerk.\nTHEATRE CONFECTIONS LIMITED\nNOTICE\nTAKE NOTICE that the above is a true copy of the proposed\nBy-law upon which the vote of the owner electors will be\ntaken on Tuesday the 4th day of December and Wednesday\nthe 5th day of December, 1962, between the hours of 9 o'clock,\nA.M and 12 o'clock noon, at the City Hall for permitting duly\nqualified owner electors to vote who shall sign a statement\nshowing that it is their expectation that they will be absent\nfrom the Municipality on the day of the poll, namely, Thursday,\nthe 6th day of December, 1962, when the Poll shall be opened\nbetween the hours of 8 o'clock in the forenoon and 8 o'clock\nin the afternoon, at St. Saviour's Memorial Hall, corner of\nWard and Carbonate Streets. Nelson, B.C., and that C W R\nHarper has been appointed Returning Officer for the purpose\nof taking and recording the vote of the owner electors.\nDated at Nelson, B.C.,\nthis 22nd day of\nNovember, 1962.\nC.  W.   R.  HARPER,\n  CfTY CLERK.\nBritain Hands Tough\nAssignment To\nMalcolm Macdonald\nBy TOM OCHILTREE\nLONDON (AP)-The British\ngovernment has handed Malcolm Macdonald a tough colonial assignment\u2014to remove the\nfuse from explosive Kenya.\nMacdonald will take over in\nJanuary as governor of that\nharsh and beautiful east African country. He will go with a\nfree hand to guide Kenya to nationhood along the path of orderly self-government.\nMacdonald, a self - confident\nand talkative man of 61, has\nhis work cut out for him.\nKenya is 224,960 square miles\nof mountains, jungles, arid\nplains, lush farms and fast-\ngrowing cities, ft includes\nwithin its borders most of the\nproblems of Africa\u2014tribal and\nracial tensions, land hunger,\nexcessive nationalism and some\nleft-wind political penetration.\nCOVET WHITE FARMS\nMany of its 6,500,000 people\nare eager for freedom. Some of\nthe Africans covet the farms of\nthe white settlers in the highlands. Europeans, Asians and\nArabs make up minority groups\nwith little in common with each\nother.\nMacdonald takes over the\ngovernorship from Sir Patrick\nRenison.\nMacdonald's experience is\nunique in British public life.\nThe son of the late prime minister Ramsay Macdonald has\nserved in government posts of\none sort or another either at\nhome or overseas for 31 years.\nHe was a colonial secretary before the Second World War.\nTO SUPPLY TREE\nNEW YORK (API - Maine\nhas won the honor of supplying\nRockefeller C e n t r e's famed\nChristmas tree this year. The\n67-f6ot white spruce will come\nfrom the forests of western\nMaine about five miles northwest of Greenville, officials\nsaid today. The tree was made\navailable by the Scott Paper\nCo.. on whose timberlands it\nstands.\nHe left Parliament in 1941.\nHis assignments after, that included the posts of high commissioner to Canada, governor\ngeneral in Malaya, commissioner general for Southeast\nAsia, high commissioner to India and British co-chairman of\nthe Laos conference in Geneva.\nToday\nIn History\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nNov. 23,1962 . ..\nAdvanced elements of the\nFrench Armored Division\nentered Strasbourg during\nthe Second World War 18\nyears ago today \u2014 in 1944.\nStrasbourg was first taken\nby France in 1681 under\nLouis XIV but was surrendered to the Germans in\n1870. After the First World\nWar It passed with Alsace-\nLorraine to France but was\nagain lost to Germany on\nthe French collapse in 1940.\n1837 \u2014 Gas lighting was\nfirst used in Montreal.\n1912\u2014Albania declared its\nindependence.\n_____\nGROWERS'\nWINES\n\\ ftA&youjCrniboSL\nI FAR MORE of peak\nHis simli_.iii._l is not published oi displayed Ij Hit\nliquor tailrd M _. In _ tanet if tti>_ Co'.n._\n\u2022\u2022\u2022&\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\">\u25a0\u25a0- -      '\u25a0 , ! ; \u25a0\u25a0-,,\u25a0 V_.,..n\n'-   \u25a0-\u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0\n IP\n-\n\u25a0:\"... -'.'.' \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0:\u25a0\n\u2014\n..-\u25a0\u25a0-.. ~\"\"^\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0 rj \u00bb\\i ' ?i-   \"'   \u25a0' .     '.\"''\u25a0''.'.      \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'.',''\u25a0' '-:' '\u25a0\u2022'\"'-' V- !\"' ' '\u25a0' ' \u25a0\u25a0 '    \"-.!''\u25a0\n\t\nUS?\nBonny Beef Braid Stew\nHas Latticework Pastry\nBy MARGARET CARR\nThis time of year most of us.\nI think, like to spend more time\nIn the kitchen. It's fun to show\noff your skill as a pastry chef.\nToday we have placed beef\nStew, that favorite fall dish, in\na fancy lattice-work setting.\nBONNY BEEF BRAID\nFilling \u2014 1 pound shoulder\nbeef, cut into %-inch cubes: 2\ntablespoons lard, 1 teaspoon salt,\nVi teaspoon garlic powder, Vi\nteaspoon pepper, V4 teaspoon paprika, 1 bay leaf, Vi cup sliced\nmushrooms. 2 cups water, 2 cups\ncubed potato, 1 cup sliced carrots, 2 tablespoons flour, Vt cup\ncold water.\nMelt the lard in a skillet. Add\ncubed beef and brown well.\nBlend in salt, garlic powder, pepper, paprika, bay leaf, mushrooms and water. Cover and\nsimmer over low heat about 2\nhours. Stir in potato and carrots\nand cook until vegetables are\npartially cooked. Mix together\nflour and water. Stir into meat\nmixture and cook for about five\nminutes, then remove bay leaf.\nSet aside while making pastry.\nPastry \u2014 3 _ cups pre-sifted\npastry flour, 1 _ teaspoons salt,\nVi cup lard. 4 to 6 tablespoons\nwater.\nSift flour with salt into a bowl\nCut in lard, using a blender or\nfork until the mixture is the consistency of corn meal and small\npeas. Sprinkle cold water, a little\nat a time, over different parts\nof flour mixture. Toss together\nlightly with a fork. Place dough\non waxed paper. Knead 3 times.\nPress gently with the paper into\na ball. Let stand at room temperature for 15 to 20 minutes.\nUsing a floured pastry cloth\nand rolling pin, roll dough into\na rectangle about 20 x 14 inches.\nPlace dough on a baking sheet.\nOn each side of the rectangle,\nlengthwise, make 4-inch cuts in\nthe dough, about 1 inch apart.\nPlace beef filling down centre of\ndough on uncut portion, leaving\nan inch of dough at each end.\nBeginning at one end, fold an\ninch of dough up over the filling.\nBring one strip of dough from\neach side, criss-crossing strips\nin the centre. Continue crossing\nlook for\nthe rum in\nthe raffia\nOn Women and\nWrestling\nVANCOUVER (CP) - What\ntakes a sweet-looking elderly\nlady to a wrestling match and\nturns her into a shrieking,\npurse-swinging banshee?\nThe wife of one wrestler believes they go there to work off\nproblems in their home. Mrs.\nGene Kiniski, wife of a former\nEdmonton wrestler now working out of Vancouver, says:\n\"If they're mad at their husbands, or the neighbors, they go\nto the wrestling matches and\nscream.\"\nHer beefy husband has been\nIhe object of much high-pitched\nabuse and a 14-slitch cut ill the\nback by a knife-wielding fan.\nPromoter Rod Fenton agrees\nlhat trouble in the home may\nhe one reason for the female\nlans of the grunt - and - groan\ngang.\n\"Get. a rabid woman fan and\nyou've really got something on\nyour hands,\" he chuckles.\n\"Once in a while they attack\nthe villain. There are always\nIwo or three characters who\nlike to be the centre of attraction and wave their bags\naround.\"\nMrs. Kiniski says her husband\nturned pro wrestler about eight\nyears ago afler playing with\n| Edmonton Eskimos in the West-\n! em Football Conference.\n\"I thought I'd married a football player,\" says this molher\nof two. \"I never saw him in\nthe ring until after we were\nmarried.\n\"What a shock it was.\"\ndough lattice fashion. At other\nend of braid, fold one inch of\ndough up over filling and tuck\nstrips underneath braid. Bake in\na hot oven (425 deg. F.) about\n30 minutes or until crust is\nbrown. Serve hot. Makes six\nservings.\nPenny Carnival\nWell Attended\nEDGEWOOD \u2014 A successful\npenny carnival sponsored by the\nEdgewood - Inonoaklin Women's\nInstitute was held in the Legion\nHall.\nUnder the convenership of\nMrs. C. Burkett, all stalls did\na brisk business. In charge of\nvarious booths were: fishpond.\nMrs. F. B. Nesbitt and Mrs. E.\nWalter: pot-of-gold, Mrs. W. Cullum: apple contest. Mrs. J.\nKirschbaum; count - the - beans.\nMrs. H. E. Farrer; mystery\ncake, Mrs. J. Klein; ring toss,\nMrs. P. Tarzwell; balloon darts,\nMrs. .1. Kupser; home baking,\nMrs R. E. Bateman and Mrs.\nL. Bracey; candy, Mrs. J.\nBrown; aprons, Mrs. W. L.\nHopp; mystery packages, Mrs.\nA. A. Meyers and Mrs. H. 0.\nCooper; books. Mrs, R. 0. Forslund; kitchen. Mrs. J, B. Mc-\nLead. Mrs. R. N. Donselaar and\nMrs. E. J. Donselaar.\nAll proceeds from the carnival\nwill go to charity.\n[RtJM\nWHITE OR DARK\nThis advertisement is not published ot\ndisplayed by the Liquor Control Board ot\nby the Government ol British Columbia,\nDeer Park\nDEER PARK - Mrs. William\nM. Douglas left for Castlegar\nwhere she is a patient in the\nhospital for a few days.\nMr. and Mrs. Harold Wires of\nSeattle arrived to spend a holiday wilh the former's mother,\nMrs. Ora Wires, and his brother-\nin-law and sister. Mr. and Mrs.\nFred Briggeman.\nMrs. Ruth Austen and infant\nson. Michael, of Castlegar were\nthe Sunday guests of Mr. and\nMrs. C, T. Williamson.\nMiss Lorraine Schwartzen\nhauer of Castlegar, recently re\nlurned from a trip to Europe,\nspent the weekend visiting relatives at Deer Park.\nMrs. A. Low has returned to\nI her home after spending some\ntime in Trail-Tadanac Hospital.\nMrs. Ella Jamieson and Mr\nand Mrs. A. Keizer of Castlegar\nwere weekend visitors to Deer\nPark.\nVictoria Woman's Design Among\nFour Used in Newest Alphabet\nBy TRACY ADRIAN\nBeige river otter and beige Tourmaline mink are\ncombined in this luxurious coat designed by Dein-\nBacher of the Waldorf. The top is of otter, with self-\ncovered buttons, three-quarter sleeves and a stand-\nup mink collar. For the skirt, the mink pelts are\nworked horizontally.\nHuge Crowd at Seasonal Event\nCWL Bazaar Features\nSomething for Everyone\nBright autumn hues and colorful displays of the various booths\nblended \u25a0with the aroma of fresh\nbaking to lend a _'est_ve air to tlie\nannual bajaar of the parish of\nthe Cathedral of May Immaculate.\nUnder convenership of Mrs. D\nDanyluk, the bazaar was \"an\noverwhelming  success.\"\nNew Denver\nNEW DENVER - Miss Mar-\ncedes Strebchuck of Kamloops\nspent the weekend with herj\nparents. Mr. and Mrs. N. Strebchuck and family.\nMr. and Mrs. T. M. Leask\nreturned  from Vancouver.\nMrs. and Mrs. K. Yotsukado\nhave left for a holiday in Japan.\nR. T. Edwards left to spend\nthe winter months in Victoria.\nMiss Erna Meinardus and her\nsisler. Mrs. T. G. Hill, left to\nspend the winter months in the\neasl with their niece, Mr. and\nMrs. E. H. Campbell and family in Peterborough. Ont., and\nwith their nephew, Mr. and Mrs.\nJack McBride and family in\nBracebridge, Ont.\nBOYS\nand\nGIRLS\nrm Coming To Town...\nSATURDAY, NOVEMBER 24th\nTO VISIT MACLEOD'S\nTm sure looking forward to seeing you all again,\nso be sure to ask Mom or Dad to bring you\ndown to your friendly Macleod's Store Saturday afternoon. We'll have a real nice visit, and\nfor every girl and boy I'll have\nA NICE SURPRISE\nMACLEODS\nThe conveners of the various\nbooths were as follows:\nBazaar co-convener, Mrs. P\nKuntz; 'fishpond, Mrs. P. E. Poulin; candy booth, Mrs. W. Mur\nphy; doll raffle, Mrs. H. Moran\nnovelty booth, Mrs. K. Grenfell;\nbake table, Mrs. J. DeGirolamo\nsewing booth, Mrs. R. R. Brown;\nvariety booth. Mrs. J. Ryan; apron booth, Mrs. E. Boechler\nknitting booth, Mrs. R. VanRuys-\nkenvelde; contests, Mrs. H. Wil\nson, Mrs. S. Cristofanetti, Mrs.\nF. Smith and Mrs. A. Hamson.\nGirl Guides, under Mrs. J.\nFukala, were kept busy serving\na hot dog lunch at noon, and the\ntea room in charge of f'rs. L.\nMaglio was a popular spot for\nbazaar visitors throughout the\nafternoon.\nThe Knights of Columbus con\neluded the successful bazaar with\na bingo game.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, NOV. 23,1962 \u2014 5\nBy ALAN  WALKER\nLONDON (CP) - A 48-letter\nphonetic alphabet somewhat resembling short hand symbols\nwas published for the first time\nThursday, the fruit of a lifelong obsession of Irish-born\nplaywright George Bernard\nShaw.\nAppropriately, the new alphabet aimed at simplifying reading and writing was used in a\npublication of one of Shaw's\nplays, Androcles and the Lion.\nFor reactionaries, each page\nof   the   play   written   in   the\nShaw\" alphabet is faced by a\ncorresponding page in conventional ABCs.\nShaw, who died in 1950, pro\nvided in his will for a trust fund\nencouraging the world \u2022 wide\nadoption of a new alphabet,\nwhich he outlined but did not\ndesign.\nThe British Public Trustee offered in 1957 a prize of \u00a3500 for\nthe best phonetic alphabet. Two\nyears later the 450 designs submitted were narrowed to four,\nincluding one by Mrs. Pauline\nBarrett of Victoria, B.C.\nREAD FORMULA CHOSEN\nThe prize was divided among\nthese four, but eventually the\ntrust settled mainly on the design of Kingsley Read, a 74-\nyear-old Briton, as the one to\nbe presented to the public.\n\"Shavian,\" as it has been\ndubbed, does not have to con-\nWA Feels Should\nBe More Support\nFor Hospital Aid\n\"The hospital is everybody's\nbusiness\", was theme of a discussion held at the recent meeting of the Women's Auxiliary to\nKootenay Lake General Hospital.\nThe dsicussion arose w%en a\nreport was heard on the WA's\nannual chrysanthemum tea held\neach fall, ft concen.ed public\nsupport of the Auxiliary's fund-\nraising events, through which it\nassists the hospital administration by contributing towards the\nequipment and patient care in\nmany ways. The Auxiliary also\nholds a tea in the spring at the\nhospital.\nIts next project is a sale of\nChristmas baking which is being 'held this week at the hospital for staff members and visitors.\nThe meeting voted to purchase\nbrake wheels for hospital beds\nand a set of bed rails to a total\namount of $700.\nPresident Mrs. Reginald Taylor gave a lengthy report on the\nB. C. Hospitals convention held\nrecently in Penticton at which\n107 auxiliaries were represented.\nThe auxiliary has decided to go\nback to its 'former custom of\nserving tea at the monthly meet\nings.\ntend with absurdities of English spelling such as those that\nproduce the various pronunciations of \"ough.\" It is claimed\nthat Shavian is more legible. It\ntakes up one-third less room\nthan traditional letters.\nThere's one catch. You can't\nread it without mastering a\n\"key\" to the 48 letters. Only a\ncouple of letters resemble conventional ones.\nOnce the key is learned, however, the trustees say you can\nread and write faster.\nBut there are many pairs of\nwords in English that sound\nalike, are spelled differently\nand mean different things.\nWords like \"plane\" and \"plain\"\nwould be confused in the Shaw\nalphabet. However, Read feels\nthe advantages of the new\nmethod outweigh the disadvantages.\nWORKED UNDER TABLE\nHe began designing the alphabet long before Shaw's trustee\ncalled for tenders. He recalls\nworking on it in 1941 during air\nraids while sitting under the\nkitchen table of his home.\nAfter the design had been\nchosen there arose the problem\nof manufacturing type to print\nShaw's play. This expensive process was paid for by the estate,\nand as a result the book sells\nfor only 3s 6d (37 cents).\nBeing a phonetic alphabet, It\ncan be adapted for any language. Now it's a question of\nwhether the world can be persuaded to accept it.\nThe publ i s h e r s. (Penguin\nBooks Ltd.), say the book will\nbe published in Canada next\nmonth.\nMrs. Barrett, in a statement\nissued Thursday by the Canadian publishers, Longmans Canada Limited, said the alphabet\n\"brings to the writing of English a simple, straight-forward\nand easy - to - learn method\nwhich should lead in time to the\nfulfilment of Shaw's expressed\ndesire for a significant saving\nof time, money and Individual\nlabor.\"\nThe wife of retired naval\nCommander Raife Barrett, Mrs.\nBarrett began work on her submission while her husband was\nstationed in Halifax- in 1958.\n\"I heard I had won on New\nYear's Eve, 1960, in Moscow,\nshe recalled. \"I cannot recall a\nmore thrilling moment.\"\n'\"Shaw's alphabet' looks a bit\nlike shorthand, but is vastly different. . . .\n\"The new alphabet is built on\nsound, but not abbreviated\nsound as in shorthand. Only\nfour abbreviations are used, the\nfour words we felt were mostly\ncommonly used\u2014'the, and, of\nand to.'\"\nMrs. Barrett says anyone\nstudying one hour a day oan\nlearn the 'Shaw alphabet' in\none week.\n\"Apart from obvious saving\nof space and time to those who\nalready speak English; it would\nbe a heaven-sent gift for fbr-\neigners. It could become the\ncommon alphabet for Europe\u2014\nthe world eventually.\"\nEngagement\nAnnouncement\nMr. and Mrs. Harold O. Copley of Salmo announce the\nengagement of their eldest\ndaughter, Maureen Margaret,\nto Mr. John Francis Ableft <jf\nSalmo, son of Mr. and Mrs. J.\nR. Ablett of North Surrey, S.C.\nThe wedding will take place\nDecember 29 in Salmo.\nFormer Wynndel\nMan  Decorated\nCRESTON - Air Force headquarters recently announced the [\nawarding of the Canadian Forces I\nDecoration to LAC T. G, Dav-i\nidge, formerly of Wynndel, B.C. j\nThe Canadian Forces Decora-\ntion is given for 12 years of I\nmeritorious service. The award |\nwas presented by Wing Com-!\nmander W. J. Smith, AFC, CD, I\nOfficer Commanding Central\nFlying School at Gimli, Manitoba.\nLAC Davidge, a member of:\nthe Canadian Army during\nWorld War II, and a former\nmember of the Royal Canadian j\nNavy, joined the RCAF in 1956.\nHe is presently stationed at\nRCAF Station, Gimli, Manitoba\nProcter Notes\nPROCTER - Mrs. K. Pearson\nhas taken up residence in Nelson\nfor the winter.\nMr. and Mrs. C. Grant have\nleft for Santa Cruz. Calif., to\nspend the winter months.\nMr. and Mrs. T. Homersham\nleft by motor for Florida to spend\nthe winter.\nBy TRACY ADRIAN\nDesigned for holiday wear is this charming frock\nreminiscent of the romantic Gay Nineties. The frock\nis made ot brown cotton velveteen, is nipped at the\nwaist and features a short flared skirt The collar\nand tiny puff sleeves are accented with white linen\nfrosted with delicate Venice lace.\nFRIDAY NIGHT\n\u00ab   7PM-\nrayrl SPECIALS\n\u2022 On  Sale Sharp at 7 p.m. \u2022  Limited\nQuantities \u2022  Personal  Shopping  Only\n\u2022  No   Phone   or   Mail   Orders\nReg. 2.49\u2014BLACKBOARDS\nBlackboard complete with stand; also has the alphabet\nand a clock at the top to help the little ones 1 J=]\nlearn to tell time and their A, B, Cs. Special     I \u2022 *\u25a0 '\nReg. 1.98\u2014DUST  MOPS\nMade by leading manufacturer. Hand washable. With\nswivel action mop connector. One to a QQ\ncustomer.  16 Only. Special    '**\nBATH TOWELS\nFluffy, absorbent bath towels. Plains, florals 'J'J\nand checks. Assorted colors \u2022 ' '\nReg. 2.98\u2014HALF PRICE\nBOYS' SPORT SHIRTS\nAssorted flannels and cottons. Assorted pat- 1 AQ\nterns and colors. Sizes: 8 to 16. \u00bb .~ +\nReg. 1.49\u2014CHILDS' SLIPPERS\nChildren's two-tone corduroy slippers. Rubber soles.\nRed and black or green and beige. n Q\nSizes: 6 to 3. Special \u2022 * *\nCHRISTMAS RECORDS\nGolden tone hi-fidelity long-play records. |   4Q\nAll Christmas favorites   '\u2022\"'\nLADIES' SKIRTS\nFall skirts. All wool in assorted styles and 1 OO\ncolors. Sizes collectively 10 to 18    \"T.OO\nReg. 1.98\u2014GIRLS' LEOTARDS\n100% stretch leotards. Assorted colors. QQ\nSizes in the group, 4 to 14.      \"''\nINCORPORATES   2\"\u00b0  MAV J620    \t\n'fytfeftift'fog (fotttpnttg.\nINCORPORATED \u00bb\u2022>   Mf9f 1670.\nSALE\nTV's & Stereos\nFeaturing The Bay's Exclusive \"Baycrest\" and\n\"Windsor\" Brands - Top Value for Your Dollar!\nWINDSOR\nCOMBINATION\n23\" TV-AM\/FM radio-stereo. Hand\nwired separate chassis, front controls, four speed automatic record\nchanger, walnut, mahogany or\nSwedish walnut finishes.\nBAYCREST STEREO\nCOMBINATION\nPowerful 12 tube AM\/FM, four\nspeed \"Dual\" automatic changer.\nFour speaker system, and push button selection. In walnut, mahogany\nand oiled walnut finishes.\nSale, each\n429.98\nSale, each\n298.98\nNow $100 Trade-In\nNEWLY DESIGNED\nG.E. 23\" T.V.\nNow is the time to trade up to this modern\nGE console with exclusive Daylight Blue\npicture; makes viewing easier, more natural, clearer. Front mounted speakers\nand controls. Walnut finish.\nRegular 339.00\n*239\nPlus Your Trade-In\nRegardless nf Condition\n_____\u25a0___\u25a0_____________\u25a0\n______\n '\u25a0\u2022'.\u25a0\u25a0.;\u25a0\u25a0      .      \u25a0 \u25a0\"\n\u25a0-\u2022'!\u25a0':\"\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\u2014' \"~\u2014\"\t\n6 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, NOV. 23, 1962\nTop Ranking Soviet Members\nContinue Talks on Red Policy\nBy PETER JOHNSON\nMOSCOW (Reuters) - Top-\nranking members of the Soviet\nUnion's Communist party continued their talks on major internal policy Thursday following\nan announcement Wednesday of\nimportant reforms in Soviet labor unions.\nTORCH FIRE\nKAMLOOPS (CP) - An unidentified workman suffered\narms burns late Wednesday\nwhen a drum of diesel fuel ex-\nIoded into flames at the provincial department of public\nworks yard here. Officials believe the blaze was set off by\na welder's torch. Damage was\nnot extensive.\nThe sweeping reforms, which\nparalleled changes in the party\norganization announced by Premier Nikita Khrushchev when\nthe party central committee began meeting Monday, were disclosed in a speech by Viktor\nGrishin, chairman of the Central Council of Trade Unions.\nGrishin told the meeting of\nthe 330-man, policy-making central committee Russian unions\nwould be split in two at rational and local levels to represent farm and industrial labor.\nThe move echoed Khrushchev's announced reorganization\nof regional and local party Soviets (councils) into two sections, one concentrating on\nfarming and the other on industrial production.\nCHANGES ESSENTIAL\nSpeakers at the meetings\nhave emphasized that the\nchanges are essential to facilitate concentration on the party's \"prime task\"\u2014laying the\nmaterial and technical ground\nfor communism.\nKhrushchev has said the\nparty must be ready to learn\nfrom anyone, even capitalists,\nif the party is to achieve its\nobjectives,\nGrishin supported an earlier\nproposal by Khrushchev for\nforming elected factory production committees.\nThe plan went a step further\nthan the \"production conferences\" between workers and\nmanagement which have previously been held in many state\nenterprises.\nSpace Craft\nSpotted Over\nBritain\nLONDON (AP)-The international aviation magazine Flight\nInternationa! reports at least\nthree mystery space craft have\nbeen launched recently without\nany announcement by the country that put them tip.\nThe magazine says the craft\nare probably Russian satellites\nor space probes that have been\ntracked but not announced by\nthe United States.\nU.S. sources, Flight International says, speculate that one\nof the space craft might have\nbeen an unsuccessful Venus\nprobe, launched apparently\nSept. 10 or 12. Another could\nbe a Mars probe that got no\nfurther than parking orbit\naround the earth.\nPrejudice Becoming Dead Duck\nAs West Europeans Bury Hates\nClassified Ads Get Results!\nAncient hatreds have\nbloodied Europe for centuries, Now, under the menace of communism, the old\nanimosities are tumbling\ndown and the states draw\ncloser to unification. And It\nIt's more a marriage ol\nreason than love, at least\nIt's a marriage, reports\nRichard O'Regan of The Associated Press in this third\nstory of a four-part series\non Europe's boom.\nBy RICHARD O'REGAN\nAMSTERDAM (AP)-Locked\ninside their tight little borders,\nWest Europeans generated prejudices about each other for centuries.\nNow their world is opening up\nand their national hates and\nemotional rivalries are disappearing.\nMillions of Gefmans\u2014not all,\nof course\u2014often used to think\nof the French as dirty, erotic\nand decadent. They saw some\nattractions in French culture,\nbut more often than not Paris\nwas Montmartre, the Moulin\nRouge and the Can-Can\u2014a city\nof sin and brothels.\nThe French on the other hand\nsaw the Germans had contributed much to the world in the\nway of music and philosophy,\nbut there was an inclination to\nregard -the \"Boche\" as bull-\nheaded, arrogant and conceited.\nThe Hitler murderers only bolstered such French convictions.\nToday, 17 years after the war,\nnational prejudice is still strong\nand persuasive.\nIn the mass, however, Europeans appear to have become\naware in the last 10 years that\nprejudice is a dead duck. They\nSPELL BINDERS\nevery single one!\nSAFEWAY\nNEW FROM\nENCYCLOPAEDIA\nBRITANNICA\nTRUE-TO-LIFE\nBOOKS\n* Peaks inlo the Living Past\n* Cables in Photography\n* Nature's Wonderland captured in Full Colour\n* lach Book a Collector's Item\nNow, from the world's most famous educational\npublishers, children's books that arc dramatically,\nexcitingly different! Enchanting fables and thrilling historical events brought to life and photographed on the spot. Nature's wonderland of\nanimals, peoples and plants captured by the camera in true-to-life colour. A picture on every page,\nfrom the world's largest educational film library;\nspellbinding stories told by authors specially\nchosen for their ability to write for children.\nBeautifully bound to list, printed on high-quality\nglazed stock that makes colours almost 'jump-\nout', and set in type that's a joy to read.\nThe first book of this exciting series\u2014LIFE IN\nTHE FOREST-is now on sale. A new tide will\nbe offered each week until your first set of six\nbooks is complete. These fascinating books have\nproven so popular that additional titles are now\nbeing prepared, and will go on sale as Soon as\nthey become available.\nEACH\nVOLUME\nONLY\n99\nc\nSTART YOUR  SET TODAY ... AT\nEncyclopaedia\nBritannica\nTRUE\nTO-LllS\nBOOK)\nDistributed by\n-LAND PUIUSHINO LTD.\nSAFEWAY.\nEncyclopaedia Encyelopa-dla     I   Encyclbp_idle\nBritannica 3\u00a34&   Britannica K\u00bbSJ   Brltanrifca j:.'*\nCANADA     SA FEWAY     L\nseem to have concluded that,\nin the nuclear age, Western\nEurope has only one way to go.\nThat is to abandon national bias\nand work together.\nCHANG ECONCPET\nInstead of their negative attitudes toward each other, a\ngreat many Europeans have\nsubstituted a positive concept:\nUnite Europe, but preserve our\nnational cultures and differences.\nThis correspondent, on a tour\nof Western Europe, talked to\ngovernment leaders, social-\no g i s t s, industrialists, priests,\nfarmers, miners, students and\nthe inevitable man in the street.\nThey backed up completely\nthe conclusions of the limited\nnumber of public opinion polls\nwhich have been made on the\nsubject: Europeans want to forget and are forgetting the hates\nof the past.\nProfessor Bartholomeus Land-\nheer, an eminent Dutch sociologist and head of the Peace\nLibrary in The Hague, summed\nit up:\n\"What has happened is that\nWest European nations haven't\nany real power struggles among\nthemselves any more. The colonies are almost gone. There is\nnothing much to quarrel about.\nNow we see we have to work\ntogether.\"\nIt used to be said that th*\nAustrians hated the Czechs, the\nCzechs hated the Hungarians,\nthe French hated the Dutch, the\nYugoslavs hated the Greeks and\nso on\u2014but everybody hated the\nGermans. And the greatest disagreement was that between\nFrance and Germany.\n\"We have forged a marriage\nof reason,\" said a French historian. \"This does not mean\nthat we are falling over each\nother in love. But we have\njoined together to wipe out the\neternal menace of war on the\nRhine.\"\nAPPLAUD DE GAULLE\nFiance's General de Gaulle\nput it this way during a recent\nlour of Germany in which he\nwas cheered, applauded and\nwelcomed almost as a long-lost\nbrother:\n\"Time will go by and the\nwounds will be healed, but the\nwounds are deep and the healing time will be long.\"\nIf you tour Europe, you still\ncan hear traces of bitterness in\nmany places against the Germans:\n\"I can never forget what the\nGermans did to us Dutch,\" said\na Netherlands diplomat.\n\"And I cannot forget what\nthey did to my Jewish relatives,\" said a young Belgian\ngirl.\n\"Those Germans,\" said a\nFrench manufacturer, \"they\nstill live like they drive: Hard-\nheadedly and brutally. They\ntake the right of way, step on\nthe gas, and run over anybody\nin their way.\"\nOn the other hand, a French\nteacher said:\n\"In my class, Hitler is a dead\nissue. Only the British seem to\nwant to keep him alive. My\nstudents travel to Germany and\nfind their German companions\nfriendly and eager to know\nabout France. Neither group\nseems to fear they are going to\nhave to face each other across\nthe trenches again one day.\"\nJean Deloor, a 17-year-old son\nOf a Belgian miner, said: \"If\nthere is any resentment still, it\nis with the older generation, not\nwith us.\"\nThe great upsurge in travel\nand the international exchange\nof people and labor in Europe\nis helping to increase understanding.\nSaid a German factory manager:\n\"Since my boy went hitchhiking in France, he thinks\nFrench art, movies, plays and\nmanners are the only culture\nleft in Europe.\"\nYou can, in fact, hear some\nyoung student* say:\n\"We're Europeans first,\nFrench. German* or Dutch 6nly\nsecond.\"\nSeafarers Ordered To\nBare Financial Affairs\nBy ROBERT RICE\nOTTAWA (CP) - The Seafarers' International Union of\nCanada has been ordered to\nbare its financial affairs publicly before the federal investigation into labor strife on the\nGreat Lakes.\nIn a series of specific orders,\nMr. Justice T. G. Norris told\nthe SIU to file documents, reports and minutes to spell out\nthe union's internal financial\noperation.\nSome of the answers expected to be found in the documentation include details of\nsalaries, loans and expenses\npaid to union officials, loans to\nother unions, income from special assessments levied against\nSIU members, a breakdown of\nthe corporate structure of a\nholding company which owns\nall SIU buildings as well as the\nconstitutional authority for the\nexpenditures.\nMr. Justice Norris issued his\norders at the request of J. A.\nGeller, lawyer for Upper Lakes\nShipping Limited.\nCRITICIZES   ANSWERS\nMr. Geller made the requests\nafter criticizing vague or evasive answers from Leonard J.\nMcLaughlin, SIU e x e c u t ive\nvice-president who is facing\ncross - examination before the\nfederal inquiry. He is the first\nsenior SIU officer to undergo\nquestioning by opposing lawyers on the broad range of\nissues under investigation by\nMr. Justice Norris.\nSeveral times, the Vancouver\njurist cautioned Mr. McLaughlin against giving argumentative answers to questions. Finally, Mr. Justice Norris told\nthe witness that if he persisted\nin such replies, he would face\npunishment \u2014 a warning the\njudge did not explain.\nUnder cross - examination,\nMr. McLaughlin said the SIU's\nannual audited financial statement, showing the union's overall fiscal position in detail, was\nnot given to the members, although it was \"available\" to\nthem.\nHe said the SIU prepared a\nfinancial statement in simpler\nform to present at each semimonthly membership meeting.\nMr. Geller said the semimonthly financial report did\nnot give the details shown in\nthe annual statement. He suggested there were a \"lot. of\nthings\" in the annual report\nthat would be of interest to SIU\nmembers.\nMr. McLaughlin said it was\n\"problematical\" whether individual members were interested in or could understand\nthe detailed audited report.\nU.K. Big Investor\nIn U.S.; Canada\nTakes Second Place\nNEW YORK (AP)-Britain is\nthe biggest foreign investor in\nU.S. business, followed by Canada, The Netherlands and Swit-\nezrland, the National Industrial\nConference Board said Wednesday.\nThe board, a non-profit organization of businessmen, said\nBritish investors own $2,500.-\n000,000 of the $7,400,000,000 invested here by foreigner* at the\nbeginning of the year.\nBy way of comparison, It\nadded, U.S. direct investment\nabroad were $34,700,000,000 at\nthe beginning of this year.\nCanada was listed as having\n$2,000,000,000 In direct investments, The Netherlands $1,000,-\n000,000   and   Switzerland  $830,-\ncounted for all but 14 per cent\nof the total, the board said.\nEcumenical Council\nFinds Itself Spared\nOn Troublesome Task\nPuerto Rico\nTo Ask U.S.,\nFor Self Rule\nSAN JUAN, Puertb Rico (AP)\nThe Puerto Rican legislature\noverwhelmingly approved a\nresolution Wednesday asking\nthe U.S. Congress to allow\nPuert6 Rico maximum Self-rule\nwithin \"permanent and irrevbc-\nabie\"   tie*   with  the  united\nState*.\nThe House of representative*\nvoted 75-3 ind the Senate 30 tb\n1 for the resolution. It also pro-\nv I d e s for a plebiscite on\nwhether Puerto Ricans favor\nindependence, statehood or perfecting the present commonwealth status.\nGovernor Louis Munoz Marin,\nwho favors continued commonwealth standing, is expected to\ngo to Washington to promote\n| his plan.\nBy BENNET M. BOLTON\nVATICAN CTTY (AP) - The\nRoman Catholic ecumenical\ncouncil Thursday found itself\nspared for a while the potentially troublesome task of taking\na new look at papal infallibility.\nA thesis on modern communications and entertainment is to\nbe discussed when the council\nfathers return ta St. Peter's Basilica Friday after a day off.\nPope John gave word Wednesday that a thesis on divine revelation, on which the prelates\nhad been unable to agree for\nmore than a week, would be\nheld up while a special commission reworks it.\nThat meant a new topic would\nhave to be introduced. The one\non communications and entertainment was chosen.\nSome informants Said it was\nmoved ahead of a thesis entitled \"de ecclesia\" (of the\nchurch) because this theological\ntopic could have brought Into\nthe council hall even greater\ndiscard than the revelation\nthesis caused.\nSTATES BISHOPS' ROLE\nThe 28-chapter \"de ecclesia\"\nthesis is said to include an outline of how the world's Roman\nCatholic bishops share in the infallibility claimed for the Pope.\nThe Vatican council of 93\nyears ago declared as doctrine\nthat the Pope is without error\nwhen  defining,  as Pope, doctrine on faith or morals.\nThe next step would have\nbeen for the 1870 council to consider a decree that bishops, as\na collective body, share in the\nPope's freedom from error ln\ntwo ways\u2014through action in an\necumenical council and through\n\"ordinary infallibility\" in their\nnormal teaching role in the\nworld.\nBefore the 1870 council could\nmove' on to episcopal infallibility, however, Italian troops\nseized Rome, ending the papal\nstates, and the Franco-Prussian\nwar flared in Europe. The council was suspended, its work incomplete.\nThe thesis \"of the church\"\ndrafted for the current council\ntake* up matters left over from\nthe corresponding thesis of 93\nyears ago.\nHUNT GANG\nLIMA, Peru (Reuters)-The\nPeruvian Civil Guard today\nlaunched a major manhunt for\na bandit gang in the remote\nUrumburu Valley area following the murder of a Civil Guard\nand the wounding of another.\nGen. Humberto Quea, director-\ngeneral guard, said he was\nsearching for Hugo Blanco, said\nto be the bandit leader.\nLamb's\nNAVUROM\nHearty In body,\nyet light In flavour\nand aroma*\nalio\nLam.s\n\/almfiieetoe\nRUM\nVERY  LIGHT\nThis advertisement ta not published oi displayed by tne\nLiquor Control Board or by the Gov't of British Columbia.\n '.    -. \u25a0-\u25a0,',\u00bb -,    , .,\n5^1\nChicago Grabs Share of\nFirst, Habs Blank Wings\nBEHIND THE SCENE\u2014Something new in photographic\ncontortions comes up here\nas two Chicago lensmen\nshoot the bowling form of\nMrs. Shirley Garms who is\none of the top keglers in the\nAll-Star Bowling event now\non in Chicago.\nBy The Canadian Press\nMontreal Canadiens, with Jacques Plante back\nin top form and turning in an acrobatic goaltending job,\ndefeated the once-blazing Detroit Red Wings 3-0 Thursday night.\nThe Wings, who jumped into a commanding lead\nin the early part of the National Hockey League season\nby going their first 10 games without defeat, now have\nlost four of their last seven and three of their last four.\nThey also now share first place with the Black\nHawks who defeated Toronto Maple Leafs 1-0 in a game\nat Chicago.\nIn another g-une Thursday\nnight in which all the teams\nsaw action, . arl Ingarfield and\nAndy Bathgate were the bog\nguns as New York Rangers riddled the collapsing Bruins 7-1\nat Boston.\nGETS FIRST SHUTOUT\nPlante, who missed 11 games\nthis season with a variety of\nailments, recorded his first\nshutout of the season in the\ngame at Detroit.\nPhil Goyette broke a scoreless duel late in the second pe-\nStamps Won't Play\nIf Crowd to Noisy\nWINNIPEG (CP) - Calgary\nStampeders lied the unfriendly\nturf of Winnipeg Stadium Thursday to work out in secrecy for\nthe deciding game of the best-\nof-three Western Football Conference final.\nBut the Stampeders, who\ndropped a 19-11 decision to the\ndefending champion Winnipeg\nBlue Bombers here Wednesday\nnight, may have outsmarted\nthemselves in their choice of\npractice fields.\nA   workout   in   the   stadium\nnoise drowning out the signals\nof quarterback Eagle Day. It\nappeared that this seriously\nhampered Day only once Wednesday night.\nHowever, Dobbs said his club\nwill halt the Saturday game at\nthe first sign of an outburst of\ncrowd noise during signal calling.\n\"They should give each quarterback equal opportunity. It's\nvery distracting for the boys\nplaying in a series like this.\"\nEarly in the Wednesday game,\nthe Stampeders were going on\nwould have taken place under    \u2014\"SV snaking the\nthe   of lice   windows   ot   Blue '\u25a0     < ..\nBombers coach Bud Grant, but\nthe inside story was that the\nsweat-suited Stampeders moved\nto the prosperous suburb of\nTuxedo for their drill. That's\nwhere Grant lives.\nBomber manager Jim Ausley\nreported that the Stampeders,\nroughly handled in the second\ngame after winning the first in\nCalgary last Saturday 20-14,\ndressed at the stadium and left\nas far as he knew, for parts\nunknown.\nCalgary coach Bobby Dobbs\nhad no further comment Thursday on the question of crowd\nStrikes and Spares\nResults of Friday bowling:\nMatinee \"C\" League\nHotshots 2, Optimists 0; Hopefuls 2, Teasers 5; Wheels 5,\nRidge Rebels 2. High single and\naggregate, Fern Porteous of\nTeasers, 231 and 603. Team high\nsingle. Hopefuls, 7(15. Team high\naggregate, Teasers, 2242.\nMixed Commercial League\nPosties 3, Inlanders 1; UIC 3,\nForestry 1; KFP 1, Palm Dairies\n3: Travellers 4, Dietrich-Collins\n0; Queens 1, Tip Top 3; Mel\nBuerge 0, Hillside 4; Savoy 3V_,\nB of M 'A; Court Jesters 2,\nEatons 2; Hume 1, Strikes and\nSpares 3. Ladies' high single and\naggregate, Kay Hays of Travellers, 328 and 745. Men's high single and aggregate, Pete Fahlman\nnf Strikes and Spares, 316 and\nB59. Team high single and aggregate. Strikes and Spares, 1251\nand 3569. Other high scores: Ray\nBrocheau, 734; Babs Robertson.\n734; Tom Marshal, 728; Van Linden, 725; Lena and Fred Koehle.\n718; Doug Petterson, 717; Paul\nBjornson, 711; Jim Riley, 709;\nDot Waterer, 708; Betty Stewart, 706; Bob MacDonald, 703;\nDoreen Fahlman, 310.\nball as soon as they got to the\nline of scrimmage.\n\"We had hoped this would\nshut them up but it didn't,\" he\nsaid. \"Saturday afternoon we'll\njust keep walking away from\nthe ball until they stop.\"\nLocal Curling\n(lub Adopts\nNew Name\nThe Nelson Women's Curling\nClub has changed its name.\nIt was decided by members\nattending the first general meeting held Wednesday to change\nthe name of the club to Nelson\nLadies' Curling Club.\nGeneral business and reports\nfrom various committees were\nattended to quickly so the club\ncould start plans for the Kootenay Women's Bonspiel which is\nto be held in Nelson early in the\nnew year. Planning for the bonspiel will continue at the club's\nnext meeting scheduled for December 5.\nRefreshments were served by\nhostess Mrs. T. Allen. She was\nassisted by Mrs. Cramb and Mrs.\nE. Chambers.\nRussian Game to\nBe Televised\nTORONTO (CP) - The hockey game tonight between the\ntouring Russian team and the\nMetro Toronto-B.C. all-stars will\nbe broadcast over the CBC television network Saturday starting\nat 4 p.m. (EST), a CBC spokesman said Thursday,\nThe Toronto team is made up\nof Metro Junior A players and\nseveral players from the University of British Columbia.\nriod, blasting a close-in shot\npast Terry Sawchuk. Bernie\nGeoffrion and Dickie Moore\nadded goals within a three-minutes span of the third period.\nPlante, repulsing Detroit on\nseveral breakaways stopped 24\nshots.\nThe game was close-checking\nthroughout, with the largest\nOlympia crowd of the season,\n14,983 Thanksgiving night fans,\ngiving it the ho-hum treatment.\nAt Chicago, a total of 25 penalties\u2014six of them five-minute\nmajors for fighting\u2014highlighted\nthe action-filled battle.\nDefenceman Pierre Pilote's\npower-play goal midway in the\nsecond period was all the\nHawks needed. Playing his first\ngame after an absence of eight\ngames because of a broken\nbone in his left foot, Pilote\npicked up his own rebound in\nfront of goalie Don Simmons\nand drove the puck behind him.\nToronto's Tim Horton was in\nthe penalty box at the time.\nMAKE 27 SAVES\nChicago goalie Glenn Hall\nmade 27 saves in recording his\nsecond shutout of the season.\nSimmons in the Toronto goal\nwas credited with the same\nnumber.\nThe victory was the first for\nChicago over Toronto in four\ngames this season.\nThe biggest battle of the night\nbroke out only moments before\nthe final horn sounded. Involved\nwere Chicago's Murray Balfour\nand Ed Shack of Toronto, and\nthe Leafs' Horton and Reg\nFleming of the Hawks.\nAll four were given majors\nand Allan Stanley of Toronto\nand Elmer Vasko of Chicago\ndrew minor roughing raps.\nAt Boston, Rangers goal-\ntender Gump Worsley saw his\nbid for a shutout spoiled when\nDon McKenney scored less\nthan two minutes from the finish.\nSCORES TWICE\nIngarfield scored his seventh\nand eighth goals of the season.\nHe also screened Boston goalie\nEd Johnston on a 55-foot score\nby Larry Cahan, the first of the\ndefenceman's pair.\nBathgate got free on a breakaway when the Bruins were\npressing the attack late in the\nsecond period and added a pair\nof assists. Dave Balon and Jim\nNeilson also scored for the winners.\nThe last-place Bruins, winless\nin 15 straight games, looked\nprogressively worse after a\nrough and tumble first period.\nThe Bruins went more than\nhalf of the middle session before mustering a shot on goal.\nIt was Boston's second loss to\nNew York in as many nights\nsince Milt Schmidt took the\ncoaching reins from Phil Watson.\nNHL Standings\nNATIONAL\nLEAGUE\nW L T F  A Pt\nDetroit\n10 4 3 46 33 23\nChicago\n9 5 5 51 44 23\nToronto\n9 8 1 52 51 19\nMontreal\n7 6 4 50 46 18\nNew York\n7 10 2 60 63 16\nBoston\n1 10 5 41 63   7\nRE-CAPS\nWE'RE PREPARED - ARE YOU ?\nALL SIZES and PRICES\n95\nWE   WILL   MOUNT   YOUR\nWINTER   TIRES.\nBURGESS TIRE \u25a0-\nRETREADING LTD. none 352.6331\n600 Block Front St. (Opp. Locker Plant) Nelson, B. C.\nM\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIUM\nJerome Takes\nFirst Heat\nPERTH, Australia (Reuters)\u2014Canada's Harry Jerome\nThursday won the firs, heat of\nthe British Empire Games \u2014\nwhen he beat Scottish sprinter AUstair Mcllroy by one\nyard in the men's 100-yard\ndash. Jerome ran the distance\nin 9.4 seconds, equalling the\nGames' record.\nIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nDetroit Hands\nPackers First\nLoss of Season\nDETROIT (AP) \u2014 Detroit\nLions, with Milt Plum passing\nto Gail Cogdill for two touchdowns, handed the Green Bay\nPackers their first National\nFootball League loss Thursday,\n26-14. Detroit moved to within\none game of Green Bay in the\nWestern  Division standings.\nThe game kept a capacity\ncrowd of 57,598 in a constant\nuproar. Touchdown passes of 33\nand 27 yards from Plum to Cog-\ndill started the Packers down\nto their first defeat in II games\nthis season.\nThe Lions, who lost their first\ngame to Green Bay 9-7 on a\nlast-minute field goal, turned\nthe rematch into a rout early\nin the second quarter. They\nscored two touchdowns 21 seconds apart and ruined the Packers' chances of becoming the\nfirst team in 20 years to go\nthrough an NFL schedule with\na perfect record.\nSki Slants\nBy  SITZMARK\nSkiers, mountain climbers, outdoors men, or anyone interested\nis invited to the Rotary Ski\nLodge Friday evening to see two\ntree lilms.\nFranz Haas, Lake Louise Ski\nSchool director, will be showing\nthe films. One is devoted entirely\nto skiing around the Lake Louise\narea, the other, taken in the\nCanadian Rockies, is a mixture\nof skiing, mountain climbing\nand the scenic beauty of the\nmountains.\nAlthough some ski club members have to work late Friday,\nthis is the only time Franz can\nshow the pictures. Those who\ncan make it should.\nRemember, the showing is free\nand everyone is welcome.\nDoctor Refuses to Bow, Sets\nOff Games' First Rhubarb\n. WITH  STANE\nAND BESOM\nResults of games played in\nthe Nelson Curling Olub Thursday night:\nC. Cathcart 8, L. Maglio 10\nH. Farenholtz 8, R. Commons\n4.\nE. Nelson 2, F. Koehle 8.\nR. Bruce 10, E. Mason 8.\nM. Buerge 10, F. Carmichael\n6.\nA. Waters 12, W. Duckworth 9\nAt 9 tonight, G. Barefoot, winner of section D meets F. Koehle\nwinner of section F and R.\nBoates, winner of section C\nmeets A. Waters, winner of sec\ntion A.\nBy JACK SULLIVAN\nCanadian  Press  Staff Writer\nPERTH, Australia (CP) - A\nSouth African doctor refused to\nbow to Ghana's demands that\nhe quit as a boxing judge and\nringside physician and set off\nthe first rhubarb of the seventh\nBritish Empire Games, formally opened Thursday by Prince\nPhilip before 50,000 people.\n\"I've never been so insulted\nin 35 years of my association\nwith amateur sport,\" Dr. Nat\nHershmann told reporters after\nOhene Djan, Ghana's sports director, threatened to pull out\nhis boxing team if Hershmann\nofficiates.\nDjan warned that if the South\nAfrican is named an official in\nthis m o r n i n g's nominations,\nGhana will immediately enter\nan official protest.\n\"And if Hershmann is nominated to officiate over any\nGhanaian boxer I'll withdraw\nthe entire boxing team immediately,\" he said.\nSouth Africa, which left the\nCommonwealth last year after\ncondemnation by other Commonwealth leaders of its policy\nof apartheid (racial separation),\nis not taking part in the games\nin this western Australian seaport of 500,000.\nACTION STARTS TODAY\nThe competition gets into full\nswing today when Harry\nJerome of Vancouver, regarded\nas the fastest human, and his\nchallengers for sprint honors\ntake to the track in the new\n$2,240,000 Perry Lakes Stadium.\nJerome, the first man In history to share both the world\n100-yard and 100-metre records,\nruns in the first of nine heats\nin the 100-yard dash.\nThe 22-year-old son of a railway porter was bedded down\nwith a touch of laryngitis Thursday. He was excused from taking part in opening ceremonies\nalong with diver Tom Dinsley\nof Vancouver, sidelined with an\ningrown toenail. Jerome said\nlater he was feeling much better.\nThe track preliminaries share\nthe first-day competitive spotlight with seven swimming\nevents including two finals,\nfirst-round bouts in boxing and\nsome fencing and bowls.\nThe track and field events,\nfeature attraction of the games,\ndoes not hit its real stride until\nSaturday when the finals will\nbe held in the 100-yard .dash, the\nsix-mile run, javelin and high\njuirip for men and shot put for\nwomen.\nPARADE  COLORFUL\nIn the magnificent opening\nceremonies, 965 c o m p et i tors\nplus officials from 35 nations\nmarch in brilliant array.\nPhilip, dapper in a grey suit,\nformally opened the games\nafter reading a message from\nthe Queen in which she referred\nto \"Intense though friendly rivalry\" and said that \"no quarter\nwill be asked or given.\"\nPhilip declared the games\nformally opened at exactly 4:07\np.m. Perth time.\nFive minutes later, 2,000 pigeons were released from the\nbright green turf inside the stadium. For a minute they flew\nin bewildered flocks around the\nstands, then made off into\nPerth's cloudless blue sky.\nThe final ritual of the two-\nhour and 10-minute opening\ncame when fencer Ivan Lund\nof Australia, competing in his\nfourth Empire Games, took the\noath on behalf of all competitors\nto abide by the rules of the\ngames \"in the spirit of true\nsportsmanship.\"\nWALES LEADS\nWales, host of the 1958 games\nat Cardiff, led off the 20-minute\nparade of athletes and officials\non the red clay track where\nEmpire and possibly world\ntrack and field records are expected to be broken during the\nnine days of competition. The\nGames end Dec. 1.\nHost country Australia, with\nthe biggest national contingent\n\u2014247\u2014finished the parade.\nCanada's team of 72 athletes\n\u2014minus Jerome and Dinsley\u2014\nwas led by flag-bearer Gordon\nDickson, a marathon runner\nfrom Hamilton, Ont.\nThe Canadian women wore\nupturned white summer felt\nhats with a red ribbon-band and\nbow, white sleeveless dresses,\nwhite - trimmed mountie - red\nblazers, white tailored gloves,\nwhite shoulder-strap purses and\nwhite kid pumps.\nThe men wore straw hats with\nblue and white striped bands,\nblue and white striped ties,\nblazers similar to the women's\nteam, cream flannel trousers\nand black shoes.\nSTANDS NEARLY FULL\nThere was hardly a spare\nseat in the 50,000-seat stadium\nwhen Philip arrived in an open\ncar and was greeted by the\nvast crowd. Strains of the national anthem were drowned\nout by the roar of three RAF\nVulcan bombers and nine RAAF\nSabre jets as they zoomed low\nover the stadium.\nA 2I-gun salute was fired for\nPhilip and when the pigeons\nwere released the guns sounded\nseven more times\u2014once for\neach of the seven Empire\nGames to date.\nThe temperature had reached\na sizzling 92.7 in the shade\nabout an hour before the opening ceremonies, but cooling afternoon breezes brought some\nrelief.\nSmall bush fires broke out a\nfew hundred yards from the\nstadium, which is located in the\nPerth suburbs near the Indian\nOcean. Many Australians went\npicnicking under the gum trees\nin the shadows of the Stadium\nas a holiday atmosphere prevailed.\nFarenholtz in\nLineup as 'Birds\nDrop Exhibition\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Lethbridge Nationals scored a last-\nminute basket to edge the University of British Columbia\nThunderbirds 54-53 Thursday in\nexhibition basketball here.\nLethbridge guard Harry Blacker scored the winning field goal\non a short jump shot with only\n38 seconds remaining. The Nationals led 13-11 at quarter time,\n27-24 at the half, but late in the\ngame UBC took a 47-42 lead on\nthree quick baskets.\nWith a minute to go, the\nThunderbirds still held a 53-52\nlead but their stalling tactics\nbackfired when John Cook lost\ncontrol of the ball.\nLethbridge called a time out\nthen set up Blacker's winning\nplay. Blacker led the Nationals\nin scoring with 12 points, all of\nthem in the second half.\nThe top man for UBC was\nforward Mike Potkonjak with 17.\nLineups:\nLethbridge (54): Diron (7)\nStephens (7), Way (4), McDonald (2), Tait (2), Galanchuk\nWest (2), Fester (4), Inglis (4),\n(4), Blacker (12), Lilja (4),\nLarsen (2).\nVancouver (53): Hartley (8),\nPotkonjak (17), Cook (7), Bet.\ncher (10), McDonald (8),.Brous-\nson (D, Predlnchuk (2), tusk1,\nMcKay, Vickery, Erickson, and\nFarenholtz.\nKEYS CUT\nLOCKS\nREPAIRED\nCombinations Changed\n\u2022 House Locks\n\u2022 Padlocks\n\u2022 Suitcase and Trunk Locks\n\u2022 Hinges \u2014 Hasps\nEDEY'S\nLOCK & CYCLE\n737 Baker St.\nPhone 352-3245\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, NOV. 23, 196? \u2014 7\nEVEN USE SHIPS\nThe Games, which took four|\nyears of preparation at a total j\ncost of $10,000,000 attracted\nthousands of visitors from overseas and Australia. Hotels, new\nmotels and private homes were\nfilled and ships berthed in\nnearby Fremantle Harbor were\nused as floating hotels.\nBefore the opening, the Canadian team received a cable of\nbest wishes from Prime Minister Diefenbaker.\nThe number of countries taking part is the same as at the\n1958 games. In addition to\nSouth Africa, India was the\nother big country not entered.\nIndia dropped out because of its\nborder war with Communist\nChina. Nigeria, Brunei and\nGambia also did not send\nteams.\n.\nTHEIR FUTURE LOOKS BRAVE-Louis R. Perinl (center) announces the sale of the Milwaukee Baseball Braves to a\ngroup of Chicago businessmen, at a news conference in\nMilwaukee. Purchasers are (from left) Daniel Searle, John\nJ Louis Jr., James McCahey Jr., Thomas Reynolds Jr., Wil-\nl.am Bartholumay and Delbert Coleman (hidden by John\nMcHale. president of Braves).  Sale price was ?5.5 million.\ncomes winter...\n!TANFX8LD*BJ\nStanfield's Limited\nTruro, Nova Scotia\nmt ii brand of\nWhether it's Rye, Scotch, Rum or Gin,\nserve a brand of known fine quality.\nKeep this advertisement\nas a reference during\nthe Holiday season.\nThis advertisement it not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia,\n, \u2022',\u2022 ii \u25a0 ii    \u25a0' \u25a0\u2022 ' --    \u25a0\u25a0-     -\u2022\u25a0 -\u25a0\u2022' '\u25a0 \u2022    :'\ni;v,ri\u00abl__\u00ab-_v_-i-\/   \u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0 ..::,.\n  _      ' -   '   \u2022 \u25a0 \u25a0 :\u25a0\u25a0:-\u25a0  \u25a0\n8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, NOV. 23, 1962\nS   HOW FA6T WAS THE   \\\nSER5EANT SONS WHEN    )\nHE BAC^EP INTO you, y\nV    GENERAL?       _>_.    !\n\\. -s^ (*M\nmm, Mim\nasi_?r -AMt.ICy'J&.i?\/ws3 \\\nJ\u00a3m\n\u00a5uhv\nill\nMARKET TRENDSCLASSIFIED\nMONTREAL (CP> \u2014 Banks    TORONTO   (CP)\u2014The  stock ume was 1,808,000 shares corn-\nfeatured strongly on the Montreal and Canadian exchanges\nThursday. Other stocks also advanced in active trade.\nRising a point each were Bank\nof Montreal at 64% and Toronto-\nDominion at 65%, while Nova\nScotia rose 1% to 72%.\nOther gainers: International\nNickel 1% to 63%, Power Corp.\none point to 72y_, Bailey Selburn Vt to 10%, Hudson Bay\nCompany % to 11%.\nAmong primary metals, Aluminium rose Vt to 23 and Stelco\nthe same amount to 18.\nIn papers, Consolidated rose\n% to 39, Macmillan Vt to 18%\nand Price % to 35V4.\nIn mines, Copperstream fell\ntwo cents to 20 cents and Mount\nPleasant one cent to $1.74.\nThe indices were up. Industrials rose 1.3 to 114.8, utilities\n0.4 to 106.6, banks 1.5 to 124.9,\nthe composite 1.1 to 114.3 and\npapers 0.8 to 97.0.\nmarket bounced higher again\nThursday, although trading volume dried to a dribble with\nUnited States markets closed\nfor the Thanksgiving holiday.\nGains to key industrial issues\npushed their index up more\nthan four points.\nBanks continued their recent\nupward run, with Toronto-Dominion climbing a point, Nova\nScotia %, Montreal %, Royal Vi\nand Canadian Imperial Bank of\nCommerce %.\nOther gainers included Consolidated Paper, Canada Cement and Canadian Celanese,\nall ahead one point, Interpro-\nvincial Pipe Line, up iy<i, Industrial Acceptance, ahead Hi\nand Investors Syndicate A,\nahead two points.\nOn the exchange index, industrials rose 4.04 to 569.04 and\nbase metals 186.87. Golds\ndipped .09 to 88.08 and western\noils .55 to 119.08.  Closing vol-\nON THE AIR\nPACIFIC STANDARD TIME\nCKLN  PROGRAMS 1390  ON THE  DIAL\nTHURSDAY, NOVEMBER 22,  1962\n58\u2014Sign On\n00\u2014The Morning Show\n40\u2014Farm Fare\n45-Chapel In The Sky\n: 00\u2014News\n05-Wake Up Time\n25-Sports News\n30\u2014News\n35\u2014Wake Up Time Continues\n45\u2014Salvation Army Program\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n8:15\u2014Wake Up Time Continues\n8:30\u2014Preview Commentary\n8:35\u2014Max Ferguson Show\n9:00\u2014News\n9:10\u2014Opening Markets\n9:15\u2014The Archer's\n9:30\u2014Alan's A.M. Spot\n9:59-D.O.O.T.S.\n10:00\u2014News\n10:05\u2014Kitchen Klatter Contest\n10:10\u2014Report From Parliament\nHill\n10:15\u2014Critically Speaking\n10:45\u2014Morning Melodies\n11:00\u2014News\n11:05\u2014Cavalcade\n11:30\u2014Morning Melodies\n11:45\u2014Win, Place and Show\n12:00\u2014Let's Sing Along\n12:15\u2014Sports News\n12:25\u2014News\n12:30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Noon Markets\n1:00\u2014John Drainie\n1:15\u2014Tommy Hunter Show\n1:45\u2014Playroom\n2:00\u2014National Schools\nBroadcast\n2:30\u2014News\n2:33\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n3:00\u2014News\n3:10\u2014Closing Markets\n3:15\u2014Sacred Heart Program\n3:30\u2014Cornucopia\n4:00\u2014News\n4:03\u2014Canadian Roundup\n4:10\u20141 Love Paris\n4:30\u2014Countdown\n5:00\u2014Spotlight B.C.\n5:30-The Little Show\n5:40\u2014On Parliament Hill\n5:45-Byline\n5:50\u2014News\n6:00\u2014Cavalcade\n6:30\u2014Silent Friends\n6:45\u2014Radio Sweden\n7:00\u2014News and Roundup\n7:20\u2014Speaking Personally\n7:30\u2014Assignment\n8:00\u2014Radio International\n8:30\u2014Winnipeg Pops Concert\n9:00\u2014Provincial Affairs\n9:15\u2014Agenda\n9:30-CBC Jazz Club\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15-Chapel In The Sky\n10:30\u2014Late Night Theatre\n11:00\u2014Friday Frolic\n11:30\u2014News\n11:31\u2014Friday Frolic Continuss\nll:57-News\n12:00\u2014Sign Off\nCBC PROGRAMS\nPACIFIC DAYLIGHT TIME\nFRIDAY, NOVEMBER 23,  1962\n00\u2014Bert Nelson\n: 00\u2014News and Report\n: 15\u2014Matinee Highlights\n: 45\u2014Piano Music\n:59-D.O.O.T.S.\n: 00\u2014Resume\n:30\u2014Sports College\n45\u2014Camera Club\n: 00\u2014Saturday Date\n:00\u2014Church News\n: 15\u2014Soccer Scores\n:20\u201465 and Up\n00\u2014Opera Time\n30\u2014Classical Records\nIn Review\n:00\u2014Popular Records\nIn Review\n3:30\u2014Jazz For Moderns\n4:00\u2014Scope\n4:30\u2014Time For French\n4:45\u2014Chansonettes\n5:00\u2014Memory Music Hall\n5:25\u2014News\n5:30\u2014N.H.L. Hockey\n7:30-On The Move\n8:00\u2014Pratley at the Movies\n8:30\u2014Concert \u2014 Gilbert\nand Sullivan\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Look Through the Papers\n10:30-Chicho's Place\nll:00-Dance With Dal\n11:30\u2014A Star Remembers\n12:00\u2014News\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\nPACIFIC STANDARD TIME\nKREM-TV -\n- Channel 2\n7:00 Everglades\n7:30 Gallant Men *\n8:30 The Flintstones *\n9:00 I'm Dickens, He's Fenster\n9:30 77 Sunset Strip \u2022\n10:30 Outdoor Sportsman\n11:00 Nightbeat\n11:30 Movie\nKXLY-TV -\nChannel 4\n7:00 Ripcord\n7:30 Rawhide *\n8:30 Route 66 *\n9:30 Fair Exchange *\n10:30 Eyewitness *\n11:00 11 o'Clock News\n11:30 Tonite Show \u2022\nKHQ-TV -\nChannel 6\n7:00 Bold Journey\n7:30 International Showtime *\n8:30 Sing Along With Mitch *\n9:30 Don't Call Me Charlie \u2022\n10:00 Jack Paar (C) *\n11:00 News and Weather\n11:30 Late Movie:\n\"Northwest Mounted\nPolice\"\nCBC-TV \u2014 Nelson, Channel 9: Trail, Channel 11\nfouAkAlf D#.\nROBERTSON - MILLIARD -.CATTELL REALTY CO. LTD.\n456 Ward St. Nelson Phone 352-7252 for Information\n\"INSURANCE FOR EVERY PERSONAL\nAND BUSINESS NEED\"\nPACIFIC STANDARD TIME\n2:00 Chez Helene\n2:15 Nursery School Time\n2:30 Misterogers\n2:45 Friendly Giant\n3:00 Loretta Young Show\n3:30 Take Thirty\n4:00 Scarlett Hill\n4:30 News\n4:45 Davey and Goliath\n5:00 Razzle Dazzle\n5:30 Friday Island\n6:00 Bazaar\n7:00 7 o'Clock Show\n7:30 Reach for the Top\n8:00 Country Hoedown\n8:30 True\n9:00 Tommy Ambrose\n9:30 Empire\n10:30 Showcase\n11:00 News\n11:15 Viewpoint\nCJLH-TV - Channel 7, Lethbridge\nMOUNTAIN STANDARD TIME\nSATURDAY\n1:45 Test Pattern \u25a0\n2:00 World of Sport:\n\"Physical Fitness\"\n3:00 World of Sport:\n\"Sail-Boating\"\n4:00 Bowling\n5:00 Kingfishers Cove\n5:30 Bugs Bunny\n6:00 Country Time\n6:30 Biography\n7:00 NHL Hockey:\n\"Boston at Montreal\"\n8:15 Juliette\n8:45 Film\n9:00 Beverly Hillbillies\n9:30 On Stage:\n\"The Last Mile\"\n11:00 C3C News\n11:10 North'Lethbridge Presents\n\"To Have and To Hold\"\n(Programs subject to change by stations without notice.)\npared with 2,107,000 yesterday.\nInternational Nickel paced\nbase metals with a gain of IVi.\nFalconbridge and Noranda both\nadvanced Vi, while Consolidated\nMining and Smelting dipped %.\nIn a quiet western oils list,\nHome B and Pacific Petroleum\nboth fell %. Speculative action\nslowed to a near standstill.\nVancouver Stocks\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nBeth Cop 2.06\nBralorne 6.25\nCanam .10\nCanusa .07\nCariboo Gold .95\nCowichan Cop .48\nCraig 18.6214\nGiant Mascot .85\nGranduc 2.95\nHighland Bell 2.30\nKamloops .0614\nKoot. p M .26\nMt. Washington 1.07\nNational Ex .05V4\nPend Oreille 1.65\nQuatsino .S9V4\nReeves MacDonald 1.30\nSheep Creek 1.21\nSherritt Gordon 2.70\nSilbak Premier .33\nSilver Ridge .03\nSilver Standard .19\nSkeena .07\nSunshine Lardeau .09\nTorwest .13\nWestern Exploration .11\nWestern Mines 2.21\nOILS\nCharter 1.16\nHome 11.50\nPacific Pete 13.62V_\nPeace River Gas .09\nRoyal Can .07\nVantor .17\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlberta Distillers 2.10\nAlberta Distillers Vt 1.80\nB C Forests 11.75\nB C Power 17.62V4\nB C Telephone 49.50\nBurrard Mort 6.00\nCanadian Collieries 6.1214\nCrestbrook 5.75\nCrestbrook Pfd. 1.20\nCrown Zeller (Can) 20.50\nInt Brew B 5.50\nInland Nat Gas 4.80\nMacM 8t Powell River    18.62'\/.\nTrans Mtn 15.00\nWestminster Paper 34.00\nUNLISTED\nAlta Gas Trunk 28.00\nTrans Canada Com 21.00\nTrans Mountain Unit 14.00\nWest Coast Vt 14.3714\nFUNDS\nAH Can. Com. 8.38    9.18\nAll Can. Div. 5.96    6.53\nAmer.  Grotwh 7.65    8.34\nCan. Inv. Fund 9.80   10.75\nCommonwealth Int. 8.41    9.22\nDiversified B 3.95    4.35\nFirst Oil and Gas 4.66    5.09\nGrouped Income 3.36    3.67\nInvestors Growth 6.39    6.95\nInvestors Mutual      11.97   13.02\nLeverage 7.03    7.70\nMutual Accum. 3.45    3.77\nMutual Bond 7.17    7.51\nMutual Inc. 5.02    5.49\nTrans Canada \"C\" 5.75    6.25\nUnited Ace. Funds 5.62    6.14\nPROVIDENCE, R.I. (API-\nJack L. Lee, 58, a pianist, who\nonce played with the orchestras\nof Paul Whiteman, Meyer\nDavis, and Bobby Hackett, died\nWednesday at his home here.\nBIRTHS\nBOTHAMLEY - To Mr. and\nMrs. John. Bothamley of Riondel\nat Kootenay Lake General Hospital, Nov. 22, a son.\nHELP WANTED\nATTRACTIVE POSITION . . .\nMAN OR WOMAN As management trainee to present\nWorld Book's Complete Educational Plan to interested\nleads and referrals. No usual\ncanvassing, no delivering, no\nperiodic collecting, and no investment. See our display ad\nin the issue of Saturday, November 24, page 7. Compensation includes bonuses and overwrites in addition to personal\nearnings for those who qualify.\nCompany benefits include profit-sharing, insurance, family\nsurgical benefits. $3,000,000\nadvertising promotion campaign this year to pre-sell\nprospects. Part-time or full-\ntime for beginners, no charge\nfor training program. Opportunity unlimited [or manager-\nqualified man or woman.\nWrite for interview to Mr. K.\nM. Pattison, Box 182, Nelson,\nB.C. Give age, education, experience and phone number.\nPROFITABLE HOBBY.\nMake beautiful Brooches, Earrings, Necklaces at home.\nEasy to do. Sell to your\nfriends. Excellent profits.\nLearn more about Jewel-Craft.\nWrite: L. G. Murgatroyd Co.,\nDept. D-75, Agincourt, Ontario.\nCUSTOMER SERVICE - ONE\nman required. Pleasant, profitable business of your own.\nComplete training given. Excellent opportunity. Car necessary. For personal interview\nwrite or wire Box 4015, Station\nD, Vancouver.\nAUTOMOTIVE, BICYCLES\nMOTORCYCLES\n1958 METEOR RIDEAU, 2 DR.\nhardtop automatic, power\nbrakes, radio, clock, back up\nlights and overload springs.\nReasonable, must be sold.\nPhone 365-5022.\n1954 DODGE 14-TON, GOOD\nshape, $400. Phone 357-9531\nSaturdays and 357-9434 evenings. W. A. Taylor.\n'62 IMPALA 2-DOOR HARDTOP\nV-8. All power equipped. Extras galore. Ph. 365-5368 Castlegar.\n1958 CHEV. % TON, A-l COND.\n7 tires and rims. Box 2655\nNelson Daily News.\n'51 MERCURY 'A TON TRUCK\n$150, also Doucard (bass violin). 365-8137.\n'54 PLYMOUTH SAVOY 2 DR.\nIn good shape, $385. Ph. 365-\n4698, 113 9th Ave. Kinnaird.\n'50 CHEV. $175. CALL AT 240\nHigh St. or ph. 352-2456 after\n4 p.m.\nLOOKING   FOR   A   TRUCK?\nPhone 352-2563.\n1958 RENAULT, 2 1950 CHEVS.,\n1956 Chev., 1960 Triumph Station Wagon. North Shore Service. Phone 352-2929.\nDAILY   CROSSWORD\nACROSS\nl.Food: si.\n5. Recommendation:\nsi.\n9. Santiago\nis the\ncapital\n10. One of tha\nHawaiian,\nIslands\n12. Guides\ncame to\npass\"\n14. Land\nmeasure\n15. Price tags\n17. Portion\n20. Coral reef\n21. Captain of\na small ship\n23. Fairy\nQueen of\ndreams\n26. Ghostlike\n27. Play\n29. Scotch\nriver\n30. Small\nbouquet\n32. Greek letter\nS3. Yugoslavian premier\n34. Certain\ntype sale\n38. Half an em\n39. Lengthwise\n40. Commenced :\npast part.\n43. Rare art\nobject\n44. Exclaim\nloudly\n45. Observed\n46. Drinks in\nsmall\namounts\nDOWN\n1. Southwestern\nIndian\n2. Hawk\nparrot\n3. Aged\n4. Rebecca\n , Eng.\nnovelist\n5. Posters\n6. Tall and\nlean\n7. Wavy;\nHer.\n8. Way of\nwalking\n9. Grouped\n11.It is (contracted)\n16. Frozen\nwater\n18. Muck\n19. Apex\nflnial\n22. Five-\nsided\nfigure\n23. Three\nWise\nMen\n24. They\nappear\nwith\nTed\nMack\n25. North\nNew\nJersey city\n28. Soak flax\n31. Cereal\nc\nA.\n0\nI\n\"ZHG\nL\nA.\n5\nS\nA\nR\nE\nT\neIe\nft\n6\nL\nB\nT\nC\na,\nw\nP\nE\ndIt\nR\no\nO\nP\nE\nM\n=\nA.\nD\nli\n1\nN\n1\n\u00b0\n1\nT\nS\nM\nA,\nD\n_\n\u25a0\u25a0*\nf\\\n1\nA\nA\n1\nD\nE\nA,\nL\n1\n3\nft.\nR\n&\nE\nU\nF\nD\n1\no\n3\nL\n1\nG\n=\nS\nSI\no\nT\no\ns\n|\nS\n5\nA\ns\nA\nF\nr\no\nN\nr\nA\nR\n.\u25a0ft.\nr\nT\nF\n2\n1\nE\nsis\nr\nA\nV\nE\n9,\n*\nft.\nS\n^\u25a0p\n0\nL_\n_\nD\nYesterday'! Answer\n34. Coast\nArtillery\nCorps:\nabbr.\n35. Eskimo\nknives\n36. Ripped\ngrass grain   37. Subsides\n32. TV's       41. High priest\nFord 42. Chasm\n%\n1\n3\n4-\n%\n5\nb\n1\n8\n%\n9\nfy\n10\nll\nil\n%\n13\n14-\n'ft\n15\nIb\nn\n18\n19\n%\n20\n%\n%\n%\n21\n3.2.\n^A\n35\n14\n?5\n26\n%\n27\n28\n!<.\nfA\n3o\n3.1\n%\n^A\n%\n32-\n%\n33\n34\n35,\n-b\n37\n%\nVA\n38\n39\nf\n4t>\n4-1\n41\n43\n1\n44\nV4i\n4S\"\n%\n4fo\n%\n11-23\nDAILY CUYPTOQUOTE \u2014 Here's how to work It:\nAXYDLBAAXR\nIs LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is used\nfor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apos-\ntrophies, the length and formation of the words are all hints.\nEach day the code letters are different.\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nPASSAU       H      VWSSR      YEEN      SKHZ\nH       YEENWMK       V W S . \u2014 M K H Q A M I A H U A\nYesterday's   Cryptoquote:   IT IS  ONLY IMPERFECTION\nTHAT COMPLAINS OF WHAT IS IMPERFECT.\u2014FENELON\n\u00a9 1862, King Features Syndicate, Inc.\nAUTOMOTIVE, BICYCLES\nMOTORCYCLES\nMOTORS\nLTD.\n323 Vernon St. - Nelson\nPhone 352-3121\n24-Hour  BCAA  Recommended\nWrecker Service\nNEW\n1963 OLDS. SEDAN\n1963 CHEV. IMPALA SEDAN\n1963 CHEV. BEL-AIR\n1963 CHEV. BISCAYNE\n1963 CHEV. PICKUPS\n1962 OLDS. JETFIRE COUPE\n1962 CHEV. PICKUP\nUSED\n1961 AUSTIN SEDAN\n1960 VALIANT SEDAN\n1960 CHEV. BEL-AIR\n1960 CHEV. PICKUP\n1960 CHEV. STATION WAGON\n1960 AUSTIN 4-WHEEL- DRIVE\n1959 BUICK HARDTOP\n1959 DODGE HARDTOP\n1958 VAUXHALL\n1958 CHEV. HARDTOP\n1958 CHEV. SEDAN\n1957 OLDS. HARDTOP\n1957 CHEV. BEL-AIR\n1956 PLYMOUTH SEDAN\n1956 BUICK SEDAN\n1956 OLDS. SEDAN\n1955 MERCURY SEDAN\n1955 DODGE HARDTOP\n1955 PLYMOUTH\nMOTORS\nLIMITED\nNelson, B. C.\n24-Hour Wrecker Service\nCHEV. - OLDS. - CADILLAC\nENVOY - CORVAIR\nCHEVY II\nBetter\nBuys\n'61 CHEV. FAMILY SEDAN\n'60 FORD STATION WAGON\n'58 LINCOLN FORDOR H.T.\n'58 CHEV. 4-DOOR HARDTOP\n'57 CHEV. 2-DOOR HARDTOP .\n'56 FORD STATION WAGON\n'56 METEOR FORDOR\n'56 BUICK SEDAN\n'55 FORD STATION WAGON  -\n'55 OLDS. 88 4-DOOR H.T.\n'54 FORD FORDOR'\nMany, Many More Makes and\nModels to Choose From\nCOME IN AND BROWSE\nAROUND\nMOTORS  LTD.\n16 Years at 701 Baker St.\nPONTIAC - BUICK\nPONTIAC ACADIAN\nVAUXHALL CARS\nGMC TRUCKS\nLOT No. 2\nAt 498 Columbia Ave.\nIn Castlegar\nCOTTONWOOD WRECKAGE\nwrecking '54 Ford, '54 Volkswagen pickup, '53 Consul, '52\nChev. pickup, '55 Ford pickup, '53 Zephyr, Plymouth,\nFords, Chevs., Pontiacs, 14-\nton Fargo. Good motors, 270\nG.M.C, '57 Dodge V-8, '53 Zephyr, '52 Pontiac. Phone 352\n5815, Box 382, 24 Ymir Road.\n'60 MONARCH RICHELIEU\nmetallic green 2 door hardtop\nautomatic V-8. Fully equipped\nwith electric wipers, padded\ndashboard, radio, power seats\nand power-windows, as new.\nWrite Box 356, Nakusp or ph.\n50-M.\nFOR SALE - 1951 % TON\nStudebaker, good rubber, running, or will trade for beet.\nBox 46, Fruitvale, Ph. 367\n5491.\n1947 FORD 2 TON STAKE\ntruck, extended frame, 4 ton\npower takeoff winch, excellent\ncondition. Phone 365-5022.\n'57 FORD HARDTOP, 2 TONE,\nautomatic. Ph. 352-6978.\n \"-\u2014 1 \u25a0      \u25a0\u25a0       .     .--'-'.Ptffpji^!.\"- :    5       \".    I-     '-';   .'        ..''      ..'.\".\u25a0     \"''\u25a0  \"\"...'-\u2022   :   -.;.-.-\"-.'.-1 ' CT ! V  .      .     .   -        .        '        .       -\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, NOV. 23,1962 r\u2014 ?\n~i\nflhowL\n352-3552\nWANTED\nMISCELLANEOUS\nCASH PAID\nFor your U.S.A., Canada, Newfoundland, Great Britain and foreign stamps and coins. Complete\nnew , illustrated catalog $1 (refundable). Also free list of 50 coin\ndealers in U.S.A. and Canada.\nOrder from: John Ranell, 361\nLisgar St., Ottawa, Ont., Canada.\nSILVERTON REC. COMMIS-\nsion would like to purchase\nused trampolene. Contact R.\nN. Hambly, Box 92, Silverton.\nPhone 358-2596.\nKOKANEE DETECTIVE\nAgency, fully licensed and\nbonded criminal, civil and\ndomestic investigations. Write\nP.O. Box 496. D. Hall, man\nager.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES\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.\nUSED FURNITURE AND ANTI-\nques. Home Furniture Exchange, Ph. 352-6531, 413 Hall\nGARBAGE BURNER NEEDED\nimmediately. Box 263, Salmo,\nB.C.\nCLEAN COTTON RAGS NOT\nless than 18\" sq. 10c lb Nelson Daily News.\nUSED  ASHLEY OR SIMILAR\nwood heater. Phone 359-7540.\nUSED  HIGH CHAIR.  PHONE\n352-6483.\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES\nCOCKER PUPS $15.00 ALSO\nChlhuahas $25.00. Bird's Kennels, Blueberry Creek.\nK 9 REG. BOARDING KEN\nnels, Fruitvale Highway G. A\nCrawford prop Ph. 387-2483\nPUPS   FOR   SALE.   H.   HAR-\nrop.\nBOATS AND ENGINES\nREPOSSESSION. SAVE $800\nnow on a 14' Deluxe Thermo-\ncraft boat, 45 h.p. Mercury\nmotor and Holsclaw trailer.\nAll 1962. Jeffery Radio and Appliances.\nClassified Ads Get Results!\nGOOD FARM HORSE AND\nharness. Fred Riebalkin, Perry Siding.\nROOM AND BOARD\nRM. AND BOARD FOR YOUNG\nbusiness man. Ph. 352-6788,\n501 Cedar St.\nROOM AND BOARD FOR GEN-\ntleman. Close in. 706 Victoria,\nPhone 352-6352.\nROOM AND BOARD AVAIL-\nable for gentleman. Ph. 352-\n6051. 1018 Stanley St.\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST A COLLIE WEARING A\nchain collar answering to Laddie. Last seen between Corra\nLynn and Bonnington. Please\nphone any information to 359-\n7544.\nLOST - LADY'S GOLD WRIST\nwatch, vicinity Nelson and\nAinsworth. Phone 352-2824.\nReward.\nLOST-A LORD ELGIN WATCH\nin men's washroom, Queen's\nHotel, Nov. 17th. John Tkack,\nRemac.\nTRAILERS\nPARTS! PARTS ! PARTS!\nRa Lyn Mobile Home Sales,\nTrail.\nBUSINESS   &   PROFESSIONAL\nDIRECTORY\nA handy alphabetical guide to goods and services\navailable In Nelson.\nFOR SALE\nMISCELLANEOUS\nCOLUMBIA TRADING\nBUILDERS SPECIALS\nHARDBOARDS\n4x8xy_\" PV. Seconds .  .     $1.99\n3x4x1V' PV. Seconds  74\n4X8XV4\" PV. Seconds   1.54\n4x8xVi\" PV. Seconds,\nPlankboard 2.80\n4x8xVi\" PV. Woodgrain\nV-groove Maple 3.29\nMAHOGANY\n3x6xVi\". Each     $1.89\nFIR PLYWOOD SANDED\n4x8xy.\" D grade. Sanded     2.50\n24V_x81x1\/i\" Sanded Panels   1.29\n4x8xs\/_\" Sanded 6.95\nUNSANDED\n4x8x5\/16\" Spruce Sheeting\nGrade 2.49\n4x8x_\" Unsanded 4.2\n4x8xV_\" Sylvacord seconds 4.75\n4x8xy.\" Etchwootl 3.95\n4x8xV.\" Shadow Wood 3.49\nFIR DOORS. 2'6\"x6'6\"        $6.50\nHINGES. 3V4\" Butts     49\nCanadian Common NAILS.\n100 lbs. 13.90\nLarge stock of storm window\nPLASTIC Weather Stripping.\n\\lso see our ly.\" ALUMINUM\nSTORM DOORS ready to in\nstall yourself. $35.95\n- ALSO IN STOCK -\nFloor Tile\nTown and Country Wall Covering\nWall Tile\nRubber Cove Base\n\\luminum and Chrome Moldings\n\u25a04etal and Wood Medicine Chests\nPlate Glass Mirrors\nCarpenters' Tools\nArborite and Durolam\nCOLUMBIA\nTRADING CO.\n901 FRONT ST.\nFOR SALE\nMISCELLANEOUS\n(Continued)\nHOSTESS ROCKERS, CHOOSE\nfrom large stock, only $36.50.\nNelson Home Furniture, 640\nBaker St. Phone 352-8432.\nSOUP AND HOT CHOC. VEND-\ning machine, oil heater, bedroom ste, coke cooler. Ph.\n352-3420.\nNOW GET 4 FT. MATTRESSES\nat a reduced price, only $37.66.\nNelson Home Furniture and\nAppliances Ltd. Ph. 352-6482.\nLAYING HENS $1.25 EACH.\nMac apples, $1.50 box. Phone\n352-5097.\nNelson-\nAutomobile Dealers\nBEACON MOTORS LTD.\nPontiac \u2014 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 SALES & SERVICE\nat Frank's Auto\nPhone 352-6411       295 Baker St.\nNORTH SHORE SERVICE\n(Standard\/Triumph)\nOpen 8 a.m.\u20149 p.m.\nAcross Lake Phone 352-2929\nPARKVIEW MOTORS LTD.\n(Rambler - Volkswagen!\n323 Nelson Ave.     Phone 352-5355\nAustin \u2022 Morris \u2022 MGA \u2022 Wolseley\nCars \u2014 Parts \u2014 Service\nSTAR AUTO SERVICE LTD.\nYmir Rd.    Ph. 352-7421    Nelson\nBuilding Supplies\nBEE BUILDING SUPPLY LTD.\nEverything in waterproof\nplywood.\n301 Baker St.      Phone 352-3135\nInsurance\nAllstate Insurance Agent\nSimpsons-Sears, Trail\nPhone 364-1144\nNelson: Saturdays. Ph. 352-5531\nJewellers\nCUTLER'S JEWELLERY\nFor fine watches and repairs\nPhone 352-9012       511 Baker St\nMiscellaneous\nMatch Points Bridge \u2014 Every\nMon., 7:45 p.m., Hume Hotel.\nNovelty Shops\nSOUVENIRS! NOVELTIES!\nThe Cutest - HOBBY SHOP\nPaint Contractors\nF. n. DOYLE\nPaint Contractor\nPhone 352-7311 - Nelson .\nBURNS LUMBER CO. LTD.\n602 Baker St.      Phone 352-6661\nCOLUMBIA TRADING  CO.\nQ01 Front St. Ph   352-5571\nZEEBEN LUMBER CO.\nYmir, B.C. Phone Salmo 357-9375\nCabinet Makers\nJOS. C. MERMET\nProfessional Kitchen Remodeling. Serving Nelson and Dist.\n1020 Davies St. \u2014 Nelson\nContractors\nFor a Quality Custom House\nPhone 352-5915\nMAPE LEAF\nCONSTRUCTION\nEngineers\nand Surveyors\nBAERG & CAMPBELL\n373 Baker-Nelson-Ph. 352-7434\nBox 653 - Creston - EL 6-4224\n909 Baker-Cranbrook-JU 6-3622\nBOYD C. AFFLECK\nB.C.L.S., P. Eng.\n218 Gore Street Nelson\nPhone 352-3341\nALEX CHEVELDAVE\nB.C Land Surveyor - 33 Pine St\nPh. 365-5342-Castlegar, B.C.\nRAY _. JOHNSON\nB.C. Land Surveyor J. Engineer\n369 Baker St. Nelson. Ph. 352-7117\nPrinting\nNELSON   DAILY   NEWS\nPrinters \u2014 Lithographers\nColor Printing\nPhone 352-3552\nRadio & TV Service\nVIDEO   ELECTRONIC\n405 Hall St. - Phone 352-3355\nRefrigeration\nRefrigeration Sales and Service\nCARLSON EQUIPMENT\nNelson, B.C. - Phone 352-5455\nSeptic Tank Service\nKOOtENAY SEPTIC TANK\nCLEANING SERVICE\nDependable, Odorless.\nAll Work Guaranteed\nPh. 352-5897\nNelson Septic Tank Service\nVacuum Equipment Guaranteed\nReasonable prices. Ph. 352-3663\nConcrete Ltd.\nPhone 352-3828\nCYCLOS FLOOR FURNACE,\nbarrels stand and pipe. Phone\n352-2861.\nGRADE \"A\" BEEF, 100 TO 200\nlbs., side 43c, 201 lo 250 lbs.\nside 40c. Ph. 352-6866.\nNIAGARA THERAPY V1BRA-\ntor-Lounge. Like new, $175.\nApply Box 2917 Daily News.\nCARROTS IN 50 LB. LOTS\nPhone 352-2355.\nAPT. SIZE GAS RANGE, $59.50.\nPhone 352-3441.\nELECTRIC    TRAIN.    PHONE\n352-6557 after 5 p.m.\nTAPE   RECORDER   $60,   OIL\nheater, $30. Ph. 359-7540.\nLADIES'    GLIDER   BIKE. -\nGood cond., $25. Ph. 352-5153.\n18 CU. FUT. CHEST FREEZER\n1 yr.  old. Ph.  352-3994.\nMACHINERY\nFor ALL Building Purposes\nSAND and GRAVEL\nHEAT YOUR HOME FOR PEN-\nnies by using the Valley Comfort automatic wood furnace\nor heater, forced air, gravity\nor space 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\n355-22K asking for \"Why I\nShould Use Wood For Fuel.\"\nFOR THAT SPECIAL CHRIST-\nmas Gift, we have Pony Bridles, Pony Saddles, Riding Martingales, Roping Saddles\n(black), Ladies' Saddles, Saddle Blankets, Horse Shoes,\nBook on the Horse (schooling,\nbreaking and riding), Halters,\nBits, Riding Equipment of all\nkinds. Ellisons, 523 Front St.,\nNelson. Phone 352-3181.\nTUBE TESTER, SIGNAL GEN-\nerator, signal tracer, Capacitor tester, V.O.M.\/W.T.U.M.\nCond. resistor substitute boxes. Some tubes, manuals. $225\ncash. Sold together only, Write\nBox 51, New Denver.\nSIDES OF CHOICE GRAIN FED\nbeef, cut and wrapped 49c Ib.\nSides of grain fed pork, 37c lb.\nBacon and hams. Newdan\nFarms. Creston, Ph. EL 6-9901.\nFree weekly delivery.\nSIDES OF CHOICE BEEF. 49c\nlb. Sides of pork 35c lb. Cut,\nwrapped and frozen. Free delivery to Nelson. Whitford's\nMeats, Ph. 356-2556, Creston.\nSporting Goods\nFred Whlteley'i Sport Shop\n488 Baker Street   Phone 352-7741\nSteam Baths\nNELSON STEAM BATHS\nExercise Centre - 369 Baker St.\nTopsoil, Gravel\nLarry's Topsoil, Sand and Gravel\n9th and Davies Ph  352-2355 days\nor 352-7576 evenings\n2 TOWN AND COUNTRY WIN-\nter tires and wheels, size\n5.60-15, like new: Slim-Master\nconversion gas unit: hot waler\nboiler. Phone 352-6773.\nDOMINION RUBBERS AND\nOvershoes for all the family-\nCompetitive Price. R. Andrew\n& Co., Nelson.\nPLAYPEN, $8; HIGH CHAIR,\n$3: ladies figure skates B _,\n$7; 24 volume standard encyclopedia, $6. Ph. 352-5249.\n1946 MERC. VA TON FLAT\ndeck. Also I farm and logging\nhorse. Nick Evdokimoff, R.R\n1, Perry Siding.\nGarages\nUpper Fairview Motors Ltd.\nCor. 7th at Davies   Ph. 352-2525\nTravel\nBradley Travel Agency\nPhone 352-3212   \u25a0\nVALVE REFACER, RESEAT-\ner, sun tester and numerous\nother items. Valley Service,\nAppledale.  Phone 355.2276.\nUSED ASHLEY WOOD HEAT-\ner. good condition. $100. Cost\nnew $225. Valley Service,\nAppledale. Phone 355-2276.\nNOV. 30\nIS THE\nDEADLINE\nIN FINNING'S\nFALL\nDISCOUNT\nSALE!\nYou've only got one week left\nto take advantage of the huge\nsavings on used equipment at\nFinning's. Buy now and save\n5, 10 or 15% off list price. Pay\ncash and SAVE DOUBLE, 10,\n20 or 30%! This is a genuine\nsale with honest price reductions. Look over the listing below and call Finning's TODAY.\nRemember, there's only one\nweek left in this big sale.\nD7, 1953, fully equipped. In fail-\nto good condition. Certified Buy,\n30-day warranty, fob Vernon.\nFT-6283. Listed at $18,000, save\n10%! Sale Price $16,200\nDouble Discount Price $14,400\nD6, older model, w\/hyd. angledozer, winch. In fair operating\ncondition. Fair Buy, fob Chilliwack. FT-6639. Listed at $5,750,\nsave 15%! Sale Price $4,887\nDouble Discount Price $4,025\nTD-9, 1956, w\/hyd. dozer, winch.\nJan_{ly small unit for any kind\nof job. Fair Buy, fob Vernon.\nFT-6042. Listed at $5,500, save\n15%! Sale Price $4,675\nDouble Discount Price $3,850\nHD11B, 1956, w\/hydraulic dozer,\nwinch. In fair to good condition\nthroughout. Fair Buy, fob Cranbrook. FT-6425. Listed at $11,500.\nsave 15%! Sale Price $9,775\nDouble Discount Price $8,050\nHD5, 1953, w\/hyd. dozer, winch.\nIn good operating condition. Fair\nBuy, fob Williams Lake. FT-6647.\nListed at $5,500, save 15%!\nSale Price $4,675\nDouble Discount Price $3,850\nJohn Deere 420C, 1957, w\/dozer,\nwinch. Tracks need work. Balance mechanically good. Fair\nBuy, fob Cranbrook. CF-10523\nListed at $2,000, save 15%!\nSale Price $1,700\nDouble Discount Price $1,400\nPatrick fork lift, w\/Hercules gas\nengine, ln good condition. Fair\nBuy, fob Cranbrook. CF-10591.\nListed at $6,000, save 15%!\nSale Price $5,100\nDouble Discount Price $4,200\nWillock Timber Boss fork lift.\nEngine OK. Balance in good\nworking order. Fair Buy. fob\nChilliwack. FT-6497. Listed at\n$4,950, save 15%!\nSale Price $4,207\nDouble Discount Price $3,465\n% HP Engine, older model, Cat\n18800. w\/extended shaft, pillow\nblocks, steel base. Operates\nwell. Fair Buy, fob Vernon. CF-\n63607. Listed at tt.000. save 15%!\nSale Price $1,700\nDouble Discount Price $1,400\nYour Caterpillar Dealer\nFINNING TRACTOR\n\"Where Used Equipment Is a\nBusiness - NOT a Sideline\"\nNelson - Phone 352-6622\nMachine Shop Drill Press\n22\" Table NO. Taper Spindle,\nCone Pulleys, $250.00\nStevenson Machinery Ltd.\nPhone 352-3561\nMACHINERY\n(Continued)\nATTENTION\nFALLERS\nIt's Worth a Try!\nThe All  New, Powerful\n270\nP-M CANADIEN\nHas Proved  Itself!\nTRY   ONE\u2014BUY   ONE\nOnly $239.00\nPlus a Free Factory Bonus\nGood to the  End of  Nov.\nMAC'S\nWelding & Equipment Co\nLtd.\n514 Railway St.     Ph. 352-5301\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\n(Continued in next oolumn)\nJUST OUTSIDE\nCITY LIMITS\nVERY LOW TAXES\nOn inspection you will find a\nstuccoed  4-B.R.   home;   L.R.\nwith finest hardwood floor, a\nkitchen with all the features a\nhousewife will enjoy; garage,\non Vt acre of good land. We\nhave the key for      HvO^OO\nviewing. F.P. only  J33\"\"\nTerms.\nTHIS\nis a 3-4 B.R. home for the discriminating buyer who likes\ngraceful living; finest exterior\nand interior, quality throughout; 2-car carport; a really\ncultivated lot. Please contact\nus for an appointment.\nEXCELLENT\nINVESTMENT\n4 apartments;  good revenue;\n2 blocks from     <t I I Oftfl\nBaker St. F.P.    *\"\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\"\n$2500 might handle.\nCute little home with 2 B.R.s.\nHas been completely remodelled. A home to be proud of\nfor many years to StR^ftA\ncome. F.P. \u2022pouww\nOnly $1500 down.\n$700 DOWN\nUphill district, small home, 1\nBR,   LR,   kitchen,  full  bath.\nLot 50x120, lovely garden, immediate occupancy. $3500\nBal. $45 inc. 6% int.\nONLY $5700\n2-B.R. home, Fairview, Sixth\nStreet. L-shaped L.R., dining\narea; 3-piece bathroom and\nshower. New wiring; new gas\nfurnace. Needs some finishing.\nOnly $500 down.\nNORTH SHORE\nHollywood style home that offers everything in luxurious\ncomfort, from an ultra-modern\nkitchen to the heating plant. \u2014\nOverlooking lake and city. Look\nat this one and you are in for\na breath-taking surprise. For\nthe discriminating buyer only.\nYour enquiries are invited.\nNINTH STREET\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-\n|7ed- $19,500\n$5000 down.\nBal. N.H.A. 5% Mortgage\nIncl. Princ. Int., Taxes\nNEWLY DECORATED\nNewly painted trim on 2 B.R.\nstucco home. Large L.R., Kit.\nwith dining area. Utility Rm.\nwired for washer-dryer. Basement, new gas furnace. 50'x\n120' view lot. $8700\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\nF.P.\nHOME.\nMORGAN STREET\nRevenue property, near hosp.\nUp and down duplex, each with\n2 bedrooms, large L.R., bath.,\nand kitchen. HA furnace heats\nboth. ALSO, three-roomed cottage with bathroom. 58500\nTerms.\nDUPLEX\nNewly remodelled, close in. \u2014\nMain floor: 2 bedrooms, bath,\nlarge L.R., D.R., kitchen and\nutility room. Upper floor: 3\nrooms and bath. Separate en-\ntrance. Beautiful $H GOO\ncondition.   .        *      '      v\nTerms.\nREVENUE    PROPERTY\nFour rentals, close in. $200.00\nmonthly. Gas      $ I 7 800\nfurnace. , t- \u2022   j\n$3500 down.\nNORTH SHORE.\n2 BR modern bungalow on 1\nacre with 110' lake frontage.\nAttached garage. Full concrete basement with piped HA\nfurnace. A  REALLY  BEAU-\nTIFUL $19,500\nTerms.\nMultiple Listing\nTILLICUM INN\nBALFOUR, B. C.\nThis well known resort, cafe,\nj coffee bar and five cabins at\nthe  Ferry  Landing  a  going\nj concern. $40,000\nCome in and discuss your\ndown payment.\nNorth Shore, ONE ACRE, close\nin. 100' highway $1350\nfrontage with creek. v\nBlaylock Sub. There are still\nsome really nice \/ '.s available\n: ranging in price ..om\n;    $850 ^ $1225\nSMALL   COTTAGE\n4 rooms and bathroom on one\nfloor, close In. Gas heat. Ideal\nfor elderly couple.   $5500\nTerms v\nFAMILY HOME\nA really attractive 2-storey\nhome in convenient location.\nNIES sized\" L.R. and D.R.,\nkitchen downstairs, 3 B.R.s\nand all new bathroom up. Full\nbasement,  gas furnace.  Gar-\n^coTerms: $\">500\n2 Older Style\nFamily Homes\nOn 3 nice corner lots, landscaped. Attractive 3-4 B.R. home.\nFull basement, $| 0,900\ngas furnace. ... * \u25a0\u00ab\u00bb\u00ab\"\"'\nTerms.\nOn 3 nice lots, corner location.\n3 B.R.s. Part basement, gas\nfurnace. Large $9900\ngarage. Terms *\nFairview\n3   B.R.   bungalow.   Basement,\ngarage,  oil furnace. \u2014 Quiet\n'Term. W500\nSKI-VIEW INN\nYmir Rd., next to Star Auto\nService. Drive-in kitchen fully\nequipped for quick service. \u2014\nGarage, storeroom and rest\nrooms. Two-roomed cottage for\nowner. 2\/3 acre of land, 300'\nfrontage Room for $5599\ncabins. F.P. \u00abe\"\u00abv#-\nTerms.\n160 ACRES\nMile south of NAKUSP, %\nmile from lakeshore. 15 acres\ncleared. Old house. 300M fbm\ngood timber, unknown quantity of poles. $4400\nTerms.\nF.P.\nWE TRADE DWELLINGS\nAll our listings are inspected\nand appraised at a fair price\nto vendors  and  purchasers,\nS.P.\n$1500 Down.\nHOUSE FOR RENT\nVictoria St. 1-B.R. $4Q\napartment (furnished). v\nChoice Lots North Shore,\nFairview and Uphill\nPrices $1100 to $1500\nT.\ning\nOur sales record is excellent,\nbut we need the listing of the\nhouse you want to sell\nN O W,\nTO   SATISFY\nTHE DEMAND\nPlease Use Our\nLISTING SERVICE\nPHONE 352-6144\nFOR REAL EgTATE\nRudi Martin, Res. 352-7689\nSylvia Brashear, Res. 352-3846\nMcHARDY\nAGENCIES-LTD.\nREAL ESTATE \u2022 INSURANCE\n554 Ward St. Nelson. B.C.\nPhone 352-3581. Office\nJ. B. Brown, 352-2356\nSfDE BY SIDE DUPLEX EACH\nunit 3 bdrms. Separate basement and heating. Excellent\nlocation. Good revenue or\nhome and income. Low down\npayment and good terms to responsible party. $13,000. Ph.\n352-2437.\nOLDER TYPE 4 BDRM. HOME\nin Fruitvale with possibility of\nrevenue. Fully modern, excellent location. Close to schools,\nstores and transportation. Low\ndown payment. Ph. 367-9046.\nFOR SALE OR RENT, CGN-\ntral location. 2 bdroom, 1 floor,\nolder house, with or without\nfurniture. Write Box 2611, Nelson Daily News. .\n1 ACRE ON NORTH SHORE \"AT\n6.Mlle, cleared, 250-ft. highway\nfrontage. Box 2646, Nelson\nDaily. News.\nFARM FOR SALE AT SLOCAN\nCity with good 3 bedroom\nhome, lots of piped water.\nPhone 355-2276 Valley Service.\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nTHE GOVERNMENT OF THE\nPROVINCE OF BRITISH\nCOLUMBIA\nForm No. 18\n(Section 82)\nLAND ACT\nNotice of Intention to Apply to\nLease Land\nIn Land Recording District of\nKaslo and situate in Kootenay\nLake fronting on part lot 309,\nGroup 1, lying west of the production southerly of the easterly\nlimit of Block \"A\", Map 710, at\nProctor, B.C.\nTake notice that Canadian Pacific Railway Company of Montreal, P.Q., occupation Transportation Company intends to\napply for a lease of the following\ndescribed lands:\nCommencing at a post planted\nat water's edge on the Southerly\nside of the site and inscribed\n\"C.P.R. Land, South-East corner\"; thence South 78 degrees\nis' West, 10O0 feet; thence North\n11 degrees 45' West, 110 feet;\nthence North 78 degrees 15'\nEast, 1100 feet more or less to\nthe water's edge of Kootenay\nLake; thence South - Westerly\nand following the water's edge\nof Kootenay Lake to the point\nof commencement and containing 2.60 acres, more or less, for\nthe purpose of wharf and railway car slip.\nGeo. Meldrum,\nSuperintendent,\nCanadian  Pacific  Railway Company,\nNelson, B.C.\nDated October 26th, 1962.\nRENTALS\n(Continued)\nFOR RENT, HEATED HSKG.\nroom, $20 mo. Phone 352-7462.\nSELF-CONTAINED   2   BDRM.\nduplex. Ph. 352-3685 after 5.\n3 RM. FURN. HEATED SUITE,\nPhone 352-2107.\nNORTH SHORE MOTEL OPEN\nfor winter rentals. Ph. 352-7722\n2 RM. STE. ALSO HSKPG. RM.\nApply 140 Baker, Ph. 352-3384.\nON VIEW ST. 1 BDRM. APT.\nFurn. and heated. Ph. 352-2400.\n2 BDRM. APT., L.R. KITCHEN,\nbthrm. Phone 352-2902.\n3 ROOM HOUSE FOR RENT.\n127 Silica St.\nSUITE FOR RENT.\n352-7195.\n- PHONE\nj 2   HOUSES   AT   HARROP. -\nI    H. Harrop.\nNEW 2 BEDROOM SELF CON-\ntained suite. Phone 352-6307.\nFURNISHED   HOUSE.   BEAL-\nby Point. Ph. 352-3698.\nBUSINESS\nOPPORTUNITIES\nBAKER ST. BUSINESS BLDG.\nfor sale or rent, two floors,\n2500 square feet each. Owner\nwishes to retire. Box 2697, Nelson Daily News..\nEWxnm\nCirculation  Dept., Ph. 352-3552\nPrice per single copy, 10 cents\nBy carrier per week, 40 cents\nin advance.\nSubscription fates i\nBy mail in Canada\nOutside Nelson\nOne month  $ 2.00\nThree months  ,     5.00\nSix months _...  10.00\nOne year \u2022 18.00\nBy mail to United Kingdom\nor the Commonwealth\nOne month     $ 2.00\nThree months      6.0O\nSix monthB  _ __.  11.00\nOne year     20.00\nBy mail to U.S.A. or\nForeign Countries\nOno month $ 2.50\nThree months ....;.-   7.00\nSix months   18.00\nOne year ,..._.   24.00\nWhere extra postage Is required,\nabove rates plus postage.\nFor delivery by'carrier in'Cran-\nbrook,  phone  Mrs.  Stanley\nWillison;\nIn Trail, Mrs. W. 1; Spooner\nIn  Kimberley, Mrs- A.  W.Brown,\nBUTCHER EQUIPMENT COM-\nplete shop. Box 242, Castlegar.\nNOTICE TO CREDITORS\nHAROLD A. WYNN,\nDECEASED\nNOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN\nthat all persons having claims!\nagainst Harold A. Wynn, late of\nErie. B.C., who died at Esson-\ndale, B.C. on the 14th day of\nJuly, 1962, are required to file\nparticulars thereof with the undersigned solicitors for the administrator on or before the 21st\nday of December, 1962, after\nwhich date the administrator\nwill proceed to distribute the assets of the said deceased among\nthe persons entitled thereto, having regard only to the claims\nwhich shall then have been filed\nas above required.\nDATED at Nelson, B.C..this\n15th day of November, 1962.\nGARLAND, GANSNER _\nARLIDGE,\nP.O. Box 490, Nelson, B.C.\nSolicitors for the Administrator.\nRENTALS\nTWO ROOMED SUITE, PART-\nly furnished, elec. range and\nfridg., etc. Lots heat and hot\nwater. Use of automatic laundry. Available Now. $45.00 Mo.\nJ. R. Brown, 352-2356.\nLOW WINTER RATES\nHSKPG. AND SLEEPING RM.\nweekly, monthly rates. Dishes\nlinen supplied, parking. Allen\nRooms, 171 Baker Street.\nRENT A SINGER SEWING MA-\nchine, delivered and returned\n$2 per week; $5 per month.\nSinger Sewing Centre, Phone\n352-3631.\nAN IMMACULATELY CLEAN\n3 bdrm. house in Rosemont,\nautomatic heat. Box 2671, Nelson Daily News.\nROOMS BY DAY, WEEK OR\nmonth. Reasonable rates.\nRoyal Hotel, Nelson, B.C.\nPhone 352-2541.\nNICE APT. FOR LADY, FREE\nin exchange for help to run\nrooming-house. Phone 352-2015\ndays. 352-6242 evenings.\nSMALL SELF - CONTAINED\nSte., (urn., reasonable. Ph.\n352-6943.\nMODERN ONE BDRM. APT.,\nunfurnished and heated. Ph.\n352-6048.\nPENTHOUSE, CLOSE IN, $45\nmonthly. William Kalyniuk\nAgencies, Dial 352-2425.\nBEDROOM FOR GENTLEMAN\nnear Legion, clean, private.\nPhone 352-5030.\n1 BEDROOM SUITE, NEAR\nLegion, heated. Immediate occupancy. Phone 352-5030.\n2 BDRM. UNFURN. APT. IM-\nmediate occupancy. 514 Obser-\nvatory St. Phone 352-6089.\nLARGE HOUSE AND CABIN\nat 1007 - 4th St. Inquire at\n1004 - 3rd St.\n2 BED SPACIOUS HTD. APT.,\nwasher-dryer, elec. range.\nPhone 352-3808.\n2 BDRM. HOUSE, NEW ELEC.\nstove, oil heat. Close in. Phone\n352-2553.\n1 RM. APT. FURN. HEAT,\nlight, water and frig. Ph. 352-\n2015 days, 352-6242 after 6.\n(Continued in next column?\nClassified Ads Get Resultsl\nQUESNEL (CP)-Mayor A.V.\nFraser will seek re-election in\nthe December civic elections.\nAlderman Ceal Tihglejr and Arnold Sweder, a meat'.plclting op:\nerator, have filed papers for\ntwo aldermanic seats,\nC. W. APPLEYARD & CO. LTD.\nEstablished 1911\nREALTORS and INSURANCE AGENTS\n421 Baker Street P.O. Box 26 Phone 352-3944\n1-MODERN COTTAGE. Easy walking distance, 103 High St.\nEasy access, quiet cul-de-sac. Separate garage.   $8000\n2 bedrooms, automatic gas furnace v\n$1500 down, $75 per month.\nGood reduction may be had for caih,_\n2-REDUCED PRICE. 224 Vernon St. Homa \u00bb(lfllc|?l btimtt,\nbasement, 3 bedrooms and carport. You may purchase for,\n$1000 and payments of $75 per month or REW $6500\nwith option to buy. Full pries .:,\n3\u2014ROSEMONT. Compact home with garden for young family.\nPart basement; modern kitchen; gas spaca..Iuwmk comfortable, economical heat. 3 bedrooms. $1500 cash $4500\narid balance $66 per month. Full price \u00ab-,\u00bb\u00bb.\" ,\n4-URGENT - OWNER MUST SELL. Choice dot .Witt 1-bedroom home. Separata garage. Has fireplace; oil furnace\nand playroom in basement. Requires $4000 $J0 500\ndown and monthly $100 including interest..__.\"\/'. .?VWW\nS-BELOW MARKET. Duplex in Falrvjew, 'ty'ifaaQM gt.\nSound, older-type building. Newly wired: Separate'gai furnaces. Buy for $1500 cash and pay with rental.' SixfMn\nFull price .'._ *9MUU\n6-SLOCAN VALLEY FARM, near Passmore: 50 acres, 20 clear,\nwith ample water supply. Good horn* with full basement;\nfurnace. Two bedrooms. Includes full equipment, and 500\nchickens, 2 cows, 1 calf. $12 000\nTerms: $3000 cash and baiance $100 per mon. tad. I*\n7\u2014UPHILL \u2014 Lovely 2-bedroom home for coupla. Cornar )ot\n70x100 feet. Good investment. Rented to good      * _ .flrt\ntenant for $70.00    f OOUU\nTerms, $1750 down and monthly payment*.\nge Motors\nLTD.\n608 Vernon Street\n352-7202 Phena 352.7511\nNelson\nALL READY TO GO!\n1963 GALAXIE 500 2-DR. H.T.      -\n1963 GALAXIE 500 4-DR SEDAN\n1963 FAIRLANE STATION WAGON.\n1963 FALCON FUTURA 4-DRL SgDAN'\n1963 GALAXIE 300 SEDAN 4-DR.\n1963 4x4-WHEEL DRIVE HALF-TON\n1963 FORD HALF-TON\n1963 FORD ECONOLINE VAN\n1963 CONSUL 315 4-DR. SEDAN\nSPECIAL\nOne only '62 Galaxie\n4-DOOR SEDAN _ V8, Custom Radio\nRegular $3550.00\nUSED\n1961 FORD HALF-TON PICKUP\n1959 PONTIAC 2-DR.\n1959 METEOR 4-DR. SEDAN\n1959 PORP HAUVTON\n1958 RAMBLER 4-DR. SEDAN\n1959 RENAULT-4-DR. SEDAN\n1957 FORD .2-DR. HARDTOP\n1956 FORD FATCLANE 4-DR. SEDAN\n1955 CHEVROLET 4-DR. SEDAN\n \u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0i'11 \u25a0 \u25a0   \u25a0   '    '  r, \"\u2014r \u25a0\u25a0    \u2014\u25a0 \u25a0 <JM\u00a3H|\n'-<-----^\u2014\u00bb\u00abtast Scenes In Gubon\nConflict Played Out\nASK THE GIRLS.. ..\nfor the newest preparation for Baby's comfort.\nB.B. (And we don't mean Brigitte Bardot)\nDIAPERASH   LOTION\nwith VITA-COS\nGreaseless, wonderfully soothing and healing.\nAsk for B.B. (We are too shy to say it)\nDIAPERASH   LOTION\nat\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nU.S. Bombers Shift\nBack To Normal Duty\nBy FRED S. HOFFMAN\nWASHINGTON (AP) - Nuclear bomber crews shifted to\nnormal duty after a month on\nspecial alert . . . destroyers,\ncruisers, carriers steamed\nhome from the blockade ... air\nforce reservists prepared to become civilians again.\nThe United States was gradually uncoiling the buildup of its\narmed might which at one point\nin the crisis had appeared on\nthe verge of being launched\nagainst Communist Cuba.\nBut in southeastern United\nStates, Florida in particular,\nthere was no relaxation yet.\nThousands of army troops,\nincluding tank forces, and hundreds of fast, rocket-armed jet\nfighters and powerful bombers\nstood ready\u2014just in case.\nRadar searched the skies in\nthe' direction of Cuba and antiaircraft missiles were poised\u2014\nthe Russians still have not\npulled out their IL-28 jet bombers.\nU.S. photo reconnaissance\nplanes kept watch\u2014the need for\nthis surveillance underscored by\nthe recent discovery of 25-mile\nrange Soviet bombardment missiles the United States hadn't\nknown were in Cuba.\nTENSION EASES\nHowever, there was a general\neasing of tension and it was reflected in a series of developments:\nThe more than 1,200 5-B and\nB-47 nuclear bombers of the\nStrategic Air Command were\nordered to return to normal\nalert\u2014half of them ready to\ntake off combat-loaded within\n15 minutes of warning. I\nMore than 14,200 air force re- j\nservists called to active duty j\nwith their troop-carrying squad- [\nrons on Oct. 27 were told they\nwill be getting out starting\nFriday.\nSome 17,000 navy men and\nmarines received a Thanksgiving present when the navy unfroze discharges.\nThe vanguard of 63 navy vessels, relieved of blockading\nduties, began arriving at east\ncoast ports including Norfolk,\nVa., and Key West, Fla.\nThe navy disclosed that a\ntotal of 183 ships, carrying more\n'then 85,000 men, spread over a\n2,100-mile front in the Atlantic\nand Caribbean while maintaining the Cuban blockade.\nA total of 68 navy and marine squadrons numbering more\nthan 19,000 men accounted for\n9,000 separate patrol and surveillance flights that clocked\nbetter than six million miles.\nWith the unwinding of the\ncrisis the government notified\ncivilian fliers it was lifting restrictions on flying over all but\nthe southern tip of Florida.\nFine Barker\nFor Insult\nTo Queen\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 A\nsidewalk barker who wore a\nScots Guards uniform while\ninviting passers-by into the\nNuderama striptease club was\nlined \u00a37 ($21) in court here\nWednesday.\nStanley Lowe, 40, was fined\n\u00a35 for insulting behavior and\nanother \u00a32 for \"wearing without permission of Her Majesty a tunic having the appearance and bearing certain\nregimental marks of a full\ndress uniform of a Scots\nGuards officer.\"\nPolice said that Lowe,\nwearing the red tunic with\ngold braid, stood outside the\nclub in Soho, and called\n\"lovely girls.\"\nThe magistrate said Lowe's\nconduct was likely to cause a\nbreach of the peace if any\nGuradsman or ex-Guardsman\nhappened to pass the club.\nNANCY, France (AP) - Policemen crouching in the bushes\nwatched 49 - year - old Robert\nCourcier disappear behind a\nthicket with an empty gasoline\ncan and reappear in 32 seconds\nwith a full one. The game was\nup. Courcier's home-made filling station in the woods was\nout of business after four years.\nCourvier, an electrician, admitted tapping a small pipeline\nwhile it was being laid to a\nNATO installation.\nBy JOHN HIGHTOWER\nWASHINGTON (AP)-There\nis a sense of great drama in\nWashington as the last scenes\nof the Cuban conflict are played\nout. There is feeling that something big is about to happen.\nThe question is: What?\nNeither President Kennedy,\nwho calls this a climatic period and a turning point in history, nor State Secretary Rusk,\nwho says we are all on the\nedge of unredictable events of\nhigh importance, has answered\nthis question.\nBut both men are undoubtedly\nconvinced that in Moscow, Peking, New Delhi, and Western\ncapitals old policies are being\nreviewed and historic new decisions are in the making.\nThe development of three\ncrises at almost the same time\nlast month are responsible for\nthis belief. They are the crises\nbetween the United States and\nRussia over Cuba, between\nRussia and Red China over India, and between Red China\nand India over their undeclared\nborder war. All three have let\nloose forces which, in their final impact, must have a profound influence on the future\ncourse of international relations.\nHOLDS GREATEST THREAT\nThe showdown between Kennedy and Premier Khrushchev\nover the installation of Soviet\nweapons in Cuba probably holds\nthe greatest threat and the\ngreatest hope for the future.\nIn general terms, two courses\nare open to Washington and\nMoscow. Either they can move\ntoward some adjustment of\ntheir differences, such as those\nover Berlin, and toward arms\ncontrol agreements, or they can\nget ready for the next disaster-\nthreatening Cuban type confrontation.\nFrom the U.S. point of view,\nthe chief long-range gain of the\nCaribbean crisis was to show\nKhrushchev that Kennedy\nwould face the full risk of nuclear war in defence of vital\nU.S. interests and commitments. The important question\nnow is whether Khrushchev\nchooses to avoid dangerous\nchallenges in the future or to\narm more powerfully for even\ngreater risks hereafter.\nThe immediate result of the\nCuban crisis is to roll Soviet\nnuclear power back thousands\nof miles onto Soviet territory.\nBut the experts agree that it is\nonly a matter of time until Soviet nuclear submarines can\nthreaten American security\nfrom points close to shore.\nThere is a parallel between\nthe Kremlin's power play in the\nWestern Hemisphere and the\nRed Chinese invasion of India.\nIn each case, there was a use\nof lorce to achieve a political\nobjective. The Russians are believed to have been aiming for\nU.S. surrender over Berlin before they were thwarted. Tlie\nCommunist leaders in Peking\nwanted full control of long disputed territory on India's northern border. Probably they also\nwere determined to humiliate\nIndia by military defeat, and\nthus assert dominance in Asia.\nSCHEME MAY BACKFIRE\nBut, while the Chinese proved\nmilitary.superior, their scheme\nthreatens to backfire. They\nhave compelled Prime Minister Nehru to face the weakness\nof his neutralist policy and to\nseek large-scale U.S. military\nassistance.\nNehru must now decide\nwhether he will relax once\nmore into a kind of pacifist neutrality or arm with long-term\nAmerican help. He has no guarantees that the Chinese will not\ninvade again.\nAmong Western diplomats,\nthere has been a widely held\ntheory that, in attacking India,\nthe Red Chinese wanted to\nforce Russia's hand in the long\npower struggle within the Communist bloc. The issue between\nPeking and Moscow has centred on which of them should\nlead the bloc, and whether\nmethods of force should be preferred to the methods of economic and political pressures\nand indirect aggression.\nKhrushchev has usually advocated the less risky methods of\nexpanding Communist power\u2014\na fact which made his Cuban\nventure all the more astonishing. In line with this policy, he\nhas courted the friendship of\nIndia and other neutralist or\nnon-aligned nations, though\nChina is his ally despite all\ntlieir diilerences.\nBRINGS  ON  CRISIS?\nU.S. officials assume that the\nChinese - Indian crisis has\nbrought on a hidden crisis between Peking and Moscow, with\nfuture effects on both their policies which are, for the moment, incalculable.\nAn open split between them\nwould change the political map\nof the world. It would raise the\nserious possibility of trouble between the two great Communist\ncountries along their extensive\nAsian borders. It would open\nup a whole new range of possibilities for the Western powers\nas the Russians adusted to un-\nprecedejnted new conditions.\nShould the effect of the\nstrains be to enhance Soviet\npower within the bloc, and\nshould Khrushchev now choose\nas a result of the Cuban crisis\nto move into a period of peaceful adjustments with the West,\nthe result could be to move the\nwhole world back farther from\nthe brink of nuclear war.\nIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nGood Meal\nBetter Than\nFreedom\nNEW HAVEN, Conn.\nAP)\u2014Three prisoners who\nwere due to be released Wednesday from the New Haven\nstate jail asked for, and\nwere granted, permission to\nremain behind bars one\nmore day.\nThey told Sheriff J. Edward Slavin they didn't\nwant to miss Thursday's\ntraditional U.S. Thanksgiving\ndinner.\"\niiiiiiiiiiiimmiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiini\nQue. Borrows\n.60,000,000\nFrom Canada\nQUEBEC (CP)-The Quebec\ngovernment Wednesday b o r-\nrowed $6,000,000 on the Canadian market, bringing to $170,-\n000,000 the total amount it has\nborrowed during the current fiscal year, Premier Lesage has\nannounced.\nThe money is part of a record\n$225,000,000 borrowing forecast\nin the budget speech last April.\nMr. Lesage\u2014also Quebec's finance minister \u2014 said long-\nterm bonds of 25 years were\nfloated at 5y_ per cent and\nshort-terms of six years at five\nper cent.\nIt was the third loan made\nby the government this year.\nThe first was also $60,000,000\nand the second $50,000,000.\nKonrad Adenauer Discusses\nPossible Coalition Crisis\nDEATHS\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nOttawa\u2014Frank Amyot, 58, an\ninternationally famous paddler\nwon won a gold medal for Canada in the 1936 Olympics senior\nsingles competition.\nMontreal \u2014 John Loye, 82,\nfounder of the United Irish Society of Montreal and the Canadian Railroad Historial Association.\nParis\u2014Major Philippe Kiefer,\n63, who led the. French commando capture of Ouistreham,\nin Normandy, on D-Day, June\n6, 1944.\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c line, 40c line bold face type;  larger type rates\non request. Minimum two lines.\nTrail Riding.\nH. Harrop\nSmart Dress Gloves in black or\nbrown leathers tor\nBoys and Men.\nEBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.\nNew patterns and designs in\nSailcloth Cafe Sets\n$2.95 and $3.95.\nSTERLING FURNISHERS\nSave $1.87 on overseas\nChristmas Flower Orders.\nCOVENTRY'S FLOWER SHOP\nPhone 352-5035\nBINGO\nEAGLE HALL TONIGHT\nSee Our Large Selection\nol Christmas Decorations,\nLights and Gifts.\nMAC'S FLOWER  SHOP\nFREE SKI FILMS\nBy Franz Haas of Lake Louise\nSki School. Friday, Nov. 23 at\nSilver King Ski Lodge, 8 p.m.\nEveryone welcome.\nAUTOMATIC ELECTRIC\nAPPLIANCES\n\u2022 Includes cover that tilts in 6 positions.\n\u2022 Exclusive tilt-leg to automatically drain excess\nfat.\n\u2022 Completely  immersible  for  easy  underwater\nwashing.\n$24.95\nSunbeam Completely Automatic\ndeluxe PERCOLATOR\n\u2022 Makes 8 cups of delicious coffee in 5 minutes.\n\u2022 Strength selector dial.\n\u2022 8 and 10-cup sizes.\n$37.95\nELECTRIC KETTLES:\nSunbeam  _\t\nELECTRIC KNIFE SHARPENER:\nSunbeam    __\nSTEAM IRONS: $\u00ab\u00ab qc\nSunbeam, Model S5A Ironmaster    __C.___.i03\n*12>95\n$23.95\nSunbeam\nRADIANT\nCONTROL\nToaster\n>  Bread lowers\nautomatically\ni  Toast rises silently\ni  Color selector for\nevery shade of\ntoast\n*39.95\nHipperson Hardware Co. Ltd.\nMember Link Hardware Chain\nPhone 352-5517\n395 Baker St.\nToronto Police\nTake Aged Woman\nInto Safe Custody\nTORONTO (CP)-Toronto police took an 80-year-old woman\nsuffering from amnesia into\nprotective custody Wednesday\nnight and placed her in a Salvation Army home.\nEmployees of a downtown bus\nterminal   found   Ethel   Quinell j\nwandering around the terminal j\ncarrying two suitcases.\nCHRISTMAS PORTRAIT\nSPECIAL\nOne 8x10, six 5x7's only $19.95\nReg. $28.00. Portraits by\nHelmuth, Vogue Studio\nBERLIN (Reuters) - West\nGerman Chancellor Konrad Adenauer Thursday discussed with\nhis West Berlin party executive\ncommittee the Der Spiegel magazine affair over which his government faces a coalition crisis.\nConference sources said Adenauer discussed the matter\nwithout going into details on the\ncoalition crisis. They said he\nrepeated his former assertion\nthat the federal prosecutor's office had not been instructed to\ntake action against the magazine.\nHe said the federal court's rejection of a plea for the release\nof one of the arrested Der\nSpiegel editors last Tuesday\nwas proof \"there is grave suspicion of treason against\nSpiegel.\"\nAlthough Adenauer's trip to\nBerlin had been planned for\nseveral weeks, the announcement it would take place Thursday took most observers by sur-\nvice as saying the secret service\nAdenauer also arranged to\nbrief West Berlin Mayor Willy\nBrandt on his talks with President Kennedy in Washington\nearlier this month.\nOFFERED TO QUIT\nThe coalition crisis Tuesday\nled 10 members of his Christian\nDemocratic party to offer to resign their cabinet posts to allow\nAdenauer to reorganize the cabinet in the wake of dissension\nover the treason-accused news\nmagazine Der Spiegel.\nThe move followed the resignation of five cabinet ministers\nbelonging to the Free Democratic Party, junior partner in\nthe coalition, in an attempt to\nforce Adenauer to oust controversial defence minister Franz-\nJosef Strauss.\nFDP Leader Eric Mende\nclaimed Strauss \"deceived\" his\ncabinet colleagues about last\nmonth's police raid on Der\nSpiegel, accused of illegally obtaining and printing defence\nsecrets.\nMUNICH   (Reuters)\nThe\nAmerica Honors\nThanksgiving\nNEW YORK (AP) - Americans paused Thursday to observe\nthe Thanksgiving holiday\u2014with\nprayers, feasting and family reunions.\nAlthough the holiday's origin\ndates back to the biblical accounts of harvest festivals,\nThanksgiving is regarded by\nAmericans as a United States\ncustom and a symbol of the\ncountry's way of giving thanks\nfor the bounty of its wealth,\nboth material and spiritual.\nSince the Pilgrims first observed Thanksgiving in 1621,\nthe holiday has survived wars,\ncrises, and depressions. More\nthan any other national holiday\nit continues to mirror the\nAmerican spirit.\nPhone 352-3552 for Classified\nWest German news agency\nDPA Thursday quoted ah official\nof the West German secret ser-\nas saying the Secret Service\nchief, Gen. Reinhold Gehlen,\nknew one of his agents maintained contacts with the treason-\naccused magazine Der Spiegel.\nThe agent, Col. Adolf Wicht,\nwas arrested last month on suspicion of treason during investigation of the magazine, which\nis alleged to have published defence secrets. Der Spiegel's publisher and three of its senior\neditorial staff are under investigatory arrest.\nDPA said the secret service\nofficial said Wicht also had contacts with other news outlets.\nGehlen backed Wicht as far\nas contacts established with his\nknowledge were concerned, but\ndid not approve other alleged\nactions being investigated.\nStock Quotations\nrhe Dally News does not hold Itself responsible in the event\nol an ei-ror in the following lists.\nTORONTO STOCKS\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nAdvocate\nAgnico\nAnacon Lead\nAumacho\nAumaque\nBarnat\nBrunswick\nCampbell C\nCassiar\nCentral Patricia\nCoch Will\nC G Arrow\nConwest\nCopper Corp.\nCraig\nDenison\nEast Sullivan\nElder\nFaraday\nGeco\nGunnar Gold\nHarminerals\nHeadway\nHollinger\nHudson Bay\nHydra Ex\nIron Bay\nJoliet Que.\nJonsmith\nR J Jowsey\nKenville\nKerr Addison\nLabrador\nLeitch\nLorado\nMcLeod\nMadsen\nMaritime Mining\nMcKenzie\nMining Corp\nMurray\nNew Hosco\nNorgold\nNormetals\nNorpax\nNorth Rankin\nOpemiska\nPick Crow\nPine Point\nPlacer\nPreston\nQuemont\nRadiore\nSan Antonio\nSherritt Gordon\nSiscoe\nSteep Rock\nTaurcanis\nTeck Hughes\nTorbit\nUnited Keno\nUpper Canada\nViolamac\nWright Hargreaves\nYale\nYellowknife Bear\nYoung Gold\nOILS\nBailey S A\nBanff Oils\nBata\nCalgary and Edmonton\nCanadian Delhi\n5.60\n.52\n.34\n.0814\n.05%\n1.00\n3.30\n3.60\n10.50\n1.00\n4.75\n.60\n4.10\n.28\n18.75\n10.00\n1.75\n1.06\n1.70\n23.87'\/_\n9.25\n.10\n.22\n20.75\n53.75\n.2714\n1.04\n.20\n.1014\n.2614\n.0414\n7.40\n23.00\n1.20\n1.15\n1.15\n2.20\n.50\n.2614\n14.00\n1.07\n.68\n.0314\n2.94\n.09\n.24\n5.90\n.58\n11.75\n26.00\n7.05\n10.12%\n.3914\n.35\n2.82\n1.72\n5.25\n.30\n1.56\n.34\n8.00\n1.63\n1.35\n.81\n.0914\n1,20\n.13\n10.75\n1.03\n.06\n23.00\n3.00\nCanadian Devonian\nHome A\nMidcon\nNat. Pete\nNew Continental\nOkalta\nPacific Pete\nPlace\nPonder\nProv Gas\nSpooner\nStanwell Oil\nTriad\nUnited Oils\nYank Canuck\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi\nAlgoma Steel\nAluminum\nArgus 2nd pfd.\nAtlas St.\nB.A. Oil\nBathurst Power\nBell Telephone\nB.C. Forest\nB.C. Packers B\nB.C. Power A\nBurns A\nCan. Cement\nCan. Packers B\nCanadian Breweries\nCanadian Canners\nCanadian Celanese\nCan Chem Co.\nCanadian Dredge\nCan Oil\nCanadian Pacific Rly\nColumbia Cellulose\nCons Mining _ Smelting\nCons Gas\nDist. Seagram\nDom Magnesium\nDom Stores\nDom Tar &. Chemical\nDom Textiles\nFalconbridge\nFamous Players\nFanny Farmer\nFord U.S.\nFord Can\nGatineau\nGoodyear pfd\nImperial Oil\nImp. Tobacco\nInd. Ace.\nInt. Nickel\nLoblaw A\nLoblaw B\nMassey Ferguson\nMetro Com\nMetro pfd\nMolson Brewery\nMoore Corp.\nNoranda\nPage Hershey\nPower Corp\nShawinigan\nSimpsons A\nStandard Paving\nSteel of Canada\nTexaco\nUnion Gas of Can\nUnited Steel\nWeston George\nWoodwards A\n3.70\n11.8714\n.29\n2.60\n.24\n.13\n13.75\n.55\n.40\n1.74\n.1114\n.31\n1.84\n1.39\n.0714\n42\n4514\n23\n49y.\n34%\n29%\n49 b\n50?'.\n11%\n15'..\n17%\n9 'A\n28\n5214\n11\n11%\n343\/.\n7%\n7\n57\n24 %\n4.10\n21%\n19%\n46 Vi\n8\n12%\n17%\n16%\n53y_\n17%\n29\nim\n159\n2814\n45\n44\n14%\n2514\n6814\nby.\n9\n11%\n714\n20%\n25%\n49%\n30%\n20\n71%\n24%\n29%\n1014\n18\n43\n20\n5\n17\n\u2022    1514\nTOPCOATS\nfor\nFALL\nand\nWINTER\nYou'll feel warmth,\nbut not the weight in\nour new laminated topcoats. Curon doubles the\nwarmth of any fabric to\nwhich it is bonded.\nSee these new Curon\nlaminated coats today.\n*279S \u00bb *5995\nEMORY'\u00a7\nLTD.\nTHE MAN'S STORE\nNew Home Rule\nAgreed On\nFor Nyasaland\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014A constitutional conference here has\nreached agreement in principle\non the form of a new home-rule\nconstitution for the British protectorate of Nyasaland, conference sources said Wednesday.\nA communique issued after a\nmorning meeting of British officials and Nyasaland party\ndelegations to the conference\nsaid discussion had begun on a\ndraft report of the findings of\nthe conference.\nConference sources said rapid\nprogress has been made in\ndealing with major issues in the\nconstitution which is expected\nto provide for an African Negro government headed by Dr.\nHastings Banda, the majority\nMalawai Party leader, in an internally self-governing Nyasaland early next year.\nNorway's state housing bank\ngranted loans for 221,000 of the\n394,000 homes built there between 1945 and 1962.\nHave the Job Done Right!\nVIC GRAVEC\n\u2122        LIMITED       **\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 352-3315\nDRESSER SET\n--SPECIALS- ,\n3 and 4-Piece Sets\nAssorted Designs\nA SMALL DEPOSIT WILL\nHOLD TILL CHRISTMAS\n$6.95 - $8.95 - $9.95\nYour Rexall Pharmacy\nCITY DRUG\nPhone 352-3611\nBox 460\nRotary luncheon Friday, 12:15\np.m., Hume Silver Room.\nNew shipment of navy blue\nSweaters in all sizes.\nTOT   'N'   TEEN   SHOP\nCIVIL DEFENCE\nCOMMUNICATION   COURSE\nStarts Tuesday, November 27th\nat 7:30 jp.m. in the Old Hospital\nbuilding \u2014 8 weeks' instruction\n\u2014 one class per week. Candidates can receive R.R.O. License\n, ,   I when qualified. Information av-\nShe didn t know where she j ailable [rom w> R Anderson or\nwas going or who she was supposed to be going to see,\" said\nSergeant of Detectives John\nGrilley.\nHe said the woman, who had\na ticket to Hamilton, remembered leaving Vancouver Saturday. She was carrying a Vancouver newspaper.\nPolice lound a Vancouver address in her purse and police\nare now checking.\nNews Briefs\nSHELL ISLANDS\nTAIPEI, Formosa (API\u2014The\nChinese Communists shelled the\nChinese offshore islands of Que-\nmoy and Matsu Wednesday, the\nNationalist defence ministry reported today. The ministry said\nthe Communists fired 91 shells\nat Quemoy and 23 at Matsu\ncomplex, 150 miles to the north.\nTAKES BIG LICKING\nLONDON (API-Britain has\nissued a special double-size\nstamp to mark its National\nProductivity Year. Complained\nC. Greenhalgh in a letter to the\nLondon Times: \"What sort of\npromotion is it when we are\nobliged to lick twice the area of\npostage stamp we lick in a\nnormal year?\"\nClassified Ads Get Results!\nW. W. Wait CD. Co-ordinators\ntor Nelson and Zone. Course\nfree.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nRAMSDEN\u2014Funeral services\nfor Mrs. Mercy Ramsden will\nbe held at the Church of the\nRedeemer, corner Second and\nDavies Streets, today (Friday)\nat 1 p.m. Rev. Canon W. J. Silverwood and Rev. W. Edington\nwill officiate and interment will\ntake place in Nelson Memorial\nPark. Thompson Funeral Service.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nPARKS\u2014Funeral services for\nMrs. Margaret Parks will be\nheld at St. Saviour's Pro-Cathedral today (Friday) at 2:30 p.m.\nThe Rev. Canon George W. Lang\nwill officiate and interment will\ntake place in Nelson Memorial\nPark. The Royal Canadian Legion ritual will be conducted at\nthe Thompson Funeral Home today at 2:10 p.m. In lieu of flowers, friends are requested to\nmake memorial donations to the\nCanadian Heart Fund .\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nSTDENIS\u2014Requiem Mass for\nMr. Denis StDenis will be celebrated at the Cathedral of Mary\nImmaculate Saturday at 11 a.m.\nRt. Rev. J. F. Monaghan, D.P.,\nV.F., will be the celebrant and\ninterment will take place in Nelson Memorial Park. Rosary will\nbe recited at the Thompson\nFuneral Home Friday at 8 p.m.\nEnjoy the Master Rum\nCaptain Morgan\nRUM\nA special blend of the Choicest Rums\nfrom the Largest Stocks in the World\nCAPTAIN MORGAN RUM DISTILLERS LIMITED \u2022 SUPPLIERS TO THE ROYAL CANADIAN NAVY\nTHIS ADVERTISEMENT IS NOT PUBLISHED OR DISPLAYED BY THE UQUOR CONTHOL BOARD OR THE GOVERNMENT OF BRITISH COLUMBIA\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1962_11_23","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0434591","@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":"1962-11-23 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1962-11-23 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\/1.0434591"}