{"@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"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2023-08-15","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1964-10-09","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0435338\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" TEMPERATURES\nNelson   40 51\nToronto   40 60\nCalgary ......:...:.......:..... 35 71\nPcnticton   42 57\nVancouver  54 59\nWhitehorse  47 54\nSpokane  51 4\nom\n$m\nFORECAST\nCloudy with a few showers.\nClearing this evening. Little\nchange in temperature, winds\nlight. Low-high at Cranbrook 35\nand 55; Crescent Valley 40 and\n58. Saturday: Sunny.\nPublished at Nelson, government, financial trading and educational centre of the Kootenay-Columbia area\nVol. 63\nNELSON, B. C, CANADA-FRIDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 9, 1964\n10 Cents\nNo. 143\nDefence Department To Come Under Scrutiny\nMoney Not the Problem,\nMartin Tells Hospitals\nHealth Minister Says Gov't\nWaiting tor Completion of Survey\nVICTORIA (CP) \u2014 Health Minister Eric Martin\nsaid Thursday it is \"strictly-untrue\" there is a shortage\nof hospital beds here because the provincial government\nis with-holding money.\n\"Money is not the problem,\" he said.\nMr. Martin's comment followed a complaint Wednesday by officials of the city's two major hospitals,\nRoyal Jubilee and St. Joseph's, they have had to close\ndown 125 beds at a time when 1,200 are on the hospital\nwaiting lists .\nThey blamed a shortage of nurses and operating\nfunds and laid responsibility at the door of Mr. Martin\nand the B.C. Hospital Insur\nance Service.\n\"For a doctor or anyone else\nto say we're withholding money\nfor beds is strictly untrue,\" said\nMr. Martin.\nHe said there had been a fall-\noff in the number of patient days\nin the hospitals this year because\nof other factors.\n\"There were fewer beds available because of renovations under way at the hospitals and be-\nBandits Get\n$18,000 From\nCoast Bank\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Two\nmen grabbed more than $18,000\nin an' armed bank holdup here\nThursday.\nPolice said their getaway car\nlinked them with a Moose Jaw\nservice station robbery Sept. 28.\nDescriptions of the suspects\nin the prairie holdup were broadcast to patrolmen already on the\nlookout for a late-model white\nluxury car bearing Alberta licence plates.\nThe bank holdup came just after closing time at a Bank of\nMontreal branch in south-central\nVancouver. Armed with three\nrevolvers, the men somehow\ngained entrance, rifled all cash\ndrawers, and made thier way\ninto the vault.\nIn the Moose Jaw incident, attendant Ray Burnett was forced\ninto a car by two men, ordered\nto drive a mile from his service\nstation, and let go. The men escaped with $206 in a car that\nmatched the description of the\ncar used here Thursday.\nHome, Hogg Get\nPolice Escort\nLONDON (CP) - Police had\nto escort Prime Minister Sir Alec\nDouglas-Home from a political\nrally in Brimingham Thursday\nnight after he was shouted down\nby noisy hecklers.\n\"After this exhibition here,\"\nthe prime minister said, \"I\ndoubt whether people who depend on this kind of support are\nfit to govern Britain.\"\nScience Minister Quintin Hogg\ngot even rougher tratment. His\ncar was mobbed by a jeering\ncrowd in London and police had\nto clear a path for him.\ncause some beds could no longer\nbe used. They have been found\nobsolete,\" he said.\nMr. Martin said a study of hospital problems was started by\nlocal hospital authorities at his\nsuggestion last June, and that\nhe is expecting a report on the\nsituation by the end of this\nmonth.\nThe hospital officials said 105\nbeds in Royal Jubilee haven't\nbeen used for more than a year\nand 20 beds at St. Joseph's have\nbeen out of use since mid-summer.\nA Royal Jubilee spokesman\nsaid the beds are empty because\nof a lack of nurses even though\nthe. BCHIS maintains there are\n32 too many graduate nurses at\nthe hospital at present.\n\"The government is withholding approval for using the extra\nbeds until the hospital survey is\ncomplete,\" said Mr. Martin.\nHold Line\nOn Fees,\nStudents Urge\nSAANISH (CP' - The student\ncouncil at the University of Victoria has asked the board of governors to hold the line on tuition\nfees in the 1965-66 academic year.\nAn alma mater society brief,\nbased on a student survey conducted by questionaire and representing 20 per cent of the student enrolment last year, shows\n24.9 per cent of students held part\ntime jobs through the university\nyear.\nThe survey was made after the\nboard of governors announced\nearlier this year that fees would\nbe increased $50 to $402.\nNo announcement has yet been\nmade of a possible increase in\nnext year's fees.\nIt also said 11 per cent of the\nstudents must interrupt studies\nfor financial reasons.\nSummer employment was listed by 58.3 per cent of students as\ntheir most important source of\nincome, 13.4 per cent had no\nsummer job during the 1963 season and 26.5 per cent only had\nwork for part of the summer.\nThe average summer earnings\nwere $595.40, compared to the\naverage spending per student\neach academic year of $1,142.\n25 Return\nTo Embassies\nLEOPOLDVILLE (Reuters) -\nTwenty-five Egyptians and five\nAlgerians left here by boat for\nBrazaville across the Congo\nRiver Thursday night after the\nCongolese ended a \"lock-up\" of\ntheir embassies.\nPresident Gamal Abdel Nasser of the United Arab Republic\nwas reported to have made the\nending of the \"siege\" of the two\nembassies a condition for freeing\nCongolese Premier Moise Tshom-\nbe from virtual imprisonment in\nthe Aruba Palace near Cairo.\nCairo airport sources said earlier the Leopoldville government\nhad asked Egyptian officials for\npermission to land a special\nplane there. There was speculation Tshombe, barred from the\nCairo conference of non-aligned\nnations, may leave aboard the\nspecial plane.\nPARKS BEING\nINVADED FOR\n\"EASY MONEY\"\nVANCOUVER (CP)- Naturalist and author Roderick Haig-\nBrown charged Thursday that\nthe B.C. government is going to\npermit logging and mining in\nprovincial parks simply to make\nsome more easy money.\nHe told the annual convention\nof the B.C. Federation of Labor\nthat British Columbians can ex-\npext further legislation which\nwill favor industry and not the\nprovincial parks.\nMr. Haig-Brown said B.C.'s\nClass \"A\" parks should not be\nsacrificed to get stumpage and\nmineral royalties.\n\"We need to be considering\nhow to protect and manage and\ndevelop these areas, not wondering how we can keep the government from ripping the guts out\nof them for a few quick dollars.\"\nLOOK AIIKES--former President Eisenhower stands beside a\nbronze bust ot himself at Its unveiling at Columbia University in New York. The bust depicts Eisenhower as he appeared when he was president ot Columbia.\nNuclear Deterrent\nMain Election Issue\nBy DOUG MARSHALL\nLONDON (CP)-The British\nelection enters its countdown\nstage\u2014six days to zero\u2014with\nConservative leaders concentrating more and more on\nthe nuclear deterrent issue.\nA central theme of almost all\nPrime .Minister Sir Alec Douglas-Home's recent speeches is\nthat Labor's defence plans will\nbetray Britain by stripping her\nof her independent deterrent.\nOther Tory leaders also hammered away at this point, despite the evidence most voters\nare far more concerned with\nthe price of houses or.the condition of schools than they are\nwith foreign affairs.\nBut Douglas \u2022 Home's argument, observers believe, carries a powerful emotional punch\nto it when he claims Labor is\ntaking \"a completely unreal\nview\" of world politics.\nVoters who couldn't care less\nabout the complex question of\nwhether Britain should join the\nNATO mixed-ban force still react strongly to suggestions that\nBritish influence and power in\nthe world might be further diminished.\nMeanwhile there are signs\nthat the Labor party machine\nilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllll\nEscaped Python\nDidn't Make Her Talk\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Police Thursday hunted a seven-foot\npython whic hescaped Wednesday night from the home of a\nLondon woman doctor \u2014 but this was only part of the trouble.\nThey had the utmost difficulty getting the facts from the\npython's keeper. On Wednesdays 54-year-old Mrs. Rachel Pin-\nney never speaks to anyone.\nDr. Pinney, daughter of a British Army general, is a pacifist. Four years ago she took a vow never to speak on Wednesdays, as. a. protest against Britain's possession of nuclear weapons.\nOnly in emergencies will she break the pledge, and a lost\npython, she decided, was not an emergency.\nSo the policemen's questions Wednesday night were answered with an apologetic smile, graphic gestures and a scribbled\nnote from the doctor.\nPolice Thursday described the non-poisonous python as dangerous, adding: \"Although he Is a crushing snake, a bite could\nprove serious.\"\nDr. Pinney had been looking after the snake for a friend.\nlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll'llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllliiii\nOlympic Games Hit by Politics\nTOKYO (CP) - International\npolitical bickering which seems\nto hover over the Olympics\nevery four years like the plague\nbroke out again Thursday, just\ntwo days before the 1964 Games\nopen in Tokyo, when North\nKorea withdrew its entire team\nand Indonesia threatened to follow suit.\nWhile rain fell most of the\nday from sullen skies and more\nwas predicted for today, the\nNorth Koreans announced they\nwere pulling out their 144-mem-\nber delegation from the first\nOlympics ever held in Asia because of a row over last year's\nGames in the New Emerging\nForces held in Jakarta, the Indonesian capital.\nInternational sports federations outlawed Ganefo because\ncompetitors from Israel and\nNationalist China were refused\nvisas to Indonesia for the Asian\nGames there the previous year.\nThe International Olympic\nCommittee and other world athletic bodies subsequently barred\nall who competed in track and\nfield and swimming at Jakarta\nfrom the Olympics.\nREAFFIRM DECISION\nThursday, the international\nbodies meeting in Tokyo reaffirmed that decision. North\nKorea withdrew after calling\nthe sanctions against Ganefo\n\"improper.\"\nAvery Brundage of the United\nStates, newly re-elected IOC\npresident, said only six track\nand field athletes and four\nswimmers from North Korea\nwere barred from the Olympics, but they included Sin Kim\nDan, the world's fastest woman\nrunner over 400 and 800 metres.\nIt seemed certain that Indonesia would withdraw unless\nthere is a last-minute change\nof heart by the International\nAmateur Athletic Federation,\nand the International Swimming\nFederation;\nIndonesian officials claimed\nthe support of Russia, the\nUnited Arab Republic and some\nAsian countries in their bid to\nget the ban lifted. Twenty Indonesians have been barred from\nthe Olympics for competing in\nGanefo. Nine of them \u2014 five\ntrack and field and four swimmers\u2014are in Tokyo with the\n134-member Indonesian team.\nDOUBT RUSSIAN QUIT\nBut the Indonesian officials\nadmitted it is doubtful whether\nRussia would walk out of the\nOlympics over Indonesia's\nplight and give up the many\nmedals it is expected to win.\nMeanwhile, the rainy weather\nhad hampered outdoor training.\nBut the Canadian swimming\nteam were in high spirits and\nthe Canadian basketballers\nfound the 4,200-seat gym where\nthe hoop competition will be\nheld \"a real, fine place to\nplay.\"\nThe Canadians, who qualified\nfor the Olympic tournament by\nfinishing third in a pre-Olympic\ntournament in Yokohama, drew\nRussia as their first opponent\nin the Olympic preliminaries\nstarting Sunday. The Canadians\nplay in Group A with Russia,\nItaly, Poland, Hungary, Puerto\nRico, Mexico and Japan.\nThe Canadian track and field\nteam got in some practice but\nby mid-afternoon Thursday the\ntraining track was soaked,\nmaking it dangerous for sprinters.\nU.S. military authorities said\nthe rain might continue for 10\ndays but the Tokyo meteorological bureau said the weather\nwould be good by Saturday.\nis changing directions for the final push.\nUp until now Labor Leader\nHarold Wilson has spent most\nof his time shooting holes in the\nTory prosperity claims, stressing that an economic crisis\nlooms.\nNext week he will switch to\nwhat Labor spokesmen call the\n\"creative phase\"\u2014the program\nthe socialists have prepared to\nmeet the challenge of the scientific revolution.\nShift Bosses\nQuit at\nBRITANNIA BEACH, B.C.\n(CP' \u2014 Fourteen shift bosses at\nthe strikebound copper mine here\nquit their jobs Thursday, said B.\nB. Greenlee, general manager of\nthe Anaconda Company (Canada) Limited.\nMr. Greenlee said the men left\ntheir jobs in a dispute over removal of equipment from inside\nthe mine which is being closed\nby Anaconda because of failure\nto settle a strike by 350 employees.\nOnly one shift boss stayed on\nthe job along with five foremen\nwho were not involved in the dispute.\nMr. Greenlee said the supervisory staff members were asked to remove mine cars, locomotives, battery charging equipment and other underground\nequipment in preparation for\nclosing the mine.\n\"When they refused, they were\ntold there was nothing else for\nthem to do and either they go to\nwork or resign.\"\nHe said the bosses, none of\nthem union members, chose to\nquit. .\nThe striking International Union of Mine, Mill and Smelter\nWorkers (Ind) was asked Monday to provide men to remove\nthe machinery, but the union\ntold the company there would\nhave to be a shutdown contract.\nMr. Greenlee said he took this\nto mean the union refused and,\nas a result, supervisory personnel were asked to do the work.\na;....v...g-\nHunter's\nBody Found\nPRINCE GEORGE (CP) -\nThe body of missing hunter Rudy\nMuschket has been found at the\nfoot of a cliff on Dome Mountain, about 80 miles east of here,\nThe body was discovered early\nWednesday and it took searchers until Thursday afternoon to\nhike down from the mountain of\nperpetual snow to break news of\nthe discovery.\nAn RCMP constable and another searcher stayed at the\nscene, believed to be about 4000\nfeet up the 6000-foot mountain.\nStaff Sgt. Ed Rosbert said a\nhelicopter will be sent into the\narea today.\nAuto Strike\nDeadline\nOct. 15\nDETROIT (AP) - The threat\nof a new strike loomed over the\nU.S. auto industry Thursday as\nnegotiators continued efforts to\nsettle local plant demands and\nend a U.S.-wide walkout against\nGeneral Motors in its 16th day.\nFewer than 20 GM settlements\nwere reported at some 130 bargaining units around the country.\nNational contract bargaining\nwas broken off Wednesday between the United Auto Workers\nand American Motors Corporation, when the talks bogged down\nin disagreement over retaining\na unique profit sharing provision.\nDouglas Fraser, who heads the\nUAW negotiation team, said that\nthere is still time to reach a settlement before the AMC contract expires at midnight Oct.\n15, but if no agreement is reached by that time, \"there will be a\nstrike.\"\nWinter Works\nPolicy Stands\n-Bennett\nVICTORIA (OP) - The B.C.\ngovernment will not review its\nnew winter works policy, Premier W. A. C. Bennett indicated\nThursday.\n\"I think it is a definite policy,\"\nMr. Bennett said.   \t\nThe: policy, announced last\nsummer, is that the province will\nonly pay winter works aid to\nmunicipalities who hire workmen who have been on welfare\nfor three months.\nMunicipalities protested that\ntheir winter works programs\nwould be seriously reduced by\nthe policy, and municipal affairs\nminister Dan Campbell last\nmonth promised the Union of\nB.C. Municipalities he would\nsubmit its request for a change\nto the cabinet.\nMr. Bennett said the policy\nwas designed to get able bodied\nunemployed people \"back into\nthe bloodstream.\"\nPGE in Red\nThis Year\nVICTORIA (CP) - The Pacific\nGreat Eastern Railway will lose\nmoney this year but other provincial government revenues\nwill be bigger than ever, Premier Bennett said Thursday.\nHe had earlier predicted the\nrailway would make $500,000 profit.\n\"It's because of the rain,\" he\nsaid. \"The rain that has done so\nmuch good for our forests has interfered with the moving of logs\nand cut down traffic.\"\nThe railway depends on the\nshippih gof lumber from north-\ncentral B.C. to North Vancouver\nfor a large part of its revenue.\nMr. Bennett said he could not\npredict the size of the deficit at\nthis time, *\"but I want to report\nthis to the public as early as\npossible because I gave the impression there would be a profit,\" he said.\nLast year the railway made\nits first-ever over-all profit of\n$7,014.\nThe premier said the PGE is\nthe only part of B.C.'s economy\nthat is not. moving ahead this\nyear, but he predicted the future\nof the PGE will be \"brighter\nthan ever.\"\nMERCY FLIGHT\nVANCOUVER (CP)-Joe Par-\nnouse, 16, of Kamloops, was in\nfair condition in hospital Thursday night suffering from undisclosed injuries. ;  .\nThe youth was flown to hospital here from Kamloops by the\nRCAF.\nDOLLAR UP\nNEW YORK (CP) - Canadian\ndollar up 1-64 at 92 61-64 in\nterms of U.S. funds. Week ago\n92 63-64. Pound sterling down\n1.32 at 32.78 21-64.\nCommons Committee\nFeels \"Something Wrong,\"\nPlans To Ferret It Out\nMAYOR BEATS\nCORRUPTION\nCHARGE\nSUDBURY (CP) -Mr. Justice\nLeo Landreville of the Ontario\nSupreme Court, former mayor of\nSudbury, was cleared Thursday\nof charges of municipal corruption in a judgment by Magistrate\nAlbert Marck.\nThe magistrate discharged Mr.\nJustice Landreville at the end of\na preliminary hearing of charges\nthat began Sept. 29, declining to\nsend him to trial in a higher\ncourt.\nMr. Justice Landreville, mayor\nof Sudbury from 1955 until late\n1956, was charged with accepting shares of Northern Ontario\nNatural Gas as a consideration\nfor getting NONG franchise for\nSudbury through city council\nwhen he was mayor and with\nagreeing to accept NONG shares\nfor signing the agreement.\nEvidence at the hearing was\nthat Mr. Justice Landreville\nmade a profit of $117,000 on the\nsale of NONG shares a year, after he resigned as mayor to become a Supreme Court justice.\n\"In my opinion a properly\ncharged jury could not find the\naccused guilty and I cannot find\nsufficient evidence to place him\non trial,\" the magistrate said. \"I\ndischarge the accused on all\ncounts.\" . \u25a0;,-\u25a0\nCommented the Supreme Court\njustice afterwards:\n\"This strengthens my faith in\njustice.\".\nGM Lays Off\n500 Workers\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nGeneral Motors of Canada laid\noff 500 more hourly-rated workers at its Oshawa plant Thursday bringing the total number to\nabout 8,500 since the United\nAuto Workers walked off their\njobs in GM plants in the United\nStates two weeks ago.\nThe plant, where there were\n13,500 working when layoffs started, lacks parts normally made in\nthe U.S.\nMcKinnon Industries Limited\nin St. Catharines announced\nThursday that 1,450 hourly-rated employees will be laid off\nthere next week because of a production cut-back resulting from\nthe U.S. strike.\nThis would bring total layoffs\nat McKinnon's two plants to\n1,750. At peak employment 6,100\nworkers are involved in production of engines and components\nat McKinnon, most of which go\nto the Oshawa plant.\nHuman Factor\nBeing Ignored,\nLabor\nSays\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Ma-\nchines are moving too fast and\nare endangering human life, the\nB.C. Federation of Labor was\ntold Thursday.\n\"The working men and women\nof B.C. are embroiled now in a\nproductivity race which has\nlargely discarded human values\nwith consequent damage to life,\"\nsaid the Federation's safety and\ncompensation report.\nThe report, endorsed Thursday\nby the union convention, urged\nhealth minister Eric Martin to\ngather union, industry and workmen's compensation board representatives together to study the\neffects of automation and productivity speedups on health and\nsafety of workers.\nIt also called for a federal investigation of safety regulations\nin activities under federal jurisdiction.\nThe report said speed levels at\nwhich machines operate should\nbe reduced, new workers should\nreceive special safety training,\nre-training programs should follow technological changes, and\nunion, management and government responsibilities in accident\nprevention should be clearly defined.\nBy DAVE MclNTOSH ...\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 The 24-member Commonside-\nfence committee, which has become about as non-partisan as politicians can get, is planning the most searching\ninvestigation ever undertaken into the defence production department. .\u25a0\u2022\u25a0--\nCommittee members said privately Thursday, that\nthere is something wrong in the department and they intend to find out what it is.\nSpecifically, they want to find\nout, for instance, why it took\n10 years to produce prototypes\nof the Bobcat armored troop\ncarrier. The vehicle was finally\nscrapped because it was far behind similar developments in\nother NATO countries and twice\nas expansive.\nThe committee also intends\nto investigate all circumstances\nsurrounding the construction of\nthe Provider, the navy's new\nsupply ship.\nDefence Production Minister\nDrury informed the Commons\nJuly 6 that after the navy ac-\nParliament\nThursday\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nDuring debate of trade department estimates, Alvin Hamilton\n(PC \u2014 Qu'Appelle) called for\nhigher prices in Canada on tropical products to aid underdeveloped countries.\nReid Scott'(NDP \u2014 Toronto\nDanforth) sought formation of\na new ministry of consumer affairs to protect and speaf for\nconsumers. ,-.':::\u25a0\nEldoa-JWwliam* (PC \u2014 Bow\nRiver), sought lower transportation costs for coal.\nThe Creditiste and NDP blockade against a routine private bill\nsought by the Bell Telephone\nCompany continued as the measure to add directors to the company's board was talked out for\nanother week.\ncepted the ship from the builder.\nDavie Shipbuilding Company of\nLauzon, Que.,* defects appeared\nin some of the vessel's winch\npumps and motors.    \" iVr\nMr. Drury also revealed that\nthe contract price .was..hot',\nagreed upon by the'builder until the ship was accepted by the'\nnavy. This price was. $16,382,-\n904. The initial tender was $11,-\n040,960 but certain extras were\npermitted.\nOne committee member said\nthe Provider has a vibration\nproblem, something which\nshould never have happened\nafter all the years of. Canadian\nexperience in building hulls and\npropellers for ships.\nPresentation of defence appropriations to the Commons,\nprobably? next week, will give\nthe committee an opportunity\nto get down to work again.\nThe committee expects to\ncall Defence-Minister Hellyer\nfor an Up-to-date accounting ot\nmoves toward armed forces integration and implementation\nof the white paper on defence\npublished in March.\nIt will also study the concentration of the four main defence\nindustries \u2014 aircraft, electronics, instruments and ships\u2014in\nthe Montreal and southern Ontario regions.\nAnother item the committee\nwants to look at: why the. number' of. personnel in the defence\nproduction departnjej]tJ\"\u00bb. increased to 1,829 from 1,476 between 1960 and 1964 while de-\nfen c e equipment purchases\nhave been falling to some $200,-\n000,000 from $300,000,000 a year.\nQuebec Polishes Up\nFor Her Majesty\nQUEBEC (GP)-Although se-\ncurity measures already are being put into effect,-this old city\nis all aflutter as the weekend\nvisit of Queen Elizabeth -and\nPrince Philip approaches.,\nGardeners are primping\nshrubbery, trees and lawns\nabout the Legislature Building.\nNew carpets and fresh varnish\nhave appeared in the legislative\ncouncil chamber, where the\nQueen will speak Saturday.\nBois des Coulognes, residence\nof Lieutenant - Governor Paul\nComtois, is getting a face-lifting. The Queen and the Prince\nwill lunch there Saturday.\nMeanwhile, Quebec Provincial\nPolice began Thursday stopping\ncars at all entrances to the city,\nchecking closely any that appeared suspicious and making\ndrivers identify themselves\nthrough driving permits and\nregistration licences.\nPassengers arriving at railroad stations or airports were\nnot checked except that police\nkept watch for any known separatists or terrorists. No arrests had been made up to early\nThursday night.\nAbout 800 police and soldiers\nwill surround the legislature\nbuilding Saturday.\nWhen the royal yacht Britannia arrives at Wolfe's Cove\nSaturday, frogmen will keep an\neye on its hull.\nPolice have warned that demonstrations will not be tolerated. At the same: time nothing\nmore serious than possible scuf- .\nties is expected.\nCrisp, clear weather is expected to enhance the city's\nOctober beauty during the\nweekend. The weather office\nforecasts bright. i skies,; with\nnight temperatures below freezing and daytime temperatures\nin the 40s. .\nRousing cheers and volleys of\nrifle fire echo from la Citadelle\nas soldiers of the Royal 22nd\nRegiment practise welcoming\ntheir colohel-in-chief. She will\ndedicate; a \u2022.tflertjorial to members of the regiment who have\nfallen in battle in the last 20\nyears.\nThe towering Chateau Fron-\ntenac, where.270 guests- have\nbeen invited to a state dinner\nfor the Queen Saturday night, is\ncrawling with reporters, photographers and television .technicians making it a home base\nfor the royal visit.\nThe yellow barriers' that, will\nhold back the crowds as the\nroyal party moves across the\nPlains of Abraham already are\nin place, and: four .RCMP and\ntwo Quebec Provincial Police,\nall in plainclothes, .are. patrolling the plains with powerful\npolice dogs on short leashes.\nAnd iri This Corner \u2666; .\nPAIGNTON, England (AP) \u2014 Mrs. Vlvienna Proctor knew\nwhat to do when faced with a gnu. She called the we.\n\"Have you lost a gnu?\" she asked. \"Because there's one\nright here in my back garden.\"\nThe gnu, aged two, was absent without.leave from the zoo.\nThe chap at the zoo said: \"Leave it alone. It may be\ndangerous.\"     -\t\nThe gnu, a large African antelope prized by compilers of\ncrossword puzzles, can have a savage temper,\nThe men came from the zoo and caught the gnu with a laiso.\nCINCINNATI (AP) \u2014 Love was a shattering experience\nfor 14-year-old William Bluner.\nThe youth knocked out a plate glass window Wednesday\nnight and triggered a burglar alarm in a drugstore.\nThe police arrived, and the youth explained he was only\ntrying to escape from his 13-year-old girl friend.\n\"I jumped back and struck the window when she tried to\nkiss me,\" the embarrassed boy said.\n mmm\n2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, P.iDAY, OCT. 9, 1964\nCelgar Logging Road\nFunds Now Available\nThe money has now been allocated .by the provincial treasury\nboard for Improvements to the\nCelgaf logging road, which will\nbe taken over by the department\nof highways as soon as the work\nis completed.\nThis news was telephoned to\nDun c e\nSATURDAY\nComing From\nNASHVILLE\nFamous Recording Artist\n\u2014-\u2014Shorty\t\nBARNHILL\nSinging Waltz of the\nMountains, Beautiful Caro-\nlinas, Sad Sack, Every\nHour of the Day, Many\nOther Favorites.\nAnd Featuring\nLOU McCOY\nand His Country\nMountain Beys\nIncluding\nMARTY WRIGHT\nThe Flddlln' Fool\n9-1 Adm. $1.25\nLAYNO\nCastlegar newsman Burt Campbell Thursday afternoon by Hon.\nP. A. Gaglardi, minister of highways.\nThe 45-mile-long road is a private logging road from Nakusp\nto Galena Bay, where a ferry\nconnects with Arrowhead.\nA detailed survey carried out\non the road earlier this year by\nthe department estimated that\nthe basic work in improving the\nroad would cost in excess of\n$300,000. This includes the cost\nof the necessary bridge and\ngrading to cross Halfway Creek\nand grade and width improvements. The cost of the bridge and\nrelated work has been estimated\nat $150,000.\nMr. Gaglardi has long been\nadamant that despite pressures\non him to take over the road, he\nwould not do so unless he had\nthe money available \"to bring\nit up to a safe travel standard.\"\nStudents Win\nNDTA Award\nJoint recipients of the Nelson\nDistrict Teachers' Association\nScholarship are Gus Bos of Nel\nson and Denis' P. Powers of\nSalmo.\nThis announcement was made\nat the first general meeting of\nthe Nelson District Teachers'\nAssociation Wednesday night\nThe award of $215 is made an\nnually to deserving students pursuing a career in teaching. Both\nMr. Bos and Mr. Powers are\nattending the University of Bri\ntish Columbia.\nCary Grant 'Audrey Hepburn\n'play a gam* of danger and delight..\nTonight Through Sat.\u2014Shows 7:00-9:05\nCIVIC\nKINQ\nSTOKER BLEND\nCOAL\nFor Carefree Automatic Htat\nOWLER\nFUEl & TRANSFER\n394  Baker  Street,  Nelson    Phone   352,3031\n\"THE GREATEST\nNAME   IN\nHEATING\"\nQuick Heat\nQuiet Heat\nUniform Heat\nAutomatic\nHeat\nClean Heat\nEasy\nInstallation\nSEE US FOR\nA BETTER DEAL\nEstimates\nWithout\nObligation\nNOW JS THE\nTIME TO SWITCH!\nliiiii\nq\nROCKGAS\nPROPANE LTD.\n610 Railway St. Ph. 352-6522\nNELSON, B.C.\nJuvenile Held\nIn Connection\nWith Lost Pups\nRCMP in Princeton Thursday\nnight arrested a 16-year-old juv\nenile in connection with the theft\nof five Great Dane pups and a\npanel truck, stolen at Nelson\nTuesday.\nEarlier Thursday, four of the\npups were found alive near the\nYahk junction, 40 miles south of\nCranbrook.\nThe fifth dog was found dead\nat the roadside, apparently having been struck by a car.\nThe truck and the dogs vanished when the driver, W. Haege-\ndorn of Kaslo, stepped into a\ndowntown laundromat in Nelson\nTuesday.\nComputers'\nUse Told\nAt Castlegar\n\"Computers and Programming\nLanguage\" was the title of an\naddress given by John Roberts\nto members and guests of the\nWest Kootenay Chapter of the\nCertified General Accountants'\nAssociation of B.C. in Castlegar.\nThis was the first of a series\nof four such sessions scheduled\nby the Certified General Accountants, designed to acquaint members of the profession with advances made in the field of electronic computers in the last\n10 years.\nMr. Roberts a research engineer with Cominco's research\nand computer group, described\nthe history and development of\nanalog and digital computers,\nand gave several examples of\nthe speeds with which modern\ncomputers operate.\nAfter sketching in the component parts of a computer installation and describing the function\nof each, Mr. Roberts explained\nhow the \"memory\" of a computer works, and the methods used\nto feed information into a computer and to instruct the machine\nto carry out the required calculations.\nThe meeting was attended by\n30 members and students of the\nCGA association and guests, including three from Nakusp, six\nfrom Grand Forks, one from\nCranbrook and the remainder\nfrom Trail, Nelson and Castlegar. The next meeting in November will deal with computer applications in management problems.\nSTARLIGHT\nDRIVE-IN\nTonight - Saturday\nand Sunday Only\nTune 8 p.m.\n\"IF A MAN\nANSWERS\"\n(Color)\nSandra Dee, Bobby Darrla,\nJohn Lind. Mlchellne Presle\nINDUCTION CEREMONY was an impresaive\npart of the first general meeting this week of the Nelson District Teachers' Association in which new colleagues were formally welcomed to membership in\nthe British Columbia Teachers' Federation. The in\nductees were, standing left to right, G, Walmsley, J.\nH. Morris, S. R. Fulbrook, MiBS P. A. Morey, Miss B. J.\nWard, B. Todd, M. Brooke; seated, Miss S, M. Faber,\nMiss S. A. Greening, Miss M. H. MacPherson, Mrs. N.\nJ. Walmsley, Miss D. M, Tanner and Miss S. B. Edgar.\nB.C. Hydro To Aid Castlegar\nArea in Development Program\nCASTLEGAR \u2014 The Castlegar village commission Tuesday night was told of the acceptance by Castlegar and Kin-\nnair of a B.C. Hydro and\nPower Authority's proposal to\nshare one-half of the $6,400 cost\nof the area's development project.\nDue to the lack ot agreement\non the choice of a planning\nconsultant, a special meeting will\nbe called to complete a selection.\nH. L. Keenleyside, B.C. Hydro\nchairman, told the commission\nin a letter offering to support a\nplanning program that \"we are\naware of the effects of the Columbia Treaty on the Castlegar\narea, and of our responsibility to\nhelp your community's adjustment to these effects.\n'We have been examining\nways and means of assisting in\nyour task without infringing on\nyour autbnomy, and we have\ncome to the conclusion that this\ncan perhaps best be done by helping you to establish a community\nplanning program designed to\nsuggest how you can most satisfactorily handle not only the\nchanges arising from the Columbia works, but also the growth\nwhich you can expect in any\nevent.\nOWN CHOICE\n\"With this in mind we propose\nthat you ask a planning consultant of your choice to undertake\na first-stage program of studies\ncovering the following ground:\nGeneral land development proposals   covering\nareas, staging and control policies.\nGeneral street   and  highway\nproposals.\ncouts See\nFiremen\nIn Action\ncess to any working data which\nmay be of value to us.\n\"Presumably Celgar will also\nwish to be assured that it will\nreceive an appropriate number\nof copies of all studies and reports.\n\"We, for our part, shall CO-\n , .operate fully with your consul\n'We would believe that this tant by SUppiymg him with all\nServicing policies and standards .\nGeneral school and park plans.\n\"These should be carried out\nfor the wider Castlegar-Kinnaird\narea, embracing as much territory around the community as\nseems appropriate.\nNelson had a spate of false\nfire alarms Thursday. The first\nalarm was sounded at 10:45 a.m.\nfrom a call box at High and Pine\nStreet. Children were blamed.\nThe second false alarm came\nat 7:35 p.m. Thursday evening\nwhile about 100 scouts and cubs\nwere visiting the fire hall.\nFire Chief E. S. Owens said\nthe boys behaved well when the\nalarm sounded. They moved to\none side of the fire hall on instruction, thus leaving ample\nspace for the firecrew to don\ntheir protective clothing and proceed to the fire.\nThe second false alarm was\nattributed again to children.\nThe scouts and cubs were the\nsecond group to visit the fire\nhall, 75 having attended demonstrations Wednesday night.\nAnother fire prevention week\nfeature was visits of the dkana-\ngan Helicopters machine to L. V.\nRogers High School, Hume, Trafalgar and Central Schools, and\nSt. Joseph's school. The helicopter picked up principals of each\nschool while Chief Owens lectur-\ndevelopment ed the pupils briefly.\nCASTLE Theatre\nCastlegar, B.C.\nTonight and Saturday\n\"JUNGLE CAT\"\n(Color)\nShows 7:00 and 9:00\nAUTO - VUE\nDRIVE-IN - Trail, B.C.\nLast Time Tonight\nTime 7:30 p.m.\n\"MAN FROM THE\nDINER'S CLCB\"\nDanny Kaye, Martha Hyer\nPlus-\n\"APACHE TERRITbRY\"\nRUSSIAN\nCONCERT\nGrand Forks\nHigh School Auditorium\nSaturday\nOct. 10 at 8 p.m.\nStanley  Humphries\nHigh School Auditorium\nCastlegar, B.C.\nSunday\nOct. 11 at 8 p.m.\nFeaturing from Vancouver\nMARGUERITA and\nNADESDA NEKRASSOFF\nPiano Accompaniment\nNATASHA DOMBSKY\nAccordionist\nBOB GURICIC\nAdmission:   $1.00\nStreet Corners\nBy The Informer\nWhy do the 113 information\nOperators take the longest time\nto answer?. Over the past two\nmonths I have had numerous\noccasions to contact 113 and\nhave been kept waiting an interminable time. It may be that\n113 operators are also doubling\nas PBX staff. If this is the case\njust think what confusion there\nwould be If a large number of\n113 callers telephoned at the\nsame time.\n* \u2022 *\nCorrection on Wednesday's\ncolumn regarding school bicycle\nriders. The school mentioned\nshould have read Central and\n00t Trafalgar.\n* *  *\nStrange as it may seem the\nNow Is the\nTime to\nCheck and\nStock Up Your\nMedicine Chest\nat Home or for\nBusiness\nWide Range at\nSAMPLE'S\nNELSON     .:\nPHARMACY   LTD.\n\"Your Fortress ot Health'\ni39 Baker S\u00bb Nelson\nPhone 352-2313\nlines about the Ward Street sidewalk were taken to heart by the\ncity. The sidewalks are being\ntorn up now. Unfortunately, 1\nCannot take credit for prodding\ncouncil into doing this work. It\njust happened to be a coincidence.\n.  * *\nFor m first time in many\neons i was abroad at 7 a.m.\nyesterday. Have you noticed how\ndifferent the atmosphere is at\nthat early hour? Things seemed\nto have a sharper focus even\nthough the mist was pretty\nthick. SO much for summer.\n\u2022 \u2022 \u00ab\nA spot fast becoming dangerous is the 300-block on V6r.\nnon Street. Cars are parked in\na dangerous manner on the right\nof way, apparently without\nthought for other motorists.\n\u2022 * *\nI   see   Magistrate   William\nEvans is continuing his campaign for hither tines tor minor\noffences. At I said before, hit\nthem where it hurta-in the wai-\nlet. If fines like this have a deterrent effect on offenders, then\nIt is a worthwhile approach.\n\u2022 * \u2666\nHave you ever tried to turn\nright onto Vernon from Ward\nStreet? It the left hand lane it\nblocked by a left turning oar\nand the comer parking toot is\noccupied you have a difficult\ntime in turning. Why not delete\nthe corner parking space' It is\na nuisance.\nprogram would cost around $6400\nand we are prepared to assume\nhalf of the Cost, about $3200, We\nunderstand that Celgar would be\nwilling to assume a further 25\nper cent of the oost if they are\nspecifically asked to do so by\nyou and the village commission\nof Klnnaird.\n'We hope that under these\ncircumstances you and the Klnnaird commission would be willing to share the remaining 25\nper cent of the cost, amounting\nto $800 each.\n\"If, as a result of these studies,\nyou and Kinnalrd see fit to adopt\ndevelopment policies which Justify further work, we are prepared to consider participation\non the same basis in a second-\nstage Study in which detailed\nplant, zoning and subdivision bylaws would be prepared by your\nconsultant.\nFURTHER AID\n\"The cost of such studies would\nprobably be much the same at\nthe cost of the first-stage studies\nWe are further prepared to consider contribution on the same\nbasis to any reviews and revisions which may become necessary in the bourse Ot the next\nfew years in order to ensure that\nthe plans are kept up to date\n\"It will be understood that\nunder procedure thut proposed,\nthe consultant It \"your' consultant and will report to you and\nto Klnnaird. However, in view\nOf Our interest in the suggested\nstudies, we will wish to have\ncopies of hit reports and related\nprogress, and alto to have ac-\nChamber Members\nHonor Art Morton\nA longtime member of the\nChamber of Commerce, Arthur\nC. Morton was accorded a vote\nof thanks for his long and meritorious service at an executive\nmeeting Thursday. He was presented with a travelling case.\nPresident H. Farenholtz, In\nconveying the thanks of the\nChamber, said, \"Art Morton has\ndone a great deal of work for the\nChamber of Commerce and for\nNelson.\"\nMr. Morton began his introduction to the architects' profession\nthrough apprenticeship in 1939,\ncoming to Nelson from Kaslo.\nRepresenting the firm of J. C.\nWilliams, he aided in the construction of Mount St. Francis\nInfirmary and the Kaslo school.\nAfter a tour of duty with the\nRoyal Engineers during the Second World War, he spent a few\nyears in Vancouver with the\nMoore Dry Kiln Company and\nthe Commonwealth Construction\nCompany.\nIn 1947, he returned to Nelson,\nJoining the firm of the late V.'. F.\nWilliams.\nActive in the Nelson Rod and\nGun Club and especially the Junior Firearms program, Mr.\nMorton is Immediate past president of the West Kootenay Rod\nand Gun Clubs Association and\na former director of the B.C. Fish\nand Game Federation.\nA group committee member\nof the Boy Scouts of St. Paul's-\nTrinity United Church, he is\nmost at home in any sport connected with the outdoors.\nTwo years ago, he helped organize the trek into Kokanee\nGlacier Park, a planned event to\naccommodate skilled mountaineers from various parts of Canada and the United States.\nMr. Morton will join the firm\nof R. W. Siddall and Associates\nIn Victoria.\nA. C. MORTON\nRichard Hudnut\nFashion QUICK\nHome Permanent\nOn Sale\nSALE PRICE\n$1.99\nRegular $2.50\nMayo Pharmacy\nLtd.\nCorner Baker and Ward Sts.\nPh. 352-2813 Nelson, B.C.\navailable information and data,\nIn addition we are willing to\nhelp you and facilitate your consultant's work by making Our\nprinting and blueprinting facilities available to him as far as\nour work pressure will permit,\"\nHydro said.\nTV SERVICE\n352-3355\nVIDEO\nELECTRONICS\nCLIP THIS AD\nIT'S WORTH 50c\nOn Each $5 Purchase at\nthe SKYLARK\nRESTAURANT\nand LOUNGE\nSpokane\nJust Across From the\nRldpath\n!\u2022 Pan Fried Chicken-1\n\u2022 Choice Steaks f\n\u2022 Lunches and Dinners   I\nEXPO EXHIBITORS\nBy mid-September 21 foreign\ncountries, Canada'! 10 provinces\nand the city ot Paris had announced they would participate\nin the 1967 Montreal world's\nfair.\nfolders Aid\nVisitors Here\nFolders which provide information tor conventions held In Nel*\nson are being distributed by the\nconvention promotion committee,\na Chamber of Commerce executive meeting v\/as told Thursday.\nMrt. R. H. Dill, chairman of\nthe committee, said the committee had compiled 85 folders tor\na visiting convention. The folder\nContained pertinent local information regarding facilities and\naccommodation in Kelson.\nA similar brochure would be\ncompiled for a Canadian Girls\nin Training meet in Nelson next\nweek.\nfabled (or discussion at the\nnext meeting wat a suggestion\nby R. _. Nelson that executive\nmembers and committee chair\nmen be named in the (all instead\nof spring to enable chairmen to\norganize in time (ot the new\ntourist tetton.\nIt was explained that chairman\nart generally named by Jan. 1,\nbut that latt year's selection had\nbeen delayed.\nRoads and bridges matters and\nthe Centennial project were discussed.\nSee Ui For\nSILENT, EFFICIENT\nand\nECONOMICAL\nCONTROLLED HEAT\nFor Every Room\n\u25a0 t \u2022 i\nCOLEMAN\nELECTRIC\nLTD.\nLTD.\nNOTICE\nNo Milk\nDelivery\nMONDAY,\nOCT. 12\nPlease Order Your Extra\nRequirements From Your\nMilkman on Sat., Oct. JO\nPalm Dairies Ltd.\nKootenay Valley Co-Op Dairy\nMen's Arlade-fo-Measure\nSUIT SALE\nLAST CHANCE\nTO SAVE\nReg. Value to\n79.50.. . . . NOW\nEnjoy the Look of Success in a Suit Cut and Tailored\nfor You ... at a Sale Price.\nBUY NOW and SAVE!\nfntamfci^CfompHng\nINCORPORATED\n Stock Quotations\nThe Daily News doea not hold Itself responsible In the event\nol an error in the following lists.\nClosing  prices supplied  by  Doherty,  Roadhouse  -\nMcCuaig Bros., Trail, B.C.\nTORONTO STOCKS\n41.25\n44.62\n12.37\n4.20\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi 14.75\nAlberta Dist. 3.90\nAlgoma Steel 73.87\nAlta. Gas Trunk 33.75\nAluminum 33.12\nArgus 17-50\nArgus C Pfd 13.50\nBank of Mont. 68.25\nBank of N.Scotia 77.00\nBathurst Power 25.25\nBell Telephone 59.87\nB.A. Oil 35.12\nB.C. Forest 33.87\nB.C. Packers A 17.25\nB.C. Telephone 62.50\nCalgary Power 23.87\nCan. & D. Suger 25.75\nCan. Cement 46.00\nCan. Collieries 12.12\nCan. Iron 42.37\nCan. Breweries 10.25\nCan. Canners 15.00\nCan. Industries 22.25\nCan. Imp. Bank 67.75\nCan. Pacific Ry. 52.87\nChemcell 17.62\nCol. Cellulose    11.75\nC. Mining - S\nCons. Paper\nCons. Gas\nCrest. Timber\nDist. Seagrams 65.25\nDom. Stores      22.75\nD. Tar - Chem. 22.62\nDom. Textiles 31.37\nEddy Match Co. 47.50\nEddy Paper 20.37\nFalconbridge 78.37\nFamous Players 21.50\nFanny Farmer 46.00\nFord Motor Co. 66.25\nFord of Canada 178.12\nGreyhound 12.87\nGen. Steel Wares 15.25\nGoodyear 155.50\nGt. Lakes Power 25.50\nHome Oil A 19.62\nHome Oil B 19.75\nHudson Bay Co 17.00\nImperial Oil 52,62\nImp. Tobacco 14.12\nInd. Minerals 8.50\nInland Nat. Gas 9.62\nIntl. Utilities 28.00\nInt. Nickel 93.00\nInterprov. Pipe 93.25\nInterprov. Steel. 3.55\nLaurentide 17.00\nLoblaw B 9.12\nMassey Ferg. 29.62\nMacM. Powell R. 35.75\nMolson Brew. A 34.00\nM. Locomotive 12.75\nMoore Corp.\nNoranda\nOgilvie Flour\nPacific Pete\nPrice Bros.\nPage Hersey\nPower Corp.\nQue. Nat. Gas\nRoyal Bank\nRothmans\nSalada Foods\nShell Oil\nSimpsons\nSoutham\nSteel of Canada 26.50\nTraders Fin. A 14.00\nTexaco 62.00\nTrans Mtn. Pipe 20.25\nTrans Can. Pipe 44.25\nUnion Gas of C. 24.62\nWalker-Gooder. 36.62\nWestcoast Trans. 17.00\nWeston Geo. A 19.25\nWoodwards A 26.12\nZenith Elect.      4.10\nMINES AND OILS\n57.00\n50.25\n14.37\n12.37\n47.50\n30.00\n14.87\n12,12\n17.25\n18.75\n12.12\n18.87\n27.25\n30.25\nAdvocate\nAgnico\nAunor\nBarnat\nBethlehem Cop.\nBibis\nBralorne\nBrunswick\nCal. _ Edmtn\nCampbell Chib\nCan. Delhi\nCampbell R.L.\nCariboo Gold\nCassiar Asb.\nCons. Rambler\nCentral Del Rio 7.90\nCentral Patricia 1.37\nCharter Oil\nChimo\nCoch. Will\nCoin Lake\nCons. Halliwell\nCons. Mogul\nConwest\nCopper Corp.\nCowichan Cop.\nCraigmont\nDenison\nDickenson\n6.50\n.71\n3.80\n.12\n7.90\n.29\n4.40\n13.25\n22.87\n4.50\n9.00\n18.30\n.80\n11.75\n1.55\n1.80\n1.04\n3.00\n19\n351,4\n5.31\n.47\n16,25\n16.00\n5.15\nDiscovery Mines 3.30\nEast Malartic\nEast Sullivan\nFargo\nFrobex\nFirst Maritime\nGeco\nGiant Mascot\nGiant Yel.\nGranduc\nGunnar Mines\nHighland Bell\nHollinger\nHudson Bay Mg 71.00\nHudson Bay.Oil 15.75\n1.1\n4.40\n2.99\n.84\n2.89\n38.00\n1.36\n13.50\n6.05\n6.40\n7.45\n30.25\nHydra Ex\nIron Bay\nIso\nKerr Addison\nLabrador\nLake Dufault\nLeitch\nLittle Long Lac 1.75\nLorado 1.53\nMadsen 2.08\nMalartic .66\nMattagami Lake 16.25\n21%\n1.05\n1.88\n7.25\n.37\n11,87\n5.00\nMclntyre\nMcKenzie\nMidcon\nNational Pete\nNew Cont. Oils\nNew Hosco\nNorlex\nNormetal\nNorthgate\nOpemiska\nOrmsby\nOrchan\nPetrol O _ G\nPickle Crow\nPlace Gas\nPlacer\n60.00\n.12\n4.65\n.34%\n2.88\n.13%\n3.75\n5.45\n8.65\n.41%\n5.95\n.60\n.52\n.61\n44.37\n14.87\n4.00\n74.00\n33.87\n33.37\n17.75\n13.87\n68.50\n77.37\n25.87\n60.00\n35.25\n34.00\n18.75\n62.75\n24.00\n25.87\n47.00\n42.75\n10.37\n15.25\n22.37\n68.00\n53.00\n17.75\n12.00\n41.50\n44.87\n12.50\n4.25\n65.75\n22.87\n22.75\n31.75\n48.00\n20.62\n78.75\n21.75\n46.75\n67.00\n180.12\n13.00\n15.87\n157.00\n26.00\n19.75\n20.00\n17.12\n52.87\n14.25\n9.50\n9.75\n28.25\n93.50\n93.50\n3.60\n17.25\n9.25\n29.75\n36.00\n34.50\n13.00\n57.25\n50.50\n14.62\n12.50\n48.00\n30.50\n15.00\n12.25\n17.50\n18:87\n12.25\n19.00\n27.37\n30.37\n26.62\n14.12\n62.50\n20.50\n44.50\n24.87\n36.75\n17.25\n19.50\n26.25\n4.25\n6.60\n.73\n3.85\n.75\n7.95\n.30\n4.45\n13.37\n23.12\n4.55\n9.05\n19.00\n.82\n11.87\n1.58\n8.00\n1.40\n1.90\n1.05\n3,10\n.20\n.37\n3:85\n5.40\n.48\n.48\n16.50\n16.25\n5.20\n3.35\n1.64\n4.50\n3.00\n.90\n2.92\n38.25\n1.40\n13.75\n6.15\n6.45\n7.90\n30.50\n71.25\n15.87\n.23\n1.09\n1.90\n7.35\n.37%\n12,00\n5.10\n1.80\n1.55\n2.10\n.70\n16.62\n61.00\n.12%\n.50\n4.80\nPatino\nPreston\nProvo\nQuebec Lithium\nQuemont\nRadiore\nRayrock\nReeves Mac\nRio Algom\nSan. Antionio\nSarimco\nSheep Creek\nSherritt Gordon\nSilver Standard\nSiscoe\nSteep Rock\nSullivan Con.\nTeck Corp.\nTemagami\nTorbrit\nTriad Oil\nTribag\nUnion Oil\nUnited Keno\nUnited Oil\nUpper Canada\nViolamac\nWestern Mines\nWrirght Harg.\nWilroy\n9.00\n9.05\n6.60\n6.75\n\"2.16\n2.18\n3.25\n3.35\n9.85\n9.95\n.42 .\n. .42%\n.92\n'    \":.93\n2.75\n3.50\n11.37\n. 11,75\n.23\n\u00bb24\n.20\n.21\n1.36\n1.45\n4.75\n4.80\n.68\n.70\n2.25\n2.29\n6.90\n7.00\n3.60\n3.65\n5.40\n5.45\n1.06\n1.08\n.62\n.65\n2.36\n2.40\n1.71\n1.73\n15.00\n15.12\n9.05\n9.10\n.60\n.80\n1.30\n1.35\n2.75\n2.77\n4.75\n4.85\n.73\n.80\n1.70\n1.72\nVancouver\nStocks\nINDUSTRIALS\nBurrard Mort\nGrowers A\nGrowers B\nSun Pub. A\nSun Pub. B\nInt. Brew. B\n4.25\n5.00\n4.75\n20.00\n21.00\n7.75\nMINES AND OILS\nAce Mining\nBlue Star\nCanam Cop.\nButtle Lake\nCopper Ridge\nCrown Silver\nCopper Soo\nDolly Varden\nEndako\nHuestis\nJericho\nLytton Mines\nMagnum\nMt. Washington\nNew Ainsworth\nOttawa Silver\nPeace River Pete\n1.13\n.18\n.12\n.52\n.82\n.12\n.25\n.58\n12.00\n.32\n.35\n.21\n.23%\n.81\n.15\n3.95\n.12\n.19%\n.13\n.83\n.13\n1.72\nPend Oreille\nSilver Ridge\nSkeena Silver\nTrojan\nTorwest\nWestern Expl.\nUtica Mines\nFUNDS\nAll. Can. Com,\nAll. Can. Div.\nAmer. Growth\nCan. Inv. Fund 4.16\nCom. Int. 10:65\nFirst Oil _ Gas 5.46\nInvestors Growth 8.39\nInv. Mutual. 14.86\nLeverage 9.52\nMutual Accum. ' 4.83\nMutual Bond 8.02\nMutual Inc. 6.36\nTrans Canada C 8.03\nGroup Income    4.25\n4.50\n5.25\n4.95\n20.50\n8.00\n1.15\n.20\n.13\n.13\n.26\n.61\n12.12\n.34\n.36\n.23\n.24\n.83\n.09\n.16%\n.39\n4.25 .\n.13\n.20\n.14\n.85\n1.74\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, OCT. 9, 1964 \u2014 3\nDuncan Dam Nearly Cleared Await Next Step\ni'W&#*^\n''.fe;'\n^\u00bb^__H   :\n;*&&.\nWl\nm\n*\"\" _\"i_3?nf\nEAGLE'S-EVE VIEW \u2014 43 acres of timber and bushland will have been cleared when\nSpatsum Lumber Company moves out of the\ndamslte, shown in the picture above.- The cookhouse is seen behind the larger bunkhouse-of-\nflce building on the upper side of the proposed\nDuncan Dam, whose location was marked in\nlime on the cleared land for President Lyndon\nJohnson and Prime Minister Lester D. Pearson\nto see as they flew over on their way to the\ncoast to sign the Columbia River Treaty offi-\ndaily. Of the 263 acres at the damsite there\nare still 15 acres to be cleared to the south, 10\nacres to the north and 18 acres will be cleared\nfor the spillway which will be on the far side of\nthe area shown in the picture. Don Clark is\ncook In the small trailer-cookhouse, accommodating 25 men seated almost jowl to jowl. The\nproblem will be more acute as construction\nworkers start coming In, until the catering service takes over.\n6.26\n8.42\n10.65\n11.64\n4.50\n11.67\n5.97\n9.12\n16.15\n10.43\n5.28\n8.45\n6.95\n8.81\n4.64\nTO THE EAST \u2014 the valleys of Duncan (left,\naround wooded mound) and Glacier Creek (right),\nwhich leads over into the Windermere country, are\nseen from the top of the rock abutment through which\ntwin diversion tunnels will be driven, with the Duncan\ndamsite at lower right corner out of picture. This wide\nvalley will be a reservoir when the dam is constructed and the rivers backed up. Cutting of the trees in\nthis area will be carried out over a period of years at\nlow water.\n.14\n3.85\n5.50\n8.70\n.44\n6.00\n.63\n.53\n.64\n45.00\nCOSTS WILL BE SHARED by the Kootenay Lake Board of\nSchool Trustees and B.C. Hydro and Power Authority for work\nto be done on the. Jewett School at Meadow Creek, seen being\nmoved from its former location for a short distance to a site\nnear the Abey farm. Creighton Construction won the kid for\nalterations and addition to the school. The school board's share\nof the cost will be $23,231 and the B.C. Hydro will pay $13,469.\nThe original site of the school will be used by the Authority for\na concrete aggregate zone for the Duncan Dam project. The\nJewett School is shown up on blocks waiting for the move and\nthe school presently being used, a log building, is shown in the\nbackground.\nA MORALE BOOSTER Is\nwhat Duncan Dam developments so far have meant to the\npopulace of Kaslo, which has\nnoticed more business increase\nfrom local mining activity than\nfrom increased activity related\nto the dam clearing. It is expected that there will be a noticeable change in tempo of\nbusiness activity in Kaslo when\nthe dam construction contract\nis confirmed, says Jack Morris, president of the Kaslo\nBoard of Trade, who keeps a\nsharp eye out for changes in\nthe local scene. Motels are the\nmain reclnients of Increased\neconomy In the town so far.\nIlllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllll\nPhoto-Story\nBy\nJean Baker\niimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimimiii\nFOREMAN Dennis Claggett, right, of Clinton is\ndirecting remainder of the clearing operation at the\ndamsite for Spatsum Lumber Company, and Wally\nLarsen, also of Clinton, is a cat skinner. Both are\nstanding near the office building which loks like a\ndot in the middle of the gigantic cleared area, when\nseen from the top of the rock bluff in the background,\nlooking towards the west. This bluff will be the site\nfor twin diversion tunnels while the dam is under\nconstruction.\nNEGLECTED ANIMAL\nSURREY (CP)-Henrl Luclen\nBarrett of Vancouver was fined\n$50 here Wednesday for neglect\nof 10 dogs. SPCA inspector Al\nDavidson said He inspected Barrett's dogs and founo. six half-\nstarved animals that had to be\ndestroyed. *-- \u25a0 '\nROADS AND ELECTRICITY are Immediate problems concerning the Lnrdeau Board of Trade, which Is in frequent touch\nwith B.C. Hydro officials concerning the enormous change coming to the Meadow Creek, Lardeau and Duncan valleys with\nforthcoming construction of Duncan Dam, scheduled to be completed In 1968. President of the Boar dls hard-working Frank\nAbey, who takes time,off from his ranch work to take interested visitors around the damsite area and point out the changes\nwhich have already taken place and the lands to be affected by\nthe 120-foot high, earth-fill dam. An average work force of 400\nmen over the next 3% years will have to be accommodated In\nthe Lardeau Valley and at Kaslo, with a peak-employment force...\nof 800 expected at one point. Trailer and cabin facilities at Lardeau and along the road to the damsite are being fully utilized\nwith even the comparatively small work force which has been\nclearing the dam area under the direction of Spatsum Lumber\nCompany of Clinton.\nWorld Briefs\nRECEIVES GRANT\nVANCOUVER (CP) - The\ndepartment of. pediatrics at the\nUniversity of British Columbia\nhas received a $4,000 grant from\nthe Children's Research Foundation to establish a research\nclinic for diabetic, children. It\nwill be known as the Juvenile\nDiabetic Research Clinic.\nBRIGHT FUTURE\nKAMLOOPS. (CP) - Alderman Mil Hardaker . of North\nKamloops said Wednesday there\nis a bright .future in store, for\nthe greater kamloops area. Aid.\nHardaker. is, the North Kamloops\nrepresentative on the Kamloops\nRegional Planning Commission.\nOPERATIONS   NEEDED\nNEW DELHI (AP)-A government study committee reports 20,000,000 sterilization operations would be needed annually if India's population\u2014now\n465,000,000\u2014is to be stabilized\nat 600,000.000. About 1,000,000\noperations'are performed each\nyear.     '\nWORLD BEEF UP\nROME (AP)-The United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization reports that world\nbeef production in 1963 reached\n29,600,000 tons, a four-per-cent\nincrease over 1962.\nPARSLOW'S\nENTERPRISES LTD.\nGUNSMITH1NG\nLOCKSMITHING\nFISHING SUPPLIES\n1319 Bay Ave.      Ph. 368-5025\nTRAIL, B.C.\n-\nCurrieri Insurance\nAnd\nReal Eitate Agencies\nI960 LTD.\n,'.'\u2022'' All Classes of\nGeneral Insurance\nTrail, B.C. Ph. 368-3414\n \u25a0_\u25a0\u25a0\n_\u25a0_\u25a0\u25a0\nSfrlBOU _3aiiy JJftUH     General Grivas-\"Power Behind\nThrone\" in Strife-Torn Cyprus\nEstablished April 22  1902 Nelson, B C.\nPublished by the NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n266 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia mornings except\nSundays and holidays in the centre oi the Kootenays with\nthe largest daily circulation in the Interior ot B.C.\nAuthorized as Second Class Mail  Post Office Department, Ottawa,\nand ioi Paymenl ot Pustage in Cash\nMEMBER Of   -MS CANADIAN PKESS\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN DAILY  NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION\nMEMBER OF THE AUDIT  BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS\nThe Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to Hie use for republication of all news\ndispatches credited to it or to The Associated Press or Reuters in this\npaper and also the local news nuhlished herein.\nFriday, October 9, 1964\nRelocation of Zoo for Centennial Project\nRelocation of the Robson Zoo to   with the development plans. Another\nNelson as a Centennial project would\nbe a fine feather in our cap. The potentiality of such a venture could\nwell prove another major tourist attraction to Nelson.\nPreliminary investigation has indicated that the financial aspect is\nboth within scope and range of the\nCentennial Club and our community. Such a project could be a major\nfinancial attraction during summer\nmonths particularly if it can be associated with the Walt Disney name.\nNelson already has a few major attractions. The addition of the Robson\nZoo will mean added impetus for our\ngrowing city.\nAllen Woodrow of the Robson Zoo\nis interested in relocating for a number of reasons. At present he does not\nget a sufficient number of visitors\ndue to the present position. Any reasonable offer made to Mr. Woodrow\nwould be received favorably.\nThe zoo has some star attractions\nand with a surfeit of enterprise and\nwhole hearted support the zoo project would be advantageous to Nelson. Interested citizens willing to-de-\nvote some spare time could arrange\nto relocate some of the buildings to\nfine feature of Mr. Woodrow's zoo is\nthe private museum. It has taken\nmany years of hard work and searching on the part of Mr. Woodrow to exhibit local treasures, furniture and\nother interesting artifacts.\nSurely there are some publicly\nminded citizens or firms who would\nassist financially with such a worthwhile project? Think what the advantages would be to Nelson, which\ncould then claim a renowned zoo and\nan acclaimed animal trainer in its\nmidst. The possibilities of a zoo are\nendless. Many additional features\ncould be incorporated in the zoo,\nwhich would assist the financial picture in years to come. If the city is\ngoing to have to subsidize the operation of one centennial project or\nanother, at least let us have our\nmoney's worth.\nAs the.Robson Zoo has already\nhad aii attractive offer from another\narea, the Centennial Club, if interested, will have to work rapidly. If\nNelsonites are interested in such a\nproject why not attend the next Centennial-Club meeting October 27 at\nthe civil defence room at city hall\nand speak your piece. As the zoo\na lakeshore site. A suitable site could..-.idea.wUl appeal to. the younger set\nbe found  which  would  intertwine    why don't some of you turn out?\n.    The Birth Control Debate\nBirth control is practically illegal\nin Canada. It is a criminal offence,\nfor instance, to sell, advertise or-pro--\nmote information or devices directed\ntoward contraception.\nThis law is .utterly archaic. Whatever one's religious approach to the\nsubject, it is a matter of plain fact\nthat the law is broken thousands of\ntimes every day. It is broken by doctors, druggists, mail-order houses,\nnewspapers and magazines, and the\nspirit or intent of the law is violated\nby the vast majority of the Canadian\npeople. For the law is based on the.\npremise that birth control is evil.\nThe law ought therefore to be\nchanged, according to the United.\nChurch of Canada, the social service\ncouncil of the Anglican Church of\nCanada, the Presbyterian Church,\nthe Unitarian Church, Baptist conven-\ntions,~fhe~Canddian Medical Association, Children's Aid societies, the\nCanadian Council of Women and\nmany other respected organizations.\nA {ew days ago a private member's bill to amend the Criminal Code\nto legalize birth-control was brought\nup in the House of Commons. If the\ngovernment had proposed it, it would\nhave had certain priority in the legislative process. But being moved by\na private member, it had a few minutes for debate and if it had not been\n-voted-on at-the end of that time, it\nwould be shelved almost indefinitely. So the easy way to kill a private\nbill is .to dehateit for the full allotted\ntime and thus prevent a vote.\nThat is what happened. Some of\nthe-arguments used by the small\nband of determined opponents: That\nParliament had no power to legalize\n.evil, thqt.C.anadian family life would\ndisintegrate, that an earlier Parliament which wrote the Criminal Code\n.was wisex .than the present Parliament, that the people are not ready\nfor it, that Catholic authorities are\n-flgainst.the.bill, that man was commanded to \"go forth, multiply, and\nfill the earth\".\n.. The rest of Canada is making important and legitimate concessions to\nQuebec these days. It is high time\nthat Quebec made some to the rest\nof Canada, for instance by withdrawing her veto of certain reform legislation such as this.\nIf the law will not be changed,\nthen let it be enforced. But it cannot\nbe enforced. Canada cannot afford\nto build all the prisons that would be\nneeded to hold the guilty.\n\u2014Lethbridge Herald.\nAn Opportunity Missed\nIt .\"is unfortunate that the United\nAut6;Workers Union saw fit to shut\ndown the General Motors plants by\nwalking off the production lines.\nNo end of the strike is in sight,\nand-each day brings the United\nStates economy closer to major dislocation. The full effects will begin\nto be felt when layoffs are forced in\nthe steel, glass, rubber, aluminum\nand other industries which normally\nsupply the strikebound plants.\nBut-despite this dismal outlook.\nGeneral Motors must be applauded\nfor having the fortitude to resist demands which, with ample justification, may be called outrageous,\nThe wage increases and other\nbenefits being sought are bound to\nresult in inflation of wages and prices\nelsewhere in the U.S. economy, as\nwell as in the automobile industry.\nThe fact that Ford and Chrysler settled on roughly the same terms as\nthose sought from General Motors\ndoes not mean that it was right that\nthe demands should have been met.\nBesides the inflationary dangers involved,  it  appears  that  the  Auto\ni\nWorkers, led by Mr. Walter Reuther,\nare seeking control of the automobile\nmanufacturing industry, indirectly at\nleast. The strike was called when\nGeneral Motors refused to give in to\ndemands which would hand the\nunion power over grievance procedures, union representation in the\nplants, production standards, disciplining of workers, and working conditions. Union control over these prerogatives of management would\nleave the companies powerless to\ncontrol the industry.\nBut while the General Motors\nstand is praiseworthy, it cannot be\nendorsed without some qualification.\nThe company did not act as wisely\nas it might have. Before negotiations\nwith the unions ever started, it could\nhave used its record profits to reduce\nthe prices of its cars. By so doing, it\ncould have givtn the public a break,\nearned itself measureless good will,\nand taken the wind out of the union's\nsails.\nSeizing the opportunity when it\npresented itself might have forestalled the strike.\u2014Calgary Herald.\nBy RUSSELL PEDEN\nNICOSIA (CP)\u2014Just mention\nthe name Grivas in the marketplace, the sidewalk cafe or\nthe Cyprus government office\nif you want to put a damper on\nthe conversation.\nCypriots are great talkers,\nand are more than willing to\nenlighten the visitor on their\npolitics, their grievances and\ntheir place in world affairs.\nBut no one seems anxious to\nchat about the wiry, nut-brown\nguerrilla leader who organized\nEOKA terrorism in the late\n1950s and now is regarded as\n\"the power behind the throne\"\nin his native Cyprus.\nGen. George Grivas himself\nshuns publicity. Since he returned to Cyprus from Greece\nin mid-June to direct the 30,-\n000-odd Greek-Cypriot \"security\nforces,\" he has seldom been\nseen in public and has maintained an iron rule against\ngranting interviews to reporters, even the local press.\nBut there is one outsider who\nsees the general at least once\na day\u2014a French-speaking native of Edmonton doing a fascinating liaison job for the\nUnited Nations peace force on\nCyprus.\nNEEDED INTERPRETER\nMaj. J. Louis Lessard, a\nRoyal Canadian Ordnance\nCorps officer, got the job in\nmid-August, just after the Turkish, air raids on the west\ncoast.\nAt that time, India's Gen. K.\nS. Thimayya, the UN peace\nforce commander, asked to see\nGrivas and the two generals\ntoured the stricken area together. They found out, however, that they had no common\nlanguage. Grivas speaks Greek\nand French, Thimayya English.\nThe communication problem\nwas solved with the appointment of Lessard, who deals\npersonally with the former\nGreek army officer and goes\nToday\nIn History\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nOct. 9, 1964 ...\nA i m e e Semple McPher-\nson, one of the United\nStates' most colorful and\ncontroversial religious figures, was born at Ingersoll,\nOnt, 74 years ago today\u2014in\n1890. The evangelist\npreached the fundamentalist doctrine (as opposed to\nthe Darwinian concepts of\nthe origins of man) and retained a strong and loyal\nfollowing despite ;a third\nmarriage that ended in divorce. She preached to\nmass audiences in the U.S.\nsouthwest for about 20\nyears, and died in 1944.\n1642 \u2014 Harvard College\nheld its first commencement exercises.\n1877 \u2014 The first railway\nlocomotive on the Prairies\nreached Winnipeg\u2014by boat.\nFirst World War\nFifty years ago today, in\n1914, the German armies\nforced the surrender of Antwerp after 48 hours of continuous shelling; British airmen raided the German\ncity of Dusseldorf Where\nzeppelin sheds and manufacturing plants were located.\nSecond World War\nTwenty-five years ago today, in 1939, British warships beat off repeated attacks by German bombers\nin the North Sea; the\nFrench Command reported\nGerman attacks along a 35-\nmile front near the German-\nFrench border; Sweden began building air raid shelters as disquiet spread over\nSoviet moves.\nalong  as interpreter when he\nmeets Thimayya.\n\"This has been working extremely well and I am very satisfied,\" Thimayya says. \"We\nhad a tremendous amount of\ntrouble getting things done before a liaison man was appointed.\n\"Maj. Lessard has been very\nuseful, and has established very\ngood contact with Gen. Grivas.\"\nLessard, 46, has a high regard for the former terrorist.\n\"When I enter his office I always salute and he shakes\nhands. It's a custom of his.\n\"He is crisp, dynamic, very\ndefinitely a forceful character.\nI would describe him as likeable.\"\nPOSED FOR PHOTO\nGrivas' regard for his liaison\nman was evident from his willingness to pose for photographs\nat Lessard's request.\nHe advanced, hand outstretched, from behind the\nhuge desk that dominates his\nausterely furnished office.\nRadiating authority despite\nhis 66 years and his casual\ndress \u2014 a grey cardigan and\nslacks \u2014 he appeared much\ntaller than his five feet, three\ninches.\nHis penetrating glance was\nundimmed by the horn-rimmed\nglasses he uses with reading.\nThis was the man who, with\nsome 280 EOKA followers,\neluded 25,000 crack British\ntroops on a tiny island for more\nthan four years.\nNo guard was present, but\nvisitors are screened carefully\nbefore they reach the office on\nthe second floor of the heavily\nguarded Athalassa police station, Nicosia's largest.\nFirst comes a sandbagged\nroadblock near the police station entrance, then the 10-feet-\nhigh gates surrounding the\ncourtyard. Once inside, the visitor must pass a reception desk\nswarming with policemen on\nthe ground floor and a barred\nand guarded corridor upstairs\nbefore reaching the general's\nanteroom.\nFrom the inner sanctum, Grivas has brought army discipline\nto the thousands of \"security\n. forces,\" most of them hastily\nconscripted within the last few\nmonths. Under his direction\nare some 1,500 police, 5,000\nauxiliary police and 15,000 soldiers of the national guard.\nThe government won't say\nhow many trained Greek nationals have come to Cyprus to\nserve their former commander,\nbut informed observers put the\nfigure somewhere between 7,000\nand 10,000.\nOfficially, Grivas is described\nas military adviser to the pres-\ni d e n t, Archbishop Makarios.\nBut by all indications his powers are second only to those of\nthe president himself, and he is\ngenerally regarded as the only\nman with enough ot a following to assume leadership of the\ncountry if anything should happen to the archbishop.\nDuring the EOKA campaign,\nthe Grivas directives were\nsigned \"Dighenis,\" the name ot\na legendary hero of medieval\nGreece. Today, his correspondence goes out over the signature of \"George Grivas-Dighe-\nnis, General Commander,\"\nThe man nominally in charge\nof security forces is Polycarpos\nGeorgadjis, a former EOKA\nlieutenant now minister of the\ninterior in the Greek-Cypriot\ncabinet. It is noteworthy that\nhe comes to see Grivas, instead of the other way around,\nand the general has been known\nto keep the minister waiting in\nan anteroom while dealing with\nother business.\nGrivas came to Cyprus at\nthe invitation of Makarios, and\nthe two are not regarded as\npolitical rivals. Neither has\neven hinted at any other long-\nterm goal than enosis, the union of Cyprus with Greece.\nGrivas has made a number\nof ineffectual attempts to enter\nGreek politics, but he denied\nany further political ambitions\non coming to Cyprus. He would\nnot see any reporters, he said,\nbecause his sole concern was'\nfor military matters. Statements on politics were for politicians.\nR \t\nVictim of\nOwn Tactics\nNEW DELHI (AP)-Some of\nPrime Minister Shastri's political enemies are attacking him\nwith tactics like those he used\nagainst the British colonial\nrulers of India 20 years ago.\nShastri's government is being\nforced to react the same way\nthe British were.\nThe tactics involve little\nrough stuff\u2014just plenty of fiery\nspeeches, peaceful disobedience\nof authority and courting arrest. The idea is to force the\npolice to attack, arouse public\nopinion and fill the jails, or go\non hunger strikes.\nHo Hum, Time for\nThe British Election\nBy HAROLD  MORRISON\nLONDON (CP) - Britain's\nelection campaign, as seen on\ntelevision in the average British livingroom, contains traces\nof yawn - producing dullness,\npartly because the peri has\nshown it is mightier than the\nelectronic picture.\nWhen the campaign opened,\nthe national television networks\nimmediately wheeled in their\ncameras to flash to the millions\nof viewers a live broadcast of\nthe give-and-take between reporters and political leaders at\nday-by-day press conferences at\nparty headquarters.\nBut the networks soon found\nthat, unlike the situation in\nNorth America, the reporters'\nsanctuary was not easily\nbreached. Newspaper organizations complained that the presence of television ca m e r a s\nplaced the reporter in an impossible position \u2014 his question\nand the response would be\nmade available to the TV\nviewer long before he had a\nchance to present his report in\nprint.\nTELECAST EXCERPTS\nAn   agreement  was  worked\nHUBERT\n=__r\n*\u2122?.<M:*-*ra*:-.':*%:W:W.w:w\u00bbt.>.-^^\ni> King F_tuf\u00ab\u00bb Syndicate, Int., 1964. World right, rcierved, ftfip; |0-3\n\"You'll know when Fred's had enough\u2014his socks\nwill fall down.\"\nout to ban live transmissions of press conferences\nand to provide only short excerpts for broadcast later, with\nthe reporters and their questions blocked out from the television screen.\nThis is in sharp contrast to\nthe situation in the United\nStates where the television networks cover the political press\nconferences with such unrestricted freedom that some\nnewspaper reporters complained they were used and\nabused as unpaid actors.\nThe Guardian of Manchester,\ncommenting on the victory of\nthe pen over the camera, said:\n\"A press conference is neither\na studio performance nor a\npublic meeting but a private\noccasion to which journalists\nare invited to obtain information. ... To broadcast it is to\ntreat the press conference as a\ndefinitive performance.\n\"The effect must be to destroy the informality and the intimacy of the relations between\njournalists and spokesmen\nwhich makes the best press\nconference most useful.\"\nTV COMPETITION\nBut with the victory has come\nsome barbs. The Watchman,\nwriting in The Spectator, accused the press of being \"a bit\npompous.\" He expressed Sympathy for reporters being used\nby television without being paid\nbut suggested that behind the\nnewspaper protests is a general\nfear of TV competition.\n\"Television is bound to usurp\nmany of the strictly news functions of the press as time goes\non and the sooner papers and\njournalists accept this and outflank the movement by their\nwits the less painful will be the\nprocess.\"\nThe New Statesman, another\nweekly magazine, said that\nwith \"some evening papers, the\nissue is one ef commerce rather\nthan principle: their proprietors\ndo net want the public to see\nthe questions raised on TV before they read about them in\nthe newspapers.\"\n\"Surely, if the lobby reporters objects to appearing on\nTV, it has a simple remedy:.\nTo stay away from election\npress conferences.\"\nCANADA'S INVOLVEMENT \u2014 External Affairs Minister Paul Martin has\nexpressed Canada's reluctance to act as mediator in Indochina \"If it is\nthought that the operation is not a useful one.\" Seventy Canadian Army\nofficers and men are still serving on inspection teams in the Indochinese\nstates of Ldos, Cambodiq and Viet Nam. About 30 members of the external affairs department work in the civilian control of commissions. Since\n1954, this has cost Canada $8,052,715. But their reluctance to continue\nas mediator has stemmed from the constant outbreaks of violence in spite\nof efforts to maintain peace.\u2014(CP Photo).\t\nInterpreting the News\nMACAPAGAL AND JOHNSON\nBy ARCH MacKENZIE\nCanadian   Press   Staff   Writer\nIt is not usual for the head of\na foreign state to visit Washington officially in the midst of a\npresidential election campaign.\nBut President Diosdado P.\nMacapagal is not a routine\ncaller\u2014either normally or right\nnow when the U.S. can use all\nthe friends it can get in Southeast Asia.\nPresident Johnson bit into his\ncampaign time to make the\nvisitor feel at home. In return,\nPresident Macapagal said a\nnumber of things which the U.S.\nlikes to hear from its allies and\ndoesn't always get.\nMacapagal joined in calling\nGIRL CHARGED\nPOWELL RIVER <CP)-\nRCMP here have charged Stella\nAugust of Powell River with car\ntheft following an accident here\nWednesday. Police said a car\nbelonging to a rental firm was\nfound in the bush at nearby\nWillingdon Beach. The woman\nwas found injured and was\ntaken to hospital for treatment\nof minor Injuries. Police said\nthe car; apparently went Cut ot\ncontrol and crashed.\nChina an \"imminent threat\" to\nthe peace of Southeast Asia.\nPerhaps more important, he\nindicated the Philippines may\nstep up its aid in South Viet\nNam, something the U.S. has\nbeen striving to encourage from\nEurope and Canada.\nCONCERN EXPRESSED\nMacapagal, .joining Johnson\nin the usual communique, ef-\npressed concern that \"should\nSouth Viet Nam fall to communism other Southeast Asian\ncountries on the mainland, in;\neluding Malaysia, will in no\ntime follow.\"\nHe also had some blunt words\nabout Indonesia's limping but\npersistent attack on Malaysia\nand suggested failure to resolve the dispute may push Indonesia definitely into Communist ranks.\nHe also praised U.S. retaliation in the Gulf of Tonkin\nagainst North Viet Nam and it\nis reported privately he recommended U.S. attacks on North\nViet Nam supply lines.\nCarrying such ideas, it is\ndoubtful that President Macapagal will get much farther\nthan he has as a would-be negotiator in the Malaysia-Indonesia dispute. But in terms of\npolitical stability and resources\nhe is a comforting ally from the\nU.S. point of view.\nNot all is sweetness and light,\nhowever. Philippine citizens are\nreported to be increasingly concerned about the extent of foreign ownership in their economy, Chinese and otherwise.\nThis applies to American ownership and the matter was\namong the subjects discussed.\nWord ot Lite\nThen saith Jesus unto him, Get\nthee hence, Satan; for. it is written, Thou shalt worship the Lord\nthy God, and him only shalt thou\nserve. Mnthew 4:10.\nIn any emergency there are\nalways many volunteers ready\nto assist. Civil Defence stresses\nthat it is important to have\nleaders trained so that the maximum benefit can be derived\nfrom the volunteer effort.\nWhen it comes to whisky..\n*Specialist: Anyone-\nafter a taste of Walker's Special Old\nYou're a Specialist in good taste when you\nchoose Walker's Special Old. Good taste,\ngood looks, and fine quality have made it\nCanada's popular choice in whisky. Next\ntime\u2014make it a point to buy Walker's\nSpecial Old.\nHIRAM WALKER & SONS, LIMITED\n\u2022'\u2022''\"\u25a0\u00bb\u2022 \u2022-....\u2022..,..\u201e..........\".\"\".        ,N THE SP4RKLma oeoANTEt,\njrhisadverMsement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the Government ot British Columbia\n Sir Alec, Wilson Bolstered\nBy Wives' Confidence\nBy TOM OCHILTREE\nLONDON (AP) - Two shy\nclergymen's daughters \u2014 Lady\nDouglas-Home and Mrs. Harold\nWilson\u2014strengthen the political\nhopes of their husbands with\nquiet devotion, commonsense\nadvice and the knack of making\ntheir men feel like winners.\nThey both do all they can to\nhelp without diverting the spotlight from their husbands.\nElizabeth Hester Douglas -\nHome, 54, and Mary Baldwin\nWilson, 48, come from rival political camps, yet their personal\nexperiences are remarkably\nsimilar.\nThey travel endless miles,\nsmile until their faces, ache and\nmeet floods of people as Prime\nMinister Sir Alec Douglas-\nHome, the Conservative party\nleader, and Harold Wilson, head\nof the Labor party, stump the\ncountry asking for support in\nBritain's Oct. 15 national election.\nOFFER ENCOURAGEMENT\nEach woman travels with her\nhusband, sits on the - platform\nwith him, keeps his sense, of\nhumor functioning and offers\nencouragement if the day has\nbeen rough.\n\"I like my husband to know\nI am nearby when he speaks,\"\nsaid Lady Douglas-Home. Mrs.\nWilson felt the same.way.\nIn a series of recent inter\nviews the two women have\ngiven a clear picture of what\nlife is like for the wives of British political leaders.\n. Campaigning usually starts in\nthe morning and runs through\na series of meetings in cities\nand crossroads until late at\nnight.\nThe wives hear variations of\nthe same speech over and over.\nThey have learned to laugh on\ncue, to appear grave-faced at\nthe proper passages and above\nall never to get sleepy or seem\nbored no matter how stuffy the\nhall or hot the lights,\nLady Douglas-Home, tall, distinguished looking and self-\nassured, wants her husband to\nsense her boundless confidence\nin him. She explained:\n\"I have always known he was\ncapable of holding any political\noffice in the land. He is tough\nboth mentally and physically.\nHe can really lash out quite\nwell. ...\"\nCampaigning in Britain can\nget rugged with hecklers shouting, people tossing rotten eggs\nand officials struggling to keep\norder.\nLady Doulas-Home does not\nlet rowdy incidents bother her.\nShe resents what she regards\nas emotional, unfair criticism\nof her husband but she is too\nwell bred to allow her feelings\nto show.\n\u25a0 They're built to take.it\n... with the finest of\nI materials and workmanship. Above is only\n_ one of many patterns\n|    from ...\n565 Baker St.\nI   Nelson, B.C.\n\u25a0   Phone 352-2814\nMrs. Wilson also knows how\nto mask her emotions. She has\nfair hair, cornflower blue eyes\nand a peaches-and-cream complexion.\nWidely read, a spare \u2022 time\nwriter of poetry and an accomplished singer, Mrs. Wilson up\nto now has kept her family's inconspicuous, white \u25a0 washed\nhome in London's Hampstead\nGarden suburb separate from\nthe bubbling political world of\nher husband.\nCHANGED   PERSONALITY\nPeople used to say that Wilson projected a personality of\nchilly, machine-like efficiency\u2014\nthat he was  so  stuffed with\nfacts and figures he lacked appeal for women voters. But he\nhas a warmer platform personality now, and much of the\ncredit is' given to Mrs. Wilson.\n\"I rarely give him advice,\"\nshe protested. \"Often I can spot\nlittle things which would never\nhave occurred to Harold.\"\nMrs. Wilson would have preferred her husband, to have continued his early career as a\nmember of the Oxford University faculty.\n\"I'm not a- bit ambitious,\"\nshe said. \"If things were left\nto me, I would rather we lived\na quiet life out of the public\neye.\"\nAmalgamated Schools\nName PTA Executives\nCRAWFORD BAY - A meeting of the Parent-Teacher Association was held in the staff\nroom of the Crawford Bay\nElementary School for the executive members of both Riondel\nand Crawford Bay.\nAs the two schools have been\namalgamated, the respective\nP.T.A.'s are working in close\nalliance to  give  the  greatest\nNatal Notes\nNATAL \u2014 Miss Lois Chala,\naccompanied by Miss Leslie\ndeGrace, Miss Lynn Meredith\nand Miss Judy James, all\ngraduates of St. Joseph's Hospital School of Nursing, were recent visitors at Natal. Miss\nChala spent a week's visit with\nher parents, Mr. and Mrs. John\nChala, before returning to Victoria.\nMrs. Stan Grocutt of Michel\nis spending an extended visit\nwith her daughter Doreen at\nBarriere, B.C. Miss Grocutt has\nbeen assigned to the teaching\nstaff at Barriere for the new\nterm.\nFather Martin de Poires, formerly of Regina, recently spent\na few days visiting his uncle\nand aunt, Mr. and Mrs..Frank\nSchmaltz of Natal. He also spent\na few months in various parishes\nin the West and was on his way\nto Peru, South America, where\nhe will be engaged in missionary work for the next six years.\nIf you're cold in this underwear, better move South\nor long sleeves from $2.95. Men's\nelastic-waist longs from $2.50 to\n$4.95. Boys' shirts will cost you\naround $1.50, and longs with full\ndouble seat about $1.95 to $2.50.\nYou'll be comfortable in Stanfield's.\nAnd they're a lot cheaper than\nmoving south.\nStanfield's\nstanfield's limited, TBUBO, NOVA SCOTIA\nNothing (except,maybe.thetropics);\nwill keep you warmer than Stanfield's Thermal underwear. This is\nbecause thousands of tiny knit\npockets actually capture body\nwarmth, and insulate you against\nbelow-zero weather.\nThis winter-proof underwearkmade\nin a choice of weights in ail-cotton,\ncotton and wool, and cotton and\nterylene. They will keep their shape\nwashing after washing. You can get\nshort-sleeve shirts from about $1.95,\nbenefit to the people of the two\ncommunities.\nAs Crawford Bay Is now the\nsite of an entirely elementary\nschool, this . community will\norganize the elementary P.T.A.,\nand Riondel will.be responsible\nfor the secondary grades P.T.A.\nAt the executive meeting,\nplans were laid for the election\nof offcers for the. 1964-65 school\nyear, and a number of people\nindicated their willngness to\nstand for office if' so elected.\nThese include:\nSecondary P.T.A., president,\nMr. E. M. Davidson; treasurer,\nMrs. I. Walker; secretary, Mrs.\nAudrey Green; program, Mr.\nRysen and or Mr. Russell; Elementary P.T.A., president, E.\nIngham; treasurer, Mrs. H. Be-\nsanger; secretary, Mrs. T. Davidson; convener Mrs. A. Draper.\nA general meeting of the Elementary P.T.A. will be held at\nCrawford Bay, October, 22, and\nthe Secondary P.T.A. will hold\na general meeting in Riondel on\nOctober 15.\nVaried Day Ends at Dance\nToast in Gaelic to Oueen\nKinnaird Notes\nKINNAIRD \u2014 A dinner, party\nfollowed the occasion of the\nBaptism of Shirley Rita Richards. The baptism was performed by Rev. Father E. A.\nBrophy in St. Rita's Church,\nCastlegar on' October 4. Godparents were, Miss Joan Cam-\npana and Mr. Ronda Ronald\nCampana of Rossland. ,\nMr. and Mrs. Anthony Campana and five children which\ninclude the godparents, Nancy,\nChristopher and Laura, were\nguests of the Richards family\nin Kinnaird following the. ceremony. Also present for the occasion was Mrs. Richards' sister, Miss Albina Makay of Trail.\n. #  *. *\nKINNAIRD \u2014 Wedding guests\nfrom this district travelled to\nCreston Saturday for the.marriage of a former Kinnaird girl,\nLouise Askew. of Creston, to\nKenneth Yaseniuk of Montrose.\nMaking the trip were Mr. and\nMrs. R. J. Smales, Mr. and Mrs.\nMartin Bale and Miss Charlene\nBale; Mr. and Mrs. Fred Bab-\naeff; Mrs. L. B. Jones- and Miss\nCarol Jones; Mr .and Mrs. Harry Woods, Miss Dianne Lange-\nvin and Mr.' and Mrs. J. D. Askew.\nMrs. P. J. Vaessen has rejoined her family here after spending the past three weeks in Aberdeen, Scotland The European\nflight returned Mrs. Vaessen to\nher native British Isles after an\nabsence which followed the war\nyears.\nThe guest of her mother, Mrs.\nM. Mander, Mrs. Vaessen was\nalso. reunited with her sister,\nMine. H .Guillaumont, who joined them at Aberdeen from Juan\nles-Pines on the French Riviera.\nBy JAMES NELSON\nCHARLOTTETOWN (CP) -\nQueen Elizabeth and Prince\nPhilip left at midnight Wednesday after a two-day stay, and so\nfar as Prince Edward Islanders\nare concerned they'd like more\nand longer royal visits.\nNearly 1,000 of them waited\non a chilly Charlottetown dock\nto see the Queen's departure\nfor Quebec after attending a\nstate dinner and ball.\nWearing an emerald green\nsatin gown, white Canadian\nmink stole, and a sun-ray diamond tiara that belonged to\nQueen Alexandra, her great\ngrandmother, the Queen waved\nto the crowd and they responded with repeated cheers.\nThe departure was marred\nby a near-accident when the\ngangplank of the royal yacht\nBritannia shifted position moments before the Queen was to\ngo up it.\nA naval officer said that\nwhile the Queen was attending\nthe dinner and ball, the tide\nlifted the ship and a swell\nrolled it just as the Queen arrived at the dockside.\nDANGLED FREE\nThe land end of the gangplank, which had a roller on it\nto take the movement of the\nship, tipped an eight-foot-square\nplatform so that the steps leading to it were dangling in the\nair.\nCrew members from the Britannia shifted the platform back\ninto position.\nThe Queen and her husband\narrive at Quebec Saturday\nmorning and fly to Ottawa late\nSunday. Most of Thursday will be\nspent in the Gulf of St. Lawrence out of sight of land, sailing almost due north towards\nGaspe.\nThe Britannia is escorted by\nfour Canadian naval vessels.\nLight winds and sunshine were\nforecast for Thursday's voyage\nA farewell toast to the\nQueen's health was proposed in\nGaelic, at the state banquet\nWednesday night. Four pipers\nfrom the Canadian Guards Regiment played Highland airs.\nAt the ball that followed the\nQueen, Prince Philip and 350\nother couples\u2014most of them in\nfull evening dress \u2014 danced\nwaltzes and foxtrots in the new\nFathers of Confederation Memorial Centre, which the Queen\nformally dedicated Tuesday.\nREMAINED AT EASE\nThe Queen remained vivacious and at ease throughout\nthe long day and into the night.\nShe started the ball, dancing a\na waltz with her husband.\nThe crowd swarmed around\nher when the music stopped and\nthe royal couple were escorted\nby Mounties to a roped-off area\nin one corner of the ballroom;\nBut Philip wasn't content with\nthat and danced with Mrs. Mac-\nDonald, wife of the lieutenant-\ngovernor. The Queen followed\nhim on the dance floor with Dr.\nFrank MacKinnon, president of\nthe Confederation Centre Foundation.\nThe Queen's day started Wednesday with a visit to the Confederation chamber in Province House, where the first\nmeeting of the Fathers of Confederation was held in 1864. She\nhad visited the chamber twice\nbefore.\nThen she drove through rain\nwet streets to the city's fair\ngrounds to appear before 9000\nschool children, each waving a\nUnion Jack. She presented Boy\nScout, Girl Guide and school\nachievement awards.\nRESTED AFTER LUNCH\nAfter lunch at Government\nHouse, the Queen and her husband rested aboard the yacht\nand prepared for the evening\ndinner and dance.\nDriving through city streets,\nthe public generally had a bet-\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, OCT. 9, 1964 \u2014 5\nWomen's Emergence\nBenefits Indian\nPolitical Parties\nter view of the Queen and her\nI husband after dark then in daylight. Shadows in the closed\nlimousine make it difficult to\nsee the royal couple, but after\ndark the interior of. the car is\nlighted a\u00bbd the public gets a\ngood view.\nRCMP denied a report in a\nBritish newspaper that a Charlottetown taxi driver- passed\ncasually through security\nchecks Monday at Summerside\nwhen the Queen arrived by air.\nThe driver, Conn Murphy, had\nbeen hired by three British photographers to drive them to the\nairport. They had asked that he\nbe permitted through police\nlines so he could drive them\nback to Charlottetown with pictures of the arrival.\n**the money our\ntermDlan loan\nsaved us\npaid for\nthis\nextra chair **\nSee Royal Bank first before you shop. Arrange for a low-cost\ntermpian loan. It puts buying power, bargaining power in your\npocket, leaves you more dollars to spend on that new set of\nfurniture, or any other \"big buy\". Save money next time you\nborrow,.,       __\nFinance in advance at\nROYAL BANK\nKaslo Notes\nKASLO - Mr. and Mrs. R.\nKreuger of Mirror Lake have\nleft for a holiday, during which\nthey will visit relatives-in Manitoba and Minnesota.\nRecent visitors to Kaslo were\nMr. and Mrs. J.. Giegerich .of\nSaanich, Vancouver Island and\nGuy Atkinson of New Westminster. , Mr. and Mrs. Giegerich returned in early summer\nfrom a three-month cruise\naround the world on the P. & O\nliner, Oriana. Miss E. Giegerich\nentertained a group of friends to\nenjoy slides shown by the\ntravellers. :.: !\u2022\"\u25a0'\u25a0 \u25a0\nMrs. E. Cunningham has returned home from Kootenay\nLake General Hospital, where\nshe was a patient for two weeks.\nJ. Osipiwici is visiting - in\nLondon, Ontario, the guest of\nDr. and Mrs. A. Barrera and\nfamily.   ..'..'\nQueen's Bay\n| QUEEN'S BAY - Mrs. E- D.\nBaravalle has returned from\nNew York and brbught her sister, Mrs. Babcock, with her for\na visit.\nMr. and Mrs. N. R\". German's\nrecent guests were-Mrs. R; T.\nDavies and her three children\nfrom Vista, California; Mrs.\nJanet Corum of Calgary and\nMr. and Mrs. Harrison of Calgary.\nMrs. Nora Sowerby of :Vlctoria\nvisited old friends in Queen's\nBay, where she lived for many\nyears.\nMiss Bessie Bashford of Pen-\nticton, formerly of Queen's Bay,\nvisited old friends in the Bay.\nMrs. Alec Meldriun of Vancouver spent a week with the\nHon. Basil Aylmers.\nMrs. Kenneth Attree is convalescing at the home of Alex\nAttree in Victoria.\nMrs. Chamberlain of Vancouver and Mrs. Crozier-Swith\nof Nelson were recent guests of\nMrs. Hirst.\nMrs. Lorna Wishaw has returned to her home in Arizona\nfor the winter.\nThe Church Guild tea for\nSeptember was held at the home\nof Mrs. Gladys Hirst.\nProcter Notes\nPROCTER - The Procter Hall\nSociety recently held its annual\nmeeting for the election of officers, with Bert J. Fitchett being elected as president; Gilbert\nMcMullin, vice-ipresident; Mrs.\nEdward Sikula, secretary-treasurer, and Mrs. Nick Dosenber-\nger, Jr., and Ernest Spigariol\nelected as executive members.\nThe Procter Teenage Drama\nGroup, \"The Masqueraders\"\nplans to reconvene under the direction of Mrs. C. Fitchett and\nMrs. Albert Ogden. They have\nalready sent for play books on\nDickens' Christmas Carol, which\nthey hope to produce at the\nChristmas concert.\nRIVER'S DISCHARGE\nThe average discharge at the\nmouth of the Mississippi River\n620,000 cubic feet a second.\nBOMBAY (CP)\u2014The women\nof India \u2022 are emerging as a\npowerful force in the politics of\nthe country.\nIt no longer is true to say of\nthem that they are disinterested\nin politics, totally obedient to\ntheir husbands and coy in the\npresence of men.\nIndian opposition parties are\nattaching more importance to\nthe participation of women in\nanti - government rallies and\nprocessions. Some parties have\norganized special women's\nbranches.\nOf the 16,000 Communists arrested recently during a \"passive resistance\" campaign to\nbring down food prices, as\nmany as 3,000 were women.\nThe Democratic Socialists\nhave started a drive to enlist\nfeminine support. The party has\n200 full-time women workers in\nBombay alone.\nThe right - wing Hindu Jana\nSangh claims it can throw between 3,000 and 10,000 New Delhi women into agitations any\ntime it wants. To demonstrate\nthis, the Jana Sangh recently\nkept up a seven-day round-the-\nclock hunger strike by some\n200 housewives outside the re\nsidence of Prime Minister La :\nBahadur Shastri.\nArmed with broomsticks, Calcutta's women recently surrounded municipal officials, demanding better sanitary services.\nNot to be left behind, the Ruling Congress party is making a\nmajor effort to streamline its\nwomen's branch. It has initiated plans for recruiting 20,000\nwomen workers to counter\nCommunist and Socialist anti-\ngovernment propaganda.\nCOAT\nSALE\nLADIES' FASHION COATS\nSizes 10 to 18\nUP TO HALF OFF\nCLOTH COATS:\nAll wool, chamois lining.\nReg. 39.98 i.\t\nALPACAMA COAT:\nReg. 59.98 \t\nCLOTH COAT:\nAll wool musk rot trim.\nReg. 59.98; _________\nMOHAIR COAT:\nChamois lining.\nReg. 69.98. ____\t\nORLON PILE COATS:\nWhite with leopard trim.\nReg. 59.98 \u2014__\u201e\t\nLEOPARD | COAT:\nReg. 79.98 _______\nSIMOTTA i COAT:\nReg. 79.98 . __._\nLEOPARD F.L. COAT:\nReg. 89.98 _.,_____\nMOHAIR COAT:\nMink collar.\nReg. 179.98 __\t\nMOHAIR COATS:\nMink collar.\nReg. $135  &\n19.99\n39.99\n39.99\n39.99\n39.99\n39.99\n39.99\n59.99\n89.00\n89.00\nJjadai}. WqhL\n7 p. m. Specials\nFlash Bulbs-HALF PRICE\nG.E. M5 power mite flashbulbs with\nzirconium foil. Boxes of \"?0_i\n12. Reg.  1.44. Special _ \/_W\nFall Bulbs\nGet your fall bulbs now. Daffodils,\nnarcissus, assorted tulips, crocus,\nsnowdrop, hyacinths, lily, peony,\nshastd  daisy and  phlox.  4 to o\ncustomer.  AO_\nReg. 69c. Special tT7r\nLadies' Blouses\t\nLarge selection of dressy blouses.\nSeveral styles to choose from. Assort-\nsd colors. Sizes 10 to 20. Regular\nto 6.98  : 1.49 to 3.99\nDuBarry Lotions\t\n-HALF PRICE\nFamous Du Barry firming lotion,-\nspecial astringent and skin freshner.\nAegular prices 2.75 and 1.75. Spec.\n1,37   and 88*\nBoys'\nThermal Underwear\nLight, warm, thermal shirts and\ndrawers. Sizes S, M, and L. Shirts\nReg. 1.79. 1 1Q\nSpecial      LIT\nDrawers: Reg. 1.98. >i   *q\nSpecial     I \u00ab*f r\nMen's\nThermal Underwear\nLight, warm thermal shirts and'\ndrawers. Sizes: S, M, L. Shirts Reg.\n1.98. | oft\nSpecial     LOT\nDrawers: Reg.\n2.29. Special  .\t\n1.79\nFlannelette Pyjamas\nChildren's cotton flannelette pyjamas in floral and novelty prints. Pastels and white. aq\u00abi\nSizes 3 to 6X TT>\nMen's Work Boots\nAn assortment of work boots with\nleather uppers composition soles.\nMostly brown. Sizes 6i \"T QQ\nto 10_. Special  \/ .TT\nl(hii>siin>*E>\u201e{i (tumpatut\n 6 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, OCT. 9, 1964\n.  . _ ,\t\nKromm Names Team\nFor Tonight's Opener\nBobby Kromm announced his\nstarting lineup for tonight's Western International Hockey League opener in Rossland Thursday.\nHe broke the news that Jim\nLetcher, Vancouver Canucks'\nstandby goalie, will definitely\nplay for the Maple Leafs this\nwinter and was expected to arrive in town this morning. He\nhad intended to leave Vancouver\nyesterday but was forced to remain in the coast city pending\narrival of Giles Boisvert, who\nreplaces Marcel Paille in the\nCanuck nets. Paille has been recalled by the parent New York\nRangers.\nIn the event that Letcher is\ndelayed, Bruno Forlin has agreed\nto play.\nHoldovers F.ank Carlson,\nDave Stewart and Shorty Mal-\nacko will occupy three defence\nspots. A pair of M-year-old hopefuls, Bob Willis, of Calgary and\nShelly Atwell will both see action at the other blue line slot.\nLarry Motfery of New Westminster will centre Bob Kromm\nand Mike Laughton on the Leafs'\nfirst line.\nKelowna junior league scoring\nchamp, Larry Roberge will take\nthe pivot spot between Miles\nDesharnais and Carl Chwachka\non the second.\nAlec Young, a rugged Alberta\nwinger, who checked in last night\nfrom the Spokane camp will\nline up on the right wing of the\nthird unit. Murray Owens is expected in from Portland to take\nTOKYO (CP) - Indonesia today became the second Asian\ncountry to withdraw from the\n1964 Olympic Games because of\nan argument over the eligibility\nof athletes, joining North Korea\non the sidelines.\nMIKE LAUGHTON\n. . . Switches to wing\nover the centre slot and Danny\nCalles will be given the left wing\nassignment.\nKromm said following last\nnight's practice that the line-up\nwill probably be changed noticeably for Saturday's home-opener against Trail, as he wants to\nsee several more rookies perform under fire before making\na final decision as to the squad's\nmakeup.\nYankees Bounce Back To Square Series\nRookie Mel Stottlemyre\nDazzles St. Louis Batters\nBy JACK HAND\nST. LOUIS (AP) - Rookie\nMel Stottlemyre, a name Yogi\nBerra still has trouble spelling,\nconfused St. Louis Cardinals\nwith seven - hit pitching Thursday and New York Yankees\nsquared the World Series with\nan 8-3 victory in the second\ngame.\nThe Yanks rolled out the\nheavy artillery and bombed\nBob Gibson and two successors\nfor 12 hits that Included a\nhomer by Phil Linz and four\ndoubles.\nAnother standing-room crowd\nof 30,805 huddled in the chill\nbreees and 58-degree temperature at Busch Stadium while\nthe Yanks broke open a tight\ngame with a four-run blast in\nthe ninth.\nManager Johnny Keane paraded Barney Schult, Gordon\nRichardson and finally Roger\nCraig to the hill as the score\nmounted.\nBoos rattled through the\nstands in the sixth when the\nYanks broke a 1-1 tie with the\nhelp of a controversial hit-batsman call by plate umpire Bill\nMcKinley.\nTOKYO (CP-Reuters) - A top WALKED HOWARD\nworld   sports   body   Thursday!   Mickey  Mantle  had  walked\nurged the International Olympic!and Elston Howard had lined\nCommittee to take \"uraent aclout when \" haPPened- Joe PePi-\nCommittee to take   urgent ac- L^ hg]f checking a swing at\ntion   to halt the widespread use an inside pitch was nicked on\nof pep-pills and pain-killing drugs|tlle ]e{( tnign\namong athletes. i   catcher Tim McCarver, Gib-\nIn a report submitted to the son, Keane and Dick Groat pro-\nIOC, the International Congress tested with fire, but to no avail,\nof Sports Sciences said the in- Tom Tresh then scored Mantle\ncreasing use of drugs is caused with the go-ahead run to make\nby \"the hardness and fanaticism it 2-1 amidst a chorus of boos,\nof today's competition.\" I   Two more Yanke runs in the\nRUMS\nKAVY RUM,\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the\nLiquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\n| seventh and the bundle of four\nin the ninth left the home\ncrowd in a sombre mood as\nthey filed out.\nThe teams left for New York\nImmediately after the game.\nFriday Is an off day for travel.\nWhen they resume action Saturday at Yankee Stadium it\nwill be Jim Bouton, 18-13, a 25-\nyear-old righthander, pitching\nfor the Yanks and 35-year-old\nsouthpaw Curt Simmons, 18-9,\nworking tor the Cards.\nWILL PLAY IN NEW YORK\nThey will play three games in\nNew York and then return to\nSt. Louis for the rest of the\nbest-of-seven series If more are\nneeded.\nStottlemyre, recalled by the\nYankees from Richmond Virginians of the International\nLeague Aug. 11, had the Cardinals hitting the ball into the\ndirt all through the cloudy afternoon.\nThe slim 22-year-old righthander from Mabton, Wash.,\nbanks on a sinker ball and he\nhad tight control of the situation until he appeared to tire\nin the eighth and ninth.\nBerra, the Yankee manager,\ncame out to the mound twice,\nonce to see if his pitcher had\nbeen hurt by a line smash off\nthe bat of Lou Brock in the\nsixth. Yogi made one more trip\nin the ninth after a leadoff\ntriple by Groat and a single by\nMcCarver produced a run with\nnobody out.\nMike Shannon, the hero of\nWednesday's 9-5 Cardinal victory, slashed into a fast double\nplay and Stottlemyre struck out\npinch - hitter Charley James to\nend it.\nMOST VALUABLE PITCHER\nIt was quite a performance\nfor a young man who was pitching in the minors most of the\nseason. In fact, Stottlemyre's\n13-3 record in Richmond earned\nhim the most valuable pitcher\naward in that league despite\nhis month's absence. More than\nany other pitcher, the youngster\nwas responsible for the late\nYankee pennant surge with his\n9-3 victory record.\nThe win halted a five-game\nseries losing slump of the\nYanks, who hadn't won since\nthey took the seventh game\nfrom San Francisco Giants in\nthe 1962 World Series. They lost\nfour straight battles with Los\nAngeles Dodgers last year.\nSecond game:\nNew York A 000 101 204-8 12 0\nSt. Louis N    001 000 011\u20143  7 0\nTOKYO (AP)-The population\nof Tokyo, the world's largest\ncity, reached 10,629,525, as of\nAug. 1.\nTAKE ADVANTAGE\nNOW!!\nBuy Your\nGOOD\/\/YEAR\nWINTER TIRES\nAt This\nBIG SAVING\nBUY 1\nGET 1\nAT HALF PRICE\nOn All Sizes\nSUBURBANITE\nTIRES\nANDY'S TIRE SHOP LTD.\nStottlemyre and Howard; Gibson, Schultz (9), G. Richardson\n(9), Craig (9) and McCarver.\nW-Stottlemyre. L-Gibson.\nHR: NY-Linz.\n(2 Athletes\nSet for Cross\nCountry Race\nAthletes from seven Kootenay\ncentres have entered the first\nAnnual Kootenay Open Cross\nCountry Championships, to be\nheld here Saturday. Fernle,\nCranbrook, Creston, Nakusp,\nNelson, Trail and Castlegar will\nbe represented when 62 high\nschool students take to the road\nover a gruelling two and three-\nquarter mile course.\nLeading the array is Jim\nHenke, of Nakusp, who set a\nnew record of 4:44 for the senior\nmile at the 1964 West Kootenay\nHigh School Track Meet at Trail\nlast June. His main opposition\nwill probably be Jim Boyce\ngrade 11 student at L.V. Rogers\nHigh School, Nelson, who won\nthe mile and three-quarter, L.V\nRogers Cross Country Championships, two weeks ago.\nThe race will begin at 1:30\np.m. Saturday at Civic Centre\ngrounds. Runners will complete\nhalf a lap of the Civic track, proceed onto Vernon Street; up\nDouglas Street to Behnsen; down\nBehnsen street, behind Safeway\nstore onto Front street; back\nalong Highway No. 3 to Civic\nCentre, where they will complete one full lap of the track.\nPolice intend to co-operate\nwith regard to clearing the\nstreets while the race is in progress.\nJOE PEPITONE\n. Was he hit by pitch?\nmm\nPHIL LINZ\nPlays Harmonica\n. . Hits Home Runs\nOlympic Swim Coach\nExpects No Gold Medals\nBy JACK SULLIVAN\nCanadian Press Sports Editor\nTOKYO (CP) - Swimming\ncoach Howard Firby of Vancouver said Thursday Canada\nhas its strongest swimming\nteam in Olympic history but a\nhalf-dozen other countries likely\nwill pick up the gold medals.\nFirby rates swimmers from\nthe United States, Russia, Australia, Germany, the Netherlands and Britain as the ones\nwho are likely to stand up and\nbe counted when the gold medals are passed out starting early\nnext week.\n\"The Americans should take\nall the relays for men and\nwomen,\" he said in an interview. There are five\u2014the men's\n400- and 800-metre freestyle and\n400-metre medley and the women's 400 - metre freestyle and\n400-metre medley.\nFirby, who coached the Canadian British Empire team at\nCardiff, Wales in 1958, said the\nCanadians-should reach six individual finals in swimming\nhere, something Canadians\nhaven't been able to do in the the men's 800 freestyle.\nmemory of the present generation.\nTIP BEST CHANCES\nHe gave this rundown of Ca-\nada chances of advancing to\nthe swim finals:\nWomen \u2014 Mary Stewart of\nVancouver in her specialty, the\n100 - metre butterfly; Eileen\n(Joey) Weir of Toronto in the\n100-metre backstroke; Marion\nLay, a native of Vancouver who\nlives in Covina, Calif., in the\n100-metre freestyle; and Barbara Hounsell, a native of Weston, Ont, who is a resident of\nWhittier, Calif., in the 400-metre\nindividual medley.\nMen \u2014 Sandy Gilchrist of\nOcean Falls, B.C., in the 400-\nmetre freestyle and Ralph Hut-\nton of Ocean Falls In the 200-\nmetre butterfly.\nFirby said Louise Kennedy of\nLondon, Ont., \"blows hot and\nwarm and, if hot, can be a surprise in the freestyle spring.\"\nHe also figures there will be\nthree Canadian finalists in the\nrelays \u2014 in the women's 400\nfreestyle   and   400  medley  of\nIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIHIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIItlllllllllllllllllllllMI\nNelson Curling Club Plans\nBig Introductory Funspiel\nYou say you're one of those\npeople who has always wanted\nto take up curling but just never\ngot around to it?\nThen the Nelson Curling Club's\nbig \"Funspiel\" Is the thing for\nyou!\nAs an approach to attracting\nnewcomers to the club and\nacquainting beginners with the\nroaring game, the club announced last night, plans for an\nintroductory fun-bonsplel, open\nto both men and women from\nNelson and the entire surrounding area.\nIt doesn't matter if you've\nnever thrown a rock and the\nonly contact with a broom\nyou've had is the one your girl\nflies on when the moon Is full,\nyou're welcome.\nThe club hopes curlers will\nregister in foursomes, but\nstresses that single entries will\nbe happily accepted.\nA club spokesman said an\nideal situation would be one in\nwhich every rink had a member who had never curled\nbefore.\n\"There will be no fee, except\nfor two-bits per head which will\ngo toward prizes,\" he said.\nEvery curler will be guaranteed a minmum of two games,\nand the clubs best shotmakers\nwill be on hand to give instruction to beginners and to explain\nthe rudiments of the game.\n\"The teams can be made up of\nall men, all women or any combination of both,\" club president,\nLou Maglio invites, \"so grab\nyour mother-n-law, the milkman\nand the guy next door, and plan\nto attend the big Nelson Funspiel.\"\nDates will be announced in an\nadvertisement in the Nelson\nDaily News this week.\nIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nDry Land Training Plan\nFor National Ski Team\nNational Hockey League\nLooks for Banner Season\nBy JOE DUPUIS\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\n\"About the only problem we\nhave,\" says Clarence Campbell,\n\"is how to find space for all\nthe people who want to see the\ngame.\"\nFaced with such a delightful\nprospect, the National Hockey\nLeague embarks on a new season next week confident of\nbreaking more attendance records, if that's possible.\nBoston Bruins play host to\nNew York Rangers in the league\ncurtain-raiser Monday.\nCampbell, NHL president,\nsays weekend and holiday\ngames around the six-city circuit are nearly always automatic sell-outs. \"The only margins we have tu work with are\nthe weekday games,\" he says.\n\"These are not always sold out,\nbut nearly always.\nRULES CHANGED\n\"If fans have the feeling this\nyear that the spectacle is a little\nsmoother, with a stepped-up\npace, playing rule changes will\nbe the reason,\" says Campbell.\nForemost is the \"clean\" face-\noff rule, with no body contact.\nThe time-consuming and tedious practice of players arguing\npenalty calls with the referee\nis out. From now on, penalized\nplayers must proceed directly to\nthe penalty box\u2014or else.\nOther  rules  protect  against\n324 Vernon St.\nNELSON, B.C.\nPh. 352-3727\nEXPORT\nPLAIN\nor  FILTER  TIP\nCIGARETTES\noffensive interference\u2014such as\nwhen a defensive team forms a\nscreen to protect a puck carrier\u2014and restricts the number\nof ways' a goaltender can stop\nplay unnecessarily.\nReferees now have the power\nto crack down hard on those\nwho leave the players' bench to\njoin in an altercation on the ice,\nor for any other improper reason.\nChicago Black Hawks, along\nwith the Canadiens and Detroit\nRed Wings, are logical contenders for the Leafs' crown. Offseason trades appear to have\nstrengthened both the Bruins\nand Rangers.\nCROZIER ON SPOT\nMan-on-the-spot this season is\nRoger Crozier, the 22-year-old\nrookie goalie on whom coach\nSid Abel has invested the fortunes of his Red Wing team.\nAbel still has Gordie Howe to\nprovide inspiration, but the loss\nof reliable veteran Terry Saw-\nchuk to Toronto could be a blow.\nCrozier played 15 games for\nDetroit last season, ending up\nwith a not-so-good 3.40 average.\nDetroit also has newcomers\nMurray Hall, Ron Murphy and\nAutry Erickson, obtained in a\ntrade with Chicago. Murphy will\nplay on the Howe-Alex Delvec-\nchio line.\nLeafs acquired Sawchuk after\nAbel left him unprotected in the\ndraft. Leaf coach Punch Imlach\nplans to alternate Sawchuk in\nthe nets with Johnny Bower.\nExperience is still the trump\ncard in Maple Leaf aspirations.\nImlach has veteran Red Kelly\nback, while waiting in the wings\nis. winger Dickie Moore, all-\ntime Canadiens' scoring ace\ntrying a comeback with the\nLeafs after a year's layoff.\nREAY MAKES CHANGES\nAfter stretch - drive collapses\nin the last two seasons, the\nBlack Hawks, under coach Billy\nReay, are minus three veterans\nbut will have at least four newcomers to try to fill the gap,\nApart from veteran Doug\nMohns, acquired in a summer\ntrade with Boston, the newcomers are all rookies \u2014 John Bren-\nneman, 22, Doug Robinson, 24,\nand Dennis Hull 19-year - old\nbrother of Hawk star Bobby\nHull.\nRobinson, up from Buffalo of\nthe American League, will likely\nreplace Ab McDonald on the\nHawks scooter line of Kenny\nWharram and Stan Mlkita. McDonald was part of the Chicago\ntrade that also sent Reggie\nFleming and Murray Balfour to\nBoston.\nWharram was injured when a\npuck smashed into his face dur\ning a pre - season exhibition\ngame against Toronto, and is a\ndoubtful season starter.\nBrenneman scored 28 goals\nand 47 assists with St. Louis\nFlyers of the Central Professional League last season.\nTwo new faces grace the\nyoung, spirited Canadiens team\n\u2014Yvan Cournoyer, and defence-\nman Ted Harris. Cournoyer is\nthe exciting right wing replacement for Bernie Geoffrion, who\nretired this year to coach Quebec Aces of the American\nHockey League.\nMontreal's chief concern is\ngoalie Charlie Hodge, last year's\nVezina Trophy winner, who has\nbeen playing far below form in\nexhibition games.\nHAVE ACE IN HOLE\nBut the Canadiens have an\nace in the hole in veteran\nGump Worsley, Quebec Aces\ngoalie, who has looked much\nbetter than Hodge in exhibition\nplay. Winger Henri Richard will\nmiss some early games for the\nCanadiens because of an injury.\nNew York expects big things\nfrom Bob Nevin and Dick Duff,\nacquired in the Bathgate \u2022 Mc-\nKenney trade with Toronto.\nThey also have fresh blood in\nRod Seiling, winger Ted Taylor, up from St. Paul of the\nCPHL, defenceman A r n i e\nBrown, minor star with Baltimore and Rochester of the AHL,\nand Jim Mikol, drafted from\nBoston last summer. High scoring winger Camille Henry is\nailing with a back injury. Seiling, who will be 20 in November,\ngets his start on defence with\nthe Rangers, although he can\nalso play on the forward line.\nA member of Canada's Olympic\nteam last year, he came to New\nYork in the Toronto trade,\nGilles Villemure, 24, rookie\nunderstudy of Ranger goalie\nJacques Plante, may play a\nkey role in the team's plans.\nRangers, apparently d 1 s e n-\nchanted with Plante, may start\nthe season with Villemare,\nscored upon 18 times in the. five\ngames he played for New York\nlast season.\nBruins figure they were bolstered by the Chicago trade\nthat brought them Balfour, McDonald and Fleming. Boston has\na promising rookie in winger\nRon Shock, last year with Niagara Falls Juniors,\nMissing from the Boston lineup for the first time in nine\nseasons will be Andy Hebenton,\nhockey's iron man who set a\nrecord by playing 630 consecutive games. Bruins optioned\nHebenton to the minors this\nyear, and he now is on the reserve list of Portland in the\nWestern League.\nRegular dally practice in dry\nland skiing is underway for 14\nmembers of the Canadian national ski team who are attending school and training as a\ngroup in Nelson.\nEnrolled at the university are:\nAndre Crepeau, Sherbrook, Quebec; Eva Kuchar, Montreal;\nHeather Quipp, Ottawa; Judy\nYoung, Fort William; Bob Calla-\ndine, Vancouver; Scott Henderson, Banff, Alberta; Dan Irwin,\nFort William; Bob Swan, Ottawa; and Jerry Rlnaldl, Kim-\nberley, B.C.\nNancy Green, Rossland, B.C.,\nis employed at the university in\na secretarial position, and Barbi\nWalker, Montreal, attends the\nKootenay School of Art in Nelson.\nAttending L. V. Rogers senior\nsecondary school are: Gary\nMatheson, Montreal; Vicki Rut-\nledge, Ottawa, and Keith Shepherd, Revelstoke, B.C.\nKarren Dokka, Vancouver, is\nexpected to arrive this month to\nenrol at U V. Rogers, and three\nmembers of the team who have\nbeen working elsewhere will join\nthe group for training \u2014 Michel\nLehman, Montreal; Peter Duncan,   Mt.  Tremblant,  Quebec\nand  Ron  Williams,   Smlthers,\nB.C.\nRod Hebron; Vancouver, who\nattends Oregon State University,\nwill arrive at the end of his\nschool's fall quarter, Dec. 1, and\nwill train during the winter quarter, returning to Crovallis in the\nspring.\nPro-Fi\/es\nBaseball's\nRECORD TH\u00ab)Wl\nBy BOB STJDYK\n445 FT. 1 IN. no- Grate's\nheave wag accoi.. :is_ed in _\npre-game exhibition la the old\nMinneapolis ball park, Aug;. 27,\n1906. In hie big league career\nha pitched eight games for the\nPhillies In 1945-16, winning; ont\nand losing- onel\nMinor Hockey\nFINAL\nREGISTRATIONS\nGreen Room      \u2014      Civic Centre\nSaturday, Oct. 10\n10 a.m. lo 12 Neon\nMITES\u2014under 8\u2014$2.50\nPUPS\u2014under 10\u2014$2-50\nPEE WEE\u2014under 12\u2014$4.50\nBANTAMS\u2014under 14\u2014$5.00\nMIDGETS\u2014under 16\u2014$5.50\nJUVENILES\u2014under 18\u2014$7.00\n(All Ages as of May 31st, 1964)\nNelson Maple Leafs\n1st Home Game\nNelson Civie Centre Arena\nSaturday, Oct. 10\nGAME TIME 8 P.M.\nNELSON MAPLE LEAFS\nvs\nTRAIL SMOKE EATERS\nSeason Reserved Tickets $24.00 - Middle 3 Sections\nbetween bluellnes exclusively for season and\nreserved ticket holders. - Savings of 112.00\n50% Down, Balance by Dec. 1st.\nChildren 25c       Students 50c       Rush $1.25\nReserve $1.50\nCorsages to the First 500 Ladles in Attendance\n HE'S JEST  \\-<_)9\nLEssBowN'j rr-|T\nTHAN SO'  -X DO LOOK\nIS-SEE? ) (  EWHTINTT\nDID HE\nUK. IT\nf   VES.' M6\nSAIO IT WAS\n\\.  tovEiv\nK\n\u00a7i __JF i\n\u2022A       C\n_v\n[\\ tfe\nAMP HS 8AIP MAVSEWO I\nTO KNIT A PACK FOR\n&S\/BRVOHB IM THE APMV ,\nSO WECOULP ALL. BE Itf\nUNIFORM     >-\nTHIS SAME\nIS CALLED,\nTHlDg-AND-SEEKFIFI-'\nTHK IDEA IS FOR YOU\nJO MICE UNDER THE\nCOUCH\nBIRTHS\nARLIDGE \u2014 Born to Mr. and\nMrs. Arlidge, 948 Foul Bay Road.\nOak Bay, Victoria. On October\n8th a daughter, Susan.\nCLARK \u2014 Born to Mr. and\nMrs. Donald Clark, Salmo, B.C.\nOn October 7th, a daughter.\nVLAHOVICK - Born to Mr.\nand Mrs. Andrew Vlahovick,816\nPark Street, Nelson, B.C. On\nOctober 8th, a son.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, OCT. 9, 1964 \u2014 7\nHELP WANTED\u2014FEMALE\nSALES CLERK, STEADY POS-\nition. Salary. Some typing.\nAge 21 to 35. Give phone number and particulars. Box 269,\nNelson Daily News. \u2014236-tfn\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nHELP WANTED\nHANDYMAN - JANITOR RE-\nquired for the Victorian Hospital of Kaslo. 40-hour week,\ngeneral maintenance duties,\ncoal stoker furnace, care of\nhospital grounds and gardens,\ncar allowance. Apply in writing stating qualifications, experience, and salary expected,\nto Administrator, Victorian\nHospital, Box 607, Kaslo, B.C.\n-233-238\nSCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 8 (SLO-\ncan) Teacher required immediately to teach grades 1-3 inclusive at Perry's Elementary\n1-room school. Apply in writing with copies of latest District Superintendent's report\nto H. R. Mills, Sec.-Treas., Slo-\ncan S.D, No. 8, Slocan, B.C.\n-234-tfn\nEXPANDING AREA EMPLOY-\ner requires applicant with\nelectronics experience or interests. Job in communication\nfield. Good fringe benefits\nSalary open to discussion. Apply National Employment Service, Nelson, B.C.    \u2014238-240\nQ U A L IFIED INSTRUMENT-\nmen with minimum of 5 years\nexperience required for Duncan Lake Dam Site. Prefer\nsome drafting and soils testing\nexperience. Apply in writing to\nMontreal Engineering Co. Ltd.\nP.O. Box 546, Kaslo. \u2014237-242\nMESSENGER BOY OR GIRL.\nApply C. P. Telegraphs, 460\nBaker St. -236-241\nBEFORE STORING FOR WIN-\nter, treat your implements\nright. Call Van's Repairs for\noverhaul. Pickup \u2014 Delivery,\nPhone 352-2408, 57 Ymlr Rd.\n-234-23!)\nROOM  AND   BOARD\nCLEAN,     PRIVATE     BDRM.\n,  for gentleman. Near Legion.\n$25. Ph. 352-5030 or 352-3644.\n-201-tfn\nROOM AND BOARD FOR GEN-\ntleman. Ph. 352-2119 after 5\np.m. \u2014238-240\nROOM AND BOARD FOR A\nworking girl. Ph. 352-2766 after 5 p.m. \u2014228-tfn\nWANTED - A POSITION AS\ncaretaker, motels and summer\ncamps, anywhere; for a small\nfee. Box 264, Nelson Daily\nNews. \u2014228-239\nMALE OFFICE CLERK, WITH\nindustrial first aid experience\n\"C\" Certificate, requires position. Apply Box 270, Nelson\nDaily News. \u2014236-241\nPIANO TUNING AND REPAIR.\nG. Stenberg. Ph. 352-6892.\n-231-256\nBOATS AND ENGINES\nFOR SALE - ROOMY SAFE\nfamily cabin cruiser, 19 ft.\nFlying Bridge, folding top,\ncompletely equipped, 45 h.p.\nMercury Motor, a bargain at\n$1195.00. Call 352-5694 after 5\np.m. -233-238\n1*4 YR-OLD BOAT, MO'.JOR,\ntrailer, water skis, etc. Pi hied\nfor quick sale. Phone 352-81127\nor 352-2450. -234-239\nANTIQUE CARS\nAUCTION SALE, VINTAGE\nClassic Cars \u2014 Car parts,\ntires, antique lamps, clocks,\nchina, books. Three Valley\nMotel, 12 miles West of Revel-\nstoke, B.C. on Trans-Canada\nHighway. Saturday, Oct. 10th,\n1 p.m. No reserve bids. Write\nBox 860< Telex 048-739. Phone\n837-3850. \u2014238-239\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS 1390 ON THE DIAL\nPACIFIC DAYLIGHT TIME\nFRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1964\nS:SS\u2014Sign On\n6:00-Wake Up Time\n6:40\u2014Farm Fare\n6:45\u2014Chapel In The Sky\n7:00\u2014News\n7:05-Wake Up Time\n7:25\u2014Sport8 News\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Wake Up Time Continues\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n8:15\u2014Wake Up Time Continues\n8:30\u2014Preview Commentary\n8:35\u2014Opening Markets\n8:40-Wake Up Time\n9:00\u2014News\n9:10-Music Fill\n9:15\u2014The Archer's\n9:30-Alan's A.M. Spot\n9:59\u2014D.O.O.T.S.\n10:00\u2014News\n10:10\u2014What's the Song Contest\n10:15-Music Fill\n11:00\u2014News\n11:05\u2014Morning Melodies\n12:00\u2014Canadians On Record\n12:15\u2014Sports News\n12:25\u2014News\n12:30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast'\n12:54\u2014News\n12:57\u2014Noon Markets\n1:00\u2014Sing Along\n1:15\u2014The Tommy Hunter Show\n1:45\u2014Afternoon Concert\n2:00\u2014School Broadcast\n2:30-News\n2:33\u2014Trans Canada Matinee\n3:00\u2014News and Summary\n3:05\u2014Sports .Spotlight .. \t\n3:10-Music Fill\n3:15\u2014Sacred Heart Program\n3:30-Tempo - Part I\n4:00-News\n4:03\u2014Canadian Roundup\n4:10\u2014Pops Parade\n4:30\u2014Countdown\n5:00\u2014News\n5:05\u2014The Rolling Home ShOw\n5:35\u2014Closing Markets\n5:40-Today's Editorial\n5:45\u2014 Sports Desk\n5:50\u2014Spotlight On Sports\n5:55\u2014 Strikes and Spares\n6:00\u2014News\n6:05-Grand Old Opry\n7:00\u2014News and On\nParliament Hill\n7-\"0\u2014SpepH\"\" Personally\n7:30-Music For Listen'!!.\n8:00\u2014Assignment\n8:20-UN Radio\n8:30\u2014Reserved For Music\n9:00\u2014Easy To Remember\n9:30\u2014Chamber Music\n10:00-News\n10:15-Chapel In The Sky\n10:30-Friday Frolic\n12:00\u2014News\n12:03\u2014Sign Off\nCBC PROGRAMS\nSATURDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1964\n6:00\u2014The Morning Show\n6:10\u2014 Olympic Report\n6:30\u2014The Morning Program\n6:45\u2014Royal Visit\n8:15\u2014News\n8:30\u2014Programme Resume\n9:00\u2014News\n9:15\u2014Olympic Report\n9:35\u2014Morning Concert\n9:45\u2014World Series\n12:30-Royal Visit\n1:45\u2014Saturday Sports Date\n2:30\u2014Olympic Report\n8:00\u2014Opera Time\n4:30\u2014Pratley at the Movies\n5:00\u2014Radio International\n5:30\u2014Hockey Night In Canada\n7:15\u2014The Outdoorsman\n7:30\u2014On The Move\n8:00\u2014Max Ferguson Review\n8:30\u2014Alfred Deller Consort\n9:30\u2014Canadian-American\nRelations\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15-Olympic Report\n10:30\u2014The Saturday Set\n11:00\u2014From the Panorama Roof\nU:30-Continental Cabaret\n12:00-News\n12:03\u2014Land and Marine\nWeather\n12:05\u2014After Hours\n1:00\u2014News\n1:03\u2014Recorded Music\nTELEVISION  FOR TODAY\nPACIFIC DAYLIGHT TIME\nKR-M-TV - Channel t\n6:30 Friday Night\nat the Movies:\n\"Operation Secret\"\n8:30 Adams Family *\n9:00 Valentine's Day *\n9:30 12 o'clock High \u00bb\n10:30 Farmer's Daughter\n11:00 Nightbeat\n11:15. Bob Young and News *\n11:25 Nightbeat (continued)\n11:30 Late Show:\n\"Captain Horatio\nHornblower\"\nKXLY-TV - Channel 4\n7:00 Gomer Pyle, USMC \u2022\n7:30 Rawhide \u2022\n8:30 The Entertainers *\n9:30 Friday Premiere Theatre\n11:00 11 o'clock News\n11:30 Chiller Theatre\nKHQ-TV \u2014 Channel 6\n7:00 America\n7:30 International Showtime *\n8:30 Bob Hope *\n9:30 Jack Benny (C) \u00bb\n10:00 Jack Paar (C) *\n11:00 News and Weather\n11:30 Tonight with Carson (C) \u2022\nCBC-TV - Nelson, Channel 9; Trail, Channel U\n4:00 The Secret Storm\n4:30 Razzle Dazzle\n5:00 Thierry la Fronde\n5:30 Music Hop\n6:00 Donna Reed\n6:30 Home Edition\n7:00 The 7 o'clock Show\n7:30 Plain Talk\n8:00 Country Hoedown\n8:30 Mr. Broadway\n9:30 Telescope\n10:00 Ben Casey\n11:00 News\n11:14 Viewpoint\nCJLH-TV - Channel 7, Lethbrldge\nMOUNTAIN 8TANDARD TIME\n9:45 World Series\n12:30 Royal Tour\n1:30 Breeder Stake\n2:00 Sign Off\n4:30 Countrytime\n5:00 Bugs Bunny\n5:30 NHL   (All Star)\nSATURDAY\n7:15 Juliette\n7:45 Sports Unlimited\n8:00 CFL-Montreal at Calgary\n10:15 Rogues\n11:15 CBC News\n11:25 Nite Final\n11:30 Studio 7\n(Programs subject to change by stations without notice.)\nWANTED TO RENT\n3 BDRM. HOUSE.\n352-3008.\nPHONE\n-238-240\nGARAGE NEAR RCMP BAR-\nracks. Ph. 352-5443.    \u2014238-240\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC. FOR SALE\nABOUT 9 ACRES CLEARED\nplus barn, old pear orchard,\nentrance from Queen's Bay\nTownsite, plus 46 acres in\ntimber and poles. Also 650'\nfrontage on both sides of Nel-\nson-Kaslo Highway. Full price\n$3500.00. Down $500. Wm.\nKalyniuk Agencies. Ph. 352-\n2425. -221-tfn\nKITCHEN DELIGHT - 2 B.R.\nbungalow, lower Fairview.\nSpacious and well - planned\nkitchen; L.R.; oak floors. Full\nbasement; gas furnace. Terms\n$11,900. Robertson, Hilliard.\nPh. 352-7252. -238-238\n25 ACRES, 2 MODERN HOMES,\nauto, heat, garage, workshop\nand barn on Duncan Flats,\nnear Trail, Good spot for horses. Apply Box 324, Trail or\nphone 364-1683 after 5 p.m. or\nanytime weekends.   \u2014236-246\nFOR SALE - TWO BEDROOM\nhouse with full basement on\none acre of land with some\nmixed fruit trees, or four\nacres and the house. Apply to\nSteve Danyluk, R.R. No. 4,\nVernon, B.C. -230-255\nLAKE FRONTAGE, NORTH\nShore, 3 mile, well-built two\nlevel home, ample cupboards,\nall glass lakeside, dble plumbing. App. Ph. 352-3204.\n-237-239\nFOR SALE, 2 BIG LOTS ON\nYmlr Road, No. 14; 3 B.R.\nhouse on one lot, part basement. Very suitable for store\nsight. Inquire at 14 Ymir Rd.\n\u25a0\"\" -219-lfh\nNORTH SHORE, *i MILE\nfrom bridge. House and two\nrental dwellings. Highway and\nlake frontage. 2% acres. Ideal\ncommercial potential. Phone\n352-5205. -225-tfn\nSMALL 5 ROOM HOUSE FOR\nsale or rent, low price at 304\nHigh Street. Ph. 352-5230.\n-238-243\nFOR SALE OR RENT-2 BDRM\ncottage at Longbeach on 1\nacre of land. Ph. 229-4263.\nI -238-240\nFOR SALE-ROOMING HOUSE\nBox 223, Nelson News.\n-176-tfn\n14 X 24 MODERN 2 ROOM COT-\ntage to be removed from property. Ph. 352-2474.      -236-241\nREMEMBER\nAll Our Listings Are Inspected\nand Appraised at\nFAIR MARKET VALUE\n5-BKDROOM   HOUSE\nON 5 ACRES\n2-storey family home on highway 6 miles south of Nelson.\nThis property is ideal for family wishing country living with\nKpCre\"ea:.$5500\n$3360 down payment, balance\n$48.25 per mo. incl. 6% int.\nNEW DWELLING -\nMULTIPLE LISTING\nNorth Shore, 17-Mile. 14 acre\nland in garden. Bungalow\nstyle; 2 bedrooms, living room\nwith fireplace. Electric heat.\nWorkshop-guest house also on\nproperty. $6900\nFull price  \u00abKy\u00ab\"\"\u00bb\nDown payment $1500, bal. 6*4%\nBUNGALOW OLDER STYLE\nNEAR HUME SCHOOL\nCorner, level location, 5 rooms,\n2-3 bedrooms, glass enclosed\nverandah, basement, gas fur-\nnace $8700\ngarage    *     \"\nImmediate occupancy with\n$1500 down.\nNEAR LAKE - BALFOUR\n120 sq. ft., level property, in\ngarden, lawns, fruit trees;\nonly 150 feet from lovely\nsandy beach. Five-room bungalow style with large back\nporch-laundry, fireplace, car-\nport, concrete        $$5QQ\n' With $i500down.\nLAKE FRONTAGE,\nNORTH SHORE\nOver 250 feet fairly level with\nlovely sandy beach at 11-Mile.\nExtends from main highway\nto lake; cleared. Also *i acre\nwith 3-room cot- $1 1,9Q0\ntage, all for\nTerms.\n200 BLOCK SILICA STREET\nOlder style family home with\nall modern improvements in\nand out. Two story. 6 rooms,\n3 bedrooms, fireplace, gas\nhot air furnace, sunporch,\npatio, laundry room, large\ngarage. See this property and\ntXin $n'900\nMinimum Down $1700\nor Trade\nNORTH SHORE LOT, 100 X 150,\n3 mile East. Ph. 352-3204.\n-237-239\n3 BEDROOM HOME, MODERN,\non Third St. $15,000. \u2014 $4000\ndown. Ph. 352-6912.      \u2014 115-h\n(Continued next column)\nFAMILY HOME - 6-MILE\nLevel land 90'xl6O' just off\nmain highway. 7 rooms, 4 bedrooms (2 down), double plumbing. Full basement, concrete\nfoundation and floor, gas furnace, garage in basement,\nspace for rum- $1 1,900\npus room. . ^ ' \" \u2022\nOnly $2000 Down.\nMODERN DWELLING,\n' 6-MILE\n4 acres of level land with modern 7-room, 4-bedroom dwelling; level land on highway.\nFull basement, oil furnace,\nrumpus room. Lawns, garden\nand land for sub- 41A Qftft\ndivision. Now *''\u00bb\u00bb\u00ab\"\"'\nWith $2000 down.\nI. D. Roslieg\n& Son Ltd.\n568 Ward St.     Phone 352-3581\nResidence, Phone 352-2698\n-238-238\n'Continued next column)\nDAILY  CROSSWORD\n47. Island\ngroup: S.\nPacific\n18. Prophets\n49. A soft\nmetal\n60. Weird:\nvar.\nDOWN\n1. Funeral\nsong\n2. Anger\n3. Constellation\n4. Food from\nheaven\n5. Uncooked\n6. Epoch\n7. Exchange\npremium\n8. Aquatic\nrodent\n9. Froglike\nanimal\n11. Like\nsteel\n18. Taverfc\n19. Curs\n20. Goddess\nof dawn\n21. Jogs\n28. Eccentric:\nel.\n25. Cry of a\ncow\n26. Stings\n27. Rosy\n28. An age\n31. Short\nsleep\n35. Web-footed\nbird\n38. Burning-\n|maneIto\n3S|\nBOWE RHa B\nATE\n1  B A D EBB E\nPEL\nAS KllSTY\n|RI\nSEES AlWlsB\nH_B _\u25a1__\n-_ 0HHHK _-\n___I3   ___\nhh_ a___a_H\nam _\u25a1_ una\n_____ _____\nTciterday'i Amw_>\n37. Blunders\n39. Arrived\n41. West wind!\nmyth.\n43. Extinct\nbird:N.Z.\n44. Unhappy\n46. Lawyer's\nbill\nACROSS\nt Unit of\nmeasure\n5. Quantity\nofpaper\n9. Coronet\n10.100-eyed\nmonster:\nmyth.\n12. Musical\ninstrument\n13. Blouse\n14. Lifetime\n15. Nickel:\nsym.\n17. Turkish\nweight\n18.\"\t\nprofundls\"\n19. French\npainter\n22. Music\nnote\n23. Greek\nletter\n24. Natural\n26. To fry\nlightly\n29. Covered\nwttli\nchimney\ndirt\n80. Flesh of\nsheep\n82. Toward\nS3. Land\nmeasure\n84. Underwater\nobstacles\n86. Iron: eym.\n38. Fabulous\nbird\n40. Italian\nriver\n41. Breeze\n42. English\nstreetcars\n45. Bid\nDAILY CRYPTOQUOTE \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, apoa-\ntrophies, the length and formation of the words are all hints,\nEach day the code letters are different\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nXAZN      JO      MJQWDNBT      MWJOFDW.\nXAZN      JO      MWJOFDWT      MJQWDNEi\u2014\nHWPDHW      QWDLZDI      OAZX\nYesterday's Cryptoquote: ALL ARE APT TO SHRINK\nFROM THOSE THAT LEAN UPON THEM.\u2014LORD HALIFAX\n(\u00a9 1964, King Features Syndicate, Inc.)\nMAY WE ASSIST YOU\nFOR LOCATION AT THE\nRIGHT PRICE? ACT NOW . . .\nFAMILY GROWING?\n3-4 B.R. home near all schools.\nL.R. 20'xl4' (fireplace), large,\nconvenient kitchen and utility\nroom with dining area. 1 B.R.\ndown, 3 B.R.s up. 50'xlOO* lot\nlandscaped with garden ready\nfor harvest.       % I I CAA\nPriced right *l ,'0UU\nREADY FOR INSPECTION\nJust outside city limits. Quality materials and workmanship in newer 3-B.R. stucco\nhome. Sparkling, convenient\nkitchen. Many extras throughout. Beautifully landscaped \u2014\nwith swimming pool and garden ready for harvest. Drive\nto double garage. |, | ^glJO\n1963 taxes $4.00\nOnly $2500 down.\n1 BLOCK FROM BAKER ST.\n1-B.R. home. Large L.R., 24'\nx 14'. S.P. includes gas range,\ngas space heater $4000\nand refrigerator. ....v\nBIG OPPORTUNITY\nMake 10% profit 3 units on\nVernon   St.   including   store\n\\fiB\u00b1       $16,650\nGOLF COURSE AREA\n1-B.R. family home. Garden,\nconcrete basement. Lot size\n383.6 x 333 ft. Hot water heat.\nSpacious kitchen and living\nroom. $1500 down. $8800\nPrice    *\nIMMACULATELY CLEAN\nNewly redecorated interior and\nexterior. 2 B.R, home. New\ncopper piping and wiring. Efficient kit. and vanity bathroom. Full basement, gas fur-\nonnee,FSpe '._!:, $10,500\nTRY YOUR DOWN PAYMENT\n3-B.R. home in good condition.\nHalf blk. from Baker St. Stucco exterior; auto, heat; 2-car\ngarage. Terms to   $8500\nright party \u00abPO\u00abWU\nIMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY\nFairview, 7th St. 3-B.R. home\non 1st floor. Featuring planter\ndivider of L.R., 15'x20\\ and\nkitchen; many cabinets. Full\nbasement and oil furnace. Garage attached. Two level, landscaped lots,      tie qflft\nGood value at ...*'\u00ab>\u00bbwU\nOnly $2000 down!\nWALKING DISTANCE\nSmall 2-B.R. with clever cabinet kit. Full basement, new gas\nturaace and H.Wr $5200\nIncludes gas range, elec. ref\u201e\nauto, washer. $50 per mo.\nNORTH SHORE - 3-bedroom\n- l*i-storey. L.R. fireplace,\nexcellent kitchen, dining area,\nplus utility room. Level 1.99\nacres with outside bldg. All\nredecorated. Must be seen to\n\u00bba*e;      $13,900\n$2000 down. .\nl-BEDROOM HOME\nNew gas furnace and hot water\ntank. Walking distance to bust-\nS\u00a3 $3500\nOnly $1500 down.\nLooking for Mirror Lake property? Ask about 2 new listings\nat fair price.\nONLY $500 DOWN\nChoice location for future commercial property. 2-B.R. home.\nKitchen needs renovation. Lot\n36*4' x 91'. Drive-in garage.\n\u00ab $4500\n$500 down.\n. NEAR JR, HIGH SCHOOL\nCompact 2 B.R. home with\ncabinet kit. and snack bar.\nBathroom with sliding glass\nshower door. Sun deck with\nlake view. Full basement. Wired for W\/D. Gas furnace and\nS-Price :..   $W00\n$1500 down.\nCEDAR ST.\nOlder home \u2014 make an offer.\ncash   or   finance. Immediate\noccupancy.\nFAIRVIEW 7TH STREET\nNewer 3 B.R. home. Large\nL.R., fireplace. Efficient kit.\nwith eating area and picture\nwindow.    Wired   for   W\/D.\n$15,900\nAvailable financing.\nDISTINCTIVE HOME\nChoice Fairview Height location in setting of trees and\nshrubs. This 3 B.R. home is a\nbackground of entertaining\nwith Oriental decor L.R. and\nbirch panelling D.R. Convent.\nKit. Full basement, nearly finished Rec. Rm. and extra B.R.\nA11 a cbed   double   carport.\n\u201e $18,600\nAvailable financing.\nSILVER KING ROAD\n14.05 acres, fenced. 6-room\nfamily home, 3 B.R.s. Double\ngarage, barbecue and patio\narea; barn, chickenhouses. \u2014\nCould subdivide; high poten-\ntial. See this     $30,000\nApprox $10,000 down,\n$118.99 monthly\nSALMO CITY\n5-room house. Price Includes\nmany extras. $5000\nTotal price  -P-WWU\n$1000 down.\nRENTAL\n3-B.R.s,   _ blk. from Baker\nSt. Auto. heat. A clean home\nwith 2-car garage.        475*\nPer month   Y-\u00ab\u00b0\n700 Blk. Observa- $(200\ntory. 50'xl20'lot. v,*vv\nCHOICE BUILDING LOT\nNorth Shore, other side of\nBlaylocks, 1*4 acres with\norchard. $4000. Ph. 352-6144,\nMcHardy Agencies Ltd.\nPHONE 352-6144\nSylvia Brashear, Res. 352-5633\nGordon Burgess \u2014 352-6887\nMcHARDY\nAGENCIES LTD.\nREAL ESTATE . INSURANCE\n554 Ward St. Nelson, B.C.\nprice?\nS.P.\nfor\n-238-238\n \u25a0_\u25a0_\u25a0_\u25a0*\n8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, OCT. 9,1964\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND  FARM SUPPLIES\nCATTLE FOR LOCKERS. -\nOver 100 to choose from.\nYoung steers 20c; young cows,\n17c; calves for veal or to\nraise, 25c. Bred whiteface replacement heifers. Ph. 367-9809\n-225-tfn\nCATTLE AUCTION SALES. -\nMixed, Nov. 25. Calf only, Oct.\n14 and 28. Director, Frank\nHill, Box 2139, Cranbrook, B.C.\nor phone 4-Y Fort Steele.\n-194-tfn\nFOR ARTIFICIAL BREEDING\ndairy and beef cattle, phone\n352-6874. Nelson and District\nAI. Centre, 709 Third St., Nelson. J. De Jong, Technician,\n-tfn\nFOR SALE, PURE BRED\nHereford bull, 2*4 yrs. or\nwould trade for bull or livestock. Box 46, Fruitvale or Ph.\n367-9529. \u2014238-240\nFOR SALE, GUERNSEY COW.\nGood milker. 1 whitehead calf,\nGeorge Soukeroff, Shoreacres\nFlats, B.C. 229-tfn\n1 YEAR OLD CHICKENS 80c\na piece or 32c a lb., dressed.\nGlendale Farm. Ph. 357-9734,\nSalmo. \u2014 184-tin\nCOW JUST FRESHENED, 2ND\ncilf. Very good milker. Pete\nPoohachoff, Slocan Park\n234-239\nFOR SALE, GOOD QUALITY\nfirst cut alfalfa hay. $25 per\nton. Phone Tex Mowatt 352-\n2934.   Nelson, B.C.    \u2014234-239\nPETS,   CANARIES,   BEES\nBEAUTIFUL BLACK AND\nwhite Purebread Border Collies for sale. B.C. Trial Champion blood lines. Phone 353-\n2246 or write Mrs. W. Meers,\nKaslo,  B.C. -234-239\nFOR SALE - REGISTERED\nPure Bred English Springer\nSpaniel Pups, black and white.\nBox 40, Grand Forks, 442-3065\nevenings. \u2014233-238\nKITTEN WOULD LIKE A\ngood home. Male. House\nbroken. Ph. 352-7718. -238-243\nFOR  SALE\nMISCELLANEOUS\nFOR SALE BY TENDER - WE\ninvite tenders on the following\nbuildings: 4 only \u2014 48 man\nroom bunkhouses, 1 only\u2014office building. Buildings are\navailable for inspection from\nMonday to Friday between the\nhours of 8 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.\nTenders should cover materials received from buildings\nafter dismantling and removal\nThe highest or any lender not\nnecessarily accepted. Tenders\nto be clearly marked \"Vacant\nBuildings\" and mailed to Canadian Exploration Limited,\nSalmo, B.C. \u2014233-238\nNow is the time to plant fall\nrye in your garden for green\nfertilizer next spring, we have\nit!\nNelson Farmers Supply\n524 Railway St.    Ph. 352-5375\nSUNSTRAND CASH REGISTER\n2 total, $107.50. Summira adding machine with subtract\n$59.50. Dalton adding machine\nwith subtract $39.50. New machine guarantees on above. J.\nT. Mowatt _ Co. Ltd. 352-2934,\nNelson. -234-239\nMcCLARY WOOD-COAL STOVE\nwater tank, 2 coal scuttles, 2\nwicker arm chairs, 1938 Singer\nsewing machine, small wood\ntable, wooden chair, box odd\nchina, metal spring folding\nbed. The lot, $39. Ph. 352-7585.\n-237-238\nSIDES OF GRAIN FED BEEF,\n49c, cut and wrapped; Sides of\npork, 29c; sides of pork, cut\nand wrapped, 33c. Newdan\nFarm, Creston. Ph. 356-9901 or\n356-9769. '    -171-lfn\nFOR THE BEST IN USED\nautomatic washers, dryers, refrigerators, television, etc. contact Nelson Electric Co. Ltd.,\n574 Baker St.. Nelson. B.C.\n-27-tfn\nCHIHUAHUA   PUPS   -   TAN\ncolored. Phone 352-5857.\n-217-243\nBARLEY STRAW FOR SALE.\n15c per bale. Newdan Farm,\nCreston. Ph. 356-9901.\n-230-tfn\n1  LARGE  WHITE CRIB,  $20.\nPhone 352-2777. -235-240\n'Continued next column'\nBUSINESS   &   PROFESSIONAL\nDIRECTORY\nA bandy alphabetical guide to goods and services\navailable in Nelson.\nAutomobile Dealers      Health Food\nBILLS' MOTOR-IN LTD.\n(Studebaker-Lark)\n213 Baker St.      Phone 352-3231\n-tfn\nPARKVIEW MOTORS LTD.\n(Rambler - Volkswageni\n323 Nelson Ave.    Phone 352-5355\n-tfn\nBuilding Supplies\nBEE BUILDING SUPPLY LTD.\nEverything in waterproof\nplywood.\n301 Baker St.      Phone 352-3135\n-tfn\nBURNS LUMBER CO. LTD.\n602 Baker St.      Phone 352-8661\n-tfn\nCOLUMBIA TRADING CO\n901 Front St. Ph  352-5571\nLots of free parking.\n-tin\nCabinet Makers\n...   JOS. C. MERMET\nProfessional Kitchen  Remodel-\nbig., Serving Nelson and Dist.\n-1020 Davies St. - Nelson\n-tfn\nContractors\nLazlo Huszak, General Masonry\nStone - Brick - Cement - Stucco\nPlastering\n1323 Falls St.        Ph. 352-7092\n-213-238\nKOKANEE CONSTRUCTION\n..- CO. - 582 Ward St.\nResidential \u2022 Com. \u2022 Renovation\nPhone 352-3633\nEstimates on all jobs.\n-214-239\nART RAVESTEIN\nRenovations, Cement Work\n\" and General Carpe_rv\nPhone 352-7433\n-tfn\nHealth Thru Nutrition\nHEALTH FOOD CENTRE\n924 Davies St.\n-233-258\nMonumental\nStones\nBronze and Granite\nK. D. REES\nPh. 352-6727    310-507 Baker St.\n-197-tfn\nFOR SALE\nMISCELLANEOUS\ni Continued'\nSINGER SEWING MACHINE\nCo. Sewing machines, vacuum\ncleaners, floor polishers, typewriters. 339 Baker St. Phone\n352-3631. -234-239\nSee NELSON FLOWERS LTD.\nPhone for private interview.\n-230-tfn\nPhoto Copying\nPOWELL ENGRAVING\n400 Ward St.        Nelson. B C\nPhone 352-7521\nContracts  -  Birth Certificates\nLegal Documents - Important\nPapers.\n-tin\nPrinting\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\nPrinters - Lithographers\nColor Printine\nPhone 352-3552\n-tfn\nRadio & TV Service\nONE USED TRACTOR TIRE\nand reliners, 10 X 28. Box 46\nFruitvale. Ph. 367-9529.\n-238-240\nBEST, CHEAPEST USED COAL\nand wood furnace. Write to\nCedarco, P.O. Trail, B.C.\n-233-238\nCHOICE BEEF - SIDE 100-200\nlbs. 45c lb. 200-275 lbs. 37c lb,\nPh. 352-6866. \u2014233-258\nDRY FIR AND TAMARAC. -\nStove length. Ph. 352-5485.\n-219-246\nSOLID   OAK   DINING   ROOM\nbuffet. Good condition. 352-6361\n-238-240\nGIRL'S SKATES SIZES 11 AND\n2. Ph. 352-3087 evenings.\n\u2014237-239\nBOY SCOUT UNIFORM AND 1\n'Cub sweater. Phone after 12\np.m. 352-2821. -237-242\nWOOD AND SAWDUST KIT-\nchen stove, very reasonable.\nPh. 352-3804. -236-241\nCOMB USTIONEER STOKER,\n$100. Phone 352-3808. -207-tfn\nCOAL AND WOOD STOVE, OIL\nheater. Ph. 352-2861.   -235-tfn\nAUTOMOTIVE. BICYCLES\nMOTORCYCLES\nCUSTOM-BUILT\nSeveral New Models\nIN STOCK NOW\nLarge Selection of\nUsed Logging and\nGravel Trucks\nSPECIAL\n1959 VF-190 C&C, 461 engine,\n34,000 bogies  $6000\nPHONE 372-3388\nINTERIOR\nSALES\nServing the Kootenays\n2017 East Trans-Canada Hgwy,\nKAMLOOPS, B.C.\nAUTOMOTIVE, BICYCLES\nMOTORCYCLES\n(Continued'\nFOR SALE - 1958 FORD RE-\ntractable hardtop, automatic\ntrans., power brakes, steering\nalso power windows. Equipped\nwith Interceptor special motor.\n$1600. Ph. 442-3258.    -238-239\n'61 RAMBLER CLASSIC WA-\ngon, like new, winterized, 2\nextra mounted winter tires.\nTrade. $1895. Ph. 352-2036.\n-233-238\n3 months warranty, $1995; 1958\nVolkswagen Deluxe, custom\nradio, good condition, $795. Ph.\n352-6411. Western Auto Service,\n295 Baker St. -237-239\n1962 RENAULT GORDINE, A-l\nshape, white walls, and many\nextras, $1095; 1961 Renault\nCaravelie sports car with only\n14,000 miles on. Just like new,\nNICE 55 CHEV. 2 DOOR HARD-\ntop Belaire; 52 Ford, needs\nsome work. Ph. 352-6306.\n\u2014238-243\n1961 LAND ROVER IN A-l CON-\ndition. Model 109, canopy,\nwarren hubs. Ph. 368-9979.\n-233-238\nPUBIIC NOTICES\nNOTICE TO CREDITORS\nAUGUSTA CLAUDIA\nLANGFORD MOTION,\nDECEASED.\nNOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN\nthat all persons having claims\nagainst Augusta Claudia Lang-\nford Motion, late of Nelson, B.C.,\nwho died thereat on the 21st day\nof September, 1964, are required\nto file particulars thereof with\nthe undersigned solicitors for\nthe executor on or before the\n4th day of November, 1964, after\nwhich date the executor will proceed to distribute the assets of\nthe said deceased among the\npersons entitled thereto, having\nregard only to the claims which\nshall then have been filed as\nabove required.\nDATED at Nelson, B.C. this\n30th day of September, 1964.\nGARLAND _ GANSNER,\nP.O. Box 490, Nelson, B.C.,\nSolicitors for the Executor.\n-232-h\n'59 VOLKSWAGEN BUS, GOOD\ncondition. Ph. 352-7562.\n-238-239\nFOR SALE - 1952 G.M.C. _-\nton, $300 cash. North Shore\nMotel. Ph. 352-7722.    -233-238\nFOR SALE - BSA-250 CC\u201e 1955\nor trade for a larger bike. Box\n211, Notre Dame.      -233-238\n55 BUICK   CONVERTIBLE,\nnew top. $745. Ph. 352-3126, 8-5.\n-233-238\n'55 FORD, '53 PLYMOUTH, '56\nHillman hardtop. North Shore\nService. Ph. 352-2929. -188-tfn\n1964  HONDA   90   IN   EXCEL-\nlent condition. Phone 365-5177.\n\u2014237-242\n1951 *4-TON STUDEBAKER, OR\ntrade for cattle. Box 46, Fruitvale. Ph. 367-9529.     -238-240\n1963   RAMBLER   CLASSIC. -\nMany extras. Ph. 352-6327.\n-237-239\n'62 PONTIAC HARDTOP -\nAutomatic, fully equipped. Ph.\n352-2476. -237-238\n1950 AUSTIN IN GOOD COND.\nBeasley Service, Ph. 359-7411.\n-237-242\n1948 PONTIAC, 4 DR. - Licenced, $75. Ph. 352-5850 after\n5 p.m. \u2014235-240\nFOR   SALE,   1\nPh.  352-2398.\nRENAULT.\n-236-241\n-238-h\nCOTTONWOOD WRECKAGE\nwrecking: '55-'56 Chev., '53\nFord Pickup, '55 and '56\nFords, '55-'56-'57 Dodge and\nPlymouth, Vt ton Chev. truck;\nGood motors, '56 Chev V8, '55\n'53 Consul, '56 Dodge. Ph. 352-\n5815, Box 382, 24 Ymir Rd.\n-221-tfn\nRadio - TV \u2022 Transistor - Service\nCOLUMBIA ELECTROCENTRE\nLTD.\n458 Ward St.     Phone 352-5581\n-218-tfn\nVIDEO ELECTRONICS\n405 Hall St. - Phone 352-3355\n-tfn\nHARRY PEDERSEN\nRoofing and Siding Contractor\nNew homes built-old remodeled. Free est. Ph. 352-3584 eves.\n-231-256\nFamily\nFinancial Advisors\nFINANCIAL ADVICE, DEBT\nCONTROL\nFred C. Merriman\n\u20220 Baker St.      Ph. 352-6012\nhone or write for confidential\nday or evening appointment.\n-236-261\nFlying School\nGov't approved Flying School.\nAir Charter Service.\nSingle or multi-engine aircraft.\nWANETA  AIRWAYS\nPhone 365-7444 or 365-4871\nCastlegar, B.C.\n-236-261\nGarages\nUpper Fairview Motors Ltd.\nCor. 7th at Davies   Ph. 352-2525\nTransistorized Ignition\n\u2014tfn\nRefrigeration\nRefrigeration Sales and Service\nCARLSON EQUIPMENT\nNelson, B.C.     Phone 3S2-545b\n-186-tfn\nSporting Goods\nFred Whiteley's Sport Shop\n488 Baker Street  Phone 352-7741\n  -tfn\nTopsoil\nLarry's Topsoil, Sand and Gravel\nPh. 352-2355 Days \u2022 352-7576 eves\n-tin\nWelding & Iron\nWorks\nLet KOOTENAY WELDING &\nCASTING REPAIRS\nspecialist take care of voiir welding problem. 30 years experience\nfrom different countries in Europe. Craftsmanship guaranteed\nDiesel, cylinder head, cylinder\nblocks, etc.\n1121 Columbia Ave., Castlegar\nPhone 365-5531\n\u2014127-282\n1963 4-W.D. SCOUT, WITH\nfull cab and hubs, low mileage, new condition. Full price\n$1875. 1951 International Pickup, excellent condition, with\nradio, $400. Ph. 352-7238.\n-237-239\n'Continued next column'\n1957 FORD, 4 DOOR, IN GOOD\nshape. Ph. 352-5815.    \u2014237-tfn\nWANTED\nMISCELLANEOUS\nSPOT CASH FOR USED FURN1-\nture, antiques, coins, old gold,\nguns and jewels. Home Furniture Exchange. Ph. 352-6531.\n413 Hall St.. Nelson. B.C.\n-98-tf\nNOTICE TO CREDITORS\nGEORGE FORTUNE MOTION,\nDECEASED\nNOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN\nthat all persons having claims\nagainst George Fortune Motion,\nlate of Nelson, B.C., who died\nthereat on the 10th day of February, 1931, are required to file\nparticulars thereof with the\nundersigned solicitors for the\nexecutor on or before the 4th\nday of November, 1964, after\nwhich date the executor will proceed to distribute the assets of\nthe said deceased among the\npersons entitled thereto, having\nregard only to the claims which\nshall then have been filed as\nabove required.\nDATED at Nelson, B.C., this\n30th day of September, 1964.\nGARLAND & GANSNER,\nSolicitors for the Executor.\nP.O. Box 490, Nelson, B.C.,\n\u2014232-h\nMACHINERY\nFarm\nMachinery\n\"No\"  Finance  Charges\n\"No\"  Payments\nUntil April 1, 1965\nTIMBER SALE X93101\nSealed tenders will be received\nby the District Forester at Nelson, B.C., not later than 10:30\na.m. on the 19th day of October,\n1964, for the purchase of Licence\nX93101, to cut 88,000 cubic feet\nof Cedar, Hemlock, Larch, Fir,\nBalsam, White Pine, Other Species on an area situated Clearwater Creek, Kootenay District.\nThree (3) years will be\nallowed for removal of timber.\nAs this area is within the\nLardeau S.Y.U., which is fully\ncommitted, this sale will be\nawarded under the provisions of\nsection 17 (la) of the Forest\nAct, which gives the timber-sale\napplicant certain privileges.\nFurther particulars may be\nobtained from the District Forester, Nelson, B.C., or the Forest\nRanger, Nelson, B.C.\nPROPERTY WANTED\nWANTED - USED ELECTRIC\nmotors. Coleman Electric, 502\nFront St., Nelson, Ph. 352-3175.\n -227-tfn\nWANTED - CLEAN COTTON\nrags. Must be at least 12\ninches square. Nelson Daily\nNews -126-tfn\nLISTINGS WANTED. BUILD-\ning lots, farm land, city and\ncountry residential. Commercial property, timber lands.\nCall or write Wm. Kalyniuk\nAgencies, Nelson. Ph. 352-2425.\n-231-tfn\nCOAL AND WOOD RANGE. - 4\nhole. White enamel. Phone\n352-2405. -238-240\nWANTED - LAKEFRONT\nacreage, 10 acres up. Prefer\nboat access only. All cash for\nsuitable property. S. Anderson, 100 N. Fletcher St., Chilli-\nwack, B.C. -220-tfn\nApplies to All New and Used\nAgriculture Tractors, Balers,\nCombines. Offer Good to\nOctober 30, 1964.\nIN   STOCK\nNEW M.F. Model 90 Tractor\nNEW M.F. 35 Gas - Diesels\nNEW M.F. 65 Gas - Diesels\nUSED   TRACTORS\n1-M.F. 35, 3 cyl. diesel\n3\u2014M.F. 35, Gas Tractors\n3\u2014Ford 8N Tractors\n4\u2014Ford 9N Tractors \"\n1\u2014John Deere Model AR\n1\u2014A.C. Row Crop\n1\u2014Massey Harris Model 20\n1\u2014Massey Harris Pacer and\nHyd.\nON   SPECIAL\n1\u2014*\"     800 Tractor w\/front-\nEnd Loader and Back-Hoe\nNow Only $4200 Complete\n1\u2014Caterpillar Model D8 with\nDozer and Winch.\nNow Only $7,000.00.\nValley Automotive,\nFarm Equipment Co.  Ltd.\nCRESTON, B.C.\n\u2014238-230\nNelson's\nWelding Supply\nHeadquarters\nEverything for the\nMACHINES\nRODS\nACCESSORIES\nHANDBOOKS\nMAC'S WELDING\n& EQUIPMENT CO.\n514 Railway St.    Ph. 352-5301\n-228-tfn\nRapid Tap Cutting Fluid\nReduces rBeakage.\nMakes Drilling, Boring,\nTapping Easier.\nStevenson Machinery Ltd.\nPhone 352-3561\n-238-238\nVALLEY AUTOMOTIVE LTD.\nMassey-Ferguson, New Hoi\nland New and Used Farm\nEquipment, Parts, Sales and\nService, Phone 356-2254, Creston, B.u. \u2014lio-tfn\n(Continued next column)\nNow On Display in Our Showrooms\nBUICK LeSABRE\nPONTIAC PARISIENNE\nACADIAN BEAUMONT\nG.M.C. HALF-TONS\nTWO USED CAR LOTS TO SERVE YOU BETTER\nBAKER and FRONT STREET\nLargest Car Lot in the Kootenays\n1964 Acadian 6-Cyl. Automatic.\n1964 Stratochief 6-Cyl. Automatic.\n1964 Land Rover\n1962 Chevrolet Sedan V-8 Standard\n1962 Pontlac Strato-Chiel. V8, Standard.\n1962 Pontiac Laurentlan. V8, Automatic, Two-Tone.\n1962 Ford Fairlane. V8, Standard Transmission.\n1960 Prefect 4-Door Sedan. A good second car.\n1960 Consul 4-Door Sedan. Two-Tone.\n1860 Chev. 6-Cyl. 4-Door Sedan\n1959 I.H.C. 3-Door Panel.\n1958 Pontiac 2-Door Sedan. 6-Cylinder, Standard.\n1958 Pontiac 4-Door Sedan. 6, Automatic, Two-Tone.\n1958 Austin 4-Door Sedan. Low Mileage.\n1958 Meteor 4-Door Station Wagon. 6-Cylinder.    .\n1958 Oldsmobile 2-Door Hardtop. V8, Automatic.\n1957 Plymouth Sedan\n1957 Chev. Station Wagon. 6-Cyllnder.\n1957 Austin 4-Door Sedan.\nMANY OTHER OLDER MODELS TO CHOOSE FROM\n1963 Vanguard Station Wagon. 6-Cylinder.\n1960 Envoy 4-Door Sedan. 4-Cyllnder, Standard.   <\n1960 Sithca 4-Door Sedan. Low Price.\n1958 Vauxhall 4-Door Sedan. White\n1957 Plymouth 4-Door. Very Clean.\n1957 Pontlao 4-Door Sedan, 6-Cylinder, Standard Trans.\n1956 Mercury H-Ton. Long Box, 6-Cyl.\n1956 Ford Fairlane 2-Door Hardtop. V8.\n1956 Ford 2-Door Hardtop. V8, Automatic.\n1956 Plymouth 2-Door Sedan. 6-Cyllnder, Standard Trans.\n1956 Austin 4-Door Sedan. Light Blue.\n1955 Dodge -Sedan. 6-Cylinder, Standard.\n1955 Plymouth 2-Door Sedan. 6-Cylinder, Standard.\n1955 Mercury Pickup\n1954 Pontlao 2-Door Sedan. 6-Cylinder, Standard.\n1953 Pontiac Sedan. 6-Cyllnder, Standard.\nBIG DISCOUNT ON NO-TRADE DEALS\nBEACON MOTORS LTD,\nPONTIAC \u2014 BUICK \u2014 VAUXHALL\u2014ACADIAN\nGMC DEALERS\n701 Baker St.\nPhone 352-6641\nMACHINERY\n(Continued)\n1 Only \u2014 D-7\nCaterpillar\nTractor\nComplete with\nDozer and Winch\n$6000.00\nMAC'S WELDING\n& EQUIPMENT CO\n514 Railway St.     Ph. 352-5301\n-228-tfn\nJOHN   DEERE   440   DIESEL\ncrawler, blade winch, with or\nwithout timber. Ph. 367-9809.\n-229-tfn\nTRAILERS\nKOOT-NEE\nMOBILE   HOMES\nLTD.\nIN VALUE\nIN SERVICE\nIN THE KOOTENAYS\nParts -- Towing --\nConsignments\nand Good Used.\nEast and West Kootenay\nDealer For \u2014\nGeneral Mobile Homes\nScamper Travellers\nCanuck Campers\nNow At Our New Location\nNear the Overpass\nEntirely Owned and Operated by\nJOE GRAY and RAE MASSE\nP.O. Box 2470 Ph. 426-2513\nCRANBROOK, B.C.\n-238-h\nWANTED FOR CASH, 35 OR 40\nfoot house trailer. Box 368,\nNelson Daily News.   \u2014235-240\nMOBILE HOMES\n(Continued)\n57x10' 3 B.R. $7365\nIn Modern Decor\nCompletely furnished and set up.\nWHY PAY MORE\nThe '64 Fleetwood has all the\nquality features. 1-pce. galvanized roof, baked enamel.chip-\nproof finish on aluminum sides.\nTruss engineered channel frame,\n60,000 BTU furnace, dble. fibre-\nglass insulation, frost free storm\nwindows for all windows. Nationally known, serviced and guaranteed appliances.\n17 floor plans to choose from.\n1, 2 or 3 bedrooms.\nBest bank financing possible.\nKingsway Trailer Wholesale\n5438 Imperial HE 4-0741\nDay or Night\n-192-tfn\nSHOPPING FOR A NEW Mobile home? Don't discover too\nlate that You did not receive\ntrue value for your dollar. See\nSafeway \u2014 and compare \u2014\nBefore you buy! 10 ft, and 12\nft. models on display at Cranbrook Trailer Sales, your\nauthorized Safeway Mobile\nHome Dealer for the East and\nWest Kootenays. Walt Hill,\nmgr. Phone 426-4935, P.O.\nBox 2217. -231-tfn\nWANTED   HOUSE   TRAILER,\napproximately 26 feet long,\nsuitable for use as bunk house,\nWrite Box 327, Castlegar, B.C.\n-236-241\nMACHINERY\nFOR   HIRE\nFOR RENT - PORTABLE 225\nAMP  DC   Welder.   Portable\nsteam cleaner. Ph. 352-2042.\n-218-tfn\nBUSINESS\nOPPORTUNITIES\n$5000 TO INVEST IN LOCAL\nBusiness. Forward particulars\nto Box 271, Nelson Daily News.\n-238-240\nPERSONAL\nPERSONAL SUNDRIES _ SUP-\nplies. 60% savings. Free price\nlist and sample on request.\nBox 8. Station C. Winnipeg.\n-27-240\nHYGIENIC SUPPLIES. SAVE\nup to 100%. \"Mail $1 for 18\nfinest quality assorted. Park\nSales, P.O. Box 561, Hamilton.\nOnt. -216-241\nANTIQUES\nAUCTION SALE - VINTAGE\nclassic cars, car parts, tires,\nantique lamps, clocks, china,\nbooks. Three Valley Motel, 12\nmiles west of Revelstoke, B.C.\non Trans-Canada Highway.\nSaturday, Oct. 10th, 1 p.m. No\nreserve bids. Write Box 860,\nPh. 837-3850. Telex 048-739.\n-238-239\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\nModern\nOFFICE\nFor\nApproximately 700 sq. ft. of\nmodern, fully wired office\nspace located on Baker Street\nIn Nelson.:\nREASONABLE  RENT\nLong or Short Term\nLeases Arranged\nApply to:\nNelson Daily News\nPh. 352-3552\nREUBEN BUERGE MOTORS LTD.\nTHEY'RE ALL NEW F0R '\u00ab\nNew BISCAYNES \u2022- New BEL-AIRS -\u25a0 CHEVY VAN - New IMPALAS\nNew Vi-TONS - New OLDSMOBILES - New CORVAIRS\nNew CHEVY lis - New CHEVELLES\n1965 CHEVROLET HALF-TONS. EQUIPPED WITH TEEPEE CAMPER\nCAR LOT No. 1\nVernon Street\nOpposite Our Garage\nPHONE 352-3121\n'59 Pontiac Sedan\n'65 Dynamic 88 Sedan\n2\u2014'63 Chevrolet Sedam\n4\u2014'65 1\/2-Toni\n'57 Chevrolet HT 4-Dooi\n'57 Pontiae 4-Door HT\n'62 Ford Sedan\n'62 Mercury HT\n'61 Zephyr Convertible\n'59 Buick HT\n'59 Chevrolet Panel\n'59 Pontiae 4-Door HT\n'64 Chevrolet '\/.-Ton\n'64 Corvair Van\n'64 Chevrolet Van\n'58 Chevrolet Sedan\n'62 Chevrolet Sedan\n'63 Corvair Sedan\nMany Others to Choose From\nCAR LOT No. 2\nBaker Street\nOpposite  Peeblei Motor Motel\nPHONE 352-3233\n'56 Buick HT\n'57 Meteor 2-Door\n'60 Ford Sedan\n'62 Chevy II\n'58 Plymouth 4 -Dr. HT\n'59 Dodge Sedan\n'57 Chevrolet Coach\n'59 Chevrolet Sedan\n'56 Chevrolet Sedan\n'56 Dodge Custom Royal\n'64 Mercury Econolina\n(Equipped like house trailer)\n'65 TeePee Camper\n'56 Dodge\n'56 Chevrolet 2-Door\n'58 Plymouth St. Wagon\n'58 Pontiac Sedan\n'55 Pontiae Sedan\n'58 Standard\n'54 Ford Sedan\n'55 Chev. Station Wagon\n'57 Oldsmobile HT\n2\u2014'64 Corvain (New)\n2\u2014'64 Chevy II (New)\nT\u2014'65 Chevy II\n1\u2014'65 Cadillac\nNO DOWN PAYMENT\nWITH APPROVED\nCREDIT\nI\n<$> SEIBEBUN6\nCASH      TERMS      TRADES\nThe Largest Stock of New and Used Cars In the Interior at\u2014i\nREUBEN BUERGE\nMOTORS LTD.\n24-HOUR WRECKER SERVICE \u2014 BCAA RECOMMENDED ,-\n323 Vernon Street NELSON Phone 352-3121\nCHEVROLET - OLDSMOBILE - CADILLAC - F-85 STARFIHE\nCORVAIR - CHEVY n - CHEVELLE - ENVOY\nOPEN TUX < P.M. FOR CAR SALES EVERY DAY\n _\u25a0_\u25a0__\u25a0_\u25a0\u25a0\nmm\n__\u25a0\nm\nRENTALS\ntlKFICE SPACE FOR RENT.\ni suitable for Beauty Parlour.\n1 Barber Shop, or office, reno-\nI vate to suit tenant, long lease\nI available Apply Hume Hotel\nt -197-tfn\nSIDEWALK   LEVEL,   3   BED-\nroom unfurnished apartment.\n' Close-in, immediate occupancy\n' (70 month. William Kalyniuk\nAgencies. Ph. 352-2425.\n-233-tfn\nAT 357 BAKER ST.-TWO BED-\nroom apt., partly furnished,\nheat and hot water supplied.\nApply 414-5th St. Tel. 352-7645.\n! - \u25a0 -237-239\nHSKPU AND SLEEPING RM\nweekly, monthly rates Dishes,\nlinen supplied, parking. Allen\nRooms. 171 Baker St.\n-27-tfn\nONE OR TWO- ROOM FURN-\nished apts. in Annable Block\n$21 and up. Call 352-7217. Pou-\nlin Agencies Ltd., 582 Ward St.\n-231-256\n$55   MONTHLY,   HEATED,\nneat, self contained, furn. apt.\n3 rooms plus bathroom and\nstorage room. Ph. 352-M36.\n-238-243\nFOR RENT, A BUSINESS Location in downtown Castlegar\nsuitable for retail or wholesale. Ph. 365-5001 or 365-7504.\n-236-241\n2    BDRM    HOME,    PARTLY\nturn., automatic oil heated;\n2',i miles east of bridge on\nNorth Shore. Ph. 352-3436.\n-236-241\n2 BDRM. HOUSE, 17 MILE ON\nNorth Shore, modern, fully\nfurnished. $110 per month. Apply Mrs. J. H. Vandervalk.\nPh.  229-4954. -237-242\nHOUSEKEEPING   ROOM,   $45\n: month;  heat, light supplied;\nover our office. Ph. 352-3944,\nLambert Realty.       -233-tfn\nLARGE 2 ROOM FURNISHED\napt., heated, close to Baker\nSt. Ph. 352-6162 or 352-6411..\n-236-241\nSPACIOUS PARTLY FURNISH-\ned 2 bdrm upstairs apt. Baker\nSt. Ph. 352-5401 or Call at 338\nBaker St. -236-tfn\nCENTRALLY LOCATED 2\nbdrm cottage. Ph. 352-3315 or\n352-2736. -236-241\n\u00bb BDRM  HOUSE,   CLOSE-IN.\n, Ph. 352-2874 After 6. -236-241\nS ROOM  FURN.  APT., PRI-\nV\u00abte. Ph. 352-2684.    -236-tfn\nRENTALS\n2 BDRM. HOUSE. GAS FUR-\nnace. Ph. 352-3294 after 4 p.m.\n-236-tfn\nCLEAN, SELF-CONTAINED\nfurnished 3 rooms. Ph. 352-5298\n-236-240\n3 BDRM. HOUSE AT TAGHUM,\noil heat, $60 a mon. Avail. Nov.\n1st. Ph, 365-6584.       -235-240\n2 BDRM. APT. ELEC. STOVE,\nprivate entrance. Ph. 352-6909.\n-233-238\nNICELY FURNISHED 2 BDRM.\nflat, all private. Just like a\nhome. Ph. 352-5402.    \u2014233-\nSPACIOUS HOME, GAS HEAT.\nNear Baker St. Ph. 352-3765.\n-233-238\nFOR   RENT - HOUSEKEEP-\ning rm., close in. Ph. 352-7462.\n-176-tfn\n3 BDRM. FAMILY HOME, $65\na month. Ph. 352-2664.\n223-tfn\nHALDANE   APARTMENTS   -\nFurn or unfurn. Ph. 352-6721\n-65-tfn\n1 AND 2 BDRM. UNITS, WIN\nter rentals, Ken Court Motel\nPh. 352-2821. -237-24!\nSELF   CONTAINED   3   ROOM\nsuite. Ph. 352-7139 after 6 p.m.\n-209-tfn\n3 ROOM SUITE, 1 BDRM.,\nelec. stove, heated, private\nentrance. Ph. 352-6263. 216-tfn\nFURN. HSKP. RM. APPLY 140\nBaker St. or Ph. 352-3384.\n-227-tfn\n3 BDRM. HOUSE, CLOSE-IN.\nPh. 352-2979 mornings.\n-231-tfn\nSELF \u2022 CONTAINED  SUITE -\nAdults. Ph. 352-6732.    -170-tfn\n6   ROOM   APT. - CENTRAL.\nAdults. Ph. 352-6024.   -198-tfn\nSMALL HEATED FURN. APT.\nPhone 352-3401 eves.  -235-240\n'Continued next column!\nJMamt\niatly INeroa\nCirculation  Dept.,  Ph.  352-3552\nPrice per single copy  io cents\nBy carrier per week. 40 cents\nIn advance\nSubscription rates:\nBy mail in Canada\nOutside Nelson\nOne month     $ 2.00\nThree months 5.00\nSix months    .; 10.00\nOne vear 18 00\nMORE THAN YOU\nBARGAINED FOR..\nNEW TRIUMPH 1200\nMore Value: Lowest priced 4-passenger convertible\nMore Horsepower: Top Speed Over 80\nMore Economy: Up to 35 mileS per gallon.\nMore Luxury: Walnut dash, bucket seats.\nMore Convenience: Adjustable Steering column.\nMore Roadability.\nA family sports ear.\nNORTH SHORE SERVICE\nPhone 352-2929\nJust Across the Bridge\nNelson, B.C.\nARRIVING SOON!!\nYours for %73 per Month \u25a0\n1963 Studebaker 4-Dr. Sedan\n6>Cyl.    Overdrive.    Radio\n\u2014 Your Choice $29 Per Month <\u2014\n1959 Simea 4-Door Sedan\n1955 Pontiac 4-Door Sedan\n1955 Dodge 2-Door Hardtop\nMAC)    On-the-Spot Financing\nBILLS'\nMOTOR-IN LTD.\n213 Baker St. Phone 352-3231\nNelson, B.C.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, OCT. 9, 1964\u20149\nPICK iCQ PER MONTH\nONE  J y OR LESS\nCheck Our Used Cars NOW!      \t\n'65 PLYMOUTHS, DODGES, CHRYSLERS ON DISPLAY     }\n\u2014^___\u2014lla*-\u2014\u2014-\u2014-\u2014  \u25a0  \u25a0   _\u2014*MP\u2014_M\u00bb_-_\u2014_<   II    _i     I\u2014>MP-\u00bb-W\u00bb\u2014->\n1961 Plymouth Sedan V8. Auto  ONLY $52 per mo.\n1961 Chevrolet Sedan V8. Std. Radio. ONLY $52 per mo.\n1961 triumph Station Wagon - ONLY $24 per mo.\n1961 Corvair Station Wagon ____ ONLY $59 per mo.\n1959 Chevrolet Sedan ONLY $47 per mo.\n1959 Ford Sedan V8. Std. Radio ONLY $52 per mo.\n1959 Plymouth Suburban V8. Auto. ____\u25a0_-__\u2022 ONLY $53 per mo.\n1959 Plymouth Fury V8. Auto. Radio.  ONLY $47 per mo.\n1959 Vauxhall Sedan.  ONLY $41 per mo.\n1958 Chrysler Windsor V8. Auto. _\u2014 ONLY $45 per mo.\n195ft Porqwarri.    __.   ONLY !M5 per mo.\n1958 Plymouth. Auto  ONLY $40 per mo.\nTRUCKS\n1961  Ford Pickup. Deluxe _- ONLY $46 per mo.\n1958 Fargo Panel ___ \u2014_____ ONLY $35 per mo.\n1956 International. 4-Speod Trans. __\u2014_\u201e__. .,\u2014  ONLY $29 per mo.\nMany Older Models to Choose From. No Down Payment on Approved Credit.\nWatch for the Opening of Our New Car Lot\nYOUR   FRIENDLY\nCHRYSLER .- DODGE - PLYMOUTH -- VALIANT - LAND\/ROVER\nDEALER.\nCITY AUTO\nLTD,\n803 Baker St.    NELSON Phone 352-5346\nPARKVIEW MOTORS LTD,\nPhone 352-5355\n323 Nelson Ave.\nPhone 365-7619\nCastlegar, B.C.\nPhone 352-2713\n722 Baker St.\nHUNTERS .. . ATTENTION, PLEASE!!\n1964\n1959\n1956\n1956\n1955\n1955\n1955\n1960\n1959\nVolkswagen 1500 Wagon.\nMeteor Station Wagon. ....\nThames Station Wagon.\nWas 2800\n Was\n Was\n695\n350\nFord Pickup. New motor, brakes, steering.\nMeteor Station Wagon   ..._\u201e._ Was   795\nFord Pickup. Automatic. ... __..Was  695.\nChevrolet Station Wagon. Was  795\nRambler Station Wagon. .. ..._ Was 1895\nWas 1095\nNOW$2695\nNOW 1495\nNOW 250\nNOW 850\nNOW 595\nNOW 595\nNOW 695 ,\nNOW  1695S\nI\n1963 VOLKSWAGEN 1900 SEDAN. 9600 Miles. White.\n1963 RAMBLER CLASSIC 6   \t\n1961 VOLKSWAGEN DELUXE  \t\n1960 VOLKSWAGEN DELUXE \t\n1960 PONTIAC LAURENTIAN. P.S., Radio, V8.  .....\n1959 OLDSMOBILE 4-DOOR HARDTOP. Premium\t\n19S9 FORD GALAXIE. V8, Auto., Radio, P.S., P.B.\n1959 PONTIAC. Like New\t\n1959 VAUXHALL SEDAN  _\n1959 KARMANN GHIA         \t\n1958 HILLMAN SEDAN. Real good. _______\n1959 RENAULT SEDAN __________\n1957 HILLMAN SEDAN     .\n1957 FORD. Automatic. 8-cyl. _\n1956 FORD. New motor  ;\t\n1955 FORD V8 -_...._.....___\t\n1955 BUICK 2-DOOR HARDTOP _\n1955 DODGE  __________\n1955 VOLKSWAGEN : \u2014\u25a0\n1955 DODGE  ! -\u2014.,-,-..\u201e._\u2014\t\n1955 PLYMOUTH. ; _j   '   \u25a0\n1955  ZEPHYR.  : _______\n1954 MONARCH. Automatic. \u201e'' \u25a0 '   \"\"- [\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0i,\n1953 CHEVROLET SEDAN ! !____\n1953 PONTIAC  ;\u25a0\u25a0   ; \u25a0\u25a0-. .-.--. --. .---.\n1953 MERCURY V8. Automatic. . ' -\"'   \u25a0\n1953 FORD 2-DOOR    ','\u25a0 \u201e    ,. ,i ,\"'\t\n1952 CHEVROLET SEDAN ._ _______\n1950 PONTIAC      _. \u201e\u201e._..._...\n...2495.\n\u2022\u2022 .1395-\n.:115V\n~\"W-\n... 1995-\n.. .1895\n... 1495\n895\n... 1495\n\" ,795 '\n.   750\nj m\n1195\n795.,\n_ 695\"\n_'\u25a0\u00ab_.\u25a0\n_; sso\n. 515\nm\n\u00a3495.'-\n;-;\u00ab0\n-,.4S0-\n. 195\n:0 395\n\u2022ffiS\"\n.rim\n295\n_. m\nA REAL DEAL ON A NEW 1964 RAMBLER.\nA Few New 1965 Ramblers In Stock.\n_\u00a3.  MEL BUERGE\nMOTORSLTD.\nFORD\nA\nPh. 352-7202\u2014608 Vernon St.       Car Lot: Vernon & Hendryx 332-7511\n65 FORDS 65\nnow on display    ;:z\n1965 GALAXIE 500 LTD 4-DOOR HARDTOP '^ Ifmi'\n1965 GALAXIE COUNTRY SEDAN3 % _\u201e\n1965 GALAXIE 500 4-DOOR SEDAN\n1965 FORD CUSTOM 500 SEDAN \/     '', \u2122|\n1965 FAIRLANE STATION WAGON\n1965 FAIRUNE 500 4-DOOR SEDAR V ^\n1965 FALCON FUTURA 4-DOOR SEDAN\n1965 FALCON 4-DOOR SEDAN =_\u2022-___\n1965 FORD W-TON PICKUP :;\nTest-Drive Your Choice Today! ~:~r.\nUSED CAR CLEARANCE\nThis Week. \"\nSPECIAL\nYOUR CHOICE:  ;\n$99\n1953 Pontiac Sedan\n1953 Ford Sedan\n1951 Chevrolet Sedan\n1951 _ Dodge Sedan .\"...-\"\n1950 DeSoto __lc1di_\/\n1964 Ford Galaxie 500\nConvertible\n1964 Mercury Montclair\n2-Dr. H.T.\n1962 Galaxie St. Wagon\n1962 Rambler 4-Dr.\nSedan\n1961  Ford 4-Dr. St. Wgn.\n1961  Pontiac 2-Dr. Sedan\n1961 Meteor 4-Dr. Sedan\n1961  Falcon 2-Door\n1959 Ford St. Wagon\n1959 Ford Sedan\nMEL BUERGE\nFORD\nNELSON,  B.C.\n 10 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, OCT. 9,1964\nDENTU CREAAE\nDENTU POWDER\nA Good Combination for Dental Plate Users\nDentu Creme for cleaning plates.\nand\nDentil Powder\n69.\nfor holding dental plates in place 57<S\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nBaptist Convention\nEnds Association\nWINDSOR, Ont. (CP) - Delegates to a Western Association\nof Baptist Churches' convention voted Wednesday to terminate their arrangement with the\nUnited Church ot Canada in the\njoint publication ot Sunday\nschool material.\nAbout-350 persons attending\nthe one-day Essex and Kent\nCounties convention also called\nfor the withdrawal of the material for distribution from the\nassociation's convention offices.\nThe second resolution expressed disappointment that\n\"our department of Christian\neducation be so far removed\nfrom. the. beliefs and convictions\nof our people that they should\napprove such material.\"\nJames Gordon, chairman of\nthe resolutions committee, said\nthere has been dissension be-\nbetween Ontario and Quebec\nchurches by the introduction of\na new curriculum prepared under the auspices of the United\nChurch of Canada and the Baptist Convention of Ontario and\nQuebec.\n\"It has caused us to go a\nseparate way from our sister\nconventions, the Maritime Baptist Convention and the Baptist\nUnion of Western Canada,\" he\nsaid, : ~~r\u2122 ___ \u25a0..\u25a0;\nDelegates were, told the new\ncurriculum teaches beliefs that\nwere contrary to the historic\nBaptist convention of the scriptures as the divine and revealed\nword of God, and contradicts\nand denies portions of the Holy\nScriptures.       ..\"'\".-;\nCabinet Mirnster\nOver Hal Batiks\nRemember when\nBonded Stock\nLcame in that plain\nold bottle?\nWell It doesn't\nany more.\nWe've designed a\nnew bottle for our\nwhisky.\t\nAnd a new label.\nWe age Bonded\nStock a little longer\nnow as well. To\nmake every drop\njust that little\nmore mellow.\nWe've done\neverything we can.\nTry a bottle of\"\t\nBonded Stock soon.\nThe rest)-up to you.\nCooderham's have been distilling fine whiskies since 1.32\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board\nor by the Government of British Columbia. \u25a0\nBy MICHAEL GILLAN\nOTTAWA (CP)-Justice Minister Favreau was told he\nshould resign his cabinet post\nWednesday during an angry\nCommons debate that saw him\nand the government flailed for\nthe handling of Hal C. Banks,\nformer head of the Seafarers'\nInternational Union of Canada.\nErik Nielsen (PC \u2014Yukon)\nmoved an amendment to the\njustice department estimates to\nreduce the minister's salary to\n$1. He said \"it is both my belief\nand the belief of a good many\nof us on this side that the minister is no longer fit to hold the\nportfolio. . . .\"\nMr. Favreau denied the federal government made any\n\"shady deal\" to help Mr. Banks\nescape Canadian justice.\nHe said the government prosecuted Mr. Banks with determination, had opposed his request for bail, and had argued\nif bail was granted it should be\nset at $50,000.\nAlthough Crown counsel did\nnot warn Mr. Justice Tremblay\nthat conspiracy charges are not\ncovered by Canada's extradition\ntreaty with the United States,\nthe judge knew this, and extradition was usually not discussed\nduring a bail application, Mr.\nFavreau added.\nFLED CANADA\nThe former union boss, fired\nas SIU president by the government-appointed maritime union\ntrusteeship, fled Canada while\nawaiting an appeal hearing for\nhis conviction on the conspiracy\ncharge. He had been released\non $25,000 bail and faced a five-\nyear jail term,,-.       \t\nThe Banks issue flared again\nlast week following his discovery by a reporter aboard a\nyacht at Brooklyn, N.Y.\nBefore the special afternoon\ndebate, Opposition Leader Dief-\nenbaker renewed his call for a\nspecial inquiry into Mr. Banks'\nflight from Canada.\nDebate on the estimates and\nMr. Nielsen's amendment is to\nresume next Wednesday.\nMr. Nielsen charged that\nBanks was allowed to leave the\ncountry by the government's\n\"fumbling and bumbling, intentional or otherwise.\"\nHe said: there were reports of\ntapes and films which might\nmean some Liberal backbenchers would want Banks out of the\nway.\n'VICIOUS RUMORS SPREAD'\nDavid Orlikow (NDP-Winni\npeg North) said \"vicious rumors\" are being spread in labor and newspaper circles that\nformer members of the Louis\nSt. Laurent cabinet and present\nLiberal backbenchers from\nMontreal have \"close connections\" with Mr. Banks and the\nSIU.\nHe said there were other rumors about SIU contributions to\nLiberal election campaign funds\nand backed Mr. Diefenbaker's\ncall for a judicial inquiry.\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c line, 40c line bold face type; larger type rates\non request. Minimum two lines.\nCOPY DEADLINE - PLEASE NOTE\nCopy for this column accepted until 3 p.m. for insertion\nin next day's publication.\nRotary Luncheon Friday 12:15\npjn. Hume Silver Room. \u201432-h\nDuplicate Bridge, Hume Hotel,\nEvery Monday Night.\n-238-238\nSalvation Army Clothing Sale.\nSat., Oct. 10, 10 a.m. \u2022 2 p.m.\n-238-239\nBINGO\nELKS HALL, SAT. 8 P.M.\n-236-H\nPlan Now to attend the Hoote-\nnanny Oct. 15, 7:30 p.m. L. V.\nRogers High School.,     \u2014238-h\nKnitting yarns for every purpose\nEBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.\n-226-tfn\nRUMMAGE SALE\nJunior Hospital Auxiliary, today, from 10:00 a.m. \u2014 ?. 547\nBaker St. -236-238\nRIDING AT HARROP, SATURDAY, SUNDAY, AND THANKSGIVING. -237-239\nStylish New Dresses for girls,\nsmartly tappered pants for boys.\nYou pay no more for styles at\nEBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.\n-232-tfn\nGet yourself a folding clothes-\nhorse for easy clothes drying in\nwet weather.\nHIPPERSON HARDWARE\n-238-238\nA *3L5 VALUE FOR *2\u00b0! US\nH_a__p*-F___i\u00ae\nthis Christmas   |&^\u00bb\ngive a yearly       !\u00bb.**\u25a0\u25a0 1|M; :\n...\" subscription of  H^Nil\nBEAUTIFUL BRITISH COLUMBIA\nA scenic and floral diary and a\nbeautiful 6\" x 8\" Christmas\ngreeting card - FREE!\n|VVith  every yearly  gift of  s\nF-^jH-eautiful British Columbia\nmagazine subscription you purchase we\nwill include a scenic travel diary (worth\n$1) and a 6\" x 8\" Christmas card (worth\n25c) announcing your gift subscription-\nBeautiful British Columbia is a wonderful\ngift for friends and relatives anywhere in\nthe world.  This spectacular illustrated\nmagazine deals exclusively with British\nColumbia and is published quarterly by\nservation. (A regular yearly subscription\nis worth $2 alone.)\nORDER YOUR GIFT SUBSCRIPTIONS\nFROM THE\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\nYour Christmas Gift Package and personal\nChristmas Card announcing your year - round\ngift of \"Beautiful British Columbia\" wiH be\nmailed out by Department of Recreation and\nConservation.\nIt contains the winter issue of the magazine,\nplus a scenic and floral diary featuring 26 of\nthe best colour pictures from Beautiful British\nColumbia Magazine as well as writing space for\nthe Department of Recreation and Con-       every day of the year.\nBINGO\nEAGLE HALL TONIGHT\n-32-h\nTOT \u2022 'N - TEEN\nGood stock of Childrens Coats\ndespite the sidewalk construction we're open for business.\n-238-239\nTONY FONTAINE STORY\nTrue story in color\nSATURDAY, OCT. 10, 8 P.M.\nEverybody welcome.\nCovenant Church, 802 Baker St.\nNew Shipment of plastic drapes\n\u2022 36\". and 54\"\nSTERLING\nHOME FURNISHERS\n441  Baker  Street,  Nelson.\n-238-238\nWeekend Specials!\nSnowballs,   peanut   clusters,\npectin  jellies.  Reg.  $1.49  lb.\nNow 98c lb. Plus other specials.\nNELSON FLOWERS LTD.\n533 Baker Street\n-237-239\nANNUAL\nKIWANIS   PEANUT   DRIVE\nOctober 19 and 20\nHalloween nuts and candies\nProceeds to our Senior Citizen\nVilla\n-236-245\nBALFOUR BEACH INN\nDinner of the Day and Steaks,\nFriday and Saturday, 6 \u25a0 8 p.m.\nSunday, 5-7 p.m.\nDinner parties catered to by\nreservation only. Ph. 229-4235.\n-226-h\nNELSON DANCE THEATRE\nClasses commence Sat. Oct. 10\nNotre Dame University\nALL STUDENTS CONTACT\nMrs. J. Gordon, Ballet, 352-2476\nMrs. D. Maryman, Modern Jazz,\n352-7435\n-238-239\nHAVE FUN\nWhile Learning\nBALLROOM DANCING\nWALTZ FOX TROT SWING\nCommencing\nMONDAY, OCT. 19th, 8:00 P.M.\nMr. and Mrs. J. G. (Jimmie\nand Fran) James\nPhone 352-5274\n-238-239\nAlthough Mr. Favreau maintained the RCMP had asked the\nU.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation to search for Mr. Banks,\nseveral opposition members\nsaid it was incredible he had\nnot: been located when a reporter found him in a matter\nof hours.\nThe justice minister said letters were sent to the FBI Aug.\n18 and 21, and that an FBI\nliaison officer acknowledged the\nsecond letter Aug. 28.\nMr. Nielsen said Crown counsel always makes certain there\nis a provision in a bail bond\nto ensure a person remains\nwithin the court's jurisdiction,\nbut Mr. Favreau countered that\nthe form Banks signed was the\nnormal one used in Quebec.\nMr. Nielsen's speech produced angry outbursts from\ngovernment members.\nWhen the Conservative member asked whether there was\nnot justification for concluding\nthere was a deal between the\ngovernment and Mr. Banks,\nTrade Minister Sharp shouted:\n\"Not at ail-that is a lie.\"\nHe withdrew the word only\nafter repeated demands from\nMr. Diefenbaker and Mr. Nielsen.\nBoth Mr. Nielsen and Mr. Orlikow suggested Mr. Banks'\npresence on the yacht, which\nthey said was provided by the\nSIU, indicated he has retained\ninfluence in the'union.\n... Let us not believe for\na moment that the SIU would\nprovide such facilities for Mr.\nBanks if he had lost all his usefulness to that union organization,\" Mr. Nielsen said.\nMARKET TRENDS\nTwo Killed\nIn Explosion\nDETROIT (AP) - Two crew\nmembers were killed and three\ninjured early Thursday in a fire\non board the 200-foot West German freighter Erato, tied up at\nthe Detroit Harbor terminal.\nFire department officials said\nthe dead and injured were\namong six men who were\ntrapped in the crews' quarters\nby flames.\nMore than 65 firemen and 17\npieces of equipment fought the\nblaze from the dockside where\nthe steel-laden ship, based in\nHamburg, was tied up.\nFiremen said the fire apparently started in the crews' quarters.\nNEW YORK (AP) - Amid\nsome profit-taking and heavy\nbuying, the stock market\ncarved out an irregular advance Thursday, putting some\naverages at record highs.\nA total of 5,090,000 shares\nwere traded compared with 5,-\n150,000 Wednesday.\nAmong motors, Ford continued its march to new highs,\ngaining 1_ at 62Vs as second\nmost - active issue while Chrysler recovered IVi of recent\nlosses and General Motors\nclosed unchanged as the strike\nagainst GM dragged on.\nThe Dow Jones industrial average advanced 1.12 to 874.90.\nclosing below its recently-set all\ntime high.\nThe Associated Press average\nof 60 stocks made a record peak\nof 328.4 with an advance of 1.1.\nOf 1,357 issues traded, 612 advanced and 469 declined.\nAmong the oils, Sinclair rose\n1% to 51 as fourth most-active\nstock on 83,000 shares. The\ncompany has developed an additive which is said to suppress\nengine noise.\nSTOCK SPi.iT RISES\nHoneywell Inc. recommended\na 2-for-l stock split and the issue ran up 5% to 127%.\nInternational Nickel gained\nl'\/s in the Canadian list while\nson Bay Mining % and Granby\nMining _. Canadian Pacific\ndropped %.\nPrices were irregularly higher\non the American Stock Exchange where 1,840,000 shares\nwere traded compared with 1,-\n790,000 Wednesday.\nAmong Canadians, Brazilian\nTraction gained Vi. Canadian\nMarconi was up _ and Scurry\nRainbow Oil advanced _. Canadian Javelin and Jupiter\nCorp. lost Vs each.\nMONTREAL (CP)-AU major\nsections registered gains in\nmoderate trade Thursday on\nthe Montreal and Canadian\nstock exchanges.\nIndustrials led the pack up\n1.1 on index to a new high of\n162.5 on a turnover of 247,000\nMines and oils volume was\n986,500 shares.\nComposite hit a new high on\nindex up 0.9 on the day to 156.1\nas advances outnumbered declines 104 to 70.\nAmong   industrials,   Canada\nCement and CIL gained Vi each\nto 46_ and 22% and Moore\nCorp. Vs to 56%. Du Pont of\nCanada dropped    to 59Vi.\nBanks were up 0.4 at 131.8.\nRoyal added % to 77Y4, Montreal % to 68_ and Toronto-Dominion _ to 69. Banque Cana-\ndienne Nationale was off Vs at\n76.\nPapers hit a new high, up 0.2\nto 149.1. Consolidated led the\nfield, gained Hi to 44%. Fra-\nser and Price Bros, were up _\neach to 22_ and 48. Great\nLakes dropped Vi to WVi and\nDomtar   to 22%.\nUtilities were up 0.1 at 148.7.\nTrans-Canada Pipe Line picked\nup 'A to 44Vi, Trans-Mountain\nPipe Line % to 20%.\nSenior base metals were\nstronger. Noranda gained VA to\n50%, International Nickel 1_ to\n93Vi, Hollinger %\"'to'30V4 and\nHudson Bay Mining % to 71.\nSenior oils were higher.\nTexaco highlighted the gain, up\n1_ to 62 \u201e. Imperial gained %\nto 52%. Shell and Home Oil _\neach to 19 and 19% and Husky\n\u00ab to-10\u201e.     \t\nPrimary metals were also\nstronger. Canada Iron led up\n1_ to 42_, Aluminium advanced to 33% and Dosco and\nStelco % each to 19 and 26%.\nDofasco fell % to 24%.\nTORONTO (CP)-The stock\nmarket broke through to high\nground at the close of only moderately light trading Thursday\nto establish two index highs and\nprovide a handful of issues with\nimpressive gains.\nThe 80-stock industrial index\nattained a high of 166.86 with\na .97 gain while the 114-stock\nTSE index rose .90 to 155.71. All\nother major index categories\nadvanced.\nConsolidated Paper gained\n1% to 44%, at one point touching 45. Trans Canada Pipe\ngained _ to 4414 after hitting\n45.\nBrailian Traction rose 35\ncents to $4.25 after reaching a\nhigh of $4.30 on volume of more\nthan 55,000 shares. Bell Telephone however, after its spectacular rise\u2014for this bluest of\nblue chips\u2014Wednesday to a record 60, declined % to 59%.\nOTHER INDUSTRIALS GAIN\nAlberta Gas Trunk A, B.C.\nForest Products and Calgary\nPower each rose V* to 33, 34\nand 24 respectively.\nSenior base metals were exceptionally strong. Noranda\npaced the group with a 1% rise\nto a high of 50%.\nGold trading, though dull, produced higher prices. Hollinger\nrose _ to 30_ and Dickenson\n23 cents to $5.20. Dome was\ndown Vi to 33%.\nIn light but steady western\noils trading, Home A and B\nrose % each to 19% and 19%\nrespectively, while Great Plains\ntacked on _ to 11 \u201e and Canadian Delhi 40 cents to $9.\nOn index, golds gained 1.38 to\n144.36, base metals .34 to 70.97\nand western oils .42 to 96.36.\nVolume was 3,139,000 shares\ncompared with 2,749,000 shares\ntraded Wednesday.        '\nJoint Services Bill\nTo Be Introduced\nVICTORIA (CP)-A bill to be\nintroduced at the next Session\nof the B.C. legislature will permit municipalities to enter into\nagreements for joint services,\nMunicipal Affairs Minister Dan\nCampbell said Wednesday.\nMr. Campbell said discussions\nwith the Union of B.C. Municipalities executive will start\nimmediately in order to have\nthe legislation ready for submission to the legislature when it\nopens in January.\nHe told a study  group on\nformation of a joint services\nboard in the Victoria area the\nproposed legislation may well\nmeet the needs of Greater\nVictoria and B.C.'s Lower Mainland.\nHave the Job Dane Right!\nVIC GRAVEC\nW       LIMITED        \u2022\/\nPhone 352 3315\nMASTER PUJMBKF\nWARREN\nK.\nCOOK\nFALL SAMPLES\nHAVE ARRIVED.\nDrop in and see the\nworld's finest woollens,\ntastefully styled for confidence.\nSee yourself in a Warren K. Cook suit soon.\n\u00a3_v-ORY'\u00a7\nLTD.\nTHE MAN'S STORE\nB.C. Highlights\nRETURNS HOME\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Ten-\nyear-old Keith Morris wandered\nfor 48 hours in bush in Vancouver's west end Point Grey area\nbefore he found his way home.\nPolice say it Is the second time\nthe boy had been missing recently. Several police dogs and\na police patrol searched the\narea for hours.\nMANY REJECTED\nKAMLOOPS (CP) - The\nmobile testing station travelling\nthroughout the province still is\nrejecting more cars than it\npasses. A total of 111 vehicles\nwere tested here Wednesday\nand only 35 passed. Of the\nrejects, 13 returned later after\nminor adjustments and passed.\nREXALL\n1-CENT SALE\nSTARTS MON.. OCT. 19\nBone China Cups _ Saucers\nCandles \u2014 Tree Ornaments\nChristmas Lights\nYour Rexall Pharmacy\nCITY DRUG\nBox 460 Phone 352-3611\nINQUIRY SLATED\nFOR BRITANNIA\nLONDON (Reuters)-A Royal\nNavy spokesman said Thursday\nan inquiry may be held into an\nincident at Charlottetown, P.E.I.,\nWednesday night, when a gangplank of the royal yacht Britannia shifted seconds before the\nQueen was about to use it.\nAn inquiry, he said, would be\nan internal one aboard the\nyacht and the decision to hold\nit would be made by the yacht's\nflag officer, Rear Admiral Sir\nJoseph Henley.\nLabor Rebuffed\nOn Drug Proposal\nVICTORIA (CP) - Officials of\ntwo druggists' associations said\nWednesday night the B..C Federation of Labor cannot legally\nset up its own drug store.\nThe annual convention of the\nfederation voted Wednesday to\ndo so in the Vancouver area.\n\"It couldn't be owned by the\nunion organization,\" said R. B.\nBates, president of the South\nVancouver Island Pharmacists\nAssociation.\nRegistrar Douglas Denholm of\nthe B.C. Pharmaceutical Association said the body's interpretation of existing legislation \"is\nthat they cannot establish a drug\nstore.\"\n1964\nCATTLE SALES\nCOMMUNITY  AUCTION  SALES\nASSOCIATION   LTD.\nCRANBROOK, B.C.\nSALE DATES\n(NOTE - ALL SALES ARE ON A WEDNESDAY)\nOctober 14 \u2014 Calf Sale, 1:00 p.m.\nOctober 28 \u2014 Calf Sale, 1:00 p.m.\nNovember 25 \u2014 Mixed Sale, 10:00 a.m.\nPlease list your stock with the Director so that you may\nbe sure of a position in the sale. It will also assist in\ncompiling lists for prospective buyers. Calves may be\nbrought Into the yard the morning of the sale but must\nbe in before sale time. All other stock must be in the\nafternoon prior to the sale and will be sold in the same\norder as received in the yard.\nContact FRANK HILL, Director\nAT BOX 2139,. CRANBROOK, or PHONE 4-Y FORT\nSTEELE  FOR  YOUR  LISTINGS  or  INFORMATION\n1965 FAIRLANE 500 SPORTS COUPE. A TOTAL PERFORMANCE FORD BUILT IN CANADA\n'65 Fairl3__e~Excitement in Style\n(A New World of Value)\nFairlane is the car that's built a unique reputation for\nruggedness, reliability, and value. And now, for '65, we've\nadded new values,\ni Outside, this new Fairlane is crisp and clean, with a\ntrimness that makes it easy to park, easy to handle in\ntraffic. Inside Fairlane offers the room of many larger\ncars, with beautiful new upholstery and a new, smaller\nsteering wheel that is easier to handle.\nBut Fairlane's combination of nimble handling with\nbig car comfort is only part of the story. Low price makes\neverything about the Fairlane doubly appealing.\nThe new standard \"Six\" haB 120 hp and the smooth-\nness and durability of a 7-main-bearing crankshaft. There\nis a bigger standard V-8 of 200 hp, plus an optional 225\nand 271 hp\u2014with a choice of three transmissions (3 and\n4-speed manual and Ford's 3-speed Cruise-0-Matic).\nAs you can see, the \"Fabulous Fast-selling Fairlane\"\nis even better for 1965\u2014because it offers all this new\nvalue at Fairlane's low price, plus excellent operating\neconomy. Ask a Ford Dealer for a Test Drive soon, and\nbring the whole family\u2014we build them for family fun.\nCertain features Illustrated or mentioned are optional at antra coat.\nTcstI)TivcaNcwWorldoiTotal Performance\nMUSTANG \u2022 FALCON \u2022 FAIRLANE \u2022 FORD \u2022 THUNDERBIRD\n608 Vernon St.\nMEL BUERGE MOTORS LTD.\nPhone 352-7202\nYOU* FORD DEALER Also INVITES YOU TO SEE THE WCMDERFUl MEW fORDS, FALCONS, MUSTANtSS, AND T-\u00abIRO\u00bb\"\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1964_10_09","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0435338","@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 Nelson Museum, Archives and Gallery: https:\/\/nelsonmuseum.ca","@language":"en"}],"SortDate":[{"@value":"1964-10-09 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1964-10-09 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\/1.0435338"}