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W.]","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2023-08-15","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1964-09-29","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0435434\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" waan\nTEMPERATURES\nNELSON  ...\nToronto \t\nCalgary\t\nPenticton ...\nVancouver .\nSpokane  \t\nWhitehorse\n43 65\n33 54\n38 43\n40 64\n44 60\n42 71\n35 50\n0Ui\nFORECAST\nCloudy with a few shovets\nTuesday. Cooler. Winds souther:\nly 15, Low-high at Cranbrook 35\nand 55; Crescent Valley 35 and\nte. Wednesday outlook: Mostly\ncloudy. Continuing cool.\nPublished at Nelson, government, financial, trading and educationafcentre of'the Kootenay-C<ilumbia area\nVol. 63\nNELSON, B. C, CANADA\u2014TUESDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 29, 1964\n10 Cents\nNo. 134\nUAW Warned Action to Follow\n\"Illegal Picketing\" Methods\n\"CADILLACK\"\u2014Tools and gloves He where dropped on\nGM's Cadillac assembly line ln Detroit during UAW walkout\nOH Vice President Louis\nBeaton says he Is \"a little\nmystified and amazed that\nthe contract pattern Mr.\nReuther called the highest\nla history didn't result In\nsettlement here.\"\nCAW President Walter Brother says the strike was\ncalled \"because the General\nMotors Corporation was unwilling to meet minimum\nstandards In terms of working conditions . . .\"\nTWO POINTS OF VIEW are expressed ln Detroit as United\nAuto Workers picket 89 General Motors plants over nation.\nRiot-Torn Bolivian City\nGives de Gaulle Welcome\nCOCHABAMBA, Bolivia (AP)\nPresident Charles de Gaulle\nwas welcomed to Bolivia Monday by cheering crowds and an\nembrace by President Victor\nPaz Estenssoro.\nLarge crowds, including many\nIndians in native dress, jammed\naround the airport in festive\nmood as the plane landed from\nLima, Peru.\nSome in the French leader's\nentourage, had urged him to\nskip the visit to Bolivia because\nof riotous anti -. government\ndemonstrations in this city of\n100,000 last Friday night.\nCochabamba was chosen instead of the capital of La Paz\nbecause of the lower altitude.\nThis city is 9,000 feet above sea\nlevel, La Pas 13,000 feet.\nDe Gaulle received a 21-gun\nsalute and on receiving the key\nto the city said:\n\"I am happy and honored on\nbeing welcomed by President\nPaz Estenssoro and the Bolivian people. France is coming to\nvisit you and it does with pleasure. Viva Bolivia!\"\" .\"\nBUENOS AIRES (APl-The\npowerful General Confederation\nof Labor decided Monday to call\na 24-hour general strike Oct. 5\nduring the visit to Argentina of\nPresident de Gaulle of France.,\nThe press secretary of the\nconfederation, L u i s Angeleri,\ntold reporters the executive\ncouncil decided to call the strike\nto protest government prosecution of 119 Confederation leaders for instigating disorders in\nMay and June.\nThe Confederation of 2,500,000\nmembers is dominated by followers of ex-dictator Juan D.\nPeron, now in exile in Spain.\nDETROIT (AP) \u2014 General\nMotors, hit by\" a U.S. wide\nstrike of some 260,000 United\nAuto Workers union members,\nthreatened Monday to take\ncourt action against the union\nfor what the company branded\n\"illegal picketing.\"\nAs contract negotiations were\nresumed Monday morning, GM\nwarned the UAW to stop pickets at eight locations from \"illegally preventing employees\nnot involved in the strike from\nentering the plants.\"\nLouis Seaton, GM vice-president for personnel said company and union negotiators had\na \"healthy\" discussion about\nthe problem,\n\"We are willing to give the\nunion a chance to correct the\nsituation,\" Seaton told reporters. \"But if they are unsuccessful, it leaves us with no choice\nbut to take legal steps.\"\nTwo trouble spots already\nhad been cleaned up, a GM\nspokesman said. Plants involved were located in Indiana,\nMichigan, Pennsylvania and\nCalifornia.\nBLOCKING GATES\nA company spokesman said\nthat In most cases, the pickets\nwere blocking plant gates and\nrefusing to permit salaried\nworkers to enter.\nUAW President Walter Reuther told reporters the situation\ncould be better described as\n\"ill advised rather than illegal\npicketing.\"...\nThe picketing problem did not\nappear to slow efforts to obtain\na national agreement on the\nnon - economic issues which\ntouched off the strike Friday,\nbaiting the U.S.. production of\nGM'S. 1965 autos.  :'..':..:\nBoth sides agreed to tackle\nthrough subcommittees sueh\nmatters as production standards,: sub-contracting and work-\nDillon Committee To Move Fast\nOn Presidential Protection Demand\nFour-Man Group\nTo Prepare Plan\nThe GM strike involves about\n61 per cent of some 350,000, un-\nion-representedworker* '     ,\nBeer Monopoly\nPlan Approved\nPRINCE GEORGE (CP)-A\nplan under which certain breweries would have a draft beer\nmonopoly in specified sections\nof the province will be proposed\nto the B.C. government.\nThe plan was approved at a\nweekend meeting of the Fort\nGeorge Social Credit Association.\nElmer' Nelson, second 'vice-\npresident of the association and'\none of the proponents of the\nplan, said it would provide that\ncertain breweries would supply\nall the draft beer for a specified\narea in the province. ,  \u2022\nThe breweries themselves\nwould decide which company\nwould supply which area.\nHe said.the system would cut\ndown on freight and promotion\nexpenses which' could stave off\npossible future price increases\nto the consumer.\nThe system was used in Alberta and Saskatchewan.\n\"TAILED\"\u2014Two Soviet destroyers play unofficial escort to the U. S. aircraft carrier Independence during NATO's exercise Operation Teamwork In the North Atlantic. Planes\non the Independence's deck are A-l Skyhawks. One Soviet vessel is guided missile craft\nSeven Cardinals Support\nAbsolving of Jewish People\nBy EUGENE LEVIN\nVATICAN CITY (AP)-Seven\ncardinals, including Canadian\nPaul - Emile Cardinal Leger,\njoined Monday in an offensive\nto put the Roman Catholic\nChurch on record as absolving\nthe Jewish people as a whole of\ndeicide (God-killing) in Christ's\ncrucifixion.\nOne after another, the princes\nof Roman Catholicism rose in\nthe Vatican ecumenical council\nthat all Jews of biblical times\ncould not be,blamed for Christ's\nCardinal Ritter of St. Louis,'rians, expressed the view of\nMo. (several   Middle   Eastern   pre-\nArguing on the other side, Ig- lates: \"If it is approved, there\nnace Cardinal Tappouni, patri- will  be  very  serious\narch of Antioch and of the Sy-lquences in our countries.\"\nFederal Gov't Faces\nNew Grief in Rail Bill\nOTTAWA  (CP)-Is the\neral   government  heading  for\nS^VtiTjOTs'^lliaTot.'woaier hassle, with' il* prov-\nbe considered a rejected people. I\u2122<\u00bb oyej;: 'its proposed  new\nThe cardinals were not con-, transDortation legislation?,\njtent'with ,a council draft decla- | H\u00bbprovinces were consulted\nration on Roman Catholic rela- extens vely by both the present\ntions with the Jews. They want! Liberal administration and the\nit strengthened and they said so j previous Progressive Conserva-\nwith a determination that ledfve government on pans to\nsome councU sources to predict implement recommendations of\nIt would he done. !the MacPherson royal commis-\nBut five'Middle East patri- sion on transportation,\narchs opposed any declaration    But since the extensive and\non the Jews and an Italian cardinal argued that the statement\nin its present form lavished too\nmuch praise on the Jews.\nDECISION  OVERLOOKED\nThe debate oh the Jewish\ndocument, which already has\nstirred  more controversy  out-\ncomplicated hill was introduced\nin its final form in the Commons two weeks ago, the provincial governments have not\nbeen asked for their comments\nby the federal government.\nAn effort to bring them into\nthe proposed secret briefing of\nside the council than any other j MPs was made in the^Com-\nKAMLOOPS \u00abHP,)-The Royal\nInland Hospital,, one of five in\nCanada entitled to use the\n'!rpyal\" prefix, is investigating\nthe possibility of having a member of the royal family officiate\nat the opening of a nine-storey\naddition next year.\nVerbal Duels Rage as IWA\nFactions Rise at Convention\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Words\nflew thick and fast Monday as\ntwo warring factions engaged in\na verbal duel at the western district convention of the International Woodworkers of America\n(CLC).\nDuring a short, but heated debate, the membership authorized its executive board to formulate new rules for the administration of the union's $2,370,000\nstrike fund.\nThe resolution was aimed at\npreventing a repetition of last\nsummer's fight over handling of\nthe strike fund of the union,\nwhich has 36,000 members in\nwestern Canada, most of them\nin British Columbia.\nSid Thompson, president of the\nbig Vancouevr local, had accused regional president Jack Moore\nof dipping into the strike fund\nto finance a publicity campaign\nurging IWA members to accept\na contract proposal by B.C. coast\nemployers. A faction led by\nThompson had opposed acceptance.\nMonday's resolution told the\nregion's executive board to\nbring in new rules for approval\nat the union convention next\nyear. A second resolution approved by the union will place\nadministration of the fund in the\nhands of the executive board.\nA repetition of last summer's\nfeud greeted presentation of the\nresolution Monday. Mr. Thompson charged that the union has\nlimped along for years improvising rules as the need arose,\nbut without a proper set of rules\nincorporated in the constitution.\nHe said it is not satisfactory\nfor decisions to be made by the\nexecutive board if the decisions\nare in violation of the constitution.\nMr. Moore replied that \"never\nagain in the history of the IWA\ncan we allow any of the elected\nofficers to be slandered as they\nhave in the public press.\"\n\"In 1958 the New Westminster\nlocal came to the convention with\na recommendation that money\nfrom the strike fund should be\nused only while a strike was in\nprogress,\" said Mr. Moore.\n\"After a lot of debate this resolution was turned down and the\nsame people that today are accusing us of doing something\nwrong with the money were the\npeople who in 1958 voted to uphold this decision.\n\"These same people that submitted bills and drew money\nfrom the strike fund in a year\nwhen there was no strike ... are\nin 1964 standing up and accusing\ntheir fellow officers of illegally\nhaving spent thousands of dollars,\" he said.\nissue, overshadowed another\ncouncil development with far-\nreaching- and historic' importance for. the Roman Catholic\nChurch. *The council fathers\nvoted approval for creation of\na permanent body of deacons to\nassist priests. ,\nI The body is mainly intended\nto help meet. a scarcity of\npriests in mission territories..\nThe deacons would be authorized to baptize,'perform marriages, give communion, administer last rites; preach and preside at funerals; all the priestly\nduties except to say mass and\nhear confessions.\nControversy on the Jewish\ndocument flared in the council\non the same point that caused\ndebate .outside the assembly.\nWhen originally introduced a\nyear ago, it said all mankind,\nnot jews alone, shared blame\nfor the crucifixion; Sources\nquoted ,it as saying: \"The Jews\nare not guilty of deicide.\"\nThe document was revived\nearlier this year and the deicide\nphrase omitted. The passage on\nresponsibility for the crucifixion\nwas changed to read that \"one\nshould be careful not to attribute to the Jews of our time that\nwhich was penetrated in the\npassion of Christ.\"\nBoth these changes were assailed Monday.\nThe declaration, said Richard\nCushing of Boston, \"must deny\nthat there is any special culpability of the Jews in the death\nof Christ . . . This document\nmust be made less timid and\nmore positive.\"\nCardinal Leger, Archbishop of\nMontreal, said: \"We should\nmake it clear that we are not\nspeaking of the Jews of today\nbut of Jews as such and everywhere.\"\nThe text should \"express rejection of the description of the\nJews as an accursed people, a\nreproached people, a people of\ndeicide,\" argued Joseph Elmer\nmons Monday by Alyih Hamilton, former Conservative agriculture minister.^ '\nHe asked Acting Transport\nMinister' Mcllraith to consider\ninviting provincial government\nrepresentatives to the meeting\nand Mr. Mcllraith promised to\nlook into the matter and consider the suggestion.\nShould invite Quebec ,\nMr. Hamilton also asked that\nMr. Mcllraith \"make reference\nto the implications, of this act to\nthe province of Quebec so that\n-province, will'be .among, those invited:\"\n; Mr..McIlraith.said,he had not\nindicated! any province will, be\ninvited,   \"at   this   Stage\"   but\natfreed fo look fnto iSTlSM-\nton's observations.\nSince the proposed legislation\nwas introduced, the wheat, pools\nhad a private meeting, with\nTransport Minister Pickersgiil\nabout provisions of the legislation. Reliable sources say they\nhad some changes to suggest\nand were advised to prepare\ndraft changes.\nBut the provincial governments, which have important\ninterests in the bill's provisions\nregarding powers of the Board\nof Transport Commissioners over rail rates and abandonments, have not expressed\ntheir views;\nThroughout the discussions\nwith the present and the past\nadministration, the provinces\nwere, informed they would be\ngiven a chance to appear before the Commons committee\nwhich will be studying the legislation in detail.\nGIVEN COMMITMENT\nConservative sources say,\nhowever, that the provinces also\nwere given a commitment that\nbefore the legislation got to that\nstage, where it is more difficult\nto make substantial changes,\nthey would have a chance to go\nover-the bill's provisions with\nthe federal government.\nDOLLAR UP\nNEW YORK (CP) - Canadian\ndollar up 3-64 at 93 1-32 in\nternis of U.S. funds. Week ago\n92 31-32.        I\nForestry Tax\nBill Nearly\n$200 Millions\nVANCOUVER (CP) - British\nColumbia forestry companies\nwill pay a total of $191,900,000\nin taxes to all levels of government this year, it was shown\nin an industry study released\nMonday.\nThe tax bill would compare\nwith the estimated $75,000,000 in\ncorporate profits left to the industry, said the report from the\nB.C. Council of Forest Industries, a central body representing the companies.\nThe report said the provincial\ngovernment would get $100,600,-\n000 in taxes and this would represent about 29 per cent of the\ntotal provincial revenue of $350,-\n000,000.\nThe amount would include\ncharges against logging operations, special taxes, property\ntaxes, sale tax on equipment\nand supplies and corporate income tax.\nA total $81,300,000, Including\n$33,000,000 in Import duties and\nsales tax on machinery and supplies and $48,300,000 in corporate income taxes would go to\nthe federal government, the report said.\nLand property and. tchool\ntaxes imposed by municipal\ngovernments would take another\n$10,000,000.\nHarpo Dies\nHOLLYWOOD (AP) - Harpo\nMarx, blonde-wigged non-speaking member of the famed Marx\nBrothers team, died Monday\nnight at Mt. Sinai Hospital.\nCause.of death was not immed\niately disclosed.1\nHarpo, 70, whose real name\nwas Arthur, was the second of\nthe famed theatrical team\ndie. The piano-playing Chico died\nin 1961,\nSurviving are Gummo, Zeppo\nand Groucho.\nHarpo had been in semi-retirement for five years and in\nJanuary, 1963, announced he was\nretiring completely.\nBoy, Man Drown\n100 MILE HOUSE (CP) -\nRichard Bradbury, 7, of nearby\nForest Grove, was, drowned\niday when he fell from a\nraft at Canim Lake. The boy,\nson of Mr. and Mrs. James\nBradbury, had been left at the\nlake with friends for the day.\nQUESNEL (CP)-Hatry Victor Ogden, 53, was drowned\nSunday when his small boat\noverturned on Puntzi Lake, west\nof here.\nThe Quesnel resident apparently was thrown into the water\n200 yards from shore and was\nunable to swim that distance to\nJohnson Crowds Stampede\nIn New England Campaign\nPORTLAND, Me. (API-President Johnson beat a crowded\ncampaign trail across New England Monday through surging, shouting throngs, cracking\nat his Republican rival and declaring the Republican party\nhas been captured by a faction\nthat would halt American progress.\nJohnson got by far the biggest, noisiest, most enthusiastic\ncrowds of his campaign.\nPeople were injured in the\nstampedes along the streets\nthat started in Providence, R.I.,\nin the morning. And it was\nmuch the same story from there\non in stops in Connecticut, Vermont and Maine.\nA woman was taken away in\nan ambulance.\nA Secret Service agent had\nhis coat ripped and was forced\nto tie his trousers together with\ntap*.\nSeveral hundred thousand people turned out for Johnson. His\nwife, Lady Bird Johnson, reported she lost a shoe in the\ncrowd along the way.\nAnd this was happening within\n24 hours after the Warren commission had urged tighter, more\nstringent security safeguards\naround presidents in the aftermath of the Kennedy assassination.\nJohnson rolled along in cars\nand caravans, talking as he\nwent inviting people to come to\nhis inauguration in January,\nand hitting at what he said\nwere extreme and reckless men\nwho would not hesitate to shatter U.S. prosperity.\nWASHINGTON (AP)-Senator\nBarry Goldwater charged Monday night that President Johnson is \"burning up taxpayers'\nmoney a mile a minute\" in his\nquest for election.\nOn a 2,300-mile, 35-stop campaign swing, the Arizona senator conceded: \"We are still the\nunderdogs. We'll probably be\nthe underdogs right up to election day but the campaign is\nmoving and moving well right\nnow.\"\nIn a talk prepared for a send-\noff rally at Washington's Union\nStation, the Republican presidential nominee said if Johnson\n\"really believes those polls that\nhe carries in his pocket, would\nhe be running so hard so soon\nand so fast?\"\nGoldwater scoffed at newspapers that oppose his candidacy,\nand said \"out in the real world\"\nhis campaign is going well.\n\"Lyndon's TV shows try to\nscare us to death,\" the senator\nsaid. \"His polls try to paralyse\nus. His tax-money campaign\ntrips, I guess, try to tire us\nout.\"\na \"thorough - going job,\" but\nsaid he isn't sure the \"sharp\ncriticisms of the Secret Service\nand the FBI were well taken.\"\nAlmost all other U.S. congressional comment on the Warren findings was favorable.\nThe seven \u2022 member Warren\ncommission went out of existence officially on Thursday,\nwhen it presented Its report to\nJohnson at the White House.\nBy STERLING F. GREEN\nWASHINGTON (AP)\u2014A White House committee\non presidential safety, created to consider the broad\nrecommendations of the Warren commission, planned\nswift action Monday to get proposals ready for the new\nCongress in January.\nSenate Democratic leader\nMike Mansfield of Montana said\nthe new security measures,\ngrowing out of the commission's investigation of President Kennedy's assassination,\nshould be \"one of the first orders of business\" when Congress reconvenes.\nThe Warren report, declaring\nLee Harvey Oswald to have\nbeen the lone and unaided assassin, was selling \"phenomenally\" after it went on sale at\nthree outlets Monday, the U.S.\ngovernment printing office reported.\nThe office disclosed that a to\n27 further volumes, containing\nthe full testimony and exhibits\non which the 888-page report\nwas based, may be ready in six\nto eight weeks. In sets only,\nthey wiU sell for $7! to $100 a\nset.\nRAPS SECRET SERVICE\nThe commission headed by\nU.S. Chid Justice Earl Warren\ncriticized ''deficiencies\" in the\nSecret Service preparedness for\nKennedy's fatal.visit to Dallas\nlast Nov. a. V, eaOed tor \"'complete overhaul\" of th* service's\nadvance detection practices and\nether' reforms including closer\nliaison with th* FBI and ether\nagencies.\nPresident Johnson Immediately named Treasury Secretary Douglas Dillon to bead a\ncommittee, of. tour to, work out\nrecommendations for carrying\nout the Warren proposals,\nA treasury spokesman said\nDillon intends \"to get this moving as soon as he can\" and'has\nset a Jan. 1 target data for the\ncompletion of recommendations.\nA first meeting of the special\ngroup will be held, the spokesman said, on the earliest day\nthat all are in Washington. One\nof them, Director John J. Mc-\nCone of the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency, was out of the\ncapital Monday. The others are\nActing Attorney-General Nicholas Katzenbach, and McGeorge\nBundy, presidential assistant for\nnational security affairs.\nNeither the Secret Service nor\nthe FBI had any comment on\nthe commission's criticisms.\nAPPROVAL EXPECTED\nThere was little doubt that\nCongress would provide whatever appropriations might be\nasked to tighten presidential security. \"Congress has never\nturned down a request for more\nmen or money for them (the\nSecret Service and FBI),\"\nMansfield noted.\nThe Republican leader, Senator Everett M. Dirksen of Illinois, said procedures probably\nwill be discussed when the Senate judiciary committee meets\ntoday on the pending bills.\nDirksen lauded the.report as\nBrash Fire\nNear Control\nSANTA BARBARA, Calif.\n(AP)\u2014Men. planes and bulldozers fought lingering mile-high\nhot spots in the disastrous Santa\nBarbara brush fir* Monday.\nThe U.S. forest service announced that the big blaz*-\nwhich it said has released 788\ntimes as much heat as the Hiroshima atomic bomb\u2014is TS- per\ncent contained.\nIt predicted toll containment\n\u2014meaning bare earth hacked\nall around the 70-mile perimeter\u2014by Wednesday morning I\nand control by Thursday evening.\nPlanes wOl start scattering\nrye seed over, tht 76,000 charred\nacres today, .the forest service\nsaid\u2014an operation expected to\ntake two weeks.' The fast-growing grass, it is hoped, will help \u25a0\u2022\nforestall possible winter floods.\nBetter Try Rhymo,\nMr. McEachen\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014Thirty days\nhath September, says the old\nrhyme. But not for Labor Minister MacEachen. As far as he's\nconcerned it has 31 days this\nmonth.-    \u25a0\u25a0--\nBlushing slightly, Mr. MacEachen advised the Commons\nMonday that he's stretching th*\ncalendar to. give September 31\ndays so He can keep a commitment, tp Stanley Knowles (NDP\n\u2014Winnipeg North Centre) to\nhave the proposed new labor\ncode listed on the Commons order paper by the end of September.\nWhen he. gave the commitment, he told Mr. Knowles, he\nthought September had 31 days.\nSo subject to that qualification\nthe labor code listing would be\nmade to meet his commitment.\nVANCOUVER (CP)-A goal\nof $273,000. was' set Sunday by\nthe Poliomyelitis and Rehabili-\ntation Foundation of B.C. for\nthe 1965 Mother's March. Feb-\nruary 1 was picked as the date\nfor the annual appeal for funds. \"\u25a0\nWelfare Costs To\nBe Shocker-Mitchell\nWINNIPEG (CP). - The 35th\nannual meeting of the Canadian\nChamber of Commerce opened\nMonday with some sharp warnings against too much government welfare spending.\nChamber President Howard T.\nMitchell of Vancouver told the\ndelegates many people are\ngoing to be shocked and confused by the expense of plans\n'whose full costs are now partly\nvisible or realized.\"\nHe said the government and\nvoters should ask not only what\nthe public would like in welfare\nbenefits but also \"what the inevitable bill will be.\"\nWe must know whether or\nnot the harm of discouraging,\nemployment-reducing over-taxation has been weighed by our\nbest-informed authorities on the\nsubject against the presumed\nadvantages of spending.\"\nMr. Mitchell spoke shortly\nafter delegates received a report by D. L, Morrell, the chamber's general, manager, saying\nthe greatest threat to continued\neconomic growth is the increased welfare commitments by all\nlevels of government.\nThe report called for a stocktaking of present and proposed\nWelfare programs \"to make sure\nwe all know where we are going\nand find out if we can pay the\nfare.\"\nMr. Mitchell said there has\nbeen a revolution in governmental thinking that has turned\nCanadians from conservative\nspenders to \"the ranks of the\nmost imprudently open-handed\nin the world insofar as prospective new welfare spending is concerned.\"\n 2 \u2014 KELSON DAILY. NEWS, TUESV SEPT. 29,1964\nStudent's Body Found\nAt Foot of Ice Wall\nINVERMERE - The body of\nEdward Johnson, 21-year-old\nUniversity ot British Columbia\nstudent, missing since Sept. 14\nin the White Swan Lake area,\n35 miles north-east o[ Canal\nFlat, ivas found Sunday by members of the Alpine Club of Vancouver,\nThree members of the . club\nwere flown to. the area at the\nrequest of his parents, .after\nground: searchers had abandoned\nthe area because of a heavy\nsnowfall.\t\nCoroner.F. E. Coy said \"that\ndeath was \"instantaneous, caused by'a-1S9Wopt fall down an ice\nwall. ' Searchers had to chop\nthrough avalanche debris before\nthe hody'could, be- moved from\nthe 700Moot\" level:\nII appeared that Johnson had\nfallen \"after. killing .a mountain\ngoat, found\" dead nearby. In an\natt\u00abmBt_lo_gel_the\" goat out, he\napparently caused a minor av-\nalanche and. slipped to his death\nParents of the youth flew over\nthe area Sunday in a helicopter\nin the hope of sighting him. They\nlater informed RCMP in Invermere of seeing a rugged area\nand wished to enlist the aid of\nexperienced mountaineers to\nsearch the region.\nMembers of the Alpine Club,\nDick Gilbert, Tony Cousins and\nJim Sinclair, told RCMP that\nconditions were extremely dangerous for Untrained personnel;\nonly f6r' fully-eqUipped,'\" experienced climbers.\".\nClampons (metal pins driven\ninto the rack formation to pro,\nvide footholds) were necessary\nat all times during the search.\nThe youth's family expressed\ngratitude to the RCMP and all\nothers Involved' for their efforts\nto find their son.\nAn inquiry will be held and\nfuneral'servtceswDl be in North\nBattleford, his parents' home\nVolunteers Sought\nFor Fire Department\nAid. M. B, Ryalls made a\nstrong plea at City Council Monday night for an immediate increase in the volunteer section\nof thft,,c|jy.|ife. department.\nHe remarked that the fire\nchief was concerned over the\nlack of volunteers. \"The present strength of Ihe volunteers Is\nwell below the required minim\num and citizens should consider\nvolunteering their services for\nfire service.\nAid, Ryalls stated this while\ndiscussion was in progress on the\nfire department report.\nAid. Edith Van Maarion's\nmotion that the fire chief be authorized to! advertize for volunteer fire gighters was approved.\nLett Timet Tonight\u2014-Shews 7:00-8:30\n\"SHOCK TREATMENT\" \"IATTLE OF\n'^'.:;;,;;With;:'V;:'\/:   ' BLOODY BEACH\"\nStuart Whitman \u25a0.' Audi* Murphy\nBIST ACTOR OP THI YIAR\nSIDNEY POITIER\nicuonmut wmn foi us rammuiiCEi\nStreet Corners\nBy The Informer\nTo the Informer:\nSir \u2014 In Saturday's edition\nof the paper I read your article\nin which you stated that you\nstood on a street corner and\nwatched for drivers and their\ntraffic violations.\nFormer Nelson,\nTrail Resident\nDies al Coast\nFufteral service was held Saturday for Harry Bentham, who\ndied recently at Vancouver General Hospital at the age of 59,\nHe was born in Colchester, England in 1004, leaving for Canada\nin 1922, He lived at Field, B.C.,\nRevelstoke, Midway and Trail,\narriving in Nelson in 1950. He\nwas employed by the Canadian\nPacific Railway for 42 years.\nHe is survived by his wife,\nEthel May Bentham, of Nelson,\ntwo daughter, Mrs. Sylvia Kraft\nand Miss Barbara Bentham of\nNelson; two sons, Henry Bentham of Terrace, B.C., and Jack\nBentham of Nelson; seven\ngrandchildren; two sisters, Mrs.\nNellie Rillman, of Palo Alto,\nCalifornia and Mrs, Stella Adderley, Victoria, and one brother, George Bentham of Victoria.\nService was held at Nunn and\nThompson funeral chapel in Vancouver where the \"23rd Psalm\"\nwas recited and the hymn \"What\na Friend We Have in Jesus\" was\nplayed by the organist. Rev. Mr.\nRoberts of the Anglican Church\nofficiated.\nBurial service was held at\nForest Lawn Cemetery.\nADULT EDUCATION\nPROGRAMME\nNELSON SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 7\nCOURSES OFFERED:\nSALMO:\nBadminton\nDressmaking\nFin* Arts\nWoodwork\nTyping\nBookkeeping\nIndustrial First Aid\nGeology\nSt. Johns First Aid\nRetailing\nLadies' Keep Fit\nMen's Keep Fit\nRegistration <and Inquiries) \u2014 Wednesday, Oct. I, at\nSalmo Secondary School library,\nRegistration can be done by phoning 857-M4J\nduring school hours.\nCourses begin the week following registration or when sufficient number are enrolled.\nWe welcome suggestions for further classes.\n-NELSON:\nSewing and Dressmaking\nArt\u2014Painting and Composition \t\nMotor Mechanics\n_ New Mathematics\n^Typing .,- -  ,,..\nBookkeeping\nWoodcarving \"     \t\nWoodwork\n_ Small Business Management\nEnglish for New Canadians\nAdvanced Bridge\nLodes' Keep Fit\nLumber Grading\nBallet *   \" \t\nModern Dance\u2014Fitness Through Daneing\nIndustrial First Aid\nRound Daneing\nUpholstering\nSculpturing and Ceramics\nGolf (Spring. Session) j _.   .  ...\nDrafting\nChoir\nACADEMIC COURSES:    ,.\nEnglish 30 and 40\nMath 30\nHistory 91\nWILLOW POINT:\nPointing\" for Pleasure\nNew Mathematics        -\nREGISTRATION (and Inquiries)\nTrafalgar Junior Secondary School\n(Nelson Junior High)\nTUESDAYS, SEPT. 29 and OCT. 6\nv \u2022-;      AT 7 O'CLOCK\nBY PHONING 352-3351 DURING\nY\u00a3\u25a0-'.!SCHOOL HOURS\nCoQ&eir: begin  the week following regis'\ntration or whenjsuffieient number. are..enrolJe(L\nWe welcome\"sinoestions   for further classes.\nHaaBHaaBBBESjamaaBBBMB\nLost Boy Found\nNORTH BAY. Ont. (CP)-A\nboy missing in dense bush and\nswampland near here since Saturday was found alive and apparently well Monday afternoon\nafter spending two nights in below-freezing weather, rain and\nhigh wind.\nRichard Abrams, 9, was found\nsitting under a tree ln the middle of swampy bush near Lake\nTomiko, about 20 miles west of\nhere.\nCASTLE Theatre\nCastlegar, B.C.\nLast Times Tonight\n6:45 and 9:00 p.m,\n\"SATAN NEVER SLEEPS\"\n(Color)\nWUliam Hidden, France Nuyen\nNEWS and CARTOON\nAUTO-VUE\nDRIVE-IN - TraU, B.C.\nLast Times Tonight\nTime: 7:30 p.m.\n\"THESE THOUSAND HILLS\"\nDon Murray, Richard Egan\nPlus 'THE RIGHT APPROACH'\nFrank Vaughn, Gary Crosby\nYour Doctor's\nPRESCRIPTION\nDispensed\nPromptly\nWhile You Walt\nor by Delivery\nSAMPLE'S\nNELSON   PHARMACY\nLTD.\n\"Your Fortress of Health\"\nPoena tSUUS\n0* Baker St. Neltos\nYou stated that most of the\nviolators seemed to be teenage\ndrivers. I will agree with you\nthat there are some inconsiderate teenage drivers but I have\nread that most accidents are\ncaused by drivers between the\nages of twenty-one and thirty.\nMost teenagers are driving\ntheir fathers' cars and therefore\nhave a responsibility to the citizens of Nelson and to their parents. Most drivers that are 21\nand over have their own cars\nand therefore are only responsible to the citizens of Nelson\nIf teenagers weren't responsible\ndrivers, .their, parents would, not\nlet them have the family car,\nPlease give teenage drivers a\nchance.\nMICHAEL LINDSAY\n(Editor's Note: The Informer\ndid not say he stood on a street\ncorner neither did he say that\nteenagers were irresponsible\nWhat he did say was that most\nof the drivers noticed by his\ncorrespondent appeared to be\nteenagers. The Informer has. no\ngrievances to find with any teenagers whether they be driving\nor walking.)\n\u2022 * \u2022\nHaving been bothered with a\nstray rat in pur city a few days\nago I hear councU is now getting in to the pigeon business\nSeems that the IOOF' building\nis being plagued with pigeons,\nI'm open to correction but surely\nremoval of pigeons according to:\nthe Municipal Act is a matter for\nthe building or property owner,\nWhy bother council?\t\nCity Council last night delved\ninto a messy problem \u2014 that of\nthe women's rest room in city\nhall. Seems that certain users\nof the rest room are vandals and\nhave little regard for the convenience or comfort of other!\nusers. Apparently council is\nthinking of hiring a full time at-\ntendant to police the rest room,\nCity CouncU has provided this\nnecessary service and the least\nusers can do is leave the place\nclean rather than tearing the,\nplace apart. It would seem a]\npity to have the rest room closed\nbut this may well be the case\nif the. vandalism continues\nFUNERAL RITES\nHELD, BOSWELL\n\u2022 BOSWELL \u2014 Funeral rites\nwere held Saturday at St. An-\nselm's Church in Boswell for\nMiss Gertrude L. Abbott, who\ndied in Creston Valley Hospital\nat the age of 75.\nRev. W. Holt conducted the\nservice and interment foUowed\nin the Boswell Cemetery,\nMiss Abbott, originally from\nBrighton, England, had been a\nbusiness partner of Adam N.\nFletcher for over 40 years,\nmany of them spent in Vancouver, where Mr. Fletcher was\nowner of the Fletcher Lock and\nSafe Company. They had lived\nin BosweU for the past 10 years,\nCENTRES IN NORTH\nOf Italy's 10 major cities, all\nbut two are situated in the\nnorthern part of the country-\nNaples and Palermo are the\nexceptions.\nSTARLIGHT\nDRIVE-IN\nTonight and Wednesday\n8:00 p.m.\n\"DRYLANDERS\"\nFrances Hyland, James Douglas\nPlus \"Fields of Sacrifice\"\n1 (Color) \/\nEATON'S\nSpecial\nFall\nHearing\nAid\nClinic\nALEX D. SCIIWOB\nwfll he held oa September 36ft, 1964, .at .our Heavy-\nGoods Store In Nelson. Our hearing aid consultant wUl\ntest your hearing free of chargej_anil.jhew.y0u..our\n'latest VIKING heating aids. Practically every type of\nhearing loss can be fitted Successfully from our wide\nrange of VIKING AIDS,\nHave your pretent aid checked free of charge, and\nalio take advantage of the demonstration of Baton's\nown VIKING hearing aids which carry a fuU two year\nguarantee.\nIf you cannot come In to the Clinic, you may arrange\nto have your hearing tested tree in your own home,\nsimply by phoning In for an - appointment. '\n... Budget terms are avallabl\u00bb-witlnH>-<l4w7i payment.\nAinsworth Man\nPublicizes Area\nAt Spokane Fair\nAINSWORTH HOT SPRINGS-\nAn Ainsworth businessman spent\na week in Spokane where he promoted the Kootenay district\nthrough a booth he set up at\nthe Spokane Fair.\nSam Homen rented floor space\nand set up the booth decorated\nwith pamphlets and maps from\nNelson, Balfour and Kaslo, also\nwith specimens of rock taken\nfrom the Ainsworth Hot Springs\ncaves.\nTo promote the district, Mr.\nHomen distributed S000 maps\nand pamphlets among the many\npeople attending the fair.\nMrs. F. Cursons,\nFormer Nelson\nResident, Dies\nMrs. Fred Cursons of Lister,\na former longtime resident, of\nNelson, died at the home of her\ndaughter, Mrs. A. Marzke, at\nLister early Monday. She was TS.\nPearl Cursons was born in\nBellwood, Neb., AprU 19, 1686.\nShe taught school at Albion, Neb.\nbefore her marriage to William\nE. Morris at Albion in 1008. In\n1912, they moved to Youngstown,\nAlta., where they farmed until\n1925, when they came to Nelson.\nIn Nelson, Mr. Morris operated\nthe Fairview Service Stations at\nthe comer of Anderson Street,\nand NeisOn Avenue, also the\nLakeside Service on Gordon\nRoad. He later operated a sta,\ntion at the corner of HaU and\nBaker Streets.\nMr. Morris predeceased her at\nNelson in 1940 and for a number\nof years she resided with members of.the family in various\nBritish Columbia centres. She\nmarried Fred Cursons at New\nWestminster in August, 1959 and\ndue to their ill health she and\nher husband have lived with her\ndaughter, Mrs. Marzke ln Lister\nfor some time.\nBesides her husband, she is\nsurvived by two sons, Glen\nJames Morris, Burnaby; and\nStanley E., Nelson; four daughters, Mrs. Marzke, Mrs. Gordon\nSpiers, Quesnel; Mrs. Gordon\nShaw, Cranbrook; and Mrs. A.\nBall, Coquitlam; two stepchU-\ndren, Lloyd Cursons and Mrs.\nJohn Kidd, New Westminster;\nfive sisters and two brothers in\nthe U.S., 19 grandchildren and\n38 great grandchildren.\nSchool Board Wins City Council\nOkay On Administration Building\nHays Rears Up\nTo Defend Bill\nOTTAWA (CP) - An aroused\nminister of agriculture Monday\nnight defended his bill to make\nloans to farm syndicates for machinery purchases as the best\nstep the government can take\nshort of imposing price controls\nto cut farm production costs.\nHary Harys, speaking on an\nopposition motion which would\nin effect kiU the bUl, said criticism by Conservative MPs, particularly from his own province\nof Alberta, wait merely an attempt to win political advantage.:\nThe Conservatives, Mr. Hays\nsaid, have been attacking his bUl\n\"for whatever partisan-political\nmileage might be made out of\nand-this,, he added, \"is the\ncheapest kind of two-bit partisan politics.\"\n\"This is legislation which all\nfarmers, in every part Of Canada, need and want,\" he said.\nMr. Hays spoke after Conservative Terry Nugent, an Edmonton lawyer, moved to sideline the\nfarm machinery syndicates loans\nbill into a committee investigation. Mr. Hays said if amendments are needed on the basis\nof experience, these would be\nsubmitted to a committee.\nMr. Nugent, MP for Edmon-\nlon-StrathcOna, moved that the\nbill introduced by Mr. Hays be\ndenied Second reading\u2014approval\nin principle-and that itt subject\nmatter be referred to the Commons agriculture committee.\nSALMON ARM (CP) - MM.\nSarah Ann Johnston will celebrate her 102nd birthday Oct. l.\nMrs. Johnston, born five yeart\nbefore Confederation, attributes\nher longevity to a happy marriage, no conflicts and the comfort she gets from the bible.\nonntE\nRETURN ENGAGEMENT\nBY POPULAR DEMAND\nTHE\nTYC0NS\nSATURDAY\nLAYMO\nA happy nets was struck Monday evening, when Richard Palmer, chairman of the School\nBoard for District No. 7, announced that City CouncU had\nunanimously passed the recommendation on the building plebiscite for the new administration\nbuilding.\nPrior to this announcement, C.\nB. Loff, secretary-treasurer, re,\nported that the plebiscite had\nreceived a 70 per cent accept-,\nance from ratepayers contacted.\nThe meeting was chaired by\nTrustee R. A. PhiUips, during\nthe brief absence of chairman\nPalmer, who attended the City\nCouncU meeting to speak on the\nbuilding plebiscite.\nThe Board had submitted a\npetition to school board early In\nSeptember favoring the structure, but as the percentage was1\n96.7 per cent as compared to\nthe required 55 per cent, City\nCouncil suggested more signs-1\ntures be obtained.\nThe new administration building is to be erected on Anderson\nStreet.\nCharles Cuthbert, district supervisor of schools for Nelson,\nspoke on the education committee recommendation to advertise\nall school administrative positions on a provincial basis.\n\"In order to attract the best\npossible teachers to administrative positions in this district, and\nnot to have to rely on the old\nstandard of seniority for promo-1\ntions, I feel that this recommendation should be carried.\"\nThe final selection of all personnel would rest in the hands;\nof the Education Committee and\nthe School Board, subject to the\napproval of the district superintendent and the principals of the\nschools Involved.\nAlthough new to tbe Nelson\nSchool District, this practice has\nbeen successfully Implemented\nin other districts.\nDue to the increased enrol,\nment in Grades 12 and 13, it was\ndecided that a part-time marker should be hired for the English Department at L.V. Rogers\nHigh School.\nA recommendation to transport |\ngrade seven Blewett Elementary\nSchool students to the Trafalgar Junior-Secondary School in\norder to improve the educational\nsituation for all students concerned and to Increase teacher\nentitlement by one teacher, was\ncarried.\nQUESTIONS TEACHER USE\nMrs. C. E. Bradshaw raised\nthe question of teachers using\nrecreation facilities at the\nschools without paying for lights\nor the use of the gymnasiums,\n\"I feel that the taxpayers are\nbeing deprived of their rights to\nfree access to these faculties and\nthat they, as taxpayers are sup-\nporting, by their payments to\nthe school board, the free entertainment of these teachers.\"\nMr. Cuthbert pointed out that\nthe principals of the schools involved felt that this activity\nwould have a unifying affect on\nthe teachers as a group and\nwould enhance the teaching atmosphere in general.\nC. J. Anderson, Salmo representative, added that teachersj\nput in a lot of extra time helping\nindividual students, aside from\ntheir regular hours, and that\nthis should be considered a\n\"fringe benefit\" in this regard\nThe matter was referred to\nthe building committee, under\ntrustee R. A. Archibald.\nIn giving his report for the\nbuilding and transportation com\nmittee, Mr. Archibald announced\nthe letting of a contract for the\ninstallation of a wall furnace at\nthe W. E. Wasson Elementary\nSchool at Remac to the Rockgas\nPropane Co. This was the lowest\nof two bids submitted.\nIt was noted that this conversion to propane would eliminate\nwaste and would consolidate expenses.\nOther business included the\nconsideration of the request of\nMr. F. E. Parsons of the Salmo\nElementary School for an additional 10 per cent relief help from\na relieving teacher and the passage on the request of the Armed\nForces to present to the grade 12\nstudents a program entitled\n\"Armed Forces Career Opportunities.\"\nNew Building Target\nDate Set by NDU\nCouncil gviikspL\nA request for a stop or yield\nsign at the corner of Kootenay\nand SUica Streets was referred\nby city councU to the transportation committee for study Monday night.\n* * *\nThe zoning and electrical bylaws discussion was shelved untU Thursday when council wiU\nhold a special committee meeting.\n\u2022 \u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u00bb\nIhe proposed street closure\nprogram submitted to council at\nits previous meeting was postponed until the next meeting,\n* * *  . -\nA verbal request by an irate\ncitizen over a pigeon problem on,\nthe IOOF building received scant\nattention. Mayor E. T. Bodard\nstated that if the person concerned would approach council\nin the correct manner, by letter,\ncouncU would discuss the matter.\n\u00ab \u00ab \u2022 \u25a0.\nGovernment agent George L.\nBrodie submitted a request for\nImmediate attention to resurfacing of Stanley Street from Vernon to the CPR tracks. CouncU\nagreed tp patch the road where\nnecessary.\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nTerry Wayllng was elected to\nfill a vacancy on the Nelson Ad\nvisory Planning Commission.\n\/. * \u2022 \u2022\nCity, council authorized Mayor\nBodard to attend the opening\nceremonies of the Burnaby Tech,\nnical \"Collegi Oct. 5. Aid. Edith\nVan Maarion questioned the effectiveness of sending Mayor\nBodard. After discussion the\nmotion was approved.\n-. .\u00bb- \u2022\u25a0. *'.\nThe Nelson Police Commission\nsubmitted a brief to Council suggesting that Notre Dame University area be designated a school\nzone, and that traffic lights or\na stop sign be placed on Gordon\nRoad. CouncU accepted the proposal and referred it to the transit committee for further consideration.\nCouncil Monday, granted Pacific Petroleums permission to\nconstruct a service station in\n| Nelson. Council was informed by\ncity building inspector D. A.\nTurner that there were 02 property owners In the petition area\n| of which 40 had signified their\nagreement to the proposed gas\nstation. Thii gave an acceptance\npercentage of 64.70 which was\nacceptable under the'Municipal\nAct.\n40-Year Pin Presented at\nVisit of Eagles' Head\nNATAL - Otoerving the official visit of B.C. provincial\npresident Fred Gott of New\nWestminster, Michel Aerie NO;\nl\u00ab64. Fraternal Order of Eagles\nheld a special meeting in the\nMichel Hotel basement.\nThe provincial president wat\nin the process of making hit first\nofficial vitits to aU aeries in\nthe East Kootenay diitrict, starting with Michel and proceeding\nto visit the series in Cranbrook,\nKintberley and Creston. During\nthe meeting one new member,\nLever Sandau wat initiated Into\nthe Order.\nPresentations to eight members were also made of veteran\npins, which are awarded to members in good standing who have\nattained Jo ot more years in the\naerie; 20-year pint to Alex Sine-\ntar, Alble Krall, Joe Halko, Tom\nSanderson; 90-year pins to John\nLetasy and Fred Musil, the latter now residing in Salmo.\nA 40-year pin wat also presented to veteran member Joe\nBrobotky.\nTwo othtt memners, eligible\nfor the veteran fins, were not\npresent for the occasion.\nAddressing the membership,\nprovincial president Gdit spoke\nBritannia Beach\nMine Closing\nBRITANNIA BEACH. B.C.\n(CP) - Anaconda (Canada)\nLimited has begun closing down\na copper mine which was once\nthe largest in the Commonwealth.\ntn 60 yttn tt operation, tht\nmine at thit seaside rail ttop it\nmiles North of Vancouver has\nyielded nearly 1,000,000,000\npounds of copper.\nSince Aug. n, however, the\ncompany and its 300-plus employees have been deadlocked\non wages and- working hours and\nthe company says the mine will\nhave to close.\nbriefly regarding th* FOE-spon\nsored Youth Guidance program,\nCancer Fund, Membership and\nEagledotn. In. attendance also\nwas the past president of Cranbrook aerie.\nFoUowing the meeting, a social\nand dance was held in St. Paul's\nChurch hall at Michel.\nAccompanying Mr. Gott was\nhis wife. During their brief visit\nin Michel, Mr. and Mrs. Fred\nGost were the guests ot Mr. and\nMrs. J. K. Mitchell. Mr. Mitchell\nIs secretary of the Michel aerie.\nPresident of the Rebekah at-\ntembly of B.C., Sitter Gertrude\nHolland of Vancouver made hir\nofficial visit recently to the Cassandra Rebekah Lodge No. tl in\nNatal. She was accompanied by\nSis. Jean McKefrockav, DDP, of\nAdinah Rebekah Lodge No. 8 of\nTrail, who was travelling with\nthe president to Golden. During\ntheir visit to Natal, they were\nthe guests 6f Sis. Alice Litt'e,\nDDP. After the meeting, the\nhonored guests and members\nsat down to a nice supper and\nsocial. The president during her\nbrief stay also visited all the\ntick and shutins; also paid a\nspecial visit to Bro. Tony DeLuca of Michel, a past grand\nand lowttlmc Oddfellow member\nwho will be 90 yeart of age and\nand regarded at one ot the oldest citizem in th* Natal-Michel\ndiitrict.\nCHOOUETTE\nFUELS\nPH. 352.7535\nTht Finest Stoker Coals\nORDER NOW!\nOur Specialty -\nSTOKER MIXES\nSteadily Increasing enrollment\nat NDU is making it newssary\nfor the university to gear up its\nbuilding program, according to\nRev. Aquinas Thomas, president.\nOriginally, it was planned that\n24 buildings would be constructed by 1970; now it appears necessary to have the program completed by 1967.\nTo the six buildings now standing on the campus must be added\nmany others. At present Pnte-\nnaude Hall houses administration and faculty offices classrooms, library and laboratories.\nWomen students are noised in\nLaSallette HaU and men in St.\nMartin's and McCarthy Halls.\nKitchen, dining, gymnasium and\nrecreation facilities are to be\nfound ln Maryhall, the student\nunion building. There is also a\nchapel for small religious services.\nMaryhall and McCarthy HaU,\nto be formally opened Oct, 17,\nhave been constructed this year\nat a cost of $1,200,000, plus the\ncost of landscaping. The campus\nhas been graded with permanent contours built around the\nstudent union building and women's dormitory. Grass seed has\nbeen planted over the campus.\nBy 1967 it is expected that .1600\nstudents will register for the\nacademic year. The maximum\nnumber of students to be maintained eventually will be 3500.\nAccording to the  president,\nWANTED\nUSED\nOUTBOARDS\nTrade UP to a\n1964 JOHNSON\nOn Display at\nCOLEMAN\nELECTRIC\nplans to accommodate these students must be carried out immediately. By next fall the sod must\nbe turned for a library buUding\nand a science building, each to\nbe built at a cost of $2 million.\nBecause the women students\nnow outnumber the rooms available, either an eight-storey building or three buildings to be used\nas women's residences must be\nconstructed soon. Another men's\nresidence will also be needed.\nThis program will cost close to\n$5 miUion. When it is completed\nthere will be a complex of women's residences and one of men's\nresidences.\nFather Aquinas believes that\nbefore the entire building program at NDU is completed, $20\nmillion will be spent by the university. He feels that a campaign\nfor the first $15 million must be\nlaunched immediately to get the\nprogram under way.\nCOLOR TV\n352-3355\nVIDEO\nELECTRONICS\nCapture the Romance of\n\"RED ROSES\"\nBy YARDLEY\nSoap, Talc, Cologne,\nSpray Mist, Bath Salts,\nDusting Powder and\nBath OU\nSold at\nMayo Pharmacy\nLtd.\nCorner Baker and Ward Sts.\nPh. 352-2613        Nelson, B.C.\nK9US\nAT\nQUEEN\nCITY\nFUEL\nDIAL 352-5018 - NELSON\nwatch tomorrow's Taper\nFor Fall Bay Day Specials for\nThursday. Friday - Saturday\n Stock Quotations\nThe Dally News does not hold Itself responsible In the event\nof an error lo the foUowing lists.\nClosing  prices supplied  by  Doberty,   Roadhouse  ft\nMcCuaig Bros., Trail, B.C.\nTORONTO STOCKS\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi 14.87\nAsbestos 25.00\nAlberta Dist. 3.90\nAlgoma Steel 74.12\nAlta Gas Trunk 33.62\nAluminum 34.50\nArgus 17.62\nArgus C Pfd 13.62\nBank of Montreal 67.75\nBank of N.S. 77.25\nBathurst Power 26.87\nBell Telephone 57.75\nB.A, Oil 35.75\nB.C. Forest 33.50\nB.C. Packers A 17.25\nB.C. Telephone 62.75\nCalgary Power 23.75\nC. & Dom. Sugar 25.00\nCan. Cement 46.00\nCan. Collieries 12.12\nCan. Iron 39.25\nCdn Breweries 10.50\nCdn Canners 14.87\nCan. Industries 20.37\nCan. Imp. Bank 67.25\nCdn Pacific Ry. 54.37\nChemcell 17.25\nCol. Cellulose 12.00\nCons. Mining & S 39.62\nCons. Paper 42.12\nCons. Gas 12.00\nCrestbrook Tbr. 4.15\nDist. Seagrams 86.50\nDom. Stores 22.75\nDom Tar & Chem 22.75\nDom. Textiles 29.75\nEddy Match Co. 48.75\nEddy Paper 20.00\nFalconbridge 77.62\nFamous Players 19.87\nFanny Farmer 45.00\nFord Motor Co. 61.37\nFord of Canada 183.00\nGen. Steel Wares 14.75\nGoodyear 156.00\nGt. Lakes Power 26.00\nHome Oil A 19.75\nHome Oil B 19.75\nHudson Bay Co. 17.12\nImperial Oil 51.25\nImp. Tobacco 14.37\nInd. Minerals 9.50\nInland Nat. Gas 9.00\nIntl. Utilities 27.50\nInt. Nickel 90.37\nInterprov. Pipe 91.50\nInterprov. Steel 3.45\nLaurentide 17.00\nLoblaw B 8.75\nMassey Ferguson 29.25\nMacM Powell R 34.75\nMolson Brew, A 34.75\nMont. Loco,\nMoore Corp.\nNoranda\nOgilvie Flour\nPacific Pete\nPage Hersey\nPrice Bros.\nPower Corp.\nQue. Nat. Gas\nRoyal Bank\nRothmans\nSalada Foods\nShell OU\nSimpsons\nSoutham\nSteel of Canada 26.25\nTraders Fin. A 14.00\nTexaco 62.75\nTrans Mtn. Pipe 19.87\nTrans Can. Pipe 42.62\nUnion Gas of Can 24.00\nWalker-Gooder. 36.00\nWestcoast Trans. 17.75\nWeston Geo. A 17.62\nWoodwards A 26.62\nZenith Elect.        4.05\nMINES AND OILS\n13.25\n57.75\n48.50\n14.62\n12.37\n29.75\n47.37\n14.25\n11.12\n76.00\n19.25\n12.25\n18.87\n25.37\n30.00\nAdvocate\nAgnico\nAunor\nBateman\nBarnat\nBethlehem Cop.\nBibis\nBralorne\nBrunswick\nCalg. i Ed.\nCampbell Chib\nCan. Delhi\nCampbell R.L.\nCariboo Gold\nCassiar Asb.\nCons.. Rambler\nCentral Del Rio\nCentral Patricia\nCharter Oil\nChimo\nCoch. WiU\nCoin Lake\nCons. Halliwell\nCons. Mogul\nConwest   -\nCopper Corp.\n6.40\n.69\n3.70\n.mv,\n.73\n7.95\n.29\n4.20\n13.25\n22.87\n4.80\n9.00\n17.87\n.90\n11.50\n1.52\n8.15\n1.34\n1.71\n.84\n3.05\n.18^4\n.29V4\n3.70\n5.60\n.41\n15.00\n25.25\n4.00\n74.25\n33.87\n34.62\n17.87\n13.75\n68.00\n78.00\n27.00\n57.87\n36.00\n33.75\n19.00\n63.00\n24.00\n25.50\n46.50\n39.75\n10.62\n15.25\n20.75\n67.75\n54.50\n17.50\n12.12\n39.75\n42.25\n12.12\n4.40\n66.62\n23.00\n22.87\n30.00\n49.75\n20.75\n78.00\n20.00\n47.00\n62.12\n184.75\n15.00\n157.00\n26.25\n19.87\n19.87\n17.25\n51.62\n14.50\n10,50\n9.25\n27.75\n90.62\n92.00\n3.50\n17.12\n8.87\n29.50\n34.87\n35.00\n13.50\n58.00\n48.75\n14.75\n12.50\n30.00\n47.75\n14.37\n11.25\n76.37\n19.37\n12.37\n19.00\n25.50\n30.37\n26.37\n14.12\n63.25\n20.00\n42.87\n24.25\n36.25\n17.87\n17.87\n26.87\n4.15\n6.50\n.70\n3.90\n.0814\n.75\n8.00\n.Wk\n4.35\n13.37\n23.37\n5.00\n9.10\n18.37\n.94\n11.62\n1.56\n8.20\n1.38\n1.73\n.85\n3.15\n.19%\n.31\n3.75\n8.80\nPreston\nProvo\nQuebec Lithium\nQuemont\nRadiore\nRayrock\nReeves Mac\nRio Algom\nSan Antonio\nSarimco\nSheep Creek\nSherritt Gordon\nSilver Standard\nSiscoe\nSteep Rock\nSullivan Con.\nTeck Corp.\nTemagami\nTorbrit\nTriad OU\nTribag\nUnion OU\nUnited Keno\nUnited Oil\nUpper Canada\nViolamac\nWestern Mines\nWright Harg.\nWilroy\n6.67\n2.10\n3.15\n9.65\n.42\n.90\n2.75\n11.50\n.23\n.20%\n1.41\n4.70\n.65\n2.20\n6.50\n2.95\n5.35\n1.05\n.61\n2.40\n1.70\n15.00\n8.70\n.66\n1.27\n2.81\n5.00\n.74\n1.71\n6.70\n2.12\n3.20\n9.70\n.43\n.93\n3.00\n11.62\n.24\n.21 Vt\n1.48\n4.75\n.67\n2.25\n6.55\n2.97\n5.45\n1.07\n.66\n2.44\n1.72\n15.25\n8.75\n1.30\n2.84\n5.05\n.80\n1.73\nVancouver\nSlocks\nINDUSTRIALS\nBurrard Mort.\nGrowers A\nGrowers B\nSun Pub. A\nSun Pub. B\nInt. Brew. B\nMINES AND OILS\n5.00\n5.00\n19.50\n20.00\nAce Mining\nBlue Star\nCanam Cop.\nCrown Silver\nCooper Soo\nDolly Varden\nHuestis\nJericho\nLytton Mines\nMagnum\nMt. Washington\nNew Ainsworth\nOttawa SUver\nPeace River Pete\nPend Oreille\nSilver Ridge\nSkeena SUver\nTrojan\nWestern Expl.\nTorwest\nUtica Mines\nFUNDS\nAll. Can. Com.\nAll. Can. Div.\nAmer. Growth\nCan. Inv. Fund\nCommon. Int.\nDiv. Inc. B\nFirst OU ft Gas\nInvestors Growth\nInv. Mutual\nLeverage\nMutual Accum.\nMutual Bond\nMutual Inc.\nTrans Canada C\nGroup Income\nUnited Ace.\n1.04\n.20\n.12\n.13\n4.95\n5.50\n5.25\n19.87\n21.00\n8.25\n1.06\n.20%\n.13\n.14\n.30\n.72\n.37\nCowichan Cop.\n.49\n.49%\nCraigmont\n16.12\n16.25\nDenison\n16.87\n17.12\nDickenson\n5.00\n5.25\nDiscovery Mines\n3.30\n3.35\nEast Malartic\n1.65\n1.85\nEast SuUivan\n4.05\n4.10\nFargo\n3.05\n3.15\nFrobex\n.85\n.88\nFirst Maritimes\n2.52\n2.53\nGeco\n37.75\n38.25\nGiant Mascot\n1.30\n1.33\nGiant Yel.\n13.75\n14.00\nGranduc\n6.75\n6.80\nGunnar Mines\n6.80\n8.90\nHighland BeU\n7.40\n7.60\nHollinger\n29.50\n30.00\nHudson Bay Mg\nHudson Bay Oil\n70.00\n70.50\n15.62\n15.75\nHydra Ex\n.22\n.23\nIron Bay\n.90\n.92\nIso\n1.90\n1.95\nKerr Addison\n7.15\n7.30\nLabrador\n36.75\n37.00\nLake Dufault\n12.37\n12.50\nLeitch\n5.50\n5.60\nLittle Long Lac\n1.76\n1.81\nLorado\n1.51\n1.55\nMadsen\n2.08\n2.10\n.Malartic\n.68\n.72\nMattagami Lake 15.75\n,16.00\nMclntyre\n59.50\n60.00\nMcKenzie\n11.50\n12.00\nMidcon\n.39\n.40\nNational Pete\n4.25\n4.35\nNew Cont. Oils\n.34%\n.37\nNew Hosco\n3.05\n3.10\nNorlex\n.13%\n.14\nNormetal\n3.55\n8.85\nNorthgate\n5.50\n5.55\nOpemiska\n8.75\n8.80\nQrmsby\n.41\n.43\n,\/rchan\n5.75\n5.90\nPetrol OtS\n.57\n.58\nPickle Crow\n.53\n.56\nPine Point\n32.50\n33.00\nPlace Gas\n.66\n.68\nPlai'.er\n40.12\n40.37\nPatino\n8.55\n8.75\n.25\n.76\n.07%\n.17\n.41%\n8.70\n.12\n.21%\n.15%\n.74\n1.44\n6.23\n8.36\n10.57\n4.11\n10.63\n5.86\n5.53\n8.30\n14.72\n9.41\n4.79\n8.02\n5.82\n8.02\n4.20\n.27\n.78\n.17%\nPRELUDE TO DISASTER \u2014 Feeding time at a swallow's nest built\non the side of a house at Mirror Lake was becoming precarious as the fledglings grew huskier from mother swallow's continuous efforts to keep her\nbrood satisfied, when this picture was taken by Percy Orrell of Mirror\nLake. Next morning, remains of the neat and several feathers on the verandah floor were all that remained to be seen of this domestic tableau.\nLegion Essay Contest\nTime Approaching\nSALMO \u2014 The forthcoming\nRoyal Canadian Legion essay\ncontest and a request from the\nBoy Scout Association for use of\nthe Legion Hall were topics dealt\nwith at the recent Legion meeting of Salmo Branch 217.\nInformation was read by the\nsecretary concerning the essay\ncontest, to be held on a nationwide scale. Commencing at the\nbranch level and progressing\nthrough the zone to Command\nand finally to the Dominion\nCommand, it was determined a\npotential winner in each class\ncould eventually receive the\nsum of $170 in prize money.\nThe essays, to be written on\nthe subject 'How Remembrance\nDay Should Be Observed' will\nbe open to students in grades 7,\n8 and 9 in one class and the\nremainder in grades 10, 11 and\n12 in the other. Local contestants\nwiU be competing for a $10 first\nprize and a $5 second prize in\neach class. All entries submitted\nwill be entered into the Zone\ncompetition for judging at that\nlevel.\nAn appeal was received from\nthe Boy Scouts Association for\nthe use of the Legion hall as a\nmeeting place for that group.\nCongestion in the primary school\nhas displaced the troop from\ntheir former facilities, which\nprompted the request. Wednesday evening of every week between the hours of 4 to 10 p.m.\nwill be made available to that\ngroup for their use. In order to\ncomply with the internal bookkeeping system, the amount of\nthe rental fee ordinarily payable to the Branch will be\ndonated to the Association in an\nequal amount.\nThe reading of the minutes of\nthe last meeting in June revealed a donation of $40 to the local\nGirl Guide Association to aid\nin their purchase of a tent.\nRossland School\nCabinet Installed\nAt Cranbrook\nCattle Sales Up\n\u25a0\nIn Second Auction\n.13\n.22\n.16\n.15\n.75\n1.45\n6.85\n9.16\n11.56\n4.51\n11.65\n6.44\n5.93\n9.03\n16.01\n10.31\n5.24\n8.40\n6.10\n8.40\n4.59\n9.03\nCRANBROOK \u2014 The season's\nsecond sale by Community Auctions Sales Association, Ltd.,\n(East Kootenay) nearly doubled\nits initial sale held last month.\nSold in a few hours and loaded\nfor shipment were 524 head,\nwhich sold for a total of just\nunder $51,000. This brings to\nnearly $87,000 the return for the\n796 head the Association has sold\nso far this year, with three more\nfall sales ahead.\nTwo railway carloads from\nCrescent Valley via Nelson were\namong the entries, and shipments after the sale included a\nrailway car consignment to an\nOntario point. Southern Alberta\nsent most of the buyers, though\na number were also East\nKootenaians. Cattle-liners handled a large volume of shipments.\nTop prices were $19.10 per\ncwt. for steers, $21 for calves,\n$14.50 for cows and $14.75 for\nbulls. The prices were about the\nsame as open market prices in\nCalgary for that day.\nAuctioneer was Warren Cooper of Nanton, helped by Garry\nHammond of Fort Macleod, and\nSalmo Library Has Large\nAddition Junior Books\nSALMO \u2014 Salmo library has\n\"The World and Its Peopples\"\non the shelves with volumes of\nFrance, Russia, Great Britain\nand Ireland, Spain, Japan and\nKorea. In addition, a number\nof new books, manly for juniors.\nhave arrived.\nJunior books are:\nThe Sea Gulls Woke Me, Adventures of Silly BiUy, Duck on\nthe Truck, Look Out Mrs\nDoodlepunk, WiU You Come to\nMy Party, Curious George Rides\na Bike, The Story of Ferdinand,\nIn the Days of the Dinosaurs,\nAdventure at Black Rock Cave,\nGhost Town Treasure, Lonesome\nBear, Homer Price, Quarter\nback's Aim, Star of Wild Horse\nCanyon, Tornado Jones, Trouble\nAfter School, Ginnie and the New\nGirl, Katie John, On Your Toes\nSusie, Trish, Senior Year, Snow\nTreasure, Black Spaniel Mystery, Deadline at Spook Cabin,\nRiddle of the Lonely House, Sea\nView Secret, Miss Pickerell Goes\nto Mars, Miss Pickerell and the\nGeiger Counter, Revolt on Alpha\n'C, Pippi Longstocking, Pippi\nGoes on Board, Spooky Magic,\nTricks and Projects, Sewing Is\nFun, Jokes and Riddles, Codes\nand Secret Writing, Fun With\nChemistry. X-15, Old Yeller,\nShamrock Queen, YeUow Eyes,\nZoo Pals, Fifth Chinese Daughter, Marty, The Dairy of Anne\nFrank, First Woman Doctor, Ben\nHur, WUd Animals I Have\nKnown, Shackletons Valiant Voy-\nAdults' fiction and non-fiction\nbooks include:\nA Tale of Two Cities and David\nCopperfield, Dickens; House of\nthe Seven Gables, Hawthorne;\nSilas Marner, Eliot;. Wuthering\nHeights, Bronte; Turn of the\nScrew and Daisy Miller, Joyce;\nMy Lord, What a Morning, Anderson; Not Death, But Love,\nBurnett; The Prisoner of Zenda,\nHope; Six Centuries of Great\nPoetry, Bulfinch's Mythology,\nRoget's Pocket Thesaurus, A\nStreet Lamp and the Stars,\nFather Borrelli.\nLowest Number Beginners\nIn Years at Natal-Michel\nFrank HU1 of Fort Steele is\ndirector of East Kootenay As-\nsocation affairs.\nNext sale is calves the morning of October 14, when about\n1000 head are expected. Early\nadvance entry is being urged so\nthat buyers can be notified of\nthe prospects in advance.\nBlood Donated Short\nOf Average Requirements\nCRANBROOK-The fall blood\ndonor clinic, held by the Cranbrook Branch of the Red Cross\nduring the semi-annual visit of\nthe Southern Alberta blood service mobile clinic, brought in a\ntotal of 228 bottles from 238 volunteers. This brought to 514 bottles the total donations by Cranbrook people for 1964.\nAmounts of whole blood and\nblood plasma, always immediately available at St. Eugene\nJaycees To Learn of\nHuman Relationships\nIn Business Life\nCRANBROOK \u2014 A ten weeks'\ncourse \"Human Relations and\nProductivity,\" offered by the\nnational Junior Chamber of\nCommerce, has been undertaken\nby Cranbrook Jaycees.\nProvincial economic affairs\nchairman Don CockweU of Cranbrook is making arrangements.\nThe ten lectures discuss basic\nprinciples of getting along with\nothers, and methods of getting\nand giving best return in economic terms.\nReports at the Thursday evening meeting showed a successful broadcasting session by the\norganization the previous evening to mark national Jaycee\nWeek.\nAt conclusion of the business\nsession, 14 Kimberley Jaycees,\nwho had taken on this radio\nbroadest work Thursday, joined\nCranbrook Jaycees.\nSpecial program Item was\nthe B.C. Telephone demonstration by Doug Smith of the\npart telephone service taken\nIn operation of NORAD, when\nthe meeting was In direct\ncommunication with NORAD\nheadquarters.\nDistrict Jaycee. golf tournament the previous Sunday at\nCranbrook, with Creston and\nKimberley taking part, was won\nby Doug Aikman of Cranbrook.\nCentennial\nProject Canvass\nGets Under Way\nROSSLAND\u2014Rossland's share\nof the cost of its proposed centennial project, the museum\nbuilding, will be the object of a\ncanvass to be held this week\nfollowing a meeting Monday\nnight.\nThe project will be a museum,\nshaped like a mine hoist house\nand headframe, to be situated\nin a park-like area at Black\nBear junction, where roads\nbranch out to Rossland, Sheep\nLake and Paterson.\nFinal arrangements for the\ncanvass were made Monday\nnight at St. Andrew's church\nannex. Stan Hewgill, canvass\nchairman, states that the city\nhas been divided into 52 areas\nfor canvassing.\nThe publicity committee under\nTom McRae has been distributing handbills to all households\narranging window displays, and\nplanning radio and newspaper\nadvertising.\nNATAL \u2014 Enrolment at both\nthe Michel-Natal Elementary\nSchool and Sparwood Secondary\nSchool serving the Natal-Michel\ndistrict has been listed at 468\nstudents for the new term, with\na combined teaching staff of 22\nmembers.\nEnrolment at the elementary\nschool is 252 pupils, with 29 beginners in grade 1, the lowest\nnumber of beginners in years.\nThe teaching staff consists of\nMrs. Ann Pascovich, Natal;\nMrs. Arlene Gaal, Natal; Mrs.\nMargaret Chatterson, Natal;\nMrs. Mary Urbash; Mrs. Susan\nRehnby, Vancouver; Miss Joanne Kusnir, Fernie; Mr. Leonard Kosiec, Fernie; special\nintermediate teacher, Donald A.\nR. Chandra, Fiji Islands; Mrs.\nVaUerie DePaoU, Natal; Frank\nMitchell, Natal, who is the\nprincipal.\nEnrolment at Sparwood Sec- class.\nondary School is 216 students,\nabout the same as 1st year, with\n35 of the total being elementary\nstudents.\nTeaching staff at the Sparwood Secondary School includes\nH. Winstanley, Natal: Miss M.\nLeslie, White Rock; Mrs. J.\nCartwright, Natal; J. Dixon,\nKimberley; C. Ungaro, Natal;\nF. Bonderoff, Salmo; Mrs. M.\nE. Dufour, Natal; A. Lalonde,\nNatal: M. Bruschetta, Natal;\nMiss A. Curtis, Vancouver. H.\nH. Peebles of Quesnel, B.C. is\nvice-principal with W. B. Johnston of Jaffray, B.C., as principal.\nKindergarten classes, with an\nenrolment of 26 pupils, have\nalso started in St. Michael's Hall\nat Natal under the direction of\nSister Mary Paulinus of the\nSisters of the Atonement, who\nconduct the yearly kindergarten\nAnnouncement\nof Motion\nIn trying to promote public interest so that\nCentennial Club will not continue to bog down\nto a lot of talk and do nothing organization I\nwill move at the next meeting:\nThat the Centennial Club wUl promote a Centennial Queen Contest.\nThat contestants for Queen wiU promote a project for majority popularity.\nContestants wiU be credited votes by purchasers\nel membership in club.\nThat purchasers of membership can also allot\nvotes for project of choice.\nThat purchasers of membership can allot votes\nfor other project than Queen contestants they allot\nvotes for.\nThat members for contest purposes will not be\nlimited In number of membership purchases.\nMembers can, however, have one vote only la\nconduct of business of club regardless of number of\nmemberships purchased.\nThis Is purpose of promoting public interest without rejection of any project that might become public\nchoice by majority.\nProjects unworthy of promotion will not be likely\nto be promoted.\nE. A. CALBICK,\nChairman of Membership,\nNelson Centennial Club\nHospital from the Red Cross\nWood depot in Calgary, vary\nfrom year to year for Cranbrook\nrequirements, but the total given this year is slightly short of\nthe average requirements.\nAt the Thursday cUnic in the\nRP Hall, Red Cross scrolls acknowledging donations of 20 bottles or more were presented to\nLarry Betts, George Dougall,\nGeorge Haras, T. A. Walmsley,\nAlec Yadernuk, Mrs. D. R. Maxwell and R. D. Butler.\nCranbrook Chapter of the Registered Nurses Association provided professional assistance and\nthe Cranbrook Jaycettes clerical\nand refreshment part of the\nclinic\nRossland Mines\nActivity\nShows Increase\nROSSLAND \u2014 Considerable\nactivity is taking place on local\nmining properties at present,\nmore than has been in evidence\nfor a number of years.\nIt is reported that McKinney\nGold Mines has acquired the\nElmo and Queen mineral claims\nfrom Glover and Grubisic and\nthe Novelty and 14 claims in the\nSouth Belt from Rossland Mines\nLtd. Raising is to be done on the\nMayflower claim from the bottom level to tap the main shaft\nand diamond drilling will be\ndone on this claim as well.\nJohn Harkoff of Lynden,\nWash., has. taken an option on\nthe Eureka, Evening and Crowe-\nHunter Fraction mineral claims\nfrom Warren Crowe.\nW. Thompson of Vancouver is\nactive on O.K. Mountain on the\nMidnight Mineral Claim, E. A.\nRuelle and the Hermon Bros, of\nRossland are active in 'he same\nMOTORCYCLIST INJURED\nCASTLEGAR (CP) - George\nKennedy of Kettle FaUs, Wash.,\nsuffered undetermined injuries area on lhe 1XL- clalm-\nSunday when his motorcycle left j C. Chisholm of East Utah Min-\nthe highway near here and ing Co., is making an oxamina-\nplunged 50 feet down a bank, tion of the Albion Mine near\nIt was believed his machine' Sheep Lake owned by W.\nlanded on top of him. Schwartzenhauer of Castlegar.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUES., SEPT. 29, 1964 \u2014 3\nROSSLAND - Members of the\nstudent government of Rossland\nSecondary School, elected by\ntheir classmates in the spring,\nwere installed in their offices\nduring the auditorium period.\nVice-Principal J. H. Gagnon\nrecaUed that this was the 14th\nsuch ceremony to be held at the\nschool.\nHeading the student parliament for this year as prime minister is Lome McWatters, with\nVirginia Mohr as deputy prime\nminister. Sandra McGauley is\nminister of records, and Evelyn\nWilUams minister of finance.\nInstalled as cabinet members\nwere Lois Graham as minister of\nsocial affairs; Carol Stanton as\ndeputy minister of social affairs.\nMary Hughes, minister without\nportfolio; Don Fodor, minister\nof culture; Linda Caswell, minister of athletics: Ron Rutherglen, minister of publications;\nJean Bell, minister of Grand af\nfairs; Faye Janni, deputy minister of finance.\nThe elected home-room presidents, from divisions 1 to 21 respectively are: Brian Mauchline\nJo-Anne Herman.s Donna Davison, Judy Prestley, Bev Zentner,\nDon McKay, Penney Thomas.\nBeverly Eccles, Kevin Bell, Dan\nBrinson, Sally Haley, Teddy Fie\nming, David Beauchamp, Arthur Hastings, Grant Rutherglen\nNancy DesFarlais, Ron Quarrie,\nStephen McKay, Valerie Fine,\nPhyllis Green and James Mi!-*\nell.\nCARS REJECTED\nCHILLIWACK (CP)-The provincial mobUe testing station\nrejected more than 80 per cent\nof the 600 vehicles tested here\nlast week. David Greenwood of\nthe Chamber of Commerce said\nthe high rejection rate indicates\nmore such mobUe testing units\nare needed.\na-\nht\ns.\nin-\nial\nig,\nir-\niw\nas\nhe\nhe\nof\nth\n\u25a0n,\na\na\nre\nOPERATION\nDOORSTEP\nSCHEDULE FOR TUESDAY:\nStanley and Robson Sti. \u2014 1-4 p.m., 5-9 p.m.\nKootenay St. and Hall Mines Rd.\u20141-4 p.m., 5-9 p.m.\nFEEL SAFE-NOT SORRY\nFREE TB TESTS and X-RAYS for all persons\n6 months of age and ever.\nChristmas Seals Fight Chest Disease\nnd\nof\nir-\n>y.\nad\niron\nby\nFALL FOOD FAIR\nCheck Our Value Packed Flyer for These\nand Many More Outstanding Values\nB.C Sugar\nNo. 1 White, Granulated\n10 Ib. bag 77\nEmpress. Pure Seville\nOrange er G.L.O.\n\" fl. o\u00ab. fin\t\nMarmalade \u00a7\nSafeway Coffee\nStrawberry Jam i\nAll Purpose Grind.\n1 lb. bag ._\nEmpress Pure.\n\"\" fl. ot. tin .\n79\n79\n99\nSafeway Superb Beef\nSteaks\nSirloin or Club. II\nTop Quality B.C. Beef.It)\nCanada Choice.  *\n85c\nBananas\nPlump, Firm Fruit - No. 1 Quality\n6 h. $1.00\nPrices\nEffective\nSept. 29th\nto\nOct. 3rd\nWe Reserve the\nRight to Limit\nQuantities\nll) SAFEWAY\nCANADA    SAFEWAY    LIMITED\nI\nI\n Established AprU 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 ot ths Kootenays with\nthe largest daily circulation in the Interior oi B.C.\nAuthorized as Second Class Mail. Post Oltics Department, Ottawa.\nand for Payment ol Postage in Cash.\nMEMBER OF THK CANADIAN PRESS\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN DAILY NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION\nMEMBER OF THE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS\nThe Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use (or republication ol all news\ndispatches credited to it or to The Associated Press or Reuters in this\npaper and also the local news published herein.\nTuesday, September 29, J 964\nNotre Dame on to Qreater Things\nThe continued growth of Notre\nDame University since its inception\nhas not been without history, hardship or variety. It is a mere 13 years\nsince Notre Dame College was instituted, and since then ambitious\nstrides have been taken, culminating In the founding of Notre Dame\nUniversity.\nSince inception as a university\nNDU has been amply endowed with\nacademic vigor and a large measure\nof foreslghtedness. NDU, in its short\nspan oi life as a university, has developed unique avenues oi research\nand education, which is remarkable\nin such a young educational establishment.\nThere have been many universities which have started from humble\nbeginnings and made academic history by their achievements and ingenuity. NDU will be no exception.\nIf the faculty and staff of the univer\nsity apply themselves wholeheartedly to the task oi expansion and\nacceptance oi academic recognition\nby other universities, they will eventually have a university which will\nbe hard to beat anywhere in Canada.\nAdmittedly NDU has no historical\nbackground. But think oi the opportunity oi creating your own university history.\nNotre Dame University has so iar\nshown that it is capable oi providing\nimpetus, and will without doubt aspire to greater things in the next\ndecade. The citizens oi Nelson should\nrealize what an asset the university\nwill prove in the years to come. University education is not coniined to\nthe hallowed halls of NDU. In its wisdom the faculty have provided an\nambitious extension program which\nis open to Nelsonites.\nGood luck in your endeavors,\nNotre Dame University of Nelson.\nAnswers Needed to Teenage Employment\nThe rate oi teenage unemployment among the 14- to 19-year\nbracket who are in the labor force is\nmore than three times the unemployment rate for those in the 24- to 64-\nyear category.\nIn July, the unemployment rate\noi the two groups was, respectively,\n9.8 per cent and 2.7 per cent. Over\nthe coming winter there will be a\nteenage work iorce in excess oi 700,-\n000 persons, according to the Department oi Labor. It is anticipated\nthat 13 per cent will be constantly\nunemployed.\nIt is easy to overestimate the economic importance oi teenage unemployment. Only about one-third oi\npersons in this group are in the labor\nforce, and few oi those who are job-\nVeronica\nAnd the Savages\nZiuuit caizsns hereaouuis who\nlake a dim view of top-heavy coii-\nieurs sported these days by many\niemale teenagers received some\nmoral support recently irom two\nrather disparate sources: wartime\nscreen siren Veronica Lake and a\nfew hundred extremely angry New\nGuinea head-hunlers. As some oi\nour older readers will remember,\nVeronica's succes de scandale, as\nit were, was a long, peek-a-boo hairdo. On a CBC quiz program Veronica\npurred a spirited denunciation of the\nbee-hive look as well she might.\nMeanwhile, back in New Guinea the\nsecond unit oi a low-budget Hollywood iilm outiit shot a couple hundred ieet oi the ierocious head-\nhunters and, by goily, they looked\nnot unlike some oi the young ladies\nwe see oi a morning tripping daintily\nto high school under a huge mass\nof hair. The late movie involving the\nheadhunters shook a good many\nmummies and daddies, we'll wager.\n\"Isn't that our Margie, that one on\nthe left with the spear?\"\nNow mind you we're not about\nto advise young ladie3 to dismantle\nthese mops altogether. The Veronica\nLake Look left a great deal to be\ndesired, too, and probably lengthened the second world war. We just\nthink the girls ought to avoid extremes, lust as actual bee-hives come\nin all sizes depending upon the\nnumber of buzzers involved, observing the inexorable law oi economy\nin nature, so should the ascent of a\ngirl's crpwning glory pursue a moderate course. Who knows? If those\nsavages in New Guinea hadn't gone\noverboard topside, many more of\nthem might have contrived to keep\ntheir heads, and these days, what\nwith mid-term tests and all, that's\njust what a girl's got to do, eh?\n\u2014Penficfon Herald.\nless must fully support themselves or\na family. But jobless teenagers are a\ndistinct social problem.\nTeenage unemployment is as\ngreat a difficulty in the United States,\nand the late President Kennedy, realizing this, established a \"Committee\non Youth Employment\" to examine\nand resolve the inherent problems.\nIf teenage employment is not\ngiven prime consideration by the\ngovernment, whole lifetimes will be\nlost or seriously whiled away in idleness and recrimination. The end result will be a corrosive effect on our\nnational economic and social structure. Consequently, the problem of\nteenage employment requires immediate and profound study.\nTo some extent labor organizations create an artificial job barrier\nby imposing high starting salary\nrequirements. Also, an eiiect of the\nMinimum Wage Act creates a major\nproblem for employers who cannot\naiiord to engage untrained youngsters.\nGovernment legislation should be\nenacted to ensure that the unemployed teenager is not the recipient\nof this situation. In Canada training\ncourses are being made readily\navailable. However, results in this\nfield have been disappointing.\nPerhaps the government could\nextend the wage scale subsidy at\npresent in effect to over 45-year-old\nemployees to the teenagers. Fitting\nthemselves for later life is the responsibility, in the main, of the teenagers themselves. Government and\nindustry can certainly help but the\nroad will be a long one.\nFemale, Female\nA famous New York iashion designer, Mr. Oleg Cassini, is about to\nburst Upon the world with a wholly\nnew idea in feminine beauty. It appears from a Reuters dispatch that\nhe has found the startling concept\nin Sweden. He has discovered women who look like women.\nMr. Cassini plans to bring out\nsome models with attributes which\nmay prove shocking in sophisticated\nNew York: \"Good models without\nmakeup, with long hair that has not\nbeen spoiled by too many fashionable hairdressers, and who are athletic looking.\"\nThat's pretty revolutionary \u2014 females who look iemale. But it just\nmight catch on in New York, and\n\u2022pread around the country. The marriage rate will go up, the divorce\nrate will go down, a new era of domestic happiness may set in. Mr.\nCassini seems to have stumbled on\nsomething big.\n\u2014Victoria Daily Times.\n2000 Men Underground to Keep\nMontreal Metro on Schedule\nOcean,\nBy CY FOX\nMONTREAL (CP) - Some\n2.000 men, burrowing and blasting beneath Canada's biggest\ncity for 26 months, now have\ndug out almost 40 per cent of\nthe route to be covered by the\nprojected Montreal subway system.\n\"Our work is on schedule and\nwe're within our original $180,-\n000,000 budget,\" says Lucien\nL'Allier, director of the city's\npublic works department and\nchief subway engineer.\nLike the subway system in\nParis, the Montreal system will\nbe known as the Metro. It will\nalso take many a technical cue\nfrom the men who run the\nFrench capital's underground\ntrains.\nThe first two routes of the\nthree currently planned for\nMontreal are scheduled to ba\nin operation by the summer of\n1966, and the third, to serve the\nWorld's Fair site on islands in\nthe St. Lawrence River and on\nthe river's south shore, is due\nfor opening early in the year of\nthe fair, 1967.\nA fourth line is contempleted,\nto run north and south under\nmidtown Mount Royal, but a decision on its construction has\nnot yet been made.\nThe three lines will total\nabout 16 miles in length, 4.6\nmiles less than the total for the\nToronto subway, the current extensions of which are scheduled\nfor completion by December,\n1967.\nIn giving figures on the Toronto project, a spokesman for\nthe city's transit company said\nthat system will cost $342,000,-\n000 all told, or $16,601,050 a\nmile. Montreal's average is\nabout $11,260,000 for every mile\nof fully equipped subway.\nGerard Gascon, assistant to\nMr. L'Allier, said a big factor\neasing excavation work in\nMontreal is th* solid rock that\nstarts about 40 feet under the\ncity's surface. Toronto has little rock that close and much\nclay and sand.\nRock enables subwsy builders\nto get their work done with a\nminimum of expensive surface\noperations. The expense would\nresult from the necessity of Interfering with under-the-street\nutilities such as sewers and\npower lines and the purchase of\nsurface property.\n\"Two-thirds of our excavations take the form of tunnelling through rock,\" said Mr.\nGascon, a former mining engineer and veteran of 12 years In\ncity work. \"We get down to 70\nfeet at one point under the city\nand 180 feet down beneath the\nriver.\"\nIt can be dangerous work, but\nrock tunnelling is not so haznr-\ndous as digging through soft\nearth, where there is the constant possibility of collapse.\nOne feature in the design of\nthe Metro's cars has encouraged the tunnel-makers to head\ndown fairly deep. That feature\nis the rubber wheels which allow the cars to climb grades of\nup to six degrees In slope. Such\nwheels also mean relatively\nquiet operation.\nThey are among the features\nthe Montreal system has borrowed from the Paris Metro.\nHELP FROM FRANCE\nIhe connection with Paris is\nextensive. Engineers from the\nFrench capital helped design\nthe Montreal line and some are\nserving as consultants during\nthe construction work.\nThe cars, numbering more\nthan 300, are being built by Ca\nnadian Vickers Limited and account for $45,513,918 of the total\nsubway cost.\nWhere streets are especially\nwide, subway-builders can run\ntheir tubes close to the surface\nand still allow traffic to flow\nduring construction. Wide\nstreets also mean such work\ncan be done without expropriating property along the thoroughfares.\nThe Montreal subway runs\nclose to the surface at the approaches to the 26 stations on\nits lines.\nArchitects designing the stations are being given free rein\nto \"make people forget they're\nunderground and in a subway,\"\nMr. Gascon said.\nSTARTS AT MIDTOWN\nThe subway's main line will\nrun from a point near midtown\nDominion Square east to Champ\nde Mars and then north to Riviere des Prairies, the stream\nseparating the north side of\nMontreal Island from the mainland.\nA second line will run between Atwater Avenue near the\nwest-end site of the Forum and\nan east-end point marked by du\nHarvre Stret. The route will\nrun beneath streets separating\nthe parallel main thoroughfares\nof Sherbrooke and St. Catherine streets.\nThe line Servicing the fair and\nthe South shore will have its\nnorthern terminus at midtown\nde Montlgny Street, with a station at Champ de Mars in addition to its exposition stop on St.\nHelen's Island and a terminal\nstation on the river bank opposite Montreal.\nThe subway, begun in Hay,\n1982, has been a pet project of\nMayor Jean Drapeau, who In\ncluded it in his campaign platform of 1960.\n\"Our big problem is time,\"\nsaid Mr. Gascon, gazing over a\nmaze of maps and drawings.\n\"Everyone in this town seems\nto have his eyes on 1967, and\nin planning the completion of\nour three lines, so have we.\"\nBUSY DAYS AHEAD\nFOR U.S. SPACEMEN\nBy HOWARD BENEDICT\nCAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP)\nA couple of astronauts will take\nthe Project Gemini spacecraft\nup early next year and twist its\ntail.\nIn three orbits of the earth,\nat 17,500 miles an hour, Virgil\nI. (Gus) Grissom and John W,\nYoung will fly the two-seater\nspacecraft backward, forward,\nsideways and upside down. During the five-hour ride they will\ntest every system the ship has\nfor communications, control,\npropulsion and support of life in\nouter space.\nIf all goes well, then comes\nthe big test. Within two months\nafter the Grlssom-Young flight,\nastronauts Edward White and\nJames McDivitt will take the\nGemini up and orbit the earth\nfor four days, by far the longest\nany Americans have been in\norbit: After that, missions will\nincrease to seven days, then 14,\nand then, late in this decade,\nmay come the man-in-the-moon\nlandings to which the Gemini\nexperiments are pointed.\nFor the actual moon ride,\ncalled Project Apollo, the astronauts will use a three \u2022 man\nspaceship now being developed.\nIt will be much larger even\nthan the Gemini, America's\nlargest spacecraft to date.\nThe first unmanned orbit of\na Gemini spacecraft, launched\nby a Titan II rocket, took place\nlast April 8. One more unmanned flight is planned in\nOctober, to test the re-entry\nheat shield and recovery procedures.\nWILL MAKE REPORTS\nWhen the Titan It rocket\nblasts away from Cape Kennedy\nit will burn for five minutes, 36\nseconds and shove the spacecraft into an orbit ranging from\n100 to 185 miles above the\nearth. During the powered\nphase of flight, Young will\nmake continuous reports to\nCape Kennedy on cabin pressure, oxygen supply and propellent status.\nGrissom will report on unusual vibrations and separation\nof Titan's two stages, shut-off\nof the second stage engine, separation of the spacecraft and\nthe \"go-no go\" status of the\ncrew just before insertion into\norbit. He will press the button\nwhich will separate the 7,000-\npound capsule from the booster.\nOn launching, the astronauts\nwill grip rings attached to the\nfloor between their legs. In case\nof trouble during the first one\nminute, 35 seconds of flight lup\nto 70,000 feet), they will be able\nto pull the rings and ejection\nseats will shoot them away\nfrom the spacecraft and parachute them to earth.\nIf trouble develops above 70,-\n000 feet the astronauts will fire\nrockets on the base of the craft\nto shoot themselves free of the\nrocket, and the entire capsule\nwill parachute to earth.\nGrissom and Young will ride\nsideways, one above the other,\nduring the launching phase.\nAfter Grissom separates the\nspacecraft, he will roll the\nspace chariot 90 degrees so he\nand Young are riding upright.\nOnce in orbit, the pilots are\nweightless. Restraining straps\nwill prevent them from floating\nfree in the cabin.\nArtist Gathers Unschooled\nNative Talent of Eskimo Artists\nBecause Civil Defence is\n\"Your Business\" everyone\nshould be familiar with its\naims and objects. Your\nsafety and welfare are both\nInvolved.\nBy ARCH MacKENME\nOTTAWA (CP) - A lot of\nEskimos laughed when Terry\nRyan stopped his dog team at\nremote hunting camps in north\nBaffin Island and handed out\ndrawing pencils and paper.\n\"They nearly fell over when\nthey learned that I had come\njust to give them this pencil\nand paper and the usual response was: 'I can't draw.' \"\nHUBERT\n'I just thought of what I want Santa Claus to\nbrine me next Christens.\"\nBut Mr. Ryan, now finished\nwith this phase of a special\nproject, feels it was all worthwhile as an exercise in artistic\nstimulation among a talented\npeopled. He has about 500 drawings and sketches to show for\nit.\nMr. Ryan, 33, is a friendly\nbachelor born in Toronto who\nfirst went north in 1956 as a\nfederal weather observer. For\nthe last three years he has been\nsecretary and art adviser to the\nWest Baffin Eskimo Co-operative which, among other things,\nmarkets the distinctive, distinguished Eskimo stone cuts and\nprints produced by Cape Dorset\npeoples.\nHe's an artist himself, with\na Toronto exhibition to his\ncredit last year and another\npending, Most of his work has\nfeatured Arctic themes, especially landscapes.\nENCOURAGE DRAWING\nH* reported back to Ottawa\nrecently, tanned and trim, on a\nproject which is backed with a\nCanada CouncU grant\u2014one of\nsix projects providing a total of\n$18,000 to encourage the Eskimo\nto draw.\nMr. Ryan set out in February\nto visit Arctic Bay, Pond Inlet\nand Clyde River on the northern end of Baffin Island, whose\neastern flank faces Greenland.\nThe three communities numbering about 600 people in their\nareas lie about 500 miles apart\nand Pond Inlet, in the centre,\nis 2,000 miles north of Toronto.\nThe trip by dog team was\nroutine to old-hand Ryan, although even the Eskimos complained about the unusually cold\nweather which produced temperatures of 50 below zero in\nMarch when a little relief at\nleast is expected.\nMr. Ryan passed out the paper and pencils on one trip and\nthen picked up the results a few\nweeks later on his way back.\nHe got mostly black-and-white\ndrawings although he had dispensed some colored pencils.\nVariety was Infinite, He tends\nto place more value on the\ncontributions of the older people, some of whom he expects\nwill keep drawing for the fun\nof it. He left an agent in each\narea to collect any further\ndrawings.\n\"The Older people are less\nconcerned about giving you the\nkind of drawing that they think\nyou might want\u2014they are lets\nderivative to that extent,\" Mr.\nRyan said.\nSome of the drawings are detailed work of the area's distinctively styled parkas, pants\nand other fur, skin and cloth\napparel.\nSome drawings crudely display hunting scenes and th&re\nare some landscapes too\u2014a departure from drawings trends\nin Cape Dorset farther south.\nMr. Ryan plans to sift through\nthe drawings he has collected.\nThen he probably will compile\nthe best in a book.\nDrug Trade\nAids Economy\nOf Morocco\nTANGIER (AP) - Over the\nrugged mountains of the north\nMoroccan Rif, a helicopter\nwhirls and men peer through\nbinoculars at the parched slopes\nbelow.\nTheir job is to spot fields of\nkeef, a widely spread narcotic\nand the main means of subsistence for more than 1,000,000\nBerber mountainers.\nDespite efforts of authorities,\nthe growing and smuggling of\nkeef continues to be a booming\nbusiness in the kingdom of Morocco.\nIn the last decade, 325 tons\nof keef were seized. The amount\nof what changed hands, was\nis believe to be only a fraction\nsmoked or left the country\naboard smugglers' boats or in\nthe suitcases of foreigners.\nFor keef\u2014a tobacco-like product similar to Indian hemp-is\none of the cheapest narcotics\navailable. Here, in this once notorious seaport of international\nfame, a pound of keef can be\nbought for as little as $3.\nIt Is smoked In tiny clay pipes\nattached to long wooden holders\nmade by local craftsmen and\nfrequently sold to tourists SS\nsouvenirs in crowded Moroccan\nsouks (markets.\nW.H.P. ISSUES RULING\nUp to 1954, keef was sold\nfreely throughout Morocco. The\nWorld Health Organization declared keef a dangerous drug\nand the fight against the growers and smugglers was on.\nSoon, the government Of newly\nindependent Morocco struck violent opposition of Berbers in the\nnorthern part of the country,\nwhere keef is virtually the only\nthing that doesn't refuse to grow\nin the barren mountains.\nDespite surveillance and hell-\ncopter teams whirling over the\nmountains, the growing of keef\ncontinues\u2014a time-sanctioned occupation passed from father to\nson.\nThe Moroccan keef smoker\nprefers to get his drug straight\nfrom the branch, He likes to separate the grains himself to stuff\nthe tiny pipe and watch the blue\nsmoke curl out in expectation of\nbliss\u2014or the illusion of bliss\u2014\nthat frequently follows.\nLast year, Moroccan courts\ntried 2,000 cases of smuggling.\nIn the same year, 50 tons of keef\nwere burned and 18,000,000\nbranches were destroyed In the\nregion of Ketama in the north\nalone.\nt\n\\\nv\nBuxton\nj-*-'     GeorgetowfTbij*\n1\n\u2022Mackenzie\nV~'*\n~.r\n\/     British  f\n'1 Guiana )\n> \\\n,Jt\nSurinam\nBrazil     i \\\n\\\nT\\      ,J-^'\nMiles NVr# BE\no\ni   i   ii.\nBRITISH COLONY-BRITISH PROBLEM - British Guiana is a self-governing Crown colony on\nthe northeast coast of South America. In the country\nof 83,000 square miles, the population of about\n500,000 comprising almost equal numbers of Negroes\nand East Indians, has been involved in racial clashes.\nSir Richard Luyt, 49, governor, has taken stern steps\nto prevent further violence. (CP Newsmap)\nJagan Switches From\nProphet to Politician\nGEORGETOWN (AP) - British Guiana's Dr. Cheddl Jagan\nhas turned in his prophet's\nrobes for the trappings of a\npractical politician in a last-\nditch move to avert election defeat this fall.\nThe consensus is that the\ndarkly handsome Marxist premier will fail.\nBut to British Guianese who\nnow consider Jagan's ouster a\ncertainty, the forthcoming elections will amount to no more\nthan changing the driver of the\nsame old bus route. This is because of a spreading belief that\nthe wave of racial violence between Guianese of East Indian\nand of African descent has gone\nbeyond political control,\nWithout internal peace and a\ncommon objective, little hope is\nheld for the development ot this\ntroubled colony, whether the\nleader be Jagan or his archrival, Negro leader L. Forbes\nBurnham.\nReflecting the opinion of some\nprominent Guianese, police\ncommissioner Peter Owen said\nrecently: \"Neither Jagan nor\nBurnham can govern without\nthe consent of the other, I'm\nafraid violence has now gone\nbeyond the realm of politics,\"\nThe strapping, ruddy \u2022 faced\nBriton commands a tiny police\nforce of 1,600 men and 600 volunteers often badly overmatched in 24 months of almost\ncontinuous civil strife, Terrorist\nviolence since February has\nclaimed 181 lives; 24 persons\nare missing, more than 800\nhave been wounded and damage\nto property and crops Is estimated at over $2,500,000,\nThe violence has evolved\nmostly around the controversial\npersonalities of the big, erudite\nBurnham and Jagan,\nBurnham, a lawyer \u2022 Shakespearean scholar with a large\nfollowing among the Negro middle and poor classes, is viewed\nwarily by some intellectuals\nwho claim to see in him s disquieting thirst for power.\nA socialist and political ex-\ncolleague of Jagan, Burnham\nbosses the Peoples National\nCongress from a small, third-\nfloor office marked simply\n\"leader.\" Party members refer\nto each other as \"comrade.\"\nThere is hardly any question\nthat Burnham enjoys the fullest\nsupport of the U.S. and British\ngovernments. Jagan is the first\nMarxist with a clearcut man,\ndate in Western Hemisphere\nhistory. But he has been unable\nto govern successfully because\nof strong resistance at home\u2014\nand in London and Washington\n\u2014to his policies, which are regarded as too far left,\nThe waning popularity of\nt h e northwestern university-\ntrained dentist was clearly visible in I960 elections that gave\nhim only 42.7 per cent of the\nelectorate. He held on to the\nprime ministry, however, under i\nthen existing election regulations.\nThe Jagan party's all-India\nbase also has been shaken by -\ndefections of small Hindu and\nMoslem groups. These losses, i\nattributed to an antl-Commu- (\nnist surge, are believed behind;1\nthe premier's recent moves to|\nportray himself in a friendlier, I\nmore moderate light among!\nbusinessmen and the church.\nPersons close to the party\nhierarchy report Jagan and his\ntop strategists are even giving\nconsideration to a public denunciation of communism,\nWord of Lite\nThou wilt show me the path\nof life: in thy presence is fulness of joy: at thy right hand\nthere are pleasures for evermore. Psalm 16:11.\nMATU-UKI George Leontrd,\nIT, complains that the principal ot his high school In\nAttleboro, Mass., Joseph B.\nJoyce, ia asking him to cut\noff his future in asking him\nto cut 6tf some oi that hair\nGeorge Says his future ai ir\nentertainer depends on tt\u00ab\nBeatle-llke mop.\nToday\nIn History\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nSept. 28, 1984 . . .\nWilliam of Noimandy\nlanded in England lo promote and establith hii\nclaim to the English throne\n898 years ago today \u2014 In\n1066. Two weeks later ha\nmet and defeated King Harold at the Battle of Hastings\nand quickly subdued Britain\nto become the Island's first\nforeign-born king.\n1946-The French constituent assembly adopted the\ndraft of a new constitution\nfor the nation.\n1948 \u2014 A San Francisco\njury found Los Angeles-born\n\"Tokyo Rose\" guilty of\ntreason for her anti-American broadcasts during the\nSecond World War,\nFirst World War\nFifty years ago tod\u00bby, In\n1914, German guns bOm-\nharded the outer fortifications of Antwerp; Auslro-\nHungarian armies retreated\nas Serbians captured the\ntown of Semlin in Hungary;\nthe German cruiser Emden\ncontinued its raids in the\nIndian Ocean and Sank five\nBritish vessels.\nTweny-flve years ago today, in 1939, French troops\nadvanced 1,500 yards along\nthe Moselle River to the outskirts of Besch and Borg;\nthe RAF attacked ships of\nthe German fleet in the Heligoland Bight but five of the\nsix attacking planes were\nshot down.\n 1\nCurrie-Lougheed Vows Heard at\nVictoria Home of Bride's Parents\nVICTORIA \u2014 A century-old gown of mellowed\nIvory lace, made for a presentation at the Court ol St.\nlames, was worn by bride Darla Leqnne Lougheed for\nher marriage September 20 to Mr. lames William Currie.\nThe parents of the bridegroom,\nRCMP Staff Sergeant W. J. Currie and Mrs. Currie, and son\nRichard, and his sister, Miss\nSharon Currie of Alberni, formerly of Nelson, motored to\nVictoria for the ceremony, at\nKinsmen Give\nKaslo Cemetery\nFace-Lifting\nKASLO \u2014 Kinsmen were commended for their efforts in improving the appearance of the\nKaslo Cemetery, at the recent\nmeeting of the Kaslo Village\nCommission.\nThe Kinsmen Club has made\na \"very noticeable\" improvement in the grounds at the cemetery, through their efforts during the past season.\nConstruction of a cement sidewalk in block 17a, \"D\" Avenue\nwill begin this week, with T.\nBaba as contractor, it was\nnoted.\nApplications were approved\nfor building permits for the government agent's residence and\nfor a garage to be built by Mr.\nYoxall.\nCommissioner Miller reported\non the fall meeting of the\nAssociation of Kootenay Bound*\nary Municipalities which he had\nattended.\nCommissioners Paterson and\nJardine were named to sit on\nthe court of revision, with Chairman Drayton November 2.\nwhich Rev. H. R. Pike officiated\nat the home of the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Milliard P.\nLougheed of Victoria.\nThe petite bride was a picture\nas she came down the stairway\nwith her father to stand before\nthe flower-banked fireplace in\nthe main hall.\nThe gown, fashioned with, fit\nted bodice and long sleeves, had\na hoop skirt that lifted slightly\nin front to show the satin underskirt and full at the back into\na slight train.\nMARKET TO MOVE\nBritain's famed Covent Garden Market is to move to a new\nsite near Vauxhall Bridge, south\nof the River Thames, by 1971\n300 years after its charter was\nfirst granted.\nA tiny crown of pearls held\nher full-length veil of ivory tulle\nwhich was caught with tiny\nsprays of pearl orange blossoms\nthat had originally formed the\nheaddress worn by her grandmother, the late Mrs. J. B. Watson at her wedding. Her heirloom gown also had belonged\nto her grandmother.\nThe bridal bouquet was of\nJohanna Hill roses and stephanotis.\nMiss Ruth Green was the only\nattendant and she wore a Grecian style dress of light coral\nchiffon with softly pleated bodice\nand full, long skirt. Sprayed carnations to match the dress and\nJohanna Hill roses were in her\nbouquet and matched her floral\nheadpiece.\nThe groom had Mr. Donald\nWalmsley of Duncan as best\nman.\nMr. Stanley Martin sang The\nLord's Prayer during the cere-\nStorvold - Clements\nmony and I Believe during the\nsigning of the register. Mr. Len\nAcres played the soft background\nmusic.\nA cathedral three-tiered cake\nwith fretwork decoration and\nsilver leaves was embedded in\ntulle, caught with pearl orange\nblossoms. The bridal table was\ncovered with a Venetian lace\ncloth. Butterfly holders held\nwhite carnations and ferns, and\nsilver bowls on the table were\nfilled with stephanotis and ivy.\nSoft candlelight fell from white\ntapers in silver candelabra.\nMr. P. A. Watson of Calgary\nproposed the toast to his niece.\nLeaving for a wedding trip up-\nisland, the bride wore a little\nblack wool crepe suit with white\nblouse and black, mink-tipped\nwhimsy hat. Her corsage was of\nsweetheart roses and stephanotis.\nThe couple will live at 1921\nFernwood.\nReceptions in Nelson,\nMontrose Follow Rites\nReceptions at the church hall\nand at the home of the bride's\nparents in Montrose followed the\nwedding ceremony held at St,\nPaul's-Trinity United Church in1\nNelson at which Kathleen\nFrances, daughter of Mr. and\nMrs. John Clements of Montrose, became the bride of Mr\nAlbert Edward Storvold, son of\nMrs. Audrey Storvold of Fruitvale and Mr. Albert Storvold of\nNelson.\nRev. Peter W. Faris officiated\nat the marriage service September 12. Standards of gladioli ornamented the church and guests\nsat in pews marked by white\nribbons.\nGiven  in  marriage  by  her I\nWomen's Association Fetes\nUniversity Students at Tea\nBrilliant autumn blooms decorated the dining haU of Maryhall,\nthe student union building at\nNotre Dame University of Nelson, Sunday afternoon as the\nWomen's Association to the\nuniversity entertained women\nstudents at tea.\nIn all, 87 students signed the\nguest book, after they were received by Mrs. M. B. MacMillan,\ndean of women; Mrs. G. B. Arnesen, president of the association;\nand Miss Virginia Johnsen, director of clubs for the student council.\nPlaced before a picture win\ndow, from which there was a\nbreathtaking view of Kootenay\nLake, was a lace-covered tea\ntable centered by a large bouquet of chrysanthemums, asters\nand snapdragons. Tall, twisted\ngreen tapers completed the arrangement.\nMassive bouquets of zinnias,\ndahlias and other fall flowers in\nbrass vases were placed about\nthe hall. Mrs. Roy Pollard arranged the floral decorations,\nand Mrs. Reginald H. Dill was1\nin charge of the guest book.\nDuring the afternoon, Mrs,\nArnesen spoke briefly on the\n\"\\\nfather, the bride chose for her\nwedding ensemble, a smart, pale\nblue, double-knit two-piece suit\nfeaturing three-quarter length\nsleeves, with matching shoes and\nbeige hat and gloves. Her bouquet was a nosegay of red rosebuds, with white streamers and\nstephanotis. Her jewelry was a\nset of gold cross earrings.\nMrs. Irene Clements was her\nsister-in-law's matron of honor,\nwearing a three-piece, baby\npink, double knit suit, with hat|\nen tone and beige accessories,\nHer corsage was of pink rosebuds.\nMr. Ronald Storvold, uncle of\nthe bridegroom, was best man\npurpose of the organization and\nits activities,\nPouring at the tea table were\nMrs. Peter Faris, Mrs. M. E.\nDrew, Mrs. D. F. Porteous, and\nMrs. A. J. Beauchamp.\nMrs. R. W. Rand convened\nthe serving committee, comprised of Mrs. G. R. Barrett, Mrs.\nV. M. Killeen, Mrs. M. Davis,!\nMrs. G. H. Lee, Mrs. T. Naka,\nMrs. J. S. Mcintosh, Mrs. L. J.\nBatley, Miss L. Gri, Mrs. C. A.\nScarborough and Mrs. Stan\nHamilton.\nMrs. S. Gustafson convened\nthe refreshment committee, assisted by Mrs. M. Darwin, Mrs.\nCornells Van Pelt, Mrs. E. Gare,\nMrs. Pollard, Mrs. Hamilton,\nMrs. R. Walltley, Mrs. G. Sylvester, and Miss Gri.\ni In addition to the students,\n' guests at the tea Included Rev.\n\\quinas Thomas, president of\n\\DU; Rev. Dr. L. R. McKenzie,\nvice-president: Sister Mary Catherine, director of the School of\nMedical Library Science; and\nSister Mary Ellen, instructor in\n'he School of Secretarial Studies\nV.\nand the brother of the bride, Mr.\nDavid Clements was usher.\nBlue and white streamers dec-\norated the church hall for the\nnoon reception. A lace cloth covered the head table, which was\ncentred with a three-tiered wedding cake topped with a miniature bride and groom. The cake\nwas made by Mrs. Sam Smelski\nof Fruitvale and decorated by\nMrs. Gordon Bergstrom. Candles\nglowed in candelabra flanking\nthe centrepiece.\nA later reception followed at\nthe home of the bride's parents\nat Montrose.\nThe mother of the bride chose\na Kelly green sheath-style dress\nfor her daughter's wedding, with\nwhich she wore brown accessories and yellow carnation corsage. The mother of the bride-|\ngroom wore a pale green silk\npolka dot sheath, with beige accessories and pink carnation\ncorsage.\nMaster of ceremonies was Mr.\nRon Storvold and Mr. Joe Tode-\nvlc proposed a toast to the bride,\nMr. Storvold proposed a toast to\nthe matron of honor and Mr. Jim\nDhellard of Fruitvale to the\nbridegroom.\nThe newlyweds will make their\nhome in Northern Alberta,\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUES., SEPT. 29, 1964 \u2014 5\nGbojuL Bul Jowit\n.PHONE 352-3552.\nTwo Nelson couples were honored on the occasion of their silver wedding anniversaries Saturday night\nat a no-host party held at the home of Mr. and Mrs.\nR. J. Petty, 921 Tenth Street. |\nPresented with gifts were the\nguests of honor, Mr. and Mrs.\nD. J. Thomson and Mr. and Mrs.\nG. B. Beattie. A special anniversary cake was cut and a buffet\nsupper enjoyed during the evening.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nWalter Davis, 1313 Front1\nStreet, has left for Brighton,\nEngland, to visit Toronto en\nroute. Mr. Davis plans to take\nevery opportunity during his\ntravels to show a film, which he\nis taking with him, publicizing\nthe Kootenays.\n\u2022 \u2022 >\nThe Junior Hospital Auxiliary\nMonday night presented\ncheque for $125 to administrator\nof Kootenay Lake General Hospital, R. H. Procter, for purchase of a stainless steel cart!\nand basin and ten dollars for\npick-up forceps for the central\nsterilizing room. Mrs. J. L.\nSmith, vice-president, made the\npresentation.\n\u2022 * \u2022\nMrs.   A.   E.   Lashmar,   705\nSeventh Street, was hostess to\nthe September meeting of the\nSt. John's Lutheran Ladies' Aid,\nwith 13 members and one guest\nin attendance. Rev. Carl J. Hennig conducted the devotional\nand after the business meeting,\nrefreshments were served.\n* * *\nA cheque to complete the furnishing of one unit in the new\nKiwanis senor citizens villa was\napproved at a meeting of the\nImperial Order Daughters of the\nEmpire, held at the home of\nMrs. Harold Lakes, on the North\nShore. Mrs. W. W. Ferguson,\nwelfare convener, reported a\nparcel of colthing sent to a\nneedy family, Co-hostesses were\nMrs. W. C. Motley and Mrs.\nGraham Fraser.\nKaslo Notes\nKASLO \u2014 Buck Higashi and\nMrs. W. Tyers were winners of\nthe Two-Bail Foursome cup tournament held at Kaslo, Sunday.\nRunners up were C. White and\nMrs. H. Perkins, while Gus Carney and Mrs. L. MacPherson\nwon the consolation prize.\nA corn roast was enjoyed by\nmembers after the tournament.\nMR. AND MRS. ALBERT EDWARD STORVOLD\n\u2014Wiofo by Vogue Studio.\nHints From Heloise\nBy Heloise Cruse\nBy HELOISE CRUSE\nDear Folks:\nI bought two yards of adhesive-\nbacked paper for less than a\ndollar and made four placemats\n(18\" x 12\").\nNaturally, I did not remove\nhe paper backing!\nPlacemats are very attractive\nvhen cut with pinking shears,\nir they can be scalloped around\nhe edges with regular scissors.\nThe mats are so easy to keep\n\u25a0lean, as they do not absorb\ntains, and can be washed with\ni swipe of a damp sponge. They\nre much less expensive than\nie usual placemats.\nOne can cut the placemats any\n'iape one desires. I made a dar-\nng set by drawing around a\nurkey platter.\nWith the two-thirds of a yard\nou have (eft over, you ean cut\n^tractive centrepieces, or small\n:ircles to use as coastere (or\n'our glasses, water pitcher, etc.\n1 also covered my stained hot\nlads (the kind you set hot food\nm> with some of the scraps and\nhey are prettier than they were\nvhen new. Now I have a match-\nng set of everything.\nI think these would be won\nlerful to sell at bazaars and excellent as a project for Girl\nScouts, etc. And think of the\nprofit an organization could\nmake with very little effort!\n\u2014Heloise.\nDear Heloise:\nI just stumbled upon idea of\nusing aluminum foil to wrap\npackages. It is quite beautiful.\nTear off as much foil as needed (plus a few extra inches), and\nwad the aluminum foil into a\nball. Then carefully unfold the\ncrushed foil on a table and\nsmooth it out.\nThis crinkled sheet is ready\nto be used for wrapping; and I\nmust say it makes an attractive\npackage. How tightly or loosely\nyou squeeze the ball depends on\nthe Size of the wrinkles you desire in the aluminum foil. It is\npretty any way ... no matter\nhow you wrinkle it.\n-Lillian Wilson.\nLadies:\nLillian enclosed a sample of\nthe foil and it looks like old,\ncrinkled leather. It Is absolutely\nbeautiful.\nThis idea would be especially\ngood for wrapping birthday presents all during the year. After\nall, most of us keep foil in the\nhouse. We don't always havn\ntime to go to the store to buy\nwrappings. So tear off a little\nwrappings. So tear off a little\nyou'll love it.\nI found that by putting the\ncrinkled foil down flat on the\ntable and rubbing it briskly with\nmy fingers \u2014 it was even prettier. Heloise\nSLIMETTE nr SfuS^H\nPanels shape you beautifully!\nSlimming... slenderising.\nLycra lets you enjoy lti\nslimming...aienaenzing...beautlfytoi\u2022 ..that's tht fabulous. Lycra long leg\npantiee from Exquisite Form. The feather light, silky soft feel of uncovered Lycra\nSower net ia blissfully comfortable... yet has the miraculous power to control.\nDinette's special secret ia side panels of Lycra itretch satin. Combined with front and\nback panels they mould and curve from waist to thigh. And the Slimette high-waist\nlong leg has a aide zipper that lets you slip in and out with esse, while a comfortable\n3-inch collar top gives fashion-perfect waist control. All Slimette long-leg, panties\nsnd regular girdles are machine washable, and wear longer. So slip into Slimette soon.\nGirdle $\u00bb        ' Long Leg Pantie $12 Pantie Girdle $10\nLong Leg Pantie with Zipper $13\nCollar Top Long Leg Pantie from $15\n\"lycrt\" ItDu Ponl'l Irttlemtrk fir II, spsmlex fibre\nSwim Class Finance Topic\nNEW DENVER - The Recreation Commission resumed its\nmonthly meetings at the home\nof Mr. Glen Emery.\nMain item wss the swim class\nheld in July, with J. R. McKoen\nand assistants teaching. Parents paid $3 per child for the\nswimming instructions and $7\nier child for life-saving instruction\u2014the commission paid the\ninstructors at the rate of $4 per\nchild for swimming and $14 per\nperson for life-saving.\nDunkers were Mary Ann Sutherland, Kevin McCrory and\nBradley Hicks. Floaters were\nTim McCrory, Heather Wilson.\nGraham Wilson; beginners were\nJim Hicks, Joy Oda, Margaret\nStewart, Mary Ann Irwin: juniors, Arthur Matsushita, Shelly\nThring. Dawn Forsythe. Marjorie\nAngrignon,   Sheila   Angrignon.\nI Leslie Thring and Holly Maxin\nuk; life-saving, Alice Ann Hope\nMary Phyllis Forsythe, with\nDouglas Nelson of Silverton tak\ning his training with the class:\nintermediate life-saving, Ginney\nForsythe and Naomi Mori.\nThe Commission paid for the\ngalvanized cable used to anchor\nthe raft. A diving board was also\nprovided but this did not last\nlong even though it was a special one.\nMembers will try and attend\nthe regional conference in Nel\nson Oct. 25.\nC. L. MCKell\u00bbr Chaired the\nmeeting.\nDear Heloise:\nIf you have a pitcher of Juice,\nor some other drink which you\n| want to chill (but you don't want\nto \"water It down\"), put your ice\ncubs ln a plastic bag, close the\nend ot the bag with a rubber\nband, and put the bag and all\nin the pitcher of juice.\nNancy,\n\u00bb \u2022 \u2022\n| Dear Heloise:\nAfter repeated washings, be\nbles* rubber pants become stiff\nand uncomfortable.\nTo keep the pants soft, take\nthem from the washer and pop\nthem Into the dryer with a full\nload of towels. This will even\nsoften rubber pants which have\nalready become stiff.\nBarbara Mathy.\n\u2022 \u2022\nDear Heloise:\nFor a mattress protector on a\nsmall child's bed, I use a flannel-backed plastic tablecloth \u2014\nflannel side up.\nThe tablecloth protects the\nmattress, is comfortable for the\nchild to sleep on, and I can wash\nit in the machine in lukewarm\nwater and hang it on the line,\nDoreen Bartlett.\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nDear Heloise:\nI take a Small plastic detergent\nbottle, pour a little liquid silver\npolish in it and dilute lt with a\nbit Of water so it won't Clog.\nI use this to Clean my silverware ss I am washing my dishes.\n1 use a piece of paper towelling\nto rub the silverware after squirting the polish directly on the\nsilver itself. My silver is clean\nin no time at all.\nMinnie Gilchrest.\nCopyright, 1964, King Features Syndicate, Inc.\nSIGNS AGREEMENTS\nYugoslavia   has   more   than\n1.000 experts in  the  countries\nwith which it has signed trad?\nagreements in recent years.\nCUTS\nBRUISES\nI HEAL-QUICKLY\nANTISEPTIC\nHERBAL   OINTMENT\nRD\u00ae tSoaDfe\n(But Plenty Warm)\nPenmans does the job\u2014comfortably. Knocks the chill right out of ths\nair, yet doesn't strangle you in a hard-to-move-in suit. The reason?\nPenmans are tailored to help you on the job; cut generously, where\nthey should be; made snug, where they should be.\nThey keep you warm without bulk because they are knitted of three\nmaterials: pure white merino wools... soft, absorbent cottons... and\nCorral*... warmer together than they would be separately.\nPenmans are so comfortable only their warmth reminds you that you are\nwearing underwear.\nThere's a Penmans Underwear to suit every type of job and every\npocketbook: Penmans 95 -The Aristocrat of Winter Underwear.\nPenmans 71 -Distinctively Canadian. Penmans 73 -White Merino.\nPenmans 1575 - Orion and Wool Thermal. Penmans 2003 - Cotton\nThermal. Penmans 27 - Fleece.\nfor the man who knows comfort and style\n\u2022 Registered Trade Mirk, Du Pont of Canada Limited\n Esso Home Heat Service is better\nbecause its people are\nBetter trained to serve you better\/ You get \"extra\nvalue\" for your heating dollar. If you're the type\nof person who insists on the best, you probably\nalready have Esso Home Heat Service. You've seen\nthe crisp, efficient way an Esso Home Heat team\nlocks after your heating needs... specialists in\nservice and furnace oil delivery. This professional\nskill is the result of the most thorough, practical\ntraining in the industry. And these men regularly return to the classroom for refresher courses to keep\nup to date on the latest developments in the heating\nindustry. They save yoii money by keeping your oil\nheating equipment in economical operating condition. If you're not getting this kind of service you'll\nnever know until you've tried the best. Get \"extra\nvalue\" for your heating dollar\u2014get Esso Home Heat\nService \u25a0 always LOOK TO IMPERIAL for the best\n6\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUES., SEPT. 29,1964\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinii\nSee as Child\nExpert Says\n\"Unless you've become a\nconnoisseur, the way to\nlook at pictures is the way\nchildren look at them,\"\nsays Vancouver artist Roy\nKiyooka. \"Children don't\n'understand' art. They\nhaven't been told what they\nlike. They accept art for\nwhat it is, a kind of exultation, a kind of joy. ... If\nyou teach young adults, you\noften find that they've ben\nblinded and that your job is\nto train them to see again.\"\nIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIHIHinilHIl\nNET EARNINGS\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nLoblaw Groceterias Co., year\nended June 1: 1964, $14,202,945,\n$13.36 a combined second preference and common share; 1963\n$13,027,930, $12.12.\nLoblaw Companies Ltd., year\nended May 30: 1964, $12,656,167,\n$1.06 a share; 1963, $11,366,519,\n$1.02.\nFIVE SHOT DEAD\nSAIGdN (Reuters)\u2014Five persons were reported shot dead\nwhen security forces opened\nfire on a crowd in the South\nVietnamese city of Qui Nhon\nSunday after someone in the\ncrowd shot at the troops. Later\nthe crowd stormed a local radio\nstation and troops were called\nin to evict the demonstrators.\nGrowing Administration Staff\nCoordinates NDU Business Areas\nAt Notre Dame University, the\npresident is responsible to the\nBoard ot Governors for the operation and finances of the university. To assist the president in\nhis duties, the Dean of Studies\nis responsible for the academic\ndepartments on the campus, and\nthe non-academic departments\nare the responsibility of the business manager under the direction of the president.\nIn the early days of higher education, the president of a university constituted the entire administrative staff pf the. institution.\nLater as universities grew, many\nbusiness duties were performed\nby members of the board and\nthe faculty. Departmental chairmen frequently assumed complete responsibility for business\nmatters in their areas.\nProblems of business administration in the early days were\nmuch less complex than they are\ntoday. Gradually, as the size of\nthe institutions and their budgets\nincreased, the need for professional assistance was recognized.\nBUSY OFFICE\nAt NDU the business manager\nis charged with the business administration of the various departments and works closely\nwith the accountant. He is responsible for budgetary control\nof spending by various departments   within   their   aUocated\nPremier Lesage Lays Down\nTerms of Assciationship\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 Premier\nLesage said Monday there pre\n\"at least two minimum claims\nwhich a very great majority of\nFrench \u2022 Canadians make upon\nour Confederation.\n\"The first of these is a status\ntor the French-speaking Canadian equal in all respects to that\nof the English-speaking Canadian,\" he said in an address to\nthe Canadian Club.\n\"This means in the immediate future: French as a working\nlanguage in the federal admin\nistration and French as a teaching language for French minorities outside Quebec.\n\"The second claim is that of\na genuine decentralization of\npowers, resources and decisionmaking in our federal system.\"\nText of his address was released in advance of delivery.\nQuebec beUeves in \"harmony\nthrough consultation and discussion among equals,, not through\na uniformity imposed by an all-\npowerful central government,\"\nhe said.\nViet Nam Forces Seek\nRebels in Tribal Area\nFrom AP-Reuters\nBAN ME THUOAT (CP) -\nHundreds of South- Vietnamese\narmy troops moved unopposed\ninto the centre of the tribal rebellion in central South Viet\nNam Monday, hoisting the South\nVietnamese flag over the Buon\nSar'Pa camp Monday {or the\nfirst time since the revolt began\nnine days ago.\nThe march Into the camp,\nwhich is almost on the Cambodian border, was backed up by\nabout 1,000 paratroopers and\nrangers who moved up close to\nthe camp. Some 300 of the rebel\nmountain tribesmen were inside.\nReuters.news agency said restoration of government authority over Bun Sar Pa was regarded as opening the way for\ntalks between the government\nand rebel leaders, whose grievances include demands for more\ntribal representation in the local administration.\nBut real leaders of the revolt\nwere still in hiding somewhere\nnear the Cambodian border\nclose to Bun Sa Pa, 130 miles\nnortheast of Saigon, Reuters\nsaid.\nThe seizure of Buon Sar Pa\ncame a few hours after U.S. helicopters evacuated U.S. Army\nCol. John H. Freund and 12\nAmerican  special  forces  men\nWorld Briefs\nGRAFT SUCCESSFUL\nTOKYO (AP) - A patient's\nhand, severed at the wrist, has\nbeen grafted back on successfully, a Japanese doctor says.\nDr. Yasushi Toyoshima of\nOsaka's Municipal University\nHospital told a medical meeting\nSaturday that eight surgeons\nperformed the 14-hour operation\non a young factory worker last\nOctober. Toyoshima said the\nworker had regained almost\ncomplete use of the hand.\nMARRIAGE BREAKS UP\nHOLLYWOOD (AP) - Actress Sue Lyon.and her husband, Hampton Fancher III,\nhave separated, a spokesman\nfor the actress said Sunday.\nFancher, 26, and Miss Lyon, 18,\nwere married last December.\nThe spokesman said there were\nno immediate plans for a divorce.\nHOLLYWOOD (AP)-Actress\nTippi Hedren was married Sunday to her manager and agent,\nNoel Marshall, in a ceremony\nat her home in Sherman. Oaks,\na Hollywood suburb. It was the\nsecond marriage for both Miss\nHedfett, 29, and Marshall, W.\nfrom the camp. Freund had\nbeen in the camp, for a week as\na combination hostage and transmitter of messages betwen tbe\nrebels and the South Vietnamese\ngovernment.\nbudgets. The business office is\nresponsible for the purchasing\nof all goods required by departments, on requisition from them\nIt controls the secretarial pool\nof the institution.\nThe business office is also responsible for the operation and\nmaintenance of the auxiliary enterprises on the campus \u2014 the\ndining hall, dormitories, and\nother buildings. Proper co-ordination of these departments must\nbe maintained. All personnel hiring for the non-academic departments is also done through this\noffice.\nThe accountant maintains\nrecords of all business transactions affecting the university,\nand compiles regular statements related to these. He maintains budgetary control of funds\nallocated to all departments and\nissues regular statements to departments concerning their budgets. He is responsible for collecting fees and charges from\nstudents and others who use the\nuniversity's facilities, and he is\nin charge of the payroll and the\npayment of all accounts.\nAll the clerical needs of the\nbusiness office, registrar's office, dean of studies' office, president's office, and development\noffice are cared for by the secretarial pool. Duties of this group\ninclude switchboard operation,\ntyping of correspondence from-\nthe administration, and stenciling and mimeographing all the\nexams and forms required in\nthe operation of the university.\nDIETARY IN CHARGE\nThe new dining lounge with its\nmodern kitchen is controlled by\nthe dietary department. The\ncomplete operation of cooking\nand feeding the students is under\nthe supervision of the food ser-~\nvice manager. He purchases food\nand supervises the dining room\nand chief cook who is in charge\nof the cooking of meals. This department employs local personnel. Some dishwashing and sundry dining hall duties are handled by students who require financial assistance. The dining\nhall Is operated as a cafeteria.\nCleaning and maintaining the'\nbuildings on the campus and the\ngrounds is carried put by the\nmaintenance staff under \u2022 the\nmaintenance supervisor. Janitorial work covers the major portion of these duties, but emphasis\non maintenance has increased\nwith the additional buildings and\nequipment. Student help is used\nin this department to provide\nfinancial assistance.\nTHE GIANT SATURN-1 is a mere speck of light ln the fierce\nlooking heavens over Cape Kennedy, Fla. The photo was\nmade with an ultra:wide angle lens a tew seconds after the\nlaunching; This Saturn sent an 18-ton satellite, Including a\n... _j4unmv_mqdd qf_ttejlijdjio Moonship, liito orbit\nRoman Catholic Mission\nConfers With Greek Church\nATHENS (Al*)\u2014Augustin Cardinal Bea, president of the Vatican secretariat for promotion of\nChristian unity, met the primate of the Greek-Orthodox\nChurch Monday'in ah atti'mpt'to\nbring the two sharply divided\nchurches closer together.\nThe 25-mihute conference between Bea and white-bearded\nArchbishop Chrysostomos was\nthe first meeting of a Roman\nCatholic cardinal and a head of\nthe Greek Church in centuries.\nGreek   Church  officials  de-'\ndined to disclose what was discussed.\nThe cardinal headed a Roman\nCatholic mission which Saturday\nbrought the head of St. Andrew\nthe apostle back to Patras,\nGreece, after 500 years in a gesture of goodwiU toward the Orthodox Church.\nArchbishop Chrysostomos has\nbeen cool to overtures from\nRome and did not go to Patras\nfor the ceremony. But Cardinal\nBea came here to see him.\nSupplementary EducatimPTogr^\nService Qiven Commmutyby NDU\nA new community, service was\noffered at Norte Dame, last year\nand wUl be offered again this\nyear \u2014 an organized supplementary education program conducted under the auspices of the\nFaculty of Education and using\nits faculties..: - \u25a0\u2022.:\nPurpose of the program is to\ngive special attention to elementary and secondary students in\nthe community who have had\ndifficulty with their studies. It\nendeavors to enrich and intensify\nthe material given the average\nstudent, and to offer a greater\nchaUenge to the superior student. Through the program- the\nuniversity is able to put into operation . the ideas which have\ncome.out. of valuable research\nand practice:in other universi\nties.,\nBy providing individual help\nfor students, the knowledge and\ndirection available from principals and classroom teachers has\nbeen utilized to advantage. Cooperation with parents has been\nemphasized so that they might\nbe assisted in their work of educating their children.\nThroughout the year, students\nare tested to .determine levels of\nachievement, aptitudes and direction of interest, and a remedial program is set up wherever\nnecessary. Children with unusual\nability or creativity receive\nspecial assistance.\nConfidence that the child can\nlearn and that he wants to learn\nIs stressed in the attitude of the\ninstructors throughout the various phases of the program. Students are encouraged to express\nopinions and assess tbe opinions\nof other. In addition to oral\nwork, elementary students are\nencouraged to use imagination\nand express beliefs and ideas\nthrough frequent creative writing assignments.\nTHREE STAGES\nThere are three stages to the\nprogram. In the first, which is\nteacher - directed, the teacher\ntests, diagnoses by going back\nto baste concepts, and directs\nstudents in ways of thinking so\nthat the students gain confidence\nby finding that they can think a\nproblem through to a solution.\nIn the second stage, student\nparticipation is introduced, and\nthe student assists in the diagnostic work by identifying tho\ntypes of errors he makes. In the\nthird phase, students give directions in what is to be taught.\nThey help determine whether\nthe material is to be taught by\nthe teacher, another student, or\nby research. They plan with the\nteacher ways to evaluate the\nlearning, who is to do the\nevaluating, and the follow-up\nmeasures to be taken after a\nunit of work is assigned. Students also play an important part\nin determining amount of time\nto spend on individual subjects.\nDurrell's analysis of the reading difficulties is used in the\nelementary grades. Individual\ntests of one and a half to two\nhours duration are given each\nstudent in an effort to diagnose\nspecific areas of weakness in\noral and silent reading, and\nability in phonics, word analysis,\nvisual aptitude, listening skill,\nand speed. Two instructors'give\nthe test, one to analyze difficulties, the other to test time.\nElementary and high school\nstudents are tested in basic concepts of arithmetic from a list\ncomoiled bv the Illinois Arithmetic Project which is doing\nresearch work in the field. of\nmodern mathematics, and making startling discoveries about\nthe abilities of small children in\nunderstanding math.\nExperimental use is also being\nmade of the French laboratory\nwith the purpose of forming a\nprogram. A limited program last\nyear indicated promising progress this term when textbooks,\nseat work devices, and charts\nwill be utilized.\nA weU-planned Uterature program for all grades is also planned, plus a creative writing\nprogram for those showing\nunusual skill in writing, More\nemphasis will be placed on\nsocial studies. In this field, research material is being investigated and bibliographies^ are\nbeing prepared to give basic\ninstruction in geography and\nhistory with emphasis on cause\nand effect and the influence of\nsignificant events.\nThe math and reading programs of 1st year will be maintained as well as the science\nprogram, with continued emphasis on learning by observation,\nexperimentation, and individual\nresearch.\nSHE REACHED INTO THE BACK SEAT AND . . .-After she\nwas helped out of her car, Marline Bowman, 21, Logansport,\nInd., told police she reached Into the back seat to pat down\npapers blowing around, and her car climbed eight feet up\na guy wire on a utility pole.\nIn Nelson, there\nare 2 home\nheating\nspecialists ready\nto provide you\nwith fast,\ndependable Esso\nHome Heat\nService\nThe people who offer this excellent service are independent\nbusinessmen who live and\nwork in your area. Each member of these teams is a specialist in his own line\u2014heating\noil sales, service, fuel or equipment. Their livelihood depends\non how well they serve you.\nAnd they serve you well. Regardless of what your heating\nproblem, these men are committed to provide you with\nimmediate, expert attention.\nOne phone call brings instant\naction. If you do not have Esso\nHome Heat Service now, do\nyourself a favour.\nPHONE 352-3713\nEsso Home Heat\nService is better\nbecause\nits people are\nHere are your Esso\nHome Heat Specialists\nMr. Austin Moor*\nAgent\n45 Government Rd.\nNelson, B.C.\nPhone 352-3713\nE. A. (BERT) LASHMAR\nService Dealer\nKootenay\nSheet Metal Ltd.\n281 Baker St.,\nNelson, B.C.\nPhone 352-6113\ndip'\n NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUES., SEPT. 29,1964 \u2014 7\nRetired History Professor's\nMany Accomplishments Hailed\nVANCOUVER (CP) - The\n\"boy wonder\" of the history department was the tag put on\nFrederick Hubert Soward when\nhe arrived at the University of\nBritish Columbia in 1922.\nNow retired dean of graduate\nstudies and director of international studies, UBC's elder\nstatesman has done far more\nthan just teach and study history. He has participated in\nthe making of history.\nAnd between accomplish\nments he has found time to develop an acute taste for mystery novels. He frequently\nreads a paper-back novel in an\nhour.\nDean Soward participated in\nshaping Canadian policy during\nthe Second World War as special assistant to the undersecretary of state for external affairs. He has been a Canadian\ndelegate to the United Nations\nand has participated in numerous overseas conferences.\nSHE'S A SPORTSCASTER - Betty Caywood, hired by\nthe Kansas City Athletics to help broadcast the games on\nradio, talks to Yankees pitcher Ralph Terry on her first trip\nto New York, The Athletics hope Betty will lure lady fans.\nHis greatest moment he considers the day in 1957 when, as\nrapporteur of the trusteeship\ncommittee of the United Na-\ntions General Assembly, he\nmoved that British Togoland\nand the Gold Coast amalgamate to become the new African nation of Ghana.\nGIVEN RARE HONOR\nUBC recently presented Dean\nSoward with an honorary degree, considered a rare honor\nfor one of the university's\nteachers.\nIn a written tribute passed by\nthe university senate, he was\ndescribed as \"a voracious\nreader (with) an encyclopaedic\nknowledge and a photographic\nmemory and (with) interests so\nbroad that they encompass all\nof the arts.\"\nA history essay he wrote ln\nhis final high-school year won\nhim a scholarship to the University of Toronto. Two years\nlater he went overseas with the\n48th Highlanders to fight in\nFrance and Belgium during the\nFirst World War.\nHe later returned to the University of Toronto and Edinburgh University on scholarships.\nAfter that came another\nscholarship, to Oxford, where\nhe and another young Canadian\nundergraduate became firm\nfriends.\nThat student was Lester B.\nPearson, who Dean Soward described as a \"good, all-round\ntype ... You couldn't caU him\nan intellectual.\"\nIn 1922 he came to UBC and\nembarked, as a lecturer, on\n\"the lean years.\" He was to\nspend 25 years at the then-\nyoung university before his salary reached $5,000 a year.\nIn his varied career since he\nhas written 12 or 15 books (\"I\ncan't remember tbe exact number'!). ,:       ;'.. ...\nWeekend Death Toll\nRises to High Rate\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nForty-four persons died violently across Canada during the\nweekend, 34 of them in highway\naccidents.\nA survey by The Canadian\nPress from 6 p.m. Friday to\nmidnight Sunday local times\nshows that in addition to the\nhighway toll four persons\ndrowned, two were killed in\nfires and four persons died in\nmisceUaneous accidents.\nOntario had the heaviest toll\nwith 21 fatalities, including 15\ntraffic deaths, one drowning and\ntwo persons killed in fires. One\nboy died in a hunting accident,\na youth was killed on a church-\nsponsored hayride and a man\ndied in a fall down stairs.\nQuebec had six traffic deaths\nand three drownings.\nFour persons died on the highways in Alberta, three in Saskatchewan and two in Manitoba.\nThe latter province also reported one death as a result of\na plastic bag suffocation. .\nThere were two traffic deaths\nin Newfoundland and one each\nin Nova Scotia and New Brunswick.\nBritish Columbia and Prince\nEdward Island were fatality\nfree.\nThe survey does not include\nknown suicides, slayings, industrial and natural deaths.\nChildren Taught\nBy Computer\nNEW YORK (AP)-Teachers I\nneed not worry, but a sophisticated computer system has\ntaught a group of children in\nN.D.U. Supplement Correction\nDue to o competition error, the following photos ef the faculty members\nappear over incorrect names in the Special Notre Dame University Edition.\nThey appear here in the correct positions. The Nelson Daily News apologizes for any inconvenience thii may cause.\nSR. MXRIE IRENE, S.E.S.\nInstructor, Department of\nSecretarial Studies\nIntroduced by\nNORM'S\nSport Shop\n7^v;'\n!   1             :\u2022'\":'' \u25a0\u25a0\nSR. MARY ELLEN, S.S.A.\nAssistant Professor,\nDepartment of\nModern Languages\nIntroduced by\nEBERLE'S\nNehon, 8. C.\nAssistant Professor,\nDepartment of\nBiological Sciences\nIntroduced by\nFred Whiteley's\nSport Shop\nNelton, B. C.\nJOHN RYAN\nVisiting Lecturer,\nDepartment of Accounting\nIntroduced by\nLoom and\nNeedle Fabrics\nBaker St.        Nelton, B.C.\nFreeport, N.Y., how to read\nwithout formal human instruction.\nJohn Henry Martin, superintendent of Freeport public\nschools, reported that the chUdren who learned reading from\nthe computer in 30 hours\n\"could read significantly better\" than others taught by\ntraditional methods.\nCaUed the Edison Responsive\nEnvironment System, the computer talks, listens,, presents\npictorial and. graphic material\nand even comments, and explains..\nHere's how it works:\nA child goes into a booth\nwhere he is alone with a \"talking typewriter.\" He touches a\nletter key on the multi-colored\nkeyboard and the computer responds by pronouncing and typing the letter.\nHe soon discovers how letters, symbols and numerals\nlook and sound, later expanding them into words, sentences\nand stories\u2014aU within 30 hours\nof \"instrumented instruction.\"\nlite Freeport experiment\nstarted five months ago when\nthe Responsive Environment\nCorp. of tha Thomas A. Edison\nLaboratory in New Yprk invited the Freeport public\nschools, to conduct an experiment to determine the instrument's validity.\nThe pUot project was supported by the local board of education and the state department of education.\nThe experiment with 20 kindergarten and mentally retarded chUdren showed that in-\nteUigence and sex made no difference.\nDuring the last five months,\n\"no one ever spoke in loud\nB.C. Highlights\nSEES EXPANSION\nPENTICTON (CP) \u2014 Agriculture Minister Richter says the\nBoys Club of Penticton should\nexpand in the same way as 4-H\nclubs in B.C. Mr. Richter was\nspeaking at the opening of the\n$40,000 boys dub building here\nSaturday,\nCONVENTION ENDS\nVANCOUVER (CP)-Dr. John\nF. McCreary, dean of the faculty of medicine at the University of British Columbia told the\nconcluding session of the B.C.\nIndustrial First Aid Attendants\nAssociation there is a shortage\nof doctors in Canada and insufficient medical training faculties.\nPRETTIEST INDIAN - Winner\nof the American Indian\nbeauty contest at the Pendleton Roundup, Pendleton,\nOre., ta Geraldine Plotras, 16.\nShe's a Klamath Indian who\nUvea In Portland, Ore.\ntones,\" Martin said. \"Hurry\nwas forbidden. A generally\npleasant hush was maintained\nin order to keep the children in\na neutral atmosphere.\"\nAs for teachers, they merely\nobserved the child's progress\nthrough an unseen one - way\nviewing mirror.\nPie Trlmmere\"\nDeck out the Thanksgiving\npumpkin pie with midget\n\"cheese pumpkins\". CM a\nsmall package of cream\ncheese into 6 portions rolling\neaeh into a ball. Draw\npumpkin-Hka grooves ia eeoh\none, emphasizing them with\nyellow coloring, and press a\nwhole dove m the top of\neach. Chi before placing\nthem round the pie, just inside\nthe crust edge. Good with\napple pie too of course I\nTempting Toppers\nWhen it comes to Apple Pie,\nss It surely does in October\nand on through, winter, we-\nsuggest varying the usual\ncheese accompaniment by\nsometimes serving a Rarebit\nTopping, or on occasion a\nBlue Cheese one. Read on for\nspecific*)\nRarebit Pie\nTopping...\nle none other than Just what It\nsays, Cheese Rarebit.... but\ndressed and spiced up to\ncrown any apple pie with\nglamor and a touch of the\ngourmet Make upyourfavor-\nHe Rarebit recipe using old\nCanadian cheddsr cheese for\nzesty (lavas. Might add just a\nwhisper of cayenne to it too.\nThen serve this elegant version of a cheese saucv-hot\nover apple pie\u2014garnishing\nwith a dash of cinnamon.\nPicture-pretty and. appetite-\nappealing I\nBlue Cheese\nTopping...\nOn apple pie, puts It into the\ngourmet class again, flavor-\nwise, yet everyday-ish by way\nof approach. Add Canadian\nblue cheese to the ususl butter, flour end brown sugar\nmixture for. a crumble top for\nan apple crisp. Fore 9-inch pie\nwe suggesta half cup each of\nbrown sugar and flour and a '\nquarter cup each of butter and\ncrumbled blue cheese.. .letting it bake In a hot oven,\n426\u00b0 for about 45 minutes,\nAnd Fresh Peer Pie...\nIs truly delicious wkha Ginger\nCheese Topping... in which\ncream cheese is beaten fluffy\nwith cream then studded with\nslivers of preserved ginger. For\ns 9-inch pie, beat togethertwo\n(4-ounce) packages of cream\ncheese with enough milk to\nmoisten. Stir in a quarter cup\nor more (you be the judge) of\nchopped preserved ginger.\nRefrigerate the topping till it's.\ntime to serve it in generous\nscoops on pieces of your best\ntresh pear pie I\nPrepared by the Home Economists of\nTHE CANADIAN DAIRY\nFOODS SERVICE BUREAU\n147 Davenport Rd., Toronto 5. Ont.\n9-N.I4\nYour local daily newspaper\npresents more information\nto help you shop than you get\nfrom any other source.\nyour next\nfew minutes\ncan mean\ngreater shopping\nsatisfaction\nfor you\nThe way to get won-sranwnoB ejttt ss 1\nyour shopping is to plan it on tbe hesb of As\ninformation yon get in yonr local dagy nwwysfUfc\nThere is no easier way to aave dm* energy\nsnd money when yen go to the stores.\nInstead of wishing yon knew where to \u00a3n4\nwhat yon want to boy, you ean settle In yonr\n..::.:::..  own nihil the details about prices, oolofi, quality,\nsizes and other essentials, just by leading\nthe advertising in the local daily tmrspspm\nAnd as you read, you ean decide quickly and\neasily where your (hopping trip will take yoifc\neven before taking an actual step away torn\nyour home.\nYon get your choice ef the largest, moat\nattractive selections when yon read the\nadvertising in the local daily newspaper. Retailed\nplace in the local daily newspaper mora of\ntheir advertising than they place in any other\nadvertising medium. Many stores advertise\nonly in the local daily newspaper*\nSo, for more satisfying, man enjoyable\nshopping, read the advertising in your local\n'    daily newspaper and plan your tripe accordingly.\nBe sure to read the advertising in your local\n:  daily newspaper today snd every day.\nJfalamt lailg $nw\nShopping is more successful and satisfying when you start it\n..:\u25a0. in your local daily newspaper before you visit the stores.\n 8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY..NEWS, TUE5., SS?T. 29,1964\nNelson Maple Leafs Land\n\"Catch of the Season\"\nTeam Shaping Up Well;\nStewart, Carlson Return\nBy PAT McMAHON\nDaily News Sports Editor\nWhen Nelson Maple Leafs coach Bobby Kromm\ngoes fishing, he isn't content to come home with minnows.\nThe Leafs' fiery mentor said Wednesday night\nhe has landed \"the biggest senior hockey catch of the\nseason.\"\nBut Kromm refused to elaborate, except to say\nhis new charge is a high scoring winger from the prairies\nwho turned down several opportunities to play hockey\nln the.Eastern, and International Hockey-Leagues, in\nfavor of faking a fling with Nejspn.     .     . _\n\"I don't want to divulge his name until he gets\nfo Nelson'and we have him signed to a card,\" Kromim\nsaid.   -.\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0': v...\n\"He-is expected to arrive In town Wednesday\nmorning.!.will say.thin, though: if all the reports I have\nheard are correct, this kid could make any senior hockey\nteam in the' country.\" \"\nThe Leafs are badly in need\nof a top Wight winger who is proficient around the net, to. replace\nveteran. Ijoug. Kilburn,. .Kilburn\nretired from hockey after a successful season last year, in which\nhe netted 34TfoaTs ahT27\"assists.\nVETERANS SIGN\nKromm also -announced the\nsigningyOl veteran rearguards\nDave Stewart and Frank Carlson\nfor tlie forthcoming season. As\nweU' as being stalwarts on defence last winter, the pair proved\nvaluable on the attack, account-\nMen's\nMade-to-Measure\nSUIT\nSALE\nContinues . . .\ning for 47 scoring points between\nthem. -\nCarlson picked up seven gosls\nand 18 assists; Stewart checked\nin with 11 goals and as many\nhelpers.\nCarlson's trips to the penalty\nnames, but ssid the newcomer\nis a big winger who graduated\nfrom junior hockey last year and\nwas a late cut from a Western\nHockey League Club. He is reported as having already enrolled at another University but as\nbeing interested In trying out for\na scholarship at Notre Dame.\nGOALTENDER PROBLEM\nWith the addition of several\ntalented youngsters and one or\ntwo veterans, yet to be announced, Kromm expects to be in good\nshape along the front wall and\non the blue line, when puck wars\nbegin.Oct. 10. His main concern\nnow is to locate a netminder of\nsenior calibre.\nVeteran goaltender, Gus\nAdams, has indicated a desire\nto retire, but said recently he\nwould.be willing to take one\nmore turn between the pipes if\nhe was badly needed.\n\"Nelson has been very good\nto me,\" he told this writer after\nthe Midsummer Game, \"and I\nwouldn't see the Leafs stuck.\nBut I reaUy feel it is time I was\nreplaced with a younger net-|\nminder, I'd like to just sit back\nand watch the game from the\ncomfort of the stands this year.\nKromm has a line on one\npromising goalie, who is stUl at\na pro camp, and another who\nwas a standout in the Saskatche-\ni junior hockey league last\nyear, but as yet has not come\nto terms with anyone. Adams is\nexpected to tend the twine at\ntraining camp. Kromm wiU play\nit by ear thereafter.\nDAVE STEWART\nbox amounted to 72 minutes;\nStewart logged 48 minutes in the\nsin-bin.\nSCHOLARSHIP HOPEFUL\nAnother scholarship hopeful Is\nalso expected .to arrive in Nelson in time for the opening of j\ntraining camp, Thursday.\nKromm again refused to namei\nRAY ROBINSON\nWINS IN FRANCE\nPARIS (Reuters) \u2014 Sugar Ray\nRobinson, former world middleweight boxing champion, beat\nVoland Leveque of France on\npoints over 10 rounds in a non-\ntitle middleweight contest here\nMonday night.\nIt was a close fight and de\nspite Robinson's great popularity\nin France the decision was greet\ned with boos.\nRobinson's left eye was badly\ncut_by_a clash of heads in the\nninth round and he had to use\nall his ring craft to avoid severe\npunishment.\nAUSSIE DAVIS CUPPERS\u2014from left: Tony Roche, Fred Stolle, captain Harry Hopman,\nRoy Emerson and John Newcombe,\nEmerson's Dazzling Comeback\nSparks Aussies' Davis Cup Win\nCLEVELAND (AP). - Roy\nEmerson conceded the opening\nset. to an inspired Chuck McKinley Monday and then rallied for\na devastating34,. 6-2, 6-4, 6-4\nvictory that gave Australia the\nDavis Cup for the 12th time in|\nthe last 15 years.\nThe final margin was 3-2 and\nit marked-another-frustrating\nfaUure for the United States,\nwhich has not been able successfully to defend the silver tennis bowl since 1M9.\nThe scrappy 5-foot-eight McKinley, the U. S. No. 1 ranked,\nplayer from San Antonio, Tex.,\nput up a valiant last-ditch fight\nto save the cup but he was helpless under the relentless bombardment of the 27-year-old Australian who cUmaxed his finest\nseason.\nPlaying the type of forcing, almost errorless tennis that won\nhim the Australian, Wimbledon\nand United States titles this year\nEmerson' dominated the match\nfrom the second set to ths eid.\nafter   dropping   hi \u25a0   delivery I   Emerson hit another overhead\ntwice in the first set. I for advantage and won when\nMost of the times he won his McKinley's lob drifted over, the\ndelivery at love or with the loss back line.\nSt. Louis Leaps Into Second\nPlace Over F oundering Phils\nBy TOM PENDERGAST\nST, LOUIS (API-Hie turfing St. Louis Cardinals hopped\nover slipping PhUadelphla into I The iecpnd Cardinal run\nsecond p\\ecl In the tight Na- mmk toe fourth. Boyer dou-\ntional League pennant race j Wed tp Wt and went to third on\nMonday nlgSt, handing the PhU-WMte\\ second **$M single,\nlias thefr eighth straight defeat Javier then bounced to second\ns-i behind the hitting of Ken but Boyer s id safely across\nBoysr and BUl White. i ahead of Taylor's throw home,\ndie. Shannon then hit a saorl-; er's choice, following a walk ts\nfice fly to deep right-centre, i Gonzslet and Richie Allen's\nscoring White.\nof no more than a single point.\nThe occasions that McKinley\ngot even within smelling die-\nEmerson's tactics were simple and effective. He broke Me.\nKlnley in the first game of\ntwice of a break were rar\u00bb\u2014' eaST'ol Uie finafthree \"sets\" and\nthe fourth and eighth games of\nthe second set were an example\u2014but each time the tanned,\nwell \u25a0 conditioned Australian almost nonchalantly hit bis way\nout of trouble.\nMcKinley's   best   weapons\nwere  a  trickly  lob  that  ha-\nTha Cardinals' victory In the\nopener of the key three-game\nseries was their sixth straight\nand moved them to within one\ngame of the first-place Cincinnati Reds, who were not scheduled.\nThe Phillies (ell Into third\nplace for the first time lines\nMay t, Wt games back.\nThs Cardinals and Reds each\nhave five games remaining in\na regular season that runs out\nSunday, while the Phillies have\nfour left.\nBoyer, White and Mike Shannon led the Cardinal attack.\nBoyer got two doubles, White\ncollected threa singles and\nShannon drove ln three runs\n| with a (ingle and sacrifice fly.\nSt. Louis added a third run\nin the sixth when Boyer, following his second double, scored\non White's third consecutive single. Then, in the eighth, the\nCardinals added two more runs\non Shannon's bloop single to left\nwith men on second and third\u2014\nthe result of Dick Groat's single and John Briggs' error on\nWhite's fly ball to left.\nPhiladelphia scored in the\neighth on John Caliison's field-\nthen played out the sets without extending himself.\nThe match, played ln bright GIVEN HELP\nsunshine and 56-degree temper-1 Bob Gibson won the crucial\nature on the Clark Stadium game, bring his record to 18-11\nclay court, had been postponed with relief help from Barney\nfrom Sunday by a cold rain Schults in the ninth inning,\nras^d Emwson eariv in the which permitted only the first-Sehulti \u00abme on after Costen\nmatch   anT a   def   bac\u2122h\u00abnd|0'the \u00ab\"al *\u00bb-**\"\u2022 I*** *fi \u00ab* Tol\u00bb T^\nwhich he was able to angle' In that one, Fred Stolle,'Aus- kw.:.walked with none out.\nSSJStZ consistent X-Wrt Jft ***\u00ab, *4 \u00a3 nffi-.W'ffi \u00ab* <\u00a3\nners. But he couldn't put enough w'es \u00ab>\"> a dramatic 7-5, 8-3, Dabympto to Wt into a double\nof these shots into sequence to H B-\u00bb, 6-4 triumph over Den-.Pay and ended it by getting\nbreak;therhythm ofEmerson's '\u00bbis Ralston of Bakersfield, Calif. Plnch-hltter John Hermstein to\ngame. I   McKinley had'beaten BtoUa pBB:'*v,--,.     . .'   ..,:  . ..\nMcKinley made one last ef- 6,1, 0-7, 4-6, M and Emerson I J5\u2122\" j\u00a3Jl,tw?B% SH\nfort'when he got to advantage had crushed Ralston 64, M. 6-J ffi^ZWH?' \"LS? FJJ\non Emerson',  service in the on the first day for a 1-t split. ^J^S-JS ,&\u00a3\n10th game of the fourth set. | The Amerlcsn team of McKIn-\nWith one shot needed for a sav-'ley and Ralston had sent hopes\ning break, the American lobbed' flying with a doubles victory\nHe served with such crackling! weakly   and   the   Australian Saturday  over  Emerson  and\nforce and played with such con- smashed it for a winner, I Stolle 6-4, 4-6, 4-6, 6-8, 6-4.\nfidence and imagination that   *--  l- '   \u2014\"\u2014\u2014'\u2014 \"*\u25a0\u2022-'\nMcKinley always seemed to be\ngulping water.\nTHRILLS GALLERY\nThe stubby, thick - legged\nAmerican, sliding and bounding\nover the clay composition court\nlike  an   acrobat,   thrilled  the\nUncle Sam Chasing Bums\nFor $818,000 Back Taxes\nNEW YORK (API\u2014The base-' nue Service seeks 52 per cent\ngallery of 6,500 with occasional I ba\u00bb   D<\"igers  packed  their of:\nspurts of flashy shot-making but ?Pikf and moved from Brook-1\n\" 1..M    tn   T \u00ab\u00ab,    Anr,\u201elae    sa.iAn    .latM\nhis spotty brilliance was smothered by Emerson's unrelenting,\nmachine-like attack.\nEmerson never lost a service\nThe   $473,000  the  National\niyn'to Los\" Angeles'seven ye'ars League team pajd to_ Pacific\nago.'but \"stm=traillng themis CoatUdagiw tetmt for moving\nan $818,000 tax fight.\nThe U.S. International Reve-\ninto their territory\nTTie (345,000 the Dodgers got\nlater for allowing tlielr American League rivals, the Angels,\nto play basebaU in Los Angles.\nExistence of the tax court'\ncases was learned Monday.\nThey are civil, not criminal\nprosecutions, started ln 1061 and\n1063, respectively.\nRobert F. Welch, Manhattan\nlawyer representing the Dodgers, said it probably will be a\nyear before a hearing.\nSTATES ISSUE\nmen in a row before the Phillies\ncoUected their third bit. Philadelphia finally broke through\nfor a run in the eighth, but the\nCardinals ..already had built\ntheir lead to-.J-O against PhU\nlies', starter Chris. Short, 17-9.\nShort, who had hamstrung the\nCardinals in his last, three complete . s tarts against them,\nproved rio. pussle In this game.\nThe- Philadelphia lefthander,\nwho had allowed the. Cards only\ntwo runs going Into the game,\ngot Into trouble in the second.\nWith one Out, White lashed\nShort's first pitch to right for a\nsingle and went' to third when\nJulian Javier\u2014also hitting the\nfirst pitch-singled up the mid'\nSavoys Down\nTrail llallcos\nNelson Savoys, playing their)\nfirst game since capturing tht\nj Western international Soccer\n.League championship earlier\nI'this month, edged Trail ItallcOS\n; 4-3 in an exhibition tilt played at\nA government spokesman ssid Civic Grounds, Sunday.\nthe issue in the Dodgers' payment to the six PCL teams is\nwhether it it an ordinary and\nnecessary business expense, de;\nductible when occurring, or\nwhether it is a capital expenditure.\nIf tha Utter, hi ssid, it might\n*bt be deductible at al), or it I\nThe win wis the tenth for thi\nNelson club in their last eleven\noutings, their only recent defeat\nbeing a U setback Suffered at\nthe hands of a Vancouver all-\nstar dub in tht Pacific Northwest Tournament in Spokane in\nAugust.\nJoe Jacoe', Willie Schell, Qulnto\nmight be deductible Spread out Maida and John Carr handled\nover a number of years. ;tH* scoring for tlie local Squad.\nThe case involving tht AnV, A greatly improved WiU club,\ngilts covers the same Situation bolstered by several new play-\nin riverse~how to classify the \u00ab* struck early and had the\nincoming paymtnt. Savoys down 2-0 before Jacoe\nWhen tht Dodgers and tht old P\"t Nelson on the scoreboard\nNtw York Glints moved to th* 1JJ1* \u00bb >\u00bbn* \u00bb?w drlve; MUda\nwatt Coast, tht latter to San u*d the ocimt moments later\nFrancisco, at tht end of tht 1057, \u00bbV -Fetta.lly1 Vdk ?\"ugive\nseaton. they agreed to th* tOL fe\u00a342 !letminfer,J0.uCha!,5^\nSix More Stan\nWith Rtd Wings\nDDTMiIT (CP) - Sid Abel,\nmanager-eotch of Detroit fttd\nWings, announced Monday six\nmort members ef hit National\nHockey Leagut club htvi tigntd\nfor 1664-tt.\nWant to buy a really good camera?\nV^g\u00a3      :.,.., :^.:JS$t a Commerce Shutterbug Loam\nYou name it. If it's not a camera, perhaps it's a piano, or a washing machine or an automobile.\nWhatever it is, one of a wide variety of Commerce loans can be tailored to your exact needs. Phone or visit the\nLoan^epartment ofany-\u20acorrnier^'tbmeh-.---CAt4jmum IMPERIAL BANK OF COMMERCE\nteams' demand for $900,ooo in.\ndamnification\u2014$150,000 for etch\nof the six minor leagut teams.\nApparently no such tax cast\nhat bttn (tttd against tht\nGlints.\nStill in Front\nDUNEDIN, Pia. (API-Arnold\nPalmer held a $3000 tdge Monday In tournament winnings on\ntha basis of figures compiled by\nthe Profosslonal Golfers Association through tha Seattle Open,\nPalmer has collected $110,743\nIn 22 tournaments, winning two\nand placing among the first five\nfinishers in 14.\nPinch hitter Dick Tracewski\njingled home a tie-breaking run\nIn the eighth inning Monday -\nnight as Los Angeles Dodgers\ndefeated Chicago 2-1 for their\nfirst victory in their last six\nmeetings with the Cubs.\nTracewski's hit drove-in rookie\nBart Shirley and broke up a\npitching duel between the Dodgers' Howie Reed (3-4) and tht\nCubs' Dick Ellsworth (14-17).\nShirley opened the eighth inning with a single and advanced\non Jeff Torberg's sacrifice before Tracewski delivered.\nRon Perranoski pitched the\nninth inning for the Dodgers,\nRUN NOT EARNED\nLos Angeles scored an unearned run in the first inning. Wes\nParker singled with one out and\ntook second as second-baseman\nRon Campbell fumbled a\ngrounder by Willie Davis. Parker stole third and scored on\nTommy Davis' infield out,\nThe Cubs tied it in the fourth\nwhen Ron Santo singled, advanced on Doug Clemens' walk and\nscored on a two-out single by\nCampbell. \"\u25a0'\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIMIIIIIIIMIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nHey Dad . . . Can You Still Run?\nHey, Dad! Are you still the\nathlete yon used to be?\nIf you are the parent of a\nTrafalgar Junior High School\nstudent, you'll .'be getting a\nchance to find out.\nChildren attending Trafalgar\nare about to embark on the Canadian Legion 50 and 100-mlle\nclub program, and you are In-\nvittd to participate.\nThe Idea Is to get into the habit\not doing a little exercise by running increasing distances each\n| day, with an ultimate total objective ef 50 and 100 miles,   .\nParents tri invited to join\ntheir chUdren In.the program.\nYou start by running any distance you feel capable of handling, without subjecting yourself\nto undue exertion (once around\nan average city block Is about a\nquarter of a mile. For the first\nmonth, girl's are not credited\nwith more, than one-half .mile a\nday (for the first i5 miles). .\nBoys are credited with no more\nthan one mile per day for the\nfirst 30 days. These, of course,\nare maximum distances.\nStudents and parents can run\nat their convenience, but their :\nrunning.can be Supervised between 8:10 and 8:40 a.m., at the\nTrafalgar secondary' school.\nShower facilities are available'\nat this time.\nStudents''will be provided with\na chart tp keep track Of their\ndistances, and successful runners _\nwill be presented with a pin do-'\nnated by the Nelson Branch of\nthe Canadian Legion.\nSo how about, it, Mom and\nDad'. . i think ySii San keep\nup with the kids ? 1 ?   '      ' ..\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllUUIIIIIIIIIl\nTiger-Cats Bomb\nEskimos 43-14\nBy BOB TRIMBEE\nEDMONTON (CPl-Himflton\nTiger-Cats, taking advantage of\ntarly fumbles, trounced Edmonton fiikimOs 43-14 Monday night\nIn a Canadian Football League\nInterlocking game before I3,ooo\nfans. ;;.-_L\nQuarterback Bernie Faloney\ntook advantage of two firtt Quarter Interceptions to move Hamilton Into t quick lead and thi\nTiger-Cats were nevtr itt danger\nOf falling behind.\nFullback Art Baker scored two\ntouchdowns to pace Hamilton's\nscorers. Halfbacks Bobby Gaiters\nand Willie Bethea, reserve quarterback Frank Cosentino and end\nHal Patterson added singles. Don\nSutherin converted all the touch\ndowns and added a single on a\nfield goal attempt to complete\nthe Scoring.\nEnd Tommy Joe-Coffey took a\n10-yard pass from reserve quarterback Bill Redell and ran another three yards for one touchdown while Redell scored the\nother on a four-yard run. Centre\nBUl Mitchell kiiked one convert\nand had a tingle on an attempted field goal in tht first quarter.\nHamilton jumped ahead 14-1\nin the opening quarter, stretched\nit to 22-1 by the half and 34-1\nin thi third quarter. Eskimos\noutscored Hamilton 13-7 in the\nfinal 15 minutes, both coming in\nthe last, half Of the quarter -after\nRedell replaced Jon Anabo at\nthe Eskimo helm.\nand the half ended with the score\ntiid 2-2.\nSchtll shovtd hit team theed\n3-2 in the early minutes of the\nsecond rfamt but Trail roartd\nback to tit tht count again,\nThen carr blasted a shot to\nthe open corntr te put Nilton\nahead to stay,\nSavoys wilt travel to Trail to\nolay another inhibition gtme,\nSaturday. Camt tlmt it Butter\nPark is 7:30 p.m. Tht contest\nwill be a ntw expiritnet for thi\nwisl chtmpiont at it wiu bt\nthe first timt they havt played\nunder tht lightt.\nLimit Brown Trophy\nTo Three Countries\nAlways there\nwith ready cash...\nFor Bill Consolidation\nor any good reason.\n\u2022BOSS fo \u20220,00022\nNIAGARA  FINANCE   COMPANY LIMITED\nMO \u25a0ranch** 1 rem Coset te Coaet\nNelton Branch Conveniently Located at\n560 Baker St. \u2014 Phone 352,7232\nNfiW V6RK (CP)-The Ami-1 memorial W Witter Browh, wl|6\nteur HOCkty Association of the wat atgOOd * friend ai ama-\nUnited States announced Mon- teur hockey ever hid. If it can \u25a0\nday tht national teamt of Can- be kept down to a small, \u00abom-\nada, the Soviet Union and pact tournament each year, \u25a0\nCzechoslovakia Will takt part thin I think that countries thtt\nthis titton in the first annual \"re perhaipt not so good in\ntournament for tht Walter A. hockey right now wiU make big-\nBrown Memorial Trophy.        i ger efforts to Improve and earn\nThe round-robin tournament an invitation,1; \u25a0;\nwUl be held annually In Ccle-|\nrado Springs, Colo., and participation wul be by invitation ot\nthe U.S, association, president\nTom Uekhart said in tn interview.\n\"W* are going to try to keep\nit down to throe countries itch\nyear, btcaute wt want it to bt\na btltnctd competition with nobody thtrt just for tht ride.\"\nThe first Walter Brown tournament will be held in Colorado\nSprings Dec. 26-31.\nLockhart said the Canadian,\nSoviet and Czech hockey associations have all accepted invitations to send teams.\nBrown, who died earlier this\nmonth, was a vice-president\nthe International let Hockey\nfederation and president of\nBoston Bruins of the National\nHockey League.\n\"We don't want to make this\ntournament a rival or counterpart to the official world championships,\" Lockhart said. \"We\nwant to stimulate amateur\nAnnounce New\nHealing Substance:\nShrinks Piles\nEidtuira htillni Mbttuic* prartn to thridk'\nhwwrrhoidiMidnptirdtmigediitiiw. '\u25a0'\u25a0\nA renowned research Institute hit\nfound a unique healing substanct\nwith the ability to shrink hemo'r'\nrhoids painlessly. It relieves itching\nand discomfort in minutes end\nspeeds up heeling of the injured,\nInflamed tissue. ...   ._\n. In Case after case, while .gently-.\nrelieving pain, actual reduction\n(shrinkage) took place.\nMost important of ell\u2014results\nwere to thorough thet this improvement wat maintained over t perW<J\nof mtny months.    \u25a0 -\u2022\u25a0\u2022\u2022\u2022\u25a0-.:\nThit wa\u00bb accomplished with \u00ab\nnew hetling Substance (Bio-Dyne)\nwhich quickly helps heal injured .\ncells and stimulates growth of new\ntissue.\nNow Bio-Dyne is offered In ointment and suppository form called\nPreparation H. Ask for it at all drug\nt^.^J.u'.\"^ .*'\" \" l\u00abu.u r I \u00bbt\u00bbn\u00bb-m<\u00bb>ey badi guarantee,\nhockey whUe setting up a fitting I,         ,\n mm\nThirty Foot Putt Sinks\nNelson Junior Golfer\nRon Howlett Wins Second\nStraight Kootenay Tourney\nUndated Major\nLeague Statistics\nNational League\nAB   R   HPct.\nClemente, Pitts. 604  90 207 .343\nAaron, Mil.\nCarty, Mil.\nTorre, Mil.\nWilliams, Chi.\nAllen, Phila.\n538 101 183 .328\n427 66 140 .328\n575 85 186 .323\n617 86 195 .316\n613 118 194 .316\nRuns - Allen, Philadelphia,\n118; Mays, San Francisco, 116.\nRuns Batted In \u2014 Boyer, St\nLouis, 116; Santo, Chicago, 112.\nHits \u2014 Clemente, Pittsburgh,\n207; Flood, St. Louis, 202.\nDoubles \u2014 Maye, Milwaukee\n43; Clemente, Pittsburgh, 39.\nTriples\u2014Santo, Chicago, 13;\nAllen, Philadelphia, 12.\nRome Runs \u2014 Mays, San\nFrancisco, 44; WUliams, Chicago, 3.\nRod Howlett, 16, of Kimberley\nwon his second straight Kootenay Junior Golf Championship\nSaturday in a down-to-the-wire\nfight with Rick Hamilton of Nel-\nA total of 72 golfers entered\nthe annual tournament sponsored by C. E. MacKinnon of Cranbrook Foundry Co. Ltd., but not\none junior girl golfer signed up.\nHowlett captured top honors\nin the 27-hole championship\nflight by canning a 30-foot putt\non the last hole for a par and a\n123 total. Hamilton, playing in\nthe same foursome, had 124.\nThe Kimberley golfer had nine\nhole rounds of 44, 40 and 39 while\nHamilton scored 45, 39 and 40.\nThree years ago Howlett ended\nup in a tie for first place when\nStolen Bases\u2014Wills, Los An-1 he missed a putt on the last hole.\n:les, 51; Brock, St. Louis, 43. j He lost the playoff.\nPitching - Koufax, Los An- -All I could think of when I\ngeles, 19-5, .792; Bunning, Phila-Iwas making that last putt was\ntwo years ago when I lost the\ndelphia, 18-7, .720.\nStrikeouts \u2014 Drysdale, Los\nAngeles, 233 Gibson, St. Louis,\n232.'\nAmerican League\nAB   R   HPct.\nOliva, Minn. 648 107 208 .321\nRobinson, Bait. 592 78 185 .313\nHoward, N.Y. 527 59 163 .309\nMantle, N.Y. 451 86 137 .304\nRobinson, Chi.   509 80 153.301\nRims\u2014Oliva, Minnesota, 107;\nHowser,. Cleveland, 100.\nRuns Batted In\u2014B. Robinson,\nBaltimore, 111; Stuart, Boston\nand Killebrew, Minnesota, 109.\nHitS-Oliva, Minnesota, 208;\nB. Robinson, Baltimore, 1'85.\nDoubles \u2014 Oliva, Minnesota,\n42; Bressoud, Boston, 40.\nTriples \u2014 Rollins and Versalles, Minnesota, 10; Yastr-\nzemski, Boston and Fregosi,\nLos Angeles, 9.\nHome Runs\u2014Killebrew, Minnesota, 48; Powell, Baltimore,\n37.\nStolen Bases\u2014Aparicio, Baltimore, 55; Weis, Chicago, 22.\n. Pitching\u2014Bunker, Baltimore,\n18-5, .783; Pappas, Baltimore\nand Ford, New York, 16-6, .727.\n. Strikeouts \u2014 Downing, New\nYork, 206; Pascual, Minnesota,\n199.\nplayoff,\" said Howlett. \"I just\nknew the putt had to go in.\" It\ndid, and he won. This is his last\nyear as a junior.\nBob Livingstone of Kimberley\nwas third with a 127 total while\nBob Langin, winner of the Cran-\nbrook Club championship this\nyear, ended 10 strokes off the\npace with 133. Langin shot a 39\nin his second round but started\noff with a 48 and ended up with\na 46.\nRay Wilson of Kimberley won\nthe first flight with a total of\n97 for 18 holes. Garth Christian-\nson of Cranbrook was a close\nsecond with 98.\nLen Mosher of Creston placed\nfirst in the second flight with\n104. Marvin Ferg of Cranbrook\nand Wayne Elliott of Marysville\nended in a tie for second and\nFerg won on an extra hole.\nThird flight winner was Joe\nRokosh of Kimberley with 111\nwhile Don Threatful of Nelson\ncame second with 113.\nJackie Cockwell of Cranbrook\ncame through in the fourth\nflight.- A three-way tie for second was won by Alan Bailey of\nCranbrook. Losers were Peter\nMetheum of Nelson and Jim Anderson of Cranbrook. All three\nended the 18 holes with 120\ntotals.\nCranbrook's Bob Anderson\nposted a 123 to capture fifth\nflight honors, while Bruce Calder of Kimberley took second\nafter a playoff with Bob Jones\nof Cranbrook. Both ended with\n133.\nThirty-six golers were entered\nfrom Cranbrook, 10 from Kimberley, nine from Nelson, nine\nfrom Fernie, five from Creston\nand three from Marysville.\nHigh Flying Tigers Aiming\nTo Foil Yanks' Flag Hopes\nBy JACK HAND\nNEW YORK (AP) - Charlie\nDressen's red-hot Detroit Tigers, winners of their last five\ngames, come to town today\nhoping to throw a few roadblocks in New York Yankees'\npennant drive.\nAny combination of four Yan.\nkee wins or four defeats for'\nBaltimore Orioles and Chicago\nWhite Sox, tied for second spot,\nwill give New York its 29th\nAmerican League pennant. The\nYanks  reeled  off  11  straight\nw:ns before they were beaten\n3-2 in 11 innings by Washington\nSenators Sunday.\n\"We've got to keep on winning,\" said manager Yogi\nBerra Monday on the Yanks'\nlast open date of the season.\nthemselves,  1 know they play\nall of them on the road but\nsometimes that helps.\"\nDOUBLEHEADER TONIGHT\nBerra has pitchers Al Downing   (13-8)   and   Jim   Bouton\n\"Those other guys are winning;! .<\u00ab;\"' \u00abned up to face the Ti-\nagaj\u201e\u00bb ;gers in tonight's doubleheader\n1 at Yankee Stadium. Mel Stottle-\nAsked about the plight of the\nslumping Philadelphia Phillies\nin the National League. Berra\nsaid; \"They got one break.\nThey play the contenders so\nthey  have  a  chance  to  help\nCHARLIE DRESSEN\n... new contract.\nAnother Boxer Dies\nAfter Bout\nBUENOS AIRES (Reuters) -\nArgentine boxer Adrian Servin,\n29, died Monday after collapsing\nin the ring last Wednesday during a bout with Enrique JSna.\nServin collapsed before the\nstart of the last round. Despite\na brain operation, he went into\na deep coma.\nHe is survived by a wife and\nthree young children.\nQuebec Rifles\nHave Big-Time\nAspirations\nMONTREAL (CP) - Quebec\nRifles will make franchise applications next month to both\nthe American and National Football Leagues, general manager\nJ, I. Albrecht said Monday.\nAlbrecht said he has already\nhad private talks with commissioners and team owners of the\ntwo leagues.\n\"The initial reaction was that\nthey were definitely Interested\nin Montreal,\" he said.\nRifles are new Eastern Division entries this year in the\nUnited Football League, a U.S.-\nbased minor pro circuit.\nAlbrecht said the fact that the\nRifles are a new team doesn't\nmake a move to go higher in\nprofessional ranks premature.\n\"I came here with the ambition of obtaining an NFL or AFL\nfranchise. And it's never too\nearly to start planning.\"\nSet World Record in 1928,\nMontreal Woman's Editor\nAttends Tenth Olympics\nYOGI BERRA\n\"gat to keep winning.\"\nmyre (9-2) will work the Wednesday night game and Whitey\nFord, (15-6) the Thursday afternoon game.\nDressen has named Dave\nWickersham (19-12) and Hank\nAguirre (5-10) for tonight, with\nMickey Lolich (17-8) Wednesday and Denny McLain (3-5)\nThursday.\nThe Tigers rolled at a 33-18\npace during September and took\nover fourth place. Early in the\nmonth they were six games under the .500 mark but now have\nan 83-73 record.\nBill Frehan, a fine young\ncatcher, is leading the Tigers at\nbat with a .298 average and Al\nKaline, hitting .295, is in his\nbest physical condition of the\nyear.\nThe Tigers rehired Dressen\nfor another one-year term Saturday.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUES., SEPT. 29, 1964 \u2014 9\nThree Rookies Invited to Camp\nTHREE ROOKIES, MEMBERS OF LAST YEAR'S Kootenay International Junior Hockey League champion Notre Dame Knights, have been invited to try out for berths on the Nelson Maple Leafs, coach Bobby Kromm\nannounced Monday. They are Shelly Atwell, Danny Calles and Miles Desharnais. Atwell and Calles were brought up by the Leafs for a number of\ngames on a trial basis last season, while Desharnais led the junior loop in\nboth goals and assists. Desharnais will be competing for the one remaining\neentre ice spot. Mike Laughton and Howie Hornby are considered sure bets\nto sew up the other two eentre positions. Kromm is high on Atwell's chances\nof catching a place on the Queen City blueline brigade, while Calles hopes\nto nail down a right wing position. Training camp is scheduled to open\nThursday.\nMONTREAL (CP)-In 1928, a\nToronto girl named Myrtle\nCook ran the 100 metres in 12\nseconds at the Canadian Olympic trials is Halifax.\nIt was a world record and it\nstood for four years.\nLater that year, at the Olympics in Amsterdam, Miss Cook\nran the anchor leg of the women's 400-metre relay. The team\nof Bobbie Rosenfeld, Jane Bell,\nEthel Smith and Myrtle Cook\nbrought' home gold medals.\nToday Myrtle Cook McGowan,\nwomen's editor of the Montreal\nStar, is waiting fpr a fourth\ngranddaughter to be born so\nshe can start training another\nrelay team.\nWhen she goes to Tokyo to\ncover the 1964 Olympics for The\nStar, she will extend a record\nstarted 36 years ago.\n\"It will be the 10th time I've\nparticipated in the Games,\neither as an athlete, team official or with the press.\"\nMyrtle's remarkable career\nin track and field in the late\n'20s and early '30s won her a\nstack of medals and a place in\nthe Canadian Amateur HaU of\nFame.\nBut she also earned cham-\nPersonal Sacrifice Required\nTo Play on National Team\nBy   WALTER   KREVENCHUK\nWINNIPEG (CP) - Want to\nplay for Canada's national\nhockey team?\nYou must be a good player;\nhave a boss willing to give you\na fair amount of time off; be\nwilling to slice some 16 hours a\nweek from time spent with your\nfamily; adjust your university\nstudies to a 44-game exhibition\nschedule and a four-week trip\nto Europe.\nThere are 26 players here and\nfour at the University of British Columbia able and willing\nto meet the qualifications\u2014all\nfor a chance at a berth on the\nteam that will carry Canada's\ncolors in the 1965 world amateur championships at Helsinki,\nFinland.\nFor example, Bill Johnson,\n36 - year \u2022 old defenceman, is\nsqueezing in two-hour, after-\nwork sessions on the ice around\nduties as a sporting goods salesman and father of four.\nJim McKenzie, 34; sees little\nof his four children ss he\ndivides his day between a job\nas steel company sales representative and team forward.\nElliott Chorley, 33, who plays\nright wing, is a brewery representative and father of three.\nWORKS AS PLUMBER\nDanny Summers, 39-year-old\nplumber with two children,\nplays defence.\nGoalie Don Collins, 31, is a\nlailway office clerk with two\nChUdren.\nBernie Grebinsky, 31-year-old\ndefenceman from FoSm Lake,\nSask., works as a brewery sales\nrepresentative to feed a family\nof three.\nReg Abbott, 84, a eentre,\nworks as an insurance sales\nagent. He has three chUdren.\nFred Dunsmore, 34 \u2022 year-\nold comptroUer with a cement\ncontracting firm and father of\ntwo, is another forward.\nAll are members of last season's senior Winnipeg Maroons.\nStudents at the University of\nManitoba are centre Roger\nBourbon'nais, right-wing Marsh-\naU Johnston and defencemen\nPaul Conlin and Terry O'Mal\nley, members of Canada's first\nexperiment with a national\nteam \u2014 the young 1964 Olympic\nsquad that finished fourth.\nGoaltender Ken Broderick\nand forwards Bob Forhan,\nBarry McKenzie and Brian Con-\nacher are UBC students who\nwill commute for weekend exhibition games.\n\"They're good boys,\" says\nCoach Gordie Simpson, 35-year\nold father of two and assistant\ncredit manager with a cement\ncontracting firm.\nSimpson, who was chosen to\nhandle the national team after\ndirecting Maroons to the Allan\nCup last spring, is optimistic.\n\"We are combining the best\nof two teams,\" he says, referring to the 16 former Maroons\nwhose experience will be mixed\nwith the zest of eight young\nOlympic holdovers.\n\"This team wUl have an ex-\nceUent chance. It should be four\nor five goals better than the\nOlympic team.\"\nSimpson says scoring punch\nwas what the Olympic team\nlacked and he believes such former Maroons as Al Johnson\n(who saw NHL duty with Detroit Red Wings), Abbott, Duns-\nmore and Gary Aldcorn wUl\nprovide it.\nIn the first two weeks of\npractice Simpson stressed basic\nhockey\u2014\"to cure them of bad\nhabits.\" Then comes exhibition\nplay in which he wUl try to set\nup \"three good-scoring lines.\"\nHis only firm decision so far is\nto keep Bourbonnais and Johnston together.\nSimpson's only regret is that\nsoon he must tell some of his\nMaroons they won't be on the\nteam. This will be a sad chore\nbecause many friends are\namong them.\npionship honors in Ice hockey,\nwsr canoe paddling, basketball, |\nveledrome cycling, tennis, bowl-.\ning and major league softbaU. {\nIn 1929 she married Lloyd\nMcGowan,   a  former  Ontario\nchampion basebaU and hockey i\nplayer who has been a Montreal |\nStar sports writer for years,    j\n\"I met him at the Olympics!\nin 1928 when I was captain of\nthe Canadian women's team.\nHe was covering the game for\nthe press and had to interview\nme.\"\nMyrtle was Canadian sprint\nchampion in the 60 and 100\nmetres and 400-metre relay in\n1828-29-30. She set records at\nthese distances both indoors\nand out. In 1928 she also won the\n1011-metre dash in international\nexhibitions at Paris and London.\nAnd at the British Empire\nGames in Hamilton in 1930 she\ncaptured Dominion medals for\nIhe 60 and 100 metres and 400-\nMetre relay.\nMyrtle admits there's one\nsport in which she has never\ndistinguished herself. She can't\nswim. \"Coaches didnt. approve\nof it during heavy track training.\"\nThese days the energetic former athlete, who always wears\na hat and gloves to work, is\nbusy with Olympic activities.\nShe has served for years on the\nadvisory boards of the Canadian Olympic Association and\nBritish Empire Games Association, and during the last few\nyears has been responsible for\nco - ordinating Olympic wardrobes.\nThe idea of wardrobes for\nOlympic teams was started by\nCanada and has since been\npicked up by other countries.\nThe wardrobes are donated by\nmanufacturers and sometimes\nas many as three firms wiU\nwork together on one outfit,\nMyrtle explains.\n\"They're designed speciaUy\nto keep luggage weight down.\"\nSTUDENT LOANS\nThe recent enactment of legislation by the\nGovernment of Canada to guarantee student\nloans is a great step forward to ensure that all\nstudents wishing to avail themselves of higher\neducation will not be denied the opportunity\nthrough lack of finances. The Plan enables\nstudents to borrow up to a maximum amount of\n$1000 per year for 5 years through Chartered\nBanks. Interest on the loan is paid directly by\nthe government until 6 months after graduation.\nAs in past years, we at the Bank of\nMontreal are anxious to assist students in their\nfinancing. If you are eligible for a student loan,\nor require further information about any financial problem, contact us at the Bank of\nMontreal. Mr. Pat Murison, the Manager, or\nhis assistants, Mr. Walter Toffoli and Karl\nTeichmann, ore fully versed in the Canada\nStudent Loan Plan and are looking forward te\nassisting you.\nIf\nall gasolines\nare the same\nhow come you can get\nbetter mileage with BA?\nThe reason is simply this: you can get better mileage because with B-A you\nuse less gasoline.\nWhy? Well here are four good reasons.\nFirst, B-A Gasolines are specially weather-formulated each month to compensate for regional and seasonal temperature changes. This means you\nget fast, positive starting and fast warm-ups. As a result, you use less gasoline\nduring these operations.\nSecondly, B-A Gasolines contain a special detergent to keep your carburetor clean. This gives you smoother idling and positive pick-up which\nmeans you use less gasoline.\nAlso, B-A Gasolines burn clean and prevent combustion deposits that\nrob your car of power. Result\u2014you use less gasoline.\nFinally, B-A Gasolines are final-filtered at the pump to eliminate harmful\ndirt particles that could interfere with your car's proper performance and\nwaste gasoline.\nThis is why we say you can get better mileage with B-A Gasolines.\nSo switch today. Move up to B-A Gasolines.\nTHI BRITISH AMERICAN OIL COMPANY LIMITED\nCLEAN ACROSS CANADA \u2022\nS-26l\u00bb\u00bb .\n %mm\n10 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUES., SEPT. 29,1964\nTo Build Mill\nAf Squamish\nVANCOUVER (CP)^-Plans for\na $60,000,000 pulp mill to be\nbuilt at Squamish, 40 miles\nnorth of here, were announced\nMonday.\nThe mill is planned by United\nPulp Company Ltd., a group of\nB.C. forest companies, and\nPrice Brothers and Company\nLtd., of Quebec.\nIn a joint announcement,\nSamuel Heller, president of\nUnited, and T. R. Moore of\nPrice Brothers, said first stage\nproduction of bleached kraft\npulp would start at 800 tons and\nprobably reach 900 tons.\nThe capacity would increase\nto about 1,200 to 1,400 in the\nsecond phase.\nMr. Heller said if applications\nfor pulpwood harvesting\nlicences for timber in nine\nCrown forests are approved construction could begin immediately.\nthe mill, employirig between\n350 ahd 375 persons and provld-\ninjc a yearly payroll of $2,750,-\n000, could be ill operation by the\nend of 1067.\nSome 700 men would be employed in construction.\nMARKET TRENDS\nNEW YORK (AP) -Stock\nmarket volume fell off sharply\nMonday as Wall Street displayed caution over the continued strike against General\nMotors, but prices grew firm in\nlate trading, putting averages at\nnew highs.\nGM stock itself was down a\nfull point early in the day but\nclosed with a loss of only ls\nat 100. For a while it showed a\nsmall fractional gain.\nSentiment in the Street\nseemed dampened by some\nnews items. Among these were\nreports of declines in building\ncontracts and in machine-tool\norders. In addition, many in\nWall Street were disappointed\nthat the GM strike was not\nsettled during the weekend.\nThe net result was a cooling\noff in trading enthusiasm. Volume was 4,800,000 shares compared with 6,180,000 Friday and\nwas the smallest since Sept. 16,\nwhen a Jewish holiday cut turnover to 4,240,000 shares.\nPrices were thoroughly mixed\nin the morning but began tq\nshow firmer tendencies in early\nafternoon. This prompted a\npickup in investment demand\nthat resulted in a slight gain\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS 1380 ON THE DIAL\nPACIFIC DAVLIGHT TIME\nTUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1964\n5:58\u2014Sign On\n6:00\u2014The Morning Show\n6:40\u2014Farm Fare\n6:45-Chapel ln the Sky\n7:00\u2014News\n7:05-Wake Up Time\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Wake Up Time Continues\n8:00\u2014News\n8:05\u2014B.C. News and Weather\n8:15-Wake Up Time\n8:30-Preview Commentary\n8:35\u2014Opening Markets\n8:39\u2014Wake Up Time Continues\n9:00\u2014News\n9:10-Music FiU\n9:15-The Archers\n9:30-Alan's A.M Spot\n9:59^DOOTS\n10:00\u2014News\n10:10\u2014What's the Song Contest\n10:15\u2014Morning Melodies\n10:45\u2014Lucky 7 Contest\n11:00\u2014News\nll:05-Book Mark\n11:10\u2014Morning Melodies\nContinue\n12:00\u2014Tennesse Ernie Ford\n12:15\u2014Sports News\n12:25-News\n12:30-B.C. Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Noon Markets\n1:00\u2014Sing Along\n1:15-What's On Tipp\n1:45\u2014Afternon Concert\n2:30\u2014News\n2:33\u2014Trans Canada Matinee\n3:00\u2014News\n3:05\u2014Sports News\n3:l6-Music FU1\n3:15\u2014Sacred Heart Program\n3:30\u2014A Summer Place\n4:00\u2014News\n4.03-Canadlan Roundup\n4:10\u2014Pope Parade\n5:00\u2014News\n5:05-The Rolling Home ShOw\n5:35-Closing Market)\n5:40-Today's Editorial\n5:45-Sports Desk\n5:50\u2014Spotlight on Sport)\n5:55\u2014Strikes and Spares\n6:00\u2014National News\n6:05-Grand Old Opry\n7:00\u2014News and Report)\n7:20\u2014Speaking Personally\n7:30\u2014Music For Listening\n8:00\u2014Assignment\n8:30\u2014Winnipeg Pops Concert\n9:00-The Film In Society\n9:30\u2014The Chapel Royal\n10:00\u2014New)\n10:15\u2014Follow Me To Greece\n10:30\u2014Ken's Korner\nU:00-Sign Off\nCBC PROGRAMS\nWEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1964\n1:00\u2014Morning Show\n1:00\u2014News and Report\ni:10\u2014Interlude\n: 15-The Archers\n1:30\u2014Pacific Express\nl:59-D.O.O.T.S.\nI:00-Morning Visit\n: 10\u2014For Consumer)\ni:15\u2014University of the Air\n1:45\u2014Playroom\n1:00\u2014Off the Record\n: 45\u2014Music on the Heather\n1:00\u2014Canadians on Record\n1:15\u2014News\n!:25\u2014Bill Good Sports\n!:30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n1:55\u2014Five To One\n1:00\u2014Readings from the\nClassics\n: 15\u2014The Tommy Hunter Show\n1:45\u2014Mainly Dixieland\n!:00\u2014Afternoon Concert\n1:30\u2014News\n!: 33\u2014Trans Canada Matinee\n1:30\u2014Matinee Theatre\n4:00\u2014News\n4:03\u2014Canadian Roundup\n4:10\u2014Tempo\n4:30-Countdown\n5:00\u2014Tempo for Teens\n5:30\u2014News\n5:40\u2014Today's Editorial\n5:45\u2014Sports Desk\n5:50\u2014Spotlight on Sports\n5:55\u2014Recorded Musie\n6:30\u2014The Question Tonight\n7:00\u2014New) and Parliament HiU\n7:20\u2014In the Provinces\n7:30\u2014Christian Frontiers\n8:00\u2014Assignment\n8:30\u2014Dixieland Downbeat\n9:00\u2014Music Diary\n9:30-CBC Strings\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Talks\n10:30\u2014Serenata\n11:00\u2014New Records\n12:00\u2014News\n12:05\u2014After Hours\n1:00\u2014News\nTELEVISION  FOR TODAY\nPACIFIC DAYLIGHT TIME\nKREM-TV \u2014 Channel I\n8:30 Woodv Woodpecker\n7:00 Sea Hunt\n7:30 Combat *\n8:30 McHale's Navy *\n9:00 Tycoon *\n9:30 Peyton Place *\n10:00 Fugitive '\n11:00 Nightbeat\n11:15 Bob Young and News '\n11:25 Nightbeat (continued)\n11:30 Lnte Show:\n\"Cobra Woman\"\nKXLT-TV \u2014 Channel t\n7:00 The Reporter \u2022\n8:00 World War I *\n8:30 The Red Skelton Show '\n9:30 Petticoat Junction *\n10:00 The Doctors and Nurses\n11:00 11 o'Clock News\n11:30 Big 4 Movie\nKBQ-TV \u2014 CTiannel 6\n7:00 Bold Journey\n7:30 Mr. Novak \u2022\n8:30 Man from U.N.C.L.E.\n9:30 TW-3 (C) *\n10:00 University of Washington\nFootball\n11:00 News and Weather\n11:30 Tonight with Carson (C) '\nCBC-TV \u2014 Nelsen, Channel 9; Trail, Channel 11\n4:00 The Secret Storm\n4:30 Razzle Dazzle\n5:00 Fireball XL-5\n5:30 Music Hop\n6:00 Hollywood and the Stan\n6:25 Home Edition\n7:00 7 o'Clock Show\n7:30 Reach For the Top\n8:00 Jack Benny Show\n8:30 Danny Kaye Show\n9:30 Front Page Challenge\n10:00 CBC Newsmagazine\n10:30 Cine Club\n11:00 News\n11:14 Viewpoint\nCJLH-TV - Channel 7, Lethbridge\nMOUNTAIN STANDARD TIME\nWEDNESDAY\n11:30 Test Pattern\n12:00 Sports, Weather, News\n12:20 Farm Report\n12:30 Whiplash:\n\"Barbed Wire\"\n1:00 Breaking Point:  \"Shadow\nof a Starless Night\"\n2:00 T.B.A.\n2:30 Woman's World\n3:00 Moment of Truth\n3:30 Take 30\n4:00 T.B.A.\n4:30 Razzle Dazzle\n5:00 Forest Rangers\n5:30 Music Hop\n6:00 Sports, Weather, News\n6:30 Rawhide\n7:30 Mr. Ed:\n\"Love Thy Neighbour\"\n8:00 Red River Jamboree\n8:30 Perry Mason\n9:30 Hall of Fame:\n\"The Fantasticks\"\n10:30 Already It's Tomorrow\n11:00 C.B.C. News\n11:15 Night Final\n11:20 Breaking Point:   \"Shadow\nof a Starless Night\"\n(Programs Mbjeet te change by stations without notice.)\nfor the popular average), aU of\nwhich topped the historic highs\nthey made Friday.\nThe Dow Jones industrials average rose .75 to 875.46.\nThe Associated Press average\nof 60 stocks rose .4 to 326.5.\nStandard and Poor's 500-stock\nindex rose .07 to 84.28.\nTEXAS GULF ACTIVE\nTexas Gulf Sulphur, which\npaced the market last week on\nrumblings of even greater mineral wealth on its Timmins,\nOnt., land, Was again the most\nactive stock, rising Vk to 62%\non 145,500 shares.\nAmong Canadian issues\nAluminium Ltd., rose Vt, Canadian Pacific Vt, Distiller) Seagrams Vt, Granby Mining Vi,\nMclntyre Porcupine Vt arid\nWalker Gooderham Vi.\nDome Mines was ddwn H at\nthe close, Hudson Bay Mining\nVt and international Nickel a\npoint,\nPrices were irregularly higher\non the American Stock Exchange, where Canadian Javelin gained a point.\nCanadian Marconi was up Vt,\nPreston Vs.\nMolybdenite fell 1-16, Fargo\nOil 3-16, Jupiter Corp. Vs and\nScurry Rainbow OU Vt:\nTORONTO (CP) - The stock\nmarket moved through a day\nof small price advances\u2014with\na few major exceptions \u2014 in\nmoderate trading Monday. The\nspeculative list was a disappointment, but picked up steam\ncompared with some recent sessions.\nThe industrial list was paced\nby issues such as Moore Corp.,\nwhich gained Vk to 57% alter\ntouching a 1964 high of 58. Another was Texaco OU, which\ngained a point to' a new peak of\n63. Hand Chemical A was ahead\nVt to a new peak of mi, as\nFinn WOMAN-Pope Paul\ntalks In the Vatican with\nMile. Marie Louise Monnet\nof France, the first woman\nbe appointed as an observer\nto the Ecumenical CouncU.\nThe occasion was an audience\ntor members of the International Middle Class Movement, which aha heads.\nwas Inland Natural Gas to itt\nhigh of 9Mi.\nInterprovincial Pipe Line was\nalso a fine performer, gaining\nIVi to a high of 91Vi.\nOn the minus side. Imperial\nOil and Canada Cement lost Vt\neach to il'k and 46, while Canada Permament Mortgage\ndropped % to 73.\nThe Speculative list was led\nhigher by Consolidated Morrison.\nMOST ACTIVE STOCK\nThe stock was the day's most\nactive issue and traded 505,223\nshares. Consolidated Morrison\ngained a penny to $1.15 but at\none point touched a 1964 high\nof $1.33 after the firm announced that Noranda Mines\nhad offered to buy its Saskatchewan potash properties for\n150,000 Noranda treasury\nshares.\nThe senior base metals list\ngot off to a bad start but finished on the upside. Noranda\njumped % to 48%. But Inco lost\nIVi to 90% in profit-taking. Falconbridge tell a point to mt.\nTrading in gold) waa brisk\nthroughout moSt of the session,\nto 60.\nIn light senior western oil\ntrading, Home B rose Vt to wk\nand the A issue) Vt to lift as\nHudson') Bay fell Vi to 15%.\nOn index, Industrials rose .68\nto 164.80, the TSE index .09 to\n183.88, golds .21 to 145.60, base\nmetals .21 te 70.39 and western\noils .55 to 96.22. Volume was\n3,518,000 shares compared with\n4,519,000 shares traded Friday.\nMONTREAL (CP)-A lagging\nindustrial section forced stocks\nto trade fractionally lower Monday An the Montreal arid Canadian Stock Exchanges.\nTrading was moderate in industrials with a volume of 212,-\n400 shares and moderately active in speculative trading with\n953,900 shares changing hands.\nComposite waa off 0.1 on index to 155.0 as advances edged\ndeclines 88 to 85.\nIndustrials were off 0.4 on index to 180.5. Canada Cement\ndropped Vt to 46 and Asbestos\nVt to 25. Moore Corp.. added\nWt to 58.\nPapers were up 0.4 at 148.0.\nAbitibi and Consolidated picked\nup Vt each to 15 and 42%\nFraser dropped Vt to 31V*.\nUtUities were also up 0.4 at\n148.0. CPR, Trans-Canada Pipe\nLine and Trans-Mountain Pipe\nLine all advanced Vi.\nBanks were up 0.1 at 131.1.\nBanque Canadienne Nationals\nwas Vi stronger at 77Vi and\nMontreal and Royal Vi at 68 and\n76.\nSenior base metals were\nlower. International Nickel\ndropped IVi to 90Vt and Hudson\nBay Mining a point to 70. Noranda gained Vt to 48.\nSenior eUs were off. Imperial\ndipped * to .u% and B-A,\nHusky and Pacific Pete Is oi-un\nto 38, 10% and 12U respectively.\nIn speculative trading Also-\ncope closed 30 cents higher at\n$1.18 on a turnover of 30,862\nshares. Consolidated Canorama\ndropped IVi cents to 17Vi cents.\nSOVIET OFFICIAL DIES   |\n. MbSCdW (Reuters) - Sergei\nBorlSov, Soviet first deputy foreign trade minister, died Sunday. Zorisov was one of Russia's greatest experts on foreign\ntrade, the'Communist newspaper Pravda said, and made a\nspecially important contribution\nduring the Second World War I\narid the years of post-war re.\nconstruction. His age was not\ngiven nor the cause of death.\nTlmUsWto^L bip.\ntZatuio, LVhasl&Jt.\nDAILY   CROSSWORD\n1. Prevaricator\n4. Entire\namount\n8. Tells\n6. WaU recess\nT.British\n(.Greek\nletter\n9. Flat-bat-\ntomed\nboat\n10. Burglar:\n\u25a0I.\n17. Weep\n19. Foxy\n20. Vended\n21. Obtained\n22. Sleeveless\ngarment\nSS. Church\nseason\n28. Tiny\n21. Blunder\n28. Prickly\nherbs\n29. Tavern\n11. Pigpen\n15. Arrange\nIn\na line\n84. Gamut\n35. Lath\n16. Story\n38. West wind\neBQU (HUH\njiLffl aatna\nnnaaa asms!\nnnaD qeict ar\noho aian niat\nrannnan araeii\nauiasci\nranan mnat-nat\nusira sun am\nnn aaa unas\nannaa annua!\nHnaH oaanra\nnaan mm\nYHtirSir'i Amur\n19. Capital of\nLatvia\n40. Again\n42. Small\nreport\n44. Ignited\nACROSS\n1. Clayey\n6. Brisk\n11. Infirm\n12. Come forth\n13. Booth\n14. Stick\ntogether\n15. High,\ncraggy Ml)\n16. Dull pain\n18. Type\ngenus:\nabbr.\n19. Emphaslie\n21. Ship's\n\"kitchen\"\n24. To be\nln debt\n27. Complies\n28. Maker of\ntiles\n80. Brown In\nthe sun\n31. Transmitter\n82. Plaid\nfabric;\nScot.\n86. Street:\nabbr.\n87. Places\n88. Constellation\n41. Rabbit fur\n43. Fairylike\n46. Lengthwiat\n46. Loyal\n47. Indian's\nshelter\n48. Drinking\naid\nDOWN\n1. Woody\nfiber\n2. Upon\nDAILY CltmoqUOTE \u2014 Hen'* how to work It)\nAXYDLBAAXR\nla    LONGFELLOW\nOne Utter simply stands for another. In this sample A Is uaM\nfor the three L's, X for the two O's, ete. Single letter), apoi\ntrophies, the length and fonmatlon of the words art all hlnta\nEach day the oede letters are different.\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nF N A T A        UWLATVBHWJ\nRVGDB      HJLHRRATAJSA\nSTHUA\u2014DHSNEAJPATC\nYesterday's Cryptoquote: I do NOT MIND WINS BUT 1\nHATE INACCURACY.\u2014SAMUEL BUTLER\nC IMS, Xlaf rwturM \u00bbv\u00bb4lc\u00bbu tu\nHX\nRX\nDO IN GAY COLORS\nSpice a kitchen scheme with\nchecks in red, green, blue \u2014\nyour favorite Colors.\nBig, bold checks in '5 to the\ninch cross-stitch set off kitchen\naccessories! Gay on Cloths, towel), curtains. Pattern 753: six\n6tf-i\u00abch motifs.\nTHIRTY-FIVE CENTS ht coins\n(no stamps please) for this pattern to Laura Wheeler, care of\nN.D.N. Needlecraft Dept., 60\nFront Street West, Toronto, Ont.\nPrint plainly PATTERN NUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS.\nNEW FOR 1965! 200 designs\n\u2014more fashions to knit, crochet\nthan ever! Plus 3 FREE patterns, embroidery, dolls' clothes.\nSend 25c for new Needlecraft\nCatalog.\nVALUE! 16 COMPLETE\nQUILT PATTERNS in deluxe\nColonial Quilt Book. For beginners, experts. Send 60c.\n0asal lApL With.\nVnwtwt WxvSn,\nPrinted Pattern\n9024\nSIZES\n10-20\nNEW STEP-IN\nFor  business  and  pleasure,!;\nchoose the step-in with fall's new\ndelightfully dashing sailor tie.\nSew it in transition cottons, crepe\nor wool.\nPrinted Pattern 9024: Misses'\nSizes 10, 12, 14, 16 ,18, 20. Size\n16 takes 3% yards 35-inch fab-|\nrlc.\nFORTY CENTS (40c) in coins\n(no stamps please) for this pattern. Print plainly 8IZE, NAME,\nADDRESS and STYLE NUMBER.\nFIFTY CENTS (50c) in cOltlsf\n(no stamps please) for this\npattern. Print plainly SIZE,\":\nNAME, ADDRESS and STYLE\nNUMBER.\nSend order to MARIAN MARi\nTIN, care of N.D.N. Pattern:\nDepartment, 60 Front Street?\nWest, Toronto, Ont.\nFREE PATTERN DIRECT TO\nYOUR DOOR - choose it frori\n300 design ideas in new Fall-Winter Pattern Catalog! School, cas\nual, career, dressy styles - al\nsizes! Send 50c\nt\nXL\n NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUES., SEPT. 29,1964 \u2014 11\nWANTED - FULL OR PART-\ntin* persons for established\nFuller Servicing Route. Wages\napproximately $100.00 per\nweek. Part-time $40.00 per\nweek. Apply: Ted Stewart,\nPh. 365-7055. -218.220\nHELP WANTED\u2014FEMALE\nCLEANING LADY WANTED\nSaturday mornings to clean\ngent's apt. Box 260, Nelson\nDaily News. -223-229\nWOMAN WANTED FOR 3\nhours cleaning. Ph. 352-6964.\n-229-229\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nWANTED - A POSITION AS\ncaretaker, motels and summer\ncamps, anywhere; for a small\nfee. Box 264, Nelson Daily\nNews. -228-239\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 tree storm\nwindows for all windows. Nationally known, serviced and guar-\ninteed appliances.\n17 Door plans to choose from.\n1, 2 or 3 bedrooms.\nBest bank financing possible.\nKingsway Trailer Wholesale\n5438 Imperial HE 4-0741\nDay or Night\nPART-TIME BABYSITTER. -\nPhone 352-6923. -224-235\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\n152-6874 Nelson and District\nA.l. Centre, 709 Third St., Nelson 1 De Jong. Technician,\n-tfn\nFOR SALE, GUERNSEY COW.\nGood milker. 1 whitehead calf.\nGeorge Soukeroff, Shoreacres\nFlats, B.C. -229-234\n1 YEAR OLD CHICKENS 80c\na piece or 32c a lb., dressed\nGlendale Farm, Ph. 957-9734,\nSalmo. -184-tfn\n-192-tfn\nFOR SALE-HOUSE TRAILER,\n32 x 8. Located at Twin Rivers\nMotel or Phone 365-5638, or\nBox 456, Kinnaird.    -225-230\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-tl\nWANTED - USED ELECTRIC\nmotors. Coleman Electric, 602\nFront St., Nelson, B.C.\n-227-tfn\nWANTED - CLEAN COTTON\nrags. Must be at least 12\ninches square. Nelson Dally\nNews. -126-tfn\nPERSONAL\nPERSONAL SUNDRIES & SUP-\nplies. 60% savings. Free price\nlist and sample on request.\nBox 8, Station C. ffinnineg.\n-27-246\nHYGIENIC SUPPLIES. SAVE\nup to 100%. \"Mail $1 for 18\nfinest quality assorted. Park\nSales, P.O. Box 561. Hamilton,\nOnt. -216-241\nWHEN MOM ASKED WHO SOT\nIN THE COOKIES I LOOKED\nHER STRAIGHT IN THE EVE\nANP 6AIP\u201e*I DID.'\"\nYEAH,BUT IWASSORTA\nHOPINS SHE'D GIVE MB\nA COOKIE FOR BEINS\nSO HONEST-\nPROPERTY  WANTED\nit*\nPOR SALE\nMISCELLANEOUS\nHUNTERS' SPECIALS; NEW\nGenuine 8MM German Mauser\nModel 98, 6-shot, rifles, $29.50.\nNew .303 Short Lee Enfield 10-\nshot, $16.50. New .303 British\nJungle Carbines, 10-shot,\n$27.50. New .30 calibre U.S.\nM-l carbine, semi-automatic,\n15-shot, $89.50. Free sling,\ncleaning accessories, gun case,\nwith each order for limited\ntime. ,303 and 8MM ammunition, $9.00 per 100. We ship\nC.O.D. International Firearms\nLtd,, 1011 Bleury, Montreal.\n-227-232\nFOR SALE\nMISCELLANEOUS\n(Continued)\nLIMITED AMOUNT OF SOIL,\nas it comes. Delivered in 5 and\n8 yd, lots. Ph. 352-6044.\n-226-231\nCONVERSION   OIL  BURNER,\nas new, with all controls. 911\nGordon Rd. or Ph. 352-5946.\n-229-231\nMISTO-VAN\nFor outdoor and indoor use.\nEliminates odour Immediately\nand waste effectively.  Positively guaranteed. Sold at\nNELSON FARMERS SUPPLY\nLTD.\n524 Railway St.     Ph. 352-5375\n-229-229\n11 SIX-LIGHT WINDOWS, COM-\nbination door and frame, large\nfridge, complete double bed,\noil range, small accordion, 14\"\nV-Pulley, grease gun, 2 trailer\nhitches, piston water pump,\nH.D. drum, 4-2-gal. oil cans,\n10 augers, pr. of ice skates,\nsize 8. Ray Beaton, R.R. No. 1,\nNelson. -226-231\nBUSINESS   ft   PROFESSIONAL\nDIRECTORY\nA handy alphabetical guide to goods and services\navailable In Nelson.\nAutomobile Dealers\nBILLS' MOTOR-IN LTD.\niStudebaker-Larki\n213 Baker St.      Pbone 352-3231\n-tfn\nPARKVIEW MOTORS LTD.\n(Rambler - Volkswagen!\n321 Nelson Ave.   Phone 312-5355\n\u2014tfn\nBuilding Supplies\nBEE BUILDING iUPPLY LTD.\nEverything in waterproof\nplywood.\n101 Baker SL     PhottS 852-3135\nBURNS LUMBER CO. LTD!\"\ntot Baker St.     Phone 858-6661\n  -tfft\nCOLUMBIA tftAblNti CO \"'\n901 Front St. Ph MMSM\nLots of free perking,\n, .--tfa\nCabinet Makers\nJOS. C. MBRMET        ,\nProfessional Kitchen Remodeling. Serving Nelson and Diet.\n1020 Davies SL - Nelson\n-tfn\nContractors\nJCOKANEE CONWRUCTlON\nco. - stt ward \u00abt. ,\nResidential \u2022 Com. \u2022 Renovation\nPhone 352-363$\nEstimates OA all jobs.   _\n* -M4-J3S\n\"\"\"'' a\"rt EJpSiSf\nRenovations. Cement work\nand General Cereeatry\nPhone isMtfo\nUtlo Husiak, General Masonry\nStone \u2022 Brick - Cement - Stucco\nPlastering\n1333 Falls St.       Ph. \u00ab}\u2022\u00ab\u00ab\n-413-ilM\nPhoto Copying\nPOWELL ENGRAVING\n4M Ward St.       Nelson, B.C\nPhone 362-7521.\nContracts - Birth Certificates\nLegal Documents - Important\nPapers.\n-tin\nPrinting\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\nPrinters - Lithographers\nColor Printing\nPhOne 332-355*\n-tin\nRadio & TV Service\nRadio \u2022 TV \u2022 Transistor - Service\nCOLUMBIA ELECTROCENTRE\nLTD.\n463 Ward St.     PhOne 35W581\n-218-tfn\nVIDEO ELECTRONICS\n408 Ball St, - Phone 355-3355\n-tfn\n\u2014,-   m\u2014         \t\n......, -.. \u2014... -.- ... ,.\u201e-. .\nReducing \u2022 Exercises\nLadles, Men., Wad., Fri.\n_   16 md. \u2022 10 p.m\nGents, Tues., Thurs., 4at,\ni p.*. -10 p.m.\nSLIM GYM\nMS laker St     Phone 35t-$tl\u00ab\n-209-tfn\nDO YOU HAVE WATER PROB-\nlems? Permo-Cement wUl stop\nthem. Sets in 4-5 minutes. No\nheat or hydration; no expansion; no contraction. Bonds to\nwood, steel, masonry; even under water, 2 lbs. $1.89; 4 lbs.\n$2.95. Larger sizes or bigger\njobs. Columbia Trading Co.,\n901 Front St. -226-231\n4\" VITRIFIED SEWER PIPE,\nelbows, tees and Ys, 4\" drain\ntile, flue liner, chimney brick,\nmasonry cement, Portland cement, Red-E-Crete concrete\nand mortar mix in stock at\nColumbia Trading Co., 901\nFront Street. -226-231\nUSED KENMORE OIL HEATER\n35,000 BTU, 3-gallon tank, elec\ntrie thermostat control, circulating fan, excellent cond., $30.\nOne Sunbeam floor polisher.\n$19. Ph. Balfour 229-4607.\n-228-230\nFOLEY MODEL' 200 FILER;\nModel 32 handsaw retoother;\nModel 525 automatic setter;\nModel LM4 lawnmower sharp,\nener; Model 314 gummer; hand\ntools, attachments. Like new.\nBox 608. Rossland.    \u2014228-233\n0,000 B.T.U. GAS FURNACE,\nBeatty   24\"   mangle   Ironer,\nvenetion blinds. Ph. 352-5657.\n-209-234\nDRY FIR AND TAMARAC. -\nStove length. Ph. 352-5485,\n-219-246\nSINGER SEWING MACHINE\nCo. Repairs, sales, rentals. 339\nBaker St. Ph. 352-3631.-228-233\nACME DELUXE COAL AND\nwood range. Like new. Ph. 359-\n7411. -228-230\nCOMB USTIONEER STOKER,\n$100. Phone 352-3808. -207-tfn\nR.C.A. T.V. CONSOLE. PHONE\n352-6010. -225-tfn\nMACHINERY\nNelson's\nWelding Supply\nHeadquarters\nEverything for the\nWELDER\nMACHINES\nRODS\nACCESSORIES\nHANDBOOKS\nMAC'S WELDING\n& EQUIPMENT CO.\n$14 Railway St.    Ph. 352-5301\nRENTALS\nOFFICE SPACE FOR RENT,\nsuitable for Beauty Parlour,\nBarber Shop, or office, renovate to suit tenant, long lease\navailable. Apply Hume Hotel.\n-197-tfn\nAUTOMOTIVE, BICYCLES\nMOTORCYCLES\nHSKPG. AND SLEEPING RM\nweekly, monthly rates. Dishes,\nlinen supplied, parking. Allen\nRooms, 171 Baker SL\n\u201427-tfn\nONE OR TWO- ROOM FURN-\nished apts in Annable Block\n$21 and up. Call 352-7217. Poulin Agencies Ltd,, 582 Ward St.\n-206-230\nCOZY, QUIET, MODERN APT.\nLiving room, bdrm., kitchen\nand bath. $70 per mon. unfurn.\nPh. 352-3815 Fleming Apts.\n\u2014223-tfn\nFURNISHED HSKP. ROOM;\nheat and water supplied; Vt\nblk. oft Baker St., 414 Falls St.\nPh. 352-6912 or 352-3208.\n-229-tfn\nCOMFORTABLE HSKP. ROOM\nover   our   office.   Lambert\nRealty. Baker St. Ph. 352-3944.\n-226-tfn\n-228-tfn\n3-PIECE BATHROOM SET,\nwhite, complete with fittings,\nin good condition, cheap.\nDouble bed, complete with\nmattress and spring. Robins\u2014\n785 Kipling, Trail.     -229-231\nALL WOOL GREY BLANKETS,\nfreshly dry-cleaned, ea. $3.50;\npillow cases, freshly laundered,\nlight blue, ea. 40c; 3' camp\ncots, ea. $3.60. Columbia Trading Co., 901 Front St. -226-231\nRefrigeration\nRefrigeration Sales ahd service\nCarlson equipment\nNelson. B.C.    Phone $S2-545ti\n-166-tfn\nFlying School\nGov't approved plying Sohool.\nAir Charter Service.\nSingle or jpjM\u00ab.\u00bb\u00a3w**\nWANETA  AIRWAYS\nPhOne 365-7444 or 365-4871\nCe.t>*|\u00ab.B.C._iiMjs\nGarages\nUpper Falrvtew Meters Ltd.\nCor. to at Davits Ph. SttUis\nTransistorised Ignition\n\u2014tin\nMonumental\nStones\nBronze and Granite\nK. D. RE?S\nPh. 312-6727     3J0-507 Baker St.\n-197-tfn\nSporting Goods\nPreS WWieley'e (part Shop\n4tt taker Street Phone 852-7741\nTopsoil\nLam's Topsoil, S\u00bbd end Gravel\nPh. 3M-2J55 Days \u2022 352-7576 eves.\n-tin\nWelding & Iron\nWorks\nUt KOOTENAY WELDING ft\nCASTING REPAIRS\nspecialist take care of vour welding problem, $o years experience\nfrom different countries in Eur-\nSit. Craftsmanship guaranteed\nIttel, cylinder heal cylinder\nblocks, etc.\n1121 Columbia Ave., Castlegar.\nPhone 365-5831\n\u2014127-282\nSIDES OF GRAIN FED BEEF,\n49c, cut and wrapped; Sides ol\npork. 29c; sides of pork, cut\nand wrapped, 33c. Newdan\nFarin, Creston Ph. 353-990) or\n$59-9769. -171-tffl\nPLASTIC PIPE. ALL SIZES\nand pressures. Lowest prices.\nMac's Welding it Equipment\nCo. Ltd., 314 Railway St., Kelson, B.C. Phone $54-5301.\n-l$0-\u00bb90\npLYwbito special - m\nsanded, 4x8x5\/16\", $2.\u00ab0i 4x8X\nH\", $3.36: 4x8xtt\". kMj -\nSanded, 4x8xH, tt.93. Coium>\nwa Trading Co., Bl front St.\nFOR   THE   BEST   jR   USED\nautomatic washers, dryers, re-\nfrigerators, television, etc. contact Nelson Electric Co Ltd.,\n$74 Baker St.. Meisoa. B.C,\nHLAWIC IPIPB, DRAIN WASTE\nand vent or water pipe and\nfittings in stock. Columbia\nTrading Co., 9*1 Front Street.\n-226-231\n1 Only *-, D-7\nCaterpillar\nTractor\nComplete with\nDeter and Winch\n$6000.00\nMAC'S WELDING\n& EQUIPMENT CO.\n314 Railway St.     Ph. 352-5301\n-228-tfn\nArc Welding Electrodes\nFor welding High Tensile Steel\nC* fork Lifts, AC or DC.\nSttvfthSfin Machinery Ltd.\nPhOnt 352-3561\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nroom, private entrance, close\nin, room for car. Ph. 352-2977.\n-196-tfn\n2 CABINS, $15 AND $20 MON-\nthiy. Suitable bachelors, available 1st of Oct. Ph. 352-3761.\n-226-231\n2    BDRM.    MODERN    APT\nfurn. or unfurn. Ph. 352-3353.\n-217-tfn\n3   BEDROOM   HOUSE   WITH\nbath. Box 70, Crescent Valley,\n-227-232\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-tIn\nSELF   CONTAINED   3   ROOM\nsuite. Ph. 352-7139 after 6 p.m.\n-209-tfn\nSMALL SUITE, SUITABLE\nfor 1 man. 116 Vernon St. Ph,\n352-5602. -219-tfn\n6 RM. HOUSE WITH GAS FUR-\nnace. 508 Houston St. Phone\n352-7442.      \u25a0 -224-229.\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\nCOTTONWOOD WRECKAGE\nwrecking: '55-'56 Chev., '53\nFord Pickup, '55 and '56\nFords, '55-'56-'S7 Dodge and\nPlymouth, Vt ton Chev. truck;\nGood motors, '56 Chev V8, '55\nChev 6, '53 Consul, '56 Dodge.\nPh. 352-5815, Box 382, 24 Ymir\nRd. -221-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-186-tfn\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC. FOR SALE\ni Continued i\nWANTED - LAKEFRONT\nacreage, 10 acres up. Prefer\nboat access only, All cash for\nsuitable property. S. Anderson, 100 N. Fletcher St., Chiiliwack, B.C. -220-tfn\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC. FOR SALE\n1963 VALIANT, SIGNET 200,\nconvertible, red with white\ntop. Has all optional equipment, standard shift, 145 H.P.\nengine. Ph. 332-6175' after 6\np.m. -219-tfn\nFOR SALE-1956 R190 INTER-\nnational Tag, 16 ft. deck, full\nair brakes, 900 rubber. Columbia Trading Co., 901 Front St.\n-226-231\n55 FORD, '53 PLYMOUTH, '53\nZephyr, '63 Norton 750 CC Motorcycle, $850. North Shore\nService. Fh. 352-2929.\u2014188-tfn\n'55 PONTIAC LAURENTIAN, 6\ncyl. Standard shift. P.O. Box\n59, Thrums. Ph. 359-7515.\n-224-229\nFOR SALE - 1963 HONDA; '35\nTrailster. Good cond. Phone\n352-7171 after 4. -226-231\n1958 FORD RANCHWAGON,\n1949 Vi-ton. Ph. 352-6055 after\n5 o.m.  -226-231\nEXPERTLY DESIGNED AND\nrecently completed 3 B.R.\nbungalow. Large L.R. with\nbroadloom; good sized D.R.;\nboth with large corner windows. Interior of house is\nwood- panelled throughout.\nBeautiful bright kitchen with\nplenty of cupboards and counter space; eating area. Attached carport. Terms. $21,500\nRobertson, Hilliard. Phone\n352-7252. -226-229\nIMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY, 2\nbedroom design. F.P. $7500\nWm. Kalyniuk Agencies. Ph.\n352-2425. -186-tfn\nFOR SALE-ROOMING HOUSE\nBox 223, Nelson News.\n-176-tfn\n2-BEDROOM   BUNGALOW   AT\nSilverton. Ph. 358-2364.\n\u2014228-233\nLOT IN KINNAIRD,  100'xlSO'.\nGood location. Ph. 352-5688.\n-228-233\nFAIRVIEW - Itt STOREY, 3\nbdrm. home. Phone 352-2586.\n-229-234\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 A\nworking girl. Ph. 352-2766 after 5 p.m. \u2014228-tfn\nBOATS AND ENGINES\nMcCULLOCH-SCOTT OUT-\nboard engines, boats and parts,\nSales & Service. Mac's Welding & Equipment Co Ltd., 514\nRailway St., Nelson, B.C.\nPhone 352-5301. -130-230\n3-BEDROOM HOUSE  AT SIL-\nverton. Ph. 358-2369. -228-233\nONLY $1000 DOWN - ROBSON,\n3 bdrm. house on lot with lake\nfrontage, directly across from\nPulp Mill. Excellent for family\nwith children. Reas. priced.\nPh. 365-5579, J. E. Wales.\n-226-231\nABOUT 9 ACRES CLEARED\nplus barn, old pear orchard,\nentrance from Queen's Bay\nTownsite, plus 46 acres ln\ntimber and poles. Full price\n$3500.00. Wm. Kalyniuk Agencies. Ph. 332-2425.      -221-tfn\nFOR SALE, 2 BIG LOTS ON\nYmir Road, No. 14; 3 B.R.\nhouse on one lot, part basement. Very suitable for store\nsight. Inquire at 14 Ymir Rd.\n-219-tfn\n1956 VOLKSWAGEN, $250;   '47\nChev. $75. Ph. 352-2363.\n-224-229\n59 CHEV V8, AUTOMATIC. -\nClean inside and out. A-l condition. Ph. 352-3355.    -224-229\n\u202253 4-DOOR PLYMOUTH, Excellent cond. $295. Ph. 352-5255.\n-224-229\n1954 DODGE WAGON, HELPER\nSprings. $200. Ph. 352-3389.\n\u202259 FORD HALF-TON PICKUP,\n26,000 miles. Ph. 365-8307.\n-227-232\nFIRST $200 TAKES AWAY '54\nChev. Phone 365-8276. Collect.\n-227-232\n\u202258 FORD V8 STAND. BEAUTI-\nful cond. Ph. 352-6903.\n-229-tfn\n1950 AUSTIN, GOOD COND. -\nBeasley Service. Ph. 359-7411.\n-228-233\n'55 PONTIAC, NEEDS WORK.\nOffers? Ph. 352-3087.  -225-260\n1953 G.M.C. PICKUP IN GOOD\ncOnd. Ph. 359-7372.     -227-229\nCLEAN 1 BDRM. HOUSE. -\nauto, heated. Adults. Ph.\n352-7184. -227-232\nSELF - CONTAINED 3-ROOM\nfurnished suite.  Ph. 352-6951,\n2 ROOM SUITE. SUITABLE\nfor 2 girls or couple. 116 Vernon St. Ph. 355-5602. -229-tfn\n4-BDRM. HOUSE AT 408 HOUS-\nton St. Call anytime afternoon.\nPhone 352-7361. -228-233\n-229-220\nVALLEY AUTOMOTIVE LTD.\nMasseyFtrgusbn. New Hoi\nland New and Used Farm\nEquipment. Parts, Sales and\nService. Phpnt 356-2254, Cres-\ntOn. B.u -110-tfn\nJOHN \"tJlHS'\" 440  DIESEL\ncrawler, bladt winch, with \u00abr\nwithout amber. Ph. 367-9809.\n-229-tfn\nBUSINESS\nOPPORTUNITIES\nFOJt SALE - G66D QUALITY\nalfalfa and timothy hay, delivered. Jot Pogany, Jar.,\nLister, B.C. Ph. 353-2605.\n\u2014435-830\nfOR SALE - 12 FT. ALUM-\ninum csrtopper and 3tt H.P.\nmotor, used 2 weeks ot summer. Ph. 365-5638 Or BOX 466,\nKinnaird. -as-Sat\nBARLEY STORE FOR SALE.\n15c per hale. Newdan Farm.\nCreston. Ph. 336-9901.\n-227-tfn\n20'' GAS RANGE, $40. PHONE\n352-6554. -229-234\n(Continued next column)\nL.,UM\\v**m.m.mL*m\nFOR\nSALE\n$8,000 DOWN\nWill Buy Your Own\nBUSINESS and\nHOME\nMbderrt 2-bay service station ahd adjoining home.\nKinnaird.\nFull price $30,000.\nPhone 364-2181 or\nWrite Box 100, Trail.\n\u00ab\u2014m mmmmm. m\\mmm >>\u25a0\u00bb\u25a0\u25a0 *.\u00bb\u00bb\u25a0\u00ab\nSELF \u2022 CONTAINED  SUITE -\nAdults. Ph. 352-6732.   -170-tfn\n1950 VAUXHALL. $10. PHONE\n352-7198. -229-231\nNORTH SHORE, tt MILE\nfrom bridge. House and two\nrental dwellings. Highway and\nlake frontage. 2tt acres. Ideal\ncommercial potential. Phone\n352-5205. -225-tfn\n12 ACRE FARM AT SLOCAN\nPark. Modern home. Contact\n365-5712, or 365-5536 after 6,\nor write Box 992, Castlegar.\n-220-231\nMACHINERY\nFOR   HIRE\nFOR RENT - PORTABLE 225\nAMP DC  Welder.   Portable\nsteam cleaner. Ph. 352-2042.\n-218-tfn\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST - BILLFOLD CONTAIN-\ning around $200 in $10 and $20\nnotes. Reward. Phone F. Winter, 428-2251. -229-231\nWANTED TO RENT\nMODERN 3 BDRM. HOUSE BY\nclean reliable family. Phone\n365-7450 Castlegar.     -229-231\nPETS,  CANARIES,   BEES\nCHIHUAHUA   PUPS   -   TAN\ncolored. Phone 352-5857.\n-217-243\nJfolami\nfatly Sfauia\nCirculation  Dept.,  Ph.  352-3353\nPrice per single copy, io cents\nBy carrier per week. 40 cents\nin advance.\nSubscription ratesi\nBy mail in Canada\nOutside Nelson   '\nOne month  $ 2.00\nThree months   -  5.00\nSix months  10.00\nOne year 13.00\nFAIRVIEW.  - 2   BEDROOM\nhouse. 4tt lots. $500 down, $75\nmonthly. Full price $6950. Wm.\nKalyniuk Agencies, 352-2425.\n-225-tfn\nFIVE ROOM HOUSE, 3 B.R.\nCement foundation and basement, 2 lots, lawn and garden.\nS.P. $8250; CD. $2500. Bal.\nterms. Ph. 352-6328.   -229-234\nWANT TO TRADE  DUPLEX\nin Calgary with lots in Nelson,\nBox 262, Nelson Daily News.\n-229-231\nPROPERTY WITH BUILDINGS\nnear Trail. Apply Box 324,\nTrail, or Phone 384-1693 after\n8 p.m. \u2014226-237\nFOR SALE - CROWN GRANT-\ned Claims, NelSon-Ymir area.\nH. Park, 457 Rutland Ave.,\nSan Jose, Calif.       -223-230\n7 AC. FARM, 2-B.R. HOUSE,\nfull basement, oil heat, young\norchard. Box 37, Robson\n-207-23$\n(Continued next column)\nSTAYS UP TO GET DOWN\u2014Hypnotist Richard SL Charlet\ndemonstrates technique he used on Yvonne Young, 23, to\nget her to loae weight by staying awake In San Jose, Calif;\nShe remained awake a record 268tt hours and tost 16tt\npounds. She continued normal activities, Including working\nIn her father's night spot\nt   ROOM   APT. - CENTRAL.\nAdults. Ph. 352-6024.   -198-tfn\n2 BDRM. HOUSE ON HIGH ST.\nPhone 352-2861. -227-tfn\n3 ROOM APT. APPLY 306 Victoria St. -227-232\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\nModern\nFor\nApproximately 700 sq. ft. ol\nmodern,   fully   wired office\nspace located on Baker Street\nIn Nelson.\nREASONABLE   RENT\nLong or Short Tern\nLeases Arranged\nApply to:\nNelson Daily News\nPh.  3523552\nBuy. Sell. Trade With Want H>\nBuy selltradeRent hire help\n\u00ae1jp Nflamt lailg TSnvx\nCLASSIFIED ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT\n.!.\n \u25a0\u25a0\nmm\n12 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUES., SEPT. 29,1964\ni-Price Sale of\nGOOD BCK^S v\nsuch as the following\nWas  Now\nEducation of a Golfer by Sam Snead 4.95\nCooking Out of Doors by Molly Graham. . 3.00\nFoods for Home and School by C, C. Greer 2.15\nThe Fabulous Country\nby Charles Laughton. :...:.;.,..,f>,95   :\n\u2022 Flame of Power by Peter C. Newman 4.95\nIhe Witch Door by-E. Ogilvie ...........5.20\nPrimitive Art by Franz Boa ...:..:. 2.25\nThe Kite by W. 0. Mitchell ..\u201e....: .3.05\nCanada . . . Tomorrow's Giant\nby Hutchison .4.95   .\nScience Circus by Bob Brown ...5.50\nand many others to choose from.\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nOnly--.\n2.47r\nuo\nLO?  .\n3.50 .\n2.50\n2.60\n1.16\n2.00\n2.50\n2.75\nRailroad Collision\nTakes Four Lives\nMONTGOMERY, 111. (AP)-A\nspeeding Burlington passenger\ntrain slammed into an idle Rock\nIsland train early Monday ki'lin?\nfour crew members and injuring\nat least 40 passengers.\nWitnesses said the Rock Island train was not moving at\nthe time of the crash. The Burlington train was traveUing at\nan estimated 40 to 45 miles an\nhour, officials said.\nThe metal-searing coUision demolished at least five diesel units\nof both trains. Engine parts\nwere strewn overa-hundred feet\nof track.\nAt least eight Burlington cars\nwere deraUed and tracks torn\nup for hundreds of feet. A con-\nASKS PLANNING\nVANCOUVER (CP)-Regional\nplanning should be set up\nthroughout the province to ensure control of housing standards and to safeguard health,\nthe provincial union board of\nhealth conference said. The conference here recently urged\nMinister of Municipal Affairs\nDan Campbell to urgently consider, the request.\nHave the-Job Done Right'\nUK GRAVER\nW       LIMITED        ed\nPhone 352-3315\nMASTER  PLUMBER\ntrol tower, that was to have\ngiven the waiting Rock Island\ntrain the go-ahead signal, was\ntoppled and twisted about a baggage car.\nTRAIN WAS REROUTED\nThe Chicago, Burlington and\nQuincy train was the No. 3 overnight Zephyr from Chicago to\nOmaha. The Rock Island Golden\nState Limited, headed for Chicago from Los Angeles, was being rerouted over Burlington\ntracks.\nThe dead were identified as\nRusseU Reeves of Mokena, 111.,\nR. L. Parker of Aurora, 111., and\nGeorge Donaldson of Galesburg,\nIU. The fourth victim, George\nLincoln of Galesburg, died a few\nhours after the accident in hospital.\nAU but Reeves, the Rock Island engineer, were riding in the\nlead Burlington car.\nFire Chief Herbert Hoffman\nsaid \"the impact threw the Rock\nIsland engine completely up and\nover the Burlington cab.\"\nOne Rock Island official estimated there were about 200 passengers aboard both trains.\nHtlps You Overcome\nFALSE TEETH\nLooseness and Worry\nNo longer be annoyed orf eel lll-at-\n\u2022ue because oJ.Iwm, wblibly lalse\nteeth. FASTEETH, an Improved alkaline (non-acid) powder, sprinkled on\nJour plates holds them firmer so they\neel more comfortable. Avoid embar-\nraaament caused -by loose plates. Get\nPASTEETH at any drug counter.\nIN SCHOOL AND OUT Of SCHOOl-Two Negro first-grade\npupils leave formerly all white Jefferson Davis School (upper) in Jackson, Miss., as integration moves on a pace, and.\n(lower) Mrs. Patty Salters' second grade classroom Is somewhat boycotted In Cleveland. This is Stephen E. Howe Elementary School, with only 13 of 40 pupils present It's the\nschool where civil rights demonstrations took place in the\nspring, and where a young minister was crushed to death\nunder tracks of a bulldozer while the school was being buUt\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c line, 40c line bold face type; larger type rates\non request. Minimum two lines.\nCOPT DEADLINE - PLEASE NOTE\nCopy for this column accepted until 3 p.m. foi an\nin next day's publication.\nCamera-Shy Canadian Negotiates\nA Small Peace in Troubled Cyprus\nTEMBLOS, Cyprus (CP) -\nThis is an historic occasion,\"\nsaid Maj. Bob Therriault, as\nGreek- and Turkish - Cypriots\nembraced outside the troubled\nvillage of Temblos, thumping\neach other on the back. \"Perhaps we should record it with\na picture.\"\nBut when the photograph was\nagreed upon, nearly an hour\nlater, the Canadian negotiator\nresponsible for the reunion\nstepped quietly out of camera\nrange.\nThe incident took place late in\nAugust when a dozen Turkish-\nCypriot harvesters, mostly\nwomen and old men, ventured\ncautiously from their hemmed-\nin village under Canadian\nescort to gather the fruit of\ntheir gnarled carob trees.\nAn elderly Turkish. \u2022 Cypriot\nrecognized a constable in the\ngroup of Greek-Cypriot policemen who met them at the\ngrove, and a round of handshaking and back-thumping began.\nIt was something of a triumph\nfor Maj. Therriault, 36, a six-\nfoot Quebecer with a mUitary\nmoustache who commands B\nCompany of the 1st Battalion,\nRoyal 22nd Regiment.\nWeeks of patient negotiation\nand  persuasion had  laid the\ngroundwork for the harvesting\noperation, weeks of going back\nand forth between Greek-Cypriot authorities and the Turkish-\nCypriot mukhtar\u2014village headman \u2014 of Temblos, calming\nfears and suspicions.\nThe mukhtar had steadfastly\nrefused to meet Greek-Cypriot\nauthorities face to face and discuss problems. Then, when a\nmeeting on neutral ground had\nat last been held, none of the\nvillagers wanted to be among\nthe first harvesters.\nThe appointed day for the\nharvest to begin went by without volunteers. The men of the\nvillage sat or squatted around\nthe mukhtar outside the dusty\nand delapidated coffee house,\narguing among themselves.\nThings started out the same\nway on the following day, when\nMaj. Therriault and eight men\nof the regiment returned at\n7:30 a.m. to escort the vUlag-\ners.\n\"Yes, there are Greek policemen down there,\" the major explained patiently. \"But only one\nof them is armed, and I will\nkeep him right beside me.\nAfter an hour's discussion, a\ntoothless and grey-haired patriarch left the circle and returned with his donkey and a\nlong pole. A few women fol\nlowed him, then more of the\nmen.\nThe reason for the villagers'\nconcern was obvious. The all-\nTurkish village, nestled in the\nfoothills of the Kyrenia Mountains has been described as\n\"the biggest potential trouble\nspot north of the mountains.\"\nHemmed in on three sides by\nGreek-Cypriots, its supply line\nis a steep path up the side of\nthe mountains to St. Hilarion\nCastle, a Turkish-Cypriot bastion some 2,000 feet above. The\nclimb takes 3'k hours.\nA potentially explosive situation developed at Temblos in\nmid-July, when Greek-Cypriots\ncharged that Turkish \u2022 Cypriot\nfighters were coming down into\nthe refugee-crowded vUIage of\n800 from the mountains.\nGreek.Cypriot forces massed\naround the viUage and threatened to attack. But nearly 100\nmen of B Company moved in\nbetween, and both sides were\npersuaded to withdraw.\nOn the first day of the carob\nharvest, vUlagers worked in the\ngrove for about two hours, poking the black carob pods from\ntree branches with poles and\nloading them into baskets and\nsacks carried by donkeys.\nCarobs are a major agricultural  export  of  Cyprus,   and\nbrought the island considerably\nmore than \u00a31,000,000 ($3,000,000)\nin revenue last year.\nThe pods, which resemble\nlarge black pea - pods, are\npressed to extract a tasty syrup\nknown in Cyprus as carob\nhoney. The leathery pressed\npods are exported, mainly to\nEngland, where they are used\nin the manufacture of cosmetics, plastics and other products. Cypriots use them as\nanimal fodder.\n\"That's a fine start,\" Maj.\nTherriault commented after the\nfirst day's harvest. \"I would\nhave counted it worthwhile if\nthey had agreed to work for\neven 20.minutes the first day.\"\nHe felt the carob harvest\nmight serve as a \"test case\"\nin arranging to gather the olive\nand lemon crops, which ripen\nlater in the year.\nUrged to pose for a photograph with the reassured harvesters, Maj. Therriault gestured\ntoward Cpl. Roger Charest of\nQuebec and Cpl. Bernard Tu-\nrenne of Montreal, who kept the\nVan Doo escort close beside the\nvillagers as they wandered\nfrom tree to tree.\n\"I have some top-notch section leaders here,\" he said.\n\"Get some of the men into the\npicture.\"\nWHITE\nAND\nLIGHT BLUE\nJEANS\nJust Arrived\n$\n5.95\nFmory'S\nLTD.\nTHE   MAN'S  STORE\nTRAIN KILLS POUR\nFOSTORIA, Ohio (AP) - A\npassenger train crashed into a\ncar at a crossing on a rural\nroad north of here Sunday, killing four Mexican migrant farm\nworkers and critically injuring\nanother.\nSQUADRON DISBANDS\nThe Norwegian Air Force\nSquadron 332, established in\nEngland in 1942, has been deactivated in Norway. Its war\nrecord included 82 kills.\nWanted, Part-time assistant.\nHobby Shop.\n-229-230\nKashmir Death\nToll Mounting\nNEW DELHI (Reuter6) - At\nleast 109 persons have been\nkilled in clashes along the Kashmir cease-fire line this month,\nDefence Minister Y. B. Chavan\nannounced Monday.\nChavan told Parliament there\nwere 163; incidents since the\nstart of this7 month.7\nHe gave Indian casualties as\n37 killed, 17 wounded and eight\nmissing. On the Pakistani side,\nknown casualties were 72 killed\nand two wounded.\nLIONS LIGHT BULB DRIVE\nTONIGHT AND TOMORROW\nNIGHT. -229-229\nJOY MAKERS\nWATCH THIS SPACE\n-229-229\nHaigh Tru-Art Beauty Salon\n576 Baker St.        Ph. 352-3313\n-29-h\nNELSON ROD & GUN CLUB\nRegular meeting Legion HaU,\nTuesday, Sept. 29, 8 p.m.\n-228-229\nKnitting yarns for every purpose\nEBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.\n-226-tfn\nAdult Education, School District No. 7. Check courses ottered on Advertisement, Page 3.\n-227-h\nBINGO\nLEGION HALL TONIGHT\n-29-h\nST. JOHN AMBULANCE\nGENERAL MEETING\nwill be held in the Fire HaU on\nTues., Sept. 29 at 7:30 p.m.\nEveryone invited. \u2014228-229\nDiamonds, Watches, Gifts,\nRepairs, Engraving.\nTED ALLEN'S JEWELLERY\n-29-h\nCrystal-clear plastic for storm\nwindows. AvaUable in 36\", 54\",\nand 120\" width.\nHIPPERSON HARDWARE\n.     . -229-229\nCentennial Club. Meeting will MAKE A DATE\nbe held tonight, Sept. 29, 7:30    To come to lunch at the Le-\np.m. Civil Defence Office, City  'ion, Thursday, Oct. 1, 11:30-1:30\nHall. Everybody Welcome.       I $1- Sponsored by the Order of\n\u2014229-229 | the  Royal  Purple.      \u2014228-231\n6*\na\ntan\nI put less money\ninto financing\nand more into\nthe car**\nFirst \u2014. before you shop around - arrange with Royal Bank to finance in advance\nwith a lbw<c)st termplan loan.-It'puts buying power, bargaining power in your pocket.\n(With the dollars you save, get that optional equipment you wanted!) No extras. No\nhidden charges. Fast service, often within 24 hours.\nBorrow this businesslike way. Next time you need money for a new car or any big\npurchase, see Royal Bank ahead of time about a low-cost, life-insured termplan loan.\nTypical low-cost termplan lotus\nYou receive\nYou repay over\nMonthly payment\n$ SOO.\n12 months\nS 43.93\n$2,000\n30 months\nS 75.44\n$3,600     .-.,-\u25a0\n30 months\n$115.73\nFinance in advance at\nROYAL BANK\nNelson Branch.-\u2014\nCranbrook Branch.\nCreston Branch ~\t\nJ. N. Comborough, Mgr.\n E. D. feetzel, Mgr.\n^ ...-.A. H. Gray, Mgr.\nNelson Ladies' Curling Club\nAnnual Meeting\nTonight \u2014 8 p.m.\nNelson Curling Rink\n-229-229\nVETERANS\nWelfare   Officer   at  Legion,\nSaturday, 3rd October, 10 a.m.\nto Noon. Phone for appointment.\n\u25a0     _229-h\nCushion Special, 17\" square,\ncorduroy, button-centre at $1.85.\nAll colors.\nSTERLING FURNISHERS\n-228-229\nThe Rossland Centennial Fund\nCanvass starts today. Let your\npledge make the Rossland Museum a West Kootenay Showpiece. \u2014228-228\nFREE LECTURE\nA wonderful Christian Science\nmessage entitled \"Do You Know\nWho You Really Are?\" by\nLenore D. Hanks, member of the\nChristian Science Board of\nLectureship, wiU be given at\n8 p.m. Tuesday, September 29,\nin the Orange HaU, 760 Eldorado\nSt., TRAIL, B.C. Sponsored by\nFirst Church of Christ Scientist,\nNelson. AU are welcome. Those\nwishing transportation Phone\n352-7184. -227-229\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nCURSONS \u2014 Funeral services\nfor Mrs. Pearl Cursons of Lister,\nwho passed away Sept. 28th at\nLister, aged 79 years, will be\nheld at the Thompson Funeral\nHome Friday at 2 p.m. The Venerable Archdeacon F. D. Wyatt\nwill officiate and interment will\ntake place in Nelson Memorial\nPark.\nYOUR\nDOCTOR'S\nPRESCRIPTION\nDispensed WhUe You Watt\nFREE DELIVERY\nAt Your RexaU Pharmacy\nCITY DRUG\nPhone 352-3611 Bos 4M\nUPER\nMLtJf\n.00% B.C. OWNED\nAND OPERATED\ndnmjunamumt\nFerraros Ltd. of Trail Purchase Vernon St. Super-Valu In Nelson\nWe are pleased to announce the appointment of our new management personnel to the Super-Valu Store at 619 Vernon Street, here in\nNelson.\nWith this new personnel comes a thorough knowledge of the grocery\nbusiness. In the sincere desire to serve the people of Nelson and District\nwell, we extend an invitation to all to come in and meet the new management . .. your suggestions will enable them to serve you even better.\nflon, Sokolic\nSTORE MANAGER\nRon comes to Nelson after 1 V% years with\nSuper-Valu in Castlegar. He was with Trail\nSuper-Valu prior to that. A native of the Kootenays, Ron was born in Trail, B.C., 27 years\nago. Being interested in community work, he\nis a past member of Trail Jaycees. Ron looks\nforward to his stay in Nelson as he enjoys skiing, swimming and water-skiing.\nBERNARD\nDIAMOND\nMeat Manager\nBernard brings to Nelson a thorough knowledge\nin this-field, having worked in the Trail Super-Valu\nmeat department for the\npast 6 years. Bernard and\nhis wife Heather are also\nlooking forward to their\nstay in Nelson\nKmmg&wffiL\nJIM COX\nProduce Manager\nBorn 25 years ago In\nKimberley and after 5\nyears in the grocery business, Jim comes to Nelson\nfrom the Castlegar Super\nValu store. Jim, his wife,\nHelen Patricia and their\n3.children, Shori-Lyn 4,\nJody-Alen 3 and Baby\nJamie Lew, 2 mo., are\nhappy to be in Nelson\nand look forward to your\nacquaintances.\nBuy Bsdt*)L-$\u00a3WSL WhtlSLl\n619 Vernon St. Nelson, B.C.\nPhone 352-2815\nUPER\nALU\n100% B.C. OWNED\nAND OPERATED\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1964_09_29","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0435434","@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":"1964-09-29 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1964-09-29 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\/1.0435434"}