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W.]","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2024-05-07","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1966-01-26","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0442492\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" TEMPERATURES\nNELSON 12 24  tr.\nToronto   -8 S \u2014\nCalgary  -a 17  tr.\nPenticton \u201e IS 26 \u2014\nVancouver : 30 42 .05\nWhitehorse  -36 -20 \u2014\nSan Francisco ..... 35 53 \u2014\nVol. 64\nels cm ^aiia\nPublished at Nelson, government financial trading and educational centre of the Kootenay-Columbia area\n~~~~ ~ \u25a0'<   \"      NELSON, b!c, CANADA\u2014WEDNESDAY MORNING, JANUARY 26, 1966 .      \"     ~~ ~       ~\nFORECAST\nKootenay: Cloudy with a few\nsnowflurries. Milder. Winds light.\nLow and high at Cranbrook 5\nabove and 20, Nelson area 15 and\n30.\nThursday: cloudy.\n10 Cents\nNo. 239\nAt Skookumchuk\nSeven Homeless\nAfter Flash Fire\nCRANBROOK \u2014 A family oi seven escaped\nwith only the clothing they were wearing when a\nflash fire destroyed a home at Skookumchuk, 30\nmiles north of here Monday.\nThe father, Ernie Foster, was slightly injured in\nhis frantic efforts to save some of the family possessions. Uninjured were Mrs. Foster and their three\nboys and two girls.\nAn exploding oil heater was believed the cause\nof the fire.\nThe Red Cross began immediate action to assist in the re-establishment of the Foster family. A\nhouse under construction on the property, but unfinished, provided immediate shelter.\nHousehold furniture and items of clothing are\nbeing accepted at the Kimberley and Cranbrook fire\ndepartments in an effort to assist the Fosters, who\nhave farmed the property where the fire occurred\nfor many years.\nPeterson\nIssues\nUltimatum\nPetition Urges Action\nIn Threatened Mine Strike\nVICTORIA (CP) \u2014 Labor Minister Peterson Issued an ultimatum Tuesday in an effort to stop a mine\nstrike and prevent the collapse of the business community of Merritt.\nMr. Peterson said unless Craigmont Mines Ltd.,\nand the United Steelworkers of America (CLC) settle\ntheir dispute this week an industrial commission will\nbe appointed \"early next week.\"\nHis\nultimatum followed a\nmeeting with a delegation from\nthe Nicola Valley town of 6,000\nwhich cornplained that the strike\nwas crippling Merritt's economy,\nthe 'delegation, headed by\nHugh McGowan, who owns a\nsporting goods store, presented\na petition with 2,200 signatures\nwhich asked the government to\n\"bring about a settlement before\nIrreparable damage has been\ndone to this community.'\nThe mine employs about 450\nmen who are seeking wage\nincreases of $1 or more.\nMr. Peterson said the strike,\nwhich began last Oct. 1, is\nhaying a. \"serious effect\" on\nthe economy and the govern'\nment considers it a \"very serious dispute.\"\nHe said both parties met\nMonday and had scheduled\nanother meeting for today but\n\"I'm not satisfied with the\nprogress that has been made in\nthese meetings.\"\n\"Consequently I am advising\nthe   parties   that   unless   the\ncurrent' meetings result In a\nsettlement of the dispute, an\nindustrial inquiry commission\n\"will beappoihteffi\"\n\"I ask the patties to at least\nagree ' to have the mine\nre-opened and the men return\nto work pending completion of\nhearings and recommendations\nof the' commission.\"\nMr. Peterson said he hoped\nthe disputants would \"see the\nwisdom of settling their own\ndispute without outside interference.\"\nHe said the inquiry recommendations are not bind\n\"but in most cases they have\nresulted in settlement,\"\nlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllt\nOch, The Shame!\nTIMMINS, Ont. (CP) -\nWasn't, a Scot in sight Monday\nnight .when Kinsmen marked\nRobbie Burns' birthday.\nHaggis, the traditional Scottish dish, was carried to the\ntable by two Irishmen, Dr.\nDale O'Shaughnessy and William Columbrue.\nAn Italian, Frank Zanchln,\nprepared the haggis, and another Irishman, Clark Pepper,\ntoasted it.\nThe main course was Chinese\nsweet and sour pork.\nII1IIII1HUU Illllllllllllllllll\nTEDDY AND TIMMY RUTHERGLEN seem to be following in the footsteps of their father, district conservation officer Ted Rutherglen. On a recent hunting trip with their father, the two boys shot themselves a cougar\neach. Ted is well-known for his ability at ridding the area of troublesome\ncougar, having shot well over 100 of them. The two boys are off to a good\nstart.\nConspiracy Charges Laid\nAgainst Second Liberal MLA\nRCMP Gets\nNew Weapon\nOTTAWA (CP)- The long arm\nof the RCMP has developed another muscle with introduction\nof a wire photo service to flash\nidentification Information around\nthe globe in minutes.\nThe RCMP, in a statement\nTuesday, said it had a preview of\nthe new service Saturday when\na single fingerprint and classification of 10 prints were sent here\nfrom Scotland Yard and positive\nidentification of the prints made\nand radioed to the yard within\ntwo hours.\nSolicitor - General Pennell said\nthe RCMP will begin shortly to\nestablish a wire photo service\nacross Canada, linking its own\ndetachments and providing service to local police forces.\nSaturday's trial was made\nthrough facilities of the Canadian Overseas Telecommunication Corp.\nMATANE, Que. (CP) -\nCharges were filed Tuesday alleging that a second Liberal\nmember of the Quebec legislative assembly, Jacques Bernier,\ndemanded and accepted money\nfor himself from persons having\ndealings with the provincial gov?\neminent.\nThe charges Involve $850 said';\nto \"have? i been received from-\nthree persons.\ni Mr. Bernier, elected in a. 1064\nbyelection to represent Matane,\nalso is said to have conspired\nwith a Liberal organizer in Matane to commit the offences The\norganizer, Alphonse Turcotte,\nfaces a conspiracy charge, too.\nThe charges were filed before\na justice of the peace in this\nGaspe county community six\ndays after similar charges were\nfiled against the Liberal member for Fortneuf, Marcellin La-\nroche.\nIn Quebec City, Mr. Bernier,\n37, said he has never obtained\nsums of money from anyone\nand has never tried to do so.\nHe and Mr. Laroche were in\ntheir seats Tuesday for the for\nmal opening of the legislature.\nMr. Laroche was alleged to\nhave demanded and accepted\nmoney for himself and two\nothers. The charges involved a\ntotal of $15,260.\nQUEBEC (CP) \u2014 The Quebec\ngovernment intends to prevent\nGerald Martineau, member of\nthe Quebec legislative council,\n\"Aims Were harmless\"\nMotfs Letter Reveals\nSHEFFIELD, Mass. (AP) -\n\"My aims were harmless, not\nhostile.\"\nNewcomb Mott, an American\nwho Soviet authorities say killed\nhimself while a prisoner, wrote\nthose words to his parents from\na Russian jail.\nDescribing his appeal to the\nSoviet Supreme Court against\nan 18-month sentence for illegal\nentry into Russia, Mott, 27,\nwrote:\n\"In the most important and\nlast part of my personal appeal, I wrote: 'I have legal intentions from start to finish;\naccidentally I arrived at the\n(Soviet) border at an improper\nlocation; the act of border trespassing was not premeditated;\nmy aims were harmless,. not\nhostile: the area entered (Norway) is, indeed, for tourists,\nnot a forbidden place; I made\nno attempt to hide, thus demonstrating that I did- not realize\nthat I broke a law. I am an\nhonest, law-abiding person.'\"\nMott's parents released the\ntext of the lengthy letter Tues\nday: In it Mott said he had done\nall he could to help himself.\n\"Ironically, \u2022 the; court's written verdict was given to me\nNov. 25, Thanksgiving, and if\nthe appeal fails, I'll be journey,\ning to a labor camp before\nChristmas.\n\"However, it hasn't been\ntotal loss, and I don't suppose\na labor camp would be either.\nI'm no 'pollyanna,' but I have\nlearned a good deal about the\nU.S.S.R. and about myself.\"\nfrom occupying his seat during found guilty under Section 102\nthe legislative session opening\nTuesday, a highly placed gov -\neminent' source disclosed.\nMr. Martineau was sentenced\nJan. IB to 90 days in   jail and\nfine  of $49,000 after being\nof the Criminal Code. He is appealing the case.\nHe was charged with arranging commissions for friends of\nthe Union Nationale or supporters of the party on Quebec government purchases.\nExpert Sees R. China\nWith Bomb by 1970\nCould Send Missiles\nAgainst U.S. by 1975\nBy FRANK CAREY\nWASHINGTON (AP) \u2014 A specialist on China\nsaid Tuesday that by 1970 or sooner, Peking will have\ndeveloped a hydrogen bomb and a limited capability\nto deliver nuclear warheads by medium range missiles.\nProf. Ralph L. Powell, chairman of the Far Eastern studies at American University here, said that by\n1975, China may have made its first deployment of intercontinental missiles capable of striking the United\nStates.\n\"This is a grim prospect,\" he told a congressional\nforeign affairs subcommittee.\nThe Chinese have a military\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Canon\nEdward Walter. Scott, 46, Tuesday night was consecrated sixth\nAnglican Bishop of Kootenay in\nceremony at the Anglican\nTheological College here.\nBishops from other parts of\ndfir*\nNon-Confidence Vote\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 The minority Liberal government survived its second voting test of\nthe new Parliament Tuesday\nnight, defeating a Conservative\nmotion criticizing its pension\npolicy 134 to 126.\nThe 129 Liberals present got\nsupport from the five Social\nCredit MPs in the House in running up their eight-vote edge on\nthe question.\nThere were no absentees in\nthe Conservative ranks and the\n07 PCs were supported by 19\nNew Democrats, nine Creditistes\nand Independent Conservative\nMaurice Allard (Sherbrooke).\nThe motion, moved by the\nConservatives in the throne\nspeech, criticized the government\nfor not acting immediately to\nincrease the current old age pension to $100 a month.\nIn other business dealt with in\nthe Commons Tuesday External\nAffairs Minister Martin said Canada is prepared to take part in\nany United Nations peace effort\nin Viet Nam.\nPrime Minister Pearson promised an early debate and vote\non the issue of capital punishment.\nAlvin Hamilton (PC \u2014 Qu'Ap\npelle) said Social Credit- MPs\nwho voted with the government\nlast week blocked higher, pensions.\nJames Brown (L\u2014Brantford)\nsaid perhaps higher pensions\ncould be paid with a capital gains\ntax.\nJack Horner (PC \u2014 Acadia)\nsaid Communist China should\nhave been asked to participate\nin Expo 67 at Montreal.\nDonald Tolmie (L \u2014 Welland)\ncalled for action soon to bypass\nthe Welland Canal bottleneck.\nconcept of overextending the\nU. S. by forcing it to spend\nmore money, send more troops\nand suffer more casualties in\nViet Nam, he added.\n\"They have a thesis of protracted war, based on their belief revolutionaries have more\npatience than their enemies in\nthe capitalist world.\"\nAnother student of China said\nin a report issued by the National Science Foundation that\nPeking's development of an\natomic bomb has helped it to\nnarrow somewhat the West's\nover-all superiority in science\nand technology.\nBut, as of the end of 1964 at\nleast, the Chinese still were far\nfrom their target of catching up\nwith theworld's advanced scientific level by the.end of 1967,\nthe report says. It says economic factors and a cooling of\nSino \u2022 Soviet relations were\namong the reasons.\nAlso, it may be another\n30 years before China builds up\n\"a sizable scientific force\" of\nquality scientists and engineers\ndespite an impressive numerical\ngrowth since the establishment\nof the Communist regime\n1949, the document says.\nThe report was eompiled by\nDr. Chu-yuan Cheng, a specialist in surveying the Chinese\nCommunist scene, working under a foundation grant.\nThe foundation says he based\nhis investigation on examination\nQov't Plans for Rhodesia\nDraw Fire in U.K. House\nr\nKootenay Bishop\nConsecrated\not hundreds of newspapers, periodicals and scientific journals\npublished on the Chinese Mainland, and also on a study of\nRussian and Japanese publications.\nCheng, a former director of\nthe research department, Union\nResearch Institute, Hong Kong,\nmade the study while on the\nfaculty of Seton Hall University\nin New Jersey. He's now associated with tie University of\nMichigan.\nThe 588-page report, entitled\nScientific and Engineering Manpower in Communist China, 1949\n1963, deals principally with those\nyears, but contains some observations regarding 1964.\nIt says:\n\"Official reports and records,\non scientific and technological\nprogress over the 14-year period\nfor which (most) data are available show a tendency to concentrate research inr fields. where\nImmediate production was possible, . . .\n\"The pragmatic-motives of the\nCommunist leaders are clearly\nreflected in scientific developments. However, owing to the\ngradual establishment of new\nbranches, such as nuclear physics, semi-conductors, electronics,\nautomation, and high \u2022 polymer\nchemistry (including plastics),\nthe gap in the development of\nscience and technology between\nCommunist China and advanced\nWestern countries has gradually\nnarrowed in some areas.\"\nQuebec Throne\nSpeech Highlights\nBy JOSEPH MacSWEEN\nLONDON (CP) - Charges'of\nbrainwashing, and hedging were\nexchanged in the Commons\nTuesday, when Prime Minister\nWilson outlined terms for a Rhodesian settlement \"without rancor or recrimination.\"\nWilson envisaged an interim\ngovernment of Rhodesians of\nall races under Governor Sir\nHumphrey Gibbs in the event of\na return to constitutional rule in\nthe central African colony where\nPremier Ian- Smith's, white-mi?\nnority regime broke from Britain Nov. 11,-        \t\nWilson's statement was the\nfirst major item after Parliament returned from its'Christmas recess during which\nan. emergency Commonwealth\nprime ministers' conference on\nRhodesia \"was Held' to Lagos, Nigeria. That conference, Jan. 11\nand 12, looked hopefully toward\na solution of the Rhodesian affair \"within weeks rather than\nmonths.\"\nMUST TALK TO ALL\nOpposition Leader Edward\nHeath said Tuesday the government must be prepared to talk\nmembers of his government,\nprovided they are ready to return to constitutional rule.\n\"To ask otherwise is to\nask for unconditional surrender\nwhich only increases bitterness\nand damage in Rhodesia,\" said\nHeath. \"I, therefore, ask you to\nstop hedging on this point.\"\nHeath also asked Wilson to indicate there is no question of a\nperiod of direct rule from Westminister over Rhodesia and Wilson said none was intended.\nDenying any hedging, Wilson\nsaid Sir Humphrey Gibbs is authorized to receive proposals\nfrom Smith or anyone else but\nthere is no question of allowing\nSmith and his regime to negotiate a settlement.\nTory Sir Godfrey Nicholson,\nwho recently visited Rhodesia,\nsaid, \"If you don't negotiate\nwith the Smith regime now,\nthere is no one with whom you\ncan negotiate in the foreseeable\nfuture.\"\nWilson is condemning Rhodesia and perhaps other parts of\nAfrica to a \"most ghastly tragedy,\" Nicholson said.\nUPROAR FOLLOWED\nUproar followed Wilson's re-\nto anyone, including Smith or tort that Nicholson may have\nbeen in danger of brainwashing\nwhen he was a guest of P. K.\nVan der Byl, junior information\nminister in Rhodesia.\nSpeaker Dr. H. M. King ruled\nthis was a reflection on Nicholson's judgment but not his integrity, thus no withdrawal was\nnecessary. Wilson said Nicholson\ncommitted a \"serious error of\njudgment in staying with someone who under our law is committing treason.\"\nSome parliamentarians saw\nthe most significant point of\nWilson's address as a shift of\nemphasis on the question of direct rule. Previously WHson appeared to be suggesting such a\nprocedure of rule from London,\nhowever briefly. Tories had attacked this plan as humiliating\nto Rhodesians, who want to negotiate.\nWilson's statement contained\nnothing about expected new\nsanctions against Rhodesia.\nEarlier Tuesday, a British\ngovernment source said Britain\nis not prepared to recognize\nSmith as head of the Rhodesian\ngovernment even if he gives up\nhis claim to independence and\nreturns the'colony to constitutional rule.\nQUEBEC (CP) \u2014 Following\nare highlights, of the speech\nfrom the throne, read Tuesday\nat the opening of a new session\nof the .legislature;\nQuebec's econpmy experienced an unprecedented surge\nto 1965. :\u25a0.\/..\nMany new enterprises have\nestablished themselves here,\nand several other large cor-,\nporations manifest a desire to\ndo likewise.\nThe government \"will endeavor more, vigorously than\never to achieve for our people\nunqualified respect for all\ntheir rights . . .\"\nA Quebec scientific research\ncouncil and research centre\nwill be established.\nAn act to establish a milk\nproducers' board will be submitted. \u25a0 ...'. i   ..    .\nInstitution of a crop insurance program is planned.\nLegislation to be amended\nto permit larger\nloans to farmers.\nlong-term\nLegislature to be asked to\nimplement a broad social policy.\nGovernment to Introduce\nmedical assistance plan for\npersons and families receiving aid from the state.\nthe province and other areas attended the ceremony, the first\nsince Rt. Rev. Godfrey P. Gower\nwas consecrated bishop of New\nWestminster.\nArchbishop Harold Sexton performed the ceremony.\nThe new bishop was chosen at\nan electoral synod in Nelson last\nNovember, to succeed Bishop W.\nR. Coleman, who resigned Aug.\n31.\nBishop Scott had served in parishes in Prince Rupert and Winnipeg and had been associate\ngeneral secretary for the general synod council of the Anglican Church of Canada.\nA native of Edmonton, he was\na 1940 graduate of the University\nof B.C. and of the Anglican Theological College in 1942.\nHe was a member of the general synod's commission on marriage and related matters.\nCANON\nSCOTT\nImprovements\nNeedy Mothers\nAct.\nplanned  in\nAssistance\nChanges planned to School\nAllowances Act to improve attendance at Bchool and to help\nlarge families.\nTechnical and professional\ntraining to undergo accelerated development.\nUnprecedented stimulus to\nbe given to adult education.\nJoint legislature committee\nto study medicare plan for\nQuebec.\nGeneral housing corporation\nto be established.\nNo Search\nFor Bodies\nTill Spring\nCHAMONOK, France (Reuters)\u2014Alpine rescue squads last\nnight called off until spring their\nsearch for the bodies of 117 passengers and crew of an Air India jetliner that crashed on\nMont Blanc Monday.\nThe decision, announced by\npolice, represented a major setback in the search for an explanation of the plane's mysterious\ncrash into the mountain when it\nshould have been flying high and\nmiles away.\nBad weather defeated Hie attempt to resume the search for\nclues and the remains of those\nwho died. The mountain, peppered with ihe wreckage of the\njet, was hidden Tuesday in a\nswirling grey mist.\nHie Boeing 707, on its way\nfrom Bombay to New York, was\nsetting down for a scheduled\nstop at mountain-ringed Geneva\nairport when it slammed into\nEurope's highest mountain peak\nInflation\nPicture for 2011\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Canadians probably will be paying $5\na pound for beef, $35 a bottle for\nscotch and $730 for a suit by the\nyear 2011, predicts a Vancouver\npensions expert.\nAlan F. Pierce told a Vancouver Board of Trade luncheon\nMonday that in 45 years time the\naverage annual salary will be\n$23,000 and pensions will be $7,-\n000 if inflation continues at its\npresent rate of three to four per\ncent a year.\nIf the figures seem absurd it\nis necessary only to go to the\nnewspaper files of 45 years ago\nand look at the prices then, he\nsaid.\nMan Shot\/\nWoman Charged\nAt Cranbrook\n\u25a0 CRANBROOK \u2014 A St. Mary's\nReserve man is in critical condition in hospital here, with a\nshotgun wound in the stomach,\nand a woman from the reserve\nhas been charged with criminal\nnegligence following an incident\nthere on Saturday.\nDouglas Gabrial Casimer, 25,\nwas rushed to St. Eugene Hospital in Cranbrook by other\nmembers of the St. Mary's band\nwhere it was found that he had\nreceived shotgun wounds in the\nlower abdomen.\nCharged with criminal negligence was Madeline Morigeau\nand remanded for eight days or\nless. She has been released on\nbail pending a hearing on the\ncharge.\nDOLLAR FIRM\nNEW YORK (CP)-Canadian\ndollar unchanged at 93 1-32 in\nterms of U.S.\" funds. Week ago\n93 1-16.\nPound sterling up 1-64 at\n$2.80 27-64.    \u25a0   -\ntl HIIIMHIIHIIIllHIIIIII'lt\"'\nResentment of\nWomen Blamed\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014A psychiatrist says accident - prone\ndrivers often blame women\nfor \"a considerable measure\nof their difficulties.\"\nDr. W. A. Tillmann, assistant professor of psychiatry af\nthe University of Western\nOntario, says in an article ir\nthe Ontario Medical Revie'-\ndrivers with a high accider\nfrequency, studied in gro''\ntherapy sessions, showed\nresentment of women.\n\"The female was often :\ntacked verbally, not only '\nher role as a driver on t!\nroad, but also as a wife and '\nother instances as a mother\nHe said the source of. thr\nhostility was never' dete\nmined.\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nRussia To Try Farming Incentives\nMOSCOW (AP)\u2014A commission headed by Communist\nparty secretary Leonid. Brezhnev was announced. Tuesday to\nprepare new rules for the 38,-\n000 collective farms forming the\nbackbone of backward Soviet\nagriculture..\nForeign quarters expect an increase in incentives for collective farmers, the most underpaid and underprivileged group\nin the Soviet Union.\nAgriculture has fallen  short\nof goals, the Soviet diet is\npoorly balanced and wheat has\nbeen imported to two of the last\nthree years.\nIn an effort to overcome this,\nfarm payments have been increased recently and the rural\nelement of private enterprise\nincreased by enlarging individual gardens whose output can\nbe sold privately.   .\nREMAINS UNINSPIRING\nBut the basic system of col\nlectives has remained uninspiring for farmers.\nThe announcement said the\ncommission had been instructed\nby the Soviet Communist\nparty's central committee to\nstudy all proposals. Brezhnev is\nthe committee's first secretary.\nThe commission's 149 members include party and government leaders, scientists, collective farm chairmen and farmers. There was no indication\nwhen it will report.\nThe statutes governing a\nculture are 30 years old.\nThere also are state farm\nInvestment funds are supplie\nto state farms by the govern\nment and the workers guaranteed a government wage.\nCollectives were supposed to\nsave for investment and pay\nwages from profits. In fact, the\ncollectives had little to invest,\nwhich meant that they were not\nmodernized and o.f t.e.9.. paid\nfarmers nothing in cash,\n 2\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., JAN. 26, 1966\nDRIVER  EDUCATION  PROGRAM  PLANNED\nAPPROVE $10,000 CITY SURVEY\nAssist in Planning\nFuture Works Projects\n! A land survey of most of the\ncity that could, in effect, conceivably save the residents of\nNelson some $50,000 has been\napproved by council for immediate action.\nTo be undertaken by surveyors, C, W. Baerg and R. G.\nJohnson, the work will take\nsome eight, months to complete\nSt a cost of $10,000.\nAccording to city engineer,\nM. D. Puziak, purpose of the\n\"legal posting survey\" is to\nestablish reference points throughout the city for future public\nworks projects such as planning\nsanitary sewer lines, storm Sewage systems Bnd water supplies.\nThe reference markers.laid out\nas small concrete survey \"monuments\" three blocks apart, will\nalso help public works crews in\nthe plotting of all existing roads,\nsidewalks, retaining walls, culverts, bridges, electrical substations and hydro poles. The\nsurvey will also help prepare\n\"as built\" plans as work progresses and assist construction\ncrews in fulfillment of their duties during construction periods,\nas well as prepare for their design by supplying line and grades\nin the field.\nA side-benefit of the survey\nwill directly save the tax-payer\nmoney on any personal survey\nwork he wishes done. Such work\nwould entail an expenditure of\napproximately $200 if hired out\nseparately, said Mr. Puziak. He\nalso envisions a saving of nine\nhours on a works project that\ncurrently takes 10 hours to complete, with resultant cuts in man-\nhour costs as well.\nOnce completed in August, the\nposting plans will be registered\nwith the Land Registry Office\nand all reference points pinpointed on a master map. A\nsection surveyed in 1960 of the\nnorthern part of the city will also\nbe registered and included in the\noverall scheme.\nHigh Life ...\nPlays Coming Up\nAt LV. Rogers\nA group of players from the\nPlay house Theatre Company\nIn Vancouver will be coming to\nNelson to perform the play\n\"Romeo and Juliet\" by William'\nShakespeare.\nThe play will be staged In the\ngymnasium of L, V, Rogers.\nProfits from the play will be\ndonated to L. V. Rogers ski\nteam.\nRogers' own drama club li\nMother's March\nPlanning Blitz\nA one-day blitz is planned lor\nthe annual Mothers' March when\n,150 mothers, directed by eight\nteam captains from the Nelson Kinsmen elub will canvass\non behalf of the Rehabilitation\nFoundation of B.C.\nThis will be the 21st annivesary\nof Mothers' Marches, proceeds\nOf which are required to further\nthe foundations vital services,\nsuch as speech and hearing, so?\ncial and medical rehabilitation,\nequipment, vocational rehabilitation and other services.\nWhile oral polio vaccine is\npreventing new eases, there are\nstill hundreds disabled by poliomyelitis requiring rehabilitation\nso they can be returned to useful and normal lives. It is to?\n\u25a0ward this end the Rehabilitation\n.'Foundation  operates.\nChairmen of this year's can-\nvrss is Kinsman'Don Hetton.\nCASTLE Theatre\nCastlegar, B.C.\nLast Times Tonight\n\"WORLD WITHOUT SUN\"\nAndre Falco, Pierre Gullbert\nShows at 7:00 and 9:00\nLocal Resident\nDies Aged 78\nMagnus Ingmar Christensen,\n78, of 114 Anderson Street, died\nat i his home Monday morning\nfollowing a lengthy illness.\nBorn in Vardo, Norway, in\n1887, Mr. Christensen carne to\nPetersburg, North Dakota, in\n1904 with his sister, and moved\nto Kerrobert, Sask, in 1909,\nwhere he homesteaded and\nfanned until 1946,\nHe married the former Annie\nHaugen of Luseland, Sask., on\nDec. 20, 1911. In 1916, he sold\nhis farm and came to Nelson\nwhere he built his own home on\nAnderson Street. He was employed by the highways depart?\nment as ferry man on the Nelson ferry for 10 years.\nBesides his wife, he is survived by four daughters, Mrs\nWayne (Erna) Hitchcock, of\nSomme, Sask., Mrs. B. B. (Mildred) Stallwood of Nelson,\nMrs. Grant (Florence) Thompson of Orillia, Ont., Mrs. Philip (Phyllis) Graham of Eldorado, Sask., one son Earl, of\nNorth Battleford, one nephew,\nTed Eyde of Kerrobert, Sask,\n13 grandchildren and seven\ngreat grandchildren.\nproducing three plays to bt performed this spring. One is a\nscene from \"Julius Caesar\" directed by Mr. Green. A scene\nfrom \"Romeo and Juliet\" is being directed by George Gibault.\nAnd thirdly, \"The Teacup Tree\"\nwhich is being directed by Kar?\nina Forsyth and produced by\nMarilyn Martin. The three plays\nhave been entered in a one-act\ndrama festival scheduled for\nMarch 90, 31 and April 1st at\nTrafalgar Junior Secondary\nSchool. There are still places\nopen in the easts and positions\nfor work backstage. Anyone in?\nterested in a position may see\none of the directors listed above.\nExtols the Virtues\nOf Club's Magazine\nRotarians are missing a gOOd\nbet when they fail to read their\nInternational magazine, was the\nsuggestion from -Reginald Dill\nat the regular meeting of the\nNelson branch.\n\"There is wealth in the Rotary\nmagazine,\" declared the magazine chairman in an enlightening dissertation on the merits\nof the fraternal journal that\nhas a 400,000 circulation each\nmonth and which is reprinted\n30 times in other information\nmedia. ' . .'\t\n\"It is estimated that each year\nover 100 million additional reader contacts are made by reprints,\" Mr. Dill told the meet?\ning.\"\nBoasting a world-wide mailing\nlist and read by Rotarians as\nwell as non-Rotarlans, the magazine, continued the speaker, had\nan additional voice in 43,000\nmonthly Spanish editions.\nLocally, the club provided subscriptions to Notre Dame University, the Civic Library, and\nL. V, Rogers High School, Honorary members of the Nelson\nbranch also received copies of\nthe magazine each month and\nfive subscriptions were subsidized by the organization for recipients In South\" Amerioa, Mr.\nDill added.    - \u25a0-.'\u2022:.-.,:\nBoard To Study\nTV Teaching Value\nThe educational powers ol tel-l extended into the month of June,\nevlsion will be tested by the One of the necessities involved\nNelson School Board in tht lab? would be training of teachers to\nMAILS WITH A BANG\nCATANZARO,. Italy (AP>-\nThe mails are too slow, complained a note signed by a skull\nat the main post'office here. The\nbomb's clockwork was slow as\nwell and it failed to explode before it was dismantled.\noratory of actual application in\nthe school room.\nTo finance the initial experiment, $1500 will be budgeted (or\nto determine the relative merits\nof classroom video which has\nbeen the subject of much speculation by educators and is currently under study at Kamloops.\nBacked by the Education Committee on recommendation by\nschool supertendent, C. Cuthbert, the proposal calls for experimental e s t a b llshment of\n\"closed circuit\" television system at L. V. Rogers Senior Secondary School. Cost would involve rental of equipment for a\nfour-month period from September to December, with all equipment being installed by a local\nfirm.\n\"It is the general feeling that\nthis is a very important new\nmedium of instruction,\" Mr.\nCuthbert declared, adding that\nif the initial experiment proved\nsuccessful, the service could be\n\"B\nbetween Suez and the\nChina Sea are many nameless men\nwho prefer to live and die_unknown.\n This is the story of\none such man. Among,\nthe great gallery\nof rogues and heroes\nthrown up on the beach\nand ports\u2014no man was\n   _more.re8pected.or more\ndamned than\u2014\nLORD JIM.\n\"Peter O'Toole gives\na terrific performance!\nA worthy successor to\n'Bridge On The River\nKwal'and'Lawrence\nof Arabia'!\"\nrial Aegalas rimee\nFltaiyHIMDBMOU\nMSJAs WuMMuIsS^\nTONIGHTrTHURS. ONE SHOW ONLY 8 p.m.-\n'Psrtu\nFRI.-SAT. 2 Shows 6:30-9:05\nEmploying a copy Of the journal to enhance his remarks, the\nspeaker pointed out various features Inherent In the publication\nto \"discover the wealth that is\nthere.\" SOme of the literary\ntreasures Included the editorial\nand humor sections, Mr. Dill\ntold his listeners. He cited a\nparticular interest in the current Issue on the founder of\nRotary, Paul Harris. Content of\nthe magazine was distilled from\nsome 400 unsolicited contributions, four of which were chosen\nhandle monitor and video tape\nequipment. \"There Is a need\nfor our staff to gain experience\nwith tht equipment and explore\nthe use of this medium In our\neducational program,\" Mr. Cuthbert declared In a written recommendation. He added that it\nwould appear appropriate to consider provision for installation\nof TV in plans of an addition fo\nL. V. Rogers School, and provide\nfunds in the current budget for\nrental of the equipment as a pilot\nproject for the month of September, 1968. i\nSupport of the recommendation\ncame from education committee\nchairman, D. G. R. Sargent, who\ndescribed, the scheme as \"by\nfar the most satisfying way\"\nto test TV in the classroom. He\nsuggested that experiences of\nother schools would be a help,\nbut that it \"won't tell us anything.\nCatalanotto\nReported\nCuba-Bound\nALCAMO, Sicily (AP)-Joseph\n(Cockeyed Joe) Catalanotto, Mafia figure deported to his native\nSicily from Canada In 1964, has\nleft .this, village and is reported\non his way to Cuba.\nCatalanotte, 63, deported from\nWindsor, Ont., received an Italian passport in December good\nfor all countries except the\nUnited States and Canada, police said. His wife and daughter\nstill live in Windsor.\nPolice said that about two\nweeks ago they got word that\nCatalanotte had gone to Spain,\nreceived s Cuban visa there,\nand then left for Cuba.\nCatalanotte arrived in Italy\nNov. 6, 1964, under a Canadian\ndeportation order. He had previously been deported to Canada\nfrom the U.S. He was arrested\nAug. 11, 1964, in Canada.\nPolice in Detroit accused him\nof being a Mafia member. Italian authorities agreed and kept\nhim under watch.\nUnder police supervision he\ncame to live with his brother\nVlncenzo, also listed by Italian\nauthorities as having been connected with the Mafia, in this\nvillage near Trapani on the\nwestern tip of Sicily.\nDuring his stay Catalanotte\nsuffered Increasingly from an\neye ailment. Police said he lived\nan extremely quiet and withdrawn life.\nHis brother died last year and\nafter that he applied for a passport to leave the country.\neach month exclusive of stories\narranged for by tho editors.\nThese included works by authors\nsuch aa Winston Churchill, Albert Einstein, John Gunther, Willy Brandt and Pearl Buck.\nOf all tht features contained\nIn the International publication,\nthe speaker stressed, none was\nmore valuable than a section\ntermed \"The Clubs in Action\",\nwhich was a source of \"plenty\nof material\" for possible club\nprojects or activities. Mr. Dill\nsaid that as chairman of the\nmagazine committee he had been\nasked to procure mention in the\nclubs In action section, and relative to this, a guide to news had\nbeen supplied by the magazine\nto heln preparation of such contributions.\nLauding the publication's merits, the speaker stressed that\ninformation contained within its\ncovers was \"all ours for the\ntaking and compared indifference to the magazine with vitamin pills which did no good\nunless utilized,\n\"Let's read more of the Rot?\narian so we cap share more in\nthe fellowship ol world-wide professional and businessmen united in the ideal of service, which\nis Rotary,\" the speaker concluded.\nThree Classes Planned\nDuring Each Term\nA total of $4550 hoi been earmark ed by the Nelson School Board towards\nbetterment of itudent Intellect as well as road  safety.\nTo be included In the 1966 burget ia provision for experimental closed \u2022\ncircuit TV instruction at L. V. Rogers Senior Secondary School; introduction of\ndriver education as a supplementary program, and financial assistance to increase\nthe quantity of library boots for rural sc hools. Th esum of $1500 has been allocal?\ned for each project.\nRecommended by the Education Committee on suggestion of\nschool superintendent, C. Cuthbert, the budget items also included hiring of a remedial\nreading teacher.\nCommenting on the library\nbook augmentation, Mr. Cuthbert\ntold the meeting that at the moment, standard ratio In British\nColumbia was 10 books per student. This compared with the\nNelson district library pool setup where a total of 740 students\nhad access to some 2,200 books \u2014\nor three books per pupil, The\nspeaker added that the current\nbudgeted amount allowed for a\nloss or damage rate of less than\none per cent, which he described\nas \"low\", a conservative estimate of 2S0 discards plus an am-\nCrash Kills 46\nU.S. Servicemen\nSAIGON (AP) - Forty-six\nUnited States servicemen died\nTuesday in the. worst air crash\nof the Viet Nam war.\nA twin-engine C-123 loaded\nwith mortar shells crashed into\nthe Side of a mountain and exploded. No one survived.\nWhile the war went on in the\nSouth, the suspension of U.S.\nboniblng of North Viet Nam continued .\nCairo sources Meanwhile, said\nthe United States had made a\nnew peace overture to Hanoi and\noffered to continue the bombing\nmoratorium until a response\nwas received, 'fhe U.S. embassy\nin Cairo denied it.\nAt the same time Jean Chau-\nvel, a French diplomat who recently visited Peking and Hanoi\nsaid North Viet Nam, China and\nthe VOit Cong guerrillas Seemed\nstanding firm on a hard line.\nCIVIC     m,\nWould Drop\nVoting Age\nOTTAWA (CP) - Howard\nJohnston, freshman Social Credit MP for Okanagan \u2022 Revel-\nstoke, said in the Commons\nTuesday the voting age in federal\nelections urgently needs to be\nlowered.\nMaking his first speech during\nthe throne speech debate, he said\nthe whole Canada Election Act\nis archaic and should be revised.\nYoung people often got married or started careers under 21\nand they should have the franchise. He did not specify what\nthe minimum voting age Should\nbe, saying the question should be\nstudied by a Commons committee.\nMr. Johnston, a teacher, said\nregulations should make it easier for eligible voters to get their\nnames on the voters' list,\nNews of the Day\nCOPV DEADLINE - PLEASE NOTE\nCopy tor this column  accepted until 3 p.m. fir Insertion\nIn next day's publication.\nRATES: 30c line, 40c line bold face type; larger type rates\non request. Minimum two lines.\nPythian Sisters meeting tonight,\n\"   .m., I.O.O.P. Hall.\n8 pi\n-21-h\nBINGO TONIGHT\nCATHOLIC HALL - 8 P.M.\n-30-h\nEAGLES MEET TONIGHT\n8 P.M.\n-72-h\nBeit materials used On your\nShoes at Tony's Shoe Repairs.\n-30-h\nVETERANS Welfare Officer at\nLegion 10 a.m. till noon Friday,\nJanuary 28th. \u201418-h\nRegular meeting tonight, 8 p.m.\n-21-21\nValentine\nGreeting\nCards and\nCut-Outs\nNow on\nDisplay\nSAMPLE'S\nNELSON\nPHARMACY   LTD.\n.\"Your Fortress of. Health\"\n139 Baker S>       ...   . Nelson\nPhone 35L2313\t\nPRESTO LOGS\nCROQUETTE FUEL\nFOOT OF BAKER ST.\n\u2014297-tfrt\nLOvely Suits for love(y ladies at\nDULLUM'S\nSites 12 \u2022 14.\n\u201426-21\n45\" ftayol Floral and Abstract\n- Reg, $1,95. now only 81 79 yd,\nSTERLING FURNISHERS\n-20-21\nUnited Church used clothing\nsale open today, 2-4 p.m. \u201430-h\nBolt ends and discontinued patterns. Reg. to $2.95, Now $1 yd.\nSTERLING FURNISHERS\n-21-21\nSays Aging\nCan Be Slowed\nTORONTO (CP) - Dr. Francois Bourliere, a French expert\non old age, says that although\nscience-fiction prophecies of\nimmortality are exaggerated,\naging can be slowed.\nDr. Bourliere, director of the\nCentre of Gerontology in Paris,\nspoke at a press conference\nMonday at the opening of the\nfirst Canadian conference On aging which brings together 550\nexperts on gerentology, geriatrics and allied fields, The conference ends Friday.\nDr. Bourliere said research Indicates aging can be slowed by\nmedicines, diets and mental and\nphysical exercise,\nHe said anabolic steroid, the\nmale sex hormone, can improve\nthe health of aged men if they\ntat more protein. Synthetic\npreparation) have been made\nthat work the Same way for\nwomen, he said.\nOn the possibility of putting\ndiseased humans in a deep\nfreeze and reviving them later\nwhen a cure is known, Dr.\nBourliere said no such tech?\nniques are likely in the foreseeable future.\nBut he said scientists are\nStudying animals that hibernate\nfor long periods with low body\ntemperatures in the hope of\nlearning how they do it,\nount to provide one book for each\ntwo pupils. This would raise the\nratio to three-and-one-half books\nper pupil. Mr. Cuthbert said that\na special library allowance of at\nleast $1,500 would \"seem most\ndesirable\", bringing the book ratio up to four books per pupil. Although still well below the accepted standard, the money\nwould \"help achieve a better ratio for the student,\" he added.\nTo further car safety consciousness, a driver education\nprogram on a supplementary basis will be inaugurated on a budgeted working capital of $1,550.\nClarifying the proposal, Mr.\nCuthbert told the meeting that a\nlocal firm had agreed to supply\na vehicle. The board would be\nrequired to provide dual control\nfor the car at a cost of $100, as\nwell as licence, insurance and\ngas and oil for a total expenditure of $1,343.\nOverall cost, however, could\nbe cut by eliciting the aid of a\nservice club for supplying of gas\nand oil. Further reductions could\nbe attained through student fees\n(based on a class of 24 pupils).\nEstimated .savings would come\nto approximately $695, In a written recommendation, Mr. Cuthbert suggested that classes\ncould be offered three times a\nyear during each school term\nwith relative savings each time.\nTrustee, William Kalynluk,\nlauded the board's action on the\nmatter and that insurance agents were \"very interested\" in\nthe program and had suggested\nto him that the board be approached. \"I'll be very glad to\nreport that the board is proceeding with the program,\" he added.\nMr. Cuthbert commented that\nit was hoped to include Salmo In\nthe program which would encompass all students at the junior high school level. He said\ntwo or three driver \u2022 teachers\nhad already evinced interest in\nthe program. Classes could be\nready In one-month's time, he\nobserved. Board trustee, Peter\nReibin, remarked that an insurance federation had already set\nfunds aside for a driver training\nprogram.\nORDER DEPORTED\nVANCOUVER (CP) - three\nGreeks who violated terms of\ntheir visitors' permits by taking\njobs in the Prince George area\nhave been ordered deported to\nGreece.\nLyle Hawkins, immigration department regional director, said\nTuesday no criminal charges will\nbe laid, Ordered deported were\nEvangelbs Caryahttls, DImltrios\nMakrigahnis and Vasilios Tsio?\npos. They did hot appeal.\nPatients in KoOtenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital can have the\nDaily News sent to them every\nmorning at 40 cents per week\nPhone 352-3552, Circulation Department, Dally News.     -30-h\nMontrose...\nVillage Safety\nProgram Underway\nMONTROSE - A safety program is underway in the Village\nof Montrose, with erection of\nsafety signs at each end 6f the\ncommunity Commissioner Gordon Henke advised the village\ncommission Monday night.\nMr. Henke said also that letters are being Sent to eaoh house?\nholder stressing the Importance\nof teaching children to be safety conscious on the highway.\nThe commission chairman and\nCommissioner Henke will attend the regional services district meeting to be held in Grand\nForks February 5 and the commissioner will attend the Parent\nTeacher Association banquet to\nbe held in J. Lloyd Crowe High\nSchool in Trail February 11.\nSchool children will be allowed to use the skating rink for\ntheir physical education period,\nthe commission decided. It was\npointed out that Montrose has\nthe only outdoor skating rink\nin the area.\nName Group\nTo Pick Slate\nA nomination committee was\nappointed at a meeting of the\nNelson Centennial Club to bring\nin a slate of officers for 1\nat the annual meeting to be held\nat the Chamber Of Commerce\nrooms Monday.\nPublic works commissioner J.\nWats reported thatroads are being kept in good condition.\nArea Highways\nIn Good Shape\nHighway conditions in the district are \"good\" according to\nregional engineer D. F. Martin,\nWho reported plowing and sanding operations underway.\nFavorable conditions also prevailed on the Salmo-Creston Skyway.\nName Duplicate\nBridge Winners\nDr. and Mrs. N. E. MorrisOn\nand Mrs, Ilea Williams and Mrs.\nA. Godfrey were top winning\npairs in this week's seven-table\nMitchell match point bridge\ngame for the north and south,\neast and west, respectively.\nOther winning pairs in north\nand south were Mrs. George\nMadore and Mrs. Gordon Burns,\nsecond, and Mrs. P. W. Buckley\nand LOrne Nicholson, third.\nIP east and west, other.winning pairs were Mrs. Roy Evans\nand Mrs. C. Connor, second,\nand MrS, Jack Kilpatrick and\nMrs. George Gelinas, third.'\nANNUAL MEETING OF\nNORTH SHORE\nRECREATION  COMMISSION\nJanuary 27th, at 8 p.m., at the\nHall, Open tO all North Shore\nresidents. Refreshments served.\n-26-22\nMonuments, Headstones,\nMemorial Markers,\nStone or Bronie.\nNELSON MONUMENTAL\n& STONE\n533 Baker Street\n-21-21\nhume h6tel Cabaret\nDine and Dance\nFeaturing DANNY HARRISON\nAND His Beau-Kuys\nFRIDAY AND SATURDAY\nGlad's Beauty Parlor\nwill be closed from\nJanuary 25th lo 29th.\n-i\u00ab-2i\nadmission $1.1\n).m.\n) per person.\n\u201481-24\nHUMS  SCHOOL\n8;It p.m. tonight. Hear Dr.\nCarpenter speak on the parents'\nrole in sex education.\n~2l-2i\nSpecial sale of cocoa door mate\nT-large  sizes,   regularly  $2.49,\nnow only :$i:98 ..   .\nHIPPERSON HARDWARE\n21-21\nTHE PLAYHOUSE THEATRE\npresents\nROMEO AND JULIET\nCostumes, Scenery, direction,\nM. Black.\nJAN. 31, 1 P.M., 8:15 P.M.\nt. V. ROGttlti\nStudents $1.00 - Adults ii.tt\n-18.55\nPollution Control Need\nDiscussed by Local Club\nCARD 6F THANKS\nThanks to all who supported\nthe Bottle Drive in aid of Crippled Children.\nRoad Kings Cay Club.\nPollution control highlighted\nthe'meeting of the Nelson Rod\nand Gun Club Tuesday night with\nJ. J, MCEwen presenting a brief\noh the subject to members. The\nbrief was ratified by the Club\nand it will be presented at the\nftext meeting of the B.C. Wildlife\nFederation.\nContained itt the brief are recommendations regarding the\nresponsibilities of industries and\ncommunities, located, near water\nSources to prevent wholesale pollution 01 them, \"We art not going\nto ask the provincial government\nto pay the bill\", stated Mr. McEwen because \"this must be\ncome a nationwide program.\"\nProvincial secretary W. D.\nBlack wrote the club that the\nquestion of the Gibson Creek\nDam and. Damslte will be discussed. He was referring to a\nletter from the Nelson dub which\ndescribed the disrepair Of the\nGibson Dam. Since the dam does\npot function properly the lake\nhas become almost a mud'flat\nlit was mentioned that with bet\nfer roads more people are gaining access to the lake:\nChanges. In the-cojt.Of fishing\nlicences Were announced..by R.\nA. Rutherglen, conservation officer. He reported that' non-resi-\n\u201421?2} dent alien licences   jumped   ia\nprice to $10. For these people he\nstated a three day licence costing\ntwo dollars will be available. It\nIs hoped the effect of these short\nterm permits will be to encourage tourists to Spend a day or\ntwo in a good fishing area.\nAt the meeting It was decided\nto raise the members' dues to\n$2.50. Also a nominating committee was set up to select candidates for the executive to be elected at the next meeting,\nthe club plans to send a letter\nto the City Council requesting a\nmeeting concerning the acquisition of the old fish hatchery\nbuilding, The building would be\nt|sefu) to the members In providing a range for junior fire arms\ngroups. Meeting fOOms and refreshment areas could also be\nset up.\nIt was announced that radio\nreports will be given concerning\nweather conditions at resorts\nand fishing results for the day\nThese announcements are to be\ncontinued fdr One month tO t*st\ntheir effectiveness, these reports\nwill replace the card! which the\norganisation has formerly sent to\nIts members. However during the\ntrial period the written announcements will- be continued,\nMr. Rutherglen showed a series of slides after the meeting\nhad been adjourned. These pictures showed examples of wild\nlife species in the district, and\ndistinguishing characteristics Of\nvarious varieties of fish were\npointed out.\nSPECIALS\nRichard Hudnut\nEgg Creme Shampoo \u2014 $1.29\nFor Normal or Oily Hair.\nand\nRichard Hudnut\nCreme Rinse \u2014 $1.29\nHair Conditioner\nMayo Pharmacy\nLtd.\nCorner Baker and Ward Sts.\nPh. 352.2813        Nelson, B.C.\nCheck tha\nAppliance\nSuper\nValuta\nat\nROCKGAS\nPROPANE\nLTD.\nPh. 352-6521\nNelson\nT\nm\n mmmaasmtmmawmmm\nmm\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., JAN. 26, 1966\u20143\nNELSON VENTURERS VISIT GAME OFFICER RUTHERGLEN\nAnimal skulls collected by R. A. Rutherglen, district conservation officer, were viewed recently at his home by the Third Nelson Venturers. Ted\nRutherglen's wildlife collections include geological specimens, tanned hides,\nanimal traps and assorted firearms.\nMr. Rutherglen discussed conservation techniques with the boys and\nanswered their questions concerning his collections. He emphasized the im\nportance of close observation, especially with regard to articles having a potential historical worth. He pointed out several articles which, though not\nvery old, were beginning to become rare and valuable to collectors.\nThe Venturers are boy scouts between the ages of 14 and 17 years.\nThe Venturer program is an experiment within the Scouting Movement to\nretain the interest of older teenagers. Their activities are designed to increase\ntheir awareness and understanding of community life. It is an optional div\nision of the scout troop and the decision to separate from the younger scouts\nlies solely with the boys.\nThe six boys forming the third Nelson Venturers decided upon a\nschedule of activities which saw them visiting industrial and community service organizations throughout the district. Thus, at the end of their first year\nthey have visited most of these groups, including the Hospital and newspaper\noffices.\nVILLAGES PLAN JOINT AMBULANCE SERVICE\nCranbrook\nEast Kootenay Regional District Board Sworn in\nCRANBROOK - Fifteen -\nmember board of the newly organized East Kootenay Regional District was completed with\noath administration here to representatives of four organized\nterritories named since 1966\ncivic elections.\nComplete board now is Henry\nNelson, rural area of Galloway,\nchairman Don Sherling, Cranbrook, Russell Lytle, Kimberley, James Ogilvie, Marysville,\nStan Thome, Fernie, Robert\nThomson, Sparwood, Orlando\nUngaro, Natal, Marvin Tunna-\ncliffe, Invermere, Phil Haverstock, Chapman Camp, representing municipal areas and\nVincent Downey, East Cranbrook, R. H. Vigne, Moyle, Gerry DeCosse, Meadowbrook, J.\nF, M. Henderson, Windermere,\nQ. H. Fedorek, Michel, and\nCameron Moore, Edgewater for\nrural areas.\nFrank Bertoia was appointed\nsecretary-treasurer, and was instructed to carry out the functions within the authority area\nas decided by the board at its\nnext meeting Feb. 26.\nApproved as  basic  expense\nafter considerable argument\nwas payment of each member\nat the rate of $25 per meeting.\nwith travel allowance 10 cents\nper mile per member, or 15\ncents where transportation Is\nshared by members. Additional\n$300 a year was authorized by\nthe chairman and $160 a month\nfor the secretary treasurer, plus I\nallowance for clerical assistance.\nSpeaker at the meeting was\nDon South, municipal department regional planning division\ndirector. He outlined the planning function of the board allowed in the act, which included\nemployment of a regional planner and building inspector to\nenforce established regulations\nwith reference to rural con -\nstruction.\nDepartment planning assist -\nance would be advisory only by\nits technical committee, while\ndistrict responsibility would be\nemployment of the planner, the\ndraftsman, clerical assistant\nand building inspector. Budget\nfor this will be the major item\nof the next board meeting.\ndeadline for board submissions each rural memiber a single\nof budgets to the department toward inclusion in the fiscal year\nstarting April 1.\nBoard members vote on the\nbasis of estimated population\nthey   represent,   which   allows\nvote  and municipal  members\nmultiple votes on this basis.\nRural board members for\nthis initial council have been\nappointed but in future will be\nelected   each   December   from\ntheir own defined areas, while\nmunicipal members are named\nby the municipal government\nthey represent. Budget in preparation will include election\ncosts for 1966 naming of the 1967\nboard.\nRossland ...\nBuilding Permits\nShow Increase\nSalmo\nAnglican\/ United Churches\nAmalgamation  Discussed\nROSSLAND \u2014 Inspector John\nFetter reported to the Rossland\nCity Council recently an increase of $108,481 in building\npermits issued during 1965. The\n1965 value of building permits\nwas $347,442.\nIn 1964, 85 permits were issued\nFruitvale and Montrose\nTo Purchase Vehicle\nFRUITVALE-Fruitvale\nMunicipal Council met with\nmembers of the Council from the\nVillage of Montrose regarding\nthe provision of ambulance service for the area.\nIt was decided that both muni\ntioned well in 1965 and since the i reation commission. Commission-\n1966 council was made up of the er Goetz represents the council\nsame members, he would retain on the Trail-Tadanac Hospital\nall committee membership wth- Board, while the West Kootenay\nout any change. Commissioners Union Board of Health Commit\nF. M. Smith, J. V. Lewis and L. tee is made up of commissionerr\nP. Goetz form the works com- Morissette, Lewis and Goetz.\nmitte; commissioners Lewis and\nChairman   Borrow   also   re\ncrease were commercial buid- E?r,chT, ? m \u00bbmbulan(* IT \u00ab   J' Morisse\"e make u? .the appointed R. Carter as building\nino tiramii. XIThosY., *\u201e \u2122!\u2122  hlcle whlch was bem8 traded m finance committee; commission- .\"1,     p R ,i(, ,\nmetcidTuldt^ Xo\u00b0   Z W the Consolidated Mining and en Morissette, Lewis and Goetz SSdog cS- D *F\nmercial   buildings,   $5600;    and | Smolllnl> Cjm\u201emv. \u201e,\u201e ,\u201e\u201e\u201e, s, |ai8n (nrmth,. utilities rnmmittae: I ?*eEer ana a0B calcner? \"i 5;.\n| new residences, $114,260.\nEight  new  residences\nI built in 1965.\nSALMO \u2014 A focal point of discussion at the Salmo Anglican\nannual church meeting was the\nfuture of the church here. Attempts are being made to meet\nwith the United Church Committee to discuss the possible amalgamation of the two churches.\nDuring the past few years a\nnumber of Anglican members\nhave been transferred to other\nareas thus depleting the congregation to a bare minimum.\nAn election of officers for this\nMarch IS has been set as the year saw Colin Brown appointed\nas rectors warden and he will\nbe delegate to Synod. Stan Dawson was elected peoples warden.\nThe church committee slate includes G. Law, Mrs. G. E. Mac-\nNeill, Mrs. H. Craige, 0. P. Lar-\nsen and Mrs. Ed John. Serving\non the Salmo Community Church\nBoard will be Mrs. C. Hansen,\nMrs. McLean, T, S, Dawson.\nFollowing his annual report to\nthe congregation, Reverend D.\nN. Robinson announced his departure from this parish. He and\nfamily will be moving to Duncan\nB.C., in the spring.\nThe meeting was preceded by\na pot luck supper served by the\nAnglican Guild.\nTWO DIED ON ROAD\nSEPPEtMBAOH, B e 1 giran\n(AP)\u2014A car skidded on a snow-\ncovered road here and killed a\nsix-year-old boy as he ran out\nof school. The driver, a 67-year-\nold doctor, stepped out of the\ncar and collapsed with a heart\nattack. He also died.\nToday's Stock Market Quotations\nThe Daily News does not hold itself responsible In the event of an error tn the following lists\nClosing prices supplied by Doherty, Roadhouse & McCuaig Bros., Trail, B.C.\nTORONTO  STOCKS\nINDUSTRIALS\nInd Accept\n22.62\n23.25\nCampbell RL\n20.50\n23.50\nOpemlski\n10.87\n11.00\nSherritt Gordon\n6.00\n. 6.10\nAB                      24.37\n24.75\nImperial Oil\n53.12\n53.37\nCariboo Gold\n.45\n.46\nOrclian\n5.00\n5.05\nSilver Fields\n3.70\n3.85\nAlgoma Steel     68.50\n68.75\nInd Minerals\n8.75\n9.25\nCassiar Asb\n14.87\n15.00\nPernio Gas\n66.00\n67.75\nSilver Standard\n1.26\n1.31\nImp Tobacco\n15.00\n15.25\nCentral Del Rio\n11.50\n11.62\nPetrol O&G\n.69\n.70\nSiscoe\n2.41\n2.43\nAlta Gas Trunk 37.75\n38.00\nInland Nat Gas\n9.62\n9.25\nCentral Patricia\n1.67\n1.75\nPermo Gas\n.31\n.32\nSteep Rock\n7.25\n7.30\nAluminum         36.37\n36.50\nIntl Utilities\n32.87\n33.00\nCharter Oil\n3.00\n3.50\nPine Point\n66.00\n67.75\nSullivan Cor.\n5.90\n6.00\nArgus               18.62\n19.00\nInt Nickle\n103.75\n104.00\nChimo\n1.63\n1.64\nPlace Gas\n1.62\n1.67\nTeck Corp\n5.65\n5.70\nArgus C Pfd       13.87\n14.00\nInterprov Pipe\n87.25\n87.50\nCoch Will\n4.75\n4.85\nPatino\n10.50\n10.75\nTorbit\n.73\n.75\nB of Montreal    66.37\n66.62\nIntrprov Steel\n6.25\n6.37\nCopperman\n.15\n.16\nPreston\n11.25\n11.37\nTriad Oil\n2.40\n2.41\nB of Nova Scotia 75.62\n76.00\nJefferson Lk\n32.37\n32.62\nCons Rambler\n2.30\n2.40\nProvo\n2.46\n2.49\nTribag\n2.60\n2.62\nBathurst Power 24.00\n24.50\nLaurentide\n13.25\n13.37\nCons Halliwell\n.64\n.65\nQue Manitou\n.33\n.34\nUnited Keno\n5.40\n5.60\nBell Telephone   58.87\n60.12\nLoblaw B\n11.12\n11.25\nCons Mogul\n3.95\n4.00\nQue Lithium\n2.95\n3.00\nUnited Oil\n.15%\n,16',4\nBAOil               31.12\n31.37\nMassey Ferg\n34.25\n34.37\nConwest\n7.50\n7.60\nQuemont\n10.62\n11.00\nUnited Buff\n.67\n.68\nBC Forest          23.75\n24.00\nMac Powell R\n27.50\n27.75\nCopper Corp\n.75\n.76\nRadiore\n.70\n.71\nViolamac\n4.25\n4.30\nBC Packers A    18.62\n19.00\nMFG Man\n8.50\n8.62\nCowichan Cop\n.84\n.87\nRoman Corp\n7.95\n8.05\nWestern Beaver\n.18\n.20\nBurns & Co        15.75\n16.00\nMont Loco\n14.25\n14.62\nCraigmont\n13.37\n13.50\nReeves Mac\n2.85\n3.10\nUpper Can\n1.51\n1.55\nBC Telephone     74.00\n75.00\nMoore Corp\n78.25\n78.87\nDenison\n37.00\n37.37\nRayrock\n1.10\n1.15\nWestern Mines\n5.75\n5X0\nCalgary Power   29.25\n29.50\nMolson Brew A\n8.50\n8.62\nDickenson\n5.25\n5.30\nRio Algom\n20.12\n20.37\nWrirght Harg\n.76\n.85\nCan & D Sugar   23.25\n23.50\nNoranda\n53.50\n54.87\nEast Malartic\n1.70\n1.73\nSan Antionio\n.18\n.19\nWilroy\n1.95\n1.97\nCan Cement       47.25\n48.25\nPacific Pete\n12.00\n12.12\nEast Sullivan\n9.10\n9.20\nSarimco\n.22\n.23\nZulapa\n.25\n.26\nCan Iron            68.26\n70.00\nOgilvie Flour\n15.25\n15.50\nFargo\n2.95\n2.99\nCan Brew           8.25\n8 37\nPrice Bros\n41.00\n41.50\nFirst Maritimes\n4.85\n4.90\nVANCOUVI\n\u25a0R   STOCK*\nCan Canners      13.75\n14.25\nPower Corp\n46.50\n47.00\nFrobex\n.96\n.97\nChemcell           14.37\n14.62\nQue Nat Gas\n14.62\n14.75\nGreat Plains\n11.75\n12.00\nINDUSTRIALS\nNew Cronin\n.41\n_\nCan Imp Bank    69.62\n70.00\nRoyal Bank\n80.12\n80.50\nGunnar Mines\n2.20\n2.25\nGrowers A\n4.40\n' \u2014\nSkeena Silver\n.63\n66\nCan Industries    20.00\n20.12\nRothmans\n24.87\n25.25\nGiant Yel\n14.12\n14.25\nGrowers B\n4.50\n4.75\nNew Imperial\n1.45\n1.47\nCPR                  65.62\n66 11\nSalada Foods\n10.50\n10.75\nHighland Bell\n8.75\n8.85\nOkanagan Hei\n3.15\n\u2014\nTrojan\n.46\n.47\nCol Cellulose       7.37\n7.62\nShell Oil\n21.12\n21.25\nGranduc\n4.15\n4.20\nSun Pub B\n24.00\n25.00\nQuatsino\n.28\n.29\nC M 4 S             48.12\n48.62\nSimpsons\n28.87\n29.12\nHollinger\n27.00\n27.50\nSun Pub A\n24.50\n25.00\nTorwest\n.68\n.69\nCons Gas           16.37\n16.87\nSoutham\n40.75\n42.00\nHudson Bay Mg\n83.75\n84.37\nInt Brew B\n9.75\n\u2014\nPyramid\n14.62\n14.87\nCons Paper        39.37\n40.12\nSteel of Can\n425.00\n460.00\nHastings\n2.35\n2.45\nMINES AND OILS\nAce\n.87\n.90\nCrestbrk Timber 5.37\n5.25\nTraders Fin A\n12.12\n12.25\nHydra Ex\n.23\n.23%\nArlington   Silver    \u2014\n.80\nUtica Mines\n1.65\nDom Bridge       27.00\n27.25\nTexaco\n57.00\n58.00\nIron Bay\n2.65\n2.70\nCanam Cop\n.16%\n.17\nMadrona\n1.40\n1.45\nDist Seagrams    38.87\n39.00\nTrans Mtn Pipe\n18.25\n18.50\nIso\n2.05\n2.07\nBata Resources\n.70\n.71'\nWestern Exp!\n.11\n.11%\nD Electrohome   17.00\n17.37\nTrans Can Pipe\n38.50\n38.62\nKerr Addison\n10.50\n10.62\nBethex'\n.52\n.58\nDynasty\n18.62\n18.75\nDom Foundries   29.00\n29.12\nUnion Carbide\n28.25\n28.50\nKey Anacon\n2.85\n2.90\nCopper Soo\n.44\n.45\nFUNDS\nDom Stores        24.00\n24.25\nWalker-Gooder\n35.25\n35.75\nLabrador\n34.25\n36.00\nCons Standard\n.22\n.25\nAmer Growth\n5.48\n6.38\nDom Textiles     33.75\n34.00\nUnion Gas of C\n33.00\n33.50\nLeitch\n5.85\n5.90\nCopperman\n13.25\n13.50\nCan Inv Fund\n4.23\n4.64\nDom Tar 4 C     18.62\n18.87\nWestcoast Trans 23.00\n23.50\nLorado\n1.29\n1.31\nDolly Varden\n.40\n.41\nDiversified\n5.99\n6.58\nEddy Match Co  36.62\n37.00\nWeston Geo A\n21.50\n21.75\nLake Dufault\n14.25\n14.50\nDundee\n.36\n.37\nCommonwealth\n11.02\n12.08\nEddy Paper        6.75\n10.00\nWoodwards A\n25.50\n26.87\nLittle Long Lac\n1.80\n1.84\nCon Potash\n.35\n.37\nCollective Mutual 6.44\n7.00\nFalconbridge     110.50\n111.50\nZenith Elect\n270.00\n275.00\nMalartic\n.80\n.81\nEndako\n16.62\n17.00\nFirst Oil & Gas\n5.89\n6.44\nFamous Players 25.75\n26.00\nAdvocate\n4.75\n4.90\nMadsen\n2.09\n2.15\nKamloops\n.69\n.70\nGroup Income\n4.38\n4.79\nFanny Farmer   48.12\n49.50\nMINES AND OILS\nMattagami Lake 17.50\n17.75\nEarlcrest\n.26\n.29\nInvestors Growth 9.49\n10.32\nFord Motor Co 60.00\n61.00\nAtlantic Coast\n1.60\n1.63\nMcKenzie\n.09\n.10\nGalaxy\n.66\n67\nGrowth Equity\n5.35\n5.85\nFord of Can       145.50\n147.00\nAgnico\n1.32\n1.36\nMidcon\n.58\n.60\nMt Washington\n.37\n.38\nInv Mutual\n5.23\n5.68\nGen Steel Wares 10.75\n11.50\nAunor\n3.25\n3.30\nMcWaters\n.63\n.64\nLondon Pride\n.19%\n.20\nInv Intl\n6.08\n6.61\nGoodyear         200.00\n205.00\nBeth Cop\n5.85\n5.95\nNational Pete\n2.65\n2.70\nOttawa Silver\n.64\nMutual Bond\n8.38\n8.78\nGreyhound         13.12\n13.37\nBanff Oil\n12.12\n12.37\nNorlex\n.24%\n.25\nLytton\n.42\n\u201e\nMutual Accum\n5.33\n5.83\nGt Lakes Power 30.00\n31.25\nBralorne\n4.35\n4.40\nNew Jason\n.08%\n.09\nPatricia Silver\n1.96\n2.00\nLeverage\n10.43\n11.43\nHome Oil A       18.12\n18.25\nBrunswick\n16.12\n16.25\nNorth Can Oil\n4.10\n4.15\nPeace River Pete .33\n.34\nMutual Inc\n6:59\n7.21\nHusky Oil           14.75\n14.87\nCadamet\n.11\n.11%.\nNew Hosco\n2.84\n2.85\nMaenum\n.60\n.61\nProvident\n6.41.\nG.97\nHome Oil B        18.75\n19.12\nCampbell Chib\n8.35\n8.45\nNormetal\n4.80\n4.95\nMcKinney\n.18\n.19\nTrans Can C\n8.42\n9.19\nHudson Bay Co   15.12\n15.25\nCan Delhi\n2.71\n2.75\nNorthgate\n8.90\n9.00\nSilver Ridge\n.27\n.28\nUnited Accum\n9.94\n10.86\nNatal...\nThree Rinks\nPlay at Fernie\nNATAL \u2014 Three rinks from\nNatal-Michel, participating in the\nrecent East Kootenay Royal Canadian Legion Zone Bonspiel at\nFernie did exceptionally well in\nthe competition with two of the\nthree rinks emerging in the winning bracket. In the \"A\" competition, the Hugh Tennant rink\nwon fourth place white in the\n'B\" competition, the Jimmy\nGrocutt rink won second place\nlosing out in the final to the\nrink from Cranbrook skipped by\nVic Marasco.\nThe Senior Sodality of St.\nMichael's Parish held a successful toboggan party up the Elk\nValley on Sunday with some 15\nmembers participating. After a\nfew hours of tobogganing enjoyed\non the slopes up at Musils, the\ngroup returned to St. Michael's\nHall where refreshments were\nserved.\nThe winner of a raffle undertaken by the.Grade XI class of\nSparwood Secondary School was\nMiss Joanne Cytko of Sparwood.\n(Smelting Company; the local St. also form the utilities committee; wf,\u201e nmmrtk\u00absni>r- T>\nJohn's Ambulance  Society  lias while commissioners Goetz and ward    as   civ\u00ab   defence\nwere agreed to operate the service for Smith also make up the parks PJST?', \u2122   elv\"   amnce\nthe two villages and details of and cemetery committee. Com-1\nthis arrangement will be worked missioners Smith and Lewis are\nRossland . . .\ns Present\nCheck\nKnights\n$500\nROSSLAND - Tullio Lenarduz-\nzi, Grand Knight of Rossland\nCouncil, Knights of Columbus,\npresented a cheque for $500 to\nSister Euphemia at the first\nmeeting in the new year of the\nMater Misericordiae Hospital.\nBoard.\nThe money is to be used in the\nnew hospital addition to furnish\nthe pediatric ward.\nNET EARNINGS\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nMurphy  Oil  Co.  Ltd.,   year\nended Dec. 31: 1965, $1,370,000\nor 50 cents a share; 1964, $896,-\n000 or 33 cents.\nHuron and Erie Mortgage\nCorp., year ended Dec. 31: 1965,\n$1,912,708; 1964, $1,773,000.\nThe Canada Trust Co., year\nended Dec. 31: 1965, $1,110,707;\n(no comparable figures).\nConfederation Life, year\nended Dec. 31: 1965, $1,094,701\n(net loss); 1964, $1,942,231.\nLiass taiiaisgeisjeiii  Will  Uts  WUIJlcUl \u201euod,u\u201eb,3  shiiisu  ca.iu  wc,\u201eo  pass,       _ i a\nout at the annual meeting of the Fruitvale's   representatives   on HOW fO relieVB\nSociety which is scheduled for the Fruitvale-Montrose civil de\nGRAPES BY THE MILLION\nAbout 1,900,000,000 grape\nvines in Yugoslavia occupy\nthree per cent of the good\nfarming land.\nJanuary 20th. The ambulance\nwill be housed at the Montrose\nFire Hall and the emergency fire\ntelephone system of that village\nwill handle any calls for ambulance service.\nCommissioner F. M. Smith,\nchairman of the works committee, reported that the truck\nplow was now in operation and\nshould greatly speed up snow\nploughing in the village. All\nroads were reported as passable,\nand the crew is busy widening\nout the travelled portions by bulldozing equipment pushing the\nsnow back. Sanding and other\nregular maintenance work lias\nnecessitated the employment of\ncasual labor, and during the rush\nof snow ploughing two weeks ago\nadditional equipment had to be\nhired for this purpose; however,\nsnow ploughing costs are still estimated to be lower than those\nfor the same period during the\nprevious winter.\nA special meeting of Council\nis scheduled January 27 to discuss finances for the year 1966,\nand to fully study projects pro\nposed for the year. Several projects which will be done under\nthe Winter Works Program if\nweather conditions are favorable\nwill be considered at this time\nalso. Council gave final reading\nto its Temporary Loan Bylaw No.\n142, which will authorize council\nto borrow up to $42,000 to meet\ncurrent expenditures until such\ntime as taxes and other revenue\nare sufficient to meet the operat-\nting expenses of the municipality.\nIn correspondence received\nfrom the local centennial committee, the council was advised that\ncentennial day for the Fruitvale\narea has been set by the committee as June 25 for the year 1966.\nCouncil also learned that the\nNational Centennial Caravan will\nvisit Fruitvale on August 9, 1967,\nand this date will be set for centennial celebrations in the Fruitvale area for the year 1967. The\nBritish Columbia Centennial Caravan will be travelling through\nthe province from June to November, 1966, and will stop at\nFruitvale for one day; this date\nhas not been determined as yet.\nChairman G. A. Borrow will\nbe attending a meeting of the\nAssociation of Kootenay and\nBoundary Municipalities in Creston on January 22nd; election of\nofficers to replace those on the\nexecutive who were defeated in\nmunicipal elections in December\nwill be one of the items on the\nagenda of this meeting. In appointing committees for the year\n1966, Chairman Borrow stated\nthat all committees had func-\nfence committee; Commissioner\nMorissette is council representative on the Fruitvale district ce\ntennial committee; commissioners Goetz and Smith are representatives on the Fruitvale rec-\nBACK\nACHE\nUse Dodd's Kidney\nPills for prompt\nrelief from the\nsystemic condition causing the\nbackache. Soon\nyou feel better \u2014\nrest better. Depend on Dodd's.\nBUSINESS   ft   PROFESSIONAL\nDIRECTORY\nA handy alphabetical guide to goods and services\navailable in Nelson.\nAutomobile Dealers\nBILLS' MOTOR-IN LTD.\n(Studebaker Sales)\n213 Baker St.    Phone 352-3231\n-tfn\nPARKVIEW MOTORS LTD,\n(Rambler - Volkswagen)\n123 Nelson Ave.    Phone 352-5355\n-tfn\nSHIELDS PONTIAC-BUICK Ltd.\nComplete Automobile Service\n701 Baker St.       Phone 352-5505\n-10-tfn\nBuilding Supplies\nBEE BUILDING SUPPLY LTD.\nEverything in waterproof\nplywood.\n301 Baker St.      Phone 352-3135\n-tfn\nBURNS LUMBER CO.  LTD.\n-102 Baker St.      Phone 352-6661\n-tfn\nCOLUMBIA TRADING CO.\n609 Ward St.      Phone 352-5571\n1 Block South of Woolworth's\n-tfn\nK. & D. SASH & DOOR\nCustom Woodwork - Sash\nBox 62, Thrums, Phone 359-7349\n-293-tfn\nContractors\nLaszlo Hnszak, General Masonry\nStone - Brick - Cement \u2022 Stucco\nPlastering\n1323 Falls St.       Phone 352-7692\n-239-tfn\nART RAVESTEIN\nRenovations, Cement Work\nand General Carpentry\nPhone 352-7433\n-tfn\nGarages\nUpper Fairview Motors Ltd,\nCor. 7th at Davies    Ph. 352-2525\nTransistorized Ignition\n-tfn\nHealth Foods\nHEALTH FOOD CENTRE\nHealth Thru Nutrition\n659 Baker Street\n-22-tfn\nPhoto Copying\nPOWELL  ENGRAVING\n460 Ward St. Nelson. B.C\nPhone 352-7521\nContracts - Birth Certificates\nLegal Documents\nImportant Papers\nUn\nPrinting\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\nPrinters - Lithographers\nColor Printing\nPhone 352-3552\n-111-tfn\nRadio and TV\nService\nVIDEO ELECTRONICS\n405 Hall St. - Phone 352-3356\n-tfn\nRefrigeration\nRefrigeration Sales and Service\nCARLSON  EQUIPMENT\n803 Anderson St   Ph 352-5455\n-186-tfn\nSporting Goods\nFred Whiteley's Sport Shop\n488 Baker St    Phone 352-7741\n-tfn\nTopsoil\nLurry's Topsoil, Sand and Gravel\nPh. 352-2355 Days   352-7576 eves.\n-tfn\nTREE FALLING\nDanger Tree Falling, Trimming,\nTopping. Reasonable rates.\nFree estimates. Fully insured.\nERIC DENNY, R.R. 1, Nelson.\n-280-1\nVacuum   Cleaners\nEI.ECTKlll.UX Sales a Service\n711 Innes St        Ph. 352-7341\n-77-tfn\n Nfleon iatlg Npuib\nEstablished April a. 1903 Nelson.    B. a\nPublished by the NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n266 Bake: Street, Nelson. British Columbia, mornings except\nSundays and holidays in the centre oi the Kootenays with\nthe largest daily circulation in the Interior oi B.C.\nAuthorized a. Second Class Mall.  Post Office Department. Ottawa,\nand for Payment ot Postage in Cash.\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN DAILY NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION\nMEMBER OF THE AUDI! BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS\nrbe Canadian Press Is exclusively entitled to the use tor republication ot all news\ndispatches credited to it or to the Associated Press or Reuters in this\npaper and als   the local newt published herein\nWedneeday, January 26, 1966\t\nThe Pulp and Paper Miniature\nThe present itate oi the pulp\nand paper industry ii an uncannily\ndetailed miniature oi the broad canvas of Canada today.\nIt seems to embrace all oi the\nstrength, promise and problem* oi\nthe nation at large. Probably no\nother Industry oi comparable size\nand Importance ia faced with at\nmany paradoxes.\nIt* growth is strong and rapid,\nbut there it a distinct danger that it\nii expanding too much too soon.\nSales are at all-time highs and\nrising, but profits are being squeezed harder and harder by labor\nshortages and rising wages and\ncosts. The Industry continues to be\none of the top earners of export dollars, but the race to expand capacity has added significantly to our\nimport bill as the bulk of needed\nmachinery and equipment comes\nfrom foreign sources.\nIt is faced with growing competi\ntion at home and abroad. The demands and geographic patterns of\nforeign markets especially are\nchanging rapidly, and the industry\nis by no means united on what the\nchanges mean or how to meet them.\nSome favor creation of a free\nbade arrangement with the U.S.,\nan approach just as divisive and\nemotional within the industry as\nthe basic principle is to the nation\nat large.\nTh eimportance of how responsibly and successfully the pulp and\npaper industry meets its problems\ngoes well beyond the industry itself. It alone contributes some four\nper cent of Canada's gross national\nproduct and its performance has a\ndirect bearing on countless other\nsegments of our economy.\nIts relative success in the months\nahead could provide a guide to\u2014\nand will be a significant determinant of\u2014our broader economic decisions.\u2014Financial Times.\nEast Is East, West Is West\nAny condescension Westerners    they truly love  their  fellows  as\nmay ieel toward poverty-stricken\nIndia and her so-called backwardness should be replaced by unrestrained admiration ior the kind of\nmen India calls to leadership.\nIt is now disclosed that the late\nPremier Shastri died penniless after\ndonating his salary of $630 a month\nto help India's social and economic\nprogress. He had no bank balance\nand owned no property. He lived\nin a house rented from the government\nIt is bootless to carry comparisons too far or to argue, for instance, that North .American political leaders should renounce all\nworldly goods while everyone\naround them enjoys the affluent\nsociety. This would be pointless\nhypocrisy.\nBut in the context of India, facing perhaps the worst famine of\nthis century, Shastri's selflessness\nputs to shame the protestations oi\nmany self-seeking Christians that\nthemselves.\nShastri's political opponents\nmight attack his ideas and his policies but hardly his ethics or his\nexample. There was about him no\nhint oi illicit turniture \"deals,\" oi\nwinking at under-the-table contributions to campaign iunds, oi\nsecret bank accounts in Switzerland.\nThis simple little man with standards of conduct many North\nAmericans must consider naive,\nreaches out from beyond the grave\nto remind the world that power\ndoes not necessarily corrupt, that\nselflessness can reach awesome\nproportions, even in the highest\nplaces.\nHis example suggests the great\ngulf between the ethics and attitudes of the Orient and the West,\none that will have to be bridged\nbefore there can be satisfactory relationships \u2014 or even communication.\u2014Vancouver Province.\nNo, No Mr. Greene\nIt is understandable that the\nnew, Ontario based, minister oi\nagriculture, Joseph Greene, should\nwant to make friends with the western farmers, but he is choosing a\nhair-raising method.\nIn Vancouver recently, the fledgling minister flatly predicted Canadians will have to pay higher food\nprices in order to keep the farming\nindustry out of the hands of a few\nbig corporations.\nThis is too much to swallow.\nThe problems of agriculture ar*\nmore complex than that What Mr.\nGreene seems to be doing is singling out one facet of the problem,\nso-called vertical integration, and\nusing it to buy support\nIn December the food price index stood at 139.6 which was up\ndramatically from 133.2 in December, 1964. The prices received by\nCanadian farmers, according to a\nreliable estimate, have increased\n1.5 per cent a year since 1957.\nIt is bad enough that domestic\nbudgets are strained, but increased\nfood prices are also reducing Canada's competitive advantage In\nworld agriculture trade. The harsh\nanswer to this ls increased productivity which means, particularly\neast of the Lakehead, larger farm\nunits with more machinery and\nfewer humans. These can still be\nretained within the framework of\nthe tradition-honored  family  farm,\nif the government evolves policies\nto help make it possible.\nThat is what Mr. Greene ought\nto be doing, not blowing the problem of corporation fanning out of\nall proportion and using it to support a price hypothesis that strikes\nat ths very heart of the Canadian\neconomy.\u2014Hamilton Spectator.\nNow You Can Blame\nHifch Heels for\nIt wasn't exactly news when a\nveteran Cleveland policeman reported after 27 years of investigating auto accidents that women generally drive 5 to 10 miles an hour\nfaster than men. Harried husbands\nhave always known this. What was\nnews was the reason given by the\npoliceman: high heels.\nIt seems the ladies scuff the\nback of their heels if they have to\nstretch their right foot to reach the\ngas pedal. To avoid this, said police\nofficer Joseph Zarlenga, they move\nthe seat up, almost on top oi the\nwheel, rest the bottom of the heel\non the floor, get added leverage\non th* accelerator \u2014 and zing,\naway they go.\nHis solution \u2014 take off the high\nheels when driving. Rather than\nkick up her heels, if a lady gets\nthe urge, it's much safer if she\nkicks  them  off.\u2014Chicago  Tribune.\nLetters to the Editor\nLetters to the Editor on ray toplo of genuine Interest\nare welcome if they are brief, accurate and fair. They may\nbe published over a nom de plume, but the name of the\nwriter must be given to the Editor as evidence of good faith.\nAnonymous letters go Into the wastepaper basket. Typewritten\nletters must be double-spaced.\nSNOWY WHITECAP\nCominco a '\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u2014I have read an article In\nthe Trail Times about the big\nthree, Cominco, Mine-Mill and\nthe local paper. Of course, they\nare all one. We could call it\nComlcmill.\nWhen you hear of so-called\ncompany towns, you could safely\nsay Trail is outstanding in this\narea. The company has the majority vote, excluding the cost of\nliving, which is on a steady Increase but the wages are not\nkeeping up.\nAccording to the mayor and\nlocal merchants, and, of course,\nHarvey Murphy, in the past\nnumber of years the union has\nmade quite a few accomplishments locally. I will not deny\nthis, but I will say that between\nfive and eight years ago Trail\nwas around third or fourth highest wage earners in the province,\nnow they are about fifteenth. As\nI see it, lots for the community\nand nothing for the working man.\nThe union says lots of benefits\nbut you cannot eat fringe benefits.\nMurphy is a good man in some\nrespects, a good talker of course,\nso good in fact, he talks the men\ninto things they don't want. And\n'Comicmill''\nby forced voting by fhe time the\nmen realize what has happened\nit is too late. AH the men should\nvote, but vote right.\nEvery time the employees ask\nfor increased wages we are told\nthe story about wage settlements\nin some outfit in Texas or Ten-\nnesee where they have migrant\nworkers or transients of sorts.\nComparing wage agreements, we\nare tired of hearing of this; we\nare more interested in our own\ntroubles and comparing agreements within 200 miles radius of\nTrail. Our agreement stinks\ncompared to quite a few others\nclose around us.\nThe Mine-Mill needs a good\nshake-up, or bring in the steelworkers.\nThis, of.course, is up to the\nworking man. Their pride has to\nbe brought to the surface. They\nhave been let down so often this\nmight be hard to do, but it can\nbe done. You'd better believe it.\nDispleased Union Member.\nBehind Qallic Charm Is Shrewd Politician\nBy STEWART MacLEOD\nOTTAWA (CP) - Lucien La-\nmoureux, the new Speaker of\nthe House of Commons, is a\ngentle - spoken lawyer whose\nGallic charm tends to conceal a\ncrisp decisiveness.\n\"In his quiet, polite way,\"\nsays an opposition member,\n\"he sometimes gives the impression of bending under pressure. But he's firm, believe\nme.\"\nMr. Lamoureux, 45-year-old\nMP for the Eastern Ontario riding of Stormont, has been tested\nunder fire and the Commons is\nnot getting an unkown quantity.\nAs deputy Speaker in the last\nParliament, he occupied the\nchair through some of the more\ntesty debates, and he managed\nto emerge without raising the\nwrath of any group;\nBecause of his apparent success at the job, his election as\nSpeaker was not unexpected.\nSince former Speaker Alan\nMacnaughton decided not to\nseek re - election in Montreal\nMount Royal, it was considered\na foregone conclusion that Mr.\nLamoureux, a Cornwall lawyer,\nwould move into the rich panelled quarters behind the Speaker's chair\u2014and into the chair\nitself.\nBORED BY PROCEDURE\nIn some ways it's ironic that\nhe should occupy the procedural nerve centre of the Commons, because until his appointment as deputy Speaker nothing\nbored Mr. Lamoureux so much\nas procedure.\n\"F r a n k 1 y,\" he says, \"1 always thought procedure in itself was a rather dull subject.\nAs a lawyer, I found it dull.\"\nBut the Ottawa native bad little difficulty in handling his university courses, complete with\nprocedural training. He went\nthrough the University of\nj Ottawa and Osgoode Hall for a\nmaster of arts degree and his\nlaw degree.\nThen for nine years he was\nthe executive assistant to Lionel Chevrier, Liberal transport\nminister prior to the government's defeat in 1957. After this\nToday in History\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nJan. 26, 1966 .. .\nGeneral Chinese Gordon\nand his British garrison\nwere massacred at Khartoum 81 years ago today\u2014\nin 1885\u2014by the Mahdi Mohammed Ahmed, who was\ntrying to throw the Egyptians and British out of the\nSudan. Khartoum had been\nbesieged for 317 days and a\nrelief expedition arrived two\ndays later. Gordon had\nearned   his   nickname   by\nIn 1965 four municipalities in\nthe Nelson zone trained news\nin the use of the feeding truck.\nThirteen municpalities now have\ntrained personnel in this capacity.\nputting down a revolution in\nChina some years before\nand was a popular hero in\nBritain, where a day of national mourning was ordered in his memory.\n1788 \u2014 Sydney, Australia,\nwas founded as a British\npenal colony.\n1924 \u2014 An order-in-council\nauthorized the display of the\nCanadian red ensign.\nFirst World War\nFifty years ago today\u2014in\n1916 \u2014 French guns destroyed German defence\nworks west of Laucourt in\nthe Roye region; German\nartillery shelled Lens.\nSecond World War\nTwenty-five years ago today\u2014in 1941\u2014Supply Minister C. D. Howe said\nbombed British factories\nmight be re-established in\nCanada; British troops in\nItalian - ruled Eritrea captured Biscia; British trawlers shot down four German\naircraft.\nHUBERT\nhe moved to Cornwall to enjoy\n\"a pleasant life\" as a small-\ncity lawyer.\nMr. Lamoureux entered the\nCommons in 1962 in a rare deferred election, held on July 16,\nfour weeks after the June 18\ngeneral election. The deferment\nwas due to death of the Liberal\ncandidate two days after official nomination day. Mr. Lamoureux was nominated by the\nLiberals and won by 70 votes\nover his Conservative opponent.\nBECAME INTERESTED\nWhen he was appointed deputy Speaker, Mr. Lamoureux\nhad to throw himself completely\ninto procedure. For several\nmonths he read little else but\nCommons rules.\n\"It was rather dry reading,\nbut then 1 took a liking to it,\nand 1 must say I enjoy it now.\nAfter a while you start moving with a group of people who\nhave an interest in this type of\nthing.\"\nWith his perfectly-knotted tie,\ncrisply-pressed suit and unwrin-\nkled robes, Mr. Lamoureux is\na natty figure in the huge\nleather-backed Speaker's chair.\nHe listens attentively to every\nmember, sometimes tapping his\nleft fingers on the arm rest\nwhen the debate is not moving\nthe way he would like. Before\njumping up to call a member\nto order he will shuffle his shiny\nblack shoes on the green-carpeted footrest.\nHe has no dramatics, no tendency to wisecrack his way\nthrough difficult situations. \"I\nknow the honorable member is\ndoing so unconsciously,\" he'll\nsay, \"but perhaps he has wandered just a bit from the subject\nmatter, and perhaps we can\nwork our way back to the matter under discussion.\"\nHis tone is soft.\n\"I would like, to think that\nwhen I have been in the chair,\nI have tried to be fair at all\ntimes,\" he says, \"but you don't\nhave too much time to think,\nand you never have any time\nfor research.\"\nNEVER ABSENT\nMr. Lamoureux has never\nmissed a Commons sitting. He\nhas seldom missed two weekly\nvisits to his Stormont riding, 75\nmiles away. He always jumps\nin his car at 6 p.m. Wednesday\nand spends the evening at home\nbefore returning to Ottawa\nThursday morning. And he's in\nhis riding from Friday evening\nuntil Monday morning.\nBut he sees little of his wife\nand four children while there.\nStoutly refusing to accept any\nconstituency engagements during House sitting hours, he accepts them for weekends and\nWednesday evenings.\n\"When I am home, I always\nmake myself available to my\nconstituents.\"\nDuring his free moments in\nOttawa\u2014where he lives at a\ndowntown hotel \u2014 Mr. Lamoureux writes letters to his constituents. They literally pour out\nof his office. \"I can think of\nmore reasons to write letters\u2014\nI can keep my two secretaries\nbusy producing them.\"\nHe'll write letters to students\nwho have done well in school,\nor to someone who may have\nexpressed opinions in a letter to a newspaper. Or he'll\nsend a flock of similar letters\nasking for ihe views of constituents.\nAlong with everything else,\nMr. Lamoureux has maintained\na weekly radio broadcast in his\nriding, in both English and\nFrench. And he writes the script\nhimself. He is at ease in both\nlanguages.\nHe was asked what he did\nfor relaxation.\n\"I've never done very much\nin life except work! I guess my\nonly real relaxation is an occasional game of bridge.\" Mr. Lamoureux is also one of the best-\ninformed MPs on sports although he doesn't participate in\nany.\nQUESTION PERIOD TOUGH\n\"The job of deputy Speaker\nwas very strenuous physically,\nand you have to keep on your\ntoes mentally. I have found that\nif I do my homework I can have\na pretty good idea of what procedural arguments might\narise.\"\nGenerally, he has found the\ndaily question period to be the\ntoughest to handle, although the\ncomplicated procedural arguments usually arise elsewhere.\nIn one case last year, while\nMr. Macnaughton was away,\nMr. Lamoureux had his ruling\nappealed while he was acting\nas chairman of the whole\nHouse. The appeal was made\nto the Speaker\u2014who was Mr.\nLamoureux.\n\"I resolved that it was a very\njudicious ruling,\" he recalls,\nwhite, allowing that the situation\nwas \"a bit ridiculous.\"\nHe says that was one occasion when members could have\nembarrassed him. But no one\ndid.\nAfter going through the last\nParliament in the detached role\nof deputy Speaker. Mr. Lamoureux was asked whether this affected his election campaign.\n\"No, I don't think so. I am\nnot really a partisan politician\nand I am not the type who goes,\nout and attacks an opponent. I\nthink my campaign was objective.\"\nWhat does he miss about his\npre-parliamentary days when\nhe was a small-city lawyer.\n\"I had time to go home for\nlunch then,\" he says.\nDividends\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nTurnbull Elevators Ltd., $1.10\nA pref. 27% cents, March 1,\nrecord Feb. 14.\nFruehauf Trailer Co. of Canada Ltd., common 50 cents,\nMarch 18, record Feb. 25.\nThe Imperial Life Assurance\nCo. of Canada, 95 cents, April\n1, record March 10.\nRockwell Standard Corp.,\ncommon 2TA cents (U.S.),\nMarch 10, record Feb. 11.\nTru-Wall Concrete Forming\nLtd., common 3 cents, Feb. 28,\nrecord Feb. 16.\nPhoto Engravers and Electro-\ntypers Ltd., common 40 cents,\nMarch 1, record Feb. 4.\nMclntyre Porcupine Mines\nLtd., common 60 cents, March\n1, record Feb. 8.\nMontreal Trust Co., common\n13 cents, plus 10 cents extra,\nApril 15, record March 31.\nSoviet Visit Won't\nChange Situation\nBy JOHN BEST\nMOSCOW (CP)-The almost\nunanimous view here now is\nthat the visit of a high-ranking\nSoviet mission to Hanoi can\nhave little direct bearing on\nchances for peace in Viet Nam.\nIndirectly, and over the long\nterm, it could have a beneficial\ninfluence. But experienced\nWestern observers are convinced that the reason for the\nmission was rooted in the the\nquarrel between the Soviet Union and China and had little to\ndo with the Viet Nam conflict.\nAnnouncement that a mission\nheaded by Alexander Shelepin,\nNo. 2 man in the Soviet Communist party, was going to\nHanoi came in the first flush\nof President Johnson's wide-\nranging peace offensive just\nafter Christmas.\nAn early tendency was to\nassume the two moves were\nlinked. This view may have\nbeen strengthened by a discernible easing of the ferocious\npropaganda campaign that had\nbeen going on in the government - controlled Soviet press\nagainst the U.S, for its military\ninvolvement in Viet Nam.\nOn sober second thought it\nbecame clear the Shelepin trip\nmust have been planned weeks\nbefore the unheralded peace\noffensive and thus had no basic\nconnection with it.\nIt also was realized that although the U.S.S.R. is believed\nto have an interest in ending\nthe Viet Nam conflict, it would\nnot lightly send one of its top\nmen off to the North Vietnamese capital on a highly-publicized journey designed to\nbring about a settlement.\nCHARGE SELLOUT\nNothing would be more gleefully seized upon by the Chinese Communists as proof of\ntheir standing charge that the\nKremlin is conniving with\nWashington to settle the war at\nthe expense of the Chinese and\nthe North Viet Nam Communists.\nEven as things stand, the\nChinese have not been slow to\naccuse Moscow of preparing a\nsellout.\nThe man heading the mission, Shelepin, doesn't strike\nobservers here as a likely emissary of peace. He is regarded\nas a tough, ambitious party\nman with little experience in\ndiplomacy at the international\nlevel.\nHe is reported to have been\ngiven a leading role in organizing the Communist party congress here this spring. Indications are that Moscow intends\nto use the conference as a\nforum for wide-open attack on\nthe Chinese, perhaps trying to\nisolate them formally from the\nworld Communist movement as\nled by the Kremlin.\nTo do this Moscow will have\nto bring as many foreign Communist parties as possible into\nassociation with the conference\nand get their support.\nFew here believe Moscow\nwould dare try an open assault\non China's position of influence\nin North Viet Nam. However,\nShelepin is assumed to have\ntried to bolster the Soviet Union's influence by putting before\nthe North Vietnamese leaders\nthe Kremlin position on a host\nof issues dividing the Communist world.\nNo Official UeSe Thinking on U.K. Role\n\"But I thought I earned your 'undying gratitude'\ntwo days age.\"\nBy ARCH MacKENZIE\nWASHINGTON (CP) - The\nAmerican penchant for tidy\nalignment of the globe into\npolitical and. geographical blocs\nhas been stimulated by recent\nevents within the British Commonwealth of Nations.\nThese reinforce Yankee skepticism that the Commonwealth\never was effective, and\nstrengthen convictions that reality\u2014as seen through United\nStates eyes\u2014calls for another\nBritish effort to join the European Common Market and tet\nthe Commonwealth go.\nHow prevalent this view is in\nofficial Washington is unknown.\nThere is no public evidence for\nit but certainly the concepts of\nthe late Presldeht Kennedy have\nnever been disowned, as evidenced by the continuance of\ndiscord with President de Gaulle\nof France.\nPersons who usually can be\nexpected to have access to official thinking have resurrected\npessimistic views about the capacity of the Commonwealth to\nendure. These views gain some\nsignificance in the light of important Anglo-American defence\ntalks being held here Thursday.\nBritain wants to reduce military costs and the U.S. may\nhave to take on some of the\nfinancial burden to help keep\nher major ally on duty In the\nPacific and elsewhere.\nSIGNS OF BREAKUP\nThe decline of the Commonwealth is seen in Such events\nas the Indian-Pakistani war, a\nbloody family squabble which\nSoviet Russia, of all nations,\nconciliated.\nAlso cited are the recent Nigerian revolt, a blow to the\nBritish legacy in Africa, the\nseries of troubles with Ghana,\nthe departures from the Com\nmonwealth of Burma and then\nSouth Africa, the Rhodesian\nrebellion, the split between\nSingapore and Malaysia and\neven evidence that Canada, New\nZealand and Australia lean more\nnow on the U.S. than on Britain.\nC L. Sulzberger of the New\nYork Times says it is fair to\nask whether the Commonwealth\neven exists.\n\"The idea of transforming a\ndisintegrating empire into an assembly of independent English-\nspeaking nations was a pleasant\ndream,\" he writes. \"Today it\nseems scarcely more than that.\"\nSulzberger quotes British Conservative Enoch Powell as saying the time has come \"when\nthe kidding has to stop\" about\nBritain and the Commonwealth,\nadding:\n\"Pretending there is a Commonwealth when there isn't has\nboth hampered Britain's freedom of diplomatic  action  and\nsapped   its   waning   economic\nstrength.\"\nURGES MARKET ROLE\nSyndicated columnist Joseph\nKraft took a similar line recently in urging Prime Minister\nWilson to turn his Labor party\ntoward Europe and another effort to join the Common Market\nfamily, despite French opposi-\nion last time.\nBritain's world role is diminishing and that endangers Britain's special status with the\nU.S., says Kraft.\nSulzberger suggests that Can,\nada, Honduras and Ghana join\nthe Organization of American\nStates. He notes Canada's defence links with the U.S. in the\nNorth American Air Defence\nCommand. And he says Australia, New Zealand and Britain\nshould join the U.S. in a grand\nPacific  alliance   extending  all\nthe way up through the Philip\npines to Japan.\"\n\u2022V\n Junior Maple Leafs Hungry\nFor Victory Over Smokies\nNelson Junior Maple Leafs\nwill have their third coach of\nthe season tonight when they\nplay host to Trail Junior Smoke\nEaters  in  a  West  Kootenay\nJunior Hockey League contest,\nThe Leafs began the season\nunder Bill Freno who was recently  suspended  pending  a\ndecision by the British Columbia Amateur Hockey Association. Manager Ross Allen then\ntook over as coach for three\ngames. Tonight Rob Birce will\ntake over the chores of directing the club until a decision\nis made as to whether Freno\nwill be able to return or not.\nBirce is expecting a better performance from the club than they\nhave shown in the last games\nand feels that the club will be\nout to win this one tonight.\nThe Junior Leafs are in a bad\nslump, having lost their last\nseven games, and haven't won a\ngame in the 1966 portion of the\nseason. But they'll be gunning\nfor a big win tonight, a win that\nwould give them another chance\nto close the gap on the first place\nSmokies,\nThe Leafs will also be sporting\nnew lines in the contest. In an\neffort to add more firepower to\nthe overall team, Birce has\nbroken up the existing units and\nreorganized them.\nBRUCE FERGUSON\nThe Leafs biggest downfall in\ntheir last game was team spirit.\nBut it's expected that they will\nmore than make up for it tonight\nas they have been hustling all\nweek at practice and are up for\ntonight's meeting with Trail.\nThe Nelson club received\nshot in the arm when fears that\ndefenceman John Harvie may be\nlost for the remainder of the\nseason  were  quelled.\nIt was suspected that the de\nfenceman may have a fractured\nskull, but x-rays proved this to\nbe wrong. Harvie was boarded\nin a game on January 15.\nSplitting the defensive chores\nwith Harvie will be Danny Hen-|\nnig, Ray Stack, Ron Vulcano and\nBruce Ferguson.\nFerguson has been the Leafs\nsteadiest blueliner in recent\ngames and thrives on hard\nwork and lots of action. While\nthe big defenceman is one of\nthe hardest hitters on the team,\nhe is also one of the best rushing defencemen in the league\n. . . somthing the Leafs lost\nwhen Bob Jeffs moved up to\nforward before being suspend-\ned along with Freno and Jim\nBoyce. Ferguson has taken up\na big share of the slack since\nJeffs has left the blueline.\nChuvalo Suffers Setback;\nOutpointed by Corletti\nLONDON (AP)-Eduardo Corletti, an Argentine fighting out\nof Rome, Tuesday night outpointed George Chuvalo of Toronto, the fourth-ranked challenger for Cassius Clay's heavyweight boxing title, in an upset\nvictory over 10 rounds.\nCorletti stepped into the ring\nwithout a rating in the world's\ntop 10 fighters and weighing\n19114 pounds against Chuvalo's\n206%.\nSAO PAULO, Brazil (AP)-[\nCorinthians of Sao Paulo de\nfeated the Russian national soccer team 3?1 Tuesday before 18,'\n000 spectators in Morumbi Stadium.\nA crowd of about 6,000 expected Chuvalo to bulldoze his\nway to victory over the fast-\nmoving Corletti.\nBut the Argentine proved the\nfaster in the ring, danced his\nway out of trouble, as the bulllike Chuvalo bored in, and\nshrugged off most of the two-\nhanded punches which the Canadian chose to throw.\nThe Associated Press made\nthe first, fourth and 10th rounds\neven; the second, third, seventh,\neighth went to Corletti; the\nother rounds were given to the\nCanadian.\nChuvalo started the fight with\ntwo punches that looked a bit\nJUNIOR\nHOCKEY\nNelson Civic Centre\nI NELSON JUNIOR MAPLE LEAFS\nvs.\nTRAIL JUNIOR SMOKE EATERS\nTONIGHT \u2014 JAN. 26 \u2014 8 P.M.\nAdmission:\nAdults 50c, Students 35c, Children 25c.\nDAILY  CROSSWORD\n18. Whit\n19. Slightly\ndamp\n20. Pleasure\ncraft\n22. Sleet\n24. Meadow\n25. Made\nwealthy\n26. Chair\n28. Belt\n30. Inhale\n32. More infrequent\n34. Permits\n35. Elide\n36. Competent\nYeiterday'i Answer\n38. Farm\nfeature\n40. Soft drink\n41. Sheep cry\n42. Attempt\n44. Part of a\ndoctorate\ndegree\nACROSS      46. Conven-\n1, Neckwear iently\n6. Flagpole accessible\n11. Italian city\n12. Island In DOWN\nMalay            1. Resort\narch.              2. Almanac\n13. Man's 3. Garden\nname dweller\n14. Base hit 4. Sprint\n15. Type 5. Music note\nmeasure         6. Lapis\n16. Play on 7. Aeslr\nwords 8. Reading\n17. Poem desk\n18. At homo        9. Crease\n19. Subject to    10. Gratis\nGresham's    14. Demands\nlaw as payment\n21. Hateful 16. Be sullen\n23. Beverages\n27. Silent\n28. Setting\n29. God of\nwar: Gr.\n80. African\nwilderness\n31. Believe\n33. Pronoun\n34. African\nworm\n37. Exclamation\n88. Canadian\nprovince:\nabbr.\n80. Go aboard\na ship\n41. Siamese\nmonetary\nunit\n43. Pronunciation mark\n44. Kitchen\nutensil\n45. Guide \t\nDAILY CRYPTOQUOTE \u2014 Here's how to work It:\nAXTDLBAAXB\nIs    LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is used\nfor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc Single letters, apos-\ntrophles, the length and formation of the words are all hints.\nBach day the code letters are different.\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nCJJ    RNUP    QCTTJ    C    VZFW    UHZZF\n.PQCP  RNUP   JOP   OXPQ  PQJ  GJYXV.\n\u2014UQCSJUBJCBJ\nYesterday's Cryptoquote: TIME \u2014 THAT BLEAK AND\nNARROW ISTHMUS BETWEEN TWO ETERNITIES. \t\nCOLTON\n.> <\u00ab 1966, Xing nature* Syndicate, Incl\n1\n2\n5\ni\n5\n%\n6\n7\nS\nq\n10\nII\n%\n12\nli\n%\n1*\n%\n15\ni\n16\n%\n17\n18\n^\n19\n20\n21\nii\nVA\n25\n\u00bb'\nii\n87\n%\n29\na\n'^\ns6\n%\n%\n%\nSi\n\\l\n'^\nii\n34\nU\nli'\n%\n!7\n%\nw\n%\n\u00bb\n40\n^\n41\n42\nn\n1\n44\n'\nM\n46\nlow. He was warned for fouling\ntowards the end of the round.\nChuvalo threw in everything\nhe had in the fourth round, but\nCorletti's speed kept him out of\nserious trouble.\nIn the last round Chuvalo\u2014as\nhe had done for most of the\nfight\u2014stormed in and got in a\ngood right. But Corletti weathered that one and then got in\ntwo lefts in return.\nThe crowd gave both fighters\na fine ovation.\nDAMAGED CHANCES\nThe loss damaged Chuvalo's\nchances for a crack at Henry\nCooper's British Empire title\nand the world championship\nheld by Cassius Clay.\nIn another fight, Cooper, 31,\nknocked out Hubert Hilton of\nGlen Cove, N.Y., with a left hook\nafter one minute, 20 seconds of\nthe second round in a scheduled\n10-rounder.\nCooper weighed 192% pounds\nand Hilton 1WA pounds.\nHilton ranked ninth challenger\nfor Clay's title. Cooper is not\ncurrently rated among the top\n10.\nChuvalo and his manager,\nIrving Ungerman, agreed afterwards the defeat was a disappointment and might cause more\ndifficulty getting a fight with\nCooper or Clay.\n\"We won't call it a set-back,\"\nUngerman said. \"It won't Stop\nus looking for Cooper and Clay.\n\"George is a good draw. If it\nhad been anyone else in the ring\ntonight against Corletti,. you\nwouldn't have had as good a\nfight as you got.\"\nWAS 'PRETTY SHIFTY*\nChuvalo said Corletti was\n\"pretty shifty,\" but the Argentinian's jabs did not hurt. \"I'd\nlike nothing better than a rematch,\" Chuvalo said,\n\"If Corletti had stood up and\nfought like a man, I would have\nbeaten him,\" Chuvalo said. \"But\nhe kept going back, back, back.\n\"I guess this has set back my\nprogram for a challenge against\nClay, but that is still our objective.\"\nCorletti, nursing a badly cut\nleft eye, said in his dressing\nroom: \"They don't come any\ntougher or stronger than George\nChuvalo. He rocked me once or\ntwice towards the end, but I\nthink the crowd agreed that I\nwon a good fight on better boxing ability.\"\nBut Ferguson and the rest of\nthe Leafs will have their work\ncut out for them and will have\nto hustle if they hope to beat the\nSmokies.\nThe main problem facing the\nNelson club will be Larry Brant,\nBrant, the Trail captain, gives\nthe Leaf fits in every game as\nhe is able to ward off the Nelson\ndefenders in his rushes to the\ncorner.\nIf the Leafs stop Brant, they'll\nhave stalled a major part in the\nSmoke Eater attack.\nThe Leafs are all healthy for\nthe game and the only absentees\nwill be Jeffs and Boyce.\nA decision is expected to be\nreached soon by the BCAHA after\na preliminary meeting was held\nSunday in Rossland to discuss\nthe actions of the players and\nFreno in the game in Rossland\nwhich brought about the suspensions.\nNelson will be well rested for\nthe meeting while Trail will be\ncoming off from their game\nagainst Rossland Tuesday night,\nBut the Smokies are a well-\nbalanced, well-conditioned club\nthat doesn't like to lose ,and\nhaven't done so too often this\nseason.\nWith the Smoke Eaters\nthreatening to run away with\nthe WKJHL title, the Leafs\nwill need a victory tonight to\nprevent them from getting too\nfar ont front.\nThe Leafs are determined to\ntake a win tonight and with\nseven consecutive losses under\ntheir belt, it's a good bet that\nthey'll be hungry for two\npoints.\nAnd the hungry team usually\ncomes out on top.\nAces Rally\nFor Victory\nQUEBEC (CP)-Three goals\nlate in the third period gave\nQuebec Aces a come-from-be-\nhind 7?5 victory over Baltimore\nClippers in an American Hockey\nleague game before more than\n3,800 fans Tuesday night.\nJean - Guy Gendron led the\nQuebec scoring with two goals.\nOther Quebec marksmen were\nGordon Labossiere, Simon Nolet,\nTerry Gray, Cleland Mortson\nand Don Blackburn.\nBaltimore scorers were Bill\nKnibbs, Jean \u2022 Marie Cossette,\nKen Schinkel, Duncan MacDonald and Ted Taylor\nThe Clippers took a 2-0 lead\non goals by Knibbs and Cossette\nin the first four minutes of the\nopening period. But the Aces\nwiped out the two-goal deficit\nbefore the period ended with\nGendron scoring his pair of\ngoals and Labossiere his single.\nSchinkel tied the game 3-3 in\nthe second period, but Nolet put\nthe Aces back on top.\nThe Clippers made it 5-4 on\ngoals by MacDonald and Taylor\n40 seconds apart early in the\nfinal period. But Quebec came\nfrom behind again as Gray,\nMortson and Blackburn scored.\nWITH STANE\nAND BESOM\nResults of games played Tuesday night in Men's Curling Club:\nL. Bicknell 6 M. Buerge 10\nG. Koehle 11 E. Mason 5\nB. Winlaw 8 L. J. Maurer 9\nJ. Leeming 10 R. W. Koehle 8\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Results\nof the English Football Association cup third-round soccer replays Tuesday night:\nBurnley 7 Bournemouth 0\n(Winner away to Tottenham in\nnext round)\nIpswich 2 Southport 3\n(Winner at home to Cardiff or\nPort Vale)\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIII\nThis Is Skiing?\nSKIING is getting up at 5:30 and packing 10 people into a\ncompact car.\nSKIING is lying on a wet highway putting on your chains\n200 feet from the parking lot because some cop says so.\nSKIING is forgetting your money for a lift ticket.\nSKIING is pinching your fingers in your cable bindings.\nSKIING is forgetting your poles.\nSKIING is having your goggles fog while   all the girls\nare fastening their bindings.\nSKIING is having everyone walk over the top of your new\nskis.\nSKIING is watching the three-year-olds schuss by.\nSKIING is waiting in a tow line while the ski school classes\ncrowd in front of you.\nSKIING is coming out of your bindings in deep powder.\nSKIING is your bindings sticking when you have to go.\nSKIING is having your stretch pants split.\nSKIING is squirting wine from your bota bag on your new\nsweater.\nSKIING is a long lunch line and cold chili.\nSKIING ls putting on cold, wet gloves after lunch.\nSKIING is falling off a rope tow.\nSKIING is itchy underwear.\nSKIING is snow melting in your boots.\nSKIING is crossing your tips.\nSKIING is losing a contact lens in the snow.\nSKIING is the ice melting on the chair lift seat.\nSKIING is forgetting where you hid your beer in the snow.\nSKIING is a frozen radiator.\nSKIING is GREAT.\n\u2014University of Washington Dally\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiimiiiiiiiiiimiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nEditorial\nClean Up the Qame\nA clear indication that something is lacking in the leadership\nsupplied by the Western International Hockey League executive was\nabundantly clear at Spokane's Coliseum Sunday when a minor riot erupted\nin the final stages of a Nelson Maple Leaf-Spokane Jets fixture, forcing\nthe referee to coll the gome with more than three minutes remaining.\nThe exhibition that ensued was ... to say the very least . . .\na shocking display on the part of fans, club officials and players alike.\nIt would certainly seem that Spokane general manager-coach Colin\nKilburn should be called on the carpet by the league executive to fully\nexplain his actions in engaging in a fight with a Nelson Maple Leaf player,\nond either justify his action or be suspended.\nSunday's outbreak was to be expected. There have been indications\njn past games involving the Jets that just such an occurrence has been\nin the making.\nKilburn, because of his position with the Spokane Club, should be\nexpected to conduct himself with more decorum than to engage in such\ntactics with a player from an opposing teem. He should set on example\nfor his players to follow.\nThe WIHL ... if it is effective at all . . . should move to moke\nsure that at all future times the general manager or coach of any team\nin the league can be counted on to set a proper example ... if he is to\nremain in hockey.\nIt appears that the time it now ripe for a general house-cleaning\nin the WIHL.\nPlayers guilty of actions likely to lead to debacles such at occurred\nat Spokane should be immediately eliminated from league play . . . and\nfans guilty of tuch actions should be refused admission to league games.\nThere it no place in organized hockey today for such actions.\nCanada, a few years ago, was clearly the leader in world hockey\ncompetition. Her stature has slipped . . . and is slipping more each year.\nThis it due, to a very large degree, to the trend our game is taking today.\nLet's clean it up before it is too late. Let's train our players in the\nfiner skills of the game . . . not teach them to be unbridled ruffians who\ntake to the ice for the sole purpose of eliminating memberi of the opposing\nteom.\nAs it is played today, the sportsmanship hat been removed from\nhockey played in the WIHL.\nThis paper it curious at to just what action is planned with regard\nto the Spokane debacle by Milo Fabro and hit fellow memberi of the\nWIHL executive.\nThe situation calls for drattie tfeps. It also colli for a league\nexecutive with enough gumption to bring about a tueceiiful conclusion.\nYankees\nBut Lose\nRegain Mantle\nTony Kubek\nNEW YORK (AP) - Mickey\nMantle underwent surgery\nhis right shoulder and Tony\nKubek retired from baseball\nTuesday in developments that\nwill shape the immediate future\nof New York Yankees.\nBobby Richardson notified the\nclub he would be back to play\nsecond base in the 1966 season\nwhen he learned the Yanks\nwould be without Kubek, their\nregular shortstop.\nWith outfielder Roger Marls\nstill a question mark after play-\ning only 46 games last year,\ncatcher Elston Howard coming\nback from a 196S operation and\n37-year-old pitcher and coach\nWhitey Ford operating with a\ncirculation problem in his left\nhand, the Yanks face an uphill\nstruggle to regain their former\nstatus as champions.\nMantles condition was listed\ni satisfactory at Rochester,\nwhere a Mayo Clinic spokes-\nman said there were no complications in the operation to remove a bone chip from his\nshoulder.\nAlthough hospital spokesman\nreleased no information about\nthe effect of the operation on\nMantle's baseball future, general\nmanager Ralph Huk said in\nCheshire, Conn., that a spokesman at the hospital told him the\nall-star outfielder would be In\ngood shape to report for spring\ntraining, March 1 at Fort Lauderdale, Fla.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., JAN. 26, 1966\u20145\nON THE AIR\nPACIFIC STANDARD TIME\nCKLN PROGRAMS 1390 ON THE DIA1\nWEDNESDAY, JANUARY 26, 1966\nS:59-Sign On\n6:00\u2014News\n6:10-The Morning Show\n6:40\u2014Farm Fare\n6:45\u2014Chapel In The Sky\n7:0O-News\n7:05-Wake Up Time\n7:25\u2014Sports News\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Wake Up Time Continues\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Sports Report\n8:15\u2014Wake Up Time Continues\n8:30\u2014Preview Commentary\n8:35\u2014Opening Markets\n8:40\u2014Wake-Up Time Cont'd\n9:00\u2014News\n9:10\u2014Roads and Weather\n9:15-A.M, Spot\n9:59-Time Signal\n10:00\u2014News\n10:05\u2014Open Line\n10:55\u2014Assignment No. 1\n11:00\u2014News\n11:05\u2014Morning Melodies\nll:40-The Archers\n11:55\u2014Provincial Affairs\n12:O0-Tommy Hunter\n12:15\u2014Sports News\n12:25\u2014News and Roads\n12:30-B.C. Farm Broadcast\n1:00\u2014John Drainie\n1:15\u2014Gordie Tapp Show\n1:45-Sacred Heart\n2:00\u2014B.C. School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n3:30\u2014Off the Record\n3:55\u2014Assignment\n4:00\u2014News\n4:03\u2014Canadian Roundup\n4:10\u2014Sports News\n4:15-High Time\n4:30\u2014Pops Parade\n4:55\u2014Assignment No. 3\n5:00\u2014The Rolling Home Sh\n5:05\u2014News\n5:10-The Rolling Home\nShow Cont'd\n5:30\u2014News\n5:35-Closing Markets\n5:40-On Parliament Hill\n5:45\u2014Business Barometer\n5:50\u2014Bill Good Evening Sou,.\n6:00\u2014Strikes and Spares\n6:05\u2014News\n6:15\u2014Countrytime\n7:00\u2014News\n7:15\u2014Topic for Tonight\n7:30-CBC Halifax Orchestra\n8:00\u2014Between Ourselves\n9:00\u2014Midweek Theatre\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15-Chapel In the Sky\n10:3O-Distinguished Artists\nU:00-Sign Off\nCBC PROGRAMS\nWEDNESDAY, JANUARY 26, 1966\n4:10\u2014Off the Record\nTony Kubek\nHouk said he understood Mantle would be in hospital three\nweeks.\nNative Diver Big Winner;\nGeorge Royal Finishes 9th\nBy BOB MYERS\nARCADIA, Calif. (AP)-Natlve\nDiver took the lead a few strides\nout of the gate and set the pace\nTuesday to win $28,500 San Pas-\nquale Handicap at Santa Anita\nPark.\nBouncing back from his disappointing 10th place finish in\nthe San Carlos Handicap Jan. 8,\nthe California seven-year-old reestablished himself at the horse\nto beat in the $100,000-added\nSanta Anita Handicap Feb. 26.\nMasterfully ridden by Jerry\nLampert, Native Diver got under the wire first in a blanket\nfinish with Cupid and Isle of\nGreece.\nOFF RECORD\nThe time for the 1 1-16 miles\nwas 1:41, two-fifths off the track\nrecord.\nThe victory was Native Diver's\n25th stakes, all in California, and\nEmerald 'Spiel\nWon by Salmo\nEmerald Men's Curling Club\nheld its annual bonspiel on January 21-22-23 with 15 rinks entered.\nThere were three events in\nthe bonspiel with rinks from Salmo, Fruitvale and Emerald taking top prizes.\nWinner of the first event was\nA. Moir (Salmo) and runner-up\nwas R. Kline (Salmo).\nIn the second event K. Burrows (Fruitvale) took top honors\nover W. Morris' foursome from\nEmerald.\nG. Carr gave Emerald the first\nplace in the third event with\nvictory over A. Grotkowski of\nYmir.\nwas worth $17,250 to his owners,\nMr. and Mrs. L. K. Shapiro.\nHill Rise, a second choice in\nthe betting, never seriously challenged and was sixth. George\nRoyal, Canada's Horse of the\nYear in 1965, was ninth in the\nfield of 10 and did not come up\nwith an expected stretch run.\nGeorge Royal, ridden by veteran John Longden, has yet to\nwin a race on the dirt track and\nscored his biggest triumph here\nlast year in the $100,000 San\nJuan Capistrano Handicap on\nthe turf.\nNative Diver, paid $5.20, $4.60\nand $3.40; Cupid ridden by Bob\nUssery, paid $7.60 and $5.60, and\nIsle of Greece, with Walter Blum\nriding, returned $5.20.\nLOST SHORTSTOP\nWhile the Yanks were hopeful\nof regaining the services of their\nbrilliant switch\u00bbhitter, at least\non a part time basis, they had\nto be reconciled to the loss of\ntheir shortstop,\nKubek announced his retirement because of a series of injuries that had hampered his career in recent years. Reports\nfrom the Mayo Clinic Indicated\nthe 29-year-old infielder suffers\nfrom pressure on the spinal cord\nnerve which could affect his reflexes.\nAlthough the doctors told Kubek months of rest might alleviate the situation, Kubek felt J\nthere was possibility of perma-l\nnent disability if he tried to\nplay.\nThe condition apparently is\nthe result of a fracture in the\ncervical section of the neck,\npreviously undiscovered, s u f-\nfered several years ago. Bone\nspurs and nerve damage have\ndeveloped.\nThe  retirement  of Kubek\naves the Yankees with only\none experienced shortstop, Ruben Amaro, acquired from Phil,\nadelphia Phillies during the winter in a trade for Phil Linz.\n6:00\u2014News\n6:05\u2014The Morning Program\n8:00\u2014News\n8:35\u2014Max Ferguson Show\n9:00\u2014News and Reports\n9:10-Pacific Express\n9:15\u2014Network Test\n9:30\u2014Pacific Express\n9:44\u2014Playroom\n9:59-DOOTS\n10:00\u2014Along the Way\nll:40-The Archers\n11:55\u2014Provincial Affairs .\n12:00\u2014Tommy Hunter and Pals\n12:15\u2014News and Weather\n12:30-B.C. Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Marine Weather\n1:00\u2014John Drainie\n1:15\u2014Gordie Tapp Show\n1:45\u2014Program Resume\n2:00\u2014B.C. School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014News\n2:33\u2014Trans Canada Matinee\n3:30\u2014Off the Record\n3:55\u2014Assignment\n4:00\u2014News\n4:03\u2014Canadian Roundup\n4:40-Who Will Come With Me?\n4:55\u2014Assignment\n5:00\u2014Jazz 'n' Things\n5:30\u2014News\n5:40-On Parliament Hill\n5:45\u2014Business Barometer\n5:50\u2014Bill Good Evening Sports\n6:00r-Tempo, Part II\n6:15\u2014Music In G\n6:45\u2014Rod and Charles\n7:00\u2014News\n7:15\u2014Topic for Tonight\n7:30\u2014CBC Halifax Orchestra\n8:0O\u2014Between Ourselves\n9:00\u2014Midweek Theatre\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15-Today's Editorial and\nSpeaking Personally\n10:30\u2014Distinguished Artists\n11:00\u2014A Man at Westminster\n11:30\u2014First Hearing\n12:00\u2014News\n12:03\u2014Land and Marine Weather\n12:05-After Hours\n1:00\u2014News\nTHURSDAY, JANUARY 27, 1966\n6:00\u2014News\n6:05\u2014The Morning Program\n8:00\u2014A.M. Show Cont.\n8:25\u2014Sports Report\n8:35\u2014Max Ferguson Show\n9:00\u2014News and Report\nLegion Zone\nPlaydowns\nCanadian Legion Zone Bonspiel\nwill be held in Rossland, January 28 - 29 - 30. The first draw is\nat 6:00 p.m., second at 9:00.\n6:00 \u2014 Henne vs Thomas;\nD'Amour vs Wyatt; Leeman vs\nHill; McAulay vs Moran; Lutki-\nvich vs LaForte; Fine vs Robertson; Huitema vs Brost; Wood-\nburn vs Russ.\n9:00 \u2014 LeMoel vs Bush; Stone\nvs Hayward; Patterson vs Ver-\nkerk; Smith vs Cameron; Barefoot vs O'Connel; Budd vs Beaudry; D'Archangelo vs Derlow;\nRoberts vs McAulay.\nThe final will be held on Sunday.\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nCANADIAN SKI TEAM\nARRIVES HOME TODAY\nSeven of the 11 members of\nCanada's National Ski Team\nare scheduled to return to Nelson today after competing in\nmeets in Europe for the past\nthree weeks.\nThe returnees include Andre\nCrepeau, Garry Matheson,\nBarbie Walker, Scott Henderson, Wayne Henderson, Gerry\nRinaldi  and  Bob Swan.\nThe remainder of the team,\nNancy Greene, Karen Dokka,\nPeter Duncan and Rob Hebron, will remain overseas with\ncoaches Dave Jacobs and Verne\nAnderson, to compete in two\nFrench meets this week. The\nboys will be at Megeve while\nNancy and Karen compete at\nSt. Gervais.\nThe seven members were\noriginally scheduled to arrive\nin Nelson on Tuesday but were\ndelayed along the way.\nlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nWhile the majority of the\n\"A\" team is arriving home,\nthe \"B\" team is departing for\nRossland where they will train\nfor two days before travelling\nto Spokane where they will\ncatch a plane for Salt Lake\nCity, Utah. From there they\nwill travel to Park City to\ncompete in the Lowell Thomas\nClassic on January 30.\nTeam manager Peter Webster will accompany the team\nof Heather Quipp, Anne Rowley, Stephanie Townsend, Keith\nShepherd, Danny Irwin, Currie\nChapman, Kelly Flock, Andre\nPomerleau, Pierre Lebrun,\nJacques Roux and Michel Lehmann.\nThey will be joined by the\nentire \"A\" team at Aspen,\nColorado in time for the Andre\nRoch Competition, which was\nwon last year by Nancy\nGreene.\n9:10\u2014Pacific Express\n9:44\u2014Playroom\n9:59\u2014Time Signal\n10:00-Along the Way\n11:55\u2014Assignment No. 1\n11:40\u2014The Archers\n10:55\u2014Assignment No. 1\n12:00-That McKinnon Girl\n12:15-News\n12:30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Marine Weather\n1:00\u2014John Drainie\n1:15\u2014Gordle Tapp Show\n1:45\u2014Program Resume\n2:00-Western Regional\nSchool Broadcast\n2:80\u2014News\n2:33-0pening of B.C.\nLegislature\n4:00\u2014News\n4:03\u2014Canadian Roundup\n4:10\u2014Off the Record\n4:40-Who Wffl Come With Me?\n4:55\u2014Assignment No. 3\n5:00\u2014Jazz 'n' Things\n5:30\u2014News\n5:40-On Parliament Hill\n5:45\u2014Business Barometer\n5:50\u2014Sports Desk\n6:00\u2014Tempo Part II\n6:15\u2014A Date With Doug\n6:45\u2014Rod and Charles\n7:00\u2014News\n7:15\u2014Topic for Tonight\n7:30\u2014Soundings\n8:00-CBC Talent Festival\n8:30\u2014Music Diary\n9:00-Symphony Hall\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15-Today's Editorial\n10:30\u2014Chamber Music\n11:00\u2014Concerts From Abroad\n12:00\u2014News\n12:03\u2014Land and Marine Weather\n12:05\u2014After Hours\n1:00\u2014News\n1:03\u2014Recorded Music to 6 a.m.\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\nPACIFIC STANDARD TIME\nKREM-TT \u2014 Channel I\n5:00\u2014Wyatt Earp\n5:30-Channel 2 Reports\n6:30\u2014True Adventure (C)\n7:00-Dobie Gillis\n7:30-Batman* (C)\n8:00-PattyDuke\u00ab\n8:30-Blue Light* (C)\n9:00\u2014The Proud Land* (C)\n10:00\u2014Long Hot Summer*\nll:0O-Nightbeat\nll:30-\"Breakthrough\"\nECLY-TV \u2014 Channel 4\n7:00\u2014The Rifleman\n7:30\u2014Lost in Space*\n8:30-Beverly Hillbillies* <C>\n9:00\u2014Green Acres* (C)\n9:30-Dick Van Dyke*\n10:00\u2014Danny Kaye Show* (C>\n11:00-11 o'clock News\n11:30\u2014Wrestling Champions\nKHQ-TV \u2014 Channel I\n7:00\u2014Death Valley Days (C)\n7:30-The Virginian* (C)\n9:0ft-Bob Hope* (C)\n10:00-1 Spy* (C)\n11:00\u2014News and Wealher\nll:30-Tonight With Carson* (C)\nCBC-TV \u2014 Nelson, Channel I; Trail, Channel II\n10:00\u2014Canadian School Telecast\n10:S\u00bb-The Friendly Giant\n10:45\u2014Chez Helene\n11:00\u2014Butternut Square\n11:20\u2014Across Canada\n11:50\u2014News (Toronto\n12:00\u2014Bachelor Father\n12:30\u2014Search for Tomorrow\n12:45-Gulding Light\nl:0O\u2014Girl Talk\n1:30\u2014As the World Turns\n2:00\u2014Password\n2:30\u2014Follow the Leader\n3:00-To Tell the Truth\n3:25\u2014Happening on Take Thirty\n3:30-Take Thirty\n4:00\u2014Bonnie Prudden Show\n4:30\u2014Razzle Dazzle\n5:30\u2014Music Hop\n6:00\u2014Provincial Affairs\n6:15\u2014Cuisine\n6:45-Klahanie\n7:15\u20147 o'clock Show\n7:45\u2014Peggy Neville Sho\u00ab\n8:00-Blue Light\n8:30\u2014Bob Hope Theatre\n9:30\u2014Festival\n11:00\u2014News\n11:14\u2014Viewpoint\nCJLH-TV \u2014 Channel 7, Lethbridge\nMOUNTAIN STANDARD TIME\n10:00\u2014Canadian Schools\n10:30\u2014Friendly Giant\n10:45\u2014Chez Helene\n11:00\u2014Butternut Square\n11:20\u2014Across Canada\n11:50-CBC TV News\n12:00\u2014Noon Show\nl:0O-No Hiding Place\n2:00\u2014Password\n2:30\u2014Something for the LHies\n3:00-To Tell the Truth\n3:25\u2014Take Thirty\n4:00\u2014Bonnie Prudden Show\n4:30\u2014Razzle Dazzle\nTHURSDAY\n5:00\u2014Trackdown\n5:30\u2014Sea Hunt\n8:0O-Dateline: Sports,\nWeather, News\n6:30\u2014Farming Today\n7:00\u2014Camp Runamuck\n7:30\u2014Bewitched\n8:0O-Seaway\n9:00-1 Dream of Jeannie\n9:30\u2014Telescope\n10:00-Man From UNCLE\n11:00-CBC News\n11:15\u2014Final Edition\n11:20\u2014Great Adventure\n(Programs siuhjert to change by stations without notice.)\n NELSON DAILY NEWS,\nWED., JAN. 26, 1966\u20146\nMARKET\nTRENDS\nNEW YORK (AP) - Stock\nsplits by International Business\nMachines and other companies\nheightened the speculative atmosphere on Wall Street and\nthe stock market posted its second straight day of recovery.\nVolume totalled 9,320.000\nshares compared with 8,820,000\nMonday.\nA number of analysts mentioned inflationary psychology\nas a factor in current market\nstrength. A continued strons ad-\nvance by aerospace issues underlined the defence speitdms\nboost in the United States\nbudget.\nAirlines, electronics, sijevattj\nsituated issues and an jss.ii-\nmcnt of lower - prkec- swAs\nwere in the spotttglM.\nThe top steels an* ttntm.%\ntook minor louses. Sum* of til*\nselling in these spjiiiis *\u00ab*s\nlinked with a ctev? in w iw\u00bb:\nsales in mii.VJwuas-y\nDOW lNIH'STRttS* l*\nThe Dow Aw* ihwustt;i|\u00bbfi *<--\nerage rose .25 Itfo WS8*. 'Wbr- -te-\nsedated Psess swtisgc vS TO\nstocks artv-Afflw.1 1 'fi to Mfi-k.\nIBM dectewwS * *Stn<2 saw*\nsplit and She issue aa'vmwi-:\n14>s to a\u00bb>?j. This <essi a stew\nover the matte, si\u00bb\u00bb IBM has\nbeen a darling of tie institutional investors most of the\ntime.\nFurther excitement was\nadded by stock splits for\nCrompton and Knowles, Scher-\ning and Burndy Corp. Crompton\nand Knowles spurted 2 points\nbut the split news seemed to\nhave been anticipated Monday\nby sharp gains in the two other\nstocks. Schering slipped VA and\nBurndy fa.\nAfter the close came word\nU.S. Steel reported higher earnings for 1965 but a decline in\nfinal quarterly earnings as compared with a year ago. The\nStock was off Va at 53 in advance of publication of the\nnews.\n., Among Canadians, Dome\nMines lost %, Hudson Bay Mining Vi and International Nickel\n%. Aluminium Ltd. was up.%.\nOn the American Exchange\nCanadian Marconi was up %\nand Brazilian Traction Va.\nWhat stocks did:\nTues    Mon\nAdvances 651     697\nDeclines 535     503\nUnchanged 251     220\nTotal issues 1,437  1,420\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014Heavy to\nmoderate price declines among\nspeculative issues highlighted a\nslower market on the Toronto\nStock Exchange Tuesday.\nD'Eldona suffered the heaviest decline as it dropped 34\ncents to 2.62 on more than 789.-\n000 shares. The company said\nTuesday no important mineralization has been found in the\nlatest drill holes.\nIn other speculative activity\nWilco fell 21 cents to 93 cents\noh more than 468,000 shares.\nVolume was 6,995,000 shares\ncompared with 8,403,000 Monday.\ninternational Utilities moved\nup I'\/i to 33 and B.C Telephone\n1 to 74 while Canada Cement\nwas up % to wv, and the Bank\nof Nova Scotia Va to 76.\nAlgoma Steel slid Va to 6814\nwith Bell and Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce off % to\n60 and 69%.\nAmong base metals Hudson\nBay led the group lower as it\nfell Vi to 84 with Denison and\n.Lake Dufault each down Va to\n37 and 1414. Noranda eased off\nVa to 53%.\nGiant Yellowknife was off %\n, to 14V4 among gold issues while\nDome added Va at 41 and Coch-\nenour Willans 10 cents at 4.75.\n\u2014 In western oils Banff moved\nahead % to 12y4 and Canadian\n- Homestead 20 cents to 2.2S.\n. Great Plains declined % to 11%.\n. On index, industrials were off\n.08 to 174.66, golds 1.19 to 172.28,\nbase metals .33 to 90.48, TSE\n:M to 164.93. Western oils were\nup 1.37 to 110.29.\n'MONTREAL (CP) - Stock\nprices were generally lower\nTuesday on the Montreal and\nCanadian stock exchanges.\nOnly papers and banks were\nhigher among the senior groups\nJn moderately active trading.\nDeclines edged advances 131 to\n80.\nThe composite index dropped\n021 at 163.28.\nIndustrial volume was 192,600\n-shares, mines and oils  1,515,-\n700, compared with 178,000 and\n1,972,000 Monday.\nBanks rose 0.14 at 132.14. Ca-\nnadienne Nationale jumped one\npoint to 72 and Nova Scotia Va\nto WVa. Provinciate climbed %\nto 52 and Toronto-Dominion Vt\nto6714.\nPAPERS ROSE 0.01\nPapers rose 0.08 at 122.13.\nPrice Bros, advanced % to 41%\nand Abitibi % to 12%.\nUtilities closed down 0.63 at\n156.94. B.C. telephone and In-\nterprovincial Pipe Line fell Va\nto nVa and 87%. Maritime Telephone slipped Va to 22% and\nQuebec Natural Gas Va to 14%.\nThe original $Day with Storewide Savings you know are really outstanding! Many more\nnon-advertised specials throughout the store. Phone, mail or CO.D. orders accepted!\nMEN'S  WEAR\nMew's Budget-Priced Anklets\nywk'y *s*i plain, stretcher or sized dress\nsuv&s, WW! and nylon. Subs of $1 range.\nVmt iUws. 9      Cl\n     2for 'I\nSS-citfi\nMen's Deubfe-Seat Shorts\nMea* sJMtUc cotton briefs. Swiss rib.\nras*! sesuns, itouWe seal. Sites: S, M. L.\nK*SKa\u00bbr tat, J      Si\nSjperja]\n\u25a0pr.\nMen's Undervests\nMen's athletic vests to match shorts.\nSwiss ribbed, taped seams. Sizes: S, M,\nand L. Regular 69c. J       Cl\nSpecial\n\u25a0 pr.\nMen's Broadcloth Boxer Shorts\nSanforized broadcloth boxer shorts.\nElastic waist. Balloon seat. Neat patterns.\nSizes: S, M. J        Cl\npr.\nSpecial\nFamous Brand Boxer Shorts\nFirst quality by a famous maker. Sanforized broadcloth. Sizes 30 to 42, Cl\nbroken. Regular 1.50. Special    * I\nMen's White T-Shirts\nFine combed cotton short sleeve tee\nshirts. Crew neck \u2014 nylon reinforced\nneckband. Subs of regular 1.50 range.\nVery minor flaws. Sizes: S, M, L. Cl\nSpecial     *'\nMen's Budget-Priced T-Shirti\n100% combed cotton tee shirts. Washable. Sizes: S, M only. 9       Cl\n  <fcfor Tl\nSpecial\nMen's Cotton Handkerchiefs\nGenerous size cotton handkerchiefs. Hemstitched. 5 handkerchiefs to a package.\nRegular 1.49 value. Cl\nSpecial     * I\nBoxed Ties\nQuality ties with regular values to 1.50.\nPriced to clear. 9       Cl\n  A for 'I\nSpecial\nTerylene Dress Shirts\nTruly no-iron terylene. Short pointed\ncollar. White. Sizes 16 and C3\n17 only. Special   *S\nLong Sleeve Knit Shirts\nLong sleeve knit T-shirts of 20% wool,\n80% Orion. Completely washable. Grey,\ncharcoal, burgundy. Sizes: C\/1\nS, M, L. Reg. 6.95. Special  *t1\nWORK CLOTHES\nMen's Cardigan Sweaters\nMen's all wool bulky knit cardigans in\nbeige. Grey and navy. Sizes: S, M, Co\nL, and XL. Reg. 12.98. Special  *O\nMen's Work Socks\nLong wearing grey, 214 lb. work socks.\nReinforced heel and toe. Standard size.\nRegular 69c. \u2022%      Cl\nSpecial   \" pr. *'\nAll-Purpose Work Glovei\nCotton twill gloves. Ideal for cleaning,\npainting. Limited quantities. 9 Cl\nReg. 39c pr. Special   3 pr. * I\nMen's Drill Work Pants\nHard-wearing drill work pants. Sanforized for lasting fit. Reinforced, Colors:\nSuntan, Green, Charcoal. Sizes 30 to 44.\nRegular 4.98. . C je\nSpecial   *TT\nMen's Drill Work Shirts\nSanforized cotton drill work shirts. Color-\nfast \u2014 fully washable. Colors: Suntan,\nGreen, Charcoal. Sizes 15 to 1714. |]\nRegular 3.50. Special  *3\nMen's Denim Pants\nMen's full cut work pants of 9 oz. blue\ndenim. All sizes. at\/a\nReg. 4.50. Special   *^\nMen's Whipcord Pant\nMen's battleaxe whipcord pants. Full cut.\nWashable. All sizes. CC\nReg. 5.98. Special  *3\nBOYS' WEAR\nBoyi' Ankle Socki\nFancy ankle socks. Kroy wool and cotton\nand wool and nylon. Stretchees and sized.\nSubs of reg. 69c values.       3       Cl\nSpecial   3 for * I\nBoyi' Jackets\nBoys' water repellent suburban length\njackets, pile lined for warmth. Broken\nsizes. Reg. 12.98. CQ\nSpecial *3r\nBoyi' Undenhorti\nBoys' athletic style briefs. Military rib\nfor added wear. Taped seams. Pre-\nshrunk. Sizes: S, M, L. 3       Cl\nSpecial    3 for *l\nBoys' Undervests\nAtrletlc vests to match above shorts.\nMilitary rib, taped seams. Pre-shrunk.\nSizes: M, L. 3 Cl\nSpecial  9  for * I\nLADIES' WEAR\nReversible Ski Jockett\nColorful   printed   jackets reversing to\nblack. Quilted nylon with zip waist, collar\nand tuck-in hood.\nS. M. L. Reg. 12.98 \t\n*5\nDresses\nNice selection of dresses in assorted\nstyles and fabrics. Sites 10 to 18. CC\nReg. value to 29.88    *3\nBriefi\nFancy rayon briefs. Lace trim, assorted\ncolors. 2 in a cosmetic Cl\nenvelope. S, M, L     * I\nTurtle Neck T-Shirti\nsleeveless turtle neck stretchy pullovers,\n2 way neck line. Nylon zipper. Gold, pink,\nblack, brown, rose white. <9\nS, M, L    *A\nNylon Slips\nFull length slips in Nylon Acetate. Lace\ntrim on bodice and the hem. White, Cl\npink, blue. Sizes 32 to 42.   * I\nPantie Girdles\nA group from higher price lines. Satin\nfront, elasticized back and sides for a\nsmooth fit. Sizes S, M, L. C9\nSpecial .... **\nLadies' Brai\nQuality bras from higher priced lines.\nAssorted styles in padded or regular.\nBroken size range. Cl\n32A to 38B. Special  * I\nRayon Briefi\nFancy ranyon briefs in banded or elastic\nleg styles. Lace trim. Assorted pastel\nshades. Sizes S, M, L. 9 Cl\n\"       '  9 for *I\nSpecial\nCotton Half Slipi\nShadow panel, fancy eyelet trim      Cl\nWhite only. Sizes S, M, L. *\nStretch Girdles\nLastex pull-on style. Easy to care, comfortable to wear. Cl\nSizes S, M, L .  * I\nBlouses\nFully combed cotton. Sanforized. Roll-up\nsleeves. Assorted colors.    9       C9\n........... 2  for \u00bb3\nSizes 32 to 38.\nGaylord Blouses\nLovely assortment of ladies' tailored\nblouse shirts. Roll sleeves. Inner-outer\nstyles in popular prints. 9 Ce\n...-. * for *3\nReg. 4.98. Special.\nCuff Leg Panties\nLadies' rayon panties, cuff leg style\nWhite. Sizes: S, M, L.        9 Cl\n _   Zfofr \u00bbl\nSpecial\nCardigans\nAn assortment of Banlon and Orion classic cardigans in a nice color assortment.\nSizes 14-16. J3\nLadies' Skirts\nWool lined skirts. Sheath style, assorted\ncolors. Sizes 8 to 18. CC\nRegular 12.98.  *3\nMillinery\nFashionable styles in a nice selec-  C9\ntion of fall hats. Reg. to 4.98  **\nShell Blousei\nFancy shell tops in rich brocade or\nmetallic. Assorted colors, CC\nSizes 10 to 18. Reg. 12.98  *D\nTextured Leotards  .\nLadies' diamond textured seamless\nstretch Leotards. Beige or black. \u00bb9\nSizes: S, M, L.  *A\nLadies' Sweeten\nA choice or Wool or Silkron cardigans\nand pullovers. Assorted styles and colors.\nSizes: S, M, L. CC\nRegular to 10.9B  *3\nJumpers\nNew Melbourne flannel, a blend of viscose\nacetate and wool. Crease resisant. Tan,\nbeige, red. Sizes 10 to 16. CO\nReg. 10.98  *0\nNOTION DEPT.\nBay Super-Value Hosiery\nLadies, here's extra saving on these but-\nstanding nylons. First quality ... 400\nneedle. 15 denier. 9        Cl\nNew shades. Special     *\u2022 pr.  * '\nFine Quality Nylem\nSeamless micro-mesh hosiery. 400 needle,\n15 denier. Assorted spring shades.\nSizes 814 to 11. 3       Cl\nSpecial   3 for * I\nSpring Scarves, Headiquores\nChoose scarves or headsquares of georgette and chiffons. First 3 Cl\nquality. Values to 69c. Spec. 3 for T.'\nHandbags\nCarryall bags and handbags in popular\nstyles. Quality made. C9\nReg. 3.98. Special  \"\nLadies', Teeners' Glovei\nWarm, wool gloves with fancy trim. Cl\nSizes: S, M, L. Reg. 1.39. Special   * I\nWomen's, Teeners' Anklet!\nWomen's and teeners' ankle socks. Turn\ndown cuff. Long-wearing nylon. Colors:\nwhite, black, beige. \u2022%       Cl\nRegular 69c. Special\nChild*' Ankle Socki\nFirst quality stretch nylon ankle socks.\nColors: White, powder and yellow. One\nsize fits 6-814. 3       Cl\nSpecial ....\n'pr.\nChildren's Knee-Hi Hon\nCotton stretch in Bermuda link pattern.\n100% stretch nylon lined with cotton.\nSizes 6 to 714 and 8-914.        <y       Cl\nSpecial\n\u25a0 pr.\nAdorn, V05 Hair Sprayi\nSave on these two popular hair sprays.\nRegular 1.89. J       (9\nSpecial\nH.B.C. Sanitary Napkins\nBox of 48's. Deodorant treated.       Cl\nRegular 1.69. Special    * I\nKleenex 400'i\nHandy Kleenex in the popular 400 size.\n..4f0r*l\nWhite. Regular 39c.\nSpecial\nEnot Fruit Salt!\nSettles upset stomach. Relieves Cl\ndiscomfort after meals. Special .... * \u2022\nHudnut Shampoo\nEgg creme shampoo for dry hair. Large\n12 oz. size. A special at 1.29. Cl\nNow   * I\nHudnut Creme Rime\nCreme rinse hair conditioner makes hair\nsoft, restores lustre and sheen. Cl\n12 oz. size. Special    * I\nCutex Cuticle Remover\nWith cotton and manicure stick. Handy\nto have. Regular 59c. 3       Cl\n  3 for *1\nSpecial\nBan Deodorant\nRefreshing for the whole family. Cl\nLarge 1.25 size. Special   * I\nWilkinson Sword Blades\nDispensers of 5 sword edge   9       Cl\nblades. Regular 79c. Sp  aL for * I\nLadies' Clutch Puna\nQuality made clutch purse in three colors. Reg. 1.59. Cl\nSpecial     \u25bc I\nAll-Purpose Cream\nHBC cleansing cream. Delightfully fragrant, large size, Cl\nReg. 1.69. Special \u25bc I\nDuBarry Lipsticks\nSave on several popular shades. Refills.\nRegular 1.25. c.\nSpecial   *l\nBoycreit Film\nBlack and white. 120 and    9 C1\n3 for Tl\n620 and 127. Special..\nBanner Pipei\nChoose Banner Real Briar. Various Cl\nshapes. Special\nCHILDREN'S   WEAR\nTurtle Neck T-Shirti\nGirls' long sleeve turtle neck T-shirts.\nGold, green, mauve. Cl\nSizes 2 to 3x    * I\nT-Shirti\nInfants' T-Shirts. Snap shoulders, multicolors, in stripes and patterns. Sizes\n2-3x. Cl\nSpecial  w \u2022\nBaby Receiving Blankets\nFor your baby's comfort. Sizes 25 x 34.\nAssorted pastel shades.       \u00ab\u00bb        Cl\nSpecial\nGirls' Rayon Briefi\nFancy lace trim. White and pastel shades.\nSizes 2 to 6. A        Cl\nSpecial\nSizes 8 to 14.\nSpecial \t\nfor\n3 for *1\nHooded Sweat Shirts\nFleeced back combed cotton hooded\nsweatshirts. Pastel shades in white, blue,\nyellow, aqua. Cl\nSizea: 4-6x. Special '.  * '\nInfants' Jumpsuits\nInfants' coverall jump suit. 2 button side\nopening. Shoulder straps. Wheat Cl\nblue, maize. Sizes 1, 2, 3  * \u25a0\nCurity Diopen   .\nGood quality, soft, absorbent. Small imperfections won't affect the wear. C 9\nPack of 12. Special T 3\nLong Sleeve T-Shirts\nColorfast combed cotton T-Shirts. As-\nsorted stripes in grey, blue, brown, Cl\nnavy. Sizes 2-4. Special  * I\nFlannelette Diaperi\nGood quality flannelette diapers. 26 x 26.\nHighly absorbent. C9\nPack of 12. Special  **\nInfonti' Nighties\nGood quality flannelette nighties. White\nwith pink or blue trim.      y        Cl\nSpecial\nGirls' Flannelette Pyjamai\nGood quality flannelette in assorted\nprints. Pink, blue, yellow 9 C9\ngreen. Sizes 3-6x. Special   em pr. *3\nBoyi' Pyjamai.\nBoys' flannelette pyjamas. Notch collar.\nAssorted prints and colors. \u2022} C9\nSizes 3 to 6x   aam  pr. *3\nBoyi'. T-Shirts\nShort sleeve T-shirts. Crew neck. Colorful stripes. m,        Cl\nSizes 2-4     am for * I\nThermal Receiving Blanket!\nSoft and cuddly. Colorfast, washable.\nSizes 30 x 36. n Cl\n    A for * I\nPink. Special.\nBoxed Briefs\nRayon briefs, fancy lace trim. Cl\n3 to a box. Sizes 4 to 6x    * I\nGirls' Sweater!\nJumbo knit cardigans and pullovers.\nPlain or fancy knit. Assorted (3\ncolors. Sizes 4 to 6   *3\nGirls' Corduroy Slims\nBoxer slims in corduroy. Grey, navy,\ngreen, brown. \u2022)       C9\nSizes 4.to 6x  A pr. *3\nGirls' Leotards\n100% stretch seamless nylon leotards.\nBeige, black, royal blue. Cl\nSizes 7-9, 10-12, 12-14    * I\nT-Shirts\nLong sleeves, crew neck. White and\npatterns in pastel shades. Cl\nSizes 3 and 3x    * I\nGirls' Flannelette Pyjamas\nGood quality flannelette pyjamas in\nassorted prints and coolrs. *% C9\nSizes 8-14  em pr. *3\nInfants' Sleepers\nBrushed cotton sleepers. Button on pants,\nplasticized safety soles. Pink, Cl\nblue, yellow. Sizes 1 to 3    * \u2022\nBoys', Girls' Diaper Sets\nFancy embroidered diaper sets. White,\npink and blue. C9\nSizes 6 to 18 months  **\nGirls Blouses\nTerylene blouses for easy care. C *)\nFancy trime. White. Sizes 8 to 14... * *\nTailored Blouses\nThe popular school blouse in plain white\ncotton. Short sleeves. White. Cl\nSizes 4 to 7    * I\nToddlers Snowsuit\n1 piece snowsuit with warm quilted lining.\nFur trim on attached hood. CC\nRed or Royal. Sizes 2-3x  *3\nGirls' Snowsuit\n2-piece   waterproof  snowsuits.   Hooded\njacket, warm lining; red with\nwhite trim. Sizes 3 to 6\t\n$5\nI       PIECE GOODS\nBoth Towels\nThick terry towels. Large assortment of\ncolors in Jacquards, Floral Prints Cl\nand Solid Colors    * \u00bb\nHand Towels\nMatch bath towels in\nstyles and colors\t\n2for  *1\nBath Towels\nStriped towels in a wide assortment of\ncoloured combinations.        >y       Cl\nSpecial   \u2022'for   Tl\nFace Cloths\nVariety of colors and pat?    A\nterns. Heavy weight terry.   \u2122 for\nPillow Cases\nFine percale pillow slips.\nPlain hem. Pair\t\n*1\n$1\nLinen Tea Towels\nMulti striped, clean bright    9       Cl\ncolors. Generous size.\nLinen Tea Towels\nPure  linen  towels.   Extra  large   size\nx 34. Blue, red, 9       Cl\ngold, beiege.\nPlastic Drapes\nVinyl Drapes, cloth like weave. Floral\npatterned. Overall size 72 x 84. Cl\nSpecial    * *\nRayon Panels\nWhite and ecru panels of rayon material.\nWide assortment of sizes. 40x54, Cl\n40x63, 40x72, 40x84. Panel    * I\nSugar Bags\nWashed and laundered white bags,\nready for use. 9       Cl\nSize 32 x 34..\nDrapery Squares\nGenerous   sized   samples   of   drapery\nsquares. Suitable for windows Cl\nor pillow covers  w \u2022\nPrinted Table Cloths\nGaily printed cotton table cloths. Cl\nLaundered, ready for use. 50 x 50. * \u2022\nPillows\nFoam pillows, non-allergenic.\nWhite cotton covers\t\n$1\nBlankets\nViscose, nylon blend blanket. Seconds.\nPink, aqua, green, beiege. C9\nSize 72 x 84. Each  \"\nSheets\nGood quality sheets. High thread    C9\ncount. Size 80 x 100  *\u00bb\nBedspread!\nEver popular Heirloom bedspreads. Re-\nversible. Easy to launder. Si H\nEach\t\n$10\nPrints\nGaily  colored   prints.   Floral,   stripes,\nspots, and conventional        9       Cl\n.. <fcyds.*l\ndesigns. 36\" wide.\nFlannelette\nFluffy napped flannelette. Gay patterns\nand new designs. j      Cl\nSpecial\nSHOE SAVINGS\nWomen's Slippers\nFancy mule style slippers in red or black\nvelvet. Wedgs heels. Some Cl\nstyles in Acrilon also   * I\nInfants' Slippers\nPopular bootie styled slippers for the tiny\ntots. Natural color leather or pink and\nblue matching fur trim, Cl\nSizes 3-10   * I\nWomen's Shoes\nFlattie type slip-on or ties for growing\ngirls and women. Smooth leather C9\nuppers, composition soles  *A\nChildren's Shoes\nIn a variety of strap slip-ons, boots, etc.\nLeather uppers, composition soles. C 3\nColors red, black or brown  *3\nWomen's Shoes\nAn assortment of style shoes or walkers.\nVariety of colors. kje\nBroken size range  *\"t\nTOYLAND\nFriction Train\nFriction train with Choo Choo whistle\nRegular 1.49. Cl\nSpecial    *'\nTootin Horn Grips\nFor bikes and trikes. Two-note        C1\nhorn. Regular. 1.49. Special  * I\nJunior Deb Set\nDolly and Me shoulder bag set.     Cl\nReg. 1.39. Special  * I\nFriction Train With Choo Choo\nIdeal for birthdays or gift giving.   Cl\nReg. 1.49. Special  * I\nTruck-Poll Set\nSturdy plastic truck and pail set. Truck\ndumps. C1\nSpecial   _    * I\nHOUSEWARES\nCups and Saucers\nOutstanding value for this one-day event.\nSemi-porcelain cups 3       Cl\nand saucers. Special  3 for * I\nCoffee Mugs\nChoose from three styles. Designed and\nplain. Regular 39c. A       Cl\nSpecial\nStemware\nAn assortment of styles in goblets, champagne glasses, liqueur, wine, etc. Regular 49c and 59c. 9       Cl\nSpecial   3 for * I\nInsulated Tumblers\nUnbreakable tumblers. Ideal for Hot or\ncold drinks. \u00a3_       Cl\nSpecial\n6\nfor\nGold Leaf Glasses\nTop quality glasses, attractive design.\nWere a special at it        Si\n4 for 1.39. Now .\nIroning Pad and Silicone Cover\nSilicone cover in scorch resistant. Wipes\nclean with damp cloth. Cl\nRegular 1.49. Special    * I\nHousehold Sponges\nA sponge for every household need.\nPacked in 16's. \u2022%       Cl\nSpecial   \"fcfor *\u25a0\nQuality Corn Broom\nFive string corn broom. Quality Cl\nmade. Reg. 1.49. Special    * I\nSturdy Yacht Mop\nThe handy mop for man house? Cl\nhold uses. Regular 1.69. Special    * I\nPlastic Laundry Basket\nLight and durable. Won't stain. Cl\nAssorted colors. Special    * I\nSafti-Tred Bathtub Mat\nGreater tub safety for the whole family.\nHeleps prevent slips, skids or sildes. Cl\nSure-footed comfort. Special    * I\nFrench Fryer\nQuick-heat aluminum pan and metal Cl\nmesh for french frying. Special   * I\nSee-Thru Bake Pan\nFor cakes and ice box desserts. Ideal for\ncarrying to picnics or parties Cl\nanywhere, Special   * I\nReady-Mix Cake Pan\nPerfect for storing left-overs, pot luck\nsocials. Surehold handles. Cl\nSpecial   *l\n51\nCost Iron Frypan\nIdeal for many cooking uses.\nQuality made. 614\" size. Special.\nPlastic Decanter\nFor mixing, serving, storing. Boilproof,\nrigid, dishwater safe. 9       (i\nSpecial   3 for * I\nCake Cooler\nFor wonderful cakes. No soggy crusts.\nTwo-layer nickel plated fin- 9 Cl\nish. Regualr 89c. Special.... A for * I\nMetal Waste Basket\nAssorted styles in popular brass Cl\nSpecial      * |\nSale\u2014Lightbulbs\nStock up during Dollar Days. Made by\nG.E. Available in 40, 60 ^ Cl\nor 100 watts. Special      O for *1\n r-V01L PROa'LV NEVER ^\nBE PUT TO TH'TROUBLE.? J\n} VO'LU PROD'LV BE DAID, S\nLONCJ BEFO'Ht IS.'.'  )\n'fTRANKUV, HE DON'T LDOK WELL\n'NUFF TO LAST OUT TH' WEEK\u2014\n' WHILEYO ISHEALTHVASAAPE,\nAN' PROB'LV SMARTER.'\/'\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., JAN. 26, 1966\u20147\nBIRTHS\nHANSEN - to Mr. and Mrs.\nA. Hansen, 304 Park St., Nelson,\nat K.L.G.H., on Jan 24, a daughter.\nSIBBETT - to Mr. and Mrs.\nRobert Sibbett, R.R. 2, Nelson,\nat K.L.G.H.. Jan 21, 1966, a\ndaughter.\nMacKENZIE - to Mr. and\nMrs, Don MacKenzie, 823 0th St.,\nNelson, at K.L.G.H., Jan 22, 1966\na son.\nFITZGERALD - to Mr. and\nMra. D. Fitzgerald, 409 Silica\nSt., Nelson, B;C., at K.L.G.H.,\nJan. 24, I960, a son\nHELP  WANTED  MALE\nEARN $23 WEEKLY PLUS A\nFREE WARDROBE in your\nSpare Time. Just show Fashion Frocks to friends. No investment, canvassing or experience necessary. Write\nNorth American Fashion\nFrocks Ltd., 3425 Industrial\nBlvd., Dept. W-2615, Montreal\n39, Que. \u201421-21\nJECOND INCOME FOR MAN\nover 40 who has 3 to 5 hours\nday. Up to $600 in a month. B.\nW. Dickerson, Pres., Southwestern Petroleum Corp., 534\nN. Main St., Ft. Worth, Texas.\n-19-24\nHELP WANTED\nCANADIAN FORCES\nOPPORTUNITIES\nThe Canadian Forces needs\nyoung men NOW to serve as\nsoldiers, sailors and airmen.\nPlan your future \u2014 embark\non a challenging and adventurous career in the Canadian\nForces. You are eligible to\nserve if you are single, male,\nage 17-29, physically fit,- and\nhave Grade 8 education or\nbetter. For complete details on\nthe many opportunities and\nbenefits that are immediately\navailable see your\nCANADIAN FORCES\nCAREER COUNSELLOR\nat the\nRoyal Canadian Legion,\nNelson,\nMonday, 24 Jan.,\nNoon-8:00 p.m.\nor write to\nCANADIAN FORCES\nRECRUITING CENTRE\n2008 82nd Street,\nVernon, 6.6.'    \"\n-IMi\nWANTED - GOLF PRO-MAN-\nager for new 0-hole golf course\nat Castlegar, B.C. State experience and salary expected. Apply to secretary-treasurer, Castlegar & District Golf Course,\nBox 161, Kinnaird, B.C.-18-21\n1ELP WANTED\u2014FEMALE\nNEW IN '66. MAKE THIS YEAR\n\"Earn with Avon\" year. Have\nthose longed for extras for\nhome and family, Write Mrs,\nJ. Mcllroy, 3006-39A St., Vernon, B.C. \u201410-24\n.IOUSEKEEPER TO CARE\nfor home and 1 small child for\napprox, 1 month, sleep in, commencing Feb, 14, Apply Box\n266, Nelson Dally News. -10-24\nIEL1ABLE BABY-SITTER TO\ncome in 5 day week, 8 a.m. \u2014\n5 p.m. Write Box 265, Nelson\nDaily News. \u201410-21\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nREPAIRS, ALTERATIONS,\ncupboards, floor tile, finishing.\nCall carpenter, 352-5827.-17-22\nr*OR YOUR SNOW-PLOWING-\nphone 352-3410. -10-tfh\nMORTGAGES\nWHY TAKE LESS?\nWe Pay\nFACE VALUE\n.for\nMORTGAGES AND\nAGREEMENTS FOR SALE\nwith\nNO DISCOUNTING\nWrite full details In first\nreply to\nP.O. BOX 218,\nVANCOUVER 2, B.C.\n\u25a0^tfn\nWE BUY AGREEMENTS FOR\nsale and First Mortgages. Em\nplre Acceptance Corp. Ltd.,\n110.815 West Hastings St., Van-\ncouver 1. B.C, \u20147-tfn\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND   FARM   SUPPLIES\nFOR SALE - 2V4 YEAR OLD\nbeef to butcher. Weight about\nS0O lbs. @ 35 cents a lb, Ph.\n229-4985, J. A, Hulberts, R.R,\n1, Nelson, B.C. -19-24\n2-YEAR-OLD HEIFER, JUST\nfreshened with calf. Phone\n889-7398, South- Slogan; ?^-15 \"\nPROPERTY   WANTED\nLISTINGS WANTED. BUILD\ning lots, farm land, city and\ncountry residential:\" Commercial property, timber lands\nCall or write Wm Kalyniuk\nAgencies, Nelson\" Ph' SS2-2425\n\u2014431 tfn\nFOR SALE\nMISCELLANEOUS\n\u25a0   .USED-\nELECTRIC MOTORS\nIn Stock\n150 lip, 580 rpm, 3 phase,. 400V\n100 hp, 1160 rpm, 3 phase, 440V\n40 hp, 1765 rpm, 3 phase,\n220\/440V\n30 hp, 1165 rmp, 3 phase,\n220\/440V      I\" \u25a0' = \u25a0\u25a0-\u2022\u25a0\n10 hp, (TEFO, 1745 rpm, 3-phase\ni 220\/440V\t\n3h-hp, 860 rpm, 3 phase, 220V\n2h-!ip, 1725 rpm, 3 phase,\n220\/440V\nCOLEMAN ELECTRIC\nPhone 352-3175.-   Nelson; \u2022\u25a0 B.C.'\n-2l-h\nNOTICE    ,\nColumbia: Trading Co.\nChange of Address\n609 WARD St;\n1 block South of Woolworth's\nGood stocks of plywood, hard-\nboard  and plywood cuttings..\nRotomatic spin,dryers. .-.- .\n-16-21\nMOVING MUST SELL\n3-pce. chesterfield, $15; two\n6.70x15 new winter tires with\ntubes and wheels, $20 each;\n1 buffet, $4.00;' 1 large' chest\nof drawers, $4.00; 4 burner\nelectric stove, $5.00. To apply\n\u2014 519 Latimer or 352-5865.\n-21-23\nDUO \u25a0 HEET COMBINATION\nfurnace burns oil, wood, coal,\neven rubbish, without conversion or adjustment. Wheh'solid\nfuel burns down, oil takes uver.\nPhone 226-7221 to see furnace\nin operation under no obligation. \u2014303-24\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nDepartment of Lands, Forests,\nand Water Resources\nTIMBER SALE X-95690\nSealed tenders will be received\nby the District Forester at Nelson, B.C., not later than 11:00\na.m. on the 14th day of February, 1966, for the purchase of\nLicence X95690, to cut 634,000\ncubic feet of Hemlock, Cedar,\nWhite Pine, Larch, Fir, other\nspecies, on an area situated on\nTen Mile Creek, Northwest of\nCanyon Creek, Crawford Creek,\nKootenay District.\nFive (5) years will be allowed\nfor removal of timber.\nAs this area Is within the Lardeau P.S.Y.U., which is fully\ncommitted, this sale will be\nawarded under Ihe provisions of\nsection 17 (la) of the Forest Act,\nwhich gives the timber-sale applicant certain privileges.\nFurther particulars may be\nobtained from the District Forester, Nelson, B.C., or the Forest Ranger, Kaslo, B.C.    \u201415-h\nBEDROOM SUITE, COAL AND\nwood stove, couch, five wooden\nchairs, boy's three-speed me?\ntllic green bike. Everything in\nvery good condition;-Phi 365-\n7691, Castlegar. \u201421-26\nSIDES OF GRAIN-FED BEEF,\n49c, cut and wrapped; Sides of\npork, 43c; sides of posk, cut\nand wrapped,. 47c. Newdan\nFarm, Creston. Phone 396-9901\nor 356-9769. -171-tfn\nruH    fHB    BES1    iN    USED\nautomatic washers, dryers, refrigerators, television, etc. con\ntact Nelson Electric Co, Ltd\n574 Baker St., Nelson, B.C.\n-27-tln\nPLASTIC    PIPE   -   LOWEST\nPrices,   Mao's   Welding   and\nEquipment Co  Ltd.. 514. Railway Street. Nelson, B.C '\n\"\u25a0'   -149-tfn\noffenhauSer dual car-\nburetor manifold fits 52 to 60\nChev. 6.. Ph...3524216,:   ,.   ..\n\u25a0    \u2022   ,-\u25a0 ' ?V-M-23\nTOP QUALITY BEEF 100-200\nlbs., 48c cut and wrapped. 200-\n250 lbs., 38c cut and wrapped.\nPh. 352-6866. \u201410-35\nHAVE TO DISPOSE OF TWO\nAshley Wood burning'- heaters'\nin excellent condition. Phone\n226-7221. -303-24\nFACING STONE, 1\", 2\", 3\" AND\n4\". Limited quantity in stock.\nOrder now. Ph. 352-7576 eves.\n::a -\\%i2\n120,000   B.T.U,   FORCED   AIR\ngas furnace, 3 years old. Cheap\nfor cash. Ph, Nakusp 265-4145.\n-19-24\nCHIC BEAVER JACKET, SIZE\n14, a bargain at $225. Phone\n352-2354. \"    \"   \"   \"-19-24\nG.E.   TV,   3   YEARS   OLD -\nPhone 3F2-6320, -2-tfn\nBABY CARRIAGE, GOOD CON-\ndition. Ph. 352-2064.       -19-24\nMACHINERY '\nWELDERS' GLOVES\n$2.25 and up.\nElkhlde or Asbestos,\nSTEVENSON\nMACHINERY LTD.\nPhone 352-3561\n-21-21\nWELDING SUPPLIES - LOW\nhydrogen, mild steel, Arcair\ncarbon, brazing rod. Is\", 3\/32\"\nand V sizes in stock.\nKOOTENAY\nINDUSTRIAL SUPPLIES LTD.\nPhone 352-3328       Nelson, B.C.\n-10-21\nVALLEY AUTOMOTIVE LTD\nMassSy-Fergusbn, New Holland hew and used farm equipment. Parts, sales and service\nPhone 356-2254, Ci'estbn, B.C.\n\u25a0   -M3-tfn\nWthNlFD   TO   RENT\nWANTED TO RENT OR BUY,\n3-hdrin. hbu$e in Fairview. \u2014\nPhone 352-3662. -So-25\nDepartment of Public Works,\nCanada\nTENDERS\nSEALED TENDERS ADDRESSED TO the Office Manager,\nDept. of Public Works, Canada,\nRoom 708, 1110 W. Georgia St.,\nVancouver 5, B.C. and endorsed\n\"TENDER FOR ALTERATIONS\nTO E.M.O. PREMISES, FEDERAL BUILDING, NELSON\" will\nbe received until 2:30 p.m. (P.-\nS.T.), February 8th, 1966.\nPlans, specifications and forms\nof tender can be seen, or can be\nobtained through the Caretaker,\nFederal Building, Nelson B.C.\nTo be considered each tender\nmust be made on the printed\nforms supplied by the Department and in accordance with the\nconditions set forth therein.\nThe lowest or any tender not\nnecessarily accepted.\nD. A. Muir\nOffice Manager.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\nLARGE WATERFRONT LOTS\nat Procter, Kootenay Lake\narm. Reasonable prices. 10%\ndown, balance small monthly\npayments, including 6% int.\nWilliam Kalyniuk Agencies,\nNelson. Phone 352-2425.\n-269-tfn\nFOR SALE IN ROBSON - 7-\nacre farm; 3 acres young orchard, new 2-bedroom house,\nbarn and garage. Phone 365-\n7106 or write Box 37, Robson.\n-15-40\nQUALITY MOTEL, ROOM FOR\nexpansion. Reasonable price\nand terms. K.M.L.S. Wm.\nKalyniuk Agencies. \u2014 Phone\n352-2425. -206-tfn\nCOMMERCIAL OR INDUST-\nrial site. Within city limits,\ncorner location, 150' frontage,\nlevel. R. H. C. Realty. Ph.\n352-7252- \u25a0      -17-22\nFOR SALE OR RENT, MOSTLY\nnew house in Kinnaird. 2 bedrooms; basement suite. Phone\n364-2304. -280-tfn\nCHOICE PROPERTY ON NEL-\nson Ave. 90'xI20'. Ph. 352-6737.\n-269-tfn\n2 - BEDROOM HOUSE FOR\nsale in Nelson. For details\nphone 365-8397. -21-46\n2 BDRM. HOUSE IN CASTLE-\ngar, gas heat, close to school\nPhone 265-5398. \u201421-26\n2-B.R. HOUSE IN CASTLEGAR.\n$5500. Phone 365-6046.   \u201420-25\nTRAILERS,\nMOBILE HOMES\n1966 COURT OF REVISION\nTAKE NOTICE that the first\nsitting of the Court of Revision\nfor the purpose of hearing appeals arising from the 1966\nassessments in the Village of\nSlocan will be held at the Village\nOffice at 10:00 a.m. on Thursday, February 3rd, 1966.\nMrs. E. M. Marasek,\nVillage-Clerk.\n-21-22\nRENTALS\nIMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY -\nLarge unfurn. 2-B.R. suite; living room, dinette, kitchenette,\nbathroom. Loads of storage\nspace, comfortably heated,\nwired for range and dryer,\ncentral location. Ph. Harrison,\n352-3525. ' '\"*\u201414-tfn\nONE OF THE BETTER 2-13.R.\nduplexes.   Fully   modern   in\nevery respect. All private, just\nlike a house. Phone  )32-54l)2.\n. .      -21-28\nMODERN 2 B.R. HOME,\nadults, no pets, $90; \u2022 2-B li\napt., ground floor,? adults, no\npets, $90. Lambert Realty Ltd.\nPhone 352-2918. -293-tfn\nSINGLE   ROOM,   HATH   AND\nkitchen,  $85,  unfurnished   -\nFleming Apis., Phone 352-3815.\n'   '\"'e-279-!|n\nAVAILABLE FEB. ,,lst,.(JOM-\npletely furn. 3-rm,-sulte;lineii,\ndishes, etc., $60 a.month! 311\nCedar.Street. ... \u25a0''.'..;.\u201420-tfn\nSUITE OF OFFICES WITH A\nwalk-in vault, at 459 Baker St.\nAlterations to suit. tenant. \u2014\nPhone 352-5561.       -     \"-uO-tfn\nLARGE HSKPG. SUITE; N1CE-\nly furnished. Suit couple.\" Ph.\n352-2015; evenings,\" 352-2407.\n\u2022 '^15-tfn\nHOUSEKEEPING ROOMS'AND\nsuites. Dishes, linen supplied,\nparking, 171 Baker Street.\n-208-tfn\n2-BEDROOM APT. WITH. GAR-\nage; central. Phone , 352-5986,\nafter 6 p.m. \u201420-tfn\nOFFICE   SPACE   AVAILABLE\nfor rent W Kalyniuk Agencies.\n,   \u2014208-tIn\nI, B. DeBoni, will not be responsible for debts contracted in\nmy name, on or after this date,\nwithout my written signature.\nB. DeBoni.\n-21-21\nAUTOMOTIVE,  BICYCLES\nMOTORCYCLES\nWRECKING '57 METEOR, '87\nFord Station Wagon, '56 and\n'57 Buicks, '56 Monarch, '60\nI.H.C. Carryall; '58 Pontiac,\n'56 Chev., '56 A-sil, '55 and '56\nDodges; good motors '56\nBuick, '51, '52, '54, '56 and\n272 Ford, '55 Plymouth 8, '54\nZephyr. Cottonwood Wrecking\nService, Phone 352-5815.\n-239-tfn\nDON'T DESPAIR - WITH RE-\npairs. Replace your car engine\nwith an Allstate rebuilt engine\n4000-mile guarantee. As low as\n$10 per month 1946-52 rebuilt\nengines to fit Chevrolet, only\n$195 and your old block. Call\nSimpsons-Sears. Phone 352-5531\n- Nelson,   ' -119-tfn\nLEAVING FOR S. AMERICA!\nMust sell 1963 Corvair Monza,\ngood shape, new winterized\ntires, stick-shift, radio, bucket\nseats, leather upholstery. Ph.\nNew Denver 358-2392.    \u201419-21\nTWO 1952 CHEVS., ONE RUN-\nnlng, one for parts. Price $200.\nJ. E. Bedford, R.R. 1 Nelson:\nPhone 352-2350. \u201420-25\nFOR SALE -1963 PONT. PAR.?\nsienne, 4 dr., V-8 Standard.\nExcellent cond. Ph. 365-6819.\n-19-24\n1965 PONTIAC STRATO-CHIEF.\nMileage 7500, leaving 16,500\nwarranty coverage! \u2014 Phone\n352-6110. -20-tfn\n1 53 BUICK CUSTOM WONDER-\nbar Radio, 1 30:30 Winchester\nModel 94 rifle. Phone 332-6605.\n-21-23\nFOR SALE - '53 4-DOOR SE-\ndan. What offers? Ph. 352-6847.\n -Ib-24\n1958 DODGE Vi-TON - PHONE\n352-7172 after 5 p.n,.   \u201411-tfn\n\"M   AMI   BOARD\nPRIVATE BEDROOM FOR\ngentleman. Near Legion. $30\nper mo. Phone 352-5030 noons\nor alter f p.m. \u201416-tfn\nCANADA'S BEST VALUF\nSee The All New 1966\n10x52 General on Display\nAnd a host of other new and\nused mobile homes . . .\nMANY AT GREATLY\nREDUCED PRICES.\nCRANBROOK\nTRAILERS  LTD.\nContact Walt Hill or\nDennis Starner Today.\nWE APPRECIATE\nYOUR PATRONAGE\nBox 1458, Phone 365-5047\nColumbia Ave., Castlegar.\n-11-tfn\nFOR PEOPLE WHO DEMAND\nthe best we have designed and\nare building a 23-foot luxury\ncustom travel trailer. It has\nmajor improvements not available on any other make yet It\nis competitive. In addition we\nwill advise, engineer and incorporate any ideas a customer may have. This trailer\nreally provides home comfort\nhowever see and judge for\nyourself. Specifications and\nlayout available on request.\nThis trailer will be built nn\norder, Examples of our workmanship may be seen at our\nVictoria   factory.   Interested\n, parties should contact us soon\nto avoid delivery delays, Caveman Campers Limited, 1812\nDouglas Street, Victoria, B.C,\nPhone 383-8011; evenings, Mr.\nWright, GR-9-2763.       -17-tfn\nFOR SALE\u20141964 52'-x 10' Mobile home. Excellent location,\nnear Nelson. $6500. Phone 352?\n6198, Sunnyslde Trailer Park.\n-20-22\nLOST AND FOUND\nFOUND ONE PAIR OF HORN-\nrimmed glasses in brown (Fil-\nteray case) at Thompsons Funeral Home. \u201421-22\nLOST FRIDAY, 4 WHEEL MOV-\ning dolly. 600 Blk. Baker St.\nPh. 352-3751. -21-22\nLOST. 8' TOBOGGAN FROM\nporch of 518 Third St. Finder,\nplease ph. 352-5420,      \u201421-31\nBUSINESS\nOPPORTUNITIES\nDEALERSHIP INtltRNA'TlON?\nal Health Products. Investment\nin Stock approximately $2000.\nLeads and advertising supplied. High income field. Apply with details In confidence;\nour dealers know of this ad.\nApply Box 26\", Nelson Daily\nNews. -21-26\n| HALDANE APTS - NO' PETS\nor children. Ph 352-6721\n       .. ..-?T.|$7-tfn\nGARAGE, UPHILL. EASY Access. Phone 352-5494 after 5.\n,,,   \u2022.. i_21-2B\nONE-BEDROOM FURNISHED\nhouse. Phone 352-6366, \u201420-25\nwanted*' \u2022\nmiscellaneous\nSPOT CASH FOR USED FURNI?\nture, antiques, coins, aid gold,\nguns and jewels .Home Furniture Exchange. Ph 352-6531.\n413 Hall St.. Nelsoq. B C\nWANTED - GIRL TO SHARE\napartment with two other girls.\nPhone 352-3636 after 5:30 p.m.\nmt\n20-22\nMANDOLIN WANTED.PLEASE\nstate price with reply, phone\n356-4573, Mrs. H. Davidge,\nWynndel, B.C. -20-22\nWANTED TOSBUY- SMALL\nriding tractor: Phone\"382-5007,\nW; H. Bainbrldge,K,R.No. 1,\nNelson;' w20-25\nCLEAN COTTON RAGS, K'OT\nless than 18 inches square.\nNelson Dally News   - -270-Hn\nTTS,   CANARIES,   BeiS\nFOR SALE-MINIATURE -.COL-\nlie pups; also toy terriers. V.\n< Bauder, Creston, ph. 356-9622.\n. .\u25a0,.'...,-17-22\nONE 2-YEAR-OLD S I L V E R\nFrench poodle; owners1 moving, Phone 352-5235. \u25a0?: \u201420-22\nBath} N?tufl\nCirculation Dept., Ph. 332-3552\nBy carrier per ween, 4u cents\nin advance. '\u25a0'    .\nSubscription ratesi ..\nBy mall in Canada\nOutside Nelson\nOne month '::.. $2uu\nThree months ........: 5.00\nSix months '.' l-'f.u.   10 oo\nOne year \u2022 won\nBy mail to United Kingdom\nor the Commonwealth\nOne month      \u2022.;,,;,..u... *'2 oi\nThree months  W-   601\nSix months    .., ...,.,, -11\u00bb\nOne year ..-\u25a0-. ...20 0\"\nBy Mail to U.S.A, or\nForeign Countries\nOne month     ..\u2022\u201e.'!:,$ 2.5H\nThree months         7 oo\nSix months ;\" 13.00\nOne year .........,;   24on\nWhere extra postage is require\nabove rates plus postage.\nFor delivery by carrierwCran\nbrook,   bhone   Mrs; -Stanley\nWillison;\nIn Trail, Mrs. W E.Spooner:\nIn Kimberley, Mrs.;, A: W\nBrown \u25a0 -   :\u25a0:\nNewspaper\nAdvertising\n\u2022 Over attaj Over\n 8\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, WED!, JAN. 26, 1966\nX-\nAs E. Solomon would say .. .\nIt's a Really Big Shew\"\nAnd the Display of\nST. VALENTINE'S\nCHOCOLAT1S\nIn Decorated Heart-Shaped Boxesy.\nIs a Really Big Show at Mamn's;\nYou'll Find Lovely COUTTS CARDS\nTo Go With Them\/\/F\u201e ';.\nMANN\nDRUGS LT~\nChange of Thinking\nNeeded for Elderly\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014Retirement\nshould not be a polite word for\nunemployment, leaving'the aged\nidle and poor, a sociologist said\nMonday,\nAt.apress conference bpening\nthe five-day \u2022Canadian conference on aging; Peter Townsend\nof the University of Essex, England, said: -\"Ideally,'we should\ngive old people the same opportunities as people of other ages.\n' \"Social security schemes\nshould be geared to rising prosperity. Other countries such* as\nSweden and Germany have\nschemes-:that brihgyretiremeittV\nincomes closer to salary-owners.\nOur elderly-are, in a sense, financing the prosperity of the hi-\ntufe,\"\":y' -.'.'\u25a0\u25a0,\n-Jlfc Townsend,:who-has spent\nHints\nBy Heloise Cruse\nDear Heloise:\nI wonder if you have ever\nthough of making dish cloths out\nof the good part of your worn-\nout chenille spreads and housecoats?\nIf the.chenille is lightweight,\ndouble the material, and sew as\nyou would a pillowcase, closing\nthe open end after you have\nturned the little case inside out.\nTo make a fantabulous dishcloth use just, one thickness of\nchenille, and sew two thicknesses\nof nylon net on the smooth side\nof the cloth.\nThe chenille side is wonderfully\nabsorbent, and the net side\nscrubs anything beautifully, without scratching.\nHard-hearted Hannah\n'\"\"***\nDear Heloise:\nIf you have a narrow place to\npaint, such as between the wall\nand the stove or refrigerator,\njust tape a brush on the end of\na yardstick, and you've got it\nmade.\nEleanor Pollock\n*  *  *\nDear Heloise:\nWhen you wrote and told my\nwife to use black liquid shoe dye\nto hide the spots where she had\nspilled- bleach-, on - her - black\ncrepe dress,', it dawned on\nme . . .whyapt try; dyeing my.\nsoiled tan canvas shoes with the\ndye that was left? '\u25a0\u25a0\nSo, T did!\nThey, lookbrand- new.. I put\ntape on ihe white. rubber, soles\naround the edge to keep the black\ndye off the white part, y-'\nJim Smith\n* ..-* * \u25a0\nWell, Jim, I \"didn't have any\ncanvass shoes, but T dyed some\nleather shoes which.had-rubber\nsoles. I also dyed the edge, of\nthe sole black'. It worked beautifully for nie. Now, thediscolora-\ntions around theedge of the soles\ndo not even show.\nI did not dye the bottoms 'of the\nsoles. We don't want shoe dye\non our floors and carpets, do\nwe?-.. \u25a0'\"'\u25a0 '., \u25a0\u2022! \u2022\nHeloise\n~>\"*'   \t\nDear Heloise: ,\nFor a quick and delicious cup\ncake (or hake) icing, melted\nmarshmellows ire the greatest!\nJust a few minutes before removing the cup cake's from the\noven, top each one with a marsh-\nmallow, and they will: melt to\ncover the cakes, with yummy\nfrosting, \\ Don't \/ leave'- 'em,- too\nlong just until melted and slightly brown., ;..      -\nDelish!' , ,:.-..'  i '\u25a0\u25a0'.\"\n.':'\u2022 \u25a0 ''-.'Helen D.\n'\"\u2022\/\u2022'  a)-'\nLETTER OF LAUGHTER\nDear Heloise:.\nMy-secret.to success is I never\nlet' the other fellow know what\nI didn't know! \u25a0\n,^\"y - '':\u25a0   \\. \"Successful'\n':.'       ' \"'*: '\u2022'* '\u25a0*'\u25a0\nDear Gals: ,\nThis is. to all of you who buy\nexpensive moisturizer creams in\nglass jars.\n^   Once you-think you have got-\n^llen all you can out of the jar,\nrecap and set it upside down\nunder the hot water faucet, letting the hot-water run over it\nfor a few. minutes,\nRemove the jar \u2014 leaving It\ncapped \u2014 andlet.it stand upside\ndown for a while. \u25a0\nYou will get enough moisturizer to last you anqther week,\nand the jar will be clean as a\nwhistle,\nThis also'works on other products that come in plastic or glass\njars.   :\n.      Heloise\n12 years studying the problems\nof the aged in society, said\nwestern thinking should be revised. He said most people in\nwestern countries retire before\nthey are prepared to and.some\nuseful occupation should be\navailable for them.\nHe said they should not be\nsegregated in institutions which\nare\" neither,-hospital nor home.\nIn his speech at. the opening\nbanquet, Mr, Townsend said,\ncontrary to current belief, studies have shpwn triost aged people in: Europe-and Nor|h America have frequent and emotionally close contact with other generations in theiryferaii}es.\nHe said the fa'ttiuy-pattern is\nchanging because ^fourth generation is now coinmon. The pattern of the middle-aged' woman\ncaring for, an infirrri.'mother\nwhile she raises children is being replaced by-families with a\nwbtnan of 60 caring for. a mother\nin-JtayBOs .whe^is competing\nwithrgrandchildrenfor attention.\nT^d, White Color\nThe \"bride followed the. traditional \"something\nold, something new,, something borrowed, something\nblue\" when Suzanne Lesley Ecclestone exchanged marriage vows with Mr. Meindert Pol at a wedding cere-'.\nmony which took place at St. Paul's - Trinity United\nChurch, with Rev. David A. Cline officiating.\nThe daughter of Mr. and'Mrs.\nR. W. Ecclestone became the\nbride of the son of Mr. ahd Mrs.\nB. Pol of Taghum at a mid-\nafternoon marriage service for\nwhich she carried'a lace handkerchief as \"something old,\" and\nwore a white zircon necklace,\ngift of the bridegroom, as \"something new,\" black diamond earrings belonging to her mother as\n\"something borrowed\": and\ngarter as \"something \"blue!\"\nOrganist? Mrs;. Patricia-Hallor-\nan Green played the wedding\nmusic, and a basket of red and\nwhite carnations ornamented the\nWl Supplies Glasses\nTo Four Children\nConveners'of various committees of'the Nelson Women's Institute we're named, at the recent\nmeeting; when members answer-\ned'the roll \"call by \"giving their\nmaiden .names and places of\nbirth.  .\nMrs. J. O'Genski is agriculture\nconvener; Mrs. D, Crozier Smith,\ncitizenship; Mrs..George Sutherland, cultural activities; Mrs. E.\nWalgreii\/end Mrs. C. Anderson,\nhome econorirics^Mr^. E. Elliott\nand Mrs. W. B.\\Torgenson, health\nan'd social welfare\/ Mrs. J. Tonkin, United Nations; Mrs. F.'W.\nCartwrigbtt'pubjidty^yy ...\nFour children were supplied\nwith glasses recently through the\nMary E.\/DavidsonjjMemorial\nFund.\nOld Christmas cards were collected- Mrs. Crozier Smith will\ntake: care of sending them to\nvarious recipients, one of which\nwill be the YWCA day nursery\nin Pusan, Korea. A Christmas\ncard was received from Pusan\nand a receipt for a donation sent\nto,them.   ...\nA gift will be. sent to a burned-\nout family.\nPresident. Mrs. Elliott welcomed two visitors, Mrs. H. Carlson\nof Kaslo and Mrs. F. Lotzien of\nMajor, Sask.\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllfllMIIIIIII\nShades of\nChristine?\nHIGH WYCOMBE, England\n(AP) \u2014 Bob Evans, 40, says\nstrange things happened to\nhim and some of his work\nmates in a factory making\nbirth control pills \u2014 they\nstarted to grow curvy.\n\"I started getting headaches,-' EvanB said. \"Then I\nnoticed,that 'my, breasts were\nstarting to Swell. T also felt\ncompletely impotent.\"\nEvans and'the other men\naffected were heavily exposed\nto ^synthetic female hormones\nused in the pills. Switched to\nother jobs, they quickly' became fit again. Middle - aged\nwomen took over from them.\nThough they were provided\nwith special clothing, an official said \"they have been absorbing . the hormone chemicals in dust .form \u2014 through\nthe, skin or by breathing it\nin.\"\nDr. David Anderson, 87, a\nchemistry expert who is production director in the factory, said; \"The problem has\nno bearing on the safety or effectiveness of my firm's birth-\ncontrol pill.\"\n\"imiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimi\naltar, with red and white ribbons\nmarking the guest pews,\nGiven in marriage by her\nfather, the bride chose a white\nA-line Empire-style gown of\nfloor-length, with lace bodice featuring, a satin bow in the front,\nlilypoint sleeves and scalloped\nneckline. Her shoulder-length\nveil was caught with a star-like\ncreation of self-material trimmed with \"pearls and rhinestones.\nShe -carried red and white\nroses, .-'.y   \u2022        .'... -,\nThe maid of honor, Miss Linda\nBarefoot, chose a red velvet\ndress with white, fur hat, the\nwhite fur repeated on the sleev\u00abs\nof her gown, with white accessories. The ensembles worn by\nthe flower girl and the bridesmaids were identical to those of\nthe maid of honor. Bridesmaids\nwere Miss Lynne Patterson, Miss\nHeather Brock and Miss Fresikje\nPol. Flower girl was Susan\nBrock,\nRing bearer Wayne Ecclestone\nwore grey trousers with a black\njacket and white shirt. His bow\ntie was red.\nMr. Brian Kirkham was best\nman, and ushers were Mr. Ken\nMcCuaig and Mr. David St.\nThomas.\nThe bride's table at the reception hall was ornamented with\nred roses and centred by a three-\ntiered cake.\nThe mother of the bride wore\na fitted blue lace dress lined with\n50 Attend\nBridal Shower\nAt Edgewood\nEDGEWOOD\u2014A bridal shower\nhonoring Mrs. Herman Hug, nee\nMiss Patricia Tarzwell, was held\nin the Royal Canadian Legion\nhall.\nThe room was decorated in\nblue and white with crystal vases\nof artificial flowers adorning fhe\ntables.\nA bride's cake decorated in\npink and white centred the tea\ntable. The guest of honor, the\nmother of the bridegroom, Mrs.\nW. Hug, and his sister, Mrs. R.\nSpence, were presented with corsages and escorted te the head\ntable to open the gifts.\nMrs. R. E. Bateman, president\nof the Edgewood - Inonoaklin\nWomen's Institute, which sponsored the event, welcomed the\n50 guests.\nRefreshments were served by\nmembers, with Mrs. John Brown\nas convener.\nMB. AND MRS. MEINDERT POL OF NELSON.\nPhoto by Rermick Studio.\nblue silk and a three-quarter-\nlength coat to match. Her accessories were brown and she wore\na white corsage.\nThe mother of the bridegroom\nchose a blue suit with beige accessories and pink carnation corsage.\nOVERSEAS WIRES\nMr. Joe Falkman was master\nof ceremonies,  and  telegrams\nBAKING BINGO\nAIDS CARS\nGRAY CREEK - Mrs. Horst\nWirsig engaged the help of local\nwomen to arrange a baking\nbingo in aid of the Canadian Arthritis and Rheumatism Society,\nwhich extends its help to Gray\nCreek.\nPrize winners chose from the\ntable laden with home-making\u2014\ncream puffs, many varieties of\nbread, buns, pies, cookies, stol-\nlen, butter, whipping cream.\nBilly James and Horst Wirsig\ncalled. The cards were distributed by Mrs. George Botham. Any\ncontributions not used as prizes\nwere auctioned by Mrs. Wirsig.\nOver $64 was cleared.\nwere read from relatives in Holland and England.\nFor a wedding trip to Spokane,\nthe bride changed into a turquoise boucle knit suit with black\naccessories and pink carnation\ncorsage.\nMr. D. Thomas filmed the entire ceremony and reception and\npresented the film to the newly-\nweds as a wedding gift.\nOut of town guests included\nMr. Reg White of Edmonton and\nMrs. Helen Cone of North Surrey.\nFruitvale Notes\nFRUITVALE - Unit 1 of the\nUnited Church Women will serve\nlunch at the next regular U.C.W.\nmeeting, it was decided at the\nunit meeting held at the home\nof Mrs. J. P. Gladdish.\nMrs. B. Dovey gave the devotional ahd Mrs. Gladdish a reading from the United Church Women's publication.\n4 DAYS\nLEFT\nfor\nA  MADE-TO-\nMEASURE SUIT\nON  SALE\nWARREN K. COOK\nor\nW. R. JOHNSTON\nYes! Only 4 days left to\norder a made-to-measure\nsuit at a very substantial\nsaving.\n\"EMORY'S\nLTD.\nTHE MAN'S STORE\nClub Told :\nOf Flora at\nGlacier Park\nDr. T. S. Baksi, head of the\ndepartment of biological sciences\nat Notre Dame University, told\nof research work he is undertaking on alpine flora in Kokanee\nGlacier Park, at a meeting of the\nSoroptimist Club of Nelson.\nA graduate of and later professor at Delhi University, Dr.\nBakshi, since his arrival in Nelson as professor of botany at the\nuniversity, has carried on his research in the virtually untouched\narea of the ranges surrounding\nthe glacier.\nHe was attracted to Nelsbn\nwhen he passed through one time\non his way to the prairies, and\nwas pleased to have an opportunity to work in this centre.\nDr. Bakshi received his Ph.D.\nat Pullman, Washington, which\nhe attended on a Fulbright scholarship. He continued his studies\non another scholarship at the\nUniversity of Saskatchewan.\nHe undertook extensive research work at the university in\nSierra Leone as well as some\nteaching. Five years-later,~Jie\nproceeded to Ghana, where he\nfound conditions so unsettled he\nhad to leave after spending i\nyear there.\nThe speaker told \"of BITexperl-\nences in Sierra Leone end Ghana\nand showed slides.\nMrs. Helen Butling thanked the\nscientist for his talk;'\nAt the business meeting, which\nfollowed, plans were made for\nthe marmalade bee, to be undertaken early In February.\nSOME BLIND MAY STUDY\nCanada has 10 special schools\nfor the blind and deaf, attended\nby 3,333 pupils in 1064-65.\nHW\u00bbajajwajajajW>^ajpajajajajaj>Waaj^^ajajaj^ajajajajajaj||ajppaji\n; Your Individiiial\n!     Horoscope ;...\nam By Frances Drake ,\u2014-\u2014M\nThree membera of the game family cut the same cake on the same   \u2022;\nbirthday date. Birthday trio are, left to right, Albert Morin, his daughter, Al-\nlyn, and his father, Joseph Morin. \u2014Daily News photo.\nThree of Family Share Birthday\nIt's not often three birthdays in one family fall on the\nsame day, and when, the event\nalso constitutes three generations, that's news.\nA little dated; but never too\nlate for noteworthy .mention,\nthe three-fold occurrence was\ncelebrated December 23 by Albert Morin, 42, of 309 Hall\nMines Road; his daughter, Al-\nlyn, lo, and father, Joseph\nMorin, who Is a spry 72 years.\n\"This is the first time we've.,\nhad a chance to celebrate it together,\" said Albert, who is.on--\nthe Nelson post office staff and\na native of Saskatchewan.\nGrandpa came all the way\nfrom Meadow Lake to help celebrate the event, as well as\nshare.a little Yuletide cheer\nwith his son and granddaughter. \u2014   -  -\nLook in the section in which\nyour birthday comes and find\nwhat your outlook is, according\nto the stars,\nFor Thursday, Jan. 27, 1966\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 20\n(Aries) \u2014 Keep system and harmony uppermost and flaws can\nbe weeded out more readily. Cooperation important now.\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus)\n\u2014 Consider well duties and\nextras asked of you and those\nyou would like to accept. Be a\nwise chooser; results will be\nlong-lasting. ,\nMAY .22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini)\n\u2014 Outwit needless controversy,\ncontentious people. You can gain\nmany.points;now. '.   \u25a0   ,\nJUNE 2 2tb JULY 23 (Cancer)\n\u2014 Ask if it's pertinent, then is it\nwell-prepared before you consider taking on a new assignment. Without realizing it, you\nmay be contrary!\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leo)\n\u2014 Collaborate with those working for sound projects. Add your\nown carefully considered ideas.\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER\n23 (Virgo) \u2014 Don't promote\nwhere you do not have full\nknowledge, but don't appear\nchangeable or too hesitant to accept  what  may  be  a  clever\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER\n23 (Libra) \u2014 Present plans\nearly, and listen to those of\nothers. A better... meeting of\nminds needed. Be clear, concise;\nstrive for best policy for all.\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER\n22 (Scorpio) \u2014 Head off unpleasant disputes, becoming involved\nin others' controversies and private affairs.\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER 21 (Sagittarius) \u2014 Do you\nreally recognize your own\ndrives? And if you are repelling\nor attracting assistance? Work\nconscientioiisly_at cooperation.\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY\n20 (Capricorn)\u2014Ups and downs?\nYou can make the; \"ups\"\nstronger, fortify future gains\nwith awareness, knowledge, of\nduties, good timing.   - :   .;\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY\n19 (Aquarius) \u2014 Not all directives and action will please, but\nneither will you fully satisfy\nothers. Aim for stability. \".\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\n(Pisces) \u2014 While gazing at those\nunattained goals, and striving for\nbetter standing, do not overlook\nimportant everyday items and\nrelationships.\nYOU BORN TODAY are strong\nin courage and have outstanding\nabilities. You attract friends\neasily, like to be with people,\nthough do your best planning in\nquiet. A constructive worker,\nwith big ideas for attainment,\nyou can make many come true\nthrough dogged persistence. You\nhave abundant talent and a\nliking for the artistic. Birffidate\nof: W. A. Mozart, Austrian composer; Charles Dodgson (\"Lewis\nCaroll\"), mathematician; author\nof \"Alice in Wonderland.\"\nHove (he Job Done Right!\nVIC GRAVER\nLIMITED\nMASTER   PLUMBER\nPhone 352-3315\nSPRING SPECIAL\nElizabeth Arden\nHAND LOTION\nWith a FREE Cake of Soap\nBlue Grass or June Geranium\n$3.50\nSold Only at\nYour Rexall Pharmacy\nCITY DRUG\n\u00abM Baker St.\nBox 4\u00abo\nPh. 352-3611\nNelson, B.C.\nitatataawamaamasiiaaamm\nriMM\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1966_01_26","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0442492","@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":"1966-01-26 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1966-01-26 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\/1.0442492"}