{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0429927":{"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider":[{"value":"CONTENTdm","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf":[{"value":"BC Historical Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued":[{"value":"2023-04-05","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1957-10-03","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0429927\/source.json","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format":[{"value":"application\/pdf","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note":[{"value":" Nelson's  Record\n1855   Days V\nTraffic Fatality Free    \\\nVol. 55\n&m-\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKootenay: Cloudy with a few\nshowers morning.. Cooler. Light\nwinds becoming northerly 15. Low-\nhigh at Cranbrook 40 and 55, Crescent Valley 40 and 58.\nA WSfeSk\nNELSON, B.C., CANADA\u2014THURSDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 3, 1957\nNot mora Than 6o Dally,  10c  Saturday\nNo. 140\n^ihree Newborn Quints\nDie; Boy, Qirl Surviving\nWORKMEN REMOVE debris from the Pool of Gideon, 82 feet\ndown In hard limestone, eight miles north of Jerusalem. Arch-\neologists report the spring of ancient Israel Is flowing again after\n25 centuries. The spiral staircase at right waB carved by ancient\nengineers with bronze hand tools. The Bible refers to Gideon\nas the place where the sun stood still and stones rained down\nfrom the sky as Joshua routed the Invading Armorltes In the\nHoly Land.\nReturn to\nPreferences\nU.K. Suggestion\nDiefenbaker Statement Today; May\nSend Group on Trade Mission\nBy HAROLD MORRISON\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014Britain was reported Wednesday to\nnave suggested Canada agree to restore Gommeriwedlth\ntariff preferences, send buyers' mission to the United Kingdom and get her Crown \"agencies to buy more U.K. goods\nas possible'alternatives to acceptance of her Anglo-Canadian\nfree-trade idea.\nThe bilateral tariff elimination\nplan, along with these other suggestions, was understood to have\nbean raised by Britain at the\nopening of high-level ministerial\ntalks between the two countries.\nInformants said the Canadian\ngovernment gave no immediate\nindication whether she would accept or reject the free-trade plan,\nHowever, Prime Minister Diefenbaker, who participated in the\ntalks, said a statement would be\nIssued today.\nMAY SEND MISSION\nMr. Diefenbaker conferred with\nCanadian and U. K. ministers\ntwice during the day but declined\nto disclose any details. However,\nit is understood that Canada will\nagree to the dispatch of a mission of Canadians to survey Britain's productive capacity and to\nFIKST MAYOR\nWHITE ROCK (CP)-Mayor W.\nP. Hodgson, this new city's first\nelected mayor, was inducted into\noffice Tuesday along with his\nnew council.\nAldermen are: Mrs. Jessie Lee,\nMrs. Lilian Browne, William Offer,\nAlec 'Mitchell, Sid Pennell and\nMax Zach.\nencourage Crown agencies to buy\nmore from the U.K. \u25a0\nOn this latter issue a delicate\npoint has arisen\u2014the question of\nfederal-provincial relations. Britain, for example, wants to sell\nmore scotch whisky to Canada\u2014\nbut the distribution of liquor in\nCanada is controlled by provincial boards.\nIt was understood that one U.K.\nquestion raised at Wednesday's\nprivate talks was whether the\nfederal government would be prepared to approach the provinces\nto urge, them to import more\nscotch.\nCONSTRUCTIVE\nParticipating in the talfcs were\nPeter Thorneycroft, chancellor of\nthe U. K. exchequer; Sir'David\nEccles, president of the U. K.\nBoard of Trade; Finance Minister Fleming and Trade Minister\nChurchill.\nThe only comment Mr. Flem-\nming would make later was \"we\nare all trying to be constructive.\nMr. Thorneycroft plans to hold\na press conference today when he\nmay enlarge on his free - trade\nproposal, which Mr. Fleming said\npresents \"very formidable difficulties\" for the Canadian government.\nBy Gilbert Sedbon\nTOULON, France Reuters) \u2014\nThree of the quintuplets born to\na civil servant's wife Wednesday\nhave died.\nGenevieve, the fourth quint\nborn to Mrs. Laurence Christofle,\ndied today some 16 hours after\nthe multiple birth.\nHospital officials said the condition of the two survivors, a girl\nand boy^. Michele and Roland,\nwas unchanged and it was not\npossible to make any predictions\nabout their chances.\nWeary doctors used artificial\nrespiration and administered oxygen in an attempt to save the\nthree.\nGenevieve weighed t w o pounds\n14 ounces.\nPhilippe, one of the strongest\nand the heaviest of the quints,\ndied 15 minutes before midnight.\nHis sister Helene, who appeared\nto have died Wednesday but later\nwas revived by artificial respira\ntion, survived only 1% hours after Philippe.\nMrs. Christofle, 29, was described to be in \"very good\" condition.\nMrs. Christofle gave birth to\nquintuplets \u2014 two months prematurely \u2014 after eight years of\nhearing doctors say she couldn't\nbear children.\nThe 57,000,000-to-l chance happened to Toulon's Foch Clinic.\nDelivered within 75 minutes, the\nfive babies were placed in incubators.\nPapa Camille Christofle, 33, a\nwartime resistance fighter recovered from the first surprise this\nmorning and then beamed happily: \"We now have the large\nfamily we have been praying for.\"\nChildhood s w e e t h e arts, Laurence and Camille have been\nmarried for eight childless years.\nThey both work at the local social\nsecurity office, where family allowances are handed out.\nGaglardi Vents Views\nVICTORIA (CP) - Highways\nMinister P. A. Gaglardi Monday\ndelivered his driver's licence to\nthe Motor Vehicle Branch and\nthen had a few terse things to say\nabout his recent speeding conviction.\nHe had a few terse things to say\nabout the press as well.\nMr. Gaglardi lashed out at reports that he had been advised\nthat his licence would be suspended\nfor a month before making a statement Sunday that he would voluntarily stop.driving for a month.\n\"When I made my statement I\nhad no knowledge of the letter,\"\nhe said. \"Certainly I expected my\nlicence had to be suspended because I didn't want any preferential treatment.\"\nMr. Gaglardi said he had vol-'\nunteered to give up his licence because he didn't want anyone in the\nmotor vehicle branch to feel\n\"timid\" about ordering the suspension of ..his licence.\nAmong other, things Mr. Gaglardi\ndenied ever calling the two arresting RCMP officers \"a couple of\npunks\" and said that being in plain\nclothes they just looked like \"a\ncouple of punks.\"\nHe had never said he was\n\"curve testing\" the new road, he\nadded, but whenever he was out\ndriving he always had two things\nin mind:\n1. He was continuously conscious of the safety and travel ability\nof the highways; and\n2. He was going somewhere.\nThe minister also said that he\nnever had been doing 85 to 100\nmiles an hour and when stopped\nwas only doing about 60 miles an\nhour.\nJUDGE TOli-t-S\nAGAINST\nBABY'S RETURN\nVANCOUVER (CP) - A teenage girl who offered her illegitimate baby girl for adoption, then\nmarried and asked to have her\nback, has lost a legal battle to\nhave the adopting couple return\nthe child.\nMr.. Justice H. W. Mclnnes\nheard pleas by the girl and the\ncouple separately without revealing the identity of either party to\nthe other. He handed down written\njudgment Tuesday authorizing legal adoption of the child, now 19\nmonths old.\nThe judge was told the mother\nplaced the baby with the Catholic\nChildren's Aid Society for adoption\nand four months later changed her\nmind. The child already had been\nturned over to the couple.\n\"His Lordship said the girl now\nis married but there is no evidence\nher husband would accept the\nchild as his own. He found the\nmother impulsive, emotional and\nunstable and considered it in the\nbaby's best interests to grant the\nadoption order.\nFour Killed\nIn B,C.\nPlane Crash\nwhc\nDOLLAR    LOWER\nNEW YORK (CP) - The Canadian dollar was 7-32 lower at a\npremium of 3 11-32 in terms of\nU.S. funds; a week ago 3 27-32 per\ncent premium. The pound sterling\nwas 5-32 lower at $2.79%.\nWhite Students Expelled\nAfter Rou^hina Up Negroes\nLITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) \u2014\nTwo white boys said they were\nexpelled from Central High\nSchool Wednesday after a crowd\nof from 50 to 150 students attacked two Negro students in the\nschool.\nThe white boys said they didn't\nhurt the Negro boys but just\nwanted to make it \"miserable\"\nfor them so they.would stay away\nfrom the school.\nThis outbreak, milder than the\nmob violence which followed the\nfirst attempts of nine Negro students to enter the previously all-\nwhite school, followed the apparent collapse Wednesday of a proposed compromise in the smouldering integration battle.\nREVERSED PLANS\nArkansas Governor Orval Faubus ?aid he is standing pat on his\nstatement to President Eisenhower. The president reversed\nhis plans to withdraw federal\ntroops from the school because,\nhe said, the governor's promise\nwas not firm enough.\nFaubus had said he would accept responsibility for peace and\norder here and not personally obstruct integration orders by federal court.\nEisenhower said Faubus' statement does not \"constitute in my\nopinion the assurance that he intends to use his full powers . . .\nto prevent the obstruction of the\norders of the . . . court.\"\nGovernor Theodore McKeldin of\nMaryland, one of four southern\ngovernors who worked out the\npact between Eisenhower and\nFaubus, Wednesday accused Faubus of \"double-crossing\" the governors.\nFaubus said in a press conference Wednesday:\n\"I've given until it hurts . , .\nAll that double talk in' Washington means is this\u2014they want me\nto take troops and put bayonets\nin the backs of students in my\nstate and bludgeon and bayonet\nmy people. I never felt the necessity for this action.\"\nSuperintendent Virgil Blossom\nof Central High School said there\nwas \"some crowding, pushing,\njeering and kicking of the Negro\nstudents.\"\nThe white students, he said\n\"will be dealt with like any other\nnormal disciplinary case.\"\nBlossom mentioned two specific\nincidents. \"I understand that\ntwo Negro boys were kicked while\nat their lockers op the second\nfloor,\" Blossom said and added\nthat there was some crowding\nand pushing on the first floor. He\nsaid both incidents occurred just\nafter the Negro students arrived\nat school.\n\"There was no serious physical\nharm to anyone,\" he said.\nThe suspended students may apply to blossom for re-admission.\nHe said that a suspension usually\nlasts three days to two weeks.\nQUESNEL, B.C. (\nmen were.killed'\nWi_\u25a0\u25a0*- Four\neiv.a Pacific.\noff from Sovereign Lakfc, 25 miles\nsoutheast. of here.\nThe men, employee!!' of the airline, were bti: a' non-commercial\nflight out of Prince George in the\ncentral interior of British Columbia. They flew to Sovereign Lake\nto replenish a PWA fuel cache.\nKilled were Captain -William\nCooper, 37, of Vancouver, pilot of\nthe Stranraer amphibious plane;\nCapt. Ian Watt, .47, PWA base\nmanager at Prince George; First\nOfficer Russell Stewart, 26, Bur-\nnaby, B.C.; and engineer Keith\nDouglas, 24, Vancouver.\nThe wreckage of the plane was\nspotted by an RCMP Beaver aircraft flying from Prince George\nto Quesnel. The pilot said the four\nmen were apparently killed instantly.\nThe RCMP plane flew the Quesnel coroner to the scene of the\ncrash Wednesday. A PWA helicopter and an RCMP ground party\nwere also on their way to the lake.\nThe Stranraer, a biplane well-\nknown on the British Columbia\ncoast during the war, was the last\nof its kind flying in B.C.\nChernesky Faces\nMurder Charge\nVANCOUVER (CP) - A coroner's jury Wednesday returned a\nverdict of homicide in the knife-\nslaying Sunday of an east side\napartment house landlord.\nCity pathologist Dr. T. R. Harmon testified that William Ostashek, 54, died in hospital Monday\nfrom stab wounds in the loWer\nright chest and kidney.\nJohn Chernesky, 45, has been\ncharged with murder in Osta-\nshek's death.\nReject\nCharges Against\nAFL-CIO\nLeaders\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIM\nYukoners Get\nNews a ia Tass\nVANCOUVER (CP) -The\n6000 citizens of this Yukon city\ndon't get much when they turn\non their radios.\nRolf B. Hougen, president of\nthe Board of Trade, said here\n' Wednesday that because the\nCanadian Broadcasting Corporation doesn't give the city\nproper service, most people\nlisten to Russian stations.\n\"It's a scandalous situation.\n\"It's a direct result of the\nfact that the CBC has failed to\nmake available a direct line\nfrom Edmonton.\"\nMr. Hougen said the only radio station in the city is operated by the Canadian Army.\nIt is supposed to operate from\n7 a.m. to 1 a.m., \"but actual\nhours depend on whether there\nis anybody there to switch on.\"\nDoes Whitehorse like Russian\nbroadcasts?\n\"The news is so slanted it's\ncomical,\" he replied. \"We tune\nin for a laugh.\"\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiniiiiMi!\nSan Marino Call.\nFor UN Aid\nSAN MARINO (AP) - San Marino's Communists \u2014 challenged\nfor control of this little mountain\nrepublic by an anti - Red provisional government \u2014 appealed\nWednesday for United Nations\nhelp.\nThe Reds asked for a UN police\nforce to \"safeguard the people\nand the centuries-old liberty\" of\nSan Marino.\nG i n o Giacomini, . Communist\nforeign minister, sent a telegram\ntp,..UN..Seoretary- - General Dag\nWestern m^-AdM--cf^m^-\"Z^i^\\J^ui:  i_f\u00bbr\nand burned Wednesday1 on take.lH;ammarsk]old   requestmg   inter-\nventioh. He said a \"grave inter\nnal situation had worsened because of the Italian government's\nblockade of our borders.\" San\nMarino is surrounded by Italy.\nThe anti-Red government \u2014 recognized by Italy \u2014 has set up\nheadquarters in an abandoned\nsteel mill a few yards from the\nItalian border in this 38-square-\nmile territory. Italian police established road blocks on all routes\nleading into the territory to prevent Italian Communists from\nmoving in.\nThe provisional government was\nformed Monday after the Communists and their allies, who have\nruled San Marino since the Second\nWorld War, lost a majority in the\n60-member grand council.\nCourse Urged\nFor Dental\nTechnicians\nVANCOUVER (CP)-The Dental\nTechnicians Society of B.C. urged\nWednesday night that a course for\ndental technicians be included in\nany college of dentistry proposed\nfor the province.\nA resolution requesting government action in establishing a\nschool of dentistry at the University of B.C. will be forwarded to\nPremier Bennett.\nDavid Mathews, society president, said the making and repairing of dentures and related work\nis growing into a highly-skilled\nfield.    -\nThe society is preparing a bill\nfor presentation at the next sitting\nof the B.C. legislature which would\nmake it legal for public dental\ntechnicians to deal directly with\nthe public, -. . ...\nHoffa Expected To Win  Presidency;\nDelegates Demand Charges Deletion\nMIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP)\u2014The International Teamsters   convention   Wednesday   night   overwhelmingly  repudiated corruption charges levelled at James R. Hoffa,\nDave Beck and other Teamsters bosses by the AFL-CIO.\nThe AFL - CIO report detailing\nthe charges, based on disclosures\nbefore ttie Senate rackets investigating committee, was read to the\nconvention. It took about two hours\nas delegates listened silently.\nThen the delegates howled approval of a motion to expunge the\nAFL-CIO charges from the convention  record.\nREJECT MOVE\nThis action followed a move by\nJeffery Cohelan, an Oakland,\nCalif.,   delegate,   to  have  Hoffa,\nBeck and others   named   in   the\nAFL-CIO charges answer to them\nto delegates. He propsed a union\ninvestigation on the charges. This\nwas overwhelmingly rejected.\nThe  voting  demonstrated an\noverwhelming number of the delegates are behind Hoffa and that\nhis electlo nas Teamsters president succeeding Beck was practically  certain  since  Cohelan's\nunsuccessful motion for a union\nprobe of the corruption charges\nagainst its leaders was seconded\nby Thomas J. Haggerty, Chicago,\none of three candidates opposing\nHoffa for the Teamsters' presidency.\nAfter the voting, Hoffa took the\nconvention floor to make a de\nfence of the corruption charges\nagainst him. He had been accused by the Senate rackets committee of misusing union funds\nand using union powers for his\nown gain.\nEarlier, the Teamsters seated\nthe bulk of local union delegates\nchallenged by the Senate rackets\ncommittee as improperly selected.\nThe convention approved credentials of the delegates from\nabout two - thirds of the locals\ncited by rackets committee chairman John McClellan as having\nprobably violated union rules in\nnaming their representatives.\nThe action came as Hoffa\ncleared the decks for showdown\nvoting expected today for new\nunion officers and control of the\ngiant, scandal-scarred union.\nUnion lawyers, fearing new law\nsuits challenging any convention\ndecisions or election results, insisted on careful screening of\nqualifications of questioned delegates.\nAbout a score of delegates were\ndefinitely thrown out, inoluding\nthose from five New York \"paper\"\nlocals.\nDiamond Presented\nMedal by Diefenbaker\nMONTREAL (CP)-R, W. Diamond, former vice-president and\ngeneral manager of Consolidated\nMining and :Smelting, has'received\nthe gold medal of the Institute of\nMining and Metallurgy for. 1956,\none of the world's highest mining\norders.\nB. W. Kerrigan, secretary of the\ninstitute, said the presentation was\nmade by Prime Minister Diefenbaker Tuesday night at a dinner\nin Ottawa.\nThe gold medal had been\nawarded to Mr. Diamond last May\nfor \"his distinguished contributions\nto the mining industry in Canada.\"\nPresentation was delayed so it\ncould be made in connection with\nthe Commonwealth Mining and\nMetallurgical Congress, whose\ndelegates are touring Canada.\nIt was one of \"the greatest distinctions anyone in mining, metallurgy or mining geology \u25a0 can receive.\"\nMr. Diamond, resident of Trail,\nis congress president.\nR. W. DIAMOND\nBennett Against\nfree Trade\nWith Britain\n\u2014 VICTORIA (CP) - Premier\nBennett said Wednesday British\nColumbia would oppose free trade\nbetween Canada and Britain \u2014 as\nproposed by the U.K. \u2014 but regards the offer as \"a basis for\ndiscussion.\"\n\"There is no patent medicine\nformula like free trade to boost\ntrade between Canada and Britain,\" Premier,Berinett said.\n\"It's a sad thing that Canada has\nbeen too far removed from the\nsterling area.\nTHE TRI-SERVICE Household Guard, which\nwill be mounted at Government House In Ottawa\nduring  Queen  Elizabeth's stay  In  Ottawa  Oc\ntober 12-16, steps out smartly during preparatory\ndrill at RCAF Station Rockcliffe, near the\ncapital,\nMore U.K.\nInvestment\nIn B.C. Urged\nLONDON (CP) - A four-man\ntrade mission from British Columbia said Wednesday British\ninvestors may lose out in B.C.\nin West German and other European industry backers.\nW. C. Mainwaring, vice-president of the B.C. Power Corporation and industrial advisor to the\ngroup, said there is plenty of opportunity for investment in B.C.,\nbut \"we would feel a lot happier\nif\" we had more interest from\nBritish firms.\"\n\"It is .my feeling that English\nmanufacturers are losing out in\nsome cases on industries they\ncould very well establish.\"\nMideast Tension\nBlamed on West\nUNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (API-\nSaudi Arabia Wednesday blamed.\nWestern nations for Middle East\ntension and called for a United\nNations \"hands off\" policy toward\nSyria.\nAhmad Shukairy, minister of\nstate for Saudi Arabia, told the'\nGeneral Assembly \"it is the policy'\nof the West that is destroying ties'\nwith the Arabs.\"\nHe proclaimed Saudi Arabia's,\nfull solidarity with Syria and asserted shipments of Communist\narms to that country is no business of the United Nations.\nHe called for the United Nations to establish an agency to\n\"facilitate the repatriation of Israelis to ther former homes.\" He\nsaid \"we do not intend to throw\nthe Jews to the sea\" but wish\nthem \"a better and happier life in\ntheir homelands, where they can\nsettle under UN auspices.\"\nShukairy is a Palestinian Arab\nwho represented Syria at past UN\nsessions. He now is head of the\nUN delegation for Saudi Arabia.\nPC Wins Seal\nInByeleclion\nCALGARY (CP) - Ernest Wat- .\nkins, a Calgary lawyer, Wednesday retained for the Progressive'\nConservatives one of Calgary's six\nseats in the Alberta legislature,\ndefeating four other candidates in\na provincial byelection,\nMr. Watkins, a native of liver-\npool, Eng:, who has been in Calgary since 1858, took a narrow lead\nin. early .vote-counting.Wednesday,\nnight, oyer the Social 'Ctetlit candidate aiid his margin slowly increased as-counting continued.\n. It was -his first bid for public\noffice, ;.\u2022':''.-'\u2022'\nThe four other candidates seeking election were S. J. Helman;\nSocial Credit; Reg .McColough,\nLiberal;. Frank. Boogie, Labor; and\nCliff Harris, independent; Mr. Helman was clostf to .Mr, Watkins in\nthe early counting' but'the others\ntrailed'well behind.\nCNR DEFICIT\n$272,000\nMONTREAL (CP)-A net operating income deficit of $272,000 was\nreported Wednesday by Canadian\nNational Railways for August, contrasted with net operating income\nof $8,001,000 in August, 1956.\nFor the first eight months of\nthis year, net operating income\nis down $26,080,000 on 1956 in the\ncomparable period,-the CNR said.\nAt last Aug. 31, net operating far\ncome for the year totalled $9,123,\n000.\nKITIMAT PAPER\nBECOMES DAILY\nMONTREAL (CP) - A frontier\nnewspaper, the Kitimat Northern\nSentinel, Wednesday became a\nmember of The Canadian Press.\nApproval of membership for the\nNorthern Sentinel by the CP's\nboard of directors brought the\nnumber of daily papers in the national news co-operative to 101.\nCP is the partnership through\nwhich Canadian newspapers exchange the news of their areas\nand obtain world news.\nMore Say for Rank and File\nDuring Strike, CCC Proposal\nBy AL MARKLE\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nVICTORIA (CP) - The Canadian Chamber of Commerce Wednesday approved a proposal that\nwould give labor or management\nthe right to ask for a secret ballot while a strike is in progress.\nThe pplicy\" declaration, to be presented to the federal cabinet later\nthis year, possibly in November,\nwas agreed upon at the Chamber's\nannual convention here.\nIf incorporated in Canadian labor\nlegislation, the proposal would\nhave the effect of taking strike\nnegotiation beyond the union negotiating committee to the rank\nand file membership.\nLeonard Hynes ot Montreal,\nchairman of the Chamber's labor\ncommittee, said that employers,\nfor example, could ask the government to conduct a secret strike\nballot among members of a bargaining unit after the strike had\nbeen in progress for some time\nand after new proposals had been\nmade by the management.\nOn the other hand, he said, members of the bargaining unit could\nask for a strike ballot if a number of proposals had been rejected by the union's negotiating committee during the period of the\nstrike.\nOne effect of the proposal would\nbe to render sympathy strikes,\njurisdictional strikes and mass\npicketing vulnerable to the demands of the rank and file membership and remove control from\nthe union executive.\n 2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, OCT. 3, 1957\nCa\\y 6*&rit \u2022'Deborah, Kw\nIn Italy\n...on the\nMediterranean\n...across\nan ocean...\nand all\nover\n*P'  New York!\nCIVIC\nA FAMOUS\nPLAYERS\nTHEATRF\nCltlEHASCv... AND COLOP\n7:00-9:05\nill in Darkness as\nElectricity Cut Off\nIncreased voltage in the Nelson\npower lines and heavy rain Wednesday evening combined to cut off\nelectricity for four to five hours\nfrom 5:30 p.m. in all of the uphill\nsection from Victoria Street south.\nElectrical department officials\nreported that this was due to electrical shorting through wet trees\nin half a dozen places where trees\nwere growing among the power\nwires. This trouble had not been\nprevalent during previous rainstorms as Nelson was on just 2300\nvolts. The voltage was increased\nto 4000 volts last week.\nElectrical workers isolated each\nstreet Wednesday night and thoroughly checked the area from Vic-\nStarlight Drive-in\"!\nTimes 8:00 and 8:30 p.m.\nTONIGHT,   FRIDAY   AND   SATURDAY |\nI\n1\ni\ns\nI\nHE'S BACK AGAIN\n... to keep\nyou in stitches.\nDRK BOGARDt\nWim PM0W    DOMID SIMM\nJAMES R0HOTS0N JUSTICE\nL\t\ntASTMANCOLOR\nVTSTAVISION\nJ\nCASTLE   THEATRE\nCASTLEGAR, B.C.\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\nt Shows Nightly at 6:45\n\"THE GREAT AMERICAN\nPASTIME\"\nT. Ewell, A. Francis, Ann Miller\nHandicapped\nBranch Meets\nTRAIL \u2014 Trail branch of the\nKootenay Society for Handicapped\n. Children held its monthly meeting\nIn the KP hall Wednesday evening.\nIt was the first meeting with the\nnew executive and Harold Lins\nwas in the chair.\nSeveral Items of business, were\ntaken up.\nMrs. J. Lassen and Mrs. K.\nShaw gave interesting talks on\ncourses  attended    at   UBC    for\nI teachers in handicapped schools,\nsponsored by the Association of\nj Retarded Children for B.C.\nVi-Dayiin\nHomogenized Mixture of\nVitamins. Excellent for\ninfants and younger\nchildren.\n8 Ounces $3.50\nNelson Pharmacy\n\"Your  Fortress  of  Health\"\n433  Josephine  St.\nPHONE 1203\nELK DRIVE-IN\nCASTLEGAR, B.C.\nTonight, Friday and Saturday\n\"The Gambler From Natchez\"\n(Color)\nPlus: \"My Pal Gus\"\nOne Showing 7:30 Standard Time\nAuto-Vue Drive-In\nTRAIL, B.C.\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\nTime 6:45 p.m.\n\"DUEL IN THE JUNGLE\"\nTechnicolor\nDana Andrews, Jcane Craine\nSHORTS\nPremiere Theatre\nFRUITVALE, B.C.\nLAST   TIMES   TONIGHT\n\"Death of a Scoundrel\"\nZsa Zsa Gabor\nC. A. CANTFELL\nOF KASLO DIES\nTRAIL \u2014 Charles Albert Cant\nfell, 56, mill operator in the Kaslo\narea, died Tuesday in Trail-Tada-\nnac Hospital after a long illness.\nMr. Cantfell had been in the Nelson-Trail area for 10 years. He\nwas born December 19, 1900, in\nHalifax, and is survived by relatives in Nova  Scotia.\nThe body will be forwarded to\nSchubenacedicadie, Nova Scotia,\nfollowing funeral services Friday\nfor interment.\nSale of Wool\nTake Advantage of This\nMoney Saving Value On\nYour  Knitting   Needs.\nfUcl.*    (Indian Sweater Waal)\nReg. $1.05 Skein\nSALE PRICE, 4 oz. skein\t\n;.\"    (3 and 4 Ply)\nBeautiful selection of shades. Reg. 62c'\nSALE PRICE, ball _,.,..__, ,..\nNYI ON? (Fu\" F35\"'0116'\"\n'While They Last: Pr.\n79$\nFor all your sewing and knitting requirements\ncall at your\nCustom Sewing Centre\n(Under  New Ownership)\n580 Boker Phone 1653\nDecision on whether or not the Council will go to\nthe taxpayers for approval of fluoridation of the city's water\nsupply will be brought to the next session of Council.\nMayor Joseph Kary Wednesday night asked the\naldermen to consider the question, so that plans could be\nmade for inclusion of a referendum in the December civic\nelections.\nPlans were progressing fast for the chlorination of\nthe water, works superintendent E. E. Olson reported, and\nthe city's proposed system had been approved by the pro-\nvincial board of health.\nSix licenses, three of them to service stations, were authorized. One\nwas rejected. Service station licenses went to N. Fiddler and J.\nMcGovern, as owner and manager, respectively, for a battery\nshop and service station at 301\nNelson Avenue; to J. T. Mowatt\nfor a service station at the corner\nof Anderson and Front Streets,\nand to the Shell Oil Company to\noperate a service station on the\ncorner of Nelson Avenue and Anderson Street. The Shell Oil application was accompanied by a\npetition bearing approval of 61.5\nper cent of the surrounding residents.\nOther licenses went to Hager\nRenwick, 209 Catham Street, for\nan excavating business; to the\nNelson Lions Club for the door-\nto-door sale of light bulbs; and to\nThomas Baba of Kaslo as general\ncontractor. Application from Otto\nBraun and Andrew Tater of Vancouver for a peddler's license for\nthe sale of jewellery was unanimously rejected.\n*  \u2022  *\nA total of $107,005 had been\nspent on the construction of the\nnew Kootenay Lake General Hospital to the end of August, a progress report received from the\nBoard of Directors showed. A\nsecond progress payment amounted to $38,301. At the time the report was made up 95 per cent of\nfootings had been completed, 30\nAward Contract\nFor Mill Site\nPreparation\nCelgar Limited announces t h e\naward of the contract for site preparation at its pulp mill plant site\nnear Castlegar to Dawson, Wade\nand Company Limited, Engineers\nand Contractors of Vancouver.\nThis phase of the work will include excavating, grading, fill and\nrip rapping. The earth moving involved is approximately 650,000 cu\nbic yards with some 31,000 cubic\nyards of rip rap. Work will be\nstarted immediately to take advantage of the low water period,\n_nd it is expected .that this phase\nshould be completed before spring.\nIt Will involve the grading for the\nrelocation of approximately 1%\nmiles of the CPR's Kettle Valley\nLine.\nTenders for the sheet piling\nwork and the construction of the\nfirst building of the proposed pulp\nmill, the pulp warehouse, will be\ncalled by H. A. Simons Limited,\nconsulting engineers, who are acting for the company. Advertisements will be placed in the area\nnewspapers for Ihese tenders in\norder that local contractors in the\nvicinity may have an apportunity\nto bid on this work, Celgar stated.\nSecret Cubbyhole\nFound  in Wall\nMr. and Mrs. Bennie Schneider,\n1117 Front Street, have a mystery\non their hands.\nWhile remodelling an old house\nnext door, Mr. Schneider uncovered what is believed to have been\na sercet hiding place in one of\nthe rooms.\nAfter tearing off quarter round\nat the floor between two doors, a\nlength of about a foot and a half,\nMr. Schneider found that the baseboard was fastened by an inside\nspring - attached to a couple of\nhooks. Lifting the board, he found\na small cubbyhole about a foot\nlong.\n\"It was really concealed,\" Mr.\nSchneider told The Daily News\nWednesday. \"The nails had even\nbeen cut off on the inside.\"\nMr. Schneider is going to leave\nhis discovery as is for a while.\nNeighbors have taken an interest\nin it, and have speculated on its\npurpose. The property is known\nas the old Chrissop house.\nper cent of the basement and 30\nper cent of the sub-basements.\n* *  *\nCity Council \"looks kindly\" toward the establishment of a\nKootenay Lake Historical Society, and will seek further information on plans Kaslo has\nfor the Moyle. Kaslo, which this\nSpring purchased the stern-\nwheeler from the CPR upon Its\nretirement from Kootenay Lake\nservice, petitioned the City for a\ngrant toward the establishment\nof the Kootenay Lake Historical\nSociety. Request came from Noel\nBacchus, organizing secretary\nof the society.\ni*' *  *\nThe Department of Highways\ngave written verification of its\ncommitment to pay for paving\naround the city approach to the\nnew West Arm bridge, also for\none-half block on Kokanee Street,\nwhich has already been paved.\nThe present road leading to the\nferry will be one way, up from\nLakeside Park, when the bridge\nis in use.\n.   *  *\nReuben Buerge Motors advised\nthey no longer require their Vernon Street parking lot. The city\nhas sent them a bill as requested.\n* *   *\nMayor Kary and Mr. Harper\nwere authorized to complete an\nagreement with the Canadian Pacific Railway Company for a wire\ncrossing railway lines near Lakeside Park, anual rental $1.\n.   *  *\nApproval was given for the purchase of 1.0292 acres of land on\nwhich the Anderson Creek dam\nis situated. Land, which will include space for the chlorintion\nhouse, will be purchased from the\nSentinal Sand and Gravel Company\nat $600 per acre.\ntoria up the hill. The lights were\nrestored in the area from Silica to\nHoover Street at 9:15 p.m., and\nthe remainder of South Nelson was\nback on at 11 p.m. Branches had\nbeen cut away in quite a number\nof places.\nOn several occasions all of the\nNelson street lights which are included in one circuit were shut\noff for the safety of workmen.\n' Power lines had not been shorted\nby wet branches in the downtown\narea, nor Fairview, Rosemont or\nYmir Road area.\nElectrical department officials\nstated that anyone.noticing a flash\nof light on power wires should report the trouble. In this way much\ntime and inconvenience could be\nspared.\nHeating Work\nNear Completion\nInstallation of the new Civic\nCentre heating unit should be completed by October 15 provided controls are received on schedule,\nA. M. Ferguson of Ferguson Brothers, general contractors on the\njob, said Tuesday.\nHeat was supplied to the recreation hall and hot water to the\nkitchen during the recent Union\nof British Columbia Municiplities\nconvention. Workmen are now\nhooking up blast coils in the fan\nroom behind the Civic Theatre\nstage, on a platform built by T.\nH. Waters contractors. .Other subcontractors are hooking up the\nthermostats, doing wiring, and\ncovering pipes.\nCommission\nAwards Contracts\nTenders of Louis Maglio of $211\nfor removing grills and enclosing\nwall openings in the Civic Theatre,\nand of $200 for demolishing cold\nair ducts in the theatre, was accepted by the Civic Centre Commission at a meeting this week,\naccording to minutes read to City\nCouncil by City Clerk' C. W R.\nHarper.\nApproval was given to rental of\nthe recreation grounds for an industrial  exhibit.\nChairman L. Lefeaux, Aid.\nElizabeth Wallach, Frank Beres-\nford jr., W. C. Hancock, and Gordon Webb met with L. W. Bick-\nnell, D. Winlaw, Ron Nash and\nGeorge. Barefoot to discuss rental agreements for the coming\nseason. More details on this will\nbe available following the Curling\nClub's annual meeting Monday\nnight.\nCOUNCIL\nENDORSES\nSKI LIFT\nEndorsation of a proposed ski\nlift to be installed by the Silver\nKing Ski Club Society, costing\nabout $12,000, as Nelson's centennial projeet, was given Wednesday night by City Council. The project was chosen September 20 by\nthe Diamond Jubilee and Centennial Celebrations committee.\nIf the project is authorized by\nthe B.C. centennial committee, the\nprovincial government will contribute 60 cents per capita providing local authorities raise or show\nability to raise a like amount. A\ngrant of 40 cents per capita is\navailable from the provincial government to pay for entertainment.\n\"It's a good project for Nelson,\nthere's no doubt about it,\" said\nAid. George Mermet. \"Well, I\nthink it's one of the best things\nthat ever hit Nelson,\" said Aid.\nGeorge Eckmier.   '\nThe committee and council must\nassume responsibility for completion of the project, and Aid. Mermet said he would not want to use\ntaxpayers' money for it. Mayor Joseph Kary pointed out the B.C.\ncommittee will help raise money\nlocally.\nThe Weather\nNELSON     46 61 1.18\nToronto   45 58 \u2014\nRegina ...:  52 86 \u2022-\nSaskatoon  _..... 54 84 \u2014\nCalgary      37 53 .04\nKimberley  .. 50 56 .08\n'Flu Closes\nTrail Mospital\nTo Visitors\nTRAIL (CP) \u2014 Hospital administrator .Douglas Stevenson announced Wednesday the Trai-\nTadanac Hospital will be closed to\nvisitors until further notice because of influenza in the Trail district.\nMr. Stevenson said the move\nwas taken as a large part of the\nnursing staff had been affected\nand because more adults seemed\nto be contracting the flu.\nAbout 20 nurses and staff members are off work.\nThe only visitors that will be allowed in the hospital during the\npresent emergency will be immediate relatives of those seriously\nill.\nIt is not known how long the\nban will continue.\nNew Rooms To Be\nOpened   During\nZone  Meeting\nOfficial opening of new Canadian Legion club rooms, now in\nuse, will take place in conjunction with a zone meeting here October 19 and 20, secretary-manager W. H. Burns announced Wednesday. Plans for the zone meeting will be discussed at the\nmonthly meeting of the Legion and\nLadies' Auxiliary on Thursday\nnight.\nBranch volunteers- have worked\nthroughout the Summer to get the\nrooms in shape. New furnishings\nhave also been put in offices.\nSCHOLARSHIPS were presented this week to three L. V. Rogers High School\nstudents, and the winner of a $100 bursary was announced. Recipients and those\nwho presented the awards are pictured above. Left to right, Louise Sjoberg, who received the school board award for any deserving student in Grade 10 to 12, presented\nby Mrs. H. McGowan; Pat Clark and Judy Ferworn, winners of school board scholarships for pupils from Nelson School District attending senior matriculation at Rogers\nHigh, presented by I. G. James. Mrs. R. B. Brummitt, right, announced that Miss Carol\nTickner of Victoria, formerly of Nelson, was winner of the IODE bursary awarded\nto a deserving student from the school who is preparing for a teaching career. The\nbursary will be sent to her.\u2014Daily News  photo.\nEssential Workers\nTo Get Flu Vaccine\nAn epidemic of flu is expected\nhere this Winter. Dr. A. W. L.\nVogelesang, medical health officer,\nsaid Wednesday. He pointed out\ntliis disease is not considered dangerous, but said its explosive way\nof spreading through a community\ncould disrupt vital services.\nBecause of this, preparations are\nbeing made by the health department to have vaccine available for\nthose in essential services. In this\nclass, according to Dr. Vogelesang,\nare doctors, nurses, and employees\nof hospitals and nursing homes,\nfiremen, policemen, telegraph personnel, telephone operators and\nmaintenance men, radio station\nemployees, and staffs of local bus\nDistrict Centres\nTo Receive\nBCPC Payments\nTwenty-nine central and Southern Interior communities soon will\nreceive a total of $95,631,61 in payments from the gross revenue realized from the sale of electricity by\nthe B.C. Power Commission for the\nfiscal year which ended March 31,\nCheques were sent out this week.\nThe amount, well above last\nyear's $68,241.77, covers payments\nin lieu of taxes on the Power Commission's distribution facilities\nwithin municipal boundaries. The\nannual, payments, as required by\nthe \"Power Act\" are in addition\nto taxes paid on Commission lands\nand buildings, and they represent\nthree per cent of the gross revenue\nwithin each of the organized areas\nserved by the Commission.\nKootenay points to receive pay\nments, with 1956 totals in brackets,\nare: Invermere $1129.85 ($812.77);\nSilverton $259.24 ($110.48; and New\nDenver $754.44 ($365.68).\nPrisoner, Kaslo\nNative, Sought\nOntario  Police\nBy\nPORT ARTHUR (CP) - Police\nare carrying out an intensive\nsearch for 17-year-old Peter. Liv-'\nlr.gston, a district jail prisoner\nwho disappeared Wednesday while\nworking at district courthouse.\nA native of Kaslo, B.C., he was\nserving two months on a charge of\npossessing an offensive weapon.  .\nLivingston, disappeared while at\nwork with other jail prisoners in\nthe couthouse building and\ngrounds.\nSeven Citizenship\nications  Passed\nAppli\nSeven applications for Canadian\ncitizenship were approved Wednesday by His Honor Judge E. P. Dawson in county court.\nPapers will be presented later to\nVitus Johann Germann, Cornelius\nHermanus (Gordon) Huiberts, Hik-\nojiro Kato, Wilhelm Menglef, Alfred George Sartler, Marie Vajstar\nand Arie Valstar.\nReal   Hospitality\nShown UBCM\nBy Cifizens-Kary\nThe entire city of Nelson had\nshown \"real Nelson hospitality\" in\nputting on one of the most successful conferences in the history of\nthe Union of B.C. Municipalities\nlast week, Mayor Joseph Kary\ncommented at City Council meeting Wednesday night.\nTo the people of Nelson \u2014 who\nhosted the biggest convention ever\nheld here \u2014 Mayor Kary said\n\"thank you\".\nMembers of Council and their\nwives, and in particular Alderman\nC. F. Blakeman, who, as chairman,\npiloted the functions of a \"very\nsuccessful\" convention, the women\nof the United Church auxiliaries\nwho catered to the luncheons and\nbanquets, the business concerns\nwho sponsored receptions, and\npeople who opened their homes to\ndelegates were publicly thanked\nat a meeting of Council.\nThe city's Chief magistrate expressed his appreciation to the Village of Creston which donated\nboxes of apples for luncheon\n\"treats\", and to the Association of\nKootenay Municipalities.\nservices in certain cases. In ad\ndition, this protection would be\ngiven to maintenance employees\nof water, gas and electricity departments.\nThe vaccine will also be available commercially through doctors, the office said. Only a limited\namount of the vaccine is now available, since this disease is caused\nby a new virus, making a new\nvaccine necessary. Hospital\npatients will not be included in the\nvaccination program since the dis\nease is not considered dangerous.\nClinics will be held throughout\nthe Selkirk Medical Health Unit,\nDr. Vogelesang said. Dates for\nthese and when the vaccine will\nbe available, will be announced\nlater.\nTopcoats\nby JiLdkgoAWL\nWe're ready for FALL,\nwith our new coats on\ndisplay\u2014they really are\n\"TOPS\".\u2014Choose from\nCROMWELL TWEEDS\nBRAMBLE TWISTS\nVELOSHEENS\nCROMBIE  FLEECES\nRegular and Tall\nModels\nGodfreys'\n378 Baker St.\nTo Introduce The New\nBallad\n^ PATTERN IN\n.     TMC  riHCST   SILVCKPIATC \\\nNBI\ni\\\nPATTERN   IN\nFEATURE OFFER\n1      H Imperial Glass\n\u00ab.     \/CANDLEWICK\nFEATURE OFFER\nSET OF 4\n-f BOWL & LADLE COFFEE SPOONS\n(regular $4.50 value)\nDODDS\nKIDNEY\no FILLS -\n$\n95\nBallad*\nk&fHjaxfic gtacz nmi^ captamed\nUt p>tMl6u2 SlljjQMtXihS,\nSPECIAL-INTRODUCTORY OFFER\n43 PIECE\nSERVICE\nFOR EIGHT\nYOU SAVE $24.40\nREGULAR OPEN STOCK PRICE  $114.35\n(including c\/ieif)\nCREDIT AVAILABLE AT NO EXTRA COST\nCollinson's Jewellery\n\"NELSON'S DIAMOND HEADQUARTERS\"\nEstablished Since 1891\nPhone 120 '.,.'\u25a0-    Nelson, B.C.\n q; TjTiT'J\\r trm JttMBfflUMBJIi\nPRESENT 42-BED Kimberley Hospital, pictured above, will be replaced by a 57-bed\nstructure with provision for 50 per cent expansion if the city ratepayers approve a\n$282,370 money bylaw Friday. This amount would be the city's share, $165,000, of\nthe proposed $1,165,000 new hospital plus $117,370 interest -over 20 years. Wiring of\nthe present hospital is condemned and the present building is inefficient, it is pointed out. New hospital construction would start in the Spring of 1958, planners state.\n\u2014Wormingfon photo.\nBishop To\nConduct Mission\nAt Royal Oak\nRt. Rev. Philip R. Beattie,\nBishop of Kootenay, will conduct\na teaching mission in the parish\nof Royal Oak, Victoria, from October 27 to November 3.\nThe mission will be a combined\neffort of the whole parish and will\nembrace the congregations of St.\nMichael's Church, Royal Oak, and\nSt. Columba's Church, Strawberry\nVale',\nArchbishop Harold E. Sexton\nwill be celebrant at the service in\nSt. Columba's Church at 11 a.m.\nOctober 27, opening the mission.\nBishop Beattie will be preacher.\nBishop Beattie was dean of\nChrist Church Cathedral, Victoria,\nbefore his election and consecration as Bishop of Kootenay in May\nof 1955.\nKeep Your Eye on Classified!\n\u2022when\nyour\nrecipe\ncalls for\nEVAPORATED I\nMILK\n,,    sweeter\n\/       fresher flavor        \\\nI \u2014best j\nV'     for all your \/\nV baking       \/\n\u2022\n_^.<*      ma.\nMrs. Green to Turn,\nFirst Sod for Home\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Mrs. F. W.\nGreen will be invited by the Dr.\nF. W. Green Memorial Home Society to turn the first sod Sunday,\nOctober 13, for start of the senior\ncitizens' home to house 26 permanent elderly residents as a memorial to the pioneer physician who\nemerged from McGill medical\nschool to start practice here in\n1897 and practiced here continuously until his final illness in 1954.\nUnprecedented support of the\nmid - September business section\ndrive for funds organized by Mrs.\nFUNERAL HELD\nFOR MRS. WRIGHT\nNATAL \u2014 The funeral for Mrs.\nJanet Wright, an oldtime of the\nMichel district, took place at\nMichel in the United Church, Rev.\nE. Whi^e officiating. Mrs. Wright\nwas born in Scotland. Coming to\nCanada in 1923 she resided in\nMichel until 1926 and then spent\nthree years' in Africa, arriving\nback in Michel in 1929 where her\nremaining years were spent. Surviving are three daughters, Mrs.\nGuy Venzie of Michel, Mrs. Bernard Keeling of Natal and Mrs.\nC. Solk of Lethbridge; two sons,\nRobert and Tom in Michel, two\ngrandchildren, and a sister Mrs.\nMargaret Young of Michel who\nhad lived with her sister at\nMichel for the past few years.\nLocal Bidders Gain\nIn Timber Auctions\nINVERMERE \u2014 Local bidders\nwere successful In the two timber auctions held at the Invermere forest ranger office.\nEric Frisch of Windermere was\nsuccessful with his bid to cut 49,-\n000 cubic feet of fir sawlogs on\nan area between Horsetheif and\nAndreen Creeks west of Wilmer.\nFritz Zehner of Windermere and\nAlfred Trescner of Windermere\nwere successful with their bid to\ncut 40,000 cubic feet of Fir and\nlodge-pine sawlogs on an area\nsituated, near Frances Creek.\nExercise Next Week.\ndr\\tn\n50 \"Evacuees\" To Be\nCared for in Salmo\nSALMO \u2014 Fifty \"evacuees\" will\nbe registered and billeted here\nOctober 9 In a civil defence run-\nthrough.\nThe program is designed to pre-\nW. - O. Green and carried out by\n14 volunteer women canvassers is\nreported with just short of $4000\ngiven so far. The Society fund for\nthe project, originally proposed\nand sponsored by the Canadian\nLegion here, early in 1955, is now\nonly $2030 short of its objective of\n$50,000 which qualifies the home\nfor a provincial $25,000 grant to\ncover total estimated $75,000 for\nconstruction.\nThe ceremony to which a general invitation is extended the public will be at 2:30 p.m. at the\nexcellent Seventeenth Avenue site\nwhich was given the Society by\nanother pioneer, the late Michael\nFrost. Trees interfering with the\nactual location will be removed\nbefore then.\nThe Society has signed a contract with George Horwood at a\ntotal of $14,741 for the concrete\nfoundation and basic structure to\nstart within two weeks and be\nfinished before winter restricts\nbuilding activity.\nSeparate contracts will be called\nfor construction of the building to\nbegin as early as possible in the\nspring so that the home can be\ndedicated as part of the C r a n-\nbrook celebration July 1 to 4 of\nthe province's Centennial.\nPreliminary Hearing\nSet For November 5\nCRANBROOK - Allan Barclay\nCode of Calgary, released on bail\nof $2000 Monday, will be given\npreliminary hearing here November 5 on a charge of criminal\nnegligence in the death of pedestrian Joseph McConnell at Moyie\nwho died Sunday when struck by\na tractor-transport,\nMr. McConnell, 76, was born at\nProchlish, Ireland. He came to\nCanada in 1905 and to Moyie in\n1908 where he was employed at\nthe St. Eugene Mine, and had continued mining all his life until he\nretired from the Society Girl mine\nat Moyie five years ago. He served\nduring the First World War with,\nthe 54th (Kootenay) Battalion\noverseas. He has no relatives.\nFernie CD\nLauded On\nExercise\nFERNIE \u2014 Brigadier G. A.\nMcCarthur, of Victoria, assistant Provincial Civil Defence\nco-ordinator, gave high praise\nto the Fernie Civil Defence\nunit for its excellent civil defence welfare exercise carried\nout Tuesday night. Theoretically the cities of Cranbrook\nand Kiniberley were disaster\nareas. Fernie was a welfare\ncentre registering evacuees\nfrom those areas.\nBrig. McCarthur explained that\nthe organization of a good unit required experts. to supervise each\nsection. Such supervision should\nbe obtained by personal contact.\nHe complimented the Fernie unit\nin having a group of senior high\nschool girls, under the supervision\nof John Hayhurst, the commercial\nteacher, trained to capably undertake registration and billeting.\nCivil Defence was usually left to\nthe old timers and it was \"gratifying\" to see young people in Fernie\ntaking such an interest.\nCOOPERATION PRAISED\nC. D. Watkins of Victoria, wel\nfare liaison officer, remarked on\nthe excellent cooperation of the\nmany civic groups of Fernie which\naided in the successful exercise.\nHe pointed out that the Ladies'\nAuxiliary of the Canadian Legion,\nthe Salvation Army, the Ladies'\nFirst Aid team of the Fernie\nbranch, St. John Ambulance Association, the City Fire Department, the police, Boy Scouts Red\nCross, public health service and\nprovincial welfare department had\nassisted the Civil Defence unit in\nits project.   .\nThe exercise was carried out in\nthe Catholic Hall, under supervision of Edgar Wilson, Fernie\nCivil Defence officer. The 70 persons who entered the welfare\ncentre were given a lunch of\ndoughnuts and coffee, (which was\nserved by the Ladies' Auxiliary.\nThey were then registered, directed to the billeting section where\nthey received billets according to\nfamily groups, couples, or single\naccommodation. Next stop was the\nclothing section where needs were\nlisted and clothing provided by the\nSalvation Army. They were then\ntransported to billets in private\nhomes,\nOther out-of-town Civil Defence\nofficials present were Paul Stehe-\nlin, Ottawa, Dominion Civil Defence welfare coordinator; Lionel\nHart, Victoria,, provincial operations coordinator, and Ken McRae,\nEast Kootenay Civil Defence coordinator.\npare for a possible influx of 3000\npersons in cars from the Coast,\nand will be supervised by civil\ndefence authorities from Vancouver, with Gordon Moir, Salmo\ncivil defence officer, in charge.\nMrs. H. Mang will be in charge of\nregistration, and Mrs. A. E. Love-\nstrom will be in charge of food.\nLooking after billeting will be Mrs.\nR. Stenson, and Mrs. F. T. Middle-\nton will be in charge of clothing,\non the theory that some \"evacuees\" may have left hurriedly.\nThose needing first aid will be\ntaken care of by Mrs. L. Hart's\ndepartment.\nCar parking will bk supervised\nby civil defence wardens, and Boy\nScouts will run errands and do\nother duties.\nSimilar exercises are now being\nheld in other parts of B.C.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, OCT. 3, 1957 \u2014 3\nHunting's Good In East Kootenay\nDespite Indian Summer Drawbacks\nPaddy Ryan Lakes Rid of\nShiners Prior to Stocking\nINVERMERE - A favorite\nfishing area for local and visiting anglers haj, been receiving\ndrastic action by the Game Department in preparation for restocking with young fish.\nThe Paddy Ryan Lakes, one of\nthe most accessible fishing areas\nand one of the valley beauty spots,\nwere poisoned with fishtox recently. This substance suffocates the\nfish when they breath it into their\ngills as it prevents them from\ngetting oxygen.,It is harmless to\nany other form of life.\nPurpose of the poisoning was to\nrid the lakes of shiners but trout\nwere also killed in the process.\nMany district families availed\nthemselves of the opportunity to\nget the trout and several hundred\nsalvaged for valley dinner tables.\n' The lakes will be allowed to\n\"rest\" for three or four weeks\nafter which a test tank with\nscreened sides, full of live fish;\nwill be lowered. If these fish survive for a week it will prove that\nthe lakes are clear again and they\nwill then be restocked.\nThe stock is now in the Nelson\nhatchery ready for use. Two\nspecies will be used, rainbow or\ncutthroat trout will be placed in\nthe upper lakes and Eastern\nBrook trout in the two lower lakes.\n:_.___*x.!.;-:_.!_,!_i:!:a!..,:,,-j.\nJr. Forest Wardens\nOff to Good  Start\nINVERMERE - The Junior Forest Wardens have been organized\nat Invermere with 32 boys, aged\n10 to 16 years, indicating an eagerness to enrol. Supervisor is Richard Nicholls with Joe Conroy and\nMrs. Doran\nOf Marysville\nDies At 81\nKIMBERLEY - A pioneer Al-\nbertan, Mrs. Arthur William Doran\nof Marysville died suddenly at\nKimberley Hospital at the age of\n88 years. She was born Mary\nGenevieve Sherlock at Arnprior,\nOnt. The family moved to Red\nRiver, Minn., when she was a\nchild, and her marriage took\npface in 1900 at Souris, N.D. She\nand her husband settled at Bow\nIsland, Alta., in 1909 and continued their farm home there until\n1940 when they joined their daughter at Kimberley and since 1949\nhad lived at Marysville with her.\nMrs. Doran was active in the\nCatholic Women's League.\nSurviving her and her husband\nat home, two sons, Sherlock in\nSan Francisco and Arthur at Bow\nIsland, and two daughters, Mrs.\nMae Salde at \"Marysville and Mrs.\nLillian Andrews at Lethbridge. A\nthird daughter, Mrs. ' Dorothy\nMeyers, predeceased her in Spokane. Also surviving are nine\ngrandchildren, six great-grandchildren and a sister, Mrs. Dave\nTrumbla at Elm Creek, Man.\nRev. Father J. J. Checvers celebrated the requiem at the Sacred\nHeart Church.\nCRANBROOK - Hunting in East\nKootenay so far in the 1957 season\nhas been better than last, year,\nthough warm summer weather\ncontinues, and there has been\nlittle evidence of seasonal migration by either game birds or the\nbig \"game animals.\nCanada geese and mallard ducks\nare not travelling southward on\nany scale yet and are reported in\nhuge numbers at Duck Lake reserve near Creston. Pintail and\nteal duck shooting along the Kootenay has been only fair. Upland\nbirds, the varieties of grouse, are\non the upward swing of their\npopulation \u25a0 cycle and are more\nnumerous this season.\nBig game success has been extremely good considering summery weather. Many hunters have\nalready bagged their elk already,\nmostly bulls, though the season on\ncow elk which also opened September 15 continues only to October 31, and season on bull elk goes\nto December 1. Several hunters\nhave also got their moose already,\nSuccess in mountain goat hunting:\nwhich continues to December 1.\nhas been above average in both\nRocky and Selkirk Mountain areas.\nExcellent mountain sheep trophies\nup to 40-inch curl of horn have\nbeen brought in. The season, on\nsheep closes October 15.\nDeer hunting is t also fair but\nthere has been no hunting pressure\nyet as local hunters are waiting for\ncolder weather for storage of meat.\nMany are expected to await the\nfinal November 16 to December 1\nfortnight in deer regulations when\nantlerless deer covering does and\nfawns is in effect, in addition to\nthe buck season that opened\nSeptember 15.\nFrom Natal has come word that\nthe first American hunting party,\nconsisting of two Roman Catholk\npriests from Green Bay, Wise,\nspent   a   particularly   Successful\nthree weeks hunting in the Holy\nValley district 70 miles up the\nElk Valley.\nAccompanied by guide Mike Ba-\nher, assisted by Mike Jacino and\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nFlights of Geese\nPresage Bad Weather\nCRANBROOK - Householders\nwere looking to their coal bins\nand oil tanks Wednesday morning, though the air was damp\nand mild.\nAdvance notice of winter was\nposted in the valley by large\nflights of Canada Geese honking\nas they bucked a northbound\nwind and rainstorm. Waves of\nthe southbound birds rippled\nacross the sky in the morning.\nThe meteorology service doesn't\nconfirm it, but the flights usually\nare followed shortly by cold and\ndirty weather.\nmiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nArchie Wytula, well known hunters\nat Natal, they bagged four goat,\ntwo bull elk and a grizzly measuring seven feet six inches.\nThe scenery fascinated the\npriests, who planned to make a\nreturn trip.\nFINE CONDITION\nKootenay Game biologist Glen\nSmith reports game animals in\ngood supply this season and animals in excellent shape as a result of the mild past winter and\nabove-average range conditions.\nEast Kootenay Game Trophy\nCompetition Association reports\nsale of memberships through ihe\ngame associations of Cranbrook,\nKimberley, Canal Flat and Fernie\nare higher this year. Under this\nyear's regulations the . hunter-\nmember entering a trophy for competition measures it himself under\nBoone and Crockett regulations\nand submits statistics, and largest\ntrophies reported in this way will\nbe called in for official measurement   under   the  rules  in  late\nJAFFRAY FARMER\nW. J. BELANGER\nPASSES AT 57\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Farm operator\nat Jaffray for the past 28 years,\nWilliam Joseph Belanger died\nTuesday at St. Eugene Hospital\nwhere he had been a patient for\nthe past month.\nHe was born 57 years ago at\nCalabogie, Ont., and was brought\nto this province and Fernie district\nby his parents in 1902. Surviving\nhim are his wife, Lyda at Jaffray,\nhis parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred\nBelanger of Fernie, and two\nbrothers, Frank at Medicine Hat\nand John in Cranbrook, and a\nsister, Mrs. C. Nohels of Fernie.\nThe funeral and burial will take\nplace in Fernie.\nHank Campsall as assistant. Others\nof the sponsoring group are Gordon Rad and Dix Anderson.\nThe boys- are studying for their\ngreen tree course from which they\nwill advance to the silver tree\ncourse. Uniforms have been order'\ned.        .:< \u25a0,.'':. :..   .\nClose fo 500 Students Enrolled\nIn Two Schools in Nalal Area\nNATAL \u2014 A total of 467 students\nare attending classes in the two\ndistrict schools.\nThe Michel - Natal elementary\nschool has an enrolment of 299 pupils, of whom 60 are beginning in\nthe first grade. Sparwood junior-\nsenior high school has 177 students\nenrolled.\nThe elementary school staff\nconsists of Mrs. John Paskovich,\ngrade 1; Mrs. Ernie Borsato, grade\n1; Mrs. Orlando Marchi, grade\n2; Mrs. Ralph Bifano, grades 2-3;\nMrs. William Constable of Creston,\ngrades 3-4; Miss Arlene Walker,\ngrade 4; Orlando Ungaro, grade 5,\nand Frank Mitchell, principal,\ngrade 6.\nEight teachers are engaged at the\nhigh school and another will be\nadded shortly. Those employed at\npresent are Miss Beverley Nelson\nFOR A REAL TREAT IN HEAT ...\nWESTERN\nMONARCH\nDtlUMHELLER DEEP SEAM\nm\nm\nC>\u00abjL\nL_F5.11\nt&s;s_^H_rs_K^^\n___-:-___._': i ______\nTOWLER\nFUEL and TRANSFER\nPhone 889\nFOR A\nLASTING\nSHINE\nof Fruitvale, grade 7; Cirino Salvador of Fernie, grade 8; Alexander\nGrigoruk of Natal, grade 9; Miss\nKatie Siemens of Regina, grade\n10; William O'Brien of Victoria,\ngrade 11; Archie Van Buskirk (industrial arts) of Fernie; Mrs. Margaret E. Dufour (home economics)\nand N. A. Gill, principal.\nBook award winners in the elementary grades for the last term\nhave been announced as: Michael\nKatrichak, grade 1; Cathy Giles,\ngrade 1; Pat Bigelow, grade 2;\nRicci Bcrdusco, grade 2; Kenneth\nKomenac, grade 3; Anita Ber-\ndusco, grade 3; Bobby Mihalynuk,\ngrade 4; Ronald Venzie, grade 5;\nand Peggy Grigoruk, grade 6,\nThese go to the best' pupils in4he\ngrades and are presented on behalf of thp Parent-Teacher Association.\nWhen Skin itch\nDrives You MAD\nHere is a clean 'stainless penetrating antiseptic\u2014known all over\nCanada as MOONB'S EMERALD\nOIL\u2014that dries riglij* in and\nbrings swift sure relieFtrom the\nalmost unbearable itching and\ndistress.\nIt3 action Is so powerfully penetrating that the itching is promptly eased, and with continued nee\nyour troubles may soon be over.\nUse EMERALD OIL night and\nmorning as directions advise for\none full week. It is safe to use and\n[allure Is rare indeed.\nMOONE'S EMERALD OIL cf.nl\nbo obtained in the original bottle\nat any modern drug store.\nWINS   RIFLE\nRIONDEL-Wilf Kocher of Gray\nCreek was winner, of a semi-automatic .22 calibre rifle, the prize\noffered in a contest conducted by\nthe Riondel Rod and Gun Club.\nFREE DELIVERY\nQooi fiottkd BssiM\nPHONE\nNelson 24 and 175\nTrail 26 and 192\nWhen Ordering Specify Brand Namt\n\u2022 Columbia Lager \u2022' Fernie Lager\n\u2022 Kootenay * Columbia\nPale Ale Cream Stout\nEMPTY  BOTTLES COLLECTED ON  DELIVERY ONLY\nINTERIOR BREWERIES LIMITED\nThis adver.isen.ent is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia\nMerchandise as Low as\nSee thKOttfjiA^c NB\/J\nBallad\nPATTERN IN\nAT\ntut rmtST SIIVMPLATC\n$\n1\nOlsons Credit Jewellers\nDOWN\nand\n$\n1\nPER\nWEEK\nBallad*\nKQntjMc g*a& iwAf capttmd\n95\nSPECIAL INTRODUCTORY OFFER\n43 PIECE\nSERVICE\nFOR EIGHT\nyou save $24.40\n' regular open stock price $114.35\n(including chosl}\nNOT\nA PENNY\nMORE\nFOR\nCREDIT\nCONTENTS\n{\n8 Teaspoons 8 Salad Forks Round Bowl\n8 Plqce Spoons* 1 Tablespoon Spoons may be\n8 Knives 1 Sugar Spoon substituted\n8 For!:. 1 Butter Knife\n2 SPECIALS m \u00a9!FT .BOXES\nSet of Four BAtlAD\nCoffee **95\nSpoons I\nregular $4.00 value\nImperial Glass Bowf\nand CALL AD Ladle\n$295\nfegukjr.$4 JO value\n*T1UC<EV\u00bbtX3 OF OKtlM KB.\nOLSON'S Credit Jewellers\nPhone   1149\nNelson,  B.C.\n Established  AprlJ  22.  1903\nInterior British Columbia's Largest Daily Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday and statutory\nholidays   by   the   NEWS   PUBLISHING   COMPANY\nLIMITED, 266 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia.\nAuthorized as Second Class Mall, Post Otfico Department, Ottawa\nMEMBER OF  THE  AUDI1   BUREA0 sOF CIRCULATIONS\nMEMBER Of THE CANADIAN PRESS\nThe Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use tor republication ol all newi\ndispatches credited to it or to Ihe Associated Press or Reuters in this paper,\nand also the local news published therein..\nThursday, October 3, 1957\nA Remedy for School Financing\nBald-headed \"Man\nSkinin^ Example\nWe would miss the baldheaded man if he\nvanished. The smooth and stately dome reflecting our curious glances seemed the aloof\nand gleaming repository of a vast erudition.\nIt stood for the tidy mind in the tidy case, the\nshiny symbol of wisdom and dignity and respectability and hard cash.\nAnd on occasion, if imagination led in\nthat direction, the cold fact of baldness might\neven appear as attractively sinister. It was\nthe mark of the powerful somebody as opposed to the nonentities who boast abundant\nskull foliage.\nThere is a deal to be said for a fine head\nof hair, but if the baldheaded man does disappear, his shining examples will be missed.\n\u2014Calgary Herald.\nPossibly the most interesting on the\nprogram of the recent School Trustees'\nConvention held at Victoria was an\naddress given to the delegates by Dr.\nM. E. LaZerte.\nDr. LaZerte is a distinguished educationist and after retiring as Dean of\nthe Faculty of Education of the University of Manitoba, became research\ndirector for the Canadian School Trustees' Association. The outcome of this\nresearch was a report on \"School\nFinance in Canada.\"\nThe subject of Dr. LaZerte's address\nto the trustees was \"Providing and Paying for Elementary and Secondary\nEducation\" in which he discussed two\nrecurring problems of trustees, finding\nqualified teachers and paying their\nsalaries.\nFinding qualified teachers for all\nschools is complicated in these days\nby the fact that there are not enough\nto staff all the schools. While education departments often boast that all\nschool posts are filled, many are held\nby Individuals who have permits or\nare unqualified. In Canada today\ntwenty-one per cent of all teachers'\nhold only permits, temporary and third\nclass certificates. The percentage of\nCanadian teachers holding first class\nor higher certificates was 61.5, with\nB.C. holding second place to Saskatchewan with a percentage of 80.5.\nDr. LaZerte's remedy for the shortage of teachers is to demand higher\nqualifications from those entering the\nprofession. It has been amply shown\nthat lowering standards defeats this\nend, but the matter is complica.ed by\nthe fact that schools must be kept in\noperation even by unskilled persons.\nNevertheless universities and education departments are working together\nto improve the standards of teacher ,\ntraining.\nIn Dr. LaZerte's views, high qualifications and high salaries go hand in\nhand and of the two problems, how\nto find \u25a0 fully qualified teachers and\nhow to pay them, the more important\nis how to find the necessary money.\nDr. LaZerte, after having made a\ndetailed study of school finance, suggests that the present need is for increased support of education by both\nprovincial and dominion governments.\nProperly administered, this would ease\nthe burden on school districts. He also\nbelieves that the equalization program\nendorsed by the Canadian School\nTrustees' Association should be\nadopted.\nThis calls for equalized assessment\nof all real property, the adoption of\na high level foundation program,\nwhich is in effect a basic minimum\nfinanced by joint efforts of both province and municipalities, and the levying of a uniform provincial real property tax for the support of education.\nIt is a complicated program and\none which is dependent upon too many\nhuman factors to be readily put into\neffect. In the meantime, British Columbia's system of grants does much\nto offset many of the inequalities of\neducational taxation.\nLeading in the Humanities\nA century from now, when historians\ncome to examine the history of civilization in\nthe world-conflicts of 1914 and 1939, with the\nlong interval between and a restless peace\nafterwards, they may put a different valuation upon great events which have been current in our times. The emergence of the\nUnited Nations' Charter from the welter of\nhuman exhaustion may be viewed as a turning point in the common history of mankind.\"\nGreat Britain's selfless efforts on behalf of\nhuman freedom in the first half of this century will be realized for what they were and\nare\u2014courageous and crucial leadership in\nthe humanities.\nTo quote the Earl of Selkirk. First Lord\nof the.Admiralty, whose quiet and modest\nremarks before service organizations here\nthis week were warmly appreciated; \"During the last 10 years something like 600.000.-\n000 people, who were formerly governed-from\nLondon, have been by gradual stages brou?ht\nto the point where self-government can be\nintroduced on a basis of democratic institutions.\" That has been a bigger contribution\nto the letter and the spirit, of the United Nations' pledge than the modern world had ever\nseen in any equivalent form before. It is an\nhistorical fact, and a long advance into a\nbetter ordered future.\nLord Selkirk had the record behind him\nalso when he referred to Great Britain's\nprogress in the domestic field. It is true that\na genius for engineering and nerhans for\nself-help have captured for the United Kingdom the leading speed records on land, sea\nand air in the van of technological advance.\nSpeed records may be transient, but the solid\ncontribution to the emancioation of more\nthan one-fifth of the population of the globe\nand guidance on the road to self-government\nwill be the lasting and remembered achievement of this century. Evam .le is the b\u00b0st\nteaching,  and  Great Britain's concern  for\nthe humanities has been second to none in\nthe world.\u2014Victoria Colonist.\nSlum Avoidance\nThere are no slums on Atkinson Ave.,\nbetween Twelfth and Linwood, and there\naren't likely to be any. That is because the\nproperty owners in that section have banded\ntogether to make certain that the things\nwhich lead to blight and deterioration don't\nhappen in their neighborhood.\nThere are 117 home owners in the three\nblocks between Twelth and Linwood. All but\nfour have signed a compact which recognizes\nthe zoning standards and is, in effect, a\nvoluntary pledge to live up to them, the home\nowners have agreed th\u00b0y will maintain single\nfamily residences, not turn their property\ninto rooming houses Or permit the encroachment of any deteriorating influence.\nThe compact, which will be filed with\nthe Register of Deeds, is only a continuance\nOf a neighborhood policy which has paid\noff handsomely. The signers have already\ndemonstrated their intention of maintaining\nthe area by vigorous action, when called for,\nof demanding that municipal services be\nkept up to snuff, and that a helping hand\nbe given to homeowners who 1. ck the means\nof applying paint or putting in a lawn or\nother improvements.\nThe Wks on Atkinson have proved the\ncontention that it is only people who create'\nslums, and conversely, when neighbors band\ntogether, blight simply c.n't get a foothold.\n\u2014Detroit Free Press.\nIt's Been Said\nThe learned understand the reason of\nart; the unlearned feel the pleasure.\u2014Quin-\ntilian.\nUneasy Cbnseiences\nIt was William Shakespeare who wrote:\n\"Uneasy lies the head that wears a crown.\"\nA modern Shakespeare might write: \"Uneasy\nlies the head that cheated on income tax.\"\nIt perhaps isn't so much that tax cheaters\n(or other law breakers) have .uneasy consciences. If they had strong consciences they\nwouldn't have cheated. It is more the fear of\nbeing caught.\nThat there is cause for such fear is shown\nby the statement of a former legal expert of\nthe Department of National Revenue. He says\nit is surprising how many provide the Department with tips about tax evaders. Even your\nbest friend may turn you in if you offend him\ntoo much!\nSome of these tips uncover large sums of\ntax evasions. Tax evaders tend to dig themselves in ever deeper. If they get away with it\none year, or two years, the temptation is\nstrong to continue at it and in increasing\ndegree. When the law finally catches up,\npaying up back taxes, plus interest, plus penalties, can often ruin even a wealthy individual.\nEven if crime paid in the monetary sense\n(and tax cheating is a crime), it is a most\nunsatisfactory way of going through life. Constant worry lest you be caught is a heavy\nprice to pay\u2014and if you are caught the penalty is plenty indeed. Deliberate evaders, of\ncourse, deserve the punishment ,they knowingly risk\u2014Windsor Star.\nYour Individual\nHOROSCOPE\n\u2022By Vrmmtm\u00bb Drak\u00ab<\nNo Change at All\nA grand jury's recommendation, that a\nknowledge of English, sufficient at least to\nunderstand traffic signs and regulations, be\nmade a requirement both for new and existing drivers' licences, fails to recognize \"a\nhard-learned fact of traffic safety. And it is\nthis: Technical skill, whether it be in the\nhandling of a car or the interpretation of the\nlaw, is no substitute for the proper attitude\ntoward other drivers.\nThe highways have killed many motorists\u2014lawyers .among them\u2014who lived long\nenough to attain a high degree of driving\nskill and a full' appreciation of the niceties\nof the English language. Although their\nknowledge failed to save them, common\ncourtesy might have done so. A man can\nyield the right of way to the driver on his\nright at an intersection without knowing that\nthe law says he must.\nApplicants for drivers' licences now must\ntake tests on highway signs and regulations;\nso long au those tests are fairly administered,\na knowledge and understanding of English is\nrequired to pass them. The grand jury therefore would simplv confirm, bv legislation,\nexisting policy without improving the standard of driver tests. It Could more usefully\nhave recommended some of the drastic\nchanges needed in our driver testing program; changes which would produce more\ndnvers .with the prooer attitude and fewer\nvho are technically rl'ht to the noint-of self-\ndestruction.\u2014Toronto Glebe and Mail.\nLook in the section in which your\nbirthday comes, and find what\nyour outlook Is, according to the\nstars,\nFor Friday, October 4, 19S7\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 20 (Aries)\n\u2014Don't quibble about a little extra\nwork, or even a lot of it, if it is\njustly asked, and can do good. You\ncan allocate time for rest, too. Cooperation is the Big theme now.\nAvoid disputes.\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus)-\nThere's no time like the present for\ntaking care of urgent matters.\nHowever, set aside some-moments\nfor quiet reflection and planning.\nPut first things first; others will\nfall in line more swiftly. Don't be\ntoo critical of others.\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini) -\nThe effort and' integrity you put\ninto a project will pay grand dividends later. Be patient about developments, but also double-check to\nsee how they are doing.\nJUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer)-\nThough the day's aspects warn\nagainst drawing hasty conclusions,\ndon't dally too long before acting.\nBe prompt in all matters. And do\nbe tactful !\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leol-\nImpressive and solemn thoughts\nhave their respective and good\nparts to play in life but without\nhumor or tolerance, they could\nmake a day most depressing. Keep\nsmiling !\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER 23\n(Virgo) \u2014 Please note Gemini.\nYour influences similar; Don't\nwaste time but, on the other hand,\ndon't be hasty; it could prove\ncostly.\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER\n23 (Libra) \u2014 Overly long work\nhours can unfit you for the better\nand more consistent accomplishments that come when you maintain an even pace. Engage in\noccasional relaxation and wholesome pastimes.\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER 22\n(Scorpio) \u2014 Details are important\nnow. Listen to the opinions of\nothers but think them over before\nyou act. Use logic and reason to\nsolve difficult problems.\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER\n21 (Sagittarius) \u2014 Differentiate\nbetween the worthwhile and the\nchaff and handle essentials first.\nCorrespondence and legal matters\nunder especially good influences.\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY 20\n(Capricorn) \u2014 Being alone in an\nopinion does not necessarily mean\nyou are wrong, but it does suggest\nconsideration of methods to better\npresent your side, to gain rightful\nlaurels.   Matters   connected   with\nNamed for a Berry\nThe origin of Saskatoon, Saskatchewan,\nand how it came by its name is told by The\nCa!\u00bbary Alb'ertan in connection with the\nmodest observance recently of Saskatoon's\n76th birthday. The Temperance Colonization\nSociety was organized in Eastern Canada, its\nname a,good description of its purpose. On\nJune 22, 1832, it sent a vanguard West to\nlocate a likely snot for settlement. The party\ntravelled by rail via Chicago and Winnipeg\nto the end of steel at Moosomin, then overland. On August 1!) camp was established at\na promising location on the hanks of the\nSouth Saskatchewan River. The next day\nsome native berries were brought to the\nleader. John N. ,Lake. He asked what they\nwere, and was told the natives called them\n\"saskatoons.\" He had found the name of his\nsettlement. \"Arise. Saskatoon, Oueen of the\nNorth.\" he Said. That, day, Sunday, he conducted reiUious services for 10 people.\u2014St.\nThomas Times-Journal.\nThey'll Do It Every Time\nTODAY'S BIBLE\nTHOUGHT\nBe still and know that I am God.\nPsalm 46:10.\nChrist w\u00abs guided by his inner\nvoice. He illustrated a technique\nof fabulous value to humanity.\nfiunt ML\nQ\\tiCHMSlMl)AL\nEVIDENCE-4ND\nTrIE PROSECUTOR\nWILL BE SUMMIMG ~\nUP 4LL WEEK \u2014 \u2022 <@J\njkwti jackffxw\n15.19 RooSpfcLT ME...        -.-.J\nJACK6WHklOHTS.H.-}.  IJ'W*\ngeelogy,   electricity   and   travel\nfavored.\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY 19\n(Aquarius) \u2014 Handle all tasks with\nvigor and the will to make a top\nshowing. Be discriminating in all\nthings. Scientific, artistic and literary matters especially favored.\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\n(Pisces) \u2014 Do not minimize the\nachievements of others. You may\nhave to ferret out your own opportunities right now and work\nhard for gains. But you can do it I\nYOU BORN TODAY have creative talent and great determination; are , influenced by keen-\nminded people. But you may be\nintolerant of others. Cultivate your\ntalents and let your inborn sense\nof justice guide you. Don't go to\nextremes in either work or play.\nBirthdate: Rutherford B. Hayes,\n19th U.S. President.\nKing   Features\nSerious Charge Made\nAgainst Chatco Steel\nFire Damages\nMontreal Stores\nMONTREAL (CP) - A two-\nalarm blaze roared through an\nold downtown building early Wednesday. No one was injured but\nfour business places were badly\ndamaged.\nMore than 120 firemen from two\nstations fought the flames for'almost four hours before controlling\nthem. Falling bricks and a dense\npall of smoke hampered their efforts, and police were called out\nto re-route traffic.\nThe fire is believed to have\nstarted in a rooming house, and\nthen spread to the Corzo Pizzeria,\na B and B fruit market, Lingerie\nDucharme and the Harbor Drug\nStore, all on St. Carherine Street\nEast.\nTILBURY, Ont. (CP)\nternational representative \"of the\nUnited Automobile Workers Union\n(CLC) said at a union meeting\nTuesday night that $24,000 collected by Chatco Steel Products\nLimited, in payroll deductions for\nCanada Savings Bonds were not\nused to buy bonds.\nHarry Ford, the union official,\nsaid he was informed payroll deductions for the whole of last\nyear were placed In the company's\ngeneral fund and used for general\nfactory expenses.\nChatco Steel went into receivership last week.\nMr. Ford said he was asked to\ncheck the situation after local\nunion president Harold. Burton\nreported that $669 in union dues\ncollected in August were missing. He said Edward BCrry, an\nofficial of the Guaranty Trust\nCompany of Canada, acting as\nreceiver said the union dues and\nthe $24,000 in payroll deductions\nwere both missing.\nA short time ago Chatco employees offered $20,000 of their\nown savings to help the company\nAn In- through a financial crisis and to\npreserve their jobs.\nApplied Science\nSeen as Boost\nFor Production\nVICTORIA (CP) - The discoveries of science, applied to Canada's\nindustry] is one way of increasing\nthe national productivity, Raymond faupuis, immediate past-\npresident of 'the Canadian chamber |\nof commerce, said Tuesday.\nMr. Dupuis was addressing a\nluncheon meeting of the 28th annual . convention of the chamber,\nnow in session here,\n\"... The greatest obstacle to the\napplication of scientific discovery\nhas been, in many countries, philosophical and religious prejudices'\nand the mentality of the population,\" Mr. Dupuis said.\nThese prejudices, he said, explain to a large extent \"why half\nof mankind lives today in conditions which were prevalent in\nEurope at the time of the barbaric\ninyasions.\"\nTWEED SPECIAL\nSeveral ends of Wool Tweed in light and darker\nshades. Reg. $3.50 and $3.75 $^ QJT\nSpecial, Yard  i  *\u00bbo <\/\u25a0\/\nWool Faille Type DRESS GOODS\nin black, navy, electric blue. $|   *7Q\n60\" wide. Yard     \u25a0 * ' ^\n624 Baker St.\nPhone 1495\nJane's got her refrigerator full\no' left-overs, but I don't know\nwhether she's thrifty or just savin'\nscraps to keep from washin' dishes\nthey're in.-\nLost In Mystery\nMONTREAL (CP)-The name\nLarry Petrov was. called three\nlimes in court Wednesday. W'h e n\nthere was no response, police\nopinion that he has been liquidated by the underworld gained\ncredence.\nPetrov was to have appeared\nfor the oft-postponed judgment On\na narcotic charge against him.\nBut what brought his name into\nthe headlines some months agb\nwas his mysterious disappearance.\nHe became wanted by police for\nquestioning about an amazing burglary carried out last January\nat a bank in suburban Outremont.\nSafe-deposit boxes were rifled of\ncash and securities estimated as\nhigh as $3,000,000. NT official figure has ever been given.\nDefence counsel Leonce Plante\ntold the. court: \"Not only is\nPetrov not here but it seems almost certain he will never appear\nbefore this court.\"\nSEEKS DECISION\nMr. Plante asked Judge Guy\nGuibault to give a decision on the\ncase, nevertheless, S6 that the\nbondsman \u2014 Petrnv's father \u2014\nwould be freed of his obligations.\nJudge Guibault said that at present he could only issue another\nwarrant for Petrov's arrest and\nsuggested the matter of bail be\nreferred to the superibr court.\nMr. Plante said this would be\nddne in due time and an affidavit\nby a police officer would be presented to show that Petrov could\nbe presumed dead.\nMiracle Cushion\nHolds False Teeth\nTight\nEases\nSore Gumsl\nSnug <\u00a7) braftd\nDcnturt Cu_hi6ni\nart a triumph of\nAciencp, a sensa-\ntionaT new plaitic\nre-lining that g_ti rid i_f the annoyinc*\nand utiUtion of lodae, badly fitting falsa\nteeth. Snug easis tore, irritated turns duo\nto 16648 fitting dentures. Applied in a few\nminute^, makes the w6bblie_t plates stay\nfirmly in place -it gives perfect comfort Eat\nanything \u2014 talk, laugh \u2014 plat*s \"stay put\"\nHarmless to gums Or dentures.\nSnug re-liners can last frf>m _ tn f.\nm6nths. Stays soft and pliable \u2014 does not\nharden artd ruin plate. Peeli right out\nwhen replacement is needed, No daily\nbother with adhesives. Get Snug brand\nDenture Cushion, today! 2 liners for upper or lower plates $1.50. Money bapk if\nnot satisfied. At all drut;_:i..t..\nO. T. FULFORD Co., Ltd., Brockville, fini.\nYour\nNewspaperboy\nSERVES YOU\nand\nYOUR\nCOMMUNITY\nEvery Day in the Week\nThroughout the Year\nYOUR\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\nIs Delivered by Your Carrier Boy or\nGirl Regardless of Weather Conditions\nAs this is National Newspaper Boy Week we\nask thatjyou join with us in giving these fine\nyoungsters a g I a d hand in appreciation of\ntheir excellent service.\nTHE NELSON\nDAILY NEWS\n\\\n ^\u00b0\u00b0l\nCELEBRANTS Wednesday of their golden wedding anniversary were Mr. and\nMrs. W. J. Hipperson. They are pictured above with their two daughters, Mrs. J. P.\nHorswill of Nelson, left, and Mrs. R. D. Welch of Vancouver. (See story below.)\n\u2014Daily News photo.\nDeer Park\nDEER PARK \u2014 Mr. and Mrs.\nH. A. Ritchie of West Vancouver\nspent a few days in Deer Park on\na hunting and camping trip.\nMr. and Mrs. R. Jamieson of\nRainier, Ore., were the recent\nguests of their grandparents, Mr.\nand Mrs. D. D. Jamieson.\nMr. and Mrs. R. A. Hamblin and\ndaughter Lynne returned to their\nhome at Prince George after\nspending the past week with the\nformer's father, F. C. Hamblin.\nMr. and Mrs. P. Reimer of Newton, B.C.,. and C. Reimer of Vancouver and Alert Bay, were\nvisitors to Deer Park, en route to\nRenata where they will spend a\nholiday with relatives.\nMr. and Mrs. C. Williamson returned to their home here after\nspending a holiday at Nakusp, with\nthe latter's brother and sister-in-\nlaw, Mr. and Mrs. J. Reimer. On\ntheir return they visited\" friends\nat Kelowna.\nHipper sons Mark\nQolden Wedding\nA pioneer Nelson couple, Mr.\nand Mrs. William J. Hipperson,\nWednesday celebrated their golden\nwedding anniversary.\nThey received a large number\nof cards and flowers on the occasion and were at home to friends\nat a reception Wednesday evening\nat the Legion Hall. About 400 attended.\nA cake with golden yellow rosebuds and a \"50\" in the centre was\nencircled with a gold net ribbon\nand flanked by golden tapers and\ncarnation bouquets.\nPouring were Mrs. H. M. Whim-\nster, Mrs. C. G. Calibeck, Mrs.\nJohn McPhail, Mrs. F. M. Walker,\nMrs. D. T. Heddle and Mrs. R. H.\nDill. Ladies' Auxiliary to the Legion served. Mrs. James Bereau,\nMrs. Lawrence Ott and Mrs. L.\nfaiWttuoto '\nWM^wAj\nYou'll he happy\nas a lark winging\nyour way across\ntown in our gay\ncoats for stormy\nor sunny weather.\nPRICED  FROM\n$29.95 to $39.95\nGray assisted Mrs. Hipperson.\nAssisting servers were Mike\nWolfhard, Richard Bonderud and\nMichael Horswill, James Turner\nand Martin Horswill looked after\nthe golden guest book.\nMARRIED IN NELSON\nThe Hippersons were married in\nNelson on October 2, 1907 by Rev.\n(later Dr.) Newton Powell, a\nMethodist minister.\nMr. Hipperson was born in\nHastings, Ontario, and came to\nNelson in 1894 with his parents\nand family. He worked for Ash-\ndown Hardware and for Nelson\nHardware before going into business for himself in 1923 in partnership with S. A. Williams and H.\nM. Vincent. Later he bought them\nout and Mrs. Hipperson became a\npartner in the business.\nThe former Rebecca Boyes, Mrs.\nHipperson .was born in Kilmarnock, Scotland, and came to Nelson in 1906. Before coming to Nelson she worked on The Portage la\nPrairie Daily Graphio and The\nMinnedosa Mercury in Manitoba,\nand worked for the B.C. Telephone\nCompany in Nelson before her\nmarriage.\nMr. and Mrs. Hipperson have\ntwo daughters, Mrs. R: D. Welch\n(Dorothy) of Vancouver and Mrs.\nJ. P. Horswill (Margaret) of Nelson. They have six grandchildren.\nHe has a brother, Charles, in Spokane, and a sister, Miss Jessie\nHipperson, in Vancouver. George\nand Ed Boyes of Nelson are brothers of JMrs. Hipperson and Mrs.\nV. Nelson of Kinnaird is her sister.\nIn semi \u25a0 retirement now, Mr.\nHipperson is president of Hipper1\nson Hardware, and Mrs. Hipperson is vice-president. He is a member of the Rotary Club and she of\nKokanee Chapter, IODE. Both\nattend First Baptist Church. Previously they were active in curling circles, Mrs. Hipperson being\nhonorary president of the Women's\nCurling Club. They are ardent\nhockey fans and support musical\nactivities.\nBalfour Notes\nNew residents to the district who\nhave moved into the F. Hansen\nHome, are Mr. and Mrs. R. Gleam\nof Qualicum Beach, Vancouver\nisland. Mrs. Gleam is a professional violinist who played\nunder the name of Elfreda Sewell\nfor the Vancouver and Victoria\nSymphony. Mrs. Gleam was also\nactive in radio and TV for CBC,\nVancouver.\nAbout the Town\nPHONE 1007-L OR  1844\nBy Dorothy Mcintosh\nGuests of Mr. and Mrs. W. A.\nWeatherhead, 812 Fourth Street,\nare Mr. Weatherhead's brother and\nsister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Brock\nWeatherhead of Calgary.\n*   .   *\nMr. and Mrs. Telford Oliver of\nVancouver,  who visited Mr.  and\nEmpty Pockets\nBegan HerCareer\nIn Photography\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Miss Margaret Bourke-White says empty\npockets started her, on her way\nto fame as a photographer.\n\"I had to do something and I\ndidn't want to wait on tables, so\nI turned to the camera to pay\nfor my education,\" she said here\nen route to her home in New\nYork.\nFrom the air she has been photographing for an American magazine the Rocky Mountain trench\nin northern British Columbia\nwhich extends from Lake McLeod\nto Lower Post on the British Columbia-Yukon border.\nWenner - Gren Development\nCompany is surveying the area in\npreparing to build a mono-rail line.\n\"Beautiful country,\" said Miss\nBourke-White.\nHer work has taken her all over\nthe world. The assignment which\ngave her most satisfaction was\nphotographing Joseph Stalin in\nRussia in the early days of the\nGerman invasion.\nShe got the picture by treating\nStalin as she would treat anyone\nelse. \"He even laughed when he\nwatched me crawl around my\ncameras,\" she said.\nShe plans to keep on travelling\nand working, \"and I've been promised the first assignment in a\nrocket ship to the moon.\"\nPTA Install.\nNew Officers\nINVERMERE \u2014 Installation of\nnew officers was the first business\nof the Windermere District Parent-Teacher Association after the\nSeptember meeting called members together following the summer recess.\nThe installation ceremony was\nconducted by Miss Alice Curtis,\nprincipal of the David Thompson\nHigh School and honorary president. Honorary vice-president is\nDonald Campbell, principal of the\nInvermere elementary school.\nPresident is Mrs. E. A. Wilder,\nvice-president Mrs. E. C. Peat-\nfield' of Radium, secretary Mrs.\nFilmer Coy and treasurer E. C.\nPeatfield. Executive members are\nthe chairmen of the following\ncommittees: Mrs. G. A. Duthie,\nprogram; S. Uchida, membership;\nMrs. Norman Todd, magazines;\nMrs. John Ladyka, social arrangements; Mrs. Newcomen and Mrs.\nHaman, hot lunch conveners; Mrs.\nHorvath, calendars, and Mrs. T.\nN. Weir, publicity and historian.\nMrs. Alfred Davidson, retiring\npresident, was awarded her past\npresident's pin. The presentation\nwas made by Mr. Peatfield, a\ncharter member.\nMrs. Duthie, spoke briefly on the\nbenefits of a fluoridation program\nin protecting the teeth of children.\nShe said that Dr. Gibson of the\nEast Kootenay Health Unit is to\naddress the Windermere District\nBoard of Trade on the subject in\nNovember and urged all parents\nand interested residents to attend.\nThe meeting passed a resolution\nthat the Board of Trade and the\nVillage Commission of Invermere\nbe informed that the PTA will be\ninterested in any plans for fluoridation in this district.\nMrs. R. L. Oliver, 311 Elwyn St.,\nand Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Stallwood,\n703 Silica Street, have returned to\ntheir home at the coast.\n.   *   .\nG. W. Vennels and W. Cowling of\nVancouver have been renewing\naquaintances in mining circles\naround Nelson.\n*   .   *\nMrs. George Hay, who was visiting Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Oliver has\nreturned to her home in Vancouver.\nw     * '   .\nMr. and Mrs. H. E. Doelle, 507\nFourth Street, have returned from\nCouer d'Alene, where they visited\ntheir son-in-law and daughter, Mr.\nand Mrs. James Lunch who became the parents of a baby boy on\nMonday.\nJ. C. Chambers, Victoria Street,\nspent the weekend in Trail. Mrs.\nChambers, who has spent the past\nmonth visiting her son-in-law and\ndaughter, Mr. and Mrs. Dal Makay\nin Trail, accompanied him on his\nreturn.\n(armelo-Marchi\nWedding Vows\nSpoken at Natal\nNATAL - St. Michael's Church\nat Natal, was the scene of the recent wedding of Norma Marchi,\nyoungest daughter of Mrs. Pete\nMarchi and the late Mr. Marchi of\nNatal, and Nick Carmelo, son of\nMr. and Mrs. John Carmelo of\nCalgary. Rev. Father L. Trainor\nofficiated.\nThe bride, given in marriage by\nher oldest brother Ray, chose\ngown of nylon net with matching\nbolero of cotton and silk with simulated pearls and cup sequins. Her\nonly jewelry was a pearl necklace\nand earrings, a gift of the groom,\nand she carried a bouquet of red\nroses and white carnations.\nMiss Gorgina Misura of Coleman\nwas first bridesmaid, and Miss\nDolores Mussic of Spokane was\nsecond bridesmaid. Both were pink\nsemiformals with matching head\npieces and carried colonial bouquets of pink and white carnations\nand red roses.\nMr. Victor John Krovski of\nCrowsnest, was best man and Mr.\nAlfonso Bertoria of Cranbrook was\nthe usher.\nSt. Michael's choir under the\ndirection of the Sisters of the Aton\nement assisted during the wedding\nceremony.\nThe reception was held in the\nIOOF hall with relatives and\nfriends present.\nThe honeymoon was spent at\npoints in Calgary, Banff, Lake\nLouise, Nelson and Salmo.\nOut-of-town guests attending the\nwedding were Mr. and Mrs. George\nMisura and Mr. and Mrs. Robert\nSalant of Coleman; Mrs. Johanna\nCarmelo, Mr. John Carmelo of Calgary; Mr. Fred Marchi and Mrs.\nZ. Leschuitta of Cranbrook and\nMiss Jessie McDonald of Lumby.\ni Pf M\nirsii\nw a niaittii atiADim\nYOU CAN BUY Y0UK BONOS-fir cash or by insfahents-\nat your neig\/ifco.r\/ioorf B of M branch\nj   Bank or Montreal\nWORKIH. WITH CANADIANS III EVERY WALK OF LIFE SINCE 1817\nw DOWN PAYMENT OF 5%\n- S2S-\u00b0FORAS50 B0ND,S5 FORA'lOO BOND,etc.\nBALANCE IN EASY INSTALMENTS OVER A YEAR\nBRANCHES in NELSON and DISTRICT to serve you\nNelson Branch\nNew Denver Branch i\nCastlegar Branch:\nKaslo Branch:\nRiondel (Sub-Agency) i\nRossland Branch:\nTrail Branch:\nFruitvale (Sub-Agency) t\nKimberley Branch:\nMarysville (Sub-Agency):\nWILLIAM FORSYTH, Manager\nT. KENNETH SMITH, Manager\nCYRIL T. ONIONS, Manager\nERNEST BOOTH, Manager\nOpen Tuesday and Thursday\nGORDON T. GERMAN, Manager\nGORDON CAMPBELL, Manager\nOpen Tuesday and Friday\nRICHARD SPINKS, Manager\nOpen every Thursday\n3.00 p.m. and on Consolidated Mining & Smelting Co. Ltd.\nsemi-monthly paydays 11.00 a.m. - 5.00 p.m.\nRiondel Notes\nRIONDEL - Mrs. J. E. Jolie is\nvisiting her sister, Mrs. Mae Hall,\nin Aubon, Wash.\nMr. and Mrs. Jack McKinley\nhave returned from their holiday\nspent motoring in the United States\nand B.C.\nCyril Jolie has returned from\nKimberley where he was employed\nduring the spring and summer.\nFriends bid farewell to Miss Pat\nBeecher, industrial and first aid\nnurse at Riondel, at two farewell\nparties held at the homes of Mrs.\nJack Morris and Mrs. Stacey.\nMiss Beecher has gone to Vancouver.\nDavid Wills, winner of the Union\nbursary, has now enrolled at Notre\nDame College in Nelson.\nMrs. John MacDonald visited her\nsister-in-law, Mrs. Harley Taylor.\non a recent trip to Vancouver.\nKinettes Meet\nPensioner\nMembers of the Kinette club\nmet Tuesday evening at the home\nof Mrs. Helmuth Mayrhofer, 208\nMorgan Street. Co-hostesses for the\nmeeting were Mrs. M. B. Ryalls\nand Mrs. Beto Sutherland. Prizes\nwere won by Mrs. Ian Brown and\nMrs. Gordon French.\nFAST RiUSJF FOR\nTIRED\nFEET\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, OCT. 3, 1957 \u2014 5\nNew Home Nursing\nClasses To Be Started\nTwo separate courses will be\ngiven soon under sponsorship of\nNelson chapter, Registered Nurses' Association of B.C., which\nhas given a considerable amount\nof instruction in these fields in\npast winter seasons.\nInformation on the coming\nevents was conveyed to member\nnurses at their meeting Tuesday\n-night, first since the summer recess.\nHome nursing classes will again\nbe held, with Miss Jean Hood in\ncharge. A series of lectures on\nchild care will be delivered to 'Girl\nGuides, Mrs. H. Bentham conducting this series. Both will start\nshortly.\nThe loan cupboard branch of the\nchapter's work was busy during\nthe summer, Miss Flora McLean\nreported. She also told of activities in civil defence and of the\nRed Cross workshop.\nTRIP TO ROME\nTheir meeting has been postponed,\ntherefore, to the second Tuesday of\nthat month.\nDiscussions\nPlanned by PTA\nAn unusual experiment In Parent-Teacher Association meetings\nwill be made when members of the\nJunior-Senior High Schools Parent-\nTeacher Association gather at the\nL. V. Rogers High School next\nweek.\nInstead of the usual \"meet the\nteachers\" theme applied in other\nyears, round-table discussions with\nhome room teachers in their classrooms will take place.\nMembers of the executive who\nmet at the home of Mr. and Mrs.\nW. Arne Laine Tuesday night\nI decided that by using the dismiss McLeanlater gave a talk \u2122f\u00b0n p'f'. Pa\u2122ts will,be *ble\nand showed slides on her trip to\nI to know their children's teachers\nEurope to attend the International! b?\"er and know \"hat( Is f^M,\nCongress of Nurses in Rome in\nJune.\nPreliminary discussions took\nplace on the type of project the\nnurses would undertake for the\nnew hospital in the way of furnishings or equipment. This will be\nfurther discussed.\nInstead of meeting November 5,\nthe nurses will attend a lecture by\nDr.   Laycock  on  mental  health.\nof them as parents of high school\nstudents. Special plans were made\nfor parents of Junior-High School\nstudents to acquaint them with the\nhigh school.\nBecause of the large number of\nteachers instructing night classes:\nit was decided to change meeting\nnights to the second Thursday of\neach month. Plans for the annual\ncarnival early in November were\ndiscussed,\nKootenay Lake Brownies Go\nTo First Rally at Riondel\nRIONDEL \u2014 A precedent was\nestablished when Brownies representing each pack in the Kootenay\nLake District of the West Kootenay\nDivision met at Riondel.\nTwelve excited girls from Willow Point with their Brown Owl,\nMrs. John Learmonth, crossed on\nthe Kootenay Lake ferry and joined a similar contingent from Crawford Bay led by Brown Owl Mrs.\nGwen Highton and Tawny Owl Mrs.\nAnnabel Foster to converge on\nRiondel. They were greeted at the\nRecreation hall by the sixers of\nthe Riondel pack who were assisted\nby Mrs. Irene Jensen, District\nCommissioner, Brown Owl Mrs.\nJean Shannon, and Tawny Owl\nMrs. Rita Holmes in welcoming\nthe guests.\nA get-acquainted game started\nthe fun, then the 54 Brownies with\ntheir leaders formed a huge circle.\nAfter grace was sung in unison,\nWYNNDEL\u2014W. Popovich, Jr., is\nhome for a few weeks vacation\nfrom his place of business in Calgary.\nMrs. G. Lowery, Sr., has returned to her home in Calgary after\nvisiting her son and family and renewing acquaintances with other\nfriends and relatives in the district.\nSbmtuL UJhssd&k,\nlunch was served by Leanne Collins, Penny Fiedler and Margaret\nMorris, the sixers of the Riondel\npack.\nThe hall then rang with shouts\nand squeals as the joy of joining\nin. competitive games with their\nfriends took hold of all the Brownies. The games were followed by\na walk to North Bay where the\nvisitors were shown some of the\nbeauty spots.\nMrs. Learmonth thanked the\nRiondel Brownies and their leaders\nand the Willow Point contingent\ngave the Grand Howl. Mrs. Highton\nexpressed the thanks of the Crawford Bay pack and led the Brownies in three cheers for their hostesses.\n. A small memento of the occasion\nwas presented to each visitor before she left for her home.\nIs Baby getting heavy to carry?\nWhat you need, mother, Is a\nnew\nLLOYD   STROLLER    '\nfrom FREEMAN'S,\nThe sleeper model has 3-posllton\nback rest plus adjustable foot-\nrest to give baby top comfort\nat all  tlmesl See them  now at\nJ>AMMOtlL\nVISITOR SHOWS\nFILMS ON  U.K.\nMembers and friends of St. Andrew's Anglican Church at Willow I\nPoint were entertained by Frank I\nSedman of Liverpool, who showed\ncolor movies of his trip last year\naround Great Britain, the Continent, and also the Queen's corona-1\ntion.\nMr.   and   Mrs.   Sedman  have 1\nspent the summer visiting their son |\nBernard and his family at Six-Mile,\nand left Wednesday to visit friends I\nand other relatives in Langley and.\nVancouver    before   returning   to\nLiverpool to where Mr. Sedman |\nwill resume his duties as immigration officer and lecturer for the |\nCanadian government.\nNo motter how often those precious\nbaby's woollens are washed with\ngentle ZERO Cold Water Soap,\nthey'll always remain soft and\nbright as now, never shrink or mot.\nZERO softens wotor too! 59c package does 50 washings, 98c package\nover 100. At your local drug,\ngrocery and wool shops. For FREE\nsample write Dept. D, ZERO Soap,\nVictoria, B.C.\nZERO\nCOLD WATER SOAP\n57-55.\nyoufcxatf-M\nIRENE'S\n569 Ward St.\nNever before have\nwe seen such a bri_i\nliant season for hats.\nYou'll not only be\nwearing them more\noften, but they're so\nvery beautiful you'll\nfeel like an exciting\nnew personality! \u2014\nLook for softer,\nwider, deeper brims,\ndeftly shaped in a\nfull harvest of colors.\nWe are looking forward to showing\nthem to you. How\nabout today!\nMILLINERY AND\nDRESS SHOP\nPhone 50\n'JAMA DOLL      -\nJust a pair of man's socks \u2014\na. few scraps of fabric, makes\nthese'cutest 'jama dolls! Boys\nand girls\u2014all children love them.\nPattern 736: pattern for 12-\ninch dolls and pajamas; pattern\nof faces. Dolls made of man's\nSize 12 socks and scraps.\nSend THIRTY-FIVE CENTS in\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted!\nfor this pattern to Laura Wheeler,\nNDN, 60 Front St., W., Toronto,\nOnt. Print plainly PATTERN\nNUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS.\nOur gift to you\u2014two wonderful\npatterns for yourself, your home\n\u2014 printed in our Laura Wheeler\nNeedlecraft Book, plus dozens of\nother new designs to order \u2014\ncrochet, knitting, embroidery, iron-\nons, novelties. Send 25 cents ,for\nyour copy of this book NOW \u2014\nwith gift pattern printed in it.\nSOFT FLUID VARIATIONS\n(faclfcwS\nDresses (or Fall\nHere's your invitation to see\nour NEW Fall classics with soft\nlines that create an atmosphere       V|*>\nof casual elegance around you.\nPainstakingly tailored by well known\nmakers:- \"ALJEAN, \"JONATHAN\nLOGAN\" and \"TEENA PAIGE\" in\n100% wool worsteds, jerseys, and\ncrepes in a jewel box of colors.\nfall' dresses\nPriced From\n$16.95 and Up\nDon't Miss \"Fashions From Dee's\" at the\n.KIWANIS FALL FASHION SHOW\nSATURDAY, OCT. 5TH, AT THE\nCATHOLIC HALL\n(D&&A,  Ladies' Apparel\n\"THE FASHION CENTRE\"\n535  BAKER  ST. PHONE  775\n 6 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, OCT. 3, 1957\nA-For-Peace\nTo Seal All\nUN Members\n. VIENNA (Reuters) - The first\nworking session of the atoms-for-\npeace conference Wednesday decided to seat all members of the\nUnited Nations and its agencies.\nIt voted 39 to 0 with seven abstentions in favor of n Canadian\nproposal after voting down a\nCzech plan to allow all non-member states to send observers to\nthe conference.\nThis motion, which would have\nenabled Communist China to send\nobservers, was defeated 35 to 13\nwith one abstention.\nSoviet delegate V. S. Emelya-\nftov quoted from a Russian novel\nto back up his argument that\nCommunist China and any other\nstate not. represented at the\nUnited Nations should be allowed\nto send observers.\nCanadian delegate H. Wershof\nretorted that this would permit\nany regime calling Itself a state\nto send observers.\nThe statute,, establishing the\nInternational Atomic Energy\nAgency, was agreed to by 82 nations at a UN meeting last October. It specified that nations\nwhich had signed but not ratified\nthe statute should send observers.\nLaborile Hears\nMalenkov Rumor\nLONDON (Reuters)-A British\nLabor member of Parliament reported Wednesday he had heard\nrumors that Georgl Malenkov has\nbeen arrested and taken.to Moscow.\nLabor MP Desmond Donnelly\nreported the rumors from Pel\nping where he Is on a visit.\nAfter his dismissal as a first\ndeputy premier, Malenkov was\nappointed to manage a power\nstatic.n In the remote \"virgin\n'anis\" republic of Kazakhstan.\nDonnelly visited the republic last\nweek.\nMalenkov's rumored arrest co-\ninc'ded with another attack by\nt h e official Communist party\nnewspaper Pravda on the \"anti-\nparty group of Malenkov. Kaga-\nnovicl,, Molotov and Shepllov.\"\nVyac.heslav Molotov, Malenkov,\nLa.ar Kaganoyich and Dmitri\nShepilov were ousted from the\nruling Soviet praesidium July 4\nIn one of the biggest Kremlin\nreshuffles since the death of\nStalin,\nWIDE.EYED, Maureen Lyons,\n11, clutches $970 In New York\nafter the police property clerk\nturned the cash over to her.\nMaureen found the bills In a\ntrash can three months ago, but\nhad to wait the required 90 days\nto tee If anyone would put In n\nclaim. Now the sixth - grader\nplans to buy sonte clothes, contribute to chnrlty and bank the\nrest for her education,\nPrince Charles\nCatches 'Flu\nLONDON (AP) - Buckingham\npalace sources said Wednesday\nthat Prince Charles,' eight-year-old\nheir to the throne, has caught Influenza at his new boarding\nschool.\nCourt officials said the young\nprince and four other boys have\nbeen taken 111 at Cheam School,\n40 miles southwest of London.\nIt was not immediately known\nwhat type of Influenza the boys\nare suffering from. An epidemic\nof Asian.flu has cut school'attendances by half in some parts\nof north and midland England.\nThe disease is spreading south,\nNews of the young prince's\nillness was Immediately sent to\nhis parents who are on holiday\nat Balmoral Castle, Scotland.\nThis Is only Prince Charles'\nsecond week at the school. It is\nthe first time that an heir to the\nthrone has gone to boarding\nschool at such an early age.\nThe prince will remain at the\nschool and is being attended by\nthe school doctor, court officials\nsaid.\nSoble Asks\nFor Mercy\nNEW YORK (API-Confessed\nspy Jack Soble said Tuesday he\ndeeply regrets the crimes he\ncommitted against the United\nStates. He asked for ni^rcy from\nthe country he scheme, to betray.\nThe 55-year-old former head of\na Soviet Intelligence ring In the\nUnited States told federal judge\nRichard H. Levet:\n\"I cannot forgive myself. I had\nplenty of opportunity to\nstraighten out my life since I\ncame to this country and I didn't\ndo It.\"\nSoble appeared for sentencing.\nHe had pleaded guilty to cortsplf-\nIng tb obtain national defence\nsecrets, knowing the Information\nwould be transmitted to the Soviet Union.\nLevet said he would impose\nsentence next Tuesday. He also\nwill rule on motions to red.ee\nthe 5'A-year sentences he Imposed\nAug, 9 on Soble's wife Myra, 53.\nand Jacob Albam, 64.\nMrs. Soble and Albam pleaded\nguilty to the same charge as did\nSoble. The Sobles lived for a\ntime In Montreal.\nSoble could get a maximum sentence of 10 years In prison and a\n$10,000 fine.\nHolyoake Fills\nNew Cabinet\nWELLINGTON, N.Z. (Reuters)\nPrime Minister Holyake Wednesday completed his cabinet reshuffle\n' with the appointment of Attorney-\nGeneral John Marshall as deputy\nprime minister and of Finance\nMinister Jack Watts as the third-\nranking government member.\nHolyoake, who succeeded ailing\nSir Sidney Holland last month,\nnow Is ready with a complete government lineup for the Nov. 30\ngeneral elections.\nDIVIDENDS\nBy The Canadian Press\nAmerican Nepheline Ltd. two\ncents Nov. 8, record Oct. 15.\nDominion Oilcloth and Lino Co.\nLtd. 40 cents, plus year end 50\ncents Oct. 31. record Oct. 11.\nEasy Washing Machine Co.,\nLtd. five cents, plus five cents extra Oct. 1, record Oct. 11.\nFord Motor Co. of Canada Ltd,\nclass A and B $1.25 Dec. 16, record\nNov. 1.\nYear's Probation\nFor Contributing\n.ohn Paul Ross of Nelson was\nplaced on 12 months' probation\nTuesday by Juvenile Court Judge\nWilliam Evans for contributing to\nthe delinquency of a young girl in\nAugust. Ross pleaded guilty August 2, and the case was adjourned\n60 days.\nTrade Deficit\nAt Record High\nOTTAWA (CP)-Canada's foreign trade deficit at the end of\nJune was $574,100,000, a record\nhigh for the first six months of\nany year, the bureau of statistics\nreported Wednesday.\nDuring the January-June period. Canadians imported $2,904.-\n600,000 worth of goods from all\ncountries and exported goods valued at $2,330,300,000.\nIn June alone, the cumulative\nIrade deficit was boosted by $59,-\nD00.0OO, as Imports totalled $454,-\n000,000 and exports $394,100,000.\nFigures for the six-month period showed a favorable surplus\nof $80,800,000 In trade with'the\nUnited Kingdom, but a whopping\ndeficit of $747,900,000 In trade\nwith the United States. Favorable\nsurpluses In trade with other\ncountries helped reduce the effect of the trade deficit with the\nU.S.\nThe six-month deficit of $574,-\n100,000 compared with a deficit\nof $541,300,000 at the end of the\nsame period last year, and a deficit of $842,300,000 for all of 1956.\nHowever, a slight trading improvement was seen in the fact\nthat Ihe June deficit of $59,900.-\n000 was just over half that of\nlast May\u2014$108,700,000.\nbrighten\nmeals {buffet meals) \u25a0\nwith\nM?Gaviris\nbread\ngood eating begins with Msaavin's\nOn Free Trade\nLONDON (CP) - The -Mai-\nChester Guardian says it \u25a0 -seems\nalmost certain that Britain's o!\nfers of an Anglo-Canadian free\ntrade area Is \"stillborn.\"\nThP independent Liberal pap^r\nsays that even If Britain offers an\ncasing of dollar quotas, and promises to take more Canadian wne.',\nIhe \"basis offer will reoialn onesided and politically unacceptable.\" It adds:\n\"Stout - hearted fighter though\nMr. Diefenbaker Is, even he wi'l\nsurely quail at the thought of estranging Industrial Ontario, from\nwhich he draws much 'of his\nsupport.\"\nThe paper reviews the political\nsituation in Canada, and stresses\nthe possible dangers for the Diefenbaker government. In any new\nelection the Anglo-Canadian trade\nIssue might be a lively one. In\nQuebec, where the textile industry was violently opposed to a relaxation of Import duties, sentiment would probably remain anti-\nConservative, and \"Ontario might\ndesert Mr. Diefenbaker as suddenly as It rallied to him.\"\nArrest Father\nIn Slaying Case\nKINGSTON, Ont. (CP) - Bernard Ambrose Hess. 56, Industrial\nworker from nearby Barriefleld,\nhas been charged with murder in\nconnection with the axe-slaying\nTuesday of his wife Edith' Jean.\nHess was remanded until Oct.\n8.\nProvincial police said they ar-\nrestedx-Hess in his home early\nTuesday shortly after being called\nby a neighbor. They said walls;\nfurnishings and bedclothes were\nsplattered with blood. A bloody\naxe was in the kitchen.\nA eon, William, 19, was taken\nto hospital in critical condition.\nTwo other Hess children were\ntaken to hospital with minor injuries. They are Barbara, 14, suffering from cuts and concussion\nand Patricia, 8, suffering from\ncuts,\nPolice said they thought William was likely attacked first and\nthat Mrs. Hess was attacked when\nshe came to his aid. William was\nbeaten unconscious.\nCCC Hears Plea For Joint\nU.S.-Canada Hydro Power\nVICTORIA (CP)-Jolnt development of hydro power and flood\ncontrol schemes of intcrnatinna1\nrivers, especially the Columbia,\nby Canada ahd the United States\nwas urged Mbndtiy by Phllln M.\nTalbott, president of the U. S.\nChamber of Commerce.\nHe suggested to the Canadian\nChamber's annual convention\nthat the two groups promnle a\nstudy of hydro-electric power potentials of the Yukon River basin\nin Canada and Alaska, Such economic co-operation 'Would open\nup \"vast opportunities\" for advance in living standards and\ndevelop closer ties between the\nbusiness communities of Canada\nand the United States.\nHis remarks were contained In\nthe text Of an address released\nto the press before delivery. '\nSTUDY  DISAGREEMENTS\nMr. Talbott said various disagreements between t h e two\ncountries on Columbia River development projects are under\nstudy by engineering groups. A\nfinal report will be In the hands\nof the International Joint Commission by October next year.\nThe report would contain detailed plans for Joint development\nof hydro-power, flood control, reclamation, public water supply\nand recreation projects.\n.\"It Is to my thinking that great\nbenefits would ensue to both\ncountries If our two governments\nshould work out an agreement\nfor an Integrated development\"\nof the Columbia River and Its\ntributaries.\nTurning to the Yukon River.\nMr. Talbott recalled proposals to\ndivert some of the river's headwaters to the Pacific coast in\nAlaska In order to create hydro\npower. However, no joint study\nhas been made.\n\"I am wondering,\" he said, \"if\nour two great federations of businessmen should not propose to\nour separate governments that\nthey undertake a joint study at\nthe earliest possible date.\n\"Even to a layman such as\nmyself, It would appeaf that the\npossibilities are worth exploration, and the Investment would be\ntrivial In light of the potential\nbenefits to both of our countries.\"\nCNR Expects\n'57 Deficit\nOTTAWA (CP) - R. D. Armstrong, vice-president of accounting and finance for the CNR,\nWednesday forecast that the government-owned railway may have\na deficit On its 1957 operations.\nHe told the board of transport\ncommissioners, during hearing of\na railway application for a 10-\nper-cent freight rate Increase,\nthat his forecast Is based on actual results of CNR operations In\nthe first eight months of 1957.\nand estimated results for the balance of the year.\nMr. Armstrong said the results Indicate that \"our previous\nforecast for the last part of the\nyear was unduly optimistic and\nthat the Canadian lines' net rail\nIncome before fixed charges will\nbe In the order of $25,400,000\nrather than $35,300,000.\"\nHe said that last year the CNR\nwas able to pay a dividend of\n$26,100,000 on its preferred stock.\n\"The present indication Is that\nIn 1957 we will have difficulty\nIn meeting our fixed charges,\"\nhe 'said.\nThe CNR in 1955 had a surplus\nof $10,700,000 after   a   deficit   of:\n$28,800,000 In 1954. I\nSeas Wag\u00a9 Increase For Federal\nCivil Servants as Wise Action\nVICTORIA (CP) - The wages\nof federal civil servants should\nbe raised substantially, the Canadian Chamber of Commerce\nwas told Wednesday.\nJ. Harvey Perry of Toronto,\ndirector of the Canadian Tax\nFoundation, made the suggestion\nIn a speech at the annual convention here.\nCopies of the speech were\nmade available to the press In\nadvance of delivery.\nMr. Perry, who w6s commenting on possible ways to Improve\nthe federal government's Internal\nmanagement, SSld he thought \"an\nIntelligent suggestion of the\npresent time would be that\nthe salaries'of the Benlor civil\nservants be drastically in-\nerased.\"\n\"Few businessmen would, attempt to hire senior executives\n(or even twice the salaries paid\nto deputy ministers in Ottawa.\"\nOUTSIDE CRITICISM\nMr. Perry also said there was\nneed for \"more intelligent com-\nWent and Criticism from the outside.\"\n\"General and vague allegations\nare worth far less than specific\nsuggestions as to where money\ncan be saved. If waste Is self-\nevident, these should not be very\ndifficult to make. . . .\"\nMr. Perry told the 700 delegates\nattending a morning panel:\n\"The costs of a large peacetime defence establishment are\nhigh in every way. Pay and allowances must be on a basis sufficiently competitive with Industry to attract able men.\n\"POOR VALUE\"\n\"Men In their active years\nmust be permitted to marry and\nlive as ndrhial lives as pbsslble.\nTo permit this, married quarters,\nmust be provided. Rapid technical developments In weapons and\nequipment make armament and\nmachinery costly to produce and\nthe short runs give none of the\neconomies of mass assembly.\n\"All these are fabtors which\nmean that we get poor value for\nour defence dollar.\" ,\nHe said defence spending repre^\nsents about brte-quarter of the tola! o-.lays of all governments In\nCanada.\n\"it Is confusing because It is\nvery likely that no one\u2014not even\nthe wisest of the military experts\n\u2014knows for sure whether it\nshould be reduced or Increased.\"\nRAPS TIGHT MONEY\nPremier Bennett of British Columbia In an address to the convention Tuesday night said the\n\"disastrous tight money policy\"\nIntroduced a year and a half ago\nhas produced \"very serious repercussions on the economy of Canada.\"\n\"There are some short-sighted\nCanadians who are prone to\nboast about the Increasing value\nof the Canadian dollar over that\nof the United States. <\n\"I say 'short-sighted' because\nIt does nothing but harm to our\nexport-based economy] Our premium on the Canadian dollar Is,\nIn Itself, a discriminatory tarriff\nagainst our foreign trade.\"\nBENNETT GIVES\nGAVEL TO CCC\nVICTORIA (CP)-A gavel made\nfrom the wood used In British Co-]\nlumbia's first Legislative building\nwas presented Tuesday to Raymond Dupuis of Montreal, Immediate past-president of the Canadian\nChamber of Commerce,\nThe gavel, made Jjy the British\nColumbia government department\nof works was presented by Premier Bennett. The first legislative\nbuilding, built In 1800, burned\ndown in March this year.\nADDED HONOR\nLONDON (CP) - Sir Winston\nChurchill will receive the freedom\nof Margate, Kent, at his London\nhome in November.\nFalter Payrolls\nBoost Industry\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Larger working forces and latter payrolls\nboosted Canada's industrial employment and payrolls Indexes to\nrecord highs Aug. 1, the bureau\nof statistics reported Wednesday.\nThe Industrial employment index, computed on the basis of\n1949 figures equalling 100, rose to\n127.5 at Aug. 1, from 128.6 July 1\nand from 125.4 a year earlier.\nAll provinces except Quebec\nand Ontario reported larger\nworking forces in August than in\nJuly. A slackening of manufacturing, logging ,and trade accounted\nfor the Quebec decline, Employment in Ontario remained unchanged \u2014 small losses In manufacturing and trade were balanced\nby gains In construction and other\ngroups.\nThe payrolls Index rose In Aug- .\nust to 203.7 from 202.1 a month\nearlier and from 189.9 a year\nearlier. Average weekly wages\nand salaries Increased to $68.38\nfrom $68.30 a month earlier and\n$64.77 a year ago.\nWe've discovered a hot sundae treat! just make a\nMonarch Sponge Pudding ... it makes its own luscious\nhot sauce while baking. Add a generous topping of\nwhipped cream ... lots, to please the moppets! Pile on\na cherry or two and it's the most tempting, extra-special\ndessert you've ever set before your family! There are\ntwo kinds of Monarch self-saucing puddings\u2014sponge and\nfruit, three flavours in each.\nOllCirCh self-saucing puddings\n SPORTS\nLeafs Begin Workouts\nTonight If Ice Ready\nNelson Maple Leafs are scheduled to hold their first workout\nof the season tonight at Civic\nArena, provided, of course, the\nice is in condition to handle the\nskaters.\nAlthough it is expected that tonight's gathering of Nelson's\nhockey , clan will be composed\nmainly of intermediates, spiced\nwilh a few who have legitimate\nclaims to spots on a senior hockey\nclub, vice-president Jack McMillan said Wednesday he expects\nseveral young prospects to hit town\nbefore the beginning of next week.\nMcMillan returned Wednesday\nfrom a business trip to the prairies, with which he combined vis-\nIts to pro camps at Cajgary and\nEdmonton. Coach Pat Egan is expected to arrive from Winnipeg\nSaturday.\nLeafs, however, will not'be the\nfirst group to take the ice today\nMinor hockey players are tabbed\nfor a session after school in preparation for a minor hockey jamboree which will be held Tuesday.\nSpokane Flyers, defending B.C.\nchamps, who bowed to Whitby\nDunlops in the finals of the Allan\nCup competition in Toronto last\nspring, have made arrangements\nto begin their .workouts Saturday\nmorning. Roy McBride, chief-cook-\nand-bottle-washer in charge of\nFlyers fortunes, is not certain on\nwhat days his charges will take\nthe ice more than once.\nTo atone for the time he is\nspending in Calgary\u2014from where,\nincidentally, he expects to obtain\nseveral   fine   prospects\u2014McBride\nhas made tentative arrangements\nwith Civic Arena manager Jack\nMorgan for two workouts on certain days. What days they will be\nis  not yet  decided.\nThe men of McBride have\nscheduled an exhibition game for\nThursday, Oct. 10, against, either\nCalgary Stampeders or Seattle\nAmericans of the Western Hockey\nLeague. Either club will supply a\ncalibre of play not likely to be\nseen in the Western International\nHockey League before the playoffs\nroll around\u2014if at all.\nSeason tickets will go on sale\nMonday for those who held season \u2014 or contract-season tickets\nlast year. Sales will continue until Oct. 15 before other hopefuls\nreceive consideration.\nMorgan announced that a discount of two games (which will be\nseen free of charge) will be made\nfor anyone who buys tickets before\nthe first game of the season here\nOct. 19 against Trail.\nVernon Canadians, who bowed\nto Spokane in a bitterly-battled\nSavage Cup final last season, will\nsupply the opposition in an exhibition game for Spokane at the\nColiseum Oct. 12. A referees'\nschool, being handled by the\nWIHL, will run coincidentally.\nEXPECT FINE WEATHER\nNEW YORK (AP) - Another\npleasant day for baseball is in\nprospect for the second game of\nthe world series today. The forecast is sunny with pleasant temperatures, highest in the 70s.\nTRAIL SIGNS TRIO\nTRAIL (CP)\u2014Trail Smoke Eaters of the Western\nInternational Hockey League brought their total of\nplayers signed to an even dozen Wednesday when three\nmore joined the club.\nLast season's regular netminder, Seth Martin, joined\nup as did defenceman Johnny Paolone and rightwinger\nKenny Cook, Trail intermediate players last season.\nBarons Bounce Whitby Squad\nIROQUOIS FALLS, Ont. (CP) -\nGeorge Bouchard, John McLellan\nand Jim Moore each scored t w o\ngoals to lead Cleveland Barons of\nthe American Hockey League to\na 7-4 victory over Allan Cup\nchampions Whitby Dunlops in an\nexhibition hockey game Wednesday night.\nSteve Kraftcheck scored the\nother Cleveland goal as Barons\nclinched the game in the third period by breaking a 4-4 tie.\nCharlie Burns with t w o goals\nand Ted O'Connor and George\nSamolenko scored for W h i t b y,\nwho suffered their third succes\nsive exhibition defeat by Cleve\nland.\nBIG BUD IN EDMONTON\nEDMONTON (CP) - Edmonton\nFlyers of the Western Hockey\nLeague Wednesday announced the\nsigning of 210-pound Bud MacPher-\nson, a defenceman with Montreal\nCanadians last season.\nHe spent most of five seasons\nwith Canadiens and also played\nwith Montreal Royals, Buffalo and\nCincinnati.\nm^^entOe\n-u&.. dew\n(7.\nHaig&Hai\n,    SCOTCH  WHISKY\nTHE   OtDESr   NAME   IN   SCOTCH-    . B\n            FAMOUS   FOR   OVfR-'j.OO'   YEARS\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the\nLiquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\nWhitey Ford Shackles Milwaukee\nSm\nWorld\nSeries\nNotes\nBy MURRAY ROSE\nNEW YORK (AP)-Sal Maglie,\nthe Yankees' celebrated ineligible,\npitched batting practice and then\nwatched from the press box as\nWhitey Ford hurled his gritty five-\nhitter.\nHow did it feel looking on from\nupstairs?\nAwfully nervous,\" said Sal, rubbing perspiring hands. \"You don't\nworry as much down there (pointing to the dugout).\"\nJust a year ago, MagUe beat\nthe Yanks for Brooklyn in the\nseries opener. Later he pitched\nanother nifty game but it was\ndwarfed by Don Larson's perfect\ngame.\nThere didn't seem to be anything wrong with Mickey Mantle's\nlegs, especially in the eighth inm\ning when the Yankee speedster\nbeat out a drag bunt past the\npitcher. Mickey hustled to first\nlike a scared bunny.\nElston Howard, the Yankee cat-\nchei'-outfielder-first baseman, had\nplayed only 16 innings at first\nwhen he was called on to replace\nreinjured Bill Skowron at first in\nthe third inning. Skowron hurt his\nback running out a first-inning\ngrounder.\nEach team got one break. The\nYanks got a lucky hit when Johnny\nLogan couldn't get Mantle's roller\nout of his glove in time to make\na play in the first. The Braves got\nhelp when Howard dropped the\ndouble-play ball in the fifth.\nThis was the ninth world series\nfor Yankee catcher Yogi Berra and\nhe took it just as if it was spring\ntraining.\nYogi's main concern before the\ngame was \"when and who does\narmy play a week from Saturday.\nI want to see 'em.\"\nBefore the game, Yankee manager Casey Stengel sat in the dugout and greeted wave after wave\nof reporters. A writer in the back\nof the group asked a man in front:\n\"What did he say?\"\nThe one close to Stengel shrugged\nhis shoulders and replied: \"Who\nknows?\"\nBefore the game, Milwaukee\nmanager Fred Haney was asked\nif he would settle for a split of\nthe first two games in the stadium\n\"Heck, no,\" replied Haney emphatically. \"We're out to take 'em\nboth.\"\nHe'd be happy to settle for the\nsplit now, of course.\nLefthander's Five-Hitter\nWins Opener for New York\nBy JACK HAND\nNEW YORK (AP)-Whitey Ford, chunky New York\nlefthander, whipped Milwaukee's Warren Spahn in Wednesday's world series opener 3-1 while 69,476 basked in the\nwarm sunshine of a perfect fall afternoon.\nShowing complete recovery from the arm miseries\nthat bothered him during most of the regular season, Ford\nheld the National League champions to five hits.\nWhen the embattled Braves, who went into their first\nseries as 8-5 underdogs, threatened in the sixth, Ford calmly\nblew down three of their toughest righthanded hitters\u2014Hank\nAaron, Joe Adcock and Andy Pafko.1 The stylish little man\nstruck out Aaron and Pafko and retired Adcock on an easy\ngrounder  after  walking the\nBRITISH SOCCER\nENGLISH LEAGUE: Division I\nArsenal 4 Aston Villa 0\nDivision III Southern\nBournemouth 3 Shrewsbury 1\nDivision I    ' '\nWolverhampton 4 Tottenham 0\nThird Division Southern\nAldershot 2 Brighton 3\nCrystal P 1 Torquay 1\nGillingljam 1 Exeter City 1\nSwindon Town 2 Southend 1\nReading 1 Norwich City 2\nDivision III Northern\nCrewe Alex 2 Wrexham 0\nDarlington 5 Halifax Town 0.\nEuropean Cup   \".\nFirst Round\u2014Second Leg\nMan nited 3 Shamrock R 2\nInternational Games\nLeeds U 2 Juventus (Italy) 4\nSunderland 5 Maccabi (Israel) 2\nfirst two batters,\nIMPORTANT   WIN\nBeating, Spahn, Milwaukee's 21-\ngame winning ace, was an important step for the Yankees.\nMost observers figured 36-year-\nold Spahn has to win two games\nto end the Bombers' reign.\nThe Yanks took this opener in\nstride, although they lost the\nservices of their slugging first\nbaseman, Bill Skowron, early in\nthe game.\nWhen Mickey Mantle took Del\nCrandall's fly for the final out,\nFord trudged toward the dugout\nafter receiving only perfunctory\nhandshakes from the infielders.\nIt was a sharp contrast to the\nlast previous series contest played\nat Yankee Stadium in 1956, when\nYogi Berra rode Don Larsen\npiggy back after his perfect game.\nSpahn gave it the big try as\nthe only Milwaukee pitcher with\nprevious series experience. But\nthe crafty veteran just didn't have\nenough to match Ford. Manager\nFree) Haney took him out in the\nsixth after the Yanks had racked\nup seven of their nine hits. All\nthree runs were charged against\nSpahn although the last one scored\nafter he had left the game.\nCOLEMAN IN FIRST\nIt was a beautifully pitched,\nscoreless battle for the first 4V_\ninnings until Jerry Coleman, who\nstarted at second base instead of\nyoung Bobby Richardson, came\nthrough with his second hit \u2014 a\nground single to .left past Eddie\nMathews.\nTwo infield outs   had   shoved\nSmrke Tallies\nThree, Paces\nReds'9-2 Win\nPETERBOROUGH, Ont. (CP)~\nRookie rightwinger Stan Smrke\noutshone Montreal Canadiens star\nperformers Wednesday night as\nhe scored three goals'to pace Reds\nto a 9-2 victory over Whites in\nan intra-squad exhibition game before 3000 fans.\nThe 29 - year - old Smrke, was\nsidelined by a leg injury after being purchased by the National\nHockey League Canadiens from\nChicoutimi of the Quebec Hockey\nLeague last season.\nJean Beliveau with two goals\nand Henri Richard, Dickie Moore,\nBert. Olmstead and Don Marshall\nwith one apiece also scored for\nReds. Claude Provost and Guy\nBlack scored for Whites.\nDENMARK TEAM BEATEN\nCOPENHAGEN (AP) - Eire\nWednesday night defeated Denmark, 2-0 in a tough, thrilling soccer match which ended with\ncrowd of 28,000 hurling apples at\nthe Irish players on the floodlit\nfield of the Idrastspark Stadium.\nHE LEFT US\nA LEGACY\nOut of his dreams, his vision, his thinking and\nhis hard work, came the priceless invention of\nthe telephone. All who give telephone service\nand all who use it are inheritors of Alexander\nGraham Bell.\nOther than face-to-face conversation, the telephone is surely our easiest and fastest means of\ncommunication. Certainly, it is the most simple\nway to order the 12th Series of\nCANADA SAVINGS BONDS\nDue November 1, 1970       _,    \u25a0    .\nYieldihg 4.46% to maturity\nDenominations: $50, $100, $500, $1,000, $5,000\nThe limit that each person may purchase this\nyear has been raised to $10,000.\nCanada Savings Bonds are safe. Interest, which\nis higher than ever this year, and principal are\nguaranteed by the Government. The bonds may\nbe cashed at any time at their full face value,\nplus earned interest.\nYour order id us by telephone wiU receive\nimmediate and careful attention.\n744 West Hastings Street\nVancouver\nTelephone: Pacific 5531\nWood, Gundy & Company\nLimited\nMilwaukee\nHamstrung\nBy Whitey\nColeman around to third when\nHank Bauer bruised one of\nSpahn's pitches for a long double\nto right centre, letting Coleman\nromp home.\nFord had just escaped after\nsome anxious moments in the top\nof the fifth due to a - dropped\nthrow by Elston Howard at f i r s t\nbase on a sure fire double play.\nHoward, a catcher-outfielder who\nnever had played first in the majors until last Friday in Boston,\nhad taken over in the third after\nSkowron had reinjured his back\nrunning the first base in the first\ninning.\nWes Covington|s single, Howard's\nerror and a walk to Spahn put\nFord in trouble. Covington had\nbeen wiped out on Del Crandall's\nbouncer to Gil McDougald but\nCrandall was safe on the error.\nWhen Ford walked Spahn on four\npitches, Milwaukee had men on\nfirst-and second with two out but\nRed Schoendienst rapped sharply\nto Andy Carey for a force on Crandall at third to end the inning.\nSKIRTS DISASTER\n\u25a0 With a one - run lead, Ford\nskirted disaster in the sixth after\nwalking both Johnny Logan and\nEddie Mathews, the first two batters.\nIt was then that Whitey hit his\npeak. Aaron went out on three\npitches, protesting mildly to plate\numpire Joe Paparella that he\nhadn't gone all the way around\non the third strike. Adcock rolled\nto Howard who crossed in front\nof Coleman and threw to Ford just\nin time. Pafko worked the count\nto 3-2 and went down swinging.\nAfter that close escape, the\nYanks ripped into Spahn in t h e\nsixth and chased him off the hill.\nWith one out, Howard grounded\na single to centre.-A walk to Yogi\nBerra on a 3-1 pitch brought manager Fred Haney to the mound to\ntalk with his pitcher. He stayed\nwith Spahn.\nCarey took one called strike,\nhalf attempting a bunt, and singled\nsharply to centre, scoring Howard.\nBerra went to third.\nHaney came out again, this time\nto take Spahn with him.\nErnie Johnson, a sidearming\nrighthander, came from the bullpen to face Coleman. With the infield pulled in tight, Coleman\ndumped a perfect squeeze bunt\ntoward Johnson. The pitcher, never\nmaking a move toward the plate,\nwhirled and threw to first in time\nto get Coleman as Berra came\nhome.\nCRACKS IN SEVENTH\nFord, who had pitched himself\nin and out of trouble all afternoon\ndue to his .wildness, finally was\nscored on in the seventh.\nCovington, a left-handed hitter,\ndoubled to the far corner in left\nand scored on Schoendienst's two-\nout single to centre.\" With Logan\nrepresenting the potential tying\nrun at the plate, Ford caught the\nshortstop fishing on a low outside\npitch for a third strike.\nFrom that moment on, Ford\nwas untouchable. He retired the\nlast seven bakers in succession to\nwin his fifth series game in eight\nattempts.\nEncouraged by the success of\nFord, manager Casey S t en g e 1\nnamed Bobby Shantz, another left-\nhan(ler, to work in today's garrte.\nShantz, making a fine Comeback\nafter years of arm trouble following a 24-game winning season in\n1952, has an 11-5 record this season.\nLew Burdette, 17-9, a 30-year-\nold right-hander who once pitched\nfor Stengel's Yankees briefly in\nthe fall of 1950, will work for the\nBraves. That leaves Bob Buhl as\nthe man who will pitch Saturday's\nfirst game in Milwaukee's County\nStadium.\nMANTLE LOOKS HEALTHY\nThere had been doubt up to game\ntime about the physical condition\nof both Mantle and Skowron.\nMickey showed no bad effects of\nhis left leg injury, beating out an\ninfield hit in the first and a bunt\nin the eighth. He even tried to\nsteal a base but was caught by\na perfect peg by Crandall.\nSkowron, definitely out of today's game, is a doubtful partici-.\npant in the remainder of the series.\nAgainst a righthander like Burdette, Stengel has his choice of\nHarry Simpson or the veteran\nJoe Collins, both left-hande\"d batters, to fill Skowron's shoes.\nThe big crowd that c?me early\nto jam the bleachers hours before\ngame time,' paid a net of $425,-\n34672 of which $216,926.83 goes\ninto the players' pool. The players\nalso get 60 per cent of the $3,250,-\n000 radio-TV deal for their pension\nfund.\nNEW YORK (AP) -\nbox score of the first\n1957 world series:\nMilwaukee (N)     AB\nSchoendienst 2b     4\nLogan ss   3\nMathews 3b    2\nAaron cf   4\nAdcock lb   4\nTorre, lb   0\nPafko rf    4\nCovington If   4\nCrandall c ,   4\nSpahn p    1\nJohnson p   0\n\u2022Jones      1\nMcMahon p   0\nTotals   31\n- The official\ngame of the\nRHO AE\n0 112 0\n0  0  2\n0\n2\n7\n1\n3\n4\n4\n0\n0\n0\n0\n3 0\n1 0\n0 0\n0 0\n0 0\n0 0\n0 0\n1   0\n0   0\n0   0\n1   5 24   9   0\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, OCT. 3, 1957 \u2014 7\nSki Slants\nNew York (A)   . AB R H O A E\nBauer rf   4 0  110 0\nMcDougald ss ....  4  0  12  6  0\nMantle cf     4   0   2   2   0   0\nSkowron lb    10 0 2 0 0\nHoward lb   2113   11\nCollins lb     10  0  5  0  0\nBerra c   3  115  0  0\nCarey 3b   3  0  12  2  0\nColeman 2b     3  12  3  4  0\nKubek If     3   0   0   10   0\nFord p     3   0   0   110\nTotals     31   3   9 27 14   1\n\"Grounded out for Johnson in 7th\nMilwaukee (N)    000 000 010-1\nNew York (A)     000 012 OOx-3\nE \u2014 Howard, RBI \u2014 Bauer,\nCarey, Coleman, Schoendienst.\n2b \u2014 Coleman, Bauer, Covington.\nS \u2014 Coleman. DP \u2014 McDougald,\nColeman and Howard; Crandali\nand Logan. Left \u2014 Milwaukee (N)\n7, New York (A) 7. BB-Ford 4\n(Mathews 2, Spahn, Logan), Spahn\n1 (Berra), McMahon 1 (Carey). S\u2014\nFord 5 (Covington 2, Aaron, Pafko,\nLogan), Johnson 1 (Kubek), McMahon 3 (Bauer, McDougald, Collins). HO \u2014 Spahn 7 in 5 1-3, Johnson 0 In 2-3, McMahon 2 in 2. R-ER\n\u2014Spahn 3-3, Johnson 0-0, McMahon\n0-0, Ford 1-1. W\u2014Ford. L\u2014Spahn.\nU\u2014Paparella (A) plate, Conlan\n(N) first base, McKinley (A) second base, Donatelli (N) third base,\nSecory (N) left field, Chylak (A)\nright field. T\u20142:10. A\u201469,476. Receipt net\u2014$425,034.72.\nBy SITZMAltK\nThe turnout of skiers to work on\nthe cabin and lift was very disappointing last weekend.\nThe same crowd that did all the\nwork last year, with a few exceptions, have again been out every\nweekend.\nSurely, with a membership now\nof nearly 300 compared with last\nyear's 35, we should be able to get\na bigger turnout.\nI think it's time that all the\nskiers who recieved free ski lessons last season should be willing\nto spend a few weekends of work\nto show their appreciation, and improve the skiing facilities for the\ncoming season.\nEven with a small crew out last\nSunday the extension on the cabin\nwas well underway by quitting\ntime. The foundation and almost\nall of the floor were laid,\nAnother crew cut, skidded and\npeeled enough poles for the construction of a shed to house the\ndrive terminal of our new lift.\nThere are many jobs still to be\ndone in the coming weeks, so if\nyou want to help, choose your job\nfrom the following list and come\nprepared with appropriate tools.\n(1) Finish onstruction of cabin\nwalls and roof.\n(2) We have all kinds of lumber\non the site that needs the nails\npulled out (anyone can do this).\n(3) There's a shed to be constructed of poles\u201424 feet long, 14\nfeet wide and 16 feet high\u2014to house\nthe lower power unit.\n(4) We have to clean up all the\nsnags on last year's course so you\nwon't break your leg on one of\nthem this season. Anyone can help\non this one.\n(5) As soon as we get the location of intermediate towers for our\nlift, holes must be dug and poles\nerected. But for this one, we have\nto wait until we hear from the lift\nmanufacturers.\nSo, you see, we have lots to do\nand it looks like work every weekend, rain or shine.\nLet's see'more of you on hand\nthis Sunday. Remember, if you\nwant a ride out, be at the corner\nof Baker and Stanley Streets at\n10 a.m.\nTED WORKMAN\nDENIES RUMORS\nABOUT GRID TEAM\nTORONTO (CP) - Vice - president Ted Workman of Montreal\nAlouettes reiterated Wednesday\nstatements he made Tuesday in\nWinnipeg denying rumored trouble in the Big Four Football club's\nfront office, and a published report that president Leo Dandur-\nand is attempting to buy control\nof the club.\nWorkman was interviewed here\nas he paused In his trip back to\nMontreal from Western Canada.\n\"The rumors obviously have no\nsubstance,\" he said. \"They are\nall based on speculation, probably by some irresponsible person.\"\nEIGHTH DEFEAT\nFOR BALMY BEACH\n' TORONTO (CP) \u2014London Lords\nWednesday night moved into a\nfirst-place tie with Sarnia Golden\nBears by walloping T o, o n t o\nBalmy Beaches 40-0 before about\n300 Ontario Rugby Football Union\nfans.\nLords now have nine points\nalong with Bears, with Kitchener-\nWaterloo Dutchmen behind with\neight points and a game in hand.\nIt was Beaches' eighth loss.\nRUGBY SCORES\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Results\nof Wednesday night's rugby\nmatches:\nRUGBY UNION\nMaesteg 0 Llanelly 25\nSaracens 19 Middlesex Hospital 3\nDevenport Services 17 Paignton 3\nRUGBY LEAGUE\nLancashire Cup semi-final\nSt. Helens 9 Oldham 29\nRUGBY LEAGUE\nYorks Cup semi-final\nHuddersfield 14 Leeds 2\nYorks Cup semi-final replay\nYork 14. Bradford Northern 8.\nFights\nBoston \u2014 Billy Ryan, 170Vi, Lo\nwell, Mass., outpointed Phil Rizzo,\n165, Brooklyn, 8.\nHolyoke, Mass. \u2014 Burke Emery,\n160, Sherbrooke, Que., outpointed\nIrish Dick Lowry, 16, New York,\nSMOKES\nFOR CANADIAN\nMILITARY PERSONNEL\nserving with Ihe\nUnited Nations Emergency\nForce in Ihe Middle East\n$1*\u00b0 sends 400\nEXPORT\nCIGARETTES\nor any other Macdonald Brand\nPostage included\nMall order and remittance foi\nOVERSEAS DEPARTMENT\nMACDONALD TOBACCO INC.\nP.O. Box 490, Place d'Armis,\nMontreal, Que.\nThlt offer U eub|ect to any Chang*\nIn Government Regulations*\nNELSON CIVIC\nARENA\nOct. 5-13\nEntertainment\nGilts\nSUNDAY, OCT.\nFamily Sk\u00b0'in9\n^ art1 BABE.\n^7KD^,OCT-8\nCttltD^peonu*.\n( Cetew0'\"'\"\n60b *\u00bb^r\n NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, OCT. 3, 1957\nBUT THE RAW \\\nWILL COME IM    )\nTHE TOP J\u2014^\n~7 THEN DIS IT      x\n( OPSIOE DOWN,'\n\\T     HA\/ \/\/.\/\t\nI... \\^ ^^\nm^vw\nUNCLE JISSS IS RISHT!\nLADIES USE ROUSE TO\nMAKE THEMSELVES _\/|\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS\nThe Daily News does not Moid itaelt responsible tn the avent\noi an error In the following ll_ta\nTORONTO  STOCKS\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nAlgom Uranium\t\nAnacon Lead \t\nAtlin Ruff\t\nAubelle  -\t\nAumacho \t\nAumaque  ;.\t\nAunor .\nBase Metals\t\nBaska Uranium\t\nBoymar :\t\nBrilund \t\nBroulan  -\t\nBrunswick \t\nBuff Can\t\nCampbell C \t\nCan Met\t\nCassiar  :..\nCentral Patricia \t\nCoin Lake\t\nCons Denison \t\nCons Halliwell \t\nCons Mining & Smelting\nCons Red Pop \t\nCon Sub \t\nConwest  \t\nCopper Corp \t\nCopper Man \t\nD'Aragon \t\nEast Amphi   \t\nEast Malartic \t\nFalconbridge  \t\nFaraday \t\nFrobisher \t\nGeco \t\nGlen Uranium\t\nGoldcrest   \t\nGolden Manitou \t\nGunnar Gold \t\nHarminerals \t\nHasaga \t\nHeadway\t\nHollinger  \t\nHudson Bay \t\nInspiration \t\nInt Nickel\t\nIron Bay \t\nJoliet Que \t\nJonsmith   \t\nR J Jowsey \t\nKenville    \t\nKerr Addison \t\nLabrador \t\nLakeshore \t\nLexindin'\t\nLittle Long Lac\t\nLorado   \t\nLouvic't  \t\nMacassa    \t\nMacDonald  \t\n18.75\n.80\n.30\n.06\n.21\n.07%\n2.00\n.37%\n.18\n.14%\n.21-\n.76\n5.10\n.12\n6.55\n3.20\n7.00\n1.03\n.14\n17.50\n.46\n21.75\n.14\n.89\n3.60\n.23\n.08\n.16\n.07%\n1.70\n2.50\n1.95\n1.62\n9.00\n.20\n.08\n.48\n17.00\n.12\n.18\n.43\n24.00\n52.75\n.40\n77.25\n2.30\n.27%\n.10\n.50\n.06%\n16.50\n..10\n.05%\n1.52\n1.09\n.08\n2.25\n.31\nQueen To Arrive\nIn Daylight\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Queen\nElizabeth and Prince Philip leave\nLondon by air at 7 a. m. on Oct.\n12 so they can reach Canada in\ndaylight for the beginning of\ntheir North American visit.\nIt was announced Wednesday\nthe early start would allow them\nto drive in daylight from Uplands Airport, Ottawa, to Government House.\nThey will make the non - stop\n3,400-flight in a British Overseas\nAirways Corporation airliner in\n13% hours.\nThe plane will land at Ottawa\nat 4:40 p. m.\nBOAC said the airliner will be\ncommanded by Capt. Gordon\nStore, 51, a South African associated with flying for 31 years.\nHe will have a crew of 10 including three other pilots. I\nOne of the two stewardesses\nwill be a Canadian.\nShe is Velma Brown, 25, from\nNipawin, Sask. She was educated\nat Nipawin, Medicine Hat, Alta.\nand Victoria, where her mother\nand stepfather now live. After\nstudying radiotherapy in London\nshe joined BOAC in 1955.\nThe other stewardess, Faith\nSisman, was born in Calcutta,\nIndia. She has flown nearly 2,-\n000,000 miles since 1948.\nJAKARTA (AP) - Indonesia is\nhost to a four-man Hungarian delegation here for a month-long visit\nto negotiate increased trade.\nMalartic G F     1.42\nManeast  :      .13',\nMaritimie Mining 96\nMcLeod      1.20\nMcKenzie R L 17\nMilliken       2.84\nMining Corp     11.75\nMogul    88\nMulti Mins 75\nNew Delhi  62\nNew Harricana  : 15\nNew Fortune 12\nNipissing  ..\u201e     1.60\nNew Highridge 13 '\nNisto 07\nNoranda New    40.25\nNormetals        3.00\nNorpax   60\nNorth Can     1.58\nNorth Rankin     1.00\nOpemiska      8.65\nPickle Crow  ' 1.16\nPlacer Devel     8.80\nPreston E D     6.90\nQuebec Copper  46\nQuebec Lithium     6.25\nQuebec Metallurgical   ' 1.26\nQuemont     9.90\nRadiore    68\nRayrock       1.34\nSan Antonio  50\nSherritt Gordon      5.30\nSteep Rock      13.37%\nSullivan Con     2.15\nSylvanite     1.46\nTeck Hughes     1.75\nTemagami     2.13   -\nThomp - Lund 70\nTombill    64\nTrans Cont Res 18\nVentures      30.00\nVicour  06%\nViolamac       1.32\nWaite Amulet     6.55\nWiltsey Goglin  24\nWright Hargreaves      1.53\nYellowknife Bear     1.12\nOILS\nAmerican Leduc  21\nBanff Oils     2.42\nBailey Selburn    11.75\nBata Petroleum 07\nCalgary and Edmonton .... 28.75\nCan Admiral  48\nCdn Atlantic      6.05\nCan  Decalta  i 65\nCommonwealth Pete 07\nCon East Crest  16\nHome A     18.75\nLiberal Pete     1.51-\nMidcon 65\nLong Island Pete 13%\nNew Gas Expl     1.80\nOkalta      1.84\nPacific Pete   24.50\nPetrol    59\nPonder 60\nProv Gas      3.05\nRoyalite   '..  17.00\nSpooner  25\nStanwell Oil     1.00\nTriad       5.35\nUnited Oils      3.85\nWespac  20\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlbitibi  '     27%\nAlgoma Steel      29\nAluminum      29\nArgus 2nd pfd      16\nAtlas St      18%\nB A Oil   ' 42\nBathurst Power      45\nBeatty Bros      4%\nBell Telephone      39%\nBrazilian      8%\nB C Electric 43,.s      88\nB C Forest     10\nB C Power A     39\nBurns A      10\nCanadian Breweries     25\nCanadian Canners      13%\nCanadian Celanese     14%\nCan Chem Co      5%\nCan Malting      48\nCan Oil     140\nCanadian Pacifia Rly     2814\nCan Packers B  \u201e..    34\nCockshutt        8%\nCons, Gas  ,     30\nDist Seagram      26%\nDom Foundries      27%\nDom Steel Ord     25%\nDom  Stores       46\nDom Tar & Chemical      97\/\u00bb\nDom Textiles         7%\nFamous Players      15%\nFanny Farmer      17%\nFord A      807\/B\nGatineau       27%\nGen Steel Wares      6%\nGoodyear       160\nGoodyear pfd     44\nHoward Smith     26%\nImperial Oil     44\nVANCOUVER STOCKS\nClosing Prices\nMINES\nBeaver Lodge 15\nBralorne        4.80\nCanusa ' 03\nCariboo Gold      .63''\nFarwest Tungsten 09\nGiant Mascot  10%\nGranduc        1.50\nHamil Si]  03%\nHighland Bell     1.30\nNational Ex  28\nPioneer Gold       1.35\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\nTimes Shown Are Pacific Standard Time\nKXLY TV \u2014 Channel 4\nKHQ TV \u2014 Channel 8\n8:00 Good Morning\n7:40 Color Test Pattern\n8:30 Search For Tomorrow *\n7:43 Test Pattern\n8:45 Guiding Light *\n7:55 NARTB\n9:00 Hotel Cosmopolitan\n7:56 Bible Reading\n9:15 Love of Life\n8:00 Tic Tac Dough *\n9:30 As The World Turns *\n8:30 It Could Be You *\n10:00 Beat The Clock *\n8:45 World Series (Milwaukee\n10:30 Houseparty *\nBraves vs New York Yank\n11:00 Big Payoff *\n11:15 Matinee Theatre (C) \u00bb\n11:30 The Verdict Is Yours *\n12:00 Queen For a Day *\n12:00 Brighter Day *\n12:45 Modern Romances *\n12:15 Secret Storm *\n1:00 Comedy Time *\n12:30 Edge of Night *\n1:30 Truth or Consequences *\n1:00 Theater\n2:00 Corliss Archer\n2:00 Garry Moore    .\n2:30 Elaine Gray Kitchen\n2:45 Godfrey Time *\n3:00 Matinee On Six\n3:00 Fun At Home\n\"Miraculous Journey\"\n3:30 Strike It Rich\"\n5:00 Five o'clock Movie\n4:00 Early Show     f\n\"The Penalty\"\n6:00 The News\n6:30 Weathe'rwise\n6:15 Doug Edwards News *\nThe Front Page\n6:30 Sgt. Preston *\n6:45 TV Cues\n7:00 I Search For Adventure\nNBC News *\n7:30 TBA\n7:00 The Honeymooners\n8:00 Harbour Master *\n7:30 Studio 57\n8:30 Climax *\n8:00 You Bet Your Life *\n9:30 Playhouse 90 \u2022\n8:30 Dragnet *\n11:00 Late Show\n9:00 Jack London Stories\n9:30 Tennessee Ernie Ford *\n10:00 Lux Show (C) *\n10:30 Late Movie\n\"I Love You Again\"\nKREM TV - Channel 2\n2:30\n4:00\n4:30\n5:00\n5:30\n6:00\n6:30\n6:40\n6:45\nHomemakers Matinee\nAmerican Bandstand *\nPopeye\nWoody Woodpecker\nMickey Mouse Club *\nKit Carson\nNewsroom\nWeather Sketch\nPhillips World News\n6:55 Sports Spotlight\n7:00 To Be Announced\n7:30 Circus Boy\n8:00 Playhouse Two\n8:30 Real McCoys *\n9:00 Royal Playhouse \u00bb\n9:30 Biff Baker, USA\n10:00 Guy Lombardo\n10:30 Premier Performance\nPremier Border\nQuatsino   \t\nSheep Creek \t\nSherritt Gordon ....\nSilback Premier,!...\nSilver Ridge\nSilver Standard \t\nSunshine Lardeau\n.05\n.40%\n.48\n5.20\n.06\n.03 ,\n.20\n.12\nImp Tobacco   1H4\nInt Pete   44\nLoblaw A   22\nLoblaw B   20%\nMassey Harris    6\nMcColl Frontenac   59\nMont Loco     15%\nMoore Corp   60\nNat Steel Car   22%\nPage Hershey   114\nPowell River   35\nPower Corp   56V.\nShawinigan     24%\nSicks   Brew     20\nSimpsons A :  15%\nSoutham      45\nStandard Paving   35\nSteel of Canada   54%\nTaylor Pearson   9\nUnion Gas of Can  '.  67%\nWestern Grocers A  33%\nTrojan    26%\nWestern Exploration  35\nOILS\nAltex   18\nA'P Consolidated 47\nCalgary  &  Edmonton .... 28.00\nCharter   2.50\nHome   18.25\nNew Gas Ex  1.75\nOkalta Com   1.75\nPacific  Pete  24.25\nRoyalite    .,  16.75\nSparmac  16\nUnited   3.30\nVanalta    20,\nVantor _  1.55\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlberta Distillers  .:  1.35\nAlberta Distillers Vt  1.25\nB C Forests  9.50\nB C Power   39.00\nB C Telephone   39.00\nCrown Zellar  (Can)    16.25\nLucky Lager           3.85\nMacM & Bloedel B  23.00\nMid Western   2 50\nPowell River  34.50\nTrans Mtn      76.00\nWestminster Paper   23.75\nUNLISTED               Bid Ask\nAlta Gas Trunk    16.00\nTrarts Mtn Unite    76.00 77.50\nTranscana Com     29.00 29.25\nBANKS\nBank of Montreal ..   42.00 43.00\nCan Bank of Com    42.00 44.00\nImp Bank of Can     45.00 46.00\nRoyal Bank of Can    61.00 62.00\nFUNDS,\nCan Inv Fund        8.09 8.88\nCommonwealth Int     6.63\nGrouped Income ....    3.39\nLeverage        4.59\nTrans Canada \"C\"     5.30\n.\n7.29\n3.65\n5.04\n5.80\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS\n(PACIFIC\nTHURSDAY,\n55\u2014Farm Fare\n00\u2014Chapel in the Sky\n15\u2014Wake-Up Time\n25\u2014Sports News\n30\u2014News\n35\u2014Wake Up Time\n00\u2014News\n10\u2014Sprots News\n15\u2014Opening Markets\n20\u2014Breakfast Varieties\n45\u2014World Series\n00\u2014The Dinner Bell\n15\u2014Sports News\n30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n55\u2014Prairie News\n00-CKLN Reports\n15\u2014Carmelle Hammill\n30\u2014Drama\n00\u2014School Broadcast\n30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n30-Sacred Heart\n1240 ON THE DIAL\nSTANDARD   TIME)\nOCTOBER 3,  1957\n3:45\u2014Footlight Favorites\n4:00\u2014Music Box\n4:30\u2014Australian Songs\n4:45\u2014Voyage Into Space\n5:00\u2014Rolling Home Show\n6:00\u2014News\n6:10\u2014Sports News.\n6:15\u2014Closing Markets\n6:20\u2014Musicale\n6:30\u2014UBC Digest\n7:00\u2014News\n7:30\u2014Recital\n8:00\u2014Prairie Playhouse\n8:30\u2014Business Labor Review\n9:00\u2014Mainly About Books\n9:15\u2014Vancouver Chamber Orch.\n10:00\u2014News\n10:10\u2014Sports News     '\n10:15\u2014Cities at the Crossroads\n10:30-Sign Off\nCBC   PROGRAMS\n(PACIFIC  DAYLIGHT SAVING TIME)\nFRIDAY, OCTOBER 4,1957\n7:00\u2014Fisherman's Broadcast\n7:15\u2014Musical Minutes\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Musical Minutes\n7:40\u2014Morning Devotions\n7:55\u2014Musical March Past\n8:00\u2014News and Weather\n8:10\u2014Sports  News\n8:15\u2014Musical Minutes\n8:30-CBC   News\n8:35\u2014Morning Concert\n9:00\u2014News\n9:15\u2014Musical Program\n10:00\u2014Morning Visit\n10:15-The Happy Gang\n10:45\u2014Pages From Life\n11:00\u2014Kindergarten of the Air\n11:15\u2014Theme and Variation\n12:15\u2014News\n12:25\u2014Showcase\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Five to One\n1:00\u2014Afternoon Concert\n1:30\u2014Pacific Playhouse\n2:00\u2014School Broadcast\n3:45\u2014B. C. Roundup\n3:30\u2014Program Resume\n4:00\u2014Today's Music\n4:30\u2014The Arthurian Legend\n4:45\u2014Round About\n5:00\u2014News\n5:30\u2014Special Feature\n6:30\u2014P and I Showcase\n6:35\u2014Roving Reporter\n6:45\u2014Rawhide\n7:00\u2014National News\n7:30\u2014Tapestry in Music\n8:00\u2014Touch of Greasepaint\n8:30\u2014Canadian Yarns\n8:45\u2014Piano Music \u2022\n9:00\u2014Songs of My People\n9:30\u2014Petit Ensemble\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Talk\n10:30\u2014Midnight Concert\n11:57-CBC  News\nDAILY   CROSSWORD\nACROSS\n1. Icelandic\nsettlers\n6. Tennis cup\n11. Kind o\u00a3 oil\n12. Fragrant\nolcoresin\n13. Unsuccess,\n\u00a3 11 one\n(slang)\n2. Los. of hair 23. FIbwers\n3. Girl's name   24. Fra.\n4. Always\n.5. Indian\nweight\n6. Extending '\nline o\u00a3\ntroops\n7. Soothe\n8. Swerve\n14. Fold of cloth 9. Mohamme-\n15. Mast\n16. Warning\nsignals\n17. Electrical\nEngineer\n(abbr.)\ndan priest\n10. Perches\n16. Fortify\n18. End\n20. Past\n21. Music note\ngrant\n27. Com.\npass\npoint\n(abbr,)\n30. Single\nunit\n31.\t\nand\ndines\n33. Speed\ncontest\n34. Jewish\nmonth\n35. Feminine\nname\neh.hei eihbki\nHilar, laaaa\n___3______ raajiua\naaas kihh ihh\nsa   mm _it_i_\niiran.ii.i_ HOGati\n[_n_iHi_i:.i_   .\nHHEH   [_H_l[__t_\nlawra {____    E_n\nan asiia anaia\nHSIHHa   I_L.HI_H\nciaHU HHfiira\nBSm   HH-IH\nYesterday's Answer\n36. Spoken\n37. Two-\nwheeler\n39. Cut\nhair     if\nshort   v.   .\n(Program* subject to change by stations without notice.)\n18. City (N.Y.) 22. Girl's name\n19. A school\n22. Distant\n25. Harshness\n26. Silly.\n28. Annam\nmeasure\n29. Wealthy\n31. Hospital\naddition\n32. Molybde-\nnum (sym.)\n33. City (Wis.)\n36. Ancient coin\n(Gr.)\n38. City (Turk.)\n39. Salt\nsolution\n40. Proofreader's mark\n41. Kind of\nbucket\n42. Rub out\n43. Pronounced\nholy\nDOWN\n1. Turns down\npage corners\nDAILY CRYPTOQUOTE \u2014Here's how to work It:\nAXYDLBAAXR\nIs LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is used\nfor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all hint*\nEach day the code letters are different.\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nRIT      OZHLYOC     YW      PQ      CYMD      Z\nRIFYO    OZLT    YBTH    RY    RIT    CMH \u2014\nOIZRRZTF.\nYesterday's Cryptoquote: YOUTH IS A BLUNDER; MAN.\nHOOD A STRUGGLE; OLD AGE A REGRET\u2014DISRAELI.\nDistributed by KiDg Futures Syndicate\n1\n2\n3\n4\n.\nl\nb\n7\n8\n9\n10\n]\nII\n'4\n11\n13\n^\n14\n15\nm\nlb\nn\n'^1\n^\nIS\nd\nV\/A\nU\n19\nJO\n31\n^A\n22\n33\n24\nOS\ni\n26\n27\nas\n^\n29\n30\n%\n%\n%\n31\n^\n^\n32\n35\n3.\n3!T\n^A\nit,\n37\n38\n1\n39\n.o\n1\n41\n42\n%\n43\n10-3\n mm\nSMALL INVESTMENT   *\nLARGE RETU\nThat's the Want Ad Story \u2014  PHONE   1841\nBIRTHS\nGROOT \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs.\nCornelius Groot, 2106 Innes Street,\nat Kootenay Lake General Hospital, October 1, a daughter.\nMALOFF r' To Mr. and Mrs.\nCecil Maloff of Thrums, at Koo\ntehay Lake General Hospital, October 2, a son.\nSKENE - To Mr. and Mrs\nRonald Skene, 1012 Ward Street,\nat Kootenay Lake General Hospital. October 2, a daughter.\nALLSEBROOK - To Mr. and\nMrs. A. Eric Allsebrook of Niagara\nFalls. Ont.. formerly of-Kaslo, at\nNiagara Falls, September 29, a\nson.\nSMILEY \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs.\nBruce Smiley of Slocan City, at\nthe Slocan Community Hospital in\nNew Denver, September 28, a\ndaughter.\nNELSON - To Mr. and Mrs. G.\nRonald Nelson of New Denver, at\nthe Slocan Community Hospital in\nNew Denver, September 30, a son.\nHELP WANTED\nGOVERNMENT  OF\nBRITISH COLUMBIA\nAPPRENTICESHIP AND\nTRADESMEN'S\nQUALIFICATION BRANCH\nPRE-APPREN.TICESHIP\nTRADE TRAINING CLASSES\nApplications are invited, from\nyoung men for enrolment in pre-\napprenticeship trade classes\nwhich are intended to lead to\napprenticeship in the following\ntrades:- v\nElectrical\nElectronics\nSteel Erection\nWooden Boat Building\nApplicants  should   preferably\nbe from seventeen  to nineteen\nyears old, have a good basic education and be physically able to\nengage in the trade.\nNo charge will be made for\ntuition but students will be responsible ..for their room and\nboard. A subsistence allowance\nwill be given to help the student\npay for his room and board. The\namount of this allowance will\nbe forty dollars a month for a\nstudents whose home is in the\ntraining city and fifty-six dollars\na month for a student whose\nhome is outside of that area.\nWhere living accommodation\nis not available at the school, arrangements will be made with\nprivate homes to accommodate\nstudents.\nCourses will start soon after\nbctober 2lst, 1957 and will be\nheld in Vancouver. Each course\nwill last about five months.\nApplication forms can be obtained by writing to the following address:-\nDirector of Apprenticeship\nDepartment of Labour\n411 Dunsmuir Street\nVANCOUVER 3, B.C.\nPlease indicate the trade in\nwhich you are interested.\t\nFERRY ENGINEER\nGRADE 2 (SHIFT)\nB.C. DEPARTMENT\nOF HIGHWAYS\nJPPER ARROW LAKES FERRY\nSalary:  $355 per month. Accommodation available on board\nvessel.    Must  have  3rd  Class\nMarine   Diesel Certificate, several    years    proven    technical\nability.\nApplication forms -obtainable\nfrom the B.C. Civil Service Commission offices in Victoria or in\nVancouver at 411. Dunsmuir\nStreet, or any Government\nAgency, to be completed and returned to\nThe Chairman\nCivil Service Commission\n544 Michigan Street\nVictoria, B.C.\nnot later than October 16, 1957.\nCompetition No. 57:536.\nEXTRA COMMISSIONS\nWe offer a line of incandescent\nlamps (2000 hour) on a commission basis to full or part-\ntime salesmen. Commissioned\nweekly, repeats credited. Here\nis a year-round staple that can\nbuild into a largfc and remunerative operation. Write today for\ndetails, in confidence to Box\n10261, Daily News.\nAPPLICATIONS FOR THE Position of caretaker, janitor, and\nice-maker for the Bluebell Recreation Hall, Riondel, B.C., will\nbe received by the undersigned\nup until Oct. 7, 1957. Ice-making\nexperience preferable but not\nessential.\nMrs. B. Harrison, Sec.-Treas.\nBluebell Recreation Club,\nRiondel, B.C.\t\nFINANCIALLY RESPONSIBLE\n^persons required as territory\n'managers to cover Trail and the\nKootenys. Must have late model\ncar, preferably experienced in\ncrew management. The best deal\nat the moment. Dollar down, dollar a week, backed by radio\nand TV programs. Write Suite\nC, 168 E. 2nd Ave., Vancouver.\nRELIABLE YOUNG MAN TO\nwork in department store, rapid\nadvancement possible to right\nman. Must have Junior matric,\ngood writing, good appearance\nand fast with figures. Must be\nable to be bonded. Apply in Writ-\ning to Box 10299, Daily News.\nHELP WANTED\n'Continued)\nDRAFTSMEN ARE'IN GREAT\ndemand. Train by home-study in\nyour spare time for a well-paid\nsecure job. Diploma awarded.\nFree folder. Primary School ol\nDrafting, Dept. G, Box 123, Station   \"Q\",   Toronto.\nHELP WANTED\u2014FEMALE\nLARGE FIRM WITH BRANCH\noffice in Nelson requires qualified stenographer. Salary $200.00\nper month, 40-hour week. Box\n8000, Daily News.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nDON'T WAIT FOR WINTER.\nPlan now! The rush is on. Steps,\nsidewalks, driveways, basement\nfloors. All carpenter work and\nstucco work, roofing, etc. Phone\n629-L. H. Zylstra and Sons.\nFOR HIRE - TANDEM 10-YD.\nLF-190 International dump truck\nby hour or contract. S. Kudra,\nphone 1757-R.\nHANDYMAN WANTS ODD JOBS.\nPhnne 256-R.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\nIf Listed at a\nFAIR   PRICE\nWe Can Sell Your Property\nFinances Available\nTo Get the Deals Through\nLIST   TODAY\nC. W. Appleyard\n& Co. Ltd.\nBox 26 Phone 269\n421 Baker St.. Nelson. B.C.\nNEW. HOUSE FOR SALE IN\nCastlegar close to high school.\n2 bedrooms, living room, modern kitchen, bathroom, full basement, coal and wood furnace.\nWired for electric range. Land\ncould be sub-divided into four\nlots. Ph. 6511, Castlegar.\nFAIRVIEW - COMFORTABLE\nhome, 2 corner lots, 3 bedrooms,\n3-year old furnace, full basement, wired for range and TV,\ngas installed, garage. One block\nfrom school and shopping centre\nExcellent condition. Full price\n$7940.00. Phone 715-R.\n50-FT. VIEW LOT, IN THE BEST\nresidential area of Rosemont,\nRobertson Ave., all clear, ready\nto build on, 10 minutes walk from\nHudson Bay Corner. For further information'apply Box 7724,\nNelson Daily News.\nPRICED FOR QUICK SALE!\nTwo-bedroom North Shore home,\ndirectly above bridge approach\non Johnson Road. Fully insulated and in nice condition. Cash\n$5500, terms $6000. Ph. 1413-L.\nLOT 50 BY 250. GRANITE\nRoad, 114 miles from town.\nTaxes $1.75 a year. Very rea-\nsonable price. Ph. 1757-R.\nFOR SALE - MODERN 3-BED:>\nroom house. 1923 Falls St.\n5 LOTS   FOR   SALE - APPLY\n1416 Vancouver Street.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nFOR SALE _ JERSEY COW\nFreshening Oct. 21. Blood tested\nVery high in butterfat. Chas.\nMiller, Crawford Bay, B.C.\n30 HEAD HOLSTEIN HEIFERS\n6 months to 2 years. Priced to\nsell. Phone H. Harrop, 1271.\t\nFOR SALE-2 GENTLE HORSES\nGood for farm or logging. Apply\nA. Maloff, Blewett, B.C.\nWANTED-YOUNG GOAT BUCK\nApply Box 11126, Daily News.\nLEARN BLUEPRINT READING\nby home study. Your ability 'o\nread blueprints will bring promotion to a better paid job. Diploma awarded. Free folder. Blueprint Reading Dept. G3, Primary\nSchool of Drafting. Box 123, Station \"Q\", Toronto.\n(Continued In Next Column)\nNi> lamt.SaiUt, Npuis\nPrice per single copy 6c Monday\nto  Friday.  10c on  Saturday\nSubscription Rates\nBy carrier per week\nin advance 35c\nBy Mail in Canada Outside Nelson:\nOne month            $ 1.25\nThree months      $ 3.50\nSix months      $ 6.50\nOne  year $12.00\nBy mail to United Kingdom or\nthe United States\nOne month             $ 175\nThree months    $ 5 00\nSix months -    $ 9.50\nOne year                $18.00\nWhere extra postage is required\nabove  rates  plus  postage.\nFor Delivery by carrier in Cran-\norook phone Mrs  Wm  Stevely;\nIn Kimberley A. W  Brown;\nIn Trail Mrs. Syd Spooner\nand\nIn Rossland Mrs. Ross Saundry\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nCELGAR LIMITED\nSEALED TENDERS addressed\nto the undersigned and endorsed \"Tenders for steel sheet\ntiling scour wall at pulp mill site,\nCastlegar, B.C.\" will be received\nby the contracts department\nuntil 12 p.m. (noon) PST Friday,\nOctober 11, 1957.\nPlans and specifications can\nbe seen and forms of tender obtained from R. Urquhart at the\nfield office of H. A. Simons Ltd.,\nCastlegar, B.C. Telephone Castlegar 2196.\nThe lowest or any tender will\nnot necessarily be accepted.\nDated the 3rd day of October,\nA.D. .1957.\nCELGAR LIMITED,\nBy their agent,\nH. A. SIMONS LTD.\nConsulting Engineer,\n16 E. Hastings,\nVANCOUVER  4,   B.C.\nRENTALS\nFOR RENT\u2014IMMEDIATE Possession, 3-bedroom house. Oil\nfurnace. Ideal family home. Garage. Good beach. North Shore.\nTen minutes from bridge. 6 mos.\nor year lease. Box 11135 Nelson News.\nSMALL OF F I C E AND WARE-\nhouse with shelving conveniently located in Truck Terminus Bldg. on ground floor.\nPhone  77 for particulars.\nDOWNTOWN - SMALL FURN.\nbed-sitting room $17.50. With\nfridge, rangette $20. One person\nonly. Enquire Bishop's News\nStand.\nWANTED TO RENT\u2014TWO-BED-\nroom house in Fairview. Furnished or unfurnished. Apply Box\n11162, Daily News.\nMODERN 2-BEDROOM 1NSULAT-\ned cottage on lake front at Willow Point, furn. or unfurn. T. G.\nLudgate, 482-X-4.\nHOUSEKEEPING OR SLEEPING\nrooms, furnished, weekly ot\nmonthly rates. Allen Hotel, 171\nBaker Street.\nFOR RENT\u2014FURNISHED _-BED-\nroom bungalow. Close in. Adults.\nApply Box 11137, Nelson News.\n3 LARGE-ROOM SUITE. CLOSE\nin. Heated. Also hot water.\nPartly furnished. Phone 2013.\nBEDROOM WITH OR WITHOUT\nbath. Winter rates, week or\nmonth. Stirling Hotel\nFURNISHED 3-ROOM APART,\nwith bath, heated, near Baker,\nNov. 1. Phone 1184-Y\nSMALL FURN. HOUSE AT WIL-\nlow Point, Available for winter.\nPhone 482-L-2.\nFURN. LAKESIDE COTTAGE.\nClose in. Adults. Box 11117,\nDaily News.\nFOR RENT\u2014LARGE HOUSE, 2\nbedrooms. Good location. Phone\n1236.\n2-BEDROOM HOUSE FOR RENT\non Crossley.Ave. Ph. 681-R after\n5. '\n2 ROOMS FOR RENT. PHONE\n547-L.\nFOR RENT \u25a0\n519-L.\nGARAGE. PHONE\nFURNISHED APARTMENT. SUIT\ncouple. Phone 496-R.\n2 ROOMS FOR RENT. GIRLS OR\nwomen. 924 Silica\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nNELSON READY-\n^MIX CONCRETE\nLtd.\nPhone 871.\nDEALERS IN ALL TYPES OF\nused equipment, mill, mine and\nlogging supplies, new and used\nwire, rope, pipe and fittings,\nchain, steel plate and shapes.\nAtlas Iron & Metals Ltd., 250\nPrior St., Vancouver, B.C., Ph.\nPAcific   6357.\nFOR SALE - HARDWOOD DIN-\ning room suite, 670 x 15 winter\ntires, 1 Spanish style guitar, all\narticles good condition. R. Thomas, Ymir, B.C.\nGURNEY HOT AIR FURNACE,\nsteel weld, 17 inch, complete\nwith pipes $60.00. Apply A. Vaas,\n295 Dockerill St., Trail, B.C. or\nphone 1232-X.\nPROPANE UNIT, 2 TANKS, HOT\nwater tank. $65.00. Thor oil\nheater $40.00. Apply Miller's\nStore, opposite bridge.\nFOR SALE - BUTTON ACCOR-\ndian $10.00 and combination radio. Phone Austin Jackson, Civic\nHotel evenings.\nFOR SALE - WINCHESTER\nrifle .32 special in A-one condition, $25.00.. Apply 513 Latimer\nSt., evenings.\nTWENTY - GALLON PROPANE\nwater heater. Very slightly\nused, V4. price. N. S. Zeytsoff,\nSlocan Park.\nGUNS, NEW AND USED. CUS-\ntorn loads and supplies. Norm's\nGun Shop, 171 Baker, ph. 385.\nPORK, VEAL AND LAMB FOR\nsale at Crawford Bay. Phone\nevenings, Harrop 1271.\t\nHEALTH FOOD CENTRE OPEN\nday and evening  924 Davies St\n'FRIG\"   COLD   WATER   SOAP.\nBest for woollens. Local stores.\nGUITAR - A-l SHAPE. PHONE\n444-L.\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\nAll Models of\nNew CHEVRGLETS\nand\nOLDSMOBILES\nTo Choose From\nNORTH   SHORE   MOTEL   NOW\nopen for winter rentals. Ph. 1684.\n2-BEDROOM APART. ON NEL-\nson Ave. Apply Cutler's News.\nFURNISHED HEATED APART.\nAdults. Box 11118, Daily News.\n2-ROOM COTTAGE. LIGffTWA-\nter and stove. Phone 1789-Y.\n1956\n1956\n1956\n1956\n1955\n1953\n1953\n1953\n1953\n1.952\n1952\n1952\n1952\n1951\nMonarch Sedan\nMeteor Sedan\nChevrolet Sedan\nPlymouth Sedan\nChevrolet Sedan\nPontiac Sedan\nFord Coach\nChevrolet Sedan\nConsul Sedan\nHudson Sedan\nChevrolet Sedan\nChevrolet Coach\nFord Sedan\nFord Sedan\nTrucks\nHOUSE  FOR  RENT-APPLY  60\nView St., or phone 1332-Y.\nFURNISHED  APARTMENT.\nClose in. Phone 839-R.\nONE ROOM  FOR RENT\nVictoria, phone 450-,Y.\nFOR RENT - HOUSEKEEPING\nroom.  Phone  1564-X.\nFOR RENT-TWO-ROOM APART-\nment. Phone 672-R.\n3-ROOM   APART.   FURNISHED.\nApply Cutler's News.\nPARTLY    FURNISHED    SUITE.\nAdults.  Phone 316.\nBEDROOM   FOR   ONE   ADULT.\nPhone 839-R,\nROOM AND BOARD\nBOARD    AND    ROOM    FOR   2\nyoung gentlemen. Ph. 1179-X.\nHOTELS AND MOTELS\nWILL YOU BE OUR G.UEST\nwhen in Spokane, Washington?\nCity centre, parking one block.\nComfortable rooms w'wo bath at\nlow,  low rates   Colonial Hotel.\nJUSINESS   OPPORTUNITIES\nCAFE IN HOTEL\u2014NEWLY DE\ncorated\u2014fully equipped Terms\ncan be arranged Apply Fruit-\nvale Hotel Ltd., or phone 3392.\n1956 Willys Jeep\n1956 Chevrolet Station\nWagon\n1955  International  Pickup\n1955 GMC Pickup\n1955 Dodge Pickup\n1954 Fargo Panel\n1954 Chevrolet Pickyp\n1954 Fargo Pickup .\n1953 GMC Pickup\n1953 Mercury 3 Ton\nPickup\n1953 Chevro|et Pickup\n1953 Ford Pickup\n1950 Ford Panel\n1950 Chevrolet  1   Ton\nPickup\nBUERGER\nMotors Ltd.\n323 Vernon St    Nelson, B C\nPhones  35-36\n'Continued in Next Column'\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\n(Continued)\nFOR SALE - L-190 INTERNA-\ntional tandem truck in good condition. Also 10 yard gravel box\npresently installed on above\ntruck; also 13-ton tandem Freu\nhauf logging trailer with bunks\nand sub-frame for above truck.\nVery reasonable prices. Trades\nand terms. Located at East Kootenay Equipment, Cranbrook.\nCOTTONWOOD WRECKING SER-\nvice \u2014 Used parts for '47 Olds,\n,'52 Somerset, '52 Ford, '46 Meteor, Mercury, '37 Ford, '46 ply-\nmouth, '47. '50, '51, Austin,\nHillman, Prefect, Vanguard,\nMorris Minor cars. For sale,\n2-wheel trailer. .Phone 1363-L-2\nor write Box 382 Ymir Road,\nNelson.\nTRAILERS\nKOOT'NEE\nLTD      ' ' \u2022\nJr New and Used\n\"^ Sales and Service\nCRANBROOK\nJUNIPER 6-2270\nCASTLEGAR\nCastle 2701\nOur Policy:\nTo  Give  Quality   Service\nThroughout the Kootenays\n1958  MODELS\nNOW   ON   DISPLAY\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, OCT. 3, 1957 \u2014 9\nASSAYERS AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nE   W   WIDDOWSON & CO.\nAssayers, 301 Josephine St., Nelson\nSterling Lowest\nSince June '52\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014The sterling area's gold and dollar reserves fell by $292,000,000 during September, Ihe treasury announced\nWednesday.-\nThe reserves\u2014a barometer of\nBritain's economic position\u2014now\nstand at $1,850,000,000.\nToday's figure is the lowest\nsince June, 1952.\nThe huge drop was even bigger\nthan financial experts, who expected September would be a bad\nmonth,  had anticipated.\nIt was largely to stop the drain\non the gold and dollar reserves,\ncaused by for_i'\u00bbn speculation\nagainst the pound, that the government last month took the drastic step of raising the bank rate\nto seven per cent from five per\ncent.\nH.  S   ELMES.   ROSSLAND.   B C.\nAssayer Chemisl Mine Rep.\nENGINEERS- AND SURVEYORS\nM. C. McCORQUODALE, B.C.L.S.\nLand and Engineering Surveys,\n1234 Bay Ave., Trail. Ph 2752 Office folgr., Ray Johnson, B.A.Sc,\nt015-8th St., Nelson, Phone 144-R.\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, MEIC\nBC Land Surveyor P. Eng  I Civil)\n218 Gore St.   Nelson   Phone 1238\nG. W. BAERG, B\u00bbC.\nLand Surveyor\n373 Baker St.   Nelson   Phone 1118\n1956 RF 210, FIRST CLASS ME-\nchanical condition, very low mileage. $9,750. Write or call Spar-\nwood Esso \"Service. P.O. Natal,\nSparwood, B.C. Phone 56-W,\nFOR SALE - 3-TON SPECIAL\nMercury truck, 178\" wheel base,\ngood tires, hoist and steel deck.\nVery reasonable. Phone 1757-R.\nFOR SALE - '54 HILLMAN\nsedan, radio, new tires, turn\nsignals; also 28' inboard cabin\ncruiser.  Phone  1446-R.\nFOR SALE - '55 METEOR HY-\ndromatic. No reasonable offer\nrefused. Phone Austin Jackson,\nCivic Hotel, evenings.\n1952 DODGE SUBURBAN A-l\ncondition. Radio, heater, signal\nlight,. trailer hitch. Phone 3501,\nKinnaird.\nPERSONAL\nA L C O hVO L, I C S ANONYMOHS\nFridays. Box 493. Phone 366-R or\n483-R\nLEARN HAIRDRESSING AT THE\nMarvelle Beauty School in Trail.\nFor information write ,to 1319\nBay Ave, or phone 2822.\"\nFALSE TEETH DISCOMFORT?\nTry \"Dentur-Eze\" today. Wonderful plastic re-liner that makes\nteeth fit comfortably, prevents\nslipping, wobbling, tasteless,\nodorless. One application lasts\nwks. Only $1.95 at all druggists\nSIX PER CENT\nAttention Investors\u2014First agreement for sale on new dwelling,\ndiscounted 10%' repayable\nmonthly $50, principal plus interest. Cash required $2J65. Ph.\n1777, William Kalynuick Agencies.\nMACHINERY\nPOWER UNITS\nAND\nELECTRIC SETS\nTake a look at these values,\nbacked by B.C.'s leading machinery distributor. Dependable power at low cost. \u2014 See\nus today!\n200 H.P. \u2014 CAT D337, radiator,\nsteel base, safety shut-offs. Good\ncondition! Bonded Buy, 90-day\nwarranty, f.o.b. 't^flOO\nVernon. FT-3565. ... ^*>VVV\n110 H.P. \u2014 Cummins HRCP 400,\nY clutch, radiator, base. New\nunit, only 40 hrs.! Buy and Try,\n3-day trial, f.o.b. ^ 4.1 OO\nVancouver. FT-2930.   \u00abP^\"\"V\n20 K.W. \u2014 CAT D4400, ex. regulated, 60 eye, 3 ph., 120\/208.\nSteel base, rad., safety shut-offs.\nCompletely rebuilt. Bonded Buy,\n90-day warranty, f.o.b. Vancouver. .. Co \u00a3AO\nFT-3608 4><JOUU\n75 K.W. \u2014 CAT D337, ex.-reg-\nulated, 60 eye, 3 ph., steel base,\nrad.. safety shut-offs. Comnlete-\nly rebuilt. Bonded Bu\". 9n-Hav\nwarrantv, f.o.b. Van- Si)_7'.ft\ncouver. FT-2791 4> OI\u00abJU\nSee Your\nCATERPILLAR ,\nDealer\nFINNING TRACTOR\n& FOIJIPMPNT\nCO.  LTD.\nPhone 137 - Nelson\nPhone JU-62281  - Cranbrook\nFOR SALE - LF-192 INTERNA\ntional tandem truck in good con\ndition $3500. Also 13-ton tandem\nFreuhauf logging trailer $1200.\nEast Kootenay Equipment, Cran-\nbrook.\t\nWANTED - D-4 CAT ON'RUI.\nber tire backhoe for trade on a\nrehuilt D-8 Cat with\"'dozer. Box\n11141, Daily News.\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nMachine  Shop   Acetylene and\nelectrict welding, motor rewinding. Phone 593.     324 Vernon St\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\nFor All Your\nREQUIREMENTS\nIt's the\nMINING\nINDUSTRIAL\nAUTOMOTIVE\nSupplied and Serviced by\nNELSON\nMACHINERY\nCO., LTD.\nP.O. Box 230     214 Hall St\nNelson, B. C.\nPhone 18-Days      1914 Eves\nWANTED TO RENT\nFURN. 3-ROOM SUITE FOR OC-\ncupancy end of Oct. Close in. Ph.\nBernie, 235 days, evening 2102-L.\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\nnewMcculloch\niDlRECT-DRIVE\nAT\nREDUCED AGAIN!\nNow Only\n(18\" Blade)\n\u2022 Ideal for cutting firewood\n\u2022 Felling and bucking\n\u2022 lending wood lots\n\u2022 Starts with a light touch\n\u2022 Extra light weight\n\u2022 Easily   outperforms   all   other\nDirect-Drive saws,\nSea\nH. \"Fritz\" Farenholtz\nCharlie Ross or Alex McDonald\nWELDING   &   EQUIPMENT\nCO. LTD.\nPHONE  1402\n614 Railway St       Nelson, B.C.\nNEW YORK (AP) - Blue chips\nshowed the way as the stock market continued to rally in moderate\ntrading.\nLeading issues advanced from\nfractions to around 2 points. The\nrise exceeded Tuesday's and led\nto an estimated boost of approximately $1,111)0,000,000 in Ihe quoted\nvalue of stocks listed on the New\nYork Stock Exchange.\n\u2022 The Associated Press average\nof 60 slocks rose $1.50 to $163.00\nwith the industrials up $2.10.\nCanadian gainers included Aluminium Ltd., one-half higher on\n'5700 shares; Hudson Bay Mining,\nup one-half on 700 shares; Mclntyre Porcupine, one-half higher on\n700 shares; International Nickel,\nthree-eighths and Walker-Gooder-\nham, one-eighth.\nWhat stocks did:\nTues Mon\nAdvances      659    529\nDeclines      233    330\nUnchanged     231    263\nTotal issues     1123   1122\nTORONTO (CP) - The stock\nmarket had its best gain in several\nweeks but trading was the lightest\nof three years.\nWith traders diverting much of\ntheir time to the first game of\nbaseball's world series Wednesday, trading fell off in mid-afternoon.\nIndustrials climbed four points\non index and western oils added\nnearly 2'_ points.\nIndustrial gains ranged to three\npoints, led by Page-Hersey Tubes\nat 114.\nCentral Del Rio paced western\noils with a 45-cent gain to $8.85\nand Security had a similar gain\nat $6.70. Canadian Atlantic, Triad\nFargo and Canadian Devonian\nwere other firm winners. Calgary\nand Edmonton climbed Hi to 28%\namong senior issues.\nMONTREAL (CP)\u2014Issues held\nto a strong trend throughout the\nsession on the Canadian and Montreal stock exchanges although\ntrading was comparatively light.\nCanadian Arena. featured, up 7\npoints at 152 on closing. Dominion\nStores added 1V4 at 46. A, V. Roe\nlost % at 1294.\nDominion Steel gained % at 25%\nand Steel of Canada IVi at 55.\nBanking issues firmed fractionally.\nRoyal Bank added % at 61Vg.\nInternational Paper was strong\nall day; it closed at 88, up 3V4.\nConsolidated Paper firmed a point\nat 30'A. In utilities, Power Corporation remained at 56Vi most of the\nday and closed up 2 points.-Calgary Power fell a point to 60.\nBase metals all ended up on\nthe plus side with Hudson Bay\ntacking on a high 1% at 52%.\nPenny issue movements in general ranged to four Cents either,\nway. But Chib Jaculet gained 12\ncents at 97 and Burnt Hill five\ncents at 30. In higher-priced mines,\nBrunswick fell to a new low of 5.25,\na loss of 1.25.\nIndustrial volume was 58,800\nshares; mines and oils 272,800. Of\nthe 214 issues traded 96 were up,\n37 down, and 81 unchanged. Recorded were 6 new highs for the\nyear and 13 new lows.\nThe exchanges' closing averages\nshow banks up .16 at 47.05, utilities\noff .3 at 132.5, industrials up 2.7\nat 249.7, combined up 1.8 at 210.7,\npapers up 16.58 at 1100.06 and\ngolds up 1.50 at 72.18.\ni\nIM9ULAJI0W Vim\nWITH ALEXANDER MURRAY WALL MATERIALS\n.DONNACONA PANEL BOARD\nFIBERGLAS\nD0NNAC0NA KB SHEATHING\nDONNACONA HARDB0ARD SIDING\nCombine tlioco dopondablo Alexander Murray materials to fllvo you walli of lotting\nprotection and beauty... at well as maximum insulation.\n1.\n\u00a9 DONNACONA\nPANEL BOARD...\ncombine* extreme lightness with\nhigh insulation value. It his a unique\ntextured surface ind is eaay to\nbuttle and install. Can be easily painted\nto provide an ideal interior finish.\n(Plain ot prime coated.)\n\u00a9 DONNACONA\nKB SHEATHING...\nThe builder's \"by-word\" In\nweather-proof sheathing, does the job\nbetter, gives permanent insulation.\nlivery fibre is coated with asphalt\nemulsion for extra protection.\nO FIBERGLAS.\nWhile giving 100% efficient\ninsulation, it also offers\nall the advantages of fire-safety,\nfreedom from rot, mildew\nand settling.\nODONNACONA\nHARDBOARD\nSIDING...\nfor exterior use is\n'tempered' to give great\nstrength and a high\ndegree of moisture-\ntesistance. It is smooth,\ngraioless, easy to saw\nand nail.\nAsk your local building supply deafer or bufldlng contractor\nabout Alexander Murray produtti.\nCanada's First Family of Building Materials\nALEXANDER\njy[o. RAY-\nct*& \u00a3btyia?ig \u00a3*wte&\n 10 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, OCT. 3, 1957\n\"Down by the\nTelephone\"\nYou Will Find a Stand With\nAll the Following:\nSHOE POLISH\nLIGHTER FLUID\nTOOTHPICKS\nAIR  DEODORANT\nDICHLORICIDE\nVETERINARY SUPPLIES\nDANCE FLOOR WAX\nSPOT REMOVER\nSEPTIC TANK AGENTS\nANT TRAP\nAnd Many More  Household  Supplies\n,4\u00ab\u2014<LCn4k._\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nOdds.,.\n\u00ab**. Ends\n...by M.D\/B.\nAnti-Flu Vaccine Used On Soldiers\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Immunization from Rotterdam for home,\nof some. 22,000 Canadian soldiers\nand their dependents in Europe\nand Canada against ^Asian flu began Wednesday, an army spokesman said.\nRotation of the 2nd Infantry\nBrigade in Europe \u25a0 and the ' 4th\nBrigade in Canada will begin Friday when some. 600 soldiers sail\nAnti-flu vaccine has been flown\nfrom Canada to the 2nd Brigade\nin West Germany and vaccination\nof 11,000 soldiers and their dependents began today. Members\nof the 4th Brigade which will\nsoon leave for Europe and their\ndependents \u2014 another 11,000 persons \u2014 will also be immunized.\nTV SPECIAL\nHAZEL BISHOP\nHAIR SPRAY\nRegular ^\/.j\" for $\/,__,<_)\nAnd 11 you send in the yellow wrapper and 25c you will\nreceive a 320-page book called \"Your Powers as a Woman\",\nTake advantage- of this trial offer.\nFleur\/s Pharmacy\nCORNER OF BAKER AND WARD STREETS\nPhone 25 Nelson, B.C.\nMake Wood, Vallance Hardware Co.,\nLtd. your complete source of supply on\neverything electrical. We carry nationally advertised appliances, and stock\nsupplies for electrical repairs,-replacements and new installations.\nELECTRICAL WIRE\nNORLEX\n2\/12 Plain: __ .11 Ft.\n2\/14 Plain: .... .07 Ft.\n2\/12 Grounded: .12 Ft.\n2\/14 Grounded: .09 Ft,\nFLAMESEAL\nSolid #14: .....02 Ft.\nSolid #12: .... .03 Ft.\nSolid #10: .... .04'\/_ Ft.\nStranded #8: .09 Ft.\nStranded #2:   .36     Ft.\nELECTRIC APPLIANCES Including:\nSaws, Drills, Buffers, Irons,\nToasters, Fry Pans\nand many others to meet all requirements.\nSingle Pole Pushmatic Breakers\nFrom 15-40 Amps.                              ,-\u25a0 $*\u00bb   AC\nUp from  .  tm'TTj\nWall Plates: Ivory and\nBrown. 12\u00a3 and Up\nToggle Switches:\n300 and Up\nExtension Cords:\n$1.00 and Up\nNEW\nTuck Electrical Tape\nCombination of Rubber and\nFriction Tape. - %\" x 12'.\n25c\nWood, Vallance Hdwre.\nCompany Limited\nWHOLESALE - RETAIL\nPhone  1530 Nelson,  B.C.\nWell, it was bound to happen, |t-\nthose golden days of September\ncould not last, nor could they be\nexpected to \u2014 the rains had to\ncome. It is sad though' to see\ndahlias and asters bending heavy\nheads before its merciless onslaught as the world turns drab\nand gray and it is difficult not to\nfeel drab and grey along with it.\n*  \u2022  *      .\nTuesday, I thought, 'now tomorrow I must go and find something\nfor the column,' but who wants to\npaddle around in the stuff? Coming\nup to Baker Street from the post-\noffice I felt like a salmon swimming upstream and along Baker\nis was just a case of drifting with\nthe wind and tide. Gutters were\nfull to overflowing and around each\ngrated drain was the flotsam and\njetsom of paper wrappers and cigarette packages that had washed\ndown on the swollen streams.\nOn a day like this summer holidays seem far behind us, days of\nlying in the sun, of swimming and\npicnics. Gone the warm nights with\nhaze of moonlight and starlight,\nwhen sky bent low to earth so you\ncould almost get silver dust on\nyour fingers if you stood on tiptoe.\nIt is as\u00bbthough we have passed to\nanother world.\n.   *   *\nWhen I can feel as low as this\non a day like this I wonder how\nit must be for old people whose\nsummers are numbered. Well,\nenough of this \u2014 let's just hope this\nrain won't last too\" lotlg. We can always go down into the basement\nand gloat over the year's supply\nof fruit winking in their glass jars\nor sit down by a cheery fire and\nread -the seed catalogues and plan\nfor next Spring.\n.   *  *\nOh, there will be lovely days yet\n\u25a0 crisp days with frost in the air\nand the scrunchy sound of leaves\nunder foot and then there'll be the\nbusiness of putting the garden to\nbed and leaving it tidy for Springtime. It is fortunate that hope\nsprings eternal in ' the human\nbreast, and it is the surety that\nSpring will come that makes drizzly Autumn days bearable.\n\u2022', *   .\nThen of course there will be the\njoy of the autumn fire when after\nall our tidying up we burn up the\nstuff that won't go on the compost\nheap \u2014 old cardboard boxes\nmagazines and so forth that we\nhave had to move out of the way to\nget at the furnace. And on these\nrainy nights as you sit around in\nyour slippers, reading the paper or\na good book .aware of rain pelting\ndown outside, there is a great deal\nof satisfaction and enjoyment in\nthe snug cosy feeling of home.\nRAIN SLOWS FIRE\nCHILLIWACK (CP) - Forest\nservice officials said Wednesday\nmoist air has assisted fire fighters\nin bringing under control an 800-\nacre forest fire in mountahl country near Laidlaw.\nThey said the blaze started\nSunday when a slash fire on the\nPerry Logging Company operation, 20 miles northwest of here,\ngot out of control.\nIN RECOGNITION of donation of his 20th pint- of blood,\nLloyd Catley Is shown receiving a scroll from B.C. Red Cross\npresident Eric Marsden. Mr. Catley also received a special gold\npin, as well as the scroll. A large number of Nelsonltes received\npins for their 10th donations. They Include Frank Braybrooke,\nFrank Burgoyne, Mrs. Elsie Chrlstlanson, Alan Clarke, Mrs. Doug\nCummins, Mrs, Mary DeGirolamo, Harry D. Harrison, Norman\nHickman, R. L. Jarrett, Mrs. Joseph Kary, Alex Koenlg, Ivan\nLewis, Jack A. McDonald, Miss Mae Meers, J. H. Nlehaus, Mrs.\nLawrence Ott, Mrs. V. M. Patterson, Hubert South, A. VanSacker,\nWalt Walt, Fred C. Walton, Presentations were made In Canadian\nLegion during a Red Cross workshop, Some of Catley. donations\nwere made overseas during the war.\u2014Dally News photo.\nCanadian Maple to Honor\nPPCU's Fiercest Battle\nOTTAWA (CP) - A Canadian\nmaple tree has been planted near\nYpres, Belgium, on the scene of\none of the Canadian Army's blood-\nBeehive Hairdos\nrophesied\nLONDON (AP) - Royal hair\ndresser Riche decreed Wednesday\nthat women's hair styles in 1958\nshould resemble the birds and bees.\n\"Fashion has gone full cycle,\"\nsaid the man who fixes the royal\ntresses of the Duchess of Kent and\nPrincess Alexandra. \"So now\nwe're going back before Adam\nand Eve for inspiration\u2014tie birds\nand bees.\"\nRiche, who speaks French with\na Cockney accent, asked movie\nstar Robert Beatty to announce\nhis 16 new styles for the coming\nyear.\nWith a piano tinkling in the\nbackground, Beatty introduced a\nsquad of lovelies each with a hairdo of the future.\nSome of them'were called: town\nsparrow, busy bee, honey bee,\nflamingo, beehive, bee in a bonnet and turtle dove.\nThe loudest, acclaim was \"for\nbeehive. The shape of Che model's\nhair resembled the silhouette of\na bee. On top of the brunette\nwaves rested a small bee hive\nand from it sprouted a pair of\nbees.\niest battles as a memorial to the\nPrincess Patricia's Canadian\nLight Infantry.\nThe memorial will honor 16 officers and 382 men of the PPCLI\nkilled, wounded or missing in the\n2nd battle of Ypres May 8, 1915.\nBesides the tree, the memorial\nwill include a brass plaque recording the battle and a circular\nseat of Belgian tilue granite.\nArmy headquarters said Wed.\na 100-man guard of honor drawn\nfrom the PPCLI's 1st battalion\nserving in West Germany paraded Monday for a ceremony at\nwhich Brig. A. Hamilton Gault of\nMontreal, the regiment's founder,\nturned the first sod at the site\nof the memorial. Forty-two years\nbefore, Brig. Gault commanded\nthe Patricias in the 2nd battle of\nYpres.\nEighty per cent of the total\nstrength of the Patricias became\ncasualties in the heroic stand in\nthe trenches on Bellewaerde Ridge\nat Frezenberg, three miles from\nYpres.\nBritish Labor Divided\nOn Stock Market Deal\nBRIGHTON, England (Reuters)\nThe Labor party's annual conference Wednesday overwhelmingly\napproved a plan to acquire a government foothold in important industries by buying up shares on\nthe stock market.\nDespite opposition from powerful union leaders, the plan was\napproved in a card vote by 5,309,000\nto 1,276,000. Each delegate voted\non behalf of all the members of\nhis union or local political organization affiliated with the Lftbor\nparty.\nSpeakers protested that the.plan\ndeparted from the \"old-fashioned\"\nSocialist principle of outright nationalization. ' They declared it\nwould make a future Labor party\ngovernment \"a hostage, bound\nhand and foot to the capitalist\nsystem.\"\nJim Campbell, a trade union\nleader, warned:\n'I am afraid we will not be\nprepared to accept this as the last\nword in the policy of the Labor\nparty for the next general election.\"\nLEADERS AGREE\nThe plan to buy stock in key\ncompanies is supported by party\nleader Hugh Gaitskell and economic spokesman Harold Wilson.\nThey feel the party needs to attract\nnon-socialists at the next general\nelection.\nIn the name of his union \u2014 the\nNational Union of Railwaynien \u2014\nCampbell proposed a motion call\ning on the party leaders to take\nback their plan and substitute another which would'list industries\nto be nationalized by the next\nLabor party government.\nHerbert Morrison, former deputy\nleaded of the party, was another\nopponent of the plan. He said the\nproponents of the plan seemed to\nargue that the state would not get\ncontrol of industries but would \"get\na share of the swag.\"\nWilson said the plan was not a\nsubstitute for traditional forms of\nnationalization. There was a clear\ncommitment in it to extend public\nownership to any industry or part\nof an industry which, after thorough inquiry, was found to'be failing the nation, he said.\nDelegates shouted down another\nveteran socialist, Arthur Wood-\nburn, a former cabinet minister,\nwhen, in support of the plan, he\nsaid:\n\"Anybody who is a historical socialist as opposed to a Utopian\nsocialist. realizes that the capitalist system has brought great progress for the human race, and socialism must be built upon the\nbasis of capitalism.\"\nNO BURNING PERMIT\nBRINGS $25 FINE\nJ. A. Lennox of Oasis was fined\n$25 for lighting a fire on September 16 without a burning permit.\nHe pleaded guilty before Magistrate Parker Williams in provincial court at Trail Tuesday.\nRoe Assured Fifty-Two\nPer Cent Dosco Shares\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c line, 40c line black face type; larger type rates on\nrequest. Minimum two lines. 10% discpunt for prompt payment.\nFor Fuller Sales pnd Service   I\nCall  Don  Sergent  -  Phone  350\nBabies  -  Weddings - Portraits\nVOGUE STUDIO - PHONE 1552\nFisherman's  Headquarters\nTILLICL'M INN-BALFOUR, B.C.\nThe latest in art and craft supplies\nfor everyone's hobby at\nHOBBY SHOP OPP. BUS DEPOT\nNew ladies dresses and skirts\nA good fall selection in all sizes\nEBERLE'S\" ON BAKER ST.\nGordon Sutherland\nPainting, Paperhanging.  R.R. 1,\nPhone 1990, Nelson.\nGas or oil heating Installed and\nserviced. Licenced, bonded gas fitter. Norm Bowcock, phone 385.\nNew Bedroom Suite .   .\nRegular $229.00 now $199.00.\nBIRCH'S FURNITURE - PH. 47\nBoy's Pants, Shirts, Sweaters\nA good selection to choose from,\nEBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.\nMarlite tile board for bathroom\nand kitchen walls. Beautiful colors.\nT. H. WATERS _ CO. LTD.\nPhone 156 - 101 Hall St. - Nelson\nBook your orders now for\nShrubs and Rose Bushes\nSpring Delivery\nCOVENTRY'S FLOWER SHOP\nPOR YOUR NEW HAIR STYLING\n_ permanents try the Charm\nBeauty Salon, Medical Arts Bldg\nSte 211. Phone 1922.\nJust Arrived \u2014 New Shipment\nSlazenger Badminton Rackets\nWOOD, VALLANCE HARDWARE\nCO. LTD.\nPhone 505 for\nall local moving, shipping and\ndistributifig.\nSPEEDY DELIVERY\nGood quality homespun  type\nBedspreads in\nrose, chartruse and beige.\nDouble bed size at $9.50.\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nATTENTION\nCANADIAN LEGION MEMBERS\nLegion general meeting Thursday,\nOctober 3rd \u2022 8 p.m.\nFilms and Refreshments.\nWHAT ELSE?\nLONDON (CP) \u2014 An extract of\nan order issued to engineers by the\nair ministry reads: \"The end opposite to the fr'ont of an engine\nshall be called the rear.\"\nTORONTO (CP) - A spokesman\nfor A. V. Roe Canada Limited said\nlate Wednesday at least 1,750,000\ncommon shares of Dominion Steel\nand Coal Corporation Limited have\nbeen committed to Roe's purchase\noffer, assuring Roe of more than\nits required 52 per cent.\nRon Williams, assistant to Roe\npresident Crawford Gordon, said\nthe 1,750,000 figure was confirmed\nby the transfer agents, making a\nchange in an earlier report that\n2,000,000 shares were . already\ncommitted.\nMr. Williams said the transfer\nagents just advised him of the'\nerror which he said was made by\nthe agents in their recording of\nthe total DOSCO shares already\nturned in for transfer.\nHe said earlier that Roe expects to have control of 2,400,000\nDOSCO shares before Oct. 9 when\nthe formal purchase offer expires.\nThe offer was' originally to- have\nended Tuesday night but was extended another week after Roe\nannounced cautiously that it was\n\"satisfied that holders of more\nthan 52 per cent of the shares or\ntheir equivalent in debentures of\nDOSCO have accepted the offer.\"\nWednesday's statement says, specifically that the required 52 per\nPAJAMAS\nRelax in a pair of these\nBroadcloth or Flannelette\nPajamas\nNEW COLORS\nAlso a large variety of\nSki-Type Pajamas\nEMORY'O\nLTD.     9\nTHE MAN'S STORE\ncent has been reached and exceeded. Mr! Williams said the transfer\nagents \"were swamped last night\"\nwith applications to exchange\nDOSCO shares and debentures for\nRoe stock and cash.\nThe offer provides iy. Roe common' shares and $10.25 in cash for\neach outstanding common DOSCO\nshare and a similar exchange in\ncommon shares and cash for all\noutstanding DOSCO debentures.\n'. If all the 2,240,000 outstanding\ncommon DOSCO shares and the\noutstanding debentures were exchanged under terms of the offer,\nthe resulting common shares\nwould total about 3,100,000, he said.\nMr. Williams said Roe would\nnot make any statement on what\nit plans to do with its control of\nDOSCO until after the Oct. 9 expiry of its formal purchase offer\nThe Roe-Dosco merger forms\nCanada's biggest industrial enterprise with a book value of more\nthan $285,000,000 and industrial\nenterprises extending from Ontario to Newfoundland. It controls\ncoal mines, steel mills, railway\nand shipping companies, makes\naircraft and jet engines and a\nwide   variety   of   manufactured\ngoods.\nSwansea Lookout\nHas 300 Visitors\nINVERMERE - Swansea lookout near Windermere closed down\nSeptember 30 after a season remarkably free of forest rires.\nMore than 300 people climbed\nthe mountain to the lookout during the summer. Although a rough\nroad has been built some distance\nup the mountain, most of the visitors made the climb on foot. Even\nthose who made the ascent by\ncar had to climb the last steep\ngrade under their own steam.\nHave The Job Done Right\nWIC GRAVEC\n\u25a0 LIMITED        *J\nPHONE 815\nMASTER PLUMBER\nHAIGH\nTRU-ART\nBeauty  Salon\n576 Baker St,\nPhone 327\nSoothe \"All Night\" Coughs\nCHERROSOTE\nCough Syrup\nTime-tested cough syrup\nfights coughs two ways. Relieves \"tickling throat\" loosens phlegm. Local anesthetic\naction soothes irritation.   (>\u00a7\u00a3 - $1\nYOUR ggg, PHARMACIST\nCity Drug\nStar Specials at the Star\nCoffee:\nAll Brands; _....LB.\nMargarine:\nParkay;\t\nChocolate Drink:\nQuick;   \t\nChocolate Drink:\nQuick; LB.\nPrices Effective Thursday, Friday and Saturday\n^JvoceJuf, (OspaJdmsmt\n95''\n2,\u201e73'\n2 J1.23\n63'\nBrownie Mix.\nRobin  Hood;   \t\nRINSO\nGiant Size\n79c\n2\n_\u25a0\u25a0, ff,,.\nEE POLIO INOCULATIONS\nThe Selkirk Health Unit, 303\nBaker Street, is holding a special\npolio Cmic on Friday, October 11,\nfrom 2 to 3:30 p.m. Parents with\nchildren under school age who require the second polio inoculation\nare asked to bring their children\nto ^his ilinic. Please note that\nthis clinic is being held only for\nchildren requiring second doses.\nThe supply of vaccine is not large\nenough to give first or third doses\nuntil a  later date.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nCANTFELL \u2014 Funeral service\nfor the late Charles Albert Cant-\nfell will be conducted Friday at\n11 a.m. in Carberry's \u25a0 Funeral\nChapel by Rev. E. H. Patterson.\nBurial will be in Schubenaedicadie,\nNova Scotia.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nWUORI \u2014 Funeral service .for\nthe late Rowland Avon Wuori, formerly of Nelson and Rossland will\nbe held Friday, Oct. 4, at 2 p.m.\nfrom St. Andrew's United Church,\nRossland. Rev. A. J. Lawton will\nofficiate. Interment in Mountain\nView Cemetery. Clark's Funeral\nChapel in charge.\nWHITE\nRabbits:\nFresh Dressed; 3-4 lb. average;  LB.\nGRAPEFRUIT\n% for 29c\nOranges:\nSunkist;   \t\nApples:\nMacintosh; \t\nSweet Spuds:\nSpanish Onions:\n5 ib. 65*\n. *\u25a0 lbs.   \u00ab\u25a0 I\n\u00ab\u25a0 lbs.  *f.W\n19*\n VS.     l +\nWhat OspxVdmmt\n59'\nleg Roasts Pork\nlb. 55e\nBreakfast Bacon: $1 JQ\n.'. Hi  lb. pkg.    * *** T\nPork Riblets: \u00a3     45*\n 3!! 95'\n39'\nVeal, Pork and Beef:\nMinced for Meat Loaves; \t\nPork Picnics:\n5-6 lb. average; Lb.\nRound Bone Pot Roasts: 3Q*\nGrade A Red;   Lb. W W.\nSTAR GROCERY\nPHONI10\nH. A. D. GREENWOOD\nNELSON, B.C.\n","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"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.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType":[{"value":"Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial":[{"value":"Nelson (B.C.)","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier":[{"value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1957_10_03","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0429927","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language":[{"value":"English","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat":[{"value":"49.493333","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long":[{"value":"-117.295833","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider":[{"value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher":[{"value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Company, Limited","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights":[{"value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source":[{"value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title":[{"value":"Nelson Daily News","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type":[{"value":"Text","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description":[{"value":"","type":"literal","lang":"en"}]}}