{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0430074":{"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":"2023-04-03","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1956-10-15","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0430074\/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":" WKM\nWEATHER\nW0-\nFORECAST\n\"Kootenay: Cloudy with a few\nahowers. Little change in temperature. Winds south 15 In main valleys. Low-high at Cranbrook and\nCrescent Valley 35 and 50.\nVol. 55\nNELSON, B. C, CANADA\u2014MONDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 15, 1956\nNot  Mora Than Oo Dally.  lOo  Saturday\nNo. 147\nThe Maharaja of Allrajpuh, 33, and his bride, the former\nMennakshl KumarJ Ahupa, 20, are shown In -colorful native\ndress following their marriage at the India House In London,\nEng. The ceremony, which took an hour to complete, was conducted by an Inner temple barrister who Is also a Hindu priest.\nAmong those atendlng the wedding were the high commissioner\nof India, Madame Pandit, and the Maharaja of Baroda. Note\nthe ornamental sword the Maharaja is carrying. The bride Is\nwearing a sari of gold and silver embroidered with coral\nCentral Press Canadian\nIsrael Calls\nHer Envoys\nAs Jordan Reported Bolstering\nDefences Question of War Looms\nJERUSALEM (AP) \u2014 Israel summoned its ambassadors\nhome from the Big Four capitals Sunday for urgent consultations on the Arab world's .decision to bolster the defence^ of Jordan.\nFrontier tension heightened, at reports that Iraq will\nagain move troops into the little Arab kingdom with which\nit was allied in the Palestine\nwar of 1948.\nAn Israeli military patrol was\nreported to have killed two Egyptian guerrillas and captured two\nothers in a skirmish Sunday in\nthe Sdeh Boker area of the central Negev Desert near the des-\n\u2022rt home of Premier David Ben-\nGurion,\nAn Israeli spokesman quoted\nthe prisoners as saying the party\n\u2014argied with grenades and submachine guns\u2014had been sent into\nIsrael by Egyptian intelligence\nofficers based in Abu Ageila on\nthe Sinai Peninsula\nMAY APPEAL TO UN\nThe call to Israeli envoys ln\nWashington, London, Paris and\nMoscow to return to Jerusalem\nfollowed an announcement by\nforeign minister Golda Meir that\nIsrael is determined to resist what\nlhe called \"British-Iraqi plans envisaging the entry of troops into\nJordan.\" It was reported Israel\nmay appeal to the UN Security\neouncil.\n*ra nsoiotA\nmanna jNauvnuvd\n\u2022Hawaii iviotiiAOHd\n9fi OB(J ft m\nNot Favored by Eden\nBy FRASER WIGHTON\nLLANDUDNO, Wales (Reuters) \u2014 Pxime Minister Eden\nSaturday rejected \"peace at any,price\" to end,the Suez\nCanal crisis and said his government has \"no intention\"\nof withdrawing British fore-\nBen-Gurlon will address the\nKnesset parliament today.\nThere also were consultations\nin Amman, Jordan's capital\nwhere young King Hussein is\nconfronted by conflicting political and economic pressures as\nwell as issues born of the frontier\nstrife.\nILAH  ARRIVES\nIraqi Crown Prince Abdul Hah\narrived in Amman at the head of\na high-level delegation including\nGen. Raiiq Aref, the chief of staff\nof Iraq's army. An official aource\nsaid the discussion would centre\non military co-operation against\n\"Israeli   aggression.\"\nLONDON (AP) \u2014 Britain Sunday night took \u25a0 an increasingly-\ngrave view of the Israel-Jordan\nborder dispute.\nThe   foreign    office    officially\nwithheld any comment on the situation.  But British  sources  said\nthe   government   studied   closely\na  statement  by  Israeli  Foreign\nMinister  Mrs.  Golda  Meir  that\nPremier    Ben-Gurlon's   eab-;Israel was \"determined to meet\nInet met amid talk In the lira- the threat of Israel's integrity,\"\nall seotor of Jerusalem that the! which she said would be raised\nItuatlon   ii   fraught   with   re-  Dy dny movement of Iraqi troops\ninto Jordan. v\nAn   Iraqi   mission   arrived   in\ni Amman Sunday for talks aimed\nnewed   danger   of  war.  There\nwat   open   speculation   In   tha\nstreets in tha question:\n\"Will there be another war?'\nLANCASTERS OUT\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 The last\noperational, four-engined Lancaster, major weapon of Britain's\nBomber Command during the Second World War, makes its final\nflight today to be broken up.\nThe famous bomber made more\nthan 156,000 sorties against the\nenemy, dropping morelthan 500,-\n000 tons of high explosives and\n6,000,000 incendiary bombs.\nat  military   co-operation   against\n\"Israeli aggression-\"\nBritain is weighing whether\nthe Meir statement could mean\nthat Israel might decide to risk\naggression against Jordan sources\nsaid-\nIt was reported that Britain\nhas pointedly reminded Israel of\nthe Anglo-Jordan military pact\nof 1948. Under it Britain would\ngo to Jordan's aid if King Hussein invokes the collective-defence agreement in the event of\nwar. ,\nFormer Premier Nagy\nReturned to Red Fold\nBy ENDRE MARTON\nBUDAPEST (AP) \u2014 Hungary's\nCommunist party took another\nbig step Sunday toward liquidating the remnants of Stalinism by\nannouncing that former premier\nImre Nagy has been ^stored to\nparty membership.\nNagy was ousted from the membership in April, 1955,, and expelled from the Communist party\nleven months later on motions by\nMatyas Rakosi, the old Stalinist\nwho himself was deposed from the\nparty leadership last July 18.\nRakosi had accused Nagy of\nrightist deviationism.\nAt the outset of his term as premier July 4, 1953, Nagy announced\ni program to increase production\nof foo dand other consumer goods\nto raise the Hungarian standard\nof living. His government cut land\ntaxes and reduced the farmers'\ncrop delivery obligations.\nAwholseale reduction was announced on the prices of foodstuffs and industrial goods. This\n\"new look\", de-emphasizing heavy\nindustry, parallelled a similar\nmovement promoted within the\nSoviet Union during the premiership of Georgi M. Malenkov. Nagy fell soon after Malenkov re\nsigned  with  a confession  of errors Feb. 8, 1955.\nGREAT REVULSION\nSince the de-Stalinization campaign started from Moscow last\nFebruary there has been a great\nrevulsion against Stalinism in\nHungary.\nIt was climaxed this week by\nthe honorary reburial of numerous victims of the Stalin-Rakosi\nera purges and by the arres| of\nsome leading figures who took\npart in their prosecution and torture.\nOnly Saturday the government\nannounced the arrest of Lt.-Gen.\nMihaly Farkas, former defence\nminister, and his secret policeman\nson, Vladimir Farkas, who helped\nin the 1949-50 investigation of such\nprominent.Communists as former\nForeign Secretary Laszlo Rajk\nand former Interior Minister Janes Kadar. Both Rajk and Kadar\nhave been \"rehabilitated\", Rajk\nposthumously.\nThe exhumed bodies of five\ngenerals, now described as \"innocently convicted and executed,\"\nWere solemnly reburied Saturday\nin graves of honor at Budapest's\nFarkasret Cemetery, K\nCIGARET FIRE\nKILLS SIX\nFamily Wiped.Out\nAs Night Blaze\nDestroys Home\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014All six mem\nbers of a Toronto family died a\nfew Hours before dawn Saturday\nas fire flared through their two-\nstorey brick home.\nFiremen said a cigaret left\nsmouldering behind sofa cushions\nafter a late television session\nturned the trim east end home\ninto a charred husk.    .\nThey smashed into the blazing\nhouse and found the bodies of Leonard (Tiny) lurt, 45, his wife.\nKatherine, 44, and their four children, Mary Ann, 11, Michael,\nMargaret, 7, and David, 5.\nThe blaze brought to 12 the\nnumber of persons dead in Canada during Fire Prevention Week,\nFiremen said they found the\nbodies of Mrs. Burt and Mary\nAnn a few feet from the front\ndoor. Margaret's body lay at the\ntop of the stairs, David died in\nbed and the bodies of Mr. Burt\nand Michael lay together in the\nboy's bedroom.\nIt appeared Mr. and Mrs. Burt\ndied attempting to lead their children to safety. Michael was crippled by a brain ailment.\nGRANTHAM ASKS\nSUPPORT IN\nRESTORING ORDER\nHONG KONG (AP)-Sir Alexander Grantham, governor of\nHong Kong, demanded Sunday\nthat residents of this British colony\nsupport' police and troops in restoring law and order.\nThe situation resulting from last\nweek's riots is well in hand, he\nsaid in a broadcast, but complete\nrestoration of law and- order depends on the \"masses\" co-operating with police and miltary forces.\n\"I now ask\u2014demand\u2014for you\nto get behind the sedurlty forces.\"\nThe government, he said, will\nmake public a full report when investigations have, been completed.\nAs of now, the major blame has\nbeen placed on secret Chinese societies and underground criminal\norganizations. Most of the gangsters now have been rounded up,\nGrantham said.\nes from the eastern Mediterranean.\nIn a hard-hitting speech before\n4000 cheering Conservative supporters, Eden threw out charges\nthat colonialism is the main Suez\nissue.\nHe Said Britain's \"firmness and\nresolution\" in the crisis has been\nresponsible for \"a little progress\"\nbeing made ih the United Nations\nSecurity Council debate in New\nYork.\nBritain's initial opposition to\nleaving the canal \"in the unfettered control of a single power\"\nremains unchanged, he said. His\ngovernment still wants to seek international control of the waterway by negotiation \u2014 \"if we possibly can.\"\nPOINTED AT DULLES\nRejecting charges of colonialism as \"misleading\", Eden indirectly referred to\nDAG   HAMMARSKJOLD\n. . . United Nations secretary general praised by both\nEast and Welt for part during\nSuez discussions.\nPresident Notes\nTalks To Continue On\nSix Basic Principles\n. UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (CP) \u2014 Russia, using the veto\nfor the 78th time, has killed a British-French resolution\ndalling on the United Nations Security Council to support\na London plan that would give international management\nto the Suez Canal.\nWASHINGTON (AP) \u2014 Presi-:\ndent Eisenhower observed his 66th\nbirthday quietly with his family |\na statement j Sunday  \u2014  and   remarked  that,\nmade by State Secretary Dulles I \"things look better again\" regard-\nat a Washington press conference! ing prospects for easing the Suez\nthat the United States could not! Canal crisis,\nwholly'identify itself either with The birthday celebrations at the\nthe \"colonial powers\" or extreme White House was a respite for the\nanti-coionial nationalism. ' \\ president before four days of cam-\n\"Colonialism has nothing to do; paigning to the west coast, start-\nwith the matter,\" Eden said. \"Weling Tuesday,\nhave never disputed Egyptian so-     \"May   God   bless   all   of  your\nvereignty. What is at stake\nwhether the sanctity of contracts\nhas to be respected or not.\"\nEden was warm,in his praise of\nAnglo-French co-operation during\nthe crisis. He said this has led to\na \"sense of partnership\" between\nBritain and the nations of Western Europe. '\nRECALLS MUNICH\nReferring again to Britain's contention that Egypt broke an international epntraot when 'ihe nationalised the canal last July,\nmade a parallel between the canal negotiations and British diplomacy with Hitler at the 1988\nIVtunich conference.\n\"The sanctity of international\nengagements ... is the supreme,\nlesson of the period between the\nwars,\" he said. \"I can never forget it\"\nKU KLUX PARADE\nCLINTON, Tenn. (AP) \u2014 About\n125 carloads of hooded Ku Klux\nKlan members paraded Saturday\nnight through Clinton, scene of\nracial disorders arising from\nschool integration last month.\nFour crosses were burned. Newspaper men were chased from a vacant lot near town where hooded\nspeakers denounced public school\nintegration.\ndays,\" Rev. Edward L. R. Elson\ntold Eisenhower in wishing him a\nhappy birthday from the pulpit at\nthe National Presbyterian Church,\nwhere the president attended\nmorning services.\nBack at the White House the\n50-piece army band turned up on\nthe south lawn for a surprise serenade in the perfect Indian Sum-\nttiir .weather.\nEisenhower's re mark that\n^things lpokbettejr agap\". regard-,\ning the Suez situation was made\nto a group of photographers who\nwished him a happy birthday after\nthe president posed with his family for a picture at. the white\nHouse.\nBut Russia joined. 10 other\ncountries Saturday night in unanimously approving six principles,\nor requirements for continued\nnegotiations in the Suez crisis.\nUN Secretary-General Dag Ham-\nmarskjold, undaunted by the veto\nsaid he will press in private\ntalks for settlement of the dispute\nin line with the six points at\nagreement.\nThe U. S., Britain and France\nand six other council members\nvoted for the entire resolution\ncontaining the six principles and\nthe British-French proposals that\nthe decisions of IB powers at Lon\ndon for international operation\nof the canal form a basis for a\nsettlement.      .\nThe Soviet Union and Yugoslavia voted against the second part.\nThe principles approved In\nthe secret talks among the British, French, and Egyptian foreign ministers and Hammarsk-\nJold provide for free and open\ntransit of the canal, respect for\nEgypt's sovereignty, Insulation\nof the operation of the canal\nfrom   politics  of  any  country,\nMendes-France Takes\nCommand of Radicals\nBy HAROLD KINO\nLYON, France (Reuters) \u2014 Dynamic former French Premier\nPierre Mendes - France climaxed\nSunday a two-year campaign to\ngain complete control of the Radical party as minority right-wjing\nleaders announced their resignation.\nThe walkout left energetic new-\ndepler Mendes-France in undisputed control of a political machine to which his powerful personality has attracted thousands\nDf French youths during the last\ntwo years.\nThe right - wing members decided to leave after inability, to\nget their more conservative views\non policy for Algeria adopted at\nthe four-day party congress which\nended Sunday. Speculation was\nthat 22 of 75 Radical senators and\n15 of 55 national assembly deputies would leave the party.\nThe party congress called for a\nquick new political deal for Algeria\nGOT MUCH DONE\nThe split marked the end of a\ntwo-year campaign by Mendes-\nFrance for party leadership after\nhe was ousted as premier in February,- 1955. During his eight\nmonths in office he ended the Indochina war, granted Tunisia\nautonomy and led Britain into the\nWestern European Union after the\nproposed European Defence Community was rejected by the national assembly.\nThe 50-year-old Mendes-France\nwas elected first vice-president of\nthe party under the chairmanship\nof aged Edouard Herriot, a Men\ndes-France backer, a year ago.\nSunday he was triumphantly confirmed, as the party's real leader\nby being re-elected vice-president\nby a vote of 1928 to 202.\nPlot to Oust\nJuliana Rumored\nLONDON (AP) \u2014 The mass\ncirculation Sunday Pictorial says\na plot exists to overthrow Queen\nJuliana of the Netherlands by\nforcing her to abdicate in favor\nof her 18-year-old daughter, Princess Beatrix.\nf The newspaper says it learned\nof the alleged plot from Dr. I. G.\nVan Maasdijk, lord-in-walting to\nthe Queen.\nPictorial reporter Victor Sims,\nin a dispatch from The Hague,\nsays Van Maasdijk told him:\n\"I can tell you that there is a\nconspiracy to rob Queen Juliana\nof the throne. \u25a0\nThe alleged conspiracy is based\non disagreements within the royal\nJuliana's relationship with faith healer Greet\nHofmans.\nBirth Rate Next\nProblem -r-Toynbee\nWASHINGTON' (AP) - Historian Arnold Toynbee says the hu-1 family over Queen\nman race seems about to wipe out\ntwo of its great scourges \u2014 war\nand pestilence \u2014 only to face the\npossibility of devastation by the\ni third traditional source of destruction, famine.\nFor that reason, Toynbee says\nthat man will have to face up\neventually to \"the problem of limiting the birth rate.\" With population soaring as disease and war\ncome under control,'he says, the\nalternative to a reduction in the\nnumber of births \"is starvation.\"\nagreement on tolls and charg-\nes by Egypt and the users, a\nfair amount of the dues to go\nfor development and arbitration\nIn case of dispute.\nHammarskjold, who drew praise\nfrom the' Soviet delegate and the\nWest alike for his role in the\nsecret talks, said in a statement\nafter the council adjourned that\nthe action: provides a \"valuable\nstarting point\" for further explorations.\nThe situation now is that the\nSecurity Council has taken note\nof the developments resulting\nfrom the tripartite talks and has\nagreed that any settlement of the\nSuez question should meet the\nsix requirements.\nThe remainder of the Anglo-\nFrench resolution would have endorsed the 18-power proposals for\ninternational control as corresponding to the six requirements\nand as being \"suitably designed to\nbring about a settlement,\" would\nhave invited Egypt to continue\nconversations with Britain and\nFrance and would have set up provisional measures, pending a definitive settlement, for Egyptian\nauthorities to keep the canal open.\nSOVEREIGNTY INVOLVED\nEgypt's foreign minister, Mah\nmoud Fawzi, took strong excep\ntion to all the provisions except\nthose which e n u m e rated the\nagreed principles. So did Russia's\nDmitri Shepilov, who complained\nthat the Western powers were trying to waive Egypt's sovereignty.\nTo accept the 18-power proposals, asserted Shepilov, would be to\nmake negotiations pointless and to\ndecree in advance that negotiations be\/based on a- conception\nknown to be unacceptable to\nEgypt\n250,0110\nCONVERTED\nUntouchables\nLeave Hinduism\nFor Buddhism\nBOMBAY, India (AP) -Near-\nly 250,000 Hindu untouohables embraced Buddhism at the city of\nNapur Sunday in what was described as the biggest mass religious conversion in history.\nThe converts are followers of\nDr. B, Ri Ambedkar, a tramer of\nIndia's constitution and 1st first\nlaw minister after independence.\nHe and his wife, also a doctor and\nborn into Hinduism's highest\ncaste, the Brahmins, became Buddhists several years ago.\nAlmost since India became independent in 1947 Ambedkar has\nbeen campaigning for untouchables to leave the Hindu fold and\nbecome Buddhists because of\nwhat he calls Hindu \"oppresson\nand inequality.\"\nHe was bom an untouchable\nand for many years was shunned\nsocially despite his Western education and his prominence as a\npolitical leader.\nBy ancient Hindu custom untouchables aie by birth without\nany caste\u2014literally outside human society. Untouchables work\nat only the lowliest and; dirtiest\njobs and never associate with\ntheir social superiors,   \u25a0 \u25a0\nDELAY ROCKET FIRING\nFORT CHURCHILL, Man. (CP\nFiring of the first scientific rocket\nin Canada has been set back 24\nhours.\nThe rocket was scheduled to be\nlauched' near this barren sub-\nArctic military post at 11 a.m.\nTuesday. Interfence with certain\nscientific instruments in the rocket\nforced a delay until Wednesday.\nU.S\/To Continue\nAid to Yugoslavia\nBy JOHN M. HIGHTOWER     (emergency wheat shipments \u2014\nWASHINGTON  (AP)  \u2014 The|unofficially   reported   to   total\nEisenhower  administration   has I about 200,000 tons\u2014can be met.\nSUSPECT FREED\nLA. PLATA, Argentina (AP) \u2014\nForty-six persons, accused of tak-\nign part in the unsuccessful Argentine revolt June 9, were freed\nSaturday by the country's provisional government. All those released had been jailed since the\n12-hour uprising was.crushed.\ndecided that Communist Yugoslavia still remains Independent\nof Moscow oontrol and should\neontlnue to receive American\naid   despite   the   secrecy   sur\nrounding Pesldent Tito's recent I forces in earlier years\n2. That economic assistance can\nbe continued.\nS. That spare parts can be supplied for American-made military\nequipment given Yugoslav armed\nmeetings with Soviet leaders,\nBarring some late turn of events\nwhich  could  upset the  decision,\nEisenhower is due to announce on\nTuesday:\n1. That Yugoslavia's request for\nUMBRELLAS ARE PART of the Sunday\nfinery of these Zanzibar women at they dress\ntheir beat to see Princess Margaret and be\nseen by her. They were orderly when the\nprincess appeared, In contrast to groups In\nthe Congo who almost overwhelmed the\nguards around her.\n. Central Press Canadian Photos\nThis does not mean that Yugoslavia will get the more than 200\njet fighter planes Tito wants from\nthe United States. The jets were\nscheduled months ago for delivery\nin the present fiscal year but\ntheir shipment will be delayed, informants said, until questions\nabout Yugoslavia's direction in\nworld affairs are more fully clarified. The jets are of a type being replaced in Western Europe\nby more advanced designs.\n31 Fatalities\nOn Weekend\nBy The Canadian Prate\nLast week was Fire Prevention\nweek in Canada but the country's\nworst weekend accident was\ncaused by fire.\nThe death ot six members at\none family in their fire-swept Toronto home early Saturday morning helped swell the weekend fatality toll to 31.'\nA Canadian Press survey ahows\nfrom 6 p.m. Friday to 9 p.m. Sunday 15 persons died in Ontario,\nnine in Quebec, five in British Columbia, one in Alberta and one in\nNew Brunswick from accident\ncauses.\nIn addition to the six death* in\nthe family of Mr. and Mrs. L. D.\nBurt, Ontario's count showed five\ntraffic fatalities, one man crushed\nby a falling crane, two persons\nkilled at a level crossing and two\npersons, not included in this total,\nfatally shot.\nIn Quebec six persons died in\ntraffic accidents, one person was\ndrowned, a man fell from a scaffold and another died in a hunting accident.\nBritish Columbia's. five deaths\nincluded three, traffic fatalities\nand two drownings.\nOne man died in a traffic accident in New Brunswick and another in Alberta.\nQueen's Chaplain\nPlans to Marry\nLONDON (AP) \u2014 Queen Elizabeth's chaplain announced Sunday\nhis engagement to a widow who,\nhe admits, \"does not call herself\na Christian.\"\nCanon Charles Earle Raven, 71,\nsaid he wjll marry Mrs. Helene\nJeanty, 52, a heroine of the Belgian resistance' during the Second\nWorld War, Dec. 6 in St. Martln-\n- the - fields, historic Anglican\nchurch.\nAnd in This Corner...\nGAIL, Tex. (AP) \u2014 A rattlesnake sleeping peacefully In the\ncentre of a cell In city Jail waa sentenced to death.\nIt wasn't that sheriff Sid Reeder didn't like the snake\u2014It wa*\nthe two men he was about to put In the cell who objected,\nReeder doesn't know how the snake got In the cell but th* m*n\ngot In for stealing oil field equipment\nDALLAS (AP) \u2014 A chef and his assistant slipped into a hospital\nfor medical attention Friday after the two doused each other with\nhot grease in a downtown restaurant. \u25a0\nPolice said the men argued and the chef picked up a pan of\nhot grease and doused his assistant. There was another pot of hot\ngrease nearby and the chef got greased.\nTONKAWA,. Okla..(AP) \u2014 That \"stlnkln' old English elast\"\nwas Just that to 36 students at Northern Oklahoma Junior College\nhere Friday.\nInstructor Joe Hoehderffer said a noticeable \"aroma that Improved with age\" completely disrupted his class, and spread disorder throughout the building.\nFinally student Duane Beaver traced the cause to a skunk lodged In Hochderffer's desk.\nBRATTLEBORO, Vt. (AP) State police were' searching today\nfor a new kind of thief... the kind that steals half a house after\nsawing it in two.\nRalph Carvage of South Windham reported that his 8 x 12 logging camp has been cut in half and one part carted away through\na path in the woods.\nANGIER, N.C. (AP) \u2014 Miss Fish became Mrs, Bass In a quiet\nfamily wedding at the Angler Methodist church Sunday.\nThe nuptials of Marie Fish and JameB Bass attracted- wide attraction because of their names. As a result of the publlolty the\ncouple landed a free honcymon trip sponsored by a national magazine.\n ,  ; \u25a0*'\u25a0\" ' i\u2014~\n2\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, OCT. 15, 1956\nundisputed monarch Of the Gray\nCreek summit country, after routing hunters and prospectors and\ndamaging three vehicles.\n\"I was never so Scared in my\nlife,\" Roy Fisher of Balfour said\nin Nelson Saturday ip telling of\nhis experience when the destruc-\nSTARLIGHT Drive-In\nTONIGHT and TUESDAY\nShows at 7:30 p.m. and 9:30 p.m,\nCASTLE THEATRE\nCastlegar, B.C.\nTONIGHT and TUESDAY\nShows at 7:00 and 9:00 p.m.\n\"THE   INSPECTOR-GENERAL\"\nRussian Picture\nAuto-Vue Drive-ln\nTRAIL, B.C.\nTONIGHT and TUESDAY\nShows at 6:45 and 8:50 p.m.\n\"SIMBA\" (Tech.)\nDerek Bogart\nSHORTS and CARTOON\nConcert Series Drive Successful;\nFour Arifsls To Appear Here\nNelson A. Allen, membership\ncommittee chairman of Nelson\nOverture Concert Association, announced Sunday a successful conclusion to the organization's 1956-\n57 membership drive,\nFour concerts have been planned\nfeaturing John Langstaff, Nov. 1;\nPhilippe Entremont, Dec. 6; Helen\nGeorge. Feb. 14; and Zabaleta on\nMarch 12.\nAn outstanding American baritone, John Langstaff is a regular\ncommentator for the New York\nPhlarmonic children's concerts, is\nsn expert on early folk music, and\nhas made many records. He has also writen prize-winnng children's\nbooks.\nPhilippe Entremont is a young\npianiat born in France, who is\nmaking his third transcontinental\ntour. He has achieved international fame;,particularly after winning\nthe Grand Prix Thiband competition in 1953.\nMlas George, a soprano with the\nNew York City Opera Company,\nhas delighted public and press\nwith her pinging. A graduate of\nJuillard School of Music, she has\na large.repertoire of opera, oratorio,; and folk songs. v\nZabaleta, a'Spanish harpist, has\nwon rave notices in many quarters. Time Magazine described him\nas \"one of the finest harpists in\nthe world.\" Of his playing, the\nLondon Daily Telegraph said, \"He\ndazzled his audiences with an amazing technique and splendor of\ntone color. Another London paper,\nThe Times, had this to say, \"Not\nonly does Zabaleta seem to\nachieve the impossible as regards\nagility, but also his range of tonal\nquality has to be heard to be believed.\"\nLast Rites Held\nFor John Sapples\nFuneral services for the\nJohn Sapples, who died in Salmo\na week ago. aged 70 years, were\nconducted at Thompson Funeral\nHome Saturday. Rev. Canon W.\nJ.- Silverwood officiated.\nPallbearers were Victor Strand-\nberg, Douglas Gibbon, Carl Wilson, J, Avery, Archie Gray and\nChester BuSh.\nThe chapel was banked with\nfloral tributes and many friends\nattended the services.\nMrs. W. A. Manson was organist. Interment was in the Nelson\nMemorial Park.\nOne man tells another...\n\"Borrow with confidence\nfrom HFC\"\n\u25a0The word gets around as one friend tells\nanother about HFC\u2014\"They help you solve\nyour money problems!\" Whether you need\nexpert counsel about your finances from our\nhighly trained staff ... or a cash loan of up\nto SI,000 . . . you can have complete confidence in HFC\u2014Canada's first and most\nrecommended consumer finance company. For\nmoney or advice, visit HFC today!\n0USEH0LD FINANCE\nG. Ai Chilton, Manager\n608 Baker Streat, lecond floor, phono 1890\nNELSON, B.C.\nKIMBERLEY BRANCH: 420 Howard Strnol, phono LU 2.2331\nV\nVi PRICE SALE\nBLUSTERY WEATHER\nSpecial Dry Skin Lotion\nREG. $2,50 (fi   ..\n\u00a312 oz. 4>1#Z3\nBottle\n-j -SOFTENS \u2014 SMOOTHS \u2014 SILKENS\nNelson Pharmacy\nYour Fortress of Health\n'433 Josephine St. Phone 1203\nRossland-Trail\nSocreds Elect\nAngus Drinnan\nTRAIL \u2014 At the annual meeting\nof the Rossland-Trail' Social Credit\nLeague retiring president Donald\nBrothers reported on the completion of a \"very successful year\"\nclimaxed by the return of R. E.\nSommers as MLA by an overwhelming majority. The meeting\ndealt with several resolutions to\nbe forwarded to the provincial\nconvention in Vancouver In November and elected a new slate of\nofficers for the coming season.\nAngus Drinnan of Rossland was\nelected president. Mr. Brothers\ndeclined nomination due to pressure of business.\nE, M. Mcintosh of Trail was\nelected first .vice-president; Mrs.\nEdith Paterson of Fruitvale second\nvice-president. , Hilliard York of\nKinnaird, third vice - president.\nMrs. P. Corbett of Castlegar,\nfourth vice-president.\nA change in the Act or regulations calling for regular inspection\nof plants and without given notice\nwas one resolution approved by\nthe convention. Subsidation of the\nfamily allowance by the Federal\ngovernment to ensure fresh milk\nin children's diet received considerable discussion but was rejected.\nIn another resolution passed the\ngovernment will be urged to allow\nthe immediate return of money\nfrom shares in co-operatives re;\ngardless as to whether the member\nhas left the community or remains\na resident,\nlate Several matters of local concern\nwere turned over to the MLA for\naction: that Rossland be provided\nwith a motor vehicle drivers licence examiner and that some action be taken on Dog Creek at\nRenata such as widening the\nchannel and re-inforcing the bank\nbefore flood conditions took place.\nConsiderable damage was caused\n!wo years ago dug to flood conditions.\nIt was felt that corners on the\nhighway between Trail and Rossland should be straightened wherever   possible   and   that   passing\nlanes  be  constructed  in   suitable\nplaces.  Speaking on  this motion\nMr.    Sommers    considered    that\nthere always will be considerable\nj traffic  on  that road  despite  the\n! new transprovincial highway.\nj INTERIOR   CONVENTION\nI    Having   the   Provincial   Social\n1 Credit convention in the interior\ni as an alternative to staging it in\nVancbuver  every  year  was  discussed and considered as an excellent  and   fair  suggestion   and\nwill be dealt with at the convention.\nOne hundred and fifty people\nattended a public banquet held\nSaturday night at the Colombo\nHall in honor of Mr. and Mrs.\nSommers. On behalf of the people\nand as a token of system a clock\nwas presented to them. Mr. Sommers expressed appreciation on\nbehalf of his wife and himself and\nthanked all those who had worked\nso hard to make the election campaign such an outstanding success.\nParticularly the women had worked especially hard throughout a\nstrenuous campaign.\nRalph Pashley, well -\"known\nradio commentator from Victoria\nwas guest speaker. \"British Columbia is having a boom the like\nOf which it has ever before seen\nin its history,\" said the commentator of informative, provocative\nslants on the news,\n\"B.C.'a time  has arrived.  We\nhave the wealth, the hydro-electric power and the hardworking\naggressive   peqple   to    keep    It\ngoing   Indefinitely.   I   think   If\nlabor  and   management  get  off\ntheir  high  horses and  tee  eye\nto eye, If the government Is far\nsighted enough to continue the\nencouragment of  new  business,\nnothing can stop It.\"\nReferring to B.C, as the richest\nprovince in Canada and perhaps\nthe richest in the world he said\nthat it was the fighter arid the optimist that had made it what it is\ntoday. We have had good.governments in the past, the people ha,d\nmade sure of this, arid also good\nleaders. We have a good government now and a good leader. Certain things the government has to\ndo includes the opening up of the\nvast northland.\n\"I like the people of Trail,\" said\nJWr\\ Pashley, \"I have been more\nin this city than any other that\nhandles my broadcast\"\nrizzly- Prowling On\nGray Creek Summit\nA huge rogue grizzly who Is said i that   \"sounded   like   carpenters\nto be \"afraid, of no one\" is still j tearing down a building\".,\nActually, Fisher's pickup truck\nand its contents were The Rogue's\nobjects of destruction. The animal\nripped.off a'tarpaujin, scattered\nthe truck's contents in all directions, and smashed to match sticks\na food box made of half-inch plywood. The hunters' provisions \u2014\nDr. Gaddes..\"...\nTeachers Should\nLearn About\nPupils, Selves\nCASTLEGAR \u2014 \"Personality\nind the Learning Process\" was\nthe topic chosen by Dr. W. H.\nDean Leadbeater^\nSuccessor Appointed\ntive bear reared up 30 feet away \\ bacon, butter, bread, flour - were\nfrom him and glared \"insolently\",! chewed and scattered, and ln ad-\nannoyed  at  having  a  flashlight! dition the bear sank its teeth into |theme'\nshone  in   his  eyes  in  midnight Fisher's metal lunchbox and ther-\nblackness. mos bottle,\nHarry Franklin Of Balfour, and\nMr. Fisher were camped in tents\nup the summit power line trail.\nRev. G. W. Lang, BA, LTh, ot\nVictoria has been appointed to\nsucceed Dean Thomas L. Leadbeater as rector of St. Saviour's\nPro-Cathedral In Nelson on' January 1, according to an announcement made Sunday in the Cathe-\nGaddes of Victoria College for Jdral anl* st St. Andrew's Church,\nhis address to elementary teach- j Willow Point, by Dean Leadbeat-\ners attending the West Kootenay- j er.\nBoundary teachers' convention atj    Mr.  Lang,  a  graduate  of  the\nCastlegar Saturday morning.       | University of B.C., was ordained\nReferring   to   the   convention  in 1935 at the Anglican Theolo-\nGI.ARED\n\"When\nI  went Out  with  the\nIt was the first night of a propos-1 flashlight, that bear just stood up\ned week-long goat hunting trip, beside the truck and glared and\nBut The Rjjgue cut the trip short. [ held his ground,\" Fisher said.\nThis is what happened: I    \"That bear stood a head higher\nFranklin and Fisher bedded j than the top of the truck, and I'd\ndown for the night, preferring | swear his eyes were eight inches\ntheir tent to a nearby cabin offer- apart.\"\ned   by   George   Oliver,   veteran\nGray Creek trapper.\nSuddenly,  they heard a crash\nSavings Bonds\nInterest Rale Up\nThe eleventh series of Canada\nSavings Bonds will be offered\nto Canadians starting today. The\nnew bond retains the features\nthat have Caused two million people to become owners, but the\ninterest rate has been stepped up.\nThe first two coupons pay off at\nan annual rate of 3% per .cent,\nthe next two at 3V4 and the last\nseven at four per cent, The average yield if the bond is held for\nits full term of 12Vi years, is\n3.76 per  cent.\nAgain employees of some 281\nB. C. companies and establishments will be able to buy through\npayroll deduction, a popular\nthrift process that has sold $1,-\n565,SC8,4O0 worth in the past\ndecade\nAiding in the organizing of\nfirms in  the Kootenay region is\nNeither hunter dared to raise\na gun to The Rogue, for several\nreasons; a dim flashlight, the\ndisadvantage of their position,\nand the fact that their best gum\nand ammunition were under\nthe grizzly's custody In the\ntruck,\n\"A   poorly   placed    shot    and\nwe'd   have   been   attacked   for\nsure,\" Fisher explained.\nThe two men took refuge in the\ncabin and waited, while the bear\nate the scattered food and left.\nA mile further up the road, the\nmarauder tore the saiety glass out\nof one door of a new pickup truck\nowned by a Mr. Jorgenson of Creston, and then destroyed the upholstery.\nParked nearby was a sedan owned by Bob Steiner, a Blairmore,\nAlta., geologist, Here the bear\nclimbed on the hood and the top\nof the car, both of which collapsed, under its weight, broke off a\nhead lamp and ripped chrome trim\noff the side windows In an attempt to get into the car.\ngical College In Vancouver, In!\n1935. He served as curate at St.\nStephen's Church, Calgary, in-'\ncumbent at Okotocks, and rector I\nat Red Deer for 10 years. Father j\nof four' children, ages four tp 16,1\nMr. Lang is now assistant at\nChrist Church Cathedral, Victoria,\n\"A Time for Reassessment'', Dr. Gaddes said teachers\nmust learn how to know themselves and the pupils they teach.\nHe felt the job of teaching in the\nsix to 12 age group to be one of\nthe finest. Most teachers enjoy\nthis age group, which has psycho-\nlovical advantages. The child of\nthis age is most appreciative of\nanything done for him, is intensely interested ln.facts and has not\nyet reached the age of insecurity SL0CAN CITY - Funeral ser-\nfound in high school students. vices (or Mra Catherine Weir\nThe elementary child reacts to Saunders, of Slocan City, who\nclever guidance and s k i 1 f u 11 died at Mount St. Francis Infirm-\nteaching. |3ry Wednesday at the age of 40\nIt is at this age when children , years, were held at St Andrew's\nare most impressionable, that the j Presbyterian Church, Slocan City,\nelementary teacher can be most \\ on Sunday. Rev. John\ninfluential in the child's attitude Nelson officiated.\na , post Dean  Leadbeater  left to\nCome to Nelson 8^ years ago.\nMr. Leadbeater, Dean Of Kootenay, has been appointed to St.\nBarnabas' Church, Calgary. He\nand Mrs. Leadbeater and their\nthree children will leave about\nthe middle of the month.\n.A well-known Kootenay parson,\nRev. William Beames. formerly\nof Kaslo, now retired at Nara-\nmata, B.C., will serve the parish\nuntil Mr. Lang arrives to begin\nthe N.ew Year.\nFuneral Held\nFor Mrs. Saunders\nArson Suspected\nn Trail Fire\nto school.\nIn listing the things necessary\nto good teaching, the most Important is the teacher must \"like\"\nteaching. Lack of interest and enthusiasm in the teacher will result in the same attitude In the\npupils. The misplaced teacher\nmay be unhappy in her work, and\ndiscipline often suffers in this\ninstance due to the children sensing the teacher's insecurity. On\nthe other hand children are appreciative of the good teacher\nwho is happy in her work.\nClassrooms pose \"group-dynamics\" problems, which has really\nonly a fancy name for the situation created where about 40 children each with different gifts and\nhabits as well as different social\nspace at the top of one window\nthe   veteran   CSB   and   victory\nbond organizer   W. L. Clark. Mr.) an'ope^TwWchtt^   bear\nClark, now residing in Nelson, is\none   of   nine   B.   C.   investment\ndealers    borrowed    from    their\nfirms   for   the   campaign.   He   is\nwell known in sports as well as\nbusiness   circles   throughout   the\n. , backgrounds are thrown together,\nIt apparently couldn't hook its j causi\u201eg   interaction   between  the\ndaws in the window,\" Jorgenson  teacher and children and between\nfigured later. In the case of his|various  factions among fte ,tu.\nown pickup, he had left   an   air dents  themselves. The psycholo-\nKootenays.\nThe Weather\nNELSON, Sunday  .... 37 53\nSaturday  48 52\nSt. Johns   39 49\nOttawa       46 76\nToronto   41 76\nWinnipeg   36 51\nRegina     28 55\nCalgary      24 54\nKimberley   31 48\nKamloops   42 60\nPenticton    37 58\nVancouver   46 55\nVictoria         46 54\nSan Francisco   46 75\nSpokane    37 52\nquick to make use of.\nThe two parties assessed their\ndamage the next day \u2014 and headed out, the hunters to replenish\ntheir food supply.\nNO BLOOD\nThey noted two things: that\nalthough the bear's paws had broken safety glass and crumpled metal, there was not a drop of blood\nanywhere, and that its tracks measured 7x10 inches.\nThe next day Joe Gunther ot\nKootenay Bay \u2014 also prospecting\nin the area \u2014 saw the creature,\ndropped his pick and fled, Mr.\nFisher reported.\nJim Foster, West Kootenay\nPower and Light Company foreman at Crawford Bay who directs\ngical energy produced is just as\nwas j potent and real as physical energy, and can cause these problems\nin \"dynamics\". Clear thinking and\nfirmness is necessary on the part\nof the teacher, and at times punishment, but never sarcasm, Dr.\nGaddes said.\nUNDERGOES  CHANGE\nParents as well as teachers\nshould realize that the six-year-\nold just entering school must undergo a complete change in his\nway of life\u2014instead of being the\ncentre of attention he must learn\nhe is only one of many in a large\nclass, he must learn group competition, and how to face and accept disappointments resulting\nfrom this competition. If the child\nshows Obnoxious behavior or is\nPallbearers were Leslie Blake,\nA. Kato, Hubert Ray and A. Pi-\nwek.\nHymns sung were \"I To The\nHills Will Lift Mine Eyes\" and\n\"Blest Be The Tie That Binds\",\naccompanied by Miss E. Life, organist. Many floral tributes were\nreceived. Interment was in the\nSlocan City Cemetery.\nTRAIL \u2014 Several thousand dollars damage was caused to the\nSpeedway Garage on Farwell\nStreet early Sunday Morning by\nfire.\nIt is believed by Chief L. W.\nRonald that the premises were\nbroken into and it is suspected\nthat arson was the cause of the\nblaze.\nRCMP and fire officials are in-\nAllan  of | vestigating.\nA passerby reported the fire to\nthe fire department at about 2:00\na.m. but it is believed that it had\nbeen burning for about half an .\nhour previous to this. The blaze\nwas brought under control in\nabout 15 minutes.\nThe building was partially covered by insurance. Damage is\nsaid to be quite extensive to the\ninterior of the building.\nMen ...\nThe  Ideal,\nAll-Weather\nT0PCJAT\nMADE OF NYLODENE\nSHOWER-PROOFED 'MATERIAL\nThese lovely coots are made in the\neasy fitting, slip-on model and are\nfully milium lined plus a detachable zip-in wool lining.\nThe price is\nonly   \t\nRegular\n$29.50\nand Tall  Models\nGODFREYS'\nPHONE ~ 270 -\u00ab BOX\nJOY HERE 63 YEARS\nR. G. Joy, historian for the Nel\nson and District Oldtimers' As\nsociation, came to Nelson 63 years for him\nI maintenance along the route, says I aggressive, the answer will be in\n\"! it is the same bear which wreck-1the   caus9  behind   the  situation,\nI   ed the company's cabin    at   the!an(1   this   aggressiveness   should\ni summit earlier this year. ; not stimulate  antagonism in the\nThe    Rogue    won   a   decisive teacher, 'or the parent, but should\nround, but it may be his last. Trap-1 be treated with understanding as\nper George Oliver, who speculates jto ^e motivation. The parent of-\nthat the grizzly may have  been ' ten does not recognize howimpor-\nshot and thus is (ear;less and dan- J ta\"t he is to the child's psycholo-\ngerous, will be one man gunning g'caI development, and being un-\ni willing to realize his own inade-\nago, not 67 as indicated in a re-1    The two Balfour men intend to quacy,   does   not   recognize   the\nport of his talk to Kiwanis Club: return shortly to the heights above\nlast week. The year 1889, instead! the East side of Kootenay Lake* for\nof   1893,   was  accidentally  given; their goat hunting, via Crawford\nas the time of his arrival. I Bay, not Gray Creek summit trail.\n1 problems of the child.\nDr. Gaddes, in concluding, stat-\nChristian Unity Needed,\nKootenay Presbytery Told\nKIMBERLEY \u2014 Unity among\nchurches was one of the main\nthemes of the United Church\nGeneral Council, held last month\nat Windsor, Ont., Dr. Norah\nHughes of Fernie told a meeting\nof the United Church Kootenay\nPresbytery  here.\nDr.   Hughes  said,   \"Protestants\nhave   stressed   their   differences\nfrom One another. Now they need\nto emphasize what is held in common.   Missionary   work   is   still\nhampered by the divisions among q^\nChristians.    In    Canada,    where!\nChristians  are  still  a  minority,! A8K QUESTIONS\nunity is needed if the life Of thai    During an evening address, Mr\nNation is to be affected.\" j Spence    differentiated    between\nMinisters and lay delegates from I ministry and lay responsibilities,\nas far west as Greenwood heard\ned in a survey conducted in the\nUnited States among 12,000 children, on \"the teacher who has\nhelped me most\", characteristics\nat the top of the list were \"Kindness, consideration, and patience\".\nDr. Gaddes said while academic\nprowess is important, if the teacher is emotionally hostile, resistance will be built up in the chll-\nPresbytery     sessions     opened\nwith   worship  led   by   chairman dren\nRev. Frank McPhee. I    \"Teachers, then,\" said Dr. Gad-\nPhil Spence national secretary des' \"must set their sights high\nof the AOTS (As One That Ser- j never cease to study, should try\nvee), United Church men's ser-!'0 ,e,rn more about dynamic In-\nvice club, addressed the gathering! teraction in the classroom, and\ntwice on  Wednesday. In a  lun-: ra<ire   about   the   MWen   they\nfn\ncheon . address he charged that\nthe church violates the first commandment by Saying \"The Church\nneeds you,\" rather, \"You need\nthe  church  because  you     need\nteach and themselves.\"\nYou owe it to your family to Insist on\nlife-insurance protection when you\nborrow. If your present loan is with\na company that does not allow you\nthis vital protection, don't delay,\n, switch to Trans Canada Credit now.\nLoans to $2500 \u2014 protected at no\nextra cost by life-insurance\u2014can be\nquickly arranged.   Call us now.\nUICK CAStf LOANS\nTHE AU-CANADIAN\nLOAN  COMPANY\nm\n525 VERNON ST. -- PHONE 1690\nDr. Hughes tell the meeting in\nKimberley United Church that\n\"We wil! not get far with unity\noutside the United Church unless\nthere is unity within it.\" She\nreferred to General Council proposals to unite all church women's groups.\nDr. Hughes said another Council highlight was.a report by former Moderator Dr. George DOrey\non official visits to Russia and\nHungary, during which he was\nimpressed by \"the religious devotion evident oveif there.\" But\nhe was concerned with \"the lack\n6f-*emphasis on th* application\nOf Christianity to the life Of society. The council 'C10se4 with a\nmass rally opening the Mission\nto the Nation, an attempt by the\nUnited Church to challenge Canadians to look to Christ individually and collectively.\nMinisters, he said, \"must fill the\nsouls of those whom the laymen\nbring to church.\" He suggested\nPresbytery members 46k themselves four questions: \"Why is\nthere a church in the community?\" \"DO I, as an Individual,\nneed tha church?\" \"Is my church\ndoing its job?\" \"What is my personal  responsibility?\"\nAnother Wednesday evening\nspeaker, Rev. Rayribnd Woollahi\nbf cranbrook, d*ait with family\nlife and personal counselling. He\nattended a serriinar this Summer,\nwhere ^ominertt authorities discussed prevention ana cure ot\niiutioi':;: breSH-ubs.\nMr. WoOllam stressed that people should consult, not just inlaws, but trained and objective\noutside persons.\nMinisters should be trained to\nhelp in this way, Mr. Woollam\nthought. '   4\nFOR SOUND ADVICE ON\nLIFE INSURANCE SEE A\nREPRESENTATIVE OF\n.Branch  Manager:  Fraser Tees\nBranch Office: 450 Baker St., Nelson, B. C.\nDistrict  Resreserttatives:\nArt Anderson, Castlegar- Desmond Hcod, Rossland - Ed. Dnloise, Trail\nCreston \u2022   Alex. Basaraba, Cranbrook - Earle Tabor, Natal\nRich  Hood,\n\t\n\u2022 i :\t\n N\/.LSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, OCT. 15, 1956\u20143\nMust Try To Develop Calmness\nIn Modern Society\u2014Dean Scarfe\nIMPORTANT NEW8 on Kootenay Industrial scene today Is\nreopening of the Consolidated Mining and Smelting Company's\nfertilizer plant at Marysville, shown above. The plant employing\n200 men closed abruptly at the end of June, reason for closure\nbeing stated as poor prairie markets. Rail shipments from the\nTime To Reassess Value of\nGeneral Program, Says Inspector\nwarehouse continued over the summer, going for overseas export.\nDemand Is now reported to be good. Price cuts Induced by greater\ncompetition have reduced the profit margin, but the total of sales\nis gratifying. Last year's 680,000 tons could be exceeded If the\nbusiness holds, It is reported.\nCASTLEGAR   \u2014   Highlighting\nCASTLEGAR \u2014 Chief Inspector\nof Schools F. P. Levirs stated Friday in. Castlegar that it was % time\nfor reassessment of the value of\nthe general program In our high\nschools.\nSpeaking to.the West Kootenay -\nBoundary teachers' convention being held Friday and Saturday, Mr.\nLevirs said that the economic level\nof the past decade and the demand\nfor more highly trained workers\nhad led to an over-emphasis of the\nuniversity program,\nAbout 64 per cent of students in\nGrades Nine to 12 take the university program, whereas at the..time\nthe dual system was instituted\nonly 15 per cent of students took\nfirst year university or its equivalent. We must find out now, he\nsaid, if the courses offered stu\ndent* who don't intend to proceed\nwith university education not only\nhelp to prepare those students for\ntheir own chosen vocation but also\ngive them the cultural and social\nunderstanding necessary to the\ngood citizen. He suggested further\nthat a thorough study of present\nstandards of achievement in the\ngeneral program must be made as\nwell as a close analysis of present\nteaching methods. Within the next\nyear or two closely reasoned decisions must be made. \u2022\nMr. Levirs emphasized the position of counsellor in the high\nschool is an important one.\nIn clarifying the promotion\npolicy of the Department of Education, he pointed out that while\na student should progress - in a\ncontinuous stream throughout his\nschooling, promotion should not\ntake place if the student is not\nready to proceed to the next course\nor grade. Good counselling, good\nadministration, and good teaching\nwould make that stream as continuous as possible. At no time, he\nemphasized has the Department\nsuggested automatic promotion.\nMr. Levirs spoke of report cards\nas being the most important, and\nperhaps in many cases the only\nlink between school and home,\nand pointed out the necessity of\nmaking clear and accurate reports.\nfreedom, should find its outlet, in\nCALVERT HOUSE\nBAGGING, of ammonium phosphate fertilizer at Cominco's\nfertilizer department Is streamlined process, as shown here. The\n80-pound bags are filled by this automatic weighing and bagging\nmachine, then transported directly to box car loading face by\nflexible conveyer. The plant opened three years ago. Carloads\nof phosphate rock roll In from Cominco phosphate mines at Avon\nand Phosphate, Mont.   ' Cominco photo's\nCreated for Canadian Hospitality\nThis advertisement is net published or displayed by Ihe\nLiquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia\nBXECUTOR8   AND   TRUSTEES   FOt   OVER   NAIP   A   CENTURY\nYour will\n\u2014the bridge\nbetween your estate\nand your dependent!\nCherish Individuality of\nChild, Teachers Told\nroyal'trust\nCOMPANY\nAsk for\nolt boofcfef \"Prootieol\nMint j on Planning\nyour W.\nIK* GOVERNMIN*, VICTORIA\nR. W. PHIPP5, MANAGER\n6*6 PEMD6R ST. W., VANCOUVER\nGEORGE a VALE, MANAGER\nCASTLEGAR \u2014 The final ses- j\nsiong of ihe W56 West Kootenay-\nBoundary Teacher's Convention in\nCastlegar were held Saturday in\nStanley Humphries High School.\nTaking part were teachers, from\nDistrict No. 6, Kaslo, District. No.\n7, Nelson; District No. 8, Slocan;\nDistirct No. 9, Castlegar; \u25a0 District\nNo. 10, Arrow Lakes; District No.\n11 T-ra-rl; District No. 12, Grand\nForks-Greenwood and District No.\n13, Kettle Valley.\nSpecial sessions Saturday morning featured an address by Dr. W.\nGaddes of Victoria College, and a\ntalk bn \"Individual Differences\"\nby Dean Neville Scarfe, of the\nCollege of Education of the Uni\nversi-ty of B.C.\nIn this address, chiefly for secondary teachers Dean Scarfe staled: The slow learner learns in the\nsame way as the fast learner \u2014\nthe teaching methods should be\nthe aame for both, taking into consideration that last learner learns\nat a fester rate. \"Let us cherish\nthe individuality of each child:\nthere is a place for everyone in our\n00 QUICK', $0EA$\\*\nthe public meeting at Stanley\nHumphries High -School Friday\nnight was Dean Neville Scarfe's\naddress to the teachers attending\nthe West Kootenay - Boundary\nConvention in Castlegar.\nThe dean of the new College of\nEducation, Dr. Scarfe, has recently returned from Rio De Janiero\nwhere he acted in capacity of\nchairman at the world congress on\ngeography. Dean Scarfe's suggestions for the teaching of geography\ncompiled while in attendance at\nthe UNESCO seminar In 1950, have\nsince been translated into French\nJapanese and Spanish for use in\nschools.\nSpeaking on the topic \"1% B.C.'s\nEducational System Meeting the\nChallenge of the Times?\", the\nDean remarked this wast a difficult thing to know, and he would\nonly venture to suggest what some\nof these challenges are and some\nof the ways they may be met. Also,\nhe stated he believed British Columbia is meeting these challenges\nbetter than other provinces.\nThe first problem, Dean Scarfe\nfelt is that our modern society increases worry and anxiety for all.\nthere are so many more things to\ndo and no time for them, so many\nthings to want, and not enough to\n^purchase them with, the result is\na great deal of strain and tension\nThe challenge then Is to try to\ndevelop calmness, to face strains\nand tensions patiently and calmly.  People are \"too caught up\nwith trivialities, wo are all Increasingly   Irritated   and   Irritable.\"\nThe second problem is that the\neasy methods of communication,\nradios, television, etc., tend to\nmake everything too uniform, the\nsalvation of the world is that we\nare all different, each one has\nsomething special to offer to the\nworld. To meet this challenge we\nmust guard against regimentation\nand conformity.\nA very real problem is the fact\nthat while material advances in\nrecent years have been all to the\ngood, spiritual and moral advances\nhave not kept pace, thus gains\n\"through the material door have\nflown out through the spiritual\nwindow.\"\nLIKE MACBETH\nDean Scarfe likened the present\nday situation to that of the\nShakespearean tragedy, Macbeth,\nin which the lust for material gain\nand-nower re*'\"T*ed in a romn'etc\nbreakdown of the sense of values-\nThe cure prescribed is still the\nsame. \"The patient must minister\nunto himself.\"\nStandards of academic achievement have gone up In most parts\nof the world In recent years, said\nthe dean, \"The average Johnny\"\ncan read and spell better than\nIn the past, but the average\n\"Johnny\" can also think up more\nways of getting away without j\nreading or spelling* nowadays.\" j\nThe morality of \"what Is worth\ndoing is worth doing well\" has\nchanged to, how easily can I get\nby?\" he said.\nHumorously the dean stated it\nwas probably easier to be good in\nthe good old days, as there was\nso little opportunity to be bad\nCourtesy and good manners are\ndeclining as improved living circumstances present more material\nthings to crave, more things to do\nand many complex problems. We\nseek some form of distraction to\nforget our insecurities.\nPeople, he said are really made\nup of one part which is conservative and likes stability and security, the other part of us is more\nradical, and wishes to experiment\nand adventure. The conservatvc\npart needs inner confidence and is\ndependent on being able to count\non something secure. This should\nbe found in the home, while the\ncreative urge, flourishing only in\nthe school life. Freedom, however,\nif over-indulged, becomes licence,\nand that is what seemed to be\nhappening today, especially in the\nhomes? while the schools tend to\nbecome more uniform and regimented. Thus those who should\nbecome reformers become rebels,\nthe emotions are left with no securities and the creative interests\nare dulled. The great precept that\nright always triumphs cannot be\ntaught in any other way than by\nexample. Children will only learn\nwhat they want to learn, and that\nby example. Dean Scarfe felt that\ngrades one, two and three need\nparticularly the example of good\nbehaviour, as these are the forma\ntive years, it is usually too late\nwhen the children have reached\nhigh school. The dean stated the\nsubject, health and personal development should be acted, rather\nthan taught, by the example of the\nteacher. Discipline should be\nhandled with kindness but with\nfirmness.\nPATTERN IN-HOME\nFinally, he said, the home somehow must regain the family life,\nparents must give more attention\nto the children, and must forni\na pattern for the pre-school child,\nwhich will start him off with the\ninner confidence he needs,\nDean Scarfe was introduced to\nthe gathering by Miss Mpllie Cot-\ntingham, first vice-president of the\nB.C. Teachers' Federation.\nChairman of the meeting was A.\nR. Harvey of the High School\nTeaching staff and speakers weL-\ncoming the guests were E. Kraft,\nchairman of the Castlegar Village\nCommsisioners, and J. G. Craft,\nchairman of the Board of School\nTrustees for District No: 9 (Castlegar). Invocation prayer was given\nby Rev. C. L. Johnston.\nA brief musical interlude was\npresented by a school band comprised of Rossland and Castlegar\nhigh school students,\nThe composite band under Rossland Bandmarter B. Turvey performed a selection entitled \"Air\nand March,\" and during the second intermission Bandmaster Norman Fishwick of the Castlegar\nHigh School conducted the students in the Latin American number \"Monterey.\"\nMRS COTE OF\nWINDERMERE DIES\nINVERMERE - Mrs.'Dora Cote,\n69, of Windermere, who has been\nseriously ill at Vancouver for the\npast several months died Wednesday and funeral services were held\nat \u25a0 the Church of the Canadian\nMartyrs at Athalmer with Rev.\nFather Agnelius officiating on\nMonday.\nMrs. Cote was born in Manitoba\nand came to Windermere in 1950.\nShe is survived by her husband,\nfive sons and ftfur daughters, Ad-\nelor Cote, Windermere; Edward\nNew Westminster; Paul on Vancouver Island; Hector, Inverere;\nJoe, Windermere; Mrs, Ben Martini, Windermere; Mrs. Joe Hayes\nSaskatoon; Mrs. J. Detter, Lake\nTramping, Sask.; Mrs. Leo De-\nmers, Saskatoon and by 20 grandchildren.\nThieves Gel\n$12,000 in Home\nOf Recluses\nWEST BABYLON, N. Y. (AP)\n\u2014Police found thousands of dollars in bills and coins scattered\non the floor and stashed in coffee\ncans, flower pots and kitchen\nutensils in the rundown home of\na taxicab driver and- his recluse\nsister who were robbed Saturday\nof a feed bag crammed with an\nestimated $12,000 in cash.\nPolice said- two thugs missed\nmany thousands more ln Hie ramshackle, junk-filled home of 53-\nyear-old John Van Huda and his\nsister,  Jeannette, 64.\nHcfw much? Well, Babylon town\npolice chief Percy K. Hempstead\nsaid  Sunday:\n\"The cash had been sealed in\ntwo boxes and will be counted tomorrow at a bank.\n\"One box contains more than\n200 pounds in silver and there\nmust be several thousand dollars\nthere. The other box is stuffed\nwith bills. How much there is, I\ncan't say, but it's plenty.\"\nHe   added:\n\"The rats ate a lot of it,\" The\nboxes, Hempstead said, are as big\nas liquor cases.\nThe Van Hudas, who apparent-\nHunter Missing\nWILLIAMS LAKE, B.C. (CB)\u2014\nAn intensive search was under\nway during the weekend in the\nremote McLeese Lake district, 27\nmiles north of here, for a 28-year-\nold hunter missing since Monday.\nRonald Gene Ingram of Kamloops left a hunting camp at Mc\nLeese Lake early Monday with a;ly  had  been  fooling  people  for\npromise to be back at noon. His\nfather, Willis Edward Ingram of\nVancouver, and a friend stayed\nat the camp.\nyears about being poverty-stricken,, themselves were hoaxed into\nletting two bandits into their two\n| storey house.\nsociety no matter what his talent\nDemocracy must not be confused\nwith equalitarianism. The equali-\ntarian would make us all the same\nthe democrat would respect and\nadmit individual differences. The\nchild must at all costs meet with\nsuccess at his own level, and the\nonly way to ensure this success\nwas to have groupings in the high\nschools of students with similar\nabilities. There should be no acceleration in the sense of skipping\ngrades, but rather opportunity for\nthe student to progress at his own\nrate. The general program student\nin the high school should be respected every bit as much as the\nuniversity program student, and\neach should be given the same\namount of time and energy by the\nteacher.\"\nOther speakers were C. D\nOyans, general secretary, B.C\nTeachers' Federaion, Inspector B\nHarford, S. D. No. nine and 10. Inspector N. R. Allen, S.D. No. 7\nInspector S. Graham, S.D. No. 11;\nInspector C. Clay, Grand Forks, P\nHalliwell, CM & s Co., J. R. Wellington of CM & S, Miss J. Bailey,\nNew Westminster, P. G. Penner\nof the University of B.C., Dr. Fowler, Castlegar, Mrs. K. Andreashuk,\nCastlegar, Mrs. W. E. McCabe and\nMrs. F. Leitner, Castlegar, Miss B.\nRogers of the Home Economics\nDepartment; H. Hubbard, Chief\nInspector of Schools, F. Levirs,\nMiss M. Cottingham of BCTF,\nMrs. A. Lakeman of Castlegar, G.\nDoubt, H. Meredith, and Mr. Gri-\ngoruk.\nLuncheons   and   dinners   were\nserved  Friday  and  Saturday by I high school gymnasium to accom-\nmembers  of   the  Parent-Teacher  modate all the teachers and guests.\n$50 Taken From\nKinnaird Store\nKINNAIRD (CP) \u2014 A thief\nbroke into a small grocery store\nhere early Friday and took $50\nfrom the store's cash register.\nS^Jore owner Fred Bonderoff\ndiscovered the theft.\nYOUNG  MEN   WANTED!\nClerks \u2014 Commission Salesmen\nTrainees\nThis is your golden opportunity. We have openings for\na number of bright young meri who are interested in\nretailing as a career.\n\u2022 GOOD   STARTING  SALARY\n\u2022 SALARY   REVIEWS TWICE  A  YEAR\n\u2022 NUMEROUS   EMPLOYEE   BENEFITS\n\u2022 ON THE JOB TRAINING  IN  ALL PHASES OF\nRETAILING\n\u2022 EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITIES FOR ADVANCEMENT     \u2022\nFor an interview, write, giving full details of age, experience, in first letter to:\nZONE MANAGER,\nHUDSON'S BAY COMPANY,\nTRAIL, B.C.\nOr Apply In Person to the Store Manager at\nKimberley \u25a0 Nelson - Trail\nITs real fun to paint with the NEW MONAMEL\nLATEX. Flows en like magic, with one-coat\nhiding that adds beauty and enchantment\nto any room.\nPaint In the morning, ad \"ship-shape\" in the\nafternoonl No muss or fuss. Simply rinse\nroller, brush and tray under the tap.\nMONAMEL LATEX dries quickly to a durable,\nwashable finish. Sixteen modern, ready\nmixed colors.\nAT BETTER PAINT DEALERS\n%?wmet\nLATEX\n'\"TEBIOR FIHIS*1\nAssociations and Ladies Aux\niaries to the many service clubs.\nThe holding of such a large convention in Castlegar posed its own\npeculiar problems, as there are insufficient restaurant facilities for\ngreat a number, as well as the\nfact there is no public hail large?\nenough to accommodate such a\ngathering, therefore it was necessary to have serveral luncheon\ndinners on the go at the same time.\nThis meant a lot of Hr.. :\" \\\"\"-\nto be supplied, and this was done\nwith the aid of the local teachers\nand other citizens who provided\ncars for this purpose.\nFor the Saturday evening banquet, tables were  set up in  the\nFeatures of the final program\nwere an address by Rev. Canon W.\nJ. Silverwood of Nelson, whose\ntopic was the theme of the 105(5\nconvention, \"A Time for Reassessment.\" Remarks by convention\nchairman, J. H. Corbett and introduction of the special guests.\nOther members of the convention committee were W. R. Brown,\nMiss E. McKinnon, Mrs. E. Leitner,\nMrs. W. E. MacCabe, W. P. Oleski,\nH. Hyson, L. Lakeman, W.\nShkwarok, Mrs. M. Pinckney, A,\nHarvey, H, Bate, T. Wilkinson, Dr.\nF. Thorne and C. F. Sanderson.\nA dance at the Playmor Hall\ncompleted the program for the\nweekend.\nBURNS LUMBER CO.\n602 Baker St. Nelson Phone 1180\nFOR A REAL TREAT IN HEAT\nWESTERN\nMONARCH\nDRUMHELLCR DEEP SEAM\nQyoet\nTOWLER\nFUEL and TRANSFER\nPhone 889\n:t\nwhen it's an \u00a3xtfe you start\nWhen the hunt is on, everything depends on the gun. When the\nhunt is finished everything depends on the battery. Getting\nsafely out of ,the woods is no trick for an Exide.\nCold days and colder nights rriean nothing.\nYou see Exide Batteries are made of patented\nalloys that resist overcharging and sulphation\u2014\nan ordinary battery's mortal enemies. Exides\ngive you the peak of power instantly,\nevery time, in any weather, under all conditions.\nFor peace of mind and pocket book protection ...\nGat sure (tarts with Exide as low as $12.95 exchange.\n156N\nI\n 1\n\u25a0^p\u2014^ -\u2014\n\t\n; r   ^r  \u25a0=- \t\n.\nffltblUlSatllJ NflUfi 'Questions\n?\nEstablished AprU 22. 1902\n\/nlerlor British Coiumbla's Largest Dally Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday ancj statutory\nholidays   by   the   NEWS   PUBLISHING   COMPANY\nLIMITED, 266 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia.\nAuthorized as Second Class Mail, Pott Office Department, Ottawa.\nMEMBER OF THE AUDIT  BUREAU Of CIRCULATIONS\nMLMBER Ot   THE CANADIAN  PRESS\n\u2022 he Canadian Press Is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all newa\ndispatches credited to it or to The Associated Press or Reuters In this paper,\nand also the local news published therein,\nMonday, October -15, J95S \t\nA New Concept of Education\nThere seems to be every indication that the Department of Education is succeeding with its experiments in the acceleration of teaching.\nThere are good reports of both the\nscheme to teach French in the elementary schools and the provision of\na three year program in the high\nschools. There is bound to be some opposition, and the woman trustee who\nis said to have stated that the emphasis on the teaching of the bright little\nchild will lead to the development of\nlittle prigs is typical of many who\nview education from a personal point\nof view as affecting their own children, rather than the point of view of\nnational good.\nEducation in a democracy can be\nviewed from several angles. It can be\nargued that education should be supplied by the state equally and fairly\nfor all and that it is the responsibility\nof the individual to make the best of\nit. Looked at dispassionately, this\nwould have no right to make special\nclasses either for the bright or retarded child and that neither should receive more consideration than the\nnormal child. This is a theory wh'ch\nhas never been popular in'Canada for\nthere have always been classes for\nthe backward child.\nOn the other hand it can be argued\nthat education to be really effective\nshould develop to the full all the possibilities of every child and this is a\ntheory which all teachers strive to\ncarry out, for their minds revolt\nagainst brightness unused or the\nbackward child not receiving more\nhelp to attain a normal standing.\nWith the rising competition from\nother countries to  secure  industrial\nand scientific supremacy a new concept of education has come to North\nAmerica. It is that the future of nations depends upon the genius and\nthe bright child and that the educational systems should lay emphasis\non their education. In any country\ngeniuses are few and the bright children in a minority and how to deal\nwith them effectively has been the\nsubject of. much study. The problem\nis by no means easy and under the\ncircumstances the present system of,\ntwo \"streams\" in the high schools\nseems a cautious approach to the problem. Under this system the quicker\npupils progress faster and cover more\nground in their studies. If effective\nthe system might well be extended\nto the elementary schools, in many of\nwhich there has long been grouping\nof pupils by ability. \u2022\nIf this system turns the bright\nones into prigs, which is not necessarily the case, it will be unfortunate\nbut not so long ago these same children were designated \"brains\" and\nexposed to the ridicule of others. Now\nat least they have the satisfaction of\nknowing that their brains are valuable.\nNor should this focussing of attention on the bright child affect the\nteaching of the others. Teachers will\ncontinue to do as they have in the\npast\u2014do the best for every child in.\nthe class regardless of its mental\nability.\nReligion with its demands and\nvisions is not a luxury but a matter\nof life and death.\u2014Abraham Joshua\nHeschel.\nLetters To The Editor\nLetters to the Editor on any topic of genuine Interest are welcome It they are\nbrief, accurate and fair No letter will be Inserted In whole, or In part, exoept over the\nsignature and  address of the  writer.   Unsolicited  correspondence  cannot   be   returned\nWriter Discusse\nOf Fishing on\ns Deterioration\nKootenay Lake\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u2014From all accounts, Nelson is in\ndanger of losing one of its most valuable\nassets and attractions, if not the most valuable one, not only from a tourist point of\nview, but also that of local fishermen. I\nrefer to the deterioration of fishing on the\nKootenay Lake, which declines every year.\nThis means a big drop in toiurists, especially from the United States, who yearly\nspent thousands of dollars while enjoying\nand at the same time spreading the news\n.of their fine catches amongst their friends,\nThis advertising is dwindling so much that\nthe lake fishing is now being discarded, and\nthe dollars it brought are now being spent\nin other quarters where fish is plentiful.\nThis affects many of our residents, both\nin Nelson and in the vicinity of the lake,\nboth for accommodation, selling fishing gear,\nhiring of boats, etc. But most of all it is\nrobbing local Waltonians of much pleasure,\nresulting in the dearth of 'fish stories.\nThe diminishing fish also feci the pinch.\nOne ardent fisherman told me once that\nthe fish used to follow his boat about lunch\ntime, and pick up the scraps he flung overboard. On one occasion, while cleaning a\n\"big one.\" a couple of bottle caps fell out\non the table. But that sort of thing is now\na memory.\nTalk of dissolving of the Nelson Rod -and\nGun Club reflects the mood of Nelson\nanglers at this time, as the problem of restoring the lake to its former fine fishing is\nnot being advanced to their satisfaction.\nBut I feel sure this is only temporary, and\nthis useful lady will again function with\nrenewed vigor.\nI have stated before that the decline of\nsport on this big lake could be dated from\nthe time of dyking the Kootenay flats. Before this the Kootenay roamed over thousands of acres, washing into it a vast amount\nof food in insects, grubs, worms, beetles,\netc. This has been cut off, with nothing to\nreplace it.\nContributing to the decline is the Corra\nLinn dam. Fish, like ourselves, have their\nhabits, and are very sensitive to change. It\nmust make them uneasy when the depth of\ntheir dwelling-place is suddenly reduced or\naugmented,\nPredatory fish tike a heavy tbll Of the\nsmall fry, and, when they get ravenous, a\nhalf-pound trout will not be too big for\ntheir gullet.\nOnce when I was winding in a half-\npound trout, it was seized by a big char.\nAfter careful manoeuvring, I landed both\nby falling flat on them when they touched\nland, where the char spat the trout out.\nIt is perhaps too early to determine\nwhether the slime reported in several places\nANSWERS\nOpen to any reader. Names of\npersons asking questions will not be\npublished Therd is no charge for this\nservice. QUESTIONS WILL NOT BE\nANSWERED BV MAIL except where\nthere is obvious necessity for privacy\nR. G. S., Trail\u2014In the sixth game of the\n1958 World Series, if Robinson had hit a\nhome run with two men on base in the\nlast half of the 10th inning, what would\nhave been the final score, and with what\nwould Robinson have been credited?\nRobinson would have been credited with\nthe home run and three runs batted in. Final\nscore would have been 3-0.\nSubscriber. Crescent Valley \u2014 Would you\nplease print tht address of the Doll Ki 3-\npital in Vancouver?\nDolls' Hospital, ,2241 Main Street, Vancouver, B.C.\nReader,   Nelson\u2014Where   should   one   apply\nfor a licence to tell fortunes?\nThe City Hall, Front Street. Nelson,\nAmateur, Robson \u2014 A long time ago you\nprinted a recipe for making lady fingers.\nWould it be too much to ask you to\nrepeat it?\nLady fingers: Three egg Whites, half-\ncup of sugar, two egg yolks, one-eighth teaspoon vanilla, half-cup flour, one-eighth teaspoon salt. Beat egg whites until stiff, fold\nin flour very carefully, sifted previously\nwith salt. Cover baking sheet with greased\npaper and by means of tube shape lady\nfingers three inches long and one-nuarter\ninch wide. Bake in slow oven for 15 minutes, sprinkle with fruit su?ar and place\ntogether in pairs while warm.\nInterested,  Kaslo\u2014What  is  the  address  of\nthe diesel engine school in Nanaimo?\nDominion-Provincial Vocational School.\nWakesiah Avenue, Nanaimo, B.C.\nNorth American\nElections\nCanadian penchant for taking lively interest in U.S. presidential elections, if news\ncoverage in recent weeks is proper token of\nits extent, has not waned with passage of\ntime.\nUnfortunately, there are some Canadians, happily a minority, who assume a\n\"holier-than-thou\" attitude towards U.S.\npolitics and refer in disparaging terms to\nwhat they are wont to describe as the\nAmerican \"political circus.\"\nImplicit in such attitudes is suggestion\nthat Canadian politics is conducted with far\ngreater decency and decorum than is case\nin U.S.\nEven if this were so, fact remains that\nCanadian and U.S. elections have much in\ncommon, and much that frequently does\nnot reflect credit on the candidates.\nCase in point is assertion of U.S. Vice-\nPresident Nixon, who, with eye on that\npolitical intangible known as the labor vote,\nsees a four-day work week as the inevitable\nresult of Republican economic policies' if a\nRepublican administration Is re-elected. Pie-\nin-the-sky promises also characterize the\nelectoral promises of Democratic presidential candidate Adlai Stevenson, who says\nthat, if elected, he will make it his business\nto provide elderly people with standard of\nliving to which they were accustomed when\nworking, thus giving \"purpose and significance\" to th\u00a3ir lives.\nFine sentiments, surely, which everyone\nwould like to see fulfilled. Trouble is that\nsuch promises cannot be fulfilled by government decree, but are possible of attainment only when economy is capable of\nsupporting them.\nWhen election time rolls around in Canada, similar promises will be scattered\nbroadcast, Canadians, then, would do well\nto assess them with same care as they now\nseem to be devoting to pastime of debunking U.S.   electoral  promises.\n\u2014The Letter-Review.\nThey'll Do It Every Time\nMMtlPMOii\nTME LITTLE WOM4M IS SO-OO-\nWE4K SHE CAM NEVER UNSCREW\n4 COVER Off A J4R--\nBy Jimmy Hatlo\n5UT\u00bbOM,80y\/ JUSTTR\/TO\nOPEW THE S4ME J494FTER SHE\nPUTS THE LID BACK ON \u2022\u2022\u00ab\non the lake, result of recovering the tailings.\nof the Bluebell mine, is injurious to fish,\nAt least it must be unpleasant to their diet.\nPerhaps it is a laxative,\nMost of the foregoing conditions could\nbe obviated were it not for the apathy of\nthe responsible authorities in Nelson, and\nthe Game Department at Victoria. I feci\nsure that the citizens of Nelson will do all\nthey can, and be glad when lake fishing is\nbrought back to its former popularity.\nROBERT MAIN.\nNelson, B.C,\nTODAY'S BIBLE\nTHOUGHT\nAnd thou say In thine heart,\nmy power and the might of mine\nhand hath gotten me this wealth,\n\u2014Deut, 8:10.\nIn 1920 some multi-millionaires\nfound out that conditions beyond\ntheir control had contributed to\ntheir rise and fall. We know a\nman who was in partnership with\nGod ant consulted Him about\nevery move he made. God never\nfails.\ndunl dist\nYour Individual\nHOROSCOPE\n\u2022By Frances Drake-\nLook in  the flection  in  wmch\nyour   birthday   comes   and   find\nwhat your outlook is, according\nto the stars,\nFOR TUESDAY, OCT. 1\u00ab,  1956\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 20 (Aries)\n\u2014Uranus and Mercury are both\nwell aspected today. Both favor\nmental alertness and new changes\nfor the better. However, be extra\ncareful to avoid recklessness, errors.\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus)\u2014\nMuch is up to you personally now.\nSensible caution in financial and\nbusiness matters should put your\naffairs on the right side of the\nledger. You may have to guide\nothers; stress conscientiousness.\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini) \u2014\nStimulating, energizing Mercury\nrays should speed you on to unusual achievement IF you keep\nyour head and senses about you.\nBe creative but not extravagant\nin desires or ideas.\nJUNE 22\" to JULY 23 (Cancer)\n\u2014Your Innate  sense  of  what  is\nThe mature who earn much save\nmoney or buy fine things. The\nchildish spend it all and have\nnothln' to show for it.\n(all For Firm\nEnforcement of\nTraffic Laws\nVANCOUVER (CP) - A Lower\nMainland traffic conference here\nhas endorsed three ways of fight-'\ning British Columbia's increasing\nnumber of traffic deaths.\nThe group called for stricter\nforcement of traffic laws and\nstiffer penalties for violations. It\nalso asked for traffic laws based\non a national code and better\ndriver education.\n3Tie conference was sopnsored\nby the Vancouver Traffic and\nSafety Council and the B.C. Automobile  Association.\nDelegates asked that magistrates consider suspending drivers' licences more often. Charles\nE. Thompson, president of the\nB.C. Automobile Association, said\nthat the judiciary sometimes \"err\non the side of leniency.\"\nEmphasizing a need for more\nuniformity for traffic regulations,\ndelegates said that pedestrian\nrights on crosswalks vary in each\nof the Greater Vancouver municipalities. The conference endorsed\na resolution calling for uniformity\non the federal level and on the\nprovneial level where possible.\nThe conference endorsed a motion by George Lindsay, Superintendent of Motor Vehicles, establishing a committee to study ways\nof improving driver education.\nMr. Lindsay suggested insurance\ncompanies might contribute one-\nquarter of one per cent of their\npremium income to help pay for\ndriver training.\nThe meeting.also approved the\nidea of \"traffic violators' schools\"\nto which traffic offenders could\nbe sent.\nThe education panel asked that\nthe 10 hours of instruction now\ngiven in Grade 10 and 11 be given\nin Grade 10 only so it would\nreach students before the age of\n16, the required age for licensing.\nneeded and desired should serve\nyou well today. While not too\neasy a period, it is one in which\nreturns will be in proportion to\nthe efforts expended. Take time\nto think.\nJULY 24 to AUG. 23 (Leo) \u2014\nYou may have to reach,beyond\nyour own field for new advantages . now1. Fresh opportunities\nalways around, even on the so-\ncalled \"poor\" days. You have good\nideas, business sense; emphasise\nthem.\nAUG. 24 to SEPT. 23 (Virgo) \u2014\nSplendid vibratons for original\nideas, creative matters. Without\ngoing to extremes, step away from\nthe usual humdrum and try something different.\nSEPT. 24 to OCT. 23 (Libra) \u2014\nA little extra exertion and some\nrevision of ideas could add to\nyour day's returns. Review your\nschedule carefully but not anxiously, thei\\ proceed with faith\nand the knowledge that you CAN\nsucceed.\nOCT. 24 to NOV. 22 (Scorpio)\u2014\nIt is not too late nor is time too\nlimited to start that new project,\nor to engage in new studies, experiments. Influences encourage\nand stimulate  most activities.\nNOV. 23 to DEC. 21 (Sagittarius) \u2014 .Think carefully while\ngetting day's schedule in order so\nthat you can proceed without red\ntape or fuss. You can gain benefits, advance in your interests\nwith sensible caution.-\nDEC. 22 to JAN. 20 (Capricorn)\n\u2014You don't need to have everything bright and brand new to\nattain the advancement or progress possible now. Influences are\nfavorable to sound matters generally. A fine time for mental\nwork, too.\nJAN 21 to FEB. 19 (Aquarius)\u2014\nThis day's influences suggest that\nyou be alert, ready for action, and\nwilling to work for fine achievement. Don't daily: ACT!\nFEB. 20 t0 'MARCH 20 (Pisces)\n\u2014This day's influences are encouraging for keen thinking, planning, smart maneuvering to get\ninto the right position for1 accomplishment. Ahead!\nYOU BORN TODAY are innately reasonable, pleasant and sensible. You have fine assets with\nwhich to meet life's problems. You\nare   roundly   talented,   able   and j\nhave  fine  assets  with  which  to\nmeet   life's   problems,   You   are\nroundly talented,' able and  have)\na great amount of common sense\nand intuition. Don't be too set in\nyour ideas and ways. It is import,\nant to keep up with progress.\nKing Features\n?OPE AGAINST\nHEAVY JOBS\nTOR WOMEN\nCASTEL GANDOLFO, Italy\n(Reuters) \u2014 The Pope Sunday\ncalled for an end to lhe use of\nwomen \"in factories, mines and\nheavy work.\"\nHe made his remarks in a\nbroadcast from his summer residence here to 3000 members of\nthe Italian Women's Centre who\nare on a pilgrimage to the shrine\nof the Madonna of Loretto, near\nAncona, Italy. Observers said the\nPope  was also  directing his re-\nIs\nmarks to the rulers of COmmufr\n1st countries.\nHe said woman's \"primary function,   ner   sublime   mission,\nmotherhood.\"\nBut while the Pop* defended\nwoman's rights, he also called for\nher to take her proper place In\nthe family without trying for an\nequal footing with man. He explained that Christian law had\nlaid down limitations ordained by\nnature which could not exist without authority, not even in the\nsmallest nucleus\u2014\"the family\".\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED  DAILY\nI\nBub leaves Nelson,\n1:16 P.M. Connects\nat Spokane with\nWestern Star (lv.\n9:15 P.M.) or Empire\nBuilder (lv. 11:65\nP.M.). Connection\nat Seattle or Everett\nwith streamlined International arriving\nVancouver 11:59\nA.M. Railway tickets\nhonored on bus.\nAll timet are\nPacific Standard\nR. A. MUNRO, City Freight and Pasttenger Agent\n567 Ward Street, NeUon, B.C. Phono: J7\nH-Bonib Ban,\nNixon, Adlai's\nTalking Points\nLIBERTYVILLE, 111. (AP) \u2014\nAdlai E. Stevenson put the finishing touches Sunday to the\nspeech he hopes will give his campaign enough lift to pass President Eisenhower in the remaining three weeks of the presidential race.\nHe delivers the nationally-televised speech from Chicago today at 9:30 p.m. (6:30 PST). The\nsubject: Why he believes a way\nshould be found to end hydro-\ng^n bomb tests,\nA decision to make the H-bomb\nban Stevenson's primary campaign talking point was reached\nat a two-day weekend conference\nof Stevenson strategists at his\nfarm here not far from Chicago.\nAnother primary campaign\ntopic, Stevenson's advisers said,\nwill be vice-president Nixon.\nTop Stevenson backers say they\nsee a \"public distrust\" of Nixon\nand hope  to  capitalize on  it.\nThe hydrogen bomb testing issue has placed the Democratic\nnominee in sharp dispute with Eisenhower\u2014just the sort of situation Stevenson advisers have\nhoped for.\nwatch\nrem\nNOTHING\nLIRE IT IN\nALL CANADA\nCanadian Business\nMen Arrive in Paris\nPARIS (Reuters) \u2014 A group o:\n40 Canadian businessmen arrived\nhere by air Saturday from Montreal for a three-day visit to France\nduring which they will visit Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers in Europe, and be received by\nLord Ismay, secretary-general ol\nthe North Atlantic Treaty Organ.\nI ization. .     * '\nAr-%\nSEE THIS PAPER OCTOBER 17'\u00bb\n\u25a0itOanTk^CiSmaWamWm\n... a secret that gives\n\"Black & White\" its incomparable\ncharacter, smoothness and\nflavor. Have Scotch at its\nvery best by calling for\n\"Black & White\".\n\"'lACJUlHITr\nc\u00bboiC\u00a3 oTd'scot'ch whisky\n\u00bbwaiSRS\u00a3.K\t\n.;,:.\n&W}\nFrom Scotland every precious drop...\nBLACK* WHITE\nSCOTCH WHISKY\nBUCHANAN'S\nBy Appointment\nlo Her Majesty tho Quean\nScotch Whisky Dlstllleri\nJamei Buchanan & Co. Ltd.\nDistilled,  blended  and  bottled  in  Scotland\nAvailable In 26'A oz., and  13Vi oz. bottlei\n-ill\nI his advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia\nANNOUNCEMENT\nWe are pleased to announce the addition of Private\nWire Teletype to our facilities in Trail-\nOur increasing number of clients in the Kootenays will\nbe pleased to know that their orders can be filled in Vancouver, Toronto, Montreal or Calgary Stock Exchanges\nwithin a minute or two of their placement in our office.\nHall Securities Limited\nStrand Building - Telephone 2378\nTRAIL, B. C.\n_____\n________\n-\n  1 \u00a7wp    \t\nAbout the Town\n\u25a0By Alice Stevens\nPHONE  1369 OR  1844\nMr. and Mrs. N. C. Stibbs, Sill-1\nca Street, had as guests former\nNelson residents, Mr. and Mrs,\nHarold Emery of Vancouver.\n* \u2022   *\nMrs. Annie Grummett, formerly of Brilliant, has taken up residence at 704 Josephine Street.\n\u2022 \u2666   *\nMrs.  E. Heustis of Vancouver\nMany Enjoy\nBaptist Harvest\nFestival Dinner\nAbout 100 people sat. down to a\nHarvest#Festival dinner Saturday\nnight in the basement of First\nBaptist Church.\nMrs. T. McLaughlin, secretary\nof the Ladies* Aid, was convener,\nassisted by Mrs. Laird McLeod,\nMrs. A. Openshaw and Mrs. W.\nOgden, president of the Ladies'\nAid. Other members served, assisted by members of the CGIT\nand Young Peoples', convened by\nMrs. Fred Morris. A committee\nunder Mrs. Frank Aikins decorated the room in harvest motif, including leaves, pumpkins, and\nwheat sheaves.\nMrs. Fred Joyce gave a recital\non the Church's new electric organ half an hour before the dinner started. After the meal, the\nJunior Choir sang church songs,\nunder Church music director Norman Gibson, who also led the\nSenior Choir in several selections.\naccompanied by Mrs. Joseph\nKary. Mrs. Laird McLeod and\nMr. Gibson joined voices in a\nduet, and Mr. Gibson also sang\ns solo. All present joined in Gospel hymns.\nMayor Kary spoke a few words\nof appreciation. Rev. K. Imayoshi\ntold the gathering that proceeds\nof the dinner will help speed finishing of the Church basement.\nAll work is being done voluntarily by the Men's Club.    '\nMr. Imayoshi hoped that those\npresent would profit from the fellowship.\nvisited Mr. and Mrs. Robert Andrew, 504 Nelson Avenue.\n'* * * \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Hugh Armstrong\nand daughter, Diana, Chatham\nStreet, were in Trail to attend the\nwedding of Mrs. Armstrong's\nniece, Miss Hazel Dowkes to Eric\nRoos.\n* \u2022   *\nMr. and Mrs. H (Speed) Olson.\nformer Nelson residents, now living in Vancouver, were visiting\nthe latter's brother-in-law and\nsister, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Cot-\nterill, Anderson Street.\n* *   *\nAmong Nelson residents attending the Roos-Dbwkes \"wedding in\nTrail were Mr. and Mrs. W. G.\nLeslie, Miss Gloria Dowkes, Mr,\nand Mrs. Fritz Roos and daughter, Heather, Mr. and Mrs. Robert\nStrachan and daughter, Karen\nMae.\n\u2022 *< \u2022  r\nSt..Saviour's Mother's Club met\nin the Memorial Hail Thursday\nafternoon. Tea hostesses were Mrs.\nC. Turner, Mrs. H. W. Wood, Mrs!\nF. Phillips and Mrs. F. W. Cart-\nwright. Tea was also served to 44\nclergy attending the deanery\nmeeting.\nnothing\nlike it\nin all\nCanada!\nC\nSEE THIS PAPER OCTOBER 17\"\nWINDERMERE\nLADIES CLUB\nSLATE REELECTED\nINVERMERE \u2014 Mrs. Lloyd Te-\ngart of Windermere, who has\nserved as president of the Win\ndermere Ladies Social Club' for\nmany years, was re-elected to that\noffice at the annual meeting.\nOther officers re-elected were\nvice - presidents, Mrs. Walter\nHart and Mrs. Walter Stoddart;\nsecretary, Mrs. Leg Lindholm.\nThe club has a special project\nthis year. It has undertaken to\nfurnish the solarium for the new\nWindermere District Hospital.\nFurniture now on order includes\nfour chairs, two tables and a has\nhock.\nA plaque will be placed in the\nsolarium with the name of the\nclub on it. The solarium is for the\nuse of patients and is situated at\nthe southern end of the patients'\nwing. It has a ramp leading from\nthe entrance to the garden out\nside.\nQueens Bay\nQUEEN'S BAY \u2014 Mr. and Mrs,\nAlbert Merz of Milner, B. C, and\nthejr son Herbert of Vancouver\nwere here recently visiting with\nfriends.\nMr. and Mrs. N. R. German of\nVancouver spent a few days at\ntheir home here and while here\nMr. German's brother and sister-\nin-law, Mr. and Mrs. Reginald\nGerman of Trail spent the holiday weekend with them.\nPeter Osby fell from a ladder\nwhile picking apples and broke\nhie arm and will be hospitalized\nfor several weeks.\nRdONDEL \u2014 Miss Myra McGillivray and Bob and Jim Sutcliffe\nwho are attending Gonzaga College in Spokane visited their\nfamilies, Mr. and Mrs. J. McGillivray and Mr. and Mr6. John Sutcliffe.\ncash?\nNIAGARA\n\u25ba\nThousands of Canadians from coast to coast havo\ncome to Niagara when they've wanted up to\n$1500 or more quickly. The Niagara door is open\nfor yoo; in a private interview your needs are\nlooked after promptly and courteously. Rates on\nmany Niagara loans are lower . \u2022 . and loans to\n$1500 ace life-insured at no extra cost to yoo.\nThere's a wide variety of toon and payment plans\nfor your convenience ... so drop in anytime.\n\u25a0Vera ore lost a few of our many loan plans\ntost\nGET\nMONTHLY PAYMENTS\n12\nIS\n20\n24\n$300.00\n600.00\n661.10*\n1220.00\nt 28.37\n56JJ\n116.45\n$23.35\n46.65\n95.35\n$36.45\n40.00\"\n74.30\n$31.45\n63.60\n*Om of maty el oar eonvnti\/onf even-dollar paymant plans\nIAGARA\nLOANS\nUlJjJXKKu&l BRANCHES FROM COASl-TOCOAST\nLOCATED IN NELSON AT\n560 Baker St. Phone 1636\nNew Denver\nCouple Travel\n8274 Miles\nNEW DENVEK - Harry R. Mott\nof New Denver, who recently retired from the B.C. Civil Service,\nDepartment of Highways, after\ncompleting 31 years service, and\nMrs, Mott have just returned from\na holiday throughout the United\nStates and Canada.\nMr. and Mrs. Mott travelled by\ncar from the Pacific Coast to the\nAtlantic Coast, crossing into the\nUnited States at Paterson, following the Columbia to Portland, Ore.,\nthen on Route 99 to Grants Pass,\nShasta, Scakiyou Summit, Red\nBluffs, Des Moines, through olive\norchards, palm tree-lined highways, and the Sacremento Valley\nto Fresno, Delano, BakersfielcT\nwhich has a large airfield, San\nFernando, Burbank and Glendale,\nCalifornia, where they paid a surprise visit to Mr. Mott's sister\nWhom he had not seen in 52 years.\nThey also visited while there,\nthe Forest Lawn Memorial Park\nin Glendale which Mr. Mott says\n\"is very beautiful and well worth\nseeing.\" They also took a drive\nthrough Beverley Hills to Santa\nMonica Beach, up through West\nLos Angeles, through 20th Century\nFox Studios. Leaving Glendale\nthey went through Edgerock, Pasadena, Arcadia, Uplands, to San\nBernadino Valley, and through\nfields of orange groves beside the\nhighway. From there they took\nHighway 91 to Barstow and Las\nVegas. They then crossed the Las\nVegas Desert where the full moon\nwas rising on one side while the\nsun was setting on the other,\nbreathtaking sight.\" From there\nthey joined Lincoln Highway out\nof Lincoln, Neb., and on to Des\nMoines, Iowa City and Gary, bypassing Chicago, on to Tremont,\nCleveland, and Buffalo, and Rochester, N.Y., where there is a\nIpvely drive around the Great\nLakes. g\nThey crossed back into Canada\nat Niagara Falls, where they took\nsome movies of the Canadian\nFalls, then continued on to Hamilton where they visited their\ndaughter and her family, making\nside trips while there to Brant-\nford, Toronto, Stoney Creek. Leav^\ning Hamilton they visited ir\nKingston, and also in the country\nwent to see the Long Seault Rap\nids, which would ba for the last\ntime, as these are being filled In\nwith tons of rock to make way for\nthe St. Lawrence Seaway. In Cornwall they had a visit at an Old\nPeople's Home. Leaving there they\nwent to Chesterville, to Ottawa,\nAlmonte Carleton and picked up\nthe Trans-Canada Highway at\nArnprior, travelling from there\nthrough North Bay, Sturgeon j\nFalls. Sudbury, and Sault Ste. |\nMarie where they crossed back\ninto the states for a lovely drive\naround Lake Superior to Duluth\nwhich has the largest iron ore\ndock in the world.\nThey returned to Canada\nthrough Shelby, Mont., and con-\nRebekah Provincial\nPresident in Nelson\nno_c*.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, OCT. 15, 1956\u20145\nMrs. Alex McCabe of Victoria,\nprovincial president ol the Rebekah Assembly Independent Order of Odd Fellows, spoke at a\nmeeting of the Nelson branch in\nthe IOOF hall Saturday.\nThe president showed slides\nof her recent trip to the IOOF\nUnited Nations Pilgrimage for\nYouth in New York, to which\nshe chaperoned 34 young people\nfrom Oregon, Washington and\nB. C.\nActing Grand Mrs. W. McClelland presented Mrs. McCabe with\na gift and donation towards the\nresidence under construction in\nNewton, B. C. The president acknowledged her Nelson representative,   deputy   president   of  the\nJAPANESE GIRLS\nSTILL TAUGHT\nFLORAL ART\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Although\nJapanese girls more and more are\nturning to Western ways, flower\narrangement Is still an Important\nart for them to learn, an expert\nin the field said here.\nMiss Seikoh Ogawa came to\nVancouver to demonstrate flower\narranging in a department store.\nIn Tokyo she teaches the art in\nschools, at homes and in business\noffices and gives private lessons.\n\"It is* important like cooking\"\nshe said. \"Almost all Japanese\n^irls study it in school as part oi\nthe curriculum and business es-\nstablishments have after-work\nclasses in flower arranging for\ntheir employees.\n\" 'Ikebana,' or flower arrangement is of two types, classical and\nmodern.\" she said. \"I teach modern\nflower arrangement, which the\nyoung girls prefer.\nLIKE TO CREATE\n\"There are so many strict rules\nin the classical arrangement that\nthey cannot express their own\nideas, cannot create. This they do\nnot like.\"\nMsis Ogawa said that sending\nflowers to a girl friend is a Western custom.\n\"Neither do we buy flowers by\nthe bunch or the dozen,** she said.\n\"If we have a dozen roses, ve fan\nmake from them three different\narrangements.\"\nShe said the chief secret In\nkeeping flowers is to eut the\nstems under water. \"Even a wilted flower will regain freshness\nIf you eut the stem under water\nand put It ln a cool place.\"\nEvery time the water is changed\nI the stems should be cut.\nChurch Doors Should Be Open To\nAll Nationalities, Says Bishop\nSOUTH  SLOCAN \u2014The Westi Ing session  was  taken  up  with\nMRS. ALEX  McCABE\nQueen   City   Lodge,   Mrs.   M.  E.\nKirkham   with   a   presentation.\nPrior to the meeting, a banquet,\nwas held in honor of the visitor.\nGuests included past grand patriarch George Sommers of Trail;\npast grand master D. H. Proud-\nfoot, Nelson; past president of\nthe Rebekah Assembly, Mrs. H.\nW. Hankin eft Nelson; district deputy president Mrs. G. C. Caskey\nof Trail, district deputy president\nMrs. M. E. Kirkham of Nelson,\nand members from Castlegar and\nTrail.\nKctotenay Deanery of the Women's Auxiliary to the Anglican\nChurch was held in South Slocan on Friday. A large congregation gathered in St. Matthew'B\nChurch for communion, Rt. Rev.\nP. R. Beattie, Bishop of Kootenay being celebrant. Canon Silverwood preached the sermon,\nhis theme being \"The Church,\nand the WA in a troubled world.\"\nRefreshments were served in\nthe parish hall while registration\nof delegates got under way. The\nmeeting opened with singing of\na hymn and prayers.\nThe welcoming address was\ngiven by Mrs. W. Baker and Mrs.\nMitchell replied, speaking of the\nbeauty of the countryside on\ntheir journey to South Slocan,\nCards of good wishes were sent\nfrom the meeting to Mrs. Daven-\nport of Fruitvale; Mrs. Solly in\nTrail, Mrs. Percival In Victoria,\nand Mrs. Attwood of Christina\nLake.\nMrs. Sommers, president, gave\nher address, thanking the mem\nbers for their support and presence. The remainder bf the morn'\nWOMEN BOWLERS\nORGANIZE AT\nSOUTH SLOCAN\nSOUTH SLOCAN \u2014 A general\nmeeting of the Sffuth Slocan lad\n.,    \u201e   ,       , ies' Bowling club chaired by pre\n\u201en *!\u201e!,nn1al_^!f; !\"'\"..'T'isident Helen Mulloy, was held in\nMrs, McCabe has visited north to\nDawson Creek and Prince Rupert, east to Natal and Michel, and\nSouth to White Rock. From Nelson she will visit Castlegar, Slocan City, Trail, and Rossland and\nreturn to the coast via Grand\nForks.\nNew Denver\nJ. H. McDonaugh returned from\nCampbell River where he spent\nseven weeks.\nMrs. Earl M. Bingham who was\nvisiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nJ. A. Greer for a week returned to\nher home in New Westminster.\nMr. and Mrs. Quintin A. Forsythe and three children holidayed\nin Spokane with relatives.\nMr. and Mrs. G. H. Kroy entertained 12 New Denver Cubs to a\ncorn roast at their home, assisted\nby Mr. J. R. Bartlett.\nNo, 3 Plant hall though not w$ll\nattended.\nTwenty-four have indicated so\nfar, their desire to bowl this sea\nson,\nSecretary Lena Kennedy re\nported that the two alleys had\nbeen sanded and volunteers are\nneeded to apply the plastic finish\nbefore bowling can commence\nin abffut two weeks.\nNew balls will be purchased\nand a sign will be posted regarding alley rules. The meeting also\nvoted to charge various community organizations for the use of\ndishes in the hall kitchen to re\nplace breakages.\nFollowing the bowling dub\nbusiness session another meeting was held with the badminton\nclub to discus plans for the annual New Year's Eve dance sponsored jointly by the two organizations.\nbranch reports. Following noon\nday prayers, the meeting adjourned to No. 3 plant hall for lunch-\nean, catered and served by the\nladies of the Naomi Club. Rev\nRitchie gave a talk on camp Galilee on the Slocan Lake. A \"wonderful experience\" for children,\nhe asked the continued support\nof the Woman's Auxiliary and\nthat a representative be established in every parish. There was\na total of 104 children and lead*\ners, with a minister in attendance at the camp this summer.\nBISHOP 3PEAKS\nThe Bishop gave an address on\nthe Mission as WA members and\nmothers of families to encourage\nyoung men to enter the ministry.\nTo do this, he said, better treatment and pay for the ministry\nwas needed to attract the needed\nmen.\n\"The doors of the church and\nour homes should be opened to\nall people whatever their nationality.\" The Blahop hopes to\nestablish a diocesan publication\nfor the family.\nMrs, Horswill of Nelson replied\nto the Bishop, stating it was a\nvery stirring address, and a good\nthing to be stirred up now and\nagain. We need to raise our standards in the WA and the church.\"\nCancm Reeve spoke on the\n\"Every Member Canvass\" as a\nmeans of spreading the work of\nthe church more actively.\nThe diocesan president, Mrs.\nMoore, spoke on her recent attendance at the Dominion annual\nat Halifax.\nElection of officers was then\nheld with Mrs. Sommers re-elected president, Mrs. Thurber\nvice-president and Mrs. Weight-\nman, secretary-treasurer.\nAfternoon tea was served and\nfollowing prayers the meeting adjourned.\nJUST ARRIVED\nNew Shipment of\nCEDAR CHESTS\nin\nWalnut and Limed Oak\nBalfour Notes\nBALFOUR \u2014 Mr. and Mrs. M.\nW. Wellwood's guests for the holiday weekend were Mrs. Well-\nwood's sister, Mrs. Jorgine John-,\nsen of Vancouver, and brother E.\nJohnsen of Everett, Wash.\nLAC and Mrs. Doug Arnold,\nand Terry Burns were the guests\nof Mr. and Mrs. H. Franklin, on\ntheir return visit from Saskatchewan to Comox, B.C-\nMr. and Mrs. H. Franklin, Darlene, Lillian, Mr. and Mrs. M.\nMcKay, Jimmy and Blanche, visited Mrs. Franklin's brother, Mr.\nBert Morrow, and family, in\nCranbrook.\nMr. and Mrs. L. Sweeting had\nas their guest for the holiday,\nMiss Mary Ehlerrs of Vanoouver.\nCapt. and Mrs. T. Craigdallie\nhave as their guest, Mrs. Craig-\ndallie's mother, Mrs, H. J. Brown,\nof Victoria, B.C.\n\u2022 Souvenir China\n* Cups and Saucers\n\u2022 Peppers & Salts\nOrnaments,   Planters\nand  Ashtrays\nEarly Gifts for Christmas\nHobby Shop\nAcross From the Bus Depot\nPhone 1703 Nelson, B.C.\nFor Service...\nCALL\nKootenay Plumbing & Heating\nCO., LTD.\n351 Baker St.       Nelson, B.C.       Phone 666\nA Complete Plumbing and Heating Servico\ntinued   westward   across   Canada\nthrough to oil fields to Leth-'\nbridge, Alberta, through the Frank j\nslide and Crowsnest to Nelson, and I\non to New Denver. In all they travelled 8274 miles through many j\ncities and states, lovely orchards,\nfarm lands, mining towns, oil\nfieldB, deserts, but they say \"we i\nare quite happy to settle down in I\nNew Denver after our most enjoy- j\nable trip.\"\nPRINTED\nPATTERN\nA 793\nPROMINENT DESIGNER\nHERE IT 18! Outstanding Sheath-of-the.8eason by the new\nsensational Luis Estevez, Deslgner-of-the-Year, Winner of the\nCoty, Bui-dine, and Gold Coast Awards, hli talents today give\nSpecial Rewards to you\u2014to your figure and dressmaking\ntalents, Estevez' claim to fame stems largely from figure-molding lines\u2014in this sheath, notice the slender shoulder to hip\nline; the wise little darts that emphasize natural curves, so\nsimple they must be seen to be appreciated. And so very easy\nto makel\nChoose the fabric of the Original, a rloh silk, or bengallne,\npeau de sole, brpcade, sheer wool. It's a wonderful afternoon\ndress to go with furs, to dine in, to dance In, to wear when you\nwant to look your very, very bestl\nPrinted Pattern A793 Is available In Misses' Sizes 10, 12, 14,\n16, and 18, Size 16 requires 3i\/2 yards 39-Inch fabric.\nSend FIFTY CENTS (coins) plus three cents tax for\nPRINTED Pattern A793 to NDN Prominent Designer, Pattern\nDept. 60 Front St. W. Toronto. Please print plainly YOUR\nNAME, ADDRESS with ZONE, STYLE, NUMBER and SIZE.\n* SAFE WAYS *\nBiggest\nCanned Food Sale\nBARGAINS GALORE IN ALL YOUR\nFAVORITE CANNED FOODS\nSee the Big\nSPECIAL FLYER\nIt's Packed Full of\nTerrific Values and Savings\nSAVE\nPRICES EFFECTIVE\nOCTOBER 18 to 27\nSAVE\nCa'hadalOfe SAFEWAY\n.\u00bb,\nr,\n mm1.\n\u00ab\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, OCT. IS, 1956\nBOB McNAMARA TIES RECORD\nFOR TOUCHDOWNS, LIONS LOSE\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Halfback\nBob McNamara was the leader of\nthe band that played the death\nmarch for British Columbia Lions'\nplayoff hopes Saturday night as\nWinnipeg Blue Bombers won a\nWestern Interprovinclal Football\nUnion game 40-8 before 26,300\nfans.\nThe former Minnesota All-\nAmerican scored four of his six\ntouchdowns in the first half. Two\ncame on passes from Buddy Leake\nof Oklahoma ' as Blue Bombers\nmoved into a second - place tie\nwith   Saskatchewan  Roughriders,\nGelling Up Nights\nPor quick comforting; help lor Backache,\nRheumatic Pains, Getting UpNlghts, Btrong\ncloudy urine, Irritating passages, Leg Pains,\nand loss of energy due to Kidney and\nBladder troubles, try OYSTEX. Quick,\ncomplete -satisfaction or money back. Over\n000 million OYSTEX tablets used prove\nsafety, success. Don't suffer another day\nwithout asking tout druggist for CYSTEX.\nwho lost 37-17 to the league-leading Edmonton Eskimos.\nLeake kicked four converts as\nMcNamara equalled the Canadian\nmark for touchdowns by one man\nin one game. It was last matched\nin 1953' by Lorne Benson of Blue\nBombers.\nHalfback Ed Vereb scored the\nonly B.C. touchdown. It was converted by centre Ron Baker.\nLions' other point came on a\nsingle by Vic Chapman.\nThe loss left the Lion* without\na chance for a playoff spot for\nthe third straight year since they\njoined the WIFU in 1954. They\nnow have 10 points compared with\n18 each for Winnipeg and Saskatchewan. Edmonton has 18.\nREGINA (CP) \u2014 Edmonton\nEskimos regained their lead in\nthe Western Interprovinclal\nFootball Union playoff race Sa-\n'.:\u25a0'.'\nR EL I i\nslantigeP B Thii amoilng vaccine\nworks from within to remove ttio causo\nand attack the complaint. Yet Lantigen\nB can be taken easily by mouth. So\nmany thousands have already found\nlasting relief from the blinding head*\naches, the choking, gasping agony of\nSinus. Ask your druggist for free Lantigen Booklet and start treatment today.\n- ::     \u25a0\nOLYMPIANS WHIP\nALBERNI 94-75\nALBERNI, B.C. (CP) \u2014 Coach\nLance Hudson and his Olympic\nSquad Saturday defeated Alberni\nAthletics 95-75 in an exhibition\nbasketball game.\nHigh scorer for the Olympians\nwas Vancouver player Bob Pick-\nell. Pickell, who did not play Friday, scored 21 points' in the second\ngame. He was followed by Ed\nLucht and John McLeod, both\nwith 14 points.\nFor 'Athletics, Speldel was high\nman with 27.\nBRITISH RUGBY\nJOINER JOINS BRAVES\nMILWAUKEE (AP) - Milwaukee Braves Saturday traded reserve catcher Toby Atwell and\nrookie righthanders Phil Paine\nand Jack Mannah to their Wichita,\nKan., farm team for outfielder Ev-\nerette Joiner.\nturday when they defeated Saskatchewan  Roughriders 37 - 17\nbefore 14,500 fans.\nIt   was  the  first  Saskatchewan\ndefeat on Taylor Field in seven\ngames   this   season.\nRiders counted two touchdowns\nin the second quarter when a\nstrong downfield wind pinned\nEdmonton in its own territory.\nEskimos in turn got two touchdown breaks\u2014one on a blocked\nkick, another on an end - zone\nfumble.\nOtherwise, Eskimos were full\nvalue for the victory. Capping\nlong marches, Jackie Parker\nstreaked over for one touchdown\nand three 37 - yard touchdown\npasses to Rollie Miles and end\nBill Walker.\nLess than\nhours away!\n!\ni\nThe car that breaks the patterns of the pasT...\n57 CHEVROLET\nWill be nationally announced\nOnly franchised Chevrolet dealers   \/jjjl^jjjjuy' display Otis jamout trademark\nSee Your Authorized Chevrolet Dealer\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014 Results of\nrugby matches in the United\nKingdom:\nAustralian Tour\nLeeds 18 Australians It\nRugby League\nBradford N 11 Warrington 18\nCastleford 8 Keighley 17\nDewsbury 13 Featherstone R 47\nDOncaster 12 Blackpool B 1*)\nHuddersfield 24 Bramley 13\nHull 15 Barrow 8\nLeigh 11 Wigan 17\nLiverpool C 14 Hull Kingston 11\nOldham 27 Halifax 6\nSalford 11 St. Helens 27\nWakefield T 35 Batley 9\nWhitehaven 22 Hunslet 12\nWidnes 8 Rochdale H 29\nYork 15 Workington T 19\nRUGBY UNION\u2014\nCounty Championship\nCornwall 9 Devon 3\nGloucestershire 9 Somerset 20\nCLUB MATCHES\nBlackheath 3 Newport 21\nHarlequins 17 U S Portsmouth 6\nLondon S 3 Rosslyn P 11\nLondon Welsh 5 Coventry 8\nOld Alleynians   16 O  Edward-\nIans 5\nSt Thomas's 5 O Cranleighans\n.10\nSaracens 14 Met Police 18\nWasps 17 London I 11\nAbervon 16 Maesteg 14\nBarnstaple 9 Devonport S 18\nBedford 22 London Hospital 3\nBirkenhead P 10 Dublin W 8\nBridgend 8 West Wales 3\nCambridge 34 Guys H 0\nCardiff 36 Halifax 14\nCheltenham 3 Lydney 8\nCross Keys 6 Pontypridd 6\nEbbw Vale 14 Bath 10\nGlamorgan W 5 Abertillery 5\nGloucester 16 Old Blues 3\nLeicester 19 Richmond 8\nMoseley 23 O Merchant T 6\nNeath 3 Bective Rangers 2J\nNewton Abbot 3 Plymouth Al 0\nOxford 6 Notts 6\nSoccer Standings\nLONDON (AP) \u2014 Soccer stand-\nings ln tha English and Scottish\nleagues (leading teams):\nENGLI8H LEAGUE\nDivision I\nW\nManchester U    10\nTottenham _\nBlackpool _\nBurnley  _      6\nLeeds U           7\nDivision II\nStoke City \t\nLeicester C  \t\nNottingham F\t\nBIrstol R _\t\nSheffield U\t\nHuddersfield _      1\nDivision III (Southern)\nSouthampton \t\n'Torquay U     \t\nColchester U _\nNewport C\t\nReading   _\t\nDivision III (Northern)\nHartlepools U    12\nBradford C     10\nAccrington S     10\nWorkington T _\nStockport C \t\nSCOTTISH LEAGUE\nDivision I\nMotherwell \t\nRangers  \t\nHearts  _\t\nRaith R _\t\nEast Fife  \t\nQueen of S     4\nDivision II\nCowdenbeath     T\nAlloa .     4\nThird Lanark     5\nStirling Albion    4\nStranraer     5\nPenarth 20 Brldgewater A 0\nPontypool 6 Blaenavon 8\nRugby 21 Newbridge 0\nStroud 0 Aldershot S 9\nSwansea 5 Llanelly 16\nTaunton 11 O Paulines 3\nTorquay A 8 St. Ives 8\nUlster'21 Lancashire 5\nWaterloo 11 Northampton 5\nHeriots Pupils 3 Gala 0\nStewart's C College 8 Glasgow\n10\nWatsonlans 8 Edinburgh W 3\nStreatham 11 O Millhillians 8\nNashua Bows Out\n'NEW YORK (AP) - Nashua^\nran one of his mightiest races Saturday, breaking the American record as he closed out his racing\ncareer in the $54,700 Jockey Club\nGold Cup at Belmont Park.\nWith Eddie Arcaro steering and\nNashua battling off the challenges\nof all comers over the entire two-\nmile route, the four-year-old slammed under the finish line in 3:20\n2-5 to clip two-fifths of a second\noff the record set by Market Wise\nI ntaking the 1941 Gold Cup\nNashua, owned by the Leslie B.\nCombs syndicate, leaves Monday\nfor Kentucky. He takes   along   a\nlittle going away present amounting to $36,600 from the Gold Cup.\nThat hoisted his winnings to SI,.\n288,565, more than any other horse\nln the history of racing. It was\nthe 30th start and 22nd victory fojfl\nthe son of Nasrullah-Segula i\\\nJohnstown.\nCALVERT HOUSE\nCreated for Canadian Hospitality\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by (lie\nLiquor Control Board or by lhe Government of British Columbia\nLee Suspended\nBy Cleveland\nCLEVELAND (AP) \u2014 Howie\nLee, who refused to report to\nCleveland Barons of tha American Hockey League this season,\nhas been suspended'from organised hockey,\nHendy signed Lee last winter\nafter the defenceman returned\nfrom Italy with Kitchener-Waterloo Dutchmen of the Ontario Hockey'Association, Canada's entry in\nthe Olympic hockey championships.\nNEWiNEWHNEW.'H\nIfflft\nIN ALL\nCANADA\nREAD ALL\nABOUT IT\nIN\nWEDNESDAY'S\nPAPER   -\n \t\nSHORT\nCIRCUIT\nBy JOHN  SHORT\nWere you at the hockey game Saturday night?\nIf you weren't you should have been. Because, as you\nprobably know by by now, you really missed something.\nHad you occupied a seat at Civic Arena, you would have\nseen a well-drilled crew of hustlers open the Western International Hockey League season with a 6-2 victory over\nthe ice-shy Rossland Warriors.\nIt was not a handsome victory, but as Coach Pat Egan\nsaid after the game: \"It was a victory.\"\nThe rugged defenceman made his point better with those\nfour wqrds than any scribe\ncould have with 400. What\nmore need anyone say?\nPlease, gentle reader, don't take\nthe impression from this piece of\npraise that Nelson Maple Leafs,\ncirca 1956, f e world-beaters.\nThey are not world-beaters.\nThey are, however, a sound\ngroup that plays aggressive,\ncrowd-pleasing hockey. And any\nteam that plays in that manner\nwill win its share of games, and\nperhaps a few more than a fair\nihare.\nEgah had the boys \"up\" for the\nopener, and virtually every one\nof them came through with a top\neffort. And in the rare instance\nwhere the individual fell down\nhis mates recovered for him,\n\u2022   \u2022   *\nBut let's be sure to give Rossland\nall due credit. Warriors had been\non on the ice only five -times prior\nto the opener and, at times, they\nshowed it. Other times, they looked as if thev might chase Leafs\nout of the rtnk.\nMuch of the credit for the fact\nthat Leafs weren't chased from\nthe rink, but, in fact, came back\nstrong after surrendering two\nthird-period goals, must go to Gerry Koehle.\nThe nimble twine-tender blocked 50 of 52 shots and looked every\nbit like a senior calibre player in\ndoing so.\nGerry would be, I feel sure, the\nfirst to P^mit he was lucky on\n\u25a0several shots.\nAnd yo-i know as well as I da\nGOLF SEASON\nENDS IN RAIN\nJohn Melville and L!| Mickey combined at Nelson Golf\nand Country Club Sunday In\na drizzling rain to win the\ntwo-bail mixed foursome\ncompetition at the annual\nAuld  Lang Syna competition.\nBob Petty and C. L. Burnie\nwere  runners-up.\nDune Jamle.son and. Myrt\nCooper won the hidden hole\nprize, with \"Tlllie\" Mores and\nPeggy Jack combining to\ngain the runner-up \u00bbpot,\nA banquet was held immediately following the competitions to officially close the\n1956 golfing season.\niH.iiif\/.'im.tiu miimiiuiniiiii\nDELVECCHIO LOST\nTO DETROIT\nWITH BROKEN LEG\nTORONTO (CP) -Detroit Red\nWings scored a 4-1 win over Toronto in the opening game here of\nthe National Hockey League Saturday, but suffered a severe loss\nwhen centre Alex Devecchio jwas\nbadly injured.\nA 25-goal man last season, De^-\nvecchio suffered a broken right\nleg late in the first period. The'\ninjury involves the bones of the\nankle and will keep him sidelined\nfor at least eight weeks.\nDelvecchlo apparently had lost\nhis stick and was trying to kick\nthe puck out of danger when he hit\nthe sideboards in the Detroit end,\nLeafs Impressive\n3*13\nGerry Koehle's Fine Effort\nSparks First-Night Victory\nSENATORS SELL GROB\nWASHINGTON (AP) \u2014 Washington Senators anounced Sunday\nthe sale of pitcher Connie Grob\nto the Montreal club of the International League.\nBadminton\nTonight\nOCT. 16,   8 P. M.\nCIVIC CENTRE\nGeneral Meeting\nTHEN   LET'S   START   PLAY\nEveryone Welcom*\nthat a lucky goaltender with talent\n(or a talented goaltender with\nluck) is a mighty worthy opponent.\n* *    *\nSHORTS BRIEFS; Merv Home.\nformer manager of the Nelson\nsquad, handed the three stars'to\nGerry Koehle, Hal Jones and\nArchie Gaber. Merv had a tough\nchore .. . there were plenty of\nfine performances Saturday . . .\non both teams.\nGary AHbright, doing his first\nplay-by-play broadcast, handled\nthe job exceptionally well. Congratulations, Gary.\n\u2022 *    *\nCongratulations, too. are In order\nfor Bill Hamilton, who was chosen\nhonorary president of the Nelson\nMaple Leaf hockey club. Seemed\nbefore the game Saturday night\nthat almost everybody hoped to\nbe chosen to such an important\npost.\nFor a light smoke\nand a pleasing taste\nmake friends with\n!\nPHILIP MORRIS\nBacked by Jumpin' Gerry Kbehle-'s fine netminding\nchore, Nelson Maple Leafs impressed a screaming horde of\n1300 opening night fans at Civic Arena Saturday night by\nscoring two goals in each period to spoil the Western International Hockey League debut of Rossland Warriors.\n\u2022 Warriors, who replaced the defunct Kimberley Dynamiters in the four-team loop, scored two goals in the third\nperiod to ruin .the tiny goalie's bid for a shutout, but Leafs\ncame right back with two of\ntheir own to win 6-2.\nLee Hyssop, the WIHL's leading\nscorer last season, scored two\ngoals, making it obvious'he will\nnot surrender his laurels without\na struggle. Mickey Magjio, Don\nAppleton, Archie Cftber and Dave\nJoyal added singles.\nfine plays on each of Leafs' final\ntallies. He picked up a pass from\nMaglio, forced Zanler to move\nfirst and fired a blast into the upper right-hand corner.\nThe play the tiny school-teacher\nmade on Maglio's tally was, if\nanything,   more   spectacular.   He\nLeaf castoff Bud Andrews and,Pushed th\u00ab Puck Past Fletcher at\nKamloops refugee Jack Ferguson! fte   Rossland   blue-line,   hurdled\nreplied   for   Warriors,\nshot Leafs 52-31.\nThe game contained something I ot tl>e net'\nhim and in the same motion mov\ned the puck to Maglio in front\nfor each and every fan, with a\nThe  speedy   winger  made  no\nfair share of fancy skating and i mistake,\nfine stickhandling offsetting the! Gerry Koehle bad no,chance on\nflashes of scrambly hockey that I either Warrior marker. Ferguson\nare common in season inaugurals. I slld ^ Puck under his a\u2122 after\n, the youngster had blocked two\nRUGGED DEFENCE j successive efforts and lay sprawl-\nDisplaying a much more rugged' ed on his back,\nrearguard than they had last sea-1 Just 95 seconds later, newcomer\nson, Leafs made it evident almost | Steve Chorney sent Andrews in\nfrom the opening face-off that j alone and the clever actlng-oap-\nEossland forwards were going to | tain proved he has lost little of his\nkeep their heads up or start look-. twine-dentlng talent,\ning for new ones. I    Dave Joyal, one of two brothers\nDave Beskal, Ernie Gare, Marsh : operating on the line with hust-\nSeveryn and reliable Murray Par-' ling Jim Pilla, received a kiss on\nker all rattled incoming forwards: lhe cheek from Dame Fortune to\nseveral times, Beskal making up [score the third Nelson goal: He\nfor his lack of experience, with an! swooped into the corner to Zan-\nabundanoe of enthusiasm. | ier's right and fired a pass across\nSeveryn, up from Nelson Inter- j the  goal-mouth.  The  puck  rlco-\nmediates,  drew a  five  -  minute cbeted, Into  the   net   off   Reno's\nfighting  major  and  a  10-minute skate,\nmisconduct for his part in a se-,LINEUP8\ncond-period   brawl   with   Harold\n15:35; 2. Nelson \u2014 Appleton (Parker) 18:25.\nPenalties \u2014 Beskal (high-sticking) 14:15; Jones (high-sticking)\n14:15; Gare (five minutes, fighting) 13:15; Ferguson (five minutes, fighting) 15:15; Fletcher\n(kneeing) 17:34.\nSecond Period:\n3. Nelson \u2014 D. Joyal, 6:54; 4.\nNelson \u2014 Hyssop (F. Koehle, Keller) 12:09.\nPenalties \u2014 Severyn (live minutes, fighting, and 10-minute misconduct) 4:07; Jones (five minutes, fighting, and 10-minute misconduct) 4:07; Keller (tripping)\n8:28; Pilla (holding) 12:33; Gare\n(elbowing) 19:21.\nThird Period:\n5. Rossland \u2014 Ferguson (Bur-\nsaw) 4:59; 6. Rossland \u2014 Andrews\n(Chorney) 6:34; 7. Nelson \u2014 Gaber\n(Maglio, Appleton) 8:57; 8..Nelson \u2014 Maglio (Gaber) 18:45.\nPenalties \u2014 Mclntyre (holding)\n10:05; Pilla (highj-sticklng) 10:05.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, OCT. 15, 1956\u20147\nWings Lead By Three\nPoints After Victory\nJones. Jones also tangled in a\nhigh-sticking duel with Beskal in\nthe first period, for which both\nreceived minor penalties.\nEager Ernie Gare scrapped with\nFerguson 60 seconds after the\nJones-Beskal preliminary. Hyssop\nscored the first goal with the\nteams playing four-a-slde. Apple-\nton took a pass from Parker and\nfired a screened shot past Reno\nZanier in the Rossland cage three\nminutes later, with Leafs enjoying a 5-4 edge in manpower.\nGABER   SHARP\nArchie   (Citation)   Gaber  made\nRossland \u2014 goal, Zanier; defence: Yost, Fletcher, Robertson,\nLund, Ferguson; forwards: Bur-\nsaw, Rypien, Jones, Davis, Secco,\nChorney, Andrews, Mclntyre.  \u00bb\nNelson \u2014 gaol: G. Koehle; defence; Gare, Parker, Severyn, Beskal; forwards: Hyssop. Keller, F.\nKoehle, Appleton, Maglio, Gaber,\nF. Joyal, D. Joyal, Pilla.\nOfficials \u2014 Ed Robbins. Humboldt,   Sask.;   and   Terry  Caven-\nRay Kinasewich\nAmong WHL Pacers\nSEATTLE (AP) - Brandon is\nout front in the Pfairie Division\nand Seatle and New Westminster\nare tied in first place in the Coast\nDivision after the first week ot\nplay in the Western Hockey\nLeague.\nGuyle Fielder of Seattle took the\nindividual scoring lead with three\ngoals and nine assists for 12 points.\nTeammate Ray Kinasewich scored\nsix goals to lead the \"most goals\"\ndepartment with Bill Mosienko of\nWinnipeg.\naugh, Trail.\nSUMMARY\nFirst Period:\nNelson \u2014 Hyssop\n1.\nDEFENDING CHAMPION FLYERS\nTROUNCE TRAIL SMOKE EATERS\nSPOKANE, Wash. (CP)\u2014Spokane Flyers handed Trail Smoke\nEaters their second consecutive\ndefeat Saturday night, a 4-1 whipping as the Western International\nHockey League season opened\nhere.\nSpokane tallies came from Tik\nBeattie, ln an unassisted effort\nearly in the first period, from\nRalph Luke in the second, and In\nthe third period from Lorne Nadeau and Buddy Bodman.\nMike Shabaga scored Trail's\nlone goal in the middle frame,\nwith an assist from Bill Warwick.\nFirst Period;\n1. Spokane, Beattie 3:59.\nPenalties:   Jones,   Voykin   (3)\nKraiger   (3),   Lancien,   DeMore,\nHamilton.\nSecond  Period:\n2. Trail, Shabaga (B. Warwick)\n4:05; 3. Spokane, Luke (Jones)\n13:40.\nPenalties: Luke, Beattie, Hamilton (2), Kromm, Zahara.\nThird Period;\n\u2022 4. Spokane, Nadeau (Zahara,\nKubaSek); 5. Spokane, Bodman\n(Jones, 'Beattie).\nPenalties:  B.  Warwick, Hamilton, Hodges, B. Warwick.\n^iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiimiin:.\n| MacFarlane- |\n|    LeFaivre    |\nBlack Kid\n| Blucher Oxfords |\n= Built Up Arch =\ns Rubber Heel =\n\u25a0: You   cannot   buy   a   better E\n\u00bb shoe for comfortable fitting. =\n\u00a3 Sizes 6 to 12.      ir  ftp :\n= Widths Cs to Es. I J.yJ 5\n| ANDREW'S I\n3    \"Leaders in Footfashion\"     2|\nEstablished 1902 ' =\niTiiiiiiiniiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\/ri\nNelson Civic Centre\nCommission\nSchedule\nOCTOBER 15-21, 1956\nARENA\nMONDAY\n3:45- 4:55\u2014Figure Skating\n5:00- 6:00\u2014Minor Hockey\nI 6:30- 7:30\u2014Senior Hockey\n8:00 ADULT SKATING\njTUESDAY\n(Parker) ' 2:00- 4:00\u2014TINY TOTS*\nSKATING\n4:00- 5:45\u2014CHILDREN'S\nSKATING\n6:30- 8:30\u2014Senior Hockey\n8:30-10:30\u2014Minor Hockey\nWEDNESDAY\n3:45- 4:5.5\u2014Figure Skating\n5:00- 6:00\u2014Minon Hockey\n6:30- 7:30\u2014Senior Hockey\n8:00-10:00\u2014ADULT SKATING\nTHURSDAY\n2:00- 4:00\u2014TINY TOTS\nSKATING\n4:00- 5:45\u2014CHILDREN'S\nSKATING\n6:30-10:30\u2014Minor Hockey\nFRIDAY\n3:45- 4:55\u2014Figure Skating\n5:00- 6:00\u2014Minor Hockey\n6:30- 7:30\u2014Senior Hockey\n8:00-10:00\u2014GUYS & GALS\nSKATING\nSATURDAY\n8:00- 9:45\u2014Figure Skating\n10:00-11:45\u2014FAMILY  SKATING\n12:30- 1:00\u2014Skating Instruction\n1:00- 2:00\u2014Bantam Pool\n2:00- 4:00\u2014Open Minor Hockey\n8:00 SENIOR HOCKEY\nGAME NO  2\nTRAIL VS NELSON\nSUNDAY\n7:30- 8:30\u2014Civic Hotel\n8:30- 9:30\u2014Glade Beavers\n9:30-10:30\u2014Buerge Motors\n10:30-11:30\u2014Queen's Hotel\n12:30- 1:30\u2014Figure Skating\n2:00- 4:00\u2014ADULT SKATING\n5:30 Senior Hockey\nDETROIT (CP) \u2014 Detroit Red\nWings zoomed into a three-point\nlead in the National Hockey League Sunday night by defeating\nNew York Rangers 2-1 for their\nthird successive victory of the\nyoung campaign.\nRookie Billy Dea's second goal\nin as many nights turned out to\nbe tho winner as he cashed Earl\nRelbel's pass at. 12:33 of the first\nperiod with both teams , short-\nhanded on rCughing penalties to\nDetroit's Gordie Htfwe and New\nYork's Dave Crelghton.\nCHICAGO (CP) \u2014 Toronto\nMaple Leafs made a single\ngoal in the first period stand\nup Sunday night to take a 1-0\nNHL victory over Chicago\nBlack Hawks.\nThe defeat was Chicago's second\nshutout  of   the   season   and   the\nthird defeat in  as many games.\nTc\/ronto  now has  a  victory,  a\nloss and a tie. I\nNew York goalie Lorne Wors-\nley blanked Chicago in their\nhome opener here Friday.\nBOSTON (CP) \u2014 Boston\nscored twloe In the first period, then hung on until Don\nMcKenney slammed a 50-foot\nshot Into, an empty net with\n22 seconds left to play to de\nfeat Montreal's NHL champ-\nIons 3-1 Sunday night before\n10,486 fans.\nBruins' goalie Terry Sawchuk\nwas brilliant in the third period\nas Canadiens swarmed the Boston\ncage. Terry had 33 saves to Jacj\nqucs Plante's 34.\nMinor Hockey\nSchedule\nMonday, 5 to 6 \u2014 Bantam Rep.\nTuesday, 8:30 to 9:30 \u2014 Warriors midgets; 9:30 to*10:30 \u2014 Juvenile practice.\nWednesday, 5:00 to 6:00 \u2014 Open\nPee Wee and Bantam practice.\nBalance of schedule to be announced later.\nHumez Hammers\nOut TKO Victory\nMILAN, Italy (AP) \u2014 Charles\nHumez Saturday retained his Eu-\nopean middleweight boxing\ncrown with a 12th-round knockout over Italy's Franco Festucci.\nBoth were bleeding profusely\nas the referee stepped in.\nHOCKEY SCORES\nSATURDAY\nNational League\nBoston 0 Montreal 3\nDetroit 4 Toronto 1\nAmerican League\nBuffalo 2 Springfield 4\nProvidence 1 Hershey 3\nRochester 3 Cleveland 6\nInternational League\nCincinnati 5 Troy 1\nWestern Hockey League\nSeattle 4 Victoria 3\nNew Westminster 5 Vancouver 0\nEdmonton 3 Calgary 3\nWinnipeg 3 Brandon 3\nBatteries\nMINING -  LOGGING\nAND AUTOMOTIVE\nRepairs to  All  Types\n509 Lake St Phone I\nARROW BATTERIE8\nCIVIC CENTRE\nTODAY\nADULT\nSKATING\nTonight\n8:00 p.m.\nOct. 15\n0T Seagram's\nScajram's \"83**    *\nThis advertisement Is not published ar displayed by\n> liquor Control Board or by tho Government of British Column*\n{^JjjmiJlwJr T\/wL...\nAutumn is the time to \"land cruise\" across\nCanada ... scenery is at its peak ... weather\nis at its finest! And by Canadian Pacific\nScenic Dome trains you see Canada in\ncomplete comfort... relaxed in reserved,\nreclining coach seats or in the \"Domes\" ...\nwith your choice of Skyline Coffee Shop or\nDeluxe Dining Room Car ... and a variety\nof enclosed-space accommodation, from\nRoomettes to Drawing Rooms.\nSee Colourful Canada this Fall. Travel\nThe Canadian or The Dominion. Ask about\nspecial Family Fares.\nInformation and reservations from any\nCanadian Pacific office or\nMr. A. M. Steele,\nBalcer & Ward Sts., Nation\n-^\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014^Mi,\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014,\u2014,\n\u25a0\u25a0MkM\nmmmmmnmmtMmmmmmm\n.    .    '.:.\nn_\nDHri\n 8\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, OCT. 13, 1956\ntiND-SPEAKING OF BEASTS-\nHERE. COME THE SCRAGGSZT\nNEW ] WHARYO')\nGALS, ^vGOlN', <\nPAPPY.7; HONEY?).\n\u2014\u2014\u25a0\u25a0,:,v \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014: fppp \\*wmmm\u00bbw*\nMarkets Stage Rally al Week's End\nDespite Semi-Holiday Conditions\ns\n1\nAHozrhat*\u2014\u2014\u2022\n!\u00bb\nE&$>&T\\         \/  7\n>1?\nm> *\n\u00bb\u2022\u00bb\nAtawuitole,Philha* spread theslami- police\n.and local ndio - and newspaper- headline* -\n\u2022JHOUIDER 1j     \u25a0  C?\nstartins to J\/    M y^R ESCAPES Fflrui\n6av\u00bbis IN VICINJT^\nfJut now - j lone motorist moves alonj route\ni48....   emaWT \"\"\u2014\u25a0 \u25a0 \u2022\u2014'\u2014\nWMUlMTt LOOK*\nLtKt \u00bbHiMiCA0W-\u00a30UNW   _\nSWIMMER \/HI4H6D HI^TURW!   |\nOWJNTHW\nBEETLE! HE'S\nALWAYS SOME\nWHEN I WANT\nHIM\nOp%^J~\nWW?\n\/  VCtellOOKAT\n\/ THAT COS FOLLOW\nTHE SCENT!\nV   WHAT A POOCH)\nBy RON ANDREDS\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nIndustrials spurted ahead on the\nstock markets last week but'mining and oil issues drifted in no\nparticular direction and showed\nlittle change,\nThe trading volume was cut\ndown by the Canadian Thanksgiving holiday Monday and Wall\nStreet worked under semi-holiday\nconditions Friday when American banks were closed in the observance o*f Columbus Day and\nmany investors left for a long\nweekend.\nCanadian markets chalked up\nslim advances Tuesday, Wednes-\nEnjoy a\nRefreshing\nLittle Lift\nRight While You Work\nChew fresh-tasting,\ndelicious Wrigley's\nSpearmint Gum.\nGet some\ntoday.\nday and Thursday but slipped\nback a little on the last day of\ntrading. New York lost some\nground Tuesday but went ahead\non the other four sessions. The\nbest single-session advance in\nboth countries occurred Wednes\nday.\nFIVE-POINT GAIN\nIndustrials on the Toronto exchange added more than five\npoints to their index, half of the\ngain being recorded Wednesday.\nBase metals nudged ahead l'\/i\npoints but western oils tipped\nback 1 % points. At Montreal, only\ngolds lost ground.\nFinancial Institutions, especially banks, and steels were the\nindustrial leaders. But a number\nof stocks in all industrial groups\nshowed some good gains. Copper issues, despite a decrease in\nscrap copper prices in the U. S.,\nwere firm. Other mining issues\nhad about as many gains as losses\nbut the advances were wider\nranged.\nTrading was abefut average for\nrecent sessions during the four-\nday week. A , total of 15,603,000\nshares were exchaged against 18.-\n987,000 in five sessions last week.\nRoyal   Bank  showed   the   best\nUGlfVSt\nSpEARM'JfL\n\u25a0chPwn6'\nON THE AIR\nCKLN  PROGRAMS\n1240 ON TBE DIAL\n6:30\u2014Wake-Up Time\n7:00\u2014News\n7:05\u2014March of Truth\n7:10\u2014Farm Fare\n7:15\u2014Chapel in the Sky\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Sports News\n7:40\u2014Wake-Up Time\n7:45\u2014Roads and Weather\n7:50\u2014Rise 'n' Shine\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Sports New*\n8:15\u2014Musicale\n9:00\u2014News\n9:05\u2014Shoppers' Guide\n10:00\u2014News\n10:05\u2014Shoppers' Guide\n10:15\u2014Happy Gang\n10:45\u2014Composers ln Modern\n11:00\u2014News\n11:05\u2014Story Parade\n11:15\u2014Morning Melodies\n12:00\u2014Novelty Time\n12:10\u2014Sports News\n12:20\u2014News\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Prairie News\n1:00-CKLN Report*\n(Pacific Standard Time)\nMONDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1956\n1:15\u2014Matine*\n1:30\u2014Western Serenad*\n1:45\u2014Pacific News\n2:00\u2014School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Trans^Canada Matinee\n3:30\u2014Woman's World\n3:45\u2014B.C. Roundup\n4:30\u2014Blackbeard's Diamond\n5:00\u2014Sacred Heart\n5:15\u2014By Line\n5:20\u2014Closing Market*\n5:25\u2014Musicale\n5:40\u2014Sports News\n5:45\u2014Strikes and Spares\n5:50\u2014News\n6:00\u2014Rawhide\n6:15\u2014From Parliament Hill\n6:30\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n7:00\u2014News and Roundup\n7:30\u2014Capital Sports Report\n8:00\u2014Tess of the D'Urbervilles\n8:30\u2014Summer Fallow\n8:00\u2014Symphony Orchestra\n10:00\u2014News\n10:10\u2014Sports News\n10:15\u2014Bev Foster Show\n10:30\u2014Bethel Fireside Hour\n10:48\u2014Musicale\n11:00\u2014MEWS Nightcap\nCBC PROGRAMS\n(Mountain Stnadrad Time)\nTUESDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1956\n12:55\u2014Five to One\n1:00\u2014Afternoon Concert\n1:45\u2014Today's Guest\n2:00\u2014School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matine*\n3:30\u2014Playing Favorites\n3:45\u2014Today's Music\n4:30\u2014Music Picture Lady\n4:45\u2014Story Man\n5:00\u2014CBC News\n5:15\u2014By Line\n5:20\u2014Sports\n5:30\u2014Points West\n6:00\u2014National News\n6:05\u2014All-Star Hockey\n7:30\u2014Musical Program\n8:00\u2014Anniversary Theatre\n8:30\u2014Anthology\n9:00\u2014Let's Make Music\n9:30\u2014Leicester Srjare to Brdwy.\n10:00\u2014New*\n10:15\u2014Critics At Large\n10:30\u2014Distinguished Artists\n:00\u2014B.C. Fisherman's Broadest\n:15\u2014Musical Matine*\n:30\u2014News\n:35\u2014Musical Minutes\n:40-TMorning Devotions\n:55\u2014March Past\n:0O\u2014News\n:10\u2014Here's Bill Good\n:15\u2014Morning Music\n:45\u2014Laura Limited\n:0O\u2014BBC News\n:15\u2014Your Good Neighbor\n:30\u2014Morning Concert\n:00\u2014Morning Visit\n.15\u2014Happy Gang\n:45\u2014Composers in Modern\n:00\u2014Kraft Radio Theatre\n:15\u2014Kindergarten, of the Air\n:30\u2014Through the Listening\nGlass\n15\u2014News\n:25\u2014Showcase\n30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\nTimes Shown Are Pacific Standard Time\nKXLY TV - Channel 4\n:00\u2014Good Morning\n:E~As the Wor'd Turns\n:00\u2014Valiant Lady\n: 15\u2014Love of Life\n:30\u2014Houseparty (L)\n1:00\u2014The Big Payoff (L)\n:30\u2014Bob Crosby (L)\n:00\u2014The Brighter Day (L)\n:30\u2014Edge of Night (L)\nlOO\u2014Search for Tomorrow\n:15\u2014Guiding Light\n:30\u2014The Matinee\n:45\u2014Opportunity Unlimited\n:00\u2014Arthur Godfrey  (L)\n:00\u2014What's Cookin'\n:30\u2014Strike It Rich (L)\n:00\u2014Western Roundup\n:00\u2014Regional. News\n: 15\u2014Doug Edwards News (L)\n.'30\u2014Robin Hood (L)\n:00\u2014Studio One\n:00\u2014Burns and Allen (L)\n:30\u2014Talen Scouts (L)\n:00\u2014I Love Lucy (L)\n:30\u2014December Bride (L)\n:00\u2014Fabian of Scotland Yard\n:30\u2014Famous Fights\n:45\u2014TBA\n:00\u2014The Hunter\n:30\u2014Doug Fairbanks\nKHQ TV - Channel 6\n1:10\u2014Test Pattern\n1:15\u2014Color Test Pattern\n1:25\u2014Bible Reading\n1:30\u2014It Could Be You*\n>:00^Ding Dong School*\ni:30\u2014Fun To Reduce\n':45\u2014Home*\n:30\u2014Tennessee Ernie Ford*\n:00\u2014Matinee Theatre**\n!:00\u2014Queen for a Day*\n':45\u2014Modern Romances*\n:00\u2014I Married Joan*\n:30\u2014Bandstand*\n:00\u2014They Dare Not Love\n:15\u2014Women\n::15\u2014Mr. Engineer and Little\n. Rascals\n:45^-My Little Margie\n:15\u2014Trouble With Father\n:45\u2014Weather Wise\nThe Front Page\"\n:55\u2014Newspaper of the Air\"\n:00\u2014Waterfront\n:30\u2014Frankie Carle\"\n:45\u2014News Caravan*\n:00\u2014Producers Showcase**\n:25\u2014Political Telecast*\n:30\u2014Robert Montgomery*\n:25\u2014Political Telecast*\n:30\u2014News Desk\n:35\u2014Liberace\n:05\u2014Racket Squad\nKREM TV - Channel 3\n:45\u2014Test Pattern   '\n1:00\u2014Storyland\n:15\u2014KREM's Featuram*\n:30\u2014Skipper Jim\n:00\u2014Mickey Mouse Club\n:00-Sky King\n:30\u2014Newsroom\n:40\u2014Weather Reporter\n:45\u2014Hollywood Floorshow\n: 00\u2014Studio Party\n7:30\u2014Bold Journey *\n8:00\u2014Danny Thomas \u2022\n8:30\u2014Voice of Firesstone *\n9:00\u2014Famous Playhouse\n9:30\u2014Lawrence Welk Teen\nShow \u2022\n10:25\u2014Political\n10:30\u2014Sleepy Time Gal\n10:45\u2014Monday Evening Film Fair\n(Programs subject to Chang* by station* without notice.)\ngain ln industrials. It added $3 50\nto $65.25. Other winners of $2 .or\nmore were Aluminum, Algoma,\nB A Oil, Calgary Power, Powell\nRiver, St. Lawrence and International Paper. Gypsum lost $4.50\nand Canadian Westmghouse $2.\nCOLDSTREAM   ACTIVE\nFor the third straight week,\nColdstream^ won the most interest and showed the best gain in\ncoppers. The stock climbed 60\ncents to touch a new high of\nS3.50, In the last three weeks it\nhas more than doubled in value.\nSenior base metals moved in a\nnarrow range and other junior\nand copper stocks had gains and\nlosses ranging to 30 cents. Western oils were virtually unchanged.\nWeek's index changes at Toronto: Industrials up 5.33 to 472.23;\ngolds off .02 to 80.52; base metals\nup 1,20 to 239.34; western oils off\n1.54  to   156.48.\nWeek's index changes at Montreal: Banks up 1.03 to 52.60; utilities up 3.5 to 141.1; industrials up\nCrash Survivor\nMaking Headway\n. REGINA (CP) \u2014 Ross Pinder,\n40, only person to survive a two-\ncar crash at Virden, Man,, hi\nwhich 10 persons \u2014 his wife, four\nchildren and five oil workers were\nkilled \u2014 was reported \"improving\ngradually\" Sunday in a Regina\nhospital.\nA hospital spokesman said Mr.\nPinder is off the critical list.\nAn investigation into the accident is being help up pending Mr.\nPinder's recovery.\n5.5 to 296.0; combined up 4.8 to\n244.3; papers up 30.12 to 148.83;\ngolds off 0.14 to 78.97.\nWeek's volumes at Montreal:\n304,333 industrials and 2,310,174\nmines against 455,009 industrials\nand 2,794,887 mines ' ths previous\nweek.\nThe Associated Press average\nof 60 stocks at New York advanced $2.50 to $180.\nDAILY   CROSSWORD!\nACROSS\n3. Spiny\n\u2022vergrees\nahrub .\n\u00ab.Gorgt\n11. Near\n(poet)\n82. Knight'*\nweapon\n03. South\nAmerican\nanimal\n14. Pungent\nvegetablt\n15. Capital\n(Peru)\n30. Undeveloped\nflower\nIT. Musio\nnote\n13. All oorreot\n(colloq.)\n19. Turf\n20. Perennial\nherb (E.I.)\nH. Founder ot\nMethodism\n14. Fasten\nwith glue\n25. Instructor\n17. Woody\nperennial\n15. Rowing\n32. Amateur\n33. Pig pen\n34. Gold  (Her.)\nSS.Publlo\nnotice\n33. Perched\n07.Volcanio\nnek\n39. City (Fta.)\n41. Withe*\n42.Arti*t'i\nstand\ndS.Unrollo\n44.Cabbag*\nsalads\n45. Attempt\nDOWN\n1. Pale-yellow\n2. Dissimilar\n3. Quantity\nof paper\n4. Ancient\ntown\n(If. Afr.)\n6. Epoch\n6. Dark spot\nIn morblo\nf. Part of\ntha body\nI. Keel-billed\ncuckoo\n(. Scotland\n(poet)\n10. Subservient\n16. Withhold\nbusiness\n19. Body of\nwater\nna   aoj   ana\nHHHHBa iaa\nHHHUin snmnii?\n20. Persian\nfairy\n22. Branch\n23. Sheltered aid*\n14. Varying\nweight\n(Ind.)\n26. Grass\ncured\nfor\nfodder      silwtw's Amw*t\ntt. River (Eng.)\n28. Arranged      36. Morgan***\nlugs\u00ae HHsas\ntanna ansa\nlike ray*\n30. Nine day*\ndevotion\n(R. C. Ch.)\n31. Covered\nwith graas\n33. Extents of\ncanvas\n37. Fold*\nover\n38. Bird* at\na class\n40. Mon'o\nnam*\n41. African\nte^g\nDAILY CBVPTOQUOTE \u2014 aerei now to work Mt\nAXYDLBAAXB\n* LONGFELLOW\nOn* letter limply Itcnd* for another. In this example A M an*\nfor th* three L's, X for th* two O'o, etc. Bingl* letters, spo\u00bb\ntrophies, ths length and formation of th* word* art tU hint*)\nBach day th* cod* tetter* are different\nA Oiyptufjntu Quotation\nF       JIM      M~    KHT      WC8A      BFtT'rt\nHIHFTBM   MVHT    BF TTFTI-B TH T AB tj\nQAHSA.\nSaturday* Cryptoouoto: TRUTH IS ON TU KtMR AMD\nNOTHING CAN STOP IT\u2014ZOLA.\n*        Distributes' by Xing return Syndic*!*\nJS*\nTo place your order\nfor\nCanada Saving*\nBonds\ntclcplione or write\nto us.\nThe \"card money\" reproduced here was Lhe usual 'currency of French Canada in the early\n1700's. These cards, now extremely\nrare, were as good as cash and\nnormally redeemed yearly by the\nFrench Treasury Department\nPhoto courtesy The Rrjyat O.t&rio UiMK,\nCANADA SAVINGS BONDS,\nare not only as good as cash, they\nare better than cash. They may be\nredeemed at any time at their full\nface value, plus the interest which\nhas been earned on them.\nCanada  Savings   Bonds  are  the\nsafest   investment   in   Canada.\nThey cannot drop in price, and\neven   rf   lost  or   destroyed,   the\nBonds may be replaced.\nllth SERIES\nCANADA SAVINGS BONDS\non Sale NOW\nWhen held until maturity, the\ninterest rate averages 3.76%, the\nhighest ever paid on any series.\nDenominations:\n$50,  $100,  $500, .$1,000,  $5,000\nThe fimrt of $5,000 may be purchased for each\nmember of a family. Payment by monthly\ninstalments if desired\nWood,  Gundy  & Company\nlimited\n744 Vest Hastings Street Vancouver\nTclcphomx PArrfie SS3i\n_-^^^__^_\n_______^__\n SMALL INVESTMENT   -\nLARG\nThat's the Want Ad Story\nERETU\nPHONE  1844\nLOST AND FOUND\nHELP WANTED\nJOIN AN\nHISTORIC UNIT\nEnjoy 3 years of adventure and\ncomradeship in The Queen's Own\nRifles, the oldest rifle regiment in\nCanada. As a member of The\nQueen's Own Rifles you will . .\n\u2022 Travel   Widely  in  Canada   \u2014\nPerhaps Overseas\n\u2022 Learn To Handle and Lead Men\n\u2022 Meet and Serve With Men From\nAcross Canada\nStrength\nand   Char-\nO Develop\nacter\n\u00ab Get Finest Medical and Dental\nCare\na) Get 30 Days Paid Holidays A\nYear\n\u00ab Have the New Increased Pay\nRates, Pensions and Excellent\nOpportunities for Promotion.\nAfter these 3 great years, return to\ncivilian life better prepared, or\nbuild a lifetime Army career.\nYou are eligible if you are between\n17 and 40 years old, have at least\nGrade 8 education, and can meet\nArmy test requirements.\nMail the coupon below, 'phone or\nvisit your nearest Army Recruiting\nStation.\nARMY  RECRUITING   STATION.\nTHE AMOURIES.\nNELSON, B.C.\nPlease send me. without obligar\ntion. full information on Army\ncareers.\nNAME\nADDRESS     ..\nCITY\/TOWN\nPROV\t\nTELEPHONE\n7 THE WILKESES ASKED US TO A PAtflY\nSATURDAY... A MAN PROM INTERNA!.\nREVENUE CALLED.-JANE AND HARRY HAVE\nSEPARATED ...I DENTED THE CAR\nFENDER...CHIP GOT A BLACK' EVE\nH6HTIN1S...THE CLEANERS SHRANK.\nnnvc\ntK^yl\nRENTALS\nIN\"YMIR - MODERN ~5~ROOM\nhouse, electric stove and hot\nwater tank, floor furnace and\nheater. Apply Noble Gould\nYmir.\n-OR SALE MISCF' LANEOUS\n5-ROOM COTTAGE FOR rlENT.\nUnfurnished, Cheap winter\nrates. 3 min. walk from Nelson\nferry. Phone 1623-L-2, Con\nCummings.-\nWINTER RATES AT CRESCENT\nBeach Auto Court. Several furnished, winterized cabins for\nrent. Phone 471-L-l for particu\nlars or call.\nSUITES FOR RENT - THREE\nrooms unfurnished and four\nroom furnished, convenient, 507\nSilica St. Move In today. T. D\nRosling & Son Ltd., phone 717\nCLERK GRADE 2\nTRAINEE\nB.C. CIVIL SERVICE\nGOVERNMENT AGENCY,\nNELSON\nSalary: $210-$255 per month.\nThis offers young men Interested in a Government career an\nexcellent opoprtunity for training, advancement. Applicants\nmust be British subjects, with\nat least 3 years' general office\nexperience. Application forms\nobtainable from the Goverrw\nment Agent, Nelson, to be completed and returned to the\nchairman, Civil Service Commission. Parliament Buildings,\n544 Michigan Street, Victoria,\nnot later than October 24. 1956.\nWANTED - ELEMENTARY\nteaclier for about twenty pupils,\ngrades one to six, for new\nmodern one-room school at Ar-\ngenta, on scenic Kootenay Lake.\nScale E.B. $2400 to $4050 in\ntwelve years. Ideal climate. Full,\ncredit for time in the forces or\nteaching in any other province.\nApply Stating qualifications,\nyears of experience with last\ninspector's report to Alf. Watson,\nsecretary-treasurer, School District No. 6 (Kootenay Lake),\nKaslo, B.C.\nKENCOURT MOTEL - NOW\nopen for winter rentals. One and\ntwo-bedroom units, automatic\nheat. Phone 1581-L-2.\nFOR RENT \u2014 3 BEDROOM\nhouse. North Shore, opposite\ncity, $50 monthly. Ph. 1761-L-2\nafter 6 p.m.\n2-ROOM CABIN FOR\"RENT -\nNorth 'Shore, furnished or unfurnished, own fuel may be ga-\nthered. Apply J. Flegel, R.R. 1\nAmerican 800 M\nMotor Grader\nCAT\nTRACTOR\nSAWMILL\n3 SAWS\nLarqe Cookhouse\n5 Bunk Houses\nLarge Tract of\nStanding Timber\nPHONE 1960\nWL L.\nSUITE - 3 ROOMS AND BATH\nPrivate entrance, heat, water\nand electric range supplied Ph\n978-R.\nFURNISHED HOUSE, 3 BLOCKS\nfrom Baker St. 1 bedroom.\nAdults only> Box 2101, Nelson\nDaily News.\nLARGE HOUSEKEEPING ROOM\nsuit couple, fully furnished, linen, fridge, gas stove, automatic\nheat   171 Baker.\nBRAD'S AUTO COURT - WIN-\nter rentals. Self contained cottages, 2 large rooms.and bath.\nPhone 1680.\n-FOR BENT - 5-ROOM BUNGA-\nlow, fridge, stove and other furnishings. Rosemont. Apply 612\nWasson.\nHOUSEKEEPING OR S1.EEPING\nrooms, fully furnished with frig\nday week or monthly rate Al-\nlen HoteL 171 Baker St\nUNFURNISHED 3 - ROOM Duplex and bath, close in, $40 per\nmonth. Phone 1404-Y evenings.\nREQUIRED IMMEDIATELY \u2014\nFirst aid attendant, time keeper\nfor our Nakusp sawmill. Must\nhave industrial first aid certificate. Salary according to qualifications. Apply to Celgar Ltd.,\nCastlegar.\nWANTED - GOOD. FAST SAW-\nyer with knowledge of mlll-\nwrighting for cedar mill. Good\nwages and year round employment for right man. Apply Columbia Cedar Limited, Box 718.\nRevelstoke, or phone 3-X-l.\nDRAFTSMEN ARE IN GREAT\ndemand. Train by home study\nin spare time for these well-paid\njobs. Diploma awafded. Free\nfolder. Primary School of Drafting, Dept G. Box 123. Station\n\"Q\", Toronto. \"\nJUNIOR CLERK REQUIRED BY\nchartered bank, Grade 11 education required. Apply In own\nhandwriting Box 8950, Nelson\nDaily News.\nIce maker and maTnten-\nance man for Nelson Curling\nClub. Apply in writing to 512\nHendryx St.\nFURNISHED 2-ROOM SUITE\nfor rent. Call at 140 Baker or\nPhone 491-L.\n(TRUSTEE)\nOR\nSuite  10\nGilker   Blk.\u2014Nelson.\nLAWN MOWER, 14\". WOODEN\nhigh chair with padding: baby\ncarriage; crib spring (48\"x30\">;\nspring-filled crib mattress (48\"-\nx29\"); baby tub (30x16^x8%;\ntoidey seat; new mechanical\ntrain set; drink mixer attachment for No. 9 Sunbeam mix-\nmaster; 1 boy's wool sailor suit\n(navy) with white gob cap. Apply House No. 415, Corra Linn,\nJ. Spain.\nPROPERTY. HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\nFOR SALE OR RENT: 5 ROOM1\nhouse on 2 lots on Nelson Ave.\nOwner forced to leave town due\nto health. Full price complete\n$4000.00 Terms can be arranged.\nOnly those genuinely interested\nneed apply. Phone Trail 353 collect or write 1369 Cedar Ave.,\nTrail. |\nGROCERY STORE, GAS PUMPS,\nbus depot, big house on 1 acre,\nwith fruit trees and garden\nPete J. Markin, Glade, P.O\nShoreacres.\nBALFOUR - MODERN 1 BED-\nroom Home, beach Easy terms,\nor consider trailer on deal Ap-\nply Box 8833. Nelson Daily News\nBEDROOM HOUSE ON 2%\nlots by Castlegar ferry. Apply\nA. Stoochnoff, Robson.\nACRE FARM, BLACK SOIL,\nfruit trees, near Taghum. J\nKaras, Taghum.\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES    BICYCLES\nMECHANIC'S OWN 1949 PON-\niac sedan. In excellent shape.\n$675. Valley Service Appledale.\nPhone 1-J.\n'38 FORD HYDRAULIC BRAKE\nkit, fit '34 and up. Apply B.I\nBurggencate, Taghum.\nFOR SALE OR TRADE, '47 MER\ncury 2 ton flat deck Phone 91-R\nSalmo   BC\nLjcAl.tKb IN A 1.1 IVPtS Ot\nur*d equipment; mill, mine ana\nlogging supplies, new and used\nwire rope, pipe and fittings\nchain steel plate and shapes\nAtlas Iron 4 Metals Ltd.. 250\nPrior St.. Vancouver B C Ph\nPArifir 6357\nEIGHT TUBE MARCONI CABI-\nnet radio and record player,\nalso 12 gauge Parker shot gun\nfor 3\" shells. Apply box 54,\nMontrose, B.C., phone Fruitvale\n2389.\nNORTH SHORE1 MOTEL\u2014OPEN\nwinter rentals. Single and dou\nble units. Phone 1684.\nFOR RENT - 2 ROOMS, FUR-\nnishedM25 Silica St.\n3 - ROOM SUITE, GOOD LOCA\ntion. Phone 993-L evenings.\nFOR RENT \u2014 GROUND FLOOR\napartment. Adults. 409 Silica\n- ROOM SUITE. PARTLY FUR-\nnished. Ph. 1353-L after 5 p.m\nFOR RENT \u2014 FURNISHED APT.\nAdults. 412 Silica.\nROOM   FOR    RENT\ntown. Phone 934-R.\nDOWN-\nUPSTAIRS   APARTMENT   FUR-\nnished. Phone 1022-L.\nSUITE    FOR    RENT,   HEATED.\nApply 520 Carbonate.\nPERSONAL\nALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS\nBox 388 or Phone 366-R\nWANTED - MAN TO CUT AND\nskid logs, with horse or small\nCrawler, $18.00 per Ji. A. Do-\nsenberger, Sunshine Bay.\nWANTED - ELECTRICIAN'S\nhelper. Apply Coleman Electric\nphone 1752. Nelson, B.C.\nHELP   WANTED _ FEMALf\nWOMEN ~ CHRISTMAS~SELL-\ning starts early with Avon Cosmetics, part or full time, valuable sales territory now available. Write Box 2051 Nelson\nDaily News.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nWANTED - POSITION AS\nsaleslady or in office. Experienced and references. Apply\nBox 9273, Nelson Daily News.\nFOR HANDYMAN AND.ROUGH\ncarpenter   Phone 256-R.\nWOMAN WILL DO HOUSl\nwork by the day. Phone 773-Y-l\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\nWANTED TO BUY - TIMBER\nand Oush land in vicinity ot\nKootenay Lake Apply Box 2736\nNeison Daily News\nCASH PAID FOR SCRAP MET-\nal. large or small amounts Box\n10812  Nelson Daily News\nBOYS'  SKATES.  SIZES  11  and\n3. Phone 1246-L.\nTHE ALMER HOTEL OPP CPR\nDepot, Vancouver. B C. 100%\nfireproof. 24-hour elevator service Clean, quiet and comfortable Reasonable rates City\ncentre.\nSt., Vancouver, B.C.\nBUSINESS  OPPORTUNITIES\n$14,500 FULL\"PRICE FOR COUN-\ntry general store doing $80,000\nannually \u2014 includes 2-storey\nbuilding about 32'x80' (six liv\ning rooms) \u2014 all fixtures, 3\nlots and includes'stock of about\n$7000 \u2014 self-serve layout\u2014owner sacrificing because of ill\nhealth. Apply Box 2023, Nelson\nDaily News.\nBUY DIRECT FROM THE MILL\nLumber, plywood, doors, building supplies. Write for complete\ncatalogue Vancouver Sawmills\nLimited, 1111 E. 7th Ave., Vancouver 12, B.C.\nFOR SALE - TOLEDO SCALE,\nweighs up to 5 lb.; 2 coal and\nwood heaters; combination gas\nrange, would trade on electric\nrange. Inquire at Davison's\nStore.\nFOR SALE - LLOYTJs^BABY\ncarriage; tubular bed; fir doors;\ngas burner; wood heater; windows; new truck heater. Phone\n1469-X.\nXrlann Satlii Nrms\nCirculation  Dept   Phone 1844\nSubscription Ratei\nPrice pei single copy 6c Monday\nto Friday   10c on Saturday\nBy carrier   per week\nin  advance 35\nBy Mail in Canada outside Nelsur.\nOne month             $ 1.25\nThree months        $ 3.50\nSix months      .. _      $6 50\nOne year , $1200\nBy   man  to  United   Kingdom  or\nthe United States\nOne month $ 1.75\nThree montht      $5.00\nSix  months $ 9 50\nOne year $18 00\nWhere exira postage is required\nabove rates plus postage\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\nDRY PLANER ENDS FOR Kitchen range, fireplace or furnace\n$10.00 a cord Fir slabs and edging, long lengths. 2 large cord.-\n$15.00  Phone 1757-R\nBefore you buy\nTRY A\nMcCULLOCH\nWHITE ENAMEL COAL AND\nwood range; Coleman oil heater, large size, Apply B. Burggencate, Taghum,\nDRY SLABWOOD FOR SA1\nload of 2 cords, 12\" length, $25.\nImmediate delivery. Ph. 1476-X.\nFOR SALE - 2 PAIrT^GIRlTs\nwhite figure skates, sizes 13 and\n2. Phone 1726-R.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRE.TORY\nAS8AYERI AND MINE\n_   REPRESENTATIVES\nE W  WIDDOWSON 4 CO\nAssayers 301 Josephine St Nelson\nH   S\"ELMES,   ROSSLAND   BC\nAseayer Chemist Mine Rep\nENGINEERS   AND  SURVEYORS\nG  W   \"BAERG. ~B.C.'~~~\nLAND SURVEYOR\nBox 34. Fruitvale and\n373 Baiter  St..  Nelson, B.C.\nBOYD C 'AFFLECK,\u00a517C-\nBC Land Surveyor P Eng iC'ivtli\n218 Gore St    Nelson   Phone 1238\n MACHINISTS\n\"BENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine    Shop    Acetylene    and\nelectric   welding    motor   rewind\ning   Phone 593       324 Vernon St\nTIMBER  CRUISING\"\nFOREST\" RECONNAISSANCE\nCo., Box 666, Castlegar, ph. 3266.\nFOR   SALE   -   DRY   FIR^AND\ntamarac cord wood. Phone 958-L\nor call 1308 Hendryx.\nLOGGING  OR POLE  TRAILER\nand sub-frame. Phone 2-X Pat-\ntersoh.\nAPPROX    40.000\n1x8. 1x8 mmoei\nB M    2x4.   2x6\n$30 per 1000 S\nKudra. phune 1757-R\nOLD\n10c\nNEWSPAPER    BUNDLE'S'\nNelson Daily News\nHEALTH FOOD CENTRE OPEN\nday and evening 924 Davies SI\nOIL  STOVE\nkin, Glade,\n-  PETE J.  MAR-\nP.O. Shoreacres.\nDUO-THERM   OIL   HEATER,\"\nyear old. Phone 1540-R.*\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES   ETC\nFOR saleT^ young-jersey\ncow, two heifers, heavy milking strain. Freshen Feb. and\nMarch. Apply Box 108, Kinnaird.\nJERSEY CATTLE \"FOR SALE.\nApply John W. Hoodicoff,\nThrums, B.C.\nYOUNG BEWFOR SA~Eir=~25c\nper lb., whole or half. Delivered. Phone 185-L-3 after 5.\nGOOD HOLSTEIN DAIRY \"COW.\njust freshened, 2nd calf. Peter\nA. Reibin, Taghum, B.C.\nPROPERTY WANTED\nWANTED TO BUY - 2 OR 3-\nbedroom house in Fairview. Ph.\n1178.\nNSW\nmodel 33-B\n10 major improvements\nNo other taw can beat a McCulloch\nModel 33B for high speed woodcutting, light-weight, and\nprofessional-quality features. Haa\nautomatic clutch, built-in chain\noiler, rewind starter, and floatleas\ndiaphragm carbureter for full-\npower starting in any position\nwithout adjustment. Don't be\nfooled; before you buy, test the\ncutting speed and easy handling\nof a McCulloch\nModel 33B\nAvailable with\n12, 16or 20-inch\nbladea.\nSee\nSee  H    \"Fritz'   Farenholtz.\nC. Ross or Alex McDonald\nWELDING & EQUIPMENT\nCO   LTD\n614 Railway St\nPHONE\nNelson BC\n1402\nNelson\nREADY MIX\nCONCRETE LID\nPHONE 871\n\"DREAM DOZER\"\nNow on Display\n^e^TERRATRAC'SOO'\ndoes more work at less cost\n\u2022 62 HP gasoline or diesel engine, with rugged straight or\nangling blade\n\u2022 Power-boosting torque-con.\nverier drive standard\n\u2022 Automatic power-shifting\ntransmission [No clutch)\n\u2022 4 speeds forward lo 6.98\nWPH; 4 reverse speeds to\n7.68 MPH\n\u2022 Full power-steering wilh\neasy-touch hydraulic controls\n\u2022 Weighs only 8400 Ibs.\n\u2022 Optional scarifier, winch, and-\n8-ton tilt-trailer\nCall us lor details\nLOST - 1 PR. BINOCULARS,\nleft at side of road at Lookout\nPoint above Shroder Creek on\nLardeau Road, Sun,, Oct. 7, at\n1. discovered missing at 2. Reward to finder. Contact C. H.\nGreensword, Kaslo Meat Market, phone 20, home phone 120,\nKaslo. B.C.\nROOjvl AND BOARD\nROOM    AND    BOARD   FOR\nyoung gentleman Phone 1179 X\nMACHINERY\nFOR SALE OH TRADE - D7\nCaterpillar and 10 yard Richardson Scraper. Will sell separate or trade on smaller Cat,\nA. Dosenberger, Sunshine Bay.\nEnglish Driving\nTest Appeals\nTo Canadian\nBy KEN METHERAL\nCanadian PreBs Staff Writer\nLONDON   (CP) - Road   ace\ndents,   says   Michael   Palmer   of! P'y onlv to 'oan companies mak\n^396\"\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, OCT. 15, 1956\u20149\nborrowers and Loan Companies To\n% Aflecled By New License Rule\nOTTAWA (CP) - The small\nborrower and the) loin company\nhe gets his money from are going\nto be affected by new government-\nregulations which become effective nextJan. 1.\nFor the borrower it's going to\nmean smaller interest charges on\nthe larger unpaid balances of his\nloan. For the companies it's going\nto mean a lot more of them will\ncome under government control\nand require licences from the department of finance.\nThe new regulations are contained in a rewrite of the Small\nLoans Act of 1940 which Parliament approved at the last session.\nAnd K. R. Macgregor, who as superintendent of insurance keeps\nan administrative eye on the loan\nbusiness, has put out a reminder\nit becomes effective with the new\nyear.\nLIMIT  INTEREST RATE\nProvisions of the present act ap-\nHamilton, Ont, do not \"just happen\u2014they are caused.\"\nAnd the 33-year-old president\nof the Hamilton Sports Car Club\nbelieves that in Britain he has\nfound just the test to weed out\nthe accident-prone driver.\nThe test is a two-hour examination devised by Britain's Institute of Advanced Motorists. Pal\nmer, believed to be the first per\ning loans up to $500 and require\nthem to acquire a licence from\nthe department of finance. Provisions of the act limit their maximum interest rate to two per cent\nper month.\nA total of 75 such companies\nnow are licensed in Canada.\nBut the rewritten act extends\nitself to cover companies doing\nbusiness in loans up to $1500.\nWhich means, says Mr. Macgre-\non whom there now Is no control.\nCompared with the present\nstraight interest maximum of two\nper cent per month, the new regulations will provide this sliding\nscale of rates:\nTwo per cent a month on an unpaid balance less than $300; one\nper cent a month on an unpaid\nbalance between $300 and $1000\nand one-half of one per cent on\nan unpaid balance greater than\n$1000.\nIn addition the new act provides\nthat n long-term loans of less\nthan $500 for more than 20\nmonths, or of more than $500 for\n30 months, the maximum rate will\nbe one per cent a month.\nson from Canada to pass the test, \\ gor, that a lot of companies not\nplans to take the idea to Canada. J previously   requiring   a    licence\n\"I feel confident we will have; W'U now require one If they\nsomething along similar lines op- tend to continue business in that\nerating in Hamilton by the end of. loan range,\nthe year.\" says Palmer, who took     The act W>U not apply on loans\nthe test during a month's visit in above $1500.\nBritain. He returns to Canada by SLIDING SCALE\nair Sept. 29.\nFIRST  CRITICISM\nThe main criticism, says Palm-\nMr. Macgregor doesn't know\nhow many adidtional companies\nwill come under the new act. But\ner,   Is  that  the  average driving! he   does   know   that   there   are\ntest lasting 10 to 15 minutes does \"quite a few\" operating in vari-\nnot put sufficient emphasis on\ncomplete concentration\u2014the keystone of all good driving. The\ntwo-hour test is of sufficient dur-\nition to reveal any inherent\n.veakness (or carelessness) ho-w-\n?vcr temporarily alert the can-\nJidate may force himself to be.\nous cities in the above-$500 class\nLTD.\n324 Vernon St       Ph. 593\n\u2022 Nelson, B. G.   -\ndow  or   crossing   hands   on- the\nsteering wheel.\nSTRESSES   OBSERVATION\nBut the  main  emphasis is on\npower of observation of the road\nand ability to anticipate and\nThe institute test embraces all; properly counter driving errors\ntypes of thoroughfares, from busy of ether vehicles oh the road or\nshopping streets to unrestricted j such hazards as children playing\nhighways and winding country, near the curb,\nroads. At all times the accent is I Palmer's recipe for accident-\nOn safety The examiners deduct free driving: \"Stay well behind\nmarks for jerky clutch or brake the car., ahead of you. and con-\naction and such driving faults as centrate, concentrate, concen-\nresting an elbow on the door win-1 trate.\nCopper Outlook\nRemains Good\nNEW YORK (AP) - The major\nproducer price of 40 cents a pound\nfor copper completed its third\nmonth in existence last week and\nindications are it may last out the\nyear.\nBoth producer and fabricator\nstocks of the red metal are high,\n3teady output seems assured, and\nthe only question Is demand. A\nbig factor here is orders from the\nautomobile business.\nAs the models start rolling off\nthe assembly lines in large numbers makers of copper products\nare expected to get larger, orders\nrrom Detroit. This, in turn, would\nmean more demand for the metal\nby fabricators.\nSALES UP\nSales by producers last week\nwere reported a little ahead of the\ncomparable period for September\nand well ahead of the similar August period.\nCustom smelters, who refine a\nlesser amount of copper from purchased ores and scrap, held their\nprice at 39 cents a pound despite\nslow sales.\nZinc producers held to their\nprice of 13V4 cents a pound East\nSt. Louis.\nLead, meanwhile, stayed at 16\ncents a pound even though sales\nwere down from the big figures of\nrecent weeks.\nMAJOR METALS PRICES\nCopper \u2014 39-40 cents a pound,\ndelivered. Foreign 35.5-37.5 cents,\nnominal, New York.\nLead \u2014 18 cents a pound, New\nYork; 15.8 cents, St Louis.\nZinc\u201413.5 cents a pound, East\nSt. Louis; 14 cents. New York.\n'\u2014Selling\u2014Rentirii\nYour Classified Want Ad on This Handy\nORDER FORM\nFIRST LINI\nSECOND LINI\nTHIRD LINI\nFOURTH LINI\nFIFTH UNI\nSIXTH LINI\nSEVENTH LINI\nEIGHTH LINI\nPut one word in each space.\n(tech group ot numbers or letters count as one word )\nPut your address or phone number in the ad.\nBox numbers count as four words.\n(Box 00 Nelson News.)\nTO CALCULATE RATFS USE THIS TABLE\nPer Line\n1\n2\n3\nt\nInsertion\nComeeutlre  Insertions\nConsecutive Insertions .\nConsecutive Insertions .\n26 Consecutive Insertions\nI .20\n.33\n.45\n.60\n1.82\n\u2022 Minimum charge is two lines\n\u2022 Add lie for Box Number\n\u2022 Deduct 10% from above rates H payment is\nenclosed\n\u2022 Take advantage ot the low six time rate\nIon Consecutive Insertions 20\u00abJ a Line Per Time.\nYou Reach Over 36,000 Readers With Your Nelson Daily News Classified Ad\nNo ot Days Ad Is lo Run _____\n1 \u2014'\u2014\u2014 ;  Bill Me __ -\nTOUR  ^AMI\nADDRESS\nPayment Enclosed\nNelson -Daily News\nClassified Advertising Department, Nelson, B.C.\n:. '.,    ,\n________\nsssassm\n__\n amsawsaasm\n10\u2014NELSON-DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, OCT. 15, 1956\n\u2014\nThere Is No Fuel\nLike an Old Fuel\nand when your body requires extra heat to\nalleviate the aches end pains of\nRheumatism, Lumbago or Arthritis\nUs* the Old TIME-TESTED\nBuckley Stainless White Rub\n59\u00ab\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nHave The Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVEC\n\" I IMITFn *sf\nOdds...\n\u2122<* Ends\n...by M. D. B.\nSaturday we knew it had come,\nthere was no shutting one's eyes\nto the fact that summer had\nbreathed its last and that lusty\nblustery wind that called out my\ngoose bumps was no other than\nOld Man Winter on a reconnaissance tour, prior to setting up\nhousekeeping. Only those rugged individuals with mats of hair\non their chests had their collars\nopen at the neck and sometimes\nI wonder just how much of that is\nonly bravado to catch feminine\ne^es.\n* *   *\nSaturday was the sort of day\nthat Mom would say, \"I think\nwe could have the thermostat\nturned up a bit,\" and Pop would\nsay, \"Good heavens, it's already\n72 in here,\" and Mom would say,\n\"Well, maybe it is, but 1 feel a\nbit shivery,\" whereupon Pop, resigning himself to such muttered\nthings as \"if they'd wear a few\nmore clothes, nylon stockings-\nno warmth in them\" and such,\nturns up the thermostat and retires to the basement \"where you\ndon't swelter.\" Mom probably\nhad this in mind all the time, for\nthe basement is in dire need of a\ncleaning after summer's gardening activities. In fact, we are not\nsurprised to see Mom tiptoe over\nand turn the thermostat back\nat the first sounds of activity in\nthe nether regions.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nThe usual chore of putting on\nstorm windows is in full swing\nabout now with the man ot the\nhouse being told how to get the\nwindows clean on the outside.\nThis he never seems able to do\nin a way that will pass the inspection of the lady of the house\nwho figures a man with a cloth\nin his hand is more helpless than\none without. However, amid much\nholding of ladders, muffled and\nElementary Schools Require\nLibrary Books, PTA Meeting Told\nMore library books are badly\nneeded in Central and South Nelson schools, October Parent-teacher Asociation meeting was told by\nteachers. PTA members' decided\nto help supply them.\nAny children's books in good\ncondition, and one the school's approved list, would be accepted, the\n.teachers said. These were not the\ntext books used at school, but\nrather books the children could\nborrow and read as they pleased\nIt was decided to contact parents\nasking them to donate any suitable\nbooks children had discarded.\nDiscussion on fun d-raising\nschemes to help buy the books,\nbrought forth the idea of.;a skate\nsale to be held in the Central\nSchool in tfie near future. Mrs. F.\nBooth, Mrs. D, McLean and Mrs.\nMcLandish volunteered to be In\ncharge of the sale.\nNewcomers were welcomed by\nPresident S.  K.  Yorke  and  the\nPTA executive and teachers were\nintroduced to those present.\nOpen  House will  be held  In\nnot so muffled incantations the\njob gets done, and the knowledge\nthat they won't have to be taken\noff for about five months is about\nall the balm the man of the\nhouse can find to dress his bruises, barked shins and knuckles, to\nsay nothing of his temper.\n\u2022 *   *\nMy neighbor was fussing about\nthe things like turnips that have\nto be left in the ground for \"a\ntouch of frost.\" He says his fall\nwork is at a standstill because\nof this. The rye he sows to nour\nish the soil in the rest of his\nvegetable plot is up a good two\ninches. This he turns in when he\ndigs it up in the spring and his\nsoil is just about as good as any\naround. As for me, I  think I'll\nsow wild oats.\n\u2022 *   \u00ab\nAt this rate, though, with the\nsnow frosting the mountain tops,\ngardening days are pretty well\nnumbered.\nroll your own\ncigarettes\nwith\nDGDEN'S\nQUALITY riNI CUT\no fine cut with a DISTINCTIVE Jlavtmr\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c lino. Wo line Olaek race typo; larger typo rates on\nrequest Minimum two Unas.  10% discount for prompt payment\nEagles meet tonight at 8 p.m.\nOil Burner Service. Phone 385.\nAll Makes Serviced.\nDON   ELDER  STUDIO\n405 Hall St Phone 1205\nRotary Luncheon Monday 12:15\np.m. Hume Hotel.\nCorduroy \u2014 Slim Jims in Girls'\nand Ladies' sizes, $4.95 and $5.50.\nEBERLE'S ON   BAKER ST,\nNELSON    CURLING    GENERAL\nMEETING, WED., 8 P.M., SILVER\nROOM, HUME  HOTEL\nPrepared Hyacinths\nfor Christmas blooming.\nMAC'S FLOWER SHOP\nFlossy Cotton, Kapoc and Cotton Batts.\nSTERLING HOME'FURNISHERS\nMachine   Washable   Corduroy   in\nevery wanted shade, 36\", yd. $1.69\nTAYLOR'S DRY GOODS\nCentral and South Nelson\nschools'on November 14th. A\nPTA member will be at the door\nto welcome those attending, Mr.\nYorko stated.\nAs a safety precaution for school\nchildren, the PTA has been granted permission from the City Council to place pylons on Ward street.\nPermission had been obtained\nfrom the Provincial Government\nto place pylons on Stanley street.\nMr. Yorke said it was hoped to get\nthem up as \u25a0 soon as possible.\nTREATING WATER\nCity council was being contacted\non the possibility' of chlorinating\nand flouridating the city's water\nsupply at the same time. Both have\nbeen advocated for the city at\nvarious times, it was noted.\nH. McGowan gave a reonrt on a\nFilm Council meeting held at\nSouth Slocan, which he attended\nas a PTA representative.\nArrangements were being rhade\nfor the 1956-57 Film Council showings in the Junior High School, he\nstated. These films were of high\ncalibre and educational and were\nto be held each Saturday morning,\nstarting October 27. The Film\nCouncil hoped to be able to sell\ntickets through the schools.\nNelson was going to \"miss out\"\nIf they didn't get a better attendance at these showings, he emphasized.\nA report by Mrs. D. Johnson\nwas read by secretary Mrs. Booth.\nMrs. Johnson compiled a list of\norojects entered yito bv other\nPTAs as an inspiration to Central-\nSouth Nelson PTA. She noted that\nthe busiest PTA's had the largest\nattendance.\n' A committee, formed to heln\nMrs. L. G. Catley, hospitality\nconvenor, consisted of Mrs. H. McGowan. Mrs. W. Morton, Mrs. Mc-\nAvee, Mrs. S. K. Yorke, Mrs. F.\nHaukaas.\nMrs. D. Johnson, Mrs. D. McLean and Mrs. Oulton volunteered\nto look into the possibility of the\nPTA helping in the school lunch\nroom.\nThe meeting adjourned early to\nallow parents and teachers to become acquainted with each other\nas refreshments were served.\nBusiness Picks Up Speed in U.S.\nAlthough Threatened by High Costs\nBy WALTER BREEDE Jr.\nNEW YORK (AP) - The\nfourth-quarter business surge in\nthe United States picked up speed\nlast week.\nSigns pointed to a record volume of business in most lineB, although profits might be shaved by\nrising costs.\nThe best showing profit-wise\nwould be made by industries\nwhich had invested heavily tn\nnew plant and equipment.\nAuto manufacturers were betting that their billion-dollar stake\nin   automated  .machinery   would\nSMALL TRAVELLER\nSome species of Hummingbirds\nmigrate annually from the jungles\nof South America to Canada.\nCAMPBELL,   SHANKLAND\n&CO.\nChartered Accountants\nAuditors\n676 Baker St Phone 235\nQuality\nCommercial\nPrinting\nQUALITY is what we emphasize when it comes\nto Printing produced in our modern plant . . .\nequipped with the newest'type faces, automatic presses ... A complete bindery . . . and\nabove all a trained staff that takes pride in\nturning out QUALITY WORK.\nTry Us With Your Next Order for Printing\nCommercial Printers\nDIVISION OF  '\nNews Publishing Co. Ltd.\nPublishers of Nelson Daily News\nPHONE 1844   -   NELSON\nBADMINTON\nTuesday, Oct.  16th, 8 p.m.,  badminton    hall,    general    meeting.\nStart playing. Everyone welcome.\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED    and    REPAIRED\nRE CORING\nJim's Radiator Shop\n5)6 Fron' St. . Phonn 63\nNew Canadian\nGives Advice\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014Three years\nago William Weiss, with little\nknowledge of English, migrated\nhere from Germany with his wife\nand child. Today, Mr. Weiss is\nmanager of a large finance com*\npany's downtown office.\nHe said when he arrived here\nhe looked at Canada through the\neyes of an European immigrant.\nTo dcf well here, he said, he must\nstart thinking like a Canadian,\nThe first few weeks after his\narrival were rough on the family.\nBill made the rounds of employment offices and finally the former schoolteacher land a job as\nfile clerk with an insurance company for $32 a week.\n\"By then I realized without a\nsufficient command of English\nnot even the most talented and\nhardest working immigrant ccfuld\never reach success here,\" he said.\nLEARNT THE  LANGUAGE\nHe spent his time learning English and acqiuring a Canadian outlook on life. He said: \"I must\nhave spent hours talking and\narguing with my Canadian fel\nlow-workers about the silliest\nthings so I could get an idea how\nthe Canadian looks at life.\"\nAfter landing a higher-paying\njob with a finance company, he\ndecided to rid himself of his wide-\nbottefmed trousers and leather\njacket.\nTo other aspiring immigrants\nhe had this to say: \"Don't forget\nyour native homeland, but for\nPete's sake remember you are in\nCanada.\"\nHISTORIC  PIECE\nLONDON (CP) \u2014 The desk on\nwhioh Benjamin Disraeli completed the Suez canal shares deal for\nBritain in 1875 is for sale in a\nPeckham district antique shop^. An\nattached notice says: \"No Egyptian offers accepted.\"\nThe Free Church of Scotland\nPresbyterian separated itself from\nthe established church in 1843.\noffset mounting labor and material expense. Talks in Detroit\ncircles was that more efficient\nproduction techniques, plus the\nsales appeal of the new 1957 models, should pay off in fatter earnings for automakers.\nSPENDING FREELY\nDetermination of United States\nbusiness to go ahead with its expansion program was underlined\nthis week by Ralph G. Cordiner,\nboard chairman of General Electric Company.\nGE has budgeted $500,000,000 for^\nexpansion over the next three'\nyears, said Cordiner.\nMeanwhile, there was every indication that individual consumers would keep right on spending\nfreely, too. '\nThe commerce department re-'\nported that Americans had more\nmoney in their pockets than at\nany time before. Personal income\nof Americans in August was running at a record annual rate of\n$28,000,000,000.\nEARNINGS INCREASE\nThe same prosperity note was\nsounded in a United States government report this week on fao\ntory wagesA\\In September the average pay of factory workers topped $2 an hour for the first time.\nWeekly earnings average $81 \u2014up\n$3.29 from a year ago.\nThere were other boom signals.\nGeneral Motors' Fisher Body division announced it would add 10,800\nworkers to its payroll by the end\nof next month. Steel production\nset a record for the third straight\nweek; Dr. Arthur F, Burns, chief\nWhite House economist, said total\nproduction of goods and services\nwas running at a record yearly\npage of $414,000,000,000.'\nStill braking the boom* to some\nextent were tightening money\nrates and growing shortages of\nsome industrial materials and\nequipment.\nAuto makers tuning up for all-\nout production of 1957 models began to worry about a shortage of\nautomotive steel.\nAlso in evidence was the continuing upward trend of industrial\nand consumer prices. Increases\nwere announced for sheets and\npillow cases, carpets, sport shirts,\nwoolen flannel,' upholstery fabrics, soft coal, Kentucky whisky\nand used oil tankers.\nSport Shirts\nfor FALL\nThe new sport shirts by Forsyth and Arrow are very attractive In checks, stripes and\ntartans,\nOur selection is now complete.\nCMORY'C\nLimited *\"\n''THE MAN'S STORE\"\nHANDSOME   GIFT\nKINGSLAND, England (CP) \u2014\nAn anonymous donor has given\n\u00a3 1000 to the parish church of this\nHertfordshire town, whioh is being attacked by the death watch\nbeetle.\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL   TRAINING\nMedical   Arts  Building\nSuite 206 Phone 141\nCHARM\nBEAUTY SALON\nAil   Beauty   Culture\nana Cold  Waves\nMedical  Art*. Bldg.\n'hone  1922 Ste.  211\nHelen McCallum. Prop.\nAsk Your Grocer for\nEllison's U-Boke Bread Mix\nWhole Wheat or White\nIt Makes Excellent\nHome Made Bread\nPHONE 238\nELLISON   MILLING\n& ELEVATOR CO. LTD.\nCALVERT HOUSE\nCreated for Canadian Hospitality\nThis advertisement is rot published or displayed by the\nLiquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia\nPlate,  Sheet, Safety, Wired, and\nPatterned Glass and glass repairs.\nT. H. WATERS & CO. LTD.\n101 Hall St., Nelson      Phone 156\nSKATE SALE\nCentral School, 3-4:30 p.m., Wed.,\nThurs., Fri. this week. PTA sponsored.\nLOWEST PRICES ON CHOICE\nQUALITY FOOD FOR YOUR\nLOCKER OR HOME FREEZER\nINQUIRE AT THE LOCKER\nPLANT, 611 FRONT ST., PHONE\n1218, NELSON.\nTop Wool Brands for Indian\nSweaters, your choice of Mary\nMaxim or Polar yarn.\nAll your knitting needs at\nEBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.\nBritish Israel United Service\nPublic meeting Chamber of Commerce Room, Tuesday, Oct. 16, at\n8 p.m. Speaker: Mr. Cecil Savage,\nSubject: Dept. of Degradation.\nHome Nursing Classes: Registration for home nursing class\nOct. 17, 7:30 p.m, Board room,\nnurses' residence, KLGH. Teenage groups Oct 17, 6:30 p.m.\nWe have a large selection of oil,\ncoal and \\vood heaters\nWE  PAY TOP  PRICE8\nFOR   USED   FURNITURE,\nHOME  FURNITURE\nEXCHANGE, PH. 1660.\nOne Finley combination coal,\nwood and gas range, white enamel. A-l. $74.50.\nWE PAY CASH FOR USED\nFURNITURE AND ANTIQUES    '\nBIRCH'S FURNITURE\n307 BAKER ST, -  PH. 47\nIT IS HEREI THE FABULOUS\nAMANA FREEZER AND FREEZ\nER-REFRIGERATOR. WE HAVE\nA VERY ATTRACTIVE AMANA\nFOOD PLAN WHICH WILL\nSAVE YOU MANY, MANY DOL\nLARS ON YOUR FOOD BUD-\nGET. 8EE TOM SHORTHOUSE\nAT THE LOCKER PLANT AT\n611  FRONT ST. TODAYI\nCARD OF THANKS\nWe wish to express our sincere\nthanks and deep appreciation for\nall the many acts of kindness,\ncards, beautiful floral tributes,\nand other expressions of sympathy extended to us in our recent\n\u2022loss of a beloved husband snd father. Special thanks to Rev. Harry\nK. Johnston for all his kindness in our time of need.\nMrs. Marion Norberg, Shirley\nand Ray, Phylis and Sonny,\nGerald and Duane, David and\nKarin.\nSALE\nOCTOBER .7-18-19-20\nThese Are Just a Few of the Many Savings. Check Tomorrow's Paper for Further\nHandy Shopping List-\nFor Coughs and Colds\nReg,\nReg.\nReg.\nReg.\nPeg.\nReg.\nReg.\nReg.\nReg.\nReg.\nReg.\n65c    REXILLANA COUGH\nSYRUP, 4 oi. \t\n35e    REXALL REX-MENTHO\nINHALER\t\n98c    REXALL NASAL SPRAY\nVi oi. _.. \u2014\t\n60c    REXALL NOSE AND\nTHROAT RELIEF with\nEphedrine (Aqueous), 1\noi.  .\u2014 _..\t\n50e    REXALL P.T. CAMPHORATED OIL, 4 oi.\t\n1.00 REXALL CHERROSOTE\nCOUGH SYRUP, 8 oi. ....\n75c    REXALL COLD CAPSULES, 25's .._ \t\n40c    LAXATIVE QUININE-\nBROMIDE COMPOUND\nTABLETS, 24's\t\n75c    ANALGESIC BALM, l'\/s\noi. tube   \t\n45c    REXALL MUSTEX RUB,\n1 oi.    \t\n75c    REXALL OIL OF\nWINTERGREEN, 4 oi. _\n1.25 REXALL COD LIVER\nCOMPOUND with Creosote, 16 oi \t\n' 2 for 66c\n2 for 36c\n2 for 99c\n2 for 61c\n2 for 51c\n2 for 1.01\n2 for 76c\n2 for 41c\n2 for 76c\n2 for 46c\n2 for 76c\n2 for 1.26\nRexall Vitamin Buys\nReg. 1.20 HALIBUT LIVER OIL \u201e ,      .       '\nCAPSULES, 50'.  _2 for 1.21\nReg. 1.75    COD LIVER COMPOUND   .\nTABLETS, 100's __   2 for 1.76\nReg. 2.59    MUTIPLE  VITAMIN\nTABLETS, 50's .._   2 for 2.60\nReg. 4.75 MULTIPLE VITAMIN\nTABLETS, 100's  _  2 for 4.76\nReg. 2.75    VITAMIN \"B\" COM- . ,     mmM\nPOUND TABLETS, 100's   2 for 2.76\nReg. 95e    VITAMIN \"C\" TABLETS,\nioo'i     2 for 96c\nReg. 1:25 WHEAT GERM OIL\nCAPSULES, 50's     2 for 1.26\nReg. 1.00 P.T. YEAST AND IRON\nTABLETS, lOO'i       2 for 1.01\nReg. 1.50 NERVE TONIC with\nVITAMIN B-l, 16 oi. ....   2 for 1.51\nReg. 1.25 TASTELESS EXTRACT\nCOD LIVER COMPOUND\nwith Vitamin D, 16 oz. ..   2 for 1.26\nReg. 4.95 VITAMINS and MINERALS TABLETS, 100's ....   2 for 4.96\nReg. 2.95 MULTI-VITAMIN\nFORMULA 10 TONIC,       _,\n16 oz.  2 for 2.96\nYour Rexall Pharmacy\nCITY DRUG COMPANY\nP.O. BOX 460\nPHONE 34\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_1956_10_15","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0430074","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"}]}}