{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0430223":{"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider":[{"value":"CONTENTdm","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf":[{"value":"BC Historical Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued":[{"value":"2023-04-05","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1957-12-12","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0430223\/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":" 2>2n\nNelson's  Record\n1925 days\nTraffic Fatality Free\nom\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKootenay: Sunny periods today.\nLittle change in temperature.\nWinds light. Low-high at Cranbrook 20 and 35, Crescent Valley\n25 and 35.\nVol   55\nNELSON, B. C, CANADA\u2014THURSDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 12, 1957\nNot more  Than 6o  Dally.  10c  Saturday\nNo. 197\nRiots Break Out\nAnew in Cyprus\nTroops Disperse Stone-Hurling\nStudents; 233 Under Arrest\nBy SHAHE GUEBENLIAN\nNICOSIA, Cyprus (Reuters)\u2014British troops and police\nwent into action for the third successive day Wednesday\nto end riots timed to coincide with United Nations debate\non the question of Cyprus.\nIn Kyrenia, northern Cyprus, police armed with clubs\ncharged students who stoned a police station. Fifteen persons,\nsome of them girls, were detained.\nOther groups of young people stoned troops in the\ntown of Morphou. And in the northern villages of Ayios\nAmbrosios and Lapithos, troops were called out to disperse\nstudents stoning  police  and\nmilitary vehicles.\nTwo persons were arrested\nbringing to 233 the total of persons detained since rioting broke\nout on the island Monday. At\nleast 184 persons have been injured in fighting between British\nauthorities and the Greek populace in clashes between Turkish\nand Greek Cypriots.\n\"Leaflets circulated by the\nEOKA organization, which backs\nthe Greek Cypriot claim for union of this British colony with\nGreece, denied reports that\nEOKA had broken its \"truce.\"\nThey said EOKA was only reciprocating continued violence by\nsecurity forces.\nAPPEALED FOR CALM\nThe Bishop of Kitium, acting\nhead of the.Cypriot Greek Church\nappealed today for calm in the\nface qf what he described as\n\"provocation by Turks.\"\nHe referred to the communal\nclashes which took place Tuesday ' when false rumors  spread\namong the Turkish sector that a\nTurkish policeman had been fatally wounded by an unknown\nGreek assailant.\nThe Turks marched on the\nGreek sector, smashing windows I\nwith stones and destroying Greek i\nproperty.\nIn an attempt to restore order,\nCyprus' new governor, Sir Hugh\nFoot, paid a personal call Wednesday on the mayor of Nicosia,\nDr. Tbemistocles Dervis, a prominent Greek nationalist.\nIt is the first time in years that\na British official has called publicly on a prominent Cypriot nationalist. It was done in the hope\nhe could end the boycott against\ndealing with British authorities\nin the absence of the head of the\nchurch, Archbishop Makarios, exiled nearly two years ago on\ncharges that he had taken an active part in terrorist campaigns.\nDervis told reporters he agreed\nto call for an end to friction if\nTurkish leader Fadil Kutchuk\nwill do the same.\nlllllltlllllllllllllMllllllllllllllllllllllimilIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIil.lt\nToday's Election\n, Data at a Qlance\nNelson's 2684 eligible voters in today's Civic Election cast their ballots in the old post office building.on\nWard Street, from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m.\nCandidates are:\nFor mayor\u2014Aid. C F. Blakeman, Mayor Joseph\nKary, Aid. J. W. McClelland#and T. S. Shorthouse.\nFor aldermen\u2014B. C: Affleck, F. A. Beresford, Jr.,\nDr. C. E. Bradshaw, H. H.. Hinitt, C. J. Hughes, George\nLatta, L. G. Peerless and Mrs. W. J. Van Maarion.\nFirst results are not expected until after 9 p.m., but\nfigures will be flashed to radio station CKLN for immediate broadcast as quickly as they become available.\nFor more details please see page 2, '\nIIIMIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nBritons, Americans\nLeaving Indonesia\nJAKARTA, Indonesia (AP)\u2014Indonesia's war of nerves on Holland\nbegan spreading ripples of uneasiness among Britons and Americans\nWednesday..\nEleven American women and\nchildren from Sumatra, believed\n\u2014\nSubway Motormen\nBeing Replaced\nNEW-YORK (AP) \u2014 The Tran^\nsit. Authority closed the door Wednesday to peace talks in New\nYork's subway crisis. It began to\nreplace striking motormen with\nother employees gleaned from its\nranks.\n\"We refuse to negotiate with\nthe leaders of an illegal strike,\"\nsaid Joseph O'Grady, a transit\ncommissioner.\nUnion leaders countered with a\ncharge that the authority is using\ninadequately \u2022 trained conductors\nand supervisors as motormen and\n\"playing fast and loose with the\npublic safety.\"\nThe authority replied that all\npersonnel manning the trains are\n\"trained and qualified.\"\nThe tremendous turmoil that\nhas gripped the transit - crippled\ncity since Monday appeared  to\nLove of Fire\nKills Child\nVANCOUVER (CP) - A four-\nyear-old girl died Wednesday ' in\nflames that firemen believe may\nhave been caused by her obsession with fire.\nDead is Beverley Edgerton, who\nloved to light matches from the\npilot light of the kitchen tsove.\nMrs. D. W. Edgerton told fire\ndepartment officials she was in\nthe living room of her home in\nVancouver's Mount Pleasant district when she say \"a terrible\nflash.\"\nShe said flames leaped from the\nkitchen, where Beverley had been\nplaying. Mrs. Edgerton tried to\nreach her daughter, but was driven\nback by the flames.\nShe told Chief Fire Warden Lou\nMulligan later that Beverley liked\nto light pieces of paper from the\npilot light of the gas stove.\nMrs. Edgerton grabbed another\nbaby girl and ran to the home of\na neighbor.\nMr. Edgerton was at work, delivering Christmas mail for the\npost office. The Edgertons' oldest\nchild, a 10-year-old boy, was at\nschool.\nf u b si de, somewhat Wednesday;\n'traffic inbred better, business absenteeism fell, congestion eased\nslightly.\nMore trains operated but schedules on some lines deteriorated\nfurther, with some trains 2% hours\nbehind time. It was this, apparently, that led Frank Zelano, executive secretary of the striking\nMotormeri's Benevolent Association, to say:\n\"The trains are running worse\nthan yesterday.\"\nTen subway lines, including some\nof the most heavily travelled in the\n238-mile system, remained completely out of service.\nDuring the day, State Supreme\nCourt Justice Henry Clay Greenberg offered at a city hall meeting to serve as mediator in the\ntransit dispute.\nNO-STRIKE INJUNCTION\nGreenberg jailed MBA president\nTheodore Loos and three other\nunion officials for contempt a few\nhours before the strike began at\n5 a.m. Monday. They had been\nunder a no-strike injunction since\na nine-hour motormen's strike\ncrippled subway service June 14,\n1956.\nParliament\nWednesday\nBy The Canadian Press\n\u25a0Agriculture Minister Douglas\nHarkness outlined a new measure\nfor farm product price supports,\nsaying it will add stability to the\nagriculture industry.\nThe bill, not yet introduced,\nv\/ould provide annual support\nprices related to average prices\nin the three preceding years and\nstipulate, assured floors for certain key commodities at 80 per\ncent of the three-year average.\nJames G. Gardiner, former agriculture minister, said it looked\nas though farmers would be\nworse off than under the present\nplan.\nHazen Argue (CCF - Assiniboia)\nsaid the government apparently\nhas repudiated its election pledge\nof parity farm prices.\nVictor Quelch (SC - Acadia) said\nchoice of a three-year average ignores the fact that the last three\nyears have been depressed ones\nfor farmers.\nPrime Minister Diefenbaker\nsaid he will press for greater\nNATO economic co-operation at the\nNATO \"summit\" meeting in Paris\nnext week.\nGIFT FOR CITY\nKAMLOOPS (CP) - A former\nrancher has bequeathed $25,000 to\nthis city for improvement of parks\nand the Royal Inland Hospital.\nE. E. P. Cunliffe; who died Oct.\n11, bequeathed $15,000 to the parks\nand $10,000 to the hospital.\nLawyer Pays\n$2900 Fine\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014Toronto lawyer\nLewis Duncan has paid a $2000 fine\nlevied by the Supreme Court of\nCanada which found him guilty of\ncontempt of court.\nA cheque for this amount was\nreceived Wednesday by court registrar Paul Leduc, who will turn\nit over to the federal treasury.\nMr. Duncan, 67-year-old Queen's\nCounsel, was fined by the court\nMonday for statements last month\nthat justice would not be served\nif, Mr. Justice Charles Locke sat\nin on a case Mr. Duncan was about\nto argue. . -    -\nThe Supreme Court also ordered\nhim to apologize unreservedly in\nopen court before he',may argue\nbefore it again.\nMr. Duncan, a veteran of more\nthan 40 years at the bar, was given\nuntil Friday, Dec. 13, to Jay the\niirie. If he had failed to do this,\nhe would have had to serve 60 days\nin jail.\n1111 in 11111Minn 11 iii mil111 ii min nir.\nSanta Has His\nTroubles Too\nMUSKEGON, Mich. (AP) -\nSanta Claus was on the job\nat a department store Wednesday \u2014 shaken and minus some\nof his beard, but still in good\nhumor.\nClerks told about it this way:\nThe normal line of tots waited\nto climb on Santa's lap and\nconfide their Christmas desires. One, carrying a well-\nlicked lollipop, described his\nwants with excited gestures.\nThe lollipop tangled in\nSanta's nylon whiskers. The\nsurprised tpt thought Santa\nwas trying to spirit away the\nsucker and stormed up a cry\nwhile tugging at the snarled\ncandy.\nSanta's beard started to\ncome off, but he couldn't drop\nhis squirming, crying interviewee to free the sucker.\nFinally, clerks ^brought scis-\n-sors to free the tangled lollipop.'\nlllllllllllllllllllIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIfll\nto be the first wave of a precautionary evacuation of families of\noil company employees here, flew\nto Singapore.\nThe British Embassy suggested\nto the British Chamber of Commerce that its .members apply for\nexit visas for dependents, in case\nthey are needed in a hurry later\non.\nNeither of these developments\nwas accompanied by any hint of\nan.emergency affecting British or\nU.S. personnel and property similar to, the anti-Dutch measures.\nDetermined to control all the former Netherlands East Indies, Indonesia is demanding that the\nDutch hancl over West New Guinea,\nthe one remaining half-island under\nHolland's rule,\nThe first of 46,000 Dutch nationals\nwho may be asked to leave Indonesia have been evacuated by\nairlift.\nNext to Holland, Britain is the\nbiggest investor in Indonesia, Information Minister Sudibjo said\nBPM, the big oil company controlled by British, U.S. and French\nas well as Dutch interests, had not\nbeen affected by the Indonesian\ntake-oyer of businesses. Several\ndays ago employees were reported\ntrying to induce officials to stir-\nrender the company.\nMOE REPLACED\nBY BERTRAM\nNamed Chairman\nOf  Israeli-Syrian\nArmistice Group\nUNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP)\nThe United Nations said Wednesday night Lt.-Col. J. G. Bertrand\nof' Canada will succeed Lt.-Col.\nChristian Moe. of Norway Dec. 15\nas chairman of the Israeli-Syrian\nmixed armistice commission.\nA Syrian army spokesman charged in Damascus Monday that Moe\nhad displayed \"pro-Israeli\"- leniency\" and bowed to Israeli pressure. The spokesman said Syria\nno longer would co-operate with\nhim.\nThe UN statement said Syria and\nIsrael were consulted Nov. 26 on\nreplacement of Moe by Bertrand.\nThe UN added that Israel replied\nDec, 5 it had no objection, and a\nsimilar message was received from\nSyria Dec. 8^-the- day before the\nSyrian army spokesman made the\ncharge.\nU.S. Marine Col. Byron V. Leary,\nacting head of the UN truce supervisory organization, named Bertrand to succeed Moe, the UN said,\nJordan has accused Leary of\nshowing favoritism toward Israel\nin connection with a recent incident on Mount Scopus.\nCHARGE REDUCED\nMISSION CITY (CP) - Three\nMission youths, charged with rape,\nhad the charged reduced to one of\nindecent assault at a preliminary\nhearing Wednesday before Magis--\ntrate Harry Beach.\nCommitted to higher court for\ntrial were Brian Michael Jones, 20,\nCharles Wheildon, 20, and Ronald\nClare Devitt, 19.\nThe charge involves a 14-year-\nold girl and is alleged to have occurred Oct. 31 in the Steelhead\narea of Mission.\nThe three were freed on $1000\nbail each.\nNEW YORK (CP) -' The Canadian dollar was 7-32 lower Wednesday at a premium of 2 9-16 in\nterms of U;S.' funds;- a week ago\n3 5-32.per-cunt premilim,- Pound\nsterling was 3 - 16 lower at\n$2.80 5-16.' .'-..- \"\nMine Disaster Blamed\nOn Wild Coal Train\nBy DAL WARRINGTON\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nHALIFAX (CP) - A runaway\ncoal train set off the mine explosion that trapped 118 men and\ntook 39 lives at Springhill, N.S.,\n13 months ago, an investigating\ncommission announced Wednesday\nnight.\nThe commission's report said\nsix loaded cars of a seven - car\ntrain became uncoupled, roared\ndown a mine hoisting slope and\ncut an electric cable.\nAn electric arc from the broken\ncable ignited clouds of coal,dust\nstirred up by the runaway. A tremendous explosion ocourred, probably made worse by the methane\ngas, another coal mine explosion\nhazard. Regulations should be\ntightened to prevent such accidents in future.\nDonald Mclnnes, Halifax lawyer,\nheaded the commission, set up by\nthe Nova Scotia government. Other\nmembers were G. A. Vissac, Montreal mining engineer and F. E.\nGriffith of Pittsburgh, engineer of\nthe United States bureau of mines\nThey said \"the explosion resulted\nfrom, the unfortunate combination\nof circumstances for which no\nblame can be attached to any in-\ndjmdual.\"\nT5ut they said company officials\nknew about the'dangerous location\nof the power cable and there had\nbeen trouble with runaway trains.\nNothing had been done to solve\n.these problems.\nThe commissioners also said the\nmine was sometimes worked when\nthere was more methane gas in\nthe underground atmosphere than\nNova Scotia coal mines regulations\nallow.\nThe commissioners recommended the provincial mines department\nmake sure its inspectors are \"qualified, competent and physically\nable properly to inspect the\nmines.\"\nMines, Minister Manson said he\nwill call a njeeting of company\nand United Mine Workers Union\nofficers in a few days to consider\nthe commission's recommendations.\nMoscow Letter Just\nPropaganda \u2014 U.S.\nRussia Trying to Influence NATO\nTalks Say Dulles, Eisenhower\nWASHINGTON (CP)\u2014The United States Wednesday\ndismissed Nikolai Bulganin's new letter to President Eisenhower\u2014one of four the Russian premier sent to Western\nleaders\u2014as an attempt to influence next week's Atlantic\nPact summit meeting.\nThe state department pinned a propaganda label on\nthe 15-pa\u00a7e message after Eisenhower met with State Secretary Dulles to review final American arrangements for the\nNATO meeting opening in Paris Monday.\n. \" Privately, U.S. officials denounced Bulganin's latest\nbid as a hodge-podge of previously-rejected Soviet proposals,\nincluding demands for halting' atomic-hydrogen tests Jan. 1\nand suggestions for new East-\nWest meetings.\nA state department spokesman\nreported the letter, delivered Tuesday by Ambassador Georgi Zarubin, was under \"active study\" by\ngovernment authorities.\nBut press officer Lincoln White\nthen brushed aside the 3000-\nword message with these words:\n\"I think it can be assumed that\nthe. timing of the delivery of the\nletter and the intention of the Soviet Union to publish it would indicate an intention to influence\nthe proceedings at the NATO conference.\n\u25a0 \"We may wish to confer with\nother governments concerning it.\"\nNO HURRY\nEisenhower undoubtedly will\nanswer at some time,, but officials\nsaid he will not be in a hurry in\nview of what is considered the\nobvious Soviet propaganda motive.\nBulganin's ambassadors also delivered letters to Prime Minister\nMaemillan, French Premier Felix\nGaillard and West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer. They and\nEisenhower plan to arrive in Paris\nSaturday and will have a chance\nfor pre-conference talks on the\nnew Moscow move.\nThe most interesting section of\nthe Bulganin letter was considered In Washington to be Russia's suggestion that the Allies\nagree never to make or stockpile\natomic \u2022 hydrogen weapons In\nWest Germany in return for a\nCommunist pledge to forego such\nproduction   and   stockpiling   In\nEast Germany and Poland.\nThis represented Russian endorsement of an idea that the Polish regime put forward at the\nUnited Nations last Oct. 2\u2014with\nno Western takers.-\nLittle Optimism on\nEve of NATO Meeting\n\u201e. .BRIDGE GIRDER rests atop smashed passenger coaches as rescuers continue search early\nDec. 5 in St. John's station ip southeast London.\nAt least SO were killed with 105 seriously Injured\nIn the rush-hour crash of two trains In heavy\nfog Dec. i. Girder wai toppled by the crash.\n\u2014AP Wirephoto via radio from London.\nBy, ALAN HARVEY' *\n' tfahadlan Press Staff Writer\nLONDON (CP)-NATO's summit talks in Paris next week will\nattract perhaps the most distinguished gathering of ministers\nsince the peace conference of\n1919, but commentators aren't\nlooking for any-miracles.\nA restrained, in some cases\nsombre view is taken of the\nheads-of-government meetings at\nthe Palais de Chaillot. Everyone\nconcedes the importance of the\noccasion, but the strategical complexities of the missile age have\nput a damper on enthusiasm.\n\"So much needs to be done\nthat the meetings can, at best, be\nonly a new beginning on a very\nlong road,\" says The Times in a\nlengthy editorial review of the\nchallenge to NATO.\nThere is a general recognition\nthat the United States, as usual,\nwill dominate proceedings. Satisfaction that President Eisenhower has received medical approval to attend the sessions is\ntempered to some extent by\nbackward glances. The Financial\nTimes says bleakly that the worst\nsingle feature of the diplomacy\nof 1956 was the total lack of intelligible American leadership.\"\nThe Manchester Guardian visualizes State Secretary Dulles\ncoming to the conference table\nready to imbue the alliance with\na new philosophy, based on a\nmerging of sovereignties over a\nwide area, but cautions:\n\"There'is a danger that the\npurpose and philosophy of the\nAmerican   government   will\nbe\nTORPEDO REPORT\n\"JUST PRACTICE\"\nHALIFAX (CP) \u2014 Reports of a\nship being'torpedied'in the Atlantic\nwhich touched off a United States\nNavy investigation, apparently\ncame from Canadian warships simulating submarine warfare off the\nNova Scotia coast.\nNavy headquarters here said\nWednesday the messages, probably\npicked up in part by a passing ship,\n\"likely\" came from the Canadian\nships. United States Atlantic fleet\nheadquarters at Norfolk, Va\u201e said\nthey \"have every reason to believe\" the distress calls were\nnothing more than practice.\nThe United States Coast Guard\nwhich received the reports Wednesday said the messages were\nnicked up by a ship and they\nwere \"not clear.\"\nThis strengthened belief that the\nmessages originated from one of\nfive Canadian ships taking nart in\nthe exercises in a wide area off\nthis coast. Navy officials said messages, simulating actual attack,\nare sent between ships, but lire\nalways preceded by the word\n\"exercise\" and the code name for\nthe exercise.\nlost. jr obscured in e tangle ^f\ndark sophistries.\"\n-Dulles hats rarely enjoyed a\nhigh, reputation in Europe. His\nrecent uncompromising statements about Russia have encouraged belief in some quarters'that\nhe is developing into a professional and - Soviet. Tributes are\npaid, however, to the long hours\nhe has been working.\nSon, Mother\nReunited\n. VANCOUVER (CP) - A mother\nand her young son have broken\nthrough Red China's bamboo curtain and Canada's red tape to end\na 10-year separation.\nMrs. Lila Chen, co-owner of Lotus Gardens night club here, and\nher son Bobby, 15, were reunited\nat a railway station here Tuesday.\nHe was five when they were separated.\n.They met for the fir& time in\n16 years when she flew to Hong\nKong last month to arrange to\nbring him to her native Canada.\nMrs. Chen, daughter of one of\nthe first Chinese settlers in Canada, was born on the prairies. After she completed her Canadian\neducation her parents sent her to\nChina for Chinese education. In\ncollege she was married.\nIn 1948 she came to Canada to\nvisit her parents and arrange for\nimmigration of her family to Canada.\nBy the time she got her Canadian\nvisa three years later, the bamboo\ncurtain had been lowered. For almost seven years she tried to get\nher son out.\nBobby has a small brother he\nhas never seen. The child was\nborn a month after Mrs. Chen\ncame hqme to Canada in 1948.\nIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIK\nPearson Outlines\n4 Peace Roads\nOSLO (CP) \u2014 Lester B.\nPearson entitled his Nobel\npeace prize lecture \"The *\nFour Faces of Peace\". The\nfour aspects were \"Peace ,\nand Trade\", \"Peace and\nPower\", \"Peace and Policy\"\nand \"Peace and People\".\nFull text of his speech appears on page six. \u25a0\niiiiimiiiimniiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiit\nSunday Sport\nFavored al Coast\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Voter*\nIn civic elections here Wednesday gave strong support to commercial Sunday sport and marginal approval for fluoridation of\nVancouver's water supply, early\nvote tabulation Indicated.   .\nOnly 10 of the 94 polls had been\ncounted almost three hours after\nthe polls closed at 8 p.m.\nBesides voting for'six city councillors, four parks board represent\ntattves   and   three , schol   board'\nmembers, voters were  asked  tq\napprove two bylaws and two pltr-\nbisdtes.\nOn tjie question of commercial\nSunday sport between 1:30 and 0\np.m., Uia vote was 4602 to 2578 in\nfjior after 10 polls- On water flu-\ndridation, the vote was 3791 to 3270\nin favor. , \u2022 , ...\u2022,-   ,\nVoters also seemed to favor bylaws cailipg. for a five-year,expenditure of $72,000,000 on city development and a tihreewar $18,5<X|,-\nQ0O school building program. \u2122\nVoting' ih the aldermanic race\nwas among 19 candidates for six.\nseats, with the top five being elected to two-year terms and a sixth\nto. a one-year term.\nTom Alsbury, high school principal and former leading labor\nfigure, paced ttie early returns\nwith 1939 votes. He was followed\nby newspaper columnist Evelyn\nCaldwell with 1816 and Mrs. Anna\nSprott, long-time councillor seeking\nanother term, with 1359.\nOnly three sitting councillors\nwere among the 19 contestants.\nFour others retained their seats.\nThe eight-member council is being\nincreased to 10 members with Wednesday's ^elections.\nMayor Fred Hume's seat was not\nat stake. His two-year term expires in December, 1958.\nChristmas Present\nFor 100 Prisoners\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Maybe\nOttawa did decide to release 100\nprisoners from penitentiaries for\nChristmas \u2014 but apparently they\nclean forgot to tell the B.C. prisons\nabout it.\nA justice department official in\nOttawa said Tuesday that the prisoners will be released Sunday so\nthey can spend Christmas at home.\nWarden Fred Cummins of B.O.\nPenitentiary said Wednesday:\n\"This is very strange. It's the first\nI've heard of it.\"\nP.M.'s Uncle Dies\nWATERLOO, Ont. (CP)\u2014Ulysses\nM. Diefenbaker, 85, an uncle of\nPrime Minister Diefenbaker,' died\nTuesday after a month's illness.\nA native of Hawkesville, Ont., Mr.\nDiefenbaker lived here for the last\n35 years. Before that he farmed\nand taught school in Alberta.\nAnd in This Corner \u2666 \u2666..\nPOWELL RIVER, B.C, (CP)\u2014A pulp and paper workers strike\nhere Is all gummed-up for one plcketer, champing at the bit outside the plant.\nThe union's strike bulletin reports that Bob Maud left his work\nshirt In the Powell  River Company plant when the strike began.\nHe can't get Into the plant. Nobody can bring his shirt out.\nIn the pocket of the shirt Is his only set of false teeth.\nWASHINGTON (AP)\u2014Wqrking his second day as a Christmas\nseason extra mailman, Joe Biggs was told by his boss at Washington's main post office to deliver a truckload of New York mail.\nSeven hours later he phoned the Washington office and said\nhe was on the New Jersey Turnpike 11 miles outside New York.\nHe was out of gas. What, he wanted to know, should he do now?\nHis truck was unloaded, filled with gas, turned around and\nheaded for Washington.\nThe officials also gave Biggs a tip for the future. When told to\ndeliver New York mail, he is to drive to a loading platform seven\nblocks from the post office. It isn't necessary, they told him, to\ndrive 228 miles.\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014The headline on the leading editorial In\nWednesday's Vancouver Sun said: \"If it is now before 8 o'clock and\nyou  haven't voted yet\u2014\"\nThe editorial, published on civic election day, read In Its\nentirety:\n\"Why don't you put down this paper, go to the\u2014polls, then\ncome back and head the rest of It .with the sense of personal satisfaction that comes from doing your duty as a Vancouver citizen\nby Speaking up In the city's affairs?\"\n 2\u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, DEC. 12, 1957\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT \u2014 Shows at 7:00-8:37\nWhen He Puts on the PRESSURLlife EXPLODES!\nSAL\nMINEO\nDINO\nPLUS \u2014\n\"WORLD WITHOUT END\"\nBOOKS OF\nc\/wc\nlit-mmi\nwwYGm\nPremiere  Theatre\nFRUITVALE, B.C.\ni       LAST TIMES TONIGHT\nI   \"WAY TO THE GOLD\"\n(Cine.)\n,     Jeff Hunter, Sheree North\nBuy and Sell With Classified!\nCASTLE THEATRE\nCASTLEGAR, B.C.\nTonight  -  Friday -  Saturday\n2 Shows Nightly. Starting 6:45\n\"THE    AMBASSADOR'S\nDAUGHTER\"\n(Cinemascope)\nOlivia De Havllland, John Forsythe\nNEWS-CARTOON\nCranbrook Chamber\nSlate Nominated\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Cranbrook\nChamber of Commerce nominating committee submitted its proposed 1st of 1958 officers to the\nmontMy general meeting Tuesday.\nISiey. are J. S. Johnston, president; R. A. Reagh and Ernie Bas-\n80, first and second vice-presidents;\ndirectors, W. 0. Atkinson, Guideo\nBenedetti, Archie Bryden, Robert\ni Cockwell, Robert Eagle, George\nJackson, Roy LlnneH, Arthur God-\nderis, William SochowsW, Robert\nWillis, Gordon Willis, H. C. King\nand William Betts.\nI Named the advisory committee,\nall past presidents,   are  Gordon\nrail, Charles Draper, John Ellis,\nW. Hunter, M. G. KJinkhamer,\nfalter Millar and W. H. Wilson.\nAnnual meeting has been set for\nJanuary 20 to be a dinner meeting.\nFurther nominations will be accepted from the floor at that time\nand an election will be held if ne-\nowsajry. Arrangements for a spec-\n0. W. AASLAND\nTAXIDERMIST\n,     Serving You With the\n; FINEST IN TAXIDERMY\nP.O. Box SOI Phone 9151\nCASTLEGAR, B.C.\nVote\nGeorge Latta\nALDERMAN\nBetter Public Relations\nMore Co-ordination in\nCivic Departments\nImproved Conditions and\nExpansion in Uphill Area\nial speaker for the meeting are\nstill uncertain.\nThe meeting decided that Chamber membership dues schedule In\nfuture will be on the classification\nbasis of the city business licence\nof the member.\nNamed to the committee which\nis working in conjunction with a\nJunior Chamber committee in preparing a -brochure designed to attract establishment of new industry in the area were M. G. Mink-\nhamer, A. W, Hunter, R. A. Reagh,\nArchie Bryden and William Hume.\nThe Chamber will propose to\nthe City that store Iiourn for the\npre' \u25a0 Christmas shopper allow\noperations   both   Monday   and\nevening hours to 9 p.m. Friday\nand Saturday, December 20 and\n21.\nPossibility of establishment of a\nthird dental practice in Cranbrook\nwas reported to the membership at\nthe meeting. The Chamber has\nbeen malting efforts in this direction tor some time.\nRites Held for\nMike Wesley\nFuneral service for Michael Albert (Mike) Wesley, 34, who died\nDec, B at Shaughnessy Hospital in\nVancouver, were conducted Wed\nnesday at Thompson Funeral Home\nby Rev. Canon W, J. Silverwood,\nHymns sung were \"Unto the\nHills Around\" and \"Rock of Ages\"\nwith Mrs. W. A. Manson as organist.\nPallbearers were Elmer Ridge,\nJesse Ridge, William Bonderud,\nDouglas Armstrong, Richard Bonderud and Harold Ridge, with interment in Soldiers' Plot of Nelson\nMemorial Park.\nMr. Wesley was, well-known in\nNelson as a former outstanding\nstudent. He attended Hume School\nand- Nelson High School. He was\nborn at.Sweetgrass, Montana, October 23, 1923.\n.:\u2022\nTrail-Spokane\nBus Service\nRestored\nTRAIL (CP) - Greyhound Bus\nCompany officials said here Wednesday bus service has been restored between Trail and Spokane,\nfollowing settlement of a six-day\nstrike among Northwest Greyhound\nIncorporated Employees.\nThe walkout, which started last\nWednesday, involved 325 workers\nand tied up all Greyhound lines in\nthe Pacific Northwest east of Portland and Seattle.\nPopular Yuletide\nGIFT ITEMS\nWF   Dorothy Gray    ^\n\/           Du Barry      ^H\nMl       Cosmetics          \\\n\u25a0          Cosmetics        j\nand                I\nand               I\nh       Toiletries          \/\nI           Toiletries       jH|\nUL    Gift Boxed       JB\n[^         Gift Boxed    jU\n\/           Baby          ^H\ni    \/           Bunting          W\nfp     Smiles 'iS^m\n\/          Chuckles       TH\n, j      Salted   Nuts      j\nj      CHOCOLATES   ]\nBR        7 Varieties       JK\nHA      Fresh Stock      Jgff\n1             GIFT          \/'\".\n&        Wrapped     JBjH\nWe Invite You to Listen to\nCHRITSMAS CAVALCADE \u2014 CKLN  11:00 a.m.\n'.'YOUR H'OKTKRSS OF HEALTH\"\n433 JostfjlMhc St.        Plume 1203    Res; 334-1.       Nelson. B.C.\nfounjriL fatiinqA*..\nCity Council, meeting on the eve of the civic elections, Wednesday night gave three readings to a bylaw\nauthorizing the sale of seven Vernon Street lots ior $7000.\nOn these lots, it is planned, will rise a $2 million\noffice tower-hotel building, and the bylaw will authorize\ntheir sole to PaulH. McClung, one of two principals in the\nproject.\nFinal reading of the- bylaw awaits a letter from Mr.\nMcClung, stating agreement to re-sale of the property to\nthe City on the same terms, should the project not come\nt,o realization. Letter was put into the. mails Wednesday,\nMayor Kary said.\nAid. J. W. McClelland voted against the bylaw.\nDr. A. W. L. Vogelsang,'director\nof Selkirk Health Unit, informed\nCouncil it had proved impossible\nto obtain permission for an annual\nexpenditure of $60 to provide parking space for the medical health\nofficer. Dr. Vogelsang said he had\napplied to the Deputy Provincial\nHealth Officer for the grant, but\nhad been informed the matter\nshould be dealt with on the local\nlevel. Council, on request from Dr.\nVogelsang for a parking space near\nthe Baker Street health' unit offices, earlier had offered the rental\nof a parking meter at $5 a month.\n* *  *\nThree electricity users, protesting \"unreasonably high\" bills, will\nbe advised to request a dispute\ntest. A letter from Mrs. J. L.\nSmith, 232 Anderson Street, Mrs.\nGeorge Bennett, 220 Anderson St:\nand Mrs. Carl E. Swanson, 228\nAnderson St., said their bills were\nup to 30 per cent higher than for\ncomparative months. Transformer\nand voltage levels had been checked and were in order Mayor Kary\ntold the Council, and said the procedure was for the complainant to\napply for a meter test. A credit\nadjustment would be made if the\nmeter was faulty.\n.  \u2666  \u00ab\nAn auctioneer's license was\ngranted to the Silver King Ski Club\nfor its public auction this weekend.\nMayor Kary will be one of the auctioneers for the 'event, planned to\nraise funds for the ski lift, Nelson's\ncentennial project.\n\u2022 \u00bb \u2022\nE. E. Olsdn, works superintendent, will bring price quotations\nfor a new works department vehicle to the next meeting. Mr. Olson\nsuggested that the anticipated, increased activity in City parks next\nyear necessitated replacement of\nthe old park truck, and that the\npresent engineer panel truck would\nbe \"ideal.\" A lighter vehicle would\nfit his requirements, he said.\n* *  +\nExpenditure of the City's share\nin a \"Christmas bonus\" for social\nallowance recipients was approved.\nThe City will pay 20 per cent of\na $2 bonus for single persons, and\n$5 for married.\n* *  * .\nThe $2250 balance of the volunteer fire department payment was\nauthorized. The payment covers\nvolunteer payments from June to\nDecember.\n\u2022 *  *\nRequest from Vincent Killeen.\n806 Hoover .Street, for a streetlight half-way between Hendryx\nand Cedar Streets, similar to one\non Latimer Street, on his block,\npart of which is out of the city,\nwas referred to electrical superintendent A. C. VanSacker. The\nblock is presently lit from Mr.\nKilleen's home. Walking is treacherous, he said, because the wooden\nsidewalk sometimes has planks and\nsteps missing, but works superintendent E. E. Olson said this situation did not exist now. Mr. Killeen\nsaid this block is not suitable for\nvehicles and parking.\n\u2022 * \u25a0 *\nMr. Olson was given power to\nact in granting entrance for emergency vehicles at the new Nelson\nFuneral Home and Ambulance\nService, also to authorize \"no\nparking\" signs being put up during\nfunerals. Signs will be paid for by\nthe company, who said they will\ntry to park most cars on their\nlot and eliminate traffic congestion\non Ward Street during funerals.\nProfess\/oner\/ Entertainers\nPerform for Nelson Pupils\nSchool children in three Nelson\nschools were hilariously entertained Tuesday when they were\ntreated to a bit of \"live\" stage-\nwork in the form of a variety\nshow, brought to the schools by\nthe National School Assembly.\nThis company brings to the children periodically professional acts,\nwhich present a contact for the\nstudents with \"live\" entertainment\nas a contrast to television and\nmovie diversions.\nMr. and Mrs. Glen Haywood,\nthe entertainers, are professional\nin widely diversified fields of the\nentertainment world. The spontaneity of Mr. Haywood's comedy\nreached the children immediately\nand with sleight-of-hand, uproarious chatter with the audience, and\nextremely clever ventriloquism involving his friend \"Freshie\", he\nkept the children amused throughout the program.\nMrs. Haywood, who is her husband's \"straight man\" also got\ninto the act with a pair of bunnies\nwho disappeared from under a\nhat and reappeared under another\none. Mr. and Mrs. Haywood drew\nthe audience into their acts, and\nthe result was great enjoyment on\nboth sides.\nON TV THREE YEARS\nThe two entertainers are as diverted by their audience as the\naudience are by them. Mr. Haywood had his own TV show in the\nSan Francisco area for three years.\nIt was \"Adventure Time\" and he\nappeared with \"Freshie\" in between the serials. which the show\nfeatured.'He has been on the Kate\nSmith Show and the Ed Sullivan\nShow, and has done a great deal\nof single work.\nHe studied ventriloquism under\nKimberley Girl\nDies, Aged 20\nKIMBERLEY - Marion Kate\nDavies Pearson, age 20 years,\nyoungest daughter of Alex Pearson of Marysville and the late Mrs,\nKate Davies Pearson died early\nWednesday morning in Kimberley\nDistrict Hospital, where she had\nbeen a patient since Tuesday.\n\u25a0 Funeral services will be held\nfrom Kimberley United Church on\nSaturday afternon, Rev. F. A. McPhee officiating.\nVOTE FOR\nMcClelland\nFor Transportation\nPHONE 910\n\"the great Lester\", who taught\nEdgar Bergen, and hopesv eventually'to break into TV in New York\nwith his own program. \"Freshie\",\nwho incidentally was once \"taken\nhome\" by a young boy who thought\nhe could provide a better home\nfor the roguish little dummy, lives\nin a suitcase and his voice can be\nheard objecting strenuously as he\nis put away at the end of the performance.\nMrs. Haywood, whose professional name is Sherry Stevens, is\na singer in musical comedy. She\nhas taken the leading role in \"Brig-\nadoon\" and \"Song of Norway\"\nwith the San Francisco Civic Light\nOpera Company under Edwin Letter, who introduced \"Kismet\" a:\n\"Song of Norway.\"\nTurkey Shoot\nStarts Tonight\nTonight is opening night of the\nKiwanis Turkey Shoot at the Armoury. If the count of prospective\nDaniel Boones approximates other\nyears, over 350 people will have\ntried their luck by the end of the\nevening and 12 turkeys will be on\ntheir way to the platter.\nFor the shoot .22-calibre rifles\nare used. They are the cadet target\nrifles and have excellent sights. A\nqualified person is in charge of the\nrifles at all times and is on constant guard against any of the indoor range rules being violated.\nEach customer is given two\nrounds of ammunition. Four people\nshoot-jit once, the target of each\nbeing pinned to the wall at a\nreasonable distance from the\ncounter from which aim is taken.\nAfter thirty targets have been\nriddled, the target with the hole\nclosest to the bull's eye is the\none winning a turkey.\nUpstairs in the Armoury there\nwill be games of bingo and a booth\nfor refreshments,\nCar  Insurance\nUp in Manitoba\nWINNIPEG (CP) -i Automobile\ninsurance will cost more in Mani\ntoba beginning Jan. 1, and for some\nowners it will be the third rate\nincrease in about one year.\nThe latest premium increase was\nannounced Wednesday by the Western Canada Underwriters' Association. Higher costs of car repairs\nfollowing accidents was given as\nthe main reason for the insurance\nrate boost.\nThe Weather\nNELSON    28 37 -\nMontreal   10 28 .03\nOttawa      3 20 .11\nToronto  :     9 16 \u2014\nWinnipeg -12 6\nRe-ina     2 24 \u2014\nSaskatoon       5 23 \u2014\nRecord Civic Vote\nSeen in Nelson\nCLASS ADS GET RESULTS!\nBuy and Sell With Classified!\n&\u00ab\u00ab<<K\u00ab<e!\u00ab\u00ab'#e\u00ab!\u00abi<<<<\u00abt\u00abi<:>c\u00ab<t><*;'\nA record vote in Nelson's civic\nelection following' the spirited\ncampaign of the past two weeks\nis considered likely by veteran\ncampaigners.\nA total of 2684 persons are eligible to vote and it was expected\nthat, barring severe weather conditions, the number turning out\nmight surpass the December, 1951,\nelection, when 2112 cast ballots.\nThat year, 2771 were eligible.\nIn 1955, another mayoralty election, 1760 of 2751 voted. J\nThe record vote, of 1951 was\nstruck when two of the present\nmayoralty candidates\u2014Mayor Joseph Kary and T. S. Shorthouse\u2014\nran. The result then was Kary,\n968; Alex Sutherland, 638; Short-\nhouse, 494. Mayor Kary, then a\nCivic Action Association candidate,\nhas been mayor ever since.\nReturning officer is C. W. Reeve\nHarper, his deputy D. L. Ure, and\nvoting will be from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m..\nin the old post office building. Mr.\nHarper will have eight assistants\nthroughout the day and when the\ncounting begins after the polls\nclose, four more will assist.\nThe mayoralty count, always the\nfirst, will probably not be com\npleted until after 9 p.m., depending\non how heavy the vote is.\nArrangements to provide Information on the results have been\nmade by The Daily News and\nradio station CKLN. The count\nwill lie given to CKLN as quickly\nas Ihey are telephoned to The\nDaily News by its reporter.\nFour candidates seek the mayor\nalty seat, and there are eight candidates for the three aldermanic\nvacancies.\nVoters are required to use a pen\ncil in marking an X opposite each\ncandidate of their choice. If they\nuse a pen, they face a possibility\nof having their.. ballot rejected.\nSome voters write in the word,\n\"Yes,\" insteacTof an X, another\nreason for rejecting ballots. Ballots\nare also rejected if more than\nthree are voted for on an aldermanic ballot, or more than one\nfor mayor.\nThe candidates, in brief:\n.   For mayor:\nAid. Clare F. Blakeman, completing his first term as alderman,\nRotarian, member of Chamber of\nCommerce, active in other city organizations, keen water sportsman. A businessman.\n'Mayor Joseph Kary, completing\nhis sixth year as mayor. Previous\nly served two years as alderman\nand two years on school board.\nMember of New Hospital Committee as well as city representative on Hospital Board. Rotarian,\nChamber of Commerce member,\nfirst president of West Kootenay\nExhibition. Milling firm manager.\nAid. Jack W. McClelland, completing first term as alderman.\nMember Chamber of Commerce,\nIOOF and Masons. Kiwanian, also\nan elder of St. Paul's -Trinity\nUnited Church, boys' work director and chairman of the Second\nNelson Scout Group Committee.\nBusinessman.\nT. S. Shorthouse, an alderman\nfrom 1946 to 1950, previously serving as police commissioner f o r\nfour years, Active in many organizations for the past 25 years.\nChaired 1947 Golden Jubilee celebrations. Former Kinsmen Club\nmember, now a Rotarian. Businessman.\nFor aldermen:\n. Boyd C. Affleck, City engineer\n1927-1934; alderman 1945-1943. Past\npresident Chamber of Commerce,\nGyro, Legion member. Civil engineer and land surveyor.\nFrank A. Beresford jr., member\nCivic Centre Commission past two\nyears, Chamber of Commerce\nmember, Lions Club 10 years and\nnow vice-president; treasurer\nToastmaster Club. For 23 years a\nbusinessman here.\nDr. C. E. Bradshaw, native of\nNelson, last year elected police\ncommissioner. Member Municipal\nLibrary Board, served on school\nboard six years and was Civic Centre Commissioner. Member of Masons. Retired dentist,\nHarold H. Hinitt, an alderman\nfrom 1941 to 1946, and Nelsonite\nfor nearly 40 years. Now toll collector on new Nelson bridge. Retired dental technician.\nCecil J. Hughes, first venture\ninto civic politics. Member of\nChamber of Commerce and Rotarian. Manager of Civic Theatre\nsince 1938.\nGeorge Latta, native of Nelson.\nServed two years on school board.\nKiwanian. Former manager Home\nFurniture and National Fruit\nCompany, now owner and operator, employing four persons in\nfruit and vegetable wholesale business.\nLeonard G. Peerless, here since\n1938 when established optical business now employing six techni-\nBCPC TEAM TO DISCUSS\nLOCAL POWER NEEDS\nCity council has given the \"green\nlight\" for officials of the B.C.\nPower Commission to come here\nearly next year for a discussion\nof local power needs. The city\nrecently launched plans for needed\nexpansion, of its electricity facilities.\nThe Power Commission letter\nwas written after Mayor Joseph\nKary visited their Victoria offices\nNovember 29 for preliminary talks.\nThey also expressed a wish to\nmeet with officials of Kaslo, Mirror Lake, and R. H, Stafford and\nSons, who are reported building\na mill in the Sunshine Bay area.\nIncluded in the Power Commission team would be a management\nrepresentative to hold discussions\nwith Kaslo, Nelson and a Stafford\nrepresentative; a commercial man\nto examine customer records on\nthe North Shore to determine consumption, revenue, pattern, and\nother details, and a distribution\nengineer to get up-to-date information on the present North Shore\nplant and make preliminary recommendations and estimates regarding supply to the area.\nMayor Kary said he had had a\n\"very fine visit with these people.\"\nThe commission knew of demands in tlie city and adjacent\nareas, he said. Requests for power\nhad come from throughout the dis-\nVOTE   FOR\nPEERLESS\ntrict, including Ainsworth, Mirror\nLake and other points, and the\nmayor felt a discussion and report\nfrom the commission would \"definitely resolve the problem. We're\non the right track, anyway.\"\nThe matter could not be discussed, intelligently until such a\nreport was made, commented Aid.\nW. S. Ramsay.\ncians. Rotarian, vice \u2022 president\nNelson Curling Club.\nMrs. W. J. (Edith) Van Maarion,\nhere since 1949 when she joined\nnursing staff of Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital where she is now\na supervisor. Member executive\ncouncil of Chamber of Commerce,\npresident of Nelson-Creston and\nWest Kootenay Federal Social\nCredit Associations.\nESKIMO EXHIBITION\nLONDON (CP)\u2014An exhibition of\nCanadian Eskimo carvings was\nopened in London Wednesday by\nGeorge Drew, Canadian high commissioner. One article, depicting a\nmother and child, is on loan from\nthe Queen. It was presented to 'her\nby the Canadian government when\nas Princess Elizabeth, she visited\nCanada in 1951.\nDO YOU THINK 1\nShe Deserves a New\nELECTROLUX\nCleaner and Polisher\nFOR CHRISTMAS\nCall Clint Thompson, 1108\nSLIPPERS\nGood looking and good\nfitting, you'll like our\nslipper styles both for\ncomfort ond price.\n\u2022 Leather Operas\nand Romeos.\n\u2022 Skipfoam   Operas\nand Gores,\n\u2022 Shearling   Lined\nLeathers\nPriced\n$4.95 to $5.95\nGodfreys'\n378 Baker St.\n9\nFOR A REAL TREAT IN HEAT\nWESTERN\nORUMHEILER DEEP SEAM\nCoul\n.-\u25a0-.- ,,,....,.\u201e....:\nFUEL and TRANSFER\nPhone 889\nFREE DELIVERY\nQool Botlkd Bmm\nPHONE\nNelson 24 and 175\nTrail 26 and 192\nWhen Ordering Specify Brand Name\n\u2022 Columbia Lager \u2022 Fernie Lager\n\u2022 Kootenay *  Columbia\nPale Ale Cream Stout\nEMPTY   BOTTLES  COLLECTED  ON   DELIVERY   ONLV\nINTERIOR BREWERIES LIMITED\nthis advertisement is not published or deployed by the Liq\nuor Control Board or by rhe Government of British Columbia\nFor Mayor...\nKc-lLl\nKARY\nFor Transportation\nPHONE\n146\n......                    '.'\u25a0'\u2022\u2022-.'\u25a0\u25a0        \u25a0'.' '    '\nKARY Joseph      X\nv.\nPhone 1831 for transportation\nCARRY ON WITH KARY\nFor Continued Progress\n 32H3\nElections Today in 16\nKootenav Municipalities\nInterest in Four Cities\nCentres on Mayoral Races\nElections will take place today in 16 municipalities in\nKootenay-Boundary.\nOnly in four Kootenay-Boundary\ncities will mayors be elected today\n\u2014Cranbrook, Grand Forks, Kaslo\nand Nelson.\nOn nomination day, December 2,\nmayors of the other cities where\nthis seat was being vacated, went\nback into office by acclamation.\nThey were Mayor James White in\nFernie, Mayor Edward Cooke\nGreenwood, Mayor Clifford Swan\nin Kimberley, Mayor Harold Elmes\nin Rossland and Mayor L. A. Read\nin Trail.\nIn Cranbrook, Grand Forks and\nKaslo the present mayors are\nbeing opposed by  one  candidate\nVOTE   FOR\nBeresford\nTor Transportation  Phone\n1717\neach, but in Nelson the mayor is\nrunning and three other men, all\nex-aldermen.\nExcept for Cranbrook and Kaslo\nschool board vacancies were filled\nby acclamation on nomination\ndeadline, generally by the retiring\ntrustees.\nHowever! in Grand Forks no one\noffered for the two vacancies which\nwill probably mean that persons\nwill be appointed to the jobs.\nThere was only one other blank\ndrawn on the election scene in\nKootenay-Boundary. That was in\nSlocan City where a woman was\nthe only person to file nomination\npapers for one of two aldermanic\nseats.\nALDERMEN ONLY\nVoters in Fernie, Greenwood,\nKimberley and Rossland will go\nto the polls only to decide who\nwill fill aldermanic vacancies.\nThe largest numbers of candidates offering for aldermanic seats\nare in Cranbrook and Nelson \u2014\neight in each instance for three\nseats.\nVillage Commission members\nwill be elected today in Castlegar,\nChapman Camp, Fruitvale, Invermere, Marysville, Montrose, Salmo\nand Warfield.\nm Castlegar, the incumbent J. E.\nKraft and E. A. Lewis are competing for the village commission\nchairmanship; W. E. Harris, R. C.\nMaddocks, M. A. McPherson and\nG. C. Pettitt for two two-year terms\non the commission, and Mrs. Elizabeth Rysen and Earl Bradford for\na one-year term created when Mr.\nMaddocks resigned recently.\nCITY OR VILLAGE?\nA plebiscite which may have a\nhistory-making effect on the town\nwill be held today at Kaslo. There\nthe people will be asked whether\n\u25a0or not they favor Kaslo changing\nits status from that of a city to a\nvillage, a money-saving measure\nthat has been advocated by the\nCity Council.\nIn Cranbrook also a plebiscite\nFor Independence of Thought, Speech\nand Action at the Council Table\nVote\nHarold\nHinitt\n38 years a resident,\n5 years aldermanic\nexperience and a -\nrecord of community\nservice through the\nyears.\nwill be held, on whether or not\nits water supply should be fluoridated. This has been recommended\nbecause a large increase in tooth\ndecay has been noted among children.\nOne bylaw is being held. That is\nin Kimberley where a proposal for\nan $82,000 expenditure for road\nconstruction is being put before\nratepayers.\nCranbrook\nMakes Offer\nTo Electricians\nCRANBROOK - Cranbrook's\nCity Council has made its counterproposals to the Brotherhood of\nElectrical Workers, agent for contract negotiations for the city electrical department employees. It\nproposes a 10-cent increase across\nthe board, addition of Remembrance Day and Boxing Day as\npaid statutory holidays to bring\nthe number to nine, three weeks\npaid annual holiday for employees\nof 10 years standing or more,\ncumulative sick leave to a total of\n45 days, double time for Sunday\nwork, and provision by the city of\nhooks and straps for pole work.\nThe city also seeks 13 months\nfor the agreement reached which\nis due January 1. Purpose of this\nis to leave contract renewal negotiations to the new City Council\neffective each January 1 which is\nresponsible for the city budget for\nthat year.\nThe union had asked 45 cents\nincrease in its original proposals\nfor the contract renewal.\nNelson's Only Woman\nCandidate\nMARK  YOUR   BALLOT .\nVan Maarion\n(MRS.) EDITH A.\nNurse Supervisor\nX\nFor Continued Progress\nAN INDEPENDENT CANDIDATE, WITH NO\nAXE TO GRIND\nI will work for the welfare and progress of this* city.\nCastlegar Group\nTo Elect Heads\nCASTLEGAR - A four per cent\ndividend on shares has been declared by the Transportation Society. This dividend is to be applied to each member's share capital.\nDirectors remuneration was cut\nfrom the old stipend of free transportation to $3 per meeting with\noayments not to exceed two meetings per month.\nTwo inactive special accounts\nbelonging to the Co-op drivers'\nclub and the Co-op entertainment\ncommittee were to be turned over\nto the Castlegar District Hospital\nSociety by a motion passed at the\nannual general meeting of the\nCastlegar Co-op Transportation\nSociety December 6. Exact amount1\nin each account was not available\nbut the amount is in the neighborhood of $100 each.\nThe audit division of the B.C.\nCo-Operative Wholesale Society\nwas retained as auditors for the\ncoming fiscal year.\nElection for four directors will\ntake place on December 17. Voting\nwill be at the Society's office from\n6 a.m. to 10:30 p.m. and at the Kinnaird Village office from 1 p.m.\nto 5 p.m. and at the Blueberry\nStore from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Nominations close Friday. Those nominated to date are H. J. Moor, S. D.\nChambers, L. Harmston, - V. H.\nQuiding, K. D. Crosbie, M. Wolfe\nand E. A. Fitzpatfick.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\/THURSDAY, DEC. 12, 1957 \u2014 3\nSlides Shown To\nKimberley Group\nKIMBERLEY - The Senior\nCitizens' Association was treated\nto a presentation of slides by Miss\nClare Mercer who gave a running\ncommentary on a trip she took\nrecently. Scenes from Hawaii,\nFijis, New Zealand, Siam, Calcutta\nDelhi and Agra were shown.\nSanca Man Again\nHeads Sportsmen\nGRAY CREEK - The annual\nmeeting of the Gray Creek and\ndistrict Rod and Gun Club has reelected its officers. Charlie Koch\nof- Sanca is president and Lloyd\nJohnson of Crawford Bay is secretary.\nArrangements were made to hold\na turkey shoot at Gray Creek hall\non Sunday next. George Oliver\nwill assist.\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiimiiiimiiiii\nMore District\nNews On Page 10\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nDodd's\nK I  O N E Y\nPills\nChristmas\nGIFTS\nfor the ultimate\nIn home and\ntravel shaving\nRepresents the finest in craftsmanship and luxury.\nCompact unit is equally convenient when traveling or at home. Makes a perfect gift. Beautiful,\nsaddle-stitched case contains saddle brown BLADE-\nELECTRIC SHAVEMASTER as described below\nand matching accessories \u2014 comb, brush, file. Convenient compartments for cord and other accessories.\nBig Surprise...\nin a Small Gift\nPackage!\nSheafier's Sentinel\nSnorkel Pen SK.I3\nEnsemble S10.W\nTCHLESS\nlALUE\nIN PERFECTLY MATCHED\nK\u20ac\u20acPSAK\u20ac\nDlAMONDjJltf\nVou expect MORE value in Keepsake\ndromonds \u2014 ond you get \u00bb. The\nproof?   Wi youo Jn these J\nout standingly   beautiful\nKeepsoke    err$en*blos!\nChoose Yours Tomoiww!\nSHE\nWHITE DOT\nERS.\nkELPEM\nends\n\"dunking\"\ngives many years Of writing pleasure\nThe White Dot signifies that you have given\nthe world's finest pen ... a masterpiece of\nmodern design and precision craftsmanship.\nMake your selections at our counter from a\nwide variety of models, custom-fitted point\nstylee, colors... and prices!\nOLSONS\nCredit Jewellers\nPHONE 1149 NELSON, B.C.\nPARKER \"61\"\nGleaming  clip,  with  matoh-\ning pencil. \u2014 Pen from\n22.50 to 27.50\nSet from\n30.00 to 40.00\nOLSON'S CREDIT JEWELLERS\nS64 BAKER ST. NELSON, B.C. PHONE 1149\nPlease send me the following:\nNAME \t\nADDRESS\nCITY     PROV.\t\n\u25a1   CHARGE MY ACCOUNT [J   CASH ENCLOSED\nf-|   C.O.D. Q   NEW ACCOUNT\nNew accounts please employment and two rclercnces.\n N?lsmt Sailij Jfauia\nEstablished April 22. 1002.\ninferior British Coiumbfa's Largest Daily Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday and statutory\nholidays   by   the   NEWS   PUBLISHING   COMPANY.\nLIMITED, 266 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia.\nAuthorized as Second Class Mail, Post Office Department, Ottawa.\nMEMBER OF THE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS.\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS.\nThe Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news\ndispatches credited to it or to The Associated Press or Reuters in this paper,\nand also the local news published therein.\nThursday, December 12, 1957\nToday Is the Day You Cast Your Ballot\nBe Sure to Vote\nNATO Faces Important Decisions\nWhile that might mean a temporary\nrespite for them, a victory by the Russians would mean their subjugation\nlater.\nWhile fear may drive nations into\nalliances, it does not prevent the normal nationalism from finding expression. Britain made the hydrogen bomb\nbecause' of pride, she could not envisage herself as being behind other\nnations with this weapon, or forced to\nrely entirely on others for her defence,\nShe co-operates with the U.S. because\nshe sees clearly that she cannot afford\nto let that country fight her battles\nalone,\nFrance is struggling in Algeria\nlargely because of national pride and\nthe lack of sympathy of other nations\nis the cause of her lukewarm co-operation with the other NATO powers.\nBut since there are no human conditions which remain static forever,\nthe time has come to ^recognize that\nthe conditions which made NATO\nhave changed and to formulate a new\npolicy. The policy which called for\nthe sharing of all scientific secrets has\nnow lost much of its impetus. It still\nremains the most essential thing of\nall.\nThe Russians have shown themselves masters of science and technology and more so' in their ability\nto organize these. There is just as\nmuch ability in science and technology\nin the free world. It should be NATO's\nduty to organize it.\nThere is a great deal of gloominess\nover the forthcoming NATO talks. The\nalliance'between the. Western nations\nseems to Be weakening, if not breaking up, and there can' be no certainty\nthat the old close union will continue.\nThis is attributable to many\ncauses. The chief of these is weak\nAmerican leadership. It may be true,\nas an American sociologist sqys, that\nAmerican men are essentially lazy\nand can only work if they mix pleasure with it, but Mr. Eisenhower's habit\nof playing golf became in European\neyes an evidence that he was not\ndoing his job. Long before his own\npeople became dissatisfied, Europeans\nwere concerned about American foreign policy.\nWhen NATO was first organized it\nwas predicated on the belief that the\nRussians would try to expand through\nEurope. This meant that all the countries between her and the sea could\nexpect to be attacked. It was a case\nfor these countries of joining with the\nU.S. to protect themselves. Now, with\nthe coming of the inter-continental\nmissiles the situation has changed.\nEssentially the rivalry has always\nbeen between the two greatest powers\n\u2014Russia and the United States. Now\nthey are able to fight one another at\nlong range without leaving their own\ncountries. This means that' the smaller\ncountries can remain neutral. They are \u2022\nbeginning to show signs of doing that.\nLearning to Make Friends\nThe best time and place for learning\nhow to make and keep friends is in childhood and at home, according to a report\nfrom the American Medical Association received by the Health League of Canada.\nElizabeth . B. Hurlock, Ph.D., outlined\nsome tips for parents on how they can help\ntheir children learn to make friends. If good\nfoundations for getting along with others are\nlaid in the home, a child's chances for being\npopular are greatly increased, she said.\nSome suggestions to parents are:\n\u2014Set a good example for social relationships in the family, since children quickly imitate patterns of behavior they observe\naround them.\n\u2014Supervise a child's early play with his\nbrothers and sisters and with the neighborhood children. Show him how to get along\nwith others and explain why a particular\nbehavior is good or bad.\n\u2014As he grows older, discuss as a family\nwhat makes certain children popular and\nothers unpopular, This should be kept on\nan impersonal level.\n\u2014Encourage him to bring his friends\nhome and help him learn how to entertain.\n\u2014Watch for the first signs of jealousy\ntoward a brother or sister and correct the\ncause before it becomes a habit.\n\u2014Play games with a child, so he can\nlearn how. Since most contacts wilh other\nchildren will be in play, he must be able\nto play as well as they do if he is to be\nincluded in the group.\n\u2014Give him an opportunity to talk when\nthe family is together and help him to talk\nabout things that are interesting to others.\n\u2014Call on him for help. Children who\ndevelop the habit of helning at home rarely\nsit back and expect others to do all the\nwork, nor do they grumble because they\nfeel they are expected to do more than their\nshare.\n\u2014Expect him to consider the interests\nand desires of the family. Teach him to\nlaugh at himself. And make sure the home\nis a cheerful place. Being cheerful will become a habit and this goes a long way\ntoward making anyone popular.\nDr. Hurlock is former secretary-treasurer of the American Psychological Association's division on childhood and adolescence.\nFresK Wind\nTwo more announcements from Ottawa\nare indicative of the fresh wind that is b'ow-\ning through the corridors of Parliament Hill.\nTwo federal investigations are in the offing,\nore info price spreads on farm products, the\nother into the question of the source, development, distribution and use of Canada's\nenergy.\nThe latter includes water power, coal, oil\nand thermo-nuclear sources, and is the natural prelude to Ihe formulation of a national\npower policy, something which Canada must\nhave if the future development is to be consistent with its potentialities.\nThis newspaper has been urging a national power policy for years. It is gratifying\nto see a start being made.\n, \u2014Fredericton Gleaner.\nLetters to The\nEditor\nLetters to the Editor on any toplo ot\ngenuine Interest are welcome If they are\nbrief, accurate and fair. No letter will be\nInserted In whole, or In part, except over\ntha signature and address of the writer.\nUnsolicited correspondence cannot be returned.\nM ,\nElection Advertisment\nCriticized by Reader\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u2014Your advertisement sponsored by\n\"The Associated Property Owners\", and\npublished on page two of your paper of Tuesday, December 10, intrigues me.\nI am not a property owner, but I have\nresided in Nelson all my life and have been\nemployed here since leaving school. I have\nno vote nor have I an axe to grind. I am,\nhowever, taking a great deal of interest in\nthe current civic election campaign. I am\nof the opinion, too, that a great deal of credit\nis due the candidates who have been willing\nto allow their names to stand for flection.\nIt says a lot for our city when so much\ninterest is shown, rather than have all\nvacancies filled by acclamation, as is often\nthe case.\nThe purpose of this letter is to hereby\ngive notice that I have no intention of joining, if and when I do become a Nelson property owner, any organization or association\nthat would allow such \"dribble\" to be published over their name.\nIt will be an interesting and close election, and may the best man win, but let's\nbe fair. \"Mud slinging\" usually goes hand\nin hand with any election, and such is the\ncase this time. However, I have spoken to\nseveral property owners today, and they Informed me that they were not aware that\nthey belonged to such an organization. They\nwere wondering where they paid their dues,\nand who the president was. They would like\nto know this latter question in order that\nthey may withdraw from the organization.\nTheir reason? I'll give you the answer! You\nsee, the planning of this advertisement has\nnot been \"an open discussion\" and must have\nbeen instituted \"behind closed doors.\"\nFRED J. THOMPSON.\nYour Individual\nHOROSCOPE\n>By Frances Drake\nJaycees Not\n\"Stuffed Shirts\"  ,\nCanada's Junior Chamber of Commerce\nmembers are not \"stuffed shirts\" but normal,\nfun-loving, red-blooded yoijng men. This is\nrevealed in Liberty maoazine, debunking the\nnotion that the Jaycees' credo is: \"No shirt\ntoo young to stuff.\"\nTomorrow's leaders in Canadian public\nlife are likely to be found today, among the\ncountry's 20,000 Jaycee members. This leadership prep period, from 18 to 35 years of\nage, gives young men \"a chance to learn,\nand make mistakes, at a level where it won't\ndo much harm.\"\nThree hundred centres across Canada\nwill have the Jaycees to thank this Christmas, for their Santa Claus parades, downtown Christmas trees, street lights, or\n\"Bring-Christ-Back-to-Christmas\" drives.\nThe Moose Jaw Jaycees plan to rtnlace\nstreet lights with 30-inch candles. In Halifax,\nthere is a Javcee-sponsored contest for the\nmost beautifullv-decorated home.\nOther worthwhile projects include answering letters to Santa Claus: collecting\ntoys for the undernrivileged children; erecting life-size nativity scenes.\nBecause of the efforts of the Toronto\nJaycees, the Junior Board of Trade, that\nmany of the country's citizens get a chance\nto let down their hair at the Grey Cup game.\nJaycees sponsor the Grey Cup parade, the\nbanquet, and the \"Miss Grey Cup\" contest.\nThe\" do everything, in fact, except play the\ngame.\nWhat's a Scientist\nPravda reports that Russia has 250,000.\nscientists, and in the outside world there\nwill be little argument on the point that it\nhas some noted men of science. But what,\nwithin the Russian definition, is a scientist?\nDoes the term cover B.Sc.'s or their\nequivalent, and technicians of the type we\ncall repairmen? Our country has no precise definition of a scientist, either, but common usage would place him in the specialist\ncategory. There is nothing to indicate the\nRussian conception of the word is so strict.\n\u2014Windsor Star.\nBugs are developing immunity to man-\nmade sprays but men are not developing\nimmunity to bugs. We trust this does not\nindicate which side Mother Nature is betting\non.\u2014Edmonton Journal.\nTODAY'S BIBLE\nTHOUGHT\nThough I speak with the\ntongues of men and of angels,\nand have not charity, I am become as sounding brass, or a\ntrlnkllng cymbal. I Corinthians\nMil.\nWithout love our religion degenerates into the meaningless forms\nof a heathen temple.\nOxmt dist\nI reckon some minds wasn't\nmeant to be improved. Mine goes\nto sleep on me ever' time I try it.\nLook in the section in which your\nbithday comes and find what your\noutlook is', according to the stars,\nFor Friday, December 13, 1957\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 20 (Aries)\n\u2014Self - restraint and moderation\nwill be necessary now. With good\nmanagement, however, you can\nhave a profitable, fruitful day.\nAttend to business; maintain harmony.\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus)-\nGood influences! Get going with\nfamiliar matters, work you understand and like. Be ambitious to\nachieve and you will.\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini)\u2014\n\"Your\" Mercury is in benefic position now but other planets stress a\nneed for emotional control and\nclear-cut, straightforward' action\nso as not to mislead anyone. Study\nnew offerings; there may be some\nvery good ones.\nJUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer)-\nDon't be over-sensitive \u2014 a tendency today. You are too efficient\nand too clever to yield to the pettiness which can stand in the way\nof attainment. Look for the good;\nunderstand, be patient.\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leo)-\nYour Sun's position now stresses\na need for quiet thinking rather\nthan . impulsive action. Analyze\npropositions thoroughly before\nlending your support.\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER 23\n(Virgo) \u2014 Point efforts and talents\ntoward goals servicing the mapy\nrather than a few. Generous motives, aiding worthwhile causes\nwill pay off.\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER\n23 (Libra) \u2014 Friendly influences\ngenerally, but do not allow yourself to become easily irritated or\nemotionally upset. Much good can\nbe achieved.\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER 22\n(Scorpio) \u2014 Resist all temptations\nto squander time, energy or money\non unnecessary, or unimportant\nundertakings. You are not an erratic person by nature,, so don't\npursue an uncertain course.\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER\n21 (Sagittarius) \u2014 You have obligations, perhaps a few minor\nmatters that need attention. Don't\nput off till later what you CAN do\nnow. Get all benefits possible from\ngood offerings.\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY 20\n(Capricorn)\u2014Put dangerous tools,\nmachinery in good order and use\nthem (if you must) with sensible\ncaution. You can make good progress pow if you manage things\ncleverly.\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY 19\n(Aquarius) \u2014 You are priviliged\nto have splendid planetary aspects\nnow. Don't let the grass grow\nunder your feet. Scan your schedule quickly but efficiently and get\nto work \u2014 producing.\nFEBRUARY 20 to  MARCH  20\nNew Zealand Draws Visitors\nWELLINGTON, New Zealand\n(Reuters) \u2014 New Zealand is becoming the mecca of the Pacific\nfor many island' peoples, who\ncame here from as* far as the\nequator and almost as far east\nas islands exist.\nCrossing up to 3,000 miles of\nocean, some 12,000 islanders have\ncome to New Zealand in the last\n(Pisces) \u2014 Helpful vibrations\nshould encourage you now. If feeling tops, make use of new opportunities and sound suggestions to\nadvance your interests.\nYOU BORN TODAY are of a\nsober but cheery disposition; you\nappreciate the finer things of life;\nusually have a noble philosophy.\nSoften a tendency to be short In\nspeech or tactless lest you be mistaken for an unfeeling person. You\nare innately bright, progressive.\nBe sure to apply.your versatile\ntalents and capabilities in the right\ndirection. Don't associate with\nthose of little purpose. You can\nattain success in any field you\nparticularly like, if you fit yourself and keep well. Birthdate: A.\nL. Lowell, American lawyer, educator.\nKing Features\n12 years. Some have come to\nlive for varying periods, and others, 7,000 of them, have settled\nhefe to become permanent residents.\nFrom the Cook Islands, western Samoa and Fiji, they come\nin numbers which increase every\nyear, and cultural relations are\nspreading with a multitude of\nsmaller branches of the Polynesian race in Tonga and Tahiti, the\nislets of Ocean, Norfolk and Pit-\ncairn, and even territories outside the normal orbit of New\nZealand relations such as New\nCaledonia and the Solomon Islands.\nSome of those who come for a\nlimited period are students. They\nt,ake back to their native islands\nan increasing knowledge of Western learning and techniques.\nLONDON (Reuters) - Built In\nbreathing equipment to keep\ncrews of sunken submarines\nalive during rescue operations is\nbeing fitted in most British craft,\nthe Admiralty announced Tuesday night. The equipment had\nbeen successful in tests and was\nconsidered the best rescue\nmethod.\n\u00a3m*U'$\nSpecial Selected \/^\nG\nA FULLY MATURED\nQUALITY WHISKY\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board\nor by the Government of British Columbia.\nGIFT IDEAS\nNELSON ELECTRIC\nAre Sure To  Please\nGENERALS ELECTRIC\nELECTRIC RANGE\nToday's Most Advanced TV Receiver\n\u2022 Has  every engineering feature to give you perfect\ntone and life-like picture clarity in every area.\n\u2022 Has 25 tube performance.\n\u2022 Top front tuning.\n\u2022 Twin Hi Fi speakers.\n\u2022 Exclusive unitrol. :\u25a0\u25a0...'.\u25a0:\nReg. $339.00.\nSPECIAL\nCHRISTMAS PRICE\n$\n289\nE\n%\nM\n\u00abf\nm\nM\nr\nm\n!\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nWill  Install Any G.E.  Appliance\nin Your Home For Christmas\nGIFT   SUGGESTIONS   MADE   EASY \u25a0\nAT   NELSON   ELECTRIC\nSteam and Dry Iron\nPriced from  .' ...  l^oVp\nCOFFEE   MAKERS: d-l\/l QE\nPriced from  <pit.7._J Vacuum\nFRYING  PAN: * *1Q OK Cleaner\nComplete with lid. From q>lT.TJ\nLIQUID  BLENDERS: tAA OK Reg. $89.50\nPriced from ^44,Y0 ONLY\nHI-FI  COMBINATION RADIO and     (fcOQOOB \u00a370 00\nRECORD PLAYERS: Priced at  ?Z77.7J 4>\/O.QO\nMORE SUGGESTIONS  FOR YOUR GIFT LIST\n$49.95   m K3H IR0N: $17.95\n<fc*>.\/l OB      ii$    FOOD MIXER: Jt17 OB\n\u00abpZ*t.yj      ^     In colors. From ^l\/.Ya\nNELSON ELECTRIC CO. LTD.\nm\n '2&ts\nNelson Minister and Musician\nWife Celebrate Golden Wedding\nA former Nelson minister and\nhis wife, a well-known musician\nand choir leader, celebrated their\ngolden wedding anniversary December 3 at Victoria. The couple,\nwhose lives have* been dedicated\nto service to others, are Rev. and\nMrs. T. J. S. Ferguson, Mill Street.\nTheir' 50 years together have\ntaken them not only to points\nacross Canada, but also half way\naround the globe to their mission\nfield in Turkey, after their marriage at Banff, Alta. Their longest\nstay in any one spot has been in\nNelson, which they have called\nhome since 1931, when Mr. Ferguson was called to the pulpit of\nSt. Paul's United Church, and\nwhere Mrs, Ferguson was for a\ntime organist and founder of the\nSt. Paul's Boys' Choir which served the church for 25 years.\nROVING MINISTRY\nMr.   Ferguson's   ministry   also\nDULLUM'S\nLADIES' WEAR\nInvite you to drop in and\ninspect our beautiful selections of\nChristmas\nGifts\nFOR MILADY\nYou will find our clerks\nmost courteous and helpful in selecting a gift that\nwill please any \"angel\" on\nyour gift list.\ntook him to North Bay, Lanark\nand Kingston in Ontario, before he\nbrought his family west to Vernon.\nWhile in Vernon he assisted in the\nunion of the Methodist and Presbyterian Churches there. His retirement in 1938 did not lessen his\ninterest in church matters and for\n10 years he had a travelling commission when he took services in\nsmall outlying churches throughout\nWest Kootenay. He often preached\nin three different churches on a\nSunday and in others during the\nweek. He counts these ten years\nas one of the most fruitful periods\nof his life. During this time Mrs.\nFerguson continued as organist and\nchoir leader in St. Paul's United\nChurch until its amalgamation\nwith Trinity United.\nTAUGHT ARMENIANS\nMr. and Mrs. Ferguson were\nboth recent graduates of Queen's\nUniversity when they first met.\nAfter their marriage, they lived\na year on the prairies at Didsbury,\nAlta., before taking a missionary\npost in Turkey. Here both taught\nin a junior college for boys and\ndeveloped an admiration for the\nArmenian people who suffered a\ngreat deal of persecution under the\nTurks. They can recall some anxious nishts with their adopted\npeople when Turkish raids seemed\nimminent. After two years there\nand with Mrs. Ferguson in poor\nhealth, they returned to Canada\nsettling for eight years in North\n3ay, Ont.\nMr. Ferguson comes of a farming family and it was this back\nground that gave him his love of\nnature and the outdoors from\nwhich he drew many of his sermons. Mrs. Ferguson was a minister's daughter and a good deal\nof her life was spent in a church\nmanse.\nTheir anniversary was observed\nat the Victoria home of their son-\nin-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.\nR. Poisson and their children.\nFrom here they went to Vancouver\nwhere they visited their son and\ndaughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. D.\nC. Ferguson. Another son and\ndaughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Ferguson, reside in Nelson.\nIn latter years Mr. Ferguson\nspends a good deal of the growing\nseason at his camp, Nickawa, about\neight miles up the lake where he\ncultivates a -sizeable garden, despite his 87 years. Mrs. Ferguson\nkeeps busy with private music\npupils and her studio boys' choir.\nWESTERN CANADA'S\nFAVORITE EVAPORATED MILK\n^!\u00ab\u00ab!eis<\u00abi\u00abM.i<i\u20act\u00ab!\u00abiei\u00ab\u00ab[i\u00abi\u00abtsic!\u00abssteisie!e!\u00ab'\u20ac'iiG's!gis w-fwieiswistsw,:\n!      ****\u2022.       '\u25a0 ,      . *\nTJtUadi\/X. fashions\n\u25a0 t '\nChristmas Gift Suggestions\nSKI JACKETS .. SKI  PANTS\n'    Nice for curling too.\nPurses at $6.95\nSCARVES,   HEADSQUARES,  STOLES,\nWOOL GLOVES.\nHOUSECOATS for all tastes and sizes.\nWe Have Lovely\nPARTY DRESSES\nCrinolines and Maternity Wear\n\"THE STORE OF COURTEOUS SERVICE\"\nRecipes. .:\nBanana Pie,\nCake and Toddy\nNew For Holiday\nBy ALICE DENHOFF\nInstead of serving Hie usual\nmince or pumpkin-pie at the holiday feast, this year try something\nnew.\nFor example, Banana Butterscotch Pie. To make it. use a 9-\ninch baked pie shell. The filling\nmay be made with either light or\ndark brown sugar.\nCombine 3,i cup firmly packed\nbrown sugar, 5 tablespoons flour\nand V4 teaspoon salt in top of\ndouble boiler. Add slowly 2 cups\nmilk, mixing thoroughly. Cook\nover rapidly boiling water until\nwell thickened, stirring constantly.\nCook 10 minutes longer, stirring\noccasionally.\nStir small, amount of hot mixture into 2 slightly beaten egg\nyolks, then pour back into remain\ning hot mixture while beating\nvigorously. Cook 1 minute longer.\nRemove from heat and add 2\ntablespoons butter and lh teaspoon\nvanilla. Cool.\nPeel and slice 3 ripe bananas\n(yellow peel flecked with brown)\ninto pie shell and cover immediately with filling.\nNote: Be sure the filling is well\nthickened before beginning to\ncount the 10-minute cooking time\nFOR PARTY OR BUFFET\nBanana Chiffon Cake is excellent\nfor a party or a buffet since the\nrecipe allows for 15 to 20 servings\n(makes a 10-inch tube cake).\nSift together 2.4 cups sifted cake\nflour, Vk cups sugar, 3 teaspoons\ndouble-acting baking powder, and\nteaspoon salt into mixing bowl.\nMake a \"well\" in dry ingredients and add Vz cup cooking or\nsalad oil, 5 unbeaten egg yolks\n(medium size eggs), 1 cup mashed,\nripe bananas (2 to 3 bananas), and\ntablespoon lemon juice. Be sure to\nadd in the order given. Beat until\nsmooth.\nAdd % teaspoon cream of tartar\nto 1 cup egg whites (7 or 8 eggs).\nBeat egg whites in very large mixing bowl until they stand in very\nstiff peaks. Do not underbeat.\nGently \u25a0 fold in banana mixture\nuntil just blended. Do not stir.\nPour into ungreased 10-inch tube\npan, 4 inches deep.\nBake in a moderate oven (325\nPHONE 1844\nJames Dawson, well-known in\nNelson, is ill in the Shaughnessy\nHospital in Vancouver. Mrs. Daw\nson left for Vancouver last week\nand expects to return early in the\nnew year.\n*  *  *\nAfter a couple of weeks spent\nat the Coast, Mrs. Charles Kelman\nof the Terrace Apartments has returned to Nelson.\n. \u2022  *  *     \"   -\nMrs. G. V. Putnam of Inchelium,\nWashington, who spoke to the Kootenay Museum Association Tuesday\nevening on historical personalities\nand events relating to the Pacific\nNorthwest, left on Wednesday for\nTrail.\n*  \u2666  *\nMeeting at the home of Mrs. C.\nM. Robinson,. 806 Sixth Street,\nmembers of the Northview group\nof the Fairview United Church exchanged \"mystery gifts\" following\nserving of refreshments. Business\nwas dealt with at the opening of\nthe meeting. Three visitors to the\nmeeting were welcomed. Co-hostess\nwas Mrs. R. Waldie, 820 CottoV\nwood Street.\nEngagements\n\u25a0 Mr. and Mrs. John B. Reed announce the engagement of their\nyoungest daughter, Patricia Ann,\nto Charles Graham Murphy, son\nof Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Murphy, all\nof Calgary. The marriage will take\nplace Saturday, December 28th, at\n2 p.m. in St. Mary's Cathedral.\nQUEEN MOTHER Elizabeth\nwill spend a day In Vancouver\nnext month. An official announcement has said the Queen Mother\nwill stop over in Vancouver January 26 on her way to an official\nvisit to Australia and New Zealand. She will make the trip in a\nBritish Overseas .Airways Corporation plane.\n%i\u00a3dt\u00a3CMgL\nTRADITIONAL QUILT\nDouble Snowball, a favorite that\ndates back to colonial days. Just\ntwo materials used.\nIt takes only 3 patches to make\nthis quilt. With curved edges slashed, piecing is easy. Pattern 528:\npattern of patches, directions,\nchart, yardages.\nSend THIRTY-FIVE CENTS In\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern to Laura Wheeler,\nNDN. 60 Front St., W., Toronto\nOnt. Print plainly PATTERN\nNUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS.\nOur gift to you\u2014two wonderful\npattrens for yourself, your home\n\u2014 printed in our Laura Wheeler\nNeedlecraft Book, plus dozens of\nother new designs to order -\ncrochet, knitting, embroidery, iron\nons, novelties. Send 25 cents for\nyour copy of this book NOW -\nwith gift pattern printed in Itl\ndegrees) about 65 minutes or until\ndone.,\nImmediately turn pan upside\ndown, placing tube part over neck\nof funnel or bottle. Let stand until\ncold.\nLoosen cake from sides and tube\nof pan with a spatula. Turn pan\nover and hit edge sharply on table\nto loosen.\nDELICIOUS TODDY\nHere is a delicious toddy to serve\nnow and through the holidays. In\na saucepan, combine 2 cups orange\njuice, 1 cup cranberry juice cocktail, Vi cup sugar, teaspoon whole\ncloves, 2 sticks cinnamon and teaspoon grated orange rind.\nPlace over low heat, bring to\nboiling point. Simmer 5 minutes\nthen strain.\nPour into heated bo^l or pitcher\nand float orange slices on top. It\ndesired, tablespoon red cinnamon\ncandies may be used for color. In\nthat case, omit cinnamon.\nYmir Notes\nYMIR \u2014 J. Dunn has returned\nfrom Vancouver. He accompanied\nM. Gallie on a business trip.\nMr. and Mrs. A. Gillis have had\nseveral guests in the. past week\nincluding Mrs. Gillis' sister and her\nhusband, Mr. and Mrs. A. Cas-\nsarini, and another brother-in-law\nand sister, Mr. and Mrs. C. Storm\nwho ,had as travelling companions\nMr. and Mrs. Fred Nash, all of\nNatal. Mrs. Gillis' son, Bob Travis,\nspent two. days with his mother\nbefore leaving for Australia and a\nEuropean tour.\nM. Martin has returned from a\ntwo-week trip to Regina where he\nvisited his parents and relatives,\nMrs. Edith Gowing is home after\nan extended visit to Grand Prairie\nAlberta.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, DEC. 12, 1957 \u2014 3\nUnited Church Groups\nName Federation Slate\nThe Women's Federation of St,\nPaul's-Trinity United Church held\nthe final meeting of the year In\nthe church hall this week.\nThe Jubilee group was in charge\nof the devotional and the Alma\ngroup served refreshments. The\nvarious groups and committees\nreported their activities during the\npast year and a new slate of\nofficers was elected as follows:\nPast president, Mrs. M. L. Craig;\npresident, Mrs. W. L. Clark; first\nMcudan. TJtaAim.\nPrinted Pattern\nLaFrance Notes\nLA FRANCE \u2014 A social evening\nwas held in the La France Community Hall. Crokinole, darts and\ndancing were enjoyed. Mr. and\nMrs. W. Kocher gave instruction\nin square dancing.\nThe La France School children\nare joining with the Boswell children to put on a play at the\nChristmas party in the Boswell\nHall. This play is being looked\nafter by Mrs. W. Thompson.\nNew Denver\nNEW DENVER - Quintin A.\nBroadfoot, who was visiting his\nbrother-in-law and sister, Mr. and\nMrs. James Forsythe, and his\nnephew, Quintin A. Forsythe and\nfamily, left to visit his niece, Mrs.\nC. Stewart in Spokane and other\nrelatives before returning to his\nhome in Silverton, Man.\nCANADIAN HONORED\nROME (AP)\u2014Therese Dupuy,\nwife of the Canadian ambassador\nto Rome, Tuesday night was\nmade' an honorary member ot\nthe select Italian society group,\nThe Association of the Romans.\nShe is the first foreigner given\nthis honor by the association, a\nprivate cultural group of Roman\nfamilies seeking to preserve tra-\nUtions of the Italian capital, Mrs.\nDupuy was honored for her charitable work in Rome.\n';\u25a0\u25a0    iiisuri loviuis\nFor Fashionable Hotless-mgl\nOhhh, so so(t...and\nso sophisticated In rich,\nsupple capeskin that's\nmolded Into flowing lines...\nwith a smart fold at the vamp.\n$3.95 to $5.93\nOne of Many Styles to Choose From at\nANDREW'S\nLEADERS IN FOOTFASHION\nEstablished 1902\nSWEET DREAMS\nSweet for sleep \u2014 our Printed\nPattern makes a complete \u00a7lum-\nber wardrobe \u2014 easiest. sewing.\nNightie comes in 3 lengths (with\nbloomers for shortie style), 2 neckline?, 2 sleeve versions.\nPrinted Pattern 9127: Misses'\nSizes 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20. Size 16\ndress-length gown, 414 yards 35-\ninch Embroidery transfer.\nPrinted directions on each pattern part. Easier, accurate.\nSend FORTY CENTS (40c) In\ncoins (stamps, cannot be accepted) for this pattern. Please\nprint plainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE NUMBER.\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN, N.D.N., 60 Front St., W.\nToronto, Ont.\nvice-president, Mrs. L. G. Catley;\nsecond vice-president, Mrs. J. H,\nNiehaus; third vice-president, Mrs.\nR. S. Olson; recording secretary;\nMrs. J. E. Ludlow; corresponding\nsecretary, Mrs. C. M. Coventry,\nand treasurer, Mrs. A. T. Richards. Missionary treasurer is Mrs.\nJ. A. Wilson.\nCEYLONESE PEAK\nLoftiest mountain in Ceylon,\nPiduru Talagala, reaches more\nthan 8000 feet,\nmwwmwuiwmnnniwwiHii\nDOLL CARRIAGES\nFOLDING\nBLACKBOARDS\nKINDERGARTEN\nSETS\nat\nJjumnanjL\nWINTER SLEEP\nThe pulse rate of a hiberifeting\nwoodchuck drops to four or five\nbeats a minute, compared with an\naverage 80.\nJayl&iL...\nA Complete Line of\nGIFT ITEMS\nof good quality ot lowest prices.\nTABLECLOTH SETS .. .PILLOW SETS\nTOWEL SETS . . . BRIDGE SETS\nRUNNERS AND VANITY SETS\nJaylcfiL (Dhif IJoodL\nPhone 1485\n624 Baker St.\nCONFIDENTIALLY YOURS\n~\"\"v, \u2014by Byrne Hope Sanders\nMONTREAL, Dec. 12th \u2014 Time's running out\n... only ten more shopping days 'til Christmas!\nAnd here's a hint for the last-piinute shopper.\nThere are some real time-savers for you at the\nBANK OF MONTREAL. Here you ean get gay\nChr&mas Cheques and Money Orders. Especially \"packaged\" for the occasion, they\nmake both pleasing and practical gifts. And,\nfor the youngsters, I can think of nothing better to give than a\nSavings Passbook \u2014 especially designed to appeal to children of\nafl ages \u2014 with a nice balance inside. It's a sure delight In its\nholly-decked Yuletide cover. Why not visit your B of M branch\ntoday? See if you don't shorten your gift-list in a hurry.\nONE SECRET OF A GAY, LIGHT-HEARTED Christmas Season\nis to have scrumptious food ready to serve\nfamily or friends at any hour of the day\nor night. Like the superb LIPTON ONION\nSOUP \u2014 ready as soon as anyone says\n\"I'm hungry!\" Add boiling water to af!\npackage \u2014 boil for a few moments and\nyou have a really exciting soup. Top it\nwith squares of toast and grated cheese;\nuse it in your sauces, gravies and stews\nfor richer flavor. And ol course be ready\nto serve the famed California Dip \u2014 by\nmixing 1 pt. sour cream and 1 package\nLIPTON ONION SOUP.    Serve with biscuits - and you'll win\napplause 1\nMANY A WISE\nenjoy ltl\nWORD ... HAS BEEN SPOKEN about the\nimportance of eating a good breakfast to start\nthe day well. Most doctors recommend a hot\ncereal and my first choice is RED RIVER\nCEREAL I Just serve lt to your family \u2014 and\nsee how delicately flavored it is with its expert\nblending of cracked. wheat, rye and flax. Quick\nto cook \u2014 ihexpensive too, as it costs only about\n2 cents a serving. If your men-folk do heavy\nWork, RED RIVER CEREAL will help provide\nenergy needs. It's good for sedentary workers\nand older folk too, as it guards regularity. And\nfor youngsters? \u2014 It's a delight to watch them\n\u00bb-j We have Lovelies for every \"Christmas Eve\" on your lis*,\n*r and we \"present\" them here for your selection I\n*\n.HEAVENLY GIFT SWEATERS\n* Angelically-soft   to   touch   and   wear   in\ntailored, bejewelled and  utterly feminine\njd sweater styles in a galaxy of colors.\nLOVELY\nCHRISTMAS\nTOPPINGS\nTailored,   lacy,   and   couturier-\ntouched Blouses she'll love . . .\n'i':'      !Y; ';      i  '<\" ' see them all!\n*\n0 SKIRTS\nMr Luxuriously soft fabrics,\n^ rich colors. Fine detail,in\n\u2022^ many skirt styles.\nSKI-WEAR\nParkas, ski slacks, jackets\nand sweaters.\nCARCOATS\nTwo   for  the\nopen road!\nOur warm wool or orlon\nfleece carcoats will delight any angel on your\ngift list.\n(bfULL  LADIES APPAREL\n\"THE FASHION CENTRE\"\nNELSON, B.C.\n\u2022fl  PHONE 775\nM\n 6 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, DEC. 12, 1957\nGas Sell-Out Questioned\nOTTAWA (CP)--CCF members\nexpressed concern Tuesday in\nthe Commons over the possibility that Canadian natural gas will\nbe sold to United States consumers for less than Canadians pay.\nThe matter arose during debate on a non-confidence motion\nby CCF Leader Coldwell, calling\nfor public ownership of the Alberta - Montreal gas pipeline,\nwhich was later defeated 172 to\n22.\nAfex Macdonald (CCF \u2014 Vancouver Kingsway)'said the West-\ncoast Transmission Company is\nseeling gas to American distributors in the northwestern U.S. at\n22 cents per 1,000 cubic feet and\nto British Columbia distributors\nat 32 cents.\nThis was a \"sell-out\" of Canadian industry. U.S. industry was\nusing cheaper, gas from Canada\nto compete with Canadian industry.\nMr. Coldwell said there is a\npossibility. that. the same thing\nwill happen if Trans-Canada Pipe\nLines Limited begins exporting\nAltierta gas to the U.S.\nHe quoted reports in the United\nStates that an application by\nMidwestern Gas, Transmission\nCompany to import Canadian gas\ninto the U.S. showed it had contracted to pay an average of\n26.76 cents per 1|000 cubic feet\nfrom Trans-Canada! over the next\n25 years. \u2022' ' \u2022   .\nAt the. same time, the Winnipeg and Central Gas Company,\ncloser to the source of the gas,\nwould be required to pay 35.68\ncents- per 1,000 cubic feet for tbe\nsame fuel over the same period.\nNo Basis For Depression\nFear Says Bank President\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014There is no\nbasis for the fear of a major depression at this time, A. C. Ashforth, president of the Toronto-\nDominion Bank, said Wednesday at\nthe bank's annual meeting.\n\"The evidence suggests that at\nthe worst we are faced with a\nbrief period of consolidation\nwhen some of the distortions, resulting from inflationary attitudes (o costs and prices, will be\neliminated,\" he said.\n\"Once we have' achieved that,\nthe economy should again expand\non a sound and healthy basis,\nthough perhaps not at the spectacular rate of the last few\nyears.\"\nMr. Ashforth's comments were\n' contained in a text made avail-\nfor Lasting-Joy... Lucfc^ge!\n\"Samson ite\"\nfortheLadiesI\nWardrobes\n33.00\nLarge size, roomy cose\nkeeps garments wrinkle\nfree. Attractive colours.\nOvernights\n25.00\nJust the thing for week\nend trips. Smartly\nstyled,  sturdy cover.\nTrain Cases\n22.50\nThese are so hondy for\ncosmetics and night\nwear when travelling.\nforMenl\nTwo Suiters\n33.00\nMen's favourite. Keeps\nwrinkles out of suits\nand jackets. Very\nroomy.\nSANTA WILL BE IN TOYLAND\nYes, Santa will be back to see all his\nlittle friends\nTODAY, THURS. AFTERNOON,\n2:00 to 3:30, and again on FRI.,\n2:00 to 3:30\nHe Will Have a Gift of Candy and\nBalloons for Each Child\nFEATURE VALUE!!\nMEN'S DRESS SHIRTS\nReg. 4.95 and up men's dress shirts in plain colors or plain\nwhite. Arrow, B.V.D. and Brill in sizes W\/t to 17Vi\t\n3\n69\nFEATURE VALUE!!\nfAen's Long-Sleeve V-Neck Pullovers\nHeg. 7.95 and 8.95 Grand'mere and Toni'Day long sleeve\nV-neck pullovers in a wide variety of plain shades. Orion\nor wool and orlon in sizes 36 to 44\t\n5\n.99\nINCORPORATED   SfT MAV !070i\nable to the press in advance of\ndelivery.\nSOME EXPORTS DECLINE\nThe capital investment. program in 1958 will be about the\nsame as this year, Mr. Ashlorth\nsaid. Many large projects such as\nthe St. Lawrence Seaway and the\nTrans-Canada natural gas pipe\nline were still unfinished and subsidiary projects were likely to\ndevelop.   '\nSome export industries have\nbeen adversely affected by declining prices and decrease in\n'demand but the flow of capital\ninto development of industrial\nraw materials now was. paying\ndividends. In the current year\nthere had been a sharp drop in\nwheat and flour exports and a\nsignificant reduction in some\nother items but these . declines\nhad been offset by increases in\nother exports.\nMr. Ashforth suggested serious\nstudy towards finding a solution\nfor exporters' long-term credit\nproblems. One-solution might be\nto . make rediscount facilities\navailable to the chartered banks\nin respect to long-term export\ncredits, or have the government\nor Bank of Canada do the necessary financing.\nCanada could be adversely affected by any drop in business\nactivity in the United States, but\nthis did not appear to be in\nprospect., .\nINFLATION  PROBLEM\nMr. Ashforth described inflation as one of the most difficult\nand serious problems facing Canada.\nThis year's gross national product thought probably setting a\n.record in dollars, would show\nlittle change in per-capita output.\n\"In other words, we have been\npaying ourselves more for doing\nless. This adds up to higher\nprices.\"\nIf it developed that expansion\nin bank credit seemed desirable,\nthen such measures of restraint\nas the \"15-per-cent: liquidity reserve for chartered banks should\nbe reduced.\nThe increase from eisht to 15\nper cent, instituted, at Ihe end of\n1955, was an emergency measure\nand. must not be regarded as a\npermanent feature of the banking structure, Mr. Ashford said.\nAnother measure which should\nnot be ' regarded as permanent\nwas the practice of the Bank of\nCanada of establishing its rediscount rate at one-quarter of one\nper cent above the weekly rate\non treasury bills.\nThis meant that the rediscount\nrate merely followed the market.\nThe action, when taken, was\nprobably apppropriate, but, said\nMr. Ashforth, \"there will be\ntimes when we will expect the\nBank of Canada to give leadership and the redixcount rate is\none means of determining the direction of monetary policy.\"\nFor Foot Family\nLONDON (AP) - In Britain,\nwhere family devotion to public\nservice is an ancient tradition,\nthe Foots are becoming unique.\nRarely have three brothers\nbeen so prominent at the: same\ntime in British affairs.\nDingle Foot\u2014he of the musical\nChristian name\u2014is the most recent of the Foots to make headlines. At 52, with a long record\nof public service, he won a House\nof Commons seat in a byelection.\nSir Hugh Foot, 50, has become\ngovernor of Cyprus. \u25a0        *\nMichael, 44, is a former member of Parliament and determined to get there again.\nIsaac Foot, father of the clan,\nwas for many years a leading\nfigure in the Liberal party. He\nserved as secretary of mines,\nmember of Parliament and lord\nmayor of Plymouth. At 77. he is\nstill a leader in religious activities and a writer.\nSWITCHED PARTIES\nThe family gave stout support\nto the Liberal party for many\nyears. With its decline Michael,\nand then Dingle, set their own\ncourses.\nDingle managed a successful\nswitch from the Liberal to the\nLabor party. He decided the Liberals were an ineffective party.\nUnder the Labor banner he received 26,900 voles to- 18,160 for I\nhis Conservative party opponent\nin the Ipswich byelection, a resounding triumph.\nDingle served in Parliament as\na Liberal from 1931 to 1945.\nColonial administration is the\nmain interest of Sir Hugh. He\nwas governor of \u25a0 Jamaica six\nyears. To Cyprus he brings a\ncivilian rather than a military\ntouch. .\nMichael Foot, a Labor member\nof Parliament for 10 years, has\nmade vigorous use of the platform, radio , ahd journalism to\ncarry on the Foot tradition.,\nHe edits The Tribune, reflecting the left wing of the Labor\nparty. He has been assistant editor of Lord Beaverbronk's Evening Standard and is a political\ncolumnist of The D'-'ilv He'-ald\nHis voice carries weight in Labor\nparty councils,\nCalls Coexistence Sterile, Negative Concept\nPearson Makes Strong Appeal To East,\nWest, For Serious Exchange of Views\nOSLO (CP)\u2014Lester B. Pearson\nWednesday pleaded for complete\nexchange of views between East\nand West, especially between\nMoscow and Washington.\nThe former Canadian external\naffairs minister, who Tuesday received the Nobel peace prize\nhere, said:\n\"Our policy and diplomacy\u2014as\nthe two sides in the cold war\nface each other\u2014are becoming\nas rigid and defensive as the\ntrench warfare of 40 years ago,\nwhen two sides dug in, dug\ndeeper, and lived in their\nditches. ...\n\"It is essential that we avoid\nthis kind of dangerous stalemate\nin international policy today.\nThe main responsibility for this\npurpose rests with the two great\nworld powers, the United States\nand the U.S.S.R.\n\"No progress will be made if\none side merely shouts 'coexistence'\u2014a sterile and negative concept\u2014and 'parleys at the summit,' while the other replies 'no\nappeasement,' and 'no negotiations without proof of good\nfaith'. . . .\n\"We must keep on trying to\nsolve problems, one by one, stage\nby stage, if not on the basis of\nconfidence  and  co-operation,   at\nFulton |eeks\nPlans For *\nHumane Killing\nOTTAWA (CP)-Justice Minister Davie Fulton said Tuesday he\nexpects to make specific recommendations to the cabinet shortly\nto ensure humane slaughter of\nfarm animals.\nHe said in the Commons any\ndelay in action cannot be blamed\non the government.\nMr. Fulton said that when the\ngovernment took office June - 21\na committee was being set up in\nOntario to find a workable plan\nof humane slaughter in packing\nhouses.\nThe federal government gave\nexpert assistance to the committee, made up of meat packers\nand representatives of the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty\nlo Animals.\nSome three weeks ago, he said,\nthe committee decided it could\nnot continue its work and left\nthe matter with the federal government.\n\"Since (then) we have been\nworking on the matter consistently and vigorously and I hope\nshortly to be able to recommend\ncertain action to my (cabinet)\ncolleagues,\" Mr. Fulton said.\nHe also told James Sinclair (L\n\u2014Coast Capilano) he thinks there\nis a measure of divided federal\nand provincial responsibility in\nthe matter.\n\"But it is not incapable of solution,\" he added.\nJordan Bars\nleast on that of mutual toleration\nand self-interest.   '\n\"What I plead for is no spectacular meeting of a Big Two or\na Big Three or a Big Four summit, where the footing is precarious and the winds blow hard,\nbut for frank, serious and complete exchanges of views\u2014especially between Moscow and\nWashington \u2014 through diplomatic and political channels.\"\nCO-OPERATION  VITAL\nEssential to the success of any\nsuch exchanges was recognition\nby the West that there were certain issues, such as reunification\nof Qermany and stabilization of\nthe Middle East, which were not\nlikely to be settled satisfactorily\nwithout Russian  participation.\nIt was also essential that Russia recognize the right of people\nto choose their own form of government without interference\nfrom outside' forces or subversive domestic forces encouraged\nand assisted from outside.\nMr. Pearson said he well\nknows such a diplomatic approach would involve \"baffling\ncomplexities, difficulties and\neven risks.\"\nBut \"the first failure would be\nto refuse to make the attempt.\"\nIt would be folly to expect qu'ck,\neasy or total solutions but it\nwould be even greater folly to\ndo nothing, \"to sit back, answer\nmissile with missile, insult with\ninsult, ban with ban.\"\nFOUR \"PEACE ROADS\nMr. Pearson entitled his Nobel\npeace prize lecture The Four\nFaces of Peace. The four aspects\nwere'\"peace and trade;\" \"peace\nand power;\" \"peace and policy,\nor diplomacy\"; and \"peace and\npeople.\"\nThe 60-year-old diplomat said\na great gulf has been opened between man's material advance\nand his social and moral progress\u2014\"a gulf in which he may\none day be lost if it is not closed\nor  narrowed.\"\nPeace, he said, \"must surely\nbe more than this trembling rejection of universal suicide.\"\nHe suggested freer communication between the poles of Fast\nand West and that the nations\ntrade as freely as possibb together.\nRUSS WANT PEACE\n\"I be'-ieve myself that the Russian people wish for peace. I believe also that many of them\nthink that Americans are threatening them with war; that they\nare in danger of attack. So might\nI, if I had as little chance to get\nobjective and balanced information about what is going on in\nthe United States.\n\"Similarly, our Western fears\nof the Soviet Union have been\npartly based on a lack of understanding or of information about\nthe people of that country.\n\"Misunderstanding of this kind\narising from ignorance breeds\nfear and fear remains the greatest enemy of peace.\"\nOn peace and trade, Mr. Pearson said: \"Men may not now go\nto war for trade, but lack of\ntrade may help to breed the conditions in which men do go to\nwar. ...\"\nBETTER LIFE FOR ALL\n\"The higher the common man\nsets his economic goals, in this\nage of mass democracy, the\nmore essential it is to political\nstability and peace that we trade\nas freely as possible together,\n, . , We cannot have one world\nat peace without a general socia]\nand economic progress in the\nsame, direction.\n\"We must have rising living\nstandards in which all nations\nare participating to such a degree that existing inequalities in\nthe-international division of\nwealth, are, at least, not increased.\n\"For substantial progress on\nthose lines we need the degree\nof efficiency that comes only\nwith the freest possible movement of commerce through the\nworld, binding people together,\nproviding the basis of international investment and expansion,\nand thereby, I hope, 'making for\npeace.\"\nMr. Pearson .renewed his plea\nfor a permanent United Nation!\npolice force. The UN Emergency\nForce in Egypt was \"at least *\nbeginning.\"  '\n. \"If, on that foundation, we do\nnot build something more permanent and stronger, we will once\nagain have ignored realities, rejected opportunities and betrayed\nour trust. Will we never learnf\n\". . . . The stark and inescapable fact is that today we cannot\ndefend our society by war sinca\ntotal war is tofa! destruction\nand if war is used as an instrument of policy, eventually w\u00ab\nwill have total war.\n\"Therefore, the best defence ol\npeace is not power, but the removal of the causes of war and\ninternational agreements which\nwill put peace on a stronger\nfoundation than the terror of destruction.\"\nBetter Sauces^  '\nIi!!!\n-- \u00abw.K...V, \u25a0\u201e> :,\u25a0\u25a0<*\u25a0* \u25a0\nirnallPf\n\u2022 Carnation's special blending qualities and double richness make possible 'smooth lump-free, rich-tasting\nsauces\u2014every time. No other form\nof milk will give such wonderful results. Try Carnation next time you\nmake cream saifce,; chocolate sauce,\ncheese sauce'or your other favorites.\nA_\nCarnation 1-2-3 Fudge Sauce\n{Makes 2% cups)\n2 eupisugar\n3 squares (3 ounoes)\nunsweotnnnd ohocolaU\n1 largtt can undiluted\nCARNATION EVAP\nORATED MILK\n\u2022 Combine in saucepaij. Bring to boil, stirring frequently. Cook for 15 minutes, stirring occasionally.\nRemove from heat; add? 1 teaspoon vanilla. Beat with\nrotary beater until smooth and blended. Serve hot\nor cold over ice cream, cake or pudding.\nFREE: Mary Blaka's booklet, \"Favorite Recipes\". Send for your copy\nto Mary Blake, Carnation Co. Limited,\nDept. NF, Vancouver.\nTor better results,\ncook with\nTHE MP THAT WHIPS!\nJERUSALEM- (AP) - Jordan\nhas informed Israel that it will\nagain bar the consular Christmas\nprocession from the traditional\nroad from southern Jerusalem to\nBethlehem, officials said here\nTuesday night. i\nThe five-mile road, passing the j\nsite of Rachel's Tomb, runs ex- J\nactly as the old Roman road did\nwhen Mary and Joseph travelled\nit.\nUnder present conditions it\ncannot be used for any regular\ntraffic between Jerusalem and\nBethlehem, as it is cut by barbed-\nwire marking the armistice border.\nNevertheless from 1948 till 1955\nit was opened for the traditional\nconsular procession. Last year\nthe Jordanians, objected. Consuls\nhad to use the Mandelbaum Gate\nfor a round-about passage.\nit's an III Wind\nFORT ST. JOHN, B.C. (CP)\u2014\nInterruptions of transportation\nalong the Alaska Highway have\nbenefitted some sections of the\nnorth's economy and are expected to boost retail trade here.\nThe temporary bridge which\nhelped substitute for the broken\nPeace River bridge at Taylor,\nB.C., is now out of use and there\nis no immediate prospect of its\nreplacement. Bad weather had\nput several interior roads out of\ncommission.\nThe result has been that 1,-\n000,000 more feet of lumber weqf\nsold here in the first 11 months\nof the year than last year \u2014\nmostly because fir and cedar imports have been unable to get\nthrough.\nMeat processine has become a\nlively industry. With the regular\nflow from the big packinehouses\nat Edmonton cut off butchers are\nexoloiting the surplus hogs and\ncattle north of the river.\nThere's nothing like\nROGERS'\nPure Sugar Cane Flavor!\nPERFECT FOR PANCAKES, WAFFLES, DESSERTS...\nNew Rogers' Golden Pancake Syrup\n\u2014pours so easily\u2014it's the perfect\ntopping! A good source of quick\nenergy plus that sunny, sugar cane\nflavor everybody loves.\nWONDERFUL FOR BAKING...\nFamous Rogers' Golden Syrup\nsweetens everything you bake, gives\nlighter, smoother texture to cakes,\ncookies, candy.\n zpri\nmiSOH DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, DEC. 12, 195> \u2014 7\nSECTION 7\nSECTION 8\nu::y^mm:-y^--^\\--:-m.:'\/..^-\nWsm\n\u25a0*##\u25a0\u00ab\nvi\\\nin every\nTBHH\niff\ni J      ..    ...\"\nIll\n,.\u2014*\u2022*\u2022*\nttia;\nlill\nWe Reserve tlie Right To Limit Quantities\nPrices Effective Today, Friday, Saturday\nOnly Butterball Turkeys\nby Swift Canadian Co.\nFor the Finest Turkey that you\nhave ever tasted.\nORDER YOUR HOLIDAY TURKEY  NOW\n*\u00ab\n^H\n* Ready fo Eat Hams\n* COTTAGE ROLLS\nAll brands.\nWhole, half,\nor quartered.\nTender, smoked.\nNuts In Shell\nBRAZILS: ACA\n16 oz. bag    *t>Jr\niSSS  49*\nKNS...\u201e.\u201e \u201e.49<\n32 oz. bag  '.  69*\nALMONDS: Ar*\n16 oz, bag  ' *Tjr\nMIXED  NUTS:\nlb. toe\nCranberry Sauce Sfstt 22(\nChocolates SSW^ _ 75c\nMincemeat \u00bb'\u00a3%\t\nPlum Puddings J?\npringhill Old English,\noz. tin \t\nPARTY SUGGESTIONS\nMalkin'i\n99c\n49c\nGrand Forks\nPOTATOES\nNo.  1   Netted Gems\nJO   lb.   bag   49*\nMcintosh\nApples\nFancy Okanagan\n2 Ibs. 29*\nTOMATO JUl\nGRAPEFRUIT JUICE j^wnViw*.*\nAPPLE   JUICE   Sun-Rype. 48 oz. tin        3   for\nFRU\/T   COCKTA\/L   Ayln,e, 15 o,    2   for\nSLICED PINEAPPLE m ^ 20\u00ab. \u00ab\u201e \u2014\nGRAPEFRUIT SEGMENTS uu*\u00bbiii**\nCUT GRFEN BEANS ^Wiefc is oz. tm ,_..\nGOLDfN   CORN   Malkin's Fancy. 15 oz. tin _\nFANCY   PEAS   Aylmer. Sieve 4. 15 oz. tin\t\nJL\/\/MA   BEANS   D^\"* Choice. 15 oz. tin\t\nSOCKEYE SAIA40N a^nge,. n \u00ab. tm __\nSARDINES   King Oscar, i \t\nSMALL SHRIMP n* 6\u00ab. * 39*\nCRABMEAT   Queen Charlotte. 6 oz. tin 65*\n3J*\n29*\n95*\n49i\n37i\n2J*\n6 ^ 99i\n6 for 89*\n4 for 55*\n2 for 35*\n 45t\nRITZ BISCUITS:\n16 oz. pkg \u2014\nSMOKED OYSTERS! Sea Hat*\n8 08. tin  -\nRIPE OLIVES; Libby'n\n15 oi. Un \u2014.\n8TUFFED OLIVES: Nabob*\n9 ot Jar  - --...\nCOFFEE fi5#\nMaxwell House, Drip or Reg.; M ob. bag   ** *F-\nJELLO 10     *]\nAssorted Flavora;\nfar\nFARM FRESH EGGS\nGrade A Large in carton.\nDozen \t\n49*\nMANDARIN\nORANGES\nb~ *1.69\nBundle of 2    *3.25\nCape Cod\nCranberries\n16 oz. carton\nSOLID CHICKEN >^:.*;4i\n29c\n B \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, DEC. 12,1957\nl!.K.r Apf!raliar Canada Apainsf\nbrier UN Steering Committee\nUNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (CP)\nThe United Nations' political committee Wednesday decided \u2014 over\nthe objections of Britain, Canada\nand Australia\u2014to ask the General Assembly to increase the\nmembership of its steering committee.\nThe move took the form of a\nresolution asking the assembly to\nelect 13 vice-presidents instead of\nseven. The president and vice-\npresidents of the' assembly auto-,\nmatically are members of the\nsteering committee, which guides-\nthe assembly's business.\nThe three Commonwealth countries opposed the measure on the\ngrounds there is not enough general agreement on what the committee's composition should be.\nThe resolution, sponsored by 13\nJobless Flock\nTo Si.\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 The 'Salvation Army, concerned about the\nunemployment situation, said . today its institution facilities are\ntaxed to the limit.\nMajor A. Brown of Toronto said\nhe understands the Edmonton\nbranch had to convert its recreation room into a dormitory to\naccommodate persons seeking\novernight shelter.\nThe Salvation Army in Vancouver was also looking for additional accommodation. Some persons in Vancouver were seen\nsleeping in boxcars.\nAfro-Asian countries, said by increasing the membership of the\nsteering committee and by having the vice-presidents elected on\nmittee would be more representative.\nFOUR AFRO-ASIANS\nIt called for the continued election of the five permanent members of. the Security . Council-\nBritain, France, the United\nStates, Russia and China \u2014 as\nvice-presidents plus four from\nthe \"AfrcFAsian' region-,-one -from\nEastern Europe and two each\nfrom Latin America and \"Western Europe and other countries.\"\nBy agreement, the area, electing the president would reduce its\nvice-presidency quota by one.\nR. A. MacKay, Canada's permanent delegate, said Canada believes that enlarging the committee would not add to its efficiency. Canada would not, however, oppose a smaller increase\nin membership.\nThe steering committee should\nbe a technical and procedural\nbody only, he said, and to increase its membership might\nmake it cumbersome.\nHe criticized the wording\n\"Western Er'uope and other\ncountries\" as being \"nebulous.\"\nIt put Canada in the category\nof \"other countries.\"\nIf geography were to be the\ncriterion for ensuring the representative character of the committee, then North America\nshould be a separate unit.\nThe resolution passed 48 to 17,\nwith 10 abstentions. Seven countries were absent.\nCalgary Clamps Bylaw\nOn Teenage Tattooing\nCALGARY (CP) - The tattoo\nfad among Calgary teen-agers apparently has been ended by preparation of a new city bylaw.'\nHowever, an estimated 20. high\nschool boys, most of them between 13 and. 15, are left with an\nassortment of tattooed; eagles,\nroses, dragons, hearts and daggers \u2014 or the ugly.brown.skin\nstains that remain after costly\nattempts to remove them.  .\nThe fad was discovered last\nweek after one alarmed, parent\nreported his son had arrivd\nhom with both arms tattooed\u2014\nfour tattoos, in all. .\nThe city children's aid department began its own investigation\nand turned up what superintendent Hiram Coulter described ..as'\na \"fairly widespread practice,\nwith at least a dozen and possibly more young lads disfigured\nby tattoos.\"\nMonday night, city council, after hearing Mr. Coulter's protest\nthat there was no legislation to\nprevent such a fad, gave first\nreading to a bylaw it hopes will\nstop the practice.\nMUST BE LICENSED\nThe bylaw provides that all\ntattoo artists must be licensed by\nthe city, and that no person under 18 can be tattooed without the\nwritten consent of his parents.\n. In the investigation by the children's aid department, there appeared to be no cases of girls\nbeing tattooed. .\nSome of the boys told Mr. Coulter they wanted to have the tattoos removed, but were told by\nthe artists that it would cost $10\na square inch for the removal.\nEven then, they said, they would\nbe left with a permanent brown\nscar\/.\nOne youth said his several' tattoos cost $12.50. Others-. indicated\nthe cost ranged from 25 cents to\n$8 a tattoo, depending oh the design. '  \u25a0 '.\nThere, was no indication that\nthe boys, involved were members\nof a teett-age gang. Officials said\nit was simply a case.of the youngsters not wanting to be outdone\nby their school companions.  ,\nMeanwhile, Dr. W. H. Hill, city,\nfrowns on tattooing of anyone\u2014\ntnedical health officer, said he\nage regardless\u2014because a great\ndeal depends on the .'sterility of\nthe artist's needle in impregnating of the skin with analine dye.\n; \"It's not like having sideburns\"\nDr. Hill warned the teen-agers^\ni \"Those you can shave off. You-\ncan't remove a tattoo.\"\nTeamsters' Union\nLoses Ground\n!n Okanagan\n'VANCOUVER (CP)\u2014The Teamsters' Union has lost another round\nin its attempt to represent fruit\nand vegetable workers in the Okanagan.  .-.-\u25a0',\nMr. Justice Manson has granted\na writ of prohibition against the\nLabor Relations Board restraining\nit from proceeding with the hearing\nof an application by the Teamsters'\nUnion, Local-48, to have the board\ndecide the fruit and vegetable\nworkers' union is no longer in existence.\nMr'.- Justice Manson said he found\n\" 'v-ird had acted without proper legal advice in proceeding with\nthe..hearings.   .-'. ;.,:\u25a0-.  .   \"..\nGood Food\nand Nabob\ngo\nTWjCWJUL $0A&JfL...\nSophia Loren Finds Film-Makers\nIn Britain Demand Rare Talent\nBy EDDY GILMORE\nLONDON (AP)-Sophia Loren\nexplained how she is making a\nmovie with her two big eyes instead of her other well-known\nphysical charms. '\n\"You know how it's been in the\npast,\" she smiled. \"Often all sex\nand exposed body. This time\nwe're doing it differently.\"   \u25a0\nSophia tightened a yellow bathrobe about her Neapolitan figure\nand strolled on to an arc-lit set.\n: A pair of men's socks flopped\nabout her trim ankles. On her\nslender feet were sleazy bedroom\nslippers. Beneath that bathrobe\nthere was nothing but Sophia.\nThe cameras turned. William\nHolden tip-toed up behind her,\nput his arms around her shoulders and planted a kiss beside her\nleft ear.\nTOO - STRONG\nThe woman in this 23-year-old\nItalian actress flared to thi\u00bb, surface. Her great green eyes caught\nfire. Her bosom heaved like the\nwater of the Bay of Naples on a\nstormy night.\n\"Cut,\" said director Sir Carol\nV.\nNothing complements good food like a really\nsatisfying cup of coffee. Nabob has the special\nflavor and quality that adds perfect enjoyment\nto every occasion. It's the favorite coffee\u2014\nby far\u2014in western Canada.\nSpeaker Gently\nRebukes PM\nOTTAWA. (CP) - Tempers\nbristled in the Commons again\nWednesday, resulting in a sharp\nexchange between Prime Minister,\nDiefenbaker and opposition\nspokesmen.\nThe incident ended with a\nminor rebuke for the prime minister from Speaker Roland Michener.\nJames Sinclair (I^Coast-Cap-\nilano) started things off when he\nasked whether the national film\nboard had recorded an historic\nevent\u2014the start of construction\nof the South Saskatchewan River\ndam.\nMr. Sinclair said Mr. Diefenbaker had promised during the\nelection campaign that construction would start in six months.\nTuesday was exactly six months\nfrom the June 10 election.\nMr. Diefenbaker said such frivolous Commons questions had\nused up 32 hours and 37 minutes\nof the present session.\nMr. Sinclair said he wanted to\nassert the right of the opposition\nto ask questions about the South\nSaskatchewan dam.. Such questions were not frivolous though\nit turned out that Mr. Diefenbaker's election promises \" had\nbeen.   -\nCALLED A LECTURE\nPaul Martin (L-Essex East)\nsaid it was not up to any member; including the prime minister,\nto lecture the Commons.\nMr. Diefenbaker said he was\nnot lecturing. He had simply\nbeen pointing out that, day after\nday, the opposition was \"cluttering up the record\" with nonsensical questions.\nThe prime minister said the\nCommons was spending ah hour\nnearly every day on the question\nperiod when it should take no\nmore than 20 minutes.\nStanley Knowles (CCF-Winni-\npeg North Centre) said the prime\nminister was reflecting on the\nSpeaker. It was up to the\nSpeaker to determine what questions were trivial. Mr. Diefenbaker was implying that the\nSpeaker had been negligent in\nhis duty.\nMr. Michener said the prime\nminister was entitled to comment\non the amount of time spent on\nquestions but not to raise the\nquestion of the propriety of questions raised previously in\nsession.\nReed. \"Not so strong, dahling.\nNothing like so strong. More with\nthe eyes, dahling.\"\nThey shot the scene again.\nThis time dahling didn't emote\nwith her curvy body. But there\nwas a searing flame in her green\neyes and a tiny trembling at the\ncorners of her full lips.\n\"Print it,\" interrupted Reed\ntriumphantly. \"That's it, dahling.\nThat's very, very good.\"\nBIGGEST CHALLENGE\nSophia slouched off the set,\neased herself into a chair,\nstretched out her long legs and\nasked:\n\"See what I mean?\"\nThis new picture,, Carl Foreman's The Key, is the greatest\nchallenge in Sophia Loren's long,\nlist of movies.\nSir Carol Reed is an exacting\ndirector. William Holden is a\npolished actor. And Sophia Loren\nhas been called on to cover' up\nher most obvious assets and act.\n.  It isn't easy.\nBIG MOMENT\nHer big moment came two\nhours later when she had to express, in one lingering scene,\npoignant grief for a dead lover\nplus a growing passion for a new\none.\n\"That would be tough for Sarah\nBernhardt,\" grumbled a bearded\nman on the set who looked old\nenough to remember the great\nactress of bygone years.\nBut Sophia tackled her task\nwith real tears.\nIt shouldn't have been difficult\n\u2014the tears. Just a flash back to\nthe days before her figure and\nstrangely beautiful face snatched\nher from a drab, unpromising\nand hard life in Italy.\nThe cameras whirled. She\nsobbed her lines. But not to the\ndirector's liking.\nAfter one hour and 44 minutes\nhe got what he wanted.\n\"Oh, momma mia,\" moaned\nSophia as she limped off the set.\nIt's so much harder\u2014just witl]\nyour eyes and your voice.\"\nSays Emigrants\nWarned Against\nCanada's Winter\nLONDON (CP) - Canadian\nimmigration authorities in London . said Wednesday that Britons\nplanning .to emigrate are given\n\"ample warning\" of winter employment conditions in Canada.\nThey were commenting on a\nletter from a Vancouver woman\nto The Daily Telegraph saying it\nis \"grossly misleading\" for immigration authorities in Britain\nto continue giving the impression\nthat immigrants will have no\ndifficulty in finding work.\nBrenda M. FilewoOd writes\nthat the \"tremendous influx\" of\nimmigrants last summer was far\nmore than Canada could absorb.\n\"All have arrived under the\nimpression that they are coming\nto a 'land of plenty.' They are\nsadly disillusioned within a few\ndays.\"\nGET WINTER WARNING\nGordon Cumming, head of the\nCanadian immigration service in\nthe United Kingdom, said his department always tries to discourage prospective emigrants from\narriving during the, winter\nmonths when seasonal unemployment is high.\nEmigrants received verbal\nwarnings during interviews and\na printed brochure warning of\nthe dangers of winter unemployment.\nCumming also said that the\ngovernment's assisted \u2022 passage\nscheme \\to promote immigration\nis curtailed in winter months.\n\"We grant assisted passage at\nthis time of year only to dependents of emigrants already established in Canada and to emigrants going out to assured jobs\"\nhe said.\nCAPITAL TERRITORY\nAustralia's capital territory of\nCanberra has a population of 34,-\n481, including 32,443 in the city of\nCanberra.\nFOUR OF FAMILY\nKILLED IN CRASH\nKETCHIKAN, Alaska (AP) -\nFour members of one family en\nroute to Ketchikan on a Christmas\nshopping trip and the pilot of their\nchartered, light plane were killed\nMonday when the craft plunged\ninto the water near Hollis, 45 mileg\nwest of here.\nKilled were Mr. and Mrs. Charles\nWilliams; their two small children,\nBruce and Terry Jo; and the pilot,\nDon Morgan, all of Hollis, a logging community on Prince of Wale\u00bb\nIsland.\nAn infant son was left at Hollii\nwhen Williams and the other members of the family left on the Ketchikan shopping trip.\nBonn, Ottawa\nSign Uranium\nPeace Contract\nOTTAWA (CP) _ Canada and\nWest Germany Wednesday signed a\n10-year agreement for co-operation\nin peaceful uses of atomic energy which will be used as i\nptttern for similar bilateral\npacts with other countries.\nUnder the agreement, West\nGermany will sign a contract\nwith Eldorado Mining and Refining Limited, crown agency\nwhich buys and sells Canadian\nuranium, for the purchase of 500\ntons of the radioactive material.\nExternal Affairs Minister Sidney Smith said the agreement,\nthe first signed with a country\nother than the United States and\nBritain, will come into force later\nthis month. Canada has other\nagreements with the U.S. and\nBritain covering co-operation In\nthe atomic field.\nMr. Smith said agreements of\nthe kind signed with Germany\n\"wil| come to play an important\nrole in the development of the\npeaceful uses of atomic energy\nwith consequent benefit to our\nfriends and ourselves and that\nsuoh agreements will provide an\nadditional market for Canadian\nuranium.\"\nthe\nTREES CONFISCATED\nSUMMERLAND, B.C. (CP) -\nFour men were found guilty Tuesday in police court of cutting and\ntransporting Christmas trees on\ncrown land.\nMagistrate Robert Alstead fined\nAndrew Torok $150 and costs, or\n60 days in jail. Lewis Torok, Steve\nCzigle and Michael Bohus were\nfined $25 and costs or 10 days in\njail on the charge.\n\u2022 The trees were confiscated by the\nB.C. Forest Service.\nBuy and Sell With Classified!\nWe Have a\nFINE SELECTION\n\"\";\" 'of   *\nIndividual Christmas Cards\nORDER NOW\nWhile Selection Is Complete\nPHONE 1844\nOr Call In To\nNelson Daily News\nCommercial Printing Department\n266 Baker St. Nelson, B.C.\n\u2022ftt*f?r# ?r| r!'r'T;\"''nT^^J^?S\nIt's easy to make delicious\nfestive treats with this rich,\nspicy mmcemfeat. Juiciest\napples, plump raisins,\ntart peel... matured\nand aged to perfection.\n NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, DEC. 12, 1957 -$P      |\nChristmas Baking Needs\n2 \u201e 63*\n53*\n59*1\nMargarine:\nRose. 1 lb. pkg\t\nFresh tggs:\nBreakfast Gem. Grade \"A\" Large. Doz.\nShelled Walnuts:\nFor baking. 16 oz. pkg \t\nFruit Cake Mix:\n-Woodland'*. 16 oz. pkg  \t\nCocoa nut:\nGlenview.>itae or medium. 8 ta. pkg. .\nFluffo Shortening:\n1 lb. pkg __...;.;, _._.__..\nBaking Chocolate:\nBakerV Premium. 8 oz. jikg. ..\nChocolate Chipits:\nVan Kirk's. \u00ab oz. pkg.\nVanilla Extract:\nEmpress. 4 oz. bottle\nCorn Oil:\nSt. Lawrence. 16 oz. tin .\n43* t\n18*.\n33* *\nGreen Peas\nTomato Juice\nMixed Pickles\nil\nGra\nTown House or Sugar Belle.\nFancy, Sieve 4s. 15 oz. tin\nTown House, fancy.\n48 oz. tin\nRom, sweet.\n24 oz. jar\nHunt's Choice.\n15 oz. tin\nTown House. Sv\nNatural. 48 oz.\nGINGER ALE\nSahara Dry. Lorge bottle\n2 f\u00ab 45c\n|i  DELECTO CHOCOLATES:\n: i Ganong's. 1 Ib. box\nfj   CHOCOLATES: Ganong's.\nBouquet, Starlet and Lucky. I Ib. box\n3 CHOCOLATE CHERRIES:\n\\ =: Dolly Maddison. 1 Ib. pkg\t\n\u00a3  PEPPERMINT PATTIES:\nLowney's. 7 oz. pkg \t\nCREAMS ond JELLIES:\nLb. pkg \t\n98*\n89<\n35(\n29*\n35c\n28c.\n\u00a7?  Carton of Six bottles\".  42*\n\/ICrf    \"' i CONCORD GRAPE JUICE: A*\\a\n\u2022 nrjr    '.- Tea Garden. 24 oz. bottle .\u201e.  **Z*\n2,bs69< ;l~\nChristmas\nCandy\n *1.69\n$1.49\n_98*\nChristmas Candy\ni *  Canada Dry. 30 oz. bottle .\n\"i   FRUIT CORDIALS:\ns \u00a3 Nutty Club. Assorted. 12 oz. bottle .\n5 ; TOM COLLINS MIX:\nj i Canada Dry. 30 oz. bottle\t\n; r MARASCHINO CHERRIES:\n\u25a0 ? Robinson's, Red or Sreen. 6 oz. pkg. .\nSEVEN-UP:\nNUTS IN SHELL\nBRAZILS:\nIn shell. 1 Ib. pkg.\nFILBERTS:\nB.C. grown. I Ib. pkg.\nWALNUTS:\n. Ih Shell. 1 Ib. pkg\t\nALMONDS:\nIn Shell. 1 lb. pkg.\n2 for 89*\n_     63*\n 39*\nLicorice Alberts\nFresh, Imported.\n2|bb\u00ab>'(69e\nPrice*   IffeeH,e  DEC.   12  K>   14*\n4.65*\n37*\nAV\n95*\n63*\nH Green Peas:\n1 > Bel-Air, fancy frozen. 12 oz. pkg.\nat Ail Smoked Oysters:\n. T'Jr >f Clover Leaf. 2% oz. tin\t\n:g Shrimps:\nSea Trader, small. VA oz. Hn\nLobster:\nSavoy, fancy. ! oz. tin\t\nCrabmeat Legs:\nThunderbird. fk oz. pkg\t\n* * A good assortment,\n1 Ib. pkg.\t\nCRANBERRY SAUCE\nOcean Spray. Whole\n?t Jellied. 15 oz. tin\n2 for49c\n2 Ibs. 69c\nHOLIDAY HAM\nSelect Brand. Whole, Half or Quartered\nib. 59'\nGuaranteed Fully Cooked\nBRUSSEL SPROUTS:\n\u00a3 Lb -\t\nSWEET   POTATOES:\nServe Candied\t\n\u201e   BANANAS:\n^ i   Golden ripe.\t\n\\ _  CELERY: '\n3   Crisp, green California. Lb.\nLEMONS:\nSunkist. Lb. \u2014^_,\t\n 21*\n2 ibs 37*\n2 ibs 43*\n 15*\n 17*\nJapanese Mandarin\nORANGES\nSweet... Juicy ... Easy To Peel.\nindie of $ *J   ^   C\n,o Boxes.....      J.JUJ\nCRANBERRIES\nib. 29<\n\u00a7T Order your Christmas Turkey now at Safeway. Every bird guaranteed to be\n11 fender and delicious in every respect. Only the finest Grade A quality offer-\n$   \u00abd for sale.\nTURKEYS\nOVEN READY GRADE A\nStanding Rib Roast\nBeef.\nGRADE\nLate Howes.\nFor delicious\nCranberry Sauco.\nA must with turkey,\nFrying STEAKS\nSirloin, T-Bone, Club.\nGRADE J^ RED LB. 'g. JL\nSIDE BACON\nThrifty, lean.\n\\Vi lb pkg. \/9c\nP^ RED LB. J VC\nGROUND BEEF\nLean.\nA23c\nGRADE\n< We Reserve the Right To limit Quantities\nSI^4^:S'1F.KWA1\n 10 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, DEC. 12, 1957\nTwo Mounties Cited\nFor Bravery At Quarry\nINVERMERE - Standing stiffly\nto attention in the office of Assistant Commissioner C. W. Haryison\nFire Damages\nCranbrook Home\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Fire, probably\noriginating in faulty wiring which\nsmouldered in shavings ceiling insulation, badly damaged the home\nof Mr. and Mrs. Frank Sissons on\nMaple Street in the Memorial\nCentre area outside city limits\nWednesday. Flames enveloped the\nroof soon affer midnight and the\ncity fire department worked with\nthe two booster pumps for two\nhours to subdue it. Clothing and\nsome furniture were lost but many\nof the contents were saved. Damage to the building was estimated\nat about 60 per cent.\nCLASS ADS GET RESULTS!\nat RCMP headquarters in Victoria\nrecently two members of the force\nreceived Royal Canadian Humane\nSociety certificates for bravery.\nConst. Hugh Dickson Bowyer and\nCpl.' Kenneth Marshall McHale,\nboth then of the Invermere detachment, qualified for the awards on\nNovember 29, 1955.\nStory of their bravery was told\nby Robert A. Pennington, deputy\nprovincial secretary, who made\ntha presentation.\nWith the help of two civilians,\nthe RCMP officers rescued Albert\nEdward Portman, superintendent\nof the Windermere quarry of Columbia Gypsum Co., Ltd.,. at\nWindermere, when he had been\nburied under several feet of frozen\ngypsum rock.\nFor 90 minutes during the rescue\nwork Const. Bowyer and Cpl.\nMcHale held back a wall of rock\nwhich threatened to engulf the\nwhole group.\nBoth officers were wearing just\ncotton shirts at the time, and\nConst. Bowyer contracted pneumonia as a result of the ordeal.\nIbrary Comisii^sldn-To Rfqmaln\nIn Quarters for Another Year\nCRANBROOK \u2014 East Kootenay\nBranch of the Public Library Commission will remain in its present\nquarters, the former provincial\npublic works office building on the\neast end of Baker Street, for\nanother year. This property is now\nowned by the city which plans to\ntransfer its city works department\nthere, following transfer of the\nprovincial highway equipment and\nshop- headquarters to a new location north of the city.    .\nThe city was faced with the\nalternative of removing its Cranbrook Public Library from the\nprovincial government office to\nmake way for the Commission\nbranch, or permitting the Commission Branch to remain in its\ncity owned quarters. Both locations are rent free.\nThe East Kootenay Branch of\nthe Commission was established by\nstaff librarian W., H. Overend' a\nyear ago, and maintains a stock\nof aprpoximately 4500 volumes.\nWith Cranbrook as its headquarters and book depot it circulates\nblocks of 300 books quarterly\namong the permanent libraries at\nCreston, Kimberley, Cranbrook,\nFernie, Golden and Field, and is\nnow supplying rural community\nlibrary service regularly with\nblocks of 150 volumes at Wynndel,\nKingsgate, Natal, Invermere, Edge-\nwater, Parson and Donald, and\nhas plans for establishment of\nother community libraries.'\nMr$. Giacomettti\nDies At Cranbrook\nCRANBROOK - Gerolimetto\nGiovianna Giacometti, wife of Silvio Glacometti, died suddenly at\nSt. Eugene Hospital Monday. She\nhad been taken ill at her Cobham\nStreet home a few days earlier.\nShe was 27 years old and was born\nin Italy. ,She came here two years\nago from Floriana, Trevipo, Italy\nto join her husband who is engaged\nin logging work at Lamb Creek\nnear here. Also surviving her Is\nan infant daughter, Ada.\nLONDON (.Reuters)\u2014Scholarships for study in the Soviet\nUnion will be offered next year\nby Russia to students of all countries, a UNESCO publication said\ntoday. Some 40 or 50 of the scholarships are for- study of the\npeacefujj uses of atomic energy.\nCASTLEGAR WATER FUND\nMORE THAN MEETS COST\nV\nCASTLEGAR \u2014 When expenditures under its water bylaw are\ncompleted, the Village of Castlegar expects to find itself with a\nsurplus in the fund.\nThe village office Wednesday an-\nNatal Groups To\nHold Yule Party\nNATAL \u2014 Father Anthony Council, Knights of Columbus, has decided to join forces with the\nCatholic Women's League and the\nMount Carmel Society in holding a\nChristmas party for all children of\nthe parish. In previous years the\nC.W.L. held a Christmas party for\nmembers' children.\nThe fraternal activity group will\nlook into the matter of help for\nneedy families.    ,\nThe Council has also decided to\npresent Ihe' Sisters of Atonement\nwith.a gift of $25 for Christmas,\nand $15 to Rev. Father L. R.\nTrainor.\nPresentation of the Council's\ncharter, which is due to arrive\nsoon, was left to the executive for\narrangement.\nMost exciting washday discovery in years!\nvelvety-sofi\n1\nACTUAL PHOTOGRAPH!\nTowels on the left rinsed the ordinary wsy; those on the right\nwere \"FLEECY\" rinsed. The\n\"FLEECY\"-rinsed towels are\nbeautifully soft and absorbent \u2014\nover half as thick again.\n| DIAPERS!\nI \"FLEECY\" gets diapers (and all\nI babies' clothes) cuddly-soft. No\n1 more irritation due to wash-hard-\nI ened clothing.\nMEN'S SHIRTS!\nA \"FLEECY' rfnse before starching eliminates \"scratchy\" collats,\nmakes shirts soft and comfortable.\n.KMH\nWHteSS:.:;.,:...^;      -\/ji\nJmCg fluffs up matted fabrics!\nsoftens wash-hardened fibres!\nsaves you a lot of ironing!\nCross-Canada test panel amazed\nand thrilled with wonderful results!\n\"FLEECY\" is an absolutely new type of washday product that you simply\nadd to the last rinse water. Clothes dry downy-soft and fluffy whether wished\nin hard or soft water or dried indoors or out. Try \"FLEECY\" and see for\nyourself the truly wonderful difference it makes!\n'\". \u25a0':..\u25a0\u25a0  i\nJAVEX   COMPANY  LIMITED    L\nWOOLENS!\n\"FLEECY\" fluffs up matted woolens and gives them a richly soft,\ncashmere-like \"feel\".\nTRIAL   I\nBOTTLE\nE I\nNTRODUCTORY  SPECIAL\n(GOOD FOR LIMITED TIME ONLY)\nOne 16-oz. bottle of FLEECY free\nwith the purchase of one 32-oz. bottle of Jdvex Liquid Bleach at regular\nprice,    .\nPlus a coupon\nworth 10c\n(This coupon will save you 10\u00a3 when '\nyou buy another regular bottle of\nFleeCy) ,    .\nON SALE AT YOUR GROCER'S NOW I\nFOR A LIMITED TIME ONLYI\nnounced-that total expenditures to\nN o v e m b e r 30 amounted to\n$67,101.82. The bylaw approved by\nratepayers tjlis summer was for\n$110,000. Sale ofdebentures\nbrought $105,231.18.\nThe work is being suspended for\nthe year owing to frost, and will\nbe continued next spring. Nearly\n5000 feet of pipe has yet to be laid\nand the reservoir has to be built.\nJOSEPH KRALL\nDIES IN SEATTLE\nNATAL \u2014 Well known through\nout Natal-Michel district and a\nmember of one of the old-time\nfamilies of the area, Joseph Krall,\n66, has died in Seattle. Born in\nIron Mountain, Mich., he left\nMichel In 1910 to live in Seattle.\nHe served in the First World War\nHis wife predeceased him in 1940.\nHe is survived by three stepsons, one adopted daughter in the\nUnited States, his mother Mrs\nSusan Krall, six brothers and four\nsisters. Most of his relatives, in\neluding his mother, reside in Natal\nFATHER DIES\nTRAIL \u2014 Capt. Henry\/nderson,\n86, of Vancouver, father of Stanley Anderson of Trail, has died.\nBurial took place Tuesday. Also\nsurviving are his wife, Mrs. Anna\nAnderson; three daughters, Mrs.\nJohn Gillis of Vancouver, Mrs. T.\nA. Duck in West Vancouver, and\nMrs. R. Tetereau at Chilliwack;\ntwo sons, George and Percy Anderson in Vancouver, and 11 grandchildren.\nAustralia Needs\nMore Scientists\nBy COLIN SINCLAIR\nMELBOURNE (Reuters)-Australians comparative lack of interest in science as a profession\nis worrying authorities in several\nfields here.\nThey predict that the country's\nindustries, both primary and secondary, will suffer unless more\nmen and women are trained as\nscientists. One of Australia's leading physicists, Canadian \u2022 born\nProf. Harry Messel, has said that\nthe country's very survival de-,\npends upon its training far more\nscientists and technologists than\nit has in.the past.\nScientists claim there is little\ninducement to join the profession\nin Australia because salaries are\ncomparatively low and many of\nthe country's best administrators\ndo\/not appear to be alive to the\nsignificance of scientific and technical advances..\nCANUCK TRIES\nProf Messel, formerly of Rivers, Man., is head of the School\nof Physics at Sydney University.\nHe -has set out to stir up a practical and financial interest in\nscience in Australia. Young and\ndynamic, Prof. Messel came on\nthe Australian scene five years\nago and immediately set about\nconvincing businessmen that Ihey\nhad a big stake in nuclear research.\nHis campaign has brought in\ngifts of many thousands of dollars. But Prof.- Messel is far. from\nhappy about the number If scientists and technicians being\ntrained here. He described Australia's, technological position recently as tragic.\nAt this crucial stage of its development, he added, Australia\nneeds relatively far more high-\nquality scientists and technicians\nthan any other leading country\nto make up for its lack of population. Yet he said these in authnr-\nity are paying little more than lip\nservice to the problem of scientific and technological manpower.\nOne a per capita basis, he\nsaid, Australia is turning out only\nhalf as many science and technological graduates as Britain,\none-third as many as the United\nStates and one-quarter as many\nas the Soviet Union.\nINDUSTRY  FAILURE\nAnother advocate of the greater\nuse of science, Richard G Casey,\nminister in charge of the Commonwealth Scientific ahd Industrial Research Organization, said\nrecently that although scientific\nresearch has been a most profitable investment for Australia,,\nmany industries leave research\nto the government and do Utile\nof it themselves.\nOne reason for the shortage ol\nscientists and technicians in Australia, the comparatively low salaries, is stressed in a report on\nprofessional incomes issued by\nthe Melbourne University appointments board.\nBased on 9,541 replies to questionnaires sent to professional\nmen and women throughout Victoria State, this shows that scientists generally are in the lower\nincome bracket of professional\nworkers, with agricultural scientists the lowest paid of all.\nThe three highest paid professions are medicine, law and den-\ntistry. After them come engineering, architecture, physics, chemistry, accountancy and agricultural science.\nNatal Again Tries.\nFor Night Classes\nNATAL \u2014 Due to the number of\ninquiries regarding instruction in\nwoodworking and metal working it\nhas been decided to accept registrations and die $5 fee at the Spar\nwood High School at any time up\nto December 19. If a sufficient\nnumber do not register by that\ntime, the fees collected will be\nrefunded, otherwise the woodworking night classes will begin\nshortly after the registration deadline. At the ; first attempt, insufficient registrations were received.\nGuilt Complex\nABILENE, Texas (AP)-A jury\nTuesday found Claude R. Eath-\nerly, who took part in the atomic\nbombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, not guilty on two charges of\nburglary.\nEaUierly, 39, was accused of\nburglarizing post offices at View,\nTex., and Avbca, Tex. He pleaded\ninnocent by reason of temporary\ninsanity.\nAlvin D. Crew, 29, of Abilene,\nwho was tried with EaUierly on\nthe charges, was convicted and\nsentenced to three years in\nprison.\nDr. 0. P. Constantine, psychiatrist of the veterans administration hospital in Waco, said Eath-\nerly had a guilt complex and once\ntold the psychiatrist that he felt\nresponsible for killing 100,000 persons at Hiroshima.\nEatherly was the pilot of one\nof four reconnaissance planes\nwhich dropped atomic bombs on\nhich dropped atomic bombs on\nHiroshima and Nagasaki.\ntopers Seek\nEDINBURGH (Reuters) - A\nyoung society heiress and' her\nboy friend went to court Wednesday\nlo seek nermission for their marriage despite objections and legal blocks by her parents.\nTessa Kennedy, 19, heiress to\na shipping fortune, and London\nman-about-town Dominic Eiwes,\n26, travelled here recently one\njump ahead o f a court action\nbrought against the match in\nEngland, where parental consent\nis needed for persons under 21 to\nmarry.- Under Scottish law, the\nage limit is 16.\nThe couple announced on their\narrival in Scotland they intended\nto obtain Scottish residence qualifications and then marry under\nScottish .law. But Tessa's father\ngot an injunction against the\nmarriage in a Scottish court.\nTessa and Dominic asked\nthe Edinburgh High Court to lift\nthe injunction. Their lawyer contended Tessa's father had no\ngrounds for the injunction.\nIn London one cloud over the\nromance was lifted today. Authorities announced ,that a contempt of court order committing\nDominic to jail for removing\nTessa to Scotland could not be\nenforced in Scotland.\nSANTA MONICA, Calif. (API-\nSinger Dean Martin Tuesday won\ncustody of his four children by a\nformer wife. Martin's former\nwife, Elizabeth Anne, did not contest Martin's petition for the children's return. She obtained custody  aft<jr the c6uple's 1949. di-\nFour Pawns\nti\nLearn White\nMan's Trade\nPORT MORESBY, New Guinea\n(Reuters) \u2014 Four Papuans, not\nmany generations removed from\nthe Stone Age, expect to become\nthe first fully qualified nativp\ntradesmen in the territory ol\nPapua and New Guinea in January, 1958.\nThey will be the first of hun\ndreds more Papuan and New\nGuinea natives, expected to obtain\ntheir certificates from the native\napprenticeship board set up by\nthe Australian administration.\nThe four Papuans are printers\nwho have been employed as as\nsistants by the government printing office in Port Moresby. If\nIhey pass their examinations,\nthey will qualify for a minimum\nwage of \u00a317 10s. A u s t r a 1 i a r\n($39.20) a month, plus their rations and accommodation,\nWhile this may sound small .\ncomapred with salaries com\nmanded by European tradesmen\n\u2014all white are called European?\nin the territory, no matter where\nthey come from\u2014it. is high compared with wages paid to native\nlaborers.\nThere are 150 native apprentices ih Port Moresby, Wau and\nLae, and another 100 youths at\nthe administration's technical\nschools available for apprenticeships. They include trainee aircraft mechanics, printers, carpenters, plumbers and shipwrights.\nDisgruntled\nMiners Go\nBack Home\nSWANSEA, Wales (CP) - Twc\nScottish miners, who stowed awa\"\naboard a homewjrd-bound cargo\nvessel, said they were unable ti\nfind a day's work in four months\nin Canada.\nPleading guilty to the charge o'\nstowing away, John Christie and\nGerald O'Neill, both in their 20?\nwere discharged on condition the1\nthey do not commit another offenc\"\nfor 12 months. They were then\ngiven fare back to Glasgow.\n\"I would not advise anybody t\"\ngo to Canada,\" said Christie, wh'\ntold the magistrate the pair \"stov\ned away in desperation.\" He sai'\nthey were unable to get work i~\nMontreal or Toronto and that im\nmigration authorities would nr'\nsend them to mining areas.\n\"I was told there were 400,000\nunemployed In Canada,\" he said.\nWORK LACKING\nChristie emigrated under Car\nada's assisted - passage scheme-\nO'Neill said he paid his own wa;.\nAsked if they received any ur-\nemployment benefits, Christie Sai?1:\n\"You have to work seven month-\nsteady before you can get assis'\nance. They told me in Glasgo-\nwhat a great country it Was ar-'\nthat there were great opportu-\nities. I was promised work ov':\nthere but could not find it.\"\nO'Neill said they slept in polic-\nstationsand in the fields becau?-,,.\nthey could not afford the 30 cen'\na night charged by a Salvatio'\nArmy hostel. They arrived r'\nSwansea with six cents and a British penny between them.\nBoth men told the court th\"--\nwere returning to the mines In\nScotland.\nPilgrims Flock To Scene\nALPINE PASS\nThe Furka Pass, one of the\n, highest in the Swiss Alps, is at\nI an altitude of 7900 feet.\nUIQi\u00a9\nBy JACK RUTLEDGE\nMEXICO CITY (AP) - Half a\nmillion pilgrims Thursday will\nvisit the Basilica of the Virgin\nof Guadalupe, the Virgin Patroness of All the Americas and the\nPhilippines.\nThe site is on the outskirts of\nMexico City and tonight thousands Will huddle around camp-\nfires on nearby hillsides, in narrow streets, in parks, awaiting\nthe first mass.\nThe  church  will be brilliantly\nilluminated   all   night,   and   its\ndoors will open-long before dawn,\nfor the first pilgrims, many of'|\nwhom walked hundreds of miles.\nRich, poor, sick, healthy, some\nin expensive dresses but the majority in shawls and rags, all will\ninch their way through tlie ancient cathedral which weathered\nthe July 28 earthquake Without\nserious damage.\n16th CENTURY MIRACLE\nFour centuries ago, according,\nto Roman Catholic findings, this I\nmiracle occurred:\nAn Indian peasant named Juan\nDiego was on his way to mass\nat Tlaltelco, a village near the\ncapital, in 1531. Crossing Tepe-\nyac, a scraggy lonely hill where\neven cactus fought to survive, he\nheard music.\nSurprised, he lodked for its\nsource and saw a radiant light\nglowing on rocks and a woman\nstanding in the light.\n\u25a0 She said she was the Virgin\nMary.   She  g e-n 11 y  said   she\ne\nwanted a church built on the spot\nwhere she stood,\nJuan Diego went to tlie city,\nbut had difficulty in seeins\nBishop Fray Juan de Zumarraga\nWhen he did, the bishop would\nnot believe the Indian.\nDejectedly Juan Diego re\nturned to the Jiill the next day,\nand the Virim reappeared. He\ntold, her of his failure. Again she\nordered him to see the bishop,\nand he did.\nThis time . Zumarraga ordered\nhim to bring proof of the appari\ntion.\nDoggedly Juan Diego returne-l\nto the hill of Tepeyac and repeated the bishop's demand. I'\nwas Dec. 12, a dale celebrated\never since.\nROSES FROM ROCKS\nThe Virgin bade him climb the\nhill and pick roses\u2014roses where\nonly cactus grew. To his surprise\nhe found roses blooming profusely amid the scorched earth\nHe picked them, and put them\nin his mantle. The Virgin touche'l\nthem lightly, told him to take\nIhem to the bishop.\nHe did, and when he tumbleri\nthe roses from his mantle th's\nastonished churchmen saw a pic\nture of the .Virgin on the rough\ncloth. The bishop believed, anti\nordered the church built.\nThe Church claims no miraculous cures for this shrine. Bu?\nthere are uncounted tales o1\ncures by the waters of th\"\n\"pocito\" or little well on Tepeyac\nHill where the Virgin trod.\n NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, DEC. 12, 1957 \u2014 11\nPlace Your Order Now For The\nFinest, Most Tender and Meaty .  .  .\nSWIFT'S BUTTERBALL\nUNION, BROAD\nBREASTED. OVER 20 LBS.\nUnder  16  Ibs.\n16 to 20  Ibs.\n__ LB. 65*\n57*\nLIBERTY solves one of your biggest problems ... a\ngift thot you KNOW will be a hit! Come and see\nour great variety o ffoods that are attractively packaged and so much fun to receive! Our prices are so\n\u25a0 low, we think you'll make this an annual habit.\nLIPTON TREASURE CHEST WILL BE IN FRUITVALE\nSTORE FRIDAY AND SATURDAY\n'^f^-;--'Y1fMrtH..itf_MHHt1lll\nFRUITS $2 gg\nIn basket. Fancy California; 3 lbs ,  *T*'*\u2122\u2122\nLIGHT FRUIT CAKE gQc\nOver 2 lbs. Star special. Ideal gift item     \u2122W w\nFANCY ASSORTED NUTS\nBaby Runny gift box; 14 oz  S J \u00ab09\nFIRESIDE CHOCOLATES \u00a32 25\nHcCormick's, lovely assortment; 3 lb. box  \u2122 \u25a0      .     \u00abP\nCHRISTMAS CANDIES\nAssorted   brilliants    2  IDS*  \u00a99\u00a9\nFood gift hampers any size \u2014 delivered free to R.R. 1 up to\nShady Lane Cabins \u2014 or in Town.\niv   Dairy Dep\u00bb\u00ab\ntflWifllfaifimmv !\"\".* I\"..'-, r~\u2014\nPARTY SNACKS 4o,- 27 i\nKraft, Onion, Horseradish, Roka, Date Pimento.\nSAND AS Dani8h Kraft : 44$\nUMBURGER cas.no, 8 o,   _ 49t\nPORTION CHEESE Swl65 aSB,d:, \u201e, 43?!\ntGGS   Fresh local; doz. med., doz. large 2 doz. Y.Hr\nMARGARINE Parkay;, lb. teiek       69?!\nIT\n95*\nSUNLIGHT SOAP 4     4J\u00ab\nSURF:\nWith silverware. Giant pkg.\nLUX:\nLiquid detergent. King size. 20c off.\nSLICED BACON\nGainers; 11 Ib. pkg.\nPORK RIBLETS u\nWHITE    F\/SH   Manitoba; lb.\nShield. Giant size \t\n(With 33c coupon from mail)\nTOOTH PASTE:\nShield\nft r..\u00ab>v.*.:-u*.^ _\u2022\u25a0-\u25a0\nVVV   Froien Foods\nr fc\/*5   Broder's Best; fancy tender, 12 oz. '0 pkgs. >flM\\f\nJU\/vC   ORANGE; Broder's Best; 6 oz. tin 4 tins 00\u00a3\nCAULIFLOWER rraservale; M m. 2 pkg,.\u00bb29^\nREDDI-WIP ,\u201e \u00ab         59?!\nCRANBERRIES Fce8h frosen; * pkg 25<S\n25' RUA1P   ROASTS    Beef\nROUND STEAKS u~ cuts; ,b. _ 59*\nJust Arrived \u2014 Stockfish, Lutefish, Holland Herring,\nAll kinds of Fancy Sausages and Bulk Mincemeat.\nq Kentucky  wonder,\nDGQnS Fresh' sn\u00b0ppy;\nLb.\nCabbage\nOnions\nGreen\nCalifornia;\nLb\t\n4 Ibs. 25<\nig $3.49\nVeg. Marrow:... lb. 4<\nCooking \u2014.\nIS     *\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0' * ' Grand   Forks\nPotatoes ji*j %$*\n\\u.\n100 lb. bag $3.49\nNUTS\nFILBERTS\nIn shell; Ib. 39c\nALMONDS\nImported; Ib. 39c\nWALNUTS\nCalif. Baby; Ib. 39c\nWALNUTS\nRed Diamond; Ib. 65c\nMIXED NUTS\nFinest, No. 1  quality,\nlb.. 43c\nJAPANESE MANDARIN\nORANGES\n\"SUN\" Your Best Brand\n.69\n1 BOX $1\n2 boxes *3.25\nChristmas Needs and\nGift Suggestions\nCANDLES 2     45*\n18\" red or green  \u2122   for   \u25a0 ^\nPIE PLATES 1C*\nAluminum 9\"; with purchase of any mincemeat, only \u25a0 W\nCOCKTAIL MIXER *1Q OC\n6 glasses on stand .' \"\"'\u25a0,'\u25a0*?\nPLACE MATS J     49*\nChristmas decorated, plastic  '\u2022\"   for   \" *\ni-D WALL MIRROR SCENES   SC-*5\nSlectric lighted  .,   \"^\nSLIPPERS *1-49\n\u25a0'oam rubber, popular ladies gift     '\nCHRISTMAS CARDS QQ*\n15, with envelopes; box parchette ** \"\nBURP GUN *1-88\nLong rifle, reliable      *\nSANTA\nWill Be In LIBERTY in Nelson\nFRIDAY, 7 to 8 \u2014 SATURDAY 2:30 to 3:30  '\n3k _ Groceries\n*   V\nPUDDINGS\nPeek Frean's, imported \u201e\t\nMIXED FRUIT PUDDING:\nCrosse and Blackwell; 16 oi. tin\t\nCOCKTAIL BISCUITS\nHuntley-Palmer's,  assorted;  8 oz\t\nCHRISTMAS NAPKINS\n86 decorated \t\nGINGER ALE\nMcDonalds, high-fizz quality; pts. doz. 99c; qts.\nOLIVES\nStuffed, Gattusso, tree stand; 8 oz. sale \t\nPARTY PICKSv\nColored; pkg : \u201e\t\nSALAD DRESSING\nSalad Bowl; 16 oz. Liberty value \t\nOYSTERS\nSmoked, Sea Haul; 314 oz. tin\t\nCRABMEAT\nSea Haul; 6% oz '.\t\nCIGARETTES\nGift Box, M'\u00bb \t\nGRAPE JUICE\nWelch's; 24 oz. :. :...\nTOMATO SOUP\nCampbell's; 10 oz\t\nMARGARINE\nSelect Quality; \t\n2..98'\n29'\n35'\n23*\n2h55*\n49'\n19'\n29'\n23*\n49*\n78*\n39*\n4 te49*\n3,89*\nTree Light Bulbs:\nSeries type\t\nTree Decorations\n$5.88\n$2.98\n19'\nJ1.88\n88'\n3 ,\u201e 29*\n12 Doorway Trim Lites:\nOutdoor. Regular $6.75. Special \t\nElectric Novelty Scenes:\nSuper Special \t\nWhirl-Glo:\nRevolving Christmas tree light shades, 4 in box. Spec,\nTree Lights:\n7 on string, each burns independently. Special\nChristmas Tree Fix:\nKeeps tree green, needles from falling. Tin ....\nfor\nGl FT WRAPPING MATERIALS\nCello: Christmas design, 24x32. Reg. 10c. 5?\nGift Ribbon: Reg. 10c each. Sale .... 6 for 49?\nGift Wrap: Red, green or white. Bundle .... 10?\nGift Wrap: 2Q\" x 50 ft. Roll ....... ....... 75?\nCello Tape: Christmas design, 10?, 15?, 25?\nSeals, Tags Assortment:   10?, 15?, 25?, 49?\nLIBERTY\nYOUR CHRISTMAS STORE THAT OFFERS MORE\nWe Reserve the Right To Limit Quantities Prices Effective Until Dec. 17\n 12 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, DEC. 12,1937\nSearing Drought Spoils\nAustralia's Wheat Crop\nBy LOUIS LECK\nCanadian   Press   Correspondent\nSYDNEY, Australia (NP) - A\nsearing drought has turned great\nareas of Australia into cracked,\ndusty, lunar \u2022 like landscape, hitting hard at wheat farmers and\nsheep ranchers.\nAustralia's wheat crop this\nyear will probably not exceed 70,-\n000,000 bushels, leaving none for\nexport. New South Wales, the biggest state, will have to import\nwheat for food, some possibly\nfrom Canada.\nThe drought, worst in 12 years,\nhas raised an outcry from farmers for artificial raip-making.\nSUCCESSFUL TRY\nThe government's Scientific and\nIndustrial Research Organization\nagreed to try\u2014in one area, and\nas an experiment. High-flying aircraft carried out seeding, operations over the parched Bundarra\narea of New South Wales and up\nto an inch of rain fell in some\nlocalities.\nSpeetatular as the feat was, it\nonly served to emphasize the na-\n' tional helplessness in dealing with\nAustralia's  oldest   scourge,   dry\nweather.\nThe drought is expected to cut\n$200,000,000 from the national income in the current financial\nyear.\nAlthough there are great hopes\nfor rain-making, economic as well\nas technical problems must be\nsolved. .\nWOOL CROP HURT\n\"The Commonwealth is not in\nthe rain - making business,\" was\nHie firm federal reply when state\ngovernments recently demanded\nan extension of the program.\n\"Well, it ought to be,\" was the\nangry reply of one state premier.\nAustralia's sheep herds\u2014totalling 150,000,000 animals\u2014face inevitable losses although serious\ndamage may still be averted if\ngood rains come before Christmas. The over-all value of this\nSCOTTISH PALACE\nThe Palace of  Holyroodhouse,\nofficial royal residence at Edinburgh,   Scotland,   started  as  an\nyear's wool clip will probably be abbey guest house in 1128.\nreduced by about $100,000,000 in\nthe view of experts.\nDuring the last 10 years Australia experienced an almost unprecedented run of wet seasons\nand some of the effects of 1953-56\nfloods still are being felt.\nWELL PREPARED\nBut generally the wet weather\nenhanced a period of national\nprosperity in which export revenues enabled great development\nstrides, including immigration.\nThus the country now is in better shape to face a major drought\nthan ever before. Sheep graziers,\nfor instance, are more cautious\nand although their flocks are a\nrecord, so are stocks of fodder.\nSIRO\u2014the good fairy of the\npastoralist\u2014has brought a revolution in the countryside, fmprov-\ning; pastures and reducing the\nrabbit population by spreading\nthe rabbit - disease myxomatosis.\nOtherwise untold millions of rabbits now would be competing with\nsheep for nourishment, destroying not only grass but its roots.\nPasture improvement has been\ncarried out by use of trace elements\u2014the scattering of small\namounts of minerals in which the\nland is naturally deficient.\nMISSES RECORD\nEDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE,\nCalif. (AP) - A U.S.\"Air Force\nF-101 Voodoo fighterbomber\nstreaked at nearly 1,200 miles an\nhour over a measured course\nTuesday but was thwarted by\nfailure of a timing camera from\nclaiming the official world speed\nrecord held by Britain. TJie record of 1,132 miles an hour was\nset by a British Fairey Delta research plane. The air force said\nanother try will be made Thursday or Friday, weather permitting.\nPUBLIC AUCTION\n$2000  Worth   of  New  Merchandise\nWill Be Auctioned Off\nFriday, 7 p.m. and Saturday, 2 p.m.\nAt the former Coleman Electric location.\nTo raise funds for the Centennial Project.\nAll Merchandise donated by Local Nelson Firms\nSPONSORED BY THE SKI CLUB\nROAD-REMINDER\u2014 This poster, depicting * human\nskull in a beer glass holding s steering wheel, Is to be placed\non British roads to combat rise in holiday season sccldents.\nWhich Comes First, Tolls\nOr Traffic On Seaway?\nCOME ONE . . . COME ALL\nTo The Eleventh Annual\nKIWANIS\nTURKEY SHOOT\nand BINGO\nTonight, Fri., Sat. - Dee. 12, 13,14th\n(7 p.m. to 12 midnight daily.)\nNELSON ARMOURY\n(Victoria St.)\nYou don't have to shoot to win a Turkey.\nPlay Bingo or other\nGAMES OF CHANCE\nBingo and Door Prizes On Display at\nSterling Home Furniture\nmw\nBy ROBERT RICE\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nMONTREAL (CP) - Like the\nchicken and the egg, the problem\nof tolls and traffic on the St. Lawrence Seaway is a question of\n\u25a0which comes first.\nThe size of the toll depends\nlargely on how much cargo\nmoves through the new multi-\nmillion dollar waterway, due to\nopen in 18 months. But shippers\nsay they can't commit cargo until they know the toll.\nThe difficulty will be eased\nearly next year, when an experimental toll schedule is expected\nto be announced jointly by Canada and the United States, partners in building the 115 - mile\nwaterway from Montreal to Lake\nOntario.\nVARIED ESTIMATES\nEven then, and perhaps for\nmany years, the rates will likely\nbe only tentative, subject to\namendment as seaway traffic\npatterns emerge. Both U.S. and\nCanadian seaway agencies are\ncommitted to paying off the\n$425,000,000 cost of building ttie\nseaway, plus annual operating\ncharges, over a 50-year period.\nPotential traffic, on which any\ntoll system must be based, has\nbeen variously estimated\u2014from\n20,000,000 cargo tons at first from\nthe Dominion Marine Association\nto 35,500,000 tons suggested by\nthe toll committee of the United\nStates St. Lawrence Seaway Development Corporation.\nMost of the seaway's potential\ncustomers\u2014iron ore shippers, oil\ncompanies, shipping lines, pulp\nand paper manufacturers \u2014 say\nthe whole problem could be easily\neliminated. Just don't impose\ntolls at all, they say.\nTOLL-FREE ARGUMENT\nVarious reasons are given in\nsupport of a toll-free seaway.\nIf substantial tolls are imposed,\nsays the Canadian Pulp and\nPaper Association, then present\npulp-paper shipments by the old\n14-foot canal route \"will be compelled to resort to rail or truck\nmovements.\"\nThe   Aluminum   Company   of\nJfavea\nGoovmti m\nfarywr\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia\nIT'S NOT ON the curriculum,\nbut Marian Brown of Toronto\nuniversity knows how to toss a\nflapjack. She Is one of the many\nuniversity students across Can-\nadn who have set out to raise\n$20,000 In Canada to help advance world education and she's\nselling pancakes to raise a portion of the objective.\nCanada says a toll \"would.place\nus at' a competitive disadvantage\nwith' United States primory aluminum producers.\"\n\". . . Any charges which tend\nto increase basic transportation\ncosts are not in the national interest,\" says the Shipping Federation of Canada.\nSince seaway-induced prosperity will benefit all Canada, why\nnot.spread the costs across the\nnation by paying for the waterway with public funds? This argument is advanced by the Dominion Marine Association,\nspokesman for Canada's inland\nshippers.\nGROUPS OPPOSED\nIn the United States, toll views\nhave leaned in the opposite direction. Atlantic and Southern ports,\nrailways and other groups have\nvigorously protested any move to\nkeep tolls at \"bargain rates\" to\ninduce heavy cargo tonnage in\ntion. The Railway Association of\nCanada has been one of a few\nearly years of the seaway opera-\ngroups tending to back this stand.\nThe association, speaking for 22\nCanadian railways, seeks what It\ncalls an \"equitable\" toll\u2014high\nenough to pay off seaway costs in\n50 years. I\nBoth Canadian and U.S. toll\ncommittees are pledged to create\na toll structure on the ship's size\nand the weight of the cargo. They\nare aiming at a system low\nenough to attract business, yet\nhigh enough to meet costs.\nBulk cargoes, chiefly Labrador\niron ore moving westwards to\nGreat Lake steel mills, are expected to account for about 70\nper cent of seaway, traffic in\nearly years of operation.\nECONOMIC FACTORS\nWestern grain, now moved in\ngiant lake ships from Lakehead\nstorage elevators to transfer\npoints near the St. Lawrence entrance to Lake Ontario, will be\nable to travel all the way to\nMontreal without trans-shipment.\nSmall canal boats carry grain at\npresent through the old canal\nbottleneck between Prescott,\nOnt., and Montreal.\nExperts believe that the low-,\ncost laker operation over the\n1,200 - mile Lakehead - Montreal\nroute could mean a saving of five\ncents a bushel in transportation\ncosts. Any toll would reduce the\nfull saving, however.\nUntil tolls are established, observers steer clear of estimating\nseaway savings In precise terms.\nThey say an English automobile\ntransported all the way from Britain to Toronto in one vessel\nshould be cheaper in the car lot,\nbut they won't predict what the\nsaving will be.\nThey're waiting \u2014 like most\nothers involved in seaway calculations\u2014for the fares to be set.\nSOVIET APPEAL\nMOSCOW (AP) - Soviet Fleet\nsaid Tuesday the ouster of Marshal Georgi K. Zhukov as defence\nminister has not solved the problem of strengthening discipline\namong military officers. The Soviet navy newspaper called upon\nparty leaders within the armed\nservices to correct \"survivors of\nthe past who make their presence felt here and there in the\nform of unscrupulous individualistic' attitudes, violations of the\nrules of military ethics, amoral\nconduct and swaggering attitudes.\"\n' CHARLOTTETOWN (CP) -\nDr. W. J. P. MacMillan, who\nwould have b6en Prince Edward\nIsland's next lieutenant-governor,\nwas buried Tuesday following one\nof the island's biggest funerals.\nThe 76-year-old surgeon and former Conservative premier died\nSaturday following a short Illness. He would have become\nlieutenant-governor Dec. 16.\nGermany Tests\nNew Type Tug\nBONN, West Germany (Reuters)\u2014Tugs which push instead of\npull, now being tried out on the\nRhine, gre expected to effect\nlarge savings in freight costs on\nWestern Europe's most Important waterway during the next\nfew years.\nAt present, most Rhine freight\nis carried in strings of barges\nlinked by two ropes. Each string\nis hauled by a single tug, and\neach barge has a crew of two .or\nthree to steer it,, anchor it and\ntend the tow ropes.\nIn joint German and Netherlands tests of the pusher system,\na pair of lighters was secured\nrigidly side by side, with another\npair tethered behind. Pushing the\nfour lighters was a specially-designed vessel like a tug with a\nsquarish bow.\nThe main saving comes in the\ncrews of the barges, which no\nlonger are needed. When in normal service, the pusher is expected to have one or two more\nmen than a tug. A further saving\nis effected in that lighters need\nno rudders or crew's quarters\nand are otherwise of simpler construction than barges.\nNational Gallery\nIn Need of Funds\nOTTAWA (CP) - Art lovers\nmay see fewer famous paintings\nadded to Canada's National Art\nGallery here in future, unless\nfunds can be made available.\nThe gallery's annual report\nsays that with the price of first-\nquality works of art rising each\nyear, the gallery can purchase\nfewer masterpieces with its present government grant.\nChairman of the trustees,\nCharles P. Fell, says in the report that the National Art Gallery is becoming widely appreel\nated and respected in foreign\ncountries. The gallery has expanded from a minor institution\ninto a truly national one, he says.\nIn the last fiscal year, ending\nMarch 31', the gallery spent some\n$273,357. It acquired oriental\nmasterpieces and embarked seriously on the collecting of important sculpture.\nIncidentally the report notes\nthat public reaction, as gauged\nby the Press, concerning the\nrumored purchase of a Leonardo\nda Vinci work, was \"a mixture of\nhorror, fascination and desire.\"\nThis whole thing was a rumor,\nthe report adds, and there never\nreally was an opportunity to purchase a da Vinci painting.\nA SWISS watch factory has put\nthis unique wristwatch on the\nmarket. The watch is lighted by\nan electric bulb, believed to be\nthe smallest one in existence,\nmeasuring three millimetres In\nlength and nearly one millimetre\nin diameter, The bulb is located\nabove the numeral 12 on the\nface of the watch. It operates\nfor four years through a miniature accumulator which can be\nrecharged.\nSMOKES\nFOR CANADIAN\nMILITARY PERSONNEL\nserving with the\nUnited Nations Emergency\nForce in Ihe Middle East\nHb2 sends 400\nEXPORT\nCIGARETTES\nor any other Macdonald Brand\nPostage included\nMall order and remittance lot\nOVERSEAS DEPARTMENT\nMACDONALD TOBACCO INC.\nP.O. Box 490, Placa d'Armos,\nMontreal, Qua*\nThti offer Ii iub|sct to any chango\nIn Oovornment Regulations*\nColorful Sternwheeler\nEnds Career as Firewood\nWHITEHORSE, Y.T. (CP)-The\nfamous sternwheeler Yukoner\nwhich carried many prospectors\nduring the gold rush of the 1890s\nhas finally ended her days as\nfirewood.\nA landmark on the river bank\nhere for many years, the ship was\nbuilt in Victoria for the Canadian\nPacific Steamship Company Ltd.,\npredecessors of the C.P.R. coastal\nservice. She was taken to St.\nMichael's, Alaska, in sections and\nrebuilt there for use on the Yukon\nRiver.\nChe late Captain John Irving\nonce said he made the trip up\nthe Yukon to Dawson in the Yukoner in 1898. The cargo was\nmostly whisky and her passengers\ncljiefly dance-hall girls and gamblers.\nSold to Pat Galvin, one of the\nfabulous sourdoughs, the Yukon-\ner's career under his ownership\nis told in a book titled Yukon\nVoyage. Among other highlights\nher skipper was charged with\npiracy on his arrival at Dawson.\nLater the Yukoner was acquired\nby the British Yukon Navigation\nCompany, the steamship branch\nof the White Pass and Yukon Railway route, but for many years\nshe has been beached here, a\nghost of her former self.\nMany wanted to see the ship\npreserved, but she had become a\nfire hazard and was purchased by\nWilliam A. Wengryn.\nThe purchaser set up a small\nbooth near the area where the\nship was dismantled and sold\nnails from the' Yukoner for five\ncents each to tourists.\nIn the White Pass shipyard here\nare five ships of the old sternwheel\nfleet, the Keno, Whitehorse, Ak-\nsala, Klondike and Bonanza King.\nChristmas Suggestion\nBuy Her\nA   YOUNGSTOWN\nFOOD WASTE DISPOSER\nDo Away With Garbage Problems\nA PRESENT'THAT\nWILL GIVE YEARS\nOF SATISFACTION\nGet rid of Food Waste BEFORE\nit beeomei garbage!\nEnd wrapping of messy garbage, trips\nto the outside pall. Swish food waste\ndown the drain with a wonderful\nYoungstown Kitchen Food Waste Disposer. Terrific savings If you act now!\nf89.95\nColumbia Trading\nCo.\n902 Front St.\nPhone 1511\nSHOPPING?\n... For Action and\nResults, Turn to\nThe Classified Ads,\nFirst!\nIN THE\nNelson Daily News\nPHONE 1844\n SPORTS\n33i>3\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIM\nFree lessons for Curlers\nCurling instruction and assistance will be given to\nfirst-year curlers at Nelson Curling Club foinght, starting at 7 p.m. Men and women are invited to attend.\nRudy Boates and Rod Carmichael will be in charge\nof lessons, ,\nMlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nDurelle Easy Winner\nIn Bruising Thriller\nTAMPA, Fla. (AP) \u2014 Canadian\nlight-heavyweight champion Yvon\nDurelle won a unanimous decision\nover Jerry Luedee in a bruising\n10-round light - heavyweight bout\nWednesday night.\nDurelle, also British Empire\nlight-heavyweight champion, used\na left hook and right uppercut with\ntelling effect and built up an early\nlead. He was in control throughout.\nLuedee, though willing and tough,\nrarely was able to penetrate Dur-\nelle's defence for a telling blow.\nThe decisive win in the nationally-televised fight gave Durelle,\na native of Baie St. Anne, N.B.,\na total of 73 victories in 94 starts.\nDurelle, a bull-shouldered crowding fighter who operates a fleet\nof fishing boats when he is not\ntrading punches in  the ring, is\nPort Arthur\nBuys Arena\nPORT ARTHUR (CP) - This\nNorthwestern Ontario city, with\nthree Allan Cup and one Memorial\nCup championship already tucked\naway in its sports history, has\naverted a slap at its sporting pride\nby approving a $66,000 money bylaw allowing the city to purchase\nthe Port Arthur Arena.\nOtherwise the arena would have\nbeen sold tp the highest private\nbidder at the close of the 1957-58\nhockey season. It was expected to\ndisappear along with organized\nhockey.\nRatepayers approved the bylaw\nIn Monday's civic elections by a\nvote of 5174 to 1691. The result\nmade it almost a certainty that\nthe city will continue to have an\narena and a home for its powerful\nPort Arthur North Stars In the\nThunder Bay Junior Hockey\nLeague. Port Arthur also has a\nsenior team.\nThe expenditure still needs the\napproval of the Ontario Municipal\nBoard, but most officials feel it\nwill be given.\nranked No. 2 contender for the\nlight-heavyweight crown now held\nby Archie Moore.\nJudge Bob Diaz scored the fight\n98-92 for Durelle. Judge John\nBranch had it 97-95. Referee Mai\nManning scored it 96-95.\nDurelle staggered Luedee with a\nsmashing right to the jaw in the\nfourth round and snapped his head\nback on several occasions, but Luedee never was close to going down.\nDurelle, using his weight advantage over his New Haven, Conn.,\nopponent, was the stronger in the\nclinches and got in some of his best\nblows in the infighting.\nThe bout was for the benefit of\nBabe Zaharias Memorial Cancer\nFund.\nThe official gate and attendance\nwere not announced immediately.\nPromoter Lou Viscusi estimated\nthe crowd at 3500.\nWIHL OFFICIALS\nTO HOLD SCHOOL\nOn Sunday, Trail will be the\nscene of a hockey school for officials, coaches, managers ahd\nplayers of all age groups. Instructors will be Curly Wheatley of\nTrail and Bob Maker of Kettle\nFalls, Wash.\nWheatley is referee-in-ehief of\nthe Western International Hockey\nLeague, and Maker Is a member\nof the WIHL officiating staff.\nThe program will include: capable handling of games, preparation and-conduct, techniques of officiating and interpretation of\nrules. Curley will conduct the lecture sessions, while Maker will be\nin charge of on-the-ice demonstrations.\nMembers of any division are invited. Anyone wishing to take an\nactive part should bring his skates.\nThose planning to attend are requested to advise Ray Gould, recreation director, Memorial Centre,\nTrail.\nTrail Recreation Commission Is\nsponsoring the school.\nNHL REQUESTS\nADJOURNMENT\nOF (0 DAYS\nTORONTO (CP) - The National\nHockey League asked Wednesday\nfor a 60-day adjournment of hearing on a motion for summary judgment in certain aspects of a $3,-\n000,000 anti-trust suit filed against\nthe owners by the NHL Players'\nAssociation.\nMilton N. Mound, association\ncounsel, said league attorneys\nasked his New York office for\npostponement of the hearing, originally' scheduled for Dec. 17 In\nNew York. \\\nSummary judgment Is a decision\nby a judge without a trial. The association will seek to have the\nquestion of .damages tried before\na jury.\nBoucher Suggests Reduction\nOf WHL Plover Limit to 12\nSTORM\nWINDOWS\nSave Fuel\nGreater Comfort\nWill Pay For\nThemselves\nAvailable Before\nChristmas\nPHONE NOW 11 TO 156\nT. H. Waters & Go. Ltd.\nNelson,  B.C.\nPhono 156\nIB( Accused\nBy Manager\nOf Contender\nDETROIT (AP) - The brother\nof light - heavyweight challenger\nChuck Spieser said Wednesday\nnight the International Boxing\nClub has used \"all its power and\ninfluence\" to keep him from lining up television coverage of the\nSpieser-Archie Moore title fight.\nJoe Spieser, who is the fighter's\nmanager, said Governor G. Men-\nnen Williams of Michigan has stepped into the picture in an effort\nto fix the situation.\nThe fight is scheduled for late\nJanuary in the State Fairgrounds\nColiseum in Detroit. Local independent promoters guaranteed\nMoore, the champion, $100,000 to\ndefend his championship in a 15-\nround bout against Spieser.\n\"I thought the Supreme Court\nbroke up this monopoly they call\nthe IBC,\" Spieser's manager said.\n\"It looks like that bunch is stronger\nthan ever. They've stopped us cold\non two good television deals.\"\nCanny Kenny Signs\nVeteran Rearguard\nKAMLOOPS (CP) - Kamloops\nChiefs have acquired a new defenceman, George Hunchuk, it was\nannounced Wednesday by Kenny\nMacKenzie, manager of the Okanagan Senior Hockey League entry.\nHunchuk, a native of Moose Jaw,\nSask., has played 10 years in professional hockey and was once with\nVancouver Canucks of the now defunct Pacific Coast League.\nRUGBY SCORES\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Results\nin Wednesday's  Rugby Union\ncounty championship games:\nBerkshire 3 Hertfordshire 6\nSussex 9 Dorset and Wilts 17.\nGross, Purkey\nChange Uniforms\nCINCINNATI (API-Cincinnati's\nRedlegs Monday swapped southpaw pitcher Don Gross to the\nPittsburgh Pirates for righthander\nBob Purkey. Team officials said it\nwas a straight trade with no money\nInvolved.\nGross, 26, appeared in 43 games\nfor the Reds last season, starting\n16 and completing five. Purkey,\n28, compiled an 11-14 record last\nseason.\nSASKATOON (CP) -Frank\nBoucher, general manager of the\nSaskatoon-St. Paul Regals of the\nWestern Hockey League, says\nhockey attendance in the West will\ncome back strongly within a year\nor so if certain changes are madS\n\u2014among them stronger enforcement of the rules.\nMeanwhile,, the WHL must roll\nwith the punch of television and\nother matters that affect attendance.\nBoucher, former general\" manager of New York Rangers of the\n(handler Rink\nFails To Slop\nFarenholtz\nA rink skipped by Fritz Farenholtz defeated Dick Chandler's aggregation 10-8 at Nelson curling\nrink Wednesday night to qualify for\nthe semi-finals of the first club\ncompetition of the 1957-58 curling\nseason.\nBy virtue of his rink's triumph.\nFarenholtz advances tonight at\n7 p.m. against the Art Waters rink,\nwinners of Section C. Farenholtz\nwon Section A.\nJim Harvey's rink is scheduled\ntonight to oppose the S. Jefferies\naggregation in. Section B competition. Winner of the flarvey-Jef-\nferies contest will enter the Section\nB final against Walt Wait's rink.\nResults of other matches last\nnight:\nJ. Milne 7, J. Bailey,9;\nS. Jefferies 10, N. Sardich 7;\nH. Moore 7, W. Duckworth 6.\nHOCKEY SCORES\nBy The Canadian PreBS\nWESTERN LEAGUE\nEdmonton 2, Winnipeg 5\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nSpringfield 4, Hershey 3\nProvidence 5, Buffalo 7\nQUEBEC LEAGUE\nShawinigan Falls  3,  Trols-Riv-\nieres 2\nMontreal 3, Chicoutimi 6\nOHA-NOHA\nSoo 3, Chatham 4\nONTARIO SENIOR\nWhitby 8, Kingston 1\nINTERNATIONAL LEAGUE\nFort Wayne 2, Cincinnati 8\nBRITISH SOCCER\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Results\nin Wednesday's Football Association Cup second round replays:\nGillingham 6 Millwall 1 (Winners\naway to Notts Forest).\nSouthend United 2 Torquay U 1\n(Winners away to Liverpool).\nMansfield Town 3 Wigan A 1\n(Winners'away to Bristol R).\nBradford City 3 Chester 1 (Winners away to Scunthorpe).\n- Brighton Hove Albion 1 Norwich\nCity 2 (Winners home to Darlington).\nNational League, said to offset the\nimmediate problem of smaller\ngateB, \"some of us in the Western\nLeague feel we should look into\nthe possibility of reducing the overall cost df operations, and at the\nsame time not hurt the calibre of\nplay.\"\nBoucher said the first move in\nthis direction would be to cut the\nWHL player limit to 12 men in\nstead of the present 15.\n\"Because of our present limit\nwe all have some 'fringe' players-\nboys, not quite sufficiently experienced to be top-notch professionals,\nIf the better players would have\nmore time on the ice, it would not\nbe too great a strain on them and\nit is bound to have a good effect\non the game.\"\nBoucher said he thinks western\nhockey would be much better if\nit ran according to the rule book.\nBoard charging, holding the puck\nin the corner or along the boards\nand several other infringements\nseldom result in the necessary penalty, Boucher said.,\nPlayers like the Bentleys and\nEdgar Laprade, said Boucher,\ncould have had at least five more\nyears in the National League if\nthe game had been conducted according to the rule book.\nNET OBSERVERS\nNOT IMPRESSED\nBY AUSSIE STARS\nMELBOURNE (AP) - Australia's Davis Cup selectors watched\nWednesday's semi - final doubles\nmatches in the Victoria championships. It's doubtful they were impressed.\nMai Andersoi^and Mervyn Rose,\nprobably the doubles team in the\nCup matches, defeated Rod Laver\nand Bob Howe 6-3, 9-7, 6-4 on their\nopponents' errors.\nRoy Emerson and Bob Mark,\nnot on the Cup squad, won 8-6, 19-\n17, 8-10, 6-2 In men's doubles.\nAngela Mortimer of Britain and\nMrs. Mary Hawton of Australia\nreached the women's finals with\nan 8-6, 6-1 victory over Eva Duldig\nand Elizabeth Court of Australia.\nRookie Brown\nFar in Front\nOi Bear Back\nPHILADELPHIA (AP) - Barring illness or injury, Cleveland's\nJimmy Brown appeared Wednesday to have the National Football\nLeague's ground - gaining championship all wrapped up.\n- With one game remaining on\nthe regular schedule, Brown has\npicked up 864 yards on 187 attempts for a 4.6-yard average.\nRick Casares of the Chicago\nBears is In second place with a\nyardage total of 684.\nCleveland Browns, champions of\nthe NFL's Eastern division, also\nboasts the pro league's No. 1\npasser.\nThe Browns' Tommy O'Connell,\nidle last Sunday, held on to first\nplace in forward passes. He's\nthrown 110 passes, completed 63\nfor 1229 yards and eight touchdowns, an average of 11.17 yards\na pass. Former Calgary Stampeder\nEddie LeBaron of Washington Redskins is second with 90 completions in 154 attempts for 1426 yards\nand a 9.26 average.\nSam Baker of Washington an\nCleveland's Lou Groza are tiei\nfor the most points scored, each\nwith 67.\nid* i\nFord Punches Bag\nTo Strengthen Arm\nGLEN COVE, N.Y. (AP) -\nWhitey Ford is taking up boxing.\nThe ring will be in his basement\nand the opposition will be a punching bag.\nThe idea is to strengthen his\nleft arm, Doctors advised tht New\nYork Yankee ace to try this cure\nwhen he visited the Mayo Clinic\nfor a checkup. Arm trouble bothered Ford throughout the 1957 season.\nCranbrook Girls End\nHoop Season in First\nNATAL \u2014 Playing their final\ngames in the West Kootenay. High\nSchool Basketball League at Sparwood High School, Sparwood divided a twin bill, with Sparwood\ngirls absorbing a 45-14 trimming\nas Sparwood boys came through In\nfine style to win 39-23.\nIn the first game, Sparwood girls\nheld their own against highly-touted\nCranbrook during the first half\nbut fell apart in the second half\nwhen they were outscored 30 to\nfour. The win for Cranbrook concluded a successful season as they\nwent through the schedule unde-\nMINOR HOCKEY\nROUNDUP\nPee Wee Blackhawks shut out\nBruins 1-0 in the closest - checking\ngame of the season at Civic Arena\nlast Monday afternoon. It was a\nPOSTMEN STAGGER UNDER LOAD\nOF CONTRIBUTIONS TO CAUSE\nMONTREAL (CP) - Postmen\nstruggled into the Montreal Shriners Hospital for Crippled Children\nWednesday lugging loads of mail\n\u2014not the Christmas variety but it\nmight just as well have been.\nAmazed hospital authorities were\nsure Santa Claus has paid a pre-\nCliristmas visit on behalf of football fans and well-wishers in general.\nThere were upwards of 500 letters, each containing cash or a\ncheque. The sudden influx folliwed\nappeals by newspapers and radio\nand television stations for contributions on the eve of last Saturday's East-West all-star Shrine\ngame in Montreal.\nThe annual game benefits\nShriners hospitals in Montreal and\nWinnipeg. \u25a0\nMeanwhile, those who handled\nlast Saturday's game still didn't\nknow the financial situation. About\n6000 persons were present of the\n9000 to 10,000 who bought tickets.\nNOTICE\nKootenay Lake Ferry\nAdditional Service Dec.  16tli-Jan. 3rd, 1958\nDuring the period December 16th, 1957 to January\n3rd, 1958 ONLY, M.V. Balfour will operate on a 5-\nday week (Monday to Friday) schedule, weather permitting. This is an addition to the regular schedule\nmaintained by M.V, Anscomb.\nADDITIONAL SCHEDULE AS FOLLOWI5:\nLeave Balfour Leave Kootenay Bay\n(Pacific Standard Time)\n9:00 a.m. 10:00 a.m.\n11:00    \" 12.00 noon\n1:00 p.m. 2:00 p.m.\n3:00   \" 4:00    \"\nA. L. FREEBAIRN'\nDistrict Engineer\nNelson, B.C.,   Dec. 11, 1957.\nbattle between the opposing goalies, Kenny Armstrong of Hawks\nand Andre Blais.\nFor Armstrong it was his third\nshutout in four games.\nThe teams fought back and forth\nuntil almost the end of the third\nperiod before Johnny Cherenko of\nthe Hawks moved'up the ice on\na breakaway .to slap the puck past\nBruin goalie Andre Blais for the\nonly goal of the game,.\nCanadien Pee Wees moved Info\na tie for first place in the Pee Wee\nLeague as they defeated Rangers\n8-3 Tuesday evening.\nFour fast goals in the opening\nperiod paved the way for the Hab\nvictory, and they added three in\nthe second and one in the final.\nRangers popped in two goals in\nthe second and one in the third.\nChuck Owens, as usual, supplied\nmost of the Ranger scoring power,\ngetting two goals with Gordon Ferguson getting the other. Reg Cherenko and Ted Ryan earned assists.\nCanadiens were paced by Bobby\nSteed with a hat trick, Timmy\nAlan with two goals and D a n n y\nHennig, Bruce Pickering and Roily\nPorter with one each. Daryl Mc-\nLachlan and Jerry Miner picked up\ntwo assists and Harry Mason one.\nBantam Canadiens strengthened\ntheir hold ort the top rung of the\nBantam League Tuesday evening\nas they defeated Bruins 5-2. The\nteams battled to a 2-2 tie in the\nopening frame with the Canadiens\nadding two more in the second and\none in the last period.\nGary Higgs was the big noise\nfor the winners with a hat trick\nwhile singles went to BUI Burdenie\nand Lloyd Peterson. Alec Wallach\npicked up two assists, Larry McEachern, Bill Burdenie, Randy\nConne and Gordy Schmidt one\neach.\nWalter Cherenko scored the\nBruins' first goal with Ross Seaby\nhelping, while Jimmy Cain tallied\ntheir other goa lunassisted.\nfeated, having won all their eight\ngames, thereby winning the girls'\nleague championship for the East\nKootenay. Sparwood girls ended\nthe season in the league cellar,\nhaving won two games while dropping six.\nMacDonald led the scoring parade for the winners with 16 points,\nfollowed by Barrit with 11 and\nChlopan with nine. Vaughn, with\n10 points, scored most of her\nteam's points in a losing cause.\nIn the nightcap, Sparwood boys,\nwith the second team starting the\ngame and playing like veterans\nthroughout their time on the floor,\nhad little difficulty defeating Cranbrook 39-23. By their win Sparwood\nteam ended the schedule in second\nplace In the league standing with\nsix wins and two defeats. Their\nonly defeats came against Kimberley, who won the East Kootenay\nhigh school basketball championship for the boys.\nLeading the scoring parade for\nthe winners was Tom Krall with\n10 points followed by Ken Tappay\nand Laddie Berane'k with six each.\nChuck Sleith with 12 was high\nscorer for the losers.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, DEC. 12,1957 \u2014 IS\nCURLING CAMPBELLS SPLIT UP\nREGINA (CP) - The Campbell\nbrothers of the wheat-farming town\nof Avonlea are breaking up their\nfamous curling foursome\u2014for this\nyear at least\u2014to spread the gospel\nof the roarin' game to the East.\nGarnet Campbell,'31-year-old\nskip of the fabulous brother rink\nand one of the coolest clutch\nshooters in the game, has announced at Toronto that he will remain\nin Eastern Canada this winter to\nwork as a roving instructor.\nJJis 36-year-old brother Don went\nEast earlier, signing up last spring\nas a. full-time instructor at Toronto's Royal Canadian Club, where\nhe began two months ago as the\nfirst full-time tutor in the history\nof curling.\nThree brothers will remain in\nthe Avonlea area, 45 miles southwest of here\u2014Lloyd, 43, and Glen,\n39, who were with Garnet and\nDon when the Campbells won the\nCanadian title in 1955, and Gordon,\nthe youngest member of the family.\nThey may find another recruit\nand keep the Campbell name active-\nin Saskatchewan curling, but with\nGarnet and Don away, much of\nthe glamor will be lost.\nThe Campbell family has dominated Saskatchewan curling for a\ndecade. Since 1947 when Sandy\n(Dad) Campbell and three of his\nfive sons won the provincial\ncrown, the family rink- has won\nthree more Saskatchewan titles and\nthe national championship.\nIn the last 10 years, the Campbells have won $40,000 in bonspiel\nprizes, including 10 cars.\nHoak, McMillan Direct\nReds to Defence Title\nNEW YORK (AP) - Cincinnati\nRedlegs, better known for slugging\nthan defensive ability, tied a National League fielding record in\n1957 with a big boost from shortstop Roy McMillan and third baseman Don Hoak.\nThe official fielding averages released Wednesday showed the Red-\nlegs fielded .982, making only 107\nerrors in 5848 chances. This tied\nthe club mark set by St. Louis\nCardinals in 1944 and equalled by\nBrooklyn Dodgers in 1952.\nMcMillan, who committed only\n16 miscues, established a senior\ncircuit standard for shortstops. The\nmark is based on participation in\na minimum of 150 games.\nMcMillan put together a .977\nfielding average and led for the\nsecond straight season. Ernie\nBanks of Chicago Cubs was next\nwith .975.\nHoak fielded .971 to lead the\nthird basemen, He beat out Willie\nJones of Philadelphia Phillies, who\nwound up at .966.\nThe Dodgers' Roy Campanella\nestablished another record while\npacing the catchers. Frank Torre\nof Milwaukee headed the first base\nmen, Junior Gilliam of the Dodger*\nthe second basemen and Kenny\nBoyer of the Cards the outfielders.\nPitchers were led by Larry Jackson, another Cardinal.    \u25a0\nCampanella caught 100 games,\nmarking the ninth time in. his\ncareer he reached the century\nmark. He fielded .993 and finished\nin front for the fourth time. Ed\nBailey of Cincinnati was next\nwith .991.\nFights\nBy The Associated Press\nHouston, Tex. \u2014 Paul Jorgenson,\n127, Houston, knocked out Gaby\nPaliotti, 124, Montreal, 4.\nBoise, Idaho \u2014 Jimmy Martines,\n164, Glendale, Ariz., outpointed\nDick Lane, 16U4, Boise, 10.\nMORE PEOPLE BUY\nB\nUCKLEY'C\nMIXTURES\n[HAH ANY OTHER COUGH REMEDY\nCIVIC CENTRE\nTODAY\nChildren\nand\nTiny Tots\nSkating\n83\/*c\nBoys Free\nGordon's\nWm\nGordon's Gin,,\nIce, a slice of Lemon\nand fill up with\nTonic Water.\nThe ideal\ndrink at\nany time.\nifc^f^^4l^di9u^\nB2IN\nThis advertisement Is not published by the Liquor Control Board\nor by the Government of British Columbia.\n . NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY\/DEC. 12,1957\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS\nThe Dally News dou not hold  Itself responsible In the event\nof an error In the following lls'si\nTORONTO  STOCKS\n(Closing PrlceB)\nMINES\nAlgoma Uranium\nAnglo Rouen\t\nAtlin Ruff\t\nAunor  \t\nBarnat\n14.37V4\n.28\n.22\n1.80\n.18\n.21\n.61\nBase Metals\t\n\"Broulari \t\nCampbell C      5.10\nCan Met     1.56\nCassiar       5.95\nCentral Patricia 71\nChimo  46\nCons Denison   10.12'A\nCons. Discovery     2.35\nCons Halllwell    30\nCons Mining & Smelting ...   17.62'A\nCon Sanorm  \" 4.42\nCon SUb    .52\nCopper Corp      .22\nD'Aragon  W&\nEast Malartic     1.51\nEast Sullivan :.     1.88\nFalconbridge     22.50\nFaraday       1.33\nFrobisher      1.37\nGeco           8.22\nGiant Yel     3.90\nGoldale 16\nGolden Manitou 35\nGunnar Gold    13.12%\nHeadway 37\nHollinger    21.30\nHudson Bay   46.00\nInspiration  43\nInt. Nickel     70.25\nIron Bay \u2022     1.80\nR J Jowsey .-.     .35'A\nKerr Addison    14.50'\nLabrador   15.50\nLakeshqre     3.95\nLorado  57\nMacassa      2.32\nCon East Crest\t\nDuvex  .....\t\nHome A\t\nMarigold ...'.\t\nMidcon  \t\nNat. Pete \t\nNew Continental\nNew Gas Expl\t\nOkalta\n.29\n.07%\n14.87%\n.12\n.53\n1.55\n.26\n1.30'\n1.38\nPacific Pete   19 37%\nPetrol 40\nPonder 26'4\nProv Gas      2.80\nRoyalite 14\nSpooner  18%\nStanwell Oil 80\nTriad      4.80\nUnited Oils        2.40\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi        25%\nAlgoma Steel r.       24\nAluminum            29\nArgus 2nd pfd       42\nAtlas St       17\nB.A. Oil       35%\nBell Telephone       39%\nBrazilian     ..         6%\nB.C. Electric 43As       85%\nB.C. Forest          8%\nB.C. Packers A \t\nB.C. Packers B :'...\nB.C. Power A .*....'.\nCanadian Breweries\t\nCanadian Canners \t\nCanadian Celanese\t\nCan. Cement \t\nCan Chem Co\t\nCanadian Dredge\t\nCan. Malting\t\nCan Oil\t\nCanadian Pacific Rly ....\nCan. Packers A \t\nCockshutt \t\nCons Gas\t\nDist. Seagram\t\nDom. Foundries \t\nDom. Steel Ord\t\nDom. Stores . ..\\.v\t\nDom. Tar & Chemical .\nDom. Textiles\t\nFamous Players \t\nMacDonald\nMadsen R. L. \t\nMalartic G. F\t\nMaritime Mining\nMcLeod \t\nMilliken   \t\nMining Corp\t\nMogul \t\nMulti Mins\t\nNew Alger\t\nNew Delhi \t\nNew Lund \t\nNipissing\n 26\n....    1.58\n....    1.11\n 57\n 87\n....    1.84\n....   10.50\n 45\n 50\n 05.4\n 38\n 16\n....    1.16\nNormetals       2.71\nNorpax    28\nNorth Rankin  46\nOpemiska         6.40\nPickle Crow  95\nPlacer Devel     7.90\nPreston E. D     4.75\nVancouver Stocks\n(Closing PrlceB)\nMINES\nBeaver Lodge 13\nBralorne  .'.     4.40\nCanusa 02\nCariboo Gold 47\nGiant Mascot 11\nGranduc        1.15\nHamil Sil  02\nNational Ex 16\nPioneer Gold      1.05\n 04\n 29\n 04\n 01\n 12\n 19\n12%\n11%\n37%\n25V4\n13%\n14%\n23%\n5\n15%\n47\n2714\n23\n35\n8%\n29%\n26%\n25\n18%\n49%\nlOts\n7%\n15\nFord A .\nGatineau\nn\n27%\nGatineau 5% pfd      101%\nGoodyear'\t\nHoward Smith\t\nImperial Oil \t\nImp. Tobacco\t\nInt. Pete\t\nLoblaw A\t\nLoblaw B\t\nMassey Harris\t\nMcColl Frontenac\t\nMont. Loco :.\t\nMoore Corp. ....:\t\nPage Hershey\t\nPowell River \t\nPower Corp\t\nRuss. Industries\t\nShawinigan \t\nI Sicks Brew\t\nSteel of Canada\t\n'United Steel \t\n150 '\n26%\n42%\n12\n38%\n22\n21%\n6%\n55\n15%\n64%\n107\n31%\n57%\n8\n27\n21\n50%\n12%\nQuebec Lithium\t\n..    6.50\nQuebec Metallurgical \t\n..      .78\nRayrock \t\n..     .80\nSan Antonio      \t\n.42\nSherritt Gordon\t\n..    4.60\nSilver Miller\t\n.25\nStadacona \t\n.18\nSteep Rock _\t\n..    9.05\nSullivan Con \t\n1.90\nSylvanite    \t\n..    1.03\nTeck Hughes \t\n1.35\nTemagami    \t\n...    1.20\nThomp-Lund \t\n.82\nTombill \t\n...      .20\nTorbrit   \t\n...      .20\n3.60\nUpper Canada \t\n.56\nVentures \t\n...   22.87%\nViolamac    \t\n...    1.35\nWaite Amulet\t\n...    6.40\nPremier Border\nQuatsino \t\nSilback Premier\nSilver Ridge\nSilver Standard\nTrojan \t\nOILS\nAltex 17\nA P Consolidated 37\nCalgary and Edmonton .... 19.50\nCharter   1.80\nHome   14.75\nNew Ga.s'Ex  1.30\nOkalta Com  1.30\nPacific Pete   19.25\nPeace River Gas  41\nRoyalite  13.50\nSparmac  .'.  .12\nUnited   2.48\nVanalta  18\nVantor   1.24\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlberta Distillers   1.30\nAlberta Distillers Vt  1.10\nB C Forests   8.37%\nB C Telephone    .'.  37.50\nCrown Zeller (Can)  14.00\nInt. Brew. B  3.85\nInland Nat Gas  7.62%\nLucky Lager   4.30\nMacM & Bloedel B   23.75\nMid Western   1.35\nPowell River  31.50\nTrans Mtn   65.50\nWestminster Paper   22.00\nWestern Plywoods  10.\n.16%\n1.27\n.75\n.16\niWltsey Goglin\t\nWright Hargreaves\t\nYellowknife Bear\t\nOILS     -\nAmerican Leduc\t\nBailey Selburn     7.85\nCalgary and Edmonton ....   20.25\nCdn Atlantic   '4.40\nCanadian Collieries      4.20\nCanadian Devonian      5.35\nCentral Explorers      140\nUNLISTED\nAlta Gas Trunk ..\nTrans Can Com \u201e\nTrans Mtn Unit ..\nBANKS\nBank of Montreal\nCan. Bank of Com\nImp Bank of Can\nRoy Bank of Can\nFUNDS\nCan. Inv. Fund .\nCommonw'lth Int.\nGrouped Income..\nInvestors  Mutual\nLeverage \t\nTrans Can \"C\" ..\nBid\n12.75\n22.50\n65.50\n40.00\n40.50\n43.00\n58.00\n7.83\n6.48\n3.16\n9.09\n4.30\n4.75\nAsk\n22.75\n66.50\n41.50\n42.00\n44.50\n'59.00\n8.60\n7.12\n3.45\n9.83\n4.73\n5.15\nTELEVISION   FOR TODAY\nKXLY-TV - Channel 4\n9:00 Good Morning\n9:30 Search For Tomorrow *\n9:45 Guiding Light *\n10:00 Hotel Cosmopolitan\n10:15 Love'of Life '\n10:30 As The World Turns \u00bb\n11:00 Beat The Clock *\n11:30 Houseparty *\n12:00 The Big Payoff\n12:30 The Verdict Is Yours *\n1:00 Brighter Day *\n1:15 Secret Storm *\n1:30 Edge of Night *\n2:00 Garry Moore *\n2:30 Godfrey Time\n3:00 Fun At Home\n3:30 Strike It Rich *\n4:00 The Early Show\n6:00 The News\n6:15 Doug Edwards News *\n6:30 Sgt. Preston *\n7:00 I Search For Adventure\n7:30 Kingdom of the Sea\n8:00 Harbour Master *\n8:30 Climax *\n9:30 Playhouse 90 *\n11:00 The News\n11:05 The Late Show\nKHQ-TV - Channel 6\n8:10 Color Test Pattern\n8:12 Test Pattern\n8:25 NARTB\n8:26 Bible Reading\n8:29 Program Previews\n8:30 Q-Tunes\n9:00 Tic Tac Dough *\n9:30 It Could Be You *\n10:00 Arlene Francis Show *\n10:30 Treasure Hunt *\n11:00 Price Is Right *\n11:30 Bride and Groom *\n12:00 Matinee Theatre (C) *\n1:00 Queen For a Day *\n1:45 Modern Romances *\n2:00 Blondie *\n2:30 Truth or Consequences *\n3:00 Matinee Orf Six\n\"If Winter Comes\"\n5:00 Five o'clock Movie\n\"Eyes In The Night\"\n6:30 Weatherwise\nThe Front Page\n6:45 NBC News\n7:00 The Honeymooners\n7:30 26 Men\n8:00 You Bet Your Life *\n8:30 Dragnet *\n9:00 Jack London Stories\n9:30 Tennessee Ernie Ford *\n10:00 Lux Show (C) \u00bb\n11:00 Late Movie\n\"An American Romance\"\nKREM-TV - Channel 2\n2:30 Liberace\n3:00 American Bandstand *\n3:30 Do You Trust Your Wife\n4:00 American Bandstand *\n4:30 Popeye\n5:00 Woody Woodpecker *\n5:30 Mickey,Mouse Club *\n6:00 Kit Carson.\n6:30 Newsroom\n6:40 Weather Sketch\n6:45 Phillips World News\n6:55 Sports Spotlight\n7:00 Pride of the Family\n7:30 Circus Boy *\n8:00 Zorro *\n8:30 Real McCoys *\n9:00 Pat Boone Show *\n9:30 Federal Men\n10:00 Navy Log \u00bb\n10:30 Premier Performance\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAM8 1240 ON THE DIAL\n(PACIFIC  STANDARD TIME)\nTHURSDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1957\n6:55\u2014Farm Fare '\n7:00\u2014Chapel in the Sky\n7:15\u2014Wake-Up Time\n7:25\u2014Sports News\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Wake Up Time\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n8:15\u2014Opening Markets\n8:20\u2014Breakfast Varieties\n8:55\u2014Morning Devotions\n9:00\u2014News\n9:05\u2014Shoppers' Guide\n10:00\u2014News\n10:05\u2014Story Parade\n10:15\u2014Happy Gang\n10:45\u2014Here's Health\n10:55\u2014News\n11:00\u2014Christmas Cavalcade\n11:30\u2014Seven Come Eleven\n12:00\u2014The Dinner Bell\n12:15\u2014Sports News\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Prairie  News\n1:00\u2014CKLN Reports\nl:15-Sacred Heart\n1:30\u2014Drama\n2:00\u2014School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n3:30\u2014Pacific News\n3:45\u2014Rocking With Boates\n4:45\u2014Voyage Into Space\n5:00\u2014Rolling Home Show\n5:30\u2014Rolling Home Show\n6:00\u2014News\n6:10\u2014Sports News\n6:15\u2014Closing Markets\n6:20\u2014Mantovani\n6:30\u2014UBC Digest\n6:45\u2014Musicale\n7:00\u2014News\n7:30\u2014Western Roundup\n8:00\u2014Prairie Playhouse\n8:30\u2014Citizens' Forum\n9:15\u2014Vancouver Chamber Mush\n10:00\u2014News\n10:10\u2014Sports News\n10:15\u2014Talk\n10:30\u2014Kinauctions\nll:00-5ign Off\nCBC   PROGRAMS\n(PACIFIC STANDARD TIME)\nFRIDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1957\n7:00\u2014Fisherman's Broadcast\n7:15\u2014Musical Minutes\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Musical Minutes\n7:40\u2014Morning Devotions\n7:55\u2014Musical March Past\n8:00\u2014News and Weather\n8:10\u2014Sports  News\n9:15\u2014Morning Concert\n8:30\u2014News\n8:35\u2014Morning Concert\n9:0O\u2014News\n9:15\u2014Musical Program\n10:00\u2014Morning Visit\n10:15\u2014The Happy Gang\n10:45\u2014Pages From Life\n11:00\u2014Kindergarten of the Anil: 15\u2014Theme and Variation\n12:15\u2014News\n12:25\u2014Showcase\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Five to One\n1:00\u2014Afternoon Concert\n1:30\u2014Pacific Playhouse\n2:00\u2014School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n3:30\u2014Program Resume\n3:45\u2014B.C. Roundup\n4:30\u2014The Arthurian Legend\n5:00\u2014News\n5:30\u2014Points West\n6:00\u2014This Man's Musie\n6:30\u2014Musical Interlude\n6:35\u2014Roving Reporter\n6:45\u2014Rawhide\n7:00\u2014National News\n7:30\u2014Tapestry in Musie '\n8:00\u2014Touch of Greasepaint\n8:30\u2014Songs for You\n8:45\u2014Piano Music\n9:00\u2014Songs of My People\n9:30\u2014Petit Ensemble\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Talk\n10:30\u2014On Your Agenda\n11:00\u2014Midnight Concert\n11:57\u2014CBC News\nDAILY  CROSSWORD\n3. Begone\n(colloq.)\n4: Lurk\n5. Eluded\n6. Exclamation of\ndisgust\nT. Forehead\n8. Rice beer\n(Jap.)\n9. Fooled\n11. Female\nparty\n16. Tear\n19. Driving Ice\nand rain\nJO. Disease, of\nsugar cane\n(E.I.)\n22. Cup\nedge\n24. Pale\n25. Image\n(poss.)\n26. Stores\nin\nsilos\n28.A\nPry-\nteg\nperson\n31. Put on\n34. It Is silent\n(mus.)\n36. Tree\n37. Charlie\nana SHE\n3QISHE amiasiE\nanaras  HHEIHE\nhhb    ana m\nSS  HEBE  oai?\naaaHnn HHHE\ntaraaasEiEi\nanroM hi-ihhiie\ndetective\nYosltr day's Aire \u00ab>or '\n38. In this\nplace\n40. Afresh\n42. Outcast       I\nclass (Jap.)I\n44. Miss\nOfii'uiiei'\n(Programs subject to change by stations without notice.)\nACROSS\n1. Excavates\n5. Subsides\n9. Fincb\n(Eur.)\n10. Miss\nChurchlU\n12. Dish\n13. Strangle\n14. Tree\n15. Textile\nscrew pine\n17. Skin tumor\n18. Cry of pain\n19. Passes over\n21. Drop\n23. Tiny object\n27. American\nIndians\n29. Deplete\n30. Rely\n32. Finishes\n33. Fang\n35. Exclamations as in\ncartoons\n30. Mulberry\n(Ind.)\n39. Miss\n. Munson\n40. Everyone\n41. Wool-\nbearers\n43.Indian\nwatercraft\n46. Bret \u25a0 ,\nauthor\n46. Levels\n47. Close to\n48. Marbles\nDOWN\nWater Gap\n2. Mideast\nkingdom\n(var.) '\" \"'\"\nDAILY CRYPTOQUOTE \u2014 Here's how to work ft!\nAXYD LBAAX R\nIs LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Is used\nfor the three L's, X.for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all hints.\nEach day the code letters are different\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nRNRWO  JTR  LOPL  YHPLLRWF\nLORR MF TJ YWMRTK  MT DMF.RWG\n\u2014 UPWTYMRHK.\nYesterday's Cryptoquok\u2014THE PROOF OF THE PUDDINO\n18 IN THE EATING\u2014CERVANTES.\nDistributed by King Features Syndicate\na\nJ-\nT\n%\nE\n6\nT\n8\n%\ntj*\ni\n\\i>\nII\n12\nk\nli\n14\n^A\nli\nlo\n^\n>f\nie\n%\n19\n20\n1\n%\nt\nit\n13.\n1\nii\n3&\nas\nW\n27\n26\nl\n29\n30\nM\nft\nWi\n7\/\/\nrrt\n'\/\/\nn\n34\n^\n35\n36\n37\n38\n%\n39\nl\n40\n41\n.\n42.\nl\n'ii\n44\nAS\ni\n\u00ab(.'\n'^\n47\n%\n46\nft\n \u2014\n^_\t\n\/\"\nSMALL INVESTMENT   -\nLARGE RETURNS\nThat's the Want Ad Story  \u2014  PHONE   1844\nBIRTHS\n~DALZIEL - To~Mr. and. Mrs.\nJohn Dalziel of Castlegar, at Kootenay Lake General Hospital Dec.\n10, a son. \u25a0\t\nHELP WANTED\nWANTED - SALESMEN-AGENTS\n50% profit on direct selling or\nmail order item on Personalized\n\"BLITZ-SHAVE\". No brush, no\nlather. Every shaver a prospect.\nFull year's supply only $1. Free\ndetails and samples of literature\nNo obligation. Apply Box 8289,\nNelson Daily News. \t\nEXPERIENCED SEWING MACH-\nine salesman for Nelson and vi\ncinity. Apply Box 9307, Daily\nNews'.\t\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nACCOUNTANT AND S T E N 0-\ngrapher of 16'A years experience\ndesires position. Highest credentials. Apply stating salary to\nBox 9222. Daily News.\t\nFOR THE BEST IN BODY AND\npaint work, see Ted's Auto Body,\n1 mile Granite Rd or ph 186-X 3\n.FOR HIRE - TANDEM DUMP\ntruck, 10 yd. capacity. Phone\n1757-R.\t\nQUALIFIED CARPENTER RE-\nquires work. Box 9016, Daily\nNews.\t\nWIEL DO BABYSITTING WHILE\nmother works..Phone 1027.\nFOR ANY ODD JOBS PHONE\nhapdvman. 256-R.\n\u25a0\nRENTALS\nTHREE ROOMS JOHNSTONE\nBlock. Stove and.fridge supplied,\nheated, $55. Four-roomed furnished apartment, two bedrooms,\nown furnace, $50. Three bedroom family home Lower Rosemont, exceptionally large living\nroom and dining room. Large\ndeep-freeze in basement, o i 1\nfurnade, $65 per month, immediate occupancy. T. D. Rosling\nand Son Ltd., 568 Ward St.\nFOUR ROOM SUITE NEAR Hospital High Street. Gas piped m.\nImmediate occupancy. Apply\nFerguson and Ferguson, 1-373\nBaker St.\t\nGROUND FLOOR APT LARGE\nliving room with fireplace Dinette, kitchen, 1 bedroom. Fridge\nand stove only. Heated. Phone\n542-R.\t\nMODERN 2-B.R. APT. WOULD\nshare with business lady. Away\nweekends and holidays. Phone\n1216-X, 519 Silica Street.\t\nWE HAVE A NICE, BRIGHT,\nspacious office in the Truck Terminal Bldg. For p a r t i c u-\nlars phone 77.\t\nHOUSE FOR RENT. SUITABLE\nfor Nelson workers. Low rent.\nApply M. Cunningham, Crescent\nValley. Phone 206.\t\nHOUftifiKtSEHINIi OR SLEEPING\nrooms, furnished, weekly oi\nmonthly rates. Allen Hotel. 171\nRaker Street '\nUNFURN. DUPLEX, 5 WA$M\nrooms, beautiful view, self contained. Gas stove. Adults. Phone\n335-X.\t\nWARM, LIGHT HOUSEKEEPING\nroom for young man. Corner of\nBaker. 526 Josephine, ph. 321-R.\nFOR RENT - UNFURNISHED 5-\nroom apt., $55 per month. Avail-\nable immediately. Phone 231.\nFOR RENT - MODERN 3-RM\napartment, heated. Adults. Ap-\nply 1019 Latimer.     .\nPARTLY FURNISHED 2 BEDR.\nhouse. S. P. Pond, 1019 Fall St.,\nor phone 1421-Y.\t\nDELUXE MODERN 3-RM. APT.,\n1 BR., ground floor, self,- contained. Phone 130. *\nLARGE HOUSEKEEPING ROOM,\nheated, fully furn., and  fridge,\n,  for 1 or 2. 171 Baker Street.\nAPT. 3 RMS. AND BATH. PART-\nly furnished. 210 Vernon Street.\nFOR RENT - CENTRALLY. Located unfurn. apt. Phone 933-X.\nDOUBLE AND SINGLE UNITS.\nNorth Shore Motel   Ph. 1684.\nHOUSEKEEPING ROOM .FOR\nrent. 606 Front St.\t\n2 RM. SUITE, PARTLY FUR-\nnished. Phone 1341-X.\t\nHcYS, \u2022ANAKIJ..S.  BEFS\nTHREE PRETTY KITTENS ARE\nlooking for nice homes. They\nwould make nice Christmas pres-\nents. Phone 722-L-3 after 6 p.m.\nLOST   AND  FOUND\nLOST - GOLD PENDANT, PUR-\npie stone. Vicinity Ward and\nBaker Sts. Phone 1552.\nCirculation Dept. Phone 1844\nPrice per single copy 6c Monday\nto Friday. 10c on Saturday.\nSubscription Rates\nBy Carrier per week\nin advance 35c\nBy .Mail in Canada Outside Nelson:\nOne month          $ 1.25\nThree months       $ 3.50\nSix months     $ 6.50\nOne year $12.00\nBy mail to United Kingdom or\nthe United States\nOne month $ 1.75\nThree months  _\u201e   $ 5.00\nSix   months _  $ 9.50\nOne year       .  ..  .        $18 00\nWhere extra postage Is required\nabove rates plus postage.\nFor delivery by carrier In Cranbrook phone Mrs, Wm  Stevely;\nIn Kimberley A. W Brown;\nIn Trail Mrs. Syd Spooner\nand\nIn Rossjand Mrs. Ross Saundry.\nH\nI\nA\nN\nD\nL\nO\nI\nS\nAUTOMOTIVE, ,\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\nTRACTIONIZING   -\nTIRES,  CHAINS\nANTI-FREEZE\nAFTER HOUI^S\nBy Appointment\nOnly 7 Brand New\n'57 PICKUPS\nAt a Discount of\nIf Trade Involved We Are\nGENEROUS\nOLDS. - CHEVS.\nTHE   LARGEST\nBODY AND FENDER SHOP\nIN THE INTERIOR\nWheel Balancing\nand Wheel Alignment\nA-l CARS in A-l\nCondition-All Makes\nSPECIALS\n1957 Chev. Station\nS Wagon\n'. Vtfith Positraction\nPre_: Christmas\nJ Sale\n1953 Pontiac Deluxe\nVolkswagen  1955\nAustin   1955\nZephyr...-  1955\nBrirg Ward...... 1957\nNash Met. Hard Top\nCoupe '  1957,\ne\nLtd.\nPhone 35\nSPECIALIZING IN ENGLISH\ncar repairs and \"do it yourself\".\nUsed parts for 1949 to '52 Austins, '49 to '51 Hillamns, '50 to\n'51 Morris Minor, '47 Studebaker,\n'47 Pontiac. For sale. '53 Austin.\nCottonwood Wreckage \"Service,\nph. 1363-L-2, Box 382, 24 Ymir\nRoad, Nelson.\n'52 HUDSON, BEAUTIFUL BLACK\nsedan. 4 new whitewalls, two-\nspeaker radio. Fully winterized.\nMust sell quick. Excellent condition. Ph. 1874-R, or see at Fire\nHall,\n'49 MERC. HALF TON PICKUP\nwith built-in box. R & H. New\ntires and battery, $275. Phone\n1581-R-2.\n1949 FORD - LOW MILEAGE,\ngood condtion. P)ione 1841.\nFOR SALE  - PARTS FOR\nFord. Phone 1B85-L-2.\n'47\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nWANTED TO TRADE: WHEAT,\noats, crush, oats, laymash, for\ncattle and pigs. Apply Box 9212,\nDaily News.\t\n1 AYRSHIRE HEIFER, 30 MOS.\n\u2014to freshen Feb. 25. A. Town\nsend, Fruitvale.\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nTENDERS WANTED\nBids will be received up to 3 p.m.\nFriday, Dec. 13th, 1957, for a hot\nwater boiler as is and where is.\nMay be seen at the Nelson Civic\nCentre, 719 Vernon St.\nThe highest or any bid not necessarily accepted.'\nJack Morgan, Manager,\n.Nelson Civic Centre,\nNelson, B.C.\nI, ABRAHAM ADRIAN, OF\nGrand Forks, B.C., will not be\nresponsible for any debts made\nby my wife, Mrs. Joyce B.\nAdrian, before or after this date,\nDec. 10, 1957, at Nelson, or anywhere else.\nPROPER i Y, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\n3-BEDROOM MODERN BUNGA-\nlow, over 1500 sq. ft. plus large\nattached garage and sundeck\nBroadloom carpet, colored\nplumbing, two fireplaces, gas\nhot water heat, finished rumpus\nroom, 80 x 130 ft. landscaped\nlot in new district. Ph. 1739-R.\nLAND FOR SALE BY THE ACRE\nat 6 Miles, North Shore, on Blk.\n41, good garden land, overlooking city of Nelson. Apply Box\n9312, Daily News.\nWANT A REAL BARGAIN? 5-RM.\nhouse, lights, water, 2 lots, fruit\ntrees, garden, in Slocan C i t y,\n$1500. E. Maher, Genesee, Alta.\nTWO ACRES ON ROSEMONT -\nPhone 185-R-l.\nBUILDING SUPPLIES\nESMOND LUMBER CO. LTD.\nfor all Building Supplies Specializing in Plywood. Contractors enquiries solicited Phone or\nwire orders collect. 3600 E. Hastings St., Vancouver, B.C., GLen-\nburn 1500 \u2022\nMACHINERY\nPOWER UNITS\n\u2022'\u25a0\"\u25a0'  With\"\"'\nPower Take-Off and Skids\nDIESEL IJNITS\nCat. D17000, 170 h.p. $4750\nG.M. 6:71, 150 h.p. $3900\n\u2022GM,  4:7.,. 100 h.p. $3200\n*lnt..UD18A, 115 h.p. $3500\nBuda 1879, 260 h.f>. $5700\nHercules DFXE $3500\n170 h.p.\nHercules DJXC, 75 h.p. $750\n\u2022Ford R45279, 40'h.p. $995\nBuda 6DC844; $2900\n150 h.p.\nMurphy ME66, $7500\n165 h.p. *\nGAS UNITS\n\"Buda 326, 70 h.p. $850\n'Minneapolis-Moline   2834A,\n65 h.p. $745\nG.M.C. 270, 65 h.p. $695\nLIGHT PLANTS\nKholer $325      \u2022\n1500 Watt, 115 Volt, D.C.\nG.E. $2950\n20 KW, 110\/220 Volt, A.C.\nSingle Phase, Diesel Powered\n\u2022Onan $595\n3 KW, 115 Volt, A.C.\nLister Diesel $745\n3 KW, 110\/220 Volt, A.C.\nNorthlite    '\n5.6, 10, 12, 18, 20 KW, A.C, Dual\nVoltage,  Single  or Three  Phase,\nDiesel Powered, for Instant Use.\n* Enclosed   Units\nAll Units in Guaranteed\nCondition\nWRITE - PHONE \u25a0 CALL\nNorthern Engine\n& Equipment Co. Ltd.\n10330, 63 Avenue, Edmonton, 393947\n24 Hour Continuous Service\nUSED CHAIN SAWS\nEZ HOMELITE - HM IEL\nD44 McCULLOCH\n73 McCULLOCH\nSee\n'   H.  \"Fritz\"  Farenholtz,\nCharlie Ross or Alex McDonald\nMAC'S\nWelding & Equipment Co.\nLtd.\nPHONE 1402.\n614 Railway St.        Nelson, B.C.\nMACHINERY\nFINNING'S\n\"BUY and TRY\"\nSPECIALS!\nBacked by a 3-day trial, money-\nback guarantee, these used tractors are good value! Ready to\ngo, they'll make money for you.\nWhy not get full details today?\nINT, TD14A, 1652 model, Smith\nhyd. angledozer, Carco winch,\nguards. In excellent condition!\nBuy and Try, 3-day trial, f.o.b.\nWilliams Lake. %Q<Kn\nFT-2969.      \u00abPtfJJdU\nAllis-Chalmers HD-9, 1955 model\nwith only 1200 hrs.! Has angledozer, winch, guards. New tracks\nand rails! Buy and try, 3-day\ntrial, f.o.b. Van- CI? 7Cn\ncouver. FT-3392.   . *'\u00ab\u00bb>'3U\nINT. TD6 with Malo Loader.\nOnly 2 yrs. old, has Carco winch\nand guards. In good shape. Buy\nand try, 3-day trial, f.o.h. O*\"-\nllwack. %^<Kn\nFT-3886  VOVDV\nSee Your\nCATERPILLAR\nDealer\nFINNING TRACTOR\n& EQUIPMENT\nCO. LTD.\nPhone 137 -\nPhone JU-62281\nNelson\n- Cranbrook\n1954   INTERNATIONAL -\nTD9\nHydraulic angledozer, logging\nwind   operator's guard. Good\nNTisonon:..F:o:.b:......*7500\n1\u2014CAT   D4   CRAWLER\n6V   scries.   Hydraulic   angledozer,   logging   winch,   oper-\nS& Sdn $6250\n1\u2014CAT\n6V\nD4   CRAWLER\nHydraulic   angle\ndozer, operator's Stdftflft\nguard. F.o.b. Nelson \u00abP'fo\"\u00ab\n1\u2014G.M. 6-71 POWER UNIT\nEisteifded shaft and outboard\nbearing. Good condition. A\nreal bargain $1890\nTRUCK'\n& Equipment Co. Ltd.\n702 Front St.\nPhone 1810-100\nHO r ELS AND MOTELS\nWANTED - A FEW MORE RE-\nservations at the V O L N E Y\nHOTEL, Spokane, Wash. When\nyou come down for the Hockey\nGames and Shopping, drive up to\nour door, we will look after your\ncar.\nWILL YOU BE OUR GUEST\nwhen in Spokane, Washington?\nCity centre, parking one block.\nComfortable rooms w\/wo bath at\nlow. low rates   Colonfal Hotel.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\n\"fir\nE. W. WIDDOWSON & CO.\nAssayers, 301 Josephine St., Nelson\nS. ELMES,   ROSSLAND, B.C.\nAssayer Chemist Mine Rep.\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS\nM C. McCORQUODALE. B C.L.S.\nLand and Engineering Surveys,\n1234 Bay Ave., Trail. Ph. 2752 Office Mgr\u201e Ray Johnson, B.A.Sc,\n1015-Bth St., Nelson.   Phone 144-R.\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, MEIC\nB C Land Surveyor P. Eng. (Civil)\n218 Gore St.    Nelson    Phone 1238\nG. W. BAERG, B.C.\nLand Surveyor\n373 Baker St.    Nelson   Phone 1118\nINSURANCE\nWawanesa Mutual Insurance Co.\nAgent, 554 Ward St., \u25a0\nMcHardy Agencies Ltd.\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nMachine Shop  Acetylene and\nelectric welding, motor, rewinding   Phone 593,      324 Vernon St.\nWATKINS PRODUCTS\nWATKINS QUALITY PRODUCTS.\n-Phone 469-Y.\nPERSONAL\nALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS.\nFridays. Ph. 366-R or 483-R.\nLEARN HAIRDRESSING AT THE\nMarvelle Beauty'School in Trail\nFor information write, to 1319\nBay Ave. or phone 2822.\nSLENDOR TABLETS ARE EF-\nfective. 3 weeks supply $2.50, 9\nweeks $6,00 at Fleury's Phar-\nmacy and, all druggists.\nFALSE TEETH DISCOMFORT?\nTry \"DenturrEze\" today. Wonderful plastic,re-liner that makes\nteeth fit comfortably, prevents\nslipping, wobbling, tasteless,\nodorless. One application lasts\nwks. Only $1.95 at all druggists.\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\nWANTED-YOUNG PUPS, SMALL\nbreed;' also hamsters. Please\nquote price.. Write Box 9211,\nDaily News.\nBABY CRIB WITH DRAWER,\nand double dresser, good condi-\ntion. Box 1265, Daily News.\nWANTED TO BUY - LATE MOD-\nel piano. Phone 1540-R.\nTRAILERS\nKQQT-NEE\nMobile Homes\nCastlegar, Phone 2701\nCranbrook, Phone JU-6-2270\nNOW ON DISPLAY\nTHE ALL NEW\"REX\"\n10 ft. wide, 45 ft. long.\nMany Other Models on Display\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nDEALERS IN ALL TYPES OF\nused equipment, mill, mine and\nlogging supplies, new and used\nwire rope, pipe and fittings,\nchain, steel plate and shapes.\nAtlas Iron & Metals Ltd., .250\nPrior St., Vancouver. B.C., Ph.\nPAcific   6357.\nFOR SALE - KENMORE WASH-\ner and Kenmore propane gas\nstove. Both 1 yr. old. Also small\n.baby crib. Phone 352-L.\nWILL SWAP POTATO PLANTER\nwith fertilizer attachment for\nyoung bull or cattle. Alex Bool-\ninoff, Thrums.\nCOMB. GAS AND COAL'STOVE\nwith gas.tank heater, $95, Lloyd\nbaby carriage as new, $25. Ph.\n1245-R.\n1 SUNSHINE RANGETTE IN\ngood Order. Can be seen at 531\nBaker St, W. Beel, ph. 241-X-2.\nFOR SALE-TWO LETTER-SIZE\nsteel filing cabinets. Phone 747-L\n9 a.m. to 1 p.m. or evenings.\nPROPANE GAS RANGE, COM.\nplete. Can be converted to natural gas. Phone 1280-X.\nCHRISTMAS TREES, 3 MI. WEST\nGranite Rd. Open to 10 o'clock.\nRight beside highway.\t\nLAMONTE CLARINET, $45. LIKE\nnew. Can be seen at 509 Latimer\nor phone 1596-R.\nWANTED - CLEAN COTTON\nrags, 10c per lb. Nelson Daily\nNews.\nHiiALTH  FOOD CENTRE OPEN\nday anil evening  924 Davies St\nFOR SALE - 51,000 BTU COLE-\nman oil- heater. Phone 2146.\nTHOR GLADIRON,  AUTOMATIC\nironer. Phone 1854-L.\nROOM.AND BOARD\nWANTED - BOARD AND ROOM\nfor young man. Apply Box 9203,\nDaiy News.\nROOM AND BOARD FOR 1 OR 2\nyoung gentlemen. Phone 1179-X.\nGeese Bagged by\nTrojan Horse Trick\nMAGRATH, Alta. (CP) - Two\nhunters from this southern Alberta, town used their own version\nof the Trojan horse recently and\nbagged their quota of geese.\nEarl Seward and Eugene Rice\nmade a wooden horse big enough\nso that when it was supported over\ntheir stooped bodies, their legs\ntook the place of the four legs of\nthe horse.\nIt was authentic enough to fool\na flock of big Canada geese. The\ngeese were feeding in fields east\nof the Seward farm. The \"horse\"\nappeared, wandered around the\nfield and approached nearer and\nnearer.\nWhen within range, the horse\ngave up its hidden men and when\nthe smoke had cleared, six geese\nwere in the bag \u2014 five of them\nweighing more than 13 pounds\neach.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, DEC. 12,1957 \u2014 15\nCanada's UN Delegate\nFamous For Plain Talks\nBy JOSEPH MacSWEEN\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nUNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (CP)\nPipe-smoking Dr. R. A. MacKay\nof Canada gazes upon the world\nwilh the quizzical and kindly, eye\nof the professor he used to be.\nRuddy-faced, with a comfortable rumpled look, Dr. MacKay\ncarries with a minimum of fuss\nhis heavy task as Canada's permanent representative at the\nUnited Nations.\nHe has a reputation for plain\nspeaking, tempered with a.calm\nand modest friendliness invaluable to a diplomat\u2014and to Canada.\nDr. MacKay displayed dismay\nwhen he was asked for an interview.\n\"What would you write about?\"\nasked the man who holds the\nrank of ambassador and has\nfound time in an extremely full\ncareer to write several scholarly\nbooks.\nCIVIL SERVANT\nThinking of his university background and the rigors of his current post, which he has held during some of the UN's most trying\nperiods, a reporter asked:\n\"What are you first, a professor, or a diplomat?\"\n\"I'm a civil servant,\" the ambassador replied.\nDr. Robert Alexander MacKay,\n63, heads a team of 15 advisers\nment at the UN's 12th general as-\nfrom the external affairs depart-\nsembly. Then there are 15 representatives, alternate representatives and parliamentary observers on the delegation.\nA .native of Woodville, Ont., he\nserved overseas in the ranks in\nthe First World War. He is a\ngraduate of University of Toronto\nand Princeton and taught at\nPrinceton and Cornell before\ngoing to Dalhousie University as\nprofessor of government and political science in 1927.\nLEARNED PATIENCE\nHe remained on the Dalhousie\nfaculty until 1947, but meanwhile\nalso served on the royal commission on Dominion-provincial relations in 1937-40, editing the so-\ncalled Rowell-Sirois report.\nAll this\u2014and much more\u2014had\nranked him among Canada's outstanding scholars In the political\nscience field before he was appointed to the UN in 1955.\n\"Advanced university training\nis pretty, well essential in this\nwork, certainly desirable,\" MacKay said. \"History, political\nscience, economics and law are\nperhaps the best subjects.\nsuch,\n\"University teaching, as\nis of no particular- worth.\n\"Well, .perhaps it is, after all\u2014\nit teaches patience.\"\nMacKay \u2014 as well as taking\npart in committee debates\u2014maintains a permanent watching brief\nat the UN and keeps the govern\nment informed and advised.\nTHOUGHTS AND SPEECHES\nThis involves many things, said\nthe.ambassador,.looking about the\nUN delegates' lounge where he\nwas interviewed.\n\"For instance, we come here\nto the lounge to find out what\npeople are thinking \u2014 not just\nwhat they are saying in\nspeeches.\"\nDuring his years at Dalhousie\nin Halifax, MacKay became interested in Newfoundland, on\nwhich he has written extensively.\nDuring the Second World War he\nserved a stint in the external affairs department as an expert on\nthat strategic island.\n\"It was an interest that led to\nmy most rewarding experience,\"\nsaid MacKay, recalling that he\nwas summoned again to the department in 1947 when Newfoundland was considering entry into\nCanada.\n\"I was a sort of foreman of officials working on the terms of\nunion,\" he said.\n\"It was a proud rijoment when\nMr. St. Laurent, then prime minister, took the first chisel to inscribe the Newfoundland coat of\narms on Parliament's centre\nblock. Our country was being\nrounded out, as the founders, intended.\"\nDINE WITH QUEEN\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Gordon\nChurchill, Canadian minister of\ntrade and commerce, and James\nDuncan, a director of the Canadian Bank of Commerce, were\namong the guests at a small informal dinner party given by the\nQueen and Prince Philip at Buckingham Palace Tuesday night.\nPtfcBU*\nDAILY SPECIAL\n1950 CHEVROLET\nDark Green, A-l Condition\nPEEBIH\nBuying\u2014Selling\u2014Renting\nYour Classified Want Ad on This Handy\nORDER FORM\n..!\u25a0       J     \t\n11,1,1,11 min \u25a0ivhmMMWP*\nMST LINI\nSECOND UNI\nTHIRD LINI\nFOURTH LINI\nFIFTH LINI\nSIXTH LINI\nSEVENTH LINI\nEIGHTH LINI\n\u2022 Put one word in each space.\nttilth group of numbers or letters count as one word.)\n\u2022 Put your address or phone number in the ad.\n\u2022 Box numbers count as four words.\n(Box 00 Nelson News.)\nTO CALCULATE RATFS USE THIS TABLE\nPer Line\n1 Insertion      '\n2 Consecutive   Insertions\n3 Consecutive Insertion! .\n6 Comecutive Insertions .\n26 Consecutive   Insertions\nI .20\n.33\n.43\n.60\n1.82\n\u2022 Minimum charge is two linos\n\u2022 Add 1.1c for Box Number\n\u2022 Deduct 10% from Above rotes if payment h\nenclosed\n\u2022 Take advantage of the low six time rate\nNon Comecutive Insertions 20* a Line Per Time,\nYou Reach Over 36,000 Readers With Your Nelson Daily News Classified Ad\nNo of Days Ad Is lo Run       \u25a0\n , _i , _*. B|||\nYOUR  NAME\nMe\nADDRESS\n\u2022 Payment Enclosed\nNelson Daily News\nClassified Advertising Department, Nelson, B.C.\n Foul Weather or Fair\nIndoors or Out\nCAMERA\nIs  a   Thoughtful   Gift.\nKODAK AND NOMAD CAMERAS\nFLASH  BULBS   ....:.,'\nFILMS\nFLASH  UNITS\nDEVELOPING ,  ,\nat\nM\nNA M N\nDRUGS LTD.\n16 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, DEC. 12,1957\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c' line, 4De. line, black face type; larger type rates on\nrequest Minimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment\nMary Maxim Sweater Wools.\nEBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.\nBabies, Weddings, Portraits.\nVOGUE STUDIO \u2014 PHONE 1552\nColored Bamboo Table Mats.\nHOBBY SHOP \u2014 Opp. Bus Depot.\nFOR ELECTROLUX SALES\nand service, phone 1108.\nFisherman's Headquarters\nTILLICUM INN-BALFOUR, B.C.\nAnnual kiwanis turkey shoot this\nweek, Thursday, Friday and Saturday, in the Armoury.\nVOTE KARY\nPhone 1831 for\nTransportation\nGas or oil heating, sold, Installed,\nserviced. Licensed, bonded gas\nfitter. Norm Bowcock, ph. 385.\nIt's Time for\na\nMark Your\nBallot Thus\nBALLOT FOR MAYOR\nSHORTHOUSE            X .\nFOR TRANSPORTATION\nTO THE POLLS\nPhone 2155 2156\nWood Vallance hardware has wonderful gifts for everyone on your gift list. Here are just a few of our hundreds\nof gift selections.\nMOM\nFine Bone China\n\u25a0   Electric Blankets\nMixmasters\nCommunity Plate Silver\nBROTHER\nHockey Equipment\nFishing Tackle\nPocket Knives\nToy Guns of all kinds\nPOP\nBeaver Power Tools\nStanley Hand Tools\nFishing Rods and Reels\nRifles and Shotguns\nSISTER\nDolls of all kinds-\nCCM Figure Skates\nAluminum Dishes\n,      (Like Mom's!)\nSmall Suitcases for\nDolly's Clothes\nWood, Vallance Hdwe. Co. Ltd.\nPHONE   1530\nWHOLESALE\u2014RETAIL\nGordon Sutherland\nPainting, Paperhanging. R.R. 1,\nPhone 1990, Nelson.\nChristmas Gifts tor one and all at\nCOVENTRY'S FLOWER SHOP\nPhone 962\nLadies Winter Dresses\nSmart new styles for Christmas.\nEBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.\nLarge selection of TV and planter\nlamps.\nMAC'S FLOWER SHOP\n2-piece new davenport and chair.\nReg. $199.50, Special $179.00.\nBIRCH'S FURNITURE\nMarlite tile board for bathroom\nand kitchen wall. Beautiful colors.\nT. H. WATERS & CO. LTD.\nPhone 156 .- 101 Hall St. \u2022\u25a0 Nelson\nFOR YOUR NEW HAIR STYLING\n4 permanents try the Charm\nBeauty Salon, Medical Arts BIdg\nite 211. Phone 1922.\nStock up now on Indoor and\nOutdoor Christmas Tree Lights.\nWOOD, VALLANCE\nHARDWARE CO. LTD.\nSWEATER CLEARANCE\nREGULAR $8.95 \u2014 SALE $3.95\nREGULAR $5.95 \u2014 SALE $2.95\nIRENE'S MILLINERY\nA FREE CHRISTMAS CORSAGE\ngiven each customer while they\nlast, with every purchase of $5.00\nor over.\nBUTTERFIELD JEWELLERS\nSmart new togs make the most\nappreciated Christmas presents\nfor. style - conscious youngsters.\nFor the smartest in town, make\nyour selections now at-\nEBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.\nNELSON, B.C\nShorthouse Committee Rooms\nLocated at 392 Baker Street.\nWhy is it time for a change?\nSee Tom Shorthouse at his\ncommittee rooms.\nPhones 2155 and 2156.\nEveryone Welcome.\nBlames Coincidence for Leakage\nOn British Bank Rate Increase\nBJ- R.  B.   MacLURKIN\nLONDON (Reuters)-An official bf a big insurance company\nsaid Wednesday it was.\"pure coincidence\" that his firm and another\n\u2014both headed by Lord Kindersley, a Bank of England director\n\u2014should have sold' stock on the\neve of Britain's bank rate rise\nlast Sept. 19.\nThe. official, Clyde Algernon\nCopper, investment secretary to\nthe Royal Exchange .Assurance\nCompany, was testifying at a\ntribunal set up to investigate allegations of an advance leak\nabout Hie two-per-cent bank rate\nrise.\nKindrsley, 58, has been called\n\"a connecting link\" among, three\ncompanies which all sold government securities in the three days\nbefore the rate increase sent\nstock values plunging.\nAttorney-General Sir, Reginald\nManningham - Buller asked\nCooper for his views on why the\nRoyal Exchange, of which Kindersley is governor, and the merchant banking firm of Lazard\nBrothers, of which Kindrsley is\nchairman, should have engaged\nin the same kind of selling operation.\nPURE  COINCIDENCE\nCooper replied: \"So far as I\nam concerned it was pure coincidence.\"\nHe said the total nominal value\nof the stock sold by Royal Exchange Sept. 18\u2014the day before\nthe bank rate 3nnouncement-as\n\u00a31,412,300.\nCooper said he returned from\nvacation Sept. 16 fearing that\nBritain was moving swiftly toward a currency crisis. He had\ncome to the conclusion that the\nbank rate ought to have been\nraised to six per cent at least a\nmonth earlier;\nHe had had no communication\nof any kind with Lord Kindersley.\nAt a meeting of directors on\nthe morning of Sept. 18, he expressed his anxiety about a serious deterioration in the liquid\nposition, of the corporation and\nGood  quality  gift-boxed   pillow\nslips straight from England. $2.95-\n$3 95\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nIT'S HERE\nA mobile dream home\u2014for modern\nspacious living. A warm welcome\nis extended to all to inspect our\nnew \"Rex\" 10-ft. wide. Koot-Nee\nMobile Homes, Castlegar, B.C.\nVOTE KARY\nPhone 1831 for\nTransportation\nGels 5 Years for\nFraud, Robbery\nMONTREAL (CP).~ Norman\nMcCaud, 24, of Toronto pleaded\nguilty before two judges Tuesday\nand was sentenced to five years\nin penitentiary on charges of\nfraud and robbery involving cash\nahd gold, worth more than $20,000\nand airlines rebate slips Worth\n$400,000. \u25a0',}''-\nMcCaud first pleaded guilty to\nstealing two packages containing\n$6,500 worth of white gold grains\nfrom Canadian National Express\nby posing as the consignee.\nLater, he admitted guilt ih a\nburglary in which $13,000 in cash\nand the negotiable rebate slips\nwere stolen from a Trans-Canada\nAir Lines office here.\nHe also pleaded guilty to obtaining $1,600 by illegal means\nfrom a bank in suburban West-\nmount.\nThe two five-year sentences\nwill run concurrently.\nThey also will run concurrently\nwith a seven-year term McCaud\nis serving at Kingston, Ont., for.\na $25,000 armed robbery on a\nsupermarket at Kingston earlier\nthis year. He is also serving a\nsix-year sentence there for burglaries in Toronto.\nMcCaud was traced to Vancouver and arrested following the\nburglary and safecracking at the\nairlines office here.\nnjured Driver\nFlees On Fool\nVANCOUVER (CP) - An injured motorist fled on foot after\nhis car was in collision with a\ntrolley bus in Vancouver's East\nEnd Tuesday 'night. Witnesses\ntold police the man left bleeding\nfrom a forehead cut and-perhaps\nwith other injuries. Police impounded the car, damage to\nwhich was estimated at $1,000.\nLEGAL MEASURE\nTOKYO (AP) - The government is reported preparing a law\nto declare 50,000 Japanese missing overseas since the Second\nWorld War \"presumed dead.\"\nThis would make it possible for\ntheir families to collect pensions.\nBulganin Writes\nTo Gaillard\nPARIS (Reuters) \u2014 Premier\nFelix Gaillard Wednesday received\na personal letter from Soviet Premier Nikolai Bulganin.   \u25a0\nSoviet Ambassador Sergei Vinogradov told reporters after-\nWards the letter referred to\n\"peace and friendship between\nFrance and the Soviet Union.\"\nPrime Minister JIacmillan received a letter in London this\nmorning from Bulganin, and. letters from the Soviet premier\nwere delivered Tuesday to President Eisenhower, West German\nChancellor Konrad Adenauer and\nIndian Prime Minister Nehru.\nUSEFUL GIFT\nPakistan in 1957 presented Iraq\nwith 400,000 doses of smallpox\nvaccine, made in Pakistan.\nrecommended that stocks should\nbe sold;\nKindersley asked whether\neveryone was agreed, and that\nwas his sole contribution, to the\ndiscussion. There was no reference whatever to the bank rate,\nand he had made no attempt to\nfind out what Kindersley's views\nwere.\nAfter the meeting the sale of\nthe securities was carried out.\nOdds...\nEnds\nby M. D. B.\nand\nReceived my first Christmas\ncard the other day from readers\nout at Kinnaird. There is something about that first Christmas\ngreeting that sort of sets you up\nfor the whole festive season. They\nwere kind enough to also send me\na magazine in which there was an\narticle they thought might interest\npeople in this district, in view of\nthe faot a toll bridge has been\nadded unto us.\n* *  *\nIt is concerning Miss Ubangi,\nwho on some U.S. superhighways,\nis Queen of toll collectors. She is\na robot with gaping Ubangi-like\nrubber lips into which motorists\ntoss their toll. Here's the way\nthis smart operator works. As you\napproach she is flashing a red\nlight and as you toss your coins\ninto her big mouth she sorts them\noyer, deciding whether you've tried\nto gyp her. If tl?e price is right\nshe gives you a green light, flashes\n\"thank you, proceed\" and away\nyou go.\n* *  *\nBut what ii you' try to outsmart\nthis smart babe and run through\nthe red light'without stopping to\npay? Ah-ha, Miss Ubangi, though\nshe has wheels in her head, shows\nthat all her cogs are meshing and\nreally gives you the gears. If a\nmotorist didn't stoji or U6ed slugs\nor paid too little she sounds a\ndouble alarm, ringing a bell and\nflashing a red light. Hell hath no\nfury compared to her outraged\nprotest. Not only that ,she squints\nthrough' the eye of her camera and\ntakes your licence plate number.\nSo there!\n\u25a0 *  * *\nNor does night time make any\ndifference to this lady robot. She\ncan summon enough light to take\nyour picture and on the same\nframe of filjn she jots down the\nexact time of your misdemeanor\nand the date; Boy, you can't fool\nMiss Ubangi\nt *: *   \u25a0\nAll this of course is 'in the U.S.\nwhere they are short of people or\ncan't take time to wait for mere\nhuman toll collectors. Why, Miss\nUbangi can send a motorist on\nhis way in three seconds. Fumble-\nfingered toll collectors take a\nwhole '3t4 seconds.\nWhy Worry, Madame?\nIt isn't difficult to know what to\ngive bim if you do your shopping\nat Emory's where gifts are not only\nplentiful but correct and attractively priced.\nHere Are a Few Suggestions:\nSPORT   SHIRTS TIES SWEATERS\nDRESS SHIRTS        BRACES VESTS\nPAJAMAS GLOVES SLACKS\nMUFFLERS BELTS-        SPORT COATS\nSOCKS HATS GOWNS\nEMORY'S LTD.\nTHE MAN'S STORE\nStudents Send\nUp Rocket\nST. JOHN'S, Nfld. (CP.) -Three\nstudents at Memorial University\nplan to launch their second rocket\nfrom a \"secret\" site near here on\nNew Year's Eve.\nSecond year engineering student Clarence Powell and science\nstudents Hector Clarke and David\nCoffin sent their first rocket aloft\nlast wfeekend. It reached an estimated l,000*feet.\nThe rocket was a piece of copper pipe, three feet long and weighing 10 pounds. It was propelled by\nthree pounds of fuel made from\npowdered zinc and sulphur. The\nmissile landed about 30 feet from\nits \"secret\" launching site.\nThe next rocket will have a camera and radio transmitter aboard.\nHAIGH\nTRU-ART\nBeauty   Salon\nSK Baker St.\nPhone St7\nHave The Job Done Right\nUSC GRAVEC\n\u2022        LIMITED        \u2022*\nPHONE 815\nMASTER PLUMBER\nNew Manicure\nSets\nCutex or Peggy Sage with\nzipper or clasps\nIn Leather or Plastic Cases.\nLovely Colors.\nPriced  .$2 to $8.50\nYoung Miss Sets\n$1 _ $2.50\nSold at\nYour Rexall Pharmacy\nCity Drug\nNOTICE TO ELECTORS\nCIVIC ELECTION\nTHE CITY OF NELSON\nPOLLING STATION\nWill Be In The\nOLD POST OFFICE BUILDING\n403 Ward St. Nelson,  B.C.\n(Old Customs Entrance)\nThe Poll Will Be Open\nfODAY\nThe 12th Day of December, 1957 \/\nFrom 8 a.m. to 8 p.m.\nC. W.  R.  HARPER,\nReturning Officer.\n*\n$fiowuf* (Depa\/ibrwit\nSTAR SPECIALS af the Star\nPRICES EFFECTIVE THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY\nTftwL QEpahhrumL\nHomade\nSausages\n3 lbs.\n89c\n2\n2\nCOFFEE\nChase and Sanborn;  ,\nCOFFEE\nChase and Sanborn, Instant; 6 oz.\nWHOLE CHICKENS\nBurns'; 3 lb. tin\t\nSHRIMPS\nKing Oscar;\t\nTUNA\nSolid, Nabob; 7 oz\t\nOLIVES   ;\nClub House, Stuffed; 16 oz\t\nOLIVES\nClub House, Stuffed; 12 oz .'.\t\nSWEET PICKLES\nEed Seal;  24 oz\t\nDAFIDILL\n'Steenfield;  24 oz\t\nMINCEMEAT\nNabob;  16 oz.'\t\n(phoduuL tD&pwdmsinL\nJap Oranges\nApproximate Weight 9 lbs\t\nlbs.    \u25a0 \u2022 ' *\n\u20221.17\n1.59\n89*\n69'\n77'\n63*\n47*\n83'\n63*\nLettuce\nSolid HeadB; Lb.\nTomatoes\nTubes; 14 oz. ......\nGrapefruit\nWhites; \t\nGrapes\nTokays; \t\nM.69\nBundle $3.25\n19*\n33*\nv  29*\n49*\n1 for\nlb. basket\n* Bologna 25*\nMaple Leaf; Lb   \"* W.\n* Baby Beef Liver\nLb -\t\n* Pot Roasts\nRound-Bone, Grade A Red; Lb.\n* Pot Roasts\nCross Rib, Grade A Red; Lb _..\n* Mincemeat\nMaple Leaf;\t\n _ 39*\nFrying Chicken\nMaple Leaf\nn. 59c\n35'\n49*\n2,. 55'\nHave You Ordered\nYour Christmas Turkey?\nSTAR GROCERY\nH. A. D. GREENWOOD\nPHONE 10\nNELSON, B.C.\n","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. 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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"}]}}