{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0432958":{"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\/contributor":[{"value":"Gibbon, A. W.","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"Ramsden, C. W.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued":[{"value":"2023-06-01","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1959-10-23","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0432958\/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":" \u2014\nvmmmmmmmm.\n\u2014!\u2022f\n\u00a3fc^\/\nThe Interior's\nLargest Daily Newspaper\nSeptember Doily Average Press Run 8980\nWEATHER    FORECAST\nKOOTENAY: Sunny with a few\ncloudy periods Friday. Little\nchange in temperature. Winds\nlight. Low and high at Cranbrook\nand Crescent Valley 35 and 55.\nPublished at Nelson, transportation, government, financial and trading centre of the Kootenay-Columbia area\nVol. 57\nNELSON, B. C, CANADA\u2014FRIDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 23, 1959\nNot More Than 7o Dally, 10c Saturday.\nNo. 155\nCastro Charges U.S. Planes Bombed Havana\nSenator Planned\nFake Attack\nSays Pesquet\nMitterrand Wanted Gov't Search of\nHomes of 'French Algerians', Press Told\nPARIS (Reuters) \u2014 Former legislator Robert Pesquet\ntold a press conference Thursday he was the gunman in last\nweek's attempt on the life of Senator Francois Mitterand \u2014\nand that the attack was a fake planned by the senator himself.\nIt was to get the government to search the homes of\n\"defenders of French Algeria,\" he said.\nPesquet was interrogated for nearly four hours by the\nexamining magistrate investigating the Mitterand attack. The\nquestioning is expected to continue.\nMitterand \u2014 who favors a negotiated solution of the\nfive-year nationalist insurrection in Algeria \u2014 when questioned by reporters on Pesquet's allegations, said he would\nreserve any statement for the\nmagistrate\nPesquet told the press conference he had empty cartridge\ncases which the police had not\nfound.\n\"How could I have those shells\nin my possession if it was not I\nwho fixed that attack?\"\nPesquet is a former National\nAssembly deputy representing\nthe extreme right wing Poujade\nparty.\nAsked why Mitterand had a\npolitical opponent rather than a\nfriend carry out the simulated\nattack, Pesquet replied:\n\"He told me 'M I have this\nfake attack carried out by a political friend and the police arrive at the same moment, tlie\ntrick .will be discovered. That is\nwhy I prefer, in event of failure,\nthat an extremist is caught.' \"\nNO BETRAYAL\nPesquet said that Mitterand\ntold him: \"Don't try to betray\nme or I will settle with you.\"\nPesquet said that when Mitterand left the restaurant where he\nhad dined Oct. 15, he followed in\na car as had been arranged. He\nhad a friend with him sitting in\nthe back armed with a sub-ma-\nohine-gun.\nWhen they arrived at the observatory gardens,  Mitterand\njumped from his car as had been\narranged.\nBut there was a courting couple sitting on a bench and Pesquet said he did not dare to fire\nfor fear of hitting them. He drove\naround the gardens waiting for\nthe couple to go. Then a taxi appeared.\n\"Mitterand had by then been\nlying in the grass for seven or\neight minutes. I heard him say\nto me 'Right, go on, fire.' I\nfired.\"\nNO NAMES\nPesquet said the car he drove\nwas not his. He declined to name\nthe owner or the friend who was\nwith him, or to explain how he\ngot the sub-machine-gun.\nAS \"open. = letter\" over the\nname of Pesquet was circulated\nin the lobbies of the National Assembly Thursday.\nIt said Mitterand asked Pesquet to stage the fake shooting\n\"to allow the government to use\nsufficient means to carry out\nsearches at the hemes of 'national' Frenchmen and defenders\nof French Algeria.\"\nThese \"defenders\" oppose self-\ndetermination for Algeria and demand that the North African territory remain an integral part of\nFrance.\nIntimidating Witnesses\nTo Draw Court Action\nKELOWNA. (CP) - A Crown\nprosecutor Thursday warned that\nany attempt to intimidate witnesses\nin a trial of five men charged\nin connection with the severe\nbeating of two youths will be\ndealt with under the Criminal\nCode.\nThe prosecutor said he knew\nof 'no specific instance of intimidation but added there have been\n\"disturbing reports\" that witnesses  had  been  threatened.\nThe trial of the five, charged\nwith unlawfully causing a disturbance by fighting, was adjourned  for one week.\nRobert Mitchell Jablonski,\nEwalt .lake Sapinsky, Leslie Bernard Almond, Garhard WilHelm\nand    William    Ackerman    were\ncharged after two youths were\nseverely beaten following a\ndance Oct.  10.\nOne of the youths, Terry Steward, 19, was readmitted to hospital Saturday after he complained of dizzy spells. The other\nyouth was Don Ferguson, 19-\nyear-old university of British Columbia student.\nThe pair were driving home\nfrom a dance when Ihey saw a\ngang attacking a man and a girl\nin a car. They were kicked and\nbeaten.\nThe adjournment of lhe trial\nwas requested by H. S. Harrison\nSmith, counsel for Sapinsky and\nJablonski.\nThe Crown has intimated it\nwill  call   17  witnesses.\nStmt tftfinsiAL\nBy PYRAMUS\nWorkmen digging up the streets j\nhave a disconcerting way of lean-.\ning on their shovels and watching]\nmotorists as they drive by. Makes'\nthe driver wonder if his exhaust\nis showing.\n* *   *\nSignal lights on the posts facing\nup Ward Street at Vernon Slreet\ncorner have been lifted higher.\nThese are the ones that were often\ndented and cracked. Now they are\nprobably out of harm's way unless\nthe diesel trucks sport higher cabs\nin next year's new model.\n* *   *\nSEEN IN PASSING - Ivan E.\nLewis tucking his wallet into his\nback pocket as he hurried up the\nstreet . . . Mrs. Alex D. Tulloch\nstrolling across a grocery store\nparking lot ... F. A. Abfalter\nwith his account book under his\narm waiting for the green light\n. . . Chris Trkla having coffee\nwith the mayor and fire chief . . .\nF. V. Lindsey looking over Ihe\ncold cuts at the meat counter . . .\nShip Races Homeward\nAt Freeze-Up\nns\nNORMAL\nPRECIPITATION\nFOR THIS PERIOD\nVANCOUVER\n68\nEDMONTON\n08\nRECINA\n09\nWINNIPEG\n1 I\nTORONTO\n21\nMONTREAL\n;i\nHALIEAX\n51\nBy JIM WHELLY\nFOtlT SMITH, N.W.T. (OP)-\nEarly signs of freeze-up on the\nMackenzie River.system have at\nleast one vessel racing for home.\nJim; Goodwin, district marine\nagent here, said Thursday the\nMV Pilot II has been caught in\nheavy ice on the Slave River be-\nI tween Great Slave Lake and Fort\nMOSTLY CHILLY. Temperatures below or much-below normal are predicted for most of Canada in the long-range forecast of\nthe United States weather office. The forecast covers the period\nmid-October to mid-November. Map details the forecast, and also\nshows the precipitation expected across the country. Tables, at right\ngive normal readings for various centres during the period,.\n\u2014CP Newsmap.\nSteel Strike\nLosses in Billions\nJ. M. (Joe) Hielscher with magazine under his arm breathing the\nfresh air on Baker Street . . .\nMrs. Frank Beresford pacifying\nexuberant youngest two on a\nBaker Street corner ... Dr. Norman MacLeod talking to a friend\nfrom  South  Slocan.\n*      V     *\nCONFUSION\nThe six-year-old girl was very\nproud of her father's position, and\nevery lime anyone asked her name\nshe would answer, \"I am Mary\nBrown, Judge Brown's daughter.\"\nHer mother feeling that this was\na bit ostentatious, explained to her,\n\"Dear, just give your name. You\nmustn't say you're Judge Brown's\ndaughter.\"\nThe child was obviously surprised but obedient and the next time\na stranger asked her name, she\nanswered simply, \"Mary Brown.\"\n\"Judge Brown's daughter?\" asked the kindly stranger.\n\"Well I thought so,\" Mary explained, \"but mother says no.\"\nPITTSBURGH 1AP) - Losses\nresulting from the steel strike skyrocketed into billions of dollars as\nthe labor dispute hit the 100-day\nmark Thursday. No permanent\nsettlement was in sight.\nThe 500,000 striking steelworkers\nalone have lost $1,000,000,000 in\npay. Steel induslry losses are a\nclosely-guarded secret.\nBut the economic squeeze has affected many more \u2014 auto manufacturers and their employees, the\ntransport industry and its workers,\ncoal producers and miners.\nIn addition to the strikers, some\n275,000 workers have been laid off\nin allied industries. It is impossible\nto estimate their wage losses.\nBudget director Maurice H.\nStans said recently the strike\nthreatens to wipe out the government's $95,000,000 surplus for the\n1960 fiscal year. That would result\nfrom a sharp drop in tax income.\nIndividual producers guess the\nstrike has cost the soft coal industry between $3,000,000 and $5,000,-\n000 in profits.\nSo far, about 20.000 of the more\nthan 100,000 soft coal miners have\nbeen laid off because of the strike.\nThe miners have lost wages and\nbenefits totalling about $70,000,000.\nThe American Association of\nRailroads reports losses of $500,-\n000,000 in freight revenue during\nthe nearly 15 weeks of the strike.\nSome 60,000 railroad workers have\nbeen furloughed. There is no estimate of their wage losses.\nAulo producers have laid off\n75,000 production workers so far\nand that figure is growing almost\ndaily. Based on the current figure,\nwage losses were eslimated at\nabout $1,500,000 a day.\nOf the big three auto producers,\nGeneral Motors is the hardest hit\nso far. Ford and Chrysler report no\nserious difficulties yet.\nPHILADELPHIA (API - Three\nfederal appeal judges Thursday delayed enforcement of a Taft-Hartley\ninjunction against the striking\nsteelworkers and said they would\ndecide some time next week whether to throw out tlie writ altogether.\nMeanwhile, the strike, now in its\n15th week, continued.\nThe 80-day injunction was grant-\n...     \u25a0*\"'\u25a0*\"*\u2022     '\u25a0& ',*:     1\nen in Pittsfbungn Wednesday by\nJudge Herbert P. Sorg of U. S. Dis\ntrict Court. Immediately the steelworkers union appealed to the\nU. S. Circuit Court of Appeals.\nTlie Appeals Court heard arguments on two points:\nIs the injunction granted under\nthe Taft-Hartley Labor Act illegal?\nIt the strike of 500,000 steelworkers endangering Ihe health and\nsafety of the United States?\nCRUSHED BY TRUCK\nCHILLIWACK, B.C. (CP) - John\nWesley Toop, 19, was killed Wed\nnesday when he was crushed between a loaded dump box and the\nframe of a truck.\nPolice said he apparently was\nwalking beneath Ihe loaded box\nwhile it was in the dump position\nand he possibly tripped the release\nlever.\nTwins OH\n(ritlcal List\nPORTLAND (AP) - The Stub\nblefield Siamese twins, separated\nOct. 6, are no longer in critical\ncondition.\n\"Their conditions are now satisfactory and the outlook is favor\nable,\" said a spokesman at the\nUniversity of Oregon Medical\nSchool Hospital, where a team of\n17 surgeons, technicians and nurses\nseparated the two girls.\nJeanett   and   Denett,   now   3\nmonths old, were joined from the\nbreastbone to navel before the op\neration.'\nFor a week after the operation\nJeanett's condition was precarious\nand death was expected almost\nhourly. Finally she rallied and a\nweek ago the hospital said the operation was a success.\nThe threat of possible infection\nstill hung over both, however, and\nthey were too weak to offer much\nresistance should it strike.\nThe hospital said Thursday they\nare eating regularly and gaining\nweight. Jeanett weighed 11 pounds\n8 ounces; Denett 10 pounds, six\nounces. They had a combined\nweight of 9 pounds, 10 ounces when\nhare June'' IB to Mr. 'and Mrs.'\nJames Stubblefield of Parma, Ida\nEach weighed about 8V4 pounds\nfollowing separation.\nSmith. The lake is about 100 miles\nnorth of this Northwest Territories administrative centre on the\nAlberta-N.W.T. border.\nMr. Goodwin said the transport\ndepartment vessel might have\nmade it to Fort Smith had not a\nhigh wind pounded chunks of ice\nagainst one of her propellers,\ncausing the loss of a clutch.\nTRYING FOR LANDING\n\"She should make it to a landing in Nagle Channel before the\nriver is frozen solid,\" Uie agent\nsaid. The department sent a helicopter to pick up the crew but\nit was decided to let the Pilot II\ntry for the landing and safe winter haven.\n\"The early freeze-up this year\nhas caught us off guard,\" said\nMr. Goodwin. \"Last year we\nwere bringing boats ashore in our\nshirtsleeves, on Oct. 28.\"\nFreeze-up means the end of a\nshort supply season for territorial\nresidents. Barges, towed by tugs\nfrom McMurray, Alta., forge\nas far as Arctic Ocean points with\nsupplies \u2014 food, fuel, clothing\u2014\nfrom June to late September.\nTwo Charged With\nWatchman's Murder\nVANCOUVER (CPi - Two men\nwere charged Thursday wilh murdering a ni^ht watchman on his\npost Sept. 2.\nPolice said Chadwick Campbell,\n27, who was being held on a vagrancy charge in Bel'lingham, and\nLloyd Storey, 27, being held here\non a charge of possession of stolen\ngoods, will appear in court Friday.\nThey arc charged with the murder of Vaino Alto, 69, who was\nfound dead at a Johnston National Storage warehouse after police\nreceived an anonymous telephone\ncall saying there is a \"watchman\nin trouble at Johnston's.\"\nDrunk Arrested With\nKnife at Corner Rally\nBy HABOLD K. MILKS\nHAVANA, Cuba (AP) \u2014 Fidel Castro Thursday night\naccused U.S.-based planes of \"bombing\" the Cuban capital\nWednesday. He called the attack \"base and unpardonable.\"\nThe bearded prime minister appeared on television a\nfew hours after police arrested a drunken factory worker\ncarrying a knife in a crowd of demonstrators around Castro\nat a street corner rally. '\nPolice seized the man after a teen-ager screamed the\nman was trying to kill Castro, but the drunk pleaded \" I am\na supporter of Fidel.\"\nYear-End Summit\nTalks Favored\nPARIS (CP) - Soviet Ambassador Sergie Vinogradov said\nThursday Russia agreed with Pres\nident Eisenhower that East-West\nsummit talks should be held at\nthe end of this year.\nVinogradov spoke to reporters\nafter calling on Foreign Minister\nMaurice Couve de Murville for an\nhour's talk, Thp envoy said thflty\ndiscussed summit,matters and arrangements for Premier Khrushchev's expected visit to Paris be*\nfore  Christmas.\nPresident Charles de Gaulle, who\nconferred with Vinogradov two\ndays ago, recommended Wednesday that a top-level meeting should\nbe postponed until next spring.\nEisenhower, with the support\nof Prime Minister Harold Macmillan, had favored December.\nDuring the various diplomatic\ncontacts in Western capitals about\na summit meeting. Russia stood\npatiently on the sidelines awaiting\nthe outcome.\nVinogradov unexpectedly ended\nthe Soviet silence Thursday when\nreporters asked him how Russia\nfelt about a date for the talks.\n\"President Eisenhower has proposed a summit conference at the\nend of the year. We agree on\nthis.\"\nAnglican Primate Determined To\nSeek Union With United Church\nBODY IDENTIFIED\nCHILLIWACK I CPi - The body\nof a woman found in the Fraser\nRiver near here last Saturday\nwas identified today as that of\nAnita Laycock, 50, of Quesnel. Mrs.\nLaycock was in a car with her\nhusband, daughter and another\ngirl when it plunged into the river\nfrom a ferry slip at Marguerite\nApril 29. Only her husband survived.\nBennett To Name\nElection Date!\nVICTORIA (CP) - Premier\nBennett will make a major address to a mass meeting of Social\nCredit party members and the\ngeneral public before the party's\nannual convention here next week,\nparty officials said Thursday.\nThe Times says there is speculation that the premier will announce an election date at the\nmeeting, the day before the convention opens.\nTlie premier has said that he\nfavors 1961 for the election but\nOpposition spokesmen have said\nthey think the election will be\nnext year.\nPremier Manning of Alberta has\nbeen invited to be guest speaker\nat the convention.\nNOBEL AWARD\nCRITICIZED\nSTOCKHOLM (AP) - The Swedish Academy drew criticism on\nThursday for awarding the 1959\nNobel Prize in literature to Italian poet Salvatore Quasimodo.\nThe Stockholm newspaper Afton-\nbladet suggested there are several\nmore deserving writers airouind.\n\"After its incursion into the heroic with last year's prize to Pss-\nternak, Ihe academy has returned\nto a safe middle position,\" the Influential socialist organ complained.\nWINNIPEG iCPl-Archbishop\nHoward H. Clark of Edmonton,\nprimate of Ihe Anglican Church\nof Canada, Thursday reaffirmed\nhis church's determination to continue to explore every avenue for\nIhe achievement of reunion with\nthe  United  Church  ot Canada.\nThe primate made the statement in an interview to correct a\nwrong impression given Oct. 12 in\na Canadian Press story from Toronto. The story was based on an\ninterview published in the United\nChurch Observer, a bi - monthly\npublication. The story attributed\nto him certain statements that\nshould have been attributed to\nthe Observer, and erroneously\nquoted him as saying there is no\npractical way of achieving union\nbetween Anglicans and the\nUnited Church.\nArchbishop Clark said he\nhad not been instructed by the\nAnglican Church to make any\npublic statement on the matter of\nchurch union.\n\"Therefore there is no change\nin the determination of our\nchurch, as reaffirmed in general\nsynod this year, to continue to\nexplore every avenue for the\nachievement of reunion.\nQUESTIONED BY  EDITOR\n\"In the interview with the\nUnited Church Observer I answered as frankly as I could certain definite questions asked by\nthe editor. They happened to concern those areas oif special difficulty in the rdations of the two\ndnndies with each other. Therefore'it would be easy to get the\nimpression that I am pessimistic\nal union between the United\nChurch and the Anglican Church.\nThis is not the case.\n\"Nor do I think that the Anglican position really demands of\nlhe United Ohurch any surrender\nof its  deepest convictions.\"\nThe CP story erroneously\nquoted the primate as saying lu-\nture developments may see the\nUnited Church involved in unions\nwith other Protestant churches\nand the Anglicans moving closer\nto the Anglo-Catholic position and\nunion discussions with other\nCatholic churches. This interpretation should have been attributed\nto the  Observer.\nArchbishop Clark said Thursday:\n\"In any union that we are led\nunder God to achieve the resulting church would be a greater\nchurch embracing in its life alt\nthat is good and true in the life\nof the two churches, at present\nseparated.\nMUST  BE  READY\n\"Union will not be easy but we\nmust be ready to go forward\nwhen God shows us the way.\"\nHe said he personally thinks\none of the most hopeful steps that\nhas been taken has been the suggestion that the churches should\nstudy together the plan for reunion worked out in northern India by Anglicans. Methodists,\nPresbyterians, Baptists and\nothers.\n\"A plan for reunion along these\nlines seems to be the most hopeful  line  of  approach,\"  he said.\n\"A proposal is under consideration to bring leaders from north-\nem India to Canada to tell us\nabout the progress of their negotiations.\"\nCastro lashed out at the United\nStates in a TV appearance to explain Wednesday's attacks in\nHavana and the anti-Communist\nuprising by a group of revolutionary army officers.\nMANY CASUALTIES\nTwo Cubans were killed and\nnearly 50 wounded in shootings\nand grenade - tossing which followed the appearance of anti-\nCastro planes over the capital\ndropping leaflets.\nMost witnesses said they saw\nno firing nor bomb - dropping.\nThey suggested most of the casualties came from ground - fire\nagainst the intruding aircraft.\nCastro charged that the raids\nwere linked with the resignation\nof Maj. Hubert Matos, revolutionary commander in Camaguey\nprovince, and 30 of his officers\nwho charged growing Communist\ninfluence in the Castro government.\nThe 40-year-old Matos,. a hero\nof the fighting to overthrow dictator Fulgencio Batista, waa\ncharged with treason. The you\u00bbg\nofficers were arrested.\nEVENTS LINKED\n(Jastro told the TV audiencet\n\"I fM categorically affirm\" Utet\nthere - was a link between the\nevents in Camaguey and the\nbombing of Havana. I have\nproof.\"\nMatos, In quitting his command, had pledged his loyalty to\nthe revolution but denounced the\nCommunist influences in (he regime.\nCastro himself flew to Camaguey Wednesday to arrange\nMatos' arrest and to denounce\nhim as a treacherous ingrat*.\nPolice Thursday night were\nquestioning the drunken knife-\ncarrier in an attempt to determine whether an assassination attempt actually had been made.\nThe street corner Incident occurred as Cuban crowds, rallied\nby Castro for a show of loyalty\nto him, marched on the U.S. Embassy with shouts and banner*\nderiding the United Stales.\nThe man was identified as Robert Salas Hernandez, 33, Police\ndeclined to confirm a radio station's statement that he was try\ning  to  kill  the  prime  minister.\nPolice said Castro visited the\ncorner of a street where a man\nwas* killed by a grenade in Wednesday's, violence. A erowd gathered and Salas was grabbed by\nCastro's bodyguard as he made\nhis way toward the prime minister. Salas was described as quite\ndruiHt,.\n(Jastro }ias launched a popular\ncounter-attack against the great-\n'esf open threat Ttr his -regime in\nHavana \u2014 the aerial leaflet raid\nand explosive ground attacks by\nanti-Castro elements.\nAs before, he appealed t\u00bb the\nsympathies of the Cuban people\nand they responded with verbal\nattacks on the U.S. Embassy.\nFLYNN WIDOW, SON \u2014 Patrice Wymore, widow of actor Errol\nFlynn, and Sean Flynn, Errol's son from his first marriage to Lill\nDamita, sit with bowed heads as they arrive at the Church of the\nRecessional in Los Angeles to attend funeral services for the 50-\nyear-old actor. Patricia was Flynn's third wife.\u2014AP Wirephoto.\nAnd in This Corner\nKINGSTON, Ont. (CP) \u2014 Sportsman Mitch Hepburn says he knew\nhis Labrador retriever was dandy for ducks but he didn't realize its\naptitude lor other fowl.\nThe Labrador, llocky, scratched at the door Tuesday night and\nonce Inside presented Mr. Hepburn with a plump partridge, de-\nfeathered, cleaned and ready for the oven.\nResidents along the block were questioned but no one claimed\nthe bird.\nEAST GREENBUSH, N.Y. I API \u2014 Mrs. Frances Collins' child\nlives on a hill too steep for the buses from the East Greenbush school.\nSo Wednesday night tlie school board approved the transfer of\nIhe pupil to lhe East Nassau school district where buses come from\nlhe hill's other side, which isn't so steep.\nST. JOSEPH, Mo. (AP) \u2014 A cautious woman called police headquarters, explained that her bunny rabbit Hallowe'en costume is\nbasically a suit of long underwear, and asked if she was apt to be\narrested if she appeared on the street in it.\nLt. H. K. Brown told her he couldn't find any ordinance that\ncovers the situation.\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Punch, Britain's humorous magazine,\nrecently printed a cartoon advertising a scries of \"condensed culture\ncards\" a quarter of the size of a postage stamp summing up works\nof classical literature in 50 words.\nThe aftermath was described by the magazine's assistanl editor.\nJ. B. Boothroyd.\nThe magazine also had printed a series of diagrams of such\nthings as \"do-it-yourself plastic surgery kits (or squashed noses\" and\n\"home taxidermist kits for stlifting your own pets.\"\nHe said the demand for these articles had been \"terrific \u2014 they\nsent letters enclosing money [rom all over the place'\n i\u00a7P|i\u00ab-W'\u00ab.\nmmmmm\nPPPWPPpppPSPippppppiii^^^*\u2014^^^^^piflpiip^iPipia^^^^^^^iiPlI^^\n2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, OCT. 23, 1959\nThe laughter...\nthe loving...\nthe happy\nliving of a\nwonderful guy\nmake <\/iw\nA WONDERFUL\nPICTURE!\n7.00 - 9.10\nCIVIC\nTHE WEATHER\nNelson  \t\nHalifax  \t\nCalgary \t\nKimberley\n41 52 .36\n26 46 -\n33 59 \u2014\n40 56 .03\nThere's Nothing Like\nD RI ST A N\nFor Relief of\nSinus Congestion\nColds Miseries\nHay Fever\nNasal Spray     $1.25\nTablet. $1.2S - 2.25\nNELSON\nPHARMACY\n'Tour Fortress of Health\"\ntil Josephine St      Phone 1203\nAuto-Vue   Drive-In\nTRAIL, B.C.\nTonight and Saturday\n\"STORY OF MANKIND\"\n(Color)\nRonald Coleman, Hedy Lamar\nShorts\nShow Times 6:45 and 9:00 p.m.\nCASTLE THEATRE\nCastlegar, B.C.\nTonight, Saturday\n\"HOT SPELL\"\nShirley Booth, Anthony Quinn\nNews - Cartoon - Shorts\nPhilology is the branch of study\nthat concerns the origin, growth\nand relation of various language^\nSave and Sew\nWeekend Specials\nDrip-Dry  Broadcloth.  36\" \t\nGlenella  Flannel.  54\". Washable.\nWashable Novelty Tweeds. 45\". ._\nAll-Wool Flecked Tweeds. 54\". _\nDrip-Dry Pinwale Corduroy. 36\".\t\nNew shades in Felt. 72\". \t\nMoirre Taffeta.  36\". \t\n_ .69\n.1.95\n.1.79\n-3.25\n.1.49\n2.95\n.2.29\nEnglish Brocade. 50\" wide. Pink, Blue, Aqua, Champagne shades. Make a glamorous \"sheath\". 2.49\nVelveteen, newest shades. 36\". 1.95\nPrinted Flannelette. Sanforized. 36\".   .69\nHARDING 32\nNylon-blend yarn, 1 oi     tmwmm\n10 BALLS FOR $2.95\nKROY AC\nUnshrinkable, 1 o\u00ab      \u2022  \u25a0\u00ab**\u25a0\u00bb\n10 BALLS FOR $3.95\nHARDING, Double-Knitting       *1<\u00bb\nt os. balls . \u25a0\nMail Orders promptly attended to.\nWrite In for samples.\nCustom Sewing Centre\n580 Baker St.\nPhone 1653\nAND THIS IS HOW IT WORKS. The masses of switches and relays necessary for\nthe new telex communications are explained to Mayor T. S. Shorthouse and Chamber\nof Commerce President C. W. Hamsden by C. F. Shayler, CP. Telegraphs agent, and\nC. W. Bailey, CP. Communications inspector. The system was officially opened Thursday by Mayor Shorthouse.\u2014Daily News phoo by Gerry Stevens.\nAutomatic Teletype Service\nOfficially Opened   in Nelson\nA new, ultra-fast method of com-1 location for the new telex com-l The system is operated by Pri-\nfmuications came into being in i munications service, and I am j rate Wire Services, a company\nNelson Thursday, with the official! convinced that it will be a great].jointly owned by Canadian Pacific\nopening of the Telex central in asset to our community.\" j Communications arid Canadian\nCanadian Pacific Communications As a demonstration of the speed | National Telegraphs,\nbuilding. of the system, Lufthansa Airlines \t\nThe   system   is   an   automatic- at   Gander,    Newfoundland   was _     _     _\ndialing teletype, giving immediate called,   and   in   a   second,     reply  II     D     MOUfJlH\ncommunication between  any  two was received and a message could! I\\i   U*  JIWfTUIl\nunits on the continent. Later, the' be sent. |\nsystem will become world-wide,    j    Nelson is the third city besides1 Dptll'Pf   llAFP\nThe units are in a large grey, Vancouver and  Victoria, to have; lAVlll VJ  llvlw\nbox, similar in appearance to a'a  central   exchange,   the   othersi\nteletype, with a keyboard on the; being Kamloops and Kelowna. The After 47 years of service with,\nfront like a typewriter. On the Nelson exchange can presently j (he Canadian Pacific Railway, R.j\nright side is a dial, like a phone's, j handle 19 subscribers, or seven'R. Stewart of Nelson retired as1\nand several switches. A large red mme t,ian t,le Present* Later, as'car foreman this week. He was\nlight goes on when the unit is in\nuse.\nTo call another unit, the operator looks up the other person's\ncode number in a directory andi\ndials it. The pulse is sent to Van-j Ql(ipa    Ponf\nArea Promotion   Pavs Off\nFor District, Chamber Told\n\"Area promotion\" was stressed\nby Harry A. Shannon of Trail,\nchairman of the tourist and publicity committee, Associated Chambers of Southeastern B.C.\nIn an address to the Nelson\nChamber of Commerce Thursday\nat the Hume, he said the Okanagan\nis an excellent example of this\ntype of promotion. The folders put\nout by the chambers and boards\npromote the Okanagan as a whole,\nwhile the individual towns don't\nbegin their promotions until the\ntourist is in the district.\nIn connection with area promotion, he stated that natural beauty\nis not enough. \"No matter how\nmany beautiful lakes and mountains, hunting and fishing, camping facilities that you have, you\nmust also promote eating places,\naccommodation and garages.\"\n\"Everyone profits from tourist\npublicity. If it weren't for the\ntourists, two of every 10 garages\nwould not exist. The same thing\nholds for other businesses such as\nPiano Duo Presents\nThrilling Program\nA near-capacity audience thrilled to the twin pianos of Harry Neal\nand Allison Nelson, in the first\npresentation of the 1959-60 Overture Concert Association, held in\nthe Capitol Theatre Thursday\nnight.\nTheir varied program ranged\nfrom a charming set of tinkling\ntunes from childhood, to the crashing chords of the bells of a Russian\nEaster and melted into the intimate melodies of Rachmaninoff's\nRomance. Throughout this range of\nof touch possessed by both pianists.\n\"Scenas Infantis\" by Octavio\nPinto, a series of five sketches portraying childhood, was dedicated\nby Mr. and Mrs. Neal to their\nthree children. In making tlte dedication, Neal drew a laugh by an-\n-ouncing the age of his son,\nJohn, as six and then after a short\nconference with his wife, correcting\nhis mistake and saying \"John is\n5.\"\nThe program came to a close\none   and  temperament  the  pain with Franz Liszt's \"Concerto Path-\nwere beautifully coordinated even\nin the most difficult passages and\nrubato sections. Their fingers drew\nfrom the keys the varying moods\nof the pieces with infinite grace and\nprecision.\nOpening the program with a short\nfood stores, etc. j selection, \"Andante in D minor\" by\n\"If   we   work   at   it,    tourist\nbusiness can be doubled by 1964.\n\"Last year, 110 million dollars\nwere spent by tourists in British\nColumbia, yet during the same\nyear, 350 million dollars were spent\nby tourists in Washington, a state\nwith far less to offer than we\nhave.\"\nHe said that of every $20 that\nthe tourist spends, $4.50 goes to\nretail and department stores, $1.90\nfor food, $3.60 for hotels, motels,\nand other accommodations, $2.10\nfor garages, $1.90 for entertainment, and $1.40 for souvenirs.\nIn addition, secondary benefits\nare extensive. A good tourist season can result in the building onto\na motel or hotel, thus profiting\nthe carpenters, plumbers, tec. The\nextra that they earn is passed on\nto others, and the pyramid continues.\nAINSWORTH FUTURE\nCommenting on a particular feature of the immediate area, Mr.\nShannon noted that with the new\netique\" with the duo-pianists performing for the first time a new\nand more compact version of this\nvirtuoso piece.\nOf the  four encores demanded\nby the audience, perhaps the playing of \"Three Blind Mice\" in a\ndelightfully original style pleased\nWilhelm Friedmann Bach, they lit- the most. The selection was dedi-\nerally held the audience in their  cated   to   three   teen-agers   who\nhands for close to two hours. | wanted   to   hear   \"something   we\nMr. Neal joined his wife at her know.\"\npiano for the second part of the\nconcert, to play three famous\nduets; \"Marche Militaire\", Opus\n51 No. 1 by Franz Schubert, \"Slavonic Dance\", Opus 72, No. 2 by\nThe final number, \"It's a Lovely Day,\" by Rachmaninoff, was\nplayed at the request of their small\nson.\nAlso  included  in  the  program\nAntonin Dvorak   and   \"Hungarian were \"Variations,  Opus 56 on a\nDance\", Book 1, No. 5.\nThe intense and haunting melody\nof \"Romance\" by Sergei Rachmaninoff displayed the fine sense\ntheme by Haydn\", by Johannes\nBrahms, Russian Easter by Rachmaninoff and \"Three Etudes\", by\nVictor Babin.\nIhe demand grows, more units will presented with a gift of iuggage road being completed to Ainsworth,\nbe added on.\nLand Registry\nRepair Planned\ncouver, then out a main trunk\nto its destination; The pulse automatically turns on the other unit,\nand when a key is pressed, the unit\nidentifies itself to the sender. The Scaffolding skirting the Nelson\nsender then identifies himself, also, Land Registry Office has been set\nthrough a special key, then types, up in preparation for a roofing pro-\nout the message, in the same man- ject. A delay in getting the work\nner as a typewriter. underway has resulted from a shor-\nThe  first  official  message  re-  tage of steel for the metal roof. The\nceived   over   the  Nelson   central  work is being done hy Laurence I Ont\nunit was from Hon. W. D. Black, Simpson, who put in dirt fill from I He enlisted for military service\nMX.A.  for Nelson-CreMon. lhe parking lot to the rear of Ihe ' from  1914 to 1918, and after dis-\n\"I heartily congratulate the City  court house in preparation for a  charge  returned  to  Ignace,  Ont.,\nof Nelson and its businessmen on  lawn next spring. j as a car repair man. Transferred\nthe initiation of the telex systemi Afler 60 years without a side- to Field, B.C., Mr. Stewart was\nreadily linking Nelson by means' walk in front of Ihe building Ihe transferred to Nelson as car fore-\nof  this   modern   communications! city has completed the project and man*\nfrom  fellow  workers  in  the car that community could be built up\ndepartment  Tuesday. ! tremendously for the tourist, and\nThe set of luggage was presented that it should be strongly promoted\nto Mr. Stewart by A. H. Smith; by the Nelson Chamber,\non behalf of the Brotherhood of! \"The trans-provincial highway\nRailway Carmen of America and! will also increase the tourist bus-\nthe office staff. Mrs. Stewart was iness in the area, but with the\npresented with an overnight case, j trans-Canada highway opening at\nAlso  attending  the presentation* the same time, this will be a for-\nwere   A.   W.   Betton,   divisional'. gotten route, and must be pushed\nmaster mechanic,  and R. Davis,; by the associated boards and the\nsuperintendent of car departments! individual chambers.\"\nfor the Pacific region. |    He went on to describe a new\nMr.   Stewart   started  with   the' brochure to be published by the\nCanadian Pacific Railway, in 1912 Associated Boards, and said that\nworking for two years at Barclay,! M|00O COpies would be printed for\ndistribution.\nLand Registry offic:\nmethod with the rest of the province and the continent.\"\nIn reply, Mayor T. S. Shorthouse\nsent the following message:\n\"Thank you.  Mr.  Minister,  for  5cOUt    DflVS\nyour  message  of congratulations\nand goodwill. You can be assured! pMJc_e <tQ7C\nthat we are exlremely gratified j KOISeS \u00abJ>0\/*J\nthat Nelson has been chosen as the\nFormerly active in the curling\nare weU pleased with the results.  club' Mr. Stewart also bowled, and\nis an ardent hockey and baseball\nfan.\nTrail Control\nOf Nelway\nElectrohome TELEVISION\nHigh Fidelity Picture TV\nFeature No Other\nTV Offers\nHigh Fidelity Picture TV\nNo Picture Distortion\nNo Picture Flutter\nNo Smearing or Dulling\nFaithful Sound, without buzz\nor hum.\nCabinets by Deilcraft\nNo Masonite or Hardboard\nNo Simulated Grain Finishes\nGenuine hardwood veneers. In walnut, mahogany, autumn leaf mahogany,\nSwedish walnut, blonde oak.\nThe industry's leading TV chassis that won awards for\nReliability . . . and now, look \u2014\nQuality Electrohome TV       Priced with the others\nFriday and Saturday\nY     $299.00     In  All Wood   Finishes.\nTrade In Your Present T.V. Set On a New Electrohome Now \u2014 I'p to $200.00 and More\nFor Your Present Set \u2014 Phone Al Wood for Valuation.\nOREN S TV and Appliances\n108 BAKER ST.\nPHONE 231\nYour Electrohome TV DEALER for Nelson and West Kootenay.\nThe Boy  Scout  and  Cub bottle\ndrive Saturday raised an estimat- f\\(('.,.a    Prntocrnrl\ned $375,  officials  disclosed  Wed-! wTTICB    rrOIB-il-BU\n\"'Thf'boys, assisted by parents* , C\u2122cfn *fs ^f b>Yrant\nwho provided transportation, can-! A. Clark, Nelson Chamber of Commerce second vice-president, over\nIhe fact that the Nelway Customs\nis under the control of the Trail\noffice,\nln a statement to a meeting of\ntlie   chamber   Thursday   at   the\nvassed the city collecting bottles\nfrom door to door.\nOrganizers    expressed    their ,   .\nthanks to the many public spirited; cu,s'\u00b0TS...a\"l \u2122\u2122gr\u201e   \u00b0\".\ncitizens who aided the campaign\neither  actively  or  through  bottle\ncontributions.\nNOW\nin  a  magnificent\nNEW\ndecanter\n\/4 Superb &uitv\nTfais odvertkemBnt it nol published or displayed\nby Ihe liquor Control Boord or by Ihe\nGovernment of British. Columbia.\nHume Hotel, he noted that persons\nbringing equipment and supplies\ninto Canada via the Nelway port,\nmust obtain a performance bond\nthrough Uie Trail office. The information on the bond is then\ntelephoned to Nelway and the\nequipment allowed to pass through.\nThis, he said, was \"a definite\ninconvenience\" to people in the\narea, and if the entry port was\nplaced under the control of the\nNelson office, the time required\nfo>- the transaction would be cut\nto 30 minutes or less.\nThe membership unanimously\npassed a resolution to have a letter sent to H. W. Herridge, MP\nfor Kootenay West, asking that\nthe changeover in control be made.\nEarlier in the meeting, Chamber\npresident C. W. Ramsden read a\nletter from Dr. N. A. M. MacKenzie, chancellor of the University\nof British Columbia, inviting him\nto the opening of a new University\nresidence, \"Kootenay House.\"\nDr. MacKenzie thanked the\nchamber for the enthusiastic support it gave toward the building\nof the new residence.\nHarrison Named\nDirector\nHarry D. Harrison of Nelson has\nbeen named a director of the\nAutomotive Retailers Association\nof British Columbia.\nHis election took place at the association's annual convention in\nVancouver Tuesday. J. C. Hawks of\nVancouver was elected president.\nthink you can earn this\nexclusive Gold Card?tejfr\nTHIS IDENTIFIES\n7h\u00a3u^ tffo^L&c,\noj o PREFERRED RISK properly\nOiiiifr* prolrrlrd by Gt'ifral\nInsitraiict Company of Antrrira\nOnly careful, responsible homeowners carry this\nGold Card from General Insurance Company of\nAmerica. If you are a person who takes pride in\nhis home and possessions-one who has few, if any,\nlosses over the years-then you, too, deserve General's\ngold identification card. It represents the finest,\nmost complete home insurance you can buy-General's\n\"Personal Ultrapolicy.\" Call us today for the full\nstory!\nC.  W. Appleyard\nPhone 269\nand Co. Ltd.\nNelson, B.C.\nP. E. Poulin\nPhone 70 Nelson, B.C.\nEATON'S\nSpecials\nThis\nWeek\nKiwanis District\nGovernor Coming\nPacific Northwest District Governor Joseph Epler of Seattle will\nvisit Nelson Kiwanis Club in November, President L. D. Nicholson\ntold the Kiwanis meeting Thurs\nday.\nA ladies' night banquet and\ndance was planned, he said. Chairman is Walter Clarkson. Mr.\nEpler retires this year.\nHe also called attention to appointment of a member, Aid J. W.\nMcClelland, as boys' work director for the United Church in the\nKootenay.\nLetter of thanks was received\nfrom the Nelson branch of the\nCanadian ArthriUf and Rheumatism Society for the club's donation of a wax bath and hydrocol-\nlator now being used in the physiotherapist , department.\nOUTSTANDING VALUE\n$150 TRADE-IN\nOn  This O'Keefe  and  Merritt - Custom   Deluxe\nAUTOMATIC GAS RANGE\n$4 0095\nFeature Packed With Complete\nChrome Top Plus 20,000 B.T.U.\nForced Air Heating Unit. ONLY\n499\nTECO GLASS LINED\n22 imperial gallon capacity       tOO 10\nautomatic gas hot water heater *|\/T'3v\nTECO MODEL 657\n63,000 B.T.U. natural gas heaters can\nbe adapted with * oo Q r\nthermostat. . *f77.73\n50,000 B.T.U. Only $94.95\nTECO MODEL 307\n30,000 B.T.U,\nNow   Only   \t\nFIREPLACE SCREEN\nWith frame *1Q OB\nOnly     ^lO.TD\nCHESTERFIELD\nFoam rubber, sturdy construction. Regular\n$239.95. Trade-In 495 Ofl\n$79.95\n4'6\" CONTINENTAL BED UNIT\nComplete, legs, box spring,\nand mattress. Only\nELECTRIC HEATING PADS\nQuilted, *7 ne\ncompact. Only .   \u2022)\u00bb\u00bb    ***\u2022*\u00bb\nCOMBINATION CAR AND PORTABLE\n6 TRANSISTOR RADIO\nComplete with leather carry\ncase and car dash holder. ...\nVIKING STANDARD VACUUM CLEANER\nComplete with\naccessories\t\n$69.50\n$49 95\n$59.95\nBERKLEY DELUXE FOOD MIXER\nComplete with 2 bowls, dual    drOQ Ol\ndual food mix reference, only fwO-'J\nPHONE\n1860\nT.I^TQNCS\nNELSON\nBRANCH\n mmmmmmmm*mmmmiimmW*\nwmmMmimnf'\n'\u25a0^\u25a0V'^r-iK^^^-r-^'^'''\n:\u25a0\u2022;)>\u25a0-!.'\u25a0'\u25a0;- \u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0* \u25a0:<'-.''.':\u25a0.\u25a0:    \u25a0'\u25a0,-';.- ;> \u25a0\u25a0:'...\"'\u25a0 ;;.*;:*-,--'V\n\u25a0\"\n.\/;\u25a0\u25a0;.;. i)i;-:*..t.'.sVi;*-...-v^i'*\n\u25a0 !\u25a0\u25a0> : , \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-*   irs      \u25a0\u25a0 ? \u2022\"\nf!PffWS\u00bb\n*\u00a3)^3\nU.S. Buyer Activity Cheers\nB.C\/s Interior Cattlemen\nKAMLOOPS, B.C. (CP)-Signs\nof a resurgent interest by United\nStates buyers in British Columbia\noattle have Interior cattlemen\nhoping for an improvement in fall\ncattle prices.\nA strong demand for feeder\ncattle for export helped keep\nprices up last year, but American buyers failed to appear in\nany number this year when tlie\nannual autumn movement of cattle from range lands to market\nbegan last month.\nWithin the last week, however,\nU.S. buyers have been entering\nthe picture again at interior B.C.\nsales, boosting the price for\nfeeder cattle by as much as $1.\nNEW   INTEREST\nK. R. Ohowen, manager of the\nB.C. Livestock Producers' Co-operative Association, said Thursday cattlemen expect continued\nInterest by the U.S. and are hop-\nHAZLEWOOD DRUGS LTD.\nPrescriptions,\nStationerv. Toiletries, Books\n943 Spokane SV     Phone 11\nTrail,   B.C.\nScott-Atwoter\nOutboard Motors\nBail-a-MaUc Ends Hand Balling\nModern Electric\nBay Are. Phone 133\nTrail, B.C.\nLOWEST PRICED SEWING\nMACHINES\nla the Kootenays.\nUNION-PETERS\nDISTRIBUTORS LTD.\n1810 Bay Ave.   Trail   Phone 208\nPARSLOW'S\n* GUNSMITHING\nLOCKSMITHING\nFISHING SUPPLIES\n1*532 Bay Ave.       Phone 1098\nTRAIL, B.C.\ning prices may be restored to a\nlevel almost as high a$ last\nyear's.\n\"Until the last week, cattle\nweren't moving to the U. S. too\nreadily,\" he said. \"The American\nbuyers stayed in their own market where prices were lower and\nmost of our cattle were going to\nthe coast and to the east.\n\"The high discount on the dollar was also keeping the Americans away, but they came back\ninto our market last week and although their buying is not heavy\nyet, we're hoping it will creep\nup.\"\nPRICES DOWN\nFeeder oattle prices are still\ndown about $2 from last year,\nwhen good steers and heifers\nwere bringing from $20 to $23.50\na hundred pounds. Slaughter cattle prices this year are up\nslightly.\nPrices at interior markets have\noften hit their peak in October in\npast years, but Mr. Chowen says\ngood prices have been known to\ncontinue into January.\nCattlemen have been watching\nthe situation in the U. S. keenly.\nU. S. herds were sharply out by\nsevere drought a few years ago\nand Americans started buying\nCanadian cattle in the middle of\nthe 1957 season while they built\nup their own herds.\nB. C. cattle exports to the U.S.\ntotalled more than 20,000 in 1957\nfrom total shipments of a Uttle\nmore than 100,000. In 1958, 36,139\nhead of a total shipment of 107,-\n516 went to the U. S.\nHALF THIS YEAR\nUnofficial figures indicated\nonly 5,000-odd head went to American buyers in the first six\nmonths of this year, compared\nwith 11,034 in the same period in\n1958.\nThe \u00a5. S. department of agriculture warned last spring that\nthe build-up of U. S. herds might\nbecome excessive this year unless some stock was liquidated.\nB.  C.  officials  of the  federal\nReal Estate Council of British Columbia\nAnnounces\nDIPLOMA COURSES IN\nREAL ESTATE AND APPRAISAL\nOffered through Uie Faculty of Commerce and Busines;\nAdministration of the University ol British Columbia by\ncorrespondence and lectures.\nThe courses commence on NOVEMBER 4,1959\nFurther details and registration {owns oan be obtained fromi\nThe Secretary,\nReal Estate Council o* British Columbia,\nRoom 401, 207 West Hastings Street,\nVancouver 3, B.C.\nThe Corporation of the\nVillage of Silverton\nCourt of Revision\nVOTERS' LIST\n1959-1960\nCourt of Revision for the purpose of correcting and\nrevising the Voters' List for the ViHage of Silverton\nwill be held m the Municipal Office on Monday, the\n2nd doy ef November at 10 o'clock A.M.\nVILLAGE CLERK.\nDated at Silverton, B. C\nOctober  20th, 1959.\nagriculture d e p a r talent's livestock marketing division report\nthat cattle coming in off the\nranges appears in good shape.\nPay Research\nBureau Advised\nVICTORIA (CP) - Salary needs\nof Canada's civil servants should\nbe surveyed by a pay research\nbureau, B.C. Liberal leader Ray\nPerrault said here Wednesday.\nDuring a one-day visit on party\nbusiness, he said provincial and\nfederal party policy would support\na widened study of existing pay\nscales.\n\"The pay should be equal to\nthat paid by progressive employ-\nesr, on both the provincial and\nfederal level,\" said Mr. Perrault.\nIncreases should be based on increases in the cost of living basis, ,\nhe said. *\nMr. Perrault said his party ex-|\neoutive has also felt concern with\na current provincial matter\u2014the\ntransfer of many prisoners from\nthe Oakalla young offenders' unit\nto the Haney correctional institute.\nThe step was announced by Attorney-General Bonner Monday.\nThere is a feeling among persons\nconcerned with prisoner rehabilitation that valuable work will be\ndestroyed unless there is a continuity of personal contact between prisoners and personnel\nwho worked for their improvement\nat Oakalla, Mr. Perrault said.\nCRESTON AREA\nSOCREDS LIST\nHIGHWAY NEEDS\nCRESTON \u2014 Ttoe Creston Area\nCouncil of Social OredSt grofips\ncomprised of al Creston area\ngroups was held at the home of\nMi*, and Mrs. Ben Wills.\nDiscussion of road requirements\nwere submitted by each of the local presidents on behalf of then-\narea and will be submitted to Hon.\nW. D. Bladt and other suggestions\nfor improvements of road conditions were included.\nArrangements were made to\nhave a banquet Oct. 23 at which\nthe provincial secretary will be\npresent, to be held in the.K.P. hall.\nFollowing the banquet wil! be a\npublic meeting for residents wishing to meet and talk with the me-m-\nbeir.\nThe Creston W.A. reported a series of card parties for the winter\nseason is planned.\nArrangements for transportation\nfor the delegates for the Provincial Convention Oct. 29, 30 and 31\nin Vancouver were made.\nBach president gave a report of\ntheir group activities ami numerous letters regarding projects under discussion were received and\ndisposition made.\nA social period followed with\nlunch being served by the ladies.\n$2.5 MILLION\nHOSPITAL WING\nUNDER STUDY\nVICTORIA (CP) \u2014 Preliminary\nwork for construction of Jubilee\nHospital's new $2,500,000 wing is\nwell underway and tenders for\nthe main construction are expected\nto be called next spring.\n\"The project is going ahead as\nfast as can be expected,\" Health\nMinister Eric Martin said Thursday.\nHospital administrator Qeorge\nMasters said, \"we had hoped for\nan earlier approval of plans but\ndo not anticipate this will be held\nup much longer. We are ready to\ngo ahead when the preliminary\nwork is done.\"\nThe two statements were in answer to remarks by carpenter's\nunion delegate James Moffatt at\na Victoria Labor Council meeting\nWednesday ni\u00aeht.\nHe said he was reliably informed\nthat the scheduled start on construction had been delayed by\ngovernment failure to approve\nplans. He called for immediate\naction, pointing out the project\nwil give needed jobs to mora than\n90 members of his union.\nThe health minister said approval has been given to preliminary utilities and \"it is going ahead\nas test as oan be expected.\"\nMrs. Robinson\nDies at Michel\nMICHEL - Rev. W. H. Tingey\nof Fernie conducted funeral service for Mrs. Catherine Robinson,\nwife of Oliver Robinson, in St.\nPaul's Church. Mrs. Robinson\naged 68, had resided here 33 years.\nShe was born in Gateshead, England, Jan. 15, 1891 and came to\nCanada and Michel with her husband on Christmas Eve in 1926.\nBesides her husband, survivors\nare one son, Sydney of Cranbrook;\ntwo daughters, Mrs. R. (Lillian)\nBennett of Nelson and Mrs. Oharles\n(Ha) Melanson of Calgary.\nShe was an active member in\nchurch affairs with the woman's\nauxiliary .of St. Paul's.\nP a 11 b earers were Norman\nHughes, Andy Davey, Mike Slem-j\nko, Tom Barass, William Gregory\nand Robert Marsh.\nE. Kootenay Liberals\nLay Campaign Plans\nKIMBERLEY \u2014 Campaign committee on behalf of candidate Jack\nGlennie for the niext provincial\nelection was named at a Cranbrook\nDistrict Liberal Association meeting here, and plans were made\nfor the basis of the campaign\nwhich will start next month.\nInitial event planned is a dinner\nfor Ross Thatcher, Liberal leader\nin Saskatchewan in late November\nto be followed by a public meeting\nNamed to the campaign committee\nwere James Byrne, Guy Williams,\nRobert Cram, James Stewart, Dan\nBoone, James Buchanan, Mrs.\nJames Byrne and Mrs. Percy Ad-\nlard, all of Kimberley, and M. S.\n388 Jobless in\nCranbrook Area\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Number of un\nplaced applicants (or employment\nat the National Employment Service offioe in Cranbrook increased\nduring the week by 38 to a total of\n388 in the count Oct. 16. It is believed largely due to closing of\nseveral logging camps in the district due to rain and not scheduled to reopen until the ground\nfreezes. It is also partly due to\ncompletion of the season's road\nimprovement, program.\nHowever, at present there is a\nheavy demand (or Christmas tree\ncutters and laid-oBf woods workers\nare being referred by the NES\nojiee to the tree yard operators\nfor placement in this work.\n\"Snpoy- Moma- VftovkA,\"\nBROWNIE Movie Camera f\/2.3  $32.95\nReg. $38.25 value, Canada's Favorite 8\nmm movie maker, onry one simple setting\nfor wonderful oolor movies.\n8 mm Movie Projector $39.95\nReg. $49.95 value, projects\nbrilliantly sharp home rfiovies,\n200 ft. capacity, blower-eooled\n\u2014300 watt lamp, f 1.6 hi-qual-\nity sooted projection lens, rapid\nrewind, rugged metal construction.\nBuy Now and Use Our Christmas Lay-Away Plan\nNew Invermere\nWater System\nWork Under Way\nINVERMERE \u2014 Work is under\nway on the Westside Improvement\nDistrict water system and most ofI\nthe'distribution system will be in j\nuse thi* autumn. Source of water I\nfor the mile-long pipe is the Paddy j\nRyan Lakes, five miles south-;\nwest of Invermere. I\nMachinery of V. L. Mosher,\nCreston, has been digging the\nditches for the past two weeks\nstarting above the Charlie Thornton residence and continuing to the\nvillage boundary with a number\nof lateral ditches.\nThe system will provide domes-\ntie water and sprinkler irrigation\nfor 3S water users along Waterways Drive and the adjacent area\nwhich has a number of small\nfarms.\n4-H Clubs Plan\n19(0 Expansion\nAnyone wishing to organize a\n4-H Club for the 1960 season witl\nhave little time in which to do so\nbecause of the new enrolment\ndate of January 1, 1960, rather\nthan the old April 1 deadline, states\nA. J. Allan, district agriculturist.\nAdditional information is available from the Agricultural office\nin the Court House at Nelson.\nThe 4-H Club activity in the Nelson and Creston districts is limited,\nthere being only two clubs, one at\nArgenta and one at Lister.\nThe Lister Club, whioh is a\nmixed calf club, is expected to\nexpand in 1960 because the Kootenay Ayrshire Breeders are directing their efforts toward establishing an Ayrshire Calf section of at\nleast eight members in the Lister\nCalf Club.\nThe Lister 4-H Club also hopes\nto have enough members to form\na Beef Calf section and a Holstein\nCalf section, each with at least\neight members. If it proves possible to have successful operation\nof the three sections under the\nLister 4-H Club in 1960, then it\nshould be possible to form three\nseparate clubs the following year\neach with its own sponsor and its\nown leader.\nThe Lister Women's Institute is\nsponsor of the Lister 4-H Club\nand the 4-H Club leader is Alfred\nWell9pring of Lister. Anyone wishing to enrol in the Lister 4-H Club\nfor the year 1960 is asked to contact the Lister 4-H Club or the\nDistrict Agriculturist at Nelson.\nMinimum age requirement is 10\nyears before January 1, 1960.\nWynndel Socreds\nHear Meet on Tape\nWYNN'DBL \u2014 The Wynndel\nSooial Credit meeting for October\nwas held at the home of Mr. and\nMrs. Frank Merriam.\nPart of the tape recording of\nthe Nelson Constituency meeting\nwas played during the supper hour\nwith particular attention to the\ndiscussion of resolutions submitted. Fred Hagen acted as chairman in the absenee of Mr. Merriam,\nReports were heard from the\nWomen's Auxiliary of the group\nand also from the province. Reports were also heard from Mr.\nD. Bowlby and others seeking information on projects. Road estimates were discussed and suggestions sent to the area council to\nbe'submitted to Hon. W. D. Black.\nThe fall provincial convention was\ndiscussed and possible delegates\nnamed.\nThree Decorated\nVERNON (OP) - Three officers\nof bheA B.C. Dragoons were\nawarded^ efficiency decorations\nWednesday at an inspection by\narea commander Brigadier J. W.\nBishop. They are Capt. Dick Nelson, Vernon; Capt. Harold Pett-\nman, Kelowna and Sgt.-Maj. Bill\nMathens,  Penticton.\nEdgewater Wins\nCredit Union Award\nINVERMERE - Edgewater\nCredit Union was awarded a\nplaque at their annual banquet\nat Radium Hot Springs. The\naward was given because the union\nhad the best .annual meeting of\nany East Kootenay Credit Union\nof less than five years standing.\nRalph Westgate, president of the\nEast Kootenay Credit Unions, of\nChapman Camp, made the presentation. Guest speaker was Mrs.\nChris Madson of Radium, who\nspoke on \"Education.\" Adolphe\nJohnson of Edgewater, president\nof the Edgewater Credit Union,\npresided at the banquet, and Donald Cameron of Edgewater was\ntoastmaster.\nMr. Westgate proposed the toast\nto the International Credit Union\nThe toast to the Edgewaler Credit\nUnion was proposed by Tom Moore\nof Edgewater.\nFollowing the banquet, travel\nand wildlife movies were shown\nby Art Briars of Radium Hot\nSprings. Dancing followed.\nWindermere Guides\nTo Plant Bulbs\nINVERMERE - Lake Windermere District Girl Guides and\nBrownies will join with their sisters throughout Canada in cele\nbrating the Girl Guide Jubilee\nyear by planting 600 tulip bulbs\nto mark their share in \"the river\nof gold\" that is the symbol of the\nJubilee Year.\nSome 200 bulbs have been sent\nlo the Edgewater Girl Guide company and Brownie pack, 300 are\nto be planted by the Invermere and\nWindermere Guides and Brownies\nand another 100 have gone to Canal\nFlat.\nThe Invermere - Windermere\ngroups have planted their tulips\nat the Windermere District Hos\npital. The Edgewater and Canal\nFlat groups have not yet announ\nced their plans for the planting.\nBefore   you   say\nSCOTCH\nHi-Fi and Stereo Recordings\n394 Baker St.        NELSON, B.C. Phone 889\nT\nDEWAR'S\n11  ii e r e r   v a \/\u2022 i c s\nB8K\nThis advertisement h not published or displayed by the\nLiquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\nKlinkhammer and Dr. fl. W. Brock-\niugton o\u00a3 Cranbrook. Additional\nmembers will be added over the\nnext several weeks.\nA finance committee to raise a\nspecific campaign fund amount\namong Liberal Association membership will have Mr. Byrne as\nehaitman, and committee members are Chuck Kinrade, Stanley\nHodgson, Ron Olson, Brian Hamil\nton and Rod Douglas as members,\nwith their work starting immediately.\nThe candidate gave an enthusl-\nastie report to the meeting on the\nrecent Liberal rally in Vancouver,\nand outlined the provincial platform described there by the provincial Liberal leader, Ray Perrault, K advocates low cost public\npower, extension of hospital insurance to cover care for the chronically ill, medical insurance without int*feren\u00abe in doctor^patient\nrelationship, lower age limit for\nold age assistance, profit-sharing\nand co-ownership in bettering management-labor relations and justice for civil servants.\nInvitations will be extended Mr.\nPerrault by the Association to\naddress a pubtk meeting in Cranbrook district in 1960.\n$1326 COLLECTED\nFOR CANCER\nIN WINDERMERE\nINVERMERE - The Windermere District Cancer Society forwarded a cheque to the B.C. Cancer Society totalling $1126, proceeds of the 1959 Conquer Cancer\nCampaign from this district.\nTnis is the largest amount ever\nforwarded in a eancer campaign\nin the area which extends from\nBrisco to Canal Flat.\nMrs. Oswald Young of Invermere was campaign manager, assisted by Rev. R. D. F. Kimmitt.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, OCT. 23, 19S9 \u2014 3\nFormer Church Site\nMay House New Building\nORANBROOK \u2014 This week's city\ncouncil meeting began consideration of a proposal far utilization of\nthe city-owiied site where First\nBaptist Church is now located.\nConstruction of a building there\nto house a health unit, and location for the Cranbrook Public library and East Kootenay branch depot of the B. C. Library Commission will be suggested to the provincial government.\nNew Baptist Church is under construction on 14th Avenue at FUMi\nStreet south toward occupation next\nspring after wfokh the city will take\npossession oi the present building\nit has purchased.\nArrangements wiH be made for\na meeting of city council Oct. 30\nwith Game Biologist Glen Smith,\nAgriculturalist J. W. Alimack and;\nrepresentatives of the land department and parks and recreation department tor the Kootenays to discuss advisiHlity of making Lake\nElizabeth just west of Oranbrook\nin\/to a glade -8 park.\nChamber of Commerce complaints regarding condition of the\nnew South Eighth Street, between\nThird and Fifth Avenues will be\ninvestigated. Also to be investigated will be a tang-empty house in\nIhe vicinity oif Tenth Avenue School*\nof which the school principal audi\nSjisbnict school board have complained as being a hazard to children.\nApplication of Wrlton ReiUy tor\ndomestic water connection in extra\nmunicipal Pineerest was approved. Letter from Vincent Fink\nHianking the Council tor arranging the ceremonies dedicating the\nfountain in Central Park: to thei\nmemory of his father, the late\nJ. P. Fink, was received. Also received was an invitation far mayor\nRAILWAY MILEAGE\nAverage miles of road operated\nby the CNR in 1958 was 24,882, and\nby the CPR 17,096.\nand Council to participate tn the\nCanadian Legion Armistice parade.\nnew star   \\\\  \/\non display}'.\ntithe   -<*Y     .\n^^WMHOtG AID\n\"PARADEOF\nPROGRESS\"\nDIPLOMAT\n\u2022 araaoaai \u2022*** pw*w\u00bb\nZsHubttboQ\nt WciSbsoely KnnM\nWfWVOOMf\nncMfifffO w\u00ab9\nZonkh Hearing Aids Sold By\nOptkd\nPrescription Co.\n4W Hendryx St. Netao*, B.O.\nPMONf S00\nAuodate  MerfhMi  BoMdHig\nTop Dogs to Show\nAt Retriever\nStakes in Vernon\nVERNON, B.C. (CP) - Vernon\nwill 'be the showcase for Canada's\ntop retriever stook this weekend\nas the 10th annual national retriever stake gets underway Friday.\nThe annual classic, sponsored\nby the Vernon Fish, Game and\nForest Protective Association, has\ndrawn entries from all parts of\nCanada, with three from the United\nStates. Twenty \u2022 one dogs will\nvie for top honors.\nQualifiers to the national stake\nmust place in an open all-age\nstake at a trial licensed by the\nCanadian Kennel Club during 1959.\nJudges for the three-day event\nare Frank Coograll of Edmonton,\nHector Grant, Burnaby, B.C. and\nKeith Coughlan, Vancouver.\nDefending his title against a\nfield of champions will be Bulldozer of Cremavoy, a black lab-\nrador owned and handled by Bill\nSinger of New Westminster.\nBulldozer will be handicapped\nwith a badly gashed foot sustained last weekend when he\nstepped on broken glass.\nHe is expected to get his toughest opposition from Ace of Country Club, a two-year-old black\nlabrador owned and handled by\nRobert Postlethwaite of North Vancouver.\nORCHESTRA SWITCH\nThe CBC Symphony Orchestra\nbroadcasts from Toronto now are\nheard Friday evenings, instead of\nSunday evening as in former years.\nPUBLIC NOTICE\nAIRLINE SERVICE LTD.\nHas filed application! with the Public Utilities Commission for permission to increase passenger fare*\nin the City of Trail and between Trait, Green (Sables,\nMontrose, Beaver Falls and Fruitvale and between\nTrail, Warfield and Rossland,\nApplication has also been made to cancel certain\nscheduled services, due to lack of patronage, and\nincrease others where extra services are required in\nthe City of Trail and between Trail, Fruitvale and\nRossland.\nCopies of the proposed revisions may be obtained\nat tlfe Carrier's Bus Terminal and at the Montrose,\nFruitvale, Nelson and Rossland Bus Depots,\nThese applications are subject to the consent of the\nPublic Utilities Commission and any objeotion may\nbe filed with the Superintendent of Motor Carriers,\nT740 West Georgia St., Vancouver, on or befoM\nOctober 31st, 1959.\nProposed Effective Dates\nNOVEMBER 9th, 1959.\nSave on Your\nWinter Fuel Bill\nGet the Most Out of Your\nHeating Dollar...\nGyproc Wool\nFibreglas Insulation\nBurns Lumber\nCOMPANY LIMITED\nPhone 1180\nNelson, B.C.\n P^I#W'*r'*^*tK-W1.**lWl.W|'*'*'*.''.l**|.M'*i.\u00ab*'*'.11-. ^-- !.'\u25a0 \u2014       ....'... i    . .J ,JJ.|i.nu\n\u2022WIlSPW'piP!\nWWSSPWPW\nspp^Pip\nNelson Sailg NntiH\nEstablished April 22, 1902 ' N6t66n, B,. C.\nPubUshed by the NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n266 Bakei Street, Nelson, British Columbia, mornings except\nSundays and holidays in the centre ol the Kootenays with\nthe largest daily circulation In the Interior of B.C.\nAuthorized as Sseond Class Mall, Post Office Department, Ottawa.\nC. W. RAMSDEN, Publisher.\nA. W. GIBBON, Editor.\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN DAILY NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS' ASSOC1AT16N\nMEMBER OF TH& AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS\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\npaper, and also the local news published therein.\nF. B. Pearce...\n.. .Writes\nFriday, October 23, 1959\nAll Should Enjoy Columbia Benefits\nThe fact that Democratic Representative Lee Metcalf of Montana is trying\nto push a bill through the House of\nRepresentatives in Washington means\nlittle beyond the fact that some Montana people are behind this plan to\nbuild the Libby dam by installments.\nThe American Army Corps of Engineers is against the plan purely on\nengineering grounds, as well as because they would prefer the adoption\nof an over-all plan to develop the\nresources of the Columbia. This latter\nis becoming the opinion of many\npeople who live in the vast Columbia\nbasin.\nEngineers are supposed to be unro;\nmantic people devoted to hard facts\nand uncontestable figures. They are\nall this in the booklet \"Water Resources\nof the Columbia River Basin\" prepared\nby the International Columbia River\nEngineering Board, but they become\nalmost lyrical over its other resources.\nThey start a long paragraph about recreation by saying, \"The Columbia\nRiver basin offers a variety of recreational opportunities rivalled by few\nareas on the North American continent.\" The inference is that they are\nplainly impressed with the unique possibilities of this area. They also make\nit clear that the keynote to the development of the area is to be found in cooperation.\nWith this in mind they have submitted various plans which, while extracting all Ihe hydro power possible.\nwill also retain and improve all the\nnatural resources which make the area\nsuch a uniquely interesting place.\"\nThese plans will be considered by the\nInternational Joint Commission, which\nwill make recommendations to the Canadian and American governments.\nThe two governments will then proceed\nto carry out whatever plan is chosen.'\nThe American representatives will,\nquite normally, be mindful of their\nown interests, and the Canadians of\ntheirs, but it is quite unlikely that\neither parties will attempt to score at\nthe expense of the other. This Is an age\nin which countries are sinking their\nminor disagreements and co-operating\nfor the good of all. The European free\ntrade associations are proof of this. We\nneed more of this feeling on this continent, and particularly in the total de-\ndevelopment of the Columbia basin.\nThe development of its water right\nmust perforce be done internationally\non government levels, but the tourist\ntrade, which depends so much on the\nrecreational facilities, can best be increased by co-operation between those\ninterested in the business.\nWe should never at any time consider ourselves as \"subservient\" to the\nAmericans. As a free people we should\nmeet them on equal terms, accepting\ntheir help in developing our country\nand by a spirit of friendliness encouraging them to enjoy the northern portion of this wonderful Columbia basin.\nInterpreting, the News\nBy ALAN HARVEY\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nKonrad Adenauer's decision to\nvisit London next month seems likely\nto end in love and kisses all round.\nIf so, it will be a welcome change.\nFor the last year or so, the West German chancellor's coolness toward\nBritain has been a source of bewildered irritation in United Kingdom government circles.\nNow, it seems, Dr. Adenauer is\nready to bury the hatchet. He is al-\nCc\nDofcfced\ncommercialism\nSome TV adman who must have\nstudied Pavlov., has come up wilh a\nway of circumventing the industry's\nban on subliminal adveitising. He pro\nposes to get at human walchers subli*\nminally through their dogs.\nThe plan is for a recorded dogs\nbark lo be btoadcast as background\nto a dog food commercial \u2014 but at\na sound level inaudible to humans.\nThis is calculated to send Prince barking aiound the living room. The announcer Ihen asks the owner ol man's\nbesl iiiend if he knows why the dog\nis balking. Answer; he's asking for\nBrand  X  Hog  fobd.\nWe're inclined lo think, however,\nthai Ihe sponsor is just playing into\nthe hands of those of us who have\nBaid all along lhal loo many TV commercials are pitched at the level of\ndogs ralher than adult humans.\nAs lo Ihe question of whether Ihis\nis the same kind of potentially dangerous thought control as subliminal advertising for humans, lhe answer\nseems to be no. It's just a commercial\nfimmick that is about as annoying\nas the cpreal plugger's \"now, kids,\ntell your mother to be sure and get\nAs tar as the dogs are concerned,\nthey'll just be doing what they usually\ndo\u2014bark back when barked at. And\nwe have a happy premonition that\nthere may not even be too many of\nthem doing that. After all, how many\ndogs pay attenlion any more, when\nLassie barks out her weekly TV dialogue?\u2014Chrislian Science Monitor. \u25a0\nready speaking more softly, saying\nthat the differences between the two\ncountries are \"much reduced.\" And\nthe fact that he is coming at all is\nsignificant, since the invitation to\nvisit London has been open for about\na year.\nUntil recently, the 83-year-old\nchancellor seems to have felt bitterly\nthat Britain almost alone among\ncountries has refused to forgive Germany for past sins. On several occasions on meeting Prime Minister\nMacmillan, he has suddenly produced\na batch of British press clippings designed to show that there is some\nsinister unfriendly plot directed\nagainst the West German government\nThe chancellor's sense of grievance has seemed almost obsessivp\nBritish officials say the truth is that\nIhere is nn general hostility toward\nGermany, either in the British government or among the people Whitehall\ncan hardly be blamed, they say, if one\nnr two papers persist in publishing\nstories with an anti-Bonn bias,\n\"The British attitude may be one\nof indifference, but it is not one of\nhostility,\" one informant said.\nWest Germany's attitude is vital in\nthe present trend to greater give-and-\nlake in East-West relations. Usually,\nwhen the cold war shows signs of\neasing, West German insistence on\nreunion of the two Germanys puts\ndifficulties in the way.\nLast Stfturday, Dr. Adenauer said\nWest Germany will make all sacrifices\nneeded for peace, and his statement\nas a whole led commentators to believe that he no longer regards German reunification os decisive. Such a\nfundamental change in policy, if\nconfirmed, might have a big bearing\non future East-West negotiations\nGems of Thought\nTIME\nWell arranged time is the surest mark of\ni well arranged mind.\u2014Isaac Pitman.\nBelieve me when I tell you lhat thrift of\ntime will repay you ln after life, with a\nusury of profit beyond your most sanguine\ndreams.\u2014Gladstone.\nHaltawe'en is of Scottish origin,\nfor th* Scots of old were very prone to\nwitchcraft, wizards and warlocks and\nthings that went bump in the night.\nHence when they were converted to\nChristianity they took over the night\nbefore All Hallows and let their fam\niliar spirits have one night in the year\nto cavort around. And very successfully, too.\nIn England, where they never believed much in witchcraft, and the\nonly witches were the white one that\ncured warts and rheumatism, they did\nnot observe Hallowe'en. Their ghosts\nare polite and reasonable ones which\ndo not go around scaring people but\nusually inhabited old houses where\nthey are reckoned to be part of the\nfamily.\nNevertheless fall is a good time for\nbonfires and one excuse is as good os\nanother, so the English boys celebrate\nGuy Fawkes Day. This is November 5\nand according to the old rhyme,\u2014\n\"Please to remember the fifth of\nNovember gun powder treason and\nplot,\" Mr. Fawkes tried unsuccessfully to blow up parliament. We boys\ndid not know this but what did it matter?\nMy first remembrance of the day\nwas when my mother said I was too\nsmall for firecrackers so she brought\nme home a pill box with small round\npellets in it. These, I was assured,\nwhen o match was put to them, would\ngrow into worms. They must have\nlacked vitamins for no worms came\nforth.\nThat is the only safe and sane\nGuy Fawkes Day I can remember, after that I joined the rest of the gang\nin scrounging stuff for our bonfire.\nOur favorite fuel was the gorse which\ngrew on the common. Despite the\nprickles we hacked down the tough\nbushes and dragged them to our fire.\nThe beauty of the gorse was that it\nmade a glorious flaming fire for a few\nminutes and there was no sticking\n\u25a0around poking it with a stick and trying to make it stop smoking and get\nit to burn.\nThen we had fireworks. All sorts\nof them and those we have today are\nno better. We had our own displays\nand of course fire-crackers, but I do\nnot remember that we were ever a\nnuisance with them. No one thought\nof throwing them into letter boxes or\nannoying grown-ups. They left us\nalone and we let them alone. We had\nour fun and no one wrote letters to\nthe editor about the wickedness of\nfire crackers. We enjoyed ourselves\nimmensely and mothers were tolerant enough to let us all come home\nlate.\nNow 1 see our Nelson children\nhave succumbed to adult piety and\nare now going to do good deeds, not\nby stealth, but collecting for children\nin other countries who do not go to\nschool. We unregenerates used to go\nround to our neighbors collecting for\nour fireworks. At least we got something for our money even if it did go\nup in smoke.\nThirty Years Ago MacAlpine Party\nLost in North Made News Headlines\nNo Return, Though\nObviously the moon shot has set a\nstandard in the field of transportation\nwhich bus, rail and even air lines are\nlikely lo find quite a serious problem.\nThe first evidence of this made its\nappearance almost on the heels of\nLunik II. In Portugal, an irate commuter lodged a complaint with the\nLisbon-Sintra electric railway that his\ntrain was 20 minutes late on the 18-\nmile run. I\nThe Russians, he comrHBnted^with\nasperity, landed their rocket on the\nmdon's surface just 84 seconds off\nschedule on a trip of more than 230,000\nmiles.\nIt almost seems as though the\nauthors of Lunik II may have touched\nofl a little more unpleasantness than\neven they expected.\n\u2014Montreal Gazette.\nWatch Your Language\nSOLICITOUS (so-LIS-i-tus): Adjective-\nApprehensive; full of concern; full of desire;\neager. Origin: Latin.\nIt's Been Said\nTo feel for none is Ihe true social art of\nthe   world's   stoics\u2014men   without   a   heart.\n\u2014Lord Byron.\nBy GILLIS PURCELL\nCanadian  Press Staff Writer\nThirty years ago a party of fly-\niftg prospectors disappeared in\nCanada's barren lands, sparking\nan arctic search that cost a fortune and kept the country on edge\nfor, weeks.\nFamous north - country pilots\nscanned the desolate area inside\nth* Arctic Circle, battling mist-\nbanks, rain and snow. They flew\non floats over near-frozen lakes\nand on skis when ice was perilously thin. They navigated by the\nsun or by the seat of their pants\nwhen Uie nearby magnetic pole\naffected the compass.\nTheir search failed. The missing miners\u2014never really lost but\noften in trouble\u2014found their way\nto safety with tlie help of Eskimo\nhunters.\nHERALDED  NEW  ERA\nBut 1929's six weeks of spotlight on the Barrens \u2014 first\ncrossed by air just a year before\n\u2014saw the first feeble start in\nstretching modern communications across the trackless north.\nThen Uiere were only half-a-dozen\nradio stations in the Northwest\nTerritories, no radio \u2022 equipped\nplanes and no airstrips. Now aerial prospecting, defence, science\nand commerce have joined in setting up more than 70 airports\nlinked by radio telephone.\nIn two single-motor planes the\nprospectors rushed into the Arctic hoping to stake claims in a\nrich copper country they heard\nwas to be opened up by the government. It was opened up later\nbut didn't prove to be rich.\nTheir plan was a three - week\nsweep of the Territories\u2014lo the\nArctic shore and back. But a\nplane badly moored at Churchill\nwas lost in Uie wild Hudson Bay\ntide. The replacement took a\nweek and the delay ran the trip\ninto bad weather\u2014and near disaster.\nGROUP OF EIGITT\nThese were the eight-man mining group that came to be known\nas the MacAlpine party in newspaper headlines across Canada\n(ages given as 30 years ago):\nPilot Stan McMillan, 24, Edmonton,  of  Dominion   Explorers,\nCol. C. D. H. MacAlpine, 43,\nToronto, president of Dominion\nExplorers.\nE.A. Boadway, 28, Ann Arbor,\nMich., spare pilot and nayigator\nfor Dominion Explorers,\nAlex ,L Milne, 28, Winnipeg,\nchief engineer for Dominion Explorers.\nMajor G. A. (Tommy) Thompson, 35, Winnipeg, Western Canada Airways pilot.\nA. D. Goodwin, 24, Winnipeg,\nWCA mechanic.\nRichard Pearce, 36, editor ot\nThe Northern Miner, Toronto\nmining weekly.\nMajor Robert F. Baker, 39,\nPort Colborne, Ont., Dominion\nExplorers c a m p manager at\nBurnside River on Bathurst Inlet.\n\u2022 Four of the eight are dead.\nGoodwin Died at Vancouver in\n1945, MacAlpine at Toronto in\n1951, Baker at Port Colborne in\n1953 and Thompson at Vancouver\nin 1957.\ni Stan McMillan, st ill Hying\ncommercially, is supervisor of\nvisual flight regulations fur I'a-\nrifir Western Airlines at Edmonton. Brodie Boadway is general\nmanager of Carey - Canadian\nMines al East Broughton Station,\nQue. Alex Milne, until recently\nflight - lest foreman for Avro-\nOrenda at Toronto, is active in\nrecording the early history of\nnorlhland flying. Dick Pearce is\nstill associated with The Northern Miner.)\nFAILED  TO   ARRIVE\nThe MacAlpine parly was to\nhave heen back south by Sept. 20.\nBut from Bathurst Inlet on the\nArcllr shore, one of the few\nnorlhland radio stations, word\ncame Sept. 24 Uiat the party, due\n12 days earlier, had not arrived.\nTlie search slarted that day.\nRy that day, the MacAlpine\nparly, already marooned 12 days\non Ihe edge of Canada's mainland hesidp an Eskimo winter-\nInciting onmp, had built a four-\nfoot-high house of stone, mud and\nmoss. It was 12 feet by 14 inside,\nroofed with ranvas from a tent\nthe wind kept blowing down. They\nhad traded field glasses to Eskimos for a stove and had set up\na routine, wilh Major Baker in\ncharge.\nFood and ammunition were rationed. Meals were twice a day.\nTobacco had  run  out.  Organized\nWe're all full of vanity. The only\ntime everybody applauded, the\nlecturer last night was when he\ntold us how intelligent we looked.\nhunting had' built up a stock of 18\nptarmigan and 11 ground squirrels. Teams gathered moss and\nwillows for fuel. From the Es\nkimos Uiey had 55 dried white-\nfish \u2014 \"awful greasy\" \u2014 and two\ndried salmon.\nBy unanimous  vote, the party\nhad gone native\u2014their 80 pounds\nof \"white man's  food\"  was for\nI emergency only\u2014and  decided to\ni Sit tight until the freeze-up.\nStranded beside their out-of-gas\nj float planes\u2014a Falrdiild and a\nFokker\u2014Uie missing miners were\nmore than 100 miles inside the\nArctic Circle.\nLONG TREK AHEAD\nThey figured\u2014rightly\u2014that the\nnearest white settlement was\nCambridge Bay, on Victoria Island off Canada's northern mainland. There the Hudson's Bay\nCompany had a post. From the\nsigns and chatter of the Eskimos,\nUiey calculated they must travel\n60\" miles west alonij the coast,\nthen 25 miles across the not-yet-\nfrozen sea to Cambridge Bay.\nOn Sept. 23, Richard Pearce\nwrote in his diary: \"The ice-line\non tlie sea crept farther today,\nwhich is good news.\" For the\nnext three weeks the weather\nwas unsettled and mild with frequent rain and only scattered\nsnow. Major Baker ordered Uie\nmen to stay in bed until 11 a.m.\nto conserve their energy.\nOn Oct. 15, the temperature\ndropped sharply below zero, the\nEskimo hunters started to gather\nand it became clear the in - between season had ended and the\n\"walk ou!\" could start soon.\nFLIERS BALKED\nThe in - between season had\nbeen even more frustrating to the\nfliers  seeking Uie missing men.\nC. H. (Punch) Dickins, Uien a\n30-year-old pilot, was assigned to\ncheck west of Bathurst Inlet in\ncase tlie MacAlpine party overshot its objective. He found no\ntrace of Uiem but brought out a\nstranded party of four prospectors. Dickins had won Uie valued\nMcKee Trophy Uie year before\nfor the first aerial crossing of the\nBarrens\u2014wilh two of Uie missing\nmen, MacAlpine and Pearce. He\nnow is sales director for de\nHavilland Aircraft at Toronto.\nGuy Blanchet, then a 45-year-\nold Arctic explorer and now a\nresident of Victoria, was put in\ncharge of the search over the\nmissing parly's route. The season was almost too late for pontoon flying but he decided to\nmake a dash with four pontoon\nplanes.\nBy Sepl. 27, the searchers were\nat Beverly Lake, 150 miles south\nof the Arctic Circle, and found\nUie northbound MacAlpine party\nhad camped there one night-\nSept. 8\u2014laken on gas and continued. For a fortnight, low-hanging clouds along the height of\nland prey e n t e d the pnnloon\nsearch - planes from gelling\nthrough. Then they slarted the\nshift-over lo skis.\nABORTIVE  FLIGHT\nOn Oct. 5, a month afler Uie\nsearch started, four ski-equipped\nplanes Hew to Bathurst Inlet,\nspread out several miles apart\nalong the planned MacAlpine\ncourse. They found  no clue.\nThe pilots\u2014all noted norlhland\nfliers \u2014 were Herbert Hollick-\nKenyon (now operator of a hunting lodge at Spence's Bridge,\nB.C.), Hoy Brown mow sales\nmanager for a Winnipeg trucking company), Bill Spence and\nAndy Cruikshank. Spence and\nCruiksliank were later killed in\nnortli-crmntry crashes.\nTlie search resumed Oct. 27\nflew east along the roast and\u2014\nwithout knowing il\u2014passed over\nthe the snow-covered camp the\nMacAlpine party had left six days\nearlier. Then weather haded the\nsearch and when it resumed, the\nmissing group was safe at dm\nbridge Ray.\nCos!  nf Uie  search\u2014placed hy\nRichard  Pearce  at  rear  MOO.000\n\u2014was  footed  by  Col.   MacAlpine\nand bis mining  associates.\nLONG   WAIT   ENDS\nAlter almost six weeks ol waiting at the mud-and-stune hut at\nUease's Point, Uie MacAll'ine\nparly moved oif north westward\nalong lhe coast Ocl. 21. Willi Es\nkimo guides and their families,\nthree sleds anrl dog teams, the\nparty \u2014 IB in all \u2014 scrambled\nacross tlie rough ice, moving in\nand out among Hie coast floes. It\nWS6  15 below zero\nAt night they camped in igloos\nfashioned by the Eskimos with\nblocks carved from snow. They\nate boiled trout and salmon wilh\nbacon and sugar from the dwindling emergency ralions. In four\ndays they made 60 miles to the\npoint 25 miles across the strait\nfrom Cambridge Bay.\nAfler a day of rest, they\nstarted across the fro\/en slrail\nOct. 26 ever rough hummocks ol\nice. They got a quarter way\nacross when they reached open\nwater. There was nothing to do\nbut turn back.\nThe next six days brought\nhunger and near - mutiny. The\nonly food left was Uie dogs' white-\nfish and herring. Tlie Eskimos\nleft to get supplies. On Oct. 30,\nsome of the party threatened lo\ncross the strait next mornlrg.\nMaior Baker said they should\nwait   for   supplies   because   the\nwind might break Uie ke up into\ndrifl-floel.\nThe tension dropped at 6 a.rri.\nNov. 1 when the Eskimos relumed With tobacco, fresh fish,\nflour and sugar. Next day would\nbe the take-off.\nAfter a big breakfast Nov. 2\n(tea, bannock, boiled trout), the\nparty set out again. They spent\nnerve - wracking hours trying to\npick a course across a large ice\nfloe, tugging sleds over towering\nice hummocks, crossing narrow\nleads of unsafe ice after Uie Eskimos tested it with spears. At\n4 p.m. Uiey struck thin ice and\nit was decided to camp for the\nnight on the floe.\nThe last day of the trek\u2014Nov.\n3\u2014opened with a race across thin\nice in bitter wind at 27 below\nzero. The party fanned out and\nran breathlessly over the rising,\nfalling, crackling rubber ice,\nveering away from the darker,\nout to be 30 miles, instead of 12\nas estimated.\nSAVED BY  ESKIMOS\nThe weary group straggled in\nto the HBC post, collapsed, revived, tore off stinking parkas and\nsodden moccasins and ate. Then\nUiey relaxed and marvelled that\nmost ol them were in better\nshape Uilui when they left the\nsou*. Only Don Goodwin, younf-\nest of the group, suffered permanent injury; three frozen toes\nwere later amputated. Tney\nagreed, with gratitude, that without the help of the Eskimos Uieir\nexpedition would probably have\nended in disaster.\nWhen Uie visitors wondered\nhow to reassure their families\nand call of the hazardous air\nsearch, Ian M. Mackinnon, HBC\npost manager, took over and got\nout word with obsolete wirekse\nequipment.\nA postscript to a difficult but\nnever desperate operation, voiced\nUie other day by Mackinnon, now\nwith the Crown Assets Disposal\nCorporation at Ottawa: \"There\nwere semi-tragic instances such\nas Col. MacAlpine and Dick\nPearce learning for the first time\nof the stock crash of 1929\u2014and\nthe fact that when the party\neventually left Cambridge Bay\nthey had totally consumed our\nannual supply of scotch whisky.\"\nEast Punjab Owes Health Centres\nTo Hard-Working Sikhs In Canada\nBy RUSSELL ELMAN\nJULLUNDER, India iCP)-Ad-\nventurous tnrbaned Sikhs who\nleft India years ago to make their\nfortune in Canada today are financing community projects to\nraise living standards in their native villages In the Punjab.\nDollars earned in business,\nlumbering and farming in Canada are building health centres\nand schools in east Punjab, about\n200 miles north of New Delhi.\nNearly every house in Uie Doaba\ndistrict between the Sullcj and\nBeas rivers is reputed to have\nsome relative or friend in Canada.\nA British Columbia Sikh lumber magnate. Mayo Singh, donated $20,000 for a primary health\ncentre in his native village of\nPaldi, near the big military cantonment of Jullunder. The centre\nserves a populaUon of 60,000. The\nvillage of Paldl itself gave its\nname to Mayo Singh's adopted\nhometown, Paldi, in the Nanaimo\narea of B.C.\nTRAINED IN CANADA\nKapoor Singh Siddco, another\nSikh who became a millionaire in\nUie B.C. lumbering business,\ngave $200,000 to set up a small\nhospital with Canadian medical\nstandards in his ancestral village\nof Am*. His Iwo daughters, both\ngraduates as medical doctors\nfrom McGill, now are operating\nthe hospital.\nAt Kaurian, a third village in\nthe same area, a $20,000 donation from a Canadian Sikh is\nhelping build a government hi^h\nschool for boys and girls.\nSuch gifts, coupled with private\ndonations to relatives, mean far\nmore lo Indian villagers than\nUieir dollar value might indicate.\nIn remote villages Ijnked to market towns only by dirt track, wilh\nas yet few schools and hospitals,\nany assistance is a radical improvement.\nA combination of adventurous\nspirit and desire to 'better themselves prompted many Sikhs to\nquit India for Canada at the beginning of the century. With little\ncapital, they started up the\nladder like most new immigrants\n\u2014logging in B.C., wh\"at farming\nin the Prairies, and in Iransnorf\nand small businesses in eastern\nCanada.\nHOPEFUL   EMIGRANTS\nToday an estimated 12.000\nSikhs live in Canada. Each year\ntheir numbers are swelled by perhaps 200 dependents and new immigrants from India. Total number of Indians, including Sikhs,\npermitted to enler Canada for\npermanent residence under the\nimmigration quota system is 300.\nPoss'b'y anolher 200 enler as\nnon   -   immigrants,   among  them\nstudents, Colombo Plan traineet\nand visitors.\nIn Uie Punjab many Sikh\nyouths express a desire to work\nin Canada, which they see as a\nland of opportunity. Among those\ngranted entry this year is 32-\nyear-old Parduman Singh Qiawla\nof Amritsar, appointed as badminton professional at the Winnipeg Winter Club.\nA civil servant at the new\nPunjab capital of Chandigarh\nquipped, with an overtone of ser-*\niousness: \"If Canadians feel Canada is underpopulated, my family\nis prepared to shift any time. We\nhave a small contingent of 10.\"\nMahy Canadian Sikhs return to\nIndia. Some come to marry,\nsome to educate their children,\nsome to settle succession of property and others to die. Few wish\nto relinquish Uieir Canadian citizenship and often seek to pass it\non to Uieir children. This occasionally creates problems for\nCanadian officials in Uie New\nDelhi High Commission, who\nneed satisfactory documentary\nproof to settle citizenship claims.\nCOMPLICATED  CHECK\nTlie task is complicated because Sikhs, according to Uieir\nreligion, change names several\ntimes during Uieir life, and often\nhave no birth certificate or similar document. Cases may have\nto be assessed at. face value and\nupon affidavits, oral declarations\nand family stories.\nA few instances of misrepre-\nsentaUon occur, but officials say\nthere is no organized racket as\nwith Chinese in Hong Kong.\nIn Punjab villages Siklis holding Canadian citizenship seem to\nacquire a mysterious prestige.\nEven a short visit to Canada\nmay result in the addition of another .surname\u2014\"Canadian.\"\nA prominent Communist member of the Punjab legislature\nworked for a while in Canada.\nToday he is known by friends\nand enemies as Dr. Btiag Singh\nCanadian.\nimperial Oil\nEarnings Up\nTORONTO  (CD\u2014Imperial Oi!\nLtd., had net earnings in the nine\nmonUis ended .Sept. 30 of $37,680,-\n000, or $1.20 a share, compared\nwith $34,327,000, or $1.09 a share,\nin the corresponding period last\nyear,\nT. R. While, president, s-ays\nlhe increased earnings reflect\nsubstantial gains in Volume orf\nbusiness. Improvement shown in\nthe sprond quarter continued it*\nthe third.\nHUBERT\n\"Your mother's mad because we forgot today is her\nbirttd^y.\"\n mmmmmmtmtiH!!!!i!^^*^^m^^11 IIUL '.wumi\nmmmmmmmmmmm '\u25a0*.*\u25a0      *     .  \u25a0   \u25a0 '\u25a0 * ' : -\u2014 -. \u25a0\u2022-\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u2022+.'\nBus Is Home  to Three Adults\nThree Children and Squirrel\nBy JEAN BAKER\nWheeling  along highways in  a\nbus oan be as homey as living in\na six-room house, only cozier, par*\nticularly   when   there   are  three\nWET WEATHER\nIS HERE!\nTime to think about adequate\nwaterproof footwear, R. Andrew\nand Co. features a full range of\nB. F. Goodrich rubber footwear\nfor every member of the family.\nRemember dry feet are healthy\nfeet. Don't be satisfied with just\nany type of rubber footwear, be\nsure you benefit from the experience of experts and have\nAndrew's outfit your family with\nthe best possible, wet weather\nfootwear.\nGood news from Andrew's is\nthe arrival of a large shipment\nof Savage cushioned casuais at\n$8.99.\nFor the men, we urge them\nto see the new Scott-McHale top\nquality oxfords, as well as Gold\nBond Shoes by Hartt in French\ncalf, grain leathers, etc.\nIt is with pride that we can\nstate we have the largest stock\nof Savage children's shoes in the\ninterior of B.C. Your child can\nbe outfitted immediately.\nLay-aways \u2014 We are receiving daily shipments of slippers.\nIt is not loo early to have these\nlaid away for Christmas.\nSettle for nothing but the best\nin top quality footwear, courteous service, expert fitting, the\nthree outstanding policies of. ..\nR. ANDREW & CO.\nLeaders in Footfashion\nEst. 1902\nchildren and three adults eating,\nsleeping and carrying on normal\ndaily activities on the move.\nBut two of six occupants of a\nblack bus which rolled into Nelson\nThursday at noon are not only\nnormal people during the day,\nthey are also concert artists in the\nevening. And in the back of their\nvehicle-home, they carry two\ngrand pianos, which six times this\nweek have had to be unpacked and\nmoved into a theatre, in a different city each night.\nAllison and Harry Neal, due concert pianists, are veterans of the\nroad, as are their three children,\nJohn, five and a half years old,\nKathie, three and a half, and baby\nAllison, one and a half.\nAnother occupant of the bus is\nRobert Bridge, who is tour manager for the piano artists.\nPET SQUIRREL\nKeeping the household amused\non the road is Billy Boy, a pet\nsquirrel, who has the run of the\nbus-home.\nMrs. Neal, an Australian,  is  a\nWA Holds Coffee\nParfy in Hall\nROBSON - The Community Memorial Church Woman's Auxiliary\nheld a successful coffee party in the\nchurdh hall. Christmas cards were\nsold and orders taken.\nThe committee in charge of tlie\nstationery table were Mrs. Raine,\nMrs. G. Miller and Mrs. W. G.\nKennedy. Those in charge of the\nkitchen and serving were Mrs.\nRoy Brown, Mrs. J. Porter, Mrs.\nR. T. Waldie and Mrs. C. S.\nSquires.\nSO\nperfect\nfor\nfall\n\u25a0Beautiful all-wool sweaters...\nexciting new colors . . .\nCardigans, long and\nshort sleeve pullovers.\nCardigans\n$9.95 and $12.95\nPullovers, Long Sleeve\n$10.95\nPnllovers, Short Sleeve\n$6.95 and $8.95\n\\    ^        Phone 5\n942\n596 Baker St.\nsoftly-speaking attractive young\nwoman with striking blond hair.\nShe, her husband and Mr. Bridge\neach take charge of one child during the day and disciplining in\nthe rolling home is thus equally\ndivided.\nORDINARY DAY\nThey start on tlie move early in\nthe morning, and while Mrs. Neal\ngets the breakfast, the men look\nafter the driving. The morning for\nMrs. Neal is full, with clearing\naway after breakfast, dressing the\nchildren, making beds and turning the bus-home into daytime\nquarters.\nThe couch in the living-room\nfront of the bus makes into a\ndouble bed at night. The ceiling\nis six inches higher than the ordinary  bus.\nThe next compartment back\ncontains the entire kitchen unit,\nwith propane gas for heating and\ncooking, a refrigerator, foldup\nl^ible, and cupboards in every conceivable space. The next section\ncontains bunks for children, with\na special crit arrangement for\nthe baby.\nThe back compartment contains'\ntwo bunks and behind this is thei\nstorage section for the two pianos,;\nwhich  travel on their sides. j\nA radio-telephone is part of thej\nbus equipment. |\nJohn has already completed a\nyear of schooling by correspondence. The Neals are on the road\nfrom October until May and have\ntheir permanent home in Paris,\nTennessee.\nIt was here that Billy Boy Joined\nthe tour. Found injured under a\ntree, he needed personal attention,\nso joined the family in the bus\nand was nursed back to health.\nHe is \"tame as a kitten\" and has\na cage where he sleeps.\nMrs. Neal tunes the two pianos\nafter they have been set up in the\ntheatre. She and her husband practise during the afternoon and take\na quick nap before their performance at night.\nDuring their evening perfor-\nance, the Neals are provided with\na baby sitter for whom they have\nmade arrangements ahead of time.\nREADING, THREE\nREPORTS HEARD\nAT IODE MEETING\nJapan\u2014Canada's Pacific neighbor\u2014was topic of an article read\nat a meeting of the Kokanee Chapter Imperial Order Daughters of\nthe Empire Tuesday at the home\nof Mrs. R. B. Brummitt, 820 Davies\nStreet.\nMrs. E. Craig read the article,\nas secretary of the National Empire and World Affairs committee.\nReports were heard from the\nbilk fund and Civil Defence by\nMrs. W. W. Ferguson, who spoke\nof the luncheon held' for Brig.\nC. A. McCarter, provincial coordinator, during his visit to Nelson.\nMrs. A. Foster gave the report\nfor services at home and abroad.\nThe chapter will donate ten dollars to the hospital for purchase\nof ash trays.\n' By ALICE ALDEN\nIN COATS, being double-faced is a most desirable\nquality. Arthur Jablow does one of the nicest of the new\ntoppers, giving this reversible theme many bonus extras.\nThe wool reverses from black currant to red currant, for a\nreal change of color. The rounded line is drawn in broad\nseaming detail to outline the low dropped shoulder, the\ndeep sleeves and the straight, slim front. The back is a\nwide dash of broad seaming from sleeve to sleeve. All\nthe details \u2014 seaming, buttons and pockets \u2014 are repeated on both sides of the coat. And such is not always\nthe case with reversibles.\nGuide Public Relations\nOfficer Visits Nelson\nOn her first visit to the Kootenays, Mrs. J. W. Bishop of Vancouver, Girl Guide provincial pub-\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, OCT. 23, 1959 \u2014 5\nti&ouL ihsL Jojlv\/l\nPHONE   1844\nAlpha XI Plans\nChristmas for\nMenial Patients\nPreparation of Christmas parcels for mental patients was discussed at a meeting of the Alpha\nXi Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi\nsorority at the home of Mrs. E.\nMason, 318 Houston Street.\nThe provision of Christmas parcels for patients has been taken\nover from the JVlental Health\nAssociation as the chapter's annual project.\nAnother topic of discussion was\na formal fall banquet to be held\nnext Tuesday, when new pledges\nwill be installed.\nThe program theme \"Environment, health, work and play and\ntheir effects on happiness\" was\nstudied under direction of Mrs. D.\nA. Capper, Mrs. G. A. Grant and\nMrs. R. Mason.\nMrs. D. R. Nuyens was cohost-\nlie relations officer, met Guide\nleaders and auxiliary members in\nNelson.\n\"Public relations is everybody's\njob\" said Mrs. Bishop, addressing\nthe group who met at the home\nof Miss Dorothy Peirson, divisional\ncommissioner on Cedar Street.\n\"Public relations means performance and recognition and must\nbe used to achieve an end. Our\ngoals are leaders and money.\"\nMrs. Bishop pointed out that\nseven cornerstones in guiding are:\nstandard of living, international\ncamping, leisure time activities,\noutdoor and indoor activities, community service, emergency service, physical fitness.\nShe mentioned the 1960 Golden\nJubilee year of Guiding in Canada,\nwhen tulips will blossom across\nthe country from plantings by\nBrownies and Guides this fall.\nMiss Peirson presented Mrs.\nBishop with a souvenir coffee spoon\nto commemorate her visit.\nHonoring Miss Eileen Playdon, |\nwhose marriage to David Ronald\nThexton takes place this Saturday\nin Nelson, women members of the\nstaff of Wood, Vallance Hardware\nCompany gathered in the home of\nMrs. E. N. Rolph, 818 Fourth\nStreet Monday night. Miscellaneous gifts were presented in a painted and decorated basket to the\nbride-elect who was seated under\na rosette covered arch. Mother\nof the guest of honor, Mrs. Ernest\nPlaydon, presided at the tea table,\nwhioh was centred with a candelabra holding four pale blue tapers\nand pas tel chrysanthemums.\nGames were played during the\nevening.\n* *   *\nMrs. Roy Pollard, Mrs. Reginald\nH. Dill, Mrs. Waldo W. Ferguson\nand Mrs. Hewitt E. Fergusonn\nentertained this week at dinner in\nhonor of Mrs. Harold Lakes and\nMrs. Kenneth Coates, who are\nleaving for England on an extended\nvisit. The dinner party was held\nat the home of Mrs. H. E. Ferguson at Willow Point.\n* *   *\nMrs. W. R. Gibbon, 621 Silica\nStreet, has returned after spending\nthe past two weeks at the home\nof her son-in-law and daughter,\nMr. and Mrs. M. D. MacKinnon\nat Procter.\nNew Zealand and Australia are\nthe destination of Mr. and Mrs.\nGordon K. Burns, 604 Latimer\nStreet and their daughters, Miss\nBetty Burns and Miss Mary Burns,\nwho leave today for an indefinite\nstay \"down under,\"\n* *   *\nMrs. C. B. Bradshaw of the\nNorth Shore, who with her bus-\nband will leave soon to spend five\nmonths in Malta as guests of\ntheir son, Harold Bradshaw, was\nRobson Notes\nROBSON \u2014 Returning at the\nweekend from a1 successful hunting\ntrip to the East Kootenay, were\nJoe Sdhuepfer and Ted Worley,\nboth of Robson, and John Gibson\nof Penticton.\nJoe Sdhuepfer received word during the week of the death of his\nmother in Switzerland.\nFor the FIRST TIME see the WHOLE Picture!\nThey're Here!\nI960 MODEL TV SETS\nOffers You . . .\n* More Picture\n+ Better Sound\n* Better Picture\nSee the\nSparton\n\"Mardi-Gras\"\nONLY\n10% Down\n(Includes Installation)\nThis and Many, Many More Makes and Models Ori Display\nNow. . . Including Fleetwood, Zenith and Sparton.\nShop With Confidence \u2014 Service and Satisfaction Guaranteed\nPHONE\n1300\nNELSON\nBRANCH\nWynndel Notes\nWYNNDEL\u2014The Evening Circle\nof the Wynndel United Church held\nits first meeting of the fell season\nat the home of Mr. and Mrs. It.\nTompkins Monday. Reports were\ngiven by Mrs. W. Abbott. Discussion was held on the fall bazaar\nand catering for the Fellowship\ncongress.\nDeer Park\nDEER PARK \u2014 Mr. and Mrs.\nRupert Jamieson of Rainier, Oregon, are spending a few days at\nthe home of the formers parents,\nMr. and Mrs. D. D. Jamieson. The\nJamiesons had their grandson\nBarry Jamieson, who is attending\nNotre Dame College at Nelson as\na holiday visitor last weekend.\nMr. and Mrs. Paul Phelps of\nCrawford Bay were recent visitors\nto Deer Park, guests of their\ngrottier and sister - in - law, Mr.\nand Mrs. C. S. Phelps.\nSTRICT LAW\nCROYDON, England (CP) - A\nboy of 16, out for a walk with his\ngirl friend, stopped to help a\nmotorcyclist whose machine had\nbroken down. The boy repaired it\nand drove it 15 yards to test it.\nHis Good Samaritan act cost him\n\u00a315 in juvenile court for having no\ninsurance and driving while disqualified.\nDeer Park WI Has\nFirst Fall Meeting\nDEER PARK - The first fall\nmeeting of the Deer Park WI\nwas held at the home of Mts. H.\nMottershead.\nA visitor, Mrs. W. Douglas, who\nrecently moved to Deer Park, from\nTurner Valley, Alta., was welcomed to the meeting by the president\nMrs. Mottershead.\nThe summer's correspondence,\nincluding the Newsletter, was read.\nA letter of thanks will be written\nto the minister of agriculture for\nthe departmental grant.\nPlans were discussed for a winter's project, this resulted in a\ndecision to make two wool quilts,\nwhich are to be used as prizes in\ncontests. Members will meet eaoh\nweek to work on the quilts.\nThe annual meeting, with election of officers, is scheduled for\nNovember, to be held at the home\nof Mrs. S. Smith.\nMrs. E. Williamson won the contest, after which the hostess served\nrefreshments, assisted by Mrs.\nSmith.\nAinsworth Notes\nAINSWORTH - Mrs. J. E.\nHawes, accompanied by her mother, Mrs. Houston of Nelson, and\nher sister, Mrs. Niklin of Victoria,\nhas returned from Kimberley\nwhere they visited Mrs. Hawes'\nson-in-law amd daughter.\nMr. and Mrs. W. E. Lane and\ndaughters have returned from\nAbbotsford where they visited Mrs.\nLane's parents.\nMrs. A. Hansen has left to spend\nthe winter in Nelson.\nMr. and Mrs. Paul Steiner and\nson of Vancouver, are guests of\nthe laters parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nJ. B. Fletcher.\nHOW YOUR LIVER BILE\nHELPS BREAK DOWN FATS\nIN THE DIGESTIVE TRACT\nLaboratory testa have now proved\nthat liver bile emulsifies fats ...\nactually breaks them down. It is an\nestablished fact that when liver bile\nis added to tatty solids, the tats are\nbroken down aod form a smooth,\neasy-flowing mix.\nIn your digestive tract, liver bile\nhelps break down fats the same way.\nMany of the foods you eat reach the\ndigestive tract as undigested fatty\nsolids. Your golden liver bile helps\nbreak down these fats ... for easier\nand more complete digestion.\nCarter's Little Liver Pills' exetuavm\nformula of vegetable ingredients relieves irregularity gently and effectively. At the same time, it actually\nimproves the flow of liver bile needed\nto break down fats in your digestive\ntract.\nSo when you feet sluggish, headachy, nervous and need a laxative,\ntake Carter's Little Liver Pills.\nRemember, Carter's not only relieve irregularity, but actually improve the flow of liver bile. G\u00abt\nCarter's Little Liver Pills today I\nSLEEPY CLERIC\nHALIFAX, England (CP) - The\nAnglican archdeacon of this Yorkshire town, Ven. Eric Treacy 'has\nappealed to his parishioners to tell\nhim how to avoid dozing in public.\nRecently he fell asleep while a\nbishop addressed a meeting, and\nonce he fell asleep standing up\nwhile his wife was talking to him.\nguest of honor at two bon voyage\nparties. Sunday school teachers\nhonored' Mrs. Bradshaw at a no\nhost party held at the home of\nMrs. F. H. Lowe. The guest of\nhonor, who was formerly organist at the North Shore United\nOhurch Sunday School, was pre*\nsented with a cosmetic case. Mrs,\nE. M. Stiles and Mrs. F. S. Willis\nentertained at tea for Mrs. Brad\nshaw. Neighbors of the guest of\nhonor attended the event, at which\nMrs. Bradshaw was presented\nwith a stole.\n*   *   \u2022\nGuest of honor at a miscellaneous\nshower before her marriage in\nNelson recently was Mrs. J. A.\nCorwell, the former Shirley Mer-\nmet. The event was held at the\nhome of Mrs. H. J. LeMoigne,\n915 Mill Street, and the surprised\nbride-elect and her mother were\npresented with corsages. Gifts\nwere displayed in a pink rosette-\ncovered umbrella. Contests and\ngames were enjoyed during the\nevening.\nQueen's Maternity\nWardrobe Being\nDesigned Now\nLONDON (AP) - Although the\nQueen plans no public engagements until after her baby is born,\nshe is having a collection of maternity day clothes designed by\nNorman Hartnell, one of her dressmakers.\nThree of Hartnell's designers\nspent a day with the Queen at\nBalmoral Castle last week. Hartnell says he expects to visit Buckingham Palace this week to make\nfinal fittings.\nHe refused to say how many\ndresses would be in the collection.\nDodd's\nKIDNEY\nPills\nJUST ARRIVED . . .\nBALLERINAS\nSEE THEM NOW . . .\nExciting new season\narrivals for dot*\nand dress wea*.\n*. *4.95\n11M\nJayl&iL...\nPlaid Flannelette Shirting. 36\" _\nlarge Terry Novelty Bath Towelt. Each 694\nNew Fall Ginghams and Prints in\nDarker Shades. 36\". Yard 89< to $1.39\n93*\nSPECIAL: SATURDAY ONLY\n36\" Wabasso Printed Flannelette\nReg. .69 Yard    49$\nJaylffiL (Dhif $oodL\nPhone 1485\n624 Baker St.\n(DoSUl. Ladies' Apparel\nPre-Winter\n$4.19\nSWEATERS. Reg.    value   to\n$8.95.\nTO CLEAR\nREVERSIBLE   SWEATERS\nTO CLEAR AT\nHALF PRICE\nBlouses\nTerylene and Orion\nValues to $7.98\nHALF PRICE\n4 Only\nRAINMASTER\nALLWEATHER COATS\nTo Clear at Reduced Price*\nORLON JERSEYS\nReg.  $7.95 -t*!   QQ\nTO CLEAR yimaltW\n5 Only Cotton Crepe\nHALF SLIPS\nReg. QQ*\n$2.98      WW~\nPANTIES\nTo Clear\nEach 59*\nT OnV\nWINTER GOATS\nReduced to Clear\nSKI PANTS,   JACKETS\n1\/2 PRICE\n1 Only\nNavy Blue Blazer\nWorsted. Size 18.\n2 Only CRINOLINES\nHALF   PRrCIs\nReg.\n$29.96.\n$14.99\nSUITS\n1 ONLY WOOL TARTAN\nSize 14. Reg. $29.95. SALE  \t\n1 ONLY PLAID CAPE SUIT\nSize 14. Reg. $32.50. SALE \t\n1 ONLY WOOL SUIT (Old Rose)\nSize 16. Reg. $49.95. SALE \t\n1 ONLY WOOL SUIT (Winter White)\nSize 18. Reg. $49.95. SALE \t\n1 ONLY NAVY BLUE SILK CREPE\nReg. $25.00. SALE \t\nt ONLY BOUCLE SUITS\u2014\nLime Green, Size 10.\nReg. $45.00. SALE  \t\nBeige, Size M.\nReg. $45.00. SALE   \t\n$19\n$22\n$29\n$29\n$14\n$29\n$29\n95\n.99\n.99\n.99\n.99\n.99\n.99\n2 Only\nOrion\nJackets\nReg. $79.50\n$49-99\nTERMS CASH\nALL SALES\nFINAL\nNO REFUNDS\nNO EXCHANGES\nUJ&fLbu  Ladies' Apparel\nTHE FASHION CENTRE\"\nNelson, B.C. Phone 775\n 'I***'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0,    . '  \u25a0\u2022\u2022*.\u25a0\u2022  1\u2014^~ \"7-~\u2014rTETTT\u2014.\u25a0'.  \u25a0   --.,  .... .\u25a0 .1. ..'-..I'.t \u2014.   .\u25a0\u25a0.\u25a0'\u25a0^^*'*.>;jiiir,yftfli-ili!J^..i,Lu.u,,ij,i,., \u00ab;j\u00ab,wi\u00bbyiiy**\u00bb!^\n6 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, OCT. 23, 1959\n| Home-Care Plan Suggested as\nWay To Ease Crowded Hospitals\nVANCOUVER (CP)-A home-\ncar* plan for patients and loans\ntor private hospitals have been\nproposed by authorities here as\nways ol relieving the overcrowding of general hospitals.\nThe proposals were made Wednesday by delegates to the B.C.\nHospitals Association convention.\nUnder the home-care plan, convalescent p a t i a n t s would be\ntransferred to their own homes\nwhere treatment would be continued by hospital staff or a\nnursing organization.\nEXPAND FACILITIES\nAnd long-term, low - interest\ngovernment loans, delegates\nsaid, would encourage private\nhospitals to expand their facilities so that hey could take convalescent and chronic patients\nfrom hospital beds sorely needed\nfor acute caaes.\nDr. D. \u201eM. Whltelaw, chief of\nthe outpatient department at\nVancouver General Hospital, the\nlargest in Canada, said one-third\nof the llospltal's 1,500 patients\nneedn't be there at all.\nThey were well enough to leave\nthe hospital, but could not be\nmoved either because they had\nno homes to go to or had no\nway to obtain simple nursing\nservices.\nOnly three per cent of these\npatients would have been suitable for home oare but their beds\ncould accommodate a much\nlarger number of short - term\nacute cases, Dr. Whltelaw said.\nREGIONAL CONTROL\nLloyd Detwiller, deputy commissioner of the government-\noperated B.C. Hospital Insurance\nService, said some form of regional control of hospital planning will be necessary If B.C. is\nto get the best use ot its hospital\ndollars.\n\"To avoic costly duplication\nand overlapping of facilities, lt\nappears some form of co-ordination and integration will be necessary.\"\nA spokesman for the B.C. Medical Association suggested that\npatients should be classified into\nseven  categories.\nHealth Minister Martin complained earlier that the medical\nprofession appeared unable to define the different categories of\nchronic care and the lack of def-\nSEEK CHANGE\nFORT QU'APPELLE^SASK.\n(CP) \u2014A resolution seeKfng abolition of the government agent\nsystem on reserves was\npassed Wednesday by the second\nannual conference of Saskatchewan Indian Chiefs and Councillors. The resolution Is aimed\nat making band councils as independent as possible.\ninltion has been i stumbling\nblock In discussions by medical,\nprovincial and municipal authorities on the question of long-term\ncare facilities.\nDr. Howard Weaver suggested\ncategories for acute, sub-acute,\ninvalid, semi - invalid, aemi-de-\npendent 111 and aged, and senile\nor non-rehabitatole patients.\nLoans For Early\nSnow Damage To\nYoiur Individual\nHoroscope\nr.a\\maia\\mm*m*m0>,\nBy Frances Drake\nLook in the section in which your\nbirthday comes and (ind what your\noutlook is, acocMlng to the stars,\nFor Saturday, Ootafcer M, JM\u00bb\nMARCH 21 to APRIL JO (Ariel)\n- Aspects are generally friendly\nfor work and business Interests,\nalso for home end family situations. Good Mars Influences encourage your best efforts, but don't\nbe too aggressive.\nAPRIL 31 to MAY 21 (Twniil-\nIf tired of the same' tetivitles or\nroutine, try some new diversion In\nU..!l.l.ii   Cfivmanl order to relax. But don't discard\nmanitooa rarmers old method, and tooi habltl ju,t\nfor, the sake of variety. Be soundly\npurposeful,\nWINNIPEG (CP)-Premier Duff\nRoblin said Thursday the Manitoba government will make credit\navailable to municipalities so\nthey can advance loans to farmers affected by early \u2022 October\nsnow storms.\nMr. Roblin told a morning session of the Manitoba Progressive\nConservative Association annual\nmeeting that he had strong hopes\nfor federal aid to farmers.\nHe made the keynote speech to\nIhe session before leaving for the\nairport to meet Prime Minister\nDiefenbaker and three federal\ncabinet ministers who were to\nmeet with Prairie agriculture representatives to discuss crop damage.\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini)\u2014\nHave no doubts about accomplishing the worthwhile this fine day\nbut, of course, you will have to\nwork, too, Fine Mercury Influences\nencourage bright ideas, clever\npromotion.\nJUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer)\u2014\nYou may have found yourself\npressed for time, may have had\nmany demands made upon you in\nthe recent past. If so, take today's\nfree hours for rest and diversion.\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leo)-\nGood planetary rays now encour\nage initiation of new enterprises \u2014\nparticularly those which are a bit\non the unique side. Don't, however,\nProtect Your self from Cold\nWool Cruiser Coat\n15.95\nWhen the weather gets a\nsnap in it you'll be really\nglad you have one of these!\nAll-wool fabric, treated to\nbe water repellent for extra usefulness. Made with\ndouble fabric throughout\nfor real warmth and long\nwear, too. Handsome plaid\npatterns in Blue, Red and\nGreen. Sizes: 36 to 44.\nA Necessity for the\nCold Weather . . .\n\"Thermal\"\nUnderwear\nShirts (Short Sleeve) .... 2.98\nShirts (Long Sleeve) .... 3.98\nDrawers (Ankle Length) 3.98\nCombinations\n(Long Sleeve)   8.98\nThe amazing new underwear that\nkeeps ynu warm despite low temperatures. No shrinkage \u2014 you can\ndepend on it, it's made by Stanfields.\nShirts sizes S. M, L. Drawers sizes\n32 to 44. Combinations sizes 36 to44.\nfor rugged wear choose these\nHydro Style Parkas\nMade especially for the man who's\nout in all temperatures \u2014 for long\nperiods in the below zero weather.\nA very heavy duck shell with wool\nfrieze lining. Detachable hood,\n40\" length. Olive. Sizes: 36 to 46.\nAll-Wool  Jac  Shirts\nWear these as a light jacket right now \u2014\nfor heavy Winter shirts. All-wool with\ndouble stiched shoulders, armholes,\nsporis collar. In bright\nchocks. S, M, L, XL\t\nFur Trimmed Parkas\nHood is trimmed wilh fur to protect face\nfrom harsh winds. Made of sturdy' drill\nfabric wilh a thick quiited lining, elastic\nback. Olive. 36\" length.\nSizes 38, 44 and 46.\nSturdy Whipcord Pants\nWhipcord is hard to beat for really rug\nwear! It's a tough, firm weave with extra\nheavy stiching on all seams. Sanforized,\n5 pockets. 4 plastic edged.\nDark green. Sizes 30 to 42.\nSnug Fitting Ski Cops\nLined  gabardine  wilh   warm  ear  flaps.\nIn Taupe, grey or navy. n -tq\nSizes t% to IVi. I.\/T\nFlannelette Work Shirts\nOn the job or off these are tops! Their\nfleecy finish makes them so comfortable,\nthey're in a roomy cut for free and easy\nmovement. Sanforized, too. n nn\nSizes 1414 to 1VA \u00abJ.70\nComfortable Work Socks\nThose are 100% wool reinforced with nylon\nat heels and toes. Soft and resilient on your\nfeet, thick enough to l i\/\\\ngive real warmth      I.IV\nfor real foot comfort\non tht job  . . .\nLeather\nrk Boots\n9.95\nEvery feature for long wear and\ncomfort! Thick, resilient Gro-Cork\nsoles and retan leather uppers.\nGoodyear welts, storm welts, steel\nshanks. In Brown. Sizes: 6 to 11.\nfytifcjto !&*$\u00ab\u00a3 (Eomjwnj.\nEnlisted Men Resent\n\"Zombies\" In Legion\nItmmmmmma^^Mati\ntake chances on hazardous undertaking).\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER 23\n(Virgo) \u2014 Your Mercury's aspect\nencourages all matters connected\nwith writing, Mental ability should\nbe at a poak now.\nSEPTEMBER 34 to OCTOBER\n23 (libra) - Aim high \u2014 but don't\nexpect the unreasonable. You can\nmake good progress, but don't\novertax yourself. Leave some time\nfor rest and relaxation.\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER 22\n(Scorpio) \u2014 No need for worry on\nthis stimulating, beneficial day.\nOf course, recklessness and arro\ngance are taboo. You can gain\nmore by Intelligent persuasion\nthan *by force.\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER\n21 (Sagittarius) - This can truly\nbe a beneficial day. Whether work\nis on your schedule, or just re\nlaxatlon, make it pay in some\nworthwhile way.\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY 20\n(Capricorn) \u2014 Good stellar in\nfluences are encouraging for private Interests, for industry, trades,\nmining, handling machinery, building and generally useful projects.\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY 19\n(Aquarius) \u2014 Do not make sudden\ndecisions or shift from well-running matters to something untried.\nBut the day, on the whole, should\nspur you on to achievement.\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\n(Pisces) \u2014 A good period in which\nto advance In your usual occupation, to seek advice on new matters\nthat could result in profit now \u2014or\nlater. Don't question your ability;\ngive it full scope.\nYOU BORN TODAY are intuitive\nto a high degree, possess numerous talents, could be a leader, or\nwork efficiently under authority.\nYou have innate ability for mechanics, carpentry, managing groups\nof people, caring for children or\nthose hospitalized. These are a\npart of your finer side. Faults? A\nfew, but they can be corrected\nreadily by YOU. You may tend to\nextravagance, to live too luxuriously to over-indulge In rich foods\nand beverages, Guard against\nquick temper. Keep studying, improving your status.\nBy  DAVE  MoINTOSH\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 The argument\nover admittance of the so-called\nSecond World War \"zombies\" into\nthe ranks of the Canadian Legion\ncontinues to flourish ln the columns\nof the Legionary, the organization's\nnational magazine.\nAfter a referendum In 1944, the\ngovernment drafted men Into the\narmy and approximately 18,000 of\nthese NRMA (National Resources\nMobilization Act) personnel were\nsent overseas as reinforcements\nearly ln 1943. \"Zombies\" was the\ninelegant description applied by\nsome to the conscripts,\nIn 1930 at Winnipeg the Cana\ndlan Legion voted by a narrow\nmajority to admit NRMA men\nwho had served in a theatre ol\nwar. Few of them have actually\njoined the Legion.\nR. B. Webb of Minltonas, Man.,\nre-opened the argument in the\nJune issue of the Legionary by\nproposing that all conscripts of\nthe home defence force be made\neligible for Legion membership.\n\"Must we continue to go through\nlife carrying this chip on our\nshoulder?\" demanded Mr. Webb.\n\"Isn't it time to pursue a new\noutlook and let bygones be bygones?\"\nHe got short shift from Victor\nD. Brown of Plaster Rock, N.B.,\nln the August issue:\n\"I hope I shall not live to see\nthe day when the Legion . . . will\nform up on Nov. 11 to commemorate our honored dead with a conscript president and other 'zombies' in the guard of honor imitating real servicemen's feelings toward those of our comrades who\ngave their lives for the cause of\nfreedom.\" v\n\"How can a real ex-soldier fraternize with a 'zombie' when they\nhave nothing ln common?\" wrote\nJohn Monaghan of Woodflbre, B.C,\nLegion officials said the ond of\nthe argument is nowhere ln sight.\nWinnipeg Hospitals\nReceive Grants\nOTTAWA (CP) - The federal\nhealth department Thursday, announced award o[ 1153,183 ln construction grants to three Winnipeg\nhospitals.\nThe Children's Hospital gets\n$68,880 for renovation and extension of IU nurses residence; the\nConcordia Hospital $4,000 to help\nbuild a new nurses residence, and\nWinnipeg General hospital $31,503\nto help renovate and modernize\nits laundry and heating plant.\nYUKON   AREA\nThe Yukon Territory, covering\n207,000 square miles, was organized as a separate territory in\nTrucker Killed on\nFraser Highway\nBOSTON BAR (CP) - A 44-\nyear-old truck driver was killed\nWednesday night when he jumped\nclear of bis runaway truck on a\nFraser Canyon Highway hill a\nmile east of here.\nCornelius Heppner was dead\nwhen he was picked up from the\nblacktop. The truck, loaded with\nasphalt, overturned 568 feet down\nthe hill.\nRobert Gray ot Boston Bar said\nhe was following the truck, which\nseemed to be riding normally,\nwhen he saw a \"bundle of rags\"\ntumble from the cab. The bundle\nturned out to be Heppner. Police\nsaid it is possible that the truck's\nbrakes failed and the driver got\npanicky and jumped, hitting the\npavement head first.\nSPECIALS\nFRIDAY NIGHT\nOn Sale Sharp at 7 p.m.\nPersonal Shopping Only. Limited Quantities.\n2.49\n.99\nBOYS' AND YOUTHS'\nDRESS PANTS - '*, PRICE!\nReg, 4.99 and 3.93\nClearance of discontinued\nlines. Good quality boys' dress\npants in broken size range 6\nto 18. Mostly brown shades.\n7 p.m. Special\nPair \t\nMISSES' RAINBOOTS\nKeg. 2.29\nJust the thing for rainy days.\nHeavy plastic pull-on boot.\nRed or White. Sizes 9-3.\n7 p.m.\nSpecial\n3 ONLY CARRIAGES\nReg. 54.98\nConverta-a-Carrlage converts\nto stroller, car seat, car bed.\nFirst quality by \"Gendron\".\nColors: Blue, Yellow, Grey.\n7 pm. 37  77\nSpecial it I a I  I\nORLON COATS\nFULL LENGTH\n3 Only. Fur fabric Orion coats\nthat are warm yet light. Fully\nMilium lined. Colors: 2 Brown,\n1 Black. Sizes: 1\/10, 2\/14.\n7 p.m.\nSpecial\n7.88\n49.99\nTARTAN SLIM JIMS\n17 Only. 100% wool (Imported\nfrom Scotland) tartans, beautifully tailored by \"Suzanne\".\nBroken sizes and tartans.\n7 p.m.\nSpecial\nCOTTON SCATTER MATS\nReg. 4.49\nFringed ends 24x36. Grey,\nBlue, Green and Turquoise.\nLimited quantity. J nq\n7 p.m. Special     3 .JmJ\nHOLLAND BULBS\nReg. .49 and .69\nPlant now for spring growing.\nChoose from Hyacinths. Tulips, Daffodils or Crocus.\nBoxed. 3 Q\n7 p.m. Special \u2022 3 *\nSTEAK KNIVES\nRegular Price 1.29\nStainless steel, seven Inches\nlong with black handles, six\nknives to a box. CO\n7 p.m. Special \u2022 3 J'\nCHILDS' SNOW SUITS\nQuilted lined cotton snowsuits.\nTerrific   for   playwear, light\nbut warm. Colors:  Red, Blue\nSizes 2-3-4. 3   3 5\n7 p.m. Special 3.3 3\nmCORPORATlO   *\u2022\"? MAY I67Q,\nMen's Nylon Zip\n7.45\nA dressy nylon shell, warmly\nlined, and completely waterproof. Good grip rubber soles.\nSites 6 to 11.\nPlastic Rain Shoes\n1.98\nNeat and trim looking for wear\nin wet or slush, Made of pliable\nplastic which protects against\nmoisture without chafing\nankles. Cross over one-button\nclosure. Colors: Charcoal or\nMist. Sizes 4 to 10.\nMen's Welt Rubbers\n2.95\nNeat sole rubbers fnr dress\nor everyday wear. Self- acting\nback means they're easy to\nslip on and off, but stay on\nwhen walking. Black. 6 to 1114.\nZipper Splash Boots\n7.45\nAll rubber, concealed front\nslide fasteners. Fleece lining,\nlul bellows tongue, felt insoles.\nZig-Zag safety sole. Black.\nSizes Men's, 6 to 11.\nMen's, Boys' Wormtops\n7.45      6.45\nAH rubber with fleece lining\nand inside shearling sheep's\nwool collar. Felt insoles, expansion gusset with snap and\nstrap tastener. Full sizes Men's\n6 to 11; Boys', 1 to 5.\nNylon Overboots\n6.45\nUppers are of durable nylon\nmaterial with rayon fleece\nlining and rabbit fur trim.\nRubber \"bottoms for safe walking on slippery surfaces For\nwear over shoes with any type\nof heel. Colors: Black or\nbrown. Women's sizes 4 to 9.\n4-Buckle Overshoes\n7.45      5.95\nAll rubber with four-clasp\nbuckles. Thick fleece lining\nfor warmth. Full bellows\ntongue ensures dry ankles.\nSturdy sole. Black. Men's 6 to\n11; Boys' 1 to 5.\nWarmtop Overboots\n4.95      4.75\nAll-rubber pull-ons with fleece\nlining, inside shearling\n(sheep's wool! collar, snap and\nstrap fastener over top expansion gusset. Full sizes: Misses'.\n13 to 3; Child's. 5 to 12.\nfytoM&$*ni (tom|Wtt$.\nINCORPORATED   27f MAY IS70.\n ._-\n-\"''\u25a0\"v:\"''\" \"v-f  '-*\\ Y'> '\u25a0\u25a0\n!W\u00bb,!i!U\u201eW!y,IV.* I     '      -..'W'-'W*1\n^W!liS\n^*f\nTransportation Commission\nStarts Cross-Country Tour\nBy ROBERT RICE\nCanadian Press Staff Writer'\nQUEBEC (CP) \u2014 A new round\nof hearings \u2014 second in 10 years-\nopened Thursday on transportation\nin Canada.\nThe royal commission on transportation, headed by Charles P.\nMcTague, Toronto lawyer, launches a cross-country tour in this\nQuebec province capital-\nFrom here, the commission goes\nto Montreal Friday and next month\nto the Atlantic provinces. Hearings\nare also scheduled for Ottawa Dec.\n4. The commissioners are expected to head west later to hear\nother viewpoints on Canada's complex transportation situation,.\nFOLLOW LIBERAL STUDY\nThe body was appointed five\nmonths ago to 'investigate problems involving railway transportation ln Canada. It follows in the\nArchbishop Clark Urges\nValue of Quiet Sunday\nWINNIPEG I CP)\u2014The spiritual leader of Canada's 2,300,000\nAnglicans says, \"basically, Christians want a Sunday in which\nthey have freedom to worship,\nrather than a Sunday in which\nthey are prohibited (rom playing.\"\nMost Rev. Howard H. Clark of\nEdmonton, named earlier this\nmonth as primate of tlie Anglican\nOhurch of Canadp, said in an interview, that \"lo the ordinary\nman, the case for commercialized Sunday sport looks reasonable.\n\"Some play golf, therefore,\nwhy should not others watch a\nhockey game?\"\nBut, he added, \"commercial\nsport involves employed labor\nand could deny someone his freedom to worship.\"\nArchbishop Clark said the\nchurch \"sees the question of Sunday sport against a background\nof what it must believe to be an\nunplanned decline from the quiet\nSunday to a Sunday which is no\nAAA APPROVED\nLIBERTY   MOTEL\nNorth 6801  Division St.\nSpokane, Washington\n\u2022 Ultra Modern\n2 to 6 Person Units.\n\u2022 15 Minutes To Downtown\nShopping.\nMR. and MRS. R. W.\n\"BOB\" WHIPPS\nOwners and Managers\nFree   T.V.   and\nWinter Shoppers Rates\ndifferent to any other day. We\ndo not believe that citizens of our\ncountry realize fully what they\nare doing.\n\"I believe that the Lord's Day\nAct should be changed to meet\nlhe conditions of the 20th century, but tha change should be\ndone thoughtfully and not in\nangry reactidn against what\nseems like unjust restraints. I\nwould urge on any communhy\nthe value of a quiet Sunday, when\nall people are free to worship\ntheir  God.\"\nArchbishop Clark, in Winnipeg\nto conduct a week \u2022 long parish\nmission at St. George's Anglican\nChurch, also said that the time\nhas come for the church to realize she lives in a new era and\nmany of her accepted methods\nmust die with the old one.\"\nNow, in this new test, he said,\nonly that which is fundamental\nto the faith will survive. TTiat\nwhich is part of the dying age\nwill pass  away with it.\nIN SPOKANE\nThe Flame\nFOOD and COCKTAILS\nT-Bone Steak\n$145\nSmall   Orders   for   Children.\nOut of the High Rent District\nE2401 Sprague\nTurn   at   Altamont   Street\nALWAYS  OPEN\nThu fdrtriiMmtnl n nol puNish.d at dilpltyed by 111. liquor Control Bond or by th. Governmifl! ol Bnluh Columbll\nfootsteps of another royal com\nmission set up by the former\nLiberal government to study the\nsame subject.\nThe previous commission, led by\nW. F. A. Turgeon, brought a number of changes for Canada's railways, including a start on equalisation of freight rates and recapitalisation of the publicly owned\nCanadian National Railways.\nThe McTague commission has\nauthority to inquire Into \"such\nother related matters as the commission considers pertinent* or\nrelevant to the specific of general\nscope of the Inquiry.\"\nEXAMINE GRAIN RATES\nOn this basis, the commission\nis expected to look Into the controversial Crowsnest Pass rates \u2014 a\nset of rates under which Prairie\nexport grain ls moved at charges\nset ln 1899.\nMembers of the present commission are Herbert Anscombe of\nVictoria, a former minister of finance ln the British Columbia\ngovernment; Archibald N. Balch,\nchairman of the national legislature committee of the National\nRailway Brotherhoods at Ottawa;\nRene Gobeio, a forest engineer;\nM. A. McPherson of Regina, who\nhas arguod Saskatchewan's viewpoint before the board of transport\ncommissioners; Howard Mann,\nMoncton, N.B., executive manager\nof Maritime Transportation Commission, and Arnold Piatt, Lethbridge, Alta.\nBank ol Canada [Britain's Approved Schools\nInterest Rate popu|ar Wjth Delinquents\nAgain Declines\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY iCPt-Offerings to\n11 a.m.: 700 cattle and 150\ncalves; prices steady in active\ntrading.\nGood to choice butcher steers\nin good demand from Canadian\nbuyers at steady rates; good to\nchoice butcher heifers in good\ndemand; all classes of cows in\nfair demand and about steady;\nbulls steady; good replacement\nsteers in reasonably good demand at steady prices; stock\nsteer and heifer calves in good\ndemand; butcher calves scarce\nand steady.\nHogs, sows and lambs steady\nWednesday.\nChoice butcher steers 25-26;\ngood 23.50-24.50; choice butcher\nheifers 23-24; good 21.50-2.50;\ngood cows 13.75-14.50; canners\nand cutters 7-10.50; good bulls\n14.50-15.50; good feeder steers 20-\n21.50; good stock steers 20.50-22;\ngood stock steer calves 22.50-25;\ngood stock heifer calves 18-19.50;\ngood to choice veal calves 20-\n21.50; good butcherweight heifer\ncalves 18-19.50.\nHogs sold Wednesday at 20.45-\n20.50, average 20.45; light sows\n9.60; heavy sows 8.30-8.80, average 8.55; good lambs 16-16.40\nwith bulk of good lambs selling\nat 33.25 warm dressed weight.\nOTTAWA (CP)-The Bank of\nCanauu interest rate 'uiuisaay\nnwned up us fiiui consecutive\nweexiy decline, failing to a.ia per\ncent irom 5.28 last wsea with uie\nsale ol i*Uo,ooo,uou in 91-day government treasury bills,\nThe rate now nas lailen almost\na full point in the five weeks\nsince bopt, 17 when it stood at\n6.13 per cent.\nThe bank rate \u2014 minimum\ncharge by the central bank on 11\/\nInfrequent loans to ohartered\nbanks\u2014Is set at one-quarter of\none per cent above the average\nyield on the weekly sale of 91-\nday  treasury  bills.\nThe bank announced that\n$115,000,000 of the bills were soid\nby tender at an average price of\n$1)8.786 for an average yield of\n4.93 per cent. The highest yield\nwas 4,97 per cent and the lowest\n4.85.\nThe bank rate is considered a\ngeneral reflection of conditions\nin the short-term money market,\nsince its level is tied to the\nweekly rate of government short-\nterm  borrowings.\nThis was the first time since\nMay 28 that the average yield\non treasury bill sales had fallen\nbelow five per cent.\nToday's bank rate of 5.18 per\ncent compares with the record\nhigh of 6.41 per cent on Aug. 13\nand the record low of 1.12 per\ncent on July 31 last year.\nThe government also sold $20,-\n000,000 in 182-day treasury bills\nat an average price of $97,397 to\nyield 5.36 per cent. Highest yield\nwas 5.41 per cent and lowest was\n5.28. Last week the average yield\non a similar sale was 5.52 per\ncent..\nThe sale of a total $135,000,000\nin the two maturities of treasury\nbills equals the amount of bills\nfalling due this week.\nDominion Stores\nNet Profit Down\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 Dominion\nStores Ltd. had net profit in the\nhalf-year ended Sept. 19 of $2,-\n717,253 or $1.68 a share compared\nwilh $3,585,839, or $2.22, for the\ncorresponding period last year.\nSales reached a record $191,-\n396,523, an increase of $18,324,241.\nFLAT FISH\nLOWESTOFT, England (CP) -\nTrawler fishermen here are hav*\ning a record ^season fecause of\nhuge shoals of plaice in the North\nSea. They have been catching\n14,000 hundredweight a day\u2014twice\n,as much as last year.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, OCT. 23\u201e 1959 \u2014 g I\nBy OKORGE MONTGOMERY\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 The pert\nbut tough girl lawbreaker stood\nbefore the juvenile court judge\nand said, \"Please, sir, send me\nto an approved school.\"\n\"My boy friends.\" the 18-year-\nold exclaimed excitedly, \"all say\nIts wonderful\u2014Just like heaven!\"\nA half-smile played at the corners of the judge's mouth. \"We\nwill grant your wish,\" he said,\n\"but I think you will change your\nmind when you get there.\"\nBritain's 119 approved schools,\nhousing almost 8,000 boys and\ngirls aged 10 through lfl, have\nbecome a subject of controversy\nin this country, harassed like\nmost others by a postwar wave\nof juvenile delinquency.\nNOT SO TOUGH\nThe approved schools\u2014the moderately successful British version\nof a North American reform\nsohool but not nearly as \"tough\"\n\u2014have been called too strict by\nsome critics, too lax by others.\n. On his final day in court before\nretiring as England's lord chief\njustice last year, Lord Goddard\nremarked of a boy defendant:\n\"He has only been sent to an approved school, where he will have\na delightful time, as they always\ndo.\"\nBut a shocked women's conference was told of one approved\nschool where a girl of about 16\nwas placed in solitary confinement in a \"tiny cell\" of a room\nthat had no furniture except a\nmattress.\nBritons have been taking a\ncloser look at their 119 approved\nschools\u201437 for girls and 82 for\nboys\u2014since last summer when a\nriot broke out at one and 95 teenagers practically took over the\nplace. '\nMIXED BAG\nOne of the things emerging\nfrom the study is that youngsters\nin approved schools are what\nhunting - minded English people\ncall a \"mixed bag.\"\nThe 6,500 boys and 1,300 girls\nin them range from kids who are\nmerely persistent truants to cruel\nslayers, like the 14-year-old girl\nwho killed a baby.\nA child can be sent to live at\nan A.S. for any one of nine different general reasons. By and\nlarge, those there have been\nrated \"in need of care and protection,\" are unoontrollable by\ntbelr parents or are lawbreakers.\nMany observers agree the A.S.\nyoungster ls treated somewhat\nlike a boy or girl at one of the\nexclusive, boarding schools favored by the nation's upper and\nupper-middle classes. This does\nnot mean that life is easy\u2014the\ntradition-minded,  well -  to -  do\nNO   STAMP   DECISION\nEDMONTON (CP) - The Alberta cabinet came to no decision\nTuesday on the possibility of introducing regulations to control\ntrading stamps.\nCarl Rungius, Famous\nPainter Dies in N.Y.\nBriton wants his son trained in\na spartan, well-disciplined atmosphere.\nNO JAM FOR TEA\nAn A.S, child gets education\nalong ordinary academic lines, in\nsome cases, the girls attend a\nregular local sohool while sleeping and eating at the approved\none. The girls also get Instruction\nIn domestic science and other\nsubjects.\nThe boys get extras in nautical\nsubjects, woodworking, farming\nand other vocational skills. Older\nboys are permitted to leave A.S.\ngrounds for classes and work If\nit is felt they can be trusted.\nDiscipline Is carried out\nthrough a system of rewards and\npunishment. The latter can range\nall the way from no jam for tea\nto the stinging swish of the cane\nagainst a young backside \u2014 a\nmode of punishment still used occasionally in British private\nschools.\nThe usual term is up to three\nyears. Youngsters can be held until they are 19.\nAlco Adds 160\nWorkers To\nKlllmaf Plant\nMONTREAL (CP) - An addl-\ntional 160 workers have been\nhired by the Aluminum Company\nof Canada as a result of a recent\ndecision to boost production at\nKitimat, B.C., and Beauharnols,\nQue.\nThe company announced Sept.\n11 tha\u00a3 the rate of production at\nthe two smelters was to be increased by 33,000 tons a year\nthrough reactivation of soma idle\nfacilities.\nThe production rate of all Alcan\nsmelters is 800,000 tons a year\nout of an actual capacity of 700,-\n000.\nA company spokesman said an\nadditional 60 workers were\nneeded at Kitimat to help increase the production there. Approximately 100 additional work-1\ners were taken on at Beauharnols.\nThe Kitimat plant employs\n2,300 workers, the Beauharnois\nplant 350.\nAIR-COOLED  ROOMS\nHOTEL\nPEDICORD\nW213 Riverside   W214 Sprague\nSpokane, Wash,\nRooms with bath $3.50 to $4.50\nWithout bath $2.00 to $3.00\nSuites $7 00\nWELCOME   CANADIANS\nCurrent Premiums Paid\nNEW YORK (CP) - German-\nborn Car) Rungius, whose paintings of wild life in the Canadian\nWest made him one of the world's\noutstanding painters of animals,\ndied Tuesday while at work in his\nManhattan studio.\nMr. Rungius, who was 90, until\nrecently spent his summers in the\nRockies. He had a six-roomed\nworkshop and summer home in\nBanff. Alta., and from there made\nfield trips through the mountains\nfor, weeks and even months. The\nBanff property was acquired a few\nyears ago by the Glen Bow Foundation of Calgary as a museum for\nhis paintings.\nWith his sketches and photographs, Rungius would return to\nhis  New York studio to work on\nhis pictures through the winter.\nA close friend of former president Theodore Roosevelt, Rungius\nwas equally adept with a gun as\nwith a paint brush.\nAn academician of tlie U.S.\nAcademy of Design, Rungius had\nheen active up to the time of his\ndeath. His paintings of Rocky\nMountain bears, sheep, goats,\nmoose and other animals hang in\nmany public galleries and private\ncollections.\nRungius was born in a village\noutside Berlin. He studied at the\nLone Bandit\nRobs Bank\nIn Edmonton\nEDMONTON (CP)-A branch\nof the Bank of' Nova Scotia in\nsouth Edmonton was held up during the noon hour by a lone bandit who escaped with an undetermined amount of cash, stuffed in\na shopping bag.\nPolice said the man carried a\n.22-calibre, sawed-off rifle. First\nestimates of the loot were between $2,000 and $4,0O0.\nThe bandit shouted \"get 'em\nup. This is a holdup,\" and lined\nup the staff of the small branch.\nHe scooped cash into a bag, then\nran onto busy Whyte Avenue.\nMORE\nEMERGENCY  TALKS\nCALGARY ICP) - Mayor\nGerman Academy of Art and later! Harry Hays Wednesday ordered\nhad a tour of duty as Prussian i an emergency meeting of the\ncavalry officer. He came to the | police commission and the traf-\nUnited States in 1894. j fie   committee  to   discuss  meas-\nHis.wife  Louise  died  in   1941. | ures to cut down the city's acci-\nThey had no children. i denl rate.\nthere's something special about\nTTC\ntravel\nYOU'LL LIKE EVERYTHING about the famous Canadian\nPacific name trains\u2014\"The Canadian\" and \"The Dominion\".\nTake food, for instance\u2014budget-wise snacks and meals in\nthe Skyline Coffee Shop\u2014or luxury dining in the Dining\nRoom Car. Accommodation? Everything from reclining seats\nin picture-window coaches to spacious Drawing Rooms.\nNext trip\u2014go Canadian Pacific Scenic Dome\u2014it's modern\ntravel at its finest... at no extra, fare!\nEnquire about Canadian Rockies All-Expense Tours\n2, 4, 6 and 7-day tours from $54.\nFRIDAY ,d\nSATURDAY\nShop\n-Easy\nGround Beef\n85% Lean, Grade A Red.\n3 ibs. 99\u00b0\nM 11 i\nFrying Chicken\nCut Up on Trays\nGrade A lb. 3 9C\nat\nSteaks\nFresh Pork.\n3 lbs.$1\nOO\nHams\nReady to Eat, Swift's Premium.\nib59c\nSunkist Oranges      *?Qr\n4 Ib. cello bag     *J \/ V\nField Tomatoes        7Sf\nR\u00bbd-ripe; 14 oi. tube     Am*J\\a\nEmperor Grapes    Ik \\(\\r\nFresh Clutters    '\"'  I VV\nMargarine *lQf\nBetter Buy; 2 Ib. carton        \u00abV # V\nTomato Juice\nAylmer, fancy; 20 ox. tin\n10 'or M\ntel00d$. 10 for 95c\n4 (or $1\n4 for *j\n98c\n49c\nGraham Wafers\nWeston's; 10 ot. pkg. \t\nMeat Balls\nSpringhill,  14 oz. tin \t\nUmbrellas\nImported, each\t\nThongs\nAll sizes, pair \t\nHallowe'en Suckers AQf\n72't, pkg.      W \/ V\nFresh Eggs\nGrade A large, in cartons; dozen\nPure Lard\nSelect Brand \t\n59c\nib 10c\nPrices Effective Oct. 23 and 24.\nWe Reserve the Right To Limit Quantities\n \u25a0u-i\\m\nmr^mm^w&smmm'\n^^^r^\n.\u25a0*...*.       \u2014:\u2014\n\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u25a0- -v -\u2014     \u25a0  .*\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2014\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-.':\u25a0;.\u25a0\u25a0.:\u25a0\u25a0;-\u25a0 .\\;-.-r;,~--\n-TTT-\u2122^7T *     *      \u25a0\"\u25a0--..   \u25a0'\u25a0'\u25a0!   '\n'\"\"^fT^r^F^S\n8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, OCT. 23, 1959\nReddism No Bar To\nUnion Certification\nOTTAWA (OP) \u2014 The Canada\niaibor Relations Board has reaffirmed the principle Chat Communist domination of a union is\nnot of itself a bar to (he union\nbeing certified as a bargaining\nagent.\nIt cited a 1953 decision of the\nSupreme Court of Canada to\u00bb this\n. effect is giving its reasons for\nnot upholding the claim of a\nrival union that Communists in\nthe Canadian Brotherhood of\nRailway, Transport and General\nWorkers (CLC) disbarred it from\nrepresenting west coast seamen.\nThe claim has been made by\nthe Seafarers' International Union when the brotherhood sought\ncertification to bargain for seamen in 13 west coast companies.\nThe board recently granted the\nbrotherhood certification in one\ncompany and ordered representation votes in the other 13 with\nthe- brotherhood on the ballot.\nREASONS FOR DECISION\nThursday's follow - up judgment\ngave the reasons for this decision.\nTo start in with, the board said,\nthere was no evidence that the\nVancouver local of the broUier-\nhood was dominated by Reds and\nLAND'S END\nThe most Westerly point in\nEngland, Land's End, is a granite ledge topped by grassy slopes.\nno suggestion that the national\norganization was. \\\nIt then pointed out that communism is not outlawed in Canada and cited the 1953 court finding that, regardless of Communist influence in a union, it is entitled to bargaining rights unless\nit has been directed into destructive ends.\nThe board many times has\ncertified unions reputed to be\nCommunist-dominated. Only once\nhas it decertified such a union.\nThat was the old Canadian Seamen's Union, about 10 years ago.\nIt found that the CSU was being\nused for the advancement of the\nCommunist cause, rather than for\ntrade union purposes. .\nBadly Addressed\nParcels Auctioned\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 Canada's\ntreasury was $7930 richer Thursday after the post office department's annual auction of parcels\nthat could not be delivered last\nyear because Uiey were improperly addressed or poorly packaged.\nThe items for sale \u2014 approximately 54,000 of them\u2014were repackaged into 507 parcels classified as either general merchandise, hardware or jewelry. They\nwere put on the- auction block\nTuesday and Wednesday.\nThe general merchandise,\nwhich included clothing, cosmetics and fabric household goods,\nbrought $3,357 from the 350 bidders who attended the auction\neach day. Hardware netted $1,-\n338 and jewelry $694.\nAlberta Gas Export To U.S.\nHeads Down Home Stretch\nCALGARY (CP) - A series of\nhearings aimed at almost doubling production of Alberta natural\ngas and adding millions of dollars to the Western economy is\nheading down the home stretch.\nThe Alberta and Southern Gas\nCompany Limited goes before the\nAlberta Oil and Gas Conservative\nBoard seeking a 25 per cent increase in the amount of gas it may\nexport  to California.\nIt was learned this week that\nthe Westcoast Transmission Company has applied to the board of\na 30 per cent increase in the\namount  it  may   export   to   the\nfor the space age!\nAS tWs talk about outer space isnt for Mr. and Mrs. Home-\nmaker - what most Canadian families need's more inner space:\nmore space to store things, more space for clothes, more space\nte Kw in. That's why Sylvaply Plywood is kept busy with\nhome improvement ideas, Mke the bedroom wardrobe storage\nwal here in-the-making. This handsome wall-to-wall unit uses\noniy a 24-inch strip of floor space. And it can store everything\nyon and your wife wear - separate sections for each. It's but\none of many free space-making plans at the Sylvaply dealer in\nyour community-see him for sound, economical answers to\nyour home storage problems. Whether you do-it-yourself or\nhave-it-done, your Sylvaply dealer can help, even suggest\nways to remodel now and pay later. Put Sylvaply to work for\nyou now - it's out-of-this-world for the wonders it can perform!\nSYLVAPLY: the engineered miracle in wood!\nThis lough, light weight, real wood panel is Canada's busiest building material. For a\nthousand uses in homes, farm and industry, there is a type, grade, thickness and panel size\nof Sylvaply for every job. Continuing research and quality control hate made Sylmply\nihe leading brand of plywood .. . sold hy dealers who hww it, know who makes it, can vouch\nfor ils quality. Look for the brand name on the panel edge - Sylvaply waterproof-glue plywood.\nSYLVAPLY\nPLYWOOD\nSee your deafer for FRt-E remodotting plans*\nMaoMILLAN & BLOEDEL SALES serving lumber dealers coast to coast Vancouver caigary Edmonton Winnipeg London Windsor Toronto ottawa Montreal Quebec cm\nNelson Lumber Co., Ltd.\nFruitvale, B.C.\nPhone 2651\nBurns Lumber Co., Ltd.\n602 Baker St.\nNelson, B.C.\nPhone  1180\nFabro Building & Supply\nKimberley, B.C.\nT. H. Waters & Co., Ltd.\nNelson,s Pioneer Builders\n101   Hall St. Phone  156\nOglow Bros. Building & Supply Co., Ltd,\nCastlegar, B.C.\nPhone 3351\nNelson Woodworking Co.\n273  Baker St.\nNelson, B.C.\nPhone 1150\nO. P. Larsen Services Ltd.\nMarshall Wells Store\nSalmo, B.C.\nPhone 37\nUnited States Northwest. Hearings are expected to start Nov. 16.\nAlberta authorities have already granted Alberta and Southern a permit for* 400,000,000 cubic\nfeet a day,.and Westcoast a permit for 165,000,000 cubic feet a\nday. The board recently heard an\napplication from Trans-Canada\nPipe Lanes Limited for permission to export to the U.S. Mid-\nWest 204,000,000 cubic feet a day.\nThat brings to 924,000,000 cubic\nfeet a day the amount gas exporters are seeking in Alberta,\njust 324,000,000 cubic feet a day\nless than the average daily production of the entire Western\nCanada gas industry during the\nfirst half of this year.\nIn Washington, the federal\npo\\wir commission is expected to\nrulefhefore Nov. 1 on corresponding ^application for permits to\nimport the Canadian gas. Still io\nbe heard from, is the Canadian\nnational energy board, which will\nlikely start hearings later this\nfall.\nCompany officials, however, expect tlie applications will move\nrapidly through the energy board\nonce the hearings start. The\nboard's chairman, Ian McKinnon,\nheard the applications once when\nhe was chairman of the Alberta\nOil and Gas Conservation Board.\nQUICK APPROVAL\nThere is expected to be little\nopposition to the new applications before the Alberta board.\nCP. Smith, Alberta and Southern\nvice-president, says that since the\ncompany filed its first application\nthere have been several important discoveries along with reserve increase in existing fields.\nOne of the biggest new discoveries is the Berland River field\nin northwest Alberta. An open\nflow test on a British American-\nShell well showed a flow of\n1,500,000,000 cubic leet a day.\nSAVING METHODS\nWestcoast filed its bid for more\ngas on the basis of new reserves\nand a new method of conserving\ngas lost previously in transmission. Details of the new process\ndeveloped by Jefferson Lake will\nlikely form a large part of the\ntestimony at the Westcoast hearing.\nIf the applications are successful and receive federal approval\nfrom both countries, there will be\nmillion - dollar repercussions in\nmany parts of the Western economy.\nIt will mean a start on a $103,-\n000,000 pipeline gathering system\nalong the Alberta foothills built\nby. Alberta Gas Trunk Line Limited, a start on a $37,000,000 pipe\nline from Alberta through the\nmountainous interior of B.C. to\nthe Idaho border.\nMORE BENEFITS\nThe Canadian Petroleum Association says gas export will get\ninto operation many ol Western\nCanada's 950 capped and idle gas\nwells representing an investment\nof $150,000,000. The association\nalso estimates gas export will\nmean an additional $150,000,000 in\nnatural gas processing plants.\nAlso in the planning stage and\nwaiting for definite word on gas\nexport is a $100,000,000 pipeline tn\ntransmit more oil going from Alberta to Eastern industrial areas.\nAn announcement on the project\nLs expected shortly.\nU.K. Doctors Not Pushers\nDeal With Dope Addicts\nBy BERNARD GAVZER i\nLONDON (AP)-When his girl I\nfriend walked out on him, Mark I\ndecided to kill himself. |\nThe noise at the Baker Street j\nunderground frightened him, so\nhe didn't jump into the path of a\ntrain. At the seashore he was up\nto his knees in the water, but it\nwas too cold.\n\"I was too much of a coward\nto get it all over like that,\" Mark\nsays, \"so I decided to kill myself\na little bit at a time.\"\nMark shot himself\u2014not with a\ngun, but with a hypodermic needle. Its ammunition \u2014 heroin-\nwas strong enough to make him\nforget his girl. But his new sweetheart\u2014dope\u2014clung to him every\nminute of every day.\nIn this way, Mark was no different from any of the thousands\nof drug addicts in North America.\nBut the craving need was about\nthe only thing they have in common. If Mark had taken tlie same\ncourse in New York, instead of\nLondon, he would be a criminal.\nHere he is just one of Britain's\n441 known men and women who\nhave a sickness known as drug\naddiction. He deals with a doctor\ninstead of a pusher. No racketeer\ngets rich off his habit.\nDIFFERING VIEWS\nCould North America solve its\ndrug problem by adopting all or\npart of Ihe British system?\nYes, says Judge John M, Mur-\ntagh,   chief   magistrate   of   New\nYork City, voicing an opinion also i\nheld by a special narcotics study\ncommittee of the  American  Bar\nNEWSPAPER   ADVERTISING   PAYS\nOVER   AND   OVER!\nPretty-Faced\nBull Barred\nFrom States\nWASHINGTON (AP) - Brook\nMandore, the pretty-faced bull,\ncan't find sanctuary in the United\nStales.\nIt isn'l his pretty cow-like face.\nIt's the dread cattle ailment\nfoot-and-mouth disease that will\nkeep him out.\nAgricul\/nre department officials\ngave the verdict Thursday in considering tlie case of the Ayrshire\nbull condemned !o Uie slaughter\nhouse, banishment from Britain\nor castration.\nBritish officials pronounced the\nsentence because, they said,\nBrook's cow-like head made him\nunfit for breeding.\nBrook then became a cause\ncelebre throughout Britain and\nthe United Slates.\nOffers poured in to his owners.\nMr. and Mrs. William Titcumb,\nfrom U.S. buyers who wanted to\nsave the bull.\nBut the agriculture department \u2014 after the Titcumbs said\nthey would accept an offer from\nTom O'L o u g h 1 i n of Seattle-\nslopped in with their informal,\nbut 'authoritative opinion.\nThey said there is no possible\nway for Brook Mandore to enter\nthe U. S. because of a law bar\nring imports of cattle from areas\nwhere foot-and-mouth disease exists. Britain is one of those\nareas.\nSWEDISH   LAKE\nLake Vener, Sweden's largest\nlake, is about 87 miles long and\n45 miles wide.\nAssociation* and American  Medical Association.\nSays the judge, in a recent\nbook dealing with the problem:\n\"No other country in the world\nhas been so sadistic las Uie\nUnited States) in dealing with addicts. We ought to know by now\nUiat no matter how harsly we\ntreat addicts, until there is a fundamental change in federal policy, addiction in this country wijl\nnot be stamped out because the\nunderworld moguls do not intend\nto get out of so profitable a business. We should follow England's\nexample.\"\nNo, says Hairy J. Anslmgei*,\ncomiinssiLuei* ol Uie U.o. oureau\nof narcotics, whose opinion is\nsupported oy many ponce ana\nlaw  enforcement onicials.\n\"From Ume to time certain individuals,\" he has written, \"who\nconsider themselves 'e x p e r t s'\nhave publicized Uieir answer to\nUie narcotic problem. They say\nit is simple. All you have to do is\nto take the profit out of the traf-\nfic, and the problem is solved.\nWhen asked how you lake the\nprofit out, they say it is also simple\u2014just give the addicts all they\nwant for nothing . . . They ignore\nthe whole concept of American\njustice\u2014Uiat man is responsible\nfor his actions and Uiat the\nwrongdoer should be punished by\nswift and impartial justice.\"\nARTFUL DODGING?\nThough' Uiey are mindful of the\nargument, British officials artfully dodge it.\n\"We can state the situation\nhere; it is favorable,\" says T. C.\nGreen, head of the home oflice's\nA-l division, which administers\nnarcotics conlrol. \"But we do not\npresume to say what would be\ngood for anolher nation or what\nwould work in another nalion.\"\nHow does Uie Brilish system\nwork?\nThe controlling law is Uie Dangerous Drugs Ad. It forbids illicit manufacture, sale, possession,\nimporting and exporting of drugs.\nThe home office administers it,\nScotland Yard and local police\noutside London enforce it.\nIt is not illegal to be an addict.\nThere is no registration of addicts, no special clinic, no compulsory requirement Uiat addicts\nbe reported.\n\"In the United Kingdom the\nmedical treatment of a drug addict is considered to be a matter\nfor the doctor concerned,\" says\nGreen. \"Since addiction is not a\nserious problem, there has been\nno justification for seeking powers to obtain detailed information\nabout the small number of known\naddicts.\"\nMUST SHOOT LEGALLY\nOnce an addict is discovered,\nofficially he is of no further concern of Scotland Yard or the\nhome office\u2014as long as he gets\nhis narcotics legally.\nII is an offence for an addict\nto obtain drugs by stealing, by\nlorced prescriptions, or by getting supplies from more than one\ndoctor at the same time.\nBut the lot of the British addict\nis not a smooth one. There are\nalways formidable pressures on\nhim to undergo withdrawal,\nwhich means a stay in a hospital\nwhere hypnotic drugs are administered. \"*here is also psychiatric*\ntreatment. But so far, British\nmedicine is no closer to a sure\ncure for addiction than American\nmedicine.\nColumbia\nTrading\nSpecials\nOct. 23 and 24\nTrans-Clear\nPlastic Storm\nWindow Kits\nEnough, for   10   overage\nwindows.     Complete   with\nadhesive border strip.\n36\"x36 feet.\nONLY\n$2.49\nPacific Latere\nInterior Wall Finishes\nGallons    $6.49j\nQuarts   ._~ \u2014.$1.75j\nDres in One Hour.\n(Rollers in Stock)\ni\t\nMedicine\nCabinets\nOf top quality steel. Full\n14 x 20 mirror, glass\nshelves, tooth brush rack\nand blade depository.\nEXTRA SPECIAL\n3 Pee.\nColored\nBathroom\nSets\nWith 5 ft. tub, tub filler,\ndrain and overflow, mixing faucet and plug outlet, 17x19 basin, top-\nquality toilet and seat.\nChoice of 6 beautiful\ncolors. $1^*V50\nSET ...\n$169\nWINTER TIME SPECIAL\n\"Gold Nugget\"\nInsulation\nLoose-fill vermiculite.\nPer $1.85\nBag.      I\nRock Wool Batts\n2\"xl5\" or 2\"x23\" in\nstock. Also staples and\nstaple guns to loan.\nMAHOGANY\nPANELS\n1st grade. $1.89\n3'x6'x]*\nEach\nDust Stop\nFurnace Filters\nAll Sizes in Stock.\n11 \"-$1.29      2' $2.10\nFlexatite Weather\nSTRIPPING\n(Aluminum and Rubber)\nDoor Set* $2.25\nKick Plate Sweep    $1.25\nDoor Sill   .   ..$1.25\nSnuq-Fit Weather\nSTRIPPING\n(Wood and Rubber)\nDoor Set. $| .75\nEach\t\nT\n451b. Roll Roofing\n$3.64\n2101b. Sq. Burt\nSHINGLES\nPer 100 sq. ft.\n$12.40\nRead These Specials\nand Clip This Ad and Save\nCOLUMBIA\nTRADING\n901   Front Street\nPhone 1511\n ja;.i!,.,,j.J^M,*.*Wi^\n\u2022WB!SPPpppp!!^W|BfflPS?SPIW!S\n\u25a0wp-pspiipwi^\no>^\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, OCT. 23, 1959\nLEAFS TO RUN TEAM ON CO-OP BASIS\nNHL STANDINGS\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nW L T F A Pt\nDetroit    5 0 1 16  5 11\nMontreal     4 2 1 25 28   9\nToronto   4 E 0 17 13   8\nBoston     3 3 1 22 24   7\nChicago   1 5 1 13 21   3\nNew York 1 6 0 22 30   2\nGerry James\nannounces plans\nfor winter\nVersatile Winnipeg Blue Bomber\nGerry James hat disclosed hit\nplant for the winter season. 'No\nchange,' aaid Gerry, 'I'm relying\n\u00a9n \"Prestone\" Brand Anti-Freeze,\njust as 1 did last year. I know I\ncan depend on \"Prestone\" Anti-\nFreeze to protect me from freeze-\nups, rust, clogging and corrosion\nin my car's cooling system.'\nYou can depend on \"Prestone\"\nBrand Anti-Freeze, too. Its magnetic film coats every rubber and\nmetal part of your car's cooling\nsystem\u2014protects against the\nworst that winter can do! Insist\non \"Prestone\" Brand Anti-Freeze\nand you'll get it. Look for the\nGreen Tag on your radiator that\nassures you of complete winter\nprotection\u2014\"Prestone\" Brand\nAnti-Freeze protection.      PN58-1\u00bb\nNotre Dame Pups\nQet Trail Strength\nTwenty-one hopefuls turned out:\nfor the first sessions of Notre\nDame College basketball team.\nCoach Arnold Sherwood, former\ncity league star, will have the\nsquad cut to 10 for the campaign\nBUY IT NOW\nPRESTONE\nBRAND ANTI-FREEZE\n'Prestone\" is a registered trade mark\nNATIONAL CARBON   COMPANY\n\u25a0I  Ol  UNION C-KttOI  CM\nSki SfatdL\nWork on the big T-Bar lift is\nreally progressing. Last Sunday,\nth crew at the top tower almost\nfinished installing the new set of\nguiding sheaves and rub rail while\nanother crew was busy hanging\nsheaves on towers 8 and 7. The\nturnout of brush cutters was a\nlittle disappointing, though, in\nview of the good weather.\nIt is not often we mention\nnames, but just to make you skiers\nrealize the effort some members\nare making we will tell you of\na few. Fred McKim came in from\nSouth Slocan last Saturday and\nworked all day lining up, the bottom drive unit and was on the\njob again Sunday all day, hanging\nsheaves on Towers 7 and 8.\nHugo G-hermain, who has no\nparticular interest in skiing worked all day Saturday on the drive\nunit. Ed Stiles, worked practically\nevery day last week on the hill,\nassembling the sheaves so Uiey\nwould be ready for the weekend.\nHe also put In a full day Sunday\nat the top tower.\nThis Sunday, John Janssens, another man who just wants to help\nus out will be working on the\ndiesol power unit. Members,\nwhether they are phoned or not,\nare urged to be on the hill this\nweekend to help.\nWe hope to get the Sheave assemblies on Towers 5 and 6, cut\nwood for the cabin, check the\ndiesel drive motor and get the rest\nof the brush cut above Tower 6.\nagainst Trail Senior B team Oct.\n30.\nWith a nucleus of former players\nof J. Lloyd Crowe High School of\nTrail, the college expects to have\none of its finest teams.\nSilver City standout* Allan Fab-\nbro and Nick Manducta will play\nimportant roles in the success of\nthe Pups. Fatobro, a six-six centre,\nwas named second all-star at the\nprovincial tournament in Vancouver. Manducca, at six-three, was\nunanimously chosen for the best\nplayer award in the Kootenay\ntournament in Nelson last spring.\nReturning to the blue and white\nare sophomores Terry Bressanutti,\nBill Rybachuk and Wayne Highland.\nHandling court engagements for\nthe season will be Albert Pasqua\nlotto.\nBesides playing games in the\nKootenay and Okanagan, Notre\nDame hopes to send a team to\nthe British Columbia junior playoffs in Vancouver.\nMINOR HOCKEY\nCOACHING CLINIC\nHERE SATURDAY\nErnie Gare, Nelson Recreation\nDirector, will conduct On open\nclinic on coaching for all coaches\nand managers of the Nelson Minor\nHockey Association Saturday afternoon at 2:30 at the Civic Centre.\nMr. Gare will explain the basic\ncoaching fundamentals of hockey\npertaining to the minor aspect.\nSo far the local Association has\nlined up 10 coaches or managers\nond will welcome any additional\nmembers. Those lined, up are Don\nPorteous, Ron Nash, Claude and\nHughie Hooker, Ross Allen, Harry\nWiens, Alec Jmaeff, Bud Hesse,\nPete Somerville, Clem Price, Jack\nGare, Roy Lindblad, Jack Doyle,\nDick Roberts, Jimmy Lowe, Jack\nMorgan, Greg Gregoire and Slim\nPorter.\nI PANCHO WINS\nTEL AVIV (AP) \u2014 Pnncho Seg-\ni ura of Ecuador beat Mai Anderson of Australia, 6-3 6-3, in a pro-\n' fessional tennis match Thursday.\nIn a second match. Australian Ashley Cooper defeated countryman\nMervyn Rose 3-6, 6-1, 6-4.\nKaslo Golfers Stage\nWindup Tournament\nGOLF TKO DIES\nGRAND JUNCTION, Colo. (AP)\n\u2014 Fred B. Morrison, 59, well -\nknown golf professional, was found\ndead in his home Thursday.\nCoroner W. H. Snyder said a\nheart attack probably was the\ncause.\nWE SOLVE YOUR\niURREm\"PR0BLEm5\nYou Lose\nMoney With\nFaulty\nW\niring!\nWhy Not Burn Dollar Bills?\nft costs as much as outdated wiring. Electric overload is not\nonly a fire hazard, but it runs np your electric bills! Customers\navoid   dimly   lit   stores!   fall   today!   We   Install up-to-date'\nsystems!\nColeman Electric Co.\n302 Front St.\nPhone 2055\nKASLO \u2014 The Kaslo Golf and\nCountry Club held a tournament\nand pot-luck supper for members\nto wind up tlie years activities.\nThirty-five members were present\nto enjoy the supper convened by\nElsie Howlett and Wanda Johnson.\nThe various Club Competition\ncups and prizes were awarded and\npresented by President Bill Drayton and Match Chairman Bob Howlett.\nThe winners of the competitions\nwore;\nMen's  championship,  Buck Hi*\nPlayers Bound To\nKeep Hockey Alive\nIt's do or die for the Nelson Maple Leafs.\nFrom here on in, the playens will operate the team on\na cooperative basis, their sole intention to keep senior hockey\nalive here.\n\"They will manage the entire club,\" it was announced\nafter a meeting at the city hall Thursday night. Players, the\nformer hockey executive and Mayor T. S. Shorthouse attended. The meeting was closed to the Press.\n\"Now it's up to the fans,\" said Mickey Maglio, who,\nunder the new organization will be coach.\n\"We'll give them good, fast competitive hockey, If\nthey'll give us their support,\" Maglio said.\nAnd if the support was not forthcoming?\n\"That will mean the end of senior hockey in Nelson\nthis season.\"\nDurelle Drops\nJack 3 Times\nIn Ninlh\nMONCTON, N.B. (CP) \u2014 Yvon\nDurelle, bleeding from a deep cut\non the forehead, stopped frisky\nYoung Beau Jack of Boston in\nthe ninth round of thpir scheduled 10-round non-title fight here\nThusday night. ]\nDurelle, who weighed a flabby\n190, was cut over the left eye\nand bleeding from Ihe nose when\nhe scored with a looping left at\n1:37 of the ninth. The shot sent\nJack to the canvas for the third\ntime In the round and the fight\nwas called. I\nYvon. the British Empire light-\nheavyweight champion from Baie\nSte. Anne, N.R.. appeared about\nto wrap it up in the seventh when I\nJack suddenly came to life. Jack*\nwas knocked down twice in thei\nround bjit came back after the:\nsecond knock-down to stagger\nDurelle with a stinging right.\nJack weighed 178. Durelle was]\n17 pounds heavier than he wasj\nwhen he lost to world light-heavy-1\nweight champion Archie Moore in\nMontreal Aug. 12 |\nThe 22-year-old Jack suffered\nhis first knockdown in 40 professional fights. For Durelle, it was\nhis 80th victory and 22nd in the\nMoncton ring.\ngashi; runner up, Clarence White.\nWomen's championship, Elsie\nBavington; runner up, Myrna Colter.\nMen's handicap champion, Clarence White; runner up, Buck Hi-\ngashi.\nWomen's handicap champion,\nElsie Bavington; runner up, Myrna\nColter.\nJunior Membership Cup, David\nHand; runner up, Terry Perkins.\nTwo ball foursome winners,\nIrene Perkins and Buck Higashi;\nconsolation, Margery Ringheim\nand Bill Tyers.\nGrand aggregate winner for the\nyear,  women's,  Elsie  Bavington.\nVice President George Morton\nthanked Mr. Drayton for his continuing efforts time and work so\ngenerously given in promoting the\nwelfare of the Club and in the construction of the new -clubhouse;\nMr. and Mrs. Colter for their donation towards the linoleum and\nMr. and Mrs. Cochran for the\nknotty cedar panelling interior\nfinish, also all those who have\nassisted in so many ways in the\nactivities of the Club. His words\nconcluded with a vote of thanks\nto the ladies for thflr support and\ntlie supper enjoyed by all.\nThe team will be composed of\nlocal players, Including some colorful oldtime players such as Red,\nFritz and Gerry Keohle, Maglio\nsaid.\nIt will be an all-out attempt to\nkeep hockey going rather than\nhave the team fold up, other\nspokesmen said.\nIt would have folded if the players had not stepped in, they declared. The former executive has\nstepped out of the picture after\nfutile attempts to form a new\nteam.\nThere's a lot of organizational\nwork to be done, however, and\nthe Dally New* was told the\npublic would be kept fully Informed. For several weeks,\nrumor upon rumor has swept\nthe town as to the status of the\nteam.\n\"We'll   keep   the   people   Informed.\" Maglio promised.\nPlayers expect to get little more\nthan the money necessary to maintain the team.\n\"We'll   be   out   to   give   Trail\nIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIII\nFur-Bearing Trout\nStill Takes Them In\nTORONTO (CP) - A fur-bearing trout?\nAlthough no such creature exists, queries about a furred\ntrout are still regularly received by fish and wildlife experts at\nthe royal Ontario museum and the provincial lands and forests\nheadquarters.\nDr. E. J. Crossman, assistant curator in the museum's department of fishes, says most of the calls originate with persons\nwho have seen a \"fur trout\" gimmick displayed in some Ontario\ntourist stores.\nThe fish actually is a mounted lake trout with rabbit fur\nglued to the back and sides. An accompanying explanation says\nthe fish are caught in Lake Superior at depths so cold the trout actually grow fur to survive.\nDr. Crossman says lt is amazing how many people have been\ntaken in by the hoax.\nIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nSmoke  Eaters   a   fight  Saturday\nnight,\" said  Mickey.\nTlie Leafs have fared well in\ntheir opening games. While the be-\nhind-the-scene battles raged, the\nplayers turned on the heat and\nbeat Rossland Warriors 7-3 here\nlast Saturday and rapped the Warriors again on their own ice Tuesday to tlie tune of 12-4. They also\nbeat Spokane Comets in an exhibition game.\nHockey's Big Seven\nBy  THE  CANADIAN  PRESS\nBernie (Boom Boom) Geoffrion\nof Montreal Canadiens scored one\ngoal and collected two assists\nThursday night to take over the\nNational Hockey League's individual scoring leadership.\nThe leaders:\nG A Pts.\n<3\u00aboffrioW*Montreal ...rr...*4 7 11\nBathgate, New York ...   1  9  10\nHorvath, Boston     5   4    9\nPrentice, New York    3   6    9\nHowe, Detroit     4   4    8\nJ Toppazzini,   Boston      4   4    8\n* Popein,  New York     4   3    7\nI Hull,  Chicago     S   4    7\ni Pulford,   Toronto         3   4    7\n| Beliveau,  Montreal     2   5    7\nI Stasiuk,  Boston      2   5    7\nStrikes and Spares\nMixed Commercial bowling\nThursday night rolled off in fine\nstyle with Queen's Hotel taking 1;\nBloopers, 3; Hudson's Bay, 1;\nPalm Dairies, 3; North Shore, 0;\nOverwaitea, 4; Hume Hotel, 4; Savoy Hotel, 0; Orange Crush, 4;\nBeatniks, 0; Bank of Montreal, J;\nMc and Mc 2.\nLadies' high single went to Billie\nMoore of Overwaitea with 318 and\nladies' high aggregate went to\nLena Koehle of Hume Hotel with\n802. Men's high single went to Pete\nFahlman of Queen's Hotel with 346\nand men's high aggregate went to\nBruce Malcolm of Hume Hotel with\n852.\nTeam high single went to Hume\nHotel with 1316 and team high aggregate went to Hume Hotel who\nfor the second time this season\nbroke the city bowling record with\n3645 scratch and 3771 with spot.\nOther high singles were: Bruce\nMalcolm, 333; Chuck Symmonds,\n316,-Iieira Koehle, 314; Lorraine\nMay, 311.\nHabs, Wings Both\nWin by 4-1 Score\n\/m\n*\/ \/\nTONIGHT'S EVENT\nAT THE CIVIC CENTRE\nGuys and Dolls Skating\n7:30 p.m.\nWith\nBoates\ni\nStudent Dance\n9:30 p.m.\nIt's\nREAL\nCOOL\nMan!\nHi\"\"\/\/,,\nWHAT WILL BE THE\nMYSTERY PRIZE TONIGHT ? ?\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS     l\nMontreal   Canadiens   and   Detroit  Red  Wings  charged  ahead j\nin   National   Hockey   League  ac- i\nlion  Thursday   night   as   if  they j\nwere   playing   from   the   same\nscript.\nCanadiens defeated Chicago\nBlack Hawks and Detroit chased\nBoston Bruins by identical 4-1\nscores.\nIn each case, the win came before home town fans.\nThe Montreal conlest was scoreless through the first, while Detroit got Uieir  first goal  in  the ,\nopening    round.    Both    winning'\nteams were up 1-0 by the end of j\nthe second. I\nSAWCHUK BRILLIANT ,\nDetroit,   behind   the   brilliant\ngoal-tending of Terry Sawchik\u2014\nwho has allowed only five goals'\nin six games \u2014 remained unde-\nfeated, atop the >NHL.\nMontreal climbed past resting j\nToronto Maple Leafs into second.\nMarcel Pronovost, G o r die\nHowe. Val Fonteyne and Billy\nMcNeill scored for Detroit1] Guy\nGendron, on a break with Jerry\nToppazzini. spoiled Sawchuk's\nshutout with a blast from 10 feet\nout.\nThere were only 70 seconds to\nplay when goalie Don Simmons\nwas   removed   in   a   desperation\nmove to come up with the equalizer. II didn't work. First Pronovost, then Howe zeroed in un the\nempty cago.\nThe Hawks folded in tiie third\nperiod at Montreal. Up until then,\ngoalie Glenn Hall had been keeping Chicago alive with only the\none second-period goal by Rocket\nRichard getting by him.\nHe wobbled in Uie third for\nabout four minutes \u2014 just long\nenough for Claude Provost, Jean-\nGuy Talbot and Bernie Geoffrion\nto find the range.\nCanadiens were short two men\nthrough penalties when Phil Maloney counted the Hawks' lone\ngoal at 9:47 of Uie final period.\nBoston moves into Montreal on\nSaturday, while the floundering\nNew York Rangers tole their one-\nwin-six-loss record into Maple\nLeaf Gardens in Toronto.\nLeafs are one point behind\nMontreal but they have a game\nin hand. Montreal has won four,\nlost two and tied> one; Toronto\nhas won four and lost two with\nno ties.\nMontreal, by a Saturday win\nover Boston, could move into a\nfirst-place tie with' Detroit, a tie\nthat wouldn't last past Sunday,\nwhen Canadiens visit the Wings\nin Detroit. Chicago is at New\nYork Sunday.\nSATURDAY-8 P.M.\nTRAIL\nNELSON\nvs.\nSMOKE EATERS      MAPLE LEAFS\nTickets On Sale:\nSaturday \u2014 Kootenay Stationers, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.\nBUY\nOF THE YEAR\n1-315 Diesel I.R. Compressor\nUsed 790 Hoars\n1-12B Eimco Mucker\nUsed M0 Hoars\n2-20 cu. ft. Mine Cars\nSide Dump, Like New\n2-58 J.R. Drills, Jack Legs\n2 Sets Hoses\nNails, Spikes, Fan, Timber, Vent Pipe\netc.\nThli mutt be sold\u2014Save Younetf Money.\u00bb,,\nInvestigate! (\nBox 490 Kaslo\nOR\nPhone 118 Kaslo\nPresenting the new\nFLASK BOTTLE\njSonbcii Stock\nCanada's Most Popular Canadian Whisky at a Popular Price\nOOODERHAM * WORTS LIMITED. CANADA'S OLDEST DISTILLERY\u2014ESTABLISHED 1881\n < * * \u2014 \u00bb\u2014\n -\" \u25a0 ?'.\"',\"\u25a0-\u25a0:\u25a0\u25a0;' -':,\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0...,*..\u25a0..- \u25a0\n'\u25a0 I\"'\".,,:   .  I, * \".-I**1.   ,-_      I...   \u25a0.,      I      \u25a0   \u25a0','   '.., !\u25a0'. \u25a0':\u25a0 .';.'-,\n'rt^.y.,,:'},::!. \u25a0:\u25a0\u2014.   . ,. --.-.,,--...-\u25a0. \u25a0v-.:yv'.--;v :;*.',>- -tji^wppfl'-iv \u25a0'\u25a0\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, OCT. 23, 1959\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS\nThe Dailv News does not hold Itself responsible In the event\nof an error In the following lists.\nTORONTO STOCKS\nTaurcanis    68\nTeck Hughes      1.90\nTemagami      2.07\nThomp-Lund  _      .48\nTomblU  60\nTorbrit    26%\nTrans Cont Ees 18Vi\nUnited Keno          4.65\nUpper Canada      1.11\nVentures       24.50\nViolamac       1.65\nWaite Amulet        6.60\nWright Hargreaves      1.28\nYale  23\nYellowknife Bear         1.06\nYoung (H.G.) Gold      1.00\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nAcadia Uranium \t\nAdvocate   \t\nAlgom Uranium \t\nAmal Larder \t\nAnacon Lead \t\nAtlin Ruff \t\nAubelle\t\nAumacho  \t\nAumaque  \t\nAunor \t\nBarnat \t\nBase Metals \t\nBaska Uranium  ._\nBibis Yukon\t\nBoymar  \u2014\nBuffalo Ank \t\nBuff Red Lake\t\nCampbell C \t\nCan Met \t\nCassiar  \t\nCentral Patricia \t\nOhimo  \t\nCoin Lake\t\nCons Denison \t\nCons Denison Wts\t\nCons. Discovery \t\nCons Halliwell \t\nCons Howe \t\nCons Mining & Smelting .\nCon Sub        \t\nCopper Corp \t\nCopper Man \t\nCraig        \t\nD'Aragon \t\nDonalda   \t\nEast Amphi \t\nEast Malartic\t\nEast Sullivan \t\nElder Gold \t\nFrobisher \t\nGeco       \t\nGeo. Scientific Pros\t\nGiant Yel.     \t\nGold Eagle \t\nGrandines     \t\nGunnar Gold  _\t\nHeadway  \t\nHollinger    \t\nHudson Bay  .....\nInspiration \t\nInt. Nickel \t\nIron Bay \t\nJonsmith   \t\nR J Jowsey \t\nKerr Addison \t\nLeitoh \t\nLabrador \t\nLittle Long Lac \t\nLorado \t\nMacassa        \t\nMadsen R. L\t\nMalartic G. F\t\nManeast   \u2022 \t\nMaritime Mining \t\nMcKenzie R L    \t\nMilliken        \t\nMining Corp\t\nMulti Mins \t\nNew Alger        \t\nNew Bidlamaque \t\nNew Delhi \t\nNew Bosco  .\u201e\t\nNew Lund  -\\~v\nNipissing       .,..;..X.'.....\nNoranda New  !\t\nNorgold \t\nNormetals  \t\nNorpax   \t\nNorth Rankin \t\nOpemiska      \t\nPickle Crow \t\nPlacer Devel \t\nPurdy M \t\nPreston E. D\t\nQuebec Copper \t\nQuebec Lithium     \t\nQuebec Metallurgical \t\nQuemont \t\nRadiore \t\nRayrock    \t\nSan Antonio    \t\nSherritt Gordon \t\nSilver  Miller\t\nSteep Rock\t\nSlocan Van Roi \t\nSullivan Con \t\nSylvanite\t\n.10\n2.75\n13.62Vi\n.22\n.66\n.11\n.03\n.11\n.07\n2.75\n1.35\n.13\n.12\n.65\n.08\n1.50\n.06\n6.30\n.26\n10.3714\n1.28\n.55\n-.1244\n11.00\n.61\n4.00\n.69\n2.65\n18.1214\n.45\n.29\n.12\n3.20\n.31\n.08\n.07\n1.33\n1.57\n1.46\n1.91\n16.75\n.90\n8.70\n.10\n1.45\n11.75\n.32\n29.75\n47.50\n.36\n91.50\n2.35\n.14\n.42\n20.1214\n1.23\n28.00\n1.70\n.06\n2.95\n2.90\n1.14\n.05\n1.27\n.28\n1.02\n12.32'4\n.45\n.06\n.09'4\n.1714\n.75\n.23\n1.50\n47.25\n.0614\n3.60\n.1214\n1.03\n7.95\n.90\n10.50\n.0514\n5.20\n.19\n2.64\n.56\n10.37'A\n.68\n.28\n.68\n2.68\n.35\n11.75\n.16\n1.55\n1.05\nOILS\nBanff Oils        1\nBailey Selburn       18\nCalgary and Edmonton ....\nCanadian Devonian      3\nCdn Highcrest \t\nDuvex     \t\nHome A \t\nKroy   -\nLong Island Pete \t\nNat. Pete      2\nNew  Continental \t\nOkalta \t\nPacific Pete     11\nPetrol              1\nPlace Oil \t\nProv Gas      2.\nRoyalite        6\nSpooner\nStanwell Oil\t\nTriad        3\nUnited Oils         1\nYank Canuck \t\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi  . \t\nAlgoma Steel \t\nAluminum  \t\nAnalog \t\nArgus 2nd pfd\t\nAtlas St\t\nB.A. Oil     \t\nBeatty Bros.    \t\nBell Telephone \t\nBrazilian \t\nB.C. Electric 4s   \t\nB.C. Electric 4%s \t\nB.C. Forest \t\nB.C. Packers A \t\nB.C. Power A\t\nBurns A   \t\nCan.  Cement \t\nCan. Malting     \t\nCan. Packers A \t\nCan. Packers B \t\nCockshutt    _. \t\nDist. Seagram    \t\nDom. Foundries \t\nDom. Stores\nDom. Tar & Chemical\nDom. Textiles      \t\nEddy Paper        \t\nFamous  Players  \t\nFord A  \t\nGatineau \t\nGatineau 5% pfd\t\nGoodyear       \t\nGoodyear pfd \t\nImperial Oil \t\nImp. Tobacco\t\nInd. Ace -\t\nInt. Pete\t\nLaura Secord \t\nLoblaw A \t\nLoblaw B \t\nMassey Ferguson \t\nMolson's Brewery \t\nMont. Loco \t\nMoore Corp. \t\nNat. Steel Car\t\nPage Hershey \t\nPowell River \t\nShawinigan  \t\nSicks Brew\t\nSimpsons A \t\nStandard Paving \t\nSteel of Canada\t\nTexaco \t\nUnited Steel\nWestern Grocers A \t\nWeston George \t\nWoodwards   \t\nVANCOUVER STOCKS\n.03\n.00\n.211*4\n.50\n.33\n.0614\n.12\n.40\n.21\n90\n30\n51\n1214\n15\n81\n45\n55\n13\n50\n60\n73\n.0714\n36%\n37\n33-V4\n20V4\n70 Vi\n2614\n32%\n8%\n40%\n5\n681*4\n8214\n11%\n14%\n3414\n11%\n28 ^\n55\n4714\n45\n16*\/i\n42%\n30%\n55\n15%\n125\n5514\n21%\n78\n35\n94\n180\n41\n33%\n121\/4\n34\n29*4\n22%\n28\n27\n12%\n23 Vt\n17V4\n3!)ii\n15\n26%\n16%\n28\n23\n30%\n18%\n7914\n54\n8%\n35\n36\n19%\nS^\" \u00b0\u00a3.>\n|(rf\n\\\nyea^\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\nPACIFIC STANDARD TIME\n5:45 :\n6:00 I\n6:45 :\n7:00\n8:00 '\n8:30 :\n9:30 1\n10:00 1\n10:30 !\n10:40 1\nKHQ-TV \u2014 Channel S\nKREM-TV - Channel 2\nFront. Page\n5:30 Rin Tin Tin\nCavalcade of Sports *\n6:00 Bugs Bunny Playhouse\nDecorating Ideas\n6:30 Newsbeat\n\"Sundown Jim\"\n7:00 Square Dance Party\nTroubleshooters *\n7:30 Walt Disney Presents\nBell Telephone Hour (G) *\n8:30 Man From Blackhawk\nM-Squad *\n9:00 77 Sunset Strip\nPeople Are Funny \u2022\n10:00 Robert Taylor,  Detective\nNews\n10:30 Black Saddle\nLate Movie\n11:00 Nightbeat News\n\"Good Earth\"\n11:15 Jack Paar\n1:00 Nightcap News\nKXLY-TV \u2014 Channel 4\n8:45 University Profile\n9:00 On The Go *\n9:30 December Bride *\n10:00 I Love Lucy *\n10:30 Top Dollar *\n11:00 Love of Life *\n11:30 Search For Tomorrow\n11:45 Guiding Light *\n12:00 It's a Great Life\n12:30 Stage 4\n1O0 Take 4\n1:30 As The World Turns *\n2:00 For Better or Worse *\n2:30 Houseparty *\n3:00 Big Payoff *\n3:30 Verdict. Is Yours *\n4:00 Brighter Day *\n4:15 Secret Storm *\n4:30 Edge of Night *\n5:00 Ramar\n5:30 Robin Hood\n6:00 News\n6:10 Sports Spotlight\n6:15 Doug Edwards *\n6:30 Amos n' Andy\n7:00 Mackenzie's Raiders\n7:30 Rawhide *\n8:30 Hotel DeParee *\n9:00 Desilu Playhouse\n10:00 Twilight Zone *\n10:30 Person To Person *\n11:00 4-Most Feature\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nBeaver Lodge \t\nBralorne \t\nCanusa   \t\nCariboo Gold \t\nCraig \t\nFarwest Tungsten \t\nGiant Mascot     \t\nGranduc \t\nGrandview        \t\nHighland Bell    \t\nNational Ex\t\nPend Oreille     \t\nQuatsino \t\nReeves MacDonald \t\nRix-Athabaska Uran \t\nSheep Creek \t\nSherritt Gordon \t\nSilback Premier \t\nSilver Ridge     \t\nSilver Standard   \t\nSunshine Lardeau\t\nTaylor \t\nTrojan \t\nWestern Exploration \t\nOILS\nA P Consolidated     \t\nCalgary & Edmonton \t\nCharter \t\nHome \t\nOkalta Com\nPeace River\nRoyalite\nRoyal Can\nUnited\nVantor\nGas\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlberta Distillers\nAlberta Distillers Vt\nB C Forests\t\nB C Power\nB C Telephone\nCanadian Collieries ...\nInt Brew B\nInland Nat Gas\n.13\n5.80\n.0414\n.83\n3.00\n.1014\n.20\n1.40\n.15\n1.40\n.06\n2.50\n.1414\n1.50\n.20\n1.10\n2.60\n.08\n.04\n.25\n.12\n.17\n.07%\n.17\n.41\n21.00\n1.10\n11.25\n.52\n.38\n6.45\n.17\n1.70\n.62\n2.85\n2.15\n11.8714\n34.37%\n40.00\n7.1214\n4.25\n1.40\nMacM   4  Bloedel  \t\nMid Western  \u2014\nPowell River  -\t\nTrans Mtn  \u2014\nWestminster Paper \t\nWestern Plywoods \t\nUNLISTED\nAlta Gas Trunk \t\nMidwest Copper \t\nTrans Canada Com \t\nTrans Mountain Unit \t\nWestern Mines \t\nWestcoast Unit \t\nWestcoast Vt \t\nBANKS\nBank of Montreal     54.\nCan. Bank of Com    59.\nImp. Bank of Can    54.\nRoyal Bank of Can    81.\nFUNDS\nCan. Inv. Fund        8.\nCommonwealth Int. ..    7.\nGrouped Income      3.\nInvestors Growth     5.\nInvestors Mutual\nLeverage\nTrans Canada \"C\" .\n36.50\n1.60\n16.25\n10.50\n34.50\n14.50\n26.26\n.19\n25.50\n10.6214\n.09\n72.00\n15.2714\n25 55.00\n25 59.50\n50 55.00\n00 82.00\n63 9.47\n95 8.74\n70 4.04\n94 6.42\n96 11.85\n43     7.07\n6.30\n8.19\n.07     6.60\nFirst Oil and Gas      3.98    4.35\n75\nAll Can. Com     7.53\nAll Can. Div.\nDIVIDENDS\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nContinental Can Co. Inc. 4*\ncents, Dec. 15, record Nov. 20.\nInterprovincial Pipe Line Company 55 cents plus 25 cents spec*\nial, Dec. 1, record Nov. 6.\nLake of the Woods Milling Co.\nLtd. pfd. $1.75, Dec. 1, record\nNov. 2.\nStandard Brands Inc. 8714 cents\nDee. 15, record Nov. 16.\nWalter M. Lowney Co. Ltd. V\ncents, Jan. 15, record Deo. 18.\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS 1390 ON THE DIAL\nPACIFIC STANDARD TIME\nFRIDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1959\n6:54\u2014Sign On\n6:55\u2014Farm Fare\n7:00\u2014Chapel in the Sky\n7:15-Wake-Up  Time\n7:25\u2014Sports   News\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35-Wake-Up Time\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n8:15 Wake-Up Time\n8:30\u2014Opening Markets\n8:35\u2014Wake-Up Time\n8:55\u2014Morning Devotions\n9:00\u2014News\n9:15 Al Ramsden Show\n10:00-News\n10:05\u2014Sun Showers\n10:15\u2014Tommy Hunter Show\n10:45\u2014John Drainie Tells a Story\n11:00\u2014News\n11:05 Jane Grey Show\n11:10 Album Time\n11:30\u2014Woman's World\n11:35\u2014Women Today\n11:40\u2014Entertainment World\n11:45\u2014Swift Money Man\n12:00\u2014News\n12:05-Polka Party\n12:15\u2014Sports News\n12:25\u2014News\n12:31\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:54\u2014News and Noon Market)*\n1:00\u2014Pacific Express\n1:45\u2014Sacred Heart Program\n2:00\u2014National School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Trans Canada Matinee\n3:30\u2014Light Concert Orchestra\n4:00\u2014Rocking With Boates\n5:00\u2014News\n5:05\u2014Rolling Home Show\n5:20\u2014Ottawa  Report\n5:25\u2014Rolling Home Show\n5:40\u2014Closing Markets\n5:45\u2014Rolling Home Show\n5:55\u2014Dee's Show\n6:00\u2014News\n6:10\u2014Sports News\n6:15\u2014Fleming Presents\n6:25\u2014Tempo Pt. 3\n6:55\u2014Musicale\n7:00\u2014News\n7:30\u2014Serenade\n8:00\u2014Songs of My People\n8:30 Serenade\n9:30 Cameos\n10:00\u2014News\n10:10\u2014Sports; Weather\n10:15 The Four Gentlemen\n10:30 U.N. Day Special Program\n11:00\u2014News\n11:10\u2014Sign OH\nCBC   PROGRAMS\nMOUNTAIN STANDARD TIME\nSATURDAY, OCTOBER 24,  1959\n6:00\u2014Bert   Nelson\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Be\" Nelson\n9:00\u2014BBC   News\n9:15 Camera Club\n9:30 Sports College\n9:45 News\n10:00\u2014Monitor\n1:30 Time   for  French\n1:45 Chansonettes\n2:00\u2014CBC News\n2:10 Weekend   Listening\n2:15 World Ohurch News\n2:30\u2014This Week at the UN\n2:45\u2014Stu Davis\n3:00 Ray's Records\n3:15 Ask the Weatherman\n3:30\u2014Light Concert Orohesfcw\n4:25\u2014News\n4:30\u2014NHL Hockey\n6:30\u2014CBC News\n6:35 The Mitch Parks Trio\n7:00 Musical   Program\n7:30\u2014World Music Festival\n9:00\u2014Polka Party\n9:30\u2014Drama in Sound\n10:00\u2014CBC News\n10:15 The First Canadians\n10:30\u2014Ohoral Songs\nDAILY  CROSSWORD\nACROSS\n1. King of\nAmelekitos\n5. Strike\n9. Tiny\n10. Rodents\n(S.A.)\n12. Island\nrepublic\n13. French river\n14. Alder\n16. Small\nbarracuda\n2. Proas 22. Miss\n8. High (mas.)      Claire\n23. Indian\nprinces\na*. Egg\ndishes\n25. \"Hoot\n4. Shine\n6. Enemy\nscouts\n6. Final\n7. Ricken-\nbacker,\nfor one\n8. A sunshade\n9. Coarse,\nmatted wool 31. Sham\n11. Colonize        32. Inner\n26. Dirigible\n3a Window\naHH@@   HHHDI1\nlanaiauau    uq*\nhues\u00ae saa   \u201e\nEEHB  OH  HHH\nmNmw\nY\u00abaiasdaw*m .\n35. Flex\n38. Game of\ncards\n40. Compass\npoint (afchtj\n(Programs subject to change by stations without notice.)\n17. Close to       16. Fits too satellite\n18. Fuel '  tightly of\n19. It is (poet.) 20. Strange Uranus\n20. Malt kiln     21. Route 33. Theme\n(var.)\n21. Skin tumor\n22. Heathen\nimage\n23. Firework\n27. Chinese\nseaport\n28. Hawk\nparrot\n29. Girl's\nnickname\n30. Through\n31. Obese\n34.Gov. Smith\n35. Fish\n36. Exist\n37. \u2022 of Troy\n39. Spiral\nornament\n(arch.)\n41. Rock\n42. Insert\n43. Covers with\nturf    .\n44. Pare\nDOWN\t\n1. Beetle 10-23\nDAILY CRTWOQXIOTB \u2014 Here's how to work It:\nAXTBU1UI\nis    LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this sample A k Msed\nfor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are aB hints.\nEach day the code letters are different.\nA Cryptogram ((notation\nQF   QE   J   ZBWMQFQBW   TCQZO   I1W\u00ab\nXVBWFH    RB\u2014WBF    J    F C P B V K\u2014Z S P LF .\n8 J WM.\nYesterday's Cryptocplote: ALL THE WORLD IS SAD AND\nDREARY EV'RYWHERE I ROAM \u2014 FOSTER.\n(\u00a311869, King VmIwm Syndicate, IncJ\ny\/A\n1\nX\n3\nA\n%\ns\"\n<\u2022\n7\n&\nP,\n9\nli'\n10\n11\nii\n%\n13\n1+\n%\n15\n16\n%\n>y\n18\n%\nP>\n%\nji'\n^\n^A\n%\n21\n^A\n\u25a0xi.\n33\n34\n25\"\n\u25a02b\n27\n%\n28\nn\n%\n%\n%\n30\n%\n31\n3Z\n33\n34\n37\nd\n35\"\n%\n3t>\n36\n1\n39\n40\n%\n4X\n'^\n45\n%\n44\n%\n ) \u25a0\"\"\" '. wp^W.Ml'W^ ' \u25a0\"   \u2014^^~' ;\u2014! '\u2014~~\u2014   *    ;      \u25a0\u25a0 -. *\u2014r\u2014\u2014'^~~rr~- \" \u2022    '\u25a0'\u2022\u25a0\u25a0    \u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2014\u25a0   *'*   * \u25a0;.'\u25a0'\u2022 *;**7**WW!i!'-*'\n\u2014rr\u2014irrn\u2014\u00bb., \u25a0     \u25a0   '\u25a0*. .' \u2022;.\u25a0\u25a0 \u00bby.,*,*;    * -v. -V_- . \u25a0<!\u25a0   \u25a0*..>\u2022**.: *' *\u25a0....  \u25a0-. *.*!*' \u25a0.\u2022\u25a0\">'.;\u25a0. .-..!\u00ab\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0   \u2022 \u25a0 \u25a0*  \u25a0\u25a0 ^\n3-70|\nSMALL INVESTMENT  .   LARGE RETURNS\nThat's the Want Ad Story  ~  PHONE   1844\nYOU CAN NOW PHONE YOUR CLASSIFIED  ADS IN UNTIL 5 P.M. ON SATURDAY.\nBIRTHS\nGUSTAFSON \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs.\nKurt Gustafson of Slocan City at\nKootenay Lake General Hospital,\nOctober 22,-a son.      \t\nHELP  WANTED\nWANTED: TANDEM LOGGING\ntrucks equipped for long on highway log haul. 3 months contract.\nKootenay Forest Products. Ph\n1200.\nWANTED: A LICENSED B.C\nlog scaler for immediate employ\nment Phone Juniper 5-6642\nWrite Knight Lumber Co Ltd.\nCrowsnest. B.C\t\nCARETAKER WANTED FOR\nwinter months. R. D. Boyer. Ph.\n714-L-3.\nHcLP WANTED \u2014 FEMALE\nAN OCCASIONAL OPPORTUNITY\nfor teacher or intelligent house\nwife, to interview on Gallup Poll\nand public opinion surveys Use\nof car desirable Some evening\nwork required Write Canadian\nFids Limited. 49 Wellington SI\nW , Toronto 1\nANTED - CAPABLE HOUSE-\nkeeper. Fond of children. Must\nsleep in. Phone 1877.\nWANTED: A SOLOIST FOR A\nNelson church. Phone evenings\n574-L.\t\nWANTED - EXPERIENCED\nwell-trained waitress. Phone 391..\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nD7 CAT, B22 SHOVEL. ATLAS\ncompressor for hire, together or\nseparately. Logging roads built\nby hour or contract. Phone\nPO 2-6998 or write Hoffman Construction RR4,  Kelowna,  B.C.\nSUPERB DANCE BAND, FLOOR\nshows, comedy MC, available for\nall social functions. Book your\nChristmas and New Years re-\nquirements now. Phone 1213.\nrun lllc HI-..SI IN Bum AMI\npaint work, see Ted s Aulo Bodj\n1 mile Granite Road, or phoni\nbus  98: res   1186-Y\nNOW IS THE TIME FOR FALL\nwindow cleaning, including installation of storm windows.\nDutch Cleaning Service. Ph. 2190.\nCHESTERFIELD. RUG CLEAN\ning, invisible mending, moth\nproofing. Dutch Cleaning Service,\nphone 2190.\t\nFIRE, FIRE. IF YOUR CHIMNEY\nis not safe and needs repair,\njust phone 1752-L3 after 4 p.m.\nFOR EXPERIENCED SEPTIC\ntank cleaning, phone 1994-L for\nrates and anpointments\nPainting, body repairs -\nDona by experts. Peebles Motors,\nNelson.\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\nSPECIALIZING IN ENGLISH\ncar repairs Used parts for 11)49\nto '52 Austins, 49 to '52 Hill\nmans, '50 Vauxhall: '51 Morris\nMinor motor; '52 Vanguard; good\n'50 Pontiac mlr.; '49 Monarch;\n'50 Chev: 1950 Champion; '53\nFord; '50 Chev. for sale. Cottonwood Wreckage Service,\nphone 2100, Box 382, 24 Ymir\nRoad, Nelson\nWANTED: USED CARS TO BE\ntraded in on the cleanest used\ncars in the Kootenays. Wonder\nful buys at Peehles Motors (or\nthe discriminating car buyer \u2014\nbig trades on our beautiful new\n'59 plymouths & Chryslers. See\nus before you deal for the biggest\ndeal you've ever had. Out ol\ntowners phone 1090 collect\nPeehles Motors, Nelson B.C\n1956 NASH HDTP. METROPOLT-\ntan, turquoise and white, radio,\nheater, good rubber, A-l mechanically, economical. Full price\n$875. Phone 1039-R. _\n1954 PONTIAC LAURENTIAN 2\ndoor hdtp. A-l shape. Good rubber. Older model L.D. and take\nover payments. Phone evenings\n491-X after 4 p.m.\n\"1951 WILLYS VTON TRUCK\nwith 4-wheel drive. For details\nphone 2205-L after 5 p.m.\nMUST SELLT956COMMON GEAR\nVolkswagen. Extras, radio, safe-\nty belt. Phone Casttegar 6631 _\nFOR SALE OR RENT TO RE-\nsponsible party. '54 Merc. 1-ton\ndump truck. Phone 1122-X.\n1951 METEOR. VERY GOOD\nrunning condition. A steal at\n$375. Ph. 1648 or wrile Box 295\n\u00a5F. PAY CASH FOR GOOD USED\ncars   McElroy Motors Ltd\n^\u25a0plfitin Satin -Nruifi\nCirculation Dept., Phone 1844\nPrice per single copy 7c Monday\nto Friday, 10c en Saturday\nBy Carrier per week 35c\nin advance\nSubscription Rates\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 the\nUnited States:\nOne month     $ 175\nThree months    _      5 00\nSix months       9 00\nOne year 18 00\nWhere extra postage Is required\nabove rates plus postage.\nIn Rossland. Mrs Ross Saundry\nFor delivery by carrier tn Cranbrook. phone Mrs Wm Stevely;\nIn Trail. Mrs Syd Spooner:\nIn Kimberlev  A   W   Brown:\nC there!\nE 010 J\nC  IT!! ALL By    \"\n^-f   MySELF!   y>\no\no\n,t\\J   -,\u25a0\u2022 \\rfrr.\nOH\not\nt]\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nResidents of Salmo are hereby\nadvised that the Court of Revision\nto review the list of electors for\nthe 1959 Municipal elections will\nhold its first sitting on November\n1, 1959 at 10 o'clock in the morning at the village hall.\nFrank Flood,\n Village Clerk\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\n1 - BED, MATTRESS\nAND SPRING.\n1 - GLADIRON\nPRICE \t\n1 - VIKING\nRADIO. \t\ni - BAYCREST\nRADIO.   .\n1 - ROGERS\nMAJESTIC RADIO.\n1 - PHILIPS\nCOMBINATION.\n1-R.C.A. 21\"\nT.V.\n1 - WESTINGHOUSE\nT.V.\n1-G.E.\nDISHWASHER.\n1 - ELECTRIC\nDRYER\t\n1 - A.M.C.\nFRIDGE.\n1 - CONSERVADOR\nFRIDGE\t\n1 - OIL\nHEATER\t\n1 - MARTIN\nFLOOR FURNACE.\nI - COAL AND\nWOOD STOVE\t\n1 - THOR\nWASHER\t\n1 - BEATTY\nWASHER.\n$35\n$30\n$20\n$50\n$40\n$100\n$175\n$100\n$200\n$125\n$110\n$50\n$40\n$129\n$30\n$50\n$75\nHUDSON'S BAY\nCOMPANY\nIncorporated 2nd May 1670\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, BC --\nPhone  PAcific 6357\nFOR SALE - 1 WHITE ENAMEL\nMcLary Charm range\u2014oil. Good\nas new. Used 2 years. With blower tank, fuel lining. No reasonable offer will be turned down.\nD. J. Mclnnes, RR1, Willow\nPoint.\nHAVE FOR SALE-STEAM IRON.\nRogers silverware \u2014 8-setting.\nFloor polisher, girls winter outfit, size 6. Used Singer portable\nsewing machine. Phone 2995.\nTHOR-AUTOMATIC WASHER.\nWill wash clothes, dishes and\nalso spin dryer combined. What\nam I offered? Call Peter 1090\ndays or 2099 nights.\nLOAD YOUR OWN SHELLS.\nFree lessons. Tools and supplies\nin slock. New and used guns.\nNorm's Gun Shop, 171 Baker,\nPhone 385.\nFOR SALE: USED COMBINA-\ntion wood and coal and electric\nrange.   Very  good cond.   Phone\n1209-R.\nNEW 30-30 WINCHESTER RIFLE\nLever action. Phone 2205-L after\n5 p.m.\n1 USED OIL HEATER COM\nplete with tanks and stand. Ph\n1189.\nBOATS  AND  ENGINES\nFIBREGLASS BOATS. ALL SIZES\n\u2014reasonable prices. Peebles\nMotors.\n2 PAIR GIRLS WHITE SKATES\nSize 11 and 4. Will exchange for\nsize 9. Phone 951-Y.\nWOOD AND COAL RANGE, ALL\nwhite enamel, $75. Ph. 965-R.\nBUY   FOOD   SUPPLEMENT TAT\nHealth Food Centre, 924 Davies\nHEALTH FOOD CENTRE OPEN\nday and evenings. 924 Davies St.\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nMACHINERY\nUSED   TRUCKS\n1956 Ford Pickup\n1954  Ford Panel\n1952 Chev   Carry-All\n1952 Mack Tandem\n1949  IHC KB8-F  Tandem\nUSED  TRACTORS\n1955 IHC  TD-9\nCrawler  Tractor\nSmith Angledozer.\nLogging Winch.\nCanoov\n1957  IHC  TD-9\nCrawler  Tractor\nWith Drott Loader.\nLike New Condition.\n1952 Cat D-4\nCrawler   Tractor\nWide Gauge   7U Series.\nHydraulic Angledozer.\nLogging Winch.\nCanopv.\n1952 IHC TD-14A\nCrawler   Tractor\nSmith Angledozer.\nLogging Winch\nCanopv.\nRebuilt. Good Condition.\n1950   IHC   TD-24\nCrawler  Tractor\nCable Angledozer.\nLogging Winch.\nCanopv\nIHC UD  1091\nDiesel   Power  Unit\n190 H.P.  Long Skid Base.\nExtended Shaft\nRebuilt.\nNEW\nEQUIPMENT\nNew IHC 300\nUtility Wheel Tractor\nWith Wagner Backhoe.\nWagner Front End Loader\nNew Willock 4-Wheel Drive\nLift   Truck\n10,000 Lb. Capacity.\nFull Reverse Transmission.\nPower Steering.\nCENTRAL\nTRUCK\n& Equipment Co. Ltd.\n702  Front St.\nPHONE   1810\nFOR SALE - AUSTIN-MORRIS\ndealership. Texaco station, repairs and radiator shop. Ideal\nlocation for motel, drive-in restaurant or super market, Located\nin Trail's fastest growing district.\nApply; Rossland Realty, Rossland, B.C.. Phone 6-4676.\nYOUR OPPORTUNITY TO EARN\nyear around Clean pleasant\nbusiness Average earnings $2 50\nan hour commission Full or part\ntime Apply Box 2833. Nelson\nDailv News\nIN CASTLEGAR-MODERN RES-\ntaurant and bus depot for sale.\nFor information phone 2836 or\napply Box 330, Castlegar, B.C\nPACIFIC\n\"SAFE  BUYS\"\nDavid Brown\nWheel Tractor\nWith 3 Pt. Hitch and Wagner\nLoader. Very Good $ I 450\nCondition. v\nMassey Harris\nPacer Wheel Tractor\nWith  Mower  and  Plow.  Only\nworked a few hours, like new.\nReal Bargain $995\nJohn Deere Baler\nP.T.O.  Wire Tie Baler.  Year\nend Clearance, t^ftft\nReal Bargain *3U\"\nOliver OC-3\nCrawler Tractor\nWith P.T.O. and Pulley. Motor\nOverhauled. SI 2^0\nReal Bargain at       *\nCaterpillar D-4\nCrawler Tractor\nWith Rear Power Control Unit\nand Angle Dozer.  Very Good\nOperating Machine. Clearance\n\u2122ce $2750\nWrite, Wire, Phone\nPacific Tractor\n&  Equipment Ltd.\n1647 Water Street\nKELOWNA, B.C.\nPhone POplar 2-4240\nMACHINERY\nI Continued i\nSNOW PLOWS\nIf you are thinking about a\nsnowplow for your\nJeep \u2014 Truck\nTractor\nSee Us Now \u2014 Not When\nThe Snow Is Here.\nCall, Write or See\nH.  \"Fritz\"  Farenholtz,\nAlec McDonald, Gordon Coutts\nAC'S\nWELDING & EQUIPMENT\nCO., LTD.\n514 Railway St.        Phone 1402\nVERY SMALL \"CAT\" FOR SALE.\nFully equipped. Phone 467, South\nSlocan.\nPROPERTY,  HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\n(Continued1\n-About 5 minutes from a bus\nstop but a little oft the beaten\npath A very lovely 2-bedroom\nbungalow with a full basement and another bedroom.\nAll rooms most attractive; polished floors; and a really\nbeautiful kitchen, blue and\nwhite, wired for $7000\nrange.   Price *\nAbout  $3000  will  handle,\nmaybe $2500.\n-Larger Home on Stanley St.\n700 block. Very suitable for\nlarge family or rooming house.\nGas furnace. Price and Terms\non request.\n\u2014Another Fairview 2-bedroom\nhome on well located corner\nlot. New garage.    $6000\nPrice\nVery Good Terms.\nToday's Buy\nTomorrow's Security\nINVESTMENT PROPERTY\nDuplex side by side. Each 2\nB Rms. New wiring and plumb-\ng* $6500\nTry your down payment.\nYOUR   OPPORTUNITY\nTo   live   in centrally located\ntriplex I newly renovated) and\nprofitably    rent     two    units.\nfee *\"<500\nOnly $4500 Down.\nCHOICE\nVIEW LOCATION\nEdge Gyro Park, walking distance to city centre. Hz storey\nhome. Smart decor throughout.\nExtra large dormer B Rm, up.\nBasement, coal furnace. 3 lots.\np'lt $10,500\nOnly $2500 Down.\nAttention Home Buyers!\nReduced for immediate sale.\nFairview, 6th Street location,\n3 Bdrm. home. Large view L.R.\nConvenient K. and D.R. Full\nbasement,   good   furnace.\n\u00a3\u00a3. *6500\nOnly $2000 Down.\nONLY $1000 DOWN\n2 blks (rom Baker St. Duplex\n2 bdr. Adjoining L.R., kit. Full\nbasement and furnace. Upper\n1 bedroom suite. Revenue $95\nper month. $8400\nPer Monlh Balance at $75\nInc. 6% Interest.\n2 FOR 1 SALE\nYes, 2 homes near new hospital\non View St. 3 bdr. family home\nALSO newly decorated 3 bdrms\nhome, new wiring and new gas\nfurnace. Good investment Ex-\n<M $13,500\nterms, '\nTAGHUM FARM\n19 acres, log house, appraised\nvalue $3500. Reduc- $2000\ned to cash  *\nSalesmen:\nSylvia Brashear. Res. 1821-L\nRon Monty, R\"s. 792-R\nRudi Martin, Res. 969-L-l\n\"PHONE 68\nfor REAL ESTATE\"\nAgencies Ltd.\nINSURANCE - REAL ESTATE\n554 Ward St. Nelson, B.C.\nFOR SALE - FARMALL CUB\nPower-lift plow, 5' mower, snow\nblade. Popofl, Blewett, Ph. 921L2.\nDUPLEX. 4 ROOMS AND BATH\nup Suite. 3 rooms and bath down\nSuite. Hardwood floors, gas fur\nnace, double garage, 3 blocks\nfrom Baker St. Corner location\n$6000 down payment. $100\nmonthly plus 3 per cent interest\nPhone 1941-Y.\nLISTINGS\nWANTED\nWe have many buyers\nlooking for fairly priced\nhomes and we are making\nlots of sales\u2014Please LIST\nwith us today.\n4-QUIET LOCATION. 2 lots; 1-\nstorey, 3-bedroom older type\nbungalow, 300 block Mill St.\nGas   furnace. $4000\nSome terms.    .     \u2022P'l\u00abuu\n5\u2014COMFORTABLE 3 - Bedroom\nhome and 44 acre. Good garden. This adjoins the city and\nis only about 10 minutes walk\nto a bus stop. $5500\nGood   terms.\nSAFE DRIVERS SAVE\nWITH SAFECO\nAUTO INSURANCE\nC. W. Appleyard\n& Co. Ltd.\nREAL ESTATE and\nINSURANCE AGENTS\nEstablished 47 Years\nBex 26 Phone 269\n421 Baker St.        Nelson. B.C.\nT   0.  \"Buck\" Lambert.  Manager\nFOR SALE - MISCELLANEOUS\ncamp buildings on skids. Can be\ndismantled. Located on Castle-\ngar-Christina Lake Rd. Box 5526.\nDaily News.\t\nATTRACTIVE SIDE BY SIDE Duplex, good location, close in, good\ninvestment. Box 2957, Nelson\nDaily News\nFOR SALE: OPPOSITE JUNIOR\nHigh. Corner lot, 50'xlOO' with\n7 room house. Price $3000. Ph.\n1373-R.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR' SALE\n'Continued*\nNELSON DASLY NcWS, FRIDAY, OCT. 23, 1959 \u2014 11\nFALLS STREET\nThree Bedroom Bungalow, 1100\nsq. ft. Large family kitchen.\nHas makings of dandy suite\nin basement. Fully insulated.\nHot air furnace. Large garage\nonp70 foot lot.     $|2,500\nTerms   of  $2500   down\nand $50.00 per mo. at 7%\nNORTH SHORE\u2014Close in\nOne and half storey Bungalow,\nwith two B.R.'s and large L.R.\nfacing lake, below highway,\nfull basement, HA. furnace. 50\nfoot sandy beach, *. miles from\n\u00abf $10,500\nN. Shore\u2014SITKUM CREEK\nOn highway at the Sitkum\nCreek bridge. Three bedrooms,\nlarge L.R. Kitchen and bath.\nPart basement. About *V4 acre.\nGarage. A good family home\nat Sacrifice price,   $5900\nTerms $2500 down and\n$40.00 per mo. plus 6%\nCHATHAM STREET\nLovely two Bedroom Bungalow,\nonly 7 years old. Oak floors.\nPlastered throughout, Large\nkitchen with dining area.\nGlassed in porches. Full basement with H. A. furnace. Large\nsecluded lot. $| 1,300\nTerms. '\nROSEMONT\nClose to bridge, three bedroom\nhome on two corner lots. L.R.\nLarge kitchen. One B.R. down\nTwo B.R.'s and bath up. Full\nbasement, $4500\nfurnace\nWith $1250 down.\nFOR RENT\nLARGE FAMILY HOME WITH\nTHREE BEDROOMS, Close in.\nRENTALS\n'Continued*\n3 ROOM PLUS BATH FURN. APT.\nfridge, new furniture, automatic\ngas heat and hot water supplied\nDowntown location. Ph. 335.\n2 BDRM. BUNGALOW. LATIMER\nSt.. wired for range, full basement, automatic oil neat. Phone\n531-L.\nFURNISHED 2 RM. SUITE, GAS\ncooking, lights and water supplied. Phone 491-X or apply 140\nBaker.\n4 RM. FURNISHED APT. CLOSE\nin. Private entrance ground\nfloor, heat and hot water supplied. Phone 208-L.\nT.\nig\n& Son Ltd.\nPhone\n717 - J.  B. Brown - 1065-X\n568 WARD ST.\nTRAILERS\nWe Have a\nGOOD  SELECTION\nof Clean\nUsed\n2-Bedroom\nHOUSE\nTRAILERS\nRa Lyn Home Sales\nYOUR ROLLOHOME-\nSAFEWAY DEALER\nCRANBROOK\nPHONE JU 6-3669\nTwo Miles East on Fernie Road\nTrail \u2014 Phone 2250\nAt Ra Lyn Motel\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES\nMODERN 8-ROOM HOUSE ON 1\nfloor. Wired for range. Gas in.\nOil furnace. 612 5th Street, Fair-\nPH. 1759-X RE. COMFORTABLE\n7-rm. family home in Fairview\nnear   bus.\n2 BDRM. HOUSE, MODERN\nbathroom, reshingled roof, wired for electric range. Ph. 1088-L.\n'''rifilinupfi in  Npx'  I'nliimn1\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nEXPERT SAW FILING - ALSO\ncabinets, end tables and chests\nof drawers to your specifications, repair, or odds and ends.\nCall Don Dawson. Reasonable\nrate, satisfaction guaranteed. Ph.\n172 or call at Savoy Hotel\nSHIELDS VACUUM SHOP\nService and parts on all makes of\nVacuum cleaners. 1306 Bay. Ave.\nTrail.  Phone 445.\nASSAYEKS  AND  MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nH   S   ELMES, ROSSLAND. BC\nAssayer    Chemisi     Mm Rep\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS\nRAY G. JOHNSON\nBC. Land Surveyor and Engineer\niill.i Eighth St    Nelson   Ph   144-H\nFOR SALE-2-BEDROOM. SMALL\nhome in upper Rosemont. All\nnew interior, pink tile and natural wood kitchen. Wired for TV\nand electric range. Low down\npaymmt. Phons 210-R-l.\nCHRISTMAS PUPPIES. TOY\nTerriers. Booking now for December delivery. Also available\nbeautiful registered hunting Wei-\nmaraners. 5 months. Roy Lanal\nSmith, Box 246, Creston. Phone\nEL64189.\nCHIHUAHA AND CHIHUAHA\nCross pups. Apply Birch's Kennels, Blueberry Creek, B.C.\nATTRACTIVE FAMILY HOME.\n4-bedrooms. Electric stove. Centrally located. Box 4220, Daily\nNews.\n3 BDRM. HOUSE NEAR CEN-\ntral School. $50 per month. Ph.\n2155-R.\n2 COMPLETELY FURNISHED\nsuites, single and double. Close\nin. Phone 149.\nROOMS WITH OR WITHOUT\nbaths. Low weekly or monthly\nrate. Savoy Hotel\nMODERN, AUTOMATIC OIL-\nheated apt., unfurnished. Private\nentrance and parking. Ph. 2075.\nSELF-CONTAINED UNFURN1SH-\ned suite, 4 rooms & bath. Phone\n376-L.\nBRAD'S AUTO COURT. WINTER\nrentals. Separate, fully equipped\nand insulated cabins.  Ph.  1680.\nFOR SALE OR RENT. 3-BED-\nroom bungalow. Oil heat. Nortii\nShore, close to bridge. Ph. 1359-R\n1 BDR. APARTMENT, ON BAKER\nStreet. Newly decorated. Phone\n1268-L.\nSLEEPING ROOM BY WEEK OR\nmonth. Winter rates. Apply Stir-\nling Hotel,\t\nNORTH   SHORE   MOTEL   OPEN\nfor winter  rentals. Phone 1684.\nMODERN   FURNISHED  1-BED-\nroom heated apartment. Ph. 2075.\nCLEAN SLEEPING ROOM - AP\nply 410 Victoria St.\nHSKPG. AND SLEEPING ROOMS\nMthlv. rate $12-$18. 705 Victoria\nFOR RENT-2 SELF-CONTAINED\nunfurn. duplex apts. Ph. 933-X.\nSMALL COTTAGE, AUTO. HEAT\nand 1 bdr. house. Phone 1647-R.\n3-B.R. HOUSE NEAR NEW HfOS*\npital. Phone 1622-X. '\nTO LEASE\u20142-BEDROOM HOUSE,\nFairview. Phone 1289-R.\n2-BDR.  APT.   GROUND  FLOOR.\nAdults. Phone 684-Y.\nFURNISHED, HEATED 3 ROOM\nApt, close in. Phone 208-L.\nFOR RENT - HEATED HSKPG.\nroom for 2. Phone 405-L.\n5 ROOM HOME FOR RENT. 131\nChatham St.\nSMALL'hoi\u00abE FMUESt. Ph.\n1463-L.\t\n1-BEDROOM* HOUSE FOR RENT.\nPhone  1954-L.\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\nWANTED \u2014 ABOUT 30 FEET OF\nused 8 or 10 inch hot air furnace\npipe and small register. Phone\n1323-Y.\nWANTED - 18\" COAL AND\nwood furnace. Phone 1294-Y\nafter 5 p.m.\nUSED SAWDUST BURNER FOR\na coal and wood furnace. Pete\nPerepolkin, Thrums, B.C.\nWANTED:    OIL   HAND   PUMP.\nPhone 1303-Y.\nWANTED   -   CLEAN   COTTON\nrags by Nelson Daily News.\nWANTED-USED COAL STOKER\nin good condition. Phone 181-X.\nROOM AND BOARD\nROOM AND BOARD FOR YOUNG\nman with regular hours. 811 Mill\nStreet.\nBOARD AND ROOM VACANCY\nfor 2 gentlemen. Phone Mrs.\nTruscott 1179-X.\nLIVESTOCK,  POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nfBOARAND 1 SOW WITH BABY\npigs. Mr. Jack Gelesz, Box 126,\nRossland, B.C.\nHEAVY PRODUCING STRAIN\nready to lay Leghorn pullets.\nPhone 477-L-3.\nTWO YOUNG AYRSHIRE C0W$.\nOne fresh, one due 27th. Cosnett,\nSalmo.\nMarket Trends\nTORONTO (CP) - The stock\nmarket, following the lead of New\nYork's Wall Street, declined during the final miutes of trading\nThursday with industrials leading\nthe way.\nThrough most of the session\nprices were generally firm with\nmines recording a strong gain but\nwith 30 minutes left in Ihe session,\nindustrial issues began replacing\ngains with losses and earlier losers\nadded to their declines.\nOn the day the industrial index\nfell more than five points, its\nworst loss since Sept. 15 when it\ndropped more than 8M* points.\nThe final volume was 1,865,000\nshares compared with Wednesday's total of  1,574,000.\nDominion Stores was the big\nloser among industrials, dropping\nfive points to a new low of 55 following the company's six-month\nstatement which showed a sharp\ndrop in net income compared with\nthe first six months of 1958.\nOther losers of at least a point\nincluded Aluminium, Fittings Ltd!\nA, North Star Oil and Weston A.\nSenior base metals and western\noils were mixed to lower with\nchanges in a fractional range. Index losses: industrials 5.16 to\n504.59; golds .66 to 87.41; bast\nmetals .19 to 164.21; western oris\n.15 to 100.09.\nMONTREAL (CP) - The Montreal and Canadian stock exchanges\nwithstood the selling that brought\nprices down in Toronto Thursday\nand emerged with a slight gain\non index at the close of moderate\ntraiding.\nLate afternoon selling took some\nstocks with early gains down to\nformer levels, but all section*\nexcept banks, papers and gold*\ncame out with small gains.\nSteels were fractionally higher\nwitli the exception of Steel of\nCanada, whioh held at 79%, up\n1%. Hailf-point gains showed for\nAtlas at 26 and Dominion Foundries at 79Va.\nBanks took losses ln late trading. Trans-Canada off Vt  at 28.\nAssorted losers included Cockshutt, Vt at 28%, and Dominion\nStores, 4 at J6.\nNEW YORK (AP) - A further\nstay of the Taft-Hartley lnjuno.\ntion against the strike steelworkers Thursday sent the stock market to its sharpest Joss in a\nmonth. i\nIn the midst of the general decline, electronic, missile \u00abnd\nrocket stocks had a bull market\nof their own.\nTexas Instruments at one tim*\nwas ahead around 10 points to a\nrecord high. In the late decline\nthe stock lost part of Its gain\nand closed with a rise of 6%.\nCanadian losers included Distillers Seagrams, Walker Gooder-\nham, Aluminium Ltd., Canadian\nPacific and International Nickel.\nDome Mines and Hudson Bay\nMining gained. S \u00ab.:i\nAmerican Stock Exchangt\nprices were mixed on volume of\n920,000 shares. Among Ihe Canadians, Brazilian Traction and Canadian Marconi gained  Hi each.\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST: MAN'S WRIST WATCH IN\nthe vicinity of the Civic Centre\nSat. night. Finder please phone\n586-R.\nFOUND - LARGE BLUE TRI-\ncycle. Owner may have same\nfor paying for this ad. Ph. 1084-R.\nWANTED TO RENT\nTRAILER FOR SIX MONTHS TO\n1 year. Will be located in vicinity\nof Castlegar. State rent per\nmonth delivered to location.\nWrite Box 2537, Daily News\n1 OR 2 BEDROOM HOUSE. REA-\nsonably close in. Phone U7II-L.\nRENTALS\nA LARGE HOME FOR PARTY\ninterested in renting out rooms.\nAlso includes small basement.\nApt. address 200 block Vernon\nSt. For information call P. E.\nPoulin, 582 Ward St. Phone 70\nWE HAVE A NICE, BRIGHT,\nspacious office in the Truck Terminus Bldg. For particulars.\nphone 77.\nHOUSEKEEPING AND SLEEP*\ning rooms, weekly, monthly\nrates. Dishes, linen supplied;\nparking   Allen Hotel. 171  BaKer\n2-STOREY BUILDING. 40' BY\n50'. Automatic gas furnace. Situated in business area. Pine Si .\nQastlegar, B.C. For particulars,\nwrite Box 538, Castlegar.\niContinued in Next Columni\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, MEIC\nBC  Land Surveyor P  Eng  <Civili\n?I8 Gore St     Nelson     Phone 1238\nG  W  BAERG, B C\n373 Raker St \u2014Land Surveyor\nNelson Phone 1118 Res   55II-R\nALEX CHEVELDAVE\nB C   Land Surveyor - Phnne .VS42\nitu rnln-nh-n a,ve    <'3stlp1.1v    BC I\nI PERSONAL\nj OLD? WEAK, RUNDOWN AFTKR\n:    40'.'   Ostrex  Tcnic  T?b'\u00b0ts  h\u00b0lp\nI    thousands fesl; onager. Only 6Jc.,\nAt all druggists.\n2 BEDROOM, GROUND FLOOR\nsuite, stove and fridge, hot air\nheat. Ideal for elderly couple.\n903 Vernon St. Phone 684-Y.\nSELF-CONT. 3-RM. SUITE. GAS\nrange, hoi water and heat supplied. Adults. Apply 410 Victoria\nStreet\nYOUR OPPORTUNITY. FULLY\nmodern 3 room apl and tiled\nbath, wonderful location Ph 130.\nFleming Apartments\nfBDR HOUSE^--WIRED FOR\nrnn5e anil hot w;t?r North Short*\n2'*j miles from bridgf. $37 50\nPhor.r l.\"5 clays. 773 R 3 evening*;\nled  in  ,\\exl  Co\nFARMERS   and   RANCHERS:\nThe Biggest Farm\nTractor Deal of\nThe Year\non all new Massey-Ferguson Tractors\nOnly 1\/3 down either cash or trade, no finance charges,\nno interest charges, no payments, until April 1, 1960.\nEXAMPLE:\nNew 1960 Ferguson Model T-35\nWith lights, fluid in rear tires, 600x16 and 11x28 $2865\ntires complete. F.O.B. Creston only . \t\n1 \/3 DOWN PAYMENT (Cash or Trade) $ 995.00\nBALANCE    $1910.00\nNO FINANCE CHARGES  NIL\nNO INTEREST CHARGES  NIL\nFIRST PAYMENT APRIL 1, 1960,\nBalance after  April  1.  1960,  may he finance either bank loan\nlif applicable! Massey Ferguson Finance, or cash.\nThis Offer Good ONLY TO OCT. 31 \/'59\nPhone, Write or Wire\nValley Automotive Ltd.\nYOUR MASSEY-FERGUSON NEW HOLLAND DEALER\nEL. 6-2440 CRESTON, B. C. Box 202\nMine Property-For Sale\nTwo crown granted claims in Duncan River Country\nof East Kootenays, B. C. This property was located in\n1898 with tunnel driven 300 feet. Mine report\navailable showing old lead silver assays. Write\nowner, Wm. T. Barnard, 1415 West 12th Ave.,\nSpokane 43 Wn. MA   4-7724.\n :,-    !.;  \u25a0\u25a0      \u25a0. \u25a0. \u25a0.      ,-U.,,.  .\n^^^^\nWWWyMWHW\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nt2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, OCT. 23, 1959\n\"Time's Awaisting\"\nIf You Don't Pick Up Your\nHallowe'en Supplies\nNow From Our Complete Stock,\nIt Will Be Getting Too Late.\n* Masks and Half Masks\n* Fabric Costumes\n* Decorations\n* Candy\nNANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nRECORD SURPLUS\nSASKATOON (OP) \u2014The Saskatoon Industrial Exhibition Limited recorded an all - time high\noperating surplus of $131,469 in\n1956-59, it was announced Wednesday night.\nCOMING I\nSAT., OCT. 24\nThe World Famous\nINK SPOTS\n2 Shows\u201410 p.m. and 12\nonniE\n9 to 1      to the music of\nCHUCK CABOT\nand his 13-pce. Recording Orch.\nFeaturing Vocalist Beth Harmon. The Cabot Trio, The Co-\nbeteers and the Choir.\n17-Scintillating Stars-17\nThe most fabulous big name\nfloor show and dance band attraction package ever presented here. DON'T MISS IT!\nADMISSION $2.50\nPLAYMOR\nTeachers' Duty\nTo Teach Says\nCoasl Trustee\nVICTORIA (CP) - Teachers\nshould stick to teaching and\nleave counselling of students to\nthose more qualified to give it,\nDr. James Tjiiurst, head of the\ndepartment of psychiatry at the\nUniversity of British Columbia,\ntold the B.C. school Trustees\nConvention here Wednesday\nnight.\nTeachers should not be held\nresponsible for the mental health\nof their students, he said.\n\"It is the task of teachers to\nteach.\n\"With regard to the student's\nmental health, the teacher's job\nis to recognize his distress and\nsuggest something be done about\nit. But It is the task of the medical profession to treat him.\"\nHe also criticized the small\npart th\u00ab family takes in school\nactivities.\n\"K the family isn't Interested,\nit should be. Tt should be involved\nfar more and given more responsibilities.\"\nHave the  Job  Done  Right 1\nVIC GRAVEC\nW        LIMITED ***\nPHONE 815\nMASTER PLUMBER\nHAIGH\nTRU-ART\nBeauty Salon\nPhone 327\n576 Baker St.\nSupreme Court to Decide\nWho Changes Horses' Names\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014The Supreme\nCourt of Canada Thursday took\nunder advisement an appeal on\nwhether the Ontario Racing! Commission has the authority to force\na horse-owner to change his thoroughbreds'  names.\nThe appeal was taken to the\nSupreme Court by William Morrissey Toronto breeder and horse-\nowner . who claims the commission threatened him in May, 1957,\nto bar his horses from Ontario\ntracks if he did not change his\nhorses' names.\nMorrissey, who obtained a writ\nof prohibition in the Ontario Supreme Court to prevent the commission from carrying out ils\nthreat,   claims   the   commission\nhas no authority to force a change\nin names.\nThe commission contends that\nthe names\u2014Not lee, Stole the\nRing, Red Nose Clown, Rabbit\nMouth, Irenes Orphan, and Into\nthe Grape\u2014were chosen to cast\nridicule on Fred Orpen, retired\nowner of the old Long Branch\ntrack near Toronto, with whom\nMorrissey had a dispute in 1946.\nMorrissey denied that he intended the horses' names to cast\nreflection on Orpen and is appealing a decision of the Ontario\nCourt of. Appeal which quashed\nthe writ of prohibition and ruled\nthat the racing commission has\nthe power to regulate horses'\nnames  on  its tracks.\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c line, 40c line black face type; larger type rates on\nrequest.  Minimum two lines. 5% discount for prompt payment.\nBalfour Beach Inn open all win*     Kinnette   rummage   sale.   Sat,\nter. Jim Molloy, chef. Oct. 24, 9:30 a.m., Capitol Theatre.\nELECTROLUX SALES, SERVICE\n512 Richards St. Ph. 1108, Nelson.\nH O. trains and accessories.\nHOBBY SHOP OPP. BUS DEPOT\nBINGO\nEAGLE   HALL  TONIGHT\nMandarin Chop Suey House\nOpen 4 p.m. to 4 a.m.\n915 Front St. Phone 2169\nSuits, pants, sports coats, sport\nshirts. Very low prices.\nJack Boyce \u2014 302 Baker St.\nReserve Nov. 28 for Ladies Auxiliary to the Canadian Legion Fall\nTea and Bake Sale.\nDog collars, choke chains,  chair\nleads and leather leads.\nMAX  KASPER   SHOE   SHOP\nEisenhower Says\nStrike Not\nCurbed by Act\nAUGUSTA, Ga. (API-President Eisenhower told a press conference Thursday he didn't think\nthe Taft-Hartley labor act was a\ncurb  for( the steel strike.\nHe appealed to the industry\nand the Steelworkers Union to\nshow some self-discipline for the\nsake of the country.\nThe president said the national\ngood requires that space activities, missile programs and all\nother defence programs go ahead\nwithout delay.\n\"They are now being delayed\u2014\nand will be further delayed-4>y\nthis strike.\"\nEisenhower said he did not plan\nany new legislation to correct the\nTaft-Hartley law. He did not believe in punitive laws or laws of\ncompulsion, saying they only tend\nto worsen the situation. On the\nother hand, he said, the government cannot allow the country to\nbe damaged.\nDust Mops\n99< to *4.25\nWonder String Mops $2.40\nCommon Mop Sticks 70<\nJanitor Mop Sticks $2.55\nHair Brush Brooms $1.99 to $19.35\nNEEDS\nChan Sponge Mops $3.99\nLamorene Brushes $1.90\nCorn Brooms $1.49 to $2.79\nGarage Brooms $2.90\nBissell Carpet Sweepers $9.75 - $15.95\nScrub Brushes 40c to 85t\nBannister Brushes $1.10 to $1.90\nVenetian Blind Brushes $2.10\nWindow Wash Brushes $1.69\nJOHNSON'S FLOOR WAX - PASTE\n1 -Ib. Tins 69c - 2 Ibs. $1.39 - 5 Ibs. $2.95\nJOHNSON'S\nGlo-Coat, Hard Gloss Gin-Coat, Beautlflor\nLiquid Traffic Wax, Stride, Green and Brown\nLabel Liquid Wax, Kleen - Floor Liquid\nCleaner.\nOveno Oven Cleaner\nWizard Glass Cleaner\nWindex Glass Cleaner\nPride Furniture Polish\nO'Cedar Furniture Polish\nSimoniz Furniture Polish\nLemon Oil\nSamae Copper Cleaner\nBissell Rug Shampoo\nCleaning Solvent \u2014 Bulk\nSoil-Off\nBon Ami     Old Dutch     Silvo     Brasso\nAt Your Marshall-Wells Store\nHipperson Hardware Co. Ltd.\n395  Baker St.\n(Owners)\nNelson, B.C.\nRugs   or   Wall-toWall   Carpet\nJORDAN'S  LTD.\n924 Cedar St., ph. 2251-L, Nelson\nPolar wool for heavy sweaters\nPatterns\u2014zippers\u2014needles\u2014etc.\nTOT 'N TEEN\nHeavy duty Traverse rods in all\nsizes up to 220\".\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nC.W.L. TURKEY BINGO\nKinnaird Upper Bench School\n8 p.m., Sat., Oct. 24\nDance at the Eagles Hall, Sat.,\nOct. 24\u20149 to 1. Sponsored by Ladies of IWA. Good music. Re\nfreshment bar. Admission 50c.\nBUSINESS   GIRLS   CURLING\nGeneral meeting Mon., Oct. 26 at\n8 p.m. at the curling rink. For information phone 1483-Y.\nGirls' winter^eight coats and\ndresses.\nAll sizes at\nEBERLE'S   ON   BAKER   ST.\nPractical kitchen hand towels\nFawn with stripes\nAt 55c each\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nTURKEY SHOOT\nTrail-Salmo Gun Club range at\nRoss Spur, Sunday. Oct. 25, II a.m\nEveryone has a chance. Sporting\nrifles only. Events for .22 large\nbore and trap shooting.\nSURPLUS SALE!!!\n109 Baker Street in the old Sin-\nnemd building across from the\nSavoy Hotel. Over 100 items to\ngo at smashed prices. Friday and\nSaturday only.\nOdds...\nand Ends\n...byM.D.B.\nIODE THRIFT SHOP\nWe are back in business again\nafter a brief shutdown. Half price\nand less for many dresses, suits,\ncoats etc. Store hours\u201410 a.m. to\n12 and 1:30 p.m. to 5 p.m. every\nweek day but Monday.\nStandard Time\nBack in Most\nAreas Sunday\nBy The Canadian Press\nMost Eastern Canadian communities move clocks hack one\nhour in a switch to standard time\nthis weekend.\nNova Scotia, New Brunswick,\nQuebec, most of Ontario, and the\ncity of Winnipeg all make the\nchange from daylight time early\nSunday.\nNewfoundland, Saskatchewan,\nBritish Columbia and parts of Ontario switched Sepl. 27. Prince Edward Island, Alberta, and all of\nManitoba except Winnipeg, remain\non standard time the year round.\nIn Ontario, 22 major centres\nchange to eastern standard from\neastern daylight time Sunday,\nCornwall and North Bay are wait-\ning until Oct. 31. Fort William and\nPort Arthur, located in the central\ntime zone, remain on standard\ntime the year round, as does Windsor, governed by its nearness to\nDetroit.\nMINISTERS   TRAVEL\nEDMONTON (CP) \u2014 Alberta\ncabinet ministers ran up travelling expense bills totalling $25,240\n(hiring the fiscal year ended\nMarch 31, 1959. The travelling expenses were part of the over-all\ncost to the pr'.vince of $413,571\nfor salaries, expenses and indemnities of cabinet, ministers\nand members of the legislature,\nUNION FUTURE\nEDMONTON (CP) - Unions\nwill survive and go forward despite frequent attacks by various\nfactions, F. C. Bodie of Calgary,\nAlberta Federation of Labor\npresident, said Wednesday. He\naddressed the opening of the\ngroup's four-day annual convention.\nROCK 'N' ROLL\nLONDON (CPI - The War Office has decided to install juke\nboxes in two troopships for British\nsoldiers. \"Soldiers miss their rock\n'n' roll while hi transit,\" said a\nspokesman, \"and tiie juke boxes\nwill keep them 'happy.\"\nI see our little Vernon Street\nfootpath that ran under the huge\nchestnut trees has given way to a\ncement sidewalk. So long as they\nleave the trees I shall be content.\nI am talking of course of the\nblock opposite the new little park.\n* *  \u00bb\nIn a corner on the landing on\nthe steps going up to the library\nwas something you seldom see\nthese days. It was a gunny sack,\nappearing to hold a few vegetables\nand necessities of life and was ingeniously twisted onto a sturdy\nbark covered stick. Few people\ncarry things in this fashion nowadays, but it used to be the mark\nof the prospector or gentleman\nof the road and was borne on the\nshoulder with a jaunty air.\n* **   *\nA friend phoned to tell me of\nthe huge flock of cedar waxwings\nthat descended on their small\nmountain ash tree. She said she\nwent out to shoo them off before\nthe had eaten the tree bare and\nfound them surprisingly unafraid\nof her. They flew around her and\npast her face, the air alive with\nwhirring wings, she was able to\ncatch one and to get a closer look\nat it. It was frightened and gave\nup its feed of berries as it struggled to be free so she let it go\nimmediately. She let them have\nwhat she considered a reasonable\nfeed before chasing them away and\nbefore they could eat the tree com\npletely bare of the colorful fruit\nShe remarked they had noticed any\nnumber of strange birds around\nthis year and one, shiny black\nwith long legs and yellow beak,\nthey were unable to identify.\n* *   *\nShe also spoke of a kingfisher\nshe has enjoyed watching in his\ndive bombing antics. Living near\nthe fish hatchery, she says the\nhatchery men take pot shots at\nthis marauder and every time she\nhears a gun go off she hopes her\nkingfisher hasn't bitten the dust\nI suppose he could be quite a\nn u i sance around a hatchery,\nthough. When I observed that I had\nnever seen a kingfisher to recognize it she said if I ever heard its\ncuriously raucous cry and saw the\nbird I would not forget it.\n* *   *\nI told her about my experience\nwith the waxwings and sparrows\nWednesday. They came in a great\nswarm to my pool for a bath and\na drink and the blurr of wings\nabove the pool was something to\nsee. At one time the electric cable\nto my house had a couple of dozen\nof these blue-grey birds with the\nbright yellow fans across the tips\nof their tails perched upon it as\nthey either waited for their turn\nat the bath tub or recovered from\nit. The sparrows were not giving\nan inch and took their own time\nabout their ablutions while the\nwaxwings hovered and searched\nfor a place to land by the water.\nThere was no fighting or shoving\nthough and it was a glorious sight.\nI would have given much for some\ncolor film and a bit of sunshine.\nItalian Author Awarded\nNobel Literature Prize\nSTOCKHOLM (Reuters)-Italian\npoet Salvatore Quasimodo, 58, little\nknown outside his own country,\nThursday was awarded the Nobel\nPrize for literature.\nThe award was for \"his lyrical\npoetry, which with classical fire\nexpresses the tragic experience of\nlife -in our times.\" The poet also\nreceives a cash award of $42,600.\nQuasimodo\u2014his name means \"almost in the mood\"\u2014has written\nonly five volumes of poems. Among\nhis most recent is one praising the\nfirst Soviet Sputnik.\nA professor of literature at the\nConservatory of Music in Milan, he\nhas also translated Shakespeare\nand the Greek and Roman classics.\nQuasimodo belongs to the same\ngroup of Italian writers as Silone,\nAoberto Moravia and Vlttorini, a\ngeneration of politically radical\nauthors who were not able to assert\nthemselves until after the fall of\nfascism in the Second World War.\n\"PARTICULARLY HAPPY\"\nIn Milan. Quasimodo said he is\nparticularly happy to win the\naward \"because it means Europe\nfinally recognizes that the barrier\nof provincialism, namely of a false\ntradition in Italian literature, has\nbeen surmounted.\"\nAlthough he is in delicate\nhealth, Quasimodo, 58, said he will\ngo to Stockholm for the awards\nceremony Dec, 10. He suffered\ntwo heart attacks last year while\nattending a writer's meeting in\nMoscow.\nQuasimodo's works are rooted\nin Classic Greek and Italian culture, but he deals with contemporary events. He has written poems\non the Auschwitz concentration\ncamp, the execution of Italian partisans by Fascists, the dead bodies\nof Benito Mussolini and Claretta\nPetacci, the Duce's mistress.\nURGE CONTROL\nREGINA (CP) - Regina Chamber of Commerce has requested\ntwo changes in the city licensing\nbylaw to control transient book\nselling firms and \"fly-by-night\"\nauctioneers. The request, before\ncouncil Tuesday, was referred to\nthe city commissioner and the\nlicence inspector.\nMayors Told\nHigh Interest\nMeans High Tax\nTORONTO ('CP)-The president\nof the Canadian Federation of\nMayors and Municipalities said\nThursday that tax rates in most\nmunicipalities are bound to increase as a result of high interest\nrates on municipal borrowing.\n\"Municipal governments across\nCanada are caught in the tightest\nmoney squeeze they have ever experienced,\" said Mayor Robert M.\nSimpson of Arnprior, Ont.\nHis statement was released in\nadvance of a press conference here.\n\"The present situation is even\nworse than the tight-money years\nimmediately following the First\nWorld War when yields on long-\nterm Dominion of Canada bonds\nwere running at 5'A per cent, with\nClass A municipal issues at about\n6t*2 per cent.\n\"Any municipality than can borrow at 6V4 per cent today is lucky.\nSome cannot borrow at all, and\nothers are virtually ruled out of\nthe money market because of the\nexorbitant interest costs.\"\nMEANS HIGHER TAXES\nMr. Simpson said the high interest rates \"inevitably will involve\nhigher tax rates on property owners.\"\n\"Already the property owner is\ncarrying an unfair proportion of\nthe costs of municipal government.\nTo add to that burden is not only\nmanifestly unfair; it could also\nhave disastrous effects over wide\nsections of the economy.\"\nWhen municipal governments find\nthemselves paying back in principal and interest double and more\nwhat they originally borrowed,\nthey are courting a future financial\nheadache, Mr. Simpson said.\n\"Most municipalities normally\nbase their financing on a 20-year\nrepayment of the loan. When interest rates are more than 7% per\ncent the repayment involved is\ndouble that of the original loan.\n10 Million Pounds of Surplus\nButter Sent to Great Britain\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS\nOTTAWA (CPI-A batch of Ca-1\nnadian butter was loaded aboard\nship in Montreal Thursday bound\nfor Britain.\nInformants said the federal\ngovernment made a deal Monday\nwith four or five Canadian exporters lo have 10.000,000 pounds\nof surplus butter from its larders\nsold in Britain.\nThe government sold the butter\nfor which it paid a support price\nof 64 cents a pound to the Canadian exporters for 56 cents a\npound\u2014taking an estimated loss\nof about $900,000 on the deal.\nIt lost eight cents a pound on\nthe butter price plus about a cent\na pound on lhe storage charges.\nSHORTAGE IN BRITAIN\nBritish butter dealers asked the\nCanadian government several\nweeks ago to sell some of its estimated 100,000,000 - pound butter\nsurplus in Britain to help relieve\na shortage.\nThe deal however, had delicate\ndiplomatic implications. The last\ntime, several years ago, that\nCanada sold some of its subsidized butter in Britain it received\nstrong protests from the traditional suppliers of Britain's butter\u2014New Zealand, The Netherlands, Denmark and Australia.\nThis time, on receiving the request from British butter dealers,\nthe Canadian government privately canvassed the other governments involved. It is understood they indicated they would\nnot disapprove of the deal in view\nof the rising butter prices in the\nU.K. caused by the shortage and\nthe consequent risk of losing customers to other cheaper products\nsuch as margarine.\nThe other governments, however, are understood to have\nmade it plain they are still opposed in principle to any selling\non world markets of subsidized\nfood products at below - cost\nprices.\nBulky\nSweaters\nJUST IN ...\nBoth Plain Shades ond\nStripes in the popular\nShag Knit.\nLIGHT OXFORD\nNATURAL\nBLUE\nGREEN and GREY\nWINE and GREY\n$9.95 to $14.95\nE\nMORY'C\nLTD.     ^\nTHE MAN'S STORE\nNET EARNINGS\nBy THE CANA.DIAN PRESS\nAtlas Steels Ltd., 3 mos. ended\nSept. 30: 1959, $606,000; 1958,\n$3111,000. 9 mos. ended Sept. 30:\n1939. $2,365,000, $2.17 a share;\n1958,   $1,290,000,   $1.19.\nDominion Stores Ltd., 6 mos.\nended Sept. 19: 1959, $2,717,253,\n$1.68 a share; 1958, $3,585,839,\n$2.22.\nImperial Oil Ltd. 9 mos. ended\nSept. 30: 1959, $37,680,000. $1.20\na share; 1958, $34,327,000, $1.09.\nCOMMITTED FOR TRIAL\nEDMONTON (CPI - Paul\nShandro, brother-in-law of former\nmayor William Hawrelak, Wednesday was committed for Supreme Court trial on a perjury\ncharge, laid following a judicial\ninquiry into Edmonton civic affairs.\nCONTINUES\n\"Gef Twice as Much \/or\nlust a Penny More\"\nCity Drug\nPh. 34       Nelson, B. C.\nFOR TASTE:\nblended from whisky\naged in 20-year-old casks\nFOR LOOKS:\na handsome new decanter\nlOIMIil\niTHKl'OLDEK THE BARREL\nYruiYrASTK\n\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0S''ti& S^Q-n-'Mi\nREVERT\nHBo rye\n^Thi* atiwrtttejnent it not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\n","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType":[{"value":"Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial":[{"value":"Nelson (B.C.)","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier":[{"value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1959_10_23","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0432958","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language":[{"value":"English","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat":[{"value":"49.493333","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long":[{"value":"-117.295833","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider":[{"value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher":[{"value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Company, Limited","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights":[{"value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source":[{"value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title":[{"value":"Nelson Daily News","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type":[{"value":"Text","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description":[{"value":"","type":"literal","lang":"en"}]}}