{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0434485":{"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":"2023-07-24","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1962-08-29","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0434485\/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\u2014_____\nWP\n60\nYears of\nDaily Service\nto the Kootenays.\nthunx\n<_*n3\nVol. 61\n3'B VTSOlSr\nPublished at Nelson, ly^ay lslAiH0tiv % ernment, financial and trading centre of the Kootenay-Columbia area\n :\u2014    wo2fr?\u00abM\u00b0w\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKootenay: Sunny with cloudy\nperiods and scattered afternoon\nshowers. Winds light. A little\nwarmer. Low and high at Cranbrook and Crescent Valley, 35\nand 70.\nv\u00b0 T? \/.frscz   '\u25a0\u25a0 CANADA\u2014WEDNESDAY MORNING, AUGUST 29, 1962\n10 Cents\nNo. 110\nMAY BE DANGEROUS\u2014Possibly shipped from Japan for sale\nin the United States, a \"trick Swiss cheese\" toy may be\ndangerous if eaten, the government warns in Washington.\nIntended for use by practical jokers, the toy is a soft slice\nof simulated Swiss cheese made of plastic.\nSurvival Program\nSlowdown Planned\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Some phases\nof the national survival program\nwill be stretched out as an austerity measure, Defence Minister\nHarkness said Tuesday in a statement.\nHe said extension of the Canadian army's communication sys-\nAirlines Show\nHeavy Losses\nWASHINGTON (CP) - The\nU.S. commerce department says\npreliminary figures show that\n1961 was the worst financial year\nfor Canadian air carriers.\nIn a brief report appearing in\nIts weekly International Trade\nMagazine, the department said\nthat although traffic increased,\nthe six scheduled Canadian carriers lost more than $14,500,000 in\n1061, compared with a loss of $7,-\n500,000 in 1960.\nCanadian Pacific Airlines showed a loss of $7,600,000 while Tran-\nCanada Air Lines was $6,500,000\nin the red. TCA attributed much\nof its loss to a sharp switch Irom\nfirst-class to economy travel in\nCanada and to the cost ol introducing jet aircraft.\nCPA blame its trouble on res-\ntricitons imposed on its transcontinental flight frequencies, on\ninsufficient travel and last year's\ngeneral reduction in fares.\ntem will be \"phased over a longer\nperiod of time\" and that comple\ntion dates for civilian regional\nemergency headquarters and\narmy target area headquarter\nwill be etxended.\nMr. Harkness said \"a statement\nwhich appeared recently in the\npress concerning the effect of the\nausterity program in national survival is misleading.\"\nA Canadian Press Ottawa dispatch Monday night said the national stirvival program had been\ndealt a severe blow by the aus\nterity measures and that it was\nunofficially estimated the $\n500,000 program for 1962-63 would\nbe reduced by about $10,000,000\nThe story quoted informants as\nsaying plans for a complete network of nuclear fallout reporting\nstations \u2014 some 2000 in all \u2014 had\nbeen temporarily shelved.\nOTHER\nTRANQUILLIZERS\nBLAMED\nMERANO, Italy (AP) - A\nWest German doctor said Tuesday he has found evidence that\nmothers using tranquilizers other\nthan thalidomide have given\nbirth to deformed babies.\nProfessor Heinze Weicker, assistant chief of the pediatric clinic at the University of Bonn told\na medical congress here Monday\nthat expectant mothers should\nuse no tranquilizers whatever.\nThousands of deformed babies\nhave been born around the world\nto mothers who took thalidomide\nin the first two months of pregnancy.\nWeicker did not name the other\ndrugs.\nThe doctor said thalidomide apparently caused deformities in a\nbaby's limbs but cutting off vitamin B-2.\nreal Depths\nSEATTLE (AP)-The comman\nder of the nuclear submarine Sea\ndragon, back from a historic\nPolar rendezvous, predicted Tuesday submarines of the future will\ncruise at depths of thousands of\nfeet.\nCmdr. Charles D. Summitt of\nNashville, Tenn., added in a press\nconference he believes special\ntypes of subs will be able to hug\nthe ocean bottom.\nThe Seadragon and her 90-man\ncrew were welcomed by Mrs. Celesta Skoog of Seattle, wife of\nCmdr. Joseph L. Skoog, commanding officer of the Skate, the\nnuclear submarine which the Sea-\ndragon met under the polar ice.\nSkoog will fly here Wednesday\nfrom New London, Conn., where\nthe Skate docked Tuesday.\nTlie Seadragon and Skate engaged in mock warfare under the\nPolar ice before making their rendezvous and surfacing at the\nNorth Pole Aug. 2. The feat was\nannounced by President Kennedy\nat a press conference Aug. 22.\nSummitt said U.S. Navy submarines now can operate at\ndepths of more than 400 feet, but\nthe exact depth is secret.\nAt one point in the trip to the\nPole, Summitt said, the suh was\n20 feet off the ocean bottom and\nhad 20 feet between it and the ice\noverhead. He estimated the ice\nwas 70 feet thick. This was in\n(he Chukchi Sea of Alaska.\nEarthquake Fells\nHomes in Greece\nCasualties Light as Shocks\nRace Through Italy to Malta\nATHENS (AP)\u2014A severe earthquake jolted Greece\nTuesday and sent tremors through Mediterranean bedrock to southern Italy, Sicily, Crete and Malta. Homes\nwere toppled in some areas of Greece. Elsewhere the\ndamage seemed slight.\nPromised Army's Support\nGuerrillas Claim Ben Bella\nPlot to Seize Capital Foiled\nCanada, LLS,\nOfficials Meet\nOn Lumber Issue\nCasualties appeared relatively light. Though the disturbance startled thousands in an\narc with a span of more than\n600 miles from Malta to the\nGreek - Yugoslav frontier area,\ndispatches told of only one\ndeath and about two dozen injured.\nRome University technicians\nsaid it may have been as strong\nas the explosion of a 50-mega-\nton nuclear bomb, or 50,000,00\ntons of TNT.\nScientists at the seismological\ninstitute  at  the  University   of\nlonner Expects\n!io U.S. Tarrif\nOn Lumber\nVICTORIA (CP) \u2014 Trade Minister Bonner said Tuesday he\ndoesn't expect the United States\nto impose trade barriers against\nCanadian lumber manufacturers\nto protect a small segment of the\nU.S. lumber industry.\nHe said Canada only enjoys 16\nper cent of the U.S. lumber market and he considered it unlikely the U.S. would take such a\ndrastic step as mounting a tariff\nbarrier to protect such a relatively small part of its overall economy.\nCreation of a tariff barrier\nurged in the U.S. by some Pacific\nnorthwest timber interests who,\nbecause of the restrictions of the\nJones Act., find it difficult to\ncompete on the eastern seaboard\nmarket. The Jones Act prohibits\nthe movement of domestic products between U.S. ports by foreign vessels and increases shipping costs within the country.\nTribute Paid\nDr. Steacie\nUppsala, Sweden, estimated the\nquake was 50 times more\npowerful than that which killed\n12,000 persons in 1960 at Agadir,\nMorocco.\nThe   Parthenon,    the   great\nmarble monument on the Athenian  Acropolis,  withstood  the\nshock.\nOLD MAN KILLED\nA 90 - year - old Greek was\nkilled in the collapse of his\nhome in ancient Corinth, on\nthe Peloponnesus Peninsula 40\nmiles west of Athens.\nAthens seismological service\nsaid the 20-second quake was\ncentred in the Nafplion area 65\nmiles southwest of Athens.\nThere was no report of casualties at Nafplion, but police\nsifted debris to make sure no\none was buried.\nPanic caused trouble in the\nearthquake belt of southern\nItaly, where a quake last week\ntook 20 lives.\nNine persoi\nNaples in falls as they rushed\nfrom their homes to the safety\nof the streets. Naples hospitals\nsaid five others suffered shock\nor heart attacks.\nIIIIMIMIIKIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII1\nRecords Ants'\nConversations\nCORVALLIS, Ore. (AP) -\nHelen Forrest, Rutgers University zoologist, says ants apparently talk to each other and the\nsounds are clearly audible to\nhumans. She has recordings to\nprove il.\nAnts make noises by snapping\ntheir leg joints, scraping their\nfeet and rapping their jaws together, Miss Forrest said in a\nreport at a meeting of the\nAmerican Society ol Zoologists.\n\"But the most interesting and\ncomplex sounds are produced\nby stridulatory (scraping) organs,\" she said. \"The airborne\nvigrations produced can be detected without amplification at\nclose range by a person with\ngood hearing.\"\nSounds of 25 kinds of ants\nhave been recorded, she said.\nBy JACK BEST\nOTTAWA (CP)-Senior officials of the Canadian and American governments met for 2K,\nhours Tuesday on the potentially explosive issue of Canadian\nlumber exports to the United\nStates.\nAfterward, Canada's External\nAffairs Undersecretary Norman\nRobertson said the talks covered the whole problem of softwood lumber trade but he declined to give details.\nMr. Robertson, head of the\nCanadian contingent and also-\nchairman of the meeting, told\nreporters the discussions will\nresume today. He could not say\nwhether a communique will be\nissued afterward.\nThe talks were requested by\nthe U.S. government following\ndemands by lumber producers\nin the Pacific northwest, and\nby some congressmen, for curbs\non imports of Canadian softwood lumber.\nThey claimed that cheaper-\npriced Canadian lumber is undercutting the U.S. industry's\nposition in its own home mar-\nI ket.\nNO REAL PROPOSAL\nIn requesting the negotiations\nsome weeks ago the U.S. gov-\n! ernment said they should concern\nlumber imported into the United\nStates.\" It did not specifically\npropose negotiation of export\nquotas.\nHeading the American group\nwas C. .Griffith Johnson, assistant secretary of state fof economic affairs.\nMembers of the Canadian delegation included J. H. Warrent,\nan assistant deputy trade minister; Dr. L. . Rousseau, deputy forestry minister; and\nA. F. W. Plumptre, and assistant deputy minister of finance.\nIt was considered doubtful\nthat the Canadian government\nwill agree to voluntarily curbing lumber exports. U.S. lumber interests have suggested\nthat  Canada   impose  voluntary\nllllllllllllllllllllll\nlllllllllllllllll\nJ.\nof\nOTTAWA (CP) - Dr. C.\nMackenzie, former president\nthe National Research Council,\nsaid Tuesday the death of Dr. E.\nW. R. Steacie, president of NRC\nsince 1952, will be felt throughout\nCanada by the universities and\nall scientific establishments.\nDr. Mackenzie said:\n\"It's almost impossible to give\nan adequate appreciation of Dr.\nSteacie. He was such a great\nscientist with a world reputation\n\"He was a great Canadian:\nhe was not only a man of great\nscientific contrbulions and\nsearch, but he was a very fine\nscientific administrator and his\nloss is going to be felt throughout Canada by the universities,\nby ail scientific establishments\nand by a host of friends.\n\"His reputation internationally\nwas probably as great or greater\nthan that of any living Canadian\nscientist, and in all he was a\nvery great human. He was a\nmost kindly courageous and unselfish person, and he died like a\nsoldier.\nTHE WEATHER\nCanada's High\u2014Low\nMontreal  \t\nSwift Current \t\nNelson        49 69\nWinnipeg     53 65\nRegina  49 60\nCalgary     43 51\nPenticton   50 70\"\nVancouver   55 67\nSeattle     53 67\nSpokane     50 62\nquotas, bringing its exports of\nsoftwood lumber down to 10 per\ncent of the American market.\nIt now ranges between 14 and\n15 per cent.\nThe U.S. industry contends\nthat devaluation of the Canadian dollar last May gave Canadian producers an unfair\ncompetitive advantage in the\nAmerican market.\nThe Canadian lumber industry\ncontends that export restrictions\nare unwarranted and would deal\nthe industry itself a serious\nblow. It places the value of a\ncut, such as suggested by the\nU.S. industry, at $600,000,000.\nIt also notes that Canada already suffers from a serious\ntrade imbalance with the U.S.\nBulldozer\nCrushes Man\nPORT ALBERNI (CP) - A\nman was killed Tuesday when\npinned underneath a bulldozer\nnear here.\nDead is 43-year-old Walter Of-\nstie of Port Alberni.\nRCMP said Ofstie was loading\na bulldozer onto a lowjbed truck\nwhen the machine slipped, toppling on top of him.\nAn inquestinto the mishap will\nopen today.\nBoumedienne, f I a n k e d by\ncommanders of four of Algeria's six military wilayas\n(zones), said the political bureau would decide whether to\nuse force to end the insurrection of wilaya 4 that controls\nAlgiers.\nFire Burns\n7000 Acres\nLOS ANGELES (AP) - Two\nbrush fires charred more than\n7,000 acres in the San Gabriel\nmountains Tuesday, forcing evacuation of a hospital, threatening\noil fields and destroying most of\nthe ranch of cowboy actor Gene\nAutry, firemen said.\nThe blazes, 15 miles apart, are\nin the new Hall-Castaic area,\n40 miles northwest of downtown\nLos Angeles.\nEight hundred patients were\nremoved from Olive View Sanatorium as sparks pockmarked\nbuildings and lawns at the county hospital on the fringe of the\nSan Fernando Valley. .\nHumane Awards Go\nTo Eight Provinces\nBy THE  CANADIAN PRESS\nHighest honor of the Royal\nCanadian Humane Association,\nits gold medal, has been\nawarded posthumously to James\nReo, 26, a pilot from Kingston,\nOnt., who suffered fatal burns\nlast year while saving five lives\nin Greenland.\nAwards of five bronze medals\nand 21 certificates to men and\nwomen in eight provinces were\nalso announced by the association Tuesday.\nMr. Reo died in a Toronto\nhospital after he crash-landed\nhis burning amphibious otter\nplane in Greenland Aug. 29,\n1961.\nReceipts of the five bronze\nmedals are:\nMary Lynne Karis, 14, of\nPowell River. B.C. on Aug. 11,\n1961,    Mary    rescued   Patricia\nAnn Robertson, from Powell\nLake, near Powell River.\nEmile P. Holmes, of Welland\nOnt., who saved the life of Carroll Michaud at Welland on Oct.\n21, 1961 from live hydro lines.\nJohn A. Hanna, of Weston,\nOnt., who rescued three youths\nafter an explosion in a manhole March 31 this year.\nWayne Angus Whittier, of\nMiddlewood, N.S. Jan. 15 this\nyear rescued Gordon Gale Sarty\nafter the youth plunged through\nthin ice on a river.\nJohn D. MacKenzie, of Pic-\ntou, N.S. who dived fully\nclothed into the sea to rescue\nStirling Gillis July 25 last year.\nThose receiving the association's parchment certificates included:\nDuncan McPhaden, of New\nWestminster, B.C., and Ross\nBell,  17, Moose Jaw, Sask.\nALGIERS (AP)\u2014The leftist chiefs of Algeria's 45,000-\nman regular army Tuesday pledged full military support\nof Deputy Premier Ahmed ,Ben Bella in his campaign to\nregain control of this guerrilla-held capital.\nThe opposing guerrilla leaders, who chased Ben\nBella's political bureau out of Algiers, remained defiant.\nThey claimed they had smashed a plot by Ben Bella supporters to seize the capital.\nArmy backing of Ben Bella was announced by\nmilitary strongman Col. Houari Boumedienne at Setif,\n150 miles east of Algiers,\nA manifesto issued by Bourne-\ndienne's general staff declared\nthat \"a handful of unscrupulous\nofficers\" had brought anarchy\nto Algiers and that the situa\ntion threatened all of this new\nnation.\nFEAR DICTATORSHIP\nDespite the sharp wording of\nthe manifesto, diplomatic observers believe the opposing sides\nwill continue to try to avoid\nwarfare. A major fear is that\nsome type of military dictatorship will emerge from the economic chaos and political fued-\ning that has plagued Algeria\nsince independence from\nFrance July 3.\nOpposing Ben Bella along\nwith wilaya 4, which has an\nestimated 20,000 men under\narms, is wilaya 3 in the Kabylie\nMountains to the east. It has a\nforce of 10,000.\nIieut. Ali Allouaohe, spokesman for the guerrilla command,\nsaid a score of young \/Algerians\nwere rounded up in raids on the\nCasibah and weapons ranging\nfrom bazookas to grenades seized. At the same time, he accused the French Army of exploiting Algeria's crisis and confirmed\na clash with French troops \u2014\nthe most serious since the March\n'19 cease-fire Fjanco'Moslem ac;\ncords.\nSeveral Algerian soldiers were\nreported killed in gunfire Monday with French troops at Marengo, west of Algiers.\nThe French high command had\nchanged Algerians with firing\nfirst on troops protecting the departure of a European farmer.\nFrench losses were listed as\nthree killed, seven wounded.\nThe infant North African nation was torn 'by anarchy with\nAlgeMans 'bitterly disputing\namong themselves and Ihe guerrilla troops holding the capita!\nshowing increasing antagonism\ntoward Vice-Premier Ben Bella\nas well as tlie French.\nU Thant Talks\nWith Khrushchev\nMOSCOW (AP)-U Thant, acting secretary-general of the United Nations, spent four hours discussing international problems\nwith Premier Khrushchev\nYalta Tuesday.\nThis was reported Tuesday\nnight by Thant's press officer,\nRameses Nassif, who hinted that\nThant may make an announcement Thursday as to whether\nKhrushchev will visit the United\nNations in New York this autumn\nAs for topics discussed Tues\nday, Nassif said: \"All I can say\nis that subjects discussed were\nsome of the major international\nissues, including problems.facing\nthe United Nations.\"\nRCMP Says\nMoney Dropped\nIn His Car\nVANCOUVER (CP)-An RCMP\ncorporal testified Tuesday $1000\nwas planted in his car while he\nwas with one of three men accused of bribery.\nCpl. Jack McDonald said the\nmoney was dropped into his car\nwithout his knowledge.\nHe was testifying for the second\nday in the preliminary hearing of\nlawyer Rockmill (Rocky) Myers,\n30, William Foulder Robertson,\n34, and John Clinton Magrath, 45,\nwho face 12 counts of bribery and\nconspiracy to bribe him.\nMonday he testified he was approached to act as a tip-off-man\nfor any police raids against a\nposh gambling casino that was to\nbe established at Wigwam Inn, a\ntourist lodge on the north arm of\nBurrard Inlet, 20 miles northeast\nof here.\nPCs Reorganize\nIn Quebec\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014Reorganization\nof the Progressive Conservative\nparty in Quebec got under way\nTuesday.\nA spokesman said Jacques\nFlynn,. former mines minister defeated by a Liberal -in Quebec\nSouth at the last election, will\nget a key post in the reorganization.\nMr. Flynn declined to comment\nbut did not dismiss the suggestion\nthat he might run again for the\nHouse of Commons.\nParty spokesman said the main\ncharacteristic of Quebec voters is\ntheir \"instability\" which, they\nsaid, favored the Social Credit\nparty. This instability hurt the\nConservatives more than it did\nthe Liberals.\nThey said many long-time supporters of the Conservatives, especially those associated with the\nUnion Nationale, had shifted to\nSocial Credit.\nThey said that under the circumstances any one political development could swing 50 Quebec\nmembers to any one of the three\nparties. Quebec has 75 constituencies.\nADENAUER SEEKS\nTO END WALL\nINCIDENTS\nBONN (Reuters) \u2014 Chancellor\nAdenauer has appealed to the Big\nFour heads of government to help\nprevent further incidents al the\nBerlin border wall, a West German government spokesman said\nTuesday.\nThe personal appeal was made\nin identical letters to President\nKennedy, Prime Minister Macmillan, President de Gaulle and\nSoviet Premier Khrushchev,\nSIX-TON GUN\u2014Warming up for a world-wide weapons\nmeet Sept. 15 at Nellis Air Force Ease, Las Vegas, Nev.,\nan Air Force Republic F-105D fighter-bomber flies a test\ncourse with a stx-ton bomb toacL  Two F-105 teams from\nGermany and one from a United States base will compete in\nthe Tactical Fighter Weapons meet, called Project William\nTell. The 1,400-mile-an-hour F-105D can (_rry 4,000 different combinations of weapons. (Centrat Press)\nCrime Surge May Force Curb Civil Liberties\nBy KEITH  KINCAID\nHALIFAX (CP) \u2014 If existing\ncrime-fighting methods are not\ns u c c e s s ful Parliament may\npass laws which would result in\nrestriction of individual freedom, the Canadian Bar Association was warned Tuesday.\nJohn Honsberger, a Toronto\nlawyer who has made a study\nof the duties and rights of citizens related  to  the rights of\npolice to make arrests, said\nboth sides are often ignorant of\nan individual's rights.\nWhile individuals have rights\noften glossed over by authorities, citizens must not exercise\nthem selfishly to the detriment\nof law enforcement or eventually they will be lost, he told\nthe association's civil liberties\nsection at the annual meeting.\nSince the Second World War\nthere has been a disquieting increase in crime and a public\ndemand for better law enforcement will lead to Parliament\nintervening, he said. Civil liberties removed by legislation\nare seldom returned.\nMr. Honsberger's speech contained views he earlier presented to Mr. Justice Arthur\nKelly of the Ontario Supreme\nCourt who headed a royal com\nmission last year into the arrest and alleged police manhandling of a rabbi in Toronto.\nMr. Honsberger said a balance must be preserved between order and liberty, but if\nthe general public welfare suffers through individuals irresponsibility insisting on their\nrights, the balance will change.\n\"Those who prize our existing\nliberties have the responsibility\nof demonstrating they can exist\nwithout any serious breakdown\nin public order or resulting in\nany lessening of the general\nwelfare of the community.\"\nHe gave some examples. Following a prison break police set\nup road blocks, cars are\nsearched and drivers questioned. A driver can refuse to\npermit a search and demand to\nbe let through,\nDON'T LAY CHARGES\nAnother common occurrence\nis for police to take a person\nto headquarters without charges\nbeing laid, he said.\n\"It Is doubtful whether most\npeople know that they have the\nright to refuse to go and when\nthere have the right to leave\nany time unless they have been\ncharged.\"\nPolice    find    questioning    is\nmore effective at headquarters\nwhere the suspect feels himself\nto be at their mercy. \"It is not\nunusual for pressure to be put\nupon the subject to be co-operative.\"\nMr. Honsberger added that\nhis personal philosophy was that\nif you don't want to be thought\nof as a criminal you shouldn't\nappear to be one by not co-operating.\nAnd in This Corner . . .\nSWANSEA, Wales (AP)\u2014Jeremy Evans said Tuesday his\nclose attachment to a bushy red beard has cost him his job as\nan insurance clerk.\nThe 25-year-old, red-headed Welshman grew the beard on a\nget-away-from-it-all camping vacation this year. When he got\nback to the insurance office, the boss was not impressed.\n\"He took one look at my beard and said I'd have to get rid\nof It,\" Jeremy reported. \"He said growing beards wasn't done\nin the insurance business.\"\nJeremy appealed to higher authority iu Liverpool.\nHe bearded a top executive at company headquarters.\n\"I was told that people had a definite idea how insurance\nclerks should appear and that beards didn't come into the picture,\" said Jeremy.\n\"So I resigned on the spot. I'm not going to knuckle down.\"\nThe bearded rebel said he is not worried about getting another job.\n\"There must be some places In the world where beards don't\nmatter,\" he said.\nJOHANNESBURG (AP)\u2014The heaviest snowfall in memory\ncovered Johannesburg Tuesday. Frolicking citizens \u2014 many seeing snow for the first time \u2014 started snowball fights that sometimes led to swinging fists and smashed windows.\nDowntown, stenographers, clerks and their bosses hurled\nsnowballs at pedestrians and autos below Iheir ollice windows.\nCommuters could not get out of the railroad station without being\npelted. Snowballers swirled through the streets without regard\nfor traffic as they sought fresh targets.\nThere was a heavy toll of broken windows in autos, buses and\nbuildings. The snow was 12 inches deep in places in this city of\n1,000,000 persons.\n 1\n1\n2\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., AUG. 29, 1962\nDecision on Telephone Alert\nSystem Awaits Return of Chid\nGoblins and hobgoblins are\nthe dwarf creatures, of mischievous disposition, in folklore\nof many lands. \t\nCASTLE   Theatre\nCastlegar, B.C.\nTonight \u2022 Thursday (2 days only)\n\"SUSAN SLADE\"\n(Color and Cinemascope)\nTroy Donahue, Connie Stevens\nNEWS and CARTOON\nShow Times, 6145 and 9:00 p.m.\nAuto-Vue Drive-ln\nTRaUL. B.C.\nLast Time Tonight\nTonight - Tliursday - Friday\n\"NORTH TO ALASKA\"\n(Color and Cinemascope)\nJohn Wayne, Fabian,\nStewart Granger\n(Cartoon) Show Time, 8:30 p.m\nPLAYMOR\nCOMING!\nThe\nFALCONS\nFor the Labor Day Holiday\nWeekend\nSUNDAY\nMIDNIGHT\n0 IS PI I\nSEPT. 2nd       \\\nCouncil was told that assistant\nfire chie! Frank Yasek, present\nly acting chief, is in favor of\nthe system but that Fire Chiei\nOwens does not feel Ihe system\nis necessary for Nelson.\nAttending the council meeting\nwere Aid. J. S. M. Harts, actin,\nmayor, and aldermen Bodard,\nAffleck, Beresford and Maida.\nAid. Beresford and Aid Maida\nwho voled in favor of withholding action on the system until\nconsulting Chiei Owens on his\nreturn, expressed the opinion that\nChief Owens was the \"top mon in\nthe fire department\" and <wuncil\nshould wait until he returns and\nthat it was \"just another way of\nspending money.\"\nDRIVING WEDGE\nAid. Affleck said it appeared\ncouncil was \"driving a wa^dge between the chief and assistant\nchief.\" He expressed the opinion that the emergency telephone\nsystom would reinforce the fire\nforce which was weakened earlier this year when some mem-\nSJbuduqkL drive-in i\n10th ANNIVERSARY\n'\"it Door Prizes and Draws \u2014 + Free Coke for Everyone\n\u25a0*\u2022 Free Chocolate  Bars  for  the Children\n\"THE CANADIANS\"\n,i (In Color and Cinemascope) Robert Ryan\nand \"A  GALA  DAY  IN  DISNEYLAND\"\nf] Tonight and Wed.\u2014Show Time 8 p.m. \\]\nCity council Monday night voted to withhold a\ndecision on whether or not lo install a new emergency\nfire alerting system in Nelson, pending the return of Fire\nChief E. S. Owens, who is on leave of absence.\nOver the objections of Aid. E. T. Bodard and Aid.\nBoyd C. Affleck, council approved the recommendation\nof the Fire and Water Committee.\nThe emergency alerting system consists of special\ntelephones, all connected to the emergency fire number,\nand installed in homes of regular and volunteer firemen.\nCouncil was told the system would alleviate the\nphoning of all firemen, regular or volunteer, who did not\nespond to the fire horn call,\nbers were laid off as an economy\nmeasure.\nAid. Bodard told council it was\n\"tragic\" that nothing was on record as to why Chief Owens dis\napproved of the system\n\"For the safety of Nelson citizens. I think we should act on\nthis immediately. A delay would\nprove very cosily\u2014and possibly\na loss of life.\" he told council\nHe said that the centres\nCastlegar. Warfield. Trail, Ross\nland and Kaslo each have such a\nsystem and have found it satisfactory.\n\"At Warfield practices they now\nbring the firemen to the firehall\nin five minutes instead of 20 minutes,\" he said.\nHe slated that before the B. C\nTelephone changeover to automatic dialing, Ihe operators were\nhelpful in contacting volunteers\nOn the other hand, however.\nAid. Maida who is chairman of\nthe Fire and Water Committee\nsaid he was awakened at 5 a.m.\none morning by tlie fire horn. He\nsaid it took him five minutes to\ndress and drive to the firehall,\nUpon arrival, he said, there were\nfour firemen awaiting a report\nby radio from those already at\nthe scene. By this he indicated be\nfelt the fire horn was sufficient\nwarning of fire.\nIn a letter to Aid. Maida, as\nchairman of the Fire and Water\nCommittee, acting chief Yasek\nsaid, \"In the past we have never\ncompletely relied upon the present horn as a sole means of calling in off-duty ifiremen and volunteers . . ,\"\nLEAST DELAY\nPointing out the advantages of\nthe telephone system, he said in\nhis letter, \"I would like to point\nout that it would be possible for a\nduty fireman to make the call\nnotifying all off-duty firemen,\nleave the phone off the hook, instructing the first person to an-\ni swer the phone to repeat the message to all other members that\nare a little slower answering.\nThis would enable the on-duty\nfireman to leave the hall with the\nleast amount of delay.\"\nEarlier, council was told the\ncost for operating 10 such telephones in homes of firemen would\nbe $48.30 per month.\n^ Assistant chief Yasek continued\n\"At the present time, it would\nlake approximately 15 minutes to\n, phone off-duty firemen and volunteers, using the conventional method. This \u25a0constitutes a serious\ndelay. For this reason, I believe that an instant alerting system will greatly increase the efficiency of this department . . .\"\nQuality\nCOAL\nFor Every Purpose\nFurnace - Stoker - Heater\nPHONE  352-3031\nTOWLER\nFuel & Transfer\nSCHOLARSHIP winner Is\nGeorge Thomas Kidd, son of\nMr. and Mrs. E. G. Kidd, 204\nPine Street, who will be a first\nyear arts and science student\nat University of B.C. this fall.\nThe $300 scholarship was\nawarded by the Alumni Association of the university.\n9\nHtf'RoCKET \u2666\nDouBlE-PARtetx\n2x*\nSfe\n;OOf'\nTONIGHT\nShows 7.00 - 9:00\nZE\nM. T. Benthien\nOf Gray Creek\nPasses at 83\nGray Creek oldtimer Max Theodore Benthien, 83, died in Koote\nnay Lake General Hospital Tuesday.\nBorn In Denmark, he came to\nCanada in 1910, and worked in the\nToronto area for several years for\nthe Hamilton Bridge Company. In\n1917 he moved to Vancouver\nwhere he worked for four or five\nyears, and moved to Gray Creek\nin 1921.\nHe made his home at Gray\nCreek but worked at the Lambert\nSawmill at Taghum for some\ntime. For several years he worked in the Leonard Clark orchard\nat Gray Creek.\nBesides his wife, he is survived\nby one son, Fred, Gray Creek.\nFinance Firm\nEarnings Up\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Laurentide Financial Corporation Ltd.\nMonday announced a 35-per-cent\nincrease in nel. earnings in the\nfiscal year ended June 30.\nPresident Peter Paul Saunders\nsaid in his annual report net earnings rose to $2,361,469 from $1,-\n751,913.\nLaurentide is a consumer finance company operating out of\n60 branch locations in Canada, 87\nin California and Oregon, and two\nin the Bahamas.\nMr. Saunders said earnings per\ncommon share were $1.40 compared lo $1.20 Ihe previous year.\nCloistered Nuns Leading Life\nOf Severity in Old Nurses' Home\nBehind the walls of the former\nNurses' residence of Kootenay\nLake General Hospital a group\nof cloistered nuns spend their\ndays in prayer and work for the\nchurch.\nThey are 12 Sisters of the Precious Blood who recently came\nfrom Edmonton to establish their\nfirst community in the Diocese of\nNelson. They are also the first\ncontemplative com munity of\neither men or women to be in the\ndiocese.\nThe Precious Bliod Sisters\nwere founded over 100 years ago\non Stpt. 14, 1961, at St. Hyacinth,\nQue., a tiny village some 40 miles\nfrom Montreal, by Mother Catherine Aurelia, of the Precious\nBlood, formerly Aurelio Caouette,\nthen 28 years old.\nA day in the life of a Precious Blood Sister is one of prayer, work silence, sacrifice and\nreparation.\nThey rise at midnight to chant\nthe Divine Office of Matins and\nLauds, in reparation for all the\nsins being committed throughout\nthe world at that hour. |\nAt 1 a.m., the Sisters retire until 5:30 a.m. The Daily Exercise\nof the Sisters being at 6\nwith the Angelas, and Office of\nPrime, in choir, followed by Mediation and Mass at about 6:45.\nFollowing a 7:30 a.m. breakfast, the Sisters begin their work.\nHeading the group in crisp,\nwhite Habits, red Scapulars, and\nwhite guimipes, veils marked by\na tiny red cross at the brow, is\nSister Superior, Mother Mary of\nthe Rosary.\nThe Sisters stop work at 9:10\na.m., for the Hour of Terce of the\nDivine Office and a short reading of the Passion of Our Lord.\nWork resumes at 9:20 a.m., the\nsilence broken only by an ejaculation every 15 minutes.\nThe Sisters return to the Chapel\nfor the recitation of the Hour of\nSext, followed by the Particular\nExamination of Conscience.\nAfter dinner there is a visit to\nthe Blessed Sacrament then recreation.\nThis includes needlework, embroidery, crocheting or knitting.\nWhen this work is set aside at\nspiritual reading, the Sisters en\njoy free time to answer persona!\nmail, work on hobbies, slroll in\nthe beautiful garden or rest in\ntheir rooms.\nOn special feast ' days the\nSisters enjoy roller-skating, pin1!\npong, garden croquet, dominos\nand Chinese checkers. The use ol\ntelevsiion is forbidden in all Monasteries.\nAt 3 p.m., hobbies and roller\nskates set aside, the Community\nmakes the Way of the Cross followed by the Recitation of the\nHour of None. Two more hours\nof work follow, then, at 5:30 p.m.\nthe Community gathers in the\n1:25,  and  after  15 minutes  of Chapel for the saying of the Ros-\nSisters of the Precious Blood from Edmonton, members of the new monastery at Nelson, are pictured above: Front row, Sister St. Joseph, Sister St. Thomas\nof Aquinas, Mother Mary of the Rosary, Superior; Sister Holy Name, Sister Scho-\nlastica; back row, Sister Mary of Lourdes, Sister Agatha, Sister Matilda, Sister\nMary Alice (assistant and mistress of novices), Sister Mary Angela (bursar), and\nSister Bernadette.\u2014Phofo, Academy Sfudio, Edmonton.\nary, Vespers, Meditation and the She also represents the Community at Church functions.\nBy 9 p.m., when most people are preparing to head out for\ntheir evening's entertainment, Ihe\ntwelve Sisters of the Precious\nBlood have completed their pray\ners with the De Profundis and are\nin bed.\nT. Simmons, Lardeau\nGuide Killed in Crash\nKASLO \u2014 Well-known resident\nof the Lardeau and as a guide in\nEast Kootenay, Thomas Simmons\nwas killed about 5:30 Tuesday\nafternoon when his car plunged\nover a 70-foot embankment three\nmiles north of Kaslo on the Lardeau road.\nFred Aydon of Kaslo was a\nshort distance behind Mr. Simmons' car when it went down the\nbank and after arranging for a\nCalifornia tourist to remain with\nMr. Simmons, went to Kaslo to\nnotify the RCMP, a doctor and to\narrange lor an ambulance.\nSix members of the Kaslo volunteer fire brigade responded to\nthe call,  and with considerable\ndifficulty managed to place Mr.\nSimmons on a stretcher and move\nhim up the bank.\nAssisting were Bob Jones, Jack\nMorris, Bill Mnhone, Wilt Higgins,\nCourt Tai-r and John Ruud.\nMr. Simmons acted as packer\nand guide lor oil company engineers and surveyors in East\nKootenay.\nHe had lived in the Lardeau\nabout 10 years and had formerly\nlived in Alberta.\nHis wife is an outdoorswoman,\nhaving been cook for the Adirondack mountain climbers who\ntrekked into Kokanee Glacier\nPark in July.\nAngelus.\nWhen the supper dishes are\nwashed and the kitchen and refectory tidied, the Sisters unite\nfor recreation in the garden or\nCommunity Room. Conversation\nnow flows freely.\nThe extern-sister accompanies\nthe cloistered Sisters when it is\nnecessary for them to go out for\nmedical care or hospitalization.\nMrs. D. Crozler-Smlth celebrated hor 71th birthday at thc\nSenior Citizens' picnic Monday.\nMrs. Crozier-Smith had been ill\nwith pneumonia during part of\nthe summer.\n\u2014Dally News photo.\nAn emergent communication of Nelson Lodge No. 2.1\nA.F. and A.M., will he held\nin the Nelson Masonic Temple 813:15 p.m. sharp Wednesday, August 29, for the\npurpose of conducting a\nmemorial service for our\nlalp brother, Robert M.\nMcKee.\nThe service will be conducted in St. Paul's-Trinity\nUnited Church at 4 p.m.\nVisiting brethren are re-\nnuesled to attend.\nBy order nf Ihe Worshipful\nMaster,\nG. A. STEWART,\nSecretary,\nStrange Light\nSpotted by\nSky Scanner\nAn unidentified flying object,\npassing over Nelson in an easterly direction about 8:30 p.m.\nTuesday, was reported by Mrs.\nAngela Emory of 304 Houston\nStreet.\nMrs. Emory, whose hobby is\nwatching for strange lights in the\nsky, described the object she saw\nTuesday night as round with a\nflashing gold and white light. She\nsaid it was travelling quite low\nand fairly slow, and changed direction once.\nAlso witnesses to the strange\nlight were her daughter Janice\nand her sisler.\nMrs. Emory reported seeing a\nstrange light about 30 minutes\nearlier but passed it off as fiction.\nWhen spotting the second light,\nhowever, she said she realized\nboth lights appeared to be of the\nsame origin.\nMrs. Emory has been watching\n(he skies nighlly all summer and\nreports, \"There are all kinds ol\nthings out there if people want to\nwatch for them.\"\nShe has seen many strange\nlights and objects, she said, but\nthe one Tuesday night was the\nmost spectacular of all.\nPOWER. PHONE\nLINES CUT\nAT KASLO\nKASLO \u2014 Power and telephone\nsystems were knocked out in\nKaslo Tuesday night when a log\nloader became snarled up on\nwires on North Road and pulled\nout a telephone pole.\nLights were back on in aboul\nthree-quarters of an hour, and\ntelephone service was restored by\n9:45 p.m.\nRegisiration Up\nAl Tourist Booth\nIn the seven-month period ending July, 1962, more than 6000\npersons registered at the Chamber of Commerce tourist booth on\nFront Street.\nThis figure includes 2053 persons from provinces other than\nB.C.; 483 United States' visitors\nand 31 foreign for a total of 6151.\nFrom January 1 to June 30 number of visitors totalled 3584.\nLast year in the comparable\nseven-month period only 4254\ntourists had registered at the\ntourist booth. Chamber of Commerce officials estimate only one\nper cent of all visitors register\nat the chamber office.\nA breakdown by areas shows\nthese figures: (1961 area figures\nare not available):\nAlberta, 732: Saskatchewan,\n244; Manitoba, 103; Ontario, 106:\nQuebec, 18; Nova Scotia, 4: Newfoundland, 2; United Slates, 483;\nforeign, 31.\nALL BUT ONE\nTEACHING\nPOST FILLED\nAll leaching positions in School\nDistrict No. 7 have been filled\nwith the exception of a girls' physical education instructor at L. V.\nRogers High School, District Superintendent of Schools, Charles\nCuthbert, said Wednesday.\nMr. Cuthbert also indicated that\nhis department expects five per\ncent more students to enrol above\nthe some 3500 enrolled in the district last year.\nFive Fined on\nTraffic Charges\nG. Malcolm, R.R. 1 Nelson, was\ncharged in provincial court by\nmagistrate William Evans Monday with speeding near Kitchener. His case had been waived to\nNelson and he was fined $15 and\ncosts.\nE. E. Fitzpatrick of Seattle,\ncharged wilh crossing a solid\ndouble line, pleaded not guilty,\nwas found guilty and received a\nsuspended sentence.\nW. J. Woykin of Nelson charged with speeding in a posted\nspeed area was fined $15 and\ncosts.\nK. A. Mervin of Wardner was\nfined $15 and cosls for speeding at\nMoyie and was fined an additional $15 and costs for having an\ninadequate muffler. He had previously been warned by RCMP to\nreplace the faulty muffler.\nFor failure to stop at a stop\nsign, J. R. Milne of Nelson was\nfined $10 and costs.\nIvan D. Dow of Nelson, charged\nwith crossing a solid double line\nline near Slocan Cily was fined\n$25 and costs and received a second fine of $10 and costs for\ndriving while his licence was expired.\nMc*Mc\nFOR FAST\nEFFICIENT\nT.V.  SERVICE\nPh. 352-5581\nIs   Your   Child   Listless?\nAlways Tired?\nHas No Appetite?\nTry  SQUIBB\nRUBRATINIC  Elixir\nVitamin  B12 and Iron Elixir\nEspecially  for Children\n$2.75\nFleury's Pharmacy\nHarold Mayo, Prop,\nCorner Baker and Ward Sis.\nPhone 352-2613\nAN INDOOR PICNIC was held Monday by some\n35 members of the Senior Citizens' Club of Nelson.\nThe annual outing was originally scheduled lor Lakeside Park bul inclement weather forced the members\nto ihe Canadian Legion hall where Ihey played cards,\nbingo and had a turkey dinner. Finishing a card game\nbefore the dinner are Mrs. E. Steveson (back to camera); Mrs. M. A. Wilson, Mrs. N. lordison and Mrs.\nH. Sutherland.\u2014Daily News photo.\nTROUBLE?\nWhen in need of plumbing\nor heating replacement or repairs,\nor a gas fitting job .  . .\nFor Prompt,  Efficient Service\nCALL US AT 352-2454\nKootenay Plumbing & Heating\nCompany, Limited\n351 Baker St. Nelson, B.C. Phone 352-2454\n3 Hole Punching Exercise Book\n8 Books, 8 Colors  '\n3 Hole Punching Wire Bound Exercise Book\n4 Different Colors\t\nComplete Range of School Supplies\nSAMPLE'S\nNELSON\nPHARMACY LTD.\n\"YOUR  FORTRESS OF HEALTH\"\nPh. 352-2313       639 Baker St-       Nelson, B. C.\nPot\nCOAL\nin Nelson\nDial 352-5018\nAll Popular Brands\nAvailable\nQUEEN  CITY\nFUEL\n524 Railway St., Nelson\nSummer Theatre\nCircuit Sought\nVERNON (CP) - City council\nwill investigate a proposal from\nKamloops that the cities of Vernon, Penticton, Trail, Kelowna\nand Kamloops attempt to organize a summer theatre circuit.\nKAMLOOPS (CP)-School principals in the Kamloops district\nwill be asked to decide whether\nuniforms should be worn by stu-\ndertts on ^non-compulsory basis.\nCAMERAS\nMOVIE - 35mm\nBROWNIE\nFast Film Developing\nCUSTOM\nCAMERAS\n394 Baker St.\nANNUAL\nHIGHLAND I\nGAMES |\nDANCE       |\n9:30 Saturday, Sept. 1    i\nNelson Civic Centre\nADMISSION; $1.00\n Tourist Association\nTo Hear How to Raise\nPromotion Budget\nA large number of delegates, ing system, and the Barkerville\nIrom all over British Columbia restoration program.\nare expected to attend the first\nconvention of the newly formed\np.C. Tourist Association Sept. 19\nto 21 at the Capri Motor Inn in\nKelowna.\nThe theme of the convention\nwill be \"Making Matching Grants\nWork,\" with a full discussion on\nthe provincial government 50-50\ntourist area grants.\nFeatured speaker will be Jack\nOlson   from   Wisconsin   Dells\nChamber of Commerce. In this\ncommunity, population 1957, he\nwas able to raise a tourist pro\nmotion budget of $102,000. He is\ngoing to outline the successful\nformula to the delegates attend\ning   the   conference   from  the\nmany  B.C.  communities  of a\nsimilar size.\nC. P. (Chessl Lyons, park officer,   historic   sites,   provincial\nparks branch, will speak on \"His\ntory on the Highway.\" He was\ninvolved in the parks division at\nits formation and more recently\nhas been active in the \"stop of\ninterest\" historic plaques mark\nCol. George Paulin, president,\nwill preside at the convention,\nassisted hy vice-presidents W.\nJack Dalby, Alan M. McLean and\nHarold J. Merilees; and directors\nJ. Roy Corbett, W. E. (Bill> Hawkins, R. J. Colby, Jack K. Melville, W. Fred Evans. Jim V.\nHughes, and Ed R. Boyce.\nRossland Posl\nOffice Open\nFor Business\nROSSLAND\u2014Rossland's newly\nrenovated post office opened for\nbusiness Monday morning.\nClosed since March, the office\nhas been modernized throughout\nwith new floors, woodwork, counters and lock boxes. A sliding door\npartitions the revenue department\nfrom the lock box section, making\nil possible to keep the night lobby\nopen after business hours.\nAn additional parcel wicket has\nbeen provided at the north end\nof the lobby which will obviate\nthe necessity of using the old customs office during the Christmas\nrush period.\nSteam radiators and the drop\nletter box have been removed.\nOpen counters of modern design\nhave replaced the old wickets\nwhich have been in use since the\nbuilding was first opened and\nsmartly styled aluminum boxes\nhave been installed.\nThe lobby will be open until\neight o'clock each evening.\nHistoric Aircraft\nCarries TCA Pioneers\nCALGARY (CPI\u2014A squat piece\nof flying history landed at Calgary International Airport Tuesday as part of Trans-Canada Airlines' celebration of 25 years in\nthe air.\nThe aircraft, a Lockheed 10A\nElectra, carried a group of longtime TCA employees flying in one\nof the first two planes to go into\nservice for TCA in 1937.\nAt the controls was Captain Ar-\nParents Ask\nGrade 10 Kepi\nIn Greenwood\nGREENWOOD - A petition\nbearing 169 names of Greenwood\nparents has been presented to the\nKettle Valley School District\nschool board and to the minister\nof education asking that the grade\n10 class which is scheduled lo be\nmoved to the Midway school for\nthe coming year, be retained in\nGreenwood.\nThe pelition, which was originated by Mr. and Mrs. J. Meyer,\nhas received the approval ol the\nGreenwood city council as well as\nthe Greenwood Board of Trade.\nTourists A\"\nSalmo Seek\nRock Specimens\nSALMO (NDN Bureaul \u2014 Salmo's tourist information booth,\nat the intersection of highways\n6 and 3A, and operated by the\nSalmo Chamber of Commerce\nhad a busy weekend, despite\nbad weather and the fact the\nlast weekend before Labor Day\nis traditionally quiet, tourist-wise.\nA total of 27 enquiries were\nmade by motorists from such distant points as California, Minnesota, Oregon, Iowa, as well as\nfrom Washington, Alberta and\nBritish Columbia centres.\nInformation  sought  Included\nwhere to get mineral specimens\nof the area and where to get\ncrushed ice;  where  campsites\nand picnic areas were located; i   ^ COTnmission wjn ask the de\nwhere to fish and how to get I partment 0f municipalities how a\nthere. And again, as all season ; municipality  stands  as  regards\nthere was the question: \"Is the;\nSalmo-Creston cut-off open?\"    I\nMay Petition\nConcerning\nTV Situation\nKINNAIRD \u2014 Kinnaird Village\nCommissioners agreed at their\nlast meeting that a petition concerning TV reception in the area\nmight result in another investigation by the transport department\nof the present unsatisfactory set\niup.\nHunt Grizzly\nWhich Attacked\nParks Officer\nREVELSTOKE, B.C. (CP) -\nNational parks officers have baited an area of Glacier National\nPark with meat to try and trap a\n400-pound grizzly bear which attacked a man last week.\nThey hope to lure the bear back\nlo the area with the meat but\nparks superintendent Bert Styles\nsays the animal is probably miles\naway by now.\nThe mother grizzly, accompanied by two cubs, attacked parks\nofficer Noel Gardner Aug. 20 as\nhe walked with his dog at the\n6500-foot level of Mount Fidelity\nMr. Gardner climbed a tree to\nsafety but the bear ripped a\nchunk of flesh from his right thigh\nwith its teeth.\nMr. Gardner is in good condi\ntion in hospital.\nASKS HIGHER  STATUS\nCHASE (CPi-George Manuel, chief of the Neskonleth Indian band and president of. the\nNorth American Indian Brotherhood, says he will ask the National Indian Council to recommend a separate department of\nIndian affairs with its own cabinet minister. Chief Manuel will\nattend the council's annual conference in Toronto Aug. 30-\nSept. 1.\nThe booth will close for the\nseason after Labor Day. ft has\nbeen open, in the charge of\nMaureen Thiel and Karen Forgaard, afternoon and evenings,\nsince June 22.\nGRAND FORKS\nSTREET SIGNS\nAWAIT NAMES\nGRAND FORKS \u2014 The public-\nWorks Department is delivering\nstreet signs to various corners\nof the city in preparation for installation when name plates are\nready.\nAnother crew under city superintendent Bert Hebert is continuing Ihe paving projects Ior this\nseason. It is al present workin\nnear the school paving a few\nblocks of city streets in that area\ncontrol over a cable TV firm.\nCommissioner Pat Romaine\ntermed Kin-Gar Video's collection of monthly fees as \"almost\nlike taking money under false\npretences.\"\nMunicipal clerk Allen Selbie\nsaid Ihe company told him that it\nhas straightened out its trouble\nwith amplifiers, has installed a\na fifth amplifier in the Dumont\nand has rebalanced its system\nthere.\nMr. Loeblich said that the\nboard of transport is concerned\nonly with the CBC reception being provided and in tlie last test\nthe system was up to minimum\nstandards.\nMr. Selbie said Kin-Gar claims\nIhe signal is excellent at Sentinel\nMountain but it is in the transmission to Kinnaird over the dis\nlance that the signal is weakened\nComm. Romaine said he was\n\"nol thinking of the technicali\nties. This is evil, this is wrong.'\nthur Rankin of Vancouver, TCA\nflight operations manager, who in\n1939 landed the first TCA plane\nin Calgary.\nThe twin-engine, 10,500-pound\ncraft rolled to a stop almost beneath the tail of a 142,000-pound\nVanguard turbo-prop TCA airliner. Passengers were greeted by\nstewardesses Donnalee Powell\nand Jeneatte Casavant, both of\nCalgary.\nOne of the passengers was Mrs.\nGeorge Lothian, TCA's third stewardess and now wife of TCA's\nsuperintendent of flying. Mr. Lothian was co-pilot on the flight\nfrom Edmonton to Calgary.\nThe group and their aircraft are\nen route across Canada to Vancouver for a re-enactment Sept. 1\nof TCA's first flight from Seattle\nto Vancouver 25 years ago.\nDawson City Festival\nProceeds Over $880,000\nDAWSON CITY, Y. T. (CP)-\nAn estimated 20,000 persons attended the seven^week Dawson\nCity Gold -Rush Festival and\nspent more than $888,000, feslival\nco-ordinator Allan Innes-Taylor\nsaid Tuesday.\nHe said final figures on cash\nreceipts and enpenses will not be\nready for another week or so.\n\"We feel, however, that we will\ncome out alright on the festival,\"\nMr. Innes-Taylor said. \"There\nshould not be as large a deficit as\nfirst estimated.\"\nThe greatest expense\u2014the figure has not been released\u2014 was\nbelieved to have been the musical Foxy, a Broadway-bound production.\nAttendance  at  the  show  was\nconfident we will come out not\ntoo badly and will be prepared to\ngo again next year.\"\nSpokane 'Quake\nFell in B.C\/s\nCariboo Area\nSPOKANE (AP) - A \"moderately strong\" earthquake about\n370 miles from Spokane was re\ncorded at 12:21 p.m. Tuesday by\nthe Mount St. Michael seismo\ngraph near here, a spokesman\nsaid.\nThe attendant said the quake\nKimberley Girl Wins\n$100 in Canadian\nCARS Contest\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Jeanne\nMclndoe of Selkirk Senior High\nSchool at Kimberley has won a\n$100 first prize in a Canadian\nArthritis and Rheumatism Society contest. She won the\naward for a job study of rehabilitation  services.\n85-53 paid admissions, about    42'lasted for five minutes. He said\nper cent of the theatre's capa\ncity.\nMr. Innes-Taylor said \"We feel\nVANCOUVER (CP) - University of B.C. and University\nof Washington students will\ncombine to present seminars on\n\"beat\" writers and \"angry\nyoung men.\" Britain's angry\nyoung men will be discussed at\nLake Wilderness, Wash., Sept.\n14-16, and a seminar on North\nAmerican \"beats\" will be, held\nat Harrison Hot Springs, Sept.\n28-30.\nit occurred about 370 miles from\nSpokane but was unabile to teal\nwhioh direction.\nLaw enforcement agencies in\nthe Spokane area said they had\nreceived no reports of damage or\ninjury and apparently no calls\nconcerning the quake.\nThe same quake was fell over\na wide part of the B. C. Cariboo.\nResidents from Williams Lake\nto Klcena Klecne said their\ndishes rattled in the 30-second\nbump.\naoi5\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., AUG. 29, 1962\u20143\nFernie Gas Service\nAnticipated Shortly\nFERNIE - Laying of natural\ngas distribution lines in the city\nhas been proceeding at a rapid\npace in the past couple of weeks.\nLaying of the mains was about\n70 per cent complete at the mid\ndie of last week with three high\nway crossings and a river crossing also to be completed. Two\nhighway crossings will provide\nservice to the Fernie Annex, one\non Wood Street and one on Lind-\nsey Avenue.\nThe river crossing is planned\nto 'bring gas service to West Fernie while the remaining highway\ncrossing will also be in that area,\nsays a spokesman for Columbia\nNatural Gas.\nRegarding West Fernie, a company representative said that applications from residents there\nwere still being accepted and\nhomes will be serviced providing\napplications are received in time\nfor the necessary work lo be\ndone prior to freeze-up.\nRAIN DELAYS\nSome delay in laying of the\nmains has been experienced recently as welding and wrapping\nof joints cannot toe done in rainy\nweather.\nService connections, or pipeline sleading from the mains to\nthe homes will not be laid until\nafter the mains have been thoroughly tested.\nFollowing completion of the\ntesting of the mains, installation\nof service lines to the homes\nwill take place. Work on the ser\nvices is expected to commenc1\nearly in September.\nColumbia has appointed W. .)\nWilf Haberman, formerly r\nCranbrook as its resident servi -\nman in Fernie. Mr. Habernr\nand his wife have already take\nup residence in the cily.\nThe provincial gas inspector,\nwho is based at Cranbrook will\ninspect every hookup before authorizing gas to be turned on, regardless of who does the actual\nwork.\nFernie is the last community\nin the East Koolenay to be serviced lor gas.\nGREAT RIVER\nThe Columbia River runs a\ntotal of 1,150 miles, the first 460\nmiles ill Canada and the rest\nto its outlet on the U.S. Pacific\nCoast.\nSeal-Coating, Storm Sewer\nInstallation in Works Report\ni CRANBROOK - Electricity\nconsumption by the city system\nlast monlh was 1,737,160 kilowatt\nhours, up 11 per cent compared\nwitli the total of 1, 555,390 kwh for\nJuly in 1961, city electrical superintendent George Burch reports\nto city council. Net gain of 15\nmeters to Ihe system during the\nmonth brought lo 57 the net gain\nof meters for the year so far.\n|     City    works    superintendent\n|   Emil  Erickson   reported   seal-\ncoating of five and a half blocks\nnf asphalt street, laying of 347\nfeet each of 10-ineh and 12-lneh\nstorm sewers, and installation\nof five new water connections.\nWater supply conditions\nthrough Ihe month were satisfactory with 2,600,000 gallons per\nday surplus runoff. Average wa-\nler pressure in the month at 95\npounds dropped from the previous month.\nMunicipal Tourist Camp receipts to .Inly 31 tallied $8360, as\ncompared with $8024 for the corresponding period in 1961.\n21aL ChuwaL\nHIGHLAND\nGAMES\n\u2022\n*iM     '    FEATURING .  .  .\n\u2022   Highland Dancing        \u2022   Piping\n\u2022   Band Competitions\n\u2022   Drumming\n\u2022  BAND   PARADES\nat fhe\nNelson Civic Centre\nLABOUR DAY\nMonday, September 3, 1962\nPlan to attend the\nHIGHLAND   BALL\nSaturday, Sept. 1st at the Civic Centre\nDANCING 9 P.M. TO 1 A.M.\nAdmission $2.00 per couple\n(Includes Entertainment)\n01 the 35 dogs Impounded lasl\nmonth under the revised city\nby-law forbidding unleashed\ndogs al large only 19 were\nclaimed by owners. The rest\nwere disposed of.\nOf the len fire alarms answered during Ihe month Fire Chief\nVernon Doll reported no damage\nresulted from Ihe seven within\nthe city. Cranbrook District Ambulance responded to 17 calls.\nLumber Worker\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Funeral rites\ntook place at Cranbrook United\nChurch Saturday afternoon for\nRagnor Johan Bjorkman, who\ndied suddenly at Windermere on\nWednesday. He had a record of\n41 years in the lumber industry\nfree of accidents on retirement\nand as such was appointed by\nthe Interior Lumber Manufacturers' Association to launch\ntheir Kootenay-Okanagan safety\nprogram several years ago at\nKelowna.\nBorn in Sweden 74 years ago,\nhe came to Canada in 1910 and,\nrailroaded at Edson and Edmonton on the Grand Trunk Railway\nuntil 1916 when he settled at Bull\nRiver lo begin service with the\ntie and timber branch of the\nrailway in the woods operation\nthere. He transferred with this\nfirm to Canal Flat in 1929, where\nhe had lived since then. His wife\ndied in 1938.\nSurviving are five sons, Einar\nat Marble Canyon in Kootenay\nNational Park, Ralph at Watson\nLake, Elmer at Cranbrook, Walter and Ellard at Canal Flat and\nthree daughters, Mrs. W. W.\nStapleton, Mrs. H. Rotvold, and\nMrs. John While, all at Canal\nFlat, 17 grandchildren and three\ngreat-grandchildren. Rev. Bryan\nColwell officiated at the funeral\nand interment was in the family\nplot in Cranbrook General Cemetery.\nMost vegetables supply more\nvitamins and minerals when\neaten raw, since they lose part\nof their nutrients in cooking.\nAsk Celgar Explain\nAtmospheric Pollution\nCASTLEGAR \u2014 Uniformed Cominco officials years ago replied\n\"you can't have your cake and\neat it too\" when complaints were\nmade about Cominco's smell,\nsmoke and fallout, yet effective\ncontrol improvements were effected. Castlegar village chairman\nAage Sylvest has written Celgar's\npulp mill division.\nHe asks lhat Celgar accurately\ninform Castlegar commissioners\non existing conditions at the plant\nand comments that il is the village's intention \"to obtain a realistic appreciation of atmospheric\ncontamination control, particular-\nI ly as lo ils practical and economic limits.\"\nOn the assumption \"that many\npeople are similarly concerned\nwilh the degree of recent atmospheric contamination from your\nplant,\" writes Mr. Sylvest, \"we\nwould like reliable information on\nIhe following points:\n\"1. We have been led to expect\nlhat as your operators gained experience the frequency and sev-\nrily of contamination would be\nlessened to a point where it\nwould nol appreciably interfere\nwith our fresh clean air.\n\"In the past several months\nthis expectation has been in no\nsense been realized as evidenced\nby repeated appearance of very\nstrong odors, a great deal of\nsmoke, and appreciable solid fallout. Are there special circumstances explaining why Celgar's\noriginal expectations were so\ngreatly in error?\n\"2. Offensive odors from your\nplant often increase markedly\njust after midnight. To laymen\nthis appears as an operating\ntechnique based on Ihe assumption that nol many people are\nabout at this lime. Naturally we\nappreciate that atmospheric conditions might explain this, hence\nwe ask aboul it.\n\"3. Does an increased rate of\npulp production increase the\nlikelihood of contamination?\"\nThe purpose of the village's inquiry is two-fold: \"Firstly, we\nwould like to be accurately informed on existing conditions and,\nsecondly, we intend to obtain a\nrealistic appreciation of atmospheric contamination control, particularly as to its practical and\neconomic limits. We would welcome any comments dealing with\nCelgar policy on this latter aspect.\n\"Most residents of this area\ncannot avoid speculating on the\neffective c o n t r ol improvements finally achieved by Cominco some years ago in connection with the control of\nsmell, smoke, and fallout all\nIn spite of the often repeated\ntrite phrase in Its many forms\nby uninformed officials that\n\"you can't have your cake and\neat It too.\"\n\"But we do wish to be fair and\nrealistic in any speculations of\nIhis type and hence we would\nwelcome an opportunity to hear\nyour comments on this important\nsubject at a suitable meeting.\"\nWhat does \"PARITY\" mean to you and your family?\nPGE 5ft PURITY DEVELOPMENT BONDS\nPGE 5Vi% Parity Development Bonds are an ideal investment for\neveryone with something to save for. Unlike most bonds and other\ninvestments, they can never fall in value \u2014 the \"parity\" feature means\nthat you can cash them in whenever you wish for their full purchase\nprice. See in these five points why PGE 5W?0 Parity Development\nBonds are Ihe ideal way for you to increase your savings.\nI.You receive 5>\/2po per annum on your investment, calculated every 3 months.\n2. Your investment is unconditionally guaranteed by the Province of British Columbia.\nSignposts indicate that 1962 will be the biggest year in our history, with substantial\nincreases in all fields or manufacturing, industrial expansion, mining, oil and natural\ngas exploration, foreign exports, construction, and income.\n3. If you suddenly need the money, you can redeem PGE 51\/2% Parity Development\nBonds for the full purchase price at any bank in British Columbia, or at the principal\noffices of the Company's bankers throughout Canada.\n4. You have the satisfaction of participating in a great public enterprise, vital lo the\neconomy of your province. The Pacific Great Eastern Railway is Ihe key to the development of almost two-thirds of British Columbia. Profits on this exciting growth, formerly\npaid to outside investors, are now kept in British Columbia, helping lo add to your\nprovince's prosperity and to your own.\n5. You can buy PGE 5'\/2% Parity Development Bonds on payroll deduction, if you\nwish. Your office manager can advise you on this popular method of purchase.\nTHE ISSUE: This is a Refunding Issue of 535,600,000.\nHolders li( thc previous issue o( PGb Wo Parily Development llonds maturing September 15, 1962 can continue their\nim estnient hy arranging to exchange (or bonds ol Ihis refunding issue immediately.\nDENOMINATIONS: Hearer bonds are available with\ncoupons attached in ill! denominations \u2014 $100, S500, 51,000,\n55,000, 510,01)0, s:.\\ooo.\nINTEREST: Interest at the rate of 5Viro per annum will\nbe p.iid quarterly on Ihe 15th day of December, March, June\nand September during the currency of thc bond.\nDATE OK ISSUE: September 15, 1962.\nDATE OF MATURITY: September 15, 1966.\nREDE.M PTION: PGE 5<\/lr'o Parity Development Bonds can\nbe redeemed at par value at any time al any bank in ihe\nProvince of British Columbia, or at the ptincipat offices of the\nCompany's bankers throughout Canada.\nREGISTRATION: Bonds or 51,000, 55,000, 510,000, and\n525,000 can be fully registered.\nAuthorized Sales Agents:\nALL BRITISH COLUMBIA BANKS,\nTRUST COMPANIES AND\nINVESTMENT DEALERS\nUNCONDITIONALLY GUARANTEED BY THE\nPROVINCE OF BRITISH COLUMBIA\n '\nNflsmt Satly Nnua      Jhsi Book Q&wsih.   Anglicans Approve Christian\nTeaching in Public Schools\nestablished April 22 1902 Nelson, B. C.\nPublished by the NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n266 Bakei Street, Nelson, British Columbia, mornings except\nSundays and holiduys in the centre oi the Kootenays with\nthe largest daily circulation in the Interior ol B.C.\nAuthorized as Second Class Mall, Post Office Department, Ottawa,\nand for Payment of Postage In Cash.\nC. W. RAMSDEN, Publisher.\nA. W. GIBBON. Editor.\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN DAILV NEWPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION\nMEMBER OF THE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS\nThe Canadian Press la exclusively entitled to the use for republication 01 all news\ndispatches credited to it or to The Associated Press oi Reuters in this\npaper and also tbe local oews published therein.\nWednesday, August 29, 1962\nSafety Probe Should Place\nThe eighth conference of the Canadian Highway Safety Council held\nin Regina last May brought out the\nfact that Canada is still a long way\nirom having an enviable record in the\nfield of traffic safety. Unfortunately\nit seems that little can be done to\ncheck the growing toll of highway\nfatalities.'\nThe Safety Council has given a\nlot of thought and taken material\nsteps during the past year in placing\nemphasis on youth education in the\nfield of driving training but it is recognized that.the number who received\nsuch training is relatively small. The\nideal situation would be to have all\ndrivers take training but this is considered unlikely  for  some  time  to\ncome.\nHowever,; the Safety Council-is'\ncontinuing its- efforts to educate the\nyoung' in conjunction with youth\ngroups and other organizations. The\neffectiveness of this is, however, not\nlikely to be known for some years.\nStatistics enter into safety campaigns but it is possible that these\nare unintentionally misleading. Mr.\nRowan, director of the Driver Control\nBranch, Ontario Department of Transport, says that statistics showed that\nthe older driver was second only to\nthe very young driver as a highway\nproblem. Mr. Lindsay of the British\nColumbia Motor Vehicle Branch, said\nthat B.C. had no problem with the\nolder driver because of the re-examination system in the province for a\nnumber of years. There was a preponderance of older drivers but that\nthey were involved in only 1.9 per\ncent of all accidents.\nIt has always been assumed that\nyoung drivers are responsible for\nmany accidents. Perhaps, according\nto their numbers, they may have more\nthan other groups but in the table\nof traffic fatalities in B.C. for June,\n1962, the age group 20-39 had four\nfatalities while the age group 40-59\nhad eight.\nGiven good roads and mechanically perfect cars there will still be\naccidents because of human error.\nHow to prevent these errors of judgment is the real problem. A number\nof accidents which have occurred recently emphasize this. One driver\ndied when he attempted to negotiate\na road which was obviously unsafe,\nanother accident was caused by the\nungovernable temper of a woman\nand there were others where the\ndriver's judgment was considered at\nfault.\nThe Safety Council proposes to\ncarry out research into accident\ncauses in the coming year. The multiple deaths which occur so frequently\nfrom overloaded cars should certainly\nbe a matter for consideration by experts. Is the heavy weight an important factor, is the driver hampered\nby too many in the front seat, or is\nit that he is distracted by those in\nthe car?\nIt is becoming obvious that we\nneed more knowledge of the state\nof mind of accident drivers and this\nthe research committee should make\nits first line of investigation.\nIf at First You Don't . . .\nAdvertising pays, without doubt,    ting the facts to the folks, but by\nbut there are limes when the advertiser must be sorely tried to believe\nthe old maxim.\nLike the gentleman down in North\nCarolina.who placed a small advertisement in the classified section of\nhis town's daily newspaper. The advertisement, listing a sewing machine\nfor sale, appeared in the Monday\nissue aa follows:\n\"For sale: R. D. Smith has one\nsewing machine for sale. Phone 958.\nCall afler 7 p.m. and ask for Mrs.\nKelly who lives wilh him cheap.\"\nOn Tuesday there was an apology: \"We regret having erred in\nR. D. Smith's ad yesterday. Il should\nhave read: For sale: R. D. Smith has\none sewing machine for sale. Cheap.\nPhone 958 and ask for Mrs. Kelly who\nlives with him after 7 p.m.\"\nOn Wednesday they took another\nwhirl al getting the message over.\n\"R. D. Smith has informed us lhat he\nhas received several annoying telephone calls because of an error we\nmade in his classified ad yesterday.\nHis ad stands corrected: For sale: R.\nD. Smith has one sewing machine for\nsale. Cheap. Phone 958 after 7 p.m.\nand ask for'Mrs. Kelly who loves with\nhim.\"\nThat was il for Mr. Smith. On\nThursday he inserted an official notice.\n\"Notice: I, R. D. Smith, have NO\n.jwing machine for sale. I smashed\nit. Don't call 958, the phone has been\ntaken out. I have nol been carrying\non wilh Mrs. Kelly. Until yesterday\nshe was my housekeeper.\"\nWell, maybe the newspaper didn'l\ndo the besl job in Ihe world in get-\nGems of Thought\nThe men who are really busiest have\nthe most leisure' for everything.\n\u2014James Payn.\nRest satisfied with doing well, and leave\nothers to talk-of-yoii' as they please.\n\u2014Pythagoras\ngolly  il  did  gel  action.  And  what\nmore does an advertiser want?\n\u2014Penlicfon Herald.\nHair Styling\nTime was when men could poke\nfun at the ladies for spending too\nmuch time at the hairdresser's, having their locks washed, set, curled\nand colored. Now Ihe ladies can strike\nback.\nHair styling has begun to find\nfavor with the males of Toronto. Following the fashion already the rage\nin New York and Chicago, several\nestablishments hereabouts \u2014 don't\ncall them barber shops \u2014 are specializing in the art of sculpting a\nman's hair to fit his physique and\npersonality.\nThey are experts in curling,\nbleaching and designing, if necessary, a discreel toupee. The combination of washing, setting and styling\ncosts $2.50. (Some of the more posh\nparlors charge $4.) Hair-pieces sell\nfor a mere $100 and up.\nBefore anybody charges that such\ngratification of vanity is unmanly,\nlet it be remembered that this isn't\nIhe first time in history that men have\ncultivated their crowning glory. The\nwigs English lawyers wear go back\nlo a lime when no self-respecting paragon of masculinity would be caught\ndead without his peruke.\nHistorians say \u2014 not too loudly \u2014\nthat there was a time when men\ndabbed themselves with perfume.\nAfter a while, women stole the custom and men came to regard Ihe use\nof scented fluid preparations as feminine.\nCould Ihere be a turnabout now?\nWill Ihe ladies abandon hair styling\nlo the men? That will be the day.\n\u2014Toronto Telegram.\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nBest-sellers in Canada, compiled by Quill and Quire, magazine of the Canadian book trade\n(previous month's position\nbracketed):\nFICTION\n1. Ship of Fools, Katherine\nAnne Porter. Dramas in miniature played out in the theatre-\nworld of a ship. (1)\n2. Youngblood Hawke, Her;\nman Wouk. Downfall of a successful writer who tries to become a businessman. (5)\n3. In High Places, Arthur\nHailey. Political novel involving\nOttawa and Washington under\nthreat of attack. (2)\n4. The Reivers, William Faulkner, Comic novel of suspense\nabout a motor journey from\nMississippi to Memphis.\n5. Franncy and Zooey, J. D.\nSalinger. Two touching stories\nby the author of The Catcher in\nthe Rye.\n6. The Golden Rendezvous,\nAlistair MacLean. Suspense and\nadventure involving piracy, hijacking and a kidnapped scientist. (6)\n7. The Agony and the Ecstasy,\nIrving Stone. Biographical novel about Michelangelo. (81.\n8. Devil Water, Anya Seton.\nDefeat of James Stuart in the\nflections on society during three\ngenerations. (4)\nNON-FICTION\n1. The Rothschilds, Frederic\nMorton. History of the European banking family. (1)\n2. The Guns of August, Barbara W. Tuchman. A study of\nthe political and military events\nof the opein'g of the First World\nWar. (3)\n3. Conversations With Stalin,\nMilovan Djilas. Historical document by a former Yugoslav\ngovernment offciial.\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nCassandra\nDefends\nMrs. Kennedy\nLONDON (API-A leading\nBritish columnist defended today Mrs. Jacqueline Kennedy's frequent public appearances in a bathing suit.\n\"Since when has youth and\ngrace and gaiety at the White\nHouse been improper?\" asked\nthe London Daily Mirror's\nCassandra (William Connor),\nwho rarely has a good word\nto say for the United States.\nCassandra took issue with\nDr. Willis Ray, a Colorado\nBaptist leader, who said both\nthe president and Mrs. Kennedy had \"thrown dignity,\ndecency and decorum out the\nwindow\" because they went\nswimming in public in bathing suits.\nThe columnist called Dr.\nRay \"a very solemn Baptist.\"\n\"I would recommend lo\nDr. Ray,\" Cassandra continued, \"that he might care to\nlook up some photographs of\nthe wives of previous presidents of Ihe United States-\nMrs. Eisenhower, Mrs. Truman, Mrs. Roosevelt, Mrs.\nHoover and Mrs.  Coolidge.\n\"They ranged the' whole\ngamut of feminine beauty\nfrom the homely to the formidable, from the rolling pin\nto the battle-axe.\"\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nProper Municipal Civil Defence\nplans are not only a necessity for\ntimes of emergency but will provide a source of quick and valuable information for newly elected municipal representatives,\nfor employees, or even for the\naverage citizen.\n4. Uuuru, Robert Ruark. An\nAmerican's viewpoint on present-day African nationalism.\n5. Calories Don't Count, Herman Taller. How to lose weight\nby eating fats. (2).\n6. My Life In Court, Louis\nNizer. Autobiography of a famous American lawyer.  (10)\n7. Backstage -at - Stratford,\nJoan Ganong. Behind the scenes\nat Ontario's Stratford Shakespearean Festival.  (7)\n8. O, Ye Jigs and Juleps,\nVirginia Gary Hudson. Witty\ncomments on the state of things\nin 1900 by a 10-year-old girl.\n9. The Last Plantagcnets,\nThomas B. Costain. Reigns of\nRichard II, Henry IV, Henry V\nand Richard III. (4)\n10. In the Clearing, Robert\nFrost. A collection of new\npoems.\nBy CARL MOLL1NS\nKINGSTON (CPl-The governing general synod of the\nAnglican Church of Canada has\napproved a policy declaration\nthat teaching in public schbols\nshould be based on \"the Christian view.\"\n\"There is no neutral course\nin education,\" the statement,\napproved Monday night, says.\n\"The educational system which\nis not inclined towards the\nChristian principles is inevitably slanted away from them.\"\nThe declaration made clear it\nwas not talking about classes\nin religious education.\n\"We are primarily interested\nin the kind of impression the\nchild gets in the teaching of his-\nCanadians Warned Not\nTo Live Beyond Means\nTORONTO (CP) - The slowing down of Canada's growth\nand t h e negative economic\ntrends which have been accumulating for more than 10\nyears have brought this country to a difficult point in its history, Carl A. Pollock, president\nof the Canadian Manufacturers'\nAssociation, said Tuesday.\nMr. Pollock, also president of\nDominion   Electrohome   Indus-\nWorld Known\nCanadian\nScientist Dies\nOTTAWA (CP)-Dr. E. W. R.\nSteacie, 61, president of the National Research Council for the\nlast 10 years and one of the\nworld's foremost scientists, died\nof cancer at his home here Tues-\ndaiy.\nHe had worked right up to\nlast week, coming to the office\nfrom his summer cottage every\nday though he was supposed to\nbe on vacation.\nA blunt and articulate spokesman for science, he was, at the\nend, battling a government\nausterity measure designed to\nreduce the council staff by 15\nper cent during the next two\nyears.\nOnly a few of his closest\nfriends were informed as late\nas a week ago that he was near\ndeath.\nPRESSED FOR RESEARCH\nDr. Steacie, a chemist, spoke\nfrequently and publicly about\nthe need for more research in\nCanada. He pushed continually\nfor more research in the universities and industry.\nLast year he was elected\npresident of the tnternational\nCouncil of Scientific Unions,\nmaking him, in a sense, the\npremier scientist in the world.\ntries Ltd., told the Canadian National Exhibition directors' luncheon that austerity measures\nestablished by the government\nindicate \"that we dare 'no\nlonger live beyond our means.\"\n\"ft is hoped that our program\nof retrenchment will be of short\nduration, but we are facing a\nsituation which has been accumulating over a period of 15\nyears,\" he said. \"A greater\nself-sufficiency built up during\nthe next five years, through the\nself-discipline and the hard\nwork of Canadians at all levels\nof business activity, seems to\nme to be the only complete answer.\"\n\"In addition to such dedicated levels, we urgently need\nstrong leadership from Ottawa\nto establish a business climate\nIn which Canadian industry can\ngrow.\n\"In the long run, the future\nof Canada and the growth of\nher economy and markets hinge\nlargely on the success of manufacturing  industry.\"\nLieul.-Governor\nFlies 2500\nMiles On Tour\nMagistrate Commits\n\"Elite Group\" to\nJudge and Jury\nLONDON (Reuters i-A magistrate Tuesday committed for\ntrial before a judge and jury\nfour Britons alleged to have\nrun a Nazi-type \"elite\" group\ncalled Spearhead.\nTlie four men were accused\nunder the Public Order Act of\n1936 which bans quasi-military\norganizations.\nTbe men, who reserved their\ndefence for the trial at London's Old Bailey, were Colin\nJordan, 39, leader of the British National Socialist movement, and three associates,\nJohn Tyndall, 26, Ian Kerr-\nRitchie, 42, and Denis Piric,\n23.\nAfter a two - day hearing al\nBow Street court here, the four\nwere released on &I00 <$300>\nbail each.\nHUBERT\nBy STAN McCABE\nTHE PAS, Man. (CP)\u2014Lieutenant-Governor Errick F. Willis has completed all but 'the\nlast leg of a gruelling one-week\ntour through northern Manitoba\nto mark the 50th anniversary of\nthe province's expansion to the\n60th parallel and Hudson Bay.\nHe flew to this historic northern centre after visits Monday\nto Wabowden and Ilford, on the\nHudson Bay Railway to the\nnortheast, and returns to Winnipeg today.\nMr. Willis, accompanied by\nvarious members of the Manitoba cabinet, has been travelling aboard a Manitoba Government Air Service Otter since a\nweek ago Monday.\nHe travelled 2,500 miles and\nvisited 18 places in the north,\nmaking presents tions and\nspeeches at the rate of three\nand four a day.\nMr. Willis was joined on his\nnorthern tour late last week hy\nPremier Duff Roblin and members of the leglslture, after he\nhad criss \u2022 crossed the north\nvisiting such historic places as\nNorway House, Gods Lake, Oxford House, Nelson House, Puk-\natawagan, Cross Lake and\nBrochet before joining the other\nparty lo call at the modern\ncommunites of Flin Flon,\nThompson, Snow Lake and\nLynn Lake.\nHe also visited the Hudson\nBay port of Churchill, 610 miles\nnorth of Winnipeg, where sailors from five Royal Canadian\nNavy minesweepers added to\nthe colorful crowds that received him.\nFlying over the lake-dotted\nnorth he saw country first\nvisited by white men in 1612.\ntory and literature and even in\nthe physical sciences,\" said\nRev. F. A. Peake of Glanworth,\nOnt., director of religious education in Huron diocese and a\nmember of the committee that\ndrafted the statement.\nThe synod devoted five minutes to the statement. But discussion in the corridors later\npointed up differing views.\nMontreal dentist J. C. Flanagan termed the policy \"perfectly stupid.\" He asked how it\nwas possible to \"slant\" education in a Christian direction\nwhen many teachers do not hold\nwith the Christian faith and\nhave no training in it.\n\"With the development of a\ncosmopolitan Canada, it is more\nand more going to devolve upon\nthe family to see that children\nget their religious teaching in\nthe home and the church,\" he\nsaid.\nBolh he and Mr. Peake said\nthey \"disagree violently\" with\na speech on the issue by Juvenile Court Judge J. Elliot Hudson of Halifax, who suggested\nthat newcomers to Canada are\nbehind pressure to keep religion\nout of the schools.\n\"Many people who have come\nto this country and have been\nwelcomed with open arms seem\nto want to overthrow the teaching of Christianity in the\nschools,\" Judge Hudson told the\nsynod.\n\"The quicker people who\ncome to this country are taught\nthe ideals of this country, the\nbetter,\" he said.\nUnpoliced UN\nan\nBy  LIONEL WALSH\nGENEVA (Reutersl \u2014 Diplomatic observers Tuesday said the\nWest's offer of an unpoliced\nnuclear test-ban treaty excluding underground tests will\nstrengthen its hand at the coming United Nations General Assembly meeting. They feel it\nwill win favor in the neutral\nbloc of countries.\nThe United States and Britain\nMonday submitted alternative\ndraft treaties of the 17-nation\ndisarmament conference here.\nThey asked Russia to accept\neither a complete ban on all\ntests with on-site inspection or\na partial ban, without inspection and exempting underground  blasts.\nSoviet delegate Vasily Kuznetsov, flatly rejected Ihe complete\nban proposal and assailed the\npartial ban as an attempt to\nlegalize underground testing.\nThe observers said a Soviet\nrefusal of even a partial ban\ncould further weaken ils case\nbefore the neutrals, already\nsmarting from Soviet tactics at\nthe Geneva conference table.\nThe Soviet interpretation of a\ncompromise plan suggested by\neight neutral delegates has disappointed many of them. The\nRussians are insisting that a\nvital clause of the plan provides for on-site inspection only\nif the government concerned\nasks for it.\nThe judge, lay secretary of\nthe synod's lower house, said\nhe has been astounded to find\nthat \"boys and girls in court\nknow very little about religion.\"\nThe statement on religion in\nthe schools, part of a report by\nthe Anglican board of religious\neducation which took up most\nof the day's session, was\ndrafted by a committee headed\nby Rev. Frederick Payne of\nPrescott, Ont.\nBishop G. P. Gower of New\nWestminster, B.C., a member\nof the drafting committee, said\nIhe c li u r c h is encountering \"secularism, denomination-\nalism and sometimes narrow\nsectarianism\" in public education.\nHe said the issue eventually\nmust be approached by a\nunited front of all Christians.\nThe bishop added he felt sure\nthe Roman Catholic Church\nwould be anxious to talk with\nProtestants aboul the problem.\nMr. Peake told Ihe synod that\na commission of the Canadian\nCouncil of Churches is planning\nan extensive study of religion\nin the schools and said the Anglican declaration was \"not intended to be a final or definitive\nstatement\" on the subject.\nThe statement holds that the\nchurch has a right to a voice in\npublic education and notes that\n\"the overwhelming majority of\nCanadian taxpayers are at least\nnominally Christian.\"\nThe church wants the schools\nto help all pupils \"to an awareness of the significance and contribution of the Christian faith\nand tradition in our way of\nlife.\"\nIt also is asking \"that the educational system may furnish a\ncongenial climate in which the\nchurch may do her proper\nwork.\"\nNoting that maintaining\n\"Christian attitudes\" in education depends ultimately on the\nindividual teacher, the statement says that \"the church will\nneed to give as much time to\nthe enlistment of teachers as\nshe docs to that of priests and\nother professional workers.\"\nSchool curriculums often contain materials which, \"to say\nthe least, do not do justice to\nthe Christian view\" and the\nchurch should \"maintain communication\" wilh educational\nauthorities during curriculum\nrevision.\nOn possible future policy, the\nboard suggests that Anglican\nparochial schools would permit\nestablishment of a fully Christian - based curriculum. Delegates said outside the assembly\nthat cost of such a program\nwould prevent any such action\nin the near future, although the\nAnglican church maintains parochial schools in Newfoundland.\nThe synod also approved a\nprogram designed to stimulate\nreligious e d u c a t i o n on the\nchurch by providing a stronger\ncurriculum for adults, encouraging children to take part in\nthe full services of worship and\nincluding study of issues faced\nin Ihe secular world.\n\"Al the very least the church\nhas Ihe right to insist that public education should present the\nChristian view of God, man and\nthe world on the same basis as\nother views,\" the board report\nsoid.\nIntewretinq the News\nThe United States is deeply\nperturbed by the reported Soviet arms buildup in Cuba.\nWhile the situation has not yet\nbecome \"intolerable,\" there is\nevery indication that Cuban-\nAmerican relations will worsen.\nThe immediate worry in\nAmerican quarters is not that\nIhe reinforced Communist\nstructure on the Caribbean island will directly endanger the\nU.S., but it will assist and prolong the Fidel Castro regime\nand help to spread its influence\nin Latin America.\nAt   the   same   time   there   is\nIt's Been Said\nNo metaphysician ever felt the deficiency, of language so much as the grateful.\n\u2014Caleb Colton.\n\u25a0 111 j < r r 111 r r 111 r 1111 \u25a0 r 11 r i r 111111111 r 11) i r 11! i r 11111111 j i j \u25a0 r i r 11 r 1111' \u25a0\n'MIIIIII\nInnocent Pony Ride\nTurns Into Night\nmare\n\"Where'd I be if I gave somebody a raise every time\nhis mother-in-law iwded new taseth?\"\nOAKLAND, N.Y. (API -\nMarline Breitner, 14, went\nriding Monday on her pony.\nCopper Penny.\nBefore she got home a\nfreight train was delayed, a\nfirst-aid squad went racing\nacross the countryside and a\ndoctor sprained his ankle.\nMarline and Copper Penny\nwere sauntering along the\ntracks of the New York, Susquehanna and Western Railroad when a freight train approached.\nMarline wanted to go one\nway, Copper Penny the other.\nThe train brushed the pon.y\nMarline fell off and the pony\nfell on top of her. The train\nstopped.\nA crew member stayed with\nMarline and the train contin\nued a half-mile to the station\nA first-aid squad was called,\nbut their ambulance stopped\nwhere the road did, a quarter-mile from Marline.\nThe squad then boarded the\ntrain which had returned, and\nstarted to the scene.\nDr. David G. Abed, who had\nstarted down the tracks ahead\nof Ihe train, stepped on a\nrock and sprained his ankle.\nSeveral first-aid men hopped\noff the train to help the injured doctor.\nAfter Marline was aboard,\nthe train picked up the doctor and the rescue squad members with him. Bystanders\ncaught Copper Penny and\ntook her to her stable.\nMarline was treated for a\ncut on the forehead.\nilium;! i:iiiiiiiiinii\" iiiiillliiniiMiiiiii miii miiiiiiiiii\nconcern over the limited success of Ihe Alliance-for-progress\naid program, at raising living\nstandards throng bout Latin\nAmerica. The 10-year, $20,000,-\n000 program, in which the U.S.\nfoots half the bill, has accomplished  little  in  its first year.\nInflation and unemployment,\nentrenched reaction and revolutionary turmoil have played\nhavoc wilh pledges of many\nLatin American countries to reform government administration  and taxation systems.\nMany Latin American officials, ill turn, have blamed U.S.\nalliance officials for failing to\nunderstand Iheir diverse problems.\nEconomically, Ihe Castro regime may be faring no better\nthan some ol Ihe olher impoverished countries. But Soviet\naid moy veil Ihe true slate of\nCuban industry and the battalions of \"technicians\" Castro is\nreported to be importing from\nthe Soviet bloc may help to\nstrangle any major show of\nrestlessness among the Cuban\ncitizens.\nU.S. authorities say Ihe flow\nof Communist euipment into\nCuba is continuing and growing. Imports are described as\nincluding ground-to-air missiles,\nradar, military communications\nequipment, trucks, tanks, guns\nand small arms.\nThe stronger Castro becomes\nthe more difficult it will be to\ndislodge him. This thought may\nbe in the minds of the Americans as well as the Russians.\nAnd the longer Castro stays in\npower the more damage he\nmay do to the U.S. cause in\nthe Latin area.\nF. B. Pearce\n.. .Writes\nReligion is a controversial subject and while I have my own I\nbelieve that all religions, however mistaken you may think\nthey are, are trying to reach to-,\nwards God. I have no prejudices.\nThe Jehovah's Witnesses visit\nme every other week and I take\ntheir booklets, but they have long\nsince given up trying to convert\nme and are content to be on\nterms of friendship with me. I\nhave every regard for the Catholics whose religion I also decline\nto embrace.\nOne of my friends showed me\na clipping about a decision of the\nItalian courts. It appears that a\npriest got mad because one of\nhis flock voted the wrong way\nand refused him some church\nrite. The man took his case to\nthe civil courts and the court upheld him. Then the case went to\na higher court which reversed\nthe decision.\nThe headline for the report\nwas, \"Church Law Wins Over\nCivil Law.\" This is sheer nonsense. The civil law had no jurisdiction in the case. If you belong\nto a church the church makes\nthe rules and you agree to keep\nthem. To state a parallel case if\nthe Masonic Order decided to\nexpel a man because he became\na communist he could not have\nthat decision upset in the courts.\nIt is not sufficient to believe\nthai this was a case of the state\nagainst the church. The smaller\nvillage councils are riddled with\ncommunists all trying to hurt the\nCatholic Church, and no doubt\nthe local magistrates are often\ncommunists who are only too\nready to rule against it. On the\nface of it this was a case designed to damage the church and the\nhigher courts, which are not\ncommunist-dominated, threw it\nout,\nAH the churches are trying to\nachieve greater union and the\nCatholic Church is not behind in\nthe movement. In fact it. is taking\nthe lead in promoting meetings\nto that end. This is all to the\ngood, for Christianity is the only\neffective answer to communism.\nThat the Catholic Church is becoming more understanding and\nmore tolerant is shown by the\nchanges which are taking place.\nIt is now using the language of\nIhe people instead of Latin in its\nservices and changing its attitude\ntowards other religions. The\nJehovah's Witnesses who once\nwere outlawed in Quebec are\nnow allowed to go quietly about\ntheir business.\nBut we still need to get rid of\nsome of our old time prejudices.\nThe Catholics of today are not\nthe monsters that many people\nconsidered them 300 years ago\nand the Protestants of this period\nare not the stern unyielding\nzealots of previous ages. There is\nno good reason why every denomination and every sect cannot\nwork together for the common\ngood, for the confounding of communism and the greater glory of\nIhe God they all profess to serve.\nSilver Rises\nTo New High\nLONDON (AP)-The price of\nsilver for the second straight\nday rose Tuesday to a 42-year\nhigh on the London bullion market.\nIt increased three farthings to\n94'sd an ounce. Monday, it rose\nHid.\nOne dealer said: \"the price is\nstill looking very firm. Demand\ncontinued today. Buying is still\ncoming from continental and\ndomestic  industrial  resources.\"\nThe demand for silver has\nbeen growing with the photographic industry taking up 45\nper cent of the world production\nfor use in film.\nToday\nIn History\nAug. 29,  1962 .  .  .\nBrigham Y'oung, Mormon\nleader who headed the migration of nearly 5,000 of his\npeople from Illinois to the\nTerritory of Utah in 1847,\ndied at Salt Lake City 85\nyears ago today\u2014in 1877.\nYoung\u2014governor of the territory from 1850 to 1858 but\nnot re-appointed because of\nhis defiance of the U.S. government\u2014continued to be\nthe supreme power in Utah\nuntil his death.\n1935 \u2014 Queen Astrid of\nBelgium died in an auto accident in Switzerland.\n1953 \u2014 The American gunboat Scorpion, captured by\nIhe British and scuttled under a warship - limitation\ntreaty in 1818, was raised\nfrom Georgian Bay at Pen-\netanguishene, Ont.\n \t\n~\u2014-\nNelson Student Reminisces\ni\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., AUG. 29, T962-2,\nSkin Diving Among Coral Reefs One\nOf Pleasant Experiences at Nassau\nSynod Tones Down Opinions on Four Issues ...\nand friends.\nValerie   Euerby.\nFrom a land where the temperature holds around\n90 degrees, where baby orchids and double gardenias\nare to be had for the picking and skin diving is enjoyed\nin waters from 70 to 80 degrees, a Nelson high school\nstudent has returned home to share her pleasure and\nexperiences with her family\npole. This type of exercise also\nhas its roots in history, she says,\nsince the slavers used to free the\nslave who was able to bend down\nthe farthest under a rod held al\nboth ends by the dealers.\nSMALL ISLAND\nThere are 60,000 people on Providence Island, of which 90 pel-\ncent are colored, Val says. There\nare approximately 25.000 people\nin Nassau, she estimates. There\nare a number of native settlements on the island, with primitive living quarters. The island\nitself, only 21 miles long and\nseven wide, is pretty barren, she\nsaid, except for palm and a particular type of. pine tree lhat\ngrows there.\nA sea grape grows on the\ncoast, both wild and cultivated.\nThere are also almond trees.\nShe was impressed with the\nflowers-^wild baby orchids grow\non the roadside and trees ol\ndouble gardenias are seen in Nassau. Especially colorful are the\npoinsiana trees with their bright\nred blossoms. She noted the absence of vegetable gardens.\nHowever, there seemed to be\nno scarcity of fruit and vege\ntables to eal. Rice is a staple replacing potatoes. With it, black\npeas or beans are cooked. There\nare mangoes, geneps. sugar apples Hike pinapples) Bahamanian\ncherries with three pits in them,\ngrapefruit, bananas, dates and\nother fruits.\nThe houses are all colored in\npastel shades. There is no cold\nrunning water in the houses and\nthe water from the taps is hoi\nenough lo bath in. It is coole 1\nin the refrigerator for drinking.\nThere are many memorials 'o\nChristopher Columbus who discovered Ihe islands in 1492. she?\nsaid, and there are many forts,\nln one is a wax 'museum depict\nine the history of the island.\nThe young people go to church\ntwice on Sunday, she said, and\nare quite religious in Iheir daily\nliving. The colored people Over\nthe Hill hold their church services Sunday and Wednesday\nnights with wild calypso musk\nand a great to-do.\nColored police direct traffic on\nthe busy street from a box set\nin the middle of the intersections\nand the cars have steering wheels\non the right and drive on the left\nside of the road. Most of Ihe\nyoung people have their own\ncars.\nShe was reluctant fo leave Nas-\nbul   was  gelling  homesick\ndaughter of\nMr. and Mrs. A. R. Euerby, 405\nSecond Street, has enjoyed seven\nweeks in Nassau, New Providence\nIsland, the Bahamas. She and\nL. V. Rogers high school teacher\nMiss Jean Knowles started from\nNelson June 30 in Miss Knowles'\nlittle Italian car and despite frequent breakdowns motored to\nToronto and Montreal, where they\nwere joined by a friend of Miss\nKnowles', Dr. Cathy Kudo.\nThey headed south, stopped off\nin New York to shop and again\nbriefly in Miami. From there, it\nwas a 50-minule hop by plane to\nNassau, whore Miss Knowles\nspends her summers.\nHere, Miss Euerby was guest\nof Mr. and Mrs. Nigel Minns and\ntheir daughter, Rosemary, who is\nthe same age as Val. She met a\nlarge number of young people her\nown age and \"had a ball\" so far\nas her social life was concerned.\nBut her enjoyment included much\nmore than the continual round of\nsocial engagements. She observed\na great deal of the life of the island, of its history and its geography.\nThe young people there, of the\nsame age as the visitor from Canada, have mostly been working\nfor the past two years. They finish\ntheir schooling two years earlier\nthan Canadians. Theirs is the British education system, since the\nBahamas is a British colony and\ntheir examinations are prepared\noverseas. They complete in ten\nyears what Canadian students\ncomplete in twelve, and their\nstandard of education, said Miss\nEuerby, is ol a high calibre.\nMany of the young people she\nconsorted wilh worked in banks.\nUNDERWATER ADVENTURE\nDuring the day, Val swam on\nthe resort and hotel beaches and\ntwice she went skin-diving in the\nblue waters and among the coral\nreefs off Nassau. Here, the water\nmaintains a temperature of 70 to\nB0 degrees. Here, also, she saw\nbrilliantly colored fish cruising\nIhe reefs, picked conch shells\nfrom Ihe ocean floor, kept an eye\nout for barracuda and once fled\nfrom a shark.\nIn the evenings, the principal\ndiversion was watching entertainment al glittering night clubs,\nwhere there is no age limit for\npatrons and where calypso music\ntells legends of Ihe islands. Calypso originated in the islands,\nsays this young traveller, with the\nsingers replacing newspapers and\nchanting their stories to the now-1 sau\nNASSAU VISITOR \u2014 Home from the Bahamas,\nMiss Val Euerby shows her straw bag which she\nbought in a market in Nassau, where she has spent\na pleasant seven weeks.\u2014Daily News photo.\nStands Taken on Nuclear Arms, Peace Research\nInstitute, Unemployment, Services in Country\nBy CARL MOLLINS\nKINGSTON, Ont. (CPl-The\ndanger of nuclear war, the\nmiseries of unemployment and\na catalogue of other social ailments were impressed Tuesday\non the 344 bishops, clergy and\nlaymen who speak for the Anglican Church of Canada in\ngeneral synod.\nThe synod grappled for four\nSalmo Notes\nSALMO (NDN Bureau) - John\nHolden, departing principal of the\nSalmo secondary school, and Mrs.\nHolden, were guests of honor at\na dance at Ymir during the weekend, sponsored by Ymir students.\nThere was a good attendance of\nteen-agers. Wayne Tetz provided\nthe music. The Holdens left Tuesday for Kamloops where Mr. Holden will be superintendent of elementary education.\nMr. and Mrs. Bill Stringer and\nsons, Billy, Scott and Mark, and:\ndaughters Wanda and Maureen,\nhave returned from a vacation at\nCalgary. They were away two\nweeks.\nMrs. Carrie Armishaw, who has\nbeen operating a hotel dining\nroom here, has returned to her\nhome in Trail after a few days in\nTrail-Tadanac Hospital. Due to ill\nhealth, she will not return to the\nhotel.\nMrs. E. C. Jackman, Cottonwood Avenue, returned home during the weekend after being a patient for 11 days at Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital in Nelson.\nhours with the issues. It spoke\nfinally in a voice tempered by\nthe need lo accommodate differing attitudes on nuclear weapons, peace research, immigration, refugees, unemployment,\nindustrial problems, leisure,\nfamily  life  and  interest  rates.\nThe synod reserved the adjective \"urgent\" for its statements\non nuclear arms and unemployment.\nThe assembly recorded its\nbelief that nations which renounce nuclear weapons can\nexert an important \"moral influence\" on world affairs\nbut recognized the \"grave dilemma\" faced by governments\nmindful of defence.\nONLY   ONE   COURSE\n\"Yet. this synod records its\nconviction that the only sane\ncourse open to humanity is\nnever to use a nuclear weapon\nand urges its members to press\ncontinually   as   a   matter   of   weapons of similar destructive       On    Dr.    Norman.   Alcock's\nutmost urgency for the abolition\nby international agreement of\nnuclear   bombs   and   of   other\npower, the use uf which is\nrepugnant to the Christian conscience.\"\nLIIIIIMIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIII\u00bblli|t|llllUIII||IHIIIIIIIMIIII\u00abll||MIIIIII'\nI Your Individual\ni     Horoscope      i\n3I1IIIIIIIMIIIII.I fa prances Drake \u00ab 'Iin*\nShov\/s Cavalry Boots\nfamous heal. land enjoyed her return journey\nShe saw the \"king of limbo\"!by plane, to Toronto, where she\nwho limboed to within eight inch-1 stayed with friends, then on lo\nes of the floor under a flaming Calgary and to Castlegar.\nPARIS    (Reutersl    \u2014   Pans;\ncourturier Balenciaga makes no\nmajor silhouette change  in his\nwinter  collection,  hut  endorses j\nover-all   trends   clinging   closer\nlo Ihe body.\nThe collection, shown lo the\npress lor the first time Tues- j\nday, retained a short kneecap-\nlength h e m 1 i n e, particularly\nnoticeable in a group of sport\nand street ensembles.\nThese were shown with knee-\nhigh   cavalry   hoots   made   of j\nsuede,   box - leather   or   black\npatent leather.\nBulky - shouldered suits and\nulster coats were tailored with\nmilitary precision. They had\nsmall rolled collars and big\nspherical billions parading ill\ndouble-breasted rows down the:\nfront.\nemiine\nSuit jackets came in hip-\nlength versions, or featured\nnipped waist lines. Skirts were\ncut with ease, or featured in\nwrap - around envelope styles\nthat close at Ihe side front,\nBoth (he boxy overcoats and\nnarrow slim redingotes were\nslressed in Balenciaga's favorite nine-tenths length, scissored\noff to reveal an inch of the\ndross hemline.\nFormal fashions had corsel-\nelte bodices moulding the midriff over bell - shaped skirts\narched out over the hips. Waistlines ollen rose slightly higher\nin fronl, and dipped at Ihe back\nover skirts puffed out in modified bustles.\nGrand Forks\nStudent Winner\nTwo Scholarships\nGRAND FORKS - Tom Kanigan, son ol Mr. and Mrs. John\nI.   Kanigan,  has  been   awarded\ntwo  scholarships as a result of\n1 his success in the departmental\n! examinations held in June.\n\u25a0 He receives a government\nI scholarship lor first class stand-\n! ing, with his average ot 87 per\ncent, which pays half his tuition\nI fees and will amount to $161.\nj He was also winner of the Pacific Brewers' Warehouse Ltd..\ni scholarship of $400. This is award-\nled on scholastic ability as deter-\nI mined by the departmental exam-\ni inations: personal character and\nI interest in school and community\n1 affairs, and to a student proceeding to the University of British\nColumbia.\nTom will enter UBC this September as a student in first year\n' arts.\nTight, Short\nStyles at\nGivenchy Show\nPARIS (Reutersl \u2014 Designer\nHubert de Givenchy officially\nshowed his winter collection to\nIhe press Monday, continuing an\nindependent tradition he observes along with Balenciaga.\nBoth designers exclude all fashion writers until one month\nafter buyers have seen their presentations, instead of having the\npress and buyers' shows together\nin July as other Paris houses do.\nGivenchy's winter silhouette\nturns out to be not revolutionary\nbut he uses the tightest-fitting effects seen in Paris this summer.\nGivenchy ignored the general\ntrend toward longer hemlines\nand hip-length jackets. His skirls\nbared the kneecap like last year's\nand his jackets were 'fashioned\non short-waisted lines with light\nshaping over rounded and gathered skirts.\nOne of the newest dress silhouettes was fashioned like a\nskinny, tubular redingote witli\nsnugly-fitted midriff.\nEvening clothes took on a theatrical effect with exxotic silhouettes and flamboyant colors and\nembroideries.\nHostess fashions featured jorl-\nhpur trousers hloused lo contrive\na short skirt lhat pulled out like\na bustle al Ihe back.\nHow a Father\nLooks To His Child\nNo words can describe how a father looks to his\nchild from the days of infancy to the days when\nthe child becomes a parent. Many years, many\nstages, many kinds of affection . . . but above\nall, Dad is dependable.\nLife Insurance is a part of your family and helps\nyou deserve to feel \"Ten Feet Tall \"\nIs your protection adequate? Let your Crown Life\nrepresentative show you the new Family Security\nBuilder\u2014-it saves you money\u2014ond it does so much\nmore.\nSuccessful People Select\nCROWN LI\nLocal representatives:\nT. 5. SHORTHOUSE - A. WILSON - L. BLAIN\n384 Baker St. NELSON        Phone 332-..17\nLook in the section in which\nyour birthday  comes  and  find\nwhat your outlook is, according\nto the stars.\nFor Thursday, August 30th, 1962\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 20 (Aries >\n\u2014Tighten up loose ends. Don't let\nthe day become emotion-charged.\nWhere possible, slick to routine\nand don't go off on tangents. Keep\norder.\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus)\n\u2014 There's little to be gained in\nmentally going over past irritations, old annoyances \u2014 a tendency now. Look forward with\nconfidence. Show greater pa-\nlience, understanding of tlie other\nfellow.\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini)\n\u2014 Mercury's favora&le aspect,\nstimulates your personality and\nabilities. But if looking in too\nmany directions for leads and\nadvantages, you could overlook\nthose at hand. Think!\nJUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer)\n\u2014System, accomplishing as much\nas is reasonable, then putting\naside work for true relaxation\nwill afford you ease of mind\nfor a healthy day. Look for that\nsun behind the clouds.\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leo)\n\u2014Do not be influenced by extremely optimistic or pessimistic\nviews in matters connected with\nyour job. Do your best and,\nwhile results may not be immediate, they will come later.\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER\n23 (Virgo) \u2014 Especially favored\nnow: art and educational interests, domestic matters, handling\nnovelties. Be discriminating in\nall things.\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER I\n23 iLibra) \u2014 If you cannot workj\nwith a certain group or project I\nand do your best, say so honestly j\nand step to another. Why waste\ntalent \u2014 yours or others? Show\nthat practicality is one of your\nassets.\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER\n22 (Scorpio) \u2014 Y'ou have nothing\nlo fear now except your own;\ntemperament. Control emotions j\nand avoid over-aggressiveness.\nNOVEMBER 23 lo DECEM-!\nBER 21 (Sagittarius) \u2014 the posi- i\ntion of Jupiter indicates a wider |\nscope of interests, possibily greater activity. But take precatuions\nnot to overstep wise limits.\nDECEBMER 22 to JANUARY\n20 ( Capricorn) \u2014 Pay no heed\nto growing promises or sensational reports \u2014 especially if finances are involved. Keep on an\neven keel, and you should do\nwell.\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY\n19 (Aquarius \u2014 Work your way\nthrough both pleasant and dreary\ntasks with equal prcecision and\nadroitness. Often the completion\n.of,a \"dull\" chore wins the top\nprize. With securities and proper-\nlies, know your figures.\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\n(Pisces) \u2014 It may be simpler\nto agree with your associates or\ncompetitors now \u2014 without sacrificing principles, of course. A\ngood day in which to make plans\nfor the future.\nYOU BORN TODAY are endowed with tremendous reserve energy and a retentive memory;\nusually have a fund of interesting\nstories and a ready wit to punctuate your conversation. You may\nbe stubborn, possessive at times,\nbut you act with the intention of\nassisting others. Your ability to\nlead a full life should more than\nbalance problems. Many intellectuals were born in Virgo excellent psychologists, public speakers. Birthdate of: David Hartley, philosopher.\nCanadian Peace Research Institute\u2014a Toronto-based attempt\nby the former atomic scientist\nto find the way to peace through\nthe methods of science\u2014synod\nrecorded its sympathy but was\nunable to offer full support on\ntheological grounds.\n\"We   as   Christians   can\ncommit  ourselves  to  believir\nthat qualitative things \u2014 thii\nof the mind and heart\u2014can I\ncontrolled by m a the matics.'\nsaid  Archdeacon  J.  F.  Hindi\nliffe of Fort William.   .\nSynod chopped down the\nresolution on unemployment to.\nless than half its original size\non the suggestion of Dean M. L.Goodman of Brandon, Man.,\nwho objected to an \"unwarranted inclusion of economic\ntheory.\"\nDean Goodman's statement,\nadopted by synod, removes\nreference to Canada's \"insistence upon an excessively high\nlevel of income and materialistic standard of living.\"\nSHARE CONCERN\n\"We share the common and\nurgent concern for those of our\nbrethren without work and commend every effort to deal constructively with this situation,\"\nthe final statement says.'     '\nAnother resolution, backed by\nAndrew Brewin, New Democratic Party member of Parliament for Toronto Greenwood,\nurged the federal government\n\"to insist that interest rates and\nall charges be declared in all\ncontracts involving borrowing.\"\nSynod also heard reports on\nthe swift growth of the use of\nthe countryside for recreation\nby town dwellers. The speaker\nsaid the habit of spending weekends in the country may mean\ncity churches will be empty on\nSunday. Projects to take the\nchurch to resort areas through\ntouring chaplains were advocated as a promising way to\nmeet the problem.\nNOTICE\nWe Will Be\nCLOSED\nthis afternoon, out of respect for the late\nROBERT   ARNOLD   LUNDSTROM\nKOOTENAY LAUNDRY\nand DRY CLEANERS LTD.\nNELSON, B. C.\nEMPHASIS ON STYLE IN MINK \u2014 Palomino mink\nis used by Hivella oi Italy in designing the sumptuous\ncoat, left, which has been deliberately understated to\nemphasize the natural elegance of the body line. At\n' the right, a highly styled coat in pastel mink demon\nstrates the unique effect achieved by working the\nskins in contrasting ways. Pelts in the bodice are\nworked horizontally, while those in the skirt fall vertically from a softly gathered waistline. A slightly\nscooped \"puff\" collar frames th6 iace.\nWarning\nKootenay Lake and\nRiver Levels\nRegulation of Kootenay Lake to store water for winter\npower production will again be under way commencing\nSeptember 1. By an order of the International Joint\nCommission, the Main Lake may be raised to 6 feet\nabove zero, which is approximately 2 feet above the\npresent level. All persons using the foreshore of Kootenay Lake and River during the fall and winter should\nbe on the lookout for changing water levels.\nEFFECT ON THE MAIN LAKE\nAND WEST ARM\nAfter September 1 the lake will rise slowly (not more\nthan a few inches per day) until the maximum level is\nreached. It will remain at that level until it is necessary\nto release the water for power generation.\nEFFECT ON THE KOOTENAY AND\nCOLUMBIA RIVERS BELOW CORRA LINN\nRiver levels can be expected to fluctuate throughout the\nfall and winter according to the power demand and\nweather conditions.\nWIST KOOTENAY POWER AND  LIGHT\nCOMPANY LIMITED\n \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014-\n6\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, WED,, AUG. 29, 1962\nggpg 3SBfi g'-'-' |l\"''\u25a0\" BBSSSS\nMm     mm      ''\" >H\nSUBSCRIBERS TO THE NELSON DAILY NEW:\nwill he enjoying . \u2666 .\nWHICH WILL APPEAR REGULARLY IN THE\nSATURDAY EDITIONS - BEGINNING SEPTEMBER 8th, 1962\n* Up to Date National\nSports Features\n\u00a5 Excellent Reading\nFor the Whole Family\n* Features and Articles * Recipes for the Housewives\non ^ailD Bfoto\n \u25a0\n'\nBBB----M\n3cnR\nStimulants, Over-Exertion\nCaused Football Player's Death\nMONTREAL (CP)\u2014The death  game with the Laval West Hur-\nof Robert (Bob) McArdle, a\nhusky 28 - year - old football\nplayer, 24 hours after he collapsed during a football game\nbeing played in 90-degrees heat,\nwas attributed Tuesday to overexertion caused by stimulants.\n\"We don't really understand\nexactly what happened,\" said\nDr. Rosario Fontaine, chief\nmedico - legal expert for \u25a0 the\nprovince, who performed an autopsy. \"He was a fine athletic\nspecimen, had a good, heart and\nwas strong.\"\nWhen he was admitted to hospital Sunday, McArdle had a\ntemperature of 108 degrees.\nThe autopsy showed also that\nshock and a collapsed kidney\ncaused by over-exertion had\ncontributed to the death.\nBut the autopsy still left unsolved   the   type   of   stimulant\nMcArdle had used to bring on\nhis death.\nMAY NEVER KNOW\n\"We may never know,\" said\nDr. Fontaine. \"Because in the\n24 hours that he lived he had\ntime to pass it out of his system.\"\nMcArdle,  a  200-pound  tackle\nwith the Trois-Rivieres Braves\nof   the    Quebec    Intermediate\nFootball   Conference,   collapsed\n. mid - way   through   Sunday's\nBaseball Standings\nBy The Associated Press\nAMERICAN\nLEAGUE\nW  L Pet GBL\nNew York\n78 55 .586   \u2014\nLos Angeles\n74 58 .561     3'z\nMinnesota\n75 59 .560    iVa\nChicago\n68 64 .515     9Vi\nDetroit\n66 65 .504   11\nBaltimore\n66 66 .500   ll'_\nCleveland\n63 70 .474   15\nBoston\n62 71 .465    16\nKansas City\n60 73 .451   18\nWashington\n51 82 .383   27\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nLos Angeles\n86 46 .652   \u2014\nSan Francisco      83 48 .634    IVa\nCincinnati\n81 52 .609     5'A\nPittsburgh\n77 55 .583     9\nSt. Louis\n71 61 .538   15\nMilwaukee\n71 62 .534   MVa\nPhiladelphia\n63 73 .463   25\nChicago\n49 83 .371   37\nHouston\n48 84 .364   38\niNew York\n34 99 .256   SIVa\nft\nt4_7.\nEDEY'S\naV_\/^\nk Cycle\nJp Shop\n\/jEfcy            FOR\n\\J^-a^5_\n' AVwl    THE\nLargest Selection of\nBICYCLES\nand  TRICYCLES\nin the Kootenays\n737 Baker St.\nNelson, B. C.\nPhone\n. 352-3245\nricanes. It was McCardle's first\ngame in more than a year. He\nplayed three seasons with Verdun Shamcats, Canadian intermediate champions.\nOscar Trepanier, owner and\ngeneral - manager of the Trois-\nRivieres Braves, said some of\nthe players told him they saw\nMcArdle take four benzedrine\npills before the game and two\nwhile the game was in process.\n\"The players only thought it\nwas benzedrine,\" said Trepanier. \"It could have been\nsomething else.\"\nHe said he first suspected\nsomething   was    wrong    when\nMcArdle wanted to fight with\nthe trainer for no reason at all\nafter the first quarter.\n\"Later, I noticed his eyes\nwere glassy and he didn't recognize me,\" said Trepanier.\n\"He looked like a guy who\nwas drunk, so I took him out\nof the game.\"\nMcArdle walked to the bench\nand collapsed.\nCoach Bob McLeod said he\nhad no idea McArdle was taking stimulants.\n\"I know this. None of my\nboys ever took stimulants to my\nknowledge. But I've got 30 guys\non the team and I can't be with\nthem all the time.\"\nAnne Decker Leader\nIn U.S. Third Round\nROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP) -\nAnne Quast Decker made par\nseem routine again Tuesday as\nshe led 32 survivors into the\nthird round of the women's\nU.S. national amateur golf\nchampionship at the Country\nClub of Rochester.\nTen pars and two birdies kept\nthe 24-year-old defending champion from Marysville, Wash.,\neven with par at the 6,161-yard\npar 36-37\u201472 for the 25 holes\nshe's played so far, and overwhelmed her second-round opponent, veteran Marge Burns.\nThe final margin was 5 and\n4.\nThe impressive victory of the\ndefender triggered the advance\nof most of the favored players,\nincluding two - time champion\nJoanne Gunderson of Kirkland\nLake, Wash.; 1959 champion\nBarbara Mclntire, their U.S.\nCurits Cup teammates, Tish\nPreuss and Judy Bell, and three\nof the British Curtis Cuppers\nwho took such a walloping at\nColorado Springs earlier this\nmonth\u2014Frances Smith, Sheila\nVaughan and Ruth Porter.\nMILLIGAN WINS\nRae Milligan of Jasper, Alta.,\nwas the only survivor among\nthe large Canadian group that\nstarted the tournament Monday.\nShe downed Maggie Martin of\nSt. Clairsville, Ohio, 1 up to advance into today's round against\nNancy Holmes of Nashville,\nTenn.\nAlthea Gibson, the former\ntennis queen trying her hand\nat this championship for the\nfirst time, lost out to her own\nerratic play. Two up after 13\nholes, Althea ran into a rash of\nover-pars and lost 2 down to\nMrs. Paul Dye, Jr., of Indianapolis.\nShe was joined in the list of\nprominent casualties by Polly\nRiley of Fort Worth, Tex., the\ncaptain of the U.S. curtis Cup\nteam. 1948 champion Grace Len-\nczyk Cronin of Hartford, Conn.,\nand British Curtis Cupper Ann\nIrvin, ousted by Mary Ann\nDown of Baltimore, 1 up.\nNEW CHAMPIONS in Junior Olympic competition at the Pacific National Exhibition were: Gail\nJohnston, 16, of Prince Rupert, who broke the 100-\nyard juvenile record and equalled the 60-yard record,\nand Marjorie Volansky, 15, of Needles, who broke\nthe 100-yard midget record and won the midget running broad jump.\nB.C. Junior Team\nCanadian Golf Champs\nBy W. R. WHEATLEY\nMONCTON, N.B. (CP)\u2014British\nColumbia's four-man team Tuesday won the Canadian junior interprovincial golf team championship with an aggregate medal\nscore of 601, one stroke off the\nrecord over the 36-hole route.\nThe   British   Columbia   boys\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., AUG. 29, 1962\u20147\nMantle Slams 399th Homer\nTo Give Yanks 2-1 Victory\nernoon and held  a  four-stroke\nlead after 27 holes.\nBrian Wilcox of Toronto and j to a 7-6 victory over Chicago\nKen Fulton of Winnipeg tied for, cu(,s\nBy THE  CANADIAN PRESS\nMickey Mantle smacked his\n399th career home run Tuesday\nnight and powered New York\nYankees to a 2-1 victory over\nCleveland Indians.\nThe game, the first of a\nscheduled doubleheader, was\nstoppped by rain in the fifth inning.\nThe homer was Mantle's 25th\nof this season and came with\nRoger Maris on base in the bottom of the fourth.\nIndians took the lead on Al\nLuplow's homer in the fourth\nafter righthander Bill Stafford\nhad retired the first 10 Cleveland batters in order.\nWashington Senators' Don\nRudolph pitched a six-hit 4-0\nshutout over Baltimore Orioles\nto run his string of consecutive\nscoreless innings to 26.\nChuck Hinton drove in Senators' first run with a triple in\nthe first inning, an unearned\nrun scored in the fifth on two\nerrors by Marv Breeding and\nKen Hamlin's single.\nHarry Bright clouted his 16th\nrun in the eighth.\nJack Fisher pitched seven innings and was the loser.\nDetroit and Red Sox were\nrained out at Boston.\nIn the National Bill Mazero-\nski's solo home run in the\neighth inning broke up a 6-6 tie\nand carried Pittsburgh Pirates\nlow - medal honors and in a\nplayoff Wilcox won at the third\nhole with a par four to Fulton's\nfive. Wilcox was on in two of\nhis first putt rimmed the cup.\nPalmer Seeks\nTo Top Record\nArnold Palmer could send his\ngolf winnings this year over\n$100,000.\nPalmer has won seven of his\n20 tournaments for a record\n$80,198. This breaks his old\nmoney mark of $75,262 set in\n1960.\nGene Littler is second on the\nlist of top ten money winners\nreleased by the Professional\nGolfers' Association with $62,-\n270.\nThe top 10: Arnold Palmer\n$80,198, Gene Littler $62,270,\nBill Casper Jr. $52,438, Jack\nNicklaus $52,098 Gary Player\n$44,338, Bob Goalby $39,620,\nDoug Sanders $35,467, Bob Nichols $32,187, Phil Rodgers $30,-\n841, Bruce Crampton $29,187.\nBy ED CORRIGAN\nFOREST HILLS, N.Y. (AP)-\nThe national tennis championships get under way on the polished turf of the West Side Tennis Club Wednesday and to all\nintents and purposes it will be\nRod Laver against the field.\nThe red-thatched Australian\nleft-hander has been cutting a\nwide swath all over Europe and\nAustralia this year.\nAt last counl. he had won\nnine titles including Australia,\nFrance and Wimbledon. If he\ncan win the United States\nchampionship he will be the\nonly player besides Don Budge\nto capture the four top tournaments in one year.\nBudge accomplished the feat\nIn 1938.\nLaver, of course, is seeded\nNo. 1 ahead of his Davis Cup\nteammate and defending champion, Roy Emerson, who\nwhipped him in the 1961 final.\nThe United States contingent\nis headed by Chuck McKinley,\nwho blows hot and cold. He is\nNo. 3, one of the two U.S. play-\nHIRAM WALKER ^^.Y^ is Frank\nBehind  McKinley  comes  Ra-\nthis advertisement is not published or displayed by the faei osuna of the Mexican Da-\njquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia, i ;,!S pi?}\u2122\u2122 that.i:quaished the\n, United States in the American\nThe original decanter\nnow streamlined for your greater convenience\nby\nPlay for Fun\nSoftball\nSix runs in the last two innings\nsparked Royals to an 11-8 victory\nover North Shore Tigers Tuesday\nnight in a B division round-robin\nsemi-finals match.\nDale Skapple led the winners at\nbat with a perfect night, hitting\na single, double and home run:\nVic Smith and Jim Young each\nclouted a three-bagger and a two-\nbagger.\nCarl Hennig paced the Tigers'\nbatsmen with a double and a\ntriple. E. Nuyens added a triple\nand W. Enright and B. McDonald\nhit doubles.\nWinning pitcher was R. Cartwright and B. Richards took the\nloss.\nNorth Shore\nRoyals .\ntied   with   Manitoba   after   the j Fulton hit a ditch with his sec-\nmorning 18-hole round, pulled in j end shot,\nfront slowly in the afternoon.      , MATCH PLAY TODAY\nManitoba finished second with , Tuesday's rounds also served\n607 and Nova Scotia was third J as qualifying rounds for the\nwith' 608. t junior  Canadian   championship,\nThis was the fourth time the j which starts .today at match\njunior   team   tournament   has\n. 112 220 0\u2014 8 11\n022 142 x\u201411 13\nIn a second B division round-\nrobin contest. Eagles erupted for\n10 runs in the third inning to\ntrounce Larry's BA 26-12.\nR. Peloso hit a circuit drive and\na two-bagger for the winners, followed by T. Mores with a triple\nand double. It. Bond\" added a\ntriple and S. Siminoff a two-\nbagger. Tad Derbyshire hit a\ndouble for the losers.\nEagles   31 10 741-26\nLarry's  34  0 023\u201412\nNELSON   SPORT\nSCHEDULE\nRotarian Little League team\nwill practice Wednesday morning\nat 10:30 at Queen Elizabeth Park.\nbeen played and it was British\nColumbia's first win. Quebec\nwon the inaugural in 1959 and\nOntario won the last two years,\nsetting a record of 600 in 1960.\nOntario was fourth with 612,\nfollowed by Quebec with 623,\nSaskatchewan and the New\nBrunswick-Prince Edward Island team tied at 634, and Alberta with 647.\nplay with 32 eligible. Two\nrounds will be played daily until Saturday when the finalists\nmeet over 36 holes,\nWilcox and Bob Jamieson of\nPeterborough had the best\nscores in Tuesday's play\u2014Wilcox a 68 in the morning and\nJamieson  the  same   figure  in\nIt was Mazeroski's 13th\nhomer of the year and came\nwith one man out off relief\nhurler Don Elston (4-8).\nTight relief pitching by Jack\nLamabe and Diomedes Olivo\nshut out Cubs in the last six\ninnings.\nU.S. Yacht\nRests Up\nFor Races\nNEWPORT, R.I.\nWeatherly, newly -\nfender of the 111\n(AP) -\nchosen de-\nyear - old\nChicago's flashy rookie, Ken\nHubbs, moved to within three\ngames of Bobby Doerr's record\nfor the most consecutive errorless games at second base by\nmaking three assists without a\nbobble. Doerr set the record of\n73 in 1948 with Boston Red Sox.\nDon McMahon and Bob Bruce\ncombined to pitch Houston\nColts to a 4-2 victory over St.\nLouis Cardinals.\nBruce, evening his record at\n8-8, allowing two runs, both unearned, in his 5 1-3 innings. McMahon replaced Bruce with two\non in the sixth and retired all\n11 men he faced, striking out\nfive,\nErnie   Broglio   suffered   his\nseventh loss. He has won 10.\nMETS-PHILLIES SPLIT\nAlvin Jackson pitched his\nfourth shutout of the season for\nNew York Mets as he blanked\nPhiladelphia 2-0 on a three hitter in the opener of a twi-night\ndoubleheader. Phillies came\nback to win the nightcap 10-1\nbehind the six-hit pitching of\nrookie Dennis Bennett.\nIn the nightcap Phillies\npounded out five doubles in a\n13-hit attack to end a five-game\nlosing streak and hand Bob\nMiller his 11th straight loss\nwithout a victory.\nSouthpaw Jim Kaat's fifth\nshutout of the season and Zoilo\nVersalles' two-run single in the\nfifth inning gave Minnesota\nTwins a 2-0 victory over Chicago White Sox and raised their\nAmerican League pennant\nhopes.\nThe triumph kept Twins\nwithin Z'A games of the league-\nleading New York Yankees.\nIt was a heartbreaking defeat for Early Wynn, the 42-\nyear-old veteran who is struggling to reach 300 major league\nvictories. In quest of No. 299,\nWynn gave up only four singles\nbefore being lifted for a pinch\nbatter in the eighth.\nAt Kansas City, Los Angeles\nAngels came up with five home\nruns, including three in a row\nin the fourth inning, to beat the\nAthletics 10-5.\nLeon Wagner, Angel left-\nfielder, hit his 31st and 32nd\nround trippers in successive\ntimes at bat. Leroy Thomas,\nBob'Rodgers, and Felix Torres\nalso homered for Los Angeles.\nNorm Siebern, Kansas City\nfirst baseman, hit a pair of\nhome runs and drove in four\nAthletics' runs but was outnumbered by the Los Angeles guns.\nSiebern's second homer, his\n21st and his 100th run batted\nin, cleared the centrefield fence\nand travelled some 450 feet.\nBoth his home runs came off\nDean Chance (12-7), the winning hurler who was relived by\nDan Osinski with two on in the\nseventh inning.\nSiebern drove home run No.\n101 with a single in the ninth\noff Ted Bowsfield of Penticton,\nB.C., after Osinski had walked\nthe bases full.\nMoe Drabowsky lost it.\nPROTECTS NL LEAD\nJohnny Podres, backed by an\n11-hit attack that included two\nhome runs, pitched Los Angeles\nto an 8-1 victory over Cincin-\nnate to protect the Dodgers'\nNational League lead.\nPodres scattered eight hits in\ngoing the distance to win his\n11th game and he knocked in\nthe tying run with a single in\nthe second.\nMaury Wills stole his 73rd\nbase. The Dodgers captivated\nthe hometown crowd of 46,536\nwith a double steal in the\neighth by Jim Gilliam and John\nRoseboro.\nTom Davis smacked his 22nd\nhome run and veteran Duke\nSnider hit his first in Dodger\nstadium.\nBob Purkey, seeking his 21st\nvictory, was the loser.\nAt San Francisco, Juan Ma-\nrical survived a game-tying,\nthree-run homer by Del Crandall and won his 17th decision\nof the season as the Giants\nrallied to beat Milwaukee 4-3.\nSan Francisco scored its winning run in the seventh off losing reliever Carl Willey (1-5).\nChuck Hiller led off with a\nwalk, moved to third on Orlando Cepeda's one-out single\nand scored on Felipe Alou's\nnear double play grounder to\nshort.\nMarichal was handed a 3-0\nlead on Willie Mays' 39th home\nrun in the fourth inning and\nHarvey Kuenn's' two - run\nhomer in the fifth. Both were\noff starter Bob Shaw.\nMODERNIZE\nYOUR   HOUSE\nInstall . . .\nELECTRIC\nHEAT\nCall\nCOLEMAN\nELECTRIC\nLtd.\n502 Front St.       Nelson, B.C.\nPHONE 352-3175\nLloyd Frame Memorial Game\nNelson Hotel vs Queens Hotel\n(Nelson's  \"A\"  Division  Fastball  League)\nTONIGHT 6:30\nCivic Centre Baseball Diamond\nBAND IN ATTENDANCE\nAdmission: 50\u00a3\nSHOW NEW STYLE\nThe   British   Columbia   team\npresented  an entirely different j Dave Vincent was next with 148.\nthe afternoon. Jack Bryan of America.s CuPr ls in a shipyard\nHalifax shot a 69 in the after- ^ to(, restlng and dry.\nnoon. They were the only play- j \u25a0 t after a strenuous sum.\ners under par in either round, j mer o\u00a3      ta\nFulton was low man   or the;    gki Bus  Mosbacher  and\nManitoba team with his 142 and '\nhis crew are scheduled to take\nmakeup from that ol last year j    ,,mv   ,or   Saskatchewan - was   ^~ *$>\u00ab* ***\nwhen the West Coast boys fin-' Brian Bamford of Saskatoon\nished third. B.C. was also third wjth 153. Alberta's best was\nin the 1959 tournament and sec- Norm Gray of Calgary with 152.\nond in  1960. . .\nWayne Vollmer of Vancouver\nled his team with identical\nrounds of 72 for a 144 total,\nfour strokes over the Moncton\nGolf Club's par for the 36-hole\ndistance.\nManitoba   was   in   contention\nall the way, tied with B.C. after\nthe morning round with 306, but!\nB.C. moved in front in the aft-!\nDoug Harvey\nigns Contract\nFIGHTS\nBy THE ASSOCIATED PRESS\nScranton, Pa.\u2014Charles Scott,\n147, Philadelphia, stopped Joe\nSaltie, 146V4, Wilkes-Barre, Pa.,\n2.\nTokyo \u2014 Kazuo Takayama,\n1253\/4, Japan, knocked out Akira\nOguchi, 124, Japan, 3.\nSan Francisco\u2014L. C. Morgan,\n144',z, Los Angeles, outpointed\nDave Johnson, 145',-i, San Francisco, 10.\nLayer Heads Field in\nNet Championships\nzone final. Fred Stolle, a second-line Australian, is No. 5,\nfollowed by Jan-Erik Lundquist\nof Sweden and Nicola Pietran-\ngeli of Italy.\nThe women's division, too, is\nheaded by an Aussie. Margaret\nSmith is No. 1, followed by\nMrs. Karen Hanlze Susman of\nSan Diego, Calif. Then there is\nMaria Bueno of Brazil, Mrs.\nVera Sukova of Czechoslovakia,\ndefending c h a m pion Darlene\nHard of Long Beach, Calif.,\nRene Schuurman of South Africa, Leslie Turner of Australia and Mrs. Sandra Reynolds Price of South Africa.\nMiss. Hard, the No. 1 player\nin the United States, has not\nhad a good year. And Whitney\nReed, the No. 1 ranked men's\nplayer, has been clobbered so\noften in early rounds of tournament, he wasn't even seeded.\nBritish Rugby\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Results\nof Tuesday night's Rugby League\nchampionship matches:\nEastern Division\nKeighley 11, Hull 17\nWestern Division\nBlackpool 4, Swinton 14\nRochdale 10, Oldham 2\nJ-\nNEW YORK (AP) \u2014 Doug\nHarvey has formally accepted a\nplayer contract for the 1962-63\nNational Hockey League season,\nGeneral manager Muzz Patrick\nof New York Rangers said\nTuesday.\n\"Doug told me he was satisfied with the terms of the con\ntract and was setting up a training program for himself before\nhe reports to camp,\" Patrick\nsaid. Rangers open camp Sept.\n12 in Vancouver.\nHarvey, winner of the Norris\nMemorial Trophy as the circuit's outstanding defenceman,\nled Rangers into the Stanley\nCup playoffs as player-coach.\nHe announced his retirement\nfrom hockey two months ago.\nThe 37-year-old veteran will\nbe permitted to leave New York\nbetween games for periodic visits with his family in Montreal\nby the terms of the contract.\nProblems resulting from moving his family to New York are\nbelieved to have led to his resignation.\nHarvey will receive about $30,-\n000 for the 1962-63 campaign.\nlan challenger Gretel start a\nweek later, Sept. 15. Victory\nand the cup, go to the first boat\nto win four races.\nThe big blue sloop is in the\nhands of shipyard workers.\nSails have been taken off and\nsent back to the sailmakers to\nbe inspected, reshaped and re-\ncut where needed.\nThe inside of the sloop has\nbeen flushed with fresh water\nto remove salt from spray and\nwet sails. Portable heaters will\nbe installed to dry out the hull\nand remove excess weight.\nWhile the American crew\ntemporarily disbanded, Gretel\ncontinued test - racing against\nher trial horse, Vim.\nThe white sloop spent Monday trying out a new mainsail\nand Genoa jib from the sail loft\nof Ted Hood of Marblehead,\nMass. Hood was the skipper-\ndesigner of Nefertiti, defeated\nin the final trials by Weatherly.\nGretel already has some\nHood sails. In fact Hood has\nfitted out the 12-metre sloops\nimpartially. There were Hood\nsails on Weatherly when she\ndefeated Nefertiti.\nVANCOUVER (CP) - B.C.\nLions of the Western Football\nConference met their limit of\n15 imports by cutting tackle\nJerry Beabout from the roster\nMonday. The Purdue University\ngraduate came to Vancouver\nlast year from Ottawa Rough\nRiders.\nTalented Players in\nLloyd Frame Game\nStarting lineups in tonight's\nMemorial Game for the late\nLloyd Frame were announced\nTuesday.\nThe city band will participate\nduring the game at the Civic Recreation Grounds. Proceeds will\ngo towards a Lloyd Frame Memorial Trophy.\nForming the teams will be\nQueens Hotel and Nelson Hotel,\ntops in A division, play-for-fun\nsoftball, bolstered by other players who will form the nucleus\nof an all-star team expected to\nrepresent Nelson next season in\nsenior B playdowns.\nPlayers from B-T-N (Blewett,\nTaghum, Nelson) will bolster the\nNelson Hotel squad and Savoy\nplayers the Queens  team.  Also\nthe Outlaws ball club, Neil McClenaghan of South Slocan, and\nMarsh Severyn, former pro ball\nplayer.\nThe starting lineups:\nQueens\u2014D. Ball, p: T. Marshall, 2b, F. Hufty, rf, G. Adams, ss, D. MacKenzie c, A.\nDawson 3b, J. Austin, lb, B. Cat\nton, cf, G. Zabawa If, G, Towey,\nB. Mayer. N. McClenaghan, L.\nHufty, G. Benwell, B. Taylor and\nM. Severyn.\nNelson \u2014 D. Segur, 3b, S. Ben-\nedetti If; H. Sather c, G. Burdette 2b, E. Malinowsky. p, F\nChambers lb, G. Cahill, rf, W.\nChernenko, ss, A. Swetlikoe cf,\nM. Renwick p, M. Vecchio, coach,\nP. Gergely, coach; B. Voykin, p.\non the latter will be Les Hufty of and Ed Randall, p.\nIt was last summer\nWhen it all Started ... the family decided to\nconvert to Natural Gas, and the money saved during\nthe winter months helped them enjoy a good holiday\nthe following year. Also, because the change-over was\ncompleted during the summer, they found the service\ngood ... and fast.\nWhy don't you too look ahead and convert to Natural\nGas now ... you'll discover that\nNatural Gas will heat your home\nand provide- hot water for less\nmoney than any other fuel. t\/71* \"\"NATURAL GAS\nCONTACT YOUR LOCAL FRIENDLY APPLIANCE DEALER TODAY!\n 0\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, WED. AUG. 29, 1962\nA>Am?i\nVANCOUVER STOCKS\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nBelh Cop 2.05\nBralorne 6.V0\nCanam .12\nCanusa .08\nCariboo Gold 1.05\nCowichan Cop .57\nCraig 18.50\nGiant Mascot .71\nGranduc 2.91\nHighland Bell 2.43\nKamloops .07\nKoot. B. M. .36\nMt. Washington 1.10\nNational Ex .05\nPend Oreille 1.85\nQuatsino .10\nReeves MacDonald 1.30\nSheep Creek 1.20\nSherritt Gordon 3.30\nSilbak Premier .40\nSilver Ridge .03\nSilver Standard .22\nSkeena .13\nSunshine Lardeau .08\nTorwest .26\nWestern Exploration .1414\nWestern Mines 2.19\nOILS\nCalgary & Edmonton 27.50\nCharter .94\nPacific Pete 14.00\nPeace River Gas .10\nRoyal Can .05\nVantor .10\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlberta Distillers 2.25\nAlberta Distillers Vt 1.85\nB C Forests 12.50\nB C Power 16.50\nB C Telephone 50.00\nBurrard Mort 7.00\nCanadian Collieries 5.87%\nCrestbrook Pfd. 25.50\nCrown Zeller (Can) 21.00\nInt Brew B 5.00\nfnland Nat Gas\nMacM & Powell River\nTrans Mtn\nWestminster Paper\nUNLISTED\nAlta Gas Trunk\nTrans Canada Com\nTrans Mountain Unit\nWest Coast Vt\n(No Banks)\nFUNDS\nAll Can. Com.\nAll Can. Div.\nAmerican Growth\nCan. Inv. Fund\nCommonwealth Int.\nDiversified B\nFirst Oil and Gas\nGrouped Income\nInvestors Growth\nInvestors Mutual\nLeverage\nMutual Accum.\nMutual Bond\nMutual Inc.\nTrans Canada \"C\"\nUnited Ace. Funds\n4.70\n17.75\n13.75\n27.00\n26.00\n19.75\n13.75\n14.75\n.18 8.97\n.88 6.44\n.88 8.59\n59 10.52\n25 9.04\n3.\n4.\n3.\n6.\n11.69   12.70\n6.\n3\n90 4.30\n18 4.57\n.34 3.65\n.35 6.91\nStorm Blows Up\nIn Pacific\nTOKYO (AP)-A new tropical\nstorm, Wanda, blew up Tuesday\n800 miles east of Manila.\nThe Japanese meteorological\nagency said Wanda packed\nwinds up to 44.6 miles an hour\nand headed north - northwest,\neast of Luzon in the Philippines.\nTyphoon Vera, downgraded to\na tropical storm with maximum\nwinds of 36 miles an hour swept\nJapan's southernmost island of\nKyushu early today. No damage or casualties were reported.\nON THE AIR\nPACIFIC DAYLIGHT TIME\nCKLN PROGRAMS 1390 ON THE DIAL\nWEDNESDAY, AUGUST 29, 1962\n59-Sign On\n00\u2014News\n05\u2014Farm Fare\n:15-Wake-Up Time\n30\u2014News\n35-Direct Report\n45-Chapel in The Sky\n00-News\n05\u2014Wake Up Time Continues\n25\u2014Sports News\n30\u2014News\n35\u2014Wake Up Time Continues\n00\u2014News\n10\u2014Sports News\n15\u2014Wake-Up Time Continues\n30\u2014Opening Markets\n: 45\u2014The Archers\n: 00\u2014News\n:05\u2014Alan's A.M. Spot\n:58-D.O.O.T.S.\n: 00\u2014News\n: 05\u2014Birthday Book\n:15-The River Bandit\n30\u2014Pacific Express\n00\u2014News\n05\u2014Morning Melodies\n11:45\u2014Men ^nd Mandolins\n12:00\u2014Let's Sing Along\n12:15\u2014Sports News\n12:25-News\n12:31-B.C. Farm Eroadcast\nI2:55-Noon Markets\n1:00\u2014Duncan's Diary\n1:15\u2014Tommy Hunter Show\n1:45\u2014Sacred Heart Program\n2:00\u2014Holiday Time\n5:45\u2014Closing Markets\n5:50\u2014Holiday Time Continues\n6:00\u2014National News\n6:10\u2014Sports News\n6:15-Our Date With History\n6:30-Cafe La Ronde\n7:00\u2014News\n7:30-lnlroduction to Wed. Night\n7:40-CBC Wednesday Night\n10:00-News\n10:15-CBC Wednesday Night\nContinues\n11:00\u2014News and Weather\n11:01\u2014Chapel In The Sky\n11:16\u2014Sign Off\nCBC PROGRAMS\nPACIFIC\nTHURSDAY,\n6:0O-Morning Show\n9:00\u2014BBC News\n9:15\u2014Morning Concert\n9:59-D.O.O.T.S.\n10:00\u2014Morning Visit\n10:10\u2014For Consumers\n10:15-The River Bandit\n10:30\u2014Pacific Express\nU:00-Gospel Time\n11:15\u2014Off The Record\n11:45\u2014The Maurice Pearson\nShow\n12:00\u2014Four Gentlemen\n12:15\u2014News, Weather\n12:25\u2014Showcase\n12:30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n12:55-Five to One\n1:00\u2014Curiosity Shop\n1:15\u2014The Common Touch\n1:30\u2014What's New\n1:45\u2014Program Resume\nDAYLIGHT TIME\nAUGUST 30,  1962\n2:00\u2014Pot Pourri\n2:30\u2014News and Trans-Canada\nMatinee\n3:30\u2014Vancouver Theatre\n4:00\u2014Music I Like\n4:27\u2014Tempo\n6:15-The Troubadors\n6:30\u2014Can't Help Singing\n7:00\u2014News and Reports\n7:20\u2014Speaking Personally\n7:30\u2014Satin and Snuff\n8:00\u2014Soundings\n8:30\u2014Worth Repeating\n9:00\u2014Choral Music\n9:30\u2014Jazz Workshop\n10:00\u2014 News\n10:15\u2014Talk\n10:30\u2014Eventide\n11:57\u2014News\n11:00\u2014Sound About\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\nPACIFIC DAYLIGHT TIME\nKREM-TV - Channel 2\n7:00 World of Tomorrow\n7:30 Howard K. Smith *\n8:00 Focus On America *\n8:30 Top Cat *\n9:00 Hawaiian Eye *\n10:00 Naked City *\n11:00 Nighlbeat\n11:15 Movie\nKXLYTV - Channel 4\n6:30 Men Into Space\n7:00 Wanted Dead or Alive\n7:30 Alvin Show *\n8:00 Window on Main Street '\n8:30 Checkmate *\n9:30 Dick Van Dyke *\n10:00 Circle Theater\n11:00 II o'clock News\n11:30 Tonight Show *\nKHQ-TV - Channel 6\n7:00 Death Valley Days\n7:30 Wagon Train *\n8:30 The Rebel *\n9:00 Mystery Theatre *\n10:00 King of Diamonds\n10:30 David Brinkley's Journal\n11:00 News and Weather\n11:30 Lale Movie:\n\"My Sister Eileen\"\nCBC-TV \u2014 Nelson, Channel 9; Trail, Channel 11\nROBERTSON - HILLIARD - CATTELL REALTY CO. LTD.\n456 Ward St. Nelson Phone 352-7252 for Information\n\"INSURANCE FOR EVERY PERSONAL\nAND BUSINESS NEED\"\n3:15 News\n3:30 Intermezzo\n4:00 Playground\n4:30 Vacation Time\n5:30 The Living Sea\n6:00 Playbill\n8:00 Dennis Tlie Menace\n8:30 Parade\n9:00 Mystery Theatre\n10:00 Sighlline\n10:30 Hancock's\n11:00 News\n11:14 Viewpoint\nCJLH-TV - Channel 7, Lethbridge\nMOUNTAIN STANDARD TIME\nTHURSDAY\n3: SO\n3:30\n4:00\n4:30\n5:30\n6:00\n6:30\nTest Pattern\nTravelogue\nThe Tea Zone\nVacation Time\nDick Tracy\nSports, Weather, News\nWestern Theatre:\n\"Canyon Passage\"\n8:00 Best of Tommy Ambrose\n8:30 My Three Sons\n9:00 Ghost Squad\n10:00 Naked City\n11:00 CBC News\n11:15 Champagne Theatre:\n\"The Four Poster\"\nStock Quotations\nThe Dally News does not hold Itself responsible In the event\nol an error tn the following lists.\nTORONTO STOCKS\nMINES\n(Closing Prices)\nAdvocate\n6.30\nAgnico\n.73\nAnacon Lead\n.32\nAumaque\n.05\nAunor\n3.90\nBarnat\n1.16\nBase Metals\n.06\nBrunswick\n3.05\nBuffalo Ank\n1.65\nCampbell C\n3.95\nCassiar\n11.50\nCentral Patricia\n1.12\nChimo\n.46\nCoch Will\n4.70\nCoin Lake\n.23\nCons. Discovery\n1.15\nC G Arrow\n.55\nCons Halliwell\n.35\nConwest\n4.25\nCopper Corp.\n.IVri\nCraig\n10.50\nD'Aragon\n.16,2\nDenison\n10.75\nEast Malartic\n2.53\nEast Sullivan\n1.78\nElder\n1.15\nFrobisher\n.1414\nGeco\n24.75\nGiant Yel.\n11.75\nGunnar Gold\n8.80\nHarminerals\n.1515\nHeadway   \u25a0\n.36\nHollinger\n22.00\nHudson Bay\n50.75\nHydra Ex\n.38\nIron Bay\n.92\nJoliet Que.\n.23\nJonsmith\n.14\nR J Jowsey\n.30l2\nKenville\n.06\nKerr Addison\n7.70\nLabrador\n24.00\nLeitch\n1.50\nLittle Long Lac\n1.87\nLorado\n1.00\nMacDonald\n.21\nMcLeod\n1.15\nMadsen\n2.28\nMalartic\n.90\nVlarboy\n.13\nVlaritime Mining\n.53\nMcKenzie\n.35\nMining Corp\n13.3714\nMulti Mins.\n.23\nMurray\n.90\nVew Hosco\n.80\nNorgold\n.0514\nNorpax\n.12\nOpemiska\n4.95\nPickle Crow\n.68\nPlacer\n25.6215\nPreston\n0.20\nQuebec Metallurgical\n..17\nQuemont\n10.25\nRadiore\n.43\nRayrock\n.85\nRio Algom\n9.55\nSan Antonio\n.56\nSherritt Gordon\n3.40\nSiscoe\n2.00\nSteep Rock\n5.35\nSullivan Con\n1.53\nTaurcanis\n.41\nTeck Hughes\n1.57\nThomp-Lund\n.59\nUnited Keno\n9.90\nUpper Canada\n1.75\nViolamac\n1.55\nWright Hargreaves\n.99\nYale\n.09'2\nYellowknife Bear\n1.05\nYoung Gold\n.16\nOILS\nCanadian Delhi\n2.85\nCanadian Devonian\n3.60\nCdn Highcrest\n.19\nrlome A\n11.75\nMidcon\n.23l2\nNat. Pete\n2.72\nOkalta\nPacific Pete\nPetrol\nPlace\nProv Gas\nStanweli Oil\nTriad\nUnited Oils\nYank Canuck\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi\nAlgoma Steel\nAluminum\nAnalog\nAtlas St.\nB.A. Oil\nBathurst Power\nBeatty Bros.\nBell Telephone\nB.C. Forest\nB.C. Packers A\nB.C. Power A\nBurns A\nCan. Cement\nCan. Curtis Wright\nCan. Packers B\nCanadian Breweries\nCanadian Canenrs\nCanadian Celanese\nCan Chem Co\nCan Oil\nCanadian Pacific Rly\nColumbia Cellulose\nCons Mining & Smelting\nCons Gas\nDist. Seagram\nDom Stores\nDom Tar & Chemical\nDom Textiles\nEddy Match\nEddy Paper\nFalconbridge\nFamous Players\nFanny Farmer\nFord Can\nGatineau\nGatineau 5% pfd\nGen. Steel Wares\nGoodyear\nImperial Oil\nImp. Tobacco\nInd.  Ace.\nInt. Nickel\nLoblaw A\nLoblaw B\nMassey Ferguson\nMetro Com\nMetro pfd\nMolson  Brewery\nMont. Loco\nMoore Corp.\nNoranda\nPage Hershey\nPower Corp\nRuss. Industries\nShawinigan\nSicks Brew.\nSimpsons A\nSoutham\nStandard Paving\nSteel of Canada\nTexaco\nUnion Gas of Can\nWeston George\nWoodwards A\n.11\n14.00\n.51\n.67\n1.42\n.26\n1.30\n1.40\n.06\n46\n43\n25 Ml\n1'.2\n33 Vi\n30 Va\n50\n10\n51\n12%\n14%\n16%\n8\n26'5\n91\n51W\n10\n12%\n30%\n7%\n37\n22%\n3.90\n20.3714\n17!4\n43\n13\n18\n1714\n2914\n25'2\n50H\n17\n31\n152\n321-4\n100\n9%\n142\n43\nM'-j\n23V)\n66 Vi\n11\nVi\n21\n25\n13\n48\n29%\nI8Vi\n57'ia\n16%\n23 Va\n34\n25' =\n30 Vi\nB'-j\n175s\n47\n18%\nIf.',,\n14\nAUTHORIZE   TRIAL\nVANCOUVER (CP) - The\nprovincial attorney - generail's\ndepartment has authorize the\ncrown to proceed against suspected bank bandit Jean LaPointe, 39, on the basis of a\njudge and jury trial. A preliminary hearing now is expected\nfor LaPointe and Jean Paul\nJacques, 41, charged jointly\nwith the $19,000 holdup July 31\nof a Royal Bank of Canada\nbranch in Vancouver.\nDAILY  CROSSWORD\n3. Birth an.\nnounce-\nment:\n\"It's \u2014\naa\ni. Cover, as\nthe inside\n5. Mettdow\n6. Gardener's\ntool\nAmendment\n(20th)\n8. Napoleon's\nisle\n9. Para\n10. Sailors:\ncolloq.\n16. Sick\n17. Killer whale\n20. Female\ndeer\n21. Internally\n23. Spawn\nof fish\n24. Sounding,\n\u25a0water\n25. Scottish-\nGaelic\n27.Utter\n29.Little\nchild\n31. Garden\ninvaders\nB\nMjG\nvBc\n_ A]S S\nA,\n-  1  R\ne|l\n5VEE\nB\n* L .V\nV EjN T\nHtaao son\np\nP E\n*\n1\nDl   B\nEEPY\nG\nJOB\nP f?E E\nr\nSH   BBHH     \u25a0\n@a0  HBlHH\nT\nMED\nIGOR\nH\n<vB 1\ni-Ia.\nN3LE\nE\nMOT\ne|s\nESTS\nYeiterday'B Amwer\n35. Subtle\nemanation\n36. Father:\ncolloq.\n37. So be It\n39. Work\n33. Fasten with 40. Feminine\nstitches noun\n18. Girl's name  34. Coagulate\nsuffix\n(Programs subject to change by stations without notice.)\nACROSS\n1. \"Ride for\n  aa\n6. Slumbered\n11. Boy's\nnickname\n12. A chaffy\nbract:\nbot.\n13. Swedish\ncoin\n14. A fossil\nresin\n15. Organ of\nsight\n16. Perfect\nmodels\n17. Cry of pain\n18. Ran away\n19. Branching\nfrom a\ncenter\n22. Impel\n26. Close\ncomptinlon\n27. Polish\nthoroughly\n28.Afresh\n29. They accept\nwagers\n30. Absent\n32. Earth\ngoddess\n33. Frightened\n36. Companion\n38. Evade\n39. Boy's\nnickname\n41. The earth\n42. Unfolds\n43. Remains\n41. Beats\nDOWN\n1. Noah's\nboat\n2. To alert\nbeforehand a.19\nDAILY CRYaPXOQDOTE \u2014 Here's how to work lt:\nAXTDIa B A AX R\nIs    LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is used\nfor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apos-\ntrophles, the length and formation of the words are all hints.\nEach day the code letters are different.\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nDI   BRFFROXVKBI    KOJ    BYIIXUON\nKOJ    ZES    KQQKUO    KW     QWUONA.-\nDIKS FKYBWKUA\nYestei-ilay's Cryptoipiote: GOD, THAT ALL-POWERFUIj\nCREATOR OF NATURE AND ARCHITECT OF THE WORLD.\n\u2014 QUMTILIAN\nO 1962) lihaE Futures Eyndicnto, Inc.\n1\n2\ni\n4-\nS\nl\nto\n7\n8\n9\n10\nII\nl\n12.\n11\n'^\n14\n%\nII\nVA\n\\b\n17\n%\n\"A\n'?\nV\/A\n^t\nY\/a\n19\nao\n11\n^A\n11\n13\n54\nxs\nito\n^\/A\n27\nl\u00bb\n^AA\n19\nV\/f\nVA\n%\n3o\n31\n^\nU\n31\n33\n34\n35\"\nVA\n3b\n37\n%\n38\nl\n3.9\n4o\n41\ni\n41\n43\nVA\n44\nWin $105,000 in\nSoccer Pools\nLONDON (AP) - Two old-\nage pensioners won &5O.OO0\n($150,000) today on a two-penny\nbet in the British soccer pools.\nEllis, Joines, 75, and his wife\nMabel, 70, of Bristol, correctly\npicked eight tie games in last\nSaturday's contests.\nfiy. AZouUul QJksuil&Ji\nLOVABLE DOLL\nA pair of socks \u2014 a few scraps\nof fabric, make these cutest paja-\nma dolls.\nDolls are made of a man's size\n12 socks. Pattern 736: pattern for\n12-inch doll, pajama, nightgown,\npattern of doll faces: directions.\nTHIRTY-FIVE CENTS in coin\n(no stamps, please) lor this pal-\ntern, Nelson Daily News Pattern\nDept., 60 Front St. West, Toronto.\nOnt. Pl'int plainly PATTERN\nNUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS.\nNEWEST RAGE - SMOCKED\naccessories plus 208 exciling\nneedlecraft designs in our new\n1963 Needlecraft Catalog \u2014 jusl\nout! Fashions, furnishings to crochet, knit, sew, weave, embroider, quilt. Plus free pattern.\nScud 25c now!\n(Dama, Itp. With,\nntwiuvt Wfajdbt\nPrinted Pattern\n9097 sizes 10-20\nWARDROBE WONDER\nOne day of easy sewing \u2014 pres-\nto! you have a new jumper that\ndoubles as dress for busy season\nahead. Blouse is a smart fashion\n\"extra.\"\nPrinted Pattern 9097: Misses\nSizes 10, 12, 14, 16, 18. 20. Size 16\njumper requires 3?8 yards 39\ninch fabric.\nFIFTY CENTS (50c) in coin',\n'no stamps, please) for this pal-\ntern. Print plainly SIZE, NAME,\nADDRESS and STYLE NUMBER.\nSend your order to Marian Martin, NDN, 60 Front Street Wesl.\nToronto. Print plainly PATTERN\nNUMBER and your- NAME and\nADDRESS.\nFIRST TIME EVER! Glamorous movie star's wardrobe plus\n110 exciting styles to sew in our\nnew Fall-Winter Pattern Catalog.\nSend 35c.\n  ! ! ! \u25a0 ,\nSol\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., AUG. 29, 1962\u20149\nBUV SELtTRADE RENT HIRE HELP\nHELP WANTED\nRETIRED, SEMI-RETIRED RE-\nsponsible person wishing to supplement their income. This is a\nhighly respected position and\nrequires a few hours' time per\nday. Applicants must have impeccable background, and be\nbondable. Box 312, Nelson Daily\nNews.\niVANTED EXPERIENCED PER-\nson or couple to operate hotel\ndining room. Small investment\nrequired. Illness forces present\noperator to leave. Box 373,\nDaily News.\nA YOUNG MARRIED MAN AS\ndriver - salesman. References.\nKoolenay Laundry and Dry\nCleaners.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nYOUR N. SHORE FIX-IT MAN.\nFor repairs to your washing\nmachine, vacuum cleaners,\npower mowers and toasters. \u2014\nReasonable rates. Ph. 352-34112.\nPAT'S CLEANING SERVICE\nfor all your cleaning jobs. Satisfaction guaranteed. Free estimates. Phone 352-7151.\nCLEAN RETMBLE~lTOMAN\nwill wash towels (or beauty parlors and barber shops. Phone\n352-5926.\nH\nI\nA\nN\nD\nL\nO\nI\ns\n1\n!\nj\n*\nt       N\nHELP WANTED\u2014FEMALE\nAre you\nQUALIFIED?\nPleasant?\nNeat? ?\nOver 21?\nDo you .... Have a car?\nHave free time?\nff so ..... , You may qualify as\nan Avon Represen-\nlive.\nApply to: Mrs. E. C. Hearn, Avon   j-^ v        1\nManager, Apt. 15, The Glenview,   VjOECfete    Ltd,\nTrail, B.C.\nFOR SALE\nMISCELLANEOUS\nux\nNELSON SEPTIC TANK SER-\nvice. Reasonable, dependable\nservice.  Phone 352-3663.\nCESSPOOL, SEPTIC TANK\ncleaning. Reliable services. 24\nhour call. Ph. 352-6440.\nROOM AND BOARD\nWANTED -ROOM AND BOARD\nin Nelson for 17 year old girl\nwishing completion of high\nschool. In return will do housework, etc. Ph. 352-2680.\nBOARD AND ROOM FOR 1 OR\n2 young gentlemen. Ph. Mrs.\nTruscolt, 352-56511.\nCARN $23 WEEKLY plus a\nFREE WARDROBE in your\nSpare Time. Just show Fashion\nFrocks lo friends. No investment, canvassing or experience\nnecessary. Write; Norlh American Fashion Frocks, Ltd.,\n3425 Industrial Blvd., Dept.\nK-1699, Montreal 39, Que.\nHOUSEKEEPER TO LIVE IN\nat Edgewood. Care for teacher's 2 children. Apply Nelson\nEmployment Office.\nBABYSITTER WANTED WEEK-\ndays only. Phone 352-5144 after\n6 p.m.\nROOM    AND    BOARD   AVAIL-\nable. Pb. 352-6352.\nROOM~AND BOARD, 1018 STAN-\nley St. Ph. 332-6051.\nCASHIER, SOME TYPING NE-\ncessary. Apply Civic Theatre\nevenings.\nWANTED-ELDERLY LADY TO\nbaby-sit. Apply Box 307, Nelson\nDaily News.\nE^ERIENCICD~lWfsEKEEP-\ner wanted. Phone 352-3453.\nBUSINESS   &   PROFESSIONAL\nDIRECTORY\nA handy alphabetical guide to goods and services\navailable in Nelson.\nAsphalt Paving\nNelson Asphalt Paving Ltd.\nPhone 352-7621 - Nelson, B.C.\nAutomobile  Dealers\nEngineers\nand Surveyors\nRAY G. JOHNSON\nB.C Land Surveyor and Engineer\n369 Baker St. Nelson. Ph. 352-7117\nPHONE 352-3828\nCONCRETE\nFor ALL Building Purposes\nSAND and GRAVEL\nNEED\nFLOOR COVERINGS?\nSee Simpsons-Sears. Low, low\ncatalogue prices. Fast shipping\nservice from Vancouver. Complete selections of samples at\n7 ACRE FARM, 120 BASS PIANO\naccordion; 1 h.p. electric motor; 1 Beaver bench saw. All as\nnew. 2 bedroom suites. Carpenter and mechanics tools. Many\nother items. Box 527, Castlegar.\nSIDES OF CHOICE GRAIN FED\nbeef, cut and wrapped 49c lb.\nSides of grain fed pork, 37c Ib.\nBacon and hams. Newdan\nFarms, Creston, Ph. EL 6-9901.\nFree weekly delivery.\nFOR SALE, 5-YR.-OLD INGLIS\nwringer washer with pump,\nvery good condition. Ph. 352-\n5907.\n2 WINTER COATS AND 1\nshort, 3 uniforms, 2 dresses,\nhousecoat. Phone 352-6127.\n1 'OIL\" HEATER, 2 HOLSTIEN\ncows, 3 pinto ponies lor children. Box 234 Trail. Ph. 364-2162.\nBEACON MOTORS LTD.\nPonliac \u2014 Buick\nVauxhall - GMC\n701 Baker St.       Phone 352-6641\n24 Hour Wrecker Service\nFront End Aligning \u2014\nAutomatic Service\nBody and Paint Shop\nBILLS' MOTOR-IN LTa\n(Sludebaker-Larki\n213 Baker St. Phone 352-3231\nRENAULT SALES & SERVICE\nat Frank's Auto\nPhone 352-6411 295 Baker St.\nGarages\nNORTH SHORE SERVICE\n(Standard-Triumph >\nOpen 7 a.m.-11 p.m.\nAcross Lake Phone 352-2929\nPARKVIEW MOTORS LTD.\n(Rambler \u2014 Volkswagen)\n323 Nelson Ave.     Phone 352-5355\nAustin - Morris - MGA - Wolseley\nCars and Parts Depot\nSTAR AUTO SERVICE LTD,\nYmir Rd.     Ph. 352-7421    Nelson\nSHELL SERVICENTRE\nPhone 352-2014\nWheel Aligning and Balancing\n301 Nelson Avenue \u2014 Nelson\nSMITH - CORONA PORTABLE\ntypewriter for sale. Like new.\nPhone 352-2751 after 5:30 p.m.\n.MINING EQUIPMENT-> O R\nsale or rent. Ph. 367-5671, Fruitvale,\nELECTRIC BENCH SAW, 35\nMM camera, draperies and\ncurtains, etc. Ph. 352-2977.\nUpper Fairview Motors Ltd.\nCor. 7th at Davies    Ph. 352-2525\nEXTRA SPECIAL - TEEN-\nagers' and women's shoes on\nsale at $3.99. R. Andrew _ Co.\nInsurance\nAllstate Insurance Agent\nSimpsons-Sears, Trail Ph. 364-1144\nNelson: Saturdays. Ph. 352-5531\nJewellers\nCUTLER'S JEWELLERY\nFor fine watches and repairs\nPhone 352-9012      511 Baker St.\nBuilding Supplies\nBEE BUILDING SUPPLY LTD.\nEverything in waterproof plywood\n301 Baker St. Phone 352-31351\nBURNS LUMBER CO. LTD.\n602 Baker St. Phone 352-6661\nNovelty Shops\nSOUVENIRS! NOVELTIES!\nThe Cutest - HOBBY SHOP\nPaint Contractors\nF. II. DOYLE\nPaint Contractor\nPhone 352-7311 - Nelson\nCOLUMBIA TRADING CO.\n801 Front St. Phone 352-5571\nZEEBEN LUMBER CO.\nYmir, B.C. Phone Salmo 357-9375\nPrinting\nCleaning Service\nWe Clean Offices, Stores, Houses\nFree Estimates.\n. DUTCH CLEANING SERVICE\nPhone 352-0323\nContractors\nFor a Quality Custom House\nPhone 352-5915\nMAPLE LEAF CONSTRUCTION\nEngineers\nand Surveyors\nBOYD C. AFFLECK\nB.C.L.S., P. Eng.\n218 Gore Street. Nelson\nPhone 352-3341\nALEX CHEVELDAVE\nB.C Land Surveyor _ 33 Pine St\nPh 365-5342 - Castlegar, B.C.\nBAERG & CAMPBELL\n873 Baker- Nelson -Ph. 352-7434\nBox 653 - Creston - EL 6-4224\n909 Baker-Cranbrook-JU 6-3622\nNELSON   DAILY   NEWS\nPrinters \u2014 Lithographers\nColor Printing\nPhone 352-3552\nRadio & TV Service\nVIDEO ELECTRONICS\n405 Hall St. - Phone 352-3355\nSaws Sharpened\nHipperson Hardware Co. Ltd.\n395 Baker St.       Nelson\nSporting Goods\nFred Whiteley's Sport Shop\n8 Baker Street    Phone 352-7741\nTopsoil,   Gravel\nLarry's Topsoil, Sand and Gravel\n9th and Davies. Ph. 352-2355 days\nor S52-7576 evenings.\nTV and Appliances\nLiberty Appliance Sales\n324 Hall St. - Phone 352-2910\nGRADE \"A\" BEEF, 100 TO 200\nlb. side 40c; 201 to 250 lb. side\n37c. Phone 352-6866.\nLARGE UPRIGHT, DEEP\nfreeze, $150. Ph. 352-7774 or\n\u25a06822.\n9 SPEED RACING BIKE. GOOD\ncondilion, $35; girls bike, $15.\nPhone 352-2854 after 6 p.m.\nPORK   FOR   SALE,   HALF  OR\nwhole. Phone 352-2355.\nMACHINERY\nMORE\nGOOD   USED\nAT  BARGAIN  PRICES\nAll Guaranteed\nALSO\nSALE    PRICES\nOn 1962 Disconlimied\nNew McCullochs\nModels 142 - 152 - 172\nCall. Write or Phone\nMAC'S\nWelding  _  Equipment Co\nLtd.\n514 Railway St.     Ph. 352-5301\nSEWING MACHINES\nSINGER FALL\nSewing Machines\nVacuum Cleaners\nA new Sparton\nZig-Zag Machine\nMade by Singer, backed by\nSinger. \u2014 Reduced $20.00\nNow only $119.50\nFull Power\nVacuum Cleaner\nReduced to Only\n$49.50\nSinger Rug Cleaning\nFloor Polisher\nReduced to $34.88\nBig, big reductions on floor\nmodels,  demonstrators  and\ntrade-in  machines.\n$20 - $30 - $40 and $50\nOFF\nMANY ONE OF A KIND . . .\nMake Your Selection Early!\nSINGER\nSEWING MACHINE\nCO.\n339 Baker St.      Phone 352-3631\n1960 INTERNATIONAL 300 UTI-\nlity tractor equipped with back-\nhoe and front end loader. A-l\ncondtion. Priced for quick sale.\nPhone 365-5938 Castlegar, Jesse\nHeifer.\n1958 TD 14 EQUIPPED WITH\nwinch, dozer, canopy, top condition. A. Maxinuk, New Denver, B.C.\nUSED JAMMERS, GRADERS,\ncats, trucks. Stored in Nelson.\nVancouver Equipment Corp.\nPhone Scotty at 352-6488.\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES\nK 9 REG. BOARDING KEN-\noels. Fruitvale Highway. G. A.\nCrawford prop. Ph. 367-2483.\nPhone 352-3552 for Classified\nBEFORE YOU BUY A SEWING\nmachine see Ihe new Kenmore\nPush-Button Twin-Needle Automatic Zig-Zag at Simpsons-\nSears. Only $99.88. Backed by\nour famous 20 year guarantee.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS,   ETC.,   FOR   SALE\nWHY PAY~RENT? LOOK, THIS\nduplex will help pay for itself\nwhile living in your own 2-3 bedroom lower quarters. On a\nlarge view private corner lot.\nTry $1,000 down. William Kaly-\nnhik Agencies. Phone 352-2425.\nFOlT.sTLE~ORTRAr7E.TR~d6M\nhouse on 100x50 lot in Kinnaird,\nfor liveable home near Slocan\nLake. What offers? I. Johnson,\nBox 8, Kinnaird, B.C.\nRENTALS\nAIR CONDITIONED\nLOW RATES\nHOUSEKEEPING AND SLEEP-\ning   room,   weekly,   monthly\nrates.  Dishes,  linen  supplied,\nparking. Allen Hotel, 171 Baker\nAVAILABLE OCT. 1ST, SMALL\nfurnished cabin suitable working couple. Gas heat and cooking, frig., washer, etc. Good\nlocation. $45 month. Ph. 352-\n2437.\nSMALL 1 BDRM. HOUSE N.\nShore, 2ti miles from bridge.\nWired for range, winterized.\nRent $40 per month. Adults'\nonly. Phone 352-7717.\nRENT A SINGER SEWING MA-\nchine, delivered and returned\n$2 per week; $5 per month.\nSinger Sewing Centre, Phone\n352-3631.\nFURN. OR UNFURN. 3 ROOM\napt. Heat and water supplied.\nVi block off Baker, 414 Falls St.\nPhone 352-6912 or 352-5705.\n2 RM. STE. GROUND FLOOR\nNewly renovated. Gas, light\nand water supplied. Apply 140\nBaker Street.\n1 FURN, LIGHT HOUSKEEP-\ning room. Private entrance,\nvery close in. Ph. 352-2977.\nLARGE HOME NEAR S. NEL\nson schools. $75 month. Avail\nable  Sept.   15th.  Ph.  352-5401\n3 B.R. HOUSE, NO YARD, 220\nwiring, gas heat. Reasonable\nrent. Ph. 352-6554.\n2 BDRM. COTTAGE WITH\nbeach access at 6 Mile. Ph.\n352-5695.\nUNFURNISHED ONE BDRM.\nsuite, Bevanne ApLs. Phone\n352-6538.\n6 RM. APT. PERMANENT. AD-\nulls only. Box 8615, Nelson\nDaily News.\nSMALL N.S. COTTAGE. PER\nmanent. Adults only. Box 8912,\nDaily News.\nAUTOMOTIVE,   BICYCLES\nMOTORCYCLES\nCOTTONWOOD W R E C K A GE\nwrecking '53 Consul, '52 Chev.\npickup, '55 Ford pickup, '53\nZephyr, Plymouth, Fords,\nChevs., Pontiacs, Morris Oxfords, Va ton Fargo, 15\" wheels\nfor Ford, Chev. and Dodge.\nGood motors, 270 G.M.C, '57\nDodge V-8, '49-'53 Ford, '53\nZephyr, '52 Pontiac, '52 Chev,\nPhone 352-5815, Box 382, 24\nYmir Road.\nNEW CAR GUARANTEE - 90\ndays or 4000 miles. New pep for\nyour old car with an Allstate re-\nmanufactured engine. Guaranteed trade in allowance regardless of condition. No crate deposit needed. Fast shipping service from factory. Priced as\nlow as $11.00 monthly. Simpsons-Sears Limited, 556 Baker\nSt., Nelson, Phone 352-5531.\n2 - 1961 TRIUMPH HERALD SE-\ndans. 2-1950 Chevs. 1953 Austin.\nNorth Shore Service. Phone\n352.2929.\n'60 K ARM ANN - GHIA, LOW\nmileage, like new, two-tone. Ph.\n352-3511 local 03, 9 to 5 p.m.\n'58 METEOR RIDEAU 500,\nautomatic, low milage. Phone\nFruitvale 367-9023.\n'59 CHEV. IMPALA 4 DOOR\nhardtop. M. Koodrin, Thrums,\nB.C.\n'55 METEOR SUNLINER CON-\nvertible, V-8 auto. Phone Ken\n352-2141.\n'52 FORD FOR SALE. CAN BE\nseen at Tiptop Service.\n'48   CHEV?   WHAT   OFFERS?\nPh. 352-7339.\n1961   VOLKSWAGEN   DELUXE\nPhone 352-6259.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES\nFOR SALE: 15 GRADE HOL-\nstein cows with or without 250\ngal. 7.P. bulk tank. Phone Andrews 7-7339 or write Eugene\nLong, Copeland, Idaho, U.S.A.\nGEESE, DUCKS, GUINEA\nfowl, collie pups. Box 309, Kaslo\n- 353-2289.\nCOW FOR SALE. APPLY FRED\nPostnikoff, Shoreacres.\nLEGHORN- LAYERS  $1.35  EAv\nPhone 352-3808.\nGOAT FOR SALE. MRS. P. AB-\nrosimoff, Crescent Valley.\nWANTED TO RENT\nWANTED TO RENT OR BUY.\n3 or 4 bdrm. house. Please\ncontact Ralph Johnston, 352-\n2211 or Cabin 24, Lakeside\nMotel.\t\nWOULD LIKE TO RENT FLOOR\nspace 50'xl00' with warehouse\n20'x50' preferably with parking.,\nwith option to buy. Apply Box\n298, Nelson Daily News.\nWANTED TO RENT. 3 BDrIl\nhouse in New Denver before\nSept 15. Apply Box 396 Nelson\nDaily News.\nBOATS AND ENGINES\nBOAT HOUSE FOR SALE. $40\ndown, bal. terms. Norm's Sport\nShop. Phone 352-2015.\n12 FT. BOAT WITH 5 H.P. MO-\ntor. $125. Phone 352-5278.\nLOST AND FPUND\nLOST~PAIR OF MEN'S GLAS-\nses last Saturday. Ph. 352-6979.\nCirculation Dept., Phone 352-3552\nPrice per single copy, 10 cents\nBy carrier per week, 35 cents\nSubscription rates:\nBy Mail in Canada\nin advance.\nOutside Nelson\nOne month   $ 1.25\nThree months      8.50\nSix months     6.50\nOne year     12.00\nBy Mail to United Kingdom or\nthe Commonwealth\nOne month   _  $ 1.75\nThree months      5.00\nSix months      9.00\nOne year     18.00\nBy Mail to U.S.A. or\nForeign Countries\nOne month   $ 2.50\nThree months      7.00\nSix months .   ,    13.00\nOne year    24.00\nWhere extra postage Is required,\nabove rates plus postage.\nFor delivery by carrier in Cranbrook,    phone   Mrs.   Stanley\nWillisson;\nIn Trail, Mrs. Syd Spooner;\nIn Kimberley, A. W. Brown.\nNOTED HUMANITARIAN\nClara   Barton,   an   American\nCivil War  nurse  who  died  in\n1912, was the first president of\nthe American Red Cross.\nBusiness News\nOTTAWA (CPl-The seasonally adjusted index of industrial\nproduction, with 1949 levels\nequalling 100, rose in June to\n186.6 per cent from 185.8 in\nMay, the Bureau of Statistics\nreported today.\nThe advance was due solely\nto a 1.1-per-cent boost in manufacturing The increase more\nthan offset declines in mining,\nelectric power and gas production. The June index stands 9.3\nper cent higher than al Ihe same\ntime last year.\nSteel ingot production\namounted to 145,044 tons in the\nweek ended Aug. 25, a decrease\nof two per cent from the preceding week's total of 147,969\ntons. Output in the corresponding week last year was 130,169\ntons.\nYachtmen Set\nFor Competition\nLISBON (AP) - Seventy-four\nStar-class yachtsmen from 19\ncountries were ready Tuesday for\ntlie delayed start of the world\nchampionships, to be run off\nduring the next five days in\nCascais Bay.\nOutstanding competitors Include the U.S. titleholder, William E. Buchan of Puget Sound,\nWash., Durante Belle of Portugal, winner of last week's European Star class title, and Russian Timir Pinegin, an Olympic champion.\nBonar Davis of Vancouver,\nB.C. is among the competitors.\nThe races were delayed one\nday awaiting (he arrival of one\nBrazilian and eight U.S. entrants who crossed from the\nUnited Stales with their boats\non a freighter.\nPRAISES   LABOR\nVICTORIA (CP) _ Labor's\nprogress continues to be outstanding, Labor Minister Peterson says in a message for Labor\nDay next Monday. \"We have\nreason to be gratified that in\nbeautiful B.C., there is 'genuine\npartnership between labor,\nmanagement and government,\"\nhe said.\nKarsh Marries\nChicago Woman\nNEW YORK' (CP) -\"World-\nrenowned photographer Yousuf\nKarsh of Ottawa.'and Estrellita\nNachbar of Chicago were married Tuesday by-Bishop Fulton\nSheen in St. Patrick's Roman\nCatholic Cathedral; \u25a0\nThe ceremony, attended by\nabout 50 friends of the couple\nfrom Canada aind the United\nStates, was performed in the\ncathedral's Chapel of Our Lady\nbehind the high main altar,-.\nBishop Sheen,- an intimate\nfriend of the photographer, said\nthe nuptial mass and bestowed\non the couple a papal blessing\nauthorized by Pope John.\nLondon Bargemen\nContinue Strike\nLONDON (Reuters) - Bargemen at the Port of London\nrefused to submit their pay\nclaim to arbitration and voted\nunanimously to' continue on\nstrike Tuesday,\nThe strike of the 5,000 watermen who unload ships in midstream started Moriday, and\ntoday 17 ships were; Unmanned\nand another 10 partly-manned.\nAt least .1,000 longshoremen\nwere sent home for lack of\nwork.\nThe bargemen went on strike\nfor higher overtime rates after\na 42-hour week\u2014a reduction, of\ntwo hours\u2014was introduced Monday. ;\nThe union executive today\nturned down arbitration and a\nmass meeting of 3,000 strikers\nsupported the decision by a\nunanimous show of hands.\nBABIES  ARE   HOME\nVANCOUVER (CP) - The\nBecker quads are all home.\nStacey Lyniv last of the four\nborn to Mrs. Ruth Becker to be\nreleased, joined her sister and\ntwo brothers Monday at the\nhome of the Vancouver lawyer\nand his wife. Things are\ncrowded,'but Alec Becker says\nthe family is;getting, along fine\nwith the he]p'''ojr. a nurse and\na girl to hatijlle .housework.\nTWO-BEDROOM APT. HEAT,\nfridge, stove. Adults. Ph. 352-\n2592 after 6 p.m.\n4 RM. APT. HEATED, $60 PER\nmo. Call after 5 at 120 Vernon\nSlreet.\nDUPLEX. 3 RMS. AND BATH,\nlarge basement, electric range,\n. heated. Ph. 352-7491.\nHEATED AND FURNISHED 3\nroom suite close to schools.\nPhone 352-5298.\nRM. HOUSE, LARGE-LOT,\nfruit trees, colse to schools, not\ntotally finished but very livable.\nReasonably priced. Apply 1105\nSelby SI.\nWILL SELL NEWLY REMOD-\nelled duplex or trade for 3 bedroom house. Apply Box 359,\nNelson Daily News.\n\u25a0SMLLCOM FORTABLif 3mi-)-\nroom home, 1 acre, garden,\nfruit trees. Ph. 352-7666.\n3 BDRM. HOUSE ON 5 ACRES\nat Shoreacres. $6500. Write\nPaul J. Fillipoff, Creslon. B.C.\n5|TaCRE l^M,\"wAfER,~Et\nectricity, buildings. D. Stewart,\nGen. Del., Passmore, B.C.\n5 ACRES LAND, HOUSE, BUIL-\ndings. Elec, irrigation. John\nVoyken, Passmore, B.C.\nWANTED\nMISCELLANEOUS\nWANTED. J. O. PATENAUDE\nCanadian Silver Dollars, paying $10 and up for each dollar.\nPlease advise dale and condilion of coin also quantity available. W. E. Agnew, 163 Oak-\nridge Drive, Scarborough, Ontario.\nUSED FURNITURE AND ANT1-\nques. Home Furniture Exchange.  Ph. 352-0531, 413 Hall\nCLEAN COTTON RAGS~NOT\nless than 18\" sq. 10c a lb. Nelson Daily News.\nWANTED FURNITURE, CUR\ntains, piano, laundry tubs. Fryer. Box 2, Bonnington Falls.\n6uTANDl^W~G\u2122s7N6RMrS\nSport Shop. Phone 352-2015.\nPERSONAL\nEND CONSTIPATION WITH EL-\nik's Botanical Herbs. A safe\nherbal medicine in powder\nform, no boiling, no sleeping-\nready to use. It insures complete bowel movement with\nease and comfort. Promotes\nnormal bowel action. Prices $2,\n$3. Order to-day from Elik's\nDrugs Store, Dept. NDN, Saskatoon, Sask. ,\n2 BDRM, STE. UNFURN. Except for gas heater. Suitable for\ncouple. Ph. 352-6148.\n2-ROOM FURNISHED SUITE -\n614 Victoria St., or ph. 352-2696.\nSELF   CONTAINED   UNFURN-\nished suite. Ph. 352-6307.\nCENTRAL   APARTMENT,\nrooms. Adults. Ph. 352-6024.\nSLEEPING   ROOMS. - PHONE\n352-2630.\n2 BEDROOM HOUSE, GAS FUR-\nnace. 404 Silica St.\n2 RM. STE. ALSO HSKPG. RM.\nApply 140 Baker or Ph. 352-3384.\nHOUSEKEEPING  ROOMS  FOR\nrent. 705 Victoria St., alley.\nSMALL APARTMENT. 810 Victoria St. Ph. 352-2902.\nSMALL CABIN FOR RENT. PH.\n352-6340.\nSUITE FOR RENT. PHONE 352-\n7195.\n.Buyin]\n-Rentinj\nYour Classified Want Ad on This Handy\nORDER FORM\n\u25a0HBaaaaiaaaaaaaMaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaw^K \u25a0\u2014\u2014\n, _M*__aaaaa\u2014\u2014  naaaaaaaaataaaaaap\u2014aaaaa\u2014                           aaaaaaaaaaaa\u2014\u2014 ^_M_B_M__aaaaaaaa\u00ab\n\u2014-\u2014\u00ab_*a_i\u2014*\u2014_\u2014\u2014 \u2014_a_\u00bb_\u2014aaaaaa\u2014a\u00aba\u2014 _**___  \u25a0_\u2014aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa\u00abaaaaaaaaaaa\u2014,\n ,  ________\nFIRST LINE\nSECOND LINE\nTHIRD LINE\nFOURTH UNI\nFIFTH LINE\nSIXTH LINE\nSEVENTH LIN!\nEIGHTH LINE\nNEW   SELF-CONTAINED   UN-\nfurn. suite. Phone 352-6307.\nHOUSEKEEPING   ROOM.   PRI-\nvate entrance .Ph. 352-2796.\n1   BEDROOM  HOUSE.   PHONE\n352-6366.\nTRAILERS\nRA LYN MOBILE HOME SALES\nRollohome and Safeway Dealers. New and used. Trades and\nterms. We specialize in parts.\nTrail, B.C.\nFULLY EQUIPPED 15-FT.\nhouse trailer. Sleeps 5. For rent\nby week or month. Telephone\ndays, 352-5130: nights, 352-6224.\nMUST SELL 45x10 DREAM-\nhome trailer. Excellent- condition. Cedar Crest Trailer Court,\nCastlegar.\nSMALL UTILITY TRAILER\nand hitch lor Volkswagen. 924\nCarbonate St. Ph. 352-6434.\n45 x 8 ROLLERHOME TRAILER\nApply to K. Gohlke, Riondel.\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES\nCROSS   POMERANIAN\ncocker pups, $5. Ph. 352-\nAND\nPut one word in each space.\n(Each group of numbers or letters count ai one word)\nPut Your Address or Phone Number in the Ad.\nBox Numbers Count as Four Words.\n(Box 00 Nelson News)\nTO   CALCULATE   RATES,   USE   THIS   TABLE:\nPer Line\n1  Insertion\n\u2022 Minimum charge li two lines\n\u2022 Add 15e for Box Number\n\u2022 Take advantage of the low six time rate\nNon-Consecutive Insertions 20<i a Line Per Time.\nYou Reach over 36,000 Readers With Your Nelson Daily News Classified Ad\n2 Consecutive Insertions\n3 Consecutive Insertions\n6 Consecutive Insertions\n26 Consecutive Insertions\n$ .20\n.33\n.45\n.60\n1.82\nVOUR NAME.\nADDRESS\nNo. of Days Ad Is To Run .\nBill Me \u2014\t\nPayment Enclosed\nNelson Daily News\nClassified  Advertising Department, Nelson, B;\nC...\n .\n-\n10\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, WED., AUG. 29, 1962\nTEXT BOOKS and DICTIONARIES\nfor SCHOOL\n. . . Winston  and  Thorndike  Dictionaries\n, , . Pocket Dictionary\n. . . Typewriter Course\n, . . Quick Canadian Facts\n, . . Atlases, Chemistry and Physic books\n. . . Math Tables, Think-and-Do Books,\nSpellers.\nAll in the Complete Line of SCHOOL SUPPLIES at\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nOdds... ^ Ends\n by M. D. BA\nStarting out for the Coast it\nwas a beautiful hot day, almost\na little too hot for travelling, but\nno one was complaining, after all\nwhen summer comes finally towards the end of August, even if\nit is just a day, one does not complain. The trip over the cutoff was\nsmooth and interesting. By the\ntime we got to Hope the weatherman was losing his good humor\n\u2014 in fact he had a definite frown\non his face, and when we arrived\nin Vancouver the inevitable had\nhappened \u2014 it had begun to rain,\nft rained the whole week we were\nthere and only cleared up to be\ngood and warm on the return\njourney. Not complaining, mind\nyou, two days out of nine is a\ngood average this year.\nTide of History Moving to Free\nTrade, Says Premier Robichaud\nFREDERICTON (CP)\u2014Premier Robichaud of New Brunswick said Tuesday adoption of a\nprotectionist policy by Canada\nwould place the country in \"utter peril\".\n\"The tide of history is moving\ntoward free trade,\" the Liberal\npremier said at the annual conference of the Canadian Institute of Chartered Accountants.\nThree challenges face Canadians: \"The current financial\nand economic crisis more or\nless typified by the so-called\nausterity measures; the consequences of British involvement in the European Common\nMarket, and the pressing need\nto get on with the development\nof the country.\"\nA devalued dollar and the\nrange of: surcharges applied to\nmany classes of imports \"will each being nipped off by the\ninvite retaliation\" and there scissors of rising prices.\"\nwas another danger: \"That the\nmeasures will not be temporary, or will be temporary only\nin the same sense that temporary office buildings constructed\nin Ottawa in the 1940s are still\nbeing used to capacity.\"\nThe austerity program aims\nmaintaining high domestic interest rates, he said.\n\"Thus we may restore confidence in the dollar and\nachieve financial stability but\nthe price may well be a mounting level of unemployment.\n\"Throughout the past decade,\nthis excessive emphasis on\nprice stability at the expense of\neconomic growth has produced\nonly short bursts of expansion,\nRunaway Car\nKills Two\nLittle Tols\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014Two young\nboys were killed Sunday when\na car went out of control and\ncrushed them against a wall in\nsuburban Etobicoke.\nThe boys were Jeffrey Ar-\ndelli, 6, and Robert Allen Hill,\nu.\nBattista Davanze, 20, of Etobicoke later was charged with\ndangerous driving.\nMARKET TRENDS\nNEW YORK (API - Stock\nmarket prices willed Tuesday\nin one of the sharpest declines\nof the summer. Trading was\nmoderate.\nThe market began to head\nlower in the afternoon after 2M-\nsessions of irregularity. The list\nhad been poised on dead centre\nmost of this time. When prices\nbegan to soften, brokers said,\nstop-loss orders were touched\noff and there was not enough\ndemand to restrict the declines.\nThe result was lhat many of\nthe \"glamor\" issues took some\nthumping setbacks. IBM\ndropped 14'4 to 393'-; just a\nweek after it pierced stubborn\nresistance to win its way back\nabove the  400  level.\nBrokers regarded the market's performance as a continuation of pre-Labor Day caution,\na reflection of uncertainty as\nto how things will shape up for\nbusiness and tbe market in the\nfair and winter months.\nAVERAGES  FALL\nThe Dow Jones industrial\naverage fell 7.32 to 605.25. The\nAssociated Press average of 60\nstocks dropped 2.4 to 224.1 in\nthe sharpest decline since July\n8.\nThe rise in Ihe U.S. cost ol\nliving to another record was\ninterpreted as a seasonal increase. A gain in building con\ntract awards was received without enthusiasm.\nLitlon Industries was the most\nactive stock, off 2% at 59 on\n61,100 shares. Second was\nSouthern California Edison, off\nVa at 2712 on 57,300 shares.\nThird was Polaroid, off 4% at\n106% on 55,200 shares.\nGeneral motors fell %, Ford\n% and American Motors %.\nOn the Canadian list, International Nickel backed off 1%.\nHudson Bay Mining and Walker\nGooderham were down Va each\nwhile Aluminium Ltd., Canadian Pacific and Distillers Seagrams eased Va apiece.\nGainers included Dome\nMines, up Va, Mclntyre Porcupine,  %,  and  Granby  Mining,\nAmerican Exchange prices\nworked generally lower. Off Vs\nor less were Canadian Marconi,\nJupiter Corp., Preston, Molybdenite and Fargo Oil.\nMONTREAL (CP) - Stocks\nwere generally lower on the\nMontreal and Canadian exchanges Tuesday. Declines outnumbered gains eight to five.\nTrading was light in industrials\nbut moderately active in mines\nand oils.\nBase metals were mainly\nlower wilh International Nickel,\nunder active trading, off Wa at\n(A.:....\n[idB]\nFINANCING FOR\nCANADIAN BUSINESS\nThe Industrial Development Bank helps\nfinance small and medium-size Canadian\nbusinesses of almost every type and for\na variety of purpose.\nIf you are engaged in a business, or plan\nto start one\u2014whether it is an industrial,\ncommercial, trade or service enterprise\u2014\nand required financing is not available elsewhere on reasonable terms and conditions,\nyou are invited to visit an I.D.B. office\nor write for a descriptive booklet.\nINDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT BANK\nRegional Office:\nVancouver, B. C.\nTele:\n1112 West Pender St.\nMU   1-7484\n66%, Hudson Bay Mining off %\nat 50%, Aluminium off Va at\n24% and Asbestos off Va at 32.\nUtilities were down with Gatineau, on a small volume, off\nVi to 32% while Bell Telephone\nat 5114 and Shawinigan at Wa\neach fell Va.\nSteels reflected the trend\ndown with Steel of Canada,\nunder active trading, off Vs to\n17% and Algoma off Va to 43l\u00ab.\nDominion Foundries fell li to\n5214.\nDistillers were generally\nlower as Walker fell one point\nto 53 and Distillers-Segrams 'fa\nto 431\/i. Canadian Breweries\nadded l's to 10. Constructions\nwere lower with Canada Cement off % to 26H and Dominion Tar and Chemical Va to\n17%.\nOTHERS LOSE\nOther losers included Canadian Oil off lVa to 36%, Consolidated Paper Va to 38%, Salada\nFoods % to Ilia, CPR V. to\n22Vi and Central-Del Rio 10\ncents to $5.95.\nAmong gainers were Trans\nCanada Pipelines up % to 20,\nCanadian Celanese up Vi to 3OV4\nand Abitibi up Va to 46%.\nAnglo-American Molybdenite\nadded 17 cents to $2.75 among\nmines while Fox Lake Mines\nfell three cents to 37 cents,\nMount Pleasant fell seven cents\nto $2.03 under active trading\nand Viola Mac fell 26 cents to\n$1.50.\nOn index, banks were up 0.02\nto 60.17, utilities off 0.7 to 131.8,\nindustrials off 0.7 to 303.8, combined off 0.7 to 246.4, and golds\noff 0.21 to 78.78.\nTORONTO (CP) - The stock\nmarket slipped sharply Tuesday amid fairly heavy trading,\nas losses hit all sections.\nIndustrials took the steepest\nindex decline, falling two points,\nwhile golds, base metals and\nwestern oils all fell a point or\nbetter.\nKey losers in the main list\nincluded Alberta Gas Trunk A,\nBank of Montreal and Dominion Foundries and Steel, all\ndown a point or more.\nCanadian Oil, recent takeover\ntarget, dropped Hi to 37 after\nearlier going as low as 36.\nPower Corporation, large Canadian Oil shareholder, fell %.\nAmong the few gainers were\nTrans-Canada Pipe Line, up Va,\nCanadian Breweries, ahead Vs,\nCanadian Celanese, up Va and\nCanadian Imperial Bank of\nCommerce, up %.\nOn index, industrials fell 1.92\nto 554.48, golds 1.18 at 93.10,\nbase metals 1.00 at 187.15 and\nwestern oils 1.02 at 105.56.\nInternational Nickel weakened\nbase metals, dropping lli to\n66V4. Hudson Bay Mining [ell\nVa, while Denison gained Va.\nSpeculatives saw Newnorth\ngain 10 cents to 85 cents on\nheavy volume.\nIn western oils, Home A and\nB both fell % and Pacific Petroleum lia. Among the golds,\nHollinger dropped Vi and\nPlacer %.\nWas able to watch the PNE\nparade from the fourth floor of\nthe Province Building. There\nwere 37 bands and innumerable\nbeautiful floats. It was a cold,\ndamp day, but it did not faze\nVancouverites. I guess they realize that if they were to stay home\nevery cold damp day they'd be\nhome most of the time. Crowds\nhad gathered long before the parade was due and some toted camp\nchairs for comfort. A small advance band serenaded the waiting\nthrong as TV cameras were being\nset up at vantage points.\n# *  *\nAll the armed services were\nrepresented in the bands as well\nas cadets, Mounties, Canadian\nLegion, Canadian and U.S. school\nbands, Kilties, Grenadier Guards\nin bearskin caps, some in tight\nformation, some spread out and\nmost with a prancing majorette\ndoing her stuff with dexterity.\nThere were unicyclists, clowns\nand queens from surrounding\nareas on beautiful floats. Something I found different was a\ngroup of sailors playing the bagpipes. Being used to seeing only\nkilted pipers, this did seem odd.\nAll bands faced right as they\npassed Victory Square and the\nCenotaph.\n* *  *\nOne snowy float featured a\ngroup of handsome Husky dogs\nagainst the Aurora Borealis background and Victoria's queen and\nprincesses rode on a float behind\na graceful golden galleon. Another float featured a dazzling\nseascape with the queen and princesses riding in giant clam shells\ndrawn by prancing seahorses \u2014\nthis was the float from Kelowna,\nas I recall.\n\u2022 *  \u2022\nVarious ranches were represented by well-groomed horses\nand ponies and the clatter of their\nhooves on the pavement echoed\nfrom the buildings, a foreign\nsound for Hastings Street in this\nday. When the rain came down\nthe umbrellas went up and I felt\nsorry for some of the girls on the\nfloats in filmy gowns or bathing\nsuits, for the wind was cold and\nthe rain colder.\n* *  *\nDuring the whole procedure pigeons flew in formation back and\nforth across Hastings Street above\nthe parade, which took two hours\nlo pass by. In the afternoon when\nwe went out to the PNE the floats,\nsoggy messes of crepe paper,\nangel hair and what-have-you,\nwere being dismantled. Only a\n'arm float looked nonchalant\n'neath the downpour. It featured\nvegetables and fruit laid out on a\ngreen bed of dill and looked fresh\nand lovely even in the rain.\nCanadian farms\nFewer, Larger\n\u25a0 ' OTTAWA (CP) - Canadian\nfarms are becoming fewer but\nlarger arid boast more improved land than ever before,\nthe Dominion Bureau of Statistics said in a report on last year's\nfarm census.\nThe census indicates the toatl\nnumber of farms fell to 480,903\nfrom 575,015 five years before\nand 732,832 in 1941. The drop\nwas sharpest in the maritimes.\nWhile the number of farms\ncontfnued to decline, the country's total farm area was little\nchanged at 172,551,051 acres,\ncompared with 173,923,691 in\n1956.\nAcreage of improved land\nrose 3.1 per cent in the five-\nyear period to 103,403,426 acres\nfrom 100,326,243. Improved land\nwas defined as fields under\ncrops, summer fallow, im-\nroads, barnyards and areas of\nnew breaking.\nTotal area under crops fell\nslightly to 62,435,534 acres from\nthe 1956 figure of 62,944,176. The\nlargest drop \u2014 21.8 per cent-\nwas recorded in New Brunswick.\nThe area under crops increased 14.4 per cent in British\nColumbia and showed smaller\nincreases in Alberta and Manitoba. Declines occurred in all\nother provinces.\nThe total acreage of unimproved farm land, comprising\nwoodlots, natural pastures and\nwasteland, declined six per cent\nto 69,147,625 acres from 73,597,-\n448.\nThe trend toward larger\nfarms is shown by the distribution of farms by size groups.\nThe number of farms of 559\nacres or fewer fell, while farms\nof 560 acres or more increased\nin number. The sharpest increase was for farms in the 760-\n1,119 - acre range, where the\nnumber went up to 27,642 from\n24,958 in 1956.\nB.C. To Sponsor\n'ii Trade Fair\nVANCOUVER (CP) - British\nColumbia will sponsor its third\ninternational trade fair here in\nMay, 1964.\nThe government publication\nBritish Columbia News Letter\nsays five Pacific National Exhibition display buildings have\nbeen reserved for the 11-day\nfair  starting May 13.\nTrade fairs were held in 1958\nand 1961. The last one contained\nexhibits from more than 100\ncompanies and 15 countries.\nAn international toy pavilion\nis planned for the next show.\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c line, 40c line bold face type; larger type rates\non request. Minimum two lines.\nBINGO  TONIGHT\nCATHOLIC HALL - 8 P.M.\nWell Women's  Clinic\nToday - Phone 352-5521\nBest materials used on your shoes\nat TONY'S SHOE REPAIRS\nUnited Church Clothing Aid\nopen  today, 2-4 p.m,\nFresh skim milk 15c qt. in proven\nsanitary container (glass) from\nK. V. CO-OP DAIRY. Ph. 352-7317\nSave Gears and Tears\nPh. 352-5252 \u2014 Stirling Hotel\nNELSON DRIVING SCHOOL\n20'\noff Summer Furniture\nAugust Clearance\nSTERLING FURNISHERS\nTime for knitting Indian\nsweaters. Good stock of\nPolar Wool at\nTOT 'N' TEEN SHOP\nOut of respect for Mr. R. M.\nMcKee, the New Civii Hotel will\nbe   closed   from   3:30-7:30   p.m.\nNEW CIVIC HOTEL\nWishing to express your\nlove and sympathy? Flowers\nalways say it better\nMAC'S   FLOWER   SHOP\nTo dear friends in Queen's Bay.\nLorna and her dog will soon be\ngone. We shall not be back. Have\npatience and so goodbye.\nPatients in Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital can have The\nDaily News sent to them every\nMorning.\nPhone 352-3552\nCirculation Department,\nDaily News\nATTENTION ROYAL CANADIAN\nLEGION AND LADIES\nAUXILIARY MEMBERS\nMembers are requested to meet\nat the Royal Canadian Legion\nHall, this morning, (Wednesday!\nat 10:30 a.m. for the purpose of\nattending the funeral of our late\ncomrade, Alfred A. Padgin.\nDog obedience demonstration by\nDon Price of Rosedale at CPR\nFlats, 6:30 p.m., tonight.\nATTENTION ROYAL CANADIAN\nLEGION AND LADIES\nAUXILIARY MEMBERS\nMembers are requested to meet\nat the Royal Canadian Legion\nHall, today (Wednesday) at 3:30\np.m. for the purpose of attending\nthe funeral of our late comrade,\nRobert M. McKee.\nDEATH NOTICE\nSAUNDERS - On August 25 in\nKamloops, Dorcas Evelyn Saunders of 52 Columbia Street West\nin her 74th year. Survived by\n2 sons Frank of Bralorne, Albert\nof Kamloops, 3 daughters Mrs.\nLaura Donaldson of Nelson, Mrs.\nEvelyn Adams of Kelowna, Mrs.\nMargaret Anderson of Robson,\n1 brother Samuel Harrison of\nKinnaird, 14 granchildren. Funeral service was conducted in\nthe Schoening Funeral Chapel,\nKamloops, on Monday August 27\nat 2 p.m. Rev. J. C. Jolley officiating, interment Hillside Cemetery.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nLUNDSTROM - Funeral services for Mr. Robert Arnold\nLundstrom will be held at the\nThompson Funeral Home, Today\n(Wednesday) at 2 p.m. Rev. E.\nHanson will officiate and interment will take place in Nelson\nMemorial Park.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nPADGIN \u2014 Funeral services\nfor Mr. Alfred Augustus Padgin\nwill be held at St. Paul's-Trinity\nUnited Church today (Wednesday) at 11 a.m. Rev. Peter W.\nFaris and Rev. Canon W, J. Silverwood will officiate and interment will take place in Nelson\nMemorial Park. Thompson Funeral Service.\nATTENTION ROYAL CANADIAN\nLEGION AND LADIES\nAUXILIARY MEMBERS\nMembers are requested to meet\nat the Royal Canadian Legion\nHail, today (Wednesday) at 1:30\np.m. for the purpose of attending\nthe funeral of our late comrade,\nRobert A. Lundstrom.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nMcKEE \u2014 Funeral services for\nMr. Robert Maxwell McKee will\nbe held at St. Paul's-Trinity United Church today (Wednesday)\nat 4 p.m. Rev. Peter W. Faris\nwill officiate and the remains\nwill be forwarded to Edmonton\nfor interment. Thompson Funeral\nService.\nStormy Alma\nKey-Points Emerge\nAs PCs End Talks\nBy JAMES NELSON\nOTTAWA (CP)-Two days of\nelection post-mortems by top\nlevels of the Progressive Con-\nj servative party ended Monday\nwith these key points emerging\nfrom formal statements and the\nreports of participants:\n1. A reorganization of the\nfederal party's Quebec wing is\nto be undertaken immediately;\n2. An annual general meeting,\nattracting perhaps 3,000 delegates and observers, will be\nheld Jan. 18-19 unless a general\nelection comes before then;\n3. The government intends to\nproceed with a full legislative\nprogram in the 25th Parliament, where it will hold a minority control, outnumbered 149\nto 116 by three opposition parties;\n4. Party organizers are counting on the economic benefits of\ndollar devaluation to gain them\nvotes in the next election;\n5. Most top Conservatives do\nnot expect an election before\nnext spring.\nThe situation in Quebec,\nwhere the Conservatives won 50\nof the 75 seats in 1958 but retained only 14 in the June 18\nvote, was a prime topic at a\nconference of the party's national executive.\nThe Conservatives for years\nhave had the barest skeleton of\na party organization in Quebec,\ndepending at election time on\nsuch support as might be solicited from the Union Nationale party of the late premier Duplessis. Tlie support\nwas not always forthcoming.\nWith the resurgence of Conservative popularity across the\ncountry in 1956, 1957 and 1958,\nefforts were made to set up a\ndistinctive organization in Quebec. The Union Nationale, still\nriding high then, swung behind\nConservative candidates in 1958\nand the organization prospered.\nIt foundered, however, in this\nyear's election. Party headquarters here received reports\nof Conservative workers in Quebec swinging to the Liberals or,\nmore freuenlly, to the Social\nCredit   party's   Quebec   wing,\nheaded by Real Caouette. Mr.\nCaouette's recent radical statements are being counted on by\nthe Conservatives to alienate\nsome of this support and swing\nit back to them.\nRURAL VOTE COUNTED\nNo major federal party has\never concentrated on the Quebec rural voter the way the Union Nationale and provincial\nLiberals have done. The federal\nLiberals, the source said, have\nalways worked closely with the\nprovincial Liberals and the federal Conservatives have been\nembarrassed nation ally at\ntimes in having to work with\nthe Union Nationale.\nWhile the party executive\nmet, the 116 Conservative MPs\nelected in June gathered for\ntheir first caucus.\nPrime Minister Diefenbaker\nattended the two-hour session\nand gave a summary of the\nlegislative program being\ndrawn up for the parliamentary\nsession which opens Sept. 27.\nHe also laid down some general policies for the next election  campaign.\nMr. Diefenbaker, leaning on\na cane to favor the ankle he\nbroke five weeks ago, met\nbriefly with reporters after the\nclosed-door session but offered\nonly a general outline of what\nwent on.\nPLANS  FULL PROGRAM\nHe said there would be a full\nlegislative program for the session \"and we intend to present\nit in the same way we did in\n1957.\"\nEarlier in the day Mr. Diefenbaker spoke for 70 minutes\nto the executive meeting but\nwould give no details of the\nspeech. Others, said he laid\ndown a pattern for criticism of\nthe opposition Liberals which\nwill be reflected in the speeches\nof Conservative MPs in the\nmonths  ahead.\nSenator G. S. Thorvaldson of\nWinnipeg, president of the\nparty, said if an election is not\nforced by the opposition in Parliament this fall the party will\nhold an annual general meeting\nhere Jan. 18 and 19.\nHATTERAS, N.C. (AP) -\nTropical storm Alma, which the\nweather bureau calls \"poorly\norganized,\"'neared the coast of\nNorth Carolina this morning.\nTlie weather bureau at Miami\nsaid at 6 a.m. EDT Monday the\nseason's first Atlantic-spawned\ntropical storm was centred\nabout 20 miles southeast of\nMorehead City, N.C.\nThe storm was moving northeast at about 15 miles an hour.\nThe centre had winds estimated\nat 45 miles an hour.\nGale warnings were posted\nfrom Morehead City northward\nto Cape Charles, Va., with tides\nin that area expected to be one\nto three feet above normal.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nBENTHIEN - Funeral services for Mr. Max Benthein of\nGray Creek will be held at the\nGray Creek Community Hall,\nThursday at 2 p.m. Ven. Archdeacon B. A. Resker will officiate\nand interment will take place in\nthe Gray Creek Cemetary.\nThompson Funeral Service'.\nScientist Battles\nPear Tree Disease\nCORVALLIS, Ore. (AP) -A\nnew method of combatting the\ntree disease pear decline has\nbeen developed by a University\nof California scientist.\nProf. Hudson T. Hartmann\nhas produced a Barlett pear\ntree that grows on its own\nroots. The Bartlett wood is resistant to pear decline, but the\nproblem is: The Bartlett until\nnow could not produce from its\nown seed. It had to be grafted\non to other seedlings.\nHarmann told the American\nSociety of Horticultural Science\nmeeting that he and his associates have produced a non-\ngrafted Bartlett that they hope\nwill not be affected by the root\ndisease.\nSouth Korea's\nFormer Premier\nArrested\nSEOUL (AP)\u2014South Korea's\nruling junta arrested former\npremier John M. Chang today,\nafter demanding life imprisonment for him on a charge of\ncontributing $770 to a plot\nagainst the junta.\nChang, ousted in the May,\n1961, military coup, has been at\nliberty during his trial by general court-martial. He testified\nthat he gave the $770 (1,000,000\nhwan) to one of the 16 other\ndefendants on trial with him to\nhelp the man start a small business and that he heard nothing of a coup plan.\nThe prosecution charges that\nthe allged plotters planned to\nassassinate Gen. Chung Hee\nPark, the head of the junta,\nand other government leaders.\nAt today's court session the\nprosecution also asked t h e\ndeath penalty for four of the\ndefendants and prison terms\nranging from one to 10 years\nfor the other 12.\nRogers Pass\nAlta. Tourists\nVANCOUVER (CP) - The\nGreater Vancouver Visitors and\nConvention Bureau said Monday\nthe number of tourists from\nAlberta and the Prairies has\nincreased since the Rogers Pass\nHighway through the British\nColumbia Cascade Mountains\nwas opened last month.\nManaging d i r e c tor Harold\nMerilees did not give any figures.\nHe said the bureau will concentrate in the next 12 months\nin attracting larger numbers of\ntourists from the Prairies.\nAsked what brings Prairie\ntourists to B.C., he replied:\n\"Shipping and salt water. The\ncoast is the big attraction for\nits sea fishing and bathing.\"\nU Than! Flies\nTo Black Sea\nTo Meet Mr. K,\nMOSCOW (AP) \u2014 U Thant,\nUnited Nations acting secretary-general, flew to the Black\nSea coast Tuesday to discuss international problems with vacationing Premier  Khrushchev.\nThant met Soviet Foreign\nMinister Andrei Gromyko Monday and reported later they had\ndiscussed \"some of the major\nproblems facing the United Nations today.\" Thant termed the\ntalks fruitful and friendly.\nThant denied that a main objective of his visit to the Soviet\nUnion was to find whether the\nCommunist bloc will support\nhim for a full five-year term as\nsecretary-general after his interim appointment runs out\nnext year.\nCOTTON\nCASUALS\nand\nHIPSTERS\nFor\nBACK\nto\nSCHOOL\n5.95-7.95\nFmory'Q\nLTD.      W\nTHE MAN'S STORE\nForest Fire\nForces\nPeople Away\nKELSEYVfLLE, Calif. (AP)\nA forest fire has forced the\nevacuation of an estimated\n1,000 vacationers in a popular\nmountain resort area about 30\nmiles north of San Francisco.\nThe state division of forestry\nsaid Tuesday that the blaze in the\nCobb Mountain area in scenic\nLake County has blackened\nsome 9,000 acres since it\nstarted near here Sunday.\nSome 350 guests fled hobergs,\none of the area's largest resorts, Monday night as the fire,\nfanned by 30 - mile - an - hour\nwinds, came within a quarter-\nmile of the hotel. At least three\nother smaller resorts were\nevacuated.\nVacationers at some two\ndozen other resorts were put on\nthe alert. But not all were in\nthe path of the flames.\nFive cabins, five hunting\nshacks and two ranches have\nbeen reported destroyed.\nThere were no reports of injuries.\nANTI-KINK\nKinks may be removed from\nhair by applying tragacanth, a\nreddish gum of Asian origin,\nand holding the hair straight to\ndry.\nHave the Job Done Right!\nVIC GRAVEC\n*\u25a0' LIMITED       **\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 352-3315\nRexall  Multiple   Vitamin\nPOLYMULSION\nA pleasant flavored emulsion\nfor children or invalids.\n$2.00 -- $3.25 - $5.25\nFamily Size $9.25\nSold Only at\nYour Rexall Pharmacy\nCITY DRUG\nPhone 352-3611 Box 460\n^^IBilil^3SZ[|3IO&Eld\nCLASSIFIED ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT\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_1962_08_29","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0434485","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"}]}}