{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0435425":{"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"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued":[{"value":"2023-08-15","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1964-10-27","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0435425\/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":" \u25a0Ml\nTEMPERATURES\nNELSON\nToronto \u2014\nCalgary \u2014\nPenticton -\nVancouver -\nWhitehorse\nSpokane\n34 45 -\n50 73. -\n29 32 .40\n36 51 -\n15  36\n35   50\ntflfitftt\nMRECAST\n, Kootenay: A few clouds..Continuing cool. Winds light.- Low\nand high at Cranbrook and Crescent, Valley, 25 and 50. Wednesday: Sunny. Not quite so cool.\nPublished at Nelson, government, financial, trading and educational centre of the Kootenay-Columbia area\nVol. 63\nNELSON, B. C. CANADA-TUESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 27, 1964\n10 Cents\nNo. 157\n15 p.c. Surcharge Slapped on  U.K.\nRussia Buys 10.6 Million\nBushels Canadian Wheat\nU.K. Surcharges\nBring 'Sad Day'\nFor B.C.\nVICTORIA CP - A British\nColumbia cabinet minister said\nMonday the imposition of a 15-\nper-cent surcharge on imports\nby Britain has given the province \"a sad day.\"\nTrade Minister Ralph Loffmark said the economy of B.C.\n\"is going to suffer because our\nlargest exports have been in\nthe fields in which controls are\nbeing imposed.\"\nHardest hit will be the forest\nindustry, which provides an\nestimated 50 cents for every dollar earned by B.C.\nThe new surcharges affect\nnewsprint and wood products\nthat are processed further.\nLast year B.C. sold $147,000,-\n000 worth of goods to Britain,\nmuch of it in the form of forest\nproducts.\nDOLLAR DOWN\nNEW YORK (CP) - Canadian\ndollar down 1-64 at 03 1-64 in\nterms of U.S. funds. Week ago\n93 1-32. Pound sterling up 5-64\nat $2.78 23-64.\nMONTREAL <C>) \u2014 United\nStates dollar in. terms of Canadian funds was up 1-32 at $1.07%.\nBrings $21 Million in Cash;\nProbably Going to Cuba\nBy KEN CLARK\nWINNIPEG (CP)\u2014Canada announced the sale of\n10,600,000 bushels of wheat and wheat flour Monday\nto Russia, and reliable sources say that's likely all ior\nthe time being.\nCanadian officials expect Russia to take a little\nmore wheat perhaps early next year for Cuba. The\nSoviet may also buy a small quantity for shipment to\neastern Russia next spring. I\nThere appears little prospect I n\"\"* of the purchase-250,000\nfor another sale on the scale'^S 'on? of wheat and 25,000\nof the 239,000,00b-bushel dis-' ,tons $ flotuvrwould be diverted\nposal to Russia.last fall. Good '\".Cuba.\nRussian crops this year all but\nrule out that possibility.\nHowever, Soviet intentions\nare obscure at the best of times\nand the picture could change\novernight.\nThe latest sale was for $21,-\n000,000 ash. Officials say some\nor all of it will be diverted to\nCuba, which has close economic ties with Russia.\nSHIP NEXT MONTH\nShipments will start next\nmonth through St. Lawrence\nand Atlantic ports and continue\nthroughout the crop year which\nends next July 31.\nNicola) Belousov, a high-ranking member of Exportkhleb, the'\nSoviet grain board, negotiated\nthe deal here with the Canadian\nWheat Board, which announced\nthe -sale; \u2022 -      . '..   . _\t\nHe said he did not know how districts.\n'It depends on how much it\nhe said.\nMr. Belousov, who helped\nnegotiate the big 1963 sale, said\nhe would arrange-for the ship-\nment^ef.the wheat.'then return\nto Russia. He was non-com-\nmital on future Sales prospects.\nOfficials here assume that\nRussia will trade Canadian\nwheat for Cuban sugar or other\ncommodities in a straight barter deal.!CubaJhus gets wheat\nfor her flour mills without using\nup previous foreign exchange in\na direct purchase from Canada.\nRussia, may. buy Canadian\nwheatjot shipment to. Vladivostok because the Communist\ncountry fjnd its cheaper to supply its eastern regions in this\nfashion than to ship homegrown wheat from western' farm\n$117 Million Steel Operation\nAnnounced for N. Brunswick\nSAINT JOHN N.B. (CP)-A\n$117,000,000. steel, mining, chemical and fertilizer \u2022 project for\nNew Brunswick was announced\nby Premier Robichaud in a television address Monday night.\nHe said die biggest project\never undertaken in the province\nwill include a complete steel\nmill as its major component,\ntwo new base metal mines, two\nnew concentrators and a $12,-\n000,000 ore carrier1. '.\nMr. Robichaud stressed that\nthe capital expenditure, all by\nprivate Canadian corporations,\nis in addition to the more than\n$50,000,000 already expended or\ncommitted at the Bathurst-area\nmine - mill site of Brunswick\nMining and Smelting Corporation and for a smelter.\nGross sale value of the new\nindustries' products at current\nmarket prices would be about\n$90,000,000 annually.\nThe premier gave this estimated cost breakdown: Iron ore\npreparation plant and steel mill,\n$64,000,000; mine development\nand concentrators, $15,000,000;\nchemical and fertilizer plant,\n$18,000,000; construction of shipping and handling facilities, including a 30,000-ton ore carrier,\n120,000,000,\nSMELTER BEING BUILT\nA $29,000,000 lead and zinc\nsmelter already is under construction by East Coast Smelting at Belledune Point on Cahl-\neur Bay, 25 miles-north of Bath-\nurst in northern New Brunswick.\nPremier Robichaud said the\nBrunswick Corporation decided\nto construct \"a huge steel and\nFIRECRACKERS\nBELIEVED\nFIRE CAUSE\nVICTORIA (CP) - Youngsters playing with, firecrackers\nare being blamed for a $ioo,ooo\nfire which destroyed the grandstand in Royal Athletic Park\nSunday.\nOfficials said if youngsters\ndid not cause the blaze it must\nhave been deliberately set. The\nfire started in the bleachers and\nspread through tunnels under\nthe grandstand.\nThe blaze was fed by plastic\nand rubber hoses belonging to\nthe city that were stored underneath the grandstand.\nChildren had been seen playing\nwith firecrackers in the bleachers Saturday and were chased\naway.\nSentence Extended,\nBut Family Helped\nKAMLOOPS (CP) - Living\nconditions have improved for\nthe family of a man who said he\nescaped from jail because his\nwife and six children needed\nfood and clothing, an Anglican\nminister.said Monday.\nOUIe Williams- told court here\nlast; week he escaped from a\nwork party because he heard his\nfamily, who live at 87 Mile\nHouse in the Cariboo, had not\nreceived welfare assistance,\nwere without food and that his\nchildren were unable to attend\nschool because they had no\nshoes.\n\"Canon   Nelson   Atkinson   of\nNorth Kamloops, who verified\nin court the Williams family\nplight, said Monday the Williams\nfamily have been moved to a\nbetter house, clothes have been\ndonated by the Welfare Department, one welfare cheque has\nbeen, received and another is\nforthcoming.\nThe oldest boy has been given\na job on a new church construction through the efforts of Canon\nAtkinson, who. has been active\nin welfare work with prisoners\nat the provincial jail in Kamloops.\nWilliams was given a six-\nmonth term for his escape. He\nhad four months left on his sentence for theft when he escaped.\nchemical complex . . . and to\nenlarge their announced plan\nfor a fertiliser complex.\"\nOne new base: metal mine on\nBrunswick property, to be\nopened \"almost immediately,\"\nwill be she miles south, of its\nexisting mine and concentrator\n20 miles south of Bathurst.\nThe second new mine will be\nat the.new Larder U property\nof Key Anacon- Limited, about\n15 miles from the present\nBrunswick mine.\nThe premier said a 1,500-ton-\na-day custom lead'and. zinc\nconcentrator will be built to\nprocess ore from the two mines.\nBrunswick also proposed a second concentrator to recover\nabout 500,000 tons per year of\na flotation pyrite concentrate\nfrom operations at the three\nmines.\nParliament\nBy The Canadian Press\nThe Commons continued debate of the government's proposal for authority to spend\n$740,710,974 to meet November\nand December bill pending approval of all estimates.\nThis opened the way for a\ndiscussion of CBC programming.\nMarcel Lambert (PC \u2014 Edmonton West) asked that the\nCommons committee on broadcasting be constituted to check\ninto CBC operations.\nState Secretary Lamontagne,\nwho reports to Parliament for\nthe CBC, said this would \"paralyse\" the corporation's operations.\nH. A .Olson (SC - Medicine\nHat) criticized the CBC for a\n\"cavalier disregard\" to protests\nabout programming.\nPrime Minister Pearson agreed\nallegations made on a CBC program by a former prisoner at\nSt. Vincent de Paul penitentiary\nabout, punishments should be investigated.\nStanley Knowles (NDP - Winnipeg North Centre) praised the\nCBC for its interview of American Nazi leader George Lincoln\nRockwell, which he said may\nhave set back the cause of\nracism.\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nClinton Firm\nTo Clear\nMica Sites\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Spatsum Lumber Co. Ltd. of Clinton submitted the low bid for\nclearing two sites at Mica\nDam, biggest of the three Columbia River Treaty dams,\nB.C. Hydro and Power Authority announced Monday.\nTh ecmopany bid $239,150 for\nthe job of clearing 110 acres\nat the dam site and 100 acres\nfive miles downstream. The\nlatter will be for a construction camp.\nOther bids: Cattermole-\nTrethway Contractors Ltd.,\n$276,550; Downey Street Sawmills Ltd., Revelstoke $299,-\n000; Alpine Clearing Contractors Ltd, $388,000.\nHydro gave no indication\nwhen the contract will be let.\nClearing is scheduled to be\ncompleted by April 30, 1965.\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\n...And Still\nAnother Pulp\nMill Planned\nVICTORIA (CP)-A $60,000,-\n000 pulp mill will be built at\nGold River on the west coast of\nVancouver Island by the tahsis\nCompany Limited, Premier W.\nA. C. Bennett announced Monday.\nThe premier said the mill will\nhave a capacity of 750 tons a\nday, and would mean the creation of a new town at the small\nlogging community of Gold\nRiver, 180 miles northwest of\nhere.\nHe said the mill would be built\nby the Tahsis Company, a subsidiary of the East Asiatic Company of Canada Limited of Vancouver, in association with Canadian International Paper Company Limited of Montreal, an associate of the U.S.-owned International Paper Company.\nConstruction of the mill will\nstart next February, with completion expected in two years.\nMr. Bennett said the new town\nat Gold River will be set up under the Municipal Act and predicted it would have a population of 2500 at the start, growing\nto 5000.\n\"It will not be a company\ntown, but a community with all\nresidents paying taxes toward\nmunicipal development,\" he said,\n\"It will be a commercial centre for the west coast of the island, and will draw business from\nmany small communities.\"\nMACON, Ga. (AP) - President Johnson flailed away Monday at his Republican opponents\naccusing them of \"wild and impulsive-statements\" and \"the\nmost radical proposals ever\nmade to the American.people.\"\nIn a speech; in Jacksonville,\nFla., Johnson said the Republican party '.'has fallen into the\nbands of. an;extreme and narrow\nWO'lip..\"' ,::.,.V,'...'\u201e'.; .\u00ab \u201e,;, ~..\nHuman Bones\nSolve Mystery\nALEXIS CREEK, B.C. (CP)\n\u2014 A tangle of human bones and\nthe rusted remains of a rifle,\nfound in a wooded valley near\nthis Chilcotin cowtown, may\nclose the books on a murder\nunsolved for 32 years.\nThe remains are believed\nthose of Harry Seymour, an\nindian who vanished after the\ngun-slaying of Mrs. Johnny\nBaptlste in the winter of 1932\nThey have been brought back\nhere and will be sent to the\nRCMP crime laboratory in Vancouver.\nThere is a bullet hole through\nthe skull.\nForestry worker Edward Quilt,\nwho knew Seymour in 1932,\nstumbled across the bones and\nthe gun about two weeks ago in\nElkin Valley, some 50 miles\nwest of Williams Lake and about\n150 miles southeast of Prince\nGeorge, B.C.\nSIX WEEKS TO MOSCOW\u2014Leon Gfflis, 43, Richmond, Vs., waves s greeting as he leads his\ncovered wagon and family Into Moscow, completing a six-week trek across Russia. The\narrival ended a tour of 11 nations that began In Antwerp, Belgium, 'last December.\nWildStatements- Johnson\nPolitical Daddy ism - Goldwater\nNew Gov't Moves\nTo Gut Spending,\nBoost Earnings\nBy HAROLD MORRISON    V \"ft.,;\nLONDON (CP)\u2014Britain's Labor government Monday announced an extra 15-per-cent surcharge on imports in a crash program to curb overseas spending and\nto, increase British earnings.\nThe 15-per-cent levy, described as temporary, is\non the landed value of all imports except food, industrial raw materials and raw tobacco. The landed value\nis the basic cost plus insurance and.freight.\nThe levy, effective today, is being coupled with\ntax rebates for exporters ranging from one to three.per\ncent.\n\"They would tear down the\npast, and take unnecessary risks\nof war,\" Johnson added.\nIn election campaign speeches\nin Orlando, Fla., Jacksonville\nand in Augusta and Macon, Ga.,\nJohnson hammered hard on the\nthemes of peace, prosperity and\nnational unity.\n:. Jty Jaeksoiwiltelie said pros.\nasPsat_ fee, eg .gs.# jjgjworl<1\nMIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIimiMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIII\nDoctors Rally To Aid\nMcBride Hospital\nMcBRIDE, B.C.-(CP)\u2014Six doctors from Prince George\nhave gone to the rescue of the hospital here, left without a\nsingle doctor when Dr. J. M. Smart resigned.\nDr. Smart, the only doctor here, handed in his resignation to the hospital board Oct. 20,'giving four days notice.\nThe board announced immediately the hospital would close\nSaturday at midnight if no assistance was obtained.\nDr. D. B. Konrad left Prince George at the weekend to\nspend one week in McBride, 140 miles east.\nFive other Prince George doctors will rotate on a one-\nweek basis until McBride has found a replacement for Dr.\nSmart, who gave no reason for the resignation.\nHe had practiced here five years.\nIn Vancouver, Dr. Lynn Gunn, registrar of the College\nof Physicians and Surgeons of British Columbia, said he felt\nDr, Smart was fully justified in leaving.\n\"Dr. Smart worked very hard. He was pooped and just\ncouldn't carry on any longer by himself.\n\"I know what it's like to work in,a small town alone, and .\nI wouldn't stay in McBride very long either.\n\"It's humanly impossible to carry on when you're the\nonly doctor for 4500 people and you're on call 24 hours a day,\nseven days a week.\"\nDr. Gunn described the shortage of doctors in the north\nas \"desperate.\"\nIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIII\nKremlin Calls For\nCommunist Unity\nMOSCOW (API- The new\nKremlin regime appealed to\nEast European allies Monday\nfor unity within the Communist\ncamp. The Call Apparently\nsought to q u i e t the alarm\ncaused by the ouster of Nikita\nKhrushchev as Soviet leader.\nThe appeal came in art editorial on the front 'page of the\ngovernment newspaper Ijves-\ntia. It warned that the future\neconomic progress in Eastern\nEurope will demand stronger\nCommunist unity.\nThe editorial coincided with a\nflocking to Moscow of foreign\ncommunist delegations to seek\nexplanations for Khrushchev's\nremoval Oct. 14 as premier and\nfirst secretary of the Soviet.\nCommunist party.\n(Diplomatic' informants in Vienna reported they had learned\nthat the new Kremlin leaders\nare putting pressure on the East\nEuropean Communist parties to\nspeak out against Khrushchev.\nStatements of praise for\nKhrushchev had come from\nHungary, Czechoslovakia, East\nGermany and Poland.\nCommunist correspondents in\nMoscow were advised that an\nofficial account of the secret\nmeeting that deposed; Khrushchev would be published within\nthe next few days.\nGET MEMO\nThere are unconfirmed reports indicating that foreign\nCommunist delegations here\nwere being given a memorandum explaining the change in\nthe Kremlin command..   .\nthe izvestia. editorial under\nthe headline Community of\nEquals, repeated assurance that\nKhrushchev's popular policies\nof de - Stalinization and economic progress would be continued by his successors. Then\nit stressed:.','...\n\"In the present moment, the\ncause of peace and social progress In an. increasing degree depends; on strengthening the\nunity 'Of:. oil. jnti \u25a0\u2022' imperialist\nforces and'fii'St of all the unity\nof the socialist countries,, the\nworld Communist movement.\"\nThe editorial said the Communist countries \"consider their\nmain task in the field of foreign policy the development of\nproductive forces, a steady increase of the living standards of\nthe peoples. . . .\"\nThe editorial made no mention of Khrushchev.\nare at stake in the U.S. presidential election Nov. 3..\n\"The policies of peace we follow today are the consistent policies of every president since the\nSecond World War. They reflect a tradition as old as the\nnation. Courage does hot exist\nin threats and bluster\u2014in refusing to try to lessen the danger of war\u2014in withdrawing' ill\ncontact from' those who don't\nagree with us.\n\"That way lies in disaster.\"\nNEW YORK (AP) - A*6oha\nSenator Barry Goldwater .accused President Johnson of a.\"political daddyism' philosophy Monday night, and said this is an\neasy way to pitch for votes in\nthe Nov. 3 U.S. election.\nBut Goldwater, Republican\npresidential candidate, said \"political daddyism\" isn't for him.\n\"Do you honestly think that\nafter all these years in politics,\nthat I don't know the easy way\nto get votes?\" he asked.\n\"Well I do.\"\nBut he said he wouldn't be.\ncause \"if I went around telling\n'People what they wanted to hear\nI'd sound like Lyndon Baines\nJohnson.;\nGoldwater brought his elec.\ntion campaign to the biggest city\nof the U.S. for his first and only\ntry at its votes with' a political\nrally.1 '     '\u25a0 \"\u2022 n\nSurcharge Hits\nHouse Market\nThe surcharge on imports will\naffect all Britain's trading partners but will hit hardest at Britain's strongest competitors.\nAbout 20 per cent of the imports from Canada will be affected because Britain gets,\nmainly food, and raw materials\nfrom her. About 57 per cent of\nimports from Common Market\ncountries will be subject to.the\nlevy,\nIMPORTS ARE AFFECTED\nThe new duty is on about\n$4,800,000,000 worth of manufactured goods- imported annually, including, about $200,-\n000;000 shipped from Canada.\nThese additional emergency\ntariffs, which will increase the\nbuying price for British consumers, cover a huge assortment of goods, from automobiles to washing machines. Canadian products affected range\nfrom newsprint .and plywood to\nleather, plastics and electric\nstoves.\nJill told, about one-third - of\n.Britain's 4otal MS4-4mportsi of\nabout $14,SOO,000,000 Will M\nby th\u00bb higher rates,\n1 Prime Minister Wilson's tabor gov\u00bbrnni6i\u00ab\u00bb\u00ab!i!iited this\nenW&Kcf measure with marginal tax incentives to encourage more exports and. thus\nseek to overcome a total deficit in international payments estimated to reach possibly an unprecedented $2,400,000,000 this\nyear\u2014about double what had\nbeen anticipated in earlier\nmonths.\nThe Conservatives challenged\nthis estimated deficit as an- exaggeration but indicated they\nwon't put up much of a\nagainst the measures which\nalso include plans for profit and\nwage restraints and government\nassistance to relocate industry\nand retrain workers replaced\nautomation.       . .\nCONCERN ABOUT PAPER\nIn Canadian quarters there\nwas some concern over the tax\non newsprint, because this is a\nbig Canadian export item. But\nthere also was a general view\nthe curbs could have been worse\n\u2014that they were not as tough\nas\nagainst British goods during the.\n1962 Canadian exchange crisis.\nIn announcing the. curbs, Economics. Minister George Brown .\nand the chancellor of the exchequer, James Callaghan, de-'\nscribed them as temporary but\nrefused to be pinned to any specific elimination date...Canada\nwithdrew her special higher du-,\nties in about nine months; there\nwas-some talk here that the\nBritish curbs, may remain f\u00bb\nseveral years.\nThe additional 15 - per \u2022 cent\nduty will affect about 20 per\ncent of Canada's $1,000,OOQ,OM\nworth of annual shipments to\nBritain. Percentages of imports\nfrom, other sources to be affected: United States 48 per\ncent; Commonwealth countries\n13; European Common Market\n57; European Fre trade Are*\n36; remainder 13.\nCoupled with the emergency\nmoves were Siritish negotiations\nwith the' International Monetary Fund to obtain huge- tern?\nporary loans t\u00bb. help build UP.\n.British.monetary reserves.. Can*\nada and other. countries have\nalready been helping to some\nextent through currency ex>\nchange swaps and other measures to help Britain-get back on\nher financial feet.\nGordon (ools\nTax Cut Hopes\nBy JAMES NELSON\nOTTAWA (CP)-Ftoance Minister Gordon cautioned MPs\nMonday about getting-too en*\nthusiastic over the prospect ef\nearly tax cuts. .    r.\nHe said his revenues: were\nbuoyant, but only mid-year figures are so far available and\nthey reflect a change in the\nmethod and tithing of tax collections. The real picture will\nbe told in the year-end figures\nafter next March 31.\nBut outside the House members\nof all parties were certain that\ntax cuts are in the offing\u2014surely\nbefore voters next go to the polls\nthose imposed, by Canada and probably next spring.\nLONDON CP\u2014Britain's extra 15-per-cent tarriff may hurt\nCanada's chances of opening a\nbig market far dressed er\nplaned lumber.\nCanadian authorities said Monday a campaign had been launched to encourage Britain to\nturn more to timber-built houses\nas a means of overcoming a\nhousing shortage.\nBut these Canadian-designed\nhouses require the use of planed\nor finished lumber. The. Canadian Industry had hoped that it\nthe idea caught on, a big hew\nBritish market would be opened\nfor Canadian dressed lumber.\nNow the British government\nhas imposed the 15-per-cent surcharge on these imports, as\nwell as on newsprint, veneers\nand plywood and such other\nforest products and paper and\npaper board.\nThe British Timber trade\nFederation has urged the government to rescind the extra\nduty on plywood and. planed\nsoftwoods and Canadian authorities are hopeful that the administration may make some\nmodifications in the tax law.\nThey noted that Canada made\nsome modifications by exempting some commodities after imposing its own temporary tariff\nsurcharges during the 1962 Canadian currency crisis.\nCNR Postpones\nOTTAWA (CP) - The CNR\npostponed its controversial run-\nthrough program at Nakina,\nOnt., and Wainwright, Alta.,\nMonday after the federal government agreed to set up a formal inquiry into the matter.\nA policy of running trains\nthrough those two points with-\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nWINNIPEG (CP)-Roy Mc-\nCallum of Winnipeg, a spokesman for workers responsible\nfor a disruption of CNR service\nthrough a no-work protest of\nnew work rules, said. Monday\nnight workers at five major\nwestern centres have voted to\nreturn to work-, at midnight\nMonday.\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli\nout the usual crew change went\ninto effect early Sunday. It\ntouched off a no-work protest\nby hundreds of CNR employees across the country, who\n\"booked off\" for various reasons. -\nCNR' transcontinental services   Were 'severely   disrupted\nSunday and Monday ;bu{ were\nexpected to be back .to. normal\nlate Monday night-.at ar result\nof the program's postponement.\nOne possible hitch'remained,\nhowever. CNR employees were\nreported to be demanding a\nblanket guarantee against disciplinary action on those who\njoined the protest. Many had\nreceived warnings they would\nbe fired for refusing to report\nback for work. '\nA government spo'ke strain\nsaid there were assurances the\nCNR would give such a guarantee. \": \": .. '\u25a0'      j\nPrime Minister: .Pearson announced that an independent\nand impartial commissioner\nwill be appointed, immediately\nto make a full study of the\nCNR's run-through . plan. His\nname will be given today. ._\nHe reported at th . same time\nthat CNR president'Donald Gordon had offered to put off the\nNakina and Woinw'S111 rMB-\nthroughs. for up to three months\nwhile the matter is .under investigation.'' .     '\" . ..        '\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\"\nk'\n 1\u2014NEL50N DAILY NEWS, TU253AY, OCT. 27, 1964\nAccident Toll Rises\nOh Kootenay Roads\nNelson Civic Centre\n'\u25a0:\u25a0' Schedule\nTODAY\nTnetday. Oct. 27, 1964\nARENA!\n2:00- 4:00-;Tiny-Tots\n4!0O-,5:3OTJGhildren,s\n. \u2022 Skating\n6:30- 7:30-Sr. Hockey\nigv.      \u2022 .: practice\n.HI5-10:3O-Commercial\nHockey\n>   <   Practice\nRECfcfcAfl&N:\n12:45? 1:30\u2014Columbia\nCollege\n4:\u00ab. '5:00-_3irls'\n--\"    Rythmics\n8:00-11:00\u2014Senior\n....    Badminton\nGRAND FORKS (Staff)-Trag.\nedy struck at the Grand Forks\nhome of Mrs. Doris Barisenkov\nfor the second time in two\nmonths Monday when her Son\nMickey, 17, became the second\nfatality arising out of a highway\naccident that occurred when his\n1964 station wagon failed to negotiate a curve near Sheep Creek\nand crashed into a rock abutment late Saturday night.\nAnother Grand Forks youth,\nSam Makortoff, was killed instantly.\nThe death wagon was a legacy\nfrom the boy's father, Mike Barisenkov, who died of a heart attack in mid-August.\nPolice said the vehicle wis\ntravelling in a northeastery direction On highway No. 3 when\nTONIGHT-WED.\u2014Complete Shows 7:00-9:10\n\u25a0MJ4MMM\nDeAD RfNGeR\nCIVIC\nit missed a turn, skidded into\nthe rock embankment and bounced to the other side of the road,\nwhere it came to rest.\nA third Occupant of the automobile, Alex Padmoroff, was reported in \"good\" condition at\nCastlegar aAd District HOspital.\nJoint funeral services will be\nheld for the victims at Union Of\nSpiritual Communities Of Christ\nHall, Wednesday afternoon.\nFERNIE \u2014 Theodore Wayne\nFenn, 23, was killed and his\nfather and sister injured Saturday when their 1958 car Skidded\non an icy stretch Of highway and\ncrashed into the northwest bridge\nabutment at Carbon Creek, about\nfive miles east of Natal on highway No. 3.\nRushed to Fernie Hospital,\nwhere they were described a*\nbeing in \"satisfactory\" condition, were Rose Carol Fenn, it,\nand Walter 6. Fenh.\nRCMP said the party was travelling to Calgary.; \"\nAn inquest will be held at Natal\nvillage hall Noy. 5\t\nStreet Corners\nBy The Informer\nJOIN NOW\n561 Royal Canadian\nAIR CADET SQUADRON\nHave Openings for 30 Cadets\nAge 14 and 15 years or 13 yean if in Grade >\n. Parade Time: 7 p.m.\nTuesdays at Nelson Armoury\n^^\n.:':.'!.   361  Squadron (Nelion)\nRoyal Canadian Air Cadets\nWINGS PARADE\n        And\nmm HOUSE\nf UESDAY, OCT. 27 \u2014 7:30 P.M.\nsi. \" ..-'\u25a0 Nelson Armouries t\n\u2122        Inspecting Officer Will Be\nSupt. J. Stevenson, O.B.E.\nFire Chief Owens will give a demonstration\nand program following wings parade.\nI wonder what candidates for\ncity council will have up their\nsleeves this time around? There\nare few opportunities at present\nto challenge them. Methlnks it\nwill be a dull and lifeless campaign. Next year, no doubt, when\nthe mayor's seat is up for grabs\nactivity will be much. Rumor has\nit that we will have three candidates for the mayoralty.\n\u2022 \u2022 *\nI have been keeping my eye\non the 12-mlnute parking meters\noutside city hall. Judging by the\nnumber of tickets I have seen\non car windows the city must\nbe making a fair amount of\nmoney. How many motorists can\njudge 12 minutes? They don't\nseem effective as most motorists go over that limit and hope\nthe meter man will not catch\nthem.\n\u2022 \u25a0\u00ab..\u2022\nOn the East side of Latimer\nthere is a large chunk of stone.\nPossibly in the dim past this was\nused for some useful purpose\nbut at present it is a danger spot\nas it means cars travelling in\na westerly direction have to\nmake a wide swing to miss it.\nIt should be removed before an\naccident occurs.\n\u2022 \u2022 *\nI was, talking to a trucker this\na.m. over breakfast and he point*\ned out that truckers have no\nchoice but to unload goods on\nBaker Street as the rear lanes\nare far tod small for trucks to\nmanipulate. I must admit this is\na good point and It never came\nto mind. Nevertheless, perhaps\ntruckers could arrange their\nschedules so as to miss the morn-\nCASTLE Theatre\nCastlegar, B.C.\nLast Times Tonight\n. ''JUDGMENT AT\nNUREMBERG\"\nSpencer Tracy, But Lancaster\nCARTOON\nOne Program 7:30 p.m.\n<M\u00bb*HW\u00bb\nNELSON LITTLE '\nASSOCIATION\nIn Conjunction r\n_ the Home r\nPresents\n\"THE DRUNKARD\"\nI By Raymond HaU\nHume Hotel, Oct. 28-31\n7:30 p.m.\nTickets:\n$1.50 Incl. Refreshments\n'     Bex Office\u2014Hume Hotel\n10-12 Noon - 1-5 pan.\nIng and evening rush hours. Or\nuse smaller trucks for deliveries,\n* \u2022 \u2022\nIt's time the city works department stored some sand or\ngravel at the Latimer Street\nbridge. During the past week I\nhave noticed many motorists getting stuck in the early a.m. on\nthe slippery surface.\n* * *'\nI think there is a need for\nsome street lighting on the Ymir\nRoad city boundary. Coming in\nfrom that direction the Street is\npitch black. Lights at this point\nwould also illuminate the city\nwelcome sign.\n* * *\nThe other day I was talking\nto the government agent. Have\nyou even given thought to the\nnumber of hats he wears? Judging by the list of titles on his\noffice door I am surprised he\nhas enough time to fulfill them\nall. Talking of hats, Magistrate\nWilliam Evans isn't too far be\nhind in titles either. He acts as\ncity and provincial magistrate,\nfamily and juvenile court judge\nas well as numerous other onerous jobs.\n* \u2022 \u2022 *.\nI hear Police Chief thMnlinsOn\nhas bought a house, and that his\nfamily is now here. NOW the\nchief has somewhere to go at\nnight \u2014 home.. . \t\n....\nAnother Ideal columnist haS\nstated that in the near future\nNotre Dame University may\nhave its own little town up there\non the hi)l with its own shops,\nrestaurants. Maybe this is a\ngood idea, but at present the\nuniversity area just isn't zoned\nfor that kind of expansion. However, if and when the time does\ncome, no doubt city council will\nagree to a re-zoning. It seems\nthat everyone else wanting a re-\nzoning gets it with little or no\ntrouble..\nJust heard that a dalgary Company has established an outlet\nin Nelson. This is what Nelson\nneeds and more, much mbre if\nwe are to expand.\nTWO MORE UNITS of the senior citizens' villa, which is to be officially opened Nov. 14, will be furnished as a result of presentation oi cheques\nto the Kiwanis Club by Mrs. Stanley Linton, left, president of the Soroptimist\nClub, and Mrs. A. J. Hamson, right, president of the Hostess Club, Kiwanis\nauxiliary, to Kiwanis president G. E. Chambers. The club bolstered its villa\nfunds by nearly $400 in its recent nut drive, chairman Andre L, Stevens\nreported at the same meeting.\u2014DaiJy Wews photo.\nPark to Remain on Vernon\nStreet, Council Decides\nW 6 :i c\n1HURSDAY, OCT. 29th\nWatch This Paper for\nOur Grand Opening Sale\n-BARGAINS FOR\nTHE WHOLE FAMILY\nYosh Tagami\nSucceeds Kary\nSucceeding Joseph Kary, Yosh\ntagami has been named manager of EllisOn Milling and Elevator Company Ltd., NelSOn\nf ranch.\nMr. Kary has resigned to join\n:he finance department of Brit-\nsh Columbia after 15 years as\nmanager.\nMr. Tagami has been assistant\nto Mr. Kary for several years.\nlie will be assisted by Fred Hed-\nI die, who has alio been ih the\nM\\ company's   emp!6y   for   some\ntime.\nReOd Elliion, vice-resident,\nLethbridge, was in Nelson to attend to details of the transfer of\nmanagement, and expressed ap<\nprecjation of Mr. Kary'S sCrviCe\nat a dwnef party for Mr. Kary\nand ws family. Company officials and local employees attend'\ned. a presentation, was made to\nMr. Sary.\nan\n\u25a0Ppp\nFOR   YOUR   LITTLE\n608LINS\nWitches Hoti 39c\nBeetle Hati 1 39c\nMake-Up ^ 19e\nCandy for Tracks\nOr Treats\n At .;\nSAMPLE'S\nNIL SON\nPHARMACY   LTD.\n\"Your Fortress of Health\"\n639 Baker St. Nelson\nPhone 352J3U\nNature lovers can breathe easily again \u2014 Memorial Park will\nremain a park \u2014 at least for the\ntime being. \u25a0\nCity council Monday night defeated a motion by Aid. Edith\nVan Maarion to approve the third\nreading of a resolution which\nwould remove the park restriction from the. Vernon Street garden area.\nThe Hume Hotel had made\novertures to purchase the property for development as a parking lot. It was pointed out, however, that it had made no definite commitments nor had it submitted plans for development.\nAid. Van Maarion said it was\nunfair to ask the hotel to commit\nItself to ahy plan of action when\nit was not guaranteed that the\nproperty would be sold simply\nbecause the parks restriction\nwas removed. She said also that\nshould the land be put up for\nsale, there wSs no assurance\nthot the hotel would be the successful bidder.\nAid. F. A. Beresfbrd was loudest in condemnation of the resolution.\n\"I maintain there is not yet\nPioneer Laid to\nRest at Creston\nCreston - Rev. r. Garvin\nofficiated at funeral rites for\nMrs. Ellen Ida Henderson, whose\ninterment took place in Cres-\ntin's Pioneer Cemetery.\nThe service was held at St.\nStephen's Presbyterian Church\nfor the 86-year-old wife of a\nformer Creston doctor. Pallbearers were L. Truscott, A. Robertson, P. R. Robinson, F. Williams,\nR. Marshall, Sr., ahd R. Roebuck.\nMrs. Henderson was born at\nAlma, Ont., in 1878. She mar-\nwed D.. George B. Hendersbn\nin Vancouver in 1908. She had\nreceived her education at Alma,\nlater moving to Toronto, where\nShe took hCr nurse's training at\nGrace Hospital. Shortly after the\ngreat earthquake in San Francisco, she served there for two\nyCars.\nFollowing her marriage in\nlS08, she and her husband came\nto Creston to make their home.\nShe had lived here Since.\nBesides being a great aid to\nher husband in his medical work,\nMrs. Henderson hod been an\nactive member of the women's\nMissionary Society, the Ladies'\nAid, a life member Of the ft ed\nCross and for a time had teen a\nmember of the school board, tier\nmam interests were in her\nChurch and her home.\nShe wSS predeCeasSd by her\nhuSband in April Ot 1*39.\nSurviving are one son, Alexander, Of CrahbrOOk; twO daughters, the Misses jean and Mar\ngaret at heme in Creston; three\ngranddaughters in Calgary.\nthe orangutan now it almost\nextinct with lets than 5,000 6ur>\ntfvihg ih the jungles Of Sara>\nwak, Sumatra and North Borneo.\nCHOOUITTE\nFUELS\nPH. 352-7535\nThe Finest Stoker Costs\nORDER NOW!\nOur Specialty \u2014\nSTOKER MIXES\nany parking problem in Nelson,\"\nhe said.\nHe suggested other nearby\nproperty could probably be pur-,\nchased If the hotel felt it needed\nincreased parking facilities.\nAid. H, Farenhoits seconded\nAid. Van Maarion's motion that\nthe third reading.be adopted, but\npointed out there was a tourist'\nFactor involved.\nApproval of the reading wOuld\nhave sent the issue before the\nlieutenant-governor, who would\nlikely have instructed council t\u00b0\ngo before the voters with a referendum. A similar referendum\nwas defeated at the. polls, two\nyears.ago. .\u25a0 -..,-. .,, >\u2022.\u25a0,:.,-.\nIn the Courts\nEli F. Esovoloff of Thrums\nwas fihed $400 and COSts and had\nhis licence suspended for six\nmonths when he pleaded guilty\nto impaired driving.\nMagistrate William Evans\nlevied.the fine in city, police\ncourt Monday. Police testified\nthat Esovoloff waS apprehended\nand charged after he hit a\nparked car in Nelson Saturday\nevening. This was his second\noffence on the same charge,\nit was stated.\nLloyd E. Peterson of Nelson\nwas fined $20 .and costs after\nhe pleaded guilty to speeding\nin the city.\nA CrestOn man, Charles Christ-\niarison, was given a hine-mOnth\nsuspended sentence when he\npleaded guilty to a charge df\nbeing in possession of. stolen\nPolice told the court he had\nStolen Some clothing from a\nparked cSr belonging to a tourist Friday night. Magistrate\nEvans alSo ordered him to post\na $200 bond to keep the peice.\nAndrew McKay of Nelson\npleaded guilty to speeding and\nwas fined $25 and costs.\nIn Family add Juvenile Gburt,\nJudge William Evans fined an\n18-year-old boy $20 and costs\nadd suspended his licence for 12\nmdnths after the youth was\nconvicted df speeding.\nAlthough the youth pleaded\nnot guilty, police evidence showed he failed to stop for a police\nofficer who noticed him speeding\nFriday night. He was later apprehended by NelsOn City police.\nAnother juvenile was fined $20\nand costs on a similar charge of\nspeeding. He pleaded not guilty,\nbut was  convicted by Judge\nEvans.\nIn provincial police COurt, Nick\nL. Dosenberger of Nelson paid\na $20 fine for speeding. He\npleaded guilty Monday,\nDriving a vehicle without 6.C.\nlicence plates resulted in a Nelson mad being fined $25 and\ncosts. PoliCe reported that\ntart Fauldi was Operating a\nvehicle Carrying Cntarib licence\nplates despite a police wdrhittg\ntd have them Changed. He pleaded guilty.\nPolice were Credited U apprehending a Musp motonst\nwho appeared m court faced\nwith two charges.\nNick George Misotka was\nfined $106 on the first charge\not tailing to stop at an accident\nand an additional $$6 aAd costs\non the second of filing a false\nstatement. ,\nMisutke wis involved in an\naccident October 3 near the\nSlocan junction and tailed to\nstop. He was later traced by\npolice, who matched a piece of\nchrome found at the scene of\nthe accident with a car he owned.\nThe second charge was laid\nafter he told police'he had insurance to cover the damage!\ncaused in the\u00bbcol)isjoh.'\"\nLost Hunters\nShow Up,\nSearch Ends\nThree hunters reported missing Sunday afternoon walked put\nof bos. land near-East trail Monday, halting a day-long search by\nCivil Defence, RCMP and volunteers.\nDan Williams,-18, Ronald Ewa-\nsink, 18, and \u25a0 Stanley peadmarsh\n20, wer? reported-missing after\nthey failed t. return home from\na hunting trip.   \u2022 \u2022\nA search party included some\n15 volunteers, .a.police dog and a\nplane operated 6y George PeterS\nof Nelson. The search was .concentrated in.the Champion LaMs\narea after the hunters' car was\nfound ;early. Monday moral.j\nnear a'.provihcial can^ site .road\nleading to the lake.\nThe trio told police that thCji\nhad become lost and had camped. In the ares overnight. They\nreached the Columbia Riverhear\nGenelie. Monday and followed the\nriver td trail, where they re'\npOrted to RCMP. ';.\nPoliie reported, the yduths siif'\nfered no ill effects and the\nsearch was immediately Called\noff.  \";\nTrade Board Finds\nFarmers Happy\nWith Milk Control\nCRESTON \u2014 Crestdh area\ndairy farmers seem satisfied\nnow that, the industry is under\nthe Milk Control Board in the valley, the Creston Board of Trade\nexecutive noted at its recent\nmeeting   .\nthe executive will investigate\nthe situation relative to the Jor\ndan property on the Creston'\nSalmo Skyway, it was the understanding this property would be\nmade an historical Site by the\nB.C. government.\nthe board will consider representation oh a committee to dis-\nCusS phases of the Columbia\nRiver area, which has been re*\nquested by Nakusp Chamber of\ncommerce...\nthe Saimo' creston Skyway\nfeeder roads came id for diSCufr\nsion.\nThe meat inspection ct locally\nslaughtered animals was talked\noyer, with horace Lewis asking\nadditional information from the\npublic health unit.\nConditions\n\"Despicable\"\nAt St. Vincent\nM6MtftSAL(6P) - Justice\nMinister 6uy favreau said Men*\nday night that \"really dCspIO'\nable\" conditions ekist in fit. Vim\ncent de Paul Penitentiary but all\nPrisoners wiU he transferred out\nof the maxifflum-tecurity institution within two years.\n\"it is quite dear that St. Vin>\ncent de Paul must be demolished\nadd disappear as quickly as pee-\nsible as a maximum-security in*\nStltutlon,\" he said.\nPenitentiaries .under construction at Cowansvllle, Que., and\nSte. .Anne .des Plaines, Que.,'\nwould replace the prison for December, 1966.\nCentennial Meet\nTo Hear Project\nCommittee Report\nReport of the project commit\ntee will be presented \"ii) its entirety\" at tonight's meeting of\nthe Nelson Centennial Club.\nIt is hoped that more residents,\nor representatives of various\ncity organisations, will participate, to become informed of the\nclub's work or to take part in\ncommittee work, officials said\nMonday. The club meets at the\nCivil Defence office in the City\nHall.\nFilm Board\nObserves\nSilver Jubilee\nTwenty-five years of film \u2022\nmaking was celebrated with a\nspecial anniversary program by\nthe National Film Board of Canada Sunday night.\nPart of a nation-wide series\nmarking the Silver Jubilee occasion, the evening was a Visual\ntreat to all movie-goers old\nenough to remember the silent\nscreen histrionics of Mary Pick-\nford, Marie Dressier, Mack Sen-\nnett's Keystone Cops, Charlie\nChaplin, as well as many other\nCanadian celluloid greats of later\nyears such as Norma Shearer,\nDeanna Dui'bln and Walter Pid-\ngeon who was special, narrator\nof a segment representing 50\nyears of Canadian movie history.\nTracing the history of the mo-\nvie Industry,, local \"NFB host\nThomas Whitehead said that the\ntheory of motion pictures was\nfirst conceived by a Chinese\nwhile walking past a picket\nfence. Noting the strange visual\neffect of the fence on animals\nbehind, the oriental Inventor created the first- Crude movie projector. Frorn this ancient toy\ncame the eventual 'picture pads'\nthat were flicked quickly by\nhand to produce motion effects.\nThe first real technical advance\nin movies was launched with the\ninnovation of Ed(soh?s crude\nprojector in 188$, and later Came\nthe inevitable \"peep shows\" and\nthe \"10*inute thrillers;\"\nMost impressive film On the\nprogram was a visual eulogy to\nCanada's dead of two world wars\nentitled' Fields Of 'Sacrifice.\nTrustees to\nFighf Teacher\nPay Demands\n.VANCOUVER (CP) s., BritiSh\nColumbia school trustees have\ndecided to take a \"stiff stand\"\nagainst teachers' demands for ah\naverage qine-per-cept salary increase,\nWilffed Pack of fiowi Chad B4y,\npresident of the B.C. School\nTrustees Association, said in a\npress conference---Monday the\ndecision was taken at a weekend meeting here;\nHe said school boards through'\nout the province now have received wage demand increases\nranging from \u2022\u25a0\u00bb 0er cent to 15\nper cCnt with a tew reaching\n26 per cent.\nThe boards had made offers\nin the twp'and-thfee-per'cent\nrange.\nMr; Peck: said that B.C. tea'\nchert now are the highest paid\nid Canada. Teachers Settled last\nyear for an average increase of\n3.5 per Cent and aisO received\nsaury increments ranging from\nthree to five per cent.\nEach ode per cent increase in\nteacherS' salaries cost taxpayers\nabout $1,000,000 a year.\nthe average starting salary\nfor qualified high schobl teachers was $3000. Ip most district*\nthe salary rose td $9600 in 16\nyears.\nWorry of\nFALSE TEETH\nSlipping er Irritating?\nDon't be iMiriiftii by toou faUS\nteeth sill)mt, druppinS or wobblini\nwhen you ilt. Win ,0\/ laugtl. Juil\nplalti. Hit AlfUaAt pOMei\nremarkable fine* it idded\n    by ft'\n, on your\nr,T.\u00ab,..\u00ab- p.v.\u00ab-.v v...iT gives a\nremarkable fine* if idded comtort\nand MMHty by ftOuiSg plates more\nor (eellMJli'i alkaline (Soft-a\u00abd).\nOet FASTEETH at any dhig ciunter.\nMrs. Gilbert,\nPioneer Of\nNelson, Dies\nA longtime Nelson resident,\nMrs. I. F. Gilbert, died Sunday\nat Kootenay Lake General Hospital, aged 83.\nMrs. Gilbert was born Annie\nElizabeth in Ireland and moved\nto Boston wjth her family as a\nchild. She was married in Concord, New Hampshire,. 60 years\nago and she and her husband\ncelebrated their 60th wedding\nanniversary in August, although\nat that time she was in hospital.\nBoth Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert\nwere barbers and worked in several of the Southern States before\ncoming to Nelson 53 years ago.\nMr .Gilbert still continues in his\nprofession, though Mrs. Gilbert,\nwho specialized in cutting children's hair, retired 25 years ago.\nThe couple was prominent In\nboating circles, showed great interest in fishing and were well-\nknown for the Ladybird, a handsome power boat which cut a\nmagnificent feather of spray on\nKootenay Lake through the\nyears. They resided at 511 Victoria Street.\nMrs. Gilbert Is survived by\nher husband and several nieces\nand nephews.\nWAX USE\nAbout 80 per cent of the I,-\n400,000,000 pounds of wax produced annually in the U.S. goes\ninto packaging and waxed paper\nproducts.\nCOLOR TV\n352-3355\nVIDEO\nELECTRONICS\nNOVA KELP\nFrom Nova Scotia\nATLANTIC  OCEAN  KELP\nA Pure, Mineral-Rich\nDietary Supplement\n$1.79-$2.79 $3.98\nSold At\nMayo Pharmacy\nLtd.\nCorner Baker and Ward Sts.\nPh. 358-2613        NelSon. B.C.\nBBS\nHUNTERS\nMpiaiHHiM.\n24-HOUR\nService Station and\nRestaurant,\nHeated Cabins\nEVERGREEN\nESSO SERVICE\nJaffray, B.C.\nHalfway Between Cranbrook\nand Fernie\nPh. 429-3521\nSee Us Fat\nSILENT, EFFICIENT\nand\nECONOMICAL\nCONTROLLED HEAT\nFor Every Room\nu* rf \u00abg i M\"m '. * \u00bb i\n\u25a0 \u25a0 ..\u00ab i H 0 m    It\nI   *   MIL,     .   0  \u25a0 1   (I\nCOLEMAN\nELECTRIC\nLTD.\nPh. 352-3175\nNCIson\nANNOUNCEMENT\nCanada's MSSt factory Franchised \"Hydraulic and\nPneumatic Service Repair Depot\"\nis pieasea to ana\u00abu&\u00bb the ooening:oj their sir.t, British\n1294 Ellis St. Kelowna, B.C.     Phone 7614919\nPARAMOUNT INDUSTRIES LTD.\n1294 EIUS Street - Kelowna\nW. THE SERVICK1 ISN'T PARAMOUNT -\n\u25a0   \u25a0  -  . . IT ISN'tsBRViesff ..-:.._.:;\u201e,...\nT\nPI .i.J.l*\n mmt\nStock Quotations\nThe Dally News does not hold Itself responsible Ib the event\nol id error In the following lists.\nClosing prices supplied by  Doherty,  Roadhouse *\nMcCuaig Bros., Trail, B.C.\nTORONTO STOCKS\nAbitibi.\n14.75\n14.87\nAlberta Dist\n3.80\n3.95\nAlgoma Steel\n74.00\n74.05\nAlta Gas Trunk 34.25\n34.75\nAluminum\n31,87\n32.00\nArgus\n17.37\n17.50\nArgus C Pfd\n14.00\n14.12\nBk. of Montreal 68.50\n69.00\nBank of N.S.\n,75.50\n75.87\nBathurst Power 25.75\n26.00\nBell Telephone\n59.87\n60.00\nB.A. Oil\n34.75\n35.00\nB.C. Forest\n32.75\n33.25\nB.C. Packer A\n17,75\n18,75\nB.C. Telephone\n65.00\n\t\nCalgary Power\n23.25\n23.75\nCan & Dom Sgr 25.75\n26.00\nCan Cement\n46.00.\n47,00\nCan Collieries\n12.50\n\u25a0 \u2014\u2014\nCan Iron\n43.50\n43.75\nCan Breweries\n10:00\n10; 12\nCan Canners\n14.75\n15.00\nCan Industries\n22.00\n22.12\nCan Imp. Bank\n68.25\n68.50\nCan Pacific Rly 52.67\n53.00\nChemcelt\n17.00\n17.12\nColumbia Cell.\n11.62\n12.00\nCHiiS\n42.50\n43.00\nCons Paper\n43.25\n43.37\nCons Gas\n12.37\n12.50\nCrestbrk Timber 4.20\n4.35\nDist Seagrams\n66.12\n66.50\nDom Stoes\n22.12\n22.50\nDom Tar & Chm 22.25\n. 22.50\nDom Textiles\n30.00\n30.75\nEddy Match Co\n45.00\n46.75\nEddy Paper\n21.00\n21.50\nFalconbridge\n79.62\n80.50\nFamous Players 22.00\n22.37\nFanny Farmer\n43.75,\n\t\nFord Motor Co.\n64.50\n65.00\nFord of Can ...\n182.00\n185,00\nGen Steel Wares 14.75\n15.87\nGoodyear\n152.50\n156.00\nGt Lakes Power 65.37,\n.65.75\nHome Oil A\n19.50\n19.75\nHome Oil B\n19.75\n20.00\nHudson Bay Co\n16.62\n16.87\nImperial Oil\n56.25\n56.37\nImp. Tobacco\n14.25\n14.37\nInd. Minerals\n8.25\n9.25\nInland Nat Gat\n9.37\n9.50\nIntl Utilities\n27.75\n27.87\nInt. Nickel\n91.75\n92.00\nInterprov Pipe\n92.75\n93.50\nInterprov Steel\n3.85\n3.90\nLaurentide\n17.00\n1712\nLoblaw B\n8162\n8,87\nMassey Ferg\n8.62\n28.87\nMacM Powell R 35.87\n36.12\nMolson Brew A 35,50\n36.00\nMont. Loco\nMoore Corp:\nNoranda\nOgilvie Flour\nPacific Pete\nPower Corp\nQue. Nat Gas\nRoyal Bank\nRothmans\nSalada Foods\nShell Oil\nSimpsons\nSoutham\nSteel of Can\nTraders Fin A\nTexaco\nTrans Mtn Pipe\nTrans Can Pipe 41.75\nUn Gas of Can 24.25\nWalker-Goodm. 35.75\nWestcoast Trans 16.37\nWeston Geo A. 17.75\nWoodwards A 2S80\nZenith Elect' ' 4:30\nMINES AND OILS\n6.40\n.70\n3.95\n.75\n8.10\n.27\n4.65\n16.00\nAdvocate\nAgnico\nAunor\nBarnat\nBethlehem. Cop\nBibis\nBralorne\nBrunswick\nCalgary . Edmn 20.37\nCampbell Chib   .5.05\nCan Delhi\nCampbell R L\nCariboo Gold\nCassiar Asb.\nConsol Rambler\nCentral Del Rio\nCentral Patricia\nCharter Oil\nChimo\nCoch Will.\nCoin Lake\nCons Halliwell\nCons Mogul\nConwest\nCopper Corp\nCowichan Cop\nCraigmont\nDennison\nDSM\nDickenson\nEast Malartic\nEast Sullivan\nFargo\nFrobex   i\n14.75\n55.87\n49.25\n14.00\n12.00\n14.62\n11.75\n78.25\n23.75\n11,50\n19.12\n27.25\n28.25\n26.50\n13.87\n68.00\n(37\n8.80\n18.50\n.75\n11.75\n1.77\n7..0\n1.30\n1.95\n1.00\n3,35\n.20\n.34\n3.80\n4.95\n.44\n.46\n16.62\n15150\n2.80\n5.05\n1:55\n5.20\n2:83\n.85\n15112\n58.25\n49:50\n14.37\n12.2\n14.75\n11.87\n78.32\n23,87\nHUB\n19:25\n27:37\n29.12\n26:62\n14.00\n6375\n20.50\n41.87\n24.62\n36.25\n16.50\n18.00\n25.75\n4.40\n6:45\n.71\n4.00\n.60\n8.25\n.28\n4.70\n16.12\n20.87\n5.15\n8.90\n18.75\n.77\n11.87\n1.79\n7.60\n1:33\n1.98\n1.02\n3.40\n.20',4\n.35\n3,85\n5.05\n. .45\n.48\n16:75\n15.87\n3.00 .\n5.25\n1,60\n5:35\n2.85\n.90\nGeco\nGiant Mascot\nGiant Yel.\nGranduc\nGunnar Mines\nHighland BeU\nHollinger\nHudson Bay Mg\nHudson Bay Oil\nHydra Ex\nIron Bay\nIso\nKerr Addison\nLabrador\nLake Dufault\nLeltch\nLittle Long Lac\nLorado\nMadsen\nMalartic\nMattagami Lake\nMclntyre\nMcKenzie - '\":\nMidcon\nNational Pete\nNew Coht Oils\nNew HoscO\nNorlex\nNormetal\nNorthgate\nOpemiska  ;\nOrmsby\nOrchan\n\u2022Petrol 0& 6\nPickle Crow\nPine Point\nPlace Gas\nPlacer\nPatino\nPreston\nProvo\nQuebec Lithium\nQuemont\nRadiore\nRayrock\nReeves Mac\nRio Algom\nSan Antonio\nSheep Creek\nSherritt Gordon\nSilver Standard\nSiscoe\nSteep Rock\nSullivan Con\nTeck COrp'\nTemagami\nTorbrit\nTriad Ott\nTribig     .\nUnion Oil\nUnited Keno\nUnited Oil ,.\nUpper Canada'\nViolamac\nWestern Mines\nWright Harg.\nWilroy\n39.75\n1.40\n14.75\n6.25\n6.05\n6.90\n31.62\n75.37\n15.75\n.21%\n.91\n2.30\n7:75\n36.00\n11.75\n4:*75\n1.71\n1.50\n2.06\n.67\n18.87\n62.00\n\"J\n4.10\n.^8Mi\n3.00\n.13Y4\n3.95\n5.30\n8.65  .\n48,00\n6.00\n40.00\n1.45\n14.87\n6.30\n6.10\n7.05\n31.75\n75.50\n16.00\n.22\n.97\n2.34\n7.85\n37.00\n11.87\n4.80\n1.80\n1.52\n2.09\n.70\n19.00\n62.50\n-.12\n.45\n4.30\n.30\n3.05\n.14\n4.00\n5.40\n; 8.70\n49.00\n6.10\n.52 .53\n31.75      32.00\n48.00\n9.60\n6,05\n2.00\n4:05\n9:95\n.40'\n.85\n3.00\n9:76\n'.23\n1.38\n4:60\n.62\n2.27\n6.25\n4.00\n5.40\n1:18\n.62\n2|30\n1:84\n15.62\n9.00\n.   ;65\n1.38\n2:83\n4.65\n- .71\n1.58\n48.25\n9.70\n6.40\n2.03\n4.10\n10.00\n.41\n.92\n3.50\n9.85\n.24\n1.40\n4.65\n.63\n2.30\n6.40\n4.10\n5.50\n1.21\n.63\n2.35\n1.65\n, 15.87\n9.10\n.80\n1.39\n2.90\n4.80\n.75\n1.59\nVancouver\nINDUSTRIALS\nGrowers A\nGrowers B\nSun Pub A'\nSunPUb.B\nInt Brew i B\n4:50\n4.65\n21.00\n21.00\n8.00\nMINES AND OILS\nACE\nBSM\nCanam Cop\nCopper Soo\nCRP   .     ,\nCrown Silver;\nDolly Varden\nENM\nHuestis\nLTLA\nJerico\nMt. Washington\nOttawa Silver\n1:21\n.1\u00ab4\nm\n.31\n1,03\n:i3\n.62\n13.00\n:30\n.22\n.35\n.91\n.1914\nPeace River Pete .51\n4.10\n.12\n:18\n,11'\n.81\n.13\n2.03\nPend Oreille\nSilver Ridge\nSkeena Silver\nTrojan\nTorwest '\nWesternExpl\nUtica Mines\nFUNDS\nAll Can Com\nAll Can Div\nAmer Growth\nCan Inv Fund\nCommonwlt Int 10:67\nFirst Oil'. Gas 5.48\nInvestors Growth Ml\n6,30\n8;47\n10:72\n4.13\nInv. Mutual\nLeverage\nIncome   '\nMutual Accum\nMutual Bond\nMutual Inc.\nTrans Canada\nGrpup1 Income\nUnited Ace.\n14.89\n9.51\n5.94\n' 4.84\n8.09\n6.37\nC. 8J99\ni :,4:26\n8.31\n5.00\n4.75\n21.50\n8.25\nU.23\n.18\n.12\n.32\n1.04\n.14\n; .63\n13.12\n.31\n.95\n.29\n.52\n4.45\n. .13\n.18%\n.12\n.82\n.15\n2.04\n6.90\n9.28\n11.72\n4.53\n11,69\n5.99\n9.14\n16.18\n10.42\n6.53\n5.29\n8.47\n6.96\n8.89\n4.66\n9.08\ntermpian ldari^it\nfinancing costs\n-sowehai\nmore to spend\nonoursfefe6**\nIt pay. to ... Royal Bankflrtt, before you go shopping for big\npurchases, It's the low-cost, businesslike way to borrow. No\nextras; no hidden chsrges; fast. Next time, start our with the\nmoney you need. Put buying power, bargilnlng power in your\npocket with \u00bblife-insured termpian loui.\nFinance in advance at\nROYALBANK\nAUTHOR MEETS LIEUTENANT-GOVERNOR \u2014 Mrs. Kate Johnson of\nNakusp is shown chatting with the Hon. George R. Pearkes, lieutenant-\ngovernor of B.C., on his recent visit to Nakusp as the latter received a copy\nof Mrs. Johnson's book, \"Pioneer Days of Nakusp and the Arrow Lakes.\"\nLooking on is Randolph Harding, Kaslo-Slocan MLA.\t\nMany Enjoy Nakusp\nHistory in New Book\n\"History is valuable to future\ngenerations and perishable unless placed on record when it is\ncomparatively fresh.\"\nSo goes part of the dedication\npage of the second edition of\nPioneer Days of Nakusp and\nArrow Lakes, written by Mrs.\nKate Johnson, whose first work\nwas publsihed in 1951 to commemorate Nakusp's Diamond\nJubilee (1892-1952).\nContaining an introduction by\nWest Kootenay MP, H. W. Her\nridge, who refers to the author\nas having \"blared the trail\"\nwith a book that \"will remain a\nbasic reference to which everyone interested in our district will\nturn not only next year, but a\nhundred years from now\", the\nfirst 1000 copies of the initial vol-\nurne were sold out and demand\nexceeded supply.\nIn a letter accompanying a\ncomplimentary edition sent the\nDaily News,- the authoress reports receiving congratulations\nfrom Wlllard Ireland, provincial\nlibrarian and archivist, who \"enjoyed looking It over and comparing it with (he earlier edition.\"\nGenerously interspersed with\npictures throughout its 240 pages,\nthe green-bound, hard-cover history of the Slocan area was pub-\nlished at Mrs. Johnson's expense\nand is \"dedicated to all pioneer\ncitizens of Nakusp and the Arrow Lakes,\" It begins with a\ngraphic introduction of the districts concerned, early day Indian populations and tribes, as\nwell as pioneer settlement of\nNakusp,  and  is written  in  a\nconcise and colorful style that\nenhances the biographical import of the facts covered.\nTrue to the work's dedicative\naspirations, is a rich abundancy\nof trail-blazers accompanied,\nwhenever possible, with identifying pictures. Despite the seeming preponderance of technical\ndata, the book maintains a sense\nof history without encumbering\nthe reader with statistical stuffiness..\nSuch references as The Licence, Basket Social, 1902 Murder and Digging a Well, lighten\nand, heighten reading pleasure,\nmaking the book a library of the\nnostalgic and never-dull pioneer\npast.\nDecember Vole\nTo Be Taken On\nWafer Bylaw\nCASTLE'GAR \u2014 Castiegar's\n$108,000 water extension bylaw\nis to be presented again to property-owners during December's\nmunicipal elections.\nPermission to re-present the\ncontroversial bylaw \u2014 which was\ndefeated by a narrow margin in\na recent vote \u2014 has been granted\nthe village by the department of\nmunicipal affairs.\nQh a motion of water commissioner Gwilym Hughes at its recent meeting council acted to set\nthe date of voting the same as\nthat .of the municipal election,\nWorks Sup't\nReceives Award\nFrom Association\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Announced at\ncity council meeting was award\nto longtime city works superintendent Emil Erickson of i\nquarter-century certificate of superior work by the Canadian\nWaterworks Association.\nApproval was given the bid of\n$99.64 per $100 by Wood-Gundy\nand Company Ltd. for the $177,-\n000 city debentures under the\n1964 Sewer Improvements Bylaw,\nwith resolution provincial guarantee be applied for,\nPayment of $15 a month by\nthe city to John Lancaster for\nstock pound location was\nproved.\nCouncil will meet in committee\nOctober 26 to discuss the new zoning bylaw. Resolution condemning it and proposing the planning program director service\nbe terminated was put forward\nby Alderman Sherling, but failed to get support of any other\ncouncellor.\nPioneer of\nKaslo Dies\nAt Penticton\nPENTICTON - Rev. Robert\nGates of Penticton United Church\nofficiated at the funeral service\nFriday for John Paterson, former longtime resident of Kaslo\nand later Nelson and Penticton.\nHymns sung were \"All the\nWay My Saviour Leads Me\" and\n\"The Twenty Third Psalm.\" Organist was Miss Linn Hendry.\nMr. Paterson was born in\nScarfskerry, Dunnet, Scotland,\nDecember 29, 1878. He came to\nCanada from London, England,\nin 1912, residing in Saskatoon until 1914, when he moved with his\nfamily to Kaslo, and lived there\nuntil 1960.\nHe was an active member of\nKaslo St. Andrew's United\nChurch, serving as secretary-\ntreasurer for more than 25 years.\nHe served on city council and\nvolunteer fire brigade for a\nnumber of years, and was on the\nstaff of the H. Giegerich and\nGeorge Baker stores.\nHe was predeceased by his\nwife, Hanna Mary, in 1945 and\nby his sons, Sydney, in 1914 and\nRobert of Kinnaird, in 1963.\nHe is survived by on son, Eric\n(Pat) of Penticton and four\ngrandchildren, Kenneth and\nWendy of Kinnaird, Jennifer, of\nPenticton, and Jay, of Victoria.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, OCT. 27,1964\u2014S\n\u00abH^WW\"*   W      .    \u00bb~'     *        ,   >     *\u2022*>*    ~\nNEW HOSTELS \t\nGermany has opened 23 new   ^\"ballots!\nyouth hostels this year as an\naddition to their country-wide\nnetwork of overnight stopping\nplaces for hikers and cyclists.\nSALMO VISITORS Jack L. Olson, governor of Lions Club District\nsecond from right, and Neil Hurd, international councillor and past multiple '\ndistrict chairman, extreme left, who paid their official visit to the Salmo Lions\nGlub last week, are shown with club president Denny Powers, second from'\nleft, and G. E. MacNeill, zone chairman, right.\n\u2014Photo by G. V. Myers.\niiiiiiiiiiimiiiimiiimiiHiHiniiiiii\nNAKUSP TO BE\nINCORPORATED\nNAKUSP - Nakusp will become incorporated.\nA vote held Saturday recorded 195 votes for incorporation\nand 65 against, with two spoil-\nH. W. Stones of Burton was\nreturning officer.\nillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli\nWinter Plans Follow\nKinsmen Bingo Success\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c line, 40c line bold face type; larger type rates\non request. Minimum two lines.\nCOPY DEADLINE - PLEASE NOTE\nCopy for this column accepted until 3 p.m. for Insertion\nIb next day's publication.\nBINGO\nLEGION   HALL   TONIGHT\n-29-h\nHaigh Tru-Art Beauty Salon\n576 Baker St. Ph. 352-3313\n-49-h\nKnitting yarns for every purpose\nEBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.\n-226-tfn\nNoon Luncheon\n50c\nWeek days at Hume Hotel\n-249-254\nDiamonds, Watches, Gifts,\nRepairs, Engraving.\nTED ALLEN'S JEWELLERY\n-29-h\nNELSON ROD & GUN CLUB\nGeneral Meeting Tonight,\nLegion Hall, 8 p.m.\n-252-252\nStylish New Dresses for girls,\nsmartly tappered pants for boys.\nYou pay no more for styles at\nEBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.\n\u2014232-tfn\nSatin-bound blankets, viscose,\n72 x 84. Good color range;\nAt $5.95 each.\nSTERLING FURNISHERS\n-251-252\nNOTRE   DAME   U \u2022 PANEL\nMoral Standards\nImmoral Standards\nWED., OCT. 28, I P.M.\n-251-253\nBULBS!   BULBS!   BULBS!\nGetting late. Plant your bulbs\ntoday. Complete Selection.\nNELSON FLOWERS LTD.\n-252-253\nOpen Daily 9 a.m. - 10 p.m.\nSunday 9 a.m..- 9 p.m. Free\nDaily Delivery. Darwin's Produce, -. 469 Baker St., Phone\n352-2120. \u2014231-h\nTeflon-coated aluminum frying-pans for non-stick frying. An\nideal inexpensive gift.\nHIPPERSON HARDWARE\n-252-252\nADULT EDUCATION COURSE\n.    IN CERAMICS\nEnrollees Needed;\nInstructor, Mr. S. Mignosa.\nTuesday, 7-9. Ph. 352-3351.\n-252-253\nJORDAN'S RUGS\nTo view in your own home carpet samples from Canada's largest selection, please phone your\nJordan Carpet Specialist \u2014\nKeith McDougald, Nelson Hotel,\n352-7211. Expert instalaton service available. \u2014252-253\nFAMILY\nFINANCIAL ADVISOR\nNow available to help solve\nyour financial problems. - The\nPlan features: Systematic. Debt\nRetirement, Systematic Savings,\nExpense Forecasting, Cash Discounts, Credit Sources, Co-operative Buying.\nFRED C. MERRIMAN\n560 Baker St. Ph. 352-6012\n-252-252\n\u25a0>J\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nGILBERT \u2014 Funeral services\nfor Mrs, Annie Elizabeth Gilbert\nwill be held,at the Thompson\nFuneral Home, Wednesday at\n11 a.m. The Rev. Peter W.\nParis will officiate and interment will take place in Nelson\nMemorial Park.\nKASLO \u2014 The Kinsmen turkey\nbingo proved to be a financial\nsuccess, with a net profit of $96.\nThiS money will again go towards improvement of the community hall.\nAt last.week's regular Kinsmen meeting, hall chairman Joe\nOnishko expressed satisfaction\nwith the turnout for work parties\nat the hall and noted that about\nhalf of the ceiling has been insulated and sheeted in.\nKin Joe submitted the price\nfor an oil furnace, received from\na local plumbing and heating\nfirm. The cost would be $590, and\nit is expected that labor will be\ndonated. The meeting agreed to\npurchase the furnace as soon as\npossible, and will sponsor a\nmoney-raising venture in the\nnear future in aid. of this much-\nneeded item.\nDiscussion on a Klondike night\nto be sponsored jointly by the\nKinsmen and Legion, followed\nwith a committee being appointed to look further into this tentative plan.\nThe club will again sponsor\nSanta's community visit, with a\ndate and time to be announced\nlater.\nFour couples plan to attend the\nKinsmen zone meeting to be\nheld in Rossland Oct. 31.\nOld Balfour Sanitorium\nSite Interests Couple\nBALFOUR,- Mr. and Mrs.\nBarry Shaw of the Philippines,\nrecently returned to Balfour to\nrenew old acquaintances and revisit haunts of yesteryear.\nMr. Shaw's father, Major G.\nShaw, was actively associated\nwith the old sanatorium when it\nwas in operation and he and his\nwife planted two acacia trees,\nstill growing'on the R. Penfold\nproperty.\nMajor.and Mrs. Shaw, accompanied by Barry, left Balfour in\n1926 for Riondel, and in 1928 returned to England, where they\nStill, reside.\nOf interest to the Balfour visitors was a menu of the 1917\nChristmas dinner at \"the San,\nfor it bears the atuograph of\nART AWARDS\nPENTICTON (CP) - Mary\nBull, Okanagan Mission, Percy\nRitchie, Naramata, M. E. Pun-\nnett, Penticton, Tomiyo Sasaki,\nVernon, and Marjorie Lane,\nSummerland, were named winners Saturday at the Penticton\nArt Club's art show. The winning paintings were selected\nfrom a field of 42 pictures hung\nNinety - four , artists submitted\n168 works to the exhibition.\nCheck Our Value Packed\nFlyer for These and Many\nMore Outstanding Values.\nIS\nVanilla or Chocolate.\nLet's Make\nTatty Apples.\t\nNickel Raisins\nLuncheon Meat\nTomato Juice\nCake Mixes\nTown House.\nIdeal for\nShell-Outs. \u201e\nKam.\n12 ox.\nTin. \u2022__\nTown House.\nFancy,\n48 ox. Tin. ..\nMrs. Wright's.\nAssorted varieties.\n19 ox. pkg. .-.\t\nib-39c\n30for*100\n3for89C\n__3for*l00\nPicnics\nFresh, Grain-Fed Pork Shoulders.\nWhole or Shank Half\n\u25a0a*\nPumpkins\nFor Jack O'Lanterns\nOr a Tasty Pie\nib.3e\nMajor Shaw, and was shown to\nthem by Mrs. J. Bowies'.t:: ',\nPrices\nEffective\nOctober\n27th to 31st\nWe Reserve the\nRight To Limit\nQuantities\nLI) SAFEWAY\nCANADA    SAFEWAY    LIMITED\n--**\u2022*\u00bb\nOyster Specialty\nOyster Stew is always a\nwonderful treat on a frosty\nnight, or for a party dish ...\neasy to make too, in this\noyster-month-with-en- R.\nJust cook 1 pint fresh oysters\n(don't bother to drain them)\nin % cup melted butter until\nthe oyster edges curl... don't\novercook them. Then add -3\ncups scalded milk and 'A cup\nlight cream. Season with salt,\npepper and Worcestershire\nssuce. \u2022\u25a0'\u2022'\u2022*\u25a0;'.\nSweet Treat\nWant to make hot waffles\nextra special ? Add a'.; few\nchopped pecans to the weffleir\nbetter before baking and serve\nthem with hot buttered maple\nsyrup. Warm 14 cup butter and\n1 cup maple syrup together\nover low heat and stir to blond\nwell. That's all there is to It I\nDelicious served a Is mode\ntoo, with vanilla ice cream; for\na hot and cold combination.\nHoliday Sundae   \\\nAnother hot and cold favorite\nof ours, from now until Christmas, Is a hot mince sundae.\nJust heat your favorite mince\nmeat mixture, (the one you\nuse for pies and tarts), thinning it down if necessary with\ns little orange juice. Add a\ndash of rum flavoring and.vqu\nhave the easiest ice cream\ntopper to Intrigue your guests\nin s long time.\nSomething Hot To\nDrink\nAlthough we think it's hard to\nImprove on good old-fashioned hot cocoa made with,\nmilk, here's a new variation'\nthe adults in the crowd wHI \u25a0\nlike. To make'Creole Coffee,\nblend equal parts of freshly\nmade hot coffee and cocoa.\nFloat a mound of whipped\ncream on top and sprinkle'\nwith cinnamon . . . or try a\ncinnamon stick stirrer,  ' '\nFrench Fare\nFrench Onion Soup, a popular\nrestaurant item now that\nwinter is here, can be a family\nfavorite too I For a quick version sautO 2 cups thinly-Sliced\nonions gently in butter until\ntender but not browned. Add\n2 tins undiluted consommi\nsoup, season and simmer .for\na few minutes. Smells wonderful and tastes good tool\nParmesan Topper\nTo crown thst Onion Soup, in\ntrue French style, toast thick\nslices of French bread. Brush\nwith melted butter, sprinkle\nwith plenty of grated\nParmesan cheese and broil\nuntil the cheese is melted and\nlightly browned. Float a crusty\nslice stop each bowl of soup\njust belore serving.\nr\nPrepared bythe Home Economists of j\nTHE CANADIAN DAIRY j\nFOODS SERVICE BUREAU I\n147 Davenport Rd. Toronto 5. Ont I\n10-N.1S\n.,r,..;\n Established April 22, 1902 Nelson, B. C.\nPublished by the NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n'266 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia, mornings except\nSundays and holidays in the centre oi the Kootenays with\nthe largest daily circulation in the Interior of B.C.\nAuthorized as Second Class Mail, Post Office Department, Ottawa,\nand for Payment of Postage in Cash.\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN DAILY NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION\nMEMBER OF THE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS\nThe Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news\ndispatches credited to it or to The Associated Press or Reuters in this\npaper and also the local news published herein.\nTuesday, October^J964\t\nThe Signs Are Significant\nIt is being said in Europe that the    of the non-Communist European na-\nSoviet Union will never be the same\nagain, meaning by this that the deposed Nikita Khrushchev changed\nthe doctrine of Communist domestic\npolicy to a degree that cannot be\nreversed. ...\nThe former premier eased the\ntight\" tyranny of the Stalin regime,\npaid heed to the material wants of\nthe Russian people, and permitted\na more liberal freedom in their daily\nlives.\nHe aiso was more tolerant of the\nsatellite Communist regimes held in\nthe Soviet European bloc and allowed their national expressions to have\nmore play. Poles, Czechoslovaks,\nHungarians, et al, are of their ethnic\nderivation before they are Communists, and this has gradually lessened the imposed dominance of\nSoviet rule over their own affairs.\nNotable reflection of this is the\nopen dissent voiced among the satellites at the manner of Mr. Khrushchev's dismissal, something that\nwould have been unheard of only a\nfew years ago. The courage to speak\nout against the Kremlin has blossomed.\nEven among Communist parties\ntions the restive spirit of independence is showing itself. The French\nCommunists have demanded an explanation of the former Soviet premier's removal, and in Italy also,\nwhere Communist strength is large,\ndissatisfaction has found vocal objection.\nEvery previous shift of either Soviet policy or alignment has been\naccepted without question, no matter the about-face it involved. That\nthe mandates of the Kremlin are no\nlonger inviolable is of significance.\nSo much in fact that the new Soviet, hierarchy has quickly softened\nthe press denunciation of Mr. Khrushchev by which it sought to justify\nhis dismissal, and offered assurance that no change in his general\npolicies is in prospect.\nMr. Khrushchev has gone, presumably unlikely to return. But it\nseems apparent that in his ten years\nof power he so altered the forces of\nSoviet rule at home \u2014 and even\nperhaps abroad \u2014 thai the Stalinist-\nstyle days of central Moscow direction are also gone.\nThis is a development to be\nviewed with encouragement by the\nworld at large.\u2014Victoria Colonist.\nHow to Give Tke\nStatus Seeker More Power\nModern man just doesn't know\nhis own power any more.. The subtle,\nsinuous whine of the small electric\nmotor has gradually absorbed most\nof the exertion in life.\nIt began, we think, when the\nelectric clock made the winding key\nobsolete. Then the electric shaver\neliminated soap, and the electric\ntoothbrush significantly eliminated\nheart attacks brought on by the overexertion of vigorous brushing.\n. The kitchen absorbed electric can\nopeners, and electric ice crushers,\nthen discovered that it had yet to\nassimilate the electric carving knife.\nAt the office, men have grown\naccustomed to electric pencil sharpeners, and electric erasers. And now\ncomes the most electrifying development of all: The electric waste basket. Instead of crumpling old notes,\nerrors, secret designs, and messages\nof state into unsightly wads, the\nowner of the electric wastebasket\nmerely feeds the paper into the deskside mechanical jaws, and it is\nshredded instantly to excelsior.\nThis $100 item is cleverly offered\nas a necessity for the men who must\ndaily dispose of large quantities of\nconfidential data. This is a bait that\nis irresistible ior the status-minded\nexecutive.\nAn electric wastebasket at their\nside will make their importance clear\nto everyone. It will give them a feeling of power.\n\u2014Richmond (Va.) News Leader.\nThose Fecund China Pi&s\nThe current quest of Dr. Wesley    that great survivor of the Twenties:\n\"If I had a talking picture of you-\nhoo\nCombs of the University of Alberta\nfor, what he describes lugubriously\nas a \"fecund Chinese pig\" fills us\nwith hope for the world. Here we\nhave Nikita Khrushchev en route\nior the salt mines, Goldwater putting it out darkly in the States, riot\npolice cruising the back streets oi\nQuebec as the Queen smiles bravely\n\u2014 and good Wesley Combs concentrates resolutely on a breathbated\nsearch for a fecund Chinese pig.\nPeople,'bless 'em, employ many\nways of getting their mind off the\ndreadful'state of the world. Some\ntake up knitting or gin. Others emigrate to Bora Bora to set up French\ntoast factories. Still others ruminate\nnostalgically through old ditties like\nDrastic Cure\t\nDoctors often are pestered by\nneurotic persons who call them, for\n\"I'd admire it every time I got blue-\nhoo\".\nWe sincerely hope Dr. Wesley\nCombs is successful in his porcine\nOdyssey. If we happen to spot a\nfecund Chinese pig rooting around\nthe Okanagan, we'll sure let him\nknow, by Golly!\u2014Penticton Herald.\nFreshman Folly\nEvery year as naive first-year\nstudents arrive starry-eyed and\nsheep-like at the University oi Victoria, the upper-classmen develop\nswelled egos and a kind of you-\nmean-I-was-like-that-once attitude.\nIt may be justiiied. Last year\nupper-classmen helping during registration found that most frosh would\nunquestioningly sigh blank cheques\nshoved before them. And this year\n_. r._. - ... \u2122 \u201e.\u201e,\u201e;,\u201e,; ^e gullibility reached unbelievable\nno real reason at all, and sometimes;.- '_.,....   \u201e..\/., ,      ,\nat inconvenient times. One English\ndoctor, who thus had been bothered\nby a patient who called him at early\nhours in the morning, took revenge.\nHe was out visiting another patient, in the same area, in tbe middle\nof the night. So he made a Call to\nthe home of the pest, rang the doorbell and awakened him, and politely\nenquired about his health.\nThe doctor wasn't troubled by untimely calls irom that individual\nagain.\u2014Windsor Star.\nPolitical Arguments Support\nGovernment's Proposed Tax - Cut\nIs there going to be a tax-cut\nin 1965? From all indications it\nwould appear so. The government's efforts to stimulate the\neconomy have thus far failed\nto see the real underlying prob-\nLESTER  PEARSON\n..  .  . faces hurdles\nlem which faces the nation today: non-parity between the\ngrowing labor force and the labor market.\nAn expansion policy means\neasy credit, but this is something\nwhich is already present in an\naffluent society, with its increased interest rates.\nTherefore, the only way in\nwhich Ottawa can remedy the\nsituation and at the same time\nstimulate the economy, is a tax\nreduction.\nThere are compelling political\narguments being advanced here\nfor such a move.\nThe minority Pearson government is facing several high parliamentary hurdles on the pension plan, flag, redistribution,\ngovernment supply and other\nissues. Many observers expect\nthe government to clear these\nhurdles, in time.\nMeanwhile, broad suggestions\nMr. Gordon's next budget\nspeech\u2014if he gets a chance to\ndeliver it\u2014will contain tax cuts,\nare viewed here as an excellent\nhedge against the possibility of\na winter election.\nFinancially,   the   government\nLetters to the Editor\nLetters to the Editor oo an; topic ot genuine Interest\nare welcome II they are briel, accurate and lair. They may\nbe published over a nom de plume, but the name ol the\nwriter must be given to the Editor as evidence ol good\nfaith. Anonymous letters go Into the wastopaper basket.\nTypewritten letters must be double-spared.\nIs in a good position for such\naction.\nDEFICIT WILL BE LESS\nWith federal revenues rising,\nMr. Gordon has said the year's\ndeficit will be substantially less\nthan the $455,000,000 he envisaged last March.\nThe independent Canadian\nTax Foundation, in its latest\njournal gives Mr. Gordon \"an\nexcellent chance\" of balancing\nthe budget, if present revenue\ntrends continue.\nThe economy is also ripe for\na tax cut.\nThis year's advance in Gross\nNational Product is expected to\nbe betwen seven and eight per\ncent over 1963. Mr. Gordon has\nsaid the current expansion will\ncontinue \"well into\" 1965.\nBut how fast will the economy\ngrow? An average forecast of\ngrowth of 5% per cent in 1965\nwas made this week by seven\neconomists reporting to the Canadian wing of the National Industrial Conference board meeting in Toronto. Presumably,\nthat is the total advance in\nterms of value, including price\nWILL HAVE TO GROW\nIf. so, it's not good enough, in\nthe view of many authorities\nhere. Estimates that GNP next\nyear will have to grow by a full\nfive per cent in volume\u2014before\nRecognition of\nYouths' Stock\nCar Work Urged\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u2014During the past several\nmonths many Nelsonites have\nbeen travelling to Calamida Stadium at Kinnaird on Sunday afternoons to enjoy the stock car\nraces and support the Nelson\nboys taking part. Although some\ndistrict news media have followed the sport with keen interest\nand praise for their local contestants, to my knowledge your\npaper has carried only the paid\nadvertisements.\nIt would appear to me that\nmany of the youths whose names\nhave appeared in your column\ncovering the courts ahd driving\ninfractions would probably become more infrequent if their\ntalents were encouraged on a\nsupervised racetrack and their\nleisure time spent constructively building up a stock car. Other\nbusiness people in the district\ncare enough to provide these\nyoung drivers and their teammates with a wonderful stadium,\nhelp them obtain cars, parts,\ntires, fuel and give them moral\nsupport. Could you not dedicate\na small spot on one of your pages\nin recognition of this sport?\n(Mrs.) A. Stevenson,\n70. Third Street.\n(Editor's note: Quite right,\nMrs. Stevenson. Your suggestion\nin this matter is appreciated.)\nFair, Generous\nTreatment Asked\nTo The Editor:\nSir\u2014Thirty shekels of silver\nfor the'Garden of Eden? No,-\nnobody proposed, such. Mr. H.W..\nHerridge, MP, described the Arrow Lakes as the \"Garden of\nEden\" of British Columbia. Only\na part of it is, for a sum of\nmoney, to be used primarily for\na foreign power, there is a parallel to some extent. The question is who is to receive the\nbenefit of this great development?\nWhen the Kline report on expropriation was- filed recom-\nmending a standard of market\nvalue for property, it was welcomed by the government. Applied to the Arrow Lakes, it\nwould    mean  . under-developed\nterritory above Robson would receive a value based upon:\n1. When the CPR abandoned\nits Arrow Lakes boat service\nand promotion of Arrow Lakes in\nfavor of its Kettle Valley line;\nand 2. when the granting of a\nforest management licence failed to provide the prosperity an\nticipated, land values remained\ndepreciated to this state.\nIf the Columbia development\nis to be as good as proposed it\nshould include for all affected,\nthe fair and generous treatment\nthat Premier Bennett said would\nbe given.\nA. Lake\nSome 2,000 tin mines existed\nin Cornwall, England, 200 years\nago but only!two are operating\ntoday:\nWALTER  GORDON\n. . . deficit to be less\nprice increases \u2014in order to\nkeep unemployment at the\npresent level, are regarded here\nas sound.\nMr. Drury told a Montreal\naudience Sept. 30. \"It has become increasingly evident that\nthe Canadian economy is not\ngrowing fast enough to provide\nsufficient employment opportunities for our growing labor\nforce. . . . Consequently, the\nfirst major economic task facing Canada is to achieve a\nmuch faster rate of economic\nexpansion.\"\nNext question: How is it\ndone?\nThe United States did it by\ncutting both corporation and\npersonal income taxes. But the\nexperience has shown that\nmuch of the personal tax cuts\nwent into savings,, rather than\nexpenditures. That does little\nfor demand.\nMoreover, Mr. Gordon has\nsaid Canada has the added\nproblem of slippage or leakage\n\u2014that is, the propensity, for\nadded individual income to be\ndiverted into imports, thus\nworsening the external payments difficulty.\nThat happened this year even\nwithout a tax cut. With incomes\nrisin? as the economy reacVd\nfor new heights, imnorts in the\nfirst six months of 1984 were\nmore than. 19. per.cent higher\nthan a year earlier.\nBOTH CUTS I.IKEI.R\nHence, the obvious preference\nhere for a reduction in corporation income taxes, though cuts\nin both, fields are considered\nlikely.:.-. ...  s-,:.\nThe added corporation income\nwould likely mean more capital\ninvestment. While this also would\nput a pull on imports, most of\nthem would be capital goods rather than consumer products\ncomneting with Canadian production.\nThe biggest boeey in sight is\nthe threat of inflation.\nTax cuts in the fourth year of\neconomic growth could spur accelerated price increases. However, Mr. Gordon said recently\nSo far no inflationary nressures\nare evident and that if thev do\noccur, the government will not\n: resitate to take \"remedial action.\"\nNewfoundland Residents Must\nAbandon Homes of Ancestors\nBy ED WALTERS\nST, JOHN'S Nfld. (CP)-Be-\nfore 1830 the British government forebade settlement in\nNewfoundland.\nTo escape expulsion some settlers built homes in out-of-the-\nway places along the island's\n6,000 miles of coastline.\nA century and a half later\nmany of their descendants are\nfinally leaving \u2014 voluntarily.\nThe Newfoundland government's policy of centralizing\npopulation has in the last six\nyears resulted in abandonment\nof 98 communities whose 1,345\nfamilies have shifted to larger\ncentres.\nUnder the Evacuated Communities Act each family receives $600 from the government to help pay the cost Of\nmoving. However, every family\nin a-community must agree to\nmove before the government\nwill approve assistance.\nThe aim is to bring residents\nof isolated settlements to larger\ncentres where they can be more\neasily supplied with roads, electricity, medical facilities, education and employment opportunities.\nGO BACK TO FISH\nK. M. Harnum of the welfare department, which admin-\nHUBERT\nproportions. Upper-classmen placed\na paper cup containing a few coins\non a table which frosh shuffled past.\nAnd without a complaint or a\nquestion, frosh began depositing a\nnickel each in the cup.\nSo the upper-classmen began\ntelling the frosh that it was entirely\nvoluntary, that it was in fact stupid\nto, puj money in. the. cup. .\n' . You guessed it.'. The nickels kept\ncoming, and by the end of the day\nover $5 rested in the cup.\n\u2014Victoria Daily Times^\n\"Look,.if I ever\u2022\u2022 need a. right-wing liberal in my\nkitchen, I'll let you know.\"\nisters the act, says people who\nhave moved may go back in\nsummer to fish or for vacations\nbut are not allowed to return\npermanently unless they refund\nthe money.\n\"I Come From\nCrazy, Mixed-up\nHousehold\"\nENID, OKLA. (AP)-\"I come\nfrom a crazy, mixed \u2022 up\nfamily,\" Charles Statham once\nsaid. \"I call my mother sister\nand she calls me father.\"\nStatham is a Roman Catholic priest, pastor of St. Francis\nXavier church here. His\nmother, Sister Mary Joseph, is\na Benedictine nun. She's the\nbookkeeper for Monte Casino\nSchool in Tulsa.\nFather Statham and Sister\nJoseph aren't the only members\nof their family who chose religious vocations. Father Sta-\ntham's two brothers, Sister Joseph's only other children, also\nare priests. Rev. Denis Statham\nis dean of the theology department at St. Gregory's Abbey in\nShawnee, Okla., and Rev. William Statham is a Maryknoll\nmissionary stationed in Formosa.\nSister Joseph entered the Benedictine order in 1950, about 12\nyears after the death of her\nhusband, Charles M. Statham,\nSr.\n\"Of course, I don't really\ncall her sister,\" Father Charles\nsaid, \"1 call her Mom.\"\nFather Charles says it's unusual tor a widow to enter a\nconvent \"but it's probably safe\nto say that Mom is the only\nwoman in a convent with all\nher sons in the priesthood.\"\nFather Charles and Father\nDenis see their mother about\ntwice a month but Father William goes six years between\nleaves.\nAnd what do a couple of\npriests and a nun do when they\nhave a family get-together?\n\"Well,\" said father Charles,\n\"We watch a lot of television.\nMom doesn't get to watch it\nvery much in the convent so\nshe enjoys it when the wraps\nare off.\n\"And once in a while Mom\nlikes to get in the kitchen and\nfix a meal like the good old\ndays.\" *'.\n. The $600 frequently does not\ncover a family's entire moving\nexpenses,   he   says   but \"the\"\nmoney is intended only as \"assistance.\"\nLatest census figures show\n316,531 of Newfoundland's 457,-\n853 live in centres of less than\n5,000 population. In remote villages, mainly on the southwest\nand northeast coasts, populations of under 100 are common.\nPeople were moving to larger\ncentres on their own long before government assistance became available, Mr. Harnum\nsays.\nMany of the abandoned communities are on islands which\nduring half the year are cut off\nfrom the mainland by storms\nand ice. There is no electricity,\nhospitals or doctors. Often there\nare no teachers available for\nthe one and two-room schools.\nOnly way for seriously ill persons to reach medical aid is by\naircraft.\nSOME STAY\nOther viilages in isolated\nparts of the mainland were in\nalmost as bad a position. It was\nnot practical to extend electricity or roads to hamlets of a\ndozen or so families.\nSimilar conditions still exist\nin many other coastal communities. Not everybody wants to\nmove.\nSome of the reasons advanced\nby people for wanting to remain\nin Isolated nooks are purely\nsentimental. Mr. Harnum said\nit was typical to hear someone\nsay \"Poor old father is buried\nup there on the hill and I'm not\ngoing away and leave him.\"\nWhen people leave their\nhomes and move to another settlement they.usually are welcomed by established residents.\nMr.: Harnum said it's recognized that an addition to the\npopulation of a community will\nmean more and better public\nservices.\nHe said the newcomers often\nprove to be a different type of\npeople than those already there.\nThey almost always are moving from a- place where frugality and hard work was necessary to live.\nConsequently they are likely\nto prove more industrious and\nindependent and therefore give\ntheir adopted community a shot\nIn the arm.\nA NOBEl GREETING- Df Konrad Bloch. 02, Harvard biochemist, is greeted by a congratulatory message on his ollict\ndoor in Cambridge after word that he Is a Nobel Prize winner. He shares the sward for medicine with Prof. Feodor\nLynen of Munich. West Germany, for cholesterol research.\nThis School May Sound\nFishy, But It's Real\nBy DAVE BUTLER\nST. JOHN'S, Nfld. (CP)-The\nNewfoundland College of Fisheries has no intention of trying\nto teach its students how to\nfish\u2014only how to fish more efficiently and profitably than\ntheir forefathers.\nMany of the 200 young men\nwho donned the dark blue\nsweater with bright crest issued by the school have already learned their trade in\ntheir father's boats. Now the\ncollege wants to educate them\nto the degree where they can\nderive all the benefits from a\nlife at sea.\nWith an initial grant of\n$1,000,000, the school opened\nhere last year to an experimental class of about 100. With\nseven departments, the school\noffers more than 50 courses,\nfrom net \u2022 minding to marine\nelectronics and bacteriology.\nThis year's class of 200,\nwhich began studies Sept. 28, is\nusing the most modern equipment and getting the benefit of\nknowledge of experts from half\na dozen countries.\nThe only set qualification for\nadmittance is that the candidate must be at least 16. The\ncurriculum was made flexible\nso that whatever formal schooling a student has had he can\nstart at his own level.\nEXPENSES PAID\nThere is little if any cost to\nthe student. Meals and lodging\nare provided and he receives\n$7 a week throughout the\ncourse. If he has been working\nhe can forego the expenses' and\ndraw unemployment insurance.\nTravel expenses to and from\nthe college are paid by the\nschool.\nThe cost is shared by the\nNewfoundland government and\nOttawa through the Technical\nand Vocational Training Assistance Act.\nThe school's seven departments are: nautical science;\nnaval architecture; fish process\ntechnology; marine engineering; physics, mathematics and\nelectronics; English, and extension services.\nIt offers candidates the opportunity to take department of\ntransport examinations leading\nto certificates of competency as\nmasters, mates or engineers in\nthe merchant marine or coast\nguard.\nThe academic year is broken\nup-into four semesters of about\nthree months each so that maximum use can be made of the\nfacilities\nTALENT  FROM ABROAD\nThe provincial government\nbrought lecturers and instructors from Norway, England,\nJapan, France, Romania and\nschools in Newfoundland. The\ncollege now has five senior lecturers, nine lecturers, 27 instructors ahd three assistant instructors.\nCyril Banikhin, director of administration, says he sees a\ngreat future for Newfoundland\nfisheries but feels the fishermen will have to obtain further\neducation to benefit from it.\nThe North American market\nNEWSMEN\nREJECT NEW\nPROPOSAL\nDETROIT (AP) - Detroit's\nnewspaper strike dragged into\nits 105th day today.\nStriking Local 13 of the Printing Pressmen's Union Sunday\nrejected\u2014by an announced 230\nto 17 vote\u2014a new publishers'\nproposal endorsed by President\nJohnson.\nThe rejection dashed new\nhopes for a settlement of the\ndispute which has closed Detroit's two dally newspapers,\nChief issues in the strike are\nunion demands for premium\npay for Saturday night work at\nThe Free Press and manpower\nfor printing presses at The\nNews. Washup time also is in\ndispute.\nfor seafood products will increase 30 per cent over the next\n20 years, he adds.\n\"These facts alone call for\naggressive planning and positive action. The college of fisheries is dedicated to capitalizing on this need and this opportunity.\"\nThe school's president is William F. Hampton of St, John's,\nwho graduated from Dalhousie\nUniversity, Halifax, and has a\nPhD from McGill University.\nWhile working as director of\nresearch development for General Seafoods in Boston he directed the team that developed\nfish sticks. He later spent several years as chief of the fish\nprocessing section of the Food\nand Agriculture Organization in\nHome.\nOn completion of required\ncourses, students will receive\neither a diploma of technology\nor a vocational certificate, depending on level of training and\nlength of time spent in school.\nThe technology diploma will\nrequire two or three years of\nstudy and is expected to provide personnel for industry. The\nvocational certificate, particularly aimed at inshore fishermen and those already employed in the industry, will be\ngiven for shorter courses.\nToday   |\nIn History\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nOct. 27, 1864 . . .\nThe Grand Trunk Railway opened for business on\nits Montreal \u2022 Toronto line,\n108 years ago today \u2014 in\n1856. The railway had been\nincorporated in 1853 to build\nthis key rail link in Eastern\nCanada. The railway was\nintended to serve all important cities in Quebec and\nOntario and to link up with\nU.S. lines.\n1938 \u2014 Germany began\nmass deportation of Polish-\nborn Jews from Germany.\nFirst World War\nFifty years ago today\u2014in\n1914 \u2014 HMS Audacious- waS\nsunk but her crew was\nsaved after the dreadnought\nstruck a mine in the Irish\nSea; Boer Rebellion spread\nfrom the Cape to the Orange\nRiver Colony where Hell-\nbron was seized by Generals Christian De Wet and\nC. F. Beyers, South African\nWar leaders.\nSecond World War\nTwenty-five years ago today \u2014 in 1939 \u2014 Canadian\nPrime Minister Mackenzie\nKing declared in a broadcast that Canada was at\nwar to protect Christianity;\nPope Pius XII, in his first\nencyclical, denounced absolute rule and governments\nwhich put themselves \"in\nthe place of the Almighty;\"\nThe U.S., in a Senate vote,\ncompleted' the first step in\nIts revision of arms policies;\nFrance claimed clashes between German and French\narmies on the Western\nFront were increasing.\nWord ot Life\nIt is better to trust in the Lord\nthan to put confidence in man.\nPsalm 118:8.\nPreparation and training can\nreduce casualties and loss of\nproperty. See your Civil Defence\nCo-Ordinator and find out how\nyou can fit into Emergency Planning, -r-\n \u25a0H\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\n\u25a0\u25a0\nMAKING THEIR HOME AT ROBSON,\nMr. and Mrs. George Wanjoff were united In\nmarriage recently at the home ot the bride's\nparents. Mrs. Wanjotf Is the former Phyllis\nMakasoff, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. Mike J.\nMakasoff of Taghum, and the bridegroom is\nthe son of Mr, and Mrs. Peter G. Wanjoff of\nRobson. The bride wore a formal-length\ngown of peau de soie with bateau neckline,\nelbow-length sleeves and bell-shaped skirt.\nHer scalloped veil of silk illusion tulle was\nheld by a tiara trimmed with pearls, and her\ncascade bouquet was of red roses. Miss Shirley Smieff of Robson was her attendant, wearing turquoise chiffon over taffeta, with headdress en tone and white accessories, Her bouquet was of turquoise carnations. Mr. Harry\nGorkoff of Robson was best man. A reception\nwas held In the Robson Community Hall, decorated with pink and white streamers and\nbells, and the bride's table was centred with\na three-tiered wedding cake. For a trip to\nBanff and Radium, the bride changed Into a\nblack wool tweed suit with black patent accessories.\u2014Photo by Renwick Studio.    .\nHints From Heloise\nBy Heloise Cruse\nGrandmotherly Appearance Masked Steel\nNina Petrovna Swallowed Up In\nAnonymity of Soviet Retirement\nBy STANLEY JOHNSON\nAssociated Press Staff Writer\nThe retirement of Nikita\nKhrushchev lets a woman who\nnever wanted the limelight slip\nback into obscurity\u2014his wife,\nNina Petrovna.\nShe was the first wife of a Soviet leader to become a world\npersonality in her own right.\nUntil she was exposed to the\nfull glare of American publicity\nduring a U.S. visit, little was\nknown about the onetime rifle\nmarkswoman in the Red Guard\nwho mellowed over the years\nuntil Western acquaintances\ncalled her \"grandmotherly.\"\nPlump, badly corseted, sometimes wearing clothes that\nlooked like hand-me-downs from\nher washwoman, the 64-year-old\nMrs. Khrushchev nevertheless\nshowed she had a penetrating\nI brain  behind  that  knotted  up\njscraggle of grey-brown hair.\nIn Kremlin circles there were\nthose who said she was the driving force behind Nikita Khrushchev's rise through the blood-\nsoaked Soviet hierarchy.\nMARRIED IN 1924\nUntil the two were married\nin 1924, Khrushchev was just\nanother uneducated peasant-\nfighter in the cause of communism. He had lost his first wife\n\u2014whether by death or divorce\nhas never been c tear.-\nDear Ladles:\nFor those of you who make\nyour own contour sheets, may I\nsuggest that you contour only\nONE end of the sheet?\nReason?\nThis may sound lazy or too\neconomical, but it really isn't,\nand I'll tell you why: If only one\nend of the sheet is fitted, it may\nbe used for either a top or bottom sheet.\nPut the fitted end of the sheet\nover the head of the mattress,\ndraw the sheet down tightly to\nthe foot of the bed and tuck it in\nsecurely.\nRemember, most of our weight\nis naturally at the'top and middle\nof the sheet. The weight of our\nfeet is much less, so the sheet is\nIf You re TIRED\nALL THE TIME\nNow and then everybody (elt i\n\"tired-out\" feeling, and may be\nbothered by backaches. Perhapsmilling seriously wrong, just a temporary\ncondition caused by urinary irritation or\nbladder discomfort. That's the time to\ntake Dodd's Kidney Pills. Dodd's help\nstimulate the kidneys to relieve this\ncondition which may often cause backache and tired feeling. Then you feel\nbetter, rest better, work better. Get\nDodd's Kidney Pills now. Look lor the\nblue box with the red band at all drug\ncounters, You can depend on Dodd's, 60\nnot as likely to be worked loose\nat the foot of the bed.\nThis is also a laundry-saver\nfor those who like to change\nsheets twice a week ... just\nremove the bottom sheet, reverse\nthe top sheet and use it as a bottom sheet,\nAlso, by alternating these\nsheets, one time as a top sheet,\nnext time as a bottom sheet, the\nwear will be distributed more\nevenly.\nSomething else ., . since only\none end of the sheet is fitted, it's\ntwice as easy to fold, eh?  ,\nThose of you who buy ready-\nmade sheets can purchase top-\nfitted sheets and use them for\nboth top and bottom.\nI make my own sheets and I\nhave tried this method. It works,\ngals.\nHeloise.\n* * \u00bb\nDear Heloise:\nBefore doing my weekly cleaning w\"h the vacuum cleaner, I\nlike to spray my favorite room\ndeodorizer into the exhaust of\nthe vacuum sweeper.\n, By the time I am through vacuuming, the pleasant fragrance\nhas been spread all through my\nhouse.\nLois Neugrand.\n* * *\nDear Heloise:\nIf you have a single sink and\nyour dishpan covers the drain\n______________\nwhen you are washing dishes,\npreventing the water from escaping . . . set a cake rack under\nthe dishpan.   .\nThe water drains out beautifully.\nPat Hildebrand.\n* * *\nDear Heloise:\nFor ivy and philodendron growing up planter sticks . . .\nI make an extension for the\nstick by straightening out the\nhook end of a wire coat hanger.\nThen, after wetting the planter\nstick thoroughly, I push the\nhanger into the planter stick.\nThe other end of the coat\nhanger can be bent, into any de\nsired shape . . . long and narrow, triangle, square, etc.\nMy ivy is now growing up the\nhanger, and looks ever so pretty.\nMrs. Davey Stephens.\n* *\u25a0\u25a0>\nDear Heloise:\nYou know the adhesive tape\nover the hole of cleanser cans,\nand how those tapes stick to you\nor a wastebasket?\nWhy not put the tape right on\nthe bottom of the can when you\npull it off the top ? ? ?\nMrs. Charles L. Long.\n* *\u25a0*\nWhy not, indeed? Guess this\ntakes care of that stick situation,\ndoesn't it? And wasn't that a\nletter of TRUTH?\nHeloise.\nStuffed Toys\nMade for\nSick Children\nSOUTH SLOCAN - Eight\nmembers of the Bonnington-\nSouth Slocan W.I. met at the\nhome of Mrs. D Axworthy when\nthey held a work party to make\nstuffed toys, '.'for :.a\" Christmas\nparcel to be sent to the Children's Hospital in Vancouver.\nMembers will be responsible\nfor collection of Christmas gifts\nfor the Mental Health Association Christmas Tree.\nMrs. J. Lowenberg will be\nhostess for the November meeting.\nNina Petrovna (as she is\nknown in Russian) made him'\ngo to night school and. pushed\nhim on < through the party. At\nthat time she was \u25a0 teaching\nschool.\nNina Petrovna was by ..her\nhusband's side, through, all the\nbloody purges of the 1930s both\nin Moscow and the Ukraine.\nHer trip to the U.S. in 1959\nwas her first to a non-Communist country and her success\nwith press and public started a\nnew life for her. From then on\nshe was always by Khrushchev's side\u2014in public, chucking\nchildren under the chin and\nmaking warmhearted comments that dulled.the image, of\nCommunist steeliness.  \u2022 \\\nShe had three children of her\nown and was also stepmother\nto a son and daughter by\nKhrushchev's first marriage. In\nthe vast villas where her husband lived, in the days of his\nglory, she created a family at\nmosphere that, charmed, visit\nors.   ' '\t\nArea Commissioner Speaks at Balfour\nPromise, Law Direct Guides\nTo Proper Principles of Living\nREMEMBRANCE\nWEEK PLANS\nMADE AT KASLO\nKASLO \u2014 Plans were made\nfor Remembrance Week at the\nrecent meeting of the Ladies\nAuxiliary to Branch No. 14 Royal\nCanadian Legion.'\nA bake sale and tea were\nscheduled for November 7 at\nthe Legion Hall as well as a\npoppy sale. A buffet supper will\nbe held in the hall on Armistice\nDay.\nDelegates to the Zone convention held in Rossland were\nMrs. E. Horner, Official delegate, Mrs. A. Baker,, fraternal\ndelegate, and Mrs. Carpenter,\nMrs. Linn ahd Mrs. Sinclair.\nEngagement\nAnnouncement\nMr. and Mrs. Bernard.H. Frie\nof Kaslo announce the engagement of their youngest daughter,\nVerna Ann, to Mr, Kenneth W.\nBooth, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest W. Booth of Sechelt, B.C.\nThe Wedding will take place Saturday, November 28, 1964 at\n3:00 p.m. in Sacred Heart\nChurch. .      \u2014252-252 Mrs.\nBALFOUR\u2014Mrs. A. Rizzuto,\nArea Commissioner for the West\nKootenay, during her address to\nthe Brownies ,of the First Procter Pack, and the Girl Guides of\nthe First Balfour Guide Company\nat the mother and daughter banquet in Balfour Hall, stressed\nthe importance of the Guide Promise and.Law.\n\"They cover a lot of principles,\" she said, \"and \u25a0by following\nthem the gains to be won by each\ngirl would be love, friendship,\nfun, truth, loyalty, security, fairness, kindness and leadership.\nThese nine points combined\nmake the tenth point, happiness,\nfor which we all strive.\"\nCommissioner Rizutto felt this\ntime of year was excellent for\nthe Mother and Daughter banquet, fitting into the schedule\nwell. She gave news of Mrs. H.\nF. Hyson, past area commissioner, who will be' returning to Nel.\nson soon after a 3-mionth holiday\noverseas. She also extended her\nthanks to all who helped make\nthe summer visit' of the Girl\nScouts from Covina and Portland\nsuch a success. Mrs. Rizutto\nurged that any eligible Guide\ncontact their captains about international events. She congratulated the Guides on their good\ncamping this summer, saying,\n\"Carry on, for camping is of the\nutmost importance if you are to\nreceive the most out of Guiding.\"\nShe mentioned the change in\nprogram, with Brownies to join\nat seven years of age, and the\nGuides from 10 to 14; with; the\nRanger group available from 14\nto 18. It is hoped to have one\nRanger company tor each district.\nMrs. H. Haverstock; Kootenay\nLake  commissioner,   explained\nthe Ranger program further and\nstressed the need for leaders.\nHEAD TABLE\nGuests at the head table were\nMrs. J. S. Hamilton, Kokanee\nDistrict commissioner; Mrs. Rizutto, Mrs. H. Haverstodk; Captain Mrs. W. Nelson; Lieutenant\nMrs. J. Heustpn; Brown Owl\nP. Peterson; and Mrs. B.\nJ. Fitchett,. past president of the\nLA. Grace was sung, toast to\nthe Queen was proposed by Ka-\n(hy Bowles, toast to the mothers\ntoy Diane Peterson and the-reply byMrs.N. Murray; Captain\nNelson read excerpts from \"The\nFletcher Flyer\", the newspaper\ncomposed by the Guides at summer camp.\nTables were In horseshoe formation, decorated by fair flowers. Kitchen and serving committees included Mrs.' J. Erick-\nMrs. C. Noakes, Mrs. L.\nStainton, Barbara and Nancy\nNoakes, Berithe Nelson and Ka-\nthy Stainton.\nA singsong followed the ban\nquet, with the Brownies leading\noff with \"I've Got That Brownie\nSpirit Deep in My Heart\", and\nthe Guides following with, \"I\nWant to Live in a Friendly\nWorld,\" The Guides formed a\nhorseshoe, ahd Brownies Barbara Olson and Anna Erickson\nflew up to Guides, ceremony\nperformed by Brown Owl Mrs,\nPeterson and Commissioner Mrs\nRizutto. Badges presented\ntoy Commissioner Hamilton included cook and pioneer, to Bar\nbara Noakes; poultry farmer,\nchild nurse, laundress, land girl\nand swimmer, to Nancy Noakes;\ncook, gardener,- child nurse, to\nDiane Peterson; friend to animals, pioneer, swimmer, land girl\nand needlewoman, to' ' Judy\nLaing; pioneer and hiker to Berithe Nelson.\nThe successful evening .con\neluded with slides shown by Mrs.\nHaverstock of Fletcher Creek\nCamp, Slocan Lake Camp, and\nthe Covina Guides.\nMoney Sewed\nUnder Patches\nOn Apron\nBALFOUR - A , travelling\napron was started on its way by\nthe president of the Ladies' Guild\nto St. Michael and All Angels\nChurch, at the 'meeting held at\nthe home of Mrs. M. Wellwood,\nA donation of money is sewn\nunder a patch by each member,\nbefore it is paSsed on to a neighbor who does likewise .\nPlans were completed for the\nfall tea and sale to be held in\nBalfour hall Nov. 7. Committees\nappointed were: fancy work\ntable, Mrs. D .R. Anderson, and\nMrs. Wellwood; bake table, Mrs.\nE. A., MacGillivray and Mrs\nCraigdaliie; rummage, Mrs. R.\nFisher; fish pond, Katby Stainton and Nancy Noakes; servers,\nLeah Stainton, Marilyn Erickson:\nDonna Peterson, Barbara and\nNancy.Noakes and Berithe Nelson; kitchen, Mrs. W. Nelson\nand Mrs. L. Stainton; door, Mrs.\nJ. Heuston.\nChurch cleaners for November will be Mrs. Nelson and\nMrs. Stainton. The recent card\npSrty netted $13.50, the meeting\nwas told by the treasurer. One\nhundred dollars was voted to\nthe assessment.   -\nMrs. Nelson reported that the\nbaking of the Christmas cakes\nto be sold at the tea was complete. Mrs. T. Craigdaliie was\ncontest winner..\nSpecial guest at the meeting,\nMiss Orpha Foss of Vancouver,\nassisted the hostess with refreshments.\nAnniversary Tea\nTopic Harrop Wl\nHARROP \u2014 The Harrop and\nDistrict Women's Institute met\nat the cabin where \"pennies for\nfriendship\" came rolling in as\nthe birthday box was passed.\nThe president thanked all who\nhad worked so well for success\nof the SOth anniversary tea; Miss\nGrant for compiling the 50 years'\nhistory of the Institute; Mrs.\nVogel for making, the cake. The\ntop section, still intact, will be\nthe prize for a Christmas.contest.\nCards of thanks were to be\nsent to the Staintons at Balofur\nfor their help in arranging the\nhall, also to the Anderson family for their musical contributions during the tea.\nMrs. Le Quime, who has recently left the district, donated\na knitting machine to the cultural activities group.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, OCT. 27, 1964\u20145\nTells of Wolfville\nNational Wl Meet\nGRAY CREEK \u2014 Details of (mother and grandmother  pre-\nher attendance at the national'sent\", said Mrs. Scott.\nconvention held in Wolfville,\nNova Scotia, were presented by\nMrs, J. S. Scott of Robson at I\na meeting of the Crawford Bay j\nWomen's''Institute, for which I\nMrs. Ken Bruce and Mrs. Ruth\nRose were hostesses.\nMrs. J. S. Scott of Robson\ntold of her journey across Canada by train to Wolfville with\nliine other B.C. representatives.\nMrs. Scott flavored her talk\nwith many amusing incidents.\nThe experience of meeting\nmany from all parts of Canada,\nhearing reports and plans, electing new officers in this University of Acadia had been \"most\nenjoyable.\nDr.. Margaret Nix, Associate\nProfessor of McGill University\nwas the guest speaker at the\nbanquet.. Being small Dr. Nix\nstood on a box so that she could\nsee and be seen by her huge\n.audience. Her topic was \"The\nnext step\". She emphasized the\nimportance of the best teachers\nfor the youngest children.\n\"This outstanding woman may\nbe small in stature but certainly\n.not in.command, as her voice\nreached to the heart of every\nA resolution concerning the\ndangerous, blind entrance to\nGray Creek School, received\nfrom the Gray Creek Women's\nClub, was endorsed. Copies\niwll be sent to the school\nboard, the district engineer\nand the Workmen's Compensation Board,\nMembers were pleased with\nthe picture of their sampler in\nthe Weekend Magazine. They\nhad received a number of congratulations. Mrs. Scott was accompanied by her mother, Mrs.,\nGueron, and Mrs. O. B. Ballard.;\nalso from Robson.\nBuy, Sell, Trade With Want Ads\n(But Plenty Warm)\nPenmans does the job\u2014comfortably. Knocks the chill right out of the\nair, yet doesn't strangle you in. a-hard-to-move-in suit. The reason?\nPenmans are tailored to help you on the job; cut generously, where\nthey should be; made snug, where they should be.\nTheiy keep you warm without bulk because they are knitted of three\nmaterials: pure white merino wools... soft, absorbent cottons... and\nCorval\u00ae. .'\u2022. Warmer together than they would be separately.\nPenmans are so comfortable only their warmth reminds you that you are\nwearing underwear.\nThere's a Penmans Underwear to suit every type of job and every\npocketbook: Penmans 95 -The Aristocrat of Winter Underwear.\nPenmans 71 - Distinctively Canadian. Penmans 73 - White Merino.\nPenmans 1575 - Oi;lon and Wool Thermal. Penmans 2003-Cotton\nThermal. Penmans 27 -'- Fleece.\nvnmati!*\nfor the man who knows comfort and style\n. \u2022 Registered Trade Mark, Du Pont of Canada Limited\n 8\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, OCT. 27,1984\nAlways Bridesmaids - Never\nBrides, Sad Story of U.K. Boxers\nBy ALAN WALKER\nLONDON (CP)-British boxers are getting used to having\nAmerican champions pat them\non the head and tell them how\nbrave they are.\nThe latest of these is Brian\nCurvis who stood up to welterweight Emile Griffith for 15\nrounds but lost on points.\nIt is 13 years since a world\ntitle came to Britain. Since\nthen fans have had to make do\nwith a stream of \"the bravest\nperformances ever seen in a\n;-.  ring,\"\nGriffith, a brutal and efficient\ncraftsman from the Virgin Islands and the United States,\nP chopped at Curvis round after\nround and finally took the de-\n;_\u25a0 cision. Then Curvis faced television  cameras  and  said:\nTHOUGH NOT\nas the first, second and third\nplace standing medals at the\nOlympic Games, these commemorative medals by Italian\nartist Franco Fossa will prove\nlasting mementoes of the 1984\nTOkye Olympic Games,\nOPENING\nSOON\nCAMPUS\nBILLIARD   CENTRE\n\"Griffith is a great champion.\"\nGriffith replied ironically:\n\"Curvis is a great challenger.\"\nThat's the story of British prizefighters \u2014 always bridesmaids\nand never a bride.\nNOT HUNGRY\nCritics here say British boxers aren't hungry enough. Postwar affluence has produced a\ngeneration of boxers that lacks\nthe harsh background from\nwhich most current world\nchampions sprang. A quick\nlook through the lists of world\ntitle holders shows most come\nfrom what nowadays are called\nthe deprived or underprivileged\nnations and races.\nTwo white men, both from\nthe Italian quarters of tough\nAmerican cities, hold th. light-\nheavyweight ind middleweight\ntitles. Others belong to men\nfrom Thailand, Brazil, Cuba,\nPuerto Rico, the Virgin Islands\nand the southern United States.\nBritish boxers rarely get to\nfight top Americans before a title attempt. There are rich\npurses available here for less\ndifficult slugfests. The resulting\nlack of experience among British fighters tells badly when I\ntitle fight rolls around.\nGriffith's manager said this\nafter the fight against the\nWelsh contender here: \"AU\nCurvis lacks is the solid top-\nclass Experience on which Griffith has Men brought up.\"\nCurvli, British and Empire\nchampion, presumably has\nbeaten the best that Britain has\nto Offer in that class. Accordingly promoter Jack Solomons\nstys he will bring two or three\nAmericans over to fight Curvis\nRiot Rocks Glasgow\nSoecer Contest\nGLASGOW Reuters - Failing fists, flying bottles and general uproar accompanied Saturday's Scottish football league\ncup final here between Glasgow\nRangers  and  Glasgow Celtic.\nPolice, who hid appealed to\nthe 91,000 spectators to avoid a\nrepetition of the unruly scenes\nat many previous Ranger-Celtic\nencounters, made 30 arrests\nand ambulance crews took 20\ncasualties to hospital.\nRingers belt Celtic 2-1.\nand prepare him for a return\nmatch with Griffith in Cardiff\nnext summer.\nBut is it too late? Curvis is\n27, probably too old to start\nlearning the finer points of his\ncraft,,\n\"That is a task which should\nhave been undertaken a few\nyears ago, when, instead, he\nwas running up a deceptively\nimpressive list of victories over\ninferior opposition from this\nside of the Atlantic,\" says the\nDaily Telegraph.\nWorld title fights are planned\nfor light - heavyweight Terry\nD o w n e s, lightweight Dave\nCharnley and featherweight\nHoward Winstone, 111 considered top British boxers.\nBritish fans would love to see\none of them have the Chance to\ncongratulate a losing American\non his bravery.\nBut the odds seem to be that\nall three will end up as British\nprizefighters usually do \u2014 acclaimed as game losers.\nBy THE ASSOCIATED PRESS\nNational League\nEastern Conference\nWL T  G  A Pet\nCleveland 5 1 1184131.833\nSt. Louis 4 2 1173171.667\nPhila. 4 3 0180132.571\nPittsburgh 3 4 0114159.429\nDallas 2 4 1113130.333\nWashington 2 5 0144165.288\nNew York 1 5 1 97179,187\nWestern Conference\nBaltimore\nLos Angeles\nDetroit\nMinnesota\nGreen Bay\nSan Fran.\nChicago\n6 1 0 237122.837\n4 2 1171148.667\n4 2 1113105.667\n4 3 0176159.571\n3 4 0142132.429\n2 5 0139187.288\n2 5 0125188.286\nAmerican League\nEastern Division\nW L T F A Pet\n7 O 0 2341161.000\n5 1 1199138\n3 2 1140117\n2 S 0163192\nWestern Division\nSan Diego 4 2 1163149\nKanSis City 2 4 0122142\nOakland ,15,1167188\nDenver     \u25a0  1 6 0100 246\nBuffalo\nBoston\nNew York\nHouston\n.600\n.288\n.667\n.333\n,167\nTHI WHIZ WITH THI WOWI\u2014Th'S '* the jet-powered car *nd th* driver lii that Successful\nbreaking of the land speed mark on Utah's Boiinevtlls Bait Flits.   Tht drlver-Cralg\nBreidlove, 27-year-old Southern Californian. Tha car\u2014The SJttll-aoodyiar \"Spirit ef America.\"  The tiftie^-tdj.72 milts pir hour.\nPromotes Idea of Canada-West\nGerman Track and Field Meet\nBy STEPHEN SCOTT\nVANCOUVER (CP) -Dr.\nDoug Clement concedes that a\ndual track and field meet between Canada ind West Germany would probably be i mas-\nsacre, with Cinsda on the receiving ehd.\nBut he also thinks it would be\ngood thing\u2014is i sports at-\ntraction Md for whit it could\ndo for Canadian track and field.\nThe former Canadian Olympic middle-distance runner Says\nSuch a meet may be tht next\nventure of AchiUeS international Athletics Ltd., which promoted the recent Olympic preview meet hire.\nClemOnt, who participated in\nthe 1952 md 1958 Olympic\nGimes md tht 1958 British\nEmpire Gimes, joinsd 10 others to form Achilles which promoted the Olympic preview\n\u25a0long with tht Vmcouvsr Province.\nThe meet drew the Csnsdisn,\nJamaican, Trinidad ind part of\nthe U.S. teams. Wttt Germany\nwas going' to come but backed\nout because Its leaders said the\nathletes were burned out after\ntheir own Olympic trials.\nDespite terrible conditions\nthat followed 12 hours of rain,\nthe event drew 7,000 fans and\n143 was a success, Clement says,\nBuying'Selling'Rentin,\nMAIL\nYour Classified Want Ad on This Handy\nORDER FORM\nFIRST LINE\nSECOND LINE\nTHIRD LINE\nFOURTH UNE\nFIFTH LINE\nSIXTH LINE\nSEVENTH LINE\nEIGHTH LINE\n* Put one word in each space.\n(Each group of numbers or letters count as one word)\n* Put Your Address or Phone Number in the Ad.\n* Bex Numbers Count as Four Words.\n(Box 00 Nelson News)\nTO CALCULATE RATES, USE THIS TABLE:\nMinimum charje Is two lines\nPar Line: .\n1 Insertion _.,       ...\n2 Consecutive Insertions\t\n3 Consecutive Insertions _______\n6 Consecutive Insertions \t\n46 Consecutive Insertions \t\nNon-Consecutive Insertions 20e \u2022 Lino Per\nS 20\n.35\n.45\n.60\n1.82\nTim*.\n\u2022 Add 15c for Box Number\n\u2022 Toko advantage of the low six time rati\nYou Reach Over 36,000 Readers With Your Nelson Daily News Classified Ad\nYOUR NAME\nNo. ot Days Ad li To Run .\nBill Me '      ..   \u25a0\u2022\nADDRESS\nPayment Enclosed\nClassified Advertising Department, Nelson, B.C.\nFinancial losses wire COvtrtd\nby rain insurance.\nGERMANS MAY COME\nNo final decision has been\nmade yet on the nest move, but\nClement says West Germany,\nin announcing it would not attend this meet, expressed interest in establishing a \"traditional competition with Canada,\" The West German national team goes to the U.S.\nntxt year for a dual meet and\nperhaps Might comt here at\nWtll.\nm a duti meet there art two\ncompetitors, foil frdi. tach\ncountry, in eich event. Tht\ntrick and field committee Of\ntht Amittur Athletic union\nwould be asked to choose Canada's first complete national\nteam, a considtrabit expansion\nOver the present 19-man Olympic squad.\nClement   acknowledges  that\nthe meet with the \"extremely\npowerful\" West Germans would\nbe a slaughter. But he figures\nsuch athletes as sprinter Harry\nJerome, 800 - metre specialist\nBill Crothers and distance run\nner Bruce Kidd would give Canada its share of the events.\nAhd he emphasizes that it\nWould further stimulate interest\nid track and Held while earning\nsome much-needed money for\ntht SpOrt that now depend* on\ngovernment contribution* and\n\"begging.\"\nClement's pilht it that if the\nupper level of track and field\ncompetitors Can be developed,\n\"It will feed back into the\nlower level,\" But he contends It\ncannot be done without money.\nAnd he figures the West Germans would be a major draw\nhere because there art between\n50,001) and 100,000 persons of\nGerman extraction living In the\nVancouver area.\nReferee and Ringsider\nBest Pair on Boxing Card\nNEW GLASGOW, N.S. (CP)-\nThere were tour fights officially\nlisted on the card in New.Glasgow's Highland Stadium on a\nJuly night in 1945, but many\nfans Insist the fifth was the best\nof the lot.\nReferee Bobby Beaton had\njust finished counting io over\nmiddleweight Bob Bumbaso, a\nsoldier from Debert, N.S., who\nhad a lot of pals rooting at\nringside.\nA cicophany of catcalls came\nfrom \u00ab cluster of khaki - clad\ncomrades who were of the opinion their boy had been the victim of inefficient refereeing.\nNever one to dodge a challenge, Beaton invited his tormentors to enter the ring and\nsettle the argument. One did.\nBeaton recalls the soldier outweighed him by about 30\npounds \"but it was the start of\norder at the stadium as I\nknocked him out with two\npunches and hive been refereeing ever since.\"\nit's been almost 20 yeirs ind\nmore than 300 fights since that\nnight, but Beaton, now 58, continues as the most sought-after-\nthird man in Maritime boxing.\nI'm not out to set any endurance records, but I love the\nfight game and intend to keep\nat it as long as my legs stand\nup and my general health remains okay.\"\nPLAYED HOCKEY\nA native of Port Hood, N.S.,\nBeaton, now an insurance executive, has stayed at a solid\n130 pounds the last 10 years\nwith lots of walking, bowling,\ncurling, skating ... and refereeing.\nThis variety underlines the\nversatility of one of the most\naccomplished and colorful\nathletes the Marltlmes have\nknown. For Beaton has also\nbeen a boxer and marathon\nrunner and has played hockey,\nbaseball and Softball.\nSuch versatility can have Its\ndisadvantages, too, Beaton discovered, because it was boxing\nthat cost him a chance to play\nwith the 1933 Allan Cup hockey\nchamp ions, Moncton Hswks.\nHis amateur hockey status was\nrevoked that year when he appeared on a professional boxing\ncard.\nIt was also a fact that Boston\noccasionally had difficulty leaving his ring skills behind when\nhe ventured out on the ice.\nDuring the Second World War,\nclassy senior leagues operated\nin the Maritime* and Beaton\nproved himself against clubs\nloaded with NHL stars in the\nservices.\nA report of a 1M1 gime in\nHalifax Forum recills thlt\n\"nothing was birred in the\nnear riot that Bobby Beaton of\nthe Halifax Crescents and Foster of the RCAF touched off in\nthe list period.\"\nWhen the general melee was\nsorted. Out by police and officials, Beaton and Foster broke\naway for a privste set-to. The\nnewspsper account says \"only\none punch wis thrown, a terrific left hook that put the airman away for five minutes.\"\nBeaton's senior hockey career\nbegan in 1931 with New Glasgow Panthers. After patrolling\nright wing with Moncton and\nSaint John teams, he headed\ntor England where he performed with Brighton Tigers,\nStreatham Lions and Falkirk of\nthe Scottish League. After wartime atints with Halifax Crescents, Beaton became playing\ncoach in the Antigonish-Pictou-\nColchester senior league.\nBeaton - led teams produced\nvaven league championships,\nthree provincial crowns and\nthree Maritime titles.\nIf he was a little rough on the\nratebook in his younger years,\nBeaton champions it today and,\nin the case of boxing, has even\nadded to it. He introduced the\nthree-judge system in Maritime\nboxing in 1953.\n\"I always thought a referee\nshould not be called on to render a decision. He is too busy\nin a close fight to recall at the\nend of the round just what went\non during the previous three\nminutes.\"\nOf his 300 bouts, 10 have been\nCanadian title fights, and he\nhas had praise from a most unlikely corner. Johnny Buckley\nof Boston, manager of some of\nthe world's best, once marched\nup to Beaton the day after a\nfight and said:\n\"I just wanted to tell you\nthat you called one helluva good\nfight last night In my book\nyou're the very best.\"\nTokyo Gold Medal Could Mean\nGlory, Easier Life for Winner\n. to,JACJ...lttiMVAN,...\nCanadian Press Sports Editor.\nTOKYO (CP) - An Olyriipje\ngold medal worth about $7 is\nthe most precious commodity\nthat an athlete can acquire.\nWinning it can, and often\ndoes, mean glory add an easier\nlife for many, That is the. case\nfor Successful, athletes who live\nunder a system where sport IS\nsubsidized by tht state and\nwhere there is virtually no room\nfor a loser.\nIt is not enough to finish\namong the six best in the world.\nGoldminlng ih the Olympics is\nthe big thing, even though the\ntwo-ounce medal that goes td\nthe winner isn't really gold but\nonly glided.       .   .\nWhen thi. Uth Olympic\nGames elided Saturday after 15\ndays of battling for 163 gold\nmedal* compared .with 150\nChampionships at Rome four\nyears ago, Russia had won tht\nmost medals \u2014 98 \u2014 and\nbarely scraped to it* third\nstraight unofficial team championship,\nThe Russians won 30. gold\nmedals, 13 fewer than at Rome,\nand thtt showing immediately\nbrought down the wrath of the\nSpy|st press upon the Olympic\nteam.'   '\u25a0. \"\"' . s.. ..,    ?\nPost-mortems filled the Soviet sports pages. The. main target was Gavrill korobkov, the\nSoviet, tract;. and, field . qach..\nHis fetm won five gold medals\ncompared with 11 in Rome.\nTIME TO CHANGE?   '.\nKorobkov Said he already had\nStarted thinking about switching\nto a career in scientific work.\nAlthough there were 13 more\nevents here than at the' 1960\ngames, the Russians finished\nSeven medals shy of equalling\ntheir 103 gold, silver and bronze\nmedals won at Rome.\nThe United States didn't have\nid face such criticism Since its\nteam had exceeded its rosier\npredictions Ind won thi most\ngold medals of thi games, 36,\ntwo more thin at Rome. Ih all,\nthe U.S. took 90 medals, 19\nmore than In 1960,\nThi Americans won 14 df thi\n38 track ind fitld events and\n17 of the 22 swimming and diving championships,\nBut In other sports, the\nAmericans took only ftvi more\ngold medals.\nthere was an upsurge by the\nLindsay Back Home\nWith Wings at 39\nBy BEN 0LAN\nNfiW'YCtlK (AP)-fherf* I\ngood reason why Ted LindsSy,\nodi of hickey's all-time greats,\ncame back after a four-year retirement and rejoined Detroit\nRed Wings at age 39.\n\"I want to finish my hockey\ncareer In Detroit,\" ht explained. \"I played there for 13\nyears. I live there now and I'll\ndie there. I would have played\nthis season for nothing.\"\nIt was I black day for the\nColorful left wing when he was\ntraded to Chicago Black Hawks\nseven years igo. \"Not that I\nwasn't treated well in Chicago,\" he emphasized, \"but my\nheart was stiU with the Wings.\"\nLindsay, a native of Renfrew, Ont., who has scored 365\ngoals and accumulated 1,249\npenalty minutes in tht NHL, insist* he's well fixed financially.\nHe ha* interests in four companies manufacturing automotive parts.\n'We tried to sign him to a\ndollar a year contract,\" said\nSid Abel, the Wings' general\nmanager-coach, \"but Clarence\nCampbell the league president\nwouldn't give us permission. So\nwe're paying him by the\ngame.\"\nSTILL A SUPER-STAR\nLindsay, Abel and Gordie\nHowe, still a super-star at 36,\nOLYMPIC GROUP\nSEEKS $100,000\nOTTAWA CP - The federal\ngovernment may grant $100,000\na year to. help maintain a permanent Canadian Olympic sports\noffice, possibly in Toronto\nHealth Minister Judy LaMarsh\nsaid Sunday.\nShe said the Canadian Olympic Association has sought the\ngrant under the federal government's fitness and amateur\nsport program, and while the\nadvisory council on the program\nhas not completed its study of\nthe proposal, she favors it.\nShe said the rant would be\nmade innuilly out of the advisory council's $5,000,000 fund.\nMiss LaMarsh made the statement in an interview recorded\nhere for broadcast by CHCH.TV,\nHamilton.   .\nWoman Files\nSuit on NY\nYankees Sale\nNEW YORK (AP)-A Brooklyn woman, who says she holds\ntwo shares of stock in the Columbia Broadcasting System,\nIncorporated, filed suit Monday\nin federal court to bar the sale\nof the New York Yankees to\nCBS,\nIn the suit, Gloria Parker\nseeks a court order to initiate\nimmediate proceedings to nullify the \"imminent\" sale of the\nbaseball club.\nThe sale, in which CBS obtained 80 per cent of the club\nfor $11,200,000 with an option to\npurchase the other 20 per cent,\nbecomes effective Nov. 2.\nMiss Parker charges \"flagrant and obvious violation of\nthe anti-trust laws.\"\nformed the Wings' famed Production Line for many years,\n\"My arrangement with Sid it\nthat I only play home games,\"\nLindsay pointed Out. \"I'm playing some toad games now because we've been away from\nhome for a while and I don't\nwant to go stale.\"\nThe Red Wings milt the Canadiens in Montreal Saturday\nnight and do hot return home\nuntil next Thursday.\n\"He won't make ail the same\nmovts he did In the Old days,\"\nAbel said. \"But he's helped ut\nalready and gives uS one more\nSOlid player to call on when\nwe're in trouble.\"\n\"I Said all along that Red retired too darned early,\" said\nHowe, the NHL's. all-time goal\nscoring leader. \"His legs were\nin good shape when he quit and\nthey're all right now, too. It's\njust like old times having him\nback.\"\nYesterday's\nHeroes Greet\nToday's Champs\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Yester,\nyears' heroes greeted today's\nchampions in Vancouver Monday\nwhen George Hungerford and\nRoger Jackson were honored for\nbringing home Canada's only\ngold medal of the 1964 Tokyo\nOlympics.\nAmong the more than 50 persons on hsnd to watch Mayor\nWilliam Rathis give civic recognition to the Cinderella pair were\nFrank Frederickson and Police\nInspector Jack Harrison.\nFrederickson, a former alder\nman, was captain of Canada's\nfirst Olympic hockey team in\n1920, Insp. Harrison was a track\nstar in the British Empire\nGames 25 years ago.\nAlso present to congratulate\nthe coxless pairs champions were\nMerv Ferguson, president of the\nAmateur Athletic Union of Canada, and Bruce Hay, an original member of the Vancouver\nRowing Club and secretary of\nthe B.C. Amateur Sports Council.\nAlso on hsnd to watch the\nmayor present the boys with, gold\ncivic recognition medals were\nHungerford's parents, Police\nCommissioner Rod Hungerford\nand Mrs.-Hungerford. Jackson's\nparents live in Toronto.\nOther countries who .form a sort\nof third force of nations that\nis gaining in combined power\non the playing fields.\t\n. A. total of 97 third, - force\ngold medals were spread among\n24 countries,,   .\nJAPAN STRONG\nHost Japan did. bettir than it\nhad hoped, winning 16 gold medals for third place In that de*\npartment, but the loss of the\njudo open class gold medal to\nHolland's giant, Anton Geesink,\nshocked whole sections of the\nJapanese public and press., .\nToday, many of the 6,000\nathletes from 94 countries who\ncompeted In the games that\nstarted Oct. 10 were heading\nhome, or already are thire, ahd\nthe rest will be pulling out of\nthe Olympic villages in thi hixt\nfew days.\nThe game*, thi first hild in\nAsia, were orderly from start to\nwlndup. There were fiw of the\nbitter controversies that struck\nother Olympics.\nNorth Korea and Indonesia\nwithdrew before thi game* over\na dispute with Olympic and\nworld track officials involving\neligibility of athletes and East\nGermany got in a hassle over\nwho should sail a yachting entry, The West Germans won the\nsrgument and the gold medal.\nThere were warnings from\nAvery Brundage, the eider\nstatesman df amateur Sport,\nthat extreme nationalism displayed at the games IS hurting\nthe Olympic movement.\nWhile the subsidized - Sports\ncountries pondered Over what\nOlympic dividends they got for\nthiir investments, other countries were looking to the 1968\ngames at Mexico City.\nCanada sent one of its finest\nteams to the Olympics since the\nwar. It won one gold medal In\nrowing, a silver and bronze in\ntrack and a silver in judo.\nBOUND WARNING\nBut Canadian officials warded\nthat if Canadians want more\nOlympic medals it is going to\ntake more money and better\nfacilities and competition to\nmake that possible.\n\"Canadians can talk about\nphysical fitness until they're\nblue in the face but I don't know\nhow they are going to get it\nwithout proper facilities,\" said\nJim Dalty of Winnipeg, manager of the Canadian track and\nfield squad.\nCanada won a gold medal in\nthe coxless pairs rowing event\nwhen George Hungerford of\nVancouver and Roger. Jackson\nwhen George Hungerford of\nof Toronto decided td try something new after Hungerford lott\nhis place as a member of the\neight \u2022 oared crew because illness had weakened him.\nBill Crothers of Toronto won\nthe silver medal in the 800\nmetres track event, Doug Rogers of Toronto took a silver in\nthe judo heavyweight wrestling\nand Vancouver's Harry Jerome\nran eight races in four days to\nwin the bronze in the 190\nmetres where he finished\nfourth.\nCANADA 21ST\nIn the unofficial point standings Canada came 21st among\nthe 94 countries with a total of\n40 points.\nIn terms of both medals and\npoints, Canada moved well\nahead of Rome, where in I960\nit won only one silver medal,\nin the etght-oared crew, and collected 18 points to place 28th\namong 84 countries.\nJim Worrall of Toronto, president of the Canadian Olympic\nCommittee, said The Canadian\npublic must get \"wholeheartedly\nbehind the amateur sport movement In Canada financially and\notherwise\" if it wants results.\nSEASONAL RAINS\nUp to 180 inches ef rain falls\nduring the wet season along th*\ncoast of Liberia.\nToo old to buy insurance?\nBeing over SS is no barrier to the purchase of new\nlife insurance. And for many people in their aixtiea\nor seventies it can he a very wise \"buy.\"\nHere's an example. A man age 75 has a substantial\nnumber of investments. At death, estate taxes will\nhave to be paid. To raise the cash, income-producing\nassets have to be sold, often with severe losses to the\nbeneficiaries. Life insurance can prevent this loss by\nproviding the necessary cash.\nManufacturers Lift has a sound reputation for its\nliberal approach to insuring oldtr people for the\npurpose of estate conservation or for guaranteeing\nthe continuity of a business. Our representatives are\nqualified to provide competent counsel to help our\nsenior citizens meet these sptcialneeds.\nSet the Man from Manufacturtrs.\nA.Zuk\nRepresentative\nNELSON\nTel: 352-2821\nMANUFACTURERS LIFE\nINSURANCE   COMPANY\n mmmmwmm\nThe Sports Scene\nDuring the 1958-59 season it [up the eventual outcome of a\nwas my pleasure to watch a game than he is the prospect of\nnumber of Toronto Maple Leaf someone being seriously injured\nhome games from the executive through a referee's incompe-\nbox at Maple Leaf Gardens.      tence. I'll buy that.\nWorking there, under the supervision of head scout Bob Davidson are statisticians who can\ntell you at a moment's glance\nalmost every statistic except the\nsize of the goaltender's socks.\nRecords are carefully kept as\nto who's check scored the goals,\nfrom what angle, which wing,\nwhich defencemen were on the\nice at the time goals were scored and a host of other facts\nwhich the average fan never\neven considers.\nOne of the statistics with which\nthe Leaf hierarchy Is most concerned is the number of \"key\"\ngoals scored by each player.\n\"Key\" goals are divided into\nfour categories:\n(a) winning goals; (b) tying\ngoals; (c) first goal of game;\n(d) first goal to start a successful rally.\nI mention this because a\nglance at WIHL statistics shows\nyoung Danny Calles having accounted for five goals in seven\ngames \u2014 four of them \"key'\ngoals.\nYou could have won lunch\nmoney from me by betting that\nCalles would even make the club\nwhen camp opened four weeks\nago.\nBut the Notre Dame student\nhas improved in every game\nto a point where he is fast be-\ncoming one of the most valuable\nwingers on the club.\nHe began his season's scoring\nwith the tying goal that saw the\nMaple Leafs rally from behind\na 4-0 first period deficit to tie\nthe Kimberley Dynamiters 5-5\nin Khnberley.\nHis next key goal was in the\nSpokane game which tied the\ncount at 1-1 and set off a successful rally that saw Nelson emerge\nwith two points on the strength\nof a 3-1 victory.\nThen, back to Kimberley where\nning goals as \"Kromm's Kids\"\nhe scored the opening and win-\nedged the nitro brigade 3-2.\nMurray Owens did most of the\nwork but Calles finished the\neffort off with style and grace\nfor the local clubs third goal\nhere Saturday.\nActually it occurs to me that\nthe entire Jet operation has the\nwrong slant on things.\nA poorly worded publicity release from the Jets' head office,\nheralding Saturday's Rossland\nSpokane game uses for a lead\nthe fact that Joe Conn and Joe\nMorneau could be expected to\nrenew a feud that originated in\na brawl in Rossland. \"Sparks,\nsays the blurb, \"should fly.\"\nNow from where I sit ,it would\nseem the Jets were inviting fans\nto come out in the hopes of\nwatching a fight, rather than\npromising good entertaining\nhockey. And that's a pretty disgusting attitude for a hockey\nteam to have.\n\u2666 . *  .\nActually it is difficult to understand why WIHL referees are so\nreluctant to call high sticking\npenalties.\nThe rule is a simple one and\nrequires no interpretation.\nIt states simply: \"The carry,\ning of the stick above normal\nheight of the shoulders Is prohibited and a minor penalty may\nbe imposed on any player violating this rule.\"\n* * *\nBill Orban, the highly touted\nSaskatchewan junior all-star who\nagreed to sign with the Maple\nLeafs unless he could move directly into: the Western Hockey\nLeague Los Angeles Blades line\nup was fined $250 in Saskatoon,\nlast week for his part in a dance\nhall brawl which saw a policeman suffer back injuries.\nHe signed with the Blades but\ndidn't stick with the parent club.\nHe now toils for Fort Wayne of\nthe Central Pro loop.\nCAN HE REPEAT? ..... By Alan Mover\nIT\nCOM\u00a3$\nr\/m\nTosnpr\nPP\/IMrfG\ncoueGMre\nfootbaueps, \/rseEMs \/no$r\napppopp\/ats ro$WPrty\/rJ -\np\/\u00a3 0oy-uW9 ffse\/t ox\/nope\nmagaz\/meoY\u00a3P5 t#\/w saz\/pj\/t\/t-eR.)\nSTAU0ACH\nwas tfWifr&i-\nBAdPaV\nsi\/sr\/\nMJop\nPU-\nAMBRICA\n-team\nLAST\nVEAR,\nBUT TP\u00a3\nNAT\/o\/t'S\nFOU OP\nfAienrsp\nS\/GAAi.\ncaueps\nmate\nPEO(JT70\nKSSPH\/M\ntO\/H PB-\nPSAT\/m\nottty rtte 4t#\nJtiwpei\/ip\n70 COP TPB\nPSISAfA\/t\nTpoppyje\ncould Become\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, OCT. 27,1964\u20147\nShaw - Roughriders'\nCoach Next Season?\nVANCOUVER (CP) - The Sun\nsays Saskatchewan Roughriders\ncoach Bob Shaw may not return\nto Regina as coach next year.\nA story by football reporter\nJim Brooke said, \"A reliable\nand informed source,\" claimed\nShaw and the team's general manager, Ken Preston, are \"at loggerheads and all because of Bill\nFrank.\" The story said Shaw\nmay become coach and general\nmanager of Calgary Stampeders\nin 1965,\nThe source said Shaw wanted\nto claim Frank, an import tackle\nfired by the Lions for \"detrimental conduct,\" and the general\nmanager failed to tell the Saskatchewan coach that the 260-pound\nlineman was available on waivers.\n\"When Shaw discovered what\nhad happened,\" the Sun quoted\nan informant as saying, \"he was\nlivid with rage. He wanted\nFrank and intended to call him\nif he had the chance.\"\nThe Sun said Preston was re-\nported to have said he didn't\npass on the information to his\nA local hockey fan phoned to\ncomplain about the way Harry\nHarris and Sarge Sammartino\nhandled Sunday afternoon's\ngame in Spokane.\nSays the refereeing was terrible and that Jets were allowed\nto cruise around with sticks\nabove their shouders throughout\nthe game, and mentions an incl-\ndent which saw Murray Owens\nattacked by three different Spokane players after the whistle,\nwith only one penalty resulting.\nThe fan says he's less concerned with poor refereeing fouling\nCOOPER SWITCHES FROM\nTRACK TO TOUCHDOWN\nBluet Down Reds\n7-3 in NDU Game\nJim Obal, with two goals and\nCharlie Cuzzocrea, with two\ngoals and an assist paced the\nBlues to a 7-3 win over the Reds\nin a Notre Dame inter-squad\nhockey game Friday night. The\nRed squad was lead by George\nFedorak with a goal and an\nassist.\nSummary:\nFirst Period - Reds, Pat Riva\n(Coulson) 5:12; Blues, Jim Obal\n(Sloan) 7:00; Blues, Jim Turner,\n(MacAstocker, Cuzzocrea) 8:31,\nPenalties - Riva, 11:00; West-\nmacott, 18:15.\nSecond \u2014 Reds, Pat Harton\n(Riva, Fedorak); Blues, Ernie\nMoisey, (Sloan) 7:02; Blues,\nPeter Greg, (MacAstocker, Turner) 12:59; Blues, Cuzzocrea\n(Conne, Turner) 16:10.\nPenalties \u2014 Cuzzocrea (2:05),\nCuzzocrea (6:29), Westmacott\n(11:00), Riva (17:00),\nThird Period - Bues, Obal\n(Sloan) 9:00; Blues, Cuzzocrea\n(MacAstocker, Lavender) 13:33;\nReds, Fedorak (Riva) 17:09.\nPenalties - Simpson (12:22).\nAnnounce New\nHealing Substance:\nShrinks Piles\nEadustre hulmt lulutviu proTin to ihrink\nhtroof rhoidi mi replir dimi|\u00abd fan\nA renowned research institute has\nfound a unique healing substance\nwith the ability to shrink hemorrhoids painlessly. It relieves itching\nand discomfort In minutes and\nspeeds up healing of the injured,\ninflamed tissue.\nIn case after esse, while gently\nrtlieving psin, sctusl reduction\n(shrinkage) took pl\u00bb(. .\nMost important Of all\u2014results\nwere so thorough that thlsim prove-\njnent waa maintained ovtr* period\nof mtny months.\nThis was accomplithsd with a\nnew healing substsnes (B o-Dynej\nwhich quickly helps heal Injured\ncells and stimulates growth of new\ntissue.\nNow Bio-Dyne is offered In ointment and suppository .form called\nPreparation H. Ask for it at all drug\nstores\u2014money back gusrantes.\n 1 :\t\nColeman\nleads WFC\nPushing\nREGINA (CP)-End Tommy\nJoe Coffey of Edmonton Eskimos has set one Western Football Conference pass receiving\nrecord and will be out to establish another when Eskimos play\ntheir final league game Saturday.\nStatistics released Monday by\nWFC statistician Bill Hawrylak\nshowed Coffey caught 11 passes\nin a game against Calgary Stampeders last Saturday to bring his\nreceptions to 77 for the season,\nthree more than the former record set last season by Calgary\nflanker Bobby Taylor.\nColley has gained 1112 yards\non his receptions, just 14 short\nof the record set in 1959 by end\nErnie Pitts of Winnipeg Blue\nBombers.\nTaylor holds down second place\nthis year with 888 yards on 63\nreceptions and Roughriders'\nflanker Hugh Campbell has\ncaught 59 for 868 yards and a\nleague-leading 10 touchdowns.\nCalgary fullback Lovell Cole\nman is well in the lead in the\nrace for individual rushing honors with 1579 yards on 247 car-\nrles. He was top ground-gainer\nin the conference last season,\nSaskatchewan halfback Ed\nBuchanan Is second with 1247\nyards on 168 carries and B.C.\nLions' fullback Bob Swift third\nwith 944 yards on 204 carries.\nBomber halfback Leo Lewis\nhas the best average gain at 7.5\nyards a carry. Buchanan has 7.4,\nColeman 6.3. Coleman and Swift\nshare the lead in touchdowns\nrushing with 10 apiece.\nQuarterback Joe Kapp of the\nLions is leading passer, completing 174 of 284 aerials for 2508\nyards and a second-best 61.2 per\ncent average. Eagle Day of Calgary has the best completion\naverage, hitting the target, on\n62.7 per cent of his passes.\nRon Lancaster of Roughriders\nleads in touchdown passes with\n15 and he and Day each have\nhad 13 intercepted to share the\nlead in that department.\nNeal Beaumont of B.C. is leading punter with a 42.1-yard average on 90 kicks,\nJim Copeland of Roughriders\nhas returned the most punts at\n66 for 326 yards and a five-yard\naversge. ROn Morris of Lions\nhas returned 54 for 328 yards and\na leaeue-leading six-yard average. Roughriders' Gene Wlasiuk\nalso has a six-yard average.\nLewis leads in klckoff returns\nwith a 33.8-y4rd average on 21\nrunbacks.\nBill Munsey of Lions is tops in\npass interceptions with eight.\nLarry Dumelle of Saskatchewan,\nWlasiuk and Beaumont have five\neach.\nBy   WALTER   KREVENCHUK\nWINNIPEG (CP) - Back in\nMay, Billy Cooper ran the 220\nyards in 21.6, a time that set\nManitoba track buffs thinking\nof him as a future Olympic\ncontestant,\nIt was 1.6 seconds off the\nrecognized world mark but,\nconsidering that Cooper is just\n19, it gave great promise.\nBILLY COOPER\n... good move.\nFunspiel\nResults\nResults of Funspiel games at\nthe Nelson Curling Club Monday\nnight:\nB. Palmer 8, W. Tickner 11.\nL. Maglio 8, ..A. Hesse 13.\nG. Frocklage 3, J. Sutherland\n17.\nR. Hesse 7, M. Buerge 10.\nJ. James 12, K. Frederickson\n8.\nL. Bicknell 14, D. Cathcart 6.\nP. Bousquet 22, O. G. Maclntyre 3.\nS. Cherekno 13, G. Gilbert 8.\nN. Hamson 3. J. Jacobson 13.\n\"Cooper has unlimited potential as a sprinter,\" Mac Murray, former Manitoba branch\npresident of the Amateur Athletic Union of Canada, said at\nthe time.\n\"There's no telling how fast\nhe'll be moving should he continue to compete in meets up\nto and including the Canadian\nOlympic trials.\"\nAt that time Cooper was also\nworking out at the spring training camp of Winnipeg Blue\nBombers of the Western Football Conference.\nMurray appealed to the\nBombers not to sign Cooper until he had had a chance to try\nfor a berth on the Olympic\nteam.\nBilly considered the various\nfactors\u2014\"I would be running\nagainst Harry Jerome ... the\ntrials were a long way away\n... I got what I wanted in\na contract.\" He chose football.\nFAVORS TRACK\nAnd while he confesses that\n\"track is my favorite sport,\"\nhe is doing well enough on the\ngridiron to suggest that, all\nthings considered, he didn't\nmake a serious mistake,\nHe went into his first game,\nagainst British Columbia Lions,\n\"kind of wondering whether I\nLeague with St. James Rods in\n1963.\nWhile amateur track now is\nout of the question, he may still\nget a chance to display his versatility. He intends to play for\nWinnipeg Warriors in junior\nhockey this season and hopes\nto get an early call to join\nMinneapolis Bruins of the Central Professional League, a\nBoston Bruins farm club.\nHe says he has received permission from Bombers coach-\ngeneral manager Bud Grant to\nplay. \"He told me not to fool\naround with junior and semi-pro\nand. shoot for the NHL.\"\nA left-winger who scored 14\ngoals for St. Boniface Canadiens last season and two goals\nIn an eight-game stint with Minneapolis, Cooper says \"I'll know\nIf I'm good enough this year.\"\nIf not, he'll give up hockey\nand concentrate on football with\nperhaps some off-season dabbling in basketball, baseball,\nswimming and water skiing,\nsports in which he is better\nthan average.\nBOB SHAW\n... may be absent.\ncoach because he didn't feel\nFrank was a suitable acquisition.\nBrooke also quoted the informant as saying: \"This will be\ndenied but the Calgary clulb has\ndefinitely contacted Shay on the\nmatter (of coaching) in a pre.\nliminary way.\"\nIn Regina, coach Shaw said\nwhen asked for his comment:\nHow ridiculous.\"\nHe said Vancouver sportswrit-\ners were noted for their \"sensationalism\" of which Brooke's\nstory was an instance. He said\nBrooke was wrong throughout\nthe story.\n\"All you have to do is look\ncross-eyed in Vancouver and\nthey've got you going to Edmonton, Calgary or some other\nplace,\" Shaw said.\nPreston, asked for his comment, said he did not keep the\nnotice of Frank being placed on\nwaivers from Shaw.\n\"In any case the Roughriders\nexecutive wouldn't have allowed\nthe club to claim Frank in view\nof the circumstances,\" Preston\nsaid.\nAsked if he and Shaw were\nat loggerheads, Preston said,\n\"Now that it's all over\" the\nhead coach said he would have\nliked to have acquired Frank\nbut Brooke's story blew the mat\nter up \"out of all proportion.\"\nMikita Leads\nNHL Scoring\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nChicago's Stan Mikita has\nopened up a four-point lead in\nthe National Hockey League's\nindividual scoring race.\nThe defending NHL scoring\nchampion scored twice and\nearned two assists as the Black\nHawks defeated New York\nRangers 5-2 Sunday night and\nleft the rest of the pack far\nbehind. The slick Chicago cen\ntre now has three goals and\nnine assists.\nToronto defenceman Kent\nDouglas is second with eight\npoints, one more than third-\nplace Alex Delvecchio of Detroit.\nBobby Hull of Chicago scored\nthree times against New York\nto increase his goal total to five,\na league high. Tied with Hull\nat five points are Red Kelly\nand Don McKenney of Toronto\nMaple Leafs and Red Hay of\nthe Black Hawks.\nThe leaders:\n\"The first thing I noticed\nwas how big they were,\"\nAnd in a game against Saskatchewan Roughriders, the\n175-pound flanker had a bone-\nrattling encounter with 270-\npound Clyde Brock which confirmed they could hit, too.\n\"Everything went black,\"\nCooper recalls. \"But it was\ntime out for a commercial on\nTV and I recovered enough to\nstay in.\"\nHis record in Bombers' first\n10 games indicates he does belong and, in fact, puts him in\nthe race for WFC rookie-of-the-\nyear honors.\nHe caught 21 of 25 passes for\n360 yards and three touch\ndowns, rushed four times for 32\nyards and one TD, ran back\ntwo kickoffs for a total of 82\nyards, and ran back 15 punts\nfor 66.\nCOVERED CAMPBELL\nCooper also saw brief duty as\ndefensive halfback, including\nthe chore of shadowing Saskatchewan flanker Hugh Campbell, catcher of nine touchdown\npasses this season .\u2014 none\nagainst Cooper, however.\nCooper was playing midget\nfootball just two years ago. He\njumped to BombOrs after winning the scoring championship,\nrookie honors and an all-star\nranking in the Manitoba-Saskatchewan  Junior  Football\nG APts.\nMikita, Chicago\nDouglas, Toronto\nDelvecchio, Detroit\nHowe, Detroit\nMahovllch, Toronto\nMurphy, Detroit\nHull, Chicago\nKelly, Toronto\nMcKenney, Toronto\nHay, Chicago\n12\nPrince Philip\nScores Twice\nTo Win Match\nMEXICO CITY (Reuters)-\nPrince Philip won a polo match\nfor his team Monday by scoring\ntwo goals in rapid succession in\nthe last chukker.\nPlaying a brilliant game in a\nfast \u2022 moving match, the prince\nbroke a tie which had held the\nscore at 7-7 in the fifth chukker end in the sixth drove twice\nthrough the goal against determined opposition, leaving the final score 9-7.\nAs in Saturday's match at\nthe tree-lined field eight miles\nfrom the capital, all the other\nplayers were Mexican.\nTiger Cats\nClinch First\nPlace in EFC\nTORONTO (CP) - Ralph\nSazio's Hamilton Tiger - Cats\nhave clinched first place in\nthe Eastern Football Conference with one game left to\nplay, but without the steady\ntoe of placekicker Don Sutherin\nit would have been a scramble\nto the wire.\nSutherin is in front with a\ncommanding total of 87 points,\n21 ahead of his nearest rival,\nDick Shatto of Toronto Argonauts,\nWith his booting accuracy\nmaking the difference in several close contests this year,\nthe Hamilton backfielder has 32\nconverts, 14, field goals and 13\nsingle points to his credit.\nTeammates Bernie Faloney\nand Joe Zugar are first and\nsecond in punting. Faloney has\nkicked 36 times for 1,644 total\nyardage and a 45,7-yard average while Sugar punted on 63\noccasions for 2,695 yards and a\n42.8-yard average.\nSTILL LEAD\nSecond - place Ottawa Rough\nRiders, after three successive\npoor showings, still lead in the\nall \u2022 Important rushing and\npassing departments.\nHalfback Ron Stewart has\ngained 808 yards on the ground\nin 134 carries for an average\ngain of 8.0 yards. His longest gain was 46 yards and he\nhas run for three of seven\ntouchdowns.\nOttawa quarterback Russ\nJackson is the top passer with\n106 completions in 214 attempts\nfor a total of 1,928 yards. He\nhas 16 touchdown passes to his\ncredit, a completion average of\n.495 and an average gain of 9.0\nyards per pass.\nScorers:\nKnocks Out\nSparring Mate\nPLYMOUTH Mass. (API-\nSonny Liston methodically\nbuilding toward his goal of regaining the heavyweight title\nfrom Cassius Clay, convinced\nanother sparring partner Monday his left never was better,\nA Liston left hook ripped a\none-half inch gash over Lee Williams's left eye for eight\nstitches.\nWilliams thus became the\nthird sparmate in two days and\nloth over-all sent to the sidelines by the ex-champ.\nListon lost to Clay in Miami\nlast winter. They meet again\nNov. 16 in a Boston Garden\nfight.\nTrainer Willie Reddish said a\ncall has been sent out all over\nthe country for additional sparring partners and that several\nmore are on the way, But most\nhave declined.\nSutherin, H\nShitto, T\nRacine, O\nStewart, O\nThelen, 6\nWatkins, O\nFaloney, H\nGrant, H\nPatterson, H\nSweetan, T\nSamson, T\nParker, T\nDixon, M\nTD C FG S Pis\n0 32 14 13   87\n11  0  0  0\n0 2711  2\n70 0 0\n0\n0\n0\n0\n0\n3\n0\n0\n0\n7 0\n7 0\n6 0\n6 0\n6 0\n0 22\n5 0\n5 0\n5  0\nCentral\nTruck\nand\nEquipment\nCo. Ltd.\nPhone 352-2633\n702 Front St.,\nNelson, B.C.\nGodfrey's\nMotor Inn\nPhone 356-2333\nCreston, B.C.\nEast\nKootenay\nEquipment Co. Ltd.\nPhone 426-3321\nCranbrook, B.C.\nNatal\nTruck\n& Car\nSales\nPhone 425-7718\nNatal, B.C.\nP.O. Box 459,\nInternationals\nES&Sg^SSB\nwork longer\nat lower cost\n-and the new\n100,000 mile warranty proves itl\nThe new 5-Star Warranty proves what\ntruck operators have known all along\n\u2014Internationals are the reliable trucks.\nFor example, light-duty models\nhave more powerful engines, heavy-\nduty drive lines and sturdier frames.\nIt's no wonder they stay on the job\nlonger, With less cost to you in downtime and repairs!\nAnd now the most reliable trucks\nare backed by the most comprehensive\ntruck warranty. It protects every truck in the line... it protects all\nmajor components... for 100,000 miles or 24 months. For more\nfacts, talk to your nearby International Dealer or Branch.\nYou'll earn more with\nINTERNATIONAL\nTRUCKS\n\u2014built, sold and serviced by truckmen.\nINTERNATIONAL HARVESTER COMPANY OF CANADA, LIMITED\n1296 Station St., Vancouver, B.C.\n 8\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, OCT. 27,1964\nUN Forces Supervise\nTurk Troop Change\nNICOSIA (Reuters) - Canadian and Irish troops of the\nUnited Nations peace force and\nAustralian police stood guard at\nthe port of Famagusta Monday\nas 330 Turkish troops landed to\nrelieve part of the Turkish\narmy contingent on the island.\nThe Turkish contingent will\nbe stationed in barracks near\nthe Nicosi-Kyrenia road, the\nkey 16 \u2022 mile highway which\nloomed large in a month-long\ndispute over the rotation of\nTurkish troops on the island.\nAgreement on rotating the\nTurkish army contingent was\nreached last week after nearly\na month of dispute. A UN statement Thursday said arrangements had been completed for\nthe UN Cyprus force to assume\ncontrol of the road.\nPresident Makarios had said\nhis government would not allow\nrotation of the Turkish unit unless the question of opening the\nroad was settled at the same\ntime.\nTurkey and Greece keep\nsmall forces on the island under\ntreaties negotiated in 1961 when\nCyprus gained independence\nfrom Britain.\nArms Imports\nExceed Exports\nPARIS (Reuters) \u2014 France\nexported $420,000,000 worth of\narms last year and imported\n$154,000,000 worth, an armed\nforces ministry report said Mon\nday.\nBiggest imports were from\nthe United States and included\nsix KC-135 stratotanker refuelling jets designed to extend the\nrange of France's mirage-IV\nnuclear bombers, 42 crusader\nnavy fighters and 29 T-33 silver\nstar jet trainers.\nFrance also bought Tartar,\nNike-Hercules and Honest John\nmissiles plus electronic equipment for a missile ship and\nU.S. \u2022 built anti - submarine\nbombers.\nMARKET TRENDS\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS 1390 ON THE DIAL\nPACIFIC DAYLIGHT TIME\nTUESDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1964\n5:58\u2014Sign On\n6:00-Wake Up Time\n6:40\u2014Farm Fare\n6:45\u2014Chapel In the Sky\n7:00\u2014News\n7:05-Wake Up Time\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Wake Up Time Continues\n8:0O\u2014News\n8:05\u2014B.C. News and Weather\n8:15-Wake Up Time\n8:30\u2014Preview Commentary\n8:35\u2014Opening Markets\n8:39\u2014Wake Up Time Continues\n9:00\u2014News\n9:10\u2014Early Road Report\n9:15\u2014The Archers\n9:30\u2014Alan's A.M. Spot\n9:59-DOOTS\n10:00\u2014News\n10:10\u2014What's the Song Contest\n10:15\u2014Morning Melodies\n10:45\u2014Lucky 7 Contest\n11:00\u2014News\nll:05-Book Mark\n11:10\u2014Morning Melodies\nContinue\n12:00\u2014Maurice Pearson Show\n12:15\u2014Sports News\n12:25\u2014News\n12:30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Noon Markets\nl:00-Sing Along\n1:15-What's On Tapp\n1:45\u2014Sacred Heart Program\n2:00\u2014School Broadcast\n2:30-News\n2:33\u2014Trans Canada Matinee\n3;30-To Market With Music\n4:00\u2014News\n4:03\u2014Canadian Roundup\n4:10-Sports Spotlight\n4:15\u2014Pops Parade\n5:00\u2014News\n5:05\u2014The Rolling Home Show\n5:35\u2014Closing Markets\n5:40\u2014Today's Editorial\n5:45\u2014Business Barometer\n5:50\u2014Sports Desk\n5:55\u2014Spotlight On Sports\n6:00\u2014Strikes and Spares\n6:05\u2014National News\n6:10-Grand Ole Opry Stars\n7:00\u2014News ahd Reports\n7:20\u2014Speaking Personally\n7:30\u2014Music For Listening\n9:00\u2014Christian Frontiers\n9:30-CBC Talent Festival\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15-Chapel in the Sky\n10:30\u2014The Music Scene\n11:00\u2014Ken's Korner\n12:00\u2014Sign Off\nCBC PROGRAMS\nWEDNESDAY, OCTOBER. 28, 1964\n00\u2014News\n05\u2014The Morning Program\n00\u2014News\n10\u2014Sports Report\n35\u2014Max Ferguson Show\n00 News and Report\n10\u2014Interlude\n15\u2014The Archers\n30\u2014Pacific Express\n59-D.O.O.T.S.\n0O\u2014Morning Visit\n10\u2014For Consumers\n15\u2014University of the Air\n45\u2014Playroom\n00\u2014Off the Record\n45\u2014Music on the Heather\n0O\u2014Tennessee Ernie Ford\n15\u2014News and Weather\n25\u2014Sports\n30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n00\u2014Curio Shop\n: 15\u2014The Tommy Hunter Show\n45\u2014Mainly Dixieland\n: 00\u2014School Broadcast\n30\u2014News\n33\u2014Trans Canada Matinee\n3:30-Tempo \u2014 Part I\n4:00\u2014News\n4:03-^Canadian Roundup\n4:10-Tempo \u2014 Part II\n4:30-Countdown\n5:00\u2014Tempo for Teens\n5:30\u2014News\n5:40-Today's Editorial\n5:45\u2014Business Barometer\n5:50\u2014Snorts Desk\n5:55\u2014Spotlight On Sports\n6:00\u2014Tempo \u2014 Part Four\n6:30\u2014Music in G\n7:00-News and Parliament Hill\n7:20-In the Provinces\n7:30\u2014Radio International\n8:00\u2014Midweek Theatre\n9:00-CBC Vancouver Chamber\nOrchestra\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014A Voice From Hie Gallery\n10:30-Sound of the Sixties\nll:0tt-New Records\n12:00\u2014News\n12:05\u2014After Hours\n1:00\u2014News\nTELEVISION  FOR TODAY\nPACIFIC DAYLIGHT TIME\nKREM-TV - Channel I\n6:30 Woody Woodpecker\n7:00 Sea Hunt\n7:30 Combat\u2022\n8:30 McHale's Navy *\n9:00 Tycoon *\n9:30 Peyton Place *\n10:00 Fugitive *\n11:00 Nightbeat\n11:15 Bob Young and News \u2022\n11:30 Late Show\n\"Phantom of the Opera\"\nKXLY-TV - Channel 4\n00 Jo Stafford Show\n00 World War 1 *\n30 The Red Skelton Show '\n30 Petticoat Junction \u2022\n10:00 The Doctors and Nurses *\n11:00 11 o'Clock News\n11:30 Big Four Movie\nKHQ-TV - Channel S\n7:00 Bold Journey\n7:30 Mr. Novak *\n8:30 Man From U.N.C.L.E. '\n9:30 TW-3 \u2022 (C)\n10:00 U. of Wash. Football\n11:00 News and Weather\n11:30 Tonight wth Carson * (0\nCBC-TV - Nelson, Channel 9; Trail, Channel U\n4:00 The Secret Storm\n4:30 Razzle Dazzle\n5:00 Fireball XL-5\n5:30 Music Hop\n6:00 Karen\n6:25 Home Edition\n7:00 7 o'Clock Show\n7:30 Reach For the Top\n8:00 Jack' Benny Show\n8:30 Danny Kaye Show\n9:30 Front Page Challenge\n10:00 CBC News Magazine\n10:30 Other Voices\n11:00 News\n11:14 Viewpoint\nCJLH-TV - Channel 7, Lethbridge\nMOUNTAIN STANDARD TIME\nWEDNESDAY\n9:45\n10:00\n10:30\n11:00\n11:15\n11:30\n11:50\n12:00\n12:15\n12:30\n1:00\n2:00\n2:30\n3:00\n3:30\nTest Pattern\nWestern Schools\nAcross Canada.\nFriendly Giant\nChez Helene\nButternut Square\nCBC News\nFarm Highlights\nMidday Report\nWhiplash \u2014 Hunters\nBreaking Point \u2014\nI, The Dancer\nLawman \u2014 Shackled\nWoman's World\nAs The World Turns\nTake Thirty\n4:00 Secret Storm\n4:30 Razzle Dazzle\n5:00 Forest Rangers\n6:00 Nation's Business\n6:15 Weather, News\n6:30 Rawhide No. 68\n7:30 Mr. Ed -\nEd and the Peace Corps\n8:00 Red River Jamboree\n8:30 Perry Mason\n9:30 Festival\n10:30 Phoebe\n11:00 CBC News\n11:15 Night Final\n11:20 Breaking Point -\nI, The Dancer\n(Programs subject lo change by stations without notice.)\n  f\\\nNEW YORK (AP)-The stock\nmarket ended Monday with an\nirregular decline after starting\nwith a moderate gain. Trading\nwas fairly active.\nGeneral Motors, down 1% to\n106%, more than erased its Friday advance of 1% made in\nanticipation of an end of the\n31-day General Motor Strike.\nThe Dow Jones industrial average, which had been up as\nmuch as 2.24 at the end of the\nfirst hour, closed with a loss of\n.61 at 877.01.\nOf 1,384 issues traded, 556 declined and 636 advanced.\nVolume was 5,240,000 shares\ncompared with 3,840,000 on Friday when the session was cut\nby 114 hours intribuetot\nformer U.S. president Herbert\nHoover.\nStandard and Poor's 500-stock\nindex declined .4 to 85.00.\nREACH RECORD HIGH\nAs a result of gains by some\nof its blue chip components, the\nAssociated Press average of 60\nstocks rose .5 to a record high\nof 331.7 with industrials up .2,\nrails up .8 to a record peak and\nutilities up .4 to a high for the\nyear.\nTen of the 15 most active\nstocks declined and five advanced.\nAmong Canadian issues\ntraded, Distillers Seagrams rose\n% and Mclntyre Porcupine Vt.\nDown % apiece were Dome\nMines, Granby Mining and International Nickel.\nPrices were i r r e g u larly\nlower on the American Exchange. Volume was 1,710,600\nshares compared with 1,290,000\nFriday. Jupiter Corp. gained Vt\nwhile Brazilian Traction lost %.\nCanadian Javelin and Scurry\nRainbow Oil each dropped Vt.\nTORONTO (CP)-The stock\nmarket lost ground fractionally\nin only moderate trading Monday. A few industrials had good\ngains, but most sustained falls\nof 14 or less.\nPrice Brothers and Calgary\nPower each fell % to 46% and\n2314.\nBrazilian  Traction  lost  five\nAT LAST\nWRIGLEY'S\nSPEARMINT\nIS IN THE\nMGQF.RN\ncents to $4.95 and churned over\n15,940 shares. Interprovlncial\nPipe Lines was off % to\nConsolidated Paper % to 4314\nand Imperial Oil % to 56'\/4.\nAluminium, Burns, and B.C,\nForest Products each fell *i to\n32, 32% and 17, while Bank of\nNova Scotia and CPR each\nslipped % to 7514 and 52%.\nOn the plus side, Union Car\nbide, listed Monday, closed at\n26% and traded 8,726 shares.\nFord of Canada jumped 4*4\nto 18% in light turnover, while\nGeneral Motors was unchanged\nat 109 in odd-lot trading.\nSenior base metals were\nstrong. Falconbridge leaped\nahead 2Vt to a high of 89%,\nwhile Cominco tacked on % to\n42%.\nGold trading was alternately\nlight and brisk during the s\nsion. Cochenour Willans rose 15\ncents to $3.40, but Dome lost Vt\nto 33% and Hollinger Vi to 31%,\nIn light senior western oils\naction, Home A gained Vi to\n19%, Hudson's Bay % to 16 and\nHome B Vt to 19'\/s. Calgary and\nEdmonton fell 1% to 21 after\nnews that Canadian Superior\nOil has offered to acquire one\nshare of Calgary for 1.16 shares\nof its stock. Canadian Superior\nclosed at 19 a share, unchanged.\nOn index, industrials fell .13 to\n165.85, the TSE index .12 to\n154.88, base metals .07 to 71.65\nand western oils .24 to 93.95.\nGolds gained 1.57 to 151.26 and\nvolume was 3,643,066 shares\ncompared with 3,521,000 shares\ntraded Friday.\nMONTREAL (CP) - Stocks\nrallied late in the day Monday\nto close mixed to slightly lower\nin quiet industrial action on the\nMontreal and Canadian Stock\nExchanges.\nIndustrial volume was 223,100\nshares and mines and oils 904\n400 shares.\nComposite was unchanged on\nindex at 156.3 as declines outnumbered advances 95 to 82.\nIndustrials were off 0.1  at\n162.6. Dominion Textile lost %\nto 31% and Rothmans gained\n1*4 at 23%. :\nUtilities were unchanged at\n147.7. Trans-Canada Pipe Lines\nadded Vt to 42.\nBanks were up 0.4 at 132.1.\nMontreal and Royal both picked\nup % each to 69 and 78 and\nToronto \u2022 Dominion *4 to 69.\nCommerce dropped % to 68 and\nNova Scotia and Banque Cana-\ndienne Nationale Vt each to.75\nand 76%.\nPapers were up 0.2 at 148.9.\nFraser advanced Vt to 3214 and\nAbitibi % to 14%. Consolidated\nDAILY  CROSSWORD\n48, Guided\nDOWN\n1. Tapering\ntop of a\nsteeple\n2. Wing-\nshaped\n3. Against\n4. A tomb\nInscription\nB.Lair\n6. Decorated\nwall part\nT. Opening\n9. Forbidden:\nvar.\n11. Moisture\n13. Subsequent\nto\n16. Ger. spa\nisma bihh hibm\n19. Kind of\nfabrio\n20. A\nmass\nof\ncondensed\nvapor\n22. Flowed.\n24. Mlschle.\nvous\none Yeitwd\u00bbr't Abiwmp\n25. Pierces, as   34. Needles'\nSIlilH   SQDESiai!\nBiannual\n0BBS\nwith a\ndagger\n26. Spiced\nMexican\ndish: pi.\n27. Struck with\nthe hand\n30. Epoch\napertures\n35. Healed\n36. Exclamation\n38. Center ,\n40. Give over\n42. Undivided\n44. Ir. ancestor.\nACROSS\n1, American\nIndian\n4. Root of\nthetaro\n8. Scheme\n10. Juicy fruit\n11. Goddess of\nthe hunt\n12. Peninsula\nof So. Asir\n14, Go astray\n15. A wager\n17. At a\ndistance\n18. Pronoun\n19. Shrub used\nin tanning\n21. Pronoun\n22. Music\nnote\n23. Join in\nmarriage:\nsL\n25. Heavenly\nbodies\n28. Greek poet\n29. Snarl\n31. Aloft\n32, Part of\n\"to be\"\nS3. Having\nears\n85. Chapter:\nabbr.\n37. Ferry-boat\nSB. Remunerate\n40. Hint\n41. Kind of\nsailing\nvessel\n48. Abrading\nmaterial\n45. Sea eagle\n46. Lateral\n47. Plant\novule\nDAILY CRVPTOQUOTE \u2014 Here's how to work It:\nAXYDLBAAXR\nis   LONGFELLOW\nOne letter limply stands for another. In this sample A Is used\nfor the three L's,X for the two O's, etc. Single letter, apos.\ntrophies, the length and formation of the worts are all hints.\nJD*oh day the code letters are different\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nN     PBIT     ONDDSITTLL     PBLTJL     SI\nSQI.     WUJtT     PUI.T QO.-PSFOQiaUJT\nYesterday's Cryptoqnote:   LOGIC   IS   NOTHtvrt   unni\nTHAN A-KNOWLEDGE OF WORSs.ZcSteLAiKB\nO MM. Klnc Feature* Syndicate las.\ndropped % to 43% and Prico\nBros. % to 46%.\nSenior base metals were fractionally higher. Hudson Bay\nMining advanced % to 7514 and\nConsolidated Mining and Smelting Vt to 42%. Hollinger and\nNoranda dipped 14 each to 31%\nand 4914.\nSenior oils lost ground. Husky\nand Pacific Pete slipped % each\nto 10% and 12. Imperial was\nup % to 56%.\n0AOM. lip, uJM.\nWlaAioti WleUditL\nPrinted Pattern\n9176\nSIZES   10-18\nWRAP THIS UP!\nWrap once, then go, go, go in\na dashing design that turns every\nday dressing into a delight! Perfect choice for beginners \u2014 wonderful in cotton, tweedy mixture\nand stripes.\nPrinted Pattern 9176; Misses'\nSizes 10, 12, 14, 16, 18. Size 16\ntakes 2% yards, 54-inch.\n...FIFTY CENTS (50c) in coins\n(no stamps please) for this pattern. Print plainly SIZE, NAME,\nADDRESS and STYLE NUMBER\nSend order to MARIAN MAR\nTIN, care of N.D.N. Pattern\nDepartment, 60 Front Street\nWest, Toronto, Ont.\nFREE PATTERN DIRECT TO\nYOUR DOOR \u2014 choose it from\n300 design ideas in new Fall-Win-\nter Pattern Catalog! School, casual, career, dressy styles \u2014 all\nsizesl Send 50c.\nTbsdkcAagL 6y,\netcuvuL bJJumtkVL\nBUSY BLUE JAYS\nAdd a spark of color, touch ol\ntexture with fine, feathery\nfriends in easy stitches.\nStrike a brilliant note on kit-\nchen towels or cloths with busy\nblue jays. Simple embroidery.\nPattern 675: transfer six motifs\nabout 714x8 ins.\nTHIRTY-FIVE CENTS in coins\n(no stamps please) for this pat\ntern to Laura Wheeler, care ol\nN.D.N. Needlecraft Dept., 60\nFront Street West, Toronto, Ont.\nPrint plainly PATTERN NUMBER,   your  NAME   and   AD-\nNEW FOR 1965! 200 designs\n\u2014more fashions to knit, crochet\nthan everl Plus 3 FREE patterns, embroidery, dolls' clothes\nSend 25o for new Needlecraft\nCatalog,\nVALUE! 18 COMPLETE\nQUILT PATTERNS in deluxe\nColonial Quilt Book. For beginners, experts. Send 66c.\n-    ~ .);     :      -\n mm\n\u00ab\u25a0\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, OCT. 27, iS.i^-0\nDAVIES - to Mr. an, Mr*.\nPhillip Davies, 1210 Crossley\nAve., Nelson, St Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital, on October 13,\na son.\nHELP WANTED\nA YOUNG MAN TO LEARN\nthe hardware business. Age\n18-25 with grade 12 schooling.\nTo begin as a clerk in our\nretail store, good starting\nwages. Apply Wood V allance\nHardware Co. \u2014247-tfn\nEXPERIENCED BUTCHER\nand meat cutter wanted. Newdan Farm, Creston. Ph. 356-\n9001. 252-tfn\nHELP WANTED\u2014FEMALE\nPIPELINE CONS. CANADA &\nStates.   Long  project.   \"Job\nNews\"   35c,   ad.   envelope,\nKrone, Box 132, Medina, Wash.\n-252-252\nSEAMSTRESS,    WITH   SOME\nknowledge of tailoring. Apply\nIn person to Jonella Cleaners,\n517 Victoria St. 232-257\n'     -252-257\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nWILL LOOK  AFTER CHILD-\nrin in ,my home. Ph. 352-3998.\n-260-255\nWILL  DO   HOUSEWORK  BY\nthe hour. Ph. 352-7108.\n-248-253\nPIANO TUNING AND REPAIR.\n0. Stenberg. Ph. 352-6892.\n-231-258\nWILL BABYSIT IN MY HrtMfi.\nPhone 352-0923. -249-254\nWANTED TO RENT\nUftGENTLV REQUIRED, 3 Oft\n4 bedroom older type hOme,\nNelson vicihity. Ph. 352-7324.\n-248-253\n2 BEDROOM FURNISHED\nhouse. Phone \"Ron\" 352-2815.\n-248-253\n57x10' 3 B.R, $7365\nIn Modern Decur\nCompletely furnished and set up.\nWHY PAY MORE\nThe '64 Fleetwood has all the\nquality features 1-pce. galvanized roof, baked enamel ship-\nproof finish on aluminum sides.\nTruss engineered channel frame,\n60,000 BTU furnace, dble, fibre-\nglass insulation, frost free storm\nwindows for all windows Nationally known, serviced and guaranteed appliances.\n17 floor plans to choose from.\n1,2 or 3 bedrooms.\nBest bank financing possible.\nKingsway Trailer Wholesale\n5438 Imperial HE 4-0741\nDay or Night\n-192-ttn\nTO CLEAR: ONE ONLY 1964 17\nft Tee-Pee self-contained, fully\nequipped. Reg, Price (2534.\nGoing at $2095. Don't pass this\none up \u2014 if you are looking for\na good buy on a travel trailer.\n1 \u2014 1959 Volkswagen Deluxe,\nheater, radio, new rubber. A\nnice clean car at only $795.\nCRANBROOK TRAILER\nSALES, Your Authorized\nSAFEWAY MOBILE HOME\nDEALER for the East and\nWest Kootenays. Fernie Road,\nin Cranbrook. Ph. 426-4935, Box\n2217. Walt Hill, Mgr. - Where\nMobile Homes Are Our Business Not a Side Line.\n-252-tfn\nSHOPPING FOR A NEW Mobile home? Don't discover too\nlate that You did not receive\ntrue value for your dollar. See\nSafeway - and compare \u2014\nBefore you buy! 10 ft. and 12\nft. models on display at Cranbrook Trailer Sales, .our\nauthorized Safeway Mobile\nHome DealSr for the East and\nWest Kootenays. Walt Hill,\nmgr. Phone 426-4935, P.O.\nBox 2217. -231-tfn\nBUSINESS   8t   PROFESSIONAL\nDIRECTORY\nA hahdy alphabetical guide to goods Ond services\navailable in Nelson.\nAutomobile Dealers\nBILLS' MOTOR-IN LTD.\n(Stud.baker-Li.tl\n218 BSkir St       PhonO 352-3441\n  - tft\nPARKVIEW MOTORS LTD.\n(Rambler \u00ab Volkswagen!\n32) Nelson Avi.   Phone 352-5355\n-\u25a0tfft\nBuilding Supplies\nBEE BUILDING SUPPLY LTD.\nIvirythiig ih wili rprOOf\n.plywood.      \u2022\u25a0  :\n36l Biker SL     Phon* 852-4135\n ,      _ ..   . r-tt,\nBURNS LUIhSER CO LTD.\n66. ftakOf St.     Phone 952-6661\n\u25a0.   .,  .....   ,.,-tfn\nCOLUMBIA TRADING CO\n901 Front St. Ph  454-5171\nLots of free parking.\n*4fn\nCabinet Makers_\nJOS. C. MERMKT       ~\nProfessional Kitchen Remodeling. Serving Nilson and Dist.\n1020 Davies St - Nelson\n\u2014tfn\nContractors\nLSrlo Huiisk, Gsitril Masonry\nStoni \u2022 Brick \u2022 Cement \u2022 Stucco\nPliitirlig\nIM Fill* St.        Ph. 352-7692\n^439-tfh\n'.. TAi\u00a5 BAWA-riiiN\nRiiiVitiiiis, e\u00abhtnt Work\nitd OWertl Cirp iW\nPhini 352-7433\n^ttn\n,\"1t\t\nFamily\nFinancial Advisers\nFinancial Mm mi\nControl\n\u2022   tm p. wttfri\u00bbi\u00bb \u25a0-\nMblttirftt.     Ph. *691J\ntorn or write tor oonndintiii\nMj\/.0.*V\u00ablAtiM6\u00bbt*#-\nPlying School\n(\u00abv1' i*. wvM Wm 6tm.\nAlf mntt StrvTo*.    .\nStogli or rtulti-ihgihi airtrilt.\nWANB*A  AfllWAVS\nPhon* m-m at JW'4871\n,<iiiti\u00absi.B.a.\n\u00ab.. 36-261\nI   WW  \u25a0!\u25a0 II\"-  .....     T.   u\u00bbj.\nGarages\nUpper Talrvltn Meters Ltd.\nCor. 7th st Daviei   Ph 352-2524\n\u25a0   Tfinsistorizsd Ignition\nHealth Foods\nr> ,\u2022\u2022 Vitades for Nutrition..\nWALjry.ttAiTttfOOM\n|SMWsrd?t. J    J_-*l(or>, JB.C.\nHealth Food\nHealth Thru Nutrition\nHEALTH FOOD CENTRE\n924 Davies St.\n-233-258\nMonumental\nStones\nBronze and Granite\nJ!. D. REES\n7   316-567 Biker St.\n\u2014i97-t.n\nSee mum FLOWERS LTD.\nPhOne (Or pri v ati interview.\n-236-tfn\nPhqto Copying\nPOWELL ENGRAVING\n400 Wird St        Nelson. B.C\nPhone 852-7521.\nContracts - Birth Certificates\nLegal Daoqmipts - Important\n. Papers.\n-tfn\nPrinting\ndaily nIto\nPrinter* - Uthogri. hers\nColor Printing\nPhone 3B2-S554\n\u25a0^tfb\nRadio & TV Service\nftidio - TV  Transistor - Service\nCOLUMBIA ELECTROCENTRE\nLTD.\n458 Wird St.     Phoh* 444-5581\n-j-sifttfn\nWittELECTRONICS\n461 Hill St - I\nMHW-vivaa\nPhone 4S4-44M\n-tfn\nRefrigeration\nRifrigefitiin SalAS ihdlWviJ*\nCARLSON t .uipmEnT\nNelion, 6.C.    PhOrte 3Si-s49b\n-186-ttn\nSporting Goods\nfitt Whlteley's Sport Shop\n481 B\u00abk\u00bbr Str**t Phoie 452-7M1\nm\u20141\u2014\"t\"*\"j'\nTopsoil\nlam's Topsoil, SiM *ad Gravel\nPh. 454-245B Diyi \u2022 152-7576 eves.\n-tin\nWelding & Iron\nWorks\ni Hoitlesiicoji\nwild ot Cut Iron tail cy-\ntout heads, blocks, etc.\nStuck tiMt by 6. iiiiiitt of\n46 yiirt ikiif iiftci in fiutdp*.\n\"fiftsManihip Guiranteid.\nK06TISNAY WELblNG &\nCASTING REPAIRS\n121 Columbia Ave., C.stleg^r\n' T    \" f .0. e S4I-54M\nRENTALS\nFOR RENT - STORE SPACE\nin Nelson Lumber Co. Marshall Wells building Fruitvale.\nArea 3500 feet with 70 feet\nfrontage, all glass. Ideal for\nsuper market which is badly\nneeded in this town. Heavy\nwiring for freezers, etc. Ample\nparking. Nelson Lumber Co.\nLtd., Fruitvale, B.C. Phone\n367-7344. -248-265\nFOR RENT WITH OPTION TO\nbuy, 2 bedroom house, second\nfloor, room for beds and storage, 2 room suite with bath in\nground level. Basement, 1\ncabin. Ph. 352-6903.    -250-255\nFIRST 6 WEEKS FOR 1\nmonth's rent. Unfurnished, 3\nbedroom apt. 14 blk, off Baker\nSt. Immediate occupancy, $70\nmo. Wm! Kaiyniuk Agencies.\nPh. 352-2425. -250-tfn\nHSKPG' AND SLEEPING RM\nweekly, monthly rates Dishes,\nlinen supplied, forking. Allen\nfldoms, 171 Biker St.\n-27-tfn\nONE OR TWO- ROOM FURN-\nished apts. In Annable Block\n$21 and up. Call 352-7217. Pou-\nlin Agencies Ltd., 582 Ward St,\n-231-266\nFURNISHED HSKP. ROOM -\nHeat and water supplied, Vt\nblock off Baker, 414 Falls St.\nPh. 352-3208 or 352-6912.\n-246-tfn\nOVER OUR OFFICE, FURN.\nHskpg. room. $30.00 a month,\nUtilities Included. Ph. 352-3944.\nLambert Realty.       -243-tfn\nSEMI-FURNISHED SUITE, Includes stove, fridge. Heated;\nsuit female. Ph. 352-7195.\n-441-ttn\nLARGE 4 ROOM >URNISHtfD\napt, heated, close to Baker St.\nPh. 352-6162 or 352-6411.\n-246-257\nCOMPLETELY FURN. 3-R06M\nsuite. Also one large furn.\nroom. Central location. Ph.\n352-6139. -252-tfn\n1 BDRM. SUttfi. $45 MON. -\n524 Victoria St. Ph. 332-5071.\n-247<272\n6 ROOM  HOUS ..  GAS FUR-\nnice. Ph. 352-7442 after 5 p.m.\n-446-tfi\nFOR  RENT - HOUSgKEKP-\nWg rto., ilise In. Ph. 352-7462.\n-176-tfn\n} BDRM. FUftN. HEATED APT.\nApply 1019 Latimer St.\n. .   -249-tfn\n3 ROOM UNFUftN. SUlfP. -\nPriv. int. and bath Ph. 352'57}4\n-250-255\nHALDANE   APARTMENTS  -\nFurn, or uhfurn. Ph. ,52-6721.\n-65-tfn\n&ELF  CONTAINED  \u00bb  ROOM\nsuite. Ph. 352-7136 after 6.p.m.\n-209-tfn\nif ROOM SUltE, 1 BDRM.,\nelec. stove, heatid, private\nentrance. Ph. 352-6263. 216-tfn\nFURN. HSKP. RM. APPLY 140\nBaker St. or Ph. 352-3384.\n\u2014247-tfn\n6   ROOM   APT. - CENTRAL.\nAdults. Ph, 352-6024.   -198- tfn\n2 ROOM  FURN.  APT.,  PRI-\nyate. Ph. .452-2664,.,    -33.6-tfn\nF'ftOOM SUitil, FUftN. 567\nSlUCi St. Ph. 352-34.88.^25S-257\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND  FARM  SUPPLIES\nffl&tW AUCTION SALfiS -\nMlkid, NOV. 25. Calf inly, Oct.\n14 ind 28. DiridiOf, Frank\nHill, Box 2139, Cranbrook, B.C.\nOr phono 4-Y Fort Steele. .\n-i64'\u00abn\nFOR ARTIFICIAL BREEDING\ndiiry and beef oittle, PhOne\n454*6874 Nelsin and District\nA.I. Centre, .0B third St., Nel-\nsin. J. Di JOng, fichttiilin\n-M\nntSOSOfiicPNi \u00bb6\u00ab\ni piece ir 44c a lb., dfissed.\nGlendili PiMri, Ph. 6\u00ab:9734,\nSalmo. -184-ttn\nFOR SAii, V0UN6 OUERN'\nSey cow. WM. Evin, Slocan\nPark. -250-255\nBa^iij. i    r in1-|-\u2014 I -i, J--  -\u25a0\u25a0\u00ab' \u2022-\u00bb^< \u25a0\u25a0- i in\nLOST ANP FOUND\nRuiovs, b\u00bbtwi*n Vernon and\nBskif St., it ibOut 14:40, Mon.\nR\u00abWi(d. Ph. 452-5013.-25J.257\nMgsf\"   IfiT'  if\"\"       '\u25a0;\u25a0\";'' ''\u2022,' I     ' '\u2022\u25a0\u25a0' '\"t\ntOSf: 4-TON HVCRAtlUC\nJiOk. RiWird. Ph. 462-6867.\n-252-254\nPUSIIC NOTICES\nLOST:    Tt_3QUOISF BUDGIE\n\"bN in Rosemont. ph. 312-\n764, \u00bb$\u00bb4-2S2\nLAND ACT\nNOTICE OF INTENTION\nTO APPLY TO LEASE LAND\nIn Land Recording District of\nKaslo on the West side of\nKootenay Lake three and one\nhalf (3'\/\u00abi miles North of Kaslo\nand approx. one mile East of\nthe Lardo Road in area known\nas Shulty Bench.\nTake notice that Marion Allen\nManning of Box 418, Kaslo, B.C.,\noccupation Resort Owner, intends to apply for a lease of the\nfollowing described lands;-\nCommencing at post planted\none foot from the N.E. corner\nof Block one (1) of Lot Eight\nHundred and Nineteen (8191,\nKootenay District, Flan One\nThousand and Fifteen (10151,\nexcept Plan Four Thousand Five\nHundred and Ten, it being my\nN.W. corner, thence 660 Feet\nSouth; thence 100 Feet East;\nthence 660 Feet North; thence\n100 Feet West, and containing\nOne and one half (lVs) acres,\nmore or less, for the purpose of\na marina.\nMARION ALLEN MANNING.\nDated October 2, 1964.\n-235-h\nCOURT OF  REVISION\nVoter's List 1964-65\nTAKE NOTICE that the Court\nof Revision for the purpose of\ncorrecting and revising the Voter's List fOr the Village of Slocan\nwill be held in the Village Hall\non Monday, the 2nd day of November, 1964 it 10 O'clock A.M.\nJ. A. Osis\nVILLAGE    CLERK.\n-251-252\nAUTOMOTIVE, BICYCLES\nMOTORCYCLES\n1958 PLYMOUTH HARDTOP,\nwhite and gold with beautiful\nmatching ipterior; 313-V8 engine, automatic transmission,\npower brakes, radio, front and\nrear speakers, tinted windshield. Ail in excellent condition throughout. $1295. Can\narrange financing if necesary.\nPh. 332-5757 evenings, -248-tfn\nCOTTONWOOD WRECKAGE\nWrecking: '55-'56 Chiv., '53\nFord Pickup, '55 and '66\n-Fords, '55-'36-'57 Dodge ahd\nPlymouth, Vt ton Chev. truck j\nGood motors, '56 Chev VB, '55\n'53 Consul, '58 Dodge, Ph. 352-\n5815, Box 382, 24 Ymlr Rd.\n-221-tfn\n1964 FORD FAIRLANE IN TOP\nshape, fully winterized, winter\ntires, ready to go, seat belts,\nradio, seat covers, etc. 1953\nInternational Travelall. Star\nAuto Servici Ltd.     -239-254\nLEAVING TOWN, MUST SELL:\nwhat offers? 1958 Dodge, 2\ndoor, H.T., V-8 auto, radio,\nheater, W.W. hiw tireS. Ph.\n352-2401. -246-254\n\u202255 ford, '53 Plymouth, '56\nHlllmah hardtop, 1959 Plymouth Belvedere, 1\u20141958 Chev.\nSedan, '61 PHnv. NOHh Shore\nService. Ph. 352-2929. -188-tfn\n\u25a056 PONTIAC, 2 DOOR SEDAN.\nRest offer takes. Apply Star\nTransfer. Ph. 352-7313.\n-251-256\ni96> Super SpORts impala,\nhilly equipped, 527 rtiotor, few\nttiiiigi. big diiiiuhi PhOni\n. 352-5864 after 6 p.fti,   -248-253\n1655 G.M.C. GOOD CONDITION,\nand 4 wheel drlvi i960 Willys.\nL. Masurt, Yttir, B.C.\n-256'252\ncMpith car motor! 1954\nChiv V8. Stsndsrd tf inS. W\u00abti\nFrank LunU. Lirdeau.\n^\u25a0252-25?\n1954 FORD, VI, 4'TON, Mftw\npiint, good condition. Ph. 664-\n587i. --452-S57\nM\n... IW, 1656 RENAULT\nSedan. Will tiki smill trailer.\nPh. 552*6. . -441'264\n1657 FORD, 4 DOOR, IN\nshSpe. Ph. 352-5616.   ^-467'tfn\n1954 CADILLAC. I! % STAF*\nford, Ph. 229;4677.,: -239-464\nPROPERTY WANTED\nlistinS. Wm? imvD'\nmg lots, um land, oity ina\niouhtry risidiitial. Coi_rtir-\ncjil prtptrty, Unibtr liOdS.\nCiil mwhw w\u00ab. kiiyniult\nAginOiis, Nilson. Ph. 654-2425,\n\u00bbl6l't\u00ab\nfAWfl\"*Z LAKBPfoNT\nacreage, 16 aeris up. Prefer\nboat access only. All cash for\nsuitable property. S. Ander-\n166 I. TOChtr St., Chljli-\nwseif. B.c\n-2}0-tfn\nFOR SALE\nMISCELLANEOUS\nB & K'DOG CRUMBLES\n20 lbs. $2,30\nComplete and ready to serve.\nCan be fed dry or with water or\nmilk. This is a High Quality Dog\nFood at a Sensible Price.\nNELSON FARMERS SUPPLY\n524 Railway St.        Ph. 332-5375\n-252-252\n3 YR. OLD SORREL GELDING,\nbroken to ride; 1 Mason &\nRiscb upright grand piano;\nheavy duty mustang rolo-\ntiller; 1952 Dodge pickup\ntruck. All cheap for cash. Ph.\nFruitvale 367-9962 after 5 p.m.\n......     -251-256\nUSED AND SLIGHTLY DAM-\naged, automatic wood \u25a0 coal\nheaters of several makes, at\ndrastically reduced prices. Ph.\n226-7221. Texaco Station, Val-\n' ley Comfort Ltd., Appledale.\n-239-tfn\nSIDES OF GRAIN FED BEEF,\n49c, cut and wrapped; Sides of\npork, 29c; sides of pork, cut\nand wrapped, 33c. Newdan\nFarm, Creston. Pb. 356-9901 or\n356-9769. -171-tfn\nWHAT OFFERS? - HAYES\nWalking Beam Pump. Fairbanks-Morse Water Cooled Engine. Apply to Philip Wanjoff\nJr., Box 33, Robson, B.C. Ph.\n365-7394. -247-252\nBED, BOX - SPRING, MAT-\ntress and dresser. 9 x 12 British India rug, chesterfield,\nchair, G.E. Fridge, 16 cu. ft.,\n21\" T.V. Ph. 352-2747.\n-    \u25a0'-..:-';.: -256-252\nFOR THE BEST IN USED\nautomatic washers, dryers, refrigerators, television, etc. con-\ntact Nelson. Electric Co. Ltd.,\n574 Baker St, Nelson, B.C.\n-27-tfn\nLARGE LOGGING HORSE AND\nCorvan 4-sided planer conV\nplete wth heads and belts. Ph.\n362-5936 or write Box 16, Ross,\nland. -252-257\n30\" MOFFAT RANGE, AUTO-\nmatic oven. Lloyd baby buggy, good condition. Ph. 352-\n7148. -252-254\nSINGER   SEWING  MACHINE\nCo.  Repairs, sales, rentals.\n336 Baker St. Ph. 352-3631.\n-251-256\nMINE DETECTOR. - FULLY\ntrinsistorized. Will detect most\nburied mital. Ph. 365-7439.\n-247-252\n19\"' TWIN SPRINGS AND\nspring filled mattress. Complete 36\" single bed. Phone\n352-6586. -248-tfn\ni QUANSBT HUTS, 20 X 24 FT,\n$300 each.'W.'fl. ClayfonrCah.\nEx.,  Sip., ,  -261-256\n2 VIOLINS, COMPLETE WITH\ncases, $80 iach. Ph. 352-2067.\n-250-255\nDRY FIR AND TAMARAC. -\nStove length. Ph.. 352-3485. .',\n    -247-474\nCHOICE BEEF - SIDE 160-200\nlbs. 45c lb, 200-275 lbs, 37c Ib,\nPh. 352-6866.\nGOOD CHEER, COAL AND\nwood furnace. 808 Stanley St.\nPh.  35JJ-6376, -650-255\ncOAL AND WOOD st6V6. Oil\nheatir. Ph. 352-2861.  -256-tfn\nWANTED\nMISCELLANEOUS\nSPOT CASR FOR U. Ibd FURN};\nture, antiques, coins, old gold\nguns ahd jiwels Home Furniture fiXOhing. Ph. 354-6551.\n414 Hill St. NelSOn. B.C.\n-98-tl\nWANTSib - CANOPY T0P fbA\n1664 Ford H'Ton Pickup, mi\nwidi boil. W. \u00bb. MontjoAMy,\nc\/0 Cirt. lEx., SilrtiO, 8.6.\n45M5t\nvmkWf- tim> t L\t\nmotors. Coisniin ftitctrio: e6L\nPrint St., NilSOn, Ph. 352-6175.\n\u2022     -227-tfh\nWANTED - CLEAN CQTTON\nrigs. Must b* it least 12\ninch** squar*. Nilsin Daily\nNiwi _126-tfn\nmaSF. CRIB AND C&KER\nSpiftiil pup. Ph. 354-6440.\n-290-252\nKffit \"&\" '^OMBN'S kATftl,\nsize 6>i or 9. Ph. 652-2669.\n452*457\nPETS,   CANARIES,   BEES\nFOR SALE: GERMAN SHEP\nherd crossed with black Lab\npup6, $5.60. Pl|. 854-6586.\n~45S.457\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC. FOR SALE\nSatUj Npma\nFAIRVIEW, LARGE 2 STOREY\n3 bedroom house that needs\nthe attention of a handyman,\nsituated on 75' x 120' level lot,\nlandscaped. Several fruit trees\nand garden space, occupancy\nwithin 30 days. $1000 down and\n$65 per month including 6%\ninterest. Full space $6500. Wm.\nKaiyniuk Agencies. Phone\n352-2425. -250-tfn\nHARROP, M.L.S. 2 BR COT-\ntage on 9 acres, beautiful\nview. Both LR and kitchen\nhave picture windows. Oil\nheat $6,500. ($1500 will handle). Robertson, Hilliard, Ph.\n352-7252. -252-253\nCirculation  Dept.,  Ph.\nPrice per single copy. 10 cents\nBy carrier per week. 40 cents\nin advance.\nSubscription rates:\nBy mail tn Canada\nOutside Nelson\nOne month'      $ 2.00\nThree months      5.60\nSix months      10.00\nOne year . ... 18.00\nBy mail to United Kingdom\nor the Commonwealth\nOne month         $ 2.00\nThree months    6.00\nSix months     11.00\nOne year       ... ...   20.00\nBy Mail to U.S.A. or\nForeign Countries\nOn* month      $ 2.56\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\nWillison:\nIn   Kimberley.   Mrs.   A.   W\nBrawn.\n25 ACRES, 2 MODERN HOMES,\nauto, heat, garage, workshop\nand barn on Duncan Flats,\nnear Trail. Good spot ior horses. Apply Box 324, Trail or\nphone 364-1683 after 5 p.m. or\nanytime weekends.    \u2014236-tfn\nRETAIL BUILDING. PRIME\nlocation on Baker St. Only\n$7350 down and $221.31 per\nmonth including interest.\nM.L.S. Wm. Kaiyniuk Agencies. Ph. 352-2425.      -250-tfn\nFOR SALE, 2 BIG LOTS ON\n: Ymir Road, No.- 14: 3 B.R.\nhouse on one lot, part base-\nment Very suitable for store\nsite. Inquire at 14 Ymir Rd.\n-219-tfn\nSACRIFICE. 30.6 ACRE FARM,\n5 room house, out bldgs., power\nand water, full price $3700.00.\nApply J. Hecker, Passmori.\nPh. 226-7456. :-246-257\nFOR SALE-ROOMING HOUSE\nBox 223, Nelson News.\n-176-tfn\nFOR SALE OR RENT, 5 ROOM\nhouse. Fairvivew. Ph. 352-5046.\n-252-257\nMACHINERY\nICE LUGS\nFor Safety First\nWe Stock Precut\n3 ind 4 Inch Grouser\nWeldOn Lug.\nDO IT NOW\nMAC'S WELDING\n& EQUIPMENT CO.\n514 Railway St.     Ph. 352-5301\n\u25a0 rt \u25a0! \u25a0 m * * r\n-249-254\nLA UNIVERSAL\nCUTTING TORCH\n. Acetylene,. Natural Gas,\n. Propane, $59.95\nSee   It at\nStevenson Machinery Ltd.\nPhope 352-3561\n-252-252\nVALLEY AUTOMOTIVE LTD.\nMassey-Ferguson, New Hoi\nland New and Used Farm\nEquipment. Parts, Sales and\nStrvice. Phone 356-2254, Cres-\nton, B.u    .. -110-tfn\nELECTRIC AND ACETYLENE\nt. tiding. Phine \"Frahk\"\n352-6*68. -248,253\nMACHINERY\n_FOR   HIRE\nWAN?!* W&RK FOR 8 YD.\ndunip trqck ind 1 Oq* yd.\ntruck loid.r, cOttiprisSir, hirti-\nmefs aid Stiil, and cOmplSte\nniiintinanci facilities. BOx\n283, Nilsoi fiaily Niws.\n-451-256\nPERSONAL\nwt \"fe'NOT Hfclii^'oN-\nSibli tit ihy dibtt hidurted\nih Our hit.* Othir than by iuf-\nsflveS. F. 6. (Pete) Stiwirt\n. Fi\naid E. Pirn Stiwart\n-456-252\nROOM AND BOARD\n\u25a0\"*\"-.\u2022-mr *    '\"it\" \"f\\.   1 \u2022 rf*\"f-'-* 1.\neuiAJN;,' rowAi*  mk-\n. fir tentliman. Niir Uglin.\n$25. Ph. 462-5646 or 652-4644.\n-261-ttn\ni Ar iitoi.ipS or Yfoimer\nworking gentlityin.' Ph. 352-\njty-    ... .r.T..I;, .^H\u00ae\nROOM ANi Witti). i?H0NE\n384-4764 ittif 6 fe.rti. *-246-tfn\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nNewspaper Advertising\nPqys Over and Over-:\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiutttiiiiititiin\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\nModern\nOFFICE\nSPACE\nFor\nJews, Legionnaires\nFile CBC Protest\nApproximately 700 sq. ft. ol\nmodern,   fully   wired office\nspace located on Baker Street\nin Nelson.\nREASONABLE   RENT\nLong or Short Term\nLeases Arranged\nApply to:\nNelson Daily News\nPh. 352-3552\nTORONTO (CP) - Jewish\nleaders and Royal Cinadian\nLegion members filed protests\nand pickets paraded outside the\nCBC studios Sunday night when\nthe network put on a 14-minute\ntelevision interview with George\nLincoln Rockwell, self \u2022 styled\ncommander of the American\nNasi party.\nA CBC spokesman said there\nwere a number of telephone\ncalls following the show, some\ncritical and other complimentary, in addition to calls before\nthe program requesting that it\nbe withdrawn.\nAbout 25 demonstrators outside the studio carried signs\nreading \"CBC co-operates with\nNazis\" and \"there is no place\nfor Nazis in democracy\",\nRepresentatives of 30 Jewish\norganizations, representing 20,-\n000 persons, protested the CBC's\naction in giving Rockwell a\nplatform on a Canadian network. The group said Rockwell\nrepresents only a- lunatic fringe\nand should not be elevated to\nrespectability.\nA Toronto-area branch of the\nRoyal Canadian Legion demanded an investigation into\nthe standards and procedures of\nthe CBC public-affairs department, to determine the motivation which resulted in publicity\nfor Rockwell at public expense.\nSPORTS SWASTIKA\nThe interview was filmed in\nWashington by Douglas Leiter-\nman, producer of the hour-long\nshow This Hour has Seven\nDays, and reporter Robert Holt.\nIt showed Rockwell in a shirt\nwith a swastika armband; surrounded by henchmen wearing\nuniforms and armbands. '\u25a0'\nRockwell used the interview\nto> express- his--\u2022 opposition to\nJews and Negroes. He claimed\nto have 250,000 supporters and\nsaid he would be president of\nthe United States'by. 1672. '\nThe same program included\na four-minute segment of a recent film paid for by. supporters\nof Senator Barry Goldwater but\nwhich the Republican presidential nominee has kept off United\nStates television.  \"  '  j '',\nThe segments showed .scenes\nof speeding cars emitting beer\ncans, riots, police with night\nsticks, semi-nude night club\ndancers and a woman in a topless bathing suit. , :\u201e,,: 1\n.10,000 Bail f\nFor Meunier s\n\"... \u2022\u2022> itlliii \u2022'\nMONTREAL (CPviirl ibs-\ntice Adrien Meunier, Quebec\nSuperior Court judg\u00a3 was\ngranted $10,000 balh*ondiy\npending appeal of his.'iib.victimi\nlast week for perjury.       ,\nBail-was ..granted-by^Chief\nJustice Lucien, Tremblay. OKjiie\nQuebec Appeal Court. ...  1\nMr. Justice Meunjer had been\nin jail since his convictton and\nsentencing to two years in\nprisoh last Friday; ' '\u2022 J\nMr. Justice Tremblay-:-said in\nassessing bail he - had considered the. nature of the jcrime\nand the sentence imposed. \u25a0\nNo date has been. sjet for the\nappeal. ..: JBjS     '\nLawyers for the'*tonyicted\njudge had suggested.t.<P bonds\nof $950 each for ball. They said\nin their plea that the judge was\na former member of Parliament, had a fixed Jtom., was\na family fain an.,'iwas-; \"also\nseriously, ilk\" :  ''.''2,'Xi\nMr. Justice Mijitisil! vias\ncharged with perjufy ta,.donnec-\ntlon -withTevidOnce, ^|ive at\na special: hearing:\"'injjij;i|j|64;00O\nbankruptcy case.\n\u25a0fi:<-i,\u00bb.\nFIRST WITH\nTHE NEWS\nIn The\nKOOTENAY AREA\nSS5\"\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nSubscribe to the\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiii\n' .,Ji :;\u25a0 >\u25a0\nBy Carrier\n40.   Per Week\nDelivered to Your Deer.\nBy\nMa\/7\nTe Your Pott Offke:\n1 Month   .,\n3 Months\n9 2.00\n. 8.00\n6 Months\n. 10.00\n12 Months\n.18.00\nM8'\n\u25a0'.W.W*:\n\u25a0nmu.\nPhone 352-3552        S\nCIRCULATION  DEPARTMENT\n Esso Home Heat Service is better\nbecause its people are\nBetter trained to serve you better! You get \"extra\nvalue\" for your heating dollar. If you're the type\nof person who insists on the best, you probably\nalready have Esso Home Heat Service. You've seen\nthe crisp, efficient way an Esso Home Heat team\nlooks after your heating needs... specialists in\nservice and furnace oil delivery, this professional\nskill is the result of the most thorough, practical\ntraining in the industry. And these men regularly return to the classroom for refresher courses to keep\nup to date on the latest developments in the heating\nindustry, they save you money by keeping your oil\nheating equipment in economical operating condition. If you're not getting this kind of service you'll\nnever know until you've tried the best. Get \"extra\nvalue\" for your heating dollar\u2014get Esso Home Heat\nService \u25a0 always LOOK TO IMPERIAL for the best\nJO\u2014.NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUES., OCT. 27,1964\n'\u25a0  J-   TO RELIEVE TIRED, ITCHING,\nBURNING  FEET\n:'::'_=\u25a0' -' . Try\nTrek Medicated Foot Powder $1.00\nTred Medicated Foot Spray   $1.50\nA New .Cooling Foot Preparation to Give You\n\".,..: .,..\" Instant'and Prolonged Relief\nLv * Trek '\u2022 Mann's and Get Your\nTREK\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nConference Planned\nFor Ethnic Groups\nOTTAWA (CP) - A national\nconference is being convened\nhere in two weeks to plan participation in the 1967 centenary\nof Confederation by those who\ndo not count the United Kingdom or France as their family\nhomes.\nOrganized for the federal Centennial Commission, the gathering will bring together representatives of organized ethnic\ngroups from across Canada,\nand those who have had experience in organizing folk art\nfestivals.\nThe object is to encourage the\norganization of folk art groups\nin major centres which do not\nnow have them, and perhaps a\nnational  federation   of   such\nTwo Killed\/ 17 Injured\nAs Flames Soar High\nORANGE, TOX. (AP)-A series of gas explosions rocked\ntwo of a string of six petrochemical plants near this southeast Texas; oil city Sunday-killing two workers and injuring\n17, one seriously.\nRuptures in pipelines carrying\nhighly volatile gas apparently\ncaused the blasts, but company\nofficials Said they were unrelated. Neither firm shares any\nfacilities.\nThe first explosion ripped the\nSpencer Chemical Company\nplant after a leak developed in\na line carrying highly volatile\nethylene gas under a pressure\nof 29,000 pounds per-square-\ninch.\nGas fogging the area ignited\nid the shock broke windows\nat Bridge City, five miles away.\nFlames soared ISO feet and\nwere visible 25 mites to the\nwest of Beamont.\nSixteen of 26 men working the\nBight Shift at Spencer suffered\nburns, cuts from flying glass\nand debris, and shock.\nA company clock was jarred\nto a standstill at 7:30 p.m.\nAbout three hours later, a series of perhaps five explosions\ninjured three men at the nearby\nAllied Chemical Company, when\nan automatic safety valve blew\noff on a line carrying ethylene\ngas.\nThe two plants are separated\nby a 300-acre industrial site.\nPolice barricaded roads and\nentrances through chain - link\nfences within a five-mile radius\nof entire plant complex\u2014named\nChemical rRow\u2014as firemen sped\nfrom surrounding; areas to fight\nthe flames.\nFires at both plants were\nbrought under control, and thousands of pounds Of dry ice were\npacked- around lines to solidify\nescaping gas and allow repair\nof the breaks.\nNo reporters were permitted\non the scene, but reports told\nof building walls collapsing and\nwindows shattering.\nCarroll Lee Carr, 29, an employee at the Spencer plant, was\nkilled. A fellow worker, Clyde\nMatthews Jr., 31, died in the\nhospital later of burns.\nTwo-Thirds Canada\nTrade Tax-Exempted\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014Prime Minister Pearson said Monday \"Canada is very fortunate in that at\nleast two-thirds of its current\ntrade with Britain will be free\nfrom the new British import\nduty.\"\nHe said the exemptions for\nfood and raw materials \"cover\nmost of our trade.\"\n\"We were very fortunate,\" he\ntold reporters after a two-hour\ncabinet meeting at which Britain's new import restrictions\nwere discussed.\nTrade Minister Sharp said he\nbelieved the new 15-per-cent\nsurcharge, announced in London Monday will be applied to\nnewsprint. But \"this won't have\nmuch effect since they will still\nhave to buy newsprint and there\nwSSm\ni\nYour Individual |\nHoroscope\nBy Frances Drake Lm\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\u2122\u00ab.\nLook in the section in which some   recreation   uplifts.   Be\nyour birthday comes and find\nwhat your outlook is, according\n'to the stars, \u2022\".\nFor Wednesday, Oct. 28, 1964\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 20\n(Aries) \u2014 A day in which to tie\nup loose ends and make any\nrequired improvements. Don't\ncomplicate' situations by acting\nhastily or being abrupt with\nothers. Take \"ups-and-downs\"\nin stride.\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus)\n\u2014 Some complexities indicated'\nin areas where you expected\nclarity. Study matters further,\ntake all steps to avoid needless\nerrors. Many advantages possible in spite of delays.\nMAY22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini)\n\u2014 You may have to wait longer\nthan you expected for results of\nefforts or answers to what seem\nlike easy questions. But be patient. This is a day in which\nmany persons will face perplexing situations.\nJUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer)\n\u2014A friendly day on the whole,\nbut you will have to watch out\nfor little missteps, hidden pitfalls. Your intuition and perception will be a big help.\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leo)\n\u2014 Yon have-better planetary influences than most. Get your\ninnings in early and work with\nefficiency and foresight so that\nyou won't have to retrace steps\nand fall-behind.\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER\n23 (Virgo) \u2014 You may feel that\nyou are being \"pushed around.\"\nDon't push back, but study\nsituations, the factors involved.\nThere's more than one way to\ncompromise without losing face\nor principles.\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER\n2.1 (Libra).\u2014 Quiet steps may\nbe- the'most important ones\nnow, but they must be steady,\nknowing ones,, directed toward\nfuture horizons. Stress your innate diplomacy.\nOCTOBER 24 to-NOVEMBER\n22 (Scorpio) \u2014 A-partial change\nof routine \"or alteration of pace\ncan energize your being now,\njust as a change of scenery or\nis no discrimination involved,\"\nhe said.\nBefore the cabinet meeting,\nMr. Sharp said he expected 20\nper cent of Canada's $1,000,000,-\n000 annual trade with Britain\nwould be affected.\nAfter the meeting, he said\nnewsprint likely would be included and this would increase\nthe portion of Canadian trade\naffected to 33 per cent, or about\n$350,000,000.\nThe British decision to impose\ntemporary import surcharges\nwas accepted in government\ncircles as necessary and inevitable.\ngroups through which the Centennial Commission can work.\nAccording to the 1961 census,\n43.8 per cent of Canadians gave\ntheir ethnic origins as English,\nIrish, Scottish or other British\norigin, and 30.4 per cent as\nFrench.\nThe census counted 5.8 per\ncent of Canadians as of German\norigin, 2.6 per cent Ukrainian,\n2.5 per cent Italian, 2.4 per cent\nDutch, and 1.8 per cent Polish.\nIt is among these groups that\nthe centennial planners are\nlooking for distinctive contributions to the centenary.\nLeon Kossar, a Toronto news-\npaperman on loan to the Community Folk Arts Council of\nToronto, is organizing the conference for the Centennial Commission.\nWork has already begun in\ncentennial planning by another\nimportant cultural element of\nCanada \u2014 the native Indians.\nThe National Indian Council has\nreceived grants for administrative costs and is planning powwow-type observances both for\nthe 1967 world's fair in Montreal, and for Indian celebrations\nin Northern Ontario and Western Canada.\nCongratulations\nExchanged\nKosygin, Wilson\nMOSCOW (Reuters) - Soviet\nPremier Alexei Kosygin has\n\"heartily congratulated\" Harold Wilson on his election as\nBritish prime minister, the Soviet agency Tass said Monday.\nin his message,: Kosygin said:\n\"May I express the hope that\nrelations between the Soviet\nUnion and Britain would be\nfurther developed for the benefit of the peoples of-our countries, for the sake :of. lasting\npeace.\"';\nWilson in his reply, Tass reported, thanked Kosygin for his\nmessage and also congratulated\nhim on his appointment as pre-\nmier..-   :..:.::.:r.: :\u2022.'.\u2022.\u25a0\nWilson expressed the hope\nthat relations: between the two\ncountries would further improve\nand said he would do his utmost for the attainment of this\naim,. Tass. said.\nWARMER\nUNDERWEAR\nThere's snow in the hills\nso be ready when it\ncomes. We have underwear to suit all needs.\nTHERMAL\n\u2022 Shirts and Longs\nA.C. STANFIELD'S\n\u2022 Combinations\n\u2022 Shirts and Longs\nKROY WOOL\n\u2022 Combinaiotns\n\u2022 Shirts and Longs\nMELLO FLEECE\n\u2022 All Wool\nBe Prepared When\nColder Days Arrive\n\u00a3mory\u00bb\u00a7\nTHE\nLTD.\nMAN'S\nSTORE\nSpace (rafts\nTo Reach Mars\nNext Month\nCAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP)\nSeven major launchings, including two project Mariner spacecraft ticketed for Mars are\nscheduled next month at Cape\nKennedy.\nLate in November, the U.S.\nspace agency plans to launch a\nproject Gemini capsule on a final manned flight to qualify it\nfor manned missions scheduled\nto begin early next year.\nOther shorts on the schedule\nare orbital development flights\nof the Centaur and Titan IIIA\nspace rockets; the TVIROS IX\nweather satellite, and a radiation-sensing Explorer scientific\nSatellite.\nThe first Mariner \u2022 Mars\nlaunching is set for Nov. 4. The\nsecond could be fired as early\nas two days later, depending on\nhow well No. 1 fares.\nNovember marks one of the\nrare occasions when Mars is in\nposition to receive an unmanned\nvisitor from earth. The next opportunity will be in December,\n1966.\nthorough and accurate, but not\n\"fussy\" over details.\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER 21 (Sagittarius) - Whatever you cah do to facilitate\nwork projects will be appreciated in the right quarters. Don't\nbank on achieving more than\nusual gains, and you may be\nsurprised with more than you\nexpect,\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY\n20 (Capricorn) \u2014 Don't split\nhairs-when it comes to making\nimportant moves or decisions,\nNeither so diversify your activities that you accomplish tellingly in None.\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY\n19 (Aquarius) \u2014 Some matters\nwiil run as planned, others\nwon't. Take all in stride. Tomorrow is another day.\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\n(Pisces) \u2014 Keep your head\neven when the going may be\ntedious, out-of-hand or even\n\"rough.\" Day has many advantages if you keep on plugging in spite of obstacles.\nYOU BORN TODAY are highly progressive, volatile, always\nready for action, and will work\nhard for achievement \u2014 never\ncontent with so-so endeavor.\nYou cannot tolerate intrigue or\nunderhanded tactics and, regardless of the odds against you,\nwill always fight for your principles and for fair play toward\nall. You Must learn to control\nemotions since you become\neasily aggravated over even the\nsmallest annoyances. Many jurists, diplomats, highly gifted\nmusicians and artists have been\nLibra-born. Birthdate of: Julie\nAndrews,\nSays Insurance\nCompanies Should\nInvest More Money\nWINNIPEG (CP) - George\nHees, president of the Montreal\nand Canadian Stock Exchanges,\nsuggested Monday that life insurance companies should invest\nmore money in industrial\ncurities.\nMr. Hees, speaking at a\nluncheon meeting of the Canadian Club, said that, if Canadian life insurance companies\ninvested up to the allowable 25\nper cent of their portfolios in\nsuch securities, an additional\n$2,200,000,000 would become\navailable for investment in the\nindustrial expansion of this\ncountry.\nAt present, he said, the companies are investing only four\nper cent of their holdings in industrial securities.\n\"Putting more than $2,000,-\n000,000 additional dollars behind Canadian industrial expansion, and thereby greatly accelerating it, would enable\nmany who now own life insurance to buy more of it, and\nmany who now feel that they\ncannot afford it, to become\npolicy-holders,\" he said.\nTelevision Reporters\nProtest Statements\nMONTREAL (CP) - Television reporters of the Canadian. Broadcasting. Corporation's French network have protested statements by Bona Arse-\nnault, Quebec provincial secretary, that the network is the\nscene of \"left-wing communistic, infiltration.\"       v    ...r\nThe reporters, in a Sunday\nnight telegram to Solicitor-General Claude Wagner, asked for\nan inquiry that would confirm\nor disprove Mr. Arsenauit's al-\n' iMr..; Arsenault vn\u00bbde: the statement Friday night at a dinner\ncelebrating the 50th anniversary\nof the Royal 22nd Regiment,\nHe said:\n; \"There has been left-wing\ncommunistic; .infiltration- of the\nFrench' network of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation,\nmost of our newspapers and political organization, perhaps\neven the Quebec Liberal Federation.\"\nHe said Sunday night he\nnever spoke of \"Communist infiltration\" and that it is possible\nto be \"left-wing communistic'\nwithout being Communist.\nThe CBC reporters, members\nof the journalists' guild of the\nFrench network program Tele-\njournal (CLO'sald Mr. Arsenauit's statements about reporters in general and about the\nCBC staff in particular were\n\"libellous and defamatory.\"\nNuclear  Bombers\nPlaced On Guam\nWASHINGTON (AP) - The\nUnited States has posted\nsquadron of 15 B-52 heavy jet\nnuclear bombers on the island\nof Guam\u2014within about 1,000\nmiles of Red China, it was\nlearned Monday.\nThe unpubllcized move, made\nlast spring, places the. 15 B-52s\nabout 5,000 miles closer, to China\nthan when they were based in\nthe United States.\nThe squadron sent to Guam\nreplaces a unit of older medium\njet B-47 bombers. B-52s have at\nleast twice the striking range\nand carry much more of an\natomic wallop than the B-47s.\nThe B-52B also fly faster and\nhigher.\nIn Nelson, there\nare 2 home\nheating\nspecialists ready\nto provide you\nwith fast,\ndependable Esso\nHome Heat\nService\nThe people who offer this excellent service are independent\nbusinessmen.who live and\nwork in your area.,Each member of these teams is a specialist jn his own line\u2014heating\noil sales, service, fuel or equipment. Their livelihood depends\non how well they serve you.\nAnd they serve you well. Regardless of what your heating\nproblem, these men are committed to provide you with\nimmediate, expert attention.\nOne phone call brings instant\naction. If you do not have Esso\nHome Heat Service now, do\nyourself a favour.\nPHONE 352-3713\nEsso Home Heat\nService is better\nbecause\nits people are\nHere are your Esso\nHone Heat Specialists\nJr*                   \u25a0 - ,dl\nOFFICER DIES\n- VANCOUVER (CP)-William\nJohn Duncan Dempster, 88, who\nspent 37 years in the Yukon as\nan RCMP officer, died in Vancouver General Hospital here\nafter a short illness. He had\nlived in Vancouver since 1934\nafter retiring from the force\nwith the rank of inspector. Born\nin Wales; he joined the North\nWest Mounted Police in 1898.\nMan Threatens Suicide,\nObtains Qovernment Hearing\nVANCOUVER (CP)-A stonemason seeking changes in the\nWorkmen's Compenation Act\nperched on a tower of Lions\nGate Bridge for more than\nthree hours Monday in a dramatic bid for redress.\nGert Larsen, 34, finally\nclimbed down safely from the\ntower after Attorney \u2022 General\nRobert Bonner promised to look\nInto the matter.\nIt was Larsen's third attempt\nto bring the matter to a head.\nTraffic across the bridge\nspanning the harbor was\nsnarled as police and firemen\ntried to get Larsen to come\ndown from the tower, about 50\nfeet above the deck of the\nbridge.\nLarsen made another bid\nSept. IS and Oct. 8 when he sat\non the steps of the legislative\nbuildings in Victoria for several days on two separate occasions. He refused to take food\nuntil he was promised an inquiry\nwould be held into the Compensation Act,\nThe attorney-general had said\nat that time the act was not\nadministered by his department\nand that in any event a royal\ncommission was currently\nstudying the entire matter,\nINJURED BACK\nLarsen, who said he suffered\na back injury while working\nfour years ago but has been\nunable to obtain compensation,\nsaid he wants a change in the\nlaw so that decisions of the\nworkmen's compensation board\ncan be appealed in court.\nHe said he was not doing this\nentirely for himself, He said\nhundreds of other workmen\nfound themselves in similar\npredicaments.\nLarsen said at least two persons who were unable to obtain\ncompensation from the board\nkilled themselves out of despair.\nHe said one man shot himself and the other blew himself up by clutching sticks of\ndynamite to his chest.\n' When Larsen climbed to the\nbridge tower at 5:30 a.m. Monday, he left a note on the seat\nof his parked truck saying he\nwould not come down until Mr.\nBonner set up a tribunal to consider cases such as his.\nContacted by reporters, the\nAttorney - General repeated\nearlier statements that the royal\ncommission inquiry still was under way but he said the possibility of setting up a tribunal\nwould be \"looked into;\"\nLarsen then agreed to climb\ndown.\nHave the Job Done Right!\nWIC GRAVEC\nV       LIMITED       *#\nPhone 352-331S\nMASTER PLUWUtSF\nARDENS\nARDENA  ELECTRA\nWAX DEPILATORY\nRemoves   Unwanted   Hairs\nFrom Face, Arms and Legs\n60*  EACH\nSold Only At\nYour Rexall Pharmacy\nCITY DRUG\n456 Baker St.      Ph. 352-3611\nNelson, B.C.\nMr. Austin Moore\nAgent\n45 Government Rd.\nNelson, B.C.\nPhone 352-3713\nera\nE. A. (BERT) LASHMAR\nService Dealer\nKootenay\nSheet Metal Ltd.\n281 Baker St.,\nNelion, B.C.\nPhone 352.6113\n\u2022 v\n^MM^MMBMMfl\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_1964_10_27","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0435425","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 Nelson Museum, Archives and Gallery: https:\/\/nelsonmuseum.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"}]}}