{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0436120":{"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":"2023-09-20","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1965-12-07","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0436120\/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":" TEMPERATURES\nNELSON  38 46 \u2014\nToronto   22 34 .01\nCalgary  16 47 \u2014\nPenticton   44 49 \u2014\nVancouver   44 54 - .77\nWhitehorse  3 13 Tr\nSpokane  32 48 \u2014\netemt Uaii\nFORECAST\nKootenay: Mostly cloudy with\na few showers in the afternon.\nA little colder. Winds light. Low-\nhigh at Cranbrook 30 and 42,\nNelson area 32 and 42.\nWednesday: Sunny periods.\nPublished at Nelson, government, financial, trading and educational centre of the Kootenay-Columhia area\nVol. 64\nNELSON, B.C., CANADA\u2014TUESDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 7, 1965\n10 Cents\nNo. 194\nNO WORD FROM DE GAULLE\nSoviet Moon\nShot Fails\nMOSCOW (AP) \u2014 The Soviet Union announced i\nMonday that its unmanned spaceship Luna VIII failed I\nto make a soft landing on the moon.\nAnnouncing the landing, the\nSoviet news agency Tass said\nthe soft-landing system worked\nnormally at all stages but the\nlast.\nHad it been successful, the\nfeat would have put Russia well\nahead of the United States in\nthe race to put a man on the\nmoon.\nIn its English-language service, the Soviet news agency said\nthe probe \"reached the surface\nof the moon.\"\nAs a result of the probe Soviet\nscientists had made a further\nstep toward achieving a soft\nlanding, the agency added.\nThe probe reached the lunar\nsurface at 12:31.30 a.m. Moscow\ntime today (4:51 p.m. EST Mon\nday). Tass said Sunday it would\nland at about 12:50 a.m. Moscow\ntime.\nLuna VIII was launched Friday.\nThe Jodrell Bank Observatory\nin England heard the signals\nfrom the space ship stop two\nseconds after it landed.\nTass said the probe landed on\nthe southern \"shore\" of the\nwaterless Ocean of Storms.\nToday's announcement said\nthat as a result of the probe,\nSoviet scientists had made a\nfurther step toward achieving a\nsoft landing.\nBefore the Tass announcement, Jodrell Bank reported\n\"some evidence of a near success of a soft landing.\"\nRejects Terms\nBy ARTHUR L GAVSHON\nLONDON (AP)\u2014Prime Minister Wilson Monday rejected\nAfrican terms for breaking\nwhite - ruled Rhodesia's rebellion and thus risked a mass\nwalkout of the Commonwealth's\n16 non-white countries.\nThe British leader did so convinced that Britain's preferred\nprogram of economic sanctions\nalready has rendered Rhodesian\nPrime. Minister Ian Smith's\nbreakaway re g i m e bankrupt.\nWilson also was bulwarked by\nthe fact Commonwealth countries who break with London\nstand to lose their trading preferences.\nThe Organization of African\nUnity warned Friday its 36\nmembers would break off dip\nlomatic relations with London if\nBritain did not crush Smith's\nwhite-minority government by\nDec. 15.\n\"The responsibility is ours,\"\nWilson told The Daily Mirror,\n\"and whatever the cost we shall\nnot be pressured into starting\na war which we believe to be\nwrong.\"\nThere were signs, meanwhile,\nBritain's economic pincers were\nbeginning to hurt. Rhodesia defaulted Monday on its interest\npayments of a four - per - cent\nloan stock. London stock dealers reacted quickly, lowering\nprices on Rhodesian bonds by\nabout $14. Smith himself has\nsaid Rhodesia will no longer be\nable to honor international\nloans.\nCanada Charges\nPact Violated\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Canada said\nMonday Communist North Viet\nNam has committed \"gross violations\" of the 1962 Geneva\nagreement guaranteeing t h e\nneutrality of Laos.\nExternal Affairs Minister\nMartin said in a statement that\na report of the international\ntruce supervisory commission in\nLaos establishes that regular\nunits of the armed forces of\nNorth Viet Nam, which signed\nthe 1962 accord, entered Laos\nIn 1964 with arms and munitions\nand fought Laotian troops on\nLaotian soil.\n[NOW ONLY\n1  14\nShopping Days\nCHRISTMAS.\nTHE JOLLY ROGER DISCOTHEQUE Monday afternoon presented a cheque for $45 to Nelson Fire\nChief Elwyn Owens, the club's donation to the Fire\nDepartment's Christmas fund. The money was raised\nthrough donations taken up at club functions. Present-,\ning the cheque is Peter Turner. Discotheque members\nVern Miller, left, and Gary May, right, look on during\nthe ceremony.\nBank Rate Increase Seen as Necessary\nA spokesman for the external\naffairs department said North\nViet Nam's violations brings\ninto question the whole future\nand feasibility of international\nagreements.\nHe said North Viet Nam had\nsigned the Geneva agreement\nwith 13 other countries\u2014including Canada\u2014in July, 1962, and\nby February, 1964, was sending\ntroops into Laos in violation of\nthe agreement.\nCanada, India and Poland\ncomprise the truce supervisory\ncommission in Laos. Communist\nPoland declined to participate\nin the commission's investigation but did not file a minority\nreport.\nThe 14 countries which signed\nthe Geneva pact in 1962 after\n14 months of negotiation are:\nNorth Viet Nam, South Viet\nNam, Cambodia, Burma, Thailand, the Royal (neutralist)\nLaotian Government, India,\nCanada, Poland, Communist\nChina, Russia, France, Britain\nand the United States.\nMore than half of Laos now\nis under Communist military\ncontrol and an external affairs\ndepartment spokesman said it\nis unsafe for commission teams\nto try to enter Communist-held\nterritory.\nBy KEN SMITH\nCanadian Press Business Editor\nAn increase in Canada's bank\nrate won general approval Monday as a necessary move in\ncombatting the inflationary potential of the country's booming\neconomy.\nBoosting the rate to 4% per\ncent from. 4V4 created little surprise. Many businessmen\nagreed it had been anticipated\nfor some time.\nOne banker said speculation\nabout whether the increase,\nfirst in a year since the rate\nwas moved up one-quarter of\none per cent, marks the beginning of a tight - money policy\ncaused most immediate reaction.\nThe move followed an increase in the United States discount rate\u2014equivalent to Canada's bank rate\u2014to Vk per cent\nfrom four. The U.S. said the\nstep was to \"dampen mounting\ndemands on banks for still further credit expansions that\nSchool Building\n$95 Million\nKAMLOOPS (CP) - Rising\nconstruction costs and an approaching peak in the growth\nrate of the school-age population\nhave spawned $95,000,000 worth\nof proposed school construction\nin B.C., Education Minister Peterson said Monday.\nHe said the money is requested in 74 referenda in 56\nof the province's 83 school districts and that about half of\nthem have already been approved by voters.\nThe remainder will be on the\nballot in December municipal\nelections,\n\"Both the number and value\nof referenda are substantially\nhigher than usual,\" he said.\n\"There were 53 in 1964 with\na total value of $41,000,000.\"\nMore curriculum changes\nfrom the 1960 report of the\nChant royal commission were\nnamed as additional factors in\nthe higher bill.\nmight add to inflationary pressures.\"\nWhile the Bank of Canada did\nnot mention possible inflationary dangers in Canada when it\nannounced the higher bank rate,\nmany similar economic conditions exist in both countries.\nHELPS SET LIMITS ;\nThe bank rate, interest\ncharged chartered banks for\nloans from the Bank of Canada\nhelps establish limits for interest payments and charges.\nA higher rate means borrowed money costs more because interest charges also go\nup. As a result, it can help slow\ndown an economy that is expanding too fast. Business will\ndefer some projects rather than\npay the extra interest for\nmoney to finance them.\nIn Toronto, spokesmen for two\nchartered banks said the increase has led to a review of\nthe prime rate for lending\nmoney. The rate, interest\ncharged a bank's best customers, now is 5% per cent.\nW. Earle McLaughlin, president of the Royal Bank of Canada, said the question of increasing the prime rate is academic since almost all borrowers now are paying th* present\nlegal ceiling of six per cehf anyway.\nThe Bank of Montreal also\nsaid it expects to make an announcement, possibly within a\nweek.\nOther banking sources said\nthe higher rate could lead to\nhigher interest charges in many\nareas, including mortgages and\npersonal loans, but added increases might be so diffused\nthey would not be noticed in\nthe spiral of rising prices.\nSOME ASK QUESTION\nSome sources questioned whether the higher rate actually\nmarks the beginning of a tight-\nmoney policy. \"It's going to\nmean money is more expensive,\nbut not  necessarily  that  the\nMust Decide by Thursday\nIf Going to Second Ballot\nPARIS (CP) \u2014 President de Gaulle remained at his country estate in Colom-\nbey-les-Deux-Eglises Monday, keeping a typical silence about his plans after Sunday's rebuff in the French presidential election.\nIf he does not withdraw his name from competition or resign from the presidency, he will have to defeat left-wing candidate Francois Mitterrand in a second\nballot Dec. 19 to decide the presidency.\nDe Gaulle has until midnight Thursday to pull out of the second ballot. There\nseems little possibility that he would withdraw, Gaullist sources said,\nThe moderate daily Le Figaro\nsaid Monday a withdrawal\n\"would not only be wrong on\nthe tactical level but would deal\nto the institutions which de\nGaulle himself established a\nblow from which they would\nnever recover.\"\nFOUR CHILDREN FOUND\nLIVING AS FAMILY\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 Four Montreal children who disappeared from their parents' home here in August have been\nfound in Vancouver, the Montreal Police Missing Persons\nBureau said Monday.\nA spokesman for the bureau said Mary Balent, 17, her\nbrother Andre, 13, and sisters Milicha, 14, and Draga, 9, were\nreported missing last August 30 from their east-end home.\nHe said welfare court officials have learned that the\nyoungsters are living in the West Coast city where Mary has\na job as a nurse's aide in a hospital and is also working as a\npart-time charwoman. He said that some of the other children\nwere working at part-time jobs.\nOut of their $250-a-month total earning Mary rented a $90\nflat and is acting as \"mother\" to the three younger children,\nthe spokesman said.\nThey had been under the eye of the Vancouver Children's\nAid Society for some time and were reported apparently to\nbe a model little family.\nsupply will be reduced,\"  one\nsaid.\nOthers noted Louis RaSmin-\nsky, governor of the Bank of\nCanada, said last week in\na speech monetary policy\nshould not be relied on excessively to eontMls inflatto\u00bbary\n.pressures.       \u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0-...     . -\n\"It could well give rise to\ndifficulties because of its uneven impact on different classes of borrowers and because\nof its effects on flows of capital across our borders,\" he\nsaid.\nOne stock market analyst\nsaid the news of the rate changes apparently affected Canadian investors,less than Americans. The New York Stock Exchange underwent heavy selling Monday and closed lower.\nLosses on the Toronto, Montreal and Canadian exchanges\nwere fractions of those in the\nU.S.\nPearson Took Fun\nOut of Guess Game\nOTTAW A (CP)-Prime Minister Pearson's choice of. the\nbalmy Caribbean for his cabinet\nreconstruction decisions is taking the spice out of the postelection Ottawa pastime of\nguessing in advance what form\nthe ministry will take.\nIn the prime minister's absence political figures whose\nposition usually gives them at\nleast some clues aren't speaking with  any  authority.  They\nStock Market Erratic\nNEW YORK (AP)\u2014The stock i recovered much of its  severe\nmarket   reacted   violently   in loss.\nearly  trading  Monday  to   the     Volume  soared to  11,480,000\ndiscount-rate increase and then I shares, making  it  the  fourth\nU.S. Division Goes\nAfter Assault Force\nSAIGON (AP)-U.S. 1st Division infantrymen picked up their\ndead and fanned out into the\njungles 40 miles northwest of\nSaigon Monday in search of an\nenemy force that engaged them\nin a weekend assault described\nas intense as the fighting of Ia\nDrang Valley three weeks ago.\nOn the central coast, a U.S.\nmarine seaborne force consolidated its positions after more\nthai 24 hours of fighting in an\nattempt to wipe out a base from\nwhich the Viet Cong guerrillas\nhad launched several major attacks in the last few weeks.\nThe Viet Cong struck only 26\nmiles northwest of Saigon, ambushing a government convoy.\nOther ground action in the\nwar in South Viet Nam was\nscattered.\nU.S. planes blasted Viet Cong\nhideouts in South Viet Nam and\nair force and navy planes hammered at military targets and\ncommunications lines in North\nViet Nam.\nheaviest trading day in the history of the New York Stock Exchange.\nThe exchange's high \u2022 speed\nticker tape trailed in reporting\nfloor transactions by 13 minutes at the height of the sell-\noff.\nBrokers said apprehensive investors were selling big blocks\nof stock because high interest\nrates make stocks less attractive than bonds for investment\npurposes. There also was. fear\nthat the higher cost of money\nmight blunt business expansion.\nThe Dow Jones average of 30\nindustrials dropped 17.60 points\nin the first hour and later\nshaved the loss to 6.57 at 939.53.\nSome brokers, called the turn\nwhile the slump was\" at its\nsteepest, saying a rebound\ncould be expected after initial\nweakness.\nsay all they can do Is speculate\non the pattern they thought was*\nshaping up before Mr. Pearson\nleft Nov. 26.     '\nThree certain cabinet vacancies form the starting point\nfor the prime minister's task\nand for speculation here.\nAgriculture Minister Hays and\nMines Minister MacNaught were\nbeaten in the Nov. 8 election.\nWalter Gordon's resignation as\nfinance minister was announced\nNov. 11.\nHeating Pad Thought\nFire Death Cause\nIf he runs again, de Gaulle\ncould be expected to harvest\nmany of the votes which went\nto Senator Jean Lecanuet and\nthe other non-left candidates in\nthe first ballot. His victory was\nbeing regarded as assured.\nInstead of the \"frank and\nmassive support\" he had sought\nfor another seven-year term as\npresident, de Gaulle was rejected by a majority of the Voters Sunday in favor of one or\nthe other of his five opponents.\nWith only a few overseas\nvotes still uncounted, de Gaulle\nhad received less than 45 per\ncent of the nearly 25,000,000\nvotes cast\u2014only ' 13 percent\nmore than Mitterrand, running\nwith both socialist and Communist support.\nLecanuet, middle - of - the-\nroad candidate who entered the\ncompetition as an unknown, a\nmonth ago, attracted more than\n15 per cent of the ballots. The\nextreme right-wing representative, Jean-Louis Tixier-Vignan-\ncour, got about five per cent.\nTwo other candidates lost their\ndeposits for falling to get five\nper cent of the vote.\nGeneral de Gaulle was expected to return to Paris some\ntime today and hold a cabinet\nmeeting Wednesday.\nAt Mitterrand's headquarters\nin midtown Paris, plans were\nalready being drafted by his\nworkers for the coming two\nweeks of campaigning* - - -\nThe fifth republic constitution\nrequires the president\" to be\nelected by an absolute majority\nof valid votes cast. Since no one\nsucceeded in Sunday's voting, a\nsecond ballot becomes necessary, with .only the two leading\ncandidates in the race.\nThe second campaign begins\nofficially Friday. Each candidate gets two hours of free time\non the publicly-owned radio and\ntelevision networks to state his\ncase, plus official distribution of\nhis posters throughout France.\nKELOWNA (CP) - Mayor\nR. F. Parkinson Monday\nblamed a faulty heating pad for\na fire which took the life of his\nelderly mother.\nMrs. Irene Margaret Parkinson, 80, apparently died of asphyxiation early Monday in a\nblaze confined to her bedroom\nat the family's home.\nBennett To Try\nFor More\nEducation Funds\nVICTORIA (CP) - Premier\nBennett of British Columbia\nsaid Monday he will seek more\nmoney for universities and hospitals when he attends the annual conference of finance ministers in Ottawa this week.\nMr. Bennett, who doubles as\nfinance minister, said he will\npress for immediate decision on\nfederal participation in the costs\nof higher education because universities will soon be making\n1 up their budgets. ..\nMr. Parkinson and a housekeeper, Mrs. Elizabeth Hamm,\nescaped injury but the mayor\nwas treated for shock and\nsmoke inhaled while attempting\nto rescue his mother.\nHe said the blaze must have\nbeen started by a heating pad.\nHis mother, an invalid, did not\nsmoke.\nThe fire was discovered\nshortly after 6 a.m. by Mr.\nParkinson, who said he swelled\nsmoke in his room across the\nhall from his mother.\n\"I tried to get into ner room\nbut the heat and smoke was too\nmuch,\" he said.\n\"Then I ran to the bedroom,\ngot a towel and put it around\nmy face. But then her whole\nroom burst into flames.\n\"I woke the housekeeper and\nwe got out through a window.\"\nMrs. Parkinson, daughter of\ncolorful Kootenay judge J. C.\nHaynes, is survived by her son\nand a daughter, Mrs. L. Gaddes\nof Victoria.\nFuneral will be held Wednes-\nI day in Osoyoos. A coroner's inquiry is planned.\nBoom Needed\nSays Bonner\nVICTORIA (CP) - Attorney-\nGeneral Bonner said Monday. a\nboost in Bank of Canada interest rates means a boom in\nBritish Columbia is more important than ever to the country's\neconomic health.\nMr. Bonner said the interest\nboost creates the risk of a dip\nin the general economy unless\nB.C. and other areas \"produce\nmore and sell more\" abroad.\nHe noted that the Bank of\nCanada action was dictated by\na recent Canada-United States\nagreement to keep interest\nrates in lock-step to discourage\nany change in the capital flow\nbetween the two countries.\nThe U.S., he said, was forced\nto raise its rates because of a\ngrowing trade imbalance and a\nweakening of Its gold reserve by\nFrance and the Common Market.\nHe said the rate boost was a\n\"crude tool but.there may be\nno other available\".to. keep business activity from overreaching\nitself.\nLONG JOHNS MORE COMFORTABLE THAN SPACE SUIT, ASTRONAUT FINDS\nHOUSTON, Tex. (AP)\u2014James\nLovell flew through space in his\nunderwear Monday \u2014 first U.S.\nastronaut to shed spacesuit protection. The two-man Gemini 7\nspacecraft hurtled on toward a\nrecord 14 days in orbit \u2014 to the\ntune of Fly Me to the Moon.\n\"Jim's all out of his suit and\ncomfortable,\" said the spaceship command pilot, Frank Borman, over Australia shortly after\nnoon EST. He quoted Lovell,\n\"It's the only way to fly.\"\nThe astronauts spotted the\nlaunch of a 31-foot Polaris missile fired from near Cape Kennedy, Fla., by the nuclear submarine Ben Franklin at 2:25\np.m. They tracked the fiery mili\ntary rocket for three minutes\nand nearly 3000 miles.\n\"We've got her and she's\nbeautiful,\" said Lovell. \"It's\neasy to track, we're right on\nit,\" Borman reported.\nAt Cape Kennedy, work continued around the clock to set\nup the launch of Gemini 6 for\nDec. 13.\nPURSUIT PLANNED\nGemini 6 will fly in pursuit\nof Gemini 7, track it down and\nfly in formation with its sister-\nship \u2014 a complex performance\nto test moon flight techniques.\nOn the 30th orbit, Borman reported: \"Jim's been out of his\nsuit about a rev (revolution)\nnow and he's very, very com\nfortable.  I'm able to stay as\ncomfortable as I was.\"\nThe Gemini 7 austronauts\nsounded brisk and confident as\nthey ticked off their medical reports to flight surgeons on the\nground.\nThen Mission Control played\nthem tape-recorded music \u2014\namong the songs: Starburst,\nFly Me to the Moon and I Got\nPlenty of Nothing.\nLovell, a navy commander,\nbecame the first U.S. astronaut\nto test the comfort of the Gemini space cabin and show confidence in its \"shirtsleeve\" environment. He wore short-sleeved,\ncotton, long-john underwear.\nMission Control called it \"a\nspatial striptease.\" It took Lovell nearly 10 minutes to take off\nthe new lightweight spacesuit \u2014\nand earth stations were momentarily alarmed when they stopped getting Lovell's vital data \u2014\nsuch as breathing rate and heartbeat.\nBut the Gemini 7 crew reported it took some time to get the\nsuit off and for that period\nLovell had to unplug the wires\nthat fed his medical data to the\nautomatic radio sending device.\nSoviet cosmonauts had earlier\nflown in their \"shirt-sleeves.\"\nBoth Astronauts slept about\nseven hours in their 10-hour\nsleep  period  Sunday night \u2014\n\"some of the best sleep we've\nhad in weeks,\" Borman reported. \"I think both of us got a\ngood night's rest.\"\nBorman, an air force Lieutenant-Colonel, told the flight\nsurgeons in Mission Control that\nduring the night he had lost one\nof the sensing wires pasted to a\nshaved spot on his head. It was\nto measure brain electrical patterns to indicate the depth of\nsleep.\nMAKES OFFER\n\"I could put it back on\nagain,\" Borman said apologetically to the chief flight surgeon,\nCharles A. Berry.\n\"I don't think you have the\nright kind of paste up there,\"\nDr. Berry said. Three of the\nfour brain-wave sensors were\nstill in place and the experiment was still operating.\nThere was another minor\nproblem\u2014with Borman's space-\nsuit. The soft helmet is equipped\nwith a device which Borman\nuses to take his temperature\norally. It didn't work.\nMission Control reported the\ntemperature in the spacecraft\ncabin was ranging between 70\nand 75 degrees and the space-\nsuit inlet temperature \u2014 where\ncool fresh oxygen comes in\u2014\nwas operating between 55 and\n60 degrees fahrenheit, as\nplanned.\nThe astronauts ate their fifth\nmeal in space\u2014and explained\nwhy they were eating the meals\nout of the order prescribed in\nthe flight plan. It was the way\nthe meals were stored in the\nspacecraft compartments and it\nwas easier to take them as they\ncame than to sort them out.\nHAD BACON AND EGGS\nThe fifth meal consisted of\nbacon and egg bits, dehydrat-\nable meat and spaghetti, toasted\nbread cubes, chocolate pudding\nand grapefruit drink\u2014799 calories.\nThe light which shows pressure changes in the electricity-\nproducing fuel cell continued its\nstrange behavior. On the 28th\norbit, the companion light to the\ntroublesome one blinked.on-\nthen both lights went off.. MjSt .\nsion Control had already said\nthere was no concern about the\nred warning light and its erratic\noffs and ons.\nFire in a power unit at the\nAscension Island station cancelled plans to try a Laser light\nbeam communication with the\nstation Monday.\nThere was also continued difficulty with the star tracking\ndevice that showed a failure\nSunday.\nAt Cape Kennedy, Gemini 8\npilots Walter M. Schirra Jr. ahd\nThomas P. Stafford spent most\nof Monday rehearsing their\nflight.\n 2\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUES., DEC 7, 1965\nUNIVERSITY AND DAMS . . .\nARE THE REASON\nSPOT SURVEY REVEALS BUSINESS BOOMING IN CITY OF NELSON\nNelson cash registers are\n' ringing, and accountants are\ntallying up their books with total\nfigures increasing at an impressive rate, according to a\nspot survey of Nelson business\nhouses.\nAlthough there are those\namong the merchants who \"can't\ncomplain\" and are taking the\nincrease in sales as a natural\nrise to what they -say is a state\nof \"no unemployment.\" others\nfind that business has increased\nanywhere from six per cent to\n30 per cent.\nThe- automotive sales Industry\nand allied. concerns are most\nindicative of the healthy economic climate presently prevailing in.Nelson.\nMost enthusiastic are a heavy\nduty equipment firm and an\nequipment rental and heavy duty\nequipment franchise firm.\nSaid the former \"Business as\nfar as we're concerned is up 20\nto 25 per cent on offshoot work\ncaused by dam construction.\"\nHe was referring to equipment\nsold to sub-contractors on the\nColumbia projects. This, along\nwith a natural expansion program, has resulted in an increase of staff of about orte-third.\nThe manager of the equipment\nrental firm, which establishes in\nareas only where there is a good\npotential, said that \"We feel it's\na growing area and we did a\npretty close survey. We felt\nNelsbn was a centre we should\nbe operating from and we\nhaven't been disappointed. Business has been steadily on the\nincrease. We have a staff of two\nand feel we would like to have a\nstaff of about five.\"\nA large tire manufacturing\nconcern has opened a branch in\nNelson, and according to one\nauthority \"this is a company\nwhich is very careful which area\nit moves into.\"\n\"I think I can speak for all\nautomotive sales firms when I\nsay the automotive business is\nbooming right now,\" said one\ncar dealer, \"and it doesn't seem\nto be stopping.\"\nHe said that in a federal government report monthly survey\nof his sales, he notices \"quite a\nlarge Increase since 1963 or\neven since last year. Some\nmonths the figure is double and\nsome it is half higher.\"\nA tire shop operator said he\nhas had an increase every year\nin the volume of tires sold, but\ncould not say whether this is a\nnormal increase or due to\nincreased employment.\nA mail order department store\nmanager said he would estimate\nthat business had Increased 30\nper cent over last year. \"And\nwe had one of our best years In\nthe bigger lines.\"\nAutomatic washers sales are\nan indication of the expanding\nbudgets in Nelson and district\nand he said that this includes\nCreston and outlying districts,\neven Trail. He felt this was due\nin part to the road Situation,\nwith increased accessibility to\nNelson.\nOne Nelson drugstore has enjoyed a \"considerable\" increase\nin business during the past 12 or\n14 months particularly, of an\nestimated six per cent. Their\nfull-time staff has expanded with\naddition of part time help. One\nindication of the fact that Nelson\npeople are taking their increased\naffluence for granted IS that\nthey are not bothering to complain so much about some of the\nnatural increases in prices.\n\"Before, we'd have a lot bf\npeople complaining right away\nabout any Increase in price.\"\nA wholesale firm buyer revealed that the Increase in retail\ngrocery outlets through their\nwarehouse has increased within\nthe past two to three years from\n50,000 pounds of merchandise to\n100,000 pounds per week coming\nIn by truck from the coast. This\nhas necessitated staff increase of\ntwo full-time personnel over the\npast two years. Their biggest\nincrease is in their own supermarket outlets, next is the\nvolume of merchandise moved\nout to catering firms at the damsites, then next largest volume\nis in Individual Stores,\n\"This is the best year we have\never had,\" said the manager.\n\"The whole area is really booming.\"\nSales are up about 20 per cent\nin the area and Nelson proper\nshows the same percentage upsurge.\n\"If anybody doesn't notice an\nimprovement in business, it's\nlikely his own fault,\" he commented.\nHere again, the fact was\nmentioned that due to dam construction, \"we don't have anyone unemployed.\"\nIncreased pace was reflected\nin figures showing license plate\nsales and new electrical hookups.\n\"Most definitely business Is\nextremely good\" said the proprietor of a men's wear store\nwhich finds a large number of\nemployees from dam construction areas as well as university\nstudents and vocational school\nstudents among Its customers.\n\"We cash a lot of payroll\ncheques on weekends and get a\nlot of university students,\" he\nremarked, when asked about the\nincreased business tempo over\nthe past couple of years. \"There\nis definitely a lot of cash\naround,\" he commented.\nMany of the merchants found\nthat the ratio of cash and credit\nsales remains the same, both\nincreasing.\nMilk Price Increase Imminent\nTrial of Fruitvale Man\nOpens in Supreme Court\nTrial of C. A. Sims of Fruitvale,' charged with criminal negligence in the death of two\nwomen oh highway 3 one mile\neast if'Fruitvale, headed proceedings as supreme court opened-in Nelson Monday morning.\n\u2022 Appearing- before Mr. Justice\nF. C.Munroe, the case involves\ndeath of Mrs. Barbara Sims, 35,\nof Fruitvale, wife of the accused,\nand Mrs. Fred McKim, 42, of\nNelson, who died in a head-on\ncollision February 27.\nPrincipal witnesses appearing\nfor \"the crown included Fred McKim, driver of one of the vehicles; his daughter, Lenore,\nDr. A. R. Jones of Fruitvale and\nattending physician at the accident, and A. E. Staite of Trail,\ndistrict superintendent of highways for Rossland. Other witnesses were Mrs. Irene Bollard\nbf Fruitvale, friend of the accused; Cpl. K. Von Brevern,\nhead of the Fruitvale detachment, and Constable W. R. Lee\nof Trail. Scheduled to appear\ntoday for the Crown are Constable C. D. Church and Dr. J;\nE. Gnass of Trail.\n'Describing the scene of the\naccident, first witness for the\nCrown, represented by R, B\nAllan, was Dr. Jones, who told\nthe court his first action was to\nassess the situation in the Sims'\nvehicle. He said Mrs. Sims, who\nlater died at Trail-Tadanac Hos-\nCASTLE Theatre\n,  Castlegar, B.C.\nTonight and Wednesday\n7:00 and 9:00 p.m.\n\"HELP\"   (Color.  .\nThe Beatles, Leo McKern\nCARTOON and SHORT\npital, was jammed under the\ndashboard and obviously in\nserious condition, as evidenced\nby her labored breathing. He\nsubsequently instructed ambulance attendants to maintain her\nrespiratory level.\nChecking the other car, Dr.\nJones said it was apparent from\nsevere head injuries that Mrs.\nMcKim was dead. Mrs. McKim's\ndaughter, Lenore, a passenger\nin the right front seat, was later\ntransported to hospital with Mrs.\nSims. Both drivers were then\nplaced in Dr. Jones' station\nwagon, together with a McKim\nyoungster, who had been a passenger with his mother in the\nback seat of the McKim vehicle.\nPrincipal testimony points by\nboth crown and defence, represented by D. T. Wetmore, concerned condition of the highway\nand weather at the time of the\naccident, condition of the accused and positioning of certain\nhighway signs.\nInvestigating RCMP Constable\nLee and Cpl. Von Brevern, both\ntestified to the icy driving conditions on the night in question,\nCpl. Von Brevern describing\nhighway surface as \"very\ntreacherous.\" Speed limitations,\ntestified both men, were restrict-\ned to between 30 and 35 miles\nper hour.\nDescribing road conditions at\nthe time of the accident, Mr.\nMcKim told the court that it\nwas \"slippery\" with a light skiff\nof snow, testimony corroborated\nby his daughter, Lenore, who\nsustained a broken arm in the\ncrash.\nMiss McKim also coroborated\nher father's testimony that his\nrate of speed was no greater\nTONIGHT - WED.\u2014Shows at 7:00 - 8:51\nGLENN FORD\nand\nGERALDINE PAGE\nin\n\"DEAR\nHEART\"\nThe unconventional\nlove affair\nthat began\nat a\nconvention\nin New\nYork\nA MARTIN MANULlSp,\u00abiudio\u00bb,\nHEAR THE: GREAT TITLE\nSONG- NOMINATED \t\nFOR AN ACADEMY AWARDI IT WARNER BROS. |\nPius\u2014THE BATTLE OF VILLA FIORITA\npa\nLET'S VOTE\nLOUIS MAGLIO\nFOR\nMAYOR\nA Practical Man\nwho con do the job.\n\u2022\nHear L. Magiio\nSpeak en CKLN\nat 6:15 p.m.\n. .        . +       .     .\nMAGLIO. L.     |X\nthan between 30 and 35 miles\nper hour.\nAlso subject of court scrutiny\nwas the condition of the accused,\nwith three Crown witnesses al\nhiding to the odor of alcohol and\ngay demeanor of Mr. Sims prior\nto and after the accident. Called\nas a third witness, Mrs. Bollard\nsaid the accused \"had been\ndrinking a bit.\" Asked by Crown\nprosecutor Allan how she had arrived at this conclusion, the witness said the accused \"talked a\nlittle loud\" and smelled of\nliquor. She said she had known\nMr. and Mrs. Sims for the past\n12 years. Both Dr. Jones and\nCpl. Von Brevern testified they\nhad smelled liquor on the breath\nof the accused.\nMuch of the defence centered\non the existence of highway\nspeed regulating signs near the\nscene of the accident particularly\n\"approaching 45-an-hour\" markers. Testimony on this aspect\nwas contributed by Mr. Staite,\nwho visited the scene of the accident the next day.\nAlso of interest to noth counsel was his evaluation of the\ncurve of the highway near the\nscene of the accident. Corners\nwere tested, he said in reply to\ncross-examination from Mr. Wetmore, by \"driving them physically\" to find out body stresses,\nand also by consulting with design speed of engineer maps.\nThe case continues today.\nStamp Sales\nTotal $16,128\nSales of postage stamps and\nsupplies for the month of November totalled $16,128, with total\ntransactions amounting to $202,-\n342.\nOther revenue included $655.\nMoney orders issued were 4527,\nand money orders paid, 4250.\nProducer Increase OK'd\nBy Milk Control Board\nA cent per quart increase in the local price of milk\nseems imminent in view of a 23-cents per hundred increase for raw milk granted milk producers in the area\nby the Milk Control Board effective last Wednesday.\nThe new price to be received by area producers was set at $5.97 per\nhundredweight by the Board, and is an increase of 23 cents over the November price of $5.74.\nthe new price is an increase of 44 cents per hundredweight over the\n$5.53 received by producers on January 1.\nThe latest increase places East and West Kootenay producers in the\nsame price structure as those in the Okanagan and Cariboo areas.\nA local spokesman for the dairy Industry noted that the increase\namounts to \"a little more than a half-cent per quart increase to the producer.\"\nLocal dairy manager lack lames said Monday, \"We have to take a\nlook at it, but in all likelihood It will mean an increase in the retail price of\nmilk.\"\nHe noted that \"this is the only area In British Columbia where producers were granted an Increase by the Milk Control Board.\"\nBodard Named Director\nTo Regional District\nMayor E. T. Bodard was appointed the official Nelson director on the board of the newly-\nformed Kootenay Central Regional District by City Council Monday night.\nCouncil was acting on direction from the Department of\nMunicipal Affairs which noted\nthat the letter patent require\nsuch an appointment.\nMr. Bodard was Instrumental\nin the establishment of the\nCentral Kootenay Regional District, and served as chairman of\nthe steering committee that had\nguided the formative stages of\nthe Regional District development.\nThe first meeting of the District Board will be held at Nelson next Monday beginning at 8\np.m. in the Council Chambers.\nThe location of future meetings\nwill be decided at that time.\nAt Monday's meeting the\nboard will elect its chairman,\nand will also appoint a secretary\nand treasurer, and auditing firm\nProvision will also be made foi\nthe payment of director's ex\npenses.\nLarge Crowd Joins\nIn PTA Carol Sing\nFamiliar carols rang out in the\nCivic Centre Sunday afternoon\nas a capacity crowd joined six\nchoirs in the 18th annual carol\nsing, sponsored by the Nelson\nParent-Teacher Association.\nThe stage presented a glowing\npicture of the warmth of home\non Christmas eve with a fireplace\non which were two huge candles\nwith stockings 'hung with care,'\nhuge presents stacked near-by,\nA 12-foot Christmas tree decorated with blue lights, glowed softly\nthrough an immense window.\nOver the fireplace a. revolving\nstar was suspended.\nSchool choirs participating\nwere from Central Elementary,\nSt. Joseph's School, South Nelson\nElementary, Hume Elementary,\nTrafalgar Junior-Secondary and\na boys' choir from Central Elementary.\nEach choir sang one Christmas\nnumber and the audience participated in their second selection.\nProjectionist was R. J. Amatto\nand M. B. Ryall was pianist,\nThe carol sing was convened\nby Central School PTA with Mrs,\nG. Mulligan, president. Hume\nPTA with Mrs. G. A. Cairns,\npresident, was in charge of publicity, and also printed the programs, the cover of which had\nbeen printed by the school board.\nTrafalgar Senior Secondary\nSchool with Mrs. W. A. Laine,\npresident, had been in charge of\ndecorating the theatre stage and\nW. A. Laine and Cy MacKay had\ncreated the homey scene, centred\naround the fireplace, loaned by\nthe Kootenay Arts and Crafts\nFlash bulbs popped as cameramen captured it on film.\nHighway Safety Education\nSadly Lacking - Kershaw\nASSURE STAGE SUCCESS\nLONDON (Reuters)-A ticket\nguarantee of \u00a3225,000 (675,000)\nfor Hello, Dolly, the Broadway\nmusical which opened at the\nTheatre Royal, Drury Lane, last\nThursday, was announced Monday.\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMMIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIII\nLATE\nNEWS\nOF DAY\nmitiiiiiiitiimii'iMiimiiMiiiiiit'\nCARD OF THANKS\nWe wish to express our sincere thanks and appreciation to\nour many friends for their acts\nof kindness and sympathy during\nour recent bereavement ip the\nloss Of our beloved wife, mother\nand grandmother, Mrs. Mary\nJane Smith. Special thanks to\nDr. N. Morrison, nurses and staff\nof Kootenay Lake General Hospital, and Rev. D. Cline of St.\nPaul's-Trinity United Church.\nMr. John H. Smith and family.\nI \u2014285-285\nAGGRESSIVE\nPROGRESSIVE\nGOV'T\nK. FACCHINA\nif Comprehensive Planning for al\ndevelopment.\nir Parks and Recreation improve \u2022\nment programme.\nif Streamlining   administration\nthrough Job evaluation.\nif Planned provision of off-street\nparking facilities.\nON DEC. 11, For Alderman VOTE\nAccident prevention is one of\nthe oldest activities known to\nman, yet the field of public\nsafety is relatively new.\n\"We live in an age of technological change,\" S. C. Kershaw, executive director of the\nBritish Columbia Safety Council,\ntold representatives of. Nelson\nand District Safety Council Friday.\n\"The automobile has pointed\nthis up.\"\nHe added that man has been\nable to launch space ships to\nspeeds up to 17,000 miles per\nhour, but still can't bring mother\nback safely from the supermarket.\nTo date there have been 26\ntraffic fatalities in the Kootenays: last year there were 14.\n\"Education in highway safety\nis sadly lacking,\" he said.\n\"The country has developed\nbetter highways and law enforcement has improved, but\ndriver education is now a frill.\"\n. The Community Safety Council now faces the need for professional people. These agencies\nprovide the meeting ground to\ndiscuss and solve mutual problems.\nAt present, there Is a difference between the legal and\nmedical aspect of the drinking\ndriver.\n\"Doctors say that more than\n\u202205 per cent alcohol tont.it In\nthe  biood Stream  constitutes\nimpaired driving and increases\nliability   of   the   driver,\"   he\nsaid.\n\"Yet,   lawyers   seemed   re-\nsigned to the fact that there\nare drinking drivers and don't\nwant to upset the status quo.\"\nSafety councils in the province\nare slowly bringing the two factions together.\n\"Drinking is the most serious\nsocial-economic problem today,\"\nMr. Kershaw stated.\nMr. Kershaw stressed that\nwhile the community safety\ncouncil provides a liaison between enforcement agencies and\nthe people, it is not a service\nclub, but a composite of all\nservice clubs in the community.\nThe B.C. Safety Council has\nfollowed the lead of the national\ncouncil in its child accident prevention program, using Elmer,\nthe Safety Elephant, a character\nconceived by \"Bugs Bunny\"\nartists.\nThe program revolves around\nthe six errors most Common to\nchild traffic accidents. In its\nfirst year of operation in Toronto, child traffic accidents\nwere reduced by 40 per cent.\nService clubs in B.C. have\nsponsored the. rirbgfarn. Associated Canadian Travellers worked\nwith Penticton District Safety\nCouncil and the Lions Club has\nbeen active in Dromoting the\nc*>Moai\u00bbn in Buftaby.\nThe program is financed by\nthe group-sponsor in co-operation\nwith local school boards, police\nand fire departments.\nIllustrated stores are presented to pupils by members of\nthe police and fire department\non a volunteer basis.\nThe Elmer, the Safety Elephant flag flies from the flagpole arid is flown at half-mast\nwhen an accident occurs.\n\"Some youngsters in Ontario\nwere so worried about the flag,\nthey wouldn't report ah accident,\" Mr. Kershaw said.\nHe recalled a lecture in\nChicago last month where an\nindustrial executive reported\nonly two compensable accidents\nin his operation.\n\"Yet, in the same period,\nthere were eight highway\ndeaths,\" he said.\n\"We must make industry\naware that public safety Isn't\nsimply an award program. Education is the key.\"\nMr. Kefshaw said that one\nhighway death represents about\n30 injuries and more than 6000\naccidents on a natibnal basis.\nLast year, $26 million was\nspent oh autdmcbile body damage alone in B.C.\n\"The secret to accident is\nbased on frequency and cost,\"\nMr. Kershaw said.\nNelson-District Safety Council\nis one of 23 chapters in the province which is working to hisure\nthe safety Of YC-U.\n\"TALK TO SANTA\"\nTell Him You Want a\nLADY REMINGTON\nADJUSTABLE RAZOR\nAdjust for legs and\nunderarms for gentle and\nsmooth shaving.\n$19.95\nAt\nMayo Pharmacy\nLtd.\nCorner Baker and Ward Sts.\nPh. 352-2613        Nelson, B.C.\nREBUILT\nENGINES\nReplace your car engine with\nan Allstate rebuilt engine\n\u2022 4000 miles guarantee\n\u2022 No down payment\n\u2022 AS low aS $10 per month.\nCall\nSIMPSONS \u2022 SEARS\nPhone 352-5531    Nelson, B.C.\nYOUR\nDOCTOR'S\nPRESCRIPTION\nDISPENSED PROMPTLY\nWhile You Wait.\nIt It Your Privilege Te\nChoose Your Druggist.\nMake Your Choke \u2014\nSAMPLE'S\nNELSON   PHARMACY\nLTD.\n\"Your fortress of Health\"\nPhone 352-2313\nDM Baker St. Nelson\nCITIZENS OF NELSON:\nTHESE ARE THE FACTS ON THE WATER BYLAW at present before Council for consideration:\n(1) THE PROPOSED AMENDMENTS TO THE EXISTING WATER\nBYLAW DOES NOT CALL FOR METERING DOMESTIC WATER.\n(2) THE PRIME REASON FOR AMENDING THE WATER BYLAW WAS\nTO RE-INTRODUCE A DISCOUNT FOR PROMPT PAYMENT OF\nWATER AND TO PROVIDE FOR FUTURE WATER SUPPLY\nWITHOUT THE NECESSITY OF A MONEY BYLAW TO BE PAID\nOUT OF TAXES.\n(3) THE AMENDMENTS DO CONSIDER THE QUESTION OF\nMETERING COMMERCIAL AND INDUSTRIAL USERS BEING\nMANDATORY INSTEAD OF PERMISSIVE LEGISLATION AS IT\nHAS BEEN FOR YEARS. THIS IS TO ESTABLISH A PROPER RATE\nFOR COMMERCIAL AND INDUSTRIAL USERS.\n(4) I HAVE STATED IN DISCUSSIONS ON THE WATER SITUATION\nTHAT TOTAL METERING COULD BRING EQUALITY TO ALL\nUSERS AND ALSO HELP DETERMINE OUR FUTURE NEEDS.\nTHIS DOES NOT MEAN THAT THIS THOUGHT WILL EVER BE\nACCEPTED. IT WAS A THOUGHT, NOT A DEFINITE PLAN OR\nPROGRAM BY THIS COUNCIL.\nTHESE ARE THE FACTS -\nDO NOT BE MISLEAD\nWftiptL \u00a3. J. BodahxL\nfiodmOML    1\nmmmmmmmwLl\n Voters To Pick\nKaslo Project\nThree Choices Offered\nIn December 15 Voting\nKASLO\u2014Kaslo voters on Wednesday, December 15, will decide the\nchoice of this village's Centennial '67 project.\nVoters will have a choice of three possible projects from which they\ncan make their decision.\nPlans of the three projects will be on display until voting day in a\ndowntown location to give residents an opportunity to decide which-of the\nthree they prefer.\nThe three possible projects include the location of a park on Front\nStreet, plus, if sufficient funds are available, the construction of rest rooms,\nthe construction of a huge fireplace of rocks from the mouth of Kaslo Creek\nat Vimy Park, and the planting of shade trees, replacing old fruit trees along\nvillage boulevards.\nThe Kaslo Centennial Committee has issued a plea to all eligible voters to get out and exercise their franchise by casting ballots in the election,\nand in making the Kaslo Centennial '67 project truly representative of the\nwishes of the people.\nVoting will take place from 2 to 5 p.m., at the Village Office, and from\n5 to 7 p.m. at the Council Chambers.\nNon-Residents May\nUse Kaslo Dump\nSPEAKER TO WEST KOOTENAY DEANERY congregations at Nelson\nWednesday night was Rev. J, F. McRae of Cranbrook, centre, shown with\nVery Rev. R, W. S. Brown, dean of Kootenay, left, and Rev. D. N. Robinson\nof Fruitvale, rural dean of West Kootenay, right.\nKaslo Teacher\nIn Math Workshop\nKASLO \u2014 Conditional on orderly procedures being used,\nKaslo Village Council granted a\ndelegation of non-residents permission to use the village dump\nfacilities,\nA delegation of the non-residents appeared before the council asking permission to continue using the village garbage\ndumping grounds. They noted\nthat similar facilities were unavailable elsewhere.\nCouncil reviewed its decision\nto end outside use of the facilities, noting that indiscriminate\nand disorderly dumping of refuse had forced the strict measures.\nThe   Commissioners    agreed\nIndicate Route\nOf Kaslo Road\nKASLO \u2014 A report from Kaslo\nindicates that a proposed new\nroad to be constructed from\nKaslo will follow the present\nroad in part and partly trace an\nold road which few except local\nresidents know exists.\nThe proposed route will follow\nbehind the Kaslo Golf Course\ncutting back to the present road\nnear Aasen's and continue on\nthrough Mirror Lake near the\nlakeshore to return to the old\nroad which runs behind Fletcher\nCreek Bluffs, past the dairy\nfarm to the bridge.\nthat if persons using the dump\nwould co-operate by adopting orderly disposal methods, dump in\naccordance with posted signs,\nthat permission would not be\nwithheld.\nKaslo's Centennial '67 project\ncame under discussion by the\nCommissioners, and it was decided that village residents\nwould be given the opportunity\nto cast ballots for their choice.\nFurther details will be announced when plans are finalized.\nTwo Nominees\nFor Byelection\nNATAL \u2014 Nominations for\ncandidates in a by-election to\nname a commissioner to fill the\nunexpired portion of the term of\nMel DeAnna were held at Natal Village Hall recently under\nreturning officer Loretta Monte-\nmurro. The election will be held\nDecember 11.\nSalmo Students\nContest Winners\nSALMO \u2014 Four girls, students\nof Salmo Secondary School, were\nwinners of the essay contest\nsponsored by the Royal Canadian Legion, Branch 217. The\ntopic was How Remembrance\nDay Should be Observed.\nFollowing a brief introduction\nby principal G. E. MacNeill,\nAlex Turner, Legion president\nmade the presentations to the\nwinners before the entire assembly.\nDivided into two categories,\nDawn Weaver took first in\nGrades 7, 8, 9., with Debbie\nEfanoff receiving second honors. In senior grades, 10, 11, 12,\nDanita Turner was the lucky\nwinner with Marg McDonald of\nYmir coming second.\nKASLO - Mrs. D. V. Siler of\nKaslo School was one of three\nleaders at an arithmetic workshop held in Castlegar recently.\nThe workshop was sponsored\nby the Professional Activities\nCommittee of the West Kootenay\nDistrict Council and the Provincial Intermediate Teachers' Association as part of the in-service program of training which\nthe teachers of the Province of\nBritish Columbia are conducting\nto raise standards of instruction\nin the province.\nWith Mrs. Siler were Mrs. Hilda McKinnon, Primary Consult-\nSalmo Court\nCharge Nets Fine\nSALMO \u2014 A fine of $100 was\nlevied against Willard Taylor, 19,\nwhen he was convicted of contributing to juvenile delinquency\nat court here. The charge arose\nfrom a teen-age party at his\nresidence November 27 at which\ndrinks were served.\nTwo juvenile girls were each\nfined $20 for being in possession\nof intoxicant liquor while participating in the same party\nand charges against two other\nminors in connection with the\nsame case have not yet been\ndisposed. A minor, Ronald Gora,\ninvolved in the same case received a fine of $25 for being in\npossession of liquor.\nFollowing the sentences Magistrate Parker Williams of Trail,\nissued a severe warning that in\nthe event of any recurrence of\ncases of this nature the persons  \t\ninvolved will be dealt with even I liquor on his premises or\nmore severely. He placed par- premises under his control.\nticular emphasis on adults allowing teenage drinking parties in\ntheir homes, and explained that\nthe maximum penalty for contributing in this manner carries\na fine of $500 or two years imprisonment or both fine and imprisonment.\nIt was also pointed out that\nunder the government act that\u2014\nexcept in the case of liquor given\nto a person under the age of 21\nyears by his parent or guardian\nin a private dwelling-house for\nconsumption therein for beverage or medicinal purposes, or administered to him by his\nphysician or dentist, no person\nshall sell, give or otherwise\nsupply liquor to any person apparently under the age of 21, or\npermit any person apparently\nunder that age to consume\nany\nant, Vancouver School Board,\nand Mr. L. A. Rousseau, College\nof Education, U.B.C.\nThe morning session was devoted to an explanation of the\nphilosophy behind the new concepts of arithmetic teaching in\nthe elementary school and the\nafternoon sessions covered more\nspecific applications of this philosophy to actual classroom procedure.\nMrs. McKinnon led the Grade\n1 and 2 group; Mr. Rousseau,\nthe grade 3 and 4 group, and\nMrs. Siler the grade 5 and 6\ngroup.\nThree Kaslo teachers attended\nthe grade 5 and 6 sections of the\nworkshop.\nMrs. Siler's understanding of\nthe philosophy and aims of the\nnew arithmetic curriculum,\nalong with her past experience\nin teaching it, was valuable to\nteachers who are handling the\ncourse for the first time.\nTeachers from Meadow Creek\nSchool attended other sections\nof the workshop and all were\nable to compare ideas and systems of teaching at the end of\nthe day.\nTo Conduct\nCrusade\nAt Fruitvale\nEvangelist Dan Moe of Vancouver and team will be conducting a \"Youth in Action'\ncrusade at the Full Gospel\nAssembly at Fruitvale Tuesday\nto Dec. 19.\nPreaching a message geared\nto youth, yet appealing to people\nof all ages, Mr, Moe has worked\nwith \"Youth for Christ\" and in\n1960 was the International Song-\nleading Award Winner at Winona\nLake, Indiana, Since 1963 he has\nbeen the director of the Singing\nSouthernaires, a musical youth\nensemble,\nMr. Moe is the editor of\n\"Canada Repent,\" a youth publication. His team will include\nDave and Joyce Johnson of\nCalgary.\nCastlegar\nCadets\nPromoted\nCASTLE GAR \u2014 Castlegar\nSquadron 581 of the Royal Canadian Air Cadets held its promotion parade in Stanley Humphries Senior Secondary School\nwith 30 cadets receiving promotions.\nVillage chairman W. H. Reed\npresented the cadets with their\nprops, wings and stripes and\nspoke to them on leadership.\nPromoted to Warrant Officer\nsecond class were F\/Sgt. L.\nAnderson, and F\/Sgt. C. Buck-\nnell. .\nPromoted to flight sergeants\nwere Sgt. J. Menard, Sgt. B.\nStamp-Vincent and Cpl. P. Vaes-\nsen.\nPromoted to sergeants were\ncorporals N. Austin, D. Dever-\nson, W. Leduc, C. MacBain and\nJ. McNee.\nLac L. Dow, N. Fields, D.\nHartson, H. Idle, A. Jankola, D.\nNewman and H. Tukkimaki were\npromoted to Corporals.\nACls A. Allan, M. Archam-\nbault, D. Creegan, B. Dunn, P.\nHatlen, G. Johnson, G. Lester J.\nMcCutcheon, K. Mosny T. Randall. T. Taylor, F. Watson and\nA. Jonasson received promotions\nto leading aircraftmen.\nFollowing the parade refrflsh-\nments were served by the Civilian Committee.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUES., DEC. 7, 1965\u20143\nSawlog Production\nShows Increase\nA gain of more than 21 million\nfeet board measure in the November sawlogs production in\nNelson Forest District sent this\nyear's output to date to 808,315,\n979 fbm, up more than 10,500,000\nfbm over 1964.\nThe November scale was 121,-\n577,657 fbm, compared to 100,-\n389,998 in November 1964. The\noutput for the year to date climbed to 808,315,979 fbm, compared\nto 797,752,791 fbm for the same\nperiod in 1964.\nThe figures in detail:\n1964 1965\nFir        20,159,783    20,112,654\nCedar .... 10,174,929 10,710,128\nSpruce 30,320,711 46,925,278\nLodgepole\nPine 4,778,686      6,214.027\nHemlock     10,182,346     7,097.596\nKansas Man\nWins Draw\nINVERMERE - A Kansas\nman won the lakeview lot in the\nWilder Subdivision at Invermere\noverlooking Lake Windermere.\nW. R. Hecox of Shawnee Mission, Kansas, held the lucky\nticket which was drawn at the\nChurch of the Canadian Martyrs Parish Bazaar held in the\nLake Windermere Memorial\nCommunity Centre.\nNew Church\nOfficers\nInstalled\nFRUITVALE \u2014 At a moraine\nservice at St. John's Anslican\nChurch. The new Woman's\nAuxiliary officers were installed\nby Rev. D. N. Robinson. Officers were as follows:\nPresident, Mrs. Margaret Robinson; vice-president, Mrs. Verla\nKarr; recording-secretary, Mrs\nEllen Gladdish; corresponding\nsecretary, Mrs. Blanche Co-\nmeau: treasurer, Mrs. Madge\nStartup.\nAt an evening service, Garth\nAllan Bacon, son of Mr.\nMrs. Allan Bacon of Fruitvale,\nwas baptized by Mr. Robinson.\nGodparents were Dr. and Mrs\nMackay of Fruitvale.\n5,068,865      9.716,110\n2,314,404      2,095,224\nBalsam\nWhite\nPine\nYellow\nPine ..      1,000,110        720,641\nLarch       8,946,272    11,082,809\nRejects        7,442,532      6,898,404\nBirch .... 16 3,768\nCottonwood 1,344 1,018\nTotal for\nmonth:   100,389,998   121,577,657\nTotal to date for\nyear:      797,752,791   808,315,979\nMINOR PRODUCTS:\n(1964 in brackets)\nPoles and Pilings, '308,746 lineal feet) 470,445 lineal feet; Mine\nTimbers, (16,738 lineal feet).\nnil; Mine Props, (5 cords), nil;\nCordwood, (51 cords), 56 cords;\nFence Posts, (336 cords), 170\ncords.\nAnnounce New\nHealing Substance:\nShrinks Piles\nExclusive heiling substance proven te shrink\nhemorrhoids end repeir duneied tissue.\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 case, while gently\nrelieving pain, actual reduction\n(shrinkage) took place.\nMost important of all\u2014results\nwere so thorough that this improvement was maintained overs period\nof many months.\nThis was accomplished with a\nnew healing substance (Bio-Dyne)\nwhich quickly helps heal Injured\nand cells 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\n\u2022tores\u2014money back guarantee.\nON DECEMBER 11th\nFined Under\nEmployment Act\nA resident of Kinnaird,\npleaded guilty in police court at\nCastlegar, on 2 December\nto a charge under the Unemployment Insurance Act.\nArthur Phillips, an employer,\nfailed to comply with a Commission request for information in\nhis possession, deemed necessary and relevant to a claim for\nbenefit. He was fined $25 or in\ndefault 10 days in jail by Magistrate H. E. Pitts at Castlegar.\nToday's Stock Market Quotations\nThe Dally News does not hold Itself responsible in the event ol an error in the following lists\nClosing prices supplied by Doherty, Roadhouse & McCuaig Bros., Trail, B.C.\nTORONTO  STOCKS\n10.50\n58.87\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi\nAlgoma Steel\nAlta. Gas Trunk 38.00\nAluminum 29.12\nArgus 19.75\nArgus C Pfd 12.00\nBank of Mont. 59.62\nBank of N.S. 70.00\nBathurst Power 21.00\nBell Telephone 56.25\nB.A. Oil 29.12\nB.C. Forest 22.62\nB.C. Packers A 18.00\nBurns & Co. 17.12\nB.C. Telephone 68.00\nCalg. Power 27.25\nCan. !t D. Sugar 23.25\nCan. Cement \u2014\nCan. Iron 59.87\nCan. Breweries 7.37\nCan. Canners 14.62\nCan .Industries 20.75\nCan. Imp. Bank 62.50\nCan. Pac. Rly. 66.75\nChemcell 14.00\nCol. Cellulose 7.00\nCons. Min. & S. 43.00\nCons. Paper 38.50\nCons. Gas 14.25\nCrestbrk. Timber 5.25\nDist. Seagrams 36.12\nDom. Bridge\nDom. Stores\nD. Electrohome\nDom. Tar & C.\nDom. Foundries\nDom. Textiles\nEddy Match Co. 36.50\nEddy Paper 13.00\nFalconbridge 106.62\nFamous Players 25.00\nFanny Farmer 42.00\nFord Motor Co. 59.00\nFord of Can. 153.00\nGen. Steel Wares 10.87\nGreyhound Lines 12.25\nGoodyear 211.00\nGt. Lakes Power 30.00\nHome Oil A 17.62\nHome Oil B 18.75\nHusky Oil 13.25\nHudson Bay Co. 13.87\nImperial Oil 53.00\nIndus. Accept. 23.00\nImp. Tobacco     14.37\n28.25\n25.00\n14.25\n17.62\n26.37\n32.00\nInd. Minerals\n8.00\n9.75\nCentral Del Rio 10.50\n10.62\nNormetal\n4.50\n4.65\nRio Algom\n19.25\n19.37\n10.62\nInland Nat. Gas\n9.62\n9.75\nCentral Patricia\n1.76\n1.79\nNorthgate\n7.65\n7.70\nSan Antonio\n.16\n.16'\n59.00\nIntl. Utilities\n29.50\n29.62\nCharter Oil\n2.60\n3.20\nOpemiska\nOrchan\n8.90\n8 95\nSarimco\n.19%\n.22\n38.50\nInt. Nickel\n97.00\n97.25\nChimo\n1.44\n1.45\n4.30\n4.50\nSherritt Gordon\n5.55\n5.60\n29.37\nInterprov. Pipe\n84.62\n85.00\nCheskirk\n.17\n.17%\nSilver Standard\n1.00\n1.04\n20.25\nInterprov. Steel\n5.00\n5.12\nCoch. Will\n3.60\n3.70\nPetrol O&G\n.66\n.69\nSiscoe\n2.26\n2.40\n12.25\nJefferson Lake\n22.87\n23.25\nCopperman\n.10%\n.11%\nPermo Gas\n,23%\n.26%\nSteep Rock\n6.30\n6.45\n60.00\nLaurentide\n11.37\n11.50\nCoin Lake\n.21\n21%\nPickle Crow\n.26\n.27\nSullivan Con.\n5.75\n5.80\n70.37\nLoblaw B\n10.62\n10.75\nCons. Rambler\n1.99\n2.01\nPCE Expl .\n.18\n.18%\nTeck Corp.\n5.00\n5.15\n22.50\nMassey Ferg.\n34.00\n34.12\nCons. Halliwell\n.46\n.48\nPine Point\n75.50\n76.00\nTorbrit\n.46\n.51\n56.50\nMacM Powell R 26.87\n27.00\nCons. Mogul\n3.80\n3.85\nPlace Gas\n1.87\n1.90\nTriad Oil\n2.46\n2.49\n29.25\nMGF Manage.\n8.00\n8.50\nConwest\n7.45\n7.65\nPlacer\n24.75\n25.25\nTribag\n2.48\n2.50\n23.00\nMolson Brew. A\n33.00\nCopper Corp.\n.62\n.64\nPatino\n10.12\n10.37\nUnion Oil\n20.00\n20.25\n19.75\nMont. Loco.\n13.62\n13.87\nCowichan Cop.\n.90\n.92\nPreston\n10.87\n11.25\nUnited Buff Add\n.48\n.49\n17.50\nMoore Corp.\n76.00\n76.87\nCraigmont\n11.75\n12.00\nProvo\n2.13\n2.30\nUnited Keno\n4.75\n4.90\n69.00\nNoranda\n50.00\n50.50\nDenison\n36.75\n37.25\nQue. Manitou\n.20\n.21\nUnited Oil\n.14\n.15\n27.37\nOgilvie Flour\n14.50\n14.75\nDickenson\n4.75\n4.90\nQuebec Lithium\n3.10\n3.15\nUpper Canada\n1.45\n1.47\n23.62\nPrice Bros.\n38.87\n39.00\nEast Malartic\n4.75\n4.90\nQuemont\n11.00\n11.25\nViolamac\n3.50\n3.60\n44.37\nPacific Pete\n10.37\n10.50\nEast Malartic\n1.51\n1.60\nRadiore\n.85\n.86\nWestern Mines\n4.85\n5.00\n60.50\nPower Corp.\n12.62\n12.75\nEast Sullivan\n8.20\n8.25\nRoman Corp.\n7.60\n7.65\nWright Harg.\n.70\n.74\n7.50\nQue. Nat. Gas\n13.12\n13.75\nFirst Maritimes\n4.95\n5.05\nRayrock\n1.03\n1.04\nWilroy\n1.77\n1.79\n14.87\nRoyal Bank\n71.00\n71.25\nFargo\n2.85\n2.92\nRaglan Nickel\n1.93\n1.95\nWest Beaver\n.14%\n.18\n20.87\nRothmans\n23.25\n23.50\nFrobex\n.81\n.82\nReeves Mac\n2.50\n2.75\nZulapa\n.22%\n.24\n63.00\n67.00\nSalada Foods\nShell Oil\n11.25\n18.50\n11.50\n18.75\nGreat Plains\nGiant Mascot\n11.00\n1.33\n11.25\n1.48\nVANCOUVI\n:R  STOCKS\n14.12\nSimpsons\n28.87\n29.12\nGiant Yel.\n13.00\n13.37\n7.37\nSoutham\n38.00\n40.00\nGranduc\n3.25\n3.35\nINDUSTRIALS\nNew Imperial\n.36\n.37\n48.37\nSteel of Can.\n25.12\n25.37\nGunnar Mines\n2.07\n2.15\nBurrard Mort\n\u2014\n6.50\nTrojan\n,29\n.30\n38.87\nTraders Fin. A\n12.00\n12.25\nHighland Bell\n9.40\n9.75\nGrowers A\n3.50\n\u2014\nQuatsino\n\u2014\n.22\n14.37\nTexaco\n52.00\n52.62\nHastings M&D\n2.30\n2.42\nGrowers B\n3.25\n3.50\nTorwest\n.66\n.68\n5.75\nTrans Mtn. Pipe\n18.62\n18.87\nHollinger\n24.75\n25.25\nOkanagan Hele.\n2.80\n2.85\nAce\n1.04\n1.05\n36.37\nTrans Can. Pipe\n36.87\n37.00\nHudson Bay Mg 75.00\n75.50\nSun Pub. A\n25.00\n\u2014\nVan Tor Oil\n.05%\n.06\n28.50\nUnion Carbide\n27.75\n28.00\nHydra Ex\n.21\n.21%\nSun Pub. B\n\u2014\n25.00\nPyramid\n13.75\n14.00\n25.25\nUn. Gas of Can\n30.50\n30.62\nIron Bay\n2.00\n2.04\nInt. Brew B\n9.00\n9.25\nWestern Expl.\n.10\n\u2014\n14.37\nWalker - Gooder\n34.50\n34.62\nIso\n2.00\n2.05\nMINES AND OILS\nMadrona\n1.55\n1.60\n17.75\nWestcoast Trans\n23.00\n23.25\nKerr Addison\n8.60\n8.65\nArlington Sliver\n.65\n.66\nUtica Mines\n1.85\n\u2014\n26.62\nWeston Geo. A\n19.50\n19.87\nKev Anacon\n2.95\n3.00\nCanam Cop.\n.17\n.17%\nMinex\n.12\n.14\n32.50\nWoodwards A\n23.75\n25.00\nLabrador\n31.00\n32.25\nBethex\n.42\n\u2014\nFUNDS\n37.00\nZenith Elect.\n2.35\n2.40\nLake Dufault\n13.87\n14.00\nCopper Soo\n.41\n.43\nAll .Can. Com.\n6.90\n7.56\n13.75\nMINES AND OILS\nLeitch\n5.90\n6.00\nCons. Standard\n,16\n.20\nAll. Can. Div.\n8.97\n9.83\n107.25\nAdvocate\n4.80\n4.85\nLittle Long Lac\n1.71\n1.00\nCrown Silver\n.13\n\u2014\nAmer. Growth\n5.51\n6.02\n25.50\nAtlantic Coast\n1.45\n1.47\nLorado\n1.25\n1.30\nCoast Copper\n12.75\n13.00\nCan. Inv. Fund\n9.34\n10.24\n47.00\nAgnico\n1.26\n1.29\nMadsen\n2.08\n2.10\nDolly Varden\n.41\n.42\nDiv. Inc. B\n5.86\n6.44\n60.00\nAetna Inv.\n1.30\n1.40\nMalartic\n.62\n.65\nDundee\n.40\n.41\nComwlth. Int.\n10.68\n11.70\n158.00\nAunor\n3.30\n3.35\nMaltaeami Lake 16.75\n16.87\nEndako\n14.00\n14.25\nGroup Income\n4.25\n4.64\n11.75\nBarnat\n.64\n.66\nMclntyre\n89.00\n90.00\nKamloops\n.50\n.52\nFirst Oil & Gas\n5.58\n6.10\n12.50\nBanff Oil\n7.20\n7.25\nMcKenzie\n.08 \u25a0\n.09\nEarlcrest\n.20\n.21\nColl. Mutual\n6.12\n6.65\n215.00\nBethlehem Cop.\n5.60\n5.75\nMidcon\n.52\n.56\nGalaxy\n.43\n\u2014\nInvestors Growth 9.00\n9.78\n30.50\nBralorne\n4.60\n4.75\nMcWaters\n.34V4\n.35\nMt. Washington\n.32\n.34\nInv. Intl. Mutua\n5.86\n6.37\n17.87\nBrunswick\n15.25\n15.50\nNorth Cal.\n.24%\n.25\nLondon Pride\n.15\n.19\nInv. Mutual\n5.01\n5.44\n19.00\nCadamet\n.08\n.09\nNational Pete\n3.00\n3.25\nOttawa Silver\n.62\n.65\nLeverage\n9.98\n10.94\n13.50\nCampbell Chib\n7.05\n7.10\nNew Jason\n.06 %\n.08\nLytton\n.38\n.39\nMutual Accum\n5.11\n5.59\n14.12\nCan. Delhi\n2.67\n2.70\nNew Conex\n7.50\n7.80\nPeace River Pete .24%\n.25\nMutual Bond\n8.34\n8.74\n53.25\nCampbell R.L.\n19.00\n21.00\nNew Hosco\n2.76\n2.80\nMagnum\n.36\n.39\nMutual Inc.\n6.39\n6.99\n23.25\nCariboo Gold\n.38\n.42\nNew Conex Wts\n3.60\n3.65\nSilver Ridge\n.26\n.27\nTrans Can. C\n8.17\n8.92\n14.62\nCassiar Asb.\n13.50\n13.62\nNorlex\n.19\n.19%\nSkeena Silver\n.57\n.59\nUnited Ace.\n9.42\n10.30\nVOTE YES\nFor School District No. 7 (Nelson)\nSchool Loan Bylaw Referendum No. 3\nWHY THE NEED:\nTo provide only for urgently needed improvements to\nschool grounds, to school buildings, and the supplying of\nnecessary equipment to improve teaching and administrative efficency.\nTo provde additional classrooms in schools where\npopulation has outgrown present capacity.\nTo supply additional sites for playgrounds and buildings;\ninstruction area and equipment for new industrial program.\nTo improve playgrounds by blacktopping driveways\nand small play areas.\nAMOUNT REQUIRED:\nThe amount of money involved is $778,675, this amount\nwill be raised by the sale of debentures as the money is\nneeded.\nWHAT IS THE PROVINCIAL GOVERNMENT'S SHARE?\nThe Provincial Government guarantees to pay at least\none-half of the yearly payment of principal and interest.\nThe Government further assists by sharing on a substantial\nbasis that portion of the district's yearly debt and capital\npayments over the sum that can be raised by a tax levy of\nthree mills. As our present yearly debt and capital charges\nis in excess of the sum that can be raised by three mills,\nthe Government will pay the major portion of this\nreferendum (75%).\nWHAT THE REFERENDUM WILL PROVIDE !\n(a) Improvements of School Sites and Grounds.\n(b) Secondary School Facilities:\n1. Industrial Education Additions.\n2. New and Renovated Gymnasiums.\n3. Renovation of existing classrooms to Multi-Purpose\nrooms.\n(c) Elementary School Facilities:\n1. Construction of new classrooms and activity rooms\n2. Construction of new libraries and kindergarten rooms\n3. Renovation  of  existing  areas for classroom  and\nadministrative use.\n(d) Equipment, sites, and improvements to utilize present\nand new facilities.\n(e) School plans, supervision and contingencies.\nHOW AND WHERE WILL IT BE USED:\n(a) acquiring and developing schyoljsitesj\nL. V. Rogers Senior Secondary $ 12,000.00\nSalmo Jr. Sr. Secondary      2,600.00\nSouth Nelson Elementary (Uphill)  ,...  11,900.00\nSite Improvements \u2014 Various Schools    11,500.00\n$ 38,000.00\n(b) Purchasing, constructing, reconstructing\nbuilding, for school purposes or\nuse in connection therewith:\nTrafalgar Junior Secondary $ 99,500.00\nSalmo Jr. Sr. Secondary   40,000.00\nCentral Elementary\nHume Elementary    \t\nSalmo Elementary  \t\nNorth Shore Elementary ...\nRosemont Elementary\t\nBlewett Elementary \t\nA. I. Collinson Elementary .\nAdministration Office\t\n6,000.00\n... 45,000.00\n... 26,000.00\n... 75,000.00\n... 40,000.00\n... 45,000.00\n... 104,300.00\n... 5,000.00\n(485,800.00\n(c) Furnishing and equipping buildings for school\npurposes or uses in connection therewith:\nL. V. Rogers Senior Secondary % 65,000.00\nTrafalgar Junior Secondary   39,100.00\nSalmo Junior Senior Secondary .\nHume Elementary\t\nSalmo Elementary \t\nNorth Shore Elementary \t\nRosemont Elementary\t\nBlewett Elementary\nA. I. Collinson Elementary\n58,000.00\n2,600.00\n2,600.00\n5,800.00\n8,000,00\n4,000.00\n9,275.00\nAdministration Building        500.00\n(194,875.00\n(d) Other capital expenditures for school purposes:\nPlans and Supervision $ 35,000.00\nContingencies   25,000.00\n$ 60,000.00\nTOTAL ESTIMATES  $778,675.00\nWhether you have children attending school or not, the boys and girls of School District No. 7\nare our most precious asset. We must provide adequately without extravagance for their PROPER\nEDUCATIONAL training and development.\nVOTE YES\nON DEC. 11 FOR SCHOOL DISTRICT\nREFERENDUM NO. 3\nListen to CKLN Wednesday, 9:15 a. m. for discussion on Referendum No. 3\nOpen Line to follow.\n -Nrlamt Daily Nruia\nEstablished April 22   1902 Nelson.    B. C.\nPublished by the NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n266 Bukei Street, Nelson, British Columbia, mornings except\nSundays and holidays in the centre ot tbe Kootenays with\nthe largest daily circulation in the Interior ol B.C.\nAuthorized a- Second Class  Mail.   Post  Office  Department. Ottawa,\nand for Payment oi 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 tor republication ol all news\ndispatches credited to it or to the Associated Press or Reuters in this\npaper and als   the local news published herein.\nTuesday, December 7, 1965\nIf Kennedy Round Fails\nNearly everything oi importance\nwas left out of the recent election\nccEpaign\"~but larger events were\nmoving fast in the world while Canadians kept their eyes locused on\nthe periphery oi their own business.\nAmong other things, the Kennedy Round of tarriff negotiations at\nGeneva apparently was moving toward a definite decision.\nWhether it succeeds or [ails, the\noutcome will be more vital to Canada, and especially to British Columbia, than anything debated in the\nelection. For Canada lives on foreign\ntrade and foreign trade rises or falls\nwith tariffs.\nLast week, John T. Connor, U.S.\nsecretary of commerce, admitted ior\nthe first time that t h e Kennedy\nRound might fail, that the world's\ntrading barriers might not be reduced, after all, under General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade.\nMr. Connor's startling speech indicates a drastic change in his government's thinking. Until he spoke at\nNew York, possible failure at Geneva had never been mentioned publicly by any American cabinet officer. Now Mr. Connor not only admits\nthat danger but proposes an alternative.\nThe United States, he says, must\nbegin immediately to consider the\nestablishment oi a new free-trade\narea directly competing with the\nEuropean Common Market.\nThe purpose of the American government, speaking through Mr. Connor, is clear enough. He has bluntly\nwarnedthe six members of the Common Market that they must Boon decide to cut back their joint external\ntariff or risk grave losses in the American market and in other markets\nclosely associated with it.\nA virtual ultimatum from Washington has brought no reply yet from\nEurope but we may be certain that\nits meaning is well understood. Also\nits time limit.\nMr. Connor emphasises that the\nUnitecV.States' Trade Expansion Act,\nthe foundation of the Kennedy\nRoupd, will expire in 1967 and therefore \"we must base our new policies\nand actions on the facts as they develop during this crucial next year.\"\nMeanwhile the European Six\nhave a final chance to modify the\nself-centred, protectionist policies\nimposed mainly by France and put\nthe Geneva negotiations on the rails\nagain. Washington awaits their answer.\nIn case of a negative answer,\n\"contingency planning,\" as Mr.\nConnor calls it, will deeply involve\nCanada.\nNo free-trade area built around\nthe U.S. could exclude its neighbor\nand largest trading partner. Nor\ncould Canada afford to remain outside, since most of its exports are\nsold in the American market and\nmost oi its imports purchased there.\nWhat does the Canadian government think of Mr. Connor's stark\nwarning? Probably it is too unsettled\nat the moment, with a cabinet reorganization pending, to frame any\ncontingency plans of its own. But\ntime, as fixed by the American deadline, runs out.\nBefore \"this crucial next year\" is\nover Canada may well face the\nmost wrenching economic decisions\nin its modern history.\nAs a major trading nation it must\ndo everything possible to save the\nKennedy Round, knowing that Mr.\nConnor's alternative is much inferior to a worldwide, multilateral and\nnon-discriminatory tariff reduction.\nIf the Kennedy Round cannot\nbe saved because the Common\nMarket refuses to co-operate than\nCanada should try to make sure\nthat a new free-trade area includes\nas many nations as possible.\nThe Canadian economy needs\nthe American market more than any\nother\u2014and a far longer and fairer\nentry into it\u2014but it needB overseas\nmarkets like Britain, Japan, Russia\nand China as well. It cannot risk too\nmuch dependence on one buyer and\none supplier.\nBecause it is the United States'\nlargest market and closest friend,\nCanada, if it has to, can bargain\nrealistically with the American\ngiant.\u2014Vancouver Sun.\nWWII Tkey Think of Next?\nIn .the course of signing photographs for a new passport recently\na housewife we know learned to\nher surprise and delight that there\nremains a power capable oi awing\nand.mystifying today's blase moon\nchildren.\nBallpoint pens may write under\nwafeiietnd. on butter but for signatures pn glossy photos they are a\ndead lo6s',\"6ur housewiie discovered.\nSo she rooted in a junk box,\nlOund an old fountain pen, rejuve-\nnated~the~tnk sediment in the sac\nwith tap water, identified her likeness palely but good enough for\nExternal Affairs,;,took an instant\nconsensus of the dumbfounded leotard set which was her witness, and\nimmediately appreciated that she'd\nstumbled on a find as momentous\nin its way as the Rosetta Stone, if\nnot bouncing putty.\nThis was real scientific wizardy,\nand the kids knew it. A writing tool\nwhich_snckea up juice by a flick of\na lever and spat it down through a\ngolden nib \u2014 ink blots and blue-\nblack fingers and a gurgle as satis-\nfyjnrj_nR .sipping\u201esodrj:_througlug.\nstraw \u2014 this, for a generation raised\nOn viscous-coated ball bearings rolling in sockets, had to be seen to be\nbelieved. Next day the pen was at\nschool  for  Show and Tell.\nOur housewife plans next to introduce the children to such wonders of the age as the incense\nburner, the carpet sweeper, the ice\ntongs and\/if they're good, maybe\nthe car crank.\nIt looks like a big year for Show\nand Tell.\u2014Vancouver Sun.\nToasted E&&S?\nThe egg industry in the United\nStates, concerned at a drop in consumption of eggs, is working on\nways to fight back. One of them is\ndehydrated egg-nog, and another is\na plastic enclosed frozen omelet\nthat can be heated in the toaster\nwith the toast.\nThe line las to be drawn somewhere. We draw it between the dehydrated egg-nog, which is all\nright, and the frozen omelet that\npops out oi the toaster, which is appalling.\n\u25a0 \u2022 The argument that anything that\n\" encourages better early morning nutrition; is., acceptable .doesn't hold\nwater, or even coffee with us. Anyone who would eal a plastic-covered\negg cooked in a toaster ior breakfast \u2014 we don't want to have breakfast with. \u2014Ottawa \/ournal.\nThey Sleep in the Streets in Brazil\nBy BRENDA LARGE\nRECIFE, Brazil (CP) - The\nmother and her six children are\nsleeping in the street tonight,\nas they have for the last six\nmonths.\n\"My husband lost his job and\nthere is no food for our children,\" she says.\nAnother woman, about 75,\nspreads a thin blanket on the\ncurb outside a department\nstore. She will sleep for a few\nhours and go early in the morning to a church where food is\ndistributed to those who get\nthere first.\nThis is Recife, with 1,000,000\npeople the biggest city in the\npoverty \u2022 stricken northeast of\nBrazil, where the air is heavy\nwith flies and discontent\n\"The northeast is ripe for\ncommunism,\" the visitor is told\nagain and again. Cuban-trained\nCommunist guerrillas have\nbeen active in rural districts.\nIt is here that the government of Brazil faces its biggest\nproblem\u2014the 30,000,000 people\nwho live at subsistence levels\non land that is hot and dry or in\nthe jungle hinterlands.\nThe minimum wage in Recife is 50,000 cruzieros a month\n(about $27 U.S.), according to\ngovernment tables, but welfare\nagencies say it is even less. In\nthe industrialized areas of the\nsouth, the minimum wage is\nabout 65,000 cruzieros.\nA massive federal government program of social and\neconomic development in the\nnortheast so far has failed to\nmake more than a dent in the\nproblems of \u25a0 unemployment,\npoverty and illiteracy.\nBut the government is making\na strong and continuous effort\nto bring industry to the area,\nsays Joao Goncalves de Sousa,\nthe energetic superintendent of\nthe Organization for the Development of the Northeast.\n\"We have attracted more\nthan 300 new projects here in\nthe last few months. The area\nis excellent for industrial development. It has raw materials, cheap labor, and is\nclose to a big market in the\nsouth.\"\nSpecial tax incentives are offered firms and industries locating in the northeast, and a\ngroup of manufacturing plants\nis springing up around Recife.\nItaly's Pirelli is planning an\nelectric cable factory, while\nWillys Overland of Brazil will\nbuild the first auto assembly\nplant in the northeast.\nDe Sousa says the coming of\nthe industries has resulted in\nan economic growth of 6.8 per\ncent a year in the northeast in\nthe last five years.\n\"But it will take 25 years before the northeast is as highly\ndeveloped   as   the   Sao   Paulo\narea in the south.\"\nSEEK INVESTORS\nTo stimulate growth in the\nnortheast, Brazil is trying to attract foreign investors and has\nhad limited success.\nDe Sousa said he wished the\nCanadian government or Canadian private firms would show\nan interest in the area.\n\"We miss Canada here. We\nwould like to have Canadian\nfirms and Canadian technical\nassistance in planning and education.\"\nBesides huge amounts of\nAmerican aid through the Alliance for Progress, the northeast\nhas   attracted   West   German,\nJapanese and Israeli industrial\n' interests.\nA team of Israeli scientists is\nstudying drought conditions in\nthe area and the Spanish government has offered to train\nindustrial leaders.\nBesides lack of money, the\nOrganization for the Development of the Northeast has another big problem. It has a staff\nof 2,000 people, half of whom\nare university trained, but de\nSousa finds it difficult to keep\nthem.\n\"As soon as we train them,\nthey  are off to  higher-paying\njobs in the south.\"\nHOPES FOR FUTURE\nBut the superintendent, while\nbeing realistic about the problems the area faces, is optimistic about what may eventually be accomplished.\n\"You can't change the face of\npoverty overnight, but things\nare definitely getting better\nhere. With all these new projects, the employment situation\nis bound to improve.\"\nBut de Sousa's projects don't\nmean much yet to the average\nnative of Recife. There is an air\nof bitter resignation about economic conditions.\nSays the taxi driver, who has\nlived in Recife for 20 years:\n\"These industrial projects are\njust a lot of talk and no action.\nMost of them just exist on paper and some of the factories up here have even\nclosed down in the last year.\"\nThe woman who can't find a\njob for her 21-year-old son says:\n\"Are things getting any better? I don't know. All I know is\nwe've been living on beans and\nfish for 25 years and that has\nnever changed.\"\nThe Northern Anchor in Asia\nBh C. S. CHIN\nSEOUL (AP) - The crew-cut\nAmerican private sat cross-\nlegged on the grassy slope, his\nrifle across his knees. Before\nhim, to the north, stretched the\nempty no man's land of Korea's\ndemilitarized zone.\nBeyond, fading into row upon\nrow of hills dusted with blue\nhaze, lay North Korea. Behind\nthe private lay the farmlands\nand crowded cities of South\nKorea \u2014 and 50,000 American\ntroops.\nThese troops, says Gen.\nDwight Beach, commander of\nU.S. forces in Korea and the\nfour-nation United Nations command force, \"are the northern\nanchor in Asia.  The southern\nanchor is Viet Nam, where\nthings are very active.\"\nHe added, somewhat wistfully: \"Hopefully, the northern\nanchor remains inactive. . . .\"\nHow inactive the powerful\nNorth Korean army remains\nmay well depend on the number of U.S. troops in South\nKorea.\nThe South Korean government recalls that when U.S.\nforces began pulling out in\n1950, North Korea struck suddenly and unexpectedly. With\nthis in mind, the South Korean\ngovernment asked renewed assurances that U.S. forces would\nremain in strength before a\nKorean combat division was\nshipped to South Viet Nam.\nThe shield of security for\nSouth Korea lies both in the\n600,000 - man South Korean\nArmy and the 50,000 U.S. troops.\nThe American forces are scattered the length and breadth of\nthe \"land of the morning\ncalm.\"\nBut the bulk of the divisions\nare deployed over two historical invasion routes into the capital of Seoul: Chorwon Valley\nand Imjin River.\nTo the northeast of Seoul,\nstretched along the brown hills\noverlooking the Imjin River, is\nthe 2nd Infantry Division. One\nof its big jobs is patrolling the\ntense, 2V4-mile-wide demilitarized zone dividing North and\nSouth Korea.\nAlthough this area has been\nquiet since 1953, troops there\nhave been attacked several\ntimes by hit-and-run North Korean agents. The action usually\nis short and bitter: A grenade\nthrown into a bunker or the\nstaccato burst of a machine-\ngun firing on a passing U.S.\njeep.\nTo the north and east, astride\nthe twisted Chorwon Valley, is\nthe 7th Infantry Division. The\ndivision, with a variety of\ncamps and posts sprinkled\nacross Korea, is primarily a\nsecond line of defence.\n\u2022 In its area, Korean troops\npatrol the demilitarized zone.\nBut close behind it are 7th divi\nsion units, such as those at\nCamp Kaiser.\nOn the other side stands the\nNorth Korean ground force, estimated at 330,000 men. Behind\nit stand the hordes of China.\nWill North Korea strike\nagain? If so, will it do it alone?\n\"Personally, I think it would\nbe stupid for them to start on\ntheir own at the present time,\"\nsays Gen. Beach. \"They had\none laste of starting on their\nown and got really clobbered.\"\n\u2022 American officials in Seoul\ndescribe the North Korean\nArmy as effective. It is supported by a large paramilitary\nforce of trained Civilians. Although North Korea produces\nits own small arms, It depends\non the Soviet Union and Red\nChina for more sophisticated\nweapons.\nThe U.S. 8th Army is equipped with Honest John rockets\nwhich can be nuclear - armed,\nplus Nike and Hawk missiles.\nA greater threat to South\nKorean forces' lies in the North\nKorean Air Force which in-\neludes MiG 21s, 17s and 15s.\nThe best of these can cover all\nof South Korea in less than 25\nminutes from their bases.\nThe U.S. Air Force maintains\na squadron of F - 100 Super\nSabres and a squadron of F-105\nThunderchiefs in South Korea.\nThe South Korean Air Force recently received several F - S\nFreedom Fighters.\nExcessive Drinking Problem in North\nBy JOHN McLEAN\nINUVIK, N.W.T. (CP)-When\nthe Eskimo called Danny pulled\nup a chair he talked like a man\nwho wanted to get something off\nhis chest.\nIt was obvious the beer\nhe brought to the table wasn't\nhis first of the day, but the chip\non his shoulder didn't show at\nfirst.\n\"You want, to know ahout the\nEskimo?^ Welti Danny can tell\nyou plenty.\"\nThen Danny laid it on the\nline: \"You get paid for writing\nthis stuff, so you pay Danny\nnow.\"\n, The details of Danny's story\nwent unrecorded. He priced\nhimself out of the market.\nFortunately, Danny isn't typical of the Eskimo, but unfortunately there are enough like\nhim to establish excessive drinking as one of the major problems of the North.\nIt turned out that Danny had\nbeen laid off his job a few days\nearlier and, being broke, he had\nfigured he'might' make a little\nmoney out of a visiting reporter.\nHis main problem seemed to\nbe keeping a job and looking\nafter a wife and nine children\nwho share a three - bedroom\nhouse with his parents and a\ncouple of brothers and ' their\nchildren.'Total:'' 19.  '\nA disaster co-ordinating committee at the; provincial level\nnow includes representatives\nfrom the Red Cross, Salvation\nArmy and St. John Ambulance.\nIt also includes representatives\nfrom the departments of health\nand welfare, and the Royal Canadian Mounted Police.\nThe encounter with Danny\ntook place in late afternoon, but\nsomehow he managed to hang\non at the beer parlor until close\nto midnight when he staggered\nhome.\nCOUNCIL TACKLES ISSUE\nProblem drinking was one of\nthe main issues tackled by the\nNorthwest Territories council\nduring its winter session in Ottawa last February.\nA study paper prepared for\nthe meetings said consumption\nof alcohol \"has aroused increasing concern in the last five\nyears.\" It recommended individual treatment for problem\ndrinkers after steps are taken to\nbar them from buying liquor at\nterritorial stores.\nAt that time, Commissioner\nB. G. Sivertz said the sale of\noverproof rum, available at\nsome places in the North, was\nthe main cause of drunkenness\namong the natives.\n\"Delta Indians and Eskimos\napparently did not realize that\nthe potency of overproof rum\nmeant incapacity twice as fast,\"\n; the commissioner said in a paper prepared for the council.\nBut not everyone agreed with\nthe commissioner. Elected council member John Goodall cautioned against banning the sale\nof overproof spirits. \"If I voted\nfor it, I could wrap myself in\nthe Red Ensign and it still\nwouldn't save me from mayhem,\" said the 76-year-old former postmaster from Fort\nSimpson.\nPOSES MAJOR PROBLEM\nDrinking, of course, is only\none of the problems facing the\ngovernment and local authorities in their efforts to teach the\nEskimo the ways of the white\nman. But it is a major one.\nVocational centres in the main\nsettlements are well-equipped to\nprepare young people for various trades.\nThe schools, too, are more\nthan adequate considering the\nwilderness  conditions  which\ncrouch on the very outskirts of\nthis town on the Mackenzie\nRiver delta, 50 miles south of\nthe Arctic Ocean, and the other\ncommunities sprinkled across\nthe 1,300,000 square miles of the\nterritory.\nBut modern housing, job-train\ning and new opportunities to\nearn a living don't always provide the bridge between two\nworlds.\nThe wife of a northern administrative officer told about a\nyoung Eskimo who took a job at\nChurchill, Man., instead of go\ning home between terms at his\nvocational centre.\n\"His first pay cheque was\nabout $117. I advised him to\nopen a bank account with $100\nand keep $17 for himself. That\nwas on a Thursday. Saturday\nnight he was down at the beer\nparlor buying drinks for everybody. I smiled to myself, thinking how clever I was about the\n$100. At least he'd still have\nthat.\"\nAs it turned out, her protege\nwas 50 cents overdrawn.\nUltimate Russian Relaxation\nHUBERT\njg Ktng Fenhirit Syndics!*, .Inc..  I96S. Woild light*\nM^sUrfO\nBy JOHN BEST\nMOSCOW (CP)-For the typical Russian, a long - distance\ntrain trip is the ultimate in relaxation.\nYou can see it in the way the\npassengers prepare for the long\njourney as their train pulls\naway from the station for distant parts.\nOut come the pyjamas, in\nwhich many of the men spend\nthe better part of their travel\ntime, both sleeping and waking. Others put on a loose-fitting two - piece blue outfit-\nsomething like the track suit \u2022\nthe runners wear when warming up.\nA good percentage of girls\nand women get into slacks,\nsomething you seldom see on\nthe streets of Moscow.\nIt was like that aboard train\nNo. 6 when it left Moscow for\na five-day, 3,700-mile regularly\nscheduled journey to Mongolia.\nFrom the moment the big\ntrip into the Asiatic land mass\nbegan, the atmosphere on No.\n6 was one of determined relaxation.\nWith the pyjamas and other\nlounging outfits, chessh cards\nand checkerboards made their\nappearance. Some distance out\nfrom Moscow, an accordion's\nstrains began issuing from one\nof the compartments, accompanied by sweetly mellow Russian\nfolk songs sung by a group of\nyoung men,\nAs in Canada, railroads form\nan integral part of the fabric of\nnational life in the Soviet Union.\nThey are the principal means'\nof communication across vast\nexpanses of empty or near-\nempty hinterland.\nWithout them it is difficult to\nsee how Russia's far - flung\nrealm could be held together.\nThe railroad helps to give\ntravelling Russians a feel of\ntheir incredibly immense homeland. One of their favorite\nhabits is to stand at the window, mile after mile, watching\nthe fields and forests roll by.\nOtherwise they mostly just sit\nand relax, or lie down and relax\u2014and enjoy the ride.\nOn board the Mongolia-bound\ntrain was a varied collection of\nindividuals, including Soviet\nArmy officers, a construction\nengineer returning to Irkutsk\nfollowing a stay at a rest sanatorium near Moscow, a handful\nof Mongolians returning to their\nhomeland, and a Soviet technician returning to his foreign\naid post in Mongolia following\nholidays with his family in Moscow.\nThe technician was a regular\nhound   for   physical   exercise.\nWhile others lounged he paced\nup and down his sleeping car\nfor hours each day. He said he\ncovered about seven kilometres\n\u20144'\/s miles\u2014that way. At each\nstop he got off and paced\nbriskly up and down the platform, adding more miles to his\ndaily log.\n\"I have to do it to keep in\nshape,\" he explained, placing\nhis hands expansively over a\nslightly protruding middle-ags\nbelly. At home, he said hs\nwalks 10 miles each day.\nU.S. Aid Program Shifting Into\nDo-lt-Yourself Approach\nBy   ARCH   MacKENZIE\nWASHINGTON (CP) \u2014 The\nUnited States since 1954 has distributed $15,400,000,000 worth of\nwheat and other farm commodities to 114 countries, a White\nHouse conference on international co-operation heard last\nweek.\nBut the honeymoon is over,\nas President Johnson has made\nincreasingly plain. The U.S.\nfeels there are strong domestic\nand international reasons for\nmaking a fundamental policy\nshift in food and other foreign\naid.\nNations in need can still count\non U.S. food, including the United Arab Republic and India\nwhere perilous shortages exist.\nBut the pattern of the entire\naid program is being shifted to\nemphasize the do-it-yourself approach. And the U.S. intends to\nexact undertakings of good be-\nToday in History\n\"Of course I didn't forget our anniversary, dear-\nhappy anniversary!\"\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nDec. 7, 1965 . . .\nRobert Ket, a wealthy\nEnglish yeoman, was\nhanged 416 years ago today\n\u2014in 1549\u2014at Norwich for\nleading a rebellion. A feast\nheld at his manor to Complain against the government's policy of fencing off\nand selling public land degenerated into a riot and became a military conquest\nof Norwich, the nearest\nlarge town. The rising was\neasily put down by the Duke\nof Warwick, with foreign\ntroops, and Ket and his\nbrother were speedily tried\nand condemned.\n1787\nDelaware became\n' '\u2022\/\nthe first state to ratify the\nUnited States constitution.\n1941   \u2014   Japan   attacked\nPearl Harbor  and  Canada\ndeclared war on Japan.\nFirst World War\nFifty years ago today\u2014in\n1915 \u2014 President Wilson\nasked f6r  more  power  to\ndeal  with  anti  -  American\nsubversion;   British   forces\nretreated before the Bulgar- .\nian conquest of Serbia.\nSecond World War\nTwenty-five years ago today \u2014 in 1940 \u2014 President\nRoosevelt promised. U.S. aid\nto Greece, now successfully\nrepelling the Italian invasion;., two German aircraft\nwere shot down in light ac-\ntioir'over England.\nhavior from the beneficiaries,\nnot only in their domestic conduct of applying the aid but in\ntheir foreign affairs attitudes to\nthe U.S. and other nations.\nNO ALTERNATIVE\nHow effective this will be cannot be judged. But alternative\nsources of help from Communist countries or others do not\nseem to be available on the\nneeded scale.\nGhana's beiige rent Kwame\nNkrumah is one example.\nGhana in effect apologized for a\nNkrumah book calling the U.S.\nneo \u2022 colonialist among other\nthings, but the book had barred\nany discussion of help for the\ntangled Ghanaian economy.\nPresident Nasser of the United Arab Republic has gone\nsome way to tidy up relations\nwith Washington because his\nneeds are so great\u2014especially\nfor grain. In October, he was\njudged to have only about 10\nweeks' supply available.\nThis week, President Johnson\nauthorized the resumption of\nfood shipments worth about\n$55,000,000 but only for the next\nsix months. He rejected U.A.R.\nbids for another three \u2022 year\nagreement similar to the one\nexpiring last June.\nBut this was done only after\nNasser moved to disengage\nEgyptian troops from Yemen,\nexpressed willingness to compensate the U.S. for the destruction of a $500,000 library\nand made other cbhciliatory\ngestures.\nThe pending visits of President Ayub Khan of Pakistan\nand Indian Prime Minister Shastri offer more opportunities for\nthe new U.S. hard line\u2014this\ntime in putting on pressure to\nsettle the war over Kashmir\nwhich embarrassed U.S. planners.\nAyub Khan will be seeing\nJohnson Dec. 14-15 and will get\nthe message then.\nPakistan has had about $3,-\n000,000,000 in U.S. aid\u2014mostly\nmilitary which it used to attack\nIndia. It has, in U.S. eyes,\ntended to use the economic\nslice of the aid wisely but President Johnson will ask, before\nany new economic aid is forthcoming, how seriously Pakistan\nis flirting with China, officials\nhere say.\nShastri is due early next year\n\u2014perhaps January\u2014and is fac-\nin gwhat Indian officials call a\n\"natural calamity of a magnitude unknown in recent times.\"\nIndia, in short, has grown to\nlean on one-fifth of the annual\nU.S. wheat crop of about 1,200,-\n000,000 bushels and now needs\nmore than. that. India may\nhave to show much more flexibility than it has shown, heretofore about settling the Kashmir\nquestion.\nFood and economic aid to India and Pakistan has been cut\nto a piece-meal basis despite\nthe annoyance of those nations.\nMilitary aid has stopped and\nseemed unlikely to resume for a\nlong time.\nBehind the U.S. new line is\nthe domestic overhaul of farm\nsubsidies. American farm surpluses are vanishing.\nThe new approach is to increase the flow of U.S. technical aid which in agriculture's\ncase would be designed to make\nIndia and other have-not countries self-supportihg. It would\ninclude much more birth control assistance too but sbrns\nfood aid is expected to go on fbr\nyears because there is no alternative.\nWENDOVER, Ont. (CP)-A\nstill with the capacity to turi\nout 150 gallons of alcohol a da)\nwas raided by RCMP officerl\nearly Monday and three mer\nwere arrested and charged witl\nillegal possession of a still ar\nillegal possession of alcohol.\nI\n n\nLibya's Veiled Women\nReluctant to Doff Veil\nTRIPOLI (Reuters) - The\nveiled women of Libya are moving cautiously into the second\nhalf of the 20th century.\nThe government of this oil-\nrich North African state, acknowledging an acute manpower\nshortage, is trying to encourage\nwomen to take a greater part\nin the life and work of the country.\nWith official approval, girls\nand younger women are more\nand more discarding the long,\nall-enveloping veil \u2014 symbol of\ntheir seclusion from the wider\nworld.\nBut such is the force of centuries-old tradition that experienced observers here estimate it\nwill be at least another generation, possibly two, before the\nveil becomes a museum piece.\nIn so far as the veil is concerned, Libya has remained an\noutpost of orthodoxy among the\nMoslem countries of North Africa. In Tunisia and Algeria to\nthe west and Egypt to the east\nwomen have moved with the\ntimes to a greater extent.\nCOVERS FACE\nIn Tripoli, the veil, a long\nwhite garment known as the\nbarracan, remains absolute for\nmany of the older women. They\nwrap it around themselves from\nhead to ankles, covering the entire face except for a tiny peephole for one eye.\nThese veiled women stay at\nhome and mind the children and\nare rarely seen in public with\ntheir menfolk, One Tripoli\nmovie theatre puts on a show\neach week strictly for women,\nWhen Libyan officials and\nbusinessmen take vacations\nabroad they usually go with\nmen friends, leaving the wives\nand children at home.\nIn 1963, the women were given\nthe right to vote in parliamentary elections, but only a tiny\nfraction have exercised the right\nin the two elections since then.\nIn country districts of Libya,\ntho Wrpf-pn is still prominent,\nbut often in bright colors and\nwith the face uncovered.\nBefore Libya, a former Italian\ncolony, achieved independence\nin 1951, local women had little\nopportunity for primary or secondary education, and none at\nall for higher education.\nSince independence, however,\nthe government has been progressively building up a network of primary and secondary\nschools ahd has established the\nUniversity of Libya.\nNow, education has opened up\nnew perspectives to children\nand young people and radio has\nbrought the outside world into\nthe home of the formerly illiterate Arab woman.\nTraditionally a girl in Tripo-\nlitania Was put \"behind the\nveil\" on reaching puberty.\nFrom then, no man, except\nthose of her immediate family\ncircle, was supposed to see her\nface until she unveiled for her\nhusband on her wedding night.\nToday, it is estimated that\nabout 60 per cent of schoolgirls\nof 13 and upwards go about unveiled. Others wear the veil on\ntheir way to and from school,\nbut discard it in the classroom.\nFace Fears, Sufferers\nOf Agoraphobia Advised\nLONDON (AP)-Terrified of\nthe outside world, thousands of\nwomen in Britain are afraid to\nleave their own houses and\napartments.\nThey suffer from agoraphobia\n\u2014a morbid fear of open spaces.\nMrs. X is 45, handsome, has\na splendid house, a loving husband and three children.\nYet, for the last 15 years she\nhas never once stepped outside\nher front door.\nAt last, someone is doing\nsomething about the people who\nsuffer from agoraphobia.\nThe someone is Alice Neville,\n34, who started suffering from\nagoraphobia when she was\nseven. She taught herself how\nto beat it.\nHer victory has been so complete that she started the Open\nDoor Club six months ago. It\nno whas 1,500 members. Only 40\nare men.\n\"The most important thing is\nfor our members to realize they\nare not alone,\" said Mrs. Neville, who lives in nearby Chisle-\nhurst, Kent.\nterrors because they think they\nare abnormal. Agoraphobia is\nnot a mental disorder. It's an\nemotional upset.\"\nHow did Mrs. Neville cure\nherself?\nI decided to tackle all the\nthings I was afraid of,\" she\nsaid, \"and as I did so, the fears\njust shrivelled away.\n'I was petrified of water\u2014so\nI made myself swim.\n\"I was afraid of travelling\u2014\nany sort of travel\u2014so I made\nmyself learn to ride a bicycle.\nI got out into the traffic.\n\"As I overcame the big years,\nmany of the little ones disappeared.\"\nThose who join the Open Door\nClub get a list of contacts.\nThen, when their fears become\ntoo much for them, they can\nring up one another and talk,\nMrs. Neville.gives tips on over\ncoming agoraphobia:\nPractise going out after dark\n\u2014you will feel less panicky.\nTry wearing dark glasses.\nTake out a shopping basket on\nwheels\u2014and  push  it.   It  gives\n'lllllfir-'IIIIIIIIMIimillllllllHMIf\nHoods Didn't\nFaze Her\nTORONTO-(CP) - Paul.and\nMary Michalczyk are in their\nmid-70s but they don't take\nany muscle stuff from young\npunks.\nTwo would-be holdup men\nwalked -into their corner store\nin midtown Toronto Saturday\nnight looking for easy money.\nThey didn't find it.\nOne made the mistake of\ngrabbing Mrs. 'Michalczyk, 76,\nby the nose and Mrs. Michalczyk let loose a straight right\nto her assailant's nose.\n\u25a0lllllllllllllliinillllHHIIIIIIIHIIIII\nBazaar Discussed\nAt Meeting\nROSSLAND \u2014 At the Hospital\nAuxiliary -November meeting,\nthe main topic of discussion was\nthe annual tea and bazaar.\nAt the Christmas-meeting.-the\nSisters of St. Joseph at the hospital will be hostesses for the\nevening.\n\"Hundreds of people, mostly you a sense of security,\nwomen, go through life fright-1   If you have a dog, take the\nened to tell anyone about their dog with you.\nGod, Creator\nSermon Subject\nCongregations in Christian\nScience churches heard a Bible\nLesson Sunday on \"God the Only\nCause and Creator.\"\nThe. readings opened with the\nlast verse from the first chapter\nof Genesis: \"And God saw every\nthing that he had made, and, behold, it was very good.\" \u2022\nRelated passages read included: \"The spiritual reality is the\nscientific fact in' all things. . .\nGod, Spirit, alone created all,\nand called it good. . . The age\nseems ready to approach this\nsubject, toponder somewhat the\nsupremacy of Spirit, and at least\nto touch the hem of Truth's.gar-\nment.\"\nSPANS HALF CONTINENT\nGeographically, the most extensive telephone book in the\nworld covers northeastern Canada, from Labrador to Baffin\nIsland.\nNELSON DAILY NIWS, TUES., DEC. 7, 1965\u20145\n\"Wives Who Wait\"\nOften Face Tragedy\nFORT CAMPBELL, Ky. (AP)\nThey call themselves \"the wives\nwho wait.\"\nFor some of them the waiting is over. The husbands they\nwaited for will never come\nback from the fighting in Viet\nNam. They have died in action\nwith the 101st U.S. Airborne Division, whose home base Ft.\nCampbell is.\nFor others the waiting goes\non. They meet over coffee from\ntime to time to help keep up\neach other's morale.\nAt a recent meeting, movies\nof the 101st Airborne in action,\npieced together from television\nfilm and newsreels, were shown\nto the wives who wait.\nSome members of the audience rushed out in tears when\nthey saw pictures of their husbands flash across the screen.\nSome of the husbands were still\nalive, some were dead. Three\nhad been killed in the preceding four days.\nAbout 8,000 of the U.S. troops\ncommitted in southeast Asia\nhave been dispatched from this\nsprawling base on the Tennessee-Kentucky border since July.\nMany of the wives remained\nhere because this is home to\nthe career soldiers and their\nfamilies.\nCOSISA\n~?0KA \"\nm,\nMORE!\nPRINTED PATTERN\nM377   sizes 10-18\nCounted* ^Alexander\n\\**S->'\nSUIT FOR ALL SEASONS\nLOOK, LOOK AGAIN \u2014 see how the graceful curve of the\ncollar is echoed by the band that emphasizes the Empire\nshape of the sheath. Flawless details like this are among the\ndelights one finds in the collections of celebrated Countess\nAlexander \u2014 AND in Printed Pattern M377. The sheath slips\nunder a princess-carved jacket that creates a tailored im-\nfiression for day, cruise wear, travel. Choose silk satin, faille,\ninen or fine wool.\nPrinted Pattern M377 is available in Misses' Sizes W, It,\n14, 16, 18. Size 16 dress requires 2V* yards 45-inch fabric;\njacket requires 2V\u00bb yards.\nSend ONE DOLLAR for Printed Pattern M377 to NDN Pattern Dept., 60 Front St. West, Toronto, Ont. Please print\nplainly YOUR NAME, ADDRESS with ZIP, STYLE NUMBER\nand SIZE.\nNEW! NEW! NEW FOR 1966! See 57, new, cream-of-the-\ncollections designer originals in our new 1966 Couture Pattern\nBook. Plus 50c free coupon \u2014 apply to any $1 pattern in Book.\nSend 50c now for new Couture Book.\nHenry VIII Gave Ermine Nightgown;\nBut Furs Date Back to Primitive Times\nNEW YORK (AP) - An ermine nightgown was a Christmas gift from Henry VIII to one\nof his w i v e s. In medieval\nFrance, the nobility wore colored furs.\nBut furs had been in fashion\ncenturies before Henry's lavish\ngift.\nIt's not known exactly when\nthey ceased to be utility garments and became luxury\nitems. Certainly primitive men\nand women wore them for\nwarmth in cold climates. First\nthey tied the skins around their\nbodies, Later they sewed fur-\nlined trousers with bronze needles.\nBy the time the Normans conquered England, furs had been\nelevated to fashion. Otter and\nmarten adorned silks and bro-\nHow To Hold\nFALSE TEETH\nMore Firmly in Place\nDo your false teeth annoy and embarrass by slipping, dropping or wobbling when you eat, laugh or talk?\nJust sprinkle a little FASTEETH on\nyour plates.This alkullne inon-actd)\npowder holds false teeth more firmly\nand more comfortably No gummy,\ngooey.pasty taste or feeling Does not\nsour, checks \"plate odor (denture\nbreath). Get FASTEETH.today \u25a0 at\ndrug counters everywhere.\ncades. By the middle ages furs\nbecame status symbols. Cardinals wore ermine as a symbol\nof purity. Later it became the\nfur of the nobility. Leopard\nskins were worn by early Greek\npriests.\nWhat is new in furs today?\nPerhaps the only thing is that\nnow there are so many varieties from so many countries.\nFor example, there are at\nleast seven colors in fox, including the cross, a long-haired\npelt somewhat similar to silver\nwith a reddish tinge. It's becoming quite popular. Lilly\nDache featured it in her fall collection for Wells-Treister, in a\nwrapped and tied cuddle coat.\nBEAVER FAVORED\nCanadian beaver became popular in Europe after Jacques\nCartier opened up the fur export trade in 1534. Persian\nlamb was particularly prominent in the mid-19th century.\nMiss Dache uses it in a bisque\ndyed coat and hood, double-\nbreasted and with notched lapels;\nThe great designer Charles\nWorth brought sealskin into\nhigh fashion as an innovation in\n1850. Previously it had been\nworn only by coachmen. In the\nearly  1900s red and blue fox\nmuffs and neckpieces were all\nthe rage. And just before the\nFirst World War, lingerie was\ntrimmed with fur, simply because it was scarce and expensive.\nFurs have even gone out of\nstyle. In 1812 the clinging muslin\ndresses were so new and fashionable that bulky furs would\nhave detracted from the effect.\nFurriers hadn't then discovered\nhow to pluck guard hairs and\nsheer the pelts to a flat beauty.\nThis winter there is great and\nrenewed interest in fur linings.\nFrom the 16th century on, capes\nand coats were mostly fur lined.\nThen Worth started the vogue\nfor fur on the outside of women's coats. Men continued to\nwear it inside right up to the\n20th century.\nFur-lined coats were reintroduced by Mainbocher in the\n1940s, went out of style again\nand have been staging a revival\nthe last couple of seasons.\nTWINNED WITH TWEED\nSome 10 years ago there was\na new luxury mood of fur on\ntweeds. Black and white fox appeared on tweed coats and\nslinky evening gowns. Fox is\nagain popular this winter on\nknee-showing  skirts  and  even\nsome  of  the  floor-length  formats.\nNew in the last 10,; years or\nso, too, is the fur suit, dress or\ntunic. New ability to handle fur\nlike fabric has brought this\nrather extravagant fashion, to\npublic note, if not popularity.\nThese suits and dresses aren't\nentirely practical for warm,\ncentrally-heated homes and restaurants, but they are elegant.\nAnd what woman, if she could\nafford this extra fur ensemble,\nwould mind a little discomfort\nto look so ultra-elegant? Leo\nRitter of New York has designed ultimate elegance in a\nRussian broadtail suit, the jacket banded in black fox.\nFor this winter the most important fashion news is the return of the jacket. It has never\nquite gone out of style in Canada where it has a definite\nplace for evening. Ritter believes firmly in the jacket as\na big new fashion influence. He\nnoted the smart effect of a non-\nchunky jacket above the new\ndirndl skirt.\nAlso new and practical is his\ncollarless fur coat with a button-on elbow-length cape which\ncan be a formal entity in itself.\nContrast furs are interesting\nhere,. as.seal on leopard.\nReduce Your Income Tax\nYou can cut taxes now on money you set aside\nfor your retirement years, if you meet either of\nthese two simple requirements:\n1 You are not a member of a Registered Pension Plan; '\n2 You are a member of a Registered Pension\nPlan but your contribution is less than the\nmaximum allowed for tax savings.\nOne other important thing. Your savings (in\nexcess of any contributions to your employer's\nRegistered Pension Plan) must be put into a\n\"Registered Savings Plan\"\u2014the kind of plan\nyou would buy from a life insurance company.\nAnd you must establish your Plan by March 1,\n1966, for relief on your 1965 income tax.\nIf you are not a member of a Registered Pension\nPlan, the maximum allowed for tax savings is\n20% of your earned income or $2,500, whichever is less. If you are a member, the maximum\nallowed for your combined savings under both\nthe Registered Pension Plan and Registered\nSavings Plan is 20% or $ 1,500, whichever is less.\nWhy is a Manufacturers Life Plan\nthe best way?\nBecause there's no guessing about the basic amount of money\nyou'll accumulate or the basic lifetime income it will purchase\nwhen you retire. You have these figures in writing in your contract when you buy.\nMoreover, you may purchase a participating contract and\nreceive dividends in addition to the basic guaranteed benefits.\nFor moreinformation call your Manufacturers Life representative today or mail in this coupon. There is no obligation.\n|     A. Zuk,\nThe Manufacturers Life Insurance Company\nKencourt Motel, Box 105, Nelson, B.C.\nPlease send me Information about Registered Savings.\nNAME  ...-\t\nADDRESS ,' \t\ncity prov. ;..: _\nmMfacTurers life\nINSURANCE COMPANY\nWHAT'S better than one\nbeautiful fur? Why, a beautiful fur with borders of another\nbeautiful fur!\nThis happy combination ia\nachieved by Frederica in a\ndoublebreasted, gently-shaped\njaguar coat bordered at the\nhem and collared in rich, dark\nranch mink.\nHints From\nHeloise\nDear Heloise:\nMany times, when Fve been a\nhouse guest, I've left an article\nor two in the home I visited.\nNaturally, this was an inconvenience to my hostess, as she\nhad to take the time to package\nand mail the forgotten item to\nme.\nNow, as I pack my bag, T list\neach item on a sheet of paper\nwhich I tape inside the lid of\nmy suitcase.\nWhen re-packing my bag, before returning home, I check off\neach item, as it goes back into\nthe bag, and I haven't left anything behind \u2014 so far!\nJune Ames\nThat's a great idea!\nIt would also apply when visiting hotels or motels.\nHeloise\n* * \u2022\nDear Heloise:\nWe keep our card table in the\nhall closet, and it was always\nflopping over or sliding to the\nfloor.\nMy husband bought a curtain\nrod, and fastened it diagonally to\nthe closet wall.\nWe just slip one corner of the\ncard table up under the curtain\nrod, push the table back against\nthe wall, and there it stays until\nwe want to use it.\nMrs. R. C.\n\u00ab \u2022  *\nDear Heloise:\nI enjoy reading your column,\nso it's about time I contributed\nsomething.\nWhen friends ask the name of\nmy exotic-looking house plants,\nit's fun to explain that they are\navocado trees raised from seeds.\nWhenever I splurge on an avocado pear, I save the large,\nstone-type seed, and plant it in\nat least an eight-inch pot of soil\nmixed with peat moss or leaf\nmold.\nThe only trick is to keep it\nvery moist. Covering the pot with\na sheet of plastic wrap promotes\na greenhouse atmosphere.\nPale Green Thumb\n* *   *\nThat's right up my alley! I\ngrow them, too.\nHeloise\n* * \u2022\nDear Heloise:\nI would like to share an easy\nway to get a perfect waistline\nwhen making a dress. This is especially good for short-waisted\npeople, when patterns don't fit\nexactly.\nAfter you have sewed the bodice together, put it on, and put\na belt around you. Then mark\non the bodice along the bottom\nof the belt.\nWhen the skirt has been sewed\non, along this mark the waistline seam will be under the belt.\nFits perfectly.\nMrs. Richard E. Morton.\na\n'\u2022essm.\n#\nMywithCanadiajiRicificAMirjes\nto one of these greatpkylands!\nST7ROPSS Only $83 down jets you there.*\nYour holiday will get off to a great start in Amsterdam. Youll be\ngteeted with a free \"day on the house\" \u2014 17 gifts ranging from\ndinner at the famous Vijff FHeghen Restaurant to a concert by the\nConcertgebouw Orchestra \u2014 courtesy of the Amsterdam Tourist\nAssociation. It's just one more reason to fly CPA \u2014 the only airline taking the Polar Route to Amsterdam, 1,000 miles shorter\nthan going via Eastern Canada.\nMEXICO Only S24 down Jets yon there.\nWhen snow's falling at home, you can be tolling on white sand\nbeaches, sailing and swimmingin Acapulco Bay, relaxing at fashionable Mexican resorts. If you'd Hke to head further south, remember\nMexico City is the most convenient gateway to South America.\nCPA jets non-stop from Mexico City to Lima, then to Santiago\nand Buenos Aires.\nHAWAII Only $37 down Jets you there.\nYou can fly to Hawaii any day you choose \u2014 there are 8 flights a\nweek from Vancouver starting mid-December. In a few hours,\nyou can be sailing, surfing, exploring these beautiful islands of everlasting summer.. Join in the fun and excitement that centres around\nWaikiki... or take a connecting flight to the uncrowded outer\nIslands. Why not start planning your winter holiday right now.\nDrop in at your nearest CPA office or mmr.attip\/\u00ab\u00bb\/\u00ab\u00bb> varmmr\n*li to 21 day jit icmmt.\nSEE YOUR TRAVEL AGENT ... and\nFLYGuioduui (fodficairlines -jgr\nMN\u00bbDI\u00bbNP\u00bbClllie-\u2122iNS\/tSUCK8\/\u00abHI\u00bb\/R\u00bbNES\/HOTelS\/mSC0MMUNIC*tl0NS\/W0Rl0'SM0arC0MPlEtEtSANSP0Br*TI0NStSres\nFor Reservations and Tickets\nVIPOND FOR TRAVEL\n1560 Bay Ave.,Trail\nJgSm\nAPPROVED  BV\nMTCRNATlONAl!\nAMI THANSPOR*\nASSOCIATION\nFor Information ond Reservation\nBRADLEY TRAVEL AGENCIES\nPhone 352-3212 \u2014 Nelson\n\u25a0MB\n NELSON    DAILY   NEWS,\nTUES.,  DEC.  7,   1965\u20146\nMarket\nTrends\nNEW YORK (AP)-The stock\nmarket reacted Monday to the\ncredit tightening move by the\nU.S. federal reserve board with\nshock and surprise that battered prices in a huge wave of\nearly selling, but the list came\nback to cut its losses greatly.\nHad the lirst-hour loss remained uncut, it would have\nbeen the steepest for any day\nsince Nov. 22, 1963, the dsy\nPresident Kennedy was assassinated. The final lots, though\nsharp, will never make history.\nVolume was swelled to the\nfourth largest in history, 11,480.-\n000 shares compared with 8.160,-\n000 Friday, and the largest\nsince May 29, 1962 when 14,750,-\n000 shares changed hands.\nTRAILED ACTIVITY\nThe new, 900-character-a-min-\nute ticker tape system fell 13\nminutes behind transactions at\nnoon.\nBlue chips and cats-and-dogi\nwere swept downward as big\nblocks of stocks were dumped\non the market.\nThe Dow Jones industrial\naverage declined 6.57 at 939.53,\ncoming back from its worst\nslide of 17.60 at the end of the\nfirst hour when volume reached\n3,940,000 shares, the largest for\nthe initial 60 minutes since the\nNew York exchange began recording hourly volume figures\nin 1933.\nThe Associated Press average\nof 60 stocks fell 2.6 to 350.7 with\nindustrials down 3.1, rails off\n2.0 and utilities down 1.4. This\nwas the sharpest loss since July\n20 when the AP average\ndropped 4.3.\nThe rise in Die discount rate\nto H from 4 per cent was not\nthe kind of drastic news that,\nin and of itself, usually causes\nsuch heavy waves of selling.\nThe Dow industrials sank only\n1.43 Nov. 23, 1964, and only 1.16\non July 16, 1963, when the discount rate was raised by V4 per\ncent.\nThe timing of the latest boost,\ncoming without warning after\nTreasury Secretary Henry H.\nH. Fowler and President Johnson himself had publicly stated\nthat there was no need for\nhigher interest rates, was what\nupset Wall Street and many\nforeign holders of American\nstocks, analysts said.\nThe 1,432 issues traded made\nit record market for breadth.\nOf these, 1,011 declined and 240\nadvanced. New highs for the\nyear totalled 29 and new lows\n73.\nAmong Canadian issues,\nWalker Gooderham gained Vi,\nAluminium Ltd. H. Canadian\nPacific lost IVs, International\nNickel \u00bb\/\u00ab, Granby Mining and\nHudson Bay mining Vi. Dome\nMines, at one point up IVi,\nended unchanged.\nPrices were mostly lower on\nthe American Exchange. Volume was 4,150,000 compared\nwith 3,860,000 Friday.\nAmong Canadian issues, Canadian Marconi and Molybdenite gained Vi. Scurry Rainbow\nOil lost Vi, Brazilian Traction,\nCanadian Javelin and Preston\nWhat stocks did:\nAdvances\nDeclines\nUnchanged\nTotal issues\nMon.  frl.\n240   594\n1,011 599\n181    262\n1,432 1,415\nTORONTO (CPi-With news\nthat the bank rate was Increased Sunday by the Bank of\nCanada, prices took a quiet\ntumble in moderate tradin?\nMonday at the Toronto Stock\nExchange.\nThe bank rate was raised Vi\nper cent to 4% per cenl to\nmatch a similar increase by\nthe United States Federal Reserve Board.\nBank stocks Immediately reflected weakness with Royal\ndropping 1 to 71, Imperial-Commerce Vi to 62*4, Nova Scotia\n*i to 70, Toronto-Dominion VS to\n60*4 while Montreal was unchanged at 60.\nIn other main list Issues. Algoma lost IVi to 39, CPR Hi\nto 67, Moore Corp., 1 to 76. Texaco 1 to 52Vi, Supertest m to\n22, B.A. Vi to 29Vi, Trans-Canada Pipeline and Westcoast Vs.\neach to 36% and 23. Quebec\nNatural V4 to 13's, Stelco IS to\n25V4 and Massey-Ferguson Vs to\n34.\nAmong base metals. Noranda\nslipped Hi to 50, Pine Point 2\nto 75. Cominco IVs to 483i, Inco\nand Hudson Bay 1 each to 97\nand 75 and Falconbridge Vi to\n107\"4.\nNABOB Savings\nTea Bags        70c\nGreen Lobel. 100s _, P\u00ab9*    \/   #\nInstant Coffee\u00bb- 99c\nCoffee *\"\u2022=\u25a0*\u2022\u25a0\u2022 \u2022 1 ib. tin 89c\nLemon Cheese \u00a3tW 49c\nFancy Assorted. Super-Valu. 15 oz.\nCREAM STYLE CORNET * $100\nINSTANT MILK s, 3\u00bb-* 79<\nCanned Vegetables\nWHOLE KERNEL CORN:\nDelmonte. 14 oz. \t\nASPARAGUS TIPS:\nDewkist. 12 oz\t\nCUT WAX BEANS:\nGreen Giant. Delmonte. 15 or.\nSLICED BEETS:\nDelmonte. Glass 15 or\t\n5 f0l $1.00\n3 for $LOO\n6,or $100\n4for$1.00\nItems You'll Need\nNon Food\nFeatures\nHair Spray\nSudden\nBeautv\nMONTREAL   (CP)\u2014All   tec- f\u00bb!||_uA    B|fl J.. Stainless steel;\ntions dropped sharply in moderate   trading   Monday   on   the\nMontreal   and   Canadian   stock Turrl\u00ab\nexchanges. lUms\nMetals showed the sharpest\nlosses. In the base section Noranda fell 1% to 50. Consolidated\nMining and Smelting and Hudson Bay mining each dropped\none point to 48Vi and 75 respectively.\nAmong primary metals Steel\nof Canada was off IVi at 25 and\nAlgoma 1% at 59.\n5's pkg.\nbottles\nToothpaste \u00a3!$%*\u00bb\nString Brooms Each\n89*\n49*\n690\n89*\n89*\n4(or$1.00\n5tor$1.00\n 99*\n59*\n3fnr$1.00\n$1.00\n39*\nfbr'\nK\nMiniature. Kraft. .    *\u00bb nkgs. *\u25a0**\nWAX PAPER REFILLS: i)      aQa\n106 ft.'roll    ^for \u25a0\u00bbTF\nCHEESE WHIZ: \u00a3Qw\nKraft. 16 oz :... vrr\nFRUIT COCKTAIL:\nDelmonte. 15 oz\t\nPINEAPPLE:\nGold Reef. 15 oz. \t\nPEANUT BUTTER:\nSuper-Valu. 48 oz\t\nLIQUID HONEY:\nKraft. 24 6z\t\nPINEAPPLE JUICE:\nNabob. 48 oz. .       \t\nTOMATO JUICE: O\nAylmer. 48 oz    \u2022 fbr'\nGRAPE JUICE:\nWelch. 24 oz\t\nKETCHUP: O      *1 fiO\nAylmer. 18 oz  * f6r*'.wu\nLUNCHEON MEAT: 9      qq^\nKam. 12 6z. ...     *f6'f \u00b0*T\nMARSHMALLOWS: \u00abj\n\"\u25a0'\"'m^BSyv^- \"\"^^\"W'SV'HP*\u2122\u2122'^j}A-\nFestive\nChip Dip ^'l 39*\nPotato Chips Kal!:. 49*\nSnackers jftfr. 39*\nMixed Nuts !!b,he11:59*\nMixed Nuts fit un 79*\nParty Mix t%T:e!: 69*\nSalted Peanuts Kers  2tor69*\nHazelnut Whirls 8$?,'f $1.49\nChocolates \u00bb;?>brted' $1.50\nChocolates ginVoxl si\u00b02r oz'. 79*\nChocolates Mffo $1.49\nrL^.Li..   Martha Lain*, OOw\nmOCOiaTeS   assorted; 14 6z \u00ab\u25bc?\nPeppermint Patties $j$ ^ 59*\nCandies & 3pkgs$1.00\nCandies rt^f^: 49*\nSelection\nCrabmeat6taul; 69*\nSalmon Nabob*'? oz 59*\nFlaked Tuna ?aobz!b;.3for89*\nSalmon TraRose;''? Oz 3for $1.00\nBroken Shrimps 5A5oza;   2 for 89*\nPolski Dills K: 49*\nYum Yumifot: 59*\nBaby Dills .It: 59*\nGherkins E\"*? medlura: 39*\nPiCkleS       Coronation; 32 oz 49*\nPickles    k\u00a3,\u00ab 59*\nPolski Ogorki   \u00a3ratiom39*\nRipe Olives fea: 15 M. 3 for 89*\nStuffed Olives TIT:39*\nill\n _\nSTOCK-UP\nif GOV'T. INSPECTED     * CHOICE GRAIN FED\nSMOKED COUNTRY STYLE\nPICNICS\nThe very finest grain-fed Pork available .\nGuaranteed tender and full of flavor.\nWhole or Shank Half . .\nPORK LOIN ROAST Gov> ,ni-\"'cd ch*icc 9,ai\u00b0 ***\u2022\nYou Can't Beat\nSUPER-VALU  j^S^T\nMEAT |\nend euti\nBONELESS VEAL ROLL %\nPORK BUTT ROAST\n't. Inspected,\nfresh   froited \t\nGov't. Inspected,\nchoice grain fed, Boston style .\nGov't, intpected,\nchoice,\ngroin fed \t\nCOUNTRY STYLE SPARE RIBS\nSLICED SIDE BACON ^SNy\u201e\nRoyal Prime Rib Roast      Blade & Short Rib Roast  %.eifeLBP$\nm g\\f            Gov't, inspected, _ fs.m\nsi      LQ\u00ab            Canada choice or                                      11      kQ\u00ab\n |Q   \\J \/               Canada good; blade bone removed |Q . J \/\nib 69c ^\nlb-59C Sole Fillets\nib.65e ib. 59\u00b0\nik 7SC Finnan Haddie\n*m. I ml IokbIm*\nib.89e lb-65c\nCranberry Sauce\n2*49\nFoil Wrap      _ u\n59\nOcean Spray\nWhole or\njelly; 15 oz. \u2014\nNELSON    DAILY    NEWS,\nTUES.,  DEC. 7,  1965\u20147\nAlcan\n18 in. pkg.\nGov't, inspected,\nCanada choice or Canada good\n79c\nMANDARIN ORANGES\nbox\nWlbc 'it'majtck\n) 5 ib- bulk 49c\nApples $1.69\n\u2022 ONIONS\n\u2022 TURNIPS\n\u2022 CARROTS\nCauliflower\nSnackery\nPIZZA\nPIE\nCello-wrap.\neach\nHIHHHWHHHHHHHI'MHHKHU'lHI't'Iit't'W'S'WI\nGLASSES\nGothic\nMcintosh. Handy-Pak box.\nnyuonT\nDistinctive\n3 pair $1.00    )      4 for 88\"\nVnh. %'makk\nKeiller Marmalades\nLEMON CHIP 9 o,.\nORANGE CHIP to,\nTHICK CHIP 9 o..\n4*1.00\nPotatoes\nLethbridge\nNetted Gems. \u201e\t\nGIFT WRAP\nChristmas; 12 roll pkg.\n$1.49\n50 lb- sack I49\nCHOCOLATE BARS '\nNeiison; Reg. 10c\n6 for 49c\nK>l>lll>llill\u00bbi><\u00bbl>l\u00bbili>i>l\u00bb\u00bbl\u00bbl>Hi\u00bbHH;\u00bb;Wi>i>l\u00bbHi>Hi>lWl>i>Hl\u00bb\u00bbl\u00bbi>i\u00bb*l\u00bb'J\nmk. %'Which,\nKOOTENAY GINGER   ALE Quarts\nPEPSI   COLA Quart,\nCOCA    COLA Quart.\nPlus Deposit\n5 * 1.00\nFroien.\neach 69'\nNabob\nMINCEMEAT\n44 oi. jar.\nPrices Effective\nToday, Wed., Thurs.,\nFriday and Saturday,\nDec. 7, 8, 9, 10, 11.\nAt All Super-Valu Stores in Nelson, Trail,\nRossland and Castlegar.\nWE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES\nSUPER-VALU\nBUY BETTER - SAVE MORE\nYour\nIndividual\nHoroscope\nLook In the section In which\nyour birthday comes and find\nwhat your outlook is, according\nto the stars.\nFor Wednesday, Dec, 8, 1965\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 20\n(Aries) \u2014 \"It never rains but it\npours!\" Yes, but how often do\nwe count the good days, long\nstretches of providence? How\nwonderful the little things!\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurusl\n\u2014 Look to this new day for all\nits best offerings, that bright\nside you normally seek (often\nfind). Think before you confide,\ntest sources, but don't overdo\nthat either.\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini)\n\u2014 You may be able to \"get\nthrough\" today where some will\nfumble in communication. So,\ngiven a responsibility, take it on\nin your efficient way (granted it\npasses muster).\nJUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer)\nA careful sprinkling of wit at the\nright time and place can greatly boost a good thing. You obtain\nsatisfaction comforting others:\nan important role today.\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Wo)\n\u2014 Developments that warrant\nnew interest; watch characteristics closely. Where you can\nprevent an incident becoming\noverdramatic and losing effect,\nDO.\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER\n23 (Virgo) \u2014 Again ,as throughout this month, situations may\nnot be just as you'd like, but\nwith your intelligence functioning full capacity, you will save\nenergies, time.\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER\n23 (Libra) \u2014 Scale-down to essentials; take a second look at\npropositions, events. Some have\nmore value than seen superficially.\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER\n22 (Scorpio) \u2014\"Gleaming\" prospects? Not on whole. But so\nmany small items, deeds, possibilities exist that you can make\neach phase of day better, garner\nfresh credits.\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER 21 (Sagittarius) \u2014 Heavy-\nhandedness can harm some of\nthe delicate vital things, and\nsince you are not usually thus,\ndo not be tempted to this carelessness now.\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY\n20 (Capricorn) \u2014 Meetings, picking up unfinished business (even\nothers' where you can truly\nhelp) and assorting facts from\nfiction are vital functions.\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY\nIS (Aquarius) \u2014 Don't let any\nso-so beginnings deceive. Keep\nthe right pace and do not let\ndown in the necessary spots;\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\n(Pisces) \u2014 If puzzled or stymied, go directly to reliable\nsources. Don't act on impulse-\nwhile you DO listen jointly to\nyour and others' intuition..\nYOU BORN TODAY: Smart,\nquick, ready to Identify with\nroutes going to top-notch goals.\nFrankness can be fine, carefully employed, but uncontrolled can cause pain, be detrimental. Once you pin down discretion and helpful restraint to\na regular part of your system,\nyou can move forward in grand\nstrides, and style. Wasting resources by needless plunges and\nNOT giving your many fine talents and traits room for expansion are DON'TS. Your versatility can bridge many gaps. Be\nsensible eating and in pastimes. Some unusual opportunities, if also changes, ahead.\nBirthdate: William C. Durant,\nearly auto industrialist; Horace,\nRoman poet; Christina, queen ot\nSweden.\nDIVIDENDS\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nBrooke   Bond   Canada   Ltd.,\n4.16-per-cent  pref.  68 f. cents,\nJan. 14, record Dee. 15.\nCanada Bread Co. Ltd., common 20 cents, A pref. 68% cents,\nJan. 3, record Dec. 15.\nCrestbrooke Timber Ltd.,\ncommon 15 cents, Dec. 31, record Dec. 15.\nInternational Minerals and\nChemical Corp., common 30\ncents (U.S.), Jan. 3, record Dec.\n15.\nMonarch Investments Ltd.,\ncommon $1, Dec. 31, record\nDec. 17.\nSupertest Petroleum Corp.,\ncommon 2V4 cents, ordinary 25\ncents, pref. $1.25, Jan. 15, record Dec. 15.\nGeneral Steel Wares Ltd.,\npref. $1.25, Feb. 1, record Jan.\n7.\nDome Mines Ltd., 20 cents\nplus 10 cents extra, Feb. 15,\nrecord Dec. 30.\nSigma Mines Ltd., 15 cents,\nJan. 28, record Dec. 28.\nA. 1. Freiman Ltd., common\none class A share of $1 par\nvalue for each 20 common\nshares held, Jan. 15. record\nDec. 31, redeemable Jan. 21:\nmm\n 8\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUES., DEC. 7, 1965\nENGARDE, TOUCHE\nFOILED AGAIN\nPANTHERS OUTPOINT TRAIL TEAM 31 -9\nFOILED AGAIN. Martin Condor, coach of Notre Dame Panthers, strikes\nquickly and accurately with a finishing stroke as he out-fenced Conrad Nay\nof Trail J. Lloyd Crowe High School team. The Panthers gained revenge for\ntheir defeat last spring with a convincing 31-9 victory Saturday at Mary Hall\ngymnasium.\nFencing, the art of armed\npersonal offence and defence,\noriginated as a form of deadly combat long before the\nChristian era.\nModern fencers the world\nover frown on this vestige of\nthe past, however, and it is\nseldom that a principal in a\nmodern duel is an active participant in the sport.\nNotre Dame Panthers are\nmembers of the modern fencers society. Saturday, they\noutpointed Trail J. Lloyd Crowe\nHigh School for a run-away\n31-9 fencing victory at Mary\nHall gymnasium.\nThe Panthers, sporting new\nequipment, gained some measure of revenge for the defeat\nthey suffered at the hands of\nthe visitors last spring.\nJay Marosoff, Gerry Whitley and Coach Martin Condor\npointed the way, with seven\npoints each.  Steve  Rey and\nFrank Goddard each claimed\nsix points.\nTrail's Gary Monteith, Conrad Nay and Keith Williamson\neach won one match.\nGlenn Montieth, Gary's brother, foiled Condor and Marosoff in their bids to increase\ntheir totals, as he forced them\nto a draw. Williamson and\nNDU's Whitley also duelled to\na draw.\nBoth teams displayed skill\nand agility, evident in the three\ndraws and tight scores.\nThe foil, conventional weapon, has a flexible, rectangular\nblade and an overall length of\nabout 43 inches. It has a maximum weight of 17 ounces.\nThe rules provide that five\nvalid \"touches\" constitute a\nwin. The contestant who is attacked must defend himself\n(parry) before assuming the\noffensive role (riposte).\nEach five-point win constitutes two team points with a\nfive-minute time limit. If the\ncontest exceeds the five-minute\nlimit, a draw is declared and\neach team receives one point.\nThe following are the results\nof Saturday afternoon's matches:\nRey 5, Monteith 3; Condor 5,\nNay 3; Marosoff 2, Nay 5;\nGoddard 5, Williamson 4.\nCondor 5, Montieth 1; Marosoff 2, Nay 5; Goddard 5, Montieth 1; Whitley 4, Williamson\n4 (draw).\nMarsoff 5, Montieth 2; Goddard 5, Nay 2; Whitley 5, Montieth 2; Rey 3, Wiliamson 5;\nGoddard 1, Gary Montieth 5.\nWhitley 5, Nay 2; Rey 5,\nGlenn Montieth 0; Condor 5,\nWilliamson 4; Whitley 5, Gary\nMontieth 0; Rey 5, Nay 2; Condor 3, Glenn Montieth 3\n(draw); Marosoff 5, Williamson 3.\n t,.,l ,\u25a0\nNDU PANTHERS. Members of Notre Dame University fencing team,\nfrom left, Gerry Whitley, Frank Goddard, Jay Marasoff and Steve Rey\nflank seated coach Martin Condor. The Panthers upset Trail J. Lloyd Crowe\n31-9 Saturday.\nRangers Fire Red Sullivan;\nFrancis Assumes Dual Role\nNEW YORK (AP) -George | League New York Rangers Mon-\n(Red) Sullivan was fired as day and was replaced by gen-\ncoach of the National Hockey I eral manager Emile Francis.\nGAME NO. 5\nJUNIOR HOCKEY\nTRAIL JUNIOR SMOKEATERS\nVs.\nNELSON JUNIOR MAPLE LEAFS\nNelson Civic Centre Arena\nWED., DEC. 8-8 P.M.\nAdmission:\nAdults 50c Students 35c Children 25c\nSullivan will remain with the\nteam as co-ordinator of player\npersonnel and scouting.\nA former centre, the fiery\nSullivan, replaced Muz Patrick\nas Ranger coach on Dec. 28,\n1962.\nThe Rangers finished fifth in\neach of his three full seasons\nat the helm. They are currently\nI in fifth place with five victories,\nfive ties and 10 defeats.\nHOPE TO MAKE PLAYOFFS\nFrancis, a former goalie with\nthe Rangers and Chicago Black\nHawks, will serve in the dual\ncapacity of coach and general\nmanager.\n\"We're making the change\nwith the hope that we can get\nthe club moving along toward\nmaking the Stanley Cup playoffs,\" Francis said. \"We've had\na bad streak recently but feel\nthe club can snap out of it.\"\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII'I|IIIIIIIIIIIII\u00bbIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nSAWYER, BERGERSON\nJUNIOR 'BIRD' CHAMPS\nBill Latremouille and Roger\nCollingson 15-1 and 15-3.\nSteve Sawyer and Smith\njoined forces to defeat the team\nof Bruce Leeming and Del\nBergy 15-3 and 15-1 to win the\nunder 13 division of Boys'\nDoubles.\nThe Girls' Doubles under 15\nwent to Shannon Hawes and\nJudy Bergerson when they\ncame back to beat Sue Ferguson and Carol Moore 14-17,\n15-7 and 15-5.\nBrenda Lewis and Marilyn\nRoziskin combined to win the\nunder 13 doubles with 16-17,\n15-9 and 15-6 victories over\nMargaret Richardson and Joan\nMydansky.\nIn the Mixed Matches under\n15, Sue Ferguson and Gary\nSawyer teamed up to edge\nDavid Keenhotes and Shannon\nHawes 15-4, 12-15 and 15-7.\nMargaret Richardson and\nGraham Smith defeated Marilyn Roziskin and Garv Sawyer\n15-12 and 15-8 to win the under\n13 Mixed Doubles.\n'II'I'!'I'-MIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIM1.'!IMMIII|III|I'IIIIIIIMIIIIIIIMIMIIII\nAlmetov Claims\nCzechs Stronger\nSteve Sawyer, Judy Bergerson and Chris Kristofferson\ntook top single honors in Nelson Badminton Club's inter-\nclub Junior tournament held on\nSaturday.\nWith 64 contestants taking\npart, Kristofferson defeated\nLloyd Dowkes 15-3 and 15-11 to\nwin the Boys' Singles in the\nunder 17 division.\nGraham Smith was Sawyer's\nvictim by scores of 15-6 and\n15-4 in the under 15 division.\nMiss Bergerson won the\nGirls' under 15 division when\nshe defeated Carol Moore 11-5\nand 11-1.\nIn Boys' under 13 group\nSawyer also took top prize with\n15-7 and 15-9 wins again over\nSmith.\nShannon Hawes overcame\nMargaret Richardson 11-7 and\n11-1 to win the Girls' division\nunder 13 years of age.\nIn the Boys' Doubles, under\n15, Gary Sawyer teamed up\nwith David Keenhotes to defeat\nWHO ELSE?\nWalt Peacosh Picks Up Six Points\nTo Stretch WIHL Scoring Race Lead\nMELVILLE, Sask. (CP)-A\nRussian hockey coach and a\nRussian player have different\nopinions as to whether Canada\nor Czechoslovakia poses the\nmore serious threat to the Soviet Union's chances of retaining the world's amateur hockey\nchampionship.\nStar forward Alexanaer Alme-\nWITH STANE\nAND BESOM\nThe following are the results\nof the draws played at the Nelson Curling Club Monday night:\nA. Ronmark 10, R. W. Koehle 6\nJ. Leeming 14, J. Harvey 8\nD. Winlaw 9, W. Waite 8\nE. Leeming 6, M. Gee 11\nA. Reid 8, J. Thorn 6\nF. Koehle 12, L. Magiio 9.\ntov of the Soviet team picks the\nCzechs, second-place finishers\nbehind the Russians in the 1965\nworld tournament in Finland.\nCoach Anatoli Tarasov says\nCanada \"still remains as strong\na threat as ever.\"\nFirst step in settling the problem will be made Friday night\nin London, Ont., when the No. 1\nSoviet team plays Canada's national team in the first of six\nmeetings in the next three\nweeks.\nThe Russian appraisals of\ntheir opponents were released\nMonday by Gordon W. Juckes,\nsecretary-manager of the Canadian Amateur Hockey League,\nwho picked them from a Soviet\npress release.\nThe 1966 world tournament\nwill be in Ljubljana, Yugoslavia.\nGuess who's leading the Western International Hockey League\nscoring race? Walt Peacosh \u2014\nwho else.\nPeacosh picked up six points\nover the weekend \u2014 four\nand two assists \u2014 as Kimberley\nDynamiters scored wins over\nSpokane Jets and Rossland Warriors to bring his total to 52\npoints.\nHe is the WIHL's most prolific\ngoal-scorer with 20 in 21 games\nand has assisted on 32 others.\nRossland's Billy Martin, who\nhas been setting as torrid a goal-\nscoring pace as Peacosh, ranks\nsecond with 43 points on 19 goals\nand 24 assists.\nMarcel Mongrain and Dick\nVincent and Ken McTeer, the\nother two-thirds of the Dynamiters revamped \"Nitro Line\" are\ntied for third place honors with\n33 points apiece.\nVincent, fresh off the injured\nlist, assisted on Peacosh's three\ngoals  Friday against Spokane.\nGail  Holden  of the Maple\nLeafs cracked (he WIHL Big\nSeven Saturday when he collected Ms second hat-trick in a\nweek against Cranbrook Royals.\nHolden has 14 goals and 17\nassists for 31 points, the same\nas Warrior forward Ed Legare.\nLegare has 12 goals and 19\nassists in 18 games with the\nfourth-place Warriors while Holden has amassed his total in 21\ngames with the Leafs.\nBob   Wardle   holds   the   best\ngoals-against-average at 3:53 in\n17 games and owns two of the\nDynamiters three shutouts.\nAlternate goaltender Bill Sides,\nBusiness\nGirls Curling\nThe following are the results\nof the draws played in Business\nGirls Curling competition Monday at the Nelson Curling Club:\nKuntz 8, Bryson 3\nMarshall 12, Olsen 6\nPrice 8, Mores 7\nRoth 10, Morris 8\nstill out of commission for the\nDynamiters and Dave Cox of the\nJets also have one shutout to\ntheir credit.\nBarry Brown, drafted to Trail\nSmoke Eaters two weeks ago,\nhas allowed 64 goals in 18 games\nfor an average of 3.55,\nSpokane's Cox, undisputed\nleader in the goaltending department last month, was tagged for\n11 goals in two games over the\nweekend.\nKEN McTEER\nHis  average  now  stands  at\n3.58.\nKimberley and Nelson are\nstill locked in a first-place tie\nas the season nears the halfway mark, but Spokane Jets,\ntwo points back, still have two\ngames in hand.\nWIHL BIG\nSEVEN\nGP G A Pt\nWalt Peacosh (K) 21 20 32 52\nBilly Martin (R) 20 19 24 43\nMarcel Mongrain (K) 21 17 16 33\nDick Vincent (K) 17 13 20 33\nKen McTeer (K) 19 16 17 33\nGail Holden (N) 21 14 17 31\nEd Legare   (K)        18 12 19 31\n\u2022Specialists Anyone-\nafter a taste of Walker's Special Old\nYou're a Specialist in good taste when you\nchoose Walker's Special Old. Good taste,\ngood looks, and fine quality have made it\nCanada's popular choice in whisky. Next\ntime \u2014make it a point to buy Walker's\nSpecial Old.\nHIRAM WALKER & SONS LIMITED\nwlLKEaVILLC CA\u00ab*0\u00bb IN THE SPARKLING DECANTER\nOUTIUEM OF FINE WHISKIIS \u00bb0\u00ab OVS\u00ab IOO TEAM AND   IN   12-OUNCE   FLASK\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by Ihe liquor Control Bawd or by the Government of British Common\nBROOMBAIX CHAMPIONS. Slightly exhausted,\nmembers of RCMP broomball team proudly display\ntheir West Kootenay Broomball Trophy. From left,\nfront row, B. Lord, L. Horwood, M. Grierson; back row,\nN. Fuchs, K. Hollis, Bud Johnson, G. R. Kilgore, Roy\nPlitz and J. Farrell. The RCMP defeated City Police\n4-1 Sunday night for the title.\nKIMBERLEY DYNAMITERS\nGP  G A Pts\n21  20 32  52\n21   17 16\n17  13 20  33\n19   16 17  33\n20\nPeacosh\nMongrain\nVincent\nMcTeer '\nKing\nSouter\nSteenson\nTouzin\nManchester\nLilley\nWildeman\nSinclair\nNash\nPassmore\nBeattie\nWilley\nGOALTENDERS\n21\n21\n19\n20\n8\n16\n21\n14\n7\n9   19 28\n12   14 26\n5   18 23\n16 21\n10 13\n5\n3\n4 8\n5 6\n5 6\n7 3\n1 8\n1 7\n1 4\nBob Wardle\nBill Sides\nGP GA SO Avg\n17 60 2 3.53\n4   13   1  3.25\nSPOKANE JETS\nGP  F\nBahr\nHodges\nGoodwin\nTurlik\nBodman\nMoro\nCameron\nNadeau\nLaVallee\nCollins\nChow\nKilburn\nMeGowan\nScherza\nKenny\nGould\nBoychuk\nGOALTENDER\n19 13\n16 6\n19 7\n19 9\n19 9\n14 8\n18 5\n11 3\n12 7\n19 3\n14 6\n10 2\n19 2\n15 3\n11 1\n9 0\n4 0\nA Pts\n16 29\n17 23\n13 20\n9 18\n8 17\n8 16\n8 13\n8 11\n6 13\n8 11\n4 7\n5 6\n1 1\n0 0\nCox\nROSSLAND\nMartin\nLegare\nGodfrey\nThompson\nAndrews\nReid\nWyatt\nPicco\nJones\nServatius\nStolz\nMcNutt\nOakland\nCrellin\nPaloone\nHamilton\nGOALTENDERS\nGP GA SO Avg\n19  68   1  3.58\nWARRIORS\nGP F A Pts\n20 19 24 43\n18 12 19 31\n15    8\n4\n7\n7\n18\n19 27\n19 23\n9 16\n16\n20\n16\n9\n13\n16\n15\n10 11\nHolmes\nMartin\nGP GA SO Avg\n10 42 0 4.20\n10  55  0  5.50 Letcher\nCRANBROOK ROYALS\nHuston\nMaher\nGarringer\nBeaton\nGoss\nKilback\nRoberge\nPacula\nHryciuk\nBedard\nGibson\nRinaldi\nDrobot\nNuyens\nLehner\nGOALTENDERS\nGP F\n20 13\n19 12\n16 11\n17 8\n20 6\n16\n20\n16\n10\n20\n20\n20\n12\n11\n4\nA Ptj\n13 26\n13 25\n12 23\n10 18\n9 15\n9 13\n6 10\n5 8\n4 5\n4 5\n2 3\n1 2\n1 1\n0 0\nMcKay\nHeadley\nGP GA SO Avg\n6 42 0 7.00\n14   74  0  5.28\nTRAIL SMOKE EATERS\nSmith\nRusnell\nMclntyre\nVan Brunt\nPenner\nLenardon\nFerguson\nDuthie\nS. Gallamore\nWhite\nGoodwin\nKoshey\nB. Gallamore\nPruden\nFerro\nUnger\nJohnston\n16 9 16 25\n19 8 15 23\n16 8 14 22\n19 6 12 18\n16 7 10 17\n14 4 9 13\n15 5 6 11\n14 6 3 9\n19 3 5 8\n17 6 17\n16    3    3\n19\n13\n13\n3    5\n2    4\nGOALTENDERS\nRichardson\nBrown\nGP GA SO Avg\n17 104  0  8.11\n18 64  0 3.55\nNELSON MAPLE LEAFS\nHolden\nHornby\nOwens\nLaughton\nHolmes\nChwachka\nMowery\nRussill\nHooker\nRuzicka\nBorgeson\nCalles\nArnett\nGrace\nSteinke\nChernenko\nGOALTENDER\nGP G\n21 14\n21 13\n16   13\n20 12\n21 7\n19 8\n21 8\n19\n21\n21\n20\n15\n17\n4\n3\n1\n7\n5\n1\n9 2\n16 0\n12    0\nA Pts\n17 31\n14 27\n14 27\n12 24\n13 20\n11 19\n10 18\n13 17\n9 12\n10 11\n4 11\n5 10\n4    4\n1    1\nGP GA SO Avg\n2    6  0  3.00\n\\yeatlw\nmttirw\nWHEN IT IS\nIMPORTANT TO\nBE CORRECT . . .\nWhen it comes to\ninvitaions, announcements and \/\nother social stationery, come to us for\ncounsel that reflects\nour up-to-date knowledge of what is\nRIGHT.\nBUSINESS CARDS   \u2022   OFFICE FORMS\nBROCHURES   \u2022   COMPLETE FACILITIES\nATTRACTIVE PRICES\nNelson Daily News\nPrintinq Dept.\nPhone 352-3552\n NELSON DAILY NSV\/3, TUSS., DEC. 7, I9SS\u20149\nHELP  WANTED\nTRAINING OPPORTUNITY\nStudent Psychiatric Nurses\nMENTAL HEALTH SERVICES\nB.C Civil Service\nA two-year training program is offered in Psychiatric\nNursing which prepares its graduates for a career in this\nbranch of the government service. Graduates are eligible for\nlicensure as Psychiatric Nurses in British Columbia. The program offers academic courses in Science and Nursing subjects\nand Clinical practice in Psychiatric, Mental Retardation,\nGeriatric and Medical-Surgical nursing.\nADMISSION REQUIREMENTS\nAcademic:   minimum of Grade X with preference given\nto applicants with further education and good\ngrades.\nAge: 18 years.\nHealth:       evidence Of physical and emotional health.\nPersonality: evidence   of   social   maturity   and   ethical\nstandards.\nPERSONNEL POLICIES\nEarnings:     a substantial  monthly  stipend  is paid  In\nreturn for the performance of nursing duties:\nWomen Men\nFirst six months       $118 $155\nSecond six months      $168 $205\nSecond year      $203 $240\nTwo weeks vacation with pay; accommodation and meals\nat approximately $30 per month; uniforms and laundry provided.\nEntrance Dates:  Spring:  February 1966\nFall:       September 1966\nInterested candidates are advised to make formal application 3-6 months prior to the desired entrance date.\nFor further information and application forms apply IMMEDIATELY to the Department of Nursing Education, Education Centre, ESSONDALE, B.C.\n-281-290\nBIRTHS\nOTTEWELL\u2014To Mr. and Mrs.\nGregory Ottewell, R.R. 1, Nelson, at Kootenay Lake General\nHospital, Dec. 4, a son,\t\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nCARPETING  AND   UPHOLS-\ntery professionally cleaned in\nyour home. Free advice on all\ncarpet problems. Ph. 352-5909.\n-281-2\nCARPENTER   WANTS   WORK\nby hour, contract. Ph. 359-7704.\n\u2014281-286\nHELP WANTED\u2014MALE\nTHE CORPORATION OF THE\nCITY OF NELSON\nHELP WANTED - MALE\nApplications will be received\nby the undersigned for the position of Building, Plumbing and\nLicense Inspector'until Wednesday, December 15th, at 5 P.M.\nDUTIES: To administer all\nZoning, Building, Plumbing and\nSign regulations and related Bylaws; to receive, process applications for new Trade License\nand to generally administer the\nLicense By-law; other duties related thereto as assigned.\nApply stating age, marital status,  experience,  qualifications,\nreferences and salary required.\nC. W. R. HARPER,\nCity Administrator\nCity Hall, Nelson, B.C.\n-285-286\n$1000 IN A MONTH IS NOT TOO\nmuch for the man we want in\nthe Nelson area. Over 40. Take\nshort auto trips. Write B. B.\nDickerson, Pres., Southwestern Petroleum Corp., 534 N.\nMain St. Ft. Worth 1 Texas.\n\u2014284-289\nJANITOR WORK WANTED UP\nto four hours evenings. Box\n251, Nelson Dally News.\n-285-290\nTICKET TAKER, DOORMAN-\nApply Civic Theatre evenings.\n-280-tfn\nHELP WANTED\nAPPLICATIONS WANTED FOR\nNelson Daily News carrier\nboys, Cranbrook area. Apply\nCirculation Department.\n-268-tfn\nFOR SALE\nMISCELLANEOUS\nSUPER FLOOR HEAT - IF\nheating your home with a\ncommon oil heater, it will pay\nyou dividends to see our famous King line of Siegler oil\nheaters which heat floors and\nnot ceilings. This unit will pay\nfor itself with the money you\nsave on the oil. Phone 3362-7221\n\u2014 Valley Comfort Ltd., Apple-\ndale. -239-tfn\nAUTOMOTIVE,   BICYCLES\nMOTORCYCLES\nWRECKING '57 METEOR, '57\nFord Station Wagon, '56 and\n'57 Buicks, '56 Monarch, '60\nI.H.C. Carryall; '58 Pontiac,\n'56 Chev., '56 A-50, '55 and '56\nDodges; good motors '56\nBuick, '51, '52, '54, '56 and '61\nV8 Chev., 272 and 292 Ford,\n'54 Zephyr. Cottonwood Wrecking Service, Phone 352-5815.\n-239-tfn\nDON'T DESPAIR - WITH RE-\npairs. Replace your car engine\nwith an Allstate rebuilt engine\n4000-mile guarantee. As low as\n$10 per month. 1946-52 rebuilt\nengines to fit Chevrolet, only\n$195 and your old block. Call\nSimpsons-Sears. Phone 352-5531\n\u2014 Nelson. \u2014119-tfn\nRED CONVERTIBLE WITH RE-\nmovable hardtop. '61 Sports\nCaravelle. 4-speed stick shift.\nIndependent rear suspension, 4\nMichelin tires and snow tires.\nLow mileage. Phone 352-3732.\n-285-tfn\n1965 ACADIAN BEAUMONT 2-\ndoor hardtop. V8, std. trans.,\n7000 miles. Price, $3000. Phone\nFruitvale, 367-9617.    \u2014285-290\n1960 BORGWARD, BEAUTIFUL\ncondition, 33,000 miles. Particulars ph. 352-9025, Bryant La-\nboret. \u2014280-285\n1962 MERCURY METEOR, 4\nDR., V-8, standard transmission. Excellent condition. Ph.\n352-2983. -283-288\n1956 CUSTOM ROYAL, 2-DR.\nH.T., V-8, Auto, P.S., Radio\nand heater. Good rubber, new\npaint. Ph. 352-5274.       -284-289\nF-100 LONG WHEELBASE\nFord pickup. Under warranty.\nPhone 385-6609. \u2014282-288\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS.   ETC.   FOR   SALE\nLARGE WATERFRONT LOTS\nat Procter, Kootenay Lake\narm. Reasonable prices. 10%\ndown, balance small monthly\npayments, including 6%  int.\n- William Kalyniuk Agencies,\nNelson. Phone 352-2425.\n-269-tfn\nFORCED SALE. COMFORT-\nable log house overlooking the\nColumbia River at Robson. \u2014\nLarge lot, 110'xlBO', Full price\n$7500. Easy terms and small\ndown payment. Phone Castlegar, 365-7090. -280-285\nBACK BUILDING LOT, fl-MILE\nN.S., 100' x 200'. F.P. only\n$750. Terms if desired. Five\nlots, View and Chatham Sts.,\n$3950. William Kalynuik Agencies, Phone 352-2425. -237-tfn\nQUALITY MOTEL; ROOM FOR\nexpansion. Reasonable price\nand terms. K.M.L.S. Wm\nKalyniuk Agencies. - Phone\n352-2425. -206-tfn\nOWNER LEAVING TOWN -\nMust sell 11-unlt apartment in\nRossland. Phone 362-7284.\n-285-tfn\nFOR SALE OR RENT, MOSTLY\nnew house in Kinnaird, 2 bedrooms; basement suite. Phone\n364-2304. -280-tfn\nPROPERTY AT APPLEDALE.\nMrs. H. Nixon, South Slocan.\n-285-290\nCHOICE PROPERTY ON NEL-\nson Ave. 90'xl20'. Ph'. 352-6737.\n-269-tfn\nFOR SALE    -WILLYS JEEP.\nPh.  352-5005. \u2014284-289\n21\" PHILCO TV - RADIO - REC-\nord player console; mahogany\ncabinet. Best offer over $125.\nFord flathead V8, good condition; best offer. Box 392, Nelson, or Phone 352-5458 after 4.\n-285-287\nPUT YOUR ORDER IN NOW\n. . . Thick, bushy, fir Christmas trees , , , $1.50 - $2.50\non size, and shape,, delivered.\nPh. 352-2365 or write Box 244,\nNelson Daily News.   \u2014274-288\nSIDES OF GRAIN-FED BEEF,\n49c, cut and wrapped; Sides of\npork, 43c; sides of posk, cut\nand wrapped, 47c, Newdan\nFarm. Creston. Pbone 356-9901\nor 356-9769. -171-tfn\n59 BUICK ELEC, 4-D, H.T.,\nRadio, all power and extras,\nwinterized, snow tires. B. and\nD. valve seat reseater and\nrem. 16-g. shotgun. Like new.\nPhone 352-7148. -284-7\nTHERMOSTAT CONTROLLED\nforced air coal and wood or\nsawdust furnace, in good cond.\nCheap, $75.00. John Poznikoff\nWinlaw, Ph. 226-7547.    -\n-283-288\nFUR THIS BEST ift USED\nautomatic washers, dryers, re-\nfrigerators, television, etc. contact Nelson Electric Co. Ltd.,\n574 Baker St., Nelson, B.C.\n-27-tfn\nPHIL1SHAVE CORDLESS. SIX\nmos. old; Vt h.p. motor; TV\nset, needs new tubes. What offers? Ph. 352-5196 after 5 p.m.\n-285-287\nFOR SALE OR TRADE, POLA-\nroid 900 camera and case or\nwill trade for 2 good rifles.\nApply Box 249, Nelson News.\n-281-293\nAPPLICATIONS WANTED FOR\nNelson Dally News carrier\nboys, Creston area. Apply Circulation Department. \u2014268-tfn\nHELP WANTED\u2014FEMALE\nWANTED IMMEDIATELY BY\nbranch office of large company\n\u2014 Clerk for general office\nduties including bookkeeping\nmachine, typing minimum 70\nwords per minute, invoicing,\netc. Salary according to qualifications. Fringe benefits included. Phone 352-3161.\n\u2014285-290\nTWO PRACTICAL NURSES\nwanted for 37 bed hospital. Salary effective January 1966,\n$234.00 to $270.00. Apply Mrs.\nA. Ellis, Director of Nursing,\nNicola Valley General Hospital, Box 129, Merritt, B.C.\n-282-288\nWANTED\nMISCELLANEOUS\nIF THE PAYMENTS ON THE\nhouse you sold do not come in\nfast enough to meet your\nheeds, we could buy the balance of the contract ironi you.\nPlease give details. Post Office\nBox 374, Trail, B C.    -l7Mfn\n8PUI CASH FUR USED FUKNI\nture. antiques, coins, old gold,\nguns and jewels Home Furni\nture Exchange Ph 352-6531\n413 Hall St    Nelson   BC\n\u2022HB M\nCLEAN COTTON RAGS. NOT\nless than 18 Inches square.\nNelson Daily News.     -270-tfn\nPLASTIC PIPE - LOWEST\nPrices. Mac's Welding and\nEquipment Co. Ltd., 514 Railway Street, Nelson, B.C.\n-149-tfn\nUSED STEEL WOOD AND\ncoal forced air furnace. Take\naway for $50. Phone 352-2678.\n: \u2014285-286\nMACHINERY\nGROUSER BARS\nand\nWELDON ICE LUGS\nHeavy duty serated,\ngrader cutting edges.\nMAC'S WELDING\n& EQUIPMENT CO.\n514 Railway SL    Ph. 952-5301\n-280-285\nCOLD WEATHER AHEAD! -\nGet your starting fluid early.\nGood supply in stock at\nKOOTENAY\nINDUSTRIAL SUPPLIES LTD.\nZenith 6333    Telephone 352-3328\nNelson, B.C.\n,    -283-h\nNEW MILLER WELDERS\n225 Amp. A.C. (P.F.C.)\nOnly 38.5 Amp Draw, at 230 V\nSTEVENSON\nMACHINERY LTD.\nPhone 352-3561\n-285-285\nMAKE YOUR OWN WELDING\ncart or other needs for semi-\npneumatic wheels. In stock at\nKOOTENAY INDUSTRIAL\nSUPPLIES LTD.\nFt. of Cedar St. Nelson\n-284-h\nLET US HELP YOU SELL\nyour property. R.H.C. Realty,\nPhone 352-7252. -270-295\n60'xllO' CORNER LOT IN UP-\nper Fairview. Phone 852-5915.\n-281-286\n3-B.R. STUCCO HOUSE - OIL\nheat; hardwood floors. Phone\n352-3856. -285-287\nRENTALS\nFOR RENT-(l) HOME, MOD-\nem, 2 B.R.s; adults, no pets,\n$90; (2) Apartment, 2 B.R.s,\nground floor; adults, no pets,\n$90; (3) Small house, 3 B.R.s,\nRosemont, $50. \u2014 Lambert\nRealty Ltd., Phone 352-3944 or\n352-2918. -281-286\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES\nFOR ARTIFICIAL BREEDING\ndairy and beet cattle, phone\n352-6874, Nelson and District\nA. 1. Centre. 709 Third St., Nelson. J. De Jong, Technician.\n-tfn\nREADY TO LAY PULLETS,\n$2.50; Leghorn layers, 1 year\nold, $1.25. North Shore Poultry\nFarm, Phone 352-3808. -285-tfn\n3% YEAR OLD HEREFORD\nbull. Newdan Farms, Creston.\nPhone 356-9901. -269-tfn\nCOW FOR  SALE,  2nd  CALF,\nGuernsey, Ph. 226-7590.\n-284-289\nPETS,   CANARIES,   BEES\nREGISTERED TOY POODLE\npups, white. Granddaughters\nof Champion Snowstorm of\nSassafras. Deep dark miniature apricots, generations of\ncolor breeding. Hold till Christmas. Boarding, grooming and\nclipping. Four Star Regd. Kennels, Fruitvale, B.C. Ph. 387-\n7396. -280-304\n3 MALE MINIATURE BLACK\npoodles, available for Christmas delivery. Payments can\nbe arranged. Phone 352-5235. i\n-280-28JT\nMALE GERMAN SHEPHERD,\n14 mo. old, good home. Ph. 352-\n7585. -284-289\nWANTED-GOOD HOME FOR 6\nweeks old kitten, Ph. 352-7091..,\n\u2014285-290!\nMORTGAGES\nMARIANNE APTS., SINGLE,\ndouble, triple bedroom suites,\nfurnished or unfurnished; immediate occupancy. Phone 352-\n3217 or 352-6921. \u2014276-tfn\nWHY TAKE LESS?\nii\nWe Pay\nFACE VALUE\nfor I\nMORTGAGES AND I\nAGREEMENTS FOR SALEj]\nwith    '\u25a0   :\u2022'\u25a0-.'\u25a0 j\nNO DISCOUNTING 9\nWrite full details in first I\nreply to i\nP.O. BOX 218, !\nVANCOUVER 1, i.C. .\n\u2014280-tfn\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nroom. Heat, water and light\nsupplied. V. block off Faker.\nPhone 352-8912 or 352-3208.\n-283-tfn\n3-BEDROOM HOME FOR RENT\n\u2014 approximately 7 miles from\nCastlegar. Phone 359-7358.\n-279-tfn\nSINGLE  ROOM,  BATH  AND\nkitchen, $65, unfurnished. \u2014\nFleming Apts., Phone 352-3815.\n-279-tfn\nCENTRALLY LOCATED 2\nbdrm. bungalow, $70 per mo.\nAvail. Dec. 1. Ph. 352-5030, after 6 p.m. \u2014274-tfn\n3 BEDROOM HOUSE FOR\nrent. Gas range provided.\nAvailable Dec. 15, phone 352-\n3216. -283-285\nVALLEY AUTOMOTIVE LTD.\nMassey-Ferguson, New Holland new and used farm equipment. Parts, sales and service.\nPhone 356-2254, Creston, B.C.\n-223-tfn\nCASTORS FOR ALL APPLICA-\ntions. Drop In and see our\nselection\nKOOTENAY INDUSTRIAL\nSUPPLIES LTD.\nFt. of Cedar St.      Nelson, B.C.\n-284-h\nLARGE AUTOMATIC OIL\nheater with fan, other accessories. Good cond. Phone 227-\n9676. \u2014282-287\nI PR. SKIS, 5\" 8\", SAFETY\nharness poles, boots size 7.\nPhone McKay, 352-2831.\n-281-tfn\nBEEF FOR SALE, 39c A LB.,\nhalf or whole. Will cut and\nwrap, sharp frozen, 45c a lb.\n- Phone 359-7356.      -279-290\nUSED   4'   AND   8',   2-LAMP\nfluorescent light fixtures. Coleman Electric, Phone 352-3175.\n-227-tfn\nll'xl4' RUG AND UNDERMAT-\ntlng. Like new; $100, Phone\n352-2536. -285-290\nGEESE FOR SALE. $3.50,\nalive. Phone 229-4655, Balfour,\nF. Toering. \u2014284-289\nBUSINESS\nOPPORTUNITIES\nVENDING MACHINE OPPOR-\ntunity at about half price. Part-\ntime sideline, particulars to\nBox 1160, Castlegar. -284-289\nA. NO   BOARO\n4-WHEEL DRIVE 6-YD. DUMP\ntruck, rebuilt in Cranbrook\nshop, A. G. Bayes Limited,\nphone 426-4772. -280-285\nTRAILERS,\nMOBILE HOMES\nCANADA'S BEST VALUE\nAre YOU getting the Christmas\nShopping Blues\nWHY NOT A FAMILY GIFT\nTHIS YEAR 7\nChoose one of our many new,\nor guaranteed used Mobile\nHomes and let us deliver and\ncompletely set It up for you\nbefore the Holiday Season.\nCALL OR WRITE TODAY\nTop trade In allowance for your\npresent trailer, or household\nfurniture.\nCranbrook\nTrailers Ltd.\nBox 1458 Phone 365-5047\nColumbia Avenue, Castlegar\nWalt Hill and Dennis Starner\n2 BDRM. HOUSE. ELWYN ST.,\nPh. 332-2816 or 352-7835.\n-283-288\n2-BDRM. SUITE; KITCHEN\nand living room. Ph. 352-2902.\n-273-tfn\nLARGE 1 AND 2-B.R. UNITS-\nKencourt Motel. Ph. 352-2821.\n-280-285\n4 RM. FLAT, WELL FURN. AT\nWillow Pt. Ph. 352-7493.\n-280-285\n2-B.R. UPSTAIRS APT. AND A\n2-B.R. house. Phone 352-6053.\n-281-286\n2-B.R. APART., BAKER ST. -\nPartly furnished. Ph. 352-7774.\n-276-287\nNEWLY DECORATED  SUITE\ndowntown. Phone 352-7393.\n1 -285-287\nWINTER   RENTALS,   NORTH\nShore Motel. Phone 352-7722.\n-256-tfn\nOFFICE   SPACE   AVAILABLE\nfor rent. W. Kalyniuk Agencies.\n-206-tfn\nHALDANE APTS - NO PETS\nor children. Ph. 352-6721\n-137-tfn\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST, SATURDAY, DEC. 4 -\nMan's black wallet, downtown*\ncontaining important papers.\nReward offered. Phone 365-5378\nor 365-7716, Castlegar. -285-290\nLOST BLACK FEMALE KIT.\nten, 5 months. Answers to\nname of Blackle. Phone 353-\n6338, after 5 p.m.      -282-287\nLOST: BLACK PATENT PURSE\nat Civic Centre mixer Saturday;\nnight. Reward. Phons 352-8957.\nlaihj Nwm\nCirculation Dept., Ph. IS-S55Z\nPrice per single copy, lOreenti\nBy carrier per week, 40 cents\nin advance.\nSubscription ratesi       ;;\nBy mail in Canada  ;  ''-\nOutside Nelson     .,\nOne month \u2014^_ $;2.00\nThree months \u2014. i 5.00\nSix months -i-U JO.OS\nOne year \u2014li 18.00\nBy mail to United Kingdom\nor the Commonwealth\nOne month . I J.oo\nThree months \u2014___ ,6.00\nSix months \u2014__ 11.00\nOne year    .J\"-0?\nBy Mail to U.S.A. or\nForeign Countries\nOne month\nThree months .\nSix months _\nOne year ..\u2014;..\n$2.50\n7.00\n13.00\nMOO\nWhere extra postage If required\nabove rates plus postage.\nFor delivery by. carrier In Cranbrook,   phone   Mrs.   Stanley   '\nWillison;\nIn Trail. Mrs. W. E. Spooler-.\nIn Kimberley, \"Mrs.\" A.; -W~-\nBrown. *;\nHOUSEKEEPING ROOMS AND\nsuites. Dishes, linen supplied\n171 Baker Street.      -208-tfn\nFURNISHED, HEATED ROOM.\nPhone 352-7462. -269-tfn\n1 HOUSEKEEPING ROOM. PH.\n352-6985. -282-287\n! BDRM. APT., 131 CHATHAM\nSt. Ph. 352-2943. \u2014280-285\nUNFURN,\n352-3027.\n3 RM. SUITE. PH.\n-281-286\n3 BDRM. HOUSE. CLOSE IN.\nPh.   352-3919. -283-tfn\n3-BEDROOM HOUSE - PHONE\n352-3856. -285-287\nPROPERTY   WANTED\nROOM AND BOARD FOR GEN-\ntlemen. Ph. 352-3428.\n-283-238\n-268-tfn\nMake the Classified Way Pay !\nLISTINGS WANTED. BUILD-\ning lots, farm land, city and\ncountry residential. Commercial property, timber lands\nCall or write Wm Kalyniuk\nAgencies. Nelson Ph 352-2425\n-231-tfn\nThree Die Wgf\nAir Collision\nJOLIETTE, Que. (CP5\u2014Three\nmembers of one family were\nkilled Sunday when two private\nairplanes collided in the air near\nhere. . - \"\nThe planes, a Cessna 140 and\na Piper super cruiser^ crashed\ntogether 1,200 feet above-a private airport.\nThe Piper lost its-right wing\non impact and. went ..into a\nspinning whirl which'ended only\nwhen it smashed to the-ground.\nAll three dead were in the\nPiper. They were owner-pilot\nGerard Roy, of Joliette,.his. wife\nand their son Yvon, 25.'-'''\nThe owner and pilot of the\nsecond plane, Renaud , Des-\nroches, 24, also of Joliette. was\ninjured in a crash landing BuT\nhis condition was not judged\nserious.\n 10\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUES., DEC. 7, 1965\nBoxed\nChristmas Stationery\nAn Acceptable Gift At Any Time,\nAnd From Anyone.\n69*\nAND UP.\n\u2022 Hasty Notes\n\u2022 Parchment Paper\n\u2022 Gift Boxes of Stationery '\" \u2022\n\u2022 Leather Stationery Travel Kits\n\u2022 Fine Papers and Suitably Boxed\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII' \u2022'I'MIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIMIIHIIIIIIIIIMIIII\nNewspaper Advertising Pays Over and Over\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiinii\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\n(Pacific Standard Time)\nKREM-TV - Channel 2\n5:00\u2014Woody Woodpecker (C)\n5:30\u2014Channel 2 Reports\n-6:30-^-Treasure <C)\n7:00\u2014Governor's Report\n7:30-Combat*\n8:3fMMcHale's Navy*\n9:00-F TrOop*\n9:30\u2014Peyton Place*\n10:00\u2014Fugitive*\nll:00-Nightbeat\n11:30\u2014Late Movie\nKXLYTV - Channel 4\n7:09\u2014The Rifleman\n7:30^-flawhide*\n8:30-^Red Skelton* (C)\n~9:'30^Pettfcoat Junction* (C)\n10:0O-TriaIs of O'Brien*\n11:00\u201411 o'Clock News\n11:30\u2014Big Four Movie\nKHQ-TV - Channel 6\n7:0(MBold Jourr.ey\n7:.3{MWy Mother, the Car* (C)\n8:00\u2014Please Don't Eat the\n\u25a0Daisies* (C)\n8:30\u2014Dr. Kildare* (C>\n9:00\u2014Tuesday Night at the\nMovies: \"The Hook\"*\n11:00\u2014News and Weather\nll:30-Tonight With Carson* (C)\nCBC-TV - Nelson. Channel 9: Trail, Channel 11\n10:00\u2014Canadian School Telecast\n10:30\u2014The Friendly Giant\n10:45\u2014Chez Helene\nll:C0^Butternut Square\n11:20\u2014Across Canada\nll:50^News\n12:00\u2014Bachelor Father\n12:30\u2014Search for Tomorrow\n12:45\u2014Guiding Light\nl:0(M3irl Talk\n. 1:30\u2014As the World Turns\n2:00\u2014Password\n2:30\u2014Jack in the Box\n3:00-^To-..Tell the Truth\n3:.3.5rrHapjening on Take 30\n3:30-Take Thirty\n4:00\u2014Bonnie Prudden Show\n4:30\u2014Razzle Dazzle\n5:30\u2014Music Hop\n6:00-Feature Film:\n\"Mighty Ursus\"\n7:30\u2014Reach for the Top\n8:00\u2014Red Skelton Hour\n9:00\u2014Front Page Challenge\n9:30\u2014Dick Van Dyke\n10:00\u2014CBC Newsmagazine\n10:30\u2014The Public Eye\n11:00\u2014News\n11:14\u2014Viewpoint\nCJLH-TV - Channel 7, Lethbridge\nMOUNTAIN STANDARD TIME\nWEDNESDAY\n10:00^Western Schools\n10 ^Friendly Giant\n10:45\u2014Chez Helene\nll:00-^Butternut Square\n11:20\u2014Across Canada\n11:50-CBC TV News\n12:00\u2014Noon Show\n' 1:00\u2014Trailmaster\n2:00\u2014Password\n2:30\u2014Something [or the Ladies\nJ;3:M\u2014To Tell the Truth\n3:25^-Take Thirty\n;. 4:00\u2014The Bonnie Prudden Show\n.4:30^-Razzle Dazzle\n5:00\u2014Secret Squirrel\n5:30\u2014Sea Hunt\n6:00\u2014Dateline: Sports,\nWeather, News\n6:30\u2014Hogan's Heroes\n7:00\u2014Run for Your Life\n8:00\u20140. K. Crackerby\n8:30\u2014Bob Hope Theatre\n9:30\u2014Festival: Culloden\n10:44\u2014Festival: Monique Leyrar\n11:00-CBC News\nll:15-Final Edition\n11:20\u2014Espionage\n11'rngrams mihltrt to change by stations without notice.)\nDAILY   CROSSWORD\n43. Disguise\n44. Chums\nDOWN\n1. In the\ndirection of\n2. Unruly\noutbreak\n3. Antlered\nanimal\n4. Observe\n5. Mountains:\nSo. Am.\n6. Preserves\n7. Polynesian\ndrink\n8. Spanish\ntitle of\naddress\n11. Chills and\nfever\n13. Church\npart\n15. Unhappy\n18. Wheeled\nvehicles\n19. Grampus\n20. German\nriver\n22. Lament\n25. Spawn\nof fish\n26. Resorts\n27. African\ndrum\n28. Morsel\n29. Flemish\npainter\n1\nAL\nM i\nPB\nICHATM\n\"\u25a0L\" aneM\nAapde n\nAl\n|asp|te\nMl\niDPOLES\nV\nr a\n\u2022i D | 0 U R 5\nAL\n7 | A N N | |\nft\nNK\n| T R E A T S1\nc\nT 1\n1  E D|HO\nIII\nIn\nj N||NE F\nT\nN GISBA ROMA\nI\naana saiaa\niiiiaa aana\nYesterday's Answer\n30. Hastened\n32. Small\nstream\n36. Spoken\n38. Oriental\npotentate\n39. Policeman\n40.\" pro\nnobis\"\nACROSS\n1. Source\nof shade\n5. Candlenut\n.trees^\n9. Unctuous\n10. Church\npart\n11. Aroused\nfrom\nsleep\n12. Goddess...\nof the hunt\n14. Revolver.\n15. Lawmaker:\n:abbr...\n16. Current\nart fad\n17. Biblical\n\"    city    .\n18. Aids for\nhostesses\n81. Name of\neight kings\nof England\n23. Wings   . '\n24. Bow\n25. Vertebra ~~\n28. Mix\n28. Foolish\n.blunders:\n.   , colloq.\n31. Contracts\nof in-\nsurance\n33. Preposition\n34. Verb form\n35. Skill .\n36. West\n, .. Indian .\n.1 jorcery\n37. Platform\n39. Removed\nthe center\n41. S-shaped\n. . . molding\n42. Algerian\nseaport\nDAILY CRYFTOQUOTE \u2014 Here's how to work it:\nAXYDLBAAXR\nIs LONGFELLOW\nOneletter simply stands for another, in this sample A is used\nfor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apos-\ntrophies, the length and formation of the words are all hints.\nBach day the code letters are different\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nE P  LCKRVLDRIWC        LVM        E P\n\"I'W-'&P       A VRMWFC \u2014 GIWBAMGGIZ\nYesterday's Cryptoquote: ART HAS ITS FANATICS AND\nEVEN ITS MONOMANIACS.\u2014VICTOR HUGO.\nW IMS. Sine restores Syndlcste. Inc.)\nV\/\n1\n^\n5\n4-\nl\ns\n\u2022\n7\n8\ni\nto\n1\nl\n10\nVA\nii\ni\nIZ.\n\\i>\n14\nV\/\/\/f\n%\nIS\nV\/t\nIb\nn\nVa\n18\nIt\nto\n^[\nzz\n%\n21\n%\n'^\/l\n24\n%\n25\n^\n%\nVm\nVI\nVA\n26\nUt\n50\n31\n3Z.\nVA\n\u00bb\nW\nVA\nW\n^\n%\nV,\n57\nit,\nt\nV>\n4o\nl\n41\n1\n4Z\n(\nl\n^A\n4i\nm\n44\n^\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c line, 40c line bold face type; larger type rates\non request. Minimum two lines.\nFigure skating carrying case,\n$2.95 and $3.98. Edey's Cycle and\nSkate Shop. \u2014285-h\nLarge selection of tricycles for\nall ages. $7.95 up. Edey's Cycle\nand Skate Shop. \u2014285-h\nHaigh Tru-Art Beauty Salon\n576 Baker St. Ph. 352-3313\n-29-h\nBINGO\nLEGION HALL TONIGHT\n-29-h\nTURKEY SHOOT\nNELSON TRAP CLUB\nSunday, Dec. 12, 1965, 10 a.m.\ntill dark. 4 miles west of Nelson.\nShooters classed, winners handicapped. Refreshments.    \u2014282-h\nClean three- room apartment\nfor  rent.  Phone  352-2168.\n-284-286\nJACK BOYCE HAND-MADE\nJEWELLERY  AT   DULLUM'S.\n-267-tfn\nBoned Pillow slips. Priced to\nclear.\t\nSTERLING FURNISHERS\n-284-285\nCHRISTMAS FAIR ENTRIES\nreceived until 10 p.m.\nDec. 7th and 8th.\n-285-286\nONLY 3 more days to get your\nentries in to\nTHE CHRISTMAS FAIR\n\u2014285-285\nGRACEANNA BEAUTY BAR\n259 Baker St.    Ph. 352-5733\nFree Parking for Patrons\n-104-h\nAutomatic Valley Comfort wood\nheaters are now available on\neasy monthly payments at\nMacleod's Store in Nelson.\n-221-tfn\nOrder of DeMolay\nMixed Nut Drive\nToday and Wednesday\n-285-285\nFOR AGGRESSIVE -\nPROGRESSIVE GOVERNMENT. VOTE KENNEDY FACCHINA FOR ALDERMAN.\n-283-287\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS\n1390 ON THE DIAL\nTUESDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1965\n6:00\u2014News\n6:10\u2014The Morning Program\n6:40\u2014Farm Fare\n6:45-Chapel In the Sky\n7:00\u2014News\n7:05-Wake Up Time\n7:25\u2014Sports News\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35-Wake-Up Time\n8 \u25a0 OO*\u2014Nfi Ws\n8:05-B.C. News and Weather\n8:10\u2014Bill Good Sports News\n8:15-Wake Up Time\n8:30\u2014Preview Commentary\n8:35\u2014Opening Markets\n8:40\u2014Wake-Up Time\n9:00\u2014News\n9:10\u2014Roads and Weather\n9:15\u2014T. S. Shorthouse\n9:30\u2014Open Line\n9:59\u2014Time Signal\n10:00\u2014News\n10:05-Music Fill\n10:15\u2014Morning Melodies\n11:00\u2014News\n11:05\u2014Morning Melodies\nContinue\n11:30\u2014Christmas Cavalcade\n11:55\u2014A Story to Remember\n12:00\u2014Ramblin' Man\n12:15\u2014Sports News\n12:25\u2014News and Road Report\n12:30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Noon Markets\n1:00\u2014John Drainie\nl:15-Gordie Tapp Show\n1:45-Music Fill\n2:00\u2014B.C. School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014News\n2:33\u2014Trans Canada Matinee\n3:30\u2014The Archers\n3:40-Sacred Heart\n3:55\u2014Assignment\n4:00\u2014News\n4:10\u2014Sports News\n4:15\u2014Pops Parade\n4:55\u2014Assignment\n5:00\u2014Rolling Home Show\n5:05\u2014News\n5:10\u2014Rolling Home Show\nContinues\n5:40-On Parliament Hill\n5:45\u2014Business Barometer\n5:50\u2014Sports Desk\n6:00\u2014Strikes and Spares\n6:05-CKLN National News\n6:15\u2014Louis Magiio\n6:30\u2014Countrytime\n7:00\u2014News\n7:15\u2014Topic for Tonight\n7:3CM3iristian Frontiers\n8:00\u2014CBC Tuesday Night\n10:00\u2014News\n10:10-B.C. News and Weather\n10:15-Chapel in the Sky\n10:30-This Is My Story\nll:0O-Sign Off\nCBC PROGRAMS\nTUESDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1965\n6:00-The A.M. Show\n8:35\u2014Max Ferguson Show\n9:00\u2014News and Report\n9:10\u2014Pacific Express\n9:44\u2014Playroom\n9:59 Time Signal\n10:00\u2014Ten o'clock Show\n11:55\u2014A Story to Remember\n12:00\u2014Ramblin' Man\n12:15-News\n12:30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Marine Weather\n1:00\u2014John Drainie\n1:15\u2014Gordie Tapp Show\n1:45\u2014Program Resume\n2:00\u2014Western Regional\nSchool Broadcast\n2:30\u2014News\n2:33\u2014Trans Canada Matinee\n3:30\u2014OH the Record\n3:55\u2014Assignment No. 2\n4:00\u2014News\n4:03\u2014Canadian Roundup\n4:10\u2014Off the Record Cont'd\n4:40-Who Will Come With Me\n4:55\u2014Assignment No. 3\n5:00\u2014Jazz 'n Things\n5:30\u2014News\n5:40 On Parliament Hill\n5:45\u2014Business Barometer\n5:50\u2014Sports Desk\n6:00\u2014Tempo\n6:15\u2014A Night From the\nNineties\n6:45\u2014Rod and Charles\n7:00\u2014News\n7:15\u2014Topic for Tonight\n7:30\u2014Christian Frontiers\n8:00-CBC Teusday Night\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15-Today's  Editorial  and\nSpeaking Personally\n10.-30-CBC Tuesday Night\nPart II\n12:00\u2014News\n12:03\u2014Land and Marine Weather\n12:05\u2014After Hours\n1:00\u2014News\n1:03\u2014Music to 6 a.m.\nWEDNESDAY,\n6:00\u2014News\n6:05\u2014The Morning Program\n8:00\u2014News\n8:35\u2014Max Ferguson Show\n9:00\u2014News and Reports\n9:10\u2014Pacific Express\n9:15\u2014Network Test\n9:30\u2014Pacific Express\n9:44\u2014Playroom\n9:59-D00TS\n10:00\u2014Ten o'Clock Show\n12:00\u2014Tommy Hunter\n12:15\u2014News and Weather\n12:30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Marine Weather\n1:00\u2014John Drainie\nl:15-Gordie Tapp Show\n1:45\u2014Program Resume\n2:00\u2014B.C. School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014News\n2:33\u2014Trans Canada Matinee\n3:30\u2014Off the Record\n3:55\u2014Assignment\n4:00\u2014News\n4:03\u2014Canadian Roundup\n4:10\u2014Off the Record\nDECEMBER 8, 1965\n4:40-Who Will Come With Me?\n4:55\u2014Assignment '. .\n5:00-Jazz 'n' Things\n5:30\u2014News\n5:40-On Parliament Hill\n5:45\u2014Business Barometer\n5:50-t-BU1 Good Evening ?->orts\n6:00r-Tempo, Part II.\n6:30\u2014Music in G\n6:45\u2014Rod and Charles\n7:00\u2014News\n7:15\u2014Topic for Tonight\n7:30\u2014CBC Halifax Orchestra\n8:00\u2014Regional Features\n9:00\u2014Midweek Theatre\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Today's Editorial and\nSpeaking Personally\n10:30\u2014Distinguished Artists\n11:00\u2014A Man at Westminster\n11:30\u2014First Hearing\n12:00\u2014News\n12:03\u2014Land and Marine Weather\n12:05\u2014After Hours\n1:00\u2014News\nH. W. Herridge will be at the\nHume Hotel Tuesday, Dec. 7th,\nfrom 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.; Wednesday, Dec. 8, from 10 a.m.-6 p.m.\n-285-285\nCHICKEN DELICIOUS\nand Fish 'N' Chips.\nTake Out Orders.\nNEXT TO EATON'S PH. 352-2836\n-202-tfn\nBusiness (or mothers of preschoolers) Girls' Curling Club\nneeds spares to curl Monday at\n7 p.m. and Wednesday at 9 p.m.\n\u2014 Phone 352-6078 evenings.\n\u2014285-285\nWHERE CAN WE FIND A MAN\nWITH MORE CONSTRUCTION\nPUBLIC WORKS AND GENERAL EXPERIENCE?\nMAGLIO FOR MAYOR DEC. 11\n-285-285\nTHE BAY IS NOW PREPARED\nTO HANDLE YOUR CHRIST.\nMAS TREE GIFTS. JUST GIVE\nUS NAMES AND AGES, WE\nWILL SELECT THE GIFTS,\nGIFT WRAP AND TAG READY\nFOR GIVING. -282-tfn.\nCANDLES\nAND CANDLESTICKS!\nAll colors, shapes and sizes in\nCandles. Beautiful fixtures to\nhold them, at\nBLAKEMAN'S\n\u2014284-285\nHEALTH LECTURE\nBy Dr. Bernard Jenson, D.C.,\nEscondido, California. His recorded tapes will be heard at\nEagles' Hall on Saturday, Dec.\nUth, at 7:30 p.m. All Health-\nminded people are welcome.\n-285-h\nTOM SHORTHOUSE\nSPEAKS TO THE WOMEN\nOF NELSON ON CKLN\nTHIS MORNING AT 9:30.\nBE SURE WITH\nSHORTHOUSE\n-285-285\nSCHOOL RECREATION\nPROGRAM\nEvery Mon., Rosemont Drama,\n4 p.m.; Every Tuesday, Central\nRhythmics; 6-8 years, 3:30 p.m.,\n9-13 years, 4:15 p.m; Every\nThurs., Hume, Drama, 4 p.m.\nCentral gymnastics, 4 p.m.; and\nRosemont Rhythmics, 6-8 years,\n3:30 p.m.; 9-13 years, 4:15 p.m.\n\u2014285-285\nATTENTION B.C. GOV'T\nEMP. ASSOC. MEMBERS\nThe annual meeting will be\nheld at the Canadian Legion Hall\non Tuesday, Dec. 7th, at 8 p.m.\nFour turkeys will be raffled for\nattending members, and between\nthe general membership. Reports and results of officers will\nalso take place. This is an important meeting so all members\nplease attend. \u2014285-285\nSHORTHOUSE\nFOR MAYOR..\nCOMMITTEE ROOMS\n319 Baker St., Ph. 352-2266 or\n352-2267 for information and\ntransportation to the polls.\nFor progressive\nadministration through\naction, not words.\n\u2014282-287\nNotes\nFrom the Chamber of Mines,\nNelson, B.C.\nDue to the setting in of winter\nexploration in the area has tapered off for the time being.\nEight concentrators in the district are operating on their own\nore and one is treating ore from\nsurrounding properties all producing silver, lead and zinc\nThree mills not operating are\navailable when sufficient ore in\ntheir vicinity is available for\ntreatment. This makes a total\nof 12 concentrators or mills,\nwhichever is preferred to call\nthem, in the district.\nSeveral companies with properties in the district have obtained ground at Pine Point, N.W.T.\nThese are New Cronin Babine\nMines Ltd., Silver Ridge Mining Co. Ltd., Copper Soo Mining\nCo. Ltd., Trojan Cons. Mines\nLtd., North Lodge Copper Mines\nLtd., and Homestake Silver Ltd.\nKirch Silver Mines Ltd., has\nbeen organized to take over and\ndevelop the Anna and Myrtle\nmineral claims from Silver King\nMines Ltd., which formerly held\nthe property. This property is situated on Springer Creek near\nSlocan. Work is being concentrated on the Myrtle, where the\nportal has been opened up and\ntrack is being laid to the face.\nA bunkhouse has been completed, compressor house and shop\nare under construction as well as\nsnow sheds to dump and shop.\nMining is expected to start in\nthe near future.\nThe Cairnes report states the\nMyrtle in 1907 shipped 13 tons\nor ore valued at $29,044. It also\nsays that the Anna during the\nperiod 1912 to 1928 shipped 135\ntons of ore valued at $22,990.\nAs soon as the Myrtle is brought\nCaouette\nSays Split\nTo Continue\nBy GERARD ALARIE\nQUEBEC (CP) - Creditiste\nLeader Real Caouette said Sunday his party will remain split\nfrom the Social Credit Party\nas long as Robert Thompson remains Social Credit leader.\nSpeaking at a press conference, Mr. Caouette said: \"The\nQuebec Creditistes cannot picture reunification with the\nSocial Credit as long as Mr.\nThompson directs it because\nthey know he is chiefly responsible for the split which took\nplace after the 1963 elections.\n\"At the time of the split Mr.\nRobert Thompson was head of\nthe national party and therefore is responsible for the\nsplit,\"\nReunification would be possible if Mr. Thompson retired,\nthe leader of the Ralliement des\nCreditistes said,\nMr. Caouette spoke at the\nend of a two-day weekend meeting which his party candidates\nand organizers held behind\nclosed doors here.\nHis comments were in reply\nto statements made by Mr.\nThompson at the recent Social\nCredit meeting in Edmonton to\nthe effect that the two groups\ncould reunite.\nTHREATENS JOHNSON\nHe also thraetened to \"teach\na lesson to Mr. Daniel Johnson\nand the Union Nationale\" for\nthe role they played in the last\nfederal elections.\n\"The Union Nationale invited\nits people to vote for the Conservatives or for the New Democratic Party because it feared\nthe Ralliement des Creditiste\nwould enter the provincial political scene.\"\nAsked whether his party\nwould enter provincial politics\nhe said: \"All groups of the right\nin the province must be united\nto face the socialist and socializing rise of the (Liberal) administration of Jean Lesage.\ninto production, development of\nthe Anna property will be started.\nNEW FINDS\nArlington  Silver  Mines  Ltd',\ncontinues to report new finds on\nits Springer Creek property at\nSlocan, B.C. The latest is on 'B\nlevel   intersected   by   diamond\ndrill  and runs 73.7 ounces  of\nsilver per ton valued at $103.18\nacross a true width of 4.3 feet.\nPacific Silver Mines and Oils\nLtd., has indicated a new program for its Tarn O'Shanter property at Riondel. This is to test\nthe central one of three prominent anomalies by surface dia\nmand  drilling.  Bulldozing  will\nhave to be done to strip the\nzones and drill  sites.  A minimum of 2500 feet of diamond\ndrilling has been recommended.\nThe most active new operations in the area are the Home-\nstake Silver Ltd., at the Molly\nGibson mine in Kokanee Park\nand the Weland Mining Co.,\nLtd., at the Fern Mine, Hall\nCreek.\nAt the Molly Gibson, a road\nto the mine from the park\nroad has been completed. The\n5880-level driven In 1930 is\ngoing to be further developed\nand diamond drilling started\nas soon as possible. Clifford\nNewton, P. Eng., is in charge\nof the operation.\nA good road to the Fern Mine\nIs being constructed and    as\nsoon as this is completed, de\nvelopment of the property will\nbegin.   Mike   Cannon   Is   in\ncharge of the work.\nCinola Mines Ltd., a new public company, has been organized by two Vancouver contractors, William Thompson and Raymond Sheward, to re-activate the\nMidnight mine near Rossland,\nand $60,000    was spent in de-\nwatering  the  workings,   clearing the main tunnel and repairing the electrical system preliminary to starting development\nwork. This project should create\nsome interest in the surrounding\nproperties.\nESTELLA TO REOPEN\nGiant Mascot announces it will\nput the Estella property of Copper Soo Mining Co. Ltd., at Wasa\ninto production early in 1966.\nOre reserves are given as 49,000\ntons proven and probable. Net\nsmelter value is estimated at\n$34.50 per ton and operating\nprofit at $14.60 per ton.\nDakota Silver Mines Ltd., reports it has installed a 50-ton\nmill at its Beatrice silver, lead,\nzinc property near Camborne\nA test run has been carried out\nbut operation is being deferred\nuntil spring due to weather conditions at the property.\nGreat activity is in progress\nat the Vermont property of Columbia River Mines Ltd., located\non Vermont Creek, 50 miles\nsoutheast of Golden, where 17\nmen are employed drifting,\nraising and diamond drilling.\nThe work is being carried out\nunder the direction of Mike Hil-\ndabrandt, who has a contract\nfor the program.\nReports from this property\nhave created quite a lot of excitement in the stock which has\nbeen trading over the counter\nin Vancouver. The stock was\nsuspended by the superintendent of brokers but we understand trading was to be resumed\nDecember 1.\nA spokesman for the company\nintimated an application for listing on the Vancouver Stock exchange would be made and il\nBAMBI'S CHRISTMAS ADVENTURE\nBy Walt Disney\nTub whisper of winss srows J\nUOIPEgANP LOUPgg... r J\nAnnulment\nTo Help Heal\nChurch Split\nVATICAN CITY (AP) - The\nmutual excommunications of St.\nPope Leo IX and Patriarch Michael Caerularius of Constantinople, which led to the great\nschism between the Roman\nCatholic and Orthodox churches\nnine centuries ago, will be annulled in simultaneous ceremonies Tuesday in St. Peter's Basilica and Istanbul.\nThe Vatican secretariat for\nChristian unity said in a communique Sunday that Pope Paul\nwill read a declaration voiding\nthe excommunications during a\npublic session of the ecumenical\ncouncil, and a similar declaration will be made by Patriarch\nAthenagoras in Istanbul at the\nsame time.\nThe action will be a step toward healing the great East-\nWest church split of 1054 and\ncould be a step toward possible\nreunification of the Roman\nCatholic and Orthodox churches.\nThe development was seen by\nProtestant and Anglican observers at the council as a major\nbreakthrough toward broadening the entire Christian unity\nmovement.\nThe Roman Catholic and Orthodox churches are closer in\nspirit and dogma than any of\nthe other separated Christian\nchurches. It always has been\nfelt that should total reconciliation come, the first step would\nbe achieved between Catholic\nand Orthodox. ' I\naccepted, this would indicate\nthat reports from the property\nhave been confirmed to the satisfaction of the exchange. A lot\nof interest has been generated\nby the reported success at the\nVermont property and extensive\nstaking has been carried out by\nother companies in the same\ngeneral area.\nA property that as far as we\nknow has not had any attention is the Lead Queen situated\non Frances Creek approximately\n24 miles from Brisco. The elevation is high, around 7000 feet,\nand the vein is a well defined\nfissure type following the bedding planes of a quartzite formation which at times changes\nto argillite.\nA grab sample of ore on the\ndump taken in 1915 ran 29.4\nounces of silver to the ton and\n40.1 per cent lead. Samples\nfrom narrow widths of the\nvein in the drift ran as high as\n40.8 ounces of silver per ton and\n67.85 lead. The vein varies from\ntwo to four feet in width. The\nproperty is written up in the\nMinister of Mines reports from\n1901 to 1929. Some shipments\nhave been made from the property.\nHARD TO APPLY\nIt is sometimes suggested that\nexport of raw materials should\nbe prohibited so as to force processing in Canada to make jobs.\nThis sounds simple but the application would be extremely difficult. Other highly populated\nand industrialized c o u n tries\nwhich have to find employment\nfor their people will make every\neffort to develop their own re:\nsources for raw materials or\nwill import their requirements\nin as raw a state as possible\nfrom other countries where\navailable, in direct competition\nwith Canada.\nAs the underdeveloped countries begin to find themselves\nand develop their resources of\nraw materials without having\nthe facilities to process them,\nthey will be quite willing to export them to world markets to\ngenerate foreign exchange. We\nshould export our mineral resources in the highest processed\nstate possible but an economic\nchoice has to be made as to\nwhat will give us the greatest\nimmediate benefit.\nThe British Columbia Institute\nof Technology at Burnaby reports that all its first year mining students were employed by\nmining companies for the summer months to work in production or exploration. Two of Canada's largest mining corporations\nwill shortly be interviewing this\nyear's graduating classes in\nseveral technologies for employment in the mining industry.\nCorduroy\nPants\nJean Style\nOLIVE\nBROWN\nBEIGE\n$7.95\nCollegiate Style\n$8.95\nEMORY'S\nTHE MAN'S STORE\nSee Hope\nIn New Drug\nKANSAS CITY (AP) - Discussion of a new medication,\naimed at making the rhythm\nsystem of birth control more accurate, brought conservative\nbut hopeful reaction Saturday\nfrom theologians, physicians\nand priests at an international\nsymposium sponsored by the\nnational Catholic Welfare Conference.\nThe experimental drug called\nclomiphene citrate is not a contraceptive but causes ovulation\nin women to occur at the same\ntime every month. Thus the\nrhythm method, which requires\nabstinence between man and\nwife during the 12-day ovulation\nperiod, can be more accurately\nfollowed. The Roman Catholic\nChurch does not oppose the\nrhythm method but forbids use\nof contraceptives.\nHave the Job Done Right!\nUIC GRAVEC\n\u25a0        LIMITED        *J\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPhone 352-331S\n-SPECIALS-\n\u2022 Gift Wrap\n\u2022 Christinas Ribbons\n\u2022 Tags and Seals\ne Indoor   and   Outdoor\nLights\na Miniature Lights\nYour Rexall Pharmacy\nCITY DRUG\n456 Baker St       Ph. 152-3(1)\nBox 460 Nelson, B.C.\nBUSINESS   &   PROFESSIONAL\nDIRECTORY\nA handy alphabetical guide to goods and services\navailable in Nelson.\nAutomobile Dealers\nBILLS' MOTOR-IN LTD.\n(Studebaker Sales)\n213 Baker St.    Phone 352-3231\n-tfn\nPARKVIEW MOTORS LTD.\n(Rambler - Volkswagen)\n323 Nelson Ave.    Phone 352-5355\n-tfn\nBuilding Supplies\nBEE BUILDING SUPPLY LTD.\nEverything in waterproof\nplywood.\n301 Baker St.      Phone 352-3135\n-tfn\nBURNS  LUMBER CO. LTD.\n602 Baker St.      Phone 352-6661\n-tfn\nCOLUMBIA TRADING CO.\n901 Front St.      Phone 352-5571\nLots of free parking.\nPhoto Copying\nPOWELL ENGRAVING\n460 Ward St. Nelson, B.C.\nPhone 352-7521\nContracts - Birth Certificates\nLegal Documents\nImportant Papers\n'.'.'\"\":   tfn\nPrinting\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\nPrinters - Lithographers\nColor Printing\nPhone 352-3552\n-Ul-tfn\nRadio and TV\nService\nContractors\nBonny Well Drilling\nCastlegar \u2014 Phone 365-6751\nNow drilling in Nelson-\nBalfour area.\n-258-283\nLaszlo Huszak, General Masonry\nStone - Brick - Cement - Stucco\nPlastering\n1323 Falls St.        Phone 352-7692\n-239-tfn\nART  RAVESTEIN\nRenovations,  Cement  Work\nand General Carpentry\nPhone 352-7433\n-tfn\nGarages\nUpper Fairview Motors Ltd.\nCor. 7th at Davies    Ph. 352-2525\nTransistorized Ignition\n  -tfn\nHealth Foods\nHEALTH. FOOD CENTRE\nHealth Thru Nutrition\n458 Ward Street\n  -22-Jn\nNewspaper Advertising\nPays Over and Over\nVIDEO ELECTRONICS\n405 Hall St - Phone 352-33!\nRefrigeration\nRefrigeration Sales and Service\nCARLSON  EQUIPMENT\n803 Anderson St.   Ph. 352-5455\n-186-tfn\nSporting Goods\nFred Whiteley's Sport Shop\n488 Baker St.     Phone 352-7741\n-tfn\nTopsoil\nLarry's Topsoil, Sand and Gravel\nPh. 352-2355 Days  352-7576 eves\n-tfn\nTREE FALLING\nDanger Tree Falling, Trimming,\nTopping. Reasonable rates.\nFree estimates. Fully insured.\nERIC DENNY, R.R. 1, Nelson.\n-280-1\nUpholstery\nMASTERCRAFT FURNITURE\nAND UPHOLSTERY\nPhone 352-7337\n  -235-260\nVacuum  Cleaners\nEI.Ki\"IRCH.llX Sales & Service\n711 Innes SL        Ph. 352-7341\n-77;tfn\n","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. 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Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the 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"}]}}