{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0440304":{"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":"2024-02-22","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1967-09-28","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0440304\/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":" 0*8 SaAflOONVA  T\niS 3\u00ab0H 6921\n'on votovo     f\n\u00a39 MVOH003H  I    I\n0tl i\n1867111967\nPublished at Nelson, government, financial, trading and educational centre of the  Kootenay-Cofumbia area\nFORECAST\nKootenay: Sunny, continuing warm.\nWinds light. Low and high at Cranbrook\n32 and 80: Nelson area 45 and 82.\nFriday outlook: Mainly sunny. A little\ncooler.\nVol. 66\nNELSON, B.C., CANADA \u2014 THURSDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 28,  1967\n10 Cents\nNo.   134\nMan Saws Way\nA SKILFULLY EXECUTED ESCAPE BID enabled\na prisoner to break out of Nelson city jail Wednesday. Gordon Traff (right) of Vancouver was being\nheld on two charges of theft. With the aid of a hacksaw blade he cut through one of his cell bars (left)\nand made his getaway.\nTexas Calls For Federal Aid\nAs Rio Grande Danger Mounts\nPolice Combing B.C. for\nTraff, Held on Theft,\nParole Break Charges\nA widespread manhunt was triggered early Wednesday after a daring\nHoudini-type jailbreak in Nelson.\nTwenty-nine-year-old Gordon Traff of Vancouver, fled from custody in City\njail after cutting through bars of his cell with a hacksaw blade, believed to have\nbeen smuggled in to him,\nThe six-loot one-inch tall Traff\nsomehow squeezed his 190\npounds through a gap in the\nbars   measuring   only   seven\nHARLINGEN, Tex, (API-\nWaterlogged and miserable,\nRio Grande flood victims faced\nWednesday at least another\nweek of high, dangerous water\ndumped by now-dead hurricane\nBeulah. The state called for\nfederal help.\nThe Rio Grande, slowing as it\nspread into levee-lined flood-\nways, will crest at the Gulf of\nMexico in ahout another week,\nthe weather bureau said.\nAt this city of 41,000, a flood-\ncontrol dam broke Sunday and\nbrought damage and misery\nstill too widespread to assess.\nWater still rose Wednesday,\nalthough slower.\nWater inundated many expensive homes to their rooftops.\nHuge concentrations of mosquitoes, tarantulas and pollution added misery to the heartbreak of destruction.\nThe flooding came when Rio\nGrande water poured through\nthe broken control dam into the\nArroyo Idry ravine! Colorado\nand flooded it and a large part\nof Harlingen.\nThe Red Cross reported\nalmost 30,000 refugees sheltered\nin Texas while the Salvation\nArmy said its shelters held 1,-\n500. At the height of Beulah's\nwinds, more than 115,000 sought\nrefuge.\nALL PITCH IN\nUp and down the river, men\nfought with sandbags to shore\nup shaky levees and where possible to protect their homes and\nstores.\nPollution occurred at some\ncities and threatened others.\nThe high river forced sewage\nback through pipes into the\nstreet.\nCitizens were told to boil\ndrinking water. A San Antonio\nbrewery sent 150,000 gallons of\nwater. Beer and soft drinks\nfound new popularity.\nThe military prepared to\nbegin massive health measures,\nincluding  inoculations,   as  soon\nPearson Unity Campaign\nSnagged Before Start\nBy dave Mcintosh\nOTTAWA I CPI - The federal\ngovernment's Operation Unity\nluffered a setback Wednesday\nbefore the campaign even\nopened.\nAgriculture Minister Greene\nannounced that Quebec Liberal\nMPs would go to western Canada to try to win support for a\nfederal - Quebec accommodation\u2014within Confederation.\nBut Ron Basford, chairman\nof the Liberal group of western\nMPs, immediately issued a\nstatement saying there had\nbeen no consultations with his\ngroup. Such consultations\u2014and\nconcurrence of western MPs\u2014\nwere a \"necessary prerequisite\" to any visits by Quebec\nMPs.\nThe visits to the four western\nprovinces by Quebec Liberals\nwere to be the first announced\nInsecticide Source\nSought in Poisoning\nTIJUANA, Mexico (AP> -\nAuthorities in this city on the\nU.S. border conducted an all-\nout search Wednesday for the\nsource of a powerful agricultural pesticide blamed for the\nmass poisoning of children.\nThe number of deaths since\nthe outbreak Monday was listed\nat 17 by Hector Valdivia, deputy federal district attorney. He\nsaid estimates by others Tuesday that ranged as high as 34\nwere wrong.\nMost deaths were Monday,\nwith a few new ones Tuesday\nand Wednesday. Some 250 Per\nsons were in hospital at the\npeak of the outbreak but all but\n50 have been released.\nMilk first was suspected as\nthe source of the poison. But\nTuesday night the California\nagriculture department laboratories in Sacramento determined that the deadly insecticide parathion had been found\nin Tijuana bread samples.\nSale of flour and baked goods\nwas halted immediately and\nsamples from grocery shelves\nwere subjected to laboratory\nanalysis.\naction in the government's pro-\nConfederation campaign.\nDINE WITH DRAPEAU\nPrime Minister Pearson may\nkick off the campaign Saturday\nnight at Montreal when Mayor\nJean Drapeau gives a dinner\nfor the federal cabinet.\nInformants said the cabinet was carefully planning all\nmoves in its campaign so that\nonce it opened it would keep\nrolling.\nBut Mr. Basford, Liberal MP\nfor Vancouver Burrard, said\nMr. Greene had been \"speculating as to what he would like to\nsee happen.\"\nNo consultations had been\nheld about the visits with the\ncaucus of western MPs or with\nprovincial Liberal associations\nin the four western provinces.\n\"Nothing of this nature will\ntake place in western. Canada\nwithout such consultations and\nwith our concurrence being a\nnecessary prerequisite.\"\nSPOKE ON TV\nMr. Pearson said on CBC\ntelevision Wednesday night that\nthe best way Quebec can maintain its position in North America is within Confederation.\nThe prime minister said when\nQuebecers leave their province\nand move into another province\nthey do not want to feel \"they\nare going to a foreign country.\"\nas the chaotic conditions\nimproved.\nThree C-130 planes adapted to\nchemical spraying stood by at\nLangley Air Force Base, Va., to\nstart attacking the exploding\nmosquito population.\nTexas Governor John Connal-\nly announced he is asking President Johnson for $2,000,000 to\n$2,500,000 in federal aid for a\nstart on restoring city services.\nMore will be asked later.\niiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiii\nDog Hero Dies\nCOVirJA, Calif. iAPi-Ted-\ndie, the 10-year-old heroic dog\nrevived by moulh-to-mouth\nresuscitation after suffering a\nheart attack Monday, is dead.\nHis master, Cliff McAdams,\nsaid Tuesday a pet hospital\ntold him Teddie succumbed to\nuremic poisoning, the pain of\nwhich had caused the heart\nseizure.\nMcAdams, Sunday magazine and travel editor of the\nSan Gabriel Valley Tribune,\napplied heart massage and\nmouth-to-mouth resuscitation\nwhen Teddie showed signs of\ndeath. The dog regained consciousness.\nTeddie saved the family's\nlives four years ago by barking when leaking gas filled\ntheir home during the night.\n;i|iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii{iiiiiii\nSix Believed\nDead in Crash\nJACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) -\n\u2014 Two U.S. Navy airplanes\nwith six persons aboard collided during a rainstorm near suburban Jacksonville Beach late\nWednesday. Both planes\ncrashed in flames.\nA navy spokesman said all\nsix crew members in the two\nplanes were believed dead, but\nan official announcement\nadded: \"The navy is searching\nfor possible survivors.\"\nMilitary and civilian rescue\nteams rushed to a swampy\narea where one of the planes\nwent down. The wreckage was\nin about six feet of water near\nthe Intracoastal Waterway,\nwhich parallels the ocean\nshore.\nFarmers Get\n$1,951 Bushel\nFor Wheat\nOTTAWA (CP) - The federal\ngovernment Wednesday guaranteed a price level of $1.95_ a\nbushel for wheat until a new\ninternational wheat agreement\ncomes into effect next July 1.\nOpposition critics welcomed\nthe Commons announcement by\nTrade Minister Winters but said\nthey doubt whether importing\ncountries will ratify the agree'\nment.\nEldon Woolliams (PC\u2014Bow\nRiver) said Canadian taxpayers\nmust subsidize western farmers\nbecause the United States has\nsold wheat below the minimum\nprice levels agreed to at Geneva during the summer.\nSince the old agreement\nlapsed July 31, the U.S. had\n\"seized\" Canadian markets in\nJapan and elsewhere by underselling.\nMr. Winters had lulled farmers into a false sense of security last spring by suggesting\nthat wheat prices would rise 21\ncents. Instead they had fallen\n22 cents.\nThe subsidy would help but\nMr. Woolliams said markets\nhave been lost and \"there may\nbe difficulty now in getting the\nnew agreement into effect.\"\ninches wide and 18 inches high.\nThis operation gained him\naccess to the exercise yard and\nit was then a simple matter for\nthe prisoner to complete his escape bid by unlocking the door\nof the yard, which was locked\nfrom the inside.\nTraff was arrested Sept. 17\nand was being held on two\ncharges of theft involving about\nwhen he was remanded to appear again Oct. 2.\nPolice spokesman said that\nTraff has a long record of previous convictions, and he is\nknown to be a drug addict. It is\npossible that he is still in the\ndistrict.\nWhen Traff broke out of jail\nhe was wearing khaki trousers,\na light green sweater and a T-\n$700 cash. He was also being I shirt,\nheld for breach of parole and j He is described as having a\nwas taken to Trail for psychia-1 medium build, brown hair and\ntrie assessment Monday. | eyes, and fair complexion.\nHe was returned to the cells j    On his left arm is tattooed a\nand appeared in court Tuesday, I heart and the initials \"G.E.\"\nNHA Interest\nRate Hiked\nTo 8.25 p.c.\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 The National Housing Act interest rate has been boosted to a maximum of 8V_ per cent,\nLabor Minister Nicholson announced in the Commons\nWednesday.\nThe announcement of the rise from 7V_ per cenl\nbrought whistles and incredulous groans from the opposition.\n\"We can only look with despair at the immediate\nfuture,\" Conservative spokesman Russell Keays (Gaspel\nsaid in reply.\nMr. Nicholson said that effective Oct. 1 the maximum interest rate on home-ownership and rental loans\nwill be set at 8 V. per cent and remain there until the\nnext quarterly adjustment Jan. 1.\nThe present NHA rate is 7!_ per cent.\nthat 8y_\nSarnia Payroll\nEdges Oshawa's\nPlane Crashes\nInto School\nDALLAS, Tex. (AP)-A small\nplane crashed in flames into an\nelementary school Wednesday.\nThe four occupants of the plane\nwere killed and police said\n\"four to eight\" bodies were\nfound.\nThe crash hit just 20 minutes\nafter the children had been dismissed early for the Bradfield\nschool's faculty meeting, held\neach Wednesday.\nHad it been any day but\nWednesday, this would have\nbeen terrific,\" said principal\nWilliam T. Bryant. \"There\nwould have been 40 to 50 children milling around out there\nin that particular area.\"\nAfter poking its wing through\na band room window, the\nwreckage crashed into the bicycle yard behind the school. A\nsixth grader said he watched\nthe plane, aflame and with one\nbent wing, career crazily into\nthe building.\nHighland Park Police Chief\nW. H. Naylor said \"four to\neight bodies had been found,\"\nand an ambulance driver said\n\"parts of six bodies\" were\nremoved.\nOTTAWA (CP)-Sarnja Is\nrapidly outstripping its Ontario\nh i g h -p a y challenger city . of\nOshawa in average salaries and\nwages paid to workers in industry, new and more detailed federal statistics show.\nThe average of wages and\nsalaries paid to 17,693 industrial\nworkers in Sarnia in June was\n$138.68. This ia an increase of\n19.1 per-cent from the J8U6.35\npaid in 1965, and well above the\n$126.95 a week paid in 1966.\nSarnia took over first place\nlast year from Oshawa in high\naverage weekly pay cheques.\nOshawa wage- and salary-\nearners slipped to $113 a week\nlast year from $117.59 in 1965.\nIn June this year the figure had\nrecovered, reaching $121.84\nweek for 30,453 workers. But\nthis was only 3.6 per cent above\nthe 1965 figure and the smallest\ngain to be made by any major\nindustrial centre in the country.\nPRODUCED MONTHLY\nThe new figures compiled by\nDominion Bureau of Statistics\nare being made public monthly\non a more complete basis than\nbefore.\nThey differ from statistics\nmade public by the revenue\ndepartment, taken from tax\nreturns. The revenue department's latest available figures,\nfor 1965, showed Oshawa edged\nSarnia in average incomes by\nfive cents \u2014 Oshawa, $5,820.14;\nSarnia $5,820.09.\nWhile the taxation figures\ndeal in annual incomes of all\ntaxpayers, the statistics\nbureau's figures deal only with\nthe payrolls of firms employing\n20 or more persons in. a wide\nrange of specific industries..\nMoreover, the total figures\nare divided by the number of\nemployees earning wages\nsalaries, whether or not they\nwork a full work-week, which\ntends to deflate the figures.\nBut the new DBS tabulations\nshow   breakdowns   between P00r-\nHe emphasized that BY. per\ncent is the maximum. Private\nlenders would be able to lend\nbelow that rate.\nMr. Nicholson said the\nincrease is aimed at attracting\nprivate funds into housing.\nAnother aim was to allow the\ngovernment \"to concentrate its\nfuture lending in the important\nsocial areas of greatest need-\npublic housing, housing for elderly people, housing for students and urban renewal.\" He\nsaid the NHA rate in these\nareas is unchanged.\nNew Democrat spokesman\nStanley Knowles (Winnipeg\nNorth Centre! called this \"eyewash,\" saying the federal record in public housing has been\nTEMPERATURES\nNELSON     73    48\nToronto      56    44\nCalgary      89    41\nPenticton      85    41\nVancouver     76    48\nLow Rent Housing\nPlan Approved\nSAAN1CH, B.C. (CP) - The\nfederal government has approved a $700,000 low rental\nhousing scheme in Saanich\nwhich is unique in British Columbia.\nThe scheme is expected to begin operation in a few weeks-\nproviding a Christmas present\nof homes for some of Saanich's\npoor.\nApproval of a federal cabinet\norder for the money was announced Wednesday by counsel\nlor Edith Gunning, chairman of\nIhe Municipal Health and Welfare Committee and driving\nforce behind the plan.\nKokanee Being Stocked in Great Lakes\nTORONTO (CP)-Half an\ninternational program to stock\nthe Great Lakes with salmon\nshows indications of success,\nbut it is too soon to judge\nresults of the other half, says a\nfisheries research expert.\nKen Loftus, supervisor of\nfisheries research for the\nOntario lands and forests\ndepartment, said in an interview Wednesday Ontario and\nthe state of Michigan decided to\ntry salmon as a Great Lakes\ngame fish after lake trout and\nwhitefish populations were decimated by the sea lamprey.\nOntario, in the winter of\n1964-65, stocked lakes Ontario\nand Huron with kokanee\nsalmon, an inland-lakes fish\nfrom British Columbia distantly\nrelated to the prized Pacific\nsockeye.\nThe next winter Michigan\nstocked lakes Michigan and\nSuperior with coho salmon, a\nPacific coast fish whose ability\nto survive in fresh water is\nunknown.\nThere were \"spectacular\"\nreports of kokanee in streams\nfeeding Lake Huron last fall,\nMr. Loftus said. Sightings also\nwere reported in the Bay of\nQuinte on Lake Ontario.\nEASILY RECOGNIZED\nThere is no mistaking the\nkokanee at spawning time: its\nback becomes humped, its\nupper jaw beaked and its color\nis a gaudy red.\nMichigan's success with coho\ncannot  be   judged   until   it  is\nknown whether coho eggs can\nsurvive without salt water.\nThere were some surprises\nfor those involved in the Ontario experiment. Kokanee in B.C.\nlakes do not reach maturity\nuntil their fourth year. Then the\naverage size is about 12 inches,\nthe weight about one pound.\nBut kokanee in Ontario\nspawning streams are mature\nin their second year, have\nattained a length of 15 inches\nand weights of more than a\noound.\nLaboratory investigation will\ntry to uncover the reasons.\nAlready under study is a theory\nthat the kokanee in B.C. is restricted in size by its plankton\ndiet while in Ontario it appears\nto have become a meat eater.\nIf true, the department by\naccident may have found a control over alewives, a tiny trash\nfish whose vast numbers\nthreaten the survival of fish,\nespecially in Lake Ontario. It is\nbelieved the kokanee thrives on\nthe fry of alewives.\nindustries in the major communities, and will be useful in personnel   offices   for   comparing\nwages between cities.\nOTHER FACTS\nSome other facts revealed by\nthe new figures:\n1. Moncton, N.B., had the\nlargest gain in average weekly\nwages and salaries between\n1966 and June this year, up 18\nper cent to $83.13 from $70.42.\n2. St. Hyacinthe, Que., had\nthe lowest average weekly\n$76.19, but this was 10.3 per\ncent better than the average for\n1965.\n3. St. John's, Nfld., lowest-\npaying industrial city In 1965\nwith $69.94, has seen its average rise to $80.53, a gain of 15.1\nper cent.\n4. Highest paying city outside\nthe industrial heartland of\nOntario is Chicoutimi, Que.,\nwith an average $123.04 in June\nthis year, up 16.6 per cent from\n$105.51 in 1965.\n5. Highest paying western\ncity is Vancouver, with $109.91\na week in June this year, up\n12.3 per cent from $97.83 in\n1965.\nRegardless of whether lenders charged the full 8ii per\ncent, word of the figure would\nfrighten home buyers and add\nto housing problems.\n\"We didn't think even this\ngovernment would go that far,\"\nMr. Knowles said.\nUnder a formula introduced\nlast year, the NHA has been\nautomatically adjusted each\nquarter to a level IVi per cent\nabove that of the long-term\nyield on federal government\nbonds.\nDespite this, the NHA rate\nthrough 1967 has been \"substantially below conventional rates\nand for six months has offered\nno significant premium over\nhigh grade corporate bond\nyields,\" Mr. Nicholson said.\n\"As a result, since March 31,\nprivate lenders have shown little enthusiasm for NHA-insured\nmortgages.\"\nThe National Housing Act\nallowed a spread of 2'_ per\ncent above the bond yield and\nthe government had decided to\ntake full advantage of the\nspread.\nWe anticipate this change\nwill result in increased lending\nactivity on the part of primary\nlenders and at the same time\nsubstantially increase activity\nin the s e c o n d a r y mortgage\nmarket.\"\nIndian Bands Bring\nSuit Against A-G\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Five\nBritish Columbia Indian bands\nWednesday launched a suit\nagainst the attorney-general,\nclaiming ownership of 7,000\nsquare miles of land in the\nNass River Valley along the\nprovince's northwest coast.\nA writ was filed in the British\nColumbia Supreme Court on\nbehalf of the Nishga tribal\ncouncil, suing for the title to\nthe land.\nFrank Calder, New Democratic Party member of the leg\nislature for Atlin and head of\nthe Nishga Council, said the\naction is a test case that could\naffect all 45,000 non-treaty\nIndians in the province.\n\"This is the day the Indians\nhave been waiting for,\" he\nsaid. \"This is the first time in\nour history we have presented\nour claim to the court.\"\nMr. Calder. the only Indian in\nthe provincial legislature, said\nthere are about 500 treaty\nIndians in the province and all\nof them are in the Peace River\narea.\nCar driver Larry Doyle of Nelson received a shock early Wednesday,\nas he was travelling along Nelson avenue. At the junction with Davies street\nhe suddenly found himself confronted with roadwork barriers. Unable to stop\nhis car in time, he crashed into the barriers, scattering them across the road.\nThe front end of his car was damaged, but not enough to prevent him driving\nit away \u2014 after doing some explaining to City police.\n 2\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURS., SEPT. 28, 1967\nSewage. Water System\nChecked as Typhoid Source\nA health official said it will\nCRANBROOK - East Koote- resort at Green Bay\nnay health officials are investi- Lake\ngating the possibility a connection between sewage and water\nsystems, caused a typhoid outbreak among visitors to a resort\nnear here,\nThe wator supply is being\nwatched to see if it shows signs\nof a green dye that has been\nflushed   down   toilets   at   the\non Moyie other   British   Columbians\nLate\nNews of\nThe Day\nJohnstone\nRoad Work\nProgresses\nSteady progress is being made\nin the improvement program for\nJohnstone Road on the North\nShore.\nReconstruction   and  widening\nand of the road will be carried out\none Saskatoon resident are prob-j during coming months in prep-\n, able cases Iaralion for paving It next year.\nbe several days before results! About a mile of roadway will\nof the test are known. |   Letters have been mailed froml undergo improvement at a cost\nTwo women, one from Kim- Victoria to local health authori-1 of around $60,000. Cost of paving\nberley, B.C. and another from ties  in  an  attempt to  contact; will be in the region of $10,000.\nCranbrook   contracted   typhoid another  59  persons  throughout j   The work is often of a tricky\nafter visiting the resort. 'western Canada and the United] nature.  In order to widen the\nThe health  official  said two States who visited the resort.      jroad' rock Ma-ting is necessary\n_-1 in many places and this has to\nbe carefully executed because of\nnearby properties. Renewal of\npresent water pipelines Is another factor which adds to the\ndifficulties.\nFOUR NEW FIRES START\nAS FOREST HAZARD RISES\nCity Public Works\nProjects Progressing\nNelson Public Works, Sanita-,\ntion and Waterworks Depart-j\nments completed several capital\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nCAMERON-In Saskatchewan, I to   city   council   from   S.\nSept. 23, James, aged 45 years.! deGroot, director of works.\nFuneral service held Saskatche-    _,\nwan Sept. 26. Graveside inter-1   Excavation and base prepayment rites to be held  Nelson 'ion were completed in the 600,\ncemetery Friday.  Sept. 29,  at 1700   and   800   blocks   of   Gore\n2 p.m., Monsignor J. F. Mona- street,\nghan officiating. Trail-Castlcgar,   _\nFuneral   Homes,   directors   D_!   The remaining 54 feet of storm\nWicketl and F. Ingham. ' sewer in the 500 block of Koote\nnay Street was installed, completing this project.\nThe   500   and   600   blocks   of\n,.   Second Street were laid with 590\nworks projects during the month fMt of _lorm _ewer and _ea-y\nof August according to a report\nC.\nthree-quarters of the length of\nthe 400 block of Davies Street\nhad similar pipe laid.\nWater  main  installation  was\nAward To\nHit Industry\nLetter Says\nTo assist their employees in\nmaking a decision whether to\nvote for or against striking for\ncarried out In the 2100 block of; higher wages, Kootenay Forest\nKootenay Street and on newly-\nnamed Little Street.\nPaving    of    sewer    ditches,\nramps,   the   boatfront,   parking\nthe navin\u2122 TJt \"if Friday on whether to accept the\n_Lh _fg_     . y _f '^recommendation by Mr. Justice\nmon h of August, according to Mmm _f m increase \u201e wages\ntne report. of 44 cents per hour in the first\nRoutine maintenance was done\nin all areas.\nFour fresh fire outbreaks were\nreported Wednesday in Nelson\nForest District as the hazard\nreading hovered on extreme.\nTwo fires broke out in Salmo\ndistrict, one at Fernie and\nanother at Revelstoke, to bring\nthe number still burning in Nelson district to 39.\nThe CPR fire which has blazed\nat Midge Creek and for ten\nmiles along the west shore of\nKootenay Lake for three weeks,\nstill has ten men and two bulldozers assigned to its control.\nFurther south al Shaw Creek\na long-burning fire is continuing\nto cause a headache.\nSeventeen men are still on the\nlines and a camp was put in by\nhelicopter Wednesday in an\neffort to cut off Ihe blaze.\nOther fires in the district are\ncomparatively quiet, and only 69\nmen    are   engaged    in   fire-\nfighting.\nDRIEST OF YEAR\nDistrict ranger Ralph Johnston\nsaid the high hazard reading was\nattributable to air masses presently sitting over the district, the\ndriest measured all year.\n\"A character of this weather\nsituation is that there Is no night\nrecovery up the slopes of the\nmountains. It does not cool down\nas It does in the valleys,\" he\nadded.\nA 100-acre blaze which has\nbeen rampaging In the Violin\nLake area near Trail was reported to be under control\nlate Wednesday, after jumping\nthe guard the previous night,\nThis fire broke out early Monday, and It believed to have\nbeen started by a hunter.\nThirty men and a bulldozer\nbattled to control thc burning\nand   it   wai   eventually   sur\nrounded.\nA smnll night patrol was left\nas trouble was being experi\nenced with spot fires along a\nridge on the west flank of the\nfire.\nProducts Ltd., Nelson has circulated a letter setting out the\nsituation and the possible consequences.\nThey will  be called to vote\nVocational School\nV-P to Whitehorse\n16 months of a new two-year\ncontract.\nThe IWA it asking for a 50-\ncent an hour increase, to give\nthem parity with coastal wood-\ncil  Tuesday,\nNO ASSISTANCE\nTRAIL  (CP)\u2014The  provincial\ngovernment   does   not   plan   to j workers,\nassist Trail by sharing costs of     \"The  cost of the  settlement\na $31,000 flood control expendi-  proposed by the Commissioner\nture last winter. Mines Minister  is considerably more than the\nDonald Brothers told city coun-j industry anticipated. Many operators wanted to reject the report because of the extremely\nhigh   wage   clause . . . Many\ncompanies   which   negotiate\nthroush Interior Forest Labour\nRelations Association, of which\nyour   company   is   one,   have\nreached  the absolute  limit  on\nwages and will be battling to\nremain in business under this\naward,\" says the letter.\nEmployees have also been\ncirculated a copy of Mr. Justice\nMunroe's report.\nAUTO\nDRIVE-IN-\nVUE\nTroil, B.C.\nTonight and Frldav\n\"TIKO AND THE SHARK\"\n(All Tahitian Cast)\n\u2014 Plui \u2014\n\"SPY IN YOUR EYE\"\nDana Andrews, Pier Angell\n(SHORTS)\nS.T.: 7:30 p.m.\nThe fresh, sweet\nflavor that\nbabies love...\n\"tocinc\nO. H. Timmins, vice-principal\nof B.C. Vocational School and\nKootenay School of Art in Nelson,\nis to become principal of a\nvocational school in Whitehorse,\nYukon.\nHe joined the Vocational\nSchool staff here as vice-\nprincipal just over a year ago\nafter teaching drafting and\nFrench at L. V. Rogers Senior\nsecondary School in Nelson.\nMr. Timmins was born on the\nArgentine Pampas and trained\nas a civil engineer on the Buenos\nAires Railway, later obtaining\nhis Bachelor of Science (Engl\nat London University.\nHe served as an engineer in\nthe regular army until 1961.\nWhile with the army he visited\nEurope, Africa, India, the Far\nEast and the Caribbean.\nHe has completed postgraduate work in Russian at\nCambridge University and Education at University of British,\nHe attended summer school at I KB   .10501 tO I\nUBC last summer, working to-'\nward   his   master's   degree   in:\neducation.\nHis duties at Whitehorse Voca-j\nDon Johnston (centre) receives a $100 scholarship cheque from Nelson\nKinsmen Club president Bill Hamson for his outstanding athletic achievements\nlast year at L. V. Rogers High School. Bill Johnston, Don's father, looks on\nfrom the right, Johnston last year became the second athlete in history to win\nLVR's \"second bar\" award for his all-around athletic performances through\nhis high school years. He also won two big letters and was named the school's\nAthlete of the Year. He is attending Notre Dame University this year.\nTIMMINS\ntlonal Training School will commence Nov. 1.\n] DRIVE-IN \"\nI Tonight, Friday and Saturday I\n..my first word\"\nTh6 |oys of a happy baby are long remembered. To thousands\nof families, one ot babies pleasant \"lire! starts\" has been a\nformula of Pacilic Evaporated Milk or Pacific Concentrated\nPartly Skimmed Milk. So fresh-tasting and Bweet. Pacific Is the\nfines! quality available. Why not make your first word \"Pacific\"\n\u2014when baby come6 home from the hospital.\nP.S. Another great quality product from Pacific\nAs a drink fre$h from the refffgeretor\ncr us*c m cocking tviryom\n\u25a0 loves the flavor of Pacific\n\u00a3   \u25a0      .-.start! Skim Milk Powder.\n\"It s m_.-fe_._rom the milk of B.C.'s\nf\u00bbmojj_\u00bb Fraec-r Valley dairy herds i..\nand ig the only inGianf skim milk powder\nprocessed in Western Canada!\nnow also in\na new\neconomical\npoly bag\n\"ALVAREZ\nKELLY\"\nWilliam Holden,\nRichard Wldmark\n(Colour)\nShowtime:  8 p.m.\nJust Arrived\nBAYER\nDECONGEST\nCAPSULES\n10 for $1.35\nQuick Relief\nFrom Stuffy Nose.\nSAM PLE'S\nNELSON PHARMACY\nLTD.\n\"Your Fortress ol  Health\"\n639 Baker St. Nelson\nPhone 352-2313\nBoard Backs\nTrail Project\nKootenay \u25a0 Boundary Regional\nDistrict hospital board at a\nmeeting with representatives of\nTrail, Rossland and Grand\nForks, approved financing participation in the Trail-Tadanac\nHospital project to introduce an\nextended care unit, psychiatric\nunit and extended laboratory,\nand five added acute beds at\nBoundary Hospital in Grand\nForks.\nOf particular interest was a\ndecision to provide $25,000 additional for Trail-Tadanac working\ncapital.\nSportsmen Delay\nPollution Action\nNo decision was reached al\nthe Nelson Rod and Gun Club\nmeeting Tuesday night on two\nmajor Issues on the agenda:\u2014\nWhat can be done to keep the\npollution of Duncan Lake before\nthe public and whether or not the\nclub will withdraw from the\nBritish Columbia Federation ol\nRod and Gun Clubs.\nThe 14 members present decided to hold off on the second\nquestion until they had a chance\nto hear from Howard Page,\npresident of the provincial federation.\nThe club's action on the\nDuncan Dam problem will hinge\non its federation decision as\nsome members feel they could\nfight pollution more effectively\nthrough the provincial federation.\nThe meeting was held on Sept.\n26 at Eagle Hall.\n-\u25a0Ill    \u25a0     I     111! I  _-_______P.\nWANTED\nHome for\nTeddy Bear\nMayo   Pharmacy\nLtd.\nCorner   Raker  and  Ward\nPh. 352-2.13 NHkihi\nEye Specialist\nService To Be\nResumed Here\nUNKNOWN FRUIT\nAlthough Ihe origin of the\nlemon is uncertain, the bitter\nfruit seems to have been introduced into North Africa somewhere between 1000 and\nAD.\nSpecialist services for Nelson\ndistrict hospital patients are to\nbe enhanced.\nDr. Ian Bell, eye specialist,\nwill resume the Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital opthamology\nservice this month; an internal\nmedicine specialist, Dr. C. L. K.\nMcllwaine from Edinburgh, and\nDr. K, L. Muth, surgeon, will\n1200 I commence practice before De-\nI cember.\nArrow Coffer Dam\nBlow May Be Tuesday\n[    Tentative  date  for  the  next\ni major step in the construction of\nthe giant High Arrow Dam is\ni Tuesday next week.\n,   Barring any unforeseen snags,\non lhat day an explosion will rip\nGENERAL|| ELECTRIC\nFine cooking\nhas never been easier\nor more convenient!\n-Banging Western Canadians fine milk products for 50 years\nTODAY IS\npart of the guarding coffer dam\ninto fragments.\nAnother landmark of the job is\nrewalerlng of the coffer dam,\nwhich is taking place this week,\nB.C, Hydro project manager\nSam Walker said Wednesday.\nNext major achievement after\nblowing the coffer dam will be\nthe complete closure of the Columbia River in February above\nCastlegar.\nOnly 23,000 cubic yards of\nconcrete have still to be poured,\n570,000 cubic yards having been\nused in Ihe dam's making so far,\nLabor force on the project now\nstands at 1300 and is gradually\nbeing decreased.\nRequiem Mass\nFor Mrs. Cote\nRequiem Mass was celebrated\nat the Blessed Sacrament Catholic Church, Friday at 10:30 a.m.\nfor Mrs. Rosclla Nelda Cote, wife\nof Phillip Cote, who died in the\nKootenay Lake General Hospital\non September lath, aged 73\nyears\nThe Rev .1. Boyle, C.Sl.R. was\nthe celebrant and Interment\ntook place in the Roman Catholic\nSection in Nelson Memorial\nPark. Rosary was recited at the\nTho mpson Funeral Home,\nThursday at II p.m. Tlie pallbearers were: her two sons and\ntwo sons-in-law: LeRoi Cote and\nVernon Cote, E. II. Krstvcld and\nL. Vyse.\nModel 32J03: Elegant woodtone design stvling is combined with superior cooking features in Ihis moderately\npriced model. Extra hi-speed calrocl elements, no-drlp\ncooktop, fluorescent lamp End appliance outlet arc only\nfour of the many convenient cooking features Large\ncapacity oven has \"no fog\" window. Rotisserie is optional.\nREGULAR $240.00\netia\nMany Other Models\nSale Priced To Clear\nNELSON ELECTRIC\nCO. LTD.\n574 Baker St. Nelson Ph. 352-5535\n wm\nFASCINATED by Nelson Daily News electronic engraver are these\npupils from Central Elementary School, part of a group of 30 children who\ntoured the newspaper's various departments Tuesday.\nCranbrook To Vote Soon On\n$325,000 Waterworks Bylaw\nCRANBROOK - Ratepayers\nof the 2950 city voters listed for\n1966 will be eligible to ballot on\na money bylaw Thursday, Oct.\n5, to approve borrowing of $325,-\n000 to augment city water supply with wells, and install pumps\nfor developed wells and two\nmiles of additional supply mains.\nThe approved amount would\nalso allow for improvements in\nthe 50-year-old existing distribution system where waler loss is\nsuspected.\nIf approved the issue would be\nself-liquidating by application of\nan increase of about 50 per cent\nin monthly rates to thc consumer, payable with his utility\nbill. Thus retirement of the loan\nCranbrook...\nNDP Sets Date\nFor Nomination\nwould include financing by\nevery consumer in the city\nrather than by only property-\nowners.\nThe cily is still bruised from\nsix weeks of rigid sprinkling restrictions to keep taps running\nin higher altitudes of the city\nthrough a summer of almost absolute drought. This was partially due to lowered supplies and\npartially to inadequate distribution for the number ol properties\nserved.\nProfessional survey by Asso-\ncialed Engineering Services\nthree years  ago recommended\nimmediate attention fo increasing waler supply to the expand\ning city, beginning with this\n$325,000 well program as interim\nto a multi-million expansion by\nsupplying from the Moyie River\nsystem, in addition to the present Joseph Creek source with\nemergency augmentation from\nthe east-flowing Gold Creek.\nIf the city expands as anticipated the latter will become\nnecessary ultimately, but the\nwells system would serve for\npresent needs.\nApproving vole could have the\nsystem operating in 1968.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURS., SEPT. 28, 1967\u20143\nGrand Forks...\nAirport Property\nCost under Study\nCRANBROOK - Nov. 4 has\nbeen set by the new Okanagan-\nKootenay constituency NDP Association for nomination here of\nits candidate for the next federal election.\nDr. Laurier LaPierre of McGill faculty and the discontinued\ncontroversial CBC \"Seven Days\"\nprogram, will be guest speaker.\nThe convention was called by\npresident   James   Patterson   of\nNewspaper Advertising\nPays Over and Over\nHOTEL\nPEDICORD\nW21J Rlverslde-W214 Spragne\nSPOKANE, WASH.\nCOMFORTABLE ROOMS\nRooms with bath $3.50 to $4.50\nWithout bath $2.00 \u2022 $3.00\nSuites $7.50\nCanadian Currency\nat Par On\nRoom Rents\nCranbrook . ..\nSchool Class On Shift\nAs New School Awaited\nKimberley and Mrs.  Margaret\nHobbs of Revelstoke.\nCandidates of two other parlies\nhave made it known they will\nalso be available for nomination\nwhen dates are set. Both are sitting members \u2014 Howard Johnson, Social Credit, representing\nOkanagan-Mainline, and James\nByrne, Liberal. Representing\nKootenay East. Major parts of\nboth constituencies have been\nmerged under redistribution into\nOkanagan-Kootenay, effective as\nsoon as parliament prorogues.\nNo convention dates are set.\nRossland...\nChest Members\nReceive Grants\nNOT MANY AROUND\nThere   are   more   than   100\ncoins of which only one specimen is known.\nROSSLAND (Staff) - A total\nof $.fi75 in grants was authorized\nby directors of Rossland Community Chest at their last\nmeeting.\nThe Canadian Red Cross Society was granted $1400;; Rossland Civic Activities Association\n(Youth Development Fund)\n$1000; the Canadian Arthritis\nand  Rheumatism  Society  $500;\nThe Canadian Cancer Society and\nthe Canadian National Institute\nfor the Blind $350 each; Local\nEmergency Relief Committee\n$300; Kootenay Society for\nHandicapped Children, Rossland\nLibrary Association and the\nCanadian Polio Foundation, $250\neach; the Senior Citizens Association $200: Multiple Sclerosis\nFoundation $75 and Grace Hospital $50.\nGRAND FORKS (Staff) -\nAcquisition of property for an\nairport in Grand Forks was one\nof thc main topics at the last\nmeeting of Grand Forks council.\nMembers thought the cost of\nthe acquisition was excessive and\nare investigating ways of lowering the cost.\nA variety of other items were\non the agenda for the meeting.\nResidents of Ruckle Area were\nadvised of plans to carry out a\nsanitary fill operation in the\nmarsh area of the industrial\npark. The city will also dredge\nthe river while it is at its low\nlevel.\nGrand Forks council is presently awaiting confirmation from\nthe firemen of a proposed ambulance charge schedule. The\nschedule was proposed at a\nmeeting of the firemen, council\nand Regional District.\nAn inquiry regarding the programming of spring shows was\nreceived by council and CNIB\nwas granted a tag day.\nCouncil was called upon to\nsettle a dispute concerning the\nArena schedule between the\nMinor Hockey organization and\nthe Figure Skating Club. A satisfactory compromise was reached, it was reported.\nA decision was made to give\nthe city engineer the go-aheari\nlo acquire storm sewer tile and\ngravel. There was also some dis-\ncussion regarding the possibil'tv\nof a new sidewalk from '\narena to the railroad track.\nCouncil awarded a $1250 c >\ntract for Ihe construction of a\ntennis  court  from   poured  concrete.\nHow to relieve\nBACK\nACHE\nUse Dodd's Kidney\nPills for prompt\nrelief from the\nsystemic condition causing tho\nbackache. Soon\nyou feel better \u2014\nrest better. Depend on Dodd'a-\nSEEKS MAYORALTY\nNANAIMO (CPi - Alderman\nTed Barsby has announced that\nhe will run for mayor in December municipal elections. Aid.\nBarsby has served on council\nfor  four   years.\nTinactin\nAttacks\nAthlete's\nFoot\n\u25a0Reo.T.M..Scherino Corporation Limittrf\nCRANBROOK - Enrolment in\nCranbrook School District has\nsimmered down to 3296. which\nis about 200 more than in 1966,\nand also 200 more than existing\nplant capacity.\nThe five-class surplus is being\naccommodated temporarily on a\nAnnual Meeting\nOf the\nKootenay (West) Progressive Conservative\nAssociation Will Be Held On\nSaturday, September 30th\nCommencing at 2 in the Afternoon at the\nHI-ARROW ARMS MOTOR HOTEL\nCASTLEGAR\nEverybody Welcome\nWalter Davis, President\nshift basis alternating with the\nTenth Avenue Primary in its\nplant but will have its own quarters by November in its own\nMuriel Baxter primary school at\n2021 South Second Street.\nMiss Baxter, long-time Central\nprincipal, turned the sod for this\nlast week, and a five-room prefabricated structure made by\nTecton of Vancouver will be\ntrucked in and assembled with\ncranes in October on the concrete foundation the company is\nnow preparing. Parts include\nfloors, walls, roof and plumbing,\nand occupation is scheduled by\nNovember. Cost is $117,000.\nLAMBS\nZGreat\nRUMS\nNAVY RUM\nPALM BREEZE RUM\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columhia\nLay Minister\nRev. E. White\nDies Suddenly\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Lay minister\nof Laura Keer Memorial Church,\nnon-sectarian at Marysville and\nrecently Cranbrook resident.\nRev. Ernest White died suddenly\nat Marysville.\nMr. White was born in Sussex,\nEngland, and educated as mechanical engineer. He returned\noverseas from Calgary to serve\nin the First World War, then was\nconsulting engineer in Calgary,\nVancouver and Port Alice until\n. becoming a minister.\ni He served at Kamloops, Coeur\nd'Alene, Idaho, and Grand\nForks, and Marysville and Natal\nin East Kootenay to retirement\nlo Calgary, then came here two\nmonths ago. He had \"supplied\"\nduring summer at the United\nChurch.\nSurviving are his wife, Cranbrook, sons, Rev. Godfrey White,\nAnglican minister at Moses\nLake, Wash., and David, Marysville, seven grandchildren and\neight great-grandchildren.\nFuneral rites were at his own\nLaura Keer Church, conducted\nby Cranbrook Knox Presbyterian minister. Rev. A. R.\nHenderson, with Knox Church\nchoir attending, and burial rites\nwere by Rev. Godfrey White.\nTendering approval is awaited\nfrom the department of education for a $178,000 addition to\nLaurie Elementary on South\nSecond Street which will be\nnecessary soon. Ultimate use of\nthis building for junior secondary exclusively is tentatively\nplanned.\nThe annual East Kootenay\nteachers' convention has been\nset for Invermere Oct. 12 and 13,\nthe latter part of the week beginning with Thanksgiving, and\nleaving two school days.\nIn a secret ballot at the recent\nCranbrook school district board\nmeeting, majority of 4-2 was\ngiven implementation of an annual $500 trustee stipend now\npermissible by the provincial\ngovernment. There are six trustees and a chairman.\nTelephone\nVeteran\nHonored\nL. E. \"Red\" Hadfield was\nhonored by co-workers from B.i.\nTelephone Company at a retire\nment party in Vancouver on\nAugust 25.\nHis retirement, effective Sepl.\n1, ended 30 years of service witli\nthe telephone company.\nMr. Hadfield's telephone\ncareer began in 1931 in Nelson,\nbut he turned to mining for mor.\nof the 1930's. He ended his\nmining career to return to B.C.\nTelephone.\nHe was foreman in Vancouver\nand in Trail until his appointment as supervising foreman in\nVancouver in 1952.\nCORRECTION\nMclNTOSH\nAPPLES\n$\nApprox. 19-lb.\nHand.-Pack\nBox\t\nO) SAFEWAY\nCAHAI'A      IA.IWAV      llUIIIti\nCreston's\nPellet Plant\nStill Studied\nCRESTON (Staff) - Creston\ncould be due for a new $800,000\nalfalfa pellet plant, but there are\na couple of matters that must be\nstraightened out before this can\nbe confirmed.\nFinancing must be arranged\nand some assurance must be\ngiven that the Indian lands south\nof Creston, the Lister bench\nlands and certain Kootenay flats\nwill be utilized to ensure maximum alfalfa tonnage for 200\nfrost-free days of constant operation.\nThe announcement came following a detailed feasibility\nstudy by agricultural consultant\nStanley Weston and L. Farstad,\none of Canada's outstanding soil\nspecialists.\nCreston has three important\n[actors in being selected for the\nsite, Mr. Weston said. It has\nperfect soil, natural gas and envisaged low freight rates.\nThe government specialist\nadded that he felt local Indians\nwould be employed by the proposed plant, should it become\na reality and it would also add\nlo the Creston payroll.\nESCAPER SENTENCED\nPRINCE GEORGE (CP) -\nEarl Beamish, who escaped\nfrom Prince George provincial\njail Sept. 16, was sentenced\nTuesday to one year for escaping lawful custody. Beamish\nwas serving a term at Oakalla\nprison bul was brought here lo\nface a charge of robbery with\nviolence which will he heard in\nthe B.C. County Court Oct. 19.\nGirl.\nSTRETCHY KNEE HOSE\nSave ms ta 30% m Unit _r-*r_ nyfan Bermuda\nl_i_f_ heM - to b to JH AWm.M>\ntft.  \u00ab to KHA. _ffl.lQ^\n\u25a0-SUM, to  SI OO P_r    __\u25a0 ^W\nBoys' Thermal Knit Drawers\n\"\"\u2022   $1.49\nShlrta - 99c. II\nGirls' Briefs *% (Rkr\nCotton knit, 4 to tn J   W\n7toM    \u00a5k. wp   ** \" W\\\\\nLittle Boys' AA\nThermal Knit Drawers QQC\n4 to 6x M   aW\nShlr^^walch\nLADIES' CORD SNEAKERS\nNaw and faihionoble for Fall. Wide wolo\ncord Hi_-.ki.r- id. ol for tchool or cai-ial\nwear. Smart now .hnd.i of Gold, loden\nGrwn nnd Burgundy, j*. ^^ AA\nSim 6 to m Abo 4>^J.\/\/\nIlkL Awtm\nAlso   ovo.lnbh   In   Ctwkkn     _r *>   aq\nboot stylo In Loden Oro\u00abn.        * J *\"\nMENS RUNNING SHOES\nEconomically priced boat ityle, canvas up-\npen. Black or Whlto In -^ \u201e\nfoil  tiio ranso. $1 .99\nPair      <\u25a0}\nSoma tn obovo, hy Cw.od.on trrfg... )19t\nBOYS' RUNNING SHOES\nBoot _tyle, 8-10, 11-13, 1-3   $1.19\nLow cut. Blatk or While. 1-3, .  $1.69\nYOUU PAY TOO MUCH.\nhe\na-\nie.\nmts\ntuft-\nling\nthe\n\u2022fan\nthe\nlave\n>ard\ncon-\nnot\nincl\nould\n Editorial Paste\nThursday, September 28, 1987\nMilestone\nFor Soviet\nNriamt Sailij H\\nm\nEstablished April 22, 1902 Nelson, B  C,\nPublished by the NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED, 266 Bakei Street,\nNelson   British Columbia   mornings excepl Sundays and holidays   in the centre\not the Knolenays   with the largest daily circulation in the Inlenoi ol B.C.\nAuthurued as Second Class Mail   Post Ullice Department. Ottawa.\nand foi Paymenl ol Postage in Cash\nMEMBER OF IHE CANADIAN PRESS   THE CANADIAN DAILV NEWSPAPER\nPUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION AND THE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS.\nThe Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use tm republication of all news\ndispatches credited to it or to the Associated Press ot Reuters In this paper\nand also the local news published herein\nRestless Czech\nIntellectuals\nA debate rages about the authenticity ol an appeal of some 450\nCzechoslovak intellectuals first published at the beginning of this month\nIn the London Sunday Times. It was a protest against governmental\nrepression of free expression in Czechoslovakia. Admittedly such protests are not new in the European Communist world.\nWhat is remarkable about the Czechoslovak intellectuals' document Is that it went beyond internal protest to an appeal abroad for support \u2014 particularly  to  fellow-intellectuals  in  the  West.\nI Included this passage: \"Demand the right of free expression and\ncriticism as well as the end of personal persecution! And please do so,\nespecially you intellectuals who are still subject to dangerous illusions\nabout democracy and freedom in the socialist (i.e., Communist) countries, who protest against fascism in Spain, militarism in Greece, against\nracism in the- United Stales, and tend to overlook what happens there\nwhere you are pnning your hopes.\"\nOf the Amercan writers whom the Czechs addressed by name,\nthe Sunday Times quotes John- Steinbeck as saying: \"It's a phoney,\nIsn't it?\"; and'Arthur Miller as saying: \"I don't want to shoot off about\nIt when I haven't got enough information.\" Most of the other Western\nIntellectuals on whom the manifesto called by name were equally cautious. But one, the German novelist Gunther Grass, has lost no time\nIn acting on the appeal with a couragously yet politely worded letter to\nCzechoslovak President Novotny.\n\"No power apparatus is imaginative enough to suppress (the free\nword),\" he wrote, \"for the need of the human being for the free, disturbing, doubting, accusing liberating word is greater than its demand for\napparent security which the state and states always try to impose on\ntheir citizens at the cost-of freedom.\"\nIn one eense, the authenticity of the document smuggled out of\nCzechoslovakia is academic. (Serious European journals of opinion tend\nto accept it as genuine.) There is every evidence oi a revolt oi intellectuals\nwithin Czechoslovakia \u2014 and oi a government crackdown ln response.\nIt might be said thai just as British governments follow a stop-go\npolicy on the British economy, so Communist governments follow a stop-\ngo policy on intellectual expression. About the only reassuring thought is\nthat these days it is stop-go. Not so long ago it was simply full stop \u2014\nbefore the firing squad.\u2014Christian Science Monitor.\nThe Equality of Mankind;\nThe Fable and the Fact\nOf all the notions which afflict\nthis troubled world, few can have\ncaused such mischief and confusion\nas the credo, rooted in the Christian\nethic, that all men are- equal. That\nall men are created equal, and therefore of equal merit in the sight of\nGod, is now universally accepted as\na profound truth and the basis of\nmodern western civilization, with its\nemphasis on the individual, but it\nis in the attempt to translate this\nnoblest of principles from the realm\nof philosophy to that of practical\npolitics thai misrepresentation takes\nover. \u25a0   - .      - -     -     - _\nFor' in';.\"everything save . the _\ncomnjon dignity as individuals, their\nessentia] worth as unique and distinctive human beings, men are\nmanifestly and demonstrably unequal. \"However one may choose to\nmeasure him \u2014 his capacity to endure,, to adapt, survive, to. govern\nhis own affairs or that of others \u2014\none man, or one community of men,\nis clearly better suited by heredity,\nenvironment, phvsique, and a host\nol other factors lo cope with a challenge lhan another man or community. To maintain that a Kalahari .bushtnan enjoys equality, in\nthe-sight pf God as an individual\nhumrin-beinq, with a Harvard graduate.is a profound philosophic truth;\nto maintain lhal he is equally capable -f.managinq the affairs of the\nworid Is palpable nonsense. It is\nannrtrent to ever'one that societies\nat every stagp of culture, from the\nsophisticated space age of Europe\nand-America'to the primitive Stone\nAqe of Terra de! Fueqo, co-esisl\nsice -by side in the world today.\nTh\u00ab\"'cire about a<* unequal in their\ntec-jftlpSl -and cultural accomplish-\nos il .is possible, lo ie, .vet\nI1       \"   1'    r     pr-tnl\"*\"    inlPr-^relatinn\nol   lhe  concepl   ol   man's   equalily\nr_\nwe pretend that each is entitled to\nan equal voice in the political management of the world. To maintain\nthat a primitive tribesman, unaware\neven of the existence of a world beyond the limits of his jungle, is as\ncapable as his sophisticated European or North American contemporary of operating the complex\npolitical machinery of a modern nation, Is the most arrant and evident\nnonsense, yet so ingrained ls the\nconcepl ol \"one man, one vote,\" that\ntoday we are attempting to do just\nthat. It is this gross distortion of\n-truth, this evasion of reality, which\nlies at the root of much of the world's\ntragedy  \u2014  attempts  to  make   the\n- unworkable work in Africa \u2014 and\n\u25a0 a good deal of its farce \u2014 Tanzania\nhas equal voting privileges with the\nUnited   States   in   the   United   Na-\n\u2022 tions Assembly.\n' \u2022 \"Nor is it in politics alone that\nmisconceptions   of   man's   equality\n* work such mischief. For our Christian teachings encourage us to pro-\n;-)ect our acceptance of equality into\n\u2022 cT-concept ol the universal brother-\n\u25a0 hood of man. No matter that history\n- Shows us lhat like is ever hostile\n-to unlike; that societies ol one Bkin\n'. color have ever been hostile lo those\n' of_another. No matter that sociolo-\n* gists like Robert Ardrey point out\nthat civilization itself has evolved\n- from such inherent hostility, that\nstrife, not peace, is the normal condition of mankind and the source of\nall human progress; we are obsessed\n. wilh the notion that racial tension\nls unnatural and unusual and altogether unlikely.\n- The reckoning of all this mistaken and misguided idealism, in\nterms ol human misery, suflering\nnnd strif'5, has vel tp be made.\n\u2014OrilJia Packet and Times\nt,\nBy PETER BUCKLEY\nZAPOROZHYE, Ukraine\n(CP'-The great Dneproges\nhydro plant on Ihe Dnieper\nRiver here will never rival\nRed Square as a tourist\nattraction, but it still carries\nemotional punch for the old-\ntimers of Soviet communism.\n\"Communism is Soviet\npower plus electrification of\nthe whole country,\" Lenin\nonce proclaimed, and one of\nthe Bolsheviks' first peacetime priorities was an\nincrease in hydroelectric\npower.\nThe grey wall of Dneproges\n\u2014in Russian, an abbreviation\nof Dnieper Hydroelectric Station\u2014was built between 1927\nand 1932 during the first\nFive-Year Plan of the young\nSoviet stale. It was one of the\nkeystones in the Soviet\nUnion's crash program of\nindustrialiation.\nAt the time, the dam was\nsecond in size only to Grand\nCoulee in the U.S. And the\nAmericans, caught up in a\nwave of liberal-inspired\nsympathy for the Soviet Union, sent three turbines and\na staff of advisers to help in\nits construction.\nIn some respects, it was the\nmilestone for Soviet self-confidence that the Canadian\nPacific Railway was for Canada's.\nWRECKED IN WAR\n\"If you weren't here, it's\nhard to appreciate how much\nthis thing meant at the time,\"\na veteran Western Communist who visited the site in\n1931 told me. . . .\n\"Conditions were terrible\nall over the country, there\nwere so many shortages and\nso much that had to be done.\nAnd there they were, a 60-\ncalled backward country,\nbuilding one of Ihe greatest\nengineering jobs in the world.\nIt was really something.\"\nThe nostalgia surrounding\nDneproges grew during the\nSecond World War. when the\nSoviet Union's trials were\nbeing sympathetically chronicled. The dam was deliberately damaged by the Ukrainians to hamper the German\nconquest, and it was all but\n-totally wrecked later by the\nNazis as they w i t h d r e fr\nbefore the Red Army.\nSoviet engineers\u2014again\nwith American help\u2014rebuilt\nthe project after Ihe war.\nToday, Dneproges looks like\nany other dam and any other\nhydro project. Although still\nimpressively large\u2014nearly\nhalf a mile long and 190 feet\nhigh\u2014it has since been surpassed in size by projects in\nSiberia and the West.\nIts current maximum production of 650.000 kilowatts\nwill be boosted to 1,500,000 by\n1971, when an additional\nseries of generators is\ninstalled, so it will remain\namong the world's largest.\nSTEEL EARNS PROFIT\nDneproges is still the pulsing heart of Zaporozhye, a\ncity of 615,000 which mushroomed next to the hydro project.\nZaporozhye,    whose    name\nmeans \"beyond the rapids,\"\nhas two of the biggest and\nmost productive steel plants\nin the Ukraine, a stale which\nproduces more lhan half of\nthe lotal U.S.S.R. output of\npig iron and iron ore.\nAlthough local authorities\nhave lined the streets with\nattractive trees and are shilling some industry to the outskirts, il remains a heavily\nindustrial centre. Brick-colored clouds of smoke still\nbekji from the great ranks of\nsmoke slacks, despite\nincreasingly severe anti-pollution laws, and the night sky is\naglow from the fires of the\nsteel furnaces.\nAt the enormous Zaporozh\nStal works. Lenin Prize winner Lev Upko, the dynamic\nlittle manager, said his plant\nproduces 4,000,000 tons of\nsteel a year\u2014equal to the\nwhole annual production of\nczarist  Russia.\nHe estimated the state\nmakes a 35-per-cent profit on\nthe plant's operation\u2014a fat\n145,000,000 rubles last year,\nwhich translates into $175,-\n000,000 at the official\nexchange rate. Although the\nmethod of calculating profit\ncannot be compared in any\nway with a Western firm's,\nit\/s still a nice bundle.\nPLANT MODERNIZED\nDestroyed during the war,\nZaporozh Stal was rebuilt and\nhas been continuously modernized since, unlike numerous\nother plants in the Ukraine's\nancient steel industry which\nremain archaic and relatively\nunprofitable.\nWhere Zaporzhye and its\nsteel industry stand now, at\nthe lime of the revolution\nthere was only a village\ncall e\"d Alexandrovsk, with\nsome slight local fame as the\nlong-ago home of the Dnieper\nCossacks, a band of half-\nfreedmen, half-bandits.\nThe Dneproges dam\nbrought the area to life.\nSmall wonder that it has\nbecome something of a legend in little more than a\ngeneration.\nIt's even had time to take\non some legend-like exagera-\ntions. For instance, visitors\n\u25baare told' that the dam 'is\n\"believed\" to have been\nLenin's own idea.\nWhich might annoy the\nczarist planners who first conceived the dam in 1905, even\nthough they didn't get a\nchance to put their plans into\neffect.\nStock Quotations\nThe Dally News doe. not hold Itself responsible lo the event\nof an error in Ihe following lists.\nClosing prices supplied by\nDoherty, Roadhou.e & McCuaig Bros., Nelson and Trail, B.C.\nTORONTO  STOCKS\nShrum\nShockers\nQuakes Rock\nBig Chile Area\nSANTIAGO, Chile (API-A\nwave of seismic shakes spread\npanic through much of Chile\nTuesday. Two major shocks\nand a series of higher tremors\nwere felt in a 1,000-mile strip of\ncentral and coastal territory.\nThe national police said they\nhad received no reports of\ndeaths or serious injuries from\nthe quakes, which were the\nstrongest in central Chile since\nfe  March,   1964,  quake  which\nlied more than 300 persons.\ni The quakes' intensity .'anged\nup to seven on the international\nscale which has a maximum of\n9-\nProvincial Civil Defence is\nprepared to assist municipal instructors with one-night, or at\nfhe most two-night courses. This\nwill assist in holding the interest of volunteers.\nWords of Life\nTake my yoke upon you and\nlearn of me: for I am meek and\nlowly in heart: and ye shall find\nrest unto your souls. For my\nvoke is easy, and my burden is\nlight. Matthew 11:29,30.\nHUBERT\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi                  9.12 9.25\nAsbestos             24.25 24.75\nAgloma Steel      22.87 23.25\nAlta Gas Trunk  35.62 36.25\nAluminum          30.15 30.50\nArgus                  14.75 15.75\nArgus C pfd.       9,62 9.75\nBank of Mont.   13.00 13.12\nBank of N.S.       '3.87 14.25\nBell   Telephone   45.12 46.25\nB.A. Oil                 37.50 37.75\nB.C. Forest         21.00 21.50\nB.C. Packers A   17.50 21.00\nB.C. Telephone   61.00 62.75\nBurns _ Co.       15.75 16.00\nCAE Industries   11.50 11.62\nCalgnrv Power   24.25 25.00\nC. & Dom. Sugar 23.00 23.12\nCan. Cement.       38.50 30.00\nCan. Iron            21.62 21.87\nCdn.   Breweries    7.75 7.87\nCdn. Canners      11-75 1200\nC. Curtiss Wright 1.80 1.90\nCan. Industries 17.62 17.75\nCan. Imp. Bank 13.25 13.37\nCan. Marconi 6.50 6.62\nCdn. Pacific Ry. 62.50 62.87\nChemcell 10.37 10.62\nCol. Cellulose 3.95 4.00\nCominco 29.50 29.62\nCons. Paper 32.62 33.00\nCons. Paper Wts. 5.60 5.75\nCons. Gas 20.50 20.75\nCrestbrook Tbr. 7.12 7.25\nDist. Seagrams 39.12 39.25\nDome Pele 56.37 57.00\nDom. Bridge 18.00 18.25\nDom. Foundries 24.25 24.62\nDom. Stores        18.25 18.62\nD. Tar - Chem. 13.12 13.25\nDom. Textiles     22.50 22.87\nEddv Match Co. 29.00 30.00\nEddv Paper        16.00 16.25\nFalconbridge       88.75 89.50\nFamous Players 39.25 39'7S\nFannv Farmer   42.75 55.00\nFord Motor Co.  56.50 59.00\nFord of Canada 164.50 166.00\nGen. Steel Wares 7.75 8.75\nGoodyear          201.00 210.00\nGrevhound Lines 12.37 13.00\nGt. Lakes Power 20.00 20.50\nHome Oil A        23.12 23.50\nHome Oil B        24.50 24.75\nHudson Bay Co.  19.75 20.37\nHusky Oil             22.37 22.50\nHuskv Oil Wts.   11.62 12.00\nIndustrial           20.75 21.00\nImperial Oil        66.25 66.50\nImp. Tobacco      13.50 13.75\nInd.   Minerals     15.00 15.62\nInl. Nat Gas pfd. 17.50 17.75\nInland Nat. Gas  10.75 11.00\nIntl. Utilities       38.50 38.75\nInt. Nickel         115.25 115.37\nInterprov. Pipe   22.50 22.62\nInter. Pipe Wts. 11.12 11.25\nInterprov. Steel   3.90 3.95\nJefferson Lake    59.25 60.75\nLoeb                    15.37 15.50\nLaurentide            4.55 4.60\nLevy                      28.00 28.25\nLoblaw B               7.12 7.37\nMassey Ferg.      21.12 21.50\nMagna Electric   17.00 \u2022  17.50\nMacM Powell R. 28.50 28.75\nManagement        3.25 3.95\nMolson Brew A   21.50 22.00\nMont. Loco.         15.00 15.25\nMoore Corp.       33.25 33.37\nNoranda              55.50 5S.00\nN. _ Cent. Gas   13.12 13.25\nPacific Pete        19.12 19.25\nPrice Bros.        11.50 11.62\nPower Corp.        9.87 10.00\nQue. Nat. Gas    10.37 10.50\nRank Org.           6.37 6.50\nRoyal Bank        16.25 16.50\nRapid Grip          3.90 4.70\nRapid Grip A      8.00 8.50\nRnthmans           27.75 20.00\nSalada Foods      11.00 11.25\nShell Oil             31.62 31.87\nShell Oil Wts.     14.00 14.25\nShoppers City       4.00 4.15\nSimnsons            33.25 33.75\nSoutham             47.50 47.87\nSteel of Canada   22.62 22.87\nToronto Dom.      13.50 13.62\nTexaco                32.50 33.00\nTrans Mtn. Pipe 19.87 20.25\nTrans Can. Pipe 31.00 31.25\nT. Can. Pipe Wts. 8.50 8.65\nUnion Carbide     21.37 21.50\nUnion Gas of C. 14.87 15.00\nWalker-Gooder.   35.37 33.62\nWestcoast Trans. 25.37 25.30\nWeston Geo. A   17.62 18.00\nWoodwards A     17.12 17.50\nZenith Elect.        2.15 2.20\nMINES  AND OILS\nAdvocate              2.45 2.50\nAetna Inv.             .48 .50\nAgnico                  1.25 1.30\nAnglo. Amer. Moly .28 .30\nAtlantic Coast        .62 .65\nAunor                   2.32 2.33\nBarnat                   .33 .34\nBethlehem Cop.   6.40 6.50\nBanff Oil            15.50 15.62\nBralorne               1.62 1.64\nBrunswick           6.05 6.15\nCdn. Export Gas 5.75 5.30\nCdn. Gridoil         7.65 7.70\nCdn. Homestead   6.00 6.10\nCampbell  Chib     7.00 7.10\nCan. Delhi           2.90 2.95\nCassiar Ash.        16.62 1617\nCentral Del Rio 22.37 22.50\nCentral Patricia   1.53 1.53\nChimo                   1.21 1.23\nCoch. Will              .88 ,90\nCons. Halliwell       .54 .57\nCons. Rambler     1.12 1.15\nConwest              5.90 6.19\nCopperman             .25 .26\nCopper Corp           .55 .60\nCraigmont           11.62 1175\nDenison               83.00 84.00\nDickenson             3.20 3.30\nEast Malartic      1.37 1.32\nEast Sullivan       5.30 5.40\nFirst Maritimes   1.70 1.75\nFargo                   4.75 4.80\nFrobex                 3.65 3.75\nGt. Plains Dev.   17.75 13.00\nGiant Mascot       1.23 1.26\nGiant Yei.            8.10 9.08\nGranduc               5.60 5.75\nGunnar Mines      1.86 1.95\nHastings               1.50 1.53\nHighland Bell      11.50 12.00\nHollinger             27.12 27.75\nHudson Bav Mg. 60.50 61.00\nHudson Bay Oil  37.75 38.25\nHydra Ex              .18 .1SV4\nIron Bay              4.10 4.25\nISO                            1.40 1.49\nJaye Expl.           .17 _     .111\nKerr A'ldisnn       15.73 16.00\nKey, Anacon        ,91 ,95\nLabrador            32.00 32.50\nLake Dufaull      10.75 11.no\nI ' il' 11                      4.40 7.50\nLittle Long Lac 1.80\nLorndo .79\nMadsen 1.53\nMalartic .52\nMattagami Lake 13.75\nMidcon .42'.\nMclntyre 77.50\nMcWaters .46\nMogul 4.05\nNational Pete 2.35\nNew Conex 5.00\nNew Hosco 1.72\nNew Que. Raglan 4.00\nNorgold Mines ,08Vi\nNoiiex -20\nNormclnl 3.75\nNorth Can. Oil 6.10\nNorthgate 8.40\nOpemiska 10.75\nOrchan 2.70\nPernio Gas .27\nPetrol O 4 G .63\nPickle Crow .26\nPCE lxplorations 1.85\nPine Point 52.50\nPlace Gas 2.95\nPlacer 33.00\nPatino 9.50\nPreston 23.00\nQuebec Lithium 2.00\nQue. Manitou .21\nQuemont 7.20\nRadiore .52\nRancer Oil 4.05\nRayrock 1.26\nReeves Mac 1.55\nRio Algom 37.12\nRoman Corp. 27.87\nSan Antonio .20\nSarimco .20\nSherritt Gordon 5.35\nSilver Standard .70\nSiscoe 3.75\nSteep Rock 6.60\nSullivan Con. 3.80\nTeck Corp. .21\nTorbril .56\nTriad Oil 2.21\nTribag 1.08\nUnion Oil 48.00\nUnited Buff. Add. .46\nUnited Canso 3.35\nUnited Keno 6.20\nUpper Canada 1.40\nWestern Mines 2.59\nWright Harg. 1.30\nWilroy .85\nZulapa .11H\n1.85\n.83\n1.55\n.57\n14.12\n.43\n80.50\n.47\n4.10\n2.40\n5.70\n1.75\n5.10\n.09\n.21\n3.80\n6.40\n8.50\n11.00\n2.74\n.274\n.64\n.28\n1.87\n53.25\n3.00\n33.75\n9.75\n23.25\n2.10\n.22\n7.40\n.54\n4.10\n1.30\n1.90\n37.50\n211.00\n.21\n.20'.\n5.45\n.73\n3.80\n6.65\n5.85\n22'.\n,60\n2.22\n1.10\n48.75\n.47'i\n345\n6.25\n1.43\n2.70\n1.35\n.88\n.18\nVancouver\nStocks\nINDUSTRIALS\nBilliard Mort.      3.25\nGrowers A 3.00\nGrowers B 2.55\nOkan. Helicopters 3.65\nSun Pub. A        31.00\nSun Pub. B        31.00\nInt. Brew. B        9.25\nPacific Western   13.25\nMINES AND OILS\nAce Mining\nAnuk\nArctic Mining\nArlingotn Silver\nBethex\nBlue Star Mines\nBrenda\nBuchanan Mines\nButtle Lk. Mines\nCascade Moly\nCoast Copper\nCons. Skeena\nCons. Standard\nCont. Potash\nCopper Soo\nCrown Silver\nDolly Varden\nCroyden\nDundee\nDynasty\nEarlcrest\nEndako\nFuturity Oils\nPlains Pete\nGalaxy\nGem Ex.\nGranisle\nHomestake Silver\nJericho\nJersey Cons.\nKamloops Copper\nLondon Pride\nLornex\nLytton Minerals\nMadrona\nMagnum\nCont. McKinney\nMt,  Washington\nNew Cronin\nNew Imperial\nNorth. Ventures\nPatricia Silver\nPyramid\nRod. Yellowknife\nRolling Hills\nQuatsino\nSilver Piidge\nSlocan Ottawa\nTay River Mines\nTorwest\nTrojan\nVan. Metals\nVananda Expl.\nUlica Mines\nWestern Ex.\nFUNDS\nAM. Can. Com.\nAll. Can. Div.\nAmer.  Growth\nDreyfus\nColled.  Mutual\nCommon. Int.\nDiv. Inc. A\nDiv. Inc. B\nGroup Income\nGrow. Equity\nInv. Int. Mutual\nInv. Growth\nInv. Mutual\nLeverage\nMutual  Accum.\nMutual Bond\nMutual   Growth\nMutual Inc.\nProvident\nUnited Ace.\n.28\n.26\n1.89\n.32\n.46\n.09\n7.10\n.2DH\n1.31\n1.20\n.59\n.11\n.15'.\n.12\n.09 'i\n.00\n.37\n.11\n7.45\n.11\n12.50\n.34\n.41\n.41\n.09',.\n7.10\n.28\n.10\n.23\n.10\n.09\n7.30\n.63\n.46\n.54\n.23\n.14\n.15\n3.15\n.12\n.26\n3.70\n.28\n.29\n.18\n.12\n.23\n.20\n.43\n.34\n.2(1\n.14\n4.30\n.38\n8.11\n10.02\n6.88\n15.38\n6.97\n11.00\n1.52\n5.18\n4.16\n6.75\n7.87\n10.53\n5.40\n12.17\n5.63\n8.52\n6.24\n6.43\n6.77\n1128\n2.65\n3.70\n32.03\n9.50\n13.75\n.29\n.29\n1.90\n.33\n.48\n.10\n7,:o\n.21\n1.33\n1.25\n7.75\n.60\n.16\n.13\n.10\n.61\n.39\n.12\n7.50\n.11'.'\n12.75\n.35\n.43\n.41 Vi\n.11\n7.15\n.28\n.11\n,23'.i\n.12\n.09 '.i\n7.35\n.65\n.4(1\n.56\n.24\n.15\n.16\n3.25\n.13\n.27\n3.80\n.29\n.30\n.20\n.13\n.25\n.21\n.44\n.36\n.23\n.15\n4.33\n.30\nBy JACK MORRIS\nVANCOUVER (CP)-Audi-\nences often gel a shock from\nthe executive head of the\nBritish Columbia Hydro and\nPower Authority.\nGordon Shrum's opinions\nare likely to be unorthodox\nand his frankness is becoming legendary.\nSuch as last Oclober when\nhe told a school trustees' convention that stay-Ins are a\nbigger problem than dropouts\nbecause too much money Is\nwasted on run-of-the-mill students.\nOr the time he declared\nthai people on welfare find It\neasier to get social assistance\nthan work.\nHydro's co-chairman also\nfavors the direct approach.\nHe once had to stand 20 minutes in the rain waiting for\none of Hydro's buses. Vancouver city council promptly\nreceived a formal application\nfrom Hydro asking permission to build shelters at main\nbus stops.\nBut it wasn't only Gordon\nShrum's candor that prompted Ihe unorthodox Simon Fraser University in suburban\nBurnaby to pick him as its\nchancellor. As an administrator, he has a knack for getting things done. And he\ncomes equipped wilh distinguished  scientific credentials.\nFAMOUS SCHOOLMATE\nGordon Merritt Shrum was\nborn in Smithville, Ont., Jan.\n14, 1896, and went to high\nschool in Hamilton where the\nboy across the aisle was Lester B. Pearson.\n\"1 used lo reach across and\npull him out of his seal when\nthe teacher wasn't looking,\"\nhe recalls.\nHe went off to war in 1914\nand came home with the Military Medal to resume science\nstudies at the University of\nToronto.\nHe and Sir John McLennan\nperformed a major scientific\nfeat when they successfully\nliquefied helium. In later\nyears he was co-inventor of a\nlow-voltage geiger counter for\ndetecting radioactive ore and\nsolved the mystery of the origin and nature of Ihe \"green\nlino\" of the aurora borealis\nHe joined (lie University of\nBritish Columbia physics\ndepartment in 1925 and was\nits head until 1961, also acting\nas dean of graduate studies\nduring his last five years\nthere.\nHe   spent  two lours  as  a\nmember of tho National\nResearch Council In the 1940s\nand '50s and was awarded the\nOrder of the British Empire\nfor his defence science work\nduring the Second World War.\nSHRUM'S SLUMS\nHe demonstrated his preference for the diroct approach\nafter the war when UBC was\nfaced wilh a huge Influx of\nveterans. He took 250 army\nhuts from a nearby military\nbase and installed them on\nIhe campus as housing for\n5,500 veterans.\nBfy the time it was realized\nthat neither the army nor the\nfederal government had\napproved the transfer, ihe\nvets were firmly established\nin what were called \"Shrum's\nSlums.\"\nHe headed a royal commission investigating B.C. power\nresources in 1058-59 and was\nnamed president of the B.C\nElectric Co., privately-owned\nforerunner of B.C. Hydro, in\n1961, He remains a director of\nAtomic Energy of Canada\nLtd., a post to which he was\nappointed in 1959.\nMr. Shrum was given the\nchancellorship of Simon Fraser in 1963 and the university,\nbuilt in less lhan a year on a\nforested mountainlop, opened\nits doors in September, 1965.\nThe school's approach filled\nin with Mr. Shrum's own philosophy. It offered athletic\nscholarships, introduced the\ntrimester system of year-\nround classes and admitted\nbright Grade 11 students and\ndropouts who had ability but\nno university entrance certificate.\n\u2022KEY TO HAPPINESS'\nThe divorced father of two\nmarried children has few\nhobbies and they revolve\naround his membership in\nsuch organizations as the\nRoyal Society of Canada, Ihe\nCanadian Association of\nPhysicists and the Pacific\nScience Council.\nOne of his favorite subjects\nis education. He believes that\nthe brilliant student should be\ngiven all possible assistance\nwhile mediocre students\nshould be steered to technical\nor vocational schools.\n\"The real jiroblem^ 20 years\nherice, as it is today, will be\nto find enough unskilled\nblind-alley jobs for dropouts,\nand underachieves, as well\nas for individuals wilh low\nintelligence,\" he says. \"Education is the key to happiness.\"\nToday in History\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nSept. 28. 1967 . . .\nKing George of Greece\nwas restored to the throne\nby plebiscite 21 years ago\nloday\u2014in 1946\u2014afler a civil\nwar between the Communists and the monarchists\nhad halted. War broke out\nagain in 1947 alter the\nUnited Nations decided to\ninvestigate charges of border raids from Greece's\nthree Communist neighbors\nand only massive U.S. aid\nprevented thc country from\ncollapsing. Greek Communists announced Ihe end of\nIheir campaign in 1949,\nafter Yugoslavia ceased to\nallow them asylum.\n1781\u2014A m e r i c a n and\nFrench troops began the\nsiege nf British forces at\nYnrktown.\n1958\u2014Guinea opted out of\nthe French Union.\nFirst World War\nFifty years ago today\u2014in\n1917 Ihe Australians\nrepulsed counter-attacks\neast of Polygon Wood in\nYpres Salient. Italian\ntroops improved their posi-\ntions on Monte San\nGabriels, taking some prisoners. German airmen\nmade scattered raids on\nEnglish counties of Suffolk,\nEssex and Kent.\nSecond World War\nTwenty-five years ago\nloday-in 1942\u2014U.S. Navy\nand Marine Corps fliers\nshot down 24 of 43 Japanese\nairmen attacking Guadalcanal in the Solomons. Vicious\nattacks by German troops\non the 35th day of the siege\nof Stalingrad were beaten\noff by defenders shooting\nfrom windows and rooftops.\nTRUDY\nWOMAN   IDENTIFIED\nCHILLIWACK (CPi - RCMP\nWednesday Identified Mrs. Emily\nJean Usik, 55, of New Westminster, as Hie woman killed\nwhen her ear slammed into thc\nrailing ol lhe Vedder Canal\nbridge, 10 miles east of here,\nTuesday night.\n\"You're working late'\u2014I'll l\nwnai.  un, you 11 eat dinner out . . .\"\n New ARCTICPOWERgets out the worst kind of dirt in cold water.\na\nYou wouldn't\nbelieve the\ndifference\nARCTIC POWER\nhas made\nto my laundry!\nsays, Mrs. D. Lilley, Oshawa, Ontario.\n\"I have 4 children and a mechanic\nhusband to wash for, so I was ready to try\nanything. And I'm glad I tried Arctic\nPower.\"\n\"I've never been so pleased with my\nwash. Everything is so clean. The whites\nare just beautiful. I don't seem to have\nany problem with the girls' socks\nshrinking any more. My husband's work\nshirts which are coloured and always\ncovered with grease are just amazing. The\ncolours haven't faded and the grease\ncomes out everytime I wash. I don't know\nwhy everybody isn't using Arctic Power.\"\nTrjU\nID\nM. Roo'd. Colgate-Palmolivt- LI...\nNew ARCTIC POWER gets out the worst kind of dirt in cold water.\na\na\n\u2022jjjgp.\nI thought\nARCTIC POWER\nand cold water\nwashing was just\nanother gimmick!\nsays, Mrs. J. S. Poirier, Oshawa, Ontario.\n\"I thought it was just another one of\nthose ideas. You know, it's going to do\nthis and it's going to do that.\"\n\"But when it got the grease out of my\nhusband's shop coat I thought a\nmiracle had happened. Arctic Power\nreally works!\"\n\"Another thing I found with Arctic\nPower is that the children's socks don't\nshrink when I wash them in it. And\nI just don't seem to have any trouble\nwith the fading of coloured things\nnow that I'm using Arctic Power. I think\nit's tremendous.\"\n^^\u25a0U^ ^2\nit-o*-'-<.V\nCUP THE COUPON NOW!\nI\nUvw ARCTIC POWER gets out the worst kind of dirt in cold water.\nj*\nc\nh.\n\u25a001\nsi.\nie\nnt\nd<\n0-\nPniri iniator\n\u25a0\u25a0\n T\n6\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURS., SEPT. 28, 1967\nSoroptimists Lay Plans\nFor Centennial Ball\nDeanery\nMeeting\nDiscussed\nCASTLEGAR - The Soroptimist Club of Castleger-Kinnaird-\nRobson. held the firsl meeting nf\nthe new term in the home of\nEdith Craig, Kinnaird.\nPlans were nearly finalized for\nCastlegar and District's Centennial Ball, sponsored by the\nSoroptimist Club, lo be held in\nNovember. Co-chairmen of Ihe\nCentennial Ball committee are\nMarg Denneus and Alice Anderson.\nLaura Bridgman and Jean\nStainton will dress four of two\ndozen dolls In authentic colonial\ncostumes for the annual contest.\nHilarious but informative accounts of the Soroptimist International Convention held in Toronto in July were given by Alice\nFowler. Belly Leilner nnd Marg\nDenneus. Through friendships\nformed al the Toronto convention\nthe club had decided to corres\npond Witll the Helena. Montana\nclub for mutual enjoyment and\ninformation.\nAlice Anderson reported on the\nmeasles vaccine clinics held in\nApril and July. About 15 doses\nare still available al Ihe Rotary\nHeallh Cenlre and must be\nadministered before Ihe expiry\ndale September 30th.\nInstallation of new members\nwill take place on Oclober 4.\nEngagement\nAnnouncement\nMr. and Mrs. Mike Paul Zaitsoff announce the engagement of\nIheir only daughter, Verna. to\nDonald Gleeson. son of Mr. and\nMrs. Ronald Gleesnn of City of\nTwo Mountains. Quebec. The\nwedding lakes place Oct. 21 at\nIhe United Church in Castlegar.\n-227-227\nNEW DENVER-St. Stephens\n; Anglican Church Women's Aux-\nI iliary reconvened after the sum-\n: mer recess and a meeting was\nheld at  the home of Miss M.\nButlin. The presidenl, Miss G. L.\nReynolds, presided and welcom-\n' ed the members back.\nThe meeting opened with the\nderolional, taken from the Liv-\nj ing   Message,   by   Mrs.   E.   R.\ni Hope.\nThe WA deanery meeting to\nhe held in New Denver in October was discussed and plans\nmade. Miss Butlin reported on\na film shown by Mr. Tingley at\nthe Knox Presbyterian Church.\nCanvass for the Bible Society\nwill be made in September.\nMrs. Hope closed the meeting\nwith prayer, remembering the\nyoung people who have left to\natlend schools and universities.\nRefreshments were served by\n, the hostess.\nKaslo Notes\nKASLO-Dr. and Mrs. Frank\nTyers have been staying in\nKaslo with Dr. Tyers' parents,\nMr. and Mrs. W. F. Tyers, for\nthree weeks of golfing, swimming and boating.\nBefore returning to Philadel-\n: phia, where he is chief resident\nin surgery al the hospital of the\nUniversity of Pennsylvania, they\nwill spend a week in Vancouver\nand Seattle with relatives and a\nweek in Chicago where he will\npresent a paper on cardiac surgery at the meetings of the\nAmerican College of Surgeons.\nDr. Tyers received this year's\nfirst prize from Ihe Pennsylvania\nAssociation of Thoracic Surgery\nfor an essay on his research\nwork which is supported by a\n$25,000 National Heart Institute\ngrant.\nDr. Tyers came to Kaslo as a\nsmall boy and received his public and high school education\nhere.\nPythian Sisters Hold\nDecoration Service\nSILVERTON - The Pythian the meeting, a special decorated\nSisters of Lucerne Temple No. j cake and refreshments were\n17 held their decoration service j served.\nSunday at Ihe New Denver ceni- j    It wa, rf,v\u201ertnA lhat gi(ts a,-e\nThe service was held atj,0 he presented to Ihe patients\n.*._.      r.t\u00b0     Clrlnv      \\t__M.__      l*\"__ll_ .      _\u25a0 .__ ... i-    .\nThe Spanish Tourist Rureau\nsays more than 13.000.000 tourists visited Spain during the\nfirsl eight months of 1967.\nelery\nthe grave of Sister Nonie Ken-\nnett and flowers were placed on\n(lie resting places of all lhe\nother Sisters. The Sisters went\nin a body to a church service\nheld at the United Church at\nSilverton.\nTuesday evening the Pythian\nSisters held a potluck supper in\nthe Silverton Community Hall\nhonoring Iheir grand chief. Sister Nonie Gordon. Special guesls\nattending were G.C. Sister Laura\nDewis of Castlegar: P.G.C. Phyllis Woodward, and Sister Allen\noi Rossland.\nA bouquet of flowers and gift\nwere presented to the grand\nchief.\nAn inspiring talk was given to\nal the Pavilion this month.\nKinettes Choose\nCommittees\nNEW DENVER-The Kinette\nClub of New Denver-Silverton\nheld their September meeting at\nthe home of Mrs. P. Hayden.\nPresident Mrs. D. Silzer was in\nthe chair.\nIt  was  decided  that  a door\nprize would be purchased for the\nnational  convention  which  will\nbe held in Kamloops next year.\nThe Kinettes agreed to cater\nto  the   Kinsmen   variety  bingo\nthe Sisters on the principles of I Oct. 13.\nIhe order and friendship. Afler j    Mrs. D. Turner was elected lo\nTo Send Gift\nTo CARE\nNEW DENVER-The United\nChurch Women's Auxiliary met\nrecently at the home of Mrs. L.\nCampbell wilh one visitor, Mrs.\nT. Leask.\nDevotional reading was by\nMrs. W. Thring.\nA donation of $5 will be sent\nto CARE. Mrs. M. Taylor was\nappointed to send cards of gel-\nwell and sympathy, as needed.\nMrs. W. Martin will act as vice-\npresident until the December\nelection, as the vice-president,\nMrs. E. Baja, has moved to Gibson's Landing.\nMrs. W. Martin will canvass\nfor the group for the Bible Society canvass.\nThe hostess, Mrs. Campbell,\nserved lunch, assisted by Mrs,\nD. Turner.\nCancer Exams\nBeing Offered\nREGINA\nVOU MITT\nSIMPSONS - SEARS\nargain Basement\nCotton Trousers\nlittle children. Sizes  1-3.\nIn  red and  blue.\nNow 1.88\nFor the little children. Sizes  1-3.  Reg. 2.19.\nIn  red and  blue.\n2-Piece Dress Sets\nLittle Girls'. Sizes 3-6x.  Reg. 3.98.\n2-6x. Reg. 95c.\nNow 2.49\nCombed Cotton Shirts\n2-6x. Reg. 95c.\nNow59c\nCarter's Stretch Shirts\nFor the little children.  S - XL.  Reg.   1.79.\nNow 1.19\nStretchy Slims\n-it-tie Girls' in navy and browr\nSizes 3-6x. Reg   2.99.\nNow 1.88\nWinnie the Pooh\nStretchy Tops\nFor the Little Girls in Red\nand Navy. Reg. 2.69.\nNow\n1.69\nWhite Cotton\nBlouses\nLittle Girls'\nSizes 5-6x. Reg. Z for 2.49\nNow\n2 for 1.49\nDenim Slacks\nLittle Girls'\nIn Light or Dark Blue.\nSizes 4-6x. Reg. 2.99\nNow\n1.99\nSweat Jackets\nWith fleecy lining in red or\nblue. Sizes 4-fi  Reg. 3,69.\nNow\n2.69\nSlim Slacks\nLittle Boys'\nWith bell  in  light brown.\nor navy.\nSizes 4-6x. Reg. 2.49.\nNow\n1.49\nPerma Prest Shirts\nLittle  Boys' with long sleeves.   In  Burgandy.\nSizes 4-6.  Reg. 2.79.\nNow 1.79\nWomen's Casual Dresses\nIn assorted sizes.  Sizes   10-18.\nReg. 6.99- 10.98.\nNow 6.66 - 4.66\nWomen's Dresses\nIn fancy styles. Sizes  10-20.\nReg   12.98-16.98.\nNow 6.66 -10.66\nJUST SAY \"CHARGE IT\nTeen Girl's Winter Coats\nIn assorted styies.Sizes 8-14   Reg. 25.00.\nNow 12.50\nmmmmm^^mm^mmmmmmm^mmmmm\nRain Coats\nIn plaid design. Sizes  10-24.  Reg.  2.49.\nNow 1.49\nNelson\nPh.  352 5531\nCP>\u2014Twenly-five\na director's position to fill the per c e n t o[ Saskatchewan\nvacancy of Mrs. E. Baja. who women wnj nave had one or\nhas moved from the community. [ more examinations for cancer\nThe various committees were j D y^e en() 0f ig67\nchosen for the forthcoming term\nand  the  Kinette  fashion  show\nwas tabled until next spring.\nA discussion was held on the\nforthcoming   annual   Christmas | available\nThis estimate was made by\nofficials in announcing a province-wide service for the early\ndetection    of    cancer    now   is\nRiondel Notes\nMr. and Mrs. Frank Shannon\nof Riondel have returned from\na holiday touring the Windermere, Ihe Cariboo and the Okanagan.\nMiss June Munro of Riondel\nand Miss  Gladys    Erickson of\ndaughter, presently staying al\nSalmo, will follow later.\nB. Bradford and family, long-\nlime residents of Riondel, are\nmoving to Pine Point about the\nmiddle of October.\nThe baby son of Mr. and Mrs.\nKimberley   are    spending   two|G.   Stremmel   was   christened\nweeks at Expo,   travelling by Colin Glen  at Holy Redeemer\nChinch in  Riondel.   The  cere-\ntrain.\nMr. and Mrs. C. Hedge of\nRiondel spent a few days at\nVictoria, having taken their\nyoungest daughter, Beverley, to\nuniversity there.\nMrs. R. Schell has returned\nhome from Creston with her\nnew baby girl, Laurie. While\nMrs. Schell was in hospital, her\nyoung daughter, Cathy, stayed\nwilh Mrs. Schell's parents, Mr,\nand Mrs. J. A. Avery of Creston,\nWhile Mr. and Mrs. Hurnaus\nwere on holiday for two weeks,\nA. Black of Vancouver has been\nsubstitute treasurer of the Credit\nUnion. Mrs. Black accompanied\nher husband and they have been\nguesls ol Mr. and Mrs. V. Gen-\ndron.\nIan MacDonald has been transferred to Pinchi Lake. Mrs.\nMacDonald   and     their    young\nACW Discusses\nTea, Bazaar\nmony was conducted  by Rev.\nFather Boyle.\nThe infant son of Mr. and Mrs.\nM. Zurwlck was christened Robin by Rev. I. Prabhudaas in the\nRiondel Community Church.\ndance.\nMiscellaneous\nShower   Held   for\nBride-Elect\nDiagnosis of cancer by examination of cells allowing deletion in the early stages in many\nparts of the body now is offered\nby Grey Nuns' Hospital in Regina.\n\"This is particularly true in\nNEW  DENVER \u2014 Mrs.  Ken ] lhe diagnosis nf cancer of the\nCasley. Mrs. D. Law. Mrs. T.  uterine cervix which can be de-\nLyver and Mrs. S. Heslip were tected   at   an   early  stage  be-\nhostesses at the former's home' cause of the thorough examina-\na miscellaneous shower for i Hon of single cells under a mi-\nMrs. William Brekke, who was\nmarried in Vancouver.\nEighteen guests were present\nand the room was decorated\nwith pink and while streamers\nc r o s c o p e.\" said Dr. R. B.\nSylveslre. medical director of\nthe hospital.\nDr. S y 1 v e s t r e said many\nwomen   died    needlessly   from\nand vases and baskets of fall'., cancer nf the cervix before the\nflowers. Mrs. D. Norris present- ; cytology, or examination of\ned the corsages, made by Mrs. I cells service became available\nH. Gilroy and Mrs. Law. to the ' Extensive examination\nbride, also to the mother of the ; showed that one centralized\ngroom, Mrs. E. Brekke. and the j laboratory was the most practi-\nbride's sister. Miss Audrey | cal and economical for Saskat-\nCampbell, who assisted the bride chevvan's specific program,\nin opening the gifts. The Saskatchewan College ol\nMr. and Mrs. W. Brekke have Physicians and Surgeons origi-\ntaken up residence here in H. \u25a0 nally suggested the project and\nFlodin's apartments on Union Ihe provincial public heallh de-\nStreet, partment   supplied   the   funds\nDutch Girl\nThrilled By\nCanada Visit\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B.C,\n(CPi-A 19-year-old Dutch girl\nwho won a trip to Canada in a\nnational essay contest says she\nis thrilled by the vastness of\nCanada, especially with her\nfirst look at mountains.\nBut Marijke Peerbooms of\nDuerne was a bit upset by the\nfact there are so many trees\n(hat they can't be individually\ncared for as in Holland.\nMiss Peerbooms, who tra-\nVeiled across Canada with 24\nMontreal students participating\nThe Anglican Church Women in the centennial youth travel\nof the Church of the Redeemer'program, won a contest spon-\nheld Iheir opening meeting ol sored by the Dutch education j\nthe new season at the home of | ministry and the Canadian em- j\npresident Mrs. M.  Bright. bassy.\nThe president welcomed sev- Her essay was an imagina-\nera! newcomers and said she live fantasy describing a meet-\nhoped they would decide to be- ing in The Netherlands wilh a :\ncome members. Suggestions fictitious Mr. Centennial who\nwere made and discussion foi- described Ihe wonders of Can-\nlowed regarding  a   stall  at the ada.\nforthcoming service clubs falli Marijke speaks French as\ntea and bazaar, to be held in well as English and Dutch but\nNovember. Mrs. F. Wyatt and had a bit of a problem convers-\nMrs. G. Grohame volunteered to [ ing wilh the French-Canadian\ngo lo Ihe deanery meeting at;girls on the train trip across\nNew Denver as representatives:Ihe country,\nof Ihe ACW of the Church of Ihe \"Canadian French is very dif-\nRedeemer. ferent.  I  can  only  understand j\nArchdeacon Wyatt   closed the when Ihey speak slowly.\"\nmeeting wilh a prayer for guid-'\t\nance. alter which tea was served    Only   14   of   the   100   small\nby Ihe hostess assisted by Mrs. islands   in   the   Virgin   Island  j\n.1. Holland and  Mrs.   Grahaine.group are inhabited.\n. _AR HELOISE:\nMy nephew has just relumed from Vietnam.\nWhile he was there* I sent\nMm packets ot soft drink mix,\notc. Thinking he might not\nSave any way of measuring\nwater for the mixes, 1 packed\nLhem in a quart-size plastic\nirozen food container. These\nhave snap-on lids and are rather inexpensive.\nMy nephew told me that alter using the container for his\ndrink mixes, it was very useful for storing stamps, photographs, etc. The plastic container kept out the moisture.\nJust wanted to pass this tip\nun so that others sending\npackages to Vietnam might\nlike to use my idea since it\nseemed to be such a useful\nitem over there.\nMrs. D.V.F.\n.    .    \u2022\nBless you. We thank you no\nend for writing and sharing\nwith us. All of us are Interested in learning how we may,\neven though In a small way,\nbe of help to our servicemen\ntn Vietnam.\nLove,\nHelolse\n.    .    .\nDEAR HELOISE:\nI find it most helpful to purchase kitchen utensils with\ndifferent coloreo handles that\nare easy to spot.\nFor Instance, my bottle\nupener has a yellow handle,\nmy rubber spatula has a blue\nhandle, my egg turner has a\npink one and my Ice pick a\nred one.\nThese do not detract from\nmy kitchen color scheme because they are inside the\ndrawer. I still have my hanging racks of matched sets on\nthe kitchen wall that present\nno problem because they are\nin plain sight.\nErma McDougall\n\u25a0    \u00ab    \u2022\nLETTER OF  THOUGHT\nDEAR HELOISE:\nThis will possibly be a comfort to all mothers and fathers\nwho have teenagera:\nThe day eventually comes\nwhen all your yelling and\nthreats pay off. They will get\nmarried!\nWhen   we  go  to  our  son's\nhome now, we hear him  tell\nhis  children,   \"Turn   off   that\nlight when you leave a room.\ntC IW?,  King tut\nor I'll swat you.\" \"No use to\nrun the shower until the tank\nIs empty . . . you can get just\nas clean with less . . .\"\nYeB, children finally grow\nup.\nGrandpa\n\u2022    *    \u25a0\nDEAR FOLKS:\nHere's a little dtlly I learned\nthis week.\nWhen you want to make\nsign* tor a church ini\/nar, etc.,\nuse those tell ink markers anil\nwrite on foil. We unrolled toll\nfrom the box. laid it Mat on a\ntable and printed away like\nmad.\nWe did find that red and\nblack markers make the most\nattractive signs. And we also\nlearned that the marking did\nnot smear when it rained as It\ndid on our cardboard signs.\nHelolse\nw      m      a\nDEAR HELOISE:\nTo protect and beautify m>\nwindow sills, 1 covered them\nwith ceramic tile to match the\ncolor ot my  room.\nNot only do the window sills\nlook good, but all 1 have to\ndo is sponge away the dust.\nAlso, no more worry about the\npaint chipping.\nSheila Silver\n* \u25a0    \u2022\nDEAR   HELOISE:\ni bought an unpainted whatnot shelf, painted it the color\nof my baby'a room and hung\nit near hiB bath table. It is\nvery convenient tor tissues,\nvitamins, bath articles, etc.\nAlso, there's always some\nthing there 1 can hand the\nbaby to play with while\nchanging   his diaper.\nIt has certainly saved steps\nfor this busy bother.\nAnother Mom\n\u2022 \u2022    \u25a0\nDEAR HELOISE:\nWhen hanging underwear on\nthe clothesline to dry, \"string\"\na bunch ot them on your arm\nby putting your arm through\na leg of each pair. Then hang\nthem up as you go down the\nline .\nSaves bending down each\ntime to get another pair\nLynns\nThink     of     the    backaches\nthat's gonna stive, Lynne.\nYou're a honey he\u00bb.\nHelnlM\nStep  Up to Prestige Shoe\nBarker of England\nOnce you've enjoyed the look \u2014 the feel \u2014 the longer\nwear of Barker shoes, like thousands of other wearers,\nyou'll never go back to ordinary shoes. First in their\nfield, because they're second to none.\nOnly at\nMONTREAL, September  28th \u2014It yo\u00ab\n\"ouldn't write cheques on your savings account, wouldn't it be easier to save? THB\nBANK OF NOVA SCOTIA offers the neu\n'Blue Chip' savings account, paying 4V4% I\ninterest   with   no  chequing   privileges   tt\ntempt you. There are other good Scotiabank plans, too. Like 6-yeai\nSavings Certificates that pay S100 for everv $75 invested. And th( i\nregular savings account, wilh 3ii% interest and full chequing '\nprivileges. Last\u2014 but not least \u2014a handy way to stick to tht\nplan you choose. Called the Scotiabank Budget Book, it's free al\nyour nearest branch. \t\nNOW THAT SUMMER'S OVER, you'll be needing a new supplj\nof NUPERCAINAL AI_I_-PURPOS_ ANTISEPTIC CREAMS) in your medicine cabinet to take\ncare of the cuts and abrasions children invariably bring home from school... and to handle\nyour own little emergencies \u2014 knife cuts,\nburns and such (I always keep a tube handy\nin the kitchen). If there's a baby or a teenager\nin the house, you'll be pleased to know that\nNupercainai Cream   is  great for diaper rash\nand acne, too.  So   why be caught without il?   .    \t\nwonderful Nupercainai All-Purpose Antiseptic Cream at drug-\nstores everywhere.\nYou'll find thil\nurtfl Bynrtirnt.\nin.\nTODAY IS\n National Ski Team\nOlympic Skier Named Coach\nGARRY BATTISTELLA\nGary Battistella, 27-year-oM\nformer Olympic skier, will\nhandle Ihe coaching duties of\nIhe ladies' squad nf the Canadian National Ski Team, it was\nannounced Wednesday.\nManager Dan McKim said\nBattistella, a native of Trail,\nwill coach the girls through dry\nland training and will work\nwilh Verne Anderson, present\nladies' coach. Anderson will\njoin the team at the Christmas\nCamp in Banff, Alberta In\nearly December, and will\nhandle the girls throughout\ntheir European competition\nand Ihe 1968 Winter Olympics\nat Grenoble, France.\nFollowing t h e Olympics,\nAnderson will retire from tho\nposition and Battistella will\nlake over.\nBattistella skied with thc Canadian team from 1959 through\n1964,  competing   in   the  FIS\nWorld Championships In 19B2\nand the 1964 Olympics.\nAlthough born in Trail, he\ncalls Kimberley his home town,\nhaving lived there for 22 years\nbefore going to college in the\nUnited States. He attended\nWenalchee Valley College In\n1959-'6fl and the following year\nattended Montana Stale College on a ski scholarship, taking Physical Educalion both\nyears.\nHe began his coaching career\nin 1965 at Sandpoinl, Idaho as\nJunior Racing Coach at\nSchweitzer Basin and last year\nheld Ihe same position wilh the\nSpokane Ski Racing Association.\nHaving lived in Spokane for\nthe past two years, he is\nmarried to a girl from that\ncily and in the summer months\nfinds lime to enjoy his other\ninterests \u2014 flying, fishing and\ngolf.\nP\nFor\nWhat \\\nIts  Worth\n?\nJOHN KOROBANIK\nDAILY NEWS SPORTS EDITOR\nKansas City Drops Sox Twice\nTailenders Have Their Day\nBy The Associated Press\nChicago White Sox muffed an\nopportunity to take command of\nthe American League pennant\nbattle Wednesday when they\ndropped both ends of a twi-\nnight doubleheader to Kansas\nCity after Minnesota and Boston had been beaten in afternoon games.\nThe last-place Athletics rose\nup to defeat the White Sox 5-21 beat Ihe Twins. Don Mincher,\nand 4-0. California defeated the former Minnesota first baseman,\nTwins  5-1  and   C1 e v e 1 a n d. led off with a home run,\nFEDERAL PACIFIC\nELECTRIC HEATING\n\u2022 Clean, Comfortable\nPerimeter Eelectric\nHeating\nCall\nCOLEMAN\nELECTRIC\nPhone 352-3175\nblanked the Red Sox 6-0.\nDetr o II, the fourth team\ninvolved in the unpredictable\npennant scramble, was idle.\nThus, with only four days\nremaining in the regular season, Minnesota heads the pack,\none game ahead of Boston and\nDetroit. The White Sox slipped\nto fourth Vi. games off the\npace.\nI Jim Gosgcr was the A's star\nin the opener. He drove in three\nruns, one wilh a sacrifice fly in\nIhe second inning, another wilh\n[ a bunt single In the seventh and\n1 the third with another one-bagger in Ihe eighth. Rookie Chuck\nDobson, 10-10, was the winning\npitcher. Gary Peters lost it.\nHELD TO THREE\nIn the nightcap, Catfish\nHunter limited Chicago to three\nhits. Hunter and Joel Horlen\nwere locked in a scoreless duel\nuntil the A's broke the game\nopen wilh four runs on five singles and an error in the sixth.\nCalifornia lashed Into 20-\ngame winner Dean Chance for\nfour runs in Ihe fourth inning to\nConsecutive singles by Rick\nRcichardt, Jimmie Hall and\nRoger Repoz scored another\nrun before Chance intentionally\nwalked Bob Rodgers, filling Ihe\nbases. Bobby Knopp followed\nwith a run-scoring single and\nanother run came home on\nAurelio Rodriguez' single off\nreliever Ron Kline.\nThe Indians nailed down Iheir\nwin over Boston with a four-run\nsecond inning, triggered by\nTony Horton's single. Richie\nScheinhlum scored Horton with\na double and came home him\nself on a grounder plus Pedro\nGonzalez' single. Sonny Siebert,\nBob Allen and Stan Williams\ncombined for a five-hitler for\nCleveland.\nIn the National League, San\nFrancisco downed New York\nMets 7-2 as Willie McCovey\nwalloped a grand slam homer,\nWillie Mays added a solo home\nrun and Mike McCormick won\nhis 21st game for the Giants.\nChuck Harrison's single scored\nRusty Staub with two out in the\n11th inning and gave Houston a\n1-0 victory  over Philadelphia.\nThe St. Louis-Chicago and\nAtlanta-Cincinnati games were\nrained out.\nDon't\nWarns\nWe changed\nthe bottle-\nnot the\nwhisky.\nWe've added a big gold star to\nthe Seagram's Special Old\nbottle and squared off the sides.\nBut if you liked Special Old\nbefore, don't get upset. The\nbottle may be different, but that\nsmooth, easy taste hasn't\nchanged a bit. Still just as easy\nto like.\nSeagi\njrams\nSPECIAL OLD\n5 STAR\nLaugh\nCoach\nBy AL EATON\nVANCOUVER (CP) - British Columbia Lions Wednesday\nbegan what coach Jim Chan,\npion hopes is e climb out of\nthe Western Football Conference cellar by defeating Winnipeg Blue Bombers 17-1 before 25,412 fans at Empire\nStadium.\nChampion, who took over from\nDave Skrien midway through\nthe season, said before the\ngame: \"Don't laugh, but we\ncould still make the playoffs.\"\nDespite the victory, their second of the season and both\nagainst Winnipeg, the Leos remain in tlie WFC cellar with\nfive points, one less than the\nfourth-place Bombers. They are\nfour points behind Edmonton,\nbul have a game in hand on both\nEdmonton and Winnipeg.\nHalfbacks Leroy Sledge and\nCraig Murray scored one touchdown each for the Lions. Soccer-style kicker Ted Gerela converted both and also was good\non a 47-yard field goal.\nWinnipeg's lone point was\nscored when Ed Ulmer's 40-yard\nkick into the end zone was taken '\nby Bill Lasseter who couldn't\nget out.\nAfter a scoreless first quar-'\nter, Lions took a 1-0 lead into the\nsecond half. There was no scori-\ning in the third quarter and;\nLions added seven more points\nin the last 15 minutes.\nGerela got the Lions on the |\nscoreboard at the 18-second\nmark of the second frame. Instead of using regular punter\nNeal Beaumont, Champion let\nGerela try one from the 47-yard\nline. It was good.\nWHY? Partly of course, due\nlo the increase In normal operating costs. Like everything\nelse, the price of running a\nhockey club Is Increasing.\nPartly due to the Increased\narena rental.\nAnd partly due to the players' demands.\nSports is one of the very\nfew occupations where one can\ndemand a figure ... and get It.\nEven in amateur sport.\nBenvenuti, Griffith\nWorried About Rain\nBy MURRAY ROSE\nNEW YORK (AP) - Middleweight champion Nino Benvenuti\nof Italy and challenger Emile\nGriffith of New York broke\ncamp Wednesday more worried\nabout the possibility of rain on\nfight night Thursday than anything else.\nShowers were forecast for\nThursday. If rain forces a postponement of the keenly awaited\nreturn title bout at outdoor\nShea Stadium, it will be put\nover to Friday night.\nIt could have an adverse\neffect on the boxoffice. Harry\nMarkson, director of boxing for\npromoting Madison Square Garden, still was hopeful of\ncrowd of 35,000 and a\nmore than $300,000.\nLake Victoria, lying mainly\nin Tanzania and Uganda, is Ihe\nlargest lake in Africa.\nThis advertisement Is nol published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or Ihe Government nf British Columbia.\nI.W.A.\nSTRIKE\nHEADQUARTERS\nFor Celgar Employees\n272 Columbia\nAvenue\nCastlegar, B.C.\nPH.  365-3222\nHeadlines ln Ihe Montreal paper this week read:\n\"Hockey Holdouts' Song: 'If You've Got the Money, I've\nGot the Time'.\"\nEver since the National Hockey League expanded\nthis spring, players from both the old circuit and the new\nloop, have been asking for phenomenal salaries.\nAnd some oi them have been getting what they\nask for \u2014 the moon. Glenn Hall, now with St. Louis Blues\nand Terry Sawchuk of Los Angeles Kings both are reported to have received in the neighborhood of $50,000.\nAnd New York Rangers are still having trouble\nsigning their top gun \u2014 Rod Gilbert who is apparently\nasking for an 80 per cent increase over his reported\n$25,000 last season, plus some kind of insurance for five\nyears against another back i\ninjury.\nNegotiations between management and players are becoming more and more difficult\n. . . and not just in Ihe pros\neither .\nManagements throughout the\ncountry, from junior hockey on\nup and through almost all competition money sports, have\nbeen finding their athletes more\nand more demanding all the\ntime.\nThis is fine in the professional\nranks \u2014 wtih the huge television\ncontracts now offered and the\nincreasing prices and attendance \u2014 the pros can afford to\ngive the players higher salaries than they're now receiving.\nBut in the next few years, clubs\nare going to find that they will\nhave to face up to Mr. Alan\nEagleson, the eagle-eye advisor\nof the Players' Association, and\nmake their limitations known.\nLet's leave the pros and take\nan amateur club for an example. In fact, let's come right\nhome and take the Nelson Maple\nLeafs Senior Hockey Club. They\nreleased their financial statement for the lB66-'67 season this\nweek, showing that they made a\nprofit of $722.05.\nTwo figures stand out prominently in the financial statement\n\u2014 lost time and wages and admission. The Leafs took inl\n$19,293.98 in regular season ad- j\nmission and brought that total to\n$26,337.94 with the playoffs.\nBut lost time and wages took\nup $16,629.67 of that amount and\nthe scholarship share accounted\nfor another $7,464.24. The Leafs\nthen, after paying their players\n\u2014 both those working and attending school \u2014 had just over\n$2,000 remaining. Not a healthy\nsum to attempt to run a hockey\nclub.\nHockey sticks alone cost the\nclub nearly $1,800 last year. And\nwhat about the travelling expenses \u2014 over $4,800 \u2014 equipment \u2014 nearly $4,000 \u2014 and the\nother expenses involved in keep-\nl\"g the club running?\nThe expenses accounted for\nover $12,000 \u2014 one-third the operating costs \u2014 as compared to\ntwo-thirds  for the salaries.\nHowever, the Nelson club finished the season $700 lo lhe\ngood. Only because they advanced to the Western Canada Allan\nCup finals however. The Leafs\nwere faced with going in the red\nif they didn't advance out of\ntheir own league last year.\nBut they received over $3,000\nfrom the Western International\nHockey League, plus another\n$1,000 from the Province of B.C.\nHere's the key to tlie financial success of the Maple Leafs\n\u2014 \"Donations and Miscellaneous .. . $6,153.63.\"    Most   of\nthat amount can be attributed\nto the excellent efforts of the\nBooster Club and (lie citizens\nof Nelson. Without them, the\nLeafs would not be operating.\nThis year, they will again he\nthe    determining   factor. But\nthis winter, they will have lo\nwork   harder lhan they have\nworked   before and they will\nhave  to  raise   more   money\nthan they have in the past.\nNelson City Council raised the\nrent of the Civic Centre from 15\nto 20 per cent this year. That\nlive per cent will cost the hockey\nclub over $1200.\nThe increase was decided upon without consultation with the\nhockey club. If Ihe Iwo parties\nhad gotten together, the increase\nprobably would not have come\nThe Leafs are faced Ihis year\nwith the prospect of either make\nIhe playoffs, and advance lo the\nWestern Canada finals again, or\nend up in the red. What price\nsuccess!\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURS., SEPT. 28, 1967\u20147\nPast, Present Not Great\nBut Future Is Hopeful\nTlie past, the present and the\nfuture all underwent discussion\nWednesday night as Notre Dame\nUniversity basketball coach Herb\nWalker had his first meeting\nwilh hopeful prospects.\nSeventeen potential players\nturned out for the organizational\nmeeting, and while height was\nlacking, spirit wasn't.\nThe past? \u2014 For Notre Dame\nKnights it hasn't, been an especially brilliant past.\nThe present? \u2014 Walker, from\nUBC, has 17 players, is looking\nto see another ten try out, and\nhas the first practice Bet for\nMonday night,\nThe future? \u2014 Unlimited I\nWalker has big plans for the\nKnights. Not necessarily this\nseason, but in the very near\nfuture.\nTHE GAME IS SCIENCE\n\"Basketball is a science,\"\nWalker was telling the group,\n\"like everything else.\"\nScience is defined as \"skill resulting from training.\" Walker is\nhoping for three practices per\nweek, and is setting up a training program for the players to\ncarry out themselves.\nThe 15-rounder will be telecast into arenas but will not be\nseen live on home television. It\nwill be shown Saturday on\nABC's Wide World of Sports\nand on delayed television in 26\ncountries around the world.\nStarting time is 10 p.m.,\nEDT.\nBenvenuti, the handsome Italian boxer-puncher who was a\n13-5 underdog when he\ndethroned Griffith on a unanimous decision here last April\n17, was a slight favorite to\nretain the title.\nBenvenuti weighed 159 pounds\nto Griffith's 153 _ when he outpointed t h e wide-shouldered,\nnarrow-waisted New Yorker,\ngate of I The weight spread figures to be\n1 almost the same.\n\"It's up to you,\" the new Saturday, Notre Dame Knights\ncoach staled, \"if you don't want at Royal Roads Military College,\nto work at it . ..\" Victoria.\nWalker released the schedule\nfor the coming season \u2014 21\ngames against five opposing\nclubs.\nBut perhaps their biggest\ngame of the season will be early\n\u2014 against the Harlem Stars. The\nexhibition tilt is tentative, but\nhopefully set for the first month\nof play.\nSCHEDULE:\nAll home games at 8:00 p.m.\n'unless otherwise specified).\nOct. 27\u2014Friday, Selkirk Saints\nat Notre Dame.\nOct. 28 \u2014 Saturday, Notre\nDame Knights at Selkirk.\nNov. 3 \u2014 Friday, Selkirk at\nNotre Dame University.\nNov. 10 \u2014 Friday, Notre Dame\nKnights at Selkirk College.\nNov. 17 \u2014 Friday, Notre Dame\nKnights vs. Southern Alberta Institute of Technology at Calgary\nNov. 18 \u2014 Saturday, Notre\nDame Knights at Mount Royal\nCollege in Calgary.\nDec. 1 \u2014 Friday, Selkirk Saints\nat Notre Dame.\nDec. 2 \u2014 Notre Dame Knights\nat Selkirk.\nDec. 8 \u2014 Friday, Selkirk at\nNotre Dame.\nDec. 9\u2014Saturday, Notre Dame\nKnights at Selkirk College.\nJan. 5 \u2014 Friday, Lethbridge\nUniversity at Notre Dame University.\nJan. 12 \u2014 Friday, Notre Dame\nKnights at Selkirk College.\nJan. 13 \u2014 Saturday, Selkirk at\nNotre Dame.\nJan. 19 \u2014 Friday, Southern Alberta Institute of Technology at\nNotre Dame.\nJan. 20 \u2014 Saturday, Mount\nRoyal College, Calgary at Notre\nDame.\nFeb. 2 \u2014 Friday, Selkirk Saints\nat Notre Dame.\nFeb. 16 \u2014 Friday, Notre Dame\nKnights at Lethbridge University.\nFeb. 17 \u2014 Saturday, Notre\nDame Knights at Lethbridge\nUniversity.\nFeb. 23\u2014Friday, Notre Dame\nKnights at Selkirk College.\nMarch 1 and 2 \u2014 Friday and\nHERB WALKER\nKEEPS YOU\nPOSTED\nThe Northern Miner Is ths\nonly regular weekly National\nMINING newspaper in\nCanada. It's the only authentic source that people turn\nto each week to keep posted\non what is going on in every\nmining area.\nRe\u00bbd It every week tor All the\nNowsof All the Mines.\nWrite for \u2022 Specimen Copy\n\u2022CTBeTl-ortBem Mnet?\n77 Rl*er Street, Toronto 2, Canada\nPnbUibed ever? Thursday Sine* 191S\nSio.oo per year {25.00 three years\nTrial Subscription: 6 montha-$6.00\nSold at Belter NewMtands\nOSHAWA (C P i-F r a n k\nM a h o v 1 i c h fired two goals\nWednesday night, including the\nwinner, when Toronto Maple\nLeafs of the National Hockey\nLeague defeated Rochester\nAmericans of the American\nHockey League 4-2 in an exhibition game before 2,500 fans.\nWayne Carleton and Mike\nWalton tallied Ihe olher goals\nfor Toronto. Gerry Meehan and\nAndre Champagne replied lor\nRochester, a Toronio farm\nteam.\nj    COMING TO NELSON - TOMORROW!\nMODERN ELECTRONIC DRIVER TRAINING UNIT\nFOR TWO WEEKS ONLY\n10\nON DISPLAY FOR COURSE ENROLMENT\nTHE SUPER VALU PARKING LOT\nA.M   TO 9 P.M. - FRIDAY AND SATURDAY\n\u2022    \u2022    \u2022\nHOW A BCAA DRIVER TRAINING COURSE HELPS YOU\nAs Driver\n\u2014 which\nto meet a\nTrainees follow NEW WIDE SCREEN FULL COLOR MOVIES\ntake   them   through   real   traffic   situations   \u2014   they   learn\nI driving hazards before going on the road!\nLEARN TO DRIVE THIS 'SAFE' BCAA WAY!\nCOURSES AVAILABLE TO EVERYONE\nPARENTS \u2014 BE SURE YOUR TEENAGER G ETS THIS VITAL DRIVER EDUCATION TOO!\nBCAA MEMBERS SIO.OO\nNON MEMBERS $15.00\nfor Further Intormation and Brochures Contact\nBRITISH COLUMBIA AUTOMOBILE\nASSOCIATION\nKootenay District Office\n612 Vernon St. \u2014 Nelson\nPhone 352-3414\n 8\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURS., SEPT. 28, 1967\nON THE AIR\nCKLN    PROGRAMS\nPACIFIC DAYLIGHT SAVING TIME\n1390 ON THE DIAL 96 MC CABLE 1M\nTHURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 28,  1967\n12:55\u2014News and Stocks\n1:00\u2014Holiday Beat\n1:40\u2014Assignment\n1:45\u2014Sports\n1:48\u2014Summer Sounds\n2:00\u2014News\n2:03\u2014Summer Sounds\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n3:00\u2014Summer Sounds\n3:30\u2014Good V Country\n4:00\u2014News\n4:10\u2014Hii Parade\n4:30\u2014Interview: L. V. Rogers\nExchange Students\n4:40\u2014Hit Parade\n5:00\u2014 News\n5:05\u2014Sports\n5:10\u2014Rolling Home Show\n5:30\u2014News\n5:35\u2014Rolling Home\n6:00\u2014News\n6:10-Stocks\n6:15\u2014Back to the Bible\n6:45\u2014Sacred Heart Program\n7:00\u2014News\n7:05\u2014Music\n8:00\u2014News\n8:05\u2014Music\n9:00\u2014News\n9:05\u2014Music\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Five Nights a Week\n10:30\u2014Anthology\n11:00\u2014News\n11:05\u2014Sports\n11:10\u2014Night Theme\n12:00\u2014News\n6:00\u2014News and Reports\n6:10\u2014Morning Show\n6:30\u2014News\n6:35\u2014Morning Show\n7:00\u2014News\n7:05\u2014Sports\n7:10\u2014Chapel in the Sky\n7:25\u2014News\n7:30\u2014Morning Show\n7:45-Sports\n7:48\u2014Morning Show\n8:011\u2014News\n10-Sports\n8:15\u2014Morning Show\n8:30-News\n: 35\u2014Morning Show\n9:00-News\n910-Bill Good\n9:15\u2014Music Fill\n9:25\u2014Royalite Windfall\n9:59\u2014DOOTS\n10:00\u2014 News\n10:05\u2014Bulletin Board\n10:10\u2014Interview: Meals on\nWheels\n10:25\u2014Coffee Time\n10:45\u2014Sports\n10:47-Coffee Time\n10:55\u2014Assignment\n11:00\u2014News\n11:05\u2014Happy Time\n11:15\u2014 Women's World\n1:20\u2014Happy Time\n1:55\u2014 Preview Commentary\n12:00\u2014Summer Sounds\n12:30-.\\ews\n12:40\u2014Sports\n12:45\u2014Music\nCBC PROGRAMS\nTHURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1967\n00\u2014News\n10-Music\n:45\u2014Morning Devotional\n:55\u2014Music and News Show\n:35\u2014Max Ferguson Show\n:00\u2014 News  and   Report\n:15-Russ Thompson Show\n: 55\u2014Assignment\n:59-D.O.O.T.S.\n: 00\u2014News\n: 03\u2014The Concert Hour\n.55\u2014Assignment\n:00\u2014News\n:03\u2014Expodition\n: 40\u2014The  Archers\n: 55\u2014Assignment\n.00\u2014Along the Way\n: 15\u2014News\n30\u2014BC   Farm Broadcast\n: 48\u2014Marine Weather\n: 00\u2014Holiday Beat\n: 40\u2014Assignment\n: 00\u2014News\n: 03\u2014Star Show\n:30-Matinee With\nPat Patterson\n00\u2014 News\n:03-Matinee With\nPat Patterson\n3:30\u2014Off the Record\n3:55\u2014Assignment\n4:00\u2014News\n4:03\u2014Canadian Roundup\n4:10\u2014Off the Record\n4:55\u2014Assignment\n5:00\u2014News\n5:05\u2014Sports Desk\n5:10\u2014Spotlight on Sports\n5:15\u2014Tempo\n5:30\u2014News\n5:35\u2014Tempo\n6:00\u2014World at Six\n6:30\u2014Sights and Sounds\n7:00\u2014News\n7:03\u2014Tempo\n7:30\u2014Soundings\n8:00\u2014News\n8:03\u2014CBC Centenary Concerts\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Five Nights a Week\n10:30\u2014Anthology\n11:00\u2014News\nll:03-Hot Air\n12:00\u2014News\n12:05\u2014After - Hours\nFRIDAY, SEPTEMBER29, 1967\n00\u2014News\n10\u2014 Music and News Show\n45\u2014Morning Devotional\n:00\u2014News\n: 10\u2014Sports\n:15-A.M. Show\n:30\u2014Commentary\n:35\u2014Max Ferguson Show\n: 00\u2014News and Report\n: 10\u2014Interlude\n: 15\u2014Russ Thompson Show\n:55\u2014Assignment\n59-DO.O.T.S.\n00\u2014News\n03\u2014The Concert Hour\n55\u2014Assignment\n00\u2014News\n03\u2014Expoditions\n40\u2014The Archers\n55\u2014Assignment\n00-Network Test\n\u25a0News and Weather\n: 30\u2014B.C. Farm Report\n:40-51st North\n:00\u2014Holiday Beat\n: 40\u2014Assignment\n: 45\u2014Program Resume\n: 00\u2014News\n: 03\u2014Voices of the Past\n:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n: 00\u2014News\n:03-T. Can. Matinee\n3:30\u2014Off the Record\n3:55\u2014Assignment\n4:00\u2014News\n4:03\u2014Canadian Round-Up\n4:10\u2014Off the Record\n4:55\u2014Assignment\n5:00\u2014News\n5:05\u2014Sports Desk\n5:10\u2014Spotlight on Sports\n5:15\u2014Tempo\n5:30\u2014News\n5:35\u2014Tempo\n5:56\u2014Stocks\n6:00\u2014World at Six\n6:30\u2014Jazz on Tour\n7:00\u2014News\n7:03\u2014Centennial Diary\n7:30\u2014International Services\nTranscription\n8:00\u2014News\n8:03\u2014Mystery Theatre\n8:30\u2014Court of Opinion\n9:00\u2014News\n9:03\u20141967 and All That\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Five Nights a Week\n10:30\u2014Evening Concert\n11:00\u2014News\n11:03\u2014Toscanini \u2014 Centennial\nTribute\n12:00\u2014News\n12:06\u2014Midnight Jamboree\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\nPACIFIC DAYLIGHT SAVING TIME\n\u2022\u2014Live Program (O\u2014Color Program\nKREM-TV - Channel t\n7:30-Batman* <C>\n8:00\u2014Flying Nun' IC)\n8:30-Bewitched* (Cl\n9:00-That Girl* <C>\n9:30\u2014Peyton Place* IC)\n10:00\u2014Untouchables\n11:00\u2014Nightbeat IC)\n11:30\u2014Joey Bishop* (C)\nKXLY-TV - Channel 4\n6:30\u2014Leave It to Beaver\n7:00\u2014Truth or\nConsequences IC)\n7:30\u2014Cimarron Strip* IC\n9:00\u2014CBS Thursday Night\nMovie* (C) \"Cat on a\nHot Tin Roof\"\n11:00-11 o'clock News <C>\n11:30\u2014Big Four Movie\nKIIQ-TV - Channel 6\nYour  Individual  Horoscope\nLook in the section in which\nyour birthday comes and find\nwhat your outlook is, according\nlo Ihe stars. \"\nFor Friday, September 29, 1967\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 20\n(Aries) \u2014 A lack of proper pro\ncedure will make for lack of con\ntrolling interest. Also bear ir\nmind lhat the window-dressing\nis nol a measure of the basic value. Remember old obligations,\npromises.\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus)\n\u2014 This is no lime to permit fine\nopportunities to slip through\nyour hands. Financial and artistic gains indicated. Be your engaging, tactful, smiling self.\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini)\n\u2014 Your Mercury promises a new\nchance for advancement. Keep\ngoing in known areas and keep\nextra - curricular activities in\nIheir proper place, never superseding everyday duties, essentials.\nJUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer)\n\u2014 Avoid worry, indecision. You\ncan make progress if you strike\nforth staunchly, knowingly. If\nyou hesitate when the occasion\nwarrants action, little reward\nwill be yours.\nJULY 24 lo AUGUST 23 (Leo)\n\u2014 II may be advisable to slacken your gait in order lo detect\nerror of method or details overlooked. Avoid foolhardy ventures. Plan with confidence.\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER\n23 (Virgo) \u2014 End of the week\njam-up? Back off, take a better\nlook, get a better perspective. A\nslight change here or there\ncould reactivate the forward\nmovement.\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER\n23 (Libra) \u2014 Mixed influences.\nDon't head into complications:\nsteer a clear course. Speak soft\nly bul Willi decision. You are\nqualified lo give more than an\nordinary assist.\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER\n22 (Scorpio) \u2014 Poise and perseverance are two requirements\nnow. Choose the most appropriate goal and plan for ils achievement carefully.\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER 21 (Sagittarius) \u2014 Focus\nambitions on an attainable pla-i\nteau. Don'l strive for the unreasonable. Arbitration scheduled,\nEngage in it quietly, purposefully. II not well counselled, new\nventures could prove a problem.\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY\n20 (Capricorn) \u2014 Review the inner forces that drive you. Are\nyou sure you are following the\nright course for YOU? Day's aspects ask for better-than-just-\ngood effort and thought.\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY\n19 (Aquarius) \u2014 Business matters, difficult tasks, long-range\nplanning favored now. But have\npatience, be vigilant and precise.\nWatch budget, protect assets.\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\n(Pisces) \u2014 Mixed influences.\nDont' be caught in a tide of vacillation; be resolute, firm.\nAvoid tension, squabbles, fretting. Move on to well-earned\ngains. Maintain contact with\nhelpful persons.\nYOU BORN TODAY: \"First|\nthoughts\" are often your best I\njudgments. Foresightedness\nhelps you to progress rapidly,\nand your healthy curiosity and\nimagination are outstanding.\nDon't waste time or mental gyrations on trivialities, however.\nSystematize efforts and you\nwon't become bogged down with\nnon-essentials. You have a keen\nsense of justice, but you may\ntend to achieve ils ends so forcefully in some areas   that   you\ncould defeat your good purposes.\nYou appreciate music, drama,\nall tilings artistic. Birthdate of:\nRobert (Lordi Clive, founder,\nEmpire of Brit, India; Brigitte\nBardot, cinema actress; Gene\nAutrey, \"Singing Cowboy\" of\nHollywood fame.\nVt-ULdktM^ by.\nZawia. UthsudoJi.\nMotherly Touch Soothes\nIrate Business Consumers\nSAINT JOHN, N.B. (CP)-A\nunique one-member bureau\nhere is serving as a soothing\nbuffer for consumers irate over\nquestionable business practices.\nIt's the Consumer Business\nInformation Bureau, a jointly\nsponsored project that even\nprovides a motherly touch of\nsympathy with practical\nadvice.\nMrs. W. A. Crawford, attractive executive secretary of the\nmonth-old bureau, says with\ntongue In cheek: \"Business has\nnever been better.\"\nBorn from a study of consumer complaints by the board\nof trade and sponsored by three\nother groups that include merchants, the bureau has handled\nmore than 100 complaints.\nFifty of them came last week\nwhen \"high-pressure, very polished salesmen from Ontario\"\nwent on a door-to-door binge\nselling magazines without\nlicences.\nMrs. Crawford fielded the\ncomplaints,   passing   them   to\nboth the police and the press\nand moved to set up a tougher\nlicensing system.\nTransient salesmen now must\nbe checked out at her office\nbefore getting police clearance\nand credentials from city hall.\n\"This way.\" she says, \"we\ncan make use of several comprehensive files to check out\nthe company, the product and\nthe individual.\"\nMrs. Crawford says other\ncomplaints deal mostly with\nmisleading advertising by local\nbusinesses that bilk the buying\npublic.\n\"There is not much we can\ndo about the advertising, but\nwe can inform the business concerned that consumers are\nangry,\"\nMrs. Crawford's bureau\u2014its\nbudget is $7,500\u2014soon will be\nlinked with the newly-created\nprovincial consumer bureau\nthat deals primarily with credit\npractices.\nDaily Crossword\n7:00\u2014Best of Groucho\n7:30-Danicl Boone* (C)\n8:30_Ironsides* (C)\n9:30-Dragnet\u00ab <C>\n10:00\u2014Dean Martin Show* (C)\n11:00\u2014News and Weather (Cl\n11:30\u2014Tonight With Carson* 'C>\nCBC-TV - Nelson, Channel 9; Trail, Channel 11\nCastlegar, Channel 3; Cranbrook, Channel 10\n12:00\u2014Luncheon Date\n12:30-Search for Tomorrow\n12:45\u2014Guiding Light\n1:00\u2014Luncheon Date\n1:30\u2014As the World Turns\n2:00-Bv Invitation\n2:3I)-TBA\n3:00-Take Thirty\n3:..0-Edge of Night\n4:00\u2014Communicate\n4:30\u2014Barney Boomer\n5:00\u2014Gentle Ben\n5:80\u2014The Game ol Scouting\n6:00\u2014News\n6:15\u2014British Calendar\n6:30\u2014Klahanie\n7:00\u20147 o'clock Show\n7:30\u2014Accidental Family\n8:00\u2014Hogan's Heroes\n8:30\u2014Telescope\n9:00\u2014Man From UNCLE\n10:00\u2014Dragnet\n10:30\u2014Tlie True North\n11:00\u2014News\n11:19\u2014Viewpoint\nCJLH-TV - Channel 7, Lethbridge\nMOUNTAIN STANDARD TIME\nFRIDAY\n12:00-Luncheon Date \u2014 I\n12:30-Search for Tomorrow 'Cl\n_Z:45\u2014Guiding Light, id\n1:00-Scan\n2:00-Ed Allen\n2:30\u2014Donna Reed Show\n3;00-Take Thirty\n3:30-I_dge of Night IC)\n4:00\u2014Communicate <C)\n4:30\u2014Barncv Boomer\n5:00-Kids' Bids\n5:30\u2014Round Up \u2014 Sports.\nWeather, News\n6:30\u2014Man of the World\n7:30\u2014Rat Patrol (C)\n\"Darers Go First Raid\"\n8 00-Get Smart (Cl\n8:30\u2014Tommy Hunter Show 'Cl\n9:00\u2014Friday Night Movie\n\"Magnificent Obsession\"\n11:00\u2014CBC News\n11:20\u2014Final Edition\n11:30\u2014Starlight Theatre:\n\"Westbound\"\nACROSS\n1. Forehead\n6. Lath\n9. Net\n10.\t\npneumonia\n12. Wide-\nmouthed\nJars\n13. Custom\n14. Wlra\nmeasure\n15. Pl_ce\n16. Germanium:\nsym.\n17. Navy goat\nand Army\nmule, for\nexample\n20. Guided\n21. City train\n22. Possessive\npronoun\nS3. Stuffs\n24. Devilish\n26. Puddle\n28. Conjunction\n29. Pronoun\n31. Affix\n32, Thinga\n_dded\n34. Fish\n35. Possessive\npronoun\n36. Entire\n37. Mellower\n39. Dike\n41. Cubio\nmeter\n42. Hebrew dry\nmeasures\n43. Spar\n44. Face:\nsl.ng\nDOWN\n.. Satan\n2. Small\nstreams\n3. Cape\nHorn\nnative\n4. Met3'\nWestrum\n5. Veers\n6. Missing\n7. Arabian\ngarment\n8. Labeled\n9. French\nriver\n11. Bamboo\nlike\ngrasses\n15, Strings\n18. Fuel\n19. Urn-\npire's\ncall\n20. Shellac\n23. Telegraph\n24. Turf\n25. Drowse\n26. Couples\n27. Peculiarity\n29. Loaf,\ners\n30. Stories\n32. Ventilated\n33. Parts of\nchurches\n1\n3 A\n0\n-\nA\na\n_\n8 I\n'.\nI\nL\nA\nV\n!\n.  IU\nK\n\u25a0\n..\nA\n.i t.\nI\nr. m\n_\nU\nJ\nv\n1\nAT\nA\nR\nA\nI\n1\nft\nkk\n\u25a0\nT\n11\n1\nC\ns\nI\ns\nL\nA tj\nr\nr.\n1\nt\nt\n1\nM\nLf\nu\ns\nv\nc.\nT\nO\nD\nA\nL 5\nAL\n.\n1\n'.\n'.\ni\na\n1\n.\n'1  A\n'-,\nT\nA\n1\nNHT\nA\nP\ncW\nV\nE\nL\nL\n'.Ha\nD\n1\nOS\"\n\u25a0N\nA\nr.\n|\"\n_\nANl\nVe.terd-y'i Answer\n35. Frau'a\nhelpmeet\n38. Legume\n39. Trim\n40. Ostrichlike bird\ntt\n1\nZ\ni\n4\nl\nb\n1\na\ntt\n1\ntt\nIO\nii\niZ\ntt\nI.\n11\n%\ntt\n15\ntt\nlb\n11\nia\n\\<s\ntt\nZO\nil\ntt\nzz\n'tt\n23\n%\nVa\n24\n2.5\ntt\n%\n2S>\nZ1\nttl\nw>\ntt\nv>\n30\n51\n'tt\nlz\n11\n34\nm\n35\n'tt\ntt\n3k\nVI\n.\u00bb\n1\nn\n40\n41\ntt\n\u00ab\n'^\n44\ntt\n.4\n^\nUl\nDAILY CRYPTOQUOTE \u2014 Here's how to work Its\nAXYDLBAAXR\nIs LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Is used\nfor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apos-\ntrophies, the length and formation of the words are all hints.\nEach day the code letters are different.\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nUAO   IDYTU  UAPLX  FDR  VEL\nBDTTPJMF   ZD  UD   E  1DSEL  PT\nUD  ZOBYPWO  AOY  DG  E  XYPOW-\nELVO.\u2014JOWOYMOF     LPVADMT\nYesterday's Cryptoquole: THE BEST PART OF A REAL-\nESTATE BARGAIN IS THE NEIGHBOR.\u2014O'MALLEY\n(\u00a9 1967, Kim: Features Syndicate, Inc.)\nEASY TO MEMORIZE\nWatch TV while you crochet\nflower medallions. You'll have 1\ngarden of them in no time.\nThe lace-look is fashion nowl\nCrochet easy-to-memorize medallions for cloth, spread, scarf.\nPattern 773: directions; joining\ncharts.\nTHIRTY-FIVE CENTS in coins\n(no stamps, pleasei for each pattern to N.D.N. Pattern Dept., 60\nFront St. W., Toronto, Ont. Print\nplainly PATTERN NUMBER,\nyour NAME and ADDRESS.\nSend for Big, Big 1938 Needle-\ncraft Catalogue \u2014 hundreds ol\nknit, crochet fashions, embroidery, quilts, afghans, gifts, toys.\nPlus 6 free patterns printed inside. 50c.\nBook of prize AFGHANS.  12\ncomplete patterns. 60c\nMuseum Quilt Book 2 \u2014 patterns\nfor 12 quilts. 60c\nBargain! Quilt Book 1 \u2014 16 complete patterns. 60c\nBook 3  \u2014  Quilts  for Today's\nLiving. New, exciting collection.\n15 complete patterns. 60c\n(Dm&a. lApL LVitk\nTJtaMojL Wlahtbi.\nPrinted Pattern\nSCHOOL STAR\nSee how buttons on the curve\ncue in a witly aside. The simpler\nthe better is a girl's feeling\nabout the lines that follow, and\nwe agree gladly. Choose cotton\nknil, ottoman.\nPrinted Pattern 9308: Girls'\nSizes 6,8, io. 12. 14. Size 10 takes\n1% yards 35-inch.\nFIFTY CENiS 150c) in coins\n'no stamps, pleasei for each pattern. Print plainly SIZE, NAME,\nADDRESS and STYLE NUMBER.\nNUMBER.\nSend order to MARIAN MAR\nTIN, NDN Pattern Dept., 60\nFront Street West, Toronto. Ont\nPLAN YOUR NEW FALL\nWARDROBE, send now for our\nnew Fall-Winter Patern Catalogue. 100 fresh, exciting shapes\n- clip coupon in Catalogue. Send\nin all sizes. Get one pattern frei\n50c now.\ni.\n SSSjyr\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURS., SEPT. 28, 1967-\nYHfL\n(phonsL\n352-3552\nHELP WANTED\u2014FEMALE\nSARAH COVENTRY NATION-\nally advertised Jewellery announces expansion program in\nthe Koolenay area. Immediate\nopp. for full or part time. No\ninvestment. Cull 352-2B10 be-\ntween 8-10 a.m. \u2014226-228\nWOOL PRESSER. EXPER1-\nence preferable but not essential. Apply in person only \u2014\nJonella Cleaners, 517 Victoria\nStreet. -222-227\nBABYSITTER REQUIRED IN\nmy home for 3 children, while\nmother teaches. Phone 352-0320\nafter 8 p.m. \u2014227-229\nTEENAGE SCHOOLGIRL FOR\noccasional babysitting, Fair-\nview area. Apply No. 24, Lake-\nside Motel, -227-228\nLADY  COOK  REQUIRED-.!.!-\nmediately for logging crew of\n13. Ph. 365-3087 Friday to Sun.\n-221-232\nPUBLIC   NOTICE\nSITUATIONS  WANTED\nCARPENTER WORK. NOTH-\ning too large or too small. Free\nestimates. Reasonable. Phone\n359-7190. \u2014227-232\nPIANO TUNING AND REPAIR.\nGus Stenberg. Ph. 352-6802.\n -224-249\nWILL PROVIDE GOO_~_ABY-\nsitting service by day or hour.\nPhone 352-2096. -226-228\nLAND REGISTRY ACT\n(Section 162 amended)\nIN THE MATTER OF Lots 9\nand 10, In Block 47, of Lot 397,\nKootenay District, Plan 494.\nProof having been filed in my\noffice of the loss of Certificate\nof Title No. 70310-1 lo the above-\nmentioned lands In lhe name of\nLucy Mary Davies and bearing\ndate   the   20th   June,   1947,   I\nHEREBY GIVE NOTICE of my\nIntention at the expiration of 14\ndays from the first publication\nhereof to Ibsuo Provisional Certificate of Title In lieu of such\nlost Certificate. Any person having any information with reference to such lost Certificate of\nTitle is requested to communicate wilh the undersigned.\nDATED AT NELSON, B.C.,\nTHIS 22ND DAY OF\nSeptember, 1987.\nW. D. Sutherland,\nRegistrar,\nNelson Land Registration\nDistrict.\nDATE OF FIRST PUBLICATION:  September 28, 1967.\n-227-h\nWHO DO YOU THINK\nCARRIES AWAV TELLTALE\nCOOKIE CRUMBS?\n--Z8.\nAUTOMOTIVE,   BICYCLES\nMOTORCYCLES\ni Continued i\nPROPERTY,  HOUSES.\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\niContinued'\nPROFESSIONAL ROCK WALLS\nand cement finish. Ph. 352-7361\n         -216-241\nBRITISH CARPET~~AND UP-\nholsterv cleaning. Up to 20'\"'.\noff.  Phone  352-5909.  -209-234\nMACHINERY\nH. S. TWIST DRILLS\nJobbers  Length  Drills,  Fractional. Letter, Number, Small\nTaps and Dies. Lathe tool hits,\ncentre drills.\nSTEVENSON\nMACHINERY LTD.\n510 Latimer St.      Ph. 352-3561\n-227-227\nVALLEY AUTOMOTIVE LTD\nMassey Ferguson New Hoi\nland new and used farm equip\nment Parts sales and service\nPhone 856-2254. Creslon BC\n\u2014233-tfn\nMORTGAGES\nMORTGAGE MONEY REQUIR-\ned. Exceptionally sound security. Will pay up to .*; Reply\nBox 201, Nelson Daily News.\n-220-tfn\nI WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE\nfor any debts incurred in my\nname or Rainbow Resort without my written consent and\nsignature.\u2014Richard D. Mann,\nBalfour, B.C,  \u2014225-230\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nrAKMS,   ETC.,  FOR   SALE\nJALMO. 4 YEAR OLD MOD-\nern bungalow at Erie. L.R.\n27x14, oak floors, sliding al.\ndoors to patio, 2 B.R. utility\nroom, vanity bathroom and\nshower, attractive kitchen,\nmahogany cupboards, double\nsink, ex. fan. Lots of closets\nthroughout, double carport and\nworkshop. All this on 1.02 level acres. Min. down payment\n$3,000.00. S.P. $17,500. R.H C.\nRealty Company Ltd., 601 Baker St., Nelson, B.C. -224-229\nPROPERTY FOR SALE BY\nowner. 3-bdrm. home, large\nliving and dining area, wall-to-\nwall carpets, fireplace, maple\ncabinet kitchen, IVi baths, full\nbasement, oil heal, attached\ngarage. Priced for quick sale;\ngood terms, Phone 357-9334 or\nwrite Box 407, Salmo, B.C.\n  -225-230\n1-BDRM. HOME, REDECORAT-\ned inside; 2 staircases, fenced,\nlaundry room, wired for washer and dryer; gas furnace 3\nblocks from Baker St. $11,900.\n$5000 down, $100 monthly. \u2014\nPrice Includes gas stove and\nfridge, garden furniture and\ntools. Phone 352-6054.\u2014227-232\nCHOICE CHRISTINA LAKE\nproperty. 15 mins from water.\n4 acre parcels. Will sell one\nparcel separately or four together Water main on property. Phone 442-8877, Grand\nForks,          -205-230\nIF THE PAYMENTS ON THE\nhouse you sold don't come in\nfast enough to meet your need,\nwe could buy the balance\nfrom you. We pay In cash.\nBox 374. Trail  B.C     -115-tfn\nTRADE YOUR PRESENT\ndwelling nn a new CMHC financed Engineered Home. \u2014\nYour choice of Ihree 3-bedroom models nearing completion. Buy now and we will decorate interior to vour taste.\nT. D. Rosling _ Son Ltd.. 568\nWard St., Nelson, B.C., phone\n352-3581,      \u2014225-230\nFREE INSPECTION DO YOU\nrequire a business location\nwith 120 feel on highway and\nnear Baker St.' Call William\nKalyniuk Agencies Ltd.. phone\n362-2425 -285-tfn\nCOMMERCIAL BUILDING AND\nbakery equipment; 4-bedroom\napt. adjoining building. Priced\nfor immediate sale. By appointment only. Salmo, phone\n357-9416. \u2014225-228\nBUSINESS 30-FT . ON BAKER\nSt.. building 2-storev frame.\nAll this for under $25,000 -\nPlease contact Wm KaLymult\nAgencies Ltd. Ph. 352-2425.\n-97-tfn\nIContinued Next Column!\nBUSINESS   8.  PROFESSIONAL\nDIRECTORY\nA handy alphabetical guide to goods and services\navailable in Nelson.\nI ACRE OF N.S. BEACH PROP-\nerty   with   buildings.   Terms.\nWrite Box 204, Nelson News.\n\u2014226-231\n160-ACRE FARM WITH SMALL\nbeef herd and D-4 Cat. W. A,\nDouglas, Winlaw, B.C.\n-226-tfn\nAuctioneers\nKOOTENAV   AUCTIONS\nBox 263        Nelson        352-6018\n-207 tin\nAutomobile Dealers\nBILLS'  MIITtl'MN  LTD.\niDatsun Sales I\n!13 Baker SI     Plume 352-32..1\n-lln\nSHIELDS PONTIAC-HIIK'K Ltd\nComplete Automobile Service\n701 Baker SI       Phone 352-5505\n\u2014 10 tin\nBuilding Supplies\nB F E\nBUILDING SUPPLY LTD.\nEverythin'! m waterproof\nplywood\n301  Baker St      Phone 352-3135\n-tfn\nBURNS\nBUILDING MATERIALS LTD.\n602 Baker St       Phone 352 Mil I\n-tfn\nCOLUMBIA  TRADING  CO.\n609 Ward St        Phone ;l52-a571\n1 Block South ol Wnolworlh's\n-tin\nContractors\nLaszlo Huszak, General Masonry\nStone   Brick   Cement   Stucco\nPlastering\n1323 Falls St Phnne 352-7602\n-239 lln\nPAYI.ESS CONSTRUCTION\nBuildings, big or small\nllemodellinc, Painting Concrete,\nRoofing, Chimney Recapping.\nPhone 352-5703\n\u201420 .-tfn\nDress   Making\nWILMA'S  DRESSMAKING\n352-2096.\n-220-tfn\nGarages\nUpper   Fairview   iMulnrs   Ltd\nCor  7th al Davies   Ph   352-2525\nTransistorized Ignition\n tfn\nClassified Ads Bring Results\nKnitting Supplies\nNELSON YARN BARN\n814 Fourth St.,  Phone 352-7178\nOpen daily, 1-4 p.m,\n-220-245\nPhoto Copying\nPOWKI.L BNOHAVINO\n266 Baker St Nelson. B C.\nPhone 352-3552\nContracts - Birth Certificates\nLegal Documents\nImpnrtanl Papers\n-tfn\nPlumbing & Heating\n1   0. RIESTERER\nPlumbing and Healing\nPh  352-5110      210 Robson St\n-26-tfn\nPrinting\nNELSON  DAILV  \\EWS\nPrinters    Lithographers\nColor Printing\nPhnne 352-3552\n-lll-tfn\nRadio and TV\nService\nvideo ELECTRONICS\nZenith    Elertrnhnme T V\nSales and Service\n394 Baker St Ph   352-3358\n-180-tln\nRefrigeration\nRefrigeration Sales and Service\nCARLSON  EQUIPMENT\n803 Anderson St      Ph   352-5455\n-IBOIIn\n3-BDRM. HOUSE ON DOUBLE\nlot beside High School in\nSalmo. $4500. Jorgen Madsen,\nBox 13, Salmo, B.C.   -225-230\n:iOUSE FOR SALE, SOUTH\nSlocan. Phone 359-7280.\n-223-229\n2-BEDROOM HOUSE.  OWNER\ntransferred. Phone 352-3033.\n-222-227\n.46 ACRE BULLDOZED VIEW\nlot. Rldgewood Road. Phone\n352-2433. -214-239\nRENTALS\nSMALL 1-BDRM. HOME. FULL\nbasement. In quiet part of\ncity. Furnished, gas heat. Single person preferred. Phone\n352-6543. -227-229\nFOR SALE\nMISCELLANEOUS\nFALL\nLUMBER\nSALE\n\u2022\nServiceable Grade\nCedar Sheathing\n$25.1\nPer M.  FBM,\n\u2022\nFir, Larch and\nHemlock Sheathing\nFOR SALE\nMISCELLANEOUS\ni Continued i\nPer M. FBM.\n\u2022\nEconomy Grade\n2x4 and 2x6\nHemlock\n$35.00\nPer M. FBM.\n(Minimum Quantity 1 Load)\n|\u00abP\nKOOTENAY\nFOREST PRODUCTS\n3-BDRM. SUITE; LIVING RM.,\nkitchen and bath. 1 block from\nBaker St. $50 a month. Call\nPoulln Agencies Ltd., 352-7217.\n-226-228\nROOMS FOR RENT BY DAY\nweek or month at the ..oyal\nCanadian Legion, Nelson.\n-158-tfn\n1-BR.   HEATED APARTMENT.\nAdults. Phone 352-5005.\n-227-232\nSTRIP-EASY BASEMENT\nforms for rent. - Phone Art\nRavesleln, 352-7433.   -222-247\nOFFICES: 200 SQ. FT. AND\nup, available immediately. \u2014\nPhone 352-5112. -222-227\nUl'I'lCb    SPACE    AVAILABLE\nlor rem W Kalyniuk Agencies\n--20Ht.n\nSMALL FURN. HOUSE FOR 1\nor 2 persons, North Shore, Oct.\n1st. Phone 825-4463.     -227-232\n1-BEDROOM FURN., HEATED\nsuite, North Shore, $100. Phone\n352-3808. \u2014227-tfn\nTWO - 'BEDROOM FURNISHED\napartment. Phone 352-3025,\n-226-228\nSporting Goods\nFred Whltelev's Sport shop\n88 Baker St       Phnne 352 7741\n-tfn\nTopsoil\nLarry's Topsail, Sand and (.ravel\nPh   352-2355 DnVB   352-7576 \"VCS\n-tfn\nVacuum   Cleaners\nELE.CT.tlH.ll_  Snl.s  -  Service\n711  Innes St Ph   352 7:141\n-77 tin\n2-BDRM. HOUSE AVAIL. OCT\n1st. Phone 352-3328 nfter 5:30,\n-225-230\nAUCTION\nSALE\nSAT., SEPT. 30th\n1:15 P.M.\n(Note time change)\n220 Behnsen St.\nNelson, B.C.\nOn instructions of Mr. Cote,\nlongtime Nelson resident, we\noffer the following household\nfurnishings, and effects:\nTools and Equipment: Hand\ntools, garden tools, 8\" table\nsaw, jig saw, Vi\" drill, sander,\nvice, etc., Vi H.P . outboard\nmotor, good gas power mower,\nladders.\nFurniture: Twin beds, dressers, chrome suite, china cabinet, occasional chairs, tables,\nsewing machine, chesterfield\nsuite, lawn furniture.\nAppliances: Small chest deep,\nfreeze, 30\" stove, fridge,\nwringer washer, small appliances, pressure cookers,\npots and pans, etc.\nAntiques: From Mr. Cote's\npersonal collection of curios,\netc. A beautiful ornate pump\norgan in full working order,\nbutter churn, old tools, coffee\ngrinder, gas iamp, old harness,\netc.\nPREVIEW THURSDAY\nAND FRIDAY 2-9 P.M.\nHOUSEKEEPING ROOMS AND\nsuites dishes linen supplied;\nparking 171 Baker St  -35-tfn\nJ BDRM HOME FOB KENT,\nWell built. Oil Heated. Phone\n359-7573. -218-229\nMARIANNE APARTMENTS   -\nAttractive suites   Ph  352-3217.\n-144-tfn\nSTUDIO APT. AND 6-RM. APT.\nAdulls only. Phone 352-6024.\n-226-tfn\n3-BDRM. HOUSE FOR LEASE.\n713 Victoria Street_   -_20-tfn\nSELF - CONTAINED   3 \u25a0 ROOM\nsuite.   Phone  352-3480.-226-228\nPrefinished V-Groove\nMAHOGANY PANELS\n3\/16\" x 4' x 8'. Each $4.05\nSTORM and SCREEN DOORS\nAluminum self storing, pre-\nhung with pneumatic closer.\nEach           $34.05\nFIBREGLASS\nINSULATION BATTS\nRolls or loose fill In stock.\nD GRADE SPRUCE\nSHEATHING\n4' X 8' x H\". Each .. $2.69\n4' x 8' x '_\". Each     $3.80\n4'x8'x V.Each $8.85\nROOFING\nNo. 1 grade CMHC Accepted.\n210 lb. Asphalt Shingles.\nPer square $10.95\nColoured Corrugated\nPLASTIC PANELS\n26\" x 96\". Each $2.19\nCOLUMBIA TRADING CO.\n609 Ward St.\n-227-229\nELLISON'S\nWholesale \u2022 Retail\n523 Front St. Ph. 352-3181\n-215-h\nLUMBER\nDIRECT\nFrom  Mill\nMYERS LOGGING\n& LUMBER SALES\nSlocan, B.C.\n-228-h\nAUCTIONS\nBox 263 352-6018\nFALL SALE\n10% OFF\nOn All Garden Supplies at\nELLISON'S\n523 Front St. Ph. 352-3181\n\u2014226-231\nGOOD USED FURNITURE -\nWringer washer in good cond\n$35; coal and wood stove with\n2 gas burners, $35; extra dining room chairs, $2.95 each\nand up; chesterfield suites,\nelectric stoves, small tables,\nfridges, etc. Mac's Home Fur\nnishlngs, 461 Josephine Street,\nphone 352-2119.    -226-228\nGood for All Plants\nin Your Garden\nLATERS PACIFIC FISH\nFERTILIZER\n8 oz. to 1 gal. from 79c\nNelson  Farmers Supply\n524 Railway St.\nFOR SALE\nMISCELLANEOUS\n(Continued)\nWRECKING 1060 ZEPHYR, '57\nRambler, '53 Chev. Pickup,\n'56-'59 Fords, '55-'61 Chevs,\n'56-'58 Ford Station Wagons,\n'57 Volkswagen, '59'60 Ren\nault, '56-'57 Buick. '55-'5(i Ply\nmouth, '60 IHC 4x4 Good\nmotors '56 Chev 265 V8, '56-\n'57 V8 automatic Rambler\n'57 Ford V8s and 6 cylinders.\nCottonwood Wrecking Service,\nBox 382. Nelson. Ph 352-5815.\n-140-tfn\nTRAILERS,\nMOBILE HOMES\nSAFEWAY\nBOOSEY S. HAWKES (LON-\ndon I B flat clarinet, like new,\n$1)0, Phone 365-6551 or write\nBox 843, Casllegar, B.C.\n-227-229:\n'64 SPORTS FURY. 383 EN-\ngine, 4 on floor, heavy suspension, P.S., belts, radio, washers, etc.; new brakes, new\nWAV. tires, winter tires, extra\nrim. Phone 352-3898 after 5:30.\n-227-229\nTOP   QUALITY   CHOICE\nyoung  beef.   Order  now  for\nyour  freezer.  Side,   cut  and\nwrapped, 56c lb. Ph. 352-6866.\n-208-233\nPONY TRACTOR; HYDRAULIC\naccessories; '56 Buick H.T.,\nwith extra reconditioned motor\nand trans.; '55 GMC '..-ton inl\nperfect condition. Ph. 357-9784, |\nSalmo. -222-2271\nPLASTIC PIPE - LOWEST\nPrices Mac's Welding and\nEqlupmenl Co Ltd , 514 Railway Street. Nelson. B.C.\n-149-tfn\nFALL SALE - 10% OFF ON\nall garden supplies at Ellison's, 523 Front Street, phone\n352-3181. \u2014226-231\nLESS BOOZE, MORE BORTSCH\n\u2014 Canning tomatoes. Russian\nFood Store, 522 Vernon Street.\n-226-231\nPEARS, $1.25 PER 50-LB. CASE.\nFree delivery in Nelson and\nNorth Shore. Phone 352-2337.\n-226-231\nCHEAP - OIL FLOOR FUR-\nnace, kitchen stove, oil drums,\nhot water tank. Ph. 352-2630.\n-228-231\nFRUIT JARS, TREADLE SEW-\ning machine, 2 washers, 1 gas,\n1 electric. Phone 352-3389.\n\u2014225-227\nCASH SALE: 1962 CHEVY II\nSedan; good condition, radio,\nposi-traclion. Phone after 5:30\np.m. weekdays, 352-3630.\n-225-230\nFOR SALE-1962 VAUXHALL 4-\ndoor sedan. Good running order, good rubber. Clean inside\nand out. Phone 352-3553.\n-145-tfn\nIMMEDIATE\nHOUSING\nAVAILABLE\nPRICED TO FIT YOUR*\nHOUSING BUDGET\nThere's room for laughter In\na modern mobile home \u2014 See\nthe wonderful selection of\n\"wife pleasers\" on display at\nCRANBROOK\nTRAILERS LTD.\nBox 1458 Ph. 365-5047\nCASTLEGAR\nWhere Mobile Homes are our\nBusiness \u2014 Not a Sideline.\nSACRIFICE FOR QUICK SALE:\n1966 BSA 650 cc. motorcycle.\nWill accept car as trade. \u2014\nPhone 352-6104. -226-229\n'54 ZEPHYR, RADIO, $100; '60\nFalcon 4-dr. Wagon, new motor and trans. 352-7172 after 5.\n-227-229\nLOW COST, DEPENDABLE\ntransportation. 1955 Austin A-\n50 sedan. Very good condition.\nPhone 352-5443. \u2014226-228\n1954 CHEV. BEL-AIR. VERY\ngood body. Radio, automatic,\none 1956 Dodge Sedan, make\noffer. Phone 352-5112. -222-227\n'59 DODGE STN. WAGON. V-8,\nstd. trans. $150. Ph. 352-2006,\n-227-232\nCLEAR,   DRY   CHICKEN  MA-\nnure, 50c sack, 65c delivered.\nPhone F. Toerlng, 229-4655.\n-223-228\nTAKE OVER PAYMENTS 1964\nFord Convertible. P.S., P.B\nPhone  Rick,   825-9975.-222-227\n2 OIL BARRELS, PUMP AND\ncan, $12; rangette, $20; pair of\nskis, $3. Ph. 352-7171 after 5.\n-223-228\nFOR SALE  - 1964 FALCON\ngood condition. Phone 352-2449\nafter 5 p.m, \u2014225-229\n65 IMPALA SS. 300 H.P., 4-SP\nIrans., mags. Phone 352-2861\n-225-230\nBABY  BUGGY,   STROLLER, I mttct   wrt      .7   EYVRn\u2014i.\nhighchair,   like   new.  figg, \"gj^ &\u00bb\u00aeJ^\n\u25a0J.--2630. -227-232 -223-228\nSTOVE, BOOKS, RECORDS,\netc. Ph. 352-3328 after 5:30.\n-225-230\nROOM AND BOARD\nDUNCAN PHYFE DROP-LEAF\nmahogany table and 4 chairs,\n$65, Phone 352-5105.   \u2014226-228\nAPPLES AND ITALIAN PLUMS\n\u2014Annable Blk., Room 3 (basement). \u2014226-228\nUSED 24-IN 4-BURNER ELEC-\ntric ranges - Call Coleman\nElectric, 352-3175.       -lll-tfn\nTWO FURNISHED ROOMS -\nCable TV, use of kitchen and\nbath; board if required. Phone\n352-5006. \u2014227-229\nCLEAN, PRIVATE BDRM. FOR\ngentleman, near Legion, $30\nper mon. Phone 352-5030 noon\nor evenings. \u2014226-tfn\nOFFICE SAFE FOR SALE -\nPhone 352-5893. -220-tfn\nFRIDGE FOR  SALE.  PHONE\n352-3813. -221-tfn\nFOR   SALE:   1   BOATHOUSE.\nPhone 825-4679. \u2014227-231\nAUTOMOTIVE,   BICYCLES\nMOTORCYCLES\n-157-h\n1 ALL WHITE ENAMEL COAL\nand wood range, very good\ncond., $45; li-ton 1951 Ford\ntruck, good running order,\nwith grain box, $175; 1 Alpine\nSki-Doo, 10',4-h.p., two new\ntracks, motor overhauled, $575\n- Phone Salmo, 357-2276.\n-226-228\nSIDES OF GRAIN FED BEEF\n59c. cut and wrapped Sides\nof grain-led pork, 35c, cul and\nwrapped. 39c Home cured\nHams and Bacon Delivery\nweekly to Nelson. Castlegar,\nTrail and Salmo Newdan\nFarms. Creston. B.C Ph 356-\n9901 -98-tln\n'67  CHEV   FLEETSIDE\nPICKUP\n0\u00ab miles.      $2350\n'59 AUSTIN GYPSY\n4-WHEEL DRIVE\nNewtires. $759\nPriced at\nBARGAIN\nCENTRE\n170 Baker St. Ph. 352-3233\nThe 11 Year Car\nNow at\nEAST TRAIL\nMOTORS LTD.\n1694 \u2022 2nd Ave., Trail\nPhone 364-1205\nVOLVO - Rated one of the\n7 Best Cars in the World Today\nWe Can\nSAVE\nYou money on Plumbing\nFREE\nPlan and layout service\nPlastic and copper In slock\nat our Nelson store\nSimpson6-Sears \u201481-tfn\n-158-h\nAVAILABLE FOR 2 BOYS TO\nshare. Phone 352-7154.-225-230\nWANTED\nMISCELLANEOUS\nUSED ASHLEY HEATER IN\ngood condition. Phone 359-7040\nor write Box 117, Crescent\nValley. -226-231\nWANTED - PULLEY FOR A\nFord Ferguson tractor. Write\nand state price to Paul Gen-\nsick, Nakusp, B.C.     -226-231\nWANTED: 1 OR 2-BEDROOM\n10-ft. wide trailer. Box 203,\nNelson Daily News.    -226-228\nPETS, CANARIES, 6EES\nPRETTY KITTENS WOULD\nlike homes. P. Hickey, Ph\n352-5901. -224-227\nCOLLIE PUPS FOR SALE -\nPhone 367-9617. -225-232\n\u2014 each unit complete with\nall accessories \u2014 Delivered\nand set up FREE of charge\nin the East and West Kootenays.\nSee\nWalt and Val Hill\nor\nJohnny and Nan Ruud\n-222-tfn\nFor Better\nand\nUSED\nHOMES\nSee\nUnited Trailer\n405 Cranbrook St.\nCranbrook, B.C.\nPh. 426-5295 Res. 4264973\nPERSONAL\nAre You Thinking\nof Buying a\nNew Car?\nIf You Are, See\nNELSON\nDISTRICT\nCREDIT\n507 Vernon St.\nPhone 352-7410\n\u2014227-229\nA.A. MEETS 8 P.M. FRIDAY,\nSelkirk Health Unit. Information, phone 352-3458. Box 465.\n-144-tfn\nPROPERTY WANTED\nLISTINGS WANTED, BUILD-\ning lots, farm land, city and\ncountry residential. Commercial property, timber lands.\nCall or write Wm. Kalyniuk\nAgencies. Nelson. Ph. 352-2423.\n-231-tfn\n3 OR 4-BDRM. HOME IN NEL-\nson or North Shore. Have $3000\ncash. Principals anly. Phone\n352-7681. \u2014225-230\nLOST   AND   FOUND\n-195-tfn\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES\nSADDLE HORSE, WELL BRO\nken, 8 yr. old, mare, gentle\nexcellent horse for younger\nriders and children. Box 790\nGrand Forks or ph. 442-3754\n-224-tfn\n3 WELL-BROKEN SADDLE\nhorses. Gentle, excellent for\nchildren. Phone 352-7311 days,\n352-6284 evenings.      \u2014225-227\nHOLSTEIN COW, SOON TO\nfreshen with second calf. Good\nmilker. Phone 357-9307.\n\u2014227-229\nARTIFICIAL BREEDING\nDairy and beef cattle. Phone\n352-6874. J. DeJong, Nelson.\n-202-tfn\nWEANER PIGS AND PORK\nfor sale. Wynndel Hog Farm,\nRudolf Damgaard. Ph. 428-\n4B69, Box 46, Wynndel, B.C.\n-217-238\nTWO SMALL STALLIONS, TWO\nyoung fillies. Phone 352-5112.\n-222-227\nMILKING GOAT FOR SALE -\nPhone 226-7588, Winlaw.\n-223-228\nLOST: WALLET, IDENTIF1CA-\ntion papers, belonging to Robert Y'oung, Fort St. John. \u2014\nFinder please notify Hume\nHotel. -225-227\nLOST SATURDAY, PINK WAL-\nlet. Pis. ph. 352-5106. Reward.\n\u2014227-229\nWANTED TO RENT\nFURN. BED-SITTING ROOM\nor small apart, for single lady,\nclose in. Phone 352-3387.\n-225-tfn\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES\nWANTED\nWANTED: GERMAN SHEP-\nherd pup. Phone 352-3808.\n-227-tfn\nBUSINESS\nOPPORTUNITIES\n2-CHAIR   BARBER   SHOP   IN\nexpanding Fernie district. Ph.\n423-7977, 6-8 p.m., ask for Al or\nJohn, or write Box 249, Fernie.\n-226-228\nEatlg jNVmh\nCirculation Dept., Ph. 352-3552\nla CRANBROOK, contact MRS.\nC. CLOAREC. 501-S-5th SL\nIn KIMBERLEY. contact MRS.\nW. MORRIS. 355 Haney St.\nPrice per 6ingle copy, 10 cents\nBy carrier per week, 45 cent3\nin advance\nSubscription rates:\nBy mail in Canada\nOutside Nelson\nOne month  ;. 5 2.25\nThree months _      5.50\nSix months   ...._     11.00\nit Happened in Canada\n!_\u00ab\u2022 m-rv\u00bbH - tew*. wt\u00ab\u00bbo\nm\nAPPLES - WEALTHY, WAG-\nners; and pears. Prices to\nmeet vour budget. Apply Miller's Farm, Queen's Bay, 5 ml,\npast Balfour towards Kaslo.\n-221-h\nOPEN FIRE CONVERTS. CIR-\nculatln;   heater,    wood-coal;\nmodern  look,   brown enamel\n$60. Longbeach, ph. 229-4267.\n\u2014226-228\nMake the Classified Way Pay\n(Continued Ne.M Columni\n(Continued Nc.xl Columni\nHANDYMAN'S SPECIAL: 1961\nRambler Wgn.; 6-cyl. stand.,\ngood tires, bodv, etc., radio,\n$225: '59 Chev. Wgn.; V-8. radio, good tires and body, needs\ntrans, repairs, $325: Late1\nmodel motors complete: '06]\nChev. 283, 7000 miles; '66 Che-1\nvelle, std., 19,000 miles; '65\nChew II, 6-cyl., 13,000 miles;\n'65 Ford, 6-cyl-; 64 Pontiac\n283. Also many 283 V-8 Chevs.\nand many more. Speedway\nAuto Salvage, Hall Siding, Nelson, Box 149 or ph. 352-6961.\n-22li-231\n'64   MERC.   '\/.-TON.  REBUILT\nmotor, 292 V-8; long box. Excellent shape. For more information, ph. 265-3336 or 265-4525.\n-228-233 1\n'..\n, Il .CHIEFLYM5MHflB-\u00ab\u00bbR8aiTMHeoiUM8W\u00bbiNWiN\u00bb\n'J   cawitiurm-111 niiHiiorn*wromcomir(m(t\u00bb.n)\nMtVttiW *BC8ND PRtMlER 08 B-C- ONE jFtJi MOST (Wi.0*-\n\/, FUL MSN IN CANADA'S HK1W HE HAS 8JT8I MEN OVERSHMOMD\n\/A ASAPERSONAUTY BECAME HE ISREMEMBEREDGW-.A* We MAN\n'-'Wit CHANGEDUlfflAME'riQni, BILL SMITH $*\nS to  AMOR M COSMOS     ,\nJ      -tiu-ksutio*- (uvea eprje UNIVERSE)\n\"' \u00abmw\u00bb    THE FROZEN DUTCHMAN\nAmf  FAR IN THE ARCTIC ON THE SHORES OF I\n\"<*32- FR08ISHER BAY A GOEDETIC SURVEY\nmWr PART\/IN 1.02 UNCOVERED A TOMB-\nJgt      INSI DE WAS A DEAD MAN WITH\nmass   IDENTIFICATION PAPERS:\nI NiMH DERRICK VAN LAAN ..HOLLAND.\nA WHALER-0\/_.\/> .740.\nI HEHADaEM\/NED'HAPEBKCTiy\nfeefSSVSD state fop tit yeak-\n! WE TOMgmS\u00a3ESEALEDAWPEE-\nj2 SUMA8iyDEW!l<XMUL4AHPewW\n\\ etreittBATtDAPna227Vugi-\nMORS TOURirn vwtowada tm\nMl' OTNER COUNTRY'IM0H\/OPLD \u25a0\n35\nin\nm\nIlls,\nling\n\u2022ous\nrior\nay\niod-\nith-\nall\nin-\ntht\ne.\nF.\ng a\nre-\ne tt\nirity\n\u25a0res-\nhour\nwna,\n.rest\nating\nation\neport\nrkers\nor of\nlandj\n\u2022n in-\n 10\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURS., SEPT. 28, 1967\nDid You Come Bock\n?????\nYes , . . we come back to the store every day with\ngrim determination to give you an extra-fine\ndrug store service.\nWe Also Hove\nBRYLCREEM\nin stock....\n89\u00ab and*1.09-'.\nAmongst the hundreds of other Hair Preparations\nfor men, women and children.\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nNews of iEe -Day\nRATES: 30c line, 40c line bold face type: larger type rates\non request. Minimum two lines.\nHaigh Tru-Art Beauty Salon\n576 Baker St. Ph. 352-3313\n-29-h\nEnroll now for Accordian and\nOrgan lessons. Phone 352-6048.\n-225-229\nEveryone welcome to Centennial Pancake Dav at Tarrys Hall\nSunday, Ocl. 1, 10 a.m. -227-229\nHollywood bed, box spring and\nmattress, like new, $55.\nMAC'S HOME FURNISHINGS\n461 Josephine St., Ph. 352-2119.\n\u2014226-228\nSenior hockey tickets at Cutler's\nNews. 30% off.'\n3 payments, 22 games, $27.00\n\u2014209-229\nNew shipment of orlon bath\nmat sets, $9.95.\nSTERLING  FURNISHERS\n-226-227\nWEEKEND SPECIAL\nELECTRIC TEA KETTLES\n$7.95\nWOOD VALLANCE HDWE.\n\u2014227-227\nDiamonds, watches, gifts,\nrepairs and engraving.\nTED ALLEN'S JEWELLERY\n-16-h\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG (CPi-Gram\nquotes Wednesday (basis Lake-\nhead):\nLow\nHigh\nFlax\nOct      344H\nDec     348'*\nMay     3583.\nJly       3544\nRapeseed\nNov 239si\nlan 239 _\nMar 239.\nMay     240\n341 _\n3454\n355\n3534\n2384\n238>l\n2384\n2394\nClose\n3414\n3454\n35M..I\n353<_\n239% '\n239'i\n2394\n239 _\nOats\nOct 95%\nDee 94S\nMay \u2014\nBarley\nOct 128'.\nDec        127%\nMay 1274\nRye\nOct 1284\nDec 130\nMay 136i'i\nJly. -\n94% 94%\n94% 94%\n- 93%\n128%\n126\n126%\n126%\n128%\n134%\n128%\n126%\n126%\n127%\n129%\n1364\n136%\nRUSSIAN FOODS STOKE\nOpen daily. 9 a.m. - 6 p.m.\n522 Vernon St. \u2014 Nelson. B.C.\n\u2014217-h\nMINOR HOCKEY\nREGISTRATION -    -\nLast day Saturday, Sept. 30, 9-12\nBlue Room, Civic Centre. Fees\nmust be paid at time of registration. \u2014227-228\nMARKET TRENDS\nWinners of Shoot of the Month\nfor September: $59 prize, Jim\nDonaldson: $25 prize, S. Ta-\ngami: $15. Rose Bachynski. and\n$10, Ebba Harper.        -227-227\nBALFOUR   BEACH  INN\nDolly Varden Dining Room \u2014\nOpen Friday. Saturday, Sunday.\n6-8 p.m., closed Monday io\nThursday. Reservations appreciated. Dine comfortably and\nwell at the Dolly. \u2014221-h\nRepair that broken window\nglass now. See us for window\nglass, puttv, glazing points, etc.\nHIPPERSON HARDWARE\n\u2014226-227\nOUR STORE WILL BE CLOSED\nALL DAY MON.. OCT. 2. FOR\nSTOCKTAKING.\nNELSON FARMERS' SUPPLY.\n\u2014227-229\nJUICE GRAPES NOW AVAILABLE. PLACE YOUR ORDER\nAT YOUR NELSON SUPERVALU STORE. - ZINS, 36-LB.\nCASE, $4.50; MUSCATEL, 36-\nLB. CASE, $4.00; ALICANTI, 36-\nLB. CASE, $4: MIXED BLACKS\n(A TYPE OF ZIN), 36-LB. CASE\n$4.00. DELIVERY 10c CASE\nEXTRA. -226-229\nRead the Classified Daily\nTORONTO (CPl-The Toronto slock market recovered its\ncomposure late in Wednesday's\nsession, wiping out earlier losses.\nAs a result, the industrial\nindex dipped only .04 to 169.53.\nAdvances outnumbered declines\n247 to 213 and 218 issues were\nunchanged. :  \u2022\nBrokers said tile, weakness in\nthe last = two. days .was a result\nof an .oversold ..market. They\nalso said prices were expected\nlo rebound on the strength of\nanticipated increased earnings\nin. the .fourth quarter.\nBlue chips, which had been\nholding the market down during\nthe last two days, benefited\nmost in the late rally as some\nclosed with fractional gains.\nSECORD UP' \u2022\u2022\n' Biggest gains were made by\nLaura Secord. up 2% to 15%,\nLoeb 14 to 154, Versatile 1%\nto 16% and Standard Radio 14\nto 364.\nRoyal Trust fell 1% to 184.\nMaclean-Hunter 14 to 57. Fraser 14 to 234 and CPR % and\n62%.\nLake-Osu highlighted speculative activity, jumping 114 to 35\ncents on 693.000 shares. It\nclimbed 94 cents Tuesday.\nWestern oils also recovered\nfrom morning losses as Scurry-\nRainbow gained 14 to 37% and\nGreat Canadian Oil Sands % lo\n15%. Greal Canadian is to officially open its operations at the\nOil Sands in northern  Alberta\nthis weekend.\nOn index, golds were up .22 to\n166.71, base metals ,li to 108.56\nand western oils .39 to 203.89.\nVolume was 4,276,000 shares\ncompared with 4,505,000 Tues\nday,\nMONTREAL (CP) - Prices\nwere mixed on the Montreal\nStock Exchange Wednesday, as\ndeclines outnumbered gains 62\nto 48 and the composite index\nedged up .04 to 163.38.\nSenior mines were shaded\nwith Falconbridge off 1% points\nat 89 and International Nickel\n% at 115V4 on selling pressure\nfrom profit-takers. Both stocks\nshot higher last week on news\nof an increase in nickel prices\nHudson's Bay Mining tumbled\n2% points to 604 in light trading. One mining specialist said\nthe stock was spurted and\ndipped several times in recent\nmonths, on little or no new\ncompany news.\nSenior oils were higher, with\nHome up % at 23% and Imperial % at 66%.\nDenison Mines jumped one\npoint to 84, still reacting to last\nweek's announcement ot a contract to sell 21,000.000 pounds of\nuranium to Japan.\nPrices were slightly higher on\nthe Canadian Stock Exchange,\nwhere gains outnumbered losses 40 to 28.\nAmong speculative mines and\nSimpsons \u25a0 Sears\nCARLOAD SALE\n10 DAYS ONLY!\nGREATEST FREEZER BUY IN OUR HISTORY\n22\nFT.\nJust Look at These Terrific features\nSpace - Saving Design features high \u25a0 efficiency\ninsulation that permits slimmer but stronger walls.\nResult? This Cold.pot is big only where you want size\n- in* de. Outside it takes up less floor space than most\nother 22 - cu. ft. chest freezers.\nCounterbalanced Flex.-Lid has unique cross-wire\ndesign, Test - proven to give a 100 per cent positive\nseal through a lifetime of use. Lifts ond lowers gently,\neffortlessly. Conventional lids may develop air\nleaks, causing ice build \u2022 up-\nWAS\n264.95\nNOW\nSPECIAL\nSALE\nPRICE\nOF ONLY\n95\nCASH\n* 12.00 Monthly\nConventional freezers are insulated with soft fibre\nglass,  Coldspot features rigid  foam  insulation which\n(1) never  sags or makes  'hollow spots'  inside  walls,\n(2) retains cold mere effectively because of its high\ndensity composition, (3) saves you money because the\ncompressor doesn't work os hard to maintain low\ntemperature\nPlus these great features: holds over 3 ton of food (735 lb).\nAutomatic interior floodlight. 2 chrome-plated baskets and\ndivider for convenient food storage. White acrylic enamel\nfi nish inside and out. 29J\" w., 36 - 11 \/32\" h., 56J\" I. 110-\n115-v 60-cy. AC Factory shipped.\n47 N 39 227 W \u2014 Delivered   209.95\nCANADA'S STRONGEST FREEZER GUARANTEE\nAl! fieezer parts are guaranteed against defects in materials or workmanship for five years from purchase date. 5-year labor guarantee on\nsealed system, 1-year on all other parts. Food worth from $5 to $200 is\ninsured 5 years against loss or damage, resulting from mtchamcal\ndefect or power -failure caused by flood and storm or by any other act\nof God\n556 Baker St.\nJUST SAY  CHARGE IT\"\nNelson\nPh. _5?-5S31\noils Consolidated Manitoba Mining rose from 25 to 85 cents,\nthen settled al 63, holding a 38\ncents gain on volume of 119,430\nshares. The stock was suspended from trading Wednesday\nmorning pending an announcement of favorable results at the\nYellowknife Mines property of\nwhich Consolidated Manitoba\nholds a controlling interest.\nElsewhere on the market,\nChemalloy jumped 35 cents to a\nnew high of $5.65, and James\nBay also was stronger.\nFlint Rock and Shawinigan\nMines were shaded.\nIndustrial volume at the close\nwas 273,500 \"shares, and mines\nand oils traded 1,097,400.\nOn index, utilities advanced\n.25 to 142.75, and banks .85 to\n128.01. Industrials declined .02\nto 173.84, and papers .67 lo\n106.39.\nNEW YORK iAPi-The stock\nmarket declined moderately on\naverage in slow trading\nWednesday.\nChanges of most key issues\nwere fractional but a few ran to\n2 points or so.\u25a0\nThe market-continued to show\nweakness that developed after\nthe Dow Jones industrial average moved Monday to a 1967\nhigh. Brokers said prices were\nbeing eroded by profit-taking after the sustained advance.\nThey also said investors were\nunsettled by Wall Street rumors\nthat the margin r a t e \u2014t h e\namount of cash that a stock\nbuyer must put up to make a\npurchase\u2014might be raised by\nthe Federal Reserve Board\nfrom the current 70 per cent.\nThe Dow Jones average of 30\nindustrials closed with a loss of\n4.04 at 933.14. The Associated\nPress 60-stock average fell .9 to\n339.3 with industrials off 1.3,\nrails off .7 and utilities off .1.\nThe New York Stock\nExchange common stock index\ngained 3 cents in the average\n-rice'of a share. Standard and\nPoor's 500-stock index edged up\n.03 to 96.79.\nVolume fell to 8,800,000\nshares, compared with 10,-\n940,000 Tuesday.\nAmphenol, up 3. at 31T\u00ab on\n125,000 shares, was the most\nactive stock.\nTrading in Eastern Air Lines\nwas halted pending an\nannouncement the company\nhad bought hotels in Puerto\nRico and Hawaii. Eastern\nclosed at 52 .i, up V,.\nWallace-Murray declined 4V*\nto 40 and Thiokol dropped 1% to\n23Vi.\nMonogram Industries\nadvanced 5 to 132Vi.\nGeneral Motors advanced 1 to\n38 and Ford, despite being in\n'he third week of a strike,\nadded '2 at 53A_.\nBethlehem Steel declined VA\nto 371. and Republic Steel\ndropped '_ to 48.\n.Granby Mining shot ahead\n3's Dome Mines 2li and\nMclntyre Porcupine 1. Canadian Pacific lost 1\". and Hudson Bay Mining V2.\nPrices advanced on the\n\\ m e r i c a n Stock Exchange,\nvhere the index was up 6 cents\n'o $22.47 on 5,240,000 shares.\nScurry Rainbow Oil and Jupi-\n:r Corp. added 3i and Preston\n. Canadian Marconi and\n.'anadian Javelin were up Vi.\nWhat stocks did:\nWed.   Tue.\n\\dvances 599     395\nDeclines 637     869\nUnchanged 251     223\nTotal 1.487   1,487\nVANCOUVER 1 CPI - industrials and mines showed modest\ngains while oils slipped Wednesday, a day of moderate trading\non the Vancouver Stock Exchange.\nClosing averages showed industrials up .03 at 164.91, western mines up .05 at 180.10, and\npipelines off .42 at 145.0.\nGalaxy Copper led mining issues for the third day in a row\nbut continued to decline, dropping .01 to .41. In other mining\nissues, T.C. Explorations closed\nat .94, down .01, and Utica rose\n10 to $4.35.\nPacific Western Airlines led\nindustrial trading on a volume\nof 1505 shares but closed unchanged at $13.50.\nIn other industrials, Alcan\nAluminum dropped .75 to $30.13,\nCanadian Allied Property climbed .50 to $5.50 and Weldwood\nclosed at $11.50, unchanged.\nBata Resources ted oil traders\non a volume of 76,000 shares but\nclosed down .03 at .88. Plains\nPetroleum rose .02 to .42 and\nPeace River Petroleums dipped\n.01 to .27.\nVolume was 1.185,457 shares.\nCountry Town Suit\nThe Country Town Suit\nBy WARREN  K. COOK\nThis   Versatile   Color   Co-Ordinated   Suit\nSuperbly    Tailored    Coat    and   Trousers    Go\nTogethers    Provide    the    Perfect   Answer   to\nTravel,  Casual,   Business  Wear  for  the  Man\nOn the Go.\nSee    the   Wide    Range   of   COUNTRY\nTOWN Samples Now.\nEMORY'S LTD.\nTHE MAN'S STORE\nIndustry Moves East\nMONTREAL (CP) - A Western Canadian company specializing in the building of homes\naway from home for construction workers has established a\nplant in suburban Ville LaSalle\nwith a view to tapping eastern\nmarkets and expanding overseas exports.\nThe Alberta Trailer Company\n(ATCOl, which started in 1946\nas a small utility trailer business in Edmonton, has already\nwon a contract to supply\naccommodation for some of the\nmen who will be employed on\nthe mammoth Churchill Falls\npower project in Labrador.\nIt has delivered to the project\nsite 10 structures capable of\nhousing 20 men each.\nIts suburban plant, located in\na 52,160 square-foot structure,\nnow employs 105, but the company expects to increase this\nsubstantially as more orders\nare received.\nThe company, with subsidiaries located in various parts of\nthe world, now has its main\nproduction facilities and head\noffice in Calgary.\nIts eastern plant will be\nequipped to produce just about\nanything being produced in Calgary. This includes portable\nclassrooms, camp buildings and\nspecial structures for export\noverseas, such as relocatable\nhousing units with large sand\ntires for oil exploration crews\nmoving across the North African desert regions.\nSPURRED BY OIL\nIt was the oil industry in\nWestern Canada which enticed\nthe company into the portable\nhousing business.\nAs the oil industry grew and\nexploration crews began opera\ntions in the remote northern\nareas of Alberta, the housing\nproblem became critical. Thr\nmobile homes on the market al\nthe time were designed foi\nhighway travel and could no1\nwithstand the abuse of rough\ndirt roads.\nAn oil company approached\nATCO and asked it to suppl.\nindustrial units that would oper\nate efficiently in extreme cli\nmatic conditions and withstand\nrough usage. Manufacturing\nfacilities were set up in Edmon\nton and the first 60 industria'\nunits were built for crews in\nnorthern Alberta.\nWithin nine months thr\nEdmonton   plant  burned  down\niiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiimimtiiiiiiiii.\nStock Quotations\nOn Page 4\n11111111111111111111111111111111111111111'\nHave the Job Done Right1\nVIC GRAVEC\n\u25a0 LIMITED        **\nMASTEK PLUMBER\nPhone 352-3315\nHASTY NOTES\n+ Floral \u2022 Birds\n* Flowers \u2022 Scenes\n+ Plain\n35* to 51.25\nY'our Rexall Pharmacy\nCITY DRUG\n456 Baker St.      Ph. 352-3611\nBox 460, Nelson, B.C.\nDOLLAR  DOWN\nMONTREAL ICP' - The\nclosing price of the U.S. dollar\nin terms of Canadian funds was\ndown 1-32 at $1.07 13-32. Pound\nsterling was down 1-16 at $2.98\n15-16.\nNEW YORK (CPi-Canadian\ndollar up 3-64 at 93Vi in terms\nof U.S. funds. Week ago 93 1-64.\nPound sterling up 1-64 at 2.78\n21-64.\nPublic Notice\nWEST CRESTON\nFERRY\nEFFECTIVE-OCTOBER 1,1967\nThe West Creston Ferry will be out\nof service until approximately\nApril 1, 1968.\nDepartment of Highways,\n820 Nelson Avenue,\nNELSON, B.C.\nSeptember 22, 1967.\nM. A. MERLO, P. Eng.,\nDistrict  Engineer.\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"}]}}