 WEATHER   FORECAST
Kootenay—Clear Saturday rrforn-
tng* Variable clouds in the after-
Boon with a few thunderstorms.
Warm, Light winds. Low and high
at Cranbrook and Crescent Valley,
47 and 85. Sunday outlook: mostly
sunny.
Vol. 56
SATURDAY EDITION
with COMICS - 10c
?>/'   %/lC; ^?_> , iSON, B.C., CANADA-SATURDAY MORNING, JUNE 1, 1957
'HttT,.   ■'f'OXt,    d   il— ! : : '■# —:	
Not mors Than 60 Dally. 10o Saturday JJo.  35
60
This Is Nelson's
Diamond Jubilee Year
Years of Progress    .
302 Algerians
Die in Massacre
Fanatic Rebels Swoop Down on,
Village to Slay Fellow Moslems
ALGIERS (AP)—Fanatic Algerian nationalist rebels
swooped down on a mud-hut village Wednesday and massacred 302 of their fellow Moslems in a vicious mass slaying.
The .slaughter created a storm of anger in French
and Algerian newspapers. Mass - circulation Paris newspapers estimated the  death
toll as high as 500.
It appeared certain the massacre
will intensify French measures to
subdue the 21. year-old rebellion
in France's last North African possession.
The horror came to light when
bare-footed women refugeei from
Melouza staggered; some crazed
by what they had seen, into a
French outpost and reported the
slaying of their men.
START VAST SEAECH
French forces launched a vast
counter-operation by helicopter,
plane and armored troops to find
the. killers. Melouza is a tiny village in barren land 80 miles
southeast of here.
Officials of a French garrison
said rebel killers slipped over the
border from neighboring Tunisia
Tuesday night arid killed five men
in the village suspected of being
pro-French.
Algerian nationalists in Tunisia
blamed the massacre on the
French.   > I
The rest of the population protested arid, the next night, a horde
of rebels swooped down and put
To See Khrushchev
On Canadian tV
TORONTO (CP) — Russian
leader Nikita S. Khrushchev will
appear on Canadian TV screens
and be heard on a Trans-Canada
Radio hookup Sunday night,- the
CBC announced Friday.,  ?
Three American reporters recorded the hour-long interview in
Hie Moscow Kremlin last week for
the Columbia Broadcasting System. 1
Presbyterian
Assembly at Coast
VANCOUVER (CP - The 83rd
annual assembly of the Presbyterian Church in Canada convenes
,in .Vancouver June 5, and runs
through for the following eight or
nine days.
It will be the first gathering of
Presbyterians to meet in Vancou-
. ver since 1903, and indications
point to one of the largest assemblies ever heid.
MADRID, Spain (CP)-A Canadian Pacific Airlines DC - 6B arrived from Montreal Friday in
the first, passenger flight of.'the
company to Madrid. It flew by
way of Lisbon-
The airliner landed at Barajas
Airport under temporary permit
from Spanish authorities while
the two countries negotiate an
agreement to establish regular
service between Canada and
Spain.
the entire male population to death.
It was the worst single blood-letting of the rebellion.
When soldiers arrived at the site,
hardened Legionnaires had their
stomachs turned by theSiarnage.
In one hut, 35 bodies were .found
stacked like cordwpod.
Authorities were unable to estimate the political effect of the extermination, apparently intended
as a warning, to Algerians to have
nothing to do with the French.
French   authorities   said   that
since Wednesday they have killed
91 rebels. During the first 15 days
of May, 1026Tebe_ were slain,
URGES BREAK
CONTACT
PARIS (AP) — President Rene
Coty  ol  France  Friday  night
called on all civilized peoples to
break contact with-those,   who
supported the rebellion In Algeria.  He. spoke against a background of government crisis at
home and new and bloody outbursts in North Africa.
In an unprecedented midnight
broadcast to the French people
and the world, the president said;
"I ask all civilized peoples if the
time has not come to signify that
they refuse to listen to the killers
and the agents of this horrible terrorism which tramples all the laws
of God and man."
Pointing to the massacre of Melouza in which more than 300 Algerians were reported slaughtered
by rival Algerian nationalists, the
president said:
"These abominations are not
only the deed of a few bandits,
The .murderers continue to exec-
ute orders from their leaders who
still yesterday over a foreign radio
claimed the glory and honor of
having assassinated in Paris one
more Moslem guilty of loving
France—as they have already assassinated 5000 defenseless Moslems, men and women, aged and
children."
NATO Group to
Tour Canada
OTTAWA (CP) -A group of 17
journalists from 11 European NATO
countries will make a 20-day tour
of Canada beginning here Friday,
the external affairs department announced Friday.
NEW SHIPS ON TRIP
HALIFAX (CP) - The new Canadian destroyer escorts Ottawa
and Assiniboine left here Friday
to represent Canada at an International naval review at Hampton
Roads, Va. Crews of the two atomic age warships will spend two
days in Saint John, N. B., on the
way to the U. S.
Selwyn Lloyd Feels...
Removed Friction by
Easing Trade Barriers
°   * hr.     e
WINGLESS, TAILLESS French
Atar Volant P2 takes to the air
for its first free flight recently at
Melun-Villarochc airfield near,
Paris. The aluminum bodied
craft previously had been flown
only when secured by chains as
a safety measure. It is powered
by a simple jet engine which is
dlrectlonable for manoeuverabtl-
lty.—AP Wirephoto.
H-Bonib Released
In High Air Burst
ABOARD FRIGATE! ALERT,
South Pacific (CP)—Britain's second hydrogen bomb test got under
way Friday when a Royal'Air
Force jet bomber dropped a bomb
near the southern Pacific Island
of Maiden in- the v i c i n'i t y. of
Christmas atoll. . ,,
The British taskforce scientific director, William Cook, said
there, would be "no significant
fall-out activity from the high
air burst."
He said the fireball did not
touch the sea and the bomb remains were condensed into fine
particles that would be swept up
into the stratosphere amid the
seething mushroom cloud.
SLOW FALLOUT.
"These particles will take from
months to many years to fall back
to ground level," Cook added.
"This slow fall-out will not be
concentrated in any one area but
will be world-wide."
Hours before the blast scientific
recording instruments were
primed for action on dozens of islands of the central Pacific to
check radioactivity levels. Readings  also  were being taken in
Brisbane and Adelaide, Australia.
Instruments to measure the effects of the. explosion had been installed on Molden Island previously
evacuated for the . test. Maiden
lies-some 400 miles off Christmas
Island, a tiny speck on the map
1300 miles east of Japan and 4200
from Hawaii.
Small groups of correspondents
from British and Commonwealth
countries had been flown 'from
Christmas to Maiden atoll and
went aboard the admiralty yacht
Alert to witness the blast.
JETS TEST
Six Canberra jet bombers flew
into the white hell of the mushroom cloud to collect samples.
Scientists planned to assemble
readings from a wide area in an
attempt to prove their claim that
British H-bombs are "clean" by
comparison with American and
Russian nuclear weapons.
The first bomb was fired May
16.
Observers said Friday's blast, a
multi - colored mushroom, was
much bigger. It was estimated
unofficially as having the power
of 5,000,000 tons of TNT. .
Shriners Shatter
Victoria Aplomb
VICTORIA (CP) - The drowsy
mid-afternoon calm Vt Victoria was
shattered Friday al thousands of
Shriners and their.wives invaded
the' city for-a.spring cefemonja].
Tea-time in |ie ivy-covered Empress Hotel;' usually "'a quiet-."and
slightly stuffy affair,.was bedlam.
Frail China teacups rattled in their
saucers as Shriners trooped in and
out, getting organized, meeting,
friends or just trooping in and out.
An estimated 3000 members of
the top Masonic order are in town
for the ceremonial.
Canadian Pacific Steamships
from Vancouver and Seattle, loaded to the rails with fez-decked
celebrants, were dubbed "Shrine
Specials" by distraught CPR
workers.
Parades "wound around streets,
oyer the carefully manicured Empress lawns and through the hotel.
The lobby resembled a department
store bargain basement on a Saturday.
■ A horse-drawn carriage, preced:
ed by the Seattle Gizeh Temple
Band and followed by a drill team,
was driven along the sidewalk and
up to the arched front door of the
hotel..
Explosions from an ancient wagon startled citizens and sent pigeons and seagulls wheeling around
in frantic disorder.
The inner harbor mooring basin,
just clear of 25 sailing yachts entered in the Swiftsure ocean racing classic, was taken over/ by
power launches.
Top man in the crowd is, Irvin
Miller, illustrious potentate from
Vancouver.
Parades, dances, ceremonial
rites, high-jinks and general merry
making are planned for today.
llllllllllllllllllllllltlMIIIIIIMIIIIimillllllllllllllllHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
Develop Program for
Early Hospital Start
VICTORIA—Program, aimed at an early start on new hospital construction hap:peeri developed in conference with Hon.
Eric Martin and BIG. Hospital Insurance Service officials by a
Kootenay Lake General Hospital delegation at Victoria Thursday.
Negotiations with cdn _ actors are being sought'seeking reduced construction costs. on a curtailed initial project while
leaving the way open to continue later to achieve-the building
as conceived. Substitutions and modifications have been outlined
■in. discussion at Vancouver with engineers and at the capital.
The committee had a helpful reception at Victoria from the
minister, provincial secretary W. D. Black and service officials,
according to a telephone report to J. W. Graham, board chairman. The board will consider the new steps on the plan at a
special meeting Tuesday. '    ,
Vigorous steps on the project have been undertaken by the
hospital group since tenders received May < 23 came in beyond
the finances available. ... /
IIIIMIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIimillllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIII
"Ernie" To Run
British Lottery
LYTHAM ST. ANNE'S, England
(Reuters) — A mechanical brain
named "Ernie" will flash, grunt
and spin out £1,000,000 today in
Britain's first state lottery in 130
years. •
The lottery, first payoff of the
government's controversial "savings with a thrill" premium bond
campaign, will make 96 Britons
£1000 richer and scatter £23,000
in lesser prizes.
Ernie-'short for electronic random number indicator equipment
■hild A press conference Friday
in this Lancashire coast resort to
show how he will pick the winning
bond serial numbers.
His "eyes" flashed, dials spun
and radio tubes glowed as his
"body,"-live silver-grey eight-by-
ten-foot cabinets, whirred into action. .
DEFLATION MOVE
A post office brainchild, Ernie
got his start last November when
Treasury (Minister Harold Macmillan, now prime minister, inaugurated the premium bond drive
to help Britain beat inflation.
Baghdad Nations
To Consider
Military Plan*'
LONDON (AP—The five Baghdad Pact nations will consider
plans for creating a military organization at a meeting in Karachi next week, it was diclosed
Friday.
Informed diplomats said one
plan being considered would set
up a military staff headquarters
and make the 38-year-old Shah of
Iran, Mohammed Reza. Pahlevi,
the supreme commander.
The biinisterial council of the
alliance, meeting next Monday,
also will formally invite the
United States to join its military
committee. The United States already has announced it would become a committee member, and
is expected to have senior U_.
army, navy and air force officers
present at the military committe.
meeting later in June.
The basic purpose of giving the
alliance some form of military organization arise from the desire
to put teeth into it..
Members of the pact are Iraq,
Iran, Pakistan, Turkey and Britain. ..    '-.'.■•
Present Credentials
BERN, Switzerland (Reuters)—
The new ambassadors of Canada
and the U. S., Edrhond Turcott
and Henry Taylor, presented their
credentials to Swiss President
fi(ans Streuli in separate ceremonies Friday.
Won't Amend
Chafer'.      	
UNITED. NATIONS, N.Y. (Reu:
ters) — United :Natiens delegations
.have generally agreed in.private
talks to. abandon | Any idea of
amending the charter until the
world situation improves, informed sources said Friday. The general assembly's- committee of the
whole has been called into seS'
sion for next Monday to consider
fixing a -time and place for a
special charter. review conference.
Philip to Visit
Canadian Regiment
OTTAWA (CP) -Prince Philip
is to visit_the 1st Battalion; the
Royal^Canadian Regiment, at Fort
York in Soest, Germany, June 11.
The prince, colonel-in-chief of
the RCR, has asked that the visit
be. informal. and that he see
many members of the battalion as
possible, army headquarters said
Friday.
N_W DELHI (AP - Italian
film director Roberto , Rossellini
has been given a three - month
visa extension beginning May 1,
a home ministry spokesman said
Friday. His visa .expired at the
end of April and his case was
reviewed because of reports of an
alleged romance with Indian
beauty Sonalini Gupta. Home
ministry^sources said the Italian
embassy to New Delhi has given
a sort of surety that Rossellini
will keep away from Sonalini.
Pflimlin To Draft
'■■■■■:■■     .'    ' ■.    - -     •'.'-   • .;.'.,'•'':'I .
Four-Point Progi
Wins Over Socialist Leadership
In Step Toward Premier's Post;
Plans Broad Coalition Government
PARIS (AP)—Pierre Pflimlin told a 2 a.m. press conference today he had convinced other middle-of-the-road
parties of the need for a so-called National Union government for France. • -
The SO-year-old leader of the left-of-centre Popular
Republican Catholic party took a long step toward becoming premier in a broad coalition government, by apparently
winning over the Socialist"
party leadership.    •
He said he would begin drafting
a four-point "save the franc and
^ave Algeria" program' today for
submission- to all National ahd
Republican parties — that is, all
but the Communists and right-
wing Poujadists. The parties probably will .make their decision on
the program Monday.
Gov't Dictates,
Says Diefenbaker
MONTREAL (CP)-John Dief-'
enbaker accused the federal government Friday of trying to dominate and dictate to the provincial
governments.
Opening a drive to improve the
Conservative party's one - man
Commons representation fro m
this thickly - populated area, the
party chief sgid that the cabinet
"handed a dish of crow" to" the
Vrortnces-initslstesf'tasj-shariiig'
offer.
Speaking at a press conference,
Mr. Diefenbaker said the St.. Lau-.
rent government' has adopted a
"domineering and dictatorial attitude" towards the provinces.
This would be changed if the Conservatives were elected.        ■ \
"We are not going to do that
when we are elected," he said.
"We intend ' to make Canadian
unity something more than just a
phrase in the political dictionary." .
In this second day of his third
brief swing through Quebec province areas, the party chief took
issue with a recent quoted suggestion by Prime Minister St.
Laurent that Conservatives in
Quebec are supporting a man
they do not want.
He acknowledged that Leon
Balcer — one of his party's head
men in this province — did not
back him at the PC leadership
convention last December but
said differences have been patched
up.
Jet Explodes
■HALIFAX (CP) -A twin-jet
Banshee fighter plane exploded
over nearby MacNab's Island Friday and a naval spokesman said
Friday night the pilot's body had
been recovered.
His name was withheld.
The jet exploded in the air while
on a training flight out of nearby
Shearwater naval air station.
LONDON (Reuters) — Foreign
Secretary Selwyn Lloyd said. Friday night Britain has relaxed her
trade restrictions on Communist
China on "a basis of common
sense" and in the "long-term interests" of the Anglo-American alliance. '
He denied in a radio interview
that the British move, announced
Thursday, might make relations
with the U. S. more difficult. To
the contrary he said, it has removed a source of friction.
Earlier Friday, a . government
spokesman said Britain's new policy automatically applies to. North
Korea, North Vietnam and" Tibet,
all communist controlled—and to
the Portuguese colony of. Macao,
off the Chinese mainland.
OTHERS MAY FOLLOW
. Lloyd did not specifically name
these areas, Thursday when he announced Britain would expand her
trade with Communist China to the
less-restricted level of trade with
Russia.
Meanwhile, it is predicted in
many world capitals that other
countries would soon follow Brit-
■_
ain's "go it alone" decision despite opposition from Washington.
U. S. Ambassador John Hay
Whitney, called on Lloyd Friday
for a general talk believed to include the China trade decision and
other major topics.
In a speech Friday night, government trade chief Sir David
Eccles said he thinks the British
decision will cause ill-feeling in
the U. S., but he is sure it will
not last.
WASHINGTON (AP) - Senatorial leaders have signalled reluctant acceptance of Britain's decision to step up its trade with communist China as an accomplished
fact.
Republican leader William Know-
land of California told the senate
Friday this decision eventually
may topple the British crown colony of Hong Kong into the hands
of a strengthened China.
But Knowland, chief congressional defender of National China and
critic of the mainland regime, did
not criticize Britain strongly.
Pro-Wesf Gov't
Holds Strong
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - The
pro-western government of Premier Sami Solh, appeared Friday
to have survived its severest
crisis and to be holding strong
control over Lebanon. •   ,• «i
At the same time Egyptian
opposition forces seemed to have
lost their -fight to overthrow the
government. ,
With the army in full control
of the country, the opposition
seemed to have little chance now
of stirring up chaos that could
bring down the government.
Efforts Friday, to revive the
bloody riots. that, rocked Beirut
Thursday collapsed, without serious trouble. " f       ■
In two small disturbances,', five
demonstrators .suffered . minor -injuries.  Eight persons: were kilted
.Thursday.   >iI?,,u„U..,.-... sfc_
I1bririer premier Saeb Salam,
who was Injured and' arrested; in
ihe rioting) announced Friday a
personal hunger strike until the
government resigns. '
Pflimlin, an economic and agricultural export from Strasbourg,
previously had let it be known
that he would not attempt to form
a government unless the Socialists agreed to participate.
A delegation of Independent-Republicans led by ex-premiers An-
toine Pinay and Paul Reynaud was
the first important group to call
on Pflimlin in his temporary headquarters on the'Qua! Branly. Pin-
ay's group, a right-of-centre party,
at odds with the Socialists on fiscal
policy, declined comment on the
talk except to say the independents
would take a decision when Pflimlin unveils more of his program.
Pflimlin made it clear he wants
to head a brdad coalition, extending from the.Spcialists to the Independents, which would join
forces'on a four-point emergency
program.
T-
'Oaisut ^twsh.   .
Kootenay- at. Nelson,. Monday,
12.28; Tuesday, 12.10; Wednesday,
12.00; Thursday, 11.90; Friday;
11.88.
St. Laurent in
Newfoundland
GANDER, Nfld. (CP) - Prime
Minister St. Laurent toured three
south coast- outports and Gander
airport and townsite Friday t»
wind up a one-day campaign visit
to, Newfoundland. .
. Qn'each stop ttie1 prime'miiiister
jald 'special .atjention, to .ihe chil-
dren,-;ffie.''future-of'the cojihtry"
and wangled them a half'holiday
from' school,   .',',-„ '
He asked' for Votes lot James
Power, Liberal candidate for the
St. John's West riding, which includes the Placeritia area.
Anxious.to njake, up. lost time,
the.party met U.S. naval officers
at Argenfia tilt skipped ah elaborate luncheon the 'Americans had
planned. '
Canada's Second Radar
Fence in Operation
A $17,942 REPAIR JOB, building of a retaining wtdl,
is under way at Nelson curling rink. Williscroft Construction Company is doing the work for the Civic Centre
Commission. The project includes building a retaining
wall on the ribrth side of the rink and removing clay ■
under ice sheets and replacing with gravel.
—Daily Newa photo.
By DAVE McINTOSH
Canadian Press Staff Writer
OTTAWA (CP)-The second of
the three radar fences spanning
Canada—basic ingredient ih the
North American defence system
' against any air-atomic onslaught
—is in full operation.
"The mid - Canada radar warning line now is operating," said
a defence department spokesman
Friday.
Officials declined to say when
the $200,000,000 chain began to
function but it was understood it
went into full opeiationonly in the
last week or so.
The western section bf the line,
running west along the'Mth parallel from Hudson Bay, began operation on schedule Jan. 1 this
year. But completion of the eastern section from Hudson Bay to
the Labrador coast was delayed
nearly five months by bad
weather and transportation difficulties.
U.S.-BUILT
The mid - Canada line was financed entirely by Canada and
built in two years by the Trans-
Catiada Telephone System under
RCAF supervision.'
It will cost $18,000;000 to operate
in its first year and will be manned by- 800 Canadian civilians under RCAF direction.
Target date for start of operation of the $400,000,000 DEW- ra^
darline is.July 1. TWs'fence,. be^ '
ing f i a n c e d . entirely by the
United States, runs along the 70th
parallel from Greenland to the
Aluetlan Islands; ■ The Canadian
sector will be manned mainly by
Canadian civilians under U.S. military supervision.
The Pinetree radar chain, built
roughly along the 50th parallel,
has been in operation for some
three years. The U:S. paid two-
thirds the cost, Canada one third.
It is manned by the RCAF and
U.S. Air Force.
PLANES SUPPLEMENT
The U.S. is paying entirely for
gap-filler stations in the Pinetree
chain and for operation of picket
radar planes and ships which patrol far out in the north Atlantic
and north Pacific oceans.
And in This Corner .v.
LONDON (Renters)—A conference devoted to Improving Britain's laundries broke into an uproar Friday when a housewife
demanded they replace missing shirt buttons.
Mrs. C, B. Curtis said laundries could "do more" than psychiatrists and marriage guidance bureaus to save marriages merely
by replacing shirt buttons of enraged husbands.
In a tart reply, Mrs, K. M. Goodbody, laundry owner, declared;
"It Is the job of any devoted wife, to.see that her husband's shirts
are ready the night before,"    >
PORTLAND, Maine (AP)—Members of the Greater Portland
Methodist men's group have found a way to unload their well-
' meant but missent Christmas ties—and all in a good cause.
Ties surrendered at the group's second annual meeting here
next week Will be shipped directly to African missionaries. There
they will be distributed to the beau brummels of the dark continent, who wear them sans shirt, and their ladies, who use them
as skirt material. ■...'.'' ;
KANSAS CITY (AP)—Two hours of monkeyshlnes took place
Thursday aboard a cargo plane en route from Detroit.to KanBas
City,
Running loose Inside the plane as It landed was a 75-pound
chimpanzee on Its way to a pet shop at Santa Cruz, Calif.
The crew said' the chimp broke out of its cage when they were
20 minutes out of Detroit. It sp'ent the rest of the flight investigating the plane, swinging from the radio racks and, for a time, sat '
In the co-pilot's seat,
A relief crew and. freight handlers needed 20 minutes to catch
tha monkey after th» piano landed.
 NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JUNE 1, 1957
Hey Kiddies ... Giant- All Cartoon Show
TODAY AT 2:00 P.M. —'Admission 150
FREE POPCORN TO THE FIRST 100 CHILDREN    ,
— Special On Stage ToVlght —
MEET THE NELSON JUBILEE QUEEN CONTESTANTS
LAST TIMES TONIGHT — Shows at 7:00-9:13
THE PULITZER PRIZE PLAY IS Oil THE SMEEHU
Prices: 85c, 60c, 25c
STARTS
MONDAY
The story that
HAD to win the
Pulitzer Prize!
fiwn 20ft Ci«ium-'« l»
CINEmaScoPE
MILLAND
ERNEST
tMWtt«|
llllift
IfHIf-flffl-Wffl.
BRAVE MEM
CIVIC
STARLIGHT DRIVE-IN
LAST TIMES TONIGHT
Times 9:00 p.m. and 9:30 p.m.
%£diC6
I
TONIGHT ONLY ..:
ALL LADY DRIVERS ADMITTED . . . FREE ... If
your wife can't drive, put her behind the wheel at the
gat* and push her toi' ...     ......   .. :
COMING J
MONDAY, TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY |
"COME NEXT SPRING"    I
(Technicolor)
Anne Sheridan, Steve CoDJiran, Walter Brennan
This is the story of a farmer with a weakness for drinking
who deserts his wife and family and then returns eight
years later to be regenerated through the faith and love
of one of his children who Is a mute.
This is one of the best family pictures I have ever seen.
YOUR SATISFACTION IS ABSOLUTELY GUARANTEED
Premiere Theatre
FRUITVALE, B. C.
LAST TIMES TONIGHT
"GLORY" (Tech.-Super) '
Margaret O'Brien,
c Walter Brennan
CASTLE THEATRE
CASTLEGAR, B.C.
.   Showing
LAST TIMES TONIGHT
At 6:45 and 8:45
"LOVE ME TENDER" (Cine.)
Elvis Presley, Debra Paget
News and Short
HOME ON RANCH
FOUND FOR BOY
Welfare authorities have located
a home on a ranch for a'13-year-
old juvenile who earlier admitted
three breaking and enterings and
thefts and one other theft charge
said by RCMP to have occurred
since about February in the North
Shore and Bealby Point areas, also
a charge of taking a canoe and
damaging it beyond repair, said by
city police to have occurred last
month.
Juvenile Court Judge William
Evans this week ordered the boy's
parents to pay for his support.
In juvenile court Thursday, a juvenile was found to be delinquent,
fined $10 and placed on six month's
probation by Judge Evans on
charges of creating a disturbance.
Dollar Lower
NEW YORK (CP) - The Canadian dollar was 1-32 lower at a
premium of 21-32 in terms of U. S.
funds Friday. The pound sterling
was 1-16 lower at $2.79.
Manufacturer's
Annual Oiler I
DOROTHY GRAY
HOT WEATHER
COLOGNES
Sweet Spice —'Natural
June Bouquet — Lilac Time
Large 8 oz. Bottle $1.25
Nelson Pharmacy
"Your Fortress ol Hsiilth"
[ .Ses^p-hh
Auto-Vue Drive-ln
TRAIL, B.C.
LAST TIMES TONIGHT
Time 8:45
"LITTLEST OUTLAW"
Pedro Armendarlz
Cartoon: "APPLESEED"    ,
elsoir's Centennial To Be
Discussed at June 8 Meeting
A special meeting of the Nelson
Diamond Jubilee and Centennial
Celebrations Committee has been
planned for Saturday, June 8, ih
the office of Community Programs
Branch regional consultant Robert
Stangroom, Medical Arts Building.
Chairman V. C. Owen, asked Friday that all members make a spc
cial effort to attend.
Purpose of the meeting is lo
draft plans to present June 19
ahd 20, when the S.C. Centennial
Committee will be In Nelson to
discuss plans for observing B.C.'s
100th birthday next year. It Is
also requested that anyone having Ideas for centennial projects
communicate them to the committee before June 8.
At their regular meeting Friday
in the Chamber of Commerce office, members thought it would be
advisable to have a dinner meeting
when the B.C. committee is here.
There will be no meeting next
Friday.
A request from the Nelson Film
Council for a contribution towards
the outdoor film showings to be
held twice weekly in Lakeside
Park beginning the first Wednesday in July, was turned over to
the program committee. •'
The Council's letter said a donation of $150, plus $50 given *y
the city, would enable it to present
better, pictures. Committee members suggested donating $50, then
wondered if this might not open
the door for other such requests.
Mrs. L. G. Catley said the Film
Council was one of the few local
organizations that continues operations in summer.
STAGECOACH TOR PARADE
Secretary E. J. Leveque said
Kootenay Forest Products has ob-
-tained en old stagecoach ence used
by Peter Verigin, and it is intended
to put it in the jubilee parade.
Program committee chairman
Arthur Foster reported "nothing
further" on program arrangements
and submitted a bill for $625 worth
of fireworks from an Ontario company. It was hoped the Nelson
Fire Department will look after
these. Some of the money is refundable. . -..
One Trail band said it will be
unable to come for the celebrations
but another might be able to enter
the parade.
Mr. Leveque was commended
for a letter written to Hon. W. D.
Black, MLA for Nelson-Creston,
provincial secretary, and minister
of municipal affairs, requesting
government financial assistance.
Further help will also be asked
from City Council,_who have given
$2500 so far. Finance chairman T.
C. Lambert was "most anxious"
to learn the amount of any gift
from the government, and is how
preparing local canvass lists.
Publicity chairman Aid. W. S.
Ramsay said Nelson Kinsmen Club
has undertaken to look after the
children's parade and pet parade,
including buying prizes, and wished advance publicity in order to
"drum up" entries. It was felt
such cou|d be incorporated with
general parade advertising. He
also submitted bills totalling $408.
HATS'FOR SALE
Teen Town members are now
selling green and white 60th jubilee
buttons, and a new shipment of
green and white hats arrived Friday at a local store. Mrs. Catley
thought these were "wonderful"
advertising.
No action was taken on an offer
by an Alberta pottery firm to buy
souvenir'plates. The plates, to be
Five Divorces
Granted Here
Following divorces were granted
by Mr, Justice J.. O. Wilson at;the
^Jelson spring assizes:
J. H. Jerome from Catherine
Ann Jerome, married July, 1935,
at Nelson; Florence Mabel Allt
McAllister, frbm J. C. G. McAllister, married September, 1945, at
Halifax, N. S.; Irene Sookrukoff
from William Sookrukoft, married
September, 1951, at Coeur d'Alene,
Idaho; Annie Russell from A. W.
Russell, married, March, 1945, at
Vancouver; and J. F. Brinley from
Rina Joyce Mary Brinley, married
November, 1946, at Willow Point.
All are from Nelson.
New Armaments Deal Before
Tax Change, Says Deachman
NAKUSP — "No government will lowing headings
do much to change the present tax
structure of the country. The only
hope for a 'new deal' in taxes is
for a 'new deal' in armaments." .
So said Grant Deachman, executive secretary of the B. C. Liberal
Association, speaking here Friday
night in support of W. J. McLoughlin, Liberal candidate for Koote-
nay-West..
Mr. Deachman outlined the federal budget, giving the national
defence breakdown, and,-also explained the purpose and reason for
the $6 social security pension increase.
Mr. McLoughlin dealt.with national development under the foi-
•   Hi-Lite
ELK DRIVE-IN
CA8T4.EGAR, B.C.
LAST TIMES TONIGHT
One Showing, 9:00 p.m,
"VICE SQUAD"
Edward G. Robinson — PLU8
"THEM" • Edmund Gwenn
BOATS FOUND
RCMP are looking for the .owners of two boats found recently in
the Nine Mile Point and Sunshine
Bay areas.
A 14-foot rowboat, white with
green trim, was found by W. Rams-
bottom at Nine Mile Point. This
boat was said to be in "pretty
good condition," and has a space
for a motor oh the back., Another
rowboat, in "poor contdition", witlj
white top, green bottom and interior was found by a Sunshine
Bay resident.
A small cabin cruiser also found
near Sunshine Bay was- traced to
William Kapak at Balfour.
Kamloops Man
Transferred Here
John Jackson of Kamloops has
been transferred to the land registry office in Nelson..
Mr. and Mrs.. Jackson will take
;up residence at 616 Mill Street this
Saturday. They-.haye three, children, Brian, and twins, Joy and Roy.
Mr. Jackson was District Cubmaster at Kamloops and has joined
the Baptist Scout Group. Both boys
have joined No. 4 Scout Troop and
the daughter will join a local Girl
Guide troop shortly.
The Weather
NELSON   54 79
i Winnipeg    50 -63
I Regina      41 66
Calgary     35 70
j Udmonton -■  39 71
1 Kimberley    47 78
! Victoria     51 63
_ty TOM D'AQUINO
Now that the big.election is over,
I can get down to normal activities.
The highlight of last week, was of
course, the election for prime minister. Bernie Monteleone, my, honorable opponent, was elected- to
the top post and will choose his
cabinet next week. The campaigns
were the largest by far the school
has ever witnessed, and the election spirit was almost fanatical.
' At the last parliament meeting,
acting prime minister Pat Clark
terminated this session of parliament and introduced the . partly-
formed new parliament. Twenty-
six members from the divisions
will be elected in September. Congratulations to this year's cabinet
and parliament for their splendid
work.
In athletics, house softball is progressing well, and a boys' soft-
ball rep team left for Trail this
morning to play in a Softball
tournament.
All school clubs are being terminated as graduation time draws
near. Speaking ,of graduation,
feverish preparations are being
made by band, choir, students and
staff for the exercises and giant
dance to be held next week.
Awards Day will be Thursday following graduation,, and the public
is cordially invited.
Last night there was an exciting
game of Softball between students
and staff. The staff won 8-7.
unity, development of industry, trade, economic
progress, rourity, the home and
the individual, the unity of the
Commonwealth, freedom, Canada's
leadership in the recent Suez Cana!
crisis, its part in the UN and the
North Atlantic Treaty Organization
and all Commonwealth matters.
The candidate remarked that the
federal government places a 'great
importance' on the individual's
relation to the nation. Concerning
"Mica Dam. he reminded -his Me
tellers of difficulty experienced
by Ontario Hydro Commission
through export.of power. Attempts
are being made to try to prevent
that here, he' said, because the
Ottawa government recognizes the
importance of keeping all the Columbia river power for B, C, especially the Interior. Mr. McLoughlin explained the offer made
by Ottawa on Mica Creek.
The Trail radio announcer said
he "fully understood and sympathized with" complaints from people in Slocan and Arrow Lakes districts about poor .radio reception,
and hoped "we will be able to improve the situation in the near future." '   _ ' .
Russell Palmer was chairman of
the meeting, which brought about
30 people from Edgewood, Burton,
New Denver, Silverton, and Nakusp to the Nakusp Parish Hall.
CCF SPEAKERS
HERE TONIGHT
The main campaign meeting of
the CCF party in Nelson takes
place tonight.
The public meeting in Legion
Hall- will be addressed by H. W.
Herridge, the party's candidate for
re-election to Ottawa, .and Robert
Strachah, CGF provincial leader.
The provincial leader is arriving
from a series' of campaign addresses in East,Kootenay-centres, and
will spend the weekend in Nelson.
Vecchio Condition
.till Critical
Doctors in Kootenay Lake General Hospital said Joseph VMchi6
was still in "critical" condition
Friday night.
Son of Mr. and Mrs. John Vecchio of Nelson, he wa6 seriously injured Monday night after a 1957
car was In collision with a truck
on  the  Melson-Salmo highway.
CURIOUS BOY SETS
OFF FALSE ALARM
A four-year-old boy's curiosity
sent Nelson firemen, scurrying to
Box 41, Nelson Avenue and Elwyn
Street, shortly after noon Friday.
Mother of Brian MacCrimmon,
Cabin 24, Lakeside Auto Court,
said he had never seen a fire
alarm box before. Curious to find
but mote about it, he pulled open
the door and pulled, the switch.
• Fire Chief E. S. Owens explained
to him the function of the box.
made in the cross-section of a log,
would sell for about $1, and would
be on sale in other towns. An order
of at least ,1000 would be needed,
Mrs Owen read a letter from the
B.C. Centennial Committee summarizing activities of committees
all over the province. Mrs. John
Erb-read part of.a-letter from the
University of. B.C. ih. Vancouver
asking about accommodations for
dramatic presentations and other
showj next year. .
W.J. Williams
Passes at 77
A man who was well-known In
early day mining circles, William
Joseph Williams, 77, of 405 Elwyn
Street, died Friday in Kootenay
Lake General Hospital.
Mr. Williams w^s born in 1879
in St. Stephen's, Cornwall, England, coming to Canada and the
Kootenay in 1897. A short time later
he moved to the United States,
returning here in 1912. He was a
miner and prospector most of his
life, until about 20 years ago. In
1927, Mr. Williams bought a fruit
ranch opposite Nine Mile 'Point,
where he lived until 1954, when he
moved back to Nelson,
Mrs. Williams, the former Bessie Jane Allen, predeceased him
in 1944. Survivors are two sisters,
Mrs. Anne Watts and Mrs. Jane
Snell; one brother, John Edgar
Williams, all of Cornwall, England;
and. two nephews, Frederick J.
.Williams of Nelson, and.F.J.
Watts of Grass Valley, California.
DEGREE of bachelor of arts In
humanities, magna cum laude,
has been awarded by Gonzaga
University, Spokane, to Denis C,
Edgar, son of Mrs. Edith Edgar,
908 Vernon Street. He Is a graduate of St. Joseph's high school
and attended Notre Dame College and the University of Western Ontario prior to Gonzaga.
Bayonne-Sheep Creek
Road Link Planned by
New Timber Operation
JUDGMENT ON
STREET CASE
STILL PENDING
Judgment on an action by the
Nelson Oldtimers' Association to
halt the City of Nelson from moving monuments on the boulevard
of the 400 block Vernon Street in
preparation for provincial government highway work will not be
made by Mr. Justice J. O. Wilson
until at least next week, according
to court officials.
' When the case opened Wednesday afternoon in Assize Court,
Cify counsel L. S. Gansner moved
lo have the action dismissed since
the plaintiffs had not suffered any
damage additional to that suffered
by other citizens. Decision on the
motion was reserved by His Lordship until R. B. Allan, counsel for
the plaintiffs, prepares an amendment charging the work to be "illegal use of the taxpayers'money."
Ted Young
Transferred
C. E'. W. (Ted) Young has been
transferred to Inland Natural Gas
Company's accounting office in
Vancouver. A farmer City of Nelson employee, he switched to Inland when that company took over
the city gas plant last year.
SASQUATCH
JUNE 8
Student
Dance
•     NELSON CIVIC CENTRE
FREE Hunting Licences
ommers Hits
"Liberal Record"
SOUTH SLOCAN - Friday night
Social Credit, candidate D. L.
Brothers and MLA R. E. Sommers
addressed a meeting at South Slocan.
"The Liberals say they are
standing on their record," said Mr.
Sommers. "Well,, let me remind
you of the Liberal record. Don't
forget Kitimat. It stands as a monument to them forever for a giveaway. Hundreds of acres flooded,
millions of cubic feet of timber
lost, dams, tunnels, power installations and power lines, all stand
tax free forever. Remember, tax
free forever. That is the record
they stand on. Just let them try
to deny it."
Advocating the Social Credit's
stand that old age pension should
start at $100 per month, Mr.
Brothers drew a comparison of the
present $46 per month and the
pension in 1949. He showed the
purchasing power of the present
pension to be worth only $38 and
cited instances of where old age
pensioners in Vancouver could not
possibly live on $46 per month.
Mr. Brothers said the Social
Credit party advocated the, in-,
crease-of income tax exemptions
to $3000 for married people and
$2000 for single persons.
Referring to the loss-of the apple,
wheat and lumber markets, he
stated that it was only natural to
lose these markets if the Liberal
government persisted only in dealing with dollar countries.
Mr. Sommers announced tenders
for reconstruction of No. 3 highway through South Slocan would
be called around July 10. ,
Several questions followed the
meeting in the WI Hall, chaired
by James Street.
A timber .development that will
involve linking, of the Bayonne
mine and Sheep Creek areas by
logging roads and construction of
a lumber mill at Tye, on Kootenay
Lake, was announced Friday by
Anthony (Tony) Fernandez cl
Longview, Wash.
Mr. Fernandez is president of
the Cowlitz Timber Company, Inc.,
which has purchased a 144,000-acre
timber tract from the Kootenay
Logging Company, a Portland,
Ore., group.
He said that the company also
expected to build a chipper and
barker plant in the future, with the
products to be sold to pulp mills.
He thought' the entire operation
would eventually mean employment for about 200 men.   "     ,
"Our first project," Mr. Fernandez stated, "will be to tie in the
Sheep Creek area with the old
Bayonne mine road." This, would
provide a truck road through to
Tye, he explained. The road from
Tye to the Bayonne was a 12-mile
logging road and construction of
another six to eight miles of road
was required to link it up to the
Sheep Creek road. He said the
company planned to build a road
into the' Porcupine Creek area
where logging was also planned.
EARLY START .ON ROAD
Road construction would start
within a couple of weeks, he said
Construction of a band type sawmill with planer and gang mill
would follow.
With Mr. Fernandez is engineer
forester Morris Woodward, who Is
to be in charge of operations; and
Chauncey Pettybone of California
representative ot the Stetzinger
Lumber Company of Philadelphia,
who will install the sawmill.
Mr. Fernandez said estimater-
cruiser L. McConkey of Tacoma
and a crew of about 10 men had
estimated the tract contained more
than a billion feet of board measure
timber and that there was also
J. TARASOFF IN
AREA 45 YEARS
John Dimitrios Tarasoff, 60, who
was killed early Friday morning
by a treei about eight miles from
Passmore, had lived in this district about 45 years. He was born
on the high seas, as his parents
were crossing from Russia to
Canada. (See also story on Page
Three.).
The family lived in Pelly, Saskatchewan, until 1912, when they
went to Glade. A year later, they
went to Crescent Valley, which has
been their home ever since. Mr.
Tarasoff spent most of his life in
lumber mills, mostly as a saw
setter, and was also a bush worker.
He is survived by his wife, the
former Florence Markin; three
sons, John of Thrums, Fred and
Andy of Crescent Valley; one
daughter, Miss Daria Tarasoff of
Crescent Valley; two brothers,
Paul and Mike of Crescent Valley;
and three grandchildren. One brother, James, predeceased him.,
A. FERNANDEZ
more than _ billion feet of pulp
timber. He said the cruise did not
include any timber smaller than
16 inches DBH (diameter breast
high) and that there were thou*
ands of acres of timber ranginj
from eight to 16 inches'. He said
the cruise had also located about
600,000 lineal feet of cedar polei.
Timber included spruce, hemlock,
red cedar, balsam, fir, white and
pondero'sa pine and larch.
Total invested in the purchase
was not announced but a recent
report from 'Portland Indicated it
was in the neighborhood of $2,000,-
000.
Local mills in the area, at Salmo
and Creston, and including Kootenay Forest Products Of Nelson,
Would be given the opportunity to
purchase logs, Mr. Fernanda said.
The tract line runs slightly north
o£ the Creston-Salmo cutoff highway, ranging in distance from the
highway from a half-mile to three
miles.
Our Clothing Is
Made by
FIT-REFORM
SUITS, JACKETS and
SLACKS, all perfectly
tailored and In models
that really fit ...
Our selection of JACKETS and SUITS is very
complete and our feature material is.of
course . ; .
BRAMBLE
TWIST
Godfreys'
PHONE S»*»70"M BOX
JUBILEE
HATS
Available
NOW!
Get Out and Support Your City. Wear the Colors.
Make Our Jubilee a Huge Success!
Hats Can Be Purchased at the Cost Price of Only
$«V95
2
THROUGH THE COURTESY OF THE FOLLOWING  MEN'S  WEAR   STORES:
* Gilkers'Ltd. ,
546 Baker St. Phone   87
■jl; D'Arcy Hughes
Men's Shop
459 Ward St. Phone 425
^r; Emory's Ltd.
571 Baker St. Phone 31
*k Frank's Boys' and Men's
Shop
547 Baker St. Phone 1717
ir Godfreys' Ltd.
378 Baker St. Phone 270
TAr Hudson's Bay Company.
Nelson, B.C.
Get Your Topper Today III
 Doukhobor Study...
United Church Names
Three New Ministers
GRAND FORKS — Appointment
of three new ministers in Kootenay
Presbytery of the United Church
has been approved, it has been
announced by Rev. Donald Evans
of Grand Forks, Press representative for Kootenay Presbytery.
At Fernie, Rev. Gilbert Johnson of Haney will replace Rev. Dr.
Norah Hughes, who moves to Victoria West.
Rev. A. A. Burnett of Nakusp
retires this year, and his successor is Rev. Rodney Booth of
Montreal.
At Castlegar, Rev. A. 0. McNeil
of Squamish replaces Rev. Clinton
Johnson, who will serve at Hope.
Mr. McNeil, formerly at Creston,
witnessed the ordination of his son,
Albert M. McNeil, by the Moderator, Rt. Rev. J. S. Thomson, recently. .
The recent conference in Vancouver expressed its confidence
In Rev. T. M. Karpoff In his role
as liaison between the United
Church an dthe Orthodox Doukhobor community. It also instructed Kootenay Presbytery to
study the land question and
education of Doukhobor children
and to report fully to the conference in 1958.
A province-wide stewardship crusade will start in the fall, Mr.
Evans also announced. The sum
of $1,500,000 is needed for Union
College, church extension, Naramata Training School and other
conference projects, which will
make a united appeal. A central
committee will provide support and
guidance to local congregations requesting help in financial campaigns, and will distribute money
raised for conference projects
according to need.
In answer to the question "Are
moderate drinkers accepted in the
fellowship of the United Church?"'
Mr. Evans states that the United
Church in B.C. says "yes," but
urges all members to consider the
Church's official policy of voluntary total abstinence,
"The conference stressed the
responsibility.of moderate drinkers
to join with abstainers in the rest
of the Church's temperance program, especially in all efforts to
reduce alcoholism."
Sportsmen Meet
In Trail June 23
TRAIL — Preparations for the
West Kootenay zone Rod and Gun
Clubs' cohvention here June 23
were made at the monthly meeting of Trail Rod and Gun Club
this week.
Game Warden Pete. Ewart said
the department had to place
poisoned bait at Sheep Creek to
kill bears which were molesting
cattle. Notices had been placed in
the vicinity to this effect.
The Trail-Salmo gun range is
developing well. Both clubs have
cleared timber and brush, and 300
yards of timber have been cut
ready for clearing.   ■
The trap range is expected to be
in use before long. Work on construction has started.
Three Fines Levied
Fines totalling $45 and costs
were imposed Thursday by provincial court Stipendiary Magistrate William Evans. Three cases
were heard, and all pleaded
guilty.
H. Stova of Ymir was fined $10
and costs for allowing a minor to
drive without a licence, Expressway Truck Lines were fined $10
and costs for doing business outside of their area without a permit, and J. L. Laughton of Nelson was fined $25 and costs for
speeding near Fruitvale.
KOOTENAY COTTAGES
RESORT
Reserve Your Holiday Cottage Now.
Finest Accommodation, Attractive, Restful
Surroundings, Dining Room, Private Beach,
Boats, Tennis
4**** and AAA Members
EAST SHORE KOOTENAY LAKE
10 Miles From Kootenay Bay Ferry
PHONE 2. GRAY CREEK
"RECOGNITION NIGHT" was held by St. Eugene Council,
Knights of Columbus, in Cranbrook, in honor of Miss Joan Prov-
enzano, who won the Father John; Althoff Memorial Oratorical
Trophy In competition at Trail. Ed Zarowny, chairman of the
public speaking committee of Cranbrook Knights of Columbus
congratulates Joan, 14-year-old student of Mount Baker high
school and daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Provenzano. Representatives of all parish organizations also paid tribute to her, and
Rt. Rev. Msgr. A. L. Maclntyre quoted from the Book of Judith
in reference to the occasion.        •
 _____ i ,	
Planned Economy Program
Outlined by CCF Leader
FERNIE (CP) — Robert Strachan, CCF opposition leader in the
Legislature, told an election meeting Thursday night that the CCF
believes jn public ownership of
those industries which exert the
greatest control over the country's economy.
The ownership could be municipal, provincial or federal.
The CCF believes chartered
banks should be taken over or subjugated by the Bank of Canada, he
said.
The transportation system should
be unified, controls placed on the
agricultural implement field, and
public utilities placed under public ownership.
Mr. Strachan was replying to a
question whether the CCF, if elected, would nationalize industry.
Mr. Strachan said depression
signs were first shown in agriculture and later followed in the
construction field.
He did not wish a recurrence of
the depression of the 30s. The CCF
was the only party which, with a
planned economy, could institute
a program providing full employment with rising living standards,
a satisfactory share pf national income for all,- a health insurance
plan, a unified'labor legislation
and "brea,d, peace and freedom
throughout the world."
This could be done _y obtaining
control of the economy which he
said now is held by and for the
Wedding
Announcements
and
Invitations
(Wj
^n.
vJ/T^
WEDDING ANNOUNCEMENTS or INVITATIONS require the correct wording, the choice
of type, and the latest designs in stationery...
We guarantee all these essentials in regard to
Social Printing. Ask to see the various samples
that we carry in stock . . . Also "Thank You"
Cards, Wedding Cake Boxes. If out of town,
write for samples and prices.
Commercial Printers
DIVISION OF
t News Publishing Co. Ltd.
Publishers of Nelson Daily News
PHONE 1844   -   NELSON
benefit of a few, and by increasing productivity.
TACKLES SOCREDS
He challenged the Social Credit-
ers to tell where they got their
funds for extensive newspaper and
billboard advertising, and claimed
they had got ttie funds from people
for whom they had done favors.
He ridiculed the -Liberal platform which promised "five more
years of misgovernment," while
Taber Man To Be
Buried at Cranbrook
CRANBROOK — Funeral "and
burial will take place here Tuesday
for Joseph Theodore Jahren of
Taber, Alta., who died there. He
was born at Enderline, N.D., 59
years ago. He came to Canada and
Gull Lake, Sask., in 1910 and lived
there until 1927 when he moved to
Taber where he had continued his
home since then. He was a member of the Taber Fire Department
for 25 .years. He was a veteran of
the First World War.   '
Three brothers and four sisters
survive him. in this district, Hel-
mer, Sebastian, Mrs. Selma Murray, Carey, Lila and Bernice, all
in Cranbrook, and Engman in
Kimberley.
Book Lois To Go
To flk Centres
CRANBROOK — Organization by
East Kootenay branch librarian
Howard Overend of the Public library Commission for inception of
a new provinciaUy-sponsored -district service early in June is complete. Book consignments of provincial book stock wil lbe delivered to the public libraries at Kimberley, Cranbrook, Fernie Golden
and Field. Creston public library
will join the circuit in August.
Consignments will each number
approximately 200 books of fiction,
non-fiction, teen age and children's
titles delivered frorn the East Kootenay Branch book depot here, and
after two months will be exchanged among the local libraries, putting an additional 1000 library volumes in circulation through the
district.
Further plans call for extension
of service at a later date to communities of the area .without any
library facilities at present.
Minstrel Show
Delights Crowds
NEW. DENVER - Capacity
crowds applauded two performances here of the New Denver-Silverton Kinsmen Club minstrel
show. ..
Richard Bartlett, the producer,
was assisted by Mrs. Ruth MacDonald. The cast consisted of more
than 20 minstrels. Stanley Pedley
was interlocutor, and end men
were Stan Kary, L. R. Campbell.
Paul Thederahn and A. L. Harris.
Solor numbers were by Mrs. Bartlett, George Kent and Mel Ring-
heim.
"Kentucky Babe" was sung by
quartette of Mrs.  Marguerite
all the Conservatives had to often, Thring, Mrs. Harris, Mr. Kent and
was "follow John." .; '■      ; Mr .Harris.
Mr. Strachan was speaking on
behalf of Howard Day, CCF candidate in Kootenay West. Tom Uphill MLA introduced Mr. Strachan
and asked a large audience to
rally in support of the CCF. '
Cranbrook Logger
Alex Kozak Dies
CRANBRbOK - A logger in this
district for more than 30 years,
Alexander Kozak, 73, died at St.
Eugene Hospital Tuesday. Born in
l Russia, he came to Canada in 1915
and to this province in 1921. He had
logged in Cranbrook district since
then until retirement four years
ago. He had no relatives here.
Rev. F. D. Wyatt officiated at
the funeral service at McPherson
Funeral Chapel Friday.
PERMISSION GIVEN
GIRL TO MARRY
Permission was given by Mr.
Justice J. O. "Wilson in Assize
Court in Nelson for Miss Betty-'
Lou Deptford, 16, of Ashcroft, to
marry K. C. Yeast of Trail without
the consent of her parents. J. FF.
Meagher of Trail appeared for
Miss Deptford.
Mrs. Wolfe Elected
To Invermere Seat
INVERMERE - Mrs. Charles
Wolfe was elected by acclamation
Thursday to replace Mrs. K. J.
Williams as commissioner for the
village municipality of Invermere.
Mrs. Williams will be leaving district shortly.
Mrs. Wolfe is a co-owner operator of a shop here.
HISTORIC AIRLIFT
The Berlin airlift, when Russians blocked routes <to the divider capital in 1948, mover 2,325,-
500 tons of food and fuel.
INQUEST OPENED
IN HUGHES DEATH
CRANBROOK - Funeral wiU
take place at Christ Church Monday for Harry Stockton Hughes,
whose death at St. Eugene Hospital followed a highway accident.
Inquest has opened and adjourned
to an indefinite date.
He was born in Cranbrook 28
years ago and grew up at the
family farm at Wycliffe. For the
past eight years lie has lived at
Wycliffe and been employed as
repairman at the Sullivan concentrator at Chapman Camp. He was
a member of Key City Lodge,
IOOF. Surviving him, are his parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. S. Hughes
.at Wycliffe, two brothers, John
with the RCAF, and Alex at Wycliffe, and three sisters, Mrs. J.
Dixon and Mrs. R. Blackwell,
Wycliffe, and Mrs. James Neil,
Kimberley.
Shipyard Fire
Threatened
Coal Harbor
VANCOUVER (CP) - The Coal
Harbor industrial section in west
end Vancouver was threatened late
Thursday night when fire roared
through a shipyard, destroying
the building and five boats.
Damage in the two-alarm blaze
at A. C, Benson Boat Works was
estimated at $750,000.   '
All available police rerouted
snarled traffic as '100-foot flames
swept the industrial site. Five vessels, including two tugs, were
burned to the waterline as fire-
_ten from six stations slowlv
brought the blaze under control.
No one was injured.,
SEINER LOST
One of the city's two fireboats
prevented flames from spreading
to nearby Burrard Boat Works
and Queen Charlotte Cannery.
Lost in the fire was the Howe
Sound IV, a $75,000 seiner scheduled to be re-launched Friday after
a $20,000 refitting.
A fleet of 10 purse seiners
moored in front of the yard were
towed from the scene before
flames reached them.
Herman Benson, nephew of the
owner, said some 65 men probably will be without work when
the building season reaches its
peak this summer. He estimated
damage to the shiqyard at $550,-
000. Loss in boats was estimated
at $200,000.  .
PHONE   1844   FOR   CLASSIFIED
/ 3C
NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JUNE 1, 1957 —
MORE ELIGIBLE VOTERS
IN KOOTENAY RIDINGS
Increases have been recorded in
the total number of eligible voters
in both Kootenay West and Kootenay East since the last general
election of August 10. 1953.
In Kootenay West, 27,426 persons are eligible to vote on June
10, a considerable increase over the
26,960 who were eligible to vote in
the last election. The new. total, after all revisions have beep made,
was announced Friday by.F. J.
Plester of Trail, returning officer.
Falling Tree
Kills Man
PASSMORE — John Tarasoff,
60, of Crescent Valley,.was killed
about 8:30 Friday morning by a
falling tree while clearing right-'
of-way for the West Kootenay Power and Light Company near here.
A coroner's inquest opened at 7
p.m. Friday in the Thompson Funeral Home at Nelson. |
Tarasoff worked for John Blood-
off of Passmore.
There will be 168 polls in Koo-.;
tenay West, plus one advance poll
at Nelson,
Court of revision added 330'.
names to the voters' list in Koo-'
tenay West. Figures show that el-
igible voters in Trail number 6465,
Nelson 4262 and Rossland 2227, the j
three biggest centres. Eligible ur- i
ban voters total 12,954 and rural '
14,472.
In Kootenay East, returning of-
fleer Aaron Walde of Cranbrook;
has announced that there are 18.628
eligible voters. In the last general -
election there were 18,398. Polls
will number 120, with one advance
poll.-
■aw-flt, I u||t_t
and Contractoft*
Equipment
H. W. HERRIDGE
M.P. for the Past 12 Years
CCF Candidate for Kootenay West
and
R. Strachan, M.L.A.
CCF PROVINCIAL LEADER
Will Address a Public Meeting at
Legion Hall, Nelson
TONIGHT, 8 p.m.
This Advertisement Inserted by CCF, Party
Suit Dismissed
A suit by Randolph Haigh of
Salmo against Ernest Garrison of
Princeton was dismissed in Assize
Court by Mr. Justice, J. D. Wilson
with costs to the defendant.
Haigh asked $1000 for buildings
sold to Garrison, or, alternatively,
damages for breach of contract to
pay for them. He was represented
by B. K. Arlidge, and Garrison's
counsel was G. B.- Arnesen.
PORT AU PRINCE, Haiti (AP)
The army eased off this capital
city's curfew restrictions Friday as
business and essential services assumed a semblance of normality.
The curfew and martial law were
imposed after last weekend's wild
outburst of political feuding.
The curfew, at first effective
from 9 p.'m. to 4 a. m„ now does
not begin until 11 p. m. Army officials said, that if calm continues
the curfew can be abolished in a
week. Cable communications are
back to normal.
ATOMIC TEST SITE, Nev. (AP)
For the third day the second shot
ih ' the United States summer
atomic test series has been cancelled because of adverse weather.
The explosion was called off
shortly before midnight after officials said winds could carry
radioactive fallout over communities southeast of the site.
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TRAIL KINSMEN CLUB
y Presents   .
GIANT TWO CAR BINGO
Saturday, June 8th — 8 p.m.
In
TRAIL COMINCO ARENA
Tickets $3.00 Per Person Tax Included
20 BIG GAMES
PRIZES...
ir 1957 Dodge Crusader
* 1957 Nash Metropolitan
* 2 R.C.A. Victor 14" Portable TV Sets
MANY MORE GREAT  PRIZES
TICKETS NOW AVAILABLE AT
TRAIL*    L' J' Newstand, East Trail Motors, Joffey's Store, Motor Inn Service, Allen's Fruit Store,
I l-AML.    Braemers Men's Wear, Moyne's, Lauener Bros., Speedway Service, Woolworths, Rollie Crowe
Agencies, Le Rose Mercantile Ltd., Sun Valley Fruit Store, Cominco Arena Office.
ROSSLAND:   Bus Depot, Wise Hardware.
SALMO:   Payless Store.
NELSON:   Cutler's News, Wait's News Depot, Kootenay Stationers.
CASTLEGAR:    Rigby's Coffee Shop.
WIN A CAR!
Proceeds for Kinsmen Health Centre
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 Nrlaitu Sattg Hpwa
Established April -_   lull.
Interior  British Columbia's Largest  Dally Newspaper
Published every  morning except Sunday and itahtfory
holiduy.    by    the    NEWS    PUBLISHING    COMPANY
LIMITED,   266  Bake.   Street  Nelson,   British  Columbia.
Aulhuru.d u Saoond Class Mail   Poll office  Dopnrtmont. Ottawa.'
MEMBER   Ol'    1'Hli   AUUI'l   BUREAU   OI   C1HCULAT1ON0
Ml.M_.Erl Ot   IH- UANAUIAN  PRESS
1'ho Canadian Pie., is exclusively entitled to the uso toi republication of all niwi
dispatches credited to it ui to I'll- AitoDiatld l-i__ oi R.ut.rs in this paper.
and also the local news published therein >
,w- SPfKSSJ      ~ Saturday,/una., 1957 . .   - '    "*~
Canadian?' Tax Bill Too High
With the general election only a    .lational   income   increased
few days away, this is distinctly a
time when the affairs of the nation
should be under consideration.
In particular, the matter of taxation
should be scrutinized. In. the past few
years the taxpayers have accepted it
with weary resignation, believing that
the government, like mother, knew
best. They realized that it was getting
higher and higher, but that there was
little they could do about it. There
were some, too, who felt that the government had a subtle contempt for the
country In their attitude towards their
protests.
Under the heading of "Tall Story",
the News Letter of the Canadian
Chamber of Commerce tells the story
of the amazing growth of taxation in
this country.
Twenty years ago, it says—in 1937
—taxes paid by Canadians at all
levels of government amounted to
23.66 per cent of a national income of
little more than $4 billion. In that year
the total tax bill amounted tb $961
million.
This percentage fluctuated a little
until the war years. In those years our
to   $9'/«
billion in 1946, with a percentage of
national income of 31.61. In 1956, the
last year for which figures are available, the percentage of taxation as
against net national income was 32.19,
It also should be remembered that the
national income has risen to the large
figure oi moro than $23 billion.
To the casual observer it would
appear that the more money there is
in the country the less in percentage
the taxpayer should be called upon to
pay. Quite obviously this is not the
reasoning of the government, which
appears to think the more we have as
a nation the greater percentage of our
income we should pay.
The fact that Canadians are paying
a tax bill which is two per cent greater
than was paid when Canada was
fighting for survival In World War II
sirongly indicates that there has been
no effective effort to keep taxation
within boundB.
If ever there was a time to protest
this state of affairs, it is at the present
momenl The next government should
be one which does not regard overtaxation lightly. -
Shut-in's Day Sunday
Nearly two thousand years ago the'visiting of the sick was included among the
virtues to be practiced by those who would
be the Lord's disciples. On June 2, International Shut-in's Day, many people will
carry out the Master's injunction by making
a special effort to help bring joy and fellowship to as many shut-in's as possible.
Unless we have experienced illness ourselves, there is little realization of what it
means to be deprived of the1 opportunity to,
enjoy "God's great out-of-doors", or to be
unable to come and go at will, even tho'
able to walk a few yards unaided. In hospitals, homes and many out-of-the-way
places, millions of people know all too significantly the meaning of the word "shut-
in". To encourage more thought of these
folks the first Sunday of June is annually
set aside to remind the public of its obligation of visiting or in other ways remembering those who are laid aside. Adjustment to- this frustrated way of living is not
easy, but it is greatly helped by your consideration. None are more appreciative of
remembrance and understanding, a visit,
card, letter 6r some token of your thought-
fulness. Perhaps if you have a car, and they
are able to go out a bit, they would like
This Game of Golf
"The clubs used to have such simple
names as driver, brassie, spoon, driving iron,
.midiron, mashie. niblick, mashie niblick,
and putter. Now they are numbered, presumably for the convenience of those who
cannot read. The average golfer needs only
one club, but seven are usually carried.
"The No. 1 wood is used to top the ball
off the first tee. The No. 2 wood is used
when you need a good long slice over into
the next fairway. The No. 3 iron is used to
hook the ball into the woods to your left,
The No. 5 is used for those safe and sane
dribbles straight down the fairway into a
trap.- The No. 9 is used for long, low. screaming drives which land 100 feet beyond the
green. The No .7 is used when you are in
trouble, which is every other shot. The putter
is used for overshooting, undershooting, rimming the cup, and is ordinarily used to play
the last six shots on every hole."
(Source unknown.)
Requoted in West Kootenay Regional
Recreation News.
to attend church service (any Sunday!).
Or, a car-ride in the country or city.
The Shut-in's Day Association was founded in 1942 by a young Canadian semi-invalid,
Ernest Barker of Goderich, Ont., who sent
letters for publication in leading newspapers
in Canada and the United States. As a
result of one of these letters be,ing pubiishetj
in the Philadelphia Inquirer, Mrs. William
Francklin Paris, a bed-ridden invalid became interested and offered to organize a
chapter in the United, States. In 1943 Winston
Churchill and Eleanor Roosevelt endorsed
the day, the Utter devoting her entire syndicated column "My Day" to Shut-in's Day,
Rt. Hon. W. L. M. King, then prime minister of Canada, endorsed the movement,
and the idea began to spread overseas. Leonard Inskift founder and editor of the National
Cripples' Journal, Leicester, became "Representative of England". The following year
the Association des Paralyses de France of
Paris, membership of more than 26,000 persons, joined S.I.D.A. There are now representatives also in Scotland and South America. Much indeed has been accomplished, but
much remains to be done.
The Shut-in's Day Association, with
headquarters in Toronto, Is a non-denominational, non-racial, non-political and non-profit
making organization. No one receives any
financial remuneration for his or her services. Continuance of this humanitarian work
depends upon the generosity of interested
friends for support.—Shut-in's Day Association.
Northern Lights
Any of those among us who have believed that the Northern Lights are a reflection
from the ice field in the Arctic-may revise
his belief. The Aurora Borealis is being studied intently as part of the program of. the
International Geophysical Year. In a release
on the subject we are told:   , ,
"The Aurora consists of light emitted by
the air at heights about 60 miles above the
earth's surface. Observations already made
show that the passage of material particles
(emanating from the sun) cause, the,atmospheric gases of the upper air to emit light."
—Fort Williams Times-Journal.
Is Research Senrin&
Farmers Adequately
farmer, know that their Cost bf production is increasing particularly for livestock
and field crops. They also know, in the light
of experience, thati ti s unlikely their selling
prices will Change to any beneficial extent.
Economists offer no particularly cheering
prospects for the years immediately ahead.
To overcome this "cost-price" squeeze,
farmers are being told'they must be more
efficient: they know this already. They know
too that It their operation is to remain profitable they must know at once about all
new developments which may affect their
particular operation. New fertilizers and
better methods of their application; new
' grain varieties: the latest methods of achieving gain in weight of cattle; new Insecticides
for fruits and vegetables — all these offer
means to the farmer to operate more efficiently. For obvious reasons they cannot
carry out suoh investigations* for themselves.
Research is striving for these and many
other answers, but farmers wonder if it is
always searching out those most .urgent.
They .wonder if Capada is carrying out
' enough agricultural research to keep abreast
of developments in other countries, and if
there is proper corordinatoin between the
different' agencies .doing this work so that
duplication of effort is avoided. Do we have
an efficient system for collecting results and
distributing them'to farmers so'they can
benefit, right away? In short, is research
serving Canadian farmers adequately?
R. Alan Hay,
Agriculture Committee,
. Canadian Chamber'
Of Commerce.
Teenage Drivers
The sad thing about the teenage driver
and hotrod problem is that a small minority of immature youngsters create a bad
name for the rank and file of hotrodders
who are probably even better drivers than
their elders.
In fairness the public should bear. in
mind that most of the teenage drivers around
.us are not only fun-loving but also serious
about their development as good citizens.
And we're all for them.
What many people fail to realize is that
the Wbreaking, reckless type of teenage
driver is in the minority. But they're the
ones that make the most noise and get into
trouble and therefore into public print. The
rank and file good citizens among the hotrod set isn't heard of much because they're
behaving themselves.
They're solid future citizens. They're the
kind who like to tinker with machinery and
make it run better—the experimenters—perhaps the discoverers and inventors of to-'
morrow. ,
Next time you go for a drive take note
of the hotrods you see. You'll notice that
most of them have ;a deep, muffled purr that
suggests power but doesn't create a disturbance. At the same time you'll notice that
the driver knows how to handle his car skill-
■ fully.and in harmony with every traffic reg-
.ulation. '.
These youngsters are the counterpart
of the "whoopee" driver of a former generation—only a lot more sensible.       ,
Let's view each driver on his own merits
regardless of the kind of car he drives.'Let's
not classify all hotrod drivers with the few
who have no use for the law. Let'S be fair
to the good citizens of the younger set.
—The Outlook (Golden, Colo.)
They'll Do It Every Time
By Jimmy Hatlo
Tremblechin
H4SMT SrMvED
HIS P-4CH FUZZ
ON A S4TURMy
SINCE HIS WEEKEND HONEyMOON.
AHDTH4T WAS-
LET'S SEE-
1942-
Farmer's Fringes
"Fringe benefits" is a phrase that usually arises in discussion of conditions of work
In industry. It applies to pension plans, medical plans "and the like, and it most commonly appears in reports «f wage-settlements between large industries and large
unions.
It's a surprise to realize that farmers
too are now getting fringe benefits.
For example, since the first of this
month, Manitoba Pool Elevators has provided accident insurance to all farmers who
have delivered 1500 or more bushels of
grain during the past three years and who
are actively farming. Benefits of $1000 for
accidental dismemberment or loss of sight,
and medical expenses up to $500 with a $50
deductible provision are provided for all the
farmers-("patrons"), and their dependents.
Employees can be covered as well, for an
annual premium of $3.50.
On today's mechanized farms, accidents,
when they occur, are apt to be serious. Today's businessman-farmer is aware of the
high cost of sickness and accident for himself and his scarce help. This "fringe benefit" for farming is a good idea for the new-
style Canadian farm.
-   —Toronto Financial Post.
TODAY'S BIBLE
THOUGHT
Blessed are they that hunger
and thirst after righteousness, for
they shall be filled. Matt. 5:6.
There are too many people who
are only casually interested in
righteousness. It is said that for
the joy that was held before Him
Christ endured the cross.
Spirit filled Christians are joyous people.
Onntdbi.
I wouldn't say that Jane always
Interrupts, but I've, been talkin' to
her for twehty years and I haven't
got to finish a sentence yet.
Dies of Radar Burns
Human Guinea Pig
LOS ANGELES (A.) - Radar,
beams .can be extremely danger-,
ous, warns a California surgeon
who says they already have killed
one man and injured others.
The first'known case of death
from radar is believed to have occurred in 1954 in the Los -Angeles
area, Dr. John T. McLaughlin reports in the current Issue of the
California Medical Association's
monthly publication.
He says the victim stood in front,
of a radar transmitter for less
than a minute. In 10 seconds he
Suggests (hairs
En Stores for
tired Shoppers
VANCOUVER (CP) - More
prodding and constructive criti
cism from informed housewives
would be helpful to businessmen,
says a well-known consumer leader.
Mme. Henri Vautelet of Montreal said here: "Consumers who
know what they are talking about
often have a better Idea of what
is good for trade and industry
than businessmen themselves.
"What women want in the
realm of buying and selling is a
free and open competitive market, with a maximum of price
freedom and a minimum of protection, subsidization and restriction."
WANT NO GIMMICKS
Mme. Vautelet retired as president of the Canadian Association
of Consumers this year, but it
still active in the organization
Under her leadership, the CAC
has opposed such developments
as resale price maintenance, loss-
leaders, trading stamps, price
controls 'and similar angles of the
general marketing industry.
"In each case we are fighting
for a free competitive system
with no strings and no gimmicks
she said. "What women want is
simply high quality goods at fair
prices.
"Merchants 'or business men
who find wonien getting under
their skins now will find them
much more irritating in future.
Women are beginning possibly the
greatest of all their emancipations—the right to full economic
citizenship." '       .
But, she .said, women are not
trying to take over, business,
"Selling is1 the man's world, Buying is the women's. We just want
to see we are'prepared to do our
part in the economy properly—
even if it means stepping on. a
few toes."
COURTESY HELPS
Mme. Vautelet suggests, however, that merchants can increase
goodwill and profits among their
women consumers by inexpensive
and simple courtesies!
"Department . s t o r e s spend
thousands of dollars getting women to shop downtown.
"Attracted by advertisements,
the housewife makes out her shopping list. But when she gets to
the store she very often finds the
place working against her rather
than for her comfort.
"Why don't merchants put
few chairs around the store. It's
an inexpensive matter. Then they
could pay :more -attention to. the
layout, to service and special consideration and courtesies."
She said wome;i, are not attracted by price as much as men
think. The merchant who is also
a gallant will pull them in every
time.
Police Keep
Watch On
Mining Town
MtTRboCHVILLE, Que. (CP)~
The 110-man provincial' police detachment, charged with keeping
order ih this strike-torn Gaspe
mining town, kept a sharp watch
to prevent further acts of vandalism. ' ..  '. ■ '.
Lieut. Gerard Timlin, head of
the detachment, reported Thursday that "six or seven" lines
carrying propane gas from storage tanks into homes, had been
snapped and some loaded clotheslines cut.
In nearby Mont-Louis, shipping
port of Gaspe copper mines 11m
ited—against whom members of
the United Steelworkers of America- (CLC) are Striking — Police
Chief Isidore Boucher, said there
had been an explosion Thursday
beside a local garage. Damage
was slight and the cause was unknown. There were no arrests.
LI6_RTYVILL£, 111. (API-
Scores of the.21000 persons who attended the annual picnic of the
Serbian Orthodox monastery near
Llbortyville, 'a Chicago suburb
were stricken Thursday with apparent food poisoning. At least 67
persons were treated in hospitals
but none was considered critically
ill, authorities said. Roast lamb
jwas considered suspect.
had a sensation of heat in the abdomen. In less than a minute the
heat became so intense that he
ha'd to move away.
INSIDES COOKED
The man, a technician in a radar manufacturing plant, died
within two weeks. There were no
marks on the surface of his body.
Dr. McLaughlin says, but "his in-
sides were cooked . . . There was
a hole as big as a silver dollar
burned in his small bowel."
The case is just now being reported for security reasons, Dr
McLaughlin adds.
He says microwaves emitted by
a radar transmitter cause instant
and intolerable temperature increases in tissues and cells Tissue
temperature even a few degrees
above the normal body temperature is dangerous. The higher the
temperature, the,shorter the time
necessary to cause cellular death.
He says it must be treated with
"the same respect as nuclear radiation."
Clients' Emotional Upset Social
Problem In Hospitals Says Doctor
Negro Pastor
Finds Deep
South Not Bad
OLD MYSTIC, Conn. (APi-The
Negro pastor of an all-white congregation has returned from a
vi?lt to his hometown in rural
South Carolina believing the e-
gro is better off there than here.
Rev. Simon Peter Montgomery,
34, pastor of the Old Mystic Methodist Church and chaplain of the
state legislature, said people in
Pinesville, S.C, look forward "In
the long run" to 'he end of segregation.
"But," he said, "segregation is
not a real issue in Pinesville.
Outside of the 'churches there
really is no place to go and there
is no friction there. It is all
really very harmonious between
the white and colored."
He' said a large and prosperous professional class has
emerged among Negroes near
Pinesville and that many own
homes as fine or better than
northern egroes are able to buy
or rent.
Arthur Miller
Convicted In
Contempt Case
WASHINGTON (AP) - Arthur
Miller, playwright husband of actress Marilyn Monroe, was convicted Friday of contempt of Congress.
Judge Charles McLaughlin announced the verdict in a 15-page
written opinion. McLaughlin had
presided without a jury at Miller's
six-day trial, which ended a week
ago Thursday.
The indictment was based on
Miller's refusal to tell the House
of Representatives committee on
un-American activities the names
of Communist writers with whom
he attended five or six meetings
in New York in 1947.
When he appeared before the
committee last June, the 42-year-
old playwright answered all questions concerning himself., But he
said his conscience would not permit him to use the names of
others and bring trouble to them.
Miller was not in court when
the decision was released to reporters. No,time was fixed for his
sentencing.
The maximum punishment for
contempt of Congress is one year
in jail and a $1,000 fine.
By BRUCE EASSON
By Canadian Press Staff Writer
SASKATOON (CP)-A psychiatrist told the 12th annual Western
Canada Hospital Institute here'
that most patients suffer emotional disturbances as a result of
hospital confinement.
Dr. F E. Coburn, associate professor of psychiatry at the University of Saskatchewan, said such
emotional disturbance is one of
the social problems hospitals must
handle.
"The patient's emqtional problem may result from the nature
of his illness, concern for the welfare of his family and, most important, emotional reaction to the
hospital itself."
Because the patient is confined
to bed and dependent on the assistance of others, he was, in effect told to" revert to a stage of
emotional immaturity, Dr. Coburn
added. • ,
PREVENTS REST
Some patients regress to such
immaturity too easily and others
rebel because they cannot become
dependent on others.
In both cases, he said, the patient makes demands, and because
they seem excessive, the hospital
staff tends to reject him. As a
result an emotional situation Is
built up which destroys the reason
the patient was sent to bed—complete rest.
He was one of four speakers at
the session who discussed various
aspects of the patients social problems and the hospital.
Others were Father Wilfrid Her-
gott, chaplain at St. Elizabeth's
Hospital, Humboldt, Sask.; Edna
Osborne of the medical social
service department, University
Hospital, Saskatoon; and Dr. A. L.
Swanson, executive director of the
University Hospital.
The four-day institute, held for
hospital directors and trustees
from the four western provinces,
ends Saturday.
Dr. Coburn said, hospital staffs
must accept such regression to
immaturity. At the same time, to
offset the emotional problem created, the patient should be encouraged to get out of bed as soon as
possible and to help himself.
INDIVIDUAL TREATMENT
Sickness is one of the great disrupters of modern life and may
bring problems to anyone which
"medical science alone cannot
solve," said Miss Osborne.
"It should be the responsibility
of the medical social worker, not
only to understand what the patients illness means, to him, but
also to gain insight into the patient's social and less tangible
personal problems."
She said patients should always
be helped to have confidence in
the hospital and the services being
provided.
"Social services used construc
tively within the hospital and community can result In more humane and individualized treatment for patients in our hospitals."
India Endorses
Nehru's Budget
NEW DELHI (AP) - I n d I a's
parliament Friday endorsed the
posals, which include sweeping
tax boosts. Finance Minister
Tatte T. -Krishnamachairi announced some concessions in
taxes affecting poorer classes.
Members of both Houses, belonging to the governing Congress
party!' had criticized the range of
new taxes proposed to keep the
second five-year plan from being
crippled. The boosts had strong
support from Prime Minister
ehru.
Concessions granted included
abolition of the excise on tea and
coffee and reduction of railroad
fares for the first 50 miles, since
peasants, who form 85 per cent
of the population, ordinarily
travel short distances.
Gull Oil Adds
Hammer To
Drilling Gear
By   FORBES  RHUDE
Canadian  Press  Business  Editor
HARMARVILLE, Pa. (CP)-A
"hammer" is being added to oil-
drilling equipment for use in hard-
rock formations.
Under present drilling methods
a roller-bit is rotated and grinds
or chews away the underground ■
rock.
•An engine will drive a 200-pound
hammer which will deliver from
400 to 800 strokes a minute on the
attached bit.
Thus, in addition to grinding the
rock, the bit will chisel into it.
The device has been developed
by Gulf Oil Corporation, which estimates that it will double or
quadruple drilling speeds in hard-
rock formations.
Models of it are being shown
here in connection with week-long
opening ceremonies for three new
buildings at Gulf's research
centre.
The process is called hammer or
percussion drilling and the equipment is sometimes called a "Mud"
engine.
The equipment is encased in a
19-foot cylinder which is lowered
into the well-hole just above the
bit.
FLUID ENGINE
It includes a reciproactung-type
fluid engine which is operated by
the normal mud fluid used in drilling, which is forced down the well
bore under high pressure.
In conventional drilling the bit
is rotated against the well bottom
usually under heavy loads of 25,-
000 to 55,000 pounds. Under the
"hammer" method the bit is rotated under a lighter load of 6,-
000 to 40,000 pounds, apart from
the added hammer action.
Gulf expects that the new tool
will save money, time and maintenance as a result of faster pene-'
tration, that it will solve the
costly problem of maintaining
straight holes in hard slanting formations; and that, because of
lighter loads, it will under some
conditions Increase bit life. The
latter would reduce the frequency
with which the drill string-which
may bo two miles long-must be
pulled up for bit replacement. ■
Field tests, indicate that the device can ■ be operated 60 hours
without withdrawal for servicing
ard Gulf expects that this will be
increased to 100 hours, so that the
device would outlast three or four
bits before servicing.
USE   IN   CANADA
The equipment was originally
designed to punch holes through
haid brittle rock in West Texas.
Hecent tests, however, Gulf says,
indicate that it should be equally
effective in mid' - continent and
Rocky Mountain areas . of tha
United States and in some areas
of Western Canada.
It has been given 140 field tests •
in 33 wells in the United States
and Canada and Gulf is satisfied
that it is ready, for manufacture.
Date of ■ manufacture, however,
will depend upon how soon licensing arrangements are made with
a tool or supply company. Spokesmen indicated that there may be
an announcement in this regard
in two or three months. A technical paper on the subject will be
Usued in the fall.
The tool is covered by patents
but will be available to the entire
industry.
Tackle Needs !
The Dolly Run Is On!
»
CANADIAN WIGGLER
This Is a Proven Lure — $1.40
DIAMOND JIM
Real Hot — $1.65
,We have a  complete  line of spinning  and
trolling outfits, priced to suit every budget.
Don't Miss Out on the Best Fishing of the Year
Jack Boyce Men's Shop
PHONE  160
NELSON, B.C.
532  BAKER ST.
 POSTPONED AGAW
POETRY QUARTERLY FOLDS
MILWAUKEE (AP) - American Poetry, the second oldest
poetry magazine in the country,
has suspended publication. Mrs.
Star Powers, the quarterly's managing editor, said lack of support
.IIWJ   IIIIIIUIIUI
(5tZS
was the'main reason for discontinuing the magazine, founded 38
years ago. Poetry Magazine,
founded 44 years ago, continues to
publish.
READ THE CLASSIFIED DAILY
PHONE   1844   FOR   CLASSIFIED
loiiieioCiiUitl)
READY
For the Big Game!
Is He Ready
For the Bigger Game
of Life?
Bring Your
Children to
11 a.m. — TOMORROW
it. |a«r0-®ruttty
Ittittb fflijurtli
"THE   CHURCH   WITH   A   CHALLENGE"-
Minister:
REV. ,E. DONOVAN  JONES,  B.A.,  B.D., Th.M.
Director ot Music:
MERLIN  R.  BUNT.  Phone 278-L
Corner of Stanley and SiUca
Rev. H. R. Whitmore, Minister.
Organist: Mr..Angus Fraser.
10:00 a.m.—Sunday School, Junior, Intermediate and
Senior Departments.
11:00 a.m.—Sunday School, Nursery, Primary and
' Kindergarten Department.
. 11:00 a.m.—Morning Service.
"THE SEA, THE SHIP, AND GOD."
No Evening Service.
P
E
N
T
E
C
O
s
T
A
L
9:45 a.m.—Sunday School •
11:00 a.m.—Morning Worship
7:30,p.m.—Evangelistic
TUESDAY, 8:00 p.m.-Bible Study     -
FRIDAY, 8:00 p.m.—Young People's.
SUNDAY, 5:45 p.m.—Radio Broadcast.
An Invitation Is Extended To You."
Pastor: REV. REUBEN SWANSON
',.,   Phone 886-Y
In Affiliation With Assemblies of God.
Strut lapttist
9:45 a.m.—Welcome to Sunday ~ School
11:00 a.m.—God Lessens Anxiety
7:30 p.m.—Take Time to Pray
(Communion Service)
THURSDAY:: '.
8:00 p.m.—Bible Study and Prayer
9:00 p.m.—Sunday School Teachers Meeting
June 11-14 - B.C. BAPTIST CONVENTION
Anglican Church of Canada
ST. SAVIOUR'S PRO-CATHEDRAL
Rector:  REV. CANON GEORGE W. LANG, B.A., L.Th.
SUNDAY,  JUNE 2,  1957
(The Sunday After Ascension Day) .
8:00 a.m.—Holy Communion.
9:15 a.m—Holy Communion at St. Andrew's, Willow Point
11:00 a.m.—Choral Eucharist
7:30 p.m.—Evensong
Mattins Dally at 9:00 a.m.
WEDNESDAY, June 5: 10:00 a.m.—Holy Communion,
About the Town
PHONE  13(19 OR  1844
By Alice Steven*
LA to Canadian Travellers held
their monthly meeting at the home
of Mrs. W. Hoobanoff, 1216 Mc-
Quarrie Avenue. The evening prize
was won by Mrs. Phil Shrigley.
*  *  •
Mr. and Mrs. 6. B. Harrison of
Darlington, England, are spending
an extended holiday with their
son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. Eric G. Smith, Longbeach.
Our
Father's
Business
ftaton
803 Baker St.
Pastor! E., HANSON
SUNDAY:
9:45 a.m.—Sunday School
11:00 a.m.—Morning Worship
7:30 p.m.—Evening Service
THURSDAY:
7:15 p.m.—Choir Practice.
8:15 p.m.—Prayer Meeting.
FRIDAY:
6:45 p.m.—Junior League.
8:00 p.m.—Young Peoples.
IStgljtljmtH.
812 STANLEY ST. .
I SUNDAY:
11:00 a.m.—Worship  Service
7:30 p.m.—Evening   Service
WEDNESDAY:
8:00 p.m.—Bible Study and
Prayer
GOOD NEWS CLUB
ALL Children Welcome
Anglican Church
of Canada
Church of
One Redeemer
Palrview-
Canon W. J. Silverwood,
A.K.C., B.Sc, Vicar
8:00 a.m.—Holy   Communion
9;45 a.m.—Sunday School
11:00 a.m.—Morning Prayer
- 7:30 p.m.—Evening Prayer
SOUTH SLOCAN
11:00 a.m.
MONDAY, June 3rd:
Rev. N. D. B. Larmonth, D.D.,
will address a meeting of ALL
Anglicans. 8:00 p.m., Redeemer
Hall.
§>aluatum JVrmij
513 Victoria St.
Lieut and Mrs. G. Grlca
SUNDAV
9:45 a.m.—Sunday School
11:00 a.m.—Holiness Meeting
7:30 p.m.—Evening Service
Three Elements In True Faith:
Text: "If ye know these things,
happy are ye if ye do them." John
13:17.
Knowledge: First true faith
abides with knowledge. Ignorance
is one form of misery'and a form
of darkness in the mind" and soul.
Tlfe text doesn't mean that we
have to know all things, but it does
mean that,we should know ourselves. This includes knowing our
sins before God, and that we as
people are helpless without Him.
It means also that we ought to
know that we have a true refuge
and help in the saving grace of
Jesus Christ. God's mercy is found
in Christ who bore us before God
as the sacrifice for our sin. All
knowledge comes of God in one
way or another, and the beginning
of wisdom is knowledge, especially
knowledge in-and of Jesus Christ.
inis...n eabtf Occ ue:e hieerodT
uuedience: True faith comes to-
being obedient to God's Will. "If
ye do them" says the text. Faith
is practical and personal; knowing
is not enough. "Faith," says St.
James, "without works is dead."
Our doing are the clear result of
the faith we have in God. Doing
God's will is a supreme element of
faith.
Happiness: Happy are ye _ ye
do them." True faith is never sad
but is joyful. This is one of the
great gifts of God to His people
with true faith — that they are
happy. Happy that they see life
with new visions; happy that having been bound by sin they are
now free; happy that they have
harmony of mind and- spirit
through Jesus Christ.
Knowledge, Obedience, Happi-,
ness. These are the facets of a true
and shining faith that enables us
all to be true men and women and
true servants ot the Lord.
REV. J. N. ALLAN.
first .(Mptrrij of
GUjrtat ^rt-ttttat
A Branch ot the Mother Church
The First Church of Christ,
Scientist in Boston. Mass.
Sunday School 9:40 a.m.
Sunday Service: 11:00 a.m.
Subject:
"Ancient and  Modern
Necromancy, Alias  Mesmerism
and  Hypnotism,  Denounced"
Wednesday Testimonial
Meeting—8:00 p.m.
Reading Room, 209 Baker St..
Open Daily from"
2:30 to 4:30 p.m.
Sunday and Thursday Eves.
7:00 to 9 p.m. (
ALL  CORDIALLY
WELCOME
Miss Barbara Lea, who attends
Toronto Conservatory of Music, is
spending the summer with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. S. T. Lea,
616 Nelson Avenue.
* *  *
Rev. H. R. Whitmore, Elwyn'
Street, and M. G. Jemson, Fifth
Street, have returned after 10 days
in Vancouver where theywere attending a United Church conference.
Mrs. D. E. Mclvor, 307 Morgan
Street, is visiting relatives in Vancouver.
* t  *
Mrs. Mabel Colman, 905 Edge-
wood Avenue, is visiting her sons-
in-law and daughters, Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Gardner in Vancouver and
Mr. and Mrs. Rowley Stephinson
at Alberni.
Engagements
Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Coventry announce the engagement of their
younger daughter, Carroll Joan, to
Herbert Klein, son of Mr. and Mrs.
David Klein. The Wedding to take
place Wednesday, July 10 at 2:3C
p.m. in Fairview United Church
_. t. Snfjn'a
ffijtttfjeran GUjarfij
Corner Stanley and Silica Sts.
REV. CARL J.  HENNIG
Res. 317 Silica St. • Phone 729-X
10:00 a.m.—Sunday School
11:00 a.m.—Examination of
Catechumens and
Confirmation.
7:30 p.m.—Bible Class
first
PreHbgtptfatt
Gtlfarrlj
THE   CONGREGATION
WILL WORSHIP IN
ST. PAUL'S-TRINITY ,
CHURCH.
Kaslelar-Linn
Wedding Held
Al Cresfon
CRAWFORD BAY - Creston and
Crawford Bay families were linked
by the marriage in Catholic church
at Creston of the former Carol
Elizabeth Linn and Anthony Alexander Kastelan. .
The bride's parents are Mr. and
Mrs. Carl G. Linn of Crawford
Bay, and the groom is the son of
Mr. and Mrs. John Kastelan of
Creston. Mr. Linn gave his daughter in marriage. Miss Daida Johnson was bridesmaid and Mr. A.
Wunderlick was best man.
For her wedding, the bride chose
a floor length white nylon gown
which fell in tiers with lace inserts.
She carried a bouquet of red rosebuds and lily of the valley mounted in a white Bible, a gift from
the groom.  , i
Miss Johnson was in pale green
nylon chiffon in ankle-length style,
Her bouquet was composed of yet-.,
low and white rosebuds.
Crawford Bay hall was decorated with pink and white streamers,
white bells and spring flowers fbr
the reception. The parents of the
principals received the guests, the
bride's mother wearing a blue suit
with pink accessories and a corsage of white rosebuds, and the
groom's mother, a green dress
with matching, accessories and a
white carnation corsage. Tables
were set in a horseshoe pattern,
and luncheon was served. Servi-
teurs were Danny O'Connor, Paul
Danielson, Teddy Piette and Girl
Guides. '
Rev. William Edington proposed
the toast to the bride, and after
the reception Mrs. H. Haverstock
sang, "I Love You Truly" -and
"Because."
A three-tiered wedding cake centred the bride's table. It was made
by the bride's mother and decorated- by Mrs. Clifton Derbyshire,
cousin of the bride.
The couple, who will make their
home in Creston, left on a trip to
points in Washington,' Idaho and
Montana. The bride travelled in a
blue fitted suit with pink accessories. ,
Out of town guests were Mr. and
Mrs. J. Hacking, Mr. and Mrs. J.
Willis and Mr. and Mrs. A. Wastro-
dowski of Kootenay Bay, Mr. and
Mrs. H. Hansen, Mrs. G. Craig and
Eleanor, Mr. and Mrs. F. Simpson,
Miss Sieglinde Wirsig, Mr. and
Mrs. J, Oliver, Miss Beatrice Hell-
• S A LMO
HILLCREST
PENTECOSTAL CHURCH
10:00 a.m.—Sunday School
7:30 p.m.—Evening Service.
Pastor: Robert A. Delgatty
Phone 82-F
NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JUNE 1, 1957 — 5
BONNIE YOUNGSTER pictured here Is Terrence William,
young son of Mr. and Mrs. Marvin McLeod of Vancouver. His
mother is the former Enid Jane Holtom, youngest daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Holtom, 1521 Ward Street.     	
Card Party Held
A group of about 25 Oddfellows
and Rebekahs met at the IOOF
Hall Wednesday night for a card
party.
Prizes were won by Mrs. Gerda
Pickering, women's first; W. A.
Triggs, men's first; and Mrs. E.
Bentham and Ed Boyce, for low
scores.
Refreshments and a dance followed.
PHONE   1844   FOR   CLASSIFIED
Classified Ads Get Results
Cash and Carry
Weekend Special
2 Folding Lawn
Chairs     ..$12.99
Second Annual Crawford Bay Day
Big Boost fo Centennial Project
Recipes... ,     '.'.; '
Snappy Sauce Makes
Successful Barbecue
Eating out of doors is fast becoming a national habit.
' This year, more than ever before, the country will be on a picnic and backyard barbecue boom.
Children will be coaxing for picnics. And it's up to mother to have
a trick or two up her sleeve to
give a little unexpected touch to
outdoor food.
No good horhemaker would
cfream of interfering with the man
of the house while he officiates
at the grill. But" it so happens she
might have a delicious barbecue
sauce ready to heat in a coffee
can or any other hany container
as a surprise and a bonus when
serving .time comes. The one we
have for today is simple, can be
made ahead of time and refrigerated, and gives a real gourmet's,
taste to any meat from frankfurters to chicken. .   ■
Of course,, cake or cookies are
necessary to the success of any
picnic. Just ask the youngsters.
A new and different cake is m,ade
in a loaf with the frosting baked
right on so it goes to a picnic in
its own pan. It's a high light cake,
so it serves nine people generously
or 12 people if you cut the squares
a trifle smaller.
SNAPPY BARBECUE SAUCE
1/3 cup vegetable shortening
1    bottle catsup ,
1    teaspoon brown sugar
1    teaspoon onion salt
% teaspoon garlic salt
1   teaspoon prepared mustard
1    tablespoon Worcestershire
sauce
1 tablespoons vinegar
Mix all ingredients together in a saucepan.
Place over heat and stir until
it comes to a boil. Then simmer
for about one minute, stirring
often. This amount makes 1 _ cups
of sauce, so double the recipe if
you need more.
PICNIC CAKE
2 cups sifted cake flour
11/3, cups sugar
3   teaspoons baking powder
% cup vegetable shortening
1 teaspoon salt
y. cup mijk
Blend thoroughly by hand or
mixer (medium speed) for two
minutes. Then add:
2 eggs
1/3 cup milk
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
■Blend by hand or mixer (medium speed) for two minutes. Pour
into nine-inch square pan that has
been greased and lined with heavy
waxed paper. Bake in moderate
oven 40 minutes, until cake tests
done. Place 12 chocolate covered
min£ patties .(about 1. inch diameter) on top and return to oven
two minutes, or until patties have
melted. '
CRAWFORD BAY - The second
annual "prawford Bay Day" proved to be a big day in every way.
The program began in the morning with a parade of Crawford Bay
and Riondel Girl Guides and
Brownies, Scouts and Cubs and
their leaders. The flag was raised
by Marjorie Wastrodowski of the
Crawford Bay Guides. Ice Cream
cones were given to each of the
marchers.
The opening speech was made by
WilUam Fraser who remarked on
the large increase in Brownies,
Guides and Scouts and Cubs since
last year.
There were many races for both
young and-old alike which proved
to be exciting an deptertaining.
Bingo was popular with the younger sets. Contests of rope climbing
and rolling pin throwing were also
on the agenda. A local teen-ager
was the winner of the rolling pin
throw. One of the most exciting
contests, that of log sawing, was
won by Hank Howell and Eddie In-
gam in 23 lt5 seconds, first; four-
fifths of a second ahead of Weldon
Jones and Reginald Jameson. Both
chain saw competitions were won
by Reuben Johnson.
A highlight for the youngsters
was a peanut scramble with the
peanuts    being    distributed    by
'clown" Russell Sanders. He was
joined later by Willard Foster and
Mlacolm Elmes as "Ferdinand the
bull" and a Mexican bull fight ensued for the entertainment of onlookers.
Exhibition square dancing was
performed by the Crawford Bay
Junior   and   Senior Bay Si Dos,
man, Miss Adele McClure of Gray
Creek, Mr. and Mrs. L. Clark of
Lillooet, Miss DaMa Johnson bf
La France, Elmer Hagen of Sirdar, Mr. and Mrs. Edington and
son from Harrop, Mr. and Mrs.
Einar Linn of Remac, Edward
Whiffan, Mrs. R. H. Brown, Mr.
and Mrs. C. Kipp and Janice ami
Arthur Wunderlick of Vancouver,
Mr. and Mrs. C. Linn, Mrs. S.
Linn and Walter Ppmpu of Riondel, .and Mr. and Mrs. B. Bens,
Mrs. J. Bens and Marion, Miss
Beverley Zorn, Andre Douville,
Paul Douville,: Mr. and Mrs. J.
Lankhaar, Mr. and Mrs. J. Kastel-
an, Mrs. A. Walker, Mrs. D. Hansen, Donna Walker, Maurice Henley, Mr. and Mrs. E. Gatzke, and
Mr. and Mrs. H. Schuler of Creston.
Salmo Guides
Hold Spring Tea
SALMO—The Salmo Girl Guides
held their annual spring tea in the
Masonic Hall .Thursday afternoon:
The table was covered with a lace
clth with flowers at the center. Tall
candles in the Guide Colors were
at either end, '
Mrs. Clara Thiel was in charge
of the Guest book and more than
60 guests registered.
Mrs. Tull of the Fruitvale Association and Mrs. Len Dixon, Guide
captain, poured tea for the first
hour. Miss Greta Curwen of Nelson,
District Commissioner, and Mrs. C,
Treat, past-president of the Salmo
Association, then took over.
The serving was done by the
Salmo Girl Guides under the con-
veenrship of Mrs. D. Fisher, Mrs.
A. Harris, Mrs. Likus, Mrs. C. Hansen and Mjrs. Hemmingson made
an efficient kitchen committee.
The Guide Association will hold
its final meeting of the year at the
home of Mrs. C. Esche on Tuesday.
This will be in the form of a social
evening.
Bluebell Guys and Gals. Caller
was J. G. James.
Something new in the way of entertainment for the children was
added in the form of pony rides
under the supervision of Herb Hansen1 assisted by Malcolm Elmes.
Softball games were also played.
Men's winner was Riondel, and
girls' winner, Crawford Bay.
The day finished with a dance in
the community hall. This annual
dance is a part of the "Crawford
Bay Day festivities and all monies
received during the day and evening are to help to buy land for
a park which is the Centennial
project.
Contest sponsored by the 4-H
Club with proceeds donated to the
Parks Club was won by .Mrs. L.
Jollie, Riondel, first; Mrs. Jack
Hacking, Kootenay Bay, second,
and Willard Foster, Crawford Bay,
third.
Organizations taking part in tha
day were the W.I., Softball Club,
Catholic Women's Guild, The
Guild, the PTA, Badminton Club,
and Square Dance Club.
'Denver Group Plans
Public Card Party
NEW DENVER - New Denver
Pythian Sisters' Past Chiefs' Club,
meeting at the home of Mrs.
Thomas Leask, advanced plans for
its public whjst and bridge program to be held September 6.
A letter was read from official
Mrs. James Draper thanking the
group for its help during the Pythian Sisters' convention held here.
KATE AITKEN
TO LEAVE AIR
TORONTO (CP) - One ;bf .Canada's busiest women, Kate Aitken
made her last broadcast Friday on
the CBC . trans-Canada network
series, Your Good Neighbor.
Mrs. Aitken will continue her
program • on radio station CFRB,
Toronto, until the end of June
when she will retire from broadcasting to become a full-time
author.
Born in Beeton, Ont., Mrs. Ait-
ken's career started in 1923 at the
Canadian National Exhibition
where she conducted a cooking
school.
Key To Piano Presented
At WA's Dinner Dance
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST
OF LATTER DAY 8AINT8
(Mormon)
10:00 a.m.—Sunday School
11:00 a.m.—Sacrament Meeting
Eagles Hall. 641  Baker St.
For Auxiliary Meetings call
Branch President Phone 2010-R
A NELSON GIRL, Miss Joan
Jarbeau, above, was an award
recipient and class valedictorian
at recent graduation exercises at
St. Joseph's Hospital school of
nursing in Victoria. She received
the "Non Nobis Solum" (not for
ourselves alone) bursary for
faithful observance of the school
motto, presented by the Victoria
Women's Liberal Association.
Miss Jarbeau, who attended St.
Joseph's and Notre Dame College here; Is the daughter of
Mrs. Reginald Smith and the
late Nelson Jarbeau of Nelson.
A successful dinner, dance was
held recently at the St. Andrew's-
by-the-Lake church hall at Willow
Point. This, was sponsored by the
Evening firanch of the Woman's
Auxiliary.
The guests sat down to an enjoyable supper. Arrangements for
the food were made by Carl Linden, and Roy Kline and his electric
organ and Bob Robinson and his
accordion provided the dance
music and a number' of novelty
dances were enjoyed. Joe Mitchell
was master of ceremonies.
The piano which the WA had
recently purchased was pn display, and was . much admired.
Mrs. Howard, president qf the
WA, presented the key of the
piano to the church wardens, H.
nankin and T. G. Ludgate, who
expressed  their  thanks  in  accepting the piano.
Mrs. J. Arichuk and Mrs. D.
Haycroft  accompanied   by  Mrs.
McElroy at the piano sang an
amusing song about how the members raised the money to purchase
the piano. The number brought
much laughter from the audience.
The  hall  was  decorated  with
lawn   ornaments   made   by   the
members and spring flowers.
Convener of the supper was Mrs.
Linden assisted by all members of
the WA.
Saturday
^Morning
SPECIALS
Reg. .89 Lambswool Socks
Men's. One size to fit any foot. 65% lambswool and
35% nylon. Plains and fancies. CO
Limited quantity    .J7
Reg. 1.98 Men's Sport Shirts
Sanforized cotton plains and checks. Short 1 /|Q
sleeve, sport shirts in sizes S, M, L, XL    I »i if
Children's Polo Pyjamas
Boys' or girls', interlock cotton knit polo pyjamas with
crew neck, long sleeves and legs and elastic waist.
Yellow, blue, green and pink. 1   /|Q
Sizes 2, 4 and 6. Reg. 1.98. Special    I •T^'
Reg. $1 Sheer Gloves
Sheer nylon gloves in assorted styles and colors.
Perma-tuck or 40 denier sheer nylon. /CO
Sizes 6 to 8. _  •W5'
Reg. 5.99 Men's Camp Shoes
An ideal shoe for summer wear. Sturdy leather oxfords with sewn sponge rubber soles. Moccasin
vamp style. Brown only. J\  QQ
Sizes 7 to 10*4  ^ta7*
LOWEST PRICES!
Licorice Allsorts /     j
A family favorite and just arrived from Dunhill's
of England. Get yours'toddy. 2Q
Packed in Mb. cello bags.'..'.;'.;"-. '•D5'
Reg. 1.29 Insulated Teapots
4-cup, aluminum insulator, colored
semi-porcelain. 	
.69
'79
Reg. $119 3-Pce. Lounge Sets
Left and right sitting with curved centrepiece. 2 only, green or brown	
Reg. 69.95 Bicycles
Girls' or boys' 22" imported sports AK\ QQ
mpdels. Shop early. Limited quantity.'    *4r air<?
Reg. 2.98 and 3.98 T-Shirts
Grand selection of women's novelty cotton T-shirts;
short and push-up sleeve styles. Stripes 1 QO
and plain colors. S-M-L ■.la^r.f
 6—NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JUNE 1, 19S7
STOCK QUOTATIONS
Tn. Dally N-wi do_> not nold malt reipoml-l. In tnt ovont   ,
v. af on orror in tho following Moto.
TORONTO  STOCKS
Closing Prices
MINES
Algom Uranium  •
Anacon Lead 	
Anglo Rouen 	
Atlin Ruff  ,-.
Aubelle    .'• •'•
Aumacho  ,	
Aumaque 	
Aunor   	
Barnat
Base Metals  ~.—.
Baska Uranium -	
Briiund    	
Brunswick    -
Buff Can	
Buff Red Lake	
Callinan    	
Campbell R L	
Central Patricia 	
Coin Lake	
Cons Denison	
Com Discovery	
Cons Halliwell   	
Cons Mining and Smelting
Cons Red Pop 	
Con Sanorm 	
Conwest      	
Copper Corp 	
Copper Man 	
D'Aragon 	
Donald  	
East Amphi   	
East Malartic 	
East Sullivan	
Elder Gold    	
Falconbfidge   	
Faraday 	
Frobisber 	
Geco    •	
Glen Uranium :	
Goldcrest 	
Gold Eagle 	
Golden Manitou  _
Grandines     	
Gunnar Gold	
Harminerals   	
Hasaga 	
Headway 	
Hlllinger    _	
Int Nickel	
Iron Bay 	
■ Joliet Que  _	
Jonsmlth	
R J Jowsey ....;	
1.50
,70
.60
.11
.22 '-
.14
.37
.84
8.50
.16
7.00
.37
5.40
2.62
' .12
.21'/.
2185
1.15
23.-2.
.21
.10.
6.60
.37
.19
.27.
.21
.1314
1.25
3.00
.31
37.00
2.96
2.78
.1514
.45
.14
9.00
.92
.12
.19%
.36
.20
.fir,
38.75
106,75
4.25
.51
.16
.84
AINSWORTH
HOT SPRINGS
OPEN
10 A.M. TO 10 P.M.
Except Monday)
Closed All Day
DINING ROOM HOURS
7 TO 9 A.M.
11 TO 1 P.M.
5 TO 7 P.M.
FOR
Diefenbaker
government I
VOTE
PROGRESSIVE
CONSERVATIVE
VOTE
For
Charles H. Wright
Kerr Addison	
Kenvllle	
Labrador 	
Lakeshore	
Lexindin   	
Little Long Lac .
14.50
.0914
24,25
6.10
.36
2.60
Lorado     1.31
Macassa    ,    2.05
MacDonald        .47
Madsen R L t .-.    1.47
Malartic G F ..„„     1.54
Maneast ....,....' , 25V4
Maritime Mining  1.44
Mart McNeely ..- - .UVi
McKenzie R L :..:. 25
Milliken  ....     3.35
Mining Corp  .....     46
Mogul  .-, :....    1.55
Multi Mins   85
New Bidlamaque      ,10
New Delhi _....-   1.07
New Fortune    i.   - .1414
New Highridge  ,   .30
New Jason .MM.
New Lund 44
Nipissing .  ;....;     2.55
Noranda New -   50.6214
Norgold   .'.._       -21
Normetals    4,50
Norpax  - -    1.24
North Can     1.45
North Rankin  >.     1.58
Pickle Crow     1,25
Preston E D  _     8.15
Quebec Lab  1314
Quebec Lithium     8.75
Quemont _   13.50
Radiore    96
Rainville    1.25
Rayrock-    1.60
Sherritt Gordon  .:    6.20
Silver Miller * „ 70
Stadacona    _ 35
Steep Rock    -   21.75
Slocan Van Roi       .10
Sullivan Con-    2.95
Sylvanite  ...:     1.57
Teck Hughes     1.75
Temagami    3.59
Thomp . Lund 99
Tombill 55
Trans Cont Res  .'. 25
United Keho ...'.....,    4.60
Upper Canada 1 66
Ventures-  40.8714
Violamac  .'.     1.68
Waite Amulet      8.00
Wright' Hargreaves      1.35
Yellowknife Bear      1,57
OILS
American Leduc 35
Banff Oils .,'     2.61
Bailey Selburn   34.75
Calgary and Edmonton     32.8714
Can Admiral  55
Cdn Atlantic '.     8.60
Canadian Devonian     9.30
Can Tlecalta     3.80
Con East Crest  61
Duvex 16
Highcrest  :.     ,32
Home   A       19.50
Jberal Pete      2.25
^on'g Island Pete 12
Midcon  ....„...:     1.50 >
Nat Pete     4.00
New Gas Expl  :..    2.07
Okalta  : •„    2.75
Petrol '     i.uo
Ponder  60
Royalite   18.75
Spooner  60
Stanwell Oil      1.35'
Triad         7.60
INDUSTRIALS
Algoma Steel'   155
Aluminum     43%
Argus 2nd pfd 1    42
Atlas St     2614
B A Oil      56%
Bathurst Power      5414
Beatty Bros            7
Bell Telephone        4314
B C Packers A      16
BC, Power A             5114
Canadian Breweries      26
Canadian Celanese       14%
Can Cement      27%
Canadian Dredge  ' 22
Can Mailing  :     4814
Can Oil      3514
Can Peckers A      33
Can Packers B       7 .
Dist Soprani          30%
Dom F.undr.'cs        3_li
Dom Magnesium      15'/i
Dom Steel Ord           24%
Dom S'.ores  55
Doiri Tar k Chemical    1014
.''cm.us  Pla;_ers            1744
Fanny Farmsr     2014
Ford A    108
Gatineau     '31
r!en Stool Wares       7
Gypsum Lime     2-1.
Innerial oil       bo
trim Tobacco  12V*
Int Pate   55
Laura Secord      -'. 1914
Massey  Harris            71a
McColl  Frontenac    77
Mont Loco   17.
Moore' Corp        70%
Nat Steel Cap.   29
Powell River      ' 43
Page Hershey   140
Power  Corp    1'Ak
Shawialgan.  :  95 '
Sjcks Brew   22
Simpsons A   19H
Southam   52
. Steel of Canada  7214
Taylor Pearson     .:.      9%
Union Gas of Can  80
United Steel   16
Fear Britain
May Lose
Hong Kong
WASHINGTON (AP) - Senator
William Knowland (Rep. Calif.)
told the United State* Senate today Britain may be risking loss
of Hong Kong by broadening its
trade with Communist China.
Knowland, Senate Republican
leader, said Britain Is taking a
"calculated risk" in deciding to
ship what he called "strategic"
materials to Red China.
"These materials in time may
strengthen Communist China to
the point where she dares risk
the responsibility of taking over
the crown colony of Hong Kong,"
Knowland said,
One of the severest of congressional critics of Communist china;
Knowland said he finds it "difficult to understand" why Britain
should decide on a course Know-
land said could only result in
strengthening "our common enemy" in Asia.
The. state department has expressed disappointment at tha
British decision to adopt the same
list for shipments of goods to
China as to Russia. The U.S. carries on no trade with Red China.
Move 11 quickly, safely, economically,
when you choose from F-M't complete line
of industrial power trucks. The'F-irbankt-
Morie "Mohlllft" line include! 4 ill-down
model! In 2,000, 3,000, '4,000, 5,000
Ibs. capacities, all on 24* load centres
"Moblllft" itand-up-rlder trudsl are available In 8 models with 15" load centre's
ranging from 2,000 to 3,500 Ibs.
Ask for literature.
In Vancouver:
798 Beatty St.
Tela, TA-0211
Province First
Morning Issue
To Be June 17
VANCOUVER (CP)-The Province announced Friday it will move
into the morning newspaper field
June 17 with "at least six' editions."
The Province joined with The
Sun Thursday in announcing they
have formed a new company, Pacific Press Ltd., to pool their publishing resources while maintaining editorial, advertising and circulation autonomy.
The announcement said The
Province would become a morning daily and The Sun would remain in the evening field. The
Province now publishes seven editions covering the Greater Vancouver area, the Fraser Valley,
the British Columbia interior and
Vancouver Island.
Its first morning edition will
come just two days after the Vancouver Herald ceases publication.
The-Herald, only morning paper
now- publishing here, announced
Tuesday that rising costs have
forced it to stop publication June,
15. That will also be the day The
Province puts out its last evening
edition,- s
The Province's announcement
Friday by Publisher A. W. Mos-
carella promised editions' of the
newspaper would be distributed
"before breakfast" to Greater
Vancouver, the Fraser Valley and
Vancouver Island,
The weekend edition, including
The Province's B. C. magazine
mid B. C. living supplements, will
be included in Saturday morning's paper.
immmMEmliSM
Acquit White
Men In Negro
Church Fire
MONTGOMERY,'Ala. (AP)-De-
spite a prosecutor's warning that
further racial violence might result here from acquittal, a white
male jury Thursday cleared two
while'men of charges of dynamiting a Negro church.
To Ihe cheering approval of a
packed courtroom, the jury gave
a verdict of acquittal for Raymond
C. Britt, 27, and Sonny Kyle Livingston, 19.
An acquittal would say "it's all
right" to bomb Negro churches
and homes—and might lead to re
taliation—the prosecutor had said.
It would serve notice "that we
are not going to yield another
inch in lighting for our way ot
life," the defence had countered.
Postponed from scheduled trial
now' was a capital case against
two other white men charged with
participating in the bombing Of
four Negro churches and the homes
of two pro • integration ministers
Jan, 10,
SHOTS FIRED
The charge carried from two to
10 years' imprisonment on conviction. James D. York, 52, and Henry
Alexander, 27, face possible death
sentences on a charge of dynamiting a Negro minister's home,
The bombings came a few hours
after shots were fired for. the sixth
time at city buses since they were
racially integrated Dec. 21 by a
Supreme Court ruling.
Prosecutor 'William H. Thetford
told the jury:
"If you turn these men loose under the evidence the state has presented you say to the Ku Klux
Klan, 'if you bomb a Negro church
or home it's all right.'"
Baffle of fhe Budget in U.S. May
Weaken Eisenhower's Popularity
By GEORGE KITCHEN
Canadian Staff Press Writer
WASHINGTON (CP)-The control of the United States government for the next 3Vi years, if, pot
longer, may be at stake in the
bitter battle of fhe budget now being waged betwoen President Eisenhower and Congress.
The battle threatens to imperil
the president's legislative program
and, because much of that program is international in scope, it
threatens also to undermine American leadership abroad.
On the surface, the problem is
simple. The, president's $71,800,-
000,000 budget has run headlong
Into a giant economy wave sweeping Congress and the country.
SAYS NO .CUTS    '
Elsenhower says the budget,
which includes {45,000,000,000 for
defence and foreign aid, can't be.
cut to any great extent without
serious Injury to national defence,
Yet, Congress seems bent on giving lt the axe.
But the issue goes far deeper
than that. At the forefront of the
economy drive is a band of right-
wing Republicans, led by Eisenhower's Senate leader, William F,
Knowland, who are openly defying the president on his budgetary
program. They have been joined
by Democrats who are only too
eager to seize this chance to embarrass the - Republican president
and perhaps divide his party.
In the opinion of many Washington observers, the budget is only
incidental. They see the clash as
the product of a spirited campaign
by Knowland to seize Republican
leadership from the president, capture the party's allegiance and become its presidential nominee in
the 1960 elections. Eisenhower is
barred by the Constitution from
seeking another White House term
in 1950.
MAY LOSE
Should Elsenhower lose the
battle, and some competent observers feel he is in danger of
doing just that, national leadership will slip from tin; president's
hands into those of the party's old
guard, made up of Conservative,
isolationist - minded Republicans
who never have given Elsenhower
wholehearted support.
The president has one big factor
in his favor—his tremendous personal popularity with the American voter. But even this may be
slipping away. The latest Gallup
poll Indicates his prestige has
dropped by 12 percentage points
since he began his second term
last January. Today, 67 per cant
-of the voters approve of the way
He is handling his job; compared
with 79 per cent five months ago.
BLAME IKE ..
Many politicians and a big segment of the American press blame
the president himself for the situation he now is in, They feel that
Eisenhower, with his great respect
for the separation of the powers of
the presidency and the Congress
has been to reluctant to wave a
big stick at his Republican followers in the national assembly.
They suggest, too, that he now
Is handicapped> in his defence of
the budget by his previous lukewarm support of it, His failure to
defend the budget down the line
from the beginning was a tactical
error. Once an economy-minded
Congress sensed White House indecision, it pounced upon the budget without hesitation.
Accuses Dulles
Of Messing Up
U.S. Relations
VANCOUVER (CP)--A former
Progressive Conservative cabinet
minister accused the United
States secretary of state of making a "mess" of American foreign relations.
H. H. Stevens, federal trade
minister in the 1930 government
of R, B.,Bennett, told an election rally Thursday night that
John Foster, Dulles "has made
and is making a mess of .U.S.
foreign affairs, and it is about
time Canada told himso,"
He was speaking on behalf of
Vancouver - Centre candidate
Douglas Jung, who himself urged
Canada to join the British Commonwealth in setting up a "third
world force" to counter balance
the "rather rash and impetuous
actions of the United States and
Russia."
Mr. Stevens said his successor
as Trade Minister, C. D. Howe,
has been trying to Integrate the
eoonomy of Canada with that of
tha U.S. ."steadily since 1946."
Market Trends
TORONTO (CP) - The stock
market was still higher but many
of the earlier gains had been reduced Friday near the close of
trading.
International Paper, on a single
sale, was up 7V4 points to 97V_.
A. V. Roe ained 1 to touch"a
new high of 25%. Dominion Steel,
Page Hersey and Union Gas were
among other strong industrials.
International Nickel advanced 1-
Vi points to 106 among senior
base metals. Preston East Dome
was up 40 cents to $7.90 among
other mining issues and Aconic
added 30 cents at lOY.. Campbell
Chibougamau and United Keno
were off 20 cents each.
ON THE AIR
CKLN PROGRAMS 12*) ON THE'DIAL
(PACIFIC DAYLIGHT SAVING TIME)
SATURDAY, JUNE 1, 1957
30-Wake-Up Time
00—News
05—Musicale
10—Farm Fare
15—Musicale
30—News
35-Spo'rts News
40—Wake-Up Time
00—News
10—Sports News
15—Market Review
20-Breakfast Varieties
00—News
05—Musicale
15—Story Parade
30—Stamp Club
45—Sounds Fun Club
00—Postmark UK
30—Juke Box
00—News,
05—Saturday Special
00-Tha .Dinner Ball
15—Sports News
SUNDAY, JUNE 2, 1957
12:25—News
12:30-Saturday Special
2:30—Don Messer
3:00—News ,
3:10—Weekend Listening
3:15—Speaker's Choice
3:30-^Canadian Symphoniei
4:00—Buff Estes Sextet
4:15—Old Country Sp.orts
4:30—This Week
4:45—Sports College
5:00—Drive-In
5:30-r.onversations
6:00—Moods in Modern
1:00—News
7:05—Music by Hyslop
7:30—Hotel Downbeat
8:00—Halifax Theatre .
8:30—Prairie Schooner
9:00—Winnipeg Pops Concert
10;00-i-News
10:10—Sports News
10:15—Canada at Work
10:30—Sign Off
45—British Israel Broadcast
00—Overseas News
15—Newt
30—Harmony Harbour
00—BC. Gardener
15—Just Mary
30—Musicale
OO—St Paul's-Trinity SSrvics
00—This Is My Story
:30—Capital Report
:57—BC   Weather
:00—Dominion Drama Festival
:30—Critically Speaking
;00—Wprld'Music Festivals
.30—Newa
35—Weatherman
: 45—Musical Program
4:00—UN on tha Record
4:16—The Commodores
4:30—Little Symphonies
5:00—Billy Graham
5:30—Musicale
5:45--Bethel Tabernacle
6:00—Pacific Playhouse
a^o^MusIc Diary
7:00—News '
7:10—Weekend Review   .
7:20—Our Special Speaker
7:80—Sunday Chorilt
8:00~Stage '56
9:00—Winnipeg Sunday Concert
10:00—News
10:10—Sports News
S0:1B—Poetry in Reality
10:30—Sign OH '   '•
CBC PROGRAMS
(PACIFIC DAYLIGHT
SUNDAY, JUN
oo—News
03—Theme—and Variations
00—News,
15—The Answer Man
30—Harmony Harbor
00-B.C. Gardener 4 Weather
15—Just Mary
30—In His Service
00—Chamber Musio
30—Religious Period
00—Organ Music
30—Capital Report
00—Dominion Drama Festival
30--Critically Speaking
00—World Musical Festival
30—News
SAVING TIME)
E 2, '1957
35—Ask the Weatherman
42—Weather Report
45—In Heply
00—UN on the Record
15—The Commodores
30—Little Symphonies
00—Music Program
00—Pacific Playhouse
6:30—Music Diary
7:00—News
7:10—Weekend Review
7:20—Our Special Speaker
7:30—Sunday Chorale
8:00—Stage Series    ,
9:00—Winnipeg Sunday Concert.
10:00—News
10:15—Art of Translation
MONDAY JUNE 3, 1957
TIMM1NS, Ont. (CP) - Leslie
Costello, former forward with Toronto Maple Leafs of the National
Hockey League, was ordained
Thursday into the priesthood of
the Roman-Catholic Church. He
left a promising hockey career to
enter the.church,
00—B.C. Fisherman's Broadcast
15—Musical Minutes
30—News
35—Musical Mlnutei
40—Morning Devotions
45--Musical March Past
0O—News
10—Sports News
15—Morning Music
45—Laura Limited
00—News
15—Your Good Neighbor
30—Morning Concert
00—Morning Visit
15-_Iappy Gang
45—Invitation to the Waltz
00—Radio Theatre
15—Kindergarten of the Air
30—Through the Listening Glass
15—News
25—Showcase
30—B.C. Farm Broadcast
55—Five to One
00—Afternoon Concert'
00—Afternoon Concert
30—Trans-Canada Matinea
30—Footlight Favorites
45—B.C. Roundup
30—The Conqueror
00—News
15—By-Line ,
20—Sports
30—Roving Reporter
45-Rawhide
00—Sons of the Saddle
30—Music for Strings
00—News
80—Recital «
00—Joshua Doan
30-Electlon Talk
00—CBC Symphony
00—News
15—Provincial'Affairs
30—Reflections in Music
VANCOUVER STOCKS
Closing Prices
MINES
Beaver Lodge _■__       .25
Bralorne      4.35
Cariboo Gold   45
Giant Mascot 11
Granduc   .....  „_    2.75
Hamil SII       .03%
Highland Bell      '1.17
National Ex _.„._ 36 .
Pioneer Gold        1.25
Premier Border  ..  08
Quatsino    „..._..     .50
Sheep Creek         .70
Silback Premier _..., 11
Silver Standard ../.. _     .41
Sunshine Lardeau      .15
Taylor   11
Trojan  _     .38
Western Exploration ., 40
OILS
Altex 27
A P Consolidated      .45
Charter    ' 3.75
Home       19.00
New Gas Ex     2.00
Okalta Com  >..,.•     2.65
Pacific Pete      30.25
Peace River Gas 15.
Royalite    18.25
Roya) Can  71
Sparmac : 27'/4
United  .-.     3.30
Vanalta  28 ■
Vantor     2.75
INDUSTRIALS
Alberta Distillers ,.,     1.55
Alberta Distillers Vt    1.45
B C Forests   11.15
B C Power        51.00
B C Telephone    44,25
Crown Zellar (Can)     18.25
Inland w»t Gni  ,,.„.	
10.50
4.05
31.50         *.
S.99         «_'.
42.J-    -
22.09  .    '
15,09
.08
46.7S
49.2J
52.25
KM
9,21
7.77
4.19
I.7J
6.65
MacM & Bloedel B .,	
Mid Western  	
Powell River
Westminster Paper .„	
UNLISTED
BANKS
Bank of Montreal „„	
Can Bank of Com	
Imperial Bank of Canada
Royal Bank of Canada ...
FUNDS
Can Inv Fund ..'. „
Commonwealth Int
Grouped Income 	
Leverage „,...
Trans Canada "C" .
BANCROFT, Ont. (CP) - Pre-
mier Frost of Ontario Thursday
officially opened the operation,
here of Faraday Uranium Minat
Ltd. The mine, which started production -recently, has a contrast
for nearly $30,000,000 with the federal government's uranium crow-
purchasing agency.
Gilchrist's Service
Ainsworth, B. C.
IMPERIAL GAS AND OILS
ATLAS TIRE8
Open Sundays 8a.m. to 10 p.m.
On Nelson-Kaslo Highway
This Country's Got it!
ABLE, EXPERIENCED
GOVERNMENT
HOLD ON TO IT!
UNITY, SECURITY, FREEDOM
VOUFOMMM
 NELSON DAILY HEWS, SATURDAY, JUNE 1, 1957 — 7
^Survives 19 Days Ordeal
After Light Plane Crash
By JOE McGOWAN
RAWLINS, Wyo. (AP) - "It's
certainly a blessing to be alive."
Those were the first words Mrs,
Da-ton LeMasurler spoke to rescuers who found her beside the
body of her husband late Thursday on a show-shrouded mountainside,
The 45-year-old Duluth, Minn.,
woman survived her ordeal of 19
days—more than a week longer
than searchers sought the wreckage of the couple's plane.
Her only nourishment was three
small pieces of chocolate candy
and a bottle of vitamin pills.
CONSTANT STORMS
With only the remains of the
burned-out wreckage and shrubs
for. protection Mrs. Lemasurler,
lived through almost constant
itormil        ■
She shouted with joy when she
spotted'the seven-man party. She
was (rushed' to hospital here suffering from shock, frostbite,, sun-
bura, exposure and malnutrition.
Said Dr. Robert D. Paul, county
coioner:
"I thought it was an echo from
we of the fellows. Then we saw
tlis woman—she was wearing her
Jusband's pants and jacket but no
shoes—and calling for help."
"We were stunned. Not once did
anyone think, even for a moment,
that one of them would be alive."
STRUCK MOUNTAIN
The couple's light plane, headed
back to Duluth from Pasadena,
Calif., smashed into 9,500-foot Ferris Mountain east of here May 11
during heavy overcast.
The gasoline tank exploded and
burned for an hour. Then a rainstorm put out the fire.
LeMasurier, 48, who was president of Duluth radio station KDAL
presumably was injured fatally in
the crash.
His wife first told rescuers he
died four days after the crash,
later that he died seven days ago.
And before going to sleep in her
hospital bed Thursday night she
said she knows he is still, living.
■ She watched the skies for help
and saw several planes obviously
taking part in the widespread aerial search.
"I waved a red sweater but nobody saw it," she said.
"A $2,500 reward offered by the
Duluth station for information
leading to discovery of the plane
will go to Jack Putnam, foreman
of the Buzzard ranch who spotted
the wreckage early Thursday.
DULUTH, Minn. (AP)-Dalton
A. Lemasurier, whose wife was
Accuse Labor
Of Dodging
Existing Laws
WASHINGTON (AP)-Two Re-
publican members of a Senate investigating committee, said Friday
labor unions are circumventing
the law against direct political
contributions.
Senators Barry M. Goldwater
(Rep. Ariz) and Styles Britiges
(Rep. N. H.) said the practice is
"a serious threat to our two-party
system and to our existing laws.'
He called for an investigation.
They listed activities during the
1956 campaign of the United Auto
Workers , in Detroit and Flint,
Mich., as support for their
charges.
Goldwater and Bridges said
"•vidence has been presented"
showing unions and .corporations
"do make contributions and expenditures; for political purposes,
classifying them under the all-in-
elusive name pf 'education' or
'dtizenship.'"
The Taft-Hartley Act bars un-.
Ions from making political contributions in connection with any
federal election. Corporations also
•re barred from making such contributions.
University
teachers
Salaries Up
OTTAWA (qp)-Canadian university teachers last year earned
t.l-per-cent-higher salarle ■ s than
they did during the academic
year 1954-55, the bureau of stati-
flcs said Friday.
Their salaries were almost double what they were during the
prewar academic year of 1937-38.
Ihe Bureau released preliminary
results of a survey based on 51
■niversities and colleges in Canada, excluding religious teachers
paid on a scale below that of lay
teachers.
The survey showed an average
ef $9,400 yearly for faculty heads,
$5,349 for teachers in the humanities, $5,589 in social sciences, $6,-
166 in bilogical sciences, $5,715 in
physical sciences and $5,775 in
•ther fields,
The bureau said complete re-
lults of the survey will be available by Aug. 30.
rescued Thursday after 19 days in
the Wyoming wilderness, got into
the radio business early,
Lemasurier, 48, president of.
stations KDAL and KDAL-TV In
Duluth.     .
lie became Interested in the radio business by Repairing custom-*
crs' radio sets along his newspaper route.
Later he became licensee of
KILO in Grand.Forks, N.D. In
1948 he sold KILO to the Grand
Forks Herald and moved to Duluth.
Meantime, he had formed the
Red River Broadcasting Co. and
began operation ol KDAL, which
bears .his initials, in Duluth In
1936, In 1953 KDAL-TV began op-
ertlon. Both are CBS outlets.
New Air Service
links Canada
With Portugal
' LISBON (Reuters) - Canadian
Pacific Airlines Friday Inaugurated a new transatlantic service
linking Portugal with Montreal
and Toronto!
Super-DC-6B aircraft are being
used on the newroute, which CPA
hopes to extend to Madrid. They
will be replaced next year by Bristol Britannia jet transports.
Two round-trip flights a week
will be made between Canada and
days and Thursdays and returning
Portugal, leaving Montreal Mon-
Wednesdays and Saturdays, ffhe
service links up with CPA flights
lo Lat America.
Diefenbaker Aims To
Promote Canadian Unity
„ By JOHN LeBLANC
Canadian Press Staff Writer
MONTREAL (CP)-The federpl
government has "handed a dish
of crow" to the provinces in its
last tax-sharing fiscal offer, John
Diefenbaker satd Friday,
The Progressive Conservative
leader said at a press conference
that the Liberal administration
has been using a "domineering
and a dictatorial attitude" in its
relations with provincial governments.
"We are not going to do that
when we are elected," he said
We intend to make 'Canadian
unity' something.more than just a
phrase in the political dictionary."
Mr. ^Diefenbaker repeated a
promise to convene a conference
with the-provinces If he is elected
headl of the central government'. It
would deal mainly with financial
arrangements between Ottawa
and the provinces.
DISAGREED WITH BALCER
Mr. Diefenbaker arrived Friday
from Quebec City following a tour
of federal constituencies in that
area,
Newspaper men asked him to
comment on a statement attributed to Prime Minister St. 'Laurent that Conservative politicians
in Quebec in working for Mr.
Diefenbaker are supporting a man
they do not want.
Mr. Diefenbaker agreed that he
and Leon Balcer, one. of his
party's four MP's In Quebec province, had not got along at the
Ottawa   Conservative   convention
that named him as party leader.
"Sure, he and others disagreed
with me at the convention," Mr.
Diefenbaker said. "That was their
privilege."
But, Mr. Diefenbaker added, he
now has the complete loyalty of
Mr. Balcer, who is national president of his party organization
and a major figure in the provincial organization.
SPIRIT OF UNITY
"We now have that spirit of
unity in the Conservative party
that today is very disturbing to
the Liberals," he added.
Mr. Diefenbaker would not risk
a guess at the number of Conservatives that might be 'elected
June 10, but he said the "situation in every part of,Canada Is
more favorable than at any time
since 1930." This was the year of
the last Conservative Win.-
"That applies to every province," the party leader said. He
was asked for a guess about PC
Skin Diver May
Have Found
Dace's Treasure
MILAN, Italy (AP)-Two bags
believed to contain a part of the
Mussolini treasure were sighted
Friday in Lake Como by a skin
diver.
The location of the bags was
given police by Capt. Otto Kisnat,
Mussolini's bodyguard. He told
police the bags contain gold bars,
jewels, gold coins and various
folders of Benito Mussolini's personal documents.
Authorization   to   salvage   the
i^n
prospects for Quebec's 75 seats.
"We will do better in Quebec
than we did the last time," he
said.
WATERTOWN, N. Y. (API-
State .Secretary Dulles is spending the weekend at his summer
home on Main Duck Island In
Lake Ontario. Dulles and his wife
flew here from Washington Wednesday afternoon. They plan to return early next week.
bags was received from Padua's
court of assizes which ia hearing
the 12-year-old case of the treasure that the former Fascist leader
tried to take to Switzerland.
Police were informed that the
two bags were thrown in the lake
In 1945 by Mussolini'a bodyguard,
Mussolini and the treasure ware
captured by Communist partisans.
Mussolini and his mistress, Oar-
etta Petacci, were shot to death
and the treasure, estimated to
have been worth $16,000,000, was
seized by the partisans.
Police said they plan to haul
the bags ashore today.
Universal MOtor Gerat is its full name.
Geriil is German fer "implement" and Webster defines an implement ac "that
which fulfills a want, an instrument used by man te accomplish a given work."
Which is a pretty good description of the Mercedes-Bom...
AND UNIMOG S (3 TON GASOLINE VEHICLE)
Frankly, we don't know how many uses Ihe Unlmog has — we're discovering now jobs for
it all the time. Unlmog digs ditches, fights fires, drills rock, hauls logs, lays cable, cleans streets.
We've seen it pull a 60 ton load, climb a 60 degree gradient, cross rivers, desert and
trackless mountain country. Within reason, Unlmog can da just about anything you ask of
It, go anywhere you want it to go. •   -
Technically speaking, Unlmog Is a 1 ton vehicle with a 4-wheel drive, differential leeks, a
speed of 0.7 to 40 mph, and a 35 hp diesel engine with power take-off shafts at front,
rear and side. But we've come lo think of it as a mechanical monster with a lust far work where
the going is roughest — a robot with a dozen hands and an Iron will.
Working on Ihe move or from a standstill (but never lo a standstill), Unlmog uses
its slout Mercedes-Don- engine to drive a host of attachments — compressors,
generators, pumps, winches, drills, welding units, ploughs, augers . . . you name
them. And the most beOutful thing about this mechanical brute Is that It dees a full
hour's work on little more than a gallon of low-cost diesel fuel.
We Ihink you can profit by putting Unlmog to work. For mobility, power, economy
and versatility, there's no other "implement" quite like It.
I. •
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.<•
 8 — NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JUNE1, 1957
Eskimos Have Only Two Holes; Holdover Dominates Camp Roster
By JIM PEACOCK
Canadian Press Staff Writer
Edmonton Eskimos, Grey Cup
champions for the last three
years, could well be a stand-pat
football team when the Western
Interprovincial Football Union
season opens Aug. 15, but preseason indications are the other
four conference clubs will make
wholesale changes.
Eskimos, with wily Frank Ivy
back for a fourth season as head
coach, have lost only two of their
.2 United States players and two
of the 20 Canadians on the roster
at the end of last season.
On the other side, Saskatchewan
Roughriders, who lost four first-
rate players in the crash of an
airliner last Dec. 9 in British Columbia, expect no more than six of
their imports back when training
opens in July. Coach Frank Fil-
chock is in Regina for a fifth
straight year.
British Columbia Lions, who jn
three years in the conference have
failed to make the'three.- team
playoffs, will .have 31 Americans
in ' training camp at Kelowna,
when head coach Clem -Jrowe,
back for a second year at the
helm after a year as assistant,
opens workouts early in July.
Calgary Stampeders, out of the
WIFU playoffs since 1951 after
setting post-war football aflame
with a Grey Cup victory in 1948,
have signed 21 imports so far and
may have more before head coach
Otis Douglas sets out in his'first
full conference season.
Douglas joined the club late in
1956, taking over from deposed
Jack Hennemier. .   ..
Winnipeg Blue Bombers have
the only outright freshman coach
in Harry (Bud) Grant, who came
out of the* playing ranks to succeed Al Sherman at the end of
last season. Seven of the imports
he played with on' the Bomber
roster last year will be back along
with at least 11 new ones.
POWER INTACT
Taking the league from the top
of last year's final standings,' the
conference situation shapes up on
these lines as the training season
approaches:
Eskimos have lost only centre
Johnny Tatum, to the U. S. armed
forces, and end-halfback Bill Rowe-
kamp, to a coaching job, from last
year's powerful import roster. Ta-
tum's shoes may well be filled by a
former Eskimo, Oklahoma Kurt
Burris, who is returning after a
year out of the game.
Back from last year are back-
fielders Jackie Parker, Roilie
Miles, Earl Lindley and Johnny
Bright; ends Bill Walker and Joe
Mobra; tackles Reed Henderson
and Roger Nelson; and guards
Art Walker and Frank Anderson,
although   Anderson   hasn't   yet
signed.
As insurance against injury and
other happenings, Ivy has lined
up 10 new imports;
Quarterback Don Flynn, Houston; back Ken Hall, Texas A and
M; Leo Miles, New,"York Giants
and brother Roilie, and Wayne
Johnson, Texas; ends Tommy
Pearson, California; tackles Ed-
mon Gray and Dwaine Underwood,
Oklahoma; and centres Kurt Hat-.
ris and Bob Weber, Colorado A and
M. ',■ ." ' . ■
KWONG UNSIGNED  ;
Outstanding Canadians returning
include fullback Normie Kwong
who hasn't come to terms yet,
quarterback Don Getty, who Ivy
intends to. use as his first;String
signal caller this year and lineman Ted Tully. t
Halfback Con Kelly, knocked out
late last year by in eye injury, is
retiring to prevent further injury.
Steven. Mendryk, who had been
with the club since its re-entry in
trie WIFU in 1949 is retiring.
- Fllchock and the Riders face a
rebuilding task brought on in good
part by the plane tragedy that
took the lives of outstanding Canadians Gordon Sturtridge and Ray
Syrnyk and Americans Mel Becket
and Mario DeMarco.  .
Riders also have lost veteran
centre - linebacker John Wozniak,
who has retired. Import halfback
Jon McWilliams is in the U.S.
Army, and half Alex Bravo is returning to Los Angeles Rams.
Tackle-Martin Ruby, halfback
Ken Carpenter, fullback Bobby
Marlow, quarter Frank Tripucka
and punter Larry Isbell are returning. End Stan Williarrts may
be back if a leg injury has healed
sufficiently.
New imports signed are headed
by guard Bill Glass of Baylor and,
tackle John Witte of Oregon Stat-
Others among the 15 newcomers
signed are halfback Jack Hill,
Utah, guard Galen Laack, College,
of Pacific, centre Galen Whal-
meier, Kansas, and Sam Wesley,
all-Pacific coast half from Oregon.
GERRY JAMES RETURNS
Winnipeg will have, halves Bob
McNamara, Buddy Leake and Leo
Lewis, fullback Bob Davenport,
tackle Buddy Tir_ley and tackle-
guards Herb Gray and Slav Can-
akes back this year. Tinsley is
receiving his Canadian citizenship
papers this year.
New imports include fullback Joe
Brodsky, Florida; quarter Chuck
Curtis, Texas Christian; end Dennis Shaw, North Texas' State; end
Dick Donlin, Hamilin College, St.
Paul; centre Hal Whitley, Texas
A and M; guard John Michels, Tennessee; guard Vern Uecker, Texas
Christian, and tackle-guard Ivan
Kaminskif Baltimore Colts.
British   Columbia  lost   all-star
halfback Ed Vereb to the U. S.
forces, but have a number of prospects among their 31 imports signed. Tom Allman of West Virginia
I jieads the list, with Don Vicic, Ohio
'and Vernon Hallbeck, Texas Christian.
End Dan Edwards, guards Bob
■Hantla and Join: Jankans and
backs Paul Cameron, Tony Ter-'
esa, Primo Vollanueva, By Bailey
and Steve Palmer are imports returning.
Among newcomers are tackles
Emery Barnes, Green Bay; Phil
Wright, West Texas State; Dick
Foster, University of Idaho, and
Walt Mazur, Penn State. Guards
coming are Pudue's Ed Voytek,
Michigan's Chuck Frank, and Pittsburgh's Vince. Scorsone. Jerry
James of Louisiana State and 0'-
Day Williams are among endsr
TRY FOUR Q-BACKS
Lions are trying four quarter
backs—Maury Duncan, San Francisco '49ers; Gerry Dunan, California Polytech; Toppy Vann,
Georgia Tech and another as yet
unnamed player.
Tackle Chuck Quilter, now a Canadian citizen, will give Lions an
extra boost along the line. Outstanding backs to try out include
Tom Allman of West Virginia, Don
Vicic of Ohio and Vernon Hallbeck
of Texas Christian,
Calgary Stampeders' returnees
inclue end Jack Gotta, tackle Dick
Huffman, half Dean Renfro, Harry
Langford and Porky Brown.
The 21 imports signed so far include Jim Finks of Salem, 111.,
quarterback and assistant coach;
Don Caraway, Houston fullback;
Bob Stringer Tulsa half; quarter
Jim Stehlin, Brandeis; half Don
Wright, Ohio; half Jim Norris, Notre Dame and half Jim Harriman
from Los Angeles.
Af_K
tf-
'    ' '       ' _Q • 4 1
lyi VajUjJchcbll haJs deMve it c^M/
w-'i.     #i]    Q       & r\    fit   f\■■:   m   ,J mm        *llk tM
wmmmmm &
and mm
So cornp.ete.y new... so excitingly different!
Never before has British car styling so faithfully echoed Canadian tastes. Never before
has there been a British car — even Vauxhall
— so excitingly styled... so amazingly compact ... so thrttlingly the car you want to
own. And wait till you see how little it costs!
See the Victor and Victor "Super" — today!
All new 4-cylinder economy
The Vauxhall Victor's famous "square" design engine is a triumph of operating economy — equipped
w:th a brand-new Mileage-Miser carburetor. You
save gas in every mile you travel ... in town or
country.
Lively new fast-stepping performance
Here's the car that skips nimbly up hills—holds tight'
and steady on curves — with a bright, eager pick-up
that sets your spirits soaring.    '■
Bright new panoramic vision
New wraparound windshield — wraparound rear
window . . . with plenty of glass area in the side
panes. Greater safety every mile you drive.
Gay, new nature-bright colors
Imagine the glowing beauty of-colors like Gipsy Red
or Laurel Green ... fresh as springtime itself. Altogether — your choice of 8 sprightly color-stylings in
the Victor 'Super*... 5 in the Victor.
Come in and meet the new running mate to the famous 'Vetex' and 'Cresta*.
You must see it today!
AUXHALL
on display today cub
l/OUr VAUXHALL DEALER'S
THE   BRITISH  CAR  BUILT  BY  GENERAL  MOTORS
NELSON MOTOR PRODUCTS LTD
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-Golden Bears Oppose Kokanees
After 12-7 Win Over Rossland
TRAIL—Trail Golden Bears climbed into a second-
place tie in the West Kootenay Senior Lacrosse Association Thursday with a 12-7 triumph over Rossland
Juniors, who lost twice last weekend to the league-
leading Nelson Kokanees.
Kokanees have the opportunity at Civic Arena tonight to stretch their league lead as they oppose the
Golden Bears in Nelson's second home game of the
season. With two victories over Rossland Juniors and
one over Trail's junior aggregation, Nelson is undefeated
to this point.
Pro -Leduc and Einar Klit scored four and three
goals, respectively, for the winners, with Gord Robertson and Marcus Smith adding two each. Larry Ford
picked up goal No. 12.
Jack Ling scored four times, with Bertoia tallying
twice and Bill Huitema, once, for Rossland.
illlltlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli
LITTLE LEAGUE
ROUNDUP
Kiwanis 13 Lions 5
Kiwanis won their first game of
the season at Queen Elizabeth
park as they hammered out a 13-5
win over Lions. It was the first
win in four starts for Kiwanis and
the second loss tn a row for Lions.
Errors played a big part in the
game as there were only 11 hits
between the teams. Kinwanis collected six hits and Lions picked up
five.
Kiwanis scored three runs in the
third, four in the fourth and six
In the fifth. Lions scored one run
in fourth and four in their final
turn at bat, the sixth.
Ernie Moisey went the route for
the winners, giving up five hits,
walking four batters and striking
out seven. The Lions used three
hurlers, Jack McQuair, Earl Sept
and Bill Beatty. They gave up
six hits, issued five free passes
and struck out six batters. Big hits
of the night were two homers —
one by Donny Wah of Lions who
also smacked a double — and one
by Johnny Sample of Kiwanis.
Bobby Rothery drove out a two
bagger for the other Kiwanis extra
base blow.
Mc tt Mc 11 Firemen 10
Mc 4 Mc  handed   Firemen
City's Hopes
Getting Dimmer
NEW YORK (AF)-- New York
City's hopes of keeping the Dodgers and Giants from moving to
California grew dimmer Friday.
A survey by the New York Post
showed that members of the board
of estimates, who will have to pass
on any financial measures to build
stadiums, are overwhelmingly opposed to granting subsidies to keep
the two clubs.
Board members mostly would
follow the policy of Mayor Robert
Wagner, and he doesn't appear
inclined to make an exception for
two of the big town's three major
league clubs.
"If we began to subsidize baseball teams," the mayor said in
an Interview, "all sorts of business enterprises would demand
the same thing. Our feeling is that
professional ball clubs class as private enterprise. They have to
carry their own weight."
The mayor has invited Walter
O'Malley, Dodgers president, and
Horace Stoneham, Giants president, to talk things over with him
on Tuesday. This is liable to be a
showdown session.
Fights
By The Associated Press
Dallas—Art Swicen, 192, Pittsburgh, outpointed Bobby Spaeth,
186, Topeka, 10.
VANCOUVER' (CP) - British
Columbia Lions announced they
have traded fullback Al Pollard
to Calgary Stampeders of the Western Interprovincial Football Union.
No details of the trade were announced.
their fourth loss at Queen Elizabeth Park Thursday with an 11-10
victory. The game was close all
the way with a number of errors
costly to each side. Mcs scored
three runs in the first, third and
sixth innings and two in the fifth.
Firemen had three in the first and
third and four runs in the iiftli.
Firemen sent four hurlers to
the' hill in an effort to hold the Mcs
and they gave up 11 hits. Ken
Anderson started and was followed
by Art Miner, then Billy Burdenie
and finally Bruce Blakemen. Gary
Kilpatrick and Doug Florio shared
mound work for the Mcs with
Florio the winning pitcher. In the
hitting department Blakemen drove
a homer and a double, while Ken
Anderson, Art Miner and Ron
Johnston were good for a double
each. Mike Ingledew hit the only
extra base blow for the winners.
Rotary g Kiwanis (
Rotarians won their second game
in a row Friday evening as they
edged Kiwanis 8-6. It was the
fourth loss in five games for Kiwanis. Rotary scored three runs in
second and third innings and one
in each of the fourth and fifth.
Kiwanis scored two runs In the
first, one in each the second and
third and two more in the fifth'.
Stan Smith went the distance for
Kiwanis, striking out seven batters, giving up eight hits and one
free pass. Brian Lees and Frank
Smith shared the hill work for the
winners, - surrendering four - hits
while lie struck out five and gave
four passes to. first.
Bill Christie was the big hitter
of the game for the Rotary as he
hit a homer, a triple and a double
in three times at bat. Johnny Berekoff and Tommy Clem were the
other extra base hitters for the
winners, Berekoff getting a triple
and Clem a double. Ernie Moisey
hit a homer for Kiwanis and Daryl
MacLachlan a double.
Bantamweight. Boxer
Still Unconscious
SHEFFIELD, England (AP) -
British boxer Jack Tiller, remained unconscious Friday 60
hours after he collapsed in his
dressing room following a Tuesday bout.
The 24-year-old bantamweight
underwent an operation Wednesday for the removal of a blood
clot in his head.
Tiller was stopped in the last
round of an eight-round bout by
Eric Brett of England. The referee
halted the fight after Tiller was
floored for the third time in the
eighth round.
RACE DRIVERS KILLED
PIACENZA, Italy (AP) - Two
Italian drivers were killed Thursday when their motorboat crashed
against a pontoon near here. They
were competing in the Pavia-
Venice race on the swollen Po
River.
The dead were Dr. Adolfo Gattl,
50, a notary, and Lorenzo Argua,
25, a mechanic.
DANCE
to the MUSIC of the
"Kootenaires"
CIVIC
CENTRE
TONIGHT
9 p.m.
Admission 50c
"Come in—enjoy an evening of fun."
Near-Brawl Between Players
As Chisox Increase Margin
By ED WIMCS
Associated Prose Staff Writer
Chicago's fast - stepping White
So,t pushed to a four-game lead—
their largest of the season—in the
American League with some second division help Friday night-as
veteran Bob Keegan four-hit Detroit for a 6-0 victory in his first
shutout in three years and first
complete game since.last August.
The White Sox, winning their
fourth in the last five games on a
grand-slam home run by Walt
Dropo and a two-run homer by
Sherm Lollar, breezed in as Baltimore's seventh • place Orioles
smacked the New York Yankees
3-1 and the sixth place Kansas
City Athletics tripped Cleveland
3-1. Tho loss sent the third place
Indians five games off the pace,
CARDS WIN
In the National League, the
leading Cincinnati Redlegs were
Idled by rain, but gained a two-
game lead as Philadelphia and
Robin Roberts knocked off the
second - place Brooklyn Dodgers
2-1. The victory drew the Phillies
Into a third place tie, W, games
back, with the Milwaukee Braves
who were beaten 4-3 by St. Louis
Cards
The New York Giants defeated
Pittsburgh 3-2 in the other NL
game.
Washington rallied in the ninth
to defeat Boston 3-2 in the other
American League contest.
Lollar's seventh home run
headed Frank Lary to his seventh
defeat and the White Sox to their
15th victory in the last 19 games
in the first inning. Dropo then became the first to belt two grand
slammers this season in the ma
jors with his wrap-up clout In the
eighth. Keegan, winning his first
since last September, gave up
only singles, striking out two and
Walking just one. The 35-year-old
righthander last had a shutout on
May 21, 1954—also against tha Tigers, 8-0.
FEUD ERUPTS
The White Sox' fourth victory
over the Tigers in four meetings
this year saw a feud break out
between Lary, a 21-game winner
last season, and the Sox' Dave
Philley. Philley was dusted in the
first inning and his bat then
"slipped" from- his grasp and
spun' to within six feet of the
mound. In the eighth, Philley was
pushed back by another' Lary
pitch and started for the mound,
bat in hand, before plate umpire
Ed Rommel and catcher Frank
House intervened,
Al Pilarcik drove in two Oriole
runs, one with his second home
run of the season—and second in
two days—as the Yankees dropped
their third decision ih the last
four, all against eighth • place
Washington and the Birds. Ray
Moore, 31 today, five - hit the
champs. Bob Turley lost it, forcing in the final Oriole run in the
sixth with a third consecutive
walk.
Ned Garver held the Indians to
four singles and was backed up
by. Billy Hunter's two-run homer
off loser Cal McLish and three
double playB by the A's. Garver.
who had a three-hitter in his last
start (against Detroit), now is 4-3.
The Senators made it five out of
six on Jim Lemon's two-out single
in the ninth that scored Herbie
Plews with the clinching run, an
unearned marker, to hand Tom
Brewer his fourth defeat.
HAMNER HITS
Willie Jonea delivered a two-run
triple in the fourth to win for the
Phillies as Roberts won his fifth
against six'defeats with a six-
hitter. The Phils, who have won
seven of their last. 10, got their
first hit off loser Don Drysdale in
10 2-3 innings 'when Gran Hamner
singled with one out in the winning fourth.
Eddie Kasko was 4-for-4 and
drove in two runs, bringing the
winning run home in the eighth
with his third single, as the Cards
out-hit the Braves H-9 for Lindy
McDaniel's fourth victory. Wally
Moon extended his hitting streak
to 24 games with a sixth-inning
double, and Kasko then doubled
him home to tie it three-all.
Willie Mays stretched his hit
streak to 19 games with a leadoff
double in the eighth fbr the
Giants, then came around with the
winning run on a bunt single by
Hank Sauer and Ray Katt's sacrifice fly.
LEFTY RECALLED
CLEVELAND (AP) - Cleveland
Indians recalled pitcher Hank
Aguirre Thursday from San Diego
of the Pacific Coast League.
No decision has been made yet
on who will be removed from the
roster to make room for Aguirre.
SOALIES'S DAD DIES
OTTAWA (CP)-James Bever-
idge, Ottawa sports enthusiast and
father of former NHL goalie Bill
Beveridge, died at his son's home
here Friday after a brief illness.
He was 87.
JOHNNY KILBANE
DIES OF CANCER
CLEVELAND (AP) - Johnny
Kilbane, who held the world's
featherweight boxing championship from 1912 to 1923, died -at his
home Friday of cancer. He was
68.
Kilbane captured the featherweight crown from Abe Attall on
Washington's birthday in 1912. He
lost it in 1928 to Eugene OriqUi
of France.
Official Placings
Accepted by Four
INDIANAPOLIS (AP)-The Indianapolis Motor Speedway fnan-
agement said Friday four car
owners who protested the official
standings in Thursday's 500-mile
race, have signed a statement accepting the standings.
Al E. Dean ,of Los Angeles,
owner of the Dean Special driven
by Jimmy Bryan of Phoenix,
Ariz., protested that Bryan should
have been given second place instead of third. He contended the
scorers missed two laps on Bryan
in giving the second place to Jim
Rathmann of Miami.
\SF\
NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JUNE 1, 1957 — »
Baseball Scores
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Brooklyn    000 000 100—1   6   0
Philadelphia ,. 000 200 00x-2   6   0
Drysdale, Labine (8) and Campanella; Roberts and Lopata. L:
Drysdale. HR: Brooklyn, Campanella.
New York  000 000 210-3   8   0
Pittsburgh   .... 000 200 000-2  9   1
Margoneri, Worthington (7) and
Katt; Arroyo, Face (7) and Rand,
Foiles (8). W: Worthington; L:
Face. '
St.. Louis  010 011 010-4 fl   2
Milwaukee ..... 001 020 000-3   9   2
McDaniel and H. Smith; Pizarro
and Crandall.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Baltimore    001 011 000-3   7   0
New York ..... 000 010 000-1   5  0
Moore and Triandos; Turley,
Ditmar (6), Byrne (8) and Berra.
L: Turley. HR; Baltimore, Pilarcik.
Detroit    000 000 00O-O .4   1
Chicago   200 000 04x-6  9   0
Lary and House; Keegan and
Lollar. HRs: Chicago, Lollar and
Dropo.
Boston  100 000 100-2   7  2
Washington .... 010 000 011-3  8   1
Brewer and White; Kemmerer,
Clevenger (8) and Berberet. W:
Clevenger.
Cleveland     001 000 000—1  4  2
Kansas City .. 003 000 OOx—3 7 1
McLish, Tomanek (3), Mossi (8)
and Naragon, Hegan (8); Garver
and Smith. L: McLish. HR: Kansas City, Hunter. t
RECORD PURSE
PAID IN "500"
INDIANAPOLIS (AP)-The Indianapolis Motor Speedway and
automotive accessory companies
Friday night paid a record $300,-
252 purse for Thursday's 500-mile
race, of which winner Sam Hanks
and his car owner received another record $103,844.
The previous records were the
$282,052 total purse last year and
winner Pat Flaherty's $93,819
share of that total.
SENIOR
8:00 p.m.
Tonight
Adults 50c
Students and
Children 25c
Nelson Civic Centre
• TRAIL GOLDEN BEARS
* NELSONKOKANEES
DwleFQ@D~ i/ov?/Jwe a
Its North America's fastest seller I
Right from the start, Ford has set the 1957 tales pace. Since the new can
were first introduced Ford has consistently outsold every other car in North
America. Sales figures quoted in leading automotive newspapers and journals
•give conclusive evidence of Ford's leadership.
No wonder the new kind of Ford is setting new records. Ford leads in styling—
the kind of styling that's designed to last, because its long, low, "sculptured look"
expresses elegance and good taste. Even standing still, the new kind of Ford looks
as though it's going placet in s hurry. And while we're talking about CO, we'd
like to remind you that Ford set 458 speed and endurance records at Bonneville
Flats—a classic demonstration, unequalled in automotive history. Indeed, Ford
leads in the kind of performance (SIX or V-8) that takes nothin' from nobody
and the kind of ride (Even-Keel Ride) that makes every road feel airstrip smooth)
You owe it to yourself to take ten exciting minutes to experience the sheer fun of
driving the car that's new all the way through... the ear that's the undisputed.
leader in style—in performance—in motorists' preference... the things Canadian
motorists want most... the winner... the new kind of Ford.
/
Oo/ne ih, cfole a mwiet...
FORD SIX<
$hcf you'll take hoihtri ftt>m hobodif i
VISIT OR PHONET____TYOUR FORD-MONARCH DEALER TODAY!
Back the ATTACK against
TRAFFIC ACCIDENTS
Mel Buerge Motors Ltd.
608 Vernon St.
Phone 1744
 NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JUNE 1, 1957
ifiliOS
PERSON-TO ■ PERSON WANTM
"        'RESULTS/
Phone 1844
Deadline for Classified Ads—5 p.m.
Phone 1844
BIRTHS
YOUNG—To Mr. and Mrs. Roland Young of 823 Victoria Street
on May 31 at the Kootenay Lake
General Hospital, a' daughter.
VARNEY - To Mr. and Mrs.
James Varney of Vallican on May
27 at the Kootenay Lake General
Hospital, a daughter.	
FOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS
(Continued)
HELP WANTED
MAN AGED 20 TO 35 REQUIRED
for aggresive wholesale and retail firm. Steady employment,
MSA coverage,_excellent future.
Apply in own h_nd writing stating education, previous experience and salary" expected. AU
applibations strictly confidential.
Apply Box 4343, Nelson News.
FULLER BRUSH WILL HAVE
opening in Rossland, Cranbrook
and Nakusp for reliable married
man. Car necessary. $85 week
while training. Write Employment Manager .Fuller Brush Co.
Box 1160, Creston, B.C.
MESSENGER BOY WITH Bicycle to deliver telegrams. Day
work. Must be available for
June 7. Apply CPR Telegraph
Co.
HELP WANTED — FEMALE
CLERK GRADE 1
B.C. CIVIL SERVICE
FOREST SERVICE - NELSON
Salary: $173 • $210 per month.
Preferably two years' experience.
The duties to be performed are of
an interesting nature. Good opportunity for immediate, permanent employment. Liberal vacation and,sick leave; contributory
pension plan; annual increments.
Applicants must be British Subjects. For further information and
application forms apply to the Government Agent, Nelson, not later
than June 19,. 1957.
REGISTERED NURSE REQUIR-
ed for duties on afternoons only,
starting July 1. Written applications, giving details of training,
experience, marital status,. age
and references, to the Business
manager of the Medical Associate Clinic, Nelson, B.C.
WANTED AT ONCE, EXPERIEN-
ced waitress with clean living
habits. Summer employment,
$32.00 per week and board. Riondel Cafe, Osoyoos, B.C.
WOMAN  REQUIRED  TO  CARE
' for children seven days a week.
Phone  803-L  after 4 p.m.  or
134 (Pauline) during day.
WANT ED-TYPIST FOR INVOIC-
ing and general office work Ap-
v ply Box 4215, Nelson Daily News.
EXPERIENCED   WAITRESS
wanted. Apply Edi's Food Bar.
NELSON READY-
MIX CONCRETE
Ltd.
Phone 871
DEALERS IN ALL TYPES OF
used equipment, mill, mine and
logging supplies, new and used
wire rope, pipe and fittings,
chain, steel plate and shapes.
Atlas Iron & Metals Ltd., 250
Prior St., Vancouver. B.C., Ph
PAciflc 6357
NEW FLAT BOTTOM DUCK
boat with trailer, new Vk h.p.
Evenrude motor, .22 automatic
rifle with scope, 150 ft. new picket fencing, new 6-inch planer.
Priced low to sell quick. Call
359-L or 580-X.
PROPANE RANGE FOR LARGE
jobs, complete with canopy. 500
gal. tank, also propane heater.
Write W. C. Alock or Phone
2772, Fruitvale, evenings.
REGISTERED QUARTERHORSE
Stallion, incubator, wagon,.mow-
er, seperator. Phone 3136, Fruitvale.
AUTOMOTIVE
MOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES
2HN. ELECTRIC RANGE, ALSO
coil-shaped elec. heater. Perfect
condition. 519 Silica.
ONE COMPLETE DUMP BOX 4
yd. 2 ball bearing ore cars. 2 b.
. b. hoists. Ph. 378-X-2.
FOR SALE CHESTERFIELD AND
chair. Good condition, $35.00. Ph.
440-X between 11 and 1.
CHEVROLET
OLDSMOBILE
CADILLAC
New 1957 Chevrolet Sedan-
New 1957 Oldsmobile Sedans
New 1957 Oldsmobile Hard'
tops.
New 1957 Chevrolet Pickups
1955 Chevrolet Coach
1954 Austin Sedan
1954 Oldsmobile Sedan
1953 Mercury Sedan
1952 Austin Sedan
1952 Plymouth Sedan
1952 Cadillac Sedan
1956 Dodge Suburban
1956 Chevrolet Station
Wagon
1955 Pontiac Station
Wagon
1954 Chevrolet Pickup
1953 Pontiac Sedan Dely.
1952 Chevrolet Panel
1951 Chevrolet Sedan Dely
TERMS — TRADES
G.E. 32 - INCH RANGE. PHONE
1071-R. _i___'
SITUATIONS WANTED
ALL CARPENTER WORK, CON-
crete and cement floors, sanding,
floor laying, gyproc paint filling,
chimneys and fire places. Guaranteed free estimate. H. Zylstra,
Phone 136-4-R.
WILL LOOK AFTER CHILDREN
in my home by the day. Phone
779-R. .	
FOR HANDYMAN, PHONE 256-R.
LOST AND FOUND
LOST - 16-FT. WALTON ROW-
boat, painted white and orange.
Got adrift from Balfour. Reward.
J. R. Bailey, 416 Mill St. Phone
950-R
FOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS
GOOD MODEL TAPE RECORDER
with micraphone, 1 yr. old, _
price. Phone 1365-L after 5:30
p.m.	
HEALTH FOOD CENTRE OPEN
day and evening, 924 Davies St.
LOST, BLACK WALLET IN NEL-
son Saturday night. Contains
drivers licence, papers, and sum
of money. Reward. Contact
Harold Command; Kaslo, V>.C.
LOST - WALLET, BY CIVIC
Centre Thursday night. Contains personal papers and driver's licence. Reward. Phone
1918-X, Nelson.	
LOST-BUDGIE BIRD ON SUN-
day in vicinity of 315 Observatory St. Ph. 720-Y.
TELEVISION FOR TODAY
Times Shown Are Pacific Standard Time
KXLY TV - Channel 4
.     SATURDAY
:45 Good Morning
:I5 Dizzy Dean Show *
;25 Baseball Game of Week *
:00 Theater .    ,
:30 Lone Ranger
:00 Bob Harris Show
:00 TBA
;30 Wild Bill Hickock
;00 Cartoon Time
;30 Tales of the Texas Rangers
;00 Jackie Gleason Show *
;00 Gale Storm Show *     w
:30 SRO Theater *
;00 Gunsmoke *
:30 Two For-The Money *
;00 The Buccaneers
:30 The Lone Wolf
:00 Man Called X
i:30 Late Show
SUNDAY        .
1:00 Good Afternoon
1:30 Oral Roberts
2:00 Bowling Time
3:00 This Is The Life
3:30 Variety Time
3:45 Christian Science
4:00 See It Now
5:00 Annie Oakley
5:30 You Are There
6:00 Lassie *
6:30 Jack Benny *
7:00 Ed Sullivan*
8:00 G.E. Theater
8:30 Alfred Hitchcock Presents
9:00 $64,000 Challenge
9:30 Our Miss Brooks
10:00 News and Commentary
10:30 What's My Line
11:00 Errol Flynn Theater
KHQ TV - Channel t
.,.'.' SATURDAY
8:10 Test Pattern
8:15 Color Test Pattern
8:25 Bible Reading
8:30 Gumby *
9:00 Fury *
9:30 Short Subjects
9:45 Leo Durocher's Warmup *
9:55 Major League Baseball
(Boston at Washington)
12:00 Little Rascals
12:30 Gangbusters
1:00 Western Theatre
3:00 True Story *
3:30 Detective's Diary *
4:00 Hopalong Cassidy
5:00 John Wayne Theatre
5:58 Local News'
6:00 Trouble With Father
6:30 People Are Funny »
7:00 Perry Como (C) •
8:00 Five Stars For Spring *
9:00 George Gobel *
9:30 Hit Parade *
10:00 Death Valley Days
10:30 Late Movie
"Cry of the City"
SUNDAY
12:00 16th Annual Palm Beach
Golf Tournament
1:30 Christopher Program
2:00 This Is The Answer
2:30 Airline 6534 .    '
3:00 A City Decides
4:00 I Led Three Lives
4:30 Hopalong Cassidy
5:00 Impact "Crack-Up".
6:00 Tales of 77th Bengal
Lancers*
6:30 Circus Boy *
7:00 Steve Allen •
8:00 Chevy Show <C) •
9:00 Loretta Young *
9:30 Front Page
9:40 Molly
10:05 Stars On Six "Emergency'
10:30 O. Henry Playhouse
11:00 Cross Current
KREM TV — Channel 2
SATURDAY
3:00 Roy Rogers Roundup
4:00 Space Ranger
4:30 KREM Cartoons   »
5:00 Renfrew of the Mounted
Police
5:30 Popsicle Party *
6:00 Major Fights
7:00 Billy Graham
8:00 Lawrence Welk *
9:00 Ozark Jubilee *
9:30 Championship Bowling
110:30 Million $ Theatre
(Warner Bros. Features)
'    SUNDAY
12:55 News
1:00 Cartoons
1:30 Gene Autry
2:30 John Hopkms File 7 *
3:00 College Press *
3:30 Medical Horizons •
4:00 Dean Pike *
4:30 Open Hearing »
5:00 Circus Time *
6:00 You Asked For It
6:30 Hollywood Film Theatre *
8:00 Ted Mack *
9:00 Sunday Spectacular
(Warner Bros. Features)
WANTED MISCELLANEOUS
WE PAY MORE FOR SCRAP
iron and metals. Harris Junk
Co. Ltd., 904 E. Cordova St.,
Vancouver, B.C. Phone TA
9941.
COPY OF "TALES OF THE
Kootenays" by Fred J. Smyth
.wanted. Quote price. Apply Box
4348, Nelson News.
WANTED TO BUY: CHILD'S
play, pen in good condition. Ap-
ply Box 4136 Nelson News.
WANTED FRAME FOR '51 3-TON
Dodge truck. Apply Jim Sutcliffe
Riondel.
WANTED - CLEAN COTTON
rags without buttons, 10c lib.
delivered to The Daily News.
AUTOMOTIVE,
MOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES
(Continued)
Motors Ltd.
323 Vernon St. Nelson, B. C.
Phones 35 and 36
COTTONWOOD WRECKING SER-
vice—Used parts, batteries, tires
for '47 Olds, '47 Chev., '49 Meteor,
Mercury, '37 Ford, '46 Plymouth,
'47-'49-"50-'51 Austin, Hillman,
Prefect, Vanguard, Morris Minor
cars. For sale '48 Chev. Sedan
Delivery. Phone 1363 L-2 or write
Box 382, 24 Ymir Rd., Nelson,
FINANCING A CAE? BEFORE
you buy your new or late model
car see us about our low cost
financing service with complete
insurance coverage. New cars 3D
months. Contact Wm. Kalyniuk
Agencies at 1777 and save
money.
BARGAINS-1952 AUSTIN $450.00
1948 Monarch $75.00; 1946 Mercury $75.00;. 1937 Plymouth
$75.00; 1930 Model A $100.00. All
in good running order. Apply H,
J. Sanders, Golf Course Gate,
Nelson. Phone 241-Y-l.
MUST SELL '53 NASH STATES-
men. Clean. Good tires. Cheap
for cash. Ph. Salmo 66 Ext. 52
daytime,
1957 Austin A-95
1957 Austin A-55
1957 Buick 4-dr. Sedan
1957 Chev. 2-dr. hardtop
1956 Buick 2-dr. hardtop
1955 Chev. 4-door
1955 Buick 4-door
1954 Pontiac 4-door
1953 Pontiac 4-door
1953 Meteor 4-door
1952 Ford 4-door
1952 Meteor 4-door
1952 Chev. 4-door
1951  Chev. 4-door
1951 Austin A-40
•   •   •
1953 Chev. Pickup
1952 Chev. Pickup
1950 Mercury Pickup
1950 Austin Station
Wagon
WE PAY CASH FOR
LATE MODEL USED CARS
AUSTIN Sales and Servie*
803 Baker St.     Nelson, B.C.
Phone 2000
FOR SALE BY OWNER 1954 HILL-
man sedan. Excellent buy. $200
down. Phone 2137.
FOR SALE 1949 PONTIAC, GOOD
condition. Phone 1037-Y after 5.
(Continued In Next Column)
DAILY-CROSSWORD!
ACROSS
J, Tissue
(anat)
t. A spice
9. Termagant
10. Together
12. Stand up
13. Old coin
<It)
1-4. Blast or
wind
19. Wandered
about
abstractly
16. Like
17. Storage
ar<a
18. Dancers'
cymbals
19. Garden too.
22. Weird
(var.)
23. Column*
25. Father
JT.Am.
Inventor
80. Fuss
31. For
32. Fiji Islands
(abbr.)
38. Armed
bands
35. Remove hat
37. Girl's name
38. To defeat
39. A measure
40. Narrow
roadwai
41. Stitches
42. Let it stand
(print.)
DOWN
1. Song bird
I. Goddess of
discord
3. For fear H. By way J
that of
4. Astonish, 23. Assam
ment (ilk
3. Stone worn-
worker 84. Fuss
«. Small dog 25. Of the
(trop. Am.)       Pope
7. A peeress 26. Bean*
8. Hold In love       tlf ul
9. Legendary        young
tales ma_        Hertwdit- Aim.
ll. Pious 28. Compensate 35. Stupid
15. Moths 29. Very good fellow
17. Chief deity        (slang)        38. Voided
(Babyl.) 31. Fruits escutcheoa
24. Facing 34. Boll slowly   38. Existed
„___   _______
__     ___   ___
______   _U_I_
_______
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__n ___    _n
______ __:._
______ Eirasaup.
____   HEIIlf.
„___   ____
%
1
2.
TT
+
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5
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T
r-
%
1
l
10
II
12.
m
II
14
%
IS
lb
^/A
%
17
m
13
19
20
21
^
21
VA
%
-5
24
0
^<
as
-.
^
Vf
28
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31
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31
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^
35
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40
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%
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*-i
It.
(Programs subject to change by stations without notice.)
DAILY CRYPIOQVOXE — Here's how to '
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW '.'
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample a Is taut
lor the three L _, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apoa_
trophes, the length and formation of the words are iB hinta
Each day the code letters are different
A Cryptogram Quotation
Y    CWWL    JVVA    EI    IVBlCAt    Iff
PA    SNWKAJ    ENVJ    CTAVE    THSMAI
-MTWXA.PK.     •
Yesterday's Cryptoquote! WITH SKILL SHE VIBRATE*
HER ETERNAL TONGUE . . . MOST DIVINELY IN TH_ ,
WRONG—EDWARD YOUNG.
Dl-tribule- by Kins Foot.... Syndi.cst.
■i
 (5£
SMALL INVESTMENT
LARGE RETURNS
That's the Want Ad Story '-   PHONE   £844
AUTOMOTIVE,
MOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES
(Continued)
LTD.
Your Volkswagen-Ramble"
1  Dealer
Be sure you have checked our
top quality used car bargains
before you buy.
1955 Chevrolet Deluxe
Sedan
One Owner.
1953 Pontiac Deluxe
Sedan
Chieftain 0
1952 Chevrolet 5-pass.
New Motor. Real Buy.   /
Perfect Throughout,
1952 Austin A-70'
A Roomy family Car tn
. Flrst-Class Condition.
1952 Vanguard Sedan
FOR ONLY S275.00
1950 Rover Sedan  .
Beautiful Condition.
1949 Studebaker Champion.
A Steal at 1305.00.
1949 Austin A-40
Yours for $225.00
If you are looking for a good,
reliable pickup, cheap, we
have several to choose from.
FOR SALE - 1952 2-TON CHEV.
truck, stake body, first class condition, low mileage, one owner.
Enquire BOX 4110, Nelson Daily
T.49 MERCURY SEDAN, - AW
shape, customized. Will sell or
take '40 to '49 pickup truck, on
trade. Can be financed. Ph.
1049-R after 5 p.m.	
MACHINERY
SPEAR-JACKSON
Supplies'
All popular makes inserted
tooth saws made to your
specifications.
SAWTEETH.
SAW SHANKS   -
BELTING
BEARINGS
BELT DRESSING
•PULLEYS •
BELT LACING
SHAFT  COLLARS
CHOKER HOOKS
CABLE BLOCKS
"WIRE ROPE
Consult Us For
All Your Mill Supplies
son
Company Ltd.
Mining, Milling and Sawmill.
-Machinery
P.O. Box 230'
Phone .18 or 1139
EVENINGS: 792-Y
Chain Saws
FROM $40 and UP
at
H_.wi.lS
KJU DIAL
AvHAT7.ll J
nr^
A PHONE
I C__i-__^vS
J.
NUMBER
PI
FOR ME V
^ff'
V \ x_£
i c
Sl/^/ ' \
wJC
\\m/)\
\w%
v^mmk
RENTAIS
SMALL OFFICE AND WARE-
house with shelving conveniently located in T r u c k Terminus
Bldg. on ground floor Phone 77
jfor particulars.    .
NELSCN DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JUNE 1, 1957 — 11
PROPERTY WANTED
FOR RENT - SMALL UNFURN-
Ished 1-bedroom house in Fair-
view. Apply Personnel Manager,
Kootenay Forest Products, Nel-
. son.
TWO FURNISHED HOUSEKEEP-
i ing rooms to suit respectable
business man, batchelor, or two
quiet business girls. Apply Box
4219, Nelsori Dally News"
ROOM FOR RENT AVAILABLE
June 1st. Fridge and kitchen facilities, 576 Baker St., Apt. B.
Ph. 321-R.
FURNISHED. 2 BEDROOM
house 35 minutes from Nelson.
$35.00 per month. Markoff's
Store, Slocan Park.
FOR JUNE, CABIN ON BEACH
accomodates 4, 4 miles North
Shore. Ph. 782-R-L.
MACHINERY
.DO
IT
NOW!
Hurry in to Finning Tractor
for these A-l values In used
equipment! 1'hey're ready to go
and backed by Finning', exclusive warranty policy and
outstanding service organization. Do It nowl
OAT D3_ power unit, 210 HP
max., Y-ciutcn, steel base, safety
shut-ul-E. _.._eil_nt condition,
only lluo hrs.!. Bonded _uy, _U-
day warranty, to.bi *)_._-_____
Dawson Ck. PT-3530.  «P°dV-
CAT D315 puwer unit, only 1 yr.
old! 90 HP, rad., hood ana dash,
hood door, automatic stop-start.
c_0od condition. Buy and '_ry, 3-
day trial, f.o.b. Van- CQIRft
couver. C.B79. •,........'.. *«WDU
CUMMINS HRCP 400 power unit,
operated only 40 hrs.! Y-clutch,
radiator, base, 110HP at 1600 rpm.
Price slashed $845! Buy and Try,
3-day trial, f.o.b. Van- <J,/Jn_.(.
couver. FT-2930  «P-VVV
GARDNER LW6A power Unit,
COUP, Y-clutoh, steel bane, rad.
In  good  condition.  As  is,  f.o.b.
^°uver- $2700
CHRYSLER T-120 powe'r unit,
Y-clutch, rad, steel base. 70HP.
In good shape, snap price on this
>ne. As is, f.o.b. Van- $_AA
iouver...C-2344. '      *P4UU
FINNING TRACTOR
& EOUIPMENT
-   CO., LTD.
Phone 137 - Nelson
Phone JU-62281 - Cranbrook
Attention
LOGGING
OPERATORS
If you are looking for a 4-
wheel drive lift truck, come
in and see us obout the
new 4-wheel drive Patrick
5-ton and 8-ton models.—'■
Prices start at $6950.
86" Wheelbase, Power Steering,
.. Air Brakes.
Reversing Transmission  (Johnson
Bar),  Oscillating Rear Axle,
Dual Front Wheels.  .
LTD «   •
MACHINE SHOP
324 Vernon St Nelson. B.C.
PHONE 593
PROPERTY, HOUSES,
FARMS, ETC., FOR SALE
PROPERTY, HOUSES,
FARMS, ETC., FOR SALE
■ Continued)
FAIRVIEW, NEW LOCATION
Newly-built, 2-level, 3-B.R.
home. Carport for 2 cars;
double plumbing: twin sinks;
cabinet built-in kitchen; picture window In L.R.; mahogany coppertone doors, etc. —
Family room and recreation
room, patio and sun-deck. 2
l^te, landscaped. J j3(5qq
Liberal Terms.
Home and garden, located 3
blocks from city centre. Well
built five bedrooms, living,
room with fireplace. Also fireplace in den. Well arranged
kitchen and dining room. Full
basement; new oil furnace. —
Liberal Terms, til SAft
Full price  ;. «MJ»aW
North sho_u_
1-Mile. o ac.es wlui birch
grove. 2u_ it. ueaca _iuli.a_,_.
_ilc_U_.es .-bed.ouin Hume and
^e"' $iu,uou
Discount for Cash.
NORTH SHORE (4-MILE)
Low  uown payment, iiea.ly
timshea 3-becuoom home. —
Ample cupuoards anu dining
area, Fuit Dasemeni; new oil
f™ce;$12,500
Includes double garage and
cottage now rented.
FAIRVIEW
'Excellent Fairview location.—
1_-storey stucco 3-B.R. home
oh 2 landscaped lots. Dull
basement, automatic oil furnace (approximately $68 per
year for oil). $9500
Terms. Full price .. «K"*"     ;
FAIRVIEW
Liveable, needs finishing. 2-
B.R. home in choice Fairview
location. Cement basement,
Duroid roof. Natural gas connection. 50' x 120'    4___QOIi
lot. FuU price    *<>»"»
i     Terms.
NEWLY BUILT • -
Excellent view. 2-B.R. home.
Convenient kitchen with dining area. . Picture window.
H.W. floors. Mahogany doors
throughout.' Cement patio. —
I*™-.        $12,500
Full price T"~  ■
FAMILY- HOME
4-B.R.s, attractive living room
and dining room. Furnace. 2 _
lots in fruit trees and berries.
Also greenhouse. S6000
Full price   Jr •
Only $2000 Down.
WALKING DISTANCE
3-B.R. home all on one floor.
Rebuilt kitchen. Attractively
decorated. 2 lots, landscaped.
Drlve-in garage. $$250
Full price
-., With $2500 Down.
OUTSTANDING VALUE
Only $500 down' on newly-
built 5-room stucco home. —
Fourteen miles to city centre.
6 lots and garage. S6500
• Full price v
Terms.
PROPERTY, HOUSES,
FARMS, ETC., FOR SALE
(Continued)
$7500
1—If you are looking for a cute
little 4-roomed house plus
bathroom, you should see this
One. Good-Sized L.R., K., 2
B.H.s   and   bathroom.   Base-
"ew: ?:!°?i_!°! Mooo
2—Close to Jr. H.S. An older type
home but in splendid condition. L.R. and gas fireplace,
D.R., wonderful K., utility
room, plus toilet—all on the
ground floor. Upstairs; 3 large
B.R.s and bathroom. Basement
and good furnace. Property
50' x 100'. Reasonably close in.
Full price
is only   %.
With Only $3000 Cash
Required.
3—A very nice 4-roomed house
plus modern bathroom, ,on 2
acres on N.S. Lots of garden
space and on beach. House' is
winterized. Some outbuildings.
Full price.       ..     $g75Q
4—A Bplendid home, quite dose
in. Has L.R. plus fireplace,
D.R., all H.W. flooring, and
modernistic K: also den, all on
ground floor. 3 large B.R.s and
bathroom, plus a first-class
sleeping porch. Garage on
property. Full basement and
coal furnace. Located on cor-
nerjlots. $ j 4,500
Reduction   for   substantial
down payment.
5^-Two 25' x 120' lots, uphill. —
Sdand .$>ooo
6—A choice of 4 fine bldg. sites
in Fairview. Surrounded by
splendid homes. Each location
90' x 120', and $2000
priced at   ™- vv~
7—A 2-B.R. bungalow in Fair-
view. L.R., D.R., K. and utility
room; also bathroom and basement with coal furnace. 2 level
corner lots. Owner must sell.
Asking price
is
Cash could make a big
reduction,
$7800
Herb Peacock
Real Estate and Insurance Agency
532 WARD ST. PHONE 08
PACKAGE
INSURANCE
Our Business Rates are'
THE LOWEST    -
for Safe, Dependable
INSURANCE.
Exclusive—'
NORTH SHORE
1—West ol bridge. Ultra-modern
5-room bungalow, view location. All luxuries: floor oil furnace, fireplace, dream kitchen,
dinette, colored plumbing,
double sink, wired for range.
About 2 acres with 176' frontage, on quiet secondary high-
way $11 500
Cash .price   *•" J-9VY.
Or $11,800 on Terms.
2—Ranch style 8-7 rooms with
double plumbing, on lake
frontage West of bridge ap-
, proach. Attractive rooms,' modern kitchen, oil furnace. Low
taxes and easy to heat. Landscaped, lawns and garden.—
Most  convenient  lake  front-
Zc?.*l $14,500
COMPARE OUR VALUES
BEFORE YOU BUY.
T. D. Rosling
& SON LTD.
M. "Trader" Parker, Salesman
508 WARD ST. - PHONE 717
WELDING & EQUIPMENT
CO., LTD.
PHONE 1402
614 Railway St.      Nelson, B.C.
FOR SALE PLANER, BULLDO
zer, 8x6 trucks. 713 Victoria St.
flOR SALE - MODEftN ,-BDRM.
home. Spotless condition. Auto.
611 heat in high full cement basement. Neatly landscaped
grounds. This tastefully decorated home will welcome you at
once..Apply 1816 Stanley Street.
COTTAGE OR HOUSE FOR SALE
both modern. V. Hoskin (Balfour) R.R. 1, Nelson.
(Continued to Next Column'
OfcCHAftD LOTS L6VELY VIEW.
Gordon Rd. and 8th St. Ph.
1272-L.
C. 'D.
'Age-icy   \
REAL ESTATE AGENTS
INSURE UNDER A
CO_. jcsifl- POLICY AND
SAVE 20% of Your. P—nhim
Phone 99 — Eves.-1821 -L
List Your House
Funds on Hand to Get the
'        Deals Closed
MANY BUYERS
WAITING
C. W. APPLEYARD
& Co. Ltd.
Phone 269
PARTLY FURNISHED- SUMMER
cottage at six mile point on the
North Shore, water and electric
light, one hundred foot lake frontage. Apply Art Gill, 340 Schofield
Road, Trail, B.C.    .
BUILDING LOTS IN CITY,
level property, every convenience, schools, bus and utilities,
variety of fruit, 45 x 120 ft. Located 610 Gore Street. $800,
terms. Phone 429-R,
BUILDING LOT ON NORTH
Shore overlooking lake and city
Phone 692-R-l.
Agencies- Ltd.
554 Ward St.
Phone 135
FARM FOR SALE, 13 ACRES, 3-
bedroom modern house, orchard,
irrigation. 5 miles south of Nelson. Lewis Robinson, Phone 93.
Salmo after 5 p.m.
PROPERTY. HOUSES,
FARMS. ETC., FOR SALE
(Continued)
FOUR ROOM HOUSE AT WILLOW
Point. Phone 782-X-l.
APT. HOUSE FOR SALE 5 SELF-
contained apts. half . blk. off
Baker. All in good condition.
Grossing 15%. Full price $22,000.
Half cash will handle. 414 Fall
St. Phone 1184-Y.
TWO-ROOM SUITE, FURNISHED.
Adults. 823 Vernon St.
FOR SALE ON NORTH SHORE
overlooking bridge and park. 2
bedroom modern home and
lovely Iivingroom with open fire-
place. Phone 1071-R.
FOR SALE, 2-BEDROOM HOUSE,
dining, living room, kitchen,
3-f iece bathroom, furnace, 3 lots.
Apply 2013 Stanley St. Ph. 1652-R.
FOR SALE 6 SUITE APARTMENT
House..Revenue per month. One
block from Baker St. Contact
Mike Ero, 614 Victoria St.
FOR QUICK SALE, BLOCK OF
lots (22 lots), nice'location. Apply Box 331, Salmo, B.C.
TRA1J.ERS
MUST BE SOLD
Within 30 days.
30' Anderson Trailer
Plumbing, Electric Brakes,
Fully Furnished.
Best Offer Cash or Terms
APPLY
CRESCENT BEACH
A  AUTO COURT
Evenings — Or Phone 1786
BUILT FOR CANADIAN ROADS.
Insulated for Canadian Climate.
Terry & Aljo> Travel Trailers.
Also Flamingo Mobile Homes,
double insulated. Trailers 15 to 50
ft. Prices fromV$l250.00. Barrett-
Trailer Sales, 745 Kipling St.,
Trail, B.C.
33 FT. 8 MONTHS OLD TRAILER,
yellow and grey.' Beautiful interior. Latest hitch, 4-wheel
brakes. Automatic oil heater.
Sell very reasonable. Sunnyside
Trailer Court, North Shore. '
WILL TRADE 12 BASE HOHNER
piano accordian. Like new for
record player. Ph. 1557-L.
TRAILOMOBILE ' LOGGING
trailer. Top shape. Long or short
logs. $2800.00. Ph. 1359_t.
BUSINESS' AND
'ROFtSSIONAL DIRECTORY
ASSAYER8  AND  MINE
REPRESENTATIVES
•E  W  WIDDOWSON St CO.
Assayers, 30! Josephine St., Nelson
H   S   ELMES,  ROSSLAND.  B.C
Assayei Chemist Mine Rep
ENGINEERS   AND   SURVEYORS
BOYD C. AFFLECK, M EIC
BC Land Surveyor. P Eng (Civil)
218 Gor« St-   Nelson,   Phone 1238
G. W.  B'AERG,  B.C.
Land Surveyor
373 Baker St, Nelson. Phone 1118
FOR §ALE - 2-ROOM HOUSE,
garage, _ acre land. Upper
Bench, Kinnaird. Apply 34 Columbia Ave., Castlegar.
M. E. McCORQUODALE, B.C.L.S.
Land and Engineering Surveys.
1234 Bay Ave., Trail, Ph. 2752. Office Mgr., Ray Johnson, B.A.Sc.
1015-8th St., Nelson, Ph. 144-R.
MACHINISTS
BENNETT'S LIMITED
Machine Shop Acetylene and
electric welding, motor rewinding .Phone 593      324 Vernon St
I
EACON'S
ETTER
UYS
'TFncoTn;;!
Weteor ~
GUARANTEED "SAFE-BUY"
USED CARS
em
New Pick^Up Trucks.
Deluxe Cabs, Heaters, Turn Signals
Full Warranty and Factory Guarantee
Many Late Models To Choose From
Lots of Good Deals
w
_ ll * —o
Nelson, B  C.
701 BAKER ST.
HOUSEKEEPING OR SLEEPING
rooms, furnished, weekly or
monthly rates. 171 Baker St.
UNFURN. 3-RM. APT. FOR RENT
423 Silica St. Phone 1011-L.
HOUSEKEEPING   ROOM   FOR
rent 606 Front Street.
HOTELS and MOTELS
THE ALMER HOTEL, OPP. CPR
Depot, Vancouver, B.C. 100%
fireproof, 24-hour elevator service. Clean, quiet & comfortable.
Reasonable rates. City centre.
WILL YOU STAY WITHvUS
when in Spokane, Washington?
City 'center, parking 1 block.
Comfortable rooms w/wo bath
Low, low rates. Colonial Hotel.
WANTED   TO   RENT
WANTED TO RENT BY OIL CO.
sales representative, 3-bedroom
house, automatic heat, wired
for electric range. Apply P.O.
Box 440, Nelson, B.C.
URGENTLY NEEDED - FURN.
apartment or house by couple
with 1 child. Ph. Pauline at
217-R.
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
FOR SALE - NELSON LADIES'
Wear. Snap for cash. Apply Bol
4005 Nelson Daily News.
PERSONAL
ALCHOLICS ANONYMOUS
Fridays, Box 493. Phone 366-R or
483-R.
Price per singlo copy 6o Monday
to Friday, 10c on Saturday
By carrier per wees;
in advance - ,35c
Subscription Rates.
By Mail in Canada outside Nelson:
One month       .'..   $ 1.25
Three months      $ 3,50
Six months   __.    $ 6.60
One year   .         $12.00
By mail to United Kingdom or
the United States
One month'    3 1.75
Three months .  $5.00
Six months _    $ 9.50
One year      $18.00
Where extra postage Is required
above rates plus postage
. For Delivery by carrier in Cran.
orook phone Mrs. Wm. Stevelyj
In Kimberley Mr. G A Bate;
In Trail Mrs. Syd Spooner.
and' ,     .
In Rossland Mrs. Ross Saundry:
INTERESTED IN A REVENUE
apt. property. Give terms and
full particulars first letter to
Box 4365 Daily News.
BOATS AND ENGINES
SEE YOUR FAVORITE 1957
Johnson outboard on d I s p I a y.
AH h.p. rating and some electric.
They're scarce, order early.
COLEMAN ELECTRIC, Phone
2055, Nelson, B.C. Big trades
Easy terms.
(Continued In Next Column)
BOATS AND ENGINES
■ Continued'
14-FT. WALTON BOAT, 5 HORSE
twin outboard. A-l shape. Accessories. $225.00. Terms. Can be
seen at City wharf. Phone 1459
see W. McDonald.   ■'•
Winnipeg Grain
WINNIPEG   (CP)  -  Winnipeg
grain cash prices:
Oats, No. 1 feed, 65 _.
Barley, No. 1 feed, 84%.
READ THE CLASSIFIED DAILY
Family Home, nine years old. 2 4R-s down and 2 B.R.s upstairs,
living room, dining room, modern kitchen, bathroom, main floor;
Full basement,. economical automatic oil heat, located on lour
corner lots, assorted new fruit trees bearing, garden, near city
bus stop. Separate garage. 4 I 4 ______
Price reduced Irom $14,500 to ...:; _',., v I 1.UUU
With $5500 down payment, balance iong terms.
Phone for an appointment right now and see for youreelf.
KOOTENAY LAKE FRONTAGE
9.93 acres with 235.62 feet lake frontage. Good access road, near
Harrop ferry. Level frontage, suitable for two or three summer
homes; good beach. Buy now and enjoy our beautiful    C 17CA
lake this summer. Cash price *P * ' ou
FOUR ROOMS
Located at 605 Richards, near bus stop. Full ba.ement, wired for
electric range, floor ,11 furnace, Insulated. Low f_0£.f_
taxes. Full price    «PO_-OU'
With only $1000 cash down, balance as rent.
Small 2-bedroom home at 1416 Vancouver St. on 4.01 Al.
two lots. Cash price  ' ip_IUU
NORTH SHORE LOT
70 by 210 feet .with water and electricity. Level, good    Cl Offn
access, near new church. Low cash price .: «pi*«IU
N.H.A. APPROVED LOTS
16 locations to choose from priced at $1600 to $1100 each. —
Easy  terms.
ROSEMONT
New, three bedrooms, full basement. Exceptionally well built,
easy to heat. On two lota. CO?....
Full price «P3-UU
With only $2500 down payment
HOME WITH A VIEW
New, 2 bedrooms; large kitchen with dining area, beautiful living
room, with picture window, overlooking the lake.   «-tn enft
Separate garage.'Good _!_ed lot Cash price ■........:..:„.. f • W,-JMU
HOME AND BUSINESS '
Store and Cafe on North Shore. Building is two/ storey, with
living quarters above. S B.R.s, L.R., bathroom and good-sized
kitchen. Business, building and equipment for only $7500 down.
Vendor says will accept a home for part of the down payment.
Will listen .te- any p-opdsltlon you hive;
'9 Till*       - TT"       ll -._ ;'.•'.'
.gencies
Low-Cost Auto Financing, Real Estate and Insurance
534-JOSEPHINE ST. NELSON, B.C, PHONE 1777
PEEBLES  [ PEEBLES  I  PEEBLES
■ Stop and S
Compare Our Prices
1
Chevrolet.2-Door Sedan
Low Mileage. , AC Unit, New Seat
.    Covers,   New   Tires.
Like New Inside and Out.
,'!•'    Only
I H74i
w
i
__&
Vanguard Sedan
Custom Radio, Custom. Heater,
Seat Covers, New Ti-res,
Rebuilt Motor. Very Clean.
Mercury 4-Dbor Deluxe Sedan
New Paint, Power Steering, Power
Brakes; Custom Radio, Custom AC
Unit, New Rubber. Very Clean.
M
Chevrolet 2-Door Sedan
New  Paint,   Custom   Heater,
Overhauled  Motor,  Good  Rubber.
Nice and Clean.     ,  .
CASH —
TE.R.V.S
Many More to Choose From
—       TRADES
[HHYSE-1 ~ PLYMOUTH - FARjD^ BliHl
iB-KH
 12 — NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JUNE 1,1957
Pictures Are Forever
And.Will Renew. Happy Memories
'"    as Nothing Else Can. •'■'.
* Cameras
* Films of Ail Kinds
* Developing Supplies
* Film Developing
«
at...
w
I *\"'""vvw^i
MANN
DRUGS LTD.
LONGEST RIVER
The Nile, flowing 4145 miles
from Ethiopia to the Mediterranean, is the world's longest river.
RADIATORS
CLEANED and REPAIRED
RE-CORING
Jim's Radiator Shop
IIS Front St. Phone 63
HAIGH
TRli-ART
Beauty  Salon
570 Baker St.
Phone 327
for  «
Complete
Automotive
Service
INCLUDING:
•k Body, Fender and
Painting
■jr Automatic Transmission (a specialty)
if Front End Alignment
ir Tire Balancing
ir Frame Straightening
if Wheel Straightening
n*
SEE
MICKEY McEWEN
BEACON
Motors Ltd.
701  Baker St.
PHONES  578-579
CAMPBELL,   SHANKLAND
&  CO.
Chartered Accountants
Auditors
S76 Baker St. Phone 235
J. A. C. LAUGHTON
OPTOMETRIST
VISUAL  TRAINING
Suite 206 Phone 141
Medical Arts Buildinc
Have The Job Done Right
VIC GRAVEC
■        LIMITED        **
MASTER PLUMBER
PHONE 815
Dtit-TE
9-1 Tonight
ROCOTONES
On the Bandstand
Saturday Night Is Dance Night
All Over Canada.
Join the Gala Weekend Crowd
at the PLAYMOR ... The
Kootenay'. Favorite Dance
Rendezvous.
Dance Saturday
JUNE 1st
Ymir Community Hall
Dancing 9 p.m.-l a.m.
MUSIC BY, , - , , '
DEAN CLARK AND BAND
From Metaline, Washington ,
Admission: 75c per Person
The Corporation of the
City of Nelson
Applications will, be received by the Corporation of
the City of Nelson for the position of    '.
BUS DRIVER
commencing June 3, 1957.
Starting salary $273 per month, per union agreement. Medical and pension plans in effect.
Applications in writing may be forwarded to the
undersigned by noon Monday, June 3rd, 1957.
E.E. OLSON, BA, Sc,
-Works Superintendent,
City Hall, Nelson, B. C.
Odds...
Ends
and
byM.D.B.
I.have four five.cent stamps, but
for goodness sake don't tell anyone, for I am trying to keep it a
dark secret. Periodically I go to
the postoffice when I am feeling
flush and buy five fives, .or if it
is just after payday I might even
go so far as to get ten which T
tuck carefully away in my wallet.
Now, when I write a letter, I say,
I shall have a stamj. and be able
to mail it promptly instead of a
week or so later, when I come
across it still unmailed. •
*:-*■•
In'theory this is an ideal way o£
looking after one's correspondence,
but for some reason or another it
never works out that way for me.
As I believe I have told you, I
seem to run a little private dispensary — entirely by accident —
but nevertheless that's what it
amounts to. Anyone in need bf
aspirin, blank cheques, envelopes?!
bottleopener, bandaid, elastic
bands, nail file (to borrow for a
raggy nail) — and stamps comes
to my desk in the full knowledge
they have but to ask and they will
receive (most of the time.)
#  *  *
Therein li_s_the root of my stamp
difficulties. By the time I get
around to writing a letter I have
sold all my stamps and since I
seem to write letters at hours when
stamps are difficult to come by, I
end up a week later with the letter
still unposted. Somehow, having
written it I feel no further obligation and thus forget to go and
purchase that all important dash
of color for the envelope.
Well, as I said, I am now the
proud possessor of four fives, for
how long remains to be seen. I
might add I am confronted with
the same difficulty with bandaids.
The other day I had raised a
couple of blisters, but did I have a
bandaid left to apply? No sir, I had
to go and borrow some.
*' * *
Sashing along Carbonate Street
Thursday was aware of masses of
color in the garden at 808 Carbonate — what a glorious display
of rhododendrons was there, to say
nothing of a variety of other
blooms. Those shrubs certainly
make a wonderful show, these particular ones were inclined to a
salmon color. The more I see of
them the more I think I shall have
to invest in one.
OTTAWA (CP) - The" Income
tax appeal board, with some strong1
criticism of the revenue department, has allowed the appeal of a
taxpayer against the reopening of
his assessment more than six years
after his taxes had been settled.
In a judgment signed by board
member W. S. Fisher it was ruled
that the department' had no right
to reassess Earle R. Hall of Vancouver for his 1947 and 1948 income taxes without alleging there
had been misrepresentation or
fraud.
Mr. Fisher noted that under the
income tax law in force at, the
time the department could only
reopen a tax case within six years
of the original assessment except
in .cases where misrepresentation
•or fraud was alleged. The act has
MONTREAL (CP) - An eye
hank set up in Montreal last
year now has 315 future "depositors." That many persons have
promised to donate their eyes to
the bank on death so they may
Appeal Board Allows Taxpayer
To Appeal Assessment Reopening
Secrecy Veils
Missile Flight
COCOA, Fla. (AP)-The United
States defence department is emphasizing secrecy as the announced time for the firing of its
inter-continental ballistics missile,
the Atlas, draws near.       .' ■ .
Representative James T, Patterson (Rep. Conn.), a member of
the House armed services committee, said Tuesday the Adas
would be fired Friday from the air
force missile test centre on Florida's Cape Canaveral.
"I hope that Russian observers
will have an opportunity to see
the great rocket in full flight,"
he added.
■ But the defence department
doesn't want the Russians, or anybody else, to know when or if the
missile is fired. -
NOTHING TO SEE
When the Atlas blasts off, a lot
of people in this heavily populated
vicinity will hear it, but by the
time they turn their heads toward
the sound, there's nothing to see
but a wisp of vapor across the
sky, ,
It could have been the Atlas,
the Jupiter, the Snark-or one of
several other missiles with which
the various branches of the armed
services are experimenting/-
After Patterson's announcement, a public information officer
at the missile centre, said there
will be no official statements either before or after a firing.
Patterson said the Atlas, if fired
successfully, will, reach an altitude of 700 miles and travel about
2.200 miles in controlled flight,
since been changed to. reduce the
i eopening period to four years;
Mr. Fisher told the government
counsel he was "put of court" unless his defence against MR. Hall's
leal involved misrepresentation or fraud. The government's
counsel said it did\ not but sug-
g»sted the department could add
these allegations to Its defence
but Mr. Fisher ruled "it is a,bit
too late to do it now."
WILL  OT  BE  PARTT -
The board member 'said if he
proceeded and tried to determine
himself whether there had been
misrepresentation or fraud ."then
this board would have been put
in the position of making an original determination which in fact
has to be. made by the minister
(of national revenue) before be is
entitled to iqake a reassessment
in any case where more than six
years have elapsed from the .date
of an original assessment made'
by him for the taxation peridd,
"And as a member of this
board, I, at any rate, will; hot be
a party to, putting the board in
that position, since, in my opinion, it is a position to which
neither this board nor any other
court should subscribe."
Mr. Fisher allowed the ?"peal
and ordered the department reassessments of Mr. Hall's 1947 and
1948 taxes vacated. The amount
involved in the reassessments
were not disclosed.
be  used  for  corneal  transplant
operations   which   often   restore
News of tha Day
RATES: 30c line. 10c line slack.acs type: larger type rate, on
rogues- M'rlmum two lln__. 10% ill-count for prompt payment
Babies, Weddings, Portraits.
VOGUE STUDIO — PHONE 1552
VOTE WRIGHT
JUNE 10
Lamp Shade Paper
HOBBY SHOP   -   PHONE 1703
For a Varied menu try
TILLICUM INN — BALFOUR
New laid eggs, delivered weekly.
Amsden Poultry Farm, Ph. 559-X-3
For better lawns use
Buckerflelds, special fertilizer
MAC'S FLOWER SHOP
Dry slab wood for sale. $11.50
for 4 ft; cord; $15.50 for 12-inch
cord. Ph. 330-L.
Gordon Sutherland
Painting, Paperhanging, R.R. 1
Phone 1990, Nelson
Save on Bamboo drapes
Natural finish - ready to hang
STERLING HOME FURNISHERS
HEAR DR. C. H. WRIGHT AND
JOHN DIEFENBAKER ON CKLN
TUESDAY, JUNE 4 AT 7:30 P.M.
Sprayers and Dust Guns
Latest Models at
COVENTRY'S  FLOWER  SHOP
PHONE 96.
Fur Storage, Cleaning and Glazing.
Expert fur repairs. Remodelling
at
CUSTOM FURS - 580 BAKER ST.
Wall cleaning by machine.guaranteed, and at a reasonable cost.
INTERIOR WALL CLEANERS
PHONE 1122     .
Standard  size  window glass,
single and double weight.
T. H. WATERS & CO. LTD.
101 Hall St.     Nelson    Phone 156
Phone 77 for
all local moving, shipping and
distributing.
SPEEDY   DELIVERY
Astral Fridge, A-l, $55.00
WE PAY CASH FOR USED
FURNITURE
BIRCH'S FURNITURE • PH. 47.
SOCIAL CREDIT
PUBLIC MEETING .
Salmo, Saturday, Juno 1,8 p.m.
Guest Speakers
T-Shirts arid Sport Shirts
for girls and boys at'
EBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.
FOR YOUR NEW HAIR STYLING
& permanents try, the Charm
Beauty Salon, Medical Arts Bldg.
Ste 211. Phone 1922.
Don't forget, Bob Camp, your
ALL STATE AUTO INSURANCE
AGENT
will be at your Simpson Sears
Store every Saturday. Phone 1490.
LOOK BETTER, FEEL BETTER
in individually designed Spencer
foundations and brassieres. Mrs.
W. H. Naylor, Box 597, Castlegar.
Phone 5133.
Veterans welfare officer will be
at the Canadian Legion No. 51
Nelson, on Monday morning, June'
3. Please contact Legion Secretary
at .546 for interviews.-
BENEFIT   CONCERT
Boys' Student Choir and Sr. vocal
students presented by Mrs. T. J. S,
Ferguson, Capitol Theatre, June
3, 8 p.m. Admission 75c.
H. W. HERRIDGE
CCF Candidate for Kootenay West
and'
R. STRACHAN, MLA
CCF Provincial Leader, will address a public meeting Legion
Hall, Sat., June 1st, 8 p.m.
BEVERAGE DISPENSERS
UNION, LOCAL 707
IMPORTANT NOTICE
COMBINED SPECIAL AND REGULAR MEETING SUNDAY JUNE
2, CANADIAN LEGION, 8 P.M.
URGENT THAT ALL MEMBERS
ATTEND.
The CNIB home classes conduc*
ted by Miss North will be held at
the home of Mrs. George Talbot,
1817 Fall Street, commencing June
3. Would anyone requiring transportation contact Mr. W. H. Cross-
ley at 1543-Y evenings, or 1160,
local 15, days. »
FUNERAL NOTICE ,
WILLIAMS — Funeral services
for the late William Joseph Williams will be heid at the Thompson
Funeral Home Monday at 2 p.m.
Rev. H. R. Whitmore will officiate, and interment will take place
in Nelson Memorial Park.
Union Gas Company's
Net Profits Higher
CHATHAM, Ont. «*■) - Union
Gas Company of Canada Ltd. had
net profit of $2,359,836 or $3.34 a
share for. the year ended last
March 31. This compared with $2,-
,275 or $2.86 a share the previous year. .  •'.
The company's annual report
says income.rose by $1,641,875 to
$15,277,827 for the year, due mainly
to an Improving gas supply position.
UIC Manager
Talks to Students
This week Grade XI and Grade
XII students of the L.V. Rogers
High School were given short talks
by D. M. Disney, local manager
of the Unemployment Insurance
Commission.' .
To the Grade XI students ttie
theme of the talk was the road
ahead,.and pointed out tp the students upon graduating a year from
now they would be entering a new
field of endeavour. During their
"travels on this new highway they
would encounter many pot holes
and detours before finally reaching' the pinnacle of success for
which they all would be striving.
It was pointed out by the speaker that, planning was a main part
of any'successful venture and that
plans made now, if carried
through, would eventually lead to
successful careers in their chosen
fields.
To/the graduating students Mr.
Disney explained the workings of
the National Employment Service
and the services that were available to the new job seekers. He
emphasized that success did not
come easy and that those who
had .set goals "for themselves
careerwise should bend every effort towards achievement.
Students will be visiting the local
office from 7 to 8 p.m. Monday to
register for employment or for
counselling.
JUDITH ALLEN
WINS $50
SCHOLARSHIP
Judith Elaine Allen has been
awarded ' the Adele Eisenschimi
Scholarship.
The scholarship is tenable at the
piano division of this year's session
of the Banff School of Fine Arts.
It is worth $50.
Miss Allen was notified of the
award this week by Senator Donald
Cameron, director of the school.
The school is operated by the University of Alberta at Banff.
Miss Allen is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Nelson Allen of Nelson.
Diesel Inquiry
To Move West
OTTAWA (CP)—The royal commission investigating the CPR
diesel dispute is going on the
road.
It was announced Friday that the
commission, headed by Supreme
Court Justice' Kellock, will adjourn its- Ottawa hearings about
June 14 and proceed westward to
conduct further hearings at four
centres and view many of the
railway operations which have
come under discussion.
The commission was set up to
investigate the dispute between
the CPR and the- Brotherhood of
Locomotive Firemen and Engine-
men (CLC). The railway^proposes
to eliminate firemen from freight
and yard diesel locomotives but
the union maintains they are necessary.
The dispute brought a strike
that tied up the CPR for nine
days last January. The commission plans hearings in Toronto
June 18 to 20; Winnipeg«June 27
and 28; Calgary July 3 to 5 and
Vancouver July 12.
It then will adjourn to reconvene in Ottawa on a September
date to'be announced later.
CPR Policeman
Returning to Coast
Constable J. C Vincent, CPR
Police, was presented with a go-
ing-away gift by G.- L. Phillips,
district superintendent of the CPR,
on behalf of his fellow-employees
Thursday.
Mr. - Vincent' will return to the
Coast to resume duties at Vancouver. He came to Nelson in April
1956. Const. J. Matser of Vancouver will take over his duties at
Nelson.
Mr. Vincent served in the Navy
during the last war and joined
the CPR in 1953, He is an avid
fly-fisherman who has fished over
all .the province. He declares the
Slocan pool compares • favorably
with the best fishing pools to be
found in B.C.
SWIMMING
TIME?
Even if the water is too
cold, enjoy the sunshine
and relax in a
Jantzen or Carolina
SWIM SUIT
Both Trunk and
;  Boxer Style.
$2.95-$5.95
EMORY'$
Limited
THE MAN'S STORE
HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Chicken
pox almost knocked out Thursday
i.-jht's Playhouse 90 production on
television. A Columbia Broadcasting System spokesman said Portland Mason, eight-year-old daughter of actor James Mason, went
on in her part although in the
early stages of the disease. Then
she was rushed home to bed by
her mother, actress Pamela
Mason, also in the play.
PRESCRIPTION
SPECIALISTS
City Drug
Tour Rexall Pharmacy
It is only Common Sense.
a car that operates efficiently
costs less to run
Consider your car for instance. When
you use the right gasoline and motor oil-
when your car Is properly lubricated and
serviced, the satisfaction you get from the
performance of your car Is greater and the cost
of transportation Is less. At ROYALITE,
modern high compression ears, ears with
high mileage and the smaller economy cars
can ali be serviced with the proper fuels and
lubricants for greater efficiency"and
economy. Stop at your nearest ROYALITE
Station, the dealer will be glad to help you
with the right petroleum specification
for your car. There is econolny in using
the right petroleum product
ROYALITE
PREMIER & REGULAR Gasolines
ROYALITE &
ROYAL TRITON Motor Oils
The Hallmark of Motoring  Satisfaction
