 upp
--—-
The Interior's
Largest Daily Newspaper
March Daily Average Press Run 9057
%5b
Vol.56
•5*8 vynwrrA
Published at Nelson, transmit iviomaoHc*   \nent, financial and trading centre of,the Kootenay-Columbia^area.
6< »w if t «*
Weather forecast
KOOTENAY: Sunny periods.
Little change in temperature.
Winds light. Low and high at Cranbrook and Crescent Valley 35
and SO.
I CANADA-MONDAY MORNING, APRIL 6, 1959
Not More Than 6c Dally. lOo Saturday.
No. 291
Must Balance India Security, Tibet
Friendship, Relations With China
NEW DELHI (Reuters) — Prime Minister Nehru admitted Sunday that Indian feeling over Tibet coupled with India's security and her relations with Communist China
"sometimes makes difficult choices."
In an hour-long press conference, dominated by questions on the Tibetan revolt, Nehru said it- is not the government's intention to put "undesirable curbs" on the Dalai
Lama, Tibet's god-king who escaped into India last week and
arrived Saturday at the Buddhist monastery of Towang, on
the India-Tibet border.
"I am sure he would not like to take any steps here
which  would embarrass
us
or him," he added.
On India's relations with China,
Nehru said: "Conditions and embarrassing situations are created
and may continue."
THREE FACTORS
The government had three major factors in view—India's security, friendly relations with China,
and. the strong feeling in India of
developments in Tibet.
"Sometimes there is a contradiction between these. We have therefore to balance and adjust and
sometimes make difficult choices."
The New China news agency
reported   meanwhile   that   the
Panchen Lama, 21-year-old rival
ef tbe Dalai Lama, arrived Sunday In the Tibetan capital of
Lhasa to head the Tibetan government.
Ih a dispatch from Lhasa; the
Communist agency said the Panchen Lama will function as acting
chairman of the preparatory state
committee set up following dissolu
tion of the Tibetan local government March 28.
The report said the Panchen Lama will act as chairman "during
the time that the Dalai Lama is
under duress by the rebels."
JUNIOR LEADER
The Panchen Lama, Nego Ed-
deni, is the temporal leader of Tibet but is junior in importance to
the Dalai Lama, spiritual and temporal ruler.
Supporters of the Dalai Lama
opposed the selection of Nego Er-
deni as Panchen Lama.
Peiping has quoted statements
by him backing Its policy at the
time of the Korean war  and
promising last January to follow
Communist party instructions.
Nehru told his press conference
he had sent a message to the Dalai Lama on his safe arrival in
India. He said China had not protested about India giving political
asylum to the 23-year-old Tibetan
leader and "any country has (he
right to give asylum to anyone."
illllilllllllliililliiiiilliilllllllillliiilll
Synthetic Chemical
Of Life Produced
BOSTON (AP) — University of
British Columbia chemists have
produced an Important chemical
of life syntbe#:sfctiie,iAnjerlBft{i,
Chemical Society; reported Sunday.
This chemical is coenzyme. A,
needed by every living cell of human and other life. Its synthesis
for test-tube production was termed a significant step in the search
for complete understanding of life
processes. ...
Enzymes are regulators of chemical transformations involved in
life processes. Coenzyme A is one
of the most important agents working in concert with enzymes.
The chemical synthesis will provide a cheaper, abundant source,
of coenzyme A for many studies'
Khrushchev Told
To Slow Down
of life chemistry, including numerous disease States.     ■ ■;
Synthetic coenzyme A nias produced by pp. John G. .Moftatt and
■W.-ft. Gobihd Hhorana of the British Columbia Research Council St
the Vancouver university.
PLANS VITAL ROLE
Coenzyme A' li produced by living cells themselves, and apparently plays a vital role in acetyla-
tion, a basic process In nearly all
cell function.
"The biological importance of
coenzyme A cannot be overestimated," Dft Moffatt Said. The chemical can be obtained from yeast in
* fairly jiure form, but Costs about
$17,000 an ounce that way, he said;
Now it can be made synthetically from relatively inexpensive materials.
HAMBURG, Germany/(AP) -
The Hamburg tabloid Aildzeitung
says doctors have told Nikita
Khrushchev to slow down his working pace.
In a dispatch from Helsinki, the
mass-circulation newspaper quoted
unidentified "East-bloc diplomats"
as saying the Soviet premier had a
fainting spell recently.
~   It said doctors were particularly
worried about Khrushchev's high
blood pressure and excessive'Columbia
weight. deaths.
20 Accidental
Deaths in Canada
By The Canadian Press
Twenty Canadians died accidentally during the weekend, 13 of
them in Ontario and Quebec.
A Canadian Press survey from
6 p.m. local time Friday until 9
p.m. MST Sunday showed that five
persons died in traffic accidents in
each of Ontario and Quebec, two
in Saskatchewan and one in Manitoba.
Newfoundland,  Nova Scotia,
Prince Edward Island and British
reported no accidental
Finds Money Post
,GANANCii}UE, Ont. (CP) -
Donald Flanagan of Gananoque
has found the next best thing
to a money tree.
He found a $10 bill pinned
under a telephone post nail
Friday. Four hours later, on
the same spot, he discovered
a $20- bill.
Police are as baffled as Flanagan over the source of the
hioney.
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiimiii
Britons Hope.
For Tax Cuts
LONDON (Reuters) — Britons
looked hopefully today toward the
budget to be disclosed In Parliament Tuesday. Most fiscal experts
expect It to contain substantial tax
cuts.
This almost certainly will be the
Conservative government's la St
budget before it seeks a new mandate. With public opinion polls
showing the popularity of the Conservatives and the Labor party almost even, the government will be
anxious to win back some voters
by putting more money in their
pay envelopes.
The government also is anxious
to stimulate home industry'by
moves aimed at creating new jobs
for the unemployed, who now total
350,000.
. In addition, there has been a.big
improvement since, the last budget
ih Britain's external financial position as one of the world's major
trading nations. -
Politicians expect the top standard rate of. income tax, now Ss 6d
on the pound, to be reduced by at
least sixpence (seven cents).
The government's main aim. is
to cut unemployment; whichjwould
seriously threaten its chances, of
• third tehfl'tt'lt'ts Sot reduced
before October, When most 'observers expect an election;
PRESIDENT EISENHOWER apeaki at the
10th anniversary session of the North Attantlo
Treaty Organization, held In Washington,- D.C..
April 2. Seated, from left, are: Christian Herter,
United   States;  Selwyn   Lloyd,  Great  Britain;
Fatln Rustu Zorlu, Turkey, Marcello Matthias,
Portugal; HSIvard Lange, Norway; D, U. Stlkkor;
Netherlands; Eugene Schaus, Luxembourg, and
Gulseppe Pella, Italy.
—AP Wirephoto.
Ingrid Honored
At Party
HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Sir Laurence Olivier danced a hot jitterbug with* hostess Anita Louise in
the wee hours Sunday to wind up
one of the gayest movieland parties in years — the welcome home
for Ingrid Bergman.
Top figures of Hollywood showed
up lor the dinner-dance given by
Miss Louise and her studio boss-
husband, Buddy Adler,
No one-enjoyed the party more
than the gjiest oi honor.
"I'm having a wonderful time,"
Ingrid beamed. "It seems, that 1
have never been away."
TV  ACCIDENT
MARSHALL, Texas (AP) - Mr.
and Mrs. Ivan Foster were electrocuted when a television antenna
they were putting up touched a
power line Saturday. Mrs. Foster
was on the roof guiding the antenna which her husband was pushing aloft at tbeir home about 30
miles west of here.
No Appeasement
Says Eisenhower
By DOUGLAS B. CORNELL
GETrySBUHGj Pa, (API- Pre
sident Eisenhower said Saturday
the facts of international life tolerate no appeasement of Russia — in
Berlin or.anywhere in the world!
Wherever they occur and whatever the form op cost, Eisenhower
told a college audience,' "Commu-
Need Seen lor
NewM^^^^
TORONTO (CP) -William1
Dodge, vice-president of the Canadian Labor Congress, said Saturday actions of Premier Smallwood
in the Newfoundland loggers dispute underline the need for a new
political party in Canada.
He was addressing a joint meeting of the United Packinghouse
Workers and Brotherhood of Railway Transport and General Work
ers. The meeting was held to discuss proposals for a new political
party based on a partnership of
the CCF and labor unions.
"I don't' think .you, could find
over the last -10 ior 15 years' a
better example for the need of a
new political party to fight enterprises such as those undertaken by
Mr. Smallwood," Mr. Dodge said,
He referred to Newfoundland:
legislation decertifying two, locals
of the International Woodworkers
of America (CLC) and another law
•giving the government the power
to banish from the province iny
union whose officers; have been
convicted of "heinous crimes". '"
"What is going on is not just an
ordinary labor dispute. This is a
fight for the preservation of the
fundamental rights of organized
labor.".' .'.   ■
nist challenges must always be answered by the free world."
"The course of appeasement is
not only dishonorable, it is the
most; dangerous  one we could
pursue," he said.
He termed unthinkable any idea
of sacrificing 2,000,000 Germans in
West Berlin.. He said it. would
merely "embolden the Communists
to step up their campaign" of
world domination.
tn a "foreign policy pronouncement at Gettysburg College, Eisenhower erected no barricades in the
path toga prospective summit con-
Tertnce^WSMet*P?ernif Nfkfta
■Khrushchev.
TALKS PREFERRED    '"■  .
The United States and Its allies,
he said, seek to avoid war, to "substitute . '. . the conference table
for the battlefield." While rejecting appeasement, he also spoke out
against rigidity or stubbornness in
dealing with Russia.        - ' ■■
Eisenhower appeared at an outdoor convocation to lecture oh "the
need for gbeater individual and collective understanding.of the international facts of today's Ufe" and
the threat to freedom from atheistic dictatorship.
Civit Inquiry
To Resume
THREE MEM3ERS of the US8 8kate, atomic powered sub-
marine, examine samples of lea on the deck of their craft surfaced at the North Pol*. The underwater ship left New London,
Conn., Maroh 4 and dovs beneath the lee for the three-day trip
to the Pole. In Polar region'teats the aub surfaced tan times to
Drove that atomic submarines can punch through the Arctic lee
bap within .mlaslie range of Russia at any time of the year- - .
v —U.S. Navy photo via AP Wirephoto.
Vicar's Jazz Mass
Heard During Service
NORFOLK, Coim. (AP) - Solemn mass began Sunday in a
New England church with the
ripple of a jazz piano.
This was something new in religious music-the so-called "jazz
mass"—and a standing - room-
only crowd edged forward to
listen.
The drummer picked up the
beat, and then the sounds of a
thumping four - piece combo
pierced the dim interior of the
wooden and stone church.
Some you-nger worshippers
swayed unconsciously in their
seats with the music, others
tapped their toes. SHU others sat
stiffly and intently, as did their
elders.
The music was the Ttoentleth-
Century Folk Mass written a few
years  'ago   by  Rev.   Geoffrey
jaumont, vicar of St. George's
Church, Cambe-weH, England.
It was performed Sunday by
the Russ Martino Quartet and the
choir and clergy' of"Sf:*rPaul's
Episcopal Church. The quartet,
visible to the congregation, wore
plain dark suits, While the choir
wore robes.
The powerful church organ was
silenced in favor of the j>iano:
played by Martino, plus drum's;
bass and alto sax.. s      ,.- ■   Jf;'--.-
Rev, Anthony P. Treasure^ rector of St. Paul's, said the mass
was an attempt to put the words
of the solemn eucharist in a familiar musical setting.
The Kyrie Eleison and the Agnus Dei were sung above the
thythm of a Beguine/a Latin-
American dance rhythm; the offertory hymn was. a waltz, and a
bold, swinging melody in four-
four time ran through; the Gloria,
Sanctus and Benedictus.
Pastor Treasure said "we intended to show our youth that
religion is not old-fashioned."-
Reactions to the mass were
mixed: ->v '
H. M, Taylor, a New York advertising director — Vthls really
isn't; anything new, you know.
Sqmt} of the 11th-century plain
chants were originally drinking
Marian Larson, a high school
studen^-"it sounded more like a
cocktail party.'" ... .. .,;
CALGARY (CP) - A judicial inquiry into Calgary's civic administration resumes today with Mayor
Don Mackay scheduled to take the
stand "to tell the whole story."
The inquiry adjourned Feb. 27
following a two-week sitting which
heard evidence concerning: construction of the mayor's Summer
home in Banff; gifts to city officials including furniture valued at
11,200 presented to the mayor and
his wife; circumstances under
Which city-owned land was sold to
New York interests and resold as a
shopping centre site at four times
the amount.
With only a few minutes remaining before the inquiry adjourned,
Mayor Mackay said he would, prefer: not to take the stand until the
inquiry resumed full-scale sittings
I want to start right frorh thii
beginning.'I don't want to be left
hanging like this, so J would just
as soon wait until I can tell the
whole story/! he said. ./
The inquiry was ordered last fall
by Premier Manning of Alberta- at
the request of City Council after it
censured Mayor Mackay for improper conduct. The mayor admitted-borrowing 30 bags of city cement for a personal construction
job at his Banff home.
Illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
Stitch inTime
LONDON' (API-Love hustled
to beat the tax collector all over
Britain' Saturday. The average
bridegroom stood to gain about
£42 in repaid income tax by
marrying on the last day of the
fiscal year. Many brides thus
found it the easiest time of year
to coax her betrothed to the altar.        ' -    .       . -
Churches and register offices
reported a record turn-over with
ope wedding party after another
plowing through each other's
confetti. '
. .  Treasury rules are that a
man is entitled to husband's al-
' lowaiice for tjie whole fiscal year ,
If he marriesbefore it ends.
lllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllll
Dies in Fire
GIROUXVILLE, -Alta. (CP) -
Mrs. Alphonse Belanger, a middle-
aged woman, was burned to death
Sunday when fire destroyed her
home in the Girouxville region 215
miles northwest of Edmonton. --"'
Mrs. Belanger was alone in the
building at the time. Her husband
Was working at Sturgeon Heights
75 miles by road from Girouxville.
The fire was believed started by
an explosion caused by Mrs. Be-
'anger lighting a stove with coal
oil. Fierce flames kept firemen
from entering the building.
VANCOUVER (CP) - Editor Al
Forrest was suspended from the
University of British Columbia on
Saturday by the executive council
for the publication of a "goon"
edition of the student newspaper
.Ubyssey, described earlier as "sac-
riligious and disgusting.''
Also suspended was Rupert Buchanan, a former editor in chief of
the newspaper.. ,
The suspension will be effective
until Forrest makes a public apology to the student council and the
university as a whole. It was not
known why gudianan was suspended.-
Neither of the two men took
part in publishing the-editiOn which
satirized Easter in three pictures
arm captions-, but Forrest said on
Thursday he would be responsible
'for the entire newspaper staff.'
. "I am not trying to be a martyr," he said. "I am, only making
a choice I feel any Christian —
or any other -man of honor-~would
make'/.'' : it is -four of them or
pne of rae." ';■
Saturday's meeting wes held in
private. .The result was learned
through a univer'sity" spokesman.
SOVIET CHARGES
AIR VIOLATION
INTENTIONAL
-MOSCOW' (AP) -The Soviet
Union charged Sunday that a U.S.
plane intentionally violated regulations of the West Berlin air corridor March 27-in order to worsen
.East-West relations on the eve of
a foreign ministers' conference,
The note published by Tass was
handed to the U.S. Embassy Saturday—just as American authorities
in Germany were rejecting a Soviet complaint that a U.S. C-130
transport created a hazard by.flying too. high, i
The, note raised the issue to a
formal diplomatic level. Previously
the argument had been confined to
the four-power air safety centre in
Berlin.'   , .y .
It accused the Americans of
ending in the high-flying plane out
of "a desire to prejudice conditions
for the meeting of. foreign ministers or even to wreck the agreement on negotiations between -East
and West". - '.'■>...
It said the Soviet Union, on the
other hand", "allows nothing to
happen that would be liable to
hamper the situation on the eve of
the negotiations but is doing everything to make these negotiations
easier".
Ready To Negotiate
Honorable Settlement
WASHINGTON (AP): — The IS Atlantic Pact powers
have put Russia on notice of their united determination to defend Western rights in Berlin as well as the tights of its 2,-
000,000 people.
At the end of a 10th anniversary meeting Saturday,
they reaffirmed their readiness to negotiate an honorable
settlement of German problems — provided it does not imperil free-world security,.;
Paul-Henri Spaalc^ NATO secretary-general, urged
correspondents to .proclaim this unity in unmistakable terms
to keep Russia from a "totally, dangerous miscalculation"
that might spark a war...
Only "difference in shading and
opinion," as. he put. it,, .remain
among the, Allies. He said any
other impression is totally false.
"When the negotiation start with
the Soviet the single front of- the
West will be there," he said. •
TOOK HARDER
POSITION
As the Western foreign ministers arranged to leave for home,
there were signs that a tougher
negotiating position had been hammered out under pressure from
West German Chancellor Konrad
Adenauer's government.' \
A team of British, American,
French and West German working experts will draft final proposals beginning April 13 In Lon-
\ don. These'will be reviewed by
foreign   ministers   meeting   in
Paris or Geneva and offered to
Russia at a Big Four foreign
minister conference opening In
Geneva May 11.
To meet Russia's demands for
an end to four-power rule in Berlin, the- Western Big Three were
reported considering these offers:,
1. New arrangements maintaining full-Western acdess to West
Berlin but only if they are based on
continuing Soviet ^Mognjljon of
Western Big T*$p rights t» be
there as wartime conquerors of
'N^.Gmts^^-.'r.;,<^.t.u--:—' r
2. Creating a special commission which woulrl brink 'East and
West Germans together on a nongovernmental level to increase
economic, technical'and'•cultural
contacts between the two areas.
This would rule out formal recognition ofthe East German regime.
3. Discuss a special arms control zone in central Europe, including at least parts of Bast and
West Germany. This would seek
to limit troops and weapons but
would be linked to progress in reunifying Germany.
The shape, of the •Allied views
clearly reflected West Germany's
insistence that' nothing . be done
which would remotely harden the
East-West, division .of Germany,
The West Germans also insisted, Informants said, that no arrangements, should be concluded
which implied final recognition of
Russia's right to give part of East
Germany tq Poland after the war.
The Germans were reported .ready
to pledge avoidance of force in regaining this territory.
The 700-word final communique
said delegates expressed -"full
agreement on the broad lines of
policy," to be followed in settling
German issues.
Trinidad Seeks '
Independence
By E. P. SMITH     !
PORT OF SPAIN, Trinidad
(Reuters) — The Trinidad government is preparing to demand full
independence from the West Indian
Federation within the Commonwealth.   . •
The demand will be made at a
conference to be held in June to
review the federal constitution established Jan. 3, 1958.
Trinidad's chief minister, Dr.
Ei-ic Williams, has said a "decisive
change" in the constitution is the
surest: way to political stability,
which would be needed both for the
federal government's internal program and in order to obtain assistance from abroad.-        - ■■.'..
Williams is drafting proposals for
full internal self-government for
Trinidad, restricted only by the.
prior..needs yaA de^aajnds^ St£ Jhe..
feaSratfoh;'.', -."....'   ""/■"
Some of his recent proposals for
constitutional change leading to
full internal self-government for
Trinidad have been accepted by the
Colonial office, in London and are
expected to take effect shortly.
CROSBYS EXPECT
STORK VISIT
ISHPEMING, Mich. (AP) - The
Bing Crosbys are going to have another baby.
Crooner Bing's wife, Kathy
Grant, Confirmed Sunday that she
was expecting another child in September or October.' ■■ ■
Mrs. Crosby"arrived here Saturday] She begins work today in the
film Anatomy of a Murder. The
film is being shot here and Mrs.
Crosby has a starring role.
The Crosbys have one child.
LT. GEN. ROBERT W,
BURNS, commander of U.S.
forces In Japan, ordered a military plane back to Tokyo alter
it took off when he found seven
enlisted man on emergency leave
had bean ordered off the flight
A lieutenant oolonel and hla
family, on vacation, had been
given their seats. The Gl'a got
their seats back.
;   / —AP Wirephoto.
And in This Corner. ♦ ♦
NEW YORK (AP) —The Long Island Rail Road's umbrella
bank'has survived Its first rainy day. •
The bank is a scheme devised by an employee. He took tho umbrellas left on trains and put them In bright containers for commuters to borrow on rainy days, and return on their honor.
Thursday's drizzle led to a run on the bank, and all SB umbrel.
las were taken. By noon Friday, 49 were back.. 	
Whether or not the bank will remain In business will depend
upon the honesty of borrowers, the number* of absent-minded passengers who continue to leave their own umbrllas on trails and
forget to claim then), and the number of rainy days. , if
NEW HAVEN, Conn. (AP) — Poems will cost a penny apiece
here Monday. If you buy one, you can be assured of having a limited edition.. "    ■        ' :■.
Three Yale students are promoting the poetry sale this way:
Fellow students all over the U.S.—unpublished poets all—have
been sending their efforts to William Byler, Alan Shavzin and Lewis
Lipsitz. The Yale trio has been duplicating each poem 200 times.
Come next week, the 200 copies of each poem will be exhibited,
face down, in a local bookstore. Purchasers may plunk down a penny and take home a poem. They may not read be£or;e buying.
There's no profit motive, say the Yale students. They Just want
to help fellow poets become published.
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — Thirteen-year-old Doug ■ Elder
complained that he had trouble washing his horse, Duke
Service station owner Bill Shannon Jokingly told Doug: "Bring
him down to tho ttatlon. We wash cars, why not horses?"
Shannon gulped when Doug showed up at the station with his
horse Friday. But he led Duke to the wash rack and spent an hour -
washing the hprse.
Shannon, deciding to add a new service, said: "We'll wash all
the horses we can get." He said he oharged Doug $2, 50 cents more
than the price of a car wash. "A horse moves around, while a car
will sit (fill," he explained.
The price Included manicuring four hooves with whit* sldewall
cleaner.
 2-NELS,0N DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, APRIL 6, 1939
MARLON BRANDO'S
GREATESTHIT!
...KIHUNTER-KARLMALDEN
TONIGHT — CompUle. Show. 7:00
CIVIC
M-MlMSIP-tV
201H CEN1URY-F0X
9:10
["SAFARI'1  ||
I e i (Cinemascope and Color).    I
•    Victor Mature, Janet Leigh    |
"    'Gartddri and Shorts,'.< ,
.__§___Mtmi$ ■*'«■*
DRIVE-IN
. Tonight and Tuesday
Complete Shows 7:30, 8:15
A. ELLSTROM DIES
'- A resident of the Nelson area for
Almost half a century, Alvin Ell-
strom dj*l Sunday at the age -of
78. Mr, Ellstrom was a miner by
profession and had als* worked On
*oad Construction In the it years
he lived in Nelson. '■".
Born in Sweden in 1881, He came
to Canada and to B. C. in 1904. His
home was on Grarit/s Road. ■ '■-  .
Not married, his only known survivor is a neice, Mrs. Ri.F. Locke
of Mission City. ■.'.''        ,    '.
Your EXPERIENCED
Travel Agent
JIM VIPOND says:
Art, automobiles and antiques,
flowers and photography are
some of the subjects Which
will attract throngs of visitors,
to New York City's Coliseum.
.The Art Exhibition will be'on
April 13-19; Photographic Show
April 18-26; United States
World Trade Fair May 8-19,
Leave here this afternoon, be
in New York in the morning,
$213.00 return. Listen to "Holiday Abroad" Sundays at 8:30
p.m. on CJAT TrailfilO K£.
Write, Phone or Call
'"THE VIPONDS"    ,
GLOBE
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LIMITED  -
1146 Cedar Ave. Phone 2.115
TRAIL, B.C.
AUTO-VUE
DRIVE-IN  THEATRE
Trail, B.C. '■''■".
TONIGHT and TUESDAY
i'Fiend Who Walked- the. West'*
.  (Cinemascope)       ' ,v
Hugh O'Brien, Robert Evans
SHORT and CARTOON
sags
CASTLE THEATRE
.      Castlegar, B.C.
Tonight, Tuesday, Wednesday
"HIGH COST OF LOVING'
Jose Ferrer, Gcna Rowlands
CARTOON•SHORTS - NEWS
Mrs. Holl Dies
Mrs! Wa4iierflr^,-'iiS8bUfJ70,
wife of City gardener Frank Holt,
died Saturday night at Courtenay
after a long illness.
j Mrs. Holt was born in Hull, England. She and her husband lived in
Regina beiore coming to thfe Nelson district in 1932.
At Willow Point and Nelson,
Mrs., Holt Was extremely active in
the Guide - movement, training
many girls and directing affairs of
the association. She Was a past
captain of the Willow Point Girl
Guides.,
A. member of the Women's Afmy
Corps during World > War I, Mrs.
Holt was an Active member Of the
LO.D.lS. in NelSoni .   '
She irnd been living with her
daughter, Miss Betty. Holt, at
Courtenay for two years while receiving medical treatment. % .
Funeral services wijl be in
Courtenay.
Besides her husband and daughter, shp is survived by a sister in
Sidney, B.C., a sister in England
and two brothers in England.
LAST RITES FOR
MRS. LINDBLAD
Funeral services for Mrs. Charlotte Lindblad were held Friday at
the Evangelical Mission Covenant
Church which was filled to capacity. Rev. E. Hanson officiated.
Hymns sung were' "What a
Friend We Have Iii- Jesus" and
"Abide With Me". Miss F.Clemo
sang a solo, "Beyond the Sunset".
Organist was. Miss M. Pennoyer. :
Pallbearers were Roy Lindblad,
William Evans, C. 0. Anderson,
John Leslie, E. N. Stone and P.
Letkeman. .      . '<■
Interment took place in the family plot, Nelson Memorial I|ark.
Peaceful Meeting Requests
Gov't Allow Sorokin Return
. KRESTOVA, B.C. (CP) — The Sons of freedom Doukhobors. a radical section' of the 12,000-member strange religious sect in British Columbia, want to remain in Canada,,
A. brief has been handed io RCMP officers indicating
that the radical members of the sect do not wish to migrate
to Russia..
It was presented to police officers who attended a meeting of 300
members of the Sons of Freedom
here.
A summary released Saturday
said the police had been asked to
transmit the brief to Ottawa. Senior RCMP officers here declined
to release- details Of the brief.
It was the first time in tht stormy
history of the Sons of Freedom that
police officers had been invited to
a oonference. ;';. • '.
STOOD NUDE ;    "
During the meeting at least a
dozen men and women disrobed,
standing In the nude while lesd'ers
Of the .sect explained'the.stay-in-
Canada plan.
The Sons of Freedom also want
federal authorities to assist in the
bringing back of their spiritual
leader; Stefan S. Sorokin who since
1952 has lived on a 25-acrc orchard
farm near (Montevideo,1 Uruguay.'
i"0r more thaji-.a year the leaders of the 3000 Sons of Freedom
have campaigned for a return to
Russia, claiming persecution under Canadian laws.   < ,,
Sorokin, self-styled spiritual leader, went to South America in 1953,
Supposedly to find a home-land
for his followers. He has been
there since, except, for a brief■
Visit he made here in 1953.
"We need Sorokin to give direction and .purpose to our lives," a
spokesman told RCMP officers.
The bearded leader is known {p
have backed the move for a return
to Russia.  ,
NO EXPLANATION   ',■>;
There was no immediate explanation for sudden change on the part
of his followers. >
Some weeks ago spokesmen said
representations would be made to
the World Court at The Hague
against their claimed Canadian injustices and discrimination.
-Pacifists, the Sons, of Freedom
claimed Canadian schools taught
militarism, and that man-made,
laws could not be adhered to by
sect members.
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NELSON.  B   C.
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FREEDOMITES SEND
BRIEF TO OTTAWA
Interviews with RCMP officers
and leaders of the sect Saturday
and Sunday.gave, the Impression
that the Sons of Freedom request
waS not to remain In Canada, but
to ask government assistance In
■ bringing Stephen 8,' Sorokin back
to Canada,
Confirmation Of the contents of
the brief could not be established
up to press time, but Freedomites
in Nelson Saturday and at New
Denver Sunday denied that they
wanted to call off their move to
Russia, .i
Staff Sgt. William McKay of the
Trail detachment, RCMP, said in
a ' telephone interview that the
meeting .was a peaceful one.
"There was-no hostility . . . everyone seemed happy to see us there.
.,Reports- that the meeting hud
been "noisy" with "shouting,
Bcreaming, .weeping men ahd women" and hostile toward the attending police were "very distorted",
the officer said.
Chairman Michael Hadlkin. Had
Detoured by
Slocqn Slide
Traffic on .the Slocan highway js
detouring around a slide on the
New" Denver-Silverton section,
Flow of cars and trucks was
stopped for several hourS .Friday
when a 200-foot section'of'the
highway slid down the bank.
The slide was caused by the
heavy rains last fall, which weakened the under surface, a-provincial government .highways department official reported on Sunday
night., The road is down approximately two feet and skill sliding
slowly.
A detour has been constructed
around the edge of the. slide and
reconstruction will begin as SOoh
as the roadway stops shifting, the
official said;
The section is about one mile
south of New Denver;
PHONE 1844 FOR CLASSIFIED
good control of tho gathering
all times".
In Nelson, RCMP Said their impression of the' meeting was that
the Sons of Freedom were trying
to put pressure on the Government
to request Sorokin to return to Can
ada. .,..,-'.-       ■.'   :
A statement promised the Daily,
News by Peter Elasoff, Jr., secretary of the Fraternal Council, failed to materialize.
When asked for the. promised
comment on the brief, Elasoff declined "until,it has been studied
and analysed by the government."
But informal discussions with
sect leaders pointed out their
strong desire for the return of Sorokin, whom they regard ss spiritual
leader and even as "Messiah."
• His "peaceful return" and spiritual guidance is sought by the sect,
Andrew MakOrtoff said Saturday.
"If the Government doein't let
Sorokin come back, there will be
more, trouble,'* he said.
HUDDLING IN THE RAIN outside the school dormitory at New Denver, the Sons
Of Freedom began their three-day Easter celebration Sunday. The sect, which has renounced the Christian Easter and is celebrating instead the anniversary of the arrival oi
their spiritual leader, Stephen S. Sorokin in Canada, found their plans restricted by
rain. Some took cover tinder canvas as theygreeted their children through the fence.
Freedomite youngsters attending Russian sy greeted their children through the fence,
today.—Phofp by Stevens Studio.
Algars Finish Basketball
Season With 16-Point Lead
Algar Dunlops, winning team of
the city Senior Men's Basketball
league, finished the 'season well
ahead of their rivals with a six
point lead.
Algars won 13 games of 21 played for 26 points, while (heir closest
rivals, Whiteleys, won 10 of 21
games played for 20 points. The
third place team, City Auto, won
nine of 21, finishing the year with
18 points.
As well as their season win,' Algars won the city championships
for ,the McLachlan Jeweller's Trophy, winning two of three games
against City Auto. Whiteleys were
knocked out of the. playoffs by City
Auto when they lost a two-game,
total-point semi-final series by one
point.
individual scoring honors were
taken by Algar's sharpshooter, Al
Duncombe. A magnificent shot
from- anywhere on the floor, he
scored 403 points during the season 'for an average of 22.4 points'
per game. Jeff Craig of Whiteleys
was second for the scoring honors,
netting 357 points in 18 games for
an average of is points per game.
City Auto Star Lome Shockey
finished in third spot with 320 points
for an average of 9.7. Fourth scorer was Algars Bill Phillips with 250
points for a 10.4 average.
Whiteleys led in the team shoot-
Baseball Season Opens
, Earliest Ever
By JACK HAND
NEW. YORK (AP) - Baseball
beats the gun Thursday with its
earliest start ever after the greatest player shuffle since the end of
the war.
Once again New York Yankees
and Milwaukee Braves are favored
to meet in the world series although the going may be tougher
in each league,    j
Chicago, Detroit and Cleveland
are expected to test the Yankees
with Boston a6 an.outside threat.
San Francisco and Pittsburgh generally are counted upon to press
Milwaukee with some support for
Cincinnati's new power.
The old cry ."You, can't tell the
players without a scOrecard'1 really
is true this time. Such established
major leaguers as Frank Thomas';
Jimmy Piersall, Billy Martin, fid-
die Yost, Vic Wertz, -Sad £ a m
Jones, Del Ennis, Ruben Gomez,
Wally Moon and the bullpen pair
of Ray Narleski and Don itossi
will be wearing new uniforms.
The- owners, are gambling with
the weather ia .starting four days
earlier than usual. Their bonus is
an extra weekend that Could be
profitable both at the gate and on. The Pirates will open at home
the network, television ,series. As Friday against Milwaukee, which
usual, the season will end on the I, has backed up its catching staff by
last Sunday in September. adding Stan Lopata of the Phils.
The Thursday schedule calls fori   San Francisco, flushed with pen-
only two games. In'the ceremonial Bant talk after picking up S a m
opener at Washington, President
Eisenhower may throw out the first
ball before COokie LavagettO's Senators take on Baltimore Orioles.
Lavagetto said he would use Pedro
Ramos as his. pitcher.
The Senators are minus Yost and
Rocky Bridges, who also was traded to Detroit.
Baltimore has .an 'interesting
rookie in centrefielder. Willie Tas-
by. Paul: Richards has been experimenting with the infield, trying
to find a little'more punch. He may
try Whitey Lockman. ex-Giant,
Chico Carrasquel, ex-Athleflc, and
Bill Klaus, ex-Red Sox.
PIRATES VS. BEDS
The other Thursday ganie will
be played in Cincinnati with Pittsburgh Pirates as the guests. This
game provides a check for one of
the big winter deals that brought!
Jones from the Cards for Bill
White, will opeft at St. Louis in a
night game Friday:-The" Cardinals
are in a rebuilding phase u n d e.r
Solly Hemus, who is going.with
six young pitchers.
Los Angeles also opens on the
road at Chicago. Wally Moon, the
ex-Cardinal traded for Gino Ci-
moli, has won a Dodger outfield
job. The Cubs' prize rookie is outfielder George Altaian, up from
Pueblo.
Philadelphia has a home night
opener against Cincinnati when the
Phil fans will get a first look at
their new second baseman, George
Anderson, while Robin Roberts
takes his 11th opening day assignment.     , '   -.;   '
The Yankees take on Boston Red
Sox at Yankee Stadium Friday.
Chicago and Detroit clash in the
Ing percentages, with an attempted-made average of 35.5 per cent,
Algars ran second with 34.5 per
cent* and City Auto with 31.4 per
cent-
Algars also led in the overall
scoring averages; with a 24 game
average of 47.1 points per game.
City Auto netted an average of 45.1
points in 26 games, and Whiteleys
scored 1005 points in 24 games for
a 41.8 average.
Following is the individual scoring list.
P—points; FG—field goal percentage; FS-foul shot percentage;
F—fouls against.
P
FG
FS
F
A. Durtcombe (A) .
493
41
62
52
J. Craig (W) .
357
43
61
36
L. Shockey. (|CA) .
320
40'
32
79
B. Phillips (A)	
250
27
41
37
G: Strong (CA) ....
177
39
43
36
T. Catonio (CA) ..
159
m
60
73
J. Postnikoff (W)
144
m
62
35
M. RetlWiSk (A)
142
28
37
74
G. Correale (W) ..-,
123
27
52
29
P. RenwICk (CA) ...
105
26
39
64
B. McLean (W) ,..
103
29
32
25
A. Sherwood (CA)
93
31
3(1
27
H. Mason (W) 	
85
30
60
8
G. TrainOr (A) 	
69
33
38
27
J, Kenzie (W) 	
57
19
24
26
M. Pasecreta 	
55
23
20
14
R. Lanki (W) 	
36
34
57
11
M. Mackie (A) ....
33
21
32
46
L. Correale (CA)
33
26
27
n
E. Latvalla(CA) .
32
3R
38
A
G. Towhey (CA) .
31
78
25
7
A. Beach (CA) 	
31
29
41
10
A. Campbell (W) ...
30
22
35
27
J. Phillips (A) . .
29
fi
„
_
L. Fofonoff (CA) .
28
38
±.
1,
J. Ross (CAl	
25
19
56
12
B. Grey (A)	
16
30
_
14
E. Buckley (A) .
12-
14
29
12
B. Bennington (W)
10
12
40
8
B. Malcolm (W) ...
6
20
29
6
REINDEER MILK
Eskimos in the Yukon and Alaska prize reindeer milk as a beverage and ingredient for making
cheese.
Art Influences World
Nelson Audience Told
Every principle artistic style has
had an important influence on the
design and public taste of the era.
This conclusion was made at a
lecture by Abraham Roganick Saturday night at the Capitol Theatre,
The lecture, sponsored by the
Koerner Foundation and the University of British Columbia, was
presented by the Nelson School Of
Fine Arts..
"The 'Pre-RaphSelites' were the
strongest In the second half of the
19th century. They helped to pull
the public out of the artistic apathy that had existed since the
world's fair and exhibition at London in 1851," he said.
The exhibition, housed in the famous Crystal Palace, was considered by the leading art critics of
the day to be in extremely bad
taste. The only exception was the
building itself. Constructed of steel
and immense areas of glass, it was
judged to be the architectural
triumph of the .century; though one
critic termed it "ah enormous
green house."
The articles on exhibition showed
the worst in taste, he said. Where
a straight line would normally exist, a curved line was used and as-
thetic design was considered more
important than functional design.
Mass production complicated the
issue of design.    • '' '
In the field of sculpture, said Mr.
Rogatnick, Classic nude was purified and made respectable in the
eyes of the Victorians by bringing
in a chastened aspect."
Though the leading thinkers of
the era told the public about taste
and design, there was a "colossal
public indifference."
"The Pre-Raphaelites considered
the art of the period to be crude,
lacking the purity of line and the
mass of detail that art during the
time of Raphael showed in abundance. They were especially in
censed by the Currier ;s and Ives
type prints of the era."
CHINESE INFLUENCES
As the movement was dying out,
the Chinese influence began, led by
James Abbott McNeill Whistler.
Whistler felt that the severity of
line and the exactness of detail of
the Pre-Raphaelites must be shunned, that they "interrupted" a
painting, Mr. Rogatnick said.
He was the first crusader of "art
for art's sake," said Mr. Rogatnick.
"To Whistler, painting existed tor
itself, it was an escape from na-:
ture and life. 'Art is not a means,
but a goal.'
"Whistler led the middle clasaln-
to god taste; showing the lily, the
peacock and the sunflower as good
examples He began to follow the
Japanese style, introducing sweeping lines into his pictures. Soon the
fad caught on and everything was
designed in this often beautiful but
sometimes difficult style."
Cubism was the next   style   to
come before the public eye. Strict,
straight lines, rather than sweep-'
ing ones were employed.
"A clean-up of the mass of styles
was attempted by group of French
artists who called their style 'Da-
dalsm'. This style attempted to
horrify and confuse the public — It
generally succeeded.
"Surrealism under the guidance
of Salvador Dali overcame and
grew out of Dadaism. For a time it
was considered to be very radical
and shocking, but today it is 'old
hat.' "
THE WEATHER
NELSON ...  _    39 53   -
Saturday     34 58 —•
Medicine Hat ■   26 67   —
Kimberley   ,..  33 60 Tr
Penticton    39 59   —
Vancouver    43 50   ;0S
Frank Thomas to the Reds and]opener at Detroit.
sent Don Hoak, Smoky Burgess and    Cleveland plays' at Kansas City
Harvey Haddix to the Pirates.      I in the other Friday game.
A BLAZING INFERNO, this house at Taghum was reduced to rubble shortly alter
the picture was taken. The single storey structure belonging to Mr. and- Mrs. George
Kanigan, caught fire while the owners were visiting1 a neighbor. Cause of the fire has
not J)een determined—Daily News Photo, by Gerry Stevens.
B
To Our Milk Customers
Commencing April 8, 1959 our employees will be on o five-
day work week.
In order to cope with ever increasing costs ond in an endeavor
tp hold the price of milk at the present level, it is necessary
to reduce milk delivery one day per week.
Therefore, commencing Wednesday, April 8, 1959, and «ach
Wednesday thereafter, our salesmen will not deliver milk in the
Nelson area.
Regular deliveries will be made on Monday, Tuesday, Thursday,
Friday ond Saturday of each week.
The highest standard of quality and service will be maintained
under our new delivery schedule.
Your co-operation in returning all empty milk bottles would
be much appreciated.
Palm Dairies Limited
NELSON     ,
B. C.
Kootenay Valley co-oP Dairy
NELSON
B.C.
 	
^
Plan June Beginning for
47-Bed Kimberley Hospital
KIMBERLEY — Construction of
the proposed 47-bed Kimberley and
District General Hospital is slated
to begin in June.
Earliest date work could begin
Officials
Expected at
Camp Site
CASTLEGAR — Representatives
from Commonwealth Construction
Company Ltd., of Vancouver,
which has the contract for building
the Celgar Ltd. construction camp,
are expected here today.
' The camp, which will be built at
an estimated cost ol over $400,000
will include erection of a cafeteria,
and recreation buildings, a staff
house and eight bunk houses to accommodate 600 men who will be engaged in construction of the $50,-
000,090 kraft pulp mill and sawmill
development. It is anticipated that
Commonwealth will build up a
working force of 60 men by the end
of May.
This week will also see start ol
work by Fraser River Pile Drivipg
Company Ltd., of New Westminster, which last fall was awarded
a contract for woodroom foundation piling work.
Part of the pile driving job will
be done on land, and part in water
at the site.
The woodroom is where logs will
be chipped before going to digesters as part of the pulp preparation
process.
The two companies will be in
close contact with representatives
of H. A. Simons Ltd., of Vancouver, consulting engineers for the
project. •
MOVING
ANYWHERE
'"-,'■-Across the hand, or
across the street
. -.-, .'iwe move you
' wr*:K''«are, quickly.
Our rates ore low,
free estimates.
Dust-free storage.
Insurance available.
Gall today.
WEST
TRANSFER
CO.
719 Baker St.    Phone 33
NELSON, B.C.
is June 1, provided no snags are encountered wi"1 the B.C. Hospital
Insurance Scheme, hospital administrator Selwyn Simonds announced
following the annual meeting of the
kimberley and District Hospital
Society,
Paul Smith of the Arm of Smith-
McCulloch of Trail said - that a
structure containing 47 beds had
been drawn «as the immediate objective, with a wing capable of
holding 24 beds to be constructed
when needed.
Mr. Simonds, who doubles as secretary of the Board of Trustees,
said it was likely the addition
would be completed at the same
time as the main portion of the
building, depending Of course, upon
the reaction of the BCHIS, the
availability of funds and the'tender accepted.
Plans were sent to BCHIS headquarters at Victoria March 26. If
approval is forthcoming quickly
from Eric Martin, Minister of
Health and Medical Services, tenders will be called within 30 days.
THOMPSON RE-ELECTED
At a meeting of the board immediately following the general meeting, G. A. Thompson was re-elected chairman and Mr. Waites was
returned as vice-chairman. W. A.
Poole is treasurer. Also on the
board are three elected members,
H. S. Nordlund, J. O. Quinn and
Alaska Highway
Bill Said
"Unacceptable"
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) -
Erik Neilsen, member of the Canadian Parliament for Yukon, said
Saturday a bill introduced in the
U.S. Senate for the paving of the
Alaska Highway is "quite unacceptable" to Canada.
He said Sen. Richard Neuberger's
bill, introduced in the Senate Feb.
19, spells out an international
agreement in which Canada has
not been consulted.
'If the bill is passed by Congress, as is expected, Canada could
be asked to accept it as a fait accompli without modification and
without having had an-opportunity
to negotiate," he said, noting that
it provides for equal contribution
by each country.
Speaking at a meeting of the
Fourth Annual Minerals Conference, the Progressive Conservative
MP said there has been no government - to - government approach on the proposal.'
MAIN AUTHORITY TO U.S.
The Neuberger bill required joint
Canadian-U.S. financing of $11,-
000,000 a year each for six years,
or a total of $66,000,000 from each
government and placed most of the
authority for administering the project with the United States, he said.
"K, the bill goes into committee,
it is likely that the U.S. State' Department would ask for Canada's
views.
"But it could be advanced that
Ihe proper time to ask for those
views would be before the bill was
introduced at all. In other words,
negotiation before legislation,"
Neilsen said.
He said his - statements represented those of Alvin Hamilton,
minister of Northern Affairs and
National Resources, and the rest
of the Canadian Cabinet.
FOR A REAL TREAT IN HEAT ...
WESTERN
MONARCH
DRUMHEILER DEEP SEAM
■N :... t    -
PHONE 889
Towler Fuel & Transfer!
Department of Highways
NELSON - CRESTON DISTRICT
Load and Speed
Restrictions
Load and Speed restrictions will be rescinded en the
following highways in Nelson-Creston Electoral District effective 12:01 a.m. on Monday, April 6/1959:
That portion of No. 3   Southern   Transprovincial
Highway from Nelson to Castlegar.
That portion of No. 3 Southern Transprovincial
Highway from Nelson to Balfour.
That portion of No. 6 Highway from South Slocan
Junction North to Slocan Park.
RESTRICTIONS WILL REMAIN  IN  FORCE ON
ALL  OTHER  HIGHWAYS  WITHIN  THE   NELSON - CRESTON  DISTRICT UNTIL FURTHER
NOTICE.
« A. L. FREEBAIRN,
District Engineer.
Nelson, B.C.
AprU 3, 1959.
H. A. Howard, and three appointed
members — Mark Beduz as representative of Kimberley City'Coun
cil, William Nicholson representing
Selkirk District and F. L. Lewis as
the provincial representative.
Odds., a
Ends
and
,byM.D.B.
Another April, and another spring,
And earth enchantment wears in
every view;
And every year I'll be remembering
Another   spring  when   April
brought me you.
A changeful miss is she, this April
maid,
She laughs a little, weeps and
laughs again; '
The brown earth stirs i beneath her
dainty tread,
And lilacs bloom in every country
lane.
Her laughter is for (overs, in whose
hearts
Lie all the hopes and dreams for
future years,
For them her smiles, her lilac-
scented blooms,
But those with empty hearts must
share her tears.
» * »   ■
I^enjoyed a story recently about
a cabbie getting into a heated political argument with a mayor as he
was faring him to another part of
town. The cabbie got so riled that
he stopped his cab and ordered
the rn,ayor out. Right or wrong, it
is better not to argue with a cabbie
or a barber. They both value their
own opinions highly and regard
themselves more or less in the
know on all worldly matters. They
will defend their philosophies and
opinions to the death and if it is
tie barber it is not difficult to say
whose it would be.
. ♦  .
I would think that discretion
would be the better part of valor,
to let them have their opinions ;-
one could always pretend to^deaf-
;s or assume that scholarly look
that implies we ore off in a world
of our own far removed from the
petty things of the day. AH I can
say is that it was lucky for the
mayor he wasn't arguing with the
barber.
FORMER PARSON
WOMAN DIES
PARSON — Mrs. Elsie Adeline
Burns, 67, wife of Jack Burns, and
a former resident of Parson, has
died in Victoria.
Born in London, England, she
had lived in Victoria for the past
12 years. Previously she was at
Crow's Nest, B. C, and Parson,
Besides her husband, she is survived by one daughter, Mrs. Leslie
H. Lpnsdale at Victoria.
Another Lynx Shot
LA FRANCE — Vic Johnson recently shot another lyfix, the largest taken here to date. The animal
was bagged a short distance from
Ms home. : .
NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, APRIL 6, 1959—3
• A MARYSVILLE SCALER, Gus Kriejman of
Marysville, marks logs which have been stored
through the Winter for Spring handling. St.
Mary's Lumber Company, near Wypliffe, holds
a stockpile of logs for sawing during the Spring
breakup, when hauling is impossible, thus op
erating the mill on a year-round basis, In the
picture to the right, a caterpillar moves a pile
of logs.
—Photos by Charles Wormington, Kimberley.
Kimberley Ski Club
May Operate Tow
KIMBERLEY — An agreement
under which the Kimberley Ski
Club would operate the North Star
ski tow for the City under a 10-
year lease is under consideration
here,
This announcement was made by
Jack Glennie, president, at the annual meeting of the District Recreational Projects Society.
Mr. Glennie and James McFarlane, vice-president, outlined the
prop-ess and problems of the society with the Kimberley North Star
ski hill completed and work well
along on the partially-completed
arena.
Mr. Glennie said that for the
first five years, any profit derived
from operation of the hill will be
used to expand facilities to the
.point of complete accommodation
of increasing numbers of skiers.
For the following five years, 50
per cent of the profits will be returned to the Projects Society to
aid ih. construction of future recreational -facilities.
, Construction costs, he showed,
exceeded estimates by $9250 on
the ski hill. Mr. Glennie explained
the discrepancy between estimate
and outlay by pointing out that
"Out of My Mind"
Trial Jury Told
VANCOUVER (CP) - Gino
Casagrande, 28, told. Friday hbw:
he threatened to kill: the woman
he had, been living 'with if she
didn't support him, and she iold
him to "drop dead."
Testifying at his second . trial
on a charge of murder in the
knifing death of Jean Wardrop,
25, Feb. 27, 1958, .Casagrande
said: "I was drunk and went out
of my mind."
"I said 'if you don't support
me I will kill you,' " said Casagrande. "Sue said 'I have to
work tomorrow, leave me alone
(and) started slapping my face
and said 'you disgust me.'
"After that I don't know where
I got the knife and I put the
knife through her body. I then
called the police."
Casagrande said the woman
had told him to get out of her
life, but he couldn't because he
was in love with her:
the hill was built to an entirely new
design and cost comparisons were
not available.
Buzz Houlden, Barry Craig, Russ
. Vause and Al Hansen were elected
as society directors for three years,
while Don Lane was returned to
office for two years. Max DesBri-
say, Lee Ringheim and Bill Rogers completed their terms.
Mrs. Prain, in
Fruitvale 16
Years, Passes
FRUITVALE - A resident of
Fruitvale for 48 years, Mrs. Florence Mary Prain, wife of Stuart
Prain, died Sunday morning in
Trail-Tadanac Hospital. She was
70 years old.
Mrs. Prain, born in London,, England in 1888, came to Canada 50
years ago, spending a few years in
Montreal and Victoria before coming to Fruitvale.
She was a member of the Women's Auxiliary of St. John's Anglican Church.
Surviving are her husband, three
daughters, Mrs. L. C. Knowler of
Fruitvafe, Mrs. Len Debock and
Mrs. C. Wright, both of Vancouver;
two sons, Tom and Harold Moon of
Fruitvale; and 14 grandchildren.
ViolaMac
Takes Option
On Mine
TORONTO — ViolaMac Mines
Limited has acquired a working option on a prominent copper property in Godfrey Twp„ Kamiscotia
area, 12 miles northwest of the major gold camp at Timmins, Ontario. ':
This property, situated in the
Porcupine mining camp, has been
in hands of GeOrge Jamieson for
over 15 years and was sought by
many mining interests.
In former work conducted by Mr.
Jamieson, massive sulphides, con-
tainnig copper and zinc mineralization were opened in several surface trenches. Some shallow x-ray
drilling intersected two section of
massive sulphides. One hole gave
values exceeding.. 3 per cent cop
per and 7 per cent zinc.
The first diamond drill hole is
now probing the area north of the
section previously explored by the
Jamieson,interests. Besides drilling, ground crews will also conduct geophysical and geological
surveys on the large block of
ground held.
New Policy Set Out
At CCF Convent ion
By JIM PEACOCK
Canadian Press Staff .Writer
VANCOUVER (CP) — The British Columbia CfJF left its provincial convention Sunday with a
broad new policy statement on
which to base its next election platform and with an informal working
agreement with the trade union
movement to fight together in the
next B.C. election.
These were the two major accomplishments of a three-day convention, which attracted 382 persons
and for the first time dealt only
with provincial affairs as the policy statement and CCF-union
agreement took precedence over
national and international, subjects
on the agenda.
The policy pledges any CCF government in B.C. to public ownership in the fields of electric power,
telephones and natural gas and to
public control of the forests, leaving private operators in the latter
to handle the actual logging and
manuiacturing.
It also outlines broad agricultural, labor, education, social welfare, health and municipal-relations principles on which provincial
party leader Robert Strachan said
a CCF government would base its
,first-term legislation. The CCF
now is the official opposition with
10 seats in the 52-seat house.
The CCF-B.G. Federation of Labor working agreement, an informal marriage pending the completion of details at the national level
between the CCF and the Canadian
Labor Congress in the "proposed
formation of a labor  party,  pro
vides for joint financing and full
co-operation at all levels in political education, selection of candidates and election campaigning.
Mr. Strachan and provincial
president Mrs. Grace Maclnnis,
both returned to their posts by
acclamation Sunday, described
ihe convention as the largest and
most successful in the party's
history In B.C.
Its sessions were filled with argument over a broad number of
changes and proposed changes in
wording of the draft policy and
70,000 sheets of paper were used to
print various amendments during
the three days of morning, noon
and night sessions.
In the end, the broad principles
of the original draft were unchanged.
Outside the policy and union-
agreement matters, the convention
dealt directly with three urgent
motions < — emergency resolutions
introduced to deal with recent labor-legislation in B.C. and Newfoundland and with unemployment
relief measures.
- The. convention demanded disallowance of the recent Newfoundland law decertifying the International Woodworkers of America
(CLC) and pledged the CCF to fight,
for repeal of the B.C. Trade Unions
Act which makes -unions legal entities subject to suit.
It suggested several moves at the
federal and provincial levels for unemployment relief, including diplomatic recognition of Red China to
facilitate trade with Asia.
Divorces Granted
At Cranbrook
CRANBROOK-At a special civil
Assize session here, Mr. Justice
J. G. Rutton granted eight divorce
decrees. These were petitions scheduled for the last fall assizes which
time did not permit hearing.
Decrees were granted to; Olive
Mary Alice Roberts, Cranbrook,
from Clarence Melvin Roberts,
McBride; Isabelle Marie Daig-
nault, Cranbrook, from Oliva Joseph Daignault, Erickson; Lawrence Paul Leadbetter, Cranbrook,
from Mary Lou Leadbetter, Cranbrook, and Carl Sinclair Brewer,
Invermere, from Myrna Evelyn
Brewer, Windermere. F. W. Barry
represented each petitioner.
Decrees were also granted to
Jean Wenger, from Herbert Wen-
ger, both Invermere, Mrs. P. M.
Curtis representing the petitioner;
Jean Robertson Walsh, Vancouver,
from Ronald Stewart Walsh, Cranbrook, Peter Graham representing
the petitioner; Jean Beverley Neill,
Vancouver, from John Edward
Neill, Nelson, M. Provenzano solicitor; and Robert Gordon Walters
from Dianne Sarah Walters, C. H
Clegg of Rossland, solicitor.
Former Nelsonite
Opens Bakery
At Invermere
INVERMERE, — A bakeshop op
erated by a former Nelson baker
has moved into new premises.in
Invermere.
Quality Baker, owned by -Jan
Van Driel who worked ior bakeries
in Nelson and Cranbrook before
coming here, has opened the doors
of a shop that combines a modern
retail store with efficient work
rooms.
Mr. Van Driel came to Canada
from Holland 11 years ago. In the
bakery business since he was 15
years old, he was baker on a Dutch
liner running between Holland and
the Dutch East Indies for four
years. For some time he operated
a bakeshop with his brother at
Schiedam, ahd Nijmegen, both In
Holland. He came to Invermere in
J956.
Kootenay on Her Way.. .Again
VICTORIA (CP) - HMCS Kootenay started out for the second
time Sunday on her voyage to Halifax.
The new destroyer escort returned to port Saturday after a small
explosion put .one of Ihe' ship's .two
boilers out of action.
- Cause of the blast is not known,
but workers fixed the boilers in a
few hours.
The Kootenay will join the RCN's
Atlantic Command.
She was built in North Vancouver and stationed at Esquimau
during her post-commissioning and
work-up period.
La France Group
Joins Association
LA FRANCE — Decision to join
the' Association of Recreation Commissions was made at a quarterly
meeting of the La France group at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Oscar
Hellman.       '
The commission elected?, two
members, Vic Johnson and Fred
Simpson jr.,. to attend the West
Kootenay Recreation Commission
conference in Nelson April 18.
Driving in f UJKQiP'i
.'A BCAA Membership paves the way for a:
perfect trip. The BCAA is affiliated with automobile clubs in nearly all countries, enabling
you to get maps, Information, reservations with
convenience and courtesy:- Join today.
BRITISH
COLUMBIA
AUTOMOBILE
ASSOCIATION
845 Burrard St., Vancouver, B.C.
This minister
of finance
•says,—,,;*;''
"Yes, we can
afford it!"
- Mother's decision has not been arrived at lightly. Her jjeek
into her purse is anything but casual—for as family minister
of finance she is also keeper of the budget. She weighs every
important purchase carefully, because-she has a dozen
places to put every dollar... and only so many dollars.
The same problem — a dozen places for every doHar—is a
familiar one to the Minister of Finance at Ottawa. His
budget is around six billion dollars. This very large sum of
money is spent through various government departments.
It's no secret how the Minister of Finance obtains this
money. He gets it largely in taxes from millions of Canadians like you. If he spends more than he gets from you, he
must turn around and borrow from you the amount he has
overspent... or, else create new money.
The creation of new money is one factor that leads to inflation — when the dollar buys jess and less. So, as a thrifty
Canadian, you are wise to ask government only for those
services you are willing to pay for... with taxes.
Personally you try- to pay as you go, to live within yoar m-
come. It's important that government try to do the same
: thing.
You want to live well now and to realize all your ambltiotts
ior the best possible future. That future is tied up with a
sound dollar — a dollar whose purchasing power you can
depend on.
A SOUND* DOLLAR MEANS A BETTER UFE FOB YOU
TBE FIGHT AGAINST INFLATION NEEDS YOUR ACTIVE SUPPORT
A PUBUC SERVICE MESSAGE FROM H57C
THE LIFT?. INSURANCE COMPANIES IN CANADA
 ■■■**$$%>&% •
-
'■■'■■■J'1
>^^:mmmm?A Ul ■••■
Npiamt latig Nana
Established April 12. 1803
Nation. B.C.
Published by th* NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED.
266 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia mornings except'
Sundays and holidays tn th* centre oi the Kootenays with
th* largest daily circulation tn the Interior oi B.C.
Authorized as Second Class Mail   Post Office Department. Ottawa.  ,
C. W. Ramsden, Publisher. '     .
A. W. Gibbon, Editor.
MEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS        ,
MEMBER OF THE CANADIAN DAILV NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS' ASSOCIATION
MEMBER OF THE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS
The Canadian Prtss ts exclusively entitled to the use tor republication ot at) news
dispatches credited to it or to The Associated Press or Renters in this paper. -
and also the local news published therein
Monday, April 6,1959
Withdrawal From Armament
Ralph Allen, editor of Maclean's,
certainly hurt our pride, when he suggested that Canada should withdraw
from the arms race and resign herself
to the fact that today nations are helpless against those which. have long
range atomic weapons.
This Is something which heeded
saying, for as the intercontinental mis-
riles are perfected, so the potential
conflict narrows to those which possess
them, that is to say between Russia
and the United States. All other nations, with the possible exception oi
Britain, are powerless to retaliate and
for all practical purposes are as defenceless as non-combatants. .   "
The best that such Western countries can do is to provide launching
sites for American rockets. and to
install radar to give warning of approaching rockets or planes. Unfortunately this makes the sites targets for
bombs while the countries concerned
are unable to participate in their own
defence.
A .narrow self-interest would suggest that the smaller nations should
become neutral, but a longer view
demands that they range themselves
with the United States if war with
Communist countries breaks out. Such
is their hatred of Communism that it
is unlikely any of them would care to
be neutral.
Britcdn, leader of the smaller na
tions, believes that now that the United
States has inter-continental missiles
she is no longer "vital to American
defence. The British government, however, does not consider this-an opportunity to withdraw from her alliance,
but rattier that it now becomes necessary for her to take over the defence
of the smaller European countries. This
is because they believe the United
States would be reluctant to engage in
nuclear warfare with the Russians over
one small European country.
This has always been. Britain's historic role. In most of her major wars
she has beaded-a confederacy against
' an aggressor. There is, however, an
opposing opinion in Britcdn which
believes that she would,not be powerful enough to resist the Russians and
she herself would be obliterated* by
H bombs. This opposition would have/
Britain return to a greater interdependence with the United States.
But if there is a division of opinion
/over defence in Britain, there is no
question of doing nothing. There
should be no question of doing nothing
in Canada either. In a battle of intercontinental missiles our cities would
be as much the target of H bombs as
the Americans'. There is no possibility
oi being neutral, and common sense
suggests that Canada should work
wholeheartedly with the United States.
The sad thing is that no one seems to
know the best way to do that.
Interpreting therNeWs
By ED SIMON
Canadian Press Staff Writer
The safe arrival of the Dalai Lama on
Indian soil has ended a tricky and inconclusive chapter in Prime Minister Nehru's
relations with Communist China. The next
move is up to the Chinese..
Throughout the week In which Tibet's
spiritual leader was making his hazardous
way toward sanctuary, Nehru was forced
into a position that contrasted unhappjly with
his cherished role as the voice of the uncommitted peoples of the World.
The man who has spent his life cham-'
pioning the cause of the1 oppressed was confronted by oppression barely outside his borders., Moral principle dictated a clarion call
of protest; national security demanded silence^ , ^
PRESS COMMENT
Most of us become embarrassed by talk
of love. We tell.ourselves that life is hard
and that it will beat us down unless we
grapple with it fiercely. Our response is to the
call of realism, even though it be stern;
and not to tenderness, lest it Seem soft.
Yet it remains permanently true that
love, not hate, is the ultimate strength; and
that only goodness, which is something quite
different from exhortations to do good, leads
to the growth of that which is good in the
minds, hearts and deeds of men.
—Charlottetown Patriot.
Watch Your Language
CLANDESTINE (klan-DES-tin); Adjective—Secretly done or designed, especially
for an evil purpose; stealthy; furtive; covert.
Origin: Latin—Clam, secretly.
To the dismay of his friends and the
exultation of his foes, Nehru sought to steer
.*-.-middle, course, making statements carrying compromising platitudes worthy of lesser
statesmen.    '
He reaped the worst,of both possible
worlds—bitter attacks from Chinese snd Indian Communists for alleged intervention in
the Tibetan fighting and from Tibetan nationalists and their sympathizers for not
taking action.,   , ■
Particularly galling to thoSe who looked
to Nehru for leadership was his refusal to
commit himself on < the question of admitting
refugees from the conflict, a policy unhesitatingly adopted 2V4 years ago by the
neutralist government of tiny Austria at the
time of the Hungarian uprising.
Nehru's answer was to assert India's
right to take in refugees if she chose and
to add that individual applications would be
considered on their merits. Once again, it
left.both sides dissatisfied.
Some of the pressure has been eased by
the prime minister's welcome to his "honored
guest." But his problems are far from solved.
While it would have been inconceivable
for India to refuse asylum to a dignitary
revered by Indian as well as Tibetan bud-
dhists, the action has gravely embarrassed
Nehru in bis efforts to remain on good terms
with his Chinese neighbors;..
Up to now, Chinese diplomacy has been
less than brilliant, consisting principally of
a series of implausible accusations of Indian
complicity in the revolt. For the moment, he
can do little beyond denying the charges and
waiting for the storm to blow over.
In due course, the Chinese undoubtedly
will make conciliatory gestures and Nehru
will agree to forgive and forget. But he will
not easily regain the prestige he has lost.
F. B. Pearce. -.
...Writes
A malison on these pestiferous fellows
who expect me to go knight-erranting on'
their behalf while they sit in the shade and.
urge me on. A malison on them, I say, the
scurvy varlets.
One such, a sleek and well fed business
man, expects me to give up jny pleasant
easy life and embark on the dangerous business of stirring things up. Not me. If there
is one thing life has taught me it is that there
is truth in, the old saying that a soft answer
turneth away wrath, but grievous words
stir up anger. '•'.'.
Besides my gallant steed has got to the
stage where he no longer gallops but ambles
withal. His saddle was never too soft to sit
in and so far I have not heard of one with
foam rubber padding. My armor has grown
rusty in tbe joints and so have I. so all you
folks'who expect me to slay your dragons can
go chase them yourselves.
The-Old Buffer and I learned against
the courthouse wall and looked at the weak
rays of the spring sunlight falling on the old
post office.        li-'     • •-'•,
"A coat of green paint on that brickwork
would make it look better," he said.       V
''Whygreen?" tasked.        .
"In honor of St. Patrick," he said. v
"Are you Irish?"
"No and I don't like green either or that
old post office. Why don't you write about
that?"
"You are another," I said, "expecting
me to slay your Dragons; Do you own, dirty
work." *'.,-,,'       ,,.'(
"Reminds me of that bloke in the poem,
Excelsior, who carried the banner with the
strange device, only Mr. Affleck's banner has
'old post office'on it."   -,i;
"Well, that poor young fellow died,1' I
said and drifted across the street.
-"Give me $70,000 and I would make you
the best looking city hall in the Interior."
said the bloke .on the next comer. ' "' '   '
"Yah," f said and took advantage of the
change of light to shoot across the street. I
shall really have to think of trading my old
war horse for a new one. I can't get away
fast enough on foot.    .;-.'.>
"That was a rotten article today, Frank.
If you must write about education why don't
you stand up for segregation of the.Sexes in
school?"
;\Stand up indeed. Oh, my poor legs. Besides the mothers would.never stand for it.
How are the poor girls to get married if
they are segregated. Take my charger back
to the stable.
Balm in Gilead. "I liked your article today, Frank." Wonderful people these Nor.
wcgians, so understanding, so kind and so
thoughtful. Oh for a draught of acquavit —
that stuff that tastes like, essence of cedar
pencils, to drink their healths in. No need to
saddle my charger or burnish my rusty
hauberk. .
■ Oh the brave days of our youth when we
thought nothing of slaying a couple of.
dragons before breakfast, but oh the pleasant
days of<our age. Life begins at seventy. The
rain may fall and the clouds cOver the skV,
but there is nothing so beautiful as the sight
of pretty girls coming down the street and
there is nothing so cheerful as the laughter
of old men on the corners. Slay dragons,
stir up strife and jousting? Pish, tush and
forsooth.
The Tourist Report
What's holding up the report .on the Canadian tourist industry?
Sponsored jointly by federal and provincial governments, transportation companies
and ths Canadian Tourist Association, and
prepared at a cost of $40,000, it was supposed
to have been released months ago. But it
has been repeatedly put off. Now comes
the announcement that "the report will not
be made public at this time," which is merely another way of s'aying it has been postponed indefinitely.
There are sections of this lengthy report
that probably will remain confidential since
they affect .only a few parties — those who
ordered and paid for the enquiry.
But there are other sections —' particularly the opinion survey — which could well
be of interest and use to the general public.
Although no series of questions put before a
small proportion of the population can ever
be considered completely conclusive, this
survey could be especially helpful in tailoring
advertising and promotion to meet the needs
and demands of the modern traveler. And
in this respect it is not just the big advertisers — governments and transportation
companies — who need some guidance. Local
bosrds of trade and other associations promoting travel could benefit.
Too much Canadian travel promotion has
been devoted almost entirely to our "beautiful scenery" of which Canada has no monopoly. — The Financial Post.
| TheyTl Do It Every Time
By Jimmy Hatlo
GunLdisL
The way girls dress now may
be modest, but they don't have to
loosen nothls' when they eat too
much. • •
DECMVE PHASE
. LUDWIGSHAFEN, West Gem-
any (Reutes) — Chancello Kon-
the fothcoming intenational con-
feences mak Ihe most decisive
phase since the end of the wa.
He told about 8,000 people at a
state election meeting of his
he does not believe that Soviet
Pernio Khushphev wants a hot
wa.
The Week's News in Retrospei
By DAVID ROWNTREE
Canadian Press Staff Writer
The Dalai Lama outdistanced
his Communist Chinese pursuers
last week and reached India
safely. The 23-year-old Tibetan
ruler, considered a god by his
people, has been granted political
asylum, Prime Minister Nehru indicated.
India has been placed in a delicate diplomatic position by. the
Tibetan revolt which began
March 17. Peiping has accused
Nehru's government oi meddling
in China's affairs — the Communists invaded Tibet in 1950—and
of organizing "subversive activities" in the town of Lalimpong
near the Tibetan border. India
strongly denied both accusations.
The Dalai Lama's whereabouts
were unknown for two weeks. Hs
is believed to have slipped away
days before fighting broke out in
Lhasa, the capital, after the Chinese had called him to their command headq u a r t e r s. Fearful
crowds prevailed ph him not to
go 'and launched demonstrations
demandini, Independence,
; Travelling by . n 1 g h t and
guarded by rebellious Khama
tribesmen, the Dalai Lama made
Ihe slow journey to'-the' Indian
border while, Communist'planes
flew over the mountains, ready to
drop paratroops to Intercept his
flight,
Peiping clatmecl that the god-
king had'beeh captured by the
rebels but Nehru's 'statement to
Parliament viade it clear that he
•had left of bis own accord.
TORY DEFEAT
Manitoba will have its second
provincial election in less than a
year on May 14.
Premier Duff Rbbiin's Progressives Conse.vative government,
which was given a shaky mandate in a vote last June 30, was
beaten 30 to ?6 on a want-O'f-con-
fidence motion. .   .
Roblin's forces .commanded
only 26 of the 57 legislature seats.
The Liberal-Progressives and the
CCF combined to unseat the Conservatives In a vote on how the
legislature should deal with the
government'- financial program.
POLICY SEARCH
Russia has agreed to a foreign
ministers' meeting in Geneva
May 11. The chief subjects at the
parley, "hich may precede a
heads-of-g>vernment conference,
will be Germany and Berlin.
Manwhile the West was still
trying to work out a joint poUcy
to present to the Russians. The
North Atlantic Treaty Organize-
tion.n with Defence Minister
G.rge R. Pearkes representing
Canada, held a 10th anniversary
meeting in Washington.   '..
The dominant theme of public
statements by the delegates was
the need for firmness i in meeting
Nikita Khrushchev's threats' to.
push Western occupation forces
out of Berlin and conclude sep-
Businessmen
Assess
Strike Results
SARNIA, Ont. (CP)—Businessmen in this city of mare,than 43,-
000 are carefully assessing a
strike which may deal the city
its worst economic blow in 23
years. ..-.■-.
There, is no business slump yet
as a result of the strike of 1,890
employees oi the 17 -year - old
Crown-owned ' Polymer Corporation, manufacturers of synthetics
but the effects could spread. The
walkout started nearly three
weeks ago.-
Local 16-14 of fhe Oil, Chemical
and Atomic Workers Union
(CLC), representative of the
workers who struck March 18,
ha.c said they are prepared to
hold out /r six months.
With the loss of a weekly payroll amounting to about $180,000,
businesses are preparing for a
sharp cut in the city's purchasing power,
OTHER LAYOFFS
They say the strike could result
in layoffs at other plants in Sar-
nls's chemical row. Already 160
men employed by sub-contractors
of Polymer have been laid off
and Imperial Oil Limited has
closed a $23,000,000 plant which
Polymer. The employees were
shifted to rther work. The Sun
Oil Company Ltd., and Canadian
Oil Companies Ltd., refineries
here also supply Polymer.
Meanwhile, grocers rehort that
strikers have reduced "their
spending to $10 weekly Irom $30
and that canned beans, soups,
spaghetti and other economy
foods are in demand.
Polymer, established during
the Second World War, sparked
industrial expansion in this area.
Its post-war exports have soared
but competition and increased labor costs cut its earnings to $6,-
800,000 in 1957 from1 a record $9,-
800,000 in 1956.
A package - settlement offer
msds by the company March 17,
which has not been announced,
has been rejected by the union.
*TJie unioi. demands, a 10-percent across - tbe - board increase
for ill employees.
Average hourly fate at. the
plant was $2.24. 1     ,
arate peace treaties with the two
Germanys. A peace treaty with
East Germany, a Communist satellite,'would in effect give the
Communists the right to control
access to encircled West Berlin
no matter what guarantees for
the city's status Khrushchev offered.
NEWFOUNDLAND SUES
The 10th anniversary of Newfoundland's entry into Confederation passed without flag-waving.
"We have been bitterly hurt by
the lack of understanding we
have received from the rest of
Canada," Premier J. R. Small-
wood told guests at dinner in his
honoi- at St. John's.
Smallwood recalled that only (2
agreed to Confederation and those
who did *iad misgivings.
"Newfounland has been and
still is a have-not province,"
Smallwood said. "We want to he
a have province." .
The same day Newfoundland
began court action against- the
federal government for unstated
damages alleging a breach of the
RCMP acts as the island's provincial police force;
The province's statement of
claim said in.effect that Justice
Minister Davie Fulton broke the
agreement early last month by
withholding requested police reinforcements at the height of disturbances in the lo-jgers' strike. .
It alleged that Fulton, as attorney - general, allowed factors
and persons outside the scope of
the contract to influence his decision to- withhold the reinforcements asked by the province. The
dispute earlier led to the resignation, of RCMP Commissioner
Leonard H, Nicholson.
MADAGASCAR FLOODS
Floods and cyclones ravaged
the island of Madagascar, bigger
in total arer. than Manitoba, 200
miles off the east coast of Africa.
At least 500 people were feared
to have died. Several inland
towns had not been heard from
all week. Small boats were pushing up swollen, tropical rivers
with food and supplies to about
10,000c people who cannot be
French Air Force planes parachuted relief supplies to other
areas.
The premier of the autonomous
republic within the French community, Philibert Tsiranana, called the storms "a disaster unprecedented in the island's history."
South African Red Cross organizations sent blankets, sheets and
clothing.
Sixty thousand persons are estimated to be homeless. At Brick-
aville, six feet of silt covered
streets that were lined with decaying stocks of rice and coffee.
MINING PROJECT
The Ontario and British Columbia securities commissions have
bjgun Investigations of a strange
and unsuccessful project to extract gold from the sands of the
Fraser River near Lillooet, B.C
Rev. Leslie Millin, a former
pastor of a Toronto' Baptist
church, was questioned about the
venture by officials in Victoria,
He is reported to have raised at
least $500,000 from Baptists in the
two provinces to finance the op-'
eration. Profits were to have been
used to finance the Freedom
foundation, an anti-Communist organization—and build a radio station for beaming broadcasts to
Red China.
The group took out options on
eight gold claims but these have'
since expired. Machinery taken to
the area for the project has since
been removed.
Scientists Admit Russia
Ahead of Canada in Arctic
MONTREAL (CP) - Scientists
and researchers are preparing to
head into the Arctic this summer
for a far-ranging survey of Canada's little - knofvn northern marine resources.    -
The survey, first of its kind, is
to be carried out by the arctic
unit of the F/.herles Research
Board of Canada in Montreal.
Four teams of three or four
men each will range front the
Alaskan border in the west, to
Frobisher -Bay in the east, sampling marine life in a 400,000
square mile area.
Known as the "barren grounds"
project, the survey will be de
voted to a study of freshJwaier
fish' and marine conditions. It has
aspects of a "crash" program..
Associate scientist Gerald
Hunter, 37, chief of the program,
said Friday the aim is to gather
as much scientific information as
possible in the shortest time.
RUSSIANS AHEAD
"There can be no doubt, that
us in knowledge of,the Arctic,"
he said. "We don't know nearly
as much about our northern regions as "they know about theirs."
"They've been at it for years;
we've really just begun,"
The project is scheduled to last
from about June 1 to Ejept. 20.
CANADA'S BERLIN
FORMULA PLEASES
SMALL NATIONS
By GEORGE KITCHEN    ?
Canadian Press Staff Writer
WASHINGTON (CP) - A
three-point Canadian formula to
give the United Nations a hand
in the settlement of-the Berlin
dispute was reported Saturday to
have drawn support irom some
of the smaller nations in the 15-
member North Atlantic Alliance.
But it also was reported to
have got a chilly reception from
two of NATO's senior members
—the United States and France
—because UN intervention might
weaken the right they Won in the,
Second World War to have a hand
in determining Germany's future.
There-was no immediate .British, reaction. .
The Canadian formula, advanced by Defence Minister G,
R. Pearkes Friday as the NATO
council's 19th anniversary meeting discussed the Berlin crisis,
would involve Soviet acceptance
of a UN guardianship over- the
access routes between Berlin and
free Germany.
THREE POINTS
. Pearkes said Canada feels a
possible role for the UN in Berlin should be. studied and offered
these three points as a framework for a four - power agreement;
1. The basic UN role might be
to verify that all parties were
abiding by the terms of the agreement.
2. The Soviet must fledge itself and its associates'-to permit
full freedom of access to West
Berlin and- accept the establishment of a UN "presence" on the
lines of communication to the
city.
3. Any UN responsibility for
West Berlin would be complementary to the existing rights
and obligations of the four "occupy-
in" powers.
Pearkes later told reporters
that by UN "presence" on the
lines of access routes he meant
civilian or unarmed, military observers. .
He also said that NATO Secretary-General Paul Henri Spaak,
in summarizing the Berlin discussion, said the Canadian proposal would be referred along
with those advanced by other
member states to the.permanent
NATO council..
MAJOR CONTRIBUTION
The Canadian'formula emerged
as one of the major contributions
to the council's study of possible
methods of blunting the Soviet
threat to drive the. West out ofv
Berlin. It came as the council
representatives, including Canada, expressed their determination to resist the Soviet attempt
to take over the old city.
Observers said the proposal assumed significance because of
Canada's past record of successfully proposing compromise settlements in tense world trouble
spots. It was Canada's suggestion
that the UN set up the emergency
fprce which now-, patrols the troubled frontier between Israel and
Egypt.  -
Along with the Berlin proposal,
Pearkes also urged,the Western
Big, Three to.be prepared to ex-'
piore, in their approaching negotiations with the Soviet Union, .the
possibility of arms limitation or
disengagement on both sides of
the Iron Curtain.
Pearkes told the council that
Canadians were aware that a third
world war could easily means as
much nuclear destruction to its
cities as those of Europe.
'•'DESTROY US,ALL"
"Knowing the' responsibilities
they will her in their hands, we
hope that the Western negotiators
will take counsel from the knowledge that a thermonuclear. war
might destroy us all,", he said,
Italian Foreign Minister Giuseppe Pella said the possibility of
UN help should not be ruled out
and Hs-lvard M. Lange of 'Norway backed up the Canadian initiative.
Since the Russians have a veto
In the UN, --.ny plan.sUcb as that
proposed by Canada would have
to have Soviet approval to.go into
effect.
DAILY DOZEN FOR REDS
LONDON (AP)-Moscow radio
has announced a daily 15-minute
program of physical exercises for
S o v i e t factory workers. The
broadcast said they will begin
April 7 and should either be performed directly or tape-recorded
for later use..,A "similar program
Is in effect in Red China.
Teams will camp at sites near
rivers and lakes for 14 days, then
move on to new sites. Each team
will make eight moves, starting,
at Yellowknife and moving east
across the Northwest Territories.
At esch stop, each team will
prepare 200 pounds of specimens
to be shipped back to headquarters at Yellowknife. Team members are hand-picked university
professors and museum officials.
"We will, first of all, find out
what kinds of fish there are
there,"; Mr. Hunter said. "We'll
the Russians are way,ahead of
also learn a great deal- about
their distribution and abundance." " •
HELP TO ESKIMOS '
"We hope- too that as a result
of our studies, we will be able
to help the Eskimos who live in
the region. They can use the fish
for food as well as develop fishing for a livelihood."
Three other separate projects
are planned by the Arctic unit
tor the summer.
A new 38-foot Mm
is to be based at Hersi
in the Beaufort Sea,
of the Alaska boundary
study salt water m-ariJ
The. motor vessel Cl
til this year the unit's!
ing lab, is to be based in the
Belcher Hands in southern Hudson Bay.
The unit's two- year -old Frobisher Bay research ■ station on
Baffin Island is to study the
salmon-like Arctic char In connection with commercial fishing
by Eskimos.
Alta. Crude
Output Down
CALGARY (CP) - Production
of Alberta crude oil averaged
329,082 barrels daily during the
week ended March 30.
Statistics issued Friday by the
Alberta oil and gas conservation
-board show this is 51,160 barrels
daily fewer than the previous
week, but 29,712 barrels daily
more than during the corresponding week of 1958.
Pembina, bad the largest single
output' for the week with an
average of 100,429 barrels daily.
Leduc-Woodbend was next with
40,449, 'and Redwater third with
82,270.
Other major producing areas included:
Joffre, 16,335; Fenn-Big Valley,
14,507; Bonnie Glen, 11,344; Jpar-
cam, 9,843; Sturgeon Lake South,
6,257; Keystone 6,011; Acheson,
7,789; Innisfail, 5,980; Turner Valley 5,436; Harmattan Elkton,
4,648; - Wainwright,- 4,139. .
Jefferson Lake Petrochemicals
Report Loss of $474,394 in 1958
NEW ORLEANS, La, (CP)-
Jefferson Lake Petrochemicals
of Canada Ltd. had a loss in 1958
of $477,394.
The statement for. the year includes $249,803 for depredation,
$110,968 for non-productive drilling costs, $77,-223 for lease rentals
and $28,783 for geophysical costs.
The figures were announced
here by Eugene H, Walet Jr.,
president of the company, which
is 69-per-cent owned by Jefferson Lake Sulphur Company,
large United. States sulphur pro-
diicr.
Walet said the company's su-1-'
phur recove y plant in British
Columbia's Peace River area in
1958 produced 56,000 long tons of
sulphur with a-market value of
more than $1,100,000.
START SHIPMENTS
No shipments tvere made in
1958,   but   shipments   now   are
under way, principally to customers in British Columbia and
the state of Washington. Some
60,000 tons will be shipped this
year, Mr. Walet estimated.'
On the company's 80,000-acre
farmout from Mobil Oil of Canada Ltd.,' in the east Calgary-
field, six wells have been drilled
and are equipped for production
of sour gas (gas containing sulphur). Walet said plans are being
made to erect plant and facilities
for process'ng — including pipe
line ges .-"livery, recovery of
liquid products and recovery of'
sulphur.. -.,.-      {,';•'.
The company was incorporated'
in December, 1957, (to acquire the
Canadian assets and undertakings of the parent company.
Railway connection was,
pleted to the Peace Riv»
site last October.
t
WemtWeWess\\\smtWSsmm
 pPPf!^
■PIPIPPIIIEP^
RHBiH^^HHBK^BHHi^^^Hsni^s^9
|GIT Girls From East, West
Kootenay Enjoy Active Weekend
Minds and spirits of East and'
' West Kootenay girls were kept active by a constant-round of activities at the Canadian Girls in Training conference held in Nelson Friday, Saturday and Sunday. '
From the opening carnival Friday night until church service Sunday morning, the girls from as far
east as Fernie and westerly as
Greenwood were participants, in a
1 colorful variety of spiritual, mental and practical activities.
Food and fun added to the enjoyment of the busy weekend.   .   ..
A carnival in St. Paul's-Trinity
United Church broke the-ice Friday night with girls from hostess
CGIT groups — Fairview United,
First Baptist, First Presbyterian
and St. Paul's • TWnity United
churches providing a frolicsome
welcome for the visitors.
With paper money in their pockets and paper hats on their heads,
the girls toured carnival booths
providing fun and excitement suchj
as a fortune teller, seance, house
of surprises, game of chance, side
show and a freak show. Evening
vespers were led by Dawn Beattie,
vice-president of Kootenay GGIT.
A singsong led by Margaret Cat-
ley and the CGIT purpose and
hymn led by Linda Cummings, provincial president of CGIT groups,
opened a busy Saturday schedule.
Miss Grace Barritt, girls' work
secretary for the Baptist Church
tn British Columbia, spoke both
morning and afternoon' on the
theme "Teach Me Thy Way"..Her
talk dealt with steps to be taken
toward the theme—knowing God,
following Him and telling others
about Him.  »
Interest groups were held b
morning and afternoon on subjects
that, interest teen-age girls. Hair
styling was demonstrated by Mrs.
W. E. Ogden, public speaking was
topic of a talk by G. A. Clark and
D. V. Askew, church work as a
vocation was topic of Miss Barritt,
leading worship of Mrs. J. Little
of Trail, how to lead a singsong of
Mrs. R. Bain Oliver, beauty counselling of Mrs. W. K. Miillins, planning for games of Mrs. D. C. McKinnon, fashions for teens of Mrs.
Neil Hood, working with the handicapped of Mrs. P. Deerward, and|
B
For ouicFcomfpi
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how:to conduct a business meeting
of Mrs.'F. H. Lowe. .
Handicraft groups were held during Saturday afternoon. Headache
bands of black velvet, costume
jewellery,' copper wire bracelets,
crinoline table centres in the shape
of Christmas trees, wood fibre
flowers, dresser dolls of melofoam
and plastic hosiery cases were all
fashioned during the crafts groups
under leadership of Mrs. C. E.
Bradshaw, Mrs. Little, Mrs. Miillins, Mrs. I. Speirs, Mrs. Norman
Gibson and Mrs. W. D. Grainger.
A demonstration exciting much
interest among the girls was a
flower arranging group led by Mrs.
J. H. Coventry, who guided the
girls in flower arrangements for
use on the evening banquet table.
The banquet, in the Fellowship
hall of Fairview United Church,
was attended also by Rev. E. Donovan Jones, Rev. H. R. Whitmore,
Rev. R. R. Cross and. E. Hircock.
Chairman of the affair was Muriel
McNabb, and Marilyn Kary led
community singing.
Church service at Fairview United Church Sunday morning was
conducted by Helen Neighbor. The
scripture was read by Diane Kash-
luba and meditation was offered
by Rev. Whitmore. Ushers were
Gerry Neighbor, Donna Shankland,
Doreen Speirs and Muriel McNabb.
Bergman's Preference
Leans to Home Life
WINNIPEG (CP) - Actress Ingrid Bergman admits that her
interest in acting is Waning.
"I want to get my home settled,"
she said Friday in an Interview.
Miss Bergman, accompanied by
her third husband, theatrical producer Lars Schmidt, stopped over
in Winnipeg for 45 minutes while
travelling from Sweden to Hollywood for the Academy Award
presentations.   .   '
The 43-year-old actress stepped
off a Scandinavian Airlines plane
at 6:30 a.m. for "a breath of fresh
air." She and Mr. Schmidt leaned
on the wire fence at Stevenson
field and gazed over the countryside before returning to the plane.
About her career, Miss Bergman
said:
"I have no plans. Possibly 111
do something on the stage in Paris
if some play comes along."
Miss Bergman, who won the
award for the best actress in 1944
for her portrayal in Gaslight,
would make no predictions regarding this year's awards. -"
When asked about his work, Mr.
Schmidt said he is "just following
my wife to Hollywood."
Senator Says Government
Similar to Housekeeping
OTTAWA (CP)TFor housewives
who might.yearn to take a plunge
into politics,. Senator Muriel Fergusson in effect says "go ahead."
"Government on any level is
really housekeeping and homemaking on a • larger scale," Senator
Fergusson told a women's meeting
here.,
Castlegar Notes
CASTLEGAR — Miss Darlene
Harding, nurse in training at the
Royal Columbian Hospital in New
Westminster,' spent the long weekend here visiting her parents Mr,
and Mrs. R. Harding, Miss Harding returned Monday to the Coast.
Mrs.. J. Sherbiko returned Sunday, after visiting in Kimberley for
"I'm one of only
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but we're oil
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I       NAME OP FIRM i	
ADDRESS.'-.
mONt Mo..
_No. OF IMPIOYEK	
 HGN». j	
_ Z.-J
The lawyer from Fredericton,
who has been a Liberal member
of | the Senate since 1953, said a
woman's point of view is necessary
in the affairs of the nation. She is
one of six women who have been
appointed to the Senate over the
years. There are still too few
women in the House of Commons,
she said. There now are three
women in the 265-seat Commons.
Senator Fergusson said she does
not believe the lack of feminine,
participation in politics is due to
any male-opposition.
"I have found that men are most
anxious and willing to accept help
if you are willing. to work," she
said.
Question of
Quality, Not
Sex, in Business
VANCOUVER (CP) - The
average man would forget the
-battle of the sexes if women forgot it first, Mayor Elizabeth
Wood of. New Westminster said
in an address here.
She said she won her election
not because she is a woman but
because she has the qualities
needed for office — ability, integrity  and  intestinal  fortitude.
Mrs. Wood said the National
Council of Women and Federation of Business and Professional
Women's Clubs had done much
to make it possible for women
to share in public life.
However, since the first woman
was elected to the Canadian Parliament 38 years ago, only nine
women have readied Parliament
Hill rhour/i women form one half
the  voting strength of Canada.
Only one of those defeated in
their second try ever sought to
run again. There nor/ are three
women members of the House of
Commons and five women senators.
371 IN PUBLIC OFFICE
Referring to statistics compiled
by The Business and Professional
Woman, organ of the federation.
she said that.in 1958 there were
only eight women. members of
legislative assemblies,. only eight
women mayors, 97 women members of municipal councils and
250 women school, trustees — a
total of 371 women- holding public
office.
"One of the reasons we hata-
so few women in public office is
that women do' not aspire :to
these offices," Mayor Wood said.
"As women we are too easily
defeated. We should not feel this
way, particularly when women
have not shirked in industry or
other fields.    .
"In* my 14 years of seeking office I never recognised that there
is' si difference .between men and
women candidates.
''I give np quarter, I ask no
quarter. I do not feel inferior to
men. I do not feel superior to
men with whom I work.
"No .voman has a right to be
appointed to any board because
she is a woman, but only because she is outstanding."
claims srr-up record
TOPEKA, Kan. (AP)-An airman did sit -up . exercises2313
consecutive times, Friday and
claimed a world ■ record. John
Frady said his two-hour, 35-min-
ute effort beat that of a non-commissioned officer at Yokota, Japan, who claims 2,012.
NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY,. APRIL 6, 1959—3
FOB GHANDMOTKffiR^ who travel pwucularly, to
add to the pleasure of her trip, Marian Martin has created a printed pattern vacation wardrobe for those smart
COOL FOR EVERYWHERE — Cross-country or eross-the-street
this Is the Indispensable dress. It is made of a printed Dacrort and
cotton, soft but not really .sheer. It Is easily tubbed, and dries In a
matter of minutes. Marian Martin Printed Pattern 9376 tells you to
-wear-it with or without belt. Half Slzoa W/z to 24(/2. To order,
send. Fifty Cents (500) in coin's (stamps cannot be accepted)-for
Printed;Pattern 9376. Send,your order to Marian Martin, care of
•N-aN.,^, Front «.. W„.'Tororito,, Ont >' j_        y
home seWing grandmothers t- and others too — who
have a shbrter, fuller figure and are devoted to the half
sizes that fit so well without altertation.
FOR TRAVEL — The ensemble, sleeveless dress and hound's tooth
cheek jacket tailored beautifully In a fabrlo or Orion and rayon
which keeps Its crispness in plane, train, or bus. It's ah outfit that
dunks and drips1 dry quickly. Hardly, yes, hardly needs a pressing.
Make It with Marian Martin Printed Pattern 9Z77. Half-Sizes 14i/2
to 21V.. To order, send Fifty Cents (50c) In coins (stamps cannot
be accepted) fbr Printed Pattern 9277. Send your order to Marian
Martin, care of N.D.N., 60 Front St. W„ Toronto, Ont.
New ffve^fent Stamp Represents
World-Wide Rural Women's Group
By Lfes HOLKOYD
Canadian Press Staff Writer
TORONTO <CP) -,.Approjtt-i;
ately,. a woman is tbe designer
of a new- .Canadian five - cent
postal stamp whioh will commemorate the. development of a
world-wide rural women's organization.
Mrs. Helen; Bacon,, 39, of Toronto, designed the -stamp which
will be issued May 13 to honor
the Federated Women's Institutes of Canada, Cercles des Fer-
mieres Of Quebec and similar
groups, belonging to the Associated Country Women of ithe
World.. -      v" " ■;
It is the first stamp which Mrs.
Bacon—known in art circles by
her maiden name of Fitzgerald-
has had accepted by the post office..
KNEELING FIGURE
It.depicts a1 female figure kneeling'beside a tree over which a
globe is poised. The words "Associated Country Women of
World" and "Union Mondiale di
Femmes, Rurales" border the
stamp on three sides. On the
fourth is the word "Canada" and
the denomination is in-the bottom
right corner.
The female figure, the tree and
the-, globe are, pen outlines on a
white . background. The woman
and- the globe arc in black and
the tree is green.   .
J.  A.  MacDonald,  director of
PRINTED PATTERN
MI64
From age one and up, the look all mothers of young fashionables
adore Is the high-rise 'EMPIRE — especially In Patti Relfer's
charming dress-and-coat dup, A little girl will fall In love with
the'fanfare of pleats on the dress, the gay flutter of the back of
the coat as she turns to make a graceful exit at a birthday party,
The designer-chose fine linen for the coat—a gay butterfly print
cotton for the dress, "I'd.like to see It too, In sheer wool and silk,
or all In bright cotton for summer," says Miss .Rclfer. It's a delight
to sew, as well as to see — a minimum of seams, and even the
pleats are easy to set In. -I   ,
Printed Pattern M164 Is available In Children's Sizes-2, 4, 6, 8.
Size 8 dress requires 1% yards 35-Inch fabric; the coat requires
2% yards 36-Inch. ;
Send ONE DOLLAR for Printed Pattern M164 to D.N.N. Prominent Designer Pattern- Department, 60 Front Street W., Toronto,
Ont Please print plainly YOUR NAM8, ADDRESS with ZONE,
STYLE NUMBER ahd SIZE. ~
Next Week — Watch for a Prominent Designer Pattern by
Estevez.
financial services in the post office department, asked Mrs. Bacon to design the new commemorative with the specific thought
that it should be done by a
woman     ,
Mrs. Bacon, who spends1 most
pf her time as a housewife, is
the mother of two daughters,
aged 11 and 4, Her.husband Wilfred is an electronics engineer
with Canadian Arsenals Limited.
A graduate of the Ontario College of Art, she described herself
in an interview as "a , hodgepodge" of an artist rather: than a
designer. She does illustrated lettering, paints in oils—"although
not much now," and designs advertising brochures.
,. Her . paintings haye hung in
shows sponsored by the Ontario
Society of Artists, and., she has
sold many to private purchasers.
DID MASSE     COVER
She drew the cover foi; the report of the 1951 royal commission
on national development in. the
arts, letters and sciences,, popularly known as the.Massey report
after- its chairman, ■ Rt. Hon. Vincent Massey, now Governor-General of Canada.   '-.    •■
Examples of her illumination
work, an ancient art of decorative lettering-done in brilliant-colors, hang in the YWCA head^uar-
LLOYD
STROLLERS
and
CARRIAGES
at
JjLtWnanJL
639 Baker* St.
Phone 115
ters In Toronto and in the YWCA
f- Stratford, Ont.
Mrs. Bacon, who has two other
stamp designs now awaiting tbe
decision of the post office department, draws her original to the
actual size of the' finished stamp.
She said most artists prefer to
.'Ork oh a larger scale. She always submits several preliminary
sketches. There were 12 on the
women's stamp..,   -   X <,
The first idea for the women's
institute came from Mrs. Adelaide Hoodless of Hamilton. The
world organization was first proposed in the late 1920s by the late
Mrs. Alfred Watt of •; Collingwood,
Ont., who became its first president in 1933.
Wedding Hard
On Mothers
WISHEK, N. D. (AP) - As
newlyweds, Carol Krein and
William A. Helmer were in
the spotlight at their wedding.
But it developed their mothers
deserved the attention.
Mrs. Alvin Krein fell on the
church steps as she arrived for
the ceremony. But she saw her
daughter married before having her arm set.
The bridegroom's mother,
Mrs. E. K. Heimer, wasn't .
. feeling well during the cere- ,
mony. But she, too, waited until the vows were spoken before entering hospital with
pneumonia.
April Fool's Tea
Held, Castlegar
CASTLEGAR — Pythian Sisters
Kootenay Temple, held a successful April Fool's tea and bake sale
on Wednesday in the Twin Ttivers
Hall. Tables were decorated to
represent various countries, such
as Australia, South Africa, England, New Zealand, India, and
others, and members dressed in
the costume of these countries.
Mrs.. W. Nixon welcomed guests.
Mrs. E. Bradford, Mrs. R. Macintyre, Mrs. G. Wanless and Mrs.
S. Balfour of Trail, were contest
conveners.
Tea table committee head was
Mrs. O. Proud, assisted by Mrs. O.
Walker and Mrs. Louise Thorn.
Mrs. W. Saunders and Mrs. P.
Salikin were in charge of serving.
Kitchen committee Mrs. J. Sherbiko, Mrs. V. Sorensen, Mrs. C.
Bradford, Mrs. Lottie Koochin and
Mrs. J. pieil.
■ During the afternoon guests were
entertained by Mrs. Kay Andrea-
shuk's folk dancers.
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«—NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, APRIL 6, 1959
Minister to Open Books...
Coast Police Take
Oyer Mckee Papers
TORONTO (CP) - Rey. Leslie
Millin will be ordered to open his
books and account for the fortune
he raised for a gold-mining enterprise that flopped. Oswald E. Len
nox, Ontario securities commission chairman, said Saturday.
He said the investigation will include inking into the dispersal of
$51,530 that Vancouver promoter
James Harrison McKee turned
back to the Freedom Foundation
which Mr. Millin directs.
Vancouver police Friday seized
records of the gold mining enterprise In which members of the Baptist Church, invested more than
$395,000.
McKee, said to have promoted
the scheme to recover gold from
the Fraser River sands and use the
profit for anti-Communist broadcasts, was reported In Santa Rosa,
Calif.
CHECK DISPOSAL
Mr, Lennox said: "The crux of
the matter is the disposal of this
money and of some money that Mr.
McKee left In an account here, another $8,000.
"Our duty now Is to call on Mr.
Millin to prove that this money was
properly expended." •
The Ontario securities commission and the British Columbia securities' commission have been
looking into the gold-mining
scheme and its methods of financing for more than six months.
The Ontario commission's action
followed an affidavit sworn Friday
by John Schmidt, 48, construction
company foreman in suburban New
Toronto.
Mr. Schmidt said he loaned $800
to tbe ill-fated project In 1957 and
is still unpaid.
' His promissory notes expired on
April 1 last year and he has been
unable to get in touch with McKee
fo press for payment.
The gold-mine project at lillooet, B.C., has been, suspended
through lack of funds and hundreds of persons in the Toronto
area, Baptist ministers and
church members, hold unpaid
notes. Work on the mine ceased
last fall.
Details of the scheme came to
light last week. Previously, the
Ontario and British Columbia securities commissions were prevented  from  contemplating  ac
tion because of unwillingness of
any of the lenders to sign formal
complaints.
.' J. Stewart Smith, British Columbia superintendent of brokers,
said all that remains of the
money loaned Is certain muchin-
thal a gold-mining enterprise in
California may prove i successful.
The scheme was "the strangest
I have seen since I entered office
20 years ago."
DOCUMENTS SEIZED
He said police seized the documents of the enterprise on his information and further action in
the case would have to wait until
the papers were examined.
The investments, apparently
were made in return for promissory note;, on the understanding
that the profits resulting from the
Frajer River enterprise would be
used chiefly to set up a radio station at Prince George, B.C., to
broadcast to Communist China.
Mr*. Schmidt said he and his
wife were visited in July, 1957, by
a neighbor, Arthur B. Ridley, and
Henry Sleeman of Vancouver.
Mr.  Sleeman is secretary of
Allied Holdings Limited of which
McKee is president and Millin
and Ridley are directors.
SHOWN SAMPLES
Mr. Schmidt said the two men
showed him "samples of gold
dust which they described to us
as having been removed from the
property on which the project
was being conducted."
They were advised early last
year in a letter from Mr. Millin
that an independent engineer,
Robert W. Wighton, had been engaged as a qualified engineer in
charge of the project.
Mr. Schmidt's affidavit said: "I
have now been informed that and
believe that the said Mr. Wighton
is not a qualified engineer,but a
fellow of ttie Royal Geographical
Society and is a minister of the
Baptist Church."
Mr. Schmidt said Ridley and
Sleeman told him that a great
deal of money would be made
from the project and that a $500
investment might easily return as
high as $500 monthly a year after payment of initial expenses.
"We were advised that it was a
condition of subscribers that thev
agree that 10 per cent of all
profits be paid to the church."
HOROSCOPE
For Tuesday, April 7, 1959
MARCH 21 to APRIL 20 (Aries)
— Highly stimulating influences
for mental work, new ideas and
methods, scientific research. Make
your plans carefully and follow
through conscientiously, and you
can accomplish a great deal.
APRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus)-
An encouraging day for essential
matters. The student, teacher, all
those in artistic fields can make
good progress. Maintain harmony
in family circles, /'     „
MAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini) -
H you give concentrated study to
-argent and necessary affairs, a
fine) pleasant day is in order. Good
Mercury rays should prove highly
inspirational.
JUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer) -
This day should prove most productive. Planetary influences encourage both skilled and unskilled
work, Use care in finances, however.
JULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leo) -
A day for action,'accomplishment
— and optimism 1 Emphasize Leo's
innate dynamic personal magnet-
U.S. Controls
Send Farmer
To Canada
CLEVELAND (AP) - A farmer
who is one of Ohio's bitterest enemies of federal wheat controls
said that he will exile himself
and family in Canada.
John R. Donaldson, 48, of New
London, Ohio/ explained that self-
imposed exile was the only alternative to "abject and ignominious
surrender'' to federal controls.
He was prompted by a federal
court decision'last week that turned down his appeal of a $322 penalty for over-planting his allotted
wheat acres in 1957. He has been
id the courts for three years in
losing battles against this and a
previous penalty amounting to
$225.
Donaldson made his intentions
known in letters to his congressman and to the,U. S. attorney at
Toledo, where the law suits originated.       * i
He said he planned to go to Ontario this week to seek a suitable
farm and later would sell his 389-
acre ferm in Huron County, which
was handed down from his great-
great-grandfather.
ism in forging ahead toward worthwhile goals.
AUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER 23
(Virgo) — Mental tasks, authoring
stories, books, plays, teaching, etc.,
sponsored by excellent Mercury
vibrations. You could, without apprehension, try out new ideas,
projects; create, improve others'
inventions.
SEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER 23
(Libra) — Almost all worthwhile
endeavors are encouraged now,
but there is a warning to all that
both foolhardy recklessness and
going into' debt needlessly are
harmful. Be realistic.
OCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER 22
(Scorpio) — So much thatjs good
and encouraging is embodied, in
this-day's forecast that it behooves
you to get an early start — and
continue without dallying; Be
cheerful, hopeful, ambitious.
NOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER
21 (Sagittarius) — A substantial
period in which every worthy effort
in honest fields should return
something of value. Excellent Jupiter influences favor financial In-
tfir&sts
DECEMBER 22 to JANUARY 20,
(Capricorn) — Saturn's position"
now suggests care in personal conduct; also in handling machinery
and tools. Otherwise, this day can
be a truly gainful one. Have no
doubts about trying new tasks,
projects.
JANUARY 21 to,FEBRUARY 19
(Aquarius) — New ventures are
equally sponsored with familiar
interests and activities. Aim to
broaden your vision and action to
include matters that can better
future security. Be eareful of
details, however. Good Uranus
rays !
FEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20
(Pisces) — All personal desires
may not turn out quite as you
wish but benefits and opportunities
will come through unselfish attention to obligations and routine
duties. Look for unusual "breaks"
—and act on them I
YOU BORN TODAY are amiable,
friendly, kind, highly intuitive and
imaginative. You can achieve top
success if you choose the right
field and have faith in your ability
and talent. You are industrious but
must guard against becoming too
set in your ways thus hampering
mental flexibility. Improvements
are being made daily; keep pace
with the best of them and be ready
to acknowledge advantages and
values. Birthdate: St. Francis
Xavier, ."apostle of Japan," Wm.
Wordsworth, English poet.
Labor Union's Spats
No Threat to Merger
By NORMAN WALKER
WASHINGTON *AP> - Sounds
of bickering and bluster continue
from the Inner councils of organized labor's biggest club, the
AFL-CIO.
Despite feuding and a fussing
among the leaders, It still appears the merged labor movement Is going to stick together.
What's all the arguing about?
Fundamentally, former CIO
chiefs led by Walter Reuoher,
head of the big auto workers union, feel the AFL is ducking and
compromising o. too many of its
f-oblems.
PUSHING TOO HARD
By and large, leaders of the
old AFL, where AFL-CIO President George Meany has bis
roots, regard the veteran CIO
crowd as upstarts and even
rather ungentlemanly for pushing favored labor aims too, hard.
AFL stalwarts counsel more patience.
However unsightly evidence of(
these clashes of personalities and
methods may appear to the out
sider, they were freely—and, It
turns out, accurately—predicted
by the labor leaders themselves
at the outset o; the merger three
years ago.
But somehow the wounds have
been patched up. Basically, AFL
forces have the upper hand. Disgruntled CIO chiefs apparently
have never been so disgruntled
as to seriously consider quitting
the merged organization.
This was the situation at the
most recent flareup within the
AFL-CIO executive council at its
winter session at San Juan,
Puerto Rico. Tempers soared,
hot words flew. There was little
give and take on problems and
in the end fundamental differences remained unsettled.
Reuther wanted a mass march
of unemployed on Washington.
He talked in terms of 29,000 to
40,000. Meany nalked at. such a
Show of pressure on the administration and Congress, a view
shared by many other council
men.
OTHER COMPLAINTS
This led to other complaints.
Too little attention to organizing',
a disposition to let jurisdictional
rivalries between unions slide
along unsolved, and other points
of friction. A broadside charge
was made that Meany makes too
many policy decisions on his
owa.
It was finally decided to give
Reuther a little more ground
on the Washington unemployed
rally. Plans are to stage it April
8 with anywhere from 5,000 to
10,000 delegaes. A smaller group
will descend on Capitol Hill the
next day to, buttonhole congressmen for aid for the idle;
There was internal bickering,
too, whether to Oust carpenters
union president Maurice A.
Hutcheson as ah AFL-CIO vice-
president and council member.
Hutcheson is under indictment in
an Indiana highway land scandal
and charges have been made to
the Senate rackets committee of
union fund irregularities.
But on this point the AFL-CIO
chiefs closed ranks, Reuther included, to avoid a serious rupture
in the federation. Hutcheson's
carpenters had threatened to secede and take other unions with
them. This problem is not one
PORT COQUTTLAM, B.C. (CP)
There is $5 in a fund started
Friday for Alfie Grey, 12, recovering from burns to 80 per cent
of his body. Organizers hope to
swell the amount to $5,000 by
next week to pay for countless
skin grafting operations ahead.
Alfie was btfrned when he
touched a -60,000-volt power line
Feb. 12 while playing with a
friend.
that the AFL-CIO has solved, but
merely put off.
Most bystanders at the San
Juan sessions felt the fuss may
have' cemented rather than weakened the AFL-CIO. It brought differences out into the open and
got them discussed.
sense!
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Ort iksL (Point
This is the final column under "On The Point" for the
1958-59 season. It seems a great many words and many
thrilling hockey moments ago that we dusted off our typewriter and crystal ball to help along the fortunes of this year's
great Leaf squad. Although our task has been made a very
pleasant one by the appreciative comments of many readers, the real spur to effort came from watching this past season's edition of the Maple Leafs out there on the Ice-lanes.
With everyone who shared the hockey entertainment and
excitement they provided, we join in paying tribute to one of
the finest player-coach combinations to compete in the. grand
winter sport which has made
%5>\
Canada famous.
After a confused opening last
| autumn, the Leafs steadied and
1 commenced to roll with the turn of
the New Year. There followed
three ofthe most exciting months
of hockey competition any fan
could desire as the team pounded
out win after win to wrest and
hold the league leadership. Following that tremendous display of
dogged determination and drive,
tlie lads battled through a gruel,
ling eizht-game round robin semi-
final, attain emerging on top of the
heap. Then cams the three game
annihilation of Rossland Warriors
in the WIHL finals, which led into
the provincial playoffs for the
Savage Cup. Having won their
first two contests against the powerful Vernon opponents, misfortune
struck our Leaf camp with a vengeance. Everyone knows about that
end of the game goal that awarded
the third clash to Vernon. What
would have happened had Leafs
carried their surging will to win
Into overtime that night, one can
only guess. Ours is that they would
have'won and gone on to take the
series handily. However, the Canadians rallied, and the long nervous tension began to tell on the
Leafs, who'could not regain tha*
magic something which-time after
time had brought crowds to their
feet in Tearing admiration. They
did manage to bounce back and
force the Savage Cup series into*
a final, sudden-death, last game
decision, There the finish was written; but : neither the loss nor the
many questions provoked by the
series could erase from the minds
of Nelson fans the respect 'and esteem they had for Mr. Walter "Ollie" Dorohoy and his phenomenal
1958-59 Maple Leafs. Perhaps
everyone's feelings were best illustrated by the fan who said: "Wait
till next season.'We'll finish what
we started this year!"
* * *
Following a social evening last
Friday at the Legioh hall,'when
Con Madigan received the award
as most valuable player on the
6<juad, and Charlie Goodwin was
presented with the WIHL rookie of
the year trophy, the team -broke
UP; gome of the players,.SBjgjSfe
rived fiiis year will "be' remaining
to take jobs in Nelson. Others
will be coming back in the fall all
being well. Already, Ollie Dorohoy
has expressed a verSr sincere interest in returning. All enjoyed
both our city and its friendly people. In turn, our city was happy
to welcome all the new Leafs. With
the first class .resident old guard,
those remaining and those returning, the Leaf camp should open
this Autumn with.a powerful puck
potential.
* * *
Now skates, sticks and pads disappear,'but the business of hockey
remains, with.much to be accomplished before the spring fades. If
the tremendous appeal . of the
Leafs can be gauged by- the increasing fan support they aroused
week by week throughout the season, then more and more people
are honestly anxious to see and
enjoy the calibre of senior hockey
so excitingly presented during the
past months. This' being so, now
Is the time to make sound, business-like plans for next season. Because of the confusion which pe*r-
'tained last year as Spokane dropped out of the WIHL, none of the
teams which eventually brought
the league through its toughest
testing were fully prepared or financed for the hockey campaign.
This cannot happen again.
I,1 H Nelson is to continue to ice a
k, team against rivals where employ-
v4 ment can be offered hockey talent,
one, and only one sound financing
method appears feasible. That is
subscribers'' The major part of the
season's operating costs must be
underwritten BEFORE tbe season
commences through season ticket
subscribers. Failing that, It cannot again be expected that generous Baker Street merchants and
long-suffering donators, plus one
or two citizens-picking up the Inevitable deficits, are going to prevent hockey from folding. Next
season is an exciting and desirable
possibility at the moment, but
whether it becomes a reality or
not is going to depend upon the
fans. They will assure It or reject
it when the matter of subscriber
support arises, as It will, before
long. From the enthusiasm which
the Leafs under Dorohoy evoked,
we feel sure the Queen City will
not be missing from the WIHL,
when the leaves turn brown again.
*  *  *' ,
In closing out our column for the
season, we want to thank all who
have so co-operatively helped to
make it possible; a patient news
editor, a ready-to-skate team and
coach, a hard working executive
nucleus, and a first class.hockey
expert and assistant, Don Apple-
ton. With these acknowledgments
we say adieu to hockey for another
year. "It's been a glorious season,"
exclaimed one fan, to which we
simply add, "indeed it has!"
Canadiens Win Finals Berth;
Bruins Win 54 to Tie Series
Seventh Game Tuesday
By RON ANDREWS
Canadian Press Staff Writer
TORONTO (CP) - Boston
Bruins, fighting back from injuries and two desperate Toronto rallies, squeezed out a 5-4 victory
against Maple Leafs Saturday
night. The win sent the Stanley
Cup semi - final round into a
seventh and deciding game Tuesday at Boston.
Bruins, who twice held two-goal
leads only to lose them, had
three players limping through the
third period when centre Bronco
Horvath deflected Vic Stasluk's
shot off his elbow Into the Leaf
net for the winning goal.
Until that goal, at 12:53, Bruins
appeared to be weakening under
the rejuvenated Leafs who fought
back from a two goal deficit
twice.
Illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
Additional Sport
On Page 2
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
WIN CUP BERTH
HULL, Que. (CP) - Hull-Ottawa
Canadiens won a berth in the Eastern Canada Memorial Cup finals
with an 8-3 victory Sunday over
Quebec Baronets to take, their best
of three semi-final 2-0.
In the Eastern final they meet
either Toronto St. Michaels or Peterborough Petes.
Stamps Whip Warriors
5r2 to Gain 2-0 Lead
CALGARY (CP) - Calgary
Stampeders, scoring twice within
the first six minutes of play, powered their way to a 5-2 victory
over Winnipeg Warriors Saturday
night in the Western Hockey
League's best - of - seven Prairie
Division final series.
Stamps lead the set 2-0, after
winning the first game Thursday
3-2. The series moves to Winnipeg for games Tuesday and
Thursday and Saturday, If necessary.
Saturday's display was a repeat performance for Stampedes, ..^..checked the Warriors
closely and outskated them for
most.of the distance. The game
was played before .7,231 fans.
Dusty, Blair netted two, goals
for Stampeders with Chuck Blair,
Don Ward and Ron Leopold adding singles. Red Johansen and
Warren Hynes scored for War.
riors who trailed 0-2 after the
first period and 1-3 after tbe second.
Dusty Blair deflected Gino Ro-
bazza's blueline drive past the
outstretched hand of goalie Al
Rollins to send Stampeders ahead
at 3:04 of the first period. Chuck
Blair made it 2-0 while BUI Folk
was in the penalty box. He
slapped Eddie Dorphoy's rebound
1.to the net at.^iOS,-
Witli Warriors getting six shots
at Roy Edwards, Stampeders
missed several good scoring
chances in the remainder of the
session but Ward increased the
lead to 3-0 at 6:26 of the second
period,when his long shot hit defenceman Don Johns' stick,
grazed Rollins', glove and dropped
over the crease.
Art Wall Coptures
Masters Golf Title
AUGUSTA, Ga. (CP)-Art Wall
a sad-faced golfer with a sweet
putter, won the - Masters Golf
Tournament Sunday as Canada's
Stan Leonard fell into fourth-
place tie on a shaky final round.
Wall, six strokes behind the co-
leaders at the start of the final
day, shot a round of 34-32 — 66
over the par 36-36 — 72 Augusta
National, Course for a 72 • hole
score of 284. He shot birdies on
five of thevlast six holes.
Cary Middlecoff, the. 1955 Masters winner, finished second after
failing in a desperate bid to tie
on the finishing holes. Middlecoff had a final round of 72 for a
total of 285. .
Defending champion Arnold
Palmer, who was. tied with Leonard for first place at the start of
the final round, salvaged third
place at 266. He had a 74 on the
final round.
Leonard shot a 75 on the final
to tie former open champion Dick
Mayer for fourth place with 287.
EQUALLED RECORD
Wall's finishing '66 equalled the
last-round record for the* Masters
made by Doug Ford when he won
fhe title two years ago.
The lean. 35-year-old shotma-
ker from Pocono Manor, Pa., literally came from nowhere to
overtake Palmer and Leonard
and then stood off closing bids
by Leonard and Middlecoff.,
Wall had rounds of 78-74-71-66-
284-<four strokes under par for
the Augusta National Course,
which again was Jammed by a
huge gallery Sunday for the finish of the-23rd Masters.
Wall is the leading money winner on.the professional tour this
year, has won one previous tournament and has finished second
three times. But in 10 years of
professional golf he- never had
won a tournament of major importance. ,.
?i
END OF THE SEASON AWARDS were given out at the dance held In honor ol the
Nelson Maple Leafs Saturday night In the Legion. Most Valuable Player trophy went to
Con Madigan, defenceman for the Leafs while Rookie of the Year award went to Charlie
Goodwin.
t ' •
^--e_-_-m
'Each team's top line contributed three goals, Johnny Bucyk,
with two, and Horvath scored
Bruins' final goals. Stasiuk is the
third member of that 11ns. Early
in the first period Jerry Toppaz-
zini and Don McKenney scored to
give Bruins a 2-0 lead.
The Gerry Ehman-Frank Ma-
hovlich-Billy Harris line of Leafs
scored three goals, Mahovlich
getting two and Ehman Hie other.
Bert Olmstead scored the first
Leaf goal on the power play.
Toppazzlni, hit hard by Leafs"
Allan Stanley midway through
the seco t period, suffered possible broken ribs but was back
in action in the third period.
Morrison needed 15 stitches to
close a cut on his lip, inflicted
by a flying puck in the secondk
Armstrong pulled a groin muscle
in tbe same period but took his
regular turn during the third.
LUMLEY SENSATIONAL
Leafs threw everything they
could muster up at the Bruins
during the last seven minutes of
the game but Boston netminder
Harry Lumley, kicked out everything in his typically sensational
manner.
Lumley made 27 saves while
Johnny Bower of Leafs had a
busier time, stopping 31 drives.
Hawks Beaten 5-4
CHICAGO (CP) - Montreal
Canadiens, the 1958-59 Natitnal
Hockey League champions, advanced to the Stanley Cup final
Saturday night by \ shading Chicago Black Hawks '5-4 on a goal
by Claude Provost with lets than
a minute and a half of regulation time remaining.
The triumph gave the Canadiens ths best-of-seven semi-final
playcff series 4-2 and they now
aw/, the winner of the Toronto-
Boston Mini • final, now deadlocked 3-8.
After Provost's goal, the infuriated.crowd of 18,5-1—second only
to the 20,004 who packed Chicago
Stadium in a regular season
game in 1947—'held up play for
about 15 minutes by tossing debris on the,ice.
Fans on ice
Two enraged Chicago fans
dashed onto the Ice and took
swings.at referee Red.Storey
after the game-winning goal.
This display preceded a roaring ohant of "We Want Storey."
The Canadians,' gunning for an
unprecedented fourth straight
title, will meet, the winner of the
Boston-Toronto series in Mont-,
real Thursday.
Provost's goal, his second of
the night, came on assists from
Don Marshall and Phil Goyette,
;our minutes after Ted Lindsay
pulled Chicago Into a 4-4 tie at
14:32 of the third period.
It waa a hard-fought game in
which 22 penalties were called.
Montreal's Dickie Moors sod
Chicago's Ed Litzenberger snd
Ted Lindsay also scored two goals
each. Montreal's other goal was
by Doug Harvey, when ths game
was only 2:20 old,
NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, APRIL 6, 1959—7
HOCKEY SCORES
All-Ontario Senior
Kitchener-Waterloo 8 Whitby 1
Whitby leads beat of seven final
**»•
International League
Fort Wayne 6 Indianapolis 1
Fort Wayne leads best of seven
semi-final 84.
Western Canada Intermediate
Vancouver 7 fted Deer 8
Red Deer leads best of five semifinal 2-1.
Manitoba Juvenile
Winnipeg 1 Flin Flon 10
Flin Flon wins best of three
final 2-0.
PARIS (Reuters) — Francs beat
Wales 11-3 Saturday to win the five-
country International Rugby Union
championship for the first time.
Stanley Cup
Best-of-seven seml.flnals:
Series A
Montreal . 4 2 ai 16
Chicago *   2 4 ltai
Montreal wins series 4-2)
. Series B
Boston
Toronto
Scorers!
33 1917
S3 1719
Moore, Montreal
Bonin, Montreal
Litzenberger, CM
Sloan. Chicago
Ehman, Toronto
Mahovlich, Tor
McKenney,1 Boston 2
Mackell, Boston 2
Toppazzini, Bos 4
Geoffrion, Mont    2
a a pts. p«t
3
t
8
3
5
4
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8—NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, APRIL 6,19S9
BRITISH SOCCER
LONDON (Reuters) — Results
of soccer games played in the
United Kingdom Saturday:
SCOTTISH  FA CUP
Semi-finals
Aberdeen 1 Third Lanark 1
St. Mirren 4 Celtic 0
ENGLISH LEAGUE
Division I
Aston   illi 1 Leicester 2
Blackburn 0 West Brom 0
Blackpool 3 Leeds 0
Chelsea 2 Man City 0
Man United 3 Bolton 0 .
Notts F 1 Arsenal 1
Portsmouth 1 Preston 2
Tottenham 3 Luton 6
West Ham 3 Everton 2
Wolverhampton 3 Burnley 3
Division II
Barnsley 0 Sunderland 2
Brighton 4 Ipswich 1
Bristol C 1 Sheffield W 2
Cardiff 1 Fulham 2
Charlton 2 Scunthorpe >
Grimsby 1 Bristol R 2
Huddersfield 2 Lincoln 1
tlverpool 3 Derby 0
Middlesbrough 4 Leyton Or 2
Rotherham 0 Stoke 0
Sheffield U 2 Swansea 0
Division III
Bournemouth 3 Swindon t
Bury 2 Bradford C 2
Colchester 1 Mansfield 3
Doncaster 3 Accrington 0
Norwich 4 Brentford 1
Plymouth 1 Halifax 1     -
Queens P R 5 Wrexham 0
Reading 3 Notts C 1
Rochdale 1 Southampton 0
Southend 1 Hull City 1
Stockport 1 Chesterfield 1
Tranmere 2 Newport 1
Division IV
Bradford 3 Shrewsbury 1
Chester 1 Gillingham 2
Crewe Alex 5 Aldershot 0
Crystal P 1 Exeter 1
Hartlepools 10 Barrow 1
Northampton 0 Milwall 1
Port Vale 3 Coventry 0
Southport 1   Jldham 1
"orquay 0 Gateshead 1
Watford 2 Carlisle 2
Workington 0 Walsall 1
York City 2 Darlington 1
SCOTTISH LEAGUE
Division I
Clyde 3 Falkirk 2
Hibernian 1 Dundee 2
Stirling 1 Dunfermline 1
Division n
Albion 2 Alloa 0
Brechin 2 East Fife 2
Cowdenbeath 1 Montrose 1
Dundee U 1 ftranraer 0
E Sliding 1 Ayr U 0
Forfar 3 Dumbarton 1.
Morton 2 Berwick 1
St. Johnstone 1 Arbroath 1
Stenhousemuir 2 Hamilton 2
IRISH LEAGUE
Ards 3 Distillery 5
Ballymena 2 Bangor 0
CMtonville 0 Linfield .4
Coleraine 4 Crusaders 0
Glenavon 2 Deny City 2
Glentoran 0 Portadown 1
VANCOUVER (CP) - Indications that the CCF and organized
labor in British Columbia are
near agreement on united action
to oust the Social Credit government were given today before the
CCF provincial convention here.
An interim report of the provincial CCF • Canadian Labor
Congress joint liaison committee
said that during the last 12
months there has been unanimous determination on both sides
to co-operate in the ousting of
the present government of B.C.
Because of this determination,
problems that had faced the
committee in attempting t> work
out a satisfactory joint political
arrangement had been overcome.
The report said several recommendations represent conslusions
reached after 12 months experience in efforts to implement
resolutions adopted by conventions of CCF and the B.C. Federation of Labor last year. They
form the basis of further action
contemplated by the committee
for the ensuing year.
The recommendations of the
committee include:
1. That members of both organizations support work conducted
by the political education committee of the federation at the
constituency level;
2. That the executive of both
organizations send a joint state-
CCL-CCF Discuss Action
Against Socred Government
'*\^
Gu«o
ment to all their units regarding
extent to which a common legislative policy exists, agreement on
arrangements for an immediate
election platform, and arrangements for financing the campaign
by mutual agreement.
It also recommends that nominating conventions be held in
abeyance pending acceptance of
the proposed plans for co-operation.
Soccer Standings
LONDON (AP)—Standings of
leading teams in the English and
Scottish Soccer Leagues (including Saturday's games):
ENGLISH LEAGUE
Division I
W
BRITISH RUGBY
LONDON (Reuters)—Results of
Rugby League matches played in
the United Kingdom Saturday:
Barrow 10 Leeds 20
Batley 4 Hull 20
Blackpool 6 Workington Town 9
Bradford Northern 12 Wakefield
Trinity 9
Featherstone   Rovers   42   Dews-
bury 11
Halifax 19 St. Helens 25
Huddersfield 27 Castleford 23
Hull  Kingston   Rovers   16  Doncaster 10
Hunslet 22 Brantley 4
Keighley 18 York 24
Oldham 67 Liverpool City 6
Warrington 27 Salford 21
Whitehaven 39 Swinton 17
Widnes 36 Leigh 16
Wigan 38 Rochdale hornets 0
Pezance and Nevvlyn 6 Cardiff 13
Redruth 6 Ebbw Vale 10
LONDON (Reuters)—Results of
Rugby Union  games  played in
the United Kingdom Saturday:
,   Inlcr-scrvices tournament
Army 3 RAF ll
Club Matches
Old  Oranleighans   11  Metropolitan Police 3
Old Merchant Taylors 14 Guy's
Hospital's
Richmond 3 Saracens 8
Rosslyn Park 21 New Brighton 13
Wasps 19 St. Mary's Hospital 5
Aberavon 11 London Irish 0
Abertil'lery 0 Swansea 3
Aldershot Services 12 Old Blues 3
Birkenhead Park 10 Leicester 6
L T
9  4
Wolverhampton 24 9
Man United ' 23 10
Arsenal 18 12
West Ham 20 14
Burnley
Division II
Fulham 24   8
Sheffield W 24   T
Liverpool 22 10
Sheffield U 19 11
Stoke C 19 13
Division IH
Plymouth 21
Hull 23
Brentford . 18
Division IV
Port Vale 25
Coventry 21
York 18
Exeter 20   9 9
Crystal P 18 11 12
SCOTTISH LEAGUE
Division I
Rangers 20   3  8
Hearts     . 19   6  6
Airdrieonians «15 12  6
Division II
18  12   7
6
5
4
5
5
7 13
9   8
8 13
7   8
9 10
6 16
Ayr United
Arbroath
Dumbarton
Brechin C
Stenhousemuir
25    3
18
15
J4
3
6 5
7 6
10   5
TELEVISION FOR TODAY
,     PACIFIC STANDARD TIME
KXLY-TV - Channel 4
9:00—Morning Playhouse *
9:30—Godfrey Time *
10:00-1 Love Lucy *
10:30-Top Dollar »
11:00—Love of Life *
ll:30-Search for Tomorrow *
ll:45-Guiding Light *
12:00—It's a Great Life
12:30-As the World Turns *
l:00r-Jimmy Dean Show *
1:30—Houseparty *
2:00-Big Payoff •
2:30—Verdict Is Yours *
3:00-Brighter Day *
3:15—Secret Storm *
3;.30-Edge of Night »   .
4:00—Cliff Carl Show
4:30—Early Show
5:50-Lite-O
6:00—News
6:10—Sports Spotlight
6:15-Doug Edwards *
6:30-iName That Tune ♦
7:00—The Texan * .
7:30—Father Knows Best *
8:00—Danny Thomas *
8:30—Ann Sothern *
9:00—Desllu Playhouse *
10';00-Captain Grief
10:30-Night Edition
10:40-Sports Scoreboard
10:4S-Late Show
KHQ-TV - Channel 0
40—Color Test Pattern
43-r-Test Pattern
56—Bible Reading
59—Program Previews
00—Continental Classroom
30—Q-Toons
WK-Dough Re Mi ♦
30—Treasure Hunt *
00-Price Is Right *
30—Concentration *
00-Tic Tac Dough »
3CMt Could Be You *
00—Queen for a Day *
30—Haggis Baggis *
00->-Young Dr. Malone *
30—From These Roots *
00—Truth or Consequences *
30—County Fair *
00—Matinee on Six:
Anna Christie
45—Our Gang
00-Flve O'Clock Movie:
Arsene Lupin Returns
30—Weatherwise; Front Page
45-NBC News ♦
:0Or-Rescue Eight . '
;30—1959 Academy Awards *
: 30—Alcoa Theatre *
:60—Arthur Murray Party *
: 30—News
: 40—I.E. Dance Contest
:45—Late- Movie:
Another Thin Man
KREM TV — Channel 2
6:00—Superman
6:30—Newsbeat
7:00-Star Performance
7:30-Shiriey Temple
8:30—Bold Journey •
9:00—Voice of Firestone *
9:30—Glencannon
10:00—Night Court
10:30-Nightheat; John Daly
H:0O-Channel 2 Theatre
(Programs subject to change by stations without notice.)
T
Bridgewater and  Albion 8 Pen-
arth 14
Bridgend 23 Pontypridd 6
Bristol 24 Bedford 11
Cross  Keys  34 Lamorgan  Wanderers 5
Gloucester 3 Llanelly 3
Neath 8 Coventry 8
Newbridge 16 Cheltenham 3
Northampton 34 Notts 11
Nuneaton 8  Maesteg 21
Plymouth Albion 3 Newport 12
Pontypool 12 London  Scottish 3
Rugby 13 Old Alleynians 14
Torquay Athletic 11 Bath 12
United Services  (Portsmouth) t
Blackheath 34
Waterloo 5 Harlequins 0
U. S. REJECTS
RUSS COMPLAINT
BONN (AP) ' - The United
States Saturday rejected a Soviet
complaint that it had created a
hazard by flying a high-altitude
plane through the corridor into
isolated West Berlin, reliable informants reported.
The Americans set forth their
position in a written memo
banded to the Russians at the
four-power air safety centre in
Berlin. It was a reply to a Soviet
protest lodged after a C-130 turboprop plane flew into Berlin at 25,
000 feet March 27.
Russian jets buzzed the American plane, flying at wing-tip as it
crossed East German territory to
and from Berlin.
ON THE AIR
CKLN PROGRAMS 1390 ON THE DIAL
(PACIFIC STANDARD TIME)
MONDAY, APRIL 6, 1959
59-Sign On
00—News ■'-
05-Wake Up Time
30—News
35—Wake Up Time
55—Farm Fare
00—Chapel in the Sky
15—March Time
25—Sports News
30—News
35-Wake Up Time
00—News
10—Sports News
15—Opening Markets
20—Wake-Up Time
55—Morning Devotion
09-News '
: 05—Story Parade
: 15—The Archers
30—Lucky Penny Winner
35-Paul Hesketh
00—News
05—Beauty Notes From Fiala
10—Hammond Organ
15—Happy Gang .   .
45—Woman in My House
00—News    .  .
05—Excitement
•30-Woman's World
35—Women Today
40—Entertainment World
00—News
05—Polka Party e :
15—Sports News
25—News
31—Farm Broadcast
54—Nqon Markets
00—News
03—Matinee
45—Sacred Heart '. -
00-Sohool Broadcast
30—Trans-Canada Matinee
30-Pacific News
40-B.C. Road Report
45—Rocking With Boates
45—March Time
: 00—News
05—Rolling Home Show
20-Ottawa Report
25—Rolling Home Show
40—Closing Markets
45—Rolling Home Show
55—Sincerely Barbara Berude
: 00—News
: 10—Sports News . s,
: 15—Rolling Home Show
00—News ■
: 30—Academy Awards
30—To Be Announced .
00—News
10-Sports and Weather
: 15—Provincial Affairs
: 30—Distinguished Artists
00—News
:10-Sign OH
6:00-Sharp at Six
8:00—News
0:10—Sports News
9:00-BBC News
9:15—The Archers
9:30—Morning Concert
IP: 00—Morning Visit
10:15—The Happy Gang
10:45—Woman in My House
11:00—Kindergarten
11:15—To Be Announced
12:15-e-NvWS
12:25—Showcase
12:30—B.C. Farm Broadcast
12:55-Five to One
CBC PROGRAMS
(PACIFIC STANDARD TIME)
TUESDAY, APRIL 7, 195?
1:00—Pacific Express
1:45—Program Resume
2:00—School Broadcast
2:30—Trans-Canada Matinee
3:30-The Stars Oblige
4:00—Legend
4:30—Tempo
7:00—National News
7:30—Twilight Time
8:00—Business Barometer
8:30—Jazz
9:30—Leicester Square
10:00—News
10:15—Critics at Large
10:30—"University of the Air
DAILY CROSSWORD
ACROSS
i. Mother
6. Equips
(.Danger
10. Blundered
12. Silly
13. Nasser's
capital
Id. Rendered
fat .
16. Stagger
16. King of
Bashan
17. Cupola
18. Nickel
(sym.)   »
19. Small
restaurant
22. Roman
money
23. Loiter
24. Audience
26. Viper
28. Male geese
32. Solar deity
(var.)
88. Be
2.Sandarao
tree
8. Obey
4. Malt
5. Entrust
& Angry
7. Fortitude
8. Calm
&A
steersman
11. Miss
Day
IS. Also
17. Jingles
20. Lofty
mountain
21. Sun
god
22. Exist
25. Sale
notice
J6.0f a
continent
27.Pek-
ingeso
29. Some
30. African
HuawH aaHBJH
"""lsata asp"-
ihhh aat
ib     aaan
hheihh
(colloq.)
31. Soapy
33. A thick
soup
F-iiiUKIli
IHHUH   aHBHH
Saturday's Anawa
36. Jupiter
37. Departed
38. Peel
40. Crow's cry
34. Chinese
measure
35. A wrong.
37. Storage
battery
plate
89. Worship
40. Dimes
41. Unusual .
42. Plague
43. Agrees
(slang)
44. Marries
DOWN
1A household
%
*
2
r-
sr
1
r-
s—
T~
5—
¥
9
i
%
-
ii
ft"
$
it
*
a
16
^4
|
17
%
ii
ii
JO
21
i
»
i
%
ll
%
24
ii
I
%
u
V
I
2*
19
30
if*
ji
^/f
33
V/
at
i4"
jf
J*
1
39
i
4>
41
I
4i
i
4s
'^
44
I
■4-6
DAILY CRmOQUOTE — Here's how to work itt
AXYDLBAAXB
IS LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Is used
tor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all hints,
each day tbe code letters sire different
A Cryptogram Quotation   .
ZLYBO.      OBPO      ZPGOV      P      OIiOQQ
VBCTO       OBCTC       LV      «R       rLTTBO-
BPRLCQ.
Saturday's Crjptoquote: THU PEACE! OF GOD, WHICH
PASSBTH ALL UNDERSTANDING—PHILIPPIANS.
tamgiwftiattuxsSrajU^ISeJ
 \
Ud[
SMALL INVESTMENT   -
LARGE RETURNS
That's the Want Ad Story  - PHONE  1844
YOU CAN HOW PHONE YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS IN UNTIL 5 P.M. ON SATURDAY.
HELP WANTED
APPLICATIONS ARE INVITED
- by the Corporation of the Village
of Kaslo for the position of electrician, to operate and maintain
the municipal owned hydro electric plant and diesel electric
emergency standby plant and to
maintain and extend, when necessary, the transmission line in
Connection therewith. Applications will be received up to 5
p.m., April 6th, 1959, and personal interviews Tuesday, April
7th Irom 10 a.m. This is a working position vacant April 17th.
Apply Municipal Clerk, The Corporation of the Village of Kaslo,
Kaslo, B.C.      .
DO YOU WANT A GOOD SOLID
income? We are looking for ag-
•gressive men who find themselves ready for more mature
responsibility. If you have some
selling experience, Come and see
us. This is a permanent position
with future advancements insured. Commissions, MSA, etc. Apply The Manager, Suite 5, 973
Eldorado   Street,   Trail,   phone
FOR TOPS IN SALES-FOR TOPS
in dally eabilngs—for top Commission—sell the largest line of
tonics — vitamins—culinary extracts — spices -*-"cosmetics, etc.
No experience needed. Open territories  in  your  surroundings.
. Write for details. Familex, Dept-
76, 1600 Delorimier, Montreal,
HELP WANTED — FEMALE
EARN EASY EXTRA . MONEY,
spare time, at home, bji phone.
For full information, send stamped, self-addressed envelope, "Mademoiselle", 370 Donlftd St„ Winnipeg 2, Man.
IVANTED-COMPANION HOUSE-
keeper, capable, fond of children.
Good home for right party. Box
10092, Daily News.
WANTED - GIRL TO TRAIN AS
chambermaid. Phone 385 after
6 p.m. ._.-.
SITUATIONS WANTED
AVAILABLE - SEVERAL MEN
specializing in pruning, fruit
trees and flowers, building rock
walls and general gardening. For
information phone 683-Y.
FOR THE BEST IN BODY AND
paint work, see Ted's Auto Body.
I mile Granite Road, or phone
bus 98: res 1186-Y.
THERE IS ONLY ONE ADDRESS
for smooth cement work, Patio
floors. Sidewalks and plastering
basement walls. Phone 1732-L-3
DURACLEAN FLOWER FRESH
cleaning. Rugs, chest'■'fields,
uoholstry. Phone 446-R.
FOR EXPERIENCED SEPTIC
tank cleaning, phone 1994-L for
rates and annointments.
CHESTERFIELD CLEANING, IN-
visible mending. Dutch Cleaning
Service, phone 2190.
PUBLIC NOTICES
GOLDEN GENERAL HOSPITAL
tenders are invited tor the construction of a 26-bed hospital St
Golden, B.C.
Plans, specifications and tender documents will be available
at the office of Smith and McCulloch Architects,' 660, Eldorado
Street, frail, B.C., on Monday,
April 6th, 1959,. on deposit' of
$75.00, which will be forfeited if
all are not refunded in good condition within ten days following
submission of tenders.
Tenders Should be in a sealed
envelope marked ai to content,
addressed to the Chairman, Golden Hospital Board, P.O. Box
230, Golden, B.C, ahd should be
accompanied by a bid bond as
specified in the Instructions to
Bidders, j   -
They will be accepted up to
5 p.rn. (MST).on Monday, 4th of
May, 1959. The lowest or any
tender will not necessarily be accepted.
Signed:
C F. £OELINS,
Secretary-Treasurer,
Golden Hospital,
Golden, B.C.
BUSINESS AND
PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY
RENTALS
LARGE FRONT ROOM OVER
our office. Suitable for light
housekeeping, or office, workshop, etc. Gas heated, $35 a mo.
Also storage space in good base-
ment. Apply Appleyatd's.	
ATTRACTIVE   3-ROOM    APART-
ment, hall block off Baker St.,
furnished or unfurnished, heat
and water supplied, $60 month.
'414 Fall St., phone 1184-Y.
LARGE FRONT BED - SITTING
room or light housekeeping if desired. Also smaller room. Close
in, reasonable rates. Ph. 965-Y.
3-BEDROOM APT., CLOSE IN, $50
per month. Available May 1. Ph,
181-Y after 6 p.m. or write Box
122, Daily News.
APT. FOR RENT-3 ROOMS AND
bath. Stove, fridge and bed. Private entrance. 912 Sixth St., ph.
1263-Y.
FOR.RENT: SELF CONTAINED
unfurnished apartment, half of
duplex house. Suitable for couple.
Only $40 per month. Phone 933-X
SELF-CONTAINED APARTMENT
3 rooms and bath, heated, private .entrance, electric stove.
Phone 2206
ASSAYEHS AND MINE
REPRESENTATIVES
H S.-ELSes. ROSSLAND, B.C.'
Assayer.   Chemist    Min Rep.
ENGINEERS AND SURVEYOR?
Drafting Service and Suppliers for
Engineers,   Architects,   Surveyors
and Draughtsmen.
Reproduction Paper and Linen
Trail Blueprinting and Supply Co.
Ltd,
Suite 18, 1234 Bay Ave., Trail.
Phone 2358,-.. :•.. .'-,-
RAY G. JOHNSON   B.A Sc.
B.C. Land Surveyor
1015 Eighth St    Nejson   Ph   144-R
BOYD C. AFFLECK, MEIC
B.-C. Land Surveyor P. Eng. tCivili
218 Gore St    Nelson   Phone 1238
G W .BAERG, B.C.
'.    Land Surveyor
373 Baker St   Nelson   Phone 1118
HOUSE   REMODELLING   AND
cement work. Call 1581-Y-3, 6 to 8
p.m. . • 	
TRADE   SCHOOLS	
TRADE   SCHOOLS
DIESEL
HEAVY EQUIPMENT
Trained men are needed for
all types of jobs in the Tractor
and Equipment Industry. If you
are mechanically inclined and
are not making better than $90
per,week, or you don't have job
security, you owe it to yourself
to write for free facts, 'without
obligation,  about this training.
TRACTOR TRAINING
SERVICE, LTD.
Box No. 262, Nelson Daily News
FOR SALE J- 1959 FRIGIDAIRE;
custom Imperial dryer, no venting, required, 3 months old, $275,
regular $369 plus tax. One %-bed
With mattress, $30; one 5-piece
kitchen chrome set, $45; one desk
and stove, $8; one set of golf
clubs with'bag, caddy cart, nine
Clubs, $?5; one Beatty washer,
$25. 920 Fourth St. or ph. 2197.
AUTOMOTIVE,
MOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES
SACRIFICE 1-TON TRUCK
1953 FARGO with deck and box.
1957 REBUILT MOTOR.
Excellent Rubber, Signal
and clearance lights. $856
cash or finance.
. Phone 252
Algar's Tire Service
FOR SALE - 1957 CHEVROLET
210,. two-door standard 6, white-
wall tires, plastic seat covers,
custom radio, two-tone paint,
30,000 miles, real bargain, $1700.
Also 1958 Volkswagen deluxe,
leatherette upholstery, excellent
condition, 18,000 miles, $1600 or
i best offer. 920 Fourth St„ phone
2197.
SPECIALIZING IN ENGLISH
car repairs. Used parts for 194f
to '52 Austins, '49 to '52 Hill
mans. '50 to '54 Morris Minor
'51 Morris Minor motor; '52
Vanguard. '47 Oldsmobile- 6. '49
Monarch, '49 Chev, '51 Ford
convertible. Cottonwood Wreckage Service, phone 2100. Box
382. 24 Ymir Road. Nelson
INSURANCE
WAWANESA MUTUAL
INSURANCE CO.
Agent,- 6B4 Ward St. •
McHardy Agencies Ltd.
■■OR SALE MISCELLANEOUS
DEALERS M 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. -
Phone PAcific ^8357.
OIL FURNACES AND HEATERS
serviced. Gas heating installed.
Bonded, licenced gas fitter
Norm Bowcock, phone 385
70 BTU NATURAL GAS THOMP-
son heater. Phone 1413-L after
3 p.m.
FOR SALE - GIRL'S NEW COM
bike; electric rangette; 1 electric
skillet. Phone 743-R-2.
SIMPLEX COAL AND GAS COM
bination,  water tank and gas
heater, cheap. Phone 542-X.
HEALTH FOOD CENTRE OPEN
day and evenings 924 Davies St
FOR SALE - 3-PCE. BED OUT-
fit. 1019 Falls St.
FOR SALE  - McLARY RANG
ette. Phone 1751-X.        	
MACHINERY
FOR SALE - IHC WALKING
plow, 10-ln., excellent shape, $25
F. T. Balmer, Kaslo, B.C., phone
85-X.
ftOADBUiLDING - PIPELINE^-*
Dykes, etc., designed and built
by contract., A. G. Bayes Ltd
<50 Bennett Ave., Penticton.
APTS. - HOUSEKEEPING AND
sleeping rooms. Dishes linen
supplied. Private parking. Day,
week, month rates 171 Baker St.
FURNISHED 2-ROOM SUITE, -
hot and cold water, plus light
housekeeping room. Ph. 491-X or
140 Baker St-
SELF CONTAINED 2 BEDROOM
suite, heated, hot water, redecorated. Phone 2170.
APT. FOR RENT, 3 ROOMS AND
bath. Heated. Private entrance.
912 Sixth St., ph. 1941-Y after 5.
FOR RENT APRIL 1st UNFURN
Ished self-contained, heated flat.
Adult*. Ph. 394-R
FURNISHED SUITE,  CLOSE IN.
Suit couple. Phone 343-Y.
1-BEDROOM HOUSE  ON GRAN-
ite Road. Phone 1837.
BDRM. AND KITCHEN, EVERY-
thing supplied. 715 Vernon St.
HOUSEKEEPING SUITE FOR
rent. Phone'759-X.
APT., 3 AND BATH, 1 BLOCK OFF
Baker, furn. or Unfurn. Ph. 385.
NORTH SHORE LAKESIDE COT-
tale' for two. Ph. 1703 or 1604-R.
FURN ISHED APT. MAY TO
Sept. Adults. Ph. 394-R evenings.
PARTLY FURNISHED 2-ROOM
suite. 723 Silica St. Phone 718-R.
SUITE FOR RENT - PH. 2199-L
after 5 p.m. '
HOUSEKEEPING   ROOM   FOR
rent. Phone 1564-X after 5 p.m.
PROPERTY, HOUSES,
FARMS, ETC., FOR SALE
FOR SALE OR RENT - TWO-
storey building fully equipped
with modern fixtures for butcher
shop and grocery store. Would
be suitable for a coffee, shop.
Ideal location on main street.
Payment can' be arranged to
suit buyer or renter. Write Byng
Hotel,. Box 1120, Cranbrook, B.C
FOR SALE — 6-ROOM. HOUSE,
27 acres, 7 cleared, 20 bush. Good
for. pulp wood. Plenty of water;
electricity; fruit trees. Outside
buildings. Suitable for small
farm. 12 miles west of Nelson.
Or will trade for Nelson property.
Box 120, Dally News.
FOR SALE: 2 BDR. HOUSE, FUR-
nished. Also 2 apartment house,
revenue $90 a month. Phone
2257-L.
FOR SALE: 85 ACRES, STAND-
ing timber, buildings fair. Piped
, water, electricity. Make offer.
Storgard Farm, Slocan City.
ROOM AND BOARD
BOARD AND ROOM FOR YOUNG
gentleman. Phone Mrs. Truscott,
1179-X.
HOTELS AND MOTELS
ST. CLAIR HOTEL, 222 S HOW
ard St.. Spokane.'   Clean, quiet
rooms, w/wo' bath,   low rates,
, parking close by..
LIVESTOCK, POULTRY
AND FARM SUPPLIES, ETC.
FOR SALE - D-2 CAT WITH
blade or breaker plain. Ph. Balfour 23-W.
WANTED MISCELLANEOUS
WANTED TO BUY - LOGS DE-
llvered to Harrop, or . timber.
H. R. Stafford end Sons, phone
Balfour 21-X.
Wrecking -so Austin - also
have. underdash  radio,  6 volt.
S. Fletcher, Box 206, Salmo, ph.
59-R.        ii ,.„., --i-    '
FOR SALE - 1953 (J6nSuL, $400.
Phone, Davies, Kaslo, 17-M.   •
WANTED - 20 CU.>T. OR OVER
deep freeze, in good condition.
Box 10741, Daily News.
WANTED - CLEAN COTTON
rags. Nelson Daily News.
CLEAN COTTON RAGS WANTED.
Any quantity. Peebles Motors.
WANTED - Single! Bfet)'"M)
dresser. Phone 405-L.
EVERGREEN POULTRY FARM
and Hatchery, Fruitvale, B.C
Chick nrices - 1959 Leghorn and
Leghorn New Hampshires. Ph.
2706.
Unsexed
Pullets
Day oia ....
  18
"35
1 week ....
  25
43.
2  week _.
 33
51
3  week  ...
 40
58
4  week 	
...... 47
65
5  week ......
  54
. 72
6   week ...
  62
80
7  week *...
^_^..„,	
 -  90
-,
9  week _.
'..
.... 1.10,
10 week „.
  1.20
11 week   .
.... 1.30
12 week
1e40
FOR SALE - FAMILY COW, JER
sey. Phone 23-K, Balfour.
Nrlmm lailti Nrtm.
Circulation DCpt., Phone 1344
Price per single copy 6c Monday
to'Friday, 10c on Saturday.
By Carrier per Week 35c
in advance.
Subscription Rates
By Mail in Canada Outside Nelson:
One month       __...  11,25
Three months i     3.50
Six mOnths       6.50
One year .   12.00
By Mall to United Kingdom Or the
United States:
One month  $ 1,75
Three months ft.'*,--, --■■•-■■    6.00
Six months  ., *     9,00
One year          18,00
Where- extra postage is required.
above rates plus postage.
For delivery by carrier in Cranbrook, phone Mrs Wm Stevely;
In Kirfibericy, A. W Brown;
In Trail. Mrs Syd Spooner:
In Rossland. Mrs. Ross Saundry.
Vigilance
Imperative
Says P,M.
OTTAWA (CP) - Prime Minister Diefehbaker said Saturday he
sees nothing on the world scene
to suggest or to permit "the luxury of a slackening in the preparedness of the free nations."
"The need for vigilance and
unity is as imperative now, if not
more so, than at any time during the last decade," he said during a Parliament Hill ceremony
marking.the 10th anniversary- of
the North Atlantic Treaty Organization.
"There is no room for cleavages Within the (NATO) alliance," he said,, "no place for
half-hearted co-operation, 'no going it alone' much as that course
might .appeal to nationalistic
spirit and sentiment."     , ,
The flags of the 15 NATO partners were unfurled in front of the
Parliament Building as the RCAF
Central Command band played a
special medley of their respective national anthems.
Mr. Diefenbaker took the salute
at a march past of a 100-man
guard of lienor made: up of members of Canada's three armed
services.
About 50 diplomatic and military, representatives of NATO
countries attended the brief ceremony, j
four Awards
For Canada
Filmstrips
NEW YORK (CP) - Canadian
films 'and filmstrips won four
prizes Friday night at the American Film Assembly competition.
Entry was open tp filmstrips and
16-millimetre films released in
North America during the last
two years,
City of (Told a National Film
Board of Canada motion picture
which has already won first prize
at the Cannes Festival in France
and was a runner-up for a Hollywood Oscar award last year, won
first prize in the history, category.'
The film uses pictures taken
during the gold rush era to tell
the story of the Klcndike boom
of 1898.
Legend of the Raven, produced
by Crawley Films Limited of Ottawa, finished in a tie for first
place in the cr.legory of stories,
legends and films for children.
In this film, an Eskimo grandfather tells an old Eskimo legend.
Eskimo carvings of stone aid
ivory are used to illustrate the
story.
Blue ribbon awards also went
to two filmstrips produced by the
National Film Board. These were
Cendrillon, a filmstrip designed
to teach French to English-speaking children, and a series of
three filmstrips on the Great
Lakes-St. Lawrence region.
PRECARIOUS PERCH
BANGOR, Me. (AP) - A 67-
year-old man,'with a foot wed*sd
between two heavy timbers, dangled from the top Of a six-stcrev
elevator shaft for more than 40
minutes Friday before nolice and
firemen rescued him. Albert Fortin suffered only a sprained leg.
Urg<
Red China
es Youth
To Go North
By RONALD FARQUHAR
PElPIrJG (Reuters) — Young
Chinese are being urged to migrate to their country's vast,
thinly-populated northern frontier
regions to help tap rich resources
there.
In the last four years, 1,330,000
of them have left their homes
in the interior to reclaim wasteland, till virgin soil and build
new roads, railroads, towns and
Industries in the mountains,, desert and steppes.
More ate reported to be, on
i'.eir why this spring to join other
pioneers opening up these rugged
territories where many of China's
national mkority races — Mongols, Tibetans, Uighurs, Huis and
others-4ive.
YOUNG COUPLES GO
Newly - married couples are
among the thousands, who, official press reports here any, have
•volunteered for this work. Some
will go to Sinkiang, which is about
the same size as British Columbia, the Yukon and Northwest
Territories together and has a
'•opulatien of about 5,000,000. It
borders On Soviet Asia. Others
are bound for Chinghai. a province adjoining Tibet, Many will
head for the grasslands and deserts of Inner Mongolia and other
areas in the northeast.
They are urgently needed there,
the ^official. -Communist party-,
newspaper People's Daily explained, because although the.
land is vast and resources above
and below ground unusually abundant, the population is sparse and
technical know - how relatively
f>OOr. , ■ '
. They have been told not to expect all hortie comforts—at first,
anyway. '   '     ',
This advice came from another
•Peiping  newspaper,  the Kwang-
ming Daily.
THE QUALIFICATIONS-
The newspaper said young migrants should be volunteers, politically reliable, In good health
and without family ties. Young
workers, fawners, scientists, technicians, students, medical men,
government officials and cultural
■■•orkers are wanted..  .
Since 1951, newcomers have reclaimed about 1,660 square miles
Of Wasteland,. which is estimated"
to be able to yield 650,000 tons of
grain a ;• ar. They also have carried out geological prospecting
and helped to build up industry
and water conservation projects.
During the last four years, official reports state, more than
100,000 workers of Han (Chinese)
nationality have gone tc Paotow,
on the Inner Mongolian grasslands, to help bui'.d a new iron
and: steel, plant that will be the
third largest In China when lt is
cmplete. '■'
Recent publications say that in
the last four years, more than
60,000 Settlers have gone to Sinkiang.
The-arid Central Asian region
is one of. China's, main livestock
breeding areas. Only a small
acreage Is under crops although
there are plans to turn it into
an important cotton - producing
territory. It also has oilfields and
denosits of copper, lead, tine,' silver and gold.
All Roles
Challenge
Poitier
NEW YORK (AP) - Sidney
Poitier, Hollywood Oscar nominee
and bright new Broadway star,
says that Hie day he first looked
for a theatre job, a casting director told the-utterly untrained
lad he had too many handicaps
to hurdle. i ■ •
" 'I'll show him!' " Pottier told
himself 15 years ago.
"But what I really meant was,
'I'll show myself.'"
He bad been In a mood of perpetual self-challenge ever since.
His arrival "In the rew hit play,
A Raisin in the Sun, evoked unanimous critical .cheers and established him as a stage star in fact,
as well as billing, in his first major theatre role.     s
He is simultaneously in the
screen spotlight by virtue of
work in The Defiant Ones. His.
portrayal in it made Potior 4
.candidate for the Film Academy
trophy to be awarded next week.
Being released soon is the
screen version of Porgy and Bess
in which he has a key role.
"Everying I have yet to do is
a challenge," the 32-year-old Poitier says when asked about future
goals. "Each job imposes a
greater sense of responsibility.
It's the one area where ego plays
a Constructive part."
After a dozen films and lesser
excursions in stage work, Poitier
calls his,role in A Raisin in thei
Sun his severest test to date. In
the warm and absorbing drama
of family life. Poitier is a young
father torn by ambition.
"The mercurial nature of the
man," he explains, "is the big
test. He isn't- one thing now and
something else later. He's a
whole bundle of things at ope
moment, and a
assortment right afterwards."
Sidney is still mildly awed by
the casual start of his'career.
"I was just looking for a better
job and answering ads in . a
paper," he says of events that
ied him to a Harlem basement
where the American Negro Theatre was operating. "I figured
acting paid better than a lot of
other things, like being a long,
shoreman.
"If no one had been there when
. dropped in, or told me 'No
jobs,' I'd liave just gone on
somewhere else.
''But when the director told me
I had toot many hurdles, I felt an
embarrassment because of an inadequacy that I didn't-want to
accept and have to Uve with."
NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, APRIL 6, 1959—9
Speculators Keep Watch
On General Development
Week's Metal
Review
NEW YORK (AP) - Custom
copper smelters held to a price
of 34 cents a pound last Week although UiOy found few buyers.
■The Industry's experts predict
that supplies of the metal will be
short when purchasers begin
stockpiling as a hedge against
all-buWertein labor trouble this
summer when wage contracts. ex;
pire..
The big copper producers began restricting the size of buying
orders. The companies, with their
price of 31% Cents a pound,, report demand le running welj.
ah-ad of supply.
The awaited trimming of the
price of lead to put it In line
with foreign rates came during
the week. A large custrm smelter shaved the quotation half a
By GERRY MARTIN
Canadian Press Staff Writer
Canadian stock markets seesawed through one dull session
after the other last week, continuing a trend which baa become
familiar during the past month.
Mardi ended and if you are inclined to be statistical-minded trie
month broke a chain of 10
monthly Index rises.
This brought at least a temporary halt to what has been
called the-greatest1 bull market
in history. -
The week offered little index
change but several issues
featured trading.. New Kelore a
speculative issue vas .the most
active one - session issue. On
the week it gained six cents at
23 cents.
if the week belonged to anybody it was to a handful of speculative mine..who too!, turns as
leaders. Besides New Kelore,
Can-Erin added 30 cents at (1.60
and Radiore was up 23 cents at
$1:64.      '
General Development was a
market feature and the Florida
real estate firm led the most
active Industrial stocks.
The rise of General Development over the past few months
has been spectactuiar. From a
low of »29.87% in February it
soared to a high of $75 in March.
Plana for a four • for - one stock
split were announced in March
arid this week the company declared a 100 - per - cent stock
d|vidend.  '
Then Just' aa suddenly as it rote
a wave of selling drove It beck.
Listed on the American exchange
in New York, lell-orders were so
heavy trading was temporarily
suspended on Wednesday Md
Thursday to allow orders to be
bandied!
PLAN INVESTIGATION
Wednesday the American exchange said the securities and exchange commission would investigate the stock to determine
whether there was any unusual
trading; in the stock by "insiders"
—officers and. directors. Brokers
said much of the selling came as
a result of stoploss orders.
Toronto Stock Exchange officials' said they were not planning
any investigation into the stock,
Index changes at. Toronto; Industrials up .24 to 324,74; golds
off 1.56 to 89.71; bate metals oft
2.29 to .179.14; Western oils up .19
to 133.59.
Index changes at Montreal:
Banks up .69 to 62.67; utilities
r" .8 to 155.9; industrials off 4.9
to 307.7; combined off 3.6 to
257.1; papers Off 3.6 to 466; golds
off 1. to 91.67.
B.C. and Yukon CCF Call for
Disallowing Nfld. Union Acl
VANCOUVER (CP)-The British Columbia-Yukon CCF convention Saturday unanimously passed
a resolution calling {or disallowance of the Newfoundland Trade
whole different Union Act Which recently outlawed the International Woodworkers of America (CLC) in
that province.
The resolution was presented
after the. 255 delegates attending
the convention heard a brief outline of the IWA. fight in Newfoundland by H. -Landon Ladd,
president tA iWAiDlstriOt Two, In
eastern Canada.
Mr. Ladd was given a standing
ovation as he described the Newfoundland situation as "a fight
for civil liberties."
The resolution said there now
is a petition before the governor-
generaHn-council asking for the
disallowance of the Newfoundland
legislation as a flagrant violation
of private rights anil natural justice and an abuse of power.
Prospects Look Rosy
On New York Market
By WALTER BREEDE JR.
NEW YORK (AP) -A spring
upsurge in^consumer buying
pushed the U.S. economy into
new high ground last week.
- Gains over the recession period
of early 1958 were impressive:
steel and auto production up
more than 100 per cent, crude
oil output up 15 per cent, department store sales up 16 per cent,
the stock market rising lustily
again and Easter retail trade at
a record high.
All signs indicated that the second quarter, just begun, would
leave the record - breaking first
three months of 1659 in the dust.
- Prospects for the July-September quarter looked less rosy. In-,
dustry observers' said the boom
in steel—inspired largely by fear
of a strike — would run out of
steam in June.
COUNT ON CONSUMER
But businessmen counted On
the consumer to keep the economy in high gear.
At the moment, the consumer's
ability to keep things- humming
looked good.
Equally hopeful were.the motor
leaders In Detroit. Production of
U.S.-built passenger oars*for the
first quarter zoomed to 1,591,353
compared to only 1.238,697 a year
ago. Retail sales held up nicely.
All manufacturers reported big
gains.
On the retail front, Ford announced that its, dealers Sold
408,300 cars in January, February and March—a gain of 119,400
over the year-ago quarter. Also,
said Ford, car buyers who until
recently showed a marked preference for stripped-down, "economy" cars with six^cyllnder engines and manual transmission
are getting interested again in
higher-priced autos with power
steering and power brakes,   ■
Looking at the economy as a
whole, the First National City
Bank of New York came out with
a cautiously optimistic forecast.
"With steel mills heavily sold
ahead," gait the bank "Industrial
output should reach new high
ground In the second quarter.
The high level of * purchasing
power, resulting irom record personal income and' relatively
stable consumer prices, is reflected in excellent easier business. The growing confidence of
businessmen and the improving
profits picture in recent months
show in plans for modest increases in plant and equipment
outlays during 1959."
.cent to ll cents a pound In New
York. Other smelters and producers lollowed quickly. The cut restored the price to the level that
prevailed before March 5.
Major metals prices:
Copper—3H4-34 cents a pound,
nominal, New York.
Lead—11 cents a pound. New
York;  10.8 cents, St. LOulS.
Zinc—11 cents a pound, East
St. Louis; HVfe cents, New York.
Aluminum—26.8 cents a pound,
ingots., shioping points (freight
allowed). PigSj 24.7 cents.
Nickel—74 Cents n pouid. electrolytic cathodes. Port Colbcrne,
Oi-»., U.S." d'lt" irc'uded,
Silvr1— 9"t c»rts an ounce!
Mew York; 7S% pence, London.
>
Henry Ritter, Montreal-born artist who died in 1853, was noted
for his paintings of the sea.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
TIME
IS HERE
John Deere Now Make
Their Own Backhoe.
It is heavier, faster and more
powerful than any.backhoe on
the market.
WE WILL BE GLAD
TO DEMONSTRATE
For Crawlers and
Rubber Tired Tractors
Call, Write or See
H   ..pfitj" Farenholtz,
Alec McDonald, Gordon Coutts
WELDING & EQUIPMENT
CO, LTD
14 Railwav'St.       Phone 1402
It said the Newfoundland act
Is In direct, conflict with the
spirit ot the proposed bill of
rights for Canada, and unless it
is disallowed a dangerous precedent wiU be established Ior other
provinces.
It resolved that the convention
express its support of the petition
for disallowance. ,
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
Genuine
Ford
Parts
Phone
"Red" Brochu
at
BUERGE
MOTORS LTD.
PARTS'DEPT ...
PHONE 1744
.OR 1745
Ask for . ;:■'.        ...       i'' .
"RED" or "BRIAN"
For
GENUINE
FORD PARTS
For. All Ford 'Cars
FORD
METEOR      '
EDSEL
MONARCH
MERCURY
',    FORD TRUCKS
FORD TRACTORS
ENGLISH FORDS
ANGLIA - PREFECT
THAMES PANELS
CONSUL - ZEPHYR
or Phone
Brian' MacKay
1744 — 1745
Genuine
Ford
.   Tarts .
 m?$m$mm_m
10—NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, APRIL 6,1959
.You Con Save Calories
by sweetening with
Sucaryl
.Sweetening Solution   4 oz.
1.15
This can be a great tieip to all the skookum gals
and boys who wish to cut down on those
developing waistlines,     '
mjr a un
,, • if
DRUGS LTD.
Europe May Hold Two
Germanys for Years
riant Cranes
■ly North
jj CORPUS CHRISTI, Tex. (AP)
At least 11 giant whooping cranes
flew north Saturday toward their
summer nesting grounds in the
Northwest Territories.
1 An aerial check, Friday .indicated 11 of the 32 rare whoppers
which wintered at. the Aransas
■National Wildlife Refuge north of
here have departed. .   ■
| The big birds, the last flock in
Existence, normally start north
%bout April 4,  .
NORTH VANCOUVER (CP) -
A young couple and their three
small children are homeless following a fire which Friday destroyed their house and possessions on the Capilano Indian Reserve here.. Mrs. Walter Nahanee
carried Walter 4, Daniel 2, and
Billy Joe; eight months, from the
burning building.
VERNON, B.C. (CP) - Shu-
swap Okanagai, Dairy Industries
Co-opetative has sent a cheque
for $1,090 to the University of
B.C, Development Fund. It was
the co-operative's second $1,080
payment to the fund.
OUR
3rd ANNIVERSARY
Celebration Continues
—— YOUR CHOICE
PAIR LADIES' NYLONS ... full
FREE
fashioned, first quality, with  purchase ef
$5.00 of gas
.',:;., or
FREE   PA|R MEN'S STRETCHIE SOCKS
with purchase ef $5.00 of gas
Come In . . . and Meet
JIM — LES — WALT — KEN
CLARKSQN motors
Phone 205
924 Nelson Ave.
BERLIN (AP) - In the desolate days of Berlin's capitulation,
Karl and Max Frenzel threw
down their guns, shook hands, as
brothers and went in different
directions.
Karl fled westward and Max
surrendered to the Soviets.! Karl
now is a prosperous West' German shoe store owner. Max, he
has learned, has an engineer's
job in Communist East Germany.
"We will never see each other
again," Karl says, "We- have
grown too far apart. The fact is
that there are two Germanys.
People keep saying that Germany
one day will be one nation again.
But not in my lifetime. We might
as well accept that."
This spring there may be East-
West discussions that may result
in some co " operation between
the two separate Germanys. But
whatever is said or done, there
appears little doubt that the map
of Europe is going to show two
Germanys for many years.
East Germany, with its 17,500,-
bOO inhabitants, is too far along
the'road to communism for the
Soviet 'Union to allow it to turn
back. It is too vital, militarily
and politically; to the Soviet
world. Its industrial production
is second only to Russia.
West .Germany, with its 51,000,-
000 people, is a flourishing capitalist economy. Industrially, its
production is second only to the
United States in the entire Western world.
Whether the diplomats say it
is a good thins or not that Germany is split, it is a fact that
the division has:
1. Shaken the old German culture and traditions.
2. Cracked the old class and
Prussian Caste systems.   ...
3. Checked the fanatic nationalism of the German, people that
caused two world wars.
What has been substituted is:
In the East — thorough-going
communism. For 14 years, Marxist concepts have been stamped
on a people whose resistance to it
was crushed in the Berlin uprising June 17, 1953. Now these penile have little more than sullen
hope.
In the West — The concept of
a united Western Europe in which
I West Germany can play a leading role culturally politically and
economically in the interests .of
common peace and' security.
jj hese are the ideas of Chancellor
Konrad Adenauer.
| Today, West Germany's industrial production is 232 per cent
of what it was before the war
under Hitler. West Germany is in
the middle of its biggest boom in
history. There is virtually no unemployment.
The "German miracle" has disrupted the old economic society.
Tens of thousands of new businessmen have elbowed their way
to places side by side with those
old industrial barons who survived, such as the Krupp family.
The former .upper classes have
disappeared as an elite.'    <
West Berlin is the bright window of Western life that attracts
East Germans. This 's a reason
why Nikita Khrushchev is so anxious, to smash that window this
year.
Life, however, in Eastern Germany has improved recently.
A crash program of industrial-
...WE CAN
SERVICE
Slocan City-New Denver—Silverton
t   ■
Regular Truck Service Mondays - Thursdays
AGENTS:
MAPLE LEAF STORE
MRS. CUNNINGHAM
Crescent Valley
SLOCAN PARK GENERAL STORE
SAM KONKIN
Slocan Park
PETE'S STORE AND GARAGE
PETE KINAKIN
Passmore
JONES STORE
MRS. JONES
•■-;.     Winlaw
VALLEY SERVICE
PETE STOOPNIKOFF
Appledale.
OUR SERVICES:
Pillows. Washed and Recovered
Waterproofing
Thorough Mothproofing
Alterations and Complete Repairs
No extra charge for special service
Press jobs on the spot
Rug and Upholstery Work
SANIT0NE
Kootenay
' Phone 1175 or 2020
LAUNDRY AND
DRY CLEANERS
Nelson, B. C.
Place Yellow Card in Your Window for Pickup
sation is in lull swing. The Soviet Union Is . building a 2,000-
mile pipeline to bring oil from the
Urals to East Germany's chemical industry, which is to be developed as the greatest in the Soviet empire. Private business and
farming, which had not'.already
been nationalized, has been given
a temporary stay of.execution to
help the program.
The Communist theory is that
West Germany is going to go into
an economic decline. In time,
they think, West Germans will be
attracted by progress across the
frontier and will be more Inclined
to talk business—co: Communist
terms.
Where Stalin hoped to win all
of Germany by starvation by the
Berlin blockade in 1948. - 49,
Khrushchev hopes to win it by
economic saturation.
Deranged Man
In Hospital
SUDBURY, Ont. (CP) - Steve
Siekiera, 38, who strapped Vh
sticks of high explosive around his
waist Wednesday at the 1200-foot
level of Murray mine and threatened to blow himself up, has been
committed for a mental examination.      '
He was transferred to the.Ontario Hospital at North Bay Friday,
mine officials reported.
When Siekiera refused to come'
to the surface Wednesday, Rev.
Eugene Jastalski of St. Casimir's
Roman Catholic Church here talked the miner out of his intention
and relieved him of his explosive
belt.
Company officials said that if
Siekiera had set off the dynamite,
the priest, a mine official and
other workmen nearby would have
been killed.
Classified Ads Get Results!
U.S. Insurance Firm Plans
To Include Strike Benefits
WILMINGTON, Del. (AP)-An
executive of an insurance firm
formed recently to sell strike-
pay insurance said Saturday Ihe
firm hopes to be offering policies
in 60 to 90 days.
Anthony Freitas, secretary-
treasurer of the' United Employes
Insurance Company, said the
firm now is in the process of
raising $375,000 in capital to
meet Delaware requirements for
businesses of its type.
The firm is offering a $20,000,-
Otio issue of common stock. Freitas said, "From the inquiries
we've been getting it iooks like
we should be selling policies
within three months."
The policies will be offered to
unions with the proviso that 80
per cent bf the participating union—whether a local or international group—participate.
TOP BENEFITS
Freitas paid maximum benefits
would be $62.50 a week for 12
weeks, after a two-week waiting
period, at a cost of 65 cents a
month.'Still other policies, at
higher premiums; would drop the
waiting-period  requirement,
Those eligible for the benefits,
he said, would be union members on a legal strike—one authorized during the period of a
contract by the union officials
responsible in this area — or a
legal stri> that follows exnirai
tion of a contract .and, inability
to agree on terms of a new pact.
Freitas said insurance contracts would provide that the policy be in effect for at least six
months prior to the expiration of
a union-management contract.
PLANNED SEVEN YEARS
Freitas identified himself as a
former Portland, Ore., aluminum
products dealer. He said he has
been in the Wilmington area
more than a year laying the
groundwork for the firm and that
plans for this new type of insurance company were in the works
seven years. He said he initiated
the plans.
He identified the firm's other
officers as Howard F. Kuder,
president, of. Hayward, Calif.,
and John W. Frost, i the vice-
president, of Portland. He said
both had a long background in
insurance.
He said .thej Securities and Ex-'
change Commission had given
the new insurance firm clearance to begin operations last
month.
The feasibility of wage insurance for striking union workers,
■Freitas said, had been determined'in an: actuary study.   -
The wage insurance will be
written for a one - year period.
Freitas said the firm .plans direct underwriting to keep premiums low. While starting in business with offices in the Bank of
Delaware building here, a na
tionwide network of branch offices is planned, he said. '
News of the Day
RATES: 30c line. 40c Une black face type; larger type rates on
request. Minimum two lines. W% discount for prompt payment.
Hot Rods, Winning Racers, Tanks
HOBBY SHOP-OPP. BUS DEPOT
ELECTROLUX SALES, SERVICE
512 Richards St., ph. 1108, Nelson
We make double-breasted coats
into single breasted.
ROBT. NOLTE, MASTER TAILOR
New stock of Fab-Spray just arrived—20 colors, at . . .
NELSON HARDWARE CO.
Film
Cameras - Photo Supplies
CUSTOM CAMERAS
Color or B&W Film Developed
Rebekahs, Tues;, 7:30 p.m., Oddfellows, Wives and Friends, social
evening, 8 p.m.
Eagles meet tonight at 8 p.m.
White Prilled Dacron tar that
short window, 50x54, at $5.50.
STERLING HOME FURNISHERS
For a real Rake-Off, try a true
temper Lawn Rake.
WOOD, VALLANCE HARDWARE
OPEN UNTIL NOON TODAY AND
EVERY "MONDAY.
EBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.
Large selection of garden tools
and glassware. Special, 50 ft. hose
with coupling, $1.69. Student desk.
HOME FURNITURE EXCHANGE
Gyproc Plasterboard in all sizes.
Joint Tape, Fillers and, Corners,
iT. H. WATERS & CO. LTD.
101 Hall St.    Nelson    Phone 156
Get your free Ortho Garden Book
now at Ellison's, your Green
Thumb Garden Headquarters, ph.
1830, Front St. ,
For expert fitting and top quality
be sure to get your
SAVAGE SHOE$
at Andrew's, your shoe hcadquar-
ers since 1602.
ATTENTION B.C. GOVERNMENT
EMPLOYEES—Monthly meting of
the Nelson Branch of the B.C. Government Employees Association
will be held in the Canadian Legion
Hall Tuesday, April 7, at 8 p.m.
ATTENTION
LA TO CANADIAN LEGION BR. 51
Special district council meeting
and luncheon, Sat, April 11, at 12
noon, in Legion Hall, Phone 449-R
for reservations.
GORDON'S PERSONALIZED
TEXACO SERVICE
See the Renault Economy Car
1 On Display. *
.Retary Luncheon Monday, 12:15
p.m., Hume Hotel.
KOOTENAY KILTIE PIPE BAND
General Meeting April 6th, 8 p.m.
at Legion. Everyone welcome.
For Sale — Equipment and refrigeration for butcher and grocery
store. Walk-in ,11' by 10', deep
freezer, fruit and vegetable display rack, computing scales, cash
registers, meat processing machines, fixtures, tools, etc. Phone
1177 or write Box 9166.
NOTICE
Until our agents, Valentino':
News Stand, open their new store
accounts may be paid at Whimster
Printing Office, 459 Ward Street,
Medical Arts Bldg.
.   GRIZZELLE'S FLORISTS
AND GREENHOUSES
INMEMORIAM
6HERRADEN — In loving memory of dear Rob who passed away
April 6, 1957.
Still loved, still missed, still very
dear; Fond memories keep him
very near.
Wife, Nellie and Relatives,
FUNERAL NOTICE
PRAfN. — Funeral services for
the late Florence Mary Prain, beloved wife of Stuart, will be held
Wednesday, April 8, 1959, at 2 p.m.
irom St. John's Anglican Churoh,
Fruitvale, B.C. Rev. J. C. Davenport will officiate. Interment in the
family section, Fruitvale Memorial
Cemetery. Clark's Funeral Chapel
in charge.   •
China Fears Holy War
Against Reds in East
By WATSON SIMS
NEW DELHI, India (AP)-Red
China showed (ears Saturday that
the Dalai Lama's escape to India
might spark a holy war against
Communism in (he Far East.
Tibetan exiles heralded the
refugee 23-year-old god-king as,
still the political leader of the'
Himalayan kingdom. But Prime
Minister Nehru' is expected to
impose curbs on the political activities of the Dalai Lama.
Informed sources said India
will recognize him only as spiritual leader of the Buddhists and
wiU bar him from forming a
government-in-exile.
In Hong Kong, a usually reliable source said Nationalist
China's president Chiang Kai-
shek will offer the Dalai Lama
political asylum in Formosa to
carry on the fight against Communism in Tibet. Nationalist officials were reported asking India to extend the invitation.
STILL TRAVELLING
The Dalai Lama, who slipped
out of his palace in Lhasa 18 days
ago under the noses of Communist guns, 'still was making his trek
on muleback through wild country in India, and, at last reports,
bearing up well.
The travelling was at a' more
leisurely pace, climaxing one'of
the epic flights of modern history, now that he is safely across
the border beyond reach of the
Chinese Communists. '
One report from Assam state
government sources said- the Tibetan party rested during the
night 18 miles northwest of Towang after moving through the
.4,000-foot Seal Pass.
The destination of the youthful
monarch, revered by millions as
"(he living Buddha," still was not
clear. One report said that on
reaching Tezpur, where there is
a usable airfield, he will be flown
to New Delhi and reach the capital in about a week.
BLAMES FOREIGNERS
Red China carefully refrained
from attacking the Dalai Lama
The Chinese charged
the Tibetan uprising that sent the
god-king in flight was instigated
by "foreign reactionaries under
the cloak of religion."
Tibetan rebels were accused of
having ''murdered and Insulted
monks and nuns."
Peiping enlisted two clergymen
identified as Chinese Catholic
leaders — members of a clique
that does not recognize Rome—,
to defend Red Chinese religious
tolerance.
Peiping radio quoted, Archbishop Ignatius Pi Chou Che of
the Shenyang Archdiocese, and
Tsao Tao-sheng, vice-chairman of
the Patriotic Catholic Association, as saying the Tibetan Revolt "has nothing to do with religion."
REBEL WOLVES
Another condemnation of the
rebellion was attributed to Huang
Cheng - ching, identified as
prominent Tibetan , and vice-
bairman of the government in
Kansu province. Peiping radio
quoted him as denouncing the
anti-Communist rebels as "wolves
in the guise of Buddhists."
Red China's attempt to win
over Buddhist leaders was dealt
a body blow by the Tibetan revolt—and flight of the Dalai
Lama. 5\*
In Ceylon, former premier Dudley Senanayake declared: "The
Communist attitude lo religion is 1
shown by thetreatment given the
Dalai Lama. I hope the meaning [
of these events will not be lost |
on the people of Asia."
The venerable Paravahera Pan-
nanada, a 1 ea d 1 n g Buddhist
scholar, denounced (he reported
shelling by the .Chinese' of Tibetan monasteries. He called on
Buddhists to rise to'save. Tibet
from Communism.
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Nelson, B.C.
Dalai Lama
Escaped in
Dark Night
KALIMPONG, India (Reuters)
The Dalai Lama escaped from
his Communist Chinese pursuers
by travelling only at night along,
a secret escape route used seven!
years ago by one of his brothers,
Gyalo Thondup.
The Dalai Lama and 80 followers crossed high mountain passes
and trekked through treacherous,
snow-covered bridle paths and
dense forest on one of the world's
most difficult routes. i
Along the twisting 300 - mile
journey, loyal followers kept the
secret of the Dalai Lama's whereabouts from his Chinese pursuers,
and armed rebels guarded the es- j
cape route for miles on either i
side. i   ■     . ■
At Towang, 8 miles, from the
Tibet-India border and the site of
one of India's largest Buddhist
monasteries, officials Of the Indian government are waiting to
meet Tibet's leader.
From Towang, he still will have
another two-week trek to reach
the nearest railroad point at Bali-
para, nearly 1,000 miles from
New Delhi.
There are no airstrips -near
Towang and helicopters cannot
operate at sufficient altitude to
reach the 10,000-foot area.
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FUNERAL NOTICE
ELLSTROM — Funeral services
for the late Alvin Ellstrom of Nelson, B.C., will be held in the chapel
of the :..eIson Funeral Home on
Tuesday, April 7, at 11 a.m. Interment will be made in Nelson Mem-.
orlal Park. Arrangements entrusted!
to Nelson Funeral Home.
DEATH NOTICE
DITOMASSI - On April 5th, Mr.
Ralph Dltomassi of Revelstoke
passed away in Nelson, aged 83
years. Remains were forwarded
this morning to Revelstoke where
funeral services and interment will
take place. Thompson Funeral Service.
FUNERAL NOTICE
HEWAT — Funeral services for
the late Mr. Ronald Hewat will be
held at St. Mark's Anglican
Church, Kaslo, Wednesday at 3
p.m. Rev. E. R. Hope and Rev.
Canon W; J. Silverwood will officiate and interment will take place
in the Kaslo Cemetery. Thompson
Funeral Service.
ATTENTION I   Nelson - Kaslo - Salmo - Slocan City
CANADIAN LEGION BRANCH NO. 51
SPECIAL MEETING
(Dinner Meeting Replacing General Meeting April 2nd)
LEGION HALL *»« ?at *" p*
Guest Speaker:
ROBERT McNICOL
President B.C. and N.W.
States Command
Admission:
Dinner and Dance $1.50
For Reservations
PHONE 548 IMMEDIATELY
Don't Miss This Event
PLAN NOW
AND BE THERE
TICKETS MUST BE PICKED UP BY MONDAY NIGHT
