 ^mmmmtmm'—
The Interior's
Largest Daily Newspaper
May Average Press Run — 9SS1
— ' :	
}H$   ^
Vol. 60
Published at Nelson, trar^^l lifioti^' * iment, financial and trading centre of the Kootenay-Columbia
 ■■ ■      *? °*ff ^ _ GrW 	
WEATHER FORECAST
KOOTENAY: Variable cloudiness, mostly sunny in afternoon.
Slightly warmer in Western sections. Low and high at Cranbrook
45 and 70, Crescent Valley 50
and 70.
' si
area
rfrfcj   C., CANADA—MONDAY MORNING, JUNE 12, 1961
Not More Than 7c Dally, 10c Saturday
No.- &
U.S., Canada Agree to $300 Million Plane Swap
Tractor Bargaining
Team Leaves Today
Hopes
To Free 1200 Cuban
Rebels With 500 Tractors
WASHINGTON (AP) — A four-man bargaining
team assembled in Washington Sunday to complete preparations for a mission to Havana which it hopes will
bring freedom for 1,200 Cuban rebels in exchange for 500
tractors.
The four — three agricultural professors and a labor union official — are to represent the Tractors-For-
Preedom committee in negotiations with Cuban Premier
Fidel Castro. If all goes well, these talks will start late today or Tuesday in Havana. I       	
A spokesman for Uie negoti- i fli*t   operations   at   Havana's
ators   said   they   would   have I airPort  would  not
nothing to say publicly before | Plans,
leaving   for  Cuba.   Apparently,
an  effort was  being made  to
avoid anything that might upset
the  arrangements  which  have
followed  a  confused  and  tortuous   course   since   the   committee  was  formed  to  accept
the exchange offer Castro made
on May 17.
Officially, the negotiators are
here only to pick up their visas
from the Czech embassy. Because the United States and
Cuba have no diplomatic relations, the Czechs represent
the Castro government here on
such diplomatic routine.
HOPES TO LEAVE TODAY
After getting its permits, the
team plans to leave for Miami,
Fla., where it hopes to catch a
plane to Havana late today.
The committee said a report
by Pan American World Airways of restrictions placed on
One undecided factor was
whether the team would have
full power to arrange the trac-
tors-for-men swap with Castro.
The Cuban premier has demanded the team be given Ml
power but a source olose to lhe
committee has said the technicians would not make any decisions and would report back
to the comrmittee on its negotiations.
-lie technical team consists of
Prof. Roy Bainer, head of the
University of California agricu.-
tural engineering department;
C. H. Hanse, assistant professor
of agricultural engineering at
Michigan State University; J.
B. Liljedhal, agricultural engineering professor at Purdue
University, and Duane P. Great'
house, director of the United
Auto Workers agriou-tural implement department.
Young Siocan Grad
Killed in Car Mishap
James Terry Solecki, 18, of
Siocan, was killed Saturday morning when the truck he occupied,
driven by a juvenile, left Highway No. 6 three quarters of a
mile south of Siocan.
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Gregor
Solecki; two brothers, Glen and
Mark, at home; two sisters, Mrs.
Keith Yoxall of Kaslo and Debbie,
at home; and his grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. N.   Shkwarok   of
The driver, a resident of Win- Procter and Mrs. J. Solecki of
juamish. The family resided at
Kaslo and Procter before moving
to Siocan about six years ago.
50 Killed as
Quake Levels
Village
TEHRAN, Iran (Reuters) —
Fifty persons were killed by an
earthquake in the southern village of Dehkouhen Sunday, it was
announced here.
In addition, more than 50 persons were injured in the village,
which was levelled by the quake.
AH the village's 1500 surviving
inhabitants, who were living in
mud huts, now are camping in an
open field.
The same tremors shook the
town of Lar, 15 miles away, injuring six persons and destroying
mud huts that survived a violent
earthquake in April, 1860.
Tremors were felt in areas within a 180-mile radius of Lar, 600
miles south of Tehran.
Doctors  and  tents,  blankets,
mmi..,,. «_•   ,„.,,      < medical supplies and food have
.    „        ,. TOLED° Ohio (AP) - A ease- ,been rushef t0 fc wea ^ere
Vic Hurst, line tank truck overturned and about 3500 persons were killed or
was called to the scene and ran exploded on the edge of the down- injured  in   an  earthquake  last
into Siocan village to summon; town district Saturday, injuring year.
medical help. | at least 71 persons and setting;        	
The boy is survived by his par-1 several nearby houses afire.
The most critically injured were j
firemen, attempting to extinguish
the burning truck when it ex-
i ploded.
law, escaped injury when the
1949-model truck left the highway in a long skidding arc, crashed on its side, and came to rest
on its roof.
The two youths were on their
way home at 5 a.m. when the
crash occurred. They attended 1
graduation ceremonies and re-|
ceived graduation certificates at
High School students in Slocanl
a gathering for W. E. Graham1
village before the accident.       .
RCMP judged the vehicle a
total wreck. I
After the crash the juvenile
pulled Solecki from the vehicle.
A  nearby  resident,
Gas Truck
Explodes,
71 Injured
U.S. Orders 200 Starfighters;
Canada to Get 66 Voodoo Jets
By HAROLD MOR81SON
Canadian Press Staff Writer
WASHINGTON (CP) — A huge military plane swap between Canada and the
United States, involving more than $300,000,000 worth of cjircraft, has been approved by
the two governments it was learned authoritatively'Sunda'y.
An agreement will be signed in Ottawa within 48 hours.
Under the deal — biggest of its kind in peacetime and involving more than a year
of negotiations — Canada will acquire about 66 American-made F-101 voodoo jet fighters to replace aging CF-100 subsonic squadrons in the North American air defence oper-
ation.   —
Britannia Teams
Tops in B.C.
End to Laos
! Fighting Urged
In turn, the United States will
place orders in Canada for some
300 F-104G Starfighter jets to be
shipped to North Atlantic allies
under mutual aid.
The main Starfighter contract
will go to Canadair Limited,
Montreal, with Orenda Engines
of Toronto and Malton, Ont.,
supplying the turbine power.
CANADA PAYS QUARTER
The terms of the agreement,
it was learned, will specify that
the United States will put up
about $150,000,000 of this cost
and Canada about $50,000,000
under a 75 - 25 cost - sharing
agreement.
But, in fact, there will be
compensation for Canada..'?, contribution in an a_K6mpanying
deal under which the .Kennedy
Khrushchev Proposes
Peace Talks On Qermany
MOSCOW (AP)-Soviet Premier Khrushchev proposed to
President Kennedy in Vienna an
immediate peace conference
over Germany, it was disclosed
Sunday by Tass news agency.
This conference would write a
peace treaty to fix Germany's
permanent borders, make West
Berlin a demilitarized free city,
end the Western occupation of
Berlin and turn over control of
its lifelines to the East German
communists.
If the allies were not ready
to do this he offered an "interim solution," by which the
two  German  states  would  be
together and themselves work
out a solution that would be the
basis of a treaty.
Russia and the Western powers would agree beforehand to
accept whatever agreement the
Germans made.
All this was contained in a
memorandum on the German
question which Khrushchev
handed to Kennedy in Vienna
last weekend.
NEW TIMETABLE
It set a new Soviet timetable
for the German question that
headed off any 'showdown over
Berlin until the end of this year.
Tass also distributed the text
KAMLOOPS (OP) - Mine
rescue and men's first aid teams
from Britannia Mines of Howe
Sound Mining Co. won first olace . (
:n the provincial mine rescue and( 'lames. There were people lying Indocninese
first aid competitions here Satur-! ;i'l over the grass."
day. j   The injured included 10 fire-
The mine resoue team, csp-i men and two policemen. Most
tained by Luke Kirby, won the of the rest were bystanders.
and works by d-rec'lng two" jets I B.C. department of mines-central j    Tj,e   truck    driver,    Edward
of air down behind the wearer, j B.C. association trophy. i Baum, was in serious condition
The first aid team was cap- in hospital. Police said Baum was
tained by J. Morrison.
Runnersto in _the, ir||ne ..wst'
cue comtMtitiohTwas the Cariboo
Gold Quarts Mining,Co. of Wells,
B.C., with. James White as captain.
■Runner up' in ihe men's first
aid Was Princeton No. 2 team,
St. John Aimljulan-e, captained
by Cart Stenvold.
WITH A COMIC strip-style
"antl-gravlty" rocket belt, engineer Harold M. Graham actually takes off ln a test at
Buffalo, N.Y. Rogers zoomed 30
feet Into the air cruised easily
over a hill and set down on the
other side. The belt is an invention of the Bell Aerosystems Co,
-TNS photo.
"One  fireman came running j
out of the smoke with his clothing I
on fire," said Mrs. Philip G.| GENEVA (AP) — Britain and' administration will turn over to
Lopez who lives near the scene the Soviet Union Sunday appealed the Canadian Air Force the Voo-
of the explosion.' I to the warrin gforces in Laos to doo fighters.
"He fell down on the grass and S'°P righting and announced that'    It was indicated the cost of
another  fireman   put  out   the lie 14-power conference on the
' *""'   " kingdom   will   get
given six months in which to get of  a  second  memorandum  in
REV. ROBERT LEISHMANN TAYLOR of Medicine Hat,
Alta,, was elected Moderator of the Presbyterian Church In Canada at general assembly in Toronto. Rev. Taylor said later he
did not think now was the time for union of the church with the
United Church. He also spoke out against opposition to religious
education in the schools.—TNS photo.
which Khrushchev denounced as
dictatorship a Western proposal
for a neutral director of nuclear
test control machinery.
Khrushchev warned that if
there was no peace conference
and the Germans failed to agree
he would go ahead with, his long-
threatened peace treaty with Ihe
East Germans alone, ending the
occupation status of West Berlin
and giving the East Germans
mastery over the access routes
to the city.
Airliner Loses
Engine in Sea
PRESTWICK, Scotland (Reuters) — A Dutch airliner with 73
American passengers on board
landed safely here Sunday after
one of its giant engines caught
fire and plummeted into the
North Atlantic.
The story of tlie emergency
aboard the KLM Royal Dutch
Airlines DC 7 — owned by the
Electric Boat Company of Gro-
ton, Conn. — was told by passengers who waited without panic
while the plane's eight crew members fought to land it safely.
Fire broke out in one of the
port engines when the Amsterdam-bound airliner was at 13,-
000 feet off the coast of northern
Ireland.
The 39-year-old-pilot, Capt. Wilhelm Bellink, said: "This has
never happened to pie before,
and I hope it never will again."
After'the engine dropped off,
Mopgey Back
Behind Bars
WINNIPEG (CP) -The ROMP
Sunday reported Percy Moggey
back ta his cell at Stony Mountain penitentiary, his 11-month
freedom ended by an eight-man
posse which included the member of the Manitoba legislating
for the area in which the capture
was made.
Moggey, who set a Manitoba
record for the longest escape record and who is the first man to
"go over the high wall" at the
penitentiary, appeared before
Magistrate William Edwards in
Stonewall, Man., Saturday to
hear a charge of escaping lawful custody.
He was remanded without plea
to Friday in Selkirk.
Considered by police as one of
the most wanted criminals in
Canada, the partly bald 57-year-
old man gave up quietly at dawn
Saturday when two RCMP officers kicked in the door of his
snugly built log cabin buried ta
the bush four miles north of
Eriksdale, 90 miles northwest of
Winnipeg.
Whitehorse       40
the pilot and crew were able to San Francisco     53
make a safe landing. '        •     Spokane    54
THE WEATHER
68   .
70
85   .
84
77
62   .06
64   .10
61   .06
58   .18
68
65
NELSON (Sun)  62
(Saturday)   53
Winnipeg   51
Regina  52
Calgary  41
Penticton  56
Vancouver  53
Victoria  50
in shock and-unable to give, them
details of ilie'crash..., ■-..,,-.._,
The tanker tnuok.sltidded on a
turn. The two-trailer vehicle jack-
knifed and the front tank overturned.
It took firemen an hour to bring
the fire under control.
UtakA. drndi.
Kootenay at Nelson—Sunday,
17.95 feet above zero; Saturday,
18.25 feet; Friday 18.35 feet (level
rose to 18.40 later in day following official reading.)
Columbia at Trail—Saturday,
45.1 feet; Sunday not available.
under way again today.
The British foreign secretary,
the Earl of Home, and Soviet
Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko
issued this statement:
"Lord Home, as chairman of
the.next session of the Laos conference has decided after con'
sulfation..with Mr. Gromyko to
convene the 14th plenary Session
on Monday June 12 at 11 a.rn.
"The United Kingdom and Uie
Soviet co-chairmen have agreed
to send a joint message to the
International Control Commission
whioh will be dispatched tomorrow. The message reiterates the
opinions of the co-chairmen to
the parties in Laos on April 24
to co-operate with the IOC in
effecting a control over a ceasefire."
The,.three-pOwer ICC is composed of India, as chairman;
Canada and Poland.
"Revolution"
Seen in Quebec
By RICHARD DAIGNAULT
Canadian Press  Staff  Writer
QUEBEC (OP)-French Quebec now is launched irrevocably
on a new course.
The Liberal administration of
Premier Jean Lesage, after an
unprecedented 107 - day legislative hassle with the Union Nationale opposition in the legislature, wound up the longest
session ta Quebec history Saturday when it voted through the
final pieces of legislation that
from now on sets the pace for
what some observers are calling
a revolution.
The session opened Nov. 10
and was spread over seven
months.
Highlights: free and compulsory education to the 11th grade,
a' multi-million dollar university
expansion program, full - scale
co-operation with Other Canadian provinces and the federal
government in national hospital
insurance, a provincial family
allowace system, the opening
of Quebec government agencies
in Europe.
Other legislation reflects pro
found changes. The behind-the-
scenes atmosphere in the government liquor business has
been eliminated. The new Quebec Liquor Board hears applications for licences at public
hearings. Quebec motorists have
been made financially responsible for victims of highway
accidents.
PURSUED TWO THEMES
The new government hammered away at two main ideas
thrOug    the session.
1. The most powerful instrument in the hands of the French-
Canadian people is their provincial government. With it they
could achieve economic security
and profit more largely from
the development of natural resources.
2. The people of Quebec must
devote most of their energies to
education and the development
of French culture. Quebec could
not hope to occupy a promient
place in the over - all North-
American picture as a great industrial power. But cultural and
technical achievements were
accessible and desirable.
these planes, estimated at about
$120,000,000, will be shared also
on a similar 75-25 arrangement.
Woman Urges
Physical Fitness
VANCOUVER (CP) — Women
should walk more, says Mrs.
Lome Brown, who has received
her master's degree in physical
education.
"I'm horrified at women's attitude toward fitness. They
should be more, conscious of it.
If they just walked more.
"Housewives should he encouraged to get out and do more
about physical fitness. It would
change their outlook."
Mrs. Brown, mother of two
young children and wife of
physical education teacher at the
University of B. C, obtained
her bachelor of science degree in
physical education several years
ago and later returned to school
for two years to get her master's.
The Browns plan to open a
camp for boys this summer but,
says Mrs. Brown, "maybe I
should be doing something about
women."
Parliament
By THE CANADIAN PRESS
Justice Minister Fulton said
RCMP security work is essential to meet "a subversive Communist effort" in Canada.
H. W. Herridge (CCF - Kootenay West) said he has been told
the RCMP asked unievrsity students to act as "stool pigeons"
to inform on other students.
Agriculture Minister Alvin Hamilton announced a second 3,750,-
000 bushel wheat sales contract
with Poland.
Prime Minister Diefenbaker announced plans to set up a Commons committee to propose
changes in the sweeping powers
of the War Measures Act.
Mr. Fulton indicated the government may use tougher methods to bring to justice the leaders
of a Chinese immigration racket.
CONDITION   FAIR
CULVER CITY, Calif. (AP) -
Screen star Jeff Chandler is rallying after his third setback
since he underwent spinal surgery May 13, his physician reported Saturday.
Moscow Sees Queen Troop Colors
By ROD CURRIE
LONDON (CP)-The Queen
celebrated her official birthday
Saturday and Prince Philip his
actual birthday by taking part
in the martial pageantry of
trooping the color.
For the first time the ceremony, with 60 officers and about
1,650 other ranks on parade, was
transmitted to television viewers
in Moscow.
The thousands who turned out
to view the ceremony under
brilliant sunshine and billowing
white clouds gathered around
Buckingham Palace and lined
the route along The Mall to
Horse Guards Parade.
As a nearby dock struck 11
a.m., the Queen, resplendent in
the long navy skirt and scarlet
jacket of the Scots Guards, rode
side - saddle into the parade
square exactly on time for the
80-minute ceremony.   Following
her was Prince Philip, 40 Saturday, wearing the uniform of a
colonel of the Welsh Guards.
The Queen's real birthday was
April 21, when she turned 35, but
it is observed officially on the
second Saturday of June.
The color trooped was that of
the 2nd battalion Scots. Guards,
who trace their history back to
1642 when they were raised as
a royal regiment by King
Charles I.
The ceremony was transmitted to Moscow under an
aigreement in which the Moscow
May Day parade was shown to
British viewers.
Columnist William Connor,
writing in the tabloid Daily Mirror here, says the Moscow show
of arms was "menacing, sombre and deeply oppressive." He
added:
"So what do we do? More and
heavier tanks? Nonsense!
"We put on the finest and best
parade of the wooden soldiers
the world has ever seen. We
shov. them the decorative mockery of war. Bearskins and all.
. "Who could be scared of this
lot? Our view of military preparedness for a conflict that
will have no winners could not
be better expressed than by this
lovely, skillful, historic and derisive charade against the arts
of warfare."
Thus Canada's overall outlay
would run to some $80,000,00.
with the United States putting
up the other $240,000,000. Canada's payment would be on an
instalment basis. She would take
over the American portion of
costs of maintaining the Pine
Tree radar network across
Southern Canada.
Canada then would be completely responsible for administering and maintaining this
etwork. Currently, Canada
pays about two - thirds of the
maintenance costs and the
United States pays (he rest.
WITNESSES WARY
A Congressional defence subcommittee has been told, in
Vague terms, of negotiations on
one part of the complex deal-
that touching on the F - 104G
Starfighters. But defence department witnesses, apparently
through m a n u facturers' pressure on political representatives
indicated the deal might not be
completed until next year.
Maj.-Gen. Robert J. Friedman
comptroller of the U.S. air force
confirmed that a cost - sharing
agreement was under discussion
but indicated it may not be completed before 1926.
The negotiations, which,, originally involved' the Canadian
OL-44 cargo plane, have been
going on for more than a year.
They started some time after
the Canadian government decided to junk production of the
controversial and costly Cans*
dian-made CF-lOO ■ and concentrate on acquiring Bamarc affaire, a ft missiles 'for location at
two bases in Quebec and Ontario.
When it became evident that
Canada's CF - 100 jet fighter*
were rapidly becoming obsolete,
Canada suggested'she would buy
the F-101 Voodoo if the American air force purchased the CL-
44 cargo plane.
The U.S. defence department
rejected the OL44, 6aying ft
was "generally inferior" to Jkn.
ilar planes produced in the U.S.
The possibility of the United;
States placing an order for Starfighters in Canada then was pro-
"ised as an alternative.
Mother, Six
Children Die
In Fire
ALBERTON. P.E.I. (CP) - A
28-year-old mother and six of her
10 children died when fire swept
through their two-storey frame
home in the smalt western Prince
Edward Island farming-fishing
community of Campbellton early
Sunday.
Dead are Mrs. Gerald O'Holler-
an, her daughter Irene, 10, sons
Michael, 7; Earl, 5; Dwight, 4;
Cyril, 3; and Randall, five
months.
fn hospital with second and
third degree burns are 12-year-
old Gerald O'Holleran and his
two-year-old brother Rodney.
The father, Gerald O'Holleran,
was reported working as a laborer on a distant early warning radar site on Baffin Island.
Neighbors who reached the
blazing building said Mrs. O'Holleran managed to push three children through a window but apparently perished trying to reach
others.
VET CELEBRATES
PETERBOROUGH, Ont. <CP>-
John Thompson, a veteran of the
Riel Rebellion, celebrated his
100th birthday Saturday at his
home in Nassau, three miles north
of here.
talion from Belleville, Ont, Mr.
talion from Beleville, Ont., Mr.
Thompson witnessed the surrender of 10,000 Indians without a battle at Fish Creek, Sask.
sifft
fflill
ORIENTAL GLAMOR - This
Pembroke Squires creation,
shown being modeled ln New
York, brings a touch of Oriental glamor to the beach. The
swiinsuit is strapless. The col-
larless, sleeveless sheath buttons down one side.
And in This Corner . . .
ORLANDO, Fla.  (AP) — Radio station WHOO, Instead of
talking about the weather, decided to do something about it.
. Central Florida, heart of the state's citrus Industry, has suffered through an extended drought this spring. So' the radio station brought in a team of Hawaiian dance specialists and Friday
night held an outdoor rain dance attended by about 8,000 persons.
The dancers whirled their swords, chanted mystic prayers and
leaped around flaming coconuts. .» .-
A shower dampened many of the spectators before they could
reach their cars. ...
NEW YORK (AP) — The magistrate was, understandably, annoyed when patrolman Henry Ferrell interrupted court proceedings by shouting "hey, look!"
But Magistrate Kenneth Phipps and al! others present looked
through the courtroom window and saw three men climb a fire
escape and enter a window in an apartment across the street.
Ferrell dashed from the courtroom. About 10 minutes later,
he and two other patrolmen arrested three youths rifling the
apartment.
When Ferrell returned to courtroom, where he was to testify
in a case, he apologized to Phipps.
"That is perfectly all right," the magistrate replied.
r
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a—NEL50K DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, JUNE 12, 1961
Legion Seeks End to Inequities
In Reestablishment Credits
NAKUSP — A proposed reso- ernments take immediate further mons, was given by George Ma
hltlon to rectify some of the "in-| action on the unemployment sit-1 hon, of Vancouver, supervisor of
equities" in Re - establishment! uation, as many veterans are out welfare services, to the Nakusp
Credits for war veterans, was'of WOrk.
presented at the Annual Conven-, A 12-cent rebate on the 13-cent
tion of the West Kootenay Zone provincial gasoline tax will be for war Veteran Allowances to
Council of the Royal Canadian requested for amputees. At pres^ be pay outside Canada,
Legion, by J. C. Hall, third pro- ent they are getting nine cents,
vincial' vice-president. I This was in effect before the pres-
Tthe proposal was given to 122 ent  three-cent  rise  in  gasoline
delegates representing 10 of the taxes. t ,_ _  	
12 branches in the zone, in the     The Housing and Lands com- sarviC&  He stated (his was the
Legion Hall here Sunday. mittee at the provincial conven-j m__t any -one in (he province
"There is inequity in the fact( tion has asked the government to ,._d  m.ovitted for this type of
Chat a person who served over-, change the VLA to enable veter-, services
F. M. Hockney, zone commander, said $18,884 had been spent
in the West Kootenay zone for
veterans' welfare and community
250 Knights At
Jubilee Banquet
More than 290 persons from    The banquet room was filled
seas must pay back the re-estab- ans to borrow up to $14,500 for
lishment credits before he  can, housing. The present ceiling is
qualify for assistance under Lhe $10,000.
Veterans' Lands Act," said Mr. The  deadline  on  applications
Hau., for land under the VLA has now
Persons serving overseas were been removed,
given  $15  a  month  in  credits, it was also resolved thai money
the Kootenays observed Sunday
Both anniversaries of the Nelson
and Rossland councils of the
Knights of Columbus and honored
three charter members at a Gold-
i en Jubilee Banquet in the Hume
Hotel Silver Room.
Leo McKinnon and Joseph
Speakman both, of Vancouver,!
and Archie Blaney, of Nelson,
were honored as knights celebrated the forming in May of 1911
the first council ln the West Kootenay.
Speakers included Very Rev.
! F.  J.  Monaghan  council  chap-
those serving in Canada, $7.50.
"In other words," said Mr.
Hall, "the person who served
his country the longest is penalized the most."
The closing date at present for
repaying re-establishment credits
borrowed under the VLA be insured should a veteran die prior
lo paying his committments.
This would insure his widow from
going in debt as a result. i
A row method ot re.re .entation '
whereby each zone will have a
in order to qualify for veteran vice-president to represent it at
lands is September, 1962. | the provincial level was approved.
Mr. Hall proposed the repay- OUTLINES ACT I
ment time be extended one month! An outline of the new Veterans'
for every month a veteran served Land Act. presently in its second
reading before the House of Corn-
lain, Acting Mayor Aid. W. K,
Massey, James V. Hughes of
Vancouver, past supreme director, Dr. John Harrigan, of Trail,
state deputy, and G. A. Bregoliss,
of Kamloops state deputy-elect.
John B. Varcoe, of Trail, district deputy, was master of cere,
monies.
Forty-five candidates were ini
tlated into the order Sunday at
ond vice-president. Mrs. A. j ceremonies which began, with
Steenhoff of Nakusp 1» past 10:15 a.m. mass, after a parade
president. I to the church, and ended at 5
L. D. Bernard of Nakusp a o.m. when degrees were exempli
Legion member since 1925 and tied. The candidates were from
before that a member of the] Trail, Rossland, Greenwood, Kimberley,   Grand   Forks,   Salmo,
New officers elected were
Ken Carpenter of Nakusp, zone
chairman and deputy zone commander; Herman Mang of Salmo, deputy zone chairman.
Mrs. P. A. Bateman of Castle-
gar-Robson was elected president of the Ladies Auxiliary;
Mrs. Floyd Bacon, vice-president; Mrs. Herman Mang, sec-
Rivers Begin Dropping
In Creston and Trail
Great War Veterans' Association was given a life membership.
egion To Go All
Out for Sports Plan
Bv STAFF REPORTER
aside $2500 to pay transportation
in the armed forces. In other
words a person who was overseas for six years would have until 1968 to repay is credits.
This resolution will be presented for approval at the Fall Con-,
vention in Grand Forks, October
14-13. |
Reoprts on the Provincial Con-,
vention in New Westminster this,
spring, were presented. |
Tlie general resolutions committee resolved the Civil Service be
urged to"hire veter-ns where
other conditions are equal.        ,
LOWER STANDARD"'
It also urged the government
to lower, the education?! standard,  of'veterans   allying   Ior
Jobs as prison guards from Ihe man and place him on the exec- pNE be subsidj_e(| by the zone,
grade 10 to the grade ei .lit level, utlve was approved. l{ the provincial command is un-
■       ■        In deciding to concentrate their _b]e ,._ pay it
Castlegar, Kinnaird and Nelson
The 1961 class was named after
Harold J. Witchell, past state
deputy of B.C. Mr. Witchell, introduced as a knight famous for
his degree work, addressed the
banquet gathering. He expressed
thanks for the honor and said
he would "remember it until the
end of my days."
TROPHY PRESENTED
A highlight of the proceedings
was   the   presentation   of   the
The provincial convention also
passed  a reso'
the federal and provlrei.l gov
CASTLE   Theatre
CASTLEGAR. B.C.
Tonight, Tuesilcy, Wednesday
"The Bottom of the Bottle"
Color - C:i_ma_cope
v Van Johnscn
:   Show Times 6:45 and 9:00
Auto Vus Drive-In
TRAIL, B C.
Tonight, Monday
"GI BLUES"
Elvis Preslev, Juliete Prowse
FEATURETTE and CARTOON
Show Times Approx. 9:05
NAKUSP — An all-out drive to to the competitions at the Pacific
support sports on the local and National Exhibition for winners Ja"mes"y. H_ghes Trophy"'by Its
orovincial level was approved of local track and field meets. I spons0-t Mr Hughes, of Vancou-i
here. Sunday, at the annual con- a number of resolutions were, ver] past supreme director, to the
vention of the West Kootenay presented by Nelson president! Rossland council.
Zone Council of the Canadian Benjamin McCreight on behalf ofj The trophy was received by
Legion. ; Jim Pollock, incoming chairman.1 Albert Lepage,  Rossland grand
A   resolution   to   give   official    Th_ spol.ts committee proposed knight. The award honors what
status to the zone sports chair- th_(  transportation  cost  to the was judged the most active counv
cil in B.C. in 1960-61. |
J. H. Gagnon of Rossland paid.
tribute to Herbert Christian and|
James McBride, of Rossland'si
council and to Mr. Witchell. He'
asked1 sp(*e "' "le ms'ory "' ">e three'.
i men and their activities In the1
order.
Guest speaker Mr. Bregoliss
said the knights were an example
ition  demanding efforts on the local level in sup-,
This resolution was tabled until
to overflowing. The 25 guests ate
turkey dinner in a second dining
room of the hotel.
Acting Mayor Aid. Massey congratulated the members and he
said Nelson was "fortunate in
having an organization with such
great traditions as the Knights
of Columbus." He acted on behalf of Mayor T. S. Shorthouse,
now in Ottawa. People associate
the word 'knight' with that which
is noble and fine in mankind
Knights, he said, were the succor
of the poor and defenders of holy
placs,
"In olden days, damsels in distress were of particular interest
to knights," Aid. Massey added.
Aid. Massey asked the members to carry forward Catholic
teaching and training and to propagate the principles of the
Faith.
Chancellor Arvid Schneider of
the Nelson council, proposed a
toast to Mr. Witchell.
Toast to the Queen Was proposed by Mr. Varcoe. Jeffery S.
Craig, Nelson deputy grand
knight proposed a toast to the
ladies.
Th egathering heard the Nelson
council has supplied three state
deputies to the provincial organization.
A telegram from Most Rev. W.
E. Doyle, bishop of Nelson, said
the birthday was "an important
milestone in the history of the
Church."
Wires were read from the Victoria council, Joseph P. Coppin,
state secretary, Rev. R. D. Anderson, Archbishop Johnson,
Janfes R Duffy, formerly of Nelson, and L. Hart, supreme knight.
Les and George Trainor, of
Nelson, were presented 50-year
buttons.
Head table guests included
Mrs. Massey, Mrs. Varcoe, Mrs.
Harrigan, and Mrs. DeLucrezio.
Rev. Michael J. McGivenyj
founded the Knights of Columbus
in Boston In 1882.
Troops Continue
Patrol ibfDikes
Weary flCod-ffghtors watched Kootenay and Columbia river waters drop Sunday while hopes rose that the
worst is over.     ■; ■'■,
Trail, water-logcjed and worn out by a week of trading blows with the heavy hand of nature, took hope on the
weekend as wafers quietened.
Army flood headquarters at Creston reported "no
new incidents": Sunday and looked forward to a "very
slow drop" in the potential flood force held back by miles
of tired dikes. ,	
Crash-action parties of soldiers "day night, providing relief for, ..Freedom and the Bill of Rights",
continue to patrol the dikes, how- storm and domestic sewers. Mrs G E Grlzzelle on "Celgar
ever, as authorities warned' First Presbyterian church ser-B c». Miss 01ga posnik0ff on'
against  over-confidence  brought vlces were held Sunday ln anothi "Why School Uniforms?"-Mrs J
Certificates
To Be Awarded
The introduction to public
speaking course moves into its
final two sessions Monday and
Wednesday. Under the direction
of Rev. L, R. MacKen.le, M,A.,
Notre Dame College, the class is
preparing its final five and seven-
minute talks under any topic pro-| meet[ng"w.]l mwe'to 30."lime!
vidmg it has an urgent theme,     street.
A variety of topics and ideas
were expressed at the last public
speaking session on Wednesday
night.   Ken   Strange   spoke
Meeting Planned
On Uphill Park
Parents interestd in improvements to Uphill Park are meetinj
at the park Tuesday night.
It is hoped to organize a dele
gation to meet the City Council
parks committee to discuss plan!
to better facilities at the grounds
K it is raining, the 8 o'cloci
on by the lull
"If  we get too
I er   location   because   of   water,
confident we
damage.   The  Salvataion  Armyijam-_
might get caught," an official atl can,celledq  S,unday  se™M8'   but! Snowflake'
the army flood headquarters in! continued a  4-hour coffee service
Creston said Sunday. He express-! tor„ wearf. flood fl*ters'
ed the opinion that the situation1,.* oun, ,.
...   ,.,i       ,   ,   _   the cooler weather,
is improving but still needs to be
carefully watched.
Columbia River failed to rise
P. Rivers on "A Trip to Europe"
The  Salvataion  nnnyr ,„___„  st_._t  ._   ,.,,-,.  Mighty
Brian   Hughes   on
Nelson in Summer"; Miss Steffa
„,..,,       ,      ,      i Chernoff on "Materialism Versus
Foundation for hope has been'Peace„   Jack phe,     on  „wnd
,e cooler weather. It continued Anirnal- ,„ Canada..   Rick Swan.
on   the   weekend,   slowing   the son   on   ..0ne   Government   for
thaw in both Columbia and Koot- Canada and rj,- United States."
,_,.,..     .    enay watersheds and promising    „..,,,       ,     ,„ ,
appreciably  at Trail just prior to ease the flow of [lood watersl   For the final session Wednes-
to the weekend and Sunday the; at the source daJr' a Presentation of certificates
waters receded. It is not expect-j   Creston [lood . flghte__ _.
ed to-reach the 1948 peak of 46|ienced no disastrous dike failures
feet- I after Friday's gusher that swal-
Friday and Saturday the Col-| lowed up 5000 sandbags before
umbia  rose  just  slightly  more the flow was checked,
than one inch at Trail, holding)   These boils, weak spots where
more than 50 flooded homes and water   bubbles   up   behind   the
businesses in defeat. It will take; dikes,  are the  major problem
The group seeking improvements Is striving to obtain improvements which will fit into
an over-all plan prepared by recreation director Ernie Gare.
days before the city returns to
normal when the flood waters
finally do subside.
Saturday the reading at Trail
was 45-1 feet, up only slightly.
facing flood fighters in the battle
to save 50,000 acres of farmland
in the Creston Valley.
Otherwise the dikes are holding
their  own  against  the   swollen
porting sports the zone conven
lion follows the lead of Pacitic =
Command,  the provincial body.     Resolutions    approved
It is felt that rather than con- that:
tribute to the national  Olympic     All events for the grand aggre-
training program the money so gate  be determined  before en-       _  ^   ^	
used in the past will be directed| trance applications to the meets 5F"caUM>i.S*ar work for "the bet-
toward   a   more   comprehensive are accepted. | terment of the community. He
one on the local level. In this Dressing room facilities be as- said it was through this order
way it is felt that about ?0 times ^^ DJ, the zone executive. ! (hat Catholic laymen could serve
as many youngsters will benefit • ,-._. we_ks notice _f _ ____t ;he church's ideals and teachings.]
be given all branches. I    Joseph    DeLucrezio,    Nelson
In case of shortages of rib-; pndknight and.Mr. Lepageper-
bons or medals, certificates be -wmed the cutting of the birth
given to be presented later for u3v ca'ie;   , ,
ribbons or medals. i   Muc,h Joviality marked the oc-
The sports committee was in- -asion as *« master of ceremon-i
structed'by J. C. Hall, provinciali les mi speakers delved into an
from the same expenditure
The ultimate aim of both programs, the convention felt, is to
develop young people of Olympic
calibre. To continue supporting
the national one would be to deprive others of the opportunity
to try out
The   provincial  body
has   set third vice-president, to disregard: extensive  library  of  humorous
ONE SHOW ONLY AT 8.00 P.M. — Doors 7.30
IF YOU'RE IN THE MOOD FOR FUN 0RANY-
THIN6..Y0UVE JUST G0TT0 CLIMB ABOARD
Julie
T.I.O
jarnaGE-
GO'IPUND
ONbm*5cOF>E ■ COLOR by DE LUX*
No Admittance to
persons under 18.
Gsm
limitations imposed by the pro-; stories.
vincial body because competiotrs
from this area did not come up
to Canadian Athletic Association
I standards in some events.
!    New application forms will be
sent out shortly from  the pro-
' vincial headquarters.
i    The zone track meet will be
, held in Trail, .July 8.
oil Water,
Flooded
Areas Urged
CASTLEOAS — Persons whose
homes are Closed to flooded areas
would 'be wise to boU water before
.cinking it. Dr. J. H. Lindsay,
director of the West Kootenay
Health Unit, said here Sunday.
Water in the municipal supply
has been affected and is not recommended, even if boiled, for
infants under six months, he
said
river surged over  another 2705J
K.es   of   farmland   through   a
It is thought the crest arrived: Kootenay. River gauges at Cres-
early Saturday. The level at up- ton edged down slightly from
per reaches of the Columbia drop-( Ihe 25.35-foot mark, raising hopes
ped and this was reflected in the that the worst of the flood fight
lowering of flood waters Sunday, was over.
At Nelson it fell from 18.35 feet Upstream from Creston, the
on Friday to 17.95 on Sunday.
Although dikes are holding their
own at Trail, seepage continued break in the dikes about 25 miles
into the downtown am.. j south of Creston.
More than 50 businesses and; Gilbert Bean, spokesman for
homes are still vacant, their, U.S. Army flood fighters, said
basements full of water. the  new   breakthrough   brought
The proprietor of a supermar-j the total area flooded in Idaho
ket estimated a loss of $25,000 in state to 7053 acres,
merchandise alone. The Kootenai River crested at
Water is still up to the ticket I just under 37 feet early Friday
window at the Trail Odeon, night. A 35-foot flow is expected
theatre. The same building was, today.
stating the completion of the 10
week course will be awarded at
a coffee and social gathering following the final speech presentations.
MEXICAN  SYSTEM
About 3,500 families will work
on Mexico's first collective for-
rest reserve on 1,000,000 aores
near Durango.
everely   hit   in   the   crippling
ffldods df 1948.   ■
City pumps were in action Sat-
For the Finest In
PRESCRIPTION
SERVICE
call as
OPEN ALL DAY MONDAY
Fleury's Pharmacy
Harold Mayo (Prop)
Corner Baker and Ward Sts.
Phone 25 Nelson
BEE
BUILDING
AIDS
COMMON BRICK
ROMAN BRICK
NORMAN
301 Baker SL
ICK    7
CK     J
I BRICK    j
Phone 1704
liniililiilililili
EVERYONE
WHO IS
SICK
Mrs. Cornish
Dies al Coast
Word has been received from
Victoria of the death June 9, of
Water for infants can be obtain-' Mrs. Annie (Nan) Cornish, wife of
ed at the Celgar pulp mill or at
the Silver Birch Motel, he said.
The  water  Is  safe  for  older
residents after it Is boiled.
gjtfto*
Order your cool now and save money! Take advantage of the following discounts which are
now effective on orders of 2 tons or over —
LUMP—Western Monarch or
Wildfire   $2.SO per ton
EGG—Western Monarch $2.00 per ton
NUT—Western Monarch $1.50 per ton
STOKER—<AII Stoker Coals $1.00 per ton
FURNACE—Michel  $ .50 per ton
BRIQUETTES—Canmore $1.50 per ton
Easy Budget Terms Available
SAVE An Extra1 30c Per Ton by
Paying Within 10 Days
OWLE
FUEL  and   TRANSFE
394 Baker St. — Phone 889
Nelson'* Leading Coal Dealers—Eat. 25 Years
Mier Water
Sports Activity
-NVERMEHE—Gordon Thomas
Fessey, 26, was dead on arrival
at hospital here Sunday followinl
a skin diving and water skiing
session on Lake Windermere.
He complained of not feeling
well and went to his cabih on the
East side of the lake Sunday
afternoon. A Uttle later an unidentified person passing "saw
something was wron.s." He was
removed but was dead before
reaching the hospital.
An incpiest opened Sunday
night at Invermere. Next-of-kin
is his sister, Miss Maryann Fessey of Calgary. His home was
2343 Sixth Street Southwest, Calgary.
es
SALMO - Horst Gustav Bu-'
kowski, 25, was killed Friday
when a payloader he was drivin;
overturned. He was pinned beneath the machine three and a'
half miles from Nelway while
driving on the Remac road.
An inquest was opened Saturday and adjourned to June 20
at the Nelson court house. i
Mr. Bukowski came to Salmo
a little over a year ago and was
employed in the logging industry
with Associated Enterprises.     j
Born in East Prussia. Germany, in 1936, he came to Canada about six years ago. He'
worked in ocean-going vessels in;
Ontario for some time before1
coming to British Columbia.     i
He Is survived by his mother!
in West Berlin and four sisters in|
Germany.
Council
Jottings...
BUY
COAL
NOW!
SUMMER
DISCOUNTS
PHONE   1518
Queen City Fuel
■ ".'     . (Office ii':
' Nelson Farmers' Supply) *
524 Railway St. Nelson
JUST | ARRIVED
NEW   :
Citrus Flavored
Alka - Seltzer
39e — S9e — 78e
SAMPLE'S
Nelson Pharmacy Ltd.
' Your Fortress of Health"
639 Baker SL Phone 1203
__  ,,|
Kiwctnians Take
Furniture
From Hostel
Kiwanis Club members formed
a work party to remove furniture from the Hostel for Aged
Men which is to be the new
home.of the museum, following
their meeting Thursday night.
The 'furniture was provided by
the club and was returned by the
city. Funds from its sale will bolster Kiwanis welfare projects.
Following a report by president
George Latta that the Salvation
Army was providing coffee for
flood workers at Creston, Castlegar and Trail, the club decided
to donate $15 to the cause. Abbut
3,800 cups ofv coffee have been
poured for flood workers in the
three areas, the Army estimates.
W. F. Dalling reported on a
recent Kiwanis International
spring conference, describing
panel discussions.
Guest was Dr. Franklin T
Younker of Walla WaBa, Kiwan-
ian now holidaying near Kaslo.
the late A. J. Cornish, fornier industrial arts teacher at the Nelson Junior High School.
Born in Liverpool, England, Mr.
and Mrs. Cornish migrated to
Canada in 1906, settling at Pilot
Bay, then in Nelson in 1908. Mrs
Cornish lived most of her life in
Nelson, except for the last few
years spent in Trail and Victoria.
She is survived by a son, Roger
F. at Sydney, B.C., a daughter
Mrs. R. W. (Gladys) Dawson at
A letter from the Royal AKtii-j Trail, two grandchildren and five
tectural Institute said there was! Sreat grandchildren.   Her   hus-
a need of communities to preserve band predeceased her Sept. 29,
their good historic buildings.        11945- 	
The letter to council said cities j        "  '
should keep "the best of our ar-| AIJ---,--   rio.l.
ehitectural inheritance." The In-; liaermsin^Wien.
stitute is compiling an inventory! Take Up City
of all buildings in Canada which! ki„i*-.. _» v;*.<.»..;_,
are historically significant.   The  ™uTTerS Of YICTO.IB
Institute 'asked the City of Nelson i    Aid. Edith Van Maarion and
to suggest any looal structures city clerk C. W. R. Harper leave
which might be included in the na-! today for Victoria to meet muni
tional inventory. | cipal department officials Tues
"We're a little too young to day.
have anything of interest," Aid. I    They  will  conclude  arrange-
Affleck said. ■ ments for a rental agreement on
Aid. Van Maarion suggested the' the old provincial jail, and for the'grandchildren
Nelson Courthouse and old Post I regional   Civil   Defence   office j 	
Office (now City Hall) were his-1 **** '« being installed in the;
torically significant. : old hosptal. BllthS, Deaths
Mr. Bean said there are another 26,180 acres behind dikes
in the 90,000-acre Kootenay Valley which extends into southeastern British Columbia from this
far norther Idaho area.
Some 800 men were bolstering
weak spots along soggy dikes,
compared to a work force of,
more than 2000 men at the height
of the three-week fight against
the flooding river. |
There have been no serious
injuries, but 70 homes have been
evacuated, and engineers estimated their flood costs at more
than  $1,000,000.
RENT A CAR
BY THE MONTH
PHONE
John Peripelkin
Passes at 72
John "G." Peripelkin of Siocan
Park died at Kootenay Lake General Hospital Sunday afternoon,
aged 72.
He came to Canada from Russia
with his parents in 1899, settling
in the Saskatoon district. He
moved to Glade in 1928 and to
Grand Forks in 1955. A month
ago he went to live with his son,
John at Siocan Park.
He was married in Saskatchewan in 1909 and his wife predeceased him in July 1960. He is
survived by two sons, Peter of
Shoreacres and John of Siocan
Park, a daughter, Mrs. Anne
Postnikoff of Shoreacres,
grandchildren    and   two
seven
great
TILDEN
2039
Evenings 1931
301 Vernon St.
THE CANADIAN name
IN  WORID-WIDE  CAR RENTALS
to heal him
You can find your way back to
health if you will prayerfully
follow the instructions contained in Science and Health
with Key to the Scriptures by
Mary Baker Eddy. In this great
book you will find a full explanation of the method of
Christian Science healing.
Christian Science holds unwaveringly to the truth in the
first chapter of Genesis that
"God saw every thing that He
had made, and, behold, it wa»
very good." sThus Christian
Science restores the invalid to
health.
Science and Health may be
read or examined, together with
the Bible, at any Christian
Science Reading Room. Or it
may be purchased at $3.
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
READING ROOM
209 Baker Street
Nelson
Hours: 2:30-.:30, Sunday 7-9 p.m.
llilllilllli
They  will  also  meet  deputy
City council granted permission! minister of municipal affairs J
PHONE 1844 FOR CLASSIFIED
to Nelson School District No. 7 to
'borrow  $16,000  to  replace   two
sdhool buses. The buses have been
condemned by the RCMP.
•  *  *
Robert Kennedy, a resident for
44 years at Robson and Falls
Streets, applied to council for
paving of the 200 block Robson
Street to Upper Falls. The request
was referred to the public works
committee. Aid Van. Maarion
commented: "We haven't got Hie
money."   ■
',.',,«  •  *  i '    ■ . /«.
Comptroller of Dietrioh-Colliri-
informed council by' letter tlie
level of the company's site" h'ere
is five feet lower than the level
before excavation for the recently-completed interceptor sewer.
The company asked that fill be
provided by the city.
City Engineer D. Likar said (he
five-foot figure was not true and
that (here was no discrepancy between (he level now and before
the excavation. He said this year
is "an exceptionally bad year'
for flooding but that the ground at
that point was higher than before
the excavation,
E. Brown to discuss obtaining
letters patent for the newly enlarged city of Nelson.
New Dog Breed
Trained for RCMP
OTTAWA (CP) - A new breed
of Siberian husky is being developed by the RCMP for use as
sled dogs in (he Oanadian north.
Justice Minister Fulton said in
the Commons Saturday the new
jbreed will be more easily trained
|and less dangerous than dogs new
being used.   .
Show Increase
Births and deaths were up in
Nelson and district over last
year, during May, and marriages
were down.
There were 35 births in Nelson
in May, compared with 30 during
the same period in 1960. Eight
deaths were recorded against six
for the same period a year ago.
Six couples were married during May, 1960, compared with 10
the year before.
. Eight deaths occurred in the
district' this year compared to
one in I960.!There were five district marriages a year ago. This
year there were none.
YOUR MONEY GOES FARTHER
When you deal with us. We aim to sell at the lowest possible
price consistent with quality merchandise and our installation methods are up-to-date in every respect. Consult us
first and become another of our many satisfied customers.
Try us and be convinced.
Kootenay Plumbing & Heating Co. Ltd.
351 Baker St Nelson, B.C. Phone 666
RED CROSS
I
BLOOD CLINIC
at the
Canadian Legion - June 15 and 16
1:30 p.m. to 4>30 p.m. ond 6:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m.
NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY
PHONE   2075  For  Information
Public Freightways Ltd.
ANNOUNCEMENT
Public Freightways Ltd. are pleosed to announce
'   the appointment Of
MR. G. BLAIR OLSEN
to the position of Nelson and district representative. Blair Olsen is a thoroughly experienced
trucking mon who, (updn joining Public Freight-
ways) becomes an employee shareholder, in keeping with Public FreightwHys policy of profit
sharing.
Mr. Olsen Is now actively engaged fn assisting local
wholesalers and merchants to take advantage ot Public
Freightways fast dependable service between Vancouver
and West Kootenay points. ,
Support and get acquainted with Blair Olsen, your
Public Freightways representative. Ring him today
on NELSON  2-446.
Trail shippers are invited to get in touch with
their Public Freightways representative, Ken
Johnson, by dialing TRAIL 3518.
A '
 ^^^mmmmm
■    . ■        ■. ■  ■ ■
Flood Scenes in Castlegar - Trail Area
m
IHS1
NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, JUNE 12, 1961—3
Social Credit Group Meets
WYNNDEL - The Wynndel
Social Credit group held its regular monthly meeting at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Geig with 10
members  present.
Motion was made to allocate
funds to the Nelson-Creston Constituency organization. A motion
was also made to support the
federal East Kootenay Social
Credit organization.
Discussion regarding the erection of signs on key roads for the
names of individuals living along
these roads was left in abeyance.
Members were asked to pass
on any recommendations they
might have to assist the Attorney-
General's Department in solving
problems of the district. Reports
were given on the area council
meeting held last month at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. B. Wills.
Mrs. F. Merriam gave a report
of WA work being done and plans
were formulated to advertise
B.C. at the national convention
in Ottawa in July, at which Mrs.
Merriam will be a delegate as
provincial president of B.C. Other
local discussions centred around
the high water problems in the
area. Following the adjournment
ol the meeting, lunch was served
by Mr. and Mrs. Greig.
EATING KIDNEY
In preparing kidney for cooking, first remove membrane
and   then  cut  the  lobes  away
Harrop Teaching
Satisfactory
HARROP — Just in case anyone may have received the impression that there is dissatis-'
faction with the school teacher
here, Harrop parents have declared themselves as "perfectly satis-fled" with their teacher.
The comment followed a recent report that Procter and Harrop parents had expressed dissatisfaction with a teaching situation in a petition to the Nelson
District No. 7 School Board. Thr
petition was in connection wil'
the Procter school. Grades 1 I
3 are taught at Harrop.
from   the  fat  and  tubes  wi',1
sharp pointed scissors.
' LONG WALK across Canadian Pacific Railway bridge became necessary
when Castlegar ferries were tied up. Columbia River rise forced halt in their operation. This picture of group hiking along track was taken on Robson side. Note lumber in water at left.
OLD SAWMILL of Celgar Ltd. has been flooded for some lime. Placid waters
reflecting burner create scenic picture but damage they bring will send flood costs
into high dollar brackets.
Natal Council Hears Civil Defence Duties
NATAL - Two Civil Defense
officers attended the regular
meeting of Natal Village Council
to advise on council's duties in
Civil Defence. They were Ken Mc-
Rae of Kimberley and Edgar Wilson of Fernie. It was agreed to
institute a Civil Defence organization in Natal later in the year.
Delegates from local businesses
attended the meeting at the invitation of council to discuss the
village Business Bylaw No. 2.
Arising out of the disoussion it
was decided to appoint an assistant health inspector to control
the sale of uninspected meats
with the village limits.
Farmers living in Elk Valley
north of Natal will be given a re
duced licence fee covering the
sale of goods in the village produced by themselves.
MOTHER'S FOOTSTEPS
Judy Lewis, daughter of actress Loretta Young, has signed
for a leading role in an ABC-TV
77 Sunset Strip drama.
FINALLY WON
BUDAPEST (API - Austria,
which had tried for 30 years to
defeat Hungary in soccer, finally succeeded with a 2 - 1 win
before a crowd of 80,000 in
Budapest's P e o p 1 e's Stadium
Sunday.
A FAMILY
AFFAIR
and
jBLf
The central figures In this business story are three brothers who
wanted to join forces to start their own manufacturing enterprise.
All had for several years had good jobs with other employers—in
production, sales and administration respectively—and they felt their
abilities would fit together well to provide balanced management for
a new family venture.
The combined financial resources of the brothers fell short of being
enough to pay for the production equipment which would be needed,
as well as to provide working capital. They soon found that term
financing of the type they needed was hard to arrange—especially for
a brand new business which had yet to prove itself.
When the principals brought their problem to Industrial Development Bank, they were able to show a well-thought-out plan for setting
up production in a new plant. Their sales objective was based on a
thorough survey of the market for their product, which was being
partly supplied by imports from abroad; and with modern equipment
the brothers were sure they could produce and sell at competitive prices.
Discussion with IDB officers revealed some aspects of
the project which could be
changed to advantage and,
when,plans were settled, the
Bank agreed to assist the new
company to finance the cost
of the required equipment.
As expected, the first few
months' operation showed
losses, but initial operating problems were soon overcome, the company
was "in the black" by the end of the first year and subsequently earned
good profits... good enough, in fact, to repay the IDB loan nearly
two years ahead of time.
The initiative and resourcefulness shown by the brothers in setting
up this family business and operating it successfully, together with the
timely term financing supplied by IDB, resulted in the establishment
of another flourishing enterprise providing employment to Canada's
expanding labour force.
The Industrial Development Bank was established in 1944 to provide
financial assistance to small and medium-sized enterprises* unable to
obtain satisfactory tenn financing through other channels. For further
information, and a descriptive booklet, you are invited to write or visit
the nearest IDB office or consult your auditor, lawyer or chartered banker.
P.S.—We .have made a colour movir^ based on Ihe case of another company assisted by
IDB financing. If an organization or group in your community would like to have it shown,
the nearest IDB office will be glad lo make the arrangements.
INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT BANK
REGIONAL OFFICE: VANCOUVER . . .  1030 West Georgia Street
Teh MU  1-7484
OLD BRIDGE at Trail continued to carry traffic as Columbia climbed dangerously close to its decking — within four feet.
*I.D.B. can consider proposals for financial assistance in these activities!
manufacturing, processing, assembling, installing, overhauling, reconditioning, altering,
repairing, cleaning, packaging, transporting or warehousing of goods; logging, operating a
mine or quarry; arilling, construction, engineering, technical surveys or scientific research,
generating or distributing electricity or operating a commercial air service, or the transportation of persons, or supplying premises, machinery or equipment under lease to any business
mentioned above.
TAKING A
TRIP?
MANAGER of Odeon Theatre retained sense of humor as this section of Bay
Avenue flooded in Trail. Sign states; "Now Showing, The Great Flood, in Color.
Right Now It's Intermission." Weekend saw hundreds of people taking pictures.of
Trail-Castlegar flooded areas.—DaiJy Ne ws photos.
Girl's Body Not Brenda's
VICTORIA ICP) - Body of a
young girl pulled from the waters
of Deception Pass near Whidbey
Island Friday is "definitely not"
Brenda Byman, 10, who went
missing from her home at Invermere, B.C. early last month.
An RCMP [spokesman said a
local dentist has positive identification of the missing girl's
teeth and they do not match those
of the girl found on the coast.
Officials felt Hie body could
have been that of the missing
Interior girl, as it had a similar
description.
NATIVE DIALECTS
English-speaking people of the
colony of Sierra Leone number
about 130,000 compared with
some 2,000,000 tribesmen.
TRACK MEET
VANCOUVER (CP) - The
biggest, noisiest and most colorful high school track and field
meet on t_ie North American
continent heads for its 50th anniversary year today at Empire
Stadium. The annual Vancouver
and district inter-high meet is
expected to bring together more
than 300 athletes from a record
34 schools.
Use Our
HOLIDAY PACK
Should your holiday-travel not permit the mailing of The Nelson Daily News to your vacation
address, let us "lay away" your copies while you
are gone. When you return, phone The Nelson
Daily News and all back copies will be delivered
promptly by your newspaper boy. He will have
them saved in a holiday pack which he will deliver at one time when you return. No copies
will be left on your porch while you are away.
PHONE 1844
©Iff Nelson Satly Staff
CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT
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miBon lailg Jfnua       '^S   U.S. Economic Recovery        Cf™£2™da>?Zlel
Established April 22. 1902 Nelson, B. C
Publiihed by the NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,
266 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia, mornings except
Sundays and holidays ln the centre o* the Kootenays with
the largest daily circulation in 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 DAILY NEWPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION
MEMBER OF THE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS
The Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication ol all news
dispatches credited to it or to The Associated Press or Reuters in this
paper and also the local news pubUshed therein.
Monday, /ujie 12, 1961
Ransom on Wheels
Premier Fidel Castro of Cuba
seems to be following the Eichmann
trial in Jerusalem. One of the charges
against Adolf Eichmann is that he
fried to trade the lives of the Jews of
Hungary for 10,000 trucks. Now we
find Dr. Castro offering to release the
prisoners he took in last month's
abortive invasion in return for 500
United States tractors or bulldozers.
The prompt response which the
proposal has received from a number
of private groups is a tribute to the
traditional generosity of Americans to
those in danger and distriss. Perhaps
the response was a little too prompt
for purposes of sound bargaining.
Premier Castro shows signs of increasing his demands; he now seems
to want bigger and better machines
than he asked for originally. There is
also the danger lhat other dictators
may get the idea that the way to acquire a little rolling stock for nothing
is  to  kidnap  a   few   Americans  or
iriends of America and then trade
them for whatever is in short supply
at the moment.
Practices of this kind, of course,
are nothing new. In the Middle Ages
it was the custom for a victorious
army to hold its prisoners for ransom,
Ihe sum in each case depending on
the rank and importance of the captive. (England was nearly bankrupted
when King Richard the Lion-Hearted
carelessly allowed himself to be captured by a particular avaricious German Emperor). Such practices were
considered barbarous by our grandfathers, but after the cold-blooded
massacres of political prisoners and
minority groups which have been the
fashion in recent years, they are beginning to look like a positive improvement.
There is hope that the Twentieth
Century may yet attain the moral
standards of the Eleventh.
—Toronto Globe and Mail.
White Worship
Imagine, for a moment, a fiendish    being tainted by Brand X (the kind
experiment in which some blissfully
unconditioned Polynesian islander
was imprisoned alone for a week, to
gain his first impressions of the British from our commercial television
programs.—
What a very strange report he
would take back to the palm trees.
The male Briton, it would seem to
him, is fascinated almost to the point
of obsession by sheriffs who ride in
posses, and by tall strangers who
wield smoking six-guns and up-end
furniture in honky-tonk bars.
The ways of the female Briton, he
would discover, are stranger still. Almost all her waking hours appear
to be spent in disturbed reflection
on whether she is putting the right
kind of magic powder into the magic
box that washes her clothes.
Fame and fortune, wealth and
happiness seem to matter hardly at
all so long as her washing is nol
Seer of 1865
Now that Gagarin has been out
into space and back again, and men
are now talking about possible flight
to the moon,' we are reminded that
Jules Verne published a book in the
year 1865 entitled A Trip From the
Earth to the Moon in Ninety-Seven
Hours, Thirteen Minules and Twenty
Seconds.
As The Vancouver Province points
out, the astonishing thing about the
story is that it forecast with uncanny
accuracy all the scientific problems
that are now being overcome — the
problem of escaping from .the "pull"
of earth's gravity, weightlessness in
space and, finally, the difficulty of
re-entry into the atmosphere of our
planet.
These are the exact words written
by Verne almost one hundred years
ago, "In spite of the opinions of narrow-minded people, who would shut
up the human race, as within some
magic circle which it must never out-
itep, we shall one day travel to the
-loon, the planets and the stars, with
.he same facility, rapidity and cer-
'::inty as we now make the voyage
vom Liverpool to New York, distance
is but a relative expression, and must
end by being reduced to zero." v ,
—Fort William Times-/ournaf.
that washes only white, not whiter-
than-white).
Happily, something else may have
happened to put things back inlo
perspective by the time our Polynesian arrives.
A man who owns a chain of shops
in Lancashire is said to be planning
to put a new washing powder on the
market this month.
Its name will be Brand X.
And he hopes to advertise it on
TV.—London Express News Service.
Shredded Money
Police want to know why somebody in Cornwall has been secretly
tearing up old money and throwing it
away. So do we all. Disrespect for
money is the one thing that can still
astonish us in this age of sophistication and understanding. There are so
many aberrations in human behavior
that each one seems a drop in the
bucket; except this one; it falls beyond the pale. We can understand
slighlty a man who is in the habit
of giving money away to strangers,
though we consider him a little peculiar. We could understand a man
who destroyed money in public. For
he would be asking us to admire him,
not for destroying money, but for having so much that he could afford to.
But any man who destroys money
in secret can only be saying that
money is not important. And we
can't buy that. We can't afford to.
—Ottawa Journal.
Ah
Fame
The Van Gogh exhibition that recently toured Canada drew record
crowds to Toronto's Art Gallery, but
it didn't impress everybody. When a
woman apologized to her hairdresser
for being a little late, because the
crowds made il difficult to see the
Van Gogh paintings as quickly as
she'd thought, the hairdresser sniffed:
"Those DPs make me sick. Besides,
what makes him think he can paint?"
—Maclean's Magazine.
By ALAN HARVEY
Canadian Press Staff Writer
President Kennedy's European visit has left Britons with
a queasy feeling that somebody
is letting the air out of their
tires.
The slightly deflationary effect results partly from Ihe
fact that Kennedy and Nikita
Khrushchev decided to make
their Vienna rendezvous a tete-
a-tete meeting, as opposed to
another Big Four gathering.
And there are hints that Kennedy would like to keep it that
way, making the big two a
more or less permanent arrangement and leaving Britain
and France to be consulted
after the evem.
Another factor in British
frustration is that Kennedy's
visit to Paris was a state occasion, whereas the London trip
was lacked on almost as an aft-
terthought.
Clearly, times have changed.
Only two years ago it was
was acting as diplomatic pacesetter for the Western world,
doffing his fur cap in Moscow
and then hastening to allied
capitals to report on his travels.
FORMER GIANT
British politician Lord Hail-
sham was so pleased that he
said in a speed Jun. 6, DjJ:
"We are b.^inri-g to get it
across that in Mr. Macmillan
we have a statesman emerging
who is a veritable giant in the
free world."
M a c m i 1 lan's international
stature undoubtedly bounded at
that time. Tlie opportunity resulted partly from President
Eisenhower's concept - of the
presidency, but Macmillan deserved credit for seizing the
initiative.
The void no longer exists.
Kennedy obviously wants to be
his own No. 1 man. As a result,
Britain's role tends to shrink to
a size more in conformity with
her intrinsic power.
Olher factors contribute to a
certain British malaise. There
is a worried feeling that events
are passing Britain by, that
leadership is lacking, that the
country is drifting along toward
another financial crisis.
Every passing Jay convinces
more and more people that, for
better or worse, the British
Empire is a part of history.
The trouble is to find something
to put in its place. At the moment, the anxious Englishman
can see no satisfactory goal on
the horizon.
One obvi-us answer is to
climb abo.rd the Europcn merry-go-round, but after all, most
of the other oassengers are foreigners a-d the choice seats are
already token. Tlie pros.ects of
catc'iing the brass ring seem
pretty remote. As The Times
said in an editorial:
"That all this causes seme
British heartburning must be
aJ,_.U(-f| ■...._„ j, ,-•- ■-, .;
evidence that tilings for Britain
are not as they once were."
Erases Lingering Doubts
Mating, Instinct
A Chicago sociologist says that
summer school is popular with women because it is a good hunting
ground for husbands. This recalls the
statement of the co-ed who was asked
why she had enrolled in college: "I
came here to get went with, but I
ain't yet."—Toronto Telegram.
♦ '	
Canada's first wheat was
grown in 1S05 at the settlement
at Annapolis Royal, Nova Scotia.
My English friend don't like
my tea and I can't drink her
coffee. Evidently the English
don't know how to make coffee
and we're in the same fix about
tea.
By JACK LEFLER
NEW YORK (AP) - The economic recovery in the United
States rolled on last week and
expectations ot more rapid im-
prnv.o~--t later in the year
mounted. ' *"*l|
The gross national product
(total of all goods and services)
may be setting a record in the
current quarter ending June 30.
Walter W. Heller, chairman
of the president's council of
economic advisers, said the
GNP for the quarter might
reach an annual rate of nearly
$510,000,000,000. It was a little
under $800,000,000,000 the previous quarter.
Heller said that by die final
quarter the rate may be $350,-
000,000,000.
Tlie National Association of
Purchasing Agents reported
that new orders, production and
employment kept on increasing
in May.
Producers of machine tools,
construction equipm e n t and
other manufacturing machinery
equipment predicted a good
gain in sales by the fourth
quarter.
ERASES DOUBTS
Ths First National City Bank
of New York commented that
the   industrial   performance   in
(he last two months has
"erased any lingering doubts
that the economy is in a very
encouraging rebound from recession lows."
The momentum of recovery
has aroused anxiety in the Kennedy administration that it will
bring a revival of inflation.
With labor contract negotiations nearing in the automobile
industry, General Motors, Ford
and Chrysler omitted the usual
annual raises June 1 for 136,000
salaried employees not covered
by union contracts.
Automobile production moved
up last week to,an estimated
128,000 passenger cars. This
was only .87 - per - cent below
the comparable 1960 week, one
of the year's slimmest margins.
The industry was particularly
happy about sales in May. The
837,825 cars sold was the biggest monthly total of the year.
This brought dealers' new car
stocks down to about 900,000,
lowest since last October.
Harold C. Lumto, vice - president, of Republic Steel Corp.,
predicted steel production will
increase steadily and should approach record heights in the
next year.
Europe's Economic Unity
Eyed Wtih Mixed Feeling
By FORBES RHUDE
Canadian Press Business Editor
Western Europe's economic
unity excites a mixture of surprise, admiration and apprehension in Canadians.
It was surprising enough that
so many traditional national differences could be hurdled to
make possible the Rome treaty
of 1057 which created the six-
country  Common  Market.
Even with the treaty signed,
•j^- ^. 1111111 • 111111111 r m 1111111111111 f i r 111 ■ 111111111111111111111 t ■' ■'. r i' i ■ i r t • ■ -" 11' _:
| Your Individual f
:iiiiiiiiiin
""   By  Frances Drake  mm "li5
Look in the section in which
your  birthday   comes and   find
what your outlook is, according
to the stars.
For Tuesday,  June  13,   1961
MARCH 21 to APRIL 20 (Aries)
—Common sense plus humor are
lines to follow. Don't be averse
to criticism, and don't fret if a
few matters are a bit troublesome. You should do well in familiar activities,
APRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus)
— Neither especially flourishing
with benefic aspects nor is it hindering. It is really up to you to
manipulate your schedule and
activities for best results and
without strain or worry.
MAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini)
—Your Mercury going to a helpful, encouraging aspect after sundown. Plan carefully what to do
first and what procedures to
choose. You may need outside
assistance or advice, seek it.
JUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer)
—Increasingly beneficial aspects
as day advances. You can add
to gains by having your schedule
arranged to avoid needless setbacks, hindering obstacles. Exercise vour God-given capability.
JULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leo)
—Fine day on whole. Useful, progressive matters, essential work
have productive influences. Be
optimistic but not foolishly so.
Push ahead with projects and
stuH.t with which you are familiar.
AUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER
23 (Virgoi—Think, lay our program efficiently, advantageously
and you should be able to net
satisfactory results and not strain
in the doing. Research, investigations, analvzing honored.
SEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER
23 (Libra)—An in-between sort of
day leaving much to your judgment, management. Be sensibly
careful, know your subject and
don't take too much for granted.
We must work for what we seek.
OCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER
22 (Scorpio)—A day that calls for
quickened action in many things
and no procrastination. A well-
managed schedule will give less
strain and returns of greater
magnitude. Have faith, good
cheer.
NOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER
21 (Sagittarius'—Jupiter going to
a   strong,   encouraging  position.
Your personal interests and business affairs are honored. Be
mindful of promises, appointments. Refuse lo become irritated.
DECEMBER 22 to JANUARY
20 (Capricorn)—Promising influences. It behooves you to put your
best foot forward, to have enthusiasm and belief in accomplishing. Advantages in many
worthy fields. You are capable.
JANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY
19 (Aquarius)—Not a whirlwind
of excitement and achievement
perhaps but favorable to conscientious, intelligent skill, direction. Confer where you need to
and be amenable to advice, suggestions.
FEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20
(Pisces) — Day may have slow
start but it picks up in energizing influences during a.m. and
improves as it proceeds. You
should be able to accomplish a
great deal and plan for greater
gain later.
YOU BORN TODAY have many
fine talents and can achieve in
a big way if you cultivate your
finer elements and curb any tendency to superficiality and overindulgence in pleasures. You must
utilize your great versatility and
creative ingeniousness and learn
to concentrate on your true occupation, profession or career. Con-
serve your energy for the right
things, the worthwhile and you
will accomplish. Stay true to those
who have helped you to attain.
Religion, the arts, all fine things
in life are essential to your happiness and well-being. Birthdate
of: Wm. Butler Yeats, Irish author; Gen. Winfield Scott, U.S.A.;
Anthony de Grancisci, famed
sculptor.
HUBERT
, Books, "With Beer
Three thousand cafes in'.Cairo and
its suburbs are to" be transformed by
law into "cultural centres." The
mayor has decreed that from now on
each cafe must put at Ihe disposition
of its customers a library of Instructive and wholesome books.
Licences of all cafes have been
cancelled and only those with proper
public libraries will be allowed to
re-open.—Le Pelit Marocain.
r
"You weren't on the passenger list, either?"
Red President
Cheered by Big
Two's Meeting
MOSCOW (Reuters) - Soviet
President Leonid Brezhnev Saturday described as a "big and
hopeful" event the Vienna summit meeting last week between
President Kennedy and Premier
Khrushchev.
In the first summit reference
by a top Russian leader, he
pledged the Soviet Union to do
its best to realize the hopes
for an international settlement
raised at the Kennedy-Khrushchev meeting,
Brezhnev was speaking at a
"friendship meeting" for Indonesian President Sukarno in the
Kremlin which was attended by
Khrushchev and other top Soviet officials. Tlie gathering was
broadcast live by Moscow radio
and television. . "
Khrushchev smiled and applauded at Brezhnev's speech,
but maintained silence about his
meeting with Kennedy.
He spoke only once and that
was to interrupt Sukarno's
sr>" .ch.
The Indonesian leader said
that Russia, unlike the West,
welcomed Indonesla'6 intention
to fight for Dutch • controlled
We«i New Guinea.
Khrushohev. interrunt-
ing. said: "We are not only
about it. but ready to demonstrate It, too."
however, there seemed to be
strong possibilities that it would
run into complex problems that
would slow down its program.
Such a view underestimated the
new spirit of Western Europe.
Rather than slowing down, (tie
pace of unity has speeded up.
L. D. Smlthere, president,
Dow Chemical of Canada Ltd.,
expressed both the Canadian
admiration and apprehension at
the recent annual meeting of the
Canadian Manufacturers' Associate when he said:
"It means a better way of life
for Europe's millions and it is
surely an answer to the false
claims of communism. We
should be glad it's there, but we
must learn quickly to live with
it. ... I have seen little indication that we are aware that we
must take decisive and positive
action to move along with them
to mutual prosperity."
SEES  BENEFITS
Mr. Smlthers saw the European agreements as raising definite barriers against us but
nevertheless appeared hopeful
that, with proper action, we can
reap good from the situation,
even though there will be upsets.
"We should, for one tiling,"
he stated, "be making a greater
effort to establish ourselves in
Europe as reliable suppliers of
quality goods at competitive
prices, because this developing
economy is the world's greatest
potential for both our raw materials and our finished goods."
Like many others, he emphasized the need fcr keen negotiations and bargaining to retain
the best entry possible into thhe
Europea trade blocks.
"We should remind them." he
commented, "Hint our borders
are relatively wide open lo their
manufactured goods. ... We
oan maintain a status quo position in trade with them only by
raising our barriers to them unless some means is found of
reducing theirs to us."
WIDER ASSOCIATION
Or. E. H. van der Beugel,
president of KLM Royal Dutch
Airlines, another speaker at tlie
manufacturers' meeting, saw
tlie possibility of a wider association than the present Euo-
pean blocks.
"We have," he said, "seen
two rather clearly defined periods of North Atlantic co-operation after the war. Our hope
now is vested in the prospect
that we gradually move into a
third period, Uiat of a real Atlantic community. Before we
reach this, however, many difficult obstacles must be removed."
In regard to tlie prospect of
the United Kingdom making an
agreement with the Common
Market, he commented:
"If is an open question
whether a reasonable entry of
the U.K. into the Common Market, which takes into account a
few important and specific
Common wealth interests, is
more dangerous for Canada
than the present situation in
which Canada has to cope with
the Common Market on one
side and the European Free
Trade Area (the so-called Outer
Seven)  on  the  other."
A. T. Lambent,, president of
the Toronto-Dominion Bank, taking a hopeful view for the moment at least, said: "In spite
of our continuing fears thai tfie
"Six" and the "Seven" may
turn into inward-looking proteo-
■ tionisi grouts.' the effect so far
has been that their' growing
prosperity has made them better markets for Canadian
goods."
OFFERS HELP
LONDON (Reuters) - Russia
has expressed its readiness to
offer economic and technical
assistance to Nigeria, the Soviet news agency Tass reoorted
today. Nigeria, once Britain's
biggest colony in Africa, became independent last October
but remains a mem .er of the
British Commonwealth.
By BRUCE LEVETT
Canadian  Press  Staff Writer
The trend to the suburb.,
which probably began when
man first was nagged into giving up his cave for an airy skin
tent, has come full circle,
Lots of people still are moving toward the light and air at
the end ot the bus line, but a
Cross-Canada Survey shows that
a reverse trend is shaping up.
In some areas—such as the
crowded "golden horseshoe" of
southern Ontario—it's hard to
tell who's moving where. There,
it's possible to get so far into
the Toronto suburbs that you
end up In Hamilton, 46 miles
west.
That the trend to the suburbs
remains strong is evident in
most parts of the country.
But The Oanadian Press
found, especially in the larger
centres, that the moving van
taking a young family to Outlying Acres frequently returns
with an elderly, retired couple
seeking the convenience of city
dwelling.
The suburban trend is evident
in Ihe Atlantic provinces, where
it is described as "definite" in
Sydnev and "reluctant" in Halifax. Prince Edward Island and
New Brunswick are also exper-
iencin<! it. Newfoundland is an
exception.
TWMVAY TRAFFIC
There is similar evidence in
the Prairies. Lower suburban
land costs exert a pull in Edmonton and Winnipeg. Regina,
too small to reflect a definite
trend, is described as "just one
large suburb."
In Ontario, the outward movement is felt in Ottawa, Windsor
and Hamilton. The two-way
traffic is becoming more pronounced in Toronto, bearing out
Ihe experience of major United
States cities.
No clear picture has emerged
in London since the city annexed large areas Jan. 1. Before annexation, only 40 acres
in the city were available for
housing but recent figures indicate a building boom in the
newly-annexed areas.
As against two permits for
single-family dwellings issued in
London in the first three months
last year, 172 permits covering
$2,073,300 were issued in the
first, three months of this year.
Stout resistance to the siren
call of suburbia is being shown
by the individualists who inhabit such areas as Montreal,
Quebec City, Vancouver and
Victoria.
In Quebec, people are inclined
to move to the suburbs as a
healthy place to raise children,
returning to the centres of their
culture and religion when the
children are grown and away
from home.
LESS  FOR  FOOD
Jean-Claude Lahay, Quebec
City's town-planning consultant,
says however that many who
move to the suburbs really can't
afford it and have to out down
on food to meet higher living
costs. As a result, their children
are ro better off.
G. F. Fountain, Vancouver's
planning director, says there is
not much property available
near the downtown area and
many persons find they have no
choice but to live in the suburbs.
Philip Holmes, a Victoria real
es'ate agent, says suburban living booms have levelled off
there. Persons who moved to
the suburbs left vacancies in
the citv and these vacancies began filling during the recession.
The big reasons behind the
trend to and from the cities?
Economic, say the experts.
In Oharlottetown a building
lot in a middle-class urban area
sells for about $1,600. A similar
lot in the suburbs would bring
$1,000.
G. R. Day. leans office manager fcr Central Mcrt.age and
Hrusing Corporation in Fred-
ericton and Saint John, cites
scarcity of city lots, usually
lower taxation and the fact that
pero'e hunting good homes can't
fir . them in the city.
One of the largest real estate
dealers in St. John's, Nfld.,
Stan Condon, says no great
trend has developed either way
because of the high cost of land
and lack of serviced land both
in the city and en its fringes.
ESCAPE HIGH TAXES
George Schurman, Halifax
home-builder, says congestion
on the peninsula on which the
city is built has brought the
"reluctant" tr-nd to the suburbs, where hemes are also
cheaper. Contractor Douglas
Chapell 'Of Sydney says people
move out to escape high taxes
and the dirt of the steel plant.
Economic? also rule in the
West. CMHC officials say a
two-bedroom house in the suburbs of Winnioes may go for
$13,500 tn $14 000. compared
wi* $14.0"0 to $16,000 for similar accommodation wi'.hin the
citv.
The percentages tell the tale
in Edmonton.
In the 1950-55 period. the ur
ban population Jumped 41 per
cent while the total of the four
main suburban areas increased
by 42 per cent. In the following
five years the urban increase
was 22 per cent while the suburbs jumped ahead by 116 per
cent.
An official of the Ottawa Real
Estate Board pointed out that
the economic factor is not
limited to the relative cheapness of suburban housing. A
buyer can get an NHA mortgage covering most of the purchase price of a new house,
while the maximum mortgage .
CMHC will cover on an older
home ts 60 per cent of its value.
ETHNIC MIGRATION
S. <D, H. Reid, director of education for the Toronto Real
Estate Board, offers another
suggestion: Older families move
bo the suburbs when Immigrants
settle in their part of the city.
He said New Canadians, who
tend to settle in national groups,
choose a church and move into
homes around it. Some of
the original families apparently
can't adjust.
But Mr. Geid says the trend
away from the suburbs persists.
"Some couples give up after
five or six years, tiring of the
lack of amenities and transportation problems in the outskirts." Then Ihey do their
split-level best lo move back to
the cities.
Despite this, houses and apartment blocks still are being
planned for thousands expected
to move away from the cities.
Louis Mayzel is a partner
in one scheme at Falgarwood
Hills in OakviUe, just west of
Toronto.
There, 5,200 houses are going
up in three subdivisions, covering 2,000 acres of residential,
industrial and commercial land.
Of these, 4,000 will be in the
$15,000 to $20,000 range; 1,200
will be in the executive range
of $20,000 to $35,000.
"I don't like to think about lt
when it gets that high," Mr.
Mayzel said when asked what
the total cost will be. His estimate is $110,000,000.
Falgarwood is the largest, of
several such projects in tho Toronto area.
BUILDING PICKS UP
Spokesmen say there was a
general slowdown in Canadian
house-building during the lattar
half of last year. Tlie industry
picked up, however, after the
National Housing Act was
amended in December.
The NHA changes reduced the
down-payment on a new house
by allowing a purchaser to borrow 95 per cent instead of 90
per cent of the first $12,000.
This means a down-payment is
cut to $600 from $1,200.
The maximum loan was Increased to $14,200 for a house
with fewer than three bedrooms; $14,900 for one with
more than three. The previous
maximum was 712,800.
And now a person has up tor
35 years to pay, whioh means
smaller monthly payments. Previously the limit was 30 years
wilh the accepted average 25
years.
For the first two months of
1961, says the CMHC, NHA-ap-
proved loans across Canada
totalled 6.421—compared with
633 during the same period last
year.
This is an increase of more
than 900 per cent.
Despite the signs that a growing number of persons are forsaking the suburbs for the
cities, real estate men say, most
of that whooping increase will
end up in Outlying Acres.
VqpHals Ds««crate
A'* Memorial
OTTAWA (CP) - The Commonwealth War Graves Commission is "quite incensed" at
the desecration by vandals of
the $18,000 Commonwealth Air
Memorial here.
Damage to Hie memorial, a
huge ribbed globe surmounted
by an albatross, may exceed
$1,000. Arthur Walton, commission assistant secretary-general,
said Friday.
He said the English firm
whioh made the monument has
to recast missing pieces and
ship them to an Ottawa firm for
installation.
New Zealand, Ireland, and the
Philippines have been ripped
from the globe, and other pieces
too thick for ripping have been
bent.
The monument,- located on
ground owned by tlie National
Capital Commission, was unveiled by the Queen in 1959 and
commemorates airmen from all
over the world who fell in unknown graves while on duty in
Canada or going to or from
Canada during the Second Worid
War.
AWARD SHOW
Jackie Cooper has been signed
as guest star fcr the second annual TV Guide Award Shew on
NBC-TV June 13.
I
 ^ 1 ■—— , „—I—
Wynndel Pays Honor to Longtime
Residents On 45th Anniversary
ecuting attorney and A. W.
Burch as defence counsel also
provided a good deal of fun. A.
Robertson acted as master-of-
ceremonies at the banquet whioh
followed. Mrs. Kay Bauer gave
several vocal selections accomp-
WYMNDEL — Citizens of the
Wynndel district turned out in
large attendance at the Wynndel
Memorial Hail Wednesday, June
7th, to pay tribute to Mr. and
Mrs. Walter Cooper on the "occasion of their 45th Wedding Anniversary. For the delight of the, anied by Mrs. J. C. Wigen. Fred
audience there was a staging of Hagen gave the toast to Mr. and
a mock wedding, which created Mrs. Cooper, which was answered
much mirth, not only in the cos- by Mr. Cooper,
taming but the wording of the Guests who travelled from out
ceremony. | of the district for the occasion
A mock trial in which Mr. were: Mr. and Mrs. W. Mason
Cooper was charged with many and Mrs. Brown of Kimberley,
offences with H. Riussill as pros- Mrs. A. Benedetti of Banff, Alber
ta, Mr. and Mrs. W. Johnson of Guy Constable when they resided
Twin Bays, Mrs. Sally Johnson
of Kuskanook, L. Littlejohn Sr.
of Erickson, K. Littlejohn, Mrs.
A. Davis, Mr. and Mrs. A Robertson, Mrs. F. Martello, and Mr.
and Mrs. McKay of Creston.
Mr. Robertson recalled delightful incidents of past years in the
Wynndel district and spoke of the
esteem with which Mr. and Mrs.
Cooper are held as citizens who
have co-operated i n so many
community efforts.
They were married 45 years
ago at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
By ALICE ALDEN
THE Influense of the Far East has made'itself felt
In fashion this season, even unto the beautiful leather
eoats that are so popular just now. Samuel Roberts furnishes Far East sway over this handsome cabretta
three-quarter length jacket and expresses it in the mandarin neckline and semi-kimono sleeve, pictured here.
As shown, if is done in a soft banana yellow, perfect
for wear over slim suits or sheath dresses.
Wynndel Wl Enjoys
Blossom Tea at Meeting
Man Has High Praise
For Women Executives
in Alice Siding. Mrs. Cooper was
then Gladys Mason. Rev. Powell
was minister at the ceremony.
They have lived in Wynndel ever
since. Their farm is called quite,
appropriately "Flowerfields" andj
is known far and wide for the
beautiful blooms grown there.
P. Lachaat, by special request
sang the French version of Made-
Ion, with the audience joining him
on the chorus.
On behalf of the community of
Wynndel, Mr. Robertson presented Mr. and Mrs. Cooper with a
lawn set, comprising a table with
a large umbrella, two chairs and
a reclining lounge.
Before the evening closed all
of the 125 guests joined hands for
the singing of "Auld Lang Syne."
By DEIRDRE MUNGOVAN
TORONTO (OP) ^Whem David
Rush paid nearly $2,000,000 last
December to acquire John
Northway and Son, an 86-year-
old retail women's wear firm,
he was fully aware that he
didn't know anything about merchandising.
"So I went out and hired real
pros."
His major find was Ruby
Hamra,    a   diminutive,   dark-
still finds time to oatch a weekend plane to New York where
she relaxes ta her apartment,
does charcoal' sketches of world
leaders and browses through art
KOOKY LOOK
"My interests run along artistic lines. I thought I would
proceed into fashion illustrating
since all my interest was in art.
I attended the Ontario College
of Art but I found I was too
She proposes to offer clothes
from the domestic, American
and European market, cater to
the career girl's pocketbook and
borrow some ideas from New
York, including a bird cage
restaurant fashioned after the
one at Lord and Taylor.
haired 'dynamo schooled ta the j temperamental   to  be   a  good
WYNNDEL — Wynndel Wo- display section. Members were
men's Institute held its regular asked to keep in mind entries for
meeting as a Blossom Tea on the the P.N.E. Institute competitions
lawn at Mr. and Mrs. M. Wiigen's! a letter received from Nakusp
residence. \ w.I. se the High Arrow dam was
If was decided to purchase $251 tabled. Members felt that more
in tickets for aocoustic tiles for I competent persons than them-
Creston Valley Hospital. Mem- j selves are capable of making
hers wil sell tickets, which are decisions relative to the  areas
tough competition of New
York's Fifth Avenue, who in
May became president of the
firm,
"I had no opinions about
women ta business until I was
exposed to Miss Hamra," said
Mr. Rush. "I found her to be
of top executive calibre, competent to deal ta any area and
as good as, if not better than,
any male executive I've seen.
"She treats a business with
loving care—more so than a
man. From now on I would lean
to women executives."
PLAN TO EXPAND
Miss Hamra handles the day-
to-day operations of the firm
which has its headquarters on
Yonge Street in downtown Tor-
commercial artist and I'm content to use it as a hobby."
Miss Hamna says her ambition for Northway is to give
it a "clearly defined fashion
image." To that end she has introduced to Toronto such modern trends as the "kooky" look
and fashions in burlap to go
with the store's traditional lavender and lace."
50c eaoh, towards a tile.
Type of souvenir to be sent to
provincial headquarters for their
new building will be investigated.
Necessary 'funds were voted to
[ ship  clothing  to  the  Kelowna
: depot.   Members   were   shown
articles which had been entered
for competition at the East Kootenay convention and also on the
Queens Bay
Mr. and Mrs. N. R. German
have returned to Vancouver after
spending a few days at their summer home here.
Professor A. Emery of Victoria
College was the .guest of Mr. and
Mrs. A Baravalle while he was
here on the occasion of the L. V.
Rogers High Sohool graduation
exercises
whidh might be flooded, and relocation of persons affected. It
was also felt that much misinformation was being circulated
by persons who had a few facts,
but yet were not experts in all
phases of this type of development.
Brown Owl
Returns From
Training Camp
WILLOW POINT - Mrs. Lorna
Hamilton, Brown Owl for First
Willow, Point Brownie Pack has
just returned from a Maple Leaf
Training Camp held at Camp
oVto" and" fo_r'branchlto.es ta | R°7' "<& Patterson.
the  suburbs   and  In  Hamilton !   The w«* lon* 6esslon cons!st'
ad Oshawa.
This   leaves   Mr.   Rush   free
to investigate expansion, with
plans to acquire 15 to 25 more
stores in Ontario and eventually
make Northway a country-wide
operation.
Five - foot - one and just 92
pounds—she would  love to  hit
During the afternoon pictures j "» but her _2-to-14*our day
were taken of the members for- makes it an unlikely prospect-
future reference. A complete re-' Miss Hamra is a native of Tor-
port of the district convention- onto who got her start with the
was given by Mrs. F. Merriam.  T. Eaton Company where she
Tea hostesses tor the afternoon: sold   ready-made   clothes   and
were Mrs. S. Moseley, Mrs. I.
Oquist and Mrs. J. Firth.
Baudoin, Fabiola
Expecting Baby
- VATICAN CITY (AP) - Pope
John told Belgian newspaper
men .Friday that Queen Fabiola i
Mr. and Mrs. K. R. Attree have! is expecting a baby,
returned from spending the week-1   The pope gave a special audi
end in the Okanagan. guests of
Dr. James Marshal of the Dom
ence  for  newspaper  men  who
came here with the queen and
taion Entomology Laboratory at fjj^t ^ZLl'tl
Summerland.
E. Baravalle is convalescing at
his home, having been a patient
in Kootenay Lake General Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. George Porteous,
accompanied by their daughter
Miss M. Porteous. have returned
from a week-end visit to their
daughter and 6on-in-law, Mr. and
Mrs. John Colgur in Creston.
later 'became head of stock and
then assistant buyer.
In 1947 she joined the A. J.
Freiman department store in
Ottawa. On a buying trip to
New York she was offered
and accepted a position with
Franklin-Simon, a country-wide
chain in the United States.
"I was the only woman vice-
president and was in charge of
brandh expansion," she said.
"I didn't find it difficult to
deal with men In business and
I thought nothing of attending
a state visit to the Vatican. The
pope received the royal couple j meetings with 10 to 50 of them
Here's a delicious and unusual
way to make use of apples. Place
thin slices of apple on a buttered
slice of bread. Cover the apple
slices with sharp Cheddar Cheese
and broil until the cheese is
bubbly.
in a state audience Thursday.
Fabiola. 32-year-old daughter
of a noble Spanish family, mar--
ried the 30-year-old Belgian King
Dec. 15 in Brussels. Her pregnancy was first reported — without confirmation — by a Brussels weekly May 24.
A statement distributed by
the Vatican press office said the
pontiff told the Belgian newspaper men:
"The queen was very kind because she told us that she is
expecting a child."
Baudouin and Fabiola are the
World's only reigning Roman
Catholic monarchs.
ed of handicraft sessions, as well
as practical and theory classes.
All phases of the Brownie program were covered. During the
week the trainees were taken on
a tour of Cominco, and attended
Church in Trail. An interesting
point was that the cook's helper,
Mrs. Iris Davies, from Birmingham, England, was a Brown Owl
and had many interesting stories
to relate. She is visiting her sister
in Trail.
Trainees from the Kootenays
were: Mrs. Mary Gibney of
Chapman Camp, Mrs. Lorna
Hamilton, Willow Point; Mrs.
Maizey Dalziel, Castlegar; Mrs.
Daisy Simmons from Trail; and
Mrs. Lillian Molnar and Mrs.
Lillian Quarrie from Rossland
Coming from coast points were:
Mrs. Avis Schutz, Mrs. Marion
Marno, Mrs. Peggy McRae, Mrs.
Jan Chapman, Mrs. Pat McGibbon. Mrs. Kathy Whipple.
Mrs. Marjorie Parrot from
Vancouver was commandant, and
Mrs. Vi Heaslip and Mrs. Thelma
Stevenson were the assistant
trainers.
Vaniers
Entertain
3000 Guests
OTTAWA (CP) - Governor -
General Vanier and Mme. Vanier welcomed 3000 guests Saturday to their annual garden party
at Government House.
Guests mingled and sipped tea
and soft drinks to the background
music of military bands. Saris
added to the colorful spectacle
of gay summer attire and top
hats.
The lawns of the spacious gardens were left pock-marked by
the imprints of high-heeled shoes
and covered with cigaret butts
stamped into the ground.
Cameras were much ta evidence at the garden party with
Gov.-Geiieral Vanier and Prime
Minister Diefenbaker as the chief
targets.
Mrs. R. Eaton
Named UNA
President
Mrs. Rex Eaton. OBE, LLD.
has been elected national president oil" the' United Nations Association in Canada. She is the first
woman to hold the position, filled in recent years by General
E. L. M. Burns, Dr. Sidney
Smith, C. M. Drury and W. G. C.
Howland.
Dr. Eaton is well known for her
work as Associate Director of
Selective Service during the war',
and more reentry as president of
th National Council of Women
She has long been interested in
industrial relations, was the only
woman member of the B. C. Industrial Relations Board as early
as 1935, and is a member of the
Vocational Training Advisory
Council of Canada.
Native of SpringhJU, N. S., and
graduate of Acadia, she came
west to teach school after leaving university, married her principal, who was a 'fellow-Acadian
and has lived in Vancouver ever
since.
I can hold forth with the
male animal in every aspect of
business and I don't find there
are any barriers. Men seem to
be more attentive when they are i
exposed to women in the same !
business."
She came to Northway last
December from New York
where she was executive assistant to the president of Sterns.
At first she took a job as a
part-time consultant ta merchandising, commuting between
New York and Toronto.
Although she now has a full-
time  job  with  Northway,  she
MIGRANT WORKERS
More than 35,000 farm workers left Mexico to help harvest
crops in the United States in
1961, most going to California.
God the Preserver,
Sermon Subject
The mental nature of fatigue
was explained at Christian Science services Sunday in a Lesson-Sermon on the subject "God
the Preserver of Man."
Isaiah's comforting assurance
of divine strength was read from
the Bible ('Isa. 40): "They that
wait upon the Lord shall renew
their strength; they shall mount
up with wings as eagles; they
shall run. and not be weary; and
they shall walk, and not faint."
A correlative selection from
"Science and Health with Key
to the Scriptures" by Mary Baker Eddy states ta part: "The
scientific and permanent remedy
for fatigue is to learn the power
of Mind over the body or any illusion of physical weariness and
so destroy this illusion, for matter cannot be weary and heavy
laden."
The Golden Text was from the
first chapter of Joshua: "Be
strong and of good courage, be
not afraid, neither be thou dismayed, for the Lord thy God is
with thee whithersoever thou go-
est."
New Denver
NEW DENVER - Mr. and
Mrs. R. Bro and three Children
of Robson were visitors at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Q. A.
Forsythe and looked over the
Slooan Lake Divisional Girl Guide
camp.
Mr. and Mrs. Stan Heslip have
as guests, Mrs. Heslip's mother,
Mrs. E. Russell of Duncan, B.C.,
and her sister, Mrs. H. Kinder
of Vancouver.
Miss June Stewart and Mr. Pat
Henderson of Kamloops were
visiting for a few days with the
former's parents, Mr. and Mrs.
James C. Stewart.
iilliiillllllllllllilililllllllliliililiiii;
Shoes Were
Good Luck
KITCHENER, Ont. (OP) -
H anyone throws shoes at
Peter Jand's wedding, it Will
be appropriate.
He met his English fiancee
through a size six black boot
made in Kitchener 13 years
ago.
Peter was packing boots
and shoes at Marchants Rubber Company in 1948 when he
tucked his name and address
into the toe of two pairs of
women's boots.
Later in England, clerk
Gwen Honeywell, then IB. was
unwrapping the shipment in a
Suffolk store. She found one of
the notes and decided to add
Peter to her list of pen pals.
Peter, then 17, answered
and the couple wrote regularly.
Last fall Peter decided to do
some courting in person and
took a trip to England to meet
Gwen. Within a week he proposed and she accepted.
He is leaving his job as a
shipping receiver at a precision maohinery firm to fly to
England June 14. Peter and
Gwen plan to be married in
the fall and Peter has taken
a job at her father's malting
plant.
She isn't "too fussy" about
coming to Canada but Peter
loves England and, more important, loves Gwen to boot.
Mil Mill III II1IIM111! I IMM I III I! 11II! III
NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, JUNE 12, 1961—3
Council of Women
Told of Eskimo Problem
By DEIRDRE MUNGOVAN
Canadian Press Staff Writer
WINDSOR, Ont. (CP) f- Eskimos, their problems .and prospects, occupied the _?th. annual
meeting of the National Council
of Women Thursday i)ight."'
Gordon Roberts o n, ,' deputy
minister of northern affairs and
national resources and commissioner of the Northwest Territories, explained the Eskimo's
problem of assimilation.
He said in one, or at the
most two generations, the Eskimo is expected to undergo
changes greater than those
wbitemen have t a k d n 2,000
years to achieve.
Next year, he said, more than
60 per cent of the Eskimo children will attend school, and
through the department, of
northern affairs Indians and Eskimos will continue to be taught
basic skills as well as techniques geared to their individual needs.
INDUSTRIES DEVELOPED
Small industries are being developed including fur trade,
hand carving, char fishery,
printing and garment making.
Mr. Robertson suggested another solution to the transitional
period is wage employment.
"In the developing north,
there will  be  opportunities  in
mining, transportation, construction and the 6ervise industries. .  ...
"I see no reason why these
jobs — and many of the other
!jobs now being done by people
now in our northern schools."
Earlier Thursday the council
decided to urge the federal
government to reconsider the
double impact of estate duties
and income tax on pensions
annuities and death benefits.
Delegates   agreed   the   p:
sions,   annunities   and   dc ■
benefits should not be subject
both duties and tax. They pr
posed the estate tax should nc
be levied on pensions and life
insurance   interest   payable   to
the widow.
Lister Notes
Mrs. C. Kwasnieki and son of
Cranbrook were visiting Mr. and
Mrs. A. Marzke.
Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Bruce o!
Nanoose Bay, enroute to Kaslo
tor a year, visited Mr. and Mrs.
H. Demchuk.
Miss Lois Ragsdale has returned after visiting relatives at
Calgary.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Beebe and
children of Calgary have taken
up residence on the Fred Som-
merfeld place formerly owned by
H. Demchuk.
P. J. Sherstobetoff was on business at Vancouver.
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Siebert were
visiting their son Howard, and
daughter Nancy and other relatives at Edmonton.
You
get
MONEY
need it!
Up to
$2500.00
sometimes
more.
NIAGARA FINANCE
COMPANV LIMITED
560 Baker St.,
Telephone 1636.
Branches
Throughout B.C.
Better Facilities Urged
For Treating Mentally III
By ken Smith
MONTREAL (OP)-The third
world congress of psychiatry
ended here Saturday with.a renewed oall for more trained personnel and better facilitie. for
treating mental illnesses.
Dr. Morgan Martin of Ottawa,
chief of the mental health division of the department of national health and welfare, told a
discussion at the third world
congress of psychiatry of the social implications of mental disorders that "individual treatment is a keystone of psychiatry."
Dr. Martin said there are
three other aspects of the problem that are getting more attention from various officials ta
Canada:
The need for closer co-opera-
l
tion in treatment, and administrative methods between provinces and the federal government; the need for "suitable activities" for every mental patient, whether in hospital or in
the community, and the need for
effective, public education.
Dr. Martin warned against
health agencies getting caught
up in the "slavish worship of
fashions or fads" in psychiatric
treatment.
These were different from the
rapid change of emphasis psychiatry had undergone in the
last few decades and which
were important for the normal
development of treatments in
the light of increasing knowledge.
At the conference, attended by
3,000 psychiatrists from 62 coun
tries, Dr. D. Bwen Cameron of
Montreal was elected president
of the World Psychiatric Association.
Dr. Cameron, chairman of the
department of psychiatry at McGill University and the Allan
Memorial Institute here, is the
WPA's first president since the
association |was formed at the
beginning of the congress to try
to give psychiatrists a greater
voice in various governments.
The congress was held primarily to let psychiatrists know
what work and research was
being done in other countries.
There were more than 500 scientific papers presented, covering
every aspect of psychiatry from
the effects of new drugs to why
crime exists and why "voodoo
hexes" kill their victims.
By TRACY ADRIAN
A SHIMMERING gold design adorns a lightweight
«wim cap which is made to lit all head sizes and
cover any type of hair-do. It can give you the new
golden girl effect, so fashionable this year, and it's a
glamorous way to keep your hair dry while going in
for active aquatics.
the better
the bread
the better
the sandwich!
MAKE YOURS
ToastMaster
ENJOY
HOME-BAKED
FLAVOR!
 '' -r-—^r: :.---■
nr
6— NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, JUNE 12, 1961
Reds Lead NL by Bare 4 Points in Seesaw Race
Gene Freese Emerges Weekend Hero
Bj THB CANADIAN PRESS
Oimsimaffl Reds led the National League by a bare four
percentage points over Los Angeles Dodgers in a seesaiw race
in which Gene Freese emerged
as the Kedlegs' weekend hero.
The veteran foflelder clouted
a home run that contribute!, to
Cincinnati's 6-a victory over St.
Louis Cardinals in the first
game of their Sunday double-
header. In the nightcap, his
bases-loaded single broke a 3-3
tie and another one-bagger contributed to a .oiKun rally as
the Reds romped home 9-3.
The Dodgers did al they
could to keep up the pace as
Sandy Koufax tossed a five-hitter at Philadelphia Phillies for a
6-3 victory. But the single win
wasn't enough to keep Los Angeles in front.
Wally Moon hit his fourth
homer in three days with the
bases empty and drove in another run with a single to nail
down   the   Dodger   southpaw's
ninth viotary against  two defeats.
INDIANS PULL AWAY
In the American League,
Cleveland Indians pulled away
from Detroit Tigers after splitting their four-game series by
taking both ends of their Sund-y
twin bill from Kansas City 7-3
and 4-3 with Chuck Essegian
breaking up both games.
Replacing Jimmy Piersall,
who injured his heel, in the fifth
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inning of the opener
hit a two-run homer in the Seventh inning and a three - run
blast in the eighth. His ninth-
Inning double brought in the
winning run in the nightcSp.
Both victories wefe credited
to the Tribe's fabulous bullpen.
Dick Stigman, making his first
appearance of the year after
recovering from a sore awn,
held the Athletics to one hit in
the last four Innings of the opener. Barry Latman ni.de his
record 6-0 in the second, although h i s scoreless String
ended after more than 16 innings.
ANOTHER FOB SPAHN
Warren Spahn pitched two hit-
less innings in relief and won his
own game with a three - run
I homer in the ninth as Milwaukee Braves beat Ohicago Cubs
8-4 but Ihe Braves succumbed
to rookie Jack Curtis in the second game, losing 5-3.
Richie Ashburn, whose triple
had driven in two runs In the
opener, cracked a two-run single and rookie catcher Dick
Bertell drove in two more as
Milwaukee failed to solve Curtis' slow stuff.
Three third-inning home runs
by Smckey Burgess. Bob Skinner and Rocky Nelson did most
of the damage as Pittsburgh Pirates beat San Francisco Giants
8-4 in a single game. The Giants
got 11 hits off Vern Law and
Bob Friend but left seven men
on base.
Orlando Cepeda and Matty
A'.cu hit home runs for the losers.
Detroit Tigers got seven home
runs, three of them by Norm
Cash, as they split with Washington to fall IV. games back of
Cleveland    in    the    American
League race. The Senators took, game Chicago losing streak by
the opener 7-4 and Detroit won I beating the Orioles 7-1 after the
the second 7-6 in 11 innings. i Sox had dropped the opener 8-2
One of Cash's wallops cleared j on Chuck Estrada's three-hitter. I
the 94-foot right field roof at1 Pierce allowed six hits in his
Briggs Stadium, a feat accom-'second route-going performance
plished previously only by Ted' of the season and his 21st lifetime j
Williams and Mickey Mantle,     j victory over the Birds.
Steve Boros  singled with  thei   	
bases loaded to give the Tigers
their  second-game  victory.  Re
in Saturday's A hi e r 1 c 4 n'
League ianies Detroit blinked
Cleveland 2-0, New York defeat
ed Kansas City 5-3, Baltimore
nipped Minnesota 4-8, Washington
edged the White Sdx by the same
score and the Angels whipped
Boston 10-5.
In the National League the
Dodgers overcame the Phillies
5-4, Cincinnati whipped the Cardinals 4-2, the Giants white,
washed Pittsburgh 5-0 and Mil
waukee battered the Cubs .-5.
YANKS STILL ftOLLING
Yogi Berra's two homers accounted for 'both runs in the open- j
er and Roger Maris blasted two I
in the nightcap as New York'
Yankees downed Los Angeles Angels 2-1 and 5-1.
Maris, whose homer total now
stands at 20, also pulled two spectacular catches to preserve
Ralph Terry's five-hitter in the
first game. Rookie Roland Sheldon got credit for the other vie-1
tory. I
Minnesota Twins took an 8-21
pounding from Boston in the
first game, then found their
bats and walloped the Red Sox
10-5 for their third victory in 20
games.
The Twins batted around for'
five runs in the third inning   of i
the nightcap, saw the Sox reduce '
the gap to 6-5 and pulled away
again with (our runs in the ninth.
Bob Allison had a homer in each
game   and   Hanmon   Klllehrew
produced one in the second. For
the  Sox,  Don Buddln homered
twice and Jackie Jensen    and
Frank Malzone got one each in
the opener.
PIERCE GETS
SUPPORT
Lefty Billy Pierce, beaten
twice by Baltimore when his
mates gave him only a single
run to work with, snapped a 4-
LITTLE TOO' CLOSE for comfort, left-hander
Blair Olson's sizzler during the second game of Sunday's doubleheader with the Kimberley Dynamos at
Civic park. Nelson lost both ends 9-8 and 5-1. Outlaw
catcher Don MacKenzie doesn't seem to be having
too much trouble with the ball as it whistles past the
unidentified Kimberley batter. — Daily News photo.
Homers for Burdette and Lilly
Outlaws Drop Doubleheader
liever Phil Regan, who faced
only one batter, got credit for the
win.
Pair Establish
Golfing Goals
By DON SAWATSKY
News Sports Editor
The big, booming bat of Charlie
Burdette struck with fearsome
savagery, once in each game of
an East Kootenay Baseball League doubleheader Sunday, but the
big man wasn't able to stir up the
Nelson Outlaws "enough to win.
It was either that, or they were
I lying too hard. Anyway, they
lost 9-8 and 5-1 to Kimberley Dynamos Sunday afternoon at Civic
Park before about 200 fans.
The losses didn't affect Nelson's
Veeck Bows Out
Of Partnership
CHICAGO (API - Ailing Bill
Veeck bowed out of baseball
and Chicago White Sox ownership was narrowed to two men
Saturday as Arthur C. Allyn
bought his majority control part-
MONTREAL (CP) - Bill Kerr ners' Veeck  8nd Hank  GreCT"
shot  a  one-over-par  72 Sunday  herS for  an  estimated  $2,500,-
and Judy Darling 77, two over WW'
women's  par,  to  establish  the     At a  surprise   press  confer-
scores which golfers across Can- ence, Allyn,  48,  a  director  of
ada have been hoping to beat
during National Golf Week.
Kerr is the Canadian Professional Golfers Association champion and Judy is the ladies openj
champion of Canada. |
The two, both from the Mont-,
real area, played over Kerr's i
home.course of Beaconsfield.     '.
During the June 3-10 National
Golf Week, golfers could play as|
many rounds as they wished — j
at $1 — in a beat-the-ohamps ef-i
fort.
The money will be used largely';
by the Royal Canadian Golf As-!
numerous corporations, said:
1.   Veeck,   convalescent   Sox
president,   had   resigned   from
top-of-the-heap standings but the
victories brought the Dynamos out
of the cellar and into a tie for second place with their fellow clti-
bens, the Hobos.
Standings are:
Nelson !  1  I
Klmb. Hobos        3   1   6
Klmb. Dynamos 3   3   6
Cran. Cubs 2  4  4
Chunky little Les Lilly was not
to be outdone in the home run department however, He pounded
two over the vulnerable left-field
fence in the first two Innings of
the opener for the Dynamos.
Lilly's first homer was with one
man on base and the second homer drove In two men.
Kimberley accumulated nine
runs by the fourth inning of the
opener hefore the Outlaws snapped into shape.
Righthander Les Hufty started
out slowly for the Outlaws in the
Iirst game but it was the big fifth
inning lhat changed the complexion of things.
Frank Hufty squeezed out a
three-bagger on a first base-line
grounder to start the wagon rolling. Bernie Monteleone brought
him in with a grass-scorcher
Ihrough short stop position and
then Burdette's drive into deep
left field made it 8-4.
The Outlaws doubled their score
in the sixth inning when Mel Dor-
the club after selling his 30-per- j Pv poked a grounder through sec
cent holdings  ln the majority
group. |
2. Vice - President Greenberg
sold his 40 per cent but will re  !
'nain as general manager and I
executive   vice - president   "in i
complete charge of the club."   |
3. Allyn will retain his 54-per- I
cent holdings. :
4. Allyn has made  no over- I
tures to buy out Chuck Comis-
ond base, Frank Hufty drove him
to third and Al Roemer brought
them in with a double.
Burdette finished it off with his
first homer of the game.
Nelson's vigorous comeback
stopped there and for the next
three remaining Innings, neither
team managed either an insurance marker or a tying point.
The Dynamos went through
three pitchers, Carl Johanson,
(five innings), Mike Russel (two
innings) and Bodine who finished
off.
Between the three of them, they
struck out seven Outlaw batters
and walked three. Nelson hit 20
times.
Les Hufty fanned nine, walked
one and was hit 10 times.
Rodin, went tlie ..distmice in the
nightcap against southpaw Blair
Olson.
Bodine fanned only two batters
against Olson's five, was hit nine
times against Olson's 10 and walked one compared with Olson's
two.
Sam Calles snagged the only
big opportunity by the Outlaw, in
the third inning of the nightcap
when he snatched a high line
drive on the run with an over-the-
shoulder catch off the bat of Roemer.
Harvey Nash and Lilly hauled
the Dynamos ahead 2-0   in   the
fourth on a couple   of  one-basi
hits.
The t.fth inning were moment!
of indecision 'or the Outlaws and
they cust Ihem two runs. Allan
Fabbro singled tr short stop an.
the ball was hobbled and Nasi
singled to third base where th)
ball nesUaied agoin.
Burdette's .e^end homer of tht
day turned out to be the only point
for th» Outlaws in the seonc
game.
.'Calles made it five for Kimber
ley ion an error in the Infield.
Final Lineup Set
For Ball Tournament
odation for the development of! key, owner of a 46-per-cent in-
junior golf. Iorest ln the club.
Men  and  women  count  their I 	
j ret  scores,  deducting their o'- j
ficial  handicaps.  Those  beating
I the scratch scores of the champs
! will get a medal inscribed:  "1
beat the champ."
Probable Pitchers
By THE  ASSOCIATED PRESS
Probable pitchers for today's
major league games (won • lost
records in parentheses):
National League
Los Angeles (Williams 4-5) at
San Francisco (Sanford 3-3)
Only game scheduled
American League
Minnesota (Arrigo 0-0) at Boston (Delock 3-2)
Los Angeles (Bowsfield 2 - 1)
at New York (Stafford 3-2) N.
Chicago (Larsen l-O) at Balti-
11 more (Hoeft 1-3) N
Kansas City  (Shaw 3 - 4 at
Cleveland (Hawkins 5-3) N.
Only games scheduled.
""""
Only a Fifth
For Elliott
off, Nonman Blain, Don Cavalier,
Reinhard Koch and Dennis Oherenko.
Another eight players, who had
not passed their 13th birthday
by May 1 this year, are needed,
and any interested should turn
out tomorrow. Players from last
year's team who have passed the
Final line-up for a second girl's
team in the Midsummer Baseball
Budd Ties
World Mark
VILLANOVA, Pa. (AP) -
Frank Budd of Villanova tied
the world 100-yard record for the
second time this year with a
time of 9.3 seconds Sunday at
the Middle Atlantic Amateur
Athletic Union's track and field
meet.
Budd also won the 220-yard
dash as athletes from his school
tuned up for the United States
National Collegiate Athletic Association's championships Friday
and Saturday in Philadelphia.
Eight runners share the 100-
yard dash record, including
Harry Jerome of Vancouver.
Budd's time of 20.3 in the 220
was three-tenths of a second o
the world record.
Little Baseballers
Schedule Games
The Sandlot Mighty Might
Baseball Dodgers will be hosting
South Siocan today at 6 p.m. in
a new game-exchange system
tournament will be decided at a a[ ^ivic Park,
workout at 4 p.m. Tuesday atj in the future, South Siocan will
Civic grounds. he in Nelson every Wednesday at
Eligible for places on the team, 4:ao  p.m.
and especially asked to turn out,     The Little League Gyros will
are; Pat Maida", Jackie Matheson, play an exhibition baseball game
Barb Hewatt, Maureen Bragag- against  the Sandlot Babe Ruth
limit  are  also  needed   as! nola' Linda McLeod, Pam Pepin,fleam at civic grounds today at
BELGRADE (AP) - Herb El-
coaches to assist Jimmy Lissa,
who has been named head coach.
Under  tournament   rules  this
liott,   Australia's   world   record year, each team is to have five
holder at one mile and 1500 me-i boys  over the  playing-age-limit
ters, couldn't do better than fifth! as coaches
Saturday in  an  800-meter race,    Ust „, _,_,_,_..  f__ ^ ,_,..
Elliott   who  is   scheduled   to ™nthwit^Tlr' TV Said ]as''nis"ht
join the Oxford-Cambridge team, <w0."*  Ilh6, f'"0" ?„*?
i,,. . t  -„-,-..  - ■_ j I Roeheleau and Fred Nioholls to
Leslie   Carlson,   Cathy   Wagner,14:30 p.m.
Sandra Ward,  Sharon Fletcher,! 	
Janice  Fukala,  Linda  Barefoot,   Baseball   Standings
for a meet against a Harvard-]
Yale combine in the United States
Tuesday, battled East German's
Valentin for the lead at the 400-
meter mark but then dropped
back.
Valentin won in 1:50.4.
the   previosuly   enrolled   Garry
] Shatosky and Johnny Romanuik.
Lorraine Webster and Sharon
SOCCER CUP WON
FLORENCE (API - Floren-
tina of Florence beat Lazio of
Rome 2-0 Sunday and won the
Kalian Cup soccer tournament.
Florence Maglio and Colleen Wil-1 .Finns-
son. Any who are absent wiU be *AT,0NAL LEA°Uf
dropped unless they send word r,   .     .,
that they still wish to play, Cy ,'n.T"„".e.
Jackman,  tournament  manager,!^ «..
The  team,  tentatively  named I g, inm*
the Bantams   (most are  13 or Mjlwaul(ee'   ;
under) will be sponsored by the Chicago
tournament, if no other sponsor | Philadelphia
W L
33 21
34 22
30 23
26 24
24 27
24 27
21 32
17 33
Walls, who served in the same: is also looking for a sponsor and
materializes. A sixth boys' teamj AMERICAN LEAGUE
Pet
.611
.607
.607
.520
.471
.471
.396
.340
Gbl
2V,
5
7VJ
7M>
11'..
14
capacity last year, have joined
the staff of scorers under Verna
Ohernoff, who is now a member
of the National Baseball Congress,
National Association of Scorers.
More umpires and scorers are
needed as there will be games
every day during July and August.
if npne is found, the tournament Cleveland
will sponsor it, too. Detroit
A full dress workout under sup- New York
ervision of Frank Morrow, spon- Baltimore
sor, will be held to complete the Washington
Woo'.worths  boys'  team  at  the Boston
same time and place Tuesday. Kansas City
Boys already signed include Ken | Minnesota
Kuhn. Reg Cherenko, Greg Ozer- Los Angeles
W L
37 19
36 21
34 20
27 27
28 29
26 28
23 29
21 34
21 35
Pet    Gbl
.632
.630
.518
.491
.481
.442
.382
.375
IVi
2
8
9>.
10
12
15V.
16
HOW MANY KEEP THEIR SAVINGS IN A BANK?
Probably all of them/There are 10 million savings deposit accounts
in the chartered banks, by far the most popular type. They are used
by all sorts of people—wage-earners, businessmen, housewives, farmers,
students —who know their money is safe, earns good interest, and is
available whenever needed. And they like the efficiency and courtesy of
the men and women who serve them/Your nearest branch is the placp
tor your savings — and the one place you can do all your banking.
Tai^CHAETERED BANKS BE.BVING YOUR COMMUNITY
Sunday's Big League Linescores
American  League
First
Lob   Angelw   000 000 001-  1 51
New York      010 000 lOx • 2  8 0
McBride (5-4) Fowler (8) and
Averill; Terry (4-0) and Blanch-
ard. HRs: LA-Hunt (11). NY-
Berra 2 (11).
First
Kansas City   001 020 000 -  3 81
Cleveland        010 010 23x -  7 10 1
Walker (2-3) Archer (7) Staley (7) and Pignatano; Antonelli, Stigman (6) (1-01 and Romano. HRs: Cle—Kirkland (6)
Essegian 2 (3).
First
Chicago 000 000 002- 2 3 3
Baltimore       104 001 20x -  8 10 0
Baumann (4-6) Larsen (8) and
Lollar; Estrada (4-41 and Triandos. Courtney (8). HR: Bal—
Philley  (1).
First
Minnesota       000 000 101 - 2 7 3
Boston 001 004 30x
Ramos (3-S) Pleis (6) Palm-
quist (7). and Battey; Schwall
'5-01 Fornieles (7) and Nixon.
HRs: Minn—Allison (10). Bos—
Buddin 2 (2) Malzone (4) Jensen
(6).
'First
Washington      003110 002-  710 0
Detroit 000 201010- 4  60
McClain (6-41 Gabler (8) and
Green; Woodeshlck (3-3) Fox
(5), Casale (6), Fischer (8),
Aguirre (9) and Brown. HRs:
Wsh-Green (5). Det-Cash 2
(16), Colavito (17), Kaline (5).
Second:
Wash. 000 033 000 00-; 6 5 0
Detroit 001 210 200 01— 7 15 2
Sturdivant, Hobaugh (41 Kut-
yna (5) Easier (8) 1-1 and Daley;
Bruce, Fox (5) Regan (11) 6-2,
and Roarke. HRs: Wash—Ke-
ough (3) Det-Kaline (6) Cash
'27) Boros (4).
Cincinnati    002 000 034— 9 10   1
8 10 1 ' St.  Louis     000 111 000— 3 10   3
Purkey  7-3  Brosnan   (8)   and
Schmidt, Zimmerman  (81;
Broglio 16-6), McDermott  (8)
McDaniel (8), Miller (9) and Mc
Carver, Sawatski (9>.
Milwaukee   001 000 020— 3   9  0
Chicago       030 200 OOx— 5   7   :
Nottebart '3-4) Raymond  (4)
Buhl (71 and Torre; Curtis (2-1)
Shultz (8) and Bertell. HRs: Mil-
Mathews 117).
Second
Los Angeles   000 100 000 -  1  6 3
New York      301 000 lOx -  5 5 0
Grba (5-5) James '4) and Sadowski, Averill (8); Sheldon,
(3-2) Arroyo (9) and Howard.
HR: NYk. Maris 2 120), Mantle
(18).
Second
Chicago
Baltimore
Pierce (2
Barber (7-4) Hall
(4) and Triandos.
Second
412 000 000- 710 0
000 000 010-  1  6 2
5)  and Carreon;
(3)
Kansas City   000 010 011 -  3 7 4
Cleveland        100 0O2 001 - 4  8 0
Rakow, Kunkel (6) Bass (7)
Daley (9) (4-8) and Sullivan;
Grant, Allen '8) Latman (8)
i'6-Oi and Romano. HR: Cle—
Kirkland (7).
Second
Minnesota       005 010 004 -10 110
Boston 110 100 200-  5111
Kralick (5-4) Lee (7) and Nar-
agon, Battey (9); Cisco (0-1)
Hillman (3) Stallard (7) Muffett
'9) and Pagliaroni, Nixon (8),
HRs: Minn—Allison (10), Killebrew (13).
National League
First .
Cincinnati       400 Oil 000 -  6 11 0
St. Louis 000 010 010 ■  2  8 0
Hunt (6-3) and Zimmerman:
Sadeckl (4-4) Cicotte (6) Miller
(81 and Scbaffer. HRs: Cin—
Blasingame (1) Freese (12). StL
—Warwick (2).
First
Milwaukee      000 101114 - 8 11 1
Chicago 000 000 400 -  4  8 1
Willey, .Brunei (7) McMahon
17) Spahn (8) (7-6) and Torre;
Ellsworth, Hobbie (7) Scbaffer-
noth (8) (0-4) Elston (9 Sclillltz
i9) and Thacker, Bertell (8).
HRs: Mil—Boiling (8),i Spahn
12)  3.
Pittsburgh       043 000 001 - 8 9 0
San Fran.       010 102 000 - 4 112
Law (3-4) Friend (6) and Burgess;' Loes' '4-3) Duffalo '2),
O'Dell (4), Bolin '7) and Bailey. HRs: Pgh—Burgess (5),
Skinner (2), Nelson (4). SF—
Cepeda (17), M. Alou (3).
Phila. 003 000 000 -  3  5 0
Los Angeles   010 120 llx - 6 14 1
Mahaffey (6-6) Lehman (5),
Baldschun '8' and Dalrymple,
Neeman (7): Koufax (9-2) and
Roseboro. HRs: Pha — Walla
'2), LA—Moon '14), Roseboro
HI), Hodges  (4).
 ■■IM"———
^ ; ".'    '   ■,
Frank Funk Johnny Temple Wynn Hawkins        John Romnno
JUST TERRIFIC FOR TRIBI—Leading the way as the Cleveland Indians forge to the top in
the American League chase are these stellar members of the cast, headed by three of
the loop's top hitters, Jim PIersr.ll, John Romano and Johnny Temple, and the fine pitching ot reliefer Frank Funk, Mudcat Grant and Wynn Hawkins. (Central Press)
"Built to Burn" Charges
WSRC Head, Fitzgerald
By JACK SULLIVAN
Canadian Press Staff Wrifer
TORONTO (CP) — Most racetrack stables In North America are "literally built
to burn," the National Association of Stale Racing Commissioners was told here Saturday.
15-Round Decision
IHU>I
NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, JUNE 12, 1961—7
Couldn't Drop Him]
Ancient Archie Holds Share of Title
By JACK HAND
NEW YORK (API - Ancient
Archie Moore battered Italy's
Giulio Rinaldi, a courageous but
inept challenger, Saturday night
and held tight to his share of
the world light-heavyweight boxing title on a unanimous decision at Madison Square Garden.
Moore, showing his age, never
Saturday's Major
League Linescores
William Fitzgerald, Seattle
fire chief and chairman of the
Washington State Racing Commission, produced figures to
show that nearly 400 thoroughbreds had died in stable fires in
tlie 10 years from 1951 to 1060
in the United States and Canada. Forty-two horses had been
burned to death so far in 1961
which, he said, may turn out to
be "the worst year ever."
"Unless we take Immediate
positive steps to protect our
physical assets and the lives of
both humans and animals from
further destructive fires we
shall see this industry seriously
affected economically and morally," he said.
Mr. Fitzgerald suggested that
installation of automatic sprinkler systems is the best insurance
Belgian, Yank
Win Le Mans
LE MANS, France (API-Olivier Gendebien of Belgium and
Phil. Hill of Los Angeles, California, 6wept to victory in tlie
M-hour Le Mans auto race Sunday and set a distance record
of 4,476 kilometers (2,782.194
miles).
The old record established in
1957 by Ron Flockhart and Ivor
Rueb of Great Britain, was
4,397.108 kilometers (2,732.80
miles i.
Hill was at the wheel of their
red Ferrari as it crossed the
finish line in an endurance classic that saw Italian built Ferrari cars sweep the honors.
The average speed of the winners was  185.83 kilometers  per '
hour (115.94 miles).
SECOND WIN
lt was tlie second year in a
row that the hard-driving Belgian had turned back all challengers over the 8.36 mile route.
And it was tlie second time Gendebien and Hill had teamed up
to drive to victory.
Last year. Genebien's partner
was Belgian Paul Frera, now re- i
tired, and  in  1958 he and  the
Californian took the honors.
In second place were Willy
Mairesse of Belgium and Michael Parks of Great Britain in another Ferrari. Third were Pierre
Noblet and Jean Guichet of
France, also driving a Ferrari.
Only 22 of the 55 starters finished .the race.
Among those forced out were
Britain's Stirling Moss, whose
Ferrari developed a broken radiator hose: Pedro and Ricardo
Rodriguez of Mexico, out with
mechanical trouble, and Roy
Salvadorl and Tony Maggs of
Britain, whose Aston - Martin
conked out to end British hopes.
for control of fires  and urged
that all tracks use these.
His report on public safety
and security highlighted the
closing session of the five-day
NASRC meeting which drew
delegates from most parts of the
U.S. and Canada, Puerto Rico,
Japan and Jamaica. They
touched on just about every
phase of the sport from food
served to stablehands to stimulating horses.
The ohiel topic ranged around
the question of use of a medication known as butazolldin which
was described as an anti-inflammatory compound with pain-easing qualities. On Friday, the
commissioners outl awed pre-
race use of any medication that
could affect the speed of a horse
in a race.
Tlie vote was almost unanimous and dissenters changed
their minds overnight. Tlie subject was brousht up again Saturday and New Hamushire,
Maine and Rhode Island delegates, who originally voted
against the ban, switched their
votes. Vermont, which abstained
from voting en the subject along
with Illinois and Louisiana, also
switched to a "yes" vote.
Illinois and Lousiana remained on the abstaining list.
Irving Gushlns, international
nresident of the Horsemen's
Benevolent and Protective Association, closed the convention
with   aplea to commissioners tn
withhold suspension of any trainer on a horse-stimulating or any
other charge until he was given
a hearing.
He said he was "amazed" to
hear lhat laws in some states of
the U.S. provide for immediate
suspension of any trainer whose
horse has been given drugs. He
suggested that racing commissioners should "look into this
matter and at least try to have
these unfair laws changed."
By THE  CANADIAN  PRESS
American League
Chicago
000 012 000 000 000-3 15   2
Washington
200 000 001 000 001-4 11 1
Plzzaro, Hacker (8) Staley
(1) Lown (12) Kemmerer (0-2)
(13) and Carreon; Hobaugh, Staler (6) Burnside (9), Klippstein
(U-6) Kutyna (4-1) (13) and
Green, Daley (121. HRs: Wash-
Tasby (8) Keough (2).
Los Angeles 000 206 002-10 110
Boston 000112100-  5 14 0
Moeller (2-4), Heman (6) Donahue (7) and Sadowski; Monbouquette (5-6), Wills (6) Nidi-
ols (7) Stallard (9) and Pagliaroni. HRs: LA—Wagner 2 (14)
Thomas (5) Hunt (10); Bos-
Pagliaroni (4) Jensen (5).
Cleveland 000 000 000- 0 9 0
Detroit 000 000 20X- 2 41
Bell (4-5) and Romano; Bunning (5-5); Fischer (9) and
Brown. HRs: Det—Colavito (16)
Cash (14).
Kansas City 003 000 000- 3 53
New York 020 002 Olx - 5 91
Nuxhall (4-2) Kunkel and Pig-
natano; Ford (9-2) and Howard.
HRs; KC—Nuxhall (1) Bauer
(2); NY-Mantle (17).
Minnesota 100001001- 3 5 1
Baltimore 002 200 OOx ■ 4 7 1
Pascual (4-7), Lee (7) Stobbs
(8) and Batley; Brown (6-2),
Wilhelm (8) and Triandos. HR:
Bal—Hansen (6).
National League
Milwaukee      002 140 002 - 9 15 0
Chicago 120 020 000-  512 2
Burdette, McMahon (2-0) (5)
and Torre; Hobble (4-7) Brewer
(5) Anderson (5) and Bertell.
HRs: Mil-Burdette (2) Boiling
(7) Maye (6) Matthews (15).
Pittsburgh 000 000 000- 0 5 3
San Fran. 000 201 20x - 5 71
Mizell   (4-4),  Labine  (7)   and
Oldis
alley.
Cincinnati
St. Louis
Jay    (7.
Schmidt;
McCormick    (6-8)    and
000 021010- 4 90
000 001001- 2 7 2
I), Henry (8) and
Simmons (2-5) and
Sohaffer. HR: Cin-Post (5).
Phila. 010 200 100- 4 71
Los Angeles 000101102- 5 70
Roberts, Ferrarese (7) Buz-
hardt (2-8) (9) and Dalrymple;
Podres, Farrell (6) L. Sherry
(2-2) (8) and Roseboro. HRs:
Pha—Del Greco (1), LA-Moon
2 (13) Spencer (6).
Pacific Coast League
Honolulu 11-7 Spokane 2-8
Seattle 4 San Diego 2
Vancouver 7 Tacoma 2
Salt Lake at Portland ppd.
was able to drop the young Italian during Hie, 15 rounds, although he out him around both
eyes and bloodied his nose.
Moore weighed 174V4, Rinaldi
173%.
This was not one of the better
fights by Moore, who says he is
44 although his mother claims
he is 47. Slow to get started
while he let the 20-year-old Italian show what he had, the-old
man closed strong and won going away.
Referee Ruby Goldstein, who
tried to get the fighters to step
up the pace when action sagged
in the middle rounds, scored it
11-3-1 for Moore, Judge Artie
Aidala had it 11 ■ 4 and judge
Tony CaBtellano 9-5-1. The Associated Press card had it 11-3-1
for Moore.
Age and the ordeal of paring
down from 201 pounds to make
the 175-pound limit appeared to
have taken some of the zip from
Archie.
But Rinaldi, who beat Moore
in a non-title bout in Rome last
Oct. 29, never was in it after the
first few rounds. He was strong
and took a good punch but was
ARCHIE MOORE
crude and missed wildly with
his looping punches.
Time after time, the wily
Moore conned Rinaldi into a
wild surge, only to run into a
short right hand by Moore that
chopped hard on the side of his
face.
Rinaldi   was   staggered   as
early as the fourth and again in
the seventh.
BEST ROUND
The 10th was Moore's biggest
round as he pegged away with
both hands, forcing Rinaldi to
back off and cover his face with
both hands. At the end of the
round, Rinaldi settled slowly on
his stool.
But the handsome young man
from Anzio kept punching away
and landed two heavy blows in
the last two round's.
This was the ninth defence for
Moore, whose reign since 1952
Is the longest of any light-heavy
champ. Archie was stripped of
his title by Uie National Boxing
Association last October, but he
still Is recognized in New York,
Russian Masters
Win Chess Tourney
ZURICH, Switzerland (API-
Russian grand masters Paul
Keres and Tigran Petrosjan finished one-two in the six-nation
chess tournament winding up
with the 11th round here Sunday
night.
William Lombardy, 24 - year-
old grand master from Boston,
and West Germany's Lothar tied
for fourth behind Yugoslavia's
Svetozar Gligoric.
Massachusetts,   California   and|
Europe.
Moore hadn't defended in al-1
most 22 months. His last pre-l
vious defence was a third-round I
knockout of Yvon Durelle, th? |
slugging fisherman from B: i
Ste. Anne, N.B., In Montrc
Aug. 12, 1959.
Rinaldi got $25,000 to Moe.
$100,000 guarantee from t
$150,000 television money r
the gate.
It was the 213th fight on r^
ord for Moore. He has won 18
lost 25 and fought six draws. Ii I
was Rinaldi's 31st bout. His record is 25-6.
ELECTRIC MOTOR
REWINDING
e Service      • Repairs
All Size Motor! and
Armatures Rewound
1        CALL   US   TODAY
i Coleman Electric
LTD.
Phone 2055 Nelson, B.C.,
Reducing Plan Under
Study By NHL Heads
By W. R. WHEATI.EY
Canadian Press Staff Writer
MONTREAL (CPi-The possibility of reducing, perhaps by
one, the maximum number of
players who can be used in a
National Hockey League game
is expected to be studied today
by the circuit's rules committee.
The question has arisen because a survey by NHL president Clarence Campbell shows
learns have been getting along
with shorthanded squads,
whether through injuries or otherwise.
There are many instances
where the full manpower available was not utilized.
Floundering Sox
Make Major Leap
AUSSIE WINS
BARCELONA (AP) - Roy
Emerson of Australia won lhe
Count of Godo tennis trophy,
beating Manuel Santana of
Spain 6-4, 6-4, 6-1 Sunday.
Ana M .ria Estalella, Spain,
defeated Carmen Hernandez of
Soain. 4-6, 6-3, 6-3 in the women's singles.
I
BALTIMORE (AP) - Tile
floundering Ohicago White Sox,
looking up at the entire American League, have made the
first major move to rectify the
situation by negotiating an eight
player swap with Kansas City.
Tlie White Sox, who straightened out their front-office alignment earlier in the day, hoped
to settle some on-the-field problems when they acquired pitchers Ray Herbert and Don Larsen, third-baseman Andy Carey
and outfielder Al Pllarcik Saturday night.
In exchange, they gave up
two members of their well-
whacked pitching corps — Bob
Shaw and Gerry Staley — plus
outfielders Wes Covington and
Stan Johnson, a young minor
leaguer with San Diego of the
Pacific Coast League.
The deal fills two pressing
needs for the last - place White
Sox. and disposes of a third
problem. Herbert gets a spot in
the Chicago starting rotation
and Carey likely will take over
third base, allowing Al Smith to
return to his normal outfield
post.
Tlie third problem is Shaw, a
sturdy right-hander with a topflight record, who fell into disfavor with White Sox brass
when he conducted a stormy
holdout siege this spring. He has
won three and lost four this
year.
Carey may alleviate the White
Sox third base problem, created
when rookie J. C. Martin failed
to grab the berth and Smith had
to come in Irom the outfield. A
sure Slovenian, Carey is batting .244 with three home runs
and 11 runs batted in.
Tlie 81-year-old Herbert blossomed into a standout last year
with the Athletics, compiling a
14-15 record and a 3.27 earned
run average fcr the last - place
club. He has been ineffective
this season.
Larsen, 31, pitched hims-lf
into the record books in' 1956
when he hurled the only perfect
game in World Scries history for
the Yankees against the then
Brooklyn Dodgers. He has gone
downhill since.
This year, lie has been used
mainly as a pinch hitter and
has a .300 batting average.
Covington, just acquired from
the Braves, had his best year in
1958 for pennant - winning Milwaukee by hitting .330 ond
smashing 24 homers while driving in 74 runs. He has been
plagued by a wobbly knee but
is hitting .288.
Staley, 40-year-old onetime relief ace for the White Sox, has
been soundly belted this season.
Pilarcik, a much-travelled outfielder, is batting ,233.
Tlie rules committee, whose
work opens the three-day annual
meeting of the NHL, cannot itself order a reduction of the roster. The club owners will have
final say since this type of rule,
unlike ordinary playing rules,
affects club costs and finances.
Only minor changes in playing rules are expected to come
up for consideration.
Clubs currently can dress 17
players,   exclusive   of   goalies,
each game. Up to Dec. 1 of each
season, they can dress 18.
SHORTAGES NORMAL
Campbell's survey shows that
in last season's 210 games, the
shorthanded average for
teams was more than one man a
game.
Presumably injuries were
largely responsible. But tlie fact
remains that teams seemed willing to play not only with
reduced rosters, but with players in uniform remaining on the
bench at the same time.
The question now has arisen
whether there is a waste of
manpower, assuming players on
NHL rosters are better than—or
equally as good as — minor
league players.
The one snag in a possible reduction of rosters to 16 is the
protected list. Each club can
nrotect 18 players in addition to
two goalies, trom the draft.
These players cannot be
loaned. Unless the protected list
were reduced, a club would be
faced with the problem of what
to do with extra men.
In addition to the roster situation, the league owners are expected to cpnsider whether
tilery should be stricter enforcement of present Ailes.
About 175 hockey men from
Canada and the United States
are expected for the three-day
meetings. Among them will be
representatives of minor pro
circuits and of the Oanadian
Amateur Hockey Association.
The NHL and Western Hockey
League relations committees
will get together in the evening
to consider mutual problems.
Also in the evening, general
managers of NHL clubs will
meet representatives of the Saskatchewan Junior League and a
delegation from the maritimes.
Some junior clubs in Saskatchewan are partly owned locally
and partly sponsored by NHL
clubs and these relationships
will be discussed.
INCO DEVELOPS WORLD MARKETS FOR NICKEL
Nuclear power builds world
markets for nickel
Nickel and nickel alloys have properties that are essential to the production of atomic power. Special alloys developed through Inco research
are used in nuclear power plants to withstand extreme pressures, corrosion and intense heat in pipe lines, pumps, condensers, heat exchangers
and fuel tanks.
In the search for new and better products containing nickel, Inco has
always played an active role... developing alloys to fulfill special requirements in industry and the home.. .finding new ways to use existing alloys.
Canada is the world's largest producer of nickel. And Inco, through
sales, research and market development operations, maintains a continuing program for the expansion of international markets for Inco nickel.
More Inco nickel than ever before will be exported to Inco's expanding world markets... helping to build trade balances, stimulate Canada's
economic growth and create more jobs for Canadians.
THE
INTERNATIONAL NICKEL
COMPANY OF CANADA, LIMITED
55 YONBE STREET, TORONTO
A.
A
NUCLEAR POWER IS ON THE WAY
Canadian scientists and engineers conducted long-term experiments with
several different types of nuclear reactors
before laying plans for Canada's first
atomic power plant now under construction at Chalk River.
IN THE UNITED STATES
O-)
NUCLEAR POWERED MERCHANT SHIP
The N. S. Savannah, world's first nuo-
lear-powered merchant ship, depends
on nickel stainless steel for corrosion
and heat resistance in its power plant—
for beauty, cleanliness and ease of
maintenance in galley, hospital, laundry
and passenger accommodations.
IN ENGLAND
WORLD'S FIRST NUCLEAR POWER STATION
The world's first large-scale nuclear
power station went into operation at
Calder Hall on the Cumberland coast,
England.in 1956.Since that time England
has built other atomic power stations.
 mm^mmmWmmmmm^^^^^^^^^^^^^mmmmWmWmmmmmWmmmWm^mmmWmm^^^^^^^^^^m^^^m^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^mm^^m7^^^
■ ■•■.:■■'  ■ ■  -
8—NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, JUNE 12, 1961
Modern Indian Learns How
To Live in Wilderness
By TOM WILLIAMS
Canadian  Press   Staff   Writer
KAWENE, Ont. (OP)—Indians
are being taught the tricks of
living in the wilderness at
woodland school near this
Northwestern Ontario community.
The project, which on the surface might seem as necessary
as teaching a fish to swim, is
regarded by some authorities
as vital both for the Indians
and for the tourist industry.
The Quetico Conference and
Training Centre, a study retreat
on tlie shore of Eva Lake 120
miles west of the Lakelhead,
held its first training course for
guides this spring.
Tlie objectives were to provide training—and thus help establish high standards for the
guiding trade—and to provide a
means of improving earning
power for some of the area's
Indian population.
Officials said the reaction of
guides and tourist business representatives who participated in
Ihe 11-day course was so favorable that it likely will become
an annual affair.
MANY LACK KNOWLEDGE
Twenty - five men, all employed in tlie outfitting or tourist guiding business and all but
two of them Indians, took part.
They received instruction in aspects of bush life ranging from
hygienic cooking to moose and
duck calling, from map reading
to tourist relations.
H. E. Thomas, representative
of die community programs
j branch of the Ontario education
department, one of 11 agencies
and organizations sponsoring
the course, said:
"Indians, through their upbringing, are generally suited to
do an excellent job of guiding.
But surprisingly, they lack
knowledge of such basic things
as ordinary camp practices,
map reading and using a compass.
"You might wonder why an
Indian who knows the woods
around his home like the back
ol his hand would have to bother
with maps and cmpasses—and
some of them asked about this.
"Tlie answer is that a good
guide should be able to take a
party anywhere — even into
country he has never seen before. The delegates all saw the
sense of this and they really
worked at learning."
CHANCE TO EARN
On the economic aspects of
Ihe  course, Mr. Thomas  said:
"It's a hard fact that no
matter how much we do to integrate the Indian into our society and to show them how to
be good citizens, it's useless un-
PE1LET FIRING
IUGER
AUTOMATIC
• NkGUiNELDK.INGCUP
• OVER IS MOVING PARIS
• rum AUloMMic
_Ut.rrrr.t_ Irrll rUc intitlrl
of   r>   Luiri.   ..til.iirr.ur
rriilol—contains   over   ...   .
LoirrU   8   coli.irlflo
less they  have  the  means   to
economic stability.
"With tile increase in travel
and tourism, there's a real opportunity for them to play an
important part in the service industry. In fact, with the proper
training, there's no reason why
they shouldn't operate their own
tourist    outfitting    businesses
Russ Larsen of Fort Frances,
an authority on Northwest Ontario tourist business and publisher of an outdoors magazine,
said the guides are an
portant factor in tourist business and good ones are hard to
find.
"An American tourist will
come back to a particular outfitter year after year because
he knows a particular guide will
take him where the fish are
likely to be biting, or where the
game is. A poor guide will have
the opposite effect, driving business away."
NEED  SET   OF   STANDARDS
He said the number of non-
Indians in the guiding trade is
steadily diminishing, offering an
excellet opportunity for Indians
to  step i.
One problem, Mr. Thomas
said, is that there is no recognized standard for guides.
"We're hoping the Ontario
government will establish a
standard for guides and have
some form of testing. And we
hope this course will help set
an example of what qualifications a guide should have."
The course involved demonstration by experts and practice
under supervision. The demonstrations had their lighter moments. During a practice session on preparing a meal on the
trail, most of the Indian guides
used prepared and packaged
biscuit mixes to make bannock,
the traditional unleavened bread
of the woods.
'nto tiro linid 1
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nr-tton Madaol htjnvy.hlah-lmpictttyrennw'tti
.m.,lr,o •tUnll.n to MM. MOST AUTHENTIC MODEL GUN WE'VE EVER SEEN.
Conic lo yon .- rUr .v.rkrn.l.irtrtr, rirsassorrr'rlr J »i',H
rrrlv
tr-l.-.l-;
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Mono.   Bank Gt.ar.nl,..   StiWito ral   «-»»
liUi!, 27c sl'ii'i'ii" i lnii"' ur order CO.P.   I >""'■
NtW YORK IMPORTS DeptBN 12E»*nsvil!W<0nt-
'500' STRATEGY—The world's
driving champion, Jack
Brabham (left) of Australia,
talks over the performance of
the Cooper Climax with the
car owner, John Cooper, of
England, at the Indianapolis
Speedway. In a practice session, Brabham did 143.7 miles
per hour in the car.
TELEVISION FOR TODAY
PACIFIC DAYLIGHT TIME
KREM-TV - Channel 2
5:30 .tin Tin Tin *
6:00 Yogi Bear Show
6:30 Newsbeat
7:00 Lock Up
7:30 Cheyenne *
8:30 Sunfside Six *
9:30 Adventures In Paradise
10:30 Peter Gunn »
11:00 Nightbeat
11:15 Movie
KXLY-TV — Channel 4
8:25 Farm Report
8:30 Ding Dong School
9:00 I Love Lucy *
9:30 Video Village *
lfl:00 Double Exposure *
10:30 Surprise Package *
11:00 Love of Life »
11:30 Search For Tomorrow
11:45 Guiding Light
12:00 Susie
12:30 As The World Turns *
1:00 Take 4
1:15 Song Shop
1:30 Houseparty *
2:00 Millionaire *
2:30 Verdict Is Yours *
3:00 Brighter Day *
3:15 Secret Storm *
3:30 Edge of Night *
4:00 Movie at 4
5:30 Abbott and Costello
6:0(1 6 O'Clock News
6:15 Doug Edwards *
6:30 Our Miss Brooks
7:00 Assignment Under water
7:30 To Tell Tlie Truth *
8:00 Pete and Gladys *
8:30 Bringing Up Buddy *
9:00 Danny Thomas *
9:30 Andy Griffith *
10:00 Hennessey *
10:30 June Allyson *
11:00 1.1 O'Clock News
11:15 Jack Paar *
KHQ-TV - Channel 6
7:00 Two Faces West
7:30 The Americans *
8:30 Talcs of Wells Fargo '
9:00 Whispering Smith *
9:30 Concentration * (C)
10:00 Barbara Stanwyck *
10:30 News and Weather
10:45 Late Movie
"Happy Land"
CBC-TV — Nelson, Channel 9; Trail, Channel 11
Jack:
"If you are having trouble financing your premiums for
insurance why don't you call ROBERTSON-HILLIARD. I
found them real helpful."
Jim.
2:00 Ohez Helene
2: IS Nursery School Time
2:30 Open House
3:00 Reflections
3:30 The Verdict Is Yours
4:15 News (Toronto)
4:30 Friendly Giant
4:45 Junior Round-Up
5:30 Quick Draw McGraw
6:00 Bazaar
7:30 Don Messer's Show
8:00 Danny Thomas Show
8:30 Music Makers
9:00 Flintstones
9:30 Festival '61
11:00 News (Toronto)
11:16 Viewpoint
SAFETY AGAINST SLEEP—Truck driver Robert Caldwell demonstrates a new electronic device (arrow) in Chicago that
automatically applies brakes if driver falls asleep at the
wheel. It's the Driv-A-Lert, made in Dayton, O., and it
squeals loudly whenever normal steering corrections are not
made. It'll be around ?75 for passenger cars, ?250 for trucks.
ON THE AIR
CKLN  PROGRAMS 1390 ON  THE  DIAL
PACIFIC DAYLIGHT TIME
MONDAY, JUNE 12,  1961
5:59-Sign On
12:15—Sports News
6:00-News
12:25—News
6:05—Farm  Fare
12:31—B.C. Farm Broadcast
6:15—Wake Up Time
12:54—News
6:30—News
1:00—John Drainie Tells a Story
6:35—Wake Up Time
1:15—Noon Markets
6:45—Chapel in tlie Sky
1:20—Music Matinee
7:00—News
2:00—News-In-A-Minute
7:05—Wake Up Time
2:01—Music Matinee
7:25—Sports News
2:30—Trans Canada Matinee
(.30—News
3:31—Songs by Eleanor Collins
7:35—Wake Up Tune
3:45—Blain and Kay
8:00—News
4:00—News
8:10—Sports News
4:05-The Pop Hour
8:15—Wake Up Time
5:00—News
8:30—Opening Markets
5:05-The Highway Patrol
8:35-Wake-Up Time
6:00—News
8:45—Tlie Archers
6:10—Sports News
9:00—News
6:15—Rawhide
9:05—Morning Devotions
6:30—Vancouver Theatre
9:15—Alan's A.M. Spot
7:00—News
9:59-D.O.O.T.S.
7:30—The Goon Show
10:00—News
8:00—Songs of My People
10:05—The Three Suns
8:30—Summer Fallow
10:15—Pacific Express
9:00—Choral Concert
10:45—Woman's World
9:30—Little Symphonies
1:00—News
10:00—News
11:05—Moments in Music
10:10—Snorts and Weather
11:1-5—Jane Gray Show
10:15—Tales of the Kootenays
11:20—Story Parade Time
10:30—Points East, Points West
Birthday Book
11:00—News
1:30—Sacred Heart Program
11:01—Ohapel in the Sky
11:45—Swift Monev Man
11:16—Sign Off
12:00—Let's Sing Along
6:00—Sharp at Six
9:00-BBC News
9:15—Morning Concert
9:59—D.O.O.T.S.
10:00—Morning Visit
10:10—For Consumers
10^15—Pacific Express
10:45—Kapitans Fortune
11:00—Stories and Rhymes
11:15—Off the Record
12:00—Trav-llin' Balladeer
12:15—Nws
12:25—Showcase
12:30—B.C. Farm Broadcast
12:55—Five To One
100—John Drainie Tells a Story
1:15—Tommy Hunter Show
1:45—Program Resume
2:00—Two O'Cloc kSpecial
CBC PROGRAMS
PACIFIC DAYLIGHT TIME
TUESDAY, JUNE 13,  1961
2:30—Trans Canada Matinee
3:31—The Common Touch
3:45—Latin Quarter
4:00—Here Come the Clowns
4:30—Tempo
6:10—Music
6:15—Rawhide
6:30—Critics At Large
7:00—News
7:30—Festival Award Choirs
8:00—Business Barometer
8:30—CBC Vancouver Chamber
Orchestra
9:30—Leicester Square
10:00—News
10:15—In Reply
10:30—Distinguished Artists
11:00—The Liveliest Art
11:57—News
DAILY   CROSSWORD
(Programs subject to change by stations without notice.)
5. Senate    -
vote
6. Minute
reproductive body
(bot.)
7. Torrid
8. Region
9. Alluvial
deposit
M. English
county
14."  Dick"
16. Stepped on
19. Pudding
starch
20. Unrolls
21. Affected
with
opium
25. Flourished
27. Noah's
son
28. Dancer
Duncan
29. Old
Faith-
ful
and
others
31. Anoint
32. Gleam
33. Passageway
36. Political
group
3-7. Not
this
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Saturday's Answer
41. Canadian
province
(abbr.)
42. Exclamation
43. Morsel
45. Yes, in
Lima
ACROSS
1. Part of
Iran
6. Nuance
11. Grinding
medium
12. Skin
openings
13. Sand dune
(G.B.)
14. Motorists'
goals
15. At home
16. Craggy
hill
17. Consumed
18. Engrossed
22. Tool
23. Tea table
24. King of
Bashan
26. Bordered
27. Twig
30. Ahead
31. Cheddar
32.Music not.
34. Indianapo__)
36. Ignited
38. Fortify
39. Dysprosium
(abbr.)
40. On land
42. Hautboy
44. Tilt
45. Bake, as
eggs
46. Hester's
nickname
47. Small
quantities
DOWN
1. Interpose
2. Corrected
3. Lair
4. Anger
DAILY CRYPTOQTJOXE — Here's how to wo.k it:
'.    .    AX YDLBAAXB
Is)   LONGFELLOW'
' One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is need
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Stogie letters, apos^
trophies, the length and formation of the words are all hints.
Each day the code letters' are different
A Cryptogram Quotation
MY  YMZ  OEM  SZ  UZQIZONV.1
IQZZ  N G V V  EYV  E(JZ  IQZZ —
E I1UOZ Q,
Saturday'B Cryptoquote: THE FASHION OF THB WORED
PASSETH AWAY—CORINTHIANS.
<Si 1851. King Features Syndicate, Inc)
1
2
3
4
5
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7
8
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12
13
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18
19
20
21
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22
23
%
24
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%
27
28
29
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30
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31
32
33
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34-
35
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37
%
38
%
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39
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4-3
44
45
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fa
17
CLAIMS WORLD RECORD
SINGAPORE (API - Cyclist
R. Mufihukumaran, 23. completed 122 hours nonstop cycling
here today and claimed a world
record. The former milk vendor
from India topped the 120 hours
set by a Swiss cyclist in Rome
10 years ago.
FAMILY  SENTENCED
BERLIN (API—A family I
three has been sentenced to a
total of 23 years imprisonment
for espionage in East Germany.
a private Western intelligence
agency reported today, Information Bureau West said tlie
Rostock district court convicted
Karl Walters, 60, his wife, Anne-
liese, '40, and Monika Aschmann
18, Mrs. Walter's daughter by a
previous marriage.
yisLodkcJioJIL
<By. cZmuul GJJi&skfi
NEWEST NOVELTY
Rickrack magic! Combine red,
green, yellow for the plumage
of these Finejfathered friends.
Newest, novelty! Bright rick -
rack makes a gay decoration for
aprons—applique and a touch o-l
embroidery. Pattern 584, transfer motifs, directions.
Send THIRTK-nVE CENTS
tn coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern to Laura
Wheeler, NDN., 60 Front St., w..
Toronto. Print plainly PATTERN
NUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS.
JUST OFF THE PRESS! Send
now for our exciting, new 1961
Needlecraft Catalog. Over 125
designs to crochet, knit, sew.
embroider, quilt, weave—.ash-
ions, home furnishings, toy gifts,
bazaar hits. Plus FREE — instructions for six smart veil
caps. Hurry. Send 25c now!
Printed Pattern
JIFFY CUT
JIFFY - CUT Bonanza-place
pattern on fabric and cut out each
entire blouse at one time! Fash-
ion's smartest tops—team them
with skirts 'n' play pants.
Printed Pattern 9261: Misses'
sizes 12, 14, 16, 18, 20. Size 16
tcp style IV. yards 35-mch; middle 1'/., lower Wi. Jiffy cut.
Send FIFTY CENTS (50c I ill
coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern. Please prim
plainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS
and STYT.E NUMBER.
Send your oraei to MARIAN
MARTIN,. NDN, 60 Front St. W„
Toronto.
100 FASHION FINDS—the best,
newest, most beautiful Printed
Patterns for Spring - Summer.
1961. See them all in our brand-
new Color Catalog. Send 35c nowl
*•'
 ^ r
«iPk '■■■■■■
HiA
SMALL INVESTMENT   -
LARGE RETURNS
That's the Want Ad Story - PHONE   1844
YOU CAN NOW PHONE YOUR CLASSIFIED  ADS IN UNTIL 5 P.M. ON SATURDAY.
PROPERTY, HOUSES,
FARMS, ETC., FOR SALE
HELP WANTED
SELL RAWLElGH
PRODUCTS
There are now a few special opportunities to sell llawleigh's famous line of necessities either full
or part time in localities where
they have been sold for nearly 50
years. For details of our plan,
write to W. T. Rawleigh Co. Ltd.,
589 Henry Ave., Dept. CC-153,
. Winnipeg, Man.	
HELP WANTED—FEMALE
HOUSEWIVES
To work from your own homes
work 3 hours a day for telephone soliciting must have a
pleasant voice and be able to
hold a good telephone conversation. Salary plus bonus. Apply
giving name, age, and telephone
number to Box 191, Daily News.
NATIONAL FINANCE ORGANI-
zation requires experienced
secretary-stenographer for Nelson office. Good shorthand abso-
ployee benefits. Salary commensurate with experience
Phone 2341 for appointment.
WANT'Eb - WOMAN TO TAKE
full charge of a motherless
home. One boy, 11 years. Write
Box 988, Rossland. JUI.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
that all persons having claims
against Margaret Evelyn Barnett, |
late of Boise, Idaho, who died |
thereat on the 16th day of December, I960, are required to file
particulars thereof with the un-|
. dersigned solicitors for the admin-1
ultely necessary. Allusual em-| jstrator on or before the 15th day
of July, 1961, after which date the
administrator will proceed to dis-
| tribute the assets of the said deceased among the persons entitled
thereto, having regard   only   to
FAIRVIEW. HERE IS AN Opportunity to buy your own home
with only $200 down and monthly payment of $125. Clean, comfortable, convenient 2 br. home.
Check further with: William
Kalyniuk Agencies, 534 Josephine Street, Phone 1777.
SITUATIONS WANTED
LEO BEVINS, CUSTOM TYP-
ing and mimeographing. Neat,
aoourata, fast service. Phone
1588-X day or night.	
SEPTIC TANK CLEANING.
Reasonable, dependable service. Phone 161-L-l.
FOR YOUR CITY HAULING
needs call 1770 Speedway Deliv-
eries for fast service.	
WINDOWS AND SlTORM WIN-
dows cleaned. Dutch Cleaning
Service. Ph. 2190.      	
FOR ALttRATtb.) DRESSES
or pants. 524 Carbonate.
BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITIES
SMALL TOWN GROCERY AND
Variety Store. Attractive modern equipment, clean stock approximately $20,000. Turnover
close to $100,000 annually. Some
payroll from large industry.
Opportunity for family operation. Rossland Realty, Rossland
the claims which shall then have
been filed as above required.
DATED   at   Nelson, B.C. this
7th day of June, 1961.
GARLAND. GANSNER
Is ARUDGE
P.O. Box 490, Nelson, B.C.
Solicitors for the Administrator.
i STORE OR OFFICE FOR RENT.
Approximately 500 sq. ft. on
Stanley near Baker St. Will
renovate to suit tenant. Vacant
soon. Apply to A.T.V. Box 236,
Daily News.
LIVESTOCK, POULTRY
AND FARM SUPPLIES
BAY MARE AND 3-WK. COLT,
2-yr.-old Gelding, black, 1-yr.-
old Pinto-filly, 2, 4-yr. old Shetland geldings. Earle Cutler,
Nelson. Phone 2325.  , fc.
2 MILKING COWS FOR SALE 'SMALL
1, 1st call, 1, 2nd calf. G. F.
FOR RENT - PRIVATE CLEAN
3 rm. lower duplex, gas range
and heater. Partly furnished.
Suitable for quiet couple. Call
515-A Hall St.
SMALL FURN. STE. ON Victoria Street. Suitable for 1 or 2
working girls. Fridge and automatic heat. Private entrance.
Ph. 51.
Markin, by Oastlegar Ferry.
WEANER PIGS FOR SALE $12.50
each. See A.
Siding.
Townsend, Park
WEANER
Newdan
6-2435.
PIGS
Farm,
FOR   SALE.
Creston,   EL
GOOD COW FOR SALE, FRESH
7  weeks  ago.  Wm.  Hoolaeff,
Pass Creek.	
FRESH   COW   FOR   SALE -
, B. Chernenkoff, Crescent Valley
BUSINESS   &   PROFESSIONAL
DIRECTORY
A handy alphabetical guide to-goods and services
■ available in Nelson.
AIR CONDITIONED
HOUSEKEEPING AND SLEEP-
ing   room,   weekly,   monthly
rates.   Dishes,  linen  supplied,
parking. Allen Hotel, 171 Baker.
BEDROOM
1 BEDROOM HOUSE,
unfurn. North Shore 2,_ miles
from bridge. Rent $40 per mo.
Phone 156 days, 575-Y eves.
3-ROOM MODERN APT'. SELF-
contained, unfurnished central.
Gas range, heat and hot water.
Adults. Ph. 2106-L.
DELUXE GROUND FLOOR
apt. 1 bedroom, outside entrance, electric range, fridge.
Phone 542-R.
OFFICES TO RENT JOHNS-
tone Block, up to 1,400 sq. ft. or
smaller to suit tenant. T. D.
Rosling and Son, Ltd. 717.
JULY 1 - SPACIOUS APT. CEN
tral, heated, electric range, 2
rms. and bath. Ph. 1351-X after
6 p.m.    	
FOR RENT-QUIET, CENTRAL,
cheerful apartment. Adults
only. Ph. 1233 or 1604-R.
TldW~
FOR SALE
 MISCELLANEOUS
NORM'S NEW SPORTS SHOP
Diver's Supplies — Aqua Lung
Air Filling Station
Weatherby and Browning Rifles
Reloading Supplies
Everything For the Sportsman
300 Baker St. - Phone 2397
SIDES CHOICE GRADE A
light beef, 45c lb, sides heavy
beef, 250 lb. average, 37c lb.;
sides pork 30c lb. Cut, wrapped,
frozen. Delivery by Nelson-
Creston Transfer. Whitiord's
Meat Plant. El 6-2556.
LEAN GRAIN FED PORK FOR
sale. Side 29s a lb. cut, wrapped
quick frozen 32s a lb. delivery
Nelson-Creston Transfer. New-
dan Farm, Creston. Phone
EL 6-2435.
PEDESTAL FAN WITH HALF-
horse power G.E. motor can be
raised from four feet to eight
feet. Suitable for store or cafe.
Good as new. $60. Box 43, Daily
News.
25 k7v\\ INTERNATIONAL-
Palrner Diesel Electric Light
Plant, used 5000 hours, complete $2500. Apply Starlight
Drive In or phone 1655-R-4.
AUTOMOTIVE,   BICYCLES
MOTORCYCLES
ATTENTION HONEYMOONERS.
Buy this one-bedroom house
now that you will love. Built on
the rear of 3 lots. 75' x 120'.
Later build yourself your dream
home on the front ahd keep the
Sresent one for revenue. Wil-
am Kalyniuk Agencies, phone
1777.	
FOR SALE: 3 BEDROOM
house, iVs lots. Good location,
Slooan, B.C. Contact S. Anderson, Golden, B.C.
FOR SALE' - LEVEL BLDG.
lets. Call at 2006 Stanley Street
after 6 p.m.
LARGE LOTS IN UPPER FAIR-
view. Lovely view, good terms.
Ph. 1272-L.
ROOM AND  BOARD
VACANCY FOR YOUNG GENT,
leman. Phone Mrs. Truscott,
1179-X.
TRAILERS
COTTONWOOD WRECKAGE
Service - Repairs done, English and Canadian used car
parts. '51 A-40, '58 Studebaker, '49 Pontiac, '55 Chev.
motor. Phone 2100, Box 382, 24
Ymir Road, Nelson.
1957 PLYMOUTH SPORTS SUB
burban station wagon, V8 automatic, power brakes, tinted
glass, windshield washers, winterized. ■ K. Vierke, Box 1100
Castlegar.
LANDROVERS, THE LOW COST,
most dependable in 4-wheel
drive. For demonstration (days
and eves.) call Balfour 668, Nelson 1030. Ask for Geoff.
'56 DODGE, AUTOMATIC PUSH-
button, 4-door, new ring, new
trans, a clean car, radio, heater, one owner. Priced to sell
quick. Phone 237 days.
RA LYN MOBILE HOME SALES.
Rollohome, Safeway, Shasta.
New and used, terms and
trades. Trail • Cranbrook • Nakusp,
NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, JUNE 12, 196.-9
N. Zealand  Fears Disaster
If Britain Joins Euratom
By J.C. GRAHAM
Canadian Press Correspondent
AUCKLAND (CP)-New Zealand faces disaster if Britain
goes into the European Commoh
Market "with no safeguard : for
Commonwealth pjroduce. ,'•    ...
\ Fearj' iBiatf.:Britaln way be ty-
(iuca}... to 'enter Jtiie Common.
IVtyrket without', .iutfieient ptV
tection for Oornirionweilth; ln>
terests ar, rising' • daily here.
Some New Zealand or'gani-a-
tlons maint-to that the country
Paris, City of Romance,
Appeals To All Types
10 BY 45 NASHUA, LIKE NEW,
furnished. Bargain price. Call
Earl 782-R-l.
1957 - 35 FT. 2 BDRM. HOUSE
trailer. Phone 5728 or Box 81,
Robson.
UTILITY TRAILER,  FACTORY
frame. Box 11, Crescent Valley.
WANTED TO RENT
WANTED TO RENT - 2 OR 3
bedroom furn. house. Phone
2336.
1955 PLYMOUTH, LOW MILE-
age. Will trade for a Vi ton
pickup. Apply Sam Podovelni-
koff, Vallican B.C.
1950 ,4-1 TON MERCURY TRUCK
United Drive
Planned by
15,000 Indians
SEE OUR SELECTION OF USED
radios, washers and refrigerators. Jeffery Radio and Appliances.
CHILDS' COT AND MATTRESS,
$5. Large adjustable baby crib,
as new, $23, Phone 1287-Y.
LAWN CHAIRS, PAINTER'S
equipment, etc. Ph. 798-L afternoons.
KNIT • KING KNITTING MA-
chine. $80 or nearest offer. Ph.
189, Salmo.
Appliances
NELSON REFRIGERATION
Commercial Refrigeration Serv.
205 High St. Phone 1917
APPLIANCES
Repaired and Serviced
B. McCUAIG Phone 695
Engineers
and Surveyors
(Continued i.
BAERG & CAMPBELL
373 Baker — Nelson — Phone 118
Box 653 - Creston — EL 6-4224
909 Baker—Cranbrook—JU 6-3622
Assayers and Mine
Representatives
a S. ELMES, ROSSLAND, B.C.
Assayer, Chemist, Min. Rep.
Automobile Dealers
BEACON MOTORS LTD.
Pontiac - Buick - Vauxhall
and GMC Trucks
701 Baker St.       Phones 578-579
BILLS' MOTOR-IN  LTD.
(Studebaker Lark)
113 Baker St. Phone 1234
CITY
Dodge
Granite Rd.
AUTO  SERVICE   LTD.
ALEX CHEVELDAVE
B.C. Land Surveyor—Phone 5342
448 Columbia Av., Castlegar, B.C.
RAY G. JOHNSON
B.C. Land Surveyor and Engineer
1015 Eighth SL   Nelson   Ph. 2309
Garages
ALLEN MOTOR SERVICE
Cor. 7th at Davies      Phone 1798
APT. WITH
fridge, electric range.
1587-R or 1912.
iath;
Phone
2-BDRM. GROUND FLOOR APT
Fridge, stove, heated. Adults
Phone 684-Y.	
H5USE
FLORSHEIM FOR MEN, $22.99
to $27.99. R. Andrew and Company, Nelson.
GARDEN TRAliTOR WITH IM-
plements, lawn mower, T.V.
set. Hank Swedberg, Beasley,
HEALTH FOOD CENTRE OPEN
day and evenings. 924 Davies.
CEMENT MIXERS FOR RENT.
Ph. 171, Shorty's Repair Shop.
in fair shape.
Store, R. R. 1,
1670-R-2.
Question Mark
Nelson. Phone
'48 MERC. GOOD CONDITION.
Bill Dyck, Notre Dame College.
WE   PAY   CASH   FOR   GOOD
used cars. McElroy Motors.
FOR   SALE   -   .i-TON   FORD
truck and '54 Hillman. Ph. 2100.
G.M.C.  »A-1
161-L-l.
TON TRUCK.  PH.
1956 DODGE  Vs TON $525.
Balfour 719.
W.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
FRIDGE,  DINETTE SET AND
table saw. Phone 2281.
FAIR-
Vacant
3   BEDROOM
view, for rent or sale.
June 16. Ph. 190-Y.
FOR RENT SINGLE' AND LIGHT
houskeeping rooms. $20-$30 per
month or weekly. Ph. 621-R.
GOOD COAL AND WOOD FUR-
nace. 125 Chatham. Ph. 1617-L.
23" T.V., ONE YEAR OLD, LIKE
new. $100. Ph. Balfour 668.
STOKER FOR SALE - PHONE
771-R.
lix
crete
KELOWNA (CP) -The North
American Indian Brotherhood,
representing more than 500
bands and 15,000 indians oast of
OliiUiwack and north of the
Yukon border, this week will
launch a united drive in an attempt to improve the lot of re.
serve indians.
Henry Castillan, Vancouver j When  the woman
By ALAN HARVEY
Canadian  Press  Staff  Writer
PARIS (OP) - There isn't,
there Isn't—repeat there simply
isn't—any place like Paris!
The broad sweep of the
Ctharnps-Elysees, pleasure boats
on the River Seine, Ihe architectural delights of the Place
des Voeges, dinner high up in
the Eiffel Tower, lights twittering at dusk in the Place de la
Concorde where Napoleon paraded his troops and Marie Antoinette went calmly to the guillotine—that's Paris for you.
The city is unique. Few fail to
feel its charms. To bid farewell
to Paris, the poet said, Is to die
a little. Novelist Nancy Mi-ford,
who lives in an elegant house on
the Rue Monsieur, 'Says her
English visitors are always in
astonishingly good humor—
they're happy just to be in
Paris.
CITY OF ROMANCE
Paris is like this:
A man and woman, complete
strangers, sit at nearby tables
in a tiny restaurant on the
Avenue Montaigne. They order
Chateaubriand steaks, one rare,
one medium. The waiter mixes
the orders and the woman,
shyly, suggests ap exchange of
plates.
The man, putting down his paper, gruffly agrees. After a moment of constraint the two exchange a few polite comments,
finishes her
regrette rien," with a gusto that
leaves you almost not regretting Edith Piaf.
PARIS IS LUCE THAT
Diners watching from an overhead balcony, getting into the
spirit of things, stop eating long
enough to join in the song. Soon
one voice detaahes itself from
the rest—a dear, high contralto
of unmistakable quality.
A spotlight traces the source
of the soaring melody, a little
old lady sitting alone at a small
table. She smiles timidly. A sentimentalist at another table
stands up and bows toward her,
convinced ehe is a star of the
past reliving old glories.
Soon the little old lady gets
up to go, dabbing at her eyes.
The sentimentalist wants to offer her 10 francs, but his wife
sharply reminds him that 10
francs equals five dozen eggs.
Paris Is like that. Or is it just
a visitor's sympathetic imagination, predisposed to find enchantment?
lawyer and long-time champion
of B. C. Indians, said here Friday the brotherhood will send
a detailed brief to all provincial members of Parliament,
all members of the legislature
and all municipal authorities.
It will be "the most comprehensive in respect to provincial
matters ever presented by an
Indian association in Canada,"
he said in an interview.
carafe of wine, the man offers
her seme from his bottle.
Conversation flourishes. On
leaving, the two exchange cards.
"Above all," says the woman,
"don't call on Thursdays, that's
my mother's night to visit."
Paris Is like this:-
The lights are dim In a big
brasserie on the Boulevard
Montmsrtre. A James Dean type
sings Edith Piaf's "No. je ne
News Briefs
GETS TOP ROLE
ROME (AP) — Seven noted
and experienced actors were
screen tested for the role of
Jesus In Italian producer Dino
de Laurentis' $10,000,000 film
Barabbas. But the part finally
went to a sound engineer working on the picture, Roy Magano
28, a brother of film star Sil-
vano Mangano, who plans the
feminine lead in the picture.
LOST HIS CAT
BEVERLY HILLS, Calif.
'API—Jose Iturbi today filed a
$40,000 damage suit against
Gregory Smith, 15, a neighbor,
for allegedly shooting the pianist's cat, his pet for nine years.
faces the gravest challenge to
its prosperity ever presented.
Suggestions are appearing in
the press that Prime Ministe.
Keith Holyoake should take a
top-level delegation to Europe to
present the New Zealand case
at first hand.
Farming organizations olaim
lhat New Zealand would suffer
even more severely than Australia or Canada if Commonwealth preferences were abandoned.
Britain is almost the only
large free market for butter and
meat, and guaranteed free access to Britain for these products is vital to New Zealand's
economy.
SAFEGUARDS NEEDED
Holyoake has said that New
Zealand does not oppose outright Britain joining the six-nation Common Maritet formed by
Germany, France, Italy and the
Benelux countries. New Zealand's attitude depends entirely
on conditions and compensatory
arrangements.
But he coftans farming
spokesmen's claims that it
would be a disaster If Britain
joined the Common Market
without safeguards for New Zealand produce.
Holyoake says representation!
are being continuously made to
Britain, insisting that New Zealand interests must be safeguarded.
C. W. Burnard, leading
spokesman for the dairy industry, warned a farmers' conference of "ominous news" of
the closer British approach to
the Common Market. New Zealand's whole fanning pattern
had been developed to suit British needs, he said, and it would
be idle to pretend that other
markets could be found.
J. D. Ormond, chairman of
the meat producers' board, has
suggested New Zealand should
seek compensation from the
United States for American
sponsoring of the Common Market. The United States, Ormond
says, has persuaded Britain to
join West Germany and France
in building a great buffer state
against communism.
The United States could easily
provide the compensatory opportunities necessary to New
Zealand.
PHONE 871
PIANO FOR SALE,
evenings.
PHONE 584
MACHINERY
3 RM. MODERN APT. CLEAN,
self-contained,   heat  and   hot
water. Apply 423 Silica.	
SMALL   MAIN   FLOOR 2 RM.
apt. furn., frldige, parking. Ph.
F^N. APT. WORKING GIRLS' ATTENTION
preferred. Reasonable.   Phone
1633-X.
3 BEDROOM UNFURNISHED
lakeside home. 3 miles Irom
bridge. Phone 773-R-3.
|4-ROOM   HOUSE   AT   WILLOW
Point. Phone 782-X-l.
Investments and
Savings
EVANS INVESTMENTS
Stocks - Bonds • Mutual Funds
SUITE   FOR
2199-L.
RENT.   PHONE
DeSoto Sales &. Service! FaTfe.ex^errtce'and Quotati
Phone 447
RENAULT SALES & SERVICE
at Frank's Auto
Phone 2195 295 Baker St.
NORTH SHORE SERVICE
(Standard Triumph I
Across Lake Phone 1841
ions
1460 Bay Ave.    364 Baker Street
Trail, B.C. Nelson, B.C.
2378 - 3104 - Phones - 2398
3 ROOM APARTMENT. UNFUR-
_ nished._Pi.one 2327.	
FOR   RENT   HOUSEKEEPING
room. Phone 892-R.
ONE  CLEAN  FURN.  3 ROOM
suite. Phone 2147-L evenings.
HTD„ 2-BDRM. APT. FRIDGE,
elec. range. Phone 938-L.
PARKVIEW MOTORS LTD.
(Rambler • Volkswagen)
»23 Nelson Ave. Phone 1454
STAR  AUTO SERVICE  LTD.
Morris, M-G Cars, Wolsely
Borgward Sales and Service
Ymri Rd. Phone 1648
Beauty Shops
THELMA'S BEAUTY SHOPPE
S77 Baker SL Phone 244
Building Supplies
BEE BUILDING SUPPLY LTD.
801 Baker St. Phone 1704
Invisible Mending
13 RM. SUITE AND BATH, FURN.
|    fridge, laundry rm. Ph. 385.
NELSON INVISIBLE MENDERS
712 Josephine St.    Phone 275-X.
FURN.   2-RM.   SUITE.   APPLY
140 Baker St. or phone 491-X.
U N F URNISHED
bdrm. apt, heat.
MODERN
Phone 2075.
Landscaping
LARRY'S BLACK LOAM
TOPSOIL - Phone 171
Painting
and Decorating
Painting and Paper Hanging
L. Wynne — 516 Houston St.
SaWs Sharperfed
BURNS I/UMBER CO. LTD.
«02 Baker St. Phone 1180
COLUMBIA TRADING CO.
Ml Front St. Phone 1511
Commercial Signs
For 3_1 your sign needs
HAMER SIGNS - Phone 1113
Engineers
and Surveyors
BOYD C. AFFLECK, MEIC
B.C. Land Surveyor, PEng (Civ.)
218 Gore St.  Nelson   Phone 1238
Scissors, pinking shears; etc
Hipperson's Hdwre.     Phone 497
Sporting Goods
Fred Whlteley's Sport Shop
488 Baker Street Phone 160
Woodworking
Contractor
F. PIRSH
Build all types custom furniture.
Remodelling and repairs.
French polish and antique repairs
Build office, store, kitchen
cabinets.
486 Rossland Ave. Ph. 302, Trail
lathi Neuia
Circulation Dept., Phone 1844
Price per single copy 7c Monday
to Friday, 10c on Saturday.
By carrier per week 35c
in advance
Subscription rates:
By Mail in Canada Outside Nelson
One month            $ 1.26
Three months      3.50'
Six months       6,
One year 12.00
By Mail to United Kingdom or
the United States:
One month        $ 1.75
Three months    5.00
Six months     9.00
One year             18.00
Where extra postage is required,
above rates plus postage.
For delivery by earner In Cranbrook, phone Mrs. Stanley
Willisson:
In Kimberley, A. W. Brown;
In Trail. Mrs. Syd Spooner;
In Rossland. Mrs Ross Saundry
SEWING   MACHINES
RENT A SINGER SEWING MA-
chine (delivered I and returned
$5.00 per month, $2.00 per week.
Singer Sewing Center, Phone 41.
LOGGERS
The New Model 172
Most Powerful
McCulloch Choin Saw
Is Now Here!
See Us for
Gas Cans — Wedges — Files
The New Automatic
Loggers' Tape
Fire Extinguishers — Hard Hats
Chains for All Makes and
Models of Chain Saws
Bars Hard Tipped and Regrooved
Made Like New
MAC'S
Welding  &  Equipment Co.
Ltd.
514 Railway St.        Phone 1402
For ALL Building Purposes
SAND and GRAVEL
TRADE SCHOOLS
Diesel
Heavy  Equipment
Trained men are needed for all
types of jobs in the Tractor and
Equipment Industry. If you ate
mechanically inclined and are not
making better than $90.00 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.
Toronto 18 Ontario
REPLY BOX 8377, THE NEWS
ALTEM SUPER BRONZE
GAS WELDING RODS
Hercules Iron, Stainless, Monel,
Magnesium, Diecast, Aluminum.
Stevenson Machinery Ltd.
Phone Nelson 97
1 COMPLETE NATIONAL SAW
Mill 16M .apacity,. less power
unit; 1 Inf. R2«0 flat deck (tag-
a-lottg); 1-1953 Dodge 3>/_-ton
flat deck; sundry logging and
sawmill supplier equip, in A-l
shape. Ph. 9-R Slooan, Tagami
Bros. Lumber Co.	
RD6 CAT WITH CABLE DOZER.
Max Zeeben, Ymir, B.C.
WANTED
MISCELLANEOUS
THE NELSON LIONS' CLUB
need items for their While
Elephant Auction Sale to be
held in the near future. For
pick-up Phone 962 - 1614,
BOATS and  ENGINES
22 FT. CABIN CRUISER, MA-
hogany finish, 110 h.p. Chrysler
motor. Stove, sleeps 3. Will take
real estate or house trailer in
trade. Apply Box 53, Nelson
Daily News.	
HEWESCRAFT ALUMINUM
Boat 10,, 12, 14, 15, 16, 18 it.
models. New and used. Test
drive at Jorgenson's Boat Rental and Marine Sales, North
Shore, Nelson.	
WILL SACRIFICE 1959 28 H.P.
Mercury outboard motor, long
shaft, run less than 20 hours.
Like new. Call 359-L after 5
p.m.	
THERMOCRAFT BOATS, HOLS-
elaw boat trailers and Mercury
outboard motors also excellent
used motors. Jeffery Radio and
Appliances Ltd., phone 1302 -
PETS, CANARIES, BEES
WANTED, ALL KINDS OF Discarded small electrical appliances. Call 1848 for pick-up.
WANTED   CLEAN   COTTON
rags. Nelson Daily/News.
VONROY PUPPIES - A BREED
to suit your need: Hunting Wei-
maraners,- Fun-loving Cocker
Spaniels and Big-as-a-rtiinute
Toy Terriers:. Reasonable prices. The only love you can buy
Vonroy Kennels, Box 246,
Creston. Phone EL 64189.
K-9   BOARDING   KENNELS
Trail-Fruitvale High. Ph. 3613.
Selling -Rentinj
Your Classified Want Ad on This Handy
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 -   ■   . .'..„■,.'■     ■   .i
TO—NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, JUNE 12,1961
MANN
D
R
U
G
S
For Snappy,
Happy Service
Maid o' North
Wins Richest
Canuck Stakes
TORONTO (OP) - Maid
o'North, owned by Frank A.
Sherman, industrialist - sportsman from Hamilton, won die
$81,900 Canadian Oaks at Woodbine Saturday. It was die -idlest prize for fillies in the history
of Canadian racing.
Maid o'Nortlh cost Mr. Sherman $25,000 as a yearling and
had won two races at Old Woodbine this season but her victory
in the Oaks was not expected by
the majority in the crowd of 18,-
000. Ridden by Cliff Potts, she
defeated Dangerous Doll by half
a length while the odds-on favorite, Victoria Regina, finished
third, slightly more than two
lengths behind the winner. Maid
o'Nortlh paid $19.30, $9.30 and
$2.70.
The time was 1:53 3-5.
20C
i ■
Seoretarjr bird—orange.     Capetown castle—green.     Knfferboom—brown-grey.   Groat Conatantla—-purple.    Pratesr—red, dark green. Maize—light green.
Baobab tree—dark bine.
HMfifnffntiifif
.   I   7
Strelltza flower—blue.
Distant Early Warning System
Operates 24 Hours Each Day
TIM MIN S, Ont. (CP)-
Perched on a hill in the bush
50 miles south of here are What
appear to be two king-sized
toadstools. They occupy 200
square yards of ground, ringed
by a fence patrolled day and
night by armed guards.
Inside the fence, men work
on instruments under strong
lights. Ringing telephones, buzz-
ig generators and clacking
noisy background.   '
This is Ramore, a DEW Distant Early Warning) line base.
NEHRU ARRIVES
MANALI, India (Reuters)-
Prime Minister Nehru arrived
here Friday for a 10-day vacation in this picturesque Himalayan village. Nehru will spend
the vacation—his first in two
years—quietly, reading and
writing.
More than 200 servicemen and
22 civilians keep the radar station operating 24 hours a day.
They work eight hours at a
stretch, spending off-duty hours
at the nearby military base or
towns "outside."
JOINT EFFORT
The Red Ensign and the Stars
and Stripes are flown side by
side at Ramore, an integrated
base manned by Canadian and
U.S. servicemen and under direct responsibility to the Ottawa sector of the North Ameri-
cancan Air Defence Cornrnan
Ramore was built at a cost of
$6,000,000 in 1953 and was
ranked operational in January,
1958.
The highly-trained personnel
work in close co-operation with
41 other bases in the Pinetree
line, one of the three major radar setups.  Fighter  pilots  are
Focus On Health
By THE  ASSOCIATED PRESS |
Topics this week: Highway stress, a possible cause
of cancer, a summertime
hazard, and advice to grandparents.
STRESS OF DRIVING
For some people there is a
definite wear and tear in driving a car at high speeds or in
city traffic.
German researchers found
that out of a group of healthy
persons, some show great
changes in blood pressure and
pulse rate after driving at 70
• to 80 miles an hour, or after
driving in traffic conditions.
In these otherwise healthy
persons, the appearance of
these changes indicates borderline disorders and may explain some faulty reactions
that sometimes result in auto
accidents, the researchers said.
CAUSE OF CANCER?
Nickel workers have a high
rate of lung cancer and the
culprit has been identified as
a toxic gas containing nickel
which has produced cancer in
experimental animals.
Now researchers have found
that the smoke from both non-
filtered and filtered cigarets
deposits nickel in the lungs.
And a person who smokes two
packs a day for a year inhales three times the amount
of nickel needed to produce
oancer in rats.
SUMMERTIME HAZARD
Some persons are sensitive
to bee and wasp stings—so
sensitive that a number of
stings may send them into
shock, may even cause death.
In some oases a person can
be immunized against the allergy to yellow jacket sting-
much as hay fever viotims
can be immunized against
ragweed pollen. Either a mixture of the whole insect or just
the venom can be used. Protection lasts only about three
months.
However, doctors warn, little <
is known about the hazard of
continued use of the treatment. It is possible in sensitive persons that even the allergy injections may bring on
shock.
ADVICE FOR GRAMPS
With summertime here and
visits to grandparents in order, a University of Michigan
psychiatrist has some advice:
Grandparents should keep
hands off in matters catling
for discipline of a grandchild.
Leave it to the parents. Grandparents are likely either too
strict and rigid, or, too overly
mellow to be able to help the
Barents, suggested Dr. Stuart
Finch.
Even a three - year - old is
capable of playing grandparent against parent to get what
he wants.
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to cover your family's transportation and other related costs. And, one of the 252 HFC offices in
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HOUSEHOLD FINANCE
W. W. Sapsforcf, Manager
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NELSON
ready to take off from NORAD
bases within minutes of an
alarm from any of these radar
sites of the detection of an unidentified aircraft.
Day and night, seven days a
week, Hie men make the Ws-
mile trip into the bush to go on
watch. But when the duty period is ended, life in die self-
contained camp provides ample
opportunity for relaxation. Ten-
pin bowling, league basketball.
and fishing are popular activities.
Natal Idngflshor—royal bins.  -Ltrfkander bnO—purple-brown.
THESE NEW STAMPS will be issued by South Africa to.
signalize its becoming the Republic of South Africa on
May 31. That's when, as the Union of South Africa, it
separates itself from the British Commonwealth.
rUtinHlifflt
Shrike—brick red.
Capetown docks—dork blue.
Pouring gold—dark bine.
News of the Day
RATES: 30o line, 40c line black face type; larger type rates
on request. Minimum two lines.
Trail Business College Open till noon every Monday.
New Term begins September 5   Mac's Flower Shop — Phone 910
Open every Monday till noon.
EBERLE'S
CITY DRUG PH. 34
Open every Mon. till noon,
Odds...
and Ends
...byM.DLR
Fulton Admits Red
Threat in Canada
Awards ceremony today at L. V.
Rogers High Sohool, 2 p.m. in
gym. Public Welcome.
AUTO GLASS
Out and polished to fit any ma.ee
or model of automobile at
ELECTROLUX SERVICE T  H   WATERS & CO. LTD.
512 Richards St.. Ph. 1108, Nelson Phone m . 101 Hall st . Nelson
Stock Market
Looks Brighter
By JOHN BELANGER
Canadian Press Staff Writer
The stock market halted in its
lour - week decline and rose
slightly during moderately light
trading, as hesitancy crept into
industrial groups.
Volume was characteristically
lower for the week, and prices
in some groups fell, despite the
general rise. In the secondary
constructions for instance, Canada Cement, Canada Dredge
and Dock and Building Products were all down fractionally,
while Royal and Nova Scotia
fell in the banks.
The industrial index was up
slightly more than two points on
the face of strength in liquors,
foods, steels and utilities. Distillers Seagrams, Walker-Good-
erham and Canadian Breweries
were ahead, while Algoma, Atlas, Dominion Bridge, Steel
Company and Dominion Foundries and Steel rose. Dominion
Foundries and Steel reached a
new high this week and was up
more than 2Vs points.
In foods, Loblaw B was the
big winner, up more than two
points, while gains went to Canada Packers B and Weston A.
Among refining oils, Canadian
Oil was up 2'/_ points in considerable trading. Consumers Gas
traded briskly on an offer of
rights at $14 on a six-for-one
deal, and made the weekly
"most active" list.
Dominion Tar traded heavily
on  the   week   and  gained   %,
along with  heading  the  active
list.
PAPERS ADVANCE
In the papers, Abitibi, Great
Lakes, St. Lawrence and Price
Brothers all advanced1 in light
trading.
In the base metals market,
most issues declined fractionally. The seniors were mixed,
as losses went to Falconbridge,
Frobisher and Sherritt Gordon,
and gains to International
Nickel, Noranda and Labrador.
Irish, Kilemhe and Lake Du-
fault slipped among the coppers, while in the Nickels, Arcadia, Nickel Mining and Smelting and Norpax were all down.
Western oil trading was generally weak and prices declined. Central Del Rio, Bailey
Selburn A, Consolidated Mic
Mac and Dome all dropped in
the seniors, and speculative issues such as Devon-Palmer and
Medallion fell.
Index changes at Toronto: Industrials up 2.08 to 579.88; golds
down .30 to 81.68; base metals
down .45 to 192.48 and western
oils down .72 to'97.31.
Index changes at Montreal:
Banks up .32 at 62.51'; utilities
up .7 at 149(2; industrials up 3.1
at 316.0; papers up 4.4 at 467.2
and golds up .53 at 78.69.
Open Every Monday Until Noon.
Ph. 962. Coventry's Flower Shop.
Time to replace your Awning
and Chair Canvas. See us.
STERLING FURNISHERS
Drive with confidence.
Phone 902. Stirling Hotel, home of
NELSON DRIVING SCHOOL
FUNERAL NOTICE
BUKOWSKI — Funeral services
for Mr. Horst Gustav Bukowski
of Salmo, will be held at the
Salmo Community Memorial
Church, Tuesday at 1 p.m. Mr.
D. Logan will officiate and interment will take place in the Salmo
Cemetery. Thompson Funeral
Service.
Wanted — Tourist bureau clerk
for July and August, evenings
5:30 to 9 p.m. Apply in writing to
Nelson Chamber of Commerce.
HAIGH TRU-ART
BEAUTY SALON
Harper Method Professional
Service exclusive with us.
ATTENTION VETERANS
Welfare Officer will be at Legion on 16 June 1961 9 a.m. to
Noon. Pension Advocate in Nelson
17 and 18 June 1961. Phone Canadian Legion for appointment.
FUNERAL NOTICE
SOLECKI — Requiem Mass for
Mr. James Solecki, son of Mr. I
and Mrs. Harry Solecki of Slooan, |
will be sung at the Siocan City,
Catholic Ohureh, Tuesday at 11]
a.m. Rev. D. Langi, C.Ss.R. will
be the celebrant and interment I
will take place in the Slooan-
Cemetery. j
111th Battery
Hews
Unit orders, part 1, by Capt.
R. E. Watts, officer commanding.
Duties, orderly officer for week
ending June 17, 2/Lt. Hamakawa;
next for duty, WO- Dungate,
Orderly NCO, Bdr. Kidd; next
for duty L/Bdr. Denholm.
Parades, Tuesday, training parade, trained soldiers only will
parade. Thursday, pay parade,
all personnel will parade.
Dress, bush uniforms, bush
caps, web belts, boots and puttees, and shirts.
FUNERAL NOTICE
PERIPELKIN - Funeral services for Mr. John G. Peripelkin
of Siocan Park, will be held from
the residence of his son, Pete
Peripelkin, at Shoreacres, Tuesday afternoon to the Shoreacres
Cemetery. Thompson Funeral
Service.
SHOOTS MAN IN SCUFFLE
CHETWYND, B.C. (CP) - An
RCMP constable accidentally shot
a man in the head early Sunday
while they grappled on the street
of this tiny community 60 miles
west of Dawson Creek.
The bullet pierced John Carter
Cockell, 40, of Williams Lake,
over the left eye and came to rest
at the base of his skull. He was
flown unconscious to hospital in
Edmonton.
Prince George RCMP said the
shooting took place shortly after
midnight while Constable Morley
Kitchen was investigating a
break-in at a hardware store.
Fiction Comes to Life in
Coast Teenager and Wolf
SIGNS NEW CONTRACTS
LONDON (Reuters) — Russia
will supply Cuba with rolled
steel, non-ferrous metals, machinery, paper, food, chemicals
and medical supplies under contracts just signed in Moscow,
the Soviet news agency Tass reported today.
VICTORIA (CP) - A 13-year-
old boy and a full-grown timber wolf have made nature fiction come true by proving that
man can create lasting friendship with an animal long considered his enemy.
The proof oame last week
whei) Lobo, the 125-pound wolf,
leaped into the arms of young
Lutz Bauersadhs as they saw
each other for the first time in
18 months. Both Lutz and his
sharp - toothed, fierce - eyed
friend had changed—tiut neither
had forgotten.
The story started more than
two years ago when Lobo and
two other wolves were taken for
training to a zoo whioh Lutz's
father operates, 12 miles north
of here.
Lutz immediately took a liking to the vicious hunter from
the woods and soon Lobo began
to trust him.
INSEPARABLE FRIENDS
"The' two were inseparable,"
,Mr. BaUersachs said Friday.
"They played together all the
time ana 1 was not alarmed because . tlje wolves were being
trained carefully and besides,
Lobo trusted the boy."
Eighteen months ago Lobo
and the two other wolves,
Prince and Somhra, were taken
south to be used in the filming
of a Walt Disney movie which
will bear Lobo's name. Everyone thought the two would forget each other while Lobo was
away.
But while the big wolf was
acting his part on location in
the redstone country of Arizona,
Lutz often thought about him.
When the huge creature returned to Ihe zoo last week with
his companions after the long
journey north, they took his
crate into a pen and the family
watched anxiously as it was
pried open.
Lobo leaped out of the box,
looked around, then bounded
straight for the delighted l«tz.
Well, I oan put my nose away
for another 10 years, since it has
been counted by the census taker, j
I asked him how things were I
going and whether people were
being co-operative. He said he
was enjoying the job because he
met so many people he knew or
who knew his family, and that he
had been well received with
people quite ready to give the information needed. "They seem
to take the view that it is something that has to be done," he
said, "which makes things easier." ]
* *  *
It has pained me to realize that
while we were trying to promote
good relations between Canada
and the United States by letting
the President plant a tree in Ottawa, he had to hurt his back.1
What I am wondering is what
size of tree they gave him to
plant, was it a full grown oak
that took a great deal of heft to
get it into place, or didn't they
have Sae hole dug and ready?
This bears looking into, for a
sore back is enough to sour the
best disposition and could send
the good neighbor policy into an
all-time low.
* •  *
It could spread by rumor
through the rabble element like
wildfire that Canada had deliberately crippled the U.S. president
and what then? Armament factories would shift into high gear,
steel stocks would go up, heavy
water would go down, Russia
would halt all space travel to sit
and rub her hands in glee, and
things would be in a sorry mess.
Next time the President comes
calling, let us use a little consider-
tion and just give him a half
grown oak to plant. After all, the
man is in his forties.
* •  *
And before we leave the subject, we should take time out to
consider how many trees we
have had our young Queen plant
with never a thought to the consequences. Why, I imagine she
averages at least two a week. It
is perhaps this steady occupation
at the task whidh makes her appear to breeze through the job
with the touoh of the expert. Perhaps we have been taking these
services for granted with not
enough thought to the physical
strain required to set a tree on
its upward journey. Next thing
you know we'll be handing visitors a watering can when they
arrive to water the trees they
have so kindly planted for us and
expect them to mulch in a bit
of fertilizer around the roots.
* *  ♦
All I oan say is the Kennedy
incident points up the need for
a Be Kind to Presidents and
Queens Week.
By JOHN E. BIRD
Canadian Press Staff Writer
OTTAWA (CP) — How many
known Communists are there in
Canada?
Justice Minister Fulton declined in the Commons Friday
Worries Over
For Fans of
Perry Mason
By BOB THOMAS
HOLLYWOOD (AP)-Fans of
the Saturday night who-did-it
wil be happy to know that all
is peace once more in the Perry
Mason family. Perry is back in
the fold.
Raymond Burr Is the living
image of Perry, of course, and
ever will be in the minds of millions of fans of the Erie Stanley
Gardner mysteries. Include me
in that group. Perry Mason is
the only TV show our family
watches on a regular basis.
For a few anxious weeks, it
looked as though Burr might
fly the coop. Now the troubles
are resolved and the resolution
bodes well for future years of
popular series.
Bunr explained: "It wasn't a
matter of my holding out for a
change of contract or a change
of venue." These legal terms
have rubbed off on him; the latter means change of a trial, for
good cause shown, from one
county to another.
The actor wasn't seeking to
change counties. As he put it:
"The issue was whether they
would change the show so I
could continue with it."
Burr's situation has been well
chronicled in this space and
elsewhere. It was that he found
himself faced with a superhuman task of delivering weekly
more dialogue than the average
leading man has in a feature
movie.
And did it tor four years with
scarcely a let-up, except tor enforced stays in the hospital.
The producers came up with
a formula to keep their Perry
before the bar.
"It is quite simple," said
Burr. "I now will work only five
days out of every six. In other
words, no matter how long the
shooting of a program will take,
I will be assured the sixth day
off. That will be enough to regain my strength, whereas
working six or seven days at 18
hours a day became virtually
impossible."
SHOW DAD
HE IS KING
OF YOUR
CASTLE
The gift that will get the
closest to Dad is something to wear—especially if it comes from here!
It's our year-round business to know what men
like—so make it your
business to shop here for
that gift for Dad. '
FATHER'S DAY
JUNE 18
Emory'S
LTD.
THE MAN'S STORE
Weekly Metals Review
NEW YORK (AP)—The U.S.
copper market was quiet last
week as all hands enjoyed a
further breathing spell.
Demand was still good, but
far more orderly than in the recent buying splurge. Sensitive
barometers such as the London
Metal Exchange price and the
cost of scrap here dipped, then
rallied in their typical up and
down fashion.
Tin again pushed into the
market spotlight. Fears of a
1961, shortage boosted; the New
York price ■ to ft.Jiii,j highest1
since the Suez crisis, ahd the
London price to $1.10, highest
since the Korean War. Lower
prices in London were a disturbing faotor, however, for lead
and zinc sellers, although prices
held firm here. .    .
The temporarily quiet copper,
market could erupt into corifu-
sion almost overnight, however,
if Kennecott Copper Corp. is un
able to come to tepms with miners and refinery workers when
contracts expire at the end of
the month.
Industry analysts look for
sharp declines in stocks of refined metal both in May and
June. The impact of considerably
lower supplies, plus a cut-off of
lead to another price spurt,
production by Kennecott, could
Major metals prices:
Copper—31 cents a .pound, delivered. Foreign 30 cents, nominal, New York.
,! Lead—11 cents a pound, Nev
York! 10.8 cents, St. Louis-
Zinc— llVs cents a pound, East
St. Louis; 12 cents, New York.
Aluminum—26 cents a pound,
unalloyed ingots, delivered.
Nickel — 74 cents a pound,
electrolytic cathodes, Port Col-
borne, Ont., U.S. duty inoluded.
Silver—91% cents an ' ounce,
New York: 79% pence,. London.
Tin — $1.12% a pound, New
York.
to report the number but said
"we do have a Communist
threat."
He was replying to Louis Joseph Pigeon (PC-JoIiette-L'As-
somption-MontoaJm) who asked
the minister to state the number of Communists in Canada
known to the ROMP. Mr. Pigeon said he had heard there
are about 7,000.
"I am not able to answer that
question, since it would involve
the kind of information which
should not come from our own
records," Mr. Pulton said. However, he noted that the Communist party itself claims to
have 3,000 card-carrying members in Oanada.
The minister stoutly defended
the RCMP's security and intelligence work after it was criticized by several MPs during
consideration of the estimates
of the justice department.
SECURITY NECESSARY
Mr. Fulton said there had
been some public criticism of
the ROMP's anti - subversive
work but added that it cannot
be avoided. It was necessary to
preserve national security and
neither the government nor the
ROMP relished the job.
Federal security agents for
years have been doing this work
"unobtrusively, efficiently end
with the least possible interference with the private lives of
Oanadian citizens," he said.
He had no aplogies to make
for recent ROM-, questioning of
students at Laval University in
Quebec City, which drew mild
criticism from both Gabriel Ro-
berge OL—Megantic) and H. W.
Herridge (CCF — Kootenay
West).
"We do have a Communist
threat in Canada," Mr. Fulton
said.
"It is an unfortunate fact that
it is a tactic of communism to
infiltrate   perfectly   respectable
organizations.
APOLOGY NOT NEEDED
Mr. Fulton said "I really do
not think that any apology is
necessary for "the fact that inquiries have been made."
Mr. Herridge took objection to
investigation of members of
ban - the - bomb movements in
Canada, stating that it was his
personal opinion that a Communist would not likely join such
a movement.
"It is completely out of place
in a democratic country that
professes great respect for the
preservation of human rights
and fundamental freedoms, and
no one is keener on the preservation of those rights than is
the prime minister," Mr. Herridge said of such questioning.
World Briefs
SCHWEITZER ILL
LIBREVILLE, Gabon Republic (AP)-Dr. Albert Schweitzer, 86, was reported ill today
at his jungle hospital outpost of
Lamibarine. The Nobel Peace
Prize winner has been forced to
remain in bed for several days.
His illness was not serious.
ARCHBISHOP DIES
REGENSBURjG, Germany
(AP) — Arctobishop Michael
Budiiberger of Regensburg, senior Roman Catholic bishop of
Germany, died early today, two
days after his 87th birthday. He
became a priest in 1900 and a
bishop in 1923.
AUTHOR DIES
MELBOURNE (AP) - Mrs.
Aeneas Gunn, 91, one of Australia's best-known authors died
Friday. She wrote the children'i
classics. Her The Little Black
Princess about nomadic aboriginals sold more than 750,000
copies.
AIRMAN PASSES
LONDON (AP)—Maj. Francis
George Maunde-Ttiompson,. 84,
oldest air pilot, has died Friday
at his eubiwban home. A veteran of the Boer War at the
turn of the oentuiry, he gained
his pilots wings in 1911 in a
Bleriot monoplane and flew hia
own plane until three years ago.
SON WAS KILLED
NEW YORK (API-Mrs. Carmen Lopez, 21, left her _even-
year-<yid son alone in a cola
laundry for a half-hour Friday
afternoon while she went for
Jose Vasquez was gone. Last
night police found his body on
the rooftop of the laundry building, stabbed seven times and
sexually assaulted.
Hove the Job Done Right!
VIC GRAVEC
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