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Hslsutt
WEATHER FORECAST
Kootenay: Cloudy. A few showers. Little change in tempera-
tore. Winds southerly 15. Low-
high at Cranbrook and Crescent
Valley 38 amd 55.
19 oerj jj- TKj  /sot. transportation, government, financial and trading centre of the Kootenay-Golumbia area
NELSON, B. C, CANADA—MONDAY MORNING, APRIL 17, 1961
Not More Than 7c Dally, Uo Saturday
No. 300
BOMB EXPERT. When a live bomb was found in the Anglican Church at Wynndel police cordoned the area off and called in a bomb expert from the Canadian
Army at Chilliwack. Here CSM R. E. Spencer holds one of the 36 sticks of dynamite that comprised the bomb he dismantled. This loaded cigar would give quite
a bang, the full quota here could have caused extensive damage in the area.
BOMB DAMAGE. A bomb planted at the United
Grain Growers elevator at Wynndel caused wreckage shown above. Damage was expected to be $2000,
depending on how badly the scales were damaged.
Other bombs also exploded in Gilpin and Castlegar
Friday. Near Castlegar two Cominco power lines were
damaged to the amount-of $750 and 30 feet of CPR
track was blown up at Gilpin. (See also story Page 2).
—H. M. Bucina Photos.
Snowstorm Hits Midwest States
CHICAGO (AP) - A snow -
storm powered by winds up to
50 miles an hour whistled into
the midwest United States from
the northern plains Sunday.
Thousands of cars were stranded as main and arterial roads became blocked by drifts ranging
up to six feet in many sections.
Fourteen deaths were attributed to the snow; two deaths
were caused by heavy rain east
of the snowfall
The snow accumulation near
Duluth, Minn., reached 18 inches
and it was still snowing Sunday
night.
Parts of Illinois wallowed in a
wet, slushy snow that measured
six inches in depth. Drifts piled
up ahead of strong winds. Six
inches of snow piled up in Chicago.
In Milwaukee and other parts
ol Wisconsin, the snowfall ranged up to 12 inches.
The snowfall covered sections
from North Dakota, South Dakota, into Iowa, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Illinois, Indiana, western
Ohio end western Pennsylvania
and parts of Kentucky.
LUANDA, Angola.(Reuters) -
Troops flew here from Portugal
Sunday as authorities mapped
plans for a showdown with rebels
in this West African colony.
Getting
Hearing'
'Fair
Crowds
de Gaulle Hecklers
UN Presses Belgians
Pull Out of Congo
Hammarskjold Receives Heavy
Confidence Vote on Congo Policy
By JOSEPH MacSWEEN.
Canadian Press Staff Writer
UNITED NATIONS (CP) — A new demand for withdrawal of Belgian military and political personnel from
The Congo was approved Saturday night by the United
Nations General Assembly.
However, the- assembly refused to fix a deadline
or threaten penalties.
The 99-member forum also extended to UN Secretary-General Dag Hammarskjold what amounted to an
overwhelming vote of confidence on the way he has
handled The Congo operation in the face of Communist
demands that he be fired.
The Weather
NELSON (Sunday) .... 39 48
(Saturday^  40 49
Vancouver .'. 43 54
Victoria 43 95
Spokane    36 66
Castro
Demands
Proof
Several resolutions — sometimes overlapping — came up
for voting before the assembly
which defeated a Soviet draft
urging that a 21-day deadline
be fixed for the Congolese Par-
JERUSALBM (AP) - Jacob P.
Fuchsberg, .official observer for
the American Bar Association at
the trial of Adolf Eiohmann,
Air Marshal
Blatter Dies
liament to resume its work.
Fifty - three countries, including Canada, were opposed to
the deadline, 29 supported it
and there were 17 abstentions.
HAVANA — Premier Fidel Castro challenged the United States
to present proof to the United Nations of the story that insurgents
of his air force bombed Cuban air
bases where eight persons were
killed.
Calling Saturday's attacks on
three military airfields Cuba's
Pearl Harbor, he declared President Kennedy and the U.S. government were responsible.
Castro for the first time described his revolution as socialistic, the word that Communists
customarily use to refer to their
The assembly was winding up movement,
two weeks of debate on propo- His statement brought shouts
sals aimed at setting up a j for Soviet Premier Khrushchev,
broad program for preventing i "Fidel, Khrushchev, we are
civil war and bringing rival po-, with both," the crowd chanted.
LONDON (AP) - Air Marshal
pressed the view Sunday that the | Sir Leonard Slatter, 66, the man
former Gestapo officer is "definitely" getting a fair hearing in
Jerusalem.
"So far, I would definitely say
he (Eidtanann) is getting a fair
trial," FuchSberg said. "The
court here is obviously leaning
over backward to give both sides
a great deal of leeway."
who directed Britain's air arm
in the Battle of the Atlantic,
died Friday, it was reported Sunday.
Born in Durban, South Africa,
in 1894, he came to Britain when
he was 16. He joined the fledgling
Royal Naval Air Service during
the First World War.
Sopron Students
(graduate in May
VANCOUVER
pean   university
(CP)—A Euro-
faculty closes
its doors here next monlh, wilting finis to a 150-year tradition.
The last 23 students of the
University of Sopron school of
forestry graduate at University
of British Columbia in May and
the Hungarian university faculty becomes non-existent.   -
The 23 students held their
graduation dinner and ball last
week.
Dean Kalman Roller who led
tlie move from Sopron shortly
after the Soviet armed occupation of Hungary in 1956 says:
"I believe I am not conceited
when I say that our exodus
shall be written on the pages of
history to provide example and
inspiration for future genera-
'tions.
"Canada's reception of these
refugees will everlastingly remain a bright page in her history."
The 150 - year - old institution
was noted as a training ground
for foresters. .
A plaque commemorating the
faculty's four years at the UBC
is to be unveiled by Dean Roller
and UBC President Norman
MacKenzie April 24. Dean Roller
will remain on the university
forestry faculty.
In 1956 when Soviet tanks
rolled into Hungary the students
fled to Austria.
The   Powell   River   Company
agreed to accommodate the
exiled school in an empty Powell
River construction camp.
The university—196 students
including 1_ girls, 29 professors,
21 faculty wives and 50 children
—spent the spring and summer
ot 1957 in the Powell River camp
and moved to the UBC campus
for the 1957-58 school year.
Of the original 196 students,
139 have graduated and the staff
of 29 has shrunk to four. One
hundred 'graduates are in forestry jobs, 16 are studying for
higher degrees and one has won
a graduate scholarship to Washington, another to Yale.
8 GO HOME
Some dropped out for language or financial reasons, or
because -they could not make
the grades. Either returned to
their homeland.
Some of the professors are at
UBC and other universities,
some are in forestry research
and some are mining or forestry
engineers.
Dean George S. Allen of the
University of B.C. forestry faculty says:
"The Sopron group has been
one big success,
"Close to 85 per cent have
graduated, doubling the university's output of foresters.
"They meet a real need in
B.C.
"They fit in well and their employers speak well of them."
litical factions together.
SUPPORT FOR DAG
Hammarskjdld was supported
in balloting on a 17 - country
Afro - Asian resolution which
contained a key'paragraph urging new measures by the secretary - general to keep outside
military aid from reaching rival political factions in The
Congo.
A 2il - country resolution demanding withdrawal of Belgian
military, semi • military personnel and political advisers—
as well as all foreign mercenaries; "<Si fromjThe Congo was
approved 61 to five with 33 abstentions.
Canada, supported the resolution after provisions calling for
a 21-day deadline for the withdrawal and hinting at penalties
failed to win the required two-
thirds majority.
The section regarding sane-
lions lacked only three votes of
approval. Canada voted against
the deadline and sanctions
clauses. The United States also
opposed them and abstained on
the resolution as a whole.
An hour after Castro spoke,
lone high-flying fighter plane flew
over Camp Libertad, one of the
fields bombed Saturday, and
drew strong anti-aircraft fire-
Cuban authorities later identified
the plane as one of their own.
UNITED NATIONS (CP) -
Foreign Minister Raul Roa has
charged that the dawn bombings
of Cuba Saturday were plotted-by
the United States as "prelude to
a full-scale invasion" but the U.S.
replied the attacks were carried
out by Cuban airmen rebelling
against "tyranny."
U.S. Ambassador iAdtai Stevenson, replying"to the Cuban 'foreign minister's charges at the
United Nations Saturday declared:
"This has been my first opportunity to listen to Dr. Roa
on the sins of the United States
and on the virtues of Castro's
Cuba, I must say that it is quite
an experience,"
Stevenson said it was apparent
the bombings were executed by
defectors from Castro's air force
but Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister Valerian Zorin countered
lhat this wouldn't satisfy the 99-
'member political committee.
Algerian Policy
Receives Approval
IM. Agrees
To Resolution
UNITED NATIONS (AP)-T))e ,
BORDEAUX, France (AP) — An irate crowd snuffed United states was reported agree-
out attempts  Sunday by a handful of right-wingers to' able Smi^ to a Latin American
heckle President de Gaulle with shouts of "Algerie Fran-[ resolution on its tn>u'We ""* °*s
caise!" (Algeria is French). j
The throng massed on the plaza in front of Bor-I
deaux's city hall reacted-quickly, with some violence, to
the scattered shouting from opponents of de Gaulle's Algerian policies. Some hecklers were physically attacked,
and police had to intervene
to rescue them.
While the heoklers were being
escorted away for questioning,
the throng erupted in a thunderous ovation for the president.
The incident occurred as de
Gaulle rose to make another in
the series of speeches he has
been making on his five - day
tour of southwestern France.
SAID LITTLE NEW
In this speech lie repeated
much of what he has been saying since the tour began. Many
persons had looked to his Bordeaux speech for a new pronouncement on the possibility of
Adenauer Urges
Strong U.S. Lead
UN Congo Troops
Supplies Low
LEOPOLDVILLE (A'P) - UN
troops in The Congo are running
short of food while supplies pile
up here and negotiations continue
over who has the right to handle
them.
j The blockade of UMted Nations
I supplies at the key port of Matadi
becomes daily more critical for
the entire UN military operation
in The Congo. A senior UN. official indicated Sunday a crisis
point maybe reached within three.
or four weeks.
The current food shortage follows Matadi's loss in battle to the
Congolese army. Ninety .ive per
cent of all imported UN supplies
were handled at Matadi but weeks
of negotiation with Congolese
authorities have failed to get UN
troops back to the port.
Supplies continue to arrive
there but the UN refuses to recognize the right of the Congolese to
handle them. To clear the docks,
the Congolese have sent tlie supplies 250 miles by rail to Leopoldville, Where more than 120,000
pounds of food and other goods
have piled up in warehouses and
cold storage plants.
None of these supplies so far
has been delivered to the United
Nations. Each side blames the
oilier.
peace talks  with  the  Algerian
Nationalist Rebels (FLN).
Such peace negotiations were
originally scheduled for April 7
at Evian-les-Bains, but the FLN
backed out after insisting that
France must recognize it as the
mainspring of Algerian nationalism. ,,
Waves of applause greeted de |
Gaulle as he outlined his aim !
of p%ace in Algeria and "asso- j
elation" between the future Al-
gerian state and France. In the '
French view, this would mean
economic and .cultural links be-1
tween the two countries, and cooperation in defence.
There has been no official Algerian reaction to de Gaulle's
latest plea for peace and asso-
ciation, but there have been un-
pfficials hints that the rebels
now may agree to begin negotiations later this month or
early in May.
as Bhe easiest way out of the-pre-
sent United Nations debate ;On
that subject.
The p r o s p ective resohitjqn
would have the UN 'GeneralSA--
sembly invite members of ths-Qr-
■ganization of American States.
(OAS) to lend their assistanc&to-
ward relaxation of tensions'ibe-
tween Havana and Washington
Diplomatic sources said |fne
U.S. bad been against any resolution but consented to supportj-ijtjifi .
from Latin America to heaft;pff
another planned by Guinea, Mali,
Morocco and the United Arab-Republic. , .... |
Diplomats said the U.S..dto-
liked the Afro-Asian resorutioj'be-
cause it tended to put Outa'and
the U.S. on the same foottog.'jnd
would come from lefMeaiifag
countries outside the Western
hemisphere. . J 1
JOHANNESBURG (AP)-South
Africa's largest newspaper waffled Sunday that the days of Prime
Minister Hendrik VerwoOT.
white supremacy government ate
numbered and the question facing
South Africa is "How is it going
1j be changed?"
Eichmann Expected
To Plead Not Guilty
WASHINGTON (_P) - West
German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer Sunday urged Ihe United
States to take a stronger lead in
the Atlantic alliance.
Tlie U.S. should take this lead
as Ihe strongest member of the
15-nation defence alliance, Adenauer said in a filmed television
interview.
But such leadership, the chancellor declared, does not fit in
with a tripartite directorate in
NATO — the idea of President
Charles de Gaulle of France.
Adenauer said such a directorate of the big three powers
would be impossible.
Nevertheless, he added, a
thorough study is under way to
find means for making the alliance more effective.
Adenauer was asked whether
he was "pleased or displeased"
that the German people now are
involved, while Adolf Eichmann
is tried in Israel, "on those dark
pages of history."
IT HAS TO BE
"It is not pleasant, but it has
to be . . ." the chancellor Answered quietly, and added:
"One should not deny anything, and not beautify anything ... and one should not
deny the guilt."
He said also that Eichmann Is
not a German citizen and, therefore 'his country has no obligations to him.
By GARVEN HUDGINS
JERUSALEM (AP)' - Adolf
Eichmann is expected to rise in
his glass cage and plead not
guilty today when tlie special
court returns to his trial on
charges of crimes against the
Jewish people and humanity.
Since Friday noon a panel of
three judges has deliberated on
the challenge of Eichmann's
German lawyer against its authority to try die former chief
ol the Gestapo's Jewish affairs
section.
Although no one knew what
was going on in tlie chambers
of Supreme Court Justice Moshe
Landau and the district court
presidents Benyamin H a 1 e v y
and Izhak Kaven everyone ex-
a day—at least — for presentation.
The statement, it was re-
ported,-will istawffltfc fee .stat*-
lishment of Adolf Hitler's thinj
reich, and proceed to the details
or all Hie charges against Eichmann, who is accused of chief
responsibility for the deaths of
6,000,000 Jews.
Still ahead is the testimony of
39 witnesses for the Israeli
state, many of whom met Eichmann personally during his
days of Nazi authority.
One of these, Avraham Kras-
sik, was a member of a group
ol 70 Jewish prisoners once
rounded up to obliterate es
much as possible the traces left
pects they will reject the claim. | by the Nazi murder teams.
The next step, then, would be
Eichmann's plea.
Prosecutor Gideon Hausner
will then open his case with a
statement of 40,000 to 50,000
words that is expected to take
He may describe how in 1944
lie and other Jews were forced
to open the graves of Jews
killed by firing squads and scatter the remains of their bodies
over the fields.
Russia Building Moon Ships—Qagarin
By ROBERT ELPHICK        I
MOSCOW (Reuters) - Space-'
man Yuri Gagarin says Russia
already is building moon ships
in its drive toward the planets. I
Gagarin, first man to orbit the
earth, said Saturday he liked his
first taste ol space travel and
wants to embark on inter-planetary journeys "and .do some real
flying."
And in This Corner . . .
CAMBRIDGE, England (AP) — A retired British naval officer
Saturday married the spinster sister of his two previous wives In
a wedding ceremony with an unusual number of other family ties.
Cmdr. David Wemyss, 61, whose war record earned him a
Distinguished Service Order and three Distinguished Service
Crosses, took as his bride Miss Lynette Dlgges la Touche, 57, for-
berly an officer In the women's branch of the Royal Navy. She
had been bridesmaid at the commander's first wedding.
Wemyss married Edith la Touche In 1924, and she died In
1930. Later that year he married Alice la Touche, his deceased
wife's younger sister. She died two years ago.
The Rev. Maurice Handy, a cousin of the la Touche girls, performed the ceremony Saturday In the same church where Wemyss'
first two marriages took place. Many of the guests had attended
the earlier ceremonies.
The 27 - year - old air force
major was speaking to several
hundred reporters and diplomats in his first press conference since he looped the
Globe Wednesday and landed
safely in a plowed field in Russia.
Gagarin said the space ship
which carried him on his historic trip is not suitable for a
night to the moon but added:
"Special ships are being created in the Soviet Union for that
purpose."
Gagarin was seldom at a Joss
for words as he read out written
questions and answered them in
the final stage of the two-hour
conference in the Moscow Scientists' dub.
He dodged questions aimed at
dispelling the mystery surrounding his "parachute" descent to
earth and the braking of his
rocket on re-entering earth's atmosphere.
The world's press gave the
stocky spaceman a standing
ovation when he appeared before a long, beige-covered table
in front of a white bust of Lenin.
Scores of autograph seekers
mobbed Gagarin at the end of
the conference, producing the
first sign of nervousness from
the man who conquered space
and sailed through a hero's re-
ceptipn Friday.
Gagarin waved the reporters
away, saying "no, no," and was
hustled off by Russian scientists
to a side exit.
Soviet scientist Evgeny Fyo-
dorov said only initial information on Gagarin's flight was released at the press conference.
All the data gained will be
made public after processing,
he said.
Gagarin appeared to be under
security harness during the
written-question period. He rattled off his answers, occasionally, wiping his face with a handkerchief.
Landing unclear
Gagarin sidestepped one attempt to olerify the method of
his descent Irom space. He was
asked about the technique c. his
landing after a Soviet newspaper said he floated to earth at
the end oi a huge ned-and-wfcit*
parachute.
Gagarin replied:
"Many techniques of landing
have been developed in our
country. One of them is the
parachute technique. In this
flight we employed the following
system:
"The pilot was in the cabin of
the space ship. The landing proceeded successfully and demonstrated the success evolved for
landing systems in our country."
The Soviet newspaper Koms-
molskaya Pravda says Gagarin
floated to. earth, by parachute
lustily singing patriotic Russian
songs.
He was quoted as saying when
his parachute opened: "I felt its
strong cord and burst into song.
I gave it everything I had."
CRUMPLED DAYLINER. When a CPR Dayliner met a freight train hedd on near
Galloway Friday the result was this twisted metal lace of the Dayliner and it.
juries to two Nelson passengers and shock and bruises for eleven other of the 23
aboard. Miss Lois Lang and Mrs. Harold Emery, formerly of Nelson and novAa
resident of Vancouver are both reported in good condition. (Please see story
Page 2). < —Photo courtesy Larry Belzac.
 ■      ■     . • ..--..-  ,..- ..; .        '     ;   .-.     ; ':.;   ■   ~ .   ...      T>    .    ■ •     ■    , ,- .
■
A    ■   ■    .    ■ . ■■:   ■ ^::vr.;v_^   •■
2—NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, APRIL 17, 1961
Brendan Behan's play Richard's' Cork . Leg—a corned, set
in a-"Dublin graveyard — opens
at London's Theatre Royal in
March.
FILM
PROCESSING
Black and White
"6 Hour Service"
MUNSHAW
■I     Speedy, Quality
Color Service
SAMPLE'S (
Nelson Pharmoey Ltd.
"Your Fortress of Health"
639 Baker St. Phone 1203
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1 .-Wl!
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__H
JIM VIPOND says!
There is still time for you to
make arrangements to go to !
Europe this summer. While
ships and planes are already
heavily booked eastbound
around July 1st and westbound
in the vicinity of Sept. 1st, there
is still space available for you
to make that trip this summer.
Of course, you must have a
passport and we will assist you
with that formality and you
have to have a vaccination certificate. Why not call in to our
office, write, or phone for details on how you can make that
dip this summer. Don't put it
off — next year may be too late.
VIPOND
For.Travel
1560 Bay At..    Ph. 2345
Trail
Hume Hotel Nc!rcn, B. C.
Phone 2424
No Booking Fen at Our Agency |
Where EXPERIENCE Counts,
Vehicles Valued at $10,000
Destroyed Outside Krestova
FIRE, BOMB SCENES —
(Top), standing beside the still
smouldering wrecks of cars destroyed ln a fire al Krestova,
Sunday, a woman is given a
helping hand by an RCMP constable rolling up a banner proclaiming, "Christ has come ...
down with seduction, luxury and
war." Eleven vehicles were reduced to hulks of hot, twisted
metal before a crowd estimated
at close to 100 persons.
(Right), Mike Buckna's photo
shows where a bomb ripped out
the front of a 'United Grain
Growers elevator at Wynndel,
Friday, sending debris flying
and shattering windows within
a 300-yard radius. Damage is
estimated in excess of $2,000.
Violence continued to flare In
the West Kootenay Sunday
afternoon after a 48-hour lull In
the bomb threats and bombing
which occurred In the area Friday.
AU estimated $10,000 damage
was done to eleven vehicles
that burst into flames a quarter
of a mile outside Krestova about
3 n.m, The five cars, five pickup trucks and one English
model station wa_on, newest believed to be two or three years
old, all belonged to the Sons of
Freedom.
A reliable source reported that
about two dozen women stripped
and chanted foymns around the
metal pyre but everyone was
clothed when the RCMP arrived
on the scene later.
meeting is not known, but it Is be-, der the ohuroh to a burlap sack
lieved that the janmniing of the! and called police,
vehicles together for the fire foi
BOMB TICKING
. Tlie demolition expert from
Chilliwack arrived Saturday morning to dismantle the bomb. It
was removed by tieing a string
around it and pulling it out. All
persons in the area were evacuated and traffic was diverted.,
Police believe the time median-
amount of damage to the elevator
\ The burnings followed closely scales. About 11 families includ-
lowed the meeting
GASOLINE SUSPECTED
It is -suspected that gasoline was
tossed in and on the vehicles as
it was noticed by the RCMP that
broken bottles and cans were lying inside the ruined vehicles.
An intensive investigation is be-,
ing undertaken bv the RCMP and I ism had stopped but it was ticking
as yet there have been no charges j when they pulled it out. It was set
laid to go off at three o'clock, whether
In Wynndel a bomb, believed in the morning or afternoon they
planted under the scales of the didn't know. The cap was drawn
UGG elevator, tore out the front! out ot Ule bMr* wnian was tnen
of the building, scattered debris j rendered harmless,
over a wide area, knocked out1 Road blocks were maintanied
windows over • a radius of 300 throughout the area until Hie
yards   and  did   an  undisclosed bomb had been dismantled
contact Stefan Sorokin, Freedom-1 couver, for any comment on the
ites spiritual leader, now in Van- situation.
Railway Accident's
Injured Improving
TREE  SUPPLY
Since 1301 about 282.000.000
deciduous trees have been distributed for planting in Canada's prairie provinces by the
federal department of agriculture.
_ Hear. . .
i DR. J. G. M. i
I McMURCHY
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Salvation Army "Blitz7
Requites More Canvassers
Salvation Army Nelson Corps all in one night." A major change
need vohinL.r canvassers for the .n lhe campaign organization in
annual drive for funds. I'.elson and district Ihis year is
An objective of $5000 has been the effort to collect all the money
set for this year's Salvation Ann;' needed in one night,
drive   for   funds.   A   one-night!    The   Salvation   Army   Nelson
"blnz" night is sche'iu'ed to be'Corps needs canvassers to reach
held Tuesday, May 2 in Nelson ils objective. Only 32 canvassers
on the heels of bombings in two
other Kootenay centres on Friday.
At Wynndel, damage now estimated to be above the first estimate of $2,000, was caused at the
United Grain Growers' Elevator
by a bomb.
Another bomb in the same village, consisting of 36 sticks of
dynamite under St. Patrick's Anglican Ohuroh was dismantled
Saturday by Warrant Officer R.
C. Spenser of tlie Chilliwack Army
Engineers.
Two Consolidated Mining and
Smelting Company power poles
were blown up a quarter mile
south of Castlegar. Damage is
estimated at $750.
CHRIST HAS COME
In Krestova Sunday Freedomites carried placards in English
and Russian, proclaiming, "Olirist
has come . . . down with seduction, luxury and war."
The firing of the cars is believed
to be in protest of the luxuries of
western life and called for a return to the ways of the Freedomite religion.
On the arrival of a large force
of eight - ten members of the
RCMP a crowd of about 100 persons returned to the scene of
smoldering ruins. Everyone was
clothed.
Also brought back were the placards displayed previously, two in
Russian and one in English which
read: "Brothers and sisters of all
nations. We are proclaiming that
Christ has come on earth. Field
is ripening. Reaping time has
come. Down with seduction, luxury and wars. Accept peace, love
2nd unite with Christ."
The incident is believed to have
occurred following a meeting in
lhe hall at Krestova. What the
purpose and what was said at the
ing over 20 children live within
the 300 yard radius.
A second bomb was discovered
late Friday morning under the
Anglican Churoh at Wynndel by
Otto Simons, a highway worker.
He noticed two wires leading un-
Police officials are unable to
give any reason for the outbreaks.
Slipendiary Magistrate William
Evans of Nelson, who has worked
closely with the Freedomites for
the past several years, also was
unable to suggest any reason for
Hie recent outbreak.
The Daily News was unable to
Divers Find Train
Wreck; No Engine
and dislrict.
Salvation Army Nelson Corps
are respons.ble for Ihe lunds
collected at Nakusp, Kaslo, Salmo and Robson and surrounding
districts. Collection at these
points will be carried out by the
Ladies' Auxiliary to the Canadian Legion and the Womens'
Institutes.
Last year the Salvation Army
Nelson Corps collected $4800 of
the $5100 objective. The money
is sent to the National Campaign
office in Toronto. From here the
money is allotted' to the nation's
Salvation Army corps of which
Nelson is one.
Receipts will be given to enable donators to deduct the gift
from their personal income tax.
Lieut. P. Roed, of Nelson, said:
"We hope to realize our objective
CASTLE  Theatre
CASTLEGAR, B.C.
Tonight, Tuesday and Wednesday
Times. 6:45 and 9:00 p.m.
"FIVE BRANDED WOMEN"
Van Heflin, Barbara Bel Geddes
(Adult Entertainment)
NEWS and CARTOON
have volunteered so far and about
115 are needed.
Persons willing to canvas for
1 _ hours on May 2 are asked
to contact Lieut. P. Roed at tlie
Nelson Salvation Army headquarters.
In British Columbia last year
the Salvation Army supplied a
total of 92,328 beds for one night
to homeless indigent persons. A
total of 47,526 meals were supplied.
Salvation Army assisted the
needy by giving out 10,888 articles
of clothing during 1960 in this
province.
Value of relief distributed
through men's hostels totalled
$28,494 last year.
In British Columbia in 1960
the total value of relief distrib
uted by the Salvation Army in
villages, towns and cities amounted to $113,935.
Auto Vue Drive-In
TRAIL, B. C.
Tonight, Tuesday
"ICE PALACE"
Richard Burton, Robt. Ryan,
Carolyn Jones
Shows at 7:00 and 9:20 p.m.
No Admittance to
persona under IS.
Blewett Resident
Dies, Age 73
DQIRQN SERVICE
HELD  SATURDAY
A large gathering observed the
Mineral services Saturday for
Mrs. Gertrude Doiron. a native oi
Uosthern, Sask.. and a well-
known resident here, who died
Thursday, age 60 years.
Hymns. "Rock of Ages" and
"Abide With Me," were heard
during services conducted at the
Thompson Funeral Home.'
Rev. Carl Hennig, pastor of
St. John's Lutheran Ohurch, was
Ihe officiating clergyman. Interment will take place in Vancouver. '
BARRACLOUGH
LAST RITES HELD
' Funeral services were conducted Saturday at the St. Michael
and All Angels Church at Balfour
for Darlene Beatrice Barraclough,
20, and Cindy Louise Barraclough,
2, both who died in Edmonton on
April 10.
Rev. W. Edington, vicar of Ko-
Mike   Wasilenkoff   of   Blewett kanee parish, was the officiating
died in Nelson Saturday morning, cierg,yman.
age 73 years.
Born in Russia, he came to
Canada with his parents in 1898
and farmed near Saskatoon. Married in Saskatchewan in 1907, he
and his bride farmed at Verigin
Hymns included "What a
Friend We Have in Jesus," and
"Unto the Hills Around."
Pallbearers were Cliff Oakley.
Charles   Noakes,   George   Bing,
Sask.   until  1910  then  came  to1 Stan Martin. Onarles McKay, and
Glade. In 1929 he moved to South Barrie Hoskins.
Slocan   and   in   1930   he   began!    Interment was in the Balfour
working for the CPR and moved Cemetery.
to Blewett where he has  lived
since.
He is survived by his wife, two
sons, Sam and Mike of Blewett
and one daughter, Nellie of Blewett; one brother Nick of Glade:
one sister, Mrs. Fanny Bloodoff
and four grandchildren.
LAST RITES HELD
FOR C. H. ROSS
Funeral services were held Friday for Charles Herbert Ross, 82,
who died Wednesday in Nelson.
The services at the Thompson
Funeral Home were conducted by
Frank Stelfox.
Hymns sung were "Called
Home To Rest" and "Your Father Knoweth".
Interment will be at the Chapel Lawn Memorial Gardens,
Winnipeg, Manitoba.
Procter Group to
Perform Here
Procter tliesplans will be showing their stuff at the Capitol in
Nelson on April 24.
The Procter Flashlight Club
will present, "Maid to Order," a
3-act farce, with proceeds going to improving tlie stage at the
Procter Community HaU. The
club, under direction of Mrs. C.
F. Fitchett is sponsored by the
Order of the Royal Purple.
The group is entirely non-profit and, said Mrs. Fitchett, "do-
in"' it just because we like to
act."
The play has already been
staged and well received in Riondel and Procter.
Professional skin-divers Robert
Harvey, 25, and Donald Lovo, 30,
':>olh of Calgary, and six other
members of the Mako Sharks
Diving Club, explored three submerged railway boxcars Saturday
at depths of up to 120 feet in the
waters of Kootenay Lake.'
Skin-divers found two smashed
and open freight cars, and a
third sealed car, near the British Columbia Telephone Company cable crossing, about two
miles east of Balfour.
It is believed the engine is below the 120-foot level but divers
did not locate it Saturday.
Little is known about the submerged train. It is believed to
have dropped into the shoreline
waters from a barge at the turn
of the century. Legend has it tlie
barge struck rocks near tlie
shore, capsized and dumped the
cars and engine into the lake.
"We feel there is still a possibility the engine might be at a
greater depth. With limited visibility at the 120-foot depth and a
limited air supply, further investigation was impossible Saturday." Lovo said.
Tlie Calgary divers began the
search at 2 p.m. Saturday and
found the three freight train
cars within one hour. They dove
from the deck of the "Honeybee"
yacht skippered by William Taylor. Taylor ferried the divers
frcin Bailotir to a point near the
cable crossing at the south shore.
EMPTY CAR
-Harvey was able to stand on
the end of the first-box oar. It is
lodged just under the surface of
tlie lake, standing on end at a
40-degree angle. The cor was
smashed open'and almost empty
Harvey said.
Tlie second car rests on a ledge
at the 80-foot level'. Divers reported it was apparently broken
open in the fall. This car is half
tilled with coke.
At a depth of 120 feet the third
car, discovered during the expedition rests by hanging on a precipice.
FIND WIRES
"From 120 feet down the underwater bank drops off very sheer,"
Lovo said.
Ordinary two • wire wrapped
stainless steel telephone lines are
stretched from the third car.
They drop down into the dark
depths. Divers believe the wires
connect to other units in the train.
How the wires got there is not
known but one theory is they
were put in place in progress
made in an earlier salvage attempt.
The deepest car is sealed. It
was not damaged or broken open
in the drop. Divers discovered it
to be intact, right side up and
complete with wheels.
"There's several tons of steel
to be salvaged from those
wheels," Lovo said. The Sharks
intend to continue the search for
the locomotive. Eventually it is
hoped the engine may be raised
and retained as an antique of
the Victoria age.
Norm Bowcock ol Nelson wants
to see the engine raised and set
up in a city park as a tourist
attraction.
"Biggest   satisfaction   gained
from any of these things Is establishing fact from fiction,"
Harvey said, commenting on the
find.
"We were pleased to verify the
train wreck because so many
underwater stories are just
dreamed up and exaggerated out
of all proportion," Harvey said.
MORE SEARCHES
He said the divers were pleased
wilh the clearness of the water.
"Visibility was tremendous," Lovo said.
Divers hope to find other underwater evidence of legends of the
early Kootenay days. Stories of
submerged lake sternwheelers
will be investigated.
Harvey and Lovo were in Nelson to instruct a skin-diving class
held Saturday at Mr. Bowcock's
sports store. The three-hour lecture and a film titled "Blue Con-
line, t," a story of diving in the
Caribbean Sea drew an audience
of 75 persons.
Two persons injured late Friday afternoon near Galloway in
a train crash which involved a
Canadian Pacific Railway rail
diesel car and a 60-car freight,
were reported Sunday night to
oe "in good condition."
Lois Lang, 16, of Nelson, was
reported to be "much improved,
speaking, and in good condition,"
by authorities at the Fernie Memorial Hospital. She suffered
concussion, outs, a separated
shoulder and bruises in the crash.
Mrs. Harold Emery, 71, of Vancouver, a former Nelson resident,
was said to be "progressing very
well," by authorities at the St.
Eugene Hospital in Cranbrook.
Mr». Emery suffered bruises to
her right eye and a broken left
arm or wrist. She is expected to
remain  in  hospital  for several
days.
Miss Lang is the daughter of
Rev. Canon and Mrs. G. W. Lang
of Nelson. Mr. Lang left Nelson
to drive to Fernie late Friday
night and arrived there at 4:20
a.m. Saturday. Mrs. Lang spent
all day Sunday with her daughter.
"Lois was badly hurt, but we
don't know just how seriously.
We're watching and waiting," Mr.
Lang said.
Sunday,    hospital    authorities
said Miss Lgng was in good con- I
dilion and would be out of hospital soon.
Eleven other persons suffered
shock and bruises when the west
bound Dayliner met the extra
freight, but all were released after treatment.
How do I
For the Finest in
PRESCRIPTION
SERVICE
CALL 25 j
Fleury's Pharmacy
Harold Mayo (Propl
Corner Baker and Ward Sts.
Phone 25 Nelson
If there's a fool-proof way to save
I've yet to hear of it But one thing
I do know: the "Royal's" 2-Account
Plan makes saving a whole lot easier.
RENT A CAR
BY THE MONTH
PHONE
TILDEN
2039
Evenings 1931
301  Vernon St.
the CANADIAN name
IN  WORLD-WIDE CAR RENTALS
New Furnishings for the Old Bathroom
Design, color, smart Mnes . . . these are available to the
homeowner at moderate cost. With complete fixture change
or perhaps a judicious use of accessories, the bathroom can
be made like new again.
BRING YOUR REQUIREMENTS TO VS
KOOTENAY PLUMBING & HEATING
COMPANY   LTD.
351 Baker St Nelson, B.C. Phone 666
It works. Because with two separate
accounts you can curb that natural
urge to dip into your savings; you
can actually see your savings grow.
THE ROYAL BANK OF CANADA
THE BANK WITH 1.000 FRONT DOORS
Nelson Branch   R. COMMONS, Manager
CranbrooA Branch   W. R. CUNNING, Manager
Creston Branch        A. H. GREY, Manager
 •****-^^L\%%M^ka%a*^L\1mmm%m%t%%W^
■
^—^^"^^^^—-
West Kootenay Power
Revenues Climb in 1960
Net profit of $894,452, compared with $853,518 in 1959, is reported in the West Kootenay
Power and Light Company annual  report for  1960.
Operating revenue of $4,119,324
compared 'with $3,718,531 the
previous year, "reflected the
continuing load growth of the
company," the report said.
Capital expenditure was $698,-
C96, a major portion of which was
expended for extensions of service and increased sub-station
capacity.
Dividends amounting to $611,200
were  distributed  to  holders  of
common   stock   and   $35,000  to
holders ol preferred stock.
SALES INCREASE
Total sales of energy amounted to 344,628,956 kilowatt hours
as compared with 306,691,358 in
1959, an increase of 37,937,598 kilowatt hours. The total number of
customers at the end of the year
was 38,006 of whioh 23,726 were
served directly and 14,280 through
facilities owned by other distributors.
The power load continued to increase in all areas, resulting in
an overall rate growth of 12.4
per cent as compared with 9.8
per cent for the year 1959. Mine
load increased 27.4 per cent and
remainder of the load showed an
increase of 10.4 per cent. The
rate of load growth for the ten
year period, 1951 to 1960 inclusive, lias been 10.6 per cent compounded.
The increase in energy con-
sumption 'for the principal centres of distribution as compared
with the previous year was as
follows: Trail 4%; Rossland 3.2%
Castlegar and adjacent areas
20.8%; Grand Forks 8.9%; Oliver 8.2%, Osoyoos 7.3%; Kere-
meos area 8.4%; Princeton 14.1%
Penticton 10.2%; Summerland
6.7%; City of Kelowna 5.9%; Kelowna rural area 17.7%; Creston
division least side of Kootenay
Lake) 9.4%.
Substation transformer capacity was increased by a total Of
3800 kva to meet the increased
load in various area. The Col-
lowing additions were made to
the distribution system during
tlle year: 31.4 miles of distribution line; 7408 kva in distribution
transformers.
The company contributed $233,-
905 to the Pension Fund Society.
At September 30, 1960, the fiscal
year end of the Society, the fund,
which provides non-contributory
pensions to retired employees,
amounted to $2,091,543. At December 31, 1960, 38 former employees and widows of employees were receiving pensions from
the Society as compared with 33
at the end of 1959.
There were 267 employees on
the roll at the year end compared
with 277 for the previous year.
tn April, 1960, R. E. Stavert
retired as Chairman of the Board
following 13 years in that capacity. He continues as a member
of the Board of Directors. At the
Board meeting immediately following the annual general meeting of the shareholders held on
April 21, 1960, W. S. Kirkpatrick
'was elected ohairman of the
Board.
Cranbrook Chamber
Backs Extension Plan
DESK, TABLES
PURCHASED FOR
SALMO LIBRARY
SALMO — Purchase of a second hand desk and two good
tables was reported at the April
meeting of the Salmo library
Board.
This will provide more com-
rtartable reading facilities, it was
stated.
•Mrs. C. J. Gradin, librarian, reported that plans are going ahead
for this year, and as she will be
away for two months, her duties
will be taken over by Mrs. L. Taylor and Mrs.,D. A. Waterstreet.
CRANBROOK - Membership
dinner meting for April of the
Cranbrook Chamber of Commerce
endorsed Mayor R. E. Sang's
appeal for its support of the city
proposal to double its area
through a May 11 by-law plebiscite for city limits extension,
and will leave to its executive
details of its supporting program. Last October when the
by-law came up for initial vote
and was defeated the Chamber
declined to make public its
stand on this matter.
Canadian Chamber of Com'
merce Week April 16 to 22 will
be marked by a Cranbrook membership drive in the hands of
Roy Linnell, A. W. Hunter, Gordon Dezall, Arthur Godderis and
Gordon Lyons.
Roy Linnell is drawing up details for the three-day program
of the Friendship Visit by about
100 members of Lethbridge
Chamber May 8, 9 and 10. The
party will arrive in a special
railway car excursion Monday,
May 8. Overnight accommoda
tion to Wednesday morning will
be arranged here, with a dinner
in Cranbrook Monday evening
and Tuesday transportation to
Kimberley  where  the Chamber
Weekly Metals Review
NEW YORK (API-Tin prices
spurted ahead' on the non-fe.
rous metals market last week
while copper appeared to be
ready for' its, first price increase since November, 1959.
Tin's gain on the week was
four cents as the metal closed
at $1.09 a pound, up 4 cents,
after selling at a peak of
$1.09%.
Industry sources felt speculators and dealers had done much
to force the price higher, although it was admitted our-
I ailed output from The Congo
had increased European fears
of a shortage.
Continued strong demand for
copper both here and abroad
was behind industry feelings
that   the   current  price  of 29
cents a pound might be increased. Another sign was word
that custom smelters have been
selling on an average price
basis, rather than a flat 29
cents.
Major metals prices:
Copper—29 cents a pound, delivered. Foreign 28Vi cents
nominal, New York.
Lead—HI cents a pound, New
york;  10.8 cents, St. Louis.
Zinc—11_ 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 included.
Silver—91% cents an ounce,
New York; 79% pence, London.
LEGION FIRST ANNUAL
BURSARY
For Children of Veteran Members
of Nelson Branch 51,
Canadian Legion
$
300
00
FOR EDUCATIONAL
ADVANCEMENT
For Students in Grades 12 and 13
Attending
• Mt. Sentinel High School
• L. V. Rogers High School   .
• Notre Dame
Application Forms From Principals or the
Legion  Secretary  Manager
APPLICATIONS
MUST BE RETURNED TO THE
LEGION BY MAY 31, 1961
there will entertain the party at
Tuesday and a Wednesday morning farewell for Fernie are also
scheduled.
The meeting approved construction of a Chamber float for a
May -20-22 public celebration
planned here including a parade.
Gordon Lyons, Chamber delegate
to the celebration committee, reported rising enthusiasm in the
entertainment program for these
dates, V. H. Collinson, Gordon
Meyer, J. S. Johnston, A. W,
Hunter, Denis Horobin and Arthur Godderis were named the
committee to build the float
which will be so designed that it
can be stored and used as Cranbrook Chamber float in parades
of East Kootenay celebrations
through the year.
J. M. Harrison, national director of the gelogical survey of
Canada, has written the'Chamber
commendation on its efforts in
collaboration with the East Kootenay Historical Association, to
reserved, conserve and publicize
the district's unique trilobite
beds, but he suggested present
highway marker of this point Of
interest near Fort Steele junction correct age of these fossils
from ten million years to 550
million years.
Named. Cranbrook delegates
to the Southwestern British Colli m b i a Associated Chambers
spring meeting at Nakusp were
M. G. Klinkhamer, Gordon Dezall and . Wilton Reilly, with
Chamber president C. R. MacKinnon  alternate.
Kline Heads
Salmo Golfers
SALMO — The annual general
meeting of the Salmo District
Golf Club election of officers was
as follows; President, R. H.
Kline; Vice-president, 0. P. Larsen; Secretary-treasurer, W. A.
Taylor.
J. M. B. Scarborough was appointed chairman of works committee and A. J. Richardson is
match captain. It was decided to
hold a major work party Sunday,
April 23 at 10 a.m.. All golfers
are urged to attend with shovels
and rakes.
All greens need attention but
otherwise the course is in good
shape, it was reported.
A schedule of fees were set out
for the year as follows:
Men—$22, less $2 for attendance
at two work parties; women, $10:
students, $5; family,' $30. Children
16 years and under will not be allowed on the course unless accompanied by a parent.
It is proposed to hold a President-Vice-president tournament
April 30.
Plan Summer High
School at Kimberley
CRANBROOK -Kimiberley and
Cranbrook District sohool boards,
district superintendents and high
school principals have jointly approved operation of a summer
high school course at McKim High |
School. Kimberley under direction
of B. C. Wiltse of Kimberley
schools staff from July 10 to August M.
Purpose is to assist students of
Grades 9 and 10 with June failures in no more than two subjects
in preparing to write fell supplementary examinations in, these
subjects. Enrolment for the summer school is %>ntingent on' approval by the principal of the
sohool in which the pupil is a registered student.
Only school facilities are provided, and tuition change must
cover cost of the teaching service
which will  probably be  drawn
from the teachers on Kimberley
and Cranbrook sdhool staffs, to be
named by Ihe joint Kimiberley-
Cranbrook summer sohool committee.
Subjects which wiil be considered for the summer sohool are
English, matthematics, science,
social studies and French for
Grades 9 and 10 level, and minimum of ten to 12 pupils a course
will be required for its scheduling. Tentative hours of sohool are
from 9 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. daily.
The plan calls for transportation
arrangements for the Cranbrook
students enrolled, .i Consideration
for enrolment may also toe given
qualifying students from other
East Kootenay points.
Planning committee for tlie
school's operations are Kimberley
senior and junior high school principals Douglas Young and L. H.
To Start Laying
Peace Pipeline
Sometime in June
VANCOUVER (CPl - Pipe
laying will start in June on the
new crude oil pipeline that is
to bring Peace River crude to
Vancouver, Labor Minister Peterson said Friday night.
Speaking at the Canadian
Welding Society's annual welding show at Ihe B.C. Vocational
Institute, Mr. Peterson 6aid the
$35,000,000 project is expected
to give employment to about
1,000 persons and for the first
time B.C. will be able to supply
all the trained welders the job
will require.
Many of the welders to be
employed on the line would undoubtedly be institute graduates.
Garstin, and superintendent ol
schools L. A. Matheson, and Cran
brook high school principal P. B
Pullinger.
NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, APRIL 17, 1961—3
Canadian, Greek
PMs See No Need to
Strengthen NATO
OTTAWA (CP)-Prime Minis-
tens Karamanlis of Greece and
Diefenbaker of Canada hold
lhat there is an urgent need for
NATO to strengthen its defensive capacity.
A communique issused Saturday at the conclusion of Mr. Karamanlis' three-day visit here said
the prime ministers had agreed
that pending an International
disarmament agreement the
best guarantee of Western security lies in the North Atlantic alliance.
"The fullest co - operation of
the members of NATO and the
strengthening of its defence capacity are urgent requirements," the communique said,
"In this connection they maintain their previously expressed
views as to the desirability of
convening,  after  due preparation, the North Atlantic council"
at heads-of-government level,",
It also disclosed that Mr.
Karamanlis had invited the Ca.
nadian prime minister to visit
Greece, and that Mr. Diefen-
baker accepted. Timing of the-
visit will be arranged later.
Classified Ads Get Results
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Manufacturing is the leading
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Senior Citizens
Entertained
At Kimberley
KIMBERLEY - Marking their
seventh anniversary, the Kimberley branch of the Senior Citizens
Association followed its business
session with a program presented
by young people.
Members of the Marysville preschool square-dancing group were
directed by Mrs. A. Tait and Mrs.
H. Ordway, in the first public appearance of the youngsters. Mrs.
N. Dudley assisted.
G. Howis,' Kimberley Athletic
Association director, .presented a
trampoline display by pupils of
■all ages.
Comedy was added by o\own
Gordon Blaine and weight lifter
Davie Masiok.
Tlie Catholic Women's League
provided refreshments.
Trouble in Paradise
Looms Over Tahiti
By BOB THOMAS
PAPEETE, Tahiti' (AP)-In
May jet airliners will land at
this fabled island for the first
time. Tlie almost- certain result
—trouble in paradise.
The arrival of the jet age
means that Tahiti will be less | agree that Tahiti "is not ready
Others see tourism as the salvation of the islands' ailing
economy. Phosphate deposits
are being depleted, detergents
have depressed the copra market and vanilla prices are alsp
down.
But even the biggest boosters
than nine hours distant from the
U.S. west coast.
By July, seven scheduled jets
could bring 1,000 visitors a
week. Sixty liners will dock here
in 1961, compared to 35 in 1959.
Can Tahiti take the invasion?
Many here think not. They
fear the passing of this earthly
paradise that captured the
fancies of Cook, Bougainville,
Darwin, Stevenson, Gauguin,
Melville, London, Nordhoff and
Hall and the dreams of all men
who crave escape from an over-
civilized world.
for the influx and chaos may
result.
These views were gathered
from talks with many island figures, including the new governor of French Polynesia,
Aime Grimeld, a steel-eyed man
with will to match. All are concerned with the coming wave of
tourists.
Tahiti has beds for 200 visitors. By July, (lie figure will be
doubled. But there still won't be
half enough hotel rooms for the
jets' capacities. Why?
The airlines moved at a faster
speed than Tahiti could manage.
Cranbrook Jaycees
Line Up Celebration
CRANBROOK — Advertising
program through southern British
Columbia, Alberta and the three
adjacent states for Cranbrook's
May 20-22 public celebration was
main subject disoussed by the
Cranbrook Junior Chamber of
Commerce at its April meeting.
Cranbrook Teen Town began
sponsorship of this event, which
is rapidly gaining momentum toward reclaiming Cranbrook's tradition role as district host for a
large area, well established in the
days when it. was marked on May
24, Empire Day. Rick Spooner is
general chairman for arranging
the three-day program.
Major competitive event will be
the opener, May 20 when the provincial competition among district
fire department champions will
be staged on Eleventh Avenue between Rotary Park and the provincial government building. The
B.Q. Fire Marshal office has named the timers and official judges
for the event which will lead to
trophy presentation.
Competition will be preceded by
a parade of floats, vehicles and
other classifications.    Other or
ganizations participating in the
three-day program are the Pine
Ridge Roping Club with rodeo
competition and program, and the
Craiibrook Square Dancing Club.
The Oddfellows Lodge also intends to participate.
Cranbrook Jaycess Gerry Dor-
ris was recently elected new
president of the Kootenay District
of Junior Chambers at the annual
meeting at Trail. Cranbrook Jaycees plan to send a large delegation to the annual provincial Jay-
cee meeting at Penticton early in
June.
At the meeting some progress
was reported toward establishment of a public campsite and
recreation reserve area at tlie
north end of Moyie Lake. The
parks branoh of the B.C. Forest
Service had already scheduled for
1961 development of an area in
Ryan vicinity along the Moyie
River to accomodate the overflow
of camp use at Yahk, but its representative has suggested a start
this year by Cranbrook Jaycees in
providing the Moyie Lake beach
area in which it is interested with
some public sanitation facilities.
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First, you turn to the color
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arranged fai "families".  Select
your new color or one which
matches your carpet, linoleum
or furniture. Then turn to the
page indicated and you'll ftncf
this color harmonizes with others
showing through the cut-out section. Keep turning the pages for
more lovelyrfiarmonies to go with
the color of your choice.
Be sure to use Super Kem-
Tone for your walls and Kem-
Glo enamel for the woodwork.
Super Kem-Tone is guaranteed
washable and Kem-Glo looks and
washes like baked enameL
Sherwin-Williams
paints
The Best That Money Can Buy
■*___
 —^—^^—^—^^—^—^—^—^—^—^—^—^_^_—i_^_^_^__^_^_^_^_^__
^—•_—_-__^_^__-_^_________-.
Jfrlsmt Hatty Nnua
Established April 22. 1902 Nelson, B. C.
Puhlhtbed by the NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,
266 Baker Street, Nelsdn, British Columbia, mornings except
Sundays and holidays in the centre ot 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 m this
paper and also the local news published therein.
Monday, April 17, 196]
Chamber a Pillar in Community Welfare
The Canadian Chamber of Commerce movement has become such an
important part of our national life that
it is apt to be taken for granted. Like
every other movement, it needs to be
publicized if it is to be appreciated.
This week has been set aside as
"Chamber of Commerce Week," to bring
about a greater appreciation of the role
of the Chamber of Commerce movement in developing a sense of citizenship responsibility and building Canadian communities for the national good.
This is a period of change, of critical
appraisal and adjustment. In every continent and all over the world changes
are taking place which will continue to
cause repercussions which will be felt
ln Canada. Countries which were once
backward industrially have industries
of their own and no longer look to the
older Industrial countries for their products.
As a result of these changes and
developments Canada finds itself faced
with an unemployment problem of the
first magnitude and there is concern
about the rising costs of production
which are far in excess of productivity
increases,.
In the face of all these and other
problems it is imperative that there be
established a strong group of leaders
in every community. These must be men
of vision, with the ability to see, and
the willingness to do, the things which
will make the community a living part
of the necessary growth and development of our country.
The Chambers of Commerce, have
become a vital force in provincial
affairs. The combined thinking of many
hundreds of men and women interested
and concerned with problems affecting
provincial legislation are brought to the
attention of the government in the interest of all those within the province.
Through the Chamber of Commerce
movement members become aware of
the problems at the grass roots level, at
the regional level, at the provincial and
national levels. Through the Chamber
organizations, careful study is given to
these problems, legislatipn is scrutinized
and the vitality of democracy is demonstrated day by day.
The Chamber of Commerce movement stands in Canada for good citizenship, good government and good business. With these aims in view it should
receive the unstinting support of everyone.
Mundane But Mi&kty
According to a Washington, D.C,
research specialist there is a chance
that at last the common cold, perhaps
the most plebean of all ailments, can
bo eliminated. It will take time and
money, however; nine years and one
bllHon dollars.
Trade
Barriers
Poor Policy
Few of us are experts on U.S.-Canada
relations.
Still, anyone can appreciate — as
we fret over Laos and the Congo — the
need for total understanding.
Despite some Canadian objections,
an integrated defence concept is essential to survival.
And Canadians, presently voicing
their concern over the sizeable amounts
of American capital invested in Canadian industry, should remember that for
many years Canada has offered tax inducements to attract these investments.
Americans must bear in mind that
Canada represents our largest export
market. In turn, the United States is
Canada's best customer.
It is natural, as Canada's development progresses, lo see a growing and
sturdy competition between our two
countries.
Yet this must not lead to the erection of further trade barriers which in
the long run would be poor policy economically and damaginq to our mutual
relations.—Detroit Free Press.
Next to man's inability to live at
peace, real peace, what we call the
common cold is the most spectacular
example of failure in the modern marvellous world. Brilliant minds have
evolved all. kinds of technical wonders,
and medical science itself has eliminated or reduced the- incidence of much
disease.
Only the sniffles that constantly
plague the generality of all mankind
have defied the ingenuity of.scientific
research. A cold is a common thing,
bul it seems to be most uncommon in
its resistance to medical progress.
Once il was said that what this world
needed most was a good five-cent cigar;
patently what it really needs is an absence of colds. Relief is on the way,
however; if we can hang on a while
longer. And supposedly thereafter some
other common yet uncommon affliction
will take its place.
Perhaps we seek a too perfect world,
but the man who iinally banishes this
mundane little ailment will deserve a
medal — a Nobel Prize in fact.
—Victoria Colonist.
Rod Revered
Eton boys must differ sharply from
any variety of schoolboy found in Canada.
The English are sticklers for tradition, and like father, like son. But what
Canadian parent or teacher could expect to revere tradition so much that
he will risk a blistered backside for it?
Yet the Eton boys cheered almost
unanimously recently when the Etonian
grandson of Prime Minister Macmillan
addressed them in favor of continuing
the 500-year tradition whereby senior
boys are entitled to cane juniors across
the seat of their pants. In conjrast, they
heard in polite silence a yourig Etonian
who denounced the practice as "a feudal
anachronism."
Obviously the "permissive" theories
of child psychology — which spare the
rod to allow a child's personality full
bloom — have made no denl in the
classrooms or on- the playing-fields ol
Eton.—Toronto Star.
An A&e Limit
For Senators
That Conservative Association resolution lo have the government consider
an age limit for senators will send a
flutter through the dovecotes of the
Upper Chamber.
The amiable ladies and gentlemen
of the Senate love to argue that wisdom
improves with age, and that the mellow
judiciousness of Ihe years finds excellent employment' in "the chamber of
second thought."
There are senators of soaring years
who are indeed most competent debaters and legislators but there are
others who tend to lay down their burdens and relax. By recent government
edict, examined with some concern by
the Senate, Ihe retirement of more judges
al 75 was required. And if judges must
retire, why not senators? The work of
Parliament, which makes the laws, surely is as important as that of the courts
which administer and enforce the laws.
Senators, il may be taken for granted,
will hot panic. Senate reform is a favorite Canadian political theme, an old
song on the hustings, but nothing dramatic has been done to disturb the red
chamber. If they are to be retired at 75
—or 80—the senators will believe it
when a bill from the Commons appears
with that provision for their calm consideration.—Oltawa journal.
Interpreting
Tne News
Prime Minister Antonio Salazar's desparate cabinet reshui-
lle is the first clear indication
that he has more,than the Portuguese Angolan insurgents to
worry about.
The nature of the Changes
suggests that the 71-year-old
leader saw a distinct internal
threat to the power he has commanded for more than three
decades.
The evidence indicates the
threat came from tlie army
whioh inyited the former economics professor to take the
healm in 1928. It kept him there
while he applied' 19th-century
principles lo restore his country's economic health.
Those who know the Portuguese situation say that without
army support, no regime can
survive.
That rumblings of opposition
should come at this time oi
crisis is viewed as an nidication
of tlie dissatisfaction of some ot
the officers with tlie policies of
Salarzar's dictatorial regime.
Salazar's latest cabinet shuffle is said to be but the forerunner' of more changes to
come. The upshot of this week's
changes is that still more power
is concentrated in his hands.
He dismissed the ministers of
overseas provinces and defence
and ousted high-ranking officers, including the chief of staff
and the 'military governor of
Lisbon.
This gave him direct control
of armed forces both in the
West African colony of Angola
and metropolitan Portugal.
These drastic steps were taken
in the wake bf persistent rumors of army demands for
sweening changes in domestic
and foreign affairs.
Tlie new overseas minister
spok as an "atmosphere of
war" demanding sacrifices
from all. Salazar himself said
the explanation for the shuffle
is one word—"Angola."
Maximum force is to be used
to quell the butchery ard arson
in Angola. This is based on the
knowledge that without the empire thev have held for five centuries, the Portuguese wou'd be
reduced to even greater poverty
than they .now know.
But it's 'a n y b o d y's guess
whether they'll stay united behind the man who has ruTed
them with an iron hand for 30
years.
AAom Wh^'te
To Open
Mission
OSHAWA, Ont. (CPl - Mrs.
Bertha.(Mom) Whyte said Friday she will leave New York
May 8 for Nigeria, where she
hopes to open a mission to give
a home to needy -native children.
In an interview during a short
stay with friends before her de-
pature, Mts. Whyte said she
plans first to help a minister of
an inter-denominational church
in Nigeria to establish a 4,000.
acre mission on land near
Kslna.
She hopes later to branch cut
and open a mission of her own.
The controversial foster
mother and her husband Bert
provided temporary shelter for
some 1,000 children on a farm
near here before it was closed
by health authorities in 1059
after an outbreak of disease.
Mrs. Whyte has not returned
to the mission since she left for
British Columbia 17 months ago
in an unsuccessful attempt to
obtain a licence to coerate a
welfare institution there:
G.unL KqL
We drove by the place where
.lane was born and the mansion
I'd been liearin' about had shrunk
to a nice little five-room farm
house.
Highway Safety Council Finds
City Driving Safer Than Rural
y" ''l|IIIIIIIIIIIMIIII!l!t'!""MlHli|>iif<ii|i|Miiiii1i|i|i|i|i|||i	
a .
I Your Individual \
OTTAWA (CPi - City traffic
may be more frustrating than
country driving but it's safer,
the Canadian Highway Safety
Council says.
Tlie council report on 1980 traffic accidents says only 15 per
cent of the traffic fatalities occurred in cities of more than
40,000 population. There are 39
such cities and they hold 36 per
cent of the national population.
Most of (tie traffic deaths occurred on highways and rural
roads.   v <*
Among cities of more than
40,000, Sault Ste. Marie, Ont., is
rated the safest, having had its
second consecutive fatality-free
yerr in 19.0. •
Five citias had one death each
last year: Saskatoon, Verdun,
Que., Cornwall, Ont,, Moncton,
N.B., and Sydney, N.S.
The council says 3,273 persons
died in traflic accidents last
year, an increase of 42 over the
previous year. Ontario, Quebec,
and British Columbia, wilh 72
per cent of tlie nation's motor
vehicles, had 72 per cent of the
fatalities.
Five of the 39 cities listed in
the urban survey are given
special mention for showing
marked reductions in traffic
death rates over 1959 figures.
They are: Moncton, Port Arthur, Ont., Cornwall, Kingston,
Ont., and Sydney.
Moncton dropped to one death
frcm live, Port Arthur to five
from ei'rht, Cornwall to one from
four, Kingston to three from six
and Sydney to one from three.
Toronto and Montreal had the
grimmest records. Toronto reported 130 deaths compared
with 102 in 1959 and Montreal
128 against 126 the previous
year.
But the industrial city of St.
Catherines in southern Ontorio
was rated the worst at six
deaths, triple its  1959 total.
JFK  PICKS  NEGRO*
WASHINGTON (API _ President Kennedy today announced
he will appoint Cecil F. Poole,
a N?gro San Francisco lawyer,
as United States attorney for the
northern district of California.
If the Senate confirms him,
Poole will be tlie first Negro to
serve as a U.S. district attorney
in the continental United States.
Turning to the all-Canada picture, the council says the increase in traffic accidents is
being halted in most areas.
Prince Edward Island, Quebec,
Ontario, Manitoba, Saskatchewan and British Columbia reported fewer fatal accidents in
1980.
It notes, however, that multiple - death highway tragedies
are on the increase and more
injuries are occurring. The number of injured in 1980 accidents
rose to 90,152 from 84,445 in
1959, a jump of more than six
per cent.
Invisible Beam Helps
Police to Spot Crooks
By J. W. DAVIS
WASHINGTON (AP)-PeopIe
who have seerels they want to
keep from the police may be in
for new trouble.
It's becoming easier to listen
to private conversations. A curious cop now can. flash an invisible beam across a street or
field and get an earful of what's
being said there.
That's the word from Uie electronics people.
And the word from Congress
is that a strong drive is under
way to pass a law that could
give law enforcement officers
more power to make use of
overheard conversations.
The drive will run into spirited
opposition. Many persons denounce all eavesdropping —'including legal wiretapping — as
dirty business.
GETS THINGS DONE
Guiding the hearings will be
Senator Sam J. Ervin Jr., a
North Carolina Democrat with
a reputation for getting things
done.
Pitching in are three other
senators with strong views on
the matter of protecting the
public frcm criminals. They
are:
1. John L. McOlellan, Arkansas Democrat and a former
prosecuting attorney best known
as the stern chairman of the
Senate rackets committee.
2. Thomas J. Dodd, Connecticut Democrat who helped prosecute the Nazis at Nuernberg
after the Second World War.
3. Kenneth B. Keating, New
York Republican, lawyer in his
private career and one of the
most energetic men 'to sit in
Congress,
All seem determined to change
the laws to make wiretaps legal.
They seem equally determined
Income Tax Tips
By C. A. MILLER
I Written and designed for tlle
taxpayer who is not in a position to employ the services of a
professional accountant or visit
an Income Tax Office.!
Each year there are a large
number of taxpayers who are
not residing with their spouses
snd cannot determine their status
for taxation purposes.
The income _ tax department
must determine' from the information supplied on the return as
to whether tihe taxpayer is legally separated from the spouse.
In the majority of cases, the information is so meagre that the
taxpayer must he consulted before a decision can be reached.
A taxpayer is legally separated when there exists a written
separation agreement signed and
witnessed by both husband and
wife. A court order to pay so
much money periodically for Hie
support of the wife and children
is a'so recognized as a legal separation. If the taxpayer is living
apart from his wife while divorce
proceedings are pending, is'.also
classed as legal separation providing the action for divorce lias
been instituted. H divorce action
has not been star-led but only contemplated and there is no other,
court order in regard to support,
then it is not a legal separation.
The department will then treat
tlie taxpayer as only living apart
froinjhe spouse.
Living apart by mutual consent
or tlle desertion by either one
will be treated by the Income
Tax Department according to the
facts that pertain to each individual case. It you are a separated
person and wish your return to
be given prompt action by the
tax department you shouH write
all details on a separate sheet
cf paper, giving the date the separation was effected, names of
the children, who they reside with
n'ld any other pertinent information.
Question: My husband and I
have'agreed to live apart. I have
a girl, age four with me and my
husband has a boy age 10 with
him. My husband does not contribute to my support. Are we
considered to be legally separated?
Answer: No. As your living- a-
prrt is only by mutual agreement, you are not classed as legally separated.
Question: My wife deserted me
and I do not know her whereabouts. She has been gone for six
years. I support our two Children.
Am I treated as a legally separated person?
Answer: Yes. You should be
treated as legally separated for
exemption purposes.
to insist on safeguards for the
citizen's  constitutional  right  to
privacy. That is where the difficulty comes in.
NEED LITTLE  ROOM
Little space is needed for today's listening—in equipment.
Take the "spike mike." It's a
slender metal rod about a foot
long. The spike can be slipped
through a wall from the outside.
Washington police and internal revenue service agents
used one to help convict three
men, of operating a betting ring
in Washington.
What Hie officers did was perfectly all right with District
Judge Alexander Holtzoff. But
when the case readied the Supreme Court on appeal the convictions were thrown out.
The Supreme Court held that
the eavesdropping violated the
Fourth Amendment which forbids unreasonable searches and
seizures. The court said there
wes unauthorized penetration
inlo the house the men used.
In earlier cases, the court upheld roliee use of a device for
secre'ly recording conversations.
The   differnce   was   that  the
s-vke mike entered a home, the
detectaphone was placed on the
outside of a wall or door.
SEES NO DIFFERENCE
Keating told the Senate he
couldn't see the distinction.
Justice Potter Stewart who
spoke for a unanimous Supreme
Court opinion in tlie spike mike
case, said:
"This court' has never held
that a federal officer may without warrant and without consent
physically entrench into a man's
office or home, there secretly
observe or listen, and relate at
the man's subsequent trial what
was seen or heard."
The Supreme Court has held
that prosecutors may use wiretap evidence in criminal cases
in state courts. But the Federal
Communications Act still forbids wiretapping and the divul-
gence of wiretapped evidence.
The use of wiretap evidence is
forbidden in federal courts.
Dodd says there is a pressing
need for wiretapping by both
federal and state law enforcement officials in combatting serious crime.
The senators' ideas of safeguards against invasion of privacy generally boil down to
requiring a court's permission
beforehand to listen in at a
place where, officers swear,
there is reason to believe that
evidence ot. serious crime may
be obtained.
McClellan says:   -
"If it's all right to search my
home — when you believe a
crime has been done—why isn't
it all right to search my conversations?"
■ nmm "" By Frances  Drake " ' '
Look in the section in which mental   activity,   acuteness'  in
your birthday comes and  find judgement, knowing how to deal
what your Outlook is, according with people and their problems,
to the stars: You have mechanical ingemnty,
For Tuesday, April 18, 1961 show  cleverness  in  advertising
MARCH 21 to APRIL 20 (Aries) and Promoting, can handle large
— Day neither stimulating nor groups in various lines of endea-
dull or uninteresting. You can do vor- This ^^ '81 has fresh ad-
a lot with this day if you handle vantages and new vistas for your
things   adroitly,   keep  emotions 'alents  and  varied  capabilities,
sensibly under control and have Cultivate your sense of values,
faith in what you do. make   whatever   improvements
APRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus) *°u ne,ed'j3"'!""" s"Worts your-
Important,  favorable Venus  vi- ™" f^"*"**  "»"•  ^"^
brations this can-be spontaneous July and August and thJs snoul*
prove valuable for business, worlf,.
Balance of year favorable for-
completing many details, resolving problems.- Birthdate of: Many
unusually successful business personnel, artists, technicians and
scientists.
good day. God will bless earnest,
conscientious efforts with happy
results. Handle big and small affairs justly.
MAY 22 to'JUNE 21 (Gemini)
— This can be a wholesome, productive day (or your interests.
Don't flinch at tedious details,
they may be necessary to success
of whole projeot or subject. Co-
oporate where you should. .
JUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer)  °f ."^J. matches played in ">•
- Your natural versatility and Unttedj?.___"n Saturda^
British Soccer
LONDON (Reuters) - Results
keen desire for change when it is
needed are honored Uiis animated, refreshing way. You may find
new fields to conquer, new people
to meet: be your happy self.
JULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leo)-
Though day not overly generous
one some sound headway can be
made in necessary duties and
matters helpful to goy't. projects,
civic and other progressive undertakings. Listen! Heed.
AUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER 23
(Virgo) — Today similar in tendencies to Gemini's. Look around
a bit, get the lay of things, know
your schedule, what to do first,
then follow it with right things in
order of urgency.
SEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER
23 (Libra) — This should be a fine
period for you and your activities,
generally, privately. Pray for patience with the lesser but tedious
tasks. A genial attitude, faith In
the right: you can't miss.
OCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER
22 (Scorpio) — Self-restraint necessary in many ways now. It will
give you better judgement, calmer reasoning, insue a safer, more
profitable course to pursue. Gra-
ciousness always helps.
NOVEMBER 23 to DEOEM-.
21 (Sagittarius) — Friendly rays
linger since yesterday's tieneific
Jupiter aspect. Be amenable to
sound suggestions from those who
know how to advise. Conferences,
general consultations, research
favored.
DECEMBER 22 to JANUARY
20 (Capricorn) — Do not worry it
some of your efforts do not materialize quickly or return tfhe
profits you are working for. However, don't lose faith in yourself
or God's abiding help. Carry on!
JANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY
19 (Aquarius) — Day may start
slow but will pick up tempo and
benefits as it advances. Have patience, at same timet don't falter
or procrastinate. Steady attention
to task, devotion to duty will repay.
FEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20
(Pisces) — Mixed vibrations and
it will be up to you to choose how
best to manage and allocate tasks
for the bigger, better results
later. You have the talent and
know-how for true adiievement.
YOU BORN TODAY: Unusual
ENGLISH LEAGUE
First Division
Aston Villa 1 Preston 0
Blackburn 2 West Brom 1
Blackpool 2 Newcastle 1
Chelsea 3 Arsenal 1
Everton 5 Cardiff 1
Leicester 1 Fulham 2
Man United 4 Birmingham 1
West Ham 1 Man City 1
Wolverhampton 2 Burnley 1
Bolton vs Notts F evening kick-
off
Second Division
Charlton 4 Rotherham 3
Huddersfield 1 Leyton Or 0
Lincoln 1 Ipswich 4^
Luton 3 Brighton 1
Norwich 2 Liverpool 1
Plymouth 5 Bristol R 0
Portsmouth 2 Scunthorpe 3
Plymouth 5 Bristol R 0
Portsmouth _ Scunthorpe 2
Sheffield U 2 Southampton 1
Stoke 0 Leeds 0
Sunderland 1 Derby 2
Swansea 3 Middlesbrough 2
Third Division
Barnsley 3 Chesterfield 1
Bournemouth 0 Walsall 3
Bristol C 2 Tranmere 0
Colchester 2 Port Vale 0
Grimsby 4 Torquay 2
Hull City 0 Swindon 0
Newport 1 Southend 2
Notts C 2 Shrewsbury 1
Queen's P R 5 Halifax 1
Bradford C vs Bury, evening
kickoff
Fourth Division
Carlisle 2 Northampton 1
Darlington 0 Crewe Alex 1
Doncaster 3 Workington 4
Exeter   Milwall 3
Hartlepools 5 Oldham 1 ,
Peterborough 3 Accrington 0
Rochdale 2 Bradford 3
Southport 2 York City 2
Wrexham 3 Aldershot 1
SCOTTISH LEAGUE '
Division I
Hearts 0 St. Mirren 0
Division II
Cowdenbeath 0 Falkirk 3
E. Stirling 2 East Fife 3
Forfar 4 Berwick 1
Hamilton 1 Stranraer 1
Montrose 3 Morton 2
Queen of S 1 Albion 2
Stenhousemuir 3 Queen's Park
Norwegian police made 33,704
arrests for intoxication in 1960
compared with 33,833 such arrests the previous year.
HUBERT
Prominent African Negro
Sees Need for Missions
"You're wanted on the phone, sport."
J
I
G
G
S
OU.OFOCURSE.'THE
SPRINS CLEARANCES ARE
STARTINS DOWNTOWN.'
I'LL NEED SOME MONEy-
By   RICHARD   KAS1SCHKE
GROUTVILLE, Souih Africa
(AP) — Christianity—and especially Christian missions—are
having' a tough time in the new
Africa. But a prominent and respected African Negro thinks
there is still a great need for
the church and missions if they
will boldly adopt new methods.
He is Albert Luthuli, the ex-
Zulu chief who is leader of the
African (Negro) National Congress now outlawed by South
Africa's white government.
Luthuli is a mild-mannered
man whose efforts to gain p/i-
tical rights for his people in this
white-ruled country have gained
for him nomination abroad for
the Nobel Peace Prize and here,
most recently, appearances at
South Africa's marathon treason
trial.
Now back at his rural home,
he expressed no bitterness over
eight years of nearly continuous
banning and detention in an interview conducted by the American editor of the monthly Our
Africa1.
"Do you feel Christianity has
any answer for today'6 problems?"  He was asked.
"In my view the Christian
.church is making itself misunderstood." he replied. "First,
the Christian message was
brought by the white man. And
the averae. African (Negro)
man says the white man is the
cause of all his trouble. He
doesn't discriminate between
while  men  and see th»t some
came here for material gain
and others came with the message of God.
"Secondly, if tlle church appears to be indifferent tp the
suffering of the people, the people won't listen to tlie church.
And if the church just simply
keeps quiet, I might understand.
But the other man docs not."
LuUiuli said tlie church has a
very important mission in today's turbulent Africa and that
it could do a job that no one
else can.
In a new Africa there were at
least four ways in which the
church was needed to help.
"First it must train African
I Negro 1 leaders of a high quality. This has been delayed too
long, and the training has been
of low standard.
"Second — Tlie church must
speed up its youth work. We
have to capture the youth now,
in the rural areas as well as
the cities,  . .  .
"Third—Tlie ohurch must not
hesitate to speak out. If the minister must suffer for speaking,
he must suffer. . . .
"Fourth—We need tlie church
to help us in selecting what was
good in our past. It's a tragedy
to say, 'Our past was good, let's
go back.' For instance, nothing
will justify polygamy, nothing
will justify witchcraft. There
were good things in the past,
but seme don't discriminate. . . .
And the church should aid in
discriminatory selection fronl
the past."
 ■
--_-.____________
-,.a-.-
—W5S»—-
°@
THE DAY may have beena little shivery outdoors,
but the young ladies above did not mind donning the
latest ih beach apparel fbr this summery scene at the
Nelson Junior High Junior Red Cross fashion show and
tea Saturday. Swim suits to please every feminine
whim were displayed in form fitting loveliness, along
wilh brimmed hats to keep the complexion fair and
fragile.
The filmed TV series The Life
)f Riley was originally written
and produced as a feature film.
'/.ASLEEPZV"
Many people never seem to gel a
good night's rest. They toss snd turn
in bed, then are dull and listless during
the day. When kidneys slow down
wastes and excess acids stay in the
system. Disturbed rest, tired feeling
and backache often follow. If you don't
rest well at night—if you feel dull in the
daytime—use Dodd's Kidney Pills.
Then you feel better—rest better-
work better. You can depend on Dodd's
Kidney Pills. n
FREE
SEWING
LESSONS
for owners of BROTHER and
other sewing machines purchased from
UNION-PETERS LTD.
... will start again April 26th
at 7 p.m. at 108 Victoria St.,
. Nelson, B.C. For further information phone Mrs. Doyle
at 2066-L.
NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, APRIL 17, 1961—5
Wedding Brings Family
Together For Reunion
NEW DENVER - Mrs. T. Aoy-
ama returned to her home from
Procter Notes
PROCTER-Mr. and Mrs. John
Erb were recent guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Alec Garner.
Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Brady are
on an extended visit to the prairie
provinces.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Hudson and
daughters of Princeton visited recently at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Neil MacLeod. Mrs. Hudson
and Mrs. MacLeod are sisters.
Mrs. M. MacKinnon. Sr.. is visiting with relatives and friends
in Mission City and Vancouver.
Vancouver where she attended the
wedding of her son, Dr. Ray Aoyama and a reunion with her fami
ly for the first time in 16 years
Her three daughters and two sons
Dr. Ray Aoyama, Mission City
Miss Kyoko Aoyama, Hamilton
Ontario: Miss Amy Aoyama, Van
couver: Miss May Aoyama
Smithers; Tak Aoyama, Vancou
ver1 and Mrs. T. Aoyama's sister
Miss Itoko Deshima and niece
Miss Ray Murase both of Hamil
ton. all attended the Aoyama-Arai
wedding and the reunion.
RADIO-EQUIPPED
About 96 per cent of Canada's
hemes are radio-equipped and
75 per cent have television sets.
Birthday Party
NEW DENVER - An enjoyable
birthday party was held at the
home of Mrs. P. J. McCrory on
the occasion of the tenth birthday
of her daughter Kathy. Games
were played after which supper
and birthday cake was served.
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560 Baker St.,
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Branches Throughout B.C.
Four young musicians, all under 21, were heard in a delightful
evening of chamber music Saturday in the Church cf the Re-
! deemer Parish Hall.
The four young people, present-
TWO MORE CASUAL OUTFITS tha I are hard to beat be it for boating
parties or just plain loafing around. Prelt y models are (left) Charlene Bia
Madge Wallace. The Fashion Show was held at L. V. Rogers High School.
X OtiillJ \_j£i iilfi, y_/llCt i LCLLC
Qives Evening of Music
Bret*       '^SSSSb--'
f-fH.
Ainsworth
AINSWORTH - Mr. and Mrs.
Sonrtingberg and family have
moved to Shutty Bench and will
he in charge of Camp Paradise
for the summer.
Mr. and Mrs. J. Sanderson have
returned to their home at Alder-
grove afler spending the Easter
holidays with their son-in-law and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. W. E.'
Lane.
Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Ragotti left j
for a trip to Montant to visit
relatives and friends.
Mrs. R. Sherraden returned to
her home after spending the winter with her mother at Borden,!
Sask. I
ed as guests of the Nelson Regis-
.■cred Music Teachers Associa-
t.r.n, are 'being directed by El-
I'reria Sewell cf Procter and plan
to enter lhe Spokane Music Festival in May. Mrs. Lawrence Mc-
Phail, president cf the association, introduced the program.
The- quartette features Miss
Wendy Herbison. second violin,
Pat Burroughs of Trail, first violin; David Freeman cf Rossland,
viola, and David Dahlstrom of
Rossland. cello. Mrs. Hugh Her-
m..on provided piano accompaniment.
The .roup, which presented
sun ditficul! i':iimbns as Schubert's "Death and the Maiden"
with a masterly touch for musicians so young, has been together since January and coming
irem widely separated district
points, the quality of their work
pnives the more remarkable.
Seme W eue-!s invited by the
Nelson music teachers gave gen-
How to get the most
from your life insurance
It's a three step suggestion and, as it should, it starts with you.
When you purchased life insurance, you no doubt had in
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and it makes good sense for you to review your objectives and
to check whether your life insurance currently meets them.
There are two other people who can help. The first is
your wife. Your life insurance is designed for her and the
family and it's wise to have her know your plans.
The more she understands your objectives, the more she will
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Manufacturers Life
erous applause to lhe efforts of
the group and Elfreda Sewell''
introductions and explanations o
the various numbers. The pro-
'ram included a Movement in G
'rom a quartette by Joseph Haydn and "Death and the Maiden"
by Schubert, by the group. Solos
were Concerto m A minor by
Bach, played by Wendy Herbison;
Largo by Vivaldi, played by David Dahlstrom; Romance in G
by Beethoven, by Pal Burroughs
on the cello; "Beau Soir" by De-
buyssey, an impressionistic piece
■layed with muted viola, and tihe
First .Movement of Symphony Es-
pagnole by Lab, played by Pat
Burroughs.
■Miss Herbison and Pat Burroughs will be entering solo classes in the Spokane Festival. as
well.
Refreshments were served at
close of the program by the music
teachers association with Mrs.
C. W. Tyler and Mrs. T. J. S.
Ferguson pouring.
WHEN JUNIOR MISSES DRESS UP these two summery frocks are the ones to catch the eye. They are
modelled by Barbara Dalling (letl) and Elaine Ramsay.—Daily News photos.
Aoyama -Arai Vows
Exchanged at Coast
VANCOUVER - A wedding of
interest to New Denver and Vancouver was solemnized Saturday.
April 1st when Dr. Ray Aoyama
See the Man
twin Manufacturers
INSURANCE  COMPANY
Natal Notes
Arthur Polak of'Natal was a
1 past weekend visitor at Galgary.
Mr. and Mrs. Ghris- Storm of
Michel were recent Oalgary i
visitors at the home ' of. their |
son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and!
Mrs. G. Tucker. j
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Olson and
family of Kimberley were recent)
weekend visitors at Michel at the I
home of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Whit-1
lacker.
Mr. and Mrs. Sylvester Kordi-
kowski and son Ronnie of Natal
recently were in Edmonton visiting their son-in-law and daughter.
Mr and Mrs. .1. Lindstrom and
. family, and Mrs. Kordikowski's
mother, Mrs. A. Herpshaw.
Mr and Mrs. Joe Petrueka and
son of Kimberley recently spent
a few days visit with the latter's
: brother-in-law and sister. Mr. and
; Mrs. Nick Ceresi of Natal.
Mrs. Joe Grihis of Natal is
. visiting her son-in-law and daugh-
I Ir-r. Mr. and Mrs. D. Christen-
' son at Gunner Mines, Alta.
I
Wynndel Notes
Mr. and Mrs. G. Lowery and
David were Easter visitors to
friends at Beaver Mines, Alberta.
Miss Doreen Spence was a visitor to Nelson for Easier weekend
Mr. and Mrs. M. Mosoluk and
family of Lethbridge were visitors at the home of her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. J. Firth.
Mr. R. Allan and Mr. A. Haley
of Calgary, Alberta were visitors
with Mr. and Mrs. Frank Merriam.
Mr. Jack Hobson of Nelson has
been working as Social Credit organizer in the Creston Valley district.
The Wynndel Social Credit
Group held their monthly meeting
Tuesday evening al the home ol
Mr. and Mrs. R. Un. A special
evening is planned in May at the
Wynndel hall when J. Hobson will
show slides" of various trips. There
will be a Bake Sale and White
Elephant table.
Mr. and Mrs. J Jennings and
son. who have been visiting with
Mrs. Jennings during the winter,
have returned to Saskatchewan
for the summer months.
Mr. and Mrs. David Colonel and
Danny of Princeton are visiting
with.relatives in the Wynndel district.
of Mission City, son of Mrs. T.
Aoyama and the late Mr. Aoyama
nf Mew Denver was united in marriage with Miss Yukiko Aral.
daughter of Mrs. Kozo Arai and
the late Mr. Arai of Vancouver
Rev. MacWilliams officiated at
lhe ceremony in the First United
Church here.
Mrs. F, Nakada was matron of
honor and bridesmaids were the
groom's sister, Miss Amy Aoya-
man and Miss Barbara Kimura.
Dr. A. Higano was groomsman
and ushers were Mr. H. Tanaka
and the groom's brother, Mr. Tak |
Aoyama. all oi Vancouver.
A wedding reception followed in
Ihe, Regal Ball Room, Hotel Georgia. Master • of - ceremonies was
Dr. Trevor Harrop of Campbell
River. The newlyweds left for a
two-week honeymoon in California and will reside in Mission City
where Dr. Aoyama has his practice.
New Denver
NEW DENVER - Mrs. P. .!.
McCrory and her mother Mrs.
Cecil McEwen will spend a couple
of days with Wayne McCrory at
UBC. Vancouver before leaving
by boat for Honolulu, Japan,
China and England.
j Eastern Star
Elects Officers
At Invermere
INVERMERE - Mount Swansea Chapter Order of the Eastern
Star No. 80 has appointed new
officers. Succeeding Alice Craig
of Radium as Worthy Matron is
Rita Wolfe of fnvermere.
Patron is Walter Verge of
Edgewater. Others are Jessie
Blakley, associate matron; Gordon Ferguson, associate patron;
Kay Frater. secretary; Audrey
Oslerloh. treasurer; Ruth Purkis.
conductress; Eleanor Stoddart,
associate conductress: Margaret
Newcomen. chaplain: Hilda Hainan, marshall: Violet. Davidson,
organist; Edith Verge. Adah;
Melta Penner, Ruth: Ethel Tunnacliffe, Esther; Lillian Hallbauer. Martha. Gladys Ferguson. Electa: Elizabeth Hoglund,
warder. Henry Newcomen, sentinel.
Going On
HOLIDAY'S?
Don't Miss Important
NEWS ITEMS
Which Take Place While You Are Gone.
Have the
NELSON DAILY NEWS
SAVED FOR YOU
BY YOUR
CARRIER BOY
Just ask him to save your paper till you come
back, giving him the date of your return. He
will deliver the back copies along with the current issue on the date specified.
Ou r
Carriers Are Anxious
To  Give  This
SPECIAL  SERVICE
to Their
Holidaying Customers
This Summer.
Nelson Imlg Nfiua
____■_
 —
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^^^^^^^^^^■^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
:;..-v"'.i"^-\i: ;.:'■■';-:.• 7 '..';,-■.■:■   ' "- ■'.      ';.'   "'■ ;    '       ■     ■'   '    .      '' - .-      "'    ■' ■    ■■. ' '■■
6— NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, APRIL 17, 1961
,»-    .      ' —— ! ■ 1	
First Time Since '38
Masters All the Way
Black Hawks Clobber Red Wings 5-1 To Win Stanley Cup
DETROIT (CP) — Chicago
Black Hawks won the prized
Stanley Cup Sunday night romping away from the fading Detroit Red Wings to win 5-1 and
take the best-of-seven final 4-2.   |
It was the first time the Hawks
have won the world title since
1938 and the third time since
they came into the National
Hockey League in 1926. |
The Hawks were the masters
of the Red Wings Sunday night.
Despite injuries to two of their
key players, they struck back
after giving up the first goal in
the first period and won going
away, running ln three goals In
the final period.
It was a big night for the lesser luminaries of the Hawks
mur of them scoring for the first
time in the cup final. |
Reg Fleming and Ab McDonald got Hawks Into the lead in
lhe second period after Parker
MacDonald had counted for Detroit in the first, and in the final
period Eric Nesterenko, Jack
Evans and Ken Wharram completed the drubbing of Wings.      I
When the game ended the jubilant Hawks hugged and slapped
each other, and then were con-1
11111 ■ 11111111111 ■ 11 rrT it I f 111M11T111
Individual Results
G APt P
4 11 IS 10
3 12 15   8
Howe, Detroit
Pilote, Chicago
Hull, Chicago
Mikita, Chicago
M. Balfour, Chic.
Delvecchio, De t. .
Wharram, Chic.
Stasiuk, Detroit
Hay, Chicago
Goyette, Montreal
Richard, Mil.
10 14 4
5 11 21
6 10 14
4   9 0
9 12
7 4
7 23
6 0
6 20
IIIIIIIIIIEIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
gratulated by the Red Wings. ,
In a brief centre-ice ceremony
NHL president Clarence Camp-|
bell presented the cup to captain
Eddie Litzenberger of the Hawks
as scores of spectators flocked
to the ice. |
Hawks wound up the series
the hard way. They were without two of their injured stars —
Murray Balfour and Dollard St.'
Laurent — and snuffed out Red
Wings on Detroit ice — the first
time either team has been able
to win away from home in the
final.
Hawks reached the final by de-!
featlng the Montreal Canadiens
by the same 4-2 count in games,
while Detroit was defeating Toronto Maple Leafs 4-1.
For Fleming, who scored while
his learn was shorthanded, McDonald, Nesterenko and Evans,
their goals were the first in the
(inal series.
For Evans, hefty, lantern-
jawed defenceman, it was his
Iirst goal in two full seasons of
-ovular play and through playoffs up to Sunday night.
Red Wings elected to go with
goalie Hank Bassen instead nf
Terry Sawchuk  but the  defeat
cannot be blamed on. Bassen.
Goalie Glenn Hall of Hawks
pulled his mates out of several
tight spots, particularly in the
early play, and twice saved
goals by snaring the puck as it
all but wobbled over Ihe goal
line.
The crowd was 14,323, largest
for any of the semWinal and
final playoff games.
Red Wings started out as if
they would turn back Hawks
and square the final in front of
the home fans. They outshot
Hawks 8-4  fn  the  opening  pe
riod and took the lead on Mac-
Donald's   goal.
But when Fleming scored
while his team was a man short
and made defenceman Pete
Goegan of Detroit the goat in
pulling Hawks even, the Chicago team snapped back into
the play that had featured their
wins at home.
McDonald's goal was the tip-
off that Hawks were really on
their way, and Nesterenko
started the third - period onslaught after only 57 seconds of
play.
Illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
Team Statistics
FINAL
W L F    A
Chicago   4  2   19  12
Detroit   2   4   12   19
Chicago wins best-of-seven
final series 4-2
.llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
The winning Hawks will each
pick up $1,750 for their victory
in the final, while Red Wings
will collect $750 each. The total,
as winners also in the semifinals, will be $3,000 for Hawks
and $2,000 for Wings.
Howie Glover of Red Wings
was injured in the second period, when C h i c a g o's Ron
Murphy crashed into him, and
was taken to hospital believed
to have suffered internal injuries.
Stan Mikita of Hawks was
shaken up just after starting
the play on McDonald's goal
when rammed by Detroit's
Howie Young, but came back
later.
Brown to Make 10th
Defence of Crown
LONDON (API—Joe Brown,
(he 35 - year - old lightweight
champion from Baton Rouge,
La., makes the 10th defence of
the crown Tuesday night ln a
return bout with Dave Charnley,
the British and European title-
holder.
Although he is invading
Oharnley's home territory,
Brown has been installed the 2-
to-1 favorite to win the. 15-
rounder before a capacity crowd
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of 18,000 at Earl's Court Stadium.
Oharniey, a 25-year-old southpaw, has won five straight bouts
since he was stopped by Brown
in their first title fight at Houston, Tex. Dec. 2, 1959. The
young Briton was gashed over
the right eye in the fifth round
and was unable to come out for
the sixth.
It was recorded as a sixth-
round technical knockout. The
clever, hard - hitting champion
was well ahead on points when
the fight was stopped.
Brown won the crown from
Bud Smith of Cincinnati at New
Orleans, Aug.  24, 1956.
ELECTRIC   MOTOR
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VANCOUVER
FIRST —COLEY
VANCOUVER (CP) - Vancouver hockey promoter Coley Hall
said Sunday night he will bid for
a California franchise in the
Western Hockey League only if
he can obtain assurance that his
| moving to another city won't hurt
i liockey in Vancouver.
I "I wouldn't go anywhere until
II was certain Vancouver would
! be looked after." he said. "And
11 doubl if Vancouver's position
I can be cleared up before the
j league's annual meeting here
I Saturday."
Franchises for Los Angeles and
San Francisco are scheduled to
be awarded at the Saturday meeting.
Tolems Win
Finals Berth
SEATTLE (AP)-Seattle Totems Sunday night won a place
in the Western Hockey League
playoff final beating Calgary
Stampeders 2-1.
Calgary came out on top during the regular season.
The Totems now will play the
winner of the Vancouver-Portland semi-final playoffs. That
series stands 1-1, and the two
meet again Monday night.
Tcmmie McVie scored Seat-
lie's first goal in the second period on a long shot through Ihe
legs of Calgary goalie Lucien
'Dechene.
In the third period, Seattle's
Marc B o i 1 e a u scored after
teammate Guyle Fielder out-
scrambled a couple of Calgary
defensemen behind the Calgary
goal. Fielder flipped the puck
in front of Dechene. and Bnileau
swept it in from 10 feet out.
Wally Hergesbeimer scored
Calgary's goal  after that.
r
Ball Scores
SUNDAY
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Los Angeles at Boston (21
ppd
(2i
L
"WHAT IS IT?" ponders Detroit's Gordie Howe and NHL official Matt Pavelich
during the fourth game of the Stanley Cup series. "It" turned out lo be a live and
frightened hamster. The poor little fella was thrown on the ice by a fan during the
second period of the game. Howe picked It up and carried it off the ice. It was unhurt.— TNS photo.
Have you tried an...
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An important part of HFC service to families is the
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HOUSEHOLD FINANCE
W. W. Srjpjforcf, Manager
608 Baker Street Telephone 1890
NELSON
Kansas City at New York
ppd.  rain.
Chicago at Detroit, ppd, cold.
Cleveland 000 000 003—3 11 1
Wash. 002 000 000-2   6   0
Antonelli, Alien (8) (1-0) and
Romano: Donovan (0-2) and Det-
terer. HR:  Cle-Francona  (1).
First:
Minnesota .. 600 003 010—10 10 0
| Baltimore 200 001 110— 5 14 1
I Ramos (2-0i Moore (71 and
1 Battey: Estrada, (0-1) Papa (I1
I Hall il). Jones (7'. Stock (91
|and Triandos. HRs: Minn-Allison
j 2 131, Green (1). Bit—Gentile 1,
Second:
Minn. 000 102 010 02-6 13 0
Bait. 100 001 002 00-4 7 (1
Kralick. Monre lil': Pleis (91
1 l-Oi Stc'-bs 'IP and Naragon.
Battey 191. Brown. Wilhelm (81
Hoeft (loi 10-11 ,-md Triandos.
Zupo '101. HR: Minn-Mincher
'li   Versalles   Hi.
twins Take
Pair
By  THE   ASSOCIATED  PRESS
The surprising Minnesota
Twins took over the American
League lead Sunday with a
double victory over Baltimore
Orioles while San Francisco
moved out front in the National
League in a co - feature event,
coach Leo Durnohrr of Los An-
engaged in a kicking duel.
Minnesota's   home   run   slug-
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West Transfer Company
Phone 33.
Nelson,  B.C.
719 Baker St.
fT
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SAXONIA     April 22, May 12
IVERNIA        May 5, 26
CARINTHIA   May 19
550 Burrard St.,
Vancouver, B.C.
j.).      Phone: MUtual 4-4477
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TRAIL
1560 Bay Ave.
PHONE 2345
FOR INFORMATION AND RESERVATIONS
VIPOND FOR TRAVEL
NELSON
Hume Hotel
PHONE 2124
gers  overpowered   the  vaunted
Oric'.es pliching stall. Bob Alli-
scn hit two homers, one a grand
slammer,   and   drove   in   seven
. .ins i.i ..ie In-j liis; g, ...e vie-
! lory   fer   Pedro   Ramos.   ZOra
j Vepsa'.lcs  hit a  two-run homer
! in  the  llth inning  to win  the
\ second game for Twins 6-4,
j    Cleveland, shut out  for eight
I innings by Dick Donovan, rose
! up in Ihe ninth to beat Washington 3 - 2 iii the only other
American League game.
I    'Doubleheaders   between   Kansas City and New York and Los
Angeles and Boston and a sin-
I gle gam? between Chicago and
I Detroit were postponed because
of rain, cold weather or snow.
FRISCO MOVES UP
Snow also forced postponement of the National League
game between Milwaukee and
Chicago, but the other three
games were played. San Francisco moved into first place with
a 5-2 victory over Philadelphia
while Les Angeles was slugging
Pittsburgh 13-6. St. Louis topped
Cincinnati 5-3 On a seven-hitter
by 21-year-old Ray Sadeeki.
A'lison was the big show in
the first game at Baltimore with
his grand slammer in the first
off starter Chuck Estrada, who
had walked the first three batters.
Durocher and Crinlan engaged
in a Sn6w-Slopping kicking duel
at Los Angeles while Dodger*
were snapping a three - game
losing streak and beating Pitts-
bui-h 13-6.
Durocher and C o n 1 a n exchanged kicks in an arsument
over a nnn fly bv Norm Lai'ker
that fell fair and bounced foul.
Conlan called it a foul ball,
claiming nobody touched it in
fair territory. Leo claimed it
was touched hy catcher Hal
Smith before it went foul.
BOSOX  WIN FIRST
In Saturday actinn. Baltimore
New York Yankees and Boston
Red Sox won their first American League games of the season and Cincinnati suffered their first defeat Saturday
Leftv Steve Rarber. aided by
four double plays, pitched Baltimore to an 8-0 triumph over
M'nr*co!a.
F' .it - handier rke DeWck
blanked   Los   Angeles   on   four
„it_ as Boston gained a 3-0 victory.
Bob Turley, aided by young
Beb Stafford in the eighth,
pitched Yankees to a 5 - 3 triumph over Kansas City athletics.
In other American League
games, Cleveland Indians
downed Washington Senators 3-1
and Detroit Tilers whipped Chicago White Sox 6-2.
Ernie Broglio shut out Cincinnati 4-0 for St. Louis in a game
lhat was halted by rain after
five innings. A grand - slam
homer by outfielder Al Heist in
the ninth inning gave Ohicajx a
I) - 4 victory over Milwaukee
Braves. Dallas Green hurled
Philadelphia to a 2 - 0 triumph
over San Francisco.
Japan Team Dominates
Canuck Wrestling Titles
VANCOUVER (CP) — An all-star team Irom Japan walked away with four of the
eight lilies in the Canadian wrestling champ.onships here Saturday night.
Usaki Imaizumi, a 21-year-old who has his eyes set on the world title in Yokohama, Japan, next July, took his second No rth American gold medal in a month, winning the bantamweight di
vision with victories in his
three bouts.
He earlier won the United
States title at Toledo, Ohio.
Yoshlzumi Iwamuro won the
lightweight class: Jiro Naka-
jima, as expected, won the wel-
Spider Webb
Floored in (Ih
NEW YORK (API - Nigerian
Dick Tiger Saturday spoiled
Spider Webb's comeback by stopping the ring-rusty Chicago middleweight- in 2:41 of the sixth
round of a scheduled 10-rounder
at St. Nicholas Arena.
The 32-year-old Nigerian dropped his 29-year-old rival three
limes, once in the second round
and twice in the sixth. Referee
Art Mercante halted the one -
sided fight when Webb was floored for the third time by a wicked
left hook to the jaw.
Webb fell on his back and didn't stir. The referee counted to
two and then waved his hands to
signal the end. He called it a
TKO.
A barrage of blows that pinned
Webb to the ropes set him up
for the earlier knockdown in the
sixth. A left and right to the
head floored him for eight. It was
obvious Webb, making his first
fight in 14 months, was through.
Seconds later the muscular Nigerian finished him oil.
It was the first time Webb has
been stepped in 40 pro fights. His
record is 34-6,
It was Tiger's third straight
knockout victory. His record now
is 40-11-2.
TO HANG
RICHIBUCTO. N, B. (CP) -
Joseph Tilmon Comeau, 20, was
sentenced Saturday to be hanged
for murder in the knife slaying of
his mother.
A jury at the Kent County sitting of the New Brunswick Supreme Court deliberated an hour
and 35 minutes before finding
him guilty of slaying Mrs. ImClda
Comeau. 40.
The execution was set for July
19.
terweight division and Katsuo
Shibata took Ihe fourth medal
with his victory in ttie middleweight class.
Other members of tlie eight-
man Japanese team all finished
high in the standings ln their divisions. The hardest loser was
Kiycharo Koshiishi in the featherweight division.
He to*t his first bout of the
two-day championship to Vancouver's Ralph Casperson, who
eventually won the title, when
both cracked heads and Koshiishi suffered a cut over his right
eye.
Under amateur wrestling
rules the fight was automatically awarded to Casperson because of the injury suffered by
his opponent.
LOSES 4 POINTS
The  loss  cost  Koshiishi  four
Hockey Scores
SATURDAY
American League
Springfield 3 Hershey 0
(Springfield wins best-of-seven
final 4-0)
Allan Cup
Amherst 2 Gait 3
(Gait wins best-of-seven semifinal 4-0)
Memorial Cup
Winnipeg 4 Edmonton 1
(Edmonton leads best-of-seven
semi-final 2-1)
Western Intermediate
Terrace Bay 3 Lacombe 7
(Lacombe wins best • of ■ seven
final 3-1)
SUNDAY
Eastern Professional Final
Sault 2 Hull-Ottawa 1
(Best of seven tied 1-11
points under tlie scoring system
used to decide the titles. Competitors forced to default a
match or who are pinned have
four points marked against
them. A victory by a decision
costs a single point, a loss by a
decision costs three and six
points eliminates a wrestler
frcm further competition.
Koshiishi took his next two
matches by falls and a third by
a decision to finish with five
points, the same total as recorded by Casperson. The Canadian took the title on the basis
of his victory over Koshiishi In
the initial bout.
Other Canadian champions
were Dave Piper, St. Boniface,
Man., who pinned Lindsay
Spence, another Winnipeg wrestler, in his final match to win
the light heavyweight crown,
and Pete Miohienzi, London,
Ont., who pinned Japan's Fujio
Miyazakl in two minutes, five
seconds to win the flyweight
title.
Gary Stensland, an outsider
from Portland. Ore., won the
heavyweight title with two
tough decis „ns and a draw.
His last match for the title
was a decision over Kelowna's
Keith Maltman.
Perhaps the most colorful performer was tbe four-time U.S.
champion. Dr. Melvin A. Northrup nf San Francisco.
At 52. he still showed that his
skill on the mats was not to be
scoffed at. Wrestling in the
trash lightweight division, he
lost a close decision in his first
bout, pinned his next man and
fr light tn two draws.
BOSOX BELTER By Alan Mover
JACKIE
JENSEN,
CF Trt£
0O5TOf/
SOX,
WHO ft? EFFORTS To
GST BACK O//
.    77/B M6H, MPS
MP//MPSom
#0AP,
GET ALL THE NEWS FROM HOME
While On
and we will make
arrangements
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■■■';   ■■  ■■ ,■■;.-.   ' ■ ■-.-•■-. ■  .,.■ ■  ■■-  ."'■   : ■ ■   -,.■■■■■■■\
NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, APRIL 17,1961—7
HE'JUST GOES ON AND ON—Still not ready to retire although he recently rode his
5,500th winner, Johnny Longden, the winrilngest jockey in all turf history, continues on
and on, now riding at Golden Gate Fields at Albany, Calif. Highlights in the career of
the famed rider, born at Wakefield, England, 54 years ago, are pictured above. He migrated to Canada as a youngster, hit his peak in 1938 when he won the U. S. riding title
and repeated that honor in 1947 and again in 1948. Longden began as an apprentice at
Agua Caliente in the late twenties. He brought in his 4,000th winner in May, 1952, and
his 5,000th in March of 1957. He became the world leader on Labor Day of 1956 when
he won race No. 4,871, which topped the all-time record held by Sir Gordon Richards, the
famed English jockey. His son Vance, now a trainer, has a Kentucky Derby hopeful
this year in "Four and Twenty." Johnny won Derby on Count Fleet in '43.   (Central Press)
Rangers Down
Oil Kings 4-1
EDMONTON (CP) - Winnipeg
Rangers defeated Edmonton Oil
Kings 4-1 Saturday night in the
third game of the best-of-seven
Memorial Cup hookey semi-finals.
Edmonto leads the series 2-1.
Don Chiz, who scored for Edmonton, set a Canadian junior
playoff record with his 26th playoff goal. It was one better than
the 25 Ed Joyal scored for tlie
Western Canada champion Kings
last year.
The fourth game will be played
here tonight. An Oil Kings victory
would force a fifth game here
Tuesday night while a win for the
Rangers would send tlie fifth
game to a Manitoba point Wednesday night.
Winnipeg built up a 4-0 lead
with three first-period goals and
another early in the second period.
Geoff Ball beat Edmonton goal-
tender Paul Sexsmith twice in
pacing the Rangers to their best
performance of the series. They
lost 3-2 and 4-1 in the first two
games at Winnipeg. The other
Ranger goals were scored by
Dave Richardson and Horry
Bueckert.
Soccer Standings
LONDON (AP)—Standings of
the English and Scottish soccer
leagues, including Saturday games:
ENGLISH LEAGUE
First Division
W L T Pts.
Tottenham
Sheffield W
Wolverhampton
Everton
Burnley
Man United
Blackburn
Second
Ipswich
Sheffield U
Liverpool
Norwich
Middlesbrough
4 5
12 4
7 9
6 14
6 13
6 15
IS  12 13
Division
24    7   8
24 6 9
20 9 20
19 9 12
17  12 11
Third Division
27    7   8
26 5 12
23 9 10
19   11 13
19 10 13
Division
27 8   6
25 6 11
22 7 12
22    7 12
20 9 13
P R
Bury
Walsall
Queen's
Watford
Grimsby
Fourth
Peterborough
Crystal P
Northampton
Bradford
York City
SCOTTISH LEAGUE
Division I
Rangers 22
Ki'marnock 19
Celtic 15
Thd Lanark 18
Motherwell 15
Division  II
Stirling 22
Falkirk 22
5 6
8 5
8 9
2 12
6 10
Stenhousemuir
23    2   8
Stranraer      >
17 ,6 10
Montrose
19    2 14
Queen of S
18    2 12
IRISH
LEAGUE
Portadown
12    7   2
-infield
13    3   4
Ards
12    3   5
Glentoran
12    2  7
Baflymena
10    5   5
_/._»_r
Flutterby Ducks at Shadow
To Lose to Mr* Consistency
NEW YORK (CP) — Mr. Consistency upset Alberta
Ranches' flavored Flutterby and won the $60,100 California Derby by a neck Saturday at Golden Gate Fields In
Albany, Calif.
Coupled with his better - regarded stablemate, Gay Landing, Mr. Consistency set the
pace most of the way, losing
the lead only a short time on
the back stretch when Song Man
forged ahead.
Gay Landing took third, 114
lengths behind Flutterby, in the
field of seven three - year - olds
racing in the final prep for Uhe
Kentuoky Derby May 6.
Mr. Consistency and Gay
Landing are owned by Oklahoma oil man Travis M. Kerr,
giving him a two-horse threat
for the Dertny. Max Bell and
Frank McMahon of Calgary are
co-owners of Alberta Ranches,
whose Flutterby went off the 2-
to-5 favorite.
The time for the 1_ miles
was 1:49 over a fast track.
Jockey Bobby Mundorf sent
Mr. Consistency into the lead at
the start. Johnny Longden on
Flutterby made his move turning into the home stretch but
the son of Noor apparently
ducked at a shadow and lost his
momentum while Mr. Consistency held on to win.
Mr. Consistency, winner of
only three races in 17 6tarts,
earned $37,600 for' Kerr. Gay
Landing added an additional
$7,500.
The entry paid $10.60 to win,
$2.80 to place and $3 to show.
Flutterby returned $2.20 and
$2.40.
Longden said he moved up on
the stretch turn and thought
Flutterby "would go on about
his business." But "past the
eighth pole he ducked at a shadow and pulled himself up. I got
him going again but too late.
After  viewing movies of the
^GREATEST!
Name 3 Canucks
To Davis Team
MONTREAL (CPl - Two veterans and a newcomer Saturday
were named to Canada's 1961 Davis Cup team by the Canadian
Lawn Tennis Association.
The veterans are Bob Bedard,
29, of Lennoxville, Que., chosen
for the seventh year, and Francois Godbout, 22, of Waterloo,
Que., on Ihe team for the third
lime.
The new man is John Swann.
34, o! Toronto, the country's
fourth-ranked player.
Bedard add Godbout are ranked
first and third nationally.
A fourth spot on the team was
left open. Don Fontana of Toronto, the country's No. 2 player, is
still considered the main contender although pressure of business
obliged him to retire from international tennis several months
ago .
Canada meets Mexico in Quebec City July 29-31 in Ihe opening round of American zone com-l National League
petition and the winner advances     St. Louis  (Gibson 0-01 at Los
against Morocco, also in Quebec Angeles (Podres 1-0), Night.
City, Aug. 5-7.                              I    Only games scheduled.
Four-and-Twenty
Co-Favorite
AGUA CALIENTE, Mexico
(API — Alberta Ranch's Four -
and-Twenty has been forced into
co-favoritism wilh Dorchester
Farm's Carry Back in Caliente's
latest future book line on the May
6 Kentucky Derby. I
Four-and-Twenty was lowered
a point by steady backing after a
sparkling workout at Keeneland I
and now is offered at 5-1, the
same price as Carry Back.        j
Garwol, Flutterby and Beau |
Prince al lare 6-1. At 8-1 are Bal |
Musette and Crozier.
Probable Pitchers
race Judge Alfred Slielhamer
confirmed that Flutterby- was
frightened by either a deep shadow or crowd noises about an
eighth of a mile from the finish
and pulled up.
Flutterby carried 119 pounds
under the allowance conditions
of the race and the other six
carried 116 pounds.
Both Mr. Consistency and Gay
Landing are to be flown to
Louisville Monday for the Kentucky Derby. It is likely that
Flutterby will be on the same
plane.
At New York's Aqueduct Saturday, Hitting Away won .the
secondary feature after Mail
Order captured the $29,400 Excelsior Handicap.
Hitting Away's victory may
have given trainer Sunny Jim
Fitzsimmons a good Kentucky
Derby candidate. His time was
a dazzling 1:35 3-5 for the mile,
especially impressive because
Ambiopose, winner of the $50,-
000 Gotham Stakes last Saturday, required 1:35 4-6 for-the
mile.
Hitting Away, ridden by Willie Shoemaker, beat the King
Ranch's Bal Musette by a neck.
Hitting Away paid $8.40, $3
and $2.70 while the tevored Bal
Musette returned $3.40 and
$2.30.
The Alamode Farm's Mail Order led all the way in the Hi-
mile Excelsior and finished
fourth lengths ahead of King
Ranch's Disperse.
Mail Order, an entry with
Isaac J. Collins Derrick paid
$20.90, $8.60 and $6.50. Disperse
returned' $9.40 and $6.70.
At Laurel, Md., Orleans Doge,
a triple orown nominee owned
by Ben Werner of New Orleans,
poured on the speed in the
stretch to take the-$29,200 Chesapeake Stakes from the front-
running Scotch Bull.
Major Baseball Scores
By  THE  CANADIAN PRESS
American League
Los Angeles    000 000 000 - 0 4 5
Boston 101 010OOx- 3 81
Clevenger (7) and Rice; Delock
(1-0) and Pagllaroni.
Minnesota       000 000 000- 0  53
Baltimore       033 002OOx- 812 0
Stobbs (0-1) Sadowcki (3)
Geil (5) Stange (8) and Carre-
ron; Barber (1-0) and Trlandos.
HR: Bal-Williams (1).
Kansas City 000 000 030 ■ 3 5 2
New York      MOOOOlOx- 5 60
Daley (0-1) Johnson (2) Kun-
Helen Wills aa champ and today
THEY SAY that Helen Wills Moody, defaulting to fellow
Callfornian, Helen Jacobs, in that celebrated battle for the U.S.
women's tennis title in 1933, failed to congratulate the winner
and, as one expert put it—Mrs. Moody had never lost a major
match and she didn't know how to go about congratulating a
winner.
True or false. Mrs. Helen Wills Moody's default, which followed
a back injury, set off one of the highly-publicized feuds of the
century.
Wrestling Results
VANCOUVER (CPl - Championship standings at the Canadian wrestling championships
Saturday night:
Flyweight (11414 pounds I: 1.
Pete Michienji, London, Ont. 2.
Fujio Miyazaki, Japan.
Bantamweight (125. pounds 1
1. Usaki Imaizumi, Japan 2. Ernie Chornomyoz, Montreal; 3.
Sandor Szabo, Portland, Ore.
Featherweight   (136_   pounds)
1. Ralph Casperson, Vancouver,
2. Kiycharo   Koshiishi,   Japan;
3. Ted Banhidy, San Francisco.
Lightweight    U47.    pounds I:
1. Yoshizumi  Iwamuro, Japan:
2. Ray  Lougheed,  Moose Jaw,
S;sk.; 3. Tomio Saishu, Japan.
\
Welterweight (1601. pounds!:
1. JiTo Nakajima. Japan; 2.
Don Hoiness, Eugene, Ore.; 3.
Cliff Bennett, Moose Jaw.
Middleweight (174 pounds): 1.
Katsuo Shibata, Japan; 2, Will
Wurr, Winnipeg; 3. Phil Over-
lander, Montreal.
Ught-heavyweight   (191
pounds); 1. Dave Piper, Winni- [
peg;   2.   Robert.   Keeney,   Glad- ,
stone,   Ore.;   3.   Real   Lepine,
Montreal.
Heavyweight: 1. Gary "Sletis-
land, Portland, Ore.: 2. Keith
Maliman, Kelowna. B.C.; 3. Ben
Davidson, University ot Washington,
After she walked off the
court in that 1933 match with
Miss Jacobs, Mrs. Moody retired temporarily and Miss Jacobs won the 1934 U.S. nationals.
But in 1935, Mrs. Moody, her
back better, went to Wimbledon and so did Miss Jacobs. As
fate would decree, the two met
in the final and the match received world-wide attention.
There were slurs that Mrs.
Moody had "quit" in that 1933
match because she hated to loBe
and felt that Miss Jacobs might
beat her. Her claim was the injured back. Anyway, in the
1935 Wimbledon final . Mrs.
Moody was out to prove that
she still was the GREATEST
of all.
Mrs. Moody took the first set,
6-3. But Miss Jacobs came
back and won the second, also
6-3. Miss Jacobs poured it on
and, smothering Mrs. Moody's
famed attack, led- by 5-2 and
needed only one point for victory.
It wasn't to be, however.
Mrs. Moody won the nex£ game
and fought on and on and won
five successive matches, the set,
7-5, and the championship.
•    •    *
HELEN NEWINGTON
WILLS, born at Cent reville,
Calif.,    October   6,    1905,   the
daughter of Dr. Clarence A. and
Katherine Anderson Wills, probably was the GREATEST woman tennis player of all time.
She started to play the game
at an early age; at 14 she was
given a membership in the
Berkeley Tennis club. She went
to school in Vermont for awhile
and then returned to California
where she gained national recognition'in 1921, then 16, as she
won the U.S.A. girls championship.
From then on her star ascended. In U\e next 10 years
she won every women's title,
seven times being the U.S.
champion and six times the
Wimbledon queen. Coming back
in 1935 she took the Wimbledon
crown again and once more repeated in 1938.
During her career she held
the U.S. singles and doubles
crowns, won the French singles
four times and won 18 and lost
two in Wightman Cup matches.
She retired in 1938 from tournament play.
•   *   *
SHE WAS proficient in art,
attended a fine arts school in
Boston, had exhibitions of her
paintings. She also did fashion
designing. She lives in Los Angeles today as Mrs, Helen
Ruark.
Distributed by King Features Syndicate
Terriers Earn
Allan (up Berth
GALT, Ont. (CP) - Bob Mc-
Knight scored with 23 seconds of
overtime play remaining Saturday night to give Gait Terriers a
3-2 victory over Aimlierst Ramblers and a berth in the Allan Cup
finals.
The Ontario senior hookey
champions, who swept the best-
of-seven series in four straight
games, meet Winnipeg Maroons
here in the first game of ttie finals
next Friday.
McKnight's goal, fired into the
unprotected Amherst cage from
10 feet out as goalie Jacques Mon-
ette sprawled on the ice after two
successive saves, gave the Terriers their lilth straight playoff
victory and put Gait in the Allan
Oup finals for the first time.
Monette was their chief stumbling block as he kicked out 55
shots while Harold (Boat) Hurley
was called on for only 26 saves in
the Gait nets.
Bob Mader and Darryl Sly were
the other Gait marksmen. Russ
Malone fired both Amherst goals
32 seconds apart in the second
period to give the Ramblers a
temporary 2-1 lead.
Souchak Sacks
Silver by Seven
Over Snead
GREENSBORO, N.C. (API -
Mike Soufhak broke par for the
fourth day in a row Sunday with
a two-under 69 that gave him a
276 total and clinched the $22,-
500 Greater Greensboro open golf
tournament by seven shots over
runnerup Sam Snead.
Souchak, who plays out of Gros-
singer, N.Y., cruised around the
front nine of the 7,000-yard Sedge-
field County Club course with a
three-under-par 32 to put him far
ahead of the field to wrap it up
early.
The victory was worth $3,200
to Souchak.
Snead, defending champion,
finished with 71 to win $2,100.
Billy Maxwell of*Dallas, Tex.,
faltered to a finishing 75 for third
place at 284 and won $1,650.
Vancouver's Stan Leonard and
Charlie Sifford, Negro pro from
Los Angeles, tied for fourth place
with 285s. Each won $1,300.
Leonard's card was 74-69-69-73—
285.
Matt Mats
Opponent
In 4 Seconds
TORONTO (CP) - Fred Matt
of Vancouver required less than
10 minutes of actual wrestling
time Saturday night to retain his
Canadian judo black belt cham-
pionshp.
The 23-year-old champion stunned a crowd of 400 by winning his
first fall in four seconds. He pinned Toronto's Paul Schelcke with
a double footsweep.
In the final, Matt defeated Henk
Janssen of Toronto with an uchi-
mata, or inside thigh sweep, and
finished with the necessary 25-
second hold-down.
Third plop'nmgo decided by two
novice wrestlers when Dave Jinks
of Winnipeg pinned Donal Niiya
of Montreal in 45 seconds.
kel' (5) Rakow (8) and Sullivan;
Turley (1-0), Stafford   (8)   and
Howard.
Chicago 001 001 000 • 2 7 1
Detroit 210 300 OOx • 6 7 1
' McLlsh   (0-1)   Shaw   (3)   Piz-
zaro (6) Staley   (7)   and   Car-
reon; Mossi (1-0), Fox (6) and
Brown.   Hrs:    Det^Brown    (1)
Bruton,
Cleveland        000 011 010 • 3 80
Washington     000 001 000 - 1 7 0
Grant (1-0) Funk (8) and Romano; Daniels (0-12) Sisler (8)
and Daley. HR: Was-Klaus (1).
National League
Phila 000 200 000- 2 71
San Fran 000 000 000 • 0   5 0
' Green (1-0) and Dalrymple;
Marichal (0-1) O'Dell (9) and
Haller, Landrith (8). Hr: PHA
Gonzalez (2).
Cincinnati 000 00- 0 2 2
St. Louis 200 02 - 4 5 2
(called end 5th rain)
Jay  (0-1)  Nunn  (5)  and Bailey; Broglio (1-0) and Smith.
Milwaukee      310 010 000 - 5 8 1
Chicago 101030 004- 9112
Wil ley, Nottebart (0-1) (5)
and Crandall; ,-Hobbie, "Elston
19) and Bertell, Taylor (9). Hrs;
Chi-Santo \l) Heist (1).
Pittsburgh 100 002 100 - 4 111
Los  Angeles    000 000 010 -  1  8 0
Friend (1-0) and H. Smith;
Drysdale (1-1) L. Sherry (7)
Golden (9) and Roseboro. Hrs:
Fgh-Virdon 2.
American Association
Omaha 2 Indianspolis 9
Denver 1 Dallas-Fort Worth 4
Louisville 2 Houston 3
'only games scheduled)
Baseball Standings
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
American League
WL Pet. G©L
Minnesota
Cleveland
Detroit
New York
Boston
Kansas City
Los Angeles
Chicago
Washington
Baltimore
4   1 .800 —m
3   1 .750   _
1 .667 1
1 .500 IV,,
1 .500 IVi
1 .500 IVi
1 .500 IVi
2 .983 2
3 .250 2_
4 .200 8
San Francisco
Cincinnati
St. Louis
Pittsburgh
Los Angeles
Chicago
Philadelphia
Milwaukee
National League
W L Pot. GBL
4  2.667-
8   2 .600   Vi
2 .600   Vi
3 .500 1
8 .500 1
2 J500 1
4 .333 2
9 .250 2
Briton Sets
World Record
LONDON (AP) - British runner Basil Heatley set a world record for 10 miles Saturday with
a time of 47 minutes, 47 seconds.
He knocked 25 seconds off the
old record of 48.12, set by Emil
Zapotek of Czechoslovakia in
1951.
Heatley, a 27-year-old gardener, set, the record in winning
the British Amateur Athletics Association 10-mile championship at
Londop's Hurlingham Park.
"INTRODUCTION TO
PUBLIC SPEAKING"
Sponsored by the Nelson Recreation Commission
Wednesday, April 19th at 7:30 p.m.
CIVIC CENTRE—ROOM  "A"
INSTRUCTOR - Rev. L. R. McKenzie, M.A.,
Professor of Speech and English,
Notre  Dame  College  of  Nelson.
Practical Course Consisting of 10 Lessons
10 LESSONS  $10
(or payable each lesson attended)
Excellent opportunity for young businessmen and
women to acquire Public Speaking ability
Pay less when you buy,
spend less as you drive,
get more when you trade-
it's a
FALCON
Official resale figures show that Falcon averages $150 more at trade-in time than
other compacts in its class. Just one more indication of the extra quality built into
the Falcon...quality that means your car runs better, holds its value longer—in fact,
'til you're ready to trade it in.
Official Mobilgas Economy Run figures show that Falcon delivered more miles per
gallon than any other car entered. In everyday driving, Falcon owners get up to 35
mpg on regular gas. And Falcon goes up to 4000 miles between oil changes,
keeps its shine without ever needing waxing.
Manufacturer's suggested list prices show that Falcon is one of the lowest priced
6-passenger cars in Canada—up to $710 less than some other compacts. And right
now, your Ford-Monarch-Falcon dealer is offering the year's best prices and trade-in
allowances. Why not see him soon?
Every minute of every day someone, somewhere, buys a Falcon!
Falcon-Canada's best selling compact car
/FORD
monARCH
/ FALCON \
NEW 12,000 MILE WARRANTY. The dealer's written warranty on all 1961 Falcons Is 12,000 miles or one full year, whichever comes Iirst
MEL BUERGE MOTORS LTD.
USED CARS
AND TRUCKS
FORD—MONARCH—FALCON—BRITISH
608 Vernon St. Nelson, B.C.
FORD SALES AND SERVICE
Phone 1744
 --"        : ] : ]        '    : : - j—p**^ r—
8—NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, APRIL 17, 1961
King Kong Invading U.K.—"Black
Slum Rammed Onto the Stage"
By CAROL KENNEDY
Canadian  Press  Staff  Writer
LONDON (OP) — Look out,
London—King Kong is coming!
This jazzy, all - African musical, born in the wild shebeens
—native speakeasies — of Johannesburg and based on a
true-life tragedy, will explode
Feb. 22 on the stage of the
Princes Theatre before Princess Margaret and a glittering
charity audience.
What will Londoners make of
it?
"God help the English!" exclaimed an African reporter at
the last rehearsal in Johannesburg. "This isn't opera, or whatever they're expecting — it's
Sophiatown. It's a whole black
slum lifted up off its base and
rammed down on to the stage.
There'll be a riot, man!"
"Riot" was the word for the
show's   opening   night   in   Jo
hannesburg in 1959, but it was a
riot with a difference in a race-
torn land where violence leaps
in the sun like a brush fire.
For the first time in the
Union's history, a mixed audience—though seated in separate
blocks—watched a show forged
by blacks and whites together
out of the songs, dances and
racy vernaoular of native township life.
An African razor-blade salesman wrote the music; a white
woman provided the lyrics. The
cast lived in Jo'burg's teeming
locations; the producer and
choreographer in the city's prosperous white suburbs.
HERO  IS PRIZEFIGHTER
And the audience cheered the
roof off. Even the diehard Afrikaans press used superlatives.
It seemed as though some great
reservoir of repressed affection
between the races had suddnlye
ON THE AIR
CKLN PROGRAMS 1390 ON THE DIAL
PACIFIC STANDARD TIME
MONDAY, APRIL 17, 1961
1:59—Sign On
i: 00—News
1:05—Farm Fare
i: 15-Wake Up Time
i: 30—News
6:35—Wake Up Time
i:45—Chapel in the Sky
': 00—News
':05-Wake Up Time
r: 25—Sports News
'.'30—News
'-.35-Wake Up Time
i: 00—News
: 10—Sports News
: 15-Wake Up Time
1:30—Opening Markets
l:35-Wake-Up Time
1:45-The Archers
1:00—News
1:05—Morning Devotions
:15—Alan's A.M. Spot
l:59-D.O.O.T.S.
1:00—News
>:05-Robin>Hood Kitohen Clatter Contest
■: 10—Carnation Quiz Party
:15—Pacific Express
0:45—Woman's World
: 00—News
.: 05—Musicale
: 15—Jane Gray Show
1:20—Story Parade Time
Birthday Book
:30—Sacred Heart Program
11:45—Swift Money Man
12:00—Don Messer Show
12:15—Sports News
12:25—News
12:31—B.C. Farm Broadcast
12:54—News
1:00—John Drainie Tells a Story
1:15—Noon Markets
1:20—Western Music
1:45—Pacific News
2:00-B.C. School Broadcast
2:30—Trans Canada Matinee
3:31—Songs by Eleanor Collins
3:45—Blain and Kay
4:00—News
4:05-The Pop Hour
5:00—News
5:05—The Highway Patrol
6:00—News
6:10-Sports News
6:15—Rawhide
6:30—Vancouver Theatre
7:00—News
7:30-Top Grade
8:00—Songs of My People
8:30—Summer Fallow
9:00—Tlie Montreal Bach Ohoir
9:30—Little Symphonies
10:00—News
10:10—Snorts and Weather
10:15—Living Memory
10:30—University of the Air
ll:00-Cha_el in the Sky
ll:15-SignO„
CPC PROGRAMS
PACIFIC STANDARD TIME
TUESDAY, APRIL 18,  1961
6:00—Sharp at Six
8:00—News
8:10—Sports News
8:15-Sharpe
9:00-BBC News
9:15—Morning Concert
• 9:30—Morning Concert
9:59-D.O.O.T.S.
10:00—Morning Visit
10: l&V-Pacific Express
10:45—House of Horton
11:00—Kindergarten of the Air
11:15—Off the Record
12:00-Stu Davis
12:15-N.ws
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—Holiday Classroom
2:30—Trans Canada Matinee
3:30—Music from Halifax
4:00—Now and Then
4:30—Tempo
7:00—News
7:30—Christian Frontiers
8:00—Business Barometer
8:30—Concert
9:30—Leicester Square
10:00—News
10:15-In Reply
10,:30-Distinguished Artists
11:00—The Liveliest Art
11:57—News
12:00—Marine Weather
TELEVISION FOR TODAY
PACIFIC STANDARD TIME
KREM-TV - Channel 2
5:30 Rin Tin Tin *
6:00 Yogi Bear Show
6:30 Newsbeat
7:00 Lock Up
7:30 Academy Awards Show
9:30 Adventures in Paradise *
10:30 Peter Gunn *
11:00 Nigh (beat
11:16 Movie
"All Thi-ought The Nite"
KXLY-TV — Channel 4
7:30 Brakeman Bill
8:30 Ding Dong Sohool
9:00 I Love Lucy *
9:30 Video Village *
10:00 Double Exposure *
10:30 Surprise Package *
11:00 Love of Life *
11:30 Search For Tomorrow *
11:45 Guiding Light *
12:00 Divorce Hearing
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: IS Secret Storm *
3:30 Edge of Night *
4:00 Movie at 4
5:30 Abbott and Costello
6:00 N O'Clock News
6:15 Doug Edwards *
6:30 Our Miss Brooks
7:00 Assignment Underwater
7:30 To Tell The Truth *
8:00 Pete and Gladys *
8:30 Bringing Up Buddy *
9:00 Danny Thomas *
9:30 Andy Griffith *
10:00 Hennesey *
10:30 June Allyson *
11:00 11 O'clock News
11:18 Jack Paar *
KHQ-TV - Channel 6
7:00 Two Faces West
7:30 The Americans •
8:30T'ales of Wells Fargo
9:00 Acapulco *
8:30 Concentration * (C)
10:00 Barbara Stanwyck *
10:30 News and Weather
10:45 Late Movie
"Sailor Takes a Wife"
CBC-TV — Nelson, Channel 9; Trail, Channel 11
ROBERTSON - HILLIARD ■ CATTELL REALTY CO. LTD.
56 Wan) St. Nelson Phone 1912 For Information
We Take a Personal Interest in Our Clients
Chez Helene
Nursery School Time
Open House
Reflections
The Verdict Is Yours
News (Toronto)
Friendly Giant
Junior Round-Up
Quick Draw M-cGraw
News and Scan
Wanted — Dead or Alive
6:45 News
6:55 Sports
7:00 7 O'Clock News
7:25 Weather
7:30 Academy Awards
9:30 Don Messer's Jubilee
10:00 Danny Thomas Show
10:30 Music Makers
11:00 News (Toronto)
11:14 Viewpoint
burst its bonds and floodd th
city.
King Kong ran for five months
and became something of a
legend throughout southern Africa, Just as its prizefighter
hero had inspired the slum people with his bullnecked courage
and independence.
On a grander, -more tragic
scale, the story of King Kong—
his real name was Ezekiel Dhla-
mini—is the story of every simple country boy who comes to
the city and is destroyed by it.
Kong was an original, recalls
Pat Williams, the lyric-writer,
"a huge, solitary, bloody-
minded ape of a man who did
what he pleased, fiercely, in a
country where this isn't easy
with a black skin." At one time
his gaudy career seemed headed
for .glory with the prospect of
fighting in England.
But the contract was cancelled. Kong sank into brooding
frustration. One night, in a fit
of recklessness, he let himself
be knocked out by a smaller
man, and' overnight his heroic
reputation crumbled.
VARIED SOURCES
Believing his girl friend unfaithful, he stabbed her to death
—then called the police and
begged to be executed. But the
court sentenced him to 12 years'
imprisonment. This final flouting of his destiny snapped his
brain. Three days later he
drowned himself in the prison
dam.
His story has been hammered
out by composer Todd Matshi-
kiza in drumming rhythms and
jangly tunes echoing the heartbeats of township life. Every
musical influence the African
has absorbed is here, from Victorian bvmns to American jazz
of the '20s. There is a lot of
"kwela" music, too, which you
can hear on any Johannesburg
street corner, piped out by a
ragged piccaninny on a penny
whistle, and the jumping score
is streaked with blues.
Stanley (Spike) Glasser, the
white musical director who orchestrated the score, said that
white South Africans were as
proud of the show as the Africans, and even supporters of
Nationalist Prime Minister Dr.
Verwoerd were publicly wishing
it success in London.
Is there a political angle to
King Kong? Producer Leon
Gluckman told reporters there
is "some criticism," but the
Nationalists have not attempted
to censor it.
The 64 African members of
the company, at a press reception after their arrival here,
seemed reluctant to comment
on the wider implications of
their show. They just wanted to
please English audiences.
BARRIERS  DOWN
In warm, throbbing, dark-
brown voices, they murmured
how friendly Londoners seemed,
and spoke of 'their "fine hotel."
It is a modest establishment,
tucked away amid peeling Edwardian terraces, but for the
first time they are outside the
thing they say "we all grow up
with."
Dominating the company is
Nathan Mdlele, who plays the
lead. Less imposing physically
than the original—"Kong always
walked as if he meant to dig
holes in the pavement" recalls
Matshikiza—but with sombre,
brooding eyes and a darker skin
than the others, Mdlele was a
personal friend of the prizefighter.
He is the only professional
actor. Peugy Phango, who play
opposite him, used to be a
nurse, and the others worked as
clerks, teachers, domestic servants, messengers and even prostitutes.
A lot hangs on the success of
this show. Whatever its fate,
when Africa invades Britain in
all its color, violence, laughter
and tragedy, things, as an African has boasted, "will. never
be the same again."
%itainrs Automatic Phones
Answer Almost All Questions
By BORIS MISKEW
Canadian   Press   Staff  Writer
LONDON (CP)-The popularity of Britain's automatic telephone information service is beginning to create a few headaches.
Britons can dial various numbers to get the correct time,
weather forecast, road report,
tourist information and test
match cricket results. '
Now the public is applying
pressure on the government-
owned telephone system to pro-
ride soccer scores, menus and
recipes, the top popular songs
and stock market quotations.
A government spokesman said
Ihe information now available
has been a big success as a
public service and has more
than paid for itself because of
the increased use of the telephone.
There are 8,250,000 telephones
in Britain where the rates are
based on a flat rental plus additional charges for each outgoing
call.
The spokesman said the service will likely be expanded later
but, he added, the line will have
to be drawn somewhere.
He said it would be difficult
to decide which one of the hit
parade tunes is the most popular at any particular time and
the handling of stock quotations
and soccer scores — there are
about 120 teams—-would be unwieldy.
The government is not prepared to go as far as Hull, one
of Britain's two municipally-
owned telephone services. R
provides its own information
service, including a daily recipe
record, and last December a
bed-time story service was Introduced, with about 200 persons
using it nightly.
DAILY   CROSSWORD
ACROSS
.Man's niok-
name (poss.)
Anti-aircraft fire
Dish
Eagle's nest
Girl's name
Showers
Peruvian *
mountains
. Seize
, Palm Hly
. Fodder vat
. Music note
On the
ocean
. Liberate
. Resistance
forces
, Seed vessels
The Orient
Defeat, as a
hoxer
Fuse partly
Shilling
(abbr.)
Come in
Fishnet
2. Praise
3. Accents
i. North
Dakota city
5. Shakespearian king
6. Melody
7. Relatives
8. Township
map
9. Less difficult
ll.Descried
18. Kind
of beer
20. Affix
M. Cherished
22. Road
groove
28. Maintenance
24. Midday
25. Lifts
29. Norse
god of
crops
30. Stuck-
up
persons
31. Pronoun
33. Weary
__  __B  ___
_„_  __(!_
m_____ _[___
_____ _____
____ H__
___ a__ __
_____ _____
__■___ _____
Saturday _ Answer
34. Girl's nam)
36. God of war
(Babyl.)
(Programs subject to change by stations without notice.)
10.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
19.
20.
21.
23.
26.
27.
28.
20.
30,
32.
35.
37. Roman
magistrate
38. Mistake
39. Discuss
(var.)
40. Yugoslavs
41. Part of a
century
42. German
.article
DOWN
1.Hawaii tree ___..    —
A-\r
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE — Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR
ls LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A ls used
for the three L's, X tor the two O's, etc. Single letters, apos-
trophies, the length and formation of the words are all hints,
Each day the code letters are different
A Cryptogram ((notation
SKA      KWMSBUR      EY      MXWAZXA
WM       MXWAZXA      WSMANY — FEASKA.
Saturday's Cryptoquote: THE ACT IS NOT CRIMINAL UNLESS THE INTENT IS CRIMINAL—ANONYMOUS.
(© 1961, Kins Features Syndicate, Inc.)
\%
1
1
3
^
^
tr
V
A
7
^A
a
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i
io
tl
a
l
13
iA
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is
i-
'^
17
IS
%
VA
l*
%
VA
3©
%
31
2X
n
14
23"
li.
^
17
%
%
28
%
%
v>
'^
3D
31
32.
33
34
i
3-
3*
37
t^'
36
39
^
40
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41
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^
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4_
^A
0mal TAp. With.
WoMotL TTlwdhL
Printed Pattern
9030 SIZES    .2,3yi_
SUNBONNET SET
Easiest sewing! Each garment
One Pattern Part! Sides of sun-
suit are open to let rompers peep
out prettily. Trim with ruffles or
binding. Bonnet included.
Printed Pattern 9030: Toddlers'
Sizes 1, 2, 3 years. Size 2 sunset
takes IVi yards 35-inch: hat takes
_ yard.
Send FORTY CENTS (40c) in
coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern. Please print
plainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS,
STYLE NUMBER.
Send your orfler 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 in1 our brand-
new Color Catalog. Send 35c now!
JACKET OF ONE PIECE
It takes but 3 ounces of baby
yarn and one ounce for contrast
to make this baby set. Start now
It's jiffy crochet — cap an.-!
jacket — each one piece, done in
alternate rows of double and single crochet. Pattern 557: directions
cap, jacket, booties..
Send THIRTY-FIVE CENTS
in coins (stamps cannot be ac
cepted) for this pattern to Laura
Wheeler, NDN., 60 Front St., W
Toronto. Print plainly PATTERN
NUMBER, your NAME and AD
DRESS.
JUST OFF THE PRESS! Send
now for our exciting, new 1961
Needlecraft Catalog. Over 12.1
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!
 "*■■
_
..;■■■
.
^ ; i - '    p-     : g ; r,1=>yia_;}
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
BOATS and  ENGINES
BIRTHS
MASON — To Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Mason, 203 Victoria Street,
at Kootenay Lake Qeneral Hospital, April 15, a son.
POPOFF - To Mr. and Mrs.
Sam Popoff, R.R. 2, at Kootenay
Lake General Hospital, April 16,
a son.
htLP   VVAN16D
THE  CORPORATION   OF  THE
CITY OF TRAIL
NOTICE
Applications will be received
by the undersigned up to 4:00
p.m. April 24, 1961, for the position of Building Inspector and
Electrical Supervisor for the
City of Trail.
Applicants to stage age. marital status, and qualifications.
Salary commensurate with
ability.
L. G.  Anderson,
City Comptroller
G_N_Ka_ INSURANCli SAL__
man. Duties: To service existing business and solicit new accounts. Qualifications: Age 22
to 40,  high  school  education,
• neat appearing, sales ability.
Complete training will be provided successful applicant. Remuneration $230 per month plus
commission. Apply in confidence to: McHardy Agencies,
554 Ward St., Nelson B.C. Plione
135, Mr. Monty of Mr. Ryalls.
NELSON RECREATION commission. Lifeguards and Swimming Instructors— Applications
will be received up to April 30th
for summer employment in
these positions. Apply to Recreation Director, Civic Centre, 719
Vernon St., Nelson, B.C,
HELP WANTED
1 Continued)
DOOR   MAN,   2 USHERETTES.
Apply Civic Theatre evenings.
HELP WANTED—FEMALE
A WORD TO HOUSEWIVES. IF
you need money to buy a house,
car, furniture — Avon can help
you. Earnings $2 to $5 an "hour.
Write to Mrs. E. C. Hearn, Box
14, R.R. 4, Kelowna, B.C.	
PA YBACK BILLS - AVON COS-
metics has openings for energetic ladies. Flexible hours. Excellent income. Write to — Mrs.
E. C. Hearn, Box 14, R. R. 4,
Kelowna, B.C. 	
LADY WITH SOME SALES Experience as canvasser or fioli-
citor. Top earnings if qualified.
Apply Box 533'Nelson.	
SITUATIONS WANTED
(Continued)
AUTOMOTIVE,   BICYCLES
MOTORCYCLES
GARDENS PLOWED, ANY SIZE.
Phone 171.
MACHINERY
-*--*-^*-^-——»*
TORO
Mowers Are
Here Today
MAC'S   WELDING. AND
EQUIPMENT CO. LTD.
514 Railway St. Nelson
PHONE 1402
MOTORCYCLES
AUTOMOTIVE,   BICYCLES
(Continued)
I   SITUATIONS WANTED
tyANTED FOR NELSON AND
district, part time Insurance
and Credit reporter on fee basis. Excellent opportunity for
right person lo supplement present income or for active pensioner. Renly Box 2103, Vancouver. B.C. 	
CARRIER BOYS FOTTnELSON
Daily News routes during Summer months to relieve regular
carriers. In Cranbrook. apply
Mrs. Stanley Willisson, 411-13th
Ave.: in Nelson, apply Circulation Dept.
PHONE   US
NOW
FOR
CON
crete  work,
sidewalks,
patio
floors,  drivewavs.
Hank
Zyls-
tra,   plione
839->
,    after   5
1752-L-3.
IF YOU WANT A NEW PUN-
ter around the house, bricks or
Roman tiles, phone Hank Zyls-
tra 839-Y or 1752-L-3 alter_5.
RUGS, CHESTERFIELDS, UP-
liolslery exoerlly cleaned in
your home by machine. Plione
1G25-R-3.	
CHESTERFIELD AND RUG
cleaning.  Dutch Cleaning Ser
vice. Ph. 2190.     .	
BEST    IN    BODY
Auto Body   1
FOR   THE
works see Ted's
mile Granite Road, phone
ACETYLENE WELDING
Regulators and Torches,
Access eric?
Trade In Your Old Outfit.
Stevenson Machinery Ltd.
Phone Nelson 97
FOR SA__73T." SERIESD-7 CAT.
Hydraulic, oil clutch, all in excellent condition. Operated only
8 months since completely overhauled in Finning's shop. All
equipped tor logging. Price $15,-
500. Phone EL 6-4*1 or 6-2251
or write Stanley Hoffman, Box
705, Creston, B.C,
BUSINESS   &   PROFESSIONAL
DIRECTORY
A Uandy alphabetical guide to goods and services
available in Nelson.
Appliances
NELSON REFRIGERATION
Commercial Refrigeration Serv.
205 High St. Phone 1917
APPLIANCES
Repaired and Serviced
D. McCUAIG Phone 695
Engineers
and Surveyors
BOYD C.   AFFLECK,  MEIC
B.C. Land Surveyor, PEng (Civ.)
218 Gore St    Nelson   Phone 1238
.OR SALE: CUMMINS TRUCK
engine 150 H.P. Cummins Power unit 110 H.P. Mack Truck
Bogie. D-8 Cat with Dozer and
pulley Drive. Trade and terms.
WANTED: D-4 or D-6 Cat and
. crane boom. Bayes, 1441
Manitoba St. Penticton, B.C.
SELL OR TRADE FOR ANY"-
thing, two small gas Crawler
tractors with dozers. One nearly
new. R. Dauphinais, Phone
48-X, Salmo.
RENTALS
Assayers and Mine
Representatives
H. 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 Larki
213 Baker St. Phone 1234
CITY   AUTO   SERVICE   LTD.
Dodge - DeSoto Sales _ Service
Granite Rd. Phone 447
RENAULT  SALES _  SERVICE
at Frank's Auto
Phone 2195 295_Baker jit.
nortb Shore service
(Standard Triumph)
Across Lake Phone 1841
PARKVIEW MOTORS LTD.
(Rambler - Volkswagen)
323 Nelson Ave. Phone 1454
STAR   AUToIeRvIcE   LTD."
Borgward Sales and Service
Ymri Rd. Phone 1648
Beauty Shops
THELMA'S BEAUTY SHOPPE
877 Baker St. Phone 244
Building Supplies
C. W. BAERG, B.C.L.S.
373 Baker St. Nelson
Phone 1118 Res. 2315
ALEX CHEVELDAVE
B C. Land Surveyor-Phone 5342
448 Columbia Av., Castlegar, B.C.
FOR RENT: 3 ROOM HOUSE,
hot and cold water, electric
range, propane heated. Bathroom and small garden at the
rear 0! house. Immediate possession. Apply Maple Leaf
Store, Crescent Valley, B.C.
CABIN FoOENTTTTNiT-OR
an elderly person. Good horn?,
fridge, lights, water, bed,
dishes, free fruit, garden. Block
north of Willow Point hosoital.
All ior $30 monthly. Ph. 3S9-L-1.
NEW CHEVROLET B1SCAYNE
NEW CHEVROLET BEL-AIRS
NEW 1MPALA HARDTOP
NEW '..TON CHEVS
NEW CORVAIR
NEW '61 ENVOY
NO
DOWN   PAYMENT
WITH  APPROVED
CREDIT
3 I960 Chev. i2 Tons     ...   $2000
3 I960 Chev Sedans 2595
5 1960 Envoy Sedans . 21!!j
1 1960 Corvair . 2400
2 1960 Chev Stn. Wgns.       2995
2 1959 Chev 1. Tons 1800
3 1959 Chev Bel-Air Auto. 2695
1 1959 Fiat Sin. Wgn. . 900
1 1959 Morris Convert. .. 1275
1 1958 Chev 'i-Ton    1300
1 1958 Chev Sedan . 1875
2 1958 Olds. Sedans 2695
1 1958 Pontiac Coach 1875
1 1957 G.M.C. '-i-Ton 1G00 .
2 1957 Chev Sedans 1795 '
1 1957 Chev. Stn. Wgn. 1395 1
1 1936 Fargo 'i-Ton • 995
1 1955 Pontiac Sedan 1335
1 1956 Meteor Coach SOU |
1 1956 Plymouth Coach ,    995
1 1956 Meteor Sedan 1195
1 1956 Chev Vi-Ton V8 1200
1 1955 Chev 'i-Ton 1095
1 1955 Ford Fairlane . 895 '
1 1955 Chev Sedan 1373
1 1955 Chev 1375
1 1955 Vauxhall Sedan 1095 1
1 1955 Austin Sedan 895 '
1 1954 Hillman Sedan 430
1 1954 Chev Coach .. 69,.
1 1954 Pontiac H.T. . ... 795 I
1 1954 Olds. 2-Door        475
1 1953 Pontiac Sedan     225 |
1 1953 Chev Bel-Aire .   495
1 1953 Cadillac 375
j 1 1953 Austin Sedan .   295
1 1953 Chev Sedan 375
1 1953 Pontiac Sedan 475
1 19 - Chev Convertible 2:0
1 1953 Ford Sedan 493
MUST SELL '57 FORD TUDOR
custom. R and H. Black-yellow.
A-l. Box 21, Crescent Valley.
1955 3-TON MERCURY DUMP
truck with bunks. Emma lion-
kin, Salmo.
NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, APRIL 17, 1961—9
TREMENDOUS BOAT OFFER
Sturi-Craft 14' runabouts, 72"
beam, completely assembled,
ready for paint. Mahogany
deck; only $247.50. MP runabouts as above, 80" beam,
$335. See them at M. E. Obal,
Sash and Door Co. Ltd., ph.
2065.
THERMOCRAFT BOATS, HO__
claw boat trailers and Mercury
outboard, mo'tors also excellent
used motors. Jeffery Radio and
Appliances.
Kenya's White Residents
Say Situation Alarming
FOR SALE 17' CABIN CRUISER
complete with 25 h.p. Evinrude
and boat house. Phone 1219-L.
TRAILERS
RA LYN MOBILE HOME SALES.
Rollohome. Safeway, Shasta.
New and used, terms and
trades. Trail • Cranbrook • Nakusp.
1954 - 25' BY 8' ANDERSON
Coach. Well kept. North Shore
Trailer Court after 5.
ROOM  AND  BOARD
FOR   YOUNG   GENTLEMAN.
Kitchen privileges. Ph. 1751-K.
FOR SALE, 1953 METEOR
sedan. Contact Phil. Ph. 1636
or 1179-X.
'.V'E   PAY   CASH   FOR   GOOD
used cars. McElroy Motors.
FOR SALE
 MISCELLANEOUS
SIDES GRAIN FED B___ _43c
lb,; sides heavy beet — 33c Ib; ,
sides of pork — 32c lb.; Ironts'
heavy beel - 30c lb.; hinds
heavy beel — 43c lb.; hinds
light best - 49c lb.; fronts
light beef - 38c Ib. The.-.e pr.ee,
include cutting, wrapping and
freezing. Delivered to Nelson by
Nelson-Ci'csion Transfer. Whit-
ford's Heat Plant. P n 0 11 e
EL 6-2551, Creslon.	
U_AN UKA1N Fib PORK" FOR
sale. Sice as a lb. cut, wrapped
quick frozen 32s a lb, delivery'
, Nelson-Creston Tram.iar. New-
den Farm, Creston. Phono
EL 6.135.	
xiNA.M iii .tal "Iron "work
Free er.limiucs. '.'our choice ol
1500 fcrir.s Fast service Trail
Sales and Machine Ltd. Pli
1831. _
SEE OUR SELECTION"-. USED
radios, washers an:l relr, '.era
tors. Jeffery Radio and Appliances.
.'-MTcTpTpITvIn X 100 FT
rolls $5.00. Also in stock all
sizes and fittings to 2 in. Columbia Trading Co., 901 From St.
J.IE-HORS .' PLO. .\_D~_AR-
ness. Cheap, John Pozn.kolT,
Winlaw.
Nf-toiitt
■Sathi -fattia
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 , $ 1231
Three months   , 3.50
Six months 6.50,
One year 12.00
By Mall to United Kingdom or
the United States: 1
One month $ 1.75
Three months 5.00
Six months •       9 00!
One year 18.00
rvhere extra postage is required.'
above rates plus postage,
.'or delivery by carrier in Cran
brook,    phone    Mrs     Stanley
Willisson. I
In Kimberley, A  W   Brown;     !
In Trail Mrs Syd S;iooner;
In Rossland. Mrs  Ross Snundry
CAN  BEAT  RUSS
W.\?H'.\'3T0N    'AP'  - The
United States may still beat Rus-
'-. ;■■ 1'    ,,'   :.   ',' it's willing lo
ay fer it. Dr. Robert Seamans,
::c'._3   di._1.7r  cf   the   Nail"!   Aerrnau'ics   ac'   Spa:-?
.'minis' ration said  Friday the
1 S. iv'"''! be "b!e to leb a mm
here in 1917 by spending bi'-
ans  of dol'rrs  on  a  "crash"
•vogra'_. At present, Ihe tenia-
'e tar—t <' .» f."r a U.S. moon
■ling is 1959 or 1970.
Th" first public library in Up-
■-■ C"nada was founded in 1390
. Niagara •arc! ore-rated fer 20
-"rj.
By ROBERT N. LINDSAY
NAIROBI, Kenya (AP)-
From the point of view of its
white people, the situation is beginning to look alarming in this
east African colony of Britain
as it moves toward independence.
There is a feeling here similar to that which prevailed in
The Congo before Belgium gave
that country its freedom.
Kenya is a country of 6,500.-
000. The 65,000 whites are
mostly of British stock. They
and 165,000 Asians have shaped
the backbone of Kenya's economy. ,
Today tlie whites and Asians
are scared about tbe future.
They are getting their capital
out at the rate of $3,000,000 a
month. Not many have so far
quit the country, but they are
preparing to go if African violence on a large scale breaks
loose ,as it did in Tlie Congo
scon alter independence.
Whit, farmers fear violence
and that an independent government may expropriate their
farms. Many are trying to get
rid of properties on a declining
market. Thirty-seven farms recently were offered for sale in
a $3,000,000, package deal to the
Kenya settlement board, which
is buying whites' land for African agricultural development
schemes.
TELL OF THREATS
Four young married women
'rem the main white farming
area told the governor. Sir
Patrick Repnisen. of "increasing threats of African vio-
_nce." Thev told of anonymous
letters and telephone callers,
■■yarning whites of attacks on
heir lives and property. They
_id whl'as' cars and homes
had been stoned.
Frcm a handful in 1959 a
v ;:'"bi pistol shouting club
"vhitel now has a rnembership
' 60, Same cf the women mem-
':.rs joined specifically to learn
■:_ .-defence.
Seme Britons and Asians are
ending their wives and families hen- . It is only a trickle so
'-r. B"t !"'shands seem afraid
_ leave their wives alone at
•,:-bt.
African leaders such as
''-—er T-'n  Mbnva, 39,  whose
Kenya African Natibnal Union
topped the polls in legislative
elections in February, have
warned against violence. Mboya
is the one Kenya politician who
has made considerable impact
overseas and in other parts of
the African continent.
FROM MAU MAUS
He is from the Luo tribe on
Hie shores of Lake Victoria,
second largest after the powerful and enterprising Kikuyus,
who sparked the eight - year
Mau Mau revolt under Jomo
Kenyatta's leadership.
Kenyatta, now 68, probably Is
the greatest spell-binder Kenya
has produced. He is still held
under restriction after serving a
seven - year jail sentence for
managing Mau Mau, African
leaders, headed by Mboya, have
long campaigned for his unconditional release.-
The British government has
not named bhe date for either
self - government or  final  in
dependence, though repeatedly
pressed to do so by the Kenya
African leaders. It sees a Security risk in letting- Kenyatta
loose again in national politics.
The governor said of Kenyatta!
"I care for Kenya too much to
contemplate his stepping from
restriction to a position of au*
thority."
There the governor is in violent collision with African leaders. They have all refused td
take office in a new government
until Kenyatta is released.
Michael Blundell, at one tims
acknowledged leader of Kenya's
Europeans (whites', led th6
fight against Mau Man in tht
worst days of the rebellion. He
has said he would like to see
Kenyatta released before independence "so that we may see
what sort of » man he Is while
we still have adequate means of
dealing with him if he is an evU
force."
THIRD ORANGUTAN BORN IN CAPTIVITY—A suspicious
mother named Sadie, one of the Detroit Zoo's prized orangutans, nolds her day-old daughter closely as senior keeper ',
Tom-Brun admires the baby, named Ora. The baby la the
first orangutan born at the Detroit Zoo, and the third In
captivity—one In Philadelphia and the other ln San Diego.
RAY G. JOHNSON
B.C. Land Surveyor and Engineer
1015 Eighth St.   Nelson   Ph. 2309
Garages
ALLEN MOTOR SERVICE
Cor. 7lh at Davies     Phone 1798
WINTER  RAPES
HOUSEKEEPING AND SLEEP-
ing   rooms,   weekly,   monthly
rates.   Dishes,   linen  supplied.
parking. Allen Hotel, 171 Baker.
1 1932 Ford                 225
11 1952 Chev Sedan         3:3
1 1952 Pontiac Sedan 199
1 1952 Vanguard Sedan 173
1 1952 Studebaker   .-Ton 375
1 1952 Dodge Sedan 150
1 1951 Studebaker '.-Ton 150
1 1951 Dodge Sedan 175
1 1951 Chev H.T. 475
SEVERAL   THOUSAND   lluoD
used bricks (or sale. Apn.v old
City Hall or Phone 175-R-i.
LARGE OlL HEATER AND 100
gal. lank. piocs and cupper tub-
ir>3. Plione 217. A'.
f SET  ENC.CLOPEDUTBRIT-
annica  ill  excellent  condition.
Ap;ily Bax 8313. Daily New.
PORK' 7b rT'T.Z~HALF~()R
whole.  23 ceils a  pound.  Ph.
171.
SMALL 1 BEDROOM HOUSE,
unfurnished. North Shore. 2 _
miles from bridge. Rent $40 per
month. Phone 156 days, 575-Y
HKALnl .-JDl) CENTRE Oi-'.-.N
dav . r ' pvppn7s   911 Or.vics
USED T.._^Tn_l__ANERS
.___?__UD- ph°ne 1108-
USED-!_i___X~ ""AUTOMATIC
Washer. Phone 1760-Y.
Investments and
Savings
INVESTORS SYNDICATE
Growth and Mutual
Doug Kilburn Ph. 2045-Y.
Landscaping
LARRY'S BLACK LOAM
TOPSOIL - Phone 171
Painting
and Decorating
F. H. DOYLE
Painting and Decorating
Phone 2311 - Free Estimates
Saws Sharpened
BEE BUILDING SUPPLY  LTD.
301 Baker St. __ Phone 1704
BURNs"TuT_"b_R CO. LTD.
602'Baker St. Phone 1
Scissors, pinking shears, etc
Hipperson's Hdwre.     Phone 497
WARM S E L F-CONTAINED
apartment. Ideal for couple
with baby. Good clothes drying
facilities. Ph. 272.
1 1950 Dodge 1-Ton
1 1950 Ford Tractor and
Snow Blade
1 1949 Cadillac Sedan
1 1949 Ford Sedan
1 1948 Plymouth Sedan
1 1947 Chev Coupe
1 1946 Olds. Sedan 	
1 1940 Ford '2-Ton 	
1 17-Ft. Boat
3-ROOM MODERN APT SELF-
contained, unfurnished central.
Gas range, heat and hot water
Adults. Ph. 2106-L.
MAY~7_t - AlTRA___VETKl_.
Furn. Apt. heat and water supplied. _ block oil Baker.
414 Fall St. Phone 2416.
250
595
600
100  1
49.95  i
275  I
65
99.50
.   200
PRO. _KTY, HOUSES,
FARMS, ETC., FOR SALE
48~AC. FARMTT«sTlORl"r.5
ac. cleared. Has river frontage.
Hall mile Irom Mill. NEW
FOUR ROOMED BUNGALOW.
Full cement basement. 2 ohi^r
houses, barn, chicken house.
$7700.00. Good terms. T. D Rosling _ Son Ltd., 717 J. B. Brown
10B5-X.
CLEAN, COMFORTABLE
sleeping rooms, weekly or
monthly rates. Queen's Hotel
621 Baker	
UNFURNISHED, ONE BED-
room apart. Apply Bevanne'
Apart. Ph. 1903-L.
Spbrting Goods
3 ROOM SELF-CONTAINED UN-
furnished apartment. Appiy 423
Silica,	
FU R N I S H E D SUITE FOR
couple—May 1st to Sept. 1st.
Phone 394-R evenings.	
SlODERN FURNISHED 1 BED-
room apt. Available May 1st.
Phone 2075. ____^^__	
3 RM. APT7 BATHROOM -
Adults only. 1421 Front St. opposite new Safeway. Ph. 541-Y.
NO
DOWN   PAYMENT
WITH  APPROVED
CREDIT
24-Hour Wrecker Service, Ph. 35
CHEVROLET - CADILLAC
OLDSMOBILE - CORVAIR
ENVOY
REUBEN   BUERGE
MOTORS  LTD.
323 Vernon St.        Nelson, B.C.
Fred Whlteley's Sport Shop
8 Baker Street Phone 160
SLEEPING OR HSKP. ROOM
very reasonable. Near bus depot. 705 Victoria Street alley.
COLUMBIA TRADING CO
901 Front St. Phone 1511
Commercial Signs
Air-1  Vacuum Cleaners
For all your sign needs
HAMER SIGNS - Phone 1112
Divers' Air Station
^cuba"ahT1:a"nk"s FILLED
I No Waiting
I        COLUMBIA TRADING
j 901 Front St.
Saran braided hoses.fit all
vacuums — $8.95 exchange
Service and repairs to all makes
BEN SUTHERLAND
Phone 258
NEWSPAPER
ADVERTISING
PAYS  OVER
AND OVER
COSY. FURN. 2 ROOM SOTfE.
All found. Apply Stirling Hotel.
FURN. 2-RM. SUITE. APPLY
140 Baker St. or phone 491-X,
HOUSEKEEPING ROOM FOR
lady. Phone 1564-X. |
FOR RENT - HOUSEKEEPING
room $20 mo. Ph. 405-L. I
1957' G.M.C. 1 TON, 4 WHEEL
drive, new engine, new front
drive unit, new brakes. Very
good condition. 1950 G.M.C. '_-
ton panel 4 wheel drive. Very
good condition. Can be seen at
Kay Motors Ltd., 2880 Highway
Dr., Trail, B.C. Phone 1329.     _
C O T T O NWOOL WRECKAGE
Service - Repairs done, English and Canadian used car
parts. '51 A-40, '58 Studebaker,
'52 Chev. '49 Pontiac, '50 Ford
motors. Phone 2100. Box 382, 24
Ymir Road, Nelson.
WILL TRADE PLEASANT C.T.
non-basement home in White
Rock. Wonderful view. Close to
all conveniences, tor home in
Nelson. Suit retired people or
wlil sell. Price $8500. Further
particulars Box 8614, Daily
News.
FOR SALE - IMPROVED LOT
68' x 175'. One 2-bedroom house,
full basement, gas heat. One 3-
bedroom house, part basement,
bearing fruit trees and hedge.
Phone 3836 or call 188—5th Ave.,
Kinnaird.
63.ACRE FARM, LOTS OF P1P-
ed water, good 3 bedroom home
with plumbing, pasture. 15 acres under cultivation, timber
and poles. Valley Service. Appledale.
3 BDRM. FULLY MODERN
home. 5 acres level land. Irrigation at Appledale. Price $3600,
$2000 cash. bal. terms. W. Corn.
Winlaw, B.C.
1957 PLYMOUTH SPORTS SUB
burban station wagon. V8 automatic, power brakes, tinted
glass, windshield washers, winterized K. Vierke. Box 1100
Castlegar
FOR SALE - LEVEL BUILD-
ing lots bordering city limits
Phone    2046-L.    Name    your
terms.	
NEED EXPENSIVE REAL
I estate listings. Wm. Kalyniuk
!   Agencies. Phone 1777.
FURN. APT. FOR RENT. REAS-
onable. Phone 1633-X.	
3 BEDROOM DUPLEX. "HEAT-
ed. Close in. Phone 2337.
SUITE FOR RENT. SUITABLE
for counle. Phone 2199-L.
PETS, CANARIES,   BEES
K-9   BOARDING    KENNELS  -
Trail-Fruitvale High.  Ph. 3613.
'49 CHEV. 4-DOOR SEDAN,
very good cond., radio, spot
light. $250. '50 Chev. 2 door good
cond. $215. Cash. Apply Boi:
265, Salmo.  ^^
1955 FORD FAIRLANE CLUB
sedan. Good car needs some
work. Must sell. Best offer over
$325. Phone 1548.	
19*0 VAUXHALL VICTOR. ROOF
rack, chain; and rarlio Reasonable lor cash. Ph. 23^,
FAIRVIEW, 4-BDRM.. OIL HEAT
double plumbing. Phone 103'6-X.
LOT 60 X 120 ON.8TH STREET.
Terms, Water. Phone 1272-L.
LIVESTOCK, POULTRY
AND FARM SUPPLIES
YOUNG COW FOR SALE. JUST
fresh. Mike Koorb. off. Glade.
SHETLAND PONIES, WELL
broken. Phone 2323.
"Tewing  machines
RENT A'siNGElf SEWING MA-
chine 'delivered' and re'urned
$5.00 per month, $2 00 per week.
Singer Sewing Center, Phone 41.
f\ 9
J_J
MAIL
J
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g calling Rentinj
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■  I . —■ '
•        •
KK-NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, APRIL 17,1961
British Rugby
LONDON (Heuters) — Results
of Kugby Union matches played
JO the United Kingdom Saturday:
Harlequins 11 Waterloo 6
London Welsh 32 Old Cranleigh-
ans 6
Old Merchant Taylors 18 Saracens 11
Wasps 8 Broughton Park 14
Aberavon 17 Rosslyn Park 3
Abertillery 14 Pontypridd 0
Bath sll Mosleye 3
Bedford 14 Coventry 8
Birkenhead Park 0 Bristol 12
Bridgwater and Albion 16 Old
Paulines 12
Camborne 0 Plymouth Albion
11
Cheltenham 12 Esher 9
Glamorgan  Wanderers 8   Cross
Keys 5
Gloucester 3 Cardiff 14
Leicester 11 Liverpool 9
Lydney 11 Oxford 0
Neath 9 Penarth 0
New Brighton 8 Halifax 9
Newport 18 Bridgend 3
Northampton 8 Rugby 3
Nuneaton 6 Old Alleynians 6
Redruth 14 Exeter 3
St. Helen's 19 Manchester 0
St. Ives 9 Aldershot Services 27
Taunton 14 Metropolitan Police
6
Torquay Athletic 6 Maesteg 9
Weston-Super-Mare 11 Llanelly
14
U.S. Releases
Statement From
Cuban Air Pilot
MIAMI, Fla. (AP) — Edward
Ahrens, district director of the
U.S. immigration service Saturday released this statement from
the Cuban air force, pilot who
landed at Miami:
"I am one of the IB B-26
pilots who remained in the Castro air force after the defection
of Diaz Lanz and the purges
that Mowed.
"Three of my fellow pilots
and I have planned for months
how we could escape from Castro's Cuba.
"Day before yesterday I
heard that one of the three,
Lieut. Alvara Galo . . . had
been seen talking to an agent
of Bamiro Valdes, the G-2 chief.
"I alerted the other two and
we decided that probably Alvara Galo, who had always
acted like somewhat of a coward, had betrayed us. We de-
oided to take action at once.
"Yesterday morning I was assigned the routine patrol from
my base, San Antonio de Los
Banos, over a section of Pinar
del Rio and around the Isle of
Pines.
"I told my friends at Camp
Iibertad and they agreed that
we must act. One of them was
to fly to Santiago. The other
made the excuse that he wished
to check out his altimeter. They
were to take off from Camp
Libertad at 0600. I was airborne at 0605 (6:05 a.m.) -
"Because of Alvara C-alo's
treachery, we had agreed to
give him a lesson, so I flew
back over San Antonio where
his plane is stationed and made
two strafing runs at his plane
and three others parked nearby.
"On the way out I was hit
by some small arms fire and
took evasive action. My comrades had broken off earlier to
hit air fields which we agreed
they would strike. Then, because I was low on gas, I had
to go on into Miami, because I
could not reach our agreed destination.
"It may be that they went on
to strafe another field before
leaving, such as Playa Bara-
coa, where Fidel keeps his helicopter."
AIR   TRANSPORT   COMMAND
PLANE  FACTS
<te& t_H& ffiW-BBBII /
/
THE DHC-3 OTTER-ShVVLLEST AIRCRAFT IN NR TRANSPORT COWAN)
CM4 TBKE OFF FRO!. A RUNWAY NO VOM&ER THAN THE VIINfr,SPAN
OF-THE CC106 TRANSPORT- LARGEST IN SERVICE WITH A.T.C.
Sr16T!TLY AFTER ENTERING SERVICE WITH
V«ECARGO COMW^f.
OF THE CC-106
TRANSPORT IS SO
LONG AND WIDE
THE R.C.A.R, A <_®g(ft(_>Gt_)OT&t_ -TRANSPORT   IT CAN ACCOMODATE
ESTA6U5HED A SPEED RECORD WHEN IT FLEW jijSJy ntr
from wo-weta to eraMR N $ % hours: *jjj*JSfy
Mother Says
Sentence
Rewarding
Workers From 78 Countries
Owe Allegiance To U.N.
British Columbia Oilers
Good Sites For Olympics
_UOCA, Italy PReuters)-
Americao. jazz trumpeter Ohet
Baker was found guilty here today on two drug charges and
sentenced to 18 months imipris-
onemtn and a fine of 280,000 lire
(about $1,500). Baker, 31, already has spent nine months in
prison awaiting trial and this
period will count as part of the
sentence.
DEATHS
By THE  CANADIAN PRESS
Siena, 'Italy —  Msgr.   Marco
Toccabelli, 72, Roman Catholic I
archbishop of Siena.
Ottawa-__iard F. Hitdiman,
87, retired from the editorial
staff of Ihe Ottawa Citizen,
after a lengthy illness.
Brussels—Prince Reginald De
Cray, 82, once sentenced to
death for his part in underground work in Belgium during
the First World War.
While neighboring countries
were minting coins of gold and
silver the Greek city of Sparta
turned out money made of
bulky iron.
News of the Day
RATES: 30o line, 40c line black face type; larger type rates
on request Minimum two lines.
Open till noon every Monday.
Mac's Flower Shop—Plione 910
ODDFELLOWS ATTENTION
ELECTROLUX SERVICE      '   Joint meeting Slocan City and
512 Richards St., Ph. 1108, Nelson Kootenay Lodges on Wednesday,
19th, at 7:30 p.m. for official visit
Open every Monday till noon.
EBEJILE'S
Eagles Meet Tonight, 8 p.m.
Nomination of Officers.
Open Every Monday Until Noon.
Ph. 962. Coventry's Flower Shop.
Smart New Table Lamps.
Priced from $6.96.
STERLING FURNISHERS
Elvira's Beauty Salon will be
closed Friday until Tuesday inclusive. Reopens for business
Wednesday, April 19.
HAIGH TRU-ART
BEAUTY SALON
"We have that expert touch that
means so much."
Household, store, office and cafe
fixtures of all kinds.
T. H. WATERS & CO. LTD.
Phone 156    lot Hall St.    Nelson
Meeting 7:30 p.m. — Official Visit
. of Grand Master and Initiatory
Degree.
• KIN AUCTION OF THE AIR
Tuesday and Thursday, C.K.L.N.,
8 p.m. Bargains and prizes lor
everyone. Sponsored by Nelson
Kinsmen Club. Proceeeds 'for
Health Centre.
MERCURY   OUTBOARD
SPECIAL
Save $100 on 40 h.p. electric model
while they last only $846.
JEFFERY RADIO AND
APPLIANCES
ol Grand Master. Initiatory Degree will be conferred.
CARD OF THANKS
I wish to convey my thanks to
all my friends and neighbors for
their kindness, cards and flowers, Hie staff and nurses of K, L.
G. Hospital and a special thanks
to Dr. Shaw during my recent
illness.
—A. Matassa.
CARD OF THANKS
We wish to convey our sincere
thanks to all our friends who were
so kind over (lie passing of our
mother, Mrs. Hilma Mills. Special
thanks to Dr. Shaw and staff of
the Kootenay Lake General Hospital for the wonderful care of our
loved one and to Rev. Silverwood
for his comforting words and to
all those who sent the beautiful
floral tributes.
—Helen, Inez, Bob and Roy.
FUNERAL NOTICE
WASILENKOFF - Funeral services for the late Mike Wasinlen-
koff of Blewett are being held in
the Taghum Hall and interment
will be made in the Glade Cemetery today at 2:00 o'clock. Thompson Funeral Service.
FUNERAL NOTICE
KOOZNETSOFF- Funeral services for the late Peter E. Kooz-
netsoff, of Glade, will be held
from the residence today (Monday) at 2:30 p.m. and interment
will take place in Glade Russian
Cemetery. Nelson Funeral Home.
Read the Classified Daily
By LARRY ROSE
Canadian Press Staff Writer
VANCOUVER (CP)-The first
snow of winter dusts the mountains of Garibaldi Park in late
October.
By Depemlber, on tlie alpine
pastures and mountains with
such fanciful names as Black
Tusk and Castle Towers, it lies
crisp, even,  and  12 feet deep.
With this argument, and a
book full of others, the Garibaldi Olympic Development Association, formed two years ago,
hopes to woo the 1968 Winter
Olympic Games to'an area now.
looked in solitude.
Seventy - five miles north
of here, Whistler Mountain in
Garibaldi Park is one of six
Canadian sites proposed for the
games.
Others in British Columbia
are at Manning Park, 135 miles
east of here; Revelstoke, a well:
known skiing area in the western Rocky Mountains, and Rossland and Fernie, in the Kootenays of eastern B.C.
Banff-Lake Louise in Alberta
is the sixth hopeful.
To develop Garibaldi for the
Olympics would cost an estimated $13,000,000. Manning, already partly established for recreation, would cost $13,500,000,
Fernie, about $5,000,000 and
Banff, between $4,000,000 and
$5,000,000. Estimates for the
other two sites are not available.
TO STUDY REPORT
An engineering firm has studied all sites and its report will
be considered at the annual
meeting of the Canadian Olympic Association in Toronto April
21-22. The COA will then make
its recommendations to the International Olympic Association
which meets in 1963 to choose
the location of the 1968 games.
Set aside as a provincial park
in 1920, Garibaldi has an area
of 1,000 square miles. Whistler
Mountain, in the northwest corner, rises to 7,118 feet. Close by
is Mount Garibaldi at 8,787 feet,
Black Tusk, 7,598 and Castle
Towers, 8,778.
Figuring Rossland, Fernie
ahd Revelstoke out of contention because of their locations,
GODA believes its site has suitability and accessability for
contestants, officials and spectators. Tliey look also to the future—after the games — and a
great potential for summer and
winter recreation.
On its nor Hi e r n slope,
Whistler provides a vertical
drop of 5,000 feet, all suited to
skiing, and almost all sheltered
within a vast volcanic bowl.
This would be the men's downhill run.
Other downhill and slalom
courses would be found in the
same area, culminating almost
at the same finishing spot. The
jump site is handy and the immediate valley below would
have facilities for Nordic and
ice events.
Cost estimates show the most
exnensive items would be dormitories, a minimum of 10 of
different sizes, for 1,400 persons, $4,000,000; roads, bridges
and parking, $1,140,000; and an
enclosed arena for hookey and
figure-skating events, $800,000.
Ian Ross of Vancouver, a
Garibaldi engineer, says cost of
the 7,000-capacity arena would
be lew because it would be a
temporary fixture.
"Bleachers   would  be  rented i
for  the  games,  as   the  arena
would be used for only a short
period," added Ross.
In addition, three outdoor
rinks would handle the remaining hookey and figure - skating
events.
Other buildings include:
A speed skati»g rink with
artificial ice, capacity 10,000;
administration building; 10-to-
15-bed hospital; medical checkout building for athletes; rest
cabins for officials, press and
athletes; ski patrol stations;
fire station; public rest rooms
and a press building.
A recreational building with
two restaurants, one for press
members and another for athletes, is also planned. A theatre
would be included.
There would be two similar
buildings for the public.
Included in cost of the dormitories, which would be constructed so that they could later
be converted to motels, would
be a hotel where some of the
press would be accommodated
along with games' officials.
Officials say hotels and other
accommodation would be constructed near the area if Garibaldi were selected.
Some officials and press, says
technical chairman Dave Mathews, would make their headquarters either a. Vancouver,
the Olympic village or at Squa-
mish — the park's central entrance. Others would travel
back and forth to Whistler by
helicopter or train.
Squamish is 30 miles from
Vancouver and 35 miles from
Whistler Mountain.
Since 1954, the average winter snowfall in the park lias
been about 12 feet. In 1960,
more than six feet was on (he
ground in March.
Bob Fortune, Garibaldi's
weather expert, says if the area
gets the Games he will recommend they be held in Ihe last
days of February and the first
week of March.
Weather station figures show
the Games would stand a 95-
per-cent chance of good weather
at that time.
Studies show that a proposed
two-lane highway, together with
the Pacific Great Eastern Railway, could move' 13,000 persons
to and from the park each hour.
On peak days, 35,000 could be
handled.
And, the provincial government has promised a highway
into the park, whether or not
the games are held there.
Of the $13,000,000 needed to
develop Garibaldi for the Olympics, $3,500,000 would come from
public enterprise. Tlie remainder would be split between
the federal and provincial governments.
The proposed Olympic village
would be located at Alta Lake,
at (he base of Whistler Mountain.
By CHARLES STAFFORD
UNITED NATION. (AP)-
Although they come from 78
countries, the 3,300 civil servants at the United Nations secretariat in New York City ows
first allegiance to the UN.
Among them are about 100 Canadians.
The workers have been in-
strcuted by their boss, Secretary - General Dag Hammarskjold, to "abstain completely
from political activities incompatible with the status of an international civil servant."
The UN doesn't pay enormous
salaries—from $3,250 to $18,000.
But it's a Big Daddy to them
all.
It has an office to help ihem
find housing; restaurants serving good food at moderate
prices; two bars where they
can get a cocktail before lunch;
a barbership, gift shop, bank,
post office, credit union, service station and parking garage; it has an employees' cooperative store.
The UN also gives employees
60 days vacation a year and it
has programs to protect them,
particularly those from other
lands, against loneliness.
UN employees come at 9:30
a.m. EST to tlie 40-storey, glass-
crusted tower beside the East
River in Manhattan. Past the
guards file political scientists,
secretaries, lawyers, clerks, interpreters, editors, translators,
technical experts, janitors, economists, doctors.
The delegate from Israel is
speaking for an hour before the
General Assembly. That means
327 hours of staff work, translating the speech into several
languages, printing and distributing it.
He cites facts and figures on
the population explosion in Asia,
or maybe the rights of women
in  Tanganyika,  or  soil   condi
tions in Afghanistan. The staff
collected (hose facts and figures.
Nations may feud, but the
employees of this polyglot
agency work together amicably,
everyone says so.
Airlines Report
On Profit, Loss
VANCOUVER (OP) - Pacific
Western Airlines had a net loss
of $412,013 in 1960, the company
said Saturday in its annual report.
This compared with a net profit
of $415,526 in 1959.
The company had gross revenue of $8,636,884, an increase
of nearly $1,000,000 over the $7,-
863,891 in 1959, but operating
expenses climbed to $8,0124,867
from $6,918,046.
In his report to shareholders,
company President Karl J.
Springer said I960 was marked
by a distinct downturn in the
rate of Canada's economic
growth and Ihis had a marked
effect on the Canadian air
transportat i o n industry generally.
The company operates primarily in British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan and the
far north,
"The sharpest decline in revenues . . . was experienced on
operations under our DEW (Distant Early Warning) line contract," he said.
There had been a curtailment
of air services by the radar
hne contractor and a change in
policies of the air transport
board which made it inadvise-
able for PWA to carry on in
much of the lateral service on
the line.
Mr. Springer said prospects
for 1961 are reasonably bright.
But they have a language-
problem, even though at 6peak
English.
"Nobody realizes the physical
stain of having to speak a foreign language all the time, even
though you may know (he language well," says W. P. Barrett,
chief of the teohnioal assistance
recruitment service. "And if
you have no one to speak to in
your native tjmgue at night, if
you are single, then the strain
is multiplied."
At (he noon recess each day,
the tower breaks out in an epidemic of good fellowship.
On the 41st floor, a Japanese
and an Israeli bat a ping pong
ball baok and forth. A floor below, leotard-clad women groan
through muscle - toning exercises or practise ballet. In the
fifth-fllor staff lounge, a Russian and a Maltese glower—in
concentration over their chess
game.
SINGERS TOO
Down the hall' members of the
UN singers crowd into the recreation club room for rehearsal
under direction of Donald Read,
a voice teacher at New York's
Juilliard School of Music, The
singers specialize in folk songs
in 15 languages.
There are 29 various clubs,
extracurricular groups encouraged ,by UN brass for staff morale purposes. They are devoted
to such endeavors as art, badminton, bowling, dancing, golf,
bridge, cricket, flying, jazz, tennis, stamp collecting skiing,
softlball and an ancient Chinese
variation of yoga.
There are at least loq UN
ohildren youngsters, born to
couples who met and married
after going to work for the UN.
But statistics are against single
girls who go to the UN looking
for' a husband. They outnumber
single men three to one.
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CITY DRUG
By Elizabeth Motherwell
Canadian Press Staff Writer
OTTAWA (CP) - An English
baronet's daughter, who spent
three days in jail with "street
girls," for company, says the
experience was "humbling."
Rosamund Conway, 40, wife
of a prominent Ottawa child
specialist, regained her freedom today after electing to go j
to jail "for a principle."
"It was the most rewarding j
experience of my life," said tlie
pretty mother, hugging and
kissing her eight children after
emerging from a "medieval
tomb."
Mrs. Conway, daughter of the
late Sir John V. E. Lees, was
convicted Jan. 14 of exceeding
a 35-mile-an-hour speed limit
and was fined $22 with the option of a three-day jail term.
FELT CHARGE UNJUST
She chose jail because she felt
she was injustly charged.
Mrs. Conway said She was
driving 46 miles an hour to
reach a sick child left outside
her house.
A storm was coming up, said
Mrs. Conway, and "in the delay caused by the constable my
baby got soaked." The three-
month-old child had just recovered from bronchitis pneumonia.
Mrs. Conway said ambulances
and police are allowed to exceed the speed limit in the interests of the public and a private citizen should have the
same privilege in an emergency.
SCRUBBED FLOORS
She was in a cell by herself
but "scrubbed floors" with
other women, "mostly street
girls."
. "There was a very nice girl,
charged with theft as a first offender. She found her dark cell
so horrifying she planned never
to be a repeater."
Mrs. Cbnway said the food
was "allright—but I wouldn't
cook it (hat way myself."
When she wasn't working,
Mrs. Conway said she read in
slanting light entering the cell
from the jail corridor. There
was no light in the cell.
Tlie only book she was allowed was the New Testament
-Jbut m a g a zines, including
"those horrible movie ones,"
were available.
"Every minute seemed like
24  hours."
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Always sure of a i
come from every mer,
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