 Years of
Daily Service
to the Kootenays.
dm® S&iln
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Published at Ne/son. fm^jmi,DT„^rAWoav % jnent, financial and trading centre of the Kootenay-Columbia area'
WEATHER FORECAST
Kootenay: Cloudy today. Little
change in temperature. Light
winds. Low and high-at Cranbrook and Crescent Valley, 20
and 35.
-THURSDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 14, 1963
10 Cents
No. 249
19 Loggers Each Face 3 Charges Of
Non-Capital Murder; 237
TO BE OR NOT TO BE ... Whether 'tis nobler ... to send this sweet sentimental or one oi those insulting missives. So ponders Heather, 16 months,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ron Corbett, as Valentine's Day rollB around today.
—Daily News photo.
Arrest Youth in Killings;
Bodies foMnd by Employer
SAANICH (CP) — Police here
arrested a young man minutes
after discovery of the murder
Loses Bid fo
Change Charge
TORONTO (CP) - Nineteen-
year-old Gary McCorkell's bid
to have his conviction for capital murder reduced to one of
non-Capital murder failed Thursday when the Ontario Appeal
Court dismissed his appeal.
"There was no error in the
proceedings at trial to warrant
interferance or to reduce the
condition," said Chief Justice
Dana Porter.
McCorkell is sentenced to be
hanged Feb. 26 for killing three-
year-old Ronald MacLeod last
April.
A reduced conviction would
have meant life imprisonment.
Defence counsel Arthur Maloney argued that McCorkell could
only be guilty of capital murder if he killed during commission of another offence or while
trying to escape during the commission of a crime.
The suffocated bodies of MacLeod and Michael Atkinson, 2,
were found in the basement of
a warehouse. McCorkell was not
oharged with the death of Atkinson.
Evidence showed both boys
had been indecently assaulted.
of a Saanich man and his wife
Wednesday afternoon.
Dead are Mr. and Mrs. George
A. Bickford. The couple had a
16-year-old son.
It is believed the shootings
occurred Monday night.
Discovery of the double slaying resulted when Mrs. Bick-
ford's employer, George Hesse,
went to iher house to find out
why she had failed to report to
work.
Mr. Hesse looked through a
window and saw what looked
like a body covered with an
eiderdown.
CALLED POLICE
He called police who broke in
and found Mr. Bickford lying
in the passageway leading to
a bedroom.
Mrs. Bickford was found in
the kitchen. Both had been covered over.
Both had been shot with a
.22-calibre rifle.
Mrs. Bickford had been shot
four times, her husband once.
Mr. Bickford, 39, was a rigger
at Yarrows shipbuilding company. His wife was 43.
Police said the young suspect
was arrested almost immediately after the bodies were found.
EMPLOYER CALLED
Mr. Hesse told reporters: "I
just went to see why she didn't
report Ior work. I peeked
through the window and saw
these things lying there in the
hallway covered with blankets.
"They could have been laun
dry bundles. I couldn't see very
well because it is ribbed glass.
"I saw the car in the garage,
so I knew they were home. I
went to look again. There were
no drapes on one window and I
peeked through.
"I saw a couple of feet sticking out with slippers on, so I
reported to police right away."
New Iraq Gov't
Has Crushed All
Resistance
BAGHDAD .(AP). - Iraq's
new revolutionary government
claimed Wednesday it has crushed all active resistance, including that of Communists.
The new regime vowed it will
work with President Nasser's
United Arab Republic. It promised that all contracts with foreign firms will be honored.
Foreign Minister Dallb Hussein Shabib delivertd these statements in fluent English at the
first press conference since the
anti-Communist revolt Friday
sent Premier Abdel Karim Kassem to his death'.
"Those killed were actively
fighting the advancing forces of
the revolution and were using
their arms against the armed
forces. Their number is perhaps
less than those executed by the
government." Shabib said eight
persons were executed.
He accused Kassem of executing thousands during his 414-
year rule.
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Marks 105th Birthday
— With a Cigar!
VANCOUVER (CP)-Matilda Boynton plans to celebrate
her 105th birthday Thursday with a quiet cigar.
Born a slave on a farm in southern Tennessee, Matilda
says she picked up the tobacco habit at the age of five because, "I was sickly and the doctor told me to."
One of her earliest memories is of the year 1861 when
her father died in the Civil War. Matilda went to live with
relatives and soon was in the plantation fields doing "the
work of a man."
She moved to Seattle and in 1904 crossed the border to
Vancouver. She married her husband, Ed, 50 years ago and
they have lived in the same house since then. Ed himself is
between 80 and 90 years old — he won't say which is closer
to his true age.
The years have passed quickly, she says, "just fooling
around from one fool thing to another. . . . Don't go out
much no more. . . . Never was much of a run-around."
Her birthday will be celebrated quietly.
"I ain't much for sweets and cakes no more. But I is
sure going to have a cigar."
Illlllllllllllllllllllltllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltlll
Union May Extend
N.Y. Paper Strike
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo.
(AP) — Elmer Brown said Wednesday the International Typographical Union, of which he is
president, will explore today the
possibility of extending the New
York newspaper strike to the
west coast and Paris editions of
the  New  York  Times.
He made the statement after
talking briefly with the presidents of two striking New York
locals, Bertram A. Powers of
ITU Local 6 and Thomas M.
Laura of Mailers Union Local 6.
"We have tried to isolate the
strike.., to. .New. 3fork City^'
Brown said, "but in view of the
Charles May
Visit N.Z.
Says Queen
PICTON, N.Z. (Reuters) -
Queen Elizabeth disclosed Wednesday Prince Charles, 14-year-
old heir to the British throne,
will visit New Zealand soon after
he finishes school.
Nelson Mayor Mrs. D. Straw-
bridge said she told the Queen
she hoped the royal children
would visit Nelson, centre of a
fruit and tobacco growing area.
The Queen said, "Yes, Prince
Charles shall come1 shortly after
he has finished his schooling."
Prime Minister Holyoake commented at a press conference in
Wellington that a visit by the
Queen's children would be welcomed by his government and
the people.
The Queen and her husband,
Prince Philip, received a sunny
welcome to the South Island of
New Zealand Wednesday after
the grey skies in the north.
Crowds which greeted the couple in the towns of Nelson, Blenheim and Picton were dressed
up for the occasion in contrast
to the beach shorts and bare
feet turnout of the North Islanders earlier in the tour.
Wanted To Talk to J. Edgar Hoover
Man Threatens to Blow Up Justice Building
WASHINGTON (API-Pennsylvania Avenue was thrown into an uproar during the noon
hour Wednesday by a man who
drove his automobile up the U.S.
justice department steps and
threatened to blow up the building.
, Routed by tear gas after a
two-hour siege, during which he
demanded an audience with FBI
director J. Edgar Hoover, Nathan Wise, 33, was taken to a
psychiatric ward for observation.
He had no bomb.
Relatives in Phoenix, Ariz.,
where he was connected with a
department store, said Wise
cracked up about a year ago
after his father's death and had
been under psychiatric treatment.
"He's sick; he needs help."
said. Mrs. Joan Wise, his wife.
The building he chose for the
lunch-hour drama is one of the
big stone government edifices
that line the south side of Pennsylvania Avenue, midway between the capitol building and
the White House.
CONTAINS FBI OFFICES
It contains the offices of Attorney-General Robert Kennedy
and the national headquarters
and crime detecting laboratories
of the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
The attorney-general was out
of town, but Hoover was in his
fifth-floor office when a sedan
with Arizona licence plates suddenly veered across the sidewalk and came to rest halfway
up the steps of the building's
main entrance.
Wise got out from( behind the
wheel and crawled under the
car, trailing a pair of wires and
a small metal valise. In the car
were several five-gallon cans
which appeared to be connected
to the other end of the wires.
Police and fire department
emergency equipment quickly
surrounded the area and all traffic along the avenue was halted
at both ends of the building.
Ropes were stretched across
the adjoining streets and the
area was cleared of everyone
but two high police officials —
Police Inspector J. S. Hughes
and Deputy Chief George H.
Walldrodt — and a few FBI men.
"The man told me that he has
certain information about the
operations of the government
and about certain rackets that
he would divulge only to J. Edgar Hoover.
The police officials tried for
more than an hour to talk Wise
into coming out from under the
auto. He was' quoted as saying
he had "evidence" that would
result in the impeachment of
President Kennedy and the
whole cabinet.
Finally a small group of riot
police wearing gas masks lobbed
seven tear gas grenades under
the car and Wise crawled out in
a hurry. He,was taken first to
police headquarters and then to
hospital.
. At the hospital he commented:
"That's what happens when
you're trying to do something
good."
The lethal-looking metal valise was found to contain nothing
but newspapers and a flashlight.
Army bomb disposal experts
found no explosives ln the cans.
Except for the immediate area
near the entrance, no effort was
made to evacuate the justice department, building and Hoover
remained in his office.
fact that the New York publishers have gone outside to seek
allies, we are having to do that
also."
Brown said he referred to efforts by New York publishers to
get other newspapers to print
their editions.
"We have been advised that
they have gone as far as Canada and to the Miami Herald to
print their papers and haul them
to New York. We consider this
pressure tactics," he said.
In New York, Turner Catledge,
managing editor of The Times,
said: ."'t Jtnow jpf^ao-"Bueh- ar»|
rangements;":.'\ ,,.-■ -  -
There was ho immediate comment from .the Publishers Asso-
ciation of New York City.
In . Miami, James L. Kmght,
president of The Herald, denied
Brown's charge.
"The New York Publishers
have not approached anyone connected with the Miami Herald
concerning printing newspapers
for them," he said.
Shooting
Brings Union
Protests
TORONTO (CP) — The shooting deaths of three striking
woodcutters in Northern Ontar
io Monday has sparked protests
by union members in Toronto.
The United Electrical Worker*
Union (Ind.) said Wednesday it
will picket the offices of Ktoi-
berley-Clark Limited for about
an hour today to protest the
shooting. Bushworkers employed
by the company are involved
in the strike.
The United Brotherhood of
Canpenters and Joiners (CLC)
plans to picket Queen's Park
Friday to demand a government
investigation into the labor department's handling ol the
strike.
In addition, G. F. McOurdy of
Windsor, secretary-treasurer of
tho carpenters union, Wednesday demanded an Investigation
of permits issued by the lands
and forests department to settlers during the strike.
In a telegram to Premier Ro-
barts he said many permits were
used in violation of the Crown
Timber Act and fanned the bush
war that resulted in the killings.
Reds Would
Girl, 7 Loses Leg
In School Bus Crash
WATERLOO, N.Y. (AP) - a'
school bus carrying 62 children
and a tractor-trailer crashed
Wednesday on a snow-slicked
street in this central New York
village. Twenty-nine children and
the school-bus driver were injured.
The collision, tore away the
leg of a seven-year-old girl.
The girl, Deborah Marcuccilli
of Seneca Falls, was one of four
children admitted to Taylor-
Brown Hospital, along with bus
driver Ralph Worden, about 50,
who suffered critical head injuries.
Twenty-five children were
treated for minor injuries and
allowed to go home with their
parents.
IIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIllllllll
It's Not Enemy,
It's "Connie"
FORT GREELY, Alaska,
(AP) — Friendly forces defending the heartland of Alaska in the Arctic war games
"Exercise Timber-line1' have
more than "aggressors" to
worry,about. . .
Nightly by radio comes tlie
seductive voice of "Connie" inviting them to come across the
lines to warmth ahd a bot '
meal. Porters have been scattered about bearing her picture in a bathing suit.
Connie, patterned after Axis
Sally and Tokyo Rose of the
Second World War, is the
brain-child of the 4th Psychological Warfare Company of
Fort Bragg, N.C.
Two pretty secretaries from
Fort Richardson, near Anchorage, have helped create the
composite enemy siren. Glen-
da Kay Salyers, 20, posed for
the bathing suit picture. Suzanne Major, 24, is the voice.
Lieut. Ted C. Williams, commander of the Fort Bragg outfit, said "psychological warfare is still pretty much an
infant in the army, but we're
learning things 'with every exercise."
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIII)
OTTAWA ■ <Cf)—The" Communists are doing their best to
exacerbate Canada-U.S. differences on nuclear jdefencejbllcy,
diplomatic observers believe.
Since these differences broke
into full public view, two weeks
ago, there has been a steady
drumbeat of commentary from
Moscow and Peking, mostly via
press and radio.  ■ •. -,
Through it all runs the suggestion that the United States
is trying to pressure a reluctant.
Canada into obtaining nuclear
weapons.
Diplomatic informants here
say they cannot recall a time in
recent years when the name of
Canada has received so much
mention in the controlled Communist press.
The various articles have been
duly picked up and transmitted
on North American news wires.
They represent a significant
change from what Russia was
saying less than a year ago about
the issue of nuclear weapons in
Canada, officials say.
Last June 14, just as the federal election campaign was
reaching its climax, the Soviet
embassy here released a statement complaining that Canadian
statesmen were openly talking
about preparations for nuclear
armament.
SAYS CANADA UNWILLING
An article in Pravda Feb. 6
said the Canada-U.S. clash broke
out after Ottawa had "clearly
expressed its unwillingness to
play the part of an uncomplaining armor-bearer carting nuclear
warheads under U.S. supervision."
Another day the same Communist party newspaper said the
U.S. request that Canada acquire nuclear weapons "aroused
burning indignation in Canada."
Wednesday, the New China
news agency in Peking said the
present dispute "is another reflection of the Canadian resistance to U.S. attempts to include
it in the U.S. war preparations."
Approves Coast
Airline Non-Sked
oration in U.S.
Op
WASHINGTON (AP) - President Kennedy approved Wednesday the renewal through 1967
of the permit of BNP Airways
Limited of Vancouver to oper
ate a Bon-scheduled light plane
service to "all points in the
continental United States, in
eluding Alaska."
The U.S. Civil Aeronautics
Board had decided on the renewal o! the recommendation of
examiner Joseph L. Fitzmaurice.
Local Facilities   Unable To
Feed, House So Many Prisoners
By JOHN LeBLANC
KAPUSKASING, Ont. (CP)—Wholesale surrenders!
among 19 men charged with triple non-capital murder
and 237 charged with rioting Wednesday turned a
Northern Ontario bush manhunt into a well-mannered
roundup but provided police with an embarrassment
of prisoners.
All but one of the men accused of murder either
had turned themselves in or were reported en route to
a surrender point, and those under riot charges were
giving themselves up in job lots, facing Crown authorities with a problem of housing and feeding them with
limited detention facilities.
Ontario Provincial Police initially announced that 400 would
be charged .with rioting as the
result of a fatal gunfire-ridden
clash in a bushworkers' strike
near here early Monday, but by
Wednesday night the issuance of
warrants had halted at 237. Police said they did not know
whether more would be sworn
out.
PLAN TO MOVE THEM
Those accused of rioting—all
members of the Lumber and
Sawmill Workers Union (CLO-
liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimii.iiii.iimiimiii
TIMMINS (CP).- A twto-en-
gined charter plane taking
bushworkers union and company officials to Toronto for
government ordered strike ne:
gotiations crashed during takeoff early this evening.
Early reports said all »•* officials and the pilot escaped
Wlury. ':,:':■• i:
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were not .applying for hail ,6?
$200 and were accepting remand
in custody Until next Tuesday.
Plans were made to transport
them to the big prison farm at
Monteith, 100 miles. south 'of
here, the site of a wartime detention camp.
The Monday shooting brought
death to Joseph and IreneeFor-
tier, brothers, and Fernand
Drouin. Each of the 19 accused
settlers is charged with the
deaths of all three, for a total of
57 murder charges.
Originally, they were charged
Monday with shooting with intent
to wound and released immediately on $500 cash bail.
The murder warrants were issued Tuesday night after Attorney-General Cass ordered a review of the case Tuesday alter
rushing 200 OPP reinforcements
to the tense area.
Wednesday, tension had dissipated.
FLEW TO MONTREAL
Police said they heard one man
had flown to Montreal and police
there were notified that a murder warrant was out for him.
All those charged with murder are settlers and members of
the co-operative. The three union
men were killed by gunfire as
they advanced at night on a
stack of settlers' pulpwood
awaiting movement to the mill,
whose normal supplies had been
cut off by the. month-lodg lumber and sawmill workers strike.
Theunioh men had been blocking the transport of wood cut by
jlhe "Settlers; most of vfltern:
Frencn-spealrirrg men from Quebec vjh'o supplement flieifi in;
come in the bleak bush and muskeg country by supplying about
110,000 cords of pulpwood each
winter fw the Spruce Falls'news-
print mill here.
Warriors
March on
Airport
ELISABETHVILLE (AP) -
Two hundred Baluba warriors
in war paint marched on.-the
airport outside this Katanga
province capital Wednesday and
defied a United Nations bid to
disarm them.
The Balubas, carrying weapons ranging from bows and arrows to bicycle chains, went to
the airport to meet their political leader, Ason Sendwe, who
flew in from Leopoldville, the
central Congo capital.       ■ '**
The crowd at the airport was
swollen by the arrival bf MO
Baluba women and children who
were to have been flown by the
UN to their tribal homes in
Kasai. At the last moment their
flights were cancelled.
Wearing tribal monkey skin
headdresses, grass skirts arid
sackcloth uniforms, the Baluba
warriors formed outside the airport terminal.
THE WEATHER
i
Canada high-low:
Victoria 53 -
■ The Pas -1<
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Min Max Pre
NELSON  _...
....  24-
-40
. —
Toronto ..,	
   13
23
.04
Winnipeg 	
....  -2
1
.01
Begina i*i=rr.
,..- .14-
•■»,.«
Sr
Lethbridge	
.....  20
26
Tr
Calgary <	
....  21
24
Tr
Penticton 	
    22
42
—
    44
48
.13
Victoria 	
    44
53
.02
Los Angeles 	
   57
64
.05
    25
38
Tr
Unemployment Increased
By 127,000 to 541,000
"Honor" Made
Hees Resign
OTTAWA (CP)-George Hees
said Wednesday that "as a man
of honor" he had to resign as
trade minister last Saturday because Prime Minister Diefenbaker did not carry out a promise to modify the government's
policy on nuclear weapons.
He said in an Interview that
at the Conservative caucus meeting last Wednesday Mr. Diefenbaker had promised they could
"meet on common ground" and
work out policies which he, Mr.
Hees, could support.
"By Friday afternoon, it was
very apparent that nothing was
going to be done to meet my
position in any way ... So there
was no alternative — I had to
resign."
Mr. Hees, in a talk in his Ottawa hotel room during a brief
visit to the capital, said his position has been "very much misunderstood." Questions have
been asked how he could have
declared following last Wednesday's caucus meeting that the
pary was united, and then have
resigned on Saturday.
NO ATTEMPT MADE
"I was completely convinced
on Wednesday that my position
was going to be met within reason. No attempt was made to
meet it. What do you do as a
man of honor? Walk out."
Mr. Hees said that at the caucus meeting, where he was
chairman, he had spoken for
about an hour outlining his position: That Canada should have
nuclear weapons on Canadian
soil to preserve peace; that Canada had to-uphold Its nuclear obligations to its neighbors; that it
would be "disastrous" for the
party to take an anti-American
stand in the election.
OTTAWA (CP) - Unemployment in Canada increased by
127,000 from mid-December to a
total 541,000 at mid-January, the
Ddrninion Bureau of Statistics
and labor department said Wednesday ih a joint statement.
The jobless total was 4,000
less than the 545,000 unemployed
in January last year.
The month's rise in unemployment—described as "about a
normal change for the time of
year"—pushed the jobless rate
to 8.3 per cent of the labor force
from 6.3 per cent in December.
This compared with rates of 8.5
per cent a year earlier and 10.8
per cent two years ago.
The number of persons with
jobs fell sharply by 204,000 between mid-December and mid-
January to a total 5,956,000, as
a result of seasonal slackening
in outdoor activities and in retail trade, which had been busy
before Christmas. But not all of
this drop in jobs was reflected
in unemployment figures since
77,000 persons dropped out of the
labor market.
The January employment total was 92,000 higher than a year
earlier.
The job picture in brief, with I
estimates in thousands:
Jan. Dec. Jan.
Labor force     6,497 6,574 6,409
Employed        5,956 6,160 5,864
Unemployed       541   414   545
The report is based on a survey of 35,000 households across
Canada during the week ended
Jan. 19.
DROP ABOUT NORMAL
The report said the. month's
drop in employment was about
normal for the time of year, but
added there-was a smafler-than-
average decline in non-farm employment while farm employment rose more than usual.
During the last few months, It
said, there had been "a notice
able strengthening" in employment for men, reflecting a better situation in goods-producing
industris. But lack of growth
in some service industries had
resulted in fewer job openings
for women.
The month's 127,000 rise in
jobless numbers was felt mainly
among men. The number of unemployed men increased by
110,000 to 468,000, while unemployment among women rose by
17,000 to 73,000.
Of the 541,000 jobless, some
416,000—more than three-quarters of them—had been unemployed for three months or less.
Another 71,000 had been seeking
work from four to six months,
and 54,000 for more than half a
year.
DOLLAR DOWN
NEW YORK (CP)—Canadian
dollar down 1-32' at 92 25-32 ,lh
terms of U.S. funds. Week ago
92 45-64.
Pound sterling up 3-64 at
$2.80%.
And in This Corner . . .
MOSCOW, Idaho (AP)-What does Patrick Clark, a 31-year-
old Moscow mailman do on his day off?
He takes a walk, of course.
Not always, said Clark, father of three children.
"I drive over to Potlach, 18% miles away, on my day off
to visit my mother. This time I decided to walk. I felt so good
I ran the last half mile."
Mrs. Clark says "It was President Kennedy's plea for physical fitness that decided Patrick to try it . . . but he's talked
about the walk for some time."
Clark went the 1814 miles in five hours and five minutes.
DETROIT (AP)—An 18-year-old waitress jumped out of her
car at 70 miles an hour after the accelerator jammed. Physicians said Sharon Ann Cronk's escape without serious injury
was remarkable.
She suffered numerous cuts and bruises.
Sharon said the question asked her most often since her
wild ride was "Why didn't you turn off the Ignition key?"
"The answer was that I didn't know what would happen
if I turned the key, so I left it alone," she said.
I
_
• ' ;3
  ______
■■■■■- :--;■- .■-..■
2 — NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURS., FEB. 14,1963
Centres Defend MacDonald Plan
Pedestrian Hit
By Car in Trail
TRAIL' — An accident in
downtown'Trail Wednesday even
ing sent a pedestrian o Trail-
Tadanac  Hospital.
William. Inkster of Trail, who
was struck by a car at the corner of Bay Avenue and Portland
Street is reported to be in satisfactory condition.
Police are investigating.
Nelson Civic Centre
and
Recreation Commission
SCHEDULE
Thurs., Feb. 14, 1963
ARENA!
2:00- 4:00-TINY TOTS'
SKATING
4:05~5:45-CHILDREN'S
SKATING
6:00 Ice Show Move In
RECREATION HALLi
2:00- 4:00—Central School
Girls
6:30- 8:00—Junior Badminton
8:00:11:00—Senior Badminton
Gyros To
Promote
Blood Clinic
At a meeting of the Nelson
Gyro Club held. Monday, night,
members undertook responsibility for promotion of the annual
Red Cross blood donors' clinic,
under direction of Mrs. Stanley
Morris, Red Cross blood donor
chairman.
Named to head the drive was
a committee comprised of R. C,
Emory as chairman, John Hop-
wood, R. W. Huestis, L. M. McBride, J. S. Todd and F. A.
Whiteley. The club will promote
the clinic and manage advertising.
The clinic is held early ln
June. 0IH*
CASTLE Theatre
Castlegar, B.C.
Tonight and Friday
am) Saturday Matinee
"LAST OF THE VIKINGS"
(Color - Cinemascope)
Shows at 6:45 and 9:00 p.m.
TONIGHT—One complete show at 8:00 p.m.
iLOREN in a Thousand
Years!
ALLIED ARTISTS Raltatt
rKSSMMMCOHHCDB
iSliEiHt'iln-iiii iwiiHCTi
PRICES - Adults $1.00 ■ Students 75c ■ Children 50c
CIVIC
Ice
'Review
of'63
See Louisa Orwell
Former Star of "Ice Capades" and "Ice Review"
FRIDAY, FEB. 15
Show Times 4:00 and 8:00 p.m.
SATURDAY, FEB. 16
Show Time 8:00 p.m.
Admission: Adults $1.00, Children 35c
DOOR PRIZES DOOR PRIZES
 I
IAN SETON McNAIRN
Curator To Speak
At School of Art
A. prominent associate professor of fine arts at University of
B.C. will lecture Feb. 18 at Kootenay School of Arts.
Ian Seton McNairn, associate
professor and executive secre-
marks in the Development of
Art from 1855 to 1905."
Both lectures will be illustrated with slides.
Born in Toronto, Mr. McNairn
was granted a Bachelor of Arts
tary, UBC Fine Arts department j degree by McMaster University
and curator, Fine Arts Gallery
will give two lectures; one on
the development of art from 1855
to 1905 and another on the Nature of Baroque art. The lectures
will be held in conjunction with
the art school and Kootenay Museum Association.
Mr. McNairn's evening lecture, "The Nature and Motivations of Baroque Art" will be
open to the public at 8 p.m. His
afternoon lecture is entitled,
"Fifty Fateful Years — Land-
in 1941 and did graduate work
at Harvard University (summer
1940); Columbia U n i v ersity
(1946-501; in Paris (summer
1947) and in Florence (1951-52).
Before joining the UBC fac
ulty ta 1957, Mr. McNairn was a
lecturer, at McMaster and University of Toronto, and Assistant Keeper at the Tate Gallery,
England.
He holds memberships in the
College Art Association, West-
Association of Art Museums and
Western Carjhda Art circuit.
"jTourist Enthusiasm
Conquers Weather
I
I
I
VICTORIA (CP) - Tourists
ignored unfavorable weather
and flocked into British Columbia by the millions last year
and left millions of dollars behind them.
Recreation Minister Westwood
said during the budget debate
in the legislature that, despite
"capricious summer weather,"
3,689,000 persons visited the province and spent a record $145,-
000,000.
The increase over the previous
years was 22.6 per cent compared to the national average of
5.8 per cent. A total of 549,119
cars crossed the province's borders.
The minister said the travel
bureau participated in the heaviest advertising campaign in history. Besides advertisments In
top-quality Canadian and United
States periodicals and in newspapers, a record 1,500,000 pieces
of travel literature were sent to
enquirers.
The magazine Beautiful Bri-
West Kootenay
Education Conference
PUBLIC MEETING
TONIGHT-8 P.M.
L. V. ROGERS HIGH SCHOOL AUDITORIUM
Mr. Donald Harvey
Facility of Ecjqeqtion, Vietoriq College
Title: CREATIVE THINKING
EVERYONE WELCOME —NO ADMISSION CHARGE
— Refreshments Fallowing —
tish   Columbia   reached   80,000
readers in 66 countries.
He said a record 3,700,000 persons visited the 202 provincial
parks that cover 6,376,985 acres.
Close Shaves
At College
In spring a. young man's
fancy turns to "pig" shaves. At
least that's what a young man's
lancy turns to at the first sign
of warm weather on the Notre
Dame College campus.
Approximately 20 male stud
ents turned up for classes this
week with haircuts that envied
Yul Brynner's coiffure. Primarily first year students, the
shaved heads were improvised
over the weekend and all are of
the same natrrre except for one
individualist who sports an Iroquois cut. his head shaved except
for a strip of hair down the
centre of his head.
FAILED TO STOP
Alex Jmaeff of Nelson was
fined $15 and costs in city police
court for failing to stop at the
flashing red light at Nelson Avenue and Anderson Street. Jmaeff
pleaded not guilty but was found
guilty by Magistrate R. S. Nelson.
Call.'-
Me * Mel
FOR  FAST
EFFICIENT
T.V.  SERVICE!
Phone 352-S581
Logical Way of Solving
Problem-A. C. Sylvest
VANCOUVER (CP) — Leaders of communities
picked by University of British Columbia president John
B. Macdonald as the sites of future colleges Wednesday
defended his plan against criticism from the provincial
government.
They said the college plan must be implemented
despite a claim by Education Minister Leslie Peterson
in the legislature Tuesday that the projects are too expensive.
Mr. Peterson said Macdonald's
recommendations can only be
carried out if there is an economic boom in British Columbia
and if the federal government
pays most of the bill.
Mayor Dick Parkinson of Kelowna, which is the site of the
proposed Okanagan regional college, said: "The government is
always telling us that B.C. is
booming right now, why wait
longer?"
"This matter has got to be
tion must be boosted if we are
to compete with other countries."
A. C. Sylvest, chairman CJ
the village commission at Castlegar — site of the proposed
Kootenays regional college —
said lie thought the Macdon
aid report was the most logical
way of solving the educational
problem.
Burnaby Reeve Alan Emmott
said: "1 can't see any reason
why a start shouldn't be made
faced right now. Higher educa-1 on Burnaby College."
Charge Peterson Unfair
In Discussing Report
VICTORIA (CP) - Education
Minister Peterson was charged
Wednesday with being "unwittingly" unfair and misleading
when discussing the Macdonald
report on higher education.
Anthony Gargarve of Mackenzie, who often speaks for the
New Democratic Party on education matters, said the minister
did Mr. John Macdonald a disservice when he mentioned the
Break-Enter
Suspect Freed
On $500 Bail
Robert S. Harper of Nelson
charged with breaking and entering, was released on $500 bail
by Magistrate R. S. Nelson in
city police court Wednesday.
Harper was arrested by city
police early Wednesday morning
after allegedly breaking into the
Nelson armory on Victoria
Street.
About 1 a.m. members of the
111th Battery heard noises coming from the quartermaster
stores and immediately contacted city police. The lock on the
door had been broken to gain
entry.
No plea was entered by Harper and the case has been adjourned until Feb. 18.
School Band
Talk Heard by
Music Teachers
The development of school
bands was the topic of the guest
speaker at a recent meeting of
the Nelson branch Of the B.C.
Registered Music Teachers Association.
Supervisor of instrumental
music lor Nelson school P. Gerg-
ley was the guest speaker.
Plans were completed for the
Teachers' Student Recital to be
held on Monday while a committee was formed to prepare
plans for Canada Music Week
this  autumn.
H. E. Klein was welcomed as
a new member of the association.
Install IOOF
Officers for '63
The new officers of Kootenay
Lodge No. 16, IOOF for 1963 were
installed recently in an impres.
sive ceremony by a staff under
the direction of the District Deputy Grand Master Frank G. Lip
pingwell.
Elected, kere: Noble Grand R
V. Townsend, Vice Grand A. W.
Stephenson, recording secretary
R. D. Pettet, financial secretary
R. M. Boates, treasurer W. A.
Triggs.
Appointed officers were:
Junior Past Grand F. Searle,
RSNG A. G. Lane, LSNG R. L.
Hong, RSVG E. L. Hall, LSVG
P. T. Carroll, Warden J. W.
Kelly, Conductor G. R. Pickering, RSS D. Likar, LSS W. J.
Bouey, OG I. E. Lewis, IG J. T.
Moon, chaplain, W. J. Mathews,
color bearer J. C. Fletcher.
FOR HIM OR HER
ELECTRIC SHAVERS
A Reqlly Special Gift
Far Your Valentine
4 Brands to Choose From
LQWEST PRICES
SAMPLE'S
ph.
"YOUR
352-2313
NELSON
PHARMACY LTD.
FORTRESS OF HEALTH"
639 Baker St.      Nelson, B.C.
University of B.C. president's
report Tuesday.
Mr. Peterson said during the
budget debate that the recom
mendation of the Macdonald re
port for additional expenditures
of $111,000,000 a year for capital
costs by 1970 must be carefully
studied.
He said to implement the recommendations would involve increasing the number of gainfully
employed persons in 1970 to at
least 700,000 and then taxing
them an average of $185 a year
for higher education alone.
Mr. Gargrave said that if the
minister had read the report
more closely he would have seen
that the aotual additional expenditures amounted to $65,000,000—
not $111,000,000.
The additional cost would be
borne, not only by the province,
but by municipalities, the federal government, industry, endowments, alumni contributions
and student fees.
The member said when Mr.
Peerson criticized the 1970 expenditures he should also have
projected the provincial revenues to that year.
He said the minister had failed
to grasp the significance of the
report.
"We're implementing it at any
event," interjected Mr. Peterson.
Mr. Gargrave said the Macdonald report did not illustrate
the hopes of higher education but
the facts.
He said he supported Mr. Peterson's call for greater federal
government financial aid to higher education.
Regional Hospital System
Need Sounded by Brothers
p"-  ..-,' i> •    "*
m
H
M
In the Courts
Edward Rossel was fined $200
and costs in city court Tuesday
for failing to stop at the scene
of an accident.
Rossel, driving east on Front
Street Feb. 9, struck a car driven
by Henry E. Stevenson who was
in the process of making a left
hand turn from Front Street to
Hall Street. Mr. Stevenson was
weat-bound at the time. After
striking the Stevenson vehicle
and causing about $200 damage,
Rossel also struck a vehicle,
behind Mr. Stevenson, driven by
Dave Ferguson, which sustained
minor damages, court was told.
Rossel pleaded guilty before
magistrate R. S. Nelson.
Mike F. Popow pleaded guilty
to being in possession of liquor
while being on the interdicted
list. He was fined $50 and costs
in city court by magistrate
Nelson.
Beaton, Maras
Reported in
Good Condition
Hospital authorities reported
Ken Beaton, 27, is in satisfactory condition after doctors amputated his left leg just below
the knee Sunday.
The amputation resulted from
an industrial accident Saturday
morning when Mr. Beaton's foot
was trapped in a cement hopper
worm gear and was severely
mangled.
Mr. Beaton stepped into the
uncovered Opening of the gear
which pulled his foot into the
machinery.
Also reported in good, condition in Kootenay Lake General
Hospital is J. Maras, 606 Front
Street.
Mr. Maras was hit by a car
Jan. 31 while crossing ina pedestrian zone in the 600 block Baker
Street.
SH:-
PERT CANADIAN CHAMPION LOUISA ORWELL, having been one of the principal skaters in
"Ice Capades" lor three years, will be a decided
attraction at the annual ice revue Friday and Saturday in the Civic Centre. Miss Orwell has won the
Okanagan most artistic award five times, has twice
held Okanagan senior pairs, senior ladies and Western Canadian junior titles and is now Nelson's new
figure skating professional.
Nakusp-Galena Bay
Road Link Worth
$2 Million to Area
NAKUSP — During the recent
quarterly meeting of the Associated Chambers of Commerce
of Southeastern British Columbia, delegates were urged to
lake action on the Nakusp-
Galena Bay road.
E. B. Gates, president of the
Nakusp Chamber-of Commerce,
said, "There is nothing more
important to the cash registers
of every businessman in the
West Kootenays as well as the
government than to get trans-
Canada tourist traffic directed
into the glorious Kootenays via
Revelstoke, and of course this
route presents the shortest,
quickest, least expensive to
build and maintain, access for
30,000 inhabitants of the West
Kootenays.
Mr. Gates said jn a letter to
the Association's president, C.
W. Ramsden of Nelson, that the
government has started to slash
right-of-way (spare time help of
the Department of Highways)
through the private properties
just north of the Kuskanox
bridge at Nakusp, which shows
at least their intent of connecting up to the Celgar road and
ultimately taking it over.
"But," he continued, "ultimately is not soon enough, and
unless continually poked by
everybody these issues get lost
in the Victoria shuffle.
He urged that all publicity
pressure be used while the house
is sitting in Victoria on this urgently needed, relatively inexpensive, badly needed jssue for
the benefit of everyone in the
West Kootenays as well as the
travelling public.
"It could add $2 million to our
economy in 1963," he concluded
At the quarterly meeting Mr,
Gates moved that as the Rogers
Pass section of the Trans-Canada
Highway No. 1 is now completed
and the travelling public require
and desire access to the Kootenays from Revelstoke, therefore
it be resolved that the provincial government at once gazette
the private road between Galena
Bay and Nakusp to promote the
economic development of this
region." The motion was carried.
VICTORIA (CP) - Donald
Brothers (SC — Rossland-Trail)
Tuesday proposed, that a recognized system of regional hospitals is needed in British Columbia.
He said some hospitals should
become regional hospitals while
others should remain community
hospitals.
The regional hospitals would
have better facilities for more
specialized work. They would
receive an additional grant from
the government.
Community hospitals would not
have so many facilities.
He said the hospital at Trail
is handling cases originating
from the Okanagan to the Alberta border. The people of Trail
should not be called on to support facilities for treating parties
from the Okanagan, he added.
All hospitals were asking for
better facilities. .If the trend continued hospitals and the government would go broke.
Mr. Brothers also mentioned in
the budget debate in the legislature the eight-year fatality free
traffic record of Trail. He said
he was not boasting.
He said the record of the city
of 13,000 was due to concentration on safety and an active
safety council. The Trail Times
published daily the number of
fatality-free days.
The people were traffic conscious.
"They don't walk down the
wrong side of the street in dark
clothing."
Funeral Service
Held for Mrs.
Irene Christie
Funeral service for Mrs. Sara
Irene Christie, wife of W. B.
Christie, was conducted Wednesday at St. Saviour's Pro Cathedral with Rev. Canon George Lang
officiating.
Mrs. Christie died in Kootenay
Lake General Hospital Saturday.
The church overflowed with
friends and associates to the
point where additional seating
had to be arranged. The church
choir was in attendance as were
large representations from the
Order of the Eastern Star, De-
Molay and Jpbs Daughters.
Hymns siing were "XXIII
Psalm" and "Saviour Again to
Thy Dear Name We Raise."
Pallbearers were Wilton Allen,
George Coletti, Stan Morris, J.
W. McClelland, W. H. Langridge
and E. W. White.
Interment followed in Nelson
Memorial Park.
For That "SPECIAL"
VALENTINE
CHOCOLATES
$1.25 to $3.00
Fleury's Pharmacy
Harold Mayo (Prop.)
Corner Baker and Ward Sts.
Ph. 352-2613      Nelson
COMPLETE BEDROOM SET
12 Pieces
• 3-Piece Bedroom
Suite
• Box Spring
• Mattress'
• 2 Pillows
• Sheets
• Pillow Cases
• 2 Lamps
• Bedspread
50
CHROME
SUITES
S  PIECE
$5950
a "iiijiii#is..> m —» *m*#*mmm
yfcs«^-*»i m <m -m * nsmmam 1
CHESTERFIELD
SUITES
2 PIECE
$199
Nelson Home Furniture
640 Baker St.
AND APPLIANCES LTD.
Nelson Phone 352-6432
_____________
.■■;.-   - ■ ■. -. ■ • •■
■'■
..■•.-_•     ■    .   - .
t_mmf_^_m^^^
 Torchlight Parade, Talent Show
Open Kimberley Snow Fiesta
KIMBERLEY - A torchlit
path down the slopes of Kimber-
ley's North Star Ski Hill tonight
will draw all eyes to the hill to
officially open Kimberley's
eighth annual Snow Fiesta.
Spelling o u t "Fiesta" the
skiers will swoop down the hill
in a spectacular opening event
which, with a talent show, will ter. This will be followed by a
give  the   big  event  a  rousing
sendoff.
The talent show, at which candidates for the title of Snow
Fiesta Queen will display their
skills, will be officially opened
by 1962 Fiesta Queen Judy Coul-
There* s
something
SPECIAL
about
Seagi
irams
SPECIAL OLD
reception at the Union Hall.
Opening rounds in the snow
fiesta bonspiel, Jaycee Mardi
Gras, minor hockey, basketball
and a teen dance will be
scheduled for Friday.
Saturday is the big day, with
pet and costume parade; a
grand parade ending at the snow
castle, where the new queen will
be named; a boxing card; judo
and weight lifting; square dance;
farmers' dance; ice carnival
and teen dance.
Sunday, action will feature
bobsled finals, bonspiel windup
and a ski meet.
One of Sunday's important
events is naming of the Citizen
of the Year.
 (i	
Board Copes With Changes Of
Plans Caused by Sons Leaving
SLOCAN CITY - W. E, Graham of Slocan City was named
chairman of the Board of Trustees of School District No. 8 (Slocan) at a meeting held recently
in the Board office at Slocan
City.
Other trustees are J. L. Wilson,  Silverton;  W.  G.  Thring,
End of March
Slocan School
Set for
Referendum
SLOCAN CITY - A $269,690
program for Slocan District
schools is planned for the coming year, with a referendum to
be held in March to test the opinion of district residents on the
expenditure.
Details of the proposed improvements to schools in the Slocan area were presented by the
school trustees at a special meeting held recently in the Board office at Slocan City.
Objective of the Board's program, which may raise antagonism within localized areas, is to
provide a standard throughout
the entire district comparable to
standards throughout the province at the same time maintain
a satisfactory mill rate.
From the amount named in
the referendum as an estimate
of needed improvements, $12,500
has been allocated for acquiring
enlarged to serve the increased
staff and provied adequate space
for supplies and book storage.
PUPIL GROWTH BASIS
The Board has based these requirements on a projection of
pupil growth in 1963-66 of 100
students in grades 8-12.
W. E. Graham Elementary
Secondary School at Slocan City
is the only secondary school in
the district without an activity
room, which hampers the physical fitness program of the students, as well as their participation in inter-school activities.
The activity room will be built
with adequate change and shower facilities; while the addition
of one more classroom within the
next three years is planned to
maintain the provincial teacher-
pupil ratio. An increase of the
administrative area is also slated for this school, whose pupil
Finer Taste is a Seagram Tradition
This adwrtisamant Is not published or displayed by ttis
liquor Control Boarder by the Government of British Columbia
and devolpment of school sites j growth to 1966 in the elemen-
and playground areas.
CONSTRUCTION $209,000
Purchase, construction and reconstruction of buildings for
school purposes will consume
$209,000. to be spent within the
3 - year borrowing period as
stated in the referendum. The
Board has planned expenditures
to utilized portable classrooms
still available to the Board at the
New Denver Dormitory, to make
additions to the Lucerne Jr.-Sr.
High School in New Denver,
rather than request that the ratepayer provide more funds for an
addition to the school building.
Lucerne Jr.-Sr. High will also
be provided with change room
and shower facilities in connection with the activity room. The
lack of these facilities is detrimental to the health of the student, who is unable to change into gym strip for the activity, and
then back into his or her school
clothing. Without shower facilities the building becomes permeated with undesirable stale
body odors, it has been found.
Administrative and storage facilities in the school are also to be
tary division, grades 1-7 is 87
students; and the secondary division, grades 8-12, 73 students.
Mount Sentinel Jr.-Sr. High
School, at Ihe southern end of
the school district, with pupil
projection for the next 3 years
in grades 8-12 of 130 students, is
the largest secondary school in
the Board's jurisdiction.
This school also, with seven
teachers, using the administrative area constructed for this
purpose as well as enlarged facilities for the activity room, to
contain showers and change
room. To be constructed are
two extra classrooms to contain
home economics and industrial
arts. These two subjects are
provided when the school pupil
population reaches the level of
130 students. The board and the
department of education approve
the establishment of these courses at other schools in thei district when pupil growth warrants
it.
I.A. AT MT. SENTINEL
Mt. Sentinel, since September,
1962, has been offering a minimal   industrial   arts   program,
Smart Buy - Warehouse Sale
APPLIANCES
23-Inch Dual Speaker
CONSOLE by
i
MODEL 33-T-32
The  pleasing,  functional
a walnut grain finish, will
Blue picture with exclusive
lines of this handsome console, in
enhance any room decor. Daylight
"Glarejector."
Reg. $309.95
SALE
269
.95
GENERAL S EiECTItli:
f AUTOMATIC DRYER
This deluxe, high speed, fully automatic dryer
dries a  full   12-pound  load with ease.
Regular $229.00.
SALE ONLY
199
These   are   not   promotional   models. All   items   on   sale   are   regular  stock   items
NELSON ELECTRIC CO. LTD.
5/4 Baker St.
Nelson, B.C.
Phone
352-5535
situated at the present time in
the basement of the school.
Slocan Park Elementary is
scheduled to receive moneys for
the enlargement of one less-than-
standard - size classroom thus
providing better facilties in the
two-room school.
Passmore elementary requires
the construction of an additional
classroom.
Furnishing and equipping of
the buildings and additions to the
schools as aforementioned will
require $25,200. Allowances totalling $22,990 for plans and supervision, and contingencies bring
the total estimates for the refer-
New Denver; N. H. Brewster,
South Slocan and A. W. Stach,
Winiaw.
A decreased enrolment in the
Slocan district of 77 pupils was
noted. This is a result of removal of Sons of Freedom sect
members from the district.
Enrolment in 1961 was 863, In
1962 it was 786.
Indirectly, the transferrance
of Sons of Freedom sect members from his unique school district has resulted in an extension
of the school program at Mount
Sentinel Secondary School to include commercial studies. The
new commercial room made
ready for use in December was
made possible by special warrant at the expense of the provincial government. However,
recent actions of the sect render
the appraisal of the retentive
power of this measure impractical.
Temporaray accomodation to
provide industrial arts was made
ready at Mt. Sentinel for the beginning of this school year. The
necessary industrial arts equipment for a minimal program
was purchased.
It was assumed that the expense involved would be handled
in the same manner as the commercial room, at no expense to
endum to $269,690.
These estimates are based on | the School District but the pre-
the presumption that Sons of
Freedom children are not returned to District schools. If these
students are returned to the Kootenays and to School District No.
8, the Board expects that the
provincial government would resume its policy of assistance to
the board, as a retentive measure for children of Sons of Freedom sect.
sent fluid state of the Sons' of
Freedom sect may render a concession of this nature difficult.
The enrolment of the Mt. Sentinel School in Grades 8 to 11 as
projected for the next three
years, without the attendance of
Sons of Freedom children, warrants industrial arts facilities.
The board is considering amalgamation of Slocan City Elemen
tary and W. E. Graham Secondary Schools. Under provisions of
the building manual, for B.C.
schols, the two must form one
elementary-secondary school to
justify a gymnasium. At present
the two schools at Slocan City
are under one principal, G. Lind.
Grade averages in the Slocan
district are above standard
grade levels in all grades.
In the secondary school provincial department examinations
the school district percentage of
passes was at least five per cent
higher that the provincial average, with one school achieving
96 per cent of passes on exami
nations written.
The provincial survey test of
grade 8 puplis revealed that the
pupils did as well or better than
their scholastic ability indicates
in spelling, science, and the
mechanics of English, and
rather less well in vocabulary,
reading, arithmetic fundamentals, arithmetic problems, and
social studies.
Schools in District No. 8 are:
Lucerne Secondary, W. E. Graham Secondary, Mt. Sentinel Secondary, New Denver Elementary, Silverton Elementary, Slocan Elementary, Perry Siding
Elementary, Appledale Elementary, Winiaw Elementary, Pass-
more Elementary, Vallican Elementary, Slocan Park Elementary, Crescent Valley Elementary, South Slocan Elementary.
AID ON ICE
Car tires with tungsten carbide studs in the tread are
claimed to give 50 per cent
shorter braking distance on ice
or slippery roads in Sweden.
Salmo Seeks $1000 Work
To CD Building Roof
SALMO — Special application the river from both ends of Glen-
will be made to Civil Defence
through the area coordinator, W.
W. Wait, to have $10(10 work done
to the Civil Defence building roof
in Salmo.
This will be application for expenditure outside of the regular
CD budget, and will have to be
approved by senior governments
to be done on a share basis.
W. A. Taylor", village commissioner, is Salmo Civil Defence
coordinator.
This was one of the items on
the village commission agenda
Tuesday night at the mid-February meeting, conducted by chairman A. W. Hearn.
Work is under way on cleaning
drainage ditches in the park
area, which has received provincial and federal government approval under the winter works
program. Four men are employed on this.
A reply from Associated Engineering Services indicated that
a sewer service survey undertaken in 1953 estimated installation of a sewer system in the
village would cost approximately $167,500. Chairman Hearn instructed village clerk Frank
Flood to instruct the engineering survey company to update
the report including revised estimate covering recent expansion
of the village and changes in
construction costs. He will request them to look into the feasibility of a lagoon system and to
compare the cost of this with a
treatment plant system. The
company said they would do this
at a cost of no more than $250
Compiants were heard of improperly installed oil furnaces.
Following inspection by the local
fire marshal, John Blacklock,
these have since been corrected.
The clerk was instructed to
write to the owner of a building
which must be removed in line
with the housing code. Two unsightly buildings have been removed within the last two
months and two or three more
are expected to be taken down
before the summer.
The community hail will be
donated for the Little League
Association meeting Feb. 17.
A request from the public library association was granted,
allowing more shelf room near
the front of the hall. At present
all books are kept on shelves at
the back of the hall and there is
no more room there for expansion of the book supply.
The Selkirk Union Board of
Health request for.one cent per
capita for all association members was approved by the commission.
Some discussion was held on
methods of closing off access to
FAMED CHURCH SITE
The Church of Santa Maria in
Trivio. opposite Rome's famed
Trevi Fountain, contains the remains of Saint Gaspard del Buf-
alo who died in 1837.
dale bridge to avoid accidents
with young children going down
to the water. A near tragedy
occurred at the bridge recently
when a youngster ran down un
tiling and fell through the ice.
The   school   budget  was  accepted.
The commission approved an
ad to be published in the forth-
coming pictorial edition of the
der the bridge to retrieve some- Nelson Daily News.
NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURS., FEB. 14, 1963 — 3
School Board
Gives Teachers
Good Housing
SOUTH SLOCAN - Adequate
housing for teachers in rural
areas has been a big factor in
obtaining and keeping better
teachers for the schools of District No. 8 (Slocan). A recent
addition to the teacherages is a
new modern house occupied by
the principal of Mount Sentinel
Junior-Senior High School in
South Slocan.
The house has living room,
kitchen, bathroom, three bedrooms and a full basement.
Linoleum tile floors are laid
throughout the main part of the
house.
The living room features an
accent wall of curly elm panelling, with bookshelves built in
beneath one of the two large
picture windows. Heating is
electrical.
The modern kitchen has plenty
of cupboard space and there is
other storage throughout the
house. Large clothes closets are
featured in the bedrooms.
The full bathroom has a
shower, colored plumbing and a
vanity sink.
This is the largest teacher-
age in the area.
Funds are provided for construction of teachers' houses
from a sinking fund established
for the purpose by the board and
rentals are based on costs of
construction and are comparable to similar dwellings in
larger centers.
SALMO BUILDING
HAS NO OWNER
SALMO — A building in Salmo
used for Civil Defense purposes,
has no owner.
The orphaned state of the
building came to light when the
village commission decided to do
something about condition of the
roof of the building" and tried
to locate an owner*,
It was at one time the provin-   :
cial police headquarter. The pro-   |
vincial assessor says there is ho
owner registered for the building.
The   federal   government   disclaims ownership.
Meanwhile, $1000 worth of
work needs to be done on the
roof.
Ask Salmo
Residents lo
7
SALMO - The Village commission will have leaflets put .
in residents' phone books requesting that they dial. seven
digits when they are using the
fireball number.
The firehall phones have been
jammed frequently recently.
B.C. Telephone Company crews
have discovered that people
phoning have been dialling only
1 five numbers, which is possible
on other phones but ties the
fire phones into knots.
The village commission is also
asking its residents to use the
fire button at the firehall if
they are in the vicinity of the
hall and something happens to
the phone. '•'• .
WANT  ADS  GET  RESULTS
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Graham Wafers
Christie's;   13  oz.   pkg.,
Large Eggs
Fresh; Doz. 	
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for
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Mushroom Soup
Campbell's; 10 oz. tin.
Tomato Juice
Heinz: 105 oz. tin 	
Sifto Salt
2-lb. pkg., 	
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Apple Juice
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Milk
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5-oz.  size,  .......        	
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Miracle Whip; 16 bz. jar .
Salad Bowl
Kraft; 16 oz. jar    	
Cottage Cheese
Palm;  16 oz.  pkg.,
Soup Mix
Lipton's Chicken Noodle,
king Sugar
5-lb. poly 	
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32 oz. jar
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KEN'S PRODUCE and
JOYCE'S GROCERY
317 Vernon Street
Nelson, B.C.
Phone 352-3910
 <*---*
Established April 32, 1902 Nelson, B. C.
Published by the NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,
266 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia, mornings except
Sundays and holidays in the centre oi 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 ln this
paper and also the local news published therein.
Wednesday, February 13, 1963
Heart Disease Mysteries Resea rch Qoal
Research is the stimulating force
oi our modern way of life and of our
scientific and industrial expansion.
Without the desire to know, to investigate and to find causes and their
effects there would be little progress
in the world today.
Research often starts with a problem ob the search for a solution goes
on, in the process of solving one
problem researchers find they have
found the key to other problems.
This is particularly so in medical
research. The human body is so
complex with so many parts having
different functions and all in some
way dependent on other parts that
what is discovered about one organ
or part of the body well may lead
to a new understanding of others.
And while it can be said oi scientific research that it is interesting to
scientists it can be said of medical
research that it Is of interest to the
whole world.
Even in medical research the
field is wide and which particular
project should be given priority is
a matter of opinion. There are many
painful diseases under research
throughout the world, diseases which
are often painful in their effects and
ravage the body, but one disease
which Is the chief killer often does
not make itself felt. It progresses
insidiously and only makes itself
felt when the patient collapses so
that often only an autopsy reveals
the cause of death as heart disease.
We need research into the causes
of heart disease because it is the
number one killer today. To finance
research the Canadian Heart Foundations were established and this
month they are seeking support in
the work they have undertaken.
White Coll
The labor picture is changing
in North America. According to
figures gathered at the last census
in the United States the white collar
worker now clearly dominates the
nation's work force.
According to the bureau of labor
which is preparing the moBt comprehensive report on American workers
ever compiled, white collar workers
in 1960 made up 43 per cent of employed persons, compared with 39
per cent for manual workers. Ten'
years earlier, comparable percentages were 37 and 40. In 1940 they
were 33 and 37.
The fastest growing occupational
group in the 1950s was professional,
technical and kindred workers,
which includes engineers, natural
scientists, medical and other health
workers, teachers and technicians.
This group increased more than four
times as fast as total employment.
Professional engineers, for example, grew in employment by
about 64 per cent over the decade,-
with the" largest numerical increase
•among electrical engineers. Among
scientists, the fastest growth was
shown by physicists and mathematicians. Accompanying these increases was a rapid rise in employment of electrical and physical science technicians.
The rise in the number of school
age children produced an exceptionally large increase in the number
of elementary and secondary school
teachers — about 46 per cent between 1950 and 1960.
"These trends reflect the changing complexion of our economy,
especially the greater application of
scientific findings in industry and
the rising demand for educational
and medical services," comments the
Milwaukee Journal. "With the present pace of technological advance,
changes in the composition of the
Gems of Thought
"WHEN THE HEART SPEAKS"
When the heart speaks, however Simple
the words, its language is always acceptable to those who have hearts.
—Mary Baker Eddy.
* *      *
When the heart is afire, sortie sparks
will fly out of the mouth.—Thomas Fuller.
* *      *
A loving heart is the truest wisdom.
—Charles Dickens.
* *      *
If a good face is a letter Of recommendation, a good heart is a letter Of
credit.—Edward George BulwSr-LyttOn.
* *      *
Everybody's heart is open, you know,
when they have recently escaped from
severe pain. Or are recovering the blessing of health.—.lane Austen.
* *      *
A kind heart is a fountain of gladness,
making everything in its vicinity to freshen
into smiles.—Washington Irving.
ar
Work
ers
work force will be even more dramatic in the years ahead."
—Nanaimo Free Press.
Winter Has Lost
Its Happy Touch
Nearly snowless winters, like that
enjoyed by most of the Inland Empire, are fine for motorists, but they
leave some older people, who have
long memories, wilh a feeling that
something is missing. In the "old
fashioned" winters, as they recall
them from the safety and comfort
of a warm 1963 home, the passing
parade of traffic was a lot more
colorful and interesting.
There isn't much that is picturesque about a stream of fast cars
purring along bare pavements. It is
nothing like .the days when people
bundled up in open sleighs, with
horses stepping gingerly over the
snow and ice and the harness bells
jingling gaily.
Sleighing parties out to the country place under a full moon, the
wagon on runners that brought coal
and wood to the home, the magical
formations of icicles hanging motionless from eaves and tree limbs,
the boisterous shouts of youngsters
building snow fOrts and throwing
snowballs — these are all missing
in a winter like this, and there are
those who cannot help but recall
them rather wistfully.
Those things have all been made
obsolete, by lack of a heavy snov;
storm and by the invention of such
modern conveniences as the combustion motor, skid chains and snow
tire3. Another thing that threatens
to become obsolete, solely due to
thft scarcity of deep snow, is the Bled.
Well-intentioned but not prophetic parents gave sleds to a lot of
children last Christmas. Those beautifully shaped vehicles still stand in
hall closets or just inside cellar
doors, waiting for the day that never
Seems due to come, when they can
be trotted out and Ihe children can
join a merry throng on a long sloping white hillside.
If it keeps on like this nobody will
buy new sleds come next Christmas.
The children might not even remember what Snow is, or what a sled
can well be used for. Unless nature
comes through with an "old fashioned" winter before long those idle
sleds may becom6 the last of their
kind, destined eventually for a museum where they will repose beneath a little white card explaining
that such things were used by children for sliding back there in the
early 20th Century.
—Spoiesman-fleview.
Indian Paper Sayt . . .
Red China Explodes
First Nuclear Device
NEW DELHI (Reutersl-Th*
Indian Express says Communist
China exploded its first nuclear
device Jan. 11.
The newspaper's report, however, was received with scepticism at selsmological listening
posts throughout the world.
Seismologists In New Delhi
said the seismological observatory here had not recorded anything on the night of Jan. 11
even remotely attributable to a
nuclear blast.
The British Atomic Energy
Authority said it has heard nothing official Of any Chinese nu
clear Wast. An authority spokesman said the authority would be
"surprised" if the Indian newspaper report was true.
In Tokyo, the central meteorological office said seismological stations throughout Japan
have not reported any unusual
vibrations likely to have been
Caused by a Chinese nuclear
blast.
In Geneva, some Western and
non-aligned officials at the 17-
natlon Geneva disarmament
talks said the Indian newspaper
report was the first they had
heard of any Chinese nuclear
test.
Kennedy Confers With
Foreign Policy Aides
WASHINGTON (AP> - The
Washington Post says President
Kennedy conferred with his
chief foreign policy advisers
Tuesday to review cracks ln the
Atlantic alliance.
The Post, quoting informed
sources, says the meeting was
one of a series scheduled to reexamine U.S. policy in the wake
of F r a n c e's vetoing British
membership in the European
Common Market.
"Inside the Kennedy administration," reports The Post
story, "there appear to be two
main schools of strategy for
dealing wilh the challenge to
the 'grand design' of American
foreign policy.
"To use an oversimplification,
one group suggests in essence
that the United States should
regard French President
Charles de Gaulle's policy as a
head-on attack on American
policy, and react to it head-on,
to isolate him. This group sees
as inevitable collision between
"two 'grand designs.'
"A second group, one that
seems to include most of the ex
perienced diplomats, wants to
work around the de Gaulle obstacle. It favors co - operating
with de Gaulle where possible
and opposing him where necessary, but letting the European
nations that disagree with him
set the pace—for fear that
otherwise the Common Market
may be destroyed, along with
the momentum of the Atlantic
alliance.
"The latter approach appears
to be in the ascendancy."
BIBLE DIGEST
H. B. Dean
It's too bad there is so little
a house, and digged deep, and
laid the foundation upon a rock;
and when the flood arose, the
stream beat vehemently upon
that house, and could not shake
it: for it was founded upon a
rock." Luke 6:48.
Rest your future on a sure
foundation and all the elements
of evil will never move you.
Christ is the rock of ages for
all ages, trust Him.
Interpreting the News
By CARMAN CUMMING
Canadian  Press  Staff Writer
Disarmament negotiations, as
tedious and involved as they are
important, are under way again
in Geneva. As usual the opening
has been marked by a strange
mixture of hope and pessimism.
The 17-nation talks coyer the
whole spectrum of disarmament, but the hope centres on
a possible agreement to ban
nuclear tests.
The reason for optimism was
well defined by the United
States delegate, William Foster.
He said it seemed to the U.S.
that "the basic ingredient of
success—a desire for agreement
by both nuclear sides—may now
exist."
In other words, the hope is
that last year's extensive testing by both sides may have resulted in some sort of balance:
a situation where neither side
will consider it necessary to
start a new test series to "catch
up" with the other side.
NEED FRANCE
The main reason for pessimism is President Charles de
Gaulle. Tlie French leader has
made it crystal clear that
France — which was to have
been Ihe 18th power at the Geneva talks — has no intention of
In time of emergency, municipalities may become dependent upon one another. Civil Defence urges planning to ensure
thai aid is fast and efficient.
signing away its right to test
until it has a firm membership
in th* nuclear club. Russia has
made it equally clear that no
test ban can be concluded without France.
This would seem to make the
Geneva talks a mere exercise
in futility. But there are powerful reasons to continue negotiations.
For one thing, both East and
West are undOr pressure from
the eight non - aligned nations
at the talks to get down to business.
For another, the technical differences separating the two
sides appear smaller than ever
before. If an agreement in principle could be reached France
would come under great pressure from all sides to go along
with it.
READY TO BARGAIN?
Britain's minister Of state and
chief delegate, Joseph Godbfer,
indicated before the opening Of
the current session that the
West was prepared for serious
horse-trading. He said the West
might be willing to reduce its
demands for on-site inspections
if the Ru46ians also were prepared tO make concessions.
He implied that fewer inspections might be necessary if the
Russians agreed to siting more
of the automatic seismic stations to differentiate between
earthquakes and - underground
tests.
Meanwhile, the issue has been
complicated by continued U.S.
underground tests in Nevada.
Russia says this resumption of
testing threatens the chances
for ah agreement. The U.S.
sayS it is merely "continuing"
the series broken for the dura-
lion 6f the January test ban
talks in the United States.
HUBERT
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"Well, anyway I proved that the art of serious
conversation isn't dead."
••■•■■-•-~-- ■—•»*
_
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.   ■     ■■ - ■
 :.;--:, .'
NELSON DAILY NEWS,
jTHURS., FEB. 14, 1963—5
Mike May
Alter Stand
Say Tories
By KEN KELLY
OTTAWA (CP1 — Conservatives are preparing to accuse
Liberal Leader Pearson of retreating from his Jan. 12 position on nuclear arms for Canadian forces, political sources
say.
The accusation is based on
statements by Mr. Pearson Jan.
12 in Toronto, Jan. 25 in Parliament and Tuesday at a press
conference during the Liberal
party's national council meeting.
In hiB Toronto speech, Mr.
Pearson said the government
"should end at once its evasion
of responsibility by discharging
the commitments it has already
accepted for Canada. It can
only do this by accepting nuclear warheads, for those defensive tactical weapons which
cannot effectively be used without them, but whicli we have
agreed to use."
At another point in the Jan.
12 speech, he said:
"The government should reexamine at once the whole basis of Canadian defence policy.
In particular, it should discuss
with the United States and with
NATO a role for Canada in con-
tinental and collective defence
which would be more realistic
and effective for Canada than
the present one.
"This examination would be
concerned, among other things,
with the necessity of building up
NATO's conventional forces and
the part Canada could play in
this.
'HONOR COMMITMENTS'
"However, until the present
role is changed, a new Liberal
government would put Canada's
armed services in a position to
discharge fully commitments
undertaken for Canada by its
predecessor."
In Parliament, Mr. Pearson
used almost identical words.
He also said in his Jan. 25
address to the Commons that
"while keeping our pledges, we
would seek a better and more
effective defence role for Canada in the alliance, knowing
that while this is necessary—
and it will now take time—it is
yllso necessary to honor the
pledges we have undertaken until they are changed."
Mr. Pearson has denied that
these statements mean renegotiation of a non-nuclear role
after accepting nuclear arms.
At Tuesday's press conference, he said re-examination of
defence policy should be carried on both inside and outside
Parliament and within the Western alliance.
CAN'T PREDICT RESULTS
"What the results would be I
don't know," he said, adding
that he would hope for a "more
appropriate" role for Canadian
forces. The review might establish that a conventional role
"may well be the best role."
Conservatives argue that Mr.
Pearson intended to give the
impression in Toronto and in
Parliament that, while accepting nuclear warheads now, the
Liberals favored changing Canada's continental and collective
defence role to one that would
not require nuclear warheads.
His statements Tuesday, they
say, reflect efforts to appeal to
two opposing viewpoints—those
who favor a nuclear role and
those opposed, the former centred in Ontario and Western
Canada and the latter in Quebec.
In the Liberal party's policy
declaration on defence, Liberal
opposition to acquisition
of weapons requiring nuclear
warheads is recalled. This referred to opposition to Canada
acquiring Bomarc anti-aircraft
missiles and Voodoo fighters for
continental defence and CF-104
fighters and Honest John artillery rockets in NATO.
'MUST FULFIL ROLE'
"But the missiles and aircraft were acquired," the statement says. "To accept defensive nuclear weapons now is the
only way to fulfil the role to
which the government has committed Canadian forces. . . .
"A Liberal government in office would review our defence
policy in order to have our
forces provide maximum security while making an effective
contribution to the concerted effort of democratic countries in
search of real and durable
peace."
Mr. Pearson told his press
conference that he has some
ideas on Canada's future defence role but will make them
known in detail if the Liberals
are elected and become responsible for defence policy.
He said he doubts whether an
election campaign is a suitable
time for such detail—it was a
time for principles.
'.-  i.r.- ,
WITH OUR
PRICES
SMOKED M  4fes-
Picnic Hams    HA
Whole or shank half  | l#lD.
Cottage Rolls
Sweet Pickled, (C.Q.V.)  2\ lb. avg.
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12
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Medium Eggs -
Strawberry Jam
Overwaitea Butter
Overwaitea.
48 oz. tins.
Overwaitea. 11
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Head Lettuce
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Spy Apples QQ
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We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities
Pineapple Juice
Dog Food ^"-—
Coca-Cola «*_
Bread
King of Hawaii;
48 ex.	
Overwaitea, now baked
locally; 16 oz. loaves _
Salad Oil
Swift's, with coupon
available here; 25 oz. bottle
MeVities,
assorted _
Cream style, Aylmer;
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[6 — NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURS., FEB. 14,1963
BEEF
CHUCK
Canada Choice,
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YOU CAN'T BEAT SUPER-VALU MEAT!
Beef. Sirloin, T-Bone or Club.
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Potted Meats
Bonus, assorted	
Dog. Food
Champion; 15 oz. tin _._—
Coca-Cola
Family size bottles, plus deposit
Margarine
Rose brand; 16 oz. carton  _.
Jello
Assorted flavors '. ,■..■.': ...
Tomato Juice
Libby's, fancy; 48 oz. tin
5 -99c
10-99c
12-99c
5-99c
5for99c
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3FOR 77(
RUMP ROAST BEEF
First and Second Cuts. Canada Choice.
v79
Whole Chicken
Burn's; 3 Ib. 14 oz. tin ..
Tea Bags
"The tea that Dares"; pkg. of 100
Dill Pickles
Nalley's; 58 oz. jar '.	
Bread
Martha Laine; 16 oz. loaf
Ice Cream
Woodvole; 3-piht carton	
Breeze
Giant size package .
Cake Mixes
Betty Crocker	
89c
69c
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2-33c
_ 45c
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3-99c
GROUND BEEF
85%  Leon. Canada Choice
ib 49c
Sockeye Salmon
Clover Leaf; 7| oz. tin —
Pork and Beans
Broder's;  15 oz. tin	
Salad Oil
Mazola; 32 oz. bottle
Wax Refills
Zee; 200 ft. roll 	
^ 49c
10-99c
85c
49c
Powdered
Pet Milk
Giant; 3 Ib. carton.
49
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Coffee
Drip or Regular; 16 oz. pkg.
65
Sun Rype
Apple Juice
Blue label; 48 oz. tin.
41-'1.00
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Scott Tissue
Colored; 4 roll pack
BANANAS
POTATOES
FISH & CHIPS
Wynndol,
Netted Gems, No. 2
100
lb. bag
Fraservale;
20 oz. ctn.
6 i $1.00
■ ■■
\-m
 w
ft
m
■< >K v. >-■
the
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suit
of wool boucle in spring
tones of pastel blue,
turquoise, red, pink,
gold, black, white, green
and navy.
Prkedfrom        $59.95
Charge accounts invited.
w
596 Baker St.
Phone 352-5742
NELSON, B. C.
V /
HEARTS AND FLOWERS were^h^r^-t^Vrjlentine tea of St. Joseph's
School Auxiliary held Wednesday aftarWoofi'viit".thevCathedral Hall. Conveners
of the seasonal event were Mrs: ^.*(S!;JNJljrpiycmdi;Mrs. D. T. Littlewood, and
Mrs. B. K. Arlidge was hostess. Grttsle-S'nPWj were iserviteurs. Shown above
are three of the young ladies, frota left, Jbarihe. Morin,' Kit Murison and Imelda
Buckley, with Mrs. M. I. Boyes, who presidedf,ctt the table with Mrs. G. Poulin,
Mrs. C DeFerro and Mrs. S. Moisey. Mrs. V. M. Killeen looked after the bake
table and Fairview auxiliary members looked after the candy stall. Mrs. W.
, .Fahlman was cashier and Mrs. A. .;Maida; (jind.Mrs; J. Ryan were ticket conveners.—Daily News photo. '-..',.. • '''■. .   V.«.";'<'.;• ,..■    i ■ .i-.
Queen Wears White Satin to
Read Speech  From Throne
WELLINGTON (CP-Reuters)
The speech from the. throne,
read by the Queen in opening
a special session of Parliament
ehre.said Wednesday the New
Zealand government is confident
the Commnnwealth can cope
with new conditions such as the
development of the Commn Market.
The speech said the movement "among the countries of
Western Europe toward 'closer
economic and political association has important implications
for New Zealand and all other
Commonwealth countries."
But the speech said.vthe gov
ernment is "fully confident of
the Commonwealth's capacity to
cope with conditions without losing, either its cohesion or the
multi - racial partnership by
which it is distingushed.".
Cheering thousands crowded
the capital's narrow streets as
the Queen drove to the Parliament buildings for the ceremonial opening. The Queen wore a
glittering, jewel - embroidered
gown of white satin and her diamond tiara.
Thousands flocked onto the
lawns when .she arrived with
Prince Philip 'in uniform as an
admiral of the fleet.
A 21-gun salute boomed out
and a formation of Canberra
bombers of the Royal New Zealand Air Force flew overhead.
HOCKEY KEEPSAKES LOST
OTTAWA (CP) -' Keepsakes
dating back to 1913 were stolen
from the home of hockey great
Aurel Joliat, 62, police reported
Wednesday, Among items taken
were a pocket watch engraved
"1924 Canadian world champions" and a watch fob engraved "1913 Ottawa public
school champions."
NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURS., FEB. 14, 1963 —tt
FIRST WOMAN PM I Mrs.   Sirirriavo   Bandaranaike,
The first woman to head the j became Ceylon's prime minis-
government of a modern state, | ter in July, 1960.
HURRY — HURRY — HURRY
YOU «nd YOU
OUR CUSTOMERS
SALE ENDS
FEBRUARY 16th
Take Advantage Now of
• BIGGEST  BARGAINS • LOWEST PRICES
Never again will you see such big savings.
SHOES FOR ALL
R. ANDREW & CO.
579 Baker St. Nelson, B.C.
Immigration   Officer Tells
Sbroptimists of Experiences
An extensive experience with
immigration service in'the British Isles and in Nelson was outlined for the entertainment of
the Nelson Soroptimist Club at
its dinner meeting this week.
R. J. Grinsted, officer in
charge of the Nelson field immigration office, addressed the
busines women on the services
and duties of the immigration
department and acquainted his
listeners with some little known
facets of the service.
Mr. Grinsted joined the immigration department in 1946
after seven years' service in the
Canadian Army. In 1952 he came
Salmoites
Shine in
Bridge Game
From Salmo, Mr. and Mrs. F.
E. Parsons were first place winners in north and south winning
pairs of this week's match point
bridge. Also from Salmo, Mrs.
Rene Dauphinais. and Mrs. E.
Hallett of Nelson were first in
east and west winning pairs.
Other winners in north and
south were Mrs. P. G. Morey
and Mrs. I. Williams, second;
Mrs. Paul Eisenhut of Oliver
and Mrs. Louis Hanic, third, and
Mr. and Mrs. George Lambert,
fourth. •
In east and west, Mrs. George
Gelinas and Mrs. J. Kilpatrick
were second; Mrs. R. H. Bradley
and Mrs. K. H. Grenfell, third,
and Mrs. J. Boyd and Mrs. J.
Long, fourth.
to Nelson to open office 'for the
Kootenay region. 19 1956 he was
posted to the overseas branch of
the immigration department in
London and served also in Liver-
oool, Leeds, Bristol, Glasgow,
Belfast and Dublin. In September, 1960, he was posted back to
Nelson.
Mr. Grinsted spoke of the relaxation of Canadian immigration policy in recent years. He
said there is no discrimination
of race or creed. He noted that
Canada can absorb an amount
equal to 1 per cent of her population each year.
People are chosen for their
background training and skill, he
informed his listeners. Thus they
can be expected to add to the
Canadian economy and increase
domestic markets and export
trade.
He spoke of services provided
by the department for immigrants on arrival in this country.
Responsibility of the department
lies in placement in employment
and giving advice in business or
farming. He noted that some immigrants arrive in Canada with
money to invest.
He said that in the overseas
branches, people wanting to
come to Canada are screened
fo rtheir ability and training to
fill the country's needs. They are
given information regarding
laws and regulations in this
country. In the United Kingdom
the service provides promotional
programs and question periods.
Following his talk, Mr. Grinsted showed slides of points of
interest in England and Ireland
which he had taken.
The speaker was introduced by
Miss Mary McDonald and thanked by Miss Leona Boss.
CGIT  PLAN
EVENTS FOR
MISSION BENEFIT
INVERMERE - The official
board for the Windermere pastoral charge held its annual
meeting at Invermere. Rev. R.
Smith, BA, BD, of Kimberley
opened the meeting with prayer
and John Godfrey, lay minister
of Wardner, gave a Bible reading.
CGIT girls of Trinity United
Church have been studying the
"Christian Movement in East
Asia," including such countries
as the Peoples' Republic of
China, Hong Kong, Taiwan,
Okinawa and South Korea.
As a highlight of the program
the group is planning an open
meeting for parents and friends
Feb. 18. There will be a display,
a Chinese song, a Korean game,
a film about Chinese medical
work in Korea and a play about
a Chinese refugee.
The local CGIT, known as the
"Lamplighters," plan to raise
money for RAVEMCO, an interdenominational radio, visual education, mass communication
committee. which spreads the
gospel to hundreds of thousands
of people in Asia, Africa and
Latin America. They will do this
by serving a typical refugee
lunch of bread, cheese and coffee for the congregation Feb. 17.
The "Samaritans", another
group, have raised money for
this by candy sales.
Women's Council  Head Says
Leadership  Talent Dormant
VICTORIA (CP) - Mrs. B.
Galloway of Vancouver, president of the B.C. Council of Women, said Wednesday women
must "more and more" accept
the responsibility of leadership.
Addressing the opening session
of the two-day annual meeting,
Mrs. Galloway said; "Many women  are potential  leaders  re
White Cross
DRESS PUMP
12.95
Sizes 5-11
AA-B Widths
White Cross dress pumps In
peaked throat style with dainty
stripping on Vamp enhanced
by bow trim. Fine quality supple leather uppers. IW Cuban
heel.
quiring only encouragement to
bring forth talents lying dormant."
Reviewing the council's activities in the last year, she said
an outstanding event was a presentation made to the Board of
Industrial Relations in connection with the hourly rate for
needle trade workers.
The rate had been 60 cents for
female and 75 cents for male
workers. The council pressed for
an hourly rate of $1 and for
equal pay for women.
She said authentic sources
gave the council's presentation
credit for influencing the board
in its decision to increase the
rate to $1 and to wipe out the
discriminatory clause between
men and women workers.
Councils from Burnaby, Chilliwack and Courtenay presented
reports in the morning session.
Mrs. Myrtle Vickberg of Burnaby said her group raised $862 for
the Save the Children Fund.
An honorary life membership
in the council was presented to
Mrs. J. H. Smith of West Van
couver, past president of North
and West Vancouver Councils
for women.
At Wednesday's meeting, the
council's resolutions will be presented to members of the legislature.
Made Life
Member
Of Council
VICTORIA (CP) — Mrs. J. H.
Smith of West Vancouver, Wednesday ' was presented with ah
honorary life membership in the
provincial Council of Women at
the annual meeting here.
She is past president of North
and West Vancouver Councils of
Women and has served for several years on the executive of
the provincial council.
Presentation was made by
Mrs. R. T. Gilmore, New Westminster, a past provincial president.
> DOLLAR DAY-DOLLAR DAY-DOLLAR DAY-DOLLAR^ DAY; DOLLAR KJaV- DOLLAR jt)AV • DOLLAR bAY-'DOLLAR DAY-DOLLAR OAYvl
frV ffsA 'A™
I v»iompatit|.
incorporated z«p may i6to
; DOLLAR DAY-DOLLAR DAY-DOLLAR DAY- DOLLAR DAY -DOLLAR DAY- DOLLAR DAY-DOLLAR DAY-DOLlAR DAY-DOLLAR DAY- 1
Starts Today - Sorry, No Phone, Mail or CO.D.-No Deliveries
TERRIFIC SAVINGS ON THESE $1 VALUES
PIECE GOODS
AND STAPLES
Pillow Cases
Excellent quality cotton subs. C •*
Standard size. Sale, pair  *<*•
Both Towels
Thick, absorbent terry, at-    jl
tractive colors. Seconds. Ea. * I
Hand Towels
Same quality and pattern as bath
towel. •}       C1
Sale,  .«• for * I
Face Cloths
Same quality and pat- C       Cl
tern as bath towel. .. \f for * I
Linen Tea Towels
Attractive design in assorted pastel
colors. Size: 3       Cl
.3 for *1
20" x
Sale,
Dish Cloths
First quality, assorted "I       C1
patterns. Sale,   /for * I
Printed Flannelette
Good quality, softly napped. Lovely
assorted designs.
Sale,   	
Bath Mats
Durable, washable.
Assorted colors. Each
Cotton Prints
Gaily colored prints, florals, dots,
checks and stripes.      *\       jl
.2yds. 51
n
36" wide.
Plastic Foam Squares
13"xl3"x%". Ideal for A       Ci
chair seats "for * I
Plastic Foam Squares
18 x 18 x 2". Ideal
for cushions	
$1
Drapery Squares
Remnants and samples of drapery
material. 1 yard each width   C|
to 44". Each  * I
Terry Tea Towels
Very absorbent. Bright, attractive
patterns. «J       Cl
Size 18"x28". Special  A for * I
BOYS' WEAR
Boys' Athletic Underwear
Cotton rib. Sizes: 3       Cl
S, M, L. Shorts  3 prs. ▼ I
Shirts, J       C-|
Sale,  3 prs. * I
Boys' -Stretch Socks
Expansion fit, stretchy nylon to fit
n to 10. Wide variety "* Cl
of colors. Sale, «■ prs. * I
Boys' Jean Socks
Wool, rayon and nylon blend. Good
colors. Sizes: 9       Si
7 to 10. Sale,
Boys' Sport Shirts
Boys' printed flannel sport shirts.
Assorted.checks and novelty Ci
prints. Sizes: 8 to 16. Sale, ea. * I
Boys' Ski Caps
Boys 'lined ski caps. Cotton gabardine; ear flaps. Assorted, Cl
colors. Sizes: 6% to 7. * I.
NOT TONS
3.50 Value—Greeting Cards
For all occasions: baby, birthday,
anniversary, etc. Poly pack. Ci
Sale, pkg * I
Assorted Toiletries
Buy now and save. Dry skin cream,
hand cream, cold      'y       Cl
..cteatp^Sale, ..,__ .<Mor. T.I
Assorted Cosmetics
Nail Polish, Lipstick, Talcum, Roll-
On Deodorant, MacGregor Shaving
Cream. J       Cl
Sale,  :.... 3 for * I
Seamless Nylon Hosiery
First quality, 400 needle, seamless
mesh. Tops in quality and wear.
Flattering shades.      *)       Cl
Sizes 8Vs to 11.  *>prs. * I
Substandard Nylon Hosiery
Seamless. Minor faults. Medium,
dark beige shades. 3 Cl
Sizes tVs to 11 3 prs. * I
Fancy Tea Aprons
Choose from a large    *\       Cl
selection of colors. .... " prs. ™ I
Rubber Gloves
'"Substa'ndaf as. Pink <J"     Cl
and blue. Sizes S, M, L. ai. prs. * I
Oblongs
Patterns and solid      J       Cl
colors. Good value. .. 3 for * I
All-Purpose Wool
4-ply. Blue, grey, wine, navy,
white and 3       $1
maroon 3 for * I
Oven Mitts
Colorful and f       Cl
practical  at\ prs. * I
Costume Jewellery
Necklaces, pins, *\       Cl
earrings «■• for "M
MEN'S WEAR
Men's T-Shirts
Fine quality cotton, nylon reinforced. Sizes: S, M, L. Cl
Sale, each * I
Men's Athletic Underwear
Rib cotton. S, M, L.     ">       Cl
Shirts. Sale, A for * I
Shorts, 7       Cl
Sale, <t for * I
Men's Work Socks
Grey with white heels, toes, tops.
Standard size. •»       Cl
Sale,  *• prs. * I
Men's Honderkerehiefs
Good quality white cotton.      Cl
Cello pack of 6. Sale, pkg * »
Men's Ankle Socks
Nylons, wools and wool mixtures.
Fancy or .plain. Sizes: 10 to \2
and stretchies. •)       Cl
Sale,  <fcprs.*l
Men's Dress Gloves
Men's wool, leather palm. Assorted
colors. Sizes: *\       C9
S, M, L Aprs. *3
HOUSEWARES
Waste Baskets
Plastic, cleans easily. C1
Assorted colors. Sale, each .... * '
Plastic Tumblers
Boxed. Assorted      1 "J        Cl
colors. Sale,  I «*■ for * I
LaundQtV&tfkeJr^W:
Large size laundry baskets in attractive pastels. Round Cl
only. Sale, each  * •
Extension Cords
15-foot long extension cords Cl
with 3 outlet sockets. Sale, ea. * I
Extension Cords
6-foot extension cord.   •>       C1
Guaranteed. Sale, *»for *l
Window Washers
Get ready for Spring cleaning with
one of these window washers. Long
handle, rubber scraper on one side
and sponge on the other side. Assorted colors; can be used in Cl
the home or for the car * •
"Measuring Cups
Set of 4 aluminum measuring cups
with cpjopertone handles. Size of
cups range from I cup Cl
to Vi cup     I
Meat Thermometer
Take the guesswork out of cooking
with, one of these meat thermometers. Can be! used in the oven or
barbecue. Complete with Cl
four skewers * '
Roast Rack
Use one of these roast racks for
easier handling of roasts, chicken,
baked potatoes, etc. Adjust- C1
able, with chrome handles * ■
Meat Board
Wooden meat board; can be used
to pound round steak, etc., or as
an extra chopping board        Cl
for vegetables      •
Cheese Board
Wooden cheese board. When not in
use can be hung on the wall. Board
includes a cheese knife, also a
magnet to keep knife with Cl
the board - *«•
Jelly Molds
Individual plastic jelly molds. Lovely assorted colors. Come in oval
or round | J       Cl
shape  l«&for Tl"
Coffee Percolator
Aluminum coffee percolator. Cl
Handy 2-cup size * *
Frypan
10-inch chrome plated aluminum
frypan. Black wooden Cl
handle * I
Salts and Peppers
Dark brown wooden salt and pepper with gold top and identification
on'each'shaker: Handy size    Cl
for kitchen use * '
Deep Fryers
Aluminum deep fryer with rack:
Ideal for chips, Cl
fish, etc * I
CHILDREN'S WEAR
Balbriggan Training Pants
Elastic legs; white     Q       Cl
only. Sizes 2-6. Sale,  O for * I
Printed Terry Cloth Brieft
Elastic at waist. White with colored prints. A Cl
Sizes 2 to 6. Sale, "for * I
Infants' Gowns
Quality flannelette baby gowns. —
Assorted colors. «)       Cl
Sale, -fcfor * I
Girls' Rayon Briefs
Assorted pastel shades or floral
patterns. Sizes: A       Cl
7 to 14. Sale 1 prs. * I
Childs' Boxer Longs
Full boxer waist, jean style, in
sturdy cotton weave. Zipper Cl
front. Sizes 2-6X. Sale,  * •-
Child's Rayon Briefs
Plain or fancy styles in pastel
shades and white. f~ Cl
Sizes: 2-6. Sale, D for * I
Baby Blankets
Subs of Reg. 1.39 Esmond blanket.
Finished   size   30"x40".   Nursery
-pattenrsr in-bluer yellow; Cl
pink. Each ▼ I
Infants' Plastic Pants
Sizes S, M, L, XL. c Cl
Sale,  J prs. * I
Girls' Corduroy Slacks
Elastic   waistband.   Colors: red,
navy, green, brown. Cl
Sizes: 3-6X. Pair  ▼ I
LADIES' WEAR
Nylon Slips
Full slips in white or color. C ^
Sizes 38-42. Sale, each  *«fc
Nylon Half Slips
Lace trim, in white and Cl
pastel shades. S, M, L * I
Reg. 1.75—Cotton Bras
Broken sizes. Cl
Sale *l
Ladies' Briefs
Cotton briefs. White     J       Cl
only. S, M, L 3 for *M '
Ladies' Blouses
Ladies' short-sleeve blouses in an
assortment of styles ahd fabrics.
Colors: white and printed. Cl-
Sizes: 12 to 20 *■£
SHOES
Reg. 2.98—Women's Flatties
Ballerina style flats. Neolite soles,
plastic or suedine uppers.     CO
. Sizes': 4 to 9 -'...  ™<"
Reg. 5.98—Style Shoes
Women's jet heel style shoes. —
Smooth "leather or suede: Blue,
orange or black. CA
-Sizes: 5% to 10 T~
Ifoteimy !Da£ (fflwpijn^
INCORPORATED   2^  MAY 1670
 ■•vf '••'■' ^
•
-
^W^IP™^
fcSlMEtSON DAILY NEWS,
THURS., FEB. 14, 1963
Your
Horoscope
Look in the section in which
yquf. birthday comes and find
what your outlook is, according
to the stars,
For Friday, February 15,1983
MARCH 21 to APRIL 20
(Aries)" — We must struggle to
cope ..economic and other problem's. . Nothing will drop comfortably, in the lap! Do not let
those pretty, pat arguments sway
unduly. Tenacity,helps here.
APRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus)
—■ A. few "smart moves" and
you will be a front-runner. A
broad revitalized outlook suggested. Vitally important is reorganization of efforts to satisfy
current demands.
MAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini)
— You are. rarely left stranded:
ypur keen mind is usually a
jump (or several jumps) ahead
of present action. But look out
for the deceptive-type day —
this, could, be one.
JUNE-22 to JULY 23'(Cancer)
— Integrate the novel and new
withthe proven and old to effect
a desirable compromise which
c'aB. be obtained, and deployed
qttlrjer than estimated. Don't
ev&r sit back to watch the world
go by.'.". '..   ■
JULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leo)
-^.Remember — temporary repairs to existing foundations are
only a. stopgap! These must not
be let slide. A long-range program, amply developed, is part
of today's solution."
AUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER
23'(Virgo) — Seek the overall
picture'diligently. The relationship between supply and demand
can be governed by intelligent
effort Control monetary and
other, expenditures. •.;
SEPTEMBER 24" to OCTOBER
23 (Libra) — Insufficient time is
an excuse. The real answer is
poor planning. Study your "set"
ways, Unset any that no longer
fit, a job for all of us now and
then. Persevere at best things.
OCTOBER 24 to .NOVEMBER
22 (Scorpio) — If something
plain was liked before, it may
be" the successful move to revive it again — as with a simple
(but because of this simplicity.)-
pure work or art. But know what
Is needed,
NOVEMBER 23. to DECEMBER 2i .(Sagittarius) — All of
the obvious issues and situations
are not- All the Important ones.
Keep an accurate account so
not to deceive self or others,
something more difficult to do
thanitiseems.  •■
DECEMBER 22 to JANUARY
20 (Capricorn) — .Clearly in the
lead'are; consistently well-run
affairs, development of the mind
for. quicker acceptance of new
methods' .and routes, and everyday, chores lightened with a new
■face.
JANUARY 21 to' FEBRUARY
19,(Aquarius) — Before you begin work or whatever has been
sensibly planned, talte a look-see
to determine if you Are about
right things and' Your business.
Don't get mixed up elsewhere.
FEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20
(Plscesl —' A late hour (according to your own routine) is not
wise for heaviest or most trying
matters. Describe a happy
course that includes discussion,
meditation, work, relaxing.
YOU BORN TODAY have the
good grace innately to heed
another's urgent desire to speak
or aet first, thus, by dint of your
generosity, you often are a final
winner, maybe the biggest. But
this Is not a fast, rule, you must
learn to sharpen your pencil,
ydUr tune, your wits — for a
frontal attack, now and then.
Mostly you will achieve through
steady, nonshowy, practical,
antl acutely clever steps, one by
one, each surer, better than the
one before. Aquarius' especial
recipe for gains. You apprecaite
sports, a good laugh, competition; like to see others match
your effort. If the whole scheme
improves; you are happy. A
Zbdlacal Sign of keen insight,
stfgacrly, willingness to please.
Tike care not to bend too far
and- please a wrong type. You
rardly stay disappointed because of 7our broad view of
God's- gifts to man and the
world; you Can overindulge rich
foods,, pleasures. May. be Bohemian^ (n method; are staunch
in friendship, loyal to employer.
Need arr occasional p-od for your
owtrgood.-.Birthdate of; Galileo,
astronomer, philosopher; Elihu
Root, lawyer, statesman; John
Barrymort, actor; H. A. Howell,
science writer.
Tomato Juice
All-Purpose
Mrs. Wright's Kitchen Craft, silk lifted.
10 Ib.
bog 	
25 Ib.
bag _
$
79'
1.79
Grant's Toasted
Marshmallows
Freih and tasty; 12 oz. pkg.
29
Cragmont
Soft Drinks
Bubbling with flavor. Choose your
favorite flavors; 12 oz. mira can,
10«. 99
|B!|ppl|I|:
■       48 oz-
Wm      tin     .   i
11
3 ^ 99° ss  69°
2 for
6 for    |    12 for
Pork & Beans
Taste Tells, in tomato sauce; 15 oz. tin           	
29e
79c $1.49
Cream Corn
Town House fancy; 15 oz. tin.            _  ._
35e
95' $1.79
Green Peas
33e
89c $1.69
Peaches
Taste Tells, choice; 15 oz. tin       ...	
45e
$1.19 $2.29
Cut Green Beans
Taste Tells, choice; 15 oz. tin          .                                	
39<
f\f\r    $1  Ort
99* *1.o9
Lucerne
iBiinit
! Milk
Lucerne Bonus Quality
Fresh Milk
Homogenized, minimum 3.8%
Butterfat; half gallon carton.
49
ABUNDANT TREE
There are about 115 different
species of maple tree in the
world—many of them found in
tlie Himalayas and China.
Half and Half: 90c*
(Coffee Cream). Delicious on breakfast cereal. Pt. ctn.  ~ * T
Cottage Cheese: O1^!?
Creamed, Pasteurized, Regular or Farmer Style. 16 oz.  *ar
Danish Ring
29s
2for49<
29<
Mrs. Willman's, fresh,
delicious with afternoon tea.
Regular 39c. Special, loaf	
Fresh Bread:
Polly Ann, White or Brown. 24 oz. loaf .
Western Farm Loaf:
Skylark, Fresh. 24 oz. sliced loaf 	
Sharp Club Cheese:
Safeway, the All-Purpose, Cheese. Lb	
Old Cheddar Cheese:
Safeway. Ontario. The King of Cheese. Lb.
Dutch Edam Cheese:
Berkshire, Milk Flavor. Lb	
Matured Cheese:
Black Diamond. 8 oz. pkg	
79*
79*
93*
53*
POTATOES
Netted Gems. Serve 'em baked, boiled, mashed or fried.   Canada No. 2 grade.
100
$
Ib.
sack
California.
Carrots
Firm and fresh.
2 ib, 29°
Oranges
Tomatoes
California navels,
juicy, fresh flavor
Imparted, firm, red-ripe. Serve sliced,
fried or in salads; 14 oz. ctn. 	
2.00
4 lb-cello bag 69*
29
Prices Effective:
February 14, 15, 16
We Reserve the Right
To Limit Quantities.
 : ,	
 : -  •      ■'■■      "  ■ '
______
 •'.'" iff J
SAFEWAY
Here's the wonderful bargain-event you've been waiting for. Carload after carload
of new-pack canned foods have been arriving for days now, filling our stores
with famous-brand buys especially for this sale. Low, low prices like those listed
below always make our annual Canned Food Sale a popular stock-up time.
Be sure to get in on these vdues at Safeway.
Margarine «_
Sweet Biscuits
Prune Plums
Swift's Prem
Kraft Dinners
Pumpkin Pie
5
(or
David's,
4-in-l  peck;
42 oz. pkg.
Town  House,
choice;
15 ox. tin 	
4
Luncheon
meat;
12 oz. tin
Macaroni;
7i oz. pkg.	
2
4
for
for
for
Bel-air premium qualtiy,
frozen, ready to bake;
24 oz. each	
49
Nettles
QUIK
Instant  Chocolate  Drink.
32 oz. tin
$1.19
Cheer Detergent
Special Offer. Giant Pkg.
75«
Joy Liquid
Detergent
Special  Offer.  24 oz. plastic
81*
32 oz. plastic -     "
95*
Saran
Snap-Off Bags
10"xl4" Roll of 20 Bags
59*
Complexion Soap
Camay, With Cold Cream.
Special offer. 5 bars banded
49*
Home Cleaning Needs
Brighten your home from top to bottom
Corn Brooms
1.29
Blind Croft, with free
dust pan.  Both for ....
390
SPONGE CLOTH: Paramount, for
easier cleaning, does "not streak. Each
KLEEN KLOTH: The absorbent cotton   <* Q*
cloth of many uses. Reg. 49c value
HOUSEHOLD CLE
Magic- 14 oz. tin,
BRILLO SOAP PADS: Special Offer.     }Fai
Pkg. of is    .-:  -....,:;    33''
SPIC AND SPAN: Green. Many house- OQ|»
HOUSEHOLD CLEANER: White J        3 Q jk
hold uses. 41 oz. pkg
RUG & UPHOLSTER
Busy Formula B. 16 oz. plastic
RUG & UPHOLSTERY CLEANER:       CQ(£
Puritan;  15 oz. tin.
Case of 24  _...
Spaghetti O QQ
$3.29
$3.49
$3.69
Taste Tells, choice,
asstd.; 15 oz. tin. Case of 24
Green Peas
Taste Tells, choice,
asstd.;  15 oz. tin. (
Prune Plums
Town  House, choice;
15 oz. tin. Case of 24	
Cut Green Beans
TasteTells, choice;
15 oz. tin. Cose of 24 	
Cake Mixes
Betty Crocker, asstd.
varieties;  19 oz. pkg.
2 ^ 79
€
Edwards Coffee
Rich robust flavor, drip or regular grind.
Mb.
tin. .
69c £ $1.35
Standing Rib
Roast
Frying Chicken
Manor House, cut-up.
Ib.
49
€
Easy to carve, delectable
with browned potatoes,
green vegetables, fruit
salad; Canada Choice . .    |q.
Beef Round Steak
Beef Rump Roast
Beef Short Ribs
l%3
c
Canada
choice _
First and second cuts;
Canada choice	
Canada
choice _
i79
,.. 79
,b.29
DO IT NOW I
Why Wait for
for Spring?
Wt$ 1
NELSON DAILY NEWS,
THURS., FEB. 14, 1963—9
Medicare for
B.C. When
Ottawa Okays
VICTORIA (CP)-British Columbia will have a medical insurance scheme—when the federal government introduces one.
And the provincial government believes that no matter
who wins the forthcoming election the next federal government will introduce a plan.
Education   Minister  Peterson'
gave the Social Credit government's policy on medicare in
the legislature Tuesday:
Rather than saddle B.C. taxpayers with increased taxation
and rather than have a repetition of the "chaotic" conditions
that followed the Saskatchewan
government's introduction of a
scheme, the province will await
federal action.
His announcement was
greeted with groans from members of the New Democratic
Party. There was calls of "you
have moved backward with
vigor."
PROJECT BURIED
John Squire   (NDP—Alberni) '
who spoke after Mr. Peterson
in the budget debate, said the
government has "buried" medicare.
Mr. Peterson's statement had
been announced Friday by Premier and Finance Minister. Bennett after he had diverted from
his budget speech to say that
while the NDP medicare proposals would increase taxation,
"our plan" could not.
Mr. Peterson said that the
government supports the principle of a government - sponsored comprehensive medicare
plan.
But the plan should be introduced by the federal government in conjunction, with the
provinces and the senior government should pay 50 per cent of
the cost.
As soon as the next federal
government was elected the provincial government would
"proceed vigorously." It would
call for a dominion - provincial
conference to discuss a medicare plan.
ASKED FOR IT
The government had proposed
medicare plans at the dominion-
provincial conferences of 1956
and 1957. It wanted a sound program that would be acceptable
to the medical profession as
well as the public. It would support, a plan that would not
divide the medical profession
from the public or "brother
from sister"—and "that is what .
happened in Saskatchewan."
The plan must protect the doctor-patient relationship.
Mr. Peterson said that a federal royal commission into
health will probably recommend
medicare.
The    government   believed
there should be no increase, in
i taxation to pay for a medicare
scheme.
The taxpayers would be penalized if B.C. introduced a plan
without waiting for one from
Ottawa.
"It is our belief that early
action on medicare can be expected from the federal government, regardless of what party
is elected."
MOST COVERED
Mr. Peterson said about 75
75 per cent of the total population of B.C. is covered by some,
form of private insurance at
present. He praised the plans
operated by the medical prOr
fession.
Mr. Squire asked why the
education minister gave government policy instead of the health
minister.
He said there is no reason for
delay in getting a medical plan
started.
"What happens if Ottawa
doesn't move on it. I shudder
to think what the Liberals will
do. They tried to scupper it in
Saskatchewan."
In other budget debate, Waldo
Skillings (SC—Victoria) said too
much time is being spent by
members on the budget and'
throne speech debate. He said
ministers speeches should be
limited to one hour and private
ministers to 40 minutes.
Cyril Shelford (SC-Omineca)
called for the addition of another "leg" to the agriculture
department which would advise
the government on the changing .
trends in prices of such things
as (arm machinery, wine, food
and wire and also on produce
which the farmer markets.
BIG MINE TO CLOSE
MUFULIRA, Northern Rhodesia (AP)—The Mufulira copper mine, one of the biggest un>
derground copper mines in the
world, will close temporarily because of strikes by both black,
and white workers, a mine
spokesman said today. The
mine, controlled by the Rhodesian Selection Trust Group, produced 113,605 tons last year. Its"
workers number 1,700 whites
and 8,000 Negroes,
point-
 w*«Fm-wmm
10 — NELSON DAILY NEWS,JHUR5., Flp. 14,1963
See-Saw Battle Continues
Leafs in Second Place Again
Coleman Rink Wins
Ncttal-Micheal 'Spiel
NATAL - The Ron Collings
rink of Coleman captured the
"A" event of the Michel-Natal
Second Annual Mixed Bonspiel
held here over the weekend,
Collings won the event on the
final rock when he edged Adolph
Sterner of Plncher Creek, Alberta for first place in the 32 rink
bonspiel.
Sunday night the top four rinks
in each event were presented
with prizes by club secretary,
F. Mitchell.
Third place in "A" event went
to the Frank Mitchell rink of
Natal while fourth spot went to
Grant Maffioli of Fernie.
In "B" event, Patsy Camilli'S
rink of Michel, consisting of Mrs.
Agnei Lawes, Mrs. P. Camilli
and Dorino Quarin, was the winner.
Stan Thome of Fernie was second. Third place went to Irv
Morgan of Michel and Celester
DePaoll of Natal was fourth.
The Chick Roughead rink of
YOU
CAN'T
BEAT
ELECTRIC
HEAT
FREE ESTIMATES
Satisfaction Guaranteed
COLEMAN
ELECTRIC
Phone 352-3175
Coleman wbn "C" event, taking
the measure of Frank McVeigh
in the filial which was decided
in the last few ends.
.Third filace went to the Charlie
Podrasky rink Of Natal while
fourth place went to Bill Llddel
of Coleman.
An interesting feature bf the
mixed bonspiel was the presentation Of the Corbey Award,
travel alarm clocks, to the
Frank Mitchell rink of Natal for
the rink with the biggest end of
the bonspiel, a six ender.
Much credit for the success
of this second annual mixed
bonspiel is attributed to the draw
committee of the Natal-Michel
Curling Club, also to the many
out of town rinks that participated.
WITH  STANE
AND BESOM
Results of games played in the
Nelson Curling Club Wednesday
night:
R. D. Hickey S, R. Koehle 9.
R. Boates 8, A. Waters 4.
W. Tozer 12, F. Carmichael 5.
D. Benedetti 6, E. C. Hunt 13.
A. Ronmark 8, W. Triggs 8.
NHL Standings
By The Canadian Press
W L T    F   A Pts
Chicago   26 14 14 155 126 66
Toronto    26 19   9 172 144 61
Montreal ..   21 14 18 168 135 60
Detroit   22 17 13 136 138 57
New York .. 15 28 10 154 182 40
Boston          11 29 14 165 225 36
PRE-
INVENTORY
28 Colors
SS.«9o $2.49
Gallons
Reg. $9.25
7.89
28 Colors
Reg! $3.55   2.99
Gallons
Reg. $11.65
$9.95
Enameloid
High Gloss for
Interior m Exterior
Reg. $3.45   2.99
Gallons.
Reg. $11.25
$9.85
Quolitone Latex
12 Colors and White
Gallons       SC   AQ
Reg. $6.79 *J.*fT
Quarts t-i   -JQ
Reg. $2.19      l./T
BARGAIN COUNTER
Discontinued Colors — Custom Mix Colors
Not Picked Up — and Other Oddi and
Ends Priced To Clear.
Visit Our Rental Dept.
All Types of Floor Sanders an>*
Spray  Equipment
Sherwin-Williams Paint
and Wallpaper Store
565 Baker St. Phone 352-6011
(Ben Hanson, Prop.)
Let Ui Color-Style Your Home or
Place of Business.
Give Us a Call Today — No Obligation
By BILL MacDOUGALL
TORONTO (CP) - Frank Mahovlich, tho hlgh-
Bc6ring left winger who hadn't been able to buy ct goal
Of late, scored two Wednesday night and led Tqrbnto
Maple Leafs to a 6-2 victory over Detroit Bed Wings.
The win, before 13,914 fans, one of the smallest
crowds of the season, put Leafs into second place, One
point ahead of Montreal Canadiens, and left the Wings
in fourth place, three points
behind Montreal.
Mahovlich, who had been unable to score for the last four
games, regained sole possession
of the National Hockey League's
goal-acdring leadership with 20,
two In front of Detroit's Gordie
Howe.
Tim Horton, Bob Pulford,
George Armstrong and Red
Kelly also took advantage of
shaky goaltending by the Wings'
Hank Bassen to score for Leafs.
Kelly also assisted on both of
Mahovlich's goals. Alex Delvecchio and Larry Jeffrey were the
Detroit marksmen.
Before Wednesday night, Mahovlich had been able to score
only six goals in 21 games, far
off the pace he set ln the Leafs'
first 33 games when he had 22
goals.
MAKES FINE RUSH
Horton started the ruBh that
gave him his goal and Leafs a
1-0 lead at 13:01 of the first period, carrying the puck alone
through most of the Detroit team
and finishing off the play from
a scramble in front of the Red
Wing net. Referee Eddie Powers
gave Bassen a misconduct on the
play for arguing too strenuously.
Delvecchio tied it at 17:02 on
a picture passing play that went
from Howe to Parker McDonald
to Delvecchio. Leafs went ahead
again with the only goal of the
second period. Mahovlich took a
pass from Kelly and went in
alone, drawing the goaltender
far from his net before shooting.
Jeffrey tied it again at 2:25 of
ihe third period. Then Leafs exploded for their four goals — all
after Bassen was pulled or voluntarily moved far out ol position.
Mahovlich scored his second on
another Kelly pass, (jutting in
front of the net and Outmanoeuvring Bassen at 8:67, Pulford
drew him out Of position at 7:46
and shot into the net while falling.
Armstrong raced up the side
and Bassen went Out to meet
him. The Leaf winger pushed the
puck Into the net at 9:61. Bassen
went out to meet Kelly, too, but
missed the puck which kept
sliding right into the net at 10:02
NAKUSP BIRD
TOURNEY
SUCCESS
NAKUSP - The Nakusp Bad-i
minton Club held its annual
tournament  Sunday.
Mr. Fred Waldie, drawmaster,
commented on the fine entry
received. There were fifty entries
from Nelson, Castlegar, Kaslo,
New Denver and Nakusp.
In the "A" flight the local
club allowed all the silverware
to go to the vsiitors.
ln the "B" flight Nakusp players retained most of the prizes.
The following is a list of winners:
"A" Flight, ladies' doubles —
first, W. Defoe and G. McPherson, Castlegar; second, S. Harvey and G. McPherson, Castlegar.
Mixed Doubles — First, R.
Kirhy and J. Parent, Nelson;
second, D. Renzie and J. Lefeaux, Nelson.
Men's Doubles—First h. Kirby
and D. Niven, Nelson
J.   Osachoff   and   J.   Goresky,
Castlegar.
"B" Flight, ladies' doubles -
First R. Waterfield and B
Balaam, Nakusp; second, S. Anderson and E. Haire, Nakusp.
Mixed doubles — First J.
Fowle and B. Balaam, Nakusp;
second, O. Bokis and S. Anderson,  Nakusp.
Men's doubles — First. E.
Chernoff and W. Woodrow,
Castlegar; second, W. Jupp and
R. Mahood, Nakusp.
High School
Basketball
Final Standings
West Kootenay High School
Basketball League playoffs start
Feb. 23 with the girls' playoff
tournament in Castlegar. Boys1
teams finals will be held in Nel
son March 2.
In Castlegar, clubs from Nel
son, Castlegar, Trail and Rossland will be competing for the
right to represent the West Koo
tenay in the provincial high
school finals at Vancouver
March 8 and 9.
Nelson, Salmo. Trail and
Grand Forks will take part in
the boys' finals here.
After the West Kootenay boys'
champion has been declared, the
top three clubs in the tournament will play the top three East
Kootenay boys' teams to decide
who will make the trip to the
provincial finals.
The boys' East-West Kootenay
playoff tournament will be held
at the home of the West Kootenay champions.
WKHSBL FINAL STANDINGS
(Northern Division, Boys)
W  L
Hamilton Makes
Bid lor '61
Grey (up
HAMILTON (CP) - Hamilton
hopes to be awarded the Grey
Cup game in 1964 — but it won't
receive much support from Ted
Workman, president of Montreal
Alouettes.
"They have to prove to me
first they can handle It," said
Workman Wednesday night after
concluding the first half of the
Eastern Conference's annual
meeting here.
"I think the game is going tb
have to stay in the three big
cities."
He was referring to Vancouver, Toronto and Montreal, although Montreal has never staged the Grey Cup spectacle.
The EFC meeting continues
and the Western Conference will
hold its annual meeting today.
The Canadian Football League's
annual meeting is scheduled for
Friday and Saturday.
The city of Hamilton will entertain the visiting football officials at a civic luncheon today
at which time it will make its
big pitch for the Grey Cup game.
This year's East-West final has
already been awarded to Vancouver.
One of the selling points in a
17-page brochure prepared by
the city is that Hamilton has
5000 first-class hotel and motel
rooms.
"I'd like to see those rooms,"
laughed Workman.
2
1
4
2
0
3
2
1
4
2
0
ffs.
1
Castlegar  	
(Girls)
Castlegar  	
S
0
Nelson  	
7
Salmo	
(Southern Division,
Trail	
Grand Forks
Rossland 	
Boys)
4
1
2
3
(Girls)
Trail 	
0
Rossland 	
"Eliminated from playo
2
4
NHL SCORING
RACE
Strikes and Spares
LADIES' MATINEE B
Offbeats 5, Go-Getters 2; Joy-
fills 7, Alley Cats 0; Cheerfuls 3,
Jimmie's Gang 2. High single.
Florence Disney of Joyfuls. 248;
high aggregate, Muriel Peters
nf Jimmie's Gang, 612. Team
high single, Cheerfuls, 958; team
high aggregate. Jnyfuls, 2612.
VARIETY CLUB
Cheerios 3, Five Pins 1; Button Pushers 4, Rollettes 0; Die-
Hards I, Hilltoppers 3. High
single and aggregate, Dot Hurd
nf Die-HarHs, 272, 782. Team high
single and aggregate, Hilltoppers, 1018, 2603. High scorer,
Gary Neighbor, 729.
By The Canadian Press
Big Johnny Bucyk regained
second.]'he lead in the National Hockey
League's individual scoring race
Tuesday night, scoring two goals
and an assist as Boston trounced
New York 6-3 in the only NHL
game scheduled.
Bucyk, formerly tied with Detroit's Gordie Howe for the scoring lead, now has 59 points — 24
goals and 35 assists.
Meanwhile another Bruin.
Murray Oliver, picked up three
assists and moved one point
ahead of Howe into second place
with 57 points.
Jean Beliveau of Montreal,
idle Tuesday, dropped to fourth
place with 55.
The only other gain in the big
seven went to Andy Bathgate of
the Rangers, whose one assist
put him in a fifth-place tie with
Frank Mahovlich of Toronto and
Stan Mikita of Chicago.
Mahovlich's 54 points are split
27-27, Bathgate's are 24-30 and
Mikita's are 22-32.
Bucyk, Boston 	
Howe, Detroit  	
Oliver, Boston
Beliveau. Montreal
Mahovlich, Toronto
Bathgate. New York
Mikita, Chicago
G A Pts
. 24 35 59
27 29
20 37
13 42
27 27
24 30
22 32
Mount Sentinel
- Greenwood
Split Games
SOUTH SLOCAN-Mount Sentinel Junior-Senior High School
girls' basketball team overwhelmed Greenwood girls 40-10
here Saturday.
Lenore Evans netted 16 points
for the winners and Effie Plot-
nikoff gained 9.
Greenwood's Katrina Izami
scored five points for the losers.
In a closely-fought game, the
Mount Sentinel boys dropped a
59-53 decision to Greenwood.
Top scorers for the winners
were Wayne Roberts with 21 and
Bill Vlahovich with 15 points.
Castlegar
Ready for
Ladies' 'Spiel
CASTLEGAR — Curling will
be in full swing this weekend
at the Castlegar Arena, when
the Castlegar Ladies Curling
Club will hold their First Annual
Bonspiel.
The limit of 22 rinks was
reached early last week, and
several other rinks had to be
turned down with regret.
Rinks have been entered from
Rossland, Trail • Nelson, Salmo.
Grand Forks, Riondel and Mont
rose, as well as from the Castle
gar Club.
The Bonspiel will commence
at 5:00 p.m. on Friday, with the
finals of the "A" and "B" events
on Sunday at 2:30 p.m., and the
"C" event finals at 4:40 p.m.
on Sunday.
Kromm a Bit Concerned As
Smokies Leave for Europe
By KEN SMITH
MONTREAL (CP) - trail
Smoke-Eaters, Canada's representatives in next month's world
hockey championships, left Wednesday night for Europe with
coach Bobby Kromm conceding
he's a bit concerned.
Kromm, with six straight losses in a seven-game exhibition
tour fresh in his mind, admitted
the team has problems — "but
they've sent us Over here to win
and that's what we've got to do
—win."
The Trans-Canada Air Lines
jet liner carrying the team to
London was almost three hours
late leaving Montreal's International Airport. It was delayed at
Toronto while flight equipment
was loaded aboard.
The players, showing no sighs
of. being disheartened despite
their coach's worries, spent the
time idly chatting in the airport's waiting rooms.
"This Is our first night off In
six days," Cracked goalie Seth
Martin.
Football's Parker Trade
Reported Near Completion
By PAUL RIMSTEAD
HAMILTON (CP) - The most
talked — about trade in Canadian foolball—the Jackie Parker
deal — is reported to be near
completion.
Lew Hayman, general manager of Toronto Argonauts and
Joe Ryan, general manager ot
Edmonton Eskimos, said Wednesday they have reached a
stage where they are talking
about personnel.
Parker, talented and versatile
Edmonton star, has been all-
everything with the Esks since
joining them in 1954 and requested recently to be traded.
He said Toronto was the No.
1 city on his list.
Ryan and Edmonton coach
Eagle Keys went to Toronto
Tuesday to talk to Hayman and
Argonaut coach Nobby Wirkowski. They drove to Hamilton
Wednesday for the annual meeting of the Eastern Football Conference which opened this afternoon.
Keys, however, isn't as optimistic as Hayman and Ryan.
"Sometimes you're close to
making a deal then something
happens and it's all off," he
cautioned.
NAMES POP UP
Speculators are having a field
day. Names popping up in most
conversations are those of Argo
players Bill Mitchell, Mike Wick-
lum and quarterback Tom Maudlin.
Toronto is the only team negotiating, but not the only team
interested.
"We'd like to speak to Ed
monton tonight," said Jim Trimble, coach of Hamilton Tiger-
Cats. Parker's one of those super players — too good for any
club not to be interested."
Toronto and Edmonton officials discussed the deal at Toronto until 1 a.m. Wednesday
but a heavy schedule here this
week has put a halt to negotiations until Friday night.
Trimble admits Toronto has
the best chance of getting the
Edmonton ace and feels Argos
certainly could see Parker.
Comets Dump
Trail-Rossland
Intermediates
TRAIL — Spokane waltzed
their way to a 11-4 win over
Trail-Rossland Intermediates in
Trail last night.
A small crowd of 589 people
saw Spokane post a first period
score of 2-1, jump ahead for five
goals to Trail-Rossland's one.
The Trail-Rossland is tbe same
team that will meet Nelson intermediates in the best of five
series for the intermediate title
beginning in Rossland February
26.
Steve Witiuk, Red Johannson
and Gord Stratton set the pace
for tlie winners with two goals
each. Singletons came from former Nelson Maple Leaf Connie
Madigan, Dick Lainouraux, Bill
Shcetz, Del Poppell, and Bev
Bell.
Trail's goals came from Gil
Desrosiers, Ray Demore, Prim
Secco and Alex Birukow.
The Intermediates held a brief
lead at 10:57 of the second period. The lead held but for two
minutes. The game was an exhibition encounter between the
two clubs as a result of Comets
-use of Cominco Arena. Their
home ice, Spokane Coliseum is
being occupied all week.
Trail-Rossland Intermediates
weretnade up from the defunct
Rossland Warriors and a few
promising junior players.
Comets outshot the Intermediates 56-29. There were two penalties in the game, both to Spokane.
ONE UP
By Lew Saw
Campbell Fines
Blake for Remarks
About Officiating
MONTREAL (CP)—President
Clarence Campbell of the National Hockey League has fined
Montreal coach Toe Blake $200
for remarks about the officiating
after Canadiens' 6-3 loss to Toronto Maple Leafs here Jan. 31
Campbell said Wednesday
Blake's remarks implying the
officials had bet on the result
of the game were "completely
unwarranted and unfounded."
He added in a statement: "It
(Blake's remark) is a serious
reflection on the integrity of the
officials and is clearly in viola
tion of the league rules."
Eddie Powers refereed the
stormy game, in which Blake
drew a bench penalty for protesting a Toronto goal.
Campbell said in his state
ment: "Blake was reported in
Montreal - Matin French • langu
age dally in Montreal as having
said:
"The league should stop talk
int about the Gallinger case and
start talking sbout the officials,
whose work in this game gave
the impression they had wagered
on the result."
Blake later denied making the
remark sbout the bet, but subsequently modified his statement
saying he had not said it for
publication.
Campbell said Blake has been
notified of the fine and must
psy immediately. Canadiens'
cotch was fined $2,000 for punching a referee in the Stanley Cup
finals two season ago.
DAILY   CROSSWORD
2. In
Berlin,
"Mr."
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4. Toward a
lower
place
5. Dresses,
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feathers
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9. Agreements
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10. Music
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10. Earth
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20. Percolate
21. A
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22. Perry
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25. Large figures
worm 38. Greenland
27. Landlord's Eskimo
return 39. Halfway
39. Staggered point
ACROSS
1. Sudan lake
5. Pond
dweller
11. Nevada
city
12. Large
gully
18. In a row
1*. Program
Items
15. Spanish
nobleman
17. And: L,
18. Sir	
Churchill
21. Wide-
spreading
evergreens
24. Method of
learning
26. Public
27. Levels to
the ground
28. To coil
29. Mid-
morning
classroom
break
80. Downward
motion
82. Hebrew
letter
33. Slows the
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87.—,
vegetable
or mineral
40. Caliber
41. Busy
42. Kind of
earth
43. Adorned
with beads
44. On ,
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DOWN
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rock
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE — Here's how to work It:
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One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is uaed
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Each day the code letters are different.
A Cryptogram Quotation
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Yesterday's Cryptoqiiote: MEN WOULD BB ANGELS, ANGELS WOULD BE OODS.—POPE
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Asked whether the team was
upset by the string of losses, he
replied:
"We don't mind being under-
dogs-in fact we like It that
way."
The championship will be
staged in Stockholm March 7-18.
LACKS HELP?
Coach Kromm made It clear
in S brief chat before boarding
the plane that ho is upset over
what he considers the lack of
help his club has received.
"My briefcase is full of letters
asking for help, but nobody did
anything. Everything we've got
we had to do ourselves."
He insisted, however, that he
Isn't looking for or making excuses for his team.
"But I'm glad we have another 10 exhibition games in Europe before the championships
start. It'll give us a chance to
rectify our problems."
He didn't specify where he
thinks the problems lie or where
the team needs bolstering, but
he admlitted making a determined try to land defenceman
Jack Douglas of Chatham Maroons of the Ontario Hockey
Association Senior A League.
"Anyway we've been open to
criticism the way we've been
going recently, but everyone'i
been very good, very patient
We have to start producing now,
though."
The 18-man team, last season's Allan Cup champions, !g_
ceived a batch of telegramswk
they waited at the airport.  ,-j
One, signed with hundreds'<
names from Trail fans, said i
part:  "No fooling, all T^sjU j
behind you. Keep up the good
work. It will all work out O.K."
Another, sent to Kromm,
urged him not to be discouraged
and added "New York Yankees
had losing streaks too."
Kromm refused to make a prediction, although he said a team
could lose one of. the six scheduled matches and still take the
title.
ON THE AIR
PACIFIC STANDARD TIME
CKLN PROGRAMS
1390 ON THE  DIAL
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1963
S&—Sign On
:00-The Morning Show
40—Farm Fare
00-News
05-Wake-Up Tims
: 25—Sports News
30-News
35-Wake-Up Time
oo—News
10—Sports News
: 15—Wake-Up Time Continues
: 30—Opening Markets
: 35—Max Ferguson Show
00—News
10—Count Your Blessings
: 15—The Archers
30—District Road Report
35 Alan's A.M. Spot
:59-D.O.O.T.S.
: 00— News
05-What's The Song Contest
10—Baldwin Commentary
15—To Market With Music
46—Morning Melodies
00—News
:05—Morning Melodies Cont.
45—Fancy Free
00—Let's Sing Along
15—Sports News
25—News
30—B.C. Farm Broadcast
55—Noon Markets
:00—John Drainie
: 15—Shirley Harmer Show
30_What's On Tapp
45—Playroom
2:00—B.C. School Broadcast*
2:30—News
2:33—Trans-Canada Matinee
3:00—News
3:05—Closing Markets
3:10-Sports Spotlight
3:15—Sacred Heart Program
3:30—Potpourri
4:00—News
4:03—Canadian Roundup
4:10-Ebb Tide
4:30—Countdown
5:00—News
5:05—The Highway Patrol
5:40—On Parliament Hill
5:45—Byline
5:50—Sport News
8:00—National News
6:10—Job Finder
6:15—Report from Parliament
Hill
6:30—The Bible Speaks to YOU
6:45—Canada at Work
7:00—News and Roundup
7:20—Speaking Personally
7:30—Valentine's Day Drama
8:30—Variety Showcase
9:00—Citizen's Forum
9:30—Canadian String Quartet
10:0O—News
10:10—B.C. News and Weather
10:15—Chapel in the Sky
10:30—Christian Frontiers
11:00—News and Weather
11:01—Sign Off
CBC PROGRAMS
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1963
: 00—Morning Show
: 35—Max Ferguson Show
:00—News and Report
:10-Count Your Blessings
: 15—The Archers
: 30—Morning Concert
: 59-D.O.O.T.S.
: 00—Morning Visit
10—For Consumers
15—Critically Speaking
: 45—Playroom
:00—Off the Record
:46—Win, Place or Show
55-Austin Willis
:00—Blye and The Boys
25—Showcase
30—B.C. Farm Broadcast
: 55—Five to One
: 00—John Drainie
: 15—Tommy Hunter Show
:45—Program Resume
: 00—National School Broadcast
2:30—News and Trans-Canadn
Matinee
3:30—Potpourri
4:00—News
4:03—Canadian Roundup
4:10-1 Love Paris
4:30—Countdown
5:00—Tempo For Teens
5:30—Tempo
6:00—Max Ferguson Review
6:30—Evening Concerts
7:00—News and Reports
7:20—Speaking Personally
7:30—Assignment
8:00—Radio International
8:30—Canada's Big Bands
9:00-T.B.A.
9:15—Agenda
9:30—CBC Jazz Club
10:00—News
10:15—Talking About Books
10:30-Late Night Theatre
11:00—Friday Concert
ll:57-News
TELEVISION FOR TODAY
PACIFIC STANDARD TIME
KREM-TV -
- Channel t
6:30 You Asked For It
9:00 My Three Sons •
7:00 High Road
9:30 McHale's Navy •
7:30 Ozzie and Harriet *
10:00 Premiere *
8:00 Donna Reed Show *
11:00 Nightbeat
8:30 Leave It To Beaver *
11:30 Movie
KXLY-TV — Channel 4
7:30 Mr. Ed
8:00 Perry Mason *
9:00 Twilite Zone *
10:00 The Nurses *
11:00 11 o'Clock News
11:30 Tonite Show •
KHQ-TV — Channel 6
7:00 Best of Groucho
7:30 Wide Country *
8:30 Dr. Kildare *
9:30 Hazel (C) *
10:00 Andy Williams (C) '
11:00 News and Weather
11:30 Late Movie:
"Johnny o'Clock"
CBC-TV — Nelson, Channel 9; Trail, Channel 11
2:00 Chez Helene
2:15 Nursery School Time
2:30 National School Telecast
3:00 Loretta Young Show
3:30 Take Thirty
4:00 Scarlett Hill
4:30 News
4:45 Intermezzo
5:00 Razzle Dazzle
5:30 The Scarlet Pimpernel
6:00 Playbill
8:00 The Defenders
9:00 Playdate
10:00 Wrestling
11:00 News
11:14 Viewpoint
CJLH-TV - Channel 7, Lethbridge
MOUNTAIN STANDARD TIME
12:00
12:30
2:30
3:00
3:30
4:00
4:30
5:00
!:30
Test Pattern
Monitor Seven
Stage Seven:
"Claudia and David"
Western Schools
Loretta Young Show
Take Thirty
Scarlett Hill
Razzle Dazzle
What's New
Friday Island
FRIDAY
6:00 Sports, Weather, NewJ
6:30 A Look at Agriculture
7:00 Dr. Kildare
8:00 Country Hoedown
8:30 Wayne and Shuster
9:30 Empire
10:30 Tides and Trails
11:00 CBC News
11:15 Armchair Theatre:
"Watch on the Rhine"
(Program.! enbjeet to change by stations wtthnut notice.)
	
 , w
wmmm^mm..
V':-
^•o,- -■:.----
^n5
NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURS., FEB. 14, 1963 — 11
SELL RAWLEIGH
PRODUCTS
Start on Credit without experience. Full and part time Districts available. Write: Raw-
leigh's Dept. AA135, 589 Henry
Ave., Winnipeg 2, Man.
PUBLIC NOTICES
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
AND
NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
AS ADMINISTRATOR
MARY JANE RUSSELL,
DECEASED.
TAKE NOTICE that by Order
of His Honour, Judge Eric P.
Dawson, Judge of the County
Court of West Kootenay, made
the 4th day of February, A.D.
1963, Official Administrator,
County of Kootenay - Nelson, a
Corporation Sole, was appointed
Administrator with the Will annexed of the Estate of the said
Mary Jane Russell, Deceased,
who died on or about the 3rd day
of January, 1963, and that all
parties having claims against
the said Estate are required to
furnish the same properly verified to the said Administrator,
at the Court House, Nelson, British Columbia, on or before the
25th day of March, A.D. 1963 after which date the Administrator
will distribute the Estate with regard only to the claims of which
he shall then have notice.
DATED at Nelson, B.C., this
11th day of February, 1963.
Official Administrator,
County of Kootenay,
Nelson, B.C., by his Solicitor,
George H. Kirby, Esq.
LIVESTOCK, POULTRY
AND FARM SUPPLIES
FOR ARTIFICIAL BREEDING
dairy and beef cattle within approximately 50 miles of Nelson, phone Nelson 352-6874.
Nelson and District A. I.
Centre, 709 Third St., Nelson.
AYRSHIRE HEIFER TO
freshen this month. From good
producing stock. Ph. 352-2366
after 6 p.m.
PERSONAL
p.RUG   SUNDRIES,  NOVEL-
■ ■ -''ties  at  tremendous  savings.
Free catalogue. Western Distributors, Box 24DN, Regina,
Sask.
TRACTOR OWNERS
SPRING HAS SPRUNG
Now is the time to give added
life to your tractor pads
by installing
ICE LUGS
for better spring break-up
traction and provide the
needed additional wearing,
surface for the summer.
PHONE 352-5301
MAC'S
Welding & Equipment Co.
Ltd.
514 Railway SL     Ph. 352-5301
Welding and Machine Work
New and Used Machinery
Welding Supplies
STEVENSON MACHINERY
LTD.
Phone 352-3561
FOR SALE. VALVE REFACER
and hard seat grinder $325.
Phone 355-2273.
Nelson
Bathj News
Circulation Dept.,  Ph.  352-3552
Price per single copy. 10 cents
By carrier per week, 40 cents
in advance.
Subscription rates:
By mail in Canada
Outside Nelson
One month       $ 2.00
Three months      5.00
Six months     10.00
One year      18.00
By mail to United Kingdom
or the Commonwealth
One month       $ 2.00
Three months     6.00
Six months     11.00
One year       20.00
By mail to U.S.A. or
Foreign Countries
One month    $ 2.50
Three months       7.00
Six months  _    13.00
One year     24.00
Where extra postage is required,
above rates plus postage.
BUSINESS   &   PROFESSIONAL
DIRECTORY
A bandy alphabetical guide to goods and services
available in Nelson.
Automobile Dealers
BEACON MOTORS LTD.
Pontiac — Buick
Vauxball - GMC
701 Baker St.        Phone 352-6641
24 hour Wrecker Service
Front End Aligning —
Automatic Service
Body and Paint Shop
BILLS' MOTOR-IN LTD.
(Studebaker-Lark)
213 Baker St.        Phone 352-3231
RENAULT SALES 4 SERVICE
at Frank's Auto
Phone 352-6411       295 Baker St.
NORTH SHORE SERVICE
(Standard-Triumph)
Open 8 a.m.—9 p.m.
Across Lake        Phone 352-2929
PARKVIEW MOTORS LTD.
(Rambler — Volkswagen)
323 Nelson Ave.     Phone 352-5355
Austin - Morris ■ MGA • Wolseley
Cars - Parts - Service
STAR AUTO SERVICE LTD.
Ymir Rd.    Ph. 352-7421    Nelson
Building Supplies
BEE BUILDING SUPPLY LTD.
Everything In waterproof
plywood.
301 Baker St.      Phone 352-3135
BURNS LUMBER CO. LTD.
602 Baker St.      Phone 352-6661
COLUMBIA  TRADING CO.
001 Front St. Ph. 352-5571
ZEEBEN LUMBER CO.
Ymir, B.C. Phone Salmo 357-9375
Cabinet Makers
JOS. C. MERMET
Professional Kitchen Remodeling. Serving Nelson and Dist.
1020 Davies St. - Nelson
Contractors
For a Quality Custom House
Phone 352-5915
MAPE LEAF
CONSTRUCTION
Engineers
and Surveyors
BOYD C. AFFLECK
B.C.L.S., P. Eng.
18 Gore Street Nelson
Phone 352-3341
Engineers
and Surveyors
(Continued)
ALEX CHEVELDAVE
B.C. Land Surveyor - 33 Pine St.
Ph. 365-5342-Castlegar, B.C.
RAY G. JOHNSON
B.C. Land Surveyor & Engineer
369 Baker St.' Nelson. Ph. 352-7117
Garages
Upper Fairview Motors Ltd.
Cor. 7th at Davies   Ph. 352-2525
Hotels and Motels
SELKIRK MOTEL, Yahk-
Open   Ior  business.   Automatic
heaters,  comfortable  quarters,
reasonable rates.
Jewellers
CUTLER'S JEWELLERY
For fine watches and repairs
Phone 352-9012       511 Baker St.
Printing
NELSON  DAILY   NEWS
Printers — Lithographers
Colbr Printing
Phone 352-3552
Radio & TV Service
VIDEO  ELECTRONIC
405 Hall SL - Phone 352-3355
Refrigeration
Refrigeration Sales and Service
CARLSON EQUIPMENT
Nelson, B.C. — Phone 352-5455
Sporting Goods
Fred Whltcley's Sport Shop
488 Baker Street" Phone 352-7741
Steam Baths
NELSON STEAM BATHS
Exercise Centre - 369 Baker St.
Top
soil
Larry's Topsoil, Sand & Gravel
9th and Davies St. Ph. 352-2355
Days or 352-7576 Evens.
at least he   x
createp a littie '
excitement arounp
Here
AUTOMOTIVE,  BICYCLES
MOTORCYCLES
MOTORS
LTD.
323 Vernon St. - Nelson
24-Hr.  BCAA  Wrecker  Service
Phone 352-3121
New CHEV IMPALAS
New CHEV BEL AIRES
New CHEV BISCAYNES
New CORVAIR   700   H.T.
New CHEVY II H.T.
New CHEVY II SEDANS
New CHEV Vi TONS
USED UNITS
2—1962
-1962
—1962
—1961
2—1961
1961
1961
•1960
-1960
-1960
-1960
2—1960
1-1960
[-1959
1959
—1959
—1959
■1959
1959
■1959
-1958
■1958
■1958
■1958
2-1957
•1956
1956
1956
—1956
—1956
—1956
CHEV. 14-TONS
CHEV. BEL-AIR
CHEV. BISCAYNE
AUSTIN SEDAN
CHEV. STN. WGNS.
VOLKSWAGEN
CHEV. BISCAYNE
VOLKSWAGEN   SEDAN
AUSTIN GYPSY
VALIANT SEDAN
FORD SEDAN
CHEV. SEDANS
MERCURY PANEL
MORRIS STN. WGN.
(Wreck)
ZEPHYR CONVERT.
CHEV. BEL-AIR
DODGE H.T.
PLYMOUTH SEDAN
CHEV. BISCAYNE
FARGO %-TON
CHEV.  STN. WGN.
VAUXHALL STN. WGN.
FIAT SEDAN
PONTIAC H.T.
CHEV. BEL-AIRS
CHEV. SEDAN
METEOR 2-DOOR
PLYMOUTH 2-DOOR
VAUXHALL  SEDAN
FARGO '4-TON
FORD PANEL
SPECIAL
2 1955 Chev Sedans
Need Body Work
2 for $650
1—1955 CHEV.  SEDAN
1-1955 DODGE  H.T.
1-1955 DODGE 14-TON
1-1954 BUICK SEDAN
1-1954 OLDS. SEDAN
MANY MORE OLDER
MODELS  TO  CHOOSE  FROM
REUBEN
MOTORS
LIMITED
323 Vernon St.
\ Guardian
/Maintenance
Your
CHEV., OLDS, CADILLAC;
F85, CHEVY II, CORVAIR
ENVOY Dealer
24-Hr. Wrecker Service
BCAA Recommended
Phone 352-3121
COTTONWOOD WRECKAGE
wrecking '54 Ford, '54 Volkswagen pickup, '53 Consul, '52
Chev. pickup, '55 Ford pickup,
'53 Zephyr, Plymouth, Fords,
Chevs., Pontiacs, *4-ton Fargo.
Good motors, '57 Dodge V-8,
'53 Zephyr, '52 Pontiac, '52
Chev. Phone 352-5815, Box 382,
24 Ymir Road.
iContinued Next Column)
AUTOMOTIVE,  BICYCLES
MOTORCYCLES
(Continued)
1952 DODGE, NEWLY RECON-
ditioned motor, top shape, radio, good rubber. 1952 Ford,
good running car, good rubber. Small crawler tractor.
Star Auto Service Ltd.
FOR SALE '59 VOLKS. DE-
luxe. Low miles, cust. radio,
seat belt, W.W. tires. What offers. Ph. 352-6118 or Call 319
Cedar St.
1963 DODGE 14-TON EXPRESS
as new. Will accept older unit
as trade. You take over payments. $75 monthly. Ph. 352-
6887.
HERE'S YOUR CHANCE TO
get a 1957 Chev. hard top in
good condition at a reasonable
price. See it at 315 - 4th St.
1960 FORD V-8 4-DOOR SEDAN.
Good shape. Apply Slocan Valley Credit Union, Slocan Park,
B.C. Phone 359-7575.
'51 AUSTIN, '61 TRIUMPH STA-
tion wagon, '51 Chev. North
Shore Service, phone 352-2929.
NEW VALIANT DAMAGED IN
transport, *4 price. Phone 368-
8125.
1951 AUSTIN IN GOOD RUN-
ning order. $60. Ph. E. Smith,
South Slocan, 359-7477.
FOR SALE-1960 4-DOOR PRE-
fect. Phone 352-6133.
FOR SALE
MISCELLANEOUS
GAS-POWERED
LOG WINCH
and
HEAVY DUTY
CHAIN CUT-OFF SAW
Manufactured by Miller Ma-
cninery Co., Missoula, Mont.
Machine is constructed from
factory built clutches, V belt
drives and all anti-friction
bearings.
PRICE
FOB PINCHER CREEK,
$1450.00
WOOD & DEMPSEY
LUMBER LTD.
Pincher Creek, Alberta
or   phone   627-3341
for Mr. Dempsey or information.
10 Only Sides of Beef
250-275-lb. avge.    43c Ib.
Cut and Wrapped
Free Delivery
Newdan   Farm,   Creston
Phone 356-9901
SIDES OF CHOICE GRAIN FED
beef, cut and wrapped 49c lb,
Sides or grain fed pork, 35c lb.
Bacon and hams. Newdan
Farms, Creston, Ph. EL 6-9901.
Free weekly delivery.
MUST SELL 40" DELUXE
electric range, buffet, vanity
set, wardrobe, sk bed complete, bookcase, writing deBk
and chair. 315 - 4th St.
SIDES OF CHOICE BEEF, 49c
lb. Sides of pork 35c lb. Cut,
wrapped and frozen. Free delivery to Nelson. Whitford's
Meats, Ph. 356-2556, Creston.
1960 VIKING REFRIG. WITH 50
lb. freezer. Top condition. Can
be seen at 418 Silica St. Price
$225.
GENERATOR AND WATER
wheel for house lights and
power. In good shape. What
offer? Ph. 352-7493.
USED TV SETS A-l CONDI-
tion. Nelson Home Furniture
and Appliances Ltd., Nelson.
Phone 352-6432.
BUILDING 16' X 8' INSULATED
and wired. Toilet, 20 gal. glass
lined hot water tank, 110 volts.
Phone 352-6806.
PHILIPS TAPE RECORDER.
One track $200 or best offer.
Frontalalne Accordlan, 48 base
$25. '50 Chev. $125. Ph. 352-6805
SINGER SEWING MACHINE
Co. Repairs, sales, rentals.
339 Baker St. Phone 352-3631.
WASHING MACHINE, REAS-
onable price. Call at 52 Ymir
Rd.
LARGE NORTHERN WHITE
fish, 3 lbs. and up, 38c lb, 100
lb. lots. Whitford's Meats.
ANDREWS' CLEARANCE SALE
continues — bargains for all
the family.
Classified Ads Set Results I
PROPERTY, HOUSES,
FARMS, ETC., FOR SALE
C. W APPLEYARD
& CO. LTD.
Established 1912
REALTORS and
INSURANCE AGENTS
421 Baker St.        P.O. Box 26
PHONE 352-3944    .
EXCELLENT
APARTMENT SITE
Unobstructed lake view to
North and excellent access
from 3 streets. Contains 3-B.R.
cottage and $12,700
separate garage. ^     '
1 MILE SOUTH OF CITY
2.7 acres on highway for development. Has new 2-bedroom
ranch style home with double
carport and extra warehouse
that could be finished into a
double cabin. All « I ft Zftft
3 years old <P'"»<>""
Terms:  $3000 and monthly
payments $40 plus 7%.
8TH ST. VIEW LOT. Built
1956 by owner. Comfortable
2-bedroom house. Full basement. Economical auto, coal
heating.   Extra   bedroom   in
SEKMT. *,2>000
$2100 cash and $100 per mon.
223 HOUSTON ST.
Comfortable family home on
large lot; lawn, garden and
fruit trees. House has gas furnace and 2 bedrooms and bath
on main floor, and 2 upstairs.
We consider this <t I ft Zfift
good value * '"*«>"»
Terms: $1500 down and $110
per month. Good reduction if
larger down payment.
LARGE BUILDING LOT
at 6-Mile, on CI ADA
highway -P10UU
$500 down.
BY OWNER. IMMACULATE
Vernon St. property. Two 2-
bdrm. bungalows. Excellent
condition. Apply Box 3923,
Nelson Daily News for information.
UPPER FAIRVIEW HOUSE
for sale. Price $5500. $500
down, balance at 6% interest.
Also bigger house on 7th St.
Available for sale. Ph. 352-7669
HOUSE FOR SALE. FOUR
rooms and bath. Oil furnace.
Free running water. Phone
357-2270 or write Box 105,
Salmo.
AGREEMENT OF SALE $4500
for $4050. Payable $60 monthly
incl. 7%. William Kalyniuk
Agencies. Phone 352-2425.
HALL CREEK. 26 ACRES WITH
a good 2 bedroom home. W.
Kalyniuk Agencies. Phone 352-
2425.
6 YR. OLD N.H.A. 3-BEDROOM
home. 2*4 corner lots, garage,
oil heating, wired for w/d.
Phone 352-3348.
2 BDRM. HOUSE, CORNER Location. Phone 352-7716.
BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITIES
VANCOUVER 1 CHAIR BAR-
ber shop; 7 yr. lease; low rent;
heated; rear rented; busy location. Terms. 405 W. Broadway, Vancouver, B.C.
WANTED
MISCELLANEOUS
USED FURNITURE AND ANT1-
ques. Home Furniture Exchange. Ph. 352-8531, 413 Hall.
CLEAN COTTON RAGS NOT
less than 18" sq. 10c lb. Nelson Daily News.
LOST AND FOUND
FOUND AT TAGHUM HAND-
some tortoise shell cat. Long
hair, Female. Ph. 352-2336.
ROOM AND BOARD
ROOM AND   BOARD. PHONE
352-6352.
TRAILERS
PARTS! PARTS I PARTS I
Ra Lyn Mobile Home Sales,
Trail-
FOR SALE, 15-FOOT HOUSE
trailer. $700. Bud Mawer, Ymir
Road.
RENTALS
AVAILABLE MARCH 1 OR
sooner 4 rm. apt. 1 bdrm., living room, kitchen with gas
range, den or spare bdrm.,
bath, washing facilities. Quiet.
Nice for working people or
elderly people. Adults. Phone
352-7164.
DELUXE MODERN APT. 1 BR.
living room, bath and kitchen,
electric stove and fridge, excellent location, heated, $75
per mo. unfurnished. No small
children. Fleming Apartments,
phone 352-3815 or 352-7514.
3 ROOM SUITE, 1 BLOCK
from Baker Street, heating
and cooking by gas. $35 per
month. Apply Poulin Agencies,
Nelson.
LOW WINTER RATES
HSKPG. AND SLEEPING RM.
weekly, monthly rates. Dishes
linen supplied, parking. Allen
Rooms, 171 Baker Street.
ONE BEDROOM UNFURN.
suite. El. stove and H.W. tank,
oil heater, private entrances.
524 Innes St. Phone 352-5327
business hrs.
FURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING
rooms in the" Annable Block,
rent $21.00 to $31.00 per month.
Ph. Poulin Agencies Ltd., 352-
7217.
2 BDRM. HOUSE AVAIL. MAR.
1 across from Safeway. Gas
furnace and range. Ph. 352-
2424.
SMALL S.C. FURNISHED
suite, one block off Baker.
Auto, heat, private entrance,
phone 352-2155.
DUPLEX, 3 RMS. AND BATH,
heated. Electric range, basement. Adults only. Ph. 352-7491.
3 RM. APT. CLOSE DOWN-
town. No hills. Available 1st
March. Adults only. 352-2354.
LIGHT HOUSEKEEPING
room. Apply 140 Baker. Ph.
352-3384.
FURN. COSY 3 RM. APT.,
heat, hot water and all conveniences. Ph. 352-6943.
RM. APT., FURN. HOT
water, heat supplied. Ph. day
352-2015, even. 352-6242.
1   BDRM.   SUITE.   HEATED,
bath, gas stove. Ph. 352-3962.
APT.   FURN.   AND  HEATED.
713 Victoria St.
MODERN UNFURN. 1 BDRM.
apt. Heated. $68. Ph. 352-3417.
1    BEDROOM    FURN.    APT.
available Feb. 16. Ph. 352-6980.
1 BDRM. APT., KITCHEN AND
bathroom. Phone 352-3813.
2 ROOM CABIN FOR RENT.
Phone 352-6903.
SMALL HEATED FURN. APT.
Phone 352-3401 evenings.
PETS, CANARIES, BEES
FOR SALE - 15 MO. OLD GER-
man Shepard. What offers?
Apply Fred Kabatoff, Glade,
B.C.
COCKER PUPS $15.00 ALSO
Chihuahas $25.00. Bird's Kennels. Blueberry Creek.
BOATS AND ENGINES
CLEARANCE SPECIALS ON
Mercury Outboards and Ther-
mocraft boats. Jeffery Radio
and Appliances.
MARKET TRENDS
NEW YORK (AP) - Late
strength in steels and rails
helped the stock market score
its second biggest advance of
1963 Wednesday. Trading was
fairly heavy.
Volume rose to 4,960,000
shares from 3,710,000 Tuesday.
The Dow Jones industrial average advanced 5.10 to 681:72.
Of 1,306 issues traded, 722 advanced and 341 declined.
The Associated Press average
of 60 stocks advanced 2.2 to
258.9.
An estimated $3,100,000,000
was added to the quoted value
of stocks listed on the New
York Stock Exchange, based on
the rise in the AP average. It
was the largest-gain since Jan.
8 when the average rose 2.6.
Thirteen of the 15 most active stocks advanced and two
declined.
American Motors was the
most active stock, up % at 22%
on 132,900 shares.
U.S. Steel was the most active in its group, rising Hi.
Aluminium Ltd. gained *A to
lead Canadian issues higher.
Mclntyre Porcupine was up %,
International Nickel gained %
and Canadian Pacific and
Walker Gooderham were up Vs
each. Dome Mines was down Vs
and Distillers Seagrams lost %.
Prices were irregularly higher
on the American stock exchange. Volume was 1,210,000
shares, compared with 970,000
Tuesday.
Brazilian Traction and Jupiter Corporation each gained Vi
but other Canadian issues were
down where changed. Canadian
Marconi and Preston each
dropped Ms.
TORONTO (CP)-The stock
market strengthened Wednesday for the first time this week,
as all sections pulled to the upside.
Industrials gained more than
two points on index, while golds,
base metals and western oils
all showed fractional rises.
Banks led the main list higher
with Montreal up 14, Nova Scotia ahead %, Royal ahead ,
Toronto-Dominion up Vi and
Canadian Imperial Bank of
Commerce up Hi.
Aluminium gained Vs. Inter-
provincial Pipe Line and Moore
Corporation Vs each, Consolidated   Paper   and  Consumers'
Stock Quotations
The Dally News does not bold Itself responsible In the evenl
ol an e.Tor In the following lists.
TORONTO STOCKS
(Closing Prices)
MINES
Advocate
Agnico
Anacon Lead
Barnat
Base Metals
Brunswick
Buffalo Ank
Campbell C
Cassiar
Central Patricia
Chimo
Coch Witl
Coin Lake
Cons. Discovery
C G Arrow
Cons Halliwell
Conwest
Copper Corp.
Craig
D'Aragon
Denison
East Malartic
East Sullivan
Elder
Geco
Giant Yel.
Gunnar Gold
Headway
Hollinger
Hudson Bay
Hydra Ex
Iron Bay
Joliet Que.
Jonsmith
R J Jowsey
Kerr Addison
Labrador
Leitch
Little Long Lac
Lorado
Madsen
Marboy
Maritime Mining
McKenzie
Multi Mins.
Murray
New Hosco
Normetals
Norpax
North Rankin
Opemiska
Pick Crow
Pine Point
Placer
Preston
Quebec Metallurgical
Quemont
Radiore
Rayrock
Rio Algom
Sherritt Gordon
Siscoe
Steep Rock
Sullivan Con
5.8b
.60
.29
1.16
.06
3.40
2.25
4.20
11.3714
1.25
.46
4.20
.23
.81
.56
.29 *4
4.75
.16
19.37*4
.1914
12.62 Vs
2.60
2.04
1.17
25.75
12.75
9.20
.22*4
22.75
53.00
.29
1.05
.21
.18
.28
7.15
26.75
1.37
1.65
1.17
2.35
.13*4
.47
.31
.19
1.20
1.22
2.95
.12
.35
7.05
.56
11.12*4
28.62'4
8.15
.85
16.50
.40
.84
12.75
2.95
1.91
4.35
1.72
VANCOUVER STOCKS
(Closing Prices)
MINES
Beth Cop 2.78
Bralorne 6.00
Canam .12
Canusa .08
Cariboo Gold .86
19.12V-
Craig
Giant Mascot
Granduc
Highland Bell
Koot. B M
Mt. Washington
National Ex
Pend Oreille
Quatsino
Reeves MacDonald
Sheep Creek
Sherritt Gordon
Silbak Premier
Silver Ridge
Silver Standard
Sunshine Lardeau
Torwest
-Western Exploration
Western Mines
OILS
Calgary & Edmonton
Charter
Home
Pacific Pete
Peace River Gas
3.40
2.50
.19
1.25
1.15
2.80
.30
.04
.25
.11
.17*4
.14
3.10
20.00
1.15
12.00
12.00
.24
Royal Can
Vantor
INDUSTRIALS
Alberta Distillers Vt
B C Forests
B C Power
B C Telephone
Burrard Mort
Canadian Collieries
Crestbrook
Crestbrook Pfd.
Int Brew B
Inland Nat Gas
MacM & Powell River
Trans Mtn
Westminster Paper
UNLISTED
Alta Gas Trunk
Trans Canada Com
Trans Mountain Unit
West Coast Vt
BANKS
Imp. Bank of Com.
FUNDS
All Can. Com. 8
All Can. Div.
Amer. Growh
Can. Inv. Fund
Commonwealth Int
Diversified B
First Oi' and Gas
Grouped Income
.06
.16
2.00
14.00
20.50
53.00
7.37*4
7.37V4
1.50
40.00
5.37*4
5.37*4
21.6214
24.50
34.12*4
28.75
24.62*4
14.25
13.62*4
62.00
8.91
6.30
8.12
10.23
8.75
4 25
4 61
3.53
9.77
6.91
8.85
11.22
9.59
4.67
5.04
3.88
TaurCanis
Teck Hughes
Temagami
Thonip-Lund
Torbit
United Keno
Upper Canada
Violamac
Wright Hargreaves
Yellowknife Bear
Young Gold
OILS
Bailey S A
Banff Oils
Calgary and Edmonton
Canadian Delhi
Canadian Devonian
Cdh Highcrest
Home A
Midcon
Nat. Pete
Pacific Pete
Place
Prov Gas
Spooner
Stanwell Oil
Triad
United Oils
Yank Canuck
INDUSTRIALS
Abitibi
Algoma Steel
Aluminum
Analog
Atlas St.
B.A. Oil
Bathurst Power
Beatty Bros.
Bell Telephone
B.C. Forest
B.C. Power A
Burns A
Can. Cement
Can. Curtis Wright
Can. Packers B
Canadian Breweries
Canadian Canners
Canadian Celanese
Can Chem Co.
Canadian Dredge
Canadian Pacific Rly
Columbia Cellulose
Cons Mining & Smelting
Cons  Gas
Dist. Seagram
Dom Stores
Dom Tar & Chemical
Dom Textiles
Falconbridge
Famous Players
Fanny Farmer
Ford U.S.
Ford Can
Gatineau
Gatineau 5% pfd.
Imperial Oil
Imp. Tobacco
Ind. Ace.
Int. Nickel
Loblaw A
Loblaw B
Massey Ferguson
Metro Com
Metro pfd
Molson Brewery
Mont. Loco
Moore Corp.
Noranda
Page Hershey
Power Corp
Shawinigan
Shell Oil
Simpsons A
Southam
Standard Paving
Steel of Canada
Texaco
Union Gas of Can
United Steel
Weston George
Woodwards A
.35
1.65
.70
.73
.38
8.00
1.55
1.80
.92
1.14
9.50
.96
20.12*4
3.20
3.55
.1814
12.50
.24'A
2.13
12.00
.54
1,57
.11
.34
1.66
1.37
.05*4
41*4
46*4
24
114
37 "s
30
52
9%
53%
14*6
20%
9*4
33%
.83
58
10%
12%
46*4
n
8*4
26*4
5*8
23%
20
49'i
13%
Wi
1814
55*4
17%
253<i
48
182
34
100*4
41-14
15%
2514
67*6
8"'.
8*4
12*4
7V,
22
29*4
13
52 Vi
33
21 "4
8*4
29%
14*4
31*4
343i
10*2
19'4
45
19*4
6
18H
16*4
Intnl. Mutual
Investors GrOwlh
Investors Mutual
Leverage
Mutual Accum
Mutual Bond
Mutual Inc.
Trans Canada "C"
United Ace. Fund
4.26
6 64
12.31
7.30
3.62
7.30
5.20
6.22
8.02
4.63
7.22
13.99
8.00
3.96
7.64
5.C8
6.76
6.58
Gas both *4 and Canada Cement %.
Building Products was weak*
est, dropping two points to 21,
INDUSTRIALS GAIN
On the exchange index, industrials gained 2.45 to 592.24, golds
.12 to 92.10, base metals,.89 to
197.75 and western oils .25 to
114.21. Closing volume waB 4,-
314,000 shares compared with
3,940,000 Tuesday.
Among base metals, Falconbridge, Denison and Rio'Algora
all rose *i. International Nickel
gained Va, while Noranda, de-
spite trading ex - dividend 80
cents, advanced *4. Lake Du-
fault paced speculatives, gaining 50 cents to $6.50.
In western oils, Home A and
B both rose Vi and Hudson's
Bay  ,   while   Dome   dropped
MONTREAL (CP) — Stock*
rose smartly this afternoon to
snap the downward trend that
dominated the Montreal and
Canadian exchanges for the
first half of the week. By the
close, gains outnumberd losses
on the MSE by 61 to 37.
Aluminium was a prominent
gainer, rising a point o 24 in
active trading on announcement
of a marked increase in earnings in 1962.
Canadian Celanese rose % to
4614, Algoma gained *4 to 46tt,
Brazilian Traction gained 15
cents to $4.20 and Industrial
Acceptance rose % to 26.
Banks were sharply higher.
Banque Canadienne Nationale
rose a point to 72, Bank of Montr
real added '4 to 64*4, Canadian
Imperial Bank of CommerC*,
rose 1*4 to 63 and Royal Bank
added % to 7414.
Among losers, CSL dropped h
point to 51 after falling a point
Tuesday, Price dropped Vs to S?
and Stelco fell Va to 19. Hudson's Bay Company was Uh-
traded. "
The composite index rose 0,4
to 118.0. Industrials rose 0.5 to
118.5, utilities gained 0.2 to 113.5,
banks rose 0.6 to 122.8 and papers fell 0.5 to 101.9.
Mistango paced heavy trading
in mines with a gain of eight
cents to 63 cents on a turnover
of 220,000 shares. Roberval rose
two cents to 17 cents, Major-
trans added three cents to 12
cents and North American Rare
rose five cents to 43 cents.
Banff Hopes
Anti-U.S. Will
Not Be Strong
BANFF, Alta. (CP)-lt will
be a "dangerous thing" M the
April 8 federal election: campaign stirs up anti-American
sentiments, says Dean E. D,
MacPhee of the University of
British Columbia's Commerce
faculty.
Despite the attention being
given the nuclear arms dispute,
Canada's main problem is iti
economy, he said in an 'interview Tuesday.
"The attitude of a new government will determine whether
we have depression, austerity ot
progress."
DIVIDENDS
By THE CANADIAN PRESS
Canada Permament Mortgage
Corp., common 50 cents, April
1, record March 15.
Canadian Chemical Co. Ltd.,
common 7 cents, March 14,
record Feb. 22.
Globe Envelopes Ltd.,- common class A 13 cents, May 1,
record April 15.
Hollinger Consolidated Gold
Mines Ltd., common 15 cents,
March 29, record March 1.
Stedman Brothers Ltd., common 12*4 cents, April 1, record
March 15.
BRIEFS
CUBANS DEFECT
GANDER, Nfld. (CP)—Tw6
Cubans, a man and his wife in
their 30s, stepped off a Cubana
Airlines plane here and asked
for political asylum in the
United States. The plant*
stopped for fuel while on a flight
from Havana to Prague, Czechoslovakia. Names of the couple
were withheld Wednesday by
the immigration department.
MONORAIL PLAHlNBlb
SAN FRANCISCO (API-
Three private firms propose tb
build the longest monorail in the
world from San Francisco to
Palo Alto, Calif.—a distance of.
30 miles—to provide commute?
service for the San Francisco
peninsula. Spokesmen said
trains would operate at a speed
oi 85 miles w hour.
♦
	
	
 ;	
■
 2 — NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURS., FEB. 14,1963
St. Valentine's Day
TODAY!
.'and we advise you fellows that those girls or that girl
in your life are very susceptible to
A Lovely Coutts Card
An Enticingly Different Box of Valentine Chocs.
>,    Or a Gift of Perfume or Scented Soap.
Still in Good Supply (we hope)
_ - - -v AT
MAKK
DRUGS LTD.
"SHE'S FIT AT 103
SARNIA, Ont. (CP) - Mrs.
Sutherland Johnston of Sarnia
slebrated her 103rd birthday
eanesday  amid  gifts  and
irds from friends and neigh-
ofs. Her doctor described her
i "mighty fit" and surprisingly
gfle.    .
Have the Job Done Right!
IKi GRAVEC
LIMITED       **
MASTER PLUMBER
PHONE 352-3315
PLEDGES FAIR AID
MONTREAL (CP) - Charles
Poletti, former governor of New
York and vice-president of the
1964 New York World's Fair, today pledged "all technical assistance and co-operation" to
the Montreal World's Fair in
1967. Mr. Poletti, after a meeting here between officials of the
New York and Montreal fairs,
said: "We are partners in the
same venture of increasing understanding among nations, and
particularly strengthening the
bonds of friendship between
Canada and the U.S."
Independent Log Cutters
With Murder
By JOHN LeBLANC
KAPUSKASING, Ont. <CP)-
Six independent log-cutting settlers were under arrest on noncapital murder charges Wednesday and provincial police sought
13 others on the same charges.
The charges against the 19
settlers, as well as riot charges
against some 400 striking bushworkers, follow the fatal shooting of three strikers in a clash
early Monday.
The mass charges against
settlers and strikers are unprecedented in Canadian history.
A group of independent settlers opened fire on a mob of
bushworkers who raided a camp
at Reesor Siding, 37 miles west
of this northern Ontario town,
in an apparent bid to knock
over piles of cut lumber accumulated by the settlers.
Originally charged with shooting with intent to wound, the 19
settlers were released Monday
on $500 bail each. Less than 24
hours later, charges of non-capital murder were laid against
each of them.
HAVE 400 NAMES
The bushworkers, members
of the Lumber and Sawmill
Workers Union (CLC), had previously, not been charged. Pro-
CHINESE
HAND-HOOKED
Floral
RUGS
2'x4'
3'x5'
4' x 6'
8' x IO1
%:xl2'
B
441 Baker Street
_ *59.S0
_ *86.00
Phone 352-7711
* WASHDAY AIDS •
Ironing Boards
Wood — ea. 6.95
Metal, adjustable — 11.95
Metal, adj., with iron rest — 15.30
Ironing Board Pad Sets
From — 1.50 to 4.65
Ironing Board Cover
l.so
1 Sunbeam Electric Steam lron-$1350 j
Folding Clothes Dryer
4.35
Ceiling Dryer
4.10
Plastic Laundry Hampers
7.95
Plastic Laundry Baskets
From 1.79
-Wood Clothes Pins
3 Doz. Pkg. 401
Galvanized Clothes Line
Per 50 ft. 55.*
Plastic Clothes Line
Per 50 ft. $1.00
Pulleys
From 95t*
Line Fasteners
1.20
Line Dividers
55*
OR
Electric Clothes Dryer
Regular $189.95
SPECIAL
$
154.95
Wood. Vallance Hardware
Phone 352-7221
Company, Limited
WHOLESALE - RETAIL
*p
isclson, B.C.
vinclal police said they have the
names pt all the>'approxirnateiy
400 who took part ;in tfcrald
and the charges will bedaiaVas
soon as possible.
The settlers are being charged
individually, the bushworkers
jointly	
The 19 settlers face a mandatory life sentence if convicted of
non-capital murder/ a.:charge
which covers all classes -of "murder except deliberate Slayings
and deaths associated wi t h
crimes of violence.
The charge of "unlawful assembly of persons who have begun to disturb the pace tumult-
uously" carries a maximum
sentence of two years on conviction.        	
Since the Kapuskasing jail
holds only 10 persons, most of
the prisoners were expected to
be transferred elsewhere after
being brought here.
The new charges were ordered after Attorney - General
Fred Cass of . Ontario sent
Crown Attorney S. A. Caldbick
of Kapuskasing from Timmins.
COMES AS CLIMAX
The Reesor Siding outbreak
came as a climax to a series
of incidents since about 1,500
bushworkers went on strike Jan.
14 against the Spruce Falls
Power and Paper Company in
Kapuskasing and its affiliate,
Kimberly-Clark Pulp and Paper
Company at Longlac, 180 miles
west of here.
The strike has been marked
by mass demonstrations by both
strikers and settlers. Both cut
wood for Spruce Falls, the bushworkers as employees and the
settlers working independently
with special permits on Crown
land.
To cut off supplies of lumber
to the company's newsprint
mill, the bushworkers have been
patrolling surrounding highways
and roads to intercept truck-
loads of wood.
Members of three craft unions
work at the Spruce Falls mill,
who stayed away from the job
in large- numbers Tuesday,
voted early today to return to
work on the 2 a.m. shift,
WOULDN'T CROSS LINE
The strike's effects had appeared to be spreading Tuesday
to the mill itself. Mill workers
who had been keeping the plant
going on a reduced schedule refused in substantial numbers to
cross the picket line.
The strike began while negotiations were in progress for a
contract to replace an agreement that expired last Aug. 1.
Union members began the walk-
put in protest at a lack of progress in the talks.
The company wants the strikers to return before negotiations
resume. 'The bushworkers want
a contract before going back to
their jobs.
For the settlers, whose log-
cutting is a necessary boost to
poor returns from agriculture,
the prolonged strike is a disaster. Unless logs are moved from
the bush within two weeks, the
ground- will turn marshy in
warmer weather and they will
not be able to make delivery—
or be paid.
Echoes of Bitter Medicare
Plan Haunting Regina
REGINA (CP) - The first
$200,000,000 budget in Saskatchewan's history and echoes of a
bitter medical care insurance
plan dispute in the province last
July are in the wind as the provincial legislature prepares to
convene Thursday.
The CCF government has
given no indication of any important legislation other than
the budget. But Liberal Opposition Leader Ross Thatcher says
members of his party will have
many questions to ask the government, particularly on the
still - simmering medical care
question.
The provincial budget for the
1962-63 fiscal year was $174,218,-
190, about $26,800,000 greater
than the previous one. A similar
rise for the 1963-64 budget would
put it over the $200,000,000 mark
for the first time.
The last budget originally
called for a deficit, but a buoyant provincial economy was expected to produce a small surplus. Indications are that in the
coming  fiscal  year  there  are
Ask 2000 Toronto Women
To Become "Salesmen"
TORONTO (CP)-More than
2,000 women from all parts of
Ontario were asked Tuesday
night to become "salesmen"
for Canadian goods by provincial Development Minister Robert Macaulay.
Pleading for support from
women for Ontario's current
trade crusade, aimed at creating 60,000 more jobs in Ontario
by 1970, Mr. Macaulay said he
has never advocated a "buy-
Canadian" campaign as such.
It is only common sense to
buy Canadian goods if their
price and quality are comparable to the price and quality of
imported goods, the minister
said.
"We can sell abroad but we
have to start selling here."
After entertaining the women
at dinner, Mr. Macaulay reminded his guests they are responsible for spending 85 per
cent of every consumer dollar.
He said the women's division
of the trade crusade, established by 250 women at a meeting Tuesday, would give the
government advice which it
could translate into action.
The women's division hopes to
establish working committees to
study hard and soft goods
manufacturing, product promotion, design, natural resources,
retailing, consumer purchasing,
human resources and econom-
likely to be boosts ln spending
by the larger provincial departments.
Health department expenditures were expected to climb to
$56,000,000 from $47,000,000, reflecting the first full year of operation of the compulsory tax-
supported medical care insurance plan.
Some minor legislation dealing with the medical care plan
is to be brought down by the
government.
The government has said it
will announce the cost of importing doctors from outside the
province to work in Saskatchewan during a bitter boycott of
the plan by the provincial College of Physicians and Surgeons. The boycott lasted 23
days after the plan was implemented July 1. The govermment
paid salaries and return air
fares for the imported doctors,
most of' them from the United
Kingdom.
Mr.   Thatcher   said   some
weeks ago he would ask that the
Medical Care Commission, administrator of the plan, be
called before the house for questioning if there was not an improvement in payment of doctor's accounts.
Some doctors working under
the plan directly or indirectly
have complained about slow
payment of accounts submitted
to the commission. The commission has said the blame for
slow payments does not rest
with it.
The Liberal opposition has
boosted its representation in the
55-seat house to 21 members
since the last session of the legislature. Dave Steuart won a
constituency. The seat became
vacant through the death of
CCF cabinet minister L. F. Mcintosh. Walter Erb, a former
CCFer who sat as an independent at the last session, has
since joined the Liberals.
The government has the remaining 34 seats.
News of the Day
RATES: 30c line, 40c line bold face type; larger type rates
on request. Minimum two lines.
Haigh Tru Art Beauy Salon
576 Baker St. Ph. 352-3313
Diamonds, Watches, Gifts
Repairs, Engraving
TED ALLEN'S JEWELLERY
Redeemer Family Service
Sunday next, 11 a.m.
Full church please.
Infant sleepers, thermal knit for
extra comfort. $2.49 at
EBERLE'S
For  Your Valentine.  Beautiful
I Roses, Carnations and Flowering
Plants.
MAC'S FLOWER SHOP
Business Spotlight...
Oil Companies With Secrecy,
Probe Snipe Lake District
EDMONTON (CP) - Cloaked
with the secrecy of a military
operation, eight oil companies
are probing the Snipe Lake
area, 140 miles northwest of
here, seeking to establish a new
oil pool.
Oilfield spies, politely known
as scouts, buzz up and down
rough outline trails on motor toboggans looking for clues that
might help them determine
what the opposition' has found.
During the last, month aircraft have skimmed above rigs
at tree-top level while drilling
experts inside craned their
necks for the signs of a strike.
Men armed with powerful binoculars sometimes stand watch
at a fair distance from the more
promising sites, kept from moving closer by company security
guards.
The focal point of this activity
is the east shore of Snipe Lake,
roughly 25 to 30 miles east of
Valley view, a centre that blossomed from the oil boom of the
1950's.
SITE IS MAGIC WORD
Snipe Lake was recently described by the authoritative
publication Oil in Canada as
"the magic word in western
Canada's petroleum industry."
More than a dozen rigs moved
into the area last fall and some,
oilmen predict a steady pace of
further drilling work although
no strikes have been listed as
important producers and there
has been some talk of a cooling
off of interest.
In the region around the original discovery' well, drilled by
the Standard Oil Company of
British Columbia, activity remains brisk.
Crude from the region now is
being trucked to the northern
end of the Peace River oil pipeline system at Valleyview and
the oil publication reported that
pipeline facilities to the pool will
be built . following the spring
break-up.
TOUCHED OFF BIDS
A strike by Imperial Oil last
September touched off the cas
cade of bids by major oil companies. In late January, however, abandonment of a strategic wildcat well four miles
northeast took some of the glow
off the discovery.
During recent oil sales, the
major companies have paid as
much as $900 an acre for reservations. The highest bonus for
a reservation in the area this
yea"r was $366,950, paid by Central del Rio Oils Ltd.
The section lies to the northwest of the second most expensive drilling reservation ever
sold in Alberta. This was block
1073, which drew a cash bonus
of $2,078,251 from Imperial and
the California Standard Company in a Crown sale Dec. 11,
1962.
At the moment there are two
producers, five wells now being
drilled, six about to start and
seven abandoned. The average
production depth from the Beaver Hill formation, the same
producing formation as that of
Swan Hills, is 8,600 feet.
Clear Out of rose, green, yellow
nylon marquisette.
Reg. 79c, now 35c.
STERLING FURNISHERS
Ideal Valentine Gift —
English Jugs, values to $4.00 —
Special $2.39
WOOD, VALLANCE HDWRE.
Just Arrived!! Gloxinias, Begonias and Amaryllis Bulbs.
Plant Early.
MAC'S FLOWER SHOP
ANNUAL MEETING
Nelson Golf and Country Club
Chamber of Commerce Rooms
Thurs., Feb. 21, 7:30 p.m.
Top Knitting Yarns including
all Mary Maxim Wools and Patterns.
EBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.
Phone us today and we'll play
Cupid for you with Valentine
flowers.
COVENTRY'S FLOWER SHOP
Phone 352-5035
NELSON SAVINGS CREDIT
UNION
Annual meeting, Legion Hall
Feb. 18th, 8 p.m. Everybody
welcome.
When in Creston stop at the
Kootenay Hotel Coffee Shop. All
home cooking. Now operated by
Marge Caunt and Hannah Petterson.
For Your Valentine.  Complete
selection of Valentine Chocolates
also Pauline Johnson delicious
mellow chocolates.
MAC'S FLOWER SHOP
Wanted by Arthritic Society
small office desk about 24 by 40
with drawers. Phone 352-6184.
HOMEGROUND FLOUR
Stone Milled Whole Wheat
At SUPER VALU
Salmo Art and Ceramics
Exhibition, Salmo Legion Hall
Feb. 16 and 17,
2 to 9 p.m. daily.
Coffee
ATTENTION ELKS
Valentine Dance, Sat., Feb. 16
8:30 p.m. Silver Room.
Bring your friends.
Admission $1. Tickets —
Bill's Motor-In.
Lucky program numbers from
the Minor Hockey Jamboree are
293, 739, 841
Winners  presenting  these programs may pick up their prizes
at 456 Ward Street.
GODFREY'S LIMITED
Vs PRICE SALE
Inventory's over and we have
name   brand   merchandise   to
clear including 30 pairs of shoes.
Thurs., Fri„ Sat.
March 4 a date to note —
Canadian Players in
MASTERPIECE OF COMEDY
at the Civic Theatre.
Tickets $2.00 available from
Rotarians.
NELSON REGISTERED MUSIC
TEACHERS' ASSOCIATION
PRESENT A STUDENT RECITAL MONDAY, FEB 18, AT ST.
PAUL'S - TRINITY UNITED
CHURCH, 7:30 P.M. EVERY
ONE WELCOME.
. RUINS DAMAGED
ROME (AP) — Europe's severe winter has caused extensive damage to such famous Roman ruins as the Arch of Titus
and the Baths of Septimius Se-
verus. Profes s o r Gianfilippo
Carettoni, superintendent of antiquities for the Roman forum
and the Palatine Hill, said that
rain and snow froze in tiny
openings in the porous marble
of dozens of monuments and as
the ice expanded it popped dangerous cracks in the archways,
pillars and sunken passageways.
CUPID
QiftK
Suggestions
FOR
VALENTINE'S
• WHITE SHIRTS
• SWEATERS
• SOX
• TIES
• SHORTS
• BELTS
• SPORT   SHIRTS
Fmory«Q
LTD.
THE MAN'S STORE
Bulgarians
Slop Negro
Student Riots
VIENNA (Reuters)—Demonstrations by Negro students in
Sofie have been "ruthlessly
broken up" by Bulgarian police, who arrested several of
their leaders, according to reliable reports reaching Vienna
Thursday.
About 200 students demonstrated in Sofia Tuesday against
a ban by the Bulgarian government on an ail - African students' union in Bulgaria.
Several students were injured
and Ghanian Ambassador Ap-
pan - Sampong was summed to
the foreign ministry, the sources
said.
The demonstrations started
last Friday after two students
leaders received orders from
the Bulgarian government to
leave the country Friday night,
the sources said.
The leaders were the president of the newly formed students' union, a Ghanian student
and the union's vice - president,
an Ethiopian.
The expulsion order was later
cancelled for three days when
Bulgarian Premier Todor Zhiv-
kov promised to receive a student delegation.
Although they waited for five
hours, the prime minister did
not appear for the meeting and
the delegation was told by a
militia colonel that no further
demonstration would be tolerated, the sources said.
Rexall
REDUCED
CALORIE
Diet Control
Weight Control Plan
99C
Sold Only at
Your Rexall Pharmacy
CITY DRUG
Phone 352-3611
Box 460
puini uiijiuiniit.
Canada's Favourite Digestive
• •. t wo new features
New wrapper - New colour
Peek Frean's 8-oz. Digestive now
in the new red wrapper.
New ONE POUND Package
In any package, Canada's favourite—
the best Digestive biscuit ever baked.
Baked to perfection, wrapped for protection by
PEEK FREAN
makers of famous biscuits
. ■ ■ ..    .    .
-   . '   ..■        ...:
 i"    !
	
