 -
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TEMPERATURES
NELSON   44 49 .10
Toronto    37 63 —
Calgary    42 63 —
Penticton     45 59 .24
Vancouver   45 57 Tr
Regina   36 73 .10
Spokane   45 50 .17
tiMtiVL
$3.
Vol. 62
Published at Nef ^"W ^Smjfe.  ^a ncial, trading and education centre of the Kootenay-Columbia area
 1 & •Sil
WEATHER FORECAST
Kootenay: Cloudy with a few
showers. Little change in temperature. Light winds. Low-high
at Cranbrook and Crescent Valley 40 and 55.
0N, B. C, CANADA-TUESDAY MORNING, MAY 7, 1963
10 Cents
No. 14
of Canada Cuts Lending Rate to 3% P.C.
Queen Victoria        King Edward VH King George V        King Edward VTD       King George VI Queen Elizabeth
other sovereigns. Friends say that Churchill, at 88, Is retiring because of infirmities of age (he cannot bear the thought
ot being wheeled Into the Chamber) and because Lady
Churchill no.longer can campaign actively with him the way
they have dune over the decades In the most famous partnership in British politics. (Central Press)
COMMONS LOSES UNCOMMON MAN—Sir Winston Church-
Ill's decision not to run tor re-election to the House of Commons closes the most remarkable career ln the history of
the British Parliament He first was elected as a hero of
the Boer War In 1900. The last survivor ot those who sat
In the reign of Queen Victoria, he also served under five
Man Killed During
Flight to Edmonton
25 Injured as   Air Turbulence
Drops TCA Plane   About 800 Feet
By ALLEN SACKMANN
EDMONTON (CP)—An elderly passenger was killed and 25 were injured
Monday when a Trans-Canada Air Lines Vanguard hit violent air over the Rocky
Mountains on a flight from Vancouver to Edmonton.
A TCA spokesman said all except four of the injured were released from
hospital after a medical check.
A passenger said the plane dropped suddenly, perhaps 800 feet. Some passengers had not fastened their seat belts.
The turbo-prop plane, Flight 502 bound for Ottawa,  carried 71  persons.
Killed was L. M. Schmidt, 77, of Cudworth, Sask. He was a retired storekeeper and was returning from his sister's wedding anniversary. Cause of death was
not immediately known.
The TCA official said it was
expected that Mr. Mooney, formerly of Edmonton, would be
released today.
SHAMBLES IN PLANE
A TCA official said the interior of the aircraft was a shambles. Some seats were out of
place. Newspapers, blankets and
other items were scattered. Reporters were not permitted inside the plane.
The four-engine plane, with a didn't
capacity of 109 passengers, suf- Until the time of the jolt the
fered "no apparent structural j High' was smooth and it was
damage," TCA said but it was'smooth aSain a[ter tne iolt. ne
of Vancouver.TCA said there
also were two other stewardess who were checking job performances.
NOT ENOUGH TIME
Passengers said there was
one sharp jolt before many had
time to fasten their seat belts.
Passenger W. E. McEwan of
North Vancouver, said "It was
all over in 10 seconds. There
was a very brief warning . . .
some   got   strapped   in,   some
grounded for a thorough examination.
Four ambulances were at Edmonton's International Airport,
14 miles south of the city, when
the plane landed almost on
schedule.
The aircraft ran into severe
air turbulence at 21.000 feet 50
rhlles west of Rocky Mountain
House, Alta., about 25 minutes'
flying time from Edmonton.
The public weather office said
rain showers were reported in
the Rocky Mountain House area
at the time. A forecaster said
tops of clouds would have ranged
up to 25,000 feet.
The Vancouver - Edmonton
flight takes one hour and 30
minutes.
The plane was piloted by
Capt. George Smith of Vancouver.
TCA said he reported that the
seat belt sign had been turned
on just prior to the encounter
with the turbulent air.
Other members of the crew
were D. E. Glendenning, first
officer; F. A. Lemoine, purser:
and Dianne L. Reader and Pat
A. Spurgeon,  stewardesses, all
TRY FOR PEAK
KATMANDU, Nepal (AP) -
Two Americans and about 12
Sherpas left base camp Monday
on their way to launch an assault on the 29,028-feet peak of
Everest by the untried West
Ridge route, an expedition
spokesman said.
said.
Mr. McEwan said the man
ahead of him flew up out of his
seat, hit the overhead luggage
back and fell backwards over
the seat.
"Coats, hats, luggage were
flying everywhere."
One of the stewardesses also
was thrown up out of her seat
but she recovered quickly and
gave assistance to the passengers, said Mr. McEwan.
PLANE  DROPS
Ordinary Seaman Ian Adams
of Battleford, Sask., said "the
plane just dropped — I don't
know how far but someone said
about 800 feet."
He said the passengers had
just been informed to fasten
their seat belts when the turbulence hit.
"It was no more than a few
seconds and some people didn't
get their belts fastened. - One
man across the aisle left his
seat completely. He seemed to
be suspended in midair for a
second or two.
"They didn't dare move him
and the steward and stewardesses put pillows around him
and rigged up a strap effort to
hold him in place.
"One chap had an eyelid cut
and was bleeding quite badly
but he was given first aid to
control the bleeding."
Adams said he had just got
his seat belt fastened when the
plane "lunged."
NECK TWISTED
"I got quite a twist of the
neck and I felt my belt tighten."
There was no panic, said
Adams. "The passengers were
very good."
He said passengers on the
right side of the plane were
pushed against the wall and it
was those on the left who were
shaken up.
Adams described the motion
as "a sharp, sliding motion to
the left."
Adams and other uninjured
passengers continued their flight
to Saskatoon and the other eastern points shortly before 4 p.m.
MST on another Vanguard.
13 Injured
In Plant Blast
MONTREAL (CI?) -An explosion ripped through a sugar re
Need Pointed Up for
Unilateral Tariff Cuts
VANCOUVER (CP) - Canada is too important a trading
nation to harbor any delusions
of a cocoon-like existence, Carl
A. Pollock, president of the Canadian Manufacturers' Association said Monday night.
Naturally, he said, Canadian
manufacturers want a bigger
home market and, just as naturally, their first concern must
be with that market.
FOULKES
ESCORTS
CANADIANS
HOLTEN, The Netherlands
(Reuters) — Gen. Charles
Foulkes, who commanded., the
Canadian corps which^ took part | ^Pmany>"cMadian" manufacturers with a long-denied oppor-
"But in the context of today's
competitive world climate,
many of us can no longer afford to settle for the home market alone. For one thing we
must reckon with the continuation of the effective foreign
competition we have witnessed
in the last decade. We can
neither detach nor isolate ourselves from these forces of international competition."
Speaking to the annual meeting of the British Columbia division of the CMA, Mr, Pollock
said Canada may possibly he
helped in international trade by
the new United States Trade
Expansion Act. In the matter of
trade between Canada and the
U.S., he said, the overwhelming
need clearly is for unilateral
tariff reductions on the part of
the U.S.
"Such reductions would pre-
in the liberation of The Nether
lands, attended a commemoration service here Monday in
honor of the Canadians who fell
in the Second World War.
Foulkes accompanied 79 relatives of Canadian war dead who
are visiting The Netherlands
under the auspices of the Royal
Canadian Legion and The Netherlands War Graves Committee.
Wreaths were placed on the
tunity to make significant headway selling their products south
of the border. Nothing short of
this will do if we are ever to
bridge the yawning annual gap
between what we sell to the
U.S. and what the U.S. sells to
us."
Mr. Pollock said the CMA believes Canada should at all
times be prepared to support
measures designed to expand
fining plant in Montreal's east! ten cemetery by the Canada -
i Netherlands Council of Vancou-
graves of 1,200 Canadians buried [ international trade between all
here and Foulkes planted the  nations
first of 24 dogwood trees which
have been presented to the Ho
Improved  Balance of
International Payments
Spurs 4th Cut Since June
Marwell Gets
$200,498 Job
On 14.74 Miles
SALMO — Marwell Construction Ltd. of Vancouver has received the $200,498 contract for
the Salmo-Creston section paving project S-4163 on the southern transprovincial highway.
Announcement of awarding the
contract was made by Hon. P.
A. Gaglardi Monday.
The 14.74 miles covered by
the contract extends from the
junction of Highway 6 to Summit
Lake.
Work will begin shortly.
OTTAWA (CP)—Reduction of the Bank of Canada's lending rate to 3'/j per cent from four was announced Monday night.
It was the fourth cut since the rate was fixed
at six per cent last June as part of the former government's austerity program to meet a foreign exchange
emergency. Prior to the June move the bank rate was
a  floating   one  based  on
long-term money demand
Bank Governor Louis Ras-
minsky said in making the announcement Monday that "during the past six months there
has been an improvement in
Canada's balance of International payments." He added that
the exchange reserve position
had developed in a "satisfactory
way."
Mr. Rasminsky said the reductions in the rate were intended to "encourage credit conditions that faciliate sound domestic economic expansion."
Saigon Guerrillas
Execute U.S. Officer
sck to School
FORT SMITH, N.W.T. (CP) -
ver. I Teachers and students from Hay
More than 1,400 school children j River, N.W.T., went to school
.    „. ...from  Holten  and  neighboring j Monday at this community, 400
One fire department official comnlunlties aUended Monday's miles-north of Edmonton.
nH     it     itmt     f»     mli'ioln     tin     /\rifl  I ' ■>.r     I      - .,,.   _ ; «*■ .   J   \ 4 '    a
ceremonies." Thirty high school students,
Today Foulkes is to visit Wag-1120 elementary and secondary
eningen, where he received the j students and 31 teachers joined
German surrender in 1945.        I 600 students in regular classes.
end Monday, injuring 13 persons
and filling a block of busy Notre
Dame Street with rubble.
said It was a miracle no one
was killed.
None of the injured was reported in serious condition.
Quards' Bullets Killed
Tellier, Not Knife Stahs
MONTREAL (CP) - An autopsy has disclosed that guard
Raymond Tellier was killed by
bullets fired by fellow guards
and not stabbed to death by two
prisoners holding him hostage in
a cell of St. Vincent de Paul
Penitentiary.
Result of the autopsy was disclosed Monday by a Montreal
morgue official. The post-mortem examination had shown
that Tellier had been hit four
times by bullets—twice in the
heart, once in the head and
once in the shoulder.
However, said the autopsy report, he might have died in any
event from a stab wound that
pierced his lung.
Tellier was slashed and
stabbed while being held May 2
by two prisoners who grabbed
him and forced him into their
cell. With the guard as hostage,
the convicts demanded that they
be transferred to another
prison.
BLOOD SEEPS OUT
Prison guards rushed the cell
when they saw blood seeping
under the cell door. Firing pistols as they moved in, the
guards killed convict Marcel
Marcoux, 34, and wounded his
cousin Claude Marcoux, 21.
When order was restored, it
was announced by penitentiary
officials that Tellier, 35-year-old
father of three, had di ' from
the slashes and the stab wounds.
The justice department as announced a board of inquiry will
be established to investigate the
deaths and the events leading up
to them.
Warden Michel Lecorre disclosed Sunday that "a feeling of
extreme tension" gripped the
penitentiary following the shootings. He said 20 RCMP and 11
provincial police officers were
called to the prison to help
maintain order.
The reinforcements were engaged in a cell-by-cell search
for concealed weapons.
The Star says it learned
from authoritative sources that
a half-dozen or more guards did
not report for duty Friday morning, and that several others have
not shown up for work since
then.
La Presse says it learned that
the search of the cells had turn
up 24 home-made knives which
the prisoners had planned to
use during a weekend "bingo"
—prison term for riot.
The maximum security prison
still bears marks of a riot last
June. Rampaging prisoners caused millions of dollars
damage in the uprising, quelled
only when army units were sent
in. One prisoner was killed.
OTTAWA (CP)-Allen J. MacLeod, federal commissioner of
penitentiaries, said Monday he
supports a decision by the warden of St. Vincent de Paul Penitentiary to storm a cell where
two prisoners held a guard hostage. /
The guard and one of the prisoners were killed and the second
prisoner wounded. An autopsy
showed the guard, Raymond
Tellier, 35, was hit by four gunshots fired by the guards who
rushed the cell.
Michel LeCorre, warden of the
penitentiary just north of Montreal, was in Ottawa Monday to
confer with Commissioner MacLeod. Mr. MacLeod said:
"The loss of two lives, especially that of our unarmed guard,
is regrettable. But I'm certain
the already dying guard would
have been stabbed more than
three times by the prisoners if
Warden LeCorre had not ordered
the assault on the cell when he
did."
He said his preliminary investigation showed the guard "was
already a dying man as the result of the stab wounds, especially the third which punctured
his lung."
It "would have brought death
within minutes — before the
guard could have received proper
medical attention."
Mr. LeCorre said the prisoners
"stabbed the guard three times
before giving us a chance to do
anything."
Tile other guards "just could
not stand there in front of the
cell and watch Tellier, bleeding
like the devil, in extreme pain,
just being stabbed repeatedly.
They had to get in there and
stop the massacre."
SAIGON (AP) - A United
States army lieutenant was executed by Communist guerrillas
30 miles north of Saigon in
broad daylight Monday, a military spokesman said.
'' He added that two Vietnamese military men travelling in
a jeep with the American were,
also executed by the guerrillas',
who had blown the jeep off the
road with a grenade.
An earlier announcement had
reported an American captain
killed when a land mine went
off under his vehicle.
The military spokesman said
the vehicle was travelling on
notorious  Route  13  when  the
Across
Canada
OTTAWA (CP) — Prime Minister Pearson presided at two
cabinet committee meetings on
Monday, reporting on his trip
last week to London, and made
detailed plans for his conference this week with President
Kennedy.
A meeting of the full Liberal
cabinet has been called for
10:30 a.m. today.
OTTAWA (CP) — A contract
of about $10,000,000 is expected
to Ibe awarded soon to de Hav-
illand Aircraft of Canada Limited for construction of a prototype 200-ton anti-submarine
hydrofoil boat.
Informants said Monday the
project, authorized late last year
by the former Conservative government, is likely to be followed
through by the Liberal administration with the award of a
contract.
Meanwhile, a $240,000,000 program for construction of eight
frigates, initiated by the Conservatives, is under review by
the Liberals.
PRINCE ALBERT (CP) -
About 50 people greeted opposition leader Diefenbaker and his
wife when they arrived Monday
by train from Ottawa.
Hay River Businessmen Would Return to Island
By JOHN WARREN
FORT SMITH, N.W.T. (CP)-
Although some lost everything
they had, Hay River businessmen indicated Monday they will
take their chances with rebuilding on flood-managed Vale Island, 500 miles north of Edmonton.
"The river—the thing that's
giving us all the trouble—was
the reason we were there in the
first place," said Don Stewart,
a building supply and theatre
operator.
Dock facilities lor fishing and
river traffic were the basic rea
sons for the town's existence and
a major part of the town's revenue, he said.
Vale Island is at the mouth
of the Hay River. Hay River, a
community of 1,800, was swept
by water and ice when the frozen Great Slave Lake held back
the heavy spring flow of the
north-running river.
FORT SIMPSON HIT
Fort Simpson, an island community of 700 about 620 miles
north of Edmonton at the confluence of the Liard and Mackenzie rivers, also was hit by
high water and ice.
More than 1,600 persons were
evacuated from both settlements.
Northern Affairs Minister Arthur Laing, who estimated Hay
River damage at $1,600,000,
said the federal government will
decide this week what assistance it will provide for rehabilitation of the two towns.
The minister also said that
the government will study methods of preventing flooding of
Hay River and will look into
possible relocation pf the community on the mainland.
Mr. Stewart suggested opening of a sub-division on the
mainland for people who want
to live off the island "but the
businessmen can't very well
move away from the industry of
the fishing and the harbor."
Other businessmen said diking of the river possibly would
be preferable to a mass movement to the mainland.
"There's one good thing about
.the flood," Mr. Stewart said,
"that is, we've had some attention given our problem at
Hay Hiver."
RETURN FOR SURVEY
Six Hay River businessmen
planned to return to their homes
Monday to survey damage. Curt.
Merrill, Mackenzie district administrator, also was scheduled
to start a tour of the flood-ravaged communities.
There was some easy banter
among businessmen about buildings which floated off foundations, and it was suggested people would have to be careful
not to move into the wrong
houses.
"I would have him charged
with trespass in my back
yard," said A. W. Stokes, whose
yard now houses the Royal Canadian Legion buildings.
E. E. (Bud) Weiss, general
store owner, said his large store
and home have been extensively
damaged and loss of stock alone
will amount to $50,000 with property damage adding another
$50,000.
Spring supply of goods to construction and survey crews was
about to begin and the flood has
virtually eliminated it, causing
heavy financial losses.
guerrillas forced all three men
out of the vehicle and executed
them with small arrrisi the
spokesman said.
The bodies were found later
by a military patrol. The identity of the American was withheld.
The lieutenant was the 73rd
American killed in the Vietnamese war since late 1961. The
weekend toll among South Vietnamese forces was 22 dead,
seven missing and 35 wounded
in scattered Communist raids
on isolated outposts.
Freedom ites Ask
Aid in Plight
VANCOUVER (CP) - Sons
of Freedom Doukhobors entrenched in the Greater Vancouver
area for about four months,
made a plea Monday night for
help from any "responsible reasonable Canadians."
In a release made in downtown Victory Square, that has
been the Sons' headquarters
here, the appeal over the signatures of 561 Freedomites said
their plight must "be placed
amongst the list of those unavoidable problems that cannot
be resolved of their own accord."
A low bank rate tends to ease
the money supply and makes
credit easier to obtain.
The rate was pegged at six
per cent lost June in a move to
encourage an increased flow of
foreign capital. A drop in foreign capita! inflow had been
blamed for the exchange crisis.
Prior to that move the floating rate was at 5.17 per cent.
Last September the fixed rate
was reduced to 5'4 per cit.
It was cut further to five per
cent in October and to four per
cent in November.
The bank rate itself is rarely
used and then only as a minimum charge on advances by the
central bank to the chartered
banks. But it is taken as a key
indicator to conditions in the
money market.
The new 3V4 per' cent rate
compares with a rate of 5.17 per
cent just before the rate was
pegged last June.
Basis for the floating rate was
the price of government bonds
sold at tender each week. It was
set at .25 per cent above the rare
which each week's bond prices
would bring. /
Under this formula the rate today would be 3.85 per cent, or
higher than the new pegged
rate.
Lowest point ever reached by
the bank rate was 1.12 per cent
July 31, 1958. Then it rose
steadily to a record high of 6.16
on Aug. 13, 1959.
In Toronto, H. E. Langford,
president of Chartered Trust
Company, said the bank rate
"was tending to be lower and
this confirms and speeds up the
process."
A lower rate usually stimulates business generally, Mr.
Langford said. The economy has
been moving steadily during recent months and "no doubt the
government wants this to carry
NEW YORK (CP) - Canadian
dollar up 1-64 at 92 15-16 in terms
of U.S. funds. Week ago 92 15-16.
Pound sterling down 5-64 at
$2.79 29-32.
Minister Sees Need for
Manufacturing Industries
TORONTO (CP)-Trade Minister Mitchell Sharp said Monday
the "way ahead for Canada" is
to develop efficient manufacturing industries.
Coupled with this domestic diversification of the economy
will be a need to adjust to new
world trading conditions in
which trade barriers are being
lowered and competition heightened, he said.
In his first major speech as
the new Liberal trade minister,
Mr. Sharp told the national industrial production show here
Canada must move deliberately
and imaginatively into "the
new kind of trading world that
is emerging before our eyes."
"Protectionism is no answer
to our problems of unemployment and under-utilization
Canadian abilities and resources or to our balance
payments problem," he declared.
"We shall be seeking an improved pattern of export opportunity and competition such as
would provide a stimulus to Canadian growth and employmenl
on an sustainable and competitive basis."
He said Canada's attitude a
the forthcoming GATT talks on
expanding trade on a multilateral basis will be dynamic and
expansionist, not static and restrictive.
"We shall be tough, but no
reluctant bargainers."
And in This Corner . . .
HONG KONG (API—British authorities sought the help of
Buddhist monks Monday to exorcise ghosts reported haunting
government workers In two old buildings.
Chinese employees in one building said drawings, blueprints
and* equipment in a photographic drying room had been tampered with. Investigation showed no person in the building was
responsible.
A photographic dark room worker reported every time he
came out of the dark room his hands were covered with "strange
stains." He insisted the stains were not caused by photographic
solution.
Others reported they heard "sadistic laughs" at night.
The building was used by Japanese occupation forces as a
torture chamber during the Second World War. Many Chinese
prisoners died or committed suicide there.
A government spokesman said officials "are coisulting with
the Hong Kong Buddhist Association on how to exorcise the
reported ghosts."
 ™        ■•'-■    '   ■',       '   ■- ~ " —— r— — ■  ',■ ■,..,-- I       . . ———————
''■'.':'   ■■■:■-
2 — NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUES., MAY 7, 1963
Statement Shocks Handicapped Society Heads
Bluffs To Be
Blasted Today
.!. Blasting on the Coffee Creek
Bluffs will block the Balfour -
Kalso road this afternoon.
.Department of Highways foreman C. E. Kennett of Kaslo said
today's blast is a major one.
i He hoped the road would be
open for traffic about 4 p.m. Actual blasting is slated for 12
noon.
He said about one-third of the
bluffs was removed since the
project started in December.
Blasting   on   the   Ainsworth
bluffs, one mile south of Ainsworth, should be completed in
■ the next two weeks, he reported,
Only about one 10th of the
land surface of the globe is
under cultivation.
CASTLE Theatre
Castlegar, B.C.
Tonight and Wednesday
"FLOWER DRUM SONG"
(Color)
Nancy Kwah • James Shigeta
NEWS and CARTOON
Show Times, 6:45 and 9:00 p.m.
AUTO-VUE
DRIVE - IN
TRAIL, B.C.
Last Time Tonight
THE COUNTERFEIT TRAITOR
SHORT and  CARTOON
Show Time, 8:20 p.m.
Sla)diqhL
DRIVE.IN THEATRE
Tonight and Wednesday
Show Starts 8:15
"BUTTERFIELD 8"
Color - Cinemascope
Elizabeth Taylor
Xatirence Harvey
Eddie Fisher
20 TAKE
CD COURSE
SALMO — About 20 candidates
attended each session of the
held at Salmo under civil defence.
The course is designed to give
the candidates a good cross-
section of the purpose and aims
of civil defence.
K. R. H. Roberts of (he provincial staff at Victoria was instructor. Two candidates from
Nelson, and one from Fruitvale,
who are slated for further training, took advantage of the opportunity to get additional instruction.
Commission Defends Stand
On Curling Rink Takeover
TWO PRIESTS
TO CELEBRATE
ANNIVERSARIES
The 60th jubilee of Father A.
DeLestre, retired and living at
Oliver, and the 25th anniversary
of Father J. Morelli are to be
celebrated Wednesday.
The program for the day is
solemn high mass at the Cathedral of Mary Immaculate at
4:30 p.m., followed by an informal reception at 5:30 and the
jubilee banquet and presentations at 6:30 p.m. Each priest
will offer one mass for the intentions of each of the jubilar-
In Fair Condition
Harley Peters of Salmo was
reported in fair condition at Vancouver General Hospital Monday.
Peters was flown to Vancouver
Sunday following a car accident
one mile south of Ymir. He was
suffering serious chest and skull
injuries.
Peters, unmarried, had worked in Metaline Falls for some
time but returned to Salmo two
months ago. His mother and two
brothers reside in Salmo.
Florence... a city of love and longingl
mna-himm-mrtR ,„,,*,„
FRtEO
Xigirt    sss
Piazza
.MWUmALMhiAWWJ
7:00 - 9:05
My 58 Hours
of Terror
Russell Baskin — a Kirkland Lake
miner—seriously injured and jammed
in a tiny cavity between fallen rock,
unable to move, was trapped for 58
dreadful hours in the Macassa gold
mine. He describes his frightening:
ordeal to Phyllis Griffiths in Weekend
Magazine this week.
Dutch Treat for Students
Some 500 Canadian university students will go to the Netherlands this
summer on a work-play vacation.
Weekend Magazine Staff Writer
Clarke Wallace, this week, outlines
a novel plan of seeing Europe, devised by KLM Airlines.
Nelson Satlg Netits
Nelson Civic Centre Commission hammered out a tentative
rate schedule at special meeting
Monday to submit to the Nelson
Curling Club.
The schedule, it is hoped, will
end the impasse between the
commission and the club over
rental of the ice sheets next season. The club informed the com
mission that it was not interested in selling or renting their
assets and are only interested
in negotiating a five-year lease
for the facility on the basis of
past rates.
The CCC, to a voice, supported
its earlier decision that control
of the curling facilities will be
taken out of the hands of the
dub and will remain in its hands
next season.
Throughout the meeting, it was
stressed, that the new rates
will not cost the curler any more
basically than he has paid in
the past and in some instances
it will be less. To cover the expected reduced rates, the commission is hoping to increase
curling participation by different
groups.
RATE  REDUCTION
The tentative rates will give a
40 per cent reduction in basic
In fhe Courts
B. W. Blades of Slocan. charged with speeding on the North
Shore, pleaded guilty and was
fined $10 and costs when he appeared before provincial court
Magistrate William Evans Sat
urday.
Two youths were remanded for
two weeks, pending a report
from the probation officer after
pleading guilty to breaking and
entering into the Women's Institute building at South Slocan.
Floyd Felarda and William
Vhalovitch Junior had elected to
be tried by Magistrate Evans.
George Tarasoff of Thrums
charged with failing to stop at a
stop sign in Kelowna, was fined
$10 and costs when he pleaded
guilty before Magistrate Evans.
For having liquor in his pos
session while being a minor,
Richard MacDonald of Nelson
was fined $25 and costs by Magistrate Evans.
William Antifaeff of Salmo
charged with being a minor in
possession of liquor was fined
$25 and costs.
Two juveniles of Appledale
area appeared before juvenile
court judge William Evans and
pleaded guilty to stealing hub
caps from cars.
They were placed on six
months' probation and requested
to pay court costs.
A juvenile pleaded guilty to
failing to stop at a stop sign and
his case was adjourned sine-die.
NOTICE
Valuable
Advertising
Space
Available
on City of Nelson
Transit System
Bus Schedules
For Further Information
Contact C. J. CONNOR,
City Garage.
CORPORATION
CITY OF  NELSON
Silver King
Beverages
Nelson — Phone 352-6737
Sprite
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Phone 368-3933
rates to clubs contracted to 20
weeks of curling. Clubs may
contract for once or twice a week
curling. Club members who wish
to curl more than twice a week
may pay an additional "scatter" fee of $10 which will allow
the individual to curl anytime
during the week when the ice
is free.
The rates are expected to be
finalized at Wednesday's meeting. In reviewing the situation,
commissioners realized they
would be ending a privilege of
the men's curling club and at
the same time cutting into the
club's overall operating profit.
The commission plainly stated
that under the present arrangement the city is subsidizing a
private group. The city makes
no profit on leasing the facilities
carte blanche to the club.
TAKE  AWAY  PROFIT
"It is not going to cost the
curler any more but we are
going to take the profit away
from the club," Commissioner
George Barnes declared.
"No private individual should
make a profit on a publicly-owned building," stated Commissioner John Morey.
"You are taking something
away which those fellows have,
control of the facilities," said
Aid. J. H. MacMillan, city council's representative to the CCC.
"Taking away the privilege of
going down Ibere and calling
those our facilities," said chairman R. A.- Munro.
The commission realized the
importance and value of the
men's curling club contribution
to the functioning of the facility, but at the same time, felt
they had been more than rewarded for their contributions.
"We give them credit. We all
know they have done a terrific jdb," said chairman Munro.
noting the voluntary efforts of
the club.
"But the taxpayer has
vested ten times as much money
as the curling club in the building. The cutlers have had the
return on their investment several times over," said another
commissioner.
Under the old system the
whole facility was leased to the
club who sub-leased to other
interested parties. Generally
the annual dues of membership
body met the annual rental fee
and revenue was collected by
the club from other curling clubs
and interested parties.
The commission outlined Its
case in a prepared statement
which follows:
■ Civic Centre Statement
The statement by the Civic
Centre Commission follows:
In the light of publicity given
by the Daily News to a recent
extraordinary meeting of the
Nelson Curling Club and also a
published statement by the club
vice-president, it would appear
to the uninformed that the Civic
Centre Commission is being entirely unreasonable and unfair
in proposing a new method of
contracting ice to the curling
club for the coming season.
We normally negotiate, our
contract with the curling club
late in the summer. However,
this year a letter requesting
contract negotiations was received in March before we had
finalized our new rental arrangements and set our rates. We immediately advised the curling
club that we intended to change
the method of rental and that
we would supply them with our
new rate schedule as it was
completed.
We also advised them at that
time that we would be interested
in purchasing their assets since
the new rental agreement would
require that we control the rocks
and assets in the club house. It
is, and has been our intention
to hold a meeting with the ourl-
ing club executive after this
rate schedule has been presented. At this time the details of
our proposed working agreement
with the club for the coming
season will be discussed in full.
To set the record straight, I
would like to briefly explain the
history resulting in this decision
and to outline the sequence of
events leading up to the current
impasse. For a number of years
the Nelson Curling Club has
been granted the privilege of
renting at a very nominal fee
the entire curling facility to be
controlled and sublet at their
discretion.
Until last year the fee charged
has not been sufficient to cover
the operating costs of the curling rink. Last year the fee was
raised to allow the break-even
point to be reached. In effect
then, the taxpayers of the City
of Nelson have been subsidizing
a group of Nelson adults who
are operating a private recreational club for pleasure and
profit. A parallel to this would
he a situation where the City
of Nelson might grant a subsidy
to the Nelson Golf Club to enable them to provide inexpensive
golf to their members.
This situation is unique in city
owned curling facilities. There
are few, if any, civic owned curling rinks in Ihe country where
ice time is not controlled by a
civic authority and made available to any number of curling
organizations in the community.
Now in deciding to change the
| method of rental to the Nelson
Curling Club it was not our in
tention to cause hardship to the
club or to raise the cost of rental of the ice they require to ice
■the game for their members. It
was simply a desire on the part
of the Commission to attempt to
get full utilization from the curling facility and to Increase the
revenue to the City for this facility by making It available to a
wider segment of the population
of the City of Nelson.
Certainly a good deal of volunteer labor has been supplied for
renovations by the Curling Club
in the past. This no doubt has
long since been offset by low, below cost, rentals over the years
but it does put the club in the
postion of first priority for the
use of the rink and facilities under the new rental agreement
we propose.
While it is our intention to allow the Nelson Curling Club favourable ice time for their use,
we also intend to promote afternoon curling by shift workers in
local industries, curling between
4 and 6 o'clock in the afternoon
by high school students and curling when the ice is free during
the week and on weekends and
by service clubs, mixed groups,
etc.
It is naturally our desire to
maintain harmonious relations
with the NeUon Curling Club
and we certainly feel that the
new rental agreement will in no
way hamper their club's operation and enjoyment of the Civic
Centre Curling facility or cause
them a considerable increased
expense and hardship.
Your Doctor's
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While You Walr
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SAMPLE'S
NELSON
PHARMACY LTD.
"Your Fortress of Health"
639   Boker  St,       Nelson       Phone  352-2313
SUNDAY SPORTS
BILL ALLOWS
SOME SPORTS
WINNIPEG ICPI-A bill providing for limited commercial
Sunday sports in Winnipeg dually emerged from the Manitoba
legislature Monday after floundering through a series of committee debates during the weekend.
The bill allows bowling and
some other sports—'but not boxing, wrestling, or auto, horse
and dog racing—between 1:30
and 5:30 p.m.
This provision was the only
tattered remnant of Winnipeg's
"open Sunday" measure to sur
vive the legislature, where it
had been submitted as an am
endment to the city charter fol
lowing a referendum in last
fall's civic election.
Nelson Directors Declare Full
Support of Endicott Home
Nelson and Trail directors of the Kootenay Society for Handicapped Children expressed dismay Monday that a Nelson director was asking residents not
to support the society's current drive for funds.
Boyd C. Affleck, president of the Nelson branch; George Talbot, long associated with the society, and John Maglio declared they fully supported the society
and its campaign for funds to build the Dr. Endicott home at Creston.
On Sunday, Mrs. John Bickert of Nelson, a director, said petitions asking that
Nelson operate as an independent group and keep funds collected here for expansion of the Cedar Hill School were being circulated. She said she was rebelling
against    "dominance"   by
East Koofenay branches of
the society.
Mr. Affleck's statement:
The Directors of the Nelson
Branch of the Kootenay Society
for Handicapped Children are
shocked and disgusted by the
prominently displayed news item
on page 2 of the May 6 issue of
the Nelson Daily News, apparen-
ly inspired by Mrs. John Bickert
of Nelson, urging the non-support of the current effort to raise
funds for the construction and
operation of a Home at Creston
for handicapped children of the
Kootenays.
Your readers are entitled lo
know that Mrs. Bickert is a quite
recent member of our Board of
Directors, has a child who is a
pupil' in our Cedar Hill Day
School, has never at any of our
meetings at any stage opposed
the series of decisions which resulted in the present fund raising effort, and is entirely alone
on our Board in her opposition to
the project. It is most regrettable that she has no conception
of the long and intensive study
of the problem of local.care for
the handicapped ichild that has
been given over the past ten or
more years by our; own and the
others; Branches, or bf the fact
th^t;the:program (decided upon
represents p whole series of
compromises' between what we
would like, to do and what we
are able to do.
Perhaps Mrs. Bickert's most
fundamental misconception lies
in her apparent assumption that
our own Cedar Hill day school
will suffer from the construction
and operation of the Dr. Endicott Residential Home at Creston. The two projects are com
plementary, not competitive. It
is our intention lo expand and to
improve Cedar Hill School to the
best of our ability, but only as
a day school, in the forseeable
future.
Our Board is not so much concerned with the local effect of
Mrs. Bickert's bombshell which
we can combat, as with its effect over the Kootenays in general, where its baseless character may not be understood. We,
on our part, are stimulated and
increasingly united by this irresponsible intervention, and will
work even harder for the success of the campaign.
Mothers to Hear
Play School Plans
A two-hour demonstration is
planned to introduce mothers of
p'lay school children to the leaders in the North Shore hall Saturday at 8 p.m.
The mothers will gain knowledge of teaching methods and
will be given an outline of the
program slated for the summer
and fall seasons.
Mrs. B. Burns, playschool
| teacher, will tell them about the
school and its advantages for
pre-scbool age children.
Refreshments will follow.
Mr. Talbot's full statement:
It was with profound regret
that I read the article in Nelson
Daily News of Monday, May 6,
regarding t b e Dr. Endicott
Home, by one of our newer directors. Mrs. Bickert apparently
does not know too much about
the aims and objects of this project.
The function of this home is to
house mentally retarded children
who have no serious physical
handicaps. It was never intended to provide medical treatment
in any form for children. This
matter, as regards the medical
treatment has been discussed
many times by Ihe Board of
Governors of Ihe Association,
and our medical members are
all agreed that a project of medical assistance is impossible for
a place such as this.
The main object is to look after mentally retarded children
from Ibis area, both East and
West Kootenay, who need residential care, with a day school,
vocational school for the older
ones, and for the recreational
needs of the children. Mentally
retarded children with slight
physical handicaps who need no
special care, will be accepted,
but from a financial point it
be impossible to collect an
amount to establish the kind of
place this lady seems to think
we could get.
It Is very obvious that she has
not gone into any details concerning the cost of the type of
place she would like. We would
all wish to see more done in this
respect, but we must be businesslike about these things.
At  the  last  meeting of  the
Board of Directors when it was
proposed that we go ahead with
this drive, Mrs. Bickert voted
"yes" and there was not a dissenting vote.
I personally have been connected with the Kootenay Society for handicapped children ever
since it started and was a member of the Trail organization before it was organized in Nelson,
and after years of effort and
some mistakes, we have finally
come to the culminating point of
the drive for funds to start our
building. We have not always
agreed with some of the other
branches, and they have not always agreed with us, but this is
a democracy — thank God we
still have it — and as such the
majority rules.
It is indeed very unfortunate
that Mrs. Bickert should have
chosen a time when our drive
for funds was just getting started, as it affects not only Nelson,
but the whole area.
Regarding the Cedar Hill
School, it is at present adequate
for the enrollment and our teacher, Mrs. Deerward, is doing a
wonderful job with the children,
one of whom is Mrs. Bickert's
child. As this home is a start, we
think in the right direction, we
have no doubt that later more
types may be accepted.
I do think that Mrs. Bickert Is
sincere and has gone off at a
tangent. In view of this I would
urge you to disregard entirely
what she has said and support
our drive to the utmost of your
ability as volunteers, and with
your donations. Your Nelson
Board of Directors are well
known, well respected, and well
established citizens of Nelson.
There will be a question and
answer period over CKLN on
Thursday of this week from 11:00
a.m., and may I remind all parents that, but for the grace of
God, your child might have been
handicapped too.
Participating will be Dr. G. R
Callbeck, Boyd C. Affleck and
Richard Vogel of Creston, chairman of the board of governors.
"I am in no way connected
with Mrs. John Bickert and the
the group she is representing,"
Mr. Maglio said.
Mr. Maglio stressed he was
100 per cent in favor of the Dr
Endicott Home and School in
Creston and plans to work diligently towards it.
NOT RESIGNING
"Secondly I have no intention
of resigning as director of the
Nelson Society as Mrs. Bickert
implied in the Daily News Monday.
"The home will benefit Nelson
children in Ihe future and now
I'll work three times as hard to
put it across."
Mr. Maglio agreed with Mrs.
Bickert it would be wonderful to
have a school-hostel in Nelson
but felt the Creston school was
Ihe major objective of the society.
He hoped to see enlargement
of the Cedar Hill School in the
future as a secondary objective
of Ihe society.
"The major concern of Ihe society is to educate the parents
of handicapped children."
UNFAIR   TIMING
Dr. W. J. Endicott. for whom
the school is named, said at
Trail he thought it was unfair
of Mrs. Bickert to have publicized her opinion at this time.
"It. could have been done
through the society," he said
Meetings of the society were
"democratic, and opinions were
sounded out, but we cannot get
anywhere unless we accept the
rule of majority, and this was
what was done," in deciding on
the Creston site.
"We had disagreements, but
always accepted the majority
rule. No one tried to undermine
the society, particularly at such
a crucial time as is the case
at this time. I am not upSet
about the difference of opinion,
but I am upset about the timing. It was most unfair. The
way to combat a difference of
opinion is within the organization, not by going outside of it."
He recalled that the recommendations of doctors from the
Coast, within the provincial organization, had been largely responsible for the switch in sites
and this advice was reinforced
by the plans for the new Salmo
Creston road, which made Creston "much more central."
Dr. Endicott recalled that he
was chairman of the board of
governors at the time.
The question of domination by
East Kootenay was "nonsense",
he said. Nelson had always had
"a fair say in any decision. Perhaps in the earlier days Trail
dominated it because we originated it and put on the drive to
organize, but there is no domination by any group."
He said Creston was asked to
assume the senior offices on the
board because it was felt they
needed Ihe experience. Thelr's
would be a big job once the
home was built.
He said that if Mrs. Bickert
looked into the future, he felt
sure she would agree that Creston would become a bub of the
district. This "entered into our
thinking, too."
J. B. Varcoe, also of Trail,
said "tlje statements were shocking." He continued:
This woman was at the last
Board of Governors meeting of
the Kootenay Society for Handicapped Children when the motion was presented and unanimously passed, proposing the
present drive for funds to build
a home for handicapped children on the Archibald property in
Creston.
At this meeting she did not
say a word and obviously was in
agreement with the campaign
and the proposed plans.
Her actions and statements
right in the middle of our campaign are irresponsible. The
final choice of the present location was made after very careful work and study over a number of years.
The Blewett property she talks
about was, in the opinion of the
majority of the Board of Governors, not suitable. It is located
on a hillside high enough up
where the amount of snow would
-be a problem.
The cost of installing of a
water system for the property
was estimated in the amount of
$40,000.
For these reason and on the
advice of experts, the Blewett
property was abandoned.
Apparently this woman is acting on her own without authority
from the Nelson branch and
without their permission, and in
fact, contrary to their wishes.
The Nelson branch Is in agreement with the present plans and
have disassociated themselves
with anything said by Mrs. Bickert.
We have a democratic organization and it was only after
many years of study and discretion the Creston location was
agreed to by all branches.
The new Salmo-Creston road
makes Creston central for the
Kootenay and a project such as
the Dr. Endicott home requires
a certain minimum population
to make it feasible, otherwise it
could not be built or operated.
I want to assure the good and
generous people of Trail and district that Mrs. Bickert is not
speaking for the Kootenay Society lor Handicapped Children or
any branch of the Society.
I wish to assure them the Nelson branch is behind the present
drive and has do intention of
breaking With the present Society-
1 have been advised the good
people of Nelson are supporting
the drive generously.
Let us not be diverted from
our great objective of a home
for the less fortunate children.
Let us continue the heart-warming generosity we have already
received.
Criminal Assise
Case on Today
Mr. Justice H. W. Mclnnes of
Vancouver will preside over a
criminal assize case in Nelson
court house today.
Stork Makes
34 Trips
In April
Nelson and district marriages,
deaths and birth figures ail Increased during April from the
previous month, but were down
from April, 1962.
Births totalled 34 in the city
last month, ten more than in
March but down three from the
corresponding period last year.
There were four fewer deaths
last month from April, 1962, but
four more than In March. Marriages remained the same In
the city at three, for the thre
months.
District marriages and births
for last month and April, 1962,
remained the same at two and
nil respectively.
Two deaths were recorded last
month and April, 1962, although
seven were recorded during
March.
A breakdown in figures follows with April, 1962, in brackets:
City—Births 34 (37); deaths
9, (13); marriages 3 (3). District-births, o (0); deaths 2 (2);
marriages 1 (0).
Read the Classified Daily
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Fleury's Pharmacy
Harold Mayo, Prop.
Corner Baker and Ward Sts.
Phone 352-2613
Announcement
;il:::<vm:vmk
We are pleased to
announce the
appointment of
Mr. Fred J. McClelland
to our staff as an
assistant to
Mr. Elmer Stepp.
Mr. McClelland, a Nelson-
born man, has had experience
in retail stores In Nelson and
has had two years experience
in accounting. We are also
pleased to announce that Mr.
Bill Bonderud on our staff has
just returned from the Armstrong Vinyl Corlon installs-/
tion  school  and  now  holdS
papers as a qualified  Arm- I
strong mechanic. If you are I
considering a new flooring for
your home or place of busi- .
ne6s, Mr. Bonderud will be
pleased  to  discuss  this  superior type of floor covering i
and will quote you a price ,
on the installation. ■
BEE BUILDING
Supply Ltd.
301 Baker St. — Nelson
 4	
 ■
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mmk-, ' ' -1- ■ ■■■■■
\m
Pickets Take Up Position
As Remac Work Comes to Halt
SALMO — Union officials said
Monday that all 95 striking miners turned out for the picket line
during the first half hour of the
strike called at Reeves MacDonald mine at 8 a.m.
This is     the  first time  a
strike has been called  at the
mine since it first started operating in 1948.
Following the mass picket,
regular shifts commenced of
two men each every six hours.
The union has 10Q per cent
membership at Remac. Only
the office staff were at work
Monday. The workers are members of the independent Mine,
Mill and Smelter Workers' Un-
Five Acres Swimming Area
At Pass Creek Park
Now Nearing Completion
CASTLEGAR — Five acres of I A raft has been constructed
swimming area are almost com-1 by the Kiwanis Club, which has
pleted at the new Pass Creek donated $1000 towards the $5500
Park. ] expense of converting the area
It is expected that 2000 people j into parkland. Columbia Cellu-
will be able to use the park at i lose Company has donated $3000
any one time when it is com-1 and the public has put up $1500.
pleted. |    There are two feet of water in
There are two natural pools, I the top pool at present and it
formed   by ■ flow   from   Pass! will fill to a six-foot depth; the
Creek. A system of locks and
gates controls the water level.
Funeral Rites
For Longtime Elk
Valley Resident
NATAL — Funeral rites were
held for Mrs. Giovanna Cossar-
ini, a longtime resident in the
Natal-Michel district, who had
resided in the area for over
half a century.
Rev. L. M. Trainor officiated
fn St. Michael's Catholic Church.
She was 87 years of age, born
in Udine, Italy on July 28, 1876.
Since coming to Canada from
the Old Country in the early
1900's, she spent all her years
ln the Natal-Michel district.
Survivors include two sons,
Louis and Achile of the Elk
Valley, near Natal; three daughters, Mrs,, John (Yolanda) Pa-
von of Detroit; Mrs. George
(Value) Rossington of Inver-
mere, and Mrs. Silvio (Theresa'
Muraro of Kimberley; 11 grandchildren and four great grandchildren.
She was predeceased by her
husband ten years ago.
Pallbearers were Norino De-
Paoli, Joe Lant, Berto Bernardo,
George Fabro, Marcello Romano
and Elio Bellina.
lower pool, close to the highway, will vary in depth to nine
feet, and will be called the
Kiwanis Pool.
Parks Board chairman D. W.
Brookes says a large camping
site at the park will be useable
this summer and sanitary facilities will be available. A picnic
area with a large concrete cook-
out patio along with a stove,
shelter and tables will be provided this year adjacent to the
upper pool.
A large parking lot has been
levelled and is now ready for
use.
ion. They had rejected a company offer of 10 cents an hour
spread over two years in last-
minute mediation talks held in
Vancouver, i
The union said they wanted
implementation of a conciliation
board majority report, calling
for a 7!4-cent award and a one-
year agreement, with certain
fringe benefits.
Present basic rate is $2.04 an
hour.
"We're ready to open any
time," R. F. Thompson, mine
superintendent, said Monday,
when asked how long he thought
the strike might continue.
"Our relationship with the local workmen has always been
amiable," said L. M. Kinney,
mine manager.
After three weeks of strike,
strike relief starts a subsistence
allowance for the workers.
The bunkhouse and cook house
will be vacated by this morning.
"The men have agreed to perform all essential mine main
tenance work," said W. Rudy
chuk, business agent for Local
901.
NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUES., MAY 7, 1963 — 3
Mrs. Boyce  Leads Pupils in
Last Balfour-Procter Concert
ONE OF FIVE MUSICIANS in her family, Wendy
Anderson, seven years old, plays the recorder for
her teacher, Mrs. F. E. Boyce of Longbeach.
—Daily News photo by Richard Cote.
Workshops Relate Bible to Present Day . . .
65 United Church Youths
Attend Rossland Meetinq
Ten high school young people
representing Nelson's Fairview
and St. Paul's-Trinity United
Churches  attended  a  weekend
J. E. Swales To
Move to Penticton
AIRLINE
i   careers
1   men" and
I       WOMEN
I To train for Reservatlonlsts,
Passenger Agents, Hostesses,
I Station Agents, Communica-
tionists, etc. Good starting
salaries, pleasant working
I conditions, excellent chance
for advancement. High School
graduates, 17 to 35, get full
■ information today about our
training programs. Mail
coupon.
I Airlines Training Division,
Atlantic School, Box 7000,
. c/o Nelson Daily News.
I Address
I City & Province
I Phone  Age ..
I Education , I
He is a graduate of the Ontario Agricultural College in
Guelph.
CRESTON — Creston is, losing
two community workers, especially with the youth of the valley, when Mr. and Mrs. J. E.
(Ted) Swales leave for Penticton, where Mr. Swales has been
transferred by the department
of agriculture. He is district horticulturist here.
Mr. and Mrs. Swales came to
Creston in 1953 and have participated in many community enterprises.
Mr. Swales has been president
of the minor hockey league for
many years, and has given Saturday mornings to the coaching
of youngsters.
He is at the present time president of minor baseball league.
He has supported directly and
indirectly with every athletic
pursuit in the valley.
Mrs. Swales, a strong suppor-1 organization formed outside of
ter of minor hockey, along with i the Chamber of Commerce,
other womein  the  community, |    Mr. Bosse added that in the
Castlegar
Businessmen
To Regroup
CASTLEGAR — A meeting to
reorganize the Castlegar Businessmen's Association is to be
held Thursday evening.
Called by Leo Bosse, the
meeting is a result of many requests for reorganization of the
group, as well as the result of
a survey conducted by Mr.
Bosse which indicated 75 per
cent of the businesses contacted
were   interested   in   such   an
conference in Rossland. They
were among the 65 youths representing United Churches in the
West Kootenay.
Theme of the conference was
chosen by the young people. They
decided upon "The Bible: Dynamo or Dodo?". Delegates explored various aspects of the
Bible as seen through the eyes
and thoughts of modern man.
Rev. Ivan Cumming, Brilish
Columbia field secretary for
Christian education in the United
Church, came from Vancouver
to be the keynote speaker.
Three workshops developed the
theme of the conference. Each
delegate participated in one beginning Friday evening and conj-
tinuing through Saturday afternoon.
Under the guidance of Rev.
Florence Strong of Nelson, one
workshop sought to determine
the modern relevance of the parables of Jesus. It considered
what might be appropriate contemporary language for fhem.
A second workshop, under the
direction ol Rev. Rodney Booth
of East Trail, prepared and conducted the Sunday morning worship at the host church in Ross
land.
Rev. George Strong of Nelson
assisted the third workshop in
questions of science and religion.
The delegates sought to relate
the findings of modern technology to the biblical narrative.
An unusual presentation of
the conference was a recording
of "For Heaven's Sake,"
modern .musical written and
produced for the North American Student Christian 'Move,
ment conference of 1962, The
musical uses contemporary
tempos and themes to present
in a most unusual manner an
interpretation of contemporary
Christian faith.
Delegates thought they might
be snowed in on Friday night,
however the storm passed and
the ground remained clear. Nearly all hiked Saturday afternoon
on Kootenay Columbia Mountain
and enjoyed a weiner roast and
snowballing.
revitalized organization only retailers will vote on matters
affecting retailing.
has spent many hours in the Civic Centre kitchens helping to
raise money for the league.
Mr. Swales was at Nelson before coming to Creston and
worked with Kootenay and Arrow Lakes farmers on horticulturist extension work, which included demonstration of spray-,
ing, use of fertilizers and other folders of the Creston Valley Co-
farming activities. Operative Association outlined
! the  changes  which  took place
ASSOCIATION
PLANS NEW YEAR
CRESTON - Highlight of the
directors' report to the share-
He came to Nelson from Kale-
den in the Okanagan, where he
was born and received his early
education.
RCMP WAIT
FOR MAN'S
DEPORTATION
VANCOUVER (CP) - RCMP
in suburban Burnaby said Monday they are awaiting results of
a deportation hearing in Seattle
on the status of Norman William
McC'aud, 30, wanted in Toronto
lor fraud.
McCaud, who apparently had
been living in Burnaby, was arrested in Blaine, Wash., last
week by the border patrol.
PHOTO
COPYING
• CONTRACTS
•  BIRTH  CERTIFICATES
•  LEGAL  DOCUMENTS
^honel52-75?r
Powell Engraving
460 Ward Street
Nelson
during the past year since opening of the Super Valu June 7,
1962.
The new store, whose year
does not coincide with the Co-Op
store, has done well since its
opening. Surpluses from it benefit the sharr    Iders.
The   boa.-J   announced   further changes In the operation
are being planned in an effort
to keep service and policy up
to the minute. These changes
will not involve capital expenditure hut a re-arrangement of
goods and services.
Directors appointed for a three-
year term are N.  E.  Leveque
and T. H. Walhovd; remaining
directors are Al Ness, B. Neville
Smith, A. Davis, J. J. Firth, and
E. J. Preston.
Auditors are A. J. Shankland
and Company, with Gordon, Lov-
ersage giving the financial re
port. /' I
Rossland Men
End Psychiatric
Nursina Studies
ROSSLAND — Three young
Rossland men were among the
106 students who took part in
graduation exercises of the B.C.
School of Psychiatric Nursing.
Dennis Pitt,' Norman Scorgie
and Terry Neil are members of
the fall class, which commenced the two-year training
course in September of 1961.
This year's group of graduates, including men and women
students from the two 1961 classes, is an unusually large one.
Their graduation exercises were
held in the auditorium of Vincent Massey Junior High School
at New Westminster, with parents and friends in attendance.
Four-Point Program
Urged for BC Industry
VANCOUVER (CP) — Tax in-1 chinery and equipment pur-
cenlives, local industrial com- chased for use in manufactur-
missions   and   provincial   sales J ing plants;
tax exemptions were urged
Monday to increase manufacturing in British Columbia.
Robert B. McDonnell of Vancouver, president of the Canadian Manufacturers' Association's B.C. division told the annual meeting here that a four-
point program was needed to
attract new industry.
"Manufacturing industry in
B.C. must broaden its industrial
base, expand and diversify on
a large scale in Ihe coming
years.
"The jobs will not otherwise
be there, in which case our
young people will either have
to leave B.C. or face hard
times."
He urged:
Provincial sales tax exemption on all materials used for
building or expanding manufacturing premises and on all ma-
PROCTER — Music students
of Mrs. F. E. Boyce presented
a wide variety of selections displaying versatility in their last
concert of the season, under
direction of their teacher, at
Procter.
Mrs. Boyce will be leaving the
district later and this was the)
last performance she had pre!
pared for the residents of the
Procter, Balfour, Harrop, Long-
beach area.
A great deal of talent was
shown in selections played sold,
duet, trio, ensemble $nd orchestra.
Piano solos were presented by
Tom McNown, Leslie Anne Fit-
chett, Alan MacLeod, Roberta
McNown, Tanis Trip, Berith
Nelson, Carol Wilbur, Jerry Me
Kinnon, Donald McKinnon and
Beth Ogden.
Piano duets were preseted by
Jean and Janis White; violin
solo by Sidney Bowles, Donnie
Muoha, Lee Anderson; accordion and violin by Kevin and Sidney Bowles; recorder solo by
Wendy Anderson; trios by Jerry,
Grant and Sheilah McKinnon,
and Donald, Grant and Sheilah
McKinnon; ensembles by Grant
McKinnon, Sidney Bowles, Sharon and Shirley Nicholas and Don
Mucha; the Nicholas family with
Alan MacLeod on the piano;
Sharon, Donnie, Shirley, Moy-
na, Sheilah and Roberta in a
junior ensemble; the Anderson
family, with Beth Ogden as pianist, string quartette with Pat
Anderson,  first violin,  Michael
Anderson, second violin, Delrdre
Anderson, viola, and Lee Anderson, cello; the orchestra and
small fry orchestra.
Small fry orchestra members
were Wendy Anderson, Sheilah
McKinnon, Tony, Joe and Georgia Nicholas, and Moyna Paul-
hus, descant recorders; Michael
Anderson, first violin and descant   recorder;   Pat   Anderson,
Civic Centre Board
To Seek Civic Loan
CRESTON  —  The   financial!    Adam Robertson, member of
committee of A. Robertson and j the Civic Centre board a num
F. Martello, of the new Civic
Centre directorate, will approach the municipality for a
loan to carry on the activities
of the Civic Centre. This was
disclosed following the first
meeting of the directorate.
It was further revealed the
Kiwanis Club will operate the
swimming pool for this year
only.
Fire insurance policies will go
out for bid, the directorate announced, and A. J. Shankland
and Company will serve as
auditors this year.
The committee stated the
$8000 debentures held by the
Lions Club are non-interest
bearin gand do not have to be
paid back. The debentures are
held by the club for security
reasons in the case of bankruptcy.
Tlie board moved that Mrs.
Aker be a paid employee in the
capacity of secretary, and will
have no voting rights.
36 Pass First
Aid Exams Al
Rossland      ,
ROSSLAND — Thirty-six candidates were successful in the
recent examinations which dot '
lowed completion of the -senior,
first aids course sponsored- by
the local centre of St. John
Ambulance Society.
.Ray Miller was chief- in-
instructor for the course and,.
Tom Gibbons, Stan Bowcock,"
Bart Dudley, Roy Eston and
Wally Bertoia helped instruct
the various classes.
Dr. L. H. Nixon was the chief
examiner for the class	
Following are the names of
successful candidates:
Certificates: I. A. Christensen,
Patricia Davison, David Dudley,
ber of years ago, was elected! Larry Gasena, A. R. Goldie, J.
first violin and treble recorder;
Sharon and Shirley Nicholas,
second violin and recorder:
Grant McKinnon, Sidney Bowles, and Donnie Mucha, third vio-
lis; Delrdre Anderson, viola and
recorder; Lee Anderson, cello
and tenor recorder; Roberta
McNown, Mangle;' Kevin Bowl-,
es, accordion; jerry McKinnon
and Carol Wilbur, pianists.
president at the first executive
meeting.
Others on the executive and
committees are: Mr. Oliver Salvador, vice-president; Don Martin, treasurer; finance, Fred
Martello, C. W. Perry, O. Salvador; swimming, G. Holmes,
Mrs. A. Roper, D. Martin; ice,
R. McKee. Cal Beebe, H. Sommerfeld, Vernon Petersen; entertainment, Mrs. D. Mars, Mrs.
O. Roper, and G. Holmes; publicity, Cal Beebe and G. Holmes;
building, C. W. Perry, Oliver
Salvador,  Vernon  Petersen.
Les Lund will be adviser to
any of the above committees.
A. Green, E. R. Haymond, Ted
Holloway, J. W. Hook, Dale,
Miracle, Reg. Parker, Bill
Torry, D. R. Willans, G. J. Wilson, C. Young.
Vouchers: R. G. Blench, T. A.
Christensen, G. E. Holloway,
Richard Miller, Margaret Mol-
inaro.
Medallions: Mike Brown, Ron
Campana, Louise Churchill,
Dennis Dudley, Gervin Halla-
day, Doug Hewgill, Jim Woodward.
Labels: W. P. Bertoria, J. S,
Bowcock, B. I. Dudley, W. O.
Jones, C. V. Maletta, R. 0..
Miller, Al Heier, Art Martin, J.
T. Gibbons.
REV. PRATT TO
GO TO SURREY
AT END OF JUNE
CASTLEGAR-Rev. and Mrs.
R. H. Pratt and family leave!
Castlegar at the end of June to
go to Surrey, where Mr- Pratt
will be minister at' Colebrook
United Church,
New  minister of the United
the Municipal Act, adopt an incentive .taxation system for industry in its first year;
Thai major cities and municipalities set up industrial commissions or appoint industrial
commissioners.
Delegates at the convention
re-elected all major officers.
Underpass
Excavation
Progressing
CASTLEGAR - The excavation for the underpass behind
and south of Castleaid Plaza
which will carry traffic under
the CPR tracks to the new Columbia River bridge is well
under way.
Interior   Contracting   Co.   of
Penticton has  the contract
the   project.   Earth   from   the
excavating work is being dumped as fill for the road which will   „,      ,  , .„ , „     ,
link upS the underpass with thel Churcn hcre m" be Rev' Frank
Willey, who comes from Golden.
Rev. and Mrs. Pratt have two
children, a son, 3, and a daughter, 6. They came here from
Auckland, New Zealand, in July,
1958, Rev. Pratt obtained his
BA degree from the University
of New Zealand and then after
service in World War II he
entered Trinity Methodist Theological College in Auckland.
Mr. Pratt has been padre of
the Legion and was chairman
of the ministerial association for
several years.
Rev. Willey is a graduate of
Union College, Vancouver, and
has been at Golden three years.
He and his wife have three 'children, a son 8 and two daughters
aged 5 and 10. i
mvmfim
£M&$x&0£
\SMM
J
nun
Kinnaird-Christina   Lake   Highway.
10 COAST
Students to
go to quebec
VANCOUVER (CP)-Ten Vancouver high school students will
be among more than 1000 Canadian students involved in a student exchange with Quebec this
summer.
The student exchange. Involving 1000 in Ontario and Quebec
and groups of 10 each from Van-
That municipalities, through, couver, Calgary, Edmonton and
Winnipeg, is sponsored by the
Canadian Council of Christians
and Jews.
The Vancouver students will
live with French-speaking families from June 20 to July 20.
They will return wilh 10 Quebec
students, who will spend a
month here.
FINANCING FOR
CANADIAN BUSINESS
The Industrial Development Bank helps
finance most types of small and medium-
size Canadian businesses for a variety of
purposes.
If you are engaged in a business, or plan
to start one, and required financing is not
available elsewhere on reasonable terms and
conditions, you are invited to visit an
I.D.B. office or write to one for a booklet.
SET RECORD
, The 5,668,000.000 pounds of
wool produced in the world in
1962 was a record clip.
INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT BANK
BRANCH OFFICES ACROSS CANADA
Kelowna, 22A The Mall Shops Capri,
Tel:  762-2035
\
.■;;?"'■ ■■:"■' ''iff.'. X
"    ''■'11:3:
Equipment Ready
For Second Part
Sheep Lake Work
ROSSLAND — Three tractors
are to be brought in this week
as equipment started moving
last week in readiness for an
early start on the second section
of Ihe. Rossland-Sheep Lake
highway. Two earlh movers and
culvert equipment are now at
the site.
Wenlher permitting, work is
expected lo start ili about' two/
week's time. /
-Ernil Anderson Construction
Company has Ihe contract for
the six-mile seclion of highway,
which extends north from the
present road. Section three, the
final link in the cut-off which
will-connect Rossland with the
Kinnaird-Christina Lake highway, has been let to P. F. Law
Company.
Law's crew will work south
from Sheep Lake and it is anticipated that both contracts will
be completed before fall.
GET NEW STAMPS
A pictorial set of 11 stamps
for  the  Cook   Islands   in   the
Pacific will replace a series in
use since 1949.
INCORPORATED   2*?   MAY   1670.
INTRODUCTORY OFFER
PAMPER YOUR LEGS!.,
save at least 20% on these
famous stockings with the
fabulous fit!
Choose your favourite seamless
style... and choose your favourite Spring shade. Stock
up on  lovely Cameo
stockings at these low1,
once-in-a-year sale
prices. ,
it   POCKET YOUR SAVINGS!   WE'RE HAVING OUR
.ANNUAL SALE
ameo
stockings
Regularly 1.50
Sale Price
1.20
 	
  -—^-"^^^
....   .
jfrfomt lailg Nruia
Estabushed April 22. 1902
Nelson, B.C.
Published by the NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,
266 Bake! Street, Nelson, British Columbia, mornings except
.  Sundays and holidays in the centre of the Kootenays with
the largest daily circulation is the Interior oi B.C.
Authorized as Second Class Mail, Post Office Department, Ottawa.
,       .   and for Payment of Postage in Cash.
C. W. RAMSDEN, Publisher.
A. W. GIBBON, Editor*
MEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS
MEMBER OF THE CANADIAN DA1LV NEWPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION
' •'.    (-■    MEMBER OF THE rtUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS
The Canadian Press is exclusive!; entitled to the use for tepublication ot all news
dispatches credited to it or to The Associated Press or Reuters in this
pjper and also the local news published therein.
  Tuesday, May 7, 1963
We Need New Answers to Accidents
'"Not-only are there still far too
jjidny accidents occurring on the
toads but at least one new type has
made Its appearance.
A Salmon Arm man died when
his car slammed into a bridge abutment late. Saturday near Tappen.
The RCMP could find no reason for
the accident.
.' - In the'past few months there have
been several such accidents where
an Individual driving alone at night
'Has crashed into a bridge abutment.
It is perhaps coincidence that a
number of such accidents should
occur within a given period of time
but It is nonetheless disturbing that
any- should occur.
It would be understandable If
these' accidents occurred on narrow
bridges but In all cases the abut-
No Status in Affluence
When mother was a girl she
used to say wistfully, "When I'm
rich, I'll have ct maid, and maybe a
chauffeur—when I'm rich ..."
Well, mother is rich now—or at
least, affluent, as they call it in the
better circles. But nearly everybody
else is affluent, or confidently expects to be. So where can mother
hire her maid?
In Britain last week the pinch became intolerable. Employment agen-
"cilrTdunched a campaign to inspire
young people (there are lots unemployed) to seek work as what they
call resident domestics.
This in a country in which before
the war there were two million domestics. Today, it's said, less than
one per cent of households have domestics. Where once a lady could
grade her female domestics from
housekeepers to scullery maids, her
male servants from butlers to boot-
boys,, the cry today is for any sort
The Grubbers
A commentator on the Oscar
awards points to three winning pictures which reflected the nobility of
the human spirit and suggests that
perhaps this heralds a change from
the sordid and morbid themes that
seem to encompass so much oi film-
dom.
If this be .so the diversion will
be most welcome.
It is peculiar that filmed entertainment nowadays should dwell so
obsessedly on the ugly side of hu-
' man nature, with violence and sadism, faithlessness and corruption, as
the   seeming   criterion   ol   artistic
',, effort. This kind of fare, so dominant
on television, coupled with the turgid
psychological dramas which would
depress any healthy mind, paint a
Btate of affairs that can only be described as sick.
Actually the garbage can is the
| fit receptacle for a vast amount of
\ the film depravity which colors the
human scene and carries with it in-
i (fluences harmful to the decencies of
j -life.
I       One wonders oflen at the mental
iSlature of the creators and producers
if,' * ■    •
of modern entertainment of this nature.
- The excuse is thai this is realism,
but realism does not consist only of
grubbing among the dirt. There are
themes that can lift the spirit, pay
tribute to human worth, and yel be
of profound interest and appeal. The
idea that only the bad is spectacular
and that Ihe good is undramatic is
far from the truth.
What .'the film' industry needs, for
the large and the small screens, is
a breath of fresh air to let some
cleanliness into it.
—Vicloria Colonist
Dominican Republic Troops
Await Orders To Strike
ment is described as concrete, which
indicates that the bridge was of modern construction. Such bridges are
generally wider than the roadway
so that apparently the car must have
moved over or have been travelling
on the extreme right of the highway.
This is a matter of speculation
but there are certain significant
things, the occupant of Ihe car was
travelling alone and at night and
these may suggest a reason for the
accident.
Such an accident would appear
to be preventable. There has long
been a demand that the provincial
government set up a scientific body
to inquire into traffic accidents. The
recent bridge abutment fatality
again strongly emphasizes the need
for it.
By ISAAC FLORES
/ SANTO DOMINGO (AP) -
' More than 1,000 Dominican Republic troops supported by
tanks and rocket-firing planes
massed near the Haitian border
Monday awaiting strike orders.
In Washington a peace mission of the Organization of
American States was reported
seeking wider powers to head
off the threatened clash between the Dominican Republic
and Haiti.
Describing the situation as
"highly tense," Gonzalo Facio
of Costa Rica, president of the
OAS council, called an executive session of the council
to study the four-nation mission's report on its survey last
week of the situation.
The Dominican troops were
rushed to the border town of Ji-
of a domestic—any size, any color,
any sex.
It used to be said that the servant
problem was solved when the automatic laundry and the vacuum
cleaner came in. But mother's automatic aids can't mind the baby or
cook a meal on their own. And since
everybody has 'em, they don't count
much for status symbols.
This is one consequence of ihe
Affluent Society nobody seems to
have bargained for. It goes to show
there's no paradise without its flaws.
Of course, somebody will come
along soon with a robot Hazel or
Higgins. Bul that won't be the same,
either — not when everybody has
one,—Vancouver Sun.
Discipline by Proxy
A door has swung open for beleaguered parents. It falls into the
broad category of upbringing, but
is best identified specifically as dis-
.cipline by proxy.
The possibilities unfolded recently when we read about a father
being convicted for hiring someone
to punch his son on the nose. The
magistrate called it a "ridiculous
and stupid" offence but we're inclined to think that was rather a
hasty judgment.
There ate men who aren't prepared emotionally to lay a hand
on their own children. In fact it's
quite a common spc_~ies and in these
homes it's the mother who administers the brush, or the lash, or whatever is used.
Every once in a while, though,
even - the most faint-hearted father
must crack down. If he has a son
who's engaged in such boyish
pranks as forging cheques or selling
narcotics, some smidgin of discipline
most certainly is needed.
So the natural thing to do, bearing in mind the heavy duty of parental responsibility, is to ask an
objective party to punch the wayward offspring. If Ihe mercenary is
a true one, he probably has no objections if there is lo be a monetary
consideration.
This   method   of   administering
punishment has considerable merit,
especially if Ihe children stand over
six feet and outweigh the father.
—Calgary Herald.
It's Been Said
Let wickedness escape, as it may at
the bar, it never fails of doing justice upon
itself; for every guilty person is his own
hangman—Seneca.
* *      *
National antipathy is the basest, because the most illiberal and illiterate of
all prejudices.—Jane Porter.
* #      *
?oo many, through want of "prudence,
are golden apprentices, silver journeymen,
and copper masters—George Whitefield.
mani Sunday night amid unconfirmed rumors that President
Juan Bosch would order an invasion unless Haitian President
Francois Duvalier's regime
made good on its promise to
give safe conduct out of the
country to 15 political opponents
who took refuge in the Dominican embassy in Port au Prince.
One highly placed source said
Bosch was ready to "use any
excuse"  to  set  off an  armed
clash with Duvalier's forces.
RETURNS WITH LETTER
The Dominican charge d'af-
[airs in Port au Prince, Frank
Bobadilla, returned to Santo
Domingo with a letter the Haitian political refugees had sent
to all foreign diplomatic missions in Port au Prince.
The letter quoted U.S. Ambassador   Raymond   Thurston   as
Letters to the Editor
Letters to the Editor on any topic of genuine Interest
are welcome it they are brief, accurate and fair. They may
be published over a nom de plume, but the name of the
writer must be given to the Editor as evidence ol good
faith. Anonymous letters go into the wastcpaper basket.
School for
Retarded Here
Urgent Need
To the Editor:
Sir — I noticed in your paper
the Handicapped Society has set
a goal of $40,000 to collect in the
Nelson district for construction
of the Dr. Endicott Home and
School at Creston. I understand
this school is for handicapped
from the ages of 18 years to 30
years.
First, on account of the age
group I cannot understand how
this will relieve the situation in
Nelson, but please understand I
am not against any school for
handicapped in Creston or elsewhere.
Then, if this is not going to
relieve our situation, why not
have our own school in Nelson,
and any money collected should
be for a school in Nelson.
The present school we have in
Nelson certainly is not adequate.
In the first place these children
have no playground, and in our
modern idea of a school, also
the way we are spending money
for higher education, one could
only refer to our setup as the
Black Hole of Calcutta.
I believe these children should
be given a chance in life just
like anybody else. But at the
present setup we certainly have
drawn lines and what they are
getting is not even the word
hope.
This problem will as the
population expands, only enlarge, and what is being done is
not enough.
When these people call please
advise them that any money
collected for the handicapped
should be spent for a school in
Nelson.
H. NEUFELD.
R.R. 1, Nelson.
Although, for various reasons,
a role for Boy Scotus in nuclear
warfare would be impractical,
in natural disasters it could be
invaluable. The following role is
recommended — "Continue existing instruction in fire fighting,
search and rescue, camp craft,
rope work, sanitation, etc." Such
knowledge an skills could be ol
value in limes of emergency,
i.e. fire, flood, hurricane and
will be helpful to families in any
post attack period.
Group Would
Work With
Nelson Society
To the Editor:
Sir — Many parents of our
handicapped children here in
Nelson are concerned at the
proposed financial campaign
about to be carried out by the
Kootenay Handicapped Society.
You may not be aware that
these funds are for the Dr. Endicott School for the mentally
retarded about to be constructed
in Creston.
While this is a very worthwhile
project, the feeling here, is that
it does not even begin to meet
the needs of the great majority
of our handicapped children in
this district. For instance it
makes no provision for physically handicapped. Then, many
parents of the mentally retarded, don't want their children1
away from home, but they do
want day school education and
facilities for them. This is provided at our Cedar Hill school
here. But the school is now inadequate and there has been
very little done in the past
several years to improve facilities.
Now in a small community
like Nelson and district, all our
handicapped, both mental and
physical should be able to be
provided for if all interested
societies, etc. work together.
The Cerebral Palsy Association
feels this way and although
quite a young association, have
in small ways e.g. Summer
Recreation Program, tried to
accommodate all handicapped in
their program. The Cerebral
Palsy Association would certainly work hand in hand with a
Nelson Handicapped Society or
any other organization, whose
aims would be lo provide, the
best facilities possible, to meet
the needs of all handicapped
children of this district. We don't
feel the Dr; Endicott School in
Creston would do this.
Therefore, the parents of
handicapped children feel
slrongly abput this linancial
campaign and if possible would
like to stop it being conducted
here. They feel that any financial help, which the Nelson and
district people would give for
this cause, should be kept in
Nelson and utilized here in the
best way possible.
MRS. J. BICKERT.
517 McHardy Street.
PLAN  NEW CABLE
A new 264-channel submarine
lelephone cable between Britain
and Norway is planned for operation in 1966.
HUBERT
saying he had information Duvalier had ordered his civilian
militia, the Tonton Macoute, to
invade the embassies harboring
opponents if his regime appeared threatened.
The letter added that Duvalier
would kill the refugees if Haiti
is invaded.
A former Haitian army officer just out of the country said
"Duvalier has gdne' berserk."
The ex-officer, Louis Moise, hid
in the Venezuelan embassy in
Port au Prince and arrived in
Kingston, Jamaica, Sunday. He
said there is a torture chamber
in Duvalier's palace.
Four Haitians who had been
hiding in the Chilean embassy
flew to Jamaica Sunday. They
brought to 24 the number who
had sought asylum in foreign
embassies and were allowed to
leave. Eighty are still inside the
embassies.
SEVERS RELATIONS
Duvalier broke diplomatic relations with the Dominican Republic last week, and the Dominican Embassy staff has returned home, Colombia has taken over the Haitian refugees
in the Dominican Embassy.
Duvalier has declared martial
law and imposed a night curfew. Apparently his chief target
now is Clement Bardot, organizer of the Tonton Macoute and
UN underground leader.
An uneasy calm was reported
in Port au Prince.
Immigration officials halted
correspondent Nathan Miller of
the Baltimore Sun at the Port
au Prince airport as he was
buying a ticket for the United
States. He was told to report today to the ministry of interior.
No reason was given.
Two other American correspondents — Paul Good of the
American Broadcasting Company and Al Burt of the Miami
Herald—were deported Saturday.
Report
From
Victoria
Accidents Claim 48
Lives on Weekend
BIBLE DIGEST
H. B. Dean
"I know thy works, that thou
are neither cold nor hot; I
would thou were cold or hot.
So then because thou are lukewarm, and neither cold nor hot,
I will spue thee out of my
mouth." Revelation 3:15, 16.
The church has displayed too
much cold shoulder and not
enough of warm hearts. Christ
demands that our faith show
some fire.
By Hon. W. Dv Black,
Provincial Secretary,
Minister of Municipal Affairs,
Minister of Social Welfare.
Four years ago our Provincial
Government embarked on a
program of encouraging students by way of scholarships.
Tliis program has assisted many
students in the advancement of
their education. At the present
time 2727 British Columbia students are benefitting from government scholarships to a total
of over a third of a million
dollars. This figure represents
nearly a 50 percent increase in
money being spent on scholarship awards since the introduction of the program.
This past week witnessed the
announcement by the Minister
of Education that the number
ot scholarships available to
second-class senior students will
be raised from 2000 to 2500. This
is a 25 per cent increase.
These particular awards are
available to competent students
embarking upon, or continuing
with, approved full-year undergraduate studies within the
province or in Grade XIII in
public schools.
The awards fall into two categories. First-class scholarship
awards are available to all
students in the recognized programs who obtain first-class
standing of 80 percent or higher.
The only sliulation is that they
continue immediately with the
next full year of approved
study. The amount of the award
represents one-half of the tuition
fee of the next year of approved
study. There is no limit on the
number of first-class awards
which may be made. Capable
students are therefore encouraged to strive for first-class
standing.
The program, as set up in 1959,
made provision for scholarships
for lop second-class students.
Thee awards were available to
up to 2000 students with second-
class standing in the range, generally, of 70 to 80 per cent. This
is now increased to 2500. The
amount of the second - class
award represents one-third ol
the tuition fee ol the next year
of approved study.
By THE CANADIAN PRESS
Accidents claimed at least 48
lives   in   Canada   during   the
weekend, 32 in traffic mishaps.
Five persons were drowned.
Fire claimed seven lives, all
in Sudbury, when four children,
all under six years old, died in
one fire and a mother and her
two children perished in another.
Four persons were asphyxiated in Inverness County, Nova
Scotia, when they breathed the
fumes ot their car after it became mired in mud on a side
road.
A Canadian Press survey
from 6 p.m. Friday to midnight
Sunday local times showed On
tario had the largest accident
toll with 21. Twelve of these
were on the highways, two by
drowning and seven by fire.
Quebec had 11 In all, 10 in
traffic and! one by drowning.
Nova Scotia had six, Including
two drownings, and New Br«s-
wick three, all in traffic.
Manitoba, Alberta and British
Columbia each had two fatalities, all on the highways, and
Saskatchewan had one death on
the road.
Newfoundland and Prince Edward Island were free of fatalities.
The survey does not include
natural deaths, industrial accidents, slayings or known suicides.
Your Individual j
i
Horoscope
......... By Frances Drake •_-—----_--J
Look in the section in which
your birthday comes and find
what your outlook is, according
to the stars,
For Wednesday, May 8, 1063
MARCH 21 to APRIL 20
(Aries) — These are "pressure-
cooker" days. Everyone has a
new idea, enthusiasm, and plans
to advance. Reveal yours, After
detailed study: expedite their
usage, follow-up with tact.
APRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus'
— Venus only mildly auspicious.
Give matters a second glance in
case you overlooked something
the first time around. Translate
good thoughts into substantial
deeds.
MAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini)
— A middle-of-the-week period
to review performance and gear
yourself for the balance of the
week.' Associate, when possible,
with calm, courteous individuals
. wljo spread cheer, knowledge as
they work.
JUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer)
SIX INJURED
MISSION (CP) — Six persons
were injured in a two-car head-
on collision near here Sunday.
Allan Ilolden and his wife Alice
of Matsqui were taken to hospital. The three ilolden children
were treated and released from
Mission Hospital.
Pearson Shrugs Off Report
Of Phoney Bomb Threat
"Aren't you rather stationary for a roving
troubador?"
By JAMES NELSON
OTTAWA (CP)-Prime Minister Pearson has returned to
Ottawa almost bubbling with
enthusiasm over what he regards as the signal success of
his trip to London last week.
Mr. Pearson was expected lo
brief his cabinet colleagues and
senior advisers Monday on the
substance of his conversations
with Prime Minister Macmillan
and other British and NATO
leaders.
The prime minister and Mrs.
Pearson arrived at Uplands
RCAF station late Sunday afternoon and were met by Justice
Minister Chevrier, acting prime
minister while he was away,
External Affairs Minister Martin, and Viscount Amory, British high commissioner to Canada. There were about 100
others, including other cabinet
ministers.
Mr. Pearson shrugged off a
report, which proved to be a
false alarm, that a bomb had
been placed on board his RCAF
Yukon in London by le Federation de Liberation Quebecois.
Of his talks in London, he
said they were "very pleasant,
and very successful from my
point of view."
"I did what I had hoped 1
would be able to do, to re-establish contact with the prime
minisler (Harold Macmillan)
and his colleagues, and others
ol my friends in ..London. We
had a very good exchange of
views on a lot of things, and 1
think it was mutually helpful."
VISITS JFK NEXT
On specific subjects. Mr.
Pearson said:
1. He hopes to make the same
kind of informal visit with
President Kennedy when he
goes to Hyannis Port this weekend.
2. There has been no planning
fbr a Commonwealth prime
ministers conference and it
wasn't discussed in London, but
Commonwealth trade ministers
are meeting there In advance of
the forthcoming GATT meeting
in Geneva.
3. General Burns, Canadian
disarmament negotiator in Geneva, is doing "remarkably good
work—he's an idealist and also
a  strong  realist,   and   he's  a
good man to have there."
4. George Drew, former national Conservative leader who
now is Canadian high commissioner in London, accompanied
him on many of his talks and
Ihe subject ol Mr. Drew's return to Canada was not discussed.
5. Canada's policy on extending offshore fishing limits is
"not very far removed from"
Britain's newly-announced decision to push the three-mile
limit farther out to sea, and the
Canadian government is discussing how it can be done
without disturbing its foreign
friends, i
TORONTO STOCK EXCHANGE INDEXES
APRIL  1963 S3
■220	
BASE METALS
zlD
^^
-210	
-205^
— Your Moon highly auspicious.
Expand efforts to encompass
areas not heretofore tread but
which fields are prolific. Evaluation of possibilities important.
JULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leo)
— Play your hand close, lest
you disclose plans to the opposition. Dress actions in garb
that pleases the mind's eye, to
keep you "on stage center.'*
Being a leader is demanding but
has top compensations.
AUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER
23 (Virgo) — You may both oppose and support certain plans
today. But don't be caught In a
corner with no predetermined
course. Neither get halfway
through the day and Then find
out that you lack reserves or
steam. ,,
SEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER
23 (Libra) — Like Taurus now,
pursue a cautious yet adaptable
route. View things in their true
perspective — not what you wish
or hope them to be. Rose-colored
glasses do more harm than
good.
OCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER
22 (Scorpio) — Mars, In favorable aspect, enlivens this day.
Strategic movements, conscientious footwork, taking caculated
risks will be harbingers of
highly successful scoring.
NOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER 21 (Sagittarius) — You are
mostly on your own today. Develop your craft and employ to
• advantage current suggestions
that can be worked into your
schedule nicely. Temper all with
diplomacy.
DECEMBER 22 to JANUARY
20 (Capricorn) — Have confidence in your abilities. Don't
confuse timidity with discretion:
the latter Is needed. Takes notes
on important issues. Handle all
in solid manner with your usual
good judgment.
JANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY
19 (AquariOs) — Portray the
person you wish to be. But
Uranus warns against hasty
decisions, overspending. Do not
enter unfamiliar enterprises
without thorough investigation.
FEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20
(Pisces)—Neptune, still benefic,
encourages your best efforts.
Don't strike out, though, Into
uncharted waters in mere Hope
that maybe the rainbow is at
other end. Have data and map.
YOU BORN TODAY are a
composite of practicality — excellent in business, for getting
things done well — and artistry,
often succeeding in commercial
art, singing, poetry, dancing.
You give business, home ciiores,
outdoor activity all the benefit
of proficiency but sometimes too
much speed. Novelists, dramatists of this sector are deep,
moving. On the whole, you are
conservative, and usually will
not follow the crowd in dress or
habits. Persistency, powerful
energy, and personal magnetism are characteristic. Jealousy, self-will, and anger can
prevent you from attaining the
great things of which your
numerous talents are capable.
So mind the pitfalls, and where
your weaknesses exist: pull in
Ihe reins, so Ihey may not interfere with the success which can
be yours. Science, literature,
invention and music call many
Taureans. either as a regular
career or pasttime. Birthdate:
Harry S. Truman. 33rd U.S.
President.
HITS RECORD HIGH - The industrial index on the Toronto Stock Exchange hit an all time record high of 636.68 April
22. It closed at 635.83 at the end of the month. Previous high
was 629.06 in arch, 1962. Base metals hit a 1963 high April 16
at 213.88 and western oils climbed to 124.39 April 19 to hit a
1963 high. Graph also traces gold movements and sales volume.
(CP Newsmap)
MOTORCYCLISTS HURT
VANCOUVER (CP) - John
Yates, 21, of New Westminster
and Andy St. Pierre, 20, of
Maillardville suffered leg and
hip injuries Sunday when the
motorcycle they were riding
slammed into the rear of a car.
Both were taken to Vancouver
General Hospital.
 <■   :■     .
.'
//ay
NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUES., MAY 7, 1963 — 5
District J.A. Members
Come to Spring Rally
Competitions, worship and entertainment were enjoyed by 80
juniors and 15 leaders who came
from Trail, Nakusp and Castlegar to join the Nelson Junior
Auxiliary members in their
spring rally Saturday. II .
Held at St. Saviour's Pro-
Cathedral Memorial Hall, the
rally included juniors from St.
Andrew's Anglican Church in
Trail (Trail Central, Sunning-
dale, East Trail and Warfield);
the Arrow Lakes Parish, St. David's Anglican Church in Castle
gar, and Church of the Redeemer
in Nelson.
Mrs. T. H. Sturgeon of Trail
was in charge of the program,
which began with a parade to
the church at 11 a.m.
Rev. Canon W. J. Silverwood
conducted the church service and
Miss Kathleen Hollington was
organist. Carrying the banner
into the church was Eve Mc-
Bride of St. Saviour's JA.
Mrs. Austin Moore was to
charge of luncheon and tea arrangements, assisted by mothers
of the-St. Saviour's branch of
the JA.
Games were played, songs
sung and competitions held. Mr.
and Mrs. Howard Meredith were
judges of the puppet, presentation, hymn singing and demonstration of a game from a foreign
land. Castlegar won the puppet
competition, East Trail the hymn
singing and. Warfield the game.
Pennants were presented to the
winners.
Miss Dena Calbick of Nelson
and Mrs. Sturgeon and Mrs. D.
JUNIOR AUXILIARY MEMBERS carrying their banner enter
St. Saviour's Pro-Cathedral for the church service opening their
spring rally Saturday.
—Daily News Photo.
Proceeds to Cancer Fund ...
Large Crowd at Rose City
Chapter Mother's Dav Tea
The IOOF Hall was decorated
with a profusion of spring flowers for the annual Order of the
Eastern Star Mother's Day Tea
Announce New
Healing Substance:
Shrinks Piles
Bxclusive healing substance proven to shrink
hemorrhoids and repair damaged tissue.
A renowned research institute has
found a unique healing substance
with the ability to shrink hemorrhoids painlessly. It relieves itching
.and tdiscomfort   in   minutes and
■speeds up healing of the injured,
jrinflamed tissue.
In case after case, while gently
relieving pain, actual reduction
(shrinkage) took place.
Most important of all—results
were so thorough that this improvement was maintained over a period
of many months.
This was accomplished with a
new healing substance (Bio-Dyne)
which quickly helps heal injured
cells and stimulates growth of new
tissue.
..Now Bio-Dyne is offered in ointment and suppository form called
Preparation H. Ask for it at all drug
•tores—money back guarantee.
and Bazaar held Saturday. A
record crowd of guests enjoyed
tea and patronized the colorful
sale tables.
■ Receiving guests at the door
were Worthy Matron of Rose City
Chapter Mrs. A. Stromsiead and
Mrs. P. D. Zacharias.
The large tea table was covered in a Quaker lace cloth,
centred by a crystal bowl holding spring flowers of pink and
blue, the Eastern Star colors for
this year. Crystal candle holders
with blue tapers added to the
pastel decor.
Convener of the tea was Mrs.
W. M. Ferguson, with Mrs. Irwin Butcher as co-convener.
Individual tea tables at which
Ihe guests were' seated were
centred with white baskets containing pink Japonica. The decor
was incharge of Mrs. T. G. Fox,
assisted by Mrs. D. E. Sweet.
Mrs. A. R. Euerby and Mrs. R.
N. Dodds.
Presiding for Ihe first hour
were Mrs. J. H. Argyle and Mrs.
Gordon Burgess, for the second
hour, Mrs, Mary Carruthers and
Mrs. H. H. Hinitt. Mrs.'Ruby
Hermanson and Mrs. Fox attended to the silver teapots.
BEAT THE FIVE O'CLOCK
CRUSH
Serviteurs, with Mrs. M. B.
Ryalls in charge, were Mrs. W,
Allan, Mrs. H. A. Mackenzie,
Mrs. C. E. Bradsliaw, Mrs. L.
Hammond, Mrs. D. M. Disney,
Miss Audrey Allan, Mrs. A. H.
Shrieves, Mrs. L. C. Curiston.
Mrs. R. Fisher, Mrs. W. J. Cur-
rie and Mrs. W. R. Proctor.
The main project of the tea,
the ticket sales and grocery
hamper contest, from which all
proceeds go to the cancer fund,
was in charge of Mrs. Gordon
Stewart and Mrs. W. D. Morton,
assisted by Mrs, A. M. Steele
and Mrs. G. E. Smith.
Mrs. Butcher was in charge
of refreshments, assisted by Mrs.
Kay Motley, Mrs. Euerby, Mrs.
J. -H, Nuyens, Mrs. B. K. Ryley.
Mrs. C. Jones, Mrs. Ivin Valentine and Mrs. 0. Anderson.
The bake table was in charge
of Mrs. Zacharias, assisted by
Mrs. V. Graves. Mrs. K. LePage,
Mrs. Stan Morris and Mrs. Norman Best,
Ticket sales for Ihe copper
plaques contest were sold by
Mrs, Sweet and Mrs. R. J. Grin-
stead. Mrs. F. C. Robinson and
Mrs. G. S. Towgood attended to
the parcel post sales.
A wide assortment of sewing
was convened by Mrs. Norman
Hickman, assisted by Mrs. William Anderson. Mrs. R. B. Bium-
mitl, Mrs. A. J. Reirf. -Mrs. F. J.
Bird and Mrs. I. L. Hendrickson
Mrs. R. W. Westmacott was in
charge of apron sales, aided by
Mrs. William Young and Mrs.
J. A. McNabb.
Mrs. G. C. Burns and Mrs T
C. Lambert took tickets al the
door.
Rain No Deterrent
To Moy Tea Guests
Bouquets of early flowers tied
with ribbon centered individual j
tea tables for the annual spring
lea of the Church of the Redeemer Service Club. Members of
both circles of the organization
arranged the affair held in the
parish hall.
Despite a steady downfall of
rain, many guest's were present
from South Slocan and the North
Shore. Guests we're welcomed at
the door by Rev. Canon W. J.
Silverwood, Mrs. Silverwood and
Mrs. E. E. Hopwood, Service
Club president. Mrs. R. E. W.
Turner was in charge of ticket
sales.
Convener of the refreshment
committee was Mrs. W. G. Lambert. She was assisted by Mrs.
J. P. Horswill, Mrs. E. P. Baker, Mrs. William DeFoe, Mrs.
A. G. Ioanin, Mrs. A. W. Gibbon
and Mrs. R. J. Benedetti.
The serving committee, convened by Mrs. J. R. Taylor, consisted of Mrs. A. M. Steele, Mrs
Richard Roberts, Mrs. J. R.
Johnson, Mrs. J. Reginald Taylor, Mrs. A. K. McAdams and j
Mrs. J. S. Mcintosh. j
In charge of home.baking were
Mrs. E. K. Evans, Mrs. Fraser j
Tees and Mrs. E. R. McLachlan.
Mrs. S. E. Morris and Mrs. C,
J. Hughes sold white elephant
items. At the needlecraft table
were Mrs. R. 0. Christie. Mrs.
R. A. Phillips and Mrs. J. R.
Trigg.
Says Woman Should
Be Allowed Abortion
MAIL EARLY IN THE DAY
FLEE  FIRE
NEW WESTMINSTER (CPt-
A family of seven was forced
to flee its home here during
Ihe weekend by a fire which
destroyed the rear of Ihe house,
causing an estimated $2,000
damage. Frank Popek, his wife
and their five children ran from
the house when llames erupted
from the roof.
TORONTO (CP) - Canadian
law  should   allow   a   pregnant!
woman the option of having an
abortion, a United Church min-
! ister writes in the latest issue
j of the United Church Observer,
|    Rev.   Ray   Goodall,   of   New
Westminster, B.C.,..says that a
change in the law could, "elim-
i inate much of the suffering as-
i sociated with an unwanted preg-
I nancy."
I He said: "She should be allowed to do this in consultation
with recognized authorities —
her physicians and perhaps the
minisler or priest."
The official position nf the
United Church on abortion was
slated in 1960: "Christian conscience cannot approve abortion." -   ,    ,
However, the church said that
if doctors feel the pregnancy
endangers the mother's physical or mental health "therapeutic abortion may be necessary."
Mr. Goodall said thousands of
women, rather than endure an
unwanted pregnancy, either
take the matter into their own
hands or seek out "some
quack"..for an exorbitant fee*,
both often with tragic results.
-He said always the interests
of the mother must take precedence over that which is embryonic and unformed.
eek Standard
Automobile
Insurance Card
SEA TOOK WEALTH
Apart from the unknown fortunes of the passengers, treasure valued at $56,000,000 went
to the bottom in, the ship Gros-
venor off South Africa in 1782.
VACANCY
For
Accountant
Male or Female,
In 70-Bed Hospital
Apply in writing to—
St. Eugene Hospital
Cranbrook, B. C.
Stating Qualifications, Experience and Salary
Expected.
B.C. Hospital Accounting experience preferable
WINNIPEG (CP)-A Manitoba
government spokesman said
Monday a standard automobile
insurance card, designed by the
provincial motor vehicle administrators association, is being
circulated to all provinces for
consideration.
He said Manitoba's "pink"
cards, proving that a motorist
lias insurance, are not recognized in eastern Canada.
"There is no problem in the
western provinces.'' said the
spokesman, "because Manitoba's
pink card is accepted in all provinces from Saskatchewan to the
coast."
He said Ihe lack of a standard
card could he affecting Manitoba's tourist industry because
some eastern Canada and American motorists know their insurance cards will not be recognized
if they are involved in an accident.
To get around this problem.
Manitoba issues non - resident
pink cards to out-of-province visitors and also allows 24 hours to
obtain proof of insurance before
impounding a vehicle, he said.
TRY FOR TWINS
PRETORIA (Reuters) - Twin
calves to order may be the
outcome of experiments being
conducted by Dr. G. L. Hunter
of the University of Natal's
department of animal husbandry. A South African department of agriculture spokesman said if the hormone experiments are successful "we can
produce twins at will."
VANCOUVER (CP) - A total
of 37 children were treated in
greater Vancouver hospitals for
various minor injuries — all
during child safety day Sunday.
Only two of the children were
kept in hospital. One suffered
knee lacerations in a fall and
the other a fractured arm.
T. Wetmore, both of Trail, were
in charge of registration: leaders
of St. Saviour's juniors were Mrs.
John Towler and Mrs. Vincent
Fink.
Mothers assisting were Mrs.
Austin Moore, Mrs. Jack Phelps
Mrs. E. O. Johnson, Mrs. Gordoi>
Wakeham, Mrs. H. W. Stephen
son, Mrs. Clifford Dunn, M-"
Arthur Cherry, Mrs. J. E. Slac
Mrs. Towler and Mrs. L. M. Mc
Bride.
Rev. V. B. H. Pellegrin of Nakusp was in attendance.
The JA is a mid-week program
for girls 7 to 12 years of age,
providing a program of worship
and missionary instruction, the
basic purpose of which is to help
the growth of Christian character.
Helps You Overcome
FALSE TEETH
I   Looseness and Worry
No longer bo annoyed or feel Ul-at-
ease because of loose, wobbly false
teeth. FASTEBTH, an improved alkaline (non-acid) powder, sprinkled on
your plates holds them firmer so they
feel more comfortable. Avoid embarrassment caused by loose plates. Get
FASTEETH at any drug counter.
WORTHY MATRON Mrs. E. Strom stead welcomed guests to the Rose City
Chapter O.E.S. Mother's Day tea and Past Grand Matron Mrs. J. H. Argyle presided during the first hour. —Daily News photo.
"HOW
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
DESTROYS FEAR"
This free lecture is given
by
OTTO G. ZIEGENHAGEN,
C.S.B., of Chicago, 1U.
Member of the Board of Lectureship of The Mother
Church, The First Church of
Christ, Scientist in Boston,
Massachusetts
THURSDAY, MAY 9
at 8 p.m.
HUME HOTEL
Silver Room
First Church of
Christ, Scientist
Nelson, B.C.
WELCOMES YOU
Free   Translation   352-2890
V*
1 '    0 0 0 0 0-
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tmi-   oo oo 0-*:
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All you do is ask the Long Distance
operator for the ZENITH number you
wish to call.
Right away she'll connect you free
of charge, no matter whether the firm
you want is 40 miles away or 4,000.
You don't have to request a "collect"
call. The firm you call automatically
pays the toll charge.
Companies with a ZENITH number
have made an extra special effort to
cater to your convenience. For that
reason they are usually good companies
to do business with.
Remember with ZENITH it costs you
nothing to call!
If you happen to be a business man
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Vancouver - test ZENITH service right .
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ZENITH 7000. That's the number of our
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will be glad to give you full information.
B.C.TEL 0
BRITISH COLUMBIA TELEPHONE COMPANY
 :—■- : — ————
6 — NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUES., MAY 7, 1963
Yanks Move Into Tie for
Lead; Mantle, Tresh Homer
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
New i York Yankees moved
..Into ,,a' tie.; for the American
League *lead Monday night as
home runs by Mickey Mantle
.and Tom Tresh .provided the
power in a 10-3 walloping of
the last-place Detroit Tigers.
, The Yankees' victory, coupled
with Kansas City's 5-1 loss to
Chicago White Sox, left New
'York tied with the A's for the
top spot with a .600 percentage,
although Kansas City has a one-
half game lead.
In the only other AL game,
Los Angeles Angels came from
behind on a two-run double by
Albie Pearson with one out in
the last of the ninth inning and
pulled out of a four-game losing
streak by defeating Minnesota
5-4.
Pittsburgh m a i n I ained lis
hold on first place in the National League as Johnny Logan's pinch-hit single with the
PARIS (AP)-The Bible held
its position as the world's most
translated work during 1961.
says the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural
Organization. In second place?
Lenin.
bases loaded capped a four-run
sixth-inning uprising that carried the Pirates;to a 7-4 victory
over Los Angeles Dodgers. That
Was the only NFL game scheduled.
Mantle, Tresh and Bobby
Richardson each stroked three
hits as the Yankees lashed out
15 in support of Whitey Ford.
Ford won his third straight with
relief help from Jim Bouton,
who came on in the seventh inning.
Gary Peters of the White Sox,
making his first major league
start, won his first game in the
majors, allowing the A's only
four hits before newly acquired
Jim Brosnan came on in the
ninth to preserve the victory.
Peters and Mike Hershberger
homered for Chicago.
The Pirates, outhit 16-13 by
the Dodgers, won it in the sixth
when Logan came up with two
out and two on and the score j
tied 4-4. He promptly drilled a i
Don Drysdale pitch for a single:
that sent the Dodgers to their,
seventh defeat in the last nine
games. |
At Los Angeles the Twins had
taken a 4-3 lead in the top of
the ninth when Bob Allison sin-'
gled and scored with two away
on a single by Zoilo Versalles.
But, with one out in the bottom of the inning, the Angels
had tjie bases loaded on a double by George Thomas and
walks to pinch hitters Bob Sa-
dowski and Ed* Kirkpatrick.
Pearson, who had batted in
Iwo runs with a double in the
fifth, followed with his game-
winning hit. He got it off Bill
Pleis, the sixth Minnesota
pitcher, but Ray Moore, who
had started the inning, took the
loss. It was his first decislbn
this season.
The Twins scored their fif6t
two runs in the fifth, when Allison was hit by a pitch with
the bases loaded and Jim Hall
drew a walk with the bases full
again.
The Angels went ahead 3-2 in j
the same inning, scoring two
runs on Pearson's double and
the other on a sacrifice fly by
Jim Fregosi. Don Mincher's
sacrifice fly wilh the bases full
tied it for the Twins in the
sixth.
Dan Osimki, the fifth Angel!
pitcher, gave up two hits and I
a run in two innings but got the
victory. He is 1-0. '
Overtime Victory Qwes SeaU
WHL Title, Lester Patrick Trophy
———
SAN FRANCISCO (CP) - Or-
land Kurtenbach scored in overtime Monday night to give the
San ■ Francisco Seals a 4-3 victory over Seattle Totems and
the Western Hockey League
championship.
An all-time record Cow Palace
hockey crowd of 12,404 roared
their   approval   as  Kurtenbach
| scored on a knee-high shot at
14:09 and gave the Seals the Les-
I ter Patrick Cup.
Other San Francisco scorers
were Duke Edmundsbn, Moe
Mantha and Danny Belisle. For
Seattle it was Bob Sabourin, with
two, and Jim Powers.
The victory gave the Seals the
championship four games to
three in the best-of-eeven series.
The crowd, huge by WHL standards, hung on long after the
final red light, showering the ice
with confetti and cheering, "Go
Seals, Go."
A    victory    parade    through
DESECRATE BUDDHA
TOKYO (AP) - Wine-filled
vandals danced on the hands of
the big Buddha at Nara during
a cherry blossom festival. Experts climbed ladders for a
close inspection of the statue
and found scuff marks but no
real scars.
downtown San Francisco was
scheduled for today.
After a scoreless first period,
Sabourin gave the Totems a 2-0
lead with goals at 6:27 and 7:04
of the second period.
Bill Macfarland assisted him
on both goals.  '.
Edrnundson pulled San Francisco Within a point when he took
a pass in front of the crease from
Camlle Bedard and Ray Cyr at
15:58 and dumped in a short goal.
With 10 seconds remaining in
the second period, Mantha slapped a 25-footer past Totem
goalie Al Millar to knot the score.
The teams traded gbals early
in the third period to fore* the
overtime. Belisle put the Seals
ahead 3-2 with a 20-foot slapper
down the middle. But at 6:19
Powers evened the score again
with a 25-foot screen short.
It was the fourth overtime
battle in seven playoff games.
The teams split overtimes in the
first two games, Seattle won the
third and fourth meetings 9-1
and 3-1, San Francisco won the
fifth game 8-0 and took the sixth
in overtime.
Seattle was forced to play all
seven games in San Francisco
because an ice show occupied
the Totems' ice.
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attributed !>v King Features Byndicato
English Soccer Officials
Probing Bribery Rumors
l6nd6N (AP)-Bnillsn s6c-
cer administrators proBed allegations Monday that players
have taken bribes to fix games.
The scandal grew during the
weekend, two men named In
the rumors — goalkeeper Esmond Million and inside • forward Keith Williams, both of
Bristol Rovers, were suspended
by their club pending an inquiry.
The scandal broke when Million, 25 told newspaper men he
had accepted £50 to lose the
Oil Kings
Grab Junior
Series Lead
EDMONTON (CP) - A four-
goal second period outburst carried Edmonton Oil Kings to a
5-2 victory over Niagara Falls
Flyers before 6424 fans Monday
night and gave Oil Kings a 2-1
lead in the best-of-seven Memor
ial Cup junior hockey champion
ship.
Centre Butch Paul tallied twice
for Edmonton. Other scorers for
Oil Kings, in the Canadian junior
hockey final for a fourth consecutive year, were Max Mestlnsek,
Bob Falkenburg and Roger Bour-
bonnais.
Garry Harmer and Bill Gla-
shan counted for the Eaetern
Canada champions.
Fourth game of the best-of-
seven aeries will be played tonight with the fifth Thursday.
Qiants Are Not Qiants
When Mays Isn't There
By JOE REICHLER
NEW YORK (API-Millions
held their collective breath Sunday while Willie Mays was
writhing on the ground, apparently seriously hurt.
The same thought must hava
passed through the minds of the
KELLY,  ROKOSH
TOP FIELD IN
GOLF TOURNEY
Ed Kelly of Spokane and Vern
Rokosh of Kimberley took top
honors in Notre Dame Univer-
sity's first annual open golf tournament held Saturday.
Kelly carded a 43-42—85 in the
18-hole competition, to win low
gross honors, while Rokosh, with
a 24 handicap, shot a 49-42—91
for a 67 and low net honors.
Pete Farm with 93 was third
in low gross score and Mike
Thorpe with 75 was third in low
net.
Tournament chairman was
Tom Shrieves, membership committee chairman of the Nelson
Golf and Country Club.
CAHL   REJECTS
KIMBERLEY
APPLICATION
RED DEER, Alta. (CPl-The
Central Alberta Hockey League
rejected Sunday an entry application from Kimberley Dynamiters of the now-defunct Western International Hockey
League.
However, the intermediate
league left the door open for a
future application from the onetime senior club, and Kimberley representatives said they
appreciated the move.
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Lawyer Reports
Pastrano's Family
Threatened
NEW ORLEANS (AP) - The
FBI investigated Monday a report that the lives of the wife
and children of boxer Willie Pas-
trano were threatened Saturday
shortly before his bout with
Wayne Thornton in Las Vegas.
Lawyer Sam Monk Zelden ol
New Orleans asked for the investigation. He told the FBI a
New Orleans man called Pas-
trano in Las Vegas Saturday
morning and warned him his
wife and children would be hurt
or killed if he went through witb
the fight. Pastrano won a split
decision in the light-heavyweight
bout.
Zelden said the man who placed the call had been arrested.
No charges have been filed.
Savoy Softball
Practice Today
The Savoy Softball team, formerly BTN's of the Nelson Fastball League, will hold a practice
at 6:00 p.m. at Ihe Civic Centre
ball grounds "A" diamond today, weather permitting.
Anyone interested in joining
the team is asked to attend this
practice.
more than 50,000 fans at the
Polo Grounds and the millions
of television fans who watched
the game between San Fran
Cisco Giants and New York
Mets.
"Willie is hurt ... the Giants are dead . . ."
It always seems that way
when Willie is out of the lineup.
The Giants simply aren't the
Giants when he's not there.
Last September, on the heat
of the National League pennant
race, Willie collapsed on the
Giants bench in Cincinnati and
missed three games. The Giants lost all three and nobody
would have given a plugged
nickel for their chances to
overtake the league-leading Los
Angeles Dodgers.
CAME BACK STRONG
Willie came back and so did
the Giants—sparked by Mays's
hot bat. His home run put the
Giants in a regular season ending tie with the Dodgers.
It was Willie's two home runs
in the first game and the run-
scoring single in the last game
that helped bring the first National League flag to San Francisco.
Mays has failed to be in the
Giants' starting lineup 35 times
since he joined the club in May,
1951. He pinch-hit in 14 of those
games and twice after pinch-
hitting finished the game in the
outfield.
The Mays-less Giants, since
May, 1951, have won 10 and
lost 25. This record includes
games in which Mays made an
appearance  as   a  pinch-hitter.
Baseball Standings
By The Associated Press
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W   L Pet. GBL
Pittsburgh 14   8   .636
St. Louis . 16 10   .615
San Francisco   16 10   .615
Chicago 13 11   .542    2
Milwaukee 13 13   .500    3
Philadelphia   .   II 12   .478    34
Los Angeles       12 14   .462    4
Cincinnati 10 12   .455    4
New York 9 15   .375    6
Houston 8 17   .320    74
AMERICAN LEAGUE
W   L Pet. GBL
Kansas City .... 15 10   .600
New York 12   8   .600      4
Boston        11   8   .579    1
Chicago        ..... 12 10   .545    l'i
Baltimore 13 11   .542    14
Cleveland 9   9   .50fl    24
Los Angeles       13 14   .481     3
Minnesota 10 14   .417    44
Washington        10 15   .400    5
Detroit 9 15   .375    54
PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE
Northern Division
W   L Pet. GBL
Tacoma   ....    14   7  .667
Seattle       12   8   .600    14
Portland . ..     J2   8   .600    14
Spokane       9 14   .391     6
Hawaii 8 13   .381    6
Southern Division
Oklahoma City 12 10   .545
Salt Lake City    9   8   .529      4
Denver 11 13   .458    2
San Diego      .    II 14   .440    14
Dallas-Ft. Worth 9 12   .429    24
Monday's results:
Tacoma 5, Hawaii 3
Denver 7, San Diego 6
Olkahoma Cily 9, Seattle 5
Dallas-Fort Worth at Portland,
ppd., rain.
Excluding Mays's pinch-hit appearances, the Giants have won
seven and lost 14 of the games
Willie has missed completely.
Willie caused some temporary
alarm in the second game of
Sunday's doubleheader with the
Mets when he slid into second
base and lay there for a few moments, hunched up as If hurt.
However, he shook himself off
and finished the game.
Nicklaus Opens
Big Lead in
Golf's Money Race
DUNE DIN, Fla. (AP) -
Young Jack Nicklaus, an easy
victor in the Tournament of
Champions, has opened up a
$20,000 lead on the rest of the
field ln professional golfing's
competition for money-winning
laurels.
The Masters champion won
$13,000 at Las Vegas last week
end and increased his 1963 official winnings to $52,715, according to the weekly money
list PGA headquarters released
Monday.
Tony Lema moved into second place on the strength of his
$5,300 runner-up payoff. Lema
has won $32,496 but has yet to
win a tournament. He has been
among the first five finishers
in six of the 12 tournaments he
has entered.
Arnold Palmer, who tied
Lema for second place at Las
Vegas, also received $5,300 that
put his winnings at $31,375.
Gary Player, second last week,
dropped back to fourth with
winnings of $30,765.
BRITISH SOCCER
LONDON (Reuters) - Results of soccer matches played
Monday night:
ENGLISH LEAGUE
Division I
Bolton 0 Sheffield W 4
Man United 2 Arsenal 3
Division II
Middlesbrough 2 Leeds 1
Cardiff 1 Preston 1
Derby 3 Norwich 0
Huddersfield 4 Swansea 1
Division III
Carlisle 1 Reading 1
Colchester 0 Swindon 2
Port Vale 2 Bradford 1
Southend 2 Peterborough 1
Division IV
Barrow 4 Doncaster 0
Chesterfield 0 Bradford 1
Darlington 1 Torquay 2
SCOTTISH LEAGUE
Division I
Airdrieonians 0 Rangers 2
Celtic 2 Clyde 0
Dundee 2 Hearts 2
Division II
Ayr U 4 Berwick 1
E Stirling 0 St. Johnstone 0
Stirling o Queen's P 2
TOYS  STOLEN
VANCOUVER (CP) - Nearly
$800 worth of toys and novelties
was stolen during the weekend
from the West Coast Toy and
Hobby Shop here. The loot included piggy banks, toy guns,
water pistols, electric trains,
imitation jewelry, wallets and
purses.
Rovers' game against Bradford
April 21.
He was quoted as saying that
he would have collected another
ism if Bristol had lost. But
the plan misfired and the game
ended in a 2-2 draw, and he
sent the money back.
Williams also told newspaper
men he had been concerned in
accepting a bribe.
Meanwhile, the English Football Association set up a commission to investigate the case.
Two years ago bribery rumors rocked English soccer. On
that occasion several players
were reported as confessing to
taking bribes, but although the
FA investigated the stories it
took no action against anybody.
Dennis Follows, FA secretary,
said: "If a thing like this were
proved against any player, he
would probably be suspended
for life."
Senior Ball
Meeting Today v
A senior baseball practice and
meeting, regardless of weather,
will be held at 6:30 p.m., today, at the Civic Centre ball
grounds.
Everyone interested is asked
to attend this important meeting as a decision must he made
as to whether Nelson will form
a senior ball team this year.
Coach and organizer Ron
Nash in calling the practice,
stated thaf, a decision must be
reached today so he can inform
members of the Slocan Valley
Baseball League of Nelson's intentions concerning senior baseball this year. Nash will be attending a SVBL meeting scheduled for Wednesday.
Also to be discussed at the
practice is an invitation to the
Nelson team, if it is formed, to
take part in New Denver's May
24 celebrations.
SPOKES BLANK
NELSON'S SAVOY
SOCCER TEAM
A shorthanded Nelson Savoy
Soccer Club dropped a 3-0 decision to the league leading Spokane Spokes in Western International Soccer League action In
Spokane Sunday.
Despite an almost flawless defence, sparked by Frank Cam-
pagne. Stan Grill and Richard
Eggers, and a fine job in goal by
Joe Karasz, the Nelson club
could not contain the fast Spokane club.
Spokes tallied twice in the first
half of the game and added one
goal in the second half. Nelson
failed to capitalize on any of its
several good scoring opportunities.
The local club has practices
scheduled for Wednesday and
Friday at 6:00 p.m.
RICHARDSON
RELEASED FROM
HOSPITAL
HALIFAX (CPI - Blair Richardson, Canadian middleweight
boxing champion, was released
from hospital Monday and left
for Boston where he is writing
examinations as a divinity student.
Richardson, of South Bar, N.S.,
was taken to hospital for a checkup shortly after he defended his
title against Wilfie Greaves of
Edmonton and Detroit Saturday
night. Richardson, who won a
unanimous 12 - round decision,
was badly beaten by the challenger in the late rounds.
X-rays Sunday revealed nn
head injuries but Richardson
was kept in hospital for rest.
EXPORT
PLAIN
or FILTER TIP
CIGARETTES
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Wes Covington Takes
Over NL Batting Lead
SPOKANE, Wash. — Delegates to the first annual meeting of the Kootenay International Junior Hockey League pose informally after their business
sessions at Gonzaga University, Front row, left to right, Tom Shricvcs, Nelson,
British Columbia Amateur Hookey Association representative; A. G. Miller,
Nelson, league director, representing Notre Dame University Hockey Club;
Ernie Gare, Nelson, manager and coach, Notre Dame University Hockey Club;
Roy Webb, Cranbrook, executive member Cranbrook Canucks; Chuck Bradbury, Trail, manager Trail Junior Smoke Eaters, British Columbia junior
champions; Jack Zappone, Spokane, league director, representing the Gonzaga University Hockey Club; Hugo Hess, Cranbrook, executive member of
Cranbrook Canucks; second row, the Rev. Daniel Lyons, S.J., dean of students,
Gonzaga University, and faculty moderator Gonzaga University Hockey Club;
Dr. M. M. Wright, Rossland, president Kootenay International Junior Hockey
League; Hert Guttman, Trail, secretary-treasurer, KIJHL; Bill McLoughlin,
Spokane, manager and coach Gonzaga University Hockey Club; A. A. Flick,
league director, representing the Cranbrook Canucks; Elmer Conroy, Cranbrook, executive member Cranbrook Canucks; Frank White, Trail, executive
member Trail Minor Hockey Association; Bob Knight, Cranbrook, president
Cranbrook Canucks. Absent: C. E. McLean, Trail, vice-president British Columbia Amateur Hockey Association, and Leo Atwell, Nelson, B.C. vice-president KIJHL. The delegates were the guests Of Gonzaga University at dinner
following the annual meeting.
Pierre Pilote Chosen
Outstanding Defenceman
MONTREAL (CPI - Pierre
Pilote, captain of Chicago Black
Hawks,   has   won   the   James
Wakeham Wins
Second Island
Golf Title
VICTORIA (CP) - Bill Wake-
ham went on a birdie binge in
the home stretch Sunday to win
his second Vancouver Island
open golf championship by defeating Gary Smith 4 and 2.
Wakeham, d e f ending B.C.
amateur titleholder, is the second golfer in the tourney's history to take the Island Open
more than once. He won it for
his first time in 1959 while still
a junior.
The only other double winner
was Eric Hibberson, a Victoria
amateur who took it in 1950 and
1954,
Smith, 17, a junior, posed a
strong threat to Wakeham near
Although two down in the mor-
the end of the match,
ning 18-hole round, Smith charged back to grab a one-up lead
at the 27th hole in the afternoon
final.
Wakeham retaliated by cupping successive birdies on holes
32, 33 and 34, wrapping up the
tourney.
Norris Memorial Trophy as the
National Hockey League's outstanding defenceman, it was
announced Monday.
Pilote previously was named
to the league's first all - star
team.
Chicago and Toronto Maple
Leafs, the two NHL clubs rated
as having the best defence
corps, led the voting.
Toronto's Carl Brewer, also
named to the first all - star
team, was second in the individual honors. Pilote led him
98 points to 81.
Toronto's Tim Horton, named
to the second all-star team, was
third in the Norris voting with
37 points and Elmer (MooseI
Vasko of Chicago; Morton's
second all-star line-mate, yras
fourth with 28.    , ,
The trophy is worth $2,000 to
Pilote — $1,000 for being the
over-all leader, $500 for leading
after the first half of the season's voting and $500 for leading
the second-half ballotting.
Pilote had 46 points in the
first half out of a possible 90
and 52 in the second. Brewer
had 34 and 47, Horton 14 and 23,
and Vasko 20 and eight.
Pilote, a 32 - year - old 180-
pounder, is a sold checker and
an outstanding playmaker. In 59
games last season he scored
eight goals and- got 18 assists.
He is only the fourth player
to win the trophy since it was
first presented in 1954. Red
Kelly, then with Detroit, won it
that year. Tom Johnson of
Montreal won it in 1959.
Every other year it has gone
to Doug Harvey, who won it six
times with Montreal and again
last season with New York.
Pilote, a native of Kenogami,
Que., has played seven seasons
in Chicago. He played his junior hockey with St. Catharines.
Voting for the NHL trophies
is done by hockey writers and
broadcasters in the NHL cities.
Ballots are pro-rated so all cities get the equivalent of three
votes.
Other defenceman receiving
votes were Bill Gadsby, Detroit, 25; Harvey, New York,
14; Jean-Guy Talbot, Montrea,
11; Marcel Pronovost, Detroit,
7; Doug Barkley, Detroit, 5;
Lou Fontinato, Montreal, 5;
Doug Mohns, Boston, 4; Allan
Stanley, Toronto, 3; Kent Douglas, Toronto 3; Leo Boivin, Boston, 2; and Albert Langlois,
New York, 1.
Some of Best Missing but
Canada Shows Improveme
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Leading Batter
Doesn't Pretend
To Fit Hero Mould
KANSAS CITY (AP)-A pleasant, Bible-reading Baptist who
I never lets anything upset him
is leading the American League
i with a .406 batting average.
!    He is Wayne Causey, 26, Kan-
I sas   City   Athletics'   shortstop
j who  doesn't  pretend  to  fit  a
hero's mold.
"Heck people don't even recognize me on the street down
in Monroe," he says.
His hometown is Monroe, La.,
where he signed for 'a $30,000
bonus with Baltimore Orioles at
the age of 18 and promptly gave
a tithe of $3,000 to his church.
Causey has no illusions about
leading the league in batting for
a full season. A left-handed line
drive hitter, Causey has never
hit .300 for a full season.
GOES TO KC
He spent two years with Baltimore "mostly on the bench"
and four years in the minors
before the Orioles sent him to
Kansas City in an eight-player
deal in January, 1961. He hit
.276 that year with the As.
Causey started last season as
the As third baseman but was
injured part of the season and
lost his job to Ed Charles, talented rookie who has been there
since and now is sporting a .315
batting average.
But this year Causey got a
break when Dick Howser failed
to get off to a good start.
Manager Ed Lopat put Causey
at shortstop and it looks as if
Howser would have a hard time
getting his job back.
In the fall, Causey attends a
semester at Northeast Louisiana State College, where he
is studying accounting. He is an
honor student and lacks only 20
hours of getting a degree,
He and his wife, Patsy, have
two children, Deborah Ann, 5
and Larry Wayne, 2.
By JIM PEACOCK
Canadian  Press Staff Writer
Canada's performance in the
fourth Pan - American Games
just ended in Sao Paulo, Brazil,
was the best the country has
done since this Caribbean and
North and South America athletic extravaganza began in
1951.
In comparison with world
standards some of the lustre
faded. However, Canada's improved showing was accomplished without some of that
country's best talent.
Among the missing in Sao
Paulo were:
Bruce Kidd, Toronto, gold
medallist in the six-mile run at
the British Empire Games in
Perth, Australia last year;
Dick Pound, Montreal, gold
medallist in the 110-yard freestyle swim at Perth;
Bill Crothers, Toronto, who
dominated the half-mile in this
winter's indoor track season;
and
Harry Jerome, Vancouver,
world-record holder in the 100-
yard and 100-metre springs, inactive since an operation to correct a thigh-muscle injury suffered in Perth,
In light of this, Canada's
showing at Sao Paulo compares
reasonably well with that in the
Empire Games, generally considered a tougher international
meet in which the dominant
Australian and British teams
helped crack several world records in Perth.
TOOK FOUR AT PERTH
Canada won four gold med-
Leading Hitters
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
American League
I GET DECIMALS
New Zealand is switching to
a  decimal  coinage  system  in
I 1967 following Australia  which
will get the system in 1966.
Causey, KC
Yastr'mski,  Bqs
Wagner,  LA
Leppert, Wash
Robinson,   Chi
AB R HPct.
64 11 26 .406
76 13 27 .355
94 15 33 .351
52   6 18 .346
79 13 27 .342
NEW YORK (AP)-Put down
Wes Covington's name among
the players who found a new
lease on life after leaving Milwaukee Braves.
The hard-hitting Philadelphia
outfielder has taken over the
National League batting lead
with a .383 average. He increased his mark 41 points in
last week's games while collecting 10 hits in 22 attempts, a .455
pace.
Covington played for the
Braves' pennant - winning team
of 1957 and 1958. They sold
him to Chicago White Sox and
he was also with Kansas City
before moving to Philadelphia
in July, 1961.
Among the other members of
the Braves' championship
teams  who  have  starred  for
als—two in swimming, one in
track and one in boxing—and
got 12 silvers and 15 bronzes
at Perth.
Miss Stewart, 17, the 110-yard
butterfly champion at Perth
and the only Empire Games
gold medallist with the Canadian team in Sao Paulo, was
upset in the 100-metre butterfly.
But she finished second in
one minute, 8.9 seconds compared with her world record of
1:07.3, and she finished second
in the 100 - metre freestyle,
where she has shown improvement in recent months, in
1:03.2, just 3.3 seconds off the
world record.
Her performances in the un-
heated Pan - American pool
leaves room for hope that she
can win medals for Canada in
the next big international meet
—the 1964 Olympic Games in
Japan.
Most natural fibre ropes are
made from man'ila which is
obtained from a banana-like
tree in the Philippines.
DUPAS, MOYER
REMATCH
ANNOUNCED
BALTIMORE (AP) - Baltimore promoter Benny Trotta announced Monday that champion
Ralph Dupas and Denny Moyer
will meet in a world junior middleweight title fight here June
3,
"The fight should be a grudge
battle," Trotta said. *'Moyer
claims he was robbed down in
New Orleans and he's out for
revenge." Dupas took the boxing crown from Moyer last April 29.
SHOWED RISE
At September 1962 the population of Australia was 10,752,-
661—a rise of 47,540 over three
months.
other major league clubs are
Juan Pizarro of Chicago White
Sox, Bob Buhl of Chicago Cubs,
Joe Jay of Cincinnati and Carl
Willey of New York Mets. All
are pitchers. Another is Billy
Burton, an outfielder with Detroit.
Felipe Alou of San Francisco
remained in second place despite a 22-point drop to .378. Bill
White of St. Louis is third with
.353, followed by Frank Howard
of Los Angeles and John Edwards, Cincinnati, .352 each.
Edwards, the leader a week
ago, lost 59 points with only two
safeties in 15 tries.
CAUSEY LEADS AL
Wayne Causey of Kansas City
remained in first place in the
American league. He picked up
six points to .406 with an eight-
for-19 performance last week.
Carl Yastrzemski of Boston
held the runnerup position although he fell 10 points to .355.
Leon Wagner of Los Angeles
moved up three places to third
at .351. Wagner gained 18 points
with 10 hits in 25 times at bat.
Don Leppert of Washington is
fourth at .346.
Davie Nicholson of Chicago
White Sox walloped four homers
to tie Wagner and New York's
Elston Howard for the American League home - run lead.
Each has six. Floyd Robinson
of the White Sox drive in 10
runs and deadlocked Bob Allison of Minnesota for the RBI
lead at 19.
Hank Aaron of Milwaukee hit
two homers and now paces the
National League with nine.
Aaron and Ken Boyer of St.
Louis are tied for the top spot
in runs batted in with 22. Covington is third with 21.
Try . . .
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NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUES., MAY 7, 1963 — 7
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INVERCARGILL, New Zealand (CP) — The minister of
Mossburn Presbyterian Church
near here can report his flock
is  growing satisfactorily.  Two
years ago his parishioners
bought 140 ewes and distributed
them to farmers of the congregation to tend in aid of church
funds. There now are 270 sheep.
In NELSON and DISTRICT ...
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Runs—Hinton, Washington, 18.
Allison, Minnesota, 19.
Hits—Wagner, 33.
Doubles—Yastrzemski, 9.
Triples—Hinton, 5.
Home Runs—Nicholson, Chicago, Wagner, Howard, New
York, 6.
Stolen Bases—Aparicio, Baltimore,, 8.
Pitching — Fischer, Kansas
City,  5-0,  1.000.
Strikeouts — Barber, Baltimore, 41.
National League
AB R HPct.
Covington, Phila 60 14 23 .383
F. Alou, SF 98 19   37 .378
White,  StL 102 19   36 .353
Howard,  LA 88 12   31 .352
Edwards, Cin       71   7  25 .352
Runs—Flood, St. Louis, 27.
Runs Batted In—H. Aaron,
Milwaukee and Boyer, St.
Louis, 22.
Hits—F. Alou, 37.
Doubles — Cardenas, Cincinnati, 9.
Triples—Cardenas, Cincinnati,
Skinner, Pittsburgh and Alt-
man, St. Louis, 3.
Home Runs—H. Aaron, 9.
Stolen Bases—W. Davis, Los
Angeles, 6.
Pitching -Washburn, St.
(Louis, 5-0, 1.000.
Strikeouts—Washburn, 40.
ONE UP
By Lew Saw
Separate fact from fiction before you buy
any new car
COMPARE ALL 1963 POPULAR-PRICED AND COMPACT CARS WITH THESE TWO FREE BOOKLETS
Here, in two convenient booklets, are all the
facts about the 1963 cars. These booklets
are called X-Rays because they look right
through the automobiles revealing details
you could not see. The easy-to-read text
shows you clearly and simply what you get.
in every Canadian car—compactor popular-
priced. If you are consideringthe purchase
of a new car, you need these valuable X-
Ray booklets.
Either at home or in dealer showrooms,
the X-Ray booklets will provide you with an
excellent check-list. They will help you decide for yourself which car best suits your
requirements. Illustrated with photographs
and charts, the X-Ray booklets give you all
the information you need to make the
wisest choice.
ENGINEERING Methods of construction, rustproof ing and finishing are described in detail. The type of equipment provided,
Standard features, engine size and specifications, hidden quality and service-free
features and safety features. Comparative
handling and riding tests are fully recorded
in chart form.
DIMENSIONSYou'tl find a comparison of the
exterior measurements of over-all length,
wheelbage, height and width. Interiordimen-
sions cover leg-room, hip-room and headroom, in the front and rear seats. Now you
can figure outforyourself how many people
each car will actually seat—comfortably.
PRICING The X-Ray booklets take the guess
work out of your decision by separating fact
from fiction in all cars. You'll even find a
chart listing all suggested new car prices as
advertised by the manufacturers. Now you
can see for yourself exactly what you get
forthe money you pay.
Get your X-Ray booklets today—free of
charger-fromyour nearest Ramblerdealer.
If that's inconvenient, just write to X-Ray,
American Motors (Canada) Limited,
Brampton, Ontario.
A PRODUCT OF AMERICAN MOTORS (CANADA) LIMITED
PARKVIEW    MOTORS    LTD. 323 Nelson Avenue. Phone 352-5355
  ' ' ; ; '^!W'
VANCOUVER STOCKS
tClosing Prices)
MINES
Beth Cop
Bralorne
Canam
Canusa
Cariboo Gold
Cowichan Cop
Craig
Giant Mascot
Granduc
Highland Bell
Kamloops
Koot. B M
Mt. Washington
National Ex i
Ottawa Silver
Pend Oreille
Quatsino
Reeves MacDonald
Sheep Creek
Sherritt Gordon
Silbak Premier
Silver Ridge
Silver Standard
Skeena
Sunshine Lardeau
Torwest
Western Exploration
Western Mines
OILS
A P Consolidated
Calgary & Edmonton
Charter
INDUSTRIALS
Alberta Distillers
B C Forests
B C Power
Burrard Mort
Canadian Collieries
Crestbrook
Crown Zeller (Can)
Int Brew B
Inland Nat Gas
Trans Mtn
Westminster Paper
UNLISTED
Alta Gas Trunk
Trans Canada Com
Trans Mountain Unit
3.25
5.60
.11
.21
.75
1.16
18.50
.85
3.50
2.70
,08'A
.31,
1.10
.06
■ .50
1.50
Mhi
1.25
1.15
3.10
.34
Mhi
.32
.IOMj
.09
.22
.18
3.95
21.25
1.48
2.55
18.00
21.00
5.75
8.75
1.60
24.87
5.87
5.75
14.62
36.25
28.50
26.12V5
14.50
West Coast Unit
West Coast Vt
BANKS
Imp. Bank of Com.
FUNDS
Amer. Growth
Can. Inv. Fund
Commonwealth Int.
Diversified B
First Oil and Gas
Grouped Income
Intnl. Mutual
Investors Growth
Investors Mutual
Leverage
Mutual Accum.
Mutual Bond
Mutual Inc.
Trans Canada "C"
United Ace. Funds
15.25
14.25
68.50 68.50
8.57    9.37
10.30 11.84
9.27 10.16
4.73 5.20
4.67 5.10
3.75 4.10
4.57 4.97
7.16    7.79
12.99 14.13
7.82 8.68
3.96 4.33
7.39 7.74
5.62 6.14
6.79 7.47
6.38    6.97
On Trial for
Espionage
MOSCOW (Reuters) - British
businessman Greville Wynne
goes on trial today on espionage
charges which could result in a
death sentence.
Wynne, 42, will have been in
prison [or 186 days when he
stands to hear the charges read
in the hall of sessions of the
Russian Supreme Court.
A senior official of the Moscow lawyers' department described the defence counsel, Hi-
kolai Borovik, as "a very good
lawyer" and added: "Wynne
chose him himself."
Wynne's attractive wife, Sheila
42, spent 30 minutes with British Ambassador Sir Humphrey
Trevelyan Monday discussing
the trial.
ON THE AIR
PACIFIC STANDARD TIME
CKLN PROGRAMS 1390 ON THE DIAL
TUESDAY, MAY 7, 1963
59—Sign On.
:00—The Morning Show
: 40—Farm Fare
:45-Chapel In The Sky
: 00—News
:05—Wake Up Time
25—Sports News
30—News
35-Wake Up Time
00—News
10—Sports News
15—Wake Up Time Continues
:30—Opening Markets
:35—Max Ferguson Show
:00—News and Report
: 10—Count Your Blessings
: 15—The Archers
30—Alan's A.M. Spot
:59-D.O.O.T.S.
: 00—News
: 05—What's The Song Contest
: 10—Baldwin Commentary
: 15—The Reith Lectures
: 45—Preview Commentary
: 50—Morning Melodies
: 00—News
:05—Morning Melodies
Continues
: 45—Cafe Variety
: 00—Chuckwagon
15—Sports News
25—News
30-B.C. Farm Broadcast
55—News
1:00—John Drainie
1:15—Shirley Harmer Show
1:30—What's On Tapp
1:45—Playroom
2:00—Afternoon Concerl
2:30—News
2:33-T-Can Matinee
3:00—News
3:05—Closing Markets
3:10—Sports Spotlight
3:15—Sacred Heart Program
3:30—Cornucopia
4:00—News
4:03— Canadian Roundup
4:10-4:10 on CKLN
4:30-Countdown
5:40—On Parliament Hill
6:00—National News
6:10—Job Finder
6:15—Legislative Report
6:20—Musicale
6:30—Fleming Presents
7:00—News and Reports
7:30—Assignment
8:00—Radio International
8:30-Hancock's Half Hour
9:00—Business Barometer
9:30—Red River Jamboree
10:00—News
10:10-B.C. News and Weather
10:15—Chapel In The Sky
10:30-The Fourth Estate
11:00—News
11:01—Sign Off
CBC PROGRAMS
WEDNESDAY, MAY 8,  1963
!>■ 00—Morning Show
8:35—Max Ferguson Show
9:00—News and Report
9:10—Count Your Blessings
9:15—The Archers
9:30—Musicale
9:59-D.0.0.T.S.
10:00—Morning Visit
10:10—For Consumers
10:15—Music Diary
10:45—Playroom
U:00-Off the Record
11:40—Interlude
11:45—Off the Record
11:55—Austin Willis
12:00—The Chuckwagon
12:10—Piano Music
12:15—News and Weather
12:25—Showcase
12:30—B.C. Farm Broadcast
«: 55—Five to One
1:00—John Drainie
1:15—Tommy Hunter Show
1:45—Program Resume
2:00—Afternoon Concert
2:30—News and Trans Canada
Matinee
3:30-Theatre of the Air
4:00 News
4:03—Canadian Roundup
4:10—Tempo
4:30—Countdown
5:00-Tempo For Teens
5:30-Tempo
6:30—Music in G
7:00—News
7:30—Assignment
8:00-CBC Wednesday Nits
10:00—News
10:15-CBC Wednesday Night
U:57-News
TELEVISION FOR TODAY
PACIFIC STANDARD TIME
KREM-TV - Channel 2
7:00 Expedition
7:30 Combat *
8:30 Hawaiian Eye *
9:30 Untouchables *
10:30 Bell & Howell Close Up
11:00 Nightbeat
11:30 Movie
KXLY-TV - Channel 4
7:30 Marshall Dillon '
8:00 Lloyd Bridges *
8:30 Red Skelton *
9:30 Jack Benny *
10:00 Garry Moore *
11:00 II o'Clock News
11:30 Tonite Show *
KHQ-TV — Channel 6
7:00 Across the Seven Seas
7:30 Laramie (CI *
8:30 Empire (C) *
9:30 Dick Powell *
10:30 Chet Huntley Reporting
11:00 News and Weather
11:30 Late Movie
CBC-TV - Nelson. Channel 9; Trail, Channel 11
2:00 Chez Helene
2:15 Nursery School Time
2:30 National Schools 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 Supercar
6:00 Playbill
8:00 Car 54, Where Are You?
8:30 Perry Mason
9:30 Front Page Challenge
10:00 The Other Man
10:30 Inquiry
11:00 News
11:14 Viewpoint
CJLH-TV - Channel 7, Lethbridge
MOUNTAIN STANDARD TIME
WEDNESDAY
12:00 Test Pattern
12:30 Monitor Seven
Stage Seven:
"Three Desperate Men"
2:30 Sing Ring Around
2:45 Friendly Giant
3:00 Loretta Young Show
3:30 Take Thirty
4:00 Scarlett Hill
4:30 Razzle Dazzle
5:00 Kids Bids
5:30 30 on Teens
News
6:00 Sports, Weather.
6:30 On Stage:
"My Wife's Family"
8:00 My Three Sons
8:30 Parade
9:00 Ben Casey
10:00 Newsmagazine
10:30 Man in a Landscape
11:00 CBC News
11:15 Southern Playhouse:
"They Died With
Their Boots On"
Stock Quotations
rhe Daily Newt does not bold Itself responsible to the event
ol an e*ror in the following lists.
TORONTO STOCKS
(Closing Prices)
MINES
Advocate
Agnico
Anacon Lead
Barnat
Base Metals
Bibis
Brunswick
Buffalo Ank
Campbell C
Cassiar
Chimo
Coch Will
Cons. Discovery
Cons Halliwell
Conwest
Copper Corp.
Craig
D'Aragon
Denison
East Sullivan
Elder
Faraday
Geco
Giant Yel.
Gunnar Gold
Harminerals
Hollinger
Hudson Bay
Iron Bay
Jonsmith
R J Jowsey
Kenville
Kerr Addison
Labrador
Leitch
Little Long Lac
Lorado
MacDonald
McLeod
Madsen
Malartic
Marboy
Maritime Mining
McKenzie
Mining Corp
Murray
New Hosco
Normetals
Norlex
North Rankin
Opemiska
Pick Crow
Pine Point
Placer
Preston
Quebec Lithium
Quemont
Radiore
Hayrock
Rio Algom
Sherritt Gordon
Siscoe
Steep Rock
Sullivan Con
Taurcanis
Teck Hughes
Temagami
Thomp-Lund
United Keno
Upper Canada
Violamac
Yale
Yellowknife Bear
OILS
Banff Oils
Bata
Calgary and Edmonton
Canadian  Delhi
Canadian Devonian
Home A
Midcon
Nat. Pete
New Continental
Okalta
Petrol
Place
Prov Gas
Spooner
Triad
United Oils
Yank Canuck
INDUSTRIALS
Abitibi
Algoma Steel
6.85
.56
.25
.95
.05VS
.18
3.70
2.13
4.25
11.00
.55
4.35
.85
.23
4.95
.15
18.62'A
.17
12.25
2.49
1.00
1.56
28.00
11.62 Vi
8.10
.1114
28.75
59.00
1.24
.13
.31
.05 hi
6.85
.33
1.40
1.60
1.60
.20
.85
2.38
.76
.15
.42
.2914
16.3714
1.18
1.58
2.99
.34
.11
.31
7.80
12.25
29.3714
9.25
2.60
11.25
.49
.90
14.50
3.20
1.78
4.85
1.60
.25
1.76
.70
.68
7.10
1.41
1.75
.09
1.07
1.28
.05
21.75
4.40
3.95
14.00
.32
1.90
.32
-12',i
.62
.58
1.72
.11
1.67
1.49
.0714
44'4
55%
Aluminum 2814
Argus 2nd pfd. 52%
Atlas St. 37.60
B.A. Oil 29'/4
Bathurst Power .52
Bell Telephone 56%
B.C. Forest                      18.12%
B.C. Packers B 16%
B.C.  Power  A 2114
Burns A 9%
Can. Cement 39%
Can. Malting 86%
Can. Packers B 58%
Canadian Breweries 11%
Canadian Canners 1314
Canadian Celanese 64
Can Chem Co. 10%
Canadian Dredge 7%
Canadian Pacific Rly 30
Columbia Cellulose 714
Cons Mining & Smelting    26%
Cons Gas 2214
Dist. Seagram 5114
Dom Stores 1514
Dom Tar & Chemical 19%
Dom Textiles 1914
Falconbridge 6214
Famous Players 2014
Gatineau 5% pfd. 10214
Gen. Steel Wares 1214
Imperial Oil 42%
Imp. Tobacco 15%
Ind. Ace. 26%
Massey Ferguson 13%
Metro Com 714
Metro pfd 23
Molson Brewery 31
Mont. Loco 14
Moore Corp. 5314
Noranda 36%
Page Hershey 22%
Power Corp 9%
Shawinigan 29%
Shell Oil 17%
Southam 34
Standard Paving 10%
Steel of Canada 21 v4
Texaco 47%
Union Gas of Can 2114
United Steel 5>4
Woodwards A 18%
Pinball Machine
Ruled Not
Gambling Device
MONTREAL (CP) — Quebec
Court of Appeal has ruled that
a pinball machine that requires
a certain amount of skill to
score points is not a gambling
device.
The unanimous judgment of
the court, handed down Monday
upheld an appeal by restaurant
owner Marie Cote, who had been
fined $200 after being convicted
of operating a gambling device.
Mr. Justice G. Miller Hyde,
who wrote the notes for judg-
iment, said that evidence showed
the pinball machine was equip
ped with side flippers which a
player could use to keep the
ball in play.
He said also that an expert
enced player could exercise con
siderable control over the course
of the ball by striking the machine with his hands.
"I cannot agree," he wrote,
"that the striking of the machine is a trick and should not
be taken into consideration. It
is not prohibited by the rules
and it is an accepted manner
of play."
Justices Bernard Bissonnette
and Pierre Badeaux concurred
DAILY  CROSSWORD
(Programs subject to change by stations without notice.)
ACROSS
1.Iced, as
cake
6. She played
"Camllle"
11. Hearsay
12. Par , or
by airmail
13. Fragrance
14. Branca
15. Sand
dune:
G.B.
16. Marry
17. Cry of
pain
19. Platform
21. Armpit
22. Performers
25. By the
 of
one's teeth
26. To set a
limit
(3 wds.)
28. Morning:
poet
29. Cuts of
beef
SO. Frozen
water
31. To swallow
eagerly
32. Tuesday:
abbr.
83. Cornwall
mine
34. Jackdaws
38. Observes
40. Weight for
gems
41. Payments
to landlords
42. Custom
43. Analyze
44. Tossed
DOWN
1. Centesimal
unit
2. Entice
3. Egyptian
god
4. Loss of
status
5. Epoch
6. Strong
winds
7. Greedy
8. Border
9. Songbird
10. Ahead
16. Longing
18. Diminishes,
as the
moon
20. Skill
c
F
3
F
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A
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1
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&
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A
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u
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SHE
A
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b
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21. Related
22. To acknowledge
23. Spring
flowers
24. Allowance
25. Careless
ness Yeitwdty't Aniwar
27. Addition to   35. Sandarac
a building
31. Full of
boastful
talk:
colloq.
33. Greek
letter
tree      .
36. Carry dn
(a war)
37. Boil
39. Half ems
40. Slice
41. Sun god
1
2
3
■t-
S
1
i>
7
8
9
10
II
%
li
IS
%
lt
%
15
W
lb
VA
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%
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?/A
13
20
VA
21
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23
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VA
25
lb
27
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23
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5-1
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DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE — Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW
On* letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Is used
for the' three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, opos-
trophles, the length and formation of the words are all hints.
Each day the code letters are different
A Cryptogram Quotation
PA  PH  VEDW  IPHXDWWA  AB
EW  HPS'WKA  ATOK  AH  HBWQQ.
—WBPXAWAYH
Yesterday's Cryptoqnote: NOTHING RESEMBLES PRIDB
SO MUCH AS DISCOURAGEMENT.—AMIEL
World Briefs
GURKHAS ARRIVE
ADEN (AP)-Troops of tin
famed Gurkha Rifles have arrived here to begin training in
the British-protected South Arabian Federation of Emirates.
The force of 600 is in an arci
recently menaced by developments in the Yemeni revolution
and perennially menaced by
desert skirmishes and sniping.
DEFEAT DROUGHTS
CONAKRY, Guinea (Reuters)
A West German aid project
now underway here will make
the coming few months the last
really dry season in the Guinea
capital. A 50-mile pipeline will
treble the city's water suppl"
that formerly almost gave out
in the dry season.
(Dmu. lift U)iiL
7ftwiio/L Vftwdin.
Printed Pattern
9210
SIZES     10-18
Spare, elegant princess—shaped away from the waist into a
lighthearted, side-pleat flare.
Most flattering for ALL figures
—easy-sew, too.
Printed Pattern 9210: Misses'
Sizes 10, 12, 14, 16, 18. Size 16
requires 3% yards 35-inch fabric.
FORTY CENTS (40c) in coins
(no stamps please) for this pattern. Print plainly SIZE, NAME,
ADDRESS, STYLE NUMBER.
Send your order to Marian
Martin, NDN, 60 Front Street
West, Toronto. Print plainly
PATTERN NUMBER and your
NAME and ADDRESS.
FREE OFFER! Coupon in
Spring Pattern Catalog for one
pattern free—any one you choose
from 300 design ideas. Send 50c
now for Catalog.
VlswUstMgL by.
Picture how proud mom will
be to show off baby — and this
luxurious, quilted cover.
Quilted crib or carriage cover
— do by hand or machine. Use
taffeta, satin, pique. Pattern 981:
transfer one 15xl7-inch motif,
four 4x6'<•.
THIRTY-FIVE CENTS in coir
(no stamps, please) for this pal
ter, Nelson Daily News Pattern
Dept., 60 Front St. West, Toron
to, Ont. Print plainly PATTERN
NUMBER, your NAME and AD
DRESS.
NEWEST RAGE-SMOCKED
accessories plus 208 exciting
needlecraft designs in our new
1963 Needlecraft Catalog - jusl
outl Fashions, furnishings lo
crochet, knit, sew, weave, embroider, quilt. Plus free pattern.
Send 25c now.
 — T-; .     ,      .      ,	
- - . . . -_-_-_---_---_^____________-__pi
//3/
NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUES., MAY 7,1963
PLAN
YOUR FUTURE
Applications are being accepted for enrollment in the
Canadian Army for
OFFICER CANDIDATES
(age 18-23)
and
SOLDIER APPRENTICES
(age 16)
If you can meet the high enrollment standards, here is a
chance for an excellent career
with a future ... a life of challenge, travel and adventure.
Inquire at:
Armouries,
Nelson, B.C.
on Wednesday, 8 May 63
between 6 .pm. and 9 p.m.
or
WRITE for information to:
Army Recruiting Station
Vernon Military Camp
Vernon, B.C.
WE HAVE AN OPENING FOR
a full time Representative lor
our Organization for Nelson
and the surrounding area. Applications from someone who
may have only a limited number of hours available each
week will also be considered.
Requirement: Pleasing personality, good appearance,reasonable education, have a car.
Your immediate reply to Box
6141, Nelson Daily News
should contain all details of
previous activities and employment, age, interests, etc.
GENERAL COOK WANTED.
Phone 352-3453.
HELP WANTED
MALE   OR    FEMALE
TEACHERS - SUMMER JOBS
with Exceptional Earning Opportunities in East and West
Kootenay areas. Write Box
4966, Nelson Daily News.
Read the Classified Dally
WANTED
PRACTICAL NURSING
INSTRUCTORS
Two Practical Nurse Instructors are required for the B.C.
Vocational School — Nelson.
Applicants must be graduate
R.N. nurses competent to give
instructions in all aspects of
bedside nursing.
Applicants should have a pleasing personality, be of good character, and be able to work amicably with their students and
the School Administration.
Previous teaching experience
in this area is desirable but not
necessary and the successful applicants will be required to participate in a Vocational Instructor training programme as directed.
Duties under the joint sponsorship of the Federal and Provincial Governments will commence on July 1st, 1963. The salary scales for these positions
range from $430 to $590 per
month depending upon certification and experience.
These appointments are classified as Casual Employees of the
Department of Education of the
Province of British Columbia.
Whilst these are non-civil service
appointments regulations governing civil servants will, in general, apply.
Write to the Director of Technical and Vocational Education,
Department of Education, Victoria, B.C., for application forms
returnable on or before May
24th, 1963.
REGISTERED NURSE RE-
quired for hospital at Wells,
B.C. Starting salary $320.00
per month when B.C.R.N. Apply in writing with references
and full particulars to The
Cariboo Gold Quartz Mining
Co. Ltd. (NPL), 1007 • 675 W.
Hastings St., Vancouver 2,
B.C.
TWO JAPANESE GIRLS WANT-
ed for waitress work. Write
Helen's Coffee Shop, Kitimat,
B.C.
^"(//   e  \f\
W©^
5-7
SITUATIONS WANTED
CARPETS AND UPHOLSTERY
cleaned expertly in your home.
References supplied. For free
estimate phone 352-3728.
ROCK WALL WORK AND GAR-
den sidewalks. Phone 352-2691
after 5 p.m.
WILL TILL GARDENS. PHONE
352-2439.
MACHINERY
COBRA
PLASTIC
PIPE
and FITTINGS
All Sizes and Pressures
MAC'S
Welding & Equipment Co.
Ltd.
514 Railway St.     Ph. 352-5301
TRAILERS
15' SHASTA HOLIDAY TRAIL-
er. Excellent cond. Sleeps 5.
For further information. Ph.
352-3384.
BUSINESS   &   PROFESSIONAL
DIRECTORY
A handy alphabetical guide to goods and services
available in Nelson.
Used HOBART  WELDER
200 Amp. Electric Motor Drive,
Extended Shaft, Suitable for
Gas Drive. — $300.00
Stevensoh   Machinery  Ltd.
Phone 352-3561
HERE'S A GOOD BUY-ALLIS
Chalmers HD 5B bulldozer,
fully equipped for logging. 1955
R172 International Flat Deck
and older model Willys' Jeep.
All units in very good condition, reasonably priced. Write
Box 507 Castlegar or Phone
365-5973 evenings.
7'-i H.P. GARDEN TRACTOR,
cultivator and mower. Phone
352-5074.
Automobile Dealers
BILLS' MOTOR-IN LTD.
(Studebaker-Lark)
213 Bake/ St.        Phone 352-3231
RENAULT SALES & SERVICE
at Frank's Auto
Phone 352-6411       295 Baker-St.
NORTH SHORE SERVICE
(Standard-Triumph)
Open 8 a.m.—10 p.m.
Across Lake       Phope 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
Coal and Cartage
TOWLER FUEL & TRANSFER
Domestic Coals of All Kinds
General Cartage—Local Moving
Ph. 352-3031 394 Baker St.
Contractors
For a Quality Custom House
Phone 352-5915
MAPE LEAF
CONSTRUCTION
J. SAW ADA
Contracting—General Carpentry
Cabinet Work
Phone 352-3432.
Engineers
and Surveyors
ALEX CHEVELDAVE
B.C. Land Surveyor - 33 Pine St.
Ph. 365-5342—Castlegar, B.C.
BOYD C.  AFFLECK
B.C.L.S., P.  Eng.
218 Gore Street Nelson
Phone *352-3341
Furriers
DEE'S LADIES APPAREL
535 Baker St. Phone 352-2955
Renfrew Furs Agent for Sales •
Remodelling - Repairs - Storage
Garages
Upper Fairview Motors Ltd.
Cor. 7th at Davies   Ph. 352-2525
Investments
Doherty Roadhouse & McCuaig
Bros.
Members: Leading Canadian
Stock  Exchanges
335 Bay Street, Toronto, Ont.
Representative:
Harry D. Harrison.
Phone 352-3525
Painting
and Decorating
WARD'S
Painting and Decorating
Floor Sanding and Finishing
Free Estimates
Phone 352-3726 - Nelson, B.C.
Printing
NELSON   DAILY   NEWS
Printers - Lithographers
Color Printing
Phone 352-3552
Radio & TV Service
VIDEO   ELECTRONIC
405 Hall St. - Phone 352-3355
Refrigeration
Refrigeration Sales and Service
CARLSON EQUIPMENT
Nelson, B.C. - Phone 352-5455
Sporting Goods
Fred Whlteley's Sport Shop
B8 Baker Street  Phone 352-7741
Steam Baths
NELSON STEAM BATHS
Exercise Centre - 369 Baker St.
Topsoil
Larry's Topsoil, Sand & Gravel
9th and Davies St. Ph. 352-2355
Days or 352-7576 Evens.
AUTOMOTIVE, BICYCLES
MOTORCYCLES
COTTONWOOD WRECKAGE
wrecking '57 Plymouth, '54
Volkswagen pickup, '53 Consul, '53 Zephyr, Plymouth,
Fords, Chevs., Pontiacs, Vj-ton
Fargo. Good motors, '57 Dodge
V-8, '53 Zephyr, '52 Pontiac.
Phone 352-5815, Box 382, 24
Ymir Road.
BEACON MOTORS LTD. PON-
tiac — Buick — Acadian —
Vauxhall - GMC. 701 Baker
St. Phone 352-6641. 24 hour
wrecker service. Front end
aligning — Automatic service.
Body and paint shop.
'58 FORD CUSTOM RANCH-
wagon, Dual Range AT, 352
V8 Eng., cust. rad., spotlight,
mirror. Plus many extras
$1800. Write E. Lawrence, Can-
ex, Salmo.
•61~ TRIUMPH~STATION "WA-
gon, '52 Pontiac, '51 Chev.,
'56 Meteor Station Wagon.
North Shore Service, phone
phone 352-2929.
7561)LDS~SUPER 88 H.T.'Tl
condition.'New W. W. tires. To
see this low milage premium
car, Phone 352-6042.
1961 9 PASSENGER~VOLKS~
wagen bus. Radio, good tires,
good condition. $750 down, take
over payments. Ph. 352-2916.
"59 FORD 4 DR. $2,800, '56
Dodge coach 2 dr. $600. Phone
365-5712 or  365-5536.
'57 PICKUP. OVERLOAD
springs, radio, new paint, $675.
Phone 352-6162.
'58 PLYMOUTH 4 DR. HARD-
top. Automatic transmission.
Phone 352-2635.
'56 PLYMOUTH SEDAN V-8,
Automatic. Best bid. Phone
352-7232.
'55 PLYMOUTH, REBUILT MO-
tor, good shape, $550. Phone
352-5015.
'61 CHEV. CONVERT. SUPER
stock. Phone 368-9728, Trail.
'57, PLYMOUTH 4 DR SEDAN,
Good condition.  Ph.  352-5418.
WANTED
MISCELLANEOUS
SPOT CASH FOR USED FUR-
niture, antiques and old gold.
Home Furniture Exchange.
Phone 352-6531, 413 Hall St.
WANTED GOOD TENT TO
sleep four. Box 54, Thrums,
phone 359-7295.
CLEAN COTTON RAGS NOT
less than 18" sq 10c lb. Nelson Daily- News.
PROPsRTY, HOUSES,
FARMS,  ETC., FOR SALE
EARLY OCCUPANCY AVAIL-
able on this gem, located at
Douglas and Union. Has 2
over sized bedrooms, automatic heat. Exceptional privacy
and tremendous view. Ample
garden space and a number of
fruit trees. Garage level with
road. Selling for $10,500. William Kalyniuk Agencies. Ph.
352-2425.
5 ACRES REVENUE PROP-
perty, large home, 2 rented
houses, also 1 partly finished
house and some fruit trees,
Apply to Mrs. Rose Kosiance,
Creston, B.C.
2 BEDROOM HOME, CORNER
location uphill, bus stop at
door. Full basement, auto, oil
heating. Drive-in garage. Ph.
352-5055 10 a.m. - 12 noon,
after 4:30.
WANTED FOR PERSONAL
use 3 bdrm. modern house
with dining area. Contact William Kalyniuk at W. Kalyniuk
Agencies. Phone 352-2425.
LAKE FRONT LOTS $500 DOWN
near Long Beach on, Kootenay
Lake. William Kalyniuk Agencies, Ph. 352-2425.
3 BEDROOM HOUSE. ONE
floor. Excellent view of lake.
Cement foundation. 220 wiring.
P.O. box 495, Kaslo B.C.
LAKESHORE PROPERTY,
camp, at Queen's Bay fronting
highway, 200 ft. lake frontage.
Phone 352-6581.
3 BDRM HOME, 2 YEARS OLD,
in Fruitvale. Terms arranged.
Ph. 367-9010 or write Box 436,
Fruitvale, B.C.
2 BDRM. HOUSE AND 2 LOTS.
415 Robson St. Ph. 352-5667 or
call 6 - 9 p.m.
3 BDRM. HOUSE FOR SALE.
Ph. 352-5890 3 - 10 p.m.
SALE OR RENT, NEWLY-WIR-
ed house, Ymir. Ph. 357-9779.
FOR SALE. LEVEL BUILDING
lots. Phone 352-5418.
PROPERTY WANTED
FOR CASH BUILDING LOT
with lake view preferred,
bridge to 6 Mile area. Phone
352-5695.
LIVESTOCK, POULTRY
AND FARM SUPPLIES
STARTED PULLETS OF -LEG-
horn and heavy breeds. Please
place orders 2 weeks in advance of delivery. Phone 352-
FOR ARTIFICIAL BREEDING
dairy and beef cattle, phone
352-6874, Nelson and District
A.I. Centre, 709 Third St., Nelson. J. De Jong, Technician.
25~SHEeFfoTsALE, 10 EWES
and lambs, 4 ewes, 1 ram.
Write Box 6077 Nelson Daily
News.
PUREBRED JERSEY BULL, 9
mo. old, not registered.' Ph.
352-7363.
HORSES" AND PONIES FOR
sale. Earle Cutler, ph. 352-3435.
LOOSE   HAY   FOR   SALE.
Phone 352-2865.
LAYING   HENS   $1.25   EACH.
Phone 352-3808.
•NVlsott
iatly 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    ..i    20.00
By mall 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.
For delivery by carrier in Cranbrook,   phone   Mrs.   Stanley
Willison:
In   Kimberley.   Mrs.   A.   W.
Brown. '
In Trail, Mrs. W. E. Spooner
RENTALS
OVER OUR OFFICE. LARGE
housekeeping room. Range,
fridge, etc. Gas heated. $45
per month. Single furnished
room; gas heated, electric
plate, bed, etc., electricity provided. $30 per month. Apple-
yards Ltd.
MODERN APT. 1 B.R., LIV.
rm., bath and kitchen, electric
stove and fridg. Lawn and
shade trees. Ph. 352-3815 or
352-7514.
LOW WINTER RATES
HSKPG. AND SLEEPING RM.
weekly, monthly rates. Dishes
Unen supplied, parking. Allen
Rooms, 171 Baker Street.
3 ROOMS AND BATH, PARTLY
furn., gas range, new fridge,
washer, Youngstown sink
which include cupboards, tile
floor. Con Cummins, R.R. 1.
1 BDRM. APT. FURN. OR UN-
furn. Heat and H.W. supplied.
Private entrance on the level.
Vernon St. Ph. 352-5252.
UNFURNISHED 1 BEDROOM
suite. El. stove, H.W. tank, oil
heat, separate entrances. 524
Inncs. Phone 352-5328 bus. hrs.
SMALL BUNGALOW IN FAIR-
view, suitable for couple. Gas
heat, garden. Robertson, Hill-
iard, Cattell. Phone 352-7252.
NICE APT. OVER QUIET
home suitable for couple. $60
per mo. 'Heated. Ph. 352-7717
or 352-5073.
2 RM, APT. FURN., ALSO ONE
large housekeeping rm. with
fridge. Ph. days 352-2015, even.
352-6242.
ONE BEDROOM APARTMENT,
heated, electric range. Available June 1st. Apply 1019 Latimer St. after 1 p.m.
3 BDRM. HOUSE, UNFURN-
ished on Victoria St. $75.
Phone 352-3800.
3 RM. STE. WITH PRIVATE
bath. Also rooms at low rates.
Royal Hotel. 330 Baker Street.
1 BDRM., KITCHEN AND
bathroom. 614 Josephine St.
Phone 352-3813.
SMALL SELF CONT. STE. - 1
blk. off Baker. Private entrance, auto. heat. Ph. 352-2155
AVAILABLE MID-MAY FOR 4
or 5 monlhs, 2 bdrm. furn.
house. Phone 352-2594.
HOUSEKEEPING ROOM $2C A
month. Phone 352-7462.
FURN. 2 ROOM STE. 140 BAK-
er St. Phone 352-3384.
LIGHT HOUSEKEEPING
room. Phone 352-2796.
BRIGHT   CENTRAL   APT.
Adults. Ph. 352-6024.
2 BEDRM. HOUSE. MILL ST.
Phone 352-3426.
FURN. SUITE SUITABLE ONE
girl. Phone 352-7195.
MODERN UNFURN. 1 BDRM.
apt. Heated. $68. Ph. 352-3417,
APT.  FURN.  HEAT.  713  Victoria St.
1   BDRM.   HOUSE,   UNFURN,
near city centre. Ph. 352-6263.
GRND. FLOOR 2 RM. STE. AP-
ply 140 Baker St. Ph. 352-3384,
3 RM.  APT. CENTRAL. HTD.
Furnished. Phone 352-7674.
OPPORTUNITIES
BUSINESS
MAIN STREET LOCATION:
1500 feet of street level floor
space in prime location on
Baker Street in Cranbrook:
26 foot frontage; suitable for a
variety of businesses. Gas
heated and completely renovated throughout. Land value
alone warrants low asking
price of $24,000 with only $8,000
to handle, Write Cranbrook
Agencies Ltd., P.O. Box 849.
Cranbrook, B.C.
GOOD REVENUE BUSINESS.
Excellent location. Auto franchise and exclusive auto accessory franchise. Secure living for right man willing to
work.' Records open to sincere
enquiries. Personal reasons
for selling. Snap $5500. Apply
Box 5992, Nelson Daily News.
ESTABLISHED BUSINESS FOR
sale. A real money maker. 1
man can handle. Owner leaving country. Ph. even. 352-
2916.
WANTED TO RENT
OR   4   BDRM.   HOUSE   IN
Trail or vicinity. Ph. 362-7760.
WANT  ADS  GET  RESULTS
Read the Classified Dally
FOR SALE
MISCELLANEOUS
FREEZER SPECIALS - FILL
your freezer now with pork at
low price. Daily lean grain fed
pork, whole or half, 29c per lb.
Cut and wrapped 32c per lb.
Sides of grain fed choice beef,
49c lb. Also cheaper beef.
Newdan Farm, Creston. Phone
356-9901; after 5:30 356-9769.
Free weekly delivery.
ARE YOU ON THE NEW
sewer? Make your own sewer
connection with Solvent Weld
Plastic Sewer Pipe and Fittings. No special tools required, a carpenter's saw and
a paint brush will do it. In
stock at Columbia Trading Co.
901 Front St.
SIDES LIGHT STEER BEEF,
200 lb. average, 49c lb. Sides
heavy beef, 275 lb. average,
43c lb. Cut, Wrapped, Frozen.
Free delivery to Nelson.
Whitford's Meats, Ph. 356-
2556, Creston.
BE YOUR OWN BOSS. - 1
commercial wall washer $430;
1 comm. rug cleaning machine
$790; 1 comm. upholstery
cleaning machine $690. 514
Observatory St. Ph. 352-2916.
14 VOLUME ENCYCLOPEDIA
Britannica. Hardly used. Apply
Ralph Peterson, Box 159,
Castlegar, B.C.
STORE FIXTURES - BERKEL
computing scale, Berkel slicer,
dairy case, meat block, walk-
in cooler — See at old Ymir
Store or phone Alex 365-4441.
SINGER SEWING MACHINE
Co. Sewing machines, vacuum
cleaners, floor polishers, typewriters. 339 Baker St. Phone
352-3631.
'Continued next column)
FOR SALE
MISCELLANEOUS
(Continued)
PLASTIC WATER PIPE AND
fittings V4" to 2" in stock at
ali times. Larger sizes to
order at Columbia Trading Co.
901 Front St.
3 YD. LOAD MANURE, $10.
Delivered Willowpoint to Balfour. Erindale Farm. Phone
Baltour 608.
USED TV SETS A-l CONDI-
tion. Nelson Home Furniture
and Appliances Ltd., Nelson.
Phone 352-6432.
SIDES OF HEAVY PORK. 100-
125 lb. average, 25c lb. New-
dan Farm, Creston. Ph. 356-
9901. Free Delivery.
PORK FOR SALE, V4 OR
whole, 28c lb. Also 1 heavy
sow cheap. Phone 352-2355.
USED Vi" RIGID CONDUIT Assorted fitting. Flameseal wire
No. 12 and 14. Ph. 352-3358.
NEW SONOLA AND RIVOLI
accordians 25% off. Ph. 365-
8307.
50 LB. P.S.E. COMPRESSOR
inch St. tank. Apply 514
Observatory.
1   SINGLE   AND   1   DOUBLE
Bed. Phone 352-6149.
BOY'S GEARED BIKE. PHONE
352-6484.
BOATS AND ENGINES
FOR SCOTT OUTBOARD EN-
gine Sales and Service and
Boats see Mac's Welding &
Equipment Co. Ltd., 514 Railway St., Nelson, B.C.
SPECIALS ON MERCURY OUT-
boards, Thermocraft boats and
Holsclaw trailers. Jeffery Radio  and  Appliances.
15 FTl RUNABOUT WITH 35
H.Pff Johnson motor and
trailer. Phone 352-3979.
Th  H.P.  MERCURY  MOTOR,
8 ft. car top boat. Ph. 352-5074.
BOAT HOUSE FOR RENT OR
sale. Apply 300 Baker.
ROOM AND BOARD
ROOM AND BOARD FOR GEN-
tleman. Phone 352-2657 after
4 p.m.
FOR MAN OR WOMAN IN PRI-
vate home. Phone 352-6127.
ROOM    AND    BOARD    FOR
gentleman. Phone 352-6352.
London Election Shapes Up
As Party Prestige Test
By FRASER WIGHTON
LONDON (Reuters) - British
municipal elections this week
will have unusual importance
as a prestige test for the Labor
and Liberal opposition parties
and the Conservative government.
For the government, the annual contests throughout England, Wales and Scotland will
provide the first country-wide
indication this year of whether
its electoral stock is beginning
lo show a slight recovery from
a long slump.
For Labor it will be the first
chance to assess national reaction to the socialist movement's
"new look" under the leader
ship of Harold Wilson, who succeeded the late Hugh Gaitskell
in January.
For the Liberals — fielding
more than 2,200 candidates compared with 941 when the same
local government seats were
voted on three years ago—it
should show whether the momentum of its recent electoral
revival is being maintained.
Labor morale is high, boosted
PERSONAL
KOKANEE DETECTIVE
Agency, Agents Kootenays and
Okanagan. Domestic, Civil,
Criminal. Address confidential
enquiries to aforesaid Agency,
Box 163, Kelowna. Mr. J. Crazier, Manager.
PERSONAL SUNDRIES & Supplies. 60% savings. Free price
list and sample on request.
Box 8, Station C, Winnipeg.
1 will not be responsible for
any debts incurred in my name
by anyone other than myself.
William N. Relkoff.
PETS, CANARIES, BEES
K 9 REG. BOARDING KEN-
nels, Fruitvale Highway. G. A.
Crawford, prop. Ph. 367-2483.
BEES AND YOUNG QUEENS
for sale. Walter Swetlishoff,
Box 77, Crescent Valley.
COCKER PUPS $15.00 ALSO
Chihuahas $25.00 Bird's Kennels. Blueberry Creek.
by the party's scores against
the Conservative government in
a succession of parliamentary
byelections.
Socialists hope to recoup the
600-seat loss they suffered in
1960 when the seats now vacant
were last contested. They will
be deeply disappointed if they
do not top this with a gain of
at least 500 more seats.
DECIDE 8,400 SEATS
A total of 8,400 seats will be
decided but about 3,000 candidates are unopposed.
More than 1,100 "municipalities
will be balloting during, the
week. Main interest focusses on
next Thursday, when the' borough (town) councils of England and Wales, totalling 400,
hold their contests,-  .,;
At present anti-socialists—labelled variously Conservatives,
Liberals, Moderates; Progressives, Independents and Ratepayers' Candidates**controlled
between two-thirds and three-
quarters of the total,local, government of Britain.''J  "
The Labor pajftj^.tjas, however, impressive ' strength in
certain areas—many J}jg cities,
towns, and other heavily-populated centres.
London provides the outstanding instance of socialist
strength. In the parent London
council, which is Trot elected this
yeat1, Labor has a two-to-one
majority.
Over England and Wales as
a whole, Labor controls 113 of
the 400 town councils, 166 of the
447 urban district councils,, and
34 of the 138 rural district councils.
Before the Second World War,
municipal elections, were regarded as having relatively little bearing on national politics,
but since the war they have
been seen increasingly as a
socialist versus anti - socialist
aligntment.
HARD TO STOP
A train travelling at 80 miles
an hour needs a mile to stop
in, according to the Ontario
Safety League.
Buying- Selling -Renting
MAIL
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  ! , _
— , ; , , .	
TO — NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUES., MAY 7, 1963
THIS IN-BETWEEN WEATHER
is most conducive to contacting flu or the common cold.
A Good
VITAMIN  MINERAL TABLET
may help you resist that miserable, time-consuming,
upsetting,  nasty,   money-wasting  situation.
CHECK THE VITAMIN STAND
At
MANN
DRUGS LTD.
Attack on 'Copters Stirs
Fears Phouma May Ouit
VIENTIANE, Laos (AP) — A
Pathet Lao attack on two peace
mission helicopters raised fears
Monday that neutralist Premier
Souvanna Phouma might quit,
leaving the Communists and
right wing to fight it out for
power.
There also was fear that the
deepening crisis might force the
International Control Commission—made up of Canada, India and Poland-to give up trying to restore peace among the
three feuding factions.
Souvanna angrily blamed the
pro-Communist Pathet Lao led
by his half-brother, Prince Sou-
phanouvong, for Friday's attack
mon the commission helicopters
while talks were in progress on
means to end fighting between
Pathet Lao and neutralist
forces.
The attack, launched after the
Pathet Lao had given the heli-
copters, clearance, wounded
three Frenchmen and an Indian
major.
MORTARS OPEN FIRE
Pathet Lao machine-guns and
mortars opened fire on the helicopters as they were picking up
the body of a Frenchman killed
by a mine explosion the previous day. One aircraft was destroyed. The other was re
paired.
Control commissioners visited
the scene Saturday and identified the hilltop position as
Pathet Lao. Souphanouvong
claimed the Pathet Lao had not
taken the hilltop until Saturday,
but officials at the scene said
Pathet Lao troops had been
guarding the helicopters after
the attack Friday.
News of the Day
RATES: 30o line, 40c line bold lace type;  larger type rates
on request. Minimum two lines.
Rebekah Tea and Bazaar
IOOF Hall, Saturday. 35c.
Haigh Tru Art Beauty Salon
576 Baker St. Ph. 352-3313
BINGO
LEGION HALL TONIGHT
Reserve May 15, a.m.
For Arty Coffee Party
North Shore Hall.
36" Cotton bark cloth in
attractive patterns at l)8c yard.
STERLING FURNISHERS
Tiaras, pendants, pearls, for the
graduation dance.
TED ALLEN'S JEWELLERY
Florists Telegraph Delivery
Mother's Day Special—$7.50
Across the street or across the
nation. Available at
COVENTRY'S FLOWER
SHOP
.' 495 Baker Street
Diamonds, Watches, Gilts
Repairs, Engraving
TED ALLEN'S JEWELLERY
Winner of A.C.T.
100-A-Month Club
Steve Liptak
Blueberry Creek,, B.C.
ATTENTION B.C. GOV'T. EMP.
A general meeting will be held
at the Canadian Legion Hall
Tuesday, May 7 at 8 p.m. Please
attend.
NELSON
ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS
PARENTS — All children who
will start school in September
shot '.d now be registered at the
Elementary school in their area.
A child must be 6 years old by
December 31, 1963 to enter.
Phone —
Central - 352-5415
Rosemont — 352-2923 Tuesday,
Thursday afternoons
Blewett  —  352-3431  Monday,
Wednesday afternoons
South Nelson — 352-2022, mornings only
Hume - 352-6212
The Nelson Little and Babe
Ruth League extends sincere
thanks to all those who contributed time and effort to the parade on Saturday including the
Kiltie Band, Nelson Fire Dept,
A.C.T., Lions, Kinsmen, Kiwanis
and Rotary.
Haney Boy Shot
HANEY (CP) - A 13-year
old boy was killed when hit in
the head iby a .22 calibre bullet
accidentally fired hy his nine-
year-old brother, police said on
Monday.
Poilce said Mr. and Mrs. J.
Herbert Wilson of nearby Ruskin
went out, leaving their children
Andrew and Charles alone.
When they returned they found
Andrew lying dead on the floor
adn his brother standing nearby.
The incident occurred Friday
night.
VISION AFTER 60 YEARS BtlNDNESS-Bessie Slkes, ln her 60s
and blind since a spinal meningitis attack when she was 9
weeks old, revels in ability to see, finally, In her Miami,
Fla., home. Her right eye had 1 per cent vision—enough to
barely distinguish day from night—and her left eye none.
She happened to rut) the left eye—it felt moist—and suddenly she could see.
91 -CAR PILEUP—Erie-Lackawanna freight sars He helter-skelter along Reynolds curve three
miles east of Port Jervis, N.Y., after derailment of the 91 car train.  It delayed commuter service and closed the tracks for several days. Two crewmen were injured.
Canadian Investor With Small
Funds 'Getting Unfair Tax Deal'
By STEWART MacLEOD
TORONTO (CP)-The small
Canadian investor is getting an
unfair deal under an amendment to the Income Tax Act
passed two years ago, the royal
commission on taxation was
told Monday as it heard a request for its repeal.
A. G. F. Management Limited, managers of three mutual
funds, said the act's 1961 definition of an investment company
—a corporation that gets 85 per
cent of its revenue from Canadian sources—has hit hardest at
the small investor who depends
on mutual companies to diversify his holdings.
The company's brief said that
apart from restricting certain
forms of investment, the
amendment is basically ineffective and dangerous. And, in the
long run, it could result in a
loss of revenue for the Canadian government.
When former finance minister Donald Fleming announced
the amendment he said the 15-
per-cent allowance for foreign
investment would leave the
companies "a desirable degree
of liquidity and diversification"
while it would ensure that "the
greater part of savings is channelled through the hands of
these companies into Canadian
enterprise."
GIVES   DETAILS
In practice, said the company brief, this is how mutual
companies were affected:
A company with incomes
higher than $35,000 and with
more than 15 per cent of it coming from outside Canada, pays
50- to 52-percent corporation tax
on its entire income. A comparable company wjth less than
15 per cent of its income from
foreign sources, pays a 21-percent tax on this foreign income
and none on the money it gets
from Canada.
Many Canadian investment
companies specialize in foreign
markets and individuals have
placed their money in these
companies for that specific purpose. Only by ceasing to be
such specialists can these firms
escape the extra tax burden
and "in view of their obligation
to their shareholders, (this) is
something they cannot do."
While the small investor has
been subjected to greater taxation,, the brief said the basic
policy of diverting more funds
into Canadian investment has
apparently failed. At the time of
the amendment, the Canadian
mutual fund industry was "by
some standards" over-invested
in Canadian stocks and since
then, despite the tax legislation,
foreign investments have increased.
The only effective way to increase the flow of savings into
Canadian stocks "would be to
pass legislation which would
affect all forms of saving and
savings institutions."
Steel Cartel
For U.S.
Market Charged
PITTSBURGH (AP) - Senator Hugh Scott, Pennsylvania
Republican, charged Monday
"steel producers in Japan and
some European countries have
secretly agreed to a cartel" to
divide up the U.S. market.
The justice department has
been advised and is "examining
the situation to determine whether any U.S. laws have been
violated," Scott said in a speech
prepared for the American Mining ongress coal convention.
"This is a very serious development that could have a
bearing on our treaties with
countries in the cartel and could
influence the whole foreign economic policy of the United
States," he said.
The senator said the U.S.
"has been hit by a wave of
dumping—the practice of unloading surplus merchandise at
prices below those charged in
the producer's own country. It
has been happening in steel,
copper, brass, cement, chemicals, man-made fibers, pharmaceuticals and other products."
He said "the cartel apparently now covers exports of
small-diameter steel pipe, but
discussions are under way between Japanese and European
producers to include also wire
rods, bars and hot and cold
rolled steel."
The senator said he thinks
present anti - dumping laws
should be tightened and that
additional legislation may be
needed.
DENIES CARTEL
TOKYO (AP) — The spokesman for a leading steel firm
said today seven Japanese companies have made certain
agreements on exports to the
United States. But he denied a
secret cartel has been formed
to divide up the American market.
A spokesman for Nihon Ko-
kan Company of Tokyo said
seven firms recently agreed to
set a floor price and regulate
their small-diameter steel pipe
to the United States to avoid
excessive competition.
BELGRADE (AP) - Yugoslavia has granted a $6,000,000
credit to Cambodia under an
agreement signed this week.
The money will be spent in
Yugoslavia for three hydro
power plants.
Noted Author, Leslie Townes
(Bob) Hope Adds More Memoirs
By BOB THOMAS
HOLLYWOOD (AP) _ The
noted author, Leslie Townes
(Bob) Hope, has produced another volume of his memoirs,
titled I Owe Russia $1,200.
As book lovers know, Mr.
Hope has already penned They
Got Me Covered, I Never Left
Home, So This is Peace and
Have Tux, Will Travel. All
have been best-sellers.
He is the acknowledged king
of the lone-liners, and the latest
book is a gatling gun of gags.
The Hope art, in its many
fields, is a product of collaboration, and he is the first to give
credit where credit is due: his
writers.
That does not mean that he
is the creation of his string of
anonymous, highly paid gag
writers. Not at all. Everything
he docs bears his own personal
style.
MARKET TRENDS
NEW YORK (AP) — The
stock market took its sharpest
loss in more than two months
as trading dwindled Monday to
the lowest pace in a week.
Market analysts saw the decline as the result of some selling for long-term capital gains
on stock bought around last October's lows and also because
of precautionary deck-clearing
by traders who anticipate some
irregularity before the market
starts another sharp upside
move.
After the close of the New
York Stock Exchange came
news that General Motors had
declared a special 50-cent dividend in addition to its regular
quarterly 50-cent payment. GM
ended the day with a loss of Vi
on the big board but in later
trading on the Pacific coast exchange rallied to erase the loss
and post a gain.
The Dow Jones industrial average dropped 4.31 to 713.77.
Volume, however, dipped to 4,-
100,000 shares from Friday's 4,-
760,000.
The Associated Press average of 60 stocks declined 1.4
to 269.9. It was the sharpest decline since Feb. 28 when the.
average lost 2.7. An estimated
$2,000,000,000 was clipped from
the quoted value of stocks listed
on the New York Stock Exchange, based on the fall in
The AP average.
Sperry Rand was the most ac-
tive stock, up Vi to 14 on 52,500
shares. Chrysler was off 2 at
102. Ford lost %.
Royal Dutch was the most active of the oils and lost IVi.
Jersey Standard dropped IVi,
Texaco 1 and Socony-Mobil
Hi.
American Tobacco was the
volume leader in its group and
gained 1. Reynolds rose and
Lorillard 1%.
Coca Cola advanced % on a
report from the president that
first-quarter earnings exceeded
expectations.
On the New York exchange,
Granby Mining and International Nickel each lost %. Mclntyre Porcupine, Canadian Pacific and Distillers Seagrams
were off Vi,
Prices worked irregularly
lower on the American Stock
Exchange. Canadian Javelin
was active and up % and
Scurry Rainbow Oil gained Vi.
Brazilian Traction fell Vs.
TORONTO (CP)-Industrials
moved to a record high in
morning action but slipped later
in the session to close only fractionally higher during light
trading on the stock market
Monday.
The exchange index showed
industrials, after rising 1.75 to
a record high of 643.73 at 11
a.m., ahead .67 to 642.65 at the
close. Golds were lower and
base metals and western oils
both advanced slightly.
Refining oils were among the
stronger issues through most of
the session but were overshadowed by a few other selected issues at the close.
Imperial Oil and BA were
both ahead % and Texaco Canada Vi, while International Mineral and Chemical jumped 2%
to a new 1963 top of 57 and
Crain Limited rose 1'.4 to a new
high of 15%.
Rises of a point of mor£, went
to Industrial Acceptance, Dominion   Bridge   and   Canadian
Hydrocarbons as Canadian Celanese rose %, Royal Bank %
and  Intel-provincial  Pipe  Line
SOME LOSERS
Among losers, Canada Steamship Lines slipped a point to
57, Huron and Erie Mortgage
%, Calgary Power Vi, and Bell
Telephone Vi.
On index, golds dropped .13
to 87.41, base metals rose .06
to 215.37 and western oils .15
to 122.88. Final volume was 2-
528,000 shares compared with
3,337,000 Friday.
Base metals were mixed with
Labrador and Mining Corporation  up     and  Vi  respectively
and  International  Nickel  off
and Falconbridge down Vi.
Slightly higher western oils
featured Home A up Vi and
Home B and Calgary and Ed-
mondon both ahead %.
MONTREAL (CP) - Stocks
were mainly up Monday on the
Montreal and Canadian exchanges. Trading was moderately active.
Banks advanced, Royal rising
y» to 80 and Banque Provinciate Vi to 52. ■
Feature gainer was Dominion
Bridge, up one point to 22% on
a turnover of 7,795 shares. Industrial Acceptance was up %
to 26%.
Aluminium dropped Vi to 28
and Bell Vi to 56.
In mines, Kiena was up 15
cents to $3.60, Fox Lake two
cents to 32 cents and Golden
Age six cents to 30 cents.
On index, industrials rose 0.6
to 128.4, banks 0.7 to 132.3 and
the composite 0.4 to 127.4. Utilities were off 0.2 to 121.2 and
papers 0.1 to 113.0.
The title I Owe Russia $1,200
arises from the comedian's adventures in the Soviet Union.
When he finished shooting his
own monologues and some Russian circus and theatre acts, he
was presented with a bill for
film clips, laboratory processing and a film crew by Alek-
sander Davydov, head of Soviet
Export Film.
Hope's account of their exchange:
"But Mr. Davydov," I
pleaded, "this is an educational
film. Why, the whole thing is a
promotion for your great Russian artists abroad. It's practically a one-hour commercial.
Don't you think this would come
under the cultural exchange
program?
"Mr. Davydov finished his
drink. "Mr. Hope," he replied,
'friendship is friendship, but
money is separate. It is my
understanding that you are
strong and robust financially.'
"After taxes," I explained,
"we are all peasants."
"Tovarich," he said, shaking
my hand. When I looked down,
there was a bill in it.
"It's a shame Mr. Davydov
is tied up in the party. He'd
make a hell of a capitalist.
"We threshed verbally for ]
several rounds and when he;
finally took his knee out of my
chest, 1 owed Russia $1,200.
That was three years ago, and
I still do. Two of the film clips
I ordered never showed up.
When they do, I'll be happy to
pay. Not cash, I'll put it on the
Diner's Club."
Fort Smith Continues to
Help 450 Flood Victims
By JOHN WARREN
FORT SMITH, N.W.T. (CP)
—The hospitality of this northern centre has not bent under
the pressing job of looking after
more than 450 flood victims for
Hay River, N.W.T,, and Fort
Simpson, N.W.T.
Sam Dodds, administrator for
the local improvement district,
said residents of this centre, 400
miles north of Edmonton, are
tired but "I can assure you
first hand . . . they are not
tired of taking part."
The vast task of caring for
the flood victims began last
week when residents of Hay
River and Fort Simpson were
forced to flee their island towns.
The majority of the Hay
River evacuees airlifted here
by air force, commercial and
private planes, will leave Wednesday.
Mr. Dodds said they will be
placed in a trailer camp on the
mainland south of Hay River,
500 miles north of Edmonton.
Fifty trailers, leased by the
federal government, will be
moved on the site and engineers
have started digging cesspools
and laying power lines to service the temporary camp.
WON'T TAKE LONG
"It looks now like it won't be
a long-haul operation," he said
in reference to the billeting of
evacuees in Fort Smith homes.
The majority of residents
who have provided beds, sleeping bags and other facilities
have "done it without question," he said. In only a few
cases have the homeless victims moved from accommodation originally offered last Wednesday and Thursday.
A supply of food stored earlier
in a department of transport
depot has been made available
to those who took in evacuees.
Mr. Dodds said they were given
a choice of drawing rations
from the supply or of billing the
administration $1.50 a day a
person.
He said central messing facilities were planned, but no mass
feeding kitchen was set up. The
largest single kitchen in use by
evacuees was in a government
recreation hall where six families are housed.
"The arrangements were naturally pretty hasty," said Mr.
Dodds. "Events have outrun
any attempt to keep up accounts and paper work.
"All but a very few listed
when they came in, including
43 hospital patients."
SOME GO SOUTH
About 50 people have since
gone south on a government
offer of one-way transportation
on a "cost repayable basis."
Mr. Dodds said a group of
between 100 and 200 Indians remained on the high ground on
the mainland near Hay River.
Another 30, who were brought
into Fort Smith last week, have
been taken into a camp, supervised by the Indian affairs
branch. They were given rifles
to help them supplement food
supplies.
Mr. Dodds said there has
been a remarkable response to
appeals for clothes. Tremendous piles of clothing have been
stacked on tables in the Royal
Canadian Legion Hall and the
Legion auxiliary has handled
distribution to evacuees. However, there remained a shortage of such things as diapers
and baby clothes.
There is no formal requisition
required for evacuees to get
clothing. "They simply come in
and ask for what they need."
Residents of Uranium City in
the northwestern, corner of Saskatchewan, about 125 miles
southeast of here, met the plea
for clothing by sending three
planeloads, "enough to fill a
three-ton truck," to Fort Smith.
"Its really a pretty wonderful
thing."
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World Briefs
HONOR LEMNITZER
NANCY, France (AP)-Gen.
Lyman Lemnitzer has been
made an honorary citizen of
this city on the Marne-Rhine
Canal. Lemnitzer, now Supreme
Allied Commander in Europe
under NATO, served with forces
that liberated Nancy in 1944.
MAKE FEWER MOVIES
MEXICO CITY (Reuters)-
The output of Mexico's movie
industry has fallen sharply in
recent years. Mexican film producer Sanchez Tello told the
Foreign Correspondents Association here that In 1958 the country made more than 100 films.
Last year the total was 56.
