 TEMPERATURES
NELSON  50 89
Toronto    62 80.
Calgary  48 81
Vancouver    54 66
Whitehorse  !.'  40 60
Spokane   52 86
Published at Nelson, government, financial, trading and educational centre of the Kootenay-Cnlumhia area
FORECAST
Kootenay: Mostly sunny. A
little ' cooler tomorrow. Light
winds. Low and high at Cranbrook 40 and 80; Crescent Valley
45 and 80. Friday outlook: Mostly
sunny, little temperature change.
Vol. 64
NELSON, B.C., CANADA—THURSDAY MORNING, JUNE 10, 1965
10 Cents
No. 42
Russ Astronaut Gagarin
Congratulates Spacemen
ABOARD THE WASP (AP) -
The two American Gemini IV
astronauts received a congratu-
latory telegram Wednesday
from the first man ever in space
Soviet cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin.
Gemini command pilot James
McDivitt, reading the message
in translation from the Russian,
said "Isn't that great."
The message was addressed
to McDivitt and said:
"We send you our congratulations after the success we witnessed on the spaceflight in
ship Gemini IV.
"We express hope that space
flights will be to serve the world
and make progress for humanity."
Gagarin's pioneering space
flight was one orbit long April
12, 1861.
The message came as the
U.S. aircraft carrier Wasp
plowed along the Florida coast
Wednesday morning—but it took
a while' for the navy officers to
translate it.
With home just over the hori-l
ton, the ship is due to dock at j
Mayport, Fla., . at 9:15 a.m. |
EDT today, McDivitt's 36th
birthday. The navy has declared'
the Mayport docking facilities;
open to the public. Sightseers
will get a brief view of astronauts McDivitt and Edward
White as they rush to a waiting
plane for the quick trip to Houston, Tex., and the arms of their
families.
In Houston, the astronauts
will begin five days of celebrations.
Doctors reported Wednesday
White had lost eight pounds of
his original ITS during the four-
day ordeal and space walk and
McDivitt had. lost four pounds
of his pre-flight 156.
But as of Wednesday, they
had both recouped what they
lost—presumably most of it water..—and added a pound to.
boot. ■-..■.••     •
„ ,pr.. Charles A. Berry, flight
surgeon, Said the final densito
metry experiment ,to study the
extent of bone calcium loss, was
made Tuesday morning with X-
rays of heel and finger bones.
LIMITED ON MILK
Before that. the astronauts'
only diet restriction aboard ship
was to maintain a relatively
consistent calcium intake by
limiting them to a glass of milk
a day and eliminating other high-
calcium foods.
Some Soviet and American
reports had indicated the human
skeleton might become a little
lazy carrying weightless flesh,
and might lose some of its sub
stance. Flight doctors tend to
discount this, but wanted to
watch it anyway.
Berry said the astronauts' eyes
were perfect. Some drying of the
eyes in the first 36 hours of the
mission occurred, but it cleared
up after about a day and a half
of the flight, he added.
fn Houston, the wives of the
astronauts got a chance to see
the color movies of White's
stroll in space.
"It was just fabulous, and
even more fabulous when you
realize it's your husband out
there," said Mrs. Pat White.
Gunderson Administers
Socred Campaign Kitty
VANCOUVER (CP) - Elnar
M: Gunderson said Wednesday
that a fund known as the
British Columbia Free Enterprise Education Fund is a
Social Credit campaign kitty for
Premier Bennett's government.
He said he is in charge of it.
Mr. Gunderson, a former
Social Credit finance minister
and a top official of a number
of large government agencies,
said in an interview all donations to the fund go to B. E.
Stokes, his partner in the
accounting firm of Gunderson,
Stokes and Walton.
When asked for information,
Mr. Stokes refused even to
admit he knew of the existence
of the Social: Credit campaign
fund, which has never been
openly admitted before.
Mr. Gunderson said Mr.
Stokes "looks after receipts and
deposits in the bank .1 look after
it from there on."
, He refused to say how much
money is in the fund.
Social Credit officially declared expenses totalling 1422,769
for the 1963 election.
Mr. Gunderson said the money
is used to pay Social Credit's;
provincial election campaign
expenses and "a certain amount
of sub-rosa education propaganda on behalf of free enterprise
apart from politics."
NOTHING WRONG
He said he saw nothing
nothing wrong with the fund
because all political parties
have election campaign funds.
He said Premier Bennett, his
cabinet and Social Credit MLAs
do hot know about the money
or how much is in the fund.
He said he and Mr. Stokes
handle the finances directly
during an election campaign.
At other times the fund is kept
open in trust.
Mr. Gunderson, a close friend
of Mr. Bennett and his financial
advisor, is a director of B.C.
Hydro, the government ferry
authority, and Mr. Bennett's proposed Bank of B.C., vice-president of the Pacific Great Eastern Railway and a member of
the board of governors of the
University of B.C!
He was finance minister, in
Mr. Bennett's.first Social Credit
cabinet in 1951 but resigned in
19.54 after he was defeated in a
byelection. ' .","','
Wall Street Stag
Heavy Losses as Rumors Fly
President's Health
• v
Story Hits Markets
NEW YORK (CP) — A rumor about President
Johnson's health rattled the skittish stock market Wednesday.
As a result, prices slumped sharply around midday. Tnen tney rnaae a partial recovery and skidded
again.
Prices also were lower on
the Toronto and Montreal exchanges.
The report that swept Wall
Street was that President Johnson had suffered a heart attack. It was squelched quickly
by news reports the president
had met with a group of Iowa
business men and his physician
said he waa in "perfect health."
A spokesman for the New
York Stock Exchange sad:
'A rumor of this sort could
arise anywhere and, of course,
the exchange is particularly
concerned when it affects the
market. Consequently, we are
looking into it."
A broker commented: "I
don't know where the rumor
originated. You don't know
.whether these rumors just get
started or are planted."
Money can be made when the
stock  market is  declinng.
HIGH WATER that weakened an earth fill is believed to have caused this giant crane to fall on Its
side Tuesday night on a dike at the Arrow dam site.
The crane had. been working near a dredge at the
site (see pictures on page 3) but was not fn operation
when It fell. The crane,was being used In the building of the> dike. Crews began digging earth from under the crane on one side and pulled it from the other
with a larger machine to get it back on its wheels.
.     —DitUy News photo by Bea Ztlcca.
Russ Nuclear Secrecy
Outdated. Says Canada
UNITED NATIONS (CP) -
Canada challenged the Soviet
Union Wednesday to give up
its obsesson about secrecy and
permit disarmament agreements including on-site inspection.
Gen. E. L. M. Burns told the
commisson the Russan concern about secrecy Is outdated
and is blocking progress in disarmament negotiations.
He said the Russians' rejection of proposals to stop production of fissionable material for
weapons use and to freeze production of strategic nuclear delivery vehicles raised doubts
about their desire to halt the
arms race in these areas.
One reason the Russians have
advanced against these proposals was that they would involve inspection, Burns said.
But he added that secrecy
about the location of plants
making nuclear explosives or
vehicles was, "surely not relevant nowadays in the era of
development of nuclear weapons which now has unfortunately been reached."
Burns also spelled out Canada's views on draft resolutions
before the commission.
He indicated Canada would
vote for a draft, introduced by
Sweden, which among other
things would call on the 18-na-
tion Geneva disarmament conference "to get down to work
quickly on extending the partial
nuclear test ban treaty to cover
underground tests and on fram-
IIIIIIMIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIf
HALF  HOLIDAY
DECLARED
FOR SCHOOLS
VICTORIA (CP) — Governor
General Vanier has declared a
half holiday Friday for all
British Columbia school children. He made the announcement at a provincial government luncheon here Wednesday.
Illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
ing a treaty to prevent proliferation of nuclear weapons.
He also said Canada would
vote for a U.S. draft covering
the same points and including
proposals for halting production of fissionable weapons material and freezing production
of delivery vehicles.
Burns said Canada will vote
against two Soviet resolutions,
one calling for elimination of
foreign military bases and the
Traffic
Fatalities
Show Drop
OTTAWA (CP) - The Canadian Highway Safety Council
Wednesday announced that traffic fatalities showed a slight decline for the first quarter of this
year over the same period in
1964.
Compiled by the bureau of
statistics and released through
the council, the figures show
traffic deaths dropped to 769
from 761 for the quarter while
fatal accidents rose to 647 from
644.
"The public should be commended for holding the line in
these categories," W. Arch
Bryce, council executive director, said in an interview.
Decreases in traffic deaths
were recorded in Quebec, Saskatchewan, Alberta, the Yukon' and
Northwest Territories.
Injuries across Canada rose
to 26,942 from 26,077 but the
category showing the sharpest
rise was accidents involving
property damage which hit 76,
135, up from 64,821 in 1964, a
17.5-per-cent increase.
Total accidents rose 15 per
cent to 83,249 from 76,135.
Traffic deaths by provinces or
territories with the 1964 quarter
total bracketed: Newfoundland
9 (8); Prince Edward Island 3
(5); Nova Scotia 29 (27): New
Brunswick 32 (23); Quebec 242
(262); Ontario 272 (261); Man!
toba 35 (22); Saskatchewan 16
(31); Alberta 52 (66); British
Columbia 77 (72); Yukon and
Northwest Territories 2 (4).
second calling for. a world conference .to .seek, agreement on
prohibiting the use of nuclear
weapons.
WKP Must
Set Up Fund
VICTORIA (CP) - The Public
Utilities Commission has ordered West Kootenay Power
and Light Co. to set up a "stabilization fund" which may.
eventually be used to provide
rebates to consumers.
The commission, in an order
released Wednesday, said it was
impossible to forecast accurately
the company's financial position
over the next three or four years
because of "great uncertainties
as to the supply of electricity."
The commission had also been
unable to determine what constitutes a fair return for the
company "until a final decision
can be reached on certain matters outstanding between the
company and the commission,
including , . . terms on which
the company purchases power;"
The order said it was not
practicable at present to review
the rates now being charged by
West Kootenay and suggested
the eventual decision as to the
fair level of charges "maybe
retroactive."
The firm's initial payment into
the fund, to cover 1965 operations, will be $50,000. The order
said subsequent payments will
not exceed $50,009 a year.
US. Commander
to
WASHINGTON (AP)' - The
White House said Wednesday
discretionary authority for U.S.
ground forces to fight alongside South Vietnamese troops
was given to avoid a situation
that could easily enable the
Viet Cong to gain' great advantage.
In a statement read by the
presidental press secretary,
George E. Reedy, the White
House once again defined the
combat mission of U.S. ground
units in South Viet Nam. He
said there has been no change
in the role in recent days or
weeks.
There was some difference in
emphasis but virtually no difference in substance from prev-
ous explanations of the U.S.
role in Viet Nam,
Last Friday a military
spokesman in Saigon said U.S.
forces have a dual role: "To
be st a 11 o n e d at important
places and add to the defence,
and to participate in battle in
what we call combat support of
the government forces when it
becomes necessary."
This statement passed almost
unnoticed. Saturday, the state
department, responding to a request, defined the U.S. policy
of conducting an aggressive defence of installations. This concept did not tie down U.S.
forces to the immediate area.
NO MENTION MADE
There   was   no   mention   of
combat support. for South Viet
Nam forces until Tuesday the
state, department press officer,
Robert J. McClosky, said this
authority had been given to
Gen. William C. Westmoreland,
chief of the U.S. military assistance command in Saigon.
McCloskey said the authority
had been granted in recent
weeks.
The White House said Wednesday no new orders had been
given recently to Westmoreland. The statement declared:
"The primary rnission of
these troops is to secure and
safeguard important military
installations: like the air. base
at Da Nang. They have the. associated mission of active patrolling and securing action in
and near the areas thus safeguarded	
"If help is requested by appropriate Vietnamese commanders General Westmoreland
also has authority within the assigned mission to employ these
troops in support of Vetnamese
forces faced with aggressive attack when -other effective reserves are not available and
when in his judgment, the gen-
DOLLAR OFF
NEW YORK (CP) - Canadian
dollar down 3-64 at 92 13-32 In
terms of U.S. funds, Week ago
92 7-16.
Pound sterling down 1-32 at
$2.79 21-64.
eral military situation urgently
requires it."
If the U:S. military commander did not have this dscre-
tonary authority, the White
House said,: "a situation might
easily arise in which heavy loss
of life might occur and great
advantage might be won by the
Viet. Cong because of delays ih
communicatons."
The Viet Cong reacted to
Tuesday's state department
statement by threatening to call
for international help if U.S.
troops go into combat.
South Vietnamese
Casualties Heavy
There also was fear to the
U.S. of higher interest- rates
and tighter credit.
Wall Street reeled Tuesday
under its worst loss' since' the
assassination of president
Kennedy Nov. 22, 1963. The loss
Wednesday wasn't as steep but
was severe.
AVERAGE FALLS
The Dow Jones average of IS
industrials fell 9.21 points ta
879.84. The Assocated.. Press
60-stock average was eft 3.2 to
320.5, a low for the year.
On die Toronto Stock Ex*
change, industrials' hit a 1965-
index low at mid-day, but ps<
covered slightly near the close.
The 87-stock industrial index
closed down .20 at 166.51 after
hitting a bottom of 165.48. This
was the eighth loss in a row.
In Montrel, lasses ran . ss
high as $2 to Canada Cement,
   .„  ___      . 'i-60 h> Bahque Canadienne N».
Those who have^borrowed stock I Uonaleand 11 to Algoma Steal,
•at high prices can buy. at lower \ Stelco an* Bank ol Nova Scotia.
prices, thus repaying the borrowed stock at a profit. This
caned selling short
REACTION TYPICAt
The reaction was typical ef
the buffeting the stock market
has taken to the list four weeks
from outside nfluenoes.
After reaching a record* May
14, as measured- by the popular
averages, the market started a
slide that has continued with
only few interruptions.
Wall Street experts are at a
loss to pinpoint the reason for
the decline that has seen a
drop of almost 60 points in the
Dow Jones industrial average.
Plenty of reasons have.been
advanced   for   the   market's
Slump.
The one that has been given
the   most' attention  was  the
statement by William Mc-
Chesney Martin, chairman of
the   Federal   Reserve   Board,
last week that he found "disquieting   similarities"   between
current business conditions and
the boom that preceded the 1929
crash.
SAIGON' (Reuters) — Nearly
1,900 South Vietnamese troops
were ■ reported killed, wounded
or missing in the week ended
June 5, a U.S. military spokesman disclosed Wednesday.
U.S. losses during the same
period were 10 killed, 35
wounded and six missing or
captured.
The spokesman said the
South Vietnamese casualty total
included 530 killed, 710 wounded
and 635 missing.    '
Communist Viet Cong casualties in roughly the same period were 1,305, the spokesman said.
In the air war, U.S. Air Force
F - 195 Thunderchief fighter-
bombers raided North Viet
Nam Wednesday, bombing and
strafing bridges, military barracks, staging and supply areas
and ferry facilities. All the U.S.
planes returned safely.
In three ground actions during the last 24 hours, South
Vietnamese troops claimed to
have killed more than 200 guerrillas, losing more than 100 of
their own men.
The dead in one clash 50
miles northeast of Saigon included two U.S. military men.
Government forces lost an
additional 50 men killed, 24
wounded and 30 missing when
Viet Cong guerrillas attacked
an army training centre, a
U.S. spokesman said.
Meanwhile, some 2,500
American combat engineers began arriving in South Viet Nam
Wednesday to start work on the
construction of a huge supply
and distribution port at Cam
Ranh Bay about 190 miles northeast of Saigon.
74-Year-Old Beatnik Hits Road Again
ORILLIA, Ont. (CP)-Can-
ada's oldest beatnik is on the
move again.
This time 74-year-old Percy
Leggett, who claims he has
resigned from the human
race, may trudge the whole
2,7000 miles to Vancouver.
He says it's healthful as he
shoves a pushcart full of eating utensils and food. As always, he carries no bedroll,
preferring to sleep on the
roadside grass.
His immediate destination
is North Bay, about 100 miles
north of here. He left Hamilton, 139 miles southwest, on
May 29 because, he said in an
interview Tuesday, "I don't
like to live in a room when
the warm weather comes."
Percy last bobbed up in the
news in May, 1964, when he
became involved in a spat
with the Hamilton Midtown
Senior Centre, a senior citi-
1).
zens club, over his wearing of
shorts.
In a protest over street
maintenance he persisted in
shovelling snow in his shorts.
The senior citizens were
enraged when Percy refused
to doff his sorts In favor of
conventional long trousers.
"I will not dress for the
sake of conforming," he said
at the time.
The ensung squabble and
picture of Percy in his shorts
hit  newspapers  across  Canada.
He was still not conforming
Tuesday as he went through
here in shorts, white beard
and long hair. He shopped
around for a piece of cheese
(he's a vegetarian who refuses to cook his meals) and
had a cold shower at the
YMCA before leaving.
He said Tuesday he wasn't
sure whether he'll head for
the coast from North Bay.
"I am waiting for my (old
age) pension cheque to arrive
and then perhaps I'll move
from there."
But he's not going to change
his way of life.
He said in Hamilton years
ago: "When I got my pension
I resigned from the human
race. I began to live the way
I wanted to."
Vidorid
Welcomes
Vbhtete---
Parliament
Wednesday
By The Canadian Press
Wednesday, June 9, 1965;
The Commons spent its 13th
day on the rules changes debate,
voting down a Creditiste amendment 50 to 18.
The amendment would have
retained the right for members
to appeal rulings by the Speaker
by calling for a vote.
New Democrat Leader Douglas moved one to have future
Speaker's rulings go before a
precedent committee.
The committee would decide
whether the ruling should be
used as a precedent.in.future.
Transport Minister Pickersgill
suggested this go to the procedure committee for study.
VICTORIOCPJ -TJoverner.
General Vanier said Wednesday
intermarriage of English sad
French-speaking Canadians
would be. the effective answer t»
problems of national gnlty."
"Our only real problem Is one
of language and that could be
settled," he told a civic reception here. "It may sound absurd,
but the. answer is for all Cans*
dians to intermarry. ..'.'.
"That will effectively settle the
problem."
The Vaniers, who arrived here
Tuesday to begin what is eon.
sidered the governor-general's
last western tour before retire'
ment, leave today for Vancouver.
About 50 civic leaders (rem
this city and surrounding municipalities attended the reception
for the vice-regal couple.
Earlier in the day he visited
the new University of Victoria
campus to suburban Saanich
while Mme, Vanier spent the
morning at Queen Alexander Solarium talking- with children at
the hospital.
The Governor-General, and
Mme. Vanier attended an afternoon luncheon, tendered by Premier W. A. C. Bennett and a formal dinner Wednesday night at
Government House, the residence of Lieutenant-Governor
George Pearkes.
VANCOUVER (CP) - More
than 90 per cent of the population of B.C. will have medical
coverage when the B.C. Medical
Plan comes into effect Sept. 1,
the president-elect, of ■ the B.C.
Medical Association said Wednesday. ;;;
Middle Class Teachers
Blamed for Drop-outs
VANCOUVER (CP) - Part of
the blame for drop-outs and
vandals among lower class students was laid Wednesday at the
feet of middle class school teachers,
R. A. Helling of the University
of Windsor said teachers — especially in Ontario — are strongly middle class and can't understand many .of. the. problems of
economically deprived students.
He said these students often
resent their' middle class teachers and take it out in school vandalism.
"If there is much vandalism
at a school, the first place I
would look is toward the teachers."
Prof. Helling told the Canadian Political Science Association schools are biased toward
middle class students and the
lower class student has a hard
time.
"His parents have no tradition
of learning, and difficulties in
the school cause him to drop out
first mentally — staring out the
window, truancy — then physically," he said.
h
__________________________
 2^tNELSQN DAILY NEWS, THURS., JUNE 10, 1?65
Lo Vo Rogers School Awards Winners
FOR ONE WEEK
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Shows 7:00-9:10
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'65 Studebaker
CANADA'S OWN CAR
KING-SIZE comfort in a low-priced car
The 1965 Studebaker is a common-sense car in styling as well as
engineering, No wasted space in front, for easier road viewing.
No excess space in the rear, far easy maneuverability. Studebaker
puts all its attention to COMFORT in the middle-where the
passengers are. Plenty of length for legs. Plenty of height for
hats as well as heads. Plenty of width for hips. Six adults can
sit comfortably on foam padded seats - full sized seats. And the
floors are flat for easy getting-in and getting-out,.Come intake a look, take a drive, make a deal.
Studebaker
CANADA'S   OWN   CAR
0
6ee your local Studebaker Dealer
BILL'S MOTOR-IN LIMITED
•    213 Baker Street
0
ATHLETIC AND SOCIAL awards winners at recent ceremonies of L. V. Rogers Secondary High School are, left to right, back row: Jim Boyce, recipient
of the Ken Yale Trophy lor outstanding track; Mike MacLachlan, winner of
the House D Shield; Gary Johnson, who won'the West Kootenay Wrestling
Trophy; Don Ross, winner of the Basketball Trophy. Front row, left to right
are: Judy Blddlecombe, outstanding girl In traek event; Mary Burns, winner
of the Ken Yale art award; Sue Thast, West Koctenay Volleyball champ; and
Barbie Wait, who won the Imperial Bank Trophy for House Track.
Best all around students proudly presenting their plaques are, left to
right, Pat Deakln, Heather Kitto and Mike Murison. Presentations were made
at awards day ceremonies Monday afternoon at L. V. Rogers Secondary
High School.
Hajek Guilty..
Manslaughter..
Sentence Today
Jiroms "Hardrock" Hajek of
Arrowhead was found guilty here
Wednesday of a reduced charge
of manslaughter in the shooting
and beating death of his neighbor Thomas Mell last Feb. 20.
Mr. Justice Angelo Branca will
pass sentence on the 54-year-old
logger • prospector at the conclusion of the three day old
West Klootenay Criminal.Assize
this morning at 9:30 a.m.
Hajek, a bachelor, had been
arraigned on a charge of noncapital murder.
After foreman C. M. Stiatosky
of Nelson delivered the all-male
Jury's verdict, following two
hours and 22 minutes of deliberations, Justice Branca made an
exception to a personal rule and
told the Jurors he "heartily concurred" with their decision.
The muttering, blood stained
form of the 71-year-old welfare
recipient, Mell, was found o nthe
kitchen floor of his cabin by
neighbors about 0:45 p.m. He
died of shock arising from mill'
tiple injuries to his head and
body the following morning in
Revelstoke Hospital,
In his charge to the jury, Justice Branca put marked stress
on the accused's statements as
recorded by RCMP constables
Joseph Luster and W. E. Mason
In the police cruiser thst night.
He left to the jury's discretion
if Constable Luster's demeanor
In Ihe witness box was that of an
"opinionated,  obstinate,  orbit-
Sullivan Creek Fire
Reported Under Control
CASTLEGAR — B.C. Forestry
officials here report the Sullivan
Creek tire is under control.
A fire guard has been built
around the fire and it will have
to be patrolled for some time.
Only one bulldozer and 35
men were working Wednesday
which officials reported was a
very quiet day.
The wind was down and the
humidity was up seven points.
The fire started last Thursday
when high winds fanned a
smouldering stump from an old
burn Into a brush fire.
The high winds of last Sundsy
turned it Into a raging forest
fire which threatened the buildings of Hadikin's mill approximately 10 miles south-west of
here.
Monday six bulldozers, 55
men, five pumps, six chain saws
and a helicopter were moved In
Cranbrook
ttttuvt pARAO.e co. i__f____
Natal
NATAI. TRUCK t> CAR SALES
Air Cadets
Review Tonight
Group Captain K. C. Maclure
will review 581 Squadron Royal
Canadian Air Cadets at their
annual inspection in Fairview
this evening.
He will be accompanied by J.
H. Walkey, Parent Unit Liaison
Officer, J. H. Glen John, Air
Cadet Liaison Officer and J, R,
Fournler, B.C. Provincial Committee Representative.
STARLIGHT
DRIVE • IN
Tonight, Friday and Saturday
Time 6:60 p.rh.
"THE BIRDS"
Rod Taylor, Alfred Hitchcock
CASTLE Theatre
Castlegar, B.C.
Tonight and Friday
7:00 and 9:00 p.m.
"ALL THE WAY HOME"
Robert Preston, Jean Simmons
CARTOON and SHORT
AUTO-VUE
drive-in
Trail, B.C.
Tonight and Friday
6:05 P.M.
"LOVE IS A BALL"
Glen Ford, Hope Lange
SHORTS
WATCH
BILLY GRAHAM
CRUSADE
7:30 P.M. - CHANNEL 4
Every Evening to
Thursday, June 10th.
LAYMO
SATURDAY
CLUB  '65
CITATIONS
DRIUE
to fight the fire which covered
over 330 acres.
The men and equipment were
used to clear a guard around
the centre of the fire.
Propose Gas
Rate Reduction
PRINCE GEORGE (CP)-In-
land Natural Gas Co. Ltd. Is
proposing a rate reduction, B. R.
Stokes, comptroller ot the company, said in an Interview from
Vancouver Tuesday.
Inland has made representations to the public utilities commission which sets rate schedules and makes any amendments.
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiriiiii
HUNTER SHOT
AT ELK VALLEY
SPARWOOD - J. O'Neill, of
Green Bey, Wisconsin, Is Improving la Lethbridge Municipal hospital following a hunting accldeat at Elk Valley 2«
miles from Natal Monday
morning.
At 5:30 a.m. O'Neill was
shot at close range by a .357
Magnum' revolver while bear
hunting.
Tbe bullet entered his right
side and came out Ms lett
buttock.
He was taken to Michel Hospital, then transferred to Lethbridge where an operation was
performed.
IIMIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
Chain Collision
Damage $400
A chain collision Saturday
morning resulted in estimated
aggregated damage 6f $400.
lit making a left turn W. W.
Verner of Kaslo stopped hit half
ton pick-up at the intersection
of Front and Josephine Streets
to allow traffic to clear.
A second car heading west
and driven by J. A. Clarmont of
NelsOn stopped behind the Ver
ner vehicle. A wrecker heading
west and driven by L. J. Evans
of Nelson then collided with the
Clarmont vehicle, which then
collided with the Verner vehicle.
No one was injured in the
accident.
$1.00 I
. JUST ARRIVED!
THE STORY OF
WINSTON CHURGHILL
ahd of
JOHN F. KENNEDY
By EARL SCHENCK MIEftS
69*
(ILLUSTRATED)
SAMPLE'S
NELSON
PHARMACY   LTD.
"Your Fortress of Health''
SSI Baker I*. Netoos
PhOM IMJM
The helicopter was used for
reconnaissance flights and to
dump water on spot fires that
were not within the centre area.
The fire has been burning In
old logging slash and decadent
hemlock and cedar.
High winds Sunday fanned the
fire and blew sparks, causing
the fire to spread. New fires
were found over two hundred
yards away from the fire.
Assistant forest ranger G. Doi
was in charge of fighting the
fire.
Injures Hand
At CPR Shop
Canadian Pacific Railway employee, P, Gensci is reported in
good condition in Kootenay Lake
Hospital following an accident in
the CPR shops Monday afternoon.
Gensci suffered severe lacerations to his right hand.
CPR officials are investigating.
Local Oldtimer
Dies Aged 89
Mrs. Josephine Johnson, a Nelson oldtimer, died here Wednesday at the age of 89.
Born in Perstorp, Sweden, on
April 5, 1876, she came to Can'
ada at the turn of the century.
She married the late Andrew
Johnson at Wlnipeg in 1603. The
couple came to Nelson in 1606,
and lived in the district since
that time.
Her husband pre-deceased her
in 1938.
Mrs. Johnson had made Several trips back to her home in
Sweden. She lived in the Terrace Apartments with her
brother-in-law,, the late Mr. Mlc-
kelson, until 1961. She has lived
in various parts of Nelson since.
She was a past chief, and also
a life member Of Nelson No, 16
Temple of the Pythian Sisters.
She leaves no known relatives.
COUNCIL JOTTINGS
Trucks in Alley
Threat to Children
City trucks using the alley
behind 7th Street constitute a
threat to neighborhood children,
Mrs. T. R. Hubbard told council
members at their regular meeting Monday night.
Appearing on behalf of 16
petitioners disturbed over the
continued lack of storm sewers,
paving and curbing on 7th
Street, Mrs. Hubbard said there
was "too much traffic for a
residential street," and that
gravel and cement trucks, at
well ss other vehicular traffic
represented a menace to children who used the 7th Street
alley because of the lack of a
nearby playground. "This has
gone on for years," she added.
C. D. Likar, superintendent of
public works, explained that the
situation was only temporary,
and that the truck traffic was
precipitated by work being done
on a retaining wall on 8th
Street. He added that 7th Street
had been oiled periodically to
improve the condition of the
thoroughfare which would receive more attention by his department as soon ss the retaining wall was completed. This
was 'confirmed by Mayor E. T.
Bodard who acknowledged the
prbolem faced by residents in
that area- and promised the
matter would be attended to ss
soon as city labor was available,
Woman Injured
In Car Crash
A North Shore woman was
hospitalized following a two-car
collision at the corner of Cedar
and Front Streets Tuesday
morning.
Mrs. C. E. Cummins was going
north on Cedar, stopped for the
stop sign and then proceeded to
make a left turn onto Front
Street. A car heading east on
Front Street was In collision
with the Cummins vehicle. The
driver of the vehicle was not
identified.
Aggregate combined damage
is estimated at $406.
Mrs. Cummins sustained a
fracture of her right arm.
A hoi* la th* roae} suddenly 0TW>*ar*d n*or
th* intersection of C*dtt and Vernon Wh*n a six
lath water main underneath th* road developed a
leak Tuesday afternoon. No damage was done other
than the hole and a slight depression along the
road above the main- Th* mean has been fixed and
the rood will be repaired this morning.
An amendment to the city
trades license bylaw stipulating
that transient businessmen put
up a cash or bond guarantee of
$260 was finally approved after
an original motion advocating
removal of the guarantee was
defeated.
"We're losing trades license
revenues,' 'declared Aid, D. F
Porteous, who made the first
motion to eliminate the $206 cash
bond for new resident businessmen which found disfavour with
Aid. MacMillan, who'thought the
change would be unfair to
established businessmen in the
city,
Also approved was a recom
mendatlon by the garage and
transportation committee for in.
stallation of two five-speed transmissions on two Brill buses,
money to be furnished out of the
city's contingency fund.
A letter from the B.C. Association of Assessors outlining the
date of its annual conference was
received and filed, as was a
report from Fire Chief Elwyn
Owens on the California Fire
Chiefs' Conference held May 17
toJl.
Received for study was a
letter from the International Cooperation Year, B.C. Committee,
seeking local extension of its
program and support of its
Ideals.
Permission was given a local
building firm tor parking of a
66-foot display trailer in front of
its place of business on Baker
Street for a period of half a day.
Extension of a building permit
to a local construction company
was denied since there was no
provision in the existing bylaw
to permit change.
An offer from John Pbje for
rental to the city of a crawler
tractor at an hourly rate of
$12.00 an hour with operator fuel
and repairs was received and
filed.
Complaint from R, E. William
Turner, pertaining to condition
of the boulevard on the 400 block
of Richards Street was referred
to the public works and parks
departments tor study. A request for city assistance from
the Lakeside Park Lswn Bowling Club on grounds keeping was
referred to Aid. D. F. POrteous
for report.
Concern over dumping in
Cottonwood Creek expressed in
a letter to council from J. W.
Steed, was referred to the public
works department for further
study.
The resignation of city engineer, C, M, Robson, wat accepted by council as ot June 5.
rary" or fair witness, while tha
testimony of Constable Mason
showed he was not "opinionated,
obstinate or arbitrary", In giving a fair recollection of the
events surrounding the taking of
Hajek's statement,
Earlier in the trial Justice
Branca and defence counsel Norman Littlewood of Kamloops had
challenged Constable Luster's
opinion that the accused was not
drunk at the time of the statement. Constable Mason said his
first impression of the accused
was similar to that of Constable
Luster, but "I gathered irom the
reports and what I have heard
since that he must have been impaired."
Among the five witnesses tha
crown produced Wednesday
morning, one placed Hajek in
the victim's porch about the
time of the assault.
By the aid of a flashlight, B.C.
Forest Service man P. R. Russell and his house guest M. D.
Toma saw a conscious Mell
slumped against the porch wall
attempting to ward off the prod-
dings of s shotgun barrel and recognized the voices of Hajek and
Mell.   '
When Mr. Russell left to telephone the RCMP, Mr. Toma saw
Hajek on the porch; grasping the
complete united 20 guage shot
gun in his hands. A 20 guage
shotgun, dismembered into three
pieces was later found in Hajek's
bedroom and a piece of tbe gun
stock in the Mell residence, The
same occurred with'pieces of a
battered flashlight.
The two men taw Hajek about
a half sn hour later In front of.
Mr. Russell's home. Both cccom-
panied him back to his cabin to
keep him from carrying out his
threat of "going back to his
shack to barricade himself In
and shoot it out," when the police arrived.
Both agreed that the accused
was in a highly excitable state
but conversation produced s
more relaxed Hajek. They disagreed on his alcoholic state at
6 p.m.
Mr. Russell, who saw the accused in his home, ssid his appearance and manner was normal, while Mr. Toma, who encountered Hajek outside on the .
snow packed road, said he staggered and smelled of liquor.
In
ROBSON
Fashion
Beauty
Salan
Phone
S65-664J
Soothes, Rests and Refreshes
Tender, Tired, Sensitive
Feet.
DR. SCHOLL'S
FOOT  BALM
$1.25
at
Mayo Pharmacy
Ltd.
Ph. $52-2613       Nelson, B.C.
Corner Baker and Ward Sts.
SUMMER
DISCOUNTS
Buy Your
COAL
Now!! and Save
CHOQUETTE
FUELS
522 Vernon St. Nelson
PHONE 852-7535
LIFE
Contact
John Swetlishnoff
Box 806 Grand Forks, B.C.
Buiineii; phone 442-8633
Horn*: Phone 442-3390
 Stock Quotations
The Dally News does not bold ItseU responsible In the event
ol an error to the following lists.
Closing  prices supplied  by   Doherly,  Roadhoust 4b
McCuaig Bros., Trail, B.C.
TORONTO
INDUSTRIALS
Abitibi 12.12
Algoma Steel     69.00
Alta. Gas Trunk 36.00
30.00
20.00
14.12
64.00
73.75
32.75
27.62
20.75
64.00
27.00
21.25
Aluminum
Argus
Argus C Pfd
Bank of Mont.
Bank of N.S.
Bathurst Power 26.75
Bell Telephone 59.50
B.A. Oil
B.C. Forest
B.C.Packers A
B.C. Telephone
Burns It Co.
Calg. Power
Can. & D. Sugar 25.75
Can. Cement 52.00
Can. Iron 49.00
Can. Breweries 9.50
Can. Canners 14.87
Can. Industries 20.62
Can. Imp. Bank 64.37
Can. Pac. Rly 59.75
Chemcell 16.87
Col. Cellulose 9.00
Cons. Min. & S. 41.50
Cons. Paper 42.50
Cons. Gas. 13.37
Crestbrk. Timber 5.25
Dom. Bridge 26.50
Dist. Seagrams 38.75
Dom. Foundries 26.75
Dom. Stores 24.00
D. Electrohomc 11.59
Dom. Tar & C.
Dom. Textiles
Eddy Match Co.
Eddy Paper
Falconbridge
Famous Players 25.50
Fanny Farmer 43.12
Ford of Can. 149.00
Greyhound 11.50
Gen. Steel Wares 13.25
Goodyear 182.00
Gt. Lakes Power 32.00
Husky Oil 11.87
Home Oil A 18.87
Hudson Bay Co 13.00
Imperial Oil 51.75
Imp. Tobacco 14.37
Ind. Minerals 8.12
Inland Nat. Gas 10.00
Intl. Utilities 32.50
Int. Nickel 93.75
Interprov. Pipe  90.00
Interprov. Steel
Laurentlde
Loblaw B
Massey Ferg.
20.12
35.00
38.50
12.62
97.00
5.E
17.50
9.75
29.6!
MacM Powell R 31.75
Molson Brew. A 38.62
53.75
69.25
8.75
50.25
13.62
10.62
41.50
14.12
11.00
74.50
24.50
12.75
16.62
27.50
35.50
29.25
15.12
53.50
.72
6.55
7.25
4.95
15.00
.11
Mont. Loco.
Moore Corp.
MGF Manage.
Noranda
Ogilvie Flour
Pacific Pete
Price Bros
Power Corp.
Que. Nat. Gas
Royal Bank
Rothmans
Salada Foods
Shell Oil
Simpsons
Southam
Steel of Can.
Traders Fin. A
TfiX8C0
Trans Mtn. Pipe 20.00
Trans Can. Pipe 34.87
Union Carbide   28.12
Un. Gas of Can. 27.00
Walker • Gooder. 38.50
Westcoast Trans. 15.12
Weston Geo. A   19.25
Woodwards A     25.00
Zenith Elect.      3.50
MINES AND OILS
Advocate 5.90
Agnico 1.31
At. Coast Cop.    1.21
Aunor 3.75
Barnat
Bethlehem Cop.
Banff Oils
Bralorne
Brunswick
Cadamet
Calg. & Edmtn, 23.25
Campbell Chib    4.25
Can. Delhi
Campbell R.L,
Cariboo Gold
Cassiar Asb.
Central Del Rio
Central Patricia 1.31
Charter Oil
Chlmo
Chesklrk
Coch. Will
Copper Man.
Consol. Rambler 1.78
Cons. Halliwell     .38
Cons. Mogul       4.55
Conwest
Copper Corp.
Cowichan Cop.
Craigmont
Denison
Dickenson
East Malartic
East Sullivan
First Maritimes
Fargo
Frobex
Gt. Plains Dev.
Giant Mascot
Giant Yel.
Granduc
Gunnar Mines
Highland BeU
Hollinger
Hastings M & D 3.25
Hudson Bay Mg 71.50
Hudson Bay Oil 16.75
Hydra Ex
Iron Bay
Iso
Kerr Addison
Key Anacon
Labrador
Lake Dufault
Leitch
Little Long Lac
Lorado
Madsen
Malartic
Mattagaml Lake 17.62
Mclntyre
McWaters
McKenzie
Midcon
North Can. Oils
North Cal.
National Pete
New Jason
New Hosco
Norlex
,.r.l:::.:: ":;:::tr
12.25
69.25
36.50
30.25
20.25
14.50
64.25
74.50
27.25
59.75
33.00
28.00
23.00
65.00
27.25
21.50
26.25
52.50
49.50
9.75
15.12
21.37
64.50
59.37
17.25
9.12
41.75
43.12
13.50
6.(0
27.00
39.00
27.00
24.25
11.75
20.37
35.25
30.00
13.00
98.00
26.00
44.00
150.00
12.00
13.75
189.00
32.25
12.00
19.00
13.25
52.25
14.50
3.50
10.25
32.75
94.25
90.25
5.75
17.75
9.87
29.87
32.00
39.00
54.00
69.50
9.75
50.37
13.75
10.75
41.87
14.37
11.12
75.00
25.00
12.87
16.87
27.62
37.00
29.37
15.25
54.50
20.12
35.00
28.25
27.50
38.75
15.25
19.50
25.50
3.00
5.9S
1.33
1.23
3.80
.75
6.65
7.40
5.00
15.25
.lift
24.25
4.30
3.05
> STOCKS
Normetal
4.50
4.60
Northgate
8.30
8.40
Opemiska
8.75
8.80
Ormsby
.42
.44
PCE Explor.
.19
.20
Orchan
4.65
4.70
Petrol 0 4 G
.73
.74
Permo
.25
•25Vi
Pickle Crow
.36
.40
Pine Point
46.25
47.00
Place Gas
.60
.62
Placer
24.00
24.87
Patino
8.45
8.50
Preston
9.65
9.90
Provo
2.50
2.54 -
Que. Manitou
.16
.17
Quebec Lithium
3.00
3.25
Quemont
10.87
11.25
Radiore
.42
.44
Raglan
1.94
1.95
Rayrock
1.03
1.06
Reeves Mac
2.80
3.00
Rio Algom
17.25
17.50
San Antonio
.23
.24
Sarimco
.20
.2313
Sheep Creek
1.35
1.38
Sherritt Gordon
5.60
5.65
Silver Standard
1.26
1.30
Siscoe
2.05
2.15
Steep Rock
6.50
6.60
Sullivan Con.
4.40
4.45
Teck Corp.
5.65
:  6.70
Torbrit
.53
.57
Triad Oil.   ,
2.46
• 2.53
Tribag
2.68
2.70
Union Oil
16.25
17.00
United Keno
7.00
7.15
Upper Canada
1.41
1.42
Violamac
3.80
3.85
Western Mines
4.60
4.70
Wright Harg.
.67
' .70
Wilroy
1.70
1.73
West, Beaver
.21  .
.22
Zulapa Mines
.32
• .33
Vancouver
Slocks
5.75
4.50
26.25
9.00
.74
.28
.17
15.12
.44
.49
.14
.20
.55
.30
.41
.18
.30
.58
INDUSTRIALS
Burrard Mort
Growers A
Growers B
Sun Pub. A
Sun Pub. B
Int. Brew B
MINES AND OILS
Dundee
Earlcrest
Coast Cop.
Canam Cop.
Endako
Copper Soo
Galaxy
Crown Sliver
London Pride
Dolly Varden
Lytton
Huestis
Magnum
McKinney
New Cronin
Mt. Washington
New Imperial        —
Peace River Pete .4114
Pend Oreille       3.95
Silver Ridge
Skeena Silver
Trojan
Torwest
Van Tor Oil
Western Expl
Utica Mines
FUNDS
AU. Can. Com.
All. Can. Div.
Amer. Growth
Can. Inv. Fund
Com. tot.
First Oil & Gas
Investors. Growth 8.66
Inv. Int. Mutual 5.30
Inv. Mutual.
Leverage
Div. Income
Mutual Accum,
Mutual Bond
Mutual Inc.
United Ace.
5.00
4.40
26.75
27.75
9.25
.75
.29
13.25
.18
15.50
.46
,50
.15
.15
.16
.13
.70
.0514
.08
1.75
6.54
8.61
11.52
4.15
10.77
5.50
4.91
9.89
6.03
4.96
8.35
6.37
8.87
.26
.32
.44
.19
.35
.60
2.03
.42
4.50
.18
.17
.15
.71
.06
.13
7.17
9.44
12.59
4.56
11.30
6.01
9.42
5.76
5.39
10.84
6.63
5.42
8.75
6,97
There are about 1,600 known
asteroids, tiny planets that orbit
the sun.
pleasing new taste
Serve cold • on the rocks
or with your favourite mixer
WESTCOAST WINES
Thli ■dvirtlittnant Ii not published er
dliplaysd by th* Liquor control Boird or
by thi Govirnmtnt ol Brltiih Columbia.
NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURS., JUNE 10, 1965—3
Kinnaird Has Water Problems
Kinnaird Commission OK's
Bylaws Totalling $244,000
KINNAIRD - Kinnaird  Vil-, that   the   sewage   is   passed    A young girl with her bronze
lage Commission this week pass-
ed a $163,000 water bylaw, a
blacktopping bylaw for $81,000.
Lowest bid received for the
water system was $160,031, with
$35,000 for a water tank and
$15,000 for engineering costs. The
lowest bid for blacktopping was
$68,185 plus engineering costs.
The commission will meet
Thursday with the engineering
firm to go over the figures in detail.
Approval was given a subdivision proposed by Bob Finner
with the stipulation that he would
have to take ten feet off the road
and apply it to the lot,
A report from the medical
health officer. Dr. N. Schmitt,
indicated that the turbidity is
within acceptable limits and
chlorination would still make the
water safe to drink.
A report on the sewage disposal at the damsite indicated
through a large septic tank into j certificate in life saving has been
a dozing chamber where it is hired to watch over the young
chlorinated   before   being   dis-1 children at the shallow end.
charged into the river.
The chlorinator was installed
June 4. "This treatment should
eliminate any addiitonal health
hazard downstream," he concluded.
| A report from CBA Engineering showed hardness of water in
Kinnaird taken February 5, at
well No, 1, as 204; April 7 at
well No. 2 as 196 and April 9
at well No. 3 as 173.
KINNAIRD — The water supply was main topic of
concern at this week's village commission meeting, Commissioner Simpson's tear that the pump might kick out
alter the big dredge started became a reality when the
pumps did stop Monday.
This caused some hot discussion among commissioners with I. Milligan, reservoirs engineer, on the
receiving end oi some com
plaints,
Mr. Milligan said that "a daily
check on water at Kinnaird is
being made and at no time has
the turbidity been dangerous to
health." Mr. Milligan was referring to silt from the giant
dredge which is in use at the
damsite.
Mr, Milligan said, "We said
AT EDGEWOOD
Protective Association
Discusses Hydro Requests
EDGEWOOD-A public meeting of the Edgewood-Needles-
Fauquier Citizens' Protective Association was held recently in
the Edgewood Legion Hall with
Randolph Harding, MLA,
tendance also,
Mr. Harding gave a talk and
conducted a question period on
various cases he has handled in
in at- connection with the B.C. Hydro's
property dealings.
The Protective Association has
received a letter from a woman
who owns lakeshore property in
Fauquier and for which Hydro
has offered her $50 an acre. Similar cleared property in the same
area has received an offer of $65.
The meeting discussed and
approved the following requests
which have been submitted to
B.C. Hydro:
—We ask that the sequence of
appraisal be changed to given
areas instead of the informal
plan now being used.
—We ask that when a property
is directly and/or indirectly affected, whereas Hydro may
flood only a portion of the land,
the owner be given the option of
whether the remaining land is
purchased or compensated for.
—We ask that our senior citizens be given more consideration as to resettlement and property values.
—That they be allowed a period of one year, the same as
the DVA, for re-establishment
we would drill the wells. We have
drilled the three wells with Vi
million gallons of water a day.
"We now have three wells, two
operating and one will be operating this weekend. No 1 produces
360,000 gallons per day. No. 2
well produces 650,000 gallons
and No. 3 one million gallons.
We put the wells in and as far
as we're concerned they are still
ours as they are not complete.
No. 3 we had a bearing problem
in the motor, and have brought
in a new motor. These are the
best motors that are put out. As
soon as these wells and pumps
are operating smoothly we will
turn them over with all the
instructions. We will also have a
man in the area you can call
on for assistance.
"Before we came along you
had two pumps with no standby.
Now you have three pumps besides your river standby.
Chairman Carl Loeblich said,
"When we were on the river we
had 1300 gallons a minute. We
are not getting the capacity that
we had on the river.
Public works foreman Kurt
Waterman noted "we had both
pumps going but we had to cut
in on the river or we would have
been out of water."
Bill Weir, of CBA Engineering,
said "At the present time we
are not producing the full
amount because we are not
finished."
Mr. Rust pointed out that
"power cost for pumping in the
past has been $6000 a year. Mr.
Weir said it would be a 40 per
cent increase."
Mr. Weir answered the power
cost question with "As the
system is going to cost you
nothing, the extra cost of operating could be considered a salvage price for the whole system."
The reservoirs engineer pointed out that "When I first talked
to you, your greatest concern
was to get out of the river. This
way you have a choice. There
will be times when it will be
quite safe to use the river
water."
In reply to a question from
Mr. Loeblich, Mr. Milligan replied, "We pay the treatment,
Celgar Is paying their own
operation and Celgar has accepted their complete system.
Trail is still not complete.
Mr. Rust told the delegation
of five B.C. Hydro representatives that he would like to study'
the power problem and discuss
it with them further.
Insect Warning
To Fruit Growers
CRESTON - Fruit growers in
Creston Valley and earlier areas
of West Kootenay were warned
Wednesday that codling moth is
now active.
Control sprays should be applied no later than June 11,
W. S. Peters, district horticulturist, said.
MELTS ICE
Russia's atomic icebreaker
Lenin uses steam from its nuclear engine to melt extra-thick
Arctic ice.
THUNDER NEVER STOPS
Only the earth's polar regions
are free of thunderstorms, 1,800
of which are occurring somewhere at all times.
before being penalized with regards to their medical and social
allowances.
—We ask that a more fair,
sympathetic and generous approach be given to the appraisal
of owners of real property.
—We ask that the prices currently being paid by Hydro ior
uncleared land at $50 per acre
and cleared land at $65 be upped
to a more realistic value.
FIRST STEP in building of coffer dam at the Arrow dam site near Castle-
gar is being carried out here. Big truck is being loaded by a drag line as earth
and mud is dug down to more .solid material.
;*-"•*'•-,._■'■"■ .wW* ...
   Mjlnljll j]), *i   >*   4i«*w»
BUSINESS END of dredge shows round cutter head, an "eggbeater"
type of Marine Pipeline and Dredge eguipment, which picks up mud and silt
from the Columbia River bottom and carries it through pipe on floats in background, further downstream. This is second step in building of coffer dam.
SPECIAL    C Al E
CLEARANCE 5 ALt
Sangstercraft 14 ft. Fibreglas Deluxe Runabout
Ready-to-Go With 25 h.p. C<
Motor and Controls ....
SANGSTERCRAFT, 8-fT. DINGHY  $125.00
3mWl
BOAT TRAILERS
*14900 and up
1965 Johnson
MOTORS
50-1 Gas-Oil Ratio
2-Year Warranty
33 h.p., Up
OLD AND NEW. This old windmill is all that's left of a former way
of living. In background, largest dredge in western Canada is being put together by Sceptre Dredge. Across the river is the pumphouse for the Celgar
water line. The dredge works to a depth of 100 ieet.
COLEMAN
ELECTRIC LTD.
502 Front St.
Phone 352-3175
NELSON, B.C.
TERMS AVAILABLE
TRADES   ACCEPTED
 Sfalamt laily Nnua
Established April 22. 1802 Nelson,    B. C.
Published by the NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,
266 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia, mornings except
Sundays and holidays in the centre ot the Kootenays with
the largest daily circulation in the Interior oi B.C.
Authorized a» Second Class  Mail.  Posi Office Department, Ottawa,
and for Payment ot Postage in Cash
MEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS
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The Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication ot all news
dispatches credited to it or lo the Associated Press or Reuters in this
paper and als< the local news published herein.
Thursday, June 10, 1965	
Baker Street Speedway
Any Friday or Saturday night late . . . and quite often on other
nights too . . . the Nelson Business district assumes a complete new character.
There Is a squealing of tires ... the grating drone of Hollywood
mufflers blasting the sound barrier ... a blare ol raucous, piercing horns
. .'■. and the din of screeching young voices.
Baker Street assumes all the characteristics of a drag strip as roaring cars room its length.
It is time that definite steps were taken to end this nuisance that beleaguers the city during the late night hours.
Residents living in areas adjoining the business district are disturbed by the unnecessary noise, and certainly normal traffic is endangered
by the antics.
The alleyways and side streets in the downtown area are being used as race tracks, creating a dangerous situation for other drivers and pedestrians, and a noise and dust nuisance for residents.
Possibly one answer to the problem lies with the Baker Street traffic
lights. It is possible that leaving these lights in operation during the late
night and early morning hours would tend to control such drivers to a degree.
However, the real answer lies with more rigid patrolling of the busi-
ness section during the night and early morning. This would undoubtedly
provide a problem for the Nelson Police Department due to manpower limitation!.
The situation is serious enough though that certainly some steps
should be taken to bring it under control.
The streets of Nelson should be safe for children, pedestrians and all
drivers at all hours of the day. No license has yet been issued granting anyone merighttoturntheniin^^
U.S. Workers in Canada
It is unrealistic to suggest that    create an artificial situation which
Canadian firms should have to pay
U. S. wages to induce citizens of that
country to work in Canada.
Yet that appears to have been
what was suggested during a recent
luncheon address here by a U.S.
citizen who operates a business in
Calgary.
He acdd (hot U Canada wants
U.S. citizens to come to this country
to work, and to stay and become Canadian citizens, they must be paid
wages comparable to those they can
get in the U.S.
The proposal does not make
sense, economically. The level of
wages paid in Canada is related directly to the standard of living,
which is below that of the U.S. The
standard of living is a reflection of
general productivity which is a measure of the nation's wealth and prosperity. Productivity rates are higher
in the U.S., so that country can afford
to pay its workers higher wages.
To pay all workers in Canada at
the higher U.S. rates would be to
would soon collapse like the celebrated house of cards. To pay only
U.S. workers in Canada at the higher
rates would result in a lesser degree
of economic artificiality. But it would
make all Canadians second-class
citizens in their own country because
they would be unable to enjoy as
high a standard oi living as citizens
irom the U.S.
The U.S. business man seemed
to base his premise on the assumption that Canada needs U.S. citizens.
Canada has always welcomed newcomers from Ihe U.S. but its need
for them has never been desperate,
at least not so desperate that it was
considered necessary to put a silver
spoon in their mouths when they
crossed the border.
It has been found that many U.S.
workers are eager to come here and
work on an equal basis with Canadians, Those unable to withstand the
rigors of the living standard have
not been induced to remain.
Calgary Herald,
h There Life on Mars? . . . Answer May Be Near
Uranium Deal
Most Canadians will approve the
action taken by the federal government in an attempt to clear away
the obstacles to the proposed deal
ior the sale of $700,000,000 worth of
uranium to France.
The government has secured the
agreement of Great Britain and the
United States to use Canadian uranium for peaceful purposes only. This
condition has never been attached
to sales to these countries before.
The fact that it was the government's intention to place this restrc-
tion on France has been a stumbling
block during negotiations with that
country.
Removal of this element of discrimination may now spur completion of the deal which would greatly
benefit the Canadian economy during the term of the twenty-five-year
contract reportedly being sought by
France.
Ottawa would have left itself
wide open for criticism if it had let
this opportunity pass through its
hands because of the moral stand il
had taken.
It has been able to get Itself off
the hook for the time being, at least,
because the peaceful-use restriction
happens to suit US. policy against
proliferation of nuclear weapons,
and also because the U.S. and British nuclear stockpiles are already
so big that they no longer need to be
increased.
France is not in- such an advan
tageous position. It wants uranium
to use in building a nuclear arsenal.
Unless it has another undisclosed
source of the mineral, lt may still
balk at the restriction on proposed
Canadian purchases. The amount of
uranium France would use for peaceful purposes seems comparatively
limited and hardly would seem to
warrant a $700,000,000 contract.
With justification, France may
yet want to know by what right one
nation can stipulate the uses to be
put on any commodity sold to another after it has passed out of its
hands.
Canada does not cut a very striking or realistic figure in the mantle
of self-righteousness it has chosen to
put on, Regardless of how much federal leaders would like to believe it,
issues of this kind are not going to
be solved independently by small
nations. It will not be Canada that
decides what the world will do by
laying down its own set of rules, in
this case after the game has been in
progress for some time.
It may be that France will decide
to humor Canada. Its leaders know
full well that, in an emergency, if it
is still on the side of the Western allies, it will be able to get all the Canadian uranium it wants and use it
the way it sees fit.
By DR. R, S. RICHARDSON
Written for the AP
Scientific papers can be pretty
dull. I think this discussion
about life on Mars will make
easier reading if it is broken up
into questions and answers. It
is presented here as a conversation between an astronomer
who is a skeptic when it comes
to life on Mars, and an individual who is all for having life
on the red planet. We will call
them A and X.
X—Do you believe there is
life on Mars?
A—I consider it very unlikely
especially any high forms of
life.
Look at climatic conditions.
The whole planet is a desert—a
cold desert. Probably something like the plateau of Tibet.
Tibet is a high-altitude desert
. . . empty . . . bleak . . .bare.
Yet Tibet would be a paradise compared with Mars. At
least you can breathe in Tibet.
But on Mars you couldn't
breathe because there is no
oxygen in the atmosphere.
X—But astronomers are always talking about the "maria"
of Mars. Maria means "seas,"
doesn't it?
A—Until around 1890 we believed the grey-green or grey-
blue areas in the southern hemisphere were real maria—seas
and oceans. Now we're sure
they're dry land like the bright
reddish brown deserts surrounding them.
X—But there is water on
Mars. The polar caps prove
that.
A—I'll grant you a little water. But not much. I doubt if
there is enough water on the
whole planet to fill one of the
Great Lakes.
X—If water is so scarce then
how do you account for the
darkening of the maria in the
spring? You don't deny the
darkening, do you?
A—No, everybody is agreed
that as the polar cap begins to
shrink in the southern spring
the maria around it grow
darker. This darkening spreads
across the maria to the equator
and even beyond. What it can
be is very puzzling.
X—What's puzzling about it?
Vegetation has been dead all
winter. Comes the spring. Water from the melting polar cap
flows down over the dry surface. Under its magic touch
plants waken to life.
A—In the first place, it's
doubtful if the polar cap melts.
Much more likely it sublimes.
That is, changes directly from
ice to water vapor. Doesn't go
through the liquid stage. Even
if the ice did melt the water
wouldn't flow down over the
surface. Not very far at least.
To get water from the pole to
the equator you'd have to pump
it.
X—But couldn't there be life
forms entirely different from
ours?
A—It's speculative enough to
talk about life on Mars as we
know it. It's pure fantasy to
talk about life on Mars as we
don't know it.
X-All right. But how did
these canals get there?
A—Who told you there were
canals on Mars?
X—That's their name, isn't
it?
A-That's all it Is - nothing
but a name. When Schiaparelli
discovered these curious markings in 1877 he had to call them
something. So the named them
Canali. That was translated in
English as "canals."
X—So "canals" don't mean
canals? And they don't mean
there is life on Mars?
A—A few years ago the case
for plant life on Mars looked
rather good. In 1958 dark bands
were discovered in the light reflected from the maria but not
the deserts. These bands were
attributed to absorption by organic compounds in the maria.
But from recent work it appears
that the bands can be identified just as well with absorption by inorganic matter. Other
analyses of the maria indicate
the presence of microscopic
plant life. But again the results
are inconclusive.
X-But there's still the darkening in the spring. You can't
get around that.
A-Several non ■ vegetative
hypotheses have been proposed.
The darkening might be caused
from reactions of the surface
minerals with moisture from
the polar cap. According to the
volcanic-aeoiian hypothesis, the
maria consist of ash from volcanoes deposited in the summer
by winds similar to the monsoon winds that sweep across
India.
MAY BE LAVA
Possibly the maria are lava
flows from asteroids that
crashed on the surface and
liquified under the force of impact. During the winter dust
settles over the maria making
them dim .The strong winds of
summer blow the dust away,
exposing the dark surface beneath.
X—But there still could be
life—
A — You haven't heard the
worst yet. The Martian atmosphere consists mostly of nitrogen. But long ago it may have
contained water and oxygen.
The oxygen and nitrogen would
combine to form oxides of nitrogen, mainly nitrogen peroxide.
The proponents of this hypothesis believe that practically
all the surface phenomena on
Mars can be explained as nitrogen peroxide in various forms.
Life would be impossible since
nitrogen peroxide, is poisonous
both to plants and animals.
O.S. PLUNDERING CANADIAN RESOURCES-McNAUGHTON JohnSOU COuX RuSSW
It's Been Said
._.. Experience. Js JJie....name  everyone
gives to their mistakes. — Oscar Wilde.*
, and your eyes, deep pools of clear, clean, unpolluted water . . ."
By ARCH MacKENZIE
Canadian Press Stall Writer
When President Johnson says
he United States would much
rather talk than fight, his words
are aimed at the Soviet Union
and the Eastern European Communist bloc.
His words reflect existing
American foreign policy which
includes encouragement of
looser ties among satellites, observers suggest. But Johnson's
emphasis is being construed in
Washington as recognition that
Ihe Soviet Union is feeling the
heat of its Viet Nam dilemma
and particularly the propaganda
advantage Viet Nam has given
China in the Communist ideological war.
A harsher Soviet line has developed toward the United
States. Public statements have
been tougher. Now old but adequate Soviet bombers have been
sighted in North Viet Nam.
Russia seems to have lost any
interest it might have had in
helping launch peace talks. Instead it is working overtime to
get a place at the Afro-Asian
summit conference to open in
Algeria June 29 and China is
working just as hard, apparently, to exclude Russia.
FORCED FRIENDSHIP
There have been statements
from both Communist camps
that, if the worst comes to the
worst in Viet Nam, Russia and
China will get together.
Johnson's words show continuing awareness of the risk that
Viet Nam will force a Sino-So-
viet reunion. Such a development would increase the hazard
of a major conflict, it is assumed.
In foreign policy addresses
last Thursday at Chicago and
Sunday at Washington's Catholic University of America, Johnson took aim at Europe's Communist nations.
"Between the great powers of
East and West, there is no history of conflict on battlefields
of the past," he said.
"Betwen the people of the
Soviet Union and the people of
the U.S., there has been friendship and there can be great
understanding."
He suggested the peoples of
the U.S.S.R. and Eastern Europe "know above all others ths
cost of 20th-century warfare."
'LET US REASON'
At Catholic University tha
president said: 'To the people—
and to the leaders—of the Communist countries, to the Soviet
Union, to the nations of Eastern
Europe and Southeast Asia, wo
extend our invitation — come,
now, let us reason together."
Johnson bolstered his case for
American peaceful intentions
by recalling words spoken by
Franklin Delano Roosevelt,
Abraham Lincoln, John Fitzgerald Kennedy, Thomas Jefferson, George Washington, and
two non-Americans, Dag Ham-
merskjold and Pope John
XXIII.
Today in History T°°k Qreat Stride in Moon Race
W n..   umiMDn   Bcivtininir *:-_i   _i ...mi   t..   lx.'    ...i          «. n_L.i-.__    ___■    pi„«_„j rw._ * n..	
By THE CANADIAN PRESS
June 10, 1965 .. .
• The destruction of the
Czechoslovakian village of
Lidice was announced by
German authorities 23 years
ago today—in 1942—in reprisal for the assassination
of Reichsprotektor Reinhard
Heydrich, a senior SS officer, by British - trained
guerrillas. All the male villagers and some women
were   shot   and   the   re-
About ten Civil Defence courses are held each year at Pro-
vicial level. These include courses in orientation, rescue, radiological Defence, Air Service,
Health and Welfare and techniques of instruction.
mainder sent to concentration camps. The village was
razed and all references to
it in government records
were removed. In sympathy, towns in Mexico and
the Lnited States took the
name Lidice.
1857-The cities of St. Hy-
acinthe and Trois-Rtvieres,
Que., were incorporated.
1948—The trial of General
Draja Mlhailovic, leader of
the Yugoslav "cetnlk" guerrillas, began.
Second World War
Twenty - five years ago
today—in 1940—the French
government abandoned Paris: the loss of the British
aircraft carrier Glorious
and three other warships
was announced; the Norwegian army surrendered;
Italy entered the war, and
a Canadian mine sweeper
foiled attempts by the captain of the Capo Noli to
scuttle his vessel in the St.
Lawrence.
HUBERT
"Come on! Zip up my dress! I don't care if the silly
score IS tied—the guests are due in five minutes!"
By HOWARD BENEDICT
HOUSTON (AP) - With the
flight of Gemini IV, the United
States took a great stride forward in the quickening man-ot-
the-moon race with the Soviet
Union.
The medical data must still
be analysed on the longest
American manned space flight
yet, but otherwise U.S. officials
said that they see no barrier
to moving ahead in the Gemini
program to a seven-day flight in
August.
Astronauts James McDivitt
and Edward White spent nearly
98 hours in space, tripling the
total time logged by all eight
previous U.S. astronauts.
McDivitt and White were pronounced in good physical shape
on initial examination. But adverse effects normally don't
show up until after a flight and
several weeks may be required
to analyse completely the medical data. It will provide the
U.S. with the first handle on
how man's physical and mental
condition is affected by extended periods in the weightless
space environment. A Russian
cosmonaut holds the record, 119
hours — just shy of five days.
He suffered temporary aftereffects, especially In the heart
and blood vessel systems, which
caused concern among Soviet
doctors.
Gemini officials learned a lot
from the McDivitt-White flight.
Outstanding findings were that
man can operate for at least
short periods outside the orbiting capsule; that radar and
other aids are required for rendezvous in space; that man can
function effectively while in the
space environment for at least
four days, and that most spacecraft systems have a high degree of reliability for the long
haul.
IN SECOND PHASE
The man-in-space programs of
both the U.S. and Russia now
are in the second phase of the
moon race — a critical time
when operational capabilities
and techniques are being developed.
The  country   which  develops
the procedures iflfst  and  then ■
applies them to the third and
final phase will be the winner
in the lunar sweepstakes.
Last March 18, U.S. officials
acknowledged that the Russians
had a clear lead of perhaps two
years. That was the day cosmonaut Alexei Leonov became history's first human to step outside an orbiting spacecraft.
At that time the Russians had
flown two of their second-generation V o s k h o d (sunrise)
spacecraft—one with a crew of
three, the other with two. The
U.S. had flown only Its first-
generation Mercury capsule.
Since March 18, the Russians
have had no manned launch-
ings and the U.S. has flown two
of its two-man Gemini spacecraft.
The first, with astronauts Virgil Grissom and John Young at
the controls, demonstrated the
world's first manoeuvrable
manned spacecraft.
CIRCLED GLOBE
Now astronauts McDivitt and
White have circled the globe for
an American record of more
than four days and White took
a 20-minute excursion into space
on the end of a lifeline,
The achievements of Gemini
III and IV certainly have narrowed the gap. The Russians
still have a lead, however, because of a more powerful rocket
they have been using for several years. It has enabled them
to lift roomier capsules for
longer periods, giving them a
head start in the vital department of gathering medical data,
If McDivitt and White have
no serious post-flight difficulties
astronauts Gordon Cooper and
Charles Conrad are to take a
seven-day journey in August. A
14 - day Gemini voyage is
planned in December.
In between, the U.S. plans to
hook up a Gemini spacecraft
with another craft orbiting separately — an Agena satellite
launched one orbit or two before Gemini. The pilots will be
astronauts Walter Schirr aand
Tom Stafford.
McDivitt and White failed in
an effort to rendezvous with the
orbiting second stage of their
Titan II booster, but they had
no radar  or   other   helpmates
such as Schlrra  and  Stafford
will have.
The present pace indicates
both contending countries are
running within a few minutes of
each other in the four major
areas that must be perfected
before man can venture to the
moon: Long - duration, emergence of man into space, manoeuvrability, and docking.
AIM FOR MOON
Once a country has developed
reliability on all four, it can
proceed to the third phase of
the race and aim for the moon.
For the U.S., this is project
Apollo, Once the 10-shot Gemini program has rehearsed the
procedures, hopefully by the
end of 1966, three-man Apollo
ships are to be fired into earth
orbit for additional practice.
The present U.S. schedule
calls for a manned lunar landing in 1969. But Apollo director
Joseph Shea says that continued
success in the Gemini program
and early success in the Apollo
project could advance the date
to 1968.
The power for the moon flight
will be provided by a massive
Saturn Five-Rocket, a 7,500,000-
pound-thrust monster now being
developed. It is nearly 20 times
more powerful than the Titan
II which lifts the Gemini crews.
With the Saturn V, the U.S.
hopes to wipe out the advantage that Russian has enjoyed
in booster power for seversl
years. The Russians use a
rocket with 1,400,000 pounds of
thrust and there is no indication they are developing anything as large as Saturn V. It
is believed their manned lunar
landing plans call for launching three or four of their present boosters to assemble a
moon launching pad in orbit
about the earth.
American planners feel tha
single launching approach with
the Saturn V is far less risky
and stands a better chance of
early success. They also are
counting on what they consider
superior American resources,
technology and money supply te
prevail over the long haul.
PRAIRIE NEWS
LOW PAY
BRANDON (CP) - William
Laird, of Winnipeg, newly-
elected president of the Manitoba Professional Firefighters'
Association, said Tuesday firefighters in the province are
forced to "moonlight" because
of low pay.
TO INVESTIGATE
VALLEYVIEW, Alta. (CP)-A
ratepayers meeting with school
board officials will be held June
14 to discuss the dismissal of
high school teacher Douglas M.
Scott. He was dismissed after
five students were dismissed
from one of his classes at Hillside school in Vaileyview.
Teachers have complained of a
disciplinary problerh among students.
BIG INVESTMENT
Nearly $12,000,000,000 has been
spent on exploration, development and facilities in the Canadian petroleum industry since"
the war .
RESERVES DECISION
CALGARY (CP)-Mr. Justice
H. W. Riley reserved decision
Tuesday in Supreme Court in a
hearing on whether city aldermen can vote on projects involving the Calgary Stampede
if they are Stampede board directors. The dispute revolves
around proposed re-location of
the Stampede to Lincoln Park.
REEVE  RESIGNS
BLAINE LAKE, Sask ,(CP>-
T. W. Strelive, reeve of the
rural municipality of Blaine
take, 40 miles north of Prince
Albert, has resigned because df
pressure of private business. A
byelectibn wUl be held July 28.
Nomination day' is July 19.
TRAINS COLLIDE
PLUNKETT, Sask. (CP) - A
Canadian Pacific Railway
freight train collided Tuesday
with a work train on a branch
line one-half mile east of Plun-
kett, 59 miles southeast of Saskatoon. One car was derailed
but no one was injured and
damage was light.
 SUMMER FASHION FAVORITES
E. Boechler New President
St. Joseph's Auxiliary
Holds Year End Meeting,
By ALICE ALDEN
THE easy, one-piece men's-
shirt dress is a treat for comfortable but smart wear. The
stylo is especially handsome,
as Wragge does It, in crisp silk
linen in a variety of beautiful
colors.
We like the casual collar,
the short wing sleeve, the yoke
detail, the front buttoning, the
pocket flaps and the slender
line, because all these details
add up to a striking number
very much of today.
Silverton Notes
SILVERTON - Mr. and Mrs.
W. Long of Trail have arrived
to spend the summer months at
their summer home here. They
were accompanied by Mrs. L.
Briggeman, Mrs. L. Elder and
Ray Wiley, who spent the weekend with them.
Mr. and Mrs. Denis Peebles
and family of Rossland visited
their uncle and aunt, Mr. and
Mrs. George Walker, on the
weekend.
Partners in the Mountain Chief
Mine have purchased equipment in expectation of small but
steady  high  grade  production
VANCOUVER (CP) - Dr.
Patrick McTaggart • Cowan,
president of Simon Fraser University, has been awarded the
Patterson Medal for his contribution to the development of
meteorological services for
trans-Atlantic aviation. He resigned as director of the transport department's meteorological branch in 1964 to become
the university's president.
THE timeless beauty of the
bonnet is delightfully captured by Sally Victor in the
modern spirit of summer,
1965.
This version is smartly exe-
By ALICE ALDEN
cuted in pale blue straw, faced
In white leather, a striking
combination of materials. The
leather reflects its sparkling
softness onto the face.
Toastmistresses
Have Joint Meet
CASTLEGAR — At a recent
joint Toastmistress dinner meeting with the Trail club and
several guests, VALI Toast-
mistress speakers participated
in a panel presentation, Mrs.
Sadie Hammond being the
moderator.
Victoria Day inspired Miss
Betty Hall of Trail and Mrs.
Lila Fenner to talk about Queen
Victoria. To remain in the "England" theme, Mrs. Vera Campbell reminisced about her delightful early years in England.
After the evaluation of these
speeches, Mrs. Ruth Lanzarotta,
as general evaluator, pointed out
the good and less outstanding
features of the evening's presentations.
At a later date a workshop on
introductions, table settings and
table manners was held at the
home of Miss Corrie Hogen-
doom.
Members who will attend the
Council meeting at Kamloops
practised a skit on deportment,
Vali's contribution to the Council
program.
The final meeting for the season of St. Joseph's School Auxiliary was held recently with R.
Buckley, president, in the chair.
The new constitution for the
auxiliary was given final reading and members voted the adoption of the new constitution.
A lengthy discussion was held
as to spending of proceeds from
the recent spring fashion show.
Most of the parents were of the
opinion that the school library
should benefit, also purchasing
of a new SRA reading kit. It was
voted that a sum of money be
given to the Sisters to assist
them to attend summer school.
Sister Callistus, who has been
at St. Joseph's School for the
past eight years, and "has given
long and rewarding assistance to
many of the students," was
given a special thanks.
It was decided that individual
class picnics will not be held this
year. In their place, the school
will hold a field day June 11.
The auxiliary will contribute
treats following the assembly on
the final day of school.
P. Klassen gave a resume of
what has transpired during the
year concerning diocesan school
boards.
The nominating committee
presented a slate of officers to
be the new executive for the
year 1965-66. Elected were:
president, E. Boechler; first vice
president, Mrs. V. Killeen; secretary, Mrs. A. Burbank; treasurer, Mrs. W. Freno.
CHARTER MEMBERS HONORED — Blessed
Sacrament Catholic Women's League Parish Council
in Fairview is celebrating its 25th anniversary. Two
charter members Mrs. W. Roy Hunter and Mrs. A. W.
Stubbs were honored at a recent social event marking the anniversary. In the picture above, Mrs. Hunter is receiving her scroll of merit Irom president
Mrs. J. C. Eckmier. Daily News Photo.
NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURS., JUNE 10, 1965—3
Chicken Casserole, Fruit
Salad Summer Combo
In the good old summer time,
appetites wane and cooks wilt.
If supper can be prepared in
the cool of the morning, requiring just heating up later, and if
a supper dish is pleasing to the
eye and different from the everyday fare, served with a fruit
salad, both diner and cook will
be pleased and have time to enjoy the long summer twilight.
Two recipes from the Mennonlte   Treasury   of   Recipes   are
Chicken and Rice Casserole and
Fruit Salad.
CHICKEN AND
RICE CASSEROLE
1 cup rice
1 large onion
1 large carrot
1 qt. jar chicken (canned)
Cook rice in lots of boiling
salted water. Drain and rinse.
Cook onion in a small amount
of butter. Grate the carrot. Mix
all three ingredients together.
Season to taste with salt and
pepper. Put in large casserole.
Arrange chicken and its juice
on top of rice. Add some water
if it seems too dry.
Bake in a medium hot oven
for 1 hour. Serve with a salad
and pickles.
FRUIT SALAD
1   tin tangerine oranges
(drained)
1    tin fruit cocktail (drained)
4   apples, peeled and diced
2    bananas, sliced;
1   cup grapes
1   cup miniature
marshmallows
Sk cup nuts (optional)
Dressing:  Mix  Sk cup salad
dressing, 3 tablespoons milk and
add 2 teaspoons sugar.
Mix all together and serve.
NWT,   YUKON  IN CONFERENCE
OTTAWA (CP)-The Yukon
and Northwest Territories councils will be included for the
first time in the federal delegation to the federal-provincial
conference starting July 19, the
Commons was told Tuesday
night.
James Byrne, parliamentary
secretary to Labor Minister
MacEachen, made the announcement during an adjournment debate.
Gene Rheaume (PC—Northwest Territories) had complained about lack of consultation by federal authorities with
the Territories when new programs with the provinces are
formulated    .
When he asked Monday
whether changes in the program
to aid labor surplus areas would'
be made after consultation with
the territories, Prime Minister
Pearson had said the Territories would be kept informed.
KENNEDY ON COIN
The switch to John F. Kenr
nedy from Benjamin Franklin in
1964 was the seventh major
change in design of the U.S. 50-
cent piece. .
GOVERNMENT REFUSES    !
ABBOTSFORD (CP) - The1
secretary of state for Canada
has refused permission for the j
Red Ensign Club of Canada to;
organize here under that name!
says club president Douglas
Taylor. The club was set up to,
restore and maintain the Red j
Ensign in the lives of Cana-1
dians. |
Hints From Heloise
By Heloise Cruse
Dear Gals:
I have the most thrilling thing
to tell you (and I discovered it
quite by accident) . . .
We all have our penny-
pinching days. (This means that
though we find something that's and ripped.it apart. There was
CONFIDENTIALLY YOURS
t*M
MONTREAL, June 10th—It's good to 'get
away from it all' by exploring new places in
a new car. But you can't get away from the
cost of the car . . . and this is where THE
BANK OF NOVA SCOTIA can help! A Scotia
    Plan Car Loan is a truly practical way to buy
or refinance a car. The cost of the loan is low—it's lifc-insmcd
—and you get wonderfully speedy service when you do business
with the folks at Scotiabank. So why not talk over your car-buying
problem with them? They'll be glad to take the worry out of
car-buying for you! 	
DO YOUR CHILDREN need a laxative now and then? Help keep
them 'regular' with this special children's
laxative. Called FEEN-A-MINT Children's
Mint Laxative, it's developed by Pharmaco
(Canada) Ltd., and is gentle, yet effective.
What's more, it tastes good! It comes in
attractive pink pastille form and can be
chewed or sucked. More and more mothers
are discovering that it's an effective laxative
their children like to take ... a pleasant
way to help keep your youngsters 'regular'! Ask for Fecn-a-Mint
Children's Mint Laxative at your favourite drugstore.
worth $25.00, we will not spend
$2.00 for it.)
We also have our splurging
days. (This means that no
matter what it costs, we're going
to buy it anyway!)
Last week I happened to be on
one of those tight-fisted penny-
pinching days. Even so, when I
saw a dress rack with a sign
on it that said "Sale! Bargain!
$1.99," I just had to stop and
look. I saw dresses up to $20.00
reduced to $1.99! Most of them
were cotton
Also, I noticed that they were
large sizes! So I said o myself
"I wear a size 12 and most of
these are 16's, lB's, 20's and
38's! Now if I took this dress
home, I would have to cut it up
and completely remake it."
Then, I happened to notice
that some of them had pleated
skirts! I picked up one dress and,
lo and behold, it had four yards
of gorgeous material in it. Know
what I did?
I bought that dress!
I came home, took my scissors
ANDREW'S 63rd ANNIVERSARY SALE
STARTS JUNE 10th
By far the most outstanding event of the year. Be sure to take advantage of the wonderful
values being offered at Andrew's on our 63rd Anniversary Sale.
To make room for new fall lines we are offering many of our better lines of
quality shoes — Joyce, Red Carpet- — regular values to $16.99. 95 pair on
sale at the low price of  $9.99
150 pair of women's pumps regular to $11.99 on sale at  $5.99
400 pair of women's pumps regular to $9.99 on sale at  $3.99
100 pair of odds and ends regular to $10.99 on sale at  $1.99
Children's brown or white elk sandals moulded sole. Regular $3.99
on sale special at -  $2.29
75 pair of women's stack heel casual pumps. Blacks, browns, whites.
Regular $9.99. Anniversary special at  $5.99
Men's discontinued lines of Florsheim shoes. Regular $24.99. Anniversary special at $14.99
Royal Stuart English Oxfords. Regular $14.99 on sale at  $7.99
25 pair of men's oxfords. Regular to $11.99. On sale at  $3.99
30 only, Fall Leather Handbags. Regular to $9.99. Anniversary Special $4.99
FATHER'S DAY SPECIALS
Men's travelling  slippers.  Morocco  leather.   Regular  $6.99.
Anniversary Specials - -	
Men's beige glove leather slippers. Regular $6.99. Anniversary
Specia'
Men's Foamtread President at
$3.99
$4.99
$2.99
[Anl
rews
Established Since 1902
Q) noes
CASH ONLY
During This Event
ALL SALES FINAL —
NO REFUNDS —
NO CHARGES
a long zipper (which would cost
me at least 60c if I had bought
it); tape on the hem and all the
buttons and trimming!
I ripped the skirt off the dress
and made the most adorable
house dress from my favorite
pattern. I cut the facings and
plackets from the blouse of the
dress. I took off the trim and
put it on the pockets of my
house dress (after all, what's a
house dress without pockets?)
The zipper I did not need, so
I saved it for something else.
Later I Intend to save 60c on
another dress by using that
zipper.
Ladies, always read the ads
in your paper and look for the
real bargains when you go to
town.
Dresses (especially cotton)
can be remade into children's
clothes, shorts, blouses and even
men's sport shirts! There is
usually enough material if you
find a dress that has lots of
pleats.
Some designs and fabrics make
darling little girls' clothes.
I could not possibly have
bought the material in the skirt
of that dress for less than $8.00.
Now I have a beautiful house
dress for practically nothing.
Besides, remember that zipper
I saved? And those pretty buttons for the next garment?
Don't hesitate to look over
that bargain counter when you
see a sale. It will pay in the long
run and always be sure to watch
your ads in the paper for them.
Heloise.
* *  *
Dear Heloise:
I keep a plastic shoe horn near
the sink and find it excellent for
scraping stubborn food particles
from cooking utensils.
M. E.
* *  *
Dear Heloise:
Here is a suggestion for folks
with games and puzzles that
come in boxes.
We were having trouble with
the boxes falling apart . . .
sooner or later the toy or game
was short a part or several
narts.
Now I glue small pieces of
muslin over the corners Before
the boxes break! Try it! No
more lost pieces.
Mrs. G. W. L.
* *  *
Wouldn't a strip of masking
or adhesive tape around the
corners be simpler?
Heloise.
Some scientists think Green- B
land is moving past Canada's B
Ellesmere Island at a rate of i ||
almost half an inclj a year.      ' _
Efficient Family-Sized Washer    Canada's Largest Dryer
Wonderfully simple to operate . . . timed
water level control, 2 washing cycles — 2
speed selections. 4 position water temperature switch, safety switches for spin and
off-balance load, deluxe agitator and lint
filter, and many other features..
Smart shoppers know
it costs no move
at the Bay!
Introductory
Special Offer
$299
Dries a BIG washload wrinkle-free! Plus
capacity 6 cu. ft. dryer cylinder. Special
Wash-and-Wear cycle for all synthetic
fabrics. Exclusive Stop-and-Dry-only Moffat
has it! 4 heat selections, easy to clean lint
screen.
Introductory
Special Offer
$199
Trade-ins Welcome
The Bay promises you fair marker
value for your trade-in...no price
padding or phony trade allowances.
Cuts Washing Time in %
WASHER—automatically selects just the right amount
of wash and rinse water for any wash from 2
to 15 Ibs. 3 washing cycles, 4 speed selections
DRYER—This big capacity dryer shuts off automatically
when clothes are dry. Wrinkle-free g"_f A
drying, plus Stop-and-Dry feature  JaO /
Mr, Barry Player
will be at the Bay
June 11th and 12th
to demonstrate
the Famous
Moffat Laundry
Appliances
For the Cleanest Washes
WASHER—thrifty family sized washer is wonderfully
simple to operate. Timed water level control, fr •>/fl
family sized tub—two washing cycles  $ jQf
DRYER—Extra large capacity is designed to give free-
floating tumbling action for uniform wrinkle- £«*<**«
free drying. 3 heat selections, 5 way venting $£jj
Tr
V
 NELSON   DAILY   NEWS,
THURS., JUNE  10,  1965
Your
Horoscope
1 Look in the section in which
your birthday comes, and find
what your outlook is, according
to the stars.
For Friday, June 11, 1965
MARCH 21 to APRIL 20
(Aries) — Be sure that any Information you acquire comes from
accurate sources. Pay no atten
tion to the "guesswork" of
others. Once certain of the prof-
ferred data, however, use 't in
the most profitable way possible.
APRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus)
— Present planetary influences
call for more than your ususl
amount of determination and ingenuity in handling unwieldy
situations. Using both, however,
you can come out on top.
MAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini)
— A little extra pep may be all
this day needs to put it in a special class — and you a winner.
Just listening to others could
give you some truly brilliant
ideas of your own.
JUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer)
— Here is a spot for restraint;
also easing tensions, making reappraisals of all situations, inaugurating improvements where
necessary and generally bringing order and harmony to all
areas. In these things, you ex-
eel.
JULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leoi
— You can take this day out of
' ths average and place it in the
week's top spot, if you make a
correct evaluation of conditions
and follow up with perceptive action. Benefits for the stouthearted.
AUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER
23 (Virgo) - An active day!
Most persons will be independent of spirit, and there will be a
wide range of undertakings for
all to consider. Be up there
among the best — those who
think before they act, who are
discriminating in their choice.
The ingenious Virgoan can win
out.
SEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER
23 (Libra) - If you play it judiciously, with your inate understanding of the foibles and eccentricities of others, you can mold,
this day to your satisfaction,
make lt a springboard to further'
successes next week.
OCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER
22 (Scorpio)— Marks made upon
this day will reverberate far and
wide. Emphasize your extraordinary competence, launch corrective measures where neces-
ssry and don't hesitate to advance your best ideas. You can
make fine progress.
NOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER 21 (Sagittarius) - You
can maneuver the steep grades
efficiently and should be unusually keen in launching new
ventures. Managerial efforts
tapped for higher rewards. Just I
one admonition: In censuring
others, remember your own past!
mistakes.
DECEMBER 22 to JANUARY !
20 (Capricorn)— Bypass outmod- j
ed methods, take part in thos"!
which facilitate progress and
understanding of present trends. I
This day has much to offer —
and so have YOU!
JANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY
19 (Aquarius) - Uranus 'lighly
favorable. Capitalize on your
many talents in the most appropriate maner. The world loves
the unusual —and YOU dream
it up!
FEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20
(Pisces) — You may encounter
some aggravating situations
now, but don't YOU add to the
confusion. Stress the Piscoan's
Innate love of order, good judgment in the face of difficult, conditions, and you'll come out on
top — and bring others with vou.
YOU BORN TODAY: Outstanding is your versatility and
love of life. You are imaginative,
skillful, sensitive, at times test-
less and changeable. You are
always impatient to begin
"something new," but if you lose
interest, you drop your project
without giving it a chance to
prove Itself. You always aim
high, but you're no daydreamer.
Your goals are always in the
realm of possibility because >ou
have so many talents, and once
really interested in your goals,
spare no effort to attain them.
You are definitely NOT a clockwatcher; will even overtax yourself In order to get a job done-
sometlmes to the detriment of
health. Faults to conquer: Hy>
p e r s ensltlvlty, extravagance,
over-exertion. Many noted writ
ers, musicians, editors, researchers and experts In all
communications media have
been Gemlnl-born.
Manor House Frozen Fresh
Whole Fryers
The freshest tasting chicken you
ever ate. Government inspected.
Average VA to VA Ibs	
Grade
Devon Brand
Side Bacon
Sliced Rindless.
Serve with fresh
Breakfast Gem Eggs.
Government inspeceted.
1 Ib. pkg. / 0
Cut-Up Fryers
Manor House Frozen Fresh. Cut-up in
easy to use portions. Government Insp.
Avge. VA to VA lbs lb.
Manor House, Frozen Fresh
Chicken Breasts
Government
Inspected.
lib. 4 ox. to 2 Ibs.
Ib.
75
Manor House, Frozen Fresh
Chicken Wings
Government Mk   WWW t
Inspected. 1 Ib. 4 ozn    ^1   ^ *
to 1 Ib. 9 oz ID. ^W kmW
Manor House, Frozen Fresh
Chicken Livers
59'
Government
Inspected.
1 lb. plastic cups.   €()•
ATTENTION NELSON SHOPPERS!
Plan Te Attend Sefewoy-Swift's
Bar-B-Que Cooking School
Featuring Martha Logan, Swift's Home Economist at the
Nelson Hotel Banquet Room Tuesday, June 15, at 2 p.m.
Breakfast Gems
OTHHB Fresh Eggs
Large   Grade A 2 <•<«. 99£
Medium Grade A 2 <<oz- 95°
iib.Pk,.59c
^jb.95c
frozen meat Hies a   QOc
Manor House. Beef, Chicken or Turkey. 8 oz. "WMOf   ^_^m   ^J
Infant Foods 10, QQC
Heinz Strained or Junior assorted. 4%-oz.    I ^^ '°'    J_f    Jj
m Orange Juice     C  $1 AA
Taste Tells. Frozen concentrated. 6 oz. tin.    $J   '" | % ^jf ^J
Cheese Slices
Berkshire Canadian. For
delicious cheese burgers —	
Danish Blue Cheese
Safeway mild, smooth.
Random cuts  	
Empress. Delicious on
breakfast toast;
24 fl. oi. jar 	
ANIMAL SHORTAGE
VANCOUVER (CP) - Stanley
Park's curator Allan Best says
the children's zoo here may not
open Monday hecause of a lack
of animals. Mr. Best ssys the
7.00 has less than 100 animals
compared with last year's 200.
David's
Sweet Biscuits
Neapolitan Ice Waters, or Cocoanut
Macaroons. Your Choice.
3 packages    1,00
Grape Jelly
Cucumber Chips a
Frozen Asparagus £
Snow Star Ice Cream
zippy*
:risp;
ox. jar
Vanilla.
Bel-air, premium
quality;
ex. pkg. 	
1
gal. ctn.
$■
09
Oatmeal Cookies ?odoz. pk9	
Glide Liquid Starch 32 6Z. bottle
Spic and Span T-e big iob e,eone';
Rich and creamy. Vanilla, Strawberry, Chocolate
or Neapolitan.
3 pint carton 49'
41 oz. box
Kellogg's
Airway or Nob Hill
Coffee
Grind it fresh when you buy. Contains high grown Braxilian coffee beans
* Corn Flakes     * Special K
12 ox. pkg. 6i ox. pkg.
* Rice Krispies
9i ox. pkg.
Tep with Lucerne Half and Half, and sliced bananas.
Whole
Bean. _
1ibb,«,69t2ibbag$1.35
Sea Trader, Gulf;
4 or. tin	
Your choice
J packages 99°
Medium Shrimp
Puritan Beef Stew X.*T%,
Kleenex Tissue ltt°i^or* pop'up
 69*
2 for 69*
2f*r59*
Hunt's Fine Foods
Fruit Cocktail
Hunt's, choice;
15 ox. tin 	
Tomato Catsup
Hunts. Enhances meat and
fish dishes; 11 ox. bottle _
Tomato Paste
Tomato Sauce Hwl's;
4*.99c
2 for J/
Fancy Peaches lift K."».„
Hunt's; 6 oz. tin  4 for 49*
4 for 49*
.4 for 99*
7.i oz. tin
 ■*^^^"^^f
aaeiBBM
-----m
mmmmmiiimMm.Mmmmmmmxmsin
Beef
Standing Rib
Roast
Top quality
Gov't Insp.
Grain-fed
Beef.
Canada Choice.
Beef Chuck Steak A€k
Government Inspected. Canada Choice.       lb. ^^\\\\_\\\    \ ^F
Blade Rib Roast   tfiQ
Blade Bone removed. Canada Choice. __ ID. ^^J^ ^L^F
C
c
Canned Hams
Ideal
for slicing.
11/2 lb. tin.
Each	
$1.49
COOKed    Ham Premium; 6 oz. pkg.   59^
Bar B.Q. FranksNorth star; ,b 45*!
Beef Steakettes JL pkg 99*
._.. ,b. 49*
_ ,b. 59*
Cod Fillets K
Sole FilletsFresh
For fish ond chips .
Fresh,
pan fry :..
Green Peas §£fe■ 4 <«. 59°
4 for 69e
4w59e
Aylmer.
Fancy.
15 oz. tin.
Cream Corn
Spaghetti
Creamed Honey
Taste Tells.
In tomato sauce.
15 oz. tin.	
Empress Pure.
No. 1 quality.
4 Ib. plastic. Each
99°
391
390
Barbecue Sauce;
Empress Pure. 2Sk or. bottle	
Liquid Certoi
For Jam and Jelly making. 6 oz. bottle	
Blue Bonnet Margarine: 9      77«!
No. 1 Quality. 1 lb. pkg   * for * * T
Nescafe Instant Coffee: <l QO
Special offer. 6 or. jar «f"V.»
Brillo Soap Pads: _\_\_
Ideal for Barbecue Cleaning. Package of 12  *WT
Saran Wrap:
Keeps food fresh. 12" by 56' roll	
Kitchen Towels: O      AQj
Kleenex, colored tolls   *f6r ^TT
Kotex: ftQd
Regular. Box 6f 24  "'r
Score Hair Dressing: 774
Oreaseless. 3 oz. tube    ' ' r
Rol-On Deodorant:
Ban. Makes you feel safe. 114 Oz. size	
390
$1.19
Swifts Premium Products
Prem 12 ex. * 3 tins $1.00
Beef Stew;.5n0"- 2for69c
Swiftning * * «•  89
Lard $"«' m«] ,b **■ 4    ^
Weiners-Beans,5n"2for69c
Jewel Oil 2s or. b.Hi. 0 /
Cragmont
Soft Drinks
12 oz. miratins.
12' s100
Detergent
$1.19
Liquid Detergent      QOC
Encore; 48 oz. plastic    w #
Palmolive SoapO for ?9C
Geld; regular size bar .....-*-*■ -m I
Toothpaste
Colgate's, __% _f\r
withGardol. KW
Family size tube. ' %ef W.
Encore Powdered.
Special offer.
5 Ib. pkg	
Fresh,
A
M
Hi
IK
\
^.:
.J
Watermelon
Crisp, Juicy Sweet,
Lip-Smackin' Good.
Delicious for Picnics
C
•■•■••
each
«-i
Variety Lettuce
• Romaine * Endive  * Red  * Butter
Fresh, Crisp
and tender.
Adds interest
to salads.	
c
heads
Fresh, Cool
Cucumbers
Long English,
Slice for Refreshing
Summer Salads . each
Cauliflower
Fresh, Snowhite
Heads. Serve With
Cheese Sauce . each
c
Hothouse
i Tomatoes
V^VKi J Red*Rlpe
for
Slicing
Make Delicious Salads .... lb.
Prices Effective: June 10,11 and 12.
in your two friendly Nelson Safeway Stores.
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES.
c
7—
NELSON    DAILY   NEWS,
THURS., JUNE  10,  196S
Magazine Firms
Influencing
Display Space!
WASHINGTON  (AP)  - The
U.S. justice department accused
| the two biggest magazine distributors in the country Wednesday ot trying to coerce store
owners into giving their magazines preferential displays.
1   In a civil anti-trust suit (lied
[ In Newark,  N.J.,  the government charged that Curtis Circulation   Company   and  Select
j Magazines Inc., used a subsidiary-National  Magazine Serv-
| ices  Inc.—to   threaten  wholesalers and retailers with loss of
J their franchise if they failed to
comply  with  the  display de-
i mands    .
! National Magazine Service is
owned 50-50 by Curtis Circulation and Select Magazines.
The justice department said
Curtis Circulation, the largest
distributor of publications in the
U.S., Is entirely owned by the
Curtis Publishing Company,
whose magazines include Saturday Evening Post, the Ladies'
Home Journal and Holiday.
Curtis Circulation also distributes American Home, Esquire,
the New Yorker, Look, Newsweek, Harpers, Field and
Stream, the Atlantic Monthly,
House and Garden, Mademoiselle snd Vogue magazines.
Ths suit ssid Select Magazines Inc., is the second-largest
distributor in the U.S. and is
owned by McCall Corp.; Time
Inc.; Reader's Digest Association Inc.; Popular Science
Publishing Company, Inc., and
Meredith Publishing Company.
It distributes McCall's, Fortune,
I Time, Life, Sports Illustrated,
Reader's Digest, Redbook, Better Homes and Gardens, Popu-
J lar Science Monthly, U.S. News
and World Report and the Saturday Review.
I The suit in US. district court
asked that the parent companies be required to dissolve the
subsidiary, National Magazine
Service.
Some Pesticides
Highly Toxic
To Children
OTTAWA   (CP)-A   professor
of pharmacology at the Uni-
|l versity of Montreal said Wednesday certain pesticide residues,
normally considered harmless
on foods because they can be
I consumed safely by adults, may
be highly dangerous to children.
Addressing the annual meeting of the Canadian Federation
of Biological Societies at the
University of Ottawa, Dr. Jules
Brodeur said experiments have
convinced him that children are
far more susceptible than
adults to the toxic effects ef
pesticides and insecticides.
Dr. Brodeur, who treated rats
at the University of Chicago's
toxicology laboratory with the
pesticide malathion, found that
older rats develop a defence
mechanism to combat toxic
substances which prove injurious or even fatal to younger
rats .
He told a reporter he believes
there is a direct correlation between rats and humans with the
results that children may be Injured by chemicals In the form
of residues on foods.
Youngsters had been known
to become ill after running barefoot through freshly
sprayed fields after a rain.
Their feet had picked up chemicals which had passed into the
blood stream.
Dr. Brodeur suggested, that
in view of this, acceptable levels of toxicity must be revised.
TB STILL MOST
IMPORTANT
HEALTH HAZARD
| TORONTO (CP) - Tuberculosis is still the most Important
j community health problem although 1,200 fewer new cases
were reported in Canada last
year than in 1963, the Canadian
Tuberculosis Association was
told Tuesday.
Dr. C. W. L. Jeanes of Ottawa, the assclation's executive secretary, told the annual
meeting that 3.000,000 persons
die of TB yearly. In 1964, 700
Canadians died.
He warned against a slowdown of mass surveys that
search out cases of the disease.
He also appealed for closer
study of health problems created by air pollution and cigarette smoking and warned that
smoking causes not only lung
cancer but also a variety of
other lung diseases.
(. A n a O A     J> a t c W A i     LlMlit J
FAVOR  METRIC  SYSTEM
South Africa is expected to
switch shortly to the metric sys-
tern at a cost of nearly $20,000.
000. V
_________
 8—NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURS., JUNE 10, 1965
Cubs' Banks Homers for 4'2 Win Over Braves
RON SANTO
.Lead-off single.
By THE CANADIAN PRESS
Ernie Banks' 11th homer with
two aboard in the sixth paced
Chicago Cubs to a 4-2 victory
over second-place Milwaukee
Wednesday in the National League.
Billy Williams and Ron Santo
stroked out two singles off lefty
Wade Blasingame before Banks
delivered on a first pitch. The
homer lifted Banks' run batted
in total to 48. The Cubs added
a fourth run in the eighth on
pinch hitter Harry Bright's double with two aboard,
In other National League action Vern Law scattered eight
hits and four run-uprisings in
the fifth and eighth innings carried Pittsburgh Pirates to an
11-3 victory over Houston. It was
Pirates 17th triumph in the last
19 games.
Law, who lost his first five,
won his fourth straight game,
but gave up a run for the first
time in 28 innings when the Astros scored in the sixth on a
single by Bob Lilis, a walk and
Don Glendenon's error.
In New York, Willie Mays
socked a two-run homer in the
first and singled home what
proved to be the winning run in
the eighth to lead San Francisco
Giants to a 4-2 victory over New
York Mets,
DOUBLED IN FIRST
It was the second straight
game in which Mays' batting
has beaten Mets. He doubled
home in the first inning the two
runs that downed Mets Tuesday
night 2-1.
Tony Taylor slammed a three-
run homer in the third to spoil
Mike Kekich's NL pitching debut and lead Philadelphia to a
7-3 victory over the first-place
Los Angeles Dodgers.
Chris Short, starting shakily
as Dodgers scored single runs in
the first and second, got the win,
his first since May 2 after five
losses. His record is now 5-6 .
In the American League, Tony
Horton, playing his second game
since being recalled from Toronto, drove in three runs, leading
Boston Red Sox to a 4-2 victory
over Chicago White Sox.
FIRST VICTORY
The victory was the first for
Boston over Chicago this season.
Earl Wilson pitched his second complete game of the season, earning his fourth victory in
eight decisions.
Jim King hit reliever Stu Miller's first pitch in the lOlli inning over the center field fence,
giving Washington Senators a 3-2
victory over Baltimore Orioles.
King's   eighth   homer ended
Miller's string of consecutive
scoreless innings at 31. He had
not been scored on in 17 straight
appearances.
Miller replaced starter Milt
Pappas after the Orioles tied the
score in the bottom of the ninth
on a single by Brooks Robinson,
a sacrifice bunt by Boog Powell
and Jerry Adair's two-out single.
EACH HIT HOMERS
Joe Pepitone and Tom Tresh
each hit two-run homers and
Mel Stottlemyre pitched a six-
hitter as New York Yankees defeated Kansas City Athletics,
5-1 for their fifth victory in the
last six starts.
Stottlemyre, facing the Athle
tics for the first time in his career, struckout 10 and walked only two. The victory was the seventh of the season for the young
right-hander, who has lost two.
Bill White's three-run homer
highlighted a five-run fourth inning that carried St. Louis Cardinals to a 6-4 National League victory over the Cincinati Reds.
Curt Simmons, 4-6, gained the
victory with help from Tracy
Stallard after giving up two runs
in the eighth.
Ken Boyer followed White's
blast with his sixth home run.
Starter Joey Jay, 4-2, was the
victim of the Cardinal uprising
that snapped a 1-1 tie.
11.
ERNIE BANKS
. Round trip number
 Miimi mm Mimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii illinium i i i minimi •
Cal Hockley Resigns
As Trail Smokies' Coach
CAL HOCKLEY
TRAIL — Cal Hockley, playing-coach of the
Trail Smoke Eaters for the past two seasons Tuesday anounced his intention to retire.
Hockley, who came to the Smokies nine years
ago irom the Kimberley Dynamiters said he will be
on hand at this fall's training camp for a berth on the
club as a player only.
He said that he would notify Smoke Eater president, Dr. Hugh Campbell immediately regarding
his decision to retire from the coaching field.
Hockley captained the world amateur hockey
championship club of 1960-61 and also the next season's Allan Cup winners.
Last season ,the Smokies finished fourth in league play and were eliminated in the semi-finals by
the kimberley Dynamiters In the fourth game.
iiiiiiiHiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
TWO OP GIANT STATURE—Tbe tops lo tbe slug set Id the
National League, Willie Mays (lett) ot tha Giants and Emit
Banks ot tbe Cubs tout shop In Chicago before a recent
game. Willie leads tha loop In home runs and Banks Is tbe
top RBI producer id tha circuit
Technical Know-How, Key to Tomorrow
Shirtey Krebs and Walter Babakaiff are two cf many high school
graduates attending British Columbia's new Institute of Technology.
The next eight years will see an age group representing one-
quarter of the population of British Columbia enter the labour
market. In the competitive years ahead, education and specialized training will spell the difference between job and no job,
promotion and no promotion.
Shirley and Walter know that their training will give them a
choice of where they work and how they spend their future. They     j
expect to earn more money, enjoy life more and contribute more     1
to their community because of the work they have selected. *
If yon are, or will soon be, a high school graduate, look into the
opportunities open to you at British Columbia's new Institute of
Technology in Burnaby. The Institute offers programmes of two
year duration in seventeen technologies. Of these, twelve can be
classed scientific, two medical, and three business. Technicians
are in great demand in Canada. In recent years, each of Canada's
g,000 technically trained graduates has had an average of nine
jobs from which to choose.
Many forms of financial assistance available to university stu- |
dents apply to Technical Institute students as well. For complete 5
information, write The Begistrar, B.C. Institute of Technology, f
3700 Willingdon Ave., Burnaby, B.C.
&
COLUMBIA CELLULOSE
COMPANY, LIMITED
HEAD OFFICE: BURRARD BUILDING - VANCOUVER, B.C.
PBINCE RUPERT PULP DIVISION CBUGAR PULP DIVISION
Lions, Kiwanis
Deadlock 6-6
Lions and Kiwanis battled Into
extra innings to a 6-6 tie Wednesday night in Little League action.
Saturday, the Lions overran
the Kinsmen 23-14 to get back
on the winning track.
In Tuesday's game, Jackie
Markin went the distance for
Kiwanis while John Marion
handled the pitching duties for
the Lions.
Danny Gare paced the extra-
base hit attack with a triple, and
teammates Jim Pickering and
Brent Birse added doubles.
For Kiwanis, Jerry Burdenie
connected for a triple and Mike
Skands lashed a hard double late
in the game.
Kinsmen bombed ACT 8-2 in
other Little League play Saturday.
In Babe Ruth action tonight,
Jaycees meet NHA at 6:00 p.m
at Queen Elizabeth Park.
TERRACE WOODS DIVISION
RESEARCH &. DEVELOPMENT DIVISION
CELGAR' LUMBER DIVISION
CELGAR WOODS DIVISION
iiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiniimiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiii
Smokies Hit
Braves 1-2
TRAIL — Trail Smoke Eaters bombed the Nelson Braves
Wednesday night in a Can-Am
Twilight League game that
saw coach John Brkich ejected for disputing a call with the
umpire in the third inning.
Bentley McEwan, a new face
In the Trail lineup this season,
recorded the win, while Miles
Desharnais took his second loss
of the season against the
Smokies.
Gary Morris homered for the
Trail team In the fifth with no
one aboard.
Brkich In his first playing
role of the season got to first
on an error and an overthrow
moved him around to third,
The dispute came when the
base umpire ordered him back
te second base. ,
Highlights of Wednesday's
game in Trail will appear in
Friday's paper.
iimiiiiimimiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiii
BASEBALL
STANDINGS
By The Associated Press
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W L  Pet Gbl
Los Angeles
Milwaukee
Cincinnati
San Francisco
Pittsburgh
St. Louis
Houston
Philadelphia
Chicago
New York
34 21 .618
27 21 .563
28 23 .549
29 24 .547
26 26 .500
26 26 .500
26 30 .464
24 28 .462
22 29 .431 10
20 34 .370 13',i
Leafs, Canadiens Standing Pat
Last-Place Bruins Grab Four
Players at $30,000 Apiece
By W. R. WHEATLEY
MONTREAL (CP) - Boston
Bruins, last-place finishers in
the National Hockey League
last season, grabbed four players in the league's internal
draft Wednesday at $30,000
apiece and three other clubs
were  satsfied  with one  each.
Montreal Canadiens and Toronto Maple Leafs passed on
each draft call, standing pat on
what they already have or players acquired prior to the current NHL annual meeting.
Of the seven players drafted
it appeared the Bruins made
the prize selection in goalie
Jerry Cheevers, property of the
Leafs who played largely with
Rochester of the American
Hockey League last season.
Meanwhle, the NHL board of
governors met during the day
and decided that a special
meeting will be held before the
end of June to consider expansion plans.
The U.S. West Coast cities of
Los Angeles and San Francisco
have been the most anxious applicants for a spot in the NHL.
MEETS IN NEW YORK
The. board will meet n New
York to establish "efficient requirements to grant franchises." When these have been
set,  applications will be  "ac
cepted and processed," said
NHL president Clarence Campbell.
It was assumed that when
Leafs left goalie Cheevers unprotected in the draft they were
willing to go along next season
with two tried and capable veterans — Johnny Bower and
Terry Sawchuk.
Except for Earl Ingarfeld,
New York Rangers' center, no
established NHL players were
picked up in the draft.
Under the oddities of the
draft, Ingarfield found himself
right back where he started
from. He went to Montreal in
a deal Tuesday, was left unprotected by Montreal in the
draft, and was p r o m p t ly
snapped up again by the Rangers.
Defenceman Bryan Watson,
originally the property of Montreal Canadiens, was owned by
three clubs in less than 24
Hours. Watson, who played
largely last season with Quebec
and Omaha in the minors, was
acquired Tuesday by Chicago
Black Hawks.
The Hawks then left him unprotected and he was taken in
the draft by Detroit Red Wings.
In addition to Cheevers,
minor leaguers acquired in the
draft by Boston were defence-
man Paul Popeil from Chicago,
who played with Buffalo of the
American League last season;
Norm Schmitz, a forward
owned by Montreal and who
played with Omaha of the Cen-
treal Professional League last
season; and defenceman Keith
Wright, a minor leaguer owned
by New York, who was acquired by the Rangers in Tuesday's inter-league draft.
Chicago drafted defenceman-
forward Pat Stapleton from
Toronto. Stapleton was originally Boston property but went
to the Leafs in a Tuesday deal.
He played last season with
Portland of the Western
League.
Boston's final choice in the
draft was Keith Watson,
drafted from New York Rangers who picked him up from
Cleveland of the AHL in Tuesday's inter-league draft.
The draft went for several
pass calls before it wound up.
In the process, veteran defenceman Al Langlois, who has
played with Montreal, New
York and Detroit, and was recently traded to Boston, was
left unprotected by Bruins. He
was not taken by any other
club.
No attempt was made by any
club   to   claim   players  on
waivers under regulations in effect this year.
For purposes of the draft,
Boston, as last-place finisher
last season, was allowed to
protect 20 players. New York
Rangers, who finished fifth,
were allowed to protect 10.
These were exclusive of two
goalies.
Immediately the draft ended,
both clubs had to revert to the
customary 18, declaring excess
players available on $30,000
waivers.
Boston declared Parker MacDonald and Ron Harris. New
York declared Ingarfield. No
one claimed any of the three
through waivers.
Discussing the NHL governors' meeting, Campbell declined to name the 12 cities-
three of them in Canada—
which have applied for franchise in the expanding league,
expansion is not expected before the 1966-67 season.
Campbell  said  disclosure  of
the names of the cities might
prove embarrassing to them,
NEED ARENA
As indicated previously, he
said primary requirements
would be a suitable arena comparable to those now in the
NHL, and proper financial
backing.
19-Year-Old Procter Youth Canada's
Hope at International Games for Deaf
Canada's all-British Columbia
swimming team is expected to
win more than its share of
medals medals at the annual
International Games for the
Deaf this summer and a 19-year-
old Procter youth will be leading
the five man and five woman
team.
Paul Munch, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Munch of Procter and
a past student at Vancouver's
Jericho Hill School, will travel
to Washington, DC, to compete in
the seven-day meet June 27 to
July 3.
Munch is rated as one of the
top ten breast-stroke swimmers
in Canada.
During the April trials to determine the Canadian team, the
competitors' times were consis
tently faster than those of the
top-rated American squad.
Entries from 31 countries have
been received for the week-long
games.
WORLD FAVORITE
One of the best deaf swimmers
in the world in the breaststroke,
Munch completed the 200-metre
distance in 2:53.7 during the
trials.
Vancouver's Joanne Robinson,
who practiced with the Olympic
"B" team last summer placed
first in the 100-metre free-style
with 1:02.8.
The games are organized by
the Comite Internationale des
Sports Silencieux and the 40-
member Canadian team has
been put together by the Federation of Sports for the Deaf of
Canada.
Vi
4
4
6J4
6*4
8',i
V/t
AMERICAN LEAGUE
WL
Minnesota
Chicago
Cleveland
Detroit
Baltimore
Los Angeles
Boston
New York
Washington
Kansas City
32 17
30 20
26 21
27 23
27 25
28 29
24 27
24 28
24 30
12 34
Pet Gbl
.633 -
.600 21,4
.533 5
.540 bSk
.519 6>/:
.491 8
.471 9
.462 m
.444 lO'.i
.261 18'i
PAUL MUNCH AND MARILYN LARSEN
The Canadian team will include swimmers, long-distance
runners, sprinters, track and
field competitors, wrestlers and
a basketball team.
Other members of the swimming team are Doug Lambert,
Penticton; Fred MacKenzie,
Prince Rupert; Bob McPherson,
Powell River; Ron Thorpe, Na-
noose Bay; Tena Duce, Coquit-
lam; Pat Fraser, Vancouver;
Marilyn Larson, Klemtu; and
Gail Penner, Rosedale.
The  11-man  basketball team
with all players from Western
Canada will be coached by William Bain of Vancouver.
DUCATI
Italian
YAMAHA
Japanese
SALES        SERVICE
MOTORCYCLE CENTRE
902 Front St.      Nelson, B.C.
Phone 352-2454
Garrle Matheson, right, member of the Nelson
based National Ski Team, accepts $30 cheque from
Lome Sammartino, one ol 125 pupils at Rosemont
Elementary School who helped raise Ihe sum through
various studerit-initiated functions.
EDUCATION
SAFETY
Bicycles     Motor Bikes
FREE
Safety Reflectors and Booklets
available now at the Nelson Fireball
Parents... for safety sake, be sure
your child participates.
 .        .1     .    IIS     I.I   llllll    I  II   III  ff     |l
New Denver Combines Split
Slocan Baseball League Tilt
NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURS., JUNE 10, 1965—9
NEW DENVER-Fred Jmaeff
pitched Slocan Park to a 5-3
Slocan Valley Baseball League
win on the weekend, fanning nine
batters and allowing tlirce
walks.
Loser Harold Welch required
relief help from Gary Wilson and
was the victim of four costly
errors.
Together the New Denver
Combines pitchers allowed five
walks while striking out 17.
Slocan Park collected nine lilts
and played errorless ball, while
the Combines managed eight
base hits.
Gus Stankoven and Harold
Mori chalked up five of !he New
Denver club's hits.
Sunday the Combines avenged
their loss to Slocan Park by defeating Kaslo 4-2, collecting their
four runs in the first two innings.
Southpaw Johnny Nesbitt recorded the victory, whiffing 12
Kaslo batters.
Losing pitcher George Nelson
held the Combines scoreless for
seven innings while his teammates picked up one run in each
of the fourth and seventh.
Gary Wilson came on in relief
in the eighth for the New Denver
club.
Each team collected seven hits
and committed two errors.
Mori and Jim Olynuk each
slammed triples for the Combines,   while   Swantz   came
through with two doubles  for
Kaslo.
An exhibition doubleheader is
scheduled for this weekend with
the Revelstoke Carlings of Ihe
Okanagan Mainline circuit. In
the event that Revelstoke is unable to make the trip, the Combines will host a Trail commer
cial league team at 2 p.m. Sun.
day afternoon.
Following are league standings
to date:
W L T Pts
Winlaw    2   0  0    4
N. Denver-Silverton  110    2
Slocan Park   110 2
Kaslo  0  2  0    0
Time: 3:53.6
France's Jazy Smashes World Mile Record
llllllllllllltllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
Roughies Report Signing
Of Two American Imports
REGINA (CP) — Saskatchewan Roughriders today announced the signing of Americans Ernie Barnes from Denver Broncos and Jim Paton from Washington State for the 1965 Western Football Conference season.
Barnes, 28, is a five-year veteran of the American Football League, having spent three years
with San Diego Chargers before moving to Denver.
At six feet, four Inches and 225 pounds, he plays offensive guard and defensive end.
Paton stands six feet and weighs 230 pounds.
Just 22 years old, he plays offensive guard and defensive tackle.
Roughrider coach Eagle Keys also announced
that Jesse Thompson, a former defensive line coach
with Calgary Stampeders who now scouts for Minnesota Vikings of the NFL, and Bob Kellog, a former
assistant coach with Keys in Edmonton, will help
with the training camp which opens here June 28.
illllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
RENNES, France (AP) -
Michel Jazy of France bettered
the world record for the one-
mile run Wednesday night with
a time of 3:53.6.
The recognized world record
was held by Peter Snell of New
Zealand at 3:54.1.
Jazy's record effort came just
one week after he had bettered
the European record with a
3:55.5 run in the Paris suburb
of St. Maur.
Last Sunday Jazy bettered the
European record for 5,000 metres. He covered the distance in
13:34.4 to beat the old record
held by Vladimr Kuts of Rus-
sa at 13:35.
Jazy, 29, is a veteran French
distance runner and was
France's main hope for a Gold
Medal at the Tokyo Olympic
Games. He placed second in the
1,500 metres at the Rome Olympics but decided to switch to
the 5,000 metres for Tokyo.
There he ran into difficulties
with the pace and flnshed ffth.
About 3,000 persons watched
the race. Jazy had said in advance that he would be out to
beat the world record if
weather conditions were right.
WIND NEGLIGIBLE
The temperature was about
60 degrees and the wind was
negligible.
Jazy sprinted through the last
50 metres. When he crossed .the
finish line he felt that he had
beaten his European record but
had failed in the world record
attempt.
Jean Kerveadou set the pace
in the first lap of 400 metres
which went at 57.3. Jean Wad-
oux then took over, and Jazy
finished the second lap in 1:56,
which put him about three seconds in advance of his scheduled time for a record.
Gerard Vervoort set the pace
in the third lap, but the time
for the 1,200 metres was not
announced. On the final lap,
Jazy raced ahead and was
spurred on by the screaming
crowd.
He passed the 1,500 - metre
mark in 3:38.4.
Jazy complained later a number of races had been run on
the track before the mile and
that the footing was hard.
"Without this," he said, "I
think I could have done 3:52."
Vervoort finished second in
3:59.9, Michel Bernard third In
4:00.9, and Claude Nicolas
fourth in 4:03.2. All are from
France.
Jady, married and the father
of two children, is a public relations employee of a big mineral water company. He has
been running for about 14
years.
He also holds the world records for the infrequently run
distance of 2,000 metres and
3,000 metres, as well as the
European record for the 1,500
metres.
Jazy's best performances
have always been under his
own conditions, when he could
run with friendly competition
willing to set an even and fast
pace. He has never shown to
best advantage when running
against strong competition.
When possible, he has avoided
races where other stars have
been entered.
Ron Clark of Australia plans
to run in Europe next month
and has expressed interest in
racing against Jazy. But Jazy
has already announced he will
be on vacation at the time
Clarke is here.
Mile Records
3:59.4 — Roger Bannister,
England, May 6, 1954, at Oxford, England.
3:58.0 — John Landy, Australia, June 21, 1954, at
Turku, Finland.
3:57.2—Derek Ibbotson, England, July 19, 1957, at London.
3:54.5 — Herb ElUot, Australia, Aug. 6, 1958, at Dublin, Ireland.
3:54.4—Peter Snell, New Zealand, Jan. 27, 1962, at Wan-
ganaui, N.Z.
3:54.1—Peter Snell, New Zealand, Nov. 17, 1964, at Auckland, N.Z.
3:53.6—Michel Jazy, France,
June 9, 1965, at Rennes,
France.
From Soccer to Skeets,
Montreal's Expo Has It
By AL McNEIL
MONTREAL (CP) - From
soccer to skeets, you name the
sport and the 1967 Montreal
world's fair will probably have
it.
And Expo 67 officials are
aiming at having all the events
played for either international
or national titles.
Col. T. J. E. McLelland,
sports director for the fair,
says he's satisfied with progress made to date in negotiations with world sports bodies.
He recognizes, however, that a
lot more talk will be needed
before matters are settled.
"It's a simple matter to plan
these things, but it's another
matter to get them firmed up."
Many, but not all, of the
events will be staged in the
Expo 67 stadium, a 25,000-seat,
$3,200,000 pre-cast concrete amphitheatre now being built on
Mackay Pier. It will be completed in August, 1966.
Col. McLelland says world
sports organizations have been
co-operative. Many of the bigger events are in the advanced
planning stage although no
dates have been set yet for any
of the competitions.
"We are corresponding with
several countries to arrange the
international soccer championships which will be held in the
stadium."
This event will bring top professional and amateur soccer
teams here.
In addition, the stadium will
be the site of a world youth
soccer round-robin tournament,
an international track and field
meet and a North American
Indian lacrosse competition.
Many off • site events are
planned In conjunction with the
fair. "With these people already
planning their events for Montreal in 1967, we are trying to
help them."
Water sports will be concentrated in three areas—Valley-
field, Que., on Lake St. Francis,
Lake St. Louis and the Expo
jetty adjacent to Mackay Pier.
Blunt, Olsen, Bedard Share
Special Point Honors
Zillah Blunt, Verlene Olsen
and Jean Bedard topped a field
of 35 at the Nelson Golf and
Country Club's ladies' night session to take honors in the special point competition.
Dorothy Mcintosh, long-time
member of the ladles' club, was
presented with a going-away gift
RCMP Drop
Eagles 9-4
RCMP continued their Play-
For-Fun softball winning streak
Tuesday night as they defeated
Eagles 0-4 behind the steady
pitching of Ed Malinowski.
Malinowski worked four and
two-thirds innings before being
relieved by Charlie Huggard.
Stonoski took the Eagles' loss.
This year's Eagles team is a
combination of last season's
squad and former South Slocan
players.
Probable
Pitchers
By The Canadian Press
Probable pitchers for today's
major league games, won and
lost record in parentheses:
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Milwaukee, Cloninger (7-4) at
Chicago, Jackson (3-7).
Cincinnati, Maloney (5-2) at
St. Louis, Sadecki (2-51.
Houston, Bruce (4-6) at Pittsburgh, veale (6-2), (N).
Los Angeles, Drysdale (10-3)
at Philadelphia, Culp (3-2), (N).
San Francisco, Marichal (8-5)
atj N«w York, Kroll (S-S), (N).
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Chicago, Peters (4-4) at Boston, Morehead (4-4).
Cleveland, McDowell (5-3) at
Minnesota, Boswell (3-2), (Twl-
N).
Baltimore, Bunker (2-2) at
Washington,-fyBTiim (2-5), (N);
Only games Scheduled.
One of the water events.will
be the world hydroplane championships at nearby. Valleyfield,
with entries expected to reach
the 500 mark in comparison
with the normal 200.
In addition the world dragon
class sailing championships will
be held on Lake St. Louis, and
a one-day 30-mile marathon
swim is tentatively planned.
A world swimming tournament and the North American
and Canadian canoe championships are expected to round out
the aquatic events.
The Canadian volleyball finals
will be held in Montreal in May,
1967, and the Natonal Skeet
Shooting Association will decide
next year whether to hold its
annual competition here during
Expo year. ■
Representation will also be
made by. delegates to the annual meeting of the International Cycling Union with the
hope of bringing the world cycling championships here. However, a final decision isn't expected until next March.
Batting Leaders
on behalf of the membership following Tuesday's play.
Due to confliction with other „ „.   .
tournaments, the Bruce Pelmore V™;™!"' i »
and Investors Syndicate tournaments have been postponed from
June 19 until July 3.
This year the ladles' annual
West Kootenay Open golf tour- American League
ney will be held in Kaslo June AB R   HPct,
19 and 20. Jones, Boston     10118 38 .376
Eighteen-hole qualifying Horton, Detroit 130 20 46 .354
rounds must be submitted no Davalillo, Cleve. 165 19 58 .352
later than June 12 to match McAulffe, Det. 177 34 58 .328
captain Dolly Koehle. Hall, Minnesota   170 30  55 .324
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
National League
AB R H Pet.
116 14 42 .362
104 17 36 .346
179 22 60.335
155 29- 52 .335
156 26 52 .333
Johnson, L.A,
Kranepool, N.Y.
Aaron, Mil.
Torre, Mil.
Nelson Savoys Fall
6-2 to Kimberley
KIMBERLEY-N«lson Savoys
soccer club is without a coach
and they show it.
Sunday Kimberley Soccer club
downed the hapless Nelson club
6-2 in a game that was married
by defensive errors, disorganized
forward line play and to top it
all off a windstorm that covered
the field with branches.
Only the excellent goalkeeping
of newcomer Harry Bowerin prevented a higher score as he
proved to be the most effective
player on the Savoy team.
Ederer started Kimberley
goal • scoring barrage early in
the first half when he completely
outplayed the Nelson defence.
Three quick goals by Vogelaar
20 minutes later put the Kimberley Squad in front 4-6.
Willie Schell finally managed
t6 get the Savoys on the Scoreboard from a pass by Richard
Eggers deep In the Kimberley
zone.
The Savoy shifted positions in
the second half with Bernie Ryan
taking over the centre half position, allowing only two goals
against the potent Kimberley
forward line.
Sherbo and Mousseetjones increased the Kimberley lead to
6-1, before Bill Koorn and Nicola
Jacullo teamed up to blast the
ball into the open corner from
short range.
The Savoys have lost two
coaches in the last two years in
E. Mansouri and J. Carr.
Mansourl, who built up the
team and put It into championship form was transferred last
spring, while Carr, playing
coach of the Cranbrook Rovers
in past seasons, led the Savoys
to the league championship last
year.
The management is looking for
a new coach, a difficult chore in
any sport,
There are lots of capable men,
but not very many who are prepared to spend an evening a
week to coach a team.
Any experienced soccer player, willing to coach the team
should attend Thursday practice
sessions at the Civic Centre field.
Players or anyone just inter
ested in general physical conditioning is welcome to attend the
Thursday workouts at 7:00 p.m.
The Savoys are idle this weekend in the five-team circuit, but
return to action June 20 when
they host the Rossland Internationals.
SIMPSONS-SEARS
THE NEWEST DESIGN!
Ropeless Tent
Save $26.00. Reg. $115.88 Value.
Sale Price
t
89
88
Large family size, 12 x 9 x Vi'. This new,
modern design tent can be completely erected
from the outside and features two large
windows, with storm flaps, on each side. Nylo-
net dutch door has full length brass zipper and
privacy curtain. Attractive green roof, coral
walls and floor, all in heavy 10-oz. waterproof
drill. Steel poles and pegs included.
$7.00 monthly. Sale Price $89.88
QUALITY CELACLOUD FILLED
SLEEPING  BAG
Reg. $16.95 Value.
Sale Price  	
1388
A superior bag filled with 4 lbs. of celacloud.
Long wearing Olive Poplin cover, outdoor pattern flannelette lining. 100" zipper. Size 35 x 76".
Sale Price $13.88
3-WAY
CAMP COT
Site 24"x72"
Only	
999
Adjusts for use as a chaise lounge, chair, or
camp cot. Tough 60% Nylon — 50% Cotton cover
in Olive Green. Rustproof steel frame.
Sale Price $9.99
RUGGEDLY BUILT COLEMAN
CAMP COOLERS
Only
18.99
Steel outer shell. Foamed polystrene insulation,
white plastic liner, A long insulating cooler with
strong handles, hinges and lid. Drain plug, bottle
opener. Blue enamel. Size 22 x 13 x 13".
Reg. $19.89. Sale Price $18.89
A Simpsons-Sears 4-Slar Value-
AIR MATTRESS
Only
998
"At Home" comfort, because its advanced con:
struction is built like a mattress. Light blue,
extra strong rubberized cotton. Size 30 x 72".
Sale Price $9.9»
Save $7! Sturdy, 9x9x7'
UMBRELLA  TENT
Reg. 36.88
Sale price  .
2988
Quick to set up tent for a family of 4. One window
with storm flap, dutch door with full length
zipper.   Metal  poles,  centre  pole   adjustable.
Forest green colour.
Sale Price $29.88
Size 9x12x7'. Exceptional Value
HIGH WALL TENT
Reg. 74.88.
Now   	
69.99
Sleeps S with room to spare. 4 large windows
with storm flaps. Dutch door with full length
brass zipper. Forest green 12.5-oz. roof, 10 oz.
walls, dark green 8 oz. floor. Steel poles, pegs
and ropes included.
Sale Price $69.99
Outdoor
Living
Low-priced 24'
Borbecue with
Motorized Spit,
Coppertone
Hood
ONLY
16
99
Charge It I
Features turkey-size
copper-tone finish hpod;
heavy - duty CSA approved motor with 3-
position spit mount.
Chrome • plated forks,
sipt and grid; 24" steel
bowl. Raise/lower mechanism. Tubular steel
legs on wheels.
Sale Price  $16,99
CANADA'S BEST
BICYCLE VALUE !
J. C. Higgins
"Sportflite"
Choice ef 4 Models
$
99
Pay Only $5 Monthly
• Jet-age   twin-bar
extra strength
• Reliable  coaster brakes for
safe riding
• 2-tone saddle with craihrall;
touring bag
e Strong   1-pce.   pedal   arms;
reflector pedals
Men's, Youths'. Colors of
Green or Gold. Frame 20/18
inch, wheels 26x1 J $49.99
Women's, Girls'. Frame 18"
wheels, 26x1* $49.99
Polystyrene
The Amaxing New
Ceeco
Camp Light
Reg. $19.95.
Special Sale Price
14
95
This amazing, fluorescent camp light operates
off your car battery —
simply plug into the
cigarette lighter. Light
is equivalent to a 60-
watt bulb yet uses less
power than the dash
lights in your car. Will
not flatten battery. Approx. 20' of cord.
12-volt only.
Guaranteed for 1 full yr.
Roomy 19Vt x 11% x 13% size,
made of light, expanded Polystyrene. Keeps food hot or cold.
Colour green.
Now Reg.
$3.89 ..	
FRIG PACKS
Mb. size .
2-lb. size .
3-lb. size -
Camp Stove
Lighter
Reg.
type,
lig'-
Super Speciall
4-Player
Badminton Set
WITH PROFESSIONAL
SIZE 18' NET
Reg. 8.95
Value  ...
5.49
Set includes 4 steel-shaft
badminton racquets with
rubber grips; king-size 18'
net; metal poles; pegs; instructions and 2 plastic
Birds.
OUR BEST SUMMER
WEIGHT    - •
SLEEPING BAG
Reg, $29.88 Value.
Save $10
Now
19,88
Features a 4-lb. fill of
Terylene. Heavy duty poplin cover, patterned flannelette lining. 100" rustproof zipper. Size 36 x 78".
HARDWOOD
FOLDING
CAMP STOOL
Reg. 1.29
Now   .	
99«
Clear varnish. Seat 11%"
square. Stands 1314" high.
See Our Flyer for ,
fJlSSi
Many More UE*
Money-Saving ▼
SPECIALS
$1.25.    Flint
works like
lighter,
Sale Price
Camp Stove
Stand
Reg. $3.77. For all
camp stoves. Folds
to 15 X 30 x 2". Green
p'rlc, . *2.99
Special... Boat and Motor
COMBINATION
8' Boat Tops in Safety
New llnearglass won't corrode, dent, fade, peel or chip. Won't
puncture even under severe contact. Wide beam; lapstrake design.
Bronze colour. Charge it! $99.00
Versatile Elgin Motor
Guaranteed 2 years — serviced coast to coast. Perfect for small
boats, punts, canoes or as a spare for launch. Weighs only 27 Ibs.
Powerful enough for speeds up to 5 m.p.h. Charge itl $99.00
 10—NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURS,, JUNE 10, 1965
Dividends
By THE CANADIAN PRESS
Columbia Cellulose Co. Ltd.,
$1.20 pfd. 23 cents, June 30,
record June H.
Dominion of Canada General
Insurance Co,, 42% cents, July
15, record June 30.
Dominion Scottish Investments Ltd., common 6 cents,
June 30, record June 16.
Globe Envelopes Ltd,, common 8 cents, Aug. 3, record
July 16.
Llberian Iron Ore Ltd., 25
cents, Aug. 16, record Aug 6.
Ocean Cement and Supplies
Ltd., common 30 cents, July 2,
record June 16.
Supertest Petroleum Corp.
Ltd., common 2% cents, ordinary 25 cents, pfd. $1.25, July
15, record June 18    .
T. G. Bright and Co. Ltd,,
common 25 cents, June 30, record June 16.
Trans Canada Pipe Line Ltd.,
common 25 cents, July 30, record June 30.
During the last 10 years the
proportion of married women
working has increased about 77
per cent.
MARKET TRENDS
NEW YORK (AP) - Heavy
selling battered the stock market Wednesday and threw it for
another sharp loss    .
The mood of recent declines,
based more on a cautious dry-
ing-up of bids rather than active selling, changed radically
as stocks were unloaded on a
more emotional basis.
Volume leaped 7,110,000
shares from Tuesday's 4,670,-
000. It was the biggest total
since March 4 when 7,310,000
shares changed hands.
The Dow Jones industrial
average sank 0.21 to 879.84.
The decline followed Tuesday's drop which was the
sharpest since the assassination
of President Kennedy, but Wednesday's heavy trading gave it
more widespread importance.
A wild rumor that President
Johnson had suffered a heart
attack triggered a short-lived
wave of selling around noon
when volume was 1,800,000
shares for the 60 minutes. The
rumor was denied .The sub
sequent recovery almost erased
ON THE AIR
CKLN PROGRAMS 1390 ON THE DIAL
PACIFIC DAYLIGHT TIME
THURSDAY, JUNE 10, 1965
5:59-Sign On
6:00—News and Reports
6:10-The Morning Show
6:40—Farm Fare
6:45-Chapel in the Sky
7:00—News
7:05-Wake Up Time
7:25-Sports News
7:30—News
7:35-Wake-Up Time
8:00—News
8:10-Sports News
8:15-Wake-Up Time Continues
8:30—Preview Commentary
8:35-Opening Markets
8:45—Custom Concert
9:00—News
9:10-Road and Weather Report
9:15-The Archers
9:30—Royalite Windfall
9:59—Time Signal
10:00—News
10:05—Noon Markets
10:10-Music Fill
10:15—Open Line
11:00—News
U:05-Book Mark
11:08—Morning Melodies
12:00-Relax With Rafael
12:15—Sports News
12:25—Spotlight On Sports
12:30—B.C. Farm Broadcast
12:55-News
l:00-Stories With John Drainie
1:15—What's On Tapp
l:45-|acred Heart Program
2:0O>Holiday Time
2:30—News
2:33-Trans Canada Matinee
3:30—Tempo
4:00—News
4:03—Canadian Roundup
4:10-Sports Report
4:15—Pops Parade
4:30—To Market With Music
5:00—Rolling Home Show
5:05—News
5:10—Rolling Home Show
Part 2
5:35—Closing Markets
5:40—Today's Editorial
5:45—Business Barometer
5:50—Sports Desk
6:00— Strikes and Spares
6:05-CKLN National News
6:15-Countrytime
7:00—News (and) on Parliament Hill
7:20—Speaking Personally
7:30-The Bible Speaks To You
7:45—Report From Parliament
Hill
8:00—Assignment
8:30—Reserved for Music
9:00—The Fourth Estate
9:30—Winnipeg Pops Concert
10:00—News
10:15—Chapel In the Sky
10:30-Thursday Show
U:0O-News
11:03—Thursday Show
12:00—News
12:03-Sign Off
CBC PROGRAMS
FRIDAY, JUNE
1:00—News 4
l:05-The Morning Program
1:00—News
1:10—Sports Report
1:35—Max Ferguson Show
1:00—News and Report
1:10—Interlude
i:15—The Archers
i:30—Pacific Express
1:59—Time Signal
1:00—Morning Visit
i:10—For Consumers
1:15—Land of Smiles
1:45—Off the Record
!:00—Tennessee Ernie Ford
!: 15—News
1:25—Spotlight on Sports
1:30—B.C. Farm Broadcast
!:55—Five To One
1:00—Stories With John Drainie
: 15—Tommy Hunter Show
1:45—Programme Resume
!:00—Divertimento
1:30—News and Trans Canada
Matinee 1:
1:30—Tempo Part I 1
l:00-News I'
11, 1965
03—Canadian Roundup
: 10—Tempo - Part Two
:00—Jazz 'n' Things
: 30—News
: 40—Today's Editorial
: 45—Business Barometer
: 50—Bill Good Evening Sports
: 00—Tempo, Part 4
:30—An Evening Concert
:00—News and Reports
: 20—Speaking Personally
: 30—Friday Edition
: 45—Nation's Business
: 55—Piano Music
: 00—Assignment
:30—Radio International
00—News
: 15—Talking About Books
:30-CBC Stage
: 30—CBC Jazz Club
:00—News
;03—Land and Marine
Weather
05-After Hours
00—News
03—Recorded Music
00—Morning Mist
the loss. But the rise petered
out and selling snowballed in
the final hour.
Key stocks fell from fractions
to 2 or more points along a
broad front.
The Associated Press average
of 60 stocks sank 3.2 to 320.5,
its lowest level since Dec. 15,
1964 when it closed at 320.0.
American Telephone in an
unusual development, was the
most active stock as it fell IV*
to 67% on turnover of 99,400.
Analysts said the heavy selling in utilities was caused by
fear of higher interest rates
which would make utilities less
attractive on a yield basis.
Losers among the volume
leaders included General Motors, off 1%, Xerox, off .Vt,
General Telephone, off Hi and
Fairchild Camera, off Hi.
IBM lost »Sk, Du Pont 2Vt,
Union Carbide .Vt, General
Electric Hi, Goodrich 1%, Boeing 2tt, Kennecott .Vt, Tana-
conda l'A and Zenith 21i.
Steels tried to rally in late
afternoon. Bethlehem, Republic Steel, Lukens and McLouth
emerged with fractional gains.
U.S. Steel eased Vi .
On the Canadian section,
Hudson Bay Mining dropped
two points .Distillers Seagrams
fell % and losses of Vt each
were taken by Walker Gooder-
ham, Mclntyre Porcupine and
Granby Mining. Moving ahead
were International Nickel, up
1%, Canadian Pacific, Sk and
Dome Mines, Vs.
Prices also declined on the
American Exchange in heavy
trading. Scurry Rainbow Oil
was down Vt and Brazilian
Traction Sk while Canadian
Marconi and Canadian Javelin
lost Sk each. Jupiter Corp. was
up %.
MONTREAL (CP) - Stocks
were lower with the exception
of papers and utilities Wednesday on the Montreal and Canadian stock exchanges.
Industrial volume was 262,700
shares and mines and oils 979,-
200.
The composite index was off
0.5 at 155.9, a low.
Industrials off 0.5 at 161.9,
Canada Cement two points to
52 and CIL Vt to 21. Moore
Corp. dropped Vt to 69 and Dominion Textile climbed % to
34%.
Banks off 0.5 at 125.4, a low,
Canadienne Nationale \Sk points
to 70% and Nova Scotia and
Toronto-Dominion one point to
74 and 64,    '
Utilities up 0.1 to 148.4, In-
terprovincial Pipe Lines one
point to 90 and CPR % to 60.
Papers up 0.1 to 131.2, MacMillan Bloedel Sk to 3m and
Great Lakes % to 22%. Dominion Tar added Si to 20V4
and Price Bros, lost Vt to 41%.
Senior oils were off with Imperial down Vt to 52 and Shell
Vt to 16%.
Metals were lower. In the
base section Hudson Bay Mining dropped Hi points to 72
and Hollinger Sk to 27%. Inter-
TELEVISION FOR TODAY
PACIFIC  DAYLIGHT  TIME
KREM-TV •
. Channel 2
6:30-Yogi Bear
7:00-Dobie Gillls
7:30—Jonny Quest*
8:00—Donna Reed Show*
8:30—Outdoor Sportsman
giOO-Bewitched'
9:30—Peyton Place*
10:00—Jimmy Dean*
11:00—Nigjitbeat
ll:30-Late Movie
KXLY-TV -
- Channel 4
7:00—The Rifleman
7:30—Billy Graham Crusade
8:30-TBA
9:00—Password (L)
9:30—Celebrity Game (L)
10:00—Jazz on a Summer's
Day (L)
11:00-11 o'Clock News
11:30—Big Four Movie
KHQ-TV -
Channel •
7:00—Thursday Night at the
Movies: 'Forest Rangers'
8:30-Dr. Kildare*
9:30-Hazel* (C)
10:00—Suspense Theatre* (C)
11:00—News and Weather
ll:30-Tonight With Carson* (C)
CBC-TV — Nelson, Chai
nel 9; Trail, Channel 11
national Nickel rose one point
to 9414. In the primaries, Algoma and Steel of Canada fell
one point to 69 and 29 .Aluminium was off % at 30%.
TORONTO (CP) - Industrials recovered in a late-day
rally in light stock exchange
dealings Wednesday, wiping out
most of the losses that brought
the industrial index to a 1965
low.
The 87 - stock index, a barometer of the group's health,
closed at 166.51, down .20. The
index hit a low of 165.48 at the
1 p.m. compilation. Losses were
mostly fractional.
Volume was 3,329,000 shares
compared with 2,813,000 shares
Tuesday, the first time volume
has topped the 3,000,000-share
mark since June 3. This was
the eighth consecutive trading
session of drops.
Speculatives were quiet.
In the main list, Canadian
Imperial Bank of Commerce
and Brazilian Traction trimmed
% to 64% and 7 and Bell Telephone fell % to 59%. Stelco
dropped % to 29% and Toronto-Dominion Bank Sk to 63.
B.C. FOREST UP
On the plus side, B.C. Forest
Products and CPR each tacked
on Sk at 28 and 59%. Walker-
Gooderham gained % to 38%
and Bank of Nova Scotia % to
73%.
Falconbridge fell % to 97
among senior base metals and
Labrador 3% to 31. Hudson Bay
dropped a point to 7Hi and
Denison Sk to 31%.
Giant Yellowknife led golds
lower with a 1% fall to 12%.
The gold index declined 2.96 to
a 1965 low of 152.84.
In senior Western oils, Dome
fell Sk to 17% and Canadian
Superior Vt to 20%.
On Index, base metals fell
.76 to 79.10, Western oils .74 to
100.26 and the exchange index
.30 to 156.33.
JUST TESTING - Defending
champion In the U.S. Open
Golf tourney, Ken Venturi
practicea to St Louis, where
the 1965 Open will be held
June 17-20. He's testing Us
hands. Venturi has had little
or no feeling In his hands
since last October.
DAILY  CROSSWORD
3:00—Moment of Truth
3:30—Take Thirty
4:00—As the World Turns
4:30—Razzle Dazzle
5:00-Magilla Gorilla
5:30—Music Hop
6:00—Feature Film:
"2 and 2 Makes 6"
7:30—Candid Camera
8:00-Gomer Pyle, USMC
8:30—The Serial
0:00—The Defenders
10:0O-The Rogues
11:00—News
11:14—Viewpoint
CJLH-TV - Channel 7, Lethbridge
MOUNTAIN STANDARD TIME
12:00—Test Pattern
12:25-The Pastor's Study
12:30-The Story Lady
12:45-Farm Digest
1:00—Desilu Playhouse
2:00—Loretta Young
2:30—Two for Tea
3:00—Moment of Truth
3:30-Take Thirty
4:00—As the World Turns
4:30—Razzle Dazzle
5:00-KIds' Bids
FRIDAY
5:30—Music Hop
6:00—Sports, Weather, News
6:30-Naked City
7:30—Bewitched
8:00—Country Hoedown
8:30—The Fugitive
9:30—Telescope
10:00—M-Squad
10:30-Tldes and Trails
11:00-CBC News
11:15—Night Final
11:20—Desilu Playhouse
(Programs subject to change by stations without notice.)
tt
DOWN
I.Elder
2. Cutting
tools
t.Man
or
Skye
4. Letter
5. Trance
6. Promenading'
T. Sandarae
tree
S. Narrate
again
9. Oklahoma
city
11. Turfy
16. Obese
17. Paper
sack   -
20. Dangerous
snakes
22, Dragging
through
mud
24. Breeze
25. Small
square
in
a town
26. New York
Indian,
tribe
27.Pole
28. Performs
HIIWWH   SIISll'JHbi
Biai-iHig HHnaran
HBHSin   I1IIS1EISB
EIKISJIM HIM:]
EIBH61H
[grawaigwi:] em®
HGIHOIH   IlHSiraia
Hiaia nHiMMHE
HUBRIS
HiMiH HHHSi
smmw) siEimisw
MWIIHH  BlltlHK
arcana bbhsih
Tutwdqr'f Aaiwat
29. Tricks
32. German
novelist
35. Askew
36. Winglike
38. Solemn
wonder
ACROSS
1. Embark
5. Crystalline
mineral
9. Annoy
10. Peels
12. Sam
18. Muse of
lyric
poetry
14. Prefer
15. Blazed
16. Nautical
signal
17. Destitute
of hair
18. Earl: abbr.
19. Landing-
place for
the Ark
21. Lazily
23. Wit
24. Mother Ot
Irish god*
25. Price
27. One who
erects
scaffolding
30. Indefinite
article
U. God of
thunder
33. African
antelope
34. Pulverized
86. "Woe Is
me"
IS. Heaps
28. Girl's name
89. Smells
40. Desires
41, Projecting
end of a
church
«. Units of
work
DAILY CBYPIOQDOTE _ Here's how to work ltt
AXYDLBAAXR
Is   LONGFELLOW
One 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, apoa-
trophles, the length snd formation of the words are all hints.
Hsch day the cods letters are different.
A Cryptogram Quotation
D'KW      FQAWGDAWF      GTJQBMTJO      QO
ARNNZDYM—RYJ        GUWY        D'KW
OUQBMUG    RMRDY.-YQWO    PQLRNJ
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: OUR NATIONAL FLOWER IS
THE CONCRETE CLOVERLEAF.—LEWIS MUMFORD
(C law, King futures ByodiuU. Inc.)
%
1    '
1
3
4-
f/<
5
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7
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9
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V/A
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19
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21
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2*
%
^A
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%
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26
Vt
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31
32
%
35
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Vt
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B.C.  Briefs
HOSPITAL APPROVED
CRANBROOK (CP)-The pro-
vincial government has approved a start on planning a
$2,400,000 hospital here. The
four-storey hospital, with 75
beds will replace the 64-year-
old St. Eugene Hospital.
HEAD HONORED
VANCOUVER (CP)-Dr. Roy
Daniells, head of the English
department at the University of
British Columbia, has been
named university professor of
English in the first of a limited
number of special appointments
at the university to honor distinguished scholars.
(DhsM. tUfL lOilk.
WoAwtL TncuduL
Printed Pattern
9228
SWINGY SKIMMER
Vivid flowers frost the front,
the skirt swings out freely —
picture your little girl in this
gay skimmer. Flowers are easy
to embroider — braid creates a
bib effect.
Printed Pattern 9228: Children's Sizes 2, 4, 6, 8. Size 6
takes 1% yards 35-inch Transfer.
FORTY CENTS (40c) in coins
(no stamps, please) for each
pattern. Print plainly SIZE,
NAME, ADDRESS and STYLE
NUMBER.
Send order to MARIAN MARTIN, care of N.D.N. Pattern
Dept., 60 Front Street West, Toronto, Ontario.
350 DESIGN IDEAS plus ONE
PATTERN FREE - any one
you choose in new Spring-Summer Pattern Catalog. Send now
for biggest pattern book bargain
ever! Only 50c.
mmtauha. OJhadeJL
QUICK STITCHERY
Think of how much time you
spend in the kitchen — brighten
it up with lively motifs.
Share the stltchery with a
little girl — it's an enjoyable
project for two! Decorate towels,
cloths. Pattern 595: six 6 x 7-inch
motifs.
THIRTY FIVE CENTS in
coins (no stamps, please) for
each pattern to Laura Wheeler,
care of N.D.N. Needlecraft
Dept., 60 Front Street West, Toronto, Ontario.
1965 Needlecraft Catalog — 200
designs, 3 free patterns I MORE
to crochet, knit, sew, embroider.
25c.
"Decorate with Needlecraft"-
fabulous, new book packed with
25 patterns for top decorator
accessories shown in 5 idea-filled
rooms. Applique co-ordinates,
pillows, wall hangings, more. 60c,
Send for superb Quilt Book —
16 complete patterns. 60c.       /
baMsMl
MM
 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURS., JUNE 10, 1945—11
flkCHVL
352-3552
HELP WANTED—MALI
WANTED - STOPE AND DE-
velopment miners. - Apply
JohnBby Mines Ltd., Silvortqn.
Phone 358-2353. -124-135
HELP WANTED
CANADIAN FORCES
OPPORTUNITIES
The Canadian Forces needs
young men NOW to serve as
soldiers, sailors and airmen.
Plan your future — embark on
a challenging and adventurous
career in the Canadian Forces.
You are eligible to serve if
you are a Canadian citizen,
a single male, age 17-29,
physically fit, and have Grade
8 education or better. For
complete details on the many
opportunities and benefits that
are immediately available
contact your Canadian Forces
Recruiting Team at the
ROYAL CANADIAN LEGION,
NELSON, on FRIDAY, 11
JUNE, 12 noon-8 p.m. or
write to the CFRC, 547 SEYMOUR ST., VANCOUVER 2.
HELP  WANTED  FEMALE
RELIABLE EMPL'OVER HAS
opening (or an experienced
stenographer. Position offers
attractive salary, medical in-
surance, pension Plan, five day
week. Accurate typing essential, shorthand required and
must be able to work with dictating equipment. Our 3taff is
aware of this advertisement.
Reply in confidence to Box
103, Nelson Dally News. Applications must be in by Friday
June 11th. -133-138
-131-h
COLUMBIA CELLULOSE
COMPANY LIMITED
Require
HEAVY DUTY MECHANIC
to work In woods In both the
Revelstoke and Nakusp sress.
Applicants must have experience on logging and construction equipment. A knowledge
of welding is desirable. Excellent retirement,  health  end
welfare plans. Reply to Industrial Relations Superintendent,
Columbia Cellulose Company
Limited, Celgar Woods Division, Box 1000, Nakusp, B.C.
-135-137
WANTED- STRAWBERRY
pickers; women preferred. —
Write to Mike Popovich, Wvnn
.-del, B.C. -133-138
LOST AND FOUND
LOST-PICTURE PLATES
(negatives) of the Kaslo Diamond Jubilee 1953 book. Anyone knowing their whereabouts
kindly contact the Kootenay
Lake Historical Society, Karlo.
-135.133
LOST-LADIES' GOLD WRIST
watch in Nelson shopping area
on Baker and Ward Sts. Finder
please phone 368-9252 or 368'
9997 after 5 p.m.      -134-136
PIANO AND ORGANS. THOMAS
McAnespie, Pisno and Organ
specialist. Work dons for Royal
Conservatory of Music of Toronto examinations. Tuning and
repairing all makes. Will be
In Nelson on or about 1st July.
Ph. 852-5747 Or 852-8950.
-133.137
RESTLESS 7
Looking for a new Interest?
Representing Avon Cosmetics
can open a whole new world
to you . . . and be profitable
too. Write Mrs. J. Mcllroy,
Suite No, 1, 1246 McPherson
Crescent, Penticton, B.C.
-130-135
EXPERIENCED FIN I SHER
and apparel press operator for
laundry. MSA and group insurance plan available, Phone
352-6655 for Interview. Kootenay Cleaning Centre, 182
Baker Street, -130-tfn
BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITIES
MARSHALL WELLS FRANCH-
ise store in Kinnaird Shopping
Plaza. This Is a key location
with a great potential. Store
is well stocked and doing excellent business. $15,000 to
handle or will accept property
and cash to full price of
$27,000. Plaza Hardware Limited, Box 220, Kinnaird, B.C.
-135-140
IMPERIAL SERVICE STA-
tlon, small grocery store,
background 6 three-star fully-
modern cabins, .double stall
garage with pit and workbench. Age and poor health
forces us to sell. Price is optional; best bidder buys.
Grandview Auto Court, Nelson.
Phone 352-3677. -130-133
FOR SALE-GENERAL STORE
with living quarters attached,
in thriving community, six
miles from Trail. Apply Montrose General Store, P.O. Box
43, Montrose, B.C.     -128-139
WANTED TO RENT
2 OR 3 B.R. HOUSE BY SAFE-
way Employee. Must be avail'
able by July 15. Ph. 352-5762.
-133-137
MODERN 3 OR 4-B.R. HOME
needed by Calgary family by
July 2. Reply to Box 98, Nel'
son Dally News.        -180-135
BUSINESS   &   PROFESSIONAL
DIRECTORY
A handy alphabetical guide to goods aad services
available in Nelson.
Automobile Dealers
BILLS' MOTOR-IN LTD.
(Studebaker Sales)
213 Baker St.    Phono 352-3231
-tfn
PARKVIEW MOTORS LTD.
(Rambler - Volkswagen!
323 Nelson Ave.   Phone 852-5855
.       _____
Building Supplies
BEE BUILDING SUPPLY LTD.
Everything in waterproof
plywood.
Ni Baker St    Phone 382-3136
-tfn
BURNS LUMBER CO.  LTD.
661 Baker St.     Phone 352-6661
-tfn
Columbia trading co.
901 Front St.      Phone 352-5571
Lots of tree parking.
-tfn
Contractors
Lassie Husuk, General Masonry
Stone - Brick   Cement - Stucco
Plsstcrins
1323 Falls St.       Phona 352-7692
-239-tfn
ART RAVESTEIN
Renovations, Cement Work
and General Carpentry
Phone 852-7433
-tfn
Garages
Upper Fairview Motors Ltd.
Cor. 7th at Davits   Ph. 382-2525
Transistorized ignition
-tin
Health Foods
HEALTH POOD CENTRE
'   Health Thru Nutrition
483 Ward Street '
■•;      ;;        -    -22-iiB
. "Vitades for Nutrition
VITALITY  HEALTH   FOODS
684 Ward St.        Nelson, B.C.
■466-tM
33=
Monumental Stones
STONE and BRONM
i     Private Reception RoOni
I   NELSON FLOWERS LTD-
i -84-tfn
rHPSPII
t
2-3852
-81-lin
Photo Copying
POWELL ENGRAVING
460 Ward St.        Nelson, B.C
Phone S52-7521
Contracts - Birth Certificates
Legal Documents
Important Papers
-tfn
Printing
NELSON DAILY NEWS
Printers • Lithographers
Color Printing
Phone 352-3552
-lll-tfn
Radio and TV
Service
Radio ' TV ' Transistor • Service
COLUMBIA ELECTROCENTRE
LTD.
458 Ward St.     Phone 352-558)
-218-tfn
VIDEO ELECTRONICS
8 Hail St - Phone 352-3355
-tfn
Refrigeration
Refrigeration Sales and Service
CARLSON   EQUIPMENT
803 Anderson St.   Ph 352-5458
-166-tfn
Rug Cleaning
Wall-to-Wall   Carpet   Cleaning
Saniclean Services Ph. 352-6841
-80-130
Sporting Goods
Fred Whltelty's Sport Shop
468 Biker SL Phona 662-7741
        -tip
Topsoil
pn;
'S Topsoil, Sand and Gravel
2-2355 Days  352-7576 eves
-tfn
Vacuum  Cleqners
3
-SE
ELEFTftOI.UX tk.[H * SerrlU*
'Th tones St'     Ph. 382-7541
-77 tin
SITUATIONS WANTED
OLDER   EXPERIENCED
Steno, available full or part
time, Box 101, Nelson News,
-132-137
WELL  DRILLING.  WESTERN
Water Wells Ltd, Ph. 385-7380.
-104-tfn
SHARPEN MOWERS, CLIP-
pers, etc, Pickup, ph. 352-7006.
-133-149
PIANO TUNING AND REPAIR
G Stenberg. Phona 352-8892.
-287-tfn
PROPERTY, HOUSES,
FARMS, ETC. FOR SALE
PRICED RIGHT
PROPERTIES
ARE SELLING
All Our Listings Are
• Approved at.Fair.
■ Market Value ;
; GRANITE ROAD "
2 bedroom bungalow reduced
$1000 from our appraised value
for Cash. Modern kitchen, full
basement with .large picture
windows — could easily ee converted toapart- $6900
ment. Cash Price
.WitlTterms pHf.
K.M.L.S.
•" CORNER.STORE AND
.MODERN DWELLING
Well-equipped small store ih
Nelson with  attached living
quarters. Price Includes equipment Terms to be arranged,
it....::..:; mm
Contact us for full information
3-4 APARTMENTS
CENTRAL-LOCATION
Attractive older style home on
beautifully landscaped grounds
converted to self-contained
apts. Two one-bedroom apts.
on main floor, private' entrances from large open verandah.
Large L.R.'s with fireplace,
D.R., kitchen, bathroom. Spacious 2 B.R. apt on 2nd floor,
private .entrance,. iarge L.R.,
fireplace, D.R., kitchen, glassed-in back porch, All units
equipped with electric stoves
and refrigerators, Full base'
ment, oil fired furnace, laun-
dry room, auto- $18,900
matic washer... T-'
,.'..'.WltH.:i4h400.down,
NEW FOR YOU WITH VIEW
KM L (!■■ '
■ ROBERTSON :AVENUE
If- you are interested.in living.
U.  Nelson's   newOst   Ultra-,
modern dwelling we Invite you
to see this newly constructed
3 bedroom bungalow, L.R.
features . fireplace, sliding
doors to verandah;; L-shaped
D.R., dream kitchen, 3 walls
of formica- faced, cupboards
Electric heat with Individual
thermostats: -Fully insulated-,
full bssement with roughed-in
fireplace (Suitable for apart',
ment),- • large- attached::car*.
^       ■  $23,900
-. With- $4000 down, - .
BOMS AND INCOME
HOUSTON STREET .
New side by side .Duplex. 3
bedrooms, wall-to-wall carpet
in L.R. and Master B.R.
Modern kitchen, built-in electric range, double sinks, Full
basement, gas furnaces, and
_^t% $25,900;
T. D. Rosling
& Son Ltd.
868 Ward St.        Ph. 352-3581
Evenings, Phyllis Turner,
352-5694
-133-135
NORTH OKANAGAN - 16
shady acres, small house and
two rental cabins, On paved
Highway 97A. Good for horses.
Commercial possibilities. Close
to lake and fishing. Full price,
$10,000, or your offer may suit
Write for details to George
Green, Enderby Agencies Ltd
Realtors, Enderby, B.C.
-134-165
NORTH OKANAGAN RIVER-
front! Modern 3-bedroom home
on One-third acre. Oil furnace,
washer and dryer, good garden, Perfect for retirement, on
paved highway. Pull price,
66000. For full details write
George Green, Enderby Agen-
clot. Ltd., Realtors, Enderby,
B.C. -134-135
FOR SALE-PRE-FAB HOUSE
at Howser, B.C. Full plumbing, wator system, automatic
light plant, used furniture and
propane fridge, tools, ind so
forth. Owner there this weekend. J. Brashear. Ph. 332-6111
or. 352-5633, or P.O. Box 132.
Nelson, B.C. «13S-1S7
PROPERTY, HOUSES,
FARMS,  ETC.  FOR SALE
Continued	
PROPERTY FOR SALE-DIS-
tr|ot of Kootermy, In the Province of British Columbia, and
more particularly known and
described as PARCEL 1, that
part of Sublot 116, of Section
35, TownBhlp 9-A, Rossland
City, Plan X-62, shown outlined
In red on Explanatory Plan
99854-I| PARCEL 2, Block 120
(assigned) of section 35, Township 9-A, Rossland City Plan
X-62, save and except that part
shown outlined in red on reference plan 1OO480-I; PARCEL
3, Lots 1 to 7 inclusive, in
Block 63, Rossland City, Plan
616-F; PARCEL 4, Sublots 108.
109 and 110, and that part of
Sublot 120 outlined in red on
reference Plan 100480-1, of Section 35, Townshln i-a, Rossland City, Plan X-62.
Property consists of approximately 21 acres wllli large
Barn and House In good condition and considerable grazing land,
Property previously knuwn as
Bartoffy Hog and Poultry
Farm.
Sealed bids will be accepted
by the ROSSLAND CREDIT
UNION up to June 30th, 1985,
on the above mentioned property, Bids may be made on
the whole or part. The highest
or any bid may not necessarily
be accepted. ADDRESS your
bids to the:
Board of Directors
Rossland Credit Union,
P.O. Box 489,
Rossland, B.C.
ENVELOPES must be clearly
marked, "PROPERTY BID".
ROSSLAND CREDIT UNION.
-129-142
2 LEVEL ACRES AT TAGHUM,
will subdivide, Highway front-
age. Water. Beautiful view.
35 min. drive to Castlegar; 10
min. to Nelson. Ph. 365-7461
or Box 102, Nelson News.
-132-137
CORNER LOT, 50 x 60. ALSO
4 B.R. house on lot 120 x 28.
Will take late model car or
wagon as down payment. 519
Latimer St. Ph. 352-5865.
-132-tfn
FOR SALE OR TRADE FOR
home In Nelson, 51-acre farm,
10 acres cleared; 3-B.R. house,
barn, new Irrigation, fruit
trees, etc. Ph. 852-5688 after 6.
-127-152
FOR SALE^2tt ACRES WITH
partly finished house, in Tar-
rys, B.C. Sk mile from school,
on Highway No. 3. Ph. 332-2434
-134-136
WELL-KNOWN FARM, MUST
sell. Sacrifice price. iV> miles
from Nelson. Apply P. K.
Reibin, 669 Baker Street, Nol-
son, B.C. Ph. 352-3717. -131-136
SMALL i-B.R. HOUSE. FULL
basement, large kitchen. With
new furniture. On 3 lots. $0000.
Half cash. Ph. 352-5493 after 4.
720 Innes St. -130-135
OWNER TRANSFERRED -
Must sell 3-4 B.R. house. Fireplace in living room, dining
room, close to schools. Phone
352-2725. -125-tfn
FOR SALE, 2 BDRM. HOME
on 10 acres. Full price $8000.00.
Phone or write 366-4869, Box
46, Wynndel, B.C.    -133-142
FOR SALE r- 2 B.R, HOUSE.
2 room suite' with bath. 1
cabin on 3 lots. Pb. 352-2425.
-132-137
SIDE • BY , SIDE DUPLEX.
Auto. heat. Near Civic Centre,
614-316 Cedar St. Ph. 359-7466
evenings. -132-137
NEW   3-B.R.   HOME,   SOUTH
Slocan. Pbone 359-7273.
-122-147
2-B.R. HOME ON BUS ROUTE.
Gas heat Phone 352-3430.
-135-tfn
MACHINERY
Industrial Transmission
Roller Chain, Sprockets,
V-Belts, Sheaves,
Pillow Blocks.
Stevenson Machinery Ltd.
Phone 352-3561
-135-135
FOR SALE - 1959 MERRIMAN
Trailer, 10 x 35, A-l condition,
cheap for cash or terms can be
arranged. Apply A. Turnbull,
Box 1434, or phone 426-3803,
Cranbrook. -99-tfn
VALLEY AUTOMOTIVE LTD
Massey-Ferguson, New Holland NOW and Used Farm
Equipment. Parts, Salts and
Service. Phone 356-2284, Creston, B.C ^110-tfn
AVAILABLE -■ 14A D8 TR\C-
tor Alto 46A. Contract or hourly. Ph'. 365-8203 Or 365-8387.
-134-136
PERSONAL
MRS."(SLA LARSON, PLEASE
write. We need your signature
to settle mother's will. O. Rat-
kelson, Campbell River, B C.
-129-tfn
Continued next column
WOULD LIKE RIDE TO VAN-
couver for adult and child for
June 4th or l6th.pi. 858-2635.
'   r        -133-135
FOR SALE
MISCELLANEOUS
Ortho Fertilizer Spreader
Only $6.95
NELSON
FARMERS' SUPPLY
524 Railway St     Ph. 352-5375
-135-135
BE SURE YOU SEE OUR HIA-
watha Tent Trailer. Compact,
easy to haul, simple to erect in
minutes; folds down to within
43 Inches from the ground. On
display at 1621 Ward St., Nel-
son. Ask-about our easy terms.
Price now reduced by $160.
Macleod's, Your Family Shopping Centre. —135-140
MACLEOD'S LEAD
Hostess and occasional cr.airs,
reduced 20% to clear. Colors,
brown, turquoise, beige, chocolate and red. Priced from
$14.35. Hurryl 7 only to choose
from. Macleod's, Your Family Shopping Centre. -135-136
•WE TRADE ON ANYTHING"
That o|d gun you are not using, trade it in as down payment on a HONDA. - NORM'S
SPORT SHOP. 382-2015, Nel
-51-tfn
COMB. COAL-GAS RANGE,
available June 15, $50. Two
electric stoves with ovens, 2
and 3 burners, $20 each. Phone
352-9238, business hours,
-134-tfn
STENOGRAPHER'S CHAIR, $15
metal student desk, $10: one-
man mountain tent, $10; metal
ironing board, $3. Phone after
5 p.m., 352-3546, Unit Number 9. -135-137
SIDES OF GRAIN-FED BEEF,
49c, cut and wrapped; Sides of
pork, 35c; sides of pork, cut
and wrapped, 39c. Newdan
Farm, Creston. Phone 356-9901
or 356-9769. -171-tfn
FOR' THis BEST IN USED
automatic washers, dryers, re-
(rigerators, television, etc. con
tact Nelson Electric Co. Ltd..
574 Baker St., Nelson. B.C.
.    -27-ttn
AUTOMOTIVE, BICYCLES
MOTORCYCLES
HONDA 55 SPORTS WITH
mountain sprocket. TV telescopic mast with channel 2, 4
and CBC. Phone 365-7076 after
4 p.m. -133-138
COAL • WOOD FURNACE AND
pipes. Name your price and
take it away. Phone 352-2072.
M, Wasilenkoff, Blewett.
-133-138
SMALL   FURNISHED   HOUSE
in Rossland. Will trade for a
26-ft.   house  trailer.   Phone
362-5682, Rossland, Box 927.
-133-138
1960 CASE 400 CRAWLER
tractor with blads, winch, all
rock guards, 1200 hrs. A-l condition. Benny Lister, Slocan
City. Ph. 355-2364.      -132-137
HAVE A PIANO IN WEST
Transfer for sale. Apply P.O.
Box 58; Jack Mulholland.
-134-139
SPECIAL ROOM COOLERS
and air conditioners, $75 and
up. Coleman Electric, Phone
352-3175. -113-tfn
PLAIN COFFEE TABLE, WALL
mirror and lamp, all for $25.
Phone 352-528L .        —134-139
LOG LOADING HOOKS, TONGS
blocks and other misc. items.
Phone 352-3862. -130-137
TENT   TRAILER - PHONE
352-6891 after 6 p.m. —135-137
TRADE SCHOOL
TRAIN FOR
HEAVY
EQUIPMENT
(Operators - Mechanics)
Dozers, Scrapers, H.D.
Trucks, Shovels, Graders,
Etc. ' ■
For full information, write.
GREER TECH
405 Ford"BWg.'..	
Vancouver 4, B.C.
-135-h
BOATS AND ENGINES
22V CABIN CRUISER. EXCEL-
lent condition. Gray marine
motor and transmission; newly refinished and reconditioned, new driveshaft, etc. Owner
being transferred. Must sell for
best Offer over $650. Phone
352-7498. -133-tfn
16' CABIN RUNABOUT. 40 AND
36 H.P. motors, new 1964.
Electric start controls, tanks,
Double galvanized boathouse,
2 lanes. Stove, Icebox, fishing
rods, etc,, etc. Total price,
$1800. Phone 353-7123. -135-tfn
BOATHOUSE   AND   18'   IN-
board for sale. Phone 352-7420.
-135-137
PROPERTY WANTED
LISTINGS WANTED BUILD
ing lots, farm land, city and
country residential Commer
cial property, timber lands
Call or write Wm Kalvniuk
Agencies. NeUnn Ph S52-7425
-231 tin
4 ON THE FLOOR
Convertible
Absolutely flawless throughout, Finished in Arctic white
with matching nylon top; contrasting red leather interior.
Fully equipped with power
steering, custom factory radio,
tachometer, seat belts, padded
dash, Broadloom carpeting
throughout, and all other Oldsmobile luxury appointments.
Please see it at 170 Baker St.,
or call Mr. Smith, 352-3233;
Evenings 352-3639.
-135-137
FOR
SALE
1964 Chev Bel-Air, Std., 6 cyl.,
4 door. Stiver Blue. Radio,
white walls, etc. 11,000 miles.
402 Hamilton Ave.
Ph. 352-2904
After 6 p.m.
-134-186
'63 IMPALA
SUPER SPORT
HARDTOP
This like new beauty Is fully
power equipped snd is spotless Inside and out. This week
only, $2895.
REUBEN BUERGE'S
BARGAIN CENTRE
170 Baker St.       Ph. 332-3233
AUTOMOTIVE, 8ICYCLES
MOTORCYCLES
1957 CHEV. 6 CYL., STD.
trans., radio. Priced at $650
for quick sale. Call 352-6111
days; 352-3639 evenings or
Sundays for demonstration.
135-137
PICK   UP   A   FREE   CYCLE
Safety book and a free safety
reflector at Motorcycle Centre, 902 Front St., Nelson, B.C.
-134-136
WE EMPLOY THE FINEST
motorcycle specialist In ihe Interior of B.C. Motorcycle Centre, 902 Front St., Nelson.
-130-135
QUICK SALE-1959 VAUXHALL
sedan. Fully equipped. Any
reasonable offer considered.—
Phone 356-4660 or write Box
130, Creston, B.C.     -129-148
1954 OLDS, STD. TRANS., RA-
dio, new tires. Requires transmission work. As is, special
$225. For Inspection, call 352-
8111. -135-137
AUSTIN HEALEY LEMANS
100-4 convert, elect. O.D., wire
wheels, WW ice blue metallic
tonneau. Ph. 368-3856. -132-137
1958 METEOR. ONE-OWNER
car. New paint job; beautiful
shape. For tryout, 910 Mill St,
after 6 p.m. — 123-tfn
GIRLS' BICYCLE, 18", J. C.
Higgens. Never used. $30. —
Phone 352-2627. -135-137
1984 PLYMOUTH FURY 2-DR.
Hardtop. New condition. Phone
352-2195 after 5 p.m. -135-140
WRECKING 1953 FORD, 1954
Pontiac. Parts for sale. Phone
352-6096, evenings.      -135-140
FOR SALE-196S VALIANT 2-
door. Good condition. Phone
352-2830. -134-136
1952 PONTIAC. GOOD CONDI-
tion. 920 Falls St. after 3 p.m.
-127-138
'61 CHEV. STAND., 6. VERY
cheap. Phone 226-7257.-133-138
—133-137
BARRETT TRAILER AND
Boat Sales, Fruitvale, sell motorcycles, Honda, BSA and
Triumph; Homelite Chain
Saws; Springbok alumiunm
boats; Thermoglass and Wa-
cando fibreglass boats; Johnson outboard motors; Gator
boat trailers; Scamper holiday trailers and truck campers; Century fold-down trailers; accessories for trailers,
boats, motorcycles. Trade-ins.
Repsirs and service. Factory-
trained mechanic for Horda,
BSA, Homelite and Johnson
motors. . —122-147
ASSUME
PAYMENTS
OF $23
'57 Plymouth 2-door Hardtop,
V-8 with custom radio. Full
price, $438! Simply pay $46
down W.A.C. and drive it away
REUBEN BUERGE'S
BARGAIN CENTRE
170 Baker St. •,     Ph. 352-3233
-135-137
COTTONWOOD WRECK-
age wrecking KS6, '56 Ford
Pickup. '56 Austin, '53 Studebaker, '56 Merc, '90 International 4x4 carry-all, '56 Ford,
'55 Chev; good motors, KS6
motor, A55, '56 Volks,, '55
and '56 Chev. motors, '54
Zephyr, International 246-IC
motors. Ph. 352-5815, Box 382,
24 Ymir Rd. -100-tfn
DON'T DESPAIR - WITH RE-
pairs. Replace your car engine
with an Allstate rebuilt engine
4000-mile guarantee. As low as
$10 per month.. 1946-52 rebuilt
engines to fit Chevrolet, only
$195 and your old block. Call
Simpsons-Sears. Phone 352-5531
- Nelson. -119-tfn
1964 FORD Vfc-T. SHORT W.B.,
wide box, 4-speed, custom cab,
fresh air heater, pos. trac,
13,000 miles. Original owner.
Excellent cond. 1948 Int. 1-Ton
flat deck on duals. Licensed.
In good running order. Good
rubber. Make us an offer. —
Phone 352-2042. -127-tfn
WRECKING '59 AND '61 V.W.;
'87 Pontiac 2-dr. H.T., radio;
•88 Ford VB, std.; '55 Plymouth; '53 and '54 Monarch
std.; '53 Chev; '81 Pontiac; '49
Dodge;"'53 Ford motor. $50;
'48 Int. Vi-Ton- Various accessories. Parts reas. Ph. 352-2042
-105-tfn
FOR -SALE - 1960 INTERNA-
tlonal 20-paSsenger bus, 160
Series. Excellent condition and
low mileage. Reasonably priced. Write Box 2589, Cranbrook,
B.C., or phone 426-2619.
-135-135
1164 FARGO WALK-IN UTILITY
van 14,000 miles. Like new
Ideal for deliveries, variety of
commercial uses, or can convert to camper. Nelson... Dailv
News. -70-tfn
MOBILE HOMES
TRAILERS
CRANBROOK
TRAILERS LTD.
Serving the East and
West Kootenays
CANADA'S BEST BUY
Have you been wondering
where to build your SUMMER
HOME In this fast growing,
fast changing province of ours.
Why not consider a "MOBILE"
Summer Home. Then you are
free to trade — or move with
the times 11 Drop in and talk It
over — We have sales lots In
both Cranbrook (Fernie Road)
and Castlegsr (next to Twin
Rivers Motel) to serve you
better.
WALT HILL, Mgr.
-123-tfn
1966 10'x50' PONTIAC CHIEF
2-B.R, demonstrator. Used 8'
x 43' 2-B.R. Indian. Used 8'
x 35' 2-B.R. Regal. Can be
seen at Kline's Motors. Phone
352-7238. -135-137
1962 EST A VILLA HOUSE
trailer, 10'x34'. 2 B.R.s. Apply
Cedar Crest Trailer Court,
Castlegar. E. Nielsen, —133-138
28'x8' GREAT LAKES HOUSE
trailer; 1 B.R. Phone 352-2766.
-134139
•64 MODEL 2-BDRM., 50' x 10'
trailer. Ph. 352-6995.-133-138
LIVESTOCK, POULTRY
AND  FARM  SUPPLIES
FOR SALE - ONE CHARLOIS
cow, 3 yrs, old. One Charlois,
hereford heifer calf, 8 mo. old.
One Hereford heifer calf, 8 mo.
old. Call 356-9502 or write A.
W. Huolt, Box 976, Creston,
B.C. -132-143
RENTALS
SPACIOUS, SELF-CONTAINED,
heated 2-B.R. suite. Fridge,
stove, automatic washer, garbage disposal unit, fireplace,
sunporch. $95 per month. Ph.
352-5327 before 5 p.m. -135-137
SUMMER HOME; ELECTRI-
city, and fully finished. Idea!
place for children. Property
also for sale. Apply E. Bannert, Grand Forks, B.C. Phone
442-8800 or 442-3255.    —135-146
FURN. 4-ROOM SUITE. LARGE
living room, large kitchen, 1
small and 1 large B.R., bathroom, porch. Top floor. Available July 1st Ph. after 4:30,
352-6985. -131-136
ONE OR TWO ROOM FURN-
ished apts. in Annable Block,
$25   and   up.   Call   352-7217.
Poulin Agencies, 582 Ward St,
-95-tfn
ROOMS AND SUITES-HSKPG.
and sleeping rooms, weekly,
monthly rates. Dishes, linen
supplied, parking. — Allen
Rooms, 171 Baker St. -27-tfn
3 ROOM APT., PARTLY FURN.
Private entrance; no children.
North Shore, near bridge. Ph.
352-3095 afternoons or eves.
-133-138
DELUXE 2-B.R. APT. UNFUR.
Adults. Phone 352-5252.
-134-tfn
2-B.R.s, LIVING ROOM, DIN-
ing room and kitchen. 412 Silica Street —133-tfn
2 B.R. HOUSE. CLOSE-IN. 316
Cedar St. Adults. $75 per mo.
Ph. 352-6257. -132-137
CENTRAL LOCATION, FURN.
room; stove, fridge. Girls
only. Phone 352-6139. -133-tfn
FURN. BACHELOR LADY APT.
Phone 352-5886 or 332-6024.
-135-tfn
OLDER TYPE 3-B.R. HOME -
Phone 352-3226 after 6 p.m.
-135-140
2-B.R. FUR. APT. IMMEDIATE
occupancy. Phone 352-6432 or
352-3353 after 7 p.m. -135-tfn
FURN.  APARTMENT. BUSIN-
ess lady. Phone 352-3020.
.  -133-138
PUBLIC NOTICES
LAND ACT    -
Notice of Intention to Apply to
Purchase Land .
In Land Recording District of
Kaslo, B.C., and situate in Argenta, B.C., 525' +- South of
S.E. Corner of Lot 7450.
TAKE NOTICE that D. Thornton Conrow of Argenta, B.C.,
occupation: self-employed, intends to apply for permission to
purchase the following described
lands:
Commencing at a post planted
at S.W. Corner of Land of this
application, thence East 10
chains; thence North 20 chains;
thence West 10 chains to the
Easterly boundary of Lot 7450;
thence South along Easterly
boundary of Lot 7450 about 795'
to S,E. Corner of Lot 7450 (N.E.
corner of Lot 7482); thence continue South along Easterly boundary of Lot 7462 about 525' to
starting point. EXCEPT that
portion held by B.C. Telephone
Co. upon which Is situated a
Telephone Relay Tower, and
which is situated in S.W. Corner
land of this application; and
containing 15 acres, more or
less.
The purpose for which the land
is required is homesite, domestic
garden and domestic orchard.
Darling Thomtoti Conrow.
Dated Friday, June 4,1965.
-185-h
HALDANE   APARTMENTS   -
Furn. or uniurn. Ph. 352-8721.
-65-tfn
FOR ARTIFICIAL BREEDING
dairy and beef cattle, phone
352-6874, Nelson and District
A. I. Centre, 709 Third St., Nelson. J. De Jong, Technician,
-tfn
SADDLE HORSES FOR SALE.
One 2-yr., not broken; one 3-
yr., broken, 1 mare, very good
with children. Ph. 367-7248,
P.O. Box 478, Fruitvale.
-132-137
FOR SALE,   MILKING GOAT,
2 kids and weaner pigs. Phone
356-4869 or write Box 46, Wynndel Hog Farm, Wynndel, B.C.
133-137
SELLING   FRESHENED,
heavy milker. Ph. 352-5462.
-114-139
FOR SALE - LAYING HENS
and chicks. Ph. 352-3808
87-ttn
Newspaper Advertising
Pays Over and Over
FOR RENT-HOUSEKEEPING
room. Phone 352-7462.—107-tfn
1-BEDROOM HOUSE. ADULTS.
Phone 352-6337. -135-tfn
TIMBER SALE X86478
Sesled tenders willUereceived by the District Forester at
Nelson B.C., not later than 11:00
A.M. local time on' the 5th day
of July, 1985, for the purchase
of License X8647B, to cut 1,654,600
cubic feet of: Spruce, Balsam,
Cedar, Larch, Fir, Hemlock,
Lodgepole Pine, and trees of
other species, on an area situated: North Fork of Pass
Creek. Similkameen Division of
Yale Land District
Ten (10) years will be allowed
for removal of timber.
As this srea Is within the
Granby P. S. Y. U„ which is
fully committed, this-sale will
be awarded under the provisions
of Section 17 la) of the "Forest
Act" which gives the timber,
sale applicant certain privileges.
Further  particulars  can  he
obtained from the Forest Ranger, Grand Forks, B.C.* from
the District Forester, Kelson,
B.C., or from the Deputy Minister of Forests, Victoria, B.C.
■     —100-h
WANTED
MISCELLANEOUS
SPOT CASH FOR USED FURN1-
ture, antiques, coins, eld gold,
guns and jewels. Home Furniture Exchange. Ph. .352-6531.
413 Hall St., Nelson, B.C.
-St-tf
SADDLE FOR WELSH PONY
or larger. Phone 359-7427.
-133-135
PITS,  CANARIES,  BEES
AMERICAN   COCKER   SPAN-
iels; male pups, black, 8 wks.,
registered, $35. Vonroy Kennels, Creston. Phone 356-4189.
-134-136
FOR SALE - FEMALE GER-
man Shepherd pups, $5 each.
Ph. 367-9180 after S weekdays.
-132-137
FOR SALE-SHEPHERD PUPS
-Phone 352-3993.     -134-139
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
Modern
OFFICE
SPACE
For
Approximately 706 sq. ft, ol
modern,   fully   wired office
space located on Baker Street
in Nelson.
REASONABLE   RENT
Long o' Short Term
Leoses Arranged
Apply to;
Nelson Daily News
Ph. 352-3552    .
Nelson
lath} 2foui2
Circulation Dept,, Ph. 352-3552
Price per single copy.MO cents
By carrier per week, 40 cents
in advance.
Subscription rater.
By mail in Canada
Outside Nelson
One month        $ 2.00
Three months  _       5.00
Six months         10.00
One year 18 00
By mall to United Kingdom
or the Commonwealth
One .month   ...I.  ..$,_soo
Three months     6.00
TIMBER SALE X94232
Sealed tenders will be received by the District Forester at
Nelson B.C., not later than 11:00
A.M. local time on the 5th day
of July, 1963, for the purchase
of License X94232, to cut 1,168,000
cubic feet, of: Larch, Fir, Balsam, Spruce, Cedar, Logpole
Pine, White Pine and trees of
other species, on an area situated: oh headwaters of Treadmill Creek, Similkameen Division of Yale Land District.
Six (6) years will be allowed
for removal of timber.
As this area is within the
Granby P; S. Y. U., which-is
fully committed, this sale will
be awarded under the: provisions of Section 17 (la) of the
"Forest Act" which gives the
timber sale applicant certain
privileges.
Further particulars can be obtained from the Forest Ranger,
Grand Forks, B.C., from the
District Forester, Nelson, B.C.,
or from the Deputy .Minister
of Forests, Victoria, B.C.
-100-h
TIMBER SALE X70S40
Sealed tenders will be received
by the District Forester at Nelson, B.C., not later than 11:00
a.m., (Local Time) on the 26th
day of July, 1965 for the purchase of License X70540, to cut
2,430,000 cubic feet of: Larch,
Fir, Cedar, Spruce, Lodgepole
Pine and trees of other species
on sn area situated: Whee
River, North of Berlin Creek,
Kootenay Land District,
Ten (10) years will be allowed
for removal of timber;
As this area is within the
Upper Kootenay P.S.Y.U., which
is fully committed, this sale will
be awarded under the provisions
of Section 17 (la) of the "Forest
Act" which gives the timber sale
applicant certain privileges.   '
Further particulars can be
obtained from the . F 0 r e s t
Ranger, Canal Flat, B.C., from
the District Forester, Nelson,
B.C., or from the Deputy Minister of Forests, Victoria, B.C.
-118-h
CONTRACTORS
BONUS HOMES. PHONE; FOR
complete Information-. All
types of Renovations,.. New
Homes. Specializing injalumi-
num, siding, windows", doors,
roofing, store-fronts, Hotels,
Motels. Free. Estimates. An-
smack •Construction,-!: Building Supplies. Phone 352-2416,
Nelson. 352 Seymour St.^.Xam-
loops. Phone 372-8722'. i-'i24-152
1 ■ a 11 n 11111 • • 111111111 s 1 (1 • t • 111111 a 1 • 111
Newspaper Advertising
fays Oyer and Oyer
;iitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiinj
 BHSaSBSSJSSW
12—NELSON DAILY NEWS, THWBrnflWE-14,4965
r ^^n
Gay/a Carouse/
2 Revolving Stands Full of
Fine Hair-Care Items . . .
SLEEP CAPS      BOBBY PINS
BARRETTES CURLERS
BRUSHES and COMBS
Etc.
MANN
DRUGS LTD.
News of ih^Day
RATES: 30c line, 40o line bold face type; larger type rates
on request. Minimum two-lines.
COPY DEADLINE - PLEASE NOTE ■'••'■-
Copy for this column accepted until -3 p.m.- for Insertion
In next day's publication.".
Sharpening: Mowers, clippers,
etc.>For-pickup, phone 352-7006.
-133-137
Nelson Septic Tank Service
Phone 352-3772.
-106-tfn
English lace cloths, in all sizes.
STERLING FURNISHERS
.    -134-135
Haigh Tru-Art Beauty Salon
576'Baker St. Ph. 352-3313
-29-h
Diamonds, Watches, Gifts,
Repairs, Engraving
TED ALLEN'S JEWELLERY
-305-h
; CDONT MISS!
SHRINE PARADE
AND CIRCUS      ;.";.
Saturday, June 26th, Nelson
:hi:::- -■•    ■'".•"'-'.'..»i3M4?'
NELSON CIVIC EMPLOYEES
'..   LOCAL NO.' 339
Union meeting tonight, 6 p.m.;
Canadian'Legion. Urgent. Every
member'attends  "•=    :—135-135
Foam'-plastic in assorted sizes
and thickness.-Ideal.for.pillows,
cushions, -boat-seats, etc. It's low
priced!   ,-,•.•
HIPPERSON HARDWARE
.'."".    -135-135
You are in danger of losing your
KOOTENAY. LAKE FISHERY.
Come to the PUBLIC MEETING
in the EAGLES' HALL in NELSON, at 7:30 p.m. on.Monday,
June 14. Attend this meeting to
lend your support to Have your,
fishery. —135-138
ASSIGNED TO VIEI NAM—The U. S. Is sending F104 Starflghters (above) to Viet Nam
to bolster aerial attack support The Startighter flies at 1,400 mph.  The F100 Super-
sabres already there go only 800 mph.  The Soviet-made MIGs fly 650 mph.
FURNITURE FOR YOUR
Summer Comfort
CHAISE
LOUNGE
. "S.S. MOYIE"
POSTPONED
The Annual Meeting of the.K.L.
Historical Society has been postponed until Friday, June lltli, at
p.m., on board the S.S. Moyie
in Kaslo. Everyone please try
to attend     '        -135-135
*»-*%.
SPIKE
2.95
Spring Filled
Mattress
Colorful Cover
$29.95
Lawn Swings
1.50
SILVER TEA ROOM
Top of Taghum Hill
at Builtmore Construction
NOW OPEN
Specializing in Russian Foods.
Watch for Special Sunday
Dinner announcement.
Phone 352-3992   ..
. -133-136
CARD OF THANKS
My sincere thanks to everyone
for their kind thoughts; Dr.
Beauchamp and the hospital
staff for making my visit a
pleasure. I recommend everyone be given a raise.
Don Coleman.
-135-135
CARD OF THANKS
We wish to extend sincere
thanks and appreciation for the
many kindnesses, messages of
love and understanding, and
beautiful floral offerings from
our relatives and friends during
the death of our beloved husband
and father.
Mrs. Evelyn Neil and family.
-135-135
Church Seeks
Real Source
Of Unity
t .BOSTON - The Christian Sci-
enqe board of directors today
urged its church members to
find the "areas of agreement"
which exist w(th other denominations — "rather than think of
ourselves as entirely different or
exclusive."-       .   ,
From the church's earliest be.
ginnings, said' the directors, it
has been deeply involved in "the
search for the real source of
unity."  '.
The message was presented
before several thousand members at the annual meeting of
the Mother Church, the First
Church of Christ, Scientist, in
Boston, Massachusetts...
"On the basis.of its spirituality, Christian Science has much
in common with other denominations," the message noted.
. "To every honest adherent of
any God-centred faith sincerely
working to uplift and unify the
human race, we offer our fellowship and support. ...
"Today we are confronted with
one of history's deepest, most
divisive social Upheavals," the
directors- continued.     . .
"Marking this upheaval is the
churning drive of the individual
to find the real meaning of life
-and to establish his' legitimate
place and identity in an increasingly
society.
"Social and governmental or
ganizations as such do not make
the .necessary connection with
the individual or enable him to
meet his real needs. Helpful and
important as these efforts are,
they are not enough. They do
not get at the root of the trouble," said the directors.
Convicted Murderer Pleads
Lack of Sanity Hearings
By SEYMOUR M. HERSH
CHICAGO (AP)-"For heaven's sake catch me before I kill
more. I cannot control myself."
That shocking entreaty,
scrawled in red lipstick across
a mirror in a slain woman's
apartment, was 17-year-old William Heirens' frantic plea for
help that came too late.
Before he was caught, his
crimes, which began with the
fatal stabbing of a middle-aged
widow oh a June night 20 years
ago, were to include the sadistic dismemberment of six-year-
old Suzanne Degnan
Heirens, now 37, contends he
was deprived of a sanity hearing before being sentenced
Sept. 5, 1946, to three life terms
in prison for murder. His plea
for a new trial will be heard
June 17 in U.S. district court.
Shortly before his first trial,
Heirens showed police how he
climbed through an open window, snatched Suzanne from
her bed and left a ransom note
demanding $20,000.
Ten hours later, two police
detectives lifted a sewer lid and
found the child's ■ head. Other
parts of her body were found in
other sewers    .
Police found fingerprints on
the ransom note but, the investigation floundered for months.
Heirens spent those months
in his usual pursuits: He maintained a B average at the University of Chicago and at night
Passengers Unhurt
In Helicopter Crash
FOLDING
CHAISE LOUNGE
Aluminum Frame,
Saran Webbing. 	
12.95
Folding Chairs
$5.95
FUNERAL NOTICE
JOHNSON — Funeral services
| for Mrs. Josephine Johnson, will
! be held at the Thompson Funeral
Home, .Friday at 2 p.m. The
I Rev. Dr. S. E. Green will offi-
j ciate and the services will be
I followed by cremation. Friends
are requested to please omit
I flowers. "
Aluminum.frame,
Saran web; from
Aluminum frame,
Saran web
STERLING
HOME  FURNISHERS
Folding Rockers | to Unguages
*14-951 Will Take i
I Miles ef Wires
I
FATHER'S DAY IS JUNE 20
Spalding Golf Cart.
Golf Bags
Golf Balls
> Golf Gloves
Hip Waders *J0.75
Fish Nets 80^
Creel,    - J2.65
Rod Holders
Gun Sling .
Binoculars ...
$22.50
'J3.95
_ 60*
1 $3.50
J195
'3.49
'32.25
Slazenger Tennis Balls: Set of 3    2,70
Floating Ski Tow Rope. 75'
Hunting Knives
Fish Knife
Cooper Weeks Wallets
Wood, Vallance Hardware
(1963 LTD.)
WHOLESALE - RETAIL
OTTAWA (CP)-Between now
md September, 40 miles of wir-
ng will be laid in the House
jf Commons.
I There would be nothing to it,
I says the works department, if
the chamber was empty. But a
summer recess is not yet definite—at least a long one isn't—
so the department has decided
to tackle the project on weekends    .
Last weekend, one row of
seats was taken out, the green
carpet lifted and pipes installed
to carry the wires. With 10 rows
of seats, in the chamber, this
part of the operation can be
completed in 10 weeks without
a recess.
The purpose of the rewiring
is a new sophisticated simultaneous translation, system, capable of handling six languages.
It must be completed by September when L the Interparliamentary Union holds its meetings in the Commons in five
languages.
After this, the system will revert to the present two-language use, although the six-
language capability will remain
for any.future use.
With the" new" system, the existing overhead microphones,
will hang from wires near the
ornate linen-cloaked ceiling, will
be replaced with neat, modern
desk mikes.
When the overhanging microphone's were installed'in 1952 as
part: of the Commons first translation and amplification system,
the late Claire Gillis (CCF-
Cape Breton South) said they
resembled the hanging clothes
brackets in a mining wash house,
By LINDA CRAWFORD
MONTREAL (CP) - The
whole consumer program is
geared to middle class shoppers
who; now are buying more for
desires than for needs, Mrs.
Esther Peterson, special assistant to . President Johnson for
consumer  affairs,   said  Tues-
Phone 352-7221
Nelson, B.C.
SMITHERS (CP) - Helicopter
pilot Ed Dunn said today it was
"just short of a miracle" he
and three passengers escaped
injury Tuesday when their
machine was caught in a powerful downdraft and sent reeling
into three other men on the
complex and impersonal | ground.    ■
Lloyd Steel, 37, a diamond
driller from Willowdale, Ont,.
was cut in half by the whirling
rotor.
Brian McDonald, 22, of West
Vancouver had his legs severed
just below the hips. He is
reported in poor condition in
hospital here.
John Beron, 21, of Preeceville,
Sask., was released from hospital after being treated for a
blow to the head.
The pilot and his three passengers were not hurt.
Dunn, manager of Okanagan
Helicopters Ltd. here, said he
was freighting supplies to a
Canadian Longyear Ltd. drilling operation on Hudson Bay
Mountain, about eight miles west
of here, when the mishap occurred.
His Sikorsky S55 was lowering an oil drum into a pit
scooped out of glacial ice when
it was caught in a strong down-
draft.
MOSCOW (Reuters)-A Hi-
ton Russian unmanned space
station winged silently towward
the moon Wednesday on a ZSk-
day journey that may once again
give Moscow the lead in the
space race.
Observers .here speculated
that Luna VI, the latest Soviet
space probe, would attempt a
'soft" landing on the moon,
which the Russians tried and
failed to accomplish with Luna
V May 12. Luna VI is expected
to reach the lunar surface Friday night.
MEN IN PIT
"The three men were in the
pit," he said. "They shouldn't
have been there with the helicopter above but they were.
Suddenly I was caught in the
draft. I saw the men running
I tried to take avoiding, action
but wasn't able to." .
When the 'copter touched
the ice it nosed into the ground
and the propeller hit the men."
Dunn said he and his passengers were lucky the machine
settled in the 50- by 15-foot pit.
"If we hadn't we would have
rolled down the glacier and off
a 2,000-foot drop. There would
have been nothing left of either
us or the 'copter."
His three passengers were
identified as Costa Polysou of
Smithers, Robin Anderson of
Vancouver and Alcide Desro-
chers of Warwick, Que.
Dunn said the three men on
the glacier might have avoided
injury had they stayed in the
Pit-    	
If they had stood still
instead of trying to run away
I don't think the rotor would
have got them,", he said.."They
might have been all right. But
they ran right into the rotor
. . . there was nothing I
could do."
Consumer Program Geared
To Middle-Class Shopper
been introduced on a trial basis
in some American schools, Mrs.
Peters said. It was hoped
they would become compulsory for all grades.
ADOPT RESOLUTIONS
The CAC adopted a resolution
Tuesday calling on the federal
government to prohibit the sale
of flavored, candy-coated ASA
'?,'.'■ ,.   ...   _„-_„„ i„! (acetylsalicylic acid)  headache
As a result, the program is! LuuL
The   resolution   blamed   the
not fitting the needs of the
poorer families," the guest
speaker told a "press conference
prior to her opening, address at
the annual meeting of the Consumers'. Association of Canada.
The three-day dAC meeting
has gathered 100 Canadian
housewives and professional
men and women. Membership
numbers 20,000,
Consumer educatioh programs are needed for all shoppers to produce a healthy national economy and buyers who
can benefit from "shopping
around," Mrs P.eterson said.
The poorer families especially
need to learn how "to get a dollar's value for every dollar
spent." -      ••.■••.
With this end in mind, con-
tablets for a large number of
accidental deaths by poisoning,
particularly among children
who ate it as candy.
The association will reiterate
its request for the inclusion of
warnings against the danger of
these headache tablets in labels
and television advertising.
The CAC will ask the department of agriculture to change
its "Canada approved" stamp
and to adopt an active policy to
control contamination of foods.
Delegates felt the stamp  im-
sumer education courses have 12000.
POPULATION GROWS
The UN estimates that the
world's population, now 3,300,-
000,000, will double by the year
plied drugs had been approved
for quality rather than for freedom from disease.
The Canadian food and drug
directorate will be asked to introduce a regulation that foods
preserved by irradiation contain this information on the labels.  . ■
The association/also, will .seek
legislation to control the sale of
inflammable fabrics.
Hove the Job Done Right'
\flCGRAVEC
f        LIMITED        **0
MASTER PLUMBER
Pliine 352 3315
ELIZABETH ARDEN
Blue Grass
Week-Ender
Hand Lotion - Cologne
Dusting Powder • Bath Cubes
Milk Bath - Soap
In Handy Plastic Bag.
$3.50
Sold Only at
Your Rexall Pharmacy
CITY DRUG
Phone 352-3611 Box 460
he prowled north side streets
and alleys.
In June, 1946, ne was captured during a robbery attempt.
Heirens' prints matched those
on the ransom note. Other
clues developed and Aug. 6—
six weeks after his arrest—the
youth confessed to three murders, 25 burglaries, two assaults
and a robbery.
Heirens' first victim was Mrs.
Josephine Ross, 43, stabbed to
death June 3, 1945. Six months
later, Miss Frances Brown, 35,
was found beaten and shot, the
so-called "lipstick murder."
Psychiatrists, although finding Heirens legally sane to
stand trial, agreed that he had
a "deep sexual perversion
which was the cause of his
crime." The youth, they said,
also had a dual personality and
had created within himself a
"mythical and fantastic other
self . a p.ersnn on whom he
lays the blame." i
POP'S
The Question!
What to buy "DAD" is
an easy job when you see
EMORY'S SELECTION
of "POP PLEASERS"
DROP IN TODaV:
Dad's Day is
Sunday, June 20
"EMORY'S
_     LTD.
THE MAN'S-STORE
WIDELY TRANSLATED
The works of Mikhail Sholok-
hov, Soviet author of the novel
Quiet Flows the Don, have been
translated into 73 languages.
K
ALL ABOARD!
*i
__ZA^>^_
Go the Greyhound
ALL-CANADA WAY
at these
LOWEST FARES OF ALL!
■ FAST THROUGH-SERVICE WITH  NO RESERVATIONS
REQUIRED | STOP-OVER PRIVILEGES I CHOICE OF ROUTES
■ MORE FREQUENT SERVICE   | RESTROOM-EQUIPPED,
AIR-CONDITIONED BUSES I PILLOW-DOWN HEADRESTS
■ GO ANY DAY OF THE WEEK
The best things in life don't have to be expensive -
Sample bargain fares from NELSON
VANCOUVER	
CALGARY 	
EDMONTON	
REGINA  „	
WINNIPEG	
SUDBURY 	
MONTREAL 	
TORONTO 	
(Fares subject to change without notice)
One Way
Return
$15.65
$28.20
12.80
23.05
15.75
28.35
23,30
41.85
27.25
49.05
38.95
70.15
44.65
80.40
43.25
77.85
GO GROUND
...and leave the driving to us
Mr. Holiday"
At 352-3939
or   contact   the
Lines, 686 Baker St.
or   your    local
agent.
Greyhound
it,, Nelson,
Greyhound
ASK ABOUT OUR CHARTER SERVICE - NOW AVAILABLE TO U.S.*
CAMP BUILT
GOLD RIVER (CP)-A camp
site on the shores of Muchalat
Lake, 10 miles northwest of
here on the west coast of Vancouver Island, is being built by
Tahsis Co. Ltd. Company president J. V. Christensen says the
campsite.will b.e.bullt to provincial; government standards and
will be ready fW" summer.
Holiday Time
*s^
Enjoy Your Holidays But Don't Miss
Important "Local" News Items
Use The
u
HOLIDAY PACK"
Have the Nelson Daily News saved for you by your carrier boy, -
Phone 352-3552, or ask him to save your paper till you come back
giving him the date of your return. He will deliver the back copies
along with the current issue on the date specified,
Our carriers are anxious to give this special service to their
holidaying customers,
NELSON DAILY NEWS
MWtM
________________________
