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This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" ;.,       -.;-,j ,\u2014\u2014- :\nSimpkinson Heads\n 1\u2014\n : .\nWarfield Commissioner Named;\n8 Resolutions Referred to UBCM\nC. H. Simpkinson, Commissioner of the village of\nWarfield, Saturday was elected President of the Association of Kootenay Municipalities.\nSpring convention of the A.K.M., which held day-long\nsessions in the Civic Centre, also named Lloyd Williams,\nReeve of Tadanac, vice-president, and re-elected C. W. R.\nHarper, City Clerk at Nelson, secretary-treasurer. New\ndirectors are Alderman Elizabeth Wallach of Nelson,\nMayor R. E. Sang of Cranbrook, and James Draper of the\nVillage Commissioners at New Denver.\nRetiring president, and chairman of the convention,\nwas Mayor Harold Elmes of\nRossland.\niltcm\n\/\u00a357\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKOOTENAY:    Mostly    cloudy,\nlittle change in temperature. Light\nwinds.   Low-high   at   Cranbrook,\n. Crescent Valley 30 and 65.\nVol. 55\nNELSON, B. C, CANADA\u2014MONDAY MORNING, MAY 14, 195G\nNot  Mors Than Co Daily, 10c Saturday\nNo.  19\nT^^Joes Ravage Central States\niiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiihiii\nU.S. Politicians Butt\nOf Jokes at Qridiron Do\nSixty delegates came to the biannual conference from 17 of 22\nKootenay cities and villages for\ndiscussion on resolutions to\nhear addresses by dignitaries and\ncivic officials, and ,to enjoy a cocktail hour and banquet in the\nevening. Five visitors, including\nHon. W. D. Black, Minister of\nMunicipalities, T. R. B. Adams of\nNew Westminster, executive director of the Union of B. C. Municipalities, Reeve C. W. MacSorley\nof Burnaby, executive member of\nUBCM and James D. Baird of\nVictoria, supervisor of municipalities.\nEight resolutions \u2014 three of\nthem from Trail, two from Fernie, two from Warfield, and one\nfrom Nelson\u2014were carried during the afternoon. They wili be\naries, ,   so,    mat     government,\nI    grants were based \"more closely on the salaries actually be-:\ning   paid\"   was   asked   by   the'\nthird  resolution from  Trail.\n|    Unless there was a concrete ef-j\nfort on the part of the taxpayers!\nto  stop,  it  was  brought  oilt  in |\ndiscussion,   teachers   \"would   try I\nevery year for higher wages\" and |\nfor   the   average   taxpayer,   the\nline has to be drawn somewhere.\"\nTwo Fernie resolutions covered\nhome   nursing   care   and   orphan j\ndependents under the \"Workmen's |\nCompensation Act.\nOne on home nursing sought'\nan amendment of the regulation\nmaking the resident in a nursing;\nhome the responsibility of the\nmunicipality of his previous residence, to make the person \"self\nresponsible  or  the  100  per  cent.\nWASHINGTON (AP) \u2014\nPresident Eisenhower was saluted by the Gridiron Club\ntaturday night as \"the first\nepublican candidate in history who can give medical\nproof he's got a heart.\"\nAnd many .another quip\nwas tossed as the organization\nof 50 Washington correspondents held its 71st annual dinner   and   fun-poking   session.\nThe President was the guest\nof honor.\nFew among the high and\nmighty escaped unscathed\nduring the evening of skits\nand songs devoted for the most\npart to Washington's favor-\nite subject\u2014politics,\nIn the tradition of the club\nthe only toast of the dinner\nwas to President Eisenhower.\nHis reply   was off the record.\nOne speech on the record,\nhowever, was that of Roscoe\nDrummond of the New York\nHerald Tribune, the club's\npresident.\n\"Surely,\" he said, \"the President must be very pleased\ntonight to see among us so\nmany fine conservative humanitarians\u2014those Republicans\neager td march forward with\nEisenhower\u2014protesting every\nstep of the way.\"\nDrummond didn't neglect\nthe Democrats, either.\n\"Half of the Democratic party is intent on secession. The\nother half seems to prefer\nsuicide. Republicans say that\nif the Democratic politicians\nwere laid end to end\u2014they\nwould point in all directions.\nSoviet To Abolish\nInternment Camps\n[12\nDamage\n, 275 Hurt,\nin Millions-\nFour Teenagers\nDie in Car Crash\nMOSCOW (AP) \u2014 A high Soviet secret police official said Sunday all internment camps In the\nSoviet Union will be abolished\nwithin the next year to 18 months.\nThe official made this statement to\na group of French Socialists who\nvisited a prison camp at Tula,\nsome 80 miles south of Moscow.\nThe official, whose name could\nnot be disclosed, told the visiting\nFrenchmen the deportation of Soviet citizens to distant sections of\nCLOVERDALE, B. C. (CPI \u2014\nFour teen-agers from Kamloops\nwere killed instantly early Sunday when their car swerved out of\ncontrol and ploughed into a ditch\nand a telephone pole near here, jtn7 country nwteTeneraUy\"for\nDead are Jean  Baker,   19.  her!bidden. It can still    be    applied,\nbrother Danny, 20; Rose Lingren I however, to persons convicted of\n16, and Rhinehald Walter Martin,(various serious political crimes,\nabout 16, owner    of the car. Even in these cases, he said, de-\nSouthern Ontario Hit\nCHICAGO (AP) \u2014 A rash of weekend tornadoes exploded across parts of the eastern half of the United States\nSaturday and threatened new blows Sunday. At least 12\npersons were killed, more than 275 injured and property\ndamage was in the millions of dollars.\nCanada had a taste of the savage twisters. More than\n49- persons were hurt in Windsor, Ont., and McGregore, a\ntown 15 miles south of Wind-\nreferred   to   the   convention   0f i responsibility   of   the   provincial, i |i||il Jl 111 111 111 lllllllllllllllt lltllll 11 llf 11 III t II11111 lllllll 111111II111 llllllll III 11II\nUBCM in Penticton and to the\ncommittee handling revision of\nthe Municipal Act.   .\nControl   over \"unsightly,  untidy\" premises was sought In a\nresolution from Trail. Amended\nto   include   vinages   .where,   a\nWarfield  delegate said, similar\nconditions  existed,  the  resolution, In part said:\n\"Many  municipalities  throughout the Province of British Columbia are experiencing difficulty\nln regulating auto wrecking lots\nand other unsightly, untidy premises which have been  or may\nbe established  within  municipal\nlimits.\n\"Resolved that this Union of\nKootenay Municipalities request\nthe passage of suitable legislation to empower municipalities\nto pass the bylaw or bylaws necessary for the control, prohibition\nand authority to regulate auto\nwrecking lots and other unsightly, untidy premises which are an\nincreasing threat Mto property\nvalues and td * muhlci*pal assessment generally.\"\nAuthority   to   put   television\ncoaxial  cable  onto the assessment roll was asked by a second\nresolution   rrom    l rail,   where\nMayor L, A. Read said, the city\nhad   been   Involved   In   a   law\nsuit In an attempt to levy taxes. Trail found It had no authority to assess and tax the cable,\ntne   mayor   said,   and   telt   It\nshould  be taxable, because of\nthe  \"benefit   received\"   by  the\ncompanies through  the cables.\nLegislature had felt any action\non coaxial cables would be premature, Mr. Adams told the gathering. TV distribution was a \"very\nnew   venture\",   and   government\nauthorities had felt developments\nin  the future  might  render  the\ncables of little use.\nAnother suggestion was that the\ncables be classed as a utility.\nResolution pointed out that, despite the fact that the Assessment\nCommissioner for the Province of\nB. C. had instructed some municipalities to include the cables on\nassessment roles, it had been ruled\nby the Legislative Council there\nwas no basis for inclusion of the\nlines. It resolved that the UKM\nrequest provision for direct municipal taxation of such facilities\nand services be provided for in\nthe amendments to the Municipal\nact now under study.\nAdjustment   of  teachers'  sal-\ngovernment\" after 12 months res- j\nidence in any nursing home.\nResolution on orphan depend-\nents asked that children, under |\nthe age of 18 and with neither j\na dependent mother or father, be-1\ncome the-full responsibility of thej\nWorkmen's  Compensation  Board j\nOnly Nelson resolution was for]\nexemption of all motor vehicles,)\nowned by any municipality from1\npayment of registration and licensing fees.\nThat    the    UBCM    \"strongly!\nPOLLITT QUITS\nRED LEADERSHIP\nLONDON (AP) \u2014 Harry Pollitt,\nwho boasted that his initial act as\nBritain's first Red prime minister\nwould be to impeach Winston\nChurchill, gave up his post today\nas boss of the British Communist\nParty.\nThe bluff 65-year-old Lancashire\nboilermaker said he let go the\nreins as general secretary of the\nparty because of ill health. His\ncompatriots said he suffered \"considerable pain\" from a slipped disc\nas a, result of an accident six years\nago. There have been hints, however, that he was on the way out\nbecause of his long and ardent\nadmiration for the now depopular-\nized Soviet dictator, Joseph Stalin.\nCrash Kills Three\n4^LIND RIVER, Ont. (CP)\u2014Po-\nlice said three men from Flint\nMich., and a Canadian pilot were\nkilled Sunday when a single-\nengine aircraft crashed into heavy\nbush near Lake La^uzon, 10 miles\neast of here.\nPolice   identified   the   pilot\nPaul Plouffe of Blind River and\nformerly at Ottawa.\nFestival Opens Today;\n1000 in Competition\nThe   twenty-third   annuahLambert    secretary - treasurer,\nKootenay   Musical   Festival,   In' Frank Pennoyer and Ross Flem-\nwhich  more than 1,000 district   ing honorary presidents, and an\nartists   will   demonstrate   their  executive   of   Miss   Leona   Boss,\nmusical, elocution and dancing, Miss Mary Jarvis, C. H. Burgess,\nability,  opens this  morning at; B. B. Crawford, J. P. Horswill, T.\n,\u201e.\u201e\u00bb.. .1 \u201e i.,\u201e,,n,,  in,ir,\u201en\u00bbi\u201e,J    Civic Theatre, C. Lambert, Ben Sutherland and\nurge\" the Canadian Federation !\nof Mayors and Municipalities to.    This year's festival entrants will' \u00b0'\nextend relief from federal sales be competing for some 40 cups; Adjudicators will be Filmer\ntax to all vehicles and trucks and trophies and 15 speciali E- Hubble, of Winnipeg, for in-\nused and purchased by muni- awards including three new tro- j strumental and vocal classes and\ncipalities, was a resolution from'phies. These include the Eric! Mrs- PeSgy Macfarlane of Van-\nWarneia. under current law| Bourchier Shield, presented by' couver for elocution. Shake-\nequipment in excess of $10001 Rossland Light Opera Players;! spearian classes and dancing. Mrs.\nIs tax-free. j Claude  Tyler  Memorial  Trophy,; HuSh   Heribson   will   be  official\nA resolution submitted by the; t\u201e replace the Nelson Business; accompanist,\nvillage of Warfield, asking the! College Shield, for boys' choirs, Dean T. L. Leadbeater will give\ngovernment to invest villages! (unbroken voices); and Trail Wo-j the invocation this morning and\nwith powers In respect to con- men-s Liberal Association Cup fori at tonight's session Mayor Joseph\nstructlon and control of wdrka public speaking under 21 years, i Kary will officially open the fes-\nfor regulation of surface drain- In addjUon (he Cameron ^\nage comparable to those powers has  been  aUere(,  and  w,n\nnow possessed by other munlc- year be awarded fm.\n?!?.lr:.WJ,.*.?.P,P\"V.eiLU.t.,.Til!! making under 16 years. Trail\nWomen's Musical Club Award,\nknown also as the Helen K. Mc-\nDiarmid Award, this year has\nbeen increased from $25 to $50.\nNelson Musical Festival Association is sponsor of the week-long\nevent.     The   festival    alternates 0ne man was missin* and believ'\nyearly between Trail and Nelson\nwith   Trail   performances   under\nsponsorship    of    Trail    Kiwanis\nClub.\nRCMP here, about 25 miles east 1 nortation   could  be  ordered  only {age\nof Vancouver, said the four were i after trial by normal court proce\nThe savage twisters killed six\nand caused more than $1,000,000\ndamage in Michigan, killed six\nmore and inflicted $1,000,000 dam-\nafl riding in the front seat of the\ncar at the time of the accident.\nThe accident occurred when the\nteen-agers' car attempted to pass\na vehicle travelling in the same\ndirection,   towards  Vancouver\nThe cars' bumpers hooked and\nthe passing car spun out of control, veered to the right, plowed\nalong a ditch and smashed into\na power pole. The pole was\nsheared off and electricity in the\narea was temporarily cut off\nAn acetylene torch was needed\nto take the bodies from the car.\nNo one in the other car was injured.\nThe accident brings to five the\nnumber killed in traffic accidents\nin British Columbia this weekend.\nIn Chilliwack, Anne Regier, 20,\nof Sardis, suffered fatal injuries\nSaturday when the car in which\nshe was riding slammed into a\nslow-moving freight train at a\nlevel crossing.\ngo to the Municipal Act Revision;\nCommittee,\ntival. Two sessions, one at the j\nCivic and one at Capitol Theatre,\nwill be run simultaneously djir-\ning many mornings and afternoons through the week.\nThe problem of control of surface drainage is as acute in village\nmunicipalities as in cities and districts, the resolution claimed.\nT. R. B. Adams of New Westminster, who conducted the resolutions session, suggested that the\nresolution be pased on to the Municipal Act Revision Committee as\nthe department has \"under serious\nconsideration\" finer grading of\npower of various types of municipal government. '\nThe financial statement showed\ncash in the bank amounting to\n$387, and a surplus of $637.\nMayor Joseph Kary of Nelson,\nin welcoming the visitors, said he\nwas particularly pleased to greet\nso many newcomers to municipal\nleadership ranks.\nInvocation was given by Very\nRev. T. L. Leadbeater, Dean rfif\nKootenay.\nTne city's new pumper truck,\nacquired for the fire department\nthrough civil defence and city expenditure, was demonstrated for\nthe convention delegates after the\nnoon lunch break.\nMEET IN  FERNIE\nFall meeting of the Association\nof Kootenay Municipalities will\nbe held in Fernie.\nBrief talk on the Municipal Act,\nnow under revision by the Legislative Council in cooperation with\na UBCM committee, was given by\nMr. Baird. Revision would include\nmodern English and the elimination of antiquated portions, he\nsaid, a \"purely technical work,\nrather than a matter of policy.\"\nHe also urged careful background checking before civic officials were employed. \"I think\nelected officials are inclined to\ntake too much for granted. You\nshould remember to run the City's\nbusiness the same way you run\nyour own. If you take that attitude\nemployment of poor officials will\nnot happen.\" Although civic officials did not year uniforms, if some\nmunicipal official was found\nguilty of misdemeanor it \"taints\nall the others.\"\nSuggestions on the handling of\nthe Penticton convention was asked by Reeve MacSorley, who suggested an educational program,\nrather than debating of resolutions\n\"with not much hope of them\nthrough the legislature.\"\nDelegates were assisted in their\ndiscussions on and passage of resolutions by Mr. Adams, who gave\nadvice and history on legislation,\nUBCM action and the Municipal\nAct.\nMAN MISSING IN\nBUNKHOUSE FIRE\nREVELSTOKE, B.C.\n(CP)\nOFFICERS\nFestival officers this year are\nA. A. Pagdin president, F. W.' M.\nDrew  vice-president,  Mrs.  T.  C.I ferry.\ned dead following a fire which destroyed a bunk-house early Sunday\nat Sunshine Lardeau mine, 40\nmiles south of here.\nDetails of the fire and the man's\nname were not immediately\nknown. Blankets and cots were taken to the mine   by   truck   and\nFestival Furore\nMassey Meets With\nDistillery President\nBy HAROLD MORRISON\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA    (CP) \u2014   Governor-\nGeneral Massey may withdraw his1\nit, making annual donations of between $20,000 and $25,000.\nMr. Ongley and a liaison committee were long concerned over the\nfact that the distillery did much\npatronage    from    the    Dominion \\ for the festival and   the   festival\nDrama Festival unless President j could do little for the distillery. Mr.\nDavid J. Ongley resigns or makes! Ongley said Calvert's name had\na public retraction of his letter been \"censored\" from news dis-\nurging support of a distillery's products.\nDispleased and embarrassed, Mr.\nMassey took the unusual step of\nsummoning the Toronto lawyer to\nGovernment House for a two-hour\nmeeting Saturday when the governor-general apparently laid down\nterms for continued vice-regal\npatronage.\nIt is understood Mr. Massey first\nasked for a thorough accounting of\nthe circumstances under which Mr.\nOngley used festival stationery\nbearing the vice-regal name to promote the products of Calvert Distillers Ltd., main source of funds\nfor the national theatrical competition.\nMr,   Massey   apparently then\nmade it clear that he disapproved of the promotion and that his\npatronage could be continued only if Mr. Ongley resigned or retracted the letter which has offended several groups, Including\nmembers of the United Church\nof Canada, Parliamentarians and\nPrime Minister St. Laurent\nThe   festival,   top showpiece of\nCanadian amateur theatre for '31\nyears, has been under vice-regal\npatronage since its inception. But\nit has been plagued by a lack of\nfunds   and   was   at the brink of\n.bankruptcy when Calvert's rescued\npatches dealing with the festival.\nFinally, Mr. Ongley wrote a letter to 3,000 festival associates, saying that when the occasion arises,\nthey can \"remember and sui^ort\"\nCalvert products.\nVANCOUVER (CP) - A British\nColumbia governor of the Dominion Drama Festival says she is\n'profoundly grateful\" to the distillery whose contribut ions\nprompted president David- J. Ong\ney to write a letter urging support\nof the distillery's products.\nThe woman, who asked that her\nname be withheld, said the drama\nfestival \"tried all other avenues to\nobtain support\" before approaching Calvert Distillers Ltd. She added that Calvert \"never asked for\npublicity in any way.\"\nMrs. Valerie Jones, play selector\nfor the Vancouver Little Theatre,\ncalled the incident a \"tempest in a\nteapot.\"\n\"If a breakfast-food company\nhad supported us nothing would\nhave been said,\" she added.\nHowever, R. J. Love, B.C. field\nsecretary in Christian education\nfor the United Church of Canada,\nsaid that \"anything of a public nature such as the DDF shouldn't\nhave to depend on contributions\nthat certain people may find objectionable.\"\nCily Opens\nHeart to Widow\nHAMILTON (CP) \u2014 A widowed\nmother of seven children enjoyed\na brighter Mothers Day Sunday\nbecause of citizens who counteracted a bureaucratic cold shoulder with a display of heart.\n\u25a0 Mrs. Betty Haight had been\nbarred from placing a marker on\nher husband's grave by civic officials who said she first would\nhave to pay $G6 the city paid\nfor the plot. The mother was destitute at the time of her husband's death.\nWhen printers at the Hamilton\nSpectator read the story Friday\nthey passed the hat and collected\n$107 for her\u2014even before the\nnewspapers hit the street.\nLater, scores of readers phoned\nThe Spectator's offices and pledged donations for Mrs. Haight.\nArt Child, Progressive Conservative legislature member for\nWentworth, said Hamilton's action\u2014based on an old by-law-\nwas below that of Scrooge.     -\nIf civic officials didn't disown\nsuch an un-Christiah attitude, he\nsaid, he would attempt to get\nHamilton stricken from the provincial government's welfare aid\nlist.\nAda Pritchard, a woman controller, said the by-law would be\ndiscussed at the next meeting of\nthe city's welfare committee.\ndure. In most cases, convicted persons would be imprisoned in areas\nwhere they lived or as near as possible to their homes, he added.\nThe official told the Frenchmen\nthat in the future there would be\nonly two types of detention \u2014 in\nordinary prisons and in corrective\nlabor colonies.\nIn contrast to the system in the\nold concentration camps, he said,\ninmates of the labor colonies could\nnot be sent to work on projects\noutside them. The colonies would\ncontain factories where the convicts would work.\nStrike Lays\nUp 150 Ships\nBy JOE MacSWEEN\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 Some 150\nGreat Lakes ships have received\nlay-up orders\/as a result.of a seamen's strike and retaliation by\nshipping companies, it was estimated Sunday night.\nIt is against this background of\nstrife that negotiations continue\nhere today between the Seafarers'\nInternational Union (CLC) and the\ns e v e n-company Association of\nLake Carriers, meeting under the\nguidance of a federal mediator.\nThe SIU started the wage strike\nThursday against just two of the\nshipping companies, but the other\nfive companies immediately proclaimed a policy of united front \u2014\none for all and all for one.\nYOUNG BANDIT\nRETURNS MONEY\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 A butcher\nshop proprietor told police a 20-\nyear-old youth returned to the\nshop with the money and gave\nhimself up two hours after a Saturday robbery at Orleans, Ont.,\n10 miles east of here.\nIn jail here on charges of armed\nrobbery are Joseph Gould and Norman Eveland, 31, both of Rockland, Ont.\nVictor Lacroix, 44-year-old proprietor of the shop, and his son,\nErnie, 22, told police an armed man\nentered about 4 p.m. He forced the\nson to give him $130 from the cash\nregister, then escaped in a car driven by another man.\nTwo hours later, young Gould\nentered the store and returned the\nmoney.\n\"He told me he was sorry and\nsaid he had come to give me the\nmoney back,\" Mr. Lacroix said.\n\"He said he spent about $4 of the\ncash, but that he would give me\nthe $4 next week.\"\n\"I put my hand on his shoulder,\n\u2014he didn't offer any resistance.\nThen the police came and got\nhim.\"\nHARDING GOES\nTO CHURCH\nDESPITE THREAT\nBy ALAN  JACKS\nNICOSIA, Cyprus (AP) \u2014 Sir\nJohn Harding, the British military\ngovernor of Cyprus, Sunday defied would-be assassins by showing up for regular Church of\nEngland services in this tense is.\nland capital.\nTwo soldier guards accompanied Harding as he worshipped\nwith other Britons. EOKA, the\nunderground organization, has\ncalled upon all \"patriotic\" Greek\nCypriots -to kill Harding follow\ning the execution of two of their\nyoung compatriots as political\ngunmen.\nWhile Harding attended church\nthousands of Greek Cypriots went\nquietly to Greek Orthodox services throughout the island to\nmourn for the two dead men.\nOnly one incident marred the\nSunday calm. A home-made\nbomb was tossed through the\nwindow of a security force billet\nat Famagusta, injuring two men\none seriously.\nBritish authorities cracked\ndown on the, community of Paphos\nby imposing a $15,400 collective\nfine as punishment for the killing\nof a Royal Marine commando last\nWednesday. He died in a bomb\nexplosion.\nGREAT DAY FOR FROGS\nANGELS CAMP, Calif. (AP)\nMore than a dozen countries have\nentered more than 30 frogs in the\ninternational \"frog Olympics\" here\nnext weekend. Ben A. Graham of\nOwen Sound, Ont., has entered\ntwo frogs, Queen of Georgian Bay\nand Soft Thunder.\nCLIFT INJURED\nWEST LOS ANGELES (AP)\nActor Montgomery Clift was\njured seriously early Sunday when\nthe car he was driving struck' a\npower pole as he was en route\nhome from a dinner party at\nElizabeth Taylor's hillside home.\nthe Cleveland area and\ncaused $600,000 damage in Du-\nquesne,  Pa.\nWinds of tornadic force caused\nheavy damage in the Omaha area.\nThe U.S. weather bureau In\nChicago warned that severe\nthunderstorms and possible tornadoes were In prospect for\nthe southern Great Lakes area\nSunday night.\nAt least 60 twisters carved into\nthe southern Great Lakes area\nSaturday night and early Sunday.\nThe torrential downpour which\naccompanied what the weather\nbureau called Michigan's worst\nnight in history, swelled the\nFlint river out of its banks in\ndowntown Flint, an eastern\nMichigan city of 160.000.\nA similar flood was threatened\nat Grand Rapids, Mich., where\nthe Grand river neared flood\nstage.\nThunderstorms without the\nspecific threat of tornadoes\ncrackled over much of the country's mid-section, from the Rocky\nmountains to the Appalachians,\nand extended northeastward into\nNew England.\nThree twisters hit almost simultaneously Saturday at Flint\nwhere 116 died in Michigan's\nworst tornado in ' 1953. Three\nwere killed there, including a\ncouple who died, in the wreckage of their home.\n500 FAMILIES EVACUATED\nMore than 200 homes were re\nduced to rubble in the Flint area,\nand some 500 families have been\nevacuated from flood-threatened\nhomes along the Grand river east\nof Grand Rapids and along the\nFlint river.\nBesides   some   200   injured   in\nFlint  and   two   Detroit  suburbs,\nAllen   Park   and   Lincoln   Park,\nanother 25  were hurt in Windsor, across the Detroit river.\nThe   Detroit  weather station\nsaid 19 tornadoes In all struck\nIn Michigan, and scores of other\nfunnel clouds were seen soaring  overhead.\nTornadic winds lashed the\nCleveland area in Ohio, causing\nsix deaths, injuring more than 50,\nfelling 600 trees and power lines\nThree persons were crushed in\nthe collapse of a tavern.\nMiraculously, more than 200\npersons escaped Injury when a\nsection of a theatre's roof was\nblown  off.\nRoofs, chimneys and windows\nwere the principal toll Sunday\nof a pre-dawn twister which\nstruck the western Pennsylvania\nsteel town of Duquesne, near\nPittsburgh. Only two persons\nwere reported injured there.\nIn Ontario, flood conditions also were reported from Draytoni\nPreston, Bridgeport, Elmira,\nBrantford, Elora and Fergus.\nIn the wake of Friday's storm\nreports of damage, disrupted\ncommunications and snarled traffic rolled into police . offices.\nKitchener officials . reported\nrailways, roads and bridges\nthroughout the area under water.\n8000 French Troops\nRushed to Town's Aid\nCONSTANTINE, Algeria (API-\nFresh fighting broke out in the\nJewish quarter of Constantine\nSunday night, leaving at least six\ndead and four wounded. Nationalist terror raids on the city resulted\nin 19 deaths.\nThe Constantine area nas been a\nrebel hot-bed since the Algerian\ninsurrection began more than 18\nmonths ago. The attacks were concentrated on Jewish residents. Up\nto now rebels have struck generally at all the non-Arab population\nor at Arabs friendly to the French.\nSaturday, shortly alter noon,\nrebels coming from nearby mountains filtered into the Arab quarter\nwhere they were armed, then\nswept on to the Jewish area where\nthey tossed a grenade into a bar.\nThirteen Jews were wounded.\nThen the rebels began picking off\npasserby.\nFrench forces moved into the\narea and drove the rebels to the\nhills.\nConstantine, Algeria's largest inland city, has 118,000 inhabitants.\nThe new incidents came as 8,-\n000 French troops were rushed to\nOran, west of here, to reinforce de\ntachments going to the defence oj\nthe town of Tlemcen, 80 miles td\nthe southwest, which was under\nsiege by 3000 rebels.\nBarbed wire battlements, machine-gun posts and artillery emplacements were thrown up to\nmeet the anticipated attack by a\nrebel army hiding' in heavily-\nwooded mountains around the\ntown.\nIn the Constantine department oi\nAlgeria, French security forces\nclaimed 100 Rebels were killed in\na battle in the Colo mountains.\nNinety more rebels were killed h?\nFrench security forces lost four\ndead.\nNinety rebels were killed ir\nother clashes throughout the province.\nMOROCCO FORMS ARMY\nRABAT, Morocco (AP) \u2014 Sultar,\nMohammed Ben Youssef of Morocco Saturday formally announced\nthe creation of a royal army, 14,-\n000 strong. The army was provided\nfor in independence negotiation!\nwith France. It is largely French\nequipped.\nAnd in This Corner...\nLOS ANGELES (AP) \u2014 It was a showdown, western fashion,\nthe way service station operator Milton Gerbert tells It..\nHe told police he and his Insurance agent, Lee Roster, 39, had\ndrawn $7,000 from the bank and were getting Into their ear when\na man approached them with a drawn gun.\n\"This it a holdup,\" the man said. \"You're covered.\"\nGerber pulled his own gun and told the would-be robber!\n\"You're covered, too.\"\nThe man looked at the weapon and said: \"Let's call it quits.\"\n\u2022He fled.\nSYRACUSE, N.Y. (AP) \u2014 The army is improving its public relations here with flower boxes and Venetian blinds.\nA newspaper carried a story suggesting that a recruiting booth\nin the downtown area was unsightly.\nThe army promptly ordered a sergeant to scrub the booth down\nAnd a WAC lieutenant installed some window flower boxes and\nVenetian blinds.\nGOEULZIN, France (AP) \u2014 Fisherman Roger Second was riding his bicycle along a canal with his daughter, Monique, 4, fastened securely to the carrier behind him.\nThe bike went out of control and plunged into the canal. Second\nwas thrown clear and swam to safety, but Monique \u2014 still attached\nto the bike \u2014 went to the bottom.\nA 16-year-old boy tried to rescue her but found the bike stuck\nin the muddy canal floor.\nFinally a barge man using a long boat hook pulled up the bicycle with Monique still attached. The firemen revived her.\n\t\n '.'\n*******^^\n^^~\n . . :\t\n  .,---_-,\u2014--.,-.--\nM\nTONIGHT, TUESDAY \u2014 AT THE CAPITOL THEATRE\nComplete Shows 7:00-9:00\nTHE MOST ASTONISHING ADVENTURE OF THE CENTURY!\nMAI ZETTERLING \u2022 NIGEL PATRICK\nGEORGE COLE \u2022 DONALD WOLFIT\nJcriM Pity by ROBERT EUCKNER inrj lO'lIt PAX10H \u2022 From tht novel by MAX CATTO\nEduced br IF1VHIG ALIBI tnd ALBERT R. BROCCOLI \u2022 Directed by MARK ROBSON\nExtra \u2014 Late News, Cartoon \"Magoo Express\"\n\u2022   #*MOUI   PttVIDt   TIIIATDI\nSTARLIGHT DRIVE-IN\nSHOWING   TONIGHT,   TUESDAY   and   WEDNE8DAY\nTime 8:30 p.m. Last Complete Performance 9:00 p.m.\n%\u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, MAY 14, 1956    if A\u201ef U.,,,1 lnC|||lC\nBuf Visit\nChallenge in Public\nOffice Delegates Told\n\"Only from being literally the\nhands and feet of God... . -.\nwill you get., feeling of worth\nand a great sense of victory.\"\nWith these words, Kenneth\nLawson, commissioner of Public\nAffairs at Spokane, urged the\n60 delegates attending .the civic,\nbanquet of the Association of\nKootenay Municipalities Spring\nconvention to be \"good civic officials ... for only through human beings will things get\ndone\".\nThe banquet, climax of a full\nday of activities for the AKM delegates and visitors, was also attended by visitors, lady guests\nand AKM and civic dignitaries,\nswelling the number of banqueters to 150. Event was in the\nCivic t Centre recreation hall,\nwhere the day-long sessions had\nbeen held, and a cocktail hour.\nMr. Lawson, whose easy manner and light anecdotes made his\ntalk an enjoyable one for the\nattentive crowd, stressed three\nthings \"important to you, and to\nall the people of all the cities\nand nations in the world.\"\nFirst, he said, \"everyone has to\nhave affection . . . especially your\nchildren. Affection gives people\nsecurity. In your leisure time do\nsomething to bring your families\ntogether\".\nSecond was earned recognition.\n\"Some have it by leading their\nin higher things, a desire to serve\nGod.    ,\nIt was Important to get \"good\npeople\" into public office, people\nwho could stand up and make\n.decisions, \"for it was simpler in\nthe long run and the only way to\nlive.\"\nIn public office, it was better\nto be respected than loved.\nHe lamented the materialism\nIn the world. \"You In this area\nhave so many things we In the\nUnited States need , . . and\none is your easier, more' quiet\nliving. When things get faster,\nthen comes the worry and the\nanxiety. You have a lot of fine\nqualities. I hope as you progress   you   won't   lose* tnem;\nlife   Is   not  gauged  by  success\nalone.\"\nProblems in the two countries\nwere principally the same. One\nthing much to the fore in American cities was the desire for \"home\nrule.\" In the U.S., the states were\norganized first, he recalled, then\nthe villages and cities. \"We're still\nunder the domination of the State.\nWe're trying to change the constitution so we can have a little\nhome rule.\"\nCities had no control over assessment, which was handled by the\nCounty, Mr. Lawson pointed out.\n\"Our problem is more income.\"\nHe recalled that in 1932, 54 per\ncent of the tax dollar went back\nto the municipally; in 1954, only\ngroup you get it by serving I ^^aTt^i\npeople,  in  your everyday  work, j    peop]e ^ puWi(. 0,fice. have ,\nMostly Peaceful\nNEW DENVER \u2014 Sons of Freedom women hurled accusations and\ninsults at RCMP here Sunday but\ndid not resort to violence as approximately 100 of th\u00ab Sons visited their children at the New Denver dormitory on Mothe'-'s D$ v.\nThe women, among them some\nof the women who were released\nfrom jail in Nelson Wednesday after a 10-day sentence for creating\ni disturbance in Nelson by impeding hurled accusations of harsh\ntreatment of their children and\npoor food at RCMP officers as they\nsupervised the parents' visit to the\ndormitory where 85 of their children are being kept and sent to\nschool.\nOne woman charged that her spn\nhad been forced to eat a rotten egg\nand called RCMP \"beasts\" and the\ndorimotry \"a stinking Jail.\"\nMAJORITY QUIET\nThe majority of the Sons, however, sat quietly on the grounds\noutside the dormitory, in small\nfamily groups, visiting with their\nchildren and sharing lunches they\nhad brought from home.\nWhen the hour-long visiting period was over the men and women\nlined up opposite one another facing the traditional bread, salt and\nwater to pray, sing hymns, and\nsay goodbye to their children before returning to their cars parked\nalongside the highway, and then to\ntheir homes.\nMunicipalities Should Prepare\nFor Area's Expansion, AKM Told\nA hint that municipalities should\ntake advantage of money set aside\nin the estimates for regional planning for the West Kootenay was\ntossed by Hon. W. D. Black when\nhe addressed delegates to the\nSpring convention of the Associa-\nFlRftN* SINATRA \u2022 ElEANOR. PARKER.- KiM MoVAK*.   in your organizations and in your , mtere5ting   ,uture,  and  ,|\n    \"\"\"     immunity.   And you  in  public, cha)lengi itsion I\noffice above all have something. \u201eWe,re jn g revoluU ^ ,\nIt is no tragedy to die,\" he \u00bbdd\u00abd.|,hink you know it; ,j has ,\u201e do\nthe tragedy was in   a worthless; wj     the foundation ot life.\nlife\".\nThirdly, you must have a faith\n150 al Org-m\nVocal Recital\nRev. Elgar Roberts of Edmonton\nA United Artists Release\nLETHINAL\nSoya Lecithin  Granules\nA new dietary supplement.\nAs advertised in Maclean's\n$2.95\nand Chatelaine,\n6 o*s. bottle\nNelson\nPharmacy\n\"Your Fortress of Health.\"\n433 Josephine St.\nPhone 1203      Nights, 391-L\nAUTO-VUE\nTrall-Frultvale  Highway\nTONIGHT   and   TUESDAY\nShow  Time:  8:25  p.m.\n\"JOHNNY DARK\"\nTony Curtis - Piper Laurie\nSHORTS  and   CARTOON\nIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nCASTLE THEATRE\nCastlegar, B.C.\nTONIGHT  and   TUESDAY\nShows at 7:00 and 9:00 p.m.\n\"FOREVER DARLING\"\n(Technicolor)\nLucille Ball - Desi Arnaz\nJames  Mason\nANNOUNCEMENT\nI have acquired Pounders Chimney\nService and offer you a full chimney\nservice.\nREMEMBER\u2014A Clean Chimney is a Safe Chimney.\nPhone Ernie Gare\nCARS COLLIDE\nIN FAIRVIEW\nNo one was injured, but damage\nwas extensive as two cars collided\nat the intersection of Nelson Avenue and Davies Street Saturday\nnight, at 6.45 p.m.\nThe cars were driven by L. W.\nSmythe of Nelson and William\nCheveldave of Grand Forks. It was\nreported that Mr. Smythe was proceeding South along the avenue\nand attempting to make a left hand\nturn on to Davies Street, while Mr\nCheveldave was driving North on\nthe avenue towards the ferry. The\nimpact occurred a few feet North\nof the corner on the East side of\nthe avenue. City police investigated.\ni Intelligence, rather than physical,\npower, would earn leadership -i and lour local artists Presented a\n\"there will be no place for medio-!vaned muslcal P\u2122gram to an\nere people, or mediocre thinking.! audience <* about 150 Friday\n\"A nation's victories will.be based\non intelligent action, as well as\nspirit.\"\nIn this coming economic \u00bbnd|\nsocial age of plenty there would be!\nmany problems of \"leisure time\"\nand the cities \"better face it.\"        \\\nnight at St. Paul's-Trinity United\nChurch. The program featuring\nthe noted organist was in aid of\nthe Nelson First Baptist Church's\norgan fund.\nMr. Roberts' numbers included\nselections    from    \"The    Student\nMass Sung for\nJ. 0. Patenaude\nSolemn high mass of requiem\nwas sung by Rev. Father F. Mon-\naghan at the Cathedral of Mary\nImmaculate Saturday morning for\nJoseph Oliva Patenaude, 85, pioneer Nelson businessman who ditd\nin Kootenay Lake General Hospital last Wednesday.\nFather Monaghan was assisted\nby Rev. Father J. Postma as deacon and Rev. Father D. Cullen as\nsubdeacon. Most Rev. T. J. McCarthy, DD, Bishop of Nelson, assisted in the sanctuary and presided at the absolution. His chaplains\n\u25a0were Rev. Father Joseph MacGil-\nlivray, CSsR, and Rev. Father Ro-\nsaia, OSM. The former also represented Most Rev. Martin M. Johnson, Archbishop of Vancouver, and\nformerly 6ishop of Nelson.\nThere was a large attendance of\nfriends and sisters of Mount St.\nFrancis Infirmary and St. Joseph's\nSchool. There were many floral\ntributes and spiritual offerings. St.\nJoseph's choir was in attendance.\nMembers of the Kinghts of Columbus formed a guard of honor outside the cathedral as the casket\nwas borne to the hearse by pallbearers P. E. Poulin, Dr. J. Vingo,\nGeorge Gelinas, Dr. D. T Little-\nwood. John DeGirolamo and Nor*\nbert Choquette. Honorary pallbearers were John McDonnell, L.\nH. Choquette, Nick Maglio, Fred\nIrvine, Archie Burnie, I. G. Nelson\nand Henry Bourgeois. Interment\nwas,in the Roman Catholic plot in\nkelson Memorial Park.\nFriday night rosary was recited\nby Rev. Father R. D. Anderson at\nThompson Funeral Home.\nGod had made man in His own! Prince'\"   Bach   selections,   \"The\nImage, and \"we are literally His! L,?rd's   Prayer,\"   \"Melody,\"   and\ntool*\" and only by acting as thei \"\"oly City*\"\ntools of God would people gain j    Nelson performers offerings in-\na feeling of Joy and happiness.1 eluded vocal solos by Mrs. Fred\n\"We are His hands and feet.\"    j Joyce, Mrs. J. B. Stallwood, H. R.\nBanquet chairman   was   Mayor I Anderson   and   Norman   Gibson.\nJoseph Kary, who introduced the! Duets were sung by Mrs. Joyce\nguest speaker and the head table! and Mr. Gibson, and Mrs. Stall-\nguests,    Harold    Elmes,   retiring i wood and Mr. Anderson.\nPresident   of   A.K.M.,   and   new  '\t\npresident,  C.  H.   Simpkinson   of] HONOR FOR\nWarfield, spoke briefly. j ^tmm crvk.1   CAl IMCD\nHaunting strains of the famed! NELSON   bV\/LUIcK\nj    Private Stephen A. Bowcock of\nwere sung by Andrew Laurie of ] Nelson  who  is  taking  his  basic\nScottish ballad,    \"Annie   Laurie'\nSONS' CHILDREN NOT\nBEING VACCINATED (Calgary, in an enjoyable musical| training with the RFA Regiment\nSons of Freedom at New Den-'interluc)e* Mr.- Laurie who was ac-j at Fort Ord, California, has been\nver dormitory  are not receiving companied on the piano by Mrs.) selected as colonel's orderly. Word\npolio   vaccine   today   as   charged I Kary, also sang \"Passing By\", and [ of his selection has been received\nby  Sons of Freedom, Dr. H. T. j a special  ditty dedicated to  the: by his parents, Mr. and Mrsr. W. N.\nLowe, director of Selkirk Health Mayor. Bowcock, 171 Baker Street.\nUnit, said Sunday night. '   At the head table were Mayor!    in a letter to Private' Bowcock,\nA   group   of   the   Sons   wired ian(* Mrs. Kary; Mr. and Mrs. Law-j Col.   Richard   J.   Stillman,   com-\nHon.  Ray  Williston,  minister  of!son^ Heeve and Mrs. C. W. Mac-|manding officer, stated:  \"This is\neducation, charging their children\nwere to be vaccinated without\ntheir consent, and asking him to\n\"stop this action immediately\".\nThere   was   no   truth   in   the\ncharge, Dr. Lowe said.\nSorley of Burnaby; Mr. and Mrs I the second occasion upon which\nC. W. R. Harper; T. R. B. Adams'you have been so distinguished\nof   New   Westminster,   executive | among your   fellow   trainees   for\nJACKPOT WINNER\nRETURNS PORTION\nTO HOCKEY CLUB\nMembers of Nelson Maple Leaf\nHockey Club executive indicated\nat last partial satisfaction with the\ngames night held Saturday evening\nin Civic Arena.\nIt was estimated that 1000 participants were on hand. Mr. Hesse\nwon the $200 door prize and an\nunidentified Salmo resident walked off with $450 of the $500 jackpot. He kindly donated $50 to\nthe hockey club, whose fortunes!\nare somewhat improved this\nmorning.\nThe club announced immediately\nfollowing Saturday's event that\nanother would follow on June 9.\nThe Weather\nNelson     33\nToronto    56\ndirector of UBCM; Mr. and Mrs.\nArchie Burnie; James Baird of Victoria; supervisor of municipalities;\nDean T. L. Leadbeater; and Commissioner Simpkinson of Warfield\nBanquet was catered to by the\nCatholic Women's League, under a\nspecial committee of Mrs. T. Buckley and Mrs. Harry Wilson.\nyour outstanding military appearance and knowledge. I wish\" to\ncommend yOu for a job well done.\"\nParade, Flag Raising Signal\nStart of Community Chest Drive\nANNOUNCEMENT\nI wish to advise my friends and customers that\nI have sold my business to Mr. Ernie Gare.\nI wish to thank you for your support over the\nyears and will be with Mr. Gare for some time as\nsupervisor.\nE. S. Pounder\nPOUNDERS CHIMNEY SERVICE\nNelson District Community\nChest's 1956 fund campaign was\nofficially opened Saturday afternoon with a Baker Street parade\nand raising of the campaign flag\nby Mayor Joseph Kary.\nThe white flag, lettered with\ntwo blue \"Cs\", will fly atop the\npole at the corner of Baker and\nWard streeti for the duration of\nthe $20,000 drive. .   .\nMajority of the 19 charitable and\nwelfare    organizations    who    are\nCommunity Chest members were\nrepresented  in   the parade. First\ncar carried  the mayor and Hon.\nW. D. Black, who was in Nelson\nfor  the  Association  of  Kootenay\nMunicipalities meeting.\nAnother car carried community\nchest officials including president\nJ. R. Corner. Nelson Junior High\nSchool band under E. W. lies added a musical touch to the parade.\nAgencies under the Chest this\nyear  are  the   Canadian  National\nInstitute for the Blind, Easter seals\n(Lions Club), Knights of Pythias\nCerebal Palsy fund, B.C. Cancer\nSociety, Canadian Arthritis and\nRheumatism Society, camps Koola-\nree, Lourdes and Galilee, Auxiliary\nto Mount St. Francis, Beta Sigma\nPhi, Soroptimist Club; Kokanee\nchapter, IODE; Nelson Ministerial\nAssociation, St. John Ambulance\nSociety, Boy Scout Association, Air\nCadet League, Navy League,\nLadies' Auxiliary to Nelson branch\nof the Legion and the Kodtenay\nLake General Hdspital Auxiliary.\nCAR ROLLS ON\nYMIR ROAD\nPassenger in a small English con\nvertible car which rolled over on\nthe highway at the Porto Rico railway crossing about 14 miles South\nof Nelson Sunday afternoon, Ruth\nStevens of Oliver is in Kootenay\nLake General Hospital. Her injury.\na cut forehead, is not considered\nserious.\nA. school teacher, she was travelling back to Oliver with Mike\nMJdzain of Oliver, also a school\nteacher,. after they had visited\nfriends in Nelson during the weekend. A number of Nelson persons\narrived on the Scene and gave assistance until arrival of Thompson\nambulance.\nThe car was reported to have\nrolled Over once as it travelled\naround a curve. The driver was\ninjured.\nIn another accident Saturday\nnight about 10 miles South of Nelson on the Nelson-Nelway highway, W. Hitter of Remac suffered\nsevere bruises after his car struck\nthe bank on a sharp corner.\nRCMP investigated both ac-\n| cidents.\nTODAY-- 23*d. OnjuuoL\nNelson Music Festival\nCivic Theatre\n9:00 a.m. Morning, Afternoon and Evening\n(Vocal and Instrumental)\nCapitol Theatre 1 p.m. Afternoon Only\n, . (Elocution)\nSeason Tickets \u2014 Adujts $3.00, Students $1.50\nMorning and Afternoon Sessions \u2014 Adults 35<\u00a3, Students 15\u00a3\nEvenings \u2014 Adults SOci, Students 2Sf\nTO OFFER NELSON\nAS UBCM VENUE\nMayor Joseph Kary will make\na bid for the 1957 convention of\nthe Union of British Columbia\nMunicipalities, Mayor Kary\nSaturday received the backing\nof the Spring convention of the\nAssociation of Kootenay* Muni\nclpalltles In his attempt to bring\nthe convention here.\nIt would be a district-wide\naffair, Mayor Kary told the afternoon session of the convention, and would be an added\nevent of Nelson's Diamond\nJubilee  celebrations.\nThe mayor will put Nelson's\nbid in at the convention In Pen\ntlcton  In October,\ntion of Kootenay Municipalities in;\nCivic Centre hall Saturday.\n\"It would seem to me that this\narea has a definite industrial potential and that we as public servants should begin preparing for\nthat expansion,\" the municipalities minister and Nelson-Creston\nMLA told the meeting.\nAs reasons why \"we've got to\nlook ahead\" he mentioned the\ncoming work on the Blueberry-\nPaulson and Salmo-Creston roads\nand power possibilities. \"Industrial firms are beginning to take\noptions,\" he said, \"in one particular Instance near Salmo and\nNelson . . . and also near Creston.\"\nAfter stating that real progress\nis being made in writing the new\nMunicipal Act, Mr. Black went on\nto tell of three main issues confronting B. C.'s fast-growing municipalities.\nfirst     was     tne     \"appalling\nlack\" of public interest In local\ngovernment,   A   turnout   of   10\nper cent of the voters at a by-\nelection or important bylaw referendum Is becoming ordinary\nrather  than   unusual.  The  percentage Of voters who turn out\nat annual civic elections Is noticeably declining.\n\"It seems to me the only real\nanswer to the problem is public\neducation   stressing   the   importance of local government and establishing   in   the  minds  of   the\ncitizens that they could lose    all\nthe   benefits   of   our   democratic\nsystem by default,\" he said. Compulsion method, as tried in  Australia, was a substitute for active\nparticipation\nBOUNDARIES  PROBLEM\n\"Municipal governments of all\nsizes are faced with the problem\nof area of jurisdiction, or of boundaries no longer coinciding with\na political or economic unit. In a\nnumber of cases boundaries of\nmunicipalities cannot be considered as the best that could be\nadopted if one had a free hand.\"\nIn Britain, a Royal Commission\nset up to study the problem had\nsubmitted its report but could\nmake no definite recommendations.\n\"Experience indicates that a\npoint may soon be reached Hhat\nregardless of local feelings, the\ngovernment will have to exercise\nits authority and take direct action to bring about a more appropriate unit.\"\nLack of planning or failure to\nuse planning facilities were cited\nby the cabinet minister as the\nthird problem of expanding municipalities.\nPlanning the physical development of a community meant\na saving In dollars and cents\nevery year, a saving in tne\ncosts of doing business, pursuing pleasure and even day-today living, by opening up and\npossible prevention of bottlenecks,\n\"Each community should have\na master plan prepared now to\navoid expensive corrections in the\nfuture. Such a master plan is the\napplication of common sense and\nexperience to forecast as nearly\nas possible the future require\nments of the municipalities' inhabitants ... so that when the\nday arrives requirements can be\nsupplied at minimum cost, It also\nensures that civic developments\nfollow along a consistent course\ninstead of proceeding haphazard\nly, which can result in spending\nand work for one year being nullified by a change of policy in\nsucceeding years\"\nIn   conclusion,   Mr.   Black   re\nminded the delegates that services\nof the planning division of the\nMunicipal Affairs Department are\nat their disposal.\nSafely Measures\nUrged le AKM\nUse of safety campaign and\nsafety measures for \"happier\nworkers and a good job\" were\nurged to the Association of Kootenay Municipalities Saturday.\nJ. R. Corner, Kootenay Safety\nInspector of the Workmen's Com.\npensation Board told the Saturday\nafternoon sessions of the Spring\nConvention that a \"safe job was n\ngood job,\" Mr. Corner, who said\nthat a B.C. Coast logger's loss of\ntwo legs had cost, the Compensa-\ntion Board approximately $79,000,\ntold delegates they would have to\nlook at safety from a \"hard-hearted money point of view.\"\nMany municipalities had made\nan effort to provide safer working\nconditions and had won results in\nfewer accidents and less costs. In\nmany communities the \"good example\" of the Consolidated Mining\nand Smelting Company of Canada,\nLimited, had  \"certain  influence.\"\nImpressing the delegates that a\n\"safe\" job meant a better job. Mr\nCorner urged them to stress the\nimportance of safety to City supervisors.\nHe outlined the returns to civic\nemployees from the Compensation\nBoard, citing the three accident-\nfree communities of Fruitvale,\nMarysville and Silverton and the\ndistrict'\"bad boys\" who had returns of up to 130 per cent of whai\nthe municipality had paid in. Mt.\nCorner mentioned Grand Forks\nwhich had paid $2809 and whosp\nemployees had received $3678, a\npercentage of 130; Castlegar which\nhad paid in approximately $1450\nand had returns of $1835 for a\npercentage of 125; and Nelson,\nwhich paid in $28,651 and whose\nemployees received $32,956, a percentage of 115.\nTrail had a good rating. Mr\nCorner pointed out, with a percentage of 53.33, and Rossland's\nwas even better at 44.54. Kinnaird'.-\nclean record was marred by only\none small accident.\nOverall cost in the province wav\n$113,281, compared to the $69,000'\nthe board collected. Kootenay?\nhad a comparatively good record,\nMr. Comer pointed out, compared\nwith the rest of B.C. ,y\nMIli11111111111111II1111111111111111f M11111\nk^^^jLJLkMkBl\nColl us anytime for local\nor long-distance moving.\nWe quickly and carefully pack and cover oil\nyour furnishings. Our\nrates are moderate.\nPHONE 889\nTOWLER\nFuel and Transfer\niiiMimiiiiiiiiiiiimiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nBatteries\nMINING  -  LOGGING\nAND  AUTOMOTIVE\nRepairs  to  Al)   Types\n509 Lake St. Phono ;\nARROW  BATTERIES\n(\nSPORT\nSHIRTS\nof\nthe short-sleeved\nvariety.\nIf you want something\nlight and cool that is\ndressier than a T-Shirt,\nthen have a look at\nthese Arrow beauties A\nhost of colors and designs for your choice in\na full size range.\nPrice\n$3.95\nGodfreys'\nI    PHONE I^270-*l BOX   i\nfc*^\u00bb^***n*^**'*fc'fc'*'*^*,*J'\nPREPARE YOUR SUMMER WARDROBE NOW\nAt These\nSPECIAL PRICES\nThis Otter  Expires May 31, 1966\nLadies' anil Gents' Overcoats. Up from .     $1.25\nWhite,  Pastel   and   Fur  Trim  Slightly  Higher\nLadies' and  Gents' Suits . $1.25\nLadies' and Gents' Suit Coats or Sports Coats .65\nPants  and   blocks           .60\nSkirts (Pleating extra)   ,       .50\nLadies' Dresses. Up from   $1.25\nSport Shirts         .50\n10% OFF\nthe Above Prices\nfor Cash and Carry\nOPEN 7:30 A.M. TO 6:30 P.M. DAILY\nJonella Cleaners\n517 Victoria St. Phone 1042\nJUST  BEHIND 8AFEWAY\nNELSON'S ONLY DRIVE-IN CLEANERS\nM'\n mmmMmw^mmmmmm^mm\n. \u25a0\n\u25a0\n\u2014-mmmmm\n\"RICHARD OLIVER D'AN-\nDREA, son of Mr. and Mrs. Oliver D'Andrea of Trail has graduated In taw at the University\nof British Columbia. He will re-\n, celve his degree Tuesday.\nFernie Takes Majority\nOf Festival Honors\nFernie\nFERNIE\nTheatre took the majority of\nhonors at the two-night East\nKootenay Drama^Festlval which\nclosed here Saturday night. The\nFernie group won the shield for\nthe best play, the trophies for\nthe best director, and best actress and shared the trophy for\nthe best actor.\nThe winning play was John Randall \"The Haunted Theatre\" which\nwas directed by Mrs. Celia Morgan. Mrs. Betty Banek won the\nbest actress trophy for her portrayal of Lorn'a Carewe, the actress,\n.who. is putting on her opening\n| night performance in the haunted\ntheatre. Russell White who was\nBob Ransome, the actress' manager\nin the play shared honors for the\nbest actor award with Robert Du'\nthie of Kimberley Adult Drama\nClub. Mr. Duthie gave* an excellent\nLittle.ceived special mention. Similar\ncitation was given to Clifford Edgar of Fernie as stage manager of\nthe winning play, \"The Haunted\nTheatre.\"\nFUNERAL FOR\nMRS. LENARDON\nAT TRAIL TUESDAY _ \t\nTRAIL (CP) \u2014 Funeral service!performance of the drunkard, Jim\nfor Mrs. Norman Lenardon, killed!in William C. DeMille's play \"Poor\nin a car crash near Las Vegas\nThursday while on her honeymoon, will be held in Trail Tuesday.\nRev. Father John Forrest will\n, Anthony of Padua\nOld Jim.\" The best supporting ac\ntor award went to George Zino-\nvitch of Kimberley for his role as\nthe doctor in \"Poor Old Jim\nINDIVIDUALITY\n^Mrs. Yvonne Firkins stated all\nfoul* plays had been very well\ndone and had provided excellent\nentertainment which had been\nenjoyed by the large audiences\neach night.\nThe festival had been well or\nganized and handled extremely\nsmoothly.\nWalter Laurie of Fernie, president of the East Kootenay Drama\nZone, in closing the festival, announced that Cranbrook would be\nthe venue of next year's festival.\nWIELDS GAVEL\nSECHELT, B.C. (CP) \u2014 Mrs\nChristine Johnston is the first\nwoman chairman of the newly-incorporated village of Sechelt. She\nwas elected over four male members of the board.\nofficiate at St. Anthony of Padua     T   .-     \u00ab r -,\n\u00ab.      . J u  I   Justine Harris of Invermere won\nChurch. ,,    .    , ,, ,\nthe best supporting actress trophy\nNorm Lenardon, a 22-year-old \u00a3or her part as Flower Lisle in the\nTrad Smoke Eaters hockey for- Lake Windermere Community\nward, is reported in \"serious!Memorial Centre's presentation of\ncondition but expected to reco-!Act Two o{ \u00abQuiet Wedding\"\nwritten by Esther McCracken. In\nher adjudication remarks, Mrs.\nI Yvonne Firkins of Vancouver stat-\nled the supporting actress had been\nintercepting and good, maintaining\nher individuality throughout the\nplay.\nSpecial mention was given to\nMrs. Lillian Gilbert of Marysville,\nfor her role as Mother in \"Miss\nPersonality Plus\" presented by the\nMarysville Players. She had played the role with deep sincerity.\nEmma Massie of Marysville received special mention for her role\nof Lizzie Rankin, the gossipy old\nmaid in \"Miss Personality Plus\nPat Conroy of Invermere was\ncited for special mention for his\nenactment of Denys Royd, the\nbride's brother, in \"Quiet Wedding.\"\nMrs. I. Markstrom, director of\nKimberley Adult Drama Club's\npresentation of \"Poor Old Jim\" re-\nFRIENDLY.\nAMILY\nINANCE\nPersonal Loans\nFor  Bills,  Fuel,  Repairs,  Cart.\nor any good  reason.\nMOUNTAIN\nFINANCE CO. Lfd.\nSulto 212, Medical Art, Bldg,\nPHONE  1780\n259 Registered\nFor (NIB Help\nCRANBROOK - Cranbrook-\nKimberley branch of the Canadian\nNational Institute for the Blind at\nits annual meeting here reported\ncollection during the year of\n$2718.67 by volunteer canvassers\nfrom. Golden to this area, with\nKimberley's contribution through\nits Community Chest.\nField Secretary for Kootenay-\nOkanagan J. C, Hembling attended the meeting' and reported 259\nblind persons now registered in\nthe district for CNIB assistance.\nOther phases of CNIB work are\nin prevention of blindness and\nassistance to treatment where it\ncan be of benefit. Miss Marjory\nNorth, blindcraft instructor will\nbe here the week of May 21 on\ninstruction classes for the blind in\nhandicrafts, a film, \"Man About\nthe House,'' was shown, and a\ntape recorded talk by Captain M.\nC. Robinson was heard.\nThe meeting re-elected its ofli-\ncers, W. H. Wilson president, H. C.\nKing vice-president and Mrs.\nAllan Grant secretary-treasurer,\nand one director will be named\nfrom each \"of the Rotary, Gyro. I\nKinsmen, Kiwanis, Lions and'\nLegion Ladies' Auxiliary to form\nthe new executive.\n7\u00a7B\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, MAY 14, 1956\u20143\nTi\nNot All Stores\nTo Close Monday\nIn Castlegar Area\nCASTLEGAR-- Not all stores\nsupport Castlegar and District Retail Association in its plan to adopt\nnew store hours Monday a spokes\nman said here Friday. ,\n\"It is not true to say all stores\nwill be closed Mondays,' the\nspokesman said. \"Department\nstores, building suppliers, and all\nfood stores excepting two will be\nopen; the closing applies to gar- \u25a0\nages, barbers, two food stores, two\ndrug   stores   and   two   women's\nwear stores.\"\nThe association this week announced member stores would\nclose Mondays, stay open Wednesday and also possibly stay open\nFriday  nights.\nPHONE   1844   FOR   CLASSIFIED\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILY\nWIDENING of Genelle bluffs on the Trail-\"\nCastlegar Highway Is being pushed by Consolidated Mining and Smelting Company crews 'this\nSpring. Removal of the bottleneck Is being con\nducted by Cominco because of construction risks\nand hazards such as high tension wires. Heavy\nequipment Is shown at work here.\n\u2014Dally News photo.\nPass Lumber Co. Assets\nBought by Crestbrook\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Crow's Nest ployees back at work. Basic plan\nPass Lumber Company.Ltd.. one for the plant is to establish an\nol the district pioneers in this in- air.drying vard for rjrestbrook's\ndustry went into voluntary liqui- ,      ,     , ...\ndation the end of last month, andM,UrPl\"S Tn\" P\u2122?\"0\"\u2122 *' \"S\nits land, buildings and machinery C\"\"brook, Canal Flat and Parson\nhave been bought by Crestbrook! P^nts Lumber will be hauled\n\u201e,   ,       T,, from  these  planed,  and  stacked,\nlimber Lia. ''\nand   contracts   are   being   let   to\nranchers and others in the Ward\nner area for logs. Prior to clear\nMore than 400 models of motor\nbikes from 14 nations were shown\nat the international, motorcycle\nshow irt Sweden In 1956.\nRevelstoke 3X Pale Beer\nOKANAGAN Lager\nNOW AVAILABLE AT ALL LOCAL LIQUOR\nCONTROL BOARD STORES\nYOU  WILL ENJOY  THESE REALLY  FINE  BEERS\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed\nby the Liquor Control Board or by the\nGovernment ot British Columbia.\nKWS\nsHHmnt||\nMajor producer early in the\ncentury under management of the\nlate Peter Lund, the company\nheadquarters are at Wardner\nwhere the company's timber interests were located and a company town has operated ever\nsince. Current manager supervising liquidation is V. A. Lundbom\nIn recent decades with available\ntimber used. Crow's Nest Pass\nCompany    operations    had\ncutting   in   the   early   1900's   the\nWardner' district   was   primarily\n, Ponderosa pine and a few small\nj stands of this remain. Earl Johnson will continue in the Wardner\noffice for Crestbrook Timber Ltd.\nMeanwhile some of Crestbrook's\nother plants in the Cranbrook and\nrassi r\nbeen' (\"an5^ *^at area are PrePai\"ing to\nFor Service\n.Call . . ,\nKootenay Plumbing & Heating\nCo., Ltd.\n351 Baker St. Nelson, B. C. Phone 666\nA  Complete  Plumbing  and   Heating   Service\nTrailite Heads\nPrinters' Union\nTRAIL (CP) - Emil Henchel\nof Trail was,, elected Saturday\nnight as president of Local 340 of\nthe International Typographical\nUnion (AFL-CIO-CLC)at the annual meeting here. He succeeds\nJoe Boletti, who held the post for\nsix years.\nVic Davies of Nelson was named\nvice-president, and Doug Strachan\nof Trail, secretary-treasurer.\nlimited to planing, yarding and\nshipping lumber bought on contract from other logging operations. Crew when the plant shut\ndown in February was about 15\nmen. Yard clearance is now complete.\n260 ACRES  BOUGHT\n\u25a0Crestbrook\nchase   covers\nplaner has now resumed operation\nunder the new arrangement on\n\"j a limited basis at present with\nmachinery being overhauled and\na small crew of the former em-\nMyju^US\nCANADA\nLIFE INSURANCE\nTHAT FITS YOUR\nNEEDS AND\nYOUR BUDGET\nresume following spring runoff\nSt. Mary's Lake logging camp will\nprobably reopen within a fortnight, and preliminaries are under\nway for start of work up the\nKootenay River from Canal Flat.\nLamb Creek logging camp above\nMineral Lake is not expected to\nbe   dry   enough   for   work   until\nTimber   Ltd.   pur-; some time in June.\n260  acres  and   the;\nSee your Mutual Life of Canada representative:\nBranch Office: 450 Baker St., Nelson, B.C.\nBranch Manager: W. Lawrence Hall, C.L.U.\nCity Representative: Fraser Tees\nDistrict Representatives: Art Anderson, Castlegar; Ed. Daloise, Trail; Rich Hood, Creston; Al. Mather,\nPenticton; Harley Shockey, Vernon; Desmond Hood, Rossland; Alex Basaraba, Cranbrook; Earle Tabor, Natal; Rayt Bostock, Kelowna; Gladys Young, Armstrong.\nDoll Up\niYoup\nPrinting\nWhen we say \"Doll Up\" your Printing we mean\nit . . . Printing, like most other businesses, is\nchanging ... the same as styles in men's suits\nand ladies' dresses, furniture and furnishings\nfor the home . . . Printing, by that we mean\nletterheads and office stationery, the style of\nwhich has been in use for years, needs changing to meet modern trends . . . that's what we\nmean when we say \"Doll Up\" your Printing ...\nLet us \"Doll Up\" your office stationery.\nCommercial Printers\nDIVISION OF\nNews Publishing Co. Ltd.,\nPublishers of Nelson Daily News\nPHONE 1844   -   NELSON\nCRANBROOK\nMLA ADDRESSES\nPUBLIC MEETS     .\nCRANBROOK - Leo T. Nim\nsick,   MLA   for   Cranbrook,   has1\nbeen kept busy making his annual!\nreport of the session.\nHe has held meetings at Cranbrook, Kimberley, Wardner, Ta\nTa Creek, Moyie, Canal Flat and\nCreston. The attendance at all\nthese meetings was exceptionally\ngood, and in most cases better than\nhe has experienced .during election time.\n\"This is a very good indication\nthat the public's interest in the\npolitical pffairs of the Province.\nwhich has been lacking to a great\nextent in previous year, has been\naroused,\" he said.\nDuring the next few weeks Mr.\nNimsick will be holding meetings\nat Yahk, Marysville and West\nNewgate.\nIn addition he was the guest\nspeaker at a May Day celebration\nin Natal, spoke to the Associated\nBoards' convention at Invermere,\ngave a talk on the procedure in\nthe House to a class in the high\nschool and to the Knights of Columbus in Cranbrook.\nwhat you get\nas standard equipment\nwith Studebaker\nGxeluolvo \"Shield of Protection\" Body Safety-padded Seat Back*\n\/     Box-section Pillars, Body and Roof\nMotion-engineered Instrument\nPanel-Exclusive\nMora Visibility All-round\nExclusive Pyramid Design\n. \\\nExclusive\nHill-Holder\nSafe-lock Door Latches\nIxcluslva\nSefetyaetlon\nBrakes\nFreme\nJUMBO PASS promoter It\nBill Smoorkoff, Mineral King\nmine paymaster and Industrial\nfirst aid man, who won $50 for\nhis Jumbo Pass-Columbia Valley Ski Club In a recent contest.\nHe wants to help publloize the\npossible route over the Purcells\nby sale of color postcards of\nJumbo Pass scenery, and has\nsaid that any proceeds from the\ncontest would be used for this\npurpose and to promo.te organization of the Ski Club,\nNo other car offers . . . even is\n\"extras\" ... all these features-\nyet, they're \"standard equipment\" with Studebaker! Today's\nhigh powered, congested travel\ndemands them . . . your family\ncar should have them!\nJUST PICK UP YOUR PHONt\nand tell your Slutlobalior\ndealer when you'd Mike to\nhave him bring a demonstration model to your door.\nNo obligation of count.\nYes, feature for feature\u2014in style,\npower, \"and safety\u2014Studebaker is the\noutstanding car in the low price field.\nChoose from 16 luxurious models, in\nfive exciting new series ... all priced\nwith the lowest. Find out about all the\nStudebaker extras that are yours at\nno extra cost. See your Studebaker\nDealer today!\n275 hp. Golden Hawk\u2014\nand there's room for five\nB^LWAYS lo^iuY IffiERTIFlEP USED CARS FROM STUDEBAKER DEALERS\nStudebaker Q^^ *Mfa ##J\n8TUDEBAKER-PACKARD OF CANADA, LIMITED-WHERE PRIDE OF WORKMANSHIP STILL COMES FIRST\nDEFOE SERVICE LTD.\n213 BAKER ST. PHONE 1234\n \u25a0 ..  : .\nJfolaim Daily Nf tua\nEstablished April 22   1002\n\/nlerioi British Columbia'* Larqeat Daily Nowspapei\nPublished every morning except Sunday and statutory\nholidays   by   the   NEWS   PUBLISHING   COMPANY\nLIMITED, 2B6 Baket Street, Nelson, British Columbia.\nAuthorized ai Second Class Mail. Post Office Department, Ottawa.\nMEMBER   THE AUDIT   BUREAU   0\u00bb   CMCULATIONS \\\nMEMBER OS   THIS CANADIAN  PRESS\nThe Canadian Piess is-exclusively entitled lo the use for lepublicatlon of all news\ndispatches credited to it 01 to The Associated Press or Reuters in\" this paper,\nand also the local news published therein.\nMonday, May 14, 1956\nMusic Festival Important Kootenay Event\nThis week the annual Kootenay\nMusical Festival is being held in\nNelson. The Festival came into being\n23 years ago through the enthusiasm\nof music lovers who saw in it a means\nof promoting interest in music and of\nstimulating the desire in learners to\nbecome competent musicians and thus\nto enrich the cultural life of the Kootenays..\nFrom the beginning, its program\nwas designed to encourage the young\nas well as the adult performer. How\nwell it has succeeded is shown by the\nfact that year by year the number of\nentrants has increased and audiences\ngrown larger. This year, in order to\nprovide for the increased number of\ncontestants, an additional hall has had\nto be engaged, and it is expected that\naudiences will be larger.\nThe Festival has become an institution interwoven in the lives of the\npeople and dear to their hearts. This\nyear it cannot fail to be more successful than ever.\nKeeping Up With the Machines\nCanada, we are told, has a standard of living second only to the\nUnited States, and as good Canadians\nwe feel that we should not be second\nto anyone. Unfortunately the standard of living is also related to the\nper capita wealth of a country, and\nthere is. no doubt that the United\nStates far outstrips Canada in this.\nTo most people the standard of\nliving means the amount of money\nwhich can be spent over and above\nthat for the bate necessities of life,\nthough what constitutes a necessity\nand what a luxury is often a matter\nof opinion. In India a peasant would\nconsider a high standard of living as\none where he had ample food, shelter\nand clothing; in Canada the worker\nwould consider that his standard of\nliving was high if in addition to\nthese he had a well furnished home\nequipped with the latest gadgets and\na good car.\nModern civilization and a high\nstandard of living, according to our\nWestern conception, depend largely\nupon gadgets. The word gadgets has\nnow come to mean anything in the\nhome which will make life easier for\nwomen. Men love gadgets. There is\nscarcely one that has not at some time\ndreamed of a machine or appliance\nwhich will do some work better than\nby hand, for men are essentially lazy.\nNone of the appliances to be found\nin the home are the result of a\nwoman's inspiration or efforts; they\nare the outcome of some man's dissatisfaction. True, woman often had\ndissatisfactions, but she expressed\nthem only in complaints.  She still\ncomplains,   and   the   invention   of\ngadgets for the home still goes on.\nThere are those who think that\nthere are too many gadgets, among\nthem the celebrated English writer,\nJ. B. Priestley, who did not endear\nhimself to his North American audiences when he spoke of them. He\nseemed to think that the soul-of a\npeople can be lost in a world of automation. He may be right, but in the\nmeantime we are living in a world\nwhere the production of gadgets occupies a large part of the energies of\nour people.\nOn the production and sale of\nthese our high standard of living depends. It sometimes seems that in the\nend we shall be driven out of our\nhomes by them, just as, at present, we\nare the least important and certainly\nthe least expensive items in -the\nhomes. That is, however, something\nfor the future to consider. In the.\nmeantime let us go on merrily producing and selling more and more.\nThere is no wealth without production, and to production there seems\nno end.\nMr. Priestley is a writer, and\nwriters are above the sordid economic\naspects of life, though they seldom\nfail to take advantage of the comforts\nof life which wealth provides. He\nfeels that this high standard of living\nis submerging our personalities, that\nwe are becoming slaves to machines.\nHe may be right, but on the other\nhand there are vastly more books\nprinted and published, and we doubt\nif with a low standard of living thev\nwould be so widely read or whether\nMr. Priestley's own standard of living\nwould be so high.\nA Moderate Speaks\n\"I feel duty-bound to indicate the presence of a large body of 'middle-of-the-road'\nNegro feeling in Memphis . , .\n\"I believe the majority of Negroes are\nthinking as I am, but they fear the rabid\nrabble which is so easily swayed by passing passions. All of us subscribe to the\nbroad objectives of the NAACP. None of\nus wants second-class citizenship\n\"But there is a widening gap among us\nregarding the methods ...\"\nWhose ideas are these? Why. they are\nthose of Blair T. Hunt, the principal of the\nSouth's largest Nejrro high \u00ab-*,t-\"\"M, Memphis' Booker T. Washington High.\nAnd.haw welcome M f \u25a0 public takine\nof a stand by such a man!\nProf. Hunt noted, as he wrote to The\nPress-Scimitar, that he risked 'the criticisms\nof extremists. He is courageous enough not \u2022\nto care.\nA \"rabid rabble . . . swayed by passing\npassions\" could be either Negro or white.\n\u2022Responsible white citizens, responsible\nNegro citizens do not want the future of\nthe South determined by extremists. It could\nnot be a happy future.\nOnly a Negro leader, as things are now,\ncan speak for our Negro citizens. Blair Hunt\nhas done so. And moderate people, men\nand women of good will in Memphis and\nthe Mid-South, both white and Ne?*'o. now\nhave in Hunt a Negro leader with whom\nto join in an effort for better race relations.\n?Questions?\nANSWERS\nOpen to \u00bbny reader. Names of\npersons asking questions will not be\npublished There is no charge toi this\nservice QUESTIONS WILL NOT BE\nANSWEHED BY MAIL except where\nthere Is obvious necessity for privacy\nR. Q. W., Ainsworth\u2014Please explain how the\nheadwaters at Columbia Lake run uphill for a short distance before flowing\n' Into the river?\nAnother reader, D. S., Nelson, has written us as follows: \"R. O. W. may be referring to the Columbia River at Athalmer.\nB.C., where Toby Creek flows into the Columbia about one-and-one-t^alf miles north\nof  Lake   Windermere.   Sornetlmes  in   the\nSpring the level of the water in Toby Creek\nrises more rapidly than the level of the water\nin  Lake  Windermere.  At  such  times  the\nwater then flows southward into the lake\n(\"opposite direction to the usual flow). The\nsame action may occur at end if, Columbia\nLake due to the rise of the water in Dutch\nCreek.\" We are indebted to D. S. for this\ninformation, **\nP. P. R., Castlegar\u2014To save a lot of hard\nwork in digging a, well for water and\nfinding none, would you be able to supply me with name and address of a\nwater-finder in this district? Such a\nperson can tell exactly where to dig\nand how deep to dig for water just by\nwalking and holding a willow-branch\nin his hand.\nCan other readers help?\nM. C. Nelson\u2014Is there a women's professional fastball (softball) le\u00bb\u00abue in Canada or the United States? If so. where\ncould I obtain information about it?\nWe have no record of headouarters for\nwomen  fnstballers  in  Canada  and  believe\nthev play in United States Le\u00ab\"n\u00bb. We suggest you write to J. A. Jones. 2250 HaywOid\nWest Vancouver,  \"'ho  is .ser-retarv  of  the\nmajor men's fastball (softball) leamie.\nK. B\u201e Canal Flats\u2014To settle an argument.\nis it true that the Ford Motor Company\n,  gives a car in return for a 1942 penny?\nThe Ford Motor Company states that\nthey have never offered a new car in exchange for a 1942 penny. This erroneous\nrumor, it appears, started during the last\nwar when copper supplies for making pennies were curtailed in order to use all copper\nin war work Pennies have never been\nhonored in any way by the Ford Motor Company. \u2022 l\nHard To Justify\nIn hiring, firing and bonding, a blanket\npolicy against persons with prison records\nis hard to justify. Self-interest alone should\ncause employers to refrain from unfair discrimination that may create an enemy ol\nsociety. Enlightened policy would treat individually each case where background is\nimportant.\nOn the information available, one man\nmay seem a poor risk for a particular kind\nof work, but another may be more reliable\nthan some who, though without bad records,\nhave less guidance and incentive to do as\nwell. Community co-operation Is essential\nin the rehabilitation of offenders.\n\u2014Ottawa Journal\nPress Comment\nA Sudbury spinster says at this late\ndate she realizes she was dumb in turning\n\" deaf ear to all blind dates\u2014Sudbury Star\nWatch Your Language\nCONSPIRE\u2014(kon-SPIRE)\u2014verb transitive and intransitive; to make an agreement, especially- in secret, to do some unlawful deed: to plot together; to concur\nor work to one end. act in harmony. Origin\nOld French\u2014Conspirer, from Latin\u2014Con-\nsr.irare. to blow together, harmonize, agree,\np'ot, frbfn Con plus spirare. to breathe, blow\nIt's Been Said\nJustice discards party, friendship and\nkindred, and is therefore represented as\nblind \u2014Joseph Addison.\nProf. Hunt, we know, is only the firet of\nour moderates to speak out publicly.\nThe churches, white and Negro, should\ninspire the moderates among their members\nto express themselves.\nProf. Hunt himself turned to an incident\nat church, and quoted \"a good sister\" for\nthe   thought  t'lat   'This  ain't  no   time   for\nscrappin' and fus--in' . . . this is prayin' time.\"\n\u2014Memphis Press-Scimitar\nThey'll Do It Every Time\nBy Jimmy\nCongressman1 j\nWALOO FLEW-.\nACROSS THE fflUKITRV\nTO^PPE4R FOR\nHIS OL'COLLEGE\nP4L AT ONE OF\nTHOSE CLUB\nDINERS\nYOU'LL BE THE MIT OF THE\nEVENlNG-I'M TOASTMASTER\"\nyOO DOhfT KNOW WH4T THIS;\n<      ME4NSTOME-\nTODAY'S BIBLE\nTHOUGHT\nAs an eagle that itlrreth  up\nher nest.\u2014Deut, 32:11.\nBaby eagles would never learn\nto fly unless forced to do so by\ntheir mothers. Necessity has forced humanity to progress.\nfijunt dint\nYour Individual\nHOROSCOPE\nBy Frances Drake-\nThey are still In love if each\nseems anxious to keep the other\nfrom maki'n' a bad impression on\npeople.\nLook in the section in which\nyour birthday comes, and firid\nwhat yc-ur outlook is, according\nto the stars,\nFor Tuesday, May 15, 1966\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 20 (Aries)\n\u2014' Don't let quality suffer for the\nsake of speed, as may be a temptation today. And give the- other\nfellow his due in all things. Be the\nfine example that you can be.\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus)\n\u2014 Avoid over-sensitiveness now.\nRarely do others -slight you intentionally. Maintain a cheery attitude and you will have a satisfactory day,       '\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini) -\nWhile it is important not to overlook   details,   avoid  fussiness   or\nyour system? Think first, but don't\nbe fearful or hesitant about pur\nsuing your goals.\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER 22\n(Scorpio) \u2014 You can do more with\nthis day,than you may think possible at first. Be spirited, in youi\nbest form (where health permits),\nand don't be downed by anyone's\nlack of interest. Forward!\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER\n21 (Sagittarius) \u2014 Attitude and\nsystem are important now, as al\nways. \"It is no shame for a man\nto learn that which he knoweth\nnot, whatever be hie age.\" Dig deep\nfor facts, ask questions; listen.\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY 20\n(Capricorn) \u2014 \"Look before you\nleap,   for   snakes   among   sweet\noverstressing.  Manufacturing,   in-1 flowers creep.\" There may be dis\nvention, useful experimentation,\noutdoor activity, (including gardening) highly favored.\nJUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer) -\nEnjoy some healthy exercise in\nfree time\"; don't get into the doldrums or start feeling sorry for\nyourself, as is the tendency now.\nGet a good start and move forward\nwith confidence.\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leo) \u2014\nThere may be some minor matters\nto attend to before you can swing\ninto action as you would like, Don't\nchafe, but be pattent and alert and\nthings will run smoothly. Be logical.\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER 23\n(Virgo) \u2014 Pursue ambitious goals\neagerly and avoid fears, anxieties.\nWith a bright, determined start,\nyou can keep things going smoothly.\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER 23\n(Libra) \u2014 It might be wise to, review before beginning your day:\nwhere could you make improvements in your routine, or simplify\nsension and irritability about. YOU\nsteer clear of it. Do not be too\nanxious for monetary rewards.\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY 19\n(Aquarius) \u2014 There are many\nways in which you can improve\nyour methods. Try, or you will\nnever know whether you could do\nbetter. Have faith and be quick to\ngrasp opportunities.\n- FEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\n(Pisces) \u2014 With good will and\ntolerance you can lead this day\ninto a highly successful, constructive week. Even a sjow start can be\novercome under your able direction.\nYOU BORN TODAY: This is the\nZodiacal sector of many literary\ngeniuses, inventors, musicians, actors and mathematicians. Taureans\nare innately noble companions,\nstalwart defenders of the underprivileged, make happy life-mates\n$nd parents. You can, however, be\nmisled through feeling sorry for\nothers. Be careful of companionships, Indulge only in wholesdme\nGeorge Meany To\nQuell Racketeers\nATLANTIC CIT. N. J. (AP) -\nAFL-CIO president George Meany\nhas pledged a crackdown on \"that\nsmall minority\" in the trade union\nranks \"who indulge in racketeering.\"\nLabor leader!* he said, will see\nto it that this minority \"is eliminated from the ranks of the trade\nunions.\"\nMeany, in a speech before the\nInternational Ladies Garment\nWorkers Union convention, also\nvowed that the merged organiza\ntion will never divide again.\nThere will be \"internal problems,\" Meany told the more than\n1000 delegates but he criticized the\n\"gloom-mongers\" who \"spread the\nidea that division will cur\nagain.\"\nDEATHS\nPortland, Me. \u2014 Clarence E\nMulford, 73, creator of the fictional cowboy \"Hopalong Cassidy.\"\nStettler, Alta. - Charles B\nWillis, 83, owner and publisher of\nthe weekly Stettler Independent.\nMontreal \u2014 Dr. Hugh Farrell.\n37, former medical officer oversees with the South Alberta Sn^,\nment of(the 4th Canadian Armored Division.\nPasadena, Calif. \u2014 The former\ndirector of Mt. Wilson Obsprva-\ntory, Dr. Walter Sydney Adams,\n79. Adams was internationally\nknown  as  an   astronomer.\nNara, Jepan \u2014 Actor Louis Cal-\nhern, 61, distinguished star of\nBroadway and Hollywood. Mr.\nCalhern was in Japan for location\non \"Teahouse of the August Moon\"\nwith Marlow Brando and Glenn\nFord.\nhealth - building pleasures, and\ndon't wear down nerves and general 'condition trying to take part\nin too many activities or Interests\nat once. You probably enjoy classical music and the beauty of the\noutdoors. Birthdate of: Florence\nNlghtinggale, famous nurse.\nCancel U.S.\nNaval Units'\nCrete Visit\nATHENS (Reuters) - A proposed visit of American naval\nunits to Crete this month has been\ncancelled at the suggestion of the\nGreek foreign ministry, a United\nStates embassy spokesman announced,. Saturday.\nNo reason for the cancellation\nof the visit was given, but the\nnewspaper Vlma earlier today\npublished a report from Crete\nsaying that the Greek naval high\ncommand had requested that\nAmerican seamen should not go\nashore during the visit because Of\n\"certain public opinion and emotion owing to the execution of\ntwo   Cypriots.\"\nThe two Cypriots were Michael\nKaraolis and Andreas Demetriou,\nwho were executed by British\nauthorities in Cyprus Thursday for\nterrorist shootings. Their hanging\ntouched off violent anti-British\nand anti-American riots in Greece,\nwhere American support for Britain on the Cyprus issue is widely\nresented.\nPredicts TV Outlet\nFor Kamloops Area\nKAMLOOPS  B.C.   (CP)   -   A\ntelevision station may be operating\nhere early this fall, ilan G. Clark,\npresident of twin cities Television\nLtd. predicts.\nMr. Clark said his firm will\nmake a second application for a\ntelevision licence to the CBC\nBoard of Governors In une.\nThe application will ask for permission to operate a TV station\nwithout network affiliation.\nMr. piark said initial programming will be from Kinescopes of\nCanadian and U.S. television\nshows.\nVOLKSWAGEN    CANADA    LTD.   Golden   Mile, Toronto 16, Ont.\nDISTRIBUTOR FOR BRITISH COLUMBIA AND YUKON TERRITORIES     ,\nGENERAL TRUCK SALES LTD.\n275 Seymour St.  Voncouver, B.C. Phone MA0578\n*   t\nDEALER\nPARKVIEW MOTORS LTD.\n924 Nelson, Avenue\nNelson, B.C.\nPhone 1454\n \u2022  \u25a0 , 1 1\u2014\u2014J-\n \u2022\u25a0\t\n\u2014: !\t\n\/5>(ol-\nFriends Surprise Boswell Couple\nOn Silver Wedding Anniversary\nBOSWELL \u2014 Silver wedding\nanniversary of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Wallace was celebrated here.\nThe celebration was a surprise\nparty and was the idea of the Boswell Sanca Womens Club. There\nwere 59 persons present.\nIn the early evening Mr. and\nMrs. Wallace were asked to take\ntheir grand daughters for a drive,\nto see the Kootenay Lake ferry.\nAs soon as they were off, a party\nof friends invaded their house \u2014\nmoved all the surplus furniture,\netc., decorated the rooms with\nstreamers, bells, and spring flowers \u2014 set out a table with a very\nlovely wedding cake and many\npresents and cards of congratulations.\nThe Wallace's got when they\nreturned surprised to find their\nhouse surrounded with cars. On\nentering the house they wore\ngreeted by the Wedding March \u2014\nplayed by Mrs. W. Lawson Hepher\n\u2014and showered with confetti. \u25a0 t\nPRESENTATION\nAfter receiving personal congratulations, Frank W. Cummings,\nNelson Teacher\nTo NI lor Year\n(Dmajl lAft OJiik\n9150       14*4\u201424 a\nHALF-SIZE   STYLE\nEvery stitch gives double value\nwhen you sew this town-and\ncountry twosome! It's the perfect\ngo-every-where ensemble for the\nrummer! Designed for the shorter\nfuller figure, cut in Half-Sizes \u2014\nno alteration worries when fitting!\nPattern D150: Half Sizes Wh-\n16%, 18^, 20%, 22%, 24%. Size\n16% dress 2=i yards 39-inch fab\nric; bolero, 1% yards.\nThis easy-to-use pattern gives\nperfect fit. Complete, illustrated\nSew Chart shows you every step.\nSend THIRTY-FIVE CENTS\n(3.*ic) in coins (stamps cannot be\naccepted), for this pattern Print\nplainly SIZE. NAME, \/ADDRESS.\nSTYLE NUMBER.\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN. NDN, 60 Front St., W.;\nToronto, Ont\nfor the Women's Club and friends,\npresented the honored couple with\na lovely teapot, which on examination, also contained twenty-\nfive silver dollars. He said he\nhoped they would enjoy \"another\ntwenty five years of happiness\"\nand called for a toast to them.\nMr. and Mrs. Wallace both expressed their amazement and\npleasure at being given such a\nparty and at seeing such a large\ncompany of friends. Then everyone sang \"For they are Jolly Good\nFellows.\" j\nThe \"Silver Wedding\" was very \\\nwell carried out by other out of I\n'own friends, as in-addition to the:\nsilver dollars in the tea pot, more]\nthan twice that number were*on\nthe gift table.\nIt was learned later \u2014 silver,\ndollars are not easy to obtain.:\nRequests have to be put in weeks!\nahead at banks. Many gifts and'\ncards of congratulations were re-:\nceived by the couple. j\nA wedding cake* was admired\nby everyone. It was made by Mrs.\nOwen Sherratt of Cranbrook, and|\nicing and decoration were done!\nby Mrs, E. Whitney and Mrs. EM\nBainbridge. Four-year-old Kay]\nSherratt, granddaughter of the |\nWallaces passed wedding cake to'\nthe guests. I\nBoyd Wallace made a special,\nunannounced trip from Vancou-|\nver, to be  home for the Anniversary, and returned by car the j\nfollowing morning.\nFor the Womens Club, Mr. and,\nMrs.   H.  Bell,   Mr.   and   Mrs.   E.\nWhitney, Mr.  and  Mrs. E. Bain-j\nbridge handled the main arrange-'\nments. Marry Club members, help-1\ned with serving the supper. Mrs.\nPaul  L.  O'Sullivan  arranged  the'\nfloral decorations.\nMrs. Owen Sherratt and daught-:\ners Kay and Irene of Cranbrook,\nwere guest of her mother for a]\nfew days and brought with her,\nMrs. Rose Viher, also of Cranbrook. When the guests were leav-J\ning Mr. and Mrs. Wallace, thanked\neveryone and said \"we will never\nforget our silver wedding celebration.\"\ntt*ifimt-iTwwff*nfif>\nJUST   ARRIVED i\nSPLIT   BAMBOO*\nMATS\nIn Beautiful Colors. <\nFor   Wall   or  Table   Mats.   \\\ni\n\u00bb\u00ab :\nHOBBY SHOP    i\nl\n!   Phone 1703       661 Baker St. \\\nLong Training\nFor France's\nTop Dressmakers\nBy  DOROTHY  ROE i\nNEW YORK (AP)-Girls who'\noften have difficulty shortening\nthe hem of a new dress might \\\nprofit from a few years in a!\nFrench school. .\nIn France every school is re-1\nquired to teach sewing, and the\nhigh point of the year comes each\nMay when the finest work of the\nstudents is displayed before the\ncritical eyes of judges from the\nChambre Syndicalc, who pick a\nchosen few as worthy of further\ntraining to enter the great dressmaking trades of France.\nThese and other fascinating details of ,the workings of the\nFrench fashion industry are discussed in a new book, Dressmakers of France, by Mary Brooks\nPicken and Dora Loues Miller,\npublished by Harper.\nThe authors are well qualified\nto- tackle this subject. Mrs. Picken\nis a former Kansas girl who\nlearned to\" sew at her grandmother's knee, and since has\nhitched her needle and thread to\na star. She is the author of 95\nbooks on sewing. Miss Miller is\nanother Middle-Western American\nwho has lived in Paris for many\nyears as correspondent for magazines and newspapers.\nLONG TRAIL\nWhen a girl is accepted for\ntraining in French needle skills,\nshe enters the Chambre Syndicale\nschool to start the long trail to\nprofessional standing and, perhaps, fame as a designer.\nThe first year she concentrates\nonly on making basic stitches, finishes,    buttonholes   and   pockets.\nMISS   DOROTHY  PEIRSON\nMiss Dorothy Peirson, B.A., B.\nEd., of the Nelson Junior High\nSchool staff will be leaving at\nthe end of June to accept an exchange teacher position in Dartmouth, Nova  Scotia.\nSince Miss Peirson came to,\nNelson in 1949, she has been an;\nactive participant in local community organizations. Miss Peirson teaches Sunday School at the\nTrinity United Church and she\nis captain of the First Nelson\nGuide Company. She is an active member of the Ladies' Curling Club, and a member of the\nBeta Sigma Phi Sorority.\nTeacher exchanges are arranged through the Canadian Educational Association with the cooperation of the provincial departments of education.\nAn applicant must have at least\nfive years of successful teaching\nexperience, and must be sufficiently experienced and competent\nto make a worthwhile contribution both while on exchange and\nafter their return.\nThe purpose of teacher exchange is to enable teachers to\nimprove their professional knowledge and aid In contributing to\n] ABOUT THE TOWN\nTlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllliiillllillllliiiiiiiiiiinii By Alice Stevens\nPHONE   1369  OR   1844\nMr. and Mrs. Verdon Scott of\nChapman Camp have been the\nguests of Mrs. Scott's brother and\nsister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. W. A.\nAnderson, Granite Road.\nMr. and Mrs. W. A. Curran of\nTrail were in Nelson for the Spring\nconvention of Association of\nKootenay Municipalities.\n.   .   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. E. W. Euerby of\nGrand Forks have returned after\nvisiting their son-in-law and\ndaughter, Mr. and Mrs. J. A. C.\nLaughton, Second Street.\n...\nMr, and Mrs. Gordon Campbell j\nof Trail, who were in Nelson to\nattend the Kootenay Municipalities\nConvention, stayed for the weekend at their Summer home at\nQueen's Bay.\n\u2022 \u2022    e\nMr. and Mrs. Douglas Warner\nand children. Beverley, Bill, and\nLinda of Trail were weekend\nguests of Mr. Warner's mother,\nMrs. E. Warner, 1002 Hoover.\nStreet.\n\u2022 *   * I\nMr. and Mrs. Peter Dewdney of]\nTrail were in Nelson Saturday for\nthe AKM convention. Mr. Dewd-|\nneyis a well known former resident of Nelson. I\n\u2022 *   *\nMrs. E. L. Jorgensen, Cedar\nStreet, spent the weekend as the\nguest of her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Robin McBain\nat Brilliant.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Robert Pickering\nand young son Jimmy, Sixth\nStreet, have left for Maple Creek,\nSaskatchewan to attend i friend's\nwedding.\ne    e    *\nMr. and Mrs. Edmond Patenaude\nof Helena, Montana, were in Nelson to attend the funeral of their\nuncle, J. O. Patenaude, Saturday.\n*   e   \u2022\nMiss Yvonne LePage of Vernon\nis spending her vacation with Mr.\nand Mrs. J. T. Harvie, North Shore.\n' *   *   \u2022\nMrs. - Joe Harris, 511 Sixth\nStreet, has returned after 10 days'\nvisit to \u25a0 Vancouver where she\nvisited her daughter, Mrs. E. K.\nDavis, formerly of Nelson.\n...\nSt. Saviour's Mother's Club held\na tea Wednesday afternoon in the\nMemorial Hall. Mrs. F. B. Pearce\nwelcomed the guests. Flower decorations were nasturtiums.\n\u2022 ...\nMrs. J. R. Baily was in charge\nof the bake table; Mrs. H. W.\nWood, the Fancy work table; Mis.\nMansell, Mrs. C. Turner, Mrs. E.\nLund, Mrs. E. Rich and Mrs. F. W.\nCartwright, the tea tables. Mrs. N.\nF. Simonds was cashie'r.\nMothers Guests\nAl Sorority Tea\nMothers of members were prin\ncipal guests when Iota chapter of\nBeta Sigma Phi \"held at Mother's\nDay tea at the home of Mrs. Shirley Appleton, Kokanee  lodge\nA special cake for the occasion\nwas decorated with yellow rosebuds, the Sorority's flower, and\nwith lettering spelling \"Happy\nthe promotion of national and In- \\ Mother's Day.\"\nternational understanding. j     The guests received small favors\nExchange   is   a   most   effective \u25a0 distributed by Mrs. Mary Pennoy\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, MAY 14, 1956\u20143\nDELTOX\nRUGS\nmethod of broadening teachers'\ninterest and increasing their understanding of various educational 'methods.\nMiss Ruth Paterson of Dartmouth, N.S., will be arriving to\ntake Miss Peirson's place at the\nNelson Junior High School for\none year.\ner from a decorated basket, and\nalso nosegays of garden flowers.\nPourers were Mrs. Elva Kettlewell and Mrs. Pennoyer, Mrs.\nBetty Boates was convener, assisted by social chairman Mrs.\nPennoyer.\nPut- Care Into\nChoosing Glasses,\nSays Contest Winner\nBalfour Notes\nBALFOUR\u2014Mrs. W. Kline andi TORONTO (CP) \u2014 Blonde Ron-\nMrs. J. James attended the wom-|tii Burkett, winner of a \"most\nen's Institute convention in j beautiful girl to wear glasses in\nFruitvale ns delegates from Bal-j Canada\" contest, says \"glasses do\nfour Wl. They were accompanied \u25a0 something for a girl. I think they're\nby Mrs. W. H. Saunders, Mrs  L. | wonderful\nSweeting and Mrs. A. E McGil-j    she has 11 pairs, four of which\nlivary. | she won in the contest sponsored\nMrs.   E.   Carlson   has   as   her. by an optical firm. In another con-\nguest her sister, Mrs. N.  Paylor.test, judged on pictures, the for-\nnd   her   nephew,   W.   Jacobson, mer Miss Toronto placed third for\nboth of Prince George. a world crown won by Barbara\nLarson of Minnesota.\n\"I believe a woman should put\nas much care and money into se\nlecting spectacles as she does with\nThe second year she is allowed to\nstart on garment construction, and\nthis year turns the apprentice into\nMother's Day\nObserved by\nPythian Sisters\nThe annual observance of Mother's Day of the Pythian Sisters\nof Nelson was in the form of an\nenjoyable social evening following their regular meeting. Whist\nwas played by the members and\ntheir friends and the Knights\nof Pythias and their wives. Winners were Mrs. Josephine Johnson\nand C. Isaakson.\nMrs. A. H. Whitehead was chosen as the Mother of the Year and\nwas the recipient of a lovely gift\nana corsage. Corsages were also\npresented to Mrs. C. H. Cain as\nchief and Mrs. J. Bereau as treasurer of British Columbia.\nMiss Dora Perasso was convenor for the Buffet supper which\nfollowed, assisted by Mrs. E.\nBoyce, Mrs. J. Klein, Mrs. D T.\nHeddle and Mrs. R. Rowe.\nIt was reported that the Knights\nof Pythias were sponsoring a\nfilm showing of cerebral palsy in\nNelson on May 15. As cerebral\npalsy is the chief project of bobh\nthe Knights and the Sisters the\nmembers were urged  to attend.\nMrs. J. T. Harvie was congratulated on winning her competition while attending the District\nConvention in Fruitvale on April\n28. Praise was also given to Mrs.\nJ. Bereau, Mrs. C. H. Cain, Mrs.\nF. Selby and Mrs. L. Ott for their\ndisplays of various parts of the\nritual during the day. A report of |\nthe convention will be given by I\nMrs. Fred Noreross who was official delegate from Nelson temple !\nGrand sessions of Pythian Sis-'\nters will be held in Trail next'\nweek and a number of the mem-.\nbers and past chiefs of the temple\nhave signified their intention of\nattending.\nThis year Stratford's famed Shakespearean festival will have\nCanadian actors and actresses instead of Imported stars for the\nkey roles. In addition French versions of famous plays will be\nshown. It will be a new departure for the Festival which has\nspecialized in departures since Its beginning.\n6' x 9' \u201e.\n8' x 10' \u201e.\n9' x 12' -\n$19.95\n$25.95\n$29.95\njix&ma*\nHave Negro Pastor\nCHICAGO (AP) \u2014 For the first\ntime in Chicaf^b, a Negro was\nnamed minister of a white congregation here. The sixth United\nPresbyterian church, with a membership of about 160, announced\nthat Rev. A. L. Reynolds Jr., had\naccepted a call to become its\npastor.\na skilled hand. The third year is | jewelry,\" Ronni said. \"I'd love to\ndevoted to tailoring and draping, inave ^ even 20', different pairs of\nand students who get so far are j giasses_ Then -\u00a3*d change them to\nexpected to be able to handle prac- \u25a0 su|t my ci0thes.\"\ntically any kind of dressmaking! she has a spdrts pair with check\nwith skill. I nms; a daytime pair with rhine-\nThe great houses of the haute !s(ones and ass0rted styles for eve-\ncouture    are    eager    for    these\nMichael Langham, left, will take over the directing reins from\nTyrone Guthrie In this year's Festival presentations. Donald Campbell has grown this impressive red beard to play the role of\nFa I staff.\ntrained workers. They may expect\nlifelong jobs if they know their\ntrade well.\nDuring the schooling, say the\nauthors, the girls are taught two\nother subjects considered of prime\nimportance: arithmetic and baby\ncare. The Chambre Syndicale\nbelieves a dressmaker must be\nable to do sums, in order to figure\nyardage. And they _ also believe\nthat she is a better and happier\nworker if she is married, so they\nencourage it.\nI ning wear.\n\"Girls who wear the right kind\nof glasses can be very, very popular,\" Ronni said.\nOUTSIDE PAINT\nYour home will sparkle with MONAMEL-X\nHIGH FIDELITY COLORS. Long-\nlasting, fade-proof, modern as tomorrow.\nNo liner paint is made for home exteriors.\nSEE YOUR\nTfoncmeli\nDEALER\nBURNS LUMBER CO.\n602 Baker .St. ,     Phone 1180\nLARGE CROWD  ENJOYS\nJUNIOR HIGH CONCERT\nTRAIL - Trail Junior High\nSpring concert was enjoyed by a\nlarge audience Friday night.\nThe concert program, designed\nto give each group a chance to\nperform and sjiow what it could\ndo, was conducted by G. A. Mal-\nlette who is going to take a year's\nleave of absence to continue his\nstudy of music in order to receive\nhis master's degree. A presentation by the student council was\nmade to Mr. Mallette.\nBoswell Notes\nMr. and Mrs. N. Bainbridge have\nas their guests Mrs. Eainbridge's\nbrother and sister-in-law Mr. and\nMrs. John Miller. They are returning to their home in Banff\nafter their wedding at the bride's\nhome in Primate, Sask.\nBoswell and District Women's\nClub held their May meeting at\nthe home fo Mrs. Paul L. O'Sullivan. A good attendance of members, and one visitor were present. The secretary read the financial statement, showing a balance in hand. It was agreed to\nsend a letter of thanks to Mrs N,\nAnderson for her gift, to the club\nof a crochet table centre. A card\nparty is to be arranged for May 24,\nin the memorial hall. The next\nmeeting will be at the 'home of\nMrs.  Ness  of Sanca.\nKaslo United Church\nTea Successful\nKASLO\u2014The service club of St.\nAndrew's United Church held a\nsuccessful tea and bake sale in\nthe church hall on Thursday afternoon under the direction of the\npresident, Miss Iris Clarke. The\ntea and bake sale was formally\nopened with a short address by\nRev. Dr. H. K. Johnston.\nIn charge of the miscellaneous\nand sewing table were Mrs. H,\nMclntyre, Mrs. A. W. Bavington\nand Mrs. A. R. McLanders; serving\nat the tea tables and in the kitchen, Mrs. M. Palola, Miss Iris\nClarke and Mrs. G. H. Baker; at\nthe home baking table were Mrs.\nE. H. Morphet and Mrs.' R. E.\nGreen.\nPARTY PINAFORE\nTwo pretty ways she can wear\nthis style! A cool, cute pinafore\n\u2014 a party dress with the addition\nof the separate little collar! So\nversatile \u2014 sew-very-easy for\nyou!\nPattern 801: Children's sizes 2,\n4, 6, 8, included. Pattern, embroidery transfer, directions.\nSend TWENTY-FIVE CENTS ln\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern to Laura Wheeler,\nNDN, 60 Front St., W., Toronto,\nOnt, Print plainly PATTERN\nNUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS.\nLook for smartest ideas ln\nneedlecraft in our Laura Wheeler\nCatalog for 1955. Crochet, knitting, embroidery and lovely things\nto wear, iron-ons. quilts, aprons,\nnovelties \u2014 easy, fun to makel\nSend 25 cents for your copy of\nthis book NOW! You will want to\noi'der every new design In lt\nRoad Work Being\nDone at Boswell\nBOSWELL\u2014Local roads have\nbeen getting considerably little\nattention latedy. The Cemetery\nroad has been graded and gravelled. The road down to the Boswell Welcome Inn Motel has been\nwidened considerably at the\nNorth approach, so that trucks\nand buses can use it. A new road\nhas also been made to the K.\nWallace farm and is now in use.\nIt provides a good entrance to\ntwo places, the Roy Koch and\nWallace homes.\n*\u2022* :\t\nPHONE   1844   FOR   CLASSIFIED\nBy ALICE ALDEN\nBEIGE Is everywhere and so are prints. The two together do\nnicely especially when the print Is one of those delicate, precise\ndesigns or those of the lurtfllnous stained-glass variety. Another delight of the current season appears in this most attractive Trlgere\ndesign. It Is a dress plus Jacket. In this case the dress doesn't really require any concealing device since it Is of the cover-up type,\na sheath softened by pockets. The fabric Is beige sill* and the total effect Is distinguished and elegant.\nWelcome\nCanadians\nWhen you come to Spokane\nfor the Lilac Festival, or any\ntime, shop Northtown, complete one stop suburban shopping. Hundreds of values,\n1000 free parking places, 23\nstores for. your every need.\nLocated on highway No. 395\nat Division and Wellesley, as\nyou enter the city. Stop in\nsoon!\nNorthtown\nSHOPPING CENTER\n\u25ba\n0\nYou're always welcome at NIAGARA\nAt Niagara we havo the money you need In the\namount you want. You may borrow up to $1500\nor more and lake up to 24 month, lo repay . . .\nwith payments arranged on a monthly dale selected\nby you. Loan, up to $1500 are life-insurod al no\nextra cost to you\u2014and on many amounts rales at\nNiagara are lower than elsewhere. Convenient ways\nfor you to borrow will be discussed privately so, if\nyou need money promptly\u2014come in anytime.\n\"Hen ore fust a few of our many loan plant\"\nYOU\nOET\nMONTHLY PAYMENTS\n12\n13\n20\n24\n$300\n661.10*\nSOO\nISOO\n$ 20.37\n74.90\n139.80\nS 23.3S\n61.3S\n114.50\n$40*\n\u25a010.05\n00.05\n$41.40\n73.90\n\"Ono of many ofovr convon'onl avon-doltar paymont plant\n\u25a0TOSSvV\nIAGARA\nLOANS\nllllllrWVW  BBAHCHfS mnM  C0AST-10COST\n560 Baker St. Phone 1636\n M--.':\"M'' ';\/\":m;i'\u25a0\":' \u25a0\u25a0-'!i'.',\":V-:': MM-- -'.'\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0 ^-\"'\u25a0v^\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0|\u25a0''^M\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0'^M!':AvV;';\u25a0v;M''t;;rM'\u25a0\u25a0:   \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\"'\u25a0'\n\u25a0w\n\u25a0 .       \u25a0\"\nI\n\t\n6\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, MAY 14, 1956\nAccuse Russ Frogmen of Snooping\nRound and Under British Warship\nLONDON (AP) \u2014 Britain formally admitted Saturday it has\napologized to Russia for the activities by a frogman around\nSoviet warships in Britain. At the\nsame time a diplomatic source\nsaid Russians, too, had snooped on\nBritish ships.\nThe source said at least one\nRussian was caught with b small\ncamera in a paper bag aboard a\nvisiting British warship in Leningrad last October. Russian frogmen also were reported in action\nnear the British squadron. And\nseveral uninvited guests went to\na party given aboard a British\ncarrier.\nThe admission of apology came\nat a foreign office press conference today. During the conference\na spokesman pointed out Russia\ndid not follow diplomatic procedure when it published the British\nTextile Workers\nOut on Strike\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 Some 4000\ntextile workers, nearly half the\nprovincial industry's total, were\non strike Saturday at Dominion\nTextile Company plants in Drum-\nmondville, Magog and Sherbrooke.\nSome 950 employees walked out\nlast week at Sherbrooke when a\nmachine operator was suspended\nfor running his equipment improperly.\napology before Britain could get\nit into print itself.\nADMIT8 APOLOGY ;\nThe British government refused\nto comment on the broadcast But\nSaturday a foreign office spokesman officially admitted the apology had been made.\nHe said the Moscow version of\nBritain's apology was identical\nwith the text of a British note\nexcept for minor differences arising from translation.\nHe then declined further comment except to make a slighting\nsuggestion that Moscow had violated diplomatic etiquette by disclosing the apology.\n\"When an exchange of notes\ntakes place between nations, lt is\ncustomary for a government to\npublish the text of its own communication only, and not that of\nthe other government,\" the\nspokesman said.\nPOLITICAL ISSUE\nThe incident has bloomed into\na major political issue for the\ngovernment of Prime Minister\nEden.\nUnder pressure from Labor\nMPs, the Conservative government has agreed to a two-hour\ndebate on the incident next Monday.\nHugh Gaitskell, leader of the\nLabor party, said today \"it would\nbe the duty of any opposition in\nBritain to probe such an extraordinary story of muddle and incompetence of a government department.'*\n(Dmajl lift. U)iik\nStunning centerpiece in pineapple pattern! The graceful bowl\n(for fruit or flowers) \u2014 crocheted\nto its matching doily beneath!\nPattern 721: oval doily-bowl\ncombination, or 16x20 inch doiiy\nalone crocheted in heavy jiffy\ncotton.  Starch  bowl stiffly.\nSend TWENTY-FIVE CENTS in\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern to Laura Wheeler\nNDN, 60 Front St., W.. Toronto,\nOnt Print plainly PATTERN\nNUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS.\nLook for smartest ideas in\nneedlecraft tn our Laura Wheeler\nCatalog for 1955. Crochet knitting, embroidery and lovely things\nto wear, lron-ons, quilts, aprons,\nnovelties \u2014 easy, fun to make;\nSend 25 cents for your copy oi\nthis book NOWI You will want to\norder every new design in it\n9087\nYOUNG  ENSEMBLE\nSee hew lovely daughter will\nlook in this newest summer style!\nThere's the sundress, with graceful yoke above its whirly skirt;\nlittle bolero (sleeveless or short\nsleeved) for dainty cover-up!\nSimple sewing for you, Mother \u2014\nmake this ensemble right now!\nPattern 9087: .Girls' Sizes 6, 8.\n10, 12, 14. Size 10 dress, 2% yards\n35-inch; bolero 1 yard.\nSend THIRTY-FIVE CENTS\n(35c) in coins1 (stamps cannot be\naccepted), for this pattern Print\nplainly SIZE. NAME, ADDRESS.\nSTYLE  NUMBER.\nSend your order to MAE1AN\nMARTIN. NDN, 60 Front St., W..\nToronto. Ont\nPsychologist Favors\nProper Authority\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Authority, whether used in child-raising\nor criminal rehabilitation, is necessary and good thing If used wisely, British Columbia probation and\ncorrection officers were told here.\nMeeting in convention, the 50 officers were told of the benefits of\nauthority by Dr. Samuel Sussel-\nman of San Francisco and Dr.\nNaegele of University of B.C.\nDr.- Susselman, a psychologist,\nsaid in his address that in rehabilitation \"proper controls are therapeutic in themselves.\"\nDr. Naegele, a UBC sociologist,\ntold the story in a slightly different way, but stressed that \"power\nis not an e,vil thing.\" He also suggested it \"is a fallacy\" to compare\n\"equality with the absence of\nauthority.\"\nYou owe it to your family to Insist en\nlife-insurance protection when you\nborrow. If your present loan is with\na company that does not allow you\nthis vital protection, don't delay,\nswitch to Trans Canada Credit now.\nLoans to $21500 \u2014 protected at no\nextra cost by life-insurance\u2014can be\nquickly arranged.   Call us now.\nUICK CASH LOANS\nTHE  ALL-CANADIAN\nLOAN  COMPANY\nimmmmmw\n525 VERNON ST. -- PHONE 1690\nPotato Prices Up\nIn New Brunswick\nWOODSTOCK, N.B. (CP) - With\na growing demand from Ontario,\nQuebec and United States Buyers\nthe price of potatoes rose $i a\nbarrel here.\nQuotations to the fanner rose to\n$5. Officials said the improved situation is partly due to the southern United States crops not being\nup to expectations.\nCHANCE   IN   POST\n\u2014 Fletcher Warren, 59-year-\nold diplomat, now Ambassador\nto Venezuela, has been nominated by President Eisenhower\nlo be Ambassador to Turkey.\nHas 3-Sforev Dog House Builf With\nInsulation. Healing Home Comforts\nBy BILL 8ILLANPAA\nCanadian Press Correspondent\nSUDBURY (CP) \u2014 \"I love my\ndogs,\" Says J6hn Clemens, 41,\nhugging in turn his three tawny\nAfghan hounds. It's one of the\nunderstatements of the year.\nBehind his home workmen are\nbuilding a three-storey dog house.\nWhen finished, it will have broad-\nloom rugs, ventilating system,\nthemostatically-controlled. heating, chesterfield and bed.\n\"I don't want to change their\nenvironment too much.\" said Clemens.\nEach of the three storeys is\neight feet high. Why? Because the\nrooms in Mr. Clemens' apartment\nare eight feet high. He says:\n\"I'm going to put all my old\nfurniture in the dog house. They\nhave grown up with it and helped\nto ruin some of it. And I'm get\nting new  furniture  for  myself.\"\nFORCED  BY  LAW\nMr. Clemens said he is forced\ninto building the canine retreat\nby city dog-control by-laws which\ncurb his hounds' freedom. He says\nthey're a long-limbed, wanderlust-\ning breed, and need plenty of\nspace.\nMr. Clemens wants the haven\ncompleted before he leaves on a\nthree-month tour of Europe next\nmonth: He will hire a dog custodian to care for the animals\nduring his absence.\nWILL COST $1600\nMr. Clemens, who said he won\n$500,000 in a recent Supreme Court\nof Ontario battle over ownership\nof some International Nickel\nCompany shares, estimates his\ndogs' home will cost about $1500.\n\"I've got court action on how to\nfight the city's dog by-law. My\nTwo Little Words\nMake Big Difference\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 The sign\noutside the dress shop said: \"We\nwill give away a baby.\"\nHundreds of persons called police and the Children's Aid Society Friday protesting the sales\npromotion.\nPolice called at the store and\nleft satisfied. The baby is a six-\nweek-old piglet named Penelope.\nThe sign outside the dress shop\nnow reads:\n\"We will give away a baby (not\nhuman).\"\ndefence says it js ultra vires, beyond the power of the city to pass\nsuch a law.\"\nThe frame dog house is eight\nfeet by 12 feet, and 28 feet, seven\ninches high. It will be covered with\nsiding and insulated with rock\nwool. The interior will be of insulating wallboard.\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILY\nFarmer Refuses\nTo Sign Report\nPENS AC OLA, Fla. (AP) -\nFarmer Walter Carroll has gone to\nail for contempt rather than sign\na crop acreage report for the\nUnited States department of ag-\nricultpre.\nCarroll, 44, told federal officers\nhe didn't think it was any of the\ngovernment's business how much\nhe planted. He ignored a summons\nLo show cause why he should not\nbe held in contempt, and was arrested after a scuffle with federal\nmarshals. - '\nWhen Carroll refused before\nJudge Dozier Devane to sign the\nacreage report, as required by federal law, Devane ordered him\njailed indefinitely for contempt.\nThe judge also placed him under\n$2500 bond on a charge of resisting arrest.\nSays U.S. Working\nOn H-Bomb Defence\nADELAIDE, Australia (Reuters)\n\u2014Lt.-Gen. James Dolittle of the\nUnited States Air Force told reporters here the United States is\nworking on methods to nullify\nhydrogen bomb attacks.\nDoolittle outlined three plans of\npossible defence against the H-\nbomb: '\n\"We can either destroy the\nbomb carrier while still in flight\nso the full blast effect is not possible.\n\"We can break the case of the\nbomb itself to produce a lower\norder of detonation.\n\"Or we can disturb its actuating\nmechanism so that it will not go\noft.\"\nIn Adelaide for Australian celebrations marking the 14th anniversary of the Battle of the Coral\nSea, Doolittle told the press conference the three methods ire\n'all technically possible.\"\nBuy, tell, trade the classified via\nCANADA'S\n2 SCENIC DOME\nTRAINS...\nMONTREAL-VANCOUVER      \u2022      TORONTO-VANCOUVER\nNow, see all Canada . . . from your high, wide Scenic Dome\nvantage point aboard The Canadian and The Dominion . . .\nit's travel luxury at its finest. Deluxe dining room cars and\nbudget coffee shop service... reserved coach seats at no extra\ncost...and a choice of 10 types of sleeping accommodation to\nsuit your personal travel budget. Plan now to sex; Canada as you\nnever have before\u2014aboard these two great diesel-hauled,\ntranscontinental trains.\nSCENIC DOME\nROUTE\nKNOW CANADA BETTER!\nTravel and see it from Canadian Pacific Domes\nInformation and reiervofloni from any Canadian Pacific office or\nBaker & Word Sh., Nelson\nTel, Nelion 203\n^E .Freedom in Cooking!\nFairbanksuMorse\nELECTRIC     RANGES\nBe free from tedious cooking tasks. Let the new,\nautomatic Fairbanks-Morse Gibson electric range do the\nwork for you. The giant, super-heat oven makes cooking a\npleasure\u2014just set and forget and you'll get delicious\ncooking every time.\nWith the push of a button you select the exact heat you\nwant on the Fairbanks-Morse 7-heat,\nsuper speed surface elements.\nSafety signal lights for each surface unit and\noven tell at a glance which is on... even from a\ndistance! Automatic circuit breaker gives\npositive safety protection against-overloads...\neliminates fuses. Automatic oven\nlamp and full-length surface lamp.\nModel FAA-2LSA\u2014Ideal for those\nwho want the giant oven in a very\nmodestly priced range. Features 7-heat\nswitches, giant super-heat oven, 4\nsurface units and modern back panel\nwith fluorescent light\nMedal FM-2FA-A full size electric range with completely automatic oven, Ups-A-Daisy Cooker,\n3 storage drawers. Big in everything\nbut price.\nModel FM-2LDA\nTHE CANADIAN\nFairbanks-Morse\nCOMPANY LIMITED\nSIXTEEN   BRANCHES   ACROSS   CANADA\nCASTLEGAR BUILDING SUPPLY STORE\nCASTLEGAR, B.C.\n^_ - ,\n ,_\n , __\nTHjOVjUL $0\u00a3&ifL...\nLack of Talent, Plus Star-Owned\nCompanies, Hurts Studio Pockets\nBy  BOB THOMAS\nHOLLYWOOD CAP) - When\nEtudios had dozens of stars under-\ncontract, filling the cast of a piC'\nture was no problem. Today\/casting is Hollywood's biggest head-\nache.\nUntil a decade ago, nearly all\nthe top stars in the movie world\nwere tied down to studios. There\nwere a few notable exceptions-\npioneer free-lancers like Cary\nGrant, Claudette Colbert, Irene\nDunne and Ronald Colman. They\nset the pattern for the star system\nof today.\nWith only a score of name players under exclusive contracts these\ndays, studios have to compete in\nthe open market for acting talent.\nAnd  the  competition   is fierce.\nBecause studios have failed to\ndevelop enough new talent, there\nare fewer big stars than ever before in film history. Names like\nMarlon Brando, James Stewart,\nWilliam Holden, Gregory Peck\ncan write their own ticket with\nany producer.\nDEMANDS UNBELIEVABLE\n\"You wouldn't believe the demands some of these stars make,\"\ns movie maker moaned recently.\n\"But what can you do? Names\n\u25a0till sell pictures.\" .\nIn order to get the names, producers have to pay whopping salaries\u2014 $150,000 is not uncommon,\nand some get much more. The\nmost sought-after stars can also\nhold out for 50 per cent of the\nprofits, and that's what hurts the\nproducers most. But they usually\nhave to give in.\nThis sort of deal was pioneered\nby James Stewart. Starting with\n\"Winchester '78.\" he deferred his\nsalary for U-I pictures in return\nfor 50 per cent of the returns. He\nhas taken in ov*r $1,000,000 on\nsome of the films.\nThe star shortage is further aggravated by the fact that many\nnames have virtually taken themselves off the market by incorporating themselves. For a good part\nof the year, Holden, Wayne, Kirk\nDouglas, Brando, Burt Lancaster,\nFrank Sinata, Marilyn Monr6e,\nDoris Day and others are unavailable because they are working\nfor their own companies.\nCONTRACTS ONE  ANSWER\nThe reason for this is simple:\nmoney. What's the good in earning $250,000 in salary for a film\nIf income tax is going to take 90\nper cent of it? Stars have found\nthe only way to save money is\nthrough the advantages of a corporation.   Taxes   on   income   are\nPower Rates Cut\nBy One Third\nGIBSON. B.C. (CP) - The B.C.\nElectric Co., which took over the\nsupply and distribution of electricity on the Sechelt Peninsula\nMay 1. has announced a reduction\nin rates by about one-third.\nBE\nCLEARLY\nINFORMED\nCKLN\nTONIGHT\n10:15 p.m.\nHear\nThe Honorable\nWesley D. Black\nProvincial Secretary and\nMinister of Municipal Affairs\nExplain The\nBritish Columbia\nSocial Credit\nGovernment's\nPolicy Regarding\nSenior Citizens'\nHomes\n\u2022\nSocial Credit\nKeeps YOU Informed\nBritish Columbia\nSocial Credit league\nmuch' less, and the firm can later\nbe dissolved as a capita#l gain.\nWhat is the answer?\n\"For one thing.\" a studio executive told me, \"we've got to build\nup our contract list again. We've\ngot to create new stars and hold\nonto them. It's better to keep stars\non salary at $2500 a week than to\ngive them half the studio so they'll\nmake a picture for you.\"\nCecile Opens\nEyes, Speaks\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B.C.\n(CP) \u2014 Cecile Morneau, 17-year-\nol girl in a mysterious coma since\nlast Monday, regained consciousness Friday night with a question\non her lips.\n\"How did I get here?\" she asked\nas she gazed around her hospital\nroom.\nThe girl was found unconscious\nMonday morning when her mother\ntried to get her up for work.\nThere was no apparent reason\nLEARNINO EA'RLY\nFELIXSTOWE, England (CP)*-\nDurlng the boy scouts' national\nbob-a-job week 18-year?old Mer-\nvyn Popplestone got the chore ol\nbathing a baby. \"I used plenty of\nsoap and it was all right,\" he\ncommented.\nfor her coma. Doctors admitted\nthey could find no clue.\nBut except for her question and\nan occasional complaint that the\nwishes to return home, Cecile's\nconscious moments are still few.\nMedical authorities, still searching for the key to the' coma, said\nshe would remain in hospital for\nan indefinite time.\nLayoffs Dampen\nBusiness Boom\nNEW YORK (AP) - Layoffs in\nthe auto industry put a damper on\nthe business boom last week.\nFor the first time since the\nKorean War General Motors ordered a one-day shutdown at all\niti United States auto plants. Affected were some 390,000 employees in 119 Cadillac, Buick,\nOldsmobile, Pontiac and Chevrolet plants in 64 cities.\nGM's action, coupled with slow\ndowns and shutdowns by other\nauto makers, triggered a sharp\nsell-off on the stock market which\nsuffered its biggest break since\nApril 10.\nAnother troubled auto company.\nStudebaker-Packard Corporation,\nreported a net loss of more than\n$14,000,000 for the first three\nmonths of 1958. At week's end it\nwas reported seeking a merger\nwith an aircraft firm as a way\nout of its difficulties.\nSo far this year the auto industry has been pinched severely by\na general slowdown in consumer\ninstalment buying, And the hoped-\nfor spring pickup has been curbed\nNELSO NDAILY NEWS, MONDAY, MAY 14, 1936\u2014f\nby an unusually cold spring\nGENERAL  SIZING   UP\nHere's how some economists size\nup the overall business situation\nnow:\nConsumer spending and consumer goods, production will taper\noff some in the next few months.\nBut another upsurge is expected\nby late fall.\nThe thinking of some economists\nIs that the business trend over the\nlong pull will be upward, but\nthere may be jolts and minor setbacks along the way. The present\nboom \"may have passed its peak,\"\n1115-Pound Ray in\nShrimp Boat Nets\nTAMPICO, Mexico (AP) \u2014 The\ncrew of a shrimp boat off Tam-\npico cast their nets and came Up\nwith a giant ray weighing 1115\npounds. The four-man' er\u00abw\nfought the fish four hours beta*\nlanding lt.\nsays C. L. Burrill, chief economist\nfor the Standard Oil Co. \"Signs\nthat we may expect the next direction of movement to be downward are beginning to multiply.\"\n:!\u00a7:\u20ac\nfeiiiiilill\niyyMy-y^MM^W^yy^\nlllllllllllllil\nW0i\nm\n\u25a0ii\ntsii\nigi\n111\nmm\n\/      *     \\\nHill\nHH\n\u25a0 I\nin\n1955: ANOTHER RECORD YEAR\nFOR TELEPHONE EXPANSION!\nAgain in 1955, the British Columbia Telephone\nCompany broke all previous records in its continuing, province-wide expansion program. Here are\njust a Jew oj last year's telephone achievements:\n* * \"**   *   ,^^^\"l*\n*^v\nHflEjifRS r^^^-\n* \u2022\nmm\n.   T-\nAUTOMATIC CONVERSIONS\nThe B.C. Telephone Company's program to\nconvert manual telephone exchanges to automatic operation is accelerating: conversions\ncompleted last year included the Fairmont\noffice in Vancouver, as well as the Cranbrook,\nKimberley and Cloverdale exchanges.\nPHONES IN SERVICE\nThe Company added a total of 27,601\ntelephones throughout its system, surpassing\neven 1954's record total of 23,833 additional\nphones! This rapid increase in telephone\n\"population\" is indicative of our province's\nvigorous industrial and residential development.\nPAYROLL EXPENDITURES\nWages and salaries of the Company's more\nthan 5,600 employees reached a new high of\n$16,762,405 last year. This amount represents\na significant boost to the economies of cities\nand towns across the province.\nCALLS HANDLED\nThe people of B.C. made greater use of local\nand long distance service than ever before.\nDuring the year the Telephone Company\nhandled 480,000,000 local calls and 9,680,000\nlong distance calls.\nLOOKING AHEAD\nYour Telephone Company's system-wide\ndevelopment program will be proceeding at\nan even higher level during 1956 and in the\nyears to come. Projects now under way or\nin the blueprint stage are valued at more\nthan $51,000,000. During the next three to\nfour years, the Company contemplates spending close to $100,000,000 to expand and\nimprove its system.\nADDITIONS AND IMPROVEMENTS\nExpenditures for additions and improvements\nto telephone facilities all over B.C. exceeded\n$21,000,000 in 1955, compared with the\nprevious record of almost $19,000,000 set\nin 1954.\nmmmmmmi ^gMmii$m u.-:,,,, ,\u00ab,, ,,\nBRITISH   COLUMBIA\n<3\/    TELEPHONE   COMPANY\nSill\niiii!!\nsill\n\u2014\nr ,\u25a0\u00bb\nHI\nl**' \u00ab\u25a0 i **\n4310-1   M\nWBIxy\nWiYY0>YiMYWYM<iYYm<Y:YM?i\nWM|\nam   ft* Mi r-i  n   *\u2014 ' \u00ab\u25a0\u2014\u25a0--   ^-r\u25a0\u25a0-\u00bb*!,   vr-\u2014*>    ^\u25a0.-^\u25a0\u2022vM-i^-^.J^tv^^\n**&*>\u00a3.\n \t\nIPIP\n ! ; !\n\u25a0       '\u2022 |p|||F'^ \" ~   \u25a0 .'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0' ^   ^;\n \u25a0>.\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0\n8\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY ,MAY 14, 1956\nMinor Baseball\nPractices Open\nNext Saturday\nCHANBROOK \u2014 Cranbrook's\nLittle League baseball association executive decided here on\nThursday to issue a call for prospective' players to assemble at\nBaker Park Saturday so they can\nbe assigned to teams for the season.'. Lining the teams up will be\nLeri Miller and Ed McAneely.\nTentatively, plans call for two\npony league teams for boys up to\n14 years and three little league\nteams for boys younger. Appointed\nwere Frank Peck and Archie\nHarrison to guide the Kinsmen\nteam; Murray Wheaton, Legion,\nJoe Downey, Lions, John Avis,\nEotarians and Len Miller, Kiwanis. League uniforms have been\ncleaned in preparation for the\nnew season, while a call has been\nissued for players having all-star\nuniforms to turn them in.\nConstable M. Man Nostrand has\nbeen re-elected president, Bob\n\u25a0Eagle, vice-president and Nancy\nMiles,  secretary-treasurer.\nCarl Erskine Blanks Giants\nWith His Second No-Hitter\nBROOKLYN (AP) \u2014 Carl Erskine of Brooklyn Dodgers hurled\nthe second no-hit, no-run game of\nhis career Saturday, turning back\nNew York Giants 3-0.\nHe did it previously against\nChicago Cubs June 19, 1952, and\nwon that game by 5-0.\nThe only hard fielding chances\ncame off the bats of Ray Katt\nand Willie Mays. In the fifth\ninning, Carl Furillo raced to the\nscore board in right centre to\nmake a gaudy catch off Katt.\nAn inning earlier Jackie Robinson made a diving catch third\nbase of a bullet hit by Mays. Al\nDark had walked.immediately before Mays batted, and it appeared\nat the time the most significant\naspect of the play was that it\nstopped a potential rally. ,\n$500 REWARD\nImmediately after Dark\nGiant shortstop, slapped back to\nErskine for the final out the Dod\nger teammates mobbed the slender 29 - year - old pitcher, Walter\nO'Malley, president of the Dodgers\npromised Erskine a cheque for\n$500 even before he had reached\nthe dressing room.\nWhile the Dodger fans were\nwatching the no-hitter being unfurled before them, many of them\nwere listening on their portable\nradios to another. However, Don\nFerrarese of Baltimore lost his\nchance to get into the record\nbooks with Erskine when Andy\nCarey of the Yankees sent a high\nbounder toward second that wenl\nfor a hit to start the ninth. The\nrookie Baltimore pitcher won his\ngame, however 1p0.\nErskine, who walked two and\nfanned three, now has won two\ngames this season while losing the\nsame number. His previous victory\nwas against the Giants on April\n25.\nRecently he commented that he\nEsso Furnace Oil Weather-Controlled Delivery\nAnticipates Extra Demand. \u2022.\nProtects You From Shortage\nYou can rely on the sure delivery of clean-burning E\u00bb0\nFurnace Oil thanks to Weather-Controlled Delivery.\nThis is another service you get with Esso Furnace Oil that\nhelps to make your heating safe, clean, trouble-free\nand convenient.\nGuarantee your reliable supply and delivery of top-quality\nEsso Furnace Oil with an Imperial Oil \"Evergreen Contract\".\nPhone or write; IMPERIAL OIL LIMITED.\nUSE THE CONVENIENT ESSO BUDGET PLAN\nTon easy monthly payment! buy your fvel for tho year.\nhoped he would have at least one\nmore good season and would keep\ntrying although having dropped\nhis last two starts.\nAl Worthlngton was Giants'\nstarting and losing pitcher.\nIt was the first no-hitter in the\nmajors since Sam Jones of Chicago Cubs turned back Pittsburgh\nPirates on May 12, last year. Jim\nWilson, now with Baltimore,\npitched a no-hitter for Milwaukee\nagainst Philadelphia June 12, 1954.\nErskine became the eighth\npitcher since 1900 to register two\nno-hitters in his career.\nTOUGHER THAN BEFORE\nBob Feller and Cy Young of\nCleveland Indians lead all the rest\nwith three no-hitters, but one of\nYoung's was pitched before 1900\nErskine said that \"this no-hitter\nwas tougher than the one four\nyears ago because this^time I had\nto worry about losing a ball game,\ntoo.\" Against the Cubs, the\nDodgers quickly built up a big\nlead and held it all the way. Satur\nday the Dodgers led by only 1-0\nuntil the seventh.\n\"I knew I was pitching a no-hitter midway but I had to keep\nthinking about winning the game\nas well, I kept saying to myself\n'one more inning and we will get\nsome runs.\"\nMiller, Marlowe\nDumped by Tigers\nDETROIT (AP)\u2014 Detroit Tigers\nsent pitchers Bob Miller and Dick\nMarlowe to Charleston of the Am\nerican Association Saturday on 24\nhour recall.\nMiller, former bonus player, appeared in two games this season\nand allowed three runs and seven\nhits in six innings. He had no won-\nlost record.\nMarlowe had a 1-1 record in\nseven appearances. He pitched 11\ninnings, allowing eight runs \u2014\nseven of them earned \u2014 off 12 hits.\nFights\nBaseball Scores\nLOOKING MORc !ik* \u2022=*vt.i\"^ ft-.-* llvln- athletes, Brazil\nand English soccer players are caught In mldflight during International match at Wembley, England. Not gazing Into the ball,\nbut leaping to prevent a goal Is Brazil's Gylmar Neves, left. Looking like he's about to clobber Neves Is England's T. Taylor, who\nhas just bounced the ball with his forehead. England won the\nmatch, 4-2.\nTokyo\u2014Leo Espinosa, 118, Philippines outpointed Keiichi Ko-i\nmuro, 117%, Japan, 12. Espinosa\nretained Oriental bantafhweight,\ntitle.\nWINS JUBILEE\nSTAKES RACE\nLONDON (CP) \u2014 Tudor Jinks,\na four-year-old grey colt owned\nby A. J. Tompsett. Saturday won\nthe Great Jubilee Stakes at nearby Kempton Park, with Canadian\nowned Kookaburra among the\nalso-rans.\nHidden by Dominic Forte, Tudor Jinks surged to the front\nthree furlongs from home and\nheld off the late challenge of Alexander, owned by the Queen, by\nhalf a length. The Irish-owned\nHigh Bhan was third in the field\nof 15 good-class handicappers\ncontesting the IVi-mile event, a\nsweepstakes with 2500 sovereigns\nadded.\nThe 5-1 favorite was Kooka-\nburra, purchased this week by\nMax Bell of Calgary for an undisclosed sum. Kookaburra was\nthird at the elbow leading into\nKempton's short stretch, but faltered when the whip came out,\nand finished fifth.\nGil Geekie Opposes\nSupple for Title\nQUEBEC (CP)\u2014A 12-round fight\nfor the vacant bantamweight boxing title of Canada has been set\nfor May 28 between No. 1 contender Pat Supple of Montreal and\nGil Geekie of London, Ont., president Charles Mayer of the Canadian Boxing Federation announced\nFriday.\nThe title has been vacant since\nthe retirement of Fernando Gag-\nnon, formerly of Quebec, and now\nresiding in Montreal.\nMayer said promoter for the\nbout here is Georges Trudel of\nQuebec.      *\nTHIRD LANARK WINS\nGLASGOW\" (Reuters) -.Third\nLanark defeated Partick Thistle\n4-2 in the Glasgow charity soccer\ncup fnial here Saturday.\nESKS SIGN TWO GUARDS\nEDMONTON (CP) \u2014 Bob\nWaugh, 21, and Earl Ford, 22, a\npair of guards from University of\nToronto Blues, have signed football contracts with Edmonton Eskimos, club president M. I. (Moe)\nLicberman announced Saturday.\nBoth were Edmonton draft choices.\nChrysler New Yorker 2-door hardtop\nCHRYSLER\nWhen you first take the wheel of this flawless motorcar, you sense\nthat here is perfection.\nLike so many discerning motorists, you will discover unequalled\nmotoring pleasure in the handling ease and surge-ahead power\nthat a Chrysler provides. Merely touch a button, step on the gas,\nand you're off. And this superlative motqrear demonstrates the\nengineering superiority for which Chrysler has long been famous.\nChrysler, for instance, has increased its stop-power with new\ncentre-plane brakes, to keep pace with its V-8 \"go\".\nAlthough there are many such features that distinguish a\nChrysler, its worth cannot be determined by performance alone.\nThe better measure, we think you'll agree, is the rich satisfaction\nyou get when you own a Chrysler.\nVisit your dealer soon. You'll be pleased to discover how little\nit costs to get so much more in a Chrysler.\nCHRYSLER CORPORATION OF CANADA, LIMITED\nWatch Climax-Shower of Stars weekly on TV.\nCheck your newspaper for date and time.\nm\n9.\n''''mmlism\nmmmmm\nJUgamL,   \t\nx*xft:srt    See and Drive the new Chrysler with the FORWARD *^e\nLOOK at your dealer's now!\nPEEBLES MOTORS LT\n153 BAKER ST.\nPHONE 1090\nLEAGUE LEADERS\nBy The Associated Presi\nNot including Sunday games.\n(Based on 35 at bats)\nNATIONAL   LEAGUE\nPlayer and club:   Ab   R   H\nBruton, Mil. ..\nRepulski, St. L\nLong, Pitts. ...\nBailey, Cin\t\nBoyer, St. L. .\n42\n45\n76\n47\n72\n14\nRuns batted in\u2014Jablonski\ncinnati and Musial and Boyer, St.\nLouis, 18.\nDoubles\u2014Dark, New York, 9.\nTriples\u2014Bruton,   Milwaukee,  6.\nHome runs\u2014Post, Cincinnati, 9.\nStolen bases\u2014Mays, New York\nand Moon, St. Louis. 5.\nPitching\u2014Freeman and Lawrence, Cincinnati and Poholsky,\nSt. Louis, 3-0,    1.000,\nStrikeouts\u2014 Friend, Pittsburgh,\n25.\nAMERICAN  LEAGUE\nPlayer and club:   Ab   R\nMantle, N. Y. . .   81   24\nBoyd, Bait    44     6\n56\n56\n42\n12\nBy The Canadian Preii\n8ATURDAY\nAmerican League\nBoston         230 200 020\u2014 9 14 0\nWashington    280 101 OOx\u201412 12 1\nBrewer, Sisler (2), Kiely (2),\nBauman (3) and White; Ramos,\nGrob (2), Clevenger (3), Stewart\n(4), Chakales (8) and Courtney.\nW-Stewart. L-Sisler. Hrs.: Hoston\n\u2014Gernert 2, Malzone; Washington\n\u2014Snyder.\nChicago       310 120 000\u20147 17 0\nDetroit     130 000 020\u2014fl 11 1\nDonovan, Pollet (3), Fornieles\n(5), Consueqgra (8) and Lollar;\nHoeft, Black (5), Masteron (7),\nBrady (9) and House, Wilson (4)\nW-Pollett; L-Hoeft. Hrs.: Chicago\n\u2014Lollar, Neiman; Detroit\u2014Torge-\nson, Kuenn, Maxwell.\nKansas City ... 000 102 000\u20143 6 0\nCleveland     ...   000 500 OOx\u20145 8 0\nHerriage, Burtschy (4), Gorman\n(7), and Thompson; Wynn and\nHegan. L-Herriage. Hrs.: Kansa.\nCity\u2014Lopez, Zernial,\nBaltimore       000 000 100\u20141 5 0\nNew York .. .    O0Q 000 000\u20140 2 1\nFarrarese and Smith; Turley and\nBerra.\nNational League\nSt. Louis ....   031 102 003\u201410 17 3\nChicago    023 044 lOx\u201414 15 0\nMizell, McDaniel (3), Jones (4)\nSurkont (6), Jackson (6), and\nSmith; Rush, Davis (6), Valentin,\netti (9) and Chiti. W-Rush; L-\nJones. Hrs.: St. Louis\u2014Boyer, Vir-\ndon, Cooper; Chicago\u2014Kellert, Mo.\nryn, Whisenant 2, Banks.\nMilwaukee .... 100 200 300 6 13 2\nCincinnati       711 000 Olx\u201410 13 2\nBuhl, Johnson (1), Nichols (2),\nTrowbridge (4), Robinson (5)\nJolly (7), and Crandall, Rice (4);\nLawrence, Black (7), and Burgess\nW-Lawrence; L-Buhl. Hrs.: Milwaukee\u2014Mathews, Thomson; Cincinnati\u2014Bell. Kluszewski.\nPhiladelphia 000 030 00 \u20145 12 0\nPittsburgh . .   002 004 OOx'\u20148 13 2\nRoberts, Pillette (8), and Semi\nnick; Friend, Littlefield (9), King\n(9), and Kravitz, W-Friend. L-\nRoberts. Hrs.: Pittsburgh\u2014Freese,\nWard.\nNew York   000 O00 000\u20140 0 0\nBrooklyn     001 000 20x\u20143 6 0\nWorthington, Grissom (7) and\nKatt; Erskine and Campanella. L-\nWorthington.\nSUNDAY\nNational  League\nNew York    000 000 400\u2014 4   6   0\nPet1 Brooklyn      004 011 00x\u2014 6   9   0\n.452;    Hearn, Monzant (5) McCall (6)\n.422 i Wilhelm (7) and Katt; Newcombe\n.408' Labine (7) and Campanella. W\u2014\n.404 Newcombe;   L\u2014Hearn.    HRs\n.403 New  York\u2014White;  Brooklyn\nCin-! Snider 2, Furillo.\nFirst:\nMilwaukee    001 063 050\u201415 16   0\nCincinnati     000 000 000\u2014 0   9   2\nSpahn and Crandall; Fowler,\nNuxhall (5) Scantlebury (5)\nSmith (8) Lapalme (9) and Bailey. L\u2014Fowler. HRs: Milwaukee\n\u2014Tanner, Crandall, Spahn.\nSecond:\nMilwaukee    002 003 001\u2014 6 13   0\nCincinnati     010 000 000\u2014 1   8   1\nCrone and Rice; Klippstein,\nFreeman (9) and Burgess. L \u2014\nKlippstein.   HRs.:   Cincinnati  \u2014\n-Mantle,   New\nMaxwell, Det. ....\nGernhert, Bos. ..\nSlaughter, K. C.\nRuns   batted\nYork, 25,\nDoubles\u2014Goodman,  Boston,  9.\nTriples\u2014Runnels,    Washington,\n3.\nHome runs\u2014Mantle, New York,\n*\u25a0*\u2022\u2022\nStolen  bases \u2014  Seven players, er   (6)\ntied with 2. Jones,\nPet\n.420 j Crowe.\n.386'First:\n,357! St. Louis ... 000 300 000\u2014 3 9 2\n.357'Chicago .... 001000 001\u20142 6 1\n.3571 Dickson, Kinder (9) and Smith;\nMinner, Lown (8) and Landrith.\nL\u2014Minner; W\u2014Dickson.\nSecond:\nSt.   Louis. .      000 440 6\u201414 13   1\nChicago     203 002 0\u2014 7 10   2\n(Game called, darkness)\nMcDaniel, Collum (3) Wehmei-\nand Sarni, Smith  (7); S.\nValentinetti   (4)   Brosnan\nPitching\u2014Ford, New York. 5-0,' (5)' Davis  (7)   Lown   (7)   Meyer\nStrikeouts \u2014 Pascual, Washing-J (7)   and  Chiti, Tappe   (7).   W\u2014\nton, 41. , i Collum;     L\u2014Valentinetti.    HRs:\nSt.   Louis\u2014Boyer   2,   Repulski,\nMoon; Chicago\u2014Whisenant.\nPhila   103 020 021\u2014   9 15   t\nPittsburgh   100 222 13x\u2014 11 11   1\nHaddix, Lipetrl 6, Flowers 7,\nMeyer 8, Pillette 8, and Semln-\nick; Kline, King, 4, Munger t.\nFace 7, Arroyo 9, Law 9, and\nShepard, Kravitz 7.\nW-Face; L-Meyer. HRs: Phila-\ndelphia-Ennis, Seminick, Lopata;\nPittsburgh-Delgreco  2.\nSecond:\nPhila  010 410 0\u2014   6 10   0\nPittsburgh   .. 000 101 0\u2014   2   7   0\n(Suspended, curfew).\nRogovin and Lopata; Hall, Swan-\nson 4, Garber 5, Munger 6, Klint\n8, and Kravitz. HRs: Philadelphia\nLopata 2, Pittsburgh, Walls.\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nBoston     010 002 110\u2014 5 10   1\nWash  101 100 000\u2014 3   9   0\nSullivan, Susce 6, and White;\nPascal, Griggs 7, and Berberet\nW-Susce; L-Pascual. HRs: Boston\nJensen, Piersall; Washirigton-Ber-\nberet.\nChicago   .... 000 202 301\u2014 8 14   0\nDetroit    000 001 000\u2014 1 10   3\nPierce and Lollar; Trucks, Aber\n6, Gromek 7, Lary 8, and Wilson. L-Trucks, HR: Chicago, Fox.\nFirst\nKansas City ...    202 000 100\u20145 7 0\nCleveland     002 000 000\u20142 4 1\nDitmar   and   Ginsberg;   Feller,\nMcLish (3) Narleski (8) and Nar-\nagon. L\u2014Feller.\nSecond\nKansas City ..   000 010 300\u20144   8 3\nCleveland   ...   003 020 31x\u20149 12 0\nLasorda, Gorman (5) Burtschy\n(6) Portocarrero (7) and Astroth;\nScore, Houtteman (8) and Hegan.\nW\u2014Score; L\u2014Lasorda. HRs: Kan-\nsan City \u2014 Lopez; Cleveland \u2014Rosen, Colavlto.\nFirst\nBaltimore ..     000 020 000\u2014 IBS\nNew York ..   123 300 02x\u201411 13 1\nMoore,   Besana   (3)   Birrer   (3)\nBrown (5) Held h) and Triandos,\nGastall (5); Larsen, Grim (6) and\nBerra. W\u2014Larsen; L\u2014Moore.\nSecond\nBaltimore     010 000 040\u20145 9 0\nNew York    000 000 001\u20141 7 0\nWight, Zuverink (9) and Triandos; Sturdivant, Konstanty (8)\nByrne (9) and Berra. W\u2014Wight;\nL\u2014 Sturdivant HR: Baltimore \u2014\nPhilley.\nSENATORS JUGGLE\nPLAYING ROSTER\nWASHINGTON (AP) \u2014 Washington Senators trimmed their\nroster Sunday, selling two playert\noutright and sending three to the\nminor leagues on option. Two players were recalled from the minors.\nOutfielder Dick Tettelbach was\nsent back to Denver of the American Association on option.\nShortstop Jose Valdivielso, who\ncame up from Charlotte, N.C, and\npitcher Dick Brodowski, who came\nfrom Boston, were sent to Louisville in the American Association.\nCatcher Bob Oldis, who came\nfrom Chattanooga, Tenn., of the\nSouthern Association, was sold\noutright to that team.\nOutfielder Tom Wright, also\nfrom Chattanooga, was sold outright to Louisville.\nThe Senators recalled outfielder\nCarlos Paula from Denver and\nshortstop Lyle Luttrell f-\u00a3om \"Chattanooga.\nNEW  8L0GAN\nROCKWOOD, Ont. (CP) \u2014\n\"Beer does not belong with butter\" was the slogan adopted by\nthe district Presbyterian United\nWomen's Association here. It passed a resolution against any proposal to permit sale of canned\nbeer in Ontario grocery stores.\nEDEY'S CYCLE SHOP\n737 Baker St.\nPhone  1045\nHIPPERSONS HARDWARE Co. Ltd.\n395 Baker St.\nPhone 497\nWOOD, VALLANCE HDWE. Co. Ltd.\n593 Baker St\nPhone 1530\n -*\u2014\u25a0*\u25a0** \u25a0 \u25a0 : . _\n' ' ' - -\nCB^%D^C (Lions and Firemen Victorious\nw*   \\mW\\W I 4^In Minor League Inaugurals\nMilwaukee, Yankees\nStill Setting Pace\nBy The Associated Press\nThe major leagues have boiled\ndown to two-team battles in each\ncircuit, for the time being.\nMilwaukee Braves, continuing\ntheir brilliant early-season pace,\ndowned Cincinnati Redlegs in two\ngames Sunday, 15-0 and 6-1, to sol-\nidfy their percentage lead-over St.\nLouis Cardinals in the National\nLeague. Cardinals retained a half'\ngame over the Braves with 3-2\nand 14-7 triumphs over Chicago\nCubs. Percentage is what counts,\nhowever, and the Braves hold a\n51 point bulge, .733 \u2014 .682, over\nthe Redblrds.\nNew York and Cleveland, run\nning one-two in the American\nLeague were held to splits. Yankees\ntook the first game rrom Baltimore\n11-2 but Orioles came back to wfh\n5-1 behind the seven-hit pitching\nof Bill Wight.\nFELLER LOSES\nIndians had to pull out the sec\nond game 9-4 to gain its split after\nKansas City Athletics routed Bob\nFeller in the opener to win 5-2.\nBrooklyn knocked off New York\nGiants 6-4 for their fourth ln a\nrow, and climbed into third place\nIn the National League past Red-\nlegs. Pittsburgh handed Philidel-\nphia  Phillies  their  10th straight\nBritish Cricket\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2022\u2014 Close-\nof-day play cricket scores:\nAustralians 396 for 5 vs Nottinghamshire.\nMiddlesex 170, Gloucestershire\n96 for S.\nSussex 315. Hampshire ne runs\nfor no wicket.\nNorthamptonshire 251, Yorkshire 20 for no wicket.\nCambridge U 302 for 9 declared, Kent 14 for 1.\nSomerset 293 vs Lancashire.\nEssex 390 for 8 declared, Leicestershire 34 for no wicket.\nSurrey 160, and 9 for no wicket,\nGlamorgan 98.\nWorcestershire 177, Warwickshire 75 for 5.\nDerbyshire 236, RAF 95 for 3.\nBaseball Standings\nBy The Canadian Press\nAmerican League\nW   h' Ptc GBL\nNew York     16     9   .640\nCleveland        14     9   .619 1\nChicago       10    8   .556 IVi\nBoston     11   10   .524 3\nBaltimore        12   14   .462 4Vi\nWashington    11   13   .458 4%\nKansas City ....     9   13   .409 5^4\nDetroit        8   15   .348 7\nNational League\nW   L  Ptc GBL\nMilwaukee       11    4   733     Vi\nSt. Louis     15     7   .650\nBrooklyn  _   12    9   .571 2M,\nCincinnati       14   10   .565 2%\nPittsburgh       11   10   .524 3V4\nNew .York      9   13   .409 6\nChicago          5   13   .278 8\nPhiladelphia  ...     5   \\5   .250 9\n(Games behind figured from St.\nLouis, won-lost leader).\nPACIFIC  COA8T  LEAGUE\nLos Angeles     21   11 .656\nSacramento     19   11 .633\nSeattle       20   14 .568\nSan Francisco    17   17 .500\nSan Diego    16   19 .457\nPortland     15   18 455\nHollywood     12   18 .400\nVancouver       10   22 .313\nSUNDAY'S RESULTS\nLos Angeles 9-4, San Francisco 3-0.\nSacramento 7-6, San Diego 6-5.\nSeattle  3-1,  Portland  0-3.\nsetback with an uphill 11-9 victory\nin the first game of a doubleheader.\nThe second game was suspended\nbecause of Pennsylvania's curfew\nlaw.\nChicago White Sox walloped De\ntrolt Tigers 8-1 for a sweep of the\nthree-game series and Boston sal\nva'ged the finale of the three-game\nseries with Washington, winning\n5-3.\nHOMER SPOILS SHUTOUT\nA home run by George Crowe\ndeprived Braves of earning a\ndouble shutout Warren Spahn\npitched his second runless game of\nthe season and 36th of his career\nin the opener. Milwaukee contirr\nued to maul Cincinnati pitchers in\nthe second game, supporting Ray\nCrone with 13 hits.\nTORRID ROUND\nWINS FOR PORKY\nWHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS,\nW. Va. (AP) \u2014 A whirlwind finish Sunday gave Ed (Porky) Oliver a 66 to win the White Sulphur\nOpen, his first golf tournament\nvictory since 1953.\nOliver was only one under par\nwith four holes to go and needed\nat least one more to avoid being\ntied with Sam Snead, the post\npro,\nOliver's four-under-par finish\ngave him a total of 266, 14\nstrokes under par for the 72 holes\nand good for the $2300 first prize.\nSnead, who started the last\nround two strokes behind Oliver,\nhad finished earlier with a 67 and\na total of 269.\nRedlegs Release\nRelief Pitcher\nCINCINNATI (AP) - Cincinnati Redlegs Saturday released\npitcher Bill Kennedy outright to\nSeattle of the Pacific Coast League. The Reds obtained Kennedy\nfrom Seattle where he had an 8-6\nrecord last year as a relief pitchy\ner. He had previous major league\nservice with the old St. Louis\nBrowns, Chicago White Sox and\nthe Boston Red Sox.\nThe 35-year-old southpaw made\nonly one relief appearance for the\nReds this season.\nThreatening sod chilly weather\ndid much Saturday to ruin the\nopening day crowds at Little League and Babe Ruth League baseball contests.'\nThere were three times as many\nbicycles as cars surrounding Queen\nElizabeth Park Saturday afternoon\nas Lions downed Kiwanis, 4-2, in\nthe Little League opener, and only about 15 adults dotted the stands\nduring' the evening when Firemen\nbounced Kootenay Cubs, 10-8, in\nthe Babe Ruth League inaugural.\nAt the evenlhg game, however,\nthere were five or six cars present.\nAt any rate, those who stayed\naway missed surprisingly good\ngames considering they were season openers. Joe Caine scattered\nthree hits and struck out 11, walking only two, in the Lions triumph.\nTwo of the blows went to Ernie\nMoisey, the bpposing pitcher.\nMoisey whacked a solid triple in\nthe second and scored on a passed\nball two pitchea later, to account\nfor the first Kiwania run.\nDuring the fourth Inning, he\nreached Caine, for single and scored all the way from second oi\nBilly Dyer's lined single.\nRIVAL HURLER8 SHINE\nBesides being an offensive stand\nout, Moisey was effective on the\nmound. He also surrendered only\nthree hits, but one was a fly ball\nby Mike Laughton that.fell between the outfielders and rolled\nto the barrier. Caine waa on base\nwhen Laughton wacked hla homer.\nCaine scored two runs to aid his\nown cause. He scored once after a\nsingle and again after' drawing a\npass and advancing on three passed balls. Erie Niven scored the\nfourth Lion run, scoring on a triple\nby Bill Burdenle.\nDon McLean, after hurling four\nsparkling innings, said goodbye to\nhis control in the fifth, when he\nIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIillllllllllll\nBAILEY BREEZES\nTO EASY TRIUMPH\nEUGENE, Ore. (AP) \u2014 Jim\nBailey, the Australian who\ncracked the four-minute mile\nIn beating John Landy last\nweek, breezed to the Pacific\nCoast Conference northern\ndivision mile title In 4:00.4\nminutes Saturday.\nBailey, running for the University of Oregon, led all the\nway as John Mldtbo of Washington State clung doggedly to\nhis heels for two laps before\nfading. Bailey was 75 yards in\nfront at the finish.\nBailey said afterwards he\nhad held no Illusions about\nrunning under four minutes\nthis week. Asked If he needed\nsomeone to push him, Bailey\n\u25a0aid:\n\"I needed Landy both to\npush me and to pull me.\"\n'lllf|IIMIIIII!l!IIIIIMMil'll>lflllll||MI\nORIOLES SELL DYCK\nNEW YORK (AP)\u2014Baltimore\nOrioles Saturday sold outfielder\nJimmy Dyck to Cincinnati for a\nreported $25,000.\nOrioles manager.'Paul Richards\nsaid the deal was a straight cash\ntransaction.\nDyck. 34, has a .217 batting\naverage. Richards has been dissatisfied with his defensive play.\nGonzales Rallies\nIn Edmonton\nEDMONTON (CP) \u2014 Pancho\nGonzales, professional lawn tennis\nchampion from Loa Angeles, Saturday night overcame a spate of\ndouble-fault services to defeat\nTony Trabert of Cincinnati, 1955\nWimbledon titlist, 8-4, 10-12, 6-4. in\na marathon professional indoor\ntennis duel.\nGonzales committed two double\nfaults to lose the 22nd game and\nthe second set of the two-hour and\n20-mlnute match before 2,204 spec\ntators at Edmonton Gardens. Gonzales now leads Trabert 67-21 in\ntheir 100-game tour for a $25,000\nprize.\nIn the opener, tour promoter\nJack Kramer made one of his in\nfrequent appearances in competition but the former Wimbledon\nchampion lost 8-4 in a single-set\nmatch to Rex Hartwig of Australia.\nIn a doubles match limited to a\nsingle set because of lack of time.\nHartwig and Trabert defeated\nGonzales and Pancho Segura of\nEcuador 6-2.\nwalked five men, all of whom scored as K.C.'t dissipated a 3-0 lead.\nJoe Portelance was rushed to relieve McLean, but he was unable\nto douse the flames without considerable damage.\nA rather ragged game was the\nBabe Ruth encounter. Only two extra ba^e blows were belted,\ndoubles by Portelance and Ernie\nWah. Cubs, although defeated,\ngarnered seven hits, two more than\nMcLean and Portelance allowed\ntheir rivals.\nBruce Blakeman ana Jerry Wilson, the Firemen moundsmen.\nwere more discreet, however, with\ntheir free tickets and showed an\nability to pull themselves out of\nrepeated tough spots.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, MAY 14, 1956\u20149\n1\nOutlaw Hurlers Lack Control\nAs Locals Take Double Loss\nCHEWHLAH - Chewelah rallied for four runs in the last half\nof the eighth Inning here Sunday\nafternoon to defeat Nelson Outlaws, 7-6, in the first game of the\nWashington-B.C. regular league\nschedule.\nWendy Keller's control, faulty\nalmost all afternoon, deserted him\ncompletely in the eighth as he\nwalked four men and surrendered\na double and a single to allow the\nhomesters to overcome Outlaws'\n5-3 bulge and constructs a 7-5 lead\nof their own. Lefty Bulby replaced\nKeller to walk In the fourth run\nMANCHESTER!, ROVERS WIN\nMIDGET SOCCER ENCOUNTERS 2-2\nRaising of silkworms, fed oh\nmulberry leaves, is one of thfi oldest farmhouse industries in Cyprus\nin the Mediterranean.\nLandy Again Cracks\nFour-Minute Barrier\nFRESNO, Calif, (AP) \u2014 World\nmiles master John Landy of Australia cracked the four minute mile\nfor the sixth tutie Saturday night\nand said later it may have been\nhis last race at that distance.\nHe was obviously disappointed\nin his time of 3:59.1\u2014the slowekt of\nhis sub-four minute performances\n\u2014and said he now may concentrate on the 1500 metres for the\nOlympic games in Australia next\nfall.\nThe 26-year-old school master,\nwho holds the world's record of\n3:58, won the special feature easily\nand was between 75 and 90 yards\nahead of Ron Delany of Ireland\nat the finish. Danny Schwelkart of\nLos Angeles finished thld.\n\"It is a little ridiculous to run\nso many times under four minutes\nand still not break my own record.\" Landy said after the race.\nWATER tells the\ntruth about wkisky\nPut Seagram's \"83\" to the water teat.\nWater, plain or sparkling,\nreveals a whisky's true, natural flavour\nand bouquet\n*\u2022 *\"\u2022\u00bb*\u25a0*\u2666\u2666\n<<_\nSeagrams \"83\nv(uuidian,*Wludku\n0^ Seagramsw'\/* Sure\n\"Hiis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\n\"I thought I could do better here.\"\nLast week he ran second to Jim\nBailey at Los Angeles. Bailey covered the distance in 3:58.6. Landy's\ntime then was 3:58.7.\n\"I wasn't very tired,\" Landy\nsaid. \"I Just couldn't give any\nmore.\"\nReferring to his two races In\nthe U.S., he said he was not \"running like I did in Australia. I just\ndon't seem to have the nervous\nenergy needed for a record.\"\nOfficial wind gauges disclosed he\nwas bucking a five-mile-an-hour\nwind up the backstretch Saturday.\nTWO CITIES SEEK\nENTRANCE IN AHL\nNEW YORK (AP) - The American Hockey League Saturday considered applications from Rochester and Syracuse for franchise in\nthe present five-team league.\nThe league's board of governors\noutlined financial and building requirements and scheduled a final\nhearing for early June.\nSyracuse was a member of the\nAHL until two years ago when the\nfranchise was shifted td Spring\nfield, Mass.\nBritish Eliminated\nFrom Competition\nLONDON (AP) \u2014 Bulgaria Saturday night knocked Britain out\nof a place in Olympic Games sOC'\ncer play on an aggregate home-\nand-away victory score of 5-3.\nThe speedy, clever Bulgarians\nwere held to a 3-3 tie at Wembley\nStadium, London \u2014 but that was\nn_ot sufficient to win a trip to Australia for Britain's amateurs. In\nSofia last October Bulgaria defeat-\ned Britain 2-0.\nItaly Joins Quarter-Finalists\nIn European Davis (up Tourney\nLONDON (AP) \u2014 Italy clinched\nthe seventh berth in the quarterfinals of the European zone Davis\nCup tennis tournament Sunday and\nEngland got off to a good start in\nthe battle for the last position.\nBelgium, Sweden, France, Germany, Chile and Denmark ran up\nquick, decisive leads Saturday to\nmove into the round of eight.\nItaly's doubles team of Nicola\nPietrangeli and Giuseppe Merlo\neasily downed Poland's Piatek and\nRadzio at Warsaw 6-3, 6-2, 6-4 for\na 3-0 advantage in their best-of-\nfive series.\nEngland won the opening singles\nmatch from Yugoslavia at Belgrade and held a commanding lead\nin the other when it was halted by\ndarkness. Roger Becker, 22, defeat\ned Josep Palada 6-4, 6-0, ,6-2 and\nBill Knight,, 20, led Yugoslavia's\nIlija Panajotovic 6-4, 6-4, 5-2 when\ndarkness forced a halt.\nItaly will meet Denmark, conquerors of Czechoslovakia, in the\nquarter-final round. The England-\nYugoslavia victor will meet Chile.\nIn other matches Sunday, Belgium won its tie from Spain 4-1\nsplitting the final two singles contests; Chile completed a 5-0 sweep\nover The Netherlands by taking\nthe finahtwo singles; France won\n5-0 over Switzerland; Sweden won\n5-0 over Norway with two more\nsingles triumphs; and Denmark de\nfeated Czechoslovakia 4-1, split\nting the final two singles.\nGermany1 completed a 4-1 Con\nquest of Ireland Saturday.\nLOANS for things\nyou need and want\nGot $50to $1000 atHousohold Finance\nfor any worthwhile purpose. It'a the\nway thousands of people every year\nget the extra cash they need on terras\nthey can afford.\nIf you have a Bteady income, and you\ncan meet the regular monthly payments, you can borrow without\nendorsers at HFC.\nHOUSEHOLD FINANCE\n*. M. trighty, Manager\n608 Dakar Street, \u2022econd floor, phone 1890\nNELSON, B.C.\nKIMBEBLEY BRANCH. 420 Howard Sural, phons IU 2-2220\nManchester! downed Wolves,\n3-0, and Hovers edged Newcastles,\n1-0, in two Midget Soccer League\ncontests played at Civic Recreational Field Saturday morning\nwhile, In the lone junior contest,!\nWanderers and Hotspurs battled\nto a 2-2 tie. |\nManchester! played a waiting!\ngame in their contest and pound-'\ned three goali past the Wolves'\nnatmlnder while Wolves, playing j\nan all-out offensive style, were\nunable to beat the Manchester!\ncage guardian.\nBob McCandlish, playing a fine\ngame throughout, accounted for'\nall three tallies, one a penalty\nkick.- Dave Elwyn and Cal Fred-1\nerikson also played well for the\nvictors. Rogers and Gray were\noutstanding on defense for the!\nWolves.\nRovers' victory came ln perhaps the roughest midget contest\nso far in this young season, as I\nLaurie Tee scored the only goal!\non a penalty kick. Rough play!\npredominated as the clubs were\nwell-matched with neither club'\nable to monopolize play consistently.\nNekcastle stars were Mike In-\ngledew, Dennis Bond, David Ben-\nsted and goaltender Cyril Savas-\nkoff.   Vernon Slater, Mike Shay\nand  goalie  Howie  Paxtori   were\nalso in fine form.   '\nABfiAHAMSON SHARP\nRoy Abrahamson was responsible for both Wanderer goals in\nthe only Junior contest played on\nSaturday, while Don Holmes and\nBarry Lee replied for Hotspurs.\nAbrahamson's fine effort was especially -timely because he had\nonly eight team-mates. Hotspurs\nplayed with a full contingent.\nThe opposing goalies\u2014Gordon\nKlief of Wanderers and Ted Archibald of Hotspurs\u2014were equally effective, both stopping several\nlabelled drives.\nOther standouts were Ray Abrahamson, Larry Simpson and tiny\nWayne' Cameron for Wanderers\nand Don Holmes, Rich Bonder-\nlud and Maurice Corbett for Hotspurs.\nKicking in this contest was\nexceptional. Each club is literally\nloaded with hefty-booting members and the long kicks did nothing to slow down play. I\nAs for most minor league athletic activities in Nelson, the soc-\ncer'matches wer'e sparsely attended.\nof the half-inning.\nBut for a doubtful bit of running\nby pinch-runner Stan Grill, Outlaws slight nonetheless have pulled out a victory in their Wash-B.C.\nLeague inaugural.\nBlair Olson, leading off, drew\na walk in the top of the ninth.\nGrill replaced him and Gus Adams\nslapped his second double of the\ngame down the left-field line.\nThinking the ball was foul, Grill\nattempted to return to second and\nwas tagged out.\nAdams scored when Lefty White\nB.C. LIONS ADD\nQUARTERBACK\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 B. C.\nLions of the Western Interprov-\nincial Football Union announced\nSaturday the signing of a new\nquarterback, Don Gottlob.\nGottlob set a U. S. college\npassing record while with Sam\nHouston State College in 1952, collecting 2325 yards in the air. He\nwas drafted by New York\nGiants but played only three exhibition games before going Into\nthe services in 1053.\nDow Finsterwald\nOutlasts Leonard\nST. LOUIS (AP)\u2014Don Fllnster-\nwald, young pro who started the\nfinal round with a one-stroke lead,\nSunday-shot a three-under - par\n89 for a, 274 total and first-place'\nmoney ln the $25,000 St. Louis\nOpen.\nStan Leonard, of Vancouver who\nwas tied with Finsterwald at the\nhalf-way mark, had an even par\n72 Sunday and finished in fifth\nplace with 279.\nFinsterwald won $5000; Leonard,\n$1200.\nTied for second place at 277 and\nwinning $2160 each were Jack\nBurke Jr.. Master champion from\nKiamesha Lake, N.Y., Billy Maxwell of Odessa, Tex., and Bill\nCasper Jr. of Chula Vista, Calif.\nAl Balding of Toronto shot a 75\nSunday for a 290 total and winnings of $76.66.\nmaced a lengthy triple that bounced out of the reach of the outfield*\nera. Playlng-manager Ron Nalh'\nwent up to pinch-hit for young\nBernle Monteieone with two ou_t\nand White on third, but filed deep\nto centre field to end the threat\nWALKS MAKE DIFFERENCE\nOutlaws outhit their rivals, 12-5,\nbut the difference in walks\u201412 to\nsix\u2014was simply too much to overcome. Not only were the Canadians\nhitting the ball often, they were\nhitting it hard, as witness Ken\nWhite's triple, double and single;\nTom Marshall's pair of doubles; a\nsimilar effort by Galloping Gus\nAdams and a double by Ed Isaak-\nson.\nIn the seven-Inning nightcap,\ncontrol trouble again plagued the\nNelson pitchers. Grill, Adams,\nWalt Avis and Jim Bulby all tried\nwithout great success to silence\nthe Chewelah bats, The second\ngame was an  exhibition contest.\nOutlaws paid tribute to Maurlje\nLorentz, who displayed sharp control, a sweeping hook and a fair\nturn of speed in his nine-inning\nfirst-game display. An ex-professional hurler, Dude Baldwin, who\nplayed left field, and Pete Mayer,\nthe centre-fielder, were also lauded by the opposing Outlaws.\nANDREW'S\nWe co-operate with the Little\nLeague at all  timet and offer\nLITTLE\nLEAGUERS\nSpecial Prices on\nBASEBALL\nSHOES\n$E*.oo & up\nCOME IN TODAY\nANDREW'S\n6 Superb Rideaus\nMeteor Rideau models offer fine-car features and styling not found in any other\ncar in t,he low price field. V-8's up to 225\nhp. give you the liveliest GO ever\ndelivered for the money. 4-door and\n2-door Hard tops and Sedans, Convertible\nand Crown Victoria all feature Safeguard\nDesign; offer Merc-O-Matic Drive, and\npower assists.\nRIDEAU TWO-DOOB\nVICTORIA V-t\nNIAGARA FOUR.BOOR\nSEDAN V-l OR 6\nY6u name if-\nhas it-\nVSorS\/\nHere's \"young in heart\" styling with a price\ntag that reveals exceptional value. Choose from\n- 1 4-door and 2-door sedans or the new 2-door\n6 oDOuV   nardt\u00b0P> a11 with Safeguard Design. The\nr      '    Niagara series offers brilliant V-8's up to 176\nill -   hp; or Canada's most modern 6, a \"ghort-\n|\\]l3gdl do   stroke\" overhead-valve engine, owner-proved\nover millions of miles. Drive this popular\nchoice before you buy.\nA model to suit your taste ana*pocket \/\nDependability and economy were\nnever so smartly dressed as in these\nMeteors priced^ with the lowest. For\ntruly outstanding performance\nthere's Meteor's new 6, or a V-8 by\nthe world's V-8 leader. Compare all\nyou like, you won't find a 4-door or\n2-door sedan with so much to offer\nfor a budget-minded pocketbook.\n4 Thrifty\nMeteors\nMETEOR TWO.0OO\u00ab\nSEDAN V-l OR 6\n4series! 23 models !      fiise vVm8'si^^^6!\nIf your heart's set on joining the ever-\nincreasing throng of station wagon\nowners, you'll find there's a Meteor\n7 Pi r L    ,\"t'1 'ho \"just right\" combination of\notyllSn    \"^auty and duty\" for your pocket-\nbook. Take your choice of a swanky\nCfofinn      Rideau 8-passenger Country Sedan,\nOICHIUII      6-passenger Niagara Country Sedan\nMfwrV.no     or Ranch Wagon, or the thrifty\nVVdgUllb     6-passenger Meteor Ranch Wagon.\nFour models offer V-8's up to 226 hp.\nThree models, the most modern 6.\nWatch THE ED SULLIVAN SHOW\non TV every Sunday ovonlnrj.\nBe miles ahead\nwith the SMARTEST BUY\nDHvelfleiBOr\nMAY Is SAFETY MONTH __ * \"*\"\"\u00ab *\"*wf \"\u00b0* \">\u00bb\u00bb or camaoa\nBo euro you can SEE, STEER and STOP SAFELY SEE your PUT dealer -so meteor now and VOUU always oo METEOR\nBEACON MOTORS LTD.\n701 BAKER ST.\nIs\nPHONE 578\nFOR  A  SAFE   BUY  USED   CAR ... SEE  YOUR   METEOR   DEALER\n \t\n\t\n ;\n ,     .. ~-n*   .r-\u2122\u2122^^,^^^ \u00ablWJ.\u00abluy,\n10\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, MAY 14, 1956\nHEAR YE!\u2014 Mrs. Herbert Polachcck, dressed as a lown\nerler, reminds all to register and vote, In a civic activity\nsponsored by the League of Women Voters, Milwaukee, Wis.\nSelectivity Featured Canada's\nMarkets During Uncertain Week\nBy PATRICK FELLOWS\nCanadian Press Staff Writer    ,\nIn the five weeks since industrial stocks traded on Canadian\nexchanges hit record highs there\nhas been a gradual decline in\nprices. The market has retreated\nin four of those weeks and advanced in only one.\nLast week, a six-point index\ndrop in the Toronto industrial list\nThursday was the severest shake-\nout the market has had since the\nmajor break that followed President Eisenhower's heart attack last\nSeptember.\nBrokers said overselling was apparent. This appeared to be borne\nout Friday with a fairly strong bid\nto recapture lost ground.\nBusiness generally continues to\noperate at a high level of production and earnings and quarterly\nfinancial statements for the most\npart present the same rosy picture\nas the 1955 annual reports,\nSPECULATIVES DULL\nBut a continued feature of market trading this week has been\nselectivity. Traders have watched\nthe board closely for promising\nsituations among stocks that do\nnot normally catch the investor's\neye. Speculative mining and oil\nissues had a dull week, although\nmany of them wound up strongly\non the upswing.\nMarket leaders marked up most\nof the week's major losses on the\nToronto and Montreal exchanges,\nbut there was a handful of standout gains. International Paper\nclimbed $7 with expansion planned\nand talk of a merger. Canadian\nVickers, whose annual report is\nexpected shortly, jumped $5.25.\nPembina gained $3 as one of the\nfew pipelines to move up. Utilities\nproduced winners in Power Corporation, up $2 and Shawinigan, up\n$1.75.\nAluminium dropped $6.75. Algoma $6 and Chrysler $5.25. Commerce fell $3,87 to lead the banks\ndown.\nSteep   Rock   and Falconbridge.\nand Hudson's Bay were among the\nfew mines to show gains. International Nickel was down $3.37.\nNews that the federal government will aid financing of the proposed Trans-Canada natural gas\npipeline boosted a number of western oil and gas issues, including\nCanadian Export Gas which climbed $1.25 to $6.75.\nWeek's index losses at Toronto:\nIndustrials 8.56 to 464.00, golds 1.43\nto 87.37, base metals 4.30 to 241.48\nand western oils 2.28 to 152.47.\nAt New York, the Associated\nPress average of 60 stocks was\ndown $4 at $187.90.\nWeek's index losses at Montreal:\nBanks 1.16 at 54.67. utilities 1.8 at\n135.9. industrials 3.6 at 318.9, combined 3.0 at 257.9. papers 6.26 at\n1594.03 and golds 2.81 at 86.61.\nWeek's volurrles: 533,858 industrials and 5,302,823 mines against\n452.298 industrials and 6,196,617 the\nprevious week.\nBusiness Spotlight..,\nIncome Down on\nU.S. Farms\ni\nOTTAWA (CP) - United States\nfarmers, whose problems often\nparallel those of Canadian farmers have improved their lot in\nmany ways since the Second\nWorld War, But net farm income\ncontinues   to  decline.\nW..C, Hooper, Canada's agricultural counsellor at Washington,\nsays American government figures\nshow the number of farms and\nfarm operators declined significantly between 1950 and 1954.\nBut the acreage increased substantially, from some 3,500,000\nacres to 29,000,000, So did the\nsize of farms.\nIn 1954 nearly half of all U S.\nfarmers had telephones, an increase of 10 per cent, although\nfarmers' numbers decreased between 1950 and 1954 from about\n5,400,000 to 4,800,000. In the same\nyear, about 93 per cent, or 4,400-\n000, of the farms had electricity\ncompared with 78 per cent in 1950.\nNoting that net farm income on\nU.S. farms in 1055 was 10 per cent\nbelow that of 1954 at $10,600,000,-\n000 down from $17,200,000 in the\nall-time high year of 1947 - Mr\nHopper lists these main reasons\nfor the decline as production of\nfarm products in excess of domestic and export demand and the\nfact that costs of production and\nmarketing have increased in recent years.\nThe figures were not all gloomy,\nhowever. Although net income of\nall U.S. farmers in 1955 was about\n38 per cent below 1947, the per-\ncapita income of persons on farms\nwas only about nine per cent below the 1947  level last year.\nAnd per-capila income for individual farmers from all sources\nwas actually higher in 1955 than\nin 1947, reflecting the substantial\nmovement of farmers and their\nfamilies from farming to other occupations and the increase In their\nincomes from   other  sources.\nOil Output Up But\nBelow Normal Level\nCALGARY   (CP)   -  A   10,000-\nbarrel-a-day increase in Alberta\ncrude oil production last week\nfailed to bring daily average output up to what would be considered a* normal level for this time of\nyear.\nThe Alberta petroleum and natural gas conservation board reported today that production fpr\nweek ended May 7 amounted to\n320.263 barrels daily, compared\nwith 310,000 barrels daily during\nthe previous week and 273,584 barrels daily for the corresponding\nweek last year.\nATHLETIC   STUDENT\nVANCOUVER fCPt - Pat Russell, University of B.C. co-ed. has\nbeen awarded a Canadian women's Press Club scholarship of $250\nin journalism. Miss Russell, who\ntried unsuccessfully to swim the\nJuan de Fuca straits last summer.\nwill be managing tiditor of the\nUniversity paper,  UbysSey.\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\nTimes Shown Are Pacific Standard Time\nKXLY TV - Channel 4\n00\u2014Sign On\n15\u2014Love of Life ,\n30\u2014As The World Turns\n00\u2014Cartoon Clown\n30\u2014House Party\n00\u2014Big Pavoff\n30\u2014Edge Of Night\n45\u2014Bob Crosby\n00-TBA\n15\u2014Secret Storm\n30\u2014Edge Of Darkness\n00\u2014Variety Hour\n30\u2014Search for Tomorrow\n45\u2014Guiding Light\n00\u2014Valient Ladv\n15\u2014Painting Clinic\n:30\u2014Strike It Rich\n00\u2014Western Roundup\n00\u2014Western Roundup\n00\u2014News\n10\u2014Weather Vane\n15\u2014Doug Edwards News\n30\u2014Robin Hood\n00\u2014Burns and Allan\n00\u2014I Love Lucy ,\n30\u2014December Bride\n00\u2014Susie\n30\u2014TBA\n00\u2014Doug Fairbanks Jr.\n30\u2014Mr and Mrs Music\n00\u2014News\n05\u2014Tales Of Tomorrow\nKHQ TV - Channel 6\n8:40\u2014Test Program\n8:45\u2014Color Test  Program\n8:55\u2014Bible Reading .\n9:00\u2014Tenn Ernie Ford\n9:30\u2014Feather  Youi   Nest\n10:00\u2014Ding Dong School\n10:30\u2014Ernie Kovacs\n11:00\u2014Home\n12:00\u2014 Matinee Theatre\n1:00\u2014 Now - The News\n1:10\u2014 Weather Watcher\n1:15\u2014Mod   Romances\n1:30\u2014 Queen For A Day\n2:30\u2014My Little Margie\n4:00\u2014Mr. Engineer\n4:30\u2014Howdy Doody\n5:00\u2014Little Rascals\n5:30\u2014Cartoon Carnival\n6:00\u2014Wild Bill Hickok\n630\u2014Little Rascals\n6:45\u2014The Front Page\n6-55\u2014Newspaper nf the Air\n7:00\u2014Ceasar's Hour\n8:00\u2014Medic\n9-30\u2014Waterfront\n10-30\u2014Roston Blackie\nll:00-Mr. and Mrs. North\nKREM TV - Channel 2\n11 45\u2014Test Pattern\n12 00\u2014Afternoon Film Festival\n2:00\u2014Movietlme on Two\n3 30\u2014The Ruggles\n400\u2014Storv Land\n4 15\u2014John   Daly\n'4:30\u2014Shadow Stumpers\n4:55\u2014Watch the Birdie\n5 00\u2014Mickey Mouse Club\n6 00\u2014Sky King\n6:30\u2014Twilight Theatre\n7 25\u2014News\n7-30\u2014Voice Of Firestone\n8-00\u2014Mon. Evening Film Fair\n9:00\u2014News\n10:00\u2014Famous Playhouse\n10:30\u2014News\n10:35\u2014Sleepy Time Gal\n11:30\u2014Layman's Call to Prayer\n(Programs subject to change  by  stations  without  notice I\nREAD AND USE\nThe Nelson News\nWANT ADS\nEXPERl    TELEVISION\nSERVICE\nOn All  Makes ot Sets.\nPhone   1300  Days   1033 Ft  Nights\nExcept Sundays and Holidays\nMc and Mc\nFANCY TOUCH\nSOUTHPORT, England (CP) \u2014\nLatest craze among teen-ag\u00ab\nyouths in this Lancashire town is\n\"greying the hair to give that distinguished look.\" Silver paint Is\nsprayed on in order to product\ngrey   streaks.\nON THE AIR\nCKLN  PROGRAMS\n1240 ON  THE DIAL\n(Pacific Daylight Time)\nMONDAY, MAY 14, 1956\n6:30\u2014Wake-Up Time\n7:00\u2014News\n7:05\u2014 March of Truth\n7:10\u2014 Farm Fare\n7:15\u2014Chapel in the Sky\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Sports News\n7:40\u2014Rise 'n Shine\nB:00\u2014News\nB:10\u2014Sports News\n8:15\u2014Musicale\n8:30\u2014Home  Gardening\n8:35\u2014Musicale\n8:45\u2014Serenade\n8:55\u2014Entertainment   World\n9:00\u2014News\n9:05\u2014Homemaker Harmonies\n10:00\u2014News\n10:05\u2014Homemaker  Harmonies\n10:15\u2014Happy Gang\n10:45\u2014Story Parade\n11:00\u2014News\n11:05\u2014 Call  One-Nine\n12:00\u2014Novelty Time\n12:15\u2014Sports News\n12:20\u2014News\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:55-News\n:00\u2014CKLN Reports\n15\u2014Matinee\n:30\u2014Pacific   News\n:45\u2014Sacred Heart\n:00\u2014B. C. School Broadcast\n:3Q\u2014Trans Canada  Matinee\n:30\u2014House of-Commons Report\n:35\u2014Music for Relaxing\n:45\u2014B. C  Roundup\n:30\u2014Cutbss Empire\n:00\u2014Traffic Jamboree\n:15\u2014By-Line\n:20\u2014Supper Show\n>:40\u2014Sport News\n:45\u2014Strikes and Spares\n:50\u2014News\nJ:00\u2014Rawhide\n8:15\u2014Report from Pari. Hill\n6:30\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n7:00\u2014News and Roundup\n7:30\u2014Recital\n8:00\u2014Summer Fallow.\n8:30\u2014Symphony Orchestra\n9:30\u2014Distinguished   Artists\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Provincial  Affairs\n10:30\u2014 Dance with Harry Boon\n11:00\u2014NE\\VS Nightcap\nCBC PROGRAMS\n(Mountain Standard Time)\nTUESDAY,\n:15\u2014Musical  Minutes\n:30\u2014News\n:35\u2014Musical Minutes\n:40\u2014 Morning Devotions\n:55\u2014 March  Past\n:00\u2014News\n: 10\u2014Here's Bill Good\n:15\u2014Morning Music\n:00\u2014BBC News\n: 15\u2014Aunt Lucy\n:30\u2014Laura Limited\n00\u2014Morning   Visit\n15\u2014The Happy Gang\n45\u2014Musical Program\n:00\u2014Kate Aitken\n15\u2014Kindergarten of the Air\n:30\u2014A Man and His Music\n: 15\u2014News\n:25\u2014Showcase\n:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n:55\u2014Five to One\n:00\u2014Afternoon Concert\n00\u2014B. C. School Broadcast\nMAY 15, 1956\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matlnes-\n3:30\u2014Closed Circuit\n3:45\u2014Today's Music\n4:30\u2014Jubilee Road\n4:45\u2014Sleepytime  Story Telle*\n5:00\u2014Traffic Jamboree\n5:15\u2014Byline\n5:20\u2014News\n5:30^-Tumbleweed Trail\n5;45r-Presenting\n6:00\u2014Rawhid.e.\n6:15\u2014Roving Reporter\n6:30\u2014Question Box\n7:00\u2014News\n7:30\u2014Leicester Square\n8:00\u2014Songs of  Yesterday\n8:30\u2014Marine  Investigator\n9:00\u2014Let's Make Music\n9:30\u2014Anthology\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Critics at large.\n10:30\u2014Rendezvous\nDAILY   CROSSWORD,\nDOWN\n1. Strong-\ninclination\n!.Wu\nconveyed\n3. Poem\n4. Marry\n5. This can be\nfound on an '\nautomobile\n6. Tierra del\nFuegoan \u25a0\nIndian\n7. Strong\nbreeze\n8. Theater\nseat\n9. Dancing and\nsinging girls\n(Jap.)\n11. Born\n15. Shrub\n(Jap)\n18. Chic\n19. American\nmoth\n20. Warbles\n23. Number\n(abbr.)\n24. Venetian\nboats\n25. Pried\n27. Tantalum\n(sym.)\n30. Small\nlion\n31. Wayside\nhotel\n32. Neon\n(sym.)\nS-B   Ulan      m\naaaa d&HDn\nQua wau\nuhuuli j.arjc\nrj-rraTirij^r?!  a^m\n\u25a1 HE      BUM   au\nastaa enna\nBHHO  isasa\nSaturday's Auwer\n36. Devoured\n37. Jargon\n38. Girl's name\n40. Approached\n42. Belonging\nto us\n43. Single unit\n44. Petty\nquarrel\nACROSS\n1. Fore\npart\nof a\nship\n0. A deep dish\n9. Nodular\nstone\n(geol.)\n'10. Junction\n12. Finished\n13. A skin\ndisorder\n14. Frozen\nwater\n15. Aloft\n16. River (Eng.)\n17. Shilling\n(abbr.)\n18. Takes the\npart of\n21. Exclamation\n22. Anchors,\ncables, etc.\n26. Species\nof pillar\n(arch.)\n28. Midday\n29. Bird\n33. Negative\nreply\n34. Prongs\n35. Perform\n36. One-spot\ncard\n39. Ahead\n40. Mass of\nthread\n(conical)\n41. Claw\n43. Ecclesiastical scarf\n45. Follow\n46. Wanderer\n47. Small\npastry,\nfruit-filled\n48. Female\nsheep\nDAILY CRYPTOQUOTE \u2014 Here's how to work it:\nAXYDLBAAXR\nis LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this example A is used\n.'or the three L's. X for the two O's. etc. Single letters, apos-\ntrophies, the length and formation of the words are all hints.\nEach day the code letters are different.\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nZYJDPCJWJD     NZDDWP,     PWZJXQ.\nFQSJ    XU    DEW    NFQV    DCPQWV    FQ.\nAZPV\u2014AXPVJAXPDE\nSaturday's Cryptoquote: HE SMARTETH MOST WHO\nHIDES' HIS SMART, AND SUES FOR NO COMPASSION-\nRALEGH.\n%\ni\na\n1\n-4\n1\n5*\nh\n7\na\nfA\n\u25a0*)\n1\nIO\nu\nIX\ni\n13\n-\n14\n%\n%\n&\n%\nIfa\n17\n1\n18\nn\n10\na\n%\n%\n21\n%\nii.\n23\n24\n25\n2h\n37\n?\/A\n\"\/A\n%\n26\n1\u00b0>\nSO\n31\n31\n|\n33\n%\n%\n%\n34\n^\n3S\nUfa\n37\nsa\nf<\n39\n%\nW\n4\u00b0\n41\n42\n1\n43\nU\n45'\n1\n%\nAh\n%\n47\n%\n46\n%\n5-1+\n  \u2014 !\t\n\t\n , -__^__\n\/3W:\nSMALL INVESTMENT -  LARGE RETURNS\nThat's the Want Ad Story       PHONE  1844\nRENTALS\n(Continued)\nHELP WANTED\nV\nNavy Life Is\na Man's.\nTo vigorous, alert young men\nthe Royal Canadian Navy offers\naction, excitement and travel.\nYou learn the many skills of a\nsailor in modern ships and\nschools. You get sound, practical\ntraining in a useful trade. Pay\nIs good (recently raised) and the\n.pension is excellent. Discuss the\n.many job opportunities with the\n\"Naval Recruiting Officer when\nhe visits the city on\nMay 15th\nat\nThe Canadian Legion\nor\nThe Hume Hotel\nSTENOGRAPHER, MALE OR FE-\nmale. for Kinnaird Village office. Apply stating experience,\nqualifications and salary expected, Applications must be\nin Kinnaird Village office prior\nto May 12, 1956. Duties to commence as soon as possible.\n|D|MI1IEET 7\nWHY DONT YtXlN\nGIVE THE CHILDREN )\nTHEIR ICE CREAM J\nOUT IN THE^-~?)\nyard so ( Q.n\nTHEY     (0    Z)   >',\nWON'T    S*-{\" _J\nSPILL IT fgj   C\nIN HER6J\/W     fflj\n\u25a0^^\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nVILLAGE of\" MARYSVILLErB^C.\nTENDERS FOR CONSTRUCTION\nSEWERAGE  SYSTEM\nSealed tenders endorsed on the\nenvelope, \"Tender for Construction of a Sanitary Sewerage System in the Village of Marysville.\nB. C.\" will be received at the office of the Village Clerk up until\n12:00 o'clock noon, Mountain Standard time, June 4th, 1956.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC. FOR SALE\nCAPABLE ASSISTANT TO PUB-\nlic works foreman, Village of\nKinnaird. Salary approximately $300 per month. Duties to\ncommence June 1, 1956. Applications must be in May 19. 1956.\n'WE REQUIRE A YOUNG MAN\nwith sales training, or ability\nto team, to join our present staff\nApply Advertising Manager,\nNelson Daily News\t\nWANTED\u2014WOMAN TO CARE\nfor a small girl in her home\nweek days. Phone 886-X after 6\np.m.\t\nWOMAN FOR HOUSEWORK TO\nassist in home and take full\ncharge if necessary. Mrs. Mike\nWarzocha, Montrose. B. C.\nMAN TO WORK OnTARM FOR\n2 months. H. Harrop. Ph. 1278.\nTenders shall be for the follow-!   buy at\ning works:\n(a) The installation of approximately 20,000 feet of 8-inch\nand 10-inch Vitrified Clay\nSewer Pipe and the construction of manholes and\nappurtenances.\n(b) The installation of approximately 225 sewer service\nconnections.\n(c) The construction of a septic\ntank. i\nNew\u2014Priced Right\nFairview\u2014Exclusive Listing\nLuxury bungalow, 600 block\n7th St. Has \"L\" shaped L.R.-\nD.R., modern kitchen, 2 bedrooms with closets, and full\nbathroom. Concrete foundation, oil heat, laundry facilities.\nLot 60'. facing lake. See this\nexceptional $9900\nT. D. Rosling\n& SON LTD.*'\nMurray Parker, Salesman\n568 Ward St. Phone 717\nEmployment Opportunities\nMALE\nJOB INFORMATION-HIGH PAY\nAll trades. Many opportunities\nCanada, The Islands, So. America, U.S.A. Companies pay\noverseas fare if hired. Write\nSection 53E, National Employment Information, 1020 Broad.\nNewark, N. J.. U.S.A.\nHELP   WANTED \u2014FEMALE\nWANTED \u2014 SALESLADY PART\ntime for mornins only. No\nphone calls please. Ranier's\nCandies.\nWANTED \u2014 WOMEN FOR\nhousekeeping, 1 boy school age,\nlight duties. Box 8404, Nelson\nDaily News. j\nGIRL OR WOMANTOR CABIN\nand general work. Moyie Lake!\nBungalows, Moyie, B. C., or Ph\nMoyie 1-H, collect. \" j\nEXPERIENCED STBNOGRAFH-\ner for part-time employment.\nPhone 1752. i\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nwife^ntThusband would\nlike position as cooks in small,\nmine, logging or construction I\ncamp, or husband will do out-\nside work. Write Box 7907, Nelson Daily News. I\nFOR HANDYMAN AND ODD!\njobs, Phone 256-R. |\nDO YOU WANT YOUR GARDEN\nPloughed? Phone 1968-R\nPlans and specifications may be\nexamined at the office of the Consulting Engineer after May 14th,\n1956, and copies of same may be\nobtained by a bona fide tendered\nat the office of the Engineer upon\nthe deposit'of Twenty-Five Dol\nlars ($25.00).\nThis deposit shall be refunded\nfollowing the return of plans and\nspecifications and the submission\nof a tenderer. When the Contrac- I\ntor fails to submit a tender, his\ndeposit will be refunded only if.\nthe plans and specifications have\nbeen returned prior to the date\nfor closing of tenders.\nEach tender shall be accompanied by a certified cheque for Ten\n(10%) Per Cent of the Tender\namount.\nThe lowest or any tender not necessarily accepted.\nMrs. Lillian Gilbert.\nVillage Clerk. The Corporation of the Village of Marysville, Marysville, B. C.\nAssociated   Engineering   Services\nLtd.\nConsulting Engineers.\n2256 West 12th Avenue,\nVancouver 9, B. C.\nCALL FOR TENDERS\nSEALED TENDERS will be received up to 5 p.m. day light time\non Thursday, May 24th. 1956 for\nthe construction of a four classroom school at Glenmerry in the\nCity of Trail.\nPlans and speciifications are\navailable at the office of the\nBoard. A deposit of $10.00 is required.\nThe lowest or any tender will\nnot necessarily be accepted.\nTenders must be sealed, marked\nas  to content and .addressed to:\nBOARD OF SCOOL TRUSTEES.\n1145 Cedar Avennue,\nTrail,  B.C.\nLOVELY HOME\u20143 BEDROOMS,\nliving room and dining room.\nDen with fireplace, modern kitchen, full basement, automatic\nstoker, 3 lots in lawn. $4500 will\nhandle. Phone 662 days.\nTOR-saTX^ITtrade^inon\"-\noaklin farm, going concern.\nIdeal for VLA. What have you\nto offer? Box 7*959, Nelson Daily\nNews.\nTHREE - BEDROOM HOUSE\n$14,000. 207 High St. Terms if\ndesired. Phone 1731-X or write\nowner, R. A. Dyke, 4501 West\n9th, Vancouver, B. C.\n5 ROOM BUNGALOW, 2 B.R.\nsun porch, garage, wired for\nrange, hot air furnace, insulated,\nIVi lots, good location. $6200.\nPh. 307-R.\nFOR SALE - 2-BEDROOM\nhome, Vi acre of land. Hot air\nfurnace, wired for range. Ph.\n214-R\t\nFOR SALE\u20142Vi LOTS, No. 1\nfirst-class soil, fruit trees. Ph.\n231-L-3.\n131 ACRES, TIMBER, 8-ROOM\nhouse, 2 miles this side of Slo-\ncan City, Phone 217-R.\nntOOM HOUSE\" fAGrltTM\nHill, IVi acres. Alex Metin, Tag-\nhum, B. C.\nWANT TO BUY-SMALL TRACT\nof timber. -277 State St., Chehal-\nis. Wash.\nBUILDING LOT NEAR SCHOOL\nand bus route. Ph. 1048-R.\n2    LOTS\nPhone 9!\nUPHILL\n3-X.\nDISTRICT\n1  CORNER LOT 50X60,  CLOSE\nin. Phone 1083-L.\nROOM AND BOARD\nROOM ~AND\" ~BOARD~ FOR   A\nyoung gentleman. Ph. 1179-X.\nMACHINERY\nTEACHERS WANTED\nKIMBERLEY\" SCHOOL DIST-\nrict: Vacancies in Primary, Intermediate, Junior and Senior\nHigh Grades. Good salary schedule. Box 1329. Kimberley. B. C.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\nSpecial\nListing\nLOST AND FOUND\n'HAVE A HEART! WE MISS OUR\nPekinese dog, \"Mr. Lee.\" We\nlost him Saturday night. Reward. A. Burgess, Ymir, B. C.\nLOST\u2014GOLD ~WRTST~W AtCH\nbetween Bus Stop and Notre\nDame  Collee.   Burt  Campbell,\nphone 12.\nLOST-PAIR OF SPECTACLES\nin Montrose-Beaver Falls area.\nTuesday. Return to Provincial\nAssessor. Nelson. Reward.\nPERSONAL\nALCOHOLICS  ANONYMOUS\nBox 388 oi Phone 366 R\nINVISIBLE MENDING, CIGAR-\net burns, moth holes, cuts and\ntears. Prompt service, reasonable rates Mary Ward. 209 Victoria St.\nAttractive 4-bedroom residence\n(built 1950) 2 up and 2 down.\nLiving room, oak floors, bright\nkitchen wired for range, \"nooks.\"\nFull    basement,    duroid    roof.\n2 good lots. cii inn\n2 good lots, fenced.**1' ' ' ' \"\"\nc.\nI. CO., LTD.\nREAL ESTATE AND\nINSURANCE AGENTS\nEstablished 1912\nT. C. Lambert, Mgr.\n392 Baker St. Phone 269\nP.O. Box 26 Nelson, B.C.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nFOR SALE - 2 EXCELLENT\nmilk cows recently freshened.\n2 heifer calfs. Reasonable for\nquick sale. Fred Soloveof,f,\nBlewitt\n. 1 AYRSHIRE BULL, 15 MONTHS\nold, dehorned, good dairy stock.\nP O. Box 27, Slocan City.\nVOR SALE - COW JUST SIP\neently freshened. Heavy milker. Geo. Osachoff. Slocan Park.\nFOR\" SALE-- JERSEY COWi\nJust freshened, third calf, J. W\nHoodikoff, Thrums. B. C.\nCOW>OR SALE\u2014JUST FRESH-\nened. Apply ,Geo S'oochnoff,\nClaybfick, Winlaw, B. C.\nHOUSES WANTED\nWe Have Many Buyers for\nOlder Homes Needing Repair\nFrom\n$3500 t0 $4500\nLIST WITH US TODAY\nc. w.\nAppleyard\n& CO., LTD.\nREAL ESTATE AND\nINSURANCE   AGENTS     .\nEstablished   1912\nT   C   Lambert. Mgr\n392 Baker St. Phone 269\nPO  Box 26 Nelson, BC\n(Continued in Next Column*\nHome Owners\nWe wish to introduce the\nnew all new FAIRBANKS\nMORSE oil fired hot air\nfurnace to you for the\nunbelievably  low price of\nCOMPLETE\nThe furnace is complete\nfor this price as follows:\nEnamaloid casing, fibre\nglass insulated, Fairbank\nMorse gun type oil burner,\nblower and filters, Min-\nneappolis Honeywell controls, 84,000 B.T.U max.\nneat output, one year\nguarantee.\nREMEMBER\nA FAIRBANKS MORSE\noil fired hot air furnace\nNever before have we\noffered a name brand furnace for such a price\nTake advantage of this\nstartling saving now\nMACHINE   SHOP\n324  Vernon St Phone 593\nRITCHIE SAW SERVICE. HAM~-\nmering.     gumming.     welding\nAgent   for   Spear   &   Jackson\nSaws. 205 Hall St. Phone 1910\n.Phone   1910\nFOR SALE~ FORD TRACTOR,\nplows, power take-oft, saw. -iisc.\n$750 Phone Castlegar 3548 W\nDempsey, Kinnaird.\n(Continued in Next Column)\nMACHINERY\n(Continued)\nWe Specialize in\nThese lines have been\ncarefully graded to assure\ncomplete  satisfaction.\nB.C. WIRE ROPE\n& Supply Co., Ltd\n59B Taylor St.       Vancouver 3\nTelephone Tatlow 3818\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\nIn Stock\n1956 Oldsmobile\nHard Top Sedan\n1956 Oldsmobile\nHard Top Coupe\n1956 Oldsmobile Sedan\n1956 Chevrolet Station\nWagon\n1956 Chevrolet Sedan\nDelivery\n1956 Chevrolet 1\/i Ton\nPickup\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nYour Choice of\nOur Good Used Cars\n1956 Austin Sedan\n1954 Chevrolet Sedan\n1953  Buick Hard Top\nCoupe\n1953 Buick Sedan\n1953 Chevrolet Coach\n1953 Ford Sedan\n1953 Austin Sedan\nV952 Chevrolet Sedan\n1952 Austin Sedan\n1951   Plymouth Sedan\n1951  Chevrolet Coach\n1951  Chevrolet Sedan\n1951   Austin Sedan\n1951  Pontiac Coach\n1950 Austin Sedan\n1949 Meteor Coupe\n1948 Pontiac Sedan\n1948 Mercury Sedan\n1941   Plymouth Sedan\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nUsed Trucks\n1953 Ford Half Ton\n1951 Chevrolet Half Ton\n1950 Chevrolet Half Ton\n1949 Ford Half Ton\n1949 Ford Half Ton\n1947 Studebaker Half Ton\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nTERMS AND TRADES\nYour\nCHEVROLET - OLDSMOBILE\nDealer\notorsl.\n323 Vernon St Phone 35\n(Formerly  Nelson  Transfer)\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\n(Continued)\nHERE'S A BARGAIN\n1956 Monarch Lucern hardtop;\nautomatic power steering and\nbrakes, radio, two tone blue and\nwhite, white walls, 13,000 miles.\n$1000 off list. Call 1713; after\n5 p.m. 4W-R-2. Cash only.\nWE ARE WRECKING 300 CARS\nand trucks; rebuilt transmissions for all makes and models;\nnew and used tires, custom radios, parts and accessories for\nall makes and models. We buy\nwrecked cars and scrap metal.\nWestern Auto Wrecking, Box\n132, Nelson. Phone 189-R-4.\nNEW CAR BUYERS^BEFORE\nyou buy your new or late model used car see us about our\nLow Cost Financing Service.\nAvailable for either Dealer or\nPrivate Sales. William Kalyniuk Agencies, 532 Ward St.,\nNelson, B.C.\n1955 ROADWAY HOUSE TRAIL-\ner, 18 ft. long, fully modern,\ncheap for quick sale. Apply Joe\nDuchan, European Drive-In.\nNorth Shore.\nH.lU.if.KEEPING OR SLEEPING\nrooms, automatic heat, fully\nfurnished Day week or, month\nly rate  AJIen Hotel   171 BaKer\nFOR RENT-2 ROOM .COTTAGE\nand bath, North Shore, just\nabove Ferry, wired for range.\nPhone 559-X-l.\nNELSON DAILY'NEWS, MONDAY, MAY 14, 1956\u201411\nRENTALS\n\u25a0 Continued!\nFOR RENT-BASEMENT STOR\nage space, central location Bak\ner St   Apply Box 814j   D   News\nWANT TO RENT\u20142-BEDROOM\nhome   Phone 914-Y.\n(Continued In Next Column)\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\nBefore you buy\nTRY A\nMeCULLOCH\nAVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY \u2014\n,3-room furnished, heated Apt.\nPhone 1715-Y.\nFURN     SUITE    FOR    COUPLE\nMay  to Sept   Phone 394-R.\nFOR RENT-FURN   ROOM.  PIT\n870-R,  724 Mill St.\nFOR RENT-FURN. ROOM FOR\nbachelor.   Phone  231-L-3.\nFOR RENT^^-ROOST sOTFE\nwired for range. 718 Observatory\nFOR RENT^WAREHOTJSElOxl00\nfor storage. Phone 1055. \u2022\nfurn. hemto1Proom\"suite\nPhone  697-X   before 3  p.m.\nF~6TrTjiNf^nr~ fwntshed\nbedrooms. Phone 478-R.\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\nWANTED\u20141 CARLOAD (APP\n20001 split cedar\" posts. 7 feet\nlong. 18 to 21 inches in circumference State price and earliest\nshipping date to Southern Alberta Co-Operative Association\nLtd., 1221-2nd Avenue South.\nLethbridge.\nCLEAN COTTON RAGS MUST\nbe at least 12 Inches, no wool\naccepted Will pay 10c per Ib\nNelson  Dally News.    (\nWANTED TO BUY - TIMBER\nand bush land in vicinity ol\nKootenay Lake Apply Box 2738.\nNelson Daily News\nFOR RENT-2 BEDROOMS. AP-\nply 621 Silica St.\nBOATS AND ENGINES\nFOR SALE - CABIN CRUISER\n18 months old, 17' 6\" x 6' 4\" beam\n25 h.p. Evinrude outboard, remote control, speed 24. Phone\n1622-L after 4.\n\"WANTED \u2014 SINGER \"SEWING\nmachine. Contact Mrs. E. Lau-\nrino. phone 450-Y.\nuMentTy~requTred\u2014SAW^\nlogs, all species, top prices. Ph.\n1200. Kootenay Forest Products.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nFOR SALE-1948 STUDEBAKER,\nspecial deluxe sedan, over-drive,\nradio, heater, good rubber. Ph.\n1428-L.\n1954 ZEPHYR SIX. EXCELLENT\ncondition, radio, heater, low\nmileage. Ph. 1385-X after 6 p.m.\nFOR SALE-3-SPEED BICYCLE,\nA-l condition with extras $35.\nPhone 1341-L. after 5 p.m.\nSMALL CAR. GOOD CONDI-\ntion. $250. Phone 1703.\nFOR  SALE\u20141951  CONSUL. PH.\n1841.\t\nFOR  SALE-LADIES  BICYCLE,\nlike new. Phone 1953-L, eves.\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nDEALERS IN ALL TYPES OF\nused equipment; mill, mine and\nlogging supplies, new and used\nwire rope, pipe and fittings,\nchain, steel plate and shapes\nAtlas iron & Metals Ltd., 250\nPrior St., Vancouver. B. C. Ph\nPAcific 6357\nJVfl\u00a5\nmodel 33-B\n(0 mo\/or improvements\nNo other Baw can beat a McCulloch\nModel 33B for high speed woodcutting, light-weight and\nprofcasional-quality features. Hli\nautomatic clutch, built-in chain\noiler, rewind starter, and floatless\ndiapliragm carbureter for full-\npower starting in any position\nwithout adjustment. Don't be\nfooled; before you buy, test the\ncutting speed and easy handling\nof a McCulloch\nModel 33B\nAvailable with\n12,16 or 20-inch\nblades.\nSee\nH   \"Fritz\" Farenholtz,\nC. Ross or Alex McDonald\nWELDING & EQUIPMENT\nCO. LTD.\nPHONE 1402   ..\n614 Railway St       Nelson. B.C.\nNelson\nREADY-MIX\nCONCRETE LTD.\nPHONE 871\nASSAYERS AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nE. W   W1DDOWSON& CO.\nAssayers 301 Josephine St Nelson\nH   S   ELMES   ROSSLAND. B   C\nAssayer  Chemist  Mine Rep\nENGINEERS   AND   SURVEYORS\nG   W   BAERG\nBritish Columbia  Land Surveyor\n373 Baker St.     Nelson     Ph   1118\nand Box 34. Fruitvale, .B.C.\nSuccessor to the late A  L  Purdy\nBOYD C. AFFLECK M.E.I.C\nBC Land Surveyoi, P Eng (Civil)\n218 Gore St.     Nelson   Phone 1238\nS   V   SHAYLER  PC.   Box  252\nKimberley.  Ludlow 2-2138\nBC   Land  Surveyor   Civil   Uner\nMACHINIST!;\nBENNETTS   LIMITED\nMachine   Shop.   Acetylene   and\nelectric welding, motor rewinding Phone 593     324 Vernon St\nFIR  AND  LARCH  POLES   TED\nAnderson. Silverton. B  C.\nNHamt latin Jfawa\nCirculation Dept. Phone 1844.\nSubscription Rates\nPrice per single copy 6c Monday\nto Friday  10c on Saturday\nBy carrier, per week\nin advance .35\nBy Mail in Canada outside Nelson\nOne month             $ 1.25\nThree months        $ 3.50\nSix months        $ 650\nOne year   $12.00\nBy Mail to United Kingdom\nor the United States\nOne month             $ 1.75\nThree  months        $ 5.00\nSix   months        $ 9.50\nOne year .    ...    $18.00\nWhere extra postags ts required\nabove rates plus postage.\nBUSY  AT  HOME\nABERGALE. Wales (CP)\u2014Mrs.\nElizabeth Pilling, 39, has written\nto her husband in Windsor, Ont.,\npostponing her proposed move to\njoin htm there next September.\nReason: She has just given birth\nto triplets. They now have eight\nchildren.\nEXECUTORS  AND   TRUSTEES   FOR OVER   HAlF  A   CENTURY\nROYAL TRUST\nCOMPANY\njUtfcf\n\u00abr booth!\n\"Soma ficmortt on WIRs?\n1205 GOVERNMENT, VICTORIA   \u2022   616 PENDER ST. W, VANCOUVE*\n\u00ab. W. PHIPPS, MANAGER GEORGE O. VALE, MANAGER\n1 ROSS LUMBER CARRIER $1000\n* 1 gas-powered road grader $900;\n1 6x6 truck $600; 1 33-foot cabin boat $850; 1 single drum\nwinch with V-8 motor $250.\nLocated at Needles, B. C. F. G.\nGudeit, 258 West 26th St., North\nVancouver, B. C.\nLUMBER LIQUIDATION SALE\n2x4, 2x6. 2x8, 1x6. 1x8 bds. All\ndressed stock $30 per thousand\nBM. 4000 BM. or more, immediate del. free S. Kudra. Phone\n1757-R.\nFOR SALE\u2014KITCHEN TABLE,\nthree chairs, dining room suite,\nbuffet, large Coleman oil heater, McClary Escort kitchen\nrange. Phone 1470-L.\n120 BASS ACCORDION IN GOOD\ncondition; 30-30 carbine rifle;\n%-size violin with case. H. R.\nFriesen, Procter, B. C.\nFIR AND LABCH CULL LUM\nber, good fire wood, limited supply 1 truck load equals 2 cords\nSpecial $15 delivered. Ph. 1757-R\nFOR SALE: 16 GAUGE STEEL\nplate 4 ft by 12 ft sheets. Phone\n1200, Purchasing Agent, Kootenay Forest Products Ltd\nFOR SALE\u2014USED PIPE, EVERY\ndimension. Small poles and\nfence posts wanted. Write Box\n7980, Nelson Daily News.\nFOR SALE\u2014DRY WOOD $16 A\ncord. In stove length. P. Iwanik,\nProcter, B. C.\nFOR SALE-ELEVATOR, SUIT-\nable for use for freight. Apply\nBox 70, Salmo,  B.  C.\nEARLY FLOWERING MUMS,\nassorted, $3 per doz and tax\nE. L. Bealby, Phone 328-X-l.\nGAS CUT-OFF SAW, Vh H.P.,\nFairbanks motor, like new. Ph.\n1376-Y.\nOil cook range in good\nworking condition. Bargain, call\n306 Victoria. Phone 563-X.\nFOR SALE - MOZART PIANO\nPhone 214-R\nFOR SALE-PORK, WHOLE OR\nhalf. G. Hamilton, Ph. 1766-Y-l\nLARGE UPRIGHT DEEPFREEZE\nApply 622 Victoria St.\nFOR SAt-E\u2014BALED HAY. ALEX\nPereverzoff,  Appledale,  B.  C\nRENTALS\n(Continued in Next Column)\nFOR RENT-3 BEDROOM MOD-\nern house on 46uf lovely lots\nAutomatic oil furnace and garage. Available now For further\ninformation Phone 1918-X.\nFOR RENT-4 ROOMS, FULLY\nfurnished, gas and light, $65\nmonth Ground floor, adults\nPhone 217-R.\n(Continued in Next Column)\nBIG or SMALL...\nWE PRINT THEM ALL!\nBy the 100 or by the 100,000 M\n\u2022 OFFICE STATIONERY\n\u2022 CHEQUE FORMS\nBUSINESS CARDS\nRESTAURANT MENUS\nRECEIPT FORMS\nFINANCIAL\nSTATEMENTS\n\u2022 PROGRAMMES\n\u2022 LETTERHEADS\n\u2022 INVOICE FORMS\n\u2022 ENVELOPES\n\u2022 WEDDING\nSTATIONERY\n\u2022 OFFSET PRINTING\nYou Get DISTINCTIVE Printing\nWhen You Place Your Order With Us\nCommercial Printers\nDIVISION OF\nNews Publishing Co. Ltd.\nPublishers of Nelson Daily News\nphone 1844\nNELSON\n 1\n\u2014\n-\u2014\n12\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, MAY 14? 1956\nOur\nHealth Support\nRoom\nMl  Is Fully Stocked'With\nELASTIC: and NLYON - STOCKINGS\nMATERNITY GARMENTS\nPOSTURE BELTS\nTRUSSES OF ALL TYPES\nAnd We Have a Fully-Qualified Staff\nTo Fit Any of the Above\n#\nNANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nNews of the Day\nRATES: SOo line, 40e Una black face type: larger type rateo on\nrequeit Minimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment\nDON  ELDER 8TUDI0 Rotary Luncheon Monday 12:15\n888 Baker St.     \u2014     Phone 1205  p.m.   Hume Hotel.\nNEL80N  REFRIGERATION.\nComplete  Refrigeration  Service\n405 Hall St., Phone 1917\nWabasso   Sheets;   81\"xl00\"   $7.95\nPillow Cases to match tor $1.68\nTAYLOfi'8  DRY  GOODS\nGordon Sutherland,\nPainting, Paperhanging, RR 1,\nPhone 816-R-3, Nelson\nLost at Crescent Bay. A Pekingese pup, named Tin-ko. Reward.  Phone 2009-L evenings.\n561 Air Cadet Squadron presents\nRCAF  BAND  CONCERT\nMay- 17, at 8 p.m., L. V. Rogers\nHigh School. Reserved tickets at\nSimpson-Sears,\nLarge selection of coal, wood\nand electric ranges.\nWE PAY TOP PRICE8\nFOR  USED FURNITURE\nHOME FURNITURE.EXCHANGE\nPHONE 1660.\nCUTLERS   JEWELLERY\nGuaranteed\" Watch Repairs\n511 Baker Street. Phone 9.\nNew Summer Dresses   .\nTeen styled \"in Teen Sizes.\nEBERLE'8; \"652 Baker\nI    For your Logging Camp we\n|    have 2. doz. camp cots. What\noffers?   1   only  small  power\nsaw,. AtI shape, $160.\nWe pay cash for your furniture.\nBIRCH'S FURNITURE\nFormerly Cutler's New and\nUsed Furniture.\nPhone 47      . \u2014.    307  Baker St.\nLast   Call   for   Seed   Potatoes,\nsupply limited.\nMAC'S   FLOWER   SHOP-ph.  910\n48\" Barkcloth Drapery, from $1.69\nyard and up.\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nLESLIE'S FIRE EQUIPMENT\nNow equipped to re-charge C02\nextinguishers. 536 Stanley Street.\nPhone 1915 or 441-L.\nFor Rent\u2014Lower half of duplex, unfurnished,- self contained,\nsuitable for one or two people.\nPhone 933-X.\nLA  to-CANADIAN   LEGION\nWHIST DRIVE\nMonday, May' 14th, Legion Hall\n. 8 p.m. Everyone welcome.\nChimneys  cleaned and  topped\nFurnaces, stoves vacuum cleaned\nPounder'? Chimney Service\n\"Phone 1541-L.\nSPORTS DAY DANCE\nAT   PROCTOR   MAY  25th\nFree' refreshments, Free Ferry\n.10-2.   FitcheWs Orchestra.\nBRITISH   ISRAEL\nASSOCIATION\nPUBLIC MEETING\nCHAMBER OF COMMERCE,\n\u2022\u25a0\u25a0'\u2022'\u25a0 NELSON, B.C. .\nTuesday Evening, May 15th, 1956\n8 p.m.\nSpeaker\u2014Mrs. W.  H. Turner,\nVancouver, B.C.\nSubject\u2014TEACH US. TO PRAY\nYou are cordially Invited to attend this meeting or write for' free\nliterature.\nDISTRICT WINNER In Junior Chamber of Commerce public'\nspeaking contest was Fred Wejtfall of Nelson Jaycees, at left,\nshown receiving the Don Brown Cup from Bob Farmer of Trail*\nJaycee regional director. Don Brown Is a past president of Trait\"\nand past regional director. Subject was \"A Young Man's Responsibility to His Community.\" In background is John Hanson, organizing committee chairman.\u2014Dally News photo.\nNelson Store\nContest Winner\nA Nelson supermarket has won\na prize in an international contest\nin which points were given for\ndisplays, selling ideas and promotion of the product of a well known\nfruit company.\nLiberty Food Stores Ltd. was\n23rd in competition with stores\nfrom across Canada and the United\nStates, the only Interior store to\nwin a prize, it is understood, and\npossibly in the entire province,\nMarks were given for displays in\nthe store, newspaper advertising,\nselling ideae used, and so on.\nThe prize was an electric frying\npan.\nCARD OF THANKS\nMr. and Mrs. Edmond Paten- \\\naude wish to convey their heartfelt thanks to many friends for\nkind expressions of sympathy,\nfloral tributes and spiritual offerings following the death of J.\nO. Patenaude.\nRegional Postal\nEmployees Hold\nMeeting Here\nA regional convention of the\nCanadian Postal Employees was\nheld here recently with delegates\nfrom Kamloops to Calgary attending.\nS. Best, regional vice-president\nof Lethbridge, chaired the convention. Nelson CPE president H.\nD. Craig, opened the meeting, welcoming delegates and introducing\nNelson Postmaster W. G. Hall.\nPoints of interest in city and\ndistrict were outlined to the visitors by Mr. Hal!.\nA dinner at the Silver Room\nattended by delegates and their\nwives wound up the convention.\nOdds...\n\u2122d   Ends\n...byM.D. B.\nHove The Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVEC\nW       LIMltED *J\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nPanelyte, superior counter topping\nfor kitchen cabinets and tables.\nT. H. WATERS & CO. LTD.\nPhone 156. - 101 Hall St., Nelson\nCHARM\nBEAUTY SALON\nAll   Beauty   Culture\nand Cold  Waves\nMedical  Arts. Bldg.\n'hone   1922'Ste.   211\nHelen McCallum, Prop.\nTHE CITY OF PRINCE GEORGE, B.C.\nGeneral Foreman-\nWaterworks\nApplications arc invited for the above position:\nDuties:\nSupervise installations of large programme of\nwater main extensions and general maintenance of pumping, storage and distribution\nfacilities of waterworks system.\nQualifications:\nMunicipal waterworks experience essential.\nKnowledge of maps and drafting desirable.\nApplications:\nState marital status, age, weight and general\nhealth, full history of job experience, and date\navailable. Applictions to be forwarded to the\nundersigned before May 19, 1956.\nRemuneration:\nTo be commensurate with experience and\nability. State salary expected. Medical, life\ninsurance and pension plan available.\nG. P. HARFORD,\nCity Engineer,\nBuggy Top Kills\nTwo-Year-Old Boy\nPEKIN, 111. (AP) \u2014 A baby\nbuggy top slammed shut on the\nneck of a two-year-old boy here\nand choked him to deafh. Fire\ndepartment rescue workers labored an hour in an unsuccessful\nattempt to revive Bobby Ewen.\nSUSPENDED SENTENCE\nOne Saskatchewan lad, charged\nwith possession of an unregistered\nrevolver, was sentenced to six-\nmonths suspended sentence and a\nsecond was placed on six -months\nprobation after appearing in couj't\nhere Thursday.\nEighteen-year-old Nick Sher-\nstabitoff was given a suspended\nsentence and a 17-year-old was\nplaced on probation. The two boys,\nfrom Verigin, Sask. were apprehended near Shoreacres, May 2.\nThey appeared before William\nEvans, magistrate and juvenile\ncourt judge.\nClassified  Ads  Get  Results\nCAMPBELL,   SHANKLAND\n& CO.\nChartered Accountants\nAuditors   , '\n676 Baker St Phono 235\nSunday was a wonderful day\nfor a walk along Douglas Road,\nIn fact it was so wqnderful it\ntook me an extra half hour to\nget to work. From up there Fair-\nview is a sparkling mosaic with\nred and blue roofs and white\nhouses standing out against the\nnew green of lawns and trees.\nThe lake beyond was a swathe\nof deep blue with here and there\na cloud shadow dropped among\nits sun sparkles.\n*   *   *\nPeople along the way were sitting out soaking up- the sunshine\nor puttering in their gardens. Noticed a nice bit of rock work\nshaping up at 118 Douglas Road\nand a.tiny trickle of water tinkled\na tune among the rocks. I be\nlieve they are going to make the\nmost of its possibilities.\nThe Stewarts were dong a bit\nof heavy gardening, but were saying it wag really too nice a day\nto be sticking around home\nworking. I could see what they\nmeant for it was truly a day for\nheading for the wide open spac-\nCoUldn't help stopping to'admire the garden at J; Potosky's,\n108 Morgan Street. It was originally landscaped by the Felty's,\nI believe. An informal garden, it\nhas been laid out.to ground contours with an artistic arrangement of flowering shrubs, giving a woodland feeling to it. It\nhas continued to thrive under the\ncare of the Potosky's, and presents a refreshing picture as the\nshrubs come into bloom.\nStopped for a moment to chat\nwith Mr. Brown at the corner of\nSilica and Park Streets. He was\ndown taking a look at his garden,\nwhich by this time of year he\nused to have in A-l shape. He is\nstill getting around on two canes,\nbut told me he has been able to\n; get most of the garden planted up\n! at his son, .Norman's place where\nhe is staying. He said he thought\nhe might start on his own .today.\nMr. Brown lives for his garden\nand very kindly gave me a goodly selection of rock plants a few\nyears back which mutiplied until\nI was able in turn, to give some\nto others, and recently I've transplanted some of the grandchildren\nof the original plants at my ne'w\nhome.\nWe wish you many more years\nof gardening, Mr. Brown.\nSea Lamprey\nCarries Own\nPower Plant\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Science has\ncome up with a d^covery about\nthe parasitic sea lamprey\u2014the eellike fish destroyer emits a pulsating electrical discharge from\nthe area of its head.\nImplications of the phenomenon\ndiscovered by a McMaster University professor now are under\nstudy.\n\u25a0 Dr. J. L. Kask, chairman of\nCanada's fisheries research board\nsaid the newly-discovered electrical discharge mechanism is\nunique in living organisms. The\ndiscovery opens a whole Jiew field\nof study about the lamprey.\nDiscovery of the lamprey's\nunique characteristic was made\nby Dr. H. Kleerekoper, professor\nof zoology at McMaster University, Hamilton, Ont., whose work\nincludes research into the effects\n.of sonic and ultra-sonic vibrations\non fish. Hj*) is currently supervising a research project being\ncarried out by the fisheries research board.\nNOTED PULSATIONS\nDr. Kleerekoper noted the\nlamprey's electrical pulsations\nwhile making preliminary investigations in ultra-sonic studies. He\namplified the eel's discharge\nenough to light a flash bulb and\ntrigger the shutter of a camera\nduring his experiments.\nActually the electrical pulsations are very low, measuring\nfrom between 200 and 300 mil-\nlionths of a volt at a distance of\nabout four-fifths of an inch from\nthe animal's head. The pulsations\nrecur rhythmically every four-\nfifths of a second and the duration\nof each is one twenty-thousandth\nof a second.\nThe researchers also are trying\nto determine how the lamprey\nuses its unique power. They believe it is possible it can perceive changes- in its electrical\nfield caused by the presence of\nfish or other objects capable of\ndistorting it and in this way locates the prey to which it attaches itself.\nHOPE TO DESTROY LAMPREY\nIntensified   efforts   to   destroy\nthe lamprey have been under way\nfor some time, using sonic vibrations, poisons and other methods.\nThe campaign Is being co-ordinated   through   the   new   Canada-\nUnited States Great Lakes Fisheries Commission,  established to\n| protect   and   sustain   the   Great\nLakes fishery.\nControl  of the sea lamprey is\nSTYLE FOR 1980? \u2014 How kitchens and clothes will\nlook some 20 years from now was shown in 1980 house at Ideal\nHome Exhibition In London, England. Architects Alison and\nPeter Smith, with designer Teddy Tinling created this exhibit.\nLast Rites Held\nFor A. MacPherson\nFuneral services were conduct'\ned Friday at Thompson Funeral'\nHome for Alexander MacPherson,\n56, who died Tuesday in Kootenay Lake General Hospital. I\nRev. J. N. Allan officiated and\nMrs. W. A. Manson was organist.\nHymns sung were were \"Psalm\n23\", \"-Blest Be iShv. Tie That\nBinds\" and \"Rock of Ages.\"\nInterment was in Nelson Memorial Park.\nBuild A-Locomotive\nMOSCOW (AP)\u2014The newspaper\nUkrainian Pravda said Saturday\nthat Russian engineers have designed a 5500-horsepower atomic\nlocomotive. The official newspaper\nof the Communist party in the\nUkraine said the locomotive will\nbe able to run 300 days without\nrefueling and 600 miles without\ntaking on additional water.\none of the commission's most\nurgent problems. Recently fisheries men placed high hopes in a\nnew poison which is sown in river\nestuaries where larvae lie for several years buried in the bottom\nuntil they emerge to begin preying on fish. Scientists believe discovery of the lamprey's electrical\npotential will give them an even\nbetter weapon.\nREAD THE CLA88IFIED DAILY\nDON COSSACK\nCHOIR COMING\nPlans for a performance in Nelson of the famous Don Cossack\nChoir in October have been com-\npleted by the Kiwanis Club.\nThe club signed the contract at\nits Thursday night meeting at the\nHume. There are about 3u in the\nchoir, five of whom are dancers,\nthe club was told by chairman\nNorman Buckley.\nMr. Buckley and B. D. Balder'\nston also reported that arrange\nments have been lined up for the\nannual peanut drive.\nGuest at the meeting was H.\nStange, building contractor, of\nVancouver.\nLead, Zinc Buying\nQuiet, Prices Firm\nNEW ORK \u2014 The lead market\nlast week was the quietest in some\ntime, but prices remained firm at\n16 cents' a pound.   '\nZinc buying also was moderate,\nthough demand was seen as satisfactory at the current 13^-cent-\nper-p'ound level,\nMajor metals prices:\nCopper\u201445-46 cents a pound, delivered. Foreign 43^4-44 cents,\nnominal, New ork.\nLead\u201416 cents a pound, New\nYork; 15.80 cents, St. Louis.\nZinc\u201413,5 cents a pound. East\nSt. Louis; 14 cents, New York.\nSilver\u201490% cents a ounce, New\nYork; 79 pence, London.\nYour New;\nSPRING\nSUIT\nYou always look your best\nin worsted flannel, the\nmosMlattering of all suitings. We've just received\nthe newest, from England,\nso now is the time to\nchoose yours.\n2 PANT SUITS\n>69\n50\nEmory's\nLimited\n\"THE MAN'S STORE\nBOX  100 PHONE 31\nZhukov Said III\nMOSCOW (Reuters) \u2014 Marshal\nGeorgi Zhukov, Soviet defence\nminister, is ill, diplomatic informants say, but the reports do not\nsay the illness is serious.\nThe 59-year-old soldier-statesman has been absent from public\nfunctions for some days now. He\ndid not attend a reception at the\nCzech embassy on the Czech national holiday last week, as he\nwould normally be expected to.\nHe also did not receive a Finish military delegation, which included two lieutenant-generals\nand was the first high level military delegation from a Western\ncountry to visit Russia since the\nwar. The delegation left this week\nafter spending 10 days in the\nSoviet capital.\nALWAYS TIRED OUT?\nMULTI-VITAMIN\nFORMULA V.IO\nTONIC\n,'Pleasant-tasting tonic helps\n._ -\u2014  prevent iron-deficiency ana-\n16 ounces   m'n- H*3 5 ,imcs minimum\nc     daily requirement of Iron,\n2.00      plus S important vitamins\nCITY DRUG\nYour   Rexall   Pharmacy\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL TRAINING,\nMedical Arts Building\nSuite 206 Phone 141\nHAIGH\nTRU-ART\nBeauty Salon\nPhone   327\n676 Baker  Street\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED    and    REPAIRED\nRE CORING\nJim's Radiator Shop\n616 Front 8t\nPhone 69\nYouth Shot in\nBout With Bandits\nTORONTO (CPl \u2014 A 20-year-\nold youth was shot in the shoulder and groin early Sunday when\nhe grappled with three holdup\nmen in his home.\nGeorge Mason of suburban\nScarborough was wounded as he\nstruggled for possession of a revolver held by one of the masked men.\nHe was taken to hospital in fair\ncondition.\nNO HURRY\nARNOLD, England (f P) \u2014 An\nAmerican aloe, which flowers once\nevery 100 years, has been planted\non a traffic island in this Nottinghamshire town.\nAsk Your Grocer for\nEllison's U-Balte Bread Mix\n. Whole Wheat or Whltt\nIt Makes Excellent\nHome Made Bread\nPHONE 238\nELLISON   MILLING\nA ELEVATOR CO. LTD.\nI'M JUST WILD\nABOUT HOW MUCH\nMONEY, WANT ADS\nHAVE SAVED ME!\"\n\"All the girls in my crowd have learned how easy it is to S\/VE with classified ads in this paper! So many go6d\nbuys are offered each day, on all kinds\not merchandise, that we just don't\nknow where to look first . . . Take\nmy advice, ladies, shop these classified ads and save!\" . . .\nWhat  do   YOU  need??  Get  it  fast\nwith    a    low-cost    classified    ad!!\nThrifty women - and men, too - read our classified ads\nevery day for the best reason in the world: YOU SAVE!!\nWant ads in this paper are a market place for everything\nyou want to buy, sell or swap and - for expert services ...\nGet the classified shopping habit, now ...\nREAD the WANT ADS\nIn Your\nNelson Daily News\nPhone 1844\n","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Genre":[{"label":"Genre","value":"Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"edm:hasType"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; This property relates a resource with the concepts it belongs to in a suitable type system such as MIME or any thesaurus that captures categories of objects in a given field. It does NOT capture aboutness"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"label":"Geographic Location ","value":"Nelson (B.C.)","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:spatial"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Spatial characteristics of the resource."}],"Identifier":[{"label":"Identifier","value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1956_05_14","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:identifier"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.; Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"IsShownAt":[{"label":"DOI","value":"10.14288\/1.0429139","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"edm:isShownAt"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; An unambiguous URL reference to the digital object on the provider\u2019s website in its full information context."}],"Language":[{"label":"Language","value":"English","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:language"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A language of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as RFC 4646 [RFC4646]."}],"Latitude":[{"label":"Latitude","value":"49.493333","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:lat"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03c6) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Longitude":[{"label":"Longitude","value":"-117.295833","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:long"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03bb) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Notes":[{"label":"Notes","value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Company, Limited","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"Rights","value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:rights"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Information about rights held in and over the resource.; Typically, rights information includes a statement about various property rights associated with the resource, including intellectual property rights."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1956-05-14 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1956-05-14 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"Nelson Daily News","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}