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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":" French Raid\nArab Quarter\n4,480 Moslems Held for Questioning;\nSeize Arms Concealed by Moslem Women\nPy JOSEPH E. DYNAN\nALGIERS (AP) \u2014 Thousands of battle-dressed\nFrench troops and special police swooped down Sunday on\nAlgiers' casbah (Arab area) in an unprecendented raid for\nrebel suspects and arms.\nThey seized a quantity of arms, some^of them concealed beneath the white dresses of veiled Moslem women,\nand detained 4480 Moslems for'questioning. All were released later except 522, detained as \"super-suspects.\"\nThe French troops sealed oft the\nVol. 55\n16th-century casbah, hitherto con\nsidered an inviolable refuge for\nMoslems, and held it in an iron\ngrip for 18 hours.\nThe raiding party of 6000 troops\nand 1500 special police swarmed\nthrough the dark recesses and\ntwisting, narrow streets of the\n.area. Searchers combed through\nthe possessions of some 50,000 Moslems and 6000 Frenchmen who\nhave Infiltrated the area over the\nyears.\nDuring the search a Moslem was\nfatally shot when he jostled a\nNegro soldier. The only other\ncasualties were a policeman who\nwas shot in the leg as he checked\n\u25a0 captured rifle and a Moslem\nwhose leg was broken in a jump\nfrom one terrace to another.\nBIG ARMS HAUL\nThis is what the raid uncovered:\n\u25a0\u2022'\u2022\u25a0.\nRCMP CONSTABLE\nNORMS KILLED\nEDMONTON (CP) \u2014 Two persons died and six were seriously\ninjured when two cars collided\nhead-on early Sunday at sijljurban\nJasper Place. .....\nPolice \"said RC3^^\u00a3J^jmble\nHenry Norris of^MBlOiitoni driver\nof one^car, died airtantjy. An In-,\nfant in tha^ther <jai died en 'route\nto hosptfal.  '   \u25a0 \u25a0   feaSM\nConstable Norris JPt'brotiier-in-\niaw \"MJota-*\"*S\u00aeg, Mill street,\nD. MqQuaijrKTront .street and Mrs.\nj;*Per'alBKWaW:'6t.. all of Nelson.\nft wife was in cri-\nhospital and their\nid daughter Margery was\nious condition.\n-.'t&e names of the occupants of\nthe other car \u2014 a man, wife, child\ntnd two' youths \u2014 were being\nwithheld. All were in hospital with\nserious injuries.\nHundreds of arms and thousands\nof shells and grenades.\nA makeshift rebel propaganda\nprinting press.\nFrench Communists who have\nbeen   operating   a   secret   radio\ntransmitter.\nLists of rebel leaders and or\nganizatlons.\nThirty bales of assorted  mill\ntary  uniforms.\nThe search parties used mine\ndetectors in ferreting out arms.\nThey found some Moslem women\nhad concealed stolen uniforms or\nother forbidden items beneath\ntheir sheet-like dresses. The uniforms were French but bore rebel\nmarkings and presumably were on\ntheir way to rebel forces in the\nhills.\nHelicopters hovered overhead\nthroughout the day to aid the\nground searchers.\nFrench sources said 200 of those\narrested were found in possession\nof guns, tracts and duplicating ma\nchinery and will be held under\nformal charges.\nIn order to achieve maximum\nsurprise, officers did not advise\ntheir troops until 1 a.m., an hour\nbefore the action started.\n___\n0Wi\n\/37<?\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKootenay: Sunny and warmer.\nLight- winds, low-high at Cranbrook and Crescent Valley, 40 and\nNELSON, B.C., CANADA-MONDAY MORNING, MAY 28, 1956\nNot  More Than So Dally,  10c  Saturday\nNo. 30\nMm\n2W?>i\nCapture Man\nWanted in Slaying\nMIDDLEBURY, Vt (API\nWilliam E. Boswell, 35, wanted in\nthe slaying of pretty young .Philadelphia heiress Mrs. Anne Har\nris Van Ryne in Nevada, was arrested Saturday in this small\nVermont town.\nMiddlebury police chief Don\nWilliamson said Boswell was tak.\nen into custody as he drove up to\nthe home of his wife, Mrs. Arline\nBoswell, 22.\nCongressman Collaborated With\nNazis, Secret Documents Reveal\nBy WARREN RODGER8, JR.\nWASHINGTON (AP) \u2014 Long-\nsecret documents made public\nSaturday recount that Nazi propagandists with thousands of dollars\nin hand collaborated with \"a well-\nknown Republican congressman\"\nin trying to get the 1940 Republican party convention to adopt\nan \"isolationist\" platform.\nNo name was given for the congressman in captured German\ndocuments held secret for 16 years\nby British, French and American\nofficials. They were made public\nwithout comment by the state department, but a footnote cited a\n.keep-out-of-war newspaper advertisement published at the time\nover the signature of Hamilton\nFish Jr., then a Republican representative from New York.\nFish, asked for comment, said\nhe remembers the ad very well\nand he added, that in raising the\nmoney to pay for it, \"not one cent\neame from German sources.\"\nMany of the documents made\npublic were cables to Berlin from\nHans Thomsen, counsellor and\nman-in-charge at the German embassy in Washington in 1940, the\nlast full year of peace for the\nUnited States before it entered\nttie Second World War.\nIt was a year of struggle between so-called isolationists and\nInterventionists in American politics. The struggle was heightened\nby the fall of France, Italy's entry\nInto the war   against  the   Allies\nand the American presidential\nelection, ,\nReporting on this in a \"most\nurgent top secret\" cable of June\n12, 1940, Thomsen told Berlin the\nisolationists apparently were losing out.\nLooking to the 1940 Republican\nconvention, opening within two\nweeks at Philadelphia, he proposed a two-part \"well-camouflaged\nlightning propaganda campaign!\"\n1. \"A well-known * Republican\ncongressman who works in close\ncollarboration with the special officials for press affairs will invite\nsome 50 isolationists Republican\ncongressmen on a 30-day visit to\nthe party convention.\" Their aim\nwould be to \"work on the dele'\ngates of the Republican party in\nfavor of an isolationist foreign policy . . , $3,000 are required.\"\"\n2. \"The Republican in question\nis prepared to form a small ad\nhoc Republican committee\" to\npublish full-page newspaper ads\nduring the convention \"with the\nimpresive appeal 'Keep America\nout of war.'\" The cost was estimated at $60,000 to $80,000.\nThomsen cabled he had accepted proposal No. 1 as a \"unique opportunity.\" As to the ads he said\nthe Republican congressmen's\n\"Republican friends\" would probably pay half the cost, He asked\nBerlin's approval to pay the rest.\nOther documents indicated approval was given.'\nOn.        \u00ab\u00a3* i^iZPl\nfatalities   u % \u00abfc^to>5'*t\/\nmore than half o.   \u00bb 13r*^!{f\ndeaths across the cou*.      ?*j\u00bb\nOntario's toll was swei.^ 3\nnine drownings and seven tralric\ndeaths. In addition, a Canadian\nPress survey from six p.m. local\ntime Friday to midnight Sunday\nlists two deaths by burning and a\ndouble fatality by carbon monoxide poisoning.\nQuebec had the next highest toll\nwith four deaths in traffic, three\nin fires and one in another accident. Alberta reported three traffic deaths and one drowning.\nSaskatchewan, New Brunswick\nand Nova Scotia reported one traffic death each.\nCooler Weather Aids\n\u00b0oast Firefighters\nLondon Halls\nCanadian Singer\nBy ALAN HARVEY\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nLONDON (CP) \u2014 Lois Marshall, 31-year-old Toronto soprano\nwho came to England at the Invitation of conductor Sir Thomas\nBeecham, Saturday night made a\ntriumphant London debut at the\nRoyal Festival Hall.\nMiss Marshall was given a warm\novation by the standing - room\nonly audience which insisted on\na'n encore following her rendition\nof \"Exsultate, Jubilate,\" an extremely difficult work which Mozart wrote for Rauzzini, a male\nsoprano.\nFor her second selection, Miss\nMarshall chose \"Constanza\" from\nMozart's \"II Seraglio.\"\nShe was called back for two\ncurtain calls after each of her\nsongs. The Canadian artist was\naccompanied by the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra under the\ndirection of Sir Thomas.\nMiss Marshall also will give\nconcerts in Stocfiholm and Paris\nduring this tour.\nIr-ANCOUVEH (CP) - British\n;olumbia held its own against fire\nand flood threats during the weekend with no new major trouble\nspots reported.\nCooler weather helped ease the\nfire hazard in the big Vancouver\ntires district covering the southern\nparts of Vancouver Island and the\nMainland.\nDistrict forester D. B- Taylor\nsaid after making an aerial survey\nof the Sechelt Peninsula about 50\nmiles north of here, where a fire\nswept over more than 2500 acres\nof second growth and some marketable timber in the last week,\nthat the blaze was\nunder control.\"\nAbout i 200 men and 12 heavy\ntractors had been used in .the fight\nagainst the blaze, which was\nthreatening enough at one time to\ncause residents of the small village\nof Egmont to prepare for possible\nevacuation by water.\nMr, Taylor said Friday night\ndanger to the village was not\nconsidered immediate although\nprecautions were being taken.\nFirefighters had been working to\ncut and burn a firebreak and the\nblaze that was advancing towards\nthe village on a four-mile front.\nA forest service spokesman said\nhigher humidity would \"undoubtedly\" aid. firefighters.\n'The flood threat in the Fraser\nValley   eased   somewhat  with a\ntwo-inch drop in 24 hours in the\nriver level at Mission. The water\n\"reasonably I stood Sunday at 18.85 feet.\nFamilies in:low-lying areas.are.\nready to move if necessary. The\nCanadian Pacific Railway is holding 12 boxcars in readiness in case\ncattle have to be moved.\nTINY MOON TO BE\nLAUNGHIBJN'57\nPASADENA, Calif. (AP) - The\nworld's first tiny man-made moon,\nProject Vanguard, will pass over\nthe southern half of the United\nStates on its first 94-minute race\naround the earth next year, Dr.\nW. H. Pickering, director of the\nCalifornia Institute of Technology's jet propulsion laboratory, said\nSunday.\n\"Thus the observations made\nfrom this area will be very important in establishing the orbit,\" he\nexplained.\nThe only hope of seeing it, he\nreported, will be when the sun is\nshining on .the object with the\nobserver in darkness' beneath it.\nThe satellite will be only 30 inches\nin diameter.\n\"This means,\" Dr. Pickering\nsaid, \"that you will have to see\nthe satillite just after sunset or\njust before sunrise.\" It will be\nlaunched from Florida.\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIH\nThe Irony of It\nPITTSBURGH (AP)\u2014When\npolice raided an alleged gambling house Sunday, everyone\nfled to the nearest exit except Adolph Pugh, 51. who\nsat stolidly in his chair admiring a five-card straight.\nAs police Lieut. Arthur Baker arrested him on a gambling\ncharge, and confiscated the\nmoney on the table, Pugh\ndeclared:\n\"First winning hand I've\nhad today and the police pick\nup  the   pot!\"\niiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimii\nMan in Iron Mask Dies\nBRIGHTON, Eng. (Reuters) \u2014\nHarry Bensley, who won tame\npushing a baby carriage 30,000\nmiles while wearing an iron mask\ndied here last week. He was 80.\nThe one-time wealthy London\nplayboy died^penniless with only\nhis 80-year-old widow and two\nfriends to attend his cremation.\nBut in 1908 when he took a\nbet and became \"the man in the\niron mask,\" he was living on a\nyearly income of \u00a35000 from\nRussian investments!\nIn that year American millionaire Pierpont Morgan bet Lord\nLonsdale that a man could not\nwalk around the world unrecognized.\nBensley agreed to act as the\n\"guinea pig\" although his identity was kept secret at the time.\nUnder the wager he had to\nwear a mask all the time while!\nhe pushed a baby carriage through ]\n169 British towns and 125 cities J\nin 18 other countries.\nHe had to support himself by j\nselling postcards on the way and j\nto find a wife before the walk j\nended.\nThe prize for passing all 15 conditions of the wager was to be!\n\u00a321,000.\nThousands cheered him as he1\nset off from Trafalgar Square ini\nLondon pushing a spindly baby\ncarriage and wearing his weird\nmask.\nHe met King Edward VII at\nNewmarket races and sold him a\npostcard for \u00a35. The king asked\nfor his autograph but Bensley\nrefused' it to .maintain his anony-\nity.  ,:\nA hotel chambermaid once hid\nunder his bed in an unsuccessful\nattempt to unmask him and earn\nRed Lasses Expected\nIn Italian Elections\nROME (Reuters) \u2014 Millions of\nItalians went to the polls Sunday\nin local government elections expected to rebuff the powerful Italian Communist party in the country's biggest test of public opinion\nsince 1953.\n\u25a0 Good weather throughout the\ncountry heartened the pro-Western\nmoderate parties who have ruled\n'Copier Rescues\nGirl (limber\nBarbed Wire Parts\nCypriot Turk, Greek\nmiuiMEiiiimiiimuiiiimmiiiiiiiiii\nFiremen Robbed\nOf Glory Hour\nAUGUSTDORF, Germany\n(AP) \u2014 The old house was\nready to fall down of its own\nweight, its wood gnawed\nhollow, by insects.\nThe firemen in this forest\nvillage decided they could get\nin some first-rate practice by\nsetting it afire and filming the\nwork of the firefighters.\nElaborate plans were laid.\nSixteen hours before, the\nzero hour this weekend, Aug-\nustdorf firemen leaped from\ntheir beds to answer an alarm.\nIt was their practise house and\nbefore they could set up all\ntheir elaborate equipment, the\nhouse had burned .to the\nground.\nPolice blamed teen-agers for\nsetting the fire and spoiling\nthe firemen's fun.\n.    MmilimillllHIllMIIIIIMIMIMIIIIIIIi\nHoward Green To\nReturn Home\nEruption Feared Over Slaying of\nTurk Policeman in Worst Riot So Far\nNICOSIA, Cyprus (Reuters).\u2014 British troops strung\nbarbed wire between the Turkish and Greek sections of\nNicosia Sunday, as the slaying of a Turkish-Cypriot policeman threatened a new racial explosion following savage\nGreek-Turkish rioting Saturday night.\nThe policeman died of wounds caused by a terrorist\nbomb hurled as he was standing guard at a courthouse in\nPaphos. His death followed the slaying of another Turkish-\nCypriot auxiliary policeman and a Greek-Cypriot in a\nviolent ri'ot Saturday night at the village of Afania, outside\nNicosia.\nTurkish and Greek Cypriots battled in the moonlight\nwith fists, knives and sticks as buildings and haystacks\nI\"\nItaly, since the end of the Second\nWorld War. The sunshine was expected to increase the turnout of\nlukewarm, middle - of - the - road\nvoters backing the moderate parties.\nThe voting for more than 7000\nmunicipal government coun-\ncils and 78 provincial councils is\nthe first country-wide polling in\nItaly since the 1953 general elec-. , . .     ,\ntions, 1    OTTAWA    (CP)  \u2014 How ard j wounded  and  20  were detained\n; Green, 60-year-old veteran parlia-1 for questioning by authorities.\nwere set afire at frtama..\nIt was the worst clash so far\nbetween the Turkish and Greek\nCypriots, at odds over agitation\nto unite this British Mediterranean colony with Greece. Turkish\nCypriots oppose the union-with-\nGreece movement.\nThe Turkish-Cypriot slain at\nj Afania was attacked by Greek-\n' Cypriot villagers as he drove into\ni the town on a motorcycle, a Tur-\n\u25a0 kish announcement said. The\nI Greek-Cypriot was killed by shots\nI fired by security forces sent to\n! quell the riot. Nine persons were\ni mentarian who fainted during the\n; dinner hour Friday night, rested\nVANCOUVER (CP)-The first\nhelicopter-to-hospital emergency\nrescue service was carried out\nhere Sunday following an alpine\naccident on the towering peak of\nMount Seymour, about 25 miles\nnorth of here.\nThe girl, whose name has not\nbeen released by hospital authorities, fell mprje'than 100 feet down\na ste,ep 'slope and then dropped I\n\"into a fissure 15 feet deep.-'-\u2022'\u25a0-'\u2014;\u2014r\nBob McLelland, chairman of the\nMt: Seymour section of Vancouver's mountain emergency  squad, i\nsaid the girl was climbing at the\n4,500-food level of the peak wheni\nshe fell.\nMembers of the climbing party!         \t\nmade several rescue attempts, but: VICTORIA (CP)-An expectant\nthe extent of the girl's injuries: \"\">\u00bb\u00ab\u2022 Iivin.8 \u00b0\u00bb welfare 5P\u2122t the\nand the difficult terrain foiled! weekend cleaning up the debris\n,. left by hooligans who wrecked her\nMcLelland said he was reached I Mr-room cabin home in suburban\nSaanich.\nMrs. Pat Cooper\nand   looked   forward   to\n! home.\nA hospital spokesman said Mr.\nIt is also the first major electoral test for a European Commu\nnlst party since the Kremlin's de -,       ,        ,    . ., , \u201e ,     ,\nnunciation of Stalin last February  c\u00b0m \u00b0rtablyJ \"* h\u00b0S(M *\nforced Communist, into embarras-!and   looked   Iorward   to   gomg\nsing policy turnabouts.\nThe Italian Communists, largest, \u201e\nCommunist party in western IGreen ls **mte a11 nght'\nEurope, were expected to lose| Tne Progressive Conservative\nvotes, particularly in the industri-1 member for Vancouver (Quadra)\nalized north of Italy, where better I fainted in the parliamentary reliving standards and Communist I staurant while having supper with\npolicy shifts have caused hundreds j h's wi\u00a3e. A- J- Brooks (PC \u2014\nof thousands of workers to give up 1 Roys\" and Mr. Brooks' son, Dr.\nCommunist: allegiance.\nEIGHT STORES BURNED\nEach side blamed the other for\nstarting the fighting. Eight Greek\nstores were set afire by angry\nTurkish-Cypriots in Nicosia Sunday and British authorities here\nclamped a curfew on the Turkish\nquarter of the city for the first\ntime during the evening.\nBarbed wire went up between\nthe Turkish and Greek quarters\nhere, and British troops stood on\nguard at Paphos, Afania and other\ncentres. More Turkish outbreaks\nj were feared following the death\nof the policeman.\nBritish troops, meanwhile,\nmoved Into the Greek central\nsector of Nloosla and evicted\nmore tnan 100 persons from\nstores, oiricon and homes as\npunishment for failure to give\nI Information on bomb-throwing\nIn the area last Monday which\nfatally wounded a British soldier.\nThirty-four stores, 17 houses and\na big office building had their\nentrances sealed as the occupants\nwere turned out for the next\nthree months.\nHarding Making Little Headway\nrup governor last October, hag\nnever publicly said how long he\nthought his pacification job would\n| Finds Cabin\nHome in Ruins\nat his home Sunday afternoon and\ncalled the RCAF rescue unit at\nthe Sea Island base.\nA twin-rotor Piasecki helicopter\nwas called into action by the air\nforce. The 'copter was piloted by\nFO Don Park and carried a medical officer.\nThe closest the helicopter could\nbe landed was on the 6,000-foot\npeak, about Vi mile from the injured girl.\nThe Mount Seymour ski patrol j do to deserve this'\/\"\nand members of the Alpine Club', The kitchen floor was covered\nunder direction of the air force with, broken glass, beans, flour,\nmedical officer, lifted the girl I crackers, rice and other food,\nfrom the fissure and strapped her i \"There's my. food for the\nin a first aid toboggan before j month,\" said. Mrs. Cooper.. \"All\ncarrying her to the rescue craft,    over the floor.\"\nTen minutes after the girl was! ..A small puppy .owned by the\nloaded aboard the helicopter the woman was bloated with dog food\nbig machine sat down on the lawn'scattered  by   the   intruders.  She\nho has been\niiving alone while her husband has\nbeen away for a month, came\nhome Friday night to find windows\nbroken, a stove overturned, dishes\nbroken on the floor, radios and\nfurniture smashed and food scattered.\nThe distraught woman could\nonly wonder \"What kind of psychopath did this? What did I ever\nKenneth M. Brooks.\n, HOT- HEARTj ATTAOKt.-I,-.^-\u00ab\u201eI\nDr. Brooks Immediately attended Mr. Green and then Progressive Conservative leader\nDrew ordered his own physician,\nDr. H. T. C. Whitley, into the\ncase. Dr. Whitley advised Mr.\nGreen to enter hospital for the\nweekend to ensure a complete J\nrest.\nParliamentary colleagues of Mi*.\nGreen said the Vancouver member |\ndid not suffer a heart attack. He |\nsimply fainted, apparently as a,\nresult of the high tension that [\ndeveloped earlier in the Commons i\nin the rugged debate on the gov- J\nernment's controversial pipeline |\nlegislation.\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 British\nGovernor Sir John Harding now\nmay be well behind schedule ln\nhis campaign to pacify rebellious\nCyprus where the situation has\n.gone teora bad to worse to recent weeks..\nThis is the opinion of authoritative sources  here  eight months\nafter the tough army field mar-j\nshal took, over as governor and I\nprepared to crush anti-British ter- j\nrorism by a strong-arm campaign. |\nHarding Is still convinced he\ncan crush the violence by which\nGreek -  Cypriots ara pressing\ntheir   demands for  an  end  to 1\nBritish rule and for union with\nGreece, but he will present a\n'   sombre picture of the  Cyprus\nsituation when he reports back I\nto  London   next  month, these i\nsources (ay.\nThe situation in Cyprus has inj\nfact deteriorated for the British\nin recent weeks despite acceleration of Harding's \"get tough\"\ncampaign three months ago following the exile of Archbishop!\nMakarios.\nIn addition, the possibility of\nserious strife between Greek and\ntake, but it was widely reported\nearlier this year that he calculated it would take him 18 months.\nBy that reckoning, Harding\nnow would be well behind sche-\ndule, the sources say.\nLANGLEY MAN\nDIES IN CRASH\nSMITHERS, B.C. (CP) \u2014 One\nman was killed and three others\nwere injured early Sunday when\nthe car in which they were riding\nsmashed into a telephone pole on I Turkish  Cypriots now faces the\nthe Northern Trans - Provincial! island's British rulers.\nin front of Shaughnessy military\nhospital, about 25 miles from the\nmountain peak.\na \u00a31000 reward by disclosing his\nidentity.\nHe was arrested at Dartford,\nKent, for selling postcards without a licence and was allowed to\nwear his mask in court when he\nwas fined two shillings.\nMore than 200 women offered\nto marry him during six years of\ntrekking around the world.\nHe walked 30,000 miles, passing\nthrough New York, Montreal,\nSydney, Australia and many other\ncities.\nThen with only 7000 mies to go,\nthe First World War broke out.\nThe wager was called off, and\nBensley returned home to a ,.\u00a3'4000\nconsolation 'prize and to join the\narmy.\nHe gave the prize to charity\u2014\nand in the years of obscurity that\nfollowed, s lost his lucrative private income. -\nFires Sear Beauty\nSpots in Britain\nLONDON (CP) \u2014 Hundreds of\nfiremen and servicemen battled\nforest fires in seven parched\nBritish counties Sunday night.\nHigh winds sweeping across\nwooded lands .that haven't had a\ngood rain for 'more ;than three\nweeks, made it difficult to keep\nthe fires in check.\nThousands of young trees perished in moving walls of flame\nthat seared through some of Britain's celebrated scenic areas.\nThe town of Wareham, on the\npicturesque south Dorset coast,\nwas ringed at one time by flames\nthat shot 50 feet in the air, but\nthis fire was reported under control late Sunday night.\nEighty acres of woods were destroyed at Backbury hills, a Herefordshire beauty spot where the\nfire could be seen for 20 miles.\nFlames licked at the forestry\ncommission's reserve near the picture postcard country around\nCannock Chase in Staffordshire!\nFiremen from three counties\nfought.a spreading fire in Glamorgan county in South Wales,\nwhile firemen from four villages\nstruggled to keep fires near Upton in Hampshire from destroying\n50 thatched roof cottages,\nsaid    they   also   beat   the   pup's\nmother.\nThe overturned stove convinced\nMrs. Cooper that adults were responsible for the wreck. \"No child\ncould  topple that stove over. It\nHighway seven miles east of here.\nDead is Donald Harvey Milne,\n24, of Langley, B.C. Police said he\ndied, instantly when he was\nthrown from the car.\nThe careening car sheared off\nthe pole and then travelled another 200 feet before rolling over.\nthe injured men, in hospital\nhere, axe Kenneth George Kristoff,\n26, of Cloverdale; Joseph Kozer,\nmust have been a man bent on I 25, of Whalley, and Fred Mayniak,\ndestruction.\" 126. also of Whalley.\nExample of Economy\nAsked of Royal Family\n1 LONDON (CP). \u2014 A British\nmagazine\/has .sharply criticized\nthe Eqyaf family for lack of social\nresponsibility.    '*,';\nLeft-wing New .Stateman and\nNation, in an article rhainly devoted to what it calls the \"upper-\nclass spending spree,\" says ' the\nRoyal family should help to avert\nsuch excesses by setting a better\nexample themselves.\nIf not, says the magazine, \"there\nwill have to be some big changes\nat Buckingham Palace when Labor returns: to power.\"\nThe unsigned article starts with\na detailed description of the recent\ncoming-out party ' aj 'CUridgels\nhotel given by, Mrs. Arpad Plesch,\nwife of a Hungarian-born banker,\nfor her daughter, Countless Bunny\nEsterhazy, and for her husband's\ngranddaughter, Flockie .Harcourt-\nSmith.:; ; i l: ftv;.'(\", > .\nI Quoting.newspaper reports that\ntheparty cost batween \u00a35000 and\n\u00a310,000,. the- New Statesman ar\ngues that the splurge is symptom\natic of an! unparalleled binge by\nthe upper classes at a time when\nthe. conservative government is\nappealing to organized labor to go\neasy on wage and salary claims.\nAbout the only thing that can be\ndone is to'have the topmost level\nof Britain's Social pyrarnid, namely the Royal Family adapt the\npattern of their social life a little\nmore closely to the needs of mid\n20th century Britain.\"\nThe British people were reconciled, by now, to a monarchy\n''whose mental horizon is bounded\nby Newmarket and Drury Lane;\nthey no longer expect any positive\ncontribution to the welfare of the\ncommunity; but have they not the\nright demand -. . .the purely negative, virtue of social responsibi-\nUty7,,: \"\n' \"Newmarket is the headquarters\nof British racing. Drury Lane\nTheatre is in the'heart of London's\nthearreIan6V:''ahd nowadays the\nhome of light musical comedy.\nHarding, who took over as Cyp-\nxVaisJv\ndCevtLL\n\u2022\n1956    1955\n1948\nNelson Sat.\n....    14.45     5.52\n11.35\nNelson Sun\n..    15.00     5.68\n12.20\nTrail   \t\n36.05   29.92\n31.91\nWardner   .\n..   11.42     5.04\n12.94\nHope   \t\n...   27.75   21.12\n31.68\nPr. George\n....   25.44   21.94\n32.75\nFRECKLES AND MARBLES\nare this youngster's stock In\ntrade. He Is Gordon Jones, 12,\nand he Is shown displaying his\nfavorite \"shooter\" which won\nhim the Oregon marbles title In\nPortland, Ore, Gordon won over\n283 other marksmen and will vie\nfor the national title at Talla-\nhasee, Fla., June 23, \"I'll win,\ntoo, If my shooter stays hot,\"\nGordon says.\n\u2014AP Wlrephoto\nAnd in This Corner...\nNEW YORK (AP) \u2014 Joan Lynn, 26, was Indignant Friday when\npolice appeared on the scene to snatch her from a third-floor ledge\non whloh the was lying.'\nMi\u00bbi Lynn said she had no Intention of Jumping, that she Just\nliked to lie on the ledge and watch the traffic below.\nThe police left.\nPASADENA, Calif. (AP) \u2014 David Cantor, 24, an engineering\nstudent? at California Institute of Technology, reported to police\nhis small sports car had disappeared.\nThe little car showed up Friday \u2014 in the basement of the\nasembly hall. It had been disassembled, hauled into the building and\nreassemblepl.\nDENVER (AP) \u2014 When a girl buys a new bathing suit she\ngenerally thinks about what It will do for her bosom line.\nWhat she really should think about Is what It does for her\nposterior.'\nThis comes from Dorothy Stow, fashion consultant for a swim\nsuit flrjn, who says manufacturers are concerned because American\ngirls are getting hlppler. A 37-Inch hip size Is getting all to common,\nshe Insisted.\n\"The biggest problem confronting women today Is not diet, but\nexercise,\" she said.\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 An electronic brain, answered \"nuts\" to\nindustrialists and scientists when they asked which day Feb. 29 fell\nlast year.\nThat is the way the brain, called DEUCE, has been geared to\nanswer stupid questions.\nIndustrialists and scientists tested DEUCE at work at the annual\nopen dav of the National Physical Laboratory at Teddington near\nhere.\nIt worked out the lowest common factor of two given numbers\nin a little over one-500th of a second. Later it named the day on\nwhich given dates fell.\nDEUCE (Digital Electronic Universal Computing Engine) said,\nfor instance that Jan. 1 in the year 1 A.D. was a Saturday. No one\npresent knew whether that was right or wrong, so they had to take\nDEUCE's word for it.\n \u25a0\u25a0>W\u00ab-,Ur.\"U   ..,~U,\n^-^\u2014\n\t\n !\t\n1 ; -   ,\n*\"*w-W\"swr^T*~~\n2\u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, MAY 28, 1956\nAT LAST! The story ot that town called Pompey's Head and its\n\"very respectable\" people!\n20th Cenlury-Fox presents\nThe View\n .From.\n\"Pompeys Head\n\u25a0 \u25a0 COLOU kr DE LU\u00ab\nCinemaScoPc\nhs Ik* wondll of  IHKOmOHH\" \u2022.QUlrD '\nRICHARD DANA CAMERON\nEGAN \u2022 WYNTER \u2022 MITCHELL\nCIVIC\nA FAMOUS\nPLAYERS\nTHEATRE\nProcter Mops Up\nAfter Flash Flood\nA flash flood at Procter, 20 miles\nfrom Nelson, raised havoc'Saturday night,, inundated homes, isolated residents and held up a CPR\ntrain for three hours. The flood\nWas caused by a plugged culvert\non.'Procter Creek but was cleaned\nup by Sunday morning. This was\nthe principal new development on\nthe Kootenay flood scene over the\nWeekend.\nAt 8:40 Saturday night a roar j\nbanks and forked down the main\nstreet of the village.\nMinutes before the community\nhall had been filled for the weekly\nfilm showing but a breakdown in\nthe projector cancelled the showing and the crowd came out just\nbefore the hall location became\nan island-\nHero of the hour was John\nDvorak, roadmaster, who sent a\ndynamite blast at the entrance to\n'Jaycees Painting\nChamber Building\nAbout 15 Nelson Junior Chamber of Commerce members began\na paint job of the Chamber of\nCommerce building on Front street\nSunday as a final gesture of their\nPaint-up Clean-up campaign in\nNelson a week ago.\nThe second coat of paint, donated by a paint company, will be\napplied Wednesday under- Jaycee\nchairman, Irwin G. Black.\nSTARLIGHT\nDRIVE-IN\nTonight, TueBday and Wednesday\nTime 8:40.\nLast Complete Show 9:16 p.m.\nTho KILLIHGLY funny story\nof a guy who tried to\ngrab a hot fortune, but\ncaught a wild widow\nand seven merry\nmurdorers instead I\nAUTO-VUE\nTRAIL, B.C.\nTrallFrultvale  Highway\nTonight  and   Tuesday\nTime 8:50 p.m.\n\"BLACK   WIDOW\"\n(Cinemascope)\nGinger Rogers, Van Heflln\nSHORTS\nELK Drive-ln\nCASTLEGAR, B.C.\nTonight, Tuesday and Wednesday\nShow Time 0:00 p.m.\n(RUSSIAN PICTURE)\n\"TARAS SCHEVCHENKO\"\nCASTLE THEATRE\nCastlegar, B.C.\nTonight and Tuesday\nShows at 7 and 9 p.m.\n\"Kin of Fire\"\n(Technicolor)\nJack Paiance, Barbara Rush\nB ALLIED ARTISTS presents\nDAVID NIVEN\nI  YVONNE DE CARLO\nI BARRY FITZGERALD\nQuints 22 Today\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 The -four\nDionne quintuplets, 22 today, plan\na quiet get-together \"somewhere\nout of town\" to mark the occasion.\nOne report said that the three\nliving in Montreal will go to Nic-\nolet, Que., where Annette is studying music.\nL, M. Edwards, Montreal businessman who has acted in the past\nas spokesman and advisor for the\ngirls, said Sunday night they aren't\nplanning anything special other\nthan getting out of town to b\u00a3\ntogether. They said earlier they\nplanned no party.\nDean lo Toronto\nFor Meeting\nDean T. L. Leadbeater of St.\nSaviour's Pro-Cathedral in Nelson\nleft Sunday night for Toronto to\nattend the Dominion Conference\nof the Anglican Church of Canada.\nThe conference which will discuss religious education as its main\ntopic, will be held between June 1\nand June 9 at {he Toronto Diocesan Church camp-site at Aurora.\nThis first dominion-wide confer\nence of the board of religious edu^\ncation is the first to be held in\nCanada and is being directed by\nRev. Dr. Harding-Priest, general\nsecretary of the board in Canada.\nRev. L. A. C. Smith of Vancouver\nis the other delegate from British\nColumbia.\nDean Leadbeater Is representing\nthe Kootenay diocese at the conference and also will be representative for the Provincial Synod.\nThree More\nBreakins Here\n800 Enjoy First\nCrawford Bay Day\ni the culvert which had jammed,\nthat could be heard half a mile j When it failed to go off he crawl-\naway preceded the damming of j ed Into the culvert to set another\nthe creek near the residence of j charge and crawled safely out\nB. D. Buerge who was forced to ; again. The second charge freed\nevacuate. The river jumped its j the passage and the creek continu-\n  ~ I ed on its rush to the lake, carrying\nCRAWFORD BAY -, The first  R.\nannual Crawford Bay Day was a1\nhuge success as about\nMaida, L. Stewart, G. Etman\nE. Kootenay CCF\nBacks Coldwell\nOn Pipeline Issue\nPresbyterian Church\nPremises Condemned\nThe Presbytery of Kootenay of in Bogustown, now called the\nthe Presbyterian Church in Can- Fairview district of Nelson, under\nada met in Nelson Friday to cun-' the ministry of Rev. J. A. Mac\nsider what action should be taken' ,\nbecause of a condemnation order\nDonald.  This  was  in   1891.   The\nchurch has seen most oi the sig-\nissued by the fire marshal on the   nificant developmenls in Nelson,\nhall      of      First      Presbyterian  and  many   prominent   historical\nChurch here. | cj|jzen6  have  worshipped  within\nThe   Presbytery   received   the   its   walls.  The  building suffered\nplans proposed by  the congrega , {jre damage at one time, but was\ntion and recommended further ac-   successfully    repaired    and    has\ntion at the local level before ask-  served to the present.\ning assistance  from  the General I    \u00abjt ls difiicult. no doubt, to see\nAssembly of the Church. i historic landmarks disappear, but\n\u25a0    The fire  marshal's order  rests  the trust is that a worthy succes-\n1 upon   the   church   hall   and   the  sor to the present building will be\n; steeple   of   the   church   both   of  raised,\" Mr. Allan stated.\nEast Kootenay   which must be  replaced or  des-i .\nI \u2014*    \u201e\u201e*\u201e*.\u201e\u2014.,   at   its   annual   troyed  \"but  it  is  also  apparent \"pi tee t\nsur-; meeting here endorsed in a res-   that the life of the church itself  | ||\u00a3     \u00a5\u00a5631(1(21\"\nCRANBROOK -\nCCF   association\nurcjayi under\u2014M. Wastrodowski, S. Wir-\nSpo'nsored by the Crawford! siS. V' Downing; boys 13 and un-\nBay Parent-Teachers Association! der\u2014L. Syfchuck, L, Johnson, H.\nthe sports day was opened Sat-j Christianson; girls 15 and under\u2014\nurday morning by W. R. Bayllss K. Maida, N. Isnor, M. Wastrod-\nwho welcomed everyone to the owski; boys 15 and under\u2014B. Bur-\ncelebration, especially district' gess, R. Wastrodowski, L. Willis;\noldtimers.\nRiondel    and\nwith it kiddy cars, kegs of nails\nand boxes.\nThe Buerge house was\nrounded by water and chicken | olulion the stand of national is coming to an end in the fore-'\nhouse was turned around but a ! leader M. J. Coldwell in parlia- seeable future.\" it was stated. '\u2022\nhen sitting on the eggs ,did not j ment that Trans-Canada Pipeline, The congregation, under its pre-\nmove. The water also did consid-1 should be under public ownership! sent minister, Rev. J. N. Allan,}\nerable damage to artist Alex Gar-' and are forwarding their resolu-1 is mustering forces to implement\nbeautiful    grounds.    CPR   tion to him by wire.    ' j reconstruction of the hall. There\nMuch discussion centred a,bout are no plans, however, to replace\nnomination of a candidate for the 'he tower or church proper. David\nfor the Fairbank has been engaged as\npreliminary\ntion was taken. Tom Anderson of drawings have been accepted by\nKimberley was elected East Koo- both congregation and Presbytry.\ntenay Association chairman, and\nDavid   Bjerstedt   of   Cranbrook,\n'ski; girls, 11 and under\u2014M. Linn.i,     , .,     ,   ,      ,    ,\nfrom' tracks were flooded and also the i\nCrawford   Bay and  the district!D' Sowalsky. a  Warchuk;  boy...Procter, hotel grounds.      , I\ntook   part   in   games,   sporting'11   and   \"nder-L.   Johnston,   C.I    The  flash  flood   which   lasted'\neven, and a monster dance Sa,i Hedge, G. Hallstrom; girls^and about an hour, held up the east-   \u2122 ^    \u00abZ but no ac-  architect    \u201e\u201ed    his\nNELSON        Sun. 46\nSat. 43\nToronto     45\nRegina   _  52\nVictoria     48\n.03\n.43\nbound train for three hours.\nA crew of pien and trucks]\nworked feverishly on the Cres-I\nton dikes Sunday as the Koote- ;\nnay  River continued to rise to]\n23.86 feet. Most of the dikes can   secretary. Special speaker at the\nCrawford    Bay\nScouts, Guides, Cubs and Brownies\nstood in a semi-circle around the\nflag pole as the flag was raised\nearly Saturday morning.\nGaily decorated bicycles paraded\nbefore judges B. W. Fraser and B.\nMcLaughlin of Crawford Bay, C.\nFeenie of Gray Creek and Mrs.\nCaldicott of Riondel with first\nprize going to Bobbie Howell;\nsecond. Lynn Stewart and third.\nHans Linkowski.\nChildren's races occupied most\nof the morning under the charge\nof George Peterson. All participants in the races received ice\ncream cones and a nickel.\nThe afternoon program of the\nsports day, held on the property of\nW. R. Davidson, featured a square\ndancing exhibition by two Riondel\ngroups and one from Crawford\nBay. Adult sports events were also\ncarried out during the afternoon.\nIn two softball encounters Crawford  Bay  men' were  the  victors\ngirls, 18 and under-\u2014N. Isnor, M. j\nWastrodowski, K. Maida; boys,!\n18 and under\u2014D. Fraser> A. Mc-!\nLure.L. Willis and D. Wills. I\nMen's open \u2014 1, T. Johnson; 2,\nR, Harrison; 3, D. McLaughlin; j\nwomen's open \u2014 1, K. Maida; 2,f\nN. Isnor; 3, D. Harrison; three legged boys race 14 and under \u2014 1,\nL, and T. Johnson; 2, H. Christianson and H. Downing; 3, R. Ka-\ndoski and G. Hallstrom; three legged race girls 14 and under 1, V.\nDowning and K. Maida; 2, L. Butler and D. Street; 3, P. Johnson\nand M. Halliday; 2, L. Willis and\nL. Derbyshire; 3, C. Maida and R.i\nMaida; wheelbarrow race under\n18 years - 1, D. Wills and G. Hall-1\nstrom; 2, K. and R. Maida; 3,   L. |\nhold the water no higher than\n25 feet.\nmeeting, which followed a luncheon at the Cranbrook Hotel, was\nRiondel  ladies downed  Crawford\nBay.   '\nDANCE AT NIGHT\nThe celebration ended Saturday\nnight with a dance in the Crawford\nBay hall, with W. LaPlante acting\nas master of ceremonies. Music for\nthe dance, attended by about 300.\nwas supplied by M. Mattocks' orchestra, the Hits and the Misses.\nContest winners at the dance included L. Nyberg and ,T. McGregor,\nThree    business    places    were j Mrs. R. McGregor and V. Humble.\nbroken into in downtown Nelson a.  Denkell, R. Wirsig  and Mrs.\nover the weekend, to continue aiBothamley.\nlong aeries of breakings and en- j    Committee   members   for   the\ntries investigated .by  city  police ' event  inc]uded   K,   Wirsig,  Gray\nDerbyshire   and   L.  Willis    sock,     >\u2022,-,, , . ,\nin   \u00ab.ij .on   ceding Sunday from roads which\nrace open \u2014 1,  C.   Maida;   2,  R.1    .,\u201e   .__,\/\u201e   _,__..   .... .\nHarrison; 3. L. Willis; slow bicycle \u2014 1, Paul Danielson; 2, R.\nMcKinnon; 3, G. Gardiner; spoon\nand potata race \u2014 Mr. and Mrs.  ..       .  ir \u201e   ,\nS. McGregor; nail hammering -. ^J^*\u2122! \"\" t\u2122**1 \" \"\u00b0'\nJ. Derbyshire; rolling pin throw\nover the Riondel men while the! ~ R McLaughin; log sawing contest \u2014 L. Reddell; J, E. Jngham;\nrope climbing under 18 years \u2014\nS. Foster; open rope climbing \u2014,\nT. Johnson; boys 12 years tug-o-1 ^Zt'.,\u2122?!!! I\u2122!?.1''***\nwar \u2014   Crawford Bay;   boys   18\nyears tug-o-war \u2014 Crawford Bay;\nmen's tug-o-war \u2014 Crawford Bay.\nExtra work on the dikes wai; Leo Nimsick, member of the leg-\ncaused by the rampaging Goat | islature for Cranbrook - Kimber-\nRiver which is backing up because | ley. Annual picnic of the assocla-\nof the high level of the lake, and I tion was set for August 12, at\nMcoding the Kettle Valley road ! Peckham'S Lake. Mr. Nimsick was\nnear Creston. The crew worked I named chairman for arrange-\nwith draglines and trucks of gravel j ments.\nto   bring   the   dikes   up   to   their | -\nnormal level after they dropped\nbecause of frost.\nNOT CRITICAL\nWater was about three feet below the level of the dikes Sunday\nnight and the floods have not yet\nreached the critical stage.\nThe slightly cooler weather hat-\nslowed the runoff in the East\nKootenay around Cranbrook\nwhere stream levels were rt led\ncomfortably down and wa1      re-\nFund raising efforts are to be\nImplemented shortly, ai the J!\ndeadline date for replacement\nis December 31. An objective of\n$25,000 has been set.\nThe present church building\nvvas completed three years after\nthe congregation was established\nj Work Boots\nand\nOxfords\nwere  18 inches deep during  the\npast weeks.\nThe highway truck tow service\naround   Yahk   has   been   discon-\nyet considered over. Snow on the\nwestern face of the mountains is\nmeagre but heavy snow is still apparent, on. eastern and northern\nfaces which must come down be-\n8P0T SNOWMAN'S PRINT8\ni Creek.  R.   Harrison,   Riondel,   C.\nduring the past two months,\nMae's Snack Bar, 717 Vernon\nStreet, was entered probably early\nSunday morning, but it is believed\nnothing was stolen. An attempt\nto break into the juke box was\nmade.\nLate Friday night or early Saturday, the Fred W. Carmichael\npaint shop at 407 Hall Street, and\nthe Stevenson's Machine Shop\nLtd., 708 Vernon Street, were\nbroken into. Some silver was\ntaken from a cash drawer in the\nCarmichael shop and at Stevenson's a hole was cut in the bottom\nof the safe and the cement knocked loose. When this failed to give , ,\nthe would-be thieves access to the . Andrucciaci girls, seven and un\nYmir Accident\nHospitalizes 3\nThree men were hospitalized\nFriday night after the car in\nwhich  they were riding left the\nFernie, CrawforrBay7w!7*3ster: road near Ymir while en route to\nand T. Johnston of Crawford Bay.J NeLson*\nPerhaps the most exciting\nsporting event of the day waij\nthe victory of 11-year-old Tom!\nJohnson In the rope climbing\ncompetition under 14 years.\nToml climbed the 25-foot rope,\nIn 10 seconds, *.\nOther results in the games are,\nin order of first, second and third:, majned in hospital over the'week-\nThree Cars\nin Pileup\nApproximately $1000 in damage\nwas caused in a three-car pileup\non Anderson. Street just after midnight Saturday.\nTwo of the cars were parked on\nthe South side of the 200 block.\nThe third, a panel truck allegedly\ndriven by Norman Herbert Wesley, 1107 Fourth Street, was proceeding toward Nelson Avenue intersection. Mr. Wesley and his\npassenger, William Bonderud,\nNorth Shore, received facial cuts\nand the latter was treated at\nKootenay Lake General Hospital,\nthen released.\nThe truck struck the rear of a\nparked car owned by Const. K. H.\nWickens, RCMP. The Wickens car\nshot forward about 20 feet,, city\npolice said, and rammed the rear\nof a parked car owned by Const\nA. J. Cruthers, RCMP, receiving\nextensive damage to both front\nand rear ends. The truck's front\nend was almost \"totally wrecked\"\nbut damage to the Cruthers' car\n19 Welfare\nAgencies\nBenefit When You\nGive to Your\nCOMMUNITY\nCHEST\nFor Men Who Look.\nAfter Their Feet.\nWell Known Makes Such as\nLECKIE,  PARIS\nand GRE8\nWith Leather or\nComposition Soles.\n' We stond behind every\npair sold, and the prices\nare right.\n(Mireys'.\nPHONE^ij*fc70\"\u00bbl pOX\nNormal stream peak in East\nKootenay occurs toward the end\nof the first week in June. Logging\ncamps at 5000 feet altitude are still\nclosed to allow for final snow melt\nand drying of roads.\nThe Nelson flood picture was\nvery quiet as both Cottonwood\nand Anderson Creeks have subsided and further flooding is not\nexpected. However, Kootenay\nLake Is still rising and reached was minor\n15 feet Sunday. j\nNelson city wharf and side-rails JUVENILE TO\n;ire now under water and the roadway leading to the wharf is well\nunder.\nTlie owner of the  1950 model     Results of snow surveys for May\nB.  Thorshaug   of  Nelson,   driver   ! 5 indicate that the snow pack in\nq'arl   Sundki   of   Passmore   and 'ne province  is melting satisfac-\npassenger    Harry    Planden     of   -,rilv- The water content of the\nfelewett were   taken to Kootenay   now at the courses samoles has\nLake General Hospital in Nelson decreased 15 per cent on the aver-\nwith   minor   injuries.   Thorshaug a^e'\nand   Sundin   were   released   the\nsame   night   while   Planden\nThree to 5 year olds\u2014foot races\n:-rC \u2022 Petrusscuiv S. Humble, G-.\nHarrison;; boys'seven and under\n\u2014D. Bothamley. S. Draper, 3, J.\nsafe's contents, they wheeled the\nsafe into the shop and attacked it\nder\u2014F.   Kbdowski,   C.   Ditmars,\nK. Dortrnari; girls nine and under\nDARJEELING, India  (Reuters) j with an acetylene torch, breakin\u201e\n\u2014Australian climber Peter Burne! the guage on the tank. The safe j SdlmO Iflfoilt P<lSSeS\nSunday reported finding tracks j was ruined, but the thieves got\nbelieved to be 8f a Yeti \u2014 the nothing for their plans and\nwouldn't have had they succeeded\nin opening it, for all it contained\nwas records, Mr. Stevenson said\n\"abominable snowman\"\u2014at 18,000\nfeet on the Sikkim-Nepal border.\nByrne said \"The footprints in the\nsnow were 10 inches long and iVi\ninches wide and appeared to be I CR088E8 BORDER IN 80FA\nmade   by  a   two-legged   creature'    HOF, Germany  (AP)  \u2014 A 35\nwalking upright.\"\nDOG DAYS!\nGive your pet a lift.\nVitapet Powder\nPalatable $1.00\nNutritious\nVitamins and Minerals\nFor Dogs and Cats\nNelson\nPhormocy\n\"Your Fortress of Health\"\n433 Josephine St.\nPhone 1203 Nights 394-L\nDwayhe Axel Grant, infant son\nof Mr; and Mrs. John R. Grant of\nSalmo, died Saturday evening in\nKootenay Lake General Hospital\nat the age of six months. Besides\nhis parents, he is survived by one\nbrother, Roy John at home, and his\n, , \u201e     ,        ,      maternal   grandparents,   Mr.  and\nyear-old Czech worker spirited his  .\u00bb       .    ,    . .\u25a0 .   ,r   .\nI    .,        ,   .... v  '    ,        Mrs. Axel   Augustine   of   Kaslo.\nwife and children across the bor-  c.         ,                     ,..  .     ,. ,.  .\n,     ..,.,.\u201e           \"     ,     .    Funeral services will be held in\nI der into West Germany Sunday in ! kelson\nI a  folding  sofa.:  Andrej   Dpnoval '_\t\nplaced'his 34-year-old wife and two I\nchildren, 10 and 4, in the folded-up' POLICE PROMOTIONS\nI part of the sofa, lugged it to an!    VANCOUVER   (CP)   \u2014  Seven\nunwatched   border  point  on  the j constables and a patrol sergeant\nend. He is reported in good condition.\nRCMP at Salmo are still investigating the cause of the accident which occurred at 8:30\nFriday night.\nsidecar   of   his\ncrossed over.\nmotorcycle,   and\nWINS   ALLIGATOR\nGRASBY, England (CP)\u2014Winner of a church competition in this\nLincolnshire parish was Lord\nTennyson, grandson of the poet\nHis prize was an alligator.\nFor Service...\nCALL\nKootenay Plumbing & Heating\n351  Baker St.\nCO., LTD.\nNelson, B.C.\nPhone 666\nA   Complete   Plumbing   and   Heating   Service\nwere made detectives Saturday\nand a constable was named patrol\nsergeant in the city police force's\nfirst promotion since the Tupper.\nRoyal Commission. Police Chief\nGeorge Archer said the moves\nbrings the force up to the added\nstrength approved recently by the\ncity police commission.\nf;\nRIENDLY\nAMILY\nINANCE\nPersonal Loans\nFor  Bills,  Fuel.  Repair*, Ca\u00bbi,\nor any flood  reason.\nMOUNTAIN\nFINANCE CO. Lfd.\nSuite IVt   Mpdical  \u00bbrt\u00ab Bldg.\nPHONE   1786\nmimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiMiiiiiiimiiiiii\nTHTTsT\nCall us anytime for local\nor long-distance moving.\nWe quickly and carefully pack and Cover all\nyour furnishings. Our\nrafes are moderate.\nPHONE 889\nTOWLER\nFuel ond Transfer\nllllllllllllllllllltllllllllllllllllllllllllH\nBE CHARGED\nIt wasn't Friday the 13th yesterday but it must ha'Ve seemed like\nit for a 16-year-old Nelson juvenile,\nHe had an appointment to take\nhis driver's licence test so he\nborrowed a car and started down\nto the examination office in the\nIn the Kootenays the snow pack' court house. As he was about\n20 per cent above the mean. | to park and go in for his exam,\nhe apparently took his eyes from\nthe road for a moment, and bumped into a parked car.\nHe has been charged with driving without due care and attention and unaccompanied by an\nadult holder of a driver's licence.\nHe is holder of a learner's licence.\nindicating the water supply out\nlook is above average.\nSTRONG  LINES\nMost marine ropes are made of\nnanila and sisal because of their\nstrength and resistance to salt\nwater.\n\u00a3-BUY\n' COAL FOR\nNEXT WINTER\nSAVE as much as\n$2*60 per ton\nON YOUR NEXT WINTER'S HEATING\nBY BUYING YOUR COAL NOW\nAT LOW SUMMER PRICES.\nSAVE the inconvenience of largo fuel bills next Foil\nand Winter by buying your coal now and\npaying in easy monthly installments.\nBETTER COAL, Summer-mined coal is more selectively mined, more carefully prepared\nand treated.\nIT PAYS TO BUY YOUR COAL NOW!\nI\nthe weatherman helps deliver your\nfurnace oil\nEsso Furnace Oil Weather-Controlled Delivery\nAnticipates Extra Demand... Protects You From Shortage\nYou can rely on the sure delivery of clean-burning Esso Furnace Oil\nthanks to Weather-Controlled Delivery. This Is another service you get\nwith Esso Furnace Oil that helps to make your heating safe, clean,\ntrouble-free and convenient.\nGuarantee your reliable supply ond delivery of top-quality Esso Furnace Oil\nwith an Imperial Oil \"Evergreen Contract\", Phone or \\yriloi\nIMPERIAL OIL LIMITED. ^\nUSE THE CONVENIENT ESSO BUDGET PLAN\nTm ooiy monthly paymontt buy your hoi for tho yar.\nAustin W. Moore \u2014 Imperial Oil Agent\nPHONE 133\n45 GOVERNMENT ROAD\nNELSON\n PP\"       \u2022 \u25a0 \u2022 ' \u2014\"^\nPLANT THE BEST ... USE PROPER TOOLS\nDOWNSTAIRS GARDEN SUPPLIES\nSelling all this week while supplies last\nHybrid Tomato Plants:\n1.00\nThis Heavy Bearing Tomato Plant Is a Must\nFor All Good Gardeners,\nBeefsteak Tomato Plants:\nDoz\t\nBonnie Best Tomato Plants:\nFoot tall. Doz\t\nHead Lettuce Plants:\n55'\n89'\n1^ 55'\n39'\nEarly or Late Cabbage:      J      55*\nm\\ Doz. ** +*\nFruit Trees To Clear Vi PRICE\n50*\n35*\nEarly Cauliflower\nDoz\t\nDELPHINIUMS:\nRoots\t\nVIOLAS, PANSIES:\nRoot, bunch\t\nRH0DR0DENDR0NS: SAVE $2.00 Each\na.,   \u25a0 >   >'.-'\u2022'DfKtof'Clearance.\nHEDGES: 50 in Bundle.\nNow l\/j PRICE To Clear.\nHose Nozzles\nand Sprinklers\nLawn Mowers\nPower Mowers\nBIG SELECTION\nI    Lowest prices in town,\nDOWNSTAIRS STORE.\nReal eye-catchers are\nthese tops in a wide\nvariety of styles and\ncolors. Pick your pets . ..\nAssorteu plaids, crease-\nresistant BLOUSE by\nPenny Lou.\n$1.00 n $2.88\nEFS:\n8UITS\n$3.98\n8TRETCHIE BRIEFS\nLadies'.\nSale, Pair ..\nHALTERS; <\u00a3|    Aft\nPadded. Each ..!;,'\"*> I .17\nPenny Lou's BLOUSE. Assorted colors. <J* | ;,Q Q\nItalian styled  \u00abP I .OO\nGIRLS'   BATHING   8UITS\nElasticized.\nSize 7 to 14.\nBOYS'BATHING SUITS\nStretchie. Fits all nrA\nsizes. Each   O^''\nMEN'S  AND  BOYS-\nSUMMER  CAP8\n59* to 69*\nCANVAo   tof\nRUNNING  8H0ES\n89* to $1.00\nSee the kiddles' new stylish DENIMS , . . Priced low to save\nyou money. Rugged, long wearing, quality,\nSEE  SUMMER  TOYS IN OUR TOYLAND\nPLASTIC POOLS: Priced up from  $2.39\nSee Cute Childs' Nylon SUN BONNETS Only $1.00\nDISPOSABLE DIAPERS: Pkg    98\u00ab\nCrescent Valley Wins Shield\nAf South Slocan Track Meet\nSOUTH SLOCAN - South section of the Slocan School District\nconsisting of schools from South\nSlocan,   Crescent   Valley,   Slocan\nJ. V. Thomas, 69,\nKimberley, Dies\nKIMBERLEY - Retired from\nthe Sullivan mine because of 111\nhealth in 1948, James Vivian\nThomas died at Kimberley Hospital after a long illness. He was\nborn 69 years ago at St. Just,\nCornwall, England, where he\nlearned mining. He came to Canada in 1912 engaging in this work\nat various places until 1926 when\nhe settled in Cranbrook. Two\nyears later he resumed mining\nwork at Kimberley which he continued for 20 years.\nHe was a member of the IOOF\nLodge, and had served many years\nas warden for All Saints Angli\ncan parish. He is survived by his\nwife at their home here, a son,\nNorman at Lethbridge, and three\ndaughters, Mrs. Frank Goosney\nof Kimberley, Mrs. J. B. Donald\nof Riondel and Mrs. David Gold\nJr. of Tulselquah, and eleven\ngrand-children.\nKASLO FLOOD\nCONTROL PROVES\nSATISFACTORY\nKASLO \u2014 At City Council\nmeeting the clerk r4ported that\npower bylaw 445 had been forwarded to the inspector ol municipalities for his approval.\nLot 23, Block 2, Map 393, is to\nbe advertised for sale.\nA report by members of the\ncouncil on a meeting of association of Kootenay Municipalities in\nNelson was read. J. R. Corner of\nWorkmen's Compensation Board\nreported city shops in good condition with regard to safety.\nCommittee reports showed that\nwork at the water headworks was\ncompleted and satisfactory.\nKaslo Creek flood control pro\ngram has proved saticfactory so\nfar, also the power dam ia handling the spring run off very well,\nAn increase of pay is to be offered to city workmen. A list of city\nmen seeking employment on city\ncrews was compiled.\nThe Financial statement of ex-\npenditures for two (2) months\nread $10,391.38.\nPark, Passmore and Vallican held\ntheir annual track meet Friday,\nat Campbell Field at South Slocan. With few exceptions the\nwhole school attended, though\najl were not contestants.\nCrescent Valley won the inter-\nschool shield for the highest average of 3.6.\nMrs. O. Muir, principal at South\nSlocan, spoke to the children before making the presentation,\nabout the importance of having\nmany take part regardless of\ntheir ability to win, The competition and good sportsmanship\nwas most important\nThe teachers joined in congratulating the children on their efforts and co-operation.\nJanice Plotnikoff and Gloria'\nCatton of Crescent Valley both1\ntied for girls' first place and in-1\ndividual cups, !\nPhilip Bedenott, Crescent Valley, and Walter Wishlow, Slocan1\nPark, tied for boys first, and -individual cups. Walter has won I\nthe cup four years running.\nCrescent Valley took home another relay trophy which they\nalso won last year.\nThe relay trophy and individual cups become school and personal property while the shield\nis competed for each year. This\ntrack meet and awards are made\npossible by the school board.\nA member of the board was unable to attend to make the pre-'\nsentation.\nThe school and community\nclub and sports association of\nSouth Slocan as well as parents\nfrom other districts combined to\nprovide assistance in refreshment\nbooth and entertainment for non-\ncontestants.\nRefreshment booth proceeds\nwill be contributed to the junior\nRed Cross.\nDISPLAYING trophy which\nhe won ai best rookie of the\nyear In Trail's Air Cadet squadron Is LAC David Carrol, above.\nCominco Man,\nA. D. Oakes, Dies\nKIMBERLEY \u2014 Alfred Dixon\nOakes, Cominco employee in the\nSullivan Mine since 1924, died at\nthe hospital here Wednesday after a short illness.\nHe was born at Weymouth, N.S.,\n59 years ago and came West to\nKimberley in 1924 when he began\nwork at the Sullivan and also in\ncommunity affairs. He was vestryman for many years for All\nSaints Anglican parish, for 25\nyears a member of the IOOF\nLodge, and also a member of Selkirk Lodge No. 55 AF and AM.\nSurviving him are one sister, Mrs.\nWarren Boggs of Colusa, California, and his brother-in-law, O. B.\nButterman of Kimberley. Burial\nin Kimberley Cemetery followed\nfuneral service by Rev. F. D. Wyatt at All Saints Church here Saturday morning.\nLaing Urges\nGov't Action To\nPrevent Floods\nNEW DENVER - Federal-provincial planning to eliminate\nB.C.'s annual flood crisis was\nproposed here Friday night by\nLiberal leader Arthur Laing.\nThe Social Credit government\nwas severely criticized for lack of\naction to prevent floods. His call\nfor action came at the end of a\nweek-long speaking tour of the\nKootenays. Saturday he returned\nto the coast by plane from\nCastlegar.\nHis schedule was continually\nrearranged or interrupted by\nfloods and danger of floods which\nhave blocked highways and delayed trains.\nDanger of a major flood still\nexists, he said.\n\"We must immediately have a\ngovernment agency adequately\nfinanced, to dispel the annual\nspectre of flood devastation,\" he\nsaid. \"How much longer can we\ngo on keeping our fingers crossed\nand depending on a beneficient\nProvidence to deliver us from\nman-made blundering?\n\"In almost every part of the\nprovince flash floods or rising\nrivers are threatening or destroying roads, bridges, fisheries and\nfarm lands.\n\"We seem to be reconciled to\naccepting huge annual losses and\nrisking every Spring, major holocausts like the Fraser flood of\n1948. In 1954 our deliverance was\nby a hair's breadth.\"\nThis year's replacement costs\nare enormous, he added.\n\"The danger of a major disaster is still with us. We Liberals\nasked for a House committee to\ncall experts and form a policy on\nflood danger and soil erosion at\nthe last session of the Legislature,\nbut every Social Crediter turned\nthe proposal down.   \u2022\n\"The   government,   under   Op-\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, MAY 28, 1956 \u2014 3\nDEATHS\nBy The Canadian Press\nToronto \u2014 William Conway\nButler, 55, president of the All-\nCanada Insurance Federation.\nWashington \u2014 Finis J, Garrett,\nB0, retired chief judge of the U.S.\nCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals,\nPhiladelphia - William T\nGranahan, 60, a Democratic representative in Congress for 10 years.\nToronto \u2014 John Joseph Coult-\nhard, 96, a former missionary In\nChina for 50 years.\nposition pressure, brought in a\nriver control and erosion bill but\nit was provided with a convenient\nescape clause by which the bill\ndoes not apply to navigable rivers.\n\"Certainly it is a program for\njoint provincial and federal responsibility, but we cannot expect\nfederal assistance without provision of a provincial plan of\naction.\"\nHeadsJaycees\nAl Kimberley\nKIMBERLEY \u2014 Kimberley Junior Chamber of Commerce has\nelected Don Lane as Its new president, with Bill Jerwitt jr. past\npresident, Ken McKenzie and Bill\nWallinger vice-presidents, Arthur\nNixon secretary and Don Halstad\ntreasurer.\nSpecial guests at the annual\nmeeting which followed a dinner\nat the Oasis included City Council\nrepresentative Alderman J. M.\nDavis, Associated Chambers of\nCommerce representatives F. C.\nIngram and Al Bacon, and Kimberley Chamber of Commerce\nrepresentatives Al Fabro, F. Aikin\nand Ron Lane.\n\u2022 Guest speaker was Magistrate\nV. M. Bourne whose topic was\n\"What is a Canadian?\"\nGREATMm\/ERtf iwwmv\/cE\neo 6mn\/o\/WER\/if\n00coumM\nBus .daves Nelson, 1:15 P.M. Connects at\nSpokane with Western Star (lv. 9:15 P.M.)\nor Empire Builder (lv. 11:59 P.M.). Connection at Seattle or Everett with\nstreamliner International arriving Vancouver 12:15 P.M. Railway tickets honored on bus.\na New Way off Living with\nFAIRBANKS\/MORSE\nELK VALLEY\nPIONEER PASSES\nNATAL \u2014 The funeral of the\nlate Emeil Fristol, who died in\nthe Michel Hospital, took place at\nNatal with funeral services conducted by Mrs. Betty Graves, in\nthe absence of A. Sallis of the\nNatal United Church, at the funeral parlour. Mr. Fristol was well\nknown throughout the district, regarded as a poineer settler of the\nwell known Elk \u25a0 Valley district\nwhere he lived for most of the\n52 years in the district. He was\n64 years of age, born in Bohemia\non October 9, 1891. He came to\nCanada from his native land In\n1904, arriving in the Natal-Michel\ndistrict the same year. While residing up the Elk Valley he mostly\nfarmed and spent a few years\nduring the summer months as a\nfire ranger. Leaving to mourn are\ntwo sisters, Mrs. Frank Humal of\nBlairmore and Mrs. Phillip Musil\nSr., of Natal. Pall Bearers were\nFred Musil, Joe Musil, Len Musil,\nPhil Musil, Harry Kaisner and\nGeorge Kaisner.\nSLOCAN, NAKUSP\nSCOUTS CAMP\nNAKUSP \u2014 About 40 scouts and\nleaders camped last weekend at\nthe Nakusp Recreation Park.\nSixteen boys and their leaders\nfrom Slocan City joined the Nakusp scouts in camp. Boys from\nSilverton, Arrow Park and Edge-\nwood were unable to attend,\nBoys worked for points and at\nthe final count Nakusp Owls mov\ned out Nakusp Cougars with Slocan Owls in third place.\nPoints   were   given   for   \"good\nhousekeeping\"   at   camp,   gegats,\nobservation   journeys,   etc.   Two I\nhousing   camp-fire  sessions   were |\nheld with all seven patrols taking\npart.\nRestricted\nParking Asked\nSALMO \u2014 Request of Salmo j\nChamber of Commerce for restricted parking on Railway\nAvenue, north of Fourth Street,\ncas it is a traffic hazard for cars\nturning on to Highway 3A from\nHighway 6, was considered by\nSalmo Village Commissioners at\ntheir recent meeting. The commissioners are recommending to\nthe provincial department of public works that parking be restricted for two car lengths.\nReport of Cpl. Benton of RCMP\ninformed council that persons who\nremoved tools, etc., from village\nequipment had paid damages.\nTwo building permits, one to\nVictor Chomski and one to Ose-\nlemo were approved.\nFairbanks-Morse\nCOMPANY LIMITED\nSIXTEEN   BRANCHES   ACROSS    CANADA\nCASTLEGAR BUILDING SUPPLY STORE\nCASTLEGAR, B.C.\n ______\n\u2014\"\t\nNelaiut Sathj Nputa\nEstablished April 22. 1902\n\/nierior British CoJumbia's Largest Daily Newspaper\n,      Published every morning except Sunday and Btatutory\nholidays   by   the   NEWS   PUBLISHING   COMPANY\nLIMITED, 266 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia.\nAuthorized as Second Class Mall, Post Office Department, Ottawa.\nMEMBER   rHIl AUD11   BUREAU  OF CIRCULATIONS\nMEMBER Of   THE CANADIAN  PRESS\nThe Canadran Cress if exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news\ndispatches credited to it or to The Associated Press or Reuters in this paper,\nand also the local news published therein.\nMonday, May 28,1956\nEvidence of Returning Strength\nEric Nicol, Canada's leading humorist, after a world tour has arrived\nin England. Like many other world\ntravelers of late he is not by any\nmeans sure that the dissolution of the\n\u2022 British Empire is of benefit to the\nworld at large.\nHe describes some of her former\ndependencies as kicking a stuffed lion\nin the rear and thinking it is Britain.\nHe considers Britain as anything but\na stuffed lion and recent speeches by\nBritish statesmen indicate that there\nis a return to realism. When Britain\nheld her far flung empire, she governed them well, better, so travelers say,\n.than they govern themselves today,\nbut while she did this her holdings\nwere frankly to protect her trade.\nShe built great naval and military\nbases for this purpose and some of\nthem have gone because freedom has\nbeen given to the countries in which\nthey are situated. They have not only\ngone from British control, but seem\nto be in danger of being used by communism against the West.\nMr. Selwyn Lloyd, speaking for\nthe British government, says that\nBritain must, for her own safety, hold\nSingapore and Cyprus. Both are\nanxious to divorce themselves from\nBritish control. Both have been offered a measure of self-government\\\nSingapore, with its polyglot population has no real nationhood and\nCyprus which wishes to join with\nGreece would be no better off under\nlt.\nThe Singapore naval base protects\nthe lifeline of Australia and New\nZealand; Cyprus, Britain's oil fields\nin the Middle, East. To lose them\nwould imperil not only Britain but\nthe safety of the Western world.\nUnder these circumstances she cannot be expected to release her hold on\nthem. Her decision to retain them is\nheartening evidence of returning\nstrength.\nLetters To The Editor\nLetters to the Editor on any toplo of genulnsi Interest are welcome tf they are\nbrief aoourate and fair. No letter will be Inserted In whole, or In part, except over the\nsignature and address of the writer.  Unsolicited correspondence cannot be  returned.\nOut of Taxation\nail Recreations\nthe projected new facilities on the top floor\nof the Memorial Centre, consisting of a small\nhall-auditorium, club meeting rooms and\nbowling alleys will more than cover their\noperating costs.\n(4) We also anticipate that the revenues\nfrom the proposed community swimming\npool at Butler Park should come very close\nto meeting, if not exceeding, the necessary\noperating expenditures. (Actually, in the\ncase of the small and out-moded pdol that\nnow exists in Trail the deficit in 1955 was\nonly a few hundred dollars). We expect, too,\nthat the new grandstand will be a great boon\nto the city and to all participants and spectators; incidentally, we expect it will also be\na revenue producer.\nIn conclusion it is suggested that even if\nthere were small operating deficits on our\nexcellent ^facilities they could not be considered as very serious since:\n(a) The children, adults, organizations\nand business firms of the City of Trail benefit in numerous ways that are far more important than any small future deficit.\n(b) The taxpayers of Trail would only\nhave to pay one-third of any future deficit\nunder   the   present   park   agreement   with\nNo Money Paid\nRevenue on Tr\nTo the Editor,\nSir\u2014Recently there have been certain\nstatements made in meetings and in tht\npress regarding the cost of operation to the\nTrail taxpayers of recreational projects, particularly the Trail Memorial Centre, and\nwe feel under obligation to clarify the situation.\n(1) Up to December 81, 1955, the taxpayers of Trail have not paid out of taxation\nrevenue one penny towards either the construction or operating costs of recreational\nfacilities built by the Projects Society of\nTrail. The facilities, consisting of an arena,\ncurling rink, children's rink, gym, outdoor\nthearte, park improvements, including lighting facilities costing aproximately a million\nand a quarter dollars, were presented to the\nCity as free gifts and have not required\nanything from taxation funds during the\npast seven years.\n(J) Up until December 31, 1955, the following table shows the money in excess of\noperating costs spent by the Trail-Tadanac\nBoard of Park Commissioners on improvements and equipment at the Trail Memorial\nCentre. The Information- Is taken from the\nannual report for the year 1955 submitted\nto the Trail City and Tadanac Councils by\nMr. G- 3 Ortier, chairman of the Trail-\nTadanac Board of Park Commissioners.\nTadanac.\nCapital Expenditure\n._  $ 2,501\n ;    30,118\n 8,060\n     4,932\n     7,750\n 12,978\n 4.     3,459\n  $69,796\nTear\nIMS\t\n1950 \t\n1951\t\n1953 ._\t\n1953 ._\n1954\t\n1955\t\nTotal  -...\nIf the above total of $89,796 Is considered\nla Its true status as capital expenditures, then\nthe operating revenues of the Trail Memorial\nCentre for the past seven years are in excess\nof the actual operating expenditures by some\n$45,000 or an average annual surplus of approximately $6400. From this it' appears that\nthe Trail-Tadanac Board of Park Commissioners has done a good job. The taxpayers\nof Trail are extremely fortunate to have\nsuch facilities and to have had them operated without taxation.\n(3) We anticipate that the revenue from\nC. H. Wright,\nPresident\nTke Comma\nIf all the useless commas used in a day's\nprinting by the newspapers of Canada, including this one, were put side by side in a\ncurly-tailed line they would stretch from\nhere to,a far-distant there.      \u2022\nThe comma is a necessary bit of furniture in literary construction , but (mu6h\nabused by those who practice putting Words\ntogether in the hope of making sense. It is a\nsound rule of punctuation that there should\nbe no unnecessary obstruction to the reader's\neyes. When there is a natural pause, as at\nthis point in this sentence, then drop in a\ncomma. But if you would read the sentence\naloud without any* pause or hesitation then\nthe commas should be saved for another\nday,\u2014Ottawa Journal.\n^Questions?\nANSWERS\nOpen to any reader. N amei ot\npersons asking questions will not be\npublished There is no charge for this\nservice QUESTIONS WILL NOT BE\nANSWERED BY MAIL except where\nthere ta obvious necessity for privacy.\nE. C\u201e Trail \u2014 I would appreciate an answer\nto   the   following   questions   regarding\nEmmett Gulley:   What  duties,   if  any,\ndoes he perform tor the Provincial Gov-\n.  erament of B.C.? What salary, wage, or\nhonorarium does he receive? What expenses does he receive per month and\nper annum? Is he a Canadian?\nWe have no information on  the first\nthree questions. Our advice is that you write\ndirect to the Attorney-General's Department,\nParliament Buildings, Victoria, B.C. Regarding the last question, Mr. Gulley was born\nin the United States and is a member of The\nReligious Society of Friends (Quakers).\nE. W.., Kettle Valley - What date will the\nCalgary Stampede open this year? Also,\nis it possible to talje a barber's course\nby correspondence? If so, please print\naddress.\nThe Calgary Stampede will run from\nJuly 9th to 14 this year. For information on\nbarbering, write to the Moller School of\nBarbering, 815 Main Street, Vancouver, B.C.\nalso Canadian Vocational Training School,\n422 Richards Street, Vancouver, B.C.\nE. C, Castlegar \u2014 What trees are cut for\ncommercial sale as Christmas trees?\nSmall firs are the most popular tree for\nthis purpose though some people prefer the\nyoung spruce.\nReader, Grand Forks \u2014 What would be the\ncorrect  way to  address  a  letter  to  a\nwoman who is living with her husband,\nor to a widow, or a divorcee?\nThe correct way to address a letter to a\nmarried  woman   whose  husband   is  living,\nand from whom she is not divorced, would\nbe thus: Mrs. John (or J.) Surname; if she\nwere a  widow  the same  form  of  address\nwould be absolutely correct; if she were a\ndivorcee   the   letter   shoul d   be   addressed\neither to Mrs. Margaret  (or whatever her\nfirst name may be)   Surname,  or to  Mrs.\nBrown Surname, using her maiden surname\nfirst. In social circles these rules are very\nstrictly observed.\nSaving, Parliament\nIt could be that Rt. Hon. C. D. Howe\nand Hon, George A. Drew are saving Parliament for the Canadian people. When the\nminister of trade and commerce tangled\nwith the Conservative, leader, sparks flew.\nHot words were spoken. Tempers got short.\nThat doesn't happen often in the House\nof Commons of recent years. The Liberal\nGovernment has \"simply steam-rollered its\nway along. If anyone as much as took hesitation at accepting what was said, he was\ncrushed. So sharply was he smacked down,\nit took weeks to come up for air.\nNow, however, the Conservatives are\non their feet and fighting. They are not slow\nin saying what they have in mind. They are\nanxious to be critical and point out what\nthey think is wrong with the nation. It is\nan entirely new spirit in the Commons.\nMr. Howe may not like being under attack, but he can handle himself. So can\nMr. Drew. There are others on both sides\nof the House who can wade into the fray\nand take care of themselves. It all draws\nattention to the work of Parliament. It gives\na renewed meaning to Parliament, which\nhad become little more than a ves-man Troup\nof Liberals riding high. \u2014 Windsor Star,\nMLA's Pay     \"\n(Ottawa Journay)\nMembers of the Ontario legislature have\nvoted themselves a substantial increase1 in\ntheir salaries \u2014 to $3500 a year from $2600.\nwith a tax-free expense allowance boosted\n\u25a0 from $1300 to $1900, and more also for cabinet ministers and the Opposition leader. On\nthe basis of one session a year, usually last-\n' ing about six weeks, it's good pay; but, of\ncourse, a member is a member for 52 weeks\nof the year and presumably gives some of\nhis time to his public duties, even when the\nlegislature is not in session.\nWatch Your Language\nJEALOUS \u2014 (JELL-us) \u2014 adjective;\nactive, exclusive devotion; intolerant of\nrivalry in matters.of interest and affection;\nprompted by such- apprehension, as jealous\nfears. Origin: Old French \u2014 Jelous. French\n-^Jalotix.\nThey'll Do It Ever)' Time\nmmm    \u2014-= =\nBINDER'S HOME FROM THE CONVEtM-\nTIOM-SO BEFORE SENOtWG MIS DUDS TD\nTHE CLE4NER, A1FE UWLQ4DS THE POCKETS\n-&\u00bbT--WR4T rfO? Hurt's THIS?\nT\nBy Jimmy Hatlo ]\nM\nSo SAID PRINTS JUST Am\\IED-MO\nSOMETHIrM\u00a9 TELLS US PHIL4UDER H4S\nR4DWIS FIM4I-FUNG\u2014\nTODAY'S BIBLE\nTHOUGHT\nFor he endured as seeing him\nIs invisible.\u2014Heb. 11:27.\nIf we could see who is on our\nside we would have great courage,\nbut faith enables us to see.\n(hunt dist\nI reckon they are one of the\nbest families. They feel so nice\nthey don't think it necessary to\nbehave decent.\nEINAR M. GUNDERSON, executive vice-president and general manager of the Pacific Great Eastern Railway, receives a\nshipment of three new locomotives. The balance of an order of\neight will be arriving within the next few weeks. Bigger and\nmore powerful than previous models, these produce 1600 horsepower, weight 120 tons, The locomotives, made In Montreal, can\nbe used as single or multiple units and are powerful enough\nto handle any trains on al! the PGE grades.\nProspects Bright for Businessmen\nBui Boom Jittery Round The Edges\nBy WALTER BREEDE JR.\nNEW YORK (AP) - There was\ngood news for some businessmen\nthis week \u2014 and a parcel of not-\nso-good news for others.\nLong-range prospects continued\nbright. Major corporations pushed\nhuge expansion programs; production of machine tools, freight cars\nand other heavy equipment went\nahead at full blast. But on several\nother fronts the boom showed\nsigns of fraying around the edges.\nThe stock market, as measured\nby the Associated Press 60-stock\naverage, suffered its steepest fall\nsince the week of. Sept. 30. New\nauto cutbacks boosted Michigan's\nunemployment total  past 220,000.\nCONTRARY TRENDS\nPresident Harlow H. Curtice of\nVaccine Supply\nMoves Slowly\nBy The Canadian Press\nCanada's anti-poliomyelitis program already is under way but it>\nis not yet known whether supplies\nwill meet demand.\nA Canadian Press survey indicates a \"substantial portion\" of\ninitial target of almost\" 3,000,000\ninoculations will be fulfilled.\nThe number of children getting\nvaccine depends on availability of\nsupplies, a federal government\nspokesman said.\nA delaying factor was. a double-\nchecking system calculated to ensure all vaccine used is top-\nquality. Toronto's Connaught Laboratories are testing their product and federal labs double-test.\nEnough vaccine for 1,000,000 shots,\nhowever, has been approved and\ndistributed this year. Large\nbatches are currently under test\nbut it may take two weeks or\nmore before tests prova ' them\nsatisfactory.\nB.C. DEMAND HIGH\nIn British-Columbia inoculations\nstarted after the Easter vacation\nand will continue for the next few\nmonths as vaccine becomes available. Officials were uncertain\nwhether supply would meet demand.\nAlberta's program began jn\nApril and 119,396 children are\nscheduled to receive second and\nthird shots. Age groups range from\nfour to 10. In addition 64,257, who\nreceived inoculations in 1954 or\n1955, were to get \"booster\" shots\nthis year.\nAlthough federal health officials\nsaid refusals are more numerous\nthan usual, most provincial authorities agreed that the free Salk\nshots are eagerly accepted and in\nsome cases parents asks for their\nchildren to  be Inoculated.\nKelowna Plans New\nBuilding Expansion\nKBLOWNa (CP) - Several\nmajor building projects whicn\nwill contribute to the industrial\nand economical expansion of Kelowna are planned for development here within the next few\nmonths.\nThey include a new theatre,\ntwo banks, a clinic, a department\nstore and two industrial plants.\nA $150,000 structure will be\nbuilt for Simpson Sears by Cap-\nozzi Enterprizes. Tenders will be\ncalled within a week.\nThe two industries will be built\nby Crown Zellerbach Ltd. and S\nM. Simpson Ltd. Both have announced plans for huge plants in\nthe city.\nGeneral   Motors summed  up  for\nGM stockholders:\n\"The American economy would\nappear at the moment to be subject to divergent trends. Consumer\ngoods industries, including not\nonly automobiles but housing and\ncertain others, are being affected\nby a, contraction in consumer\nspending. On the other hand the\nheavy goods Industries are operating at very high levels.\"\nBut M. J. Rathbone, president\nof Standard Oil Co. (New Jersey)\npredicted another year of record\nearnings \u2014 based on an expected\nfive per cent rise in demand for\npetroleum products in the United\nStates and 10 per cent rise in\nother non-Communist countries.\nSTEEL   COSTS  WORRISOME\nSteelmakers look for another\ngood year, but are worried about\nskyrocketing costs of maintenance\nand expansion.\nThat was the consensus among\nsteel Industry leaders this week\nat the 64th general meeting of the\nAmerican Iron and Steel Institute\nhere. Roger M. Blough, chairman\nof U.S. Steel Corporation predicted that the- Industry's 1956\nproduction will come close to the\nrecord 117,000,000 tons poured in\n1955. Chairman Eugene Gilford\nGrace of Bethlehem Steel Corporation forecast a surging pickup\nlate in the year after a moderate\nsummer slowdown.\nFIND NO SIGN OF\nRADIOACTIVITY\nTOKYO (AP) \u2014 Japan reported\nthree cases of \"hydrogen bomb\njitters\" in the wake of the May\n21 Bikini test.\nStevedores refused to unload\nthe British freighter Arafura at\nKobe until after authorities had\nchecked with geiger counters and\nassured them the vessel was not\nradioactive. The freighter left\nBrisbane, Australia, May 6, with\na cargo of wool and scrap.\nFishing boat owner KiyoshI Yo-\nshida reported to the coast guard\nat Iwaki port, north of Tokyo,\nthat one of his skippers \"might\nhave\" been affected by radioactivity from the Bikini test while\ncruising in Indonesian waters\nA coast guard spokesman said.\n\"the matter is not even worth investigating because the fishing\nboat was so far from the test\narea.\"\nYour Individual\nHOROSCOPE\n\u25a0By Frances Drake-\nLook  ln  the section in  which\nyour   birthday   comes and   find\nwhat your outlook Is, according\nto the stars,\nFor Tuesday,  May 29, 1966\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 20 (Aries)\n\u2014Go6d rays for sound business\ndeals, clever ideas and mental\nalertness generally. Law, government projects, investigative work,\nall important matters sponsored,\non'  be careful nonetheless.\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus)\n\u2014 An encouraging, stimulating\nperiod for you \u2014 especially in\ndifficult mental work. The more\ndelicate and artistic matters may\nbe less easy of management. Discriminate between good and evil.\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini)\u2014\nLong-range plans may be as efficiently handled as problems that\nneed immediate solving. You\nshould be quick of perception, get\nnew ideas of value now. A good\nday for keen Gemini folks.\nJUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer)-\nAll interests and activities are not\nencouraged by helpful rays, but\nYOU personally can get firm results through intelligent planning\nand handling of schedule. Some\nfavors, benefits.\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leo)\u2014\nA peak day, with your Sun and\nMercury in good aspect. No ifs or\nbuts, on with duties \u2014 and cheerfully!\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER 23\n(Virgo) \u2014 This is no day for\nworry or apprehension. Chart\nyour course carefully, then go\nahead with faith. Good prospects\nfor fresh gain, benefits.\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER\n23 (Libra) \u2014 A day for truly big\ntasks. Especially favored are those\nengaged in medicine, chemistry,\nall useful commodities.\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER\n22 (Scorpio) \u2014 The Sun is in\nauspicious aspect today. Make the\nmost of your innate gifts and\ntalents. They can work for you\nand your many interests to advantage now.\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER\n21 (Sagittarius) \u2014 Good planetary influences. If you have good\nhealth there is no reason why\nyou should not have the will to\nwork and achieve. Research,\nteaching, medicine favored.\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY\n20 (Capricorn) \u2014 Those working\nwith   machinery,   tools,   ln   rail\nroading, building, etc., have tint\naspects. It is also a propitiou*\ntime for learning, teaching, law\nall mental work. A big day foi\nbig doings.\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY\n19 (Aquarius) \u2014 Don't go to extremes or yield to restlessness\nMuch can be accomplished if yoi\npay proper attention to essentials\nduties, and add to your store oJ\nknowledge, Have fun, study.\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 2C\n(Pisces) \u2014 Encouraging for youi\nspecial interests, for achieving iv\nthe sciences, in building, trades,\nengineering, research, law, chemistry, medicine. A fine period foi\npersonal advancement\nYOU BORN TODAY are active,\nquick in thought and movement,\noften brilliant in repartee. B\u00ab\ncareful not to be sarcastic oi\nsharp in answers. You make*\nfrtends easily, can adapt to new\nconditions, surroundings. Actually\nyou are dual in nature and may\nswitch from one project to another\nthe moment the former loses\ninterest for you. Be careful about\nthis restlessness for it can defeat\nthe brilliant success which can be\nyours. School yourself to give\ntime to reach an objective by\nmore tudy, examination, trial and\nexperiment. Seek God's aid daily\nand keep educating yourself,\nBirthdate: G. K. Chesterton, famed\njournalist, author; Patrick Henry,\nAmerican statesman, orator.\nCANVEY ISLAND, England\n(CP) \u2014 Farmer Fred Leach, owner\nof 1,000 acres in this Essex district,\nwon a prize of four packets of vegetable seeds in a competition.\nCy any test\nyou'll like Tea best\nwith\nBUBBLY\nBOILING\nWATER!\nWATER\nreveals whisky s\ntrue flavour\nn.\nPat Seagram's \"83\" to the water tent\nWater, plain or sparkling,\nreveals a whisky's true, natural flavour\nand bouquet\nSeagram*? \"83\"\n0^ Seagrams \u00bb*\/\/* Sure\nThis advertisement Is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\n\\\/\nynraot mini\/\u25a0\u25a0\nril|'|M\"jlliIj\n\u25a0?\u00abujY..-pnoTE<:TiOr*:V\n1 EXTEDloo SURFA''\n^ OUTSIDE PAINT\nMake your home \"sing\" with MONAMEL-\nX HIGH FIDELITY COLORS. Lasting\n\\ protection and beauty\u2014dollar for dollar\n\\ your best paint buy,\nSiE YOUR\nTflm\/rnel\nDEALER\nBURNS LUMBER CO.\n602 Baker St.\nPhone 1180\n W55F-?! *   -\nHeart Attack\nSeldom Fatal\nFirst Time\nBy HERMAN M. BUNDESEN\nA'heart attack doesn't always\nmean certain death. Far from lt.\nIn fact, about-80 to DO per cent of\nthe victims recover from their\nfirst attack .\nIn order to help yourself if\nyou're the victim or to help someone else who might suffer a seizure, It's important to recognize\nsome of the symptoms.\nThey vary considerably, of\ncourse, depending upon the cause\nof the heart failure. But by dividing the symptoms roughly Into\nthree categories, you can generally recognize the condition fairly\neasily.\nSome cases, not all of them, are\ncharacterized by pain; Usually\nthe pain is violent and agonizing.\nIt is felt near the heart, generally Just behind the upper portion\nof the breast bone.\n' Other cases are similar to fainting spells. In such Instances there\nmay or may not be pain in the\nregion of the heart. Usually the\nface will be pale and the pulse\nweak.\nRED FACE\nShortness of breath Is the distinctive mark of the third category. Victims of this type of heart-\nattack frequently will have a red\nface.\nWhile victims In the first two\ngroups should lie down, this is a\nmistake for those who are short\nof breath.\n{ABOUT THE.TOWN\niliiiniliiiiiiimiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii By Alice Stevens\nPHONE 1309 OR 1844 i -,\nMrs. - J.   Bachynski,   Mrs.   F,\n\t\nBachynski, and Mrs. S. Bachynski' were co-hostesses at a linen\nshower held at the home of Mrs.\nJ. Bachynski, Silver King Road.\nThe guests of honor, Miss Bernice\nSwanson, who is to be married\nGAY FOOTWEAR\nSTEPPING OUT\nLONDON (Meuters) \u2014 Feet are\ngoing gay with vengeance this\nsummer.\nBeach sandals in raffia present\na riot of color, often in harlequin\ncombinations from Italy. Town\nshoes in the new lustre kids or\nsuede match or contrast with the\npastel shades or bright prints ot\nsummer dresses.\nFor the evening; silver and gold\nkid \"barefoot\" sandals compete\nfor popularity with real \"glass\nslippers\" topped with posies of\nbrilliantly - colored flowers, a\nsingle water lily, or a tuft of\nhumble daisies.\nHeels, except for the most casual wear, are becoming ever slimmer and even higher \u2014 at any\nrate in appearance, Appearances\nare sometimes deceptive and the\nart of the shoemaker makes the\nheel look higher than it really is.\nCanadian Daughters\nElect Mrs. Taylor\nCRANBROOK    -    Cranbrook   Proudfoot and Mrs._ H. Hudson.\nThey'll probably find that they | branch of the Canadian Daughters\nJune 2nd, and her mother, Mrs.\nE, Swanson, were presented with\ncorsages. Games were enjoyed by\nlhe 35 guests. Miss Swanson\nopened the many gifts that were\nattractively displayed in a basket,\ngaily, decorated with flowers and\nribbons. Refreshments were, served by the hostesses, '\n. '. . I '\nFormer residents of Nelson, Mr.\nand Mrs. R. W. Cooper, are visiting in town. They are now living\nin Penticton. . t\n* \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Albert Hamson,\n420 Delbruck Street, had as guests\nover the weekend Airmen Donald\nMoldroski of Terre JIaute, Indiana, Thomas Seifert of Duqupin,\nIllinois, and Alex Berry of Nor.\nfolk, Virginia. The airmen are\nnow stationed at Falrchild Air\nBase in Spokane.\n* \u2022   * '\nDr. and Mrs. W. K. Massey and\nfamily, Third Street, hava returned to Nelson after having\nspent the past year in Montreal.\n* \u2022   *\nAttending   the   Rebekah   West\nKootenay District Association No.\n5 meeting at Rossland last week\nwere Miss Dora Perasso,. dele\ngate, Mrs. Alec Tulldch, Miss\nMary Wright, Mrs. Gordon Strong,\nMrs. M. (Kelly) Ozelle, Mrs. F. J\nMsAvinn, Mrs. Melville Collett,:\nMrs. Sutherland, Miss Mary\nWhite, Mrs. H. Bentham, Mrs. E.\nA. M. Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Dave\ncan't breathe without being propped up. Some may even Insist\non sitting or standing so they can\nlean forward. Whenever possible\nthe doctor should decide which ts\nthe best pohition.\nREMAIN   CONSCIOU8\nIn the latter cases the patients\nusually remain conscious while In\nthe first two categories they may\nlose consciousness. All heart crfs-\nei must be kept absolutely quiet.\nCover the,ylctlm with whatever\nIs handy to keep him warm while\nawaiting the arrival^.of a doctor.\nYou can give the heart victim\ncoffee or tea If he Is conscious.\nOne more Important thing you\nean do Is to reassure him that he\nwill bs all right. Fear will only\nmake his condition worse.\nSALAD EATERS\nNutritionists say men are harder\nto Interest In salads because they\nare less Interested ln reducing\nweight than women are.\nOUT OF SORT*\ndue to constipation?\n^othnSl\nft a girl wants a career, she has to be\non her toes all the time\u2014no feeling\ndragged-out in the morning or completely beat by the time 5 o'clock rolls\naround! Kruschen helps my career by\nhelping me feel fit and full of pepl I\n' found that the tired, listless feeling\nwhich used to slow me down disappeared with Kruschen. For Kruschen\nis no ordinary laxative but is similar to\nfamous mineral springs, giving you\ntwo-way action against impurities in\nthe bowels and kidneys. Get a package\ntoday and start living again I\nKRUSCHEN\nAT ALL  DRUG STORES\nLeague Assembly has named Mrs.\nW. G. T. Taylor its new president,\nwith Mrs. R. D. Knight going into\nthe office of past president.\nAlso Installed were vice-presidents Mrs. Victor Paulson and\nMrs. David Frame, treasurer Mrs,\nMaude Forrest, secretary Mrs.\nSam DeLuca, sergeants-at-arms\nMrs. Vincent Llddicoatt and Mrs.\nFrank Bridges, chaplain Mrs. G.\nMr. and Mrs. Albert Hamson\nand daughter Leola recently spent\na few days in Spokane.\nEngagements\nMr. and Mrs. Edwin M. Stiles,\nRR-1 Nelson, announce the engagement of their daughter Inez\nHenrietta to Mr. Knud Arenrolh\nRasmussen, son of Mr. S. Rasmus-\nB. Willis, pianist Mrs. 0. J.! sen of Copenhagen. The marriage\nKnight, inner guard Mrs. Frank! will take place in Vancouver Fri-\nGreen, and press secretary Mrs. i day, June 15 at St. Francis in the\nO. R. Keiver. | Wood Anglican Church.\nNew Zealand Mothers Told To Be\nHome lo Greet School Children\nBy J. C. GRAHAM\nCanadian  Press Correspondent'\nWELLINGTON, N.Z. (CP) -\nEvery mother should be at home\nwhen her children return from\nschool, says Dame Hilda Ross,\nNew Zealand minister for the welfare of women and children.\nIn a challenging statement she\ndenied that there is any need for\nmarried women to work in New\nZealand.\nDame Hilda, who is 72 and a\ngrandmother, is New Zealand's\nonly woman cabinet minister. Her\nopinions are widely respected\nthroughout the country, although\nshe does not hesitate to talk\nbluntly when she feels lt neces\nsary.\nMarried women went to work\ntoday because they wanted to\nhave an independent income and\npreferred to go out to work rather\nthan stay at home and look after\nthe children, she declared.\nC1TE8 RESPONSIBILITIES\n\"There is no necessity for this,\"\nshe added. \"The country is today\nenjoying such prosperity that married women with children should\nwake up to their responsibilities\nin the home and stay at home.\"\nInsisting that every mother\nshould be at home to greet her\nchildren on' their return from\nschool, she said there were odd\ndays when this might not be possible, but special arrangements\nshould be made for that.\nHer opinion on the matter has\nstarted a controversy among wo-\nTrans Canada Creditloans.protected\nat no oxtra colt by life-insurance,\nsolve budget problems for thousands\nof Canadian families\u2014without endangering family security. Solve\nyour money problems. Get a life-\ninsured loan, on your own credit.\nCall us today.\nUICK CASH LOANS\nCANADIAN W LOAN  COMPANY\nmmmmmw\n525 VERNON ST. - PHONE 1690\nMR. AND MRS. R. 8. ARMSTRONG\nArmstrongs of Salmo\nMark 60th Anniversary\nmen which la atlll briskly proceeding.\nMeanwhile, representatives of\nindustry have pointed out repercussions on the country's economy\nif married women were withdrawn from work. In a country\nexperiencing acute overfull employment, employment, they say,\nthe loss of married women would\nmake a difficult labor situation\nmuch worse.\nA representative of the clothing\nindustry said It could not continue\nto function without, married women. A check among workers in\nthis industry In four of the five\nSouth island provinces showed\nthat 51 per cent of the women\nworkers are married.' In some\nlarge centres married women\nheavily outnumber single workers.\nSALMO \u2014 Sixty years of marriage were celebrated May 24 at\nSalmo by Mr. and Mrs. Richard\nShannon Armstrong. Mrs. Armstrong, the former Matilda Lewis,\nis 77 and Mr. Armstrong is 86.\nThey were married in 1896 at\nthe home of her parents,.Mr. and\nMrs. Henry Lewis in Mountain\nGrove, Ontario.\nThey have five living children,\nHarriett in Winnipeg, Evelyn in\nVancouver, Elda in San Ysidro,\nCalifornia, Lewis of Forgan, Saskatchewan, and Noble in Salmo.\nTheir grandchildren number 11\nand they have nine great-grandchildren.\n\u2022 More than 150 people attended\nthe diamond anniversary reception where Mr. and Mrs. Armstrong greeted guests beside a\ntable centred with a lovely two-\ntiered cake which was made by\ntheir granddaughter, Mrs. Frank\nBurger of Sglmo. The serving\ntable was attractive with a beautiful lace cloth hand crocheted by\ntheir daughter-in-law, Mrs. Noble\nArmstrong. The central motif was\ncandelabra enhanced with lilacs\nand apple blossoms.\nGranddaughters and friends\nserved tea and jjourers were Mrs.\nA. Hearn, Mrs. I. Fair, Mrs. M.\nPurdy and Mrs. E. Henry. In\ncharge of the tea and coffee were\nMrs. Fred Wrang and Mrs. Herman Mang.\nThe happy couple received a\nlarge number of gifts, flowers\nand telegrams of congratulation\nfrom Montreal, Vancouver, Osoyoos and from Premier W. A. C.\nBennett and Prime Minister Louis\nSt. Laurent in Ottawa. Letters of\ncongratulation were received from\nHon. Wesley Black, MLA in Victoria, and T. C. Douglas, Premier\nof Saskatchewan.\nOut of town visitors who congratulated Mr. and Mrs. Armstrong in person included Mr. and\nMrs. Les Dilman of San Ysidro,\nCalifornia, Mrs. Millie Lewis of\nWatrous, Saskatchewan, Mr. and\nMrs. Thomas Balfe and children\nof Spokane, and Mr. and Mrs. E.\nL. Armsmmg of Cranbrook.\nMr, and Mrs. A. Shrieves\nCelebrate Anniversary\nA couple who have lived in the\nNelson district for about 30 years,\nMr. and Mrs. Albert Shrieves sr.,\n1018 Falls Street, recently celebrated the 40th anniversary of\ntheir marriage.    \\\nSI\nPattern A 686\nbit Ulea (Saiiini\n\\m\nPROMINENT DESIGNER\nOleg Casslnl, American designer famous for gowning fllm-\ndom's most glamorous stars created this shapely sheath for you, to\ndazzle your own special audlencel It's THE silhouette to celebrate\nthe summer of 19561 Curving about the shoulders Is the very\nloveliest decolletage \u2014 a little bow-effect snuggled against the\ngentle scoop of the neckline Sleek, slim unbroken-lines below \u2014\npure magic for any figurel Intense black was poured Into the\ndesigner's original \u2014 then lit with a stark white bow. Sparkling\nshades of silk \u2014 barathea, shantung, bengallne \u2014 also await your\nsewing pleasure. And a pleasure It Is to sew, to wear, to be\nadmired In your very own Casslnl creatlonl Pattern A686 Is available In Misses' Sizes 10, 12, 14, 16 and 18. Size 16 requires 3 yards\n39-Inch fabric. 8end FIFTY CENTS (In coins) plus three cents tax\nfor Pattern A686 to N.D.N. Prominent Designer, Pattern Department, 60 Front St. W., Toronto, Ont Please print plainly YOUR\nNAME, ADDRESS with ZONE, 8TYLE NUMBER and SIZE.\nTheir eight children Joined ln\nmaking the celebration an especially happy one, presenting their\nparents with a cheque and flowers.\nAn \"at home\" party was held\nin the afternoon for about 35\nmembers of the family and guests.\nA three-tiered anniversary cake,\nmade by their daughter Mrs.\nWallace Maynard of Balfour, was\ncut by the celebrants.\nMr. and Mrs. Shrieves were\nmarried in Sutton Cbldfield, War\nwickshire, England, May 21, 1916,\nand came to Canada 10 years later.\nMr. Shrieves is a retired elec\ntrician.\nBesidesVMr. and Mrs. Maynard\nand their daughter, members of\nthe family attending were Mr. and\nMrs. Albert Shrieves and their\nfour children, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Shrieves and three children\nand Mr, and Mrs. Thomas Shrieves\nand Rickey, all of Nelson; Mrs.\nFrank Spear and son Philip of\nVancouver, Mr. and Mrs. Douglas\nShrieves and two children of\nKimberley, Mr. and Mrs. Peter\nF. Shrieves and two children of\nRossland and Mr. and Mrs: Ronald\nAustin and Stephen of West-\nbridge, B.C.\nRecipes ...\n7 313\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, MAY 28,1956 \u2014 5\nFrozen Desserts Hit\nSpot on Warm Days\nJoint Church\nService Held\nSILVERTON - A joint candlelight service of the Turner Memorial Church, New Denver and the\nZion Church of Silverton, was\nheld here.\nThere was an induction of Elders, Mrs. Forsythe and Mr. L.\nCampbell of New Denver, Mrs. J.\nB. Scaia and M. Wright of Silver-\nton being inducted.\nMrs. R. O'Grady, Mr. and Mrs.\nS. R. Dewis and Mr. ,G. Nelson\nwere accepted into the Church.\nMrs. G. Nelson i received her transfer card from S^lodan City United\nChruch. i\nThe Rev. D. Johnstone's sermon\nwas \"The Promises of God.\" The\nTurner Memorial Church Choir\nsang the anthemn, \"Heaven's Resound.\" Mrs. L. Campbell was the\norganist. The Church was filled to\ncapacity.\nBy MARGARET CARR\nWith summer Just beyond the\ngarden gate, we find our thoughts\nturning toward foods that suit\nthe season \u2014 particularly cool,\nluscious desserts that delight the\neye and are even more delightful to the taste.\nAnd desserts that look good\nseem to taste even better when\nthey're homemade. They practically guarantee warm words of\npraise from every member of the\nfamily.\nHere are three frozen desserts,\nJust right for bright May weather.\nFOUR FRUIT SHERBET\n2 cups mashed bananas; Vi cup\nlemon Juice; 1-3 cup orange juice;\nV, cup golden corn syrup; V4 teaspoon salt; 1 egg white; 1-3 cup\nsugar; 1 cup milk; Vi cup maraschino cherry Juice; 1 teaspoon of\ngrated orange rind; V, cup coarsely chopped maraschino cherries.\nMash bananas thoroughly with\nlemon juice. Add orange juice,\ncorn syrup and salt Beat egg\nwhite until stiff, but not dry;\ngradually beat in sugar. Fold into banana mixture; add milk, stirring slowly. Add cherry juice,\norange rind and chopped cherries. Pour into freezer tray and\nfreeze with cold control set at\nfast freezing until mixture is almost firm. Turn into chilled beater. Return to freezer tray bowl\nand beat with rotary and freeze\nuntil firm, beating mixture with\na spoon. Store with control set\nmidway between fast and normal\nfreezing. Makes one quart.\nFROZEN LEMON PUDDING\nV, cup evaporated milk; 1 egg\nyolk; 3 tablespoons sugar; Vi teaspoon grated lemon rind; 1 tablespoon lemon juice; 1 egg white;\n2 tablespoons sugar; 1V4 tablespoons lemon juice; V* cup graham cracker crumbs.\nChill evaporated milk ln Ice\ntray until almost frozen around\nedges. Mix egg yolk, three tablespoons sugar, grated lemon rind\nand one tablespoon lemon juice\nin a large bowl. Beat egg white\nuntil stiff, beat in two tablespons\nsugar gradually. Fold egg white\nmixture into lemon mixture. Whip\nmilk in -cold bowl until fluffy,\nthen add IVi tablespoons lemon\njuice and whip until stiff. Fold\nwhipped milk into egg mixture.\nPut into ice tray. Sprinkle graham cracker crumbs over top.\nFreeze without stirring. Makes\nfour servings.\nFROZEN   AMBROSIA   MOUSSE\n6 medium oranges; Vt pint of\ncream, whipped; Vt cup powdered sugar; dash salt; 1 tablespoon\nsherry or Vt teaspoon almond ex\ntract;   Vi  cup  coconut,  chopped;\nToasted coconut.\nCut stem end off oranges,\nscoop out pulp and cut Into bite-\nsize pieces. Add sugar, salt and\nsherry, or almond extract to the\nwhipped cream. Fold in orange\npieces and Vi cup coconut and\nplace In ofange cups. Garnish with\ntoasted coconut and freeze. Let\nthaw 20 minutes at room temperature before serving. Makes six\nservings.\nSilverton\nSILVERTON --Mrs. M. Deuel\nleft to visit with relatives at Revelstoke.\nMrs. J. B. Scaia has returned\nfrom visiting at Revelstoke.\nMr. A. Nelson was the guest\nof his parents, .Mr. and Mrs. W. S.\nNelson and family. His wife and\nfamily, who had previously been\nvisiting with Mr. and Mrs. W. S.\nNelson returned with him to their\nhome in Invermere.\nMr. and Mrs. J. B. Scaia have as\ntheir guests. Mr. and Mrs. R\nChadsey and Mr. and Mrs. H.\nMoraes, all of Port Coquitlam.\nMrs. R. Chadsey is Mrs. Scaia's\nsister.\nJohn Steele of Edmonton paid\nhis parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. Steele,\na surprise visit at the holiday\nweekend. Due to road conditions\nhe was delayed at Cranbrook and\nhis visit was only a six hours before he had make the return trip.\nMrs. Byer who has been the\nguests of her daughter, Mrs. G.\nW. West, Mr. West and family left\nfor her home at Edmonton.\nMr. and Mrs. W. McKay and\nDarryl of Cranbrook visited with\nMrs. McKay's parents, Mr. and\nMrs. J. D. Matheson during the\nholiday weekend.\nMrs. Wrightson of Saskatoon,\nwho has been visiting her daughter, Mrs. J. L. Wilson, Mr. Wilson\nand Lloyd, left for Provest, Alta.,\nwhere she will visit 'with her son\nand his family  before returning\nMOTHER    OF    PEARL      <\nJEWELLERY\nFor Ladies and Gentlemen i\nFILIGREE EARRINGS\nIn Gold and Silver.\nSPORTSMAN   LIGHTER8\nPARISIAN   LAPEL   PINS   I\ni    HOBBY SHOP\n' Phone 1703\nCOVER\nSAMPLES\nFor Stools ond Cushions.\nEach\n25<\nSalmo Notes\nSALMO \u2014 Mrs. F. Middleton\nhas returned from Vancouver\nwhere she attended the B. C. conference of the United Church of\nCanada.\nMr. and Mrs. E. Hearn have\nreturned from a trip to Dallas,\nTexas. En route they visited Mr.\nHearn's brother-in-law and sister\nMr. and Mrs.' Bill Klovance at\nHavre, Mont.\nMr. and Mrs. Ed Drugge hav\u00ab\nas guests, Mr. and Mrs. Harold\nFoderberg of Vancouver.\nMrs, Noble W. Armstrong attended a farewell party at the\nhome of Mrs. W. Ryckman ln\nTrail in honor of Mrs. V. Meyers\nwho is leaving for Vancouver.\nto Saskatoon. Mr. and Mrs. J. L.\nWilson accompanied her to Nelson.\nHome for the summer vacation\nfrom U.B.C. are: Andy Avlson, Pat\nHarding and Ernest Harding.\nMiss A. Wetterhouse R.N. who\nhas been the guest of her sister,\nMrs. S. Dewis, nephew S. R. Dewis,\nMrs. S. R. Dewis and family left\nfof home at Spokane. The Dewli\nfamily accompanied her as far as\nTrail.\nLac. Norman McLeod left for\nGander. Newfoundland, after visiting with his parents' Mr. and Mrs.\nJ. McLeod, brothers and sisters.   .\nIan Chester of Winnipeg visited\nhis grandmother Mrs. M. Hunter\nand relatives on his return trip\nfrom Vancouver en route to his\nhome.\nBy any test\nyou'll like Tea best\nwith\nBUBBLY\nBOILING\nWATER!\na\nFAMED H08PITAL\nOne of the world's first hospitals\nfor children was opened in 1852\nin Great Ormond street in London,\nEngland. ]\nLONG\nDISTANCE\nCALLS\ngo through\nfaster\nwhen you\ncall by number*\nLong Distance is fast\u2014often twice as fast\u2014when\nyou call by NUMBER. Here's why. By giving the\n*      operator the out-of-town NUMBER\u2014rather than\njust the name and address\u2014you won't\nhave to wait while she gets the\nnumber from \"Information\" in\nI\/is. .ri\nthe town or city you're calling.       \/ouP\u00b0f *%\"\"* \u25a0\n'numbers^\nBRITTSH   COLUMBIA   TELEPHONE   COMPANV\n *\u25a0*\"\u2014- 1\n-^\u2014\u2014\u2014\t\n: \u25a0r\"\t\n6 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS,_MONDAY, MAY 28, 1956\nSWAPS UPSET BY PORTERHOUSE\nIN CALIFORNIA STAKES\nINGLEWOOD, Calif. (AP) \u2014\nPorterhouse, a lightly regarded\nentry, shocked a record crowd ol\n58,800 Saturday as he nosed' out\nthe mighty Swaps to win the\n$109,800 Californian Stakes.\nSwaps, who set a world record\nIn winning the 1 1-18 mile event\nlast year in 1:40 2-5, was ahead by\ntwo lengths coming down the\nstretch before Porterhouse caught\nhim and won in a photo finish.\nMister Gus, a stablemate of\nPorterhouse, was third.\nPorterhouse's time in winning\nfirst-place money of $63,700   was\n1:40 4-5. He returned his delirious\nbackers $28.70, $5.80 and $3.00.\nComing into the stretch Swaps\nopened up and drew away by a\nlength and extended his lead to\ntwo lengths before Porterhouse\ncame along with a rush. Jockey\nWillie Shoemaker applied the\nwhip to Swaps but it was too late.\nLater ShoemaKer accepted the\nblame for Swap's loss.\nIt wasn't Swaps fault he died\nwin,\" Shoemaker said. \"I eased\nup on him . . . once I saw the\nother horse (Porterhouse) coming\nI couldn't get him to running\nagain in time to hold him off.\"\nMAYS BEANED\nBEFORE CONTEST\nNEW YORK (AP) - Willie\nMays, New York *Gianta centre-\nfielder, was struck in the right\neye by a thrown ball In practice\nSaturday and ordered out of the\nlineup for a day by the club physician.\nMays was examined by Dr. Anthony Palermo who found a swelling developing over the eye. Willie\ncomplained of a headache but\nwanted to play against Brooklyn.\nDr. Palermo advised against lt\nand ordered a 24-hour observation\nperiod. Whitey Lockman took\nMays' place in centre.\nWillie was hit as he walked into\na warmup session between teammates Al Dark and Daryl Spencer\nin front of the Giants' dugout. He\ndidn't see the ball, thrown by\nSpencer.\nyU & kidding ht -Svi twt&d\nIT'S tOOICAL to change to light, easy summer shoes at\nthis time of year... to give feet a holiday from heavy\nshoes. Why Ritchie shoes, in particular? Well, they bring\nyou a new ease and freedom in the warmest weather ...\nand at the same time are in obvious good taste. Correct for\nbusiness, correct for evening wear, yet probably the most\ncomfortable shoes you can wear this summer. Go along to\nyour dealer, try a pair, and see if you don't agree with us.\nThe shoes shown are priced at about $12.95; other styles\nfrom $9.95 to $19.95.\nSIM 650\nBrown Stardunt nylon mesh. Also\nin Northcoo] plain brown nylon\nS652; and plain black 1651.\nSTYLE S56\nBlack calf mid-top with fore,\npart in black willow wear.;\nalso in brown #659.\nSTYlf 435\nBrown calf mid-top with .to.\ntilatcd forepart; alio in black\ncalf#657.   \u2022\nRITCHIE shoes are   SANITIZED  for  foot  health and   longer wear\nTHE   JOHN   RITCHIE   COMPANY   LIMITED, QUEBEC,  P.O.\nElementary\nTrack Honors\nGo lo Castlegar\nCASTLEGAR\u2014Castlegar elementary ichool pupils walkeil\naway with the William Waldie\nand Sona shield for total aggregate\npoints scored ln the track meet\nstaged Friday in the Kinnaird\nschool grounds. Taking part were\ngrades 8 to 8 from the Castlegar\nand Kinnaird schools.\nOutstanding athletics were Jack\nWhlttaker of Castlegar, Brenda\nHill, Wendy Deroe ana; Sheryl\nAnderson of Castlegar, and Linda\nWarner, Olga Rilkoff, Billy Ber-\nquist, David Leitner and Sharon\nPaulson of Kinnaird. Events run\noff were broad jump, high jump,\nrelay races, 75 and 50 yard dashes,\nSoftball throw, three legged races,\nfor a total of 40 events.\nWinners in these events were:\nBoys 12 over broad jump: C.\nJim Dergousoff; C. Girls 12 over\nhigh jump, Brenda Hill; C girls\n8 under 50 yard dash, Linda Warner; K boys 8 under 50 yard dash,\nJohn Mason; C. Girls 10 under 50\nyard dash, Marcia Sawchenko; C\ngirls 11 under broad jump, Wendy\nDefoe; C boys 10 under 50 yard\ndash, Danny Deverson; K boys 11\nunder high jump, Jack Whit-\ntaker; C girls 9 under 50 yard dash,\nOlga Rilkoff; K boys 9 under 50\nyard dash, Bruce Mathews; K 8 and\nunder' Softball throw, girls, Jacqueline Vaessen and Barry Dallin,\nboth Kinnaird; 12 over 75 yard\ndash, girls, Wendy Defoe, Castlegar; 12 over 75 yard dash, boys,\nBilly  Berqulst,  Kinnaird.\nGirls, 10 under high jump.\nWinetta Black. Castlegar; boys 10\nunder broad jump, David Leitner,\nKinnaird; 8 under three-legged-\nrace. Girls, Sharlene Bale, Kinnaird, and Linda Warner, Kinnaird; boys 8 under three-legged-\nrace, Gordon Finlay, Kinnaird and\nHarold Idle, Kinnaird; girls 9 under three-Jegged race, Carol Ann\nBuckna and Joan Guido, Kinnaird;\n9 under three-legged race, boys,\nLarry Bate and John Plotnikoff,\nKinnaird; 11 under girls Softball\nthrow, Sharon Paulson, Kinnaird;\n11 under boys softball throw, Arne\nReinsbakken, Castlegar; 9 under\ngirls Softball throw, Olga Rilkoff,\nKinnaird;  9 under  boys  softball\nLANDY EXPRESSES\nLACK OF INTEREST\nMELBOURNE (Reuters)\u2014Australia's John Landy, world mile\nrecord holder, said on his arrival\nhome from the United States Sunday that he has no further interest in the mile record.\n\"I've rather beaten the mile to\ndeath,\" he said. \"Now I would like\nto leave it to someone else.\"\nDeclaring that he wants a long\nrest this winter, Landy said he\nwill run only a few trials between\nnow and the Olyrrlpic games here\nin November. He will run.the 1500\nmetres in the games.\nSet Up Plans\nTo Pick Champ\nBOSTON (AP) \u2014 The executive\ncommittee of the National Boxing\nAssociation Saturday approved an\nelimination series for the heavyweight title starting with the Hurricane Jackson - Floyd Patterson\nbout next month.\nThe committee decided the NBA\nwould recognize as champion the\nwinner of the three-bout series.\nThe winner of the Jackson-Patterson bout June 8 would meet\nlight heavyweight champion Archie Moore, stopped by Rocky\nMarciano in the latter's last bout\nbefore retiring as heavy king.\nThe winner of that bout then\nwould meet the fighter listed as\nNo. 1 contender by the NBA for\nthe title within 90 days. It was not\ndecided what would happen if\nJackson, Patterson or Moore became the No. 1 contender.\nThe executive committee said\nthat the next NBA ratings would\nbe issued June 1. The committee\nvoted that hereafter ratings will\nbe issued monthly, Instead of\nquarterly.\n\"WeVe been talking to motorists coast to coast\nand here's what you tell us* you want:\nsplit-second service\nand *we Imperial Esso Dealers are doing\nour Lest to give it to you. at our stations\nIn a hurry for gasoline? Imperial Esso is the place to\noome! Want your oar oompletely and carefully lubricated?\nRemember this: Our Imperial \"Specialized Labrloatdon\"\nmeans every point lubricated, by chart, according to the\nmanufacturer's specifications 1\nYou'll find our Imperial Esso Station handily located near\nyou. Call In and see ua today.\nIMPERIAL\nCsso\nDEALER\nAIWAYS LOOK TO IMPERIAL FOR THE BEST\nthrow, Fred Nevakshonoff, Castlegar.\nGirls 12 over broad jump, Sher-\nryl Anderson, Castlegar; boys 12\nover high jump, Billy Berquist,\nKinnaird; 10 under girls Softball\nthrow, Sharon Paulson, Kinnaird;\n10 under boys softball throw,\nDavid Leitner, Kinnaird; 11 under\ngirls 75 yard dash, Sherryl Anderson, Castlegar; 11 under boys 75\nyard dash, Jack Whittaker, Castlegar; Girls 10 under broad jump.\nBrenda Sanft, Castlegar; boys 10\nunder high jump, Kenny Roberts,\nKinnaird; 12 over girls softball\nthrow, Elizabeth Reneerkins, Kinnaird; 12 over boys softball throw,\nTim Horkoff, Castlegar; girls 11\nunder high jump, Brenda Hill,\nCastlegar; boys 11 under broad\njump, Jack Whittaker, Castlegar;\njunior relay (9 under) girls, Castlegar, and boys, Kinnaird. Senior\nrelay (10 and under) both boys j\nand girls won by Castlegar.\nTotal score on a point basis was |\n122 for Castlegar and 110 for Kin\nnaird.\nHall-of-Famer Al Simmons\nSuccumbs to Heart Attack\nBy CHUCK CAPALDO\nMILWAUKEE (AP) - Al Simmons, whose batting\nfeats with an odd foot-in-the-bucket stance earned him a\nniche in baseball's Hall of Fame, died here early Saturday,\nfour   days   after   his   54th\nbirthday.\nOne of the game's greatest right-\n\u25a0handed-hitting outfielders, he collapsed on a sidewalk outside the\nMilwaukee athletic club where he\nlived in retirement and was dead\non arrival at a hospital. Death was\nattributed to a heart attack.\nBehind him Simmon*! left a\nscore of memorable baseball\nachievements.\nHe had a lifetime major league\nbatting average of -334 for 21\nyears, won consecutive American League batting championships\nwith\\ marks of .381 in 1930 and .390\nin 1931; and played in four world\nseries with a cumulative batting\naverage of ,329.\nSimmons was elected to baseball's Hall of Fame in 1953. His\nplaque at the Cooperstown, N.Y.,\nshrine contains this brief rundown\non his great career:\n\"Played   with  seven   major\nleague clubs 1924-1944. Star with\nPhila A.  L.  Batted ,308 to .392\nfrom   1924 to 1934... moit  hlti\nby A.  L.   right-handed   batter\nwith 2831. Led leaguetruni batted In, runs scored, hits and total\nbases several seasons. Hit three\nhome runs, July 15, 1932 . . .\"\nSimmons was fond of recalling\nspring training of 1924 whne he\nbroke in with the Athletics at Fort\nMeyers, Fla.\nMack had bought him from Milwaukee Brewers for $30,000. Simmons went up to the As with a\nwidely publicized ball player\nnamed Paul Strand, for whom\nMack had shelled out  $75,000.\n\"It was Strand, the fans* wanted\nto see, not Simmons,\" Al recalled\nin later years. \"I was just so much\nexcess baggage.\"\nAl kept his left foot \"in the\nbucket\"\u2014pointed in the general\ndirection of third base.\nBut Mack wouldn't hear of\nchanging it.\n\"Leave the young man alone,\"\nMack said. \"If he can hit .398 for\nMilwaukee let him bat the way he\nwants. I don't care if he stands\ndn his head.\"\nOutlaw Sluggers Have Field Day\nAs Hunters Loses Doubleheader\nHUNTERS, Wash. \u2014 Nelson\nOutlaws blasted Hunters hurlers\nfor 42 hits in a Wash.-B.C. League\ndoubleheader here Sunday afternoon as they crushed the local\nteam, 19-6, in the opener and 15-3,\nin the nightcap.\nWendy Keller restricted Hungers to two hits in the opener and\nstruck out 10 as his mates slammed Hank Holland for 27 hits, including four each by Tom Marshall, Ron Nash and Bob McDonald.\nAmong the extra-base blows were\na double and a triple by Nash; a\ndouble and a homer by Lefty\nWhite and a double by McDonald.\nGus Adams, Earl Lobb and Keller each collected three safeties\nwhile White, Bob Holsten and\nBarry McDowell slammed out two\napiece.\nManager Nash came up with\nanother hurler to add to his grow\ning staff when, in the nightcap, he\ninserted young Blair Olson in\nrelief of Stan Grill. He surrendered two hits and fanned six. Grill,\nwho tossed the first four innings\nand received credit for the victory,\nfanned three and gave up only one'\nsafety.\nAs in the opener, Outlaws\nmangled Hunters pitching. White\npounded out a triple and double,\nGrill did the same and Bernie\nMonteieone incorporated* a homer\nand double into his three-hit performance. Grill, Lobb and White\neach whacked to hits, while\nMarshall, Nash, McDowell and\nHolsten collected singles, to complete the 15-hit total.\nFrench Tennis\nHas New Champ\nPARIS (AP)\u2014Althea Gibson of\nNew York, the first Negro woman\nadmited to the U.S. Lawn Tennis\nAssociation rankings, continued her domination of the international circuit Saturday when\nshe won the French women's\nsingles champion by beating defending titleholder Angela Mortimer of Britain 6-0, 12-10.\nMiss Gibson's victory, her seventh ln succession and 13th in all\nin the tour which began in India\nlast December, overshadowed\nLew Hoad's expected victory over\nSweden's Sven Davidson in the\nmen's final 6-4, 8-6, 6-3. The big\nblonde from Australia blew Davidson off thexourt in an hour and\n20 minutes.\nThe 28-year-old American girl,\nseventh ranked in the United\nStates, had been beaten in all four\nprevious matches with the 24-\nyear-old English girl.\nMiss Mortimer, unnaccountably\nnervous in the first set, settled\ndown in the second and made a\nbattle of it before the more than\n12,500 persons in Roland Garros\nstadium.\nJohnny Bratton\nIn Mental Hospital\nCHICAGO (AP)\u2014Johnny Bratton, former welterweight boxing\nchampion, is in Cook county psy-,\nchopathic hospital suffering from\nwhat is described as \"emotional\ndistress.\" '\nHis mother took him to the hospital Thursday. The attending\nphysician said today Bratton it\n\"unimproved.\"\nThe Chicago boxer was recognized as champion by the National   Boxing   Association   after\n[taking a  15-round decision from\nI Charley   Fusari   at  Chicago  Sta-\n:dium March 14, 1951.\nj    He lost to Kid Gavilan at New\nI York two months later.\nPreakness Victor\nTriumphant Again\nCAMDEN, N.J. (AP) \u2014 Fabius\ndisplayed the class of his famous\ndaddy,  Citation, Saturday as  he ,\nwon the $62,009 Jersey stakes by\ntwo lengths over the Happy Hill J\nFarm's Kingmaker.\nKingmaker took second \u00bblace\nmoney of $10,000 by a nose over\nCareer Boy, owned by C. V. Whitney.\nLast week Fabius upset Needles\nin the Preakness, after running\nsecond to the Florida colt in the !\nKentucky Derby, and his success\nSaturday probably will make him\nthe favorite for the $100,000 Belmont Stakes in New York June 16.\nThe Calumet Farms entry covered the lVs miles in 1:48 4-5.\nRussian Vouches\nFor Eligibility\nOf Olympic Team\nCAIRO (AP) \u2014 President Avery\nBrundage of the International\nOlympic Committee said Sunday\nthe committee's Russian representative has investigated whether\nRussians were following Olympic\namateurism rules.\nBrundages said during a press\ninference that doubts had been\nraised on whether the Russians\nwere following the rules. The Russian committee member told Brundage that they were.\n\"We have to trust him because\nwe have no other proof that Russia infringes the rules of amateurism,\" said Brundage.\nBaseball Standings\nNATIONAL  LEAGUE\nW     L    Pet Gbl\nMilwaukee    .16    9   .640 1\nSt. Louis   . ..      22    13    .629 -\nPittsburgh      ..    18   13   .581 2\nCincinnati        18   14   .563 2Vt\nBrooklyn r ...       17   14   .548 3\nNew York      ..   14   18   .438 6Vi\nPhiladelphia   .   10   21   .323 10\nChicago 8   21   .276 11\nGames behind figured from St.\nLouis, the won-lost leader.\nAMERICAN  LEAGUE '\nW     L    Pet Gbl\nNew York     .    25   12   .676 -\nCleveland   i.....   20   14   .588 3V4\nBoston        18   16   .529 ill\nChicago         15   14   .517 6\nBaltimore    . ..   16   19   .457 8\nWashington    .    15   21    417 9*4\nDetroit 15   21   .417 9V4\nKansas City   .    14   21   .412 10\nVANISH TROLLEY\nNEW YORK (AP)\u2014The city will\ndiscontinue its last two trolley-car\nlines, both in Brooklyn, next fall.\nAfter that the only trolley in operation will be a privately-operated\nservice over the Queensborough\nbridge.\nDGDEN'S\nwmm*msm> \u25a0   \u25a0:\u25a0\u25a0*\u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0**\u25a0' -\"    * *-:\"#&a*ggMggffi\nF\" .   * *. .\n:' V:-tLM--Zmmy:Z\n-M -AG\nbest bike\nBritish Cricket\nLONDON (Reuters)  - Cricket\nclose-of-play scores in Britain:\nAustralians 334 for 3 vs MCC.\nSussex 315, Essex 34 for 0.\nYorkshire 99, Middlesex 148 for\n6.\n. Glamorgan   133,. Lancashire  98\ntori.\nGloucestershire 52, Surrey   191\n(Surrey all out at the close).\nNottinghamshire 332,  for 8  vs\nNorthamptonshire.\nDerbyshire 150 Somerset 138 for\nI.'     \u00bb   .\nKent 286. Warwickshire 37 for 2.\nHjmpshire 370 for 7 vs Worcestershire.\nEDEY'S CYCLE SHOP\n737 Baker St.\nPhone  1045\n|H|PPERSONS HARDWARE Co. Ltd.\n395 Baker St.\nPhone 497\nWOOD, VALLANCE HDWE. Co. Ltd.\n593 Baker St.\n : .\u25a0\u201e\u00bb,\u25a0 \u25a0 \u2022: ^ii\u00bb*fe'M\" \t\nPhone 1530\n_\n___^__^__^_\n ^ -r^r-\n~\n\"   '\n\u25a0--.>\nrasg\nSPORTS\nRecords Fall at High\nSchool Track Meet\nCASTLEGAR \u2014 Castlegar's\nStanley Humphries High School\npiled up highest number of points\nhere Saturday, to win the West\nKootenay-Boundary district high\nschool track meet.\nIn the class \"A\" grpup, schools\nwith over 250 pupils, Castlegar\nathletes pulled thetd to amass a\ntotal of 190 points, while Trail, as\nrunners-up, came up with 168'A\npoints. Next in line, Nelson representatives, collected 74^4 points,\nand Rossland, in fourth place had\n58 points.\nSalmo, the only school in the\nclass \"B\" group, schools with under 250 pupils, collected 46 points-\nBig thrill of the day was when\nBob Bush of Trail streaked\naround the track in 4:58:7 to beat\nlast year's record of 5:5:0 in the\none-mile event and win the coveted trophy awarded annually, by\nLadies Auxiliary Branch No.\n170, Canadian Legion, Castlegar.\nBush also came in first in the 440-\nyard dash, breaking the previous\nmark with a time of 53:5.\nTied for first place with Bob\nBush to win the senior boys' a|-\ngregate trophy was Castlegar's\nFred Stoochnow, setting a new\nhigh of 11 feet four inches for the\npole-vault, a gain of 5 inches from\nlast year's record, and coming in\nMichel Buffaloes\nWhitewash Rivals\nNATAL-MICHEL - Playing\ntheir opening game at the Natal\nball park in the Crowsnest Pass\nFootball League before a large\ncrowd Sunday afternoon, Michel\nBuffaloes scored the first whitewash of the young season when\nthey edged Lethbridge ANAF, 1-0.\nHarvey Travis scored the only\ngoal of the game late in the first\nhalf when he shot from well out\nto completely fool the Lethbridge\ngoalie as he made a vain attempt\nto clear the looper over the cVoss--\nbar.\nThe teams played on even terms\nduring the second half with both\ngoalies making spectacular saves.\nJimmy McVeigh in the Michel nets\nearned his shutout with many fine\nsaves.\nwith    a    record-breaking    broad\njump of 21 feet Vi Inches.\nSharon Piatt of Trail won   the\nsenior girls'aggregate trophy with\nfirst in the 75-yard and 100-yard\n; dashes, as well as the high jump.\nIntermediate   aggregate   trophy\nI was   captured   by   Rossland's   D\nBertoia who was a winner in the\n200-yard, 880 yard and pole vault\n! event for intermediate groups.\nI NEW RECORDS\n;    Others setting new records Saturday were J. Allen, Nelson, girls\ndiscus   throw,   over   16   class,   a\nmark of 89 feet, 8 inches.\n|    B.  Brown,  Trail,  girls  14 and\nI under, broadjump, 15 feet. 5Vi inches, previous mark, 15 feet. 2Vi\nj inches.\nM. Lund, Trail, girls 16 under,\nbroadjump, 15 feet, 2 inches.\nT. Elmes, Salmo, boys 16 over\nshotput, 40 feet, 3Vt inches.\nCastlegar, girls over 16, in four\nby 110 relay, time 56:9.\nR. Babuin, Trail, boys 16 under\ndiscus, 148 feet, fl inches.\nG. Pognotti, Trail, girls under\n14 hop step and Jump, 31 feet, 1%\ninches'.\nY. Patton, Castlegar, girls under 16 hop, step and jump, 31 feet,\n7 inches.\nT. Pighin, Rossland girls 16 under discus. 99 feet.\nA. Pellegrin, Castlegar, boys 14\nunder, hop, step and jump, 36\nfeet, 5 inches.\nK. Patterson, Trail, boys over\n16 high jump, 5 feet, 10 inches.\nTrail boys, medley relay, over\n16, 1:42.5.\nR. Bucknell, Castlegar, boys 16\nunder, high jump, 5 feet, 6 inches.\nTrail boys, 16 under, four times\n110 relay, 47:8.\nC. F. Sanderson, physical education instructor, Stanley Humphries High School, was in charge\nof the events, which were run off\nat the high school grounds in\nCastlegar.\nMinor Soccer\nRoundup\nA default marred the slate of\nminor league soccer contests Saturday morning as Newcastle, defaulted to Manchesters in a midget encounter because they were\nunable to dress sufficient players.\nWolves downed Rovers, 1-0, in\nthe other midget contest, while\nCeltics defeated Hotspurs, 2-0, in\nthe lone junior game, in which\nthe coaches were pressed into\nservice,\nThe only goal of the midget\ngame was scored by Bruce Rollick.\nOnly fine goaltending by Cain and\nPaxton of Wolves and Rovers,\nrespectively, held the score within\nthe bounds of logic. McKenzie,\nRogers and Gray shone for the\nvictors, while Shay, Slater and\nFlorio played well for Rovers.\nFred Taylor, coach of Celtics,\nand Jim Christie, the Hotspur\nmentor? bolstered their teams\nduring the junior contest. Rain fell\nduring the second half, which\nmade the going even rougher than\nusual.\nVic Smith and Roland Young\ncounted for Celtics, both goals\ncoming toward the end of the first\nhalf.\nLeafs Drop Opener to A's 5-4\nDespite Severyn's Six-Hitter\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILY\nWhile the Navy\nCaters to You.\nAssist the Catering Officer and\nlearn food management. You\ncan received valuable training\nin the cooking and catering\nbranches. You must be physically fit, have Grade 8' education, be between 17 and 25. See\nthe Naval Recruiting Officer on\nJUNE19\nCANADIAN LEGION\nor write him at\n312 West Pender Street\nVancouver, B, C.\nCreston School\nDominates Meet\nKIMBERLEY \u2014 Creston's Prince\nCharles High School continued its\nlongtime domination of the annual\nEast Kootenay high school track\nmeet here, with an aggregate of\n110.5 points for the afternoon. Kim-\nberley's McKim High School was\nsecond with 71.5 points and Cran-\nbrook's Mount Baker School third\n\u2022it 62 points.\nTwo Kootenay boundary records\nfell in the meet, when T. Wayling,\nof Creston, won the shotput at\n41 feet four inches, far ahead of\nthe record 40 feet, and M. McKenzie, of Creston, the junior girls'\nbroadjump reached 14 feet, two\ninches over the previous record.\nHe\nwalked  the  first  three   men   he\nfaced,   forced   Frankie   and   Les\ninfield, then walked Joe Postni-\nkoff to force in a run.\nGOOD SUPPORT\nSeaman, showing a fine curve\nand adequate speed, walked seven\nand struck out four, but received\nexcellent support from his mates.\nHe tightened up considerably in\nthe final three innings and retired\nthe side in order ln the ninth.\nLeafs had little difficulty getting\nmen on base. Their biggest problem was bringing them home.;\nThey stranded 11 men. Lome Bay'\nshowed one way to solve the dil- j\nemma. He clouted the only homer!\nof the day in the fifth inning a\nlong blast over the left field fence. I\nWomen Golfers Open\nHunt for Noxon Cup\nWhile Arnold Sherwood, Doug\nCampbell, R. Petty and Leigh McBride were touring the links at\nNelson Golf and Country Club ln\nthe finals and consolation events\nof the Wilson Trophy Match play\ntournament, they were bucking\nhordes of women golfers.\nThe women were playing the\nfirst round of Noxon Cup competition, which will drag on throughout the summer.\nNext Sunday the qualifying\nrounds will be played for the\nwomen's club championship and\nthe C. D. Blackwood trophy.\nEskimos Sign\nMaryland Punter\nEDMONTON (CP) \u2014 Edmonton\nEskimos announced Saturday they\nhave signed punting end Bill Walker of the University of Maryland\nfor the 1956 Western Interprovin-\ncial Football Union season.\nWalker, a native of West Mifflin\nPa., is expected to take over the\npunting chores for the Grey Cup\nchampions who lost Bob Heyden-\nfeldt to the United States military\ndraft. Heydenfeldt averaged 43.3\nyards a punt last year.\nWalker, 21, was selected an all-\nAmerican end in 1954, his junior\nyear, and repeated last season at\nMaryland. His punting average\nfor the last two years Is 41.9 yards.\nNICE, France (Reuters) \u2014\nBristol City, English second division soccer club, Sunday defeated Nice, the French champions\n3-1 after leading 1-0 at halftime.\nTrail A's proved to a small crowd at Civic Recreation\nGround Sunday afternoon that a knockout punch will do\nmore damage than any number of slaps across the back of\nthe neck with the business end of a feather-duster.\nThe point was demonstrated when A's, formerly\nunder the banner of Fruitvale, reached Marsh Severyn for\nonly six hits, including a triple and a double, to defeat\nNelson Maple Leafs, 5-4 in the local Border League baseball inaugural.\n_.,,.. .    Trail   chucker  Bob   Seaman.\nCapitalizing   on   an   error   by\nLome Bay, a single by Dave Darke\nand a mammoth triple to  right TT .,     ,      , ,       ...\n,\u2022 ,j ,.    r,-\u201e   tv \u00bb. .Hufty  to  slap  grounders  to   the\nfield by Bill Johnson, A's scored |nf,_^   ,_ ^^   ,_ Pn<rfti|_\nthree runs in the first inning and\nrefused to allow Leafs to overhaul\nthem. But the Leafs came close\non several occasions.\nThe double\u2014by Wally Russell\n\u2014was actually the BIG blow to\nLeafs hopes as, with Darke and\nBusher Mclntyre aboard in the\nfifth inning, he picked out a\nSeveryn toss and maced it to deep\nleft-centre for two bases \u2014 and\nthe ball game.\nSHARP CONTROL\nStarting then, Severyn retired 14\nmen in succession, none of them\non strikes as he gave a sterling\nexhibition of control. Over the\nnine-inning route, Severyn fanned\nonly three but walked none. Only\ntwice did he allow a count to reach\nthree balls and two strikes, and\non each occasion, the batter fanned.\nLeafs utilized a pop-gun attack\nwhich collected seven singles\namong their eight-hit quota to remain within reaching distance.\nLeafs tallied in the first, second,\nfifth and sixth frames.\nThe first run. came by virtue of\nsupreme generosity on behalf of\n95,000 Spectators\nAs English Nats\nBeat West Germans\nBERLIN (AP) \u2014 England's national soccer team defeated the\nworld champion West German\nteam 3-1 today before a sellout\nthrong of 95,000 In Olympic Stadium. *-\nEngland led 1-0 at halftime.\nThe English club, a 3-to-l\nfavorite in the pre-game betting,\nlived up to expectations with a\nclassy display of fast and accurate\npassing. Except in the closing\nminutes, the visitors dominated\nthe play.\nEngland's left half Duncan Edwards registered^ the lone tally of\nthe first half. He, broke through\nthe German defence to scora from\nsix yards out in the 26th minute.\nOutside left Colin Grainger\nscored England's second goal, putting the ball into the German net\nin the 62nd minute from 15 yards.\nSeven minutes later, inside right\nJohn Haynes registered from nine\nyards out to make it 3-0.\nThe German team's only goal\ncame five minutes before the end\nwhen inside left Fritz Walter\nscored from eight yards out.\nThe gates to the courts at Nelson\nTennis Club were officially opened\nSunday at 11 a.m., but members\nhad been practicing on them for\ntwo weeks prior to that time.\nShortly before noon, there were\nonly a few members present, but\nPresident Jimmy Green said he\nanticipated a larger turnout during\nthe afternoon. Ha said he was\nunable to estimate the membership\nbecause there had, he added, been\nnothing done in the way of making\nplans for this season.\nMr. Green was optimistic when\nspeaking about the civic tennis\ncourts at Lakeside Park. He said\nhe believed the courts would make\nit possible for Nelson teen-agers to\nlearn the game \"without having to\ncome all the way up here (the tennis courts are located on the\ngrounds of Nelson Golf and Country Club) to do it.\"\nThe club, established in 1949, has\nbeen, Mr. Green said, fighting a\nlosing battle ever since its incep-\nRookie First-Sacker Slams\n4 Hits as Braves Stop Reds\nBy JOE REICHLER\nThe Associated Press\nSparked by rookie Frank Torre's\nfour consecutive hits, Milwaukee\nBraves stubbornly clung to first\nplace in the National League Sunday by defeating Cincinnati Red\nLOANS for things\nyou need and want\nGel $SOto $1000 at Household Finance\nfor any worthwhile purpose. It's the\nway thousands of people every year\nget the extra cash they need on terms\nthey can afford.\nIf you have a steady income, and you\ncan meet the regular monthly payments, you can borrow without\nendorsers at HFC\nHOUSEHOLD FINANCE\nK. M.' otigMy, \/Aottogtf\n608 Baker Street, second floor, phone 1890\nNELSON, B.C |\numumit branch: tn Howard stn\u00bbt, t>i>\u00b0\u2122 ui t-mt\nRevelstoke 3X Pale Beer\nOKANAGAN Lager\nNOW AVAILABLE AT ALL LOCAL LIQUOR\nCONTROL BOARD STORES\nYOU  WILL ENJOV  THESE REALLY  FINE BEERS\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed\nby the Liquor Control Board ot by the\nGovernment ot British Columbia\nlegs 7-2 in the rubber game of\ntheir three-game set.\nBraves needed the victory to\nStave off the surging St. Louis\nCardinals, who swept both ends\nof a doubleheader from Chicago,\n11-9 and 12-2. The twin triumphs\nactually boosted Redbirds a full\ngame over Milwaukee, but Braves\nhold a percentage point lead, .640\nto .629 because they have lost only\nnine games to Cardinals' 13.\nRain curtailed the activity-Sunday, washing out a scheduled\ndouble header between Pittsburgh\nand Philadelphia and single games\nbetween Brooklyn and Philadelphia and single games between\nBrooklyn and New York Giants\nand Baltimore and New York\nYankees.\nLEAD INTACT\nYankees' three and a half game\nlead in the American League regained intact as Chicago White\nSox outlasted the second place\nCleveland Indians 5-4 in a marathon first game that required four\nhours; ,52 minutes and iS innings\nto play,\n] Early Wynn gave the Indians an\njeven break by hurling a five-hit\n4-2 triumph in the second game.\nThe defeat, left White Sox in\nfourth place, six games off the\npace. It was Wynn's fifth victory\nagainst two defeats.\nBoston's third place Red Sox\nwere held to.a split by Washing-\nion with Red Sox winning the\nfirst game 9-7 and Senators taking\nthe second game 11-10 in 10 innings. Kansas City also got a split\nwith Detroit, winning the second\ngame 5-0 after Tigers had taken\nan 8-2 decision.\nTorre, who replaced the slumping Joe Adcock at first base a'\nweek ago, stepped three singles\nand a double, drove in one run\nand scored two. He now has a\nstreak of five successive hits.\nBraves wrapped the game up\nearly against loser Art Fowler\nbut Lew Burdette   needed   help\nfrom Dave Jolly in the seventh to\nregister his third victory against\ntwo defeats.\nHITTERS IN FORM\nCardinals blasted out 27 hits,\nincluding home runs by Stan\nMusial and Ken Boyer, in their\ndouble win over Cubs. They blew\nan early seven-run lead in the\nopener but fought back to win\nas bonus baby Lindy McDaniel\ngained his fourth triumph with a\nnifty 4 2-3 inning relief chore.\nMusial drove in seven runs on four\nhits, including his sixth home run.\n8IEVERS H0MER8\nRoy Sievers' run - producing\ndouble in the 10th gave Senators\na split after Red Sox had erupted\nfor seven runs in the third inning\nto win the opener. Sievers, also\nhomered in each game driving in\nfive runs. In the four game series,\nhe rapped nine hits in 16 times\nat bat, and drove in 10 runs.\nPitcher Jim Wilson, making his\nfirst appearance for the White Sox\nsince he was acquired! from Baltimore several days ago, won h'is\nown game with a two-out single in\nthe 15ui that drove in Minnie Minoso with the winning run.\nMEN'S\nWORK\nBOOTS\nSee our compflete line\n\u2022 Dayton\n\u2022 Greb\n\u2022 Leckie\nat competitive prices.\nANDREW'S\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, MAY 28, 1956 \u2014 7\nSherwood, Petty Win\nGolf Tourney Finals\nAlberta Champs\nWhack Dynamos\nKIMBERLEY - Alberta champion Granum White Sox, who\nthree times came between Kimberley Dynamoes and a baseball\ntournament championship in East\nKootenay last season, did it again ;\nin a weekend doubleheader here\nto open Dynamos' 1956 season,    j\nBehind three hit pitching by!\nWill Walsco, Granum beat Dyna-j\nmos 12-2 Saturday* Imported I\npitchers Kurt Bloomquist and!\nEarl Ingarfield of Spokane allow-!\ned twelve hits between them, and'\nKimberley made nine errors in |\nthe opening game, ' ' j\nIn the Sunday game Kimberley j\ntook' a 5-0 lead in the first with |\nElmer Garinger on the mound, |\nbut it eventually seeped away to\nan ultimate 7-5 win for Granum,\nwho had Joe Weraney and Bentley\nMcCrewen on the mound.\nStroking his putts and approaches with almost machine-like precision and accuracy, Arnold Sherwood Sunday morning defeated\nDoug Campbell, 3 and 2 at Nelson\nGolf and Country Club in the\nfinals of the Wilson Trophy Match\nPlay Golf tournament.\nSherwood moved ahead of his\nolder, larger rival immediately and\nconstructed a four-hole margin\nby the end of the first nine. He\nscrambled ever so slightly on the\n10th and 11th holes, losing one and\nScant Handful Present\nAs Tennis Court Opens\ntion to try and put tennis back -on\nsolid ground with the youth of\nNelson. He told of past summers\nwhen youths^turned out faithfully\n. . . until the water was right for\nswimming.\nBriefly, Mr. Male, who during\nthe winter is an ardent badminton\nfan, explained that before World\nWar II there were 15 courts in\nNelson. \"Now, he said, \"there are\nthree here and those at the park.\"\nThe club, which pays a fee of\nfive dollars per member to the\nGolf Club for the use of the\nground, was resurrected almost entirely by private individuals interested in the social contacts and\nhealthy recreation presented by\nsuch an organization.\nMr. Male pointed out that it is\npossible at any time to have a\nmatch, provided, of course, one has\nan opponent. He added, too, that\nprospective members have two\nweeks of free play as a sort of inducement.\nREWARD SLUGGER\nFOR RECORD FEAT\nPHILADELPHIA (AP) \u2014Dale\nLong, Pittsburgh'-^ slugging first\nbaseman who has set a major\nleague record of hitting home\nruns In seven consecutive games,\nhas been rewarded with a $2500\npay boost to put his salary at\n$16,500.\nBefore leaving here for New\nYork to participate in a countrywide television broadcast, Long\nsaid general manager Joe Brown\nnotified him of the pay boost\nSaturday night, a few hours after\nhe had smashed a homer against\nPhiladelphia Phillies .to set the\nrecord.\ni \"Joe told me when I signed my\ncontract that I would hear from\nhim later,\" Long declared. \"I was\nasking for $15,000 and he wanted\nme to sign for $14,000.\n\"He called Saturday night and\nwhen he said he was tearing up\nmy contract and giving me a new\none for a raise of $2500, I choked\nup.\"\nLong will try to better his record when the Pirates meet the\nBrooklyn Dodgers in the first of\na two game series at Pittsburgh\ntonight.\nKimberley Canucks\nFlatten Cranbrook\nKIMBERLEY B.C. - Kimberley\nCanadians beat Cranbrook Rovers\nhere Saturday 6-1 as the teams met\nin the initial scheduled game of\nthe Crowsnest Pass Football\nLeague.\nScorers were Tick Beattie,\ntwice, Roy Holland, Bill Fair-\nclough and Ted Vogelaar for Kimberley. Next Saturday Kimberley\nplays at Lethbridge against ANAF,\nand Cranbrook hosts Lethbridge\nLegion.\nhalving the other, but recovered\non the 12th and 13th with magni-\nffbent shots.\nThose shots displayed the form\nthat made Sherwood club champion and allowed him to chase\nBruce Latremouille to the 15th\nhole in the Wilson Trophy tourney\nlast spring before yielding In the\nfinals.\nOn the 12th, leading by three\nholes with seven remaining, Sherwood smothered his drive and\nwound up in the rough to the right\nof the fairway. Campbell's drive\nwas long and true, leaving him in\na fine position for his second shot,\nwhich was also a dandy,\nSherwood hacked the ball into\nthe middle of the fairway and\nslammed a seven-iron shot to\nwithin 25 feet of the pin. He had\nalready used three strokes on a\npar-four hole. The fourth one hit\nthe back of the cup and dropped.\nCampbell needed two putts. The\nhole was halved.\nCampbell and Sherwood were\nin almost relative positions on the\n13th hole, with Sherwood due to\nshoot first. He hefted his trusty\nseven-iron and popped it in. For\nthat shot he was approximately 40\nfeet away.\nSomehow the spectators sensed\nat that moment that Campbell was\nbeaten. The only person who didn't\nknow it was Campbell.\nThey matched 6's on th* 15th,\nbut Campbell received a -stroke\nunder the original rules of the\ntourney, which held him In contention one hole longer. Sherwood's par on the 16th closed out\nthe match.\nSherwood last week brok\u00ab his\nputter in his semi-final match\nagainst Charlie Hayles. To compensate for his loss, he spent hours\non the practice green during the\nweek. Thg practice must have paid\noff. He was five-over-par when\nthe match concluded. Campbell's\napproximate medal score was not\navailable.\n\u25a0 R. Petty downed Leigh McBride,\n3 and 2, in the consolation final,\nplayed in the afternoon. Petty\nhad a rougher time than did Sherwood, but seldom was the issue\nin doubt, especially after the ninth\nhole.\nBatteries\nMINING - LOGGING\nAND AUTOMOTIVE\nRepairs to  A.U  Types\n509 Lake St. Phone I\nARROW BATTERIES\nPresident Classic 4-Door Sedan\nNow \"traffic-test\" the\nbig new Studebaker!\nNovtf s a perfect time to take this big new Studebaker\nout in traffic to Bee how it behaves!\nAnd, believe us, it behaves just great. When the\nlight.says Go, you go\u2014whisked by 210-hp. Take-off\nTorque. When it says Stop, you stop\u2014with the\nbiggest brakes in the low price field. You see better,\ndrive more effortlessly, and ride more comfortably\nand safely than in any other car in the field!\nSo come in. Traffic-test the Studebaker yourself.\nYou're bound to agree it's the biggest value today!\nJUST PKK UP YOUR PHONE\nand tall your Studebaker\ndealer when you'd lik\u00ab to\nhave him bring a demonstration model to your door.\nNo obligation oi course.\n^LWAYS^UYV1\neRTIHEO'OSBD CARS FROM STUDEBAKER DEALERS'\nStudebaker Oa^p **t*\n6TUDEBAKER-PACKARD OF CANADA, LIMITED-WHERE PRIDE OP WORKMANSHIP STILL COMES FIRST\nDefoe Sevvice I*t cl\u00bb 213 baker street\u2014phone 1234\n   .\nCar Market Slump Brings Layoffs\nAnd Test of Trust Fund Benefits\nBy DWIGHT L. PITKIN\nDETROIT (AP) - Laid-off\nworkers next month will start\ngetting benefits from multi-\nmillion- dollar company trust\nfunds. Some say the impact on\nthe U.S. economy of this modified\nguaranteed wage will rank with\nHenry Ford's $5 day ln the 1920s.\nThe' supplemental unemployment benefit was negotiated last\nyear by,the United Auto, Workers\nwith General Motors, Ford and\nChrysler. By June 1 these firms\nwill have paid an estimated $64,-\nOOO.poo into trust funds to get the\nplan going. Three years hence\u2014\nif all goes, well \u2014 the funds\nshould total around $250,000;000.\nBut the plan is getting off to, a\ntough start. It was born in s year\nwhen auto production reached sn\nalltime high. It is starting to\ntoddle in a year when production\nof new cars had fallen off by more\nthan 20 per cent. About 150,000\nworkers in the, auto industry have\nbeen laid off. Nearly all1 of them\nlost their jobs before May 2, and\nso are ineligible .to collect company benefits., But there have\nbeen enough layoffs since May 2\nto put an unexpected. burden on\nthe funds at the start of the plan's\noperation.\nCAR  MARKET 8LUMPS\nDetroit has been hard hit by the\nfailure of the car market to keep\nup with the booming pace of 1955.\nGM and Ford took up much of\nthe slack by cutting out overtime.\nChrysler, whose operations centre\nIn the Detroit area, was in a dif-\nCopper Prices\nDrop Sharply\nNEW YORK (AP) - World\ncopper prices continued their decline last week with a sharp drop.\nU.S. custom smelters, who had\nheld steady at 45 cents a pound\nfor several weeks, joined the trend\nwith a two-cent price cut.\nMajor U.S. producers kept firm\nat 46 cents a pound. There was\ntalk of pressure on the big companies to bring this price down\nbut producers report they have\nsold their June productiorT at that\nlevel.\nThe 48-cent price- was established in mid-February as the\nhighest' on record in more than\n110 years.\nOn the London m<\\ial exchange,\ncopper dropped to the equivalent\nof 38% cents bid, the lowest\nquotation since early May 8 last\nyear, then recovered slightly.\nIn the UniteH States, the brass\nIndustry reported production cuts\nof as much as 25 per cent from\nseveral months ago. Copper Inventories at brass mills were reported the highest ln more than\neight years. i\nZinc and lead prices held steady\nlast week.\nMETALS PRICES:\nCopper \u2014 43-46 cents a pound,\ndelivered. Foreign 38%-43'\/< cents,\nnominal. New York.\nLead \u2014 16 cents a pound, New\nYork; 15.8 cents, St. Louis.\nZinc \u2014 13.5 cents a pound, East\nSt. Louis; 14 cents, New York.\nAluminum \u2014 25.9 cents a pound,\ningots, shipping point. Pigs 24\ncents.\nNickel \u2014 64.5 cents a pound,\nelectrolytic cathodes, Port Col-\nborne, Ont., U.S. duty  Included.\nSilver \u2014 903A cents an ounce,\nNew York; 78% pence, London.\nTin \u2014 96% a pound, New York.\nferent spot. Chrysler took on s\nlot of new employees last year in\na bid to step up production and\ngain a larger'share of the market.\nNow It has laid off around 38,000\nworkers.\n'GM had an estimated 400.000\ntiourly workers a year ago. The\ncompany disclosed this month it\nhas laid off 50,000, spread around\nthe U.S. Ford had 1B7.950 employees in 1955 but has not disclosed how many have been laid\noff.\nRussia Seeks\nAfrican Power\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014Russia has\nlaunched a drive to establish contracts right across nortHern Africa, diplomatic quarters here believe.\nAccording to these sources, the\nSoviet approach to Egypt, initiated last year with the provision\nof arms and military Instruction\nby Communist bloc ln eastern\nEurope, now appears as only the\nfirst phase of a concerted move\napross the African  continent\nFollowing the approach to\nEgypt, which also included an offer of economic aid, the Soviet\ngovernment has established diplomatic relations with Sudan, Libya\nand Liberia.\nThe establishment of diplomatic\nrelations with Sudan has been\nfollowed up by an offer of eco-\nnomic aid. including a long-term\nloan. Czechoslovakia has offered\nto sell srms to Sudan.\nLIBERIAN OFFER\nTechnical aid has been offered\nto Liberia and the Soviet authorities have proposed that the establishment of relations between the\ntwo governments should lead to\neconomic and cultural co-operation.\nThe extent of contact which will\nfollow the establishment of relations with Libya is still unclear,\nbut in well Informed quarters lt\nis understood that an offer of economic aid has been  made.\nSeen in terms of world Communist strategy, the Importance\nof the new move into North Africa can hardly be exaggerated,\ndiplomatic quarters here consider.\nA successful Communist Infiltration of Egypt, the Sudan, Libya\nand Liberia would further threaten French North African interests in Tunisia, Algeria and Morocco and open up new propaganda possibilities for the Communist world in British possessions in east and west Africa.\nThe repercussions of this would\nbe felt as far away as the Union\nof South Africa, where Soviet consular representatives recently\ndemand.\"\nwere expelled from the country.\nSOS Revives Hope\nFor Missing Pilot\nWINNIPEG (CP) - A third\nSOS signal and terse message,\n\"down on an ice field,\" strengthened the hope Sufiday that a pilot\nmissing nine days in the Arctic\nbarrens about 1000 miles north of\nWinnipeg was safe.        B\nRCAF headquarters at Winnipeg reported Indications were the\nsignals came from C. C. Crorsley\nThe 60-year-old pilot from Toronto has been missing since May\n19, on a flight from a secret DEW\nline site to Churchill, Man.\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\nTimes Shown Are Pacific Standard Time\nKXLY TV - Channel 4\n10:00\u2014Sign On\n10:15\u2014Love of -Life\n10:30\u2014As The World Turns\n11:00\u2014Cartoon Clown\n11:30\u2014House Party\n12:00\u2014 Big Payoff\n12:30\u2014Edge Of Night\n12:45\u2014Bob Crosby\n1:00-TBA\n1:15\u2014Secret Storm\n1:30\u2014Edge Of Darkness\n2:00-Variety Hour\n2:30\u2014Search for Tomorrow\n2:45\u2014Guiding Light\n3:00-Valient Lady\n3:15\u2014Painting Clinic\n3:30\u2014Strike It Rich\n4:00\u2014Western Roundup\n5:00\u2014Western Roundup\n6:00\u2014News\n6:10\u2014Weather Vane\n6:15\u2014Doug Edwards News\n6:30\u2014Robin Hood\n7:00\u2014Burns and Allan\n8:00\u20141 Love Lucy\n8:30\u2014December Bride\n9:00\u2014Susie\n9:30\u2014TBA\n10:00\u2014Doug Fairbanks Jr\n10:30\u2014Mr and Mrs Music\n1100\u2014News\n11:05\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\u2014Matinee Theatre\n1:00\u2014Now - The News\n1:10\u2014Weather Watcher\n1:15\u2014Mod  Romances\n1:30\u2014Queen 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\n6:30\u2014Little Rascals\n6:45\u2014The Front Page\n6:55\u2014Newspaper of the Air\n7:00\u2014Pactors and Sin\n9:30\u2014Waterfront\n10:30\u2014Boston Blackie\n11:00\u2014Mr. and Mrs. North\nKREM TV -Channel 2\n11:45\u2014Test Pattern\n12:00\u2014Afternoon Film Festival\n2:00\u2014Movietime on Two\n3:30\u2014The Ruggles\n4:00\u2014Story Land\n4:15\u2014John Daly\n4:30\u2014Shadow Stumpers\n4:55\u2014Water! the Birdie\n5:00\u2014Mickey Mouse Club\n6:00-Sky King\n6:30\u2014Twilight Theatre\n7:25\u2014News\n7:30-Voice 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 subteel to change by stations Without notice.)\nREAD AND USE\nThe Nelson News\nWANT ADS\nEXPERT    TELEVISION\nSERVICE\nOn All Makes ot Sets.\nPhone 1300 Oavi  1033 R Nights\nExcept Sundays and Holidays.\nMc and Mc\nSTILL   COINC   STRONC-Fourstarsofthesltent\nscreen get together at a parly given recently by Mary Plckford\nln Beverly Hills, Cal. From left to right are: Charley Ruggles,\nHarold Lloyd, Gilda Gray and Walter Brennan.\nON THE AIR\nCKLN  PROGRAMS\n1240 ON THE Dial\n(Paclflo Daylight Time)\nMONDAY,\n30\u2014Wake-Up Time\n00\u2014News\n05\u2014March of Truth\n10\u2014Farm Fare\n15\u2014Chapel ln the Sky\n30\u2014News\n35\u2014Sports News\n40\u2014Rise 'n Shine\n00\u2014News\n10\u2014Sports News\n15\u2014Musicale\n30\u2014Home Gardening\n35\u2014Musicale\n45\u2014Serenade\n55\u2014Entertainment  World\n00\u2014News\n:05\u2014Homemaker Harmonies\n00\u2014News\n05\u2014Homemaker Harmonies\n15\u2014Happy Gang\n45\u2014Story Parade\n00\u2014News\n05\u2014Call  One-Nine\n00\u2014Novelty Time\n15\u2014Sports News\n20\u2014News\n30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n55\u2014News\nAMY 28,  1956\n1:00\u2014CKLN Reports\n1:15\u2014Matinee\n1:30\u2014Pacific   News\n1:45\u2014Sacred Heart\n2:00\u2014B. C. School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Trans Canada Matinee\n3:30\u2014House of Commons Report\n3:35\u2014Music tor Relaxing\n3:45\u2014B. C, Roundup\n\u20224:30\u2014Cutlass Empire\n5:00\u2014Traffic Jamboree\n5:15\u2014By-Line\n5:20\u2014Supper Show\n5:40\u2014Sport News\n5:45\u2014Strikes and Spares\n5:50\u2014News\n6:00\u2014Rawhide\n6:15\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\u2014Dance with Harry Boon\n11:00\u2014NEWS Nightcap\nCBC PROGRAMS\n(Mountain Standard Time)\nTUESDAY,\n:15\u2014Musical Minutes\n:30\u2014News\n:35\u2014Musical Minutes\n:40\u2014Morning Devotions\n:55\u2014March  Past\n:00\u2014News\n:10\u2014Here's Bill Good\n:15\u2014Morning Music\n:00\u2014BBC News\n:15\u2014Aunt Lucy\n30\u2014Laura Limited\n00\u2014Morning   Visit\n15\u2014The Happy Gang\n.45\u2014Musical Program\n:00\u2014Kate Aitken\n: 15\u2014Kindergarten of the Air\n:30\u2014A- Man and His Music\n:15\u2014News\n:25\u2014Showcase\n:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n55\u2014Five to One\n00\u2014 Afternoon Concert\n00\u2014B. C. School Broadcast\nMAY 29, 1956\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matlne*\n3:30\u2014Closed Circuit\n3:45\u2014Today's Music\n4:30\u2014Jubilee Road   .\n4:45\u2014Sleepytime  Story Teller\n5:00\u2014Traffic Jamboree\n5:15\u2014Byline\n5:20\u2014News\n5:30\u2014Tumbleweed Trail\n5:45\u2014Presenting\n6:00\u2014Rawhide\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\u2014 News\n10:15\u2014Critics at large.\n10:30\u2014Rendezvous *\nDAILY  CROSSWORD\n2. More\ndestituta\n1 Mischievous\nperson\n4. Letter of the\nalphabet\n5. Cautious\n6. Injure\n7. Hall!\n8. Gasoline\n(Brit.)\n11. Movable\nframework\nof a\nwindow\n13. Alleviate\n15. Herbs of tha\naster family\n18. Part of body\n19. Goddess of\nhealing (N.)\n20. Thus\n22. Assist\n24. A\nstrong\nale\n25. Put\ntogether\n26. Spread\nout,\nas\naana hheh\nanaara uuatia\ncranHn aiarasti\n3HQH  31TJM  rats\nam    Man uau\nana m;-ira\naaa.u aaaaiiiifl\neiub  nasi     illfcl\nB0 hhiu uunu\nauauB uaaaH\nflag\n27.-Negative\nreply\n29. As much as\nthe lap can\nhold\n30. Self-centered person\n31. Feat\nsn\nSaturday's Answer\n33. English\nauthor\n35. A square .\npillar\n38. Purchasa\n39. Wager\n40. Wurttem.\nberg\nmeasure\nACROSS\n1. Kind\nof poem\n5. Fellow\n9. City\n(Alaska)\n10. Own\n11. Aslant\n12. Rugged\nmountain\ncrest\n14. Swiss river\n15. Fortify\n16. Radium\n(sym.)\n17. A picturesque view\n20. Distress\nsignal\n21. In this place\n22. Cavity\n23. Civil wrong\n25. Rubbish\n28. Selected\n32. Biblical\nname\n33. Rush about\nwildly\n34. Whether\n35. Footlika\npart\n36. Author of\n, \"The-Raven*\n17. A woman's\n.'     light.\nknitted\nwoolen scarf\n39 Divided Into\ntwo parts by\ns median\ncleft\n11. Regretted\n12. Ostrich-like ,\nbirds\n13. Musical\ninstrument\n44. Incline\nDOWN *\u00bb8\nt. To entwina\nDAILY CEYPTOqUOTE \u2014 Here's how to work itt\nAXYDLBAAXR\nIs LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this example A Is used\nfor 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\nVYHPX RDPJTA GH ATW HEYS EM\nBPJTA,  NED  CPKJH  GK  WGJSW,\nNED KEAWH O IEUW \u2014 HCPKRYDKW.\nSaturday's Cryptoquote: NOW, GOD BE THANKED WHO\nHAS MATCHED US WITH HIS HOUR\u2014BROOKE;\nDistributed by King Features Syntliciito\n1\nI\n1\ni\n4\nl\n5\"\nr\"\n7\n8\n^\n%\n9\n10\n^A\n11\n%\nn\n11\n14\n%\n%\n15\n%\n16\n17\n18\n19\n%\n20\n21\n%\n22,\nw\n%\n^\n25\n24\n%\n^\n^A\n2J\n2*\n27\nb\n28\n2<>\n30\n31\nn\n'^\n33\nii\nb\nis\n^t\n%\n3*>\n57\n16\nt\n39\n40\nl\n41\nt\nA-L\n|\n^\n*J\n^\n44\ni\n ^^^^^^^^^^ 4pWPJf\n.     '\nwww \"^W-\n , , .\t\nSMALL INVESTMENT   -\nLARGE RETURNS\nThat's the Want Ad Story   I   PHONE   1844\nRENTALS\nFOR RENT - APARTMENT,\ndown town, available 'June 1st,\nliving room, bedroom, cabinet\n\u2022kitchen, electric stove and\nfridge,   Pembroolt   bath  and\n. shower, large closets, oak\nfloors, steam heated. Adults.\nPhone 841-L after 8 p.m.\nBIRTHS\n      .   aril\nbert Hearn of Salmo, at Kootenay\nLake General Hospital, May 25, a\ndaughter.\nVICKERS \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs.\nWilliam Vickers, R.R. 1, at Kootenay Lake General Hospital, May\n23, a son.\nHELP WANTED\nA_ VANCOUVER PUBLISHER\ndesires the services of a man as\nan advertising salesman and\ndistrict manager. This is a full\ntime position earning $100.00\nweekly with a new car supplied\nyearly. Reply giving complete\ninformation in confidence of\npresent and previous occupations age etc., and all other pertinent facts to Box 3937, Nelson\nDaily  News.\nAPPLICATIONS WILL BE RE-\nceived by the Arrow Lakes Cooperative Association for the position of manager of a general\nitore in Burton. State age, experience and salary expected.\nSend applications to Mrs. C\nGuenard, secretary, Arrow\nLakes Co-operative Association,\nBurton, B.C.-\nSALESMEN TIRED OF COMPE-\ntltion? Like to get in on something really new? Our product\nIs nationally advertised and is\nsweeping the country. Agents\nwanted for East and West Kootenays. All replies strictly confidential. Box 3455, Nelson Daily\nNews.\nAT TRAIL, STENOGRAPHER,\ntyping and shorthand necessary, previous office experience\ndesirable. Good starting salary.\nMSA. pension and life insurance\nfunds. Forward details to Box\n3940, Nelson Daily News.\t\nQUALIFIED MECHANICS FOR\nGeneral Motors franchised garage in Fernie. B. C. Good working conditions, top salary. Living accommodations available.\nLees Motors, 181 Victoria Ave.,\nFernie, B. C. Phone 182.\nSTEWARD FOR CANADIAN LE-\ngion, Rossland. B.C. Veterans\ngiven preference. Apply in own\nhandwriting stating age, experience, salary expected, to the\nSecretary, Canadian Legion.\nRossland, B..C\t\nBookkeeper wanted for\nsmall service station and garage\nbusiness; also truck dealership.\nApply to Sparwood Esso Service, P. 0. Natal, Box 74, Spar-;\nwood, B. C.       \t\nWanted - 2 experienced\ndouble drum Jammer Operators,\nsteady work, $1.75 per hour, 44-\nhour week. J. I. Haines, Greenwood, phone 56-X.\nWanted -^~cook, lady cap-\nable Of handling up to 35 people.\nJune 1st. Kootenay Cottages Resort, Phone Gray Creek, 2J.\nURGENTLY NEEDED MILL\nhand with unexpired First Aid\nIndustrial Certificate. Steady\njob. Box 179 Wynndel B.C.\nWanted - youthto\" learn\npress work. Apply, Fred Brown,\nDaily News, after 8 p.m.\nEmployment Opportunities\nMALE\nJOB INFORMATION\u2014HIGH 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\nLEARN    HAIRDRESSING\nWoman wanted, greater opportunity,    better    pay     Pleasant\nwork. Catalogue free \u2014 Write:\nMARVEL HAIRDRESSING\nSCHOOLS\n328 - 8th Avenue, Calgary.\nBranches:   Winnipeg.   Regina.\nSaskatoon and Edmonton.\nCanada's National System.\nWOMAN OR GIRL FOR GEN-\neral housework and care of chii-\ndreri. Phone 391.\nFemale help wANTErT~AT\nOnce. For further details phone\n288 at Empire Cleaners.\nSITUATIONS WANJED\nOylstra-i      \u2022\n1ST CLASS CEMENT WORK\nup-to-date methods, old country\nstyle. Specialty: Floors, walks,\ndriveways, wet basements and\nfireplaces. Phone 1364iR.\nPUBLIC  NOTICES\nNOTICE TO CONTRACTORS\nSealed tenders will be received\nup to noon P.D.T. June 6th 1956,\nby the undersigned for the installation of two Swamp Coolers\nin the District Forester's Office\nat Nelson, B.C.\nPlans and specifications may be\nobtained from the District Forester. Nelson, or the undersigned\nupon a deposit of $5.00 refundable\nupon return of plans and specifications in good condition within\nthirty days of the date of opening\nof tenders. The deposit of the\nsuccessful tenderer will not be\nreturned.\nTenders will not be considered\nunless made out on the form supplied and signed, and a deposit of\n10% of the tender is enclosed,\npayable to the order of the Minister of Finance for British Columbia, which shall be forfeited if\nthe tenderer declines to enter tnto\nthe contract when called upon to\ndo so. Cheques of the unsuccessful,\ntenderers will be returned when,\nthe contract is awarded.\nNo tender shall be considered\nhaving any qualifying clauses\nwhatsoever, and the lowest or any\ntender not necessarily accepted.\nTenders must be submitted ln\nthe envelope marked \"Tender for\nthe installation of Swamp Coolers,\nNelson.\"\nC. D .ORCHARD.\nChief Forester and  Deputy\nMinister of Forests.\n16th May. 1956.\nAUCTION  OF  TIMBER SALE\nX71516\nThere will be offered for. sale\nat public auction at 10:30 a.m.-\n(Local Time) on Monday, June 11,\n1956, in the office of the Forest\nRanger at Slocan City, B.C., the\nLicence X71516, to cut 25,300 cubic feet of sawlogs and 600 lineal\nfeet of cedar poles and piling on\nan area situated West of Slocan\nRiver at Slocan Park, Kootenay\nDistrict.\nTwo (2) years will be allowed\nfor temoval of timber.\nProvided anyone who is unable\nto attend the auction in person\nmay submit a sealed tender, to\nbe opened at the hour of auction\nand treated as one bid.\nFurther particulars may be obtained from the Deputy Minister\nof Forests, Victoria, B.C.; the District Forester, Nelson, B.C.; or the\nForest Ranger, Slocan City, B.C.\n:OR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nI FOR SALE\u20141 BOILER, LOCO-\n! motive type, 27 h,p\u201e working\nI pressure 90 lbs Best offer. Koot-\nI enay Laundry & Dry Cleaners.\nPLAY PEN AND^PAbT^BATHL\nnette   and   garbage   burner.\nPhone 5'64-X.\nFOR SALE\u2014DRY WOOD $16 A\ncord, ln Stove length P. Iwanik.\nProcter, B  C.\nWASHER $60.00, ASTRAL FRIG.\n$50.00, rangette $15.00, twin\nstroller $15.00.  Pone 1545-R.\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nBARGAIN HEATING STOVES,\nsplendid condition. 2 Coleman'\noil heaters, Model 871D, each\n$65. For coal. Supreme, brick'-\nlined, height 35\". body 13\",' $18'.\nWarm Morning will hold, sufficient coal for all day, $50.'Cast\niron belly type, good camp stove\n$10: 3 Heater Guards and quan-.\ntity stove pipe. Phone(Harrison\n1740.\nDEALERS IN ALL TYPES Or\nused equipment; mill, mine ana\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\n1 ROSS LUMBER CARRIER $1000\n1 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\n\u2022Gudeit, 258 West 26th-'St., North\nVancouver, B -C. '\u25a0  I '   j\nLUMBER; LIQUIDATION SALE\n2x4, 2x6. 2x8. 1x6. 1x8 Dds All\ndressed stock $30 per thousand\nB M 4000 BM or more, immediate del   free   S   Kudra.  Phone\n, 1757-R\nSET OF FORMICA - COVERED\ncoffee table and 2 end tables.\nPhone 1759-R.\nPORK, WHOLE OR HALF REA\"-\nsohable. Ph 171. 714 Baker.\nG'OODOIL'COOK RANGETbaS;\ngain $50: Phone 563-X.\nMcLARY  RANGE, 3  HEATERS;\n3-piece' chesterfield  Ph.  403-X.\nCONNOR WASHER, CHEAP. PH\n1626-Y. \u25a0\"     \t\n1 DELUXE McLARY WASHER,\n$60.00. Phone 44-X-l.\nMACHINERY\nMORSE\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\nTRANSMISSION\nPRODUCTS\nMorse Silent Chain Drives\nMorse Roller Chain\n* Morse Stock Sprockets\nMorse   Couplings\nMorse Drive Shafts\nMorse  Clutche*\nMorse .Higb-Spr\/ed HY-Vo\nChain   Drives\nSEE US TODAY\nOn  Vour\nCHAIN DRIVE\nPROBLEMS\nLTD;\n324 Vernon St      Nelson. B.C.\n,-        PHONE 593\nLOGGING CONTRACT TO LET\n, ioe, D4 cat or equivalent machine'.. Must have f aller,   choker-\n[ man and own- equipment. Year\nround work. For further information write Box 93, Revelstoke, B.C.\nRITCHIE SAW SERVICE. HAM-\nmering, gumming, welding.\nAgent for Spear & Jackson\nSaws. 205 Hall St., Phone 1910.\nPhone   1910.\nLOGGING JAMMER 5-6 LAW-\nrence mounted on GMC 3-ton\nfully equipped A-l condition.\nCan be seen working. Call J.\nPolovinkoff, Slocan  Park, B.C.\nFOR SALE \u2014 D7 CATERPILLAR\nwith hydraulic angle blade, good\ncondition, $7,500.00. Robert E.\nDailey, RR 3, Colville, Wash.\nMOTOR GRADERr^MERTCAN\n800M, hydraulic blade, A-l shape\nL., D. Moore, Ymir, B. C.\nIn \u25a0 Stock\n1956 Oldsmobile\nHard Top Sedan\n1956 Oldsmobile\nHard Top Coupe\n1956 Oldsmobile Sedan\n1956 Chevrolet Station\nWagon\n1956 Chevrolet (Sedan\nDelivery\n1956 Chevrolet Vi Ton\nPickup\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\n1952 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    *\nUsed Trucks\n1953 Ford Halt Ton\n1951 Chevrolet Half Ton\n1950 Chevrolet Half Ton\n1949 Ford1 Half Ton\n1949 Ford Half Ton\n1947 Studebaker Half Ton\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nTERMS AND TRADES\nYour\nCHEVROLET - OLDSMOBILE\nDealer\nFOR SALE - TD 9 INTERNA-\ntionaljCat, excellent condition.\nPhone 1960.     .\nWANTED\" '\u2014 JOB ON FARM\naround B.C. Have experience\nfor 4 years. If possible, room\nand board. $100 monthly. Jack\nSmallenburg, 18 years old, New\nDenver, B.C. Box 402. ph. 19-F.\nLOST AND FOUND\nREWARD FOR ANY INFORMA-\ntion leading to recovery of Remington cash register drawer taken from Shorty's Repair Shop,\n714 Baker St.\nLOST - GM^GREEN-6ICY~-\ncle from Longbeach. Reward\nfor Information. Eaton! Longbeach.\t\nLOST ***** NURSE'S ST. PAULAS\nhospital pin between post office and hospital. Phone 324-L.\nRCA DEEP FREEZE, 15 CU. FT.,\n$500,00 value, best offer. 21-inch\n' power lawn, mower, $65.00; fp-ur\n\\ chrome chairs, $2 each, enameled kitchen table-and etc. Ph. f)7.\nVIEW MASTER 3-DIMENSION\nStereo Camera, case and film\ncutter. Value $165.00. Will sell\nfor $95.00. Write P.O. Box 324\nNelson.\nv, TON~cHATN^Lo1:k7Wooni\nbeaver drill press complete with\nmotor, $75.00; 1 slab door, 2'10\"\nx 6'10\", $10.00.  Phone 1115.\nBOATS AND ENGINES\n :-. -JjW\nFOR SALE-CABIN CRUISER\n17' 6\" x 6' 4\" beam. 25 h p Evin-\nrude, remote control, speed 24\nPhone 1622-L after i.\t\nFOTT~SALE ~IWbOT RUN-\nabout, 25 h.p Johnson Bargain\nPhone 954-L     ,\n16-FT. PETERBOROUGH CANOE\ngood condition $60. Ph. 326-X-2.\n323 Vernon St    .     Phone 38\n(Formerly ;Nelson Transfer)\nOIL RANGE IN GOOD ORDER\nwith parts to convert to coal\nand wood. Reasonable. Also, hotplate. Phone 1404-L after 6 p.m.\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES\nT\"FEW~bF THESE FINE BOR-\nder collie pups Naturals with\ncattle or sheep You cannot go\nwrong with this intelligent\nbreed. Phone 471-X-l. Clerihew\nKennels, RR 1 9 Mile.\nI\nFIR AND LARCH CULL LUM\nber. good fire wood, limited sup\nply 1 truck load equals i rordf\nSpecial $15 delivered Ph 1757-R\nHOUSE TRAILER - 1 ROOM\nand woodshed in Salmo. $J50\nApply Box 3454, Nelson Daily\nNews.\nFOR SALE- 18 GAUGE STEEI\nplate 4 ft by 12 ft sheets Phone\n1200. Purchasing Aaenl Koote\nnay Forest Products Ltd\n(Continued  in Next Column)\nNplamt Hath-. Nrttia\nCirculation Dept   Phone 1844\nSubscription Rates\nPrice pei single copy 6r Monday\nto Friday  10c on Saturday\nBy carrier   per week\nIn  advance 35\nBy Mail in Canada outside Nelson\nOne month ...      .   $ 125\nThree  months    .          $3 50\nSix months         $ 650\nOne year $12 00\nBy  Mail  to  United  Kingdom\noi  the United  States\nOne  month S 175\nThree   months $ iOO\nSix   months ...       $ 9 50\nOne  vedi $18110\nWhen*  ex11h  P\"s1aee  is  required\naouve r.iles plus postage\nWE ARE WRECKING 300 CARS\nand trucks; rebuilt transmissions for all makes tnd models;\nnew and used tires, custom radios, parts \u00bbnd accessories for\nill make's and models. We buy\nwrecked cars and scrap metal\nWestern Auto Wrecking. Box\n132, Nelson   Phone 189-R-4.\n1952 CHEV. DE-LUXE 2 DOOR\nsedan. Perfect condition inside\nand out. Never driven in win\nter, mileage 19,000 miles. One\nowner. Can be seen at Mickey\nMcEwens, 515-4th St. Owner\nHoward Bush.\nFINANCING A NEW CAR? BE-\nfore you buy ask about our Low\nCost Financing Service with\ncomplete Insurance Coverage.\nWilliam Kalyniuk Agencies, 532\nWard St., NeJSob, B.C.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\nNEW LISTING\nWONDERFUL   BUY\nFOR HANDYMAN\nA good opportunity for anyone\nwho likes garden and fruit\nspace. Possibility for raising a\nfew chickens. Three bedrooms,\nlarge living room, kitchen and\nmodern bathroom. Full concrete foundation. New wiring.\nTwo miles from town. A won-\n\u00a3rrfulbuy        $5500\nFor appointment to view,\nPhone Bernard J. Kelly at 1912.\nRobertson,   Hilliard,\nGattell Realty\nCo., Ltd.\n456 Ward St. Nelson, B.C.\nFOR SALE - QUEENS BAY\npacking shed, not site, dimension stuff, 2x12\"; 2x8V; 2x4\", etc.\nInspecltion invited, and bids received by G, Porteous, Queens\nBay.\n5 ROOM BUNGALOW, 2 B.R.\nsun porch, garage, wired for\nrange, hot air furnace, insulated\n1W lots, good location. $6200\nPh  307-R.\nTHREE-BED ROOM 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.\nFOR SALE\"- 2-BEDROOM\nhome, %4 acre of land. Hot air\nfurnace, wired for rang*. Ph\n214-R.\nFOR SALE OR TRADE:z:\u00a3ENT-\n\"Tal AWo'te Lakes property for\nNelson property. Apply Nelson\nDaily News, Box 3930.\n131 ACRES, TIMBER, 8-ROOM\nhouse, 2 miles this side of Slocan City. Phone 217-R.\n5 - ROOM HOUSE. TAGHUM\nHill, IVi acres Alex Metin, Tag-\nhum, B. C.\nFOR RENT - VERY DESIRABLE\napartment close in, large living\nroom and bedroom, newly decorated. Modern bathroom and\nkitchen, electric stove and frig,\nsupplied. Suitable for two people. $60 per month. Ph. 933-X.\nFOR \"RENT - APARTMENT\navailable May 28th, living room,\nbedroom,   electric   sto^e   with\n- frig., private bathroom, kitchen,\noil heated. Adults. Ph.. 448-L.\nHOUSEKEEPING OR SLEEPING\nrooms, automatic beat, fully\nfurnished Day, week or monthly  rate   Allen Hotel   171  Baket\nFOR RENT \u2014 3-BEDROOM\nhouse in Fairview. Near mills,\n$65.00 a month. Apply Box 3719,\nNelson Daily News.\nFOR RENT \u2014 2-BEDROOM\napartment Baker St., partly\nfurnished, heated, $85.00. Phone\n1852-R after 3 p.m.\nFOR RENT\u2014FULLY FURNISH-\ned suite, silver and linen, June,\nJuly, Aug. Hallett, 302 Medical\nArts.\nMODERN 3 - ROOM HEATED\napartments. 1 furnished, 1 unfurnished. Phone 1715-Y.\nFURNISHED SUITE JUNE TO\nSeptember. Phone 804-Y-3 evenings.\nFOR RENT\u2014FURNISHED ROOM\n213 Victoria St. or phone 554-X,\n3:30 to 4:30 p.m.\nFOR RENT \u2014 HOUSEKEEPING\nroom. Phone 405-L.\nFOR RENT\u2014WAREHOUSE 50x100\nfor storage. Phone 1055.\nFOR RENT \u2014 FURNISHED BED-\nroom. Phone 1050-R.\n3-ROOM SUITE. 88 FRONT ST.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES^ETC.\nFOR~ SALE - 1 JERSEY COW,\nfreshened 1V4 months ago; one\nShorthorn cow to freshen in 3\nweeks. Mike Radulovich, Procter, B.C.\nFOR SALE \u2014 4 COWS, 2 JUST\nfreshened. Apply W. A. Pere-\nverzoff, Brilliant.\nFOR SALE\u201428 FRESH TESTED\ncows. Apply to A. Miastowski,\nYahk, B. C.\nFOR SALE - YOUNG WORK\nhorses, good condition. Wm. A.\nOsachoff, Perry Siding.\nFOR SALE-MILK COWS WITH\nfirst, second and third calf.\nWrite Box 365, Rossland, B.C.\nCOW  FOR  SALE.  FRESHENED\n10 days. F, Pictin, Salmo, B.C.\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\nCLEAN COTTON RAGS. MUST\nbe at Teast 12 'Inches, no wool\naccepted. Will pay lOo per lb\nNelson Daily News.\nWANTED TO BUY - TIMBER\nand bush land in vicinity ot\nKootenay Lake. Apply Box 2736.\nNelson Daily News.\nFOR SALE\u20142V4 LOTS, No. 1\nfirst-class soil, fruit trees. Ph.\n231-L-3.\nKINNAIRD LOT ADJOINING\nhighway. Apply W. Semenoff,\nBrilliant, B.C.\nBUILDING LOT NEAR SCHOOL\nand bus route. Ph. 1048-R.\nURGENTLY REQUIRED\u2014SAW-\nlogs, all species, top prices. Ph.\n1200. Kootenay Forest Products.\nWANTED GOOD FLOOR-POL-\nisher for D.C. current. Box 507,\nKaslo.\t\nPERSONAL\nALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS\nBox 388 or Phone 366-R.\n1  CORNER LOT 50X60,  CLOSE\nin. Phone 1083-L.\n3-ROOM    HOUSE,   BASEMENT\",\n2 lots, fruit trees. Phone 419-L.\nPROPERTY WANTED\nHOUSE NORTH SHORE OR\nFairview to buy on rental basis. Steadily employed. Box 3822,\nNelson Daily News.\nINVISIBLE MENDING, CIGAR-\net burns, moth holes, cuts and\ntears. Prompt service, reasonable rates. Mary Ward, 209 Victoria St\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nA8SAYERS AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nE. W   W1DDOWSON & CO.\nAssayers. 301 Josephine St Nelson\nH   S  ELMES. ROSSLAND. B  C\nAssayer, Chemist, Mine Rep\nENGINEERS   AND   SURVEYOR8\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.1.C\nBC Land Surveyor, P Eng (Civil)\n21? Gore St, JNelsan ;Phone 1238\nS   V   SHAYLER P-CJ. , Box-252\nKimberley.  Ludlow 2-2136,.\nBC   band  Surveyor. fjlvil' Engr\nM_ MACHINIST?   '    \" '^_\nBENNETTS  LIMITED\nMachine  Shop.   Acetylene  and\nelectric welding, motor rewinding Phone 593     324 Vernon St\nSpecial Death\nCertificate for\nFrogman Crabb\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 A special death certificate Is expected\nto be issued for Lt.-Cmdr. Lionel\nCrabb, British frogman who disappeared in Portsmouth harbor\nnear a Russian cruiser, it was re\nported Sunday.\nThe Sunday Dispatch says the\ncertificate will \"avoid the necessity of the family having to go to\ncourt to get him officially presumed dead,\"\nThe newspaper adds: \"The government wants to hear no more\nabout Crabb's activities.\"\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, MAY 28, 1936 \u2014 9\nWHEELCHAIR D I R E C TO R _ Movie director\nDouglas Sirk, who broke leg on location In Nogales, Ariz., talks\nwith actors Dan Duryea, left, and Rock Hudson between scenes.\nUranium Outlook Brighter...\nTechnical Reactions Said To Be\nCause of Stock Market Setbacks\nBy PATRICK  FELLOWS\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nIn what analysts described as a\nseries of technical reactions, the\nstock market was set back\nsquarely last week. On the Toronto exchange the 15.83-point decline in the industrial index was\ngreater than any weekly drop\nduring the series of reactions that\nfollowed news of President Eisenhower's illness last September.\nFor almost two months the market has been on the wane after\nhitting record highs. Late-week\nsallies into higher territory raised\nbullish hopes that an advance\nmight at last be under way. But\nbrief spells of higher prices were\nquickly followed by renewed\nselling.\nAt Tofonto ther\u00ab were only 85\nadvances against 590 declines.\nOf the 394 Issues traded at Mont-\nreal, only 42 advanced. There\nwere 245 declines.\nAbsence of incentive and some\nUBlayojable.jiews from the U.S.\nbusiness front were largely blamr\ned by observers for the sagging\nmarket Tighter credit and dearer\nmoney together with reduced sales\nand layoffs in such key industries\na* automobiles have temporarily\nclouded the future of business.\nOn the Toronto exchange, Alum-\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\n,   \u2022    Nelson\n'    READY-MIX\nCONCRETE\/ LTD,:\nPHONE 871\n1948 MOTORCYCLE INDIAN\nChief, fully equipped $350.00\ncash Phone Trail 215-X after\n6 pm\nWANTED-- 4-5 YARD~~or 5-6\nyard steel dump box and take\noff. Phone 2105.\nSMAL\"r\"C*AR    GOOD   CONDI\"\n, tion. $250   Phune, 1703.\nSee\nH   \"Fritz\" Farenholtz, C   Ross or Alex McDonald\nMACS Welding & Equipment\n814 Railway St\nCO. LID\nPHONE  1402\nNelson   BC\nAlfa. Leads in\nFlying Clubs\nLETHBRIDGE, Alta. (CP) \u2014\nMore private flying ia dona tn\nsouthern Alberta, in proportion to\npopulation, than anywhere else\nin Canada, says Ron Sturgeon, ln-\nstructor-manageD, pi the Leth--\nbridge Flying (Jlub. >.\nThe club was formed in 1948 to\nstimulate Interest-in flying, train\nnew pilots a'nd maintain the interest of those already qualified for\nflying. Starting with a fleet of\nold aircraft the club has built up\na membership of more than 700.\nIncluding Mr. Sturgeon, there\nare three full-time instructors,\nwho have a combined flying time\nof 13,200 hours. A large hangar,\nat one time owned by the 124th\nFerry Squadron, houses the 50\nprivate planes owned by club\nmembers. ,\nThe club conducts pilot training\nfor both private and commercial\nlicences on government-approved\ncourses. Included in last year's\ntrainees were 12 air cadets, who\nobtained private licences and\ncompiled a total of 372 flying\nhours. This year, more are expected to take the course.\nLocated at Kenyon field on the\noutskirts of!Lethbridge, the club\nis one of 38' affiliated in the Royal\nCanadian Flying Clubs Association.\ninium was down $8.62. Ford A, hit\nby labor layoffs, dropped $7. Canadian Vickers fell $8.ft as it became\nknown that control of the company has been acquired by Vickers of Britain. Algoma and International Paper also fell $6.75.\nStelco was down $5.\nPrice Brothers, hit by a strike\nat three paper mills, Imperial Oil,\nand Shawinigan were off between\nthree and four points.\nCanadian Canners, whose stock\nis reported being sought by California Packing Corp., gained $1.50.\nBIG MINING LOSSES\nInternational Nickel and Hudson Bay took the top mining\nlosses. Nickel Rim climbed 50\ncents to $3.40,\nUraniums brightened Friday after announcement that the U.S.\ngovernment will buy uranium 4^i\nyears beyond the 1982 deadline.\nWeek's Index losses at Toronto:\nIndustrials 15.83 to 444, golds 2.70\nto 85.23, base metals 13.80 to 230.30\nand western oils 7.25 to 147.03.\nAt New York, tha Associated\nPress average of 60 stocks was\ndown $7.90 at $177.40.\nWeek's Index losses at Montreal:\nBanks 0.13 at 53.08, utilities 3.0 at\n134.3 industrials 11.8 at 303.6, combined 8.9 at 247.2 papers 58.68 at\n1526.92 and golds 3.97 at 81.68.\nWeek's volumes: 362,504 industrials and 3,098,167 mines against\nprevious week's 440,937 industrials\nand 3,624,996 mines.\nVernon Archibald McKlllop,\nMEIC, of London, Ontario, Is\nnewly elected president of Tho\nEngineering Institute of Canada\nfor year 1956-57. Mr. McKlllop\nwill take over the office of\npresident from R. E. Heartz,\nMEIC, of Montreal. Mr. McKlllop\na graduate in engineering from\nthe University of Toronto, has\nspent his entire professional\ncareer with the London, Ont.,\nPublic Utilities Commission and\nthe London Railway Commission, of which organizations he\nIs the general manager. He has\nbeen a member of The Engineering Institute of Canada since\n1928.\nEXECUTORS AND TRUSTEES FOR OVER HALF A  CENTURY\ngoing\non a trip?\nThen leave some of your worries\nbehind\u2014with us.\nOur Standing-by Attorney, and\nInvestment Management services\nare available at very little cost.\nTHE\nROYAL TRUST\nCOMPANY\n626 PENDER ST. W, VANCOUVER\nR. W. PHIPPS, MANAGER GEORGE O. VAtE, MANAGER\nAlt for our booHal on\nWortftgemonf Servleo.\n1205 GOVERNMENT, VICTORIA\n 10 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, MAY 28,1956\nSpecial Offer\nMAX FACTOR\nPAN-CAKE MAKE-UP\n(guarantees you a smooth natural complexion finish)\nPLUS\nImported natural silk\nMake-Up Sponge FREE\n. $n.oo\nBoth for the regular Pan-Cake\nprice of\t\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c lint, 40c line black face type; larger type rates en\nrequest Minimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment\nRotary Luncheon Monday 12:15\np.ra. Hume Hotel.\nDON   ELDER STUDIO\nG59 Baker St.     -     Phone 1205\nNEL80N   REFRIGERATION\nComplete Refrigeration Service\n405 Hall St. Phone 1917\nCUTLER'8   JEWELLERY\nGuaranteed Watch Repairs\n511 Baker Street. Phone 9.\nThe Ladies' Guild Annual Bazaar and Tea, Woodland Hall, Balfour, Saturday, June 9, 3 to 5.\nBamboo Chairs, circular wrought\niron legs and bamboo blinds,\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nNew Summer Dresses\nTeen styled in Teen Sizes\nEBERLE'S, 652 BAKER\nGordon Sutherland\nPainting, Paperhanging, RR. 1.\nPhone 816-R-3, Nelson\nRESERVE MAY 29 FILM COUNCIL ANNUAL  MEETING,\nCANADIAN  LEGION\nSpecial Purchase: Colorful cotton\nprints for skirts or dresses, yd. 79c\nTAYLOR'S  DRY GOODS\nWe recommend Valorganic Fertilizer,   will  not   burn,   best  for\nlawns and garden.\nMAC'8 FLOWER SHOP, ph. 910\nLarge selection of coal, wood\nand electric ranges.\nWE PAY TOP PRICES\nFOR  U8ED FURNITURE\nHOME FURNITURE EXCHANGE\nPHONE  1560.\nAudubon Park\nMaternity Ward\nFeeling Strain\nBy STANLEY MEISLER\nNEW ORLEANS, La, (CP) '\u2014\n'Crack!\" Bird fans have started\nbiting their nails and listening for\nthat sound. \u2022  \u2022 :\nWhen it comes, an egg will pop\nand out may whoop a new member of an exclusive club \u2014- the\nwhooping cranes of North Amer*\nica. Junior, If he shows, will get\ncard No. 3. ' '\"\nJosephine and Crip, the pros-'\npective parents, are hovering over\ntwo eggs in Audubon Park Zoo\nhere. The eggs may hold two little\ncranes, but they also may' hold\nnothing. That's why bird fans\nare biting their nails.\nWhy all this fuss about a long-\nnecked, long-legged, red-faced,\nwhite - bodied, awkward-looking\nbird?\nNEED  LITTLE  CRANES\nThewhooping crane, over five\nfeet, ts the tallest bird in North\nAmerica. But, with only 30 living\nmembers, the society may disappear fast.\nOne solution is more little\ncranes. Another solution is staying alive, but the whoopers are\nunco-operative. They make hazardous flights every year from\nTexas to northern Canada.' And\ntheir size makes them an inviting target.\nSo bird fans of the world have\nto count on Crip and Josephine\nand the eggs to come through\nwith some healthy cracks. Whooping cranes of North America can\nuse them.\n1 Acme Rangette, $29.50, A-l; new\nand used garden hose. Lawn mowers and etc.\n\u25a0   BIRCH'S FURNITURE\nFormerly Cutler's New and\nUsed Furniture\nPhone 47       \u2014       407 Baker St.\nRemember June 9th Giant Bingo\nfor Hockey, Civic Arena.\nDoor prize, too.\nFUR  STORAGE\nExpert repairs and alterations\nCustom Sewing Centre\n(Successors to Greenwood Furs)\nL.A. to Cinaditn Legion, Monday, May 28 executive meeting,\n7 p.m., general meeting 8 p.m.\nWe  have  up-to-minute  information on\nALL TYPES OF INSURANCE\nand welcome inquiries. Come in\nand discuss your insurance problems.\nREMEMBER,\nA PACKAGE POLICY SAVES\n20%\nC. W. Appleyard & Co. Ltd.\n342 Baker St., ph. 269, P.O. Box 26\nNelson\nLESLIE'S FIRE EQUIPMENT\nNow equipped to re-charge C02\nextinguishers. 536 Stanley Street.\nPhone 1915 or 441rL.\nGlass Tops for Furniture, Cut to\nany shape. Edges polished.\nT. H. WATERS & CO. LTD.\nPhone 156     101 Hall St.     Nelson\nFUNERAL NOTICE \u2022\nBROOKS \u2014 Funeral services\nfor the late Mrs. Caroline Agnes\nBrooks of Rossland will be held\nTuesday, May 29, 1956, at 2 o'clock\nfrom St. Andrew's United Church.\nRev. James M. Taylor of Trail\nwill officiate. Interment in Mountain View Cemetery. Clark's Funeral Chapel in charge.\nATTENTION   EAGLES\nSpecial meeting Tuesday, 8 p.m.\nFor provincial president. Social\nfollowing. \u2022\nCHARM\nBEAUTY SALON\nAll   Beauty   Culture\nand. Cold  Waves\nMedical  Arts, Bldg. j\nEngineers' Joke\nProves Useful\nMONTREAL (CP) - The use\nof a \"sky-hook\" is a long-standing\njoke among engineers but the idea\nhelped solve an engineering problem for the Aluminum Co. of\nCanada near Kitimat.\nH. B. White, an Alcan engineer,\ntold the 70th annual meeting of\nthe Engineering Institute of Canada here how he incorporated the\nidea of a \"sky-hook\" in suspending six electric cables across Kil-\ndala Pass between Kitimat and\nKemano.\nThe problem, he said, arose\nwhen a snow avalanche last January carried away steel towers in\nGlacier Creek bowl, cutting off\nthe Kitimat smelter's electricity\nsupply from the huge hydro generating plant at Kemano, 50 miles\naway.\nFearing additional avalanches,\nengineers decided to do away with\nsteel towers in the area and then\nhit on the idea of stringing two\n6600 - foot - long, three-inch thick\nsteel csbies from mountain peaks\non each side of Kildala Pass. The\n6 aluminum sheathed power lines\nwere then hooked to cables at the\ncentre, some 400 feet above the\nfoot of the pass.\nThe system, Mr. White said, can\nwithstand 40 pounds of ice a foot\nof cable, or ice a foot in diameter.\nYAHK SCHOOL CHILDREN will have a\nnew building to replace this school where\nflooding, which takes place annually, has been\nparticularly severe recently. This photo showing\nthe school, and teacherage, was taken by Jack\nWigen   of' Wynndel   when   water   lapped   high\naround It. The overflow has since subsided. Cranbrook School District Is preparing a money\nbylaw for more than $200,000 for an elementary\nschool at Cranbrook estimated to cost $172,500\nand a two-room school to replace this old frame\nbuilding, estimated to cost $37,500 when equipped.\nCancer Group Grants\nDying Woman's Wish\nWINNIPEG (CP) - A Winnipeg\nwoman, afflicted with incurable\ncancer, who has been living in\nSeattle, Wash., has had one of\nher last wishes fulfilled\u2014a trip to\nher native city before her 'death.\nMrs, Barbara Pfeifer arrived in\nWinnipeg via air lines fretn Vancouver and was taken to hospital\nShe had received free care at the\nhome of Mr. and Mrs. Michael\nKlepack in Seattle since last July\nthrough assistance from the American Cancer Society.\nFinancial help enabled Mrs.\nPfeifer to make the trip to Winnipeg. Her mother, believed to be\nliving in St. Catharines, Ont.,\ncame here to be with Mrs. Pfeifer.\nRare Discovery\nIn Galilee\nRussians Read\nCanadian Books\nThe parliamentary library of\nCanada was established in 1841 on\nthe union of the provinces of Upper and Lower Canada.\n3hone   1922 Ste.   211\n3\nHelen McCallum, Prop.\nAsk Your Grocer for\nEllison's U-Boke Bread Mix\nWhole Wheat or White\n.  It Makes Excellent\n'    Home Made Bread\nPHONE 238\nELLISON   MILLING\nA ELEVATOR CO. LTD.\nThe Fairbanks Morse Co.\nHEATING\nDEALERS\nIn the West Kootenay Are:\nBENNETTS LTD.\nNEWON\nOGLOW BROTHERS\nCASTLEGAR\nMODERN PLUMBING\nAND HEATING\nROSSLAND\nBOUNDARY ELECTRIC\nGRAND FORKS\nNAKUSP HARDWARE\nNAKUSP\nINTERIOR SHEET METAL\nTRAIL\nBudget Surplus Up\nOTTAWA <CE) - The government tripled its budgetary surplus to $90,614,000 in the first\n\u25a0\u2666month of the 1956-57 fiscal year.\nJn his first monthly treasury\nstatement of the new year, Finance Minister Harris reported\nthat the increase in federal\nrevenues shot well ahead of the\nrise in expenditures, boosting the\nApril surplus by $58,095,0000 from\nlast year's $32,519,000.\nMr. Harris is aiming at an overall surplus for 1956-57 of $113,-\n000,000, compared with a deficit of\n$51,700,000 * last  year.\nJERUSALEM (AP) \u2014 A tomb\nbelieved to be one of the oldest\nstone structures known to man has\nbeen discovered in Israel by a\nFrench archeologist, Jean Perrot.\nThe tomb, believed to date from\nabout 10,000 B.C., was found near\nEn Mallaha village, about three\nmiles north of the biblical town\nof Hatsor in upper Galilee.\nPerrot says he dates the find\nback to the Netufian period. Net-\nufian man was an early stone-\nager who harvested grain but\nmainly lived on what he hunted\nor fished.\nThe main part of the tomb is a\ncarefully constructed walled pit\nmore than three feet deep and\nabout 20 feet across. It has a\npaved floor, and is covered by a\nmound with two concentric stone\ncircles. Next to it is a basin and\nthe remains, of a fireplace, perhaps a place for sacrifices.\nSKELETONS  FOUND\nIn the bottom of the pit. Perrot\nfound a human skeleton in a\ncrouched position with a diadem\nof shells round the cranium.\nSeven other human skeletons were!\nunearthed nearby.\nThe excavation also disclosed i\nthousands of implements and a;\nnumber of examples of primitive j\nart,.mostly from basalt. :\nUp to now, Netufian man was j\nalways believed to be a cave j\ndweller! It was not known that he j\nerected structure's of any kind.\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Canadian\nb,ooks now are being translated\nand published in Russia in greater volume than ever before, and\nare receiving increasing attention in the Soviet union\u2014particularly Canadian scientific publications.\nSo says A, Krasilnlkov, assistant director of the Foreign Literature Publishing House at Moscow, which has been in operation\n'since 1947. #h an article in USSR\nIllustrated News issued monthly\nby the Soviet embassy here he\nsays Russian readers already are\nfamiliar with a number of Canadian fiction and scientific works.\nLast year, Krasilnikov says, the\nMoscow publishing house printed\n180 books by Canadian authors in\neditions totalling 4,580*000 copies.\nCanadian fiction and poetry has\nbeen published not only in Russian but in 21 languages of different Soviet nationalities.\nGOOD TRANSLATIONS\nAs a result of this activity, Krasilnikov writes that Russians already are familiar with works\nby Canadian authors Ernest\nThompson-Seton, Stephen Leacock and Dyson Carter, to name\na few. A geography of Canada by\nD. F. Putnam was very popular\nin Russia.\nThe article mentions among scientific books of special interest in\nRussia, Synge's Tonsorial Methods of Dynamics, and Halperin's\nIntroduction to the Theory of Distribution.\nThere have been other \"interesting\" translations from Canadian\nworks on such subjects as chemistry and scientific engineering,\nKrasilnikov ends his article by\nasking \"our friends in Canada to\nwrite us about the latest Canadian\npublications, both belles-lettres\nand science which it may be advisable to translate.\"\nBlame Girls For\nBanbury Fracas\nBANBURY, England (Reuters)\n\u2014 Some 1000 British servicemen\nand women stationed near here\nwere ordered last week to stay\nout of Banbury for six months to\navoid clashes with Americans.\nBritish authorities reported a\nseries of clashes in one of which\n\"a razor was used on an American.\"\nBanbury police said the blame\nfor the brawls was \"50-50 between\nBritons and Americans.\"\n\"But the ones mainly at fault\nare the hordes of young girls who\ncome here in.the hope that Americans will spend money on\nthem,\" a police spokesman said.\n-READ THE CLASSIFIED  DAILY\nChurch Advised\nTo Study Freud\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014The Church\nof England might learn much\nabout the full truth of its own faith\nfrom Sigmund Freud, father of\npsychoanalysis and life-long opponent of orthodox religion, the\nChurch of England Newspaper\nsays.\nIn an editorial dealing with the\ncentenary of Freud's birth, the paper says Freud \"did much for\nwhich any true servant of Christ\nshould be grateful.\"\n\"There can be no denying that\nthe church has during its history\nsuffered considerably from domination by theologians and ecclesiastics whose attitude to all things\nphysical, and to sex particularly,\nhas been one of ear, utterly dif-\ni ferent from that of the founder of\nJ Christianity. - ...\n\"Freud's rediscovery of love as\n] the basis of physical as. well as\nSpiritual \"life is something from\nwhich the church might learn\nmuch about the full truth of her\nown faith.\"\nThe Church of England Newspaper is an independent weekly and\nnot an official organ. \"\nFormer CKLN Announcer Meets Danish\nBride at Rainier-Kelly Ceremonies\nCOPENHAGEN, Denmark,\n(Reuters)\u2014Ottawa reporter Bob\nRoss Saturday married a 21-year-\nold  Danish  girl,   Birgith    (Bibi)\ntiave The Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVEC\n\u2122        LIMITED        -*\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nCAMPBELL,   SHANKLAND\n&CO.\nChartered Accountants\nAuditors\n376 Biker 8t      Phone 238\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED   and    REPAIRED\nRE CORING\nJim's Radiator Shop\n518 Front 8t Phone 63\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL  TRAINING\nMedical Arte Building\nSuite 206 Phone 141\n\u00a9\nHAIGH\nTRU-ART\nBeauty Salon\nPhonr 327\n\u202276 Biker Street\nAMONG MANY GIFTS presented to R. W. Diamond at Trail's\nMemorial Centre Friday night was the traditional Cominco clock,\ngiven to all retiring employees, Tho occasion was a complimentary dinner given Mr. Diamond, who ha\u00ab retired as executive .\nvlee-preildent, western region, of Cominco: Making the presentation Ii veteran employee, P. F. Mclntyre, manager of personnel\ndlvlolon. Behind the head table was a large \"Ace of Diamonds\"\nbearing Initials R. W. D. -L. Fryllng. photo.\nSchreiner Jensen whom he met at\nMonaco during the Rainier-Kelly\nwedding. It was his 27th birthday.\nRoss, who comes from Corute-\nnay, B.C., met his bride when\nshe was working as an interpreter\nin Prince Rainier's press section\nfor the 1600 newspaper men who\ncame to Monaco for the Grace\nKelly wedding.\nThe couple made two earlier\nattempts to marry: First, in Mon\naco where despite Prince Rain\nier's recommendation the mayor\nrefused they had not fulfilled the\nsix-month residence qualification\nsecond in London, after Bibi had\ngone over with her wedding dress,\nbecause the notice required was\n16 \/days' and not three as Ross\nthoufeht.\"\nLICENCE'  FROM   KING\nSaturday, they married in the\npretty Copenhagen suburban\nchurch of Roedovre. And even in\nDenmark Bibi's father had to get\na special wedding licence from\nKing Frederik\u2014a routine procedure\u2014so the marriage could take\nplace with less than 14 days'\nnotice.\nThe ceremony was in Danish, except for the vital part when\neach had to say \"yes\" in English\nto avoid confusion.\nThe couple will spend their\nhoneymoon at a summer house In\nNorth Zealand, where Bob says he\nwill write a book based on his experience at Monaco. The title:\nFict an* Faction.\nMr. Ross was announcer for a\ntime at CKLN in 1951, from where\nhe went to the Kelowna radio\nstation. .  . I\nOdds...\nand Ends\n...byM.D. B.\nI don't think I ever pass that\nplace up the lake where the old\nNasookin's upper deck sit without\nlapsing into a coma of remembered picnics, when the Nasoo-\nkin was the lion's share of the\nentertainment. It seemed every\ngroup of any size, intent on a\npicnic, would charter the old\nsternwheeler and mothers, fathers, youngsters, babies and picnic baskets littered her decks\nen route' to Procter, Crawford\nBay or wherever there were any\ngrounds big enough to accommodate races.\n* *   *\nWas there ever a better place\nto play tag than on those wind-\nwhipped decks and the steps and\nladders were just made for\nscrambling up and down. Funny,\nI don't ever remember them losing one youngster overboard, and\nif they did no one ever mentioned\nit. Occasionally, if you knew the\nright people\u2014even in those days\nyou had to know the right people\n\u2014you might wrangle a trip up\ninto the wheelhouse and the captain would let you hold the wheel.\nThe fact that you had to stand on\na stool to see where you were going during this operation, didn't\nseem to detract from the glory of\nthe hour.\n* *   *\nPlacid parents sat in deck\nchairs, enjoying the breeze and\nscenery and sort of 'letting the\nchips fall where they may.* Others\nhad a hectic time of it trying to\nkeep track of their offspring,\ntearing around like quicksilver.\nI have.been talking of the journey going. On the way back after the races and fresh air, with\nour round little paunches stuffed\nwith pop, ice cream, candy and\nhalf the picnic basket, we were\nmore content to just peer through\nthe wire netting at the wake or\nwatch the prow part the water\ninto a foamy V. Some of us even\nrelapsed into complete inactivity\nin some cosy corner under a blanket to fall into an exhausted but\nblissful slumber as the old boat\nswished proudly along, bearing\nher precious cargo\u2014a blaze of\nglory on the shadowed lake.\n* *   *\nThe toot of her whistle as she\npulled into the wharf reverberated through the hills, rousing us\nfrom sleep and as we tottered\ndown the gangplank we had the\nsatisfied air of those who had\nbeen places and done things.\nFor\nGraduation\nDay\nWE WISH YOU\nEVERY SUCCESS.\nLook Your Best\ni       in\n\u2022 Sport Coat\nand Slacks\n\u2022 Suits\n\u2022 Shirts, Ties,\nSox\nFrom\nEmory's\nLimited\n\"THE MAN'S STORE\nGas Brings\n$525 Million to\nAlta. Coffers\nEDMONTON (CP)\u2014The Alberta government's total take from\npetroleum and natural gas sources\nsince Leduc has climbed to more\nthan $525,000,000 with the latest\nsale of leases bringing more than\n$33,000,000 into the provincial coffers.\nSale of leases in the prolific\nPembina field\u2014one of the best\nproducers in Alberta since Leduc\nwas discovered in 1947\u2014and in\nseveral other proven fields\nbrought a total of $33,283,861.\nPHONE   1844   FOR   CLA88IFIEB\nFined $50 After\nHighway Accident\nSALMO \u2014 Driver of a car involved in an accident six miles\nSouth of Salmo, John DeBruin of\nFruitvale, was fined $50 and costs\nin provincial court for driving\nwithout due care and attention.\nThe late model car sustaned $1500\ndamages and the driver received\na broken wrist and seven other\npassengers cuts and bruises in the\naccident.\nPRESCRIPTIONS\nCITY DRUG CO.\n\"Your Rexall  Pharmacy\"\nKootenay Society for Handicapped\nChildren\nGENERAL MEETING\nEagles Hall   Toillghf    8 p.m.\nBring a friend and hear about this interesting work\nthat is bringing so much happiness and usefulness\nto the Handicapped Children of Nelson and district.\n\u25ba\nN,A<SA^\nThousands of Canadians have borrowed at Niagara\nFinance offices from coast to coast\u2014and a loan of\nup to $1500 or more may be yours quickly and\nprivately. There are loan plant to meet almost ovary\nbudget requirement and loam to $1500 are life-\ninsured al no extra cost to you. Rates on many\nNiagara loans are lower, too.\nPayments can be filled to Individual pay periods\nand on loam above $500 you can have up to\n24 months to repay. Come in and see us anytime.\n\"Hen art just a hw of our many loan plant\"\nYOU\nGET\nMONTHLY PAYMENTS\n12\n15\n20\n24\n$400\n750\n\u202273.60'\n1250\nS 37.12\n70.35\n116.45\n$31.13\n57.85\n45.55\n$45.15\n74.30\n$38.93\n45.00*\n63.60\nf \u00ab\n\"Ono of ovt many ovon-dolhr paymont plant\nIAGARA\nLOANS\nllllllPVTOwJ BBANCHCS FROM COAST-TOCOASI\n560 Baker Street\nPhone 1636\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_28","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\/1.0429291","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":"1956-05-28 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":"1956-05-28 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]. 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