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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":" 60\nThis Is. Nelson's\nDiamond Jubilee Year\nYears of Progress\n$oni\n\\m\nWEATHER   FORECAST\nKootenay: \u25a0 Sunny with cloudy\nperiods in afternoon. Little change\nin temperature. Light winds. Low-\nhigh at Cranbrook and Crescent\nValley 40 and 75. \u25a0\u25a0 '.-.\n-'Vol. 56\n\u25a0flELSGN, B.C,. CANADA-MONDAY MORNING, APRE, 29, 1957\nNot mora Than Go Dally.  10o Saturday\nNo. 7\nGrand old lady of the lake, S.S. Moyie is seen here as she looked Saturday\ni people waiting oh wharves and beaches at various lake points. Here she steams\nhip the dock at Lardegu.-^-Daily News Photo.\nS$. Moyie Flower-Decked\nOi\\ Last Kootenay Lake Run\nBi Staff Writer\nFrom Pr\u00abto*-.to Argenta the\nfriends of the S&Moyie turned out\nin full force Saturday to say farewell to a fine old Iteairier.and to a\nway of life which Wer a period of\n59 years has mack the lake settlers unique amonr the people of\nBritish Columbia, (llso see stories,\npictures on page 3)\nAlso see stories, piqures on page 3\nWith her flat b<ta, the Moyie\ncould nose up on tb sand where-'\never there was a p: -eel to deliver\nor; a passenger to pick up. She\ncould visit commumies where access roads never wire built. She\nmight be a day or pwo late, but\nshe always got there,\nOn her farewell jjmrney, the\nlast of the sternwheelers on inland waters was told tt$t her duty\nwas not done in \u25a0vain. At Lardeau,\nunder a.bariiter.reafflng'.'-'t'arewell\nMojne,\" horns ot 20' (iaHs and\ntruck* saluted her'as sKe'dreW\naviay.' '.\nThe people of Argenta had a\nMan Surrenders'\nConfesses\nSlaying\nMORRISTOWN, N.J. (AP) -\nMorris County Prosecutor Franck\nScerbo said Sunday that Charles\nRobert Allison has surrendered to\nVancouver, B.C., police and confessed the mutilation slaying of a\nonetime chum in nearby Mand-\nhem Township.\nThe prosecutor said the SO^ear-\nold Allison turned himself in Saturday night and told police he\nshot Claude Vallacchi, 45, on April\n' 8, \u25a0 nine days before Vallacchi's\nhacked-up body was discovered in\na one-room bungalow.\nScerbo said the two men may\nhave argued over money matters\nbut he added that a motive cannot\nbe established until a further investigation.\nAllison, the prosecutor said,\ntravelled by buses to Vancouver.\n\"He came right up to a police\nofficer ,and said he was wanted in\nNew Jersey for shooting a man in\nthe head,\" Scerbo said.\n\u2022 \"Then he was taken in. He admitted the slaying and the fact he\nhad been running away ever\nsince. He had sold his watch, run\nout of money and I guess he.just\ngave up.\"\n49-\nWashout Derails\n2 Engines, 22 Cars\nSUDBURY, Ont. (CP) - A\ncar Canadian Pacific Railway\nfreight* train hit a washout on the\nTpronto-Sudbury line late Saturday, pitching the two locomotives\nand 22 cars off the tracks.\nAll five crew members escaped\nunhurt but the line was put out\nof commission and the CPR said\nit didn't know how long it would\ntake to restore service.\nThe washout was caused when\na beaver dam nearby collapsed\nand the rush of water undermined\na roadbed.\nNew Envoy\nAUGUSTA, Ga. (AP)-Llewelyn\nE. Thompson, a career diplomat\nwho speaks Russian fluently, was\nchosen by President Eisenhower\nSaturday to be the new United\nStates ambassador to Moscow.\nThompson, 52, now envoy to Austria, will succeed Charles E.\n(Chip) Bohlen at the Soviet Union\npost. Bohlen has been reassigned\nas ambassador to the Philippines\nafter four years in Russia.\nwreath of flowers for the ship.\nDesigned by Carol Tarr and presented by her sister Sylvia Tarr, it\nread, \"In Memory of a Faithful\nServant,\" As the paddlewheeler\nleft the community for the.last\ntime, strains of \"Auld Lang Syne'\nfollowed her.\nA daffodil wreath from the people of Johnson's Landing was made\nby Coleeh Braconnier and Robert\nStenberg. Presented by nine-year-\nold Shirley Stenberg, it read, \"The\nfolks of Johnson's Landing to show\ntheir appreciation of the excellent\nservice given by Steamship Moyie\nand her crews throughout her life,\ntime.\"   '      \"        ,.; \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0 ;\nThe people of Kaslo, largest\ncentre along the Moyie's run where\nthe sternwheeler may find her\nfinal home, proved that shewilllie\nwelcome .should she return,- rPil-\nings were .wrapped';withifid;-Whih\nand blue bunting and a Huge sign\n\"j*W,- \"'Better Efl*ed Ytftfl&'ef Will\nbe. Will Ye No Com* Back: Again.\nSTORES CL.OSED  '.   ':- ~_j0\nStores were closed for the occasion and the citizens lined the\nbanks of the'water. Boy Scouts\nand' Wolf Cubs stood at attention\nand a uniformed band played as\nCaptain Norman McLeod received\na picture of his ship.\nIndividual tributes were also paid\nthe Moyie. Most of the \"100 passengers on her final trip were old-;\ntimers who for sentimental reasons just could not stay away. Captain G. A. West, Shutty Bench,\nboarded her carrying three dozen\ndaffodils for the passengers because he and his wife had always\ndone so on their annual Spring\ntrip over a 38-year period.\nAndrew Scott of Nelson was\n, present despite his 89 years because he'd watched her launched\nin the days when she was in.\ntended for the far north. Jack\nBrown of Nelson arrived on her\nwhen he came from England 57\nyears ago.\n\"We always like to eat on this\nboat best,\" said Mr. and Mrs. A.\nW. Lymbery of Gray Creek, explaining that on the Moyie cabins\nhad been removed so diners would\nhave a better view. Mr. Lymbery\nwas first a passenger in 1911 and\nhis wife in 1919.\nLumber for the home of Mr.\nand Mrs. Ken Wallace of Boswell\nwas transported by the sternwheeler. Mr. Wallace; a 1910 traveler on the steamer, told of\nloading carloads of apples al Boswell and riding over to Procter\nto unload them.\nA. Tapanila, oldest Kaslo citizen aboard, arrived in his city\nin 1897 and through, the years has\njourneyed to mining claims in the\nLardeau on the Moyie. Mrs. J. A.\nJardine of Kaslo grew up at Copper Creek and the sternwheeler\nwas part of her childhood.\nPercy Mills of Nelson worked on\nthe boat. Cliff Came first travelled on her 44 years ago and Mr.\nand Mrs. E. Marsden, also of Nelson, 33 years ago.\nA GOOD HOME\nLawrence Exton, chief engineer,\nput into words the feeling of the\ncrew when he said, \"She's been\na good home.\"\nSticking tp her regular schedule,\nthe Moyie called in at 13 communities on her las.t trip. In nine hours\nshe had completed her journey,\nand with paddles churning, smoke\ndisgorging from, her smokestack\nand whistle gruffly blowing, she\nslid into the Procter wharf for\nthe last time.\nThe next day her ten man crew\ntook up their duties on the tugboat Granthall and an era in history had come to, a close.\nCCF Re-Elects\nStrachan\nVANCOUVER (CP) - R o b e r t\nStrachan, Cowichan - Newcastle\nmember of the legislature, Sunday\nwas returned as provincial'leader\nof \"the CCF party,     fj'i\nThe '24th annual convention of\nthe B.C; chapter also re-elected\nAlex Macdonald of Vancouver as\npresident of the CCF.\nMrs\/nGrace Macinnls of Vancouver !*as; elected vice-president,\nwhile Randolph Hardin?, MCA for\nKaslo-Slocan! was made,fa e:oj(&\n'vice-ptesidenfc\n-r\niiiiniiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nbeware That'\nCup of Teal\nBERLIN'(Reuters) \u2014 A cup\nof tea is not a dqar old British\ncustombut a means of exploit-\n\u25a0nig workers,, the Communist\n. .newspaper Leipziger Volkstim-\n;\u2022 me claims.'      i\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\nThe newspaper, ,noting that \u2022\n\u25a0;a factory owner at .Coventry\n;provides workers.wltJf tea and\n\u2022 music in the afternoon, says:\n- \"He gives strong black tea\nto whip up the nerves of the'\nworkers with the htghly-cpn-\n''centrated theine.\"   \u25a0 '\u2022 ..\n. Theipe is a vegetable, alkaloid constituent of tea similar\nto caffeine.\nThe newspaper adds that this\nis an example of capitalists'using \"every means to get .the\nutmost out of their workers.\" -\niiiiiiMimiiiiiimiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nBodies Found\nVANCOUVER (CP)-The wreckage of a. single-engined aircraft,\nthe bodies of .three business men\naround it, was found Sunday high\non a snow-covered mountain near\nHarrison-Hot Springs, B.C. it had\nbeen missing since Wednesday\nnight.- . ,\nA private helicopter on lease to\nthe RCAF picked up the bodies\nand flew them the 28 miles to Harrison Lake where an air force Can-\nso tfas to be used to bring them\nto Vancouver. ,\nThe Navion aircraft was on a\nflight from \u2022Penticton; in the British Columbia interior, to Vancouver when it became lost;\nThe RCAF search and res c u e\ndivision said the wreckage was\nspotted at about the 8000-foot mark\non Mount Brackenrldge, 20 miles\nnorth of Harrison Hot Springs.\nAn RCAF helicopter was en\nroute to the scene.\nAboard the plane were Walter\nDaltpn, 42-year-old insurance 'executive;- Fred McDowell, 46, a\nfree-lance radio director, and, Bob\nMcLachlin, 37;. wbe.lWiMed^hte'\n.ovm-ipprtgage cpmpaiiK^thre'e\nWere \u25a0 from -Vancouver..\nTo Stand on Record\nOTTAWA. (CP) - Prime Minister St. Laurent has set: off on\na 57i)0-mile, 12-day tour of the\nflfestern provinces, seeking his\nthird mandate as head of a party\nthat has been in power for a record 22 years.\nThe 75-year-old Liberal leader,\nSix Kiddies Die\nIn Morning Fire\nST. JOHN'S, Nfld, (pP)-r-Fire\ntook the lives, of six children of\nMr. and Mrs. Henry .Gear early\nSaturday in. the little village of\nHopedale on the wild and lonely\ncoast of northern Labrador.\nMrs. Gear and a surviving child\nwere badly burned, Mr. Qear less\nseriously. The RCMP detachment\nat Goose J3iiy, Labrador, about\n150 miles south of Hopedale, arranged, for them tp be flown to\nhospital at Northwest River.\nExtreme isolation of \u25a0 Hopedale\nand scarcity of communications\nbetween St. John's and\/Labrador\nobscured details of the tragedy.\nJERUSALEM \u2022 (AP)-Israel has\nassured:the United States she will\nnot intervene' in Jordan as long\nas the status quo is maintained, a\nministry spokesman said.. \u25a0\naccompanied by his youngest\ndaughter and a battery of aides,\nWill, make his first major pitch\nfor votes in a platform address\nat Winnipeg Monday night.\nIt likely will be an \"I-stand-on-\nmy-record\" speech, reviewing his\ngovernment's achievements, particularly since .1948. wfien he took\nover the leadership from the late\nMackenzie King.\nHe followed a. similar pattern\nin 1953 when, opening at Windsor';\nQnt.,.he contrasted current economic conditions with the ' terrible\" conditions, of 1930-35 when\nthe Conservatives were last in\npower.    :\n\"When they go to the polls on\nelection day,\" Mr. St. Laurent-\nsaid in 1953, \"I believe most\nCanadians are going to think back\nto those conditions of the thirties\nand contrast them with the conditions' which exist in Canada today.'.'\nMrw St. Laurent may also comment on the promises of John\nDiefenbaker, Progressive, Conser^\nvative leader, who told his first\nmajor rally at Toronto Thursday\nthat his party will reduce taxes\nand provide provinces with a new\nfiscal deal if elected.\nKing Turns Down\nCCJF Convention Said\n'^Mfist^We'v&Had\"\nI        By AL MARKLE\nl Canadian Press Staff Writer\nVANCOUVER (CP1) - The 24th\nannual provincial CCF convention\nground to a conclusion Sunday afternoon with only a few major resolutions approved by the dele:\ngates. .   \u25a0. ' \u2022 \u25a0   ...   . \u2022\nThe' convention passed, less than\n20: resolutions, excluding organizational proposals, during the. three\ndays of meetings.\nMuch of the time was spent in\narguing \"small but. important\"\npoints in some of the 100 resolu-\ntipns. ,.\nIntended tone of the meeting was\ncontained in a resolution dealing\nwith cost of living reaffirming the\nCCF belief that \"the present capitalist system must be replaced by\na'piattned economy which will\nbreak the stranglehold of private\nmonopoly and . \u201e . ensure increasing eguality in the enjoyment of\nthe good things in life,\"     '\nPOLICIES NOT CLEAR\nIn general, however, the convention fell short in making clear their\npolicies on a wide range of subjects. One CCF member said the\nconvention was \"the dullest we've\never had\"\n-There, was no discussion at all\nconcerning the federal election\ncampaign..,\nMajor'resolutions discussed Sunday included three on national and\ninternational affairs, pushed through only a few minutes before' chairman Grant MacNell\nbrought idoWii the gavel to end the\n,';Pne .urged panada's,represent*-,\ntiVes at. tl)e tfhit'ed Natiotjs to press\nfor \u00a3'! permanent .interhatjjp'nal police force; at tiie same ;time criticizing the Eisejijjoweirtooctrine for,\ntji# Middle East as jiossiMy lead-,\ning to \"imperialist intervention\"\nandwar, ,.\",\"'\n;The convention also asked for the\nrecognition by Canada of .Communist jChlna M open lip \"great hei\/\nmarkets\" for.Canadian goods.- -,-\nA labor resolution passed called\nfor. compulsory union shop if.51\nper cent .$. more of the employees\nvbte in favor, urged that a 44-hour\nwork week be established, that the\nminimum wage be Set at $1.25 an\nhour and that government employees be granted bargaining\nrights.\nGovernment insurance to victims\nof car accidents, operating on the\nprinciple of unemployment insur\nance; -was also endorsed by the\nconvention. \u25a0 \u2022   \u25a0\nThe only major agricultural resolution Instructed the incoming\nexecutive to set up an active committee to promote farm problem\nhandling within the CCF and to\nwork towards a liaison, between\nproducers, consumers and organized labor.\nThe party recommended, in a\ndiscussion on housing problems,\nthat loans for as lbng as 30 or 40\nyears be made available for home1\nconstruction.\nKlan Opens\nBranch in U.K.\nLONDON (Reuters) - The Ku\nK)ux Klan has opened a branch in\nBritain, the Reynolds News reports in its Sunday edition.\n' The left-wing newspaper says\nBritons are being invited to join\nthe \"aryan knights Ku Klux Klan,\nrealm of Britain and Texas\" on\npayment of 10-shilling entrance\nfee and an annual dues of \u00a31 about\n($2.75).\nRecruits sign an oath of allegiance saying \"I believe in the\nKlan tenets and I will obey its\nlaws.\" \u25a0-;,'      ....\nThe newspaper says that accepted members receive supplies of\n^u Klux Klan membership application forms and propaganda leaflets containing a \"mixture of rati-\niaj. hatred arid Waspheniy.\"'\u25a0'?.%\u25a0\n'''Thousands of these leaflets,\n^ppllcatibhformsarid.retl Ku Klux\nHan StickefS hkve been'sprit openly tato Britain through the customs;\n\"For ^he:-jSu'Klu!f;Klan Is,hot\nan illegal organization.\n\"How is. this covenant of Hate\nbeing organized in Britain?\n\"An application sent to the Han's\ncontact in Waco, Texas,\u2014Horace\nSherman' Miller, whose address\nappears on the leaflets\u2014results in\nhim notifying a go-between in the\nnearest British Klan cell.\nPORT ARTHUR, Ont. (CP)\nTrade Minister Howe told a nominating convention Saturday night\nthat the Liberal government had\nnothing to apologize for and predicted the government would be\nreturned to power in the June 10\nelections.     ' *\nJewish Leader Urges\nReligions Revival\nBy MEL SUFRIN\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nTORONTO (CP) - North America's l',000,000 Reform Jews were\nurged Sunday night to help fight\nthreats to democracy by undertaking a program to win the allegiance of Jews outside the synagogue.\nDr.. Maurice N. Eisendrath,\npresident of the Union of, American Hebrew Congregations\u2014oldest Jewish organization in North\nAmerica \u2014 pleaded for a general\nreligious revival in his \"state of\nthe union\" address to 3000 dele\ngates to the group's 44th biennial\nconvention.\nDr. Eisendrath, former Toronto\nrabbi whose headquarters now\nare in New York, emphasized in\ntalking to newspaper men that he\nbelieves strong membership in\nall religions is important for the\nprotection of democracy.\nWithout specifically referring to\ncommunism, he said \"vast numbers\" of Jews in Canada and the\nUnited States are \"still outside\nthe synagogue, prey to all forces\nthat may yet undermine our democracies.\"\nHussein Flies to Saudi Arabia\nFor Urgent Talks With King Saud\nBy JAMES NORfl\/S\nAMMAN, Jordta (Reuters)\u2014.King Hussein of Jordan\nmade a dramatic flight to Saudi Arabia Sunday to confer\nwith King Saud in an effort to consolidate his hold over ljis\ncrisis-ridden country,\n, \u2022 The 21-year-old monarch flew to Riyadh, the Saudi\nArabian capital, after he made another move' against his\nleft-wing opponents Sunday by refusing his royal assent\nto;a decision by.former premier Suleiman Nabulsi to establish diplomatic relations\nwith Russia.\nHvssein was accompanied by\nJordanian Foreign Minister Samir\nRafai and the chief of the royal\ncabinet, Bahjat Talhouni.\nTlie king's visit follows talks in\nMecca on Saturday between King\nSaud and President ShukriEl Ku-\nwatly of Syria and Egyptian President Nasser's personal envoy and\nchief political adviser, Wing Cmdr.\nAly Sabry.\nThe Egyptian, Syrian and Saudi\nArabian heads, of state were reported planning to send a three-\npower delegation tojAmman to see\nKing Hussein.        ;'\nIt was understood in Cairo Sunday that this plan had been shelved and that a joint message would\nbe sent to the 21-year-old monarph\nsoon.   \u2022 '   '   -,'\nIn refusing to agree to establish\ndiplomatic relations with Russia,\nKing Hussein was counterman:\nding a decision taken by the Nabulsi government April 3, a decision which caused grave concern in Western circles.\nAt the same; time .the new in-,\ndependent government of Sayed\nIbrahim announced, that 15'civil\nservants firtd -'.under the .Nabulsi\nregime, 5^f -be reinstated:, Tlvree\nother' civil) -servant? \u2014 \u2022 national\nbroa'ddastirig'director Hafei\"Abel\nHhdi and litis. two'SssisWnts-\u2014will\nbe dismissed because of their, \"attitude\" durihg^the 18-day crieis,'.:;\nSlechrlty fof'cps; today-seaied:'kil\nCorrespondent\nFreed From Jail\nBERN, Switzerland (API-Michael Goldsmith, Associated \"Press\ncorrespondent in Geneva, .was. released from prison here Saturday\nupon completion of a 24-hour sentence imposed for refusing to disclose his news sources in an,espionage case.\nHe was sentenced by Hans Wal-\nwer, a federal examining magistrate conducting a government inquiry into the March 23 suicide of\nAttorney - General Rene Dubojs,\nwho was involved in an espionage\ninvestigation. -  - .\npolitical party promises in Amman, removed party name plates\nfrom office doors and tore down\nparty placards. The troops acted\nunder emergency regulations instituted Thursday along with strict\nmartial law and' a curfew. The\nstrict round-the-clpck curfew, .remained inj effect but was lifted\nfor five hours this morning.\nThese moves are the latest in\na string of stern measures against\nCommunists and left-wing nationalists in the Arab kingdom.   :-\nRain, Hail\nAdd to Texas\nFlood Threat\nDALLAS (AP) \u2014 Violent rain\nand hail storms that raked Texas\nfrom the Panhandle to the' gulf\nSunday created new flood threats\nin this waterlogged and .wind'bat-\ntered state,, .   .: ,\nDeluges of up totsix ipches and\nhailstorms that piled stones, as\ndeep ae ,nine inches'; pent; more yp.-\nteTi.Jiaurin'g into; swolle^stteaws\ngild rivers which: already, hav^e\nflooded dozens of cifier and >?ent\nthousands, scurrying from-thilt\"\nhpm\u00a75, ,, ....\n.Even before '&e -tosavy-' :do*n-\npours of- late Saturday night and\nearly Sunday, the floods and rainstorms had reached disaster .pro-  ,\nportions -in Texas. Goverrior Price\nDaniel' has asked' President Eisen-\nhower to declare the flooded parts   .\npf the state major disaster areas  ,\nand  to  grant- whatever; federal,\nfunds are needed...',......:\nThe Red Cross has declared the-\nfloods and approximately- 60 tornadoes during April- have created ;\nthe greatest disaster situation in\nthe history of its operations in\nTexas. The Corps of U.S. Army\nEngineers has estimated that\nflood damage of two rivers alone j\n\u2014the Brazos and the Trinity\u2014already amounts to more.than $15,-\n000;000. ' -    '    \"\nAnd in This Corner ...\nFALMOUTH, Me. (AP) \u2014 A house-shaking earthquake that\njarred four New England states Friday did at least one person some\ngood. . : \u2022. '\u25a0\nThursday night Mrs. Herbert E. Jenkins tried for IS' minutes to\nget a bedroom light working,-then gave up, figuring the switch\nwas damaged.        \" .. ...   . .....'\nCame the quake\u2014the light went on.\nRENNES, France .(AP) \u2014.Police were busy the other night\nchecking a broken window in a jewelry shop that had just. been\nrobbed. All they could find out was that the pane had been smashed\nby a young man on a motorcycl#.\nAs they worked, a young man on a motorcycle rolled up to am,\nother Jewelry shop 300 feet away, smashed a window and roared\naway with jewelry estimated at $1000.\nLONDON (AP) \u2014 The government stationery office Friday an.\nnounced a list of new official publications including:\nMeasurement of Small Holes (translated from the Russian).\nHorseflies of the Ethiopian Region.\nSeats for Female Shop Assistants.\nSix life of the Elephant Seal. .   ,       .\n'DUAL RIBBONS, Maybr josteph ^Kary, officially opened' remodelled\npremises of the Nelson^DailyjNews Saturday' afternoon ds'tHrong watohpd from sidewalk. A few minutes later the first o|-about\u201e.}0.00.persons..streamed into Wilding\nfor guided tours through various departments. Behind the mayor at left is C. W. Ramsden\n    i'.'fe;    \u2022 \u25a0 \u25a0 -.'      -  < \u25a0\ngeneral manager, and at extreme right is Arthur Waters, contractor. Reporter George\nWhiteley is beside Mr. Waters. In picture at right, architect D. P. Fairbanks and Mr.\nWaters shake hands as Mr. Ramsden congratulates them for \"a job well done.\" Mayor\nand Mrs. Kary are at right.\u2014Daily News Photos\n fr-NElSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, APRIL 29, 1957\nA slice of living history out of\nPancho Villa's fabulous saga!\n1\nCIVIC\nSecond Big Action Hit\n\"FLYING LEATHERNECKS\"\nJohn Wayne, Robert Ryan\nTsTARUGHf ]\nI       DRIVE-IN       |\nSHOWING n\nTONIGHT and WEDNESDAY I\ngja. m see ii mill special ami   \u201eg \u25a0\nCINemaSCOPEi\nTAKES YOU     |\nBENEATH THE SEA!l\nBeneath\n\u25a0 1 af\nlilt! I\n12-Mile^\niiiitvu\nROBERT   TERRY  GILBERT fj\nWHaNER-MOORE-ROLANDf\nCARTOON and SHORTS\n8 Times 8:00 and 8:35\nj\u2014 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nL. E. ASKEW\nDIES AT TRAIL\nTRAIL \u2014 Leslie Everton Askew,\n85, who lived at Syringa Creek and\nTrail during the last S3 years, died\nlate Friday after a long illness in\nthe Trail-Tadanac Hospital.\nBorn in Kent County, Ontario,\nMr. Askew came west in 1905 by\ncovered wagon with his wife, who\ndied in 1952. He was a pioneer in\nMedicine Hat and Macleod, Alberta, after which he lived four years\nin Crows Nest.\nEmployed by Consolidated Mining and Smelting Company until\n1938, Mr. Askew ranched at Syringa Creek until six months ago.\nSurvivors are two daqghters,\nMiss A. Askew, at home, and Mrs.\nE. Spain of Trail; two sons, Douglas of Kinnaird, and Milton of Win-\nnifred, Alberta; four grandchildren\nand two great grandchildren.\nTemperature Hits\nHigh of 71\nNelson basked in temperatures\nup to 71 degrees Sunday, the hottest day of the year so far, according to weather officials.. Temperature climbed seven degrees\nfrom Saturday's high of 64 degrees.\nLow mark Sunday was 42 degrees, cordpared with 35 degrees\nSaturday.\nMany citizens took advantage of\nthe warm weather to get out into\ntheir gardens, some doffing their\nshirts for a sunbath. Lakeside\nPark attendants reported the.park\n\"certainly was busy\" with people\nplaying ball and tennis, or just\nstrolling. Apparently no one was\ndaring enough to take a dip in the\nlake.\nSPRING CLEANING\nNEEDS\nSponges, Chamois, Whisks,\nRubber Gloves\nZero Cold Water Soap\nDi-Chloricide\nNelson Pharmacy\n\"Your Fortress of Health\"\n433 Josephine St.\nPhone  1203     Nights:   394-L\nCASTLE THEATRE\nCASTLEGAR, B.C.\nTonight, Tuesday and Wednesday\n\"GENTLEMEN  MARflY\nBRUNETTES\"   (Cine-Tech.)\nJane Russell, Jeanne Crain\nTimes: 6:45 p.m, and 0:45 p.m.\nAuto-Yue Drive-ln\nTRAIL, B.C.\nShowing Tonight and Tuesday\n'A MAN CALLED PETER\" (Cine.)\nRichard Todd - Jean Peters\nCARTOON and NEWS ,\nTime: Approximately 8:00 p.m.\nPremiere Theatre\nFRUITVALE, B.C.\nShowing Tonight and Tuesday\n'GOOD MORNING MISS DOVE'\n(Magnetic) Cine-Tech.\nJennifer Jones, Robert Stack\nLegion, IOOF\nAttend Special\nChurch Services\nImpressive sight, at First Presbyterian Church Sunday morning\nwere members of the Canadian Legion, the Ladies' Auxiliary, Squadron 561, Air Cadets of Canada, and\nthe Kiltie Band. The parade of\nsome 70 or more persons formed\nup at the Canadian Legion building and marched to the Church.\nThis parade marked the close of\n\"Legion Week,\" designed to present the functions of the Canadian\nLegion to the general public.\nCommanding officer G. E. Mac>\nNeil of the Air Cadets read the\nfirst lesson, and S. J. Newell, president of the Canadian Legion\nBranch, read the second, lesson.\nThe parade was piped in and out\nof the church by piper \"Butch\"\nMilne,.who also played the \"Lament\" after the Act of Remembrance honoring those who fell in\nUna of duty.'\nRev. J. N. Allan based his sermon on the responsibility owed by\nindividuals to the community and\nGod. \"One of the great emphases\nof the Christian faith is responsibility,\" he said. \"We are responsible for what we do.\" Life and\nliving calls for strength of mind\nand spirit every minute, leaving no\ntinte for weakness.\"\nMr. Allan pointed out scriptural\nreference to the fact that \"we are\nour brother's keeper.\"\nLife of John Marks was traced\nby Rev.v Canon G. W. Lang during\nevensong at St. Saviour's Pro-Cathedral, attended by about 40\nmembers of the Independent Order\no^ Foresters. Mr. Lang chose this\ntheme because Monday is St.\nMark's Day.\nScripture lessons were read by\nRudy Boates and F. G. H. Lipping-\nwell. Mr. Lang's remarks were\nbased on St. Paul's letter to t|ie\nEphesians, Chapter 4, verse 7.\nSt. Mark's life was used as an\nexample of what a man can make\nof himself provided he \"taps the re\nsources\" of grace that flow,\nthrough the church.\nKENDAL, Alta. (CP) - Town\ncitizens honored Mr. and Mrs. J.\nRist on their 50th wedding anniversary. Pioneer residents of Kendal, each arrived in Canada as\ninfants from Hungary in the 1880s.\nNearly 1000 Tour\nDaily News Plant\nAbout 1000 Nelson and district\nresidents caught a glimpse of the\nwork that goes on behind the headlines pf their daily newspaper Saturday afternoon, when they toured the remodelled premises of The\nNelson Daily News.\nMayor Joseph Kary cut dual ribbons to signify the official opening\nof the building, expanded at a cost\nof $150,000. One ribbon was a wide\nwhite silk strip, while the other\nwas a length of tape from a reperforator unit, just installed along\nwith teletypesetter equipment for\nautomatic setting of type,  ,\nMayor Kary said. the occasion\nmarked \"another milestone in the\nhistory of The Nelson Daily News.\"\nC. W. Ramsden, general manager, also introduced D. P. Fair-\nbank, architect,, and Arthur Waters, contractor. Flowers were presented to Mrs. Kary.\nFriday afternoon a group *f.businessmen toured the premises by\ninvitation. -\nVisitors received a copy of \"The\nJ* F. Morrison\nMoving lo\nDawson (reek\nMiss Your Favorite Program ?\nCheck the\nCKLN\nDaylight Saving Schedules\nJ.   F.   MORRISON\n. J. F. Morrison, manager of the\nNelson store of Hudson's Bay\nCompany, for the last 4% years,\nwill be leaving May 18 to become\nmanager at Dawson Creek.\nBesides returning to the part of\nB. C. which particularly appeals to\nhim, Mr. Morrison will betaking\non increased managerial responsibility. The Dawson Creek store is\ncurrently undergoing major building expansion that will make it\ntwice the size of the store Mr.\nMorrison managed here.\nHis successor at Nelson will be\nA. A. Taylor, a married man with\ntwo children, who has been manager of the Powell River store. He\nis due to arrive May 8.\nAnnouncement of the transfer,\nwas made Saturday in Nelson by\nJ, Milne of Trail, the company's\nzone manager for the Kootenays.\nMr. Morrison started with the\nHudson's Bay Company in the\nfur trade department in Winnipeg,\ntlje city in which he. had grown up.\nHis love of the North country stems\nfrom several years ago_ when he\nopened and managed the company's Prince George store over a\nyear and a half period; Later he\nwas assistant manager at Karp-\nloops and it was from there that\nhe came to Nelson in 1952 to succeed W. J. McCubbin as -manager.\nMr. Morrison has been popular\nin business circles ih Nelson and\nhas worked for a number of organizations. He was group chairman of the Sixth Nelson Boy\nScouts. He was also active in the\nRotary Club, the Masonic lodge,\nand in the affairs of St. Saviour's\nPro-Cathedral. He is St. Saviour's\nrector's warden and his. wife has\nbeen a member of the Altar Guild.\nMr. and Mrs. Morrison have three\nchildren.\nSommers, Brothers\nSpeak at Castlegar\nTRAIL \u2014 Social Credit meeting\nwas held on the weekend at Castlegar at the Twin Rivers Hall with\ni. E. Sommers, Rossland-Trail\nMLA, and D. L. Brothers, federal\ncandidate, as speakers.\nMr. Sommers spoke pn the high\n\"veight rates adversely- affecting\n'he Interior and on power deveiop-\n\u2022len): in the Colunibia ftiver. He\nfilm reviewed, the-recent sittings\nfl the legislature and described the\n-ew Municipal Act.\u00ab\nMr. Brothers spoke Pn Social\nCredit policies affecting the central\n-ovemment and alsi en local ratters such as the extension Pf jCPl-\nrnibia River wall In Trail, Of the\n<rrrtories in Rossland and Nelson\n-nd the building of the road from\n\"'aslo to New Denver.\nThere will be a meeting of the\n\u25a0Social 'Credit federal executive and\n'he Kaslo Slocan constituency at\nNakusp on May 8.\nInside Story\", a booklet describing\noperations afThe Oeily News. Staff\nmembers were on hand to guide\nvisitors through a world of mystifying, machinery, including the\nScan-a-graver, which makes plastic engraving plates from pictures,\nthe teletypes which bring:news'\nfrom the far corners of the earth,\nlinotypes which put the reporters'\ntypewritten words into type, and\npresses capable of running off a\nfew thousand papers in minutes.\nSEE COMICS PRINTED\nColor comics for next Saturday's\nweekend supplement were run off\non the press at half speed so that\nall visitors were able to see the\noperation during the two and a\nhalf hours the tours were conducted. .\" .'\n'.After the \"open house,\" staff\nmembers and guests sat down to\nturkey dinner in St. Saviour's\nMemorial .Hall. Chairman C. W.\nRamsden introduced several\nguests, including Mrs. R. Thompson, now over 90, a Daily News\nemployee of 40 years standing,\nRev. Father R. D. Anderson, representing the Prospector, Catholic weekly newspaper here; Mayor\nand Mrs. Joseph Kary; architects,\ncontractors and sub-contractors.\nCitizens of Nelson \"have enjoyed\nan era where prosperity has been\nunequalled\" during the past few\nyears, Mayor Kary said in his toast\nto the, Daily News, which, he\nstated, has \"played a tremendous\nrole\" in civic developments.\nA. W. Gibbon, editor, a long-time\nemployee of the Daily News, ret\nsponded.\nD. P. Fairbank, architect, expressed the hope tlfe staff would\nenjoy \"many long years of work in\nyour new surroundings.\".'\nThanks to all sub-contractors\nwere expressed by Arthur Waters,\ngeneral contractor.\nMr. Ramsden said the staff had\nmade the Daily News what it is\ntoday and thanked them \"for their\nforbearance\" in going about normal duties while the building was\nbeing remodelled.\nThe general manager also paid\ntribute to Major R. H. Green of\nVictoria, president of the News\nPublishing Company, who was unable to attend because he and Mrs.\nGreen were celebrating their wedding anniversary with their family\nin Victoria.\nAmong those sending congratulatory messages to The Daily News\nwas Hon. W. D. Blaik,' MLA fir\nNelson-Creston.\nMr. Blaek wrote: \"I regret very\nmuch that' I now find that it will\nbe impossible for me to visit Nelson on your opening. I shall be\nsorry to miss your official opening\nbut extend to you my hearty congratulations on your enterprise and\nsincere good wishes for success in\nyour new premises.\"\n. A nostalgic touch was added\nwith showing of a film of the route\ntravelled by the SS Moyie on Kootenay Lake, taken last year by H.\nH. Hinitt, and shown by Arthur\nStevens. Mr. Stevens also showed\na film of Daily News operations\ntaken some time ago. ,\n(oasl Guider\nNew^C.\nCommissioner\nTRAIL \u2014 The convention o\u00bb the\nB.C. Girl Guides Association continued Saturday and wound up\nSunday noon at a luncheon pre\nsented by Cominco.\nRetiring provincial commissioner\nMrs. Max Wright of Port Alberni\nturned over the gavel to Mrs. A.\nF. .Wilkes of Vancouver.\nMrs. Wilkes, the new provincial\ncommissioner, introduced many\nguests representing 25 areas from\nthe Alberta border through Vancouver Island and from the Boundary to northern area.\nGuide, Brownie and commissioner training sessions, local ,asso-\nciation and executive meetings\nwere held Saturday morning.\nThe afternoon wound up unfinished business.\nMrs. Max Wright, retiring provincial commissioner, said she\nthought the patrol system and cooperation means success, especially in guiding.\nAt a bankquet Saturday evening\nchaired by Mrs. Wilkes Mrs. Wright\nwas presented with the Beaver for\noutstanding service and life membership in the Guide movement.\nSeveral other presentations were\nmade..:. '\u25a0\u25a0-;...\n: ..An interesting highlight of the\nevening was an address by Mrs. N.\nG. Ashworth, 6ne Pf the original\n(Siri. Guide members of the first\nGuide Commission in, 1909. Mrs.\nAshworth talked on her work with\nSir BadefrPowell and prpppsed a\ntoast to Chief Guide Lady fieden-\nPowell.\nA Guides Own service was eon-\nducted Sunday morning by Mrs.\nWilkes at the Tadanac hall.\nMrs. H. F. Hyson, division commissioner and the district commissioner of the West Kootenay, felt\nthat the convention was an out\nstanding success.\nORDINATION AND IMMERSION of 12 new ministers of the Jehovah's Witnesses\ntook place during three-day, assembly which ended Sunday. Here Rttlph Cnossen\nof Bleweitt is immersed in tank of water at Kingdom Hall on Nelson Avenue.\nDaily News Photo.\nWitnesses Told ...\nAll Mankind One\nAfter Armageddon\n\"There is about as much unity\nin this world as there is in a bag\nof cats and doge,\" said A. F. Dan-\nley of Toronto Sunday afternoon\nwhen addressing an audience of\n326 on the subject, \"Removing the\nBarriers Dividing Mankind\". This\ntalk, delivered in the Nelson Civic\nCentre Recreation Hall, was the\nhigh point of the three-day convention of Jehovah's Witnesses which\nended Sunday evening.\nReferring to God's way of establishing unity that will last for ever,\nMr. Danley declared, \"Jehovah\nGod creates the one government\nthat all creatures in heaven and on\nearth must bow to, acknowledge\nand obey. He will do away with all\nthe causes of disunity among mankind by one swift stroke at the\ncoming universal war of Armageddon. After Armageddon, all mankind'will be one. Antiageddon's\nwar will sweep the earth clean of\nall wickedness, all unrighteousness,\nall corruption. Never again will\nthere be different governments, on\nearth at the, sanje time, each\nclaiming to be' the right kind for\nthe people, because the King\nChrist. Jesus will reign over all\nthe earth without a rival government in existence.\"\nConcluding with a plea to be a\npart of the living proof that the\npresent divisive barriers can be\nremoved, Mr. Danley urged,\n\"Learn more of these glorious,\nhope-inspiring truths of the Bible.\nMake them your own. Set your\nhope on God's promise and stick\nby it. With the New World Society\nlove and serve God now when-He\nis beginning to remove the barriers dividing mankind.\"\nSaturday evening, example of\nGod's power to overcome the present barriers of language, religion,\ncolor and politics was shown in\nthe full color film, \"The Happiness\nof\/the New World Society.\" An\nattentive- audience of 320 showed\nappreciation of the convention\nscenes from Nurenburg, Germany,\nwhere 107,000 of Jehovah's Witnesses assembled from both sides\nof the Iron Curtain in an inspiring\n'demonstration of the 'fact that oppression and torture, during. 12\nyears of Nazism and eight years\nof Communism have failed to\nbreak the unity and growth of the\nNew World Society.\nIn Rome, the film showed an\nassembly of 4000 Witnesses in the\nbeautiful marble Palace of Conventions rented directly from the\nItalian government for the occa-\nThe Weather\nNelson (Sun.) \t\n    42  71\n\t\nNelson (Sat.) \t\n    35  64\n\u2014\nToronto \t\n    50   67\n.01\n    35 . 74\n_\nEdmonton\t\n    39   76.\n_\nKamloopp \t\n    46   60\n_\nPenticton \t\n    26   77\n\u2014\nVictoria \t\n    47   69\n\u2014\n    46   75\n\u2014\nCLOCKS PUSHED\nAHEAD AN HOUR\nKootenay residents lost an hour's\nsleep Saturday night, when daylight saving fime started in British\nColumbia.     '\nChange was actually made at 2\na.m. Sunday,- but many jSeoplS, if\nIhey remembered, put their clocks\nand watches ahead one hour when\nthey retired Saturday night. The\nfast time ends September 24.\nBack to School\nToday\nSchool bells will ring today as\nstudents get back to their studies\nafter the Easter holidays.\nStudents at I). V. Rogers High\nwill learri the results of their\nEaster exams, but will be able\nto take courage in the knowledge\nthat summer holidays begin fn\nabout two months. ,\nsion. The use of this palace, erected by Mussolini, was another demonstration of the ability of God's\nNew. World Society to overcome\nthe barriers that would-be world\nrulers erect in the way of unity.\nSaturday afternoon, the ordination and immersion of 12 new ministers of Jehovah's Witnesses was\ndescribed as \"living proof that in\nthe West Kootenay area, the increase of the New World Society\ncontinues as it does worldwide.\"\nThroughout the three days of\nthe assembly, talks by various\nspeakers, demonstrations, and pantomimes gave counsel on Kingdom\npreaching at the homes of people,\nand encouraged all to continue on\nin unity regardless of opposition.\nA cafeteria, operated by the Witnesses, served a total of 800 hot\nmeals.\nConvention officials expressed\nthanks to the Nelson city council\nand the- tradesmen pf Nelson for\ntheir helpfulness and co-operation,\nand for the'kindness and co-operation of the j Nelson police (and fire\ndepartments. \u00bb\u2022\nMRS. SANDERSON\nOF TRAIL DIES\nTRAIL \u2014 After a long illness,\nMrs. Ethel Jane Sanderson, who\nhas lived here seven years, died\nSunday in Trail-Tadanac Hospital\nat the age of 78.\nMrs. Sanderson was born March\n1, 1879, in Toronto, and went to\nschool there. As a bride she came\nto the mining town of Sandon 50\nyears ago. Next step from there\nwas to New Denver, where she\ntook an active-part in Women's Institute affairs.\nAfter her husband's death, Mrs.\nSanderson came to Trail in 1950\nto live with her son, John. Also\nsurviving are another son, Alvin,\nalso in Trail; two sisters, Mrs. Williams and Mrs. Needham of\nBrampton, Ontario; and one brother, James Baxter of Tillsonburg,\nOntario. -\nSlide Wrecks\nSandon Houses\nSANDON - A landslide roared\ndown across Cody Gulch here\nshortly after noon Sunday demol*\nishing four vacant houses.\nThe fall of trees, rocks and mud\ntemporarily dammed Carpenter\ncreek, endangering three more\nhomes, all occupied and one tha\np6st office. The families evacuated\nthe houses. However, the creek\nworked its way through the slide\narea.\nThe slide came across the creek\nand blocked the road up Cody\nGulch to a depth of about 25 feet,\njust touching the upper home of\nthe three that were threatened.\nThe snow is still about two and\na half feet deep on the level in\nSandon and road communication!\nwith the Slocan are disrupted by\nfaffing material, although open.\nTWO JAILED FOR\nTHEFT OF FISH\nTwo men were sentenced to live\nmonths each in the Nelson provincial jail Saturday by Magistrate\nR. S. Nelson for illegal possession\/\nof fish worth less than $50.\nNorman Stanley McKibbon an<f\nJohn Douglas Murray had ]\nguilty to the theft earlier last i\nin police court. The box was tak\nApril 23 from the Canadian Paqfie\nRailway express office.\nMagistrate Nelson fined Bern\neach $250 or five months in dqault.\nBoth defaulted.\nPartial Eclipse\nOf Sun Today\nThere'll be a partial eclipse of\nthe sun at 6 p.m. Monday, according to the Royal Astronomical\nSociety.\nAltronomers advise anyone who\nintends to watch the eclipse to view\nit through smoked glass; or a dense\nphotographic negative.\nDAY'S\nSuntan Ki\/ig\nTROUSERS\nMade  of  9,\/oz.  Twill,\nWell Cut an^Sanforized\nTROU8ER8\nPair   \t\nMATCHING\n8HIRT8   \t\n$6.50\n$4.95\nKlondike Ktag Trousers\nTough  - Tailored\nWashable\nPair\n*7.95\nGodfreys'\nPHONEjf ilttl* BOX\nNOW COLUMBIA TRADING\nGIVES YOU A COMPLETE\nFor the regular price of a cabinet sink!\n\u2022\"\u00bb$\u25a0\u2022<\nTHIS COMPLETE KITCHEN    $225.75 .\nYOU SAVE $63^0\nCheck these sink features:\n\u2022 Full 54\" wide with 2 shelved compartments\n\u2022 5 drawers glide noiselessly on nylon slides\n\u2022 One-piece, easy-to-clean durable porcelain-enameled steel top\nwith deep, no-splash bowl\n\u2022 Swinging mixing-faucet with built-in anti-splash ring\n\u2022 Two fluted tip-preventing drainboards.\nMatching Wall Cabinets:\n\u2022 Deep shelves hold dishes, supplies\n\u2022 AU in sparkling, easy'-to-clean Youngstown Star White\n\u2022 Come in today and see this complete kitchen value.\nColumbia Trading Co.\nPhone 1511\nNolson, 6. C.\n902 Front St.\n \u2014* '\n Many From District\nOn Moyie's Last Run\n\/\/?\/\nBy Staff Writer\n\"We were on the Minto's last\ntrip, and we felt we should say\ngoodbye to her sister too,\" said\nmany of the 100 passengers who\ntravelled on the Moyie's final voy;\nage Saturday.\nThey came from.everywhere because they loved the Moyie or\njust because they loved sternwheelers. Those, from the,North\nShore making the trip included Mr.\nand Mrs. C. W. A., Barwis, Mr.\nand Mrs. E. Marsden, Andrew\nScott and H. Cliff Came.\nMr. and Mrs. Tudor Ruther^len\nand their children were there. Mr.\nand Mrs. R. J. Wiginton of Nelson made the trip as did Jack\nBrown, Denis Crowther, Percy\nMills and Clyde Mills.\nMrs. G.; Robbin, Mrs. Grace Pal-\nmason and their children went\nhome to Lardeau from Kaslo on\nthe steamer for the last time. Mr.\nand Mrs. Ben Jorden drove frorn\nCalgary especially to take the final\ntrip.\nTwenty-five citizens; of Kaslo\nwere aboard. They included Mayor\nRoy Green and Aldermen Jack\nHand and Jack Morris. Mr. and\nMrs. J. A. Jardin were there as\nwere Mrs. G. S. Baker, whose husband was mayor for many years\nand Mrs. Herman Carlson.\nFrom Creston came Hilton\nYoung with his daughter Janet and\nher friend Wilma Hawkey. Mr.\nYoung has made an annual trip on\nthe^Moyie for several years. Other\nCreston travellers were Mr. and\nMrs. Robert Marshall with their\nsons Bob and Colin and daughter\nElvira.,Sandra Martens and Eithel\nSutcliffe were also in the party.\nJ. M. Macdonald and Anton Jqey-\nno represented Riondel on the trip.\nJohn Waldie was there from Castlegar, J. 0. Sutherland from Robson and J. Muir from Fruitvale.\nLake Communities Plan\nResting Place for Moyie\nBy Staff Writer\nCitizens of the upper Kootenay\nLake area are making plans concerning the final home of the SS\n; Moyie which was retired from her\nlake run Saturday. '\nAccording to Noel Bacchus of\nBirchdale organizing secretary of\nthe project all the people of the\ndistrict are working together in\nthe hope that Kaslo will receive\nofficial word from the CPR, owners of the last stesnwheeler, that,\nthe Moyie is to end its days there,\nThe Kaslo city council will assist\nthe parks committee which plans\nto make the Moyie its chief project.\nCCF Backs\nDivorce Reforms\nBy AL MARKLE\nCanadian Press  Staff  Writer\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Reforms\nIn divorce regulations and Can\nada's penal system were supported\ntoday by the 24th annual conven\ntion of the British Columbia CCF\nparty.\nThe r e fo r m s were outlined\nbriefly by Federal Member Harold\nWinch of Vancouver East, long an\nadvocate of penal reform.\nMr. Winch said the CCF party\nis trying to have responsibility for\ndivorce cases removed from the\nHouse of Commons and the Senate\nassigned to the Exchequer Court.\n\"Canada is the most backward\ncountry in the world as far as\ndivorce is concerned,\" he said.\n\"You can get a divorce for 10\nminutes of adultery but not fdr a\nlife-time of desertion or separation.\"\nMr. Winch suggested Canada institute divorce reforms based on\nthe changes made in Britain a few\nyears ago.\nHe said the penal system in Canada is definitely in need of a revamping, either in wljole or in\npart.\nFunnelling agent for funds to place\nthe boat on drydock and make her\ninto a monument and a museum\nwill be the Kootenay Lake Historical Society.\nThe provincial government has\npromised $7500 to be used in the\nproject. Leaving the paddlewheeler\nin its original condition, a museum\nof the industries on Kootenay Lake\nover the years will be arranged\nbelow deck.\nThe Kootenay Lake Historical Society is composed, of people from\nall the settlements from the head\nof the lake to Nelson. It has a\nmembership of 500 with several\ncommunities, including Nelson, not\nyet organized. ,  .'\nShould the Moyie go to Kaslo,\nshe would be located jn one of two\nplaces, the former site of the King\nGeorge hotel which was destroyed\nby fire or a place in Kaslo's park\nnear the Boy Scout hall.\nEven Pleads\nVERNON (CP) - Nicholas William Even pleaded not guilty in\nassize court here today to a charge\nof criminal negligence in the death\nlast December of Nazur Filatoff in\nKelowna. . (\"\nMr. and Mrs. Filatoff were\nstruck by a light delivery truck in\nKelowna Christmas Eve. Mrs. Filatoff died immediately and Mrs.\nFilatoff died later in hospital. Even\nis alleged to have been driver of\nthe truck.\nThe case, the second and last on\nthe docket, continues Monday.\nMr. Justice Norman Whittaker\nsaid the fact there are only two\ncases on the docket \"speaks well\nfor the law-abiding people\" of Vernon district.\nMr. Justice Whittaker said the\n.assize court is always in session\nin Vancouver and hasn't caught up\nsince it started in 1954.\nCranbrook Seeks\nMore Entries\nFor Road-eo\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Licenced drivers who will not be 20 until July 20\nare still being sought by Cranbrook\nJuniqr Chamber o{ Commerce for\ntheir teen-age road-eo set for May\n4, with entry deadline Tuesday.\nSo far 10 have entered, but an ad-\nIditional 15 applications will be.accepted.\nA Cranbrook garage is loaning\nthree new cars for the competition\nI of skill in driving, which will be\nrun on a course set up at Baker\nPark. RCMP Sergeant A. G. Bra-\nbazon and three officers from the\nCranbrook detachment will serve\nas judges and awards will be on a\nbasis of points for skill and safety\npractices in' the problems set for\ncompetitors. Winner will go to\nprovincial finals at Vancouver and\nother winners will receive prizes.\nTIC TOP'S DESIGNER HR. G. COHEN, SAYS\n\"GOOD STYLE\nbegins and ends with\nCOMFORT\"\nComfort is what you get in Tip\nTop's new Ivy influence styles.\nTrue natural fit . : . without un-\n. necessary padding, band-cut to,\nyoor personal measurements, This\nSpring choose Tip .Top's Trim\nLook style in your choice from\nhundreds of fabrics in the colour\nbest suiujd to you. Let us take\nyour personal measurements to-\nUIL0RED-T0-Y0UR-MEASURE\n-lip Top\" Clothes\n$67.50  2 pee.\nEXCLUSIVE WITH\nFRANK'S\nBoys' and  Men's Shop\n547 Baker St.\nPhone 1717 Nelson, B.C.\nTIP TOP TAILORS\nPolio Won't Keep\nTeacher Down\nVANCOUVER (CP) - A 30-year-\nold school teacher, J. A. McAllister, says he will return to his\" job\nnext September, \"with or without\na wheelchair.\"\nMr. McAllister was stricken with\npolio last fall while he was boys'\ncounsellor at Cambie Junior High\nSchool in suburban Richmond municipality.\nThe school board has transferred\nhim to Stevenson Junior High\nSchool because it is all on one\nfloor. Mr. McAllister will start to\nwork next month for Vk days a\nweek.\nHe said today that he can get\naround well in his wheelchair and\ncan drive his car, which has hand\ncontrols.\n\"I wiil be teaching full time by\nSeptember whether I have to use\nthe wheelchair or not,\" Mr. McAllister said. |\nCPR TUG GRANTHALL will take over from the\nhistoric sternwheeler Moyie after today serving Kootenay Lake communities from Procter to Lardeau. The\ntug was  named after Grant Hall,  former  Canadian\nPacific Railway vice-president.\u2014-Daily News photo.\n16 Become\nNew Citizens\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Sixteen new Canadians took ..their oath of allegiance and were issued certificates\nof citizenship in County Court recently by His Honor Judge H. W.\nColgan. They were Antonio Man-\narin, Kimberley, formerly Italian;\nJoseph and Marie Weiczorek, Cranbrook, Polish; Alfonso Bertoia,\nDannilo Giacometti, both Cranbrook, Italian; Oliver Torrey Fuller, Invermere; American; Nils\nGeorge Lindgren, Cranbrook, Swedish; Dominic Marzano, Cranbrook, Christiano Fortunato, Cranbrook, Giovanni DeAngelis, Cranbrook, Italian; Sick Lee, Kuen Mee\nWong, both Cranbrook, Chinese;\nPierre Cabelguen, ' Marysville,\nFrench; Paul Klinghammer, Wil\nmer, German; \u2022 Attilio Transero,\nCranbrook and Rachele Venir.\nCranbrook, both Italian.\nAppearing with two supporting\nWitnesses each were 24 persons\nwhose applications were recommended for approval. They were;\nErmagora F. Nonis, Caterina\nNonis, Emmy Werner, Horst Otto\nWerner, Dominic Biviera, Helen\nKalinowski, Grace Poeistra, Henry\nPoelstra, Antonio Falcone', Willi\nJoras, Heinrich Schmidt, Anna\nKlara Rochow, Karl Rochow, Alfred Tescher, Karl Anton Strobl,\nAnne Maria Stobl, Joseph Merz,\nMaria Merz, Stanley Merz, Ruth\nMikkelsen, Rense Veenstra, Bruno\nMeyer, Waltrawt Meyer and As-\nmann Mikkelsen.\nSix Escape\nPropane Blast\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Six'men\nnarrowly escaped injury Saturday\nwhen a-junk yard explosion rocked\nthe 900 block Main Street in Vancouver, shattering about 100 windows.\nThe men fled when a small blast\nand sizzling noise warned them'a\npropane gas tank was about to\nexplode.\nIt blew pieces of metal in all\ndirections and shattered windows\nof hotels, restaurants, and offices\nthe length of the block.\nKaspar Schoenenberg, 42,- was\ncutting thp tank with an acetylene\ntorch. The other five men nearby\nwere Himie Mickner, William Mol-\ndowan, Benny Lapidus, Joe Lewin\nand Jack Radis.\nREQUEST DENIED\nGILLINGHAM, Eng. (CP. -A\ncouple in this Kent town asked the\nvicar of St. Mary Magdalen church\nfor the hymn \"Day of Wrath and\nDoom Impending\" to be sung at\ntheir wedding. The vicar said: \"I\nadvised them against it. It was\nnot played.\"\nSays Hoodlum\nProblem\nExaggerated\nVANCOUVER (CP) - The annual B. C. Parent-Teacher Federation convention here was told that\nforcing inept students to remain\nin school until 15 years of age \"ties\nin with hoodlumism.\",\nVancouver school board chairman Reg Atherton told the 400\ndelegates at windup sessions here\nthat the problem of hoodlums in\nschools \"is highly exaggerated.'\n\"But I think if there is any\nhoodlumism at the school level, it\nties in with the retention of all\nstudents, regardless of ability, willingness and ambition,\" he added.\nResolutions passed at the final\nday urged the B. C. government to\nissue free a standard dictionary in\nelementary schools; dissolution of\nthe UBC's one-year teacher training \"emergency program\" and fluoridation of water.\nBig Business\nWill Bully Gov't\nSays CCFer\n. VANCOUVER (CP) - The CCF\nprovincial convention here was told\nFriday that government owneship\nof major sources of wealth in Canada is essential because \"big business will bully \"and corrupt any\ngovernment that is elected.\"\nColin Cameron, CCF member of\nparliament for Nanaimo, told delegates this country has \"a choice\nof public control of wealth or violent dislocations and depression.\n\"A handful'of giant, corporations\nget shocking tax exemptions priv\nileges. We can't fool around any\nlonger.\"\nRites Planned Today\nFor Boy Fatally\nCRANBROOK - Funeral for\nAlbert Bruce ' (Butch) Clifford,\nnine-year-old victim of a traffic accident just outside city limits\nThursday afternoon, will take place\nMonday at the Christian and Missionary Alliance Church.\nHe was fatally injured when the\nbicycle he was riding and a truck\noperated by Lawrence Turney, collided. Inquest opened Friday morning and adjourned until next Wednesday afternoon.\nHe was a pupil at Central School\nand lived with his father, Angus\nClifford, on Fifth Avenue. He is\nsurvived by his parents, three brothers, Allan in Regina, Gordon and\nAndrew at'Kinnaird, and three\nsisters, Audrey and Jean in Regina and Avis in Cranbrook. Rev.\nJ. H.,Harder will officiate and burial will be in Westlawn Cemetery.\nArena, Chair Lift Drive\nPasses Three-quarter Mark\nKIMBERLEY - Kimberley Projects Society canvass toward a\nfund for permanent recreational\nfacilities, specifically an ice arena\nand a chair lift for its North Star\nSki Club layout,, is past the three-\nquarter mark with 1551 persons\ncanvassed and about 500 still to be\ninterviewed.\nSo far 73 persons have contribut-\ner cash of $1754.50, and 1115 persons have pledged monthly payroll deduction contributions at the\nrate bf $1854.75, which will make\ntotal of $22,257 contributed in\none year by this method. If the\nprojects qualify in the opinion of\nCominco as permanent facilities\nfor community recreation, contribution from the company of twice\nthe amount raised locally can be\nexpected.\nKimberley Arena, on borrowed\ntime for more than a year, is now\nclosed for public use on fire marshal order, pending structural alterations. Estimated cost of these\nalterations was jarred when drilling for a new foundation disclosed\nmore extensive work required than\nplanned. This has led to proposal\nof a new arena at a new location,\nin the vicinity of Rotary Park,\nwhich would cost up to $200,000.\nObjective of the current canvass\nis $45,000 subscribed locally, and\nthe Projects Society had about $15,-\n000 in hand prior to the drive.\nThe canvass will continue until\ncompleted after which the proposed projects will be placed before\nCominco committee which decides\non whether they are acceptable for\ncompany assistance. When this is\ndone the proposal for the- new\narena will be presented at a public meeting for approval of those\ncontributing in the drive.\nPCs Contesting\n22 B.C. Ridings\nVANCOUVER (CP)-British\nColumbia Progressive Conservatives held a campaign meeting\nhere Saturday to map strategy for\nthe June federal election.\nCandidates, their campaign\nchairmen and' members of the federal and provincial executives attended.\n\"John Diefenbaker's ascendancy\nto the party leadership has united\nB.C. Tories at every level, both in\nthe federal and provincial organizations,\" said Leon Ladner, co-\nchairman df the meeting and president of the federal group.\nCo-chairman A. C. Des Brisay,\nrepresenting provincial Conserva-\nGREENHILL MINE\nCLOSES DOWN;\n250 JOBLESS\nBLAIRMORE, Alta. (CP) - The\nGreenhill mine of West Canadian\nCollieries, considered the largest\ncoal mine in Alberta, will suspend\noperations Tuesday, throwing 250\nmen out of work, the company said\ntoday.\nCompany spokesmen said the operation is being suspended because\nof the complete deterioration of\nmarkets for coal caused mainly by\ndicselization of the Canadian Pacific Railway.\ntives, noted that for the first time\nin more than 10 years Conservatives are contesting ail 22 ridings\nin the province.\nA total of 18 candidates attended\nthe meeting.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, APRIL 29, 1957\u2014S\nTEEN TOWNS RECOMMEND\nPROVINCIAL TRACK MEET\nTRAIL (CP) \u2014 Resolutions adopted by the 12th annual conference\nof the British Columbia Teen Town\nMayors Association included one\nto consider a , provincial track\nmeet and another to study the possibility of Softball leagues on a district level,, the winners to meet;\nfor the provincial championship.\nThe Oliver-Kelowna Teen Town\ngroup advanced the resolution on\nthe 'track meet pointing out that it\nwould do much to aid track and\nfield in the province. r-\nKelowna - Rossland, who sponsored the Softball resolution, said\nit would be a good project for the\nassociation and would bring much\npublicity.\nOther resolutions passed by the\nconference at the conclusion of\nits annual meeting here Friday\nnight included: that Teen Towns\nobtain a booth at .the Pacific Northwest Exhibition; that each Teen\nTown hold functions to raise money\nfor the provincial council; that the\n1957 mayors conference approve\nexpenditures of not more than one-\nhalf the fixed reserve fund during\nthe next year ;* that the conference\ndiscuss raising of assessments to\na more satisfactory level.\nMore than 100 delegates from\nacross the province attended the\nmeeting.        '\nGuide Offers To\nHunt Sasquatch\nHARRISON HOT SPRINGS (CP)\n\u2014A licensed guide offered here\nFriday to devote months \"if necessary\" to punting the Sasquatch,\nhairy giants of legend.\nThe offer of Jack Kirkman was\naccepted by the Harrison Hot\nSprings Centennial committee, which plans a Sasquatch hunt\nas part of its observance of British\nColumbia's 1958 Centennial.\nHowever, committee chairman\nTony Barger said no plans for the\nhunt will be made until the project\nis approved by the B.C. Centennial\ncommittee.\nIf the B.C. body approves, the\nHarrison group will have about\n$700 to launch the search in surrounding mountains. The money\ncomes from a government and\nvillage centennial allocation.\nFOR A REAL TREAT IN HEAT ...\nWESTERN\nMQNARCH\nDRUMHELLER DEEP SEAM\nmi\u00abmmMmmmmiimmiZm<mm\u00bbi smsmn\nEgg Coal $20.00 Ton\ni (2 Ton Lots) '\nSPECIALLY SIZED for BEATER or RANGE\nPHONE   889\nTOWXER   Fuel & Transfer\nERWIN, WASEY OF CANADA, LIMITED\nTORONTO\nAd. No. H-5703-Job. No. T-2890\n4 cols, x 125 lines\u2014B & W\u2014Newspaper\na look\nof luxury\nat a price\nyou can afford\nWant light, responsive steering?... want\nsmooth, surging power of the sweetest-\nrunning motor ever? Want clean, curve-\nswept beauty of line and engineering of\nadvanced design? Whatever your ideas in\n\u2022 precision performance and luxurious looks\n\u2014 you'll find them all in the sparkling new\n1957 Hillman Minx Sedan.\nHere is the car you'll know is so completely\nnew, so right for you ... when driving or\nparking or just admiring. You'll find a rainbow\nof new colours, in ten combinations. Take the\nwheel and know the feel of sh'eer motoring\nsatisfaction. Here is the car that pays tribute\nto your taste and clear judgment... for the\ncost of Hillman's look of luxury is j quite\nmodest, hardly more than you'd pay for the\nvery lowest priced car. See one. Drive one,\nand you own a car beyond compare i,. the\nmost spacious and gracious in us class...\nGoing abn\/id} Enquirt about\nour ovinias delivery plans.\nthe spar\nk'lin\ng  new\n1957 HILLMAN\nhigh fashion  car of the year\nROOTES MOTORS (CANADA) LIMITED . Montreal .Toronto v Vancouver\nDEFOE SERVICE LTD.\n213 BAKER ST. PHONE 1234\n Established April 22.  1902\ninferior British- Columbia's Largest Daily Newspapei\nPublished every morning except Sunday and statutory   ''\nholidays    by    the    NEWS    PUBLISHING    COMPANY\nLIMITED,  266  Baker  Street,  Nelson,  British  Columbia,\nAuthorized a> Second Class Mall, Post Office Department, Ottawa\nMEMBER  OB   THB  AUDIT   BUREAU  OF CIRCULATIONS\nMEMBER Ot   1'HE CANADIAN PRESS\nThe Canadian Press Is exclusively entitled to' the use tor republication of all news\ndispatches credited to it oi to The Associated West ot Reuters in this paper.,\nand also the local news published therein.\n. ____________ .        _\nTHANKS .,\nOur particular thanks go to Prsmler\nW. A. C. Bennett and his cabinet ministers for their much appreciated message and good wishes. We also pay\ntribute to the architects and the general\ncontractor for'a job wel^done, and\nthank the various city departments\nwho helped facilitate the connecting\nof electrical, water and sewer utilities.\nAfter the splendid response by\nthe people of Nelson and District to\nour \"open house\" ceremonies, this\nnewspaper and its staff would like to\nthank the hundreds who attended and\nespecially those who made the opening more colorful by sending flowers,\nmessages of support and congratulations in the opening issue, and who\nofficiated at the opening ceremonies.\nSpeech Making Diplomacy\nThe old kind of diplomacy \u2014 the\nkind where various countries exchanged secret notes \u2014 had its advantages.\nUsually such communications were ex-,\npressed in diplomatic language which\nwas formal and polite. There was no\nquestion of being forthright and rude.\nFriends and enemies were treated\nalike in this respect and if anything\nwe were more polite to our enemies.\nWe lived, perhaps in a fool's paradise. There were long periods when\nordinary people were able to go about\ntheir daily work of living quite unaware that a new war was in the making, when they were not called upon\nto regard other people as their inveterate enemies but could visit and trade\nwith them openly.\nj Now, since the last world war, we\nhave open diplomacy, in which we\nare all allowed to share \u2014 purely as\ncm audience of course, while our lead\ners exchange speeches across the barriers of the Iron Curtain.\nSpeeches! There is a dreary flood\nof them. Almost all ol them were better\nleft unsaid. Each side accuses the\nother of making announcements which\nare calculated to be propaganda and .\nnone of them are in-the most tactfully\nexpressed terms.\nT6 back them up and make confusion more confoundeH there is a host\nof news analysts with opinions most\nvociferously expressed who would\nhave us believe that we cannot read\n' with intelligence and that there is more\nbehind the words than we can see.\n' Their very prolixity is wearisome.\nIt is time our leaders did considerably less talking, less trying to make\nour hair rise with horror and spent\nmore time in finding-ways for friends\nand enemies to live together.\nPress Comment\nIt Is symptomatic of something or other\nin this modern world that the number of\ndivorced men high in public life seems\nincreasing. And that the fact of their divorce doesn't seem to militate against their\npolitical success.\nSir Anthony Eden became prime minister of the United Kingdom after his\ndivorce and remarriage. Now Foreign Minuter Selwyn Lloyd has filed petition for\ndivorce. On this continent Mr. Adlai Stevenson, twice a presidential candidate, was\n9 divorced man. He twice lost but it is most\nimprobable he would have won even had\nhe not been divorced.\nIt would be wrong, of course, to infer\nsuch prominent politicians were always the\nguilty parties in the cause for divorce. It\nfs quite possible they were, in large part,\nthe innocent parties. Both Sir Anthony and\nMr. Lloyd instituted divorce proceedings\nagainst their wives. \u2014 Windsor Star.\ntoward clearing the major obstacles that\nhave snagged our progress.\nTwo Atlantic premiers\u2014Hon. Hugh John\nFlemming of New Brunswick and Hon. Robert Stanlield of Nova Scotia\u2014agreed.tq that\npremise in a discussion of Maritime problems on the MountAllison University Forum.\nAlthough Nova Scotia industry is greatly\nhandicapped by lack of sufficient power, the\nneed for increased electrical energy is gfcat-\ner in New Brunswick. With this province\non the threshold of one of the greatest mineral development in the history of Canada,\nthe necessity for a surplus of cheap power\nis absolute. Mineral production coupled with\nthe growing requirements of Our pulp and\npaper Industry, ttiake it vital that New\nBrunswick's power output be Beared to take\nCare of thOSe enormous demands that the\nnear future will make.\n\u2014Fredericton Gleaner!\ni Faith often can tie built up on flimsy\nfoundations. Stringy spinach is an example.\nA generation of children were reared in\nthe belief ample doses of spinach would'\nmake them strong and sturdy. Nutritionists\nhow have exploded this as a myth. As a\ndiet it is less valuable than hay, they say.\n, Perhaps none did more to .promote\nspinach than, a comic character by the name\nof Popeye the Sailor Man. This raucous-\nyoiced little giant could do super-human\nfeats of strength, provided he ate his spinach\nregularly. His example was kept before in-\niocent children by equally innocent mothers\nwho had believed everything they were told\nabout spinach.\nTo those raised on spinach it is no surprise that is is compared to hay. That's\njust what it tasted like, boiled, hay, they\nwill agree. Now hay. or,spinach, may be\ngood for horses but children are different.\n\u2014Windsor Star.\nNothing is harder on a woman's wafdrobe\nthan the wardrobe of another woman,\n\u2014St. Thotrtas Times-Journal.\nWhile not a cure for all the economic\nills that beset us in the Maritirtie Provinces,\nincreased electric power will go a long way\nGood old days: When little Junior had\na dime bank\u2014now it's a billfold. ,\n\u2014Wall Street Journal.\nThe Gloomy Old Days\nA part of our job on this newspaper is\nto read other newspapers. Occupied in this\npleasant task this week, we came across,\nthe following editorial which we consider\nworthy of passing on to our readers:\n\"It is a gloomy moment in history. Not\nin the life time ,of. any man who reads\nhis paper has there been so much gravd and\ndeep apprehension; never has the future\nseerhed so dark and incalculable.\n\"In France the political cauldron seethes\nand bubbles with uncertainty. England and\nthe English empire are beihg sorely tried\nand exhausted in a social and Acortdmic\nstruggle, with turmoil at horn* 4nS uprising\nof h6r teeming millions in hef far-flung\nIndiftn 6mpirA.\n\"The United States is beset with racial,\n? Questions?\nANSWERS\nOpen to any reader Names ol\n' persons asking questions will not be\npublished There is no' charge for this\nservice QUESTIONS, WILL NOT BE\nANSWERED BY MAIL except where\"\nthere Is obvious necessity (or privacy\nSubscriber, \"Kaslo \u2014 Can you tell me where\nI can get cups and saucers with the name\nS.S. Moyie on them?\"\nWe have been informed that that these\nare obtainable at the City Drug Stare, 456\nBaker Street, Nelson, Phone 34. '\nCurious Collector, Nelson \u2014 I have a nickel,\nsmaller than a dime, dated 1930. Has it1\nany value?\nConsult C. Spatari, Rossland, B.C.\nReader, Pentictbn'\u2014 What is the address of\nthe Canadian Philatic Society?\nThe Canadian Philatelic Society Inc., 95\nCottingham Street, .Toronto 5, Ont.\nOldttmer, South Slocan \u2014 Sometime ago, I\nsaw Something about a society that was\ndiscussing whether the world is round\nor not? Did they come to any decision,\nand if so, what?-\nIt is known that the world is not exactly\na sphere, a better approximately to its\nashape being a oblate spheroid, the surface\nbeing swept out by an ellipse (or regular\noval) rotated about its shortest diameter.'\nT. K., Trail \u2014 Have there ever been authenticated signals received here from any\nof other planets?\nThe radio telescope at the U.S. Naval\nResearch Laboratory, Washington, D.C.,\npicked up radio signals froth the planet Venus\nMay 6, 1956 the first signals thus recorded.\n'Such signals were a continuous radio wave\nevidently caused by thermal energy and\nheard heard as hissing on a high radio frequency of 10,000 megacycles. They were\npicked up with the help of a radio meter.\nOhio State University claims to have received\nrafdio response from the planet Jupiter. These\nare the only planets as yet giving radio responses.\nThey'll Do It Every Time\nBy.Jimmy Hatlo\nPytWMS HAD\nTWO DUCATS\nFOR TME OPENING\n64ME AND\nINVITED P4L\nELMO\u00ab\u00ab\nLetters to The\nEditor\nLetters to the Editor on any topio of\ngenuine Interest are welcome If they are\nbrief, accurate and fair. No letter will be\nInserted In whole, or In part, except over\ntha sianature and address of'the writer.\nUnsolicited correspondence cannot be\nreturned.\nCurling President\nQuotes Figures\nTo the Editor .\nSir\u2014In reply to your recent news article,\nentitled \"The Facts\" given in reply to curler\ncomplainers, I would like to mention, that,\nlast year as well as previous years, the Nel-_\nson Curling Club has always contracted with\"\nthe Civic Centre Commission and has met\ntheir terms. Our last year's contract is, as\nfollows; from November 1st to March 15th,\n4J4 months rental $2340, this was for refrigeration and light and heat only, all other\nexpenses pertaining to the operation of the\nCurling Club such as, making and maintaining ice, janitor and janitor supplies, draw\nsecretary and secretary, etc. were borne hy\nthe Curling Club, our operating expenses\namounted to just over five thousand dollars.\nFor those interested in costs would suggest that, they ask for a breakdown of the\ncoming years budget of $9073. The writer\nbelieves that this amount is for the twelve\nmonth's operation and equipment of the curling rink building, which is used by other organizations^ as well as the Nelson Curlijig\nClub.    \"\" '\u00ab \u25a0.\nR.  M. CHANDLER,\nPresident,\nNelson Curling Club.\nNelson, B.C.\n _^ _-\t\nindustrial and commercial chaos\u2014drifting,\nwe know not where.\n\"Russia hangs like a storm cloud on the\nhorizon of Europe\u2014dark and silent.\n\"It is a solemn moment, and no man\ncan feel indifference, which, happily no\nman pretends to feel in the issue of events.\nOf our own troubles, no man can see the\nend.\"\nSounds pretty gloomy, doesn't it? Well,\nthe paper from which it was borrowed\nhas this explanation:\nThe editorial firs.t appeared in Harper's\nmagazine in 1847\u2014110 years ago.\n\u2014Beaumont (Texas) Journal.\nTODAY'S BIBLE\nTHOUGHT\nTruth is fallen In the street.\nIsaiah 59:14.\nIt is a sad day for any country\nwhen this condition prevails. The\nwhole strength of the nations is\ndevoted to building up the might\nof dictatorship. We have heard of\nfamilies in which three fourths\nof the family was employed: We\nare always hungry.\nflnM <H&L\n1 gave my younguns a pat on the\nback for doin' good: and when\nthey got bad 1 just dropped down\na couple of feet.\nSchweitzer: Saint or Humanitarian\nBy MEL HEIMBR\nNew York - The question before\nthe House now: Is Albert Schweitzer a saint or is he not?\nA shaky and disillusioned mankind, obviously over-anxious for\nsigns of goodness in itself, is pay\ning loud hqmage these years to\n'the famous Alsatian who 50 years\nago gave up a promising preaching, teaching and musical career\nto serve his fellow mat)\u2014in dark\nest Africa. \"The man is a saint,\"\nhis admirers say firmly.\nA mild demurrer 14 entered \u2014\nby two who know him better thin\nmost.\nI didn't see any saintly aura\nabout Schweitzer,\" says Jerome\nHill, the American producer of\nthe documentary film Albert\nSchweitzer, who spent five years\nputting that movie together, \"and\nI'm not sure he's fond of the\nlegend, either. He's a good man,\na wonderful man but an earthly,\nmortal man, too. He can get mad\nand 'blow his top', like any of us.\"\nErica Anderson, the petite\nViennese \u2022 born woman photographer who shot the film,, is' inclined to echo her partner's comments. \" 'Saint' is a pretty strong\nword,\" she says thoughtfully.\n\"I'd be more likely to call Dr.\nSchweitzer a 'universal man,' like\nthe well - rounded men of great\ncharacter in Renaissance days.\nHill and Mrs. Anderson are\njust back from French Equatorial\nAfrica after having finished up\n\\he movie, and now' are staying\nIn Manhattan while planning\ntheir next one, the story of\nChristmas, which they will film\nfrom stained - glass windows in\nthree famous French cathedrals.\nSchweitzer's impact on them\nwas, as it is on nearly everyone,\ntremendous. This was Erica's\nsixth visit to Lambarence, where\nthe 82-year-old doctor philosopher missionary has his hospital\nvillage and she has been so impressed \"that I'm going to spend\nevery one of my vacations, from\nnow on, there with that fine\nman.\"\n\u25a0 \"There's nothing of the goody,\ngoody about him,\" she adds.\n\"He's a realist and he has a wide\nstreak of humor in him. I suppose the thing about him that is\nmost astounding is his youthful\nquality. He's young and eager,\nmaybe because he refuses to be\ncynical about the world. \"I won't\nlet my self be disillusioned,' he\ntold me once.\" .\nThe story of how Hill and Mrs.\nAnderson finally got Schweitzer's\npermission to do a film on him is\nalmost a full-length movie itself.\nErica got the idea after a summer week - end of reading the\nLife of Albert Schweitzer in\n1948. It took her three years of\nendless letter' \u2022 writing to get to\nfirst base.\n\"Please don't pester this man,\"\none of Schweitzer's nurses wrote\nonce, after the great man himself had politely told her of the\ninsurmountable difficulties of\nfilming him in his bailiwick; unco-operative natives, bad light,\nheat, humidity etc. However, at\nthe bottom of the nurse's note,\nSchweitzer had penned, \"Come^-\nbut don't come to make film.\"\nErica made. her first trip, the\nlast step being a day's flight from\nBrazaville to Lambarene in a\nbucket - seat Junket plane, with\nseven goats for company. Her\nfoot, now, was in the door. Much\nlater, Schweitzer agreed -to have\nthe movie done, if it was not\nreleased during his Ufetime.\nHill and Mrs. Anderson   even\nYoung Teenagers\nRescue Child\n' ST. BONIFACE, Man (CP) -\nThree teen-agers who noticed a\ntiny hand, sticking out of the water\nsave a four-ydar-old boy from\ndrowning in a dramatic rescue in\nHappyland Park here.\nTommy Hove was carried ashore\nby Gregory Smith, 15, who applied\nartificial respiration. Tommy was\n\"doing fairly good\" today in hospital. \u25a0\nThe rescue began when Smith,\nIrene Prieur, 15, and Yvonne Nor-\nmandeau, 15, were walking over a\nfoot-bridge spanning a swollen\ncreek in the park.\nSmith noticed the boy's hand\nbarely showing above the water.\nThe three tried to pull Tommy\nout, but the hoy's coat was snag-\ngod on a cable under the bridge.\nPulling out his own coat and\nwatch, Smith waded into the water\nabove his waist and yanked\nTotnmy free. Aided by Irene, he\nI carried the boy up the bank and\nstarted artificial respiration.\nPhotographer   Erica  Anderson  and  Albert  Schweitzer\nbetween shootings of the documentary film.\nbroke down that resistance, and\nSchweitzer, shaking his head\ngood - naturedly, admitted they\nhad followed one of his .own cardinal culcs: \"Never enter into an\nagreement unless it contains an\nescape clause.\"\nToday on the banks of the\nO g o w e, 40 miles below the\nequator, Dr. Albert Schweitzer\ngoes about his daily tasks,. including the cleaning of antilope\nrest\ncages, and in New York are two\nmovie - makers who never will\nforget him.\nWhether he's a\" s a I n t or not\nseems almost unimportant. What\nis important is his credo, which\nhe stated for all men to see\nwhen he won the Nobel Peace prize\nin 1952:\n\"You don't live in a world all\nyour own. Your brothers are\nhere, too.\"\nAnonymous Letter\nWriter Fined $150\nSEVEN OAKES, England (AP)-\nA wealthy retired businessman who\nhates children' has been fined \u00a340\n(approximately $150) for sending\nanonymous letters to bereaved\nmothers telling them the death of\ntheir \"brats\" were a blessing to\nthe country.\nFrederick Henry B e s s e mer\nClark-, 76, grandson of British steel\nmagnate Sir Henry Bessemer, was\ncharged with mailing \"grossly offensive\" letters.\nA judge told Clark that writing\nthe letters was \"the vilest and\nmost contemptible crime anyone\ncan commit,\" and said the fine\nwas \"quite out of date and altogether unsuitable.\"\nPolice spent 2Vi years tracing\nthe letter writer. Penmanship of\nthree generations ago finally led\nthem to Clark, whose son was\nkilled in a railway accident. His\nwife died several years ago.\n\"ONE CONSOLATION\"\nTo a woman whose five-year-\nold son had been drowned, Clark\nwrote: \"It was a very sad experience for you, but there is, one\nconsolation and that is the advantage to our country. Great Britain\nhas been over-populated for some\nyears ... If more brats died there\nwould be more room in whicn to\nlive and move about the country.\"\nTo a vJoman who had given birth\nto triplets, he wrote: \"You should\nbe ashamed of your foolish and\nunpatriotic action. It would be a\ngood thing for the country if the\nthree brats did not survive.\"\nTo a woman whose baby daughter was fatally injured in a road\naccident, Clark wrote: \"Instead\nof breeding brats, women should\ntake up hospital work pr domestic\nservice.\"   [\"j ., '\" '\"   ' \u2022'\"\nClark promised the judge \"I\nwon't write any more.\"\nThe judge said Clark would go\nto jail if he does..\nAlta. Crude Oil\nOutput Lower\nCALGARY (CP) - The output of\nAlberta crude ojl for last week\nended ApVil 22, of 437,585 barrels,\nwas down 13,706 barrels daily from\nthe previous week,' but 80,381 barrels a day better than the corresponding period one year ago, the\nAlberta Petroleum and Natural\nGas Conservation Board reported\nFriday. , \u25a0\nProduction in most of the leading fields was correspondingly\nlower for the week compared with\nthe previous week.\nPembina again led production\nwith an average daily output bf\n122,136 barrels. The next best.pro-\nducer was Redwater, with a total\ndaily average of 74,422 barrels.\nCompleting the production figures\nfor what has become the \"big\nthree\" in producers, was Leduc-\nWoodbend, with a daily average\nof 56,650 barrels of crude.\nAs of April 22, Alberta had 7,-\n543 wells capable of producing,\ncompared with 7544 the previous\nweek and 6486 during the same\nweek one year ago.\nEisenhower Names\nEnvoy to Russia\nAUGUSTA, Ga. (AP) -President Elsenhower. Saturday picked Llewellyn E. Thompson to be\nthe new U.S. ambassador to\nRussia. He now lo ambassador to\nAustria.\nTales of Withcraft Come\nFrom B.C. Indian Village\nNICE TIMING\nBURY, Eng. (CP) - The double\nbill at a movie theatre in this Lancashire town: \"Birth of a Baby,\"\nand \"Bundle of Joy.\"\nVYlovui ^OMl\/at...\nCanada Sends Hollywood Another\nStar in Vivacious Patricia Owens\nBy BOB THOMAS\nHOLLYWOOD ,(AP) - It's a\nireat dish, spaghetti. I know\u2014I\nlived on it once for six weeks.\"\nThe author of this statement .is\nCanadian-horn, English - trained,\nAmerican-discovered Patricia Owens, an actress with the .prettiest,\nbrownest eyes you ever saw. She's\none of Hollywood's brightest star\nprospects today, but there were\nlimes when her career was gding\nnowhere. You might call it the spa-\nihetti period.\n\"I was living in a London flat\nwith another girl,\" Patricia recalled. \"Neither pf us was getting acting jobs and our money was getting\npretty low. \u2022\n\"We managed to get by with\nspaghetti for every dinner. It was\nvery practical; it was cheap and\nit could be stretched to, last from\none night to the next.\n'But I must'admit I did get a\nlittle weary of spaghetti. I can't\nface a plate of it now, but perhaps\nin 10 years I'll start eating it\nagain.\"\nTELEVISION STARTED HER\nPatricia is one of a host of new\nscreen personalities who can thank\ntelevision for their breaks. In her\ncase it was English TV that\nbrought her to Hollywood's attention.\nShe was born in British Columbia\npf English parents, lived there four\nyears and in Toronto four years.\nThen her parents returned to England and she went to school there,\nstarting in repertory at an early\nage. Despite her, British schooling,\nher Canadian accent hung on. ,,,\nI was always losing acting jibs\ntoo\nbecause they said I sounded\nAmerican,\" she said. \u25a0 .,\nRave reviews in a West End\nplay: won her a contract with J.\nArthur Rank and she thought she\nhad arrived. But the Rank fortunes\nwere on the skids at the time, and\nshe languished, under contract without a picture for a year.\nBack on the stage, she again attracted good notices. The Rank\npeople wanted to sign the impressive young actress. She told them\nshe had been through that dodge\nbefore. Instead, she became queen\nof the British potboiler movies that\nweren't exported. '\u2022\nTHREE BIG ROLES\nHer big break came when she\ndid the first dramatic show on the\nnew English commercial TV station, twentieth Centurjl-Fox officials saw hor, tested her, signed\nher; In quick succession she has\nbeen assigned to big roles In Island\nin the Sun, Sayoharea and Down\nPayment.\nThe roles took, her from the West\nIndies to London to Tokyo to Hollywood, ahd she's still trying to catch\nher breath.\nDolls like Dana Wynter and Joan\nCollins have come to Hollywood\nfor careers, declaring there's' no\nchance for young actresses to succeed in England. I.asked Patricia\nif she agreed.\n\"I think there are opportunities,\"\nshe replied, \"but lt is becoming\ntougher. TV is helping young talent a-great deal oevr there.\n\"But it's tough in Hollywood, too.\nI think the difference is that here\nyou can fail three times before you\nare through. In England, you can\nfail only once.\"\nJUNEAU, Alaska (AP) - Tales\nof. midnight witchcraft practices\nwere related Saturday as authorities began investigating reports of\nstrange and primitive rites at the\nIndian village of Angoon.  '.'\u25a0\n\"Revelations' by two young Indian girls, regarded as oracles by\na few elders of the Tlingit tribe at\nthe village, were reported to be\nthe basis for the midnight meetings\nwhich began Easter Sunday.\nThe investigation was started as\ntwo messages were relayed here\nover an airline teletype system,\nthe principal communication link\nwith the village, 70 miles southwest 'Of Juneau on Odmiralty Island. '       - - \/\nBob Kederik, a reporter for. the\nJuneau Empire, spent two hours at\nAngoon after the reports were received here.\n\"Many residents are frightened\nby superstitious demonstrations\nwhich apaprently include the burn1\ning of cats and dogs and midnight-\nto-dawn rites during which young\ngirls are said to see into the future,\" Kederick said.\n. He also quoted a village leader\nwho he said told him .that, a man\nturned into a bird and flew away.\n\"The atmosphere of superstition\nand terror that gripped some of the\nresidents is incredible,\" he said.\nKederick said there was no evidence of physical violence to either\nthe girls or residents who were not\ninvolved in the rites.\n, Some of the 375 residents of the\nfishing village told Kederick the\nwitchcraft demonstrations followed the death of an infant girl about\ntwo weeks ago. Authorities attributed the death to virus pneumonia.\nKederick said some villagers told\nhim they' believed the girl's death\nwas the work of witches. Since then\nthe 16-year-old was reported to\nhave named several prominent Angoon families at witches.\nKederick quoted one villager: \"A\nlot of innocent people are being\nhurt and families that believe.this\nare just going wild. A lot of people\nhave been accused unjustly of being witches.\"\nIndustry Plans to Adapt\nAir Suspension on Autos\nBy DAVID J. WILKIE\nDETROIT (AP) \u2014 Wide adaptation of air suspension may be one\nof the major engineering advances\nto be offered by the auto industry\nin 1958.    \u2022\nIn the newest of suspension systems, bellows containing a con-\nstanlly measured amount of air\nreplace the time-honored leaf and\ncoil- springs. To the extent that one\nunit is installed at each wheel,\nthe suspension can be called \"independent.\"\nAir suspension already has been\nadapted to some, coaches, and\ntrucks. Mbre recently General'Motors, which has done a great deal\nof pioneering work on the new system, installed it as a feature of\nits Cadillac Eldorado brougham.\nOTHERS MAY TRY IT\nIndustry gossip now has it that\nseveral makers outside the GM\ngroup will have air suspension\nwith the introduction of their 1958-\nmodel. cars. Mentioned in this connection is, Ford's new Edscl line,\nto be br6ught Out in September.\n1 Major components of a typical\nair suspension system are a dome,\nrubber diaphragm, retaining plate,\na piston, three levelling valves, an\nair compressor an electric motor\nand an air reservoir.\nThe dome is secured to the car\nframe. Piston and diaphragm fit\ninto the dome. The air in the dome\nacts on the diaphragm and serves\nas the spring.\nThe levelling valves, one at each\nrear wheel, and one controlling\nboth front springs, metei* the flow\nof air lo the domes. This determines the car height. Each valve\nis actuated by a rod that reacts\nto-the up' and down position of the\ncar body in relation to the wheel.\nThe air compressor, powered by\nan electric motor, is mounted on\ntop of the generator. The air reservoir is installed just forward of\nthe radiator.\nThe air, suspension system obviously is more complicated than\nthe conventional coil or leaf spring\ninstallation and its collateral components add to the upder-hood congestion. But it has been subjected\nto shock tests never encountered\nin any practicable car operation\nwithout failure.\n m\nAbout the Town\nPHONE  1369 OR  1844\nBy Alice Stevens\nAmong out-of-town visitors attending \"open house\" at The Daily\nNews Saturday were Mr. and Mrs.\nGordon White and children David,\nMarilyn and Barbara Lynn of Salmo, Richard, Carr and Donald\nWaldie of Kimberley, G. Hughes\nof Castlegar, R. C. Smith of Fruitvale, J. Anselmo of Trail, F. Warrington of Edmonton, Mrs. R. C.\nSmith and Jean of Trail, Mr. and\nGardening Topic\nOf Renata WI\nRENATA - At the April meeting of the Women's Institute, held\nat the home of Mrs. I. Wiebe, Mrs.\nH. Funk was named delegate to\nattend the West Kootenay District\nWomen's Institute Conference to\nbe held at South Slocan May 9. Resolutions sent to the, resolutions\ncommittee to be presented at he\nconference were for a faculty of\ndentistry at UBC, electrical power\nfor Deer Park and Renata and a\nroad lo link Renata and Edge-\nwood.\nFor the coming spring bazaar\nthe committee in charge will be\nMrs. L. Wither, convener, and\nhelpers, Mrs. W. J. Hale, Mrs. P.\nWarkentin and Mrs. I. Wiebe.\nThe program theme was gardening and members discussed garden problems. During the social\nhour community songs were sung.\nLunch was served by the hostess,\nMrs. Wiebe and co-hostess Miss\nMary Anne Wiebe.\nAinsworth Notes\nAINSWORTH - In the Ainsworth\nCommunity hall, the customary\ncribbage and whist games were\nplayed.*For cribbage the women's\nfirst prize was won by Gail Hart-\nland and consolation by Mrs. W.\nTurner. Men's first prize went to\nP. Gilchrist and consolation to\nCliff Hartland. Whist prizes for\nwomen's first went to Mrs. A. Baker and consolation to M. Sinclair.\nMen's first went to B. Olson and\nconsolation to H. Gilchrist. As it\nwas the last game of the season the\ngrand prizes were given. These\nwere cribbage, women's first\ngrand prize Mrs. Helen Burns and\nconsolation Mrs. Verna: Hawes;\nmen's first, J. Burns and consolation, Cliff Hartland.\nMrs. A. B. Hansen and girls\nJanice and Christine came home\nafter visiting relatives In Golden\nfor a week. Mrs. R. Alfano, mother\nOf Mrs. Hansen, came to Ainsworth with them for a visit.\nMrs. J. Smith of Winnipeg, M. Williamson of Trail, Mrs. H. M. Heath\nof Lethbridge, D. W. Harris of\nCalgary, G. Water of Red Deer;\nJames Cameron of Trail.\n* *   *\nMiss Beverley Ingledew, 821\nHendryx Street, has returned home\nfrom University of B.C., where she\nhas been taking teacher's training.\n* *  *\nMr. and Mrs. W. S. Fisher, 621\nSeventh Street, were Vancouver\nvisitors.\n* *  *\nTerry Elmes, Fourth Street, who\nhas been attending Victoria College\nof Education, has returned to Nelson for practice teaching.\n* *  \u00ab\nMrs. Arthur Foster, 705 Kokanee\nStreet,- has returned from a Vancouver visit.'\n-    \u2666  *  \u00ab\nMr. and Mrs. R. C. Smith and\nfamily of Trail spent Saturday with\nMrs. Helpn Peachey, 305 Hall\nMines Road.\nMrs. i A. A. Stewart McMorran\nand two daughters, Anne and Lee\nof Vancouver, spent the Easter\nholidays visiting her sister and\nbrothers, Mrs. John Applwhaite\nand Bud and Jack Whitfield, while\nMr. McMorran went on to Toronto\nand Montreal to attend a Dominion\nnarcotics conference and traffic\nsafety discussion.\n* *  *\nColin Bell of Notre Dame College visited his parents at New\nDenver.\n* \u2022  *\nJack Glover has returned to\nChilliwack, where he teaches high\nschool, after spending the Easter\nvacation with his parents, Mr. and\nMrs. T. H. Glover,   410   Second\nStreet.\n* *  *\nMiss Joan Gibbon, 709 Fourth\nStreet, who has been attending Victoria College of Education, has returned to Nelson for practice teaching.\n* *  *\nMiss Georgina Bennett and Miss\nHeather May of Nelson are spending a vacation in Vancouver.\n* *  *.\nMr. and Mrs. Harry Lind, Bill\nGardner and Mr. and Mrs. Stanley\nEudvesel have returned from Dawson Creek, B.C., after attending\nthe funerai of W. J. Gardner, former well known* resident of Kaslo.\nBill Gardner is a son, and Mrs.\nLind a daughter of Mr. Gardner.\nIt was the first time the Gardner\nfamily had been together in 25\nyears.\n* * *\nSt. Saviour's Mothers' Club met\nin the Mary Robertson Memorial\nRoom in the Memorial Hall Thursday afternoon. Tea hostesses were\nMrs, A. Williams and Mrs. E. Rich.\nBorrow with confidence\nWhether fie answer to yom\nmoney problems is a cash loan of\nexpert counsel, yon may rely on\nHFC, Canada's most recommended consumer finance company. YonTlKke HFC's prompt,\nfriendly attention and complete\nservice backed by 79 years' experience. So, if you need np to\n$1000\u2014in one day\u2014you may borrow with confidence from HFC.\nHOUSEHOLD FINANCE\nofCanada,\nt. S. Bernard, Manager\n60S Baker Street, second floor, phono 1890\nNELSON, B.C.\nQueen Visits Races\nToo Often Says Paper\nMargaret Cunningham, a recent Immigrant from Scotland, Is\nbeauty Queen of Hamilton, Ont., winning the title from a field\nof 250. Singing star, Brenda Lee, 12, was the first .to congratulate\nher. ,\nWomen Add Road Safety\nTalks To Club Program\nBy CAROLINE WILLETT\nCanadian  Press  Staff Writer\nOTTAWA (CP) - Women's\ngroups across Canada are rushing to add road safety activities\nto club programs, say experts at\nthe Canadian Highway Safety\nconference here.\nW. Arch Bryce, conference general manager, says women's organizations have responded with\n\"remarkable enthusiasm\" to a\ntraffic safety competition sponsored by an oil company (Shell)\nand administered by the conference. \u2022  .\nCalled the Carol Lane awards,\nin honor of the oil firm's women's\ntravel director in the United\nStates, competition prizes will be\nawarded for the first time in 1958.\nRules for the competition, available from conference offices at\n272 Somerset' Street West, Ottawa,\nare strict. But the rewards are attractive \u2014 three saving bonds\nvalued from $250 to $1000, and the\nwork is vital.\nEFFECTIVE PROJECTS\nOpened to any Canadian\nwomen's organization, the awards\nwill be made on the basis of effective safety projects such as\ndriver education and training, bicycle safety, pre-school safety education or pedestrian safety.\nWomen's, groups are recognized\nBennett Got\ners Burnt\nSays\nFing\nVANCOUVER (CP)-Davie Fulton, Progressive Conservative MP\nfor Kamloops, said Saturday Premier W. A. C. Bennett of British\nColumbia got \"his fingers burnt\"\nat the Social Credit federal campaign meeting in Toronto this\nweek.\nMr. Fulton told 20 other Conservative candidates at a campaign\nmeeting here that Premier Bennett's Eastern Canada tour hindered Social Credit's federal hopes.\nMr. Fulton said the Herbert Norman suicide won't be an issue in\nthe June 10 federal election, \"but\nit will be cited as another example\nof mishandling by the government.\"\nPHONE  1844  FOR  CLASSIFIED\nN\/\nGO GREAT!\nto SEATTLE\nAND\nVANCOUVER, B.G.\nBus leaves Nelson, 1:15 P.M. Connects ot Spokane with Western Star (leaves 9:15 P.M.)\nor Empire Builder (leaves 11:55 P;M.). Connection at Seattle or Everett with streamlined\nk International arriving, Vancouver 11:59 A.M. Railway tickets honored on bus.\n' .''...'  AM Tlm'ei Paolfle 8tandar<J Thne\nIt. A. MUNRO,\nCity Freight & Passenger Agent\n667 Ward Street,\nNelson, B. C.\nPhonoi 57\n%ovil\n \u25a0,\nas a \"powerful force in social reform,\" says Mr. Bryce. It is\nhoped the awards will act both\nas rewards and incentives for\ngreater activity toward traffic\nsafety.\n\"Basically, the individual\u2014either\npedestrian or driver\u2014is the only\none who can do anything about\ntraffic safety.\"\nSafety education must start at\nthe kiddy-cart stage and continue\nthrough the bicycle and car\nstages.\nTraffic safety officials have\nestimated that more than 3000\nmen, women and children will die\nthis year in highway and street\naccidents in Canada.\nThe conference offers an even\nmore ominous estimate\u2014that 75,-\n000 Canadians will die on streets\nand highways in the decade ending in 1967 if the present rate of\ntraffic deaths continues.\nShower Held for\nBoswell Bride\nBOSWELL \u2014 An enjoyable shower was given for new bride, Mrs.\nJames Bettis, at the home of Mrs.\nEric Bainbridge. A beautiful decorated basket of gifts was presented to the bride. It was trimmed\nin green with fresh daffodils\naround the outside. The bride's\nmother assisted her in opening the\ngifts, along with Mrs. Whitney, the\ngroom's mother. \u2022\nTea was served by the hostesses,\nMrs. Eric Bainbridge, Mrs. Norman Bainbridge, and Mrs. H. Bell.\nOut-of-town  guests  were  Mrs.\nBy GEOFFREY MILLER\nLONDON (AP) \u2014 The mass circulation newspaper Sunday Pictorial grumbles that Queen Elizabeth\ngoes to the races too often.\nA Pictorial columnist \"bets\" that\nthe Queen's husband, Prince Philip\nis bored by her passion for horses.\nHe suggests many Britons disapprove of the Queen's interest in a\nsport connected with gambling.\nThe article appeared after a\nweek in which the Queen's horses\nwon \u00a310,000 ($28,000) in prize money and the Queen has been photographed sitting informally among\ncrowds at the Badminton hors*\ntrials.\nThe Pictorial fills its front page\nwith pictures of the Queen and her\nparty squatting on the grass at the\ntrials\u2014and the prince sitting at the\nfar end of the line from his wife\nand looking distinctly bored, The\npictures appear under a banner\nheadline: \"Odd Man Out.\"\nFEELING \"OFFISH\"\nColumnish Rex North wrote that\nthe prince was in \"a rather offish\nmood.\"\n\"He seemed quite determined ty\nlinger in the background and sit\nby himself,\" North said. \"He also\nstaged a private sartorial revolution by wearing an ordinary town\nlounge suit\u2014and at horsey badminton.\n\"Why? I'll have a bet. Polo playing Prince Philip is bored by the\nQueen's passion for horses and\nhorse-racing.\n\"If the Queen has no official\nduties it is always a fair bet that\nshe will be on a racecourse, in\nspite of the fact that her husband\nhates horse racing.\n\"The Queen is. the biggest certainty racing has ever had\u2014on\npublicity value more and more\npeople are encouraged to go racing because the Queen undoubtedly\nadores it so much herself.\nMANY DISAPPROVE\n\"But there are many sincere\npeople who think it is terribly\nwrong for the Queen, who is head\nof the church, to spend so many\nfascinated hours watching a sport\non which so many gamble.\"\n. The article says the Queen does\nnot bet herself. But North adds:\n\"I am not fussy about gambling\none way or the other but someone ought to tell the Queen this:\n\"Ration your visits, particularly\nin mid-week. Every worker in the\nland is urged to work harder and\nlonger\u2014and spend less on unessen-\ntials.\n'.'So, if the Queen races too often\nthe cries that she could be boosting mojale by visiting factories\ninstead will grow louder.\"\nThere will be plenty of temptation for the Queen to go racing\nthis week. Her horse Carrozza is\na 10 to 1 entry in the One Thousand Guineas classic at Newmarket\nWednesday.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, APRIL 29, 1957\u20145\nBalfour Notes\nBALFOUR \u2014 Mrs. C. Ramsay\nand Mrs. V. Hoskins have returned\nfrom a trip to Alberta by car.\nMiss Margaret Butler of Ainsworth is spending the holiday with\nher aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs.\nL. C. Stalnton.\nMr. and Mrs. C. Race left by\ncar for Lethbridge on receiving\nword of the death of Mrs. Race's\nbrother.\nMrs. E. Noahes of Powell River\nis the guest of her son-in-law and\ndaughter, Mr. and Mrs. John\nBowles.\nGeorge Walford had as his guest\nfor the holiday' Stephen Drew of\nNelson.\nDeer Park Notes\nDEER PARK - Mr. and Mrs. J.\nV. Briggeman of Trail and Mr. and\nMr. and Mrs. F. Briggeman.\nMrs. H. R.  Briggeman of Kinnaird were the recent guests of\nH. Merriefield and sons Jimmy\nand Albert of Castlegar are spending a holiday at their summer\nhome here.\nMr. and Mrs. W. Blair and children of Trail spent a few days In\nDeer Park while on a fishing and\ncamping trip.\nCraig Coleman of Syringa Creek\nspent a few days of the Easter vacation at the home of his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs..H. C. Coleman.\nONE MORE DAY\nTO SAVE\n3<K\nOn All LAMPS\nJ-JumuwL\nBalfour Guild\nAids Church Fund\nBALFOUR \u2014 Members of the\nBalfour Church Guild voted the sum\nof $50 for the church fund at a\nrecent meeting.\nA donation of $10 has been made\nfor the vicarage fund.\nMaterial that had been donated\nwas given out to members to make\naprons for the summer sale of\nwork.\nGetting Up Nights\nFor quick comforting help for Backache,\nRheumatic Pains, GettlngUp Nights, strong\ncloudy urine, irritating passages, Leg Fains,\nand loss of energy due to Kidney and\nBladder troubles, try OYSTBX, Quick,\ncomplete satisfaction or money back. Over\n900 million CYSTEX tablets used prove\nsafety, success. Don't suffer another day\nwithout asking your druggist for OYSTEX.\nVancouver Girl\nBesf Dancer\nVANCOUVER (CP) - A talented Vancouver girl was presented\nwith the award for the best dancer\nof all the winners at the British\nColumbia Dance Festival.\nDiane Liman, 14, won the Grace\nGoddard trophy for her all-round\nperformance in different classes.\nShe was awarded the June Roper\ntrophy for the winner in the Intermediate Ballet class for the second year in a row.\nAnother double winner was Vivian Briggs, 18, of Victoria. She was\npresented with the B.C. Dance Festival trophy for her ballet toe-solo\nin the senior group. Her second triumph was the June Roper trophy\nfor the best ballet dancer.\nHeather Skerl, 17, Vancouver,\nwas named the most promising\ndancer and received the Janet An-\ntle trophy.\nThe Board of Directors trophy\nin the senior tap class was given\nto Marilyn Sommers, 16, of Victoria.\nJack Wigan of Wynndel, Miss Erin\nHagen of Wynndel and Miss Sheila\nPenson of Erickson and many local residents. Mr. and Mrs. Bettis\nintend to make their home in Boswell. -    -\nPRINTED\nPATTERN\nA678\nPROMINENT DESIGNER\nIt's simple yet sophisticated,\" Luis Estevez says about his now\nfamous sheath. \"I designed it with the purpose of making any\nfigure from the tiny size 10 to a statuesque.size 18 look its best,\"\nhe added. This young Cuban designer's American Fashion awards\nhave made him outstanding even among the other talented members of the Fashion Originator's Guild. The Printed Pattern for\nthis stunning dress is easy to use, arid truly authentic in line!\nOf a simple princess cut with a fine flare, it is uncomplicated\nin construction \u2014 a quickie for your scissors. Enjoy wearing it\nin shantung, surah, or crepe. Printed Pattern A678 is available in\nMisses' Sizes 10, 12,14, 16 and 18. Size 16 requires' 4% yards 39-inch\nfabric. Send ONE DOLLAR plus three cents tax for Printed\nPattern A678 to N.D.N. Prominent Designer Pattern Department,\n6lf Front St. W., Toronto, Ont. Please print plainly YOUR NAME,\nADDRESS with ZONE, STYLE NUMBER and SIZE.\nNo Matter Where You Go\non Your\nVACATION\nEverything Carries on as\nUsual at Home\nBefore you leave, contact us and we will have\n\u00ab\nyour Nelson News carrier boy put the paper\nthrough the letter slot, or, if you. wish, save it\nfor you so you can catch up with the news\nwhen you return.\nTHERE IS NO EXTRA CHARGE FOR\nTHIS ADDED SERVICE\nPhone 1844\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\n\u2014\u2014\u2014\n 6\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, AMtll 2*, 1957\n \u2022mill-    lid\nis Week Only\nT0 OUR MA^OEAR FRIENDS:\nApril 29, 1957.\nELECTRIC\nSPACEMASTER\nBig range convenience and yet takes very little space; only\n24\" wide. Giant 21\" oven, oven timer, minute timer, two\nappliance' outlets, roomy storage drawer and many other\noutstanding features.\nSale $279\n00\na     April 29th, our 20th\nhove brought us. ^ the ^por-\nWedeemitapnvilegetoh .nth.sCom.\ntunlty \u00bb live and Wjgi your unfaWnG\nmunitv, and it has only bee\". ^\nr;^ ond goodwill that c.r company\nOur anniversary P1 ^ 'erchandlse obtainable,\n-, only the highest 9^^ you ot com-\nCtad bV ^imum ' Jv'^ w that we may con-\npatronage.\nSincerely yours.\nGENERAL\u00a9 ELECTRIC\nMobile-Maid\nAUTOMATIC\nDISHWASHER\nThis GE dishwasher needs\nno installation . .'. no special plumbing . . . Rolls on\nwheels . . . connects right\nto your' kitchen faucet.\u2014\nHolds a family service for\neight.\nGENERAL \u00a9ELECTRIC\ntStratoliner\nDeluxe, all automatic Console Range. Set it\u2014forget itl\nBake - Boil - Fry - Broil - Roast .... automatically. \u2014\nFeatures automatic calrod unit, electric meat thermometer, automaticc oven timer and many more wonderful\nfeatures.\nSale *44900\nTHE PERFECT PAIR\nFILTER-FLO WASHER and\nCLOTHES CONDITIONER\nBOTH BY GENERAL ELECTRIC\nThe G.E. Filter-Flo Washer and matching Clothes Conditioner are perfect workmates \u2014 specially designed to make a\nbeautiful pair. They are the same size\nin all dimensions.\nSale Price From\nWASHER $279.00\nDRYER      ;    $199,00\nSale\n$'\n.00\nGENERAI^EIECTRIC\n10 cm. it. Refrigerator\nThis great, new 10 cubic foot GE Refrigerator is designed to give you\nmost of the features found on higher priced models, including Magnetic\nDoor, large vegetable crisper, full width freezer, chiller tray, mini-cube\nice tray and many more.\nSole'IS?00\nGENERAL\u00a9 ELECTRIC\nDELUXE WASHERS\nNo more \"watching over\" the\nwasher! With the automatic timer\nyou set the dial . . . washer\nshuts off automatically . . . does\no big wash, too.\nSale\n$\u2022\n.00\nGENERAL\u00ae ELECTRIC\n.   Feature Styled Ultra-Vision\nTELEVISION\nThis Deluxe 21\" table ' model\nbrings you wonderful G.E, Ultra-\nVision \u2014 with new, simplified\ntuning, at the lowest price ever.\nSale\n\u00bb199oo\nSmall Down Payment\nEasy Terms\nMANY MORE SPECIALS\nPRICES SLASHED    THROUGHOUT THE ENTIRE STOCK\nNELSON ELECTRIC\n574 Baker St.\nAUTHORIZED    GENERALS ELECTRIC    DEALER\nCo.,\nLtd.\nPhone 260\n.\n w\nCLOSING\nOUT\nRECORD DEPARTMENT\n$1.00 RECORDS\n.00\n5\u00ab.r*3\n$3.00 RECORDS\n2for$400\n$5.00 RECORDS\n2for$6\u00b0\u00b0\nGENERAL\u00a9 ELECTRIC\nPOLISHER\nModel Regular $54.50\nCS18\nSALE\nSENMAlA ELECTRIC\nCLEANER\nReg.   $89.50\nSALE\n$69.50\nModel\nva\nELECTRIC\nPERCOLATOR\nSALE\n$4.95\nCENERAL^ ELECTRIC\nAUTOMATIC\nTOASTER\nSALE\n$22.95\nGENERAL^ ELECTRIC\nMANTLE\nRADIOS\nReg. $24.95\n$19.95\nReg.   $26.95\n'  $21.95\nReg.   $39.95\n$29.95\n0ENERAL\u00aeELECTRI6\nElectric\nKettle\nReg.\n$13.50\n$11.95\nCHECK ALL THE\nFEATURE SPECIALS\nTHROUGHOUT THE STORE\nNelson Electric Co, Ltd.\nGENERAL\u00a9 ELECTRIC      '\nAUTHORIZED  DEALER\n574 Baker St. Phone 260\nInitials That Mean News,\nSymbolic of Unique Enterprise\nBy STEPHEN FORD\nThe Initials CP which precede\nuncounted news stories in Canadian papers are the emblem ol a\nCanadian news commonwealth,\nbuilt up In four decades from an\nidea to a $2,500,000 a year enterprise.\nEhis enterprise \u2014 which sells\nnothings, makes no profits, declares no dividends\u2014is The Canadian Press. Forty years ago the\noriginal idea reached fruition in a\nCanada wide association of daily\nnewspapers. Since then The CP\nhas grown until Canadian papers\nare receiving what can fairly be\ntermed the finest news service In\nthe world. Newspapers of no other\ncountry 'carry an international\nnews report so broadly, so complete, so closely tuned to their\nheeds.\nThe Canadian Press is the cooperative news gathering and\ndistributing association of Canadian daily papers. Some of the\nnews it gathers itself, some of it\ncomes from the outside by exchange arrangements, but rhost\nof the news it draws directly from\nthe 97 newspapers, all but four of\nCanada's dailies, receiving wire\nnews services in its membership.\nAfter sorting, rewriting and editing, The Canadian .Press distributes this news supply back among\nIts members for display to the 13,-\n000,000 daily newspaper readers\nin Canada. Thus The CP might\nalso be called a cleariqg house.\nThe fact that it rewrites much of\nthe news supplied by its member\npapers and distributes it for them\nunder the familiar CP logotype\ndoes not alter the definition,\n30,000 MILE LEA8E\nOf the very essence of The CP\nil its 30,000 mile system of leased\nwires. A sixth of the money CP\nspends yearly in for wire rentals.\nCP trunk circuits, leased from\nCanadian Pacific Communications,\nrun up and down across the country. Capillaries of provincial wires\nfan out the flow to newspapers off\nthe main line.\nThe Canadian Press does a business involving expenditure of $2,-\n500,000 a year but it isn't in any\nlist of commercial firms. Until it\nbuilt its compact two storey head\noffice on Toronto's University Avenue in 1943, it owned no buildings or property except the furniture and fixtures in its bureaus.\nThe annual budget is figured out\nand met by lumping the general\ncharges \u2014 such as wire rentals,\nsalaries, etc. \u2014 and dividing them,\ncity by city, where there is a\nmember newspaper, on the basis\nof population. Where there are\ntwo or more papers in a city, the\ncharge is divided equally between\nthe members except for t minor\nvariation reflecting circulation.\nHeart of The CP's wire system\nis the head office at Toronto,\nwhere 40 editors and 30 traffic\nmen handle eastern news for the\n\u2022West and western news for ttie\nKast, watching the flow of copy\nfor accuracy and style and for development of obscure but Interesting angles.\nIn New York, on the fifth floor\nof the ultra modern Associated\nPress Building, eight CP men select with quick decision the nevrt\nreport that Is then piped into Canada 21 hours a day, seven days a\nweek. These \"editors bluepencil\nsome 200,000 words a day to the\n75,000 words their outgoing circuit\nwill carry at 60 words a minute.\nThe CP editors at New York\nhandle a flood of news that rattles\ninto the office on eight teleprinters from three main sources \u2014the.\noutput of the CP overseas staff\nbased on London Bureau; the\ncomplete world news report, of\nThe Associated Press, the co-operative of United States newspapers which spends more than\n$30,000,000 a year to deliver its\nnews to. 7,000 newspaper, radio,\nand other subscribers around'the\nworld; and the world service' of\nReuters, owned by the newspapers\nof the United Kingdom, Australia\nand New Zealand.\nAt the London bureau, in the\nAssoicated Press Building on Far-\nringdon Street, another Job of sifting is done by three Canadian\neditors who have available the\ncomplete report of Press Association, the organization of the\nUnited Kingdom's dailies, and the\nbureau staff's own output on Parliament and other functions or\nevents of special Canadian interest. Because London is ahead of\nCanada in time by four hours in\nthe Maritimes to eight at the\nCoast it is not uncommon for a\nlengthy report .. a parliamentary\nsession at Wc.,ninster to be on\nthe street in Canada before The\nTimes is being sold In London.\nLIGHT BUREAU8\nAcross Canada are eight bureaus\n\u2014Halifax, Quebec, Montreal, Ottawa, Toronto, Winnipeg, Edmonton, Vancouver \u2014 with day and\nnight staffs to keep the news-\nstream flowing, meantime adding\nto it the boiled down news product\nof the respective regions. Staff\ncorrespondents are stationed at\nSt. John's, Nfld., Saint John, N.B.,\nLondon and Windsor, Ont., Regina, Calgary and Victoria.\nThe CP staff numbers more\nthan 300, of whom 80 are teleprinter operators and mechanics.\nThe rest are members of the editorial staff, mostly filing editors\nwho cut incoming copy to the\ncapacity of their outgoing circuits\nand keep the best news constantly\nahead, and rewrite men who toll\ndown the copy received from CP\nmember newspapers.\nIMPARTIAL, UNBIASED\nThe Canadian Press gives, each\nmember a basic news service complete in every department, including world news, the domestic news\nof Canada, financial and sports'\nnews and political news covering\nParliament and the various provincial legislatures. Nothing can\nhappen in the civilized world but\ncomes within its purview. But it\nmust be news, not opinion.\nEssentially, The Canadian Press\nis strictly impartial and unbiased\nin the presentation of news, for\nits members include newspapers\nof every political stripe.\nBORN OF REVOLT\nThe history of co - operative\nnews-gathering in Canada goes\nback 50 years to when the average, small city daily was padded\nwith boiler-plate and Its world\nnews was restricted to occasional\nand spasmodle bulletins supplied\nby the railway telegraph companies.\nIhe first step in news co-operation was taken In 1907 when the\nWestern Associated Press came\nInto, being in Winnipeg. It was\nfouftded by the Winnipeg publishers to meet an Intolerable situation\u2014control of news service in\nCanada by the railways. The\nCanadian Pacific Railway held\nthe rights to The Associated Press\nfor the Dominion, and collection\nof news In Ontario and Quebec\nwas largely in the hands ot the\nGreat North JVestern Telegraph\nCompany, a Grand Trunk affiliate. Its service was cheap but\nwoefully poor\u2014the papers had to\ntake what they got.\nFormations of the WAP was the\nfirst move in a newspaper revolt.\nIt gathered support in the West\nand entered Into direct competition with the CPR. The CPR enlarged its fighting area by notifying every newspaper in Western\nCanada of an increase ih press\nrates. Estimates of the increase\nranged from 66 to 233 per cent.\nNELSON NEWS SPEAK8\nThe Winnipeg papers saw the\nIncrease as an attempt to destroy\nthe WAP and their protest was\nechoed by the press across the;\nDominion, especially after the\nCPR withdrew AP service from\nThe Nelson Dally News in Nelson, which had been criticizing\nthe railway company's service and\nthe price paid for IL\nMeanwhile, Canadian publishers\nwere agreed that sooner or later\nthey must establish their own\nnews agency. In- 1909 Maritime\ndaily publishers founded the Eastern Press Association, based on\nthe same idea of co-operative\nnews service.\nUNITY SERVED\nThe turning point came when\nthe Western Associated Press appealed to the railway commission,\nwhich controlled telegraph rates,\nagainst the exorbitant rates charged by the CPR for transmission\nof WAP news as compared with\nthe low rates charged for the\nCPR service. In the appeal, the\ndally publishers of Ontario and\nQuebec stood shoulder to shoulder\nwith their western confreres. In\n1910 the railway commission declared in favor of equal rates for\nall press matter. The fight was\nover. The- CPR, in later years a\nstaunch friend of The Canadian\nPress, recognized that it was out\nof its sphere in the news agency\nfield and surrendered Associated\nPress rights in Canada to the\nCanadian dally newspapers.\nIt was necessary to set up an\norganization to take over these\nrights and guarantee to Tho AP\na return service of Canadian news.\nThe establishment in. 1911 of the\nCanadian Press Limited resulted.\nONE PAPER, ONE VOTE\nThe Canadian Press Is run by\nits general manager, directed by\nits 19-member board. Each mem\nber, large or small, has one vote\nin affairs of the association and\nIn election of directors. The dl\nrectors are elected for two-year\nterms by regions, three from the\nAtlantic provinces, one from Que-\nNELSON DAILY NEWS,\nMON., APRIL 29, 1957\u20147\n\u00a7S\/d, CL SsantL\nListen,   Bert!   The  radio's\n^ working again 1\" -nr\nbee, six from Ontario, four from\nthe Prairie provinces, two from\nBritish Columbia and three representing French-language papers.,\nThe directors elect annually a\npresident, two vice-presidents and\nan honorary president. The president, vice-presidents and ,two directors are an executive committee to strike estimates and authorize interim extraordinary expenditures.\nFor Service\nCall . .\nKootenay Plumbing & Heating\nCo.,, Ltd.\n351 Baker St. Nelson, B. C. Phone 666\nA Complete Plumbing and Heating Service\nThere IS an easy way to\nchoose heating equipment\nfoi* your hoine\nJust look for the name\nFAIRBANKS-MORSE\nBecause there is a Fairbanks'Morse Furnace specially\ndesigned for every home heating purpose, the name\nFairbanks-Morse is your guarantee of dependable,\ntrouble-free, economical heating. There are many reasons\nfortius ... the experience gained in more than 120\nyears designing and building mechanical equipment\n... engineering features that give highest heating\nefficiency at lowest fuel costs ... quiet operation\n... low installation costs ... coast-to-coast service\nfacilities ... beautiful modern cabinets, too. So,\nlook for the. name Fajrbanks-Morse and join the\nthousands of Canadians who are now enjoying\nthe finest in heating comfort at real fuel savings.\nTHERE'S A DEPENDABLE F-M UNIT FOR EVERY HOME HEATING NEED\nF-M DE LUXE \"DOWN-FlOn\nOIL FIRED FURNA0E.\nF-M WVOL SERIES\nOIL FIRED FURNAOE\nF-M ML SERIES OIL FIRED\nWARM AIR FURNAOE.\nF-M U0H SERIES GAS FIRED\nFORCED AIR FURNACE.\nALSO, SPACE HEATERS\nAND HEATING APPLIANCES\nThe ultimate In automatic oil\nheating. Special design heat\nexchanger guarantees supreme heating comfort.\nDe luxe series in Lo-Boy,\nHi-Boy and Counter-Flo\nModels. Beautiful two-tone\ncabinet. Enclosed burner.\nSpecial design gives extra\nradiating surface. Advanced\nhumidifying features give\nhealthy heat.\nStandard Lo-Boy model at a\nvery low price, but without\nsacrificing advanced F-M\nfeatures.\nA. Oil Burning Space Heaters\n_ B. Gas Burning Space Heaters\nC Water Softeners\nD. Water Heaters\ncertified bonded heating\nat its best\nYour F-M dealer can recommend tho unit for your requirements;\nTHE CANADIAN FAIRBANKS-MORSE CO. LIMITED\nSIXTEEN BRANCHES FROM COAST TO COAST\n-L-\nBennett's Ltd.\nNELSON, B. C.\nNakusp Hardware\nNAKUSP, B. C.\nBoundary Electric\nGRAND FORKS, B. C.\nOglow Bros.\nCASTLEGAR, B. C.\nModern Plumbing and Heating\nROSSLAND, B. C.\nGrand Forks Hardware\nGRAND FORKS, B. C.\nMiles Plumbing & Heating\nTRAIL, B.C.\n 8\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, APRIL 29, 1957\nSPORTS\nCampbell Cops\nThird Amateur\nlinks Crown\nPINEHURST, N. C. (AP) -\nSuperb chipping and putting by\nHuntington, W. Va\u201e golfer to a\n3 and 2 finals victory over defending champion Hillman Bobbins of\nMemphis, Tenn., in the North and\nSouth Amateur golf tournament\nSaturday.\nIn winning the event for the\nthird time in eight years, Campbell, 33-year-old insurance man\nwho captained the 1955 U.S. Walker Cup team, took a five \u25a0 hole\nlead in the morning round as he\nshot an even par 72 without the\nloss of a hole.\n\u2022 Robbins, 25-year-old lieutenant\nin the United States Air Force,\nshot a one-under-par 35 to start\nthe afternoon round, but still\ntrailed by five after the outgoing\nnine as Campbell won the eighth\nand ninth holes with birdies.\nAces Take 2-0\nLead Over Royals\nQUEBEC (CP)\u2014Orval Tessier's\ntwo goals led Quebec Aces to a\n5-4 victory over Brandon Regals\nSunday in the opening game of\nthe best-of-ntne finals for the Edinburgh trophy.\nThe Aces moved into a 2-0 lead\nduring the first period and were\nnever headed, although Brandon,\ntwice tied the score. \\\n1 Besides Tessier, marksmen for\nthe Quebec Hockey League champions were Bill O'Ree and de-\nfencemen Joe Crozier and Jean-\nPaul Lamirande. Ray Manson.\nNorm Johnson, Vic Lynn and Les\n'Lilley scored for the Western\nfaockey League champs.\n' Tessier opened the scoring for\nthe winners just past the six-min-\nute mark in the first period.\nO'Ree ran the count to 2 - 0 at\n10:15 when he took a pass from\ncentre Gene Achtymichuk and\nscored from just outside the\ncrease.\nSEE-SAW SCORING\nAfter defenceman Lamirande\nwas waved off late in the period.\nBrandon's Lilley beat Quebec\ngoalie Al Millar with a 15-footer.\nJohnson tied the contest at 4:11\nof the second frame but Lamirande broke loose less than three\nminutes later while Quebec net-\nminder Lucien Dechene with a\nknee-high 25-foot shot that caught\nthe open corner. Lynn evened the\ncount at 13:26 with partly-\nscreened 20-footer.\nAces finished the period with a\n4-3 edge when Crozier scored -with\n12 seconds remaining. His shot\ncame after a scramble and was\npartly screened.\nTessier ran the lad to 5-3 just\nafter the midpoint of the final period. He was all alone on the right\nwing when Marcel Bonin set him\nup. Manson brought the Regals\nwithin a goal less than a minute\nlater.\ncloSe call\nTrying to knot.the count, Brandon pulled Dechene in favor of a\nsixth attacker at'17:57 but were\nunable to beat Millar who came\nup with a good save on a hard\nshot by Brandon centre Elliott\nChorley. Quebec's Bob Beckett\ncame close to putting the puck\ninto the unguarded Regal net but\ndefenceman Bill Bucyk dropped to\nhis knees and blocked the shot.\nThe second game will be played\nhere Wednesday.\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiimiiiiiiiiiin\nONE HOPE LEFT\nSpokane\u2014goal: Sofiak; defence: Luke, Lancien, Plante,\nHodges, McLeod; . forwards:\nBeattie, Jones, Gordichuk, Bod-\nmaii, Kromm, Kubasek, Zahara, Cirullo, Crawford.\nWhitby \u2014 goal: Henderson;\ndefence: Treen, Sinden, Ted O'Connor, McBeth; forwards:\nTom O'Connor, Burns, Etcher,\nAir, Myles* Boncllo, Samolenko, Attersley, Gagnon, Williams.\nReferees: Gord Pranschke and\nJohn McEvoy, Ottawa.\nSummary:\nFirst period: 1, Spokane, Crawford (Cirullo, Zahara 9:36;\nWhitby, Gagnon (Attersley, Samolenko) 15:25.\nPenalties: Jones 1:21; Treen\n9:57, Attersley, Zahara 17:44,\nPlante 18:02.\nSecond, period: 3, Spokane,\nBeattie (Jones, Gordichuk) 2:03'\n4. Whitby, Samolenko (Gagnon, Ted O'Connor) 9:58; 5,\nSpokane, Hodges 11:04; 6,\nWhitby, Mylcs 11:19; 7, Whitby, Treen (Gagnon) 16:59; 8,\nWhitby, Williams (Ted O'Connor, Burns) 18:00.\nPenalties: Tom O'Connor :12,\nCrawford 8:00, Jones 13:41,\nKromm, Sinden 17:27; Burns,\n(misconduct) 18:35, Attersley\n19:10.\nThird period: 9, Whitby, Williams (McBeth) 6:57; 10, Whitby, Treen 8:35.\nPenalties: McLeod and Gagnon 2:20, Treen, Crawford 6:17;\nMcBeth 8:03, Treen 9:30, Luke\n10:42, Plante 11:35, Myles\n12:20, Tom O'Connor 16:07,\nPlante, Bodman, Tom O'Connor, Burns, (majors) 19:00;\nLuke, Hodges, McLeod, Beat-\ntie, Jones, Gordichuk, Zahara,\nCirullo, Crawford, Treen, Sinden, Air, Myles, Bonello, Samolenko, Attersley, Gagnon,\nWilliams  (misconducts)  19:00.\niiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinmiiiiiii\nOutrider Prevents\nSerious Accident\nHAMILTON, Ohio (AP) - A\nseven-horse field in the second\nrace at the Hamilton Raceway\npounded into the back stretch\nSaturday and suddenly was flagged down by a quick-thinking outrider.\nSomeone had forgotten to pull\nthe starting gate off the track and\nthe horses were headed straight\nfor what could have been a serious pileup.\nJockeys halted their mounts before they reached the obstruction\nin.the seven-furlong race.\nJudges ordered all pari-mutuel\nbets returned, and the daily double was shifted to a consolation\ndouble.\nFlyers Face Elimination\nFinds Bowling\nHealthy Sport\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 Figure-conscious women find bowling peels\nextra pounds off hips and waistline, says an expert. It also tones\nthe muscles.\nThat's the word from Mrs. Mabel\nMcDowell, an attractive housewife\nwho has just been presented with\nthe second annual Tommy Ryan\nTrophy for outstanding achievements in bowling.\nFull of helpful hints for women\nbowlers Mrs. McDowell is against\nslacks for the fair sex. She likes\nthe feminine touch and favors\nskirts and jumpers.\n\u25a0 Mrs. McDowell has been winning awards for bowling for the\nlast 15 years. As chief organizer\nand. instructor of the ladies fowling clinic in Toronto, she has arranged sessions throughout Oil'\ntario. She aims to set up these\nclinics throughout Canada.\nOrdered by her doctor to give\nbowling up five years ago because\nof arthritis, she says. \"I' just\ncouldn't\" and now she says it\nhas proven beneficial.\nMrs. McDowell says the sport\nkeeps elderly women youthful and\nDunlops Take, Stranglehold\nOn Series With 7-3 Victory\nTORONTO (CP) - Whitby Dunlops took. a stranglehold on the\nbest-of-seyen series for the Allan\nCup Saturday night by overpowering Spokane Flyers 7-3 in a penalty-studded game that erupted\ninto a last-minute donny-brook.\nThe victory gave Dunlops, playing their first season: in Senior A\ncompetition, a 3-0 lead in the series. The fourth game is here Tuesday.\nA shirtsleeved crowd of 11543,\nlargest of the series to date, roared\nits approval as the wifcopen,\nhard-hitting style snapped tempers\nwith a minute remaining. Every\nplayer but the opposing goalkeep-,\ners got into the brawl which developed from a shoving match between Whitby's Tom O'Connor and\nBud Bodman of Flyers.\nO'Connor and Charlie Burns of\nWhitby and Flyers' Bodman and\nLarry Plante took major, fighting\npenalties. Nine players on each\nminds keen. Arid it's wonderful\nexercise ..\u25a0\u2022.-.-\u25a0\nA bowler for 30 years, she has\nplayed at least ,12;games a night\njust for practice. And to top it\noff, it's in the family too. She .and\nher husband Bill won the Ontario\nmixed- doubles in .1947.\nMrs. McDowell says her success\nlies in her straight ball with a\nbreak at the end. Her best score is\n400 but still aiming for a perfect\nscore.\nclub received 10-minute misconduct\nsentences for leaving the bench to\ntrade punches. The game finished\nwith the clubs playing four aside.\nReferees Gord Pranschke and\nTom McEvoy assessed a total of\n252 minutes in' penalties. Whitby bore the;brunt of them, 10 misconducts, 10 minors and two majors for 130 minutes. Flyers took\nnine' misconducts, ll minors and\ntwo majors.\nLeft-winger Rock Crawford shot\ntha Flyers into the lead with a 25-\nfoot blazer at the 9:36 mark\nof the opening period. Spokane\nmoved ahead again midway\nthrough the second period on Tom\nHodges' long slap - shot which\nmade the score 3-2 at that point.\nTWO-GOAL MEN\nBut Dunlops tied it just 15 seconds later, Gord Myles counting\nan unassisted goal from a scramble in front of the Spokane cage.\nDefenceman Alf Treen fired what\nproved to be the. winning goal at\n16:49..\nTreen .and left-winger Doug Williams each, scored-twice for the\nwinners, while playing coach Bus\nGagnon, and right-winger George\nSamolenko added singles.\n\u25a0:--I,eft<.winger Tick Beattie scored\nthe other Spokane goal. .\n\"We just don't seem strong\nenough to skate with them for\nthree periods,\" said Spokane\ncoach Roy McBridge following the\ngame. \"We had the play for the\nfirst period and a half, but then\nwe. fell apart.\"\nSugar Ray Had\nRib Separation\nSayr Gainford\nCHICAGO (AP) \u2014 Sugar Ray\nRobinson Sunday refused to discuss published reports that he suffered a rib separation in a training camp injury before losing his\nJan. 2 middleweight title'defence\ntb Gene Fullmer but George Gain-\nford, a member of his \"entourage\", confirmed the report.\nGainford said Robinson had suffered the separation about three\nweeks before the fight. However,\nthe injury had healed by fight\ntime, Gainford said. He denied\nreports that Robinson had taken\nsedation in the form of a tranquilizer drug.\n\u25a0 Robinson refused point blank to\ndiscuss the story at the gym where\nhe is preparing for his May 1 rematch with Fullmer, the current\n160-pound champion.\nReports of the injury were carried in Sunday's New York Daily\nNews in a column by Gene Ward,\nwho said Robinson had not been\nspeaking for publication when he\nverified the story to him and didn't\nwant it published until after his\nreturn match.\n\"These are the facts,\" Ward\nwrote. \"And whether or not they\naccount for Robinson's poor performance that night is something\nwhich best can be judged when\nhe again faces Fullmer next Wednesday in Chicago Stadium. The\nITALIAN WINS SINGLES\nNAPLES, Italy (AP) -Lanky\nOrlando Sirola of Italy defeated\nChile's Luis Ayala 4-6, 6-4, 7-5,\n3-6, 6-3'-Sunday to win the men's\nsigles. title in the Naples International tenuis tournament.\nAyala had upset Australia's\nLew Hoad Saturday.\nfacts: Robinson (1) suffered a\ntraining camp injury which x-ray\nexamination disclosed to be a rib\nseparation on the right side and\n(2) took sedation in the form of\na tranquilizer drug and continued\nto take it through the night of Jan.\n1 in order to gain sleep which\nhe had been robbed of by the discomfort of his injury.\"\nBRITISHER WINS\nGRAND PRIX\nNAPLES, Italy (AP) - Peter\nCollins of Britain won the Grand\nPrix of Naples automobile r a e \u2022\nSunday.\nCollins, in a Ferrari, covered\nthe oo-lap, 246-kilometre race in\ntwo hours, 10 minutes and 31\n2-10ths seconds, an average of\n113.085 kilometres an hour (70.1\nm.p.h.).\nAnother Briton, Michael Hawthorne, also in a Ferrari, finished\nsecond in 2:11:02.4 and Luigi\nMusso of Italy, in a Ferarri, finished third. -\nGift  Cigarettes  for  CANADA'S\nMIDDLE-EAST MILITARY PERSONNEL...\nAND OTHER IMPERIAL TOBACCO BRANDS\nCAN BE SENT TO CANADA'S\nUNITED NATIONS EMERGENCY FORCE\n$1.60 sends 400\nSwoot Caporal, MaUnoo, VIcoroy\nor Winchester,\nPrlc* IneludM postage\nMail order and romjffanco to:\nIMPERIAL TOBACCO CO.\nP.O. Box 6500, Montreal\nGREENGRASS TO SOLONS\nSACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) -\nSacramento Solons of the Pacific\nCoast League Saturday night purchased outfielder Jim Greengrass\nfrom the Philadelphia organization of the National League.\nGreengrass, who formerly played\nwith the Phillies and Cincinnati,\nwas on the roster of Miami of the\nInternational League.\nMarkham Man Js\nLawn Bowling Prexy\nTORONTO (CP)-J. C. Burns of\nMarkham, Ont., was elected president Saturday of the Canadian\nLawn Bowling Council at the annual meeting. 5\nW. D. 'Connor of- Hamilton, sitting as Alberta's representative,\nwas chosen vice-president- W. B.\nCowan of Toronto was named secretary-treasurer.\nThe council heard the Quebec\nLawn Bowling Association report\non arrangements for the 1957 national championships at Montreal.\nWinners will represent Canada at\nthe 1958 British Empire Games at\nCardiff, Wales.\nThe 1958 Canadian matches will\nbe at Victoria.\nCop Peewee Title\nGODERICH, Ont. (CP) - Toronto Shopsy's captured the grand\nchampionship series of the Young\nCanada Week peewee hockey tournament Saturday night by scoring\nan 8-2 victory over Elmira in the\nfinals.\nWinnipeg, for the fourth straight\nyear, won the east-west challenge\ncup by downing Goderich 4-2 in\nthe windup game of th\u00a7 77-game\neight-day championships.\nBurns Lumber Co.\n602 BAKER ST.\nPHONE 1180\nvkt'\n--SM:\nWingwall and abutment \\\nsection of main powerhouse'\ndam near Cornwall, Ont.\nCANADA CEMENT supplies the Seaway...\nWe are proud to be suppliers of the cement being used on\nthe Canadian side of the mammoth St. Lawrence Seaway\ndevelopment. Huge quantities of concrete have already been\nplaced on the main power dam site and for the construction\nof canals, locks, retaining walls, etc..\nToww\nTo meet the requirements of this and many other projects\nin the present phase of Canada's development, the Canada\nCement Company has more than doubled the production\nof its plants in the last ten years-^from 40 million bags to\n96 million bags a year..\ntool: for flio Canada Cement frw\/emorlc. Il It your guarantee of quality.\nCanada Cement\nCompany Limited\nA QUALITY PRODUCT FOR\nEVERY CONSTRUCTION PURPOSE\nCANADA CEMENT BUILDING, PHILLIPS SQUARE, MONTREAL\nSAtES OFF\/CESi MONCTON  \u2022 QUEBEC  \u2022 MONTREAl  \u2022 OTTAWA  \u2022 TORONTO\nWINNIPEG  \u2022 REGINA \u2022 CALGARY  \u2022 EDMONTON\n \u25a07\nm\nJapan, Philippines\nCop Finals Berth\nBy The Associated Press\nJapan and the Philippines wort\n. final berths in the eastern zone\nDavis Cup eliminations Sunday,\nJapan taking a 3-0 lead in her\nfive;game series with Ceylon and\nthe Philippines splitting. 3-2' with\nIndia.\nThe two countries meet later\nthis month, with tho winner' to 11\nagainst the American zone champion late this summer.\nVenezuela took a 2-1 lead over\nCuba in their American zone play,\nand Poland. Austria, South Africa\nHolland, Mexico and Czechoslovakia clinched second-round berths\nin the European eliminations in\nother weekend play.\nAtsushi Miyagi and Kosei Kam\nwon the third game for Japan, defeating Ceylon's Bernard Pinto\nand Rupert Ferdinands 6-0, 6-2,\n7-5.\nINDIA FIGHTS BACK\nIndia, after losing Friday's two\nsingles matches, won the doubles\nplay Saturday at Manila. But Philippine star Raymundo Deyro defeated India's Naresh Kumar 6-3.\n6-2, 2-6, 6-4 in the first of two\nfinal singles to clinch the win, In-\nKluszewski SHU\nTaking Treatment\nCINCINNATI (AP)-Ted Kluszewski, Cincinnati Redlegs' ailing\nfirst baseman, enters hospital hero\ntoday for a physical checkup and\ntreatment of his ailing bapk.\nClub officials said Kluszewski\nwill not be with the club when it\nleaves fot'an eastern trip and will\nnot join it until doctors decide' he\nIs able to play.\nKluszewski, troubled' with a\nmysterious back ailment since last\nseason, has started only one regular season game thus far this\nyear\u2014the opener\u2014but he has appeared in a few others as a pinch\nhitter.\ndia salvaged the meaningless last\ngame 6-2, 6-4, 6-2.\nVenezuela's lyo Pimentel, completing Friday's singles gama suspended because ol rain, defeated\nCuba's Orlando Garrido, 4-6, 6-2,\n6-4, 6-1, Satuifday; He teamed with\nRicardo Lopez to down Raul Kar-\nman and Reinaldo Garrido 7-5, 8-6,\n6-2 in doubles play.- Two singles\ngames remain to be playod.\nPoland took a 3-0 advantage over\nLuxembourg Sunday when its\ndoubles team, Valdislav Skonecki\nand 1. Piarec defeated J. Warn-\npach and J. Werteim.6-2, 6-'4, 6-4-\nAustralia also won her doubles\nmatch against Romania at Bucharest to take a 3-0 lead, Freddie\nHuber and Franz Saiko defeated\nGeorge and Marin Viziru 6-1, 6-4,\n12-10. \/\nSOUTH AFRICA AHEAD\nThe second day of singles was\nsubstituted for the usual doubles\nat Barcelona Sunday, and South\nAfrica, winner of the first two,\ntooK both to lead Spain 4-Or- Trevor\nFrancutt ciinched the series by\ndefeating Juan Manuel Couder 7-5,\n6-4, 1-6, 2-6, 6-2.\nCzechoslovakia's Jirl Javorsky\ndefeated Switzerland's Martin Fro-\neach 6-1, 6-4, 6-1 to clinch his team's\nwin. Yiri Parma defeated Paul\nBlondel 6-2, 4-6, 6-0, 6-0 to give\nCzechoslovakia a 4-1 victory in the\nseries.\nMexico, assured of victory over\nYugoslavia after Saturday's doubles win, made it a 5-0 sweep at\nBelgrade by\"\\vinning the last two\nsingles matches. Marion Llamas\ndefeated Ivko Plecevic 6-3, 6-4, 6-3\nand- Antonio. Palafox defeated Ilija\nUeanajotovic 6-1, 6-4, 7-5.\nHolland clinched its second-round\nberth Saturday, taking a 3-0 lead\nover Norway when its doubles\nteanyof Fred Dehnert and Hans\nVan Dalsum defeated Gunnar Sjo\nweall and Finn Dag Jagge at Sche\nveningen, The Netherlands, 10-8,\n6-2, 7-5.\nBy The Associated Press\nMilwaukee's once-beaten Braves\nlost their home run punch, but still\nmanaged a 3-2 victory over Cincinnati for a two-game lead in the\nNational League Sunday.\nIn,the American, Chicago White\nSox defeated Kansas City 5-3 and\nregained a one-game edge over\nBoston Red Sox, whose winning\nstreak was ended at five games\non Yogi Berra's lOth-inning home\nrun in a 3-2 New York Yankee\nvictory. '\nElsewhere in the NL, Pitts*\nburgh and Bob Friend blanked the\nsecond place Brooklyn Dodgers\n3-0, and the St. Louis Cardinals\nswept a doubleheader 6-2 and 4-0\nwith Chicago Cubs getting only\nfive hits all day. Philadelphia Phll-\nHOW MUCH MONEY\n'\nDO YOU NEED?\nWould $400, $600, $1000 or more help you\nover a financial hurdle? Then call Niagara,\nwhere friendly loans are made. Many thou-\nlands of people from coast to coast are using\nNiagara Loan facilities to get extra cash when\nthey need it\u2014Loans are made up to $1000.00\n\u2014sometimes more. And Niagara Loans can be\nlife insured as an added peace-of-mind feature.\nRemember you're always welcome at Niagara.\nJust a few of Niagara's many loan plans\nLeague-Leading Braves Beat\nCubs Without Aid of Homers\nNash Impressed\nBy All Hurlers\nIn Squad Game\nA common adage among,ballplayers is that it usually takes hitters awhile to catch up to the pitchers, and Sunday afternoon Nelson Outlaw manager Ron Nash\nsaw it operate once again.\nPitchers Walt Avis, Wendy Keller, Stan Grill and Lefty Gould befuddled batters easily in the season's first intra-squad game. Scoring records were unimportant, but\nNash was obviously pleased with\nwhat he saw.\nCompetition is still keen for al\nmost every spot, and Ron is certain this year's aggregation will be-\nstronger than last year's. And, as\nhe continually warns his players,\nit's a good thing, because the com\npetition will be tougher.\n, Many of last year's regulars\nturned out at Queen Elizabeth\nPark yesterday, along with umpire\nArt Bouchard, and railbirds were\ngenerally impressed.\nIt was difficult to evaluate performances because'in an effort to\nsee each player work at several\npositions, Nash juggled players .as\na comedian might juggle dinner\nplates.\nOutlaws will practice every night\nthis week, in preparation for their\nseason's opener in-an \u00abxliibition\ngame at Colville next week.\nlies rapped New. York 11-2 in their\nfirst game, but the Giants were\nahead 8-7 when the nightcap was\nsuspended after 6Vk innings by curfew.\nTWO SPLITS\nIn the American, Detroit and\nCleveland split a twin bill with Al\nAber winning in relief as the Tigers took the opener 2-0. Aber was\nthe nlghtcep loser, 3-2. in 10, innings. Washington and Baltimore\nalso split their doubleheaders, the\nS.enators winning 7-6 in 10 ihnings,\nthen losing 3-2.\nTho Braves, who had hit 10\nhome runs in the last three games,\ngot their ninth victory by bunching\nmost of their, nine hits off loser\nTom Acker and three, relievers. A\ntwo-run fourth did it on doubles by\nBilly Burton and Del Crandall, a\nbunt single by starter Taylor Phillips and Danny O'Connell's sacrifice fly. The redlegs, now 0-6 vs\nPhillips and winning reliefer Red\nMilwaukee,, got nine walks off\nMurff, but were turned back by\nfour Milwaukee daubleplays.\nBEATS CRAIG\nHank Foiles' fifth - inning RBI\nsingle beat Brooklyn's Roger Craig\nand the Pirates then packed it\naway by tagging Clem Labine for\nsingle runs in the seventh and\neighth on a total of four hits\nFriend, now 2-2, gave seven hits,\nincluding a triple and double by\nGil Hodges.\nRip Repulski, with two doubles\nand a home run, and Chicb Fernandez, with a homer, drove in\nthree runs each for the Phillies\nwho bagged the opener for good\nwith a seven-run eighth inning.\nRookie Jack Sanford one-hit the\nGiants until the eighth when he\ngave way to Bob Miller. In the\nnightcap, the Phils blew a 5-1 lead\nin a six-run Giant fifth as Gail\nHarris lined his fourth consecutive\ndouble. The game will be completed Aug. 16.\nTHREE-HIT CUBS\nStan Musial smacked two singles\nand a home run, good for three\nCardinal runs, in the opener as\nyoung Lindy McDaniel three-hit\nthe Cubs. In the second game,\niHerm Wehmeier and Tom Cheney\ncombined for the shutout. < . \"\nA four-run sixth inning that featured Walt Dropo's two-run homer\nand Jim Rivera's double got the\nWhite Sox home safe. Gerry Staley\nsaved the victory for Jim Wilson,\nwhp.gave lip home runs to Gus\nZernial, Jim Pisoni and Ifcl Smith.\nBerra's third home run, of the\nseason gave Don Larsen the Yankee victory in relief. Larsen came\non in the ninth when the Red Sox\nrallied for two runs off Bob\nGrim, who ' had relieved Whitey\nFord, to tie it. ike Delock was the\nloser In relief. Mickey Mantle and\nBilly Martin were thrown out of\nthe Yankee lineup for protesting\numpire decisions.\nEarly Wynn had permitted the\nTigers only one hit in an eight\ninning shutout duel with Detroit's\nrookie Don Lee and Aber, but then\nwas tagged for Frank Boiling's\nleadoff double, a single by Charlie\nMaxwell and a double by Ray\nBoone in the ninth to lose the opener. The Indians .took the second\ngame when Jim Busby singled,\nand scored on an error by catcher\nFrank House. Ray Narleski won\nit in relief. '\nWashington won with a run after two were out in the 10th on a\nwalk and singles by Clint Courtney\nand Jerry Snyder. Dick Williams,\nscored the Oriole clincher on a\npassed ball after tripling in the\nnightcap fourth.\nFor Softball\nTeam Elected\nNelson Royals Sunday afternoon\nelected IJyrna Cain president and\nGail. Christopherson secretary-\ntreasurer for the 1057 West Kootenay Women's Softball League\nseason,'and held a short Workout\non,'the Softball diamond at Civic\nRecreation Grounds.\nReturnii|g from last year's Kootenay champions iVere Carol Dozzi\nand Maxine Mermet along with the\ntwo elected officers. Marie Stang-\nhorlin, a Royal mainstay for several season, has expressed her intention to retire, but Miss Cain said\nshe believed Marie \"would- accept\n9 coaching post.\nSeveral other members of last\nyear's team had promised to turn\nout, but didn't appear. They and\nall other prospects will have another chance Wednesday evening.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, APRIL 29, 1957\u20149\nBaseball Standings\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nW  L Pet Gbl\nMilwaukee     9   1   .900  \u2014\nBrooklyn     7  3   .700 2\nPhiladelphia     5   5   .500 4\n,New York     5   6   .455 414\nSt. Louis     4   5 - .444 414\nCincinnati   4  7   .364 514\nPittsburgh    4  7  ,364 514\nChicago     3  7   .300 6\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nW   L Pet Gbl\nChicago     7   2   .778   \u25a0\nBoston   7  4   .636 1\nNew York    6   4   .600 114\nBaltimore  \u201e    6   6   .500 214\nKansas City    6   6   .500 214\nCleveland ..-.: \u201e 5  6  .455 3\nDetroit   4  8   .333 414\nWashington     4  9   .308 5\nPACIFIC C9AST LEAGUE\nW  LPct   Gbl\nLos Angeles  12   5   .706\t\nVancouver   12  6   .667    14\nHollywood-   10  6   .625   114\nSan Francisco  11   7   .611   Vi.\nSeattle  11   7   .611   114\nSan Diego    8 11   .421   5\nSacramento     4 14   .222  814\nPortland     2 16   .111 1014\nTERRY TOBACCO\nTOPS AT SEATTLE\nSEATTLE (AP) - Washington's\nTerry Tobacco, member of the\nlast Canadian British Empire\nGames team, ran the quarter mile\nin 47.5. seconds to win the event\nSaturday as his team swamped\nWashington State College 84 1-3-46\n2-3 in a track and field meet.\nTobacco's- time was beUeved the\nfastest 440 run in college meets\nin the United States this year. It\nwas also a meet record, bettering\nIhe former 48 seconds set by Talbot\nHartley, Washington, in 1931.\nMounties Win Pair\nFrom San Francisco\nSAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Vancouver Mounties knocked San\nFrancisco out of the Pacific Coast\nLeague lead Sunday by winning a\nbaseball doubleheader 4-4 and 5-4.\nThe 12,940 fans saw the visiting\nMounties bunch extra base hits for\nthe edge in the seven-inning nightcap. Tito Francona hit a three-run\nhomer in the hinth inning to win\nthe first game for Vancouver.\nIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nMEMORIAL (UP SET EVENED   (\n'\u25a0\u2022\u25a0'.\u25a0 V ..J-.c'a.\nFLIN FLON, Man. (CP) \u2014 Ottawa Canadians rapped\nin two goals in the last half-minute Sunday night to edge  .,\nFlin Flon Bombers 4-3 and tie their best-of-seifen Mem-   ;\norial Cup junior hockey final at one game, apiece.\nBombers, following up their well-earned 3-1 victory |\nin Friday's opener, held a two-goal margin early in the !\nfinal period before centre Mike Legace narrowed the 9\ncount. Bill Carter tied the game, at 19:38 with his second i'l\ngoal of the night and captain Ralph Backstrom potted\nthe winner nine seconds later.   \u2022'. -. s\nTltfrd game of the series will be played in this north-  'l\n- em mining 'town tonight. The series moves to Regina for\nthe fourth game Wednesday and the fifth Friday.\niiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiihi'\nCANADIAN TEAM\nPUNNED FOR\nPAN-AM GAMES\nMONTREAL (CP) - Plans to\nsend a Canadian team to the 1858\nPan-American games were made\nSaturday by the Canadian Olympic Association but details of this\ncountry's representation had to be\nleft in abeyance.\nThe COA, at its annual meeting,\nset up a Pan - American games\ncommittee and said that in general its present policy of arranging for Olympic games will be\napplied to the Pan - Am sports\nshow.\nLack of a definitive venue for\nthe 1959 games was the principal\nstumbling block to full and immediate preparations. The games at\nfirst were expected to be held in\nCleveland, but\"' t h e y may be\nshifted to Chicago or to Guatemala.\nThe number of athletes Canada\nwill send and the sports they will\ncompete in will await final decision as to the location. Financial\nmatters also enter into the question, particularly for transportation.\nTWO BARBARIAN\nSTARS INJURED\nTORONTO (CP) - Great Britain's Barbarians swamped the Ontario all-star rugby team 47-3 Saturday, but the visitors did not es'\ncape unscathed. \u25a0';\nTony O'Reilly, the fleet-footed\nright-winger who scored five of\nthe Baa-Baas' 12 tries, suffered an\ninjured muscle and, after treating\nit under a heat lamp, said: \"I'm\"\nfeeling a bit stiff and don't think\"\nI'll be able to play Tuesday (in\nthe second game with the all-stars\nhere).\"\nThe other injury \u25a0 was also a\nbruised -muscle, suffered by fullback Terry Davies, who kicked\ntwo conversions and one penalty\nand will also probably miss Tues;\nday's game.\nBatteries\nMINING - LOGGING\nANO AUTOMOTIVE\nRepairs to All  Types\n609 Lake St Phone I\nARROW BATTERIES\nHONOR HORNSBY\nCHICAGO (AP)-The orchestra\nplayed Happy Birthday at Wrlgley\nField Saturday for Rogers Horns-\nby's 61st birthday.\nLITTLE LEAGUE and BABE RUTH\nPRACTICES\nLittle League \u2014 Monday, Wed., Fri.\nBabe Ruth \u2014 Tuesday and Thursday\nAssistance From Parents and Others Welcomed\nBaseball Scores\n-J     YOU\nMONTHLY PAYMENTS\nw\\   GET\n12\n1.5\n20\n24\nijA $400.00\nj\/M  600.00\n^J  794.45*\nWJ 1,000.00\n37.63\n55.75\n91.56\n30.94\n45.71\n74.82\n24.27\n35.69\n58.11\n30.69\n40.00*\n49.77\nm\n*One oj Niagara's many even-dollar payment plans.\nNIAGARA\n560 BAKER ST.\nPHONE 1636\nLOANS\n0     Largest All-Canadian  Loan  Company\nBy The Canadian Presn\nSATURDAY\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nBrooklyn 022 100 020\u2014 6 14  0\nPittsburgh .... 000 001 010\u2014 2  9   1\nNewcombe and Campanella;\nKline, Law (5) King (7) Arroyo\n(8) Churn, (9) and Joiles, Kravitz (6) L-Kline.\nMilwaukee .... 100 210 00(\u00a3-5 8 2\nCincinnati  .... 012 000 Oil\u2014 4 10  0\nBurdette and Crandall; Hacker,\nLawrence (8) and Bailley.. L \u2014'\nHacker. HRs: Milwaukee \u2014 Aaron,\nAdcock, Cincinnati \u2014 Crowe.\nWash  000 000 000\u2014 0  4  3,\nBaltimore ... 010 080 OOx\u2014 4  80\nStobbs, Byerly (8) and Courtney; Fornieles and Ginsberg. L\u2014\nStobbs. Hft: Baltimore\u2014Nieman.\nDetroit 000 000 001\u2014 13  0\nCleveland  .... 000 100 01?\u2014 2  7  0\nFoytack, Gromek (7) and Wilson; Score and Naragon. L\u2014Foytack.\nChicago 000 000 100\u2014 2  6  1\nKansas City   000 000 102\u2014 3   7  0\nDonovan, Howell (8) and Lol-\nlar; Keliner, Trucks (8) and\nSmith. W-Trucks. L-Howell. HR;\nChicago-Julian\nSUNDAY\nMilwaukee .... 100 200 000\u2014 3   9   1\nCincinnati    .. 001 000 001\u2014 2  6  2\nPhillips. Murff (4) and Crandall,\nAcker, Klippstein (5), Lavfrence\n(7), Sanchez (9) and Bailey. W\u2014\nMurff; I^-Acker.\nBrooklyn 000 000 000\u2014 0  7  0\nPittsburgh     000 010 llx\u2014 310. 1\nCraig, Labine (7) and Campan\nella; Friend and Foiles. L\u2014Craig.\nSt. Louis ,100 130 100-6   8   2\nChicago    010 100 000\u2014 2   3  0\n- McDaniel and Cooper; Jlush,\nBrosnan 16), Collum (8) and Neeman. L\u2014Rush. HR: St. Louis \u2014\nMusial.  '\nSt. Louis 000 010 030- 4  9 0\nChicago 000 000 000\u2014 0  2 0\nCheney, Wehmeier (5) and\nLandrith; Poholsky, Littlefield (8)\nand Neeman. W: Wehmeier, L: Poholsky.\nNefr York 000 000 020- 2  5 1\nPhiladelphia .. 010 3d0 07X-11   7 1\nWorthington, Margoneri (5) Sur-\nkont IB), Grissom (8), McCall (8)\nand Westrum, Katt (8); Sanford,\nMiller (8) and Lopata. W\u2014Sanford;\nL\u2014Worthington. HR: Philadelphia\n\u2014Repulski, Fernandez.\nNew York  100 061 0\u2014 8   12 0\nPhiladelphia .... 311 002 0-7   10 0\nSuspended, cuffew. Will be completed later .date.\nBurnside, Jones (1), Barclay (2),\nRicfzik (5), GriSsom (6) and West-\nrum, Thomas (5); Hearn, Meyer\n(5), Roberts (5) and Lonnett. HRs:\nNew York\u2014Castleman; Philadelphia\u2014Kazanski.\nAMERICAN-LEAGUE\n. Sun\u00abay\nWashington 000 005 100 1\u2014 7 7 0\nBaltimore .... 211 000 002 O- 6  7 0\nShifflett, Chakales (3) Hyde (6)\nByerly (9) Clevenger (10) And\nFitzgerald; Ferrarese, Loes (6)\nZuverink (6) Wight (8) Johnson\n(10) and Ginsberg. W \u2014 Byerly;\nL\u2014Johnson.\nWashington .... 010 010 000- 2 7 0\nBaltimore  101 100 OOx\u2014 3 10 1\nAbernathy and Berberet; Brown\nOdell (6) and Ginsberg. W\u2014Brown.\nBoston  000 000 002 0\u2014 2   7 1\nNew York .... 000 110 000 1\u2014 3 10 2\nF. Sullivan, Delock (8) and\nWhite,T)aley (7) H. Sullivan (9);\nFord, Grim (8) Larsen (9) and\nBerra. W: Larsen; L: Delock. HR:\nNew York\u2014Berra.\nDetroit  ...'.. 000 000 002- 2  4 0\nCleveland    000 000 000\u2014 0  6 1\nLee, Aber (8) and House; Wynn\nand Naragon. W\u2014Aber. \u25a0\nDetroit  \u201e 010 000 010 O- 2 - 7 1\nCleveland .... 000 200 000 1- 3   8 0\n.Hoeft, Bunning (8) Aber (8) and\nHouse; Garcia, Narleski (10) and\nHegan. W \u2014 Narleski; L \u2014 Aber.\nHRs: Detroit \u2014 Boiling; Cleveland\n\u2014Avila', Colavito.\nChicago    100 004 000\u2014 5  5 0\nKansas City .... 000 110 100\u2014 3  5 4\nWilson, Staley (7) and Battey,\nLollar (8); Coleman, Host (6),\nBlake (8), Gorman (8) and Smith\nW;, Wilson; L: Coleman. HRs: Chicago\u2014Dropo; Kansas City \u2014Vernal,, Pisoni, Smith.\nThe new smart look\nof\nsweet\nsweet\ncaporal\nI \u00bb U U   llll   \u2022   IRULT. r.lEIH\nsweet\ncapoia!\n|| \u25a0  i \u00bb u i i  ii 11 o \u25a0 i > a i v  111! h  \u2022\nGet a fresh start\nin smoking enjoyment\nwith  '\nMILD...8MOOTH......FRE8H\n 0\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, APRIL 29, 1957\nWHEELS WITHIN W H E E L _ This circus act is\nenough to set your head whirling as motorcyclist carries huge\nwheel containing a cyclist at Madison Square, Garden rfchcarsal.\nU.S. Springtime Boom\nLights Business Scene\nBy WALTER BREEDE Jr.\nNEW YORK (AP) \u2014 First signs\nof a spring-time boom in heavy\nconstruction brightened the United\nStates business scene last week.\nDelayed in many parts of the\ncountry by rain and cold, the biggest road building program in\nhistpry finally was getting under\nway.\nThere were other massive projects, ranging from hospitals,\nchurches, schools and office buildings to oil pipelines, waterworks\nand sewers.\nStepped-up spending on heavy\nconstruction was counted upon to\noffset the. continuing lag. in demand for houses, textiles, appliances and cars.\nAWAIT UPTURN\nStill waiting for signs of a\nspring upturn this week were producers of steel, non-ferrous metals, lumber, paperboard and oil.\nProductions of the steelmakers,\nAfter Every\nMeal\nChew refreshing, delicious\nWrigley's Spearmint Gum.\nHelps keep teeth clean\u2014\naids digestion.\nGet some\nt&day.\nSir Saville Garner To Speak al\nAnnual Canadian Press Banquet\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 Newspaper\nexecutives from the 10 provinces\nare gathering here for the yearly\nseries of meetings at which editorial and business problems are\nthreshed out.\nAnnual meetings of The Canadian Press and the Canadian\nDaily Newspaper Publishers Association will be held, as well as\ndirectors' and committee meetings.\nCP directors meet Tuesday and\nthe annual meeting of members of\nthe national news co-operative is\nset for Wednesday.   I\nCDNPA directors meet Thursday\nand Saturday, with the annual\nmeeting Thursday and Friday.\nThe Canadian section, Commonwealth Press Union, meets Tuesday night and the Canadian Committee of the International Press\nInstitute Thursday night.\nSir Saville Garner, United King\ndom high commissioner to Canada, will address the annual Canadian Press dinner Wednesday\nnight.\nBlame Hurricane\nFor Nutmeg Price\nMONTREAL (CP)\u2014 A hurricane\nthat swept the West Indies island\nof 'Grenada in 1955 is blamed for\na sharp increase in the price of\nnutmeg. A Montreal spice house\nhere reports Canadian importers\nare paying $2.25 a pound for raw\nnutmegs, compared with 32 cents\nin 1955.\nThe hurricane damaged Grenada's nutmeg trees and last year\nthe island harvested only 702,000\npounds of nutmegs, about 16 per\ncent of the previous year's crop.\nThe spice house estimates production will not be back to normal\nuntil 1960.\nhowever, were on the optimistic\nside.\nBoth Bethlehem and Youngstown\nwere well'on their way to a record\nearnings year. Each reported now\nhighs in profits for the first quarter.\nAlso reporting impressive first-\nquarter gains, were the major oil\ncompanies: Standard of New Jersey's earnings for the period were\nup 15 per cent from a year ago,\nTexaco reported a 23Vi per. cent\nrise,- Gulf a 30 per cent increase.\nBehind'the sensational profit performance was the Suez Canal\ncrisis when Europe could not get\nits normal quota of Middle East\ncrude, it bought higher priced oil\nin,the United\u25a0 States.\nEARNINGS HIGHER I\nFirst quarter earnings reports\nof the big three automakers'proved\nwhat previous sales figures had\nindicated for some time\u2014Chrysler\nCorporation,, with its swept-wing,\nfin-tailed models! had been stepping ahead at a brisker pace than\nits two big competitors, General\nMotors and Ford. -'\"\nWhile Ford's quarter earnings\nclimbed 11.3 per cent, and General\nMotors' net dropped. 7% per cent\nChrysler's profit shpt up for a\n\u25a0gain of more than 300 per cent.\nMOTHER'S IDEA?\nAYLESHAM, Eng. (CP) - Embroidered on the seat of a small\nboy's pants in this Kent community is the -plea: \"Please don't\nspank me.\"\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\nTimes Shown Are Pacific Standard Time\nKXLY TV - 'Channel.4\n1:30\u2014Good Morning\nt:45\u2014Cartodn.Time,\n9:00\u2014Romper . Room .\n):30\u2014Search for Tomorrow *\ni:45\u2014Guiding Light *\nI:00-Valiant Lady -.,\ni:15\u2014Loye-of Life .\ni:30\u2014As the. World Turns *\n.:00\u2014Our Miss Brooks *   .\n:30\u2014Houseparty *\n1:00\u2014The Big Payoff *\n!:30\u2014Bob Crosby Show *\n.: 00\u2014Brighter Day *\n,: 15\u2014Secret Storm *\n!: 00\u2014Variety Time\n: 15\u2014What's Cookin'\n1:00\u2014Garry Moore *\n1:45\u2014Variety Time\n1:00\u2014Win a Dinner\ni: 30\u2014Strike it Rich *\ni:00-KLIXY the, Klown\n;:0O\u2014Regional Weather & News\ni; 15\u2014Doug Edwards News *\ni: 30\u2014Robin Hood *    .    \u2022\n':00\u2014Men of Annapolis\n':30\u2014Men of Cochise\n8:00\u2014Burns and Allen *\n1:30\u2014Talent Scouts *-. \u25a0\n1:00\u20141 Love Lucy *\n1:30\u2014December Bride *\n1:00\u2014The Green Thumb\ni:15\u2014Famous Fights\n1:30\u2014The Movie Man\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS 1240 ON THE DIAL\n(PACIFIC DAYLIGHT SAVING TIME)\nMONDAY, APRIL 29, 1957\n7:00\u2014News\n12:55\u2014Prairie News\n7:05\u2014Morning Devotions\n1:00-CKLN Reports\n7:10\u2014Farm Fare\n1:15\u2014Matinee\n7:15\u2014Chapel in the Sky\n1:45\u2014Pacific News\n7:30\u2014News\n2:0Q-Holiday Time\n7:35\u2014Sports News\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n7:40\u2014Wake-Up Time\nS^O-Sacred Heart\n8:00\u2014News\n3:45\u2014B.C. Roundup\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n4:30\u2014The Conqueror\n8:15\u2014Opening Markets\n5:00\u2014Rolling Home S,.ow\n8:20\u2014Breakfast Varieties\n6:00\u2014Emory's News\n9:00\u2014News\n6:10\u2014Strikes 'n' Spares\n9:05\u2014Shoppers' Guide            ,\n6:15\u2014Closing Markets\n9:35\u2014Story Parade\n6:20\u2014Report Parliament Hill\n9:45\u2014Shoppers' Guide\n6:35\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n10:00\u2014News\n7:00\u2014News and RoUndup\n10:15\u2014Happy Gang\n7:30\u2014Scored by Hyslop\n10:45\u2014Invitation to the Waltz-\n8:00\u2014Joshua Doan\n11:00\u2014News\n8:30\u2014Summer Fallow\n11:05\u2014Woman's World\n9:00^-Symphony Orchestra\n11:15\u2014Morning Melodies\n10:00-N\u00abws\n12:00\u2014Dinner Bell                  ,\nld:l))-SportsNews\n12:15\u2014Sports News\n10:1 i\u2014Provincial Affairs\n12:25\u2014Noon News\n10:30\u2014Sign Off\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\nCBC PROGRAMS\nPACIFIC  DAYLIGHT  SAVING  TIME\nTUESDAY, APRIL 30, 1957\n00\u2014B.C. Fisherman's Broadcast\n15\u2014Musical Matinee\n30\u2014News\n35\u2014Musical Minutes\n40\u2014Morning Devotions\n5S\u2014March. Past\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Sports News       '.-..\n8:15\u2014Morning Music\n8:45\u2014Laura Limited   ;   '\n9:00\u2014News\n9:15\u2014Your Good Neighbor .\neiSO^-Mornihg.'Concert;.;'.- v-\n10:00\u2014Morning Visit\n10:l\u00a3-The Happy Gangv\n10:45\u2014Composers in Modern\nll:0O\u2014Radio Theatre\n11:15\u2014Kindergarten of the Air\nll:30-Listening Glass '       :' '\n12:15\u2014News S\n12:25\u2014Showcase\n12:30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Five to One\n1:00\u2014Afternoon Concert\n1:45\u2014Today's Gufst\n2:00\u2014School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n3:30\u2014Closed Cirdiiit\n3:45\u2014Footlight Favorites\n4:00\u2014Today's Music\n4:30-Ruff 'n' Reddy\n4:45\u2014Story Man\n5:00\u2014News       ':\u25a0>'\u25a0\u25a0.\n5:15^-By-Line\n5:20\u2014Sports\n5;3(MPoints West\n6:00\u2014Rawhide\n6:15\u2014Roving Reporter\n6:30\u2014Neighborly News\n6:45-After Dark\n7:00\u2014News\n7:30-Polka Party\n8:00\u2014Premiere on the Air\n8:30\u2014Anthology\n9:00\u2014Let's Make Music\n9:30\u2014Leicester Square\n10:00\u2014News  \u25a0'.-.\n10:15\u2014Critics At Large \u2022\nDAILY   CROSSWORD\nKHQ TV - Channel 6\n40\u2014Test Pattern\n45\u2014Color Test Pattern\n55\u2014Bible Reading\n00\u2014Tic Tac Dough *\n30\u2014It Could Be You *\n00-Home  *\n38\u2014Local News\n45-Home *\n00\u2014Price is Right *\n30\u2014Tenn. Ernie Ford\n00\u2014Matinee Theatre *\n00\u2014Queen for a Day *\n45\u2014Modern Romances *\n00\u2014Topper *\n30\u2014Truth or Consequences *\n00\u2014Women\n00\u2014Matinee.on Six\n30\u2014Mr. Engineer\n00\u2014Matinee on Six\n:00\u2014Five O'clock Movie\n\"Monsoon\"\n30\u2014Weatherwise\nThe Front Page\n40\u2014Newspaper of the Air\n45\u2014NBC News *\n:00\u2014Producers Showcase.*\n\"Cinderella Ballet\"\n30\u2014Robert Montgomery *\n:30\u2014TBA\n00\u2014I Led Three Lives\n: 30\u2014News Desk\n35\u2014Late  Movie\n\"Young Lovers\"\nMeans live. line from network\nKREM TV \u2014 Channel 2\n11:45\u2014Test Pattern\n12:00\u2014Frakie Laine\n12:30\u2014Pride of the Family\n1:00\u2014Featurama\n2:25\u2014News\n2:30\u2014Boss Lady\n3:00\u2014Featurama\n4:15\u2014Popeye \u00ab\n5:00\u2014Mickey Mouse Club\n, 6:00\u2014Sky King\n6:30\u2014Newsroom\n6:40\u2014Weather Sketch\n6:45\u2014John Daly\n7:00\u2014Kingdom of the Sea\n7:30\u2014Bold Journey\n8:00\u2014Danny Thomas\n8:30\u2014Voice of Firestone\n9:00\u2014Bishop Sheen\n9:30\u2014Lawrence Welk\n10:00\u2014Channel 2 Theatre\n(Programs subject to change by stations without notice.)\nDOWN\n1. Famous\noperatic\nsinger\n2. Hardened\n3. Morsels\n4. Mountain\n(Thessaly)\n5. The\n(Fr.)\nt. Coated\nwith\n-   Icing\n7. Injure\n8. Exist\n9. Method\nof\ndecorating\nmetal\n10. Dexterous\n14. Waterfalls\n19. Em- .\nploy\n20, Otherwise\nit. Fenc.\nIng\nsword\n23. Slight\ntaste\n24. A\nwager\n26. Weep\n27. Makes,\nas\ncloth\n28. Advise\noarnestij\n80. Aegean\nIsland\n31. Frothy\n33. Slug,\nglsh\naKIHL'J  MIslHCI\naar=naa laraaHr-\naaiia maiumst:\nmam an,:iHi-ii:i?.\nHaHH nauiaat!\nasa raauin ran\nEEEBHng mm\niiGumuH nana\n\u2122\u2014w\nSilnrdajr*! Aoiott\n36. Acidity\n(med.)\nST. Exchange\npremium\n38.Heads\n.  (shswr\n40. Man's\nname\nM. Tubercular\nsis (abbr.)\nIS\u2014IT\nfc\n\u00a3\nyA\n1\nm\n. ACROSS\ntThe\nWelch\nonion\n6. Anew\nnation\n(Air.),\n11. A flavoring\n12. Ghastly\n13. Grooves\nIn\nmud,\n14. A profession\n15. Either of the\nBears\n(astron.t\nW. Perform\n17. Behold!\n18, Direction\n(abbr.)\nIS. Shoshonean\nIndian\n10. He trained\nSamuel\n21. Russian\nseaport   .\n24. Blemish\n25. Penetrates\n27. Cry\n29. Channel of\n.communication\n\u00bb2. River\n\u2022     (Erig.)\nS3. Cold\n84. Pronoun\n85. Exclamation\n86. Social\ninsect\n87. Wild mt,\n39. Speaks\n41. Deities\n42. Mistak*\n43. Land\nof the\nlamas\n44. Begin\n15. Domineering\n(colloq.)\nDAILY CRYPTOQUOTE \u2014 Here's how to work Ifc\nAXYDLBAAXB\nIs LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this sample A te used\nfor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apos.\ntrophes, tho length and formation of tha words are all hint*\nEach day the code letters are different\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nTV    V Z D W-   N W Z (J J    B X C    DX    O X J W>.\n8FGW    EFN    Z    SXXV    VFSDD    ZQBBSXA\n\u2014AFOOFZN    WRIT WW.\nSaturday's Oryptoquote\u2014GO TO TUB AHT, THOU SLUQ\u00bb\nCARD; CONSIDER HER WAYS, AND BE WISE-\nPROVERBS.\nr\n im\nSMALL INVESTMENT   -\nThat's the Want Ad Story\nRETURNS\nPHONE  1844\nHELP WANTED\nBOOKKEEPER \u2022 STENOGRAPH-\ner required at Home Furniture\n(Nelson) Ltd,, to start May 1st.\n'   Working  knowledge   of   book-\n. keeping sufficient and previous\nexperience desirable. Books\nsupervised by chartered accountant. Original applications by\nletter only.\nEARN EXTRA MONEY. SELL\nEverlast, the colorful new dishes\nguaranteed not to break when\ndropped. Every home is a prospect. Exclusive territories available right In your own community. Write manufacturer,\nGlenn S. Woolley & Co,, Aax,\nOntario.\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITY FOR\nprofessional man who is mechanically minded and willing to\ninvest In a business venture\nwhich will promise handsome\nreturns. Apply Box 3856, Nelson\nDally News.    \u25a0 '\nWANTED - EXPERIENCED CAT\noperator for bush. Must take\ngood care of equipment. Apply\nColumbia Cedar Ltd., Box 609,\nRevelstoke, B.C., Phone 2718.\nWANTED - RELIEF AND PER-\nmanent carriers for Nelson Daily\nNews, Apjly Circulation Dept\nFREE ESTIMATES ON EXCA-\nvatlng and loading. Ph. 476-R-l\nor 1388-L-4.\nHELP WANTED \u2014 FEMALE\nWANTED -  WAITRESS   AND\ngrill cooks. Ph. 391 or 1877.\nTEACHERS WANTED\nPRINCIPAL WANTED - AFPLI-\ncations will- be considered for\nthe position of Principal far the\neight-room Kaslo Elementary\nJunior-Senior High School. Apply with full particulars as to\nage, marital standing, B.C. Certification, teaching experience, Inspector's report, etc., to Alt\nWatson, Secretary Treasurer,\nKaslo, B.C.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nALL CARPENTER WORK. CON-\ncrete and cement floors, sanding,\nfloor laying, gyproc, joint filling,\nchimneys and fireplaces. Guaranteed, free estimate. Ph. 1364-R.\nTRUCK AND TRAILER AVAIL-\ntble for pole hauling. Phone\n476-R-l or write Box 382, Nelson,\nGARDENS PLOWED\u2014REASON-\nable. Ph. 1968-R, J. McGovern,\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nNELSON READY-\nMIX CONCRETE\nLtd.\nPhone 871\nDEALERS IN ALL TYPES Of\nused equipment, mill, mine and\nlogging supplies, new and used\nwire rope, pipe and fittings;\nchain, steel plate and shapes.\nAtlas Iron & Metals Ltd., 250\nPrior St, Vancouver, B.C., Pa.\nPAcifio 6357.\nRAPID GROW, THE ORIGINAL\nspray on plant food. 1 lb. does\nis much as 100 lbs. of regular\nfertilizer. Good for everything\nthat grows. Columbia Trading,\n902 Front Street\nELecWM, TA8LE t66Kfeft\nwith oven. New; used 3 months.\n48\"  spring  mattress.  New  six\n\u25a0 months sgo. What offers? 311\nVernon St., upstairs.\nUNUSUAL LINO BARGAIN -\nFrom Scotland, V.\" thickness Inlaid marble tiles at 10% cents:\nV.\" at MVt cents; \"La Salle' 945\nGranville. Vancouver, B.C.\nFOR SALE - QUAKER OIL\nheater, coal and wood stove,\nbaby buggy and oil pump. Call\n216-D Vernon or Phone 581-X.\nFOR QUICK SALE-AUDIOTONE\nhearing aid, practically new at\nVi price. Contact 313 Latimer St\u201e\nPhone 1429-R.\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nTenders are called for the demolition of the church hall of\nthe Presbyterian Church, corner\nof Kootenay and Victoria Streets.\nDemolition to commence not earlier than June 1st and to be completed by June 30th.\n\/Tenders to be submitted in writing to J. Selley, 302 Sixth St..\nNelson.\nI will not be responsible for any\ndebts incurred in my name by\nmy wife, Mary Olisoff.\nRENTALS\nNEW, LOVELY APT. IN MY\nresidence, 3 min. walk from Nelson Ferry. Phone 940-X morning or evening. Con Cummins.\nONE FURNISHED ROOM, IN-\ncludes garage. Apply James Ge-\nnero, 600 block, Munro St,\nRosemont\nFURNISHED OR SEMI-FURN.\nmodern 2-bedroom apartment. \u2014\nCan be seen at 731 Baker, St.\nSunday, Monday and Tuesday.\nFOR RENT\u20143-ROOM APT. WITH\nelectric stove, close in. Call Shirley at 1495.\nHOUSEKEEPING OR SLEEPING\nrooms, furnished, weekly or\nmonthly rates, 171 Baker St.\n3-ROOM HEATED, FURNISHED\nsuite with electric range, fridge,\nwashing machine, etc. Ph. 1968-R\n3-ROOM COTTAGE AT 4-MILE;\ncheap. Phone 782-X-l.\n2-ROOM SUITES FOR KENT\n614 Victoria St.\nROOM   FOR   RENT,\ntown. Phone 934-R.\nDOWN\nS-ROOM FURNISHED SUITE\ngarage, close in. Phone 653-R.\nHOUSEKEEPING   ROOM   FOR\nrent. 606, Front Street.\nONE ROOM FOB RENT\u2014620 VIC\ntoria St. Ph. 450-Y after 5:30 p.m.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETP., FOR SALE\n5-ROOM HOUSE - BATHROOM,\nfull basement, phone, power.\nSchool bus. 80 acres, 25 cleared,\noutbuildings, 4 miles Nakusp.\nPrice $7000, $2300 down. Box 175,\nNakusp.    .\t\n2-BiSDROOM BUNGALOW, r'UL-\nly modern, less than year old.\nOil furnace. Lovely view. Near\nnew hospital site. Phone 808-X.\nHOUSE, COTTAGE AND CABIN\nat Balfour, no reasonable cash\noffer refused, termd if desired\nV- Hoskin, R.R. 1, Nelson.\nFOR SALE - 3-ROOM HOUSE,\nwith new electric stoye and oil\nfurnace. Phone 1016.,\nBUILDING LOT ON NORTH\nShore overlooking lake and city.\nPhone 692-R-l.\n15 ACRES OF LAND FOR SALE.\nNew house, young fruit trees. Ap-\nply Nick Kabatoff, Thrums.\nSALE OR TRADE ON SUITABLE\ncity property, 5 acres land, tractor, machinery, some stock. Hot\nand cold water bathroom. W. W,\nCorn, Appledale.\nFOR SALE - UNFINISHED\nhouse on 3 acres of'land between Kinnaird and Castlegar.\nWrite Box 176, Castlegar.\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\nCadillac';   -\u2022\n5 new Oldsmobile Sedans and\nHardtops\n3 new Chevrolet Station\nWagons \\\n3 new Chevrolet Sedans and\nHardtops\n'56 Chevrolet Station Wagon\n1954 Chevrolet Sedan\n1954 Austin Sedan $575\nLicence 261-693\n1954 Mercury Sedan $2200\nLicence 296-069\n1953 Mercury Sedan $1900\nNew motor. Lie, 261-711\n1952 Plymouth Sedan $600\nLicence 298-669\n195? Austin Sedan $475\nMotors Ltd.\n323 Vernon St.  Nelson, B. C.\nPhones 35 and 36\nProfit-Taking Strikes\nCanada Stock Markets\nCOTTONWOOD WRECKING\nService \u2014 Used parts, batteries,\ntires for '47 Olds. '47 Chev and\n'49 Meteor and Mercury, and '37\nFord and '46 Plymouth, '47-49-\n' 50-51 Austin, Hillman, Prefect,\nVanguard, Morris Minor cars.\nFor sale, '48 Desoto, licensed; '61\nFord; '48 Chev sedan delivery.\nPhone 1363-L-2 or write Box\n382, 24 Ymir Road, Nelson.\nBy RON ANDREWS\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nCanadian stock markets were\nhit by profit-taking last week and\nthe four-week advance ended as\nprices eased in light trading.\nAll sections felt the pinch of\nselling for profits which had built\nup during the previous month. On\nthe Toronto, Stock Exchange,\nwhich was open for only four\ndays, industrials led the decline.\nObservers said the setback was\na natural reaction. They said in\nalmost all instances of an extended rise, prices untlmately\nsettle down in the midst of the\nclimb while short-term Investors\ncleaned up on the higher prices.\nWhile New York and Montreal\nrecorded moderate rallies Monday, the Toronto traders were enjoying an extended Easter holiday. Activity on the TSE Tuesday,\nhowever, made up for the one-day\nloss of action and one of the heaviest turnovers of the year was\nrecorded.\nTRADING SLOWED\nDuring the following three days-\ntrading slowed down completely\nas the Middle East crisis heightened and investors scurried to the\nsidelines. .\nWestern oils took a sharp decline Thursday after reports that\nPresident Eisenhower had suggested that United States' imports\nof foreign oil be reduced.\nThe full ijppact of profit-takin\nwasn't felt until Friday, when a''\nsections took sharp losses.\nDespite the loss- on the industrial index for the week, the section reached a 1957 high at noor\nThursday. The advance was\nwiped out, however, in the sellinr\nspree Friday.\nSteels were relatively stronger\nled by Algoma, although it\nshowed title change following a\nsharp loss Friday by Page:Her-\nsey tubes and Aluminium. Utilities were actively traded but banks\nand manufacturing issues were\nquiet and easier.\nMINES DRAGGED\nThe mining list had little noteworthy news to offer, dragging it-\nSelf through, one of the most listless periods in weeks,   .\nThe trading pace at Toronto\nwas one of the slowest of the\nyear, sdespite the heavy turnover\nTuesday. Sales for the week totalled 23,616,000 shares compared\nwith 25,805,000 the previous week,\nwhich also had only four sessions.\nIndex changes at Toronto: industrials off 3.03 to 467.18; golds\noff .03 to 79.76; base metals off\n2.11 to 213.24; western oils off 2.4,7\nto 174.68.\nIndex changes at Montreal:\nbanks off 0.20 to 52.15; utilities\noff 0.5 to 147.14; industrials up\n1.6 to 289.6:  combined up 0.9 to\nBRITISH SOCCER\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Results of\nsoccer matches in the United Kingdom Saturday:\nENGLISH LEAGUE\nDivision I , ,\nAston Villa 1, Luton 3.\nBirmingham 3, Man City 3.\nBolton 1, Evcrton 1.\nCardiff 2, Man United 3.\nPortsmouth 0, West Brom'l.\nPreston 1, Chelsea 0.\nTottenham 2, Blackpool 1.\nDivision H\nBristol C 3, Swansea 1. '.\nLey ton Or 2, Notts C 2.\nLincoln 4, Barnsley 1.\nLiverpool-1, West Ham 0.\nPort, Vale U 0, Nott F, 4.\nDivision III, Southern\nAldershot 0, Coventry 1.\nBournemouth 4, Northampton 1.\nBrentford. 1, Norwich 1. .\nBrighton 8, Reading 3.\nGillingham 1, Newport 1.\nIpswich 3, Southend 3.\nMillwall 2, Plymouth 2.\nShrewsbury 1, Exeter 2.\nSwindon 4, Colchester 1.\nTorquay 3, Queen's PRO.\nWalsall 1, Crystal P 2.\nWatford 4, Southampton 2.\nDivision HI, Northern\nBradford 0, Hartlepools 2'.\nCrewe Alex 6, Mansfield 4.\nDarlington 3, Bradford _C 2.\nDerby 2, Southport 0.\nGateshead 4, Chester 1. ',\nHalifax 4, Tranmere 0.\nHull City 0, Carlisle 0.\nRochdale 1, York City 0.\nScunthorpe 0,, Oldham 0.\nWorkington 4, Accrington 1.\nWrexham 1, Chesterfield 3.\nOther Matches\nGrimsby T 1, Sheffield W 1.\nFulham 6, Blauweiss (Germany)\n9. .\nSCOTTISH LEAGUE\nDivision I\nAirdrieonians 3, Dunfermline 1.\nCeltic 2, Hibernians 1.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, APRIL 29, 1957\u201411\nYour Individual\nHOROSCOPE\n\u2022By FraaatM Drake-\n242,:2; papers off 5.81 to 1305.32;\ngolds up 3.4 to 80.76.\nWeek's volumes: 324,150 Indus\ntrials and 2,885,126 mines compared with 310,655 industrials and\n2,294,907 mines the previous week.\nOf 421 issues traded, 146 advanced,\n140 declined and 135 were unchanged.    '     \u2022\nLook in the section in which\nyour birthday comes and find\nwhat your outlook is, according\ntp the stars,\n. For Tuesday, April 30, 1957\n\u25a0MARCH 21 to APRIL 20 (Aries)\n\u2014Jupiter, Venus and other planetary aspects should inspire you\nto put, forth new efforts to, gain\nall the good possible today. Finances, business, work matters\nespecially favored.\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus)\n\u2014Your Venus, Mercuty and the\nMoon augur for real achievement\nin your special intests, personal\nand otherwise. You may attain\nthrough friendships, those who\nadmire youf capability.\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini)\n\u2014 Many stimulating influences,\nBut dftn't be reckless or take\nthings for granted. You will do\nbest by plaiyiing before acting.\nAlso be conservative in order to\navoid errors.\nJUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer)\nYou thrive under inspiration and\non the enthusiasm and encouragement of your family associates.\nYou will have all these aids today,\nso if you keep your mind on your\ngoals you will do well.\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leo)\n\u2014Some restrictions now, but they\ncan be helpful inasmuch as they\nforce you to keep in line. Hard\ntasks, all useful work can produce gains.      \u25a0\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER 23\n(Virgo) \u2014 You have much for\nwhich to be grateful this encouraging day. Strongly favorable aspects stimulate matters needing\na keen mentality. Jtt's your day\nfor study, research, writing, science, etc.\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER\n23 (Libra) \u2014 Your specific work\nand personal affairs can be helped\ngreatly by employees, associates,\nadmirers.  Work for this.    Show\nyour innate artistry, skill, intelli-.\ngence and tact.\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER^'\n22 (Scorpio) \u2014 Forcefulness won't.,,\nbe necessary but sensible caution'\nwill be needed in physical work\nand dangerous pursuits. New business, conferences, writing, journalism among many activities .\nhonored.\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER\n21 (Sagittarius) \u2014 You can handle:\nthis day's obligations well, and,\nwith top-flight results, too. But do-\nnot be overbearing; win co-op^\neration with your graciousness^\nSome grand infuences!\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY 20\".\n(Capricorn) \u2014 Your biggest rewards will most likely come from\na willingness to work hard and\nyour ambition to succeed honorably. Endorse only that which is\ngood, helpful.       \u2022 \u2022\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY 19;\n(Aquarius) \u2014 Planetary influent\nces suggest steadiness, purpose-'\nful action and intent. You can gar*\nner benefits and monetary ^re-\nturns if you put forth your test;\nefforts. Don't renege on details.\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\n(Pisces) \u2014 Heed notations to Capricorn today. Many strong;\nfriendly aspects. Be sure to take\nadvantage of available opportune\nities. Be progressive and you will\nbenefit. , .\nYOU BORN TODAY are en-,\ndowed with strength and power-\nMental, physical ana) spiritual; are\nusually faithful to a trust, very\ncapable in a broad, general way,\nand your knowledge and sincerity are deep. .\nWINDSOR, Ont. (Cf>) - Mrs;\nMathilda Roy had one of the larg-,\nest birthday parties ever seep\nhere. Celebrating with her on her\n84th birthday were her 11 children, 53 grandchildren and 72\ngreat-grandchildren. . ',\nFOR SALE - MODEL A, GOOD\ntires, good, running condition.\nPhone 1782-L.\nMOTORCYCLE    FOR    SALE \u2014\nAlex Soukoroff. Mountain Stn.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nONE YOUNG MILKING GOAT-\nApply G. Savlnkoff, Taghum,\nB.C. : .\nCOW FOR SALE - RECENTLY\nfreshened, Alex Koorbatoff,\nGlade. B.C,\nFOR SALE - 1 YOUNG COW, 1ST\ncalf; 1 cow, third calf. Apply Box\n446, New Denver.\nLOGU1NG iiOriSji i'OR SALE -\nPete Konkin, Slocan City.\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\n16 H.P. JOHNSON 1950 MODEL\ngood condition, snap for cash.\nAlso Electrolux vacuum. Phone\n727-Y, evenings\nUsed 3-piece chesterfield\nsuite.   Apply   S.   F.   Marshall,\nCorra Linn.\nFOR SALE - CONVERTED\nCycles complete oil furnace.\nPhone 1647-R.\n12 GAUGE REMINGTON PUMP,\n' new condition. Phone 516-L after 5.\nFOR SALE \u2014 9 CU. FT. SERVAL\nKerosene Fridge in good condition. R. Avis, Appledale.\nHEALTH FOOD CENTRE, OPEN\nday and evening. 924 Davies.\nFULLER\" BRUSH AGENT-GER-\nry Kohnke, Phone 782-L-3.\n2fol0im lathi \u00a3fat\u00bb0\nCirculation Dept Phone 1844\nPrice per single copy 6c Monday\nto Friday. 10c on Saturday\nSubscription Rates\nBy carrier per weeic   .\nin advance S5e\nBy Mall in Canada outside Nelson:\nOne month       $ 1-25\nThree months $ 3.50\nSix months $ 6.S0\nOne year    ...    $12.00\nBy mall to United Kingdom or\nthe United States\nOne month           $ 1.78\nThree months $ 5.60\nSix months    $ 9.50\nOne year      _     $18.00\nWhere extra postage is required\nabove rates plus postage\nFor Delivery by carrier In Cranbrook pljone Mrs. Wm. Stevely;\n2 CITY LOTS UPHILL DISTRICT.\n' Any reasonable offer considered.\nPhone 767-Y.\nLOTS FOR SALE ON HOUSTON\nSt Hi blocks from bus. Phone\n1571-X.\nBOATS AND ENGINES\nONLY $400 \u2014 20x8 OUTBOARD\ncabin cruiser, 2 yrs. old, equipped with lights, marine toilet,\ngas- stove, radio. For sale or\ntrade for car. Phone Frank, Mel\nBuerge Motors, or 1919-L between 6 and 8 p.m.\nNEW 1957 JOHNSON ELECTRIC\nMotors on display, the demand\nis big, choose yours now. Coleman Electric, Phone 2055, Nel-\nson, B.C. Big trades, easy terms.\nFOE SALE - CABIN CRUISER,\n17'6\" long, 6'4\" beam. Will take\n25 h.p. or better, good family\nboat. Phone 1622-L after 5,\nSCOTT ATWATER OUTBOARD\nmotors, 3 to 40 h.p. at Mac's\nWelding and Equipment Co., 614\nRailway Street, Nelson, B.C.\nfOA SALB-iS' WLTtm S6aT\nwith trailer and boathouse. $225.\nPhone 307-Y after 8 p,ni.\t\nWILL SELL OR TRADE - 21'\ncabin cruiser for good used car\nor terms. Phone 1409-L.\nROOM AND BOARD\nWANTED - ROOM AND BOARD\nfor 2 young business men, central. Apply Box 3866, Nelson\nDaily News.\nWANTED - ROOM AND BOARD\nby young working ipan. Phone\nRoom 9, Royal Hotel after 7.\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILY\nClassified Adt Get Results\nWANTED TO BUY\u2014A MANURE\nspreader in good condition. Apply Box 17, Trail, B.C.\nWANTED - CLEAN COTTON\nrags without buttons 10c lb\ndelivered to The Dally News\nWANTED   TO   RENT\nENGLISH FAMILY WOULD\nlike 2 B.R. house to r\u00abnt, with\ngarden,. in or around Nelson.\nPhone 716-R.\t\n2-BEDROOM SUITE OR HOU^E\nurgently needed. Phone 1828.\nHOTELS and MOTELS\nHAVE BREAKFAST ON US--\nwith the money you save at low\nsummer rates. Canadian money\naccepted. Exchange rate. Colonial Hotel, Spokane. Wash.\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST-BUDGIE BIRD IN VICIN-\nity of 301 Sixth Street. Reward.\nPhone 1208-X or 927.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nA88AYER8  AND  MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\n,E. W  WIDDOWSON & CO.\nAssayers, 301 Josephine St., Nelson\nES   ELMES,  ROSSLAND.  BC\nAssayer Chemist Mine Rep\nENGINEERS   AND   SURVEYORS\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, M EIC\nBCLand Surveyor. P Eng (Civil)\n218 Gore St    Nelson,   Phone 1238\nG. W.  BAERG, B.C.\nLand Surveyor\n373 Baker St.. Nelson. Phone 1118\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETT'S\u201eLIMITBD\nM a c n i n e Shop Acetylene and\nelectric welding, m o tor rewinding. Phone 593      324 Vernon St\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nFOR SALE\u2014HILLTOP COFFE\"\nshop, beside gov't view point.\ntop of Taghum Hill. Price: $11.-\n500.'Phone 1387-R or write Box\n291.\nMACHINERY\nFOR SALE \u2014 COMPLETE SAW\nmill with diesel power unit. Ph\n8495, Robson.\nPERSONAL\nALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS -\nFridays. Box 493, phone 366-R\nor 483-R.\nCLASSIFIED    DISPLAY\nUdh+ Touch\nr    IN PRICE\nnew: Mcculloch\nirect-drive\nD-44\nOur Way of Life\nIS BUILT ON PRINTING\nTake a good look at the McCulloch\nD-44...test it for balance, see\nbow easily it cuts, how little it\nweighs. Then, check the price of\nthis tough, speedy little saw and\nyou'll agree it's a real buy I\nOnly $285.00 (18 inch Bar)\nEasily'Outperforms All Other\nDirect-Drive Sawsl\nSee\nH. 'Fritz Farenholl.\nC, Ross or\nAlex McDonald\nWELDING & EQUIPMENT\nCO. LTD\n614 Railway St      Nelson. B.C\n.PHONE 1402\nThe Printed Word Enlightens, Entertains\nand Educates\n*\nIt Promotes New Products, Services and\nIdeas\nSmall Wonder That We the Canadian\n'      People Live so Well\n.'\u25a0\"\u25a0; 'v'\u25a0\";,\u25a0\nSave Money $$ $  Read the Classified\nColumns as Well as the Display\nAdvertisements of Your Local Stores\nin\nthe\nNELSON DAILY\n 12\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, APRIL 29, 1957\nYardley\n< \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u2022\nShower Set\nfor men.\nContains . . .\n1   After\nShower Powder\nPLUS'\n1 Trial Size\nShower\nShampoo\nBoth for only\n$1.25\nMan '. . .It's Good!\nMANN\nDRUGS\nLTD.\nFIVE CHARGED\nWITH ASSAULT\nBURNABY (CP) - Five youths\ncharged with roughing up a driver\nand stunning his girl friend with\na beer bottle Friday night have\nBeen remanded until May 3 on\ncharges ot assault and wilful damage to property.\n\u25a0 Bail of $1000 each was set for\nthe five in police court Saturday.\nNo plea was taken.\nI Alfred Howe told police two cars\ndrove up beside his parked vehicle and a beer bottle was hurled\nthrough the back window. When\nHowe, who is six foot three and\nweighs 225 pounds, got out to protest, he said he was pushed around.\non IHE\nPLAYMOR\nWed., May 1st\nPresenting the\nTremendously Popular\nKING\nPERRY\nAnd His Great\nRecording Orchestra\nONE  NITE ONLY\nMystery of Dongo\nTreasure Unsolved\nPADUA, Italy (Reuters) - The\nmystery, of a fabulous treasure\nwhich Benito Mussolini tried to\nsmuggle out of Italy onthe day he\ndied ,,in 1945 will come before a\ncourt here Monday after 12 years\nof investigations:\nThe treasure was seized from\nthe Fascist dictator and his mis.-'\ntress near Dongo, on the shores\nof Lake Como, in April, 1945, as\nhe attempted* to flee to Switzerland.\nWhat happened to it is unknown.\nThirty - five persons will stand\ntrial, three iji absentia, on charges\nranging from murder to theft in\nconnection with the treasure's disappearance.\nFLED TO EAST\nThe most important defendant\nis Dante Gorreri, wartime partisan leader and post-war Communist member of the Chamber\nof Deputies. His parliamentary\nimmunity was lifted in 1955 to allow his committal for trial. But\nhe left Italy for an East European destination and will be tried\nin absentia..\nThe Dongo treasure, variously\nvalued between 3,000,000,000 and\n11,000,000,000 lire ($4,830,000 and\n$17,710,000), included cases of gold\ningots, gold coins, jewelry, furs,\nforeign currencies and two priceless crowns seized from the emperor of Ethopia, Haile Selassie;\nat the time of the Ethopian conquest.\nMussolini made his ill - fated\nflight from Milan with his mistress, Claretta Petacci, and 50 diehard Fascists, on April 26, 1945,\nafter the breakdown of surrender\nnegotiations with the partisans.\nAt Dongo, the column was stopped by partisons, who captured\nMussolini. Partisans said that in a\nlast attempt to evade capture,\nMussolini pulled a German helmet\nover his eyes, then pretended to\nbe drunk.\nSECRETLY EXECUTED\nMussolini and his mistress were\nsecretly executed as an Allied column, with orders to take him\nalive, hurried to the scene.\nThe treasure vanished. A small\npart, including Selassie's crowns,\nlater were handed over to the\ngovernment.\nThe first murders in the chain\nwere those of Luigi Canal, a partisan leader, and his fiancee, Giu-\nseppina Triussi, who drew up an\nHAIGH\nTRU-ART\nBeauty   Solon\n'  Phone 327\n576 Baker St.\nCAMPBELL,   SHANKLAND\n*&   CO.\nChartered Accountants\nAuditors\n576 Baker St. Phone 235\nTHERE IS A PEACE\nFOR YOU\nIN OUR ELECTION CAMPAIGN\n\u2022 YOUR VOTE For Charles WRIGHT will assure\nthis riding of outstanding representation at\nOttawa.\n\u2022 YOUR VOTE For Charles WRIGHT will be a vote\nfor John DIEFENBAKER.\n \u25a0 Both are men of outstanding ability\nwho will serve you without fear or favour.\n\u2022 YOUR HELP during the campaign is our greatest\nneed.\nYou tan help in one of these jobs ...\n1. COMMITTEE ROOM WORK-Answering telephones, receiving visitors, clerical work, etc.\n2. CHECKING VOTERS' LISTS \u2014 Calling on voters to check\ntheir names and listings.\n3. DRIVING YOUR CAR - Shut-ins and others who find it\ndifficult to get to the polls, must be supplied transportation on election day.\n4. HELPING AT THE POLLS - On election day people to\nrepresent us in each poll and others to get the voters out\nto vote are needed.\nTo those who help, an election campaign is an\ninteresting and exciting experience. If you wish\nto share in it . . .\nPLEASE PHONE OR CALL AT' W .\nProgressive Conservative\nCampaign Headquarters\nNelson-345 Baker St.-Ph. 2117\nTrail -1561 Bay Ave.-Ph. 2820\nELECTION DAY IS JUNE 10...\nACT NOW!\ninventory of everything seized\nfrom the column.\nMore than 300 witnesses are due\nt6 testify before the Padua tribunal. But one Important piece of\nevidence is missing.\nNearly 200 feet of film was shot\nby an amateur cameraman at\nDongo on the mornings of April\n27, 28 and 29 as partisans hurried\nabout with, suitcases of banknotes,\nboxesvof gold and piles of furs.\nThe film presented a record of\nwhat took place. But it, too, has\nvanished.\nOdds...\n\u2122*. Ends\n.., byM. D. B.\nThe staff was certainly, pleased\ntb see 50 many out on Saturday\nand if you all enjoyed the after\nnoon as much as we all did, then\nit was really worthwhile. The\neditorial room still has remnants\nof-its festivities in .the baskets of\nflowers but I think our publisher\nwill have to hold \"at homes\" once\na year if he wants the place to\nlook as tidy again.\n*'' *  \u00bb\nWe really pushed ourselves to\nthe limit to get all our papers\ngathered up before you came and\nwe- are fast getting back to our\ncheerful clutter. So if you don't\nthink it was tidy when you were\nhere, then you just haven't seen\nanything.\n\u2022 \u25a0 \u00bb .-\u2022\nFor myself, I was amazed to\nsee so many interested people.\nEven the children were all eyes\nand ears and seemed to enjoy it,\nSomeone, after a bit of calculation,\nfigured there were about a thousand went through the building. For\nmyself. I have been thinking I\nmissed my calling and should have\nbeen a circus barker-ryou know,\n\"Step right up folks, right this\nway.\" And so forth. It was nice\nto see yon all and I hope we do it\nagain sometime.\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nWe had a lovely banquet in the\nevening at the Memorial Hall. Mr.\nRamsden seemed to feel we deserved it after the months of working under difficult conditions and\nduring his speech we all got the\nimpression that he figured he had\na pretty good staff at that. I\nthink he is right. We do work pretty well as a team and when you\nconsider how *ig a team it is and\nhow many personalities there are\nto cope with, it is even more re\nmarkable.\n\u2022 *  \u00bb\nEveryone on the.staff enjoyed\nshowing you how things work\naround here in order to get your\npaper to you every day. Thank you\nfor coming.\nB I T I N G I NTRODUCTION- Rumo the lioness\ndisplays cub, one of her litter of three, at Copenhagen zoo. To\ndate the lioness has presented the Danish loo with 28 cubs.\nForesees Underwater Pipelines as\nSolution fo Transportation Costs\nVICTORIA (CP) - Underwater\npipelines may become the cheapest method- of transportation for\ncommodities as well as gas and oil\nbetween Vancouver Island and the\nmainland, Labor Minister. Lyle\nWicks suggested here.\n\"The proposed new natural gas\nlink is only the beginning of the\nuse of pipeUnes between here and\nthe mainland,\" he told the annual\nmeeting of the Victoria and Vancouver Island branch of the Cana-1\ndian Manufacturers Association.  .\nHe said it was conceivable that\nagricultural products and possibly\nspecially' packaged manufactured\narticles could be shoved beneath\nthe water from one shore to the\nother under the similar tremendous pressure that forces gas\nthrough a pipe. - '   - -\n\"Such a low cost method of\ntransportation' would accomplish\nmuch in bolstering the economy of\na long overlooked section (Vancou\nver Island) of our province,\" he\nsaid.\nArcher in to Stay\nVANCOUVER (CP)-George\nArcher will stay on indefinitely as\nchief constable of the Vancouver\npolice force. Chief Archer was hired originally for a two-year term]\nwhich would have ended this year.\nA statement from police headquarters today said Chief Archer\nhas agreed to extend his stay until\nreorganization of the force is completed or until a successor is\nready. <   ',\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c line. 40o line black face type; larger type ratei an\nrequest M'nlmum two linn. 10% discount for prompt payment\n\u25a0    Stamp Albums, Stamps.\nHOBBY SHOP - PHONE 1703\nElectron-Pak Flashlights \u2014 N.\nSamsonoff, Passmore, B.C.\nLA TO CANADIAN LEGION\nGeneral meeting tonight.\nRotary Luncheon, Monday 12:15\np.m. Hume Hotel.\nScott' Atwater outboards with\nexclusive bailamatic at Mac's\nWelding and Equipment, Nelson.\nMine wedges and loading sticks.\nT. H. WATERS & CO. LTD.\n101 Hall St.   Nelson   Phone 156\nSEE BUTTERFIELD\nJEWELLERS WINDOW. GIFT\nSUGGESTIONS AT $5.00.\nPhone 263\nSNAPPY SERVICE\nFour your hauling needs.\nFor meals that are different, try\nTHE BALFOUR BEACH INN\nDining Room. Phone .18.\nHerbs \u2014 Vitamins \u2014 Minerals.\nHealth Digest on Request. Nature's\nSupplies, 1007 Park St., ph. 1225-X.\nUsed chesterfields and davenports,\n$25.00 and up.   :\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nCANCELLATION\nFirst Baptist Church coffee party\nand bake- sale May 1.     \u2022\nFor Rent: Two-rm. furn. apart.,\nbath and gas. 107 Chatham. Phone\nI084-R, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.\nFOR YOUR NEW HAIR STYLING\nand  permanents,  try the Charm\nBeauty Salon, Medical Arts Bldg.,\nSte. 211, Phone 1822.\nApple, Peach, Apricot, Plum and\nCherry Trees, $2.00 each at\nCOVENTRY'S  FLOWER  SHOP\nPHONE 962    ,\nSTORE YOUR FURS\nat Custom Furs, 580 Baker,\nClearance of All Electric Ranges.\nWE PAY TOP PRICES FOR\nUSED   FURNITURE\nHPME FURNITURE\nEXCHANGE,  PH.  1560    \u25a0\nBelgian Afshar Rugs now on display, $5.95 and up.\nWE PAY CASH FOR USED\nFURNITURE\nBIRCH'S FURNITURE \u2014 PH. 47\nCARD OF THANKS\nThe family of the late Mr. George\nHurry wish to thank Dr. Shaw and\nthe night nurses of Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital for their care and\nattention to Mr. Hurry, and to our\nmany friends for their kind words\nof sympathy and floral tributes,\nMr. and Mrs. A. H. Wilson\nIN MEMORIAM\nIn loving memory of our father,\nand grandfather, W. J. Blewett,\nwho passed away April 25, 1953.\nDays of sadness still come o'er us,\nTears in silence often flow;\nMemory keeps you ever near us,\nThough you died four years ago.\nAt Home on the beautiful hills of\n. God,\nIn the valley of rest so fair,\nSometime, somewhere, when our\nwork is done,\nWith joy we shall meet him there.\nEver remembered by Annie and\nHarvey Martin and family.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nSANDERSON\u2014Funeral, services\nfor the late Mrs. Ethel Jane Sanderson will be held Tuesday at 2\np.m. in Carberry's Funeral Chapel.\nRev. James Young will officiate,\nCremation.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nASKEW \u2014 Funeral services for\nthe late Le'slie Everton Askew will\nbe held Tuesday, April 30, at 1 p.m.\nfrom Clark's Funeral Chapel,\nTrail. Rev. Dave Stone of E a s t\nTrail United Church will officiate.\nInterment in family section, Park\nMemorial Cemetery, Kinnaird.\n\"The potential has hardly been\nscratched as yet,\" he said, taking\nfor example \"the fact that for\nevery horsepower of hydro resources used today there is a 10 horsepower potential still to be, tapped;\"\nIndustrial product df the province has jumjed'$720,000;000 in'the\npast seven years, primary because\nof the development' of secondary\nindustry, he said.\n\"By 1975, it is predicted the total will reach $1,900,000,000,\" the\nminister said.\nRetiring chairman of the CMA\nbranch, C. L. Ramsay, reported to\nthe group that the general industrial picture looked \"encouraging\"\nfor 1957 despite restricted credits\nand rising costs.\nK.Y  Integration Plan\nStarts School Friction\nBy GEORGE CORNELL\nNEW YORK (AP) - Tension is I\nrunning high in some quarters\nabout a broad-scale program to\nspur the mingling of races in New\nYork City's mammoth public\nschool-system.\nSome parents and civic groups\nare raising fiery protests. Others\nare fervently defending the plan.\nOfficials are on the jump explaining, mollifying and assuring that\nthere's nothing to be alarmed\nabout.-'\n\"The movement has stirred extremists oh both sides,\" said Dr.\nWilliam Jansen, superintendent of\nschools. \"People have to see their\nway clear between the extremists.\"\nThe friction arose over a program drawn up by a civic committee and adopted by the board\nof education recently to bet more\n\"racial balance\" in schools. The\nprogram calls for rezoning, \"se\nloctive use of bus transportation'\nand locating new buildings in\n\"fringe\" areas.\nTRANSPORTATION SNAG\nOpponents claim this implies\nwholesale movement of children,\nNegroes 'to white areas and whites\nto Negro areas. Officials say no\nsuch thing is contemplated.\nOnly elementary school children living beyond maximum distances from their schools, get bus\ntransportation. About 50,000 now\nride school buses. Junior and sen\nior high schools pupils walk or use\npublic transit \u2014 any distance.\nThe school administration's view\nis that children, white or Negro,\nsuffer drawbacks in schools of a\nsingle complexion, that they have\nno chance to get to understand\nother races, and are less adjusted\nto the real world.\nMost of the opposition to the\nschool integration program has\ncome from the borough of Queens,\nwith it shigh proportion of individual home owners. Queens also is\na bastion of the city's' upper middle class, about 88 per cent white.\nLOSES APPEAL\nVANCOUVER (CP) - A burglar\nwho was accidentally shot in the\nhead when he attacked an armed\npoliceman with a hammer, has lost\nan appeal from his sevemyear sentence. \"\nJames Maynard Smith was found\nhiding at the Martin-Senour Company after it had been broken into\nlast month. Trapped by the policeman, he swung a hammer which\nhit the officer's gun. Smith received a head wound. \u201e\u2022\nMagistrate Oscar Orf sentenced\nSmith to seven years and a companion, Alexander Edmond Bone,\nto five years. They pleaded guilty,\nThe court of appeal has upheld\nboth sentences.\nPravda Charges\n\"Conspiracy\"\nMOSCOW (AP) - Pravda\ncharged Sunday that the Jordan\ncrisis is part of an American \"conspiracy\" and said the U.S. 6th\nFleet's move to the eastern Mediterranean .has brought \"threats of\nwar over the Mideast again.\"\nThe Communist party p a p e r's\nlong-delayed'first editorial reaction to the Jordan situation contains standard Soviet charges and\nrecriminations against the United\nStates but no thereats or ultimatums.\nThe closest it comes to a warning is the statement that \"peace-\nloving peoples are vitally interested in the maintenance of peace\nin the Mideast and the rest of the\nworld and oppose this planned aggression as vigorously as they opposed the attack on Egypt.\"\nPravda said:\n\"Now everyone can see what\nthe Eisenhower doctrine means in\naction.\"\nT\nSHIRTS\nfor  Relaxing\nComfort\nRelax in one of theso\nT-Shirts    made   with\neollan or round-neck\n\u2022tyle.\n\u2022 Terry Cloth\n\u2022 Interlock Stitch\n\u2022 Cool Rayons\nV\nAlso in plain ;white With\nthe non-sag neckband.\nCMORY'C\nL   Limited J\n\"THE MAN'S STORE\"\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILY\nClassified Adt Get Result*\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED and REPAIRED\nRE-CORING\nJim's Radiator Shop\n516 Front St. Phone 63\nATTRACTIVE CAREER\nLONDON (CP) - About 20,000\ngirls- started training as nurses or\nassistant nurses in 1956,' Health\nMinister Dennis Vosper announced.\nIn the same year about 8000 nurses\nretired.\nHave The Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVEC\n\u00bb        LIMITED        **\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\n\"\"' VISUAL \/TRAINING\nSuite 206        Phone 141\nMedical Arts Building\n'   S. S. MOYIE\nPhotos in1\nCUPS and SAUCERS\nPEPPERS and SALTS\nSUGARS and CREAMS\nat\nYour Rexall Pharmacy\nCity Drug\nBox 460\nPhone 84\n8\nautomatic car care\naf no extra cost\n\u2022 iCARGHECKSERVIGE\nthere's no doubt about it\u2014\nCar-Check remembers automatically\nt\nwhen to have tires rotated,\nbattery checked, chassis lubricated\n...and other services done\nwhen they're due.\nDrive in for yours today!\nWHAT CAR-CHECK IS\n-Using 8 punch-type card,\nthis system keeps tab on\nalt your car's regular service\nneeds by mileage records.\nThis shows when each fob\nIs done\u2014and when it's due\nagain, by manufacturers'\nrecommendations.\nhow it Works\nYour Imperial Esso dealer\nInspects your Car-Check\ncard when you drive In.\nAfter carrying out your Instructions on any services\nneeded he records the completed work opposite your\npresent mileage.\nHOW TO GET IT\nJiist drive In where you\nsee this sign and ask\nus to install Esse Car-\nCheck for you. There'i\nno charge. Take advantage of this automatic way to proper\ncar care.\nr        IMPERIAL\n\u00a3sso\nDEALER\nALWAYS LOOK TO IMPERIAL FOR THE BEST\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_1957_04_29","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\/1.0430133","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":"1957-04-29 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":"1957-04-29 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"Nelson Daily News","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}