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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":" SATURDAY EDITION\nwith COMICS --lOc\nVol. 55\n$$-a>\\\n1 KJ$*aJ\n0tt1\nWEATHER   FORECAST\nKootenay: Cloudy with a few sunny periods. Widely scattered showers during afternoon. Little change\nin temperature. Winds light. Low-\nhigh at Cranbrook and Crescent\nValley 32 and 55.\nOutlook for Sunday: Cloudy.\nlib\nNELSON, B. C, CANADA\u2014SATURDAY MORNING, APRIL 5, 1958\nNot More Than 6c Daily, 10c Saturday\nNo. 292\n\"Lo, I Am Wift^STZttS. \/vs...\"\nWAR DECLARED IN CUBA\n6000 Demonstrate\nainst A'Tests\nAg\nLONDON (CP)-A call for an\nend to nuclear test explosions\nboomed Friday from protest\ngroups c a m p a i g ning on the\nstreets and in the courts of law.\nAlmost  6,000  persons   demon-\nCalifornia\nDisaster Area\n' strated against hydrogen warfare\nin London and New York.\nAbout 5,000 strong, the British\ngroup started a four-day march\non Aldermaston, where Britain\nconducts research on the H-bomb\nand other weapons. Monday, in a\nfield near the research laboratories, they plan to adopt the following resolution:\n\"We urge the governments of\nBritain, Russia and America to\nstop testing, manufacture and\nstoring of all nuclear weapons immediately.\"\nIn New York about 500 \"walkers for peace\" converged on the\nUnited  Nations  headquarters  to\nSAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Rain-\nsoaked California, soggy and dripping after weeks of aln.ost incessant storms, faced the prospects of i Dresent  a  netition   TW  ent  a\nmore rain today and of a stormy | Sl^S _,!?5ttR.2\nIn this painting the artist shows Christ blessing his disciples. With his resurrection at Easter, His blessing is extended to all mankind.\nChurches Hold Special\nBy The Canadian Press\nCanada enjoyed fine weather as Christians observed\nthe most solemn of their holy days, Good Friday.\nSpecial services marked the anniversary of ChriBt's\ndeath Friday, with Anglican churches holding three-hour\nLiturgical Rites of Good Friday and Roman Catholics holding Way of the Cross services. Many Protestant groups held\ninterdenominational services.\nJewish families sat down at sunset at the first Seder,\nmarking the beginning of the eight-day Feast of the Passover.\nThe solemnity of Good Friday will switch Sunday to\nthe gaiety and finery of Easter, with flowers, chocolate\nbunnies and new clothes hold-\ning sway.\nSunny and mild weather was reported Friday in all parts of Canada except the western prairies,\nwhere fog and drizzle occurred.\nTemperatures varied from the high\n60s in B. C. to the 40s in the Maritimes. Snow fell in Newfoundland.\nChurch attendance was reported\nhigh but its meaning was questioned at a combined Protestant\nservice in Marpole, a Vancouver\nsuburb. Said Rev. William Car-\nbutt, an Anglican:\n\"Do we not feel that religion\nlacks power in our everyday life?\nThere must be a reason. The outstanding reason is that the Cross\nhas been forgotten. There is little\nor no sacrifice in our everyday\nliving.\"\nIn Pictou, N. S\u201e 3000 lilies flown\nfrom Bermuda are on display at\nthe Presbyterian Church, the gift\nMOSCOW (AP) - Soviet academician Ivan Bardin told Western\nreporters Friday the Soviet\nUnion will launoh its third earth\nsatellite soon.\nof an anonymous former parishioner who has been sending them\neach year for the last four years.\nThe display drew 5000 visitors\nlast year. Anyone may take the\nflowers after Easter Sunday.\nSUNRISE SERVICE\nSome 1000 persons are expected\ntd attend the annual Easter sunrise service in Montreal at the top\nof Mount Royal.\nEaster finery ^ill be displayed\nin parades or informal walks. Vancouver claims to be planning the\nbiggest in Canada. It will be led\nby 40 models from midtown to west\nend Stanley Park. Fashions of the\nlast 100 years will also be shown\nas part of the British Columbia\ncentennial celebrations.\nToronto will promenade on mid\ntown Bloor Street. In Quebec City\nthe paraders will be out on fashionable Grande Allee in Uppertown\nand on the Boardwalk in front of\nthe Chateau Frontenac.\nTransport officials said it was\none of the busiest Easter vacations\non record, with extra cars ordered\nfor all main trains and extra airline\nflights from most centres.\nThree Whooping\nCranes Take\nOff For Canada\nAUSTIN, Tex. (AP) - Three of\n26 whooping cranes have started\nan unusually early flight for their\nsummer home in Canada.     '\nClaude Lard, manager of the Arkansas national refuge near Aust-\nwell, Texas, announced the departure.\nTwenty-six of the cranes wintered\nat the Gulf of Mexico coast refuge.\nFour others are in captivity. They\narc protected by law. Starting the\n2500-mile journey to the Wood Buffalo National Park, straddling the\nAlberta-Northwest Territories border, were two adult whoopers and\na 1957-born whooper, Lard said,\nThe annual northward migration\nbegan April 12 last year.\nEaster.\nCoastal areas were pounded by\ntowering waves Friday Irom tne\nPacific.\nIn the interior valleys creeks\nand rivers vaulted their banks,\nflooding thousands of acres and\ndriving more than 5000 persons\nfrom their homes.\nTwelve persons have died in\nthe storms the last few days.\nDamage to property and to crops\nranges into the millions of dollars.\nPresident Eisenhower Friday designated most of the state a major\ndisaster area, qualifying it for immediate federal emergency relief.\nSan Francisco had 3.96 inches!\nof rain for the first 3% days of\nApril. The normal fall for the\nmonth of April is 1.49 inches.\nIn San Francisco rain has fallen j\n\u2014 generally heavily \u2014 on 55 of the j\nfirst 94 days of the year.\nThe weather bureau said today's\nrain probably will tring the water\nlo \"above danger level\" in the\ndelta area where the Sacramento\nand San Joaquin rivers converge\nto flow into San Francisco bay.\niiiii.iiiiii.iiii.iiiiiiim.imiimiiiiiii.\nFine Time\nTo Be Born\nBROUGHTON G IF F O R D,\nEngland (AP) \u2014 Mermaid the\ncalf got her name the bard way\nhove Thursday\u2014she was born\nunder water.\nHer mother was wallowing\ntrapped in a duck pond at the\ntime, and all farmer Keen's\nhorses and all farmer Keen's\nmen failed to get her out again.\nThe fire brigade had to be\ncalled to lend a hand.\nSuddenly the cow gave a\nspecial low limit. The experienced farmer knew what that\nmeant.\nThey held up her head and\nsoon fireman Webb lifted the\nnewborn calf to dry land.\nIt was another hour before\nthey got out the cow. Now the\nmother and calf\u2014they decided\nto call her mermaid\u2014are doing\nfine.\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nI courteous reception from UN au\nthorities. Many of the marchers\nhad spent five days on .the road,\ncoming from as far away as Connecticut and Pennsylvania.\nA number of scientists, churchmen and other individuals sued\ndefence secretary Neil McElroy\nand the five members of the\nAtomic Energy Commission in an\nextraordinary attempt to place\njudicial restraint on U.S. tests.\nNobody in the American legal\ncommunity gave the suit much\nchance of succeeding. But the\nplaintiffs said they plan similar\nactions in Britain and Russia, the\ntwo other powers that Have been\nsetting off nuclear explosions.\nllllllHIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIi\nSuper Bomb Said\nTested By Russ\nTOKYO (AP)\u2014Two Japanese\nscientists said Thursday the\nSoviet Union exploded a super\nnuclear bomb in a recent series\nof tests in Siberia.\nProfessor Nobufusa Saito and\nYunosuke Hokoyama, both of\nTokyo University, told a Japan\nChemical Association meeting\nthey ^detected natural uranium\n(uranium 238) in rain water\nthat fell over Tokyo in the last\nmonth.\nThey said this showed Rus. ia\nhad test-exploded the so-called\n3-F bomb. The 3-F bomb (fission-fusion-fission) is the usual\nnuclear bomb wrapped in natural uranium, they said.\nIIIIIIIIIIMIIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nCouncil Awards\n44 Fellowships\nOTTAWA (CP) - Fellowships\nand grants have boen awarded to\n44 Canadians to help them tar-\nIher their studies in the arts, the\nCanada Council announced -Friday.\nValue of the awards range from\n$300 to $2,000. They go to teachers, students, painters, actresses,\nactors and musicians.\nAmong those awarded fellowships averaging $2,000 are Harry\nKiyooka, conductor of the Edmonton Symphony and theatrical\nworker Donal Wilson of Vancouver.\nHavana Tensed While\nRebel Move Awaited\nBy LABRY ALLEN\nHAVANA (AP)\u2014Rebel chief Fidel Castro's declared\ntotal war to destroy President Batista began in ominous\nsilence here at 12:01 a.m. today.\nNot a warlike sound was heard in the centre of the\ndeadened city at that .moment.'\nOnly mounting tension and military preparedness\nof government forces were apparent.\nCastro's favorite guerrilla type attack usually comes\njust before dawn. Government forces here and throughout\nCuba were dug in to meet what may come then.\nHe said war would be waged pitilessly against all\narmed forces and persons supporting the president until\nhe was toppled from power.\nU.S. Charges Russ\nDistorting Policy\nWASHINGTON (AP) - The\nUnited States accused Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev Friday of\ndistorting U. S. summit conference\npolicy while standing amid scenes\nof Soviet \"slaughter, and treachery\" in Hungary.\nA state department statement\nchided Khrushchev for demanding\na show of \"goodwill\" on the issue,\nof suspending . nuclear weapons\nVest's. It prodded him fo reply to a\nWestern prpposal for beginning diplomatic talks later this month on\nsummit conference arrangements.\nThe U. S. reaction was voiced by\nLincoln White, state department\npress officer, after Khrushchev ,on\na visit' to Budapest, called on the\nU. S. and Britain to follow the Soviet example and announce suspension of the testing of nuclear weapons.\nKhrushchev said he was prepared to accept. international, supervision of a ban on tests, but White\nsaid that Khrushchev did hot say\nwhat he meant by international\nsupervision.\nOn this issue the Eisenhower administration now is engaged in a\nreview, with a prospect of decisions possibly modifying U. S. policy in two or three weeks. But\nthere is no prospect of any Ameri-\n\"MINISTER OF\nTHOUGHT\" DIES\n\u25a0 LONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Baron\nPercy of Newcastle, known to\nBritons as \"minister of thought,\"\ndied Thursday at the age of 71.\nA Conservative member of\nParliament for 16 years, he\ngained his nickname as a minister without portfolio\u2014with no departmental responsibility \u2014 in\nStanley Baldwin's government,\n1935-36.\nFormerly Lord Eustance\nPercy, he was the seventh son\nof the seventh duke of Northumberland. One of his Christian\nnames was Algernon, a name in\nhis family since 1066 when William de Percy came to Britain\nwith William the Conqueror.\nKhrushchev Asks U.S.\nHalt Nuclear Tests\nBy HENDERSON GALL\nBUDAPEST (Reuters) - Soviet\nPremier Nikita Khrushchev Friday\nappealed directly to the leaders of\nthe United States and Britain to\n\"make mankind happy\" and order\nthe suspension _f nuclear tests.\nKhrushchev said President Eisenhower and Prime Minister Macmillan could \"prove good intentions\" by following Russia's example and end nuclear testing.\nTo Western criticism that the\nSoviet move, announced Monday,\nwas propaganda, the Kremlin chief\nreplied tartly the West should \"conduct the same propaganda.\"\nThe world, he said, greeted with\n\"disappointment and despair\" Eisenhower's negative response to the\nSoviet announcement.\nKhrushchev addressed a mass\nrally during   celebrations   of   the\nSoviet wartime sweep into Hungary\n13 years ago. He spoke from the\nbase of the Stalin statue, demolished during the 1956 anti-Communist\nuprising.\nKhrushchev, who arrived Wed\nnesday at the head of a Soviet delegation, later attended a luncheon\nreception at the Hungarian officers'\nclub.\nThe celebrations coincided with\nGood Friday observances in\ncrowded Budapest churches. But\nreligious street processions of\nformer years were not held.\nAfter a military parade\u2014biggest\nsince the 1956 Hungarian uprising-\nKhrushchev flung down his challenge to the West. He was obviously irked at Eisenhower's statement Wednesday that the Soviet\nnuclear announcement was a propaganda gimmick.\ncan suspension of tests by agreement with other powers until after\nthe Pacific test series is completed\nnext summer.\n$1000 REWARD\nPOSTED IN\nMURDER CASE\n' VANCOUVER (CP) - The Vancouver board of police commissioners has authorized the posting of a $1,000 reward for information leading to the arrest and\nconviction of the person responsible for the murder of 39-year-\nold Evelyn Mary Roache in an\neast end lane Thursday night.\nDeputy police chief Gordon\nAmbrose said the woman died after being stabbed with a knife\nfive times in the back, twice in\nthe left chest and three times in\nthe. neck. He said the weapon,\nnearly an inch wide and tapering to a point, has not been found.\nThe dead woman was the wife\nof Richard W. Roache.\n5 of 11 Highway\nDeaths in Alberta\nBy The Canadian Press\nA rash of highway fatalities in\nAlberta put that province at the\nhead of the accidental death list\nas Canadians started their Easter'\nweekend in generally fine weather.\nOf the 11 deaths in accidents recorded by The Canadian Press up\nto midnight Friday, five occurred\non Alberta highways. The count for\nthe weekend period began at 6\np.m. local time Thursday and ends\nat midnight Sunday.\nQuebec was next on the list with\ntwo traffic deaths and an accidental hanging. Ontario had a drowning, Manitoba a hunting fatality\nand Saskatchewan a single high\nway death.\nBritish Columbia and the four\nAtlantic provinces reported no fa\ntal accidents.\n\"From this instant on, the country is in a state of total war against\nthe tyranny of Batista,\" Castro\ndeclared.\nHe promised \"the war will be\nwaged implacably.\"\nWhen news of his announcement\ncame Havana's streets and nightspots were deserted. Civilians\nstayed behind locked doors in their\nhomes awaiting Castro's first big\nmove.\nAs the first step Castro said that\naction by armed patrols attacking\nthe armed forces and the nation's\ntransport and communications system would be intensified.\nRebel sources in Havana said\nthey awaited Castro's word as to\nwhat action should be taken to\nwin in the capital.\nNO REPORTS\nThere were no immediate reports of any outbreaks in Havana\nor elsewhere in Cuba.\nIgnoring a last-minute offer of\namnesty by President Fuli!enclo\nBatista's government to all rebels who down arms, Castro said\nhis columns already are on the\nmove throughout Oriente province of eastern Cuba.\n\"The fight against Batista has\nentered its final stage,\" the 31-\nyear-old guerrilla leader said in\na statement issued from his hideout in the Sierra Maestra range\nin Oriente province.\nCastro said Tuesday the first\nstage aimed\/at cutting the island's\ncommunications and transportation was beginning. Batista On the\nsame day obtained emergency\npowers from Congress to smash\nthe revolt.\nSince then tension has grown.\nSome workers have left their jobs,\nthe rebels have distributed arms\nto civilians and Batista has mobilized the 38,000 members of Cuba's\narmed forces.\nThe hour set by Castro for total\nrevolt marked the end of an ulti\nmatuin period. He had demanded\nthat Batista resign by Saturday \"to\nsave Cuba from further bloodshed.\"\nAll government employees and\nothers who work for Batista after\nmidnight will be prosecuted as\ntraitors and criminals when\ntista is overthrown, Castro declared.\nThe bearded guerrilla leader,\nwhose forces grew from an Slinan\nnucleus that landed on the coast\nof Oriente province in December,\n1956, did not mention Prime Minister Gonzalo Guell's offer of amnesty to any rebels who would\ngive up their arms.\nGENERAL STRIKE\nCastro said he still plans to call\na general strike. He asserted that\n50,000 young revolutionaries will\npour into city streets on hij signal\nto fight troops and police.\nTwo rebel columns Were spreading destruction around Santiago de\nCuba in Oriente, where Castro has\nwon his greatest support. A 1000-\nman band led by Castro's brother,\nPaul,-was operating northeast of\nSantiago, residents of the area said\nby telephone. The column was expected to turn southwestward te\njoin another band Jed by reb_l\nJuan Almeida.\nGovernment forces apparently\nwere delaying an assault until the\nrebels advanced . into more open\nterritory, away from their mountain strongholds.\nRebels Have 50\nNarked for Death\nHAVANA (AP) _ Cuban rebels\nhave marked, about .50 persons for\ndeath in' Havana, Santiago and\nother cities as informers (chiva-\ntos) for police.\nThe rebel bulletin circulated here\nFriday carried a new list of employees in bars, night clubs and\nother public places and telephone,\noperators in leading, hotels who\nare accused of informing.\nRebels have been publishing\nnames of alleged informers for the\nlast six months. ' '\nThey also have listed as prime\nassassination largest President Batista and 10 political, army and\npolice officials.\nDOLLAR UP\nNEW YORK (CP) - The Canadian dollar was up 1-16 at a premium of 2Vis in terms of U. S.\nfunds Friday. A week ago 2% per\ncent premium. Pound sterling\nwas up 3-32 at $2.81 13-16.\t\nSoviet Tests Ban Would\nCut Radiation Over Canada\nOTTAWA (CP) - The external\naffairs department said Friday that\nCanada \"welcomes\" Russia's announced ban on nuclear tests \"to\nthe.extent that it may result in a\nhalt in the rise of radiation\" over\nCanada,\nHowever, a statement issued by\nthe department, said the rest of\nthe world could not be sure \"in\nthe absence of satisfactory arrangements for international inspection\" that the Russians weie\nnot holding tests.\n\"The Canadian government has\nbeen concerned by the intensity of\nthe nuclear weapons testing program of the Soviet Union during\n-recent weeks,\" the statement said.\nThe Soviet testing program had\n\"led to an observable sharp rise\nin the background radiation in the\nlatitudes in which Canada is situated.\"\n\"The government is disposed to\nregard with favor any Soviet action\nwhich would modify their policy\nof intensifying the rate of testing.\"\nAll Set To Blow Old Rip' Today\nBy H. J. JONES\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nCAMPBELL RIVER, B.C. (CP)\nThis Vancouver Island community of 3,000 steeled itself Friday\nnight for the mighty blast that\nwill tear the heart out of Ripple\nRock. Residents did not know\nquite what to expect from man's\nbiggest non-atomic explosion.\nResidents got word late Friday\nUiat weather should be perfect\nfor the massive blow of 1,375 tons\nof high explosive at 9:31 a.m.\nPST today. The cloud ceiling was\nexpected to be fairly high and the\nwind from the south southeast,\nwith no rain. The tide will be running north at near low slack.\nThese are the conditions engineers want in order to get maximum upward blast effect to blow\nat least 30 feet off the twin peaks\nof the Seymour Narrows rock,\njust nine miles north of here and\nthe worst shipping menace on the\nwest coast.\nMEANT DOLLARS\nActually Campbell River will\nbe sorry to see the end of this\ntwo-year, $3,100,000 job. It has\nmeant much to the community in\ntourist and worker dollars.\nFriday night there was not room\navailable anywhere in the village.\nRestaurants were crowded and\nRipple Rock souvenirs \u2014 little\npieces of the infamous underwater mountain that has wrecked\n20 ships and taken 114 lives since\n1875\u2014were being sold in stores.\nBut after today the curious will\nhave gone and with them their\nmoney. Campbell River will return to relying on its main attraction as a sport fishing resort.\nMost of the curious who\ncrowded the community Friday\nnight, looking at police, air force\nand hydrographic vessels in the\ncrowded harbor and watching\nplanes flying over the site, won't\nbe able to see the blast themselves\u2014except perhaps on television.\nThe RQ.MP early today will invoke a massive ground-sea-air\nblockade to protect the public,\nboats and planes from effects of\nthe explosion.\n50 MOVED\nAbout 50 persons living within a\nthree-mile radius of the rock were\nto be moved out this morning,\nleaving doors and windows of\ntheir homes open. RCMP, RCAF\nand other patrol boats blocked\nboth ends of two-mile-long Seymour Narrows to shipping.\nPlanes are barred from a five-\nmile radius for several hours in\nthe morning.\nSome   residents   looked   anx\niously at the three - dam hydro\nsystem holding back millions of\ngallons of water in the hills behind this community. A major\nbreak in the John Hart dam, six\nmiles behind the village, could\nloose more than 20,000 acre feet\nof water.\nBut B.C. Power Commission officials said Friday night there\nneed be no fear. They expected\nthe shock wave to have practically no effect on the dam, basing their prediction on an engineering report which said the maximum displacement of the blast\nwill be less than one-eighth of\nthe shock the dam structure was\ndesigned to withstand.\nIn addition 3,500 acre feet of\nwater already has been drawn off\nthe dam basin, decreasing the\nwater level by six feet as a precautionary measure.\nBut commission officials admitted there could be a slight interruption in power service to residents in this area. They said the\nblast might trip some of the\nscores of sensitive relays at the\nJohn Hart and Ladore generating stations. If this happens, the\nload will be taken up in quick order by the commission's gas-tur- j\nbine Georgia generating stations\nat Chemainus, 150 miles south.\nOne sure casualty of the big\nblow will be the B.C. Power Commission's 3,277 foot, 13,800 - volt\npower line which passed directly\nover the rock. It was strung\nprimarily to provide power for\nthe tunneling operation by which\na shaft and tunnel was drilled\nfrom Maude Island some 2.000\nfeet out under the narrows and\nup into the peaks of the rock.\nNOW IS THE TIME for all good Easter Bunnies to set about delivering baskets\nof eggs and these Grade one youngsters in Mrs. M. McCosham's room at Central\nSchool are going to make sure the Easter Bunny has plenty of help. Pictured from left\nto right, are Jeannie Kilford, Peter Rabbit, Ricky Lancaster, Patrick Rabbit and\nWendy Hale. Centre iront is Jumping Jack Rabbit.\u2014Daily News phofo.\n1\nI\n 2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, APRIL 5, 1958\nLAST TIMES TODAY \u2014 Shows at 2:00-7:00-9:05\nTODAY\nJERI^ LEWIS\nas: '\nTHE SAD SACK\ni   Jerry's\nA Walking\nBooby Trap I\nStarts Monday \u2014 MATINEE MONDAY AT 2:00 P.M.\n^ROBERT\nM1TCHUM\nCURT\nJURGENS\n%: St\n|  CH.O.. BV DE LUXC\n!_, CINEMASCOPE?\nT\u00ab Enemy\nBEi-OW     Mon\nCIVIC\nA FAMOUS\nPLAVERl\nTHEATRI\nhunk Hall\nI Bowery Boys\nTHE HELL-PIT\nOF AMBUSH\n...lie knew\nevery feat and\nterror!      \"&\u00ab*\nLooking for Danger\n7:00  and  9:30\nDragoon Wells Massacre\n8:10 Only\nSS. mmiweus ,\nI      Liffi- tC-Sfti     m     ClMUUfi-OPE  eoi6tl\u00a5MltlJrl\nELK  DRIVE-IN  THEATRE\nCastlegar,   B.C.\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\nOne Showing 7:30 p.m.        *\n\"TIGHT  SPOT\"\nGinger Rogers and Edward G. Robinson\nPLUS\n\"SEVEN   MEN   FROM   NOW\"   (In   Color)\nRandolph Scott and Gail Russell\nCartoon\nChildren 8 yeari to 12 years \u201e \u201e  20o\nStudents   12  years  and   over   ,  40c\nAdults    I i. 60c\nCASTLE THEATRE\nCASTLEGAR, B.C.\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\n\"HEAVEN KNOWS\nMR. ALLISON\"\n(Cine. - Color)\nDeborah Kerr      Robert Mitchum\n- Plus -\nChampionship Fight\nROBINSON vs. BASIUO\nCustoms, Revenues\nUp at Cranbrook\nCRANBROOK\u2014Customs and inland revenue collected in March\nat the offices at Cranbrook and\nRbosville of the port of Cranbrook\nwere $44,574.85, highest by a considerable margin so far for 1958.\nMarch 31 ended the fiscal year\nduring which collections by the\npbrt of Cranbrook came to $502,805,\nup slightly from Ihe total of (he\nprevious fiscal year.\n.'Keep Your Eye on Classified!\nModern\nPrescription\nService\nPrompt,   Courteous   Service\nWhile You Walt or\nBy Delivery\n.(.(Service Is Our Watchword)\nNelson Pharmacy\n| \"Your Fortress of Health\"\n433 Josephine St.\nPHONE  1203\nAuto-Vue Drive-In\nTRAIL, B.C.\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\n\"ISLAND IN THE SUN\"\n(Cinemascope)\nHarry Belafonte, Joan Fontaine,\nJames Mason\nCARTOONS\nFirst Show Approx. 6:45\nNEW PRESIDENT of Nelson\nCommunity Chest is Fraser Tees,\nabove, elected this week to succeed J. R. Corner. This year's\none-day residential campaign will\nbe held May 15, directors decided. ,\nBuy and Sell With Classified!\nNOTICE\nOut* of Respect for\nThe Late Mr. William Kline\nWe Will Be Closed\nAll Day Saturday, April 5.\nAssociated Enterprises\nLtd.\nEaster services in\nNelson Churches\nThe second annual Easter Floral\nFestival of Praise will be held\nSunday evening in St. Paul's-Trinity\nUnited Church, when more than\n100 voices, the senior, girls' and\nboys' choirs directed by Merlin\nBunt will sing during the service.\nAt 9:45 a.m. a special \"Children's Church\" will be held. At 11\na.m. Rev. E. D. Jones will preach\non \"Fiction and Diction,\" last in\na series on \"Where You 'There\nWhen They Crucified My Lord.\"\nSpecial music will be given Sunday morning at Bethel Tabernacle.\nThe church choir and ' ofchestra\nwill be featured and Sunday School\nclasses will also take part. Special\nspeaker at   night   will   be   Rev.\nWilliam Kline\nDies, Aged (3\nA well-known district resident,\nWilliam Kline, 912 Fourlh Street,\ndied Thursday at his home. He was\n63.\nBorn at Newstead, Ont., in 1894,\nMr. Kline moved with his family\nto Saskatchewan and farmed in\nseveral locations in that province,\nmarrying the former Heima Mae\nParker in 1914 at Melville.\nLater he was employed at Wat-\nrous, Sask., until he came to Nelson in 1924. In 1929 he bought a service station here and in 1941 he\nand Mrs. Kline moved to Slocan\nCity to operate a lunch counter.\nLater this business was sold and\nMr. Kline bought the Outlet hotel\nat Procter which he and Mrs.\nKline managed until their retirement to Balfour.\nA sports enthusiast, Mr. Kline\nwas a well-known hockey player\nin Saskatchewan and at one time\nplayed for Watrous and other centres. Keen on fishing and boating,\nhe also was known in Nelson as a\ntiddler of old-time music.\nMr. Kline is survived by his\nwife, one daughter, Mrs. Berna\nMcKay of Nelson, and one son,\nRay, of Salmo; three grandchildren; three brothers, Chris of Nakusp, Charles of Calgary, Elmer\nof Nelson; five sisters, Mrs. Dora\nRiley and Mrs. J. J. McEwen of\nNelson, Mrs. George Merrill of\nBurnaby, Mrs. J. Rickard of Regina and Mrs. Reg. Ward of Aber-\nnalhy. He was predeceased by one\nbrother, John, and two sisters, Mrs.\nKate Krugg and Mrs. George\nRiley.\nGEORGE CRAIG\nHOTEL ZONE\nREPRESENTATIVE\nGeorge Craig, Queen's Hotel proprietor, has been elected zone representative of the British Columbia\nHotel Association. The election\ntook place at a dinner meeting in\nthe Lord Nelson dining room Wednesday night.\nMr. Craig succeeds James Madden, veteran Nelson hotelman, who\nhad been zone representative for\n14 years.\nJUDGMENT RESERVED\nJudgment was reserved Wednesday by county court Judge E. P.\nDawson in a suit by P. A. Negraeff of Creston 'for $898 from Alex\nStishenko of Creston as a result\nof a traffic accident July 6. L. S.\nGansner appeared for Negraeff\nand G. B. Arnesen for Stishenko.\nGeorge Ipp of Hong Kong, China,\nnow touring the Kootenays. He bas\nvisited Neisoti before and attended\nBethel Tabernacle's camp last\nsummer.\nRev. C. J. Hennig will discuss\n\"The Wonderful Effects of the Resurrection\" Sunday morning at St.\nJohn's Lutheran Church. Family\nworship will be observed at First\nPresbyterian Church and there will\nbe no Sunday School.\nKev. Father J. W. Dulong will\ncelebrate his first solemn mass in\nNelson at 10:30 a.m. Sunday in\nCathedral   of   Mary   Immaculate.\nThe Easter Vigil will begin at 11\np.m. Holy Saturday. This will include blessing of the Paschal\ncandle and baptismal water. Rev.\nFather F. Monaghan will be' celebrant. Paschal Vigil will commence at 10:45 p.m. Saturday in\nChurch of the Blessed Sacrament.\nSunday masses will be at 9 and 11\na.m. with Rev, Father G. Feehan\nas celebrant.\nThe Holy Shroud, representing\nthe Sepulchre, was placed in a\nprominent position Friday in Sacred Heart Church. It will remain\nthere until the Resurrection Service\nat 7:30 a.m. Sunday. Solemn high\nmass will follow at 8 a.m. with\nRev. Father R. Zuback celebrant.\nNASOOKIN HULL\nUP FOR SALE\nPart of the remains of a boat\nwhich served Kootenay Lake communities for many years will be\nsold Tuesday.\nHull of the SS Nasookin, beached\non Crcwn land about tw.o and one-\nhalf miles from Nelson on the\nNorth Shore, will be sold by auction, K. D. McRae, commissioner\nof lands, announced. Part of the\n:hip was turned into an arts and\ncrafts shop.\nThe hull must be demolished and\nremoved by Oct. 31 and the beach\nleft in a \"clean, safe and sanitary\ncondition.\"\nSwerves Past\nOfficer,\nIs Fined $50\nFailure to' stop his vehicle when\nsignalled by a police officer, cost\nAlex Schesnuk of Nelson $50 plus\ncosts and his driver's license was\nsuspended for two months. He was\nfound guilty Thursday by Magistrate ft. S. Nelson.\nConstable F. J. Vec-hib testified\nthat on April 29, he heard a car\nwhich was apparently travelling at\na high speed and with noisy muffler. Vecchio ran into the middle\nof the street and signalled with his\nflashlight for the car to stop. Schesnuk reportedly decreased speed\nabout 50 to 75 feet from the officer,\nthen swerved to the right to avoid\nhitting him and drove off at a high\nrate of speed.\nI. P, Oglow 6f Robson was fined\n$70 and costs after pleading guilty\nbefore Magistrate William Evans\non two charges. He was fined $50\nand costs \u25a0 for Speeding at Tarrys\nand $20 and costs for violating\nrestriction on his driver's licence\nwhich permits him to drive only\nwhen wearing glasses.\nJ. G. Thompson of Vancouver\nwas fined $15 and costs for speeding in the 35-miles-per-bour zone\non the North Shore and Astrid Ka-\ndin of Riondel was fined $10 and\ncosts for speeding through Willow\nPoint school zone, \"oth pleaded\nguilty.\nBANK CLEARING\nFIGURES UP\nNelson bank clearings for the\nfirst three months of this year\nwere about $800,000 above those to\nMarch 31, 1957. Totals, with 1957\ncomparisons bracketed, were:\nMarch $3,534,792.67 ($3,474,923);\nyear' to date, $11,642,455.75 ($10,-\n783,059.52).\nNES Registrations Up\nOver Last Year Figures\nRegistrations for employment\nwere up considerably over last\nyear, D. M. Disney, National Employment Service manager, told the\nfirst meeting of Nelson Employment Advisory Committee Wednesday night in the NES office.\nHe said that at March 31 2034\npersons were registered at the office against 1369 at the same time\nin 1957. There were 1996 at February 28 against 1506 one year ago.\nThere were 1896 claimants at\nMarch 31 against 1253 a year ago.\ntost were postal claims.\nLocal managers, organizations\nrepresented and individual committee members can refer problems to meetings, which will be\nheld the first Friday of every\nmonth. Regional and national committees meet at least three times\na year.\nErnie Boulet, representing Trail,\nNelson and District Labor Council,\nsaid the Duncan, B.C., committee,\nof which he was a member, enlarged NES office space, looked\nafter \"registration on the job\" during large layoffs, tried to set up\nteletype facilities in all NES offices in B.C., also discussed immigration and' crippled persons.\nGeorge Barnes, representing In-\nVerkerk Pledges Eyes\nTo CINB Eye Bank\nG. J. Verkerk was the first member of the Nelson Legion to pledge\nhis eyes to the eye bank sponsored\nby the Canadian National Institute\nfor the Blind and the Canadian\nLegion. Miss Margaret Porteous\nwas second.\nThe announcement was made by\npresident S. J. Newell to about 25\nmembers Thursday night. Mr. Verkerk hoped every man present\nwould pledge his eyes. Eyes have\nto be obtained within six hours of\nthe person's death, Mr. Newell\nsaid. There was no charge for\ntransplanting the corneas to blind\npersons. The president will make\na radio address next week in connection with the bank.\nNeed of additional funds was\nstressed by Mr. Newell, who hoped\nmore members would suggest fund\nraising projects. \"What.we need is\ndeeds, not words.\" It was suggested an entertainment project be\nplanned during Mid-Summer Bonspiel week.\nThe hall took in $411 last month\nand $330 in February, secretary-\nmanager W. H. Burns reported.\nFloor of the large hall was finished\nfor dancing in January but so far\nstudents from a children's dance\nschool were the only persons to\nuse it. A supper dance will be held\nApril 11 and the third annual dinner for single men over 60 April 16.\ni>Ir. Newell said cars would be\nneeded to transport the elderly\nmen.\nFinances were a little better last\nmonth than in February but could\nstiil be improved on, C. R. Higgens\nreported for the finance committee.\nA whist club for older members\nwas suggested by Mr. Burns.\nC. L. Glibbery of Vancouver, welfare officer for tbe Department of\nVeterans' Affairs, wrote he will be\nhere April 14 for Interviews.\nNelson Junior Chamber of Commerce is seeking nominations from\nvarious organizations for the outstanding citizen of the year, said\nchairman James Horvath.\nThe Canadian Red Cross blood\ndonor clinic will be here June 9\nand 10. It was- decided to donate\nLegion space to them as was done\npreviously.\nRobert Macnicol of Vancouver.\nB.C. president, advised he hopes\nto visit Nelson soon.\nA request from Seton Lake, B.C.,\nbranch for financial aid towards\nbuilding a clubhouse was tabled.\nQueen City Credit Union will be\n\"going strong\" if members take\nadvantage of its services, Mr. Newell thought.\"\nThree branch and one club membership applications were accepted.\nNew branch members are A. J.\nCherry and N. V. Warner of Nelson\nand H. M. Potts. New club member\nis J. E. Parker of Bonnington. Club\nmembership applications from M.\nW. Bodnaruk and B. T. McKay of\nNelson, W. F. Chernenko and K. T.\nBowles of Lardeau were given first\nreading, then tabled for one month.\n\"Legend of the West,\" a B.C.\nGame Department film showing\ncolorful scenes of the Cariboo, was\nshown by Mr. Verkerk. Refreshments were served by the Ladies'\nAuxiliary.\ntefiof Lumber Manufacturers' Association, said he did not think\nNES services were fully used.\n\"Employment is our business,\"\nSaid Mr. Disney. If the service was\nused, NES facilities for hiring good\nhelp would expand. Signs wefe\navailable saying companies hired\nthrough NES. This, said Mr. Disney, cuts time spent by employers\ninterviewing job-seekers.\nMost workers registered for only\none purpose, to get unemployment\ninsurance benefits, Mr. Disney continued. During the war all. available jobs and manpower had to be\nlisted with National Selective Service.\n\"Closed shop\" unions, such as\nare found in construction trades,\nare hired through union halls, Mr.\nBoulet pointed out. He thought\nthere would be a turnover of skilled\nlabor in this area when the Castlegar pulp mill goes in.\nNew Canadians merited special\nconsideration, according to Miss\nMarian Boyd, representing the Soroptimist Club.\nQualifications of the men and\nspecifications of the employer were\nfirst considerations in hiring, Mr.\nDisney said. Encouragement of\nlanguage classes was suggested by\nMr.  Barnes who said he found I . ..      t\nnew-Canadian employees work out I fllf\u00ab|i roll Al\nas well as or better than Cana- VlCI 111311 Ul\ndians.\nRev. Reuben Swanson has been\nappointed chairman and F. J.\nThompson employment and classification officer, secretary. Other\nmembers are S. J. Newell, representing Nelson. Legion, Joseph\nKary representing Nelson Chamber of Commerce, S. C. Lauder\nrepresenting the Carpenters' and\nJoiners' Union and Aid. G. A. Mermet, who was unable to attend\nbecause of illness.\nLooking on during the launching of her\nnamesake, \"Melinda Jane,\" is Melinda Jane\nHorle, one-year-old daughter of I. M. Horie, president of Interior Lake Service, held by Mrs. Horie,\nwhose name, Iris G., is carried by another of the\nHorie boats on the Slocan Lake. Mrs. G. L. Phillips, wife of the superintendent of CPR Kootenay\ndivision, christened the boat as It started to slide\ndown the ways, \"I christen you Melinda Jane.\nGodspeed!\" she said as the champagne bottle\nsmashed against the vessel's bows. Attending the\nlaunching were Mr. and Mrs. Phillips, Mr. and\nMrs. Horie, John Manly, builder of the boat, A. S.\nLockwood, assistant superintendent of Kootenay\ndivision; J. Clark, chief dispatcher; D. Danyluk,\ndivisional engineer; Peter Thorn, B.C. Coastal\nService; Harold Dow, master of B. and B., CPRj\nMr. and Mrs. James Lundie, Peter Forbes, steamship inspector, and William Phillips, member of\nthe Nelson Kiltie Band who piped the boat into\nthe water.\nMelinda Jane, neat, chunky and efficient-\nlooking, slid busily down the ways with her shrill\nhorn blowing and into the water with a sizeable\nsplash. She was launched Thursday afternoon\nafter less than a week had elapsed since being\nhauled piecemeal Into Nelson on flatcars. Melinda\nJane is the property of Interior Lake Service who\nwill take over the freight run on Kootenay Lake\nfrom the CPR tugboat Granthall. Her bows ara\nshaped for pushing barges and she is diesel.\npowered.\nThe Weather\nNELSON, Saturday ...\n38\n51\n.13\nSunday  \t\n36\n48\n.20\nToronto \t\n29\n53\n\u2014\nWinnipeg\t\n43\n60\n\u2014\nRegina \t\nftn\n52\n.02\nCalgary  _\t\n.11\n3*\n.34\nEdmonton \t\n34\n3D\n.06\nPenticton  \t\n40\n50\n.35\nVictoria  _.\t\n33\nM\n__\nWhitehorse\t\n23\n49\n_\nSan Francisco \t\n45\n3D\n.97\nSpokane _...\n34\n39\n.19\nPrince Rupert\t\n37\n54\n\u2014\nPrince George\t\n29\n52\n\u2014\nPortland  \t\n34\n98\n\u2014\nSeattle \t\n36\n56\n\u2014\nFlags Flying\nReporls Mayor\nMore than half the Centennial\nflags purchased by Nelson businessmen and citizens are already\nbeing displayed, Mayor T. S. Short'\nhouse said Wednesday.\nHe said about 70 flags had been\npurchased. Supply had run out, but\nmore were being obtained. He said\nhe wished to compliment Ihe businessmen for their interest in flying\nthe flags and in preparing decorations for coming centennial celebrations.\nFire Chief E. S. Owens and his\nstaff were prepared to help in installing flags and decorations, the\nmayor said.\nFull co-operation of citizens in\nsetting up early displays in an \"all-\nout\" effort to decorate houses and\nplaces of business was urged.\nThe mayor said he planned to ask\nCity Council next week to advance\nArbor Day cleanup so that this\nwork would be well over before the\ncentennial flag raising April 27.\nFRUIT, TREE, LAWN and\nGARDEN SUPPLIES\nQuality Lawn Mix:\nReg. formula. Specially selected for this, area. Lb\nMerion Blue Grass:\nFor velvet lawns. Lb\t\nAluminum Lawn Guard:\nKeeps neat edges. 50 ft\t\nFolding Garden Fences:\nProtects beds and shrubs. 10 ft\t\n85*\n$3.00\n*4.95\n51.85\nFIELD\nSEEDS\nComplete Stock\nReduced prices on\n\u2014 Come I\n\u2014 Bulk or Packaged,\nall bulk seeds this year.\nn and See Us. \u2014\nTOM-BOY FARM FRESH\nGRADE A LARGE\nEGGS\ndoz.\n50\nLawn Rollers:  $ 8.95\nPlanet Junior Seeders:  37.50\nCombination seeder and wheel hce.\nCyclone Hand Seeders:      5.25\nSo-Easy Garden Seeder:  70\n6 Ft and.8 Ft. Clyde Tree Pruners\nLopping Sears\nSweet Pea Netting: 30' x 6'.  ._ 75c\nRakes - Cultivators - Spades - Forks\nSunset Garden Book;\ntO&fBOV\nStores\nWholenal*\nAnd\nRetail\nOpen\nMondays\nUntil Noon\n._\"--. ____-.lH.J__.\njf\n $800 in Presentations\nTo Castlegar Hospital\nff) ROBSON \u2014 Cheques totalling\nmore than $800 to be used in furnishings and equipment for the\nnew Castlegar district hospital \u2014\nhave been presented by district\nPlan Denial\nConferences for\nPre-Schoolers\nCRANBROOK - Dental health\nsurvey of pre-school children by\nthe East Kootenay Health Unit\nshowed a minimum 50 per cent of\nthree-year-old children have dental\ndecay conditions, while one in\nevery five two-year-olds similarly\nshow this condition. The dental\nexamination then moved to four-\nand five-year-olds registered in\nkindergartens where 90 per cent of\nthose examined showed decayed\nteeth.\nAs part of the public health program of education for good dental\nhealth parents of the kindergarten\nchildren examined were advised on\nmethods of preventing further de-\n\" cay.\nThe program also extended to\nGrade 1 children in the larger centres of the Health Unit where the\npercentage of children showing\nevidence of dental decay rose even\nhigher, but the dental health program of treatment in school starter\ncommunity sponsored dental clinics\nhad corrected much of this condition.\nMethods of extending denial\nhealth conference to parents of\npre-schoolers are planned for the\nfuture in view of findings among\nthe small segment of pre-schoolers\nenrolled at kindergarten, which\nwill help ease the volume of repairs necessary for the six-year-\nolds who qualify for the dental\npublic health clinics.\nwomen's institutes and members of\nthe Union of Spiritual Community\nof Christ.\nPresentations were made at a\nmeeting of representatives of both\norganizations and members of the\nhospital board.\nA cheque for $467 towards the\nWl room in the new hospital was\npresented by Mrs. W. T. Waldie\nto Earl Norris; the second cheque\nof $350 for a B.M.R. machine was\npresented by Mrs. John Chernoff\nand Mrs. William Gorkoff to Jack\nBainbridge.\nA wonderful response had been\nreceived from organizations in the\ndistrict, Mr. Norris and Mr. Bainbridge said in thanking the groups.\nRepresentati' es present were\nMrs. Janet Brownlie, president of\nthe Kinnaird WI, Mrs. H. Motters\nhead, president of Deer Park WI\nMrs. Waldie, president of Robson\nWI, and Mr. and Mrs. Chernoff\nand Mrs. Gorkoff, representing the\nUnion of Spiritual Communities of\nChrist. Mrs. Mary Warkentin of\nthe Renata WI was unable to be\npresent.\nNight Classes\nEnd at Kimberley\nKIMBERLEY \u2014 Sixteen night\nclasses were in operation from October to March in the 1957 - 58\nseason, studying a wide-range of\nsubjects, from cabinetmaking and\nmusic appreciation to English for\nnew Canadians.\nA display of the work done was\nshown in the activity room of Wak-\ntins school. Noted among the displays were coffeetables and cupboards from the woodworking class,\nand sewing and handicraft baskets.\nThe school band under direction\nof Mr. Yardwood entertained while\ntea was served and the night school\nsquare dance class gave a demonstration of square and round dancing. \t\nBeacon Fires,\nTree Plantings\nAt Gray Creek\nGRAY CREEK \u2014 Centennial\nCelebration plans are developing\nhere. On April 27 the Centennial\nflag will be formally presented by\nChairman of the Centennial Committee George Petrescu to the Hall\nTrustees. The flag will be flown |\nfrom the new 40-foot flag pole.\nPacific Rangers' Peace Memorial\nof tree plantings will be dedicated\nby the Rev. W. Edington. The\nceremony will be followed by a tea\nin the Hall and during the evening\nthere will be a great beacon fire\non the Hall beach and colored\nlights will be thrown.\nCranbrook To Join\nIn Car Caravan\nCRANBROOK - The Cranbrook\nChamber of Commerce, at an executive meeting, launched plans for\nparticipating in a car caravan\nalong with Chambers at Kimberley,\n~*?T?t\nMwif\u00bb*>T4*\\\nToday's Insurance\nProblems     -\nAnswered by\nYour Insurance Advisors\nQUESTION: I had an accident which \"totalled\" my\noar as far at the claim adjuster was concerned. The \"blue\nbook\" price was $400. This\nIs the price I got. But I put\nover $500 Into the motor and\n$200 Into the body, so actually I didn't get the fair\nprice. Is there anything I\ncan do?\nANSWER: The standard\npolicy provides for arbitration of these matters.\nHave you an insurance problem of your own? Come in\nor write us. We'll be glad to\nhelp you without charge or\nobligation of any kind 1        \u25a0\nRobertson -\nHilliard, Cattell\n456 Ward St.      Ph. 1912-1913\nFernie and Windermere Valley to\ntravel to Kalispell, Mont., for the\nMay 31-June 1 weekend.\nThe party would travel by way\nof the new Elko-Roosville road\nlinking the Southern Trans-Provincial Highway and the international\nboundary, now well advanced toward completion, and designated\nas part of a continental north-south\nroute between Mexico and Alaska.\nThe Kalispell Chamber has made\nseveral mass visits via this route\nto East Kootenay points in the past\nyear, and the planned oavalcade\nwould be return visits.\nDelegates named to the spring\nmeeting of the Associated Chambers of Commerce of Southeastern\nBritish Columbia at Kimberley\nApril 18 and 19 are Cranbrook\nChamber president J. S. Johnston,\nM. G. Klinkhamer, R. E. Reagh,\nA. W. Hunter and Ernest Basso.\nCranbrook resolutions have already\nbeen submitted to the Associated\nChambers' resolution committee.\nMr. Reagh has been appointed by\nthe Chamber as its official repre\nsentative on the Cranbrook com\nmittee preparing for the Centen\nnial celebration July 1 to 4.\nUrgent need for prominent sign\ndesignation at the' new junction of\nthe Southern Transprovincial and\nKingsgate-Radium roads at the\noverpass two miles north of Cranbrook will be brought to the attention of the Department of Highways.\nDiscuss Plans\nFor Centennial\nLISTER \u2014 Plans for the Centennial Year celebrations were discussed at a meeting of 25 Lister and\ndistrict residents. Celebrations for\nthis area are scheduled for June 8.\nEast Koolenay\nWoman Passes\nWYNNDEL - Last rites were\nheld here Saturday for Mrs. Edward Shannon, a pioneer of Kootenay-Boundary who died here at\n72 years of age.\nTwo years ago Mr. and Mrs.\nShannon\u2014residents of East Kootenay tor the past 32 years\u2014celebrated their golden wedding anniversary with a family reunion and\na community celebration.\nMrs. Shannon was born Ella\nClark in Petrolia, Ont., in 1886, and\nmoved with her family to British\nColumbia and the Grand Forks district in 1890. In 1906 she married\nEdward Shannon. They lived in\nGrand Forks until 1926 when they\nmoved to Kimberley. In 1942 they\nretired to live at Creston and in\n1945 came to Wynndel where they\nhave made their home for the past\n13 years.\nMrs. Shannon was predeceased\nby her parents, a sister and two\nbrothers. Besides her husband she\nis survived by two sisters, Mrs.\nLillian Johnston of Prince George,\nand Mrs. Ida Edwards in Toronto.\nOnt.; four brothers, Robert Clark\nin Vancouver, Charles Clark, Fort\nLangley, Leslie Clark in East Stan-\nwood, Wash., and Paul Clark in\nGrass Valley, Calif.; six sons,\nCharles at Marysville, James in\nPeru, South America, Robert in\nKimberley, Frank at Riondel,\nHarry at Trail, and Melvin at\nOliver; and a daughter, Mrs. May\nColling of Vancouver. Mrs. Shannon is also survived by 12 grandchildren and three great-grandchildren.\nFuneral services were conducted\nat the St. Paul's United Church in\nWynndel, and led by Rev. B. A.\nKnipe. Pallbearers were Adolph\nHagen, Fred Hagen, Cliff Gregory,\nC. Vogan, D. Bowlby and F. Merriam. Interment was in the Forest\nLawn cemetery in Creston.\nMrs. Palmer, in\nEast Kootenay\n44 Years, Dies\nCRANBROOK - Mrs. Mary Ann\nPalmer died Wednesday at St.\nEugene Hospital! She had been a\npatient there for. the past two\nweeks.\nShe was born 76 years ago and\ngrew up in England, and in 1913\ncame to Canada and Saskatoon.\nShe moved to this province a year\nlater when she settled in the Windermere Valley, and she lived at\nWilmer and Invermere for many\nyears. Her husband, Gordon Palmer, died there in 1935. A few\nyears later she brought her children to Cranbrook and she had\nmade her home here since then in\nSlaterville until two months ago\nwhen she moved to., Cranbrook\nStreet. She was a member of Christ\nChurch parish, and of the Senior\nCitizens Association.\nShe is survived by two sons, Howard and Lloyd, and two daughters,\nMrs. Harry Smith and Mrs. William\nYadernuk of Cranbrook. Her oldest\nson, Elmer, was killed in the Second World War. Also surviving are\n19 granddaughters and a sister in\nEngland.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, APRIL 5,1938\n*&\nKaslo Hospital\nBoard Elects Jacobs\nKASLO\u2014The 1958 annual meeting of the Kaslo Victorian Hospital\nSociety was held in the Legion hall.\nThirty-nine of the members were\npresent. President Alex Jacobs presided.\nA slight operating deficit, due to\nlower patient days in hospital, was\nshown in the financial statement.\nMeredith, Bruce, Baldwin and Kitto\nwere named as auditors. Reports\nof Kaslo and Riondel Hospital Aids\nwere read by Mrs. Cecil Morton,\nBoth auxiliaries reported a busy\nyear. Committee heads presented\nreports followed by the report of\nthe president.\nPresident Jacobs stated plant expenditures were held to a minimum\nbut  certain  new  equipment  was\nSalmo Youth to Queen\nScout Ceremonies\nSALMO \u2014 Queen Scout Henry\nThomas (Tom) John leaves Salmo\nTuesday for Victoria where he will\nreceive his Queen Scout certificate\nfrom Lieutenant - Governor Frank\nM. Ross at a ceremony at Government House Thursday.\nThe Queen Scout presentation\nwill be preceded by a luncheon,\nwith the Lieutenant-Governor and\nMrs. Ross as hosts.\nTom is sixteen years old and a\nthird-year student at the Salmo\nJunior-Senior High School. He is\nthe son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward\nJohn and has two sisters, Merilyn\nBRIDGE PLANS\nDEPOSITED\nCRESTON \u25a0\u2014 Description of site\nand plans for a bridge to be located\nhear Nick's Island ferry have been\ndeposited with the minister of\npublic works at Ottawa and the\nLand Registry Office at Nelson,\nE. S. Jones, deputy provincial\nhighways minister, has announced.\nOn April 29 application will be\nmade to the federal minister of\npublic works for approvalof the\nsite and plan.\nKOOTENAY VALLEY\nHOSPITAL IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT NO. 4\nNOTICE\nof ANNUAL MEETING\nZONE NO. 5\n. From Hall Creek, Ymir, Sheep Creek, Erie,\nRoss Spur, Canadian Exploration and H.B.\nMine, South to the U.S. Border.\nNotice is hereby given that the Annual General Meeting of the Property Owners of the above\nZone will be held in SALMO COMMUNITY HALL,\non TUESDAY, 15th of APRIL, 1958 at 8:00 p.m.\nFor the following purposes:\n(a) To receive from the Trustees of the Zone a report on the undertakings of the said Improvement District for the preceding fiscal year and\na statement of the financial condition of the\nsaid Improvement District prepared by the\nauditor.\n(b) To discuss with the trustees any matter relating\nto the undertakings or finance of the said\nImprovement District.\nTrustee: Mr. G. A. Gordon, chairman of the meeting.\nDated the 5th day of April, 1958.\nBy Order of the Board,\nG. I. PENNIKIT,\nSecretary-Treasurer.\nWin Safety Draws\nNATAL \u2014 Four out of five names\ndrawn in the \"Safety Book\" contest at the Michel Colliery for the\nmonth of March qualified and were\nawarded $18 each lor answering\nquestions based on information\ncontained in the booklet. They were\nFrank Fairolough, John Iwasiw,\nElio Bernardo and L. Chiaratto.\nThis contest is being conducted by\nthe Crow's Nest Pass Coal Company for four months to encourage\nthe reading of the safety booklet\npublished by the Safety Council of\nthe Western Canada Coal Operators' Association. The April drawn\nwill be the fourth month of the\nsafety booklet contest.\nMoyie Rebuilding\nHistoric Cemetery\nMOYIE\u2014Moyie Community Club\nat its April meeting heard a report\nthat the new Moyie garbage dump\nwas nearing completion and would\nsoon be ready for inspection.\nR. Stanton sr. represented the\nLions Club and a discussion on the\nforthcoming Charter night took\nplace.\nThe local Moyie Lions Club, wjth\na membership of 18, has started\nwork on the Moyie cemetery. Last\nSunday eight members aided in the\nreconditioning, Mr. Stanton said.\nThe Moyie cemetery serves as an\nhistoric landmark of years gone\nby, when Moyie was one of Canada's chief mining (owns,\n13, a patrol leader in the Girl\nGuides, and Jennifer, six.\nTom has been in the Scouting\nmovement for the past eight years, j\nstarting as a Cub when he was\neight years old. He ls an enthusiast;\nfor pioneer camping and all phases\nof outdoor living.\nThe Salmo youth was one of 15\nScouts from British Columbia who\nattended the World Jubilee Jamboree in Sutton Coalfield, Warwickshire, England, in August, 1957.\nHe was presented with his Queen\nScout badge by district commissioner G. A. Gordon at. Camp Busk\nin June, 1957.\nThe Scout movement in Salmo\nis a fast-growing and enthusiastic\norganization under the leadership\nof Cubmaster Lome Avery and\nScoutmaster Douglas Leask. Dr. J.\nC. Carpenter is president of the\nassociation.\nPlan 3-Act\nProduction\nBONNINGTON\u2014Kootenay River\nPlayers held a meeting in the Bon-\nnington Hall, to discuss the drama\nfestival in Trail, and the adjudications given the plays. The Players\nentered two plays \u2014 \"Elizabeth\nRefuses\" in which Jock Hawkins\nwon a certificate of merit for his\nrole of the clergyman; and \"The\nOld Lady Wins Her Medals\" in\nwhich Mae McFarlane won a certificate of Merit for her lead role as\nthe old lady, Mrs. Dowie.\nA new reading committee was\nappointed to seek a three-act play\nfor production in the Fall. The\ncommittee comprises Jock Haw\nkins, Mae McFarlane, Barbara\nDahlquist, Eileen Elsdon and Doreen Pearce.\nMembers plan to construct doors\nand windows for use as props in\nfuture productions.\nTo Circulate\nLibrary Books\nCRANBROOK \u2014 East Kootenay\nBranch of the B.C. Public Library\nCommission will move its stock of\nseveral thousand volumes of books\naround the circuit of- local and\ncommunity libraries in April in\nconsignment lots.\nLots of 300 books \/ill be located\nat Fernie Library April 8, Kimberley April 9, Creston April 10, and\nCranbrook April 11. Book selection\nlibrary   will\n..,.     .  . .committees of each\nproposed, including new laundry choose the volumes they want in\nequipment and a chest type deep- their consignments which will re-\nfreeze. Garden and harvest dona- main available to their member-\ntions had helped hold down dietary ship until July, when the consign\ncosts, he said. Mr. Jacobs praised\nthe work of the staff and said nursing standards were high.\nThe meeting was told that new\nbylaws were ready and awaiting\ndepartmental approval and will be\npresented for acceptance at an extraordinary general meeting.\nThree retiring members of the\nboard were reelected. At a board\nmeeting following the annual session, Mr. Jacobs was returned as\npresident, R. Fahrni was named\nvice-president and W. H. Dunn appointed secretary.\nmehts will be collected and reassigned. Community libraries will be\nsimilarly served when bock-lots\nwill be placed at the community\nlibraries at Kingsgate and Wynndel April 22, Invermere and Edge-\nwater April 24, and Donald and\nParson April 25.\nKOCHER HEADS\nCOMMISSION\nGRAY CREEK \u2014 W. J. Kocher\nwas re-elected president at the annual meeting of the Gray Creek\nRecreation Commission. New committee members are Mrs. W, La-\nPlante and W. G. James.\nTrap Beaver on\nCrawford Flats\nGRAY CREEK-The busy beaver, whose construction work has\ncreated a nuisance throughout\nCrawford Bay Flats, will soon be\nreduced in numbers.\nVeteran trapper George Oliver\nand Cliff Derbyshire have set up\ntrap lines on the Hats, where beaver dams have been backing water\ninto people's homes.\nLast year a beaver even stopped\ntraffic .by dropping a Cottonwood\ntrunk across the highway and telephone lines.\nTraps must be set so that the\nbeaver drowns itself when caught,\nor it will chew its way out. Good\nsized beaver run 50 pounds or so in\nweight. Skins are in prime condition at this time of the year and\ntrapping season extends to the end\nof April.\nGelgar Mills Win\nSafety Awards\nScenic Slides\nShown at Hqrrop\nHARROP \u2014 The Harrop and district Community Centre sponsored\na showing of scenic slides before\nan audience of over 60 people. Ray\nStafford of Longbeach showed\nscenes of Mexico City and Guatemala. He remarked that in 4000\nmiles of travelling through Mexico\nhe saw n'o timber or wire fences.\nMel Mikelson showed slides of\nlocal scenes in the Kokanee area,\nMurphy's Park and lakes Kaslo,\nKeene, Garland and Tanal. He\nthrilled the audience with pictures\nof his hunting trophies, including\na grizzly bear, three mountain goat\nand a black bear.\nDon Cameron displayed slides\nof the north and south islands of\nNew Zealand, showing farm scenes\nand exotic flowers, the trees and\npasture, a vivid green in contrast\nto the hot, dry Mexican scener\/\nNAKUSP \u2014 At the annual general meeting of the Interior Lumber Manufacturers Association held\nin Penticton, Dennis Brookes, sawmills manager for Celgar Limited,\nwas presented with an award of\nmerit' for the Nakusp Sawmill,\nwhich attained the lowest accident\nfrequency rate amongst the Association's members during 1957 for\na Group B Sawmill working between 100,000 and 200,000 hours per\nyear. The actual number of man\nhours worked was 170,011 with four\nlost time compensatory injuries\ngiving an accident frequency for\nthe year of 23.53.\nAs of March 31 (he Nakusp\nplant had gone 241 days without a\nlost time compensatory injury\nand is a strong contender for the\nB.C. Provincial Government Centennial Safety Award to be made\nIn July.\nI\nTransferred to Vancouver Post\nAn award was also made to the\nCompany's Castlegar Sawmill for\nthe lowest frequency rate for the\nyear of 20.15. The Castlegar Mill\nis rated as a Group A Sawmill,\nworking over 200,000 man hours\nper year. The awards will be presented to the mill's joint union and\nmanagement safety committee at\nthe Company's annual safety banquet to be held in May in connection with B.C. Forest Products\nSafety Week May 12 to 17.\nThe Company's safety program,\ncarried out through the co-opera-\nlion of the employees and supervisory staff, ranks with the best in\nIhe lumber industry in B.C., it was\npointed out. The awards made are\nbased on the official records of\nthe W o r k m' e n's Compensation\nBoard.\nBuy and Sell Wilh Classified!\nNatal Farewells\nFred Nesh\nNATAL \u2014 The members of Michel Aerie No. 1865, F.O.E. held a\nfarewell party in honor of .one of\ntheir members, Fred Nash, who\nhas left Michel to live in Nanaimo.\nMr. Nash spent 18 years at Michel,\nbeing employed during these years\nas a fireboss at the Michel Colliery. He was ah active member\nof the Fraternal Order of Eagles\nand was president in 1954. Mr.\nNash was also Chancellor Commander of the Michel Knights of\nPythias. A short address by Mr.\nNash was responded to by president John Desjardins.\nGames of carpetball, indoor\nhorseshoes and cribbage were enjoyed.\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILY\nSPONSOR SOFTBALL\nHARROP \u2014 Harrop and district\nCommunity Centre are sponsoring\nboys' Softball sessions under the\nleadership of V. O. Rowley. Games\nare played on the community\ngrounds- Saturday morning, and\nformation of  teams is planned.\nFiltered\nDry Cleaning\nDyeing - Alterations - Repairs\nAlso Agents for House of Stone\nMade-to-Measure Suits\nEmpire\nDry Cleaning\n327 Baker St. Phone 288\nWE CALL AND DELIVER\nCIVIL DEFENCE\nWELFARE COURSE\nWill Be Held In\nNELSON - April 10th\nCANADIAN  LEGION  HALL\nAFTERNOON and EVENING CLASSES\nAll members and others interested in. Welfare\nare requested to attend.\nPlease give your name to\nJ. R. BAILEY \u2014 Phone 950-R\nor J. A. WILSON, 108 or 1327-L\nS. NIXON\nTRAIL \u2014 D. J. Turland has been\ntransferred by the Canadian General Electric Company Limited to\nVancouver to specialize in utility\nsales. S. Nixon of Edmonton will\ncome here as Sales Engineer for\nEast and West Kootenays. Announcement of the transfers was\nmade by A. M. Thompson, manager Pacific District, Apparatus\nDepartment.\nWhile in Trail Mr. Turland was\nSecretary of the frail and District\nSenior Citizens Villa Society, Vice\nChairman of the Kootenay Branch\nof the E.I.C., Director of the Red\nMountain Ski Club, memher of the\nTrail Rotary Club, and a member\nD. J. TURLAND\nof the Association of Professional\nEngineers of British Columbia.\nEducated in Vancouver and a\ngraduate of the University of British Columbia, he worked at the\nCompany's Peterborough Plant and\nits Vancouver office before moving\nto Trail in November 1955.\nMr. Nixon was born in Gateshead, England and moved to Canada at an early age. He was educated in Edmonton and graduated\nfrom the University of Alberta wiUi\na Bachelor of Science degree in\nElectrical Engineering in 1949. He\nis a member of the Engineering Institute of Canada and the Association of Professional Engineers of\nAlberta.\nSPACE ? ? ? ?\nIS  NO PROBLEM TO THE  HOUSEWIFE\nWHO PICKS UP THE PHONE AND CALLS\n1180\nfor an estimate on material to build\nMore Kitchen Cupboard Space, and\nFREE ! !\nPlans for Modern Kitchen Cabinets.'\nMODERNIZE . .\nTHAT KITCHEN\nTHE BURNS WAY\nBURNS LUMBER co ^\nPHONE 1180\nNELSON, B.C.\n\u25a0\n Msoti latlg Nruia       Le\"e\"t0 The\nEstablished April 12, 1902\nInterior British Columbia's Largest Dally Newspaper\nPublished every mornftg except Supday and statutory\nholidays   by   the   NEWS   PUBLISHING   COMPANY\nLIMITED, 266 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia\nAuthorized as Second Class Mall, Post Oliice Department, Ottawa.\nMEMBER Ot  THE AUDI! BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS.\nMEMBER Oi THE CANAUIAN PRESS.\nThe Canadian Press u exclusively entitled to the use (or republication of til news\ndispatches credited to it or to The Associated Press or Reuters ln this paper,\nand also the local news published therein.\n!\u00a35\u00abSm\u00a3 Saturday, April 5, 1958 . ~~\nHe Is Risen;\nBehold, The Place Where They laid Him\nEditor\nTo Christian communities the world\nover Sunday represents a time oi festivity\u2014festivity which varies ln degree* according to national tradition\nand religious belief. This is the time\nof Easter bonnets, chocolate eggs, decorated hard-boiled eggs, soma of which\nor* hidden in the garden for the children to seek.\nThe now famous Easter parade will\ntake place In London's Strand and\nHyde Park and, in general, we find\nlime to relax and enjoy the promise\n\u00bbf warm weather and the summer\nwhich ls to follow.\nFew of us will not think of the traditional \"goodies\" that come with this\nseason and most of us will no doubt\nenjoy our hot-cross buns through the\nholiday, but let us stop right here and\nexamine that word\u2014Holiday or Holy\nDay\u2014the commemoration of Christ's\nresurrection.\nDo all of us think of the real meaning behind the Easter holidays? Do we\nremember that Christ died on Calvary\nand arose again from the dead? Or ls\nEaster Just another period - of rest,\nticked off on the calendar as a time\nto visit relations or take off on a fishing trip?\nWe prefer to believe that most\npeople in the community realize the\nsolemnity of this partiaular holiday\u2014\nrealize the miracle which was disclosed to the world\u2014a miracle porten-\nIous enough, one so great, that it has\nremained fresh in the world's memory\nfor nearly two thousand years.\nThe event which we are celebrating started with the crucifixion and\nunfolded itself:\n\"And when the Sabbath was past,\nMary Magdalene and Mary the mother\nof James and Salome had bought sweet\nspices that they might come and an-,\nwint Him.\"\n\"And very early ln the morning the\nHrst day of the week, they came unto\nthe sepulchre at the rising of the sun.\n\"... they saw a young man sitting\nsn the right side . . . and they were\niffrighted.\n\"And He salth unto them, be not\niffrighted: Ye seek Jesus of Nazareth,\nwhich was crucified: He ie risen; He is\nnot here, behold, the place where they\nlaid Him ... \" St. Mark, 16-1, 2, 5, 6.\nLetters ts ths Editor on any tople et\ngenuine Interest ire welcome If they \u00abre\nbrut, sccurste snd ftir. No lettv will be\nInserted In whole- er In part, except over\nth* signature and address ef tht writer.\nUnsolicited eorrttpendtnct etnnot bt rt-\nturned.\nDriver Claims Term\n\"Speeding\" Not Correct\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u2014I note in your paper of today (March\n31) that you stated I was fined $15 for speeding through the Willow Point school zone.\nThat is not correct, the charge was that I\ndrove faster than IS miles an hour past this\nschool. I would not call that exactly speeding. If you drive a car try to drive it at\n15 miles an hour sometime then you will\nmow better about what you are talking about.\nI was driving possibly 25 miles an hour but\nI most certainly would not call that speeding,\ni knew that this was In the 35-mile an hour\nnone and completely forgot all about the\nschool being there. There was not a kid in\nsight and I admit technically I was wrong\nn driving at the speed I was but I sure do\nibject to you stating in your paper that I\nvas speeding.\nIf you doubt what 1 am saying, consult\nhe court records which will show I *was\ngiven a ticket for driving faster than 13 miles\nper hour. The constable did no't say I was\nipeeding.\nI trust you will correct this statement\nn any way you wish but I definitely was not\nipeeding.\nD. W. McDERBY.\nHirror Lake, B.C.\nTwo Words of Warning\u2014Be Alert\/\nA tragic aspect of all holidays is\nreflected by death, Injury and property\ndamage through the increase of traffic\nand traffic accidents. At this time,\nmotorists and pedestrians should be\nespecially alert and especially careful.\nWith the prospect of thousands of\nholiday bound motorists on the roads\nthis weekend and since the closing of\nichools will greatly increase the num\nbers of children on city streets, care\nnust be the watchword of. the Easter\nlolidays.\nTo keep this simple and to the point,\nwe would warn all our readers: Use\nadditional care when driving or walking\u2014watch all intersections closely\u2014\nkeep your speed down.\nStay alive and enjoy your time off\n\u2014don't return home in a coffinl\nStrong, Runners\u2014If Free\n\"The railroads are basic.\" In this statement we summed up a few .days ago a\nnumber of reasons why the railroads of\nAmerica must receive help. Many of these\nreasons stem in part from the efficiency\nimplicit in their mechanical operation\u2014in\npart from the strength and efficiency built\nInto the roadbeds, bridges, and culverts on\nwhich their rails rest.\nThe friction -involved in flanged steel\nvheels rolling along sleel rails is so small\nPress Comment\nCLOSER TO TWO-PARTY SYSTEM\nCanada's election of this week may be\nremembered longest for a result entirely\napart from the strengthening of the Conservative party's hold upon the House of Commons. The vote may have marked a definite\ntrend toward return of the two-party syslem\nIn politics north of the border.\nSpokesmen of the two major parties, of\ncourse, long have predicted the eventual disappearance of the minor parties as national\npolitical factors, although no one would assume that they will cease to have influence\nin provincial matters. This 1958 election lends\ncredibility to this political prophesy.\n\u2014Spokane Spokesman-Review.\nIt's Been Said\n(Beautyl is a sort of bloom on a woman.\nIf you have it you don't need to have anything else; and if you don't have it, it doesn't\nmuch matter what else you have\u2014Sir James\nH. Barrie.\nhat the same tractive power necessary to\nnove 60 tons through the air or 400 tons\n.long a paved highway will move 5000 tons\nalong those rails. The magazine Railway\nProgress puts it in other terms: To move\n100,000 tons from New York to San Francisco\nby highway takes four times as much fuel\nind 13.5 times as many man-days of work\nas by rail; by air, 25 times as much fuel\nand 11.4 as many man-days.\nThe railroads' righls of way\u2014the product of a century and a quarter of building\nand rebuilding \u2014 can carry more people,\nheavier loads, _ and bigger volume Over\ngreater obstacles of weather and terrain and\nat higher speed than can any other system\nof transportation existing or in prospect.\nThese advantages are self-evidently of\nutmost importance in event of a war. With\nthese advantages, however, why are not the\nrailroads in. times of peace outdistancing\ntheir competitors?\nBecause of the immense overhead on\ntheir fixed facilities which they have had\nto build and maintain at their own expense.\nBecause they are regulated to a degree their\ncompetition is not\u2014as though they were still\na dominant monopoly, Because they did not\nsoon enough solve, and later were forbidden\nto solve, the problem of door-to-door service.\nBecause for a hundred years the railroads,\nby their nature, have been \"sitting ducks\"\nfor every unit of taxation\u2014state and local\nas well as federal. Because, in a word, as\ndesperate competitors in a free-enterprise\nrace they are running shackled and weighted\ndown.\u2014Christian Science Monitor.\nAn Important\nMember\nOf Family\n. . . F. B. PEARCE\nSome Gains\nBetter Tkan None\nLord Beaverbrook has joined Cyrus Eaton\nin calling tor negotiation with the Russians at\nthe summit. \"The Beaver\" is a political soloist whose views are often rated eccentric;\nbut this time he voices a public opinion that\n(.nil:; irresistible.\nHe wants trlme Minister Macmillan to\nmeet Nikita Khrushchev with or without\nPresident Eisenhower in attendance. It's\njnlikely Mr. Macmillan would go It alone;\nhe sets a high value on British-American\nteamwork in diplomacy. But the Beaverbrook\nproposal reflects a strong popular demand\nin U.K. that the British government take the\ninitiative and force Washington's hand.\nOn one point Lord Beaverbrook says out\nloud what many people think; the West need\nnot insist on putting the German question on\nIhe summit agenda. The Russians don't want\nto discuss it, knowing that a united reich\n:ould not be kept out of the Western ajliance.\nAt present, then, Germany's future is just\nnot negotiable; and the West might as well\njeeept ths fact.\nBut there are other questions on which\ndiscussion might be fruitful. Conceivably\nan agreement to suspend nuclear tests could\nbe negotiated. Just possibly there are terms\nm which the Russians would stop meddling\nin the Middle East since they don't need Its\nlil. The \"cultural exchanges\" that were recently arranged might be expanded.\nConsidering that it took ten years to work\n>ut the four-power Austrian treaty\u2014a rela-\nively simple matter\u2014nobody should expect\ntalks at the summit, or any other level, to\n\u2022 wipe all the current issues off the slate. But\ni conference will be worth holding if it produces just one workable compromise. Lord\nBeaverbrook evidently thinks it can be done;\nand he is a shrewd judge of politics as the\nsrt of the possible.\u2014Financial Post.\nA brother columnist comes up\nwith the proposition that there\nwould be fewer spoiled, children\nif there were some way to spank\ngrandmothers.\nFirst of all what constitutes a\nspoilt child? About the only data\nwe have to go on is the fact that\nour children are indulged, but the\nJones' are spoiled rotten. That\ncoupled with the belief that given\na free hand some of those little\nbrats would feel the weight of my\nhand indicates the spoilt child.\nWho spoils children? Why their\nparents, of course, but just try and\n.ellthem that. They are convinced\nthat their children are highly intelligent and old beyond their\nyears. They don't need to be petted\nor babied. At three they are far\ntoo grown up for that. They are\ntold to do this or not to do that\nand are expected to behavetts premature adults.\nGrandmothers don't spoil children. Did she spoil their parents?\nNone of them will admit that, and\nwhen they say they do it is just a\ncase of parental jealousy that ths\nchildren should love grannie so\nmuch.\nOf course they love her. She doesn't nag at them all day long telling them not to do this or that and\nlooking sourly at them every time\nIhey do something. She knows these\ndays that at least three-quarters\nof the don't and scolding children\nreceive are quite unnecessary. So\nshe lets them do very much as\nUiey like and gives them a great\ndeal of loving and cuddling and\ngenerally gives the belief that\nthey are wonderful children and\nthat she loves them very much,\nIn return they think there is no\none like grandma,\nBASICALLY SIMPLE\nAnd the parents can't understand\nit. Poor things. They can't see that\nit is all basically very simple. It\nsimply consists in going out of the\nway to assure their children that\nihey are very fond of them. What's\nso hard in scooping up a child and\nhugging him. Grandma does it and\nhe squeals with delight, but the\nparents\u2014no they can't be bothered.\nThey don't think it necessary, \"My\nchildren,\" they say, \"have no need\nfor that.\" They are far too intel\niigent. .  .\nIf there is one thing which is\ncertain it is that children up to\nthe age of 12 need a urciil deal\nof physical affection. It is not suf-\nChurch and Thoatra Liven\nFamous Greenwich Village\nBy JOSEPH MacSWEEN\nCanadian Press: Staff Writer\nNEW YORK (CP) - Greenwich village provides a rewarding theatre evening all its own,\naway from the glitter of Broadway. \t\nThe homey, relaxed atmosphere\nof the village's off \u25a0 Broadway\ntheatre can be almost as refreshing as the performance. The arty\nvillagers themselves provide local color\u2014being either a motley\nthrong or a cosmopolitan audience,, accordltig to your point of\nview.\nTo reach Actors' Playhouse,\nnow presenting the earthy Spanish play Blood Wedding, you go\ndown two flights of stairs to a\nbasement auditorium, which\nseems hardly bigger than a living j\nroom although it seats 150.\nMargot Lassner, the German'\nimmigrant actress who is well\nknown in Toronto. and to CBC\naudiences, plays a starring role\nand   is   enthusiastic   about   off-\nficient to take it for granted that\nIhey know you, love them or to tell\nthem in words. They need physical\nproof and it is my belief that there\ncan be nothing wrong in a family\nwhere the father comes home at\nnight and the children rush to him\nto be hugged or where the mothers\nf'ake the odd time to cuddle her\nbig children. Yes, the big children,\nfor they never quite outgrow that\nneed for the physical expression of\nlove.\nAnd before we slap grandmother\ndown for the sake of a few children, let's consider others who\nneed that.\nWho Is it who says, \"The old\nfolks should be able to put the\ndown payment on the house. They\ndon't need their money?\u2014Borrow\na couple of hundred from dad. He\ndoesn't spend his money these\ndays. You can pay him back in a\ncouple of months? \u2014 Let's go to\nHawaii for a couple of weeks. Grannie will be- delighted to look after\nthe kids.\u2014Ma. We have an important dance next week. Will you\nlet the youngsters stay with you\novernight?\u2014If grandma comes to\nstay with us she can have that\nlittle room off the kitchen and her\nboard money will pay for the new\nchesterfield.\u2014She sure is a nuisance talking to the kids all the\ntime just when I want them out of\nthe house.\u2014I wish she would sit\nstill instead of trying to help, She\nonly gets in the way. :\nBut-who clothes the helpless little\nnewcomer, and keeps him in garments for months? Grandmother\nand there ought to be a grand\nmother's day.\nBroadway work. She played in\nthe hit The piddei. River tm\nBroadway last season.\n\"It's easier to project the per-'\nsonality of the role here and I\nlike the intimacy,'.' said the actress, who is also a writer.\nHer adaptation of the French\nplay The Actor was prepared for\nCBC presentation Eastern Sunday.\nNot only ln theatre has the village a distinctive flavor. Near\nthe playhouse it a Roman Catholic Church that carries this motto\non the door:\nWhenever I happen\nTo. pass any church\n1 always pay\nA^ visit,\nSo someday, at last\nWhen I'm carried in\nThe Lord won't say\n\"Who is it?\"\nART WITH SCHNAPPS\nAt the border of the village, \u201e.i\nthe lower east side, is the Downtown Theatre, where Halifax's\nLeon Shaw appears in The Boy\nFriend.\nThis is a converted old brown-\nstone mansion in which a musical trio at the corner of the slage\npractically sit in the lap of the\npaying customers.\nThe Downtown has the distinction of being perhaps the only,\ntheatre in New York where patrons can get a drink without going outside.\nThey go upstBirs to a Ukrainian club bar, where beefy Ukrainian gentlemen are glad to fix hot\nrums over a gas stove. Sometimes the Ukrainian choral group\nrivals the chorus downstairs.\nCOLORFUL BRIDGE\nThe towers of the Brooklyn\nBridge\u2014in case you ara one of the\nowners\u2014are turning green.\nCleaners at work for the first\ntime on the two 270-foot granite\nturrets have uncovered their original pinkish-tan hue. The towers\nwere long thought to be black.\n\"Without a doubt this bridge.is\nthe dirtiest thing I've ever seen,''\nsaid the boss cleaner. The bridge\nwas built 75 years ago.\nStudents at Hunter College will\nbe officially \"invisible\" if they\ndon't dress properly on campus.\nToreador pants, dungarees, blue\njeans and slacks are . forbidden\nfor girls. Boys must wear shirts\nand ties or sport shirts buttoned\nat the neck, or jackets. Otherwise, they'll be marked absent\nfrom class.\nSign of the time.: Man with placard on 42nd Street, proclaiming:\n\"I'm out of work. Please speak to\nme. Joe,\" People hurried past.\nBewildered Babe\nLeft Two Nights\nHUTCHINSON, Kan. (AP)-*\n\"My mommy and daddy have\nleft me,\" a bewildered little boy\ntold a neighbor Thursday.\nJeffry Allan Easterday, ZVi\nyears old, apparently spent two\nnights alone at home. His father\nwas on a flight, to Texas; his\nmother is missing.\nTom Easterday, a Navy man\nat a Hutchinson naval air station,\nleft early Tuesday on a flight to\nCorpus Christi, Tex. He returned\nThursday night.\nMrs. Easterday had left without any explanation.\nYoung Jeffry said he had spent\ntwo nights alone. He prepared\nmeals for himself and his two\ndogs. He ate dry cereal, cocoa\nand oatmeal.\nB.C. ESTATES\nAppointment\nL. H. SHANTZ\nSpeaker of the House\nThe appointment of Mr. L. H.\nShantz as representative tor\nB.C. Estates Limited in the\nOkanagan and Kootenays was\nconfirmed today by Geoffrey\nWhitelaw, Managing Director.\nMr. Shantz will be returning\nfrom Victoria to the Okanagan\nfollowing completion of his\ncurrent duties as Speaker of\nthe British Columbia Legislature at the end of this month\nto take over operations from\nthe B.C. Estates Limited Ver-\nnon office.\nGems of Thought\nUSEFULNESS\nUsefulness is doing rightly by yourself\nind others.\u2014Mary Baker Eddy.\n* *      #\nNo man U useless while he has a friend.\n\u2014Robert Louis Stevenson.\n* *     *\nAll service ranks the same with God.\nThere is no last or first.\n* \u2014Robert Browning.\n,    . ,\u00ab     *     *\nNo one  is  useless  in  this  world  who\nightens the burden of it for any one else.\n\u2014Charles Dickens.\n\u25a0\u00bb     *     \u00ab\nEvery *an is useful to his kind by the\nviry fact of his existence.\u2014Thomas Carlyle.\n* *      *\nHave I dpnt anything for society? I have\nthen don* rnor* for myself.\n\u2014William Gilmore Simms.\nThey'll Do It Every Time\nBy Jimmy Hatlo\nOver a week\nAQO <34ZEU_4\nPHONED THE\nFURNITURE\nPEOPLE TO\nT4KE B4CK\nTHE LIV.r.5-\nROOM SUITE\nFOR PlXlNS-\nTODAY'S BIBLE\nTHOUGHT\nThai which Is highly esteemed\nanions Men Is abomination in\nthe tight of God. Lu. 16:15.\nWe have known multimillionaires\nwho at the end confessed they had\nspent their livfts collecting ashes.\nOunlddd,\n_ _> WHEN DO\nTHEY FIN4LLY\nSHOW UP TO\nT4KEIT4.V4y?\nTHUD! At\/O A 7IP0F\nTh'SMTiOgATTD\nMUS.E.BIR,\nSit, VAUOMHRD.\nTOUONTO,\nOUT, OAN.\nC's\nI reckon women have their\nfaults, but I never saw one feel\nas big over success or act as\nwhipped over failure as A man\ndoes.\nFit All, Drip Dry\nCotton DRESSES\nCut in three sizes, elasticized waistband gives variation within each\nsize. Pretty cap sleeve and sleeveless styles with      ^    gm m\ndainty collar and neckline treatments. Lovely colors     MUSa.   9 J\nin attractive prints. Sizes: small, medium, and large.\nPriced at   ;.\n6\nSHEEN SLIM JIMS\nYou'll want a pair of comfortable cotton\nsheen slim jims for Spring and Summer\nwear. Smart tapered legs with side slits,\ntwo pockets, Beige, blue and\nblack. Sizes 10 to 18\t\n3.98\nTAILORED BLOUSES\nRegular shirtwaist style looks smart with\nskirts and sportswear. Convertible collar,\nshort sleeves. White and TOO\npretty colors. Sizes: 12 to 20  _>i\/0\n\u201e><#___\nMlSSfc1 BAN-LON SWEATERS\nSuper-soft Ban-Lon the new 100% quality controlled interlock  PULLOVERS\nsweater that never needs blocking, washes by hand or in       K.9&\nthe automatic washer. They're easy to care for and lovely\nto own. See them now at the Bay's Sweater Department.\nSizes 14 to 20. White, aqua, red, black, beige and pink.\nCARDIGANS\n795\nSmart Fashions\nfor the Younger\nSet\nNYLON DRESSES\nEasy to care for, wash and drip dry dresses,\nstyled for the young lady who desires the\nlatest fashions in easy care fabrics. Choose\nfrom a large selection of pastel shades. All\nwith pretty embroidered, flocked, or lace\ntrim. Sizes 8 to 14. iC OC\nPriced at   Oi7 J\nNEW!   REVERSIBLE   SKIRTS\nFor GIRLS\nm\nVN\n2 Skirts in one \u2014 pttfeetly styled in all\nwbol checks. Mix <Sr match with sweaters\nOr blouses for dn Outstanding Spring\nensemble.'\nSizes 8-14\t\n6.95\n$t&$0$ \u00a3>m dumpangu\nINCORPORATED   2\"?   MAY  1670.\n \u25a0ffliftiffmrf'df\n9:45  a.m.\nChildren's Church\nA wonderful welcome to the\nDay of Resurrection. All Sunday\nSchool Departments will attend,\npupils and parents, united in\nEaster Joy. Choral Praise led by\nthe Crusader Boys' Choir. A city-\nwide invitation to one and -all.\n\u2022 8:00 a.m.\u2014Breakfast Communicants Class.\n11 a.m*\nSermon: \"Fiction and Diction\"\nCome \u2014 all who share the glorious good news of a Risen\nSaviour, and join this fellowship of resounding proclamation\nand heart-healing happiness.. Choral praise led by the\nSenior Choir.\ndfe\n7:30 p.m.\n\"The Climax\"\na>;\nwfr\n10*1\nat the\nFLORAL FESTIVAL\nof PRAISE\n\u2022 Hundreds and Hundreds of\nFlowers\n\u2022 Over One Hundred Voices in the\nMossed Choirs \u2014 Boys, Girls\nand Seniors.\n\u2022 An Experience You Will Never\nForget.\n\u2022 Doors Open 6:45 p.m.\n\u2022 Processional 7:30 p.m.\n\u2022 Closing Chorus 8:30 p.m.\nAll Welcome\nUnife* (ttiptwij\nJosephine and Silica\nMinister\nREV. DONOVAN JONES\nB.A., B.D., Th.M.\nMusic Director\nMERLIN R. BUNT\nPhone 692-L-1\nAnglican Church of Canada\nST.  SAVIOUR'S PRO-CATHEDRAL\nNELSON, B. C.\nDean:  THE RIGHT REVEREND P. R.  BEATTIE,\nB.A., D.D., Lord Bishop of Kootenay\nRector: THE REVEREND CANON GEORGE W. LANG,\nB.A.. L.Th.   '\nSUNDAY, APRIL 6, 1958    \u2014    EASTER DAY\n7 a.m. Holy Communion\n8 a.m. Holy Communion\n11  a.m. Festal Mattins and Sermon\n(Jr. and Sr. Choirs in Attendance)\n12 Noon Holy  Communion\n7:30 p.m. Festal Evensong and Soundstrip\nInstruction\nVII \"The Resurection\"\nEASTER  SERVICES\n10:30 a.m.\u2014Specials by Choir, and Orchestra.\nEaster Message.\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Rev. George Ipp.\nCOME and WORSHIP WITH US AT\nS\u00a3%1 ffiatontarU\nTravelling\nBasket Nets $100\nRIONDEL \u2014 Riondel Hospital\nAuxiliary reported that their travelling basket project was successful, netting the sum of $100. The\nmoney will be donated to the Kaslo\nVictorian Hospital for the purchase\nof gooseneck lamps and a food\ntrolley.\nThe Auxiliary plans to make the\ntravelling basket an annual event.\nmH}t\nS'ahtattmt Aruui\n513 Victoria St.\nLieut, and Mrs. G. Grice\nSUNDAY\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday School\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Holiness   Meeting\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evening Service\nSAINT\nPAUL'S\nEVANGELICAL\nLUTHERAN CHURCH\nCorner Stanley and Silica Sts.\nREV. ERNST H. NYGAARD\nPastor\nEASTER  SUNDAY\u201411  a.m.\n\"Resurrection Rock\"\n7:00   p.m.\u2014Luther   League\nParing of Kokatwe\nEASTER SERVICES\nQueen's Bay \u2014 8:00 a.m.\nWillow Point \u2014 9:30 a.m.\nLongbeach \u2014 11:30 a.m.\n\"Crawford Bay \u2014 4:00 p.m.\nBalfour \u2014 7:30 p.m.\nALL ARE WELCOME\nRev. W. Edington, Vicar\niWmwn\n(Emipttattt Gtyurrlj\n803 Baker St,\nPastor: E. HANSON\nEASTER SUNDAY:\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday School\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning Worship\n7:45 p.m.\u2014Evening Service\nSpecial Easter Music at\nSunday Services\nTUESDAY:\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Sewing Circle at\nMrs. Hardy's.\nTHURSDAY:\n7:15 p.m.\u2014Prayer Meeting\n8:00 p.m.\u2014Choir Practice\nFRIDAY:\n6:45 p.m.\u2014Junior League\n8:00 p.m.\u2014Young People's\n3Ftr0t (Eljurrf! of\nQHjriat \u00a7>ru\u00bbttttat\nV Branch of the Mother Church,\nThe First Church of Christ,\nScientist, in Boston, Mats,\nSunday School: 9:40 a.m.\nSunday Service: 11:00 a.m.\niubject:\n\"UNREALITY\"\nWednesday, Testimonial\nMeeting \u2014 8:00 p.m.\n'loom. 209 Baker St.,\nOpen Daily From\n2:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m.\nSunday Evening\n7:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m.\nALL CORDIALLY\nWELCOME\nWynndel Notes\nWYNNDEL - Rev. and Mrs.\nSchneider and family are taking\nup residence in Creston where Rev.\nSchneider will continue his duties\nas minister of the newly built\nChurch of God in Creston.\nMr. and Mrs. A. Sherwood have\npurchased the house formerly\nowned by Rev. and Mrs. Schneider.\nMiss Sharon Uri has been a patient in the Creston Valley Hospital.\nSALMO\nHILLCREST\nPENTECOSTAL CHURCH\n10:00 a.m.\u2014Sunday School\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evening Service\nPastor: Robert A. Delgatty\nPhone 82-F\nCHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST\nOF  LATTER   DAY   SAINTS\n(Mormon)\n10:30 a.m.\u2014Sunday School\nEagles Hall,  641 Baker St.\nFor Auxiliary Meetings call\nBranch President. Phone 372-L\n812 STANLEY ST.\n11:30 a.m.\nWORSHIP.\n7:30 p.m.\n\"THE TABERNACLE\"\nAll Are Welcome\nPastor H. Creighton\u20141960-L.\n3Ftrat\n$lr?8hi|ftriatt\n(Eljurclf\nMinister: E. A. Hircock\n11:00 a.m.\nFAMILY WORSHIP\nSpecial Easter Sermon.\n1:30 p.m.\n. SALMO UNION SERVICE\nSalmo Community Church.\nAnglican Church\nof Canada\nChurch of\nThe Redeemer\nSecond and Davies Streets\nFAIRVIEW\nRector\nCanon W. J. Silverwood,\nA.K.C., B.Sc.\n9:4^ a.m.\u2014Holy Communion\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Choral Communion\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Festal Evensong\nSOUTH SLOCAN\n9:00 a.m,\u2014Evening Service\nSt. John's\nLutheran Church\nTHE CHURCH OF\nTHE LUTHERAN HOUR\nCorner Stanley and Silica Sts.\nRev. Carl J. Hennig, Pastor\nRes. 317 Silica St.   Phone 729-X\n11:00 a.m.-EASTER SUNDAY.\n\"The Wonderlul Effects of\nThe Resurrection.\"\nComing Event:\u2014\nApril 12\n\"THE CONCORDIANS\"\nfrom Edmonton will appear\nat St. John's Church.\nALL ARE\nCORDIALLY WELCOME.\nCorner of Fifth and Elwyn Streets\nREV. H. R. WHITMORE, Minister\nOrganist: Mr. Angus Fraser\nServices in Church Proper - Fifth Street Entrance\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Senior  Sunday  School\n11:00 a.m.\u2014\"EASTER FAMILY SERVICE\"        \t\n\"Let U\u00ab Wake Up.\"\n11:00 a.m.\u2014The Nursery\n7:30 p.m.\u2014A Choral Service. Boys', Girls' and Senior Choir.\n\"The  Message of  Easter\"\n9:30 a.m.\u2014North Shore United Church Hall,\nSunday School for all ages.\nf tnst lapitisi GIi?urdf\n(Cottonwood and Fourth Sts.)\nMlnltter:   REV.   K.   IMAYOSHI\n(Cottonwood and Fourth Streets)\nEASTER SUNDAY SERVICES\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Open  session  Sunday  School.  Parents invited.\nEaster colored slides to be shown.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014\"Triumph   After   Tragedy\"   Junior   and   Senior\nChoirs. Communion Service.\n7:30 pm.\u2014\"I Believe In Eternal Life\".\nSpecial  choir music.  Communion Service.\nWEDNESDAY:\n8:00 p.m.\u2014Bible Study, Prayer Service.\nCastlegar WA\nConvenes Sale\nCASTLEGAR - The United\nChurch WA held a successful sale\nin the church. basement. Guests\nwere received by the president,\nMrs. J. Sherbiko, and Mrs. A. 0\nMcNeil and decorations carrying\nan Easter theme were made by\nMrs. L.. Morey. Rev. O. McNeil\nwelcomed the guests. The serving\ntable was covered with a crocheted\ncloth and centred with a bowl of\nCalla lilies, while the tea tables\nheld Easter centerpieces.\nPouring were Mrs. W. Easton\nMrs. W. Houston, Mrs. Finlater and\nAirs. W. Blackwell. Tea table convener was Mrs. E. Kraft, assisted\nby Miss Lennie Morey, Miss Gail\nSeaton, Miss Lorraine Hunter and\nMiss Marianne Campbell. Kitchen\nconvener Mrs. Mary Gemmill was\nassisted by Mrs. G. McMaster,\nMrs. T. Blackburn and Mrs. J,\nLipsett. In charge of the apron\ntable were Mrs. H. Gergely, Mrs.\nL. A. Grunerud, and Mrs. J. Gem-\nmill.\nThe bake table was in charge of\nMrs. Forgie-Thompson, Mrs. Bob\nHunter and Mrs. W. Shay. The par\neels for children and adults were\nlooked after toy Miss V. Wyllie.\n%n\nPlan Scout\nBanquet\nPlans for the annual father-son\nbanquet of the Third Nelson Boy\nScouts and Wolf Cubs were discussed Wednesday evening when\nthe Ladies' Auxiliary to the group\nmet at the home of Mrs. J. S.\nMcintosh, 411 Fourth Street.\nApril 23 was set as the date for\nthe banquet which will be held in\nthe Fairview United Church hall.\nThe Rev. H. R. Whitmore is chairman of the group committee made\nup of fathers of the Cubs and\nScouts.\nThe 12 members present heard\nreports on the successful bake sale\narranged jointly by the Third, Fifth\nand Sixth Nelson groups. A rummage sale in which all groups of\nthe city will participate will soon\nbe held.\nCo-hostess for the meeting was\nMrs. David Meakins. The next\nmeeting will take place at the\nhome of Mrs. W. K. Massey.\nThird Nelson Boy Scout troop,\nunder the leadership of ' Gordon\nFleming, is made up of 26 boys.\nThe Cub pack, with Bob Maber\nas leader, numbers 28. Cubs meet\nat the Hume school once a weekj\nand Scouts at the Scout Hall,\nI the\nIt\nLister Notes\nLISTER \u2014 Ray Garrill and Ronald Pernot of Claresholm, Alta.,\nwere callers at the home of G.\nGarrill.\nL. Anderson was a business visitor to Calgary.\nJ. R. Blackmore visited friends\nin Vancouver.\nMr. and Mrs. Alfred Ball and\nfamily, formerly of Cranbrook and\nCreston, have taken up residence\nhere.\nMrs. G. Oliver, Mrs. Edith Huscroft, Mrs. George Fleck, Mrs.\nElaine Sommerfeld and Mrs. Charles Fleck visited at Bonners\nFerry, Idaho.\nMr. and Mrs. R. Scott and son\nof Calgary are visiting the latter's\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. H. Sommer-\nfelt.\nCreston, Golden and Lister\nfriends honored Paul Meyer's on\nthe occasion of his 71st birthday.\nMr. and Mrs. Rudolph Lizzo and\nGary of San Diego, Cal. are visiting Mr. and Mrs. Oliver. Mr. and\nMrs. Lizzo who is Mrs. Oliver's\nsister, are en route to Banff and\npoints East.\nMr. and Mrs. Sid Wigen and\nchildren of Ottawa, en route to\nVictoria, visited J. Huscroft, and\nKenneth and Leonard Huscroft.\nMr. and Mrs. Alex Demchuk and\nchildren were visitors from Cranbrook While here they were guests\nof H. Demchuk, J. A. Hobden and\nL. A. Hobden.\naiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nPHONE 1844\nMiss Dorothy Wallace of Vancouver is visiting her brother-in-\nlaw and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Jack\nMcDonald, 424 Hoover Street. She\naccompanied Mr. and Mrs. McDonald when they returned to Nelson from two weeks spent at the\nCoast, where they visited Mrs. McDonald's mother, Mrs. R. J. Hewitt and sister, Mrs. R. L. King and\nfamily of Nanaimo.\n\u2022 * \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. A. Limacher, 918\nCarbonate Street, have as guest\ntheir son, S. A. Limacher, of Sudbury, Ont.\n\u00bb  \u2666  \u2022\nSpending the Easter holidays in\nNelson, Mrs. O. Bentsen of Kelowna is guest of her brother-in-\nlaw and sister, Mr. and Mrs. R. J,\nWhite, 317 Second Street.\n* *  *\nMr. and Mrs. L. J. Bonacci, 715\nCedar Street, left Thursday for a\nweek's holiday in Vancouver, Victoria and Seattle.\n# \u2022  *\nOn the occasion of his sixth birthday, Martin Ramsden, son of Mr.\nand Mrs. Alan R. Ramsden, 816\nNinth Street, entertained seven\nsmall friends at a party at his\nhome. The young guests enjoyed\ngames and contests.\n* *  *\nFormerly of Nelson and now\nmanager of the Hudson's Bay Co.\nin Dawson Creek, John F. Morrison and family are in Nelson until\nSunday. Mr. and Mrs. Morrison,\nSjisan, Mary Jane and Charles, are\nen route to Portland, Ore., where\nCharles will enter university.\n* * \u2022\nLeaving Thursday night for the\nCoast, Mrs. D. M. Sample, 903\nJosephine Street, Mrs. S. Linton,\nNorth Shore, and Miss Eileen Mackenzie, 413 Carbonate Street, will\nattend the annual conference of\nthe western Canada region of Soroptimist International to which\ndelegates are sent from the four\nwestern porvinces. The provinces\nalternate in sponsoring the conference each year. Delegates from\nRossland-Trail, Kinnaird, Castle-\ngar-Robson, Cranbrook and Kimberley clubs are also attending.\n# *  \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. M. R. Smith, 415\nCarbonate Street, have as Easter\nguest their daughter, Miss Muriel\nSmith, and Miss Mary Gee, who\nattend New Westminster Business\nCollege.\n\u2022 *  \u2022\nMrs. G. F. Olson, Mrs. Henry\nStevenson, Mrs. R. A. Phillips,\nMrs. Frank Beresford and Mrs.\nHenry LeMoigne motored to Spokane this week to attend the Spokane Central Lady Lions' annual\nspring banquet and fashion show.\n. \u25a0. .\nA miscellaneous shower honoring\nMiss Joy McEwen, who is to be\nmarried Monday, was held at the\nhome of Miss Maureen Kennedy,\n324 Houston Street. Gifts were presented to the bride-elect in a basket decorated in a school teacher\ntheme. Winners of games played\nwere Mrs. J. J. McEwen, Mrs. J.\nGilker, Mrs. B. Gould and Mrs. C.\nNoakes.\nGray Creek Winds\nUp Whist Season\nGRAY CREEK \u2014 Final game of\nthe whist tournament was played\nat the Hall, climaxing a series of\ngames held during the Winter\nmonths at various people's houses.\nOrganizer was W. J. Kocher.\nMrs. Wayne Vickery and Mrs.\nHorst Wirsig tied for the ladies'\ntop place, wnileh eading the men's\ncolumn was T. J. Oliver. Second\nplace was Bob LaJeunesse and\nconsolation prize went to Mrs.\nGeorge Botham and Hunter Mc-\nLure. High score at. the last game\nwas made by W. LaPlante.\nMISS DOREEN BACON of\nKaslo, Saturday will join the service of the Royal Canadian Air\nForce. Miss Bacon, who plans\nto go In for radar work and to\napply for overseas duty, will be\nstationed In St. John's, Quebec.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, APRIL 5, 1958 \u2014 5\nEASTER GIFT\nSUGGESTIONS\nHassocks: $j,.95      $2Q-95\nPriced from     * to     ~ W\nTV 'n Table Lamps: *7\u00ab\u00ab      $47.50\nPriced from    * to      ~ *\nFloor Lamps: $|g.9S      SJ.Q-50\nPriced from     .\u25a0\u25a0 to        m \u25a0**\nScatter Cushions:        QQ*      Sj.ss\nPriced from  * +*      to     *\u25a0\nPictures: $7.93\nLarge size. 'teg. $9.95     '\nCard Tables: *7\"95      $1 J.-50\nPriced from  to      \u25a0   *\nSmokers: *Q-50     *21\"95\nPriced from     ** to    *\"_'\nJ>AswnarbL\nWl  ENJOYS\nCHINESE CUISINE\nINVERMERE - MeeUng of the\nWindermere District Womens' Institute featured a Chinese dinner\ncatered to by Mrs. Lim Man You\nof Invermere.\nMembers enjoyed the tasty dishes\nprepared by Mrs. Lim. The supper,\nserved at the home of Mrs. W. H.\nCleland, was followed by the regular business meeting and by a\nshowing of films .by Miss Dorothy\nWorsley of her European tour last\nsummer.\nThe Women's Institute has undertaken to sponsor the Pioneer tea\nwhich will be held Sunday, July 27,\nas part of the Centennial celebrations at Invermere.\nFormer Balfour\nCouple to Mark\n59th Anniversary\nBALFOUR \u2014 Long-time Balfour\nresidents Mr. and Mrs. John\nPeachey will celebrate their S9th\nwedding anniversary April 14 in\nVancouver, theiv present home.\nMr. and Mrs. Peachey resided here\nabout 47 years before going to\nVancouver.\nTheir daughter-in-law, Mrs. Helen\nPeachey and her daughter, Miss\nLynn Peachey, live at Argenta. A\ngranddaughter, Mrs. D. R. Nuyens,\nlives at Nelson and a son, David\nPeachey, at Kelowna.\nis    ^^^^^      \/ great time to get\nKodak camera\nfoamActyb\nPhone 106\nCAMERA\nSTORE\nNelson, B. C.\nLaFrance Notes\nLA FRANCE\u2014Mr. and Mrs. Roland Trenaman and family have\nmoved to Kimberley.\nMr. and Mrs. C. MacKay had\nas their guests their son-in-law and\ndaughter, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Mc-\nLiesh and family.\nMr. and Mrs. Nels Tofelt of La\nFrance and Kootenay Bay visited\nfriends in Invermere.\nA house-warming, sponsored by\nIhe La France Community Club for\nMr. and Mrs. Tom Hoskin, was\nheld in their new home. Many\nfriends and neighbors were present. The presentation of money for\npurchase of a rose bush was made\nby Mrs. Sadie MacKay, president\nof the club. Mr. and Mrs. Hoskin\nalso received other lovely gifts.\nDancing was the theme of the evening.\nMr. and Mrs. Oscar Hellman and\nfamily have moved into their new\nhome which is near completion.\nt^m^ct* Qtufct\nSunday School\nHonors Leader\nWYNNDEL\u2014Teachers and pupils\nof St. Paul's United Church in\nWynndel gave a presentation to\ntheir former superintendent in tribute to many years of service to\nthe Sunday school.\nThe presentation consisted of\ntwo bibles, one a version in story\nform. Both bibles were inscribed\nby W. Greig.\nMrs. C. Vogan made the presentation on behalf of the children,\nwho sang songs during the presentation ceremony. Miss Olga Hagen\nhas taken over as superintendent\nof the Sunday school.\nTo Help With\nMusic Festival\nWork on welfare projects was\nprogressing, it was reported at the\nApril meeting of Kiwanis Hostess\nClub at the home of Mrs. John\nHogg, the group plans to assist\nthe Kiwanis Club with the annual\nMusical Festival.\nMrs. F. Eberle and Mrs. A.\nShrieves were co-hostesses.\nWINNERS AT WHIST\nWYNNDEL - Winners in the\nMilitary Whist, sponsored by the\nWynndel Community Club, were\nMr. and Mrs. W. Abbott, Mrs.\nRagna Uri and Frank Hagen, with\nthe low score going to Mr. and\nMrs. A. Margitan, Mrs. Fletcher\nand Mr. E. Linden. Mr. Larsen\nwas a prize winner.\nThis Ip an Easter picture situation that's a must for the family album,\nslides or movies.\nCapture Easter Joys On Color Film\nEvery season has its day \u2014 its\nbig holiday, that is. Summer sparkles with the First of July and\nfall boasts festive Thanksgiving.\nChristmas, of course, is the star in\nthe crown of winter, and Easter\nis spring's bright promise to the\nearth of joy and fulfillment in the\nmonths ahead.\nWith the approach of Easter,\nalmost everyone gets a \"lift.\" The\nworld takes on a new young look-\nsoft greens and pinks and yellows\nin the shop windows match those\non the flower-vendor's cart. Baby\nchicks and lambs and cottontails-\nnew puppies and kittens \u2014 new\nspring bonnets'\u2014 bright new slipcovers \u2014 shiny screen doors\u2014fresh\npaint and polish.\nThe happy, busy tempo of the\nseason \u2014 the wonderful day of\nEaster itself \u2014 just naturally call\nfor camera and film. No one who\ncan click a shutter would want to\nlet   such   perfect   picture   oppor\ntunities slip by. There's not only\nthe highlight of the Easter Parade\n\u2014 there's the bounty of the Easter\nBunny, egg hunts and parties for\nthe children home from school,\nvisitors on spring vacation trips,\nnewly acquired pets and plants,\nIhe whole family together for\nEaster dinner.\nThese \u2014 and many more \u2014 expected and unexpected situations\nwill be wailing for your camera\nthis weekend. So be prepared with\na good supply of film \u2014 especially\ncolor film \u2014 to do full justice to\nthe colorful symbols of the Easter\nseason. Today's color film is really\na pleasure to use because you don't\nhave to worry about whether you're\ngoing to snap pictures indoors or\nout, with flash or without. It works\nequally well in daylight or with\nflash without the addition of filters\nor hlue flash bulbs to compensate\nfor the different light.\n653 \u2014John Van Guilder\n 6\u2014 NEISON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, APRIL 5, 1MB\n$631 Million in Construction\nNear Record Canadian Figures\nTORONTO \u25a0*\u25a0 As the result of\ngood gains in three of the construction categories that make up the\ntotal, construction contract awards\nhave shown a 14% increase'in dollar volume during the first quarter\nof 1958 when compared to the same\nperiod last year. The strongest\nbuilding type so far this year has\nbeen the Residential category,\nWhich has shot up 134% over 1957.\nEngineering construction shows a\n22% gain, Business buildings are up\n8% \u2014 the lone category showing a\ndrop is Industrial construction\nwhich is down 48% on the first\nquarter.\nFigures compiled by Hugh C.\nMacLean Building Reports show\nthe 3-month cumulative contract\naward total for 1958 to be $631,769,-\n500 \u2014 the second highest first-quarter total on record. This total is\n$80,408,000 ahead of the first-quarter total for 1957. All regions show\nResidential gains for the 3-month\nperiod. Seven provinces record\noverall cumulative gains.\nTotal of awards for March, 1958,\nat $260,139,500, is up $32,195,400\nover that recorded for March last\nyear. Good gains in Residential and\nBusiness were sufficient to offset\nlosses in Industrial and Engineering.\nTwenty-nine \"Big Jobs\" valued\nat $1 million each contributed to\nthe March, 1958, total. Approximate\n\"Big Job\" totals for the month:\nOntario - $30.4 million; Quebec -\n$45.6 million; Maritimes - $25 million; and Western - $24 million.\nThis amounts to $125 million, or\n48% of the total for ihe month.\nMetropolitan trends: Both Montreal and Toronto show increases\nHome Workshop\nSandbox \u2022 Easy to Build\nA sandbox goes a long way in\nkeeping your children happily at\nplay. Stimulate a child's imagination and he'll keep occupied. This\nKOEHLE\nELECTRIC\nPhone 1630 Nights 544-R\n410   Kootenay  St,\nNelson, B.C.\nIn volume during the first quarter.\nMontreal's 3-month total ls $150.4\nmillion, up $81 million over 1957;\nToronto's total is $118 million, up\n$28.8 million over last year. Montreal shows gains in all categories\n\u2014 Toronto shows galrts ln Residential and Engineering.\nComparative figures for March,\n1958, for each category (with 1957\nfigures in brackets) are as follows\nResidential, $86,093,800 ($31,742,\nD00), up $54,351,800; Business, $64,-\n337,000 ($46,778,300), up $17,568,700;\nIndustrial, $63,153,200 ($76,346,600),\ndown $13,193,400; and Engineering,\n$46,555,500 ($73,077,200), down $26,-\n521,700).\nComparative cumulative figures\nfor the first quarter of 1958 for each\ncategory (with 1957 figures in\n\u2022brackets): Residential, $217,435,100\n($92,729,400), up $124,705,700; Business, $146,234,300 ($134,269,200), up\n$11,965,100; Industrial, $92,117,500\n$180,633,300), down $88,545,8.0; and\nEngineering, $175,982,600 ($143,698,\n600), up $32,284,000.\nComparative cumulative regional\nfigures for the first quarter ot 1958\n(with 1957 figures in brackets):\nMaritimes, $51,314,000 ($28,770,000),\nup $22,544,000; Quebec, $182,358,200\n($98,418,200), up $84,165,000; Ontario, $253,587,800 ($265,707,300), down\n$12,119,500; and Western, $144,284,-\n500 ($158,465,000)', down $14,180,500.\ngaily colored sandbox, with Its\nwhimsical fish decoration appeals\nto every youngster.\nWhether used as a sandbox or as\na wading' pool, it provides a\nmagnet that consumes many playtime hours.\nAnyone can build and decorate\nthis box at small cost by using the\nfull size pattern offered below. This\nspecifies what materials to buy,\nwhen and where each is used. No\nspecial tools are needed.\nPeople who haven't used a hammer or saw in years, frequently\ndeclare they can t drive a nail\nstraight. When these same people\nstart building a .attern project\nthey are amazed to find it far\neastler than they imagined.\nThousands of people in every\nwalk of life find woodworking lots\nof fun. Besides providing an economical solution to household equipment problems, it offers many\nhours of complete relaxation.\nTo eliminate any need for artistic\nability, the pattern painted with\ncolors specified. Building from a\npattern is quick, easy and economical.\nSend 40c for Sandbox Pattern No.\n20 to Pattern Dept., NDN, Quinn\nLumber and Builders Supply Co.\nLtd., 280 Maitland Street, London,\nOnt. Send additional 55c for catalog\nillustrating over 300 other projects.\nRoof Pilch\nImportant In\nShingle Choice\nIn re-roofing a home, the degree\nof slope or pitch to the roof has\nan important bearing on the\nchoice of the roofing material\nmost suitable for the job.\nThe lower the pitch, the more\nnecessary it is to guard against\ndamage to the house by moisture,\nwind and rain. Water flows more\nslowly off a low-oitch roof, and\nwind is better able to get under\nthe edijes of the roofing material.\nAsphalt shingles, the most widely used roofing material for homes\ncan be safely applied on roofs that\nslope as little as two inches per\nfoot of horizontal run,\nUsing a special application\nmethod developed ln recent years,\na double-thick fe't ii\"derlr> Is\nput down. A 19-inch wide strip of\nthis material is laid first at the\nnave edge. Thi1! cov<\"-ed -with a\n36-inch wide strip, and succeeling\nstrips of this width are laid over\nthe entire roof, overlapping 19\ninches each.\nWhen the asphalt shingles are\napplied, the roofer places a half-\ndollar sized spot of quick-setting\ncement under each table and\npresses the shingle down firmly.\nThis bonds the shingle to the one\nbeneath It, and prevents wind and\ndriving rain from getting under\nthe protective armor of the roof,\nSome asphalt shingles have a\nspecial design which locks Uie\ntabs in place, and spots of cement\naren't needed. Dther types of asphalt shingles jiave cement pre-\napplied at the factory.\nVancoivfli' ^*\u00ab*lcs\nFor Service\nCall...\nKootenay Plumbing & Heating\nCo. Ltd.\n151 Baker St. Nelson, B. C. Phone 666\n.A Complete Plumbing ond Heating Service\np^curUAj^,\n^\nEXPERT PACKING\nMODERN STORAGE*\n\u2022SoniHiod jervfc* assures yo\u00bb a clean,\n\u2022of* move. And every detail is Pre-Planncd\nto save you work, worry. No extra cost. Call\nWEST TRANSFER CO.\n719 laker St.\nPhono 33\nNikon, I.C.\n11'!\"-.       mmifi. \"\".       I \u00bb1 \"WW' II.\nSERVING UNITED StATIS\nCANADA, ALASKA,   .\nHAWAII & PUERTO RfcO1\n(Closing P\nMINES\nrices)\nBeaver Lodge \t\n.17\nBralorne \t\n5.30\n- .0314\nCariboo Gold\t\n.67\nFarwest Tungsten ..\n.10\n.09\n1.00\n1.38\nGranduc  \t\nHighland Bell .\nKootenay Base Metals\t\n.01\n.15\n1.35\n.05\nPioneer Gold\t\nQuatsino \t\n.23\n.26\n4.00\n.05\n.20\nSherritt Gordon  ,\nSilver Ridge \t\nSilver Standard \t\n.16\nSunshine Lardeau .\n.1114\nTavlor \t\n.12\n,1954\nTrojan  _\u201e\nOILS\nAltex\t\n.12\nA P Consolidated\nCalgary and Edmo\n.36\n18.75\nlton ...\nCharter \t\n1.60\n14.00\n1.15\n1.30\n16,50\n.30\n11.50\n.30\nOkalta Com \t\nPacific Pete\t\nPeace River Gas\nRoyalite  \t\nSparmac \t\n,11 Vi\nUnited  \t\n1.78\n.16\nVanalta \t\nVantor     \t\n1.19\nINDUSTRIALS\n1.35\n1.15\nAlberta Distillers Vt\t\nB C Forests\t\n9.00\n43.00\nB C Telephone\nCrown Zeller (Can)\n13.00\nInt Brew B\t\n4.10\n'nland Nat Gas \t\n2.75\n4.80\nMacM 4 Bloedel B\n25.75\n1.50\n30.00\n45.75\n23.00\nMid Western \t\nPowell River \t\nTrans Mtn\t\nWestminster Paper\nWestern Plywoods\n13.50\n1 BANKS\nBid\nAsk\nBank of Montreal\n41.50\n42.50\nCan Bank of Com\n44,00\n45.00\nImp Bank of Can\n45.00\n46.00\nRol Bank of Can\n54.60\n55.50\nFUNDS\nCan Inv Fund ....\n\u00bb.u\n8.91\nCommonw'lth  Int\n6.59\n7.25\nGrouped Income\n8.23\n3.53\nInvestors Mutual\n9.46\n10.23\nLeverage \t\n4.54\n4.99\nTrans Can \"C\" ....\n5.00\n5.40\nWhen applying paint with a rol\nler always start with a\nnew load\non an unfinished\narea and work\ntowards a finished\narea.\nJ hi. Wbd&hn dionuL\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS\nTh* Dally Newi doe\u00ab not hold Itself re.ponilbl. In th* event\not \u00abn error In th* following Hats.\nTORONTO  STOCKS\n(Clotlag Prices)\nMINES\nAlgom Uranium   13.6214\nAnacon Lead\nAtlin Ruff\t\nBarnat \t\nBase Metals\n50\n.13\n,36Vi\n,20\n.19\n2.03\n5.20\n7.60\n1.36\n7.45\n.99\n.17\n12.8714\nVLAN MO. QSB- MJs\nFOR A PRACTICAL family home, that incorporates everything a growing family needs, we\nrecommend this lovely three-bedroom home, The\nliving room is located on the front of the house,\nand features an inside fireplace wall, for easy\nfurnishing. If you are looking for a plan to fit\nthat front to back sloping lot, this ls the plan for\nyou. It has a frontage of 52' and an overall area\nFLOOQ    MSEA-.     \\AIA  SO TT\nof 1424 square feet. We have designed It to meet\nthe regulations laid down by National Housing\nAct, and you may obtain the working drawings\nfrom the building Centre (B.C.) Ltd., 1240 West\nBroadway, Vancouver 9. Our new CENTENNIAL\nISSUE of \"Select Home Designs\" is now available. Send 25 cents to cover cost of mailing and\nhandling.\n17 More Kootenay\nPolls Report Totals\nFederal election returns were received from 10 more West Kootenay\nand seven East Kootenay polls\nGood Friday, their totals making\nlittle effect on the election night\nreturns.\nThe standings with only three\npolls left to report, were:\nKootenay West\nH. W. Herridge, CCF    10,401\nPeter Dewdney, PC    .    9,116\nW. J. McLoughlin, Lib :    2,517\nHarry Almack, Soc. Cred. ..    1,876\nKootenay East\nMurray McFarlane, PC   5293\nJames Byrne, Lib   4419\nDave Bjerstedt, CCF    3968\nJames Chabot, SC   2060\nReturns from the West Kootenay\npolls added 82 votes to the count for\nH. W. Hetridge, veteran CCF member who has represented West\nKootenay in the House for 12 years.\nThey brought his total up to more\nthan 1000 over his returns in the\nJune 10 election last year.\nFriday night there were two\npolls, Poplar .Gerrard and Marble-\nhead \u2014 still not heard from.\nIn the East Kootenay, where liberal member James Byrne was defeated by Progressive Conservative\ncandidate Murray McFarlane, only\n14 votes were added to his original\ncount of 5279. Mr. Byrne, three-\nterm member, received 128 more.\nOnly one East Kootenay poll,\nForde, was unreported.\nThese additions to result in Kootenay West were made:\nArgenta \u2014 Almack 1, Dewdney\n1, Herridge 20, McLoughlin 1,\nTrout Lake \u2014 Almack 0, Dewdney 2, Herridge 3, McLoughlin 1. \u25a0\nBeaton \u2014 Almack 2, Dewdney 15,\nHerridge 11, McLoughlin 1.\nFerguson \u2022- Almack 0, Dewdney\n8, Herridge 2, McLoughlin 0.\nHowser \u2014 Almack 1, Dewdney\n10, Herridge 7, McLoughlin 1.\nLardeau \u2014- Almack 1, Dewdney\nCRANBROOK P.O.\nBUSINESS DROPS\nCRANBROOK\u2014Gross volume of\nbusiness at the Cranbrook post\noffice In March tallied $74,288.47,\nsubstantially lower than the gross\nfor the same month last year at\n$84,861. It was the first month in\na year to show a relative decline,\nUnemployment insurance stamps\nsales, representing the volume of\nemployment, came to $5603.24 compared with $6661.12 for last March,\nprobably due to earlier closing of\nwoods for spring runoff than occurred in 1957, Sales were higher\nthan for February, which totalled\n$4752.18.\nPostage stamps and meter revenue was $4198.23, down from the\ntotal of $4509.23 for the month last\nyear. Money orders issued 'numbered 3450 compared with 3942 for\nlast March and money orders paid\nnumbered 794, compared with 933\npaid last March.\nDuring the month the post office\nconsigned 420 pieces of mail to the\ndead letter office as undeliverable\nwhen addresses were insufficient to\nlocate the addressee.\nTAX \u2022 FREE PURCHASES\nPARIS (Reuters) \u2014 Foreign\ntourists ln France will be,able to\nbuy goods tax free in future if\nthey pay for them in Canadian\nor United States dollars or currencies of the European Payments Union, including sterling,\nthe finance ministry announced\nThursday night. Taxes, including\npurchase lax, range from 15 to 25\nper cent of the price.\nDewdney 1, Herridge 11, McLough\nlin 3.\nGalena Bay \u2014 Almack 0, Dewdney 3, Herridge 6, McLoughlin 0.\nPend 'Oreille \u2014 Almack 1, Dewdney 5, Herridge 3, McLoughlin 2,\nBirds Landing \u2014 Almack 5,\nDewdney 12, Herridge 3, McLoughlin 6.\nKootenay East\nNewgate \u2014 Bjerstedt 19, Byrne\nChabot 7, McFarlane 7.\nBull River \u2014 Bjerstedt 5, Byrne\n12, Chabot 5, McFarlane 20.\nBeavermouth \u2014 Bjerstedt 6\nByrne 5, Chabot 8, McFarlane 2.\nEricksons Camp \u2014 Bjerstedt 1\nByrne 2, Chabot 4, McFarlane 1.\nNohel's Camp \u2014 Bjerstedt 5\nByrne 1, Chabot 0, McFarlane 0.\nLeanchoil \u2014 Bjerstedt 5, Byrne\n5, Chabot 0, McFarlane 1.\nMoberly \u2014 Bjerstedt 4, Byrne 4\nChabot 4, McFarlane 2.\nBaska Uranium\t\nBrunswick \t\nCampbell C \t\nCampbell R. L.\t\nCan Met\t\nCassiar > -\nCentral Patricia\t\nCoin Lake\t\nCons Denison \t\nCons. Discovery    2.70\nCons Halliwell  2814\nCons Howe     1.90\nCons Mining & Smelting ....  17.50\nCon Sanorm 05Vi\nCon Sub   76\nCopper Corp      .2414\nD'Aragon ...: 16\nDonalda  -     .16\nElder Gold     1.90\nFalconbridge 66\nFaraday    21.62V.\nFrobisher     1-46\nGeco      1.50\nGlen Uranium     6.00\nGoldora  33\nGunnar Gold   15.25\nHarmlnerals 10\nHeadway   65\nHollinger   22.50\nHudson Bay    42.00\nInt. Nickel    72.00\nIron Bay     1.55\nJoliet Que 2414\nKerr Addison   17.75\nLabrador   _   15.25\nLakeshore   _     4.25\nLittle Long Lac     1.90\nLorado  52\nMacassa      2.70\nMadsen R. L     2.12\nMalartic G. F.     1.00\nMaritime Mining 57\nMart McNeely 23\nMcLeod       .95\nMcKenzie R. L 14\nMilliken      2.10\nNew Delhi 38\nNew Fortune  11\nNew Highridge 12\nNew Harricana 12\nNlpissing        1.32\nNoranda New   39.3714\nNormetals      2.55\nNorpax 20\nNorth Rankin 45\nOpemiska     7.10\nPlacer Devel   10.00\nPreston E. D     5.50\nQuebec Copper 38\nRadiore  45\nRayrock  _ 90\nSherritt Gordon     4.15\nSilver Miller  68\nStadacona 20\nSteep Rock        9.55\nSullivan Con     2.05\nSylvanita   \t\nTeck Hughes\t\nTemagami\t\nThomp-Lund\t\nUnited Keno  \t\nUpper Canada\t\nVentures  \t\nViolamac \t\nWaite Amulet\t\nWiltsey Goglin\t\nWright Hargroaves\nYeliowknife Bear \t\nOILS\nAmerican Leduc      .19\nBanff Oils _ 166\nBailey Selburn - 7.50\nCalgary and Edmonton .... 19.25\nCdn Atlantic  4.20\nCanadian Collieries  4.10\nCanadian Devonian  _ 5.30\nCan Decalta -.-..      -05\nCons Peak 05t_\nHome A ....:   14.25\n1.15\n1.61\n1.29\n.78\n3.85\n.63\n23.00\n1.25\n6.25\n.18\n1.22\n.85\nMidcon  .,\t\nNat. Pete\t\nNew Continental\nNew Gas Expl ....\nOkalta      \t\nPacific Pete \t\nPetrol\n.78\n1.91\n.38\n1.19\n1.43\n16.6214\n.51\nProv Gas  -     2.61\nRoyalite\nSpooner     \t\nStanwell Oil\t\nTriad\t\nUnited Oils\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi  \t\nAlgoma Steel\t\nAluminum\t\nArgus 2nd pfd ...\nAtlas St\t\nB.A. Oil    \t\nBathurst Power .\n11.8714\n.1714\n.69\n4.20\n1.80\n2714\n25\n26%\n4714\n1614\n36%\n16\nBeatty Bros \u201e     3.55\nBell Telephone .\nBrazilian \t\nB.C. Forest\nFive Panelists\nSpeak on Careers\nKIMBERLEY - Five speakers\ncomposed the panel at the McKim\nSelkirk Junior Higs School PTA\nmeeting where the theme was\n\"Vocations for Boys\". Dr. Neve,\nspeaking on career as a doctor,\nstressed it was \"hard but rewarding work, with a wide range of\nearnings... but a good 12 years\nwork and study before you can be- \u201e_...,,\ncome   established.\"  Opportunities good. \"Business is not a short cut\nwere available in many branches to riches but it offers plenty of op-\ncareers, said banking is a divers!\ntied business with opportunities in\ndomestic and foreign branches.\nAl Fabro speaking on businesses,\nsaid, he believed the future looked\nof the field, in science and research\ndepartments, public health, government health and as general physicians and specialists.\nNorman Thomas speaking for\npharacists said there was unlimited\nopportunity for those who will work\nand were willing to put in long\nhours. There were opportunities in\nhospital dispensarys, industry, research developing and production\nand sales production, and in the\narmed services.\nLeo Fowler speaking on banking\nportunity for those willing to ap-\nply,\" he said. A study of bookkeeping and accountancy should be the\nfirst consideration.\nG. Venovitch spoke on careers In\nteaching, said \"This U, not too high\nfrom .he financial standpoint, but\noffers people a chance to study as\nthey teach.\" The cost, including\nroom and board would run around\n$1000 a year, and various courses\nfrom one to five years could be\ntaken according to the standard\nyou wish to attain.\nCanadian Rhodes Scholars\nFind Oxford Inspiring\nBy RUSSELL ELMAN\nOXFORD, England (CP) - A\nyoung undergraduate argued\nheatedly with a relaxed, pipe-\nsmoking don in an Oxford College.\nSitting in a comfortable armchair in the don's rooms, he had\njust read aloud an essay and\nnow fiercely defended his arguments as the don tried to pick\nholes in it. The student might how\nthree, years. In contrast with Canadian practice, he specializes in\none subject throughout. Emphasis is on the academic side.\nOLDER STUDENTS\n\"The law course here Is not as\npractical as at the University of\nSaskatchewan,\" said Ken Lysyk\nof Khedive, Sask., also at Wad-\nham. \"However, I hope I will be\na better lawyer for the theoretical\nbefore wider knowledge and ex-! 8\u2122\u2122d,\"S I J! get at Oxford\nperience, but not before he was I    T\u2122 Canadian, who usually al-\nconvinced   the   older   man   had f ready Possesses a university de-\nproved his point.\nThat is how things go at Oxford. Once a week in an hour-\nlong informal session, the undergraduate goes over his work with\nhis tutor.' This unique relationship   between   student   and\ngree, \u25a0 may have an advantage\nover the English student. He often is older and if he reads the\nsame subject as ln Canada, he\nhas less groundwork to plow\nthrough.\nHis most difficult problem may\nteacher, copied but rarely dupli-1 be ,strikjng, a  balance  between\ncated at other universities, Is a  m*\\ and play, to reap the greatest benefit from Oxford life. The\nreason why Oxford and its\nway of life are so attractive to\nthe 60-odd Canadians in residence each year.\n\"The tutorial system is probably Ihe best thing Oxford has to\noffer us,\" said John Fraser of\nOttawa, a Rhodes scholar at Magdalen College. \"Being able to sit\ndown and talk on\" equal terms,\nwith some of Britain's best brains\nis a wonderful experience.\"\nHEAVY READING\nFred Drummie, 24, a Rhodes\nscholar from the University of\nNew Brunswick now at Wadham,\nsaid the tutor hopes to hit the\nhigh spots in the course, leaving\nthe student to fill in the gaps with\nhis own reading. Ideally, he\nshould do 40 to 50 hours a week.\n\"It is impossible to abuse the\ntutorial system and get away\nwith it,\" he said, sipping tea in a\ncommon room. \"At a Canadian\nuniversity, you finish part of your\ndourse each year in annual examinations but at Oxford you are\ntested on the entire syllabus at\nthe end. You can't cram two or\nthree years' work into the final\nmonth.\"\nThe university offers a wide\nselection of lectures in all subjects but attendance is voluntary.\nStudents generally prefer to skip\nlectures if the same information\nis available In a book.\nThe Canadian at Oxford usually\nprefers to read for a bachelor of\narts degree, taking the final examination after two, instead of\nCanadians have no particular so\nciety or organization of their own,\nleaving Oxford's varied extracurricular titbits to Individual\ntaste.\nFraser, son of Ottawa newspaper man Blair Fraser, is editor\nof the undergraduate weekly\nnewspaper Cherwell. Drummie is\nsecretary of the university hockey\nteam. Nearly everyone spends the\nlong vacations travelling.\nLIKE TO TALK\n\"For eight weeks in term, you\nare in a fully self-contained society, with its own rules and traditions,\" said Gay Sellars, a graduate of the University of Toronto\nnow taking an advanced degree\nat Nuffield. \"When I came up\nhere I thought lt was wonderful\nthat London was only 70 minutes\naway. But I have found everything I could want in Oxford \u2014\ntheatre, music, politics and university societies of every description.\"\n\u25a0 But perhaps the most appealing\nthing in Oxford for the Canadian\nis conversation. Every undergraduate, it would seem, is prepared\nto strike up a sparkling discussion on any subject, at any time\nand at any place; he is an authority on Plato, Liberia and the\nweather.\n\"In Canada, people seem more\nconcerned about what is said than\nhow It is said,\" said Miss Sellars. \"Here, it may be th* other\nway round.\"\nB.C. Power A ~.\nBurns A '. \u201e\nCanadian Breweries \t\nCanadian Celanese \t\nCan. Cement\t\nCan Chem Co      4\nCanadian Dredge  _\nCan. Malting\t\nCan Oil \t\nCanadian Pacific Rly .\nCan. Packers A\t\nCockshutt \t\nCons Gas  _\t\nDist. Seagram \t\nDom. Foundries ....\u2022\t\nDom Magnesium _.\nDom. Steel Ord\t\nDom. Stores   \t\nDom. Tar & Chemical.\nDom. Textiles\t\nFamous Players  _\nFanny Farmer\t\nFord A\t\nGatineau \t\nGatineau 5% pfd\t\nGen. Steel Wares  _,\nGypsum Lime\t\nImperial Oil  \t\nImp. Tobacco _.\nInt. Pete\t\nLoblaw A\t\nLoblaw B  \t\nMassey Harris\t\nMcColl Frontenac\t\nMoore Corp\t\nPage Hershey\t\nPowell River \t\nPower Corp\t\nRuss. Industries  \u201e.\nShawinigan \t\nSicks Brew\t\nSimpsons A \t\nStandard Paving\t\nSteel of Canada\t\nTaylor Pearson \t\nUnion Gas of Can\t\n41'4\n614\n36%\n3914\n1114\n27''t\n1614\n2914\n,80\n16\n53\n23%\n2414\n39\n8%\nS1'4\n2614\n27%\n11\n20\n57\n13\n8%\nlev*\n1514\n74%\n31%\n102\n614\n33\n39,4\n12%\n33%\n25\n2414\ni%\n5414\n68\n114\n714\n26%\n2414\n17%\n37\n53%\n8%\n7814\nIF YOU ARE\nPlanning or Building\nA HOME\nBe Sure to Obtain Our Prices on All Your\nWindows and Frames, Doors\nand Other Millwork\nSATISFACTION  GUARANTEED\nT. H. Waters & Co. Ltd.\nPHONE   156\n1958\nLawn-Boys\nNow On\nDisplay\nSeven Models\nlo Choose From\n(Ai Low as $56.95)\nGenerous Trade-In Allowance for Your Old\nPower Mower\nPhone Ul For Demonstrations or Appraisals\nNow Is the Time to Have Your\nPower Lawn Mower Serviced\nRepair Parti In Stock For All Lawn-Boys\nA New 18\" Blade Is Only $2.55.\nWhy Not Have Yours Replaced?\nSinnerud Truck & Tractor Ltd.\n191 Boker St.\nPhone 1030\nNelson, B.C.\n Your Individual\nHOROSCOPE\n\u2014.     By Vrmweem Drake\u2014\u2014\u2014\nFor Sunday, April 6,1958\nLook In the section in which your\nbirthday comes, and find what your\noutlook is, according to the stars,\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 20 (Aries)\u2014\nA joyful Easter to you! And a few\n\"Don'ts\" suited to the day's\ntroubled times: Don't be antagonistic, eccentric, nor approve of\nfoolish whims. Don't overindulge in\npleasures.\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus)-\nBe eager to thank God for another\nEaster; help those whose ideals\nyou are sure of; carry charity with\nyou. Both good and not-so-good\ninfluences are about; tread sturdily on God's safe ground.\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Geminil-\nGuard against pleasures before\nduties, and heedlessness in family\nmatters that deserve more attention. These, and any tempters you\nrecognize, can, so should, be handled ably by you.\n. JUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer)-\nWlth the right start at the glorious\nEaster Sunday church services,\nand good will toward all, you will\nattract benefits and build happiness\nthat can last a long time. Don't\npermit moodiness.\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leol-\nNever underestimate the value ot\nsimplicity in prayer. Great martyrs\nusually prayed simply from the\nheart. You could make this day a\nsort of New Year beginning, renewing forgotten worthy resolutions.\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER 23\n(Virgo) \u2014 Upon awaking, first let\nyour mind and heart soar to heaven\nto give thanks for the grace of\nawakening. Then recall your many\nother advantages. Live this day\njoyfully in praise of God.\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER\n23 (Libra) \u2014 You innately realize\nhumanity's wonderful privileges\n(when living up to your better self)\nand Librans are often found at the\nfoundation of humanitarian works.\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER 22\n(Scorpio) \u2014 Begin today brightly,\nin true Scorpio fashion, appreciat\ning all good little things of life,\nlooking forward to the many more\ngood days that can be made. We\nmust give to really live.\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER\n21 (Sagittarius) \u2014 Participation in\ncelebrating others' good fortune,\nas well as sympathizing with.them\nin trials is equally important.\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY 20\n(Capricorn) \u2014 Be faithful to your\nfaith, thus will you be content and\nlive with honest progress as healthy\nhumans. There is no place In this\nday for distrust, or dissatisfaction.\nLook up!\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY 19\n(Aquarius) \u2014 No qualms! It ls a\ntime for thanksgiving, inward happiness, with faith in God's goodness.\nFEBRUARY 2 Oto MARCH 20\n(Pisces) -r Quiet resolution, firm\nbelief in your salvation, and living\nfor that end dally is the recipe to\nrenew this privileged Easter. Have\nfaith in God and in your country's\ndestiny; strive for its good.\nYOU BORN TODAY are under\nmost heartening aspects. You\nshould feel inspired (as persons of\nthis Sign usually arc) to greater\nheights, to do more for humanity,\nyour community, family. Truly,\nyou can lead these to the summits\n(when you are trying consistently.)\nRoundly talented, often surprisingly versatile. Just don't become, too\nexcited over any project and overdo or over-push others. Protecting\ngood health makes for longer years\nof attainment. Distribute your vitality carefully; develop tolerance,\nyour wit and perception. Operate\nunder wise precautions when enthusiastic. Birthdate of: Raphael,\nrenowned painter; Marcus Aurel-\nius, Roman Emperor, philosopher.\nKing Features.\nFor Monday, April 7, 1958\nLook ta the section in which\nyour birthday comes and find\nwhat your outlook is according\nto the stars,\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 20 (Aries)\n\u2014 A peppy, spirited day. See that\nyou are ready with ambition and\ninitiative. You can accomplish\nmuch good if not too demanding\nof self or others. Try new things,\ncontinue with the usual.\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus)-\nMostly generous vibrations. Be inspired to start day smartly. Finances, business improvements,\nconferences to better things generally favored. Do your part conscientiously, cheerfully.\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini)-\nNew (of value) daring ventures,\nhandling machinery, discoveries\nand Inventions; promoting things\nof help to mitigate work in the\nhome or office and mental subjects highly honored.\nJUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer) -\nBring forward your good ideas,\nput them logically to work. Show\nothers how to achieve. Face new\ntasks wjth faith, confidence, cheer.\nIn free time, read good material,\nand enjoy entertainment.\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leo>-\nToday set your pattern for the\nwhole week, which can be a productive one. A splendid time, for\ndiscovering flaws, bettering many\nthings that have loopholes, and for\nfinishing incompleted items.\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER 23\n(Virgo) \u2014 If you aren't as original as usual, don't fret; get busy\nwith matters needing attention.\nPut things in order. You innate\n\"knack for system and orderliness\nneeded now. Fine rays on the\nwhole.\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER 23\n(Libra) \u2014 Trades, all laborious\nwork, engineering, architecture,\nmining, among top favored. Delicate and artistic matters also under a benefic Venus. Moon   and\nother  well  aspected  planets say\n\"Attain \"\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER 22\n(Scorpio) \u2014 Very good day, Mars\nnot too aggressive. The energy\nand vigor felt can be used to good\npurposes, pressing forward with\nright matters, maintaining a\nsoundly productive schedule.\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER\n21 (Sagittarius) \u2014 This should not\nbe solely a money-seeking day. It\nencourages worthwhile activities,\nnew and usual problems, art,\nstudy, planning. Real accomplishment in your interests is honored.\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY 20\n(Capricorn) \u2014\u25a0 Generally an excellent day for healthy things, but\nbe sensibly careful just the same,\nespecially in spending and dangerous activities. Have faith in\nachieving, reach for top results.\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY 19\n(Aquarius) \u2014 You' may find the\nunusual and different easier, more\nfruitful than the ordinary, but this\nis mostly a generous period. Work\nwith zest, meet competitors with\nself-assurance, know-how.\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\n(Pisces) \u2014 Stimulating vibrations\nfrom Neptune to add to the benefic influences from other . stirring\naspects. Can and should be an\nimportant day for you, no matter\nhow big other things are.\nYOU BORN TODAY are bright,\nengaging, often exciting and always interesting. Sometimes a\nturbulent somebody, but with talents galore. Such a personality of\ncourse holds some failings, faults,\nbut they are not difficult to correct. Your reasoning powers can\nhandle most situations with ease\nand efficiency. Don't ever override reason or others' rights \u2014 it\nnever pays. You can be the most\ngracious and pleasant person when\nat your best. So every day, with\nprayer and faith in God be a\nbetter YOU.\nKing Features.\nThink Chinese Reds Will\nLeave Hong Kong Alone\nBy ROBERT TUCKMAN\nHONG KONG (AP)-A question\noften asked by newcomers to this\nBritish crown colony is: \"Will\nthe Chinese Communists take\nHong Kong?\"\nMost oldtimers here will reply:\n\"No, at least not now or for some\nyears to come.\"\n\"Hong Kong may be living on\nborrowed time,\" says one longtime resident, \"but right now it's\nmore valuable to the Communists the way it is.\"\nFor the Chinese reds, flourishing Hong Kong is a source of\nhard money, a trading post, a\nlistening post and its only door\nto the Western world.\nBoth the British who govern\nthe island and resident foreigners readily concede lhat the\nCommunists would have no\ntrouble, militarily, in seizing\nHong Kong from Its small British garrison.\n\"They wouldn't have to do\nmuch more than make a few\nphone calls,\" is the usual, half-\nSerious comment.\nThe Peiping - owned Bank of\nChina is the colony's biggest\nstructure (although soon to be\ntopped by an 18-storey British\nbank).\nTHREE   NEWSPAPERS\nThe Chinese Communists publish three newspapers here, operate a government purchasing\nagency,and a government travel\nagency as well as run several\nschools and numerous retail\nshops.\nNevertheless, there Is little\ndoubt' that the dominant sentiment among Hg Kong's 2,500,000\nChinese is anti-Communist. Not\nthe least of the anti-Communists\nare the 700,000 refugees who fled\nRed rule in the last nine years.\nLast Oct. 1, on the Chinese\nCommunist anniversary, there\nwere many Red flags In evidence. But 10 days later on the\nNationalist Chinese anniversary\n\u2014Double Ten Day\u2014there were\nmany more Nationalist banners.\nIn the three days of Kowloon\nStreet rioting between pro- and\nanti-Communist during October\nlast year, it became clear that\nthe Chinese population was heavily on  the anti-Communist side.\nHong Kong businessmen\u2014generally conceded to be among the\nworld's sharpest\u2014are gambling\nthat the Reds won't move in for\nat least a decade.\nINVESTING HEAVILY\nThey are investing heavily in\nnew trading companies and industrial enterprises, notably the\nfast-growing textile industry.\nFor the last year, the colony\nhas been underg.ing a building\nboom which is still in full swing.\nIn bustling, thriving Hon?\nKong, a threat of aggression\nfrom its big neighbor to the\nnorth seems\u2014at the moment\u2014a\ndistant worry.\nProphet's View of 2000 A.D.:\nLife Will Be Beautiful!\ntrt\nBy EVAN CHARLES\nNEW YORK - In 1911 this fellow predicted Ihe system of electronic detection the world now\nknown as radar; in 1915 he foretold flying saucers, in 1920 he\ntold of the coming of man-made\nsatellites, and last year he prophesied a kind of sputnik- that\nwould ndraw its power from the\nsun.\nFor the Twenty-first Century,\nhe predicts a way of life that\nwill rriake our Twentieth Century\nas old-fashioned as a mustache\ncup!\nThe man with the phenomenal\nability to forecast scientific advances is Hugo Gernsback. Friend\nand fellow scientist of such men as\nLee De Forest, who invented the\nvacuum tube, and the physicist\nNikola Tesla, Gernsback sees\nmany modern scientific achievements as confirmations of things\nhe envisioned many years ago.\nIn a novel he wrote in 1911, for\nexample, he foretold the use of a\npulsating radio wave to locate objects many miles away. He said\nthat when the radio wave was\nWhite Elephant\nFeund, Thailand\nBANGKOK (Reuters) \u2014 The\nfirst royal white elephant of\nthe reign of King Phumiphol\nAduladet of Thailand has been\nfound in the southern province of\nKrabi.\nThe discovery of a white elephant is traditionally c o n s i d-\nered an auspicious event in the\nreign of a Thai king.\nThe elephant, a four-year-old\nbaby, has been brought to Bangkok and housed in the zoo. Tourists visit it there every day. Foreigners in particular are disappointed to find the elephant is not\npure white, but a muddy pink.\nBut it is certain white markings, including white eyes, white\nears and body hair and white\ntoes that make it a royal white\nelephant.\nIn olden times, royal white elephants were floated down to\nBangkok by river. Religious ceremonies and festivities were held\nat every village through which\nthey passed.\nLate in the 16th century, seven\nwhite elephants were discovered\nin Thailand. The king of neighboring Pegu, in modern Burma,\nasked for two of them. When the\nThai king refused, he invaded\nthe land with 900.000 men, 7.000\nwar elephants and 15,000 horses\nand took away four white elephants instead of two.\nBy these standards Ihe most\npowerful, monarch in Thai history was King Chulalongkhorn,\nwho as a prince was taught English by Anna Leonowens, author\nof the book that was made into\na film and a hit musical play.\nThirteen white elephants were\nfound in his reign, including\nthree described as \"pure white.\"\nSir John Bowring, who led an\nEnglish diplomatic mission to\nThailand in the 19th century,\nsaid: \"The real cause of the reverence in which the white elephant is held is that he is supposed to be the incarnation of\nsome future Buddha and will\ntherefore bring blessings on the\ncountry which possesses so great\ni\\ treasure.\"\nDAILY  CROSSWORD\nACROSS\n1. Road\nbranch\n\u00bb. Mr\u00bb. Doud'a\ndaughter\n10. Fragrant\nwood\n12. Prize\n13. Wild grape\nvine\n14. A tear\n(her.)\n18. Weight\n(Den.)\n16. The Pope'a\npalace\n18. Basque cap\n19. Gaucho'i\n\\w\"pim\n22. Like\n23. Overweight\n26. Presidential\n.   assistant\n28. Avoid\n30. Herd of\nwhales\n31. Music note\n33. Metal\n34. River (Fr.)\n36, Georgia's\ncapital\n39. Winter\nhazard\n42. Cook in an\noven\n43. August 14,\n1945\n45. Stand up\n\u202246. Crimean\nresort\n47. Dipped out,\naa water\n48. Botch\nDOWN\nLDrop\n2. Hodgepodge\n>. Highway 24. Fuss\ni. Know 25. Num-\n(Scot) ber\n5. Kind of cat 27. Sloped\n6. Expect    \u2022 29. Fib\n7. Refuse of 32. Skill\ngrapes 34. Bll-\n8. Girl's name        Hard\n9. Paradise stroke\n11. Keep         . 35. flhlpa\n17. Goddess of of\ndestruction        war\n18. Trick 36. Inland\n(slang) aea\n19. Sack (Russ.)\n20. Harem room 37. \"Law\n21. Escape of\n(slang) Mows\"\n23. Pelt (var.)\nalalia Hasp\nr_5MI .l-lfci;   l:!h..ll__\nWmm   UHE1H3H\nhhb uhh    an\n HH   OBIBBO\n\u25a0.-\u25a0wan i-irj.ii..]\nYeitftrdsy'i Amwcf\n88. Placed\n39. Not\nworking\n40. Felines\n4L Unfledged\nbird\n44. Wedge ln\n4*\nDAILY CBYPTOQUOTE\u2014Here's how to work Its\nAXYDI, BAAXIt\nla LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Is used\nfor the three L's, X for tha two O's, etc.   Single letters, apo-.\ntrophes, tha length and formation of the words ar* all hint*\nEach day the code letter* ar* different.\nDIM\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nZIVOF'C      L      NJNNGM.\nLW F\nDSM GRAM IA ELW GMCC D8LW L\nCKLW-NLUIW.\nyesterday's Cryptoquotei LOVE THE LITTLE TRADE\nWHICH THOU HAST LEARNED, AND BE CONTBUT\nTHEREWITH\u2014AUKELtUS.\nDistributed by King Mam BmslleK*\ninsert a nitrocartridge into one leg,\nturn on the button and now fully\nblown-up chair stands rigid yet\nmolds itself to your bndy.\n\"We had a very delicious meal\nprepared and served automatically\nfrom an electroservo. This handsome table, which served a five-\ncourse, dinner for six people, prepares, cooks and serves food. It is\na table, an electrostove, a tefriger-\nator and dishwasher, all in one . . .\n\"The hostess . had stocked the\nservo before dinner with the hy-\ndraulically compressed and dehydrated food, thin discs about two\ninches in diameter of. steaks, boned\nfish and chicken. She had dialled\nthe servo for the prescribed\namount of water, sauces and butter\nwhich the servo will automatically\nadd,\" the Gernsback prophecy continues.\n\"In front of the hostess is a row\nof buttons which she uses as various foods are wanted ... All foods\nare cooked outside and there is\nnever any cooking smell . . . After\ndinner, all that is necessary is to\npress another button which brings\nup the dishwasher.\n\"Afterwards we flew home in\n' Strong pneuma-chalrs are made of plasheen and take up\nless than half-cubic foot of space, Man In centre Inflates chair\nfor use,\nsent to the moon, it would come\nbouncing back to earth in 2.5 seconds. On Jan.10, 1946, American\nmilitary experts bounced a radio\nsignal off the moon \u2014 it returned\nin 2.4 seconds!\nGernsback, born in Luxembourg,\ntook an early interest in science,\nand when he came to the United\nStates at 18 he brought with him\nan improved design for a dry-cell\nbattery. He sold it to automobile\nmakers forignition systems, manufacturing the battery himself in\ndowntown New York.\nIn the 1920's, when 'Gernsback\nbegan to publish magazines in the\nfields of science and electronics,\nhe inaugurated the term \"science\nfiction\". Gernsback still publishes\nmonthly magazines, but once a\nyear he produces a pamphlet titled\nForecast, and the 1958 edition is\na lulu!\nIn it he describes a visit to a\n','typical home in the country\" of\nthe not-so-distant future:\nFirst\u2014\"It has no windows. During the past 15 years, windows\u2014\nwhich let in dust and drafts\u2014have\ndisappeared . . .\n\"Like all new houses, this one ls\ntotally dust-conditioned and infrared heated, prozon-aired and bac-\nterio-conditioned with the latest\nultra-vlolizer panels in every\nroom. These new and powerful\npanels, artistically disguised as\nmodern paintings, kill 96 per cent\nof all known air-carried bacteria\nand viruses. , ,\n\"Windowless, all new houses are\nnow dependent on the lately perfected solarads (solar radiation\nlighting fixtures). They give true\nsunlight\u2014not an imitation\u2014by ato-\nfusion; that is, atomic fusion. No\nwires are used. They last for many\nyears without refueling . . .\n\"Most rooms are percentage\ngravitated. By means of a wall\nregulator, you energize the counter-\ngravitational unit below your floor\nfrom 10 to 100. Thus, if you weigh\n170 pounds and your regulator Is\nset at 10, you weight 17 pounds.\n\"The low gravity is usually set\nfor sleeping purposes\u2014it gives you\nmaximum rest because you exert\nlittle weight on the bed now. For\nworking about the house, 15 to 18\nper cent gravity is best.\n\"What we liked best in our\nfriend's home were its new and\nbeautifully-styled pneuma - chairs.\nUltra-comfortable, made of the latest plasheens, they have a velour-\nlike silk touch.'yet they weigh only\ntwo pounds and when deflated take\nup less than one-half cubic foot of\nspace.\n\"To Inflate them within seconds,\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, APRIL 5,1958 \u2014T\nSTAMP CORNER\nBy JAMES MONTAGNES\nTelevision in North America has\nnot resulted in any special postage\nstamps, but in other countries the\nbeginning of television service has\nbrought out a rash of special\nstamps. Latest to join the growing\nnumber of stamps is that of Hungary, issued late in February and\na miniature, souvenir sheet of a\nstamp for Hungarian television\nwere printed. The two florint red\nstamp shows a tall office building\nwith a television tower on its roof\nand an inscription for \"Magvar\nTelevizio.\" The souvenir sheet\nbears a green 2 florint stamp of\nfimllar design with a gold border.\nCzechoslovakia recently began\ntelevision service and two stamps\nwere issued, one showing people\nlooking at a television set and the\nother showing a television transmitting tower and receiving antennae on houses.\nFrance had a stamp for television\nin 1955 featuring the transmitting\nantenna on the Eifel Tower at\nParis. Luxembourg showed its television transmitter at Dudelange on\na 1955 stamp. Italy in 1954 issued\ntwo stamps for television showing\na receiver with a map of Italy on\nthe screen and a receiving antenna.\nSwitzerland on a 1952 stamp of its\ntelecommunications commemorative set featured the eye of television. West Germany on a 1957\nstamp showed the screen of a television sot to mark the start of its\ntelevision service.\nBecause in most fo.those countries television is operated by the\nour cosmoflyer, a cosmic power\nharness that one dons on top of\nany building for flying short distances. At the 2000-foot lane, an\naircop radioed us over and threatened us with a traffic (air traffic\nfine) if we didn't light our head-\nbeacon (red flashing light worn on\ntop of the head to avoid collisions).\n\"We apologized and told him\ngravely that one of his own orange\ntaillights on his belt was out, too.\nWe parted good friends.\"\n' Did 1958 ever look better?\nAmong new stamps to arrive are (top, left to right) from\nAustralia two stamps with different border design for th*\nAustralian War Memorial at Canberra: from 8weden for It*\nhelicopter postal service, and (lower, left to right) from Vatloan\nCity for the Lourdes shrine; from Egypt for political leader\nMustafa Kamel on the 60th anniversary ef his death, from\nHungary for the start of television In that country, and from\nFrench Equatorial Africa a stamp showing a kudu antelope.\nTry and Stop Me\nHusbands, notes Russell Lyncs\nsadly, have become virtually\n\"part-time wives.\" reduced to\nwashing dishes, changing diapers,\nor flourishing the strings of their\nbarbecue aprons. Prospects for\nimprovement, continues Lynes,\nare bleak. \"They have made their\nbeds,\" he said, \"and now thev\nmust not only lie in them \u2014 but\nmake them every morning!\"\n\u2666 *  *\nWhen a book of cats hit the\nstalls, a dealer sold his entire\nstock in two hours and reordered\n100 copies. 'The publisher wired:\n\"100 more cats on way. Are your\ncustomers mice or men.?\"\n* *  *\nA diplomatic mother tells how\nshe restored peace between her\ntwo embattled daughters, aged 17\nand 14. The 14-year-old had had a\nbig day in the open air and was\nordered to bed at the early hour\nof 9 to recuperate. When her \"hoy-\nfriend\" nhoned ' at 10, the o'.der\nsister told him his dream girl was\nasieen.\nNext morning the \"dream girl\"\nwas read\" to murt'er her sister.\n\"Now he'll think I have to an tn\nbed every nisht like a mere child,\"\nshe wailed. But the wise mother\ninterpolated, \"I heard what your\nsister told that young man. She\nsaid you had a terrible hangovr.\nHe really seemed impressed.\"\nA look ot unholy joy crossed the\n14-year-o!d's face as she went over\nand threw her arms around her\nsister's neck!\n\u2022 *  *\nThings looked bad for Hades\nthe day the devil backed into a\nlawnmower. But then he hurried\nover to a liquor store where he\nheard they retailed spirits.\n\u2022 *   a\nMarlon Brando defines an actor\nas \"a guy if you aren't talking\nabout him, he isn't listening.\"\n\u2022 * ..\nA couple of zoot-sulters, vacationing in Florida, went to see an\nathlete in a bathing suit climb\ninto a tank to wrestle with an al-\nlltator. \"My, mv,\" exclaimed one\nadmiringly, \"what a crazy way\nto close a suitcase!\"\nam,\nA well-lit tourist teetered un to\na traffic con and gulped, \"where\nam I?\" \"Brother,\" laughed the\ncop. \"vou are smack in the middle\nof Fifth Avenue and Forty-second\nStreet.\n\"Never mind Ihe \u2014 the def.i's,\noffisher,\" said the tourist airily,\n\"What City?\"\nTELEVISION   FOP   TODAY\nKXLY-TV - Channel 4\nSATURDAY\n: 00\u2014Good Morning\n15\u2014Baseball Preview *\n30\u2014Baseball Game !\n:00\u2014Chicago Wrestling\n:00~Masters Rolf *\n00\u2014Western Roundup\n00\u2014Captain Kangaroo\n30\u2014Mighty Mouse\n-.00\u2014Cartoon CWn\n:30-Wild Bill Wckock\n:00\u2014Last nf Ihe Mohicans\n: 30\u2014Jungle Town\n:00\u2014Starlite Stairway\n: 30\u2014Top Dollar * '\n.00\u2014Rale Storm Show *\n:30-Have Gun, Will Travel *\n:O0\u2014Runsmoke *\n:30\u2014Perry Mason\n; 30\u2014Late Show\nSUNDAY\n9:00\u2014Mormon Conference *\n11:00\u2014Oral Roberts 'Easter)\n11:30\u2014Triumphant Hour\n12:30\u2014Oral Roberts\nL00-TBA\n1:15\u2014Christian Science\n1:30\u2014Masters Golf *\n3:00\u2014Hill Number On*\n4:O0-This Is The Life\n4:30\u2014Song  Shop\n5:00\u2014'News Commentary\n5:30\u2014Annie Oakley\n6:00\u2014Mickey Rooney Show\n6:30\u201420th Century *\n7:00\u2014Lassie \u2022\n7:30\u2014Jack Benny *\n8:00\u2014Ed Sullivan \u2022\n9:00\u2014G.E. Theatre \u2666\n9-.30-Alfred Hitchcock,*\n10:00\u2014$64,000 Challenge *\n10:30\u2014What's My Line\n11:00\u2014Errol Flynn Theatre\nKHO-TV - Channel 6\nSATURDAY\n9:00\u2014Ruff and Reddy *\n9:30\u2014Furv *\n10:00-\"Andy's Gang *\n10:30\u2014Howdy Doodv *\n11:00\u2014NetWork Fill TBA\n11:30\u2014NBC Major League Ball *\nDodgers vs. Braves\n2:30\u2014Gangbusters\n3:00\u2014Western Theatre\n4:00\u2014True Story *\n4:30\u2014Detective Diary-*.\n5:00\u2014Hopalong Cassidy\n6:00\u2014Farm Summary\n6:15\u2014 Farm Newsreel\n6:30\u2014Sabre of London\n7:00\u2014Death Valley Days\n7:30\u2014People Are Funny *\n8:00\u2014Perry Como *\n9:00\u2014Target\n9:30-Your TV Theatre\n10:00\u2014Ted Mack Amateur Hour *\n10:30\u2014Hit Parade *\n11:00\u2014Late Movie: \"Life Boat\"\nSUNDAY\n1:00\u2014Christopher Series\n1:30\u2014This Is The Answer\n2:00\u2014Sunday Matinee on Six:\n\"Indian Love Call\"\n4:00\u2014Omnibus *\n5:30\u2014Price Is Right\n6:00-TV Theatre\n7:00-My Friend Flicka *\n7:30\u2014No Warning *\n8:00-Steve Allen *\n9:00\u2014Chevy Show *\n10:00\u2014Loretta Young * .\n10:30\u2014Late Movie: \"Red Dust\"\nKREM TV - Channel 2\nSATURDAY\n2:00\u2014Adventures of Roy Rogers\n3:00-Play of the Week\n4:30\u2014KREM Cartoons\n5:00\u2014Country Music Jubilee *\n6:00\u2014Championship Bowling\n7:00\u2014Man Behind the Badge\n7:_0-Dick Clark Show *\n8:00-All-Star Golf \u00ab\n9:00\u2014Lawrence Welk *\n10:00\u2014Navy Log *\n10:30\u2014Channel 2 Theatre\nSUNDAY\n1:00\u2014Faith for Today\n1:30\u201420th Century Fox Hour\n2:30\u2014Telecourse\n3:00\u2014Johns Hopkins File '\n3:30\u2014Janet Dean, R.N.\n4:00\u2014Royal Playhouse\n4:30-Paul Winchell \u2022\n5.00\u2014Tales of Texas Rangers *\n5:30\u2014Lone Ranger *\n6:00\u2014Sunday Spectacular\n7:30\u2014Maverick \u2022\n8:30\u2014Adventure at Scott Island '\n9:00\u2014Sid Caesar Invites You *\n9:30\u2014You Asked For It *\n10:00\u2014Channel 2 Theatre\n(Programs subject to change by stations without notice.)\ngovernment through postal authorities which also operate all communication services, these stamps\ncountries have also issued such\nto television have appeared. Other\nstamps and more are contemplated\nin the near future.\nA collector who wants to have a\nspecialty of stamps featuring television would do well to get started\nnow while the number of stamps\nis still small and those issued are\nstill reasonably priced. The early\nstamps of a topical subject such\nas this usually become scarce when\nthe topic becomes popular.\nAmong interesting books to appear recently is one issued by the\nSwiss postal department at Bern,\nSwitzerland, dealing with the various steps in printing Swiss stamps.\nThe 40-page booklet is written in\nEnglish, as well as Italiar, French\nand German, and illustrates the\nprocesses from the first design of\nrecent Swiss stamps to the choice\nof the final design. Samples of pictorial stamps of issues of the past\n20 years are shown in various\nstages of design. The booklet contains a great deal of Information\nfor the student of philately and can\nbe obtained from the Swiss postal\nadministration for about $1.50.\n#   +   *\nNew issues ... The United Arab\nRepublic has issued its first stamp*\nfor an Afro-Asian congress on eye\ndiseases , . . France has issued a\nset of stamps for four famous scien-\ntists . . . Ghana's stamps {or tin\nfirst anniversary of its independence feature buildings and th*\ncountry's flag . . . Western Samoa\nhas issued new stamps with it*\nUnited Statei Issues thi*\nstamp for the Brussels Inter*\nnational   Exhibition  at  Detroit\nname in its native language \"Samoa I Sislfo\" and commemorating\nits parliament, with pictorial de-\nsigns including Samoa and New\nZealand flags and map of the islands . . . Western Germany ha*\nissued a stamp for forest fire prevention . . . Vatican City haa\nissued a set of stamps for the religious shrine at Lourdes, France.\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PF.OGRAM8 1240 ON THE DIAL\n(PACIFIC  STANDARD  TIME)\nSATURDAY, APRIL 5, 1958\n6:55\u2014Farm Fare\n10:5O\u2014Sports News\n7:00^Wake Up Time\n11:00\u2014Metropolitan Opera\n7:25\u2014Sports  News\n2:30-D.J. for a Day\n7:30\u2014News\n4:00\u2014Now I Ask You\n7:35-Wake Up Time\n4:30\u2014Old Country Sports\n8:00\u2014News\n4 45\u2014Sports College\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n5:00\u2014Moods ln Modern\n8:15\u2014Market   Review\n5:25\u2014News\n8:20\u2014Breakfast  Varieties\n5-30-NHL Hockey\n8:30\u2014All the Weather\n7:00\u2014Organ Music\n8; 35\u2014Varieties\n7:30\u2014News\n9.00\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Western Roundup\n9:00\u2014Agostinl Conducts\n8:00\u2014Marine Investigator\n9:15\u2014Story Parade\n8:30\u2014Prairie Schooner\n9:30\u2014Stamp Club\n9:00\u2014Music From Montreal\n9:45\u2014Outdoors with Kerry Woods\n9:30\u2014Winnipeg Pops\n10:00-Postmark UK\n10:00\u2014News\n10:30\u2014Musicale\n10:10\u2014Sports News\n10:45\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Sign Off\nSUNDAY, APRIL 6, 1958\n9:55\u2014Sign On\n3:45\u2014In Retort\n10:00\u2014News\n4:00\u2014UN on the Record\n10-10\u2014Snorts News\n4:15\u2014British Israel Broadcast\n10:15\u2014Just Mary\n4:30\u2014Weekly Sports Review\n10:30\u2014This Is My Story\n4 45-^Interlude\n11:00\u2014St   Paul's-Trinity\n5:00\u2014Billy Graham\n12:00\u2014Fix It-Make It\n5:30-World Church News\n12:10\u2014Musicale\n5:35\u2014Mantovani\n12 15-News\n5:45\u2014Bethel Tabernacl*\n12:25\u2014Sports News\n600\u2014Pacific Playhoiu*\n12 30\u2014Capital Report\n6:30\u2014Music Diary\n1:00\u2014News\n7:00\u2014News\n12:15\u2014Sports News\n7:30\u2014Sunday Choral*\n12:25\u2014News\n8:00-CBC Stage\n1:03\u2014Canadian Scene\n8:00\u2014Winnipeg Symphony\n1:30\u2014Critically Speaking\n10:00\u2014News\n2:00\u2014Timmy's Easter Parade\n10:10\u2014Sports News\n3:00-TBA\n10:15\u2014Sign Off\n3:30\u2014News.\nCBC PROGRAMS\n(PACIFIC STANDARD TIME)\nSUNDAY, APRIL 6, 1958\n8:00\u2014News\n3:42\u2014Weather Report\n8:03\u2014Random Hour\n3:45\u2014In Reply\n900\u2014BBC News\n4:00\u2014UN on the Record\n9:15\u2014The Random Hour Cont.\n4:15\u2014Ed McCurdy\n9:30\u2014Come All You Round\n4:30\u2014Little Symphonies\n10:00\u2014B.C. Gardens; Weather\n5:00\u2014Toronto Pop Concert\n10:15\u2014Just Mary\n6:00\u2014Pacific Playhouse\n10:30\u2014In His Service\n6:30\u2014Music Diary\n11:00\u2014Chamber Music\n7:00\u2014News\n11:30\u2014Religious Period\n7:10\u2014Weekend Review\n12:00\u2014Music\n7:20-Our Special Speaker\n12:30\u2014Capital Report\n7:30\u2014Sunday Chorale\n12:57-Weather Report\n8:00\u2014CBC Stage\n1:00\u2014Canadian Scene\n9:00\u2014Winnipeg Symphony Orch.\n1:30\u2014Critically Speaking\n10:00\u2014News\n2:00\u2014Timmy's Easter Parade\n10:15\u2014Joe and Maudie\nof Stars\n10:30\u2014The Lamentation of\n3:00-TBA\nJeremiah\n3:30\u2014News\n11:00\u2014New Records\n3:35\u2014Ask the Weatherman\n12:00\u2014News and Weather\nMONDAY, A\nPRIL 7, 1958\n7:00\u2014B.C. Fishman's Broadcast\n3:30\u2014Program Resum*\n7:15\u2014Musical Minutes\n3:45\u2014B.C. Roundup\n7:30\u2014News\n4.30\u2014Once Upon a Time\n4:45\u2014The Moon of Snowshoes\n7:35\u2014Musical Minutes\n5.00\u2014Bands on Parade\n7:40\u2014Morning Devotions\n5:15\u2014News\n7:55\u2014Musical March Past\n5:25\u2014On The Scene\n8:00\u2014News\n5:30\u2014Sports Desk\n8:10\u2014Sport News\n5:40-Byllne\n8:15\u2014Musical Minutes\n5.45\u2014Mostly Music\n6:00-FEDERAL ELECTION\n8:35\u2014Anything Goes\n10:00\u2014News and Weather\n9:00\u2014BBC News\n10:15\u2014Music 201\n9:15\u2014Morning Concert\n11:00\u2014Midnight Concert\n10:00\u2014Morning Visit\n11:57\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Happy Gang\n10:45\u2014Pages From Life\n11:00\u2014Kindergarten of the Air\nTV - RADIO\n11:15\u2014Now I Ask You\n11:45\u2014Theme and Variation\nREPAIRS\n12:15\u2014News\n12:25\u2014Showcase\nGuaranteed Service\n12:30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\nPHONE 2050\n12:55-Five to One\n1:00\u2014Afternoon Cone\nFor Prompt Attention\n1:30\u2014A Touch of Greasepaint\nMc t Me\u2014Nelson, B.C.\n2:00\u2014Holiday Time\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n 8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, APRIL 5, 1958\nIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIMIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nSPORTS\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimimiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nHabs# Coach Happy-Won't\nAlter Successful Formula\nMONTREAL TCP) \u2014 Fate having been good to the Montreal\nCanadiens, coach Toe Blake has\ndecided not to monkey with it.\nThe Canadiens, Blake decided,\naren't interested in any special\ntechniques or styles of play no\nmatter who they meet in the\nStanley Cup finals. They'll just\nkeep playing the regular sort of\nfire-wagon hockey that has already brought them the National\nHockey League championship\nand a four-straight victory over\nDetroit Red Wings in the Stanley\nCup semi-finals.\n\"We have only one style \u2014 to\nwin,\" said Blake. \"We'd becrazy\nto change our style now.\"\nCanadiens will come up against\nU. S. ICE TITLE\nSERIES LINED UP\nINDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Mel\nRoss, general manager of Indianapolis Chiefs of the International\nHockey League, said Thursday\nnight he has been talking over a\npossible U.S. minor league championship series with officials of\nCharlotte Hornets, Eastern League\nplayoff favorites.\n\u2022 Indianapolis won the International League playoffs Tuesday\nnight at Louisville. Charlotte leads\nthe best-of-seven final series 3-2\nover Washington.\neither New York Rangers or Boston Bruins, who lead the best-of-\nseven semi-final 3-2.\nBlake said he thought tihe rest\nafforded his champions by their\nquick victory will be good for\nthem, particularly oft - injured\nplayers like Dickie Moore, Jean\nGuy Talbot and goaltender Jacques\nPlante.\nTOUGH WORKOUT\nBlake put the Canadiens\nthrough a 90 \u2022 minute workout\nThursday but kept the body-\nchecking and rough stuff out. Another long practice is scheduled\ntoday.\nPlans for more workouts will\ndepend on how long the Rangers-\nBruins series lasts. If it goes Ihe\nfull seven games the final opens\nhere Thursday.\n. Defenceman T o m Johnson,\nstill bothered by a knee injury,\nis doubtful for the series.\nOther Canadiens still ailing are\nMoore\u2014whose left hand is in a\ncast although he plays regularly\n\u2014and Bernie (Boom Boom)\nGeoffrion; recently recovered from a serious operation for\na ruptured bowel.\nGeoffrion still is being used\ni only on power plays.\nBill Slater\nShows Mates\nGreat Style\nMONTREAL (CP) - Olympic\nveteran Bill Slater clipped more\nlhan 15 seconds Irom his Canadian record lor the 1,650 - yard\nfreestyle swim Friday, winning\nthe first event of the British Empire Games trials.\nSlater, 17, of Vancouver covered the course in 19:02.3 and\neasily bested five others, all\nfrom Montreal.\nHis former record was 19:17.4.\nThe high school student, who\nwon a fifth place for Canada in\nthe 1956 Olympics, also broke another record for a shorter distance. He was officially clocked at\n9:57.5 for 880 yards, 10.8 seconds\n[aster than his previous record\ntime.\nIt was the first event of the\ntrials. More than 70 men and\nwomen swimmers and divers\nfrom five provinces are competing for 12 places on the team\nto go to Cardiff, Wales, in July.\nThe 17-event program continues\ntoday and Monday.\nFriday's event was the only\none scheduled.\nJacques Corbeil, who stuck\nwith Slater for the first eight\nlaps, finished second far behind\nin 20:37.5. Yvon Blanohette was\nthird, Pete Rutherford fourth and\nRobert Tamilia fifth.\nBlanchette used a backstroke\nthe whole way.\nMONTHLY RING AWARD TO RAY\nAFTER CONQUEST OF BASILIO\nNEW YORK (AP) - Sugar Ray\nRobinson's re-conquest of the middleweight championship earned the\nNew York marvel the Fighter of\nthe Month honor in the monthly\nRing Magazine boxing ratings released Friday.\nRobinson's victory over Carmen\nBasilio, and featherweight king Ho-\nDunlops Batter\n-Star Team\nWHITBY, Ont. (OP) - The world\nhockey champion Whitby Dunlops,\nmaking their first appearance before home fans since winning the\ninternational amateur title at Oslo,\ndefeated a Toronto all-star squad\n8-6 Thursday night.\nThe all-stars comprised mainly\nplayers. from Buffalo Bisons of the\nAmerican Hockey League and the\nBrampton Consumers of the Ontario Hockey Association Senior B\nLeague. A crowd of 1800 watched\nthe contest.\ngan (Kid) Bassey's successful title\ndefence against Mexico's Ricardo\n(Little Bird) Moreno and many\nother important bouts In the last\nmonth resulted in a shuffling of\nthe ratings in most divisions.\nIn th light-heavy division, New\nYork's Tony Anthony, who stopped\nCanada's Yvon Durelle, was promoted from fourth to second, and\nthe Baie Ste. Anne, N. B., fighter\nwas dropped from second to fourth.\nYolande Pompey of Trinidad, stopped by middleweight Rory Cal\nhoun, fell from third to seventh.\nErich Schoppner of Germany was\npromoted from fifth to third.\nBASILIO TOP CONTENDER\nIn the middleweight division. Basilio took over Robinson's No. 1\nspot among the contenders. Holly\nMims' upset victory over Spider\nWebb moved Mims back into the\nelite 10 at the No. 7 spot. Webb\nfell from third to sixth. Charley\nHumez of France advanced from\nfifth to third.\nHuber-Wareo\nGRADERS\nand\nROAD ROLLERS\nATIONAL\nACHINERY\nLimited\n. Granville   Island\n\\ Vancouver 1, B.C.\nHOLDS FIGHT TITLE\nTOKYO (AP)-Keiichi Ishikawa\nFriday night retained his Japanese\nlightweight crown by knocking out\nYasushi Kumagaya in the third\nround of a 10-rounder.\nShichiro Kimufa won an upset\n10-round decision over Hitoshi Mi-\nsako, Japanese flyweight contender, in the semi-final.        ,\nTOWED BY REINDEER\nLONDON (AP) \u2014 Moscow Radio\nsaid Friday a Soviet collective\nfarmer won a 1600-metre ski race\ntowed by a reindeer in Murmansk.\nThe iarmer's time, 3:03, was\nachieved in one of Ihe main events\nof the 24th Festival of the North\u2014\na winter sports \"Olympics\" beyond\nthe Arctic Circle.\nFights\nBy The Associated Press\nDenver \u2014 Nine Valdes, 206,\nCuba, outpointed Wayne Bethea,\n204. New York, 10.\nSt. Louis \u2014 Charles (Sonny) Listen, 205, St. Louis, outpointed Bert\nWhitehurst, 192, Baltimore, 10.\nRichmond, Calif. \u2014 Bobby Scan-\nIon, 133, San Francisco, stopped\nLuke Easter, 135, San Francisco, 8.\nBOSOX SATISFIED\nBOSTON (AP)\u2014Joe Cronin, general manager of Boston Red Sox,\nsaid Friday the American League\nclub is- satisfied to remain at its\npresent location\u2014Fenway Park.\nEarlier in the week plans for a\n$10,000,000 sports centre in Norwood to include a 60,000 capacity\nstadium were announced. Construction would be contingent on the\nRed Sox using it.\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILY.\nCanadian Cities\nBeing Considered\nFor New Pro Loop\nDALLAS, Tex. (AP) - Dallas\nhas been given a franchise in a\nnew U.S. professional football\nleague lhat is scheduled lo begin\noperation next fall.\nGeorge Schepps, general man\nager of the Dallas baseball club,\nsaid Friday he is \"very interested'\nin trying to put a pro football team\nin the Cotton Bowl.\nThe International Football\nLeague Inc. is being organized by\nJack Corbett, a former Dallas man\nwho has owned several minor\nleague baseball clubs and once operated a chain of theatres, Schepps\nsaid.\nIt is to be a 12-team league, with\nIhe cities to be selected from Bos\nton, Brooklyn, Buffalo, Cincinnati,\nSt. Louis, Kansas City, Minneapolis, Milwaukee, Toronto, Montreal,\nHouston, Dallas, Mexico City, Portland, Seattle, San Diego, Havana,\nMiami, Louisville and Denver.\nDallas, Denver, Miami and Houston are the only four that so far\nhave been granted franchises.\nStanley Cup\nStatistics\nBy The Canadian Press\nBest-of-seven semi-finals\nSeries B\n'    W L F   A\nBoston  s.    3  2  20   14\nNew York    2  3  14  20\nMontreal   won   series   A   semifinals against Detroit 4-0;  awaits\nwinner of series B between Boston\nand New York.\nScorers:\nG A Pts Pen\nM. Richard, Mtl    7. 3   10    2\nMacKell, Bos    2  8   10    6\nMohns, Bos         2   7    9   10\nMcKenney, Bos     5   2    7    0\nToppazzini, Bos    5   1    6    0\nBeliveau, Mtl    2   4    6    2\nGoyette, Mtl    4   15    2\nMoore, Mtl          3   2    5    2\nCreighton, NY    3   2    5    2\nHebenton, N Y    2   3    5    4\nH. Richard, Mtl....   0   5    5    2\nThree Open Choices\nFor Former Champion\nThe 68 Fairlane Club Sedan\n\u2014beautiful yet low priced' member of Ford's fine Fairlane series.\n58 FORD offers Built-in Value\nat no extra cost to you!\nHERE ARE THE FACTS:\nIn the low price three\nit's Ford that offers you these 9\nextra value features as standard\nequipment in every model!\nLooking for value in your new car?\nThen look to the 58 Ford. There's\nbuilt-in quality, \"straight down the\nline\" . . . and it's there at no extra cost\nto you!\nextra IMlUf\/FordWwswept-baek, ball-\njoint front suspension is specially-designed\nto soak up the bumps . . . give a softer,\neasier ride on even the roughest roads.\nEXTRA VALUE! Ford's giant-grip, double-\nsealed brakes bring you added confidence.\nDouble sealing helps keep water and dirt\nout of the brake system for longer life.\nEXTRA VALUE! Deep, rrsilinnt\nfoam-rubber padding lines the\nfront seat of every Ford car.\nGreater comfort for passengers is\nthe result. . . less driving fatigue\non long trips, i\nextra VALUE! New Magic Circle\nsteering takes the work out of\nwheel-turning, responds quickly\nand smoothly to a touch of your\nfinger. Parking's no longer a problem, and driving's pure pleasure\non any road.\nEXTRA VALUE! Ford's roof and\nbody insulation is the best in any\nmodern car. Heat,'sound and\nweather are thoroughly damped\nout for a far more quiet, comfortable ride.\nEXTRA VALUE! New, deep-offBet\nhypoid rear axle is an improved\nFord design. Husky yet low-slung,\nit permits a lower car level without\nsacrificing interior leg room.\nEXTRA VALUE! Variable rate rear\nsuspension cuts \"squat\" and \"dip\"\non fast starts and stops. -KeepB you\non an even keel through the\nsharpest turns.\nEXTRA VALUE! Ford'Bfronthinged\nhood is designed for safety and\neasy accessibility to engine.\nReduces danger of hood's flying up\nwhile you're driving .. . cuts time\nand labor costs during repairs.\nextra VALUE! With the new\n'Inner Ford' you ride deep down\ninside the chassis for greater comfort and stability. The frame is\nwelded, braced and bonded to form\none incredibly tough unit.\nSee your\ndealer\n58 FORD\nSIX or V 8\nthe going is great!\niCtrtain feaitvu illustrates are '\u2022S'.andatd\" on\ntome rnodelt, optional et tttta cost ott othert.)\nMEL BUERGE MOTORS LTD.\n608 VERNON STREET\nPHONE 1744\nPenalty Records\nIn Rough Series\nBOSTON (AP) - The Boston-\nNew York Stanley Cup hockey\nsemi-Iinal series already has gone\ninto the record books as the most\npenalty-tilled in major league\nhistory.\nThe number of penalties in the\nseries soared to 67 Thursday night\nafter Boston's 6-1 triumph over the\nRangers which put the local club\nin a 3-2 lead in the best-of-seven\nset.\nThe previous high total of penalties in a single playoff series was\n61 set by Boston and Toronto in\n1951.\n10-TEAM HOCKEY\nLOOP POSSIBLE\nDES MOINES, Iowa (AP) - ,\nnew professional ice hockey\nleague of 10 teams extending from\nDes Moines to Seattle and into\nWestern Canada has been pro>\nposed.\nP. L. George, Des Moines sports\npromoter, said Friday the league\n\"is only in the talking stage, but I\nunderstand there will be an organization meeting late this month or\nearly in May,\nThe Des Moines Tribune identifies Lyle Z. Wright, executive vice-\npresident of the Denver Arena Corporation, as one of the promoters\nof the two-division league.\nThe eastern division would be\ncomposed of Des Moines. St. Paul,\nMinn., Omaha, Denver and Winnipeg. The Tribune quotes Wright.\nThe western division would include\nSeattle and Calgary, Edmonton,\nVancouver and Victoria.\nOxford Crew Rated Underdogs\nLONDON (Reuters) - Oxford\nand Cambridge renew their\nancient rivalry on the Thames today with Cambridge favored to\nwin  the annual boat race.\nThe heaviest eight are Oxford\nmen. Theirs is the oldest school,\nbut they have scrapped the traditions of their forefathers and\nadopted a new-style boat and\u2014\nfor England\u2014an unorthodox rowing style.\nThey have a big score to settle with their traditional Cambridge rivals when they meet on\nthe four - mile, 374 - yard course.\nThe dark blues of Oxford have\nlost the last three races and the\nover-all score stands at 57 victories for Cambridge, 45 for Oxford and one dead heat.\nThis time more is at stake in\nthe annual contest. The winner\nmay be chosen to represent Eng-\nI land at the British Empire and\nCommonwealth Games at Cardiff,\nWales, in July.\nNEW STYLE\nOxford has a new, banana-\nshaped boat with raised prpw and\nstern. Its strong, heavy crew rig\nthe oars and seats in American\nfashion. They thrust the shell forward with short, choppy strokes,\nsitting upright and taking the\nstrain on legs and shoulders.\nThe Cambridge light blues,\nfaster and neater, use sliding\nseats in a conventional shell.\nTheir strokes are long and swinging in the traditional way.\nPredictions favor Cambridge to\ntake the Easter Saturday race\nbut forecasters recall too well\nhow they picked Oxford to win\nlast year and watched Cambridge\nsweep to an easy triumph.\nCHICAGO. (AP) - Dethroned\nmiddleweight champion Carmen\nBasilio left hospital and his unlucky fight city Friday, uncertain of everything except in his\nbelief that he can lick Sugar Ray\nRobinson if they meet again.\nBasilio was snappy and chipper in a press conference following his discharge from hospital.\nHe needed a nine-day treatment\nof an eye Robinson pummelled\ninto a black, egg - sized mess\nwhen Sugar Ray dethroned him\nhere. March 25.\nBasilio, before heading for\nSyracuse, N.Y., said it will take\na week or two before he decides\nwhether:\n1. To seek a rubber match\nwith Robinson.\n2. To retire, as his wife, Kay,\nwould like him to do.\n3. Or to contemplate regaining\nthe welterweight title he vacated\nlast Sept. 23, when he took the\nmiddleweight crown from Robinson in New York.\n|    Basilio,   who   now   has   been\n1 stripped of both the welterweight\nand middleweight titles in losing\nall of his  four  Chicago  appearances,  asserted  Friday that:\n\"If my eye didn't get hurt, I\nthink I would have stopped Robinson.\"\nDISAGREES WITH FILM\nAlthough observers and movies\ndisagree, Basilio said his left eye\nwas injured by a Robinson punch\nin the fourth round and was shut\ntight in the fifth round.\nFilms indicate a right upper-\ncut by Sugar Ray late in the fifth\nround started the trouble and the\neye ballooned as the sixth round\nstarted.\n\"It's my eye and T oughta\nknow,\" said Basilio.\nAsked what would happen if he\nmet Robinson in a rubber match,\nhe replied: \"I'd like to fight him\nagain. I know I can lick him.\"\nHe said it didn't make any difference where the fight was.\nBasilio was told by his doctor\nhis  banged  left  eye  now  is  in\ngood shape and that after a little\nrest he could go into training any\ntime he felt fit.\nThere was some discoloration\nunder the injured eye, but the\nswelling appeared gone.\nLongden Adds\nTo Win Total\nSAN FRANCISCO (AP)-Johnny\nLongden, the 47-year-old grand-\npappy who says \"I'll keep riding\nas long as I feel good and maybe\nI'll win 6000,\" is adding to his\nstature as the winningest jockey\nof all time.\nThe still sprightly Alberta-bred\n112-pounder rode two more winners'\nThursday at Golden Gate Fields.\nHe was up on True Poise in the\nsecond race ($4.50) and then guided Solid Rae from last place in a\nfield of six fillies and mares to a\nneck victory over Matkea in the\n$4000 feature.\nOnly eight months ago Longden\nsuffered a broken right leg, and\nsome experts said he would never\nride again. The injury sidelined him\nfor five months, but the gritty competitor came back and has had\nmore than 100 winners since then\nto move past the 5100 mark.\nMasters Cards\nAUGUSTA, Ga. (AP) - Friday's\nsecond round cards of the 36-hole\nleaders in Ihe Masters golf tournament:\nPar out\t\nPai\" in  \t\nVenturi out .\nVenturi in  343\nMaxwell out\nMaxwell in 443\nPatton out .\nPatton in   443\nLeonard out\nLeonard in 342\nWininger out\nWininger in 442\n454 343 454\u201436\n443 545 344-36\u201472\n444 453 475\u201440\n455 233-32\u201472\u2014140\n453 353 453-35\n544 344-35-70-141\n444 345 343\u201434\n544 434-35-69\u2014141\n444 443 444\u201435\n546 344\u201435-70-142\n544 443 554\u201438\n554 344-35-73-142\nBlues \"Not Hungry\" Says Phil\nOn Eve of Sixth Cup Contest\nBOSTON (CP) - Coach Phil\nWatson returned to mid -'season\nlorm Friday as he tried to iash\nlite into his suddenly - unimpressive flew ifpik Rangers.\nWatson, noted lor nis verbal explosions, had nothing but good to\nsay ol his team alter they swept\nover Bosion Bruins 5-3 Tuesday\nto tie their Stanley Cup semi-final\nseries at two games apiece.      '\nHe had nothing but sarcasm\nfor Uie same crew Friday lol-\nlowing Iheir 6-1 loss to Boston\nThursday night.\n\"The Bruins  want the  money ,\nmore than we do,\" he yelled at j\nhis players, referring to the Stanley Cup payoff. \"We're not hungry.\"\n\"It wasn't even a contest. When\nyou're hungry you make sure you\nget the money. You don't get\nstupid penalties, you work. You\ngot both hands on the slick.\"\nTWO DEFENCEMEN\nWalson apparently had Ranger\ndelenceman Harry Howell and\nJack Evans in mind lor getting\nwhat he called stupid penalties.\nHowell had just stepped on the\nice in the first period when Flem\nMacKell scored for Boston.\nBronco Horvath\u2014criticized by\nBoston coach Milt Schmidt alter\nTuesday's game\u2014scored shortly\nafter while Evans was off to give\nBoston a strangle - hold on the\ngame.\n\"That broke the Rangers'\nbacks,\"'said Bruins' captain Fern\nFlaman, who added to the destruction with his first two goals\nin 85 games. \"At least, they slopped working. We had an easy\nlime from then on.\"\nWatson's appeal to his team's\nlinancial desire was based on the\nfact that Rangers are assured of\n$500 each for finishing second in\nthe regular season. If they lose\nlo Boston, they pick up another\n$750 each.\n$1250 EACH\nIf they win, however, they get\n$1250 each for the semi-finals plus\nat least $150 even if they lose in the\nfinals against Montreal Canadiens.\n\"Look how we were outshot,\"\nWatson moaned. \"They got 47\nshots and we got 23. A few more,\nand they would have doubled it.\"\nDespite Boston's fired-up performance Thursday, Schmidt was\nnot enthusiastic.\n\"All season we've been consistent only in being inconsistent,\"\nhe said. \"I've got to be shown.\nSure, I know if we win Saturday we play Montreal, but I'll\njust wait and see.\"\nHangers and .Bruins reported\nall players should be in good condition for the sixth game Saturday, but defenceman Bill Gadsby\nand Lou Fontinato of the\nRangers still are feeling the effects of the early games of the\nseries.\nGadsby, who suffered a shoul\nder injury in the second game,\nsaid he can't work properly. I\ncan't do much out there\u2014I just\ndon't feel free. I can't shoot, I\ncan't poke check\u2014nothing.\"\nFontinato, with a .bruised hip,\nsaid only:  \"It hurts.\"\nBronco Horvath, taken off the\nice with a cut scalp and slight\nconcussion Tuesday after being\nslashed, scored once Thursday\nand picked up an assist, indicating that he is feeling no pain.\nExhibition\nBaseball Scores\nBy The Associated Press\nTHURSDAY\nAt West Palm Beach, Fla.\nPittsburgh    320 000 400-9 13 1\nKansas City ....   200 041 000-7 10 1\nDaniels, Williams (6), Raydon\n(7), Arroyo (9) and Kravitz; Gar-\nver, Portocarroero (6), Duser (9)\nand H. Smith. W-Williams. L-Por-\ntocarroero. HR: Pittsburgh\u2014Pendleton.\nAt Jacksonville, Fla.\nLos Angeles ...   012 100 100\u20145 11 1\nMilwaukee  . ..    001 100 010-3   7 0\nKipp, Labine (6) and Pignatano;\nSpahn, Rush (6), Johnson (8) and\nRice. W-Kipp. L-Spahn, HRs: Los\nAngeles \u2014 Neal, Gray; Milwaukee\n\u2014Rice, Mathews.\nAt Ft. Gordon, Ga.\nWash    020 100 000 000-3 10 0\nCinci.   . .   010 101 000 000\u2014   3 15 0\nStobbs, Hyde (9) ..nd Fitzgerald,\nBerberet (9); Haddix, Wieland (7),\nFreeman (9) and Bailey. HR:\nWashington \u2014 Lemon.\nAt Scottsdale, Ariz.\nCleveland      011 \u00bb03 0\u2014 5   7 0\nBaltimore       530 200 x\u201410 11 0\nFerrarese, Wojey (3), Churn (6)\nand Brown; Harshman, Moeller (6)\nand Triandos. W-Harshman. L-\nFerrarese. HR: Baltimore\u2014Robinson.\nCleveland      002 310 112-10 14 1\nBaltimore     112 040 03X-11 14 0\nGrant, Woodeschick (6), Churn\n(7), Wojey (8), McLish (8) and\nNixon, Brown (7); Houtteman, Dal-\nkowski (6), Daley (7), Lehman (8)\nand Ginsburg. W-Lehman. L-Wojey.\nHR: Cleveland\u2014Colavito.    '\nAt Mesa, Ariz.\nSan Fran.    ...   100 001 012\u2014 5   8 1\nChicago (N) .   102 050 02x\u201410 13 0\nBarclay, Constable (5), Margon-\neri (8) and Schmidt; Hobbie, Rodriguez (9) and S. Taylor. W-Hobbie.\nL-Barclay. HRs: Chicago \u2014 Long,\nBanks; San Francisco \u2014 Schmidt.\nNELSON SHOPPERS\nAre Having a Field Day at Mc and Mc's\nCENTENNIAL SILVER DOLLARS ARE BEING\nGIVEN AWAY WITH HUNDREDS OF ITEMS.\nFOR EXAMPLE:\u2014\nCENTENNIAL\nSILVER\nDOLLARS\nWill Be Given To You With Your Purchase of\nTHOR DELUXE DRYER - Reg. $289.00\nor\n4 SILVER\nDOLLARS\nWith the Purchase of\nG.E. TEA KETTLE\nRegular $14.95\nJOIN   THE   FUN\nChoose your own items.\nIn our ONE HUNDREDTH YEAR\nof service to\nIndustry and Trade In B.C.\nMcLennan, McFttly & Prior Ltd.\nif\n iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiii\nSPORTS\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nPreston North End Closer\nTo Lead in English Loop     '\nLONDON (Reuters! \u2014 Preston\nNorth End Friday inched closer\ntoward the top of the English Soccer League by winning 2-1 at\nBlackpool at the start of a\ncrowded Easter weekend soccer\nschedule.\nBut Wolverhampton Wanderers,\nidle Firday, still were favored to\ncapture the English Leave\nchampionship. The Wolves, wilh\n55 points  in  the  first  division,\nRacing Stark\nit Fort Erie\nFORT ERIE, Ont. (CP) - Fort\nErie launches its 1958 season Monday in the earliest opening in the\nhistory of Canadian thoroughbred\nhorse racing. The 196-day season\non Ontario's three tracks doesn't\nend until Nov. 20, when the early-\nwinter winds will be whistling\nthrough the stands at Toronto's\nWoodbine.\nFort Erie's spring meeting of 24\ndays opens the current campaign.\nThe horses will move into Toronto's Old Woodbine on May 5 for\n24 days, after which they will move\nto the $13,000,000 New Woodbine on\nJune 2. They will race at that track\nuntil July 12. A second series of\nmeetings will follow at Fort Erie,\nOld Woodbine and the New Woodbine.\nCIVIC CENTRE\nARENA\nStudent\nDance\nSaturday\n9 p.m.\nComing\nAttractions\nApril 26th and 26th\nBoat Show\u2014Art Show\nApril 27th\nOentennlEri Opening Ceremonies\nMay 9th\nLions Club Centennial Ball .\nMay   14th\nVancouver Symphony\nMay 29th, 30th and 31st\nOayland Shows.\nJune  27th  and  28th\nB.C. Centurama Show\nJuly 7th to  12th\nWorld's Summer Curling\nChampionships\nJuly 26th\nR.C.M.P,\nRide\nstayed lour points ahead of Preston and have an extra game to\nPlay.\nWest Bromwich Albion, lagging\nin third place wilh 46 points but\nstill hopelul, played a scoreless\ntie wilh Tottenham Hotspur in\nLondon, and were lucky at that.\nAlbion's inside-lelt, Alex Jackson,\nwas oft the Held for half the game\nwith an injured ankle.\nDerek Hannin pushed in three\ngoals in Bolton Wanderers' 1-0\nhome win over Aston Villa in Ihe\ntirsl division. Charlton centre-\nforward Stuart Leary put in three\nof the lour by which the London\nside shut oul its visitor, Rother-\nham United.\nHAT TRICK\nIn other first-division contests\nat Grimsby, Tommy Briggs\nscored three lor Grimsby in ils\n4-1 home victory over Middlesbrough. At Doncaster, Blackburn\ndeleated the Rovers 5-1, Bryan\nDouglas accounting for three\ngoals.\nManchester United, set for the\nfinal of the Association Cup contest alter winning through three\nrounds, tied 2-2 at home to Sunderland. United, defending league\nchampion, has yet to win a regular league game since the Feb.\n6 air crash which wiped out most\nof its first string.\nLondon teams held the first two\nspots in the second division. West\nHam convinced visiting Nottingham County it was the better side\nby winning 3-1. Second - place\nCharlton's win over Rotherham\nstill left it three points behind\nWest Ham, which has 51.\nCLOSED GAP\nIn the third division southern,\nreading closed the gap by a point\nin its climb from second place in\na bid to oust the top squad,\nBrighton. Reading beat Walsall\n3-1 while Brighton managed only\na 2-2 stalemate at Millwall.\nBrighton has 52 points and Reading trails by a point.\nScunthorpe, leading the third division northern, lost 1-0 at Wrexham. But with four more games\nleft to pljy than second - place\nBury, Scunthorpe is an advantageous two points in the lead.\nBury lost also\u20142-1 at Hartlepools.\nIndomitable Venturi Battles To Hold\nOne-Stroke Lead Over Rival Linksters\n\u00abi\nBy HUGH FULLERTON Jr.\nAuuUsTA, Ga. (API -, Ken\nVuniun, an inaomitame scrapper\nstaged an aimosi unbeuevaoie\ncoiiieoacR Friaay and retained\nhis one-stroke lead at the hallway point ot Uie 22nd Masters\ngolt championship.\nVenturi, alter using up 40\nstroKes on a lirst nine thai was\nas wretched as Georgias\nweather, came back with biroics\non uie last tnree holes ana a four-\nunuer-par 3i. 'Mat give him even\npar ii lor the aay and a 36ihoie\ntotal of 140.\nBut Ken s brilliant performance\ncouran't aim the lustre of his\npiaying partner, the irrepressioie\namateur Biliy Joe Patton, who\ntued a second round ot nS) and\ntiea for second place at 141 with\nTexas pro Billy Maxwell.\nBetween them, Venturi and Patton have been responsible for two\not the greatest amateur feats in\nMasters History. Friday they both\nlived up to Uie billing they gained\nwhen Billy Joe trailed Sam Snead\nand Ben Hogan by only a stroke\nin the hectic 1954 Masters and\nwhen, Venturi lost by a stroke to\nJackie Burke in 1956.\nWIDE OPEN CHAMPIONSHIPS\nThe results on a miserably wet,\nwindy day left the 1958 Masters\nas a wide open championship\nwhich any one of about a dozen\nplayers could win.     \u2022\nTied for fourth place, two\nstrokes olf the pace, were Stan\nLeonard of Vancouver, 41-year-old\nCanadian pro who has a lock on\nCanada's PGA championship,\nand silver - haired Bo Wininger,\nwho plays from Odessa, Tex.\nMaxwell and Leonard shot 70s\nFriday on the kind of day when\nsub par scores were exceedingly\nscarce. Dow Finsterwald had a\n71, a. score matched by defending champion Doug, Ford. With\na 145 total, Ford still wasn't entirely out of the running.\nAl Balding of Toronto cape in\nwith, a par 72 for a 147 total. Nick\nWeslock, a native of Windsor,\nOnt., playing out of Royal Oak,\nMich., as an amateur had\n76-77-153. Weslock failed to qualify for the last two rounds.\n35-FOOT PUTT }\t\nLeonard, who has won the\nCanadian PGA  title  six  Umes,\nSaskatoon Holds\nNarrow Pin Edge\nREGINA (CP) - Saskatoon withstood a fourth-game rally by Vancouver to hold, a four-point lead ip\nthe 'men's team competition after\nthe first day in the Western Canada\nFive-Pin Bowling championships.\nVera Mohns' 1151 four-game total paced Saskatoon to its 5116\npoints.\nVancouver was paced by Frank\nScarfe with  1083.\nKamloops was in third place on\nthe fine showing of Johnny Aura,\nthe men's singles leader, with 1151,\nMoose Jaw was fourth with 4857,\nEdmonton fifth with 4809, Winnipeg\nsixth with 4799 and Calgary seventh\nwith 4693.\nCURLERS\nANNUAL BANQUET\nTuesday, April 8th\nHUME  SILVER  ROOM\n6:30 p.m.\nOTTAWA JUNIORS\nWhip All-Stars\nIn First Game\nOTTAWA (CPI \u2014 Ottawa-Hull\nJunior Canadiens put on an awesome display of power Friday night\nas they swamped Cape Breton All-\nStars 18-3 in the opening game of\ndie Eastern Canada Memorial Cup\nhockey semi-finals.\nSecond game of the best-of-five\nseries will be played in nearby\nHull, Que., Sunaay with the third\nhere Monday night.\nThe junior Habs, runner - up in\nthe 19j8-57 Memorial Cup final,\nscored almost at will as they led\n3-0 at the end of the first period,\n13-0 after 40 minutes of play and\noutscored the visitors 5-3 in the\nfinal period.\nVeteran hockey followers say\nthe score was the highest playoff\ntotal in memory.\nNetminder Joe McMullin of Cape\nBreton was bombarded with 71\nshots, 53 of which he was able to\nstop, while Bruce Gamble in the\njunior Habs cage was called on to\nhandle only 17.\nRalph Backstrom, Gilles Tremblay and Claude Richard paced the\nOttawa-Hull club with three goals\neach while Bob Boucher scored a\npair. Singles went to Bill Carter,\nBob Rousseau, Harold White, Andre Tardif, John Annable, Terry\nGray and Claude Fournel.    '\nOttawa, considered a cinch to\nreach the Eastern Canada final\nagainst Toronto Marlboros, out-\nskated and outhustled their Ughter\nwhistle.\nSonny Salyzyn, Wayne. Syniskin\nand Jack Coffin scored for the All-\nStars in the final period when they\nshowed any signs of life..\nFormer NHL\nStars Lead\nCanuck Win\nVANCOUVER (CP) - With Phil\nMaloney and Jackie McLeod 'again\nproviding the spark, Vancouver\nCanucks beat Winnipeg Warriors\n5-3 Friday night to take a 2-0 lead\nin the best-of-seven Western\nHockey League semi-final.\nBefore 5800 fans, Maloney scored\nonce and assisted three times.\nLinemate MtLeod scored twice,\nwhile Walt Peacosh and Elliot\nChorley scored the others.\nIn the first game of the series,\nwon 4-1 by Canucks Tuesday night,\nMaloney scored once and McLeod\ntwice.\nScoring for the visiting Warriors\nFriday night were rookie Howie\nGlover, Gordie Redahl and Earl\nIngarfield.\nMcLeod opened the scoring for\nVancouver while Winnipeg defenceman Kent Douglas was sitting\nout his first minor penalty.\nThe little winger banged ln Phil\nMaloney's pass from directly in\nfront of the Winnipeg net. Goalie\nRay Mikulan had no chance on\nthe shot.\nMcLeod scored his second goal\non a backhand from about six feet\noff the corner of the net.\nPeacosh, 22-year-old who came\nto Canucks for the playoffs from\nthe Okanagan Senior League, was\nuncovered in front of the net when\nhe finished off a three-way play\nwith Bill Folk and Maloney while\nDouglas was sitting out his second\npenalty.\nVancouver enjoyed, a wide edge\nln play throughout the first period.\nEven while Canucks' Al Cleary was\noff twice with penalties the Warriors were ineffective as McLeod\nand Maloney ragged the puck.\nIn the last minute of the second\nperiod, a period in which the Warriors were badly outclassed, they\nstruck for two goals.\nAt 19:11 Glover's pass from behind the net trickled in off goalie\nPelletier's skate. Twenty-five seconds later Redahl swept in at top\nspeed with Steve Witiuk's pass and\npulled Pelletier aside to score.\nhad four birdies, one with a 35-\nfoot putt at the 10th, and was\nover par twice. He was one over\npar on the 220-yard fourth after\nknocking his tee shot over the\ngreen and he dumped a wedge\nshot into the pond at the 15th\nand took a six.\nBracketed at 143 were Sam\nSnead and Cary Middlecoff, both\nformer winners of the Masters,\nex-PGA champion Chick 'Harbert\nand Art Wall Jr., Arnold Palmer\nand Finsterwald, r e p r esenting\nthe younger generaUon of pros.\nThe big 6,980-yard, par 36-36\u2014\n72 Augusta National course was\nentirely different from the comparatively easy layout that saw\npar broken 17 times on the first\nround. Softened by rain which\ndidn't end until about noon, swept\nby a chilling wind that dropped\ntemperatures into the upper 40s\nand with the pins placed in inaccessible locations, it was a course\nto challenge the greatest players.\nSome of the best failed to make\nthe final 36 holes as the field\nwas slashed to half for the final\n36 holes. Out of the running were\nU.S. Gpen champion Dick Mayer\namateur champion Hillman Robbins, 1958 Masters winner Burke,\nMexico's Robert de Vicenzo and\nJapan's Koiohi Ono, among others. Players with scores higher\nthan 149 were dropped.\nEXTRA STROKES\nVenturi took two extra strokes\nfor .a' seven on the long eighth\nhole and tliree - putted the ninth\nbefore he settled down.\nAt the 10th, the Californian\nplunked in a 15-foot birdie putt.\nHe got another bird at the 13th\nwith a near-perfect wedge shot.\nBut he three-putted the 14th and\nstill was three over par.\nThat was when things began to\nhappen. Ken barely missed a six-\nfooter on the 15th green, then\nholed putts of five and eight feet\nfor birdies on the next' two\ngreens. At the 18th, with some 7,-\n500 spectators looking on breathlessly, he calmly knocked in a\n20-footer for a birdie three that\nmeant the lead.\nPatton, no less amazing, had a\nchance to tie Venturi at the last\nhols. Out in 34 after successive\nbirdies on the seventh, eighth and\nninth holes, Billy Joe picked up\nanother stroke at the 15th, then\nlost one at the short 16th. There\nhe dumped his tee shot In the\npond and then put his next four\nfeet from the pin. He holed a\n30-foot chip from \u25a0 off the 17th\ngreen for a bird and was even\nwith Venturi at that-stage.\nOn the 18th Patton's approach\nwas just short of the green and\nhis chip stopped some 10 feet\nshort of the pin. He took two\nputts for his 69.\nKid Gavilan\nEdges Tiger\nPHILADELPHIA (AP) - Cuba'\nKid Gavilan, showing flashes of\nthe form which once earned him\nthe middleweight title, out-punched\nthe. veteran Ralph (Tiger) Jones\nof Yonkers, N. Y\u201e Friday night\nto win a split 10-round decision at\nthe arena. Gavilan weighed 155,\nJones 155%.\nGavilan took another step on\nwhat he hopes is the road back to\ntitle contention by the simple expedient of landing oltener and\nmore telling blows in the televised\nfight.\nThe 32-year-old Cuban belied\nhis age as he kept the pressure on\nthe rugged Jones with slashing\nbolo punches in this third meeting\nof the two veteran campaigners.\nGavilan won in 1953, and last February at Miami.\nThe two judges, Jimmy Mina and\nNate Lopinson, scored Gavilan the\nwinner, Mina 47-44, and Lopinson\n47-43. Referee Joe Sweeney awarded Jones the decision 46-44. The\nAssociated Press scored it for Gav\nilan  49-41.\nRematch for George\nTORONTO (CP)-Toronto heavy'\nweight George Chuvalo is to box\nHoward King of Reno, Nav., here\nApril 21.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, APRIL 5, 19S8 \u2014 9\nWinnipeg Maroon Boss\nFears Packers' Power\nWINNIPEG (CP)-The Western\nCanada Allan Cup hockey final\nbetween Kelowna Packers and\nWinnipeg Maroons doesn't start\nuntil April 7 but the Maroons'\ncoach has already declared Kelowna will take a lot of firepower\nto lick and he's not certain he's\ngot the ammunition.\nCoach Bill Robinson can be\npardoned for a bit of pessimism.\nHe was a Winnipeg Maroons'\nplayer in 1954 and 1956. Both\nWinnipeg went to BriUsh Columbia for the Western Canada final.\nBoth times Maroons played the\nchampion of the Okanagan Senior\nHockey League. And both times\nthe Okanagan boys were the\nvictors.\nThis year the best-of-seven\nseries will be played in Kelowna,\nB.C. The dates are April 7, 9,\n11, 12, 14 and 16. Date for the\nseventh game will be decided\nlater.\n\"Our team is primarily defensive,\" said Robinson. \"The games\nwill be close but I think we'll\nneed a few breaks to come out\non top.\"\nMany of this season's Maroons\nalso were on the team that was\nbeaten in 1956 by Vernon Canadians and in 1954 by Penticton\nVs-although it took the Vs the\nfull seven games to turn the trick.\nNewcomers are three juniors\npicked up for the playoffs, goalie\nSugar Jim Henry and forwards\nRay Manson, Gord Pennell and\nLaurie May.\nHenry spent iV, yean ln the\nGOLF\nSCHOOL\nThere Will Be\nNO  Golf School\nMonday, April 7\nSucceeding Monday! and\nWednesdays as usual.\nNational Hockey League with\nBoston and New York. Manson\nwas a 42-joal scorer with thft\nprairie division champion Brandon Regals of the Western Hocke,y\nLeague in the 1956-57 season, and\nPennell is a former Vancouver\nCanuck of the WHL.\nWinnipeg made the western\nfinal by beating Fort William,\nOnt., Beavers and Red Deer,\nAlta., Rustlers. ,\nKelowna made- the playoff by\nwinning the OSHL title in a playoff with Kamloops Chiefs and\nthen defeating Rossland Warriors\nof the Western International Hoc- \u2022\nkey Leagije 4-1 in a best-of-seven\nseries for the B.C. senior hockey\ntitle.\nTwo B. C. Boxers\nLose in Spokane\nSPOKANE (AP) - Two BriUsh\nColumbia boxers lost their bouts in\nan amateur athletic union card\nhere Friday night.\nGordon MacDonald of Grand\nForks, B.C., was defeated by Leroy\nMorford of Moxee, Wash., and Bob\nGee Won of Cranbrook, B.C., lost\nto John Stevens, Spokane.\nWANTED\nRooms\nf o r i'>.$\nBonspiel Visitors\nPleaie  phone   1703\nAnyone having rooms    \u25a0\navailable\n(Hobby Shop), 661  Baker\nIf you live in the city\nor Phone Mrs. Roy Burton\n1335-L\nIf you live on the\nNorth Shore.\nBodin Sidelines Hearn\nAs Favorites Advance\nUnder normal circumstances \u2014\n'\"normal\" being a West Kootenay\nOpen badminton tournament that\ndid not include such high-echelon\ntalent as Canadian senior and junior champs Dave McTaggart and\nHarvey Hurd\u2014Ed Hearn would still\nbe actively competing in men's\nsingles competition at Nelson Civic\nCentre.\nEd, however, is out. He bowed\nto Kimberley's Eric Bodin, 15-8,\n15-5, in a third-round match that\nSAVE UP TO\n$2000\nMen's 100% Wool\n2-PIECE SUITS\nReg. 59.50 and 69.50 suits being offered now at this exceptionally low price. Never before have\nwe offered such a wide selection Si top    ,    \u00a3>*      \u25a0 f\\\nquality name brand suits.  Check the y| (j.wW\nchart below for size and color. Altera-,\ntions Included if required.\n49\nColor\nModel\n36\n37\n38\n| 39\n| 40\n42\n| 44\n| 46\nBlue\nReg.\n1\n1   3\n3   |        |\nTall\n1\n1\n1\n1        1\nBlue-\nGrey\nRer).\n2\n2\n1   1        1   1\n3\n1   4\n1   1\nTall\n1\n1\n1   1\n2   1         1\nGrey\nReg.\n1\n1        1   1\n1         1\nTall\n1        1   1\n1         1\nBrown\nReg.\n1\n2\n2\n1\n1   1\n\u25a0  1\nTall\n1   1        1\n1      !\nBlack\nReg.\n1   1        1\n1      1     \u25a0\nftofc#m>'i>\u00abii (EamiMttg.\nINCOHPORATtD   2\"\"  MAY  1670\nwould never have come about at\nthis early stage if the \"big-name\"\nplayers had not shown up in such\nabundance.\nIn recent tournaments, lt has\nbeen almost routine to seed both\nHearn and Bodin. But for this one,\nthere was room for only one, as\nHearn slipped into the eighth and\nfinal spot. Bodin was left off, no\ndoubt because of his unspectacular\ndisplay last year.\nShortly before press time Friday\nnight, however, Bodin was not unspectacular. Neither was he spectacular, but he didn't have to be.\nHis youth and his speed proved\noo much for Hearn, who said be-\n'ore' the match that Eric's edge\n;.i conditioning would prove too big\nn obstacle.\nMcTaggart, Canadian Senior\nhamp, and Hurd, Canadian Junior\nhamp, advanced as easily as exacted, and Bert Fergus, perennial\nhamp Of the West Kootenay tour-\n.oy, did likewise. But any or alt\nf the three above-named might be\nn the outside looking in when the\n.inal comes around Sunday after-\n.ioon.\nBodin, for one, is almost certain\n.o reserve his seat early. He faces\n.JcTaggart today, and Dave is in\n:io mood for trifling. Even when\nlie trifles, he appears far and away\n;he best of the lot, although, as he\nadmitted, he was decidedly short\n'f sleep Friday, what with conclud-\n.ig work for the Easter layoff and\n;ompleting the drive from Vancouver.\nSleepy or not, McTaggart is out-\n.anding. He teamed with young\nJonna Faye Haley of Rossland to\n:feat Edith Chlopan and Morris\nlamsey in the third round of mixed\nrubles play after each tandem had\nawn a bye in the opening pair\ni rounds. Scores were 15-4, 15,9,\nad the underdogs gave a better-\n.ian-expected  account  of  them-\n,;lves. Everybody had fun, especially the spectators.\nIn singles, McTaggart eased past\nTom Harvey of Williams Lake,\n15-0, 15-3, and Percy McGregor of\nCrawford Bay and Nelson, 15-0,\n15-5.\nHurd whipped Warren Garner, a\nNelson player, 15-4, 15-3 in their\nsingles match, and Fergus and\nJeanne Stringer teamed to beat J.\nGibbon and L. Ponti, 15-4, 15-11,\nin their mixed doubles match.\nOur New Location\nMMS&\u00a3<Gt7(m\u00bb<8\/$WIVES7\nGIVES\nYOU\nIN THE MOST WANTED NAME BRAND...\nA Note To Sportsmen ~\nAn open invitation is extended to you to discuss all types of equipment and services, new or old, which\nwill now take place in our larger premises. Talk over your requirements and inquire about such major\nitems as Tents, Boats, Motors, Camping Equipment, which will soon be on display.\nSincerely, FRED WHITlLEY, Manager.\nkV6m\nBASEBALL!\nBIGGEST\nYEAR YET\nGET LINED UP\nWe Are\nOffering\nA Special\nOrder\nService\nCatering\nTo Little\nLeague Baseball\nTHE MOST...\nVERSATILE\nOUTBOARD\nMOTOR\nThe One and Only\nSCOTT -ATWATER\n\"law On  Display\nen our floor.\nFRED WHITELEYS\nSPORTING GOODS\n488 BAKER ST.\nNELSON, B. C.\nPHONE 160\n 10 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, APRIL 5, 1958\nL\nV\nL\nA\nB\nN\nE\nR\nU\nO\nN\nE\nR\nA\nN\nG\nE\nR\nS\nE\nC\nR\nE\nT\nA\nG\nE\nN\nT\nB\nU\nz\ns\nA\nw\nY\nE\nR\nJ\nI\nG\nG\nS\n?^ -THE \"NEW* PEOPLE-\"!3?\nIT WAS VOUE GBgAT-\nGRAN'-PAPPV'S, AM'\nHIS GREAT-SRAN'-\nPAPPV'S BEFORE\nHIM.'.r-USIN'THIS\nCO\/AB GIVES OUE\nFAMBLVTOSETHERMESSS\nI TH' \\Y AH WANTS \\\nFAMBLV Y MAH OWN\nWHOT  1  PRIVATES\nCOMBS NCOMBUIKE\nTOGETHER L   THEM    j\n\u2022 STAYS   VNEW\" <\nTOGEIHERfr) KIDS  S\n^JSP^alB^ got\/? y\n*\"r~~\\i\ny^K       &\n4 ^\n^^VV. 11\nis\niLmiumi ws\nWSOHO-PMSQN WANT ADS\nFOR QUICK RESULTS \/\nPhone 1844\nDeadline for Classified Ads\u2014S p.m.\nPhone 1844\nBIRTHS\nLEONARD \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs.\nH. Leonard (nee Shirley Robinson)\nNorth Vancouver, April 3rd, a son.\nWILSON - To Mr. and Mrs.\nW. G. (Bud) Wilson (nee Anne\nTeir) of Victoria, formerly of Nelson, on March 29, a daughter, Deborah Lynn.\nKASSAN \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs.\nRoss Kassan, 1421 Ward Street, at\nKootenay Lake General Hospital,\nApril 2, a daughter.\nSOOKORUKOFF - To Mr. and\nMrs. William Sookorukoff, Thrums,\nat Kootenay Lake General Hospital, April 2, a daughter.\nSPEIRS \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Speirs, 920 Tenth Street, at\nKootenay Lake General Hospital,\nApril 2, a daughter.\nHALLSON \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs.\nMagnus Hallson, Radio Range Station, Crescent Valley, at Kootenay\nLake General Hospital, April 3, a\ndaughter.\nWILSON \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs.\nLeonard Wilson, Emerald Mine,\nSalmo, at Kootenay Lake General\nHOsDital, April 3, a son.\nTRIGGS \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs. William Triggs, Canadian Exploration\nMine, Salmo, at Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital, April 3, a daugh-\nBAYOFF \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs. Edward Bayoff, 1122 Josephine Street,\nat Kootenay Lake General Hospital, April 4, a daughter.\nDONALDSON \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs.\nFrancis Donaldson, Nelson, at Kootenay Lake General Hospital, April\n4, a son.\nMACKINNON - To Mr. and Mrs.\nJ. Mackinnon of Nakusp, March 29,\na daughter.\nWILKOWSKI - To Mr. and Mrs.\nTed Wilkowski of Silverton, at the\nSlocan Community Hospital, New\nDenver, March 26, a son.\nPHO - To Mr. and Mrs. Frank\nPho of New Denver at the Slocan\nCommunity, Hospital, March 28, a\ndaughter.   \t\nHELP WANTED\nPART-TIME OFFICE HELP \u2014\nmornings or afternoons, Monday\nthrough Friday. Typing essential. Steady employment. Apply\nBox 4148, Nelson Daily News.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nSEPTIC TANKS AND CESSPOOLS\ncleaned. Reasonable rates, free\ninspection. Ph. 491-X after 6 p.m.\nor write Dick Wiyrick, 140 Baker\nSt.\nHEATING INSTALLED, GAS FIT\nting, appliances, oil burners serviced. Norm Bowcock, Bonded\nLicenced Gas Fitter, ph. 385.\nFOR THE BEST IN BODY AND\npaint work, see Ted's Auto Body,\n1 mile Granite Road, or phone\n186-X-3.\n2 10-YARD TANDEM DUMP\ntrucks, reasonable rate. S. Ku-\ndra\u201e phone 175-R-7.\nWE SPECIALIZE IN HOUSE RE-\nmodelling and cement work. Ph.\n1581-Y-3, 5 to 7'p.m.       \t\nFOR GARDEN  DIGGING AND\nplanting, phone 186-X-l.\nFOR   REPAIRS\u2014ALTERATIONS,\nhouse building, phone 597-L-2.\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST - LADY'S BROWN LEA-\nther purse, vicinity Hume Hotel,\nMarch 29, containing lady's\nglasses, urgently needed. Phone\n151-K, Trail, J. Vecchio, 115 Le-\nRose St., Trail.\"\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\nCOAL   BURNER   WITH   A\nblower and pipe. Phone 1850-L.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nH. S. ELMES,  ROSSLAND, B.C,\nAssayer Chemist Mine Rep\nENGINEERS   AND  SURVEYORS\nM. C. McCORQUOQALE, B.C.L.S.\nLand and Engineering Surveys.\n1234 Bay Ave., Trail. Ph. 2752.\nOffice Mgr. Ray Johnson, B. A. Sc.\n1015-Sth St., Nelson\u2014Phone 144-R.\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, MEIC\nB.C. Land Surveyor P. Eng. (Civil)\n218 Gore St.    Nelson    Phone 1238\nG. W. BAERG, B.C.\nLand Surveyor\n373 Baker St.    Nelson   Phone 1118\nHEATING\nJ. G. MUNDY\nGas Fitting and Sheet Metal Work\nAppliances. Free Estimates.\nPhone 774\u2014523 Cedar St., Nelson\nINSURANCE\nWAWANESA MUTUAL\nINSURANCE CO.\nAgent, 554 Ward St.,\nMcHardy Agencies Ltd.\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nMachine Shop, Acetylene and\nelectric welding, motor rewinding.\nPhone 593 324 Vernon St.\nMACHINERY\nTOMORROW\nMAY  BE\nTOO LATE!\nMachines are selling fast in\nFinning's fabulous \"Dutch\nAuction.\" Never before a used \u25a0\nequipment sale like this. Bids\nare coming in fast; machines\nare selling fast. Tomorrow\nmay be too late. Get your bid\nin today on the machine you\nwant!\nCAT D4 TRACTOR\n1951 model, ready to go. Has\nCat angledozer, No. 44 control.\nSee and bid on FT-3756. Starts\nat $3000.\nPrice today $3000\nApril 14   2800\nApril 21  _  2600\nApril 28   2400\nINT. TD9 TRACTOR\n1948 model has Isaacson dozer,\nwinch. Listed at $7500. See and\nbid on FT-3652.\nPrice today  $6000\nApril 14   5500\nApril 21   5000\nApril 28   4500\nINT. TD-;4 TRACTOR\nWith  angledozer and winch;\nolder machine but good value.\nListed at $5000, watch it drop!\nBid on FT-3854.\nPrice today  $4200\nApril 14   3800\nApril 21   3400\nApril 28 ...._ 3000\nBID TODAY!\nSee Your\nCATERPILLAR\nDealer\nFINNING TRACTOR\n&. EQUIPMENT\nCO. LTD.\nPhone 137 \u2014 Nelson\nPhone JU-62281 \u2014 Cranbrook\nWe Are Authorized Dealers\nfor\nCanadian\nLiquid Air Co. Ltd.\nOxygen and Acetylene\nAltem Super Bronze\nHercules Iron Rods\nL.A. 7016 Atom Arc-\nArcaloy and Ni-Rod\nElectrodes\nHelmets, Goggles, Lenses,\nTorches,  Tips,  Regulators\nLet Us Take Care of Your ,\nWelding Requirements\nMACHINERY   LIMITED\n708 Vernon St. Nelson\nPHONE 97\nOver 40 Years In Nelson\nFOR SALE - OLIVER TRACTOR,\nOC 3, Ser. 1283605, with Oliver\nfront end loader. Price $950. Oliver tractor OC 3, Ser. 2WH-894,\nwith front end loader. Price\n$1450. Nelson Machinery Co. Ltd.,\n\" Nelson, B.C.\nFOR SALE - JOHN DEERE 40\ncrawler, 1955 model, only 1200\nhours, top condition, with dozer\nrock and brush guards, sod pan,\nlights, pulley, $2400 or near offer including delivery. Box 393,\nPincher Creek, Alberta.\nWIDE GAUGE D2 CAT, 5J SER-\nies, good condition; 21\" McCormick breaker plow. Write W. M.\nTaylor, R.R. 1, Nelson, B.C., or\nphone 23-W, Balfour.\nWANTED - 2>A CU. FT. CEMENT\nmixer. Phone 4693, Castlegar.\nHOTELS AND MOTELS\nONE CANADIAN TO ANOTHER-\nLet us be your host while visiting\nin Spokane. Drive up to the Vol-\nney Hotel, W 410 Riverside Ave.,\ngive us your keys, and we do\nthe rest\u2014$2.00 single to $6.50\ndouble. Family rooms $6.50 to\n$7.50. Reservation MA 4-2396.\nCANADIAN FRIENDS - WHEN\nin Spokane stop at the Colonial\nHotel, 124V4 Post St., one -block\nfrom stores and parking.\nPROPERTY WANTED\nWANTED \u2014 3 BEDROOM, MOD-\nem family home in Fairview district. Substantial down payment.\nBox 4188, Daily News.\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\nCHEVROLETS\nand\nOLDSMOBILES\nNow on Display\nG.M.\nParts and Accessories\nGOODYEAR TIRES\nUsed Car\nA Complete Line of Body,\nFender and Mechanical\nWork\n1953 Ford Tudor\nAutomatic\n$1295\n1956 Oldsmobile Sedan\n$2895\n1955 Ford Sedan\n$1495\n1953 Meteor Tudor\n'    $1250\n1953 Chev. Sedan\n$1095\n1954 Fargo i Ton Panel\n$995\n1955 Chev. I Ton Pick Up\n$1395\nAll Other Makes and\nModels in Stock\nBUERGE\nLTD.\nPhone 35 - 36\n323 Vernon St.      Nelson\nSPECIALIZING IN ENGLISH\ncar repairs. Used parts for 1949\nto '52 Austins, '49 to '52 Hill-\nmans, '50 to '51 Morris Minor,\n'47 Studebaker, '47 Pontiac, '52\nVanguard. For sale, '53 Austin,\nRocket lawnmower. Cottonwood\nWreckage Service, ph. 1363-L-2,\nBox 382, 24 Ymir Road, Nelson.\nFINANCING A CAR? BEFORE\nyou buy your new or late model\ncar see us about our low cost\nfinancing service with complete\ninsurance coverage. New cars 30\nmonths. Contact Wm. Kalyniuk\nAgencies at 1777 and save,-\nFOR SALE - 1951 HILLMAN,\n13,000 miles true mileage, $500;\nalso 1938 Ford. See Townsend at\nPark Siding.\t\nFOR SALE - 1 1950 AUSTIN; 1\n1952 Vanguard; 1 1941 Nash.\nNorth Shore Service, phone 1841.\nFOR SALE - BOY'S AND GIRL'S\nbicycle in good condition. Ph. 90.\n'57 VOLKSWAGEN FOR SALE -\nGood buy. Phone 469-Y.\t\nROOM AND BOARD\nBOARD AND ROOM -PHONE\n1231-Y. \t\nCirculation Dept., Phone 1844\nPrice per single copy 6c Monday\nto Friday, 10c on Saturday.\nSubscription Rates\nBy Carrier per week\nin advance.\nBy Mail in Canada Outside Nelson:\nOne month       $ 1.25\nThree months _    $ 3.50\nSix months       $ 6.50\nOne year       $12.00\nBy Mail to United Kingdom or\nthe United States;\nOne month     \u201e    $ 1.75\nThree months  \u201e    $ 5.00\nSix months    $ 9.50\nOne year     $18.00\nWhere extra postage is required\nabove rates plus postage.\nFor delivery by carrier in Cranbrook, phone Mrs. Wm. Stevely.\nIn Kimberley, A. W. Brown.\nIn Trail, Mrs. Syd Spooner.\nIn Rossland, Mrs. Ross Saundry.\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nAUCTION SALE\n'   Steel Hull, S.S. Nasookin \u25a0\nNotice is hereby given that at\n2:00 p.m.,. Tuesday, April 8th,\n1958, at the Court House, Nelson,\nI will sell by public auction the\nhull of the S.S. Nasookin, beached\non Crown foreshore fronting the\nhighway and lying opposite Lot\n5289, K.D., approximately 2V4\nmiles east of Nelson.\nTerms of sale are as follows:\n1. The hull must be demolished\nand completely removed on or\nbefore October 31st, 1958.\n2. When the hull is removed, the\nbeach and foreshore must be\nleft in a clean, safe and sanitary condition and in this regard Ihe purchaser will be\nrequired to deposit the sum of\n$150.00 in cash or certified\ncheque as a bond of his good\nintention. Such bond to be refunded if upon subsequent examination it is found that the\npurchaser has fully complied\nwith this condition of sale.\n3. The purchaser undertakes to\nagree to save harmless the\nCrown in the right of the Province from any right or claim\nfor damages by reason of injury to any person or persons\nand\/or equipment of any kind\nwhatsoever\" caused by or\nthrough the removal of the\nhull.\nDated at Nelson, B.C., this 31at\nday of March, 1958.\nK. D. McRAE,\nCommissioner of Lands.\nLAND REGISTRY ACT\n(Section 161)\nIN THE MATTER OF Parcel\n\"A\" (D.D. 27461-1) of Parcel No.\n2 (D.D. 10917-1) of Lot 6302, Kootenay District.\nProof having been filed in my\noffice of the loss of Certificate of\nTitle No. 41288-1 to the above-\nmentioned lands in the name of\nThomas B. Young and bearing\ndate Ihe 7th day of April, 1937,\nI HEREBY GIVE NOTICE of my\nintention at the expiration of one\ncalendar month from the first\npublication hereof to issue Provisional Certificate of Title in\nlieu of such lost Certificate. Any\nperson having information with\nreference to such lost Certificate\nis requested to communicate with\nthe undersigned.\nDATED   AT   NELSON,   B.C.,\nthis 28th day of February, 1958.\nL. A. McPHAIL,\nDeputy Registrar,\nNelson Land\nRegistration District\nDate of First Publication:\nMarch 5th, 1958.\nAUCTION OF TIM&ER SALE\nX-769J0 %\nThere will be offered for sale\nat public auction, at 1:30 p.m.\nlocal time, on May 12th, 1958, in\nthe office of the Forest Ranger,\nKaslo, B.C., the Licence X-76950,\nto cut 513,000 cubic feet of hemlock, cedar, larch, balsam, fir\nand spruce trees, on an area situated on Vacant Crown Land op\nWoodbury and Fletcher Creeks,\nKootenay Land District.\nSix (6) years will be allowed\nfor removal of timber.\nProvided anyone unable to attend the auction in person may\nsubmit a sealed tender, to be\nopened at the hour of auction and\ntreated as one bid.\nFurther particulars may be obtained from the Deputy Minister\nof Forests, Victoria, B.C.; tha\nDistrict Forester, Nelson, B.C.;\nor the Forest Ranger, Kaslo,\nB.C.\nNOTICE TO\nSUB CONTRACTORS\nWe are tendering on the S.\nS. Kresge store, Trail, B.C.\nPlease forward copies of\nyour tenders to reach us by\nMonday, April 7th.\nPIGGOTT\nCONSTRUCTION LIMITED\nGENERAL CONTRACTORS\nBox 1368\nSaskatoon, Saskatchewan\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nDEALERS IN ALL TYPES OF\nused equipment, mill, mine and\nlogging supplies, new and used\nwire rope, pipe and fittings,\nchain, steel plate and shapes.\nAtlas Iron 4 Metals Ltd., 250\nPrior St., Vancouver, B.C., Ph.\nPAcific   6357.\nUSED WOOD AND COAL FUH-\nnaces with casings, from $15 up.\nAlso one Booker. Used roll-rim\nbathtubs, complete with fittings,\nfrom $30. Used vacuum cleaners,\n$10 up. Columbia Trading, 903\nFront St.\n(Continued on next page)\nH\nI\nA\nN\nD\nL\nO\nI\nS\nsoayiicANTV-\\\nREAD THIS NEXT \"CiL,\nITEM ON LOB'S FjS\\\nSHOP9N9 iSBT,\/r-S\\\n^nn^-^zzzzzzzK \\\ni  r^          V\n^^~^\\M\n>W$>r I Lam\n1       mi\nfl        \\S\u00a7\nIXeasaaW \\.} V\nIto^flg^\n9s^T'1 \u25a0**  -~^^H\n^^^^('llmmtwaas\nr Ota, him. VasJtr\n\u2014THAT MEANS\nSIX POUNDS Of\nHAMBURGER\n 3\nSMALL INVESTMENT   -\nLARGE RETURNS\nThat's the Want Ad Story - PHONE   1844\nYOU CAN  NOW PHONE YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS IN UNTIL 5 f.M. ON SATURDAY.\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\n(Continued)\nSERVEL GAS FRIDGE AND FIT-\ntings, like new, $350. Singer\ntreadle sewing machine, good\ncondition, $35. Mr. A. Leaf,\nTaghum, B.C., phone South Slocan 183.\nWASHING MACHINES, MAN'S\nCCM bicycle, hot water tank, air\ncompressor, water pipes and fittings, ornament molds, etc. Call\n535-R-l after 3 p.m\nJHOLE ICE CREAM CABINET,\nexcellent condition, cash price\n$175. Jeffery Radio and Appl.\nLtd., 446 Ward St., Nelson\n\"FOR SALE - 17 IN. WOOD AND\ncoal furnace, including everything but registers. Can be seen\nat 318 First St., Nelson, B.C.\n2 PROPANE TANKS, REGULA-\ntor, coca cola cooler, new condition, very cheap. Phone 7361,\nCastlegar.\nTAPPAN GAS RANGE, HOUSE-\nhold furniture and miscellaneous\narticles. 917 Edgewood Ave., ph.\n650-X\nPLYWOOD CUTTINGS - ALL\nthicknesses and sizes. Cheap.\nColumbia Tradin?, 902 Front St\n4  ROOM   APT.   WITH   BATH  -\nclean. Phone 445-Y after 4 p.m.\nHealth food centre-open\nday and evenings. 924 Davies St.\nWOOD AND COAL STOVE\nSecond Street.\n317\nAPPLES-$1.25 PER BOX. BRING\nyour own container. Ph. 369-Y-3.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\nGRANITE ROAD\nNear Lakeshore\nSACRIFICE\nNew bungalow. Large Living\nRoom with plate glass windows. Full basement, coal\niurnace. 2 ample bedrooms\nwith double cupboards. 3-piece\nbathroom with shower. Priced\nmuch below cost.     $9Q00\nOr $9600 on terms. $3000 down.\nNORTH SHORE\n.1\u2014New.   2-bedroom   bungaldw\nin 6-Mile area, near store and\nservice station.       \u2022tR^flO\nImproved lot. Prlce'P04'\"\"\nDown Payment $1500.\nALSO IN 6-MILE AREA\n2\u20143-Bedroom bungalow built 5\nyears.   No   basement   plan.\nAutomatic    dishwasher   and\n^ril $6950\nDown payment: $1000.\nOwner transferred, can give\nimmediate possesion.\nLATIMER AT KOOTENAY\n8\u2014Attractive 3-bedroom bungalow. One ol our best buys.\nBedrooms are good size, living room 9'xl2, kitchen 19'x\n13 , wired for range. Concrete\nfoundation, good basement,\ncement floor, oil furnace, 2.\ncar garage. Convenient loca-\nSe  $10,500\n$3500 will handle, balance\nmonthly. Good  discount for\ncash.\nVICTORIA STREET ,\n4\u2014Duplex, Owner's suite, 2 bedrooms and bath, living room\nand kitchen, Also 4-room\nsuite with bath, at present\nrented at $35 a $\u00a3^ftA\nmonth. Price \u00abPO\u00ab*UU\nSome terms.\nFAIRVIEW\n5\u2014Attractive 2-bedroom bungalow.   Oil   furnace,   drive-in\ng\u00a3j*   $11,500\nVery good terms,\n8\u2014Excellent building lot\u2014Doug-\n^oad- $1650\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITY\n7\u2014Ladies' Dress Shop. Excellent\nlocation. Reasonable rent and\nExpenses. $4500\nPlus Inventory.\nAppleyard\n& Co., Ltd.\nREAL ESTATE and\nINSURANCE AGENTS\nEstablished 1912\nBOX 26 PHONE 269\n421 Baker St.        Nelson, B.C.\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITY\nStore, gas station, cabins, and\ndwelling situated at a natural\nstopping spot on No. 3. Gross\nsales $60,000 plus rentals of\n$1200 annually. Owners dwelling, 4 bedrooms, modern kitchen, bathroom. This is a wonderful opportunity to own\nyour own business in an area\nthat shows great promise, of\n\u00a3o\u00b0nmlnpgricVeery     $28,000\nPlus  stock   at  inventory.\nWe have full particulars.\nT. D. Rosling\n& Son Ltd.\nM. (Trader) Parker, Salesman\n866 WARD ST. PHONE 717\nPROPERTY, HOUSES\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\n(Continued)\nFAIRVIEW '\n3 B.R.s. Wired for range. Basement, H.A. furnace. Carport,\n^s120: $1-2,500\nFAIRVIEW\n8 rooms. (3 suites). Basement,\nTTmT' garage- $10,000\nWARD STREET, UPHILL\n4 nice rooms and bath, basement and hot air furnace.\nStucco exterior. Lot 60' x 100'\nwith garden, lawns and cement slab for car- CCftCA\nport. Terms  \u00abf\u00bbOODU\nCROSSLEY AVENUE\n6 rooms and bath on six lots.\nLarge L.R., kitchen and bath\non main floor, 2 B.R.s up and\n2 rooms in base- ftKlfbf.\nment. Terms  \"PD.JUU\nHIGH STREET\nLiving room, dining room,\nkitchen, bath and two bedrooms, one floor. Basement\nand small garden tCIAH\nplot, terms  ?D<JUU\nUPHILL\n5 years old. 3-B.R. bungalow.\nBeautifully finished. Oil furnace. 50' x 120' ttl\/TOSft\ncorner. Terms. .. \u00abH 4,-SOU\nUPHILL\n8  years  old.  FOUR  ROOMS\nand BATH. Full basement, fur-\nTaerms100'.X.120'\\ $8500\nNORTH SHORE\nNear   bridge.   8   years   old.  7\nrooms and bath ONE FLOOR.\nOil  furnace;  deep-freeze.  2-3\n\u00a3rmS $H,900\nFACING BRIDGE\nBUILDING  LOT,    SLIOJJO\n80' x 200'    #l-fOU\nANDERSON AND FIRST STS.\nOlder house in wonderful location. Five rooms and bath,\nmain floor; three upstairs. \u2014\nBasement, hot air furnace,\ngarage. 3 lots, 90' x 120' corner.\nfa $9000\nAgencies Ltd.\nReal Estate, Insurance,\nAppraisals\nPhone 135, or Evenings, 1065-X\nFOR SALE IN CASTLEGAR -\nAttractive modern house on 6th\nAvenue. Four rooms, bathroom,\nplus finished room in full basement. Hardwood floors in living\nroom and one of the bedrooms.\nFireplace. Heavy wiring. Lot 60x\n100. Could be financed by CM 4\nS. Apply 554, 7th Avenue, phone\n2776, Castlegar.\nNEW 4 - ROOM HOUSE AT SLO-\ncan Park. Full basement, on 5'\/_\nacres choice cultivated land.\nPaved highway, electric lights,\nnear school. Full price $5500.\nPaul Markoff, Slocan Park.\nFOR SALE - 5 LOTS ON ROSE\nMountain, $500 each. Phone 515-Y\nafter 5 p.m.\nHOUSE FOR SALE IN FAIRVIEW\n\u20143 bedrooms. Terms. Apply 208\nAnderson.\nLOTS  FOR SALE-$350.  PHONE\n476-L-4.\nFOR SALE - MODERN 3 BED-\nroom bungalow. Phone 890-Y.\nFOR SALE - 6-ROOM HOUSE.\nPhone 529-Y.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES, ET.\nEVERGREEN POULTRY FARM\nand Hatchery, Fruitvale, B.C.\nChick prices\u20141958 Leghorn and\nLeghorn New Hampshires.\nUnsexed     Pullets\nDay old          18 35\n1 week         25 43\n2 week         33 51\n3 week         40 58\n4 week         47 65\n5 week         54 72\n6 week          62 80\n7 week       90\n8 week     1.00\n9 week     1.10\n10 week     1.20\n11 week     1.30\n12 week 1.40\nHOUSE FOR SALE 313 HIGH ST.\nl BR., K., DR. Full basement,\nbathroom. Phone 419-L.\t\nFOR SALE - 2 BR HOUSE, OOOD\ncondition, close in. Phone 612-X.\nRENTALS\n(Continued)\nFOR RENT \u2014 UNFURNISHED\nhousekeeping suite, 2 large\nrooms, $35 monthly. And 2-bedroom suite, kitchen, living room,\nbathroom, unfurnished, location\n400 block\u2014brick building. Apply\nAppleyard's Real Estate, or write\nBox 26, Nelson.\nOFFICES FOR RENT - 1 ROOM\nJohnstone Block. Will partition\nfor suitable tenant. Rent $45. Also\n2 large rooms Aberdeen Block,\n$65. Immediate occupancy. T. D.\nRosling & Son Ltd., 568 Ward St\nFOR RENT AT CRESCENT VAL-\nley \u2014 Modern three bedroom\nhouse, garage and garden plot.\nPhone South Slocan, 206, or ap-\nply J. M. Cunningham.\nLARGE BED - SITTING ROOM\nand kitchen, fully furnished, 2\nbeds; suit 2 clean, respectable\ngentlemen. Available reasonable.\nPhone 335-X.\n3 RM. APARTMENT WITH BATH\nin my residence, North Shore, Vt\nmile from bridge. Con Cummins,\nphone 940-X afternoons or evenings.\nWE HAVE A NICE, BRIGHT,\nspacious office in the Truck Terminus Bldg. For particulars\nphone 77.\n6-ROOM HOUSE - AUTOMATIC\nheat, TV. Adults only. 404 Silica.\nSUITE FOR RENT - PARTLY\nfurnished. Phone 1341-X.\nLIGHT  HOUSEKEEPING   ROOM\nfor rent. Phone 1077-X after 5.\n2 BEDROOM HOUSE, FURN., $60\na month. Phone 476-L-4.\nSUITE  FOR  RENT\nonly. Phone 316.\nADULTS\n2-ROOM SUITE FOR RENT, PH.\n491-X or call 140 Baker.\nROOM FOR RENT - PHONE\n1564-X.\nFURNISHED   APT.,   CLOSE   IN,\nfor summer months. Ph. 1499-L.\n2 ROOM FURN. SUITE. 823 VER-\nnon St. Adults.\n2 FURN.  3-ROOM  SUITES.  PH.\n697-X.\nPARTLY FURN. 2 RM. SU1TE-\nPhone 1541-R.\nFOR RENT - HEATED HOUSE-\nkeeping room. Phone 726-X.\nCOMPLETELY  FURN.  SUITE\nfor 2 men, close in. Phone 149.\nTRAILERS\nMobile Homes\nCastlegar,  Phone 2701\nCranbrook.  Phone JU-6-2270\nFor the Best in Mobile Homes\nSee These:\u2014\n\u2022 PATHFINDER      ir REX\nir MERRIMAN      * A B.C\n* MARATHON\nAlso a Good Selection of\n,      Used Cars.\nBARRETT TRAILER SALES -\nNew location. Highway 3A, Fruitvale. Direct factory distributors\nfor Aljo and Terry Travel Trailers. Built for Canadian roads.\nInsulated for Canadian climale\nELECTRICAL    REPAIRS\nInland Electric Ltd.\n911   Farwell St.,\nTrail\nComplete \u2022 Electrical Service\nMotor Rewinding and Repairs\nHearing-Aid Service and Batteries\nLighting Fixtures\nPhone: 2367\nSPRING   IS   HERE!\nIS  YOUR  CAR   PREPARED?\nFor only $12.00 we will prepare your car by tuning t(ie motor\nusing only GM   Factory Procedures.\n\u2014-Lubricate thoroughly.\n\u2014Examine all brake linings and adjust the brakes.\n\u2014Change oil in the motor and differential.\n\u2014Tighten the exhaust system to eliminate any danger of\ncarbon monoxide fumes in the car.\n\u2014Check the steering.\n\u2014Check all battery charging controls and test the battery.\n\u2014Check the cooling system for leaks.\nTHIS IS A BARGAIN, YOU MUST NOT MISS-\nPARTS NOT INCLUDED IN ABOVE PJUCE.\nNELSON   MOTOR  PRODUCTS\nPhone 121-122\n28L Baker St,\nPERSONAL\nALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS\nFridays. Phone 366-R or 4B3-R.\nWE WILL DELIVER By OUR\nown truck pullets of any age\nDelivery to be made in July or\nAugust. Orders taken from now\non. No deposit necessary. Sound,\nhealthy stock guaranteed. White\nLeghorns, New Hampshires,\nWhite Rocks and Cross breeds.\nApplebv's Poultry Farm, Mission\nCitv; B.C\nUSE LLOYD'S CORN AND CAL-\nlous Salve and Pads for painful\ncorns and callouses. \u2014 prompt\nrelief. Salve 50c. Pads 25c at\nFleury's Pharmacy, Nelson;\nSalmo Drugs, Salmo, and all\ndruggists.\nFOR EGG PRODUCTION AND\nmeat, Schlaffke's Poultry. Gov-\n* r n ment approved. Hatching\nweekly. Schlaffke's Hatchery,\nNew Denver, B.C .\nFOR SALE - WORK HORSE AND\nfarm supplies, plow, harrow, etc.\nApply Pete Konkin, Slocan Cilv,\nRENTALS\nFOR RENT - FULLY MODERN,\nself-contained three-room suite\non ground floor. Recently redecorated, oak floors, stove and\nfridge supplied. Rent $70 per\nmonth. One-half of duplex at 6-\nMlle, two bedrooms, living room\nand.kitchen, oil heater supplied.\nRent $50 per month. T. D. Rosling __ Son Ltd., 668 Ward St.\nHOUSEKEEPING OR SLEEPING\nrooms, furnished, days, weekly\nor monthly rates. Allan Hotel, 171\nBaker St.\nBUILDING SUPPLIES\nESMOND LUMBER CO LTD\nfor all Building Supplies Spe\ncializing in Plywood Contrac\ntors enquiries solicited Phone or\nwire orders collect 3600 E Has\ntings St.. Vancouver, B.C., GLen\nburn 1500\nRUGBY SCORES\nLONDON    (Reuters)-Friday's\nrugby results:\nRUGBY UNION\nCamborne 0 Saracens 15\nPenarth 5 Barbarians 6\nRedruth 22 St Marys Hosp 0\nSale 28 Wasps 6\nTaunton 22 Oldmillhillians 5\nTruro 11 St Thomass Hosp 5\nWeston Super Mare 21 Moseley 3\nRUGBY LEAGUE\nBarrOw 20 Whitehaven 21\nHull 15 Hull Kingston Rovers 3\nLeigh 28 Blackpool Borough 20\nSt. Helens .32 Wigan 7\nSwinton 18 Oldham 28\nWorkington Town 32 Salford 2\nWidnes  17 Warrington 21\nYork 35 Castleford 5\nClassified Ads Get Results!\nTODAY'S SPECIALS AT\nMcELROY'S\nif 1958 AUSTIN A-95\nit 1958 AUSTIN A-55\n* 1958 MORRIS STATION WAGON\nit  1958 CHEVROLET BEL-AIR 4-DOOR\nWhitewall Tires, V8 Engine.\n* 1957 PLYMOUTH 2-DOOR\nif 1956 FORD 4-DOOR\nWhitewall Tires, 2-Tone, Radio.\nit 1956 BUICK 2-DOOR HARDTOP\nit 1956 METEOR SEDAN\nit 1956 AUSTIN 4-DOOR\nif 1955 AUSTIN 4-DOOR\nif 1955 PLYMOUTH 4-DOOR\nLow Mileage.\nif 1954 FORD 4-DOOR\nVery Clean, Low Mileage.\nif 1953 CHEVROLET BEL-AIR\nSPECIAL\n13- Studebaker\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nWE PAY CASH FOR YOUR GOOD USED CAR\ncEIroy Motors\nAUSTIN \u2022 MORRIS SALES AND SERVICE\nBaker and Hendryx St. Phone 2000\n\\mm m nsumg\nWORDS\nCAN'T  DESCRIBE THEM\nC is for Classy\n(to go with your Chassis)\nA is for Automobile\nR is for Riotous\ncolors in stock - so come down and\nS it at the Wheel!\nI Mphabetically speaking, we have J-U-S-T\n, .he car for.Y-O-U. Look over these letter-\nperfect buys and see what we mean!\nAdorable Austin A-40. A Dandy Only $595\nBEST BUYS AT PEEBLES\nCharming Chrysler Family Sedan\nTops in Condition.\nDandy Dodge Custom Royol Sedan\nButton Automatic,  3-Tone Smartness.\nExtra  Economy\nEuropean Specials\nFabulous Fords\nIn 3 Wonderful Bargains.\nGood Cars Are Our Specialty\nHardy Hudson Jet\nIn Lovely Shape.\nMarvelous Mercury\nAutomatic.  Lots of Extras You'll Like.\nOutstanding Oldsmobile Rocket 88 Sedon\nSedan. Radio, Etc. It's Lovely.\nPractical Plymouths.\nin Many Models\nond Many More to Choose From.\nCALL IN TODAY OR PHONE ,\nWE'LL PICK YOU UP\nBOATS and ENGINES\nCOMPLETE SERVICE AND RE-\npair on all outboard motors.\nCOLEMAN ELECTRIC, Phone\n2055, 502 Front Street.\nWANTED TO RENT\n1-STALL GARAGE,  ANYWHERE\n\u25a0 in Nelson. Phone Harry Wiens,\nat 72 or 892-L.\nNEW 20\" WHIRLWIND\nCompare the features of this mower\nwith any other rotary and see why\nit's truly a bargain in quality end\nperformance.\n\u2022 Helgli.-of-cu. change In lecondi\nwithout tools.\n\u2022 Throttle, stop and start controls at\nyour finger-lips.\n\u2022 Staggered wheel deiign prevent!\nscalping.\n\u2022 Front exhaust chute ends clumping.\n\u2022 2'A H.P. 4-eycle engine recoil\nstarter and special Toro Auditor*\nmuffler.\nA complete tine of reel and rotary\nmodels available.\nSee\nH.  \"Fritz\" Farenholtz,\nCharlie Ross or Alex McDonald\nWELDING & EQUIPMENT\nCO.,   LTD.\nPHONE 1402\nHappy\nEaster\nTO\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, APRIL 5,1958 \u2014 11\nCLASS ADS GET RESULTS!   |    Buy and Sell Witt Classified!\nStop! Look!\nNELSON  MOTOR PRODUCTS  LTD.\nARE OFFERING\nTHE OPPORTUNITY OF A LIFETIME  ON  5  LATE-\nMODEL ALMOST LIKE NEW  LUXURY  CARS\nPLUS:\nFREE that's right, absolutely FREE\n100 Gals, of Gas\nwith any one of these cars\n1957 CHRYSLER WINDSOR HARDTOP\nEquipped with automatic transmission, radio, power\nsteering, power brakes, signal lights, air conditioner, electric seats, two-tone paint, white wall tires.\n\u2022ALL\nfrom\nAgencies\n534 Josephine St.\n1955 CHRYSLER NEW YORKER SEDAN\nRadio,  automatic  transmission,  power  brake*,  power\nsteering, etc.\n1955 OLDS. SUPER 88 HARDTOP COUPE\nAutomatic transmission, radio, power brakes, red and\nwhite two-tone paint, air conditioner, signal lights, etc.\nAll these cars are thoroughly reconditioned\nfor your safety. Backed by GM endorsed\ngood-will guarantee.\nNelson Motor Products\nLTD.\nAuthorized Pontiac - Buick - Vauxhall Dealers.\nKootenay and Victoria St., Behind Bank of Montreal\nPhones 658 and 659 Nelson, B.C.\nPhone in or write\u2014we will supply transportation.\nHaldane Motors\n301  Vernon St.\nPHONE 2135\nYour Mercedes-Benz Dealers\nNelson, B.C.\nM\nPEEBLES\n\u25a0EMi_m.-M\n1958\n1958\n1957\n1957\n1957\n1956\n1956\n1956\n1955\n1955\n1954\n1953\nZEPHYR 4-Door\nDODGE Custom Royal, 2-Door Hardtop\nFORD 2-Door Fairlane, automatic, radio\nCHEVROLET Station Wagon, 4-Door\nBORG-WARD 2-Door, radio\nCHEVROLET Belair 2-Door Hardtop\nMETEOR Rideau, automatic, custom radio\nDODGE Custom Royal, automatic, radio, power\nsteering\nBUICK 2-Door Hardtop, automatic, radio\nCADILLAC Coupe-DeVille, continental kit\nCHEVROLET Belair, automatic, power steerinp\nBUICK Roadmaster, custom radio, automatic\nFEATURING THE AMAZING\nDiesels or Gas.... 45 to 50 Miles to the Gallon\nFREE DEMONSTRATION ANY TIME\nPHONE   2135 - 2136\nTEST-DRIVE THE \"58\"  MERCEDES\nThe Quality Car of the Future\nUsed . .. CARS ... New\nT\n 12 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, APRIL 5, 1958\n.. EASTER TIME[..\nMay We\nWish You\nA  Happy  Easter Morn\nin the true meaning\nof Eastertide.\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllil\nALONG THE STREET\nBy Bus Ness\n(iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\n(Editor's note: This is a new\ncolumn which will appear from\ntime to time. Contributions of genuine news about Dusiness activities will be carried in each column)\nWe hear by the grapevine that\ntwo well known food store chains\nmay soon be announcing amalgamation. One of these firms has a\nbranch at Nelson. Watch for an announcement in the New Daily News\nwhen this occurs.\nFred Whiteley's Sport Shop, one\nof the largest sporting goods stores\nin the interior, has opened at 488\nBaker Street. Formerly the Jack\nBoyce Sport Shop, it was moved\nfrom the McKay and Stretton store\nat 532 Baker Street. The new sport\nshop in the former Star Grocery\nbuilding has double the floor space\nof the old store.\n\"TRAIN\" POPULAR\nDon Sweet, manager of Tom-Boy\nStore,  told the Daily  News  that\n130 Enjoy Final\nSquare Dance\nKIMBERLEY - The Kimberley\nnight school square dancing classes\nheld their final rally in the McKim\nJunior High School gym, with Mr.\nand Mrs. Howes, Watkins School\nclass and Mr.- and Mrs. Wilson's\nLower Blarchmont School class,\nand several squares from the Kimberley square dance club joining\nin. An evening of four hours of\ndancing was broken by intermission\nwhen lunch was served and presentations were made to Mr. and Mrs.\nHowes and Mr. and Mrs. Wilson\nfor their efforts during the past\nseason. Over 130 dancers took\npart, and planned an opening dance\nfor the fall season.\nPPIC TO OPEN\nCOAST OFFICE\nVANCOUVER (CP)-The Poultry Products Institute of Canada\nhas opened an office here to assist B.C.. poultry farmers in marketing their produce.\nA spokesman for the \"organization said Wednesday poultry production accounts for one quarter\nof the province's- agricultural\nrevenue and provides the major\nportion of the income of 4,000 of\nB.C.'s 24,000 farm, families.\nASTHMA-\nCHRONIC\nBRONCHITIS\n. . . luffaran\u2014Templeton', RAZ-MAH\ncan help you cough leu, breathe more\n\u00aboii!y. Mr. S. Waldmnn, 367 Chorlei St.,\nWinnipeg,sayi \"I hove suffered a great\ndeal from chronic bronchilli and asthma\nfor the poll 20 year,. I wheeze and have\nprolonged ollocki of coughing. Sine*\nining RAZ-MAH, I have had luch fine\nrelief front coughing and wheezing, and\nbreathe so much more comfortably, I\nheartily recommend RAZ-MAKfo\neveryone who suffer, os I have.\"Try\nTfmpleton'\u00abRAZ.MAH,79c and $1.50\nat all drug counter,.\n2100 youngsters rode aboard the\nTrail Crik Speshul ast week when\nthe store staged a Centennial stunt.\nThe novel train, which has - been\nseen in parades in various celebrations in western Canada, chugged around the town for two days,\nloaded with cheering kids.\nOff-street parking is becoming\nmore and more important to the\nbusiness activities of the city and\nwill undoubtedly lead uptown stores\nto band together to provide convenient parking lots for their shoppers.\nA representative of a large\neastern Canada manufacturer of\nradio equipment conmmented\nthat in no other city had he seen\nas many centennial flags as there\nare in Nelson.\nAn account executive of a Vancouver advertising agency recently\nin the city expressed surprise on\ndiscovering the pleasant dining and\nlounge facilities in Nelson.\nAccommodation in Nelson's newly renovated Nelson Hotel, according to business people and travellers, appears to be at a premium.\nGarage and automobile sale\nagencies report that February and\nMarch have been good months, and\ncompare favorably with the same\nmonths last year.\nNelson To Send\nContestants lo\nPNE In August\nWinner of the Midsummer Bonspiel Queen Contest will represent\nNelson at the Pacific National Exhibition in August this year, the\nfirst contestant to be sent to the\nPNE in two years.\nNelson is still eligible to send a\ncontestant to compete at the Pacific National Exhibition for the\ntitle of \"Miss PNE\", Albert Maida,\nchairman of the Midsummer Bonspiel Association has been notified.\nAll districts which have had entrants in the past two years still\nhave their franchise to send a contestant this year. Nelson's entrants\nin former years have been Lillian\nMiller in 1955 and Muriel Lauder\nin 1956.\nDuring the period following\nApril 21, which is the closing date\ni'or entries, seven judges will be\npicked to choose contestants for\nMiss PNE from applicants, who\nmust conform to rules outlined by\nthe contest committee: (a) must\nbe resident of Canada for two years\nand of her provincial district for\nsix months; (b) single, never married, divorced or had marriage\nannulled; (c) must be age 17 or\nover on the opening day of the\ncontest, and not be 22 until after\nDecember 1, 1958; (d) good character, poise, personality, charm\nand beauty of face and figure; (e)\ngood health and education equivalent to one year in high school;\n(f) this must be her only appearance in a \"Miss PNE\" final contest.\nFinalists in the midsummer bonspiel queen contest will be taken\nto the Lilac Festival in Spokane\nand appear on TV there; to Colville for the annual rodeo and possibly to points in Alberta. The\nwinner of the final contest will\nreceive $200 cash and a gown and\nthe runner-up will receive $50 and\na gown. The winner will receive\nfirst class transportation for herself to Vancouver and return and\nexpenses while in Vancouver.\nDEATHS\nBy The Canadian Press\nFort William, Ont.\u2014S. A. (Al)\nCheesman, 58, veteran Canadian\nbush pilot.\nDetroit \u2014 Edward J. Hill. 65,\npioneer in lighter-than-air aviation and veteran of 75 balloon\nflights.\nWinnipeg \u2014 Captain J. Marsh\nBaker, member of two championship rowing crews.\nVancouver \u2014 Minnie Elizabeth\nPatrick, 95, first Canadian Pacific Railway agent at Laggan.'now\nLake Louise, Alta., in 1885 and\naunt of hockey greats Frank and\nLester Patrick.\nSackville, N.B.-Alfred H. Mac-\nCready, 84, publisher and editor\nof the old weekly Sackville Post\nfor 50 years until his retirement\nin 1946.\nToronto\u2014James Nelson, father\nof James R. Nelson, press secretary to Prime Minister Diefenbaker.\nToronto \u2014 Q. Johnstone Maltby.\n71, retired mining engineer and\nmember of the board of directors\nof several Canadian mining companies.\nMontreal \u2014 Donat Bibeault. 62,\nCanadian vice-president and business agent of the International Longshoremen's Association (CLC).\nFORMER U.K. MINISTER\nLONDON (AP) \u2014 Baron Percy\nof Newcastle, formerly Lord Eustace Percy, died Thursday. He\nwas 71. A former Conservative\nmember of Parliament, he was\npresident of the board of education in the Baldwin cabinet from\n1924 to 1929.\nQuaint Ceremony\nOf Bun Observed\nLONDON (Reuters) - Alan\nBeckett, 18-year-old able seaman,\nwalked jauntily into the Widow's\nSon tavern on Friday, tossed a\nhot cross bun into a net over the\nbar and collected \u00a31 and a free\npint of beer for his trouble.\nHis bun was the 134th to go into\nthe. net in a Good Friday ceremony dating back to the last century.\nThe story goes that a sailor son\nasked his widowed mother to\nkeep a hot cross bun for him for\nhe would be home from the sea\nat Easter..\nHis ship foundered, but his\nmother never iost nopd aim each\nGood Friday put by another bun.\nWhen she died her cottage became a tavern and the buns she\nsaved through the years were\nstrung up in a net over the bar.\nSince then the successive tavern owners each Good Friday invite a seaman home on leave to\nadd a bun to the collection.\nOverseas Army\nEnjoys Westerns\nLETHBRIDGE, Alta. (CP) -\nJack Craine, manager of a Canadian army radio station in West\nGermany, reports that \"anything\nwith a western flavor is a success\" with his listeners.\nMr. Craine, formerly of Lethbridge, is on loan from the CBC\nto radio station CAE\u2014Canadian\nArmy Europe \u2014 at Werl, West\nGermany. The station serves 1,-\n400 Canadian soldiers and their\nfamilies stationed in the country.\n\"The emphasis is very heavy\non light entertainment,\" says Mr.\nCraine, a graduate of the University of Alberta. \"We have a\nlot of local talent too. I think\nevery unit in the brigade has its\nown cowboy orchestra.\"\nBritish forces in the area have\nformed CAE fan clubs arid cowboy songs have become so popular the British soldiers make\ntape recordings of CAE programs.\nBRITISH SOCCER\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Results\nof soccer matches played Friday\nin the United Kingdom:\nENGLISH LEAGUE\nDivision I\nBlackpool 1 Preston 2\nBolton 4 Aston Villa 0\nBurnley 2 Sheffield W 0\nCheslea 0 Notts F 0\nEverton 0 Leeds 1\nMan United 2 Sunderland 2\nNewcastle vs Man City ppd\nPortsmouth 3 Birmingham 2\nDivision II\nBristol R 2 Fulham 2\nCardiff 2 Bristol C 3\nCharlton 4 Rotherhajri 0\nDoncaster 1 Blackburn 5\nGrimsby 4 Middlesbrough 1\nLeyton Or 3 Huddersfield 1\nDivision III Southern\nAldershot 2 Newport 1\nBournemouth 1 Northampton 1\nCrystal P 1 Colchester 1\nGillingham 2 Southend 0\nMillwall 2 Brighton 2\nPlymouth 1 Port Vale 0\nQueens PR 1 Exeter 1\nReading 3 Walsall 1\nDivision III Northern\nAccrington 2 Tranmere 1\nCarlisle vs Barrow ppd\nChesterfield 2 Chester 1\nCrewe Alex 2 Darlington 2\nHartlepools 2 Bury 1\nOldham 4 Bradford 2\nRochdale 0 Gateshead 0\nSouthport 0 York City 1\nCanada's first family sports cart\nStudebaker\nHAWK\nsee It- drive It...\nbe amazed by its\n\u2022 LOW PRICE\ne OPERATING\nECONOMY\nROOMY\nINTERIOR\nC.P.R. PIONEERS Inspect modern diesel:\nThings have changed.a bit since Stanley Lea, of\nNelson, worked as an englneman in the C.P.R.'s\nRevelstoke division and Archibald Sturrock was\ndivision master mechanic on the Esquimau and\nNanaimo Railway. The two C.P.R. pioneers com\npare their memories of the steam days with the\nmodern diesel locomotive that brought them together with more than 60 other members of the\nCanadian Pacific Pioneers Association from Vancouver to Montreal on the first stage of their\n\"house party\" trip to the U.K.\nLEG AMPUTATED\nNEW YORK (AP) - Composer Cole Porter had his right\nleg amputated Thursday. The\nhospital said his condition was\nsatisfactory following the operation. Porter had been troubled by\nosteomyelitis\u2014a bone disease\u2014in\nthe leg since he fell from a horse\nin 1937.\nWHITE\nSHIRTS\nfor Easter\nWASH   'N'   WEAR\nYou'll wqnt one of these\nwash 'n' wear shirts for\nEaster. Made with the\nnew short point collar in\nsingle and double cuffs.\n$5.95-$7.50\nTIES  TO  MATCH\nYOUR SUIT\n$1.50 and $2,00\nEMORY.S\n\"THE MAN'S STORE\"\nVYbvisL fya&MfL...\nPioneer Broncho Billy Anderson\nWins Oscar at Age of 78 Yedrs\nOdds...\nEnds\nand\nby M. D. B.\nStopped in the other day\u2014election day to be exact\u2014at the Chamber of Commerce building to see\nwhat was new. There had been\nquite a few people from Alberta\nand the Coast wanting to know\nwhere they could register their absentee vote.\n* *  *\nA goodly number drop by, looking lor work in the district\u2014some\nfrom the United States and some\nfrom as far away as Nova Scotia.\nMrs. Christiansen says they are\nalways getting letters enquiring\nabout jobs and the other day there\nwas one all the way from Newfoundland.\n* *  *\nTwo gripes travellers seem to\nhave are the bridge and ferry tolls\nand the Monday store closing. Some\neven decide to go down through\nthe States rather than pay the tolls\nand Coast people cite the 25-cent\ncharge on Lions Gate bridge in\ntheir complaints. The Monday closing is the big bug-a-boo, though,\nwith States folk. Mrs. Christiansen\nsaid one lady had saved $300 to\nspend in Nelson, which was.to be\nher last port of call before returning south of the border, and she\nhad to be across by Monday night.\nImagine her annoyance when she\ndiscovered the stores were closed\nall day Monday.\n\u2022'\u2022\"'\u00bb\u25a0*\nWhen the sun comes out, Nelson\nis beginning to look like her usual\nlovely spring self. Pink and white\nDaphne is about over, but For-\nsythia is just putting on its bright\nyellow stars. Daffodils are out in\na good many yards following the\ncrocuses which did their blooming\nbest. Primroses and violets are\npeeping at the world and some\nrockeries are putting on quite a\nfine showing already. Trees are\njust beginning to pop their green\nbuds, fanning out clean fresh green\nto brighten the world.\nWhile today (Friday) is a\ngloomy day hung over with sullen\nclouds and the sky puckers up and\nhas itself another weep, we know\nthat sunnier days are to come\u2014\nthis is the Spring promise. So\nhappy Easter to you all and a\nspecially happy Easter to the wee\nGrade Ones.\n\u2022 FABULOUS ROAD\nPERFORMANCE\n\u2022 DISTINCTIVE\nSTYLIN8\nDEFOE SERVICE LTD.\n213 Boker St.\nRETURN FROM\nEXTENDED TRIP\nGRAY- CREEK - Mr. and Mrs.\nC. C. Feenie have returned from a\nseries of visits at the coast and in\nthe Okanagan. During their stay on\nthe Island they visited old Gray\nCreek residents, Mr. and Mrs.\nRobert Grant at Duncan, Mr. and\nMrs. Leonard Clark ___ Royal Oak\nand Rev. John van der Leest and\nfamily at Victoria. Mr. and Mrs,\nFeenie saw the Macdonald Briar\nCup parade and Mr. Feenie enjoyed\nthe curling \u2022games. They heard\nboth Prime Minister Diefenbaker\nand Mr. Leslie Pearson speak.\nForty years ago Mr. Feenie was a\nfellow student of the Prime Minister's at Saskatoon University.\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c line, 40c line black face type; larger type rates on\nrequest. Minimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment.\nEaster Rosaries, Planters, Lilies.\nHOBBY SHOP, OPP. BUS DEPOT\nEaster Bonnets and Purses.\nTOT 'N' TEEN SHOP\nFleury's Drug Store\nOpen Sunday from 2 to 5 p.m.\nBabies, Weddings, Portraits.\nVOGUE STUDIO - PHONE 1552\nAN ELECTROLUX will do your\nspring cleaning. (Cleaners and\nPolishers). Phone 1108.\nBeautiful New Easter Coats\nBonnets and Dresses.\n' EBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.\nFOR YOUR NEW HAIR STYLING\nand permanents try the Charm\nBeauty Salon, Medical Arts Bldg.\nSte. 211. Phone 1922.\nFUR  STORAGE\nCleaning\u2014Alterations.\nCUSTOM SEWING CENTRE\n580 Baker St., Nelson, B.C.\nFor Sale \u2014 Chicken manure, $1\nsack delivered, or by the truck\nload. Phone or write Amsden Poultry, ph. 559-X-3. Also top soil.  ,\nExtension Traverse Rods, heavy\nduty, available in sizes from 28\"\nto 220\".\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nINAUGURAL ORGAN AND\nCHORAL RECITAL\nFairview United Church, 8th and\nElwyn, Tues., April 15, at 8:15 p.m.\nAUTO GLASS\nCut and polished to fit any make\nor model of automobile, at\nT. H. WATERS & CO. LTD.\nPhone 156 - 101 Hall St. - Nelson\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nKLINE \u2014 Funeral services for\nthe late Mr. William Kline will be\nheld at the Fairview United Church\nSaturday at 2 p.m. Rev. H. R.\nWhitmore will officiate and cremation will follow. Friends wishing to\npay their last respects may do so\nat the Thompson Funeral Home\nuntil 1 p.m.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nFORREST\nFuneral services for the late Mrs.\nDavid (nee Mary Balfour) Forrest\nwill be held Monday, April 7, 1958,\nat 10 a.m. from Knox United\nChurch. Rev. James It Taylor\nwill officiate. Interment at Mountain View Cemetery, family section. Clark's Funeral Chapel in\ncharge.\nREGISTERED NURSES' annual\ndistrict meeting and banquet, April\n16th, Anglican Church Hall, Trail,\n7 p.m. If attending, call 286-L by\nMonday, April 7th.\nSend Easter flowers-4o your\nChurch\u2014shut-in friends\u2014your\nhome\u2014from\nCOVENTRY'S FLOWER SHOP\nPHONE 962\nFIRST SERVICE\nWELL ATTENDED\nAbout 450 persons attended the\nfirst service in the new Fairview\nUnited Church Palm Sunday morning. Of these, 304 received Communion.\nRev. H. R. Whitmore received\n22 members on profession of faith\nand 16 on transfers from other\ncongregations. Joining the church\nfor the first time were Dawn Beat-\ntie, Michael Borch, Elizabeth\nBrown, Lynn Cutler, Dale Disney,\nPhillip Engstad, Kenneth Hancock,\nFred Massey, Barbara Moore,\nBetty Moore, Sheila McGovern,\nDiane Nuyens, Jeffrey Paterson,\nDavid Robinson, Doreen Ross, John\nThomson, Angus' Whitmore, Mrs.\nR. J. Allen, Mr. and Mrs. G. H.\nKennedy, Mrs. D. E. Sweet and\nF. J. Tough.\nTransfers were Mrs. H. L. Allard from The Pas, Man., R. J.\nAllen from Grand Coulee, Sask.,\nMr. and Mrs. G. B. Beattie from\nSt. Paul's-Trinity, Miss Lynn\nBeattie from New Westminster, S.\nR. Brown from Sherbrooke, Que.,\nMrs. S. R. Brown and Sidney Jr.\nfrom Montreal, Mrs. Elizabeth\nEngstad from Burns Lake, B.C.,\nDr. and Mrs. M. E. Geissinger\nfrom Edmonton, Mr. and Mrs. H.\nC. Rounde from Regina, Mrs. F.\nJ. Tough from First Presbyterian\nChurch, Trail, and Mr. and Mrs.\nR. J. White from Bralorne, B.C.\nBy BOB  THOMAS\nHOLLYWOOD (AP) - Neighbors in the Silver Lake district\nof Los Angeles have been dropping into the home of G. M. Anderson to see if it's true.\nIt's true, all right. They have\nonly to look on the mantle of\nMr. Anderson's cluttered little\nliving room to see the shiny,\ngolden .Oscar.\nThough his neighbors know him\nas a wise-cracking, slightly eccentric oldster who lives alone in\na red frame bungalow, film historians recognize him as Broncho\nBilly Anderson, leading player in\nthe first story filjp, The Great\nTrain Robbery. Because he pioneered the film industry and created the movie western, the motion picture academy gave him\nan honorary award last week.\nI dropped by to see how he survived the experience.\nFEELS YOUNGER\n\"I feel 30 years younger,\" he\ngrinned. \"No more mothballs for\nme.\"\nBilly, who is 78, admitted that\nhe was nervous over facing the\n2,500 guests at the Pantages Theatre. (The Oscar show ran overtime, so the honorary awards\nwere given after the telecast.)\nFess Parker helped me a lot,\"\nhe said. \"He kept talking to me\nin whispers, 'Don't be nervous;\nyou can make it.' That fellow\nHugh O'Brian helped, too. They\nare both very nice fellows.\"\nThe two modern gunslingers\nhelped Bette Davis make the\naward to Broncho Billy.\nThe Broncho Billy revival\nstarted a month ago when I did\na series of columns on the western. After much negotiation I\nlanded an interview with Anderson, his first in many years.\nIt seemed odd to me that the\nacademy had never honored him,\nsince it had given Oscars to D.W.\nGriffith, Mack Sennett and others\nfor their contributions. So I made\nthe suggestion to academy president George Seaton. He took it\nup with the board of governors\nand the Oscat was voted.\nEXCITING \"LIFE\nBroncho Billy's life has been\nexciting since. He has had offers\nto go to New York for TV appearances, make movies, attend\na celebration at Niles, Calif.,\nwhere he founded his Essanay\nStudios.\nWhat about the offers?\n\"It's kinda hard to start a new\ncareer at my age,\" he said.\n\"You're not so sure your mind\nis going to fire real bullets and\nnot just come up with blanks.\nBut I might do a few things.\nThey'd have to be worth while,\nthough, nothing undignified.\"\nHe reflected on his career.\n\"I suppose I did help build the\nmovie business. But if it hadn't\nbeen me, it would have been\nsomeone else. Shucks, there was\nno stopping the motion picture;\nit had to grow no matter what\nanyone did to it.\"\nTwo Nelson\nNurses to\nRNABC Meet\nMrs. J. G. James and Miss Flora\nMcLean will represent Nelson\nChapter, Registered Nurses' Association of B. C, at the RNABC\nconvention May 28-30 in Victoria.\nThis was decided at a branch meeting in Kootenay Lake General Hospital Nurses' Home.\nTwo bursaries will be offered to\ngirls wishing to enter training\nscjiool in the fall. May 18 was announced as the date for the Nurses'\nVesper Service, usually held in\nconjunction with Hospital W*ek:\nLost \u2014 Approximately six weeks\nago between Silica and Civic Centre, rhinestone brooch, valuable\nkeepsake. Finder please phone 125\nafler 5 p.m. Reward.\nEASTER FAMILY DINNER\nwill be served Sunday in the\nROUND-UP ROOM\nfrom 12 noon to 9 p.m. For reservations, phone 391.\nRED CROSS\nStarting Tuesday, April 8, Red\nCross Campaign headquarters, 441\nBaker St., will be open from 2 to\n5 daily until all canvassers have\nmade their returns.\nLAKESIDE PARK\nLAWN BOWLING CLUB\nAnnual meeting will be held in\nWomen's Institute Room, Civic\nCentre, Tuesday, April 8th, at 8\np.m. All members requested to\nattend.\nWoman Telegrapher,\nAunt of Patrick\nBoys, Dies Aged 95\nVANCOUVERr-Minnie Elizabeth\nPatrick, 95, aunt of hockey immortals Frank and Lester Patrick,\nand first CPR agent at Laggan,\nnow Lake Louise, Alta., in 1885,\ndied here Wednesday.\nA native of Illinois, Mrs. Patrick\nlearned the art of telegraphy from\na relative, Charles Cumpston, with\nthe CPR in Moose Jaw, when the\nline was threading its way west.\nHer husband, the late Louis Patrick, drove the first CPR passenger\ntrain from Canmore, Alta., to Donald, B.C., in 1886, and continued\nfor 32 years, establishing a record\non that difficult mountain run. He\nwas 89 at his death in 1942.\nSurviving are two daughters and\none son, L. T. (Jack) Patrick, a\nCPR official in Winnipeg.\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILY\nKODAK\nFILMS\nAND\nSUPPLIES\nAt Your Rexall  Pharmacy\nCity Drug\nNEW  OPERA\nHONG KONG (Reuters) - A\nnew opera, Sputnik Storms in the\nHeavens, was presented here\nThursday night by the Peiping\nOpera Theatre in praise of the\ntwo Soviet satellites, the New\nChina News Agency reported.\nHave The Job Done Right\nWIC GRAVEC\n\u2022 LIMITED        \u2022*\nPHONE  815\nMASTER PLUIMBEU\nHAIGH\nTRU-ART\nBeauty   Salon\nS7B Baker St.\nPhone V9\nPLAYMOR\nT\nO\nN\nI\nT\nE\nWe Proudly Present the\nSerenaders\nINTERIOR'S TOP DANCE ORCHESTRA\nfor the Big Pre-Holiday\nDANCE\nSuperb Donee Music Plui Entertainment\n9:30 TO 1    \u2014   ADMISSION $1.00\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_1958_04_05","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\/1.0430788","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":"1958-04-05 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":"1958-04-05 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":""}]}