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W.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/contributor","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:contributor"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/contributor","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource.; Examples of a Contributor include a person, an organization, or a service."},{"label":"Contributor","value":"Ramsden, C. 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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":" ^mmmmtmm'\u2014\nThe Interior's\nLargest Daily Newspaper\nMay Average Press Run \u2014 9SS1\n\u2014 ' :\t\n}H$   ^\nVol. 60\nPublished at Nelson, trar^^l lifioti^' * iment, financial and trading centre of the Kootenay-Columbia\n \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0      *? \u00b0*ff ^ _ GrW \t\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKOOTENAY: Variable cloudiness, mostly sunny in afternoon.\nSlightly warmer in Western sections. Low and high at Cranbrook\n45 and 70, Crescent Valley 50\nand 70.\n' si\narea\nrfrfcj   C., CANADA\u2014MONDAY MORNING, JUNE 12, 1961\nNot More Than 7c Dally, 10c Saturday\nNo.- &\nU.S., Canada Agree to $300 Million Plane Swap\nTractor Bargaining\nTeam Leaves Today\nHopes\nTo Free 1200 Cuban\nRebels With 500 Tractors\nWASHINGTON (AP) \u2014 A four-man bargaining\nteam assembled in Washington Sunday to complete preparations for a mission to Havana which it hopes will\nbring freedom for 1,200 Cuban rebels in exchange for 500\ntractors.\nThe four \u2014 three agricultural professors and a labor union official \u2014 are to represent the Tractors-For-\nPreedom committee in negotiations with Cuban Premier\nFidel Castro. If all goes well, these talks will start late today or Tuesday in Havana. I       \t\nA spokesman for Uie negoti- i fli*t   operations   at   Havana's\nators   said   they   would   have I airPort  would  not\nnothing to say publicly before | Plans,\nleaving   for  Cuba.   Apparently,\nan  effort was  being made  to\navoid anything that might upset\nthe  arrangements  which  have\nfollowed  a  confused  and  tortuous   course   since   the   committee  was  formed  to  accept\nthe exchange offer Castro made\non May 17.\nOfficially, the negotiators are\nhere only to pick up their visas\nfrom the Czech embassy. Because the United States and\nCuba have no diplomatic relations, the Czechs represent\nthe Castro government here on\nsuch diplomatic routine.\nHOPES TO LEAVE TODAY\nAfter getting its permits, the\nteam plans to leave for Miami,\nFla., where it hopes to catch a\nplane to Havana late today.\nThe committee said a report\nby Pan American World Airways of restrictions placed on\nOne undecided factor was\nwhether the team would have\nfull power to arrange the trac-\ntors-for-men swap with Castro.\nThe Cuban premier has demanded the team be given Ml\npower but a source olose to lhe\ncommittee has said the technicians would not make any decisions and would report back\nto the comrmittee on its negotiations.\n-lie technical team consists of\nProf. Roy Bainer, head of the\nUniversity of California agricu.-\ntural engineering department;\nC. H. Hanse, assistant professor\nof agricultural engineering at\nMichigan State University; J.\nB. Liljedhal, agricultural engineering professor at Purdue\nUniversity, and Duane P. Great'\nhouse, director of the United\nAuto Workers agriou-tural implement department.\nYoung Siocan Grad\nKilled in Car Mishap\nJames Terry Solecki, 18, of\nSiocan, was killed Saturday morning when the truck he occupied,\ndriven by a juvenile, left Highway No. 6 three quarters of a\nmile south of Siocan.\nents, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Gregor\nSolecki; two brothers, Glen and\nMark, at home; two sisters, Mrs.\nKeith Yoxall of Kaslo and Debbie,\nat home; and his grandparents,\nMr. and Mrs. N.   Shkwarok   of\nThe driver, a resident of Win- Procter and Mrs. J. Solecki of\njuamish. The family resided at\nKaslo and Procter before moving\nto Siocan about six years ago.\n50 Killed as\nQuake Levels\nVillage\nTEHRAN, Iran (Reuters) \u2014\nFifty persons were killed by an\nearthquake in the southern village of Dehkouhen Sunday, it was\nannounced here.\nIn addition, more than 50 persons were injured in the village,\nwhich was levelled by the quake.\nAH the village's 1500 surviving\ninhabitants, who were living in\nmud huts, now are camping in an\nopen field.\nThe same tremors shook the\ntown of Lar, 15 miles away, injuring six persons and destroying\nmud huts that survived a violent\nearthquake in April, 1860.\nTremors were felt in areas within a 180-mile radius of Lar, 600\nmiles south of Tehran.\nDoctors  and  tents,  blankets,\nmmi..,,. \u00ab_\u2022   ,\u201e.,,      < medical supplies and food have\n.    \u201e        ,. TOLED\u00b0 Ohio (AP) - A ease- ,been rushef t0 fc wea ^ere\nVic Hurst, line tank truck overturned and about 3500 persons were killed or\nwas called to the scene and ran exploded on the edge of the down- injured  in   an  earthquake  last\ninto Siocan village to summon; town district Saturday, injuring year.\nmedical help. | at least 71 persons and setting;        \t\nThe boy is survived by his par-1 several nearby houses afire.\nThe most critically injured were j\nfiremen, attempting to extinguish\nthe burning truck when it ex-\ni ploded.\nlaw, escaped injury when the\n1949-model truck left the highway in a long skidding arc, crashed on its side, and came to rest\non its roof.\nThe two youths were on their\nway home at 5 a.m. when the\ncrash occurred. They attended 1\ngraduation ceremonies and re-|\nceived graduation certificates at\nHigh School students in Slocanl\na gathering for W. E. Graham1\nvillage before the accident.       .\nRCMP judged the vehicle a\ntotal wreck. I\nAfter the crash the juvenile\npulled Solecki from the vehicle.\nA  nearby  resident,\nGas Truck\nExplodes,\n71 Injured\nU.S. Orders 200 Starfighters;\nCanada to Get 66 Voodoo Jets\nBy HAROLD MOR81SON\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nWASHINGTON (CP) \u2014 A huge military plane swap between Canada and the\nUnited States, involving more than $300,000,000 worth of cjircraft, has been approved by\nthe two governments it was learned authoritatively'Sunda'y.\nAn agreement will be signed in Ottawa within 48 hours.\nUnder the deal \u2014 biggest of its kind in peacetime and involving more than a year\nof negotiations \u2014 Canada will acquire about 66 American-made F-101 voodoo jet fighters to replace aging CF-100 subsonic squadrons in the North American air defence oper-\nation.   \u2014\nBritannia Teams\nTops in B.C.\nEnd to Laos\n! Fighting Urged\nIn turn, the United States will\nplace orders in Canada for some\n300 F-104G Starfighter jets to be\nshipped to North Atlantic allies\nunder mutual aid.\nThe main Starfighter contract\nwill go to Canadair Limited,\nMontreal, with Orenda Engines\nof Toronto and Malton, Ont.,\nsupplying the turbine power.\nCANADA PAYS QUARTER\nThe terms of the agreement,\nit was learned, will specify that\nthe United States will put up\nabout $150,000,000 of this cost\nand Canada about $50,000,000\nunder a 75 - 25 cost - sharing\nagreement.\nBut, in fact, there will be\ncompensation for Canada..'?, contribution in an a_K6mpanying\ndeal under which the .Kennedy\nKhrushchev Proposes\nPeace Talks On Qermany\nMOSCOW (AP)-Soviet Premier Khrushchev proposed to\nPresident Kennedy in Vienna an\nimmediate peace conference\nover Germany, it was disclosed\nSunday by Tass news agency.\nThis conference would write a\npeace treaty to fix Germany's\npermanent borders, make West\nBerlin a demilitarized free city,\nend the Western occupation of\nBerlin and turn over control of\nits lifelines to the East German\ncommunists.\nIf the allies were not ready\nto do this he offered an \"interim solution,\" by which the\ntwo  German  states  would  be\ntogether and themselves work\nout a solution that would be the\nbasis of a treaty.\nRussia and the Western powers would agree beforehand to\naccept whatever agreement the\nGermans made.\nAll this was contained in a\nmemorandum on the German\nquestion which Khrushchev\nhanded to Kennedy in Vienna\nlast weekend.\nNEW TIMETABLE\nIt set a new Soviet timetable\nfor the German question that\nheaded off any 'showdown over\nBerlin until the end of this year.\nTass also distributed the text\nKAMLOOPS (OP) - Mine\nrescue and men's first aid teams\nfrom Britannia Mines of Howe\nSound Mining Co. won first olace . (\n:n the provincial mine rescue and( 'lames. There were people lying Indocninese\nfirst aid competitions here Satur-! ;i'l over the grass.\"\nday. j   The injured included 10 fire-\nThe mine resoue team, csp-i men and two policemen. Most\ntained by Luke Kirby, won the of the rest were bystanders.\nand works by d-rec'lng two\" jets I B.C. department of mines-central j    Tj,e   truck    driver,    Edward\nof air down behind the wearer, j B.C. association trophy. i Baum, was in serious condition\nThe first aid team was cap- in hospital. Police said Baum was\ntained by J. Morrison.\nRunnersto in _the, ir||ne ..wst'\ncue comtMtitiohTwas the Cariboo\nGold Quarts Mining,Co. of Wells,\nB.C., with. James White as captain.\n\u25a0Runner up' in ihe men's first\naid Was Princeton No. 2 team,\nSt. John Aimljulan-e, captained\nby Cart Stenvold.\nWITH A COMIC strip-style\n\"antl-gravlty\" rocket belt, engineer Harold M. Graham actually takes off ln a test at\nBuffalo, N.Y. Rogers zoomed 30\nfeet Into the air cruised easily\nover a hill and set down on the\nother side. The belt is an invention of the Bell Aerosystems Co,\n-TNS photo.\n\"One  fireman came running j\nout of the smoke with his clothing I\non fire,\" said Mrs. Philip G.| GENEVA (AP) \u2014 Britain and' administration will turn over to\nLopez who lives near the scene the Soviet Union Sunday appealed the Canadian Air Force the Voo-\nof the explosion.' I to the warrin gforces in Laos to doo fighters.\n\"He fell down on the grass and S'\u00b0P righting and announced that'    It was indicated the cost of\nanother  fireman   put  out   the lie 14-power conference on the\n' *\"\"'   \" kingdom   will   get\ngiven six months in which to get of  a  second  memorandum  in\nREV. ROBERT LEISHMANN TAYLOR of Medicine Hat,\nAlta,, was elected Moderator of the Presbyterian Church In Canada at general assembly in Toronto. Rev. Taylor said later he\ndid not think now was the time for union of the church with the\nUnited Church. He also spoke out against opposition to religious\neducation in the schools.\u2014TNS photo.\nwhich Khrushchev denounced as\ndictatorship a Western proposal\nfor a neutral director of nuclear\ntest control machinery.\nKhrushchev warned that if\nthere was no peace conference\nand the Germans failed to agree\nhe would go ahead with, his long-\nthreatened peace treaty with Ihe\nEast Germans alone, ending the\noccupation status of West Berlin\nand giving the East Germans\nmastery over the access routes\nto the city.\nAirliner Loses\nEngine in Sea\nPRESTWICK, Scotland (Reuters) \u2014 A Dutch airliner with 73\nAmerican passengers on board\nlanded safely here Sunday after\none of its giant engines caught\nfire and plummeted into the\nNorth Atlantic.\nThe story of tlie emergency\naboard the KLM Royal Dutch\nAirlines DC 7 \u2014 owned by the\nElectric Boat Company of Gro-\nton, Conn. \u2014 was told by passengers who waited without panic\nwhile the plane's eight crew members fought to land it safely.\nFire broke out in one of the\nport engines when the Amsterdam-bound airliner was at 13,-\n000 feet off the coast of northern\nIreland.\nThe 39-year-old-pilot, Capt. Wilhelm Bellink, said: \"This has\nnever happened to pie before,\nand I hope it never will again.\"\nAfter'the engine dropped off,\nMopgey Back\nBehind Bars\nWINNIPEG (CP) -The ROMP\nSunday reported Percy Moggey\nback ta his cell at Stony Mountain penitentiary, his 11-month\nfreedom ended by an eight-man\nposse which included the member of the Manitoba legislating\nfor the area in which the capture\nwas made.\nMoggey, who set a Manitoba\nrecord for the longest escape record and who is the first man to\n\"go over the high wall\" at the\npenitentiary, appeared before\nMagistrate William Edwards in\nStonewall, Man., Saturday to\nhear a charge of escaping lawful custody.\nHe was remanded without plea\nto Friday in Selkirk.\nConsidered by police as one of\nthe most wanted criminals in\nCanada, the partly bald 57-year-\nold man gave up quietly at dawn\nSaturday when two RCMP officers kicked in the door of his\nsnugly built log cabin buried ta\nthe bush four miles north of\nEriksdale, 90 miles northwest of\nWinnipeg.\nWhitehorse       40\nthe pilot and crew were able to San Francisco     53\nmake a safe landing. '        \u2022     Spokane    54\nTHE WEATHER\n68   .\n70\n85   .\n84\n77\n62   .06\n64   .10\n61   .06\n58   .18\n68\n65\nNELSON (Sun)  62\n(Saturday)   53\nWinnipeg   51\nRegina  52\nCalgary  41\nPenticton  56\nVancouver  53\nVictoria  50\nin shock and-unable to give, them\ndetails of ilie'crash..., \u25a0-..,,-.._,\nThe tanker tnuok.sltidded on a\nturn. The two-trailer vehicle jack-\nknifed and the front tank overturned.\nIt took firemen an hour to bring\nthe fire under control.\nUtakA. drndi.\nKootenay at Nelson\u2014Sunday,\n17.95 feet above zero; Saturday,\n18.25 feet; Friday 18.35 feet (level\nrose to 18.40 later in day following official reading.)\nColumbia at Trail\u2014Saturday,\n45.1 feet; Sunday not available.\nunder way again today.\nThe British foreign secretary,\nthe Earl of Home, and Soviet\nForeign Minister Andrei Gromyko\nissued this statement:\n\"Lord Home, as chairman of\nthe.next session of the Laos conference has decided after con'\nsulfation..with Mr. Gromyko to\nconvene the 14th plenary Session\non Monday June 12 at 11 a.rn.\n\"The United Kingdom and Uie\nSoviet co-chairmen have agreed\nto send a joint message to the\nInternational Control Commission\nwhioh will be dispatched tomorrow. The message reiterates the\nopinions of the co-chairmen to\nthe parties in Laos on April 24\nto co-operate with the IOC in\neffecting a control over a ceasefire.\"\nThe,.three-pOwer ICC is composed of India, as chairman;\nCanada and Poland.\n\"Revolution\"\nSeen in Quebec\nBy RICHARD DAIGNAULT\nCanadian Press  Staff  Writer\nQUEBEC (OP)-French Quebec now is launched irrevocably\non a new course.\nThe Liberal administration of\nPremier Jean Lesage, after an\nunprecedented 107 - day legislative hassle with the Union Nationale opposition in the legislature, wound up the longest\nsession ta Quebec history Saturday when it voted through the\nfinal pieces of legislation that\nfrom now on sets the pace for\nwhat some observers are calling\na revolution.\nThe session opened Nov. 10\nand was spread over seven\nmonths.\nHighlights: free and compulsory education to the 11th grade,\na' multi-million dollar university\nexpansion program, full - scale\nco-operation with Other Canadian provinces and the federal\ngovernment in national hospital\ninsurance, a provincial family\nallowace system, the opening\nof Quebec government agencies\nin Europe.\nOther legislation reflects pro\nfound changes. The behind-the-\nscenes atmosphere in the government liquor business has\nbeen eliminated. The new Quebec Liquor Board hears applications for licences at public\nhearings. Quebec motorists have\nbeen made financially responsible for victims of highway\naccidents.\nPURSUED TWO THEMES\nThe new government hammered away at two main ideas\nthrOug    the session.\n1. The most powerful instrument in the hands of the French-\nCanadian people is their provincial government. With it they\ncould achieve economic security\nand profit more largely from\nthe development of natural resources.\n2. The people of Quebec must\ndevote most of their energies to\neducation and the development\nof French culture. Quebec could\nnot hope to occupy a promient\nplace in the over - all North-\nAmerican picture as a great industrial power. But cultural and\ntechnical achievements were\naccessible and desirable.\nthese planes, estimated at about\n$120,000,000, will be shared also\non a similar 75-25 arrangement.\nWoman Urges\nPhysical Fitness\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Women\nshould walk more, says Mrs.\nLome Brown, who has received\nher master's degree in physical\neducation.\n\"I'm horrified at women's attitude toward fitness. They\nshould be more, conscious of it.\nIf they just walked more.\n\"Housewives should he encouraged to get out and do more\nabout physical fitness. It would\nchange their outlook.\"\nMrs. Brown, mother of two\nyoung children and wife of\nphysical education teacher at the\nUniversity of B. C, obtained\nher bachelor of science degree in\nphysical education several years\nago and later returned to school\nfor two years to get her master's.\nThe Browns plan to open a\ncamp for boys this summer but,\nsays Mrs. Brown, \"maybe I\nshould be doing something about\nwomen.\"\nParliament\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nJustice Minister Fulton said\nRCMP security work is essential to meet \"a subversive Communist effort\" in Canada.\nH. W. Herridge (CCF - Kootenay West) said he has been told\nthe RCMP asked unievrsity students to act as \"stool pigeons\"\nto inform on other students.\nAgriculture Minister Alvin Hamilton announced a second 3,750,-\n000 bushel wheat sales contract\nwith Poland.\nPrime Minister Diefenbaker announced plans to set up a Commons committee to propose\nchanges in the sweeping powers\nof the War Measures Act.\nMr. Fulton indicated the government may use tougher methods to bring to justice the leaders\nof a Chinese immigration racket.\nCONDITION   FAIR\nCULVER CITY, Calif. (AP) -\nScreen star Jeff Chandler is rallying after his third setback\nsince he underwent spinal surgery May 13, his physician reported Saturday.\nMoscow Sees Queen Troop Colors\nBy ROD CURRIE\nLONDON (CP)-The Queen\ncelebrated her official birthday\nSaturday and Prince Philip his\nactual birthday by taking part\nin the martial pageantry of\ntrooping the color.\nFor the first time the ceremony, with 60 officers and about\n1,650 other ranks on parade, was\ntransmitted to television viewers\nin Moscow.\nThe thousands who turned out\nto view the ceremony under\nbrilliant sunshine and billowing\nwhite clouds gathered around\nBuckingham Palace and lined\nthe route along The Mall to\nHorse Guards Parade.\nAs a nearby dock struck 11\na.m., the Queen, resplendent in\nthe long navy skirt and scarlet\njacket of the Scots Guards, rode\nside - saddle into the parade\nsquare exactly on time for the\n80-minute ceremony.   Following\nher was Prince Philip, 40 Saturday, wearing the uniform of a\ncolonel of the Welsh Guards.\nThe Queen's real birthday was\nApril 21, when she turned 35, but\nit is observed officially on the\nsecond Saturday of June.\nThe color trooped was that of\nthe 2nd battalion Scots. Guards,\nwho trace their history back to\n1642 when they were raised as\na royal regiment by King\nCharles I.\nThe ceremony was transmitted to Moscow under an\naigreement in which the Moscow\nMay Day parade was shown to\nBritish viewers.\nColumnist William Connor,\nwriting in the tabloid Daily Mirror here, says the Moscow show\nof arms was \"menacing, sombre and deeply oppressive.\" He\nadded:\n\"So what do we do? More and\nheavier tanks? Nonsense!\n\"We put on the finest and best\nparade of the wooden soldiers\nthe world has ever seen. We\nshov. them the decorative mockery of war. Bearskins and all.\n. \"Who could be scared of this\nlot? Our view of military preparedness for a conflict that\nwill have no winners could not\nbe better expressed than by this\nlovely, skillful, historic and derisive charade against the arts\nof warfare.\"\nThus Canada's overall outlay\nwould run to some $80,000,00.\nwith the United States putting\nup the other $240,000,000. Canada's payment would be on an\ninstalment basis. She would take\nover the American portion of\ncosts of maintaining the Pine\nTree radar network across\nSouthern Canada.\nCanada then would be completely responsible for administering and maintaining this\network. Currently, Canada\npays about two - thirds of the\nmaintenance costs and the\nUnited States pays (he rest.\nWITNESSES WARY\nA Congressional defence subcommittee has been told, in\nVague terms, of negotiations on\none part of the complex deal-\nthat touching on the F - 104G\nStarfighters. But defence department witnesses, apparently\nthrough m a n u facturers' pressure on political representatives\nindicated the deal might not be\ncompleted until next year.\nMaj.-Gen. Robert J. Friedman\ncomptroller of the U.S. air force\nconfirmed that a cost - sharing\nagreement was under discussion\nbut indicated it may not be completed before 1926.\nThe negotiations, which,, originally involved' the Canadian\nOL-44 cargo plane, have been\ngoing on for more than a year.\nThey started some time after\nthe Canadian government decided to junk production of the\ncontroversial and costly Cans*\ndian-made CF-lOO \u25a0 and concentrate on acquiring Bamarc affaire, a ft missiles 'for location at\ntwo bases in Quebec and Ontario.\nWhen it became evident that\nCanada's CF - 100 jet fighter*\nwere rapidly becoming obsolete,\nCanada suggested'she would buy\nthe F-101 Voodoo if the American air force purchased the CL-\n44 cargo plane.\nThe U.S. defence department\nrejected the OL44, 6aying ft\nwas \"generally inferior\" to Jkn.\nilar planes produced in the U.S.\nThe possibility of the United;\nStates placing an order for Starfighters in Canada then was pro-\n\"ised as an alternative.\nMother, Six\nChildren Die\nIn Fire\nALBERTON. P.E.I. (CP) - A\n28-year-old mother and six of her\n10 children died when fire swept\nthrough their two-storey frame\nhome in the smalt western Prince\nEdward Island farming-fishing\ncommunity of Campbellton early\nSunday.\nDead are Mrs. Gerald O'Holler-\nan, her daughter Irene, 10, sons\nMichael, 7; Earl, 5; Dwight, 4;\nCyril, 3; and Randall, five\nmonths.\nfn hospital with second and\nthird degree burns are 12-year-\nold Gerald O'Holleran and his\ntwo-year-old brother Rodney.\nThe father, Gerald O'Holleran,\nwas reported working as a laborer on a distant early warning radar site on Baffin Island.\nNeighbors who reached the\nblazing building said Mrs. O'Holleran managed to push three children through a window but apparently perished trying to reach\nothers.\nVET CELEBRATES\nPETERBOROUGH, Ont. <CP>-\nJohn Thompson, a veteran of the\nRiel Rebellion, celebrated his\n100th birthday Saturday at his\nhome in Nassau, three miles north\nof here.\ntalion from Belleville, Ont, Mr.\ntalion from Beleville, Ont., Mr.\nThompson witnessed the surrender of 10,000 Indians without a battle at Fish Creek, Sask.\nsifft\nfflill\nORIENTAL GLAMOR - This\nPembroke Squires creation,\nshown being modeled ln New\nYork, brings a touch of Oriental glamor to the beach. The\nswiinsuit is strapless. The col-\nlarless, sleeveless sheath buttons down one side.\nAnd in This Corner . . .\nORLANDO, Fla.  (AP) \u2014 Radio station WHOO, Instead of\ntalking about the weather, decided to do something about it.\n. Central Florida, heart of the state's citrus Industry, has suffered through an extended drought this spring. So' the radio station brought in a team of Hawaiian dance specialists and Friday\nnight held an outdoor rain dance attended by about 8,000 persons.\nThe dancers whirled their swords, chanted mystic prayers and\nleaped around flaming coconuts. .\u00bb .-\nA shower dampened many of the spectators before they could\nreach their cars. ...\nNEW YORK (AP) \u2014 The magistrate was, understandably, annoyed when patrolman Henry Ferrell interrupted court proceedings by shouting \"hey, look!\"\nBut Magistrate Kenneth Phipps and al! others present looked\nthrough the courtroom window and saw three men climb a fire\nescape and enter a window in an apartment across the street.\nFerrell dashed from the courtroom. About 10 minutes later,\nhe and two other patrolmen arrested three youths rifling the\napartment.\nWhen Ferrell returned to courtroom, where he was to testify\nin a case, he apologized to Phipps.\n\"That is perfectly all right,\" the magistrate replied.\nr\n: \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0\n .\n_\n^\u2122\n_\n. !\t\na\u2014NEL50K DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, JUNE 12, 1961\nLegion Seeks End to Inequities\nIn Reestablishment Credits\nNAKUSP \u2014 A proposed reso- ernments take immediate further mons, was given by George Ma\nhltlon to rectify some of the \"in-| action on the unemployment sit-1 hon, of Vancouver, supervisor of\nequities\" in Re - establishment! uation, as many veterans are out welfare services, to the Nakusp\nCredits for war veterans, was'of WOrk.\npresented at the Annual Conven-, A 12-cent rebate on the 13-cent\ntion of the West Kootenay Zone provincial gasoline tax will be for war Veteran Allowances to\nCouncil of the Royal Canadian requested for amputees. At pres^ be pay outside Canada,\nLegion, by J. C. Hall, third pro- ent they are getting nine cents,\nvincial' vice-president. I This was in effect before the pres-\nTthe proposal was given to 122 ent  three-cent  rise  in  gasoline\ndelegates representing 10 of the taxes. t ,_ _  \t\n12 branches in the zone, in the     The Housing and Lands com- sarviC&  He stated (his was the\nLegion Hall here Sunday. mittee at the provincial conven-j m__t any -one in (he province\n\"There is inequity in the fact( tion has asked the government to ,._d  m.ovitted for this type of\nChat a person who served over-, change the VLA to enable veter-, services\nF. M. Hockney, zone commander, said $18,884 had been spent\nin the West Kootenay zone for\nveterans' welfare and community\n250 Knights At\nJubilee Banquet\nMore than 290 persons from    The banquet room was filled\nseas must pay back the re-estab- ans to borrow up to $14,500 for\nlishment credits before he  can, housing. The present ceiling is\nqualify for assistance under Lhe $10,000.\nVeterans' Lands Act,\" said Mr. The  deadline  on  applications\nHau., for land under the VLA has now\nPersons serving overseas were been removed,\ngiven  $15  a  month  in  credits, it was also resolved thai money\nthe Kootenays observed Sunday\nBoth anniversaries of the Nelson\nand Rossland councils of the\nKnights of Columbus and honored\nthree charter members at a Gold-\ni en Jubilee Banquet in the Hume\nHotel Silver Room.\nLeo McKinnon and Joseph\nSpeakman both, of Vancouver,!\nand Archie Blaney, of Nelson,\nwere honored as knights celebrated the forming in May of 1911\nthe first council ln the West Kootenay.\nSpeakers included Very Rev.\n! F.  J.  Monaghan  council  chap-\nthose serving in Canada, $7.50.\n\"In other words,\" said Mr.\nHall, \"the person who served\nhis country the longest is penalized the most.\"\nThe closing date at present for\nrepaying re-establishment credits\nborrowed under the VLA be insured should a veteran die prior\nlo paying his committments.\nThis would insure his widow from\ngoing in debt as a result. i\nA row method ot re.re .entation '\nwhereby each zone will have a\nin order to qualify for veteran vice-president to represent it at\nlands is September, 1962. | the provincial level was approved.\nMr. Hall proposed the repay- OUTLINES ACT I\nment time be extended one month! An outline of the new Veterans'\nfor every month a veteran served Land Act. presently in its second\nreading before the House of Corn-\nlain, Acting Mayor Aid. W. K,\nMassey, James V. Hughes of\nVancouver, past supreme director, Dr. John Harrigan, of Trail,\nstate deputy, and G. A. Bregoliss,\nof Kamloops state deputy-elect.\nJohn B. Varcoe, of Trail, district deputy, was master of cere,\nmonies.\nForty-five candidates were ini\ntlated into the order Sunday at\nond vice-president. Mrs. A. j ceremonies which began, with\nSteenhoff of Nakusp 1\u00bb past 10:15 a.m. mass, after a parade\npresident. I to the church, and ended at 5\nL. D. Bernard of Nakusp a o.m. when degrees were exempli\nLegion member since 1925 and tied. The candidates were from\nbefore that a member of the] Trail, Rossland, Greenwood, Kimberley,   Grand   Forks,   Salmo,\nNew officers elected were\nKen Carpenter of Nakusp, zone\nchairman and deputy zone commander; Herman Mang of Salmo, deputy zone chairman.\nMrs. P. A. Bateman of Castle-\ngar-Robson was elected president of the Ladies Auxiliary;\nMrs. Floyd Bacon, vice-president; Mrs. Herman Mang, sec-\nRivers Begin Dropping\nIn Creston and Trail\nGreat War Veterans' Association was given a life membership.\negion To Go All\nOut for Sports Plan\nBv STAFF REPORTER\naside $2500 to pay transportation\nin the armed forces. In other\nwords a person who was overseas for six years would have until 1968 to repay is credits.\nThis resolution will be presented for approval at the Fall Con-,\nvention in Grand Forks, October\n14-13. |\nReoprts on the Provincial Con-,\nvention in New Westminster this,\nspring, were presented. |\nTlie general resolutions committee resolved the Civil Service be\nurged to\"hire veter-ns where\nother conditions are equal.        ,\nLOWER STANDARD\"'\nIt also urged the government\nto lower, the education?! standard,  of'veterans   allying   Ior\nJobs as prison guards from Ihe man and place him on the exec- pNE be subsidj_e(| by the zone,\ngrade 10 to the grade ei .lit level, utlve was approved. l{ the provincial command is un-\n\u25a0       \u25a0        In deciding to concentrate their _b]e ,._ pay it\nCastlegar, Kinnaird and Nelson\nThe 1961 class was named after\nHarold J. Witchell, past state\ndeputy of B.C. Mr. Witchell, introduced as a knight famous for\nhis degree work, addressed the\nbanquet gathering. He expressed\nthanks for the honor and said\nhe would \"remember it until the\nend of my days.\"\nTROPHY PRESENTED\nA highlight of the proceedings\nwas   the   presentation   of   the\nThe provincial convention also\npassed  a reso'\nthe federal and provlrei.l gov\nCASTLE   Theatre\nCASTLEGAR. B.C.\nTonight, Tuesilcy, Wednesday\n\"The Bottom of the Bottle\"\nColor - C:i_ma_cope\nv Van Johnscn\n:   Show Times 6:45 and 9:00\nAuto Vus Drive-In\nTRAIL, B C.\nTonight, Monday\n\"GI BLUES\"\nElvis Preslev, Juliete Prowse\nFEATURETTE and CARTOON\nShow Times Approx. 9:05\nNAKUSP \u2014 An all-out drive to to the competitions at the Pacific\nsupport sports on the local and National Exhibition for winners Ja\"mes\"y. H_ghes Trophy\"'by Its\norovincial level was approved of local track and field meets. I spons0-t Mr Hughes, of Vancou-i\nhere. Sunday, at the annual con- a number of resolutions were, ver] past supreme director, to the\nvention of the West Kootenay presented by Nelson president! Rossland council.\nZone Council of the Canadian Benjamin McCreight on behalf ofj The trophy was received by\nLegion. ; Jim Pollock, incoming chairman.1 Albert Lepage,  Rossland grand\nA   resolution   to   give   official    Th_ spol.ts committee proposed knight. The award honors what\nstatus to the zone sports chair- th_(  transportation  cost  to the was judged the most active counv\ncil in B.C. in 1960-61. |\nJ. H. Gagnon of Rossland paid.\ntribute to Herbert Christian and|\nJames McBride, of Rossland'si\ncouncil and to Mr. Witchell. He'\nasked1 sp(*e \"' \"le ms'ory \"' \">e three'.\ni men and their activities In the1\norder.\nGuest speaker Mr. Bregoliss\nsaid the knights were an example\nition  demanding efforts on the local level in sup-,\nThis resolution was tabled until\nto overflowing. The 25 guests ate\nturkey dinner in a second dining\nroom of the hotel.\nActing Mayor Aid. Massey congratulated the members and he\nsaid Nelson was \"fortunate in\nhaving an organization with such\ngreat traditions as the Knights\nof Columbus.\" He acted on behalf of Mayor T. S. Shorthouse,\nnow in Ottawa. People associate\nthe word 'knight' with that which\nis noble and fine in mankind\nKnights, he said, were the succor\nof the poor and defenders of holy\nplacs,\n\"In olden days, damsels in distress were of particular interest\nto knights,\" Aid. Massey added.\nAid. Massey asked the members to carry forward Catholic\nteaching and training and to propagate the principles of the\nFaith.\nChancellor Arvid Schneider of\nthe Nelson council, proposed a\ntoast to Mr. Witchell.\nToast to the Queen Was proposed by Mr. Varcoe. Jeffery S.\nCraig, Nelson deputy grand\nknight proposed a toast to the\nladies.\nTh egathering heard the Nelson\ncouncil has supplied three state\ndeputies to the provincial organization.\nA telegram from Most Rev. W.\nE. Doyle, bishop of Nelson, said\nthe birthday was \"an important\nmilestone in the history of the\nChurch.\"\nWires were read from the Victoria council, Joseph P. Coppin,\nstate secretary, Rev. R. D. Anderson, Archbishop Johnson,\nJanfes R Duffy, formerly of Nelson, and L. Hart, supreme knight.\nLes and George Trainor, of\nNelson, were presented 50-year\nbuttons.\nHead table guests included\nMrs. Massey, Mrs. Varcoe, Mrs.\nHarrigan, and Mrs. DeLucrezio.\nRev. Michael J. McGivenyj\nfounded the Knights of Columbus\nin Boston In 1882.\nTroops Continue\nPatrol ibfDikes\nWeary flCod-ffghtors watched Kootenay and Columbia river waters drop Sunday while hopes rose that the\nworst is over.     \u25a0; \u25a0'\u25a0,\nTrail, water-logcjed and worn out by a week of trading blows with the heavy hand of nature, took hope on the\nweekend as wafers quietened.\nArmy flood headquarters at Creston reported \"no\nnew incidents\": Sunday and looked forward to a \"very\nslow drop\" in the potential flood force held back by miles\nof tired dikes. ,\t\nCrash-action parties of soldiers \"day night, providing relief for, ..Freedom and the Bill of Rights\",\ncontinue to patrol the dikes, how- storm and domestic sewers. Mrs G E Grlzzelle on \"Celgar\never, as authorities warned' First Presbyterian church ser-B c\u00bb. Miss 01ga posnik0ff on'\nagainst  over-confidence  brought vlces were held Sunday ln anothi \"Why School Uniforms?\"-Mrs J\nCertificates\nTo Be Awarded\nThe introduction to public\nspeaking course moves into its\nfinal two sessions Monday and\nWednesday. Under the direction\nof Rev. L, R. MacKen.le, M,A.,\nNotre Dame College, the class is\npreparing its final five and seven-\nminute talks under any topic pro-| meet[ng\"w.]l mwe'to 30.\"lime!\nvidmg it has an urgent theme,     street.\nA variety of topics and ideas\nwere expressed at the last public\nspeaking session on Wednesday\nnight.   Ken   Strange   spoke\nMeeting Planned\nOn Uphill Park\nParents interestd in improvements to Uphill Park are meetinj\nat the park Tuesday night.\nIt is hoped to organize a dele\ngation to meet the City Council\nparks committee to discuss plan!\nto better facilities at the grounds\nK it is raining, the 8 o'cloci\non by the lull\n\"If  we get too\nI er   location   because   of   water,\nconfident we\ndamage.   The  Salvataion  Armyijam-_\nmight get caught,\" an official atl can,celledq  S,unday  se\u2122M8'   but! Snowflake'\nthe army flood headquarters in! continued a  4-hour coffee service\nCreston said Sunday. He express-! tor\u201e wearf. flood fl*ters'\ned the opinion that the situation1,.* oun, ,.\n...   ,.,i       ,   ,   _   the cooler weather,\nis improving but still needs to be\ncarefully watched.\nColumbia River failed to rise\nP. Rivers on \"A Trip to Europe\"\nThe  Salvataion  nnnyr ,\u201e___\u201e  st_._t  ._   ,.,,-,.  Mighty\nBrian   Hughes   on\nNelson in Summer\"; Miss Steffa\n\u201e,..,,       ,      ,      i Chernoff on \"Materialism Versus\nFoundation for hope has been'Peace\u201e   Jack phe,     on  \u201ewnd\n,e cooler weather. It continued Anirnal- ,\u201e Canada..   Rick Swan.\non   the   weekend,   slowing   the son   on   ..0ne   Government   for\nthaw in both Columbia and Koot- Canada and rj,- United States.\"\n,_,.,..     .    enay watersheds and promising    \u201e..,,,       ,     ,\u201e ,\nappreciably  at Trail just prior to ease the flow of [lood watersl   For the final session Wednes-\nto the weekend and Sunday the; at the source daJr' a Presentation of certificates\nwaters receded. It is not expect-j   Creston [lood . flghte__ _.\ned to-reach the 1948 peak of 46|ienced no disastrous dike failures\nfeet- I after Friday's gusher that swal-\nFriday and Saturday the Col-| lowed up 5000 sandbags before\numbia  rose  just  slightly  more the flow was checked,\nthan one inch at Trail, holding)   These boils, weak spots where\nmore than 50 flooded homes and water   bubbles   up   behind   the\nbusinesses in defeat. It will take; dikes,  are the  major problem\nThe group seeking improvements Is striving to obtain improvements which will fit into\nan over-all plan prepared by recreation director Ernie Gare.\ndays before the city returns to\nnormal when the flood waters\nfinally do subside.\nSaturday the reading at Trail\nwas 45-1 feet, up only slightly.\nfacing flood fighters in the battle\nto save 50,000 acres of farmland\nin the Creston Valley.\nOtherwise the dikes are holding\ntheir  own  against  the   swollen\nporting sports the zone conven\nlion follows the lead of Pacitic =\nCommand,  the provincial body.     Resolutions    approved\nIt is felt that rather than con- that:\ntribute to the national  Olympic     All events for the grand aggre-\ntraining program the money so gate  be determined  before en-       _  ^   ^\t\nused in the past will be directed| trance applications to the meets 5F\"caUM>i.S*ar work for \"the bet-\ntoward   a   more   comprehensive are accepted. | terment of the community. He\none on the local level. In this Dressing room facilities be as- said it was through this order\nway it is felt that about ?0 times ^^ DJ, the zone executive. ! (hat Catholic laymen could serve\nas many youngsters will benefit \u2022 ,-._. we_ks notice _f _ ____t ;he church's ideals and teachings.]\nbe given all branches. I    Joseph    DeLucrezio,    Nelson\nIn case of shortages of rib-; pndknight and.Mr. Lepageper-\nbons or medals, certificates be -wmed the cutting of the birth\ngiven to be presented later for u3v ca'ie;   , ,\nribbons or medals. i   Muc,h Joviality marked the oc-\nThe sports committee was in- -asion as *\u00ab master of ceremon-i\nstructed'by J. C. Hall, provinciali les mi speakers delved into an\nfrom the same expenditure\nThe ultimate aim of both programs, the convention felt, is to\ndevelop young people of Olympic\ncalibre. To continue supporting\nthe national one would be to deprive others of the opportunity\nto try out\nThe   provincial  body\nhas   set third vice-president, to disregard: extensive  library  of  humorous\nONE SHOW ONLY AT 8.00 P.M. \u2014 Doors 7.30\nIF YOU'RE IN THE MOOD FOR FUN 0RANY-\nTHIN6..Y0UVE JUST G0TT0 CLIMB ABOARD\nJulie\nT.I.O\njarnaGE-\nGO'IPUND\nONbm*5cOF>E \u25a0 COLOR by DE LUX*\nNo Admittance to\npersons under 18.\nGsm\nlimitations imposed by the pro-; stories.\nvincial body because competiotrs\nfrom this area did not come up\nto Canadian Athletic Association\nI standards in some events.\n!    New application forms will be\nsent out shortly from  the pro-\n' vincial headquarters.\ni    The zone track meet will be\n, held in Trail, .July 8.\noil Water,\nFlooded\nAreas Urged\nCASTLEOAS \u2014 Persons whose\nhomes are Closed to flooded areas\nwould 'be wise to boU water before\n.cinking it. Dr. J. H. Lindsay,\ndirector of the West Kootenay\nHealth Unit, said here Sunday.\nWater in the municipal supply\nhas been affected and is not recommended, even if boiled, for\ninfants under six months, he\nsaid\nriver surged over  another 2705J\nK.es   of   farmland   through   a\nIt is thought the crest arrived: Kootenay. River gauges at Cres-\nearly Saturday. The level at up- ton edged down slightly from\nper reaches of the Columbia drop-( Ihe 25.35-foot mark, raising hopes\nped and this was reflected in the that the worst of the flood fight\nlowering of flood waters Sunday, was over.\nAt Nelson it fell from 18.35 feet Upstream from Creston, the\non Friday to 17.95 on Sunday.\nAlthough dikes are holding their\nown at Trail, seepage continued break in the dikes about 25 miles\ninto the downtown am.. j south of Creston.\nMore than 50 businesses and; Gilbert Bean, spokesman for\nhomes are still vacant, their, U.S. Army flood fighters, said\nbasements full of water. the  new   breakthrough   brought\nThe proprietor of a supermar-j the total area flooded in Idaho\nket estimated a loss of $25,000 in state to 7053 acres,\nmerchandise alone. The Kootenai River crested at\nWater is still up to the ticket I just under 37 feet early Friday\nwindow at the Trail Odeon, night. A 35-foot flow is expected\ntheatre. The same building was, today.\nstating the completion of the 10\nweek course will be awarded at\na coffee and social gathering following the final speech presentations.\nMEXICAN  SYSTEM\nAbout 3,500 families will work\non Mexico's first collective for-\nrest reserve on 1,000,000 aores\nnear Durango.\neverely   hit   in   the   crippling\nffldods df 1948.   \u25a0\nCity pumps were in action Sat-\nFor the Finest In\nPRESCRIPTION\nSERVICE\ncall as\nOPEN ALL DAY MONDAY\nFleury's Pharmacy\nHarold Mayo (Prop)\nCorner Baker and Ward Sts.\nPhone 25 Nelson\nBEE\nBUILDING\nAIDS\nCOMMON BRICK\nROMAN BRICK\nNORMAN\n301 Baker SL\nICK    7\nCK     J\nI BRICK    j\nPhone 1704\nliniililiilililili\nEVERYONE\nWHO IS\nSICK\nMrs. Cornish\nDies al Coast\nWord has been received from\nVictoria of the death June 9, of\nWater for infants can be obtain-' Mrs. Annie (Nan) Cornish, wife of\ned at the Celgar pulp mill or at\nthe Silver Birch Motel, he said.\nThe  water  Is  safe  for  older\nresidents after it Is boiled.\ngjtfto*\nOrder your cool now and save money! Take advantage of the following discounts which are\nnow effective on orders of 2 tons or over \u2014\nLUMP\u2014Western Monarch or\nWildfire   $2.SO per ton\nEGG\u2014Western Monarch $2.00 per ton\nNUT\u2014Western Monarch $1.50 per ton\nSTOKER\u2014<AII Stoker Coals $1.00 per ton\nFURNACE\u2014Michel  $ .50 per ton\nBRIQUETTES\u2014Canmore $1.50 per ton\nEasy Budget Terms Available\nSAVE An Extra1 30c Per Ton by\nPaying Within 10 Days\nOWLE\nFUEL  and   TRANSFE\n394 Baker St. \u2014 Phone 889\nNelson'* Leading Coal Dealers\u2014Eat. 25 Years\nMier Water\nSports Activity\n-NVERMEHE\u2014Gordon Thomas\nFessey, 26, was dead on arrival\nat hospital here Sunday followinl\na skin diving and water skiing\nsession on Lake Windermere.\nHe complained of not feeling\nwell and went to his cabih on the\nEast side of the lake Sunday\nafternoon. A Uttle later an unidentified person passing \"saw\nsomething was wron.s.\" He was\nremoved but was dead before\nreaching the hospital.\nAn incpiest opened Sunday\nnight at Invermere. Next-of-kin\nis his sister, Miss Maryann Fessey of Calgary. His home was\n2343 Sixth Street Southwest, Calgary.\nes\nSALMO - Horst Gustav Bu-'\nkowski, 25, was killed Friday\nwhen a payloader he was drivin;\noverturned. He was pinned beneath the machine three and a'\nhalf miles from Nelway while\ndriving on the Remac road.\nAn inquest was opened Saturday and adjourned to June 20\nat the Nelson court house. i\nMr. Bukowski came to Salmo\na little over a year ago and was\nemployed in the logging industry\nwith Associated Enterprises.     j\nBorn in East Prussia. Germany, in 1936, he came to Canada about six years ago. He'\nworked in ocean-going vessels in;\nOntario for some time before1\ncoming to British Columbia.     i\nHe Is survived by his mother!\nin West Berlin and four sisters in|\nGermany.\nCouncil\nJottings...\nBUY\nCOAL\nNOW!\nSUMMER\nDISCOUNTS\nPHONE   1518\nQueen City Fuel\n\u25a0 \".'     . (Office ii':\n' Nelson Farmers' Supply) *\n524 Railway St. Nelson\nJUST | ARRIVED\nNEW   :\nCitrus Flavored\nAlka - Seltzer\n39e \u2014 S9e \u2014 78e\nSAMPLE'S\nNelson Pharmacy Ltd.\n' Your Fortress of Health\"\n639 Baker SL Phone 1203\n__  ,,|\nKiwctnians Take\nFurniture\nFrom Hostel\nKiwanis Club members formed\na work party to remove furniture from the Hostel for Aged\nMen which is to be the new\nhome.of the museum, following\ntheir meeting Thursday night.\nThe 'furniture was provided by\nthe club and was returned by the\ncity. Funds from its sale will bolster Kiwanis welfare projects.\nFollowing a report by president\nGeorge Latta that the Salvation\nArmy was providing coffee for\nflood workers at Creston, Castlegar and Trail, the club decided\nto donate $15 to the cause. Abbut\n3,800 cups ofv coffee have been\npoured for flood workers in the\nthree areas, the Army estimates.\nW. F. Dalling reported on a\nrecent Kiwanis International\nspring conference, describing\npanel discussions.\nGuest was Dr. Franklin T\nYounker of Walla WaBa, Kiwan-\nian now holidaying near Kaslo.\nthe late A. J. Cornish, fornier industrial arts teacher at the Nelson Junior High School.\nBorn in Liverpool, England, Mr.\nand Mrs. Cornish migrated to\nCanada in 1906, settling at Pilot\nBay, then in Nelson in 1908. Mrs\nCornish lived most of her life in\nNelson, except for the last few\nyears spent in Trail and Victoria.\nShe is survived by a son, Roger\nF. at Sydney, B.C., a daughter\nMrs. R. W. (Gladys) Dawson at\nA letter from the Royal AKtii-j Trail, two grandchildren and five\ntectural Institute said there was! Sreat grandchildren.   Her   hus-\na need of communities to preserve band predeceased her Sept. 29,\ntheir good historic buildings.        11945- \t\nThe letter to council said cities j        \"  '\nshould keep \"the best of our ar-| AIJ---,--   rio.l.\nehitectural inheritance.\" The In-; liaermsin^Wien.\nstitute is compiling an inventory! Take Up City\nof all buildings in Canada which! ki\u201ei*-.. _\u00bb v;*.<.\u00bb..;_,\nare historically significant.   The  \u2122uTTerS Of YICTO.IB\nInstitute 'asked the City of Nelson i    Aid. Edith Van Maarion and\nto suggest any looal structures city clerk C. W. R. Harper leave\nwhich might be included in the na-! today for Victoria to meet muni\ntional inventory. | cipal department officials Tues\n\"We're a little too young to day.\nhave anything of interest,\" Aid. I    They  will  conclude  arrange-\nAffleck said. \u25a0 ments for a rental agreement on\nAid. Van Maarion suggested the' the old provincial jail, and for the'grandchildren\nNelson Courthouse and old Post I regional   Civil   Defence   office j \t\nOffice (now City Hall) were his-1 **** '\u00ab being installed in the;\ntorically significant. : old hosptal. BllthS, Deaths\nMr. Bean said there are another 26,180 acres behind dikes\nin the 90,000-acre Kootenay Valley which extends into southeastern British Columbia from this\nfar norther Idaho area.\nSome 800 men were bolstering\nweak spots along soggy dikes,\ncompared to a work force of,\nmore than 2000 men at the height\nof the three-week fight against\nthe flooding river. |\nThere have been no serious\ninjuries, but 70 homes have been\nevacuated, and engineers estimated their flood costs at more\nthan  $1,000,000.\nRENT A CAR\nBY THE MONTH\nPHONE\nJohn Peripelkin\nPasses at 72\nJohn \"G.\" Peripelkin of Siocan\nPark died at Kootenay Lake General Hospital Sunday afternoon,\naged 72.\nHe came to Canada from Russia\nwith his parents in 1899, settling\nin the Saskatoon district. He\nmoved to Glade in 1928 and to\nGrand Forks in 1955. A month\nago he went to live with his son,\nJohn at Siocan Park.\nHe was married in Saskatchewan in 1909 and his wife predeceased him in July 1960. He is\nsurvived by two sons, Peter of\nShoreacres and John of Siocan\nPark, a daughter, Mrs. Anne\nPostnikoff of Shoreacres,\ngrandchildren    and   two\nseven\ngreat\nTILDEN\n2039\nEvenings 1931\n301 Vernon St.\nTHE CANADIAN name\nIN  WORID-WIDE  CAR RENTALS\nto heal him\nYou can find your way back to\nhealth if you will prayerfully\nfollow the instructions contained in Science and Health\nwith Key to the Scriptures by\nMary Baker Eddy. In this great\nbook you will find a full explanation of the method of\nChristian Science healing.\nChristian Science holds unwaveringly to the truth in the\nfirst chapter of Genesis that\n\"God saw every thing that He\nhad made, and, behold, it wa\u00bb\nvery good.\" sThus Christian\nScience restores the invalid to\nhealth.\nScience and Health may be\nread or examined, together with\nthe Bible, at any Christian\nScience Reading Room. Or it\nmay be purchased at $3.\nCHRISTIAN SCIENCE\nREADING ROOM\n209 Baker Street\nNelson\nHours: 2:30-.:30, Sunday 7-9 p.m.\nllilllilllli\nThey  will  also  meet  deputy\nCity council granted permission! minister of municipal affairs J\nPHONE 1844 FOR CLASSIFIED\nto Nelson School District No. 7 to\n'borrow  $16,000  to  replace   two\nsdhool buses. The buses have been\ncondemned by the RCMP.\n\u2022  *  *\nRobert Kennedy, a resident for\n44 years at Robson and Falls\nStreets, applied to council for\npaving of the 200 block Robson\nStreet to Upper Falls. The request\nwas referred to the public works\ncommittee. Aid Van. Maarion\ncommented: \"We haven't got Hie\nmoney.\"   \u25a0\n',.',,\u00ab  \u2022  *  i '    \u25a0 . \/\u00ab.\nComptroller of Dietrioh-Colliri-\ninformed council by' letter tlie\nlevel of the company's site\" h'ere\nis five feet lower than the level\nbefore excavation for the recently-completed interceptor sewer.\nThe company asked that fill be\nprovided by the city.\nCity Engineer D. Likar said (he\nfive-foot figure was not true and\nthat (here was no discrepancy between (he level now and before\nthe excavation. He said this year\nis \"an exceptionally bad year'\nfor flooding but that the ground at\nthat point was higher than before\nthe excavation,\nE. Brown to discuss obtaining\nletters patent for the newly enlarged city of Nelson.\nNew Dog Breed\nTrained for RCMP\nOTTAWA (CP) - A new breed\nof Siberian husky is being developed by the RCMP for use as\nsled dogs in (he Oanadian north.\nJustice Minister Fulton said in\nthe Commons Saturday the new\njbreed will be more easily trained\n|and less dangerous than dogs new\nbeing used.   .\nShow Increase\nBirths and deaths were up in\nNelson and district over last\nyear, during May, and marriages\nwere down.\nThere were 35 births in Nelson\nin May, compared with 30 during\nthe same period in 1960. Eight\ndeaths were recorded against six\nfor the same period a year ago.\nSix couples were married during May, 1960, compared with 10\nthe year before.\n. Eight deaths occurred in the\ndistrict' this year compared to\none in I960.!There were five district marriages a year ago. This\nyear there were none.\nYOUR MONEY GOES FARTHER\nWhen you deal with us. We aim to sell at the lowest possible\nprice consistent with quality merchandise and our installation methods are up-to-date in every respect. Consult us\nfirst and become another of our many satisfied customers.\nTry us and be convinced.\nKootenay Plumbing & Heating Co. Ltd.\n351 Baker St Nelson, B.C. Phone 666\nRED CROSS\nI\nBLOOD CLINIC\nat the\nCanadian Legion - June 15 and 16\n1:30 p.m. to 4>30 p.m. ond 6:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m.\nNO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY\nPHONE   2075  For  Information\nPublic Freightways Ltd.\nANNOUNCEMENT\nPublic Freightways Ltd. are pleosed to announce\n'   the appointment Of\nMR. G. BLAIR OLSEN\nto the position of Nelson and district representative. Blair Olsen is a thoroughly experienced\ntrucking mon who, (updn joining Public Freight-\nways) becomes an employee shareholder, in keeping with Public FreightwHys policy of profit\nsharing.\nMr. Olsen Is now actively engaged fn assisting local\nwholesalers and merchants to take advantage ot Public\nFreightways fast dependable service between Vancouver\nand West Kootenay points. ,\nSupport and get acquainted with Blair Olsen, your\nPublic Freightways representative. Ring him today\non NELSON  2-446.\nTrail shippers are invited to get in touch with\ntheir Public Freightways representative, Ken\nJohnson, by dialing TRAIL 3518.\nA '\n ^^^mmmmm\n\u25a0    . \u25a0        \u25a0. \u25a0  \u25a0 \u25a0\nFlood Scenes in Castlegar - Trail Area\nm\nIHS1\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, JUNE 12, 1961\u20143\nSocial Credit Group Meets\nWYNNDEL - The Wynndel\nSocial Credit group held its regular monthly meeting at the home\nof Mr. and Mrs. Geig with 10\nmembers  present.\nMotion was made to allocate\nfunds to the Nelson-Creston Constituency organization. A motion\nwas also made to support the\nfederal East Kootenay Social\nCredit organization.\nDiscussion regarding the erection of signs on key roads for the\nnames of individuals living along\nthese roads was left in abeyance.\nMembers were asked to pass\non any recommendations they\nmight have to assist the Attorney-\nGeneral's Department in solving\nproblems of the district. Reports\nwere given on the area council\nmeeting held last month at the\nhome of Mr. and Mrs. B. Wills.\nMrs. F. Merriam gave a report\nof WA work being done and plans\nwere formulated to advertise\nB.C. at the national convention\nin Ottawa in July, at which Mrs.\nMerriam will be a delegate as\nprovincial president of B.C. Other\nlocal discussions centred around\nthe high water problems in the\narea. Following the adjournment\nol the meeting, lunch was served\nby Mr. and Mrs. Greig.\nEATING KIDNEY\nIn preparing kidney for cooking, first remove membrane\nand   then  cut  the  lobes  away\nHarrop Teaching\nSatisfactory\nHARROP \u2014 Just in case anyone may have received the impression that there is dissatis-'\nfaction with the school teacher\nhere, Harrop parents have declared themselves as \"perfectly satis-fled\" with their teacher.\nThe comment followed a recent report that Procter and Harrop parents had expressed dissatisfaction with a teaching situation in a petition to the Nelson\nDistrict No. 7 School Board. Thr\npetition was in connection wil'\nthe Procter school. Grades 1 I\n3 are taught at Harrop.\nfrom   the  fat  and  tubes  wi',1\nsharp pointed scissors.\n' LONG WALK across Canadian Pacific Railway bridge became necessary\nwhen Castlegar ferries were tied up. Columbia River rise forced halt in their operation. This picture of group hiking along track was taken on Robson side. Note lumber in water at left.\nOLD SAWMILL of Celgar Ltd. has been flooded for some lime. Placid waters\nreflecting burner create scenic picture but damage they bring will send flood costs\ninto high dollar brackets.\nNatal Council Hears Civil Defence Duties\nNATAL - Two Civil Defense\nofficers attended the regular\nmeeting of Natal Village Council\nto advise on council's duties in\nCivil Defence. They were Ken Mc-\nRae of Kimberley and Edgar Wilson of Fernie. It was agreed to\ninstitute a Civil Defence organization in Natal later in the year.\nDelegates from local businesses\nattended the meeting at the invitation of council to discuss the\nvillage Business Bylaw No. 2.\nArising out of the disoussion it\nwas decided to appoint an assistant health inspector to control\nthe sale of uninspected meats\nwith the village limits.\nFarmers living in Elk Valley\nnorth of Natal will be given a re\nduced licence fee covering the\nsale of goods in the village produced by themselves.\nMOTHER'S FOOTSTEPS\nJudy Lewis, daughter of actress Loretta Young, has signed\nfor a leading role in an ABC-TV\n77 Sunset Strip drama.\nFINALLY WON\nBUDAPEST (API - Austria,\nwhich had tried for 30 years to\ndefeat Hungary in soccer, finally succeeded with a 2 - 1 win\nbefore a crowd of 80,000 in\nBudapest's P e o p 1 e's Stadium\nSunday.\nA FAMILY\nAFFAIR\nand\njBLf\nThe central figures In this business story are three brothers who\nwanted to join forces to start their own manufacturing enterprise.\nAll had for several years had good jobs with other employers\u2014in\nproduction, sales and administration respectively\u2014and they felt their\nabilities would fit together well to provide balanced management for\na new family venture.\nThe combined financial resources of the brothers fell short of being\nenough to pay for the production equipment which would be needed,\nas well as to provide working capital. They soon found that term\nfinancing of the type they needed was hard to arrange\u2014especially for\na brand new business which had yet to prove itself.\nWhen the principals brought their problem to Industrial Development Bank, they were able to show a well-thought-out plan for setting\nup production in a new plant. Their sales objective was based on a\nthorough survey of the market for their product, which was being\npartly supplied by imports from abroad; and with modern equipment\nthe brothers were sure they could produce and sell at competitive prices.\nDiscussion with IDB officers revealed some aspects of\nthe project which could be\nchanged to advantage and,\nwhen,plans were settled, the\nBank agreed to assist the new\ncompany to finance the cost\nof the required equipment.\nAs expected, the first few\nmonths' operation showed\nlosses, but initial operating problems were soon overcome, the company\nwas \"in the black\" by the end of the first year and subsequently earned\ngood profits... good enough, in fact, to repay the IDB loan nearly\ntwo years ahead of time.\nThe initiative and resourcefulness shown by the brothers in setting\nup this family business and operating it successfully, together with the\ntimely term financing supplied by IDB, resulted in the establishment\nof another flourishing enterprise providing employment to Canada's\nexpanding labour force.\nThe Industrial Development Bank was established in 1944 to provide\nfinancial assistance to small and medium-sized enterprises* unable to\nobtain satisfactory tenn financing through other channels. For further\ninformation, and a descriptive booklet, you are invited to write or visit\nthe nearest IDB office or consult your auditor, lawyer or chartered banker.\nP.S.\u2014We .have made a colour movir^ based on Ihe case of another company assisted by\nIDB financing. If an organization or group in your community would like to have it shown,\nthe nearest IDB office will be glad lo make the arrangements.\nINDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT BANK\nREGIONAL OFFICE: VANCOUVER . . .  1030 West Georgia Street\nTeh MU  1-7484\nOLD BRIDGE at Trail continued to carry traffic as Columbia climbed dangerously close to its decking \u2014 within four feet.\n*I.D.B. can consider proposals for financial assistance in these activities!\nmanufacturing, processing, assembling, installing, overhauling, reconditioning, altering,\nrepairing, cleaning, packaging, transporting or warehousing of goods; logging, operating a\nmine or quarry; arilling, construction, engineering, technical surveys or scientific research,\ngenerating or distributing electricity or operating a commercial air service, or the transportation of persons, or supplying premises, machinery or equipment under lease to any business\nmentioned above.\nTAKING A\nTRIP?\nMANAGER of Odeon Theatre retained sense of humor as this section of Bay\nAvenue flooded in Trail. Sign states; \"Now Showing, The Great Flood, in Color.\nRight Now It's Intermission.\" Weekend saw hundreds of people taking pictures.of\nTrail-Castlegar flooded areas.\u2014DaiJy Ne ws photos.\nGirl's Body Not Brenda's\nVICTORIA ICP) - Body of a\nyoung girl pulled from the waters\nof Deception Pass near Whidbey\nIsland Friday is \"definitely not\"\nBrenda Byman, 10, who went\nmissing from her home at Invermere, B.C. early last month.\nAn RCMP [spokesman said a\nlocal dentist has positive identification of the missing girl's\nteeth and they do not match those\nof the girl found on the coast.\nOfficials felt Hie body could\nhave been that of the missing\nInterior girl, as it had a similar\ndescription.\nNATIVE DIALECTS\nEnglish-speaking people of the\ncolony of Sierra Leone number\nabout 130,000 compared with\nsome 2,000,000 tribesmen.\nTRACK MEET\nVANCOUVER (CP) - The\nbiggest, noisiest and most colorful high school track and field\nmeet on t_ie North American\ncontinent heads for its 50th anniversary year today at Empire\nStadium. The annual Vancouver\nand district inter-high meet is\nexpected to bring together more\nthan 300 athletes from a record\n34 schools.\nUse Our\nHOLIDAY PACK\nShould your holiday-travel not permit the mailing of The Nelson Daily News to your vacation\naddress, let us \"lay away\" your copies while you\nare gone. When you return, phone The Nelson\nDaily News and all back copies will be delivered\npromptly by your newspaper boy. He will have\nthem saved in a holiday pack which he will deliver at one time when you return. No copies\nwill be left on your porch while you are away.\nPHONE 1844\n\u00a9Iff Nelson Satly Staff\nCIRCULATION DEPARTMENT\n \u25a0\n.    . \u25a0 -    \u25a0-'-\u25a0.\"\u25a0.    \".\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\"\u25a0\u25a0:\u25a0    \u25a0'   \u25a0 \u25a0   \u25a0.  \u25a0   \u25a0\u25a0    .\u25a0    \u25a0\n...... .-\u25a0.-.\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0    \u25a0      \u25a0   :      \u25a0 \u25a0   \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0     . \u25a0 \u25a0'.'\u25a0\u25a0\n\u25a0 \u25a0 \"\u25a0 '  \u25a0 \u25a0      . . .- \u25a0\u25a0\".\n-r---,^\u2014_,----------_-______..._____l_M\nmiBon lailg Jfnua       '^S   U.S. Economic Recovery        Cf\u2122\u00a32\u2122da>?Zlel\nEstablished April 22. 1902 Nelson, B. C\nPubliihed by the NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n266 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia, mornings except\nSundays and holidays ln the centre o* the Kootenays with\nthe largest daily circulation in the Interior oi B.C.\nAuthorized as Second Class Mail, Post Office Department, Ottawa.\nC. W. RAMSDEN, Publisher.\nA. W. GIBBON, Editor.\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN DAILY NEWPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION\nMEMBER OF THE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS\nThe Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication ol all news\ndispatches credited to it or to The Associated Press or Reuters in this\npaper and also the local news pubUshed therein.\nMonday, \/ujie 12, 1961\nRansom on Wheels\nPremier Fidel Castro of Cuba\nseems to be following the Eichmann\ntrial in Jerusalem. One of the charges\nagainst Adolf Eichmann is that he\nfried to trade the lives of the Jews of\nHungary for 10,000 trucks. Now we\nfind Dr. Castro offering to release the\nprisoners he took in last month's\nabortive invasion in return for 500\nUnited States tractors or bulldozers.\nThe prompt response which the\nproposal has received from a number\nof private groups is a tribute to the\ntraditional generosity of Americans to\nthose in danger and distriss. Perhaps\nthe response was a little too prompt\nfor purposes of sound bargaining.\nPremier Castro shows signs of increasing his demands; he now seems\nto want bigger and better machines\nthan he asked for originally. There is\nalso the danger lhat other dictators\nmay get the idea that the way to acquire a little rolling stock for nothing\nis  to  kidnap  a   few   Americans  or\niriends of America and then trade\nthem for whatever is in short supply\nat the moment.\nPractices of this kind, of course,\nare nothing new. In the Middle Ages\nit was the custom for a victorious\narmy to hold its prisoners for ransom,\nIhe sum in each case depending on\nthe rank and importance of the captive. (England was nearly bankrupted\nwhen King Richard the Lion-Hearted\ncarelessly allowed himself to be captured by a particular avaricious German Emperor). Such practices were\nconsidered barbarous by our grandfathers, but after the cold-blooded\nmassacres of political prisoners and\nminority groups which have been the\nfashion in recent years, they are beginning to look like a positive improvement.\nThere is hope that the Twentieth\nCentury may yet attain the moral\nstandards of the Eleventh.\n\u2014Toronto Globe and Mail.\nWhite Worship\nImagine, for a moment, a fiendish    being tainted by Brand X (the kind\nexperiment in which some blissfully\nunconditioned Polynesian islander\nwas imprisoned alone for a week, to\ngain his first impressions of the British from our commercial television\nprograms.\u2014\nWhat a very strange report he\nwould take back to the palm trees.\nThe male Briton, it would seem to\nhim, is fascinated almost to the point\nof obsession by sheriffs who ride in\nposses, and by tall strangers who\nwield smoking six-guns and up-end\nfurniture in honky-tonk bars.\nThe ways of the female Briton, he\nwould discover, are stranger still. Almost all her waking hours appear\nto be spent in disturbed reflection\non whether she is putting the right\nkind of magic powder into the magic\nbox that washes her clothes.\nFame and fortune, wealth and\nhappiness seem to matter hardly at\nall so long as her washing is nol\nSeer of 1865\nNow that Gagarin has been out\ninto space and back again, and men\nare now talking about possible flight\nto the moon,' we are reminded that\nJules Verne published a book in the\nyear 1865 entitled A Trip From the\nEarth to the Moon in Ninety-Seven\nHours, Thirteen Minules and Twenty\nSeconds.\nAs The Vancouver Province points\nout, the astonishing thing about the\nstory is that it forecast with uncanny\naccuracy all the scientific problems\nthat are now being overcome \u2014 the\nproblem of escaping from .the \"pull\"\nof earth's gravity, weightlessness in\nspace and, finally, the difficulty of\nre-entry into the atmosphere of our\nplanet.\nThese are the exact words written\nby Verne almost one hundred years\nago, \"In spite of the opinions of narrow-minded people, who would shut\nup the human race, as within some\nmagic circle which it must never out-\nitep, we shall one day travel to the\n-loon, the planets and the stars, with\n.he same facility, rapidity and cer-\n'::inty as we now make the voyage\nvom Liverpool to New York, distance\nis but a relative expression, and must\nend by being reduced to zero.\" v ,\n\u2014Fort William Times-\/ournaf.\nthat washes only white, not whiter-\nthan-white).\nHappily, something else may have\nhappened to put things back inlo\nperspective by the time our Polynesian arrives.\nA man who owns a chain of shops\nin Lancashire is said to be planning\nto put a new washing powder on the\nmarket this month.\nIts name will be Brand X.\nAnd he hopes to advertise it on\nTV.\u2014London Express News Service.\nShredded Money\nPolice want to know why somebody in Cornwall has been secretly\ntearing up old money and throwing it\naway. So do we all. Disrespect for\nmoney is the one thing that can still\nastonish us in this age of sophistication and understanding. There are so\nmany aberrations in human behavior\nthat each one seems a drop in the\nbucket; except this one; it falls beyond the pale. We can understand\nslighlty a man who is in the habit\nof giving money away to strangers,\nthough we consider him a little peculiar. We could understand a man\nwho destroyed money in public. For\nhe would be asking us to admire him,\nnot for destroying money, but for having so much that he could afford to.\nBut any man who destroys money\nin secret can only be saying that\nmoney is not important. And we\ncan't buy that. We can't afford to.\n\u2014Ottawa Journal.\nAh\nFame\nThe Van Gogh exhibition that recently toured Canada drew record\ncrowds to Toronto's Art Gallery, but\nit didn't impress everybody. When a\nwoman apologized to her hairdresser\nfor being a little late, because the\ncrowds made il difficult to see the\nVan Gogh paintings as quickly as\nshe'd thought, the hairdresser sniffed:\n\"Those DPs make me sick. Besides,\nwhat makes him think he can paint?\"\n\u2014Maclean's Magazine.\nBy ALAN HARVEY\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nPresident Kennedy's European visit has left Britons with\na queasy feeling that somebody\nis letting the air out of their\ntires.\nThe slightly deflationary effect results partly from Ihe\nfact that Kennedy and Nikita\nKhrushchev decided to make\ntheir Vienna rendezvous a tete-\na-tete meeting, as opposed to\nanother Big Four gathering.\nAnd there are hints that Kennedy would like to keep it that\nway, making the big two a\nmore or less permanent arrangement and leaving Britain\nand France to be consulted\nafter the evem.\nAnother factor in British\nfrustration is that Kennedy's\nvisit to Paris was a state occasion, whereas the London trip\nwas lacked on almost as an aft-\nterthought.\nClearly, times have changed.\nOnly two years ago it was\nwas acting as diplomatic pacesetter for the Western world,\ndoffing his fur cap in Moscow\nand then hastening to allied\ncapitals to report on his travels.\nFORMER GIANT\nBritish politician Lord Hail-\nsham was so pleased that he\nsaid in a speed Jun. 6, DjJ:\n\"We are b.^inri-g to get it\nacross that in Mr. Macmillan\nwe have a statesman emerging\nwho is a veritable giant in the\nfree world.\"\nM a c m i 1 lan's international\nstature undoubtedly bounded at\nthat time. Tlie opportunity resulted partly from President\nEisenhower's concept - of the\npresidency, but Macmillan deserved credit for seizing the\ninitiative.\nThe void no longer exists.\nKennedy obviously wants to be\nhis own No. 1 man. As a result,\nBritain's role tends to shrink to\na size more in conformity with\nher intrinsic power.\nOlher factors contribute to a\ncertain British malaise. There\nis a worried feeling that events\nare passing Britain by, that\nleadership is lacking, that the\ncountry is drifting along toward\nanother financial crisis.\nEvery passing Jay convinces\nmore and more people that, for\nbetter or worse, the British\nEmpire is a part of history.\nThe trouble is to find something\nto put in its place. At the moment, the anxious Englishman\ncan see no satisfactory goal on\nthe horizon.\nOne obvi-us answer is to\nclimb abo.rd the Europcn merry-go-round, but after all, most\nof the other oassengers are foreigners a-d the choice seats are\nalready token. Tlie pros.ects of\ncatc'iing the brass ring seem\npretty remote. As The Times\nsaid in an editorial:\n\"That all this causes seme\nBritish heartburning must be\naJ,_.U(-f| \u25a0...._\u201e j, ,-\u2022- \u25a0-, .;\nevidence that tilings for Britain\nare not as they once were.\"\nErases Lingering Doubts\nMating, Instinct\nA Chicago sociologist says that\nsummer school is popular with women because it is a good hunting\nground for husbands. This recalls the\nstatement of the co-ed who was asked\nwhy she had enrolled in college: \"I\ncame here to get went with, but I\nain't yet.\"\u2014Toronto Telegram.\n\u2666 '\t\nCanada's first wheat was\ngrown in 1S05 at the settlement\nat Annapolis Royal, Nova Scotia.\nMy English friend don't like\nmy tea and I can't drink her\ncoffee. Evidently the English\ndon't know how to make coffee\nand we're in the same fix about\ntea.\nBy JACK LEFLER\nNEW YORK (AP) - The economic recovery in the United\nStates rolled on last week and\nexpectations ot more rapid im-\nprnv.o~--t later in the year\nmounted. ' *\"*l|\nThe gross national product\n(total of all goods and services)\nmay be setting a record in the\ncurrent quarter ending June 30.\nWalter W. Heller, chairman\nof the president's council of\neconomic advisers, said the\nGNP for the quarter might\nreach an annual rate of nearly\n$510,000,000,000. It was a little\nunder $800,000,000,000 the previous quarter.\nHeller said that by die final\nquarter the rate may be $350,-\n000,000,000.\nTlie National Association of\nPurchasing Agents reported\nthat new orders, production and\nemployment kept on increasing\nin May.\nProducers of machine tools,\nconstruction equipm e n t and\nother manufacturing machinery\nequipment predicted a good\ngain in sales by the fourth\nquarter.\nERASES DOUBTS\nThs First National City Bank\nof New York commented that\nthe   industrial   performance   in\n(he last two months has\n\"erased any lingering doubts\nthat the economy is in a very\nencouraging rebound from recession lows.\"\nThe momentum of recovery\nhas aroused anxiety in the Kennedy administration that it will\nbring a revival of inflation.\nWith labor contract negotiations nearing in the automobile\nindustry, General Motors, Ford\nand Chrysler omitted the usual\nannual raises June 1 for 136,000\nsalaried employees not covered\nby union contracts.\nAutomobile production moved\nup last week to,an estimated\n128,000 passenger cars. This\nwas only .87 - per - cent below\nthe comparable 1960 week, one\nof the year's slimmest margins.\nThe industry was particularly\nhappy about sales in May. The\n837,825 cars sold was the biggest monthly total of the year.\nThis brought dealers' new car\nstocks down to about 900,000,\nlowest since last October.\nHarold C. Lumto, vice - president, of Republic Steel Corp.,\npredicted steel production will\nincrease steadily and should approach record heights in the\nnext year.\nEurope's Economic Unity\nEyed Wtih Mixed Feeling\nBy FORBES RHUDE\nCanadian Press Business Editor\nWestern Europe's economic\nunity excites a mixture of surprise, admiration and apprehension in Canadians.\nIt was surprising enough that\nso many traditional national differences could be hurdled to\nmake possible the Rome treaty\nof 1057 which created the six-\ncountry  Common  Market.\nEven with the treaty signed,\n\u2022j^- ^. 1111111 \u2022 111111111 r m 1111111111111 f i r 111 \u25a0 111111111111111111111 t \u25a0' \u25a0'. r i' i \u25a0 i r t \u2022 \u25a0 -\" 11' _:\n| Your Individual f\n:iiiiiiiiiin\n\"\"   By  Frances Drake  mm \"li5\nLook in the section in which\nyour  birthday   comes and   find\nwhat your outlook is, according\nto the stars.\nFor Tuesday,  June  13,   1961\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 20 (Aries)\n\u2014Common sense plus humor are\nlines to follow. Don't be averse\nto criticism, and don't fret if a\nfew matters are a bit troublesome. You should do well in familiar activities,\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus)\n\u2014 Neither especially flourishing\nwith benefic aspects nor is it hindering. It is really up to you to\nmanipulate your schedule and\nactivities for best results and\nwithout strain or worry.\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini)\n\u2014Your Mercury going to a helpful, encouraging aspect after sundown. Plan carefully what to do\nfirst and what procedures to\nchoose. You may need outside\nassistance or advice, seek it.\nJUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer)\n\u2014Increasingly beneficial aspects\nas day advances. You can add\nto gains by having your schedule\narranged to avoid needless setbacks, hindering obstacles. Exercise vour God-given capability.\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leo)\n\u2014Fine day on whole. Useful, progressive matters, essential work\nhave productive influences. Be\noptimistic but not foolishly so.\nPush ahead with projects and\nstuH.t with which you are familiar.\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER\n23 (Virgoi\u2014Think, lay our program efficiently, advantageously\nand you should be able to net\nsatisfactory results and not strain\nin the doing. Research, investigations, analvzing honored.\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER\n23 (Libra)\u2014An in-between sort of\nday leaving much to your judgment, management. Be sensibly\ncareful, know your subject and\ndon't take too much for granted.\nWe must work for what we seek.\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER\n22 (Scorpio)\u2014A day that calls for\nquickened action in many things\nand no procrastination. A well-\nmanaged schedule will give less\nstrain and returns of greater\nmagnitude. Have faith, good\ncheer.\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER\n21 (Sagittarius'\u2014Jupiter going to\na   strong,   encouraging  position.\nYour personal interests and business affairs are honored. Be\nmindful of promises, appointments. Refuse lo become irritated.\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY\n20 (Capricorn)\u2014Promising influences. It behooves you to put your\nbest foot forward, to have enthusiasm and belief in accomplishing. Advantages in many\nworthy fields. You are capable.\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY\n19 (Aquarius)\u2014Not a whirlwind\nof excitement and achievement\nperhaps but favorable to conscientious, intelligent skill, direction. Confer where you need to\nand be amenable to advice, suggestions.\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\n(Pisces) \u2014 Day may have slow\nstart but it picks up in energizing influences during a.m. and\nimproves as it proceeds. You\nshould be able to accomplish a\ngreat deal and plan for greater\ngain later.\nYOU BORN TODAY have many\nfine talents and can achieve in\na big way if you cultivate your\nfiner elements and curb any tendency to superficiality and overindulgence in pleasures. You must\nutilize your great versatility and\ncreative ingeniousness and learn\nto concentrate on your true occupation, profession or career. Con-\nserve your energy for the right\nthings, the worthwhile and you\nwill accomplish. Stay true to those\nwho have helped you to attain.\nReligion, the arts, all fine things\nin life are essential to your happiness and well-being. Birthdate\nof: Wm. Butler Yeats, Irish author; Gen. Winfield Scott, U.S.A.;\nAnthony de Grancisci, famed\nsculptor.\nHUBERT\n, Books, \"With Beer\nThree thousand cafes in'.Cairo and\nits suburbs are to\" be transformed by\nlaw into \"cultural centres.\" The\nmayor has decreed that from now on\neach cafe must put at Ihe disposition\nof its customers a library of Instructive and wholesome books.\nLicences of all cafes have been\ncancelled and only those with proper\npublic libraries will be allowed to\nre-open.\u2014Le Pelit Marocain.\nr\n\"You weren't on the passenger list, either?\"\nRed President\nCheered by Big\nTwo's Meeting\nMOSCOW (Reuters) - Soviet\nPresident Leonid Brezhnev Saturday described as a \"big and\nhopeful\" event the Vienna summit meeting last week between\nPresident Kennedy and Premier\nKhrushchev.\nIn the first summit reference\nby a top Russian leader, he\npledged the Soviet Union to do\nits best to realize the hopes\nfor an international settlement\nraised at the Kennedy-Khrushchev meeting,\nBrezhnev was speaking at a\n\"friendship meeting\" for Indonesian President Sukarno in the\nKremlin which was attended by\nKhrushchev and other top Soviet officials. Tlie gathering was\nbroadcast live by Moscow radio\nand television. . \"\nKhrushchev smiled and applauded at Brezhnev's speech,\nbut maintained silence about his\nmeeting with Kennedy.\nHe spoke only once and that\nwas to interrupt Sukarno's\nsr>\" .ch.\nThe Indonesian leader said\nthat Russia, unlike the West,\nwelcomed Indonesla'6 intention\nto fight for Dutch \u2022 controlled\nWe\u00abi New Guinea.\nKhrushohev. interrunt-\ning. said: \"We are not only\nabout it. but ready to demonstrate It, too.\"\nhowever, there seemed to be\nstrong possibilities that it would\nrun into complex problems that\nwould slow down its program.\nSuch a view underestimated the\nnew spirit of Western Europe.\nRather than slowing down, (tie\npace of unity has speeded up.\nL. D. Smlthere, president,\nDow Chemical of Canada Ltd.,\nexpressed both the Canadian\nadmiration and apprehension at\nthe recent annual meeting of the\nCanadian Manufacturers' Associate when he said:\n\"It means a better way of life\nfor Europe's millions and it is\nsurely an answer to the false\nclaims of communism. We\nshould be glad it's there, but we\nmust learn quickly to live with\nit. ... I have seen little indication that we are aware that we\nmust take decisive and positive\naction to move along with them\nto mutual prosperity.\"\nSEES  BENEFITS\nMr. Smlthers saw the European agreements as raising definite barriers against us but\nnevertheless appeared hopeful\nthat, with proper action, we can\nreap good from the situation,\neven though there will be upsets.\n\"We should, for one tiling,\"\nhe stated, \"be making a greater\neffort to establish ourselves in\nEurope as reliable suppliers of\nquality goods at competitive\nprices, because this developing\neconomy is the world's greatest\npotential for both our raw materials and our finished goods.\"\nLike many others, he emphasized the need fcr keen negotiations and bargaining to retain\nthe best entry possible into thhe\nEuropea trade blocks.\n\"We should remind them.\" he\ncommented, \"Hint our borders\nare relatively wide open lo their\nmanufactured goods. ... We\noan maintain a status quo position in trade with them only by\nraising our barriers to them unless some means is found of\nreducing theirs to us.\"\nWIDER ASSOCIATION\nOr. E. H. van der Beugel,\npresident of KLM Royal Dutch\nAirlines, another speaker at tlie\nmanufacturers' meeting, saw\ntlie possibility of a wider association than the present Euo-\npean blocks.\n\"We have,\" he said, \"seen\ntwo rather clearly defined periods of North Atlantic co-operation after the war. Our hope\nnow is vested in the prospect\nthat we gradually move into a\nthird period, Uiat of a real Atlantic community. Before we\nreach this, however, many difficult obstacles must be removed.\"\nIn regard to tlie prospect of\nthe United Kingdom making an\nagreement with the Common\nMarket, he commented:\n\"If is an open question\nwhether a reasonable entry of\nthe U.K. into the Common Market, which takes into account a\nfew important and specific\nCommon wealth interests, is\nmore dangerous for Canada\nthan the present situation in\nwhich Canada has to cope with\nthe Common Market on one\nside and the European Free\nTrade Area (the so-called Outer\nSeven)  on  the  other.\"\nA. T. Lambent,, president of\nthe Toronto-Dominion Bank, taking a hopeful view for the moment at least, said: \"In spite\nof our continuing fears thai tfie\n\"Six\" and the \"Seven\" may\nturn into inward-looking proteo-\n\u25a0 tionisi grouts.' the effect so far\nhas been that their' growing\nprosperity has made them better markets for Canadian\ngoods.\"\nOFFERS HELP\nLONDON (Reuters) - Russia\nhas expressed its readiness to\noffer economic and technical\nassistance to Nigeria, the Soviet news agency Tass reoorted\ntoday. Nigeria, once Britain's\nbiggest colony in Africa, became independent last October\nbut remains a mem .er of the\nBritish Commonwealth.\nBy BRUCE LEVETT\nCanadian  Press  Staff Writer\nThe trend to the suburb.,\nwhich probably began when\nman first was nagged into giving up his cave for an airy skin\ntent, has come full circle,\nLots of people still are moving toward the light and air at\nthe end ot the bus line, but a\nCross-Canada Survey shows that\na reverse trend is shaping up.\nIn some areas\u2014such as the\ncrowded \"golden horseshoe\" of\nsouthern Ontario\u2014it's hard to\ntell who's moving where. There,\nit's possible to get so far into\nthe Toronto suburbs that you\nend up In Hamilton, 46 miles\nwest.\nThat the trend to the suburbs\nremains strong is evident in\nmost parts of the country.\nBut The Oanadian Press\nfound, especially in the larger\ncentres, that the moving van\ntaking a young family to Outlying Acres frequently returns\nwith an elderly, retired couple\nseeking the convenience of city\ndwelling.\nThe suburban trend is evident\nin Ihe Atlantic provinces, where\nit is described as \"definite\" in\nSydnev and \"reluctant\" in Halifax. Prince Edward Island and\nNew Brunswick are also exper-\niencin<! it. Newfoundland is an\nexception.\nTWMVAY TRAFFIC\nThere is similar evidence in\nthe Prairies. Lower suburban\nland costs exert a pull in Edmonton and Winnipeg. Regina,\ntoo small to reflect a definite\ntrend, is described as \"just one\nlarge suburb.\"\nIn Ontario, the outward movement is felt in Ottawa, Windsor\nand Hamilton. The two-way\ntraffic is becoming more pronounced in Toronto, bearing out\nIhe experience of major United\nStates cities.\nNo clear picture has emerged\nin London since the city annexed large areas Jan. 1. Before annexation, only 40 acres\nin the city were available for\nhousing but recent figures indicate a building boom in the\nnewly-annexed areas.\nAs against two permits for\nsingle-family dwellings issued in\nLondon in the first three months\nlast year, 172 permits covering\n$2,073,300 were issued in the\nfirst, three months of this year.\nStout resistance to the siren\ncall of suburbia is being shown\nby the individualists who inhabit such areas as Montreal,\nQuebec City, Vancouver and\nVictoria.\nIn Quebec, people are inclined\nto move to the suburbs as a\nhealthy place to raise children,\nreturning to the centres of their\nculture and religion when the\nchildren are grown and away\nfrom home.\nLESS  FOR  FOOD\nJean-Claude Lahay, Quebec\nCity's town-planning consultant,\nsays however that many who\nmove to the suburbs really can't\nafford it and have to out down\non food to meet higher living\ncosts. As a result, their children\nare ro better off.\nG. F. Fountain, Vancouver's\nplanning director, says there is\nnot much property available\nnear the downtown area and\nmany persons find they have no\nchoice but to live in the suburbs.\nPhilip Holmes, a Victoria real\nes'ate agent, says suburban living booms have levelled off\nthere. Persons who moved to\nthe suburbs left vacancies in\nthe citv and these vacancies began filling during the recession.\nThe big reasons behind the\ntrend to and from the cities?\nEconomic, say the experts.\nIn Oharlottetown a building\nlot in a middle-class urban area\nsells for about $1,600. A similar\nlot in the suburbs would bring\n$1,000.\nG. R. Day. leans office manager fcr Central Mcrt.age and\nHrusing Corporation in Fred-\nericton and Saint John, cites\nscarcity of city lots, usually\nlower taxation and the fact that\npero'e hunting good homes can't\nfir . them in the city.\nOne of the largest real estate\ndealers in St. John's, Nfld.,\nStan Condon, says no great\ntrend has developed either way\nbecause of the high cost of land\nand lack of serviced land both\nin the city and en its fringes.\nESCAPE HIGH TAXES\nGeorge Schurman, Halifax\nhome-builder, says congestion\non the peninsula on which the\ncity is built has brought the\n\"reluctant\" tr-nd to the suburbs, where hemes are also\ncheaper. Contractor Douglas\nChapell 'Of Sydney says people\nmove out to escape high taxes\nand the dirt of the steel plant.\nEconomic? also rule in the\nWest. CMHC officials say a\ntwo-bedroom house in the suburbs of Winnioes may go for\n$13,500 tn $14 000. compared\nwi* $14.0\"0 to $16,000 for similar accommodation wi'.hin the\ncitv.\nThe percentages tell the tale\nin Edmonton.\nIn the 1950-55 period. the ur\nban population Jumped 41 per\ncent while the total of the four\nmain suburban areas increased\nby 42 per cent. In the following\nfive years the urban increase\nwas 22 per cent while the suburbs jumped ahead by 116 per\ncent.\nAn official of the Ottawa Real\nEstate Board pointed out that\nthe economic factor is not\nlimited to the relative cheapness of suburban housing. A\nbuyer can get an NHA mortgage covering most of the purchase price of a new house,\nwhile the maximum mortgage .\nCMHC will cover on an older\nhome ts 60 per cent of its value.\nETHNIC MIGRATION\nS. <D, H. Reid, director of education for the Toronto Real\nEstate Board, offers another\nsuggestion: Older families move\nbo the suburbs when Immigrants\nsettle in their part of the city.\nHe said New Canadians, who\ntend to settle in national groups,\nchoose a church and move into\nhomes around it. Some of\nthe original families apparently\ncan't adjust.\nBut Mr. Geid says the trend\naway from the suburbs persists.\n\"Some couples give up after\nfive or six years, tiring of the\nlack of amenities and transportation problems in the outskirts.\" Then Ihey do their\nsplit-level best lo move back to\nthe cities.\nDespite this, houses and apartment blocks still are being\nplanned for thousands expected\nto move away from the cities.\nLouis Mayzel is a partner\nin one scheme at Falgarwood\nHills in OakviUe, just west of\nToronto.\nThere, 5,200 houses are going\nup in three subdivisions, covering 2,000 acres of residential,\nindustrial and commercial land.\nOf these, 4,000 will be in the\n$15,000 to $20,000 range; 1,200\nwill be in the executive range\nof $20,000 to $35,000.\n\"I don't like to think about lt\nwhen it gets that high,\" Mr.\nMayzel said when asked what\nthe total cost will be. His estimate is $110,000,000.\nFalgarwood is the largest, of\nseveral such projects in tho Toronto area.\nBUILDING PICKS UP\nSpokesmen say there was a\ngeneral slowdown in Canadian\nhouse-building during the lattar\nhalf of last year. Tlie industry\npicked up, however, after the\nNational Housing Act was\namended in December.\nThe NHA changes reduced the\ndown-payment on a new house\nby allowing a purchaser to borrow 95 per cent instead of 90\nper cent of the first $12,000.\nThis means a down-payment is\ncut to $600 from $1,200.\nThe maximum loan was Increased to $14,200 for a house\nwith fewer than three bedrooms; $14,900 for one with\nmore than three. The previous\nmaximum was 712,800.\nAnd now a person has up tor\n35 years to pay, whioh means\nsmaller monthly payments. Previously the limit was 30 years\nwilh the accepted average 25\nyears.\nFor the first two months of\n1961, says the CMHC, NHA-ap-\nproved loans across Canada\ntotalled 6.421\u2014compared with\n633 during the same period last\nyear.\nThis is an increase of more\nthan 900 per cent.\nDespite the signs that a growing number of persons are forsaking the suburbs for the\ncities, real estate men say, most\nof that whooping increase will\nend up in Outlying Acres.\nVqpHals Ds\u00ab\u00abcrate\nA'* Memorial\nOTTAWA (CP) - The Commonwealth War Graves Commission is \"quite incensed\" at\nthe desecration by vandals of\nthe $18,000 Commonwealth Air\nMemorial here.\nDamage to Hie memorial, a\nhuge ribbed globe surmounted\nby an albatross, may exceed\n$1,000. Arthur Walton, commission assistant secretary-general,\nsaid Friday.\nHe said the English firm\nwhioh made the monument has\nto recast missing pieces and\nship them to an Ottawa firm for\ninstallation.\nNew Zealand, Ireland, and the\nPhilippines have been ripped\nfrom the globe, and other pieces\ntoo thick for ripping have been\nbent.\nThe monument,- located on\nground owned by tlie National\nCapital Commission, was unveiled by the Queen in 1959 and\ncommemorates airmen from all\nover the world who fell in unknown graves while on duty in\nCanada or going to or from\nCanada during the Second Worid\nWar.\nAWARD SHOW\nJackie Cooper has been signed\nas guest star fcr the second annual TV Guide Award Shew on\nNBC-TV June 13.\nI\n ^ 1 \u25a0\u2014\u2014 , \u201e\u2014I\u2014\nWynndel Pays Honor to Longtime\nResidents On 45th Anniversary\necuting attorney and A. W.\nBurch as defence counsel also\nprovided a good deal of fun. A.\nRobertson acted as master-of-\nceremonies at the banquet whioh\nfollowed. Mrs. Kay Bauer gave\nseveral vocal selections accomp-\nWYMNDEL \u2014 Citizens of the\nWynndel district turned out in\nlarge attendance at the Wynndel\nMemorial Hail Wednesday, June\n7th, to pay tribute to Mr. and\nMrs. Walter Cooper on the \"occasion of their 45th Wedding Anniversary. For the delight of the, anied by Mrs. J. C. Wigen. Fred\naudience there was a staging of Hagen gave the toast to Mr. and\na mock wedding, which created Mrs. Cooper, which was answered\nmuch mirth, not only in the cos- by Mr. Cooper,\ntaming but the wording of the Guests who travelled from out\nceremony. | of the district for the occasion\nA mock trial in which Mr. were: Mr. and Mrs. W. Mason\nCooper was charged with many and Mrs. Brown of Kimberley,\noffences with H. Riussill as pros- Mrs. A. Benedetti of Banff, Alber\nta, Mr. and Mrs. W. Johnson of Guy Constable when they resided\nTwin Bays, Mrs. Sally Johnson\nof Kuskanook, L. Littlejohn Sr.\nof Erickson, K. Littlejohn, Mrs.\nA. Davis, Mr. and Mrs. A Robertson, Mrs. F. Martello, and Mr.\nand Mrs. McKay of Creston.\nMr. Robertson recalled delightful incidents of past years in the\nWynndel district and spoke of the\nesteem with which Mr. and Mrs.\nCooper are held as citizens who\nhave co-operated i n so many\ncommunity efforts.\nThey were married 45 years\nago at the home of Mr. and Mrs.\nBy ALICE ALDEN\nTHE Influense of the Far East has made'itself felt\nIn fashion this season, even unto the beautiful leather\neoats that are so popular just now. Samuel Roberts furnishes Far East sway over this handsome cabretta\nthree-quarter length jacket and expresses it in the mandarin neckline and semi-kimono sleeve, pictured here.\nAs shown, if is done in a soft banana yellow, perfect\nfor wear over slim suits or sheath dresses.\nWynndel Wl Enjoys\nBlossom Tea at Meeting\nMan Has High Praise\nFor Women Executives\nin Alice Siding. Mrs. Cooper was\nthen Gladys Mason. Rev. Powell\nwas minister at the ceremony.\nThey have lived in Wynndel ever\nsince. Their farm is called quite,\nappropriately \"Flowerfields\" andj\nis known far and wide for the\nbeautiful blooms grown there.\nP. Lachaat, by special request\nsang the French version of Made-\nIon, with the audience joining him\non the chorus.\nOn behalf of the community of\nWynndel, Mr. Robertson presented Mr. and Mrs. Cooper with a\nlawn set, comprising a table with\na large umbrella, two chairs and\na reclining lounge.\nBefore the evening closed all\nof the 125 guests joined hands for\nthe singing of \"Auld Lang Syne.\"\nBy DEIRDRE MUNGOVAN\nTORONTO (OP) ^Whem David\nRush paid nearly $2,000,000 last\nDecember to acquire John\nNorthway and Son, an 86-year-\nold retail women's wear firm,\nhe was fully aware that he\ndidn't know anything about merchandising.\n\"So I went out and hired real\npros.\"\nHis major find was Ruby\nHamra,    a   diminutive,   dark-\nstill finds time to oatch a weekend plane to New York where\nshe relaxes ta her apartment,\ndoes charcoal' sketches of world\nleaders and browses through art\nKOOKY LOOK\n\"My interests run along artistic lines. I thought I would\nproceed into fashion illustrating\nsince all my interest was in art.\nI attended the Ontario College\nof Art but I found I was too\nShe proposes to offer clothes\nfrom the domestic, American\nand European market, cater to\nthe career girl's pocketbook and\nborrow some ideas from New\nYork, including a bird cage\nrestaurant fashioned after the\none at Lord and Taylor.\nhaired 'dynamo schooled ta the j temperamental   to  be   a  good\nWYNNDEL \u2014 Wynndel Wo- display section. Members were\nmen's Institute held its regular asked to keep in mind entries for\nmeeting as a Blossom Tea on the the P.N.E. Institute competitions\nlawn at Mr. and Mrs. M. Wiigen's! a letter received from Nakusp\nresidence. \\ w.I. se the High Arrow dam was\nIf was decided to purchase $251 tabled. Members felt that more\nin tickets for aocoustic tiles for I competent persons than them-\nCreston Valley Hospital. Mem- j selves are capable of making\nhers wil sell tickets, which are decisions relative to the  areas\ntough competition of New\nYork's Fifth Avenue, who in\nMay became president of the\nfirm,\n\"I had no opinions about\nwomen ta business until I was\nexposed to Miss Hamra,\" said\nMr. Rush. \"I found her to be\nof top executive calibre, competent to deal ta any area and\nas good as, if not better than,\nany male executive I've seen.\n\"She treats a business with\nloving care\u2014more so than a\nman. From now on I would lean\nto women executives.\"\nPLAN TO EXPAND\nMiss Hamra handles the day-\nto-day operations of the firm\nwhich has its headquarters on\nYonge Street in downtown Tor-\ncommercial artist and I'm content to use it as a hobby.\"\nMiss Hamna says her ambition for Northway is to give\nit a \"clearly defined fashion\nimage.\" To that end she has introduced to Toronto such modern trends as the \"kooky\" look\nand fashions in burlap to go\nwith the store's traditional lavender and lace.\"\n50c eaoh, towards a tile.\nType of souvenir to be sent to\nprovincial headquarters for their\nnew building will be investigated.\nNecessary 'funds were voted to\n[ ship  clothing  to  the  Kelowna\n: depot.   Members   were   shown\narticles which had been entered\nfor competition at the East Kootenay convention and also on the\nQueens Bay\nMr. and Mrs. N. R. German\nhave returned to Vancouver after\nspending a few days at their summer home here.\nProfessor A. Emery of Victoria\nCollege was the .guest of Mr. and\nMrs. A Baravalle while he was\nhere on the occasion of the L. V.\nRogers High Sohool graduation\nexercises\nwhidh might be flooded, and relocation of persons affected. It\nwas also felt that much misinformation was being circulated\nby persons who had a few facts,\nbut yet were not experts in all\nphases of this type of development.\nBrown Owl\nReturns From\nTraining Camp\nWILLOW POINT - Mrs. Lorna\nHamilton, Brown Owl for First\nWillow, Point Brownie Pack has\njust returned from a Maple Leaf\nTraining Camp held at Camp\noVto\" and\" fo_r'branchlto.es ta | R\u00b07' \"<& Patterson.\nthe  suburbs   and  In  Hamilton !   The w\u00ab* lon* 6esslon cons!st'\nad Oshawa.\nThis   leaves   Mr.   Rush   free\nto investigate expansion, with\nplans to acquire 15 to 25 more\nstores in Ontario and eventually\nmake Northway a country-wide\noperation.\nFive - foot - one and just 92\npounds\u2014she would  love to  hit\nDuring the afternoon pictures j \"\u00bb but her _2-to-14*our day\nwere taken of the members for- makes it an unlikely prospect-\nfuture reference. A complete re-' Miss Hamra is a native of Tor-\nport of the district convention- onto who got her start with the\nwas given by Mrs. F. Merriam.  T. Eaton Company where she\nTea hostesses tor the afternoon: sold   ready-made   clothes   and\nwere Mrs. S. Moseley, Mrs. I.\nOquist and Mrs. J. Firth.\nBaudoin, Fabiola\nExpecting Baby\n- VATICAN CITY (AP) - Pope\nJohn told Belgian newspaper\nmen .Friday that Queen Fabiola i\nMr. and Mrs. K. R. Attree have! is expecting a baby,\nreturned from spending the week-1   The pope gave a special audi\nend in the Okanagan. guests of\nDr. James Marshal of the Dom\nence  for  newspaper  men  who\ncame here with the queen and\ntaion Entomology Laboratory at fjj^t ^ZLl'tl\nSummerland.\nE. Baravalle is convalescing at\nhis home, having been a patient\nin Kootenay Lake General Hospital.\nMr. and Mrs. George Porteous,\naccompanied by their daughter\nMiss M. Porteous. have returned\nfrom a week-end visit to their\ndaughter and 6on-in-law, Mr. and\nMrs. John Colgur in Creston.\nlater 'became head of stock and\nthen assistant buyer.\nIn 1947 she joined the A. J.\nFreiman department store in\nOttawa. On a buying trip to\nNew York she was offered\nand accepted a position with\nFranklin-Simon, a country-wide\nchain in the United States.\n\"I was the only woman vice-\npresident and was in charge of\nbrandh expansion,\" she said.\n\"I didn't find it difficult to\ndeal with men In business and\nI thought nothing of attending\na state visit to the Vatican. The\npope received the royal couple j meetings with 10 to 50 of them\nHere's a delicious and unusual\nway to make use of apples. Place\nthin slices of apple on a buttered\nslice of bread. Cover the apple\nslices with sharp Cheddar Cheese\nand broil until the cheese is\nbubbly.\nin a state audience Thursday.\nFabiola. 32-year-old daughter\nof a noble Spanish family, mar--\nried the 30-year-old Belgian King\nDec. 15 in Brussels. Her pregnancy was first reported \u2014 without confirmation \u2014 by a Brussels weekly May 24.\nA statement distributed by\nthe Vatican press office said the\npontiff told the Belgian newspaper men:\n\"The queen was very kind because she told us that she is\nexpecting a child.\"\nBaudouin and Fabiola are the\nWorld's only reigning Roman\nCatholic monarchs.\ned of handicraft sessions, as well\nas practical and theory classes.\nAll phases of the Brownie program were covered. During the\nweek the trainees were taken on\na tour of Cominco, and attended\nChurch in Trail. An interesting\npoint was that the cook's helper,\nMrs. Iris Davies, from Birmingham, England, was a Brown Owl\nand had many interesting stories\nto relate. She is visiting her sister\nin Trail.\nTrainees from the Kootenays\nwere: Mrs. Mary Gibney of\nChapman Camp, Mrs. Lorna\nHamilton, Willow Point; Mrs.\nMaizey Dalziel, Castlegar; Mrs.\nDaisy Simmons from Trail; and\nMrs. Lillian Molnar and Mrs.\nLillian Quarrie from Rossland\nComing from coast points were:\nMrs. Avis Schutz, Mrs. Marion\nMarno, Mrs. Peggy McRae, Mrs.\nJan Chapman, Mrs. Pat McGibbon. Mrs. Kathy Whipple.\nMrs. Marjorie Parrot from\nVancouver was commandant, and\nMrs. Vi Heaslip and Mrs. Thelma\nStevenson were the assistant\ntrainers.\nVaniers\nEntertain\n3000 Guests\nOTTAWA (CP) - Governor -\nGeneral Vanier and Mme. Vanier welcomed 3000 guests Saturday to their annual garden party\nat Government House.\nGuests mingled and sipped tea\nand soft drinks to the background\nmusic of military bands. Saris\nadded to the colorful spectacle\nof gay summer attire and top\nhats.\nThe lawns of the spacious gardens were left pock-marked by\nthe imprints of high-heeled shoes\nand covered with cigaret butts\nstamped into the ground.\nCameras were much ta evidence at the garden party with\nGov.-Geiieral Vanier and Prime\nMinister Diefenbaker as the chief\ntargets.\nMrs. R. Eaton\nNamed UNA\nPresident\nMrs. Rex Eaton. OBE, LLD.\nhas been elected national president oil\" the' United Nations Association in Canada. She is the first\nwoman to hold the position, filled in recent years by General\nE. L. M. Burns, Dr. Sidney\nSmith, C. M. Drury and W. G. C.\nHowland.\nDr. Eaton is well known for her\nwork as Associate Director of\nSelective Service during the war',\nand more reentry as president of\nth National Council of Women\nShe has long been interested in\nindustrial relations, was the only\nwoman member of the B. C. Industrial Relations Board as early\nas 1935, and is a member of the\nVocational Training Advisory\nCouncil of Canada.\nNative of SpringhJU, N. S., and\ngraduate of Acadia, she came\nwest to teach school after leaving university, married her principal, who was a 'fellow-Acadian\nand has lived in Vancouver ever\nsince.\nI can hold forth with the\nmale animal in every aspect of\nbusiness and I don't find there\nare any barriers. Men seem to\nbe more attentive when they are i\nexposed to women in the same !\nbusiness.\"\nShe came to Northway last\nDecember from New York\nwhere she was executive assistant to the president of Sterns.\nAt first she took a job as a\npart-time consultant ta merchandising, commuting between\nNew York and Toronto.\nAlthough she now has a full-\ntime  job  with  Northway,  she\nMIGRANT WORKERS\nMore than 35,000 farm workers left Mexico to help harvest\ncrops in the United States in\n1961, most going to California.\nGod the Preserver,\nSermon Subject\nThe mental nature of fatigue\nwas explained at Christian Science services Sunday in a Lesson-Sermon on the subject \"God\nthe Preserver of Man.\"\nIsaiah's comforting assurance\nof divine strength was read from\nthe Bible ('Isa. 40): \"They that\nwait upon the Lord shall renew\ntheir strength; they shall mount\nup with wings as eagles; they\nshall run. and not be weary; and\nthey shall walk, and not faint.\"\nA correlative selection from\n\"Science and Health with Key\nto the Scriptures\" by Mary Baker Eddy states ta part: \"The\nscientific and permanent remedy\nfor fatigue is to learn the power\nof Mind over the body or any illusion of physical weariness and\nso destroy this illusion, for matter cannot be weary and heavy\nladen.\"\nThe Golden Text was from the\nfirst chapter of Joshua: \"Be\nstrong and of good courage, be\nnot afraid, neither be thou dismayed, for the Lord thy God is\nwith thee whithersoever thou go-\nest.\"\nNew Denver\nNEW DENVER - Mr. and\nMrs. R. Bro and three Children\nof Robson were visitors at the\nhome of Mr. and Mrs. Q. A.\nForsythe and looked over the\nSlooan Lake Divisional Girl Guide\ncamp.\nMr. and Mrs. Stan Heslip have\nas guests, Mrs. Heslip's mother,\nMrs. E. Russell of Duncan, B.C.,\nand her sister, Mrs. H. Kinder\nof Vancouver.\nMiss June Stewart and Mr. Pat\nHenderson of Kamloops were\nvisiting for a few days with the\nformer's parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nJames C. Stewart.\niilliiillllllllllllilililllllllliliililiiii;\nShoes Were\nGood Luck\nKITCHENER, Ont. (OP) -\nH anyone throws shoes at\nPeter Jand's wedding, it Will\nbe appropriate.\nHe met his English fiancee\nthrough a size six black boot\nmade in Kitchener 13 years\nago.\nPeter was packing boots\nand shoes at Marchants Rubber Company in 1948 when he\ntucked his name and address\ninto the toe of two pairs of\nwomen's boots.\nLater in England, clerk\nGwen Honeywell, then IB. was\nunwrapping the shipment in a\nSuffolk store. She found one of\nthe notes and decided to add\nPeter to her list of pen pals.\nPeter, then 17, answered\nand the couple wrote regularly.\nLast fall Peter decided to do\nsome courting in person and\ntook a trip to England to meet\nGwen. Within a week he proposed and she accepted.\nHe is leaving his job as a\nshipping receiver at a precision maohinery firm to fly to\nEngland June 14. Peter and\nGwen plan to be married in\nthe fall and Peter has taken\na job at her father's malting\nplant.\nShe isn't \"too fussy\" about\ncoming to Canada but Peter\nloves England and, more important, loves Gwen to boot.\nMil Mill III II1IIM111! I IMM I III I! 11II! III\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, JUNE 12, 1961\u20143\nCouncil of Women\nTold of Eskimo Problem\nBy DEIRDRE MUNGOVAN\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nWINDSOR, Ont. (CP) f- Eskimos, their problems .and prospects, occupied the _?th. annual\nmeeting of the National Council\nof Women Thursday i)ight.\"'\nGordon Roberts o n, ,' deputy\nminister of northern affairs and\nnational resources and commissioner of the Northwest Territories, explained the Eskimo's\nproblem of assimilation.\nHe said in one, or at the\nmost two generations, the Eskimo is expected to undergo\nchanges greater than those\nwbitemen have t a k d n 2,000\nyears to achieve.\nNext year, he said, more than\n60 per cent of the Eskimo children will attend school, and\nthrough the department, of\nnorthern affairs Indians and Eskimos will continue to be taught\nbasic skills as well as techniques geared to their individual needs.\nINDUSTRIES DEVELOPED\nSmall industries are being developed including fur trade,\nhand carving, char fishery,\nprinting and garment making.\nMr. Robertson suggested another solution to the transitional\nperiod is wage employment.\n\"In the developing north,\nthere will  be  opportunities  in\nmining, transportation, construction and the 6ervise industries. .  ...\n\"I see no reason why these\njobs \u2014 and many of the other\n!jobs now being done by people\nnow in our northern schools.\"\nEarlier Thursday the council\ndecided to urge the federal\ngovernment to reconsider the\ndouble impact of estate duties\nand income tax on pensions\nannuities and death benefits.\nDelegates   agreed   the   p:\nsions,   annunities   and   dc \u25a0\nbenefits should not be subject\nboth duties and tax. They pr\nposed the estate tax should nc\nbe levied on pensions and life\ninsurance   interest   payable   to\nthe widow.\nLister Notes\nMrs. C. Kwasnieki and son of\nCranbrook were visiting Mr. and\nMrs. A. Marzke.\nMr. and Mrs. J. C. Bruce o!\nNanoose Bay, enroute to Kaslo\ntor a year, visited Mr. and Mrs.\nH. Demchuk.\nMiss Lois Ragsdale has returned after visiting relatives at\nCalgary.\nMr. and Mrs. Don Beebe and\nchildren of Calgary have taken\nup residence on the Fred Som-\nmerfeld place formerly owned by\nH. Demchuk.\nP. J. Sherstobetoff was on business at Vancouver.\nMr. and Mrs. Ed Siebert were\nvisiting their son Howard, and\ndaughter Nancy and other relatives at Edmonton.\nYou\nget\nMONEY\nneed it!\nUp to\n$2500.00\nsometimes\nmore.\nNIAGARA FINANCE\nCOMPANV LIMITED\n560 Baker St.,\nTelephone 1636.\nBranches\nThroughout B.C.\nBetter Facilities Urged\nFor Treating Mentally III\nBy ken Smith\nMONTREAL (OP)-The third\nworld congress of psychiatry\nended here Saturday with.a renewed oall for more trained personnel and better facilitie. for\ntreating mental illnesses.\nDr. Morgan Martin of Ottawa,\nchief of the mental health division of the department of national health and welfare, told a\ndiscussion at the third world\ncongress of psychiatry of the social implications of mental disorders that \"individual treatment is a keystone of psychiatry.\"\nDr. Martin said there are\nthree other aspects of the problem that are getting more attention from various officials ta\nCanada:\nThe need for closer co-opera-\nl\ntion in treatment, and administrative methods between provinces and the federal government; the need for \"suitable activities\" for every mental patient, whether in hospital or in\nthe community, and the need for\neffective, public education.\nDr. Martin warned against\nhealth agencies getting caught\nup in the \"slavish worship of\nfashions or fads\" in psychiatric\ntreatment.\nThese were different from the\nrapid change of emphasis psychiatry had undergone in the\nlast few decades and which\nwere important for the normal\ndevelopment of treatments in\nthe light of increasing knowledge.\nAt the conference, attended by\n3,000 psychiatrists from 62 coun\ntries, Dr. D. Bwen Cameron of\nMontreal was elected president\nof the World Psychiatric Association.\nDr. Cameron, chairman of the\ndepartment of psychiatry at McGill University and the Allan\nMemorial Institute here, is the\nWPA's first president since the\nassociation |was formed at the\nbeginning of the congress to try\nto give psychiatrists a greater\nvoice in various governments.\nThe congress was held primarily to let psychiatrists know\nwhat work and research was\nbeing done in other countries.\nThere were more than 500 scientific papers presented, covering\nevery aspect of psychiatry from\nthe effects of new drugs to why\ncrime exists and why \"voodoo\nhexes\" kill their victims.\nBy TRACY ADRIAN\nA SHIMMERING gold design adorns a lightweight\n\u00abwim cap which is made to lit all head sizes and\ncover any type of hair-do. It can give you the new\ngolden girl effect, so fashionable this year, and it's a\nglamorous way to keep your hair dry while going in\nfor active aquatics.\nthe better\nthe bread\nthe better\nthe sandwich!\nMAKE YOURS\nToastMaster\nENJOY\nHOME-BAKED\nFLAVOR!\n '' -r-\u2014^r: :.---\u25a0\nnr\n6\u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, JUNE 12, 1961\nReds Lead NL by Bare 4 Points in Seesaw Race\nGene Freese Emerges Weekend Hero\nBj THB CANADIAN PRESS\nOimsimaffl Reds led the National League by a bare four\npercentage points over Los Angeles Dodgers in a seesaiw race\nin which Gene Freese emerged\nas the Kedlegs' weekend hero.\nThe veteran foflelder clouted\na home run that contribute!, to\nCincinnati's 6-a victory over St.\nLouis Cardinals in the first\ngame of their Sunday double-\nheader. In the nightcap, his\nbases-loaded single broke a 3-3\ntie and another one-bagger contributed to a .oiKun rally as\nthe Reds romped home 9-3.\nThe Dodgers did al they\ncould to keep up the pace as\nSandy Koufax tossed a five-hitter at Philadelphia Phillies for a\n6-3 victory. But the single win\nwasn't enough to keep Los Angeles in front.\nWally Moon hit his fourth\nhomer in three days with the\nbases empty and drove in another run with a single to nail\ndown   the   Dodger   southpaw's\nninth viotary against  two defeats.\nINDIANS PULL AWAY\nIn the American League,\nCleveland Indians pulled away\nfrom Detroit Tigers after splitting their four-game series by\ntaking both ends of their Sund-y\ntwin bill from Kansas City 7-3\nand 4-3 with Chuck Essegian\nbreaking up both games.\nReplacing Jimmy Piersall,\nwho injured his heel, in the fifth\nRetread Your Truck Tires Now\nCut your tire costs in half by a proven retreading program\nthat features the latest designs and most modern\n\u25a0    ,    - equipment available.\n\u25a0A TOP CAP FULL CAP FULL CAP\n6TFULL CAP   MUD and SNOW        LOGROC\n'Om NEW BENDRIX EQUIPMENT FEATURES:\nTRIAD CENTRE PLATES     Ensures perfectly rounded tire.\nCASINGS REMAIN COOL   Open bands keep casings cool\nr \u00ab\u25a0 \" during retreading . . . adding new-tire life.\niiofj ALGAR S Tire Service\nh^TClES^ ANQ  RETREAD1NG  LTD.\njfeO Lake Sf. \"Quality Is Our Most Important Product\"\nPh. 252\ninning of the opener\nhit a two-run homer in the Seventh inning and a three - run\nblast in the eighth. His ninth-\nInning double brought in the\nwinning run in the nightcSp.\nBoth victories wefe credited\nto the Tribe's fabulous bullpen.\nDick Stigman, making his first\nappearance of the year after\nrecovering from a sore awn,\nheld the Athletics to one hit in\nthe last four Innings of the opener. Barry Latman ni.de his\nrecord 6-0 in the second, although h i s scoreless String\nended after more than 16 innings.\nANOTHER FOB SPAHN\nWarren Spahn pitched two hit-\nless innings in relief and won his\nown game with a three - run\nI homer in the ninth as Milwaukee Braves beat Ohicago Cubs\n8-4 but Ihe Braves succumbed\nto rookie Jack Curtis in the second game, losing 5-3.\nRichie Ashburn, whose triple\nhad driven in two runs In the\nopener, cracked a two-run single and rookie catcher Dick\nBertell drove in two more as\nMilwaukee failed to solve Curtis' slow stuff.\nThree third-inning home runs\nby Smckey Burgess. Bob Skinner and Rocky Nelson did most\nof the damage as Pittsburgh Pirates beat San Francisco Giants\n8-4 in a single game. The Giants\ngot 11 hits off Vern Law and\nBob Friend but left seven men\non base.\nOrlando Cepeda and Matty\nA'.cu hit home runs for the losers.\nDetroit Tigers got seven home\nruns, three of them by Norm\nCash, as they split with Washington to fall IV. games back of\nCleveland    in    the    American\nLeague race. The Senators took, game Chicago losing streak by\nthe opener 7-4 and Detroit won I beating the Orioles 7-1 after the\nthe second 7-6 in 11 innings. i Sox had dropped the opener 8-2\nOne of Cash's wallops cleared j on Chuck Estrada's three-hitter. I\nthe 94-foot right field roof at1 Pierce allowed six hits in his\nBriggs Stadium, a feat accom-'second route-going performance\nplished previously only by Ted' of the season and his 21st lifetime j\nWilliams and Mickey Mantle,     j victory over the Birds.\nSteve Boros  singled with  thei   \t\nbases loaded to give the Tigers\ntheir  second-game  victory.  Re\nin Saturday's A hi e r 1 c 4 n'\nLeague ianies Detroit blinked\nCleveland 2-0, New York defeat\ned Kansas City 5-3, Baltimore\nnipped Minnesota 4-8, Washington\nedged the White Sdx by the same\nscore and the Angels whipped\nBoston 10-5.\nIn the National League the\nDodgers overcame the Phillies\n5-4, Cincinnati whipped the Cardinals 4-2, the Giants white,\nwashed Pittsburgh 5-0 and Mil\nwaukee battered the Cubs .-5.\nYANKS STILL ftOLLING\nYogi Berra's two homers accounted for 'both runs in the open- j\ner and Roger Maris blasted two I\nin the nightcap as New York'\nYankees downed Los Angeles Angels 2-1 and 5-1.\nMaris, whose homer total now\nstands at 20, also pulled two spectacular catches to preserve\nRalph Terry's five-hitter in the\nfirst game. Rookie Roland Sheldon got credit for the other vie-1\ntory. I\nMinnesota Twins took an 8-21\npounding from Boston in the\nfirst game, then found their\nbats and walloped the Red Sox\n10-5 for their third victory in 20\ngames.\nThe Twins batted around for'\nfive runs in the third inning   of i\nthe nightcap, saw the Sox reduce '\nthe gap to 6-5 and pulled away\nagain with (our runs in the ninth.\nBob Allison had a homer in each\ngame   and   Hanmon   Klllehrew\nproduced one in the second. For\nthe  Sox,  Don Buddln homered\ntwice and Jackie Jensen    and\nFrank Malzone got one each in\nthe opener.\nPIERCE GETS\nSUPPORT\nLefty Billy Pierce, beaten\ntwice by Baltimore when his\nmates gave him only a single\nrun to work with, snapped a 4-\nLITTLE TOO' CLOSE for comfort, left-hander\nBlair Olson's sizzler during the second game of Sunday's doubleheader with the Kimberley Dynamos at\nCivic park. Nelson lost both ends 9-8 and 5-1. Outlaw\ncatcher Don MacKenzie doesn't seem to be having\ntoo much trouble with the ball as it whistles past the\nunidentified Kimberley batter. \u2014 Daily News photo.\nHomers for Burdette and Lilly\nOutlaws Drop Doubleheader\nliever Phil Regan, who faced\nonly one batter, got credit for the\nwin.\nPair Establish\nGolfing Goals\nBy DON SAWATSKY\nNews Sports Editor\nThe big, booming bat of Charlie\nBurdette struck with fearsome\nsavagery, once in each game of\nan East Kootenay Baseball League doubleheader Sunday, but the\nbig man wasn't able to stir up the\nNelson Outlaws \"enough to win.\nIt was either that, or they were\nI lying too hard. Anyway, they\nlost 9-8 and 5-1 to Kimberley Dynamos Sunday afternoon at Civic\nPark before about 200 fans.\nThe losses didn't affect Nelson's\nVeeck Bows Out\nOf Partnership\nCHICAGO (API - Ailing Bill\nVeeck bowed out of baseball\nand Chicago White Sox ownership was narrowed to two men\nSaturday as Arthur C. Allyn\nbought his majority control part-\nMONTREAL (CP) - Bill Kerr ners' Veeck  8nd Hank  GreCT\"\nshot  a  one-over-par  72 Sunday  herS for  an  estimated  $2,500,-\nand Judy Darling 77, two over WW'\nwomen's  par,  to  establish  the     At a  surprise   press  confer-\nscores which golfers across Can- ence, Allyn,  48,  a  director  of\nada have been hoping to beat\nduring National Golf Week.\nKerr is the Canadian Professional Golfers Association champion and Judy is the ladies openj\nchampion of Canada. |\nThe two, both from the Mont-,\nreal area, played over Kerr's i\nhome.course of Beaconsfield.     '.\nDuring the June 3-10 National\nGolf Week, golfers could play as|\nmany rounds as they wished \u2014 j\nat $1 \u2014 in a beat-the-ohamps ef-i\nfort.\nThe money will be used largely';\nby the Royal Canadian Golf As-!\nnumerous corporations, said:\n1.   Veeck,   convalescent   Sox\npresident,   had   resigned   from\ntop-of-the-heap standings but the\nvictories brought the Dynamos out\nof the cellar and into a tie for second place with their fellow clti-\nbens, the Hobos.\nStandings are:\nNelson !  1  I\nKlmb. Hobos        3   1   6\nKlmb. Dynamos 3   3   6\nCran. Cubs 2  4  4\nChunky little Les Lilly was not\nto be outdone in the home run department however, He pounded\ntwo over the vulnerable left-field\nfence in the first two Innings of\nthe opener for the Dynamos.\nLilly's first homer was with one\nman on base and the second homer drove In two men.\nKimberley accumulated nine\nruns by the fourth inning of the\nopener hefore the Outlaws snapped into shape.\nRighthander Les Hufty started\nout slowly for the Outlaws in the\nIirst game but it was the big fifth\ninning lhat changed the complexion of things.\nFrank Hufty squeezed out a\nthree-bagger on a first base-line\ngrounder to start the wagon rolling. Bernie Monteleone brought\nhim in with a grass-scorcher\nIhrough short stop position and\nthen Burdette's drive into deep\nleft field made it 8-4.\nThe Outlaws doubled their score\nin the sixth inning when Mel Dor-\nthe club after selling his 30-per- j Pv poked a grounder through sec\ncent holdings  ln the majority\ngroup. |\n2. Vice - President Greenberg\nsold his 40 per cent but will re  !\n'nain as general manager and I\nexecutive   vice - president   \"in i\ncomplete charge of the club.\"   |\n3. Allyn will retain his 54-per- I\ncent holdings. :\n4. Allyn has made  no over- I\ntures to buy out Chuck Comis-\nond base, Frank Hufty drove him\nto third and Al Roemer brought\nthem in with a double.\nBurdette finished it off with his\nfirst homer of the game.\nNelson's vigorous comeback\nstopped there and for the next\nthree remaining Innings, neither\nteam managed either an insurance marker or a tying point.\nThe Dynamos went through\nthree pitchers, Carl Johanson,\n(five innings), Mike Russel (two\ninnings) and Bodine who finished\noff.\nBetween the three of them, they\nstruck out seven Outlaw batters\nand walked three. Nelson hit 20\ntimes.\nLes Hufty fanned nine, walked\none and was hit 10 times.\nRodin, went tlie ..distmice in the\nnightcap against southpaw Blair\nOlson.\nBodine fanned only two batters\nagainst Olson's five, was hit nine\ntimes against Olson's 10 and walked one compared with Olson's\ntwo.\nSam Calles snagged the only\nbig opportunity by the Outlaw, in\nthe third inning of the nightcap\nwhen he snatched a high line\ndrive on the run with an over-the-\nshoulder catch off the bat of Roemer.\nHarvey Nash and Lilly hauled\nthe Dynamos ahead 2-0   in   the\nfourth on a couple   of  one-basi\nhits.\nThe t.fth inning were moment!\nof indecision 'or the Outlaws and\nthey cust Ihem two runs. Allan\nFabbro singled tr short stop an.\nthe ball was hobbled and Nasi\nsingled to third base where th)\nball nesUaied agoin.\nBurdette's .e^end homer of tht\nday turned out to be the only point\nfor th\u00bb Outlaws in the seonc\ngame.\n.'Calles made it five for Kimber\nley ion an error in the Infield.\nFinal Lineup Set\nFor Ball Tournament\nodation for the development of! key, owner of a 46-per-cent in-\njunior golf. Iorest ln the club.\nMen  and  women  count  their I \t\nj ret  scores,  deducting their o'- j\nficial  handicaps.  Those  beating\nI the scratch scores of the champs\n! will get a medal inscribed:  \"1\nbeat the champ.\"\nProbable Pitchers\nBy THE  ASSOCIATED PRESS\nProbable pitchers for today's\nmajor league games (won \u2022 lost\nrecords in parentheses):\nNational League\nLos Angeles (Williams 4-5) at\nSan Francisco (Sanford 3-3)\nOnly game scheduled\nAmerican League\nMinnesota (Arrigo 0-0) at Boston (Delock 3-2)\nLos Angeles (Bowsfield 2 - 1)\nat New York (Stafford 3-2) N.\nChicago (Larsen l-O) at Balti-\n11 more (Hoeft 1-3) N\nKansas City  (Shaw 3 - 4 at\nCleveland (Hawkins 5-3) N.\nOnly games scheduled.\n\"\"\"\"\nOnly a Fifth\nFor Elliott\noff, Nonman Blain, Don Cavalier,\nReinhard Koch and Dennis Oherenko.\nAnother eight players, who had\nnot passed their 13th birthday\nby May 1 this year, are needed,\nand any interested should turn\nout tomorrow. Players from last\nyear's team who have passed the\nFinal line-up for a second girl's\nteam in the Midsummer Baseball\nBudd Ties\nWorld Mark\nVILLANOVA, Pa. (AP) -\nFrank Budd of Villanova tied\nthe world 100-yard record for the\nsecond time this year with a\ntime of 9.3 seconds Sunday at\nthe Middle Atlantic Amateur\nAthletic Union's track and field\nmeet.\nBudd also won the 220-yard\ndash as athletes from his school\ntuned up for the United States\nNational Collegiate Athletic Association's championships Friday\nand Saturday in Philadelphia.\nEight runners share the 100-\nyard dash record, including\nHarry Jerome of Vancouver.\nBudd's time of 20.3 in the 220\nwas three-tenths of a second o\nthe world record.\nLittle Baseballers\nSchedule Games\nThe Sandlot Mighty Might\nBaseball Dodgers will be hosting\nSouth Siocan today at 6 p.m. in\na new game-exchange system\ntournament will be decided at a a[ ^ivic Park,\nworkout at 4 p.m. Tuesday atj in the future, South Siocan will\nCivic grounds. he in Nelson every Wednesday at\nEligible for places on the team, 4:ao  p.m.\nand especially asked to turn out,     The Little League Gyros will\nare; Pat Maida\", Jackie Matheson, play an exhibition baseball game\nBarb Hewatt, Maureen Bragag- against  the Sandlot Babe Ruth\nlimit  are  also  needed   as! nola' Linda McLeod, Pam Pepin,fleam at civic grounds today at\nBELGRADE (AP) - Herb El-\ncoaches to assist Jimmy Lissa,\nwho has been named head coach.\nUnder  tournament   rules  this\nliott,   Australia's   world   record year, each team is to have five\nholder at one mile and 1500 me-i boys  over the  playing-age-limit\nters, couldn't do better than fifth! as coaches\nSaturday in  an  800-meter race,    Ust \u201e, _,_,_,_..  f__ ^ ,_,..\nElliott   who  is   scheduled   to \u2122nthwit^Tlr' TV Said ]as''nis\"ht\njoin the Oxford-Cambridge team, <w0.\"*  Ilh6, f'\"0\" ?\u201e*?\ni,,. . t  -\u201e-,-..  - \u25a0_ j I Roeheleau and Fred Nioholls to\nLeslie   Carlson,   Cathy   Wagner,14:30 p.m.\nSandra Ward,  Sharon Fletcher,! \t\nJanice  Fukala,  Linda  Barefoot,   Baseball   Standings\nfor a meet against a Harvard-]\nYale combine in the United States\nTuesday, battled East German's\nValentin for the lead at the 400-\nmeter mark but then dropped\nback.\nValentin won in 1:50.4.\nthe   previosuly   enrolled   Garry\n] Shatosky and Johnny Romanuik.\nLorraine Webster and Sharon\nSOCCER CUP WON\nFLORENCE (API - Floren-\ntina of Florence beat Lazio of\nRome 2-0 Sunday and won the\nKalian Cup soccer tournament.\nFlorence Maglio and Colleen Wil-1 .Finns-\nson. Any who are absent wiU be *AT,0NAL LEA\u00b0Uf\ndropped unless they send word r,   .     .,\nthat they still wish to play, Cy ,'n.T\"\u201e\".e.\nJackman,  tournament  manager,!^ \u00ab..\nThe  team,  tentatively  named I g, inm*\nthe Bantams   (most are  13 or Mjlwaul(ee'   ;\nunder) will be sponsored by the Chicago\ntournament, if no other sponsor | Philadelphia\nW L\n33 21\n34 22\n30 23\n26 24\n24 27\n24 27\n21 32\n17 33\nWalls, who served in the same: is also looking for a sponsor and\nmaterializes. A sixth boys' teamj AMERICAN LEAGUE\nPet\n.611\n.607\n.607\n.520\n.471\n.471\n.396\n.340\nGbl\n2V,\n5\n7VJ\n7M>\n11'..\n14\ncapacity last year, have joined\nthe staff of scorers under Verna\nOhernoff, who is now a member\nof the National Baseball Congress,\nNational Association of Scorers.\nMore umpires and scorers are\nneeded as there will be games\nevery day during July and August.\nif npne is found, the tournament Cleveland\nwill sponsor it, too. Detroit\nA full dress workout under sup- New York\nervision of Frank Morrow, spon- Baltimore\nsor, will be held to complete the Washington\nWoo'.worths  boys'  team  at  the Boston\nsame time and place Tuesday. Kansas City\nBoys already signed include Ken | Minnesota\nKuhn. Reg Cherenko, Greg Ozer- Los Angeles\nW L\n37 19\n36 21\n34 20\n27 27\n28 29\n26 28\n23 29\n21 34\n21 35\nPet    Gbl\n.632\n.630\n.518\n.491\n.481\n.442\n.382\n.375\nIVi\n2\n8\n9>.\n10\n12\n15V.\n16\nHOW MANY KEEP THEIR SAVINGS IN A BANK?\nProbably all of them\/There are 10 million savings deposit accounts\nin the chartered banks, by far the most popular type. They are used\nby all sorts of people\u2014wage-earners, businessmen, housewives, farmers,\nstudents \u2014who know their money is safe, earns good interest, and is\navailable whenever needed. And they like the efficiency and courtesy of\nthe men and women who serve them\/Your nearest branch is the placp\ntor your savings \u2014 and the one place you can do all your banking.\nTai^CHAETERED BANKS BE.BVING YOUR COMMUNITY\nSunday's Big League Linescores\nAmerican  League\nFirst\nLob   Angelw   000 000 001-  1 51\nNew York      010 000 lOx \u2022 2  8 0\nMcBride (5-4) Fowler (8) and\nAverill; Terry (4-0) and Blanch-\nard. HRs: LA-Hunt (11). NY-\nBerra 2 (11).\nFirst\nKansas City   001 020 000 -  3 81\nCleveland        010 010 23x -  7 10 1\nWalker (2-3) Archer (7) Staley (7) and Pignatano; Antonelli, Stigman (6) (1-01 and Romano. HRs: Cle\u2014Kirkland (6)\nEssegian 2 (3).\nFirst\nChicago 000 000 002- 2 3 3\nBaltimore       104 001 20x -  8 10 0\nBaumann (4-6) Larsen (8) and\nLollar; Estrada (4-41 and Triandos. Courtney (8). HR: Bal\u2014\nPhilley  (1).\nFirst\nMinnesota       000 000 101 - 2 7 3\nBoston 001 004 30x\nRamos (3-S) Pleis (6) Palm-\nquist (7). and Battey; Schwall\n'5-01 Fornieles (7) and Nixon.\nHRs: Minn\u2014Allison (10). Bos\u2014\nBuddin 2 (2) Malzone (4) Jensen\n(6).\n'First\nWashington      003110 002-  710 0\nDetroit 000 201010- 4  60\nMcClain (6-41 Gabler (8) and\nGreen; Woodeshlck (3-3) Fox\n(5), Casale (6), Fischer (8),\nAguirre (9) and Brown. HRs:\nWsh-Green (5). Det-Cash 2\n(16), Colavito (17), Kaline (5).\nSecond:\nWash. 000 033 000 00-; 6 5 0\nDetroit 001 210 200 01\u2014 7 15 2\nSturdivant, Hobaugh (41 Kut-\nyna (5) Easier (8) 1-1 and Daley;\nBruce, Fox (5) Regan (11) 6-2,\nand Roarke. HRs: Wash\u2014Ke-\nough (3) Det-Kaline (6) Cash\n'27) Boros (4).\nCincinnati    002 000 034\u2014 9 10   1\n8 10 1 ' St.  Louis     000 111 000\u2014 3 10   3\nPurkey  7-3  Brosnan   (8)   and\nSchmidt, Zimmerman  (81;\nBroglio 16-6), McDermott  (8)\nMcDaniel (8), Miller (9) and Mc\nCarver, Sawatski (9>.\nMilwaukee   001 000 020\u2014 3   9  0\nChicago       030 200 OOx\u2014 5   7   :\nNottebart '3-4) Raymond  (4)\nBuhl (71 and Torre; Curtis (2-1)\nShultz (8) and Bertell. HRs: Mil-\nMathews 117).\nSecond\nLos Angeles   000 100 000 -  1  6 3\nNew York      301 000 lOx -  5 5 0\nGrba (5-5) James '4) and Sadowski, Averill (8); Sheldon,\n(3-2) Arroyo (9) and Howard.\nHR: NYk. Maris 2 120), Mantle\n(18).\nSecond\nChicago\nBaltimore\nPierce (2\nBarber (7-4) Hall\n(4) and Triandos.\nSecond\n412 000 000- 710 0\n000 000 010-  1  6 2\n5)  and Carreon;\n(3)\nKansas City   000 010 011 -  3 7 4\nCleveland        100 0O2 001 - 4  8 0\nRakow, Kunkel (6) Bass (7)\nDaley (9) (4-8) and Sullivan;\nGrant, Allen '8) Latman (8)\ni'6-Oi and Romano. HR: Cle\u2014\nKirkland (7).\nSecond\nMinnesota       005 010 004 -10 110\nBoston 110 100 200-  5111\nKralick (5-4) Lee (7) and Nar-\nagon, Battey (9); Cisco (0-1)\nHillman (3) Stallard (7) Muffett\n'9) and Pagliaroni, Nixon (8),\nHRs: Minn\u2014Allison (10), Killebrew (13).\nNational League\nFirst .\nCincinnati       400 Oil 000 -  6 11 0\nSt. Louis 000 010 010 \u25a0  2  8 0\nHunt (6-3) and Zimmerman:\nSadeckl (4-4) Cicotte (6) Miller\n(81 and Scbaffer. HRs: Cin\u2014\nBlasingame (1) Freese (12). StL\n\u2014Warwick (2).\nFirst\nMilwaukee      000 101114 - 8 11 1\nChicago 000 000 400 -  4  8 1\nWilley, .Brunei (7) McMahon\n17) Spahn (8) (7-6) and Torre;\nEllsworth, Hobbie (7) Scbaffer-\nnoth (8) (0-4) Elston (9 Sclillltz\ni9) and Thacker, Bertell (8).\nHRs: Mil\u2014Boiling (8),i Spahn\n12)  3.\nPittsburgh       043 000 001 - 8 9 0\nSan Fran.       010 102 000 - 4 112\nLaw (3-4) Friend (6) and Burgess;' Loes' '4-3) Duffalo '2),\nO'Dell (4), Bolin '7) and Bailey. HRs: Pgh\u2014Burgess (5),\nSkinner (2), Nelson (4). SF\u2014\nCepeda (17), M. Alou (3).\nPhila. 003 000 000 -  3  5 0\nLos Angeles   010 120 llx - 6 14 1\nMahaffey (6-6) Lehman (5),\nBaldschun '8' and Dalrymple,\nNeeman (7): Koufax (9-2) and\nRoseboro. HRs: Pha \u2014 Walla\n'2), LA\u2014Moon '14), Roseboro\nHI), Hodges  (4).\n \u25a0\u25a0IM\"\u2014\u2014\u2014\n^ ; \".'    '   \u25a0,\nFrank Funk Johnny Temple Wynn Hawkins        John Romnno\nJUST TERRIFIC FOR TRIBI\u2014Leading the way as the Cleveland Indians forge to the top in\nthe American League chase are these stellar members of the cast, headed by three of\nthe loop's top hitters, Jim PIersr.ll, John Romano and Johnny Temple, and the fine pitching ot reliefer Frank Funk, Mudcat Grant and Wynn Hawkins. (Central Press)\n\"Built to Burn\" Charges\nWSRC Head, Fitzgerald\nBy JACK SULLIVAN\nCanadian Press Staff Wrifer\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 Most racetrack stables In North America are \"literally built\nto burn,\" the National Association of Stale Racing Commissioners was told here Saturday.\n15-Round Decision\nIHU>I\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, JUNE 12, 1961\u20147\nCouldn't Drop Him]\nAncient Archie Holds Share of Title\nBy JACK HAND\nNEW YORK (API - Ancient\nArchie Moore battered Italy's\nGiulio Rinaldi, a courageous but\ninept challenger, Saturday night\nand held tight to his share of\nthe world light-heavyweight boxing title on a unanimous decision at Madison Square Garden.\nMoore, showing his age, never\nSaturday's Major\nLeague Linescores\nWilliam Fitzgerald, Seattle\nfire chief and chairman of the\nWashington State Racing Commission, produced figures to\nshow that nearly 400 thoroughbreds had died in stable fires in\ntlie 10 years from 1951 to 1060\nin the United States and Canada. Forty-two horses had been\nburned to death so far in 1961\nwhich, he said, may turn out to\nbe \"the worst year ever.\"\n\"Unless we take Immediate\npositive steps to protect our\nphysical assets and the lives of\nboth humans and animals from\nfurther destructive fires we\nshall see this industry seriously\naffected economically and morally,\" he said.\nMr. Fitzgerald suggested that\ninstallation of automatic sprinkler systems is the best insurance\nBelgian, Yank\nWin Le Mans\nLE MANS, France (API-Olivier Gendebien of Belgium and\nPhil. Hill of Los Angeles, California, 6wept to victory in tlie\nM-hour Le Mans auto race Sunday and set a distance record\nof 4,476 kilometers (2,782.194\nmiles).\nThe old record established in\n1957 by Ron Flockhart and Ivor\nRueb of Great Britain, was\n4,397.108 kilometers (2,732.80\nmiles i.\nHill was at the wheel of their\nred Ferrari as it crossed the\nfinish line in an endurance classic that saw Italian built Ferrari cars sweep the honors.\nThe average speed of the winners was  185.83 kilometers  per '\nhour (115.94 miles).\nSECOND WIN\nlt was tlie second year in a\nrow that the hard-driving Belgian had turned back all challengers over the 8.36 mile route.\nAnd it was tlie second time Gendebien and Hill had teamed up\nto drive to victory.\nLast year. Genebien's partner\nwas Belgian Paul Frera, now re- i\ntired, and  in  1958 he and  the\nCalifornian took the honors.\nIn second place were Willy\nMairesse of Belgium and Michael Parks of Great Britain in another Ferrari. Third were Pierre\nNoblet and Jean Guichet of\nFrance, also driving a Ferrari.\nOnly 22 of the 55 starters finished .the race.\nAmong those forced out were\nBritain's Stirling Moss, whose\nFerrari developed a broken radiator hose: Pedro and Ricardo\nRodriguez of Mexico, out with\nmechanical trouble, and Roy\nSalvadorl and Tony Maggs of\nBritain, whose Aston - Martin\nconked out to end British hopes.\nfor control of fires  and urged\nthat all tracks use these.\nHis report on public safety\nand security highlighted the\nclosing session of the five-day\nNASRC meeting which drew\ndelegates from most parts of the\nU.S. and Canada, Puerto Rico,\nJapan and Jamaica. They\ntouched on just about every\nphase of the sport from food\nserved to stablehands to stimulating horses.\nThe ohiel topic ranged around\nthe question of use of a medication known as butazolldin which\nwas described as an anti-inflammatory compound with pain-easing qualities. On Friday, the\ncommissioners outl awed pre-\nrace use of any medication that\ncould affect the speed of a horse\nin a race.\nTlie vote was almost unanimous and dissenters changed\ntheir minds overnight. Tlie subject was brousht up again Saturday and New Hamushire,\nMaine and Rhode Island delegates, who originally voted\nagainst the ban, switched their\nvotes. Vermont, which abstained\nfrom voting en the subject along\nwith Illinois and Louisiana, also\nswitched to a \"yes\" vote.\nIllinois and Lousiana remained on the abstaining list.\nIrving Gushlns, international\nnresident of the Horsemen's\nBenevolent and Protective Association, closed the convention\nwith   aplea to commissioners tn\nwithhold suspension of any trainer on a horse-stimulating or any\nother charge until he was given\na hearing.\nHe said he was \"amazed\" to\nhear lhat laws in some states of\nthe U.S. provide for immediate\nsuspension of any trainer whose\nhorse has been given drugs. He\nsuggested that racing commissioners should \"look into this\nmatter and at least try to have\nthese unfair laws changed.\"\nBy THE  CANADIAN  PRESS\nAmerican League\nChicago\n000 012 000 000 000-3 15   2\nWashington\n200 000 001 000 001-4 11 1\nPlzzaro, Hacker (8) Staley\n(1) Lown (12) Kemmerer (0-2)\n(13) and Carreon; Hobaugh, Staler (6) Burnside (9), Klippstein\n(U-6) Kutyna (4-1) (13) and\nGreen, Daley (121. HRs: Wash-\nTasby (8) Keough (2).\nLos Angeles 000 206 002-10 110\nBoston 000112100-  5 14 0\nMoeller (2-4), Heman (6) Donahue (7) and Sadowski; Monbouquette (5-6), Wills (6) Nidi-\nols (7) Stallard (9) and Pagliaroni. HRs: LA\u2014Wagner 2 (14)\nThomas (5) Hunt (10); Bos-\nPagliaroni (4) Jensen (5).\nCleveland 000 000 000- 0 9 0\nDetroit 000 000 20X- 2 41\nBell (4-5) and Romano; Bunning (5-5); Fischer (9) and\nBrown. HRs: Det\u2014Colavito (16)\nCash (14).\nKansas City 003 000 000- 3 53\nNew York 020 002 Olx - 5 91\nNuxhall (4-2) Kunkel and Pig-\nnatano; Ford (9-2) and Howard.\nHRs; KC\u2014Nuxhall (1) Bauer\n(2); NY-Mantle (17).\nMinnesota 100001001- 3 5 1\nBaltimore 002 200 OOx \u25a0 4 7 1\nPascual (4-7), Lee (7) Stobbs\n(8) and Batley; Brown (6-2),\nWilhelm (8) and Triandos. HR:\nBal\u2014Hansen (6).\nNational League\nMilwaukee      002 140 002 - 9 15 0\nChicago 120 020 000-  512 2\nBurdette, McMahon (2-0) (5)\nand Torre; Hobble (4-7) Brewer\n(5) Anderson (5) and Bertell.\nHRs: Mil-Burdette (2) Boiling\n(7) Maye (6) Matthews (15).\nPittsburgh 000 000 000- 0 5 3\nSan Fran. 000 201 20x - 5 71\nMizell   (4-4),  Labine  (7)   and\nOldis\nalley.\nCincinnati\nSt. Louis\nJay    (7.\nSchmidt;\nMcCormick    (6-8)    and\n000 021010- 4 90\n000 001001- 2 7 2\nI), Henry (8) and\nSimmons (2-5) and\nSohaffer. HR: Cin-Post (5).\nPhila. 010 200 100- 4 71\nLos Angeles 000101102- 5 70\nRoberts, Ferrarese (7) Buz-\nhardt (2-8) (9) and Dalrymple;\nPodres, Farrell (6) L. Sherry\n(2-2) (8) and Roseboro. HRs:\nPha\u2014Del Greco (1), LA-Moon\n2 (13) Spencer (6).\nPacific Coast League\nHonolulu 11-7 Spokane 2-8\nSeattle 4 San Diego 2\nVancouver 7 Tacoma 2\nSalt Lake at Portland ppd.\nwas able to drop the young Italian during Hie, 15 rounds, although he out him around both\neyes and bloodied his nose.\nMoore weighed 174V4, Rinaldi\n173%.\nThis was not one of the better\nfights by Moore, who says he is\n44 although his mother claims\nhe is 47. Slow to get started\nwhile he let the 20-year-old Italian show what he had, the-old\nman closed strong and won going away.\nReferee Ruby Goldstein, who\ntried to get the fighters to step\nup the pace when action sagged\nin the middle rounds, scored it\n11-3-1 for Moore, Judge Artie\nAidala had it 11 \u25a0 4 and judge\nTony CaBtellano 9-5-1. The Associated Press card had it 11-3-1\nfor Moore.\nAge and the ordeal of paring\ndown from 201 pounds to make\nthe 175-pound limit appeared to\nhave taken some of the zip from\nArchie.\nBut Rinaldi, who beat Moore\nin a non-title bout in Rome last\nOct. 29, never was in it after the\nfirst few rounds. He was strong\nand took a good punch but was\nARCHIE MOORE\ncrude and missed wildly with\nhis looping punches.\nTime after time, the wily\nMoore conned Rinaldi into a\nwild surge, only to run into a\nshort right hand by Moore that\nchopped hard on the side of his\nface.\nRinaldi   was   staggered   as\nearly as the fourth and again in\nthe seventh.\nBEST ROUND\nThe 10th was Moore's biggest\nround as he pegged away with\nboth hands, forcing Rinaldi to\nback off and cover his face with\nboth hands. At the end of the\nround, Rinaldi settled slowly on\nhis stool.\nBut the handsome young man\nfrom Anzio kept punching away\nand landed two heavy blows in\nthe last two round's.\nThis was the ninth defence for\nMoore, whose reign since 1952\nIs the longest of any light-heavy\nchamp. Archie was stripped of\nhis title by Uie National Boxing\nAssociation last October, but he\nstill Is recognized in New York,\nRussian Masters\nWin Chess Tourney\nZURICH, Switzerland (API-\nRussian grand masters Paul\nKeres and Tigran Petrosjan finished one-two in the six-nation\nchess tournament winding up\nwith the 11th round here Sunday\nnight.\nWilliam Lombardy, 24 - year-\nold grand master from Boston,\nand West Germany's Lothar tied\nfor fourth behind Yugoslavia's\nSvetozar Gligoric.\nMassachusetts,   California   and|\nEurope.\nMoore hadn't defended in al-1\nmost 22 months. His last pre-l\nvious defence was a third-round I\nknockout of Yvon Durelle, th? |\nslugging fisherman from B: i\nSte. Anne, N.B., In Montrc\nAug. 12, 1959.\nRinaldi got $25,000 to Moe.\n$100,000 guarantee from t\n$150,000 television money r\nthe gate.\nIt was the 213th fight on r^\nord for Moore. He has won 18\nlost 25 and fought six draws. Ii I\nwas Rinaldi's 31st bout. His record is 25-6.\nELECTRIC MOTOR\nREWINDING\ne Service      \u2022 Repairs\nAll Size Motor! and\nArmatures Rewound\n1        CALL   US   TODAY\ni Coleman Electric\nLTD.\nPhone 2055 Nelson, B.C.,\nReducing Plan Under\nStudy By NHL Heads\nBy W. R. WHEATI.EY\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nMONTREAL (CPi-The possibility of reducing, perhaps by\none, the maximum number of\nplayers who can be used in a\nNational Hockey League game\nis expected to be studied today\nby the circuit's rules committee.\nThe question has arisen because a survey by NHL president Clarence Campbell shows\nlearns have been getting along\nwith shorthanded squads,\nwhether through injuries or otherwise.\nThere are many instances\nwhere the full manpower available was not utilized.\nFloundering Sox\nMake Major Leap\nAUSSIE WINS\nBARCELONA (AP) - Roy\nEmerson of Australia won lhe\nCount of Godo tennis trophy,\nbeating Manuel Santana of\nSpain 6-4, 6-4, 6-1 Sunday.\nAna M .ria Estalella, Spain,\ndefeated Carmen Hernandez of\nSoain. 4-6, 6-3, 6-3 in the women's singles.\nI\nBALTIMORE (AP) - Tile\nfloundering Ohicago White Sox,\nlooking up at the entire American League, have made the\nfirst major move to rectify the\nsituation by negotiating an eight\nplayer swap with Kansas City.\nTlie White Sox, who straightened out their front-office alignment earlier in the day, hoped\nto settle some on-the-field problems when they acquired pitchers Ray Herbert and Don Larsen, third-baseman Andy Carey\nand outfielder Al Pllarcik Saturday night.\nIn exchange, they gave up\ntwo members of their well-\nwhacked pitching corps \u2014 Bob\nShaw and Gerry Staley \u2014 plus\noutfielders Wes Covington and\nStan Johnson, a young minor\nleaguer with San Diego of the\nPacific Coast League.\nThe deal fills two pressing\nneeds for the last - place White\nSox. and disposes of a third\nproblem. Herbert gets a spot in\nthe Chicago starting rotation\nand Carey likely will take over\nthird base, allowing Al Smith to\nreturn to his normal outfield\npost.\nTlie third problem is Shaw, a\nsturdy right-hander with a topflight record, who fell into disfavor with White Sox brass\nwhen he conducted a stormy\nholdout siege this spring. He has\nwon three and lost four this\nyear.\nCarey may alleviate the White\nSox third base problem, created\nwhen rookie J. C. Martin failed\nto grab the berth and Smith had\nto come in Irom the outfield. A\nsure Slovenian, Carey is batting .244 with three home runs\nand 11 runs batted in.\nTlie 81-year-old Herbert blossomed into a standout last year\nwith the Athletics, compiling a\n14-15 record and a 3.27 earned\nrun average fcr the last - place\nclub. He has been ineffective\nthis season.\nLarsen, 31, pitched hims-lf\ninto the record books in' 1956\nwhen he hurled the only perfect\ngame in World Scries history for\nthe Yankees against the then\nBrooklyn Dodgers. He has gone\ndownhill since.\nThis year, lie has been used\nmainly as a pinch hitter and\nhas a .300 batting average.\nCovington, just acquired from\nthe Braves, had his best year in\n1958 for pennant - winning Milwaukee by hitting .330 ond\nsmashing 24 homers while driving in 74 runs. He has been\nplagued by a wobbly knee but\nis hitting .288.\nStaley, 40-year-old onetime relief ace for the White Sox, has\nbeen soundly belted this season.\nPilarcik, a much-travelled outfielder, is batting ,233.\nTlie rules committee, whose\nwork opens the three-day annual\nmeeting of the NHL, cannot itself order a reduction of the roster. The club owners will have\nfinal say since this type of rule,\nunlike ordinary playing rules,\naffects club costs and finances.\nOnly minor changes in playing rules are expected to come\nup for consideration.\nClubs currently can dress 17\nplayers,   exclusive   of   goalies,\neach game. Up to Dec. 1 of each\nseason, they can dress 18.\nSHORTAGES NORMAL\nCampbell's survey shows that\nin last season's 210 games, the\nshorthanded average for\nteams was more than one man a\ngame.\nPresumably injuries were\nlargely responsible. But tlie fact\nremains that teams seemed willing to play not only with\nreduced rosters, but with players in uniform remaining on the\nbench at the same time.\nThe question now has arisen\nwhether there is a waste of\nmanpower, assuming players on\nNHL rosters are better than\u2014or\nequally as good as \u2014 minor\nleague players.\nThe one snag in a possible reduction of rosters to 16 is the\nprotected list. Each club can\nnrotect 18 players in addition to\ntwo goalies, trom the draft.\nThese players cannot be\nloaned. Unless the protected list\nwere reduced, a club would be\nfaced with the problem of what\nto do with extra men.\nIn addition to the roster situation, the league owners are expected to cpnsider whether\ntilery should be stricter enforcement of present Ailes.\nAbout 175 hockey men from\nCanada and the United States\nare expected for the three-day\nmeetings. Among them will be\nrepresentatives of minor pro\ncircuits and of the Oanadian\nAmateur Hockey Association.\nThe NHL and Western Hockey\nLeague relations committees\nwill get together in the evening\nto consider mutual problems.\nAlso in the evening, general\nmanagers of NHL clubs will\nmeet representatives of the Saskatchewan Junior League and a\ndelegation from the maritimes.\nSome junior clubs in Saskatchewan are partly owned locally\nand partly sponsored by NHL\nclubs and these relationships\nwill be discussed.\nINCO DEVELOPS WORLD MARKETS FOR NICKEL\nNuclear power builds world\nmarkets for nickel\nNickel and nickel alloys have properties that are essential to the production of atomic power. Special alloys developed through Inco research\nare used in nuclear power plants to withstand extreme pressures, corrosion and intense heat in pipe lines, pumps, condensers, heat exchangers\nand fuel tanks.\nIn the search for new and better products containing nickel, Inco has\nalways played an active role... developing alloys to fulfill special requirements in industry and the home.. .finding new ways to use existing alloys.\nCanada is the world's largest producer of nickel. And Inco, through\nsales, research and market development operations, maintains a continuing program for the expansion of international markets for Inco nickel.\nMore Inco nickel than ever before will be exported to Inco's expanding world markets... helping to build trade balances, stimulate Canada's\neconomic growth and create more jobs for Canadians.\nTHE\nINTERNATIONAL NICKEL\nCOMPANY OF CANADA, LIMITED\n55 YONBE STREET, TORONTO\nA.\nA\nNUCLEAR POWER IS ON THE WAY\nCanadian scientists and engineers conducted long-term experiments with\nseveral different types of nuclear reactors\nbefore laying plans for Canada's first\natomic power plant now under construction at Chalk River.\nIN THE UNITED STATES\nO-)\nNUCLEAR POWERED MERCHANT SHIP\nThe N. S. Savannah, world's first nuo-\nlear-powered merchant ship, depends\non nickel stainless steel for corrosion\nand heat resistance in its power plant\u2014\nfor beauty, cleanliness and ease of\nmaintenance in galley, hospital, laundry\nand passenger accommodations.\nIN ENGLAND\nWORLD'S FIRST NUCLEAR POWER STATION\nThe world's first large-scale nuclear\npower station went into operation at\nCalder Hall on the Cumberland coast,\nEngland.in 1956.Since that time England\nhas built other atomic power stations.\n mm^mmmWmmmmm^^^^^^^^^^^^^mmmmWmWmmmmmWmmmWm^mmmWmm^^^^^^^^^^m^^^m^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^mm^^m7^^^\n\u25a0 \u25a0\u2022\u25a0.:\u25a0\u25a0'  \u25a0 \u25a0  -\n8\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, JUNE 12, 1961\nModern Indian Learns How\nTo Live in Wilderness\nBy TOM WILLIAMS\nCanadian  Press   Staff   Writer\nKAWENE, Ont. (OP)\u2014Indians\nare being taught the tricks of\nliving in the wilderness at\nwoodland school near this\nNorthwestern Ontario community.\nThe project, which on the surface might seem as necessary\nas teaching a fish to swim, is\nregarded by some authorities\nas vital both for the Indians\nand for the tourist industry.\nThe Quetico Conference and\nTraining Centre, a study retreat\non tlie shore of Eva Lake 120\nmiles west of the Lakelhead,\nheld its first training course for\nguides this spring.\nTlie objectives were to provide training\u2014and thus help establish high standards for the\nguiding trade\u2014and to provide a\nmeans of improving earning\npower for some of the area's\nIndian population.\nOfficials said the reaction of\nguides and tourist business representatives who participated in\nIhe 11-day course was so favorable that it likely will become\nan annual affair.\nMANY LACK KNOWLEDGE\nTwenty - five men, all employed in tlie outfitting or tourist guiding business and all but\ntwo of them Indians, took part.\nThey received instruction in aspects of bush life ranging from\nhygienic cooking to moose and\nduck calling, from map reading\nto tourist relations.\nH. E. Thomas, representative\nof die community programs\nj branch of the Ontario education\ndepartment, one of 11 agencies\nand organizations sponsoring\nthe course, said:\n\"Indians, through their upbringing, are generally suited to\ndo an excellent job of guiding.\nBut surprisingly, they lack\nknowledge of such basic things\nas ordinary camp practices,\nmap reading and using a compass.\n\"You might wonder why an\nIndian who knows the woods\naround his home like the back\nol his hand would have to bother\nwith maps and cmpasses\u2014and\nsome of them asked about this.\n\"Tlie answer is that a good\nguide should be able to take a\nparty anywhere \u2014 even into\ncountry he has never seen before. The delegates all saw the\nsense of this and they really\nworked at learning.\"\nCHANCE TO EARN\nOn the economic aspects of\nIhe  course, Mr. Thomas  said:\n\"It's a hard fact that no\nmatter how much we do to integrate the Indian into our society and to show them how to\nbe good citizens, it's useless un-\nPE1LET FIRING\nIUGER\nAUTOMATIC\n\u2022 NkGUiNELDK.INGCUP\n\u2022 OVER IS MOVING PARIS\n\u2022 rum AUloMMic\n_Ut.rrrr.t_ Irrll rUc intitlrl\nof   r>   Luiri.   ..til.iirr.ur\nrriilol\u2014contains   over   ...   .\nLoirrU   8   coli.irlflo\nless they  have  the  means   to\neconomic stability.\n\"With tile increase in travel\nand tourism, there's a real opportunity for them to play an\nimportant part in the service industry. In fact, with the proper\ntraining, there's no reason why\nthey shouldn't operate their own\ntourist    outfitting    businesses\nRuss Larsen of Fort Frances,\nan authority on Northwest Ontario tourist business and publisher of an outdoors magazine,\nsaid the guides are an\nportant factor in tourist business and good ones are hard to\nfind.\n\"An American tourist will\ncome back to a particular outfitter year after year because\nhe knows a particular guide will\ntake him where the fish are\nlikely to be biting, or where the\ngame is. A poor guide will have\nthe opposite effect, driving business away.\"\nNEED  SET   OF   STANDARDS\nHe said the number of non-\nIndians in the guiding trade is\nsteadily diminishing, offering an\nexcellet opportunity for Indians\nto  step i.\nOne problem, Mr. Thomas\nsaid, is that there is no recognized standard for guides.\n\"We're hoping the Ontario\ngovernment will establish a\nstandard for guides and have\nsome form of testing. And we\nhope this course will help set\nan example of what qualifications a guide should have.\"\nThe course involved demonstration by experts and practice\nunder supervision. The demonstrations had their lighter moments. During a practice session on preparing a meal on the\ntrail, most of the Indian guides\nused prepared and packaged\nbiscuit mixes to make bannock,\nthe traditional unleavened bread\nof the woods.\n'nto tiro linid 1\nrnrlnt\nVi'mii.,'_.\u00bbi-..ir.i-ii.!tr. ii\"a:\"'\">\">\"\" -l1;';-\nnr-tton Madaol htjnvy.hlah-lmpictttyrennw'tti\n.m.,lr,o \u2022tUnll.n to MM. MOST AUTHENTIC MODEL GUN WE'VE EVER SEEN.\nConic lo yon .- rUr .v.rkrn.l.irtrtr, rirsassorrr'rlr J \u00bbi',H\nrrrlv\ntr-l.-.l-;\n_r, full tr\nMono.   Bank Gt.ar.nl,..   StiWito ral   \u00ab-\u00bb\u00bb\nliUi!, 27c sl'ii'i'ii\" i lnii\"' ur order CO.P.   I >\"\"'\u25a0\nNtW YORK IMPORTS DeptBN 12E\u00bb*nsvil!W<0nt-\n'500' STRATEGY\u2014The world's\ndriving champion, Jack\nBrabham (left) of Australia,\ntalks over the performance of\nthe Cooper Climax with the\ncar owner, John Cooper, of\nEngland, at the Indianapolis\nSpeedway. In a practice session, Brabham did 143.7 miles\nper hour in the car.\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\nPACIFIC DAYLIGHT TIME\nKREM-TV - Channel 2\n5:30 .tin Tin Tin *\n6:00 Yogi Bear Show\n6:30 Newsbeat\n7:00 Lock Up\n7:30 Cheyenne *\n8:30 Sunfside Six *\n9:30 Adventures In Paradise\n10:30 Peter Gunn \u00bb\n11:00 Nightbeat\n11:15 Movie\nKXLY-TV \u2014 Channel 4\n8:25 Farm Report\n8:30 Ding Dong School\n9:00 I Love Lucy *\n9:30 Video Village *\nlfl:00 Double Exposure *\n10:30 Surprise Package *\n11:00 Love of Life \u00bb\n11:30 Search For Tomorrow\n11:45 Guiding Light\n12:00 Susie\n12:30 As The World Turns *\n1:00 Take 4\n1:15 Song Shop\n1:30 Houseparty *\n2:00 Millionaire *\n2:30 Verdict Is Yours *\n3:00 Brighter Day *\n3:15 Secret Storm *\n3:30 Edge of Night *\n4:00 Movie at 4\n5:30 Abbott and Costello\n6:0(1 6 O'Clock News\n6:15 Doug Edwards *\n6:30 Our Miss Brooks\n7:00 Assignment Under water\n7:30 To Tell Tlie Truth *\n8:00 Pete and Gladys *\n8:30 Bringing Up Buddy *\n9:00 Danny Thomas *\n9:30 Andy Griffith *\n10:00 Hennessey *\n10:30 June Allyson *\n11:00 1.1 O'Clock News\n11:15 Jack Paar *\nKHQ-TV - Channel 6\n7:00 Two Faces West\n7:30 The Americans *\n8:30 Talcs of Wells Fargo '\n9:00 Whispering Smith *\n9:30 Concentration * (C)\n10:00 Barbara Stanwyck *\n10:30 News and Weather\n10:45 Late Movie\n\"Happy Land\"\nCBC-TV \u2014 Nelson, Channel 9; Trail, Channel 11\nJack:\n\"If you are having trouble financing your premiums for\ninsurance why don't you call ROBERTSON-HILLIARD. I\nfound them real helpful.\"\nJim.\n2:00 Ohez Helene\n2: IS Nursery School Time\n2:30 Open House\n3:00 Reflections\n3:30 The Verdict Is Yours\n4:15 News (Toronto)\n4:30 Friendly Giant\n4:45 Junior Round-Up\n5:30 Quick Draw McGraw\n6:00 Bazaar\n7:30 Don Messer's Show\n8:00 Danny Thomas Show\n8:30 Music Makers\n9:00 Flintstones\n9:30 Festival '61\n11:00 News (Toronto)\n11:16 Viewpoint\nSAFETY AGAINST SLEEP\u2014Truck driver Robert Caldwell demonstrates a new electronic device (arrow) in Chicago that\nautomatically applies brakes if driver falls asleep at the\nwheel. It's the Driv-A-Lert, made in Dayton, O., and it\nsqueals loudly whenever normal steering corrections are not\nmade. It'll be around ?75 for passenger cars, ?250 for trucks.\nON THE AIR\nCKLN  PROGRAMS 1390 ON  THE  DIAL\nPACIFIC DAYLIGHT TIME\nMONDAY, JUNE 12,  1961\n5:59-Sign On\n12:15\u2014Sports News\n6:00-News\n12:25\u2014News\n6:05\u2014Farm  Fare\n12:31\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n6:15\u2014Wake Up Time\n12:54\u2014News\n6:30\u2014News\n1:00\u2014John Drainie Tells a Story\n6:35\u2014Wake Up Time\n1:15\u2014Noon Markets\n6:45\u2014Chapel in tlie Sky\n1:20\u2014Music Matinee\n7:00\u2014News\n2:00\u2014News-In-A-Minute\n7:05\u2014Wake Up Time\n2:01\u2014Music Matinee\n7:25\u2014Sports News\n2:30\u2014Trans Canada Matinee\n(.30\u2014News\n3:31\u2014Songs by Eleanor Collins\n7:35\u2014Wake Up Tune\n3:45\u2014Blain and Kay\n8:00\u2014News\n4:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n4:05-The Pop Hour\n8:15\u2014Wake Up Time\n5:00\u2014News\n8:30\u2014Opening Markets\n5:05-The Highway Patrol\n8:35-Wake-Up Time\n6:00\u2014News\n8:45\u2014Tlie Archers\n6:10\u2014Sports News\n9:00\u2014News\n6:15\u2014Rawhide\n9:05\u2014Morning Devotions\n6:30\u2014Vancouver Theatre\n9:15\u2014Alan's A.M. Spot\n7:00\u2014News\n9:59-D.O.O.T.S.\n7:30\u2014The Goon Show\n10:00\u2014News\n8:00\u2014Songs of My People\n10:05\u2014The Three Suns\n8:30\u2014Summer Fallow\n10:15\u2014Pacific Express\n9:00\u2014Choral Concert\n10:45\u2014Woman's World\n9:30\u2014Little Symphonies\n1:00\u2014News\n10:00\u2014News\n11:05\u2014Moments in Music\n10:10\u2014Snorts and Weather\n11:1-5\u2014Jane Gray Show\n10:15\u2014Tales of the Kootenays\n11:20\u2014Story Parade Time\n10:30\u2014Points East, Points West\nBirthday Book\n11:00\u2014News\n1:30\u2014Sacred Heart Program\n11:01\u2014Ohapel in the Sky\n11:45\u2014Swift Monev Man\n11:16\u2014Sign Off\n12:00\u2014Let's Sing Along\n6:00\u2014Sharp at Six\n9:00-BBC News\n9:15\u2014Morning Concert\n9:59\u2014D.O.O.T.S.\n10:00\u2014Morning Visit\n10:10\u2014For Consumers\n10^15\u2014Pacific Express\n10:45\u2014Kapitans Fortune\n11:00\u2014Stories and Rhymes\n11:15\u2014Off the Record\n12:00\u2014Trav-llin' Balladeer\n12:15\u2014Nws\n12:25\u2014Showcase\n12:30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Five To One\n100\u2014John Drainie Tells a Story\n1:15\u2014Tommy Hunter Show\n1:45\u2014Program Resume\n2:00\u2014Two O'Cloc kSpecial\nCBC PROGRAMS\nPACIFIC DAYLIGHT TIME\nTUESDAY, JUNE 13,  1961\n2:30\u2014Trans Canada Matinee\n3:31\u2014The Common Touch\n3:45\u2014Latin Quarter\n4:00\u2014Here Come the Clowns\n4:30\u2014Tempo\n6:10\u2014Music\n6:15\u2014Rawhide\n6:30\u2014Critics At Large\n7:00\u2014News\n7:30\u2014Festival Award Choirs\n8:00\u2014Business Barometer\n8:30\u2014CBC Vancouver Chamber\nOrchestra\n9:30\u2014Leicester Square\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014In Reply\n10:30\u2014Distinguished Artists\n11:00\u2014The Liveliest Art\n11:57\u2014News\nDAILY   CROSSWORD\n(Programs subject to change by stations without notice.)\n5. Senate    -\nvote\n6. Minute\nreproductive body\n(bot.)\n7. Torrid\n8. Region\n9. Alluvial\ndeposit\nM. English\ncounty\n14.\"  Dick\"\n16. Stepped on\n19. Pudding\nstarch\n20. Unrolls\n21. Affected\nwith\nopium\n25. Flourished\n27. Noah's\nson\n28. Dancer\nDuncan\n29. Old\nFaith-\nful\nand\nothers\n31. Anoint\n32. Gleam\n33. Passageway\n36. Political\ngroup\n3-7. Not\nthis\nI_|P|l|NIIC|RTu]S\nT F L IFIG\\Q fejp W\nOHIO   HS   _9B_.\nE1DH   B1I..B5B   HH\nESS  BHUlllU  an\nui. Mi.Mor.;..\nBHDIBS   BHISBB\n-JH'aim...- aw\n(111   1 .HUSO   BSE\niaB rai-iaa onii\naBB ma ansa\nSaturday's Answer\n41. Canadian\nprovince\n(abbr.)\n42. Exclamation\n43. Morsel\n45. Yes, in\nLima\nACROSS\n1. Part of\nIran\n6. Nuance\n11. Grinding\nmedium\n12. Skin\nopenings\n13. Sand dune\n(G.B.)\n14. Motorists'\ngoals\n15. At home\n16. Craggy\nhill\n17. Consumed\n18. Engrossed\n22. Tool\n23. Tea table\n24. King of\nBashan\n26. Bordered\n27. Twig\n30. Ahead\n31. Cheddar\n32.Music not.\n34. Indianapo__)\n36. Ignited\n38. Fortify\n39. Dysprosium\n(abbr.)\n40. On land\n42. Hautboy\n44. Tilt\n45. Bake, as\neggs\n46. Hester's\nnickname\n47. Small\nquantities\nDOWN\n1. Interpose\n2. Corrected\n3. Lair\n4. Anger\nDAILY CRYPTOQTJOXE \u2014 Here's how to wo.k it:\n'.    .    AX YDLBAAXB\nIs)   LONGFELLOW'\n' One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is need\nfor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Stogie letters, apos^\ntrophies, the length and formation of the words are all hints.\nEach day the code letters' are different\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nMY  YMZ  OEM  SZ  UZQIZONV.1\nIQZZ  N G V V  EYV  E(JZ  IQZZ \u2014\nE I1UOZ Q,\nSaturday'B Cryptoquote: THE FASHION OF THB WORED\nPASSETH AWAY\u2014CORINTHIANS.\n<Si 1851. King Features Syndicate, Inc)\n1\n2\n3\n4\n5\nt\n\u00a3>\n7\n8\n9\nIO\nII\n'Y\/\nYA\n12\n13\n%\n\\s\nIS\n%\nV\/A\nIb\nV\/A\nn\n18\n19\n20\n21\n%\n22\n23\n%\n24\nIS\n'^\n%\n-t.\n%\n27\n28\n29\n'^A\n^A\n30\n%\n31\n32\n33\nn\n34-\n35\n3b\n37\n%\n38\n%\n%\n39\n4_\n<V\\\nYA\n42\n4-3\n44\n45\n4*\nfa\n17\nCLAIMS WORLD RECORD\nSINGAPORE (API - Cyclist\nR. Mufihukumaran, 23. completed 122 hours nonstop cycling\nhere today and claimed a world\nrecord. The former milk vendor\nfrom India topped the 120 hours\nset by a Swiss cyclist in Rome\n10 years ago.\nFAMILY  SENTENCED\nBERLIN (API\u2014A family I\nthree has been sentenced to a\ntotal of 23 years imprisonment\nfor espionage in East Germany.\na private Western intelligence\nagency reported today, Information Bureau West said tlie\nRostock district court convicted\nKarl Walters, 60, his wife, Anne-\nliese, '40, and Monika Aschmann\n18, Mrs. Walter's daughter by a\nprevious marriage.\nyisLodkcJioJIL\n<By. cZmuul GJJi&skfi\nNEWEST NOVELTY\nRickrack magic! Combine red,\ngreen, yellow for the plumage\nof these Finejfathered friends.\nNewest, novelty! Bright rick -\nrack makes a gay decoration for\naprons\u2014applique and a touch o-l\nembroidery. Pattern 584, transfer motifs, directions.\nSend THIRTK-nVE CENTS\ntn coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern to Laura\nWheeler, NDN., 60 Front St., w..\nToronto. Print plainly PATTERN\nNUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS.\nJUST OFF THE PRESS! Send\nnow for our exciting, new 1961\nNeedlecraft Catalog. Over 125\ndesigns to crochet, knit, sew.\nembroider, quilt, weave\u2014.ash-\nions, home furnishings, toy gifts,\nbazaar hits. Plus FREE \u2014 instructions for six smart veil\ncaps. Hurry. Send 25c now!\nPrinted Pattern\nJIFFY CUT\nJIFFY - CUT Bonanza-place\npattern on fabric and cut out each\nentire blouse at one time! Fash-\nion's smartest tops\u2014team them\nwith skirts 'n' play pants.\nPrinted Pattern 9261: Misses'\nsizes 12, 14, 16, 18, 20. Size 16\ntcp style IV. yards 35-mch; middle 1'\/., lower Wi. Jiffy cut.\nSend FIFTY CENTS (50c I ill\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern. Please prim\nplainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS\nand STYT.E NUMBER.\nSend your oraei to MARIAN\nMARTIN,. NDN, 60 Front St. W\u201e\nToronto.\n100 FASHION FINDS\u2014the best,\nnewest, most beautiful Printed\nPatterns for Spring - Summer.\n1961. See them all in our brand-\nnew Color Catalog. Send 35c nowl\n*\u2022'\n ^ r\n\u00abiPk '\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nHiA\nSMALL INVESTMENT   -\nLARGE RETURNS\nThat's the Want Ad Story - PHONE   1844\nYOU CAN NOW PHONE YOUR CLASSIFIED  ADS IN UNTIL 5 P.M. ON SATURDAY.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\nHELP WANTED\nSELL RAWLElGH\nPRODUCTS\nThere are now a few special opportunities to sell llawleigh's famous line of necessities either full\nor part time in localities where\nthey have been sold for nearly 50\nyears. For details of our plan,\nwrite to W. T. Rawleigh Co. Ltd.,\n589 Henry Ave., Dept. CC-153,\n. Winnipeg, Man.\t\nHELP WANTED\u2014FEMALE\nHOUSEWIVES\nTo work from your own homes\nwork 3 hours a day for telephone soliciting must have a\npleasant voice and be able to\nhold a good telephone conversation. Salary plus bonus. Apply\ngiving name, age, and telephone\nnumber to Box 191, Daily News.\nNATIONAL FINANCE ORGANI-\nzation requires experienced\nsecretary-stenographer for Nelson office. Good shorthand abso-\nployee benefits. Salary commensurate with experience\nPhone 2341 for appointment.\nWANT'Eb - WOMAN TO TAKE\nfull charge of a motherless\nhome. One boy, 11 years. Write\nBox 988, Rossland. JUI.\nNOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN\nthat all persons having claims\nagainst Margaret Evelyn Barnett, |\nlate of Boise, Idaho, who died |\nthereat on the 16th day of December, I960, are required to file\nparticulars thereof with the un-|\n. dersigned solicitors for the admin-1\nultely necessary. Allusual em-| jstrator on or before the 15th day\nof July, 1961, after which date the\nadministrator will proceed to dis-\n| tribute the assets of the said deceased among the persons entitled\nthereto, having regard   only   to\nFAIRVIEW. HERE IS AN Opportunity to buy your own home\nwith only $200 down and monthly payment of $125. Clean, comfortable, convenient 2 br. home.\nCheck further with: William\nKalyniuk Agencies, 534 Josephine Street, Phone 1777.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nLEO BEVINS, CUSTOM TYP-\ning and mimeographing. Neat,\naoourata, fast service. Phone\n1588-X day or night.\t\nSEPTIC TANK CLEANING.\nReasonable, dependable service. Phone 161-L-l.\nFOR YOUR CITY HAULING\nneeds call 1770 Speedway Deliv-\neries for fast service.\t\nWINDOWS AND SlTORM WIN-\ndows cleaned. Dutch Cleaning\nService. Ph. 2190.      \t\nFOR ALttRATtb.) DRESSES\nor pants. 524 Carbonate.\nBUSINESS\nOPPORTUNITIES\nSMALL TOWN GROCERY AND\nVariety Store. Attractive modern equipment, clean stock approximately $20,000. Turnover\nclose to $100,000 annually. Some\npayroll from large industry.\nOpportunity for family operation. Rossland Realty, Rossland\nthe claims which shall then have\nbeen filed as above required.\nDATED   at   Nelson, B.C. this\n7th day of June, 1961.\nGARLAND. GANSNER\nIs ARUDGE\nP.O. Box 490, Nelson, B.C.\nSolicitors for the Administrator.\ni STORE OR OFFICE FOR RENT.\nApproximately 500 sq. ft. on\nStanley near Baker St. Will\nrenovate to suit tenant. Vacant\nsoon. Apply to A.T.V. Box 236,\nDaily News.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES\nBAY MARE AND 3-WK. COLT,\n2-yr.-old Gelding, black, 1-yr.-\nold Pinto-filly, 2, 4-yr. old Shetland geldings. Earle Cutler,\nNelson. Phone 2325.  , fc.\n2 MILKING COWS FOR SALE 'SMALL\n1, 1st call, 1, 2nd calf. G. F.\nFOR RENT - PRIVATE CLEAN\n3 rm. lower duplex, gas range\nand heater. Partly furnished.\nSuitable for quiet couple. Call\n515-A Hall St.\nSMALL FURN. STE. ON Victoria Street. Suitable for 1 or 2\nworking girls. Fridge and automatic heat. Private entrance.\nPh. 51.\nMarkin, by Oastlegar Ferry.\nWEANER PIGS FOR SALE $12.50\neach. See A.\nSiding.\nTownsend, Park\nWEANER\nNewdan\n6-2435.\nPIGS\nFarm,\nFOR   SALE.\nCreston,   EL\nGOOD COW FOR SALE, FRESH\n7  weeks  ago.  Wm.  Hoolaeff,\nPass Creek.\t\nFRESH   COW   FOR   SALE -\n, B. Chernenkoff, Crescent Valley\nBUSINESS   &   PROFESSIONAL\nDIRECTORY\nA handy alphabetical guide to-goods and services\n\u25a0 available in Nelson.\nAIR CONDITIONED\nHOUSEKEEPING AND SLEEP-\ning   room,   weekly,   monthly\nrates.   Dishes,  linen  supplied,\nparking. Allen Hotel, 171 Baker.\nBEDROOM\n1 BEDROOM HOUSE,\nunfurn. North Shore 2,_ miles\nfrom bridge. Rent $40 per mo.\nPhone 156 days, 575-Y eves.\n3-ROOM MODERN APT'. SELF-\ncontained, unfurnished central.\nGas range, heat and hot water.\nAdults. Ph. 2106-L.\nDELUXE GROUND FLOOR\napt. 1 bedroom, outside entrance, electric range, fridge.\nPhone 542-R.\nOFFICES TO RENT JOHNS-\ntone Block, up to 1,400 sq. ft. or\nsmaller to suit tenant. T. D.\nRosling and Son, Ltd. 717.\nJULY 1 - SPACIOUS APT. CEN\ntral, heated, electric range, 2\nrms. and bath. Ph. 1351-X after\n6 p.m.    \t\nFOR RENT-QUIET, CENTRAL,\ncheerful apartment. Adults\nonly. Ph. 1233 or 1604-R.\nTldW~\nFOR SALE\n MISCELLANEOUS\nNORM'S NEW SPORTS SHOP\nDiver's Supplies \u2014 Aqua Lung\nAir Filling Station\nWeatherby and Browning Rifles\nReloading Supplies\nEverything For the Sportsman\n300 Baker St. - Phone 2397\nSIDES CHOICE GRADE A\nlight beef, 45c lb, sides heavy\nbeef, 250 lb. average, 37c lb.;\nsides pork 30c lb. Cut, wrapped,\nfrozen. Delivery by Nelson-\nCreston Transfer. Whitiord's\nMeat Plant. El 6-2556.\nLEAN GRAIN FED PORK FOR\nsale. Side 29s a lb. cut, wrapped\nquick frozen 32s a lb. delivery\nNelson-Creston Transfer. New-\ndan Farm, Creston. Phone\nEL 6-2435.\nPEDESTAL FAN WITH HALF-\nhorse power G.E. motor can be\nraised from four feet to eight\nfeet. Suitable for store or cafe.\nGood as new. $60. Box 43, Daily\nNews.\n25 k7v\\\\ INTERNATIONAL-\nPalrner Diesel Electric Light\nPlant, used 5000 hours, complete $2500. Apply Starlight\nDrive In or phone 1655-R-4.\nAUTOMOTIVE,   BICYCLES\nMOTORCYCLES\nATTENTION HONEYMOONERS.\nBuy this one-bedroom house\nnow that you will love. Built on\nthe rear of 3 lots. 75' x 120'.\nLater build yourself your dream\nhome on the front ahd keep the\nSresent one for revenue. Wil-\nam Kalyniuk Agencies, phone\n1777.\t\nFOR SALE: 3 BEDROOM\nhouse, iVs lots. Good location,\nSlooan, B.C. Contact S. Anderson, Golden, B.C.\nFOR SALE' - LEVEL BLDG.\nlets. Call at 2006 Stanley Street\nafter 6 p.m.\nLARGE LOTS IN UPPER FAIR-\nview. Lovely view, good terms.\nPh. 1272-L.\nROOM AND  BOARD\nVACANCY FOR YOUNG GENT,\nleman. Phone Mrs. Truscott,\n1179-X.\nTRAILERS\nCOTTONWOOD WRECKAGE\nService - Repairs done, English and Canadian used car\nparts. '51 A-40, '58 Studebaker, '49 Pontiac, '55 Chev.\nmotor. Phone 2100, Box 382, 24\nYmir Road, Nelson.\n1957 PLYMOUTH SPORTS SUB\nburban station wagon, V8 automatic, power brakes, tinted\nglass, windshield washers, winterized. \u25a0 K. Vierke, Box 1100\nCastlegar.\nLANDROVERS, THE LOW COST,\nmost dependable in 4-wheel\ndrive. For demonstration (days\nand eves.) call Balfour 668, Nelson 1030. Ask for Geoff.\n'56 DODGE, AUTOMATIC PUSH-\nbutton, 4-door, new ring, new\ntrans, a clean car, radio, heater, one owner. Priced to sell\nquick. Phone 237 days.\nRA LYN MOBILE HOME SALES.\nRollohome, Safeway, Shasta.\nNew and used, terms and\ntrades. Trail \u2022 Cranbrook \u2022 Nakusp,\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, JUNE 12, 196.-9\nN. Zealand  Fears Disaster\nIf Britain Joins Euratom\nBy J.C. GRAHAM\nCanadian Press Correspondent\nAUCKLAND (CP)-New Zealand faces disaster if Britain\ngoes into the European Commoh\nMarket \"with no safeguard : for\nCommonwealth pjroduce. ,'\u2022    ...\n\\ Fearj' iBiatf.:Britaln way be ty-\n(iuca}... to 'enter Jtiie Common.\nIVtyrket without', .iutfieient ptV\ntection for Oornirionweilth; ln>\nterests ar, rising' \u2022 daily here.\nSome New Zealand or'gani-a-\ntlons maint-to that the country\nParis, City of Romance,\nAppeals To All Types\n10 BY 45 NASHUA, LIKE NEW,\nfurnished. Bargain price. Call\nEarl 782-R-l.\n1957 - 35 FT. 2 BDRM. HOUSE\ntrailer. Phone 5728 or Box 81,\nRobson.\nUTILITY TRAILER,  FACTORY\nframe. Box 11, Crescent Valley.\nWANTED TO RENT\nWANTED TO RENT - 2 OR 3\nbedroom furn. house. Phone\n2336.\n1955 PLYMOUTH, LOW MILE-\nage. Will trade for a Vi ton\npickup. Apply Sam Podovelni-\nkoff, Vallican B.C.\n1950 ,4-1 TON MERCURY TRUCK\nUnited Drive\nPlanned by\n15,000 Indians\nSEE OUR SELECTION OF USED\nradios, washers and refrigerators. Jeffery Radio and Appliances.\nCHILDS' COT AND MATTRESS,\n$5. Large adjustable baby crib,\nas new, $23, Phone 1287-Y.\nLAWN CHAIRS, PAINTER'S\nequipment, etc. Ph. 798-L afternoons.\nKNIT \u2022 KING KNITTING MA-\nchine. $80 or nearest offer. Ph.\n189, Salmo.\nAppliances\nNELSON REFRIGERATION\nCommercial Refrigeration Serv.\n205 High St. Phone 1917\nAPPLIANCES\nRepaired and Serviced\nB. McCUAIG Phone 695\nEngineers\nand Surveyors\n(Continued i.\nBAERG & CAMPBELL\n373 Baker \u2014 Nelson \u2014 Phone 118\nBox 653 - Creston \u2014 EL 6-4224\n909 Baker\u2014Cranbrook\u2014JU 6-3622\nAssayers and Mine\nRepresentatives\na S. ELMES, ROSSLAND, B.C.\nAssayer, Chemist, Min. Rep.\nAutomobile Dealers\nBEACON MOTORS LTD.\nPontiac - Buick - Vauxhall\nand GMC Trucks\n701 Baker St.       Phones 578-579\nBILLS' MOTOR-IN  LTD.\n(Studebaker Lark)\n113 Baker St. Phone 1234\nCITY\nDodge\nGranite Rd.\nAUTO  SERVICE   LTD.\nALEX CHEVELDAVE\nB.C. Land Surveyor\u2014Phone 5342\n448 Columbia Av., Castlegar, B.C.\nRAY G. JOHNSON\nB.C. Land Surveyor and Engineer\n1015 Eighth SL   Nelson   Ph. 2309\nGarages\nALLEN MOTOR SERVICE\nCor. 7th at Davies      Phone 1798\nAPT. WITH\nfridge, electric range.\n1587-R or 1912.\niath;\nPhone\n2-BDRM. GROUND FLOOR APT\nFridge, stove, heated. Adults\nPhone 684-Y.\t\nH5USE\nFLORSHEIM FOR MEN, $22.99\nto $27.99. R. Andrew and Company, Nelson.\nGARDEN TRAliTOR WITH IM-\nplements, lawn mower, T.V.\nset. Hank Swedberg, Beasley,\nHEALTH FOOD CENTRE OPEN\nday and evenings. 924 Davies.\nCEMENT MIXERS FOR RENT.\nPh. 171, Shorty's Repair Shop.\nin fair shape.\nStore, R. R. 1,\n1670-R-2.\nQuestion Mark\nNelson. Phone\n'48 MERC. GOOD CONDITION.\nBill Dyck, Notre Dame College.\nWE   PAY   CASH   FOR   GOOD\nused cars. McElroy Motors.\nFOR   SALE   -   .i-TON   FORD\ntruck and '54 Hillman. Ph. 2100.\nG.M.C.  \u00bbA-1\n161-L-l.\nTON TRUCK.  PH.\n1956 DODGE  Vs TON $525.\nBalfour 719.\nW.\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\nFRIDGE,  DINETTE SET AND\ntable saw. Phone 2281.\nFAIR-\nVacant\n3   BEDROOM\nview, for rent or sale.\nJune 16. Ph. 190-Y.\nFOR RENT SINGLE' AND LIGHT\nhouskeeping rooms. $20-$30 per\nmonth or weekly. Ph. 621-R.\nGOOD COAL AND WOOD FUR-\nnace. 125 Chatham. Ph. 1617-L.\n23\" T.V., ONE YEAR OLD, LIKE\nnew. $100. Ph. Balfour 668.\nSTOKER FOR SALE - PHONE\n771-R.\nlix\ncrete\nKELOWNA (CP) -The North\nAmerican Indian Brotherhood,\nrepresenting more than 500\nbands and 15,000 indians oast of\nOliiUiwack and north of the\nYukon border, this week will\nlaunch a united drive in an attempt to improve the lot of re.\nserve indians.\nHenry Castillan, Vancouver j When  the woman\nBy ALAN HARVEY\nCanadian  Press  Staff  Writer\nPARIS (OP) - There isn't,\nthere Isn't\u2014repeat there simply\nisn't\u2014any place like Paris!\nThe broad sweep of the\nCtharnps-Elysees, pleasure boats\non the River Seine, Ihe architectural delights of the Place\ndes Voeges, dinner high up in\nthe Eiffel Tower, lights twittering at dusk in the Place de la\nConcorde where Napoleon paraded his troops and Marie Antoinette went calmly to the guillotine\u2014that's Paris for you.\nThe city is unique. Few fail to\nfeel its charms. To bid farewell\nto Paris, the poet said, Is to die\na little. Novelist Nancy Mi-ford,\nwho lives in an elegant house on\nthe Rue Monsieur, 'Says her\nEnglish visitors are always in\nastonishingly good humor\u2014\nthey're happy just to be in\nParis.\nCITY OF ROMANCE\nParis is like this:\nA man and woman, complete\nstrangers, sit at nearby tables\nin a tiny restaurant on the\nAvenue Montaigne. They order\nChateaubriand steaks, one rare,\none medium. The waiter mixes\nthe orders and the woman,\nshyly, suggests ap exchange of\nplates.\nThe man, putting down his paper, gruffly agrees. After a moment of constraint the two exchange a few polite comments,\nfinishes her\nregrette rien,\" with a gusto that\nleaves you almost not regretting Edith Piaf.\nPARIS IS LUCE THAT\nDiners watching from an overhead balcony, getting into the\nspirit of things, stop eating long\nenough to join in the song. Soon\none voice detaahes itself from\nthe rest\u2014a dear, high contralto\nof unmistakable quality.\nA spotlight traces the source\nof the soaring melody, a little\nold lady sitting alone at a small\ntable. She smiles timidly. A sentimentalist at another table\nstands up and bows toward her,\nconvinced ehe is a star of the\npast reliving old glories.\nSoon the little old lady gets\nup to go, dabbing at her eyes.\nThe sentimentalist wants to offer her 10 francs, but his wife\nsharply reminds him that 10\nfrancs equals five dozen eggs.\nParis Is like that. Or is it just\na visitor's sympathetic imagination, predisposed to find enchantment?\nlawyer and long-time champion\nof B. C. Indians, said here Friday the brotherhood will send\na detailed brief to all provincial members of Parliament,\nall members of the legislature\nand all municipal authorities.\nIt will be \"the most comprehensive in respect to provincial\nmatters ever presented by an\nIndian association in Canada,\"\nhe said in an interview.\ncarafe of wine, the man offers\nher seme from his bottle.\nConversation flourishes. On\nleaving, the two exchange cards.\n\"Above all,\" says the woman,\n\"don't call on Thursdays, that's\nmy mother's night to visit.\"\nParis Is like this:-\nThe lights are dim In a big\nbrasserie on the Boulevard\nMontmsrtre. A James Dean type\nsings Edith Piaf's \"No. je ne\nNews Briefs\nGETS TOP ROLE\nROME (AP) \u2014 Seven noted\nand experienced actors were\nscreen tested for the role of\nJesus In Italian producer Dino\nde Laurentis' $10,000,000 film\nBarabbas. But the part finally\nwent to a sound engineer working on the picture, Roy Magano\n28, a brother of film star Sil-\nvano Mangano, who plans the\nfeminine lead in the picture.\nLOST HIS CAT\nBEVERLY HILLS, Calif.\n'API\u2014Jose Iturbi today filed a\n$40,000 damage suit against\nGregory Smith, 15, a neighbor,\nfor allegedly shooting the pianist's cat, his pet for nine years.\nfaces the gravest challenge to\nits prosperity ever presented.\nSuggestions are appearing in\nthe press that Prime Ministe.\nKeith Holyoake should take a\ntop-level delegation to Europe to\npresent the New Zealand case\nat first hand.\nFarming organizations olaim\nlhat New Zealand would suffer\neven more severely than Australia or Canada if Commonwealth preferences were abandoned.\nBritain is almost the only\nlarge free market for butter and\nmeat, and guaranteed free access to Britain for these products is vital to New Zealand's\neconomy.\nSAFEGUARDS NEEDED\nHolyoake has said that New\nZealand does not oppose outright Britain joining the six-nation Common Maritet formed by\nGermany, France, Italy and the\nBenelux countries. New Zealand's attitude depends entirely\non conditions and compensatory\narrangements.\nBut he coftans farming\nspokesmen's claims that it\nwould be a disaster If Britain\njoined the Common Market\nwithout safeguards for New Zealand produce.\nHolyoake says representation!\nare being continuously made to\nBritain, insisting that New Zealand interests must be safeguarded.\nC. W. Burnard, leading\nspokesman for the dairy industry, warned a farmers' conference of \"ominous news\" of\nthe closer British approach to\nthe Common Market. New Zealand's whole fanning pattern\nhad been developed to suit British needs, he said, and it would\nbe idle to pretend that other\nmarkets could be found.\nJ. D. Ormond, chairman of\nthe meat producers' board, has\nsuggested New Zealand should\nseek compensation from the\nUnited States for American\nsponsoring of the Common Market. The United States, Ormond\nsays, has persuaded Britain to\njoin West Germany and France\nin building a great buffer state\nagainst communism.\nThe United States could easily\nprovide the compensatory opportunities necessary to New\nZealand.\nPHONE 871\nPIANO FOR SALE,\nevenings.\nPHONE 584\nMACHINERY\n3 RM. MODERN APT. CLEAN,\nself-contained,   heat  and   hot\nwater. Apply 423 Silica.\t\nSMALL   MAIN   FLOOR 2 RM.\napt. furn., frldige, parking. Ph.\nF^N. APT. WORKING GIRLS' ATTENTION\npreferred. Reasonable.   Phone\n1633-X.\n3 BEDROOM UNFURNISHED\nlakeside home. 3 miles Irom\nbridge. Phone 773-R-3.\n|4-ROOM   HOUSE   AT   WILLOW\nPoint. Phone 782-X-l.\nInvestments and\nSavings\nEVANS INVESTMENTS\nStocks - Bonds \u2022 Mutual Funds\nSUITE   FOR\n2199-L.\nRENT.   PHONE\nDeSoto Sales &. Service! FaTfe.ex^errtce'and Quotati\nPhone 447\nRENAULT SALES & SERVICE\nat Frank's Auto\nPhone 2195 295 Baker St.\nNORTH SHORE SERVICE\n(Standard Triumph I\nAcross Lake Phone 1841\nions\n1460 Bay Ave.    364 Baker Street\nTrail, B.C. Nelson, B.C.\n2378 - 3104 - Phones - 2398\n3 ROOM APARTMENT. UNFUR-\n_ nished._Pi.one 2327.\t\nFOR   RENT   HOUSEKEEPING\nroom. Phone 892-R.\nONE  CLEAN  FURN.  3 ROOM\nsuite. Phone 2147-L evenings.\nHTD\u201e 2-BDRM. APT. FRIDGE,\nelec. range. Phone 938-L.\nPARKVIEW MOTORS LTD.\n(Rambler \u2022 Volkswagen)\n\u00bb23 Nelson Ave. Phone 1454\nSTAR  AUTO SERVICE  LTD.\nMorris, M-G Cars, Wolsely\nBorgward Sales and Service\nYmri Rd. Phone 1648\nBeauty Shops\nTHELMA'S BEAUTY SHOPPE\nS77 Baker SL Phone 244\nBuilding Supplies\nBEE BUILDING SUPPLY LTD.\n801 Baker St. Phone 1704\nInvisible Mending\n13 RM. SUITE AND BATH, FURN.\n|    fridge, laundry rm. Ph. 385.\nNELSON INVISIBLE MENDERS\n712 Josephine St.    Phone 275-X.\nFURN.   2-RM.   SUITE.   APPLY\n140 Baker St. or phone 491-X.\nU N F URNISHED\nbdrm. apt, heat.\nMODERN\nPhone 2075.\nLandscaping\nLARRY'S BLACK LOAM\nTOPSOIL - Phone 171\nPainting\nand Decorating\nPainting and Paper Hanging\nL. Wynne \u2014 516 Houston St.\nSaWs Sharperfed\nBURNS I\/UMBER CO. LTD.\n\u00ab02 Baker St. Phone 1180\nCOLUMBIA TRADING CO.\nMl Front St. Phone 1511\nCommercial Signs\nFor 3_1 your sign needs\nHAMER SIGNS - Phone 1113\nEngineers\nand Surveyors\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, MEIC\nB.C. Land Surveyor, PEng (Civ.)\n218 Gore St.  Nelson   Phone 1238\nScissors, pinking shears; etc\nHipperson's Hdwre.     Phone 497\nSporting Goods\nFred Whlteley's Sport Shop\n488 Baker Street Phone 160\nWoodworking\nContractor\nF. PIRSH\nBuild all types custom furniture.\nRemodelling and repairs.\nFrench polish and antique repairs\nBuild office, store, kitchen\ncabinets.\n486 Rossland Ave. Ph. 302, Trail\nlathi Neuia\nCirculation Dept., Phone 1844\nPrice per single copy 7c Monday\nto Friday, 10c on Saturday.\nBy carrier per week 35c\nin advance\nSubscription rates:\nBy Mail in Canada Outside Nelson\nOne month            $ 1.26\nThree months      3.50'\nSix months       6,\nOne year 12.00\nBy Mail to United Kingdom or\nthe United States:\nOne month        $ 1.75\nThree months    5.00\nSix months     9.00\nOne year             18.00\nWhere extra postage is required,\nabove rates plus postage.\nFor delivery by earner In Cranbrook, phone Mrs. Stanley\nWillisson:\nIn Kimberley, A. W. Brown;\nIn Trail. Mrs. Syd Spooner;\nIn Rossland. Mrs Ross Saundry\nSEWING   MACHINES\nRENT A SINGER SEWING MA-\nchine (delivered I and returned\n$5.00 per month, $2.00 per week.\nSinger Sewing Center, Phone 41.\nLOGGERS\nThe New Model 172\nMost Powerful\nMcCulloch Choin Saw\nIs Now Here!\nSee Us for\nGas Cans \u2014 Wedges \u2014 Files\nThe New Automatic\nLoggers' Tape\nFire Extinguishers \u2014 Hard Hats\nChains for All Makes and\nModels of Chain Saws\nBars Hard Tipped and Regrooved\nMade Like New\nMAC'S\nWelding  &  Equipment Co.\nLtd.\n514 Railway St.        Phone 1402\nFor ALL Building Purposes\nSAND and GRAVEL\nTRADE SCHOOLS\nDiesel\nHeavy  Equipment\nTrained men are needed for all\ntypes of jobs in the Tractor and\nEquipment Industry. If you ate\nmechanically inclined and are not\nmaking better than $90.00 per\nweek, or you don't have job security, you owe it to yourself to write\nfor free facts, without obligation\nabout this training.\nTRACTOR TRAINING\nSERVICE, LTD.\nToronto 18 Ontario\nREPLY BOX 8377, THE NEWS\nALTEM SUPER BRONZE\nGAS WELDING RODS\nHercules Iron, Stainless, Monel,\nMagnesium, Diecast, Aluminum.\nStevenson Machinery Ltd.\nPhone Nelson 97\n1 COMPLETE NATIONAL SAW\nMill 16M .apacity,. less power\nunit; 1 Inf. R2\u00ab0 flat deck (tag-\na-lottg); 1-1953 Dodge 3>\/_-ton\nflat deck; sundry logging and\nsawmill supplier equip, in A-l\nshape. Ph. 9-R Slooan, Tagami\nBros. Lumber Co.\t\nRD6 CAT WITH CABLE DOZER.\nMax Zeeben, Ymir, B.C.\nWANTED\nMISCELLANEOUS\nTHE NELSON LIONS' CLUB\nneed items for their While\nElephant Auction Sale to be\nheld in the near future. For\npick-up Phone 962 - 1614,\nBOATS and  ENGINES\n22 FT. CABIN CRUISER, MA-\nhogany finish, 110 h.p. Chrysler\nmotor. Stove, sleeps 3. Will take\nreal estate or house trailer in\ntrade. Apply Box 53, Nelson\nDaily News.\t\nHEWESCRAFT ALUMINUM\nBoat 10,, 12, 14, 15, 16, 18 it.\nmodels. New and used. Test\ndrive at Jorgenson's Boat Rental and Marine Sales, North\nShore, Nelson.\t\nWILL SACRIFICE 1959 28 H.P.\nMercury outboard motor, long\nshaft, run less than 20 hours.\nLike new. Call 359-L after 5\np.m.\t\nTHERMOCRAFT BOATS, HOLS-\nelaw boat trailers and Mercury\noutboard motors also excellent\nused motors. Jeffery Radio and\nAppliances Ltd., phone 1302 -\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES\nWANTED, ALL KINDS OF Discarded small electrical appliances. Call 1848 for pick-up.\nWANTED   CLEAN   COTTON\nrags. Nelson Daily\/News.\nVONROY PUPPIES - A BREED\nto suit your need: Hunting Wei-\nmaraners,- Fun-loving Cocker\nSpaniels and Big-as-a-rtiinute\nToy Terriers:. Reasonable prices. The only love you can buy\nVonroy Kennels, Box 246,\nCreston. Phone EL 64189.\nK-9   BOARDING   KENNELS\nTrail-Fruitvale High. Ph. 3613.\nSelling -Rentinj\nYour Classified Want Ad on This Handy\nORDER FORM\nFIRST LINE\nSECOND LINE\nTHIRD LINE\nFOURTH LINE\nFIFTH LINE\nSIXTH LINE\nSEVENTH LINE\nEIGHT LINE\n\u2022 Put one word in each space.\n(Each group ot numbers or letters count as one word)\n\u2022 Put Your Address or Phone Number in the Ad.\n\u2022 Box Numbers Count as Four Words.\n(Box 00 Nelson News)\nTO CALCULATE RATES, USE THIS TABLE:\n\u2014 i. \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0>\u2014wi\u2014i I i     mi\u2014h\u2014p.\n_J 1\nPer Lin*\n1 Insertion \t\n2 Consecutive Insertions\n3 Consecutive Insertions\n6 Consecutive Insertions\n26 Consecutive Insertions\n? .20\n.35\n.45\n.60\n1.82\nMinimum charge is two lines\nAdd ISc fer Box Number\nTake advantage of the low six time rate\nNon-Consecutive Insertions 20<\u00a3 a Line Per Time.\nYou Reach over 36,000 Readers With Your Nelson Daily News Classified Ad\nNo. of Days Ad It To Run _____\nYOUR NAME\nBill Me.\nADDRESS\n\u201e        Payment Eneksed\nNelson Daily\nClassified Advertising Department, Nelson, B.C\n -   \u25a0   . .'..\u201e\u25a0,.'\u25a0     \u25a0   .i\nTO\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, JUNE 12,1961\nMANN\nD\nR\nU\nG\nS\nFor Snappy,\nHappy Service\nMaid o' North\nWins Richest\nCanuck Stakes\nTORONTO (OP) - Maid\no'North, owned by Frank A.\nSherman, industrialist - sportsman from Hamilton, won die\n$81,900 Canadian Oaks at Woodbine Saturday. It was die -idlest prize for fillies in the history\nof Canadian racing.\nMaid o'Nortlh cost Mr. Sherman $25,000 as a yearling and\nhad won two races at Old Woodbine this season but her victory\nin the Oaks was not expected by\nthe majority in the crowd of 18,-\n000. Ridden by Cliff Potts, she\ndefeated Dangerous Doll by half\na length while the odds-on favorite, Victoria Regina, finished\nthird, slightly more than two\nlengths behind the winner. Maid\no'Nortlh paid $19.30, $9.30 and\n$2.70.\nThe time was 1:53 3-5.\n20C\ni \u25a0\nSeoretarjr bird\u2014orange.     Capetown castle\u2014green.     Knfferboom\u2014brown-grey.   Groat Conatantla\u2014-purple.    Pratesr\u2014red, dark green. Maize\u2014light green.\nBaobab tree\u2014dark bine.\nHMfifnffntiifif\n.   I   7\nStrelltza flower\u2014blue.\nDistant Early Warning System\nOperates 24 Hours Each Day\nTIM MIN S, Ont. (CP)-\nPerched on a hill in the bush\n50 miles south of here are What\nappear to be two king-sized\ntoadstools. They occupy 200\nsquare yards of ground, ringed\nby a fence patrolled day and\nnight by armed guards.\nInside the fence, men work\non instruments under strong\nlights. Ringing telephones, buzz-\nig generators and clacking\nnoisy background.   '\nThis is Ramore, a DEW Distant Early Warning) line base.\nNEHRU ARRIVES\nMANALI, India (Reuters)-\nPrime Minister Nehru arrived\nhere Friday for a 10-day vacation in this picturesque Himalayan village. Nehru will spend\nthe vacation\u2014his first in two\nyears\u2014quietly, reading and\nwriting.\nMore than 200 servicemen and\n22 civilians keep the radar station operating 24 hours a day.\nThey work eight hours at a\nstretch, spending off-duty hours\nat the nearby military base or\ntowns \"outside.\"\nJOINT EFFORT\nThe Red Ensign and the Stars\nand Stripes are flown side by\nside at Ramore, an integrated\nbase manned by Canadian and\nU.S. servicemen and under direct responsibility to the Ottawa sector of the North Ameri-\ncancan Air Defence Cornrnan\nRamore was built at a cost of\n$6,000,000 in 1953 and was\nranked operational in January,\n1958.\nThe highly-trained personnel\nwork in close co-operation with\n41 other bases in the Pinetree\nline, one of the three major radar setups.  Fighter  pilots  are\nFocus On Health\nBy THE  ASSOCIATED PRESS |\nTopics this week: Highway stress, a possible cause\nof cancer, a summertime\nhazard, and advice to grandparents.\nSTRESS OF DRIVING\nFor some people there is a\ndefinite wear and tear in driving a car at high speeds or in\ncity traffic.\nGerman researchers found\nthat out of a group of healthy\npersons, some show great\nchanges in blood pressure and\npulse rate after driving at 70\n\u2022 to 80 miles an hour, or after\ndriving in traffic conditions.\nIn these otherwise healthy\npersons, the appearance of\nthese changes indicates borderline disorders and may explain some faulty reactions\nthat sometimes result in auto\naccidents, the researchers said.\nCAUSE OF CANCER?\nNickel workers have a high\nrate of lung cancer and the\nculprit has been identified as\na toxic gas containing nickel\nwhich has produced cancer in\nexperimental animals.\nNow researchers have found\nthat the smoke from both non-\nfiltered and filtered cigarets\ndeposits nickel in the lungs.\nAnd a person who smokes two\npacks a day for a year inhales three times the amount\nof nickel needed to produce\noancer in rats.\nSUMMERTIME HAZARD\nSome persons are sensitive\nto bee and wasp stings\u2014so\nsensitive that a number of\nstings may send them into\nshock, may even cause death.\nIn some oases a person can\nbe immunized against the allergy to yellow jacket sting-\nmuch as hay fever viotims\ncan be immunized against\nragweed pollen. Either a mixture of the whole insect or just\nthe venom can be used. Protection lasts only about three\nmonths.\nHowever, doctors warn, little <\nis known about the hazard of\ncontinued use of the treatment. It is possible in sensitive persons that even the allergy injections may bring on\nshock.\nADVICE FOR GRAMPS\nWith summertime here and\nvisits to grandparents in order, a University of Michigan\npsychiatrist has some advice:\nGrandparents should keep\nhands off in matters catling\nfor discipline of a grandchild.\nLeave it to the parents. Grandparents are likely either too\nstrict and rigid, or, too overly\nmellow to be able to help the\nBarents, suggested Dr. Stuart\nFinch.\nEven a three - year - old is\ncapable of playing grandparent against parent to get what\nhe wants.\nPlanning to move ?\nMake it easy\non yourself\nwith an HFC Moving Loan\nWhen you move, see HFC about a Moving Loan.\nHFC can supply the money for all your moving\nexpenses ... to pay off the moving company, and\nto cover your family's transportation and other related costs. And, one of the 252 HFC offices in\nCanada is likely to be near your new home, to give\nyou additional service. Borrow up to $2,500 with\n: Up to 36 months to repay.\nLow cost* lifo insurance aval\/able on all loans\nHOUSEHOLD FINANCE\nW. W. Sapsforcf, Manager\n608 Baker Street -   Telephone 1890\nNELSON\nready to take off from NORAD\nbases within minutes of an\nalarm from any of these radar\nsites of the detection of an unidentified aircraft.\nDay and night, seven days a\nweek, Hie men make the Ws-\nmile trip into the bush to go on\nwatch. But when the duty period is ended, life in die self-\ncontained camp provides ample\nopportunity for relaxation. Ten-\npin bowling, league basketball.\nand fishing are popular activities.\nNatal Idngflshor\u2014royal bins.  -Ltrfkander bnO\u2014purple-brown.\nTHESE NEW STAMPS will be issued by South Africa to.\nsignalize its becoming the Republic of South Africa on\nMay 31. That's when, as the Union of South Africa, it\nseparates itself from the British Commonwealth.\nrUtinHlifflt\nShrike\u2014brick red.\nCapetown docks\u2014dork blue.\nPouring gold\u2014dark bine.\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30o line, 40c line black face type; larger type rates\non request. Minimum two lines.\nTrail Business College Open till noon every Monday.\nNew Term begins September 5   Mac's Flower Shop \u2014 Phone 910\nOpen every Monday till noon.\nEBERLE'S\nCITY DRUG PH. 34\nOpen every Mon. till noon,\nOdds...\nand Ends\n...byM.DLR\nFulton Admits Red\nThreat in Canada\nAwards ceremony today at L. V.\nRogers High Sohool, 2 p.m. in\ngym. Public Welcome.\nAUTO GLASS\nOut and polished to fit any ma.ee\nor model of automobile at\nELECTROLUX SERVICE T  H   WATERS & CO. LTD.\n512 Richards St.. Ph. 1108, Nelson Phone m . 101 Hall st . Nelson\nStock Market\nLooks Brighter\nBy JOHN BELANGER\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nThe stock market halted in its\nlour - week decline and rose\nslightly during moderately light\ntrading, as hesitancy crept into\nindustrial groups.\nVolume was characteristically\nlower for the week, and prices\nin some groups fell, despite the\ngeneral rise. In the secondary\nconstructions for instance, Canada Cement, Canada Dredge\nand Dock and Building Products were all down fractionally,\nwhile Royal and Nova Scotia\nfell in the banks.\nThe industrial index was up\nslightly more than two points on\nthe face of strength in liquors,\nfoods, steels and utilities. Distillers Seagrams, Walker-Good-\nerham and Canadian Breweries\nwere ahead, while Algoma, Atlas, Dominion Bridge, Steel\nCompany and Dominion Foundries and Steel rose. Dominion\nFoundries and Steel reached a\nnew high this week and was up\nmore than 2Vs points.\nIn foods, Loblaw B was the\nbig winner, up more than two\npoints, while gains went to Canada Packers B and Weston A.\nAmong refining oils, Canadian\nOil was up 2'\/_ points in considerable trading. Consumers Gas\ntraded briskly on an offer of\nrights at $14 on a six-for-one\ndeal, and made the weekly\n\"most active\" list.\nDominion Tar traded heavily\non  the   week   and  gained   %,\nalong with  heading  the  active\nlist.\nPAPERS ADVANCE\nIn the papers, Abitibi, Great\nLakes, St. Lawrence and Price\nBrothers all advanced1 in light\ntrading.\nIn the base metals market,\nmost issues declined fractionally. The seniors were mixed,\nas losses went to Falconbridge,\nFrobisher and Sherritt Gordon,\nand gains to International\nNickel, Noranda and Labrador.\nIrish, Kilemhe and Lake Du-\nfault slipped among the coppers, while in the Nickels, Arcadia, Nickel Mining and Smelting and Norpax were all down.\nWestern oil trading was generally weak and prices declined. Central Del Rio, Bailey\nSelburn A, Consolidated Mic\nMac and Dome all dropped in\nthe seniors, and speculative issues such as Devon-Palmer and\nMedallion fell.\nIndex changes at Toronto: Industrials up 2.08 to 579.88; golds\ndown .30 to 81.68; base metals\ndown .45 to 192.48 and western\noils down .72 to'97.31.\nIndex changes at Montreal:\nBanks up .32 at 62.51'; utilities\nup .7 at 149(2; industrials up 3.1\nat 316.0; papers up 4.4 at 467.2\nand golds up .53 at 78.69.\nOpen Every Monday Until Noon.\nPh. 962. Coventry's Flower Shop.\nTime to replace your Awning\nand Chair Canvas. See us.\nSTERLING FURNISHERS\nDrive with confidence.\nPhone 902. Stirling Hotel, home of\nNELSON DRIVING SCHOOL\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nBUKOWSKI \u2014 Funeral services\nfor Mr. Horst Gustav Bukowski\nof Salmo, will be held at the\nSalmo Community Memorial\nChurch, Tuesday at 1 p.m. Mr.\nD. Logan will officiate and interment will take place in the Salmo\nCemetery. Thompson Funeral\nService.\nWanted \u2014 Tourist bureau clerk\nfor July and August, evenings\n5:30 to 9 p.m. Apply in writing to\nNelson Chamber of Commerce.\nHAIGH TRU-ART\nBEAUTY SALON\nHarper Method Professional\nService exclusive with us.\nATTENTION VETERANS\nWelfare Officer will be at Legion on 16 June 1961 9 a.m. to\nNoon. Pension Advocate in Nelson\n17 and 18 June 1961. Phone Canadian Legion for appointment.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nSOLECKI \u2014 Requiem Mass for\nMr. James Solecki, son of Mr. I\nand Mrs. Harry Solecki of Slooan, |\nwill be sung at the Siocan City,\nCatholic Ohureh, Tuesday at 11]\na.m. Rev. D. Langi, C.Ss.R. will\nbe the celebrant and interment I\nwill take place in the Slooan-\nCemetery. j\n111th Battery\nHews\nUnit orders, part 1, by Capt.\nR. E. Watts, officer commanding.\nDuties, orderly officer for week\nending June 17, 2\/Lt. Hamakawa;\nnext for duty, WO- Dungate,\nOrderly NCO, Bdr. Kidd; next\nfor duty L\/Bdr. Denholm.\nParades, Tuesday, training parade, trained soldiers only will\nparade. Thursday, pay parade,\nall personnel will parade.\nDress, bush uniforms, bush\ncaps, web belts, boots and puttees, and shirts.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nPERIPELKIN - Funeral services for Mr. John G. Peripelkin\nof Siocan Park, will be held from\nthe residence of his son, Pete\nPeripelkin, at Shoreacres, Tuesday afternoon to the Shoreacres\nCemetery. Thompson Funeral\nService.\nSHOOTS MAN IN SCUFFLE\nCHETWYND, B.C. (CP) - An\nRCMP constable accidentally shot\na man in the head early Sunday\nwhile they grappled on the street\nof this tiny community 60 miles\nwest of Dawson Creek.\nThe bullet pierced John Carter\nCockell, 40, of Williams Lake,\nover the left eye and came to rest\nat the base of his skull. He was\nflown unconscious to hospital in\nEdmonton.\nPrince George RCMP said the\nshooting took place shortly after\nmidnight while Constable Morley\nKitchen was investigating a\nbreak-in at a hardware store.\nFiction Comes to Life in\nCoast Teenager and Wolf\nSIGNS NEW CONTRACTS\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Russia\nwill supply Cuba with rolled\nsteel, non-ferrous metals, machinery, paper, food, chemicals\nand medical supplies under contracts just signed in Moscow,\nthe Soviet news agency Tass reported today.\nVICTORIA (CP) - A 13-year-\nold boy and a full-grown timber wolf have made nature fiction come true by proving that\nman can create lasting friendship with an animal long considered his enemy.\nThe proof oame last week\nwhei) Lobo, the 125-pound wolf,\nleaped into the arms of young\nLutz Bauersadhs as they saw\neach other for the first time in\n18 months. Both Lutz and his\nsharp - toothed, fierce - eyed\nfriend had changed\u2014tiut neither\nhad forgotten.\nThe story started more than\ntwo years ago when Lobo and\ntwo other wolves were taken for\ntraining to a zoo whioh Lutz's\nfather operates, 12 miles north\nof here.\nLutz immediately took a liking to the vicious hunter from\nthe woods and soon Lobo began\nto trust him.\nINSEPARABLE FRIENDS\n\"The' two were inseparable,\"\n,Mr. BaUersachs said Friday.\n\"They played together all the\ntime ana 1 was not alarmed because . tlje wolves were being\ntrained carefully and besides,\nLobo trusted the boy.\"\nEighteen months ago Lobo\nand the two other wolves,\nPrince and Somhra, were taken\nsouth to be used in the filming\nof a Walt Disney movie which\nwill bear Lobo's name. Everyone thought the two would forget each other while Lobo was\naway.\nBut while the big wolf was\nacting his part on location in\nthe redstone country of Arizona,\nLutz often thought about him.\nWhen the huge creature returned to Ihe zoo last week with\nhis companions after the long\njourney north, they took his\ncrate into a pen and the family\nwatched anxiously as it was\npried open.\nLobo leaped out of the box,\nlooked around, then bounded\nstraight for the delighted l\u00abtz.\nWell, I oan put my nose away\nfor another 10 years, since it has\nbeen counted by the census taker, j\nI asked him how things were I\ngoing and whether people were\nbeing co-operative. He said he\nwas enjoying the job because he\nmet so many people he knew or\nwho knew his family, and that he\nhad been well received with\npeople quite ready to give the information needed. \"They seem\nto take the view that it is something that has to be done,\" he\nsaid, \"which makes things easier.\" ]\n* *  *\nIt has pained me to realize that\nwhile we were trying to promote\ngood relations between Canada\nand the United States by letting\nthe President plant a tree in Ottawa, he had to hurt his back.1\nWhat I am wondering is what\nsize of tree they gave him to\nplant, was it a full grown oak\nthat took a great deal of heft to\nget it into place, or didn't they\nhave Sae hole dug and ready?\nThis bears looking into, for a\nsore back is enough to sour the\nbest disposition and could send\nthe good neighbor policy into an\nall-time low.\n* \u2022  *\nIt could spread by rumor\nthrough the rabble element like\nwildfire that Canada had deliberately crippled the U.S. president\nand what then? Armament factories would shift into high gear,\nsteel stocks would go up, heavy\nwater would go down, Russia\nwould halt all space travel to sit\nand rub her hands in glee, and\nthings would be in a sorry mess.\nNext time the President comes\ncalling, let us use a little consider-\ntion and just give him a half\ngrown oak to plant. After all, the\nman is in his forties.\n* \u2022  *\nAnd before we leave the subject, we should take time out to\nconsider how many trees we\nhave had our young Queen plant\nwith never a thought to the consequences. Why, I imagine she\naverages at least two a week. It\nis perhaps this steady occupation\nat the task whidh makes her appear to breeze through the job\nwith the touoh of the expert. Perhaps we have been taking these\nservices for granted with not\nenough thought to the physical\nstrain required to set a tree on\nits upward journey. Next thing\nyou know we'll be handing visitors a watering can when they\narrive to water the trees they\nhave so kindly planted for us and\nexpect them to mulch in a bit\nof fertilizer around the roots.\n* *  \u2666\nAll I oan say is the Kennedy\nincident points up the need for\na Be Kind to Presidents and\nQueens Week.\nBy JOHN E. BIRD\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 How many\nknown Communists are there in\nCanada?\nJustice Minister Fulton declined in the Commons Friday\nWorries Over\nFor Fans of\nPerry Mason\nBy BOB THOMAS\nHOLLYWOOD (AP)-Fans of\nthe Saturday night who-did-it\nwil be happy to know that all\nis peace once more in the Perry\nMason family. Perry is back in\nthe fold.\nRaymond Burr Is the living\nimage of Perry, of course, and\never will be in the minds of millions of fans of the Erie Stanley\nGardner mysteries. Include me\nin that group. Perry Mason is\nthe only TV show our family\nwatches on a regular basis.\nFor a few anxious weeks, it\nlooked as though Burr might\nfly the coop. Now the troubles\nare resolved and the resolution\nbodes well for future years of\npopular series.\nBunr explained: \"It wasn't a\nmatter of my holding out for a\nchange of contract or a change\nof venue.\" These legal terms\nhave rubbed off on him; the latter means change of a trial, for\ngood cause shown, from one\ncounty to another.\nThe actor wasn't seeking to\nchange counties. As he put it:\n\"The issue was whether they\nwould change the show so I\ncould continue with it.\"\nBurr's situation has been well\nchronicled in this space and\nelsewhere. It was that he found\nhimself faced with a superhuman task of delivering weekly\nmore dialogue than the average\nleading man has in a feature\nmovie.\nAnd did it tor four years with\nscarcely a let-up, except tor enforced stays in the hospital.\nThe producers came up with\na formula to keep their Perry\nbefore the bar.\n\"It is quite simple,\" said\nBurr. \"I now will work only five\ndays out of every six. In other\nwords, no matter how long the\nshooting of a program will take,\nI will be assured the sixth day\noff. That will be enough to regain my strength, whereas\nworking six or seven days at 18\nhours a day became virtually\nimpossible.\"\nSHOW DAD\nHE IS KING\nOF YOUR\nCASTLE\nThe gift that will get the\nclosest to Dad is something to wear\u2014especially if it comes from here!\nIt's our year-round business to know what men\nlike\u2014so make it your\nbusiness to shop here for\nthat gift for Dad. '\nFATHER'S DAY\nJUNE 18\nEmory'S\nLTD.\nTHE MAN'S STORE\nWeekly Metals Review\nNEW YORK (AP)\u2014The U.S.\ncopper market was quiet last\nweek as all hands enjoyed a\nfurther breathing spell.\nDemand was still good, but\nfar more orderly than in the recent buying splurge. Sensitive\nbarometers such as the London\nMetal Exchange price and the\ncost of scrap here dipped, then\nrallied in their typical up and\ndown fashion.\nTin again pushed into the\nmarket spotlight. Fears of a\n1961, shortage boosted; the New\nYork price \u25a0 to ft.Jiii,j highest1\nsince the Suez crisis, ahd the\nLondon price to $1.10, highest\nsince the Korean War. Lower\nprices in London were a disturbing faotor, however, for lead\nand zinc sellers, although prices\nheld firm here. .    .\nThe temporarily quiet copper,\nmarket could erupt into corifu-\nsion almost overnight, however,\nif Kennecott Copper Corp. is un\nable to come to tepms with miners and refinery workers when\ncontracts expire at the end of\nthe month.\nIndustry analysts look for\nsharp declines in stocks of refined metal both in May and\nJune. The impact of considerably\nlower supplies, plus a cut-off of\nlead to another price spurt,\nproduction by Kennecott, could\nMajor metals prices:\nCopper\u201431 cents a .pound, delivered. Foreign 30 cents, nominal, New York.\n,! Lead\u201411 cents a pound, Nev\nYork! 10.8 cents, St. Louis-\nZinc\u2014 llVs cents a pound, East\nSt. Louis; 12 cents, New York.\nAluminum\u201426 cents a pound,\nunalloyed ingots, delivered.\nNickel \u2014 74 cents a pound,\nelectrolytic cathodes, Port Col-\nborne, Ont., U.S. duty inoluded.\nSilver\u201491% cents an ' ounce,\nNew York: 79% pence,. London.\nTin \u2014 $1.12% a pound, New\nYork.\nto report the number but said\n\"we do have a Communist\nthreat.\"\nHe was replying to Louis Joseph Pigeon (PC-JoIiette-L'As-\nsomption-MontoaJm) who asked\nthe minister to state the number of Communists in Canada\nknown to the ROMP. Mr. Pigeon said he had heard there\nare about 7,000.\n\"I am not able to answer that\nquestion, since it would involve\nthe kind of information which\nshould not come from our own\nrecords,\" Mr. Pulton said. However, he noted that the Communist party itself claims to\nhave 3,000 card-carrying members in Oanada.\nThe minister stoutly defended\nthe RCMP's security and intelligence work after it was criticized by several MPs during\nconsideration of the estimates\nof the justice department.\nSECURITY NECESSARY\nMr. Fulton said there had\nbeen some public criticism of\nthe ROMP's anti - subversive\nwork but added that it cannot\nbe avoided. It was necessary to\npreserve national security and\nneither the government nor the\nROMP relished the job.\nFederal security agents for\nyears have been doing this work\n\"unobtrusively, efficiently end\nwith the least possible interference with the private lives of\nOanadian citizens,\" he said.\nHe had no aplogies to make\nfor recent ROM-, questioning of\nstudents at Laval University in\nQuebec City, which drew mild\ncriticism from both Gabriel Ro-\nberge OL\u2014Megantic) and H. W.\nHerridge (CCF \u2014 Kootenay\nWest).\n\"We do have a Communist\nthreat in Canada,\" Mr. Fulton\nsaid.\n\"It is an unfortunate fact that\nit is a tactic of communism to\ninfiltrate   perfectly   respectable\norganizations.\nAPOLOGY NOT NEEDED\nMr. Fulton said \"I really do\nnot think that any apology is\nnecessary for \"the fact that inquiries have been made.\"\nMr. Herridge took objection to\ninvestigation of members of\nban - the - bomb movements in\nCanada, stating that it was his\npersonal opinion that a Communist would not likely join such\na movement.\n\"It is completely out of place\nin a democratic country that\nprofesses great respect for the\npreservation of human rights\nand fundamental freedoms, and\nno one is keener on the preservation of those rights than is\nthe prime minister,\" Mr. Herridge said of such questioning.\nWorld Briefs\nSCHWEITZER ILL\nLIBREVILLE, Gabon Republic (AP)-Dr. Albert Schweitzer, 86, was reported ill today\nat his jungle hospital outpost of\nLamibarine. The Nobel Peace\nPrize winner has been forced to\nremain in bed for several days.\nHis illness was not serious.\nARCHBISHOP DIES\nREGENSBURjG, Germany\n(AP) \u2014 Arctobishop Michael\nBudiiberger of Regensburg, senior Roman Catholic bishop of\nGermany, died early today, two\ndays after his 87th birthday. He\nbecame a priest in 1900 and a\nbishop in 1923.\nAUTHOR DIES\nMELBOURNE (AP) - Mrs.\nAeneas Gunn, 91, one of Australia's best-known authors died\nFriday. She wrote the children'i\nclassics. Her The Little Black\nPrincess about nomadic aboriginals sold more than 750,000\ncopies.\nAIRMAN PASSES\nLONDON (AP)\u2014Maj. Francis\nGeorge Maunde-Ttiompson,. 84,\noldest air pilot, has died Friday\nat his eubiwban home. A veteran of the Boer War at the\nturn of the oentuiry, he gained\nhis pilots wings in 1911 in a\nBleriot monoplane and flew hia\nown plane until three years ago.\nSON WAS KILLED\nNEW YORK (API-Mrs. Carmen Lopez, 21, left her _even-\nyear-<yid son alone in a cola\nlaundry for a half-hour Friday\nafternoon while she went for\nJose Vasquez was gone. Last\nnight police found his body on\nthe rooftop of the laundry building, stabbed seven times and\nsexually assaulted.\nHove the Job Done Right!\nVIC GRAVEC\nW LIMITED       **\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nPRESCRIPTION\nSPECIALISTS\nCITY DRUG\nYour Rexall Pharmacy\nONLY GREYHOUND OFFERS\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_1961_06_12","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\/1.0434066","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":"1961-06-12 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":"1961-06-12 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. 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