{"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"label":"Aggregated Source Repository","value":"CONTENTdm","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:dataProvider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who contributes data indirectly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Collection":[{"label":"Collection","value":"BC Historical Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:isPartOf"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included."}],"Contributor":[{"label":"Contributor","value":"Gibbon, A. 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. 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."}],"DateAvailable":[{"label":"Date Available","value":"2023-06-23","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:issued"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Date of formal issuance (e.g., publication) of the resource."}],"DateIssued":[{"label":"Date Issued","value":"1961-04-08","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:issued"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Date of formal issuance (e.g., publication) of the resource."}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"label":"Digital Resource Original Record","value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0434067\/source.json","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:aggregatedCHO"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The identifier of the source object, e.g. the Mona Lisa itself. This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" SATURDAY EDITION\nwith COMICS - 10c\nPublished at Nelson, transportation, government, financial and trading centre of the Kootenay'Golumhia area\nml\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKootenay: Mostly cloudy, not\nquite so mild. Winds light. Low-\nhigh at Cranbrook mid Crescent\nValley 25 and 52.\nSunday outlook: Sunny.\n.\"\u25a0:\u2022 ^.\nVol. 59\nNELSON, 3. C, CANADA-SATURDAY MOBNING, APRIL 8, 1961\nNot More Than 7o Daily, Wo Saturday\nNo_j293:\nB-52 Shot Down\nBy Accident; Three\nChute to Safety\nFate of Five Others Not Known;\nMen on Horseback on. Way to Wreck\nWOMEN SEEK\nHIGHER TAX\nEXEMPTION\nOTTAWA (OP) - The Canadian Federaton ot University\nWomen Friday asked that a wife\nbe allowed to earn up to $950 before her husband's tax exemption\nis affected.\nIn a brief to the government\nthe delegation, headed by Mrs.\nW. H. Gilleland of Ottawa, the\ncentral  Canada  vice - president\ncomplained that the present celling for a wife is $250 although\nother dependents may earn $950.\nIf a wife's wages exceed $250\nGRANTS, N.M. (AP) \u2014 An MOO jet fighter plane'h\u00ab husband's exemption is re-\naccidentally Bhot down a B-52 jet bomber Friday over duced by the amount she earns,\nwestern New Mexico and the United States Air Force said     \u2122 >\u2122n<\u2122 \u2122so. asked \/or\nthree men had parachuted irom the bomber before it %E%2tot*\u00a3\u00a3?%\u00a3\ncrashed. business to have her pay deducted\nThe three men were spotted by helicopter crews  fram me taxaWe iacome \u201e, her\nand  were   being   flown  to  an  Albuquerque  hospital, amployer husband.\nmeanwhile said I    \" was stated that a husband!\nlate spring storm had swept can claim wages paid other rela-\nthrough the area Friday, with tives as a business expense but\nsnow and rain. | cannot make the same claims for\nThe United States Air Force a wife's services.\nhad two helicopters flying over.   Tlie taxpayer who must employ\nthe area with three C-47 trans-' Ml time household help to care\nports. j for a dependent was the subject\nThe crash of the B-52 turned' ^^^ *ird amendment proposed it\nduel v,;D_ nvm- I ne  brief  to  Finance  Minister\nMobutu To Meet\nThe air force\neight men were aboard the\nbomber when it was struck by a\nSidewinder missile during\ntraining mission with a New\nMexico air national guard F-100,\n!     The fate bf the other five men crasl?ed j?t\u00b0  Wi*  mountain\nThe wreckage of the bomber\nwas discovered about 15 miles\nnortheast of Mount Taylor Peak\nan 11,389-foot landmark in west\ncentral New Mexico.\nThe three survivors were found\nabout 2_ miles northeast of the\npeak, where they had landed\nafter parachuting from the stricken aircraft.\n_ mock aerial duel high over\n_\\ew Mexico into tragic reality Fleming,\nshortly  after  noon  as  a  New,        \u2014\nMexico air national guard F-100\naccidentally fired a sidewinder,\nmissile into the bomber. j\nThe huge eight-engined bomber'\nn\nfl\nwas not known.\nMen on horseback were on the\nway to the crash scene along with\nmen on tractors. There are roads\nin the general area but they are\nbnpassable this time of year. A\nlayoffs Planned\nAf Oakalla\n1 VANCOUVER (CP)-A spokes-\nimam for 50 employees at Oakalla\n! prison farm in suburban Burnaby\nI who have been laid off or face\nlayoffs later this year said Friday the Provincial government\n.economy move wiU. leave the pri-\n.soo .with; only \u2022\u25a0;<__'-'.gtrawl for\nevery five inmates. He said the\nproper ratio tor efficient operation of lhe jail is one officer for\nevery three prisoners.\nAttorney General Bonner earlier this week announced layoffs\nof 30 men at the prison immedi-\nly to keep costs within the $2,-\n500,000 budget. A further 20 officers will be laid off in the fall.\nThere are just over 300 employees at present and about 1200\nprisoners at the jail. In addition\nto taking care of the prison inmates, the staff has to perform\nservices for other penal institutions in the province, making the\ntrue ratio higher.\nWarden Hugh Christie said Friday the 12-rnan perimeter guard\nwill have to be eliminated in view\nef the staff cuts and rehabilitation\nwork will haive to be cut down.\nHe said it is hoped some voluntary help can be enlisted to help\nout with rehabilitation work.\ncountry about 60 miles north of\nGrants.\nThe accident occurred as the1\nfighter pilot from the 188th\nUnion to Test\nLabor Law\nVANCOUVER (CP) - A small\nunion that could afford to lose\nterceptor squadron of the New' mav De chosen to test a portion\nMexico air national guard work-;o[ British Columbia's new law\ned with the bomber crew on what| ftat restricts union participation\nthe United States Air Force called!m Politics, it was reported Fri-\n\"an authorized intercept mis-'day-\nsjon\" ;   One section of the law,  an\nThe   fighter  had   made   five \"J*\"*L**\"? *j*\ntra ning passes at the B-52. Then,! \u2122$J* raJj\u2122. ,r\u201eS!\non the sixth pass the deadly Sidewinder somehow was released.\nThe heat-seeking missile steered\nmotors.\n2 Murder Cases\nOn Vernon Dock\nVERNON (CP) \u2014 Two murder\ncharges top the criminal docket\nat the Spring Assizes opening\nhere April 24.\nEdward Drachenberg of Kelowna is charged with the Nov. 10\ndeath of his wife, while David\nThomas of Salmon Arm is accused of murdering Lizzie Mo-\nyese Dec. 23.\nJames Tooley 'of Vernon and\nArthur M. Bregoliss of Kelowna\nare Charged with manslaughter\nin the death of Patrick Wilson in\na street brawl here Dec. 10.\nDoukhobors Peter Astaforoff,\nMary Astaforoff and Nastia Hadikin of Grand Forte face an arson\ncharge following the burring of a\nhouse in the interior city Jan. 1.\nAt least two other oases will be\nheard. No judge has yet been\nnamed to preside over the court.\ncssion of the legislature, forbids\nunions to use membership dues\nfor political purposes.\nAnother section requires a trade\nunion official to sign a statutory\ndeclaration that his union is complying and will continue to comply with the dues portion. Failure\nto file a declaration could result\nin a union losing its dues check-\noff-rights. \u2022.-*\u25a0\u25a0._ \u2022>..'..'\u2022*\u2022'\u25a0 \"':\u25a0:\u25a0\u25a0-\nIt is reported that a plait'to\nbe put before a meeting of representatives of all affiliates of the\n120,000-member B.C Federation\nof Labor (CLC) later this month\ncalls for selection of a small\nunion to fight the statutory declaration section of the law.\nThe union would be one with\nall its members in one plant and\nthus could afford to lose its\ncheckoff rights. The court fight,\nwhich unionists say could last\ntwo years, .would be financed by\nIhe bulk of the unions in the\nprovince.\nThe union would provoke the\ncourt case by refusing to file a\ndeclaration.\nSOMEBODY-! BE WORKIN'   ON   THE   RAILROAD\u2014On   the\nNorthern Pacific, some 10 miles west ot Ellensburg, Wash.,\nthat Is. There are nearly 40 freight cars off the rails along\nthis horseshoe curve which follows the Yakima River.\nMOSCOW (AP) - The Soviet\nUnion has asked Britain for assurance that an immediate call\nfor a cease-ire in Laos will not\ndelay the opening of a 14-im-\ntion peace conference, informed\nsources said Friday.\nHigher Gasoline Tax\nLooms for Manitoba\nWINNIPEG (CP) \u2014, Premier\nDuff.Roblin announced.Friday\nnight he will ask: foir increases\n^_3r ,.-'\" i ',\u25a0- ,.;.,;\u2014_____\nTONGAY VISITS\nMONASTERY\n' VINA, Calif. (Art - Russell\nTongay, released from a Florida\nprison March 31, came to tlie\nTrappist monastery Friday but\nnot to join the order.\n\"He will spend two weeks here\nas a guest of the monastery but\nhe definitely will not be entering\nour community here or any other\ncommunity oi our order,\" a monastery spokesman said.\n\"He is trying to get oriented,\nto figure out wh;>t he is going to\ndo and plan his life for the fn\nture.\"\nTongay was sentenced to 10\nyears in prison for manslaughter\nin 1955 after the death of his five\nyear old daughter Kathy in a 33-\nfoot dive. Kathy and her brother,\n>nbba, were the Aquatot swimming prodigies.\nTHREB.WAY STRETCH\u2014-Here is the setup for the big British\ncable-laytog project Thia year they're laying a 2,000-mile\ncable from Scotland to Newfoundland capable of carrying\n60 conversations at a time. Next year they're linking Aus\ntralia and New Zealand, and to 1064, New Zealand and Canada. The cable-laying ship Moni__i (above) la dotag'the jOh.\nArrow indicates the machinery which feeds cable overside.\nAt left, workmen adjust machinery that pays cut1 the cable.\nin Manitoba's gasoline.and\nroad-use diesel \u25a0 fuel taxes | as,\nh\u00a3..p_s_ited & government's\nl\u00abt&\" budget which provides\nfor revenues' totalling $105,773,-\n400.\nMr. Roblin, who doubles as\nprovinc i a i treasurer, earlier\nthis session tabled estimates\noutlining spending for the year\ntotalling $103,856,514.\nHe said the government proposes a three-cent increase in\ngasoline tax to 14 cents a gallon. The proposed increase on\ndiesel fuel will'. IjisV six cents\nbringing it to 17 cents a gallon.\nThe premier said the changes\nwill bring Manitoba's taxes on\nthese commodities in line with\nthe rates in other provinces.\nHe said the increase had been\nsparked by a report of a recent\nstudy of Manitoba road needs\nwhich \"indicates the necessity\nfor an entirely new approach\n. . . and that we must' be prepared to invest funds in our\nhighway system for a good\nmany years at a level beyond anything previously contemplated.\"\nHe said the present Charges\nfor road use are inadequate to\nmeet Bus ,new demand and do\nnot place the burden where it\nproperly belongs.\nHe said the increase in gasoline and diesel fuel taxes will\nresult in an increase of revenue\nof about $5,000,000 bringing the\ntotal estimated revenue 'Irom\nthese sources to $20,725,000.\nGas Hearings\nAdjourned\nTo April 14\nVANCOUVER (CP) - A piiblfc\nutilities commission hearing in\nwhich four companies are seeking a certificate of omwetvience\nto distribute natural gas in the\nBast Kootenay Friday was adjourned until April 14.\nDuring the four-day hearing\nIBland Natural Gas Company,\nCascade Utilities Limited, Great\nNorthern Gas Utilities and Koo-\nteny Gas. Utilises Limited completed their cross-examinations\non the various submissions.\nNext Friday's hearing will be\ntaken up with final submissions\nby counsel for the companies.\nSouth Africa\nStands Accused\nUNITED NATIONS (CP) - A\nresolution accusing South Africa\nof imposing a reign of tyranny\nand; racial terror o\u00bber South-West\nAfrica, a trust territory, was\nadopted without a dissenting vote\nby the United Nations General\nAssembly Friday.\nThen the assembly's 99-member\nspecial political committee indulged in a 2%-hour chorus of\ncondemnation on South Africa's\napartheid but postponed vote on\nthe subject until Monday.\nSo many delegations spoke in\n\"explanation of vote\" that the\ncommittee never got to the vote\nitself. It was indicated in the debate that South Africa will be\nbereft of Commonwealth support\nwhen the roll-call does come.;\nThe resolution on South-West\nAfrica, a huge former German\nterritory under . South ..African\nriile by virtueTim'an old League\nof Nations mandate, was approved by. a vote of 84 to 0 with eight\nabstentions.\nWeather\n    28   57\n J...   20   48\nThe\nNelson \t\nWinnipeg\t\nRegina  22 48 Tr\nCalgary    22 48 .01\nPenticton  30 61 \u2014\nVancouver   36 55 \u2014\nVictoria  _... 42 54 \u2014\nSan Francisco  48 71 \u2014\nSpokane   27 55 \u2014\nNATO Nuclear\nPartnership Asked\nCAMBRIDGE, Mass, (OP) -\nPrime Minister Macmillan called\nFriday night for a NATO nuclear partnership, cementing of\nEurope's two rival trade blocs\nand expansion of trade and credit\nwith the aim of better unifying\nthe free world against communism.\n\"Unless we work for greater\nunity, we shall slide into division,\" the British leader said in\nan address to the centenary of\nthe Massachusetts Institute of\nTechnology. \"The time is short.\nLet there be no delay.\"\nMacmillan, who winds up his\ntalks with President Kennedy\ntoday suggested the West now\nmay have sufficient nuclear\npower. With an apparent reference to the independent nuclear\nbuild-up in France, he warned\nagainst \"wasteful duplication.\"\nTwo Jailed for\nDoctoring Coins\nVANCOUVER (CP) -Twomen\nwere jailed for two years Friday\non charges of doctoring coins in\nwhat proseoutor Stewart McMorran said would have been a $500,-\n000 swindle if successful.\nPaul Pankowe, 31, and John\nRomarouk, 36, earlier pleaded not\nguilty to the oharges.\nThe prosecutor said Pankowe\nwas convicted in 1949 in the kidnapping of 66-year-old engraver\nErnie Conduit who was chained to\na bed for five days while masked\nmen tried to soare him into helping with a counterfeiting plan,\nThe prosecutor added that if\nthe coin plan was suocessM coin\ncollectors would have been defrauded out of $500,000.\nB.C Not Getting \"Worst of the Bargain\"\nWENATCHEE, Wash. (AP) \u2014i agreement has been reached by, the power benefits created, but.   British Columbia proposed two\nthat a far greater return has been alternatives, either for ttie federal\n' he said.\nBritish Columbia Lands and For- the hra countries\nests Minister Williston said Friday the Canadian public has been Public Power Association, Willis-\nmisled and that it is not true that ton said the Canadian public had\nCanada is getting the \"worst of ^en led by press statements in\n., ,. \u2022 .. _. _. j _ , the United States to believe other-\nfche bargain  in the proposed Col\numbia River development treaty\nIn an address to the Northwest! s(f \u00b0d b_th? \"\"\"^ ?\u201e f8'\"   >*T\"Z?   _ b\u00b0Dl* ' *?LZ\n1   In Oanada, he said, it has not Lakes\u2014Mica Dam\u2014Dunoan Lake\nbeen the.policy of the federal projects and provide .fair corn-\nauthority'to make money aval- pensation in the area affected, of\nlable at a comparatively cheap' for the province to - buid them\ninterest rate for large projects in\u201e with assurance that the, cost af\nthe national interest. | delivered power at the major load\nThere is one field in wbfch our. centres-would not be more than\nwise.\nHe said that at one press eon-\n.'\nwith the United States. j ference tomier president Dwight federal administration might well 4.25 mills .\n' \"Everyone in Canada closely, Eisenhower held in Denver \"tabu- follow'the example which has \"There is no indication-that an\nassociated with the treaty feels Uated information tended to show been set by the government of the. amicable agreement cannot be\nlhat a very fair and advantageous I there was not a 50-50 division of | United States.\" I reached,\" he commented.\nI\nWilliston also declared.untrue]port be. allowed into the United\nthe \"rumor\" that Britlsth Colum- States, the resulting development\nbia is more interested in develop- of both the power resources and\ning Peace River than-the Colum-; the country will be delayed,\" he\nbia River. It has never bad any said,\nfoundation except in'political arguments against the government\nin power, he said.\nIt was true, however, that in-ie\nfirst years there would be a power\nsurplus available for export.\n'It the federal Canadian pol-\nicy remains adamant that no es-\nWillston said that engineering\nshould reach-final stages oft the\nprojects before a signature is\nplaced on the treaty.\n'\"There would be no point in\nagreeing to fulfil! an Obligation\nwhich later proves impossible to\nachieve,\" he said.\nSwift Settlement\nIn Congo Possible\nBED PUSHED\n300 MILES\nBy PETER GROSE\nLEOPOLDVILLE, The Congo (AP) \u2014 Congo central\ngovernment and rebel leaders will meet Sunday in neutral\nCongolese territory to negotiate political and military differences.\nGen. Joseph Mobutu, military strongman of the,.. ,\nLeopoldville   government  announced  arrangements  to|Wcs\u00able wheel of their _bed'-came\nmeet the rebel commander in Oriental Province, Gen Vic>ff and ]t \u2122 nece?sary to 'W\u00bb\ntor Lundula,* a Bumba, a river town on the neuttal border\nbetween Equator and Orien-\nPENTICTON (CP) - Fifteen\ntired teenagers pushing a bed arrived back in Penticton Thursday\nnight after completing a 300-mila\nreturn trip to Kamloops in. approximately 60 hours.\nThe boys on both laps of their\njourney ran into d_flc_ties.vO_(\ntal provinces.\nJean BaKkongo, vice-premier\nof the Leopoldville regime, disclosed he will meet the Stanleyville rebel leader, Antoine Gizenga, the same day at the jungle village of Bundoki, about 30\nMiles from Bumba, on the same\nborder.\nThe developments, indicating\nthe possibility of an all-Congo\nsettlement, followed -swiftly a.\ngesture by the central government toward reconciliation. The\ngovernment lifted its four-month\nblockade of rebel Oriental and\nKivu provinces.\nThe gestures paved the way\nfor completing the conciliation\npicture with military and political' talk.\nHEADED BY GIZENGA\nTaking part in the political\ntalk, will be Leopoldville Interior Minister Cyrille Adoula and\nOleophas Kamitatu, the centoal\ngovernment, emissary who made\ncontact early this week with\nGizenga's regime. Gizenga himself is expected to head the\nrebel negotiators.\nEconomics Minister Jean-Pierre pericoyard told h\\ press\nconference that.valualMe \/copper\nshipments from the mines of\nKatanga Province, where secessionist President Tshotnlbe holds\nsway, now are being routed\nthrough Portuguese Angola, depriving the central government\nof foreign .exchange which\nwould be realized if the ore\nwent through a Congolese port.\nBut Tshombe is having his\nown economic troubles, Derico-\nyard said. Tshombe has forbidden sale of locally - produced\ngoods to the rest of The Congo\nunless the payment is in his\nown Katanga francs, the currency   he   adopted   early   this\nyear to demonstrate independence of the central government\nand bank, Oericoyard said. The\nban cut off the supply of The\nCongo's most popular cigarets,\nthe Beigas, produced in Katanga. For a month no Beigas\nhave been Shipped to Leopoldville.\nIn Elisabethville Friday night\nthe Katanga government announced that its forces have\ncaptured the rebel-held town of\nKabala in the northern part of\nthe province.\nThere was no immediate UN\nreaction despite the fact that\nabout 100 Ethiopian UN troops\nare in Kabalo.\nCapture of the town \u2014 400\nmiles north of here\u2014is a further step in the Katanga Arniy's\ndrive through northern Katanga\nwiping out resistance pockets.\n. A UN spokesman reported\nthat some city traders are supplying .the UN with. fre_i .foodstuffs again\u2014\"but a partial boycott still seems to be operating.\"\nEarlier, UN personnel were\nreported running short of fresh\nfood such as bread and meat\nand relying pit \"UN supplies\nand Orations.\"        ,..,-\u201e.'.\nthe boycott was ordered by\nTshombe as part of his demand\nfor \"general sabotage\" against\nthe. UN. Although Tshombe has\ngiven assurances this demand\nhad been rescinded, no official\nannouncement to this effect has\nbeen made. Shops, restaurants\nand cafes still refuse service to\nUN personnel.\nDOLLAR LOWER\nNEW YORK (CP)'- Canadian\ndollar 3-64 lower at $1.01 1-16 in\nterms of U. S. funds. Pound sterling 3-32 lower at $2.79%.\none side of the bed for a considerable distance into Kamloops,\nThey ran into the same difficulty coming back, finally, endhiif up\nwith a three-wheel vehicle.'\"'\nThe boys said that everyone\nalong the route treated them very\nwell. Gas for the aocompatiyihg\ncars was supplied by both Kelowna and Penticton service stations.\nCafes supplied food and refresh\nments. \u2022 \u25a0 \u25a0\u2022\u2022 >\u25a0) '\u25a0    ig\u00a7*\nThe boys had to: pay SO .cents\neach way on the Okanagan La_*\nBridge.\nThe journey north too_ 24 bqqrs\nbut 27 were needed: for. the;\/p\nhome. __     _ \u2022-\nStrange {Hashes\nReported in Sky\nKAMLOOPS (OP) - Myster-\nious flashes in the early morning\nsky were reported over a jtiijk\narea of the Interior of British\nColumbia Friday.- \u25a0       \u25a0\nResidents' of sudh widely scattered points as Vernon, Kamloops, Revelstoke and S#ip!\nArm reported brilliant flashes f_\nlowed by, a low,' rumbling explo\nsion. \u2022 (. .  \u25a0 V) ,\u2022 I\nAn RCAF aircraft investigated\na report of a flash' and explosion\nin the sky over 'Bowen Wand,\nnear Vancouver, about 7:30r'a.m.\nbut found nothing.\nSeveral tug boat operators VDr\nported the flashes. ;\u25a0 '    ... ,j$j\nAn-RCMP \"cbnst_jle in Vernon\nsaid a brilliant blue light lit up\nthe sky for 30 seconds around 4:15\na.m. \"\nA Revestoke raiway .wortet\nsaid a plume of smoke stayed -I\nthe sky for about an hour after\nthe explosion.\nExplanations for the phenomenon were sought from the RiCAF\nand interior radar and telescope\nstations but none were fofUteonfc\nCGC Urges Lower Personal,\nCorporation  Income Tax\nOTTAWA (OP) - The Canadian Chamber of Commerce, advocating federal deficit financing in the 1981-62 budget,\ntoday urged lower personal and\ncorporation income taxes.\nThe chamber said in an 84-\npage pre - budget brief to Finance Minister Fleming and\nRevenue Minister Nowlan that\nit opposes deficit financing \"in\nnormal circumstances,\" but\nadded that a cash deficit now is\nappropriate.\nIt forecast a \"substantial\"\ngovernment deficit in the federal year that started April 1.\nThe chamber's suggestions\nwere part of a broad recommendation for federal co-ordination of all aspects of economic\npolicy to lay lhe groundwork\nfor increased economic growth.\nIt added: \"It is recognized,\nof course, that business- itself\nmust take responsibility in various fields, but in many areas\nfile initiative lies with the government.\"'\nThe offensive to produce economic growth,i it said, must be\ndesigned to stimulate employment, correct season unemployment.\nReferring to deficit financing,\nthe chamber's brief said that at\npresent a budgetary deficit\nwould be designed \"to give temporary support to the economy\nand to prevent the development of a deflationary spiral\nduring the period of readjustment.\"\nThe brief expressed the view\nof the chamber's executive\ncouncil that, there is tto present\nneed for \"a massive Injection\nof purchasing power\" Into the\neconomy,  suggesting that  tax\ncuts  would  fill  the need  for\nmore consumer buying power.\nOn tax reductions, it recom-\nployment and make Oanadian\nindustry more competitive at\nhome and on the export markets.\nReferring to deficit financing,\nthe chamber's brief said that at\npresent a budgetary deficit!\nwould be designed \"to give temporary support to the economy\nand to prevent the development of a deflationary spiral\nduring the period of readjustment.\"\nThe brief expressed the view\nof the chamber's executive\ncouncil that there is no present\nneed for \"a massive injection\nof purchasing power\" into the\nthat\nneed\ntax\nfor\neconomy,  suggesting\ncuts  would  fiU\nmore consumer buying power.\nOn tax reductions, it recortie\nmended:\n1. A limited temporary reduction in the personal income tax\nin the form of a tax holiday or\na reduction in the tax rate.\n2. A reduction in the corporation income tax rate to stimulate business activity.\n3. Government incentives. ;to\nbusiness to invest more in machinery and equipment and-research. This wOuld take the\nform of a $15,000 deduction\nfrom taxable income for every\n$10,000 spent on research, engineering and design..\nAnd in This Corner \u2666 . .\nMOSCOW (AP) \u2014 For years the official newspaper of Sovlel\nYouth. Komsomol Pravda, has been blasting jazz as a capitalistic\nevil. Now lt proposes what amounts to a network of jazz night\nclubs throughout the Soviet Union.\nKomsomol Pravda says the string of new cafes should be decorated in a light and gay manner, with tables along the walls,\nsunken dance floors and platforms for student jazz bands.\nThe article concludes with a plea that the establishments avolc\ntrite names as \"youth\" or \"friendship\" clubs and adopt names\nwith \"rather unusual flavor.\"\nI\nLONDON (AP) \u2014 Just as detectives hoped he would, Polly\nJolley talked his way out of a kidnapping. \u00bb.\u00ab-3|\nPolly, a parrot, was stolen with a flock of 200 rare birds from\na private zoo at the weekend. He turned up Wednesday 'in-ttjj6\npets'corner of a London department store. ,.'.3\nHe was squawking: \"Hey, diddle diddle . . , Baa, baa, black\nsheep, have you any wool?\"\nThen he chuckled and screamed his name and address. A\nstock clerk, who had read newspaper reports that the missing\nAmazon parrot was able to recite nursery rhymes and repeal\nhis name and address, called the police. j ;\u25a0 A\nThe manager of the pets department said the birds had beer)\nbought from a bird dealer at Egham, in Surrey.\nDetectives followed the trail back and found he had also\nbought the birds from another man. .    . J\nDetectives are now questioning a man in Southampton. '\nAnd Polly Jolley and the other birds are now back in tKeit\nprivate zoo at the Beak Hall bird farm at Hockcliffe.\n\u00bb\n'\u25a0'\"\u25a0'' \" '    ';\n_____\n'\n  _\n^PiPfWippfPpif\n2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, SAT., APRIL 8, 1961\nNew KFP Plant\nUnder Construction\n'Research, the key to ulilizatior.\nand the door to stable marketing\nis becoming an integral part ol\nmodern forest prodoct operations.\nAt Kootenay Forest Froducts\nLtd.,'research has the objective\nof improving basic product lines\nand developing new products to\nexpand sales without cutting\nmore timber from the woods. To\naccomplish this, KFP has been\nactive in the developing of new\nproducts and processes that will\nprovide a greater number of products and, at the same time, in-\nOiHungsT\nRangers Open\nSemis Monday\nEDMONTON (CP) \u2014 The best\nof seven,,Memorial Oup hockey\n\u00ab__\u25a0___ series between Edmonton --'.Kings and Wtaipeg\nApril W, 'Ait\" Potter, vicejpresi-\ndent of the 'CAHA, announced\nhen -rfotajr.jnigbt.\nHe said We second game wide __J*rJ\u2122\u00bb Winnipeg April 12\nwith the #iinl:and fourth games\nh ___min_ April 15 and 17.\nSaw tfie Aeries stands after the\nlour* gafiwiriU decide whether\nanother giin*-would be pjaiyed in\nWindermere Club\nHas Donee Group\nI jjfVERpBRE \u2014 Windermere\nPojnir___y CM) is sponsoring a\nfecpu-V dance group under the\n___on ol Mir. and Mrs. R. Dearin.\n\u25a0 *r&. be held on alternate\nELK Drive-!n\nCASTLEGAK, B.C.\ntest Times Tonight\nWORLD\" (in color)\nAward Winner\nEDGE\", (in color)\nalhonn, Yvonne DeCarlo\nurease Ihe company's competitive\nposition through up-grading low\nvalue lumber producs.\nKFP decided early ln 1961 to\nconstruct the first stage of a\nbuilding whidi will house gluing\nequipment for manufacturing\nnew products and provide storage for the lumber to be used in\ntheir processing. Construction oi\nthe first stage of this building is\nexpected to be completed sometime in June. After preliminary\nproduction it is anticipated that\nthe factory building will be extended to accommodate mpre\nequipment and a larger produc\ntion.\nThe building has been designed\nso that, as it is expanded, it wall\naccommodate an overhead crane\nwhich will transport all the lumber to and irom the gluing ma\nchines.\nThe first products that will be\nproduced in this new plant will\nbe laminated decking and laminated panelling. By using the correct combination of low and high\ngrade lumber, the company will\nbe able to produce superior products by laminating and market\nthem at competitive prices, it is\nexplained.\nAll production and quality control equipment is being designed by KFP personnel and fabricated in company shops. KFP\nexpects In the next several years\nto expand new product lines to\nlaminated beams and laminated\nspecial purpose panels for both\nstructural and decorative uses.\nIn recent years, substitute products have been able to take away\nfrom markets that were traditionally lumber martlets. This\nhas caused \"much concern\" to\nall lumber manufacturer. KFP\nofficials said Friday they believe\nglued wood products that are\nwell engineered and are well promoted arid marketed will recapture many of these markets for\nwood.\nNew Building, Expansion,\nPrograms Get Under Wayl\nStandard Oil Company of B.C.\nLtd., owner of the new station,\nhas designated it a Chevron station because it will be operated by\na lessee, not yet named. Hie\nbuilding is of. the latest design\nwith the roof extending as a canopy over the outside edge of the\ntwo-pump island. Garage, painted\nCLOSE INSPECTION of uniforms is the rule, Nelson's newest boy's group, the Navy League Cadets,\nlearned early. Here Petty Officer (2nd class) Phillips\ninspects cadet's lanyard. The boys range in age from\n12 to 14 years, and may join the older Sea Cadets\nat 14. Training is aboard the Hampton Gray VC quarters in the post office.\n\u2014Daily News Photo.\nMan Product of System,\nRotary Panelists Agree\nAuctioneers\nAgain in\nAction Today\nFine weather has brought a\nsudden surge of building activity\nin Nelson with plans for two modern service stations off the drawing boards, construction begun,\nand the design for a new modern\nbuilding whioh will be added to\n,the main Baker Street through-\nfare is in the finishing stages.\nBuilders of tlie new service stations are the Shell Oil Company\nof Canada Limited, and the Stan-\n| dard Oily Company of B.C. Ltd.\nJ. T. (Tex) Mowatt, of Nelson,\nis putting up the new Baker Street\nstructure, designed by David P.\nFairbank, Nelson architect. -\nAt the same time the demolition\nof two frame houses on a site next\nto the plant of the News Publishing Company at tlie westerly end\nof Baker Street has ended. This\nwork makes way for enlargement; service station on Nelson Avenue\nof a third service station, Gor- opposite the Hume Elementary\ndon's Texaco Service at 206 Baker i School of long-standing service to\nStreet. A parking lot will be fin- the city has been completely torn\nished by mid-summer. | down to make way for a larger\nMr. Mowatt said Friday night and more modern outlet. It will be\nI he expects to announce final plans rebuilt by Ihe same company.\n' for his building at tlie early part)   u M   ,io Conlractors als0\nof next week. Excavation work ,have &e c(mtraot to bm ac\nwas begun Friday to lower the mi     -^ wi\u201e be of modern\nground to.about  0 feet six inohes i M[_  g[ ^\nwlow sidewalk level. Tlie build- k,,^, ^ not mailMe Fri.\ning wul occupy lhe area between! ^\nthe  McCulloch   Building  which'\nhouses the Chamber of Mines of i Crews are nearing Ihe end of\nSoutheastern B.C. office, and an-, the demolition of the familiar old\nother building which is occupied: Nelson Avenue land mark and\nat the 357 Baker Street address j lumber scraps were burned on\niby Kootenay Plumbing and Heat-j\ning Company Ltd. I pftQ*   O.. if P\nMr. Mowatt said the undertak-; r wal    w*',vc\nThursday and Friday under inspection of Fire Chief E. S.\nOwens.\nJ. M. Skellern, Shell Company ,\nrepresentative in Nelson, is directing the construction of the new\noutlet.\nNearing   completion   are  the\nB. C.\" Telephone building at the\nin new colors of red, white and j corner o[ st,anley Md victoria\nblue, will be composed of a two-, streetSf whjd, _,\u201e hmse ^j-.\nbay area with one hoist and one mar allt()matie equipment; and\nflat work space. j the B   c   Department of High-\nPaul   Corcoran,   new   Nelson ways addition on Front Street,\nbrandh manager for the the Standard company and a former resi-\n| dent of Victoria, said the location\n| at Hall Mines Road and Kootenay\n| Street is considered to be \"one of\nj the best in town.\"\nA Shell Oil Company of Canada\nPROMPT\nDELIVERY\nCOAL\nCall 1518\nQUEEN   CITY\nFUEL\n524 Railway St., Nelson\nI\nPLAYMOM\nTONITE!\n1*8 Most Exciting Event\nCf 1fa\u00ab new season\nFamous Recording Star\nBUDDY\nKNOX\nfind Bl SENSATIONAL\nRHYTHM\nORCHIDS\nOR SI It\nand FLOOR SHOW\n9 to 1 \u2014Adm. $1.75\nANNUAL\nR.C.M.P.\nBALL\nCIVIC CENTRE\nFriday, April 21\nDancing 9-2\nLunch and Corsages for\nthe Ladies Included in\nthe Ticket\nTickets may be purchased\nby phoning\nRCMP Detachment 2300\nSchool Monday,\nOh Happy Day\n\"It's back to school, tra-la,'\nis the happy thought coursing\ntrough the minds of little mop-\neta as they lie misty-eyed in\nheir beds this weekend dreaming of homework, teachers and\nbooks.\nThe 10-day holiday that started\nMarch 31 is the last breather for\nstudents before the final examinations in June. Monday sees them\nall back in their class rooms.\nMost. students wrote examinations before Easter so they have\nbeen able to enjoy themselves\nwith a clear conscience. For\njunior high school students, however, the holiday was a chance\nto do some uninterrupted studies\nfor the tests coming up when\nclasses reconvene.\nR. A. Lowe\nHeads Trail\nRed Cross\n1 ninety articles' i\". will'be his sixth construction' _ \u25a0,\n-ding  dressing project in Nelson since coming to  KcvcMUb    Up\nPost office transactions were\nup slightly in March over the\nsame month last year. Receipts\nTRAIL \u2014 A meeting of the\nTrail branch of the Canadian Red\nCross saw the election of R. A,\n\"Bob\" Lowe to the presidency,\nand the addition of two new vice\npresidents to the executive.\nThe election resulted from the\nresignation of G. L. \"Flip\" Fil-\nlippelli. In tendering his resignation Mr. Fillippelli expressed\nregrets at finding it necessary\nto make such a move but explained that new duties with Cominco\nand a pending move from the district motivated his action.\nAccepting the resignation, C. A.\nMaobey, speaking for the execu-.\nSoft living and the cult of the ing thing about it, he said, was    One hundred and\norganizations   man   has   trans-1 that the group of prisoners \"were of furniture, including \u201e\nformed   North   Americans   into a cross-section of American so- tables, beds, chairs, writing desks &e c^ aD0ut K vears a2\u00b0- He\nmoral and spiritual cretins was ciety from coast to coast.\" Draw- and mattresses will go on the operates the J. T. Mowatt andj\nthe verdict of a panel discussion ing on his own military experi- auction   block   today   to   raise Company Ltd. typewriter and re-;\nat the Friday meeting of the Ro- ence he failed to find any reason money for Nelson Kiwanis and Pa* t>usi\"ess here, and put up his.same \u2122\"ln lasl y\u00a3ar; \u2122ce'^\ntary Club. | for the breakdown. He put the Si!ver Ki\u201eg Ski dubs' coo-minity j tat aiding at the age of 18.       ^^tar^to w\u00abe $185,060\nThe discussion centred around blame \u2122 lhe s\u00b0ld'ers as lndlvl(1' and winter ski tourism projects. I CALIFORNIA STYLE\na 45-minute tape of a speech llals who should have stuck to-      ,.  vlo-_rMid(,nt nm ._\ngiven bv Dr   William Mover   a 3ether and helPed each other-    I  , . vice-president Don Ap-\ngiven Dy ur. wiiiiam mover, a = \u00ab\u25a0 \u25a0 pleton, successor to J. W. Mc-\npsychiatrist at a meeting in In direct con radlcUon the hree CIe!Jand as ^^ \u201ef (he joint\nHawaii last year to probe the other members of the panel, R. \u201e,_.,\u201e\u201e .. \u00ab-,,\u201e\u201e _,\u201e_,, .Ar\nreasons for the moral decay that Blake Allan, M. N. Brandon and ?*\"ldJ.r.\u00b11 \u2122Zi^t\nI had taken place among American Dr. John G. McMurchy felt the (\u2122ludm\u00ab \u2122\u00ab\u2122ses> will be\nprisoners of war in Korea.        I blame  rested  on  society  as  = s0,tl al me atK;tlon-\nNEW and EXCITING\nSiBonn\nBy Bourjols of Paris\n\u2022 Bath Oil\n\u2022 Dry Skin Bath Oil\n\u2022 Cologne\n\u2022 Perfumed Bath Crystals\nFleury's Pharmacy\nHarold Mayo (Prop)\nCorner Baker and Ward Sts.\nPhone 25 Nelson\nIn the case in point 700 men- wnole-\nwhose combat officers had been' PRODUCTS OF SYSTEM\nkilled surrendered to the Chinese. |    Mr, Brandon felt me men wer6\nMr. Appleton and Roger Bell I Maglio.\nare in charge of the cash register;\t\ncommittee and will also dispatch\nI A $23,000 California-style ser-\n1 vice station complete with cano-\ni py-over-pump island will be com-\nplede about June 1 at Hall Mines\nRoad and Kootenay Street. Contract for the job was awarded to\nNelson building contractor Louis\nBecause of the psychloogy used'  r''d''-7^\"'the\" Astern \"under th\u00ab <=\u2022\"!-who help carry out the\nh\u201e ih. . ki\u201e._, V, .\/...     ' Products  ot  the  system under busjness transactions while mov-\nby the Chinese commandant - which wc y^ ..We are becom.\nhe told the soldiers they were' ing less and less tolerant of per- lng Bhrol,gh m crowd'\nfighting for the Wall Street capi-i sonal  discomforts,\"  he  stated. Lo\u2122  M.  Craig and Joseph\nlalists; that he had no wish to| The rugged individualist is dying !^ar. wHl be auctioneers.\n'\" treat them, they were throwing' out. This means there is no one Scene of the auction will be the\nMrs. Samsonoff\nPasses at 81\nIheir lives away for nothing and. to take the responsibility or with marking lot of the Hume Hotel,\nso on \u2014 discipline became non-1         '     '\nCASTLE Theatre\nCASTLEGAR, B.C.\nLast Times Tonight\n\"GREEN MANSIONS\"\n(Color-Cinemascope)\nPLUS\nPatterson-Johansson Fight Films\nNews and Cartoon\nSHOWS AT 6:45 AND 9:00\nAuto Vue Drive-In\nTRAIL, B. C.\nTonight, Monday, Tuesday\n\"ALIAS JESSE JAMES\"\nBob Hope, Rhonda Fleming\nSHOW TIME 7:00 and 9:15\nSkodhqkt\nDRIVE-IN\n10 Miles East of Nelson\nLast Times Tonight\nShow Starts 7:30 p.m.\n\"Who Woi That Lady\"\nTony Curtis, Dean Martin,\nJanet Leigh\nPLUS-\n\"3 Men in a Boat\"\nPLUS CARTOON\nNext Thurs., Fri., Sat.\n\"THE KILLERS OF\nKILIMANJARO\"\nPLUS -\nPATTERSON - JOHANSSON\nFIGHT FILMS\n _\u201e,,.,,,_, 6.  ___. ,    . .   .    .. .    A     ,     ,the  imagination  to  make  deel- whioh will be fenced toy rope to\ntive, wished the retiring president, ex!stent'   V\"^, murdered  fellow: sions. , provide an enclosure. The buyers\nwell in his new work and voiced iprlsone's f\u00b0r f00d and informed    \"Witness the big corporations.! will have an opportunity to in-\nregrets at losing him. He also!on each \u00b0\u2122er to gain favors.   | Here tne decisions are made by spect the articles of furniture belauded Mr. Fillippelli's past ef-|   K- J- Grinsted felt that soft life boards  of  directors,   while  the' (0re the sale and as the auction\nforts on behalf of the Red Cross; and bad training was the major. managing is done by personality! proceeds,\nand in particular the exceptional cause of the decay. The astonish- boys whose sole qualifications are'\nI Nelson Artist's\nA one-ian exhibition of paintings by Zeljco Kujundzic, princi-\nwork he had done in earlier years,\nas chairman oi the local blood!\ndonor clinics. The new vice pres-'.\nidents elected  to  the  executive Work tO Be\nare D. M. R. \"Danny\" William- C\u201eL:|,ii.aJ -t, \/*\u00ab_._\nson and R. J. \"Dick\" Thompson.; CxniDlted at COOSt\nIn business, prior to the election of the new officers, the dates\nfor the annual Trail blood donors\nclinic were announced as June\n21, 22 and 23.\nAs was the case last year, the\nclinic will operate in the afternoons and evenings only. The\ndrive is to be under chairmanship\nof Jack Reid. assisted by Ron\nHall and Lou Halliday.\nInterim reports were presented\nby various committee chairmen.\nMrs. Rose Kumorek for the\n\"home nursing\" committee expressed regret that, due to the\ninaibiility of interest qualified personnel to head up the class, plans\nfor a spring course had been\nabandoned. Every effort was being made to assure a fall class,\nhowever.\nMrs. Colin Guillaume, speaking\nfor the loan onboard committee,\nadvised that her group was still\nvery active and expressed the\nhope that a sponsoring group\ncould be found to supply an additional wheel chair.\nthat they know how to be popu-!\nlar. Thus we see weakness of' ftperted to take part in the sale\ncommand as a product of the 'nc ude Barry Ferguson, Randy\nsvstem.\" i Mulcaster, Earl Hooker and Wal-\nDr. McMurchy and Mr. Allan ter Palmer-\nagreed the \"every man for him-:   cl* members have moved all\nself\" policy was a weakness pro- furniture to be sold from the third\nduced by the system in which the floor of the hotel to the basement\nA district pioneer, .Mrs. Katty\nSamsonoff, 81, died in Nelson\nWednesday.\nShe was ' born in Russia in\n1879 and came to Canora, Saskatchewan in 1898 where she\nmarried. In 1910 she came to\nBrilliant and lived there until\n1928, when she moved to Slocan\nPark. She had been living in\nSilver King Ski Olub members; Nelson since 1959.\ncompared with $183,947 a year\nago.\nSale of stamps and supplies accounted for $11,328 against $10,-\n659 in March, I960. Other revenue\nsuch as box rentals netted $882\ncompared with $1010 a year ago.\nThe number of money qrders\nissued and number paid were,\nrespectively, 4030 and 4541 this\nMarch. The respective figures fori\nlast year were 4064 and 4271.\nMrs. Samsonoff is survived by\ntwo sons, Nick, Slocan Park;l_\nMike, Nelson; one daughter, Mrs.\nMary Juraloff, Slocan Park; six\ngrandchildren and four great\ngrandchildren.\nChoquette\nFuels\n-PHONE 530 \u2014\n\u2022 Furnace\n\u2022 \"McGillvary Cobble\"\n\u2022 Briquettes\nORDER NOW\nWe Sell Sand and Gravel\nATTENTION\nNELSON\nTV\nCABLE\nSUBSCRIBERS\nTemporary Line Interruptions\nwill occur from time to time\nbecause of maintenance work.\nPLEASE DO NOT\nADJUST YOUR SETS!!\nWork is expected to be\ncompleted within a\nfew days\nTV SERVICE DEPT.\nNELSON, B.C.\npal of the Nelson Art Sdhool, will individual thinks only of his own The articles are scheduled to be'\nbe held in the New Design Gallery\nin Vancouver from April 20 to\nMay 6.\nMr. Kujundzic, whose work is\nwell-known ln art circles both in\nEurope and North America, has\nexhibited widely in both continents.\nI The show will be opened April\n20 by Dean Geoffrey Andrew,\nUniversity of B.C. The same evening Dean and Mrs. Andrew will! Guests were Ray West of.Oli-\nentertain at dinner for Mr. and ver, who will shortly take up\nMrs. Kujundzic. | residence in Nelson, Dick Wheat-\ncomforts, not of his fellows.      j moved to the parking lot today be-\nThese last three felt that the;fore tne auction commences,\ngreatest blame lay on the system:   The sale will be the second\nwhich produced the men rather I jointly-sponsored project by the\nthan the men themselves,\nIn other business conducted at\nthe meeting, three new members\nwere added to the Rotarian rosier. They were J. M. Morley,\nHelmuth Mayrhofer and R. Bain\nOliver.\ntwo clubs. The first auction last\nfall earned about $400.\nly and Cy Foiler of Vancouver\nand Herb Peacock of Penticton,\nNames were collected  during\nASK MOURNING\nDOVES BE MADE\nGAME BIRDS\nVERNON (CP) - A resolution\nthat mourning doves be considered game birds and targets of an\nopen shooting season will be one\nof the many discussed by 100\nj delegates attending the annual\nmeeting of the Okanagan and\nthe meeting to be sent to the Yale-Similkameen  zones of  Ihe\nNelson Maple Leafs ,n Winnipeg,! a Ci pM) __, Game Associa,Uon\nencouraging\nPatton Cup.\nthem   toward   the\nUBC Professors Among Those\nHonored by Royal Society\nOTTAWA (CP) - The Royal\nSociety   of  Canada   announced\ntoday  lhat 27 Canadian  scien-\nArnold Calder reported on the tists snd humanists have been\nannual meeting of the B.C. branch\nof the Red Cross which he attended in. Vancouver. Key speaker at\nthis meeting was General Alfred\nGruenther, head of the American\nRed Cross, and former Supreme\nCommander of NATO forces in\nEurope.\nLAST TIMES TODAY\u2014Shows at 2:00 - 7:00 - 9:00\nHflNSRl\nEd Wynn- Judith Anderson\nAnna Maria Alberchetti\nTECHNICOLOR\n\u20ac IV11\nFAIR  CONDITION\nVANCOUVER (CPl- Murray\nStanley, 33 of Kincolilli, near\nPrince Rupert, was reported in\nfair condition in hospital here\ntoday with head injuries suffered during a fight last weekend.\nMeanwhile, RCMP at Prince\nRupert have charged Roger Norman of Kincolilh with assault\ncausing bodily harm as a result\nof the incident.\nENGLISH TOFFEE\n! Ib, cello bog . .       .49\nSCENIC TINS\nS7C - $1 - $1.43\nSAM PLE'S\nNelson  Pharmacy Ltd.\n\"Your Fortress of Health\"\n639 Baker St. Plione 1203\nelected fellows of the 79-year-\nold organization.\nThe elections bring total\nmembership in Canada's most\ndistinguished learned society to\n547. The society was founded in\n1892 by the Marquess of Lorne\n(later (he ninth Duke of Argyll)\nwho was then Governor - General.\nPresident is Dr. M. Y. Williams, professor emeritus of\ngeology at the University of\nBritish Columbia.\nNewly elected fellows:\nSecond one\u2014Tlie humanities\nin the French language:\nPierre Dagenais. founder and\ndirector of the institute of geography. University of Montreal;\nL'abbe Gerard Dion, director\ndepartment of industrial relations, Laval University; Jean\nFiliatrault, director of the\nFrench department of Vickers\nand Benson Limited, Montreal;\nGermalne Gnevremont, Montreal novelist; Andre Lauren-\ndeau, editor-in-chief Le Devoir,\nMontreal.\nSection two\u2014The humanities\nIn ih\u00ab Fr ,i\"h lantraa?e:\nC. C. B\u00bbvlev, department of\nMstivrv. McGill University;\n- _. Brvry e'erk \"f lhf> Pr!\"v\nf\"H!>_! an* secrotqrv of Ihe\n_-M_l  cabinet,   Ottawa;   Carl\nF. Klinck, professor of Canadian literature, University of\nWestern Ontario; W. A. C. H.\nDobson, professor of East Asiatic studies, University of Toronto; James St. Clair \u25a0 Sobell,\nprofessor and head of the department of Slavonic studies,\nUniversity of British Columbia;\nW. G. Smith, director of the Institute of Islamic Studies and\nprofessor of comparative religion, McGill.\nSection three \u2014 Mathematical, physical and chemical sciences:\nR. E. Burgess, professor of\nphysics, University of British\nColumbia; A. G. W, Cameron,\nassociate research officer, physics division, Atomic Energy of\nCanada Limited, Chalk River,\nOnt.; Charles Fox, professor of\nmathematics, McGill; A. F. McKay, vice-president. Monsanto\nCanada Limited, La Salle, Que.;\nM. A. Preston, professor of\nphysics, MeMaster University;\nA. E. R. Westman, director, department of chemistry, Ontario\nResearch Foundation, Toronto.\nSection four \u2014 geological sciences:\nCharles Richard Stelck, professor of geology, University of\nAlberta; Denis M. Shaw, department of geology, MeMaster; Peter A. Hacque\/bard,\ngeological survey of Canada,\nmines and t\u00bbchnical surveys department,   Ottawa;   Robert   B.\nFerguson, department of geology, University of Manitoba.\nSection five \u2014 biological sciences:\nR. A. Altschul, professor and\nhead of the department of anatomy, University of Saskatchewan; A. W. A. Brown, professor\nand head of the department of\nzoology, University of Western\nOntario; Jack J. R. Campbell,\nprofessor of dairying, faoulty of\nagriculture, University of British Columbia; Paul Raymond\nGorhann, senior research officer\nand head of (he plant physiol- j\nogy section, division of applied\nbiology, National Research\nCouncil, Ottawa; Joseph Francis Morgan, chief, biochemical\nresearch section, laboratory of\nhygiene, Department of National Health and Welfare, Ot-\ntawa; Bram Rose, associate\nprofessor of medicine, McGill.\nSaturday.\nThere is already an open season on mourning doves in some\ngame management areas following an Amerioan theory that\nshooting causes them to reproduce more vigorously.\nOther resolutions ask that pheasant hunting hours remain unchanged but the daily bag be increased to three wilh tlie season\ntotal remaining at 10 birds.\nA-IENS _\n3 h.p. -<\nROTARY\nTIILER\n\u2022 AMERICA'S FAVORITE FOR\nJust Easy Tilling!\n* Powerful 3 h.p.\nongino\n\u2022 Tills B\" to 20\" wide\n\u2022 Optional  reverto\ndrive\n\u2022 Froo-swinging\ndaplh bar\n\u2022 Ask lor fre\u00ab\ndemonstration\n,.<V\nDISTRIBUTOR\nVALLEY SERVICE\nPhone Appledale 1-J\nSome Areas Open to Dealers\nIf you are interested in a tiller just give us a call and we\nwill demonstrate in your own garden. Only then you can be\nsure that you have the tiller to suit your soil conditions\nsince there are several tine combinations. Payments can\nbe arranged.\nPays $10 Fine\nJ. A. Sexsmith of Balfour was\nfined $10 for crossing a double\nline on the highway when he appeared in provincial court this\nweek, iie pleaded guilty before\nstipendiary magistrate Willam\nEvans.\nEMPIRE\nDRY CLEANERS\nWE CALL AND DELIVER\n821 Baker-Nclson-Ph. 288\nFILTERED\nDRY CLEANING\nDyeing - Alterations - Repairs\nAlso Agents (or House of Stone\nMade-to-Measure Suits\nNfj.\" Spring Samples\nELECTRIC   RAILWAY\nA $480,000,000 system of electric railways, running 310 miles ]\nfrom Tokyo to Osaka, will be '\nopened in Japan in 1965.\nSHERLOCK-MANNING\nHURON LOUIS XV\n$895 Delivered\nPEND d'OREILLE\nPIANO SALES\n3194 Highway Drive \u2014 Trail\nPHONE 198\nDEPARTMENT OF HIGHWAYS\nNOTICE\nPursuant to Section 27 of the Highway Act, road\nrestrictions will be rescinded on the following\nroads in Region 3, effective at 12:01 a.m. on the\nmorning of April 10, 1961:\nGRAND FORKS - GREENWOOD DISTRICT:\nAll main and side roads.\nROSSLAND-TRAIL DISTRICT:\nNo. 22 Rossland-Patterson\nNo. 3 Southern-Transprovinclal Highway,Rossland\nto Castlegar\nNELSON-CRESTON DISTRICT:\nNo. 3 Southern-Transprovinclal Highway, Castlegar\nto Balfour\nAll other restrictions will remain ln force until further\nnotice.\nD. F. MARTIN,\nRegional Engineer\nNelson. B.C.\nApril 7, 1961\n N-LS6N MLY NIWI, SAT., APRIL 8,1961 - 3\niuiiH\u00a7\u00a7_ Spotlight.. ^\nIron Foundries Trace\nOrigins Back to 1737\n8. . tt_B_\u00ab mumis\nNnsl-lnn IHvss ttUdlUMI Editor\n-ftfthil- hfttn Foundries Ltd.,\nl_Witlft-i_W*tl iltttuuMtti com-\n()_*. toi_6 i_ origins \"in a\nS_*l8hl lifte\" from a blast fur-\nhiit_ *hi_l Went Into operation\nlleftf _*_\u201e Rivieres in New\nFWBfte in 1797, and whose prod-\nU6. ttta BdW at Ihe king's stores\nih .Heh<- nl.25 to 30 beaver\nittillS l_r hundredweight.\nAs fetwded ln a new _-\nItoUfaW booklet entitled The\n_t#y ot Die Canada Iron Com-\nllrjllies, (he present name dates\nmm. 1016 and the company\nHow heads 10 older companies\n__ lias 18 plants and numerous sales offices and ware-\nIwus.s across Canada. Sales in\nim totalled $101,346,000.\nSubsidiaries are C. W. Carry\nLtd., Edmonton; Calgary Structural Steel Ltd.; Western Bridge\nand Steel Fabricators Ltd., Vancouver; and Dominion Structural Steel Ltd., Pressure Pipe\nLtd., Tamper Ltd., Railways\nand Power Engineering Corporation Ltd., Paper Machinery\nLtd., Paper Mill Equipment,\nLtd., and C. M. Lovsted and Co.\n(Canada) Ltd., all with Montreal head offices.\nThe salesmen's division of the\nVancouver real estate board\nhas asked Public Works Minister Walker that the maximum\nhome improvement loan obtainable under the National Housing Act be increased to $8,000,\ncompared with a present maximum of $4,000 for a single-\nfamily dwelling, and that the\namount be repayable over a\nperiod of 12 years.\nThe division also asks for\nguarantees for mortgages on\nexisting homes, similar to NHA\nloans for building new ones.\nOutlining (he suggestions in a\nrecent  address,   Dennis   Shaw,\npresident-elect  of  the  division,\nORANBROOK \u2014 Peak figure said neither requires subsidy or\nfor unemployment this season was' expenditure of public funds and\nnoted tlie last week in March at't both are self-liquidating,\nthe Cranbrook office of the National Employment Service, covering the area from Elko to Kootenay Lake and north to Parson.\nThe list nurrtbei- 1,807 unplaced\napplicants at the end of March,\nIhe year's peak so far by a substantial margin. Tally was up 78\npersons during the week.\nAccounting for _i_dh of the\nJobli\nFigure\nless\nres at\nYear's Peak\nTeaching Staff\nResignations\nAnnounced\nORANBROOK \u2014 One year\nhigh figure is seasonal layoff of leave-of-absence for Gordon\nbush workers for the spring run- Walmsley, physical education in-\noff period, which lasts from siX|Structor at Mount Baker School,\nto eight weeks usually. Mil and was approved hy Cranbrook Dis-\nplaner workers at the centres\nthrough the area are continuing\nwork in general with excellent\nstockpiles of logs or lumber for\ncontinued plant operations.\nAnalysis of (he figure shows 1,-\n535 men and 272 women listed.\nTotal listings for the date a year\nago were 1,750, of whom 1,441\nwere men and 318 women.\ntrict School Board. Mr. Walmsley will spend (he year studying\nat University of British Columbia.\nTeaching staff resignations effective in June have been received from Mrs. F. W. Purvis\nand Mrs. Olive Johnston, both\nhome economics instructors at\nMount Baker School, Miss Anne\nBriggs of Tenth Avenue Sohool,\nMrs. Catherine Rounsville of\nAmy Woodland Elementary\nSchool, and Edward C. Holman,\nmusic supervisor of elementary\nschools, who is returning to England after two years in Oanada.\nT. A. Phillips was appointed night\nsdhool supervisor for the 1961-62\nsdhool year.\nThe board also confirmed appointment of Mrs. Robert. Berger\nas custodian of the Wardner elementary school, succeeding Mrs.\nJohn Koski, who is leaving the\ni district.\nProgrammes\nBranch Aims\nShown at Meet\nMVERMEHE \u2014 Jon McKinnon\nof Oranbrook, recreation commission director for East Kootenay, addressed a mme meeting at\nWindermere attended by recreation commission representatives\nfrom Canal Flat, Radium, Wind-\nenmere and Invermere.\nMr. McKinnon described aims| \"\nand actm-ties of the Community! BLACKFAULDS\nProgrammes Branch, mentioning\nparticularly  leadership  training\nand the possibility of a Kootenay\nTraining School for'leaders.\nIt was thought that Bast Kootenay communities would benefit\nby more intercommunity meetings with Recreation Commission\nexecutives.\nArrangements will be made for\nrepresentatives to attend the annual Community Programme's\nBranch meeting in Cranbrook\nlate this spring.\nOLDTIMER DIES\nAT CRANBROOK\nCRANBROOK - Longtime former resident of BlaokfauMs, Alta.\nMrs. Florence Jane McKay, died\nsuddenly in Cranbrook. She was\n80 years old and was born at\nElderslie, Bruce County, Ont.,\ntat most of her life had been\nspent at Bdachfaulds. She had\ncome here three months ago to\nmake her home with her son,\nHarold McKay. Also surviving are\nfour sisters, Mrs. Margaret Breed\nof Vancouver, Mrs. Ida Ourrie of\nToronto and Mrs. Marry Miller\nand Mrs. Annie Farewell of\nBlackifaulds.\nThe body has been shipped to\nBlackfaulds for funeral service\nand burial.\nCRESTON FOREST\nASSOCIATION\nINCORPORATED\nCRESTON \u2014 Timber rights wit\nbe protected in the Creston area\nwith formation of an incorporated\nsociety. i\nCreston Forest Association 1C   WINDERMERE\ncently  was   incorporated   as   a] \u00bb..-..-_ ^i\u00bb\/_c\nsociety with its object to protect! DISTRICT GIVES\nmembers' quotas; ensure as far! CXQO TQ  FUND\nas possible members are able to \\ \u2122 v\nobtain timber up to their quotas; i nWERMERE \u2014 Invenmere\nto act for the members in any- j Kinsmen Club has announced\n' 5602.33 collected in the Windermere District as proceeds of their\nannual \"Mother's Maroh\" for\ncrippled children and polio prevention and rehabilitation. This\nis an increase of $85 over 11)60\ndonations.\nA breakdown credits separate\nv_ley communities: Invermere\n$196.19; Edgewater $66.52; Wilmer   $31.17;    Athalmer   $64.25;\nthing affecting timber operations in (he Creston Sustained-\njdeld Units.\nLIBRARY BOARD\nNOW COMPLETE\nORANBROOK - Cranbrook Library Board election has been\ncompleted with C. W. Beasely\nchairman, Mrs. G. M. Robertson,\nvice-chairman,   Donald   Miller I\u2122* Creek $16.40; Windermere\ntreasurer and Mrs. Ronald Dale\n$14;   Radium   $21;   Canal   Flat-\nsecretary, with directors  Denis j *1^?-38,  ...\nHorobin, G. A. Havers, Mrs. R.I   Ca^f\u00abn dianman was Stan\nW. Slye, Mrs. M. C. Pennington j1 &y ''rater-\t\nand Mrs. T. E. Roulston. !\nThe board has decided to resort  Hospital Auxiliary\nto small debts court action for  \u25a0\u00bb ^     .  .\ncompensation ol missing books if   DCCOITieS jOCICTy\nborrowers continue neglecting to     CRESTON VALLEY \u2014 Erick-\nreturn them.\nDespite the daily afternoon bor- ley Hospital recently was incor-\nrowing service which has been in\neffect with a staff of volunteer librarians and limited facilities, the\n6pace problem is becoming more\nacute at the library location in\nthe provincial government building. This is partly due to gradual\nestablishment of a reference section from which books cannot be\nborrowed. High sohool students\nare finding this section of use in\ntheir studies and making heavy\nuse of it.\nson Auxiliary to the Creston Val-\nporated as a Society under the\nSocieties Act.\nObjects of the society are to\nadd to the comfort and welfare\nof hospital patients; to raise\nfunds by any means having the\napproval of the board of management of the hospital; foster good\nrelations between the hospital anc1\ngeneral public; and to generally\nco-operate with (he board ol\nmanagement and the officers ol\nthe hospital.\niSt\n,\nLive better with Genuine Arborite\nBeautify youk kitchen... bathroom... every room in your house with lije-hsting labour saving Genuine\nWhether you're building a new home...\nre-modelling an old one...or just \"doing-it-\nyourself\"...you'll find that Genuine Arborite\nis perfect for any application where flat\nsurfaces are involved.\nAnd Genuine Arborite is wonderfully\neasy to install...defies chips and cracks...\nwithstands heat... wipes clean in a jiffy.\nSee your B.C. Arborite dealer today.\nAsk him to show you the complete range\nof Arborite's Color-Magic patterns and colours.\nAnd while you're at it, enquire about\nArborite's companion products...\nEdge Trim, Twin-Trim, and Contact Cement.\nRemember, there is no substitute\nfor Genuine Arborite.\nArborite\nFine furnlfure, foo, can be finished in Genuine Arborife, giving surfaces ftaf wipe doan in a moment.\nHandsome drawing room rfoore faced in Genuine Arbor\/fa. Also, marble pattern Arborife coffee (able fop.\nlt 1\nQuick, easy.to-install Arborite Fdge Trim being applied fo kitchen counter\nunit for high-quality professional finish.\nArborite Woodgrain pattern walls, featuring silk screen floral design, highlight attractive\naff-Arborife bathroom decor.\nThe range and versatility of Genuine Arborite is demonstrated in countless homes throughout British\nColumbia. Let Genuine Arborite beautify your home, too. Discuss your home improvement plans with\nyour neighbourhood Arborite Dealer\u2014he's a good man to know.\nGENUINE\nArborite\nTHE ARBORITE COMPANY LIMITED\nMONTREAL \u2022 TORONTO . HALIFAX * QUEBEC CM \u2022 WINNIPEG \u2022 EDMONTON \u25a0 VANCOUVER\ntrod. Mark Bio'i\nCandy stripes in Stardust patterns keynote Arborite kitchen plan. Counter fops,\nback splash, and cabinets are also in matching Genuine Arborite paiternt.A\nTHE ARBORITE COMPANY LIMITED\n1161 Melville Street, ,\nVancouver 5, B.C.\nPlease send me complete information on Arborite including fun cotoim.\ntwelve page booklet, \"A More Colourful Life with Genuine Arborite.\"\nNAMC......\nADDRESS..\n(Please Print)\nL_.\n\u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0\n __ _.\n\u25a0\ny\nJlrismt latly Nana\nEstablished April 22, 1902 ' Nelson, B.C\nPublished by the NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n26S Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia, mornings except\nSundays and holidays in the centre o* the Kootenays with\nthe (pigest 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.\n\u2022. ft    , *> MEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS\nMEMBER 6k THE CANADIAN DAILV NEWPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION\nJ       \u25a0  \u00a3\u25a0 MEMBER OF THE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS\nThe Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news\ndispatches credited to it or lo The Associated Press or Reuters ro this\n\u00ab        .-'  _ paper and also the local news published therein.\nSaturday, April 8, 1961\nThe Bomb Still Necessary Evil\nEis probably true that many of\ns who took part in the Ban-the-\nBomb marches are idealists who sincerely believe that if America and\nBrlipin gave up the use of atomic\nweapons\" then Russia would follow\nsuif and the horrors of atomic war\naverted.*>\nOn the other hand there may be\nsome like Bertrand Russell whose life\nhai. been spent in espousing unpopular? causes principally perhaps because they need to express their personalities.\n,:X_d yet again there may be many\nwhi simply went along for the ride\nana among these must be counted the\njnc&y .young men and women carried\naw&y by a cause to which they have\ngiven little consideration.\nput when all is said and done it\nmtff be just atavistic instincts manifesting themselves at the Spring of\ntheKyear. The sunrise Easter Day celebration at English Bay is not Christian\nbut was performed back in dim ages\nlong before the birth of Christ. In\nsoiiie communities it is the custom to\nclimb a high hill at this time of the\nyear and it may be purely coincidental that Sons of Freedom strip in the\nspring, but history records that Russian communities used to mark the\ndisappearance af the snows of winter\nby mass strippings.\nThe Ban-the-Bomb march has an\nanjecedent.in the Crusades. Here, too,\nidealism led the way. It seemed a\nnoble thing ,ta, free the Holy Land\nIrom the infidel and the Crusades\nmay have achieved some good, but\nthey were an evidence of mass hys\nteria which culminated in the Children's Crusade. It seems inconceivable\nnow that children could be drawn\nfrom all acrosB Europe to die or become slaves before they ever reached the shores of Palestine, but the\nBomb marchers have given little\nthought to what would happen if it\nwere banned.\nNo one wants the hydrogen bomb\nused, everyone would be much happier perhaps if it had never been invented, but now that the world has it,\nit must adjust to its implications.\nIt is safe to say that if the West did\nnot have it, Russia would, and if Russia gave up the use of lt China would\nnot. Mr. Macmillan coined the phrase\nthe \"wind of change\" but even he did\nnot foresee all the changes which are\ntaking place.\nThe U.N., on which so much of the\nworld pinned its hopes for peace, has\ndegenarated into a series of blocs\nmoBt of which are anti-white and it\nis becoming evident that in the not\ntoo distant future the struggle for\nsupremacy will be by the Communist\nAsian countries against the Europeans \u2014 Including Russia. If and\nwhen that happens it will be well for\nthe West that it has the hydrogen\nbomb. China openly says that she\ncan afford to lose half of her 600,000,-\n000 people and still rule the world.\nIn the meantime the hydrogen\nbomb keeps the peace of the world.\nNo country at present dares to contemplate war lest it unleashes all the\nhonors of atomic war. Despite everything the West cannot afford to ban\nthe bomb.\nLetters to Tlie\nEditor\nLetters to the editor on any topic ol\ngenuine Interest are welcome II they\nare oriet. accurate and fair They\nmay be published over a nom de\nplume, but the name ol the writer\nmust be given to the Editor aa evidence of good faith. Anonymous letters go Into the wastepaper basket.\nTypewritten letters musi be double-\nspaced.\nDuncan Lake Labor\nRumors Corrected\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u2014I have been asked to comment on a\nrumor that local labor is failing to find a\nplace in the ''large labor force of upwards\nof 150 men employed by B. C. Hydro in engineering investigations at Duncan Lake\".\nThe facts are that 42 men are presently\nemployed in the-area. Oniy one is a B. C.\nHydro man, an engineer from our Victoria\noffice. Our consultants employ 25, of whom\n13 are local; and Boyles Brothers Drilling\nCompany have 17 men on the job, nine of\nwhom are local.\nIt must be evident, considering the technical nature of the work, that the employment of just over 50 per cent local labor is\nreasonable. Every attempt has been made\nto employ local men, and this long-standing\nB. C. Hvdro policy will be continued.\nLANCE H. WHITTAKER,\nChief of Information Services,\nB. C. Hydro.\nStarlings Anonymous\n\".We have followed with great interest the battle of the starlings which\ngoes on endlessly in parts of the\nw\u00a3rld.\nThe English have failed, miserably, in London with efforts to shoo\nthe little building destroyers away\nfroirn the metropolis. They have used\neverything from electric grids to bagpipes, have been frustrated by bird\nlovers who won't permit poison and\nshooting,, and have wound up with\nthe starlings in full command. What\nH$Ier couldn't do once, the invading\nstarlings- do each night.\nNow the United States proposes\nto mount an attack. Here is a challenge to American Know-How. And\nthe Americans must be given marks\nfor ingenuity and a real American\ngimmick \u2014\n#A miceky.\nThe idea, to keep the birds away\nfrom airport runways, is to mix them\na Mickey Finn in their natural food\nalong the air strips. This, it is reasoned, would make the bird too tipsy to\nfly or too hung-over to want to. Then\nthe bird would go away.\nWant to bet?\nStarlings Anonymous may be the\nresult of the attempt to lead the birds\nto liquor. It may also prove that a\nstarling with a load on may think it\nis an American eagle and take after\nthe planes. This starling is a tough\nfellow.\nWe wonder about this serving of\nliquor. Will it come under state laws?\nWill they be served drinks before\n11 a.m. and after 11 p.m.?\nWe can imagine the sour observations of humans stranded in a town\nand thirsty after closing hours. \"Only\na starling can get a drink in this\nburg.\"\nIt is worth a try. But only an incurable optimist will expect success.\n\u2014Calgary Herald.\nThe Wonder in Words\n_With that sad and sophisticated\nexpression that monkeys reserve for\nthe achievements of upstart civilization, the passenger on the Redstone\nRocket peered from his space capsule while a photographer caught the\ncurious -blend of the primordial and\nfuturistic. That was weeks ago. But\nthe news in the picture was not the\nsort that fades like newspaper print.\nIt is more like the news in a great\nwork of art\u2014an influence that impels reflection, that asks a creative\nresponse. It reminds us that for human beings experience tends to remain Incomplete without a telling\nof it.\nAmong the differences between\nmankind and beasts, this is one. The\nmonkey's wise and even disdainful\nlook does hot deceive us that he is\nmuch the. wiser for the trip\nSome may ask whether we are\nmuch the wiser. The answer is that\nwe shall be, when we have exchang\ned with one another the multiplicity\nof thoughts that it evokes.\nIt is unlikely the monkey will exchange his new thoughts, if any, with\nthe older thoughts of monkeys whose\nspace exploits have remained more\nor less at the same aTboreal altitudes\nfor monkeys' years. And this Beems\na pity from a simian point of view.\nThe power lo communicate in\nthis way, to build others' experience\ninto our thoughts and others' thoughts\ninto our experience, is, so far as we\nknow, a peculiarly human capability.\nSo the monkey looks out of his capsule window and we look in at him.\nHe is silent. And, perhaps, so are\nwe; but not for long.\n\u2014Christian Science Monitor.\nThe Gentle Muse\nThe tissues of the Lile to be\nWe weave with colors all our own,\nAnd in the field of Destiny\nWe reap as we have sown.\n\u2014John Greenleaf Whittier.\n'Mom ... Upper Fairview, South Ne Ison, Rosemont. \u2022. need a change!\"\nInterpreting\nThe News\nBy JACK BEST\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nHardening of Canada (s policy towards South Africa is dramatically\nillustrated by its support of a strongly worded resolution of apartheid\nnow before the United Nations as-'\nsembly.\nThe resolution, co-sponsored by\nthree Commonwealth members \u25a0\u2014\nIndia. Ceylon and Malaya\u2014is much\ntougher than the last apartheid resolution which came before the assembly and which Canada found too\nstrong to vote for. She abstained.\nBritoin has made an even more\nremarkable switch.\nBoth countries, however, stopped\nshort of supporting a still tougher declaration now before the assembly.\nSponsored by. 25 African states, it\ncalls for diplomatic and economic\nsanctions against South Africa.\nThe India-Ceylon-Malaya resolution calls on UN members to take\n\"such separate and collective actions\nas are open to them\" to bring about\nan abandonment of South Africa's\nrace policies.\nIn officially endorsing the resolution Canada expressly stipulated it\ndid not condone the use of force or\npunitive measures.\nThe resolution sternly censures\nSouth Africa for its \"continued and\ntotal disregard\" of previous UN appeals and for its \"determined aggravation of racial issues.\"\nIt denounces racial discrimina-*\ntion as reprehensible and\"'repugnant\nto human society, and accuses South\nAfrica of flagrantly violating the UN\nCharter ond the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.\nAll this is pretty strong stuff os\ncompared to the 1959 resolution,\nwhich merely expressed deep regret\nand concern that the South African\ngovernment had not responded to op-\npeals to- reconsider \"policies which\nimpair the right of all racial groups\nto enjoy the same fundamental\nrights and freedoms.\"\nInstead of calling for-actions by\nUN members, the 1959 resolution\nmerely appealed for \"their best endeavors as appropriate\" to achieve\nthe purposes of the resolution.\nCanada's present support of a resolution which is. far stronger than\none it found too strong in 1959 is not\nat all paradoxical. Circumstances\nhave changed. For one thing, the\nSharpeville massacre\" has taken\nplace.\nGenerally, it reflects the governments' impatience-\u2014part of that\nfound in the international community os a whole\u2014at South Africa's intransigence on the question of apar\ntheid.\nThis intransigence\u2014some would\nsay arrogance;\u2014was the chief rea\nson for the hostile attitude of last\nmonth's prime ministers' conference\nin London which produced South Af\nrica's withdrawal from the Commonwealth.\nFormer Packers' Owner Admits\nKnowing of Firms' Investments\nBRANDON, Man. (OP) \u2014'The\nformer owner of Brandon Packers Limited admitted at a court\nsession in his home Thursday\nthat he had full understanding\nof .the firm's investment in a\ncompany controlled by two\nmen facing a conspiracy\ncharge.\nJ. C. Donaldson testified un\nder oross - examination that he\ndiscussed a $200,000 Brandon\nPackers investment in Fropak\nLimited before lie sold the local\nmeat packing plant in 1958 to\nHubert Cox and Hugh Paton,\nboth of Toronto.\nTlie $200,000 forms nearly half\nof Ihe $480,000 Cox and Paton\nare charged with conspiring to\nIncome Tax Tips\nBy C. A. MILLER\nIt's Been Said\nTake away the sword; states can be\nsaved without it; bring the pen I\n\u2014Edward George Bulwer-Lytton.\n(Designed and written for the\ntaxpayer who is not in a posi- j\ntion to employ the services ol\na   professional   accountant   or\nvisit an Income Tax Office.)     i\nIn this article we will deal with\nthe type of dependent on whom\ntlie taxpayer may claim the\nequivalent to married status. To\nclaim the equivalent to married\nstatus, which carries an exemption of $1000, the taxpayer must\nbe single, divorced, legally separated or a widow (eri. I\nIf the taxpayer qualifies, this\nequivalent exemption may be\nclaimed on a father, mother,\nbrother, sister, niece, nephew,\naunt or uncle, provided the dependent is wholly supported by\nthe taxpayer in a self-contained\ndomestic establishment. It is not\ncompulsory that the taxpayer\nhimself reside with the dependent. Paying their board and lodging in a hotel or rooming house\nis not sufficient to allow such a\nclaim. The residence maintained\nfor the dependent must be\" self-\ncontained, with its own bathroom\nand be the place where the dependent eals and sleeps.\nIt must be noted that the equivalent to married exemption may\nbe claimed on an aunt, uncle,\nniece or nephew, but if they do\nnot  qualify   for   the  equivalent\nexemption there is no provision'\nin the Income Tax Act whereby l\nIhey may be claimed as other\n.'r'ependents.\nIn cases where the aunt and;\nuncle raised the taxpayer from a j\nchild, he could claim them as\nfoster parents rather than-as an I\naunt or uncle. Regarding nieces I\nand nephews, wholly supported\nby the taxpayer and residing\nwith the taxpayer, they might:\npossibly be claimed as adopted;\nchildren. For income tax pur-]\nposes adoption may be either in J\nlaw or in fact. In cases such as\nihis full details should be written\non a separate sheet of paper and\nattached to the return.\nSituations such as.this will be\ncovered more fully in a later\narticle.\nMYSTERY   LETTER\nVANCOUVER (CP) - A pilot\nwiUi British Northern Pacific\nAirline learned Thursday that\na huge H stamped in the snow\nmeans \"helicopter Land Here,\"\nnot Help. The pilot called Air-\nSea Rescue when he spotted an\nH in Hie snow near Garibaldi\nLake, about 78 miles north of\nhere. Confused, the rescue unit\nchecked with Okanagan Helicopter Limted, who solved the\nmystery.\nsteal from Brandon Packers between Jan. 1, and Nov. 30, I960.\nPart of the preliminary hearing is being held in Mr. Donaldson's home because he is recuperating from a broken back.\nHe also admitted making a\nprofit on shares he \"picked up\"\ncheaply Iron small shareholders, knowing he could sell them\nat $15 a share when the plant\nwas sold.\nSIGNED  MINUTES\nHe said he and the company's\nsecretary, Miss M. E. Peary,\nwho together owned more than\n90 per cent of the common\nstock in Brandon Packers,\nsigned minutes of a directors'\nmeeting ratifying the sale of\nlhe plant, and the Fropak investment, without calling the\nmeeting.\nMr. Donaldson admitted that\na letter authorizing a bank to\ndeliver his common shares to\nthe new owners, which he said\nTuesday had been dictated in\nthe bank office because the deal\nwas new to him, was actually\nprepared in the Brandon Packers office the day before the\ndeal.\nHe testified that his lawyer,\nN. W, Keer of Brandon, prepared the agreement for sale\nMarch 22, 1956, in Brandon. Mr.\nDonaldson said Wednesday the\nagreement had been prepared\nin Toronto.\nHe said the lowest he paid to\nshareholders before the sale\nwas $10, and he had charged\nPaton and Cox $15 a share\nwhen he sold them. He did not\nknow how much money he\nmade by doing this because he\ndidn't know if he still had his\nrecords.\nAt that time, Mr. Donaldson\ntestified, it was not public\nknowledge that Brandon Packers was to be sold. He had completed an option agreement with\nPaton and Cox.\nCommittee Advises Overhaul\nOf Alberta School   Buses\nEDMONTON (CP)-With last\nNovember's death of 17 students in the Lamont, Alta., bus\ncrash a vivid memory, a government - appointed committee\nhas suggested a general overhaul of all school bus operations\nin Alberta.\nThe committee's report, tabled in lhe legislature Thursday, contains 50 recommendations. They call for outright\nchanges or improvements in\nsohool board policies, driver\ntraining and regulation, bus\nequipment and railway operations .and level crossing warning signals.\nHeaded by Paul Lawrence,\nmanager of the Alberta Safety\nCouncil, the three-member com-\naunt JM\nI'm glad Pa has an eye for a\npretty woman. The more he-\nappreciates good looks, the more\n1 appreciate his bein' satisfied\nwith me.\nmittee was established Nov. 30,\nthe day after the sohool bus collided with a CNR freight train\nat a,level crossing near Lamont,\n45 miles northeast of Edmonton. In addition to the 17 students killed, 23 others and bus\ndriver Frank Budney were injured.\nCommenting on the fatal\ncrossing near Lamont, the committee report said the grade was\nhigher than the five per cent\nstandard set by the department\nof transport and visibility was\nfurther impaired by a dip in the\nroad.\nHAVE ROAD TESTS\nOne major recommendation\nwas that special operating licences should be required for\nschool bus drivers. Such licences would require a road test\nin a school bus and an annual\nrecomm m e n d a 11 o n from the\nschool board.\nThe committee said front\ndoors should be kept open while\nvehicles are crossing railway\ntracks to lessen the chance of\njamming should -there be a collision.\nIf Budney had been required\nto stop, open the door and possibly the window on the driver's\nside, he \"undoubtedly would\nhave heard the horn of Hie\ndiesel locomotive that struck\"\nhis vehicle at Lamont, the report said.\nSUGGEST SUPERVISOR\nTtie committee recommended\nthat school s\"stems with 40 or\nmore bus routes should have a\npupil transportation supervisor.\nSuch a supervisor would plan\nroutes, oversee drivers and conduct training programs for\nthem, and keep track of mechanical condition of buses, A supervisor should be employed\njointly by smaller sohool systems.\nEND  BUS SALES\nAnother recommendation was\nthat buses should be operated\nas publicly or privately-owned\nfleets rather than by individual\noperators and the sale of bus\nroutes should be discouraged.\nThe committee said bus\nroutes should be planned so\nthat children will \"not have to\ncross four - lane highways or\nbusy two-lane roads.\nTurning to railway equipment,\nthe report suggested revolving\namber lights should be installed\non roofs of locomotives and railway cars and attempts should\nbe made to improve visibility on\nlocomotives.\nOther recommendations in the\nreport;\nNo radios should be allowed lo\noperate in a bus while it is\ncarrying pupils;\nMunicipalities should conduct\na survey to close level crossings hot actually needed;\nPupils should be loaded and\nunloaded at sbecial stops off the\ntravelled portion of streets and\nhiehways;\nBus routes should be planned\nto minimize the number of\ntimes'a'bus'must cross railway\ntracks. \u2022 \u25a0\nBeef Popular\nWllh Canadians\nOTTAWA (CP) - Canadians\nwent for beef cuts in a big way\nlast year as per capita consumption of meat jumped 3.6\npounds to 146.5 pounds.\nA report by the Dominion\nBureau of Statistics says the\naverage Canadian ate 69.2\npounds of beef in 1960, almost\nfive pounds more than in 1959.\nHe also put away 55.2 pounds\nof pork, down three pounds\nfrom per capita consumption of\npork in 1959, .4 pounds of\ncanned meat, 7.6 pounds of\nveal, five pounds of fancy meat\nand 3.2 pounds of mutton and\nlamb.\nThe 146.5 - pound total compared with 142.9 pounds in i959\nand was 12 pounds above the\n1951-55 average.\nSedan Too Sick\nTo Appear in\nN.Y. Court\nTORONTO (CP) - Brendan\nBehan was not able to appear in. court Friday to face\ncharges of creating a disturbance\u2014he is too sick.\nThe Irish playwright is still in\na private hospital here and will\nprobably not leave his bed until late next week, said Eam-\nmon Martin, a close friend.\nMr. Behan _ recuperating\nfrom an alcoholic seizure. He\nalso suffers from diabetes and\na heart condition.\nSchools Wind\nUp Ontario\nConvention\nTORONTO (CP) - The Ontario Federation of Home and\nSchool Associations wound up\nits convention Thursday with a\nsession of wrangling over a\nresolution that was finally rejected.\nThe thorny question to delete\nthe world \"Christian\" from the\nPublic Schools Act dealing with\nteachers' duties, was thrown out\nbecause the section of Hie act\nhad been transferred to the\nSchools Administration Act Jan.\n1, 19.1.\nA substitute motion, to retain\nthe term Christian morality in\nthe Schools Administration Act,\nreceived overwhelming support.\nA move to have conversational French taught in elementary schools and French composition and grammar taught in\ngrades seven and eight was referred to committee.\nThe federation members were\namong 10,000 delegates at the\n101st meeting of Hie Ontario Educational Association and? the\n18th Catholic Education Confer-\nControversy Raging\nOver Eichmann Trial\nBy RELMAN MORIN\nJERUSALEM (AP) - Spread\nacross six columns of discussion\nin the Israeli newspaper Jerusalem Post is the caption \"Trying\nEichmann \u2014 Triumph or Tragedy?\"\nThis question is the subject of\nfierce controversy in Israel today with many clashing points\nof view.\nAdolf Eichmann, chief of the\nJewish affairs section of the\nNazi gestapo, goes on trial here\nTuesday.\nHe is charged formally with\n\"crimes against Hie Jewish people and crimes against humanity.\" Tlie indictment holds him\nresponsible in the deaths of an\nestimated 6.000,000 Jews, slain\nin German extermination camps\nduring the war.\nSTANDS ACCUSED\nIsrael contends he was operational director of Hie extermination plan known as the \"final\nsolution of the Jewish question.\"\nAs such, he comes into court\naccused as one of the greatest\narch-criminals in history.\nVirtually every family of European Jews living in Israel today mourns one or more relatives who were victims of the\nNazi death camps.\nYou might expect to find unanimity of opinion on Hiis extraordinary case, the justification\nfor kidnapping Eichmann in\nBuenos Aires last year, and the\ndesirability of trying him in Israel.\nBut opinion is by no means\nunanimous.\nA young Israeli, noting the\nimmense labor in preparing for\nthe trial, remarks: \"One bullet\nin Buenos Aires would have\nmade this all unncessary.\"\nA shopkeer says:  \"The trial\nwill cost a great deal of money\nand Israel is not a rich nation.\nIt  would  have  been  better  toi\ngive Eichmann to the GemianstJJ\nand let them try him. Only, o(ii\ncourse, they don't want him.\" \"\u2022]\nOPINIONS DIFFER\nTwo distinguished Zionists,\nboty associated wilh this movement for more than 50 years,\ndisagree about the trial's effects.\nMeir Gossman says in the\nJerusalem Post: \"This is going\nto prove a great mistake. It will\nintroduce strife and quarrels\ninto Hie Jewifh camp and will\nlead to vituperation and vilification of the Jews.\"\nBut Richard Lichtheim says\nin the same paper: \"Israel had\nno alternative . . , The trial has\nan important educational as-\npeot Jor Hie younger generations, both in Israel and Germany.\"\nJewish   liberals   abroad   who\n| worry about the trial are cow-\nI ards,   trembling  in   case   Gentiles  Uiink badly of the Jews,\nLichtheim contends.\nSo it goes\u2014disagreement in\nIsrael of virtually every point\nof this case.\nEichmann could draw the\ndeath penalty. Some Israelis,\nwith strong religious convictions, feel it would be contrary\nlo the spirit of Hieir religion to\nexecute Eichmann. Others ask:\n\"Suppose he is executed, can\nanyone believe his remains\nwould be buried in the Holy\nLand?\"\nHUBERT\nSSWAmamm:<:-mmmm^m^^      -\n_l 1961, Kinff Features Syndicate, Inc., World ri(thtB reserved.\n\"I don't think I'll do the rest\u2014that's all I see when.\nI'm driving it.\"\n_______\n__\u25a0\n \u25a0 \u2022    .' '\n\u2014-\u25a0\nVm\nHonor Salmo      Fruitvale Notes\nBride-Elect\nSALMO \u2014 Members of the Pythian Sisters Twin Temple No. 33\nof Salmo were hostesses at a\nshower honoring Miss ,A_h Fletcher, whose marriage takes place\ntoday.\n',_ Guest-of honor ahd her mother\nwere presented with corsages and\n\u25a0 many gifts were received-by the\nbride-elect. Games were played,\nrefreshments served. The bride's\ncake was made and decorated by\nMrs. Peggy Wrens.\nFRUITyALEfrl). ve^Farey has\nspent.'the -Easter \u25a0 weekend in\nSeattle visiting his' parents, Mr.\nand Mis. L. Farey. He was ac-\ncomp,ai_!.diity.'.T, Becker,.\nMi_. F.\"'E. Haines, and'granddaughter, Alice, were in-Portland\nto spend the Easter holidays visiting-Mrs. Haines' cousin, Mrs. 0.\nWise. \u25a0',',\nVisitors at the home of Mr.\nand Mrs. M... Wilson during the\nweekend, were-.the latter's parents, Mr. and Mr_ G. Kovalcik,\nand her .sister,' Mrs. Irene Loik\nof Penticton.\nStefani*Elme| Vows Exchanged at\nCandlelit Evening Wedding Service\n(Horn? to \u00a9Ijttrrh\nSt. Paul's-Trinity\nUnited Church of Canada \u2014 Corner Josephine and Silica Sts,\nTOMORROW - 11 A.M.\nEASTER COMMUNION\n.... whereat any and all professing Christians\nare welcomed to the Lord's Table. During this\nworship hour, confirmation and adult baptism will\nalso take place; and a formal presentation of the\nFirst Unit Payment will be made.\nSchedule for the Day\n\u2022 8:30 Hi-C Class.\n\u2022 9:00 Elders' Service\n\u2022 9:30 Reception Class\n\u2022 9:30 S.S. Grd. 2 and np\n\u2022 11:00 S.S. Gr. 1, under\n\u2022 11:00 Nursery-Care\n\u2022 11:00 Broadcast CKLN\n\u2022 12:15 Second Sacrament\nMinister: REV. DONOVAN JONES, BiA., B.D., Th.M.\nMusic Director, MERLIN R. BUNT, Phone 359-R\nArtflltran fflljurrh\naf fflattaba\nSt. Saviour's\nPro-Cathedral\nWard and Silica Streets\nThe Right Reverend\nWilliam R. Coleman,\nMA, BD, STM, DD, FRSA\nLord Bishop of Kootenay\nRector:\nThe Reverend Canon\nGeorge W. Lang, B.A., LTh.\nTHE OCTAVE OF EASTER\nSunday, April 9, 1961\n8:00 a.m.\u2014Holy Communion\nCorporate Communion for the\nW.A.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014All Departments\nof the Sunday\nSchool.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Mattins,\nthe Litany\nand Sermon.\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evensong _id\nSermon.\nWEDNESDAY\n10.00 a.m.\u2014Holy Communion\n3Ftr0i\njjjr-0hyt--tan\n(Etjitrrlj\nCorner of Kootenay and\nVictoria Sts.\nMinister: E. A. Hircock\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sabbath School.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning Worship\nCORDIAL  WELCOME\nTO ALL\nSt. John's\nLutheran  Church\nCorner Stanley and Silica Sts.\nRev. Carl J. Hennig, Pastor\nRes. 317 Silica St.    Ph. 729-X\n10:00 a.m.\n-Sunday School\nand Junior\nBible Class.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Divine Service.\n1:30 P.M.\nCONCORDIA MALE CHORUS\nALL ARE CORDIALLY\nWELCOME\nIHtrai (Mjurrlj of\n(florist _. ri. ttttat\nA Branch of\nThe Mother Church,\nThe First Church of Christ.\nScientist, In Boston, Mass.\nSunday School: 9:40 a.m.\nSunday Service: 11 a.m.\nSubject:\n\"ARE SIN, DISEASE, AND\nDEATH REAL?\"\nWednesday Testimonial\nMeeting \u2014 8:00 p.m.\nReading Room, 209 Baker St.,\nOpen Daily From\n2:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m.\nSunday Evening\n7:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m\nALL CORDIALLY\nWELCOME\nCHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST\nOF LATTER DAY SAINTS\n(Mormon)\n10:30 a.m.\u2014Sunday School.\nEagles Hail, 641 Baker St.\nFor Auxiliary Meetings Call\nBranch President, Ph. 1297-X\nFairview\nUnited Church\nFifth and Elwyn Streets\nMinister:\nREV. H. R, WHITMORE\n10:45 a.m.\u2014Sr. Sunday\nSchool\n11-00 a.m.\u2014Sunday School.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning Worship\n2:00 p.m.\u2014Harrop\n3:30 p.m.\u2014Procter\n9:45 a.m.\u2014North Shore\n.   United Church\nSunday School\nA FRIENDLY CHURCH\nFOR FRIENDLY PEOPLE\n(Eljurrl! of %\n(Anglican)\nSecond and Davies Streets\nFAIRVIEW\nRector:\nCanon W. J. Silverwood,\nA.K.C., B.Sc.\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday School\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Choral\n- - Communion\nAll organizations\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evening Prayer\nSOUTH SLOCAN\n2:30 p.m.\n(All\nOrganizations\nfctljri\n(PENTECOSTAL)\nSUNDAY:\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday Schpol\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning' Worship\n5:30 p.m.\u2014Radio Broadcast\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evangelistic\nTUESDAY:\n8:00 p.m.\u2014Bible Study\nFRIDAY:\n8:00-p.m.\u2014Young .Peoples'.\nREV.  R.  SWANSON\nPhone 2225\nMISSION\nCOVENANT\nCHURCH\n802 Baker St.\nPaBtor: E. HANSON\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday School.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning\nWorship\n7:30 p,m.\u2014Evening\nService.\nTHURSDAY:\n7:00 p.m.\u2014Prayer\nMeeting\n8:00 p.m.\u2014Choir Practice\nFRIDAY:\n6:45 p.m.\u2014Trail Blazers\n8:00 p.m.\u2014Young People's\nAll Welcome!\nJFirai iapttat\n(Ehurrlj\n(Cottonwood and Fourth Sts.)\nALL WELCOME\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday School.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning Worship\nTopic Will Be Announced\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evening Service\nTopic Will Be Announced\nMinister:\nREV. R. C. VAUGHAN\nPhone: Res. 1582-Y\nCandlelight reflected softly on Middl; White and\nglowing yellow of the attendants\" gowils when Audrey-\nMae Elmes, daughter of Mr. and Mi_. W. H.:-Elmes of\njNelson,   exchanged   marriage  vow_   with   Mr.' Robert\nj Oliver Stefani, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Stefani of Trail,\n(at an evening ceremony in Fairview United Church.\nRev. H. R. Whitmore officiated at the service. White\nstocks arranged in Btanding beauty baskets provided\nfloral background in fhe church, which' was filled with\nmany friends and relatives from Nelson, the Trail-Rossland\nand    other    outside\narea\npoints.\nEntering the dhurdh on the arm\nof her father, the bride was\nlovely in a white princess-stylea\nfloor-length gown of peau de soie,\nwith lace yoke and bouf_t.il sk.i't\nappliqued with lace flowers. She\nwore matching elbow-length lace\nREPRESENTATIVE\nCHOSEN FOR\nDIOCESAN  MEET\nWILLOW POINT - At a meeting of the Women's Auxiliary to\nSt.    Andrew's-hy-the-Lake-  held\nThursday afternoon in the church\nhall,, it was reported that the an-\nThe ritual and drill teams of nuai diocesan meeting would be\nchose a dark brocaded silk With the Nelson Ladies Auxiliary to fte held at West Summerland April\nwhite accessories and pink de- ^^f^\\t.E^. \u2122_1 X and W'\n\"\"\"\"\"\" \"      \"  \"\"\"\" \"\"\"\"     \"\"    Miss C. F. Ross will be repres-\nRitual\/ Drill\nTeams of Eagles\nli lo Compete\nlight rose corsage.\nThe bride's.table, was centered\nby a three-tiered wedding cake\nnestled in tulle sprinkled with\npink roses.   \u25a0\nMr.  Bob ' Davidson  of Trail,\ngloves and her shoulder-length! master of ceremonis, read tele-\nveil fell from a peau de soie | grams, from friends who were un-\nrosette headdress. She carried a able to be present. A toast to the\nmauve cattleya orchid on a white; bride was proposed by R. B. Mor-\nBible. i ris and the best man proposed a\nThe bride was attended by her!toast to ta bri(Jal attendants.     |\ntwin  sister,  Miss  Muriel-Louisei   The  Ida  Elizabeth  Group  of ... ,    ... M   H     \u201e,,_..\nElmes. as maid of honor and her j Fiirvw Unted Church convened J^\u2122Lb V^f&J**\nbridesmaids were her cousin, I \u2122e reception. Serviteurs were\nMiss Roberta Stevenson and Miss; Mrs D- w- Laisblcy, Mrs. Jack\nMargaret Baker. Their full-skirt-! Denny, Mrs. Tom Lockhart. Miss\ned gowns of daffodil yellow were ] Shirley Gustafson, Miss Muriel\nof cocktail-length taffeta brocade. Smith, Miss Jo McMullin, Miss\ncompete at the zone conference\nSunday in Trail. | entative ^ m willow Point w A\nFinal plans for their attendance     K was decided fcat m ___\nwere made at a meeting: of the|mer ^      ^     rt    ^  \u201e.\na,UX\"^ytl.,SWee_atWhldhpre.   held at the home of Mrs. R. A,\nident Mrs. Mary Morrison presid- Grimes My n_ __, ^ Mter.\nnoon W.A. and Evening Guild will\nThe auriliary is preparing also be in oharge.\nMrs.   W.   Edington\nto enter the ritualistic and drill\nteems in the northwest conference\nto be held at Missoula, Montana,\nMay 6. |\nA special meeting and dinner.\nto welcome Mrs. Mae Knight of\nLadysmith. provincial president.\nwas\nhostess for the afternoon.\ntea\nHat, Uniform to\nBe Purchased\nFRUITVALE - Purchase of a\nMrs. A. Smith reported on a trip hat for a Brownie leader and uni-\nto Creston of 31 Eagles and their form  for  Mrs.  S.  Walsh,. new\nwives   to   attend   the   Creston Guide leader, were approved at a\n_ cock__-.enrgvn uuro\">\"*\u00bb\u00bb*\u2022 I \"\"\"'. \u00a3^\"-M'\u00a3m^,vZZ aerie's tenttl anniversary. At this meeting of the Fruitvale Baden\nand their yellow tulle headdress Karen Gibson, MtSsJudy Foster *\nwere held by a circlet of yellow | and Miss Beverlee War-\nsatin roses. They wore matching!    Pundh was served by K. Yale\nshoes  and  gloves   and  carried land   Mayor   Harold   Elmes   of\nElizabethan colonial bouquets of j Rossland, assisted by Mr. Laish-\nwhite carnations and marguer-1 ley and Mr. Denny; |\nites. Following a honeymoon trip to j   T_n<!W_.l  Nn_P\u00ab\nLittle flower girl Elizabeth Ann' Sea'tleand Vfctoria, for which the    \"\"Jvvcu  I^UICS\nMassey  wore  a  yellow  organ-1 br'de *anged mio a maOTe knit-\ndy frodk trimmed with lace and ted sult m& ot<AM corsage, the\nevent, Mrs. Smith, as past pro-1 Powell Society, held at the home\nvincial president, was presented of Mrs. H. Godin.\nwith  a corsage  from president!   Mrs.   G.   Metcalfe,  president.\nMrs. G. Hills.\nMr.\ncarried a basket of wftute spray\nchrysanthemums and mauve\nheather.\nMr. William Stefani supported\nhis brother as best man and ushers were brothers of the bride,\nMr. Terence Elmes and Mr. Malcolm Elmes. The men wore dark\nsuits with white carnation bout-\nonnieres.\nDuring the service, Miss Dorothy Foster sang \"The Lord's\nPrayer\" and \"Wedding Prayer.\"\nAt a reception held in the Silver\nRoom of the Hume Hotel, mothers\nof the principals assisted in the\nreceiving line. Mrs. Elmes was\ngowned in dhampagne taffeta\nwith mauve accessories and corsage of pink delight roses, whrle\nthe mother  of  the  bridegroom\nnewlyweds will make their home\nat 1422 Green Avenue in Trail,\nwhere the bridegroom is principal\ncf the Tadanac School and the\nbride is on.the teaching staff of\nTrail Centra] School.\nand Mrs. Bob Lindsay of\n\":\u25a0'-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0:\u25a0!-. who recently bought the\nBert Hepher Ranch in Boswell,\nwere down for tlie weekend.\nMrs. Kath Hepher has returned] and  was\nfrom Castlegar accompanied by i ments were served by Mrs.\nwelcomed Mrs. J. Moen as a new\nmember.\nExpenses were approved for\nsending district commissioner\nMrs. K. Hubbersty to the provincial Guides annual meeting being held this year at Prince\nGeorge.\nThe new coffee urn has arrived\ndisplay.   Refresh-\nM.\niier   nephew,   Miohael   Hygens, McLeod,  Mrs. Walsh and Mrs.\nw*o will be her guest for awhile. | H. Salmon.\nSeason's Cosmetic News\nIs Soft \"Chiffon Look\"\nOur\nFather's\nBusiness\nWhat memorial Have You?\nIn Mark 14:9 we read \"This also that she hath done shall be\nspoken of for a memorial of her.\"\nThis is a, beautiful incident of\nChrist's last days on earth. It is\nnot likely that the woman knew\nthat Christ was near the end of\nhis life here. But the motive that\nprompted her act was fine and\nnoble. And there was beautiful\ncourtesy and grace in our Mas-\nster's readiness to accept the offering and to step between the\nwoman and her reproof.\nFirst the incident gives encouragement to all who would\nperform acts of devotion or make\ngifts to God and Hs churdi. The\nremembrance of this woman is a\npledge that God will not forget his\npeople.\nIt is well to bear in mind also\nthat the power of rendering service to God comes from the fact\nof being Christians. Knowing Who\nwe serve and sure of being accepted, everything we have becomes a talent we can use for\nGod.\nIn conclusion one may note Bhat\ndoing good is a pleasant way of\ngetting ourselves remembered.\nAll work done for Christ's sake is\nboth remembered and recompensed.\nWe have often 'been interested\nat a wedding in seeing the gifts\nspread out, and someone Who\nknows the secret behind each gift\nwill take us around and say:\n\"Mrs. so-an-so gave that. And\nMr. so-and-so gave that. And the\nmayor of the city gave that. And\nthis celebrated judge gave that.\"\nWe have often thought of the\ntreasures that Christ some day\nmay show to us, and he will say:\n\"The widow in the temple gave\nthis,\" and there will be the two\nmites whioh were her whole living. \"An the Samaritan woman\ngave that, and the woman who\ncame to the tomb on Easter mor-\nBy DEIRDRE MUNGOVAN\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nTORONTO (CP) - A soft,\nnatural look has invaded the\ncosmetic world, supplanting last\nyear's \"movie star look\" and\nParis'  \"white look.\"\nMarc Laurent calls it the\n\"chiffon look\" but no matter\nwhat it is labelled it definitely\ncomplements the latest hot\ncolors in fabrics and the easy\nflowing lines of this season's\nfashions.\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS 1390 ON THE  DIAL\nPACIFIC STANDARD TIME\nSATURDAY, APRIL 8,  1961\n5.5__Sign On\n6:00\u2014News\n6:05\u2014Farm Fare\n6:15\u2014Wake Up Time\n7:00\u2014News ,\n7:05\u2014Wake Up, Time\n7:25\u2014Sports\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Wake Up Time\n8:00\u2014Jtows\n8:10-Wake Up Time\n9:00\u2014BBC News\n9:15\u2014This Week at the UN\n9:30\u2014Just Mary\n9:45\u2014Mr. Homme's House\n9:59\u2014D.O.O.T.S.\n10:00\u2014News\n10:10\u2014Quiz Party\n10:30\u2014Time For Frenoh\n10:45\u2014Cbansonettes\nll:0O-CBCNews\n11:15\u2014Story Parade Time\nBirthday Book\n11:30\u201465 and Up\n12:00-Sports College\n12:15\u2014Sports News\n12:25\u2014News\n12:30\u2014CBC Camera Club\n12:45\u2014Musicale\n1:00\u2014Metropolitan Opera\n4:30\u2014Musicale\n5:00\u2014NHL Hockey\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Western Hits\n8:00\u2014A Touch of Greasepaint\n8:30\u2014International Concert\n9:30\u2014Here's The Hits\n10:00\u2014News\n10:10\u2014Sports and Weather\n10:15\u2014Saturday Serenade\n11:00\u2014News\n11:05\u2014Saturday Serenade\nil:57\u2014News\n12:00\u2014Sign Off\n8:59-Sign On\n9:P0-BBC News\n9:15\u2014British Israel\n9:30 \u2014News\n9:40\u2014Hidden Pages of the Air\n9:59\u2014D.O.O.T.S.\n10:00\u2014Sunday Morning Magazine\n11:00\u2014Church Service\n12:00-ThisIsMyStory\n12:30\u2014Patton Cup Hookey\n(Nelson at Winnipeg)\n3:00\u2014News\n3:05-Something For Sunday\n4:00\u2014Venture\nSUNDAY, APRIL 9,  1961\n5:00\u2014The Hour of Decision\n5:30\u2014Bethel Fireside Hour\n6:00\u2014Toronto Symphony Orchestra\n7:00\u2014National News\n7:10\u2014Weekend Review\n7:30\u2014Capital Report\n8:00\u2014CBC Stage\n9:00\u2014Symphony Orchestra\n10-00\u2014News\n10:10\u2014Sports News\n10:15\u2014Silent Friends\n10:30\u2014Old Favorites\n11.00\u2014News\nCBC PROGRAMS\nPACIFIC STANDARD TIME\nSUNDAY, APRIL 9,  1961\n7:00\u2014Random Hour\n9:00\u2014BBC News\n9:15\u2014B.C. Gardner\n9:30\u2014Neighborly News\n9:40\u2014Hidden Pages of the Air\n9:59-D.O.O.T.S.\n40:00\u2014Sunday Morning Magazine\nll:00-Carl Tapscott\n11:30\u2014Matinee Highlights\n12:00\u2014Music\n12:30\u2014Children's Magazine\n1:30\u2014Critically Speaking\n2:00\u2014News\n2:08\u2014Flashback\n2:15\u2014In Reply\n2:30\u2014Religious Period\n3:00-T.S.O. Pop Concert  .\n4:00\u2014Venture\n5:00\u2014News\n5:03\u2014Points West\n5:30\u2014Folk Song Time\n6:00\u2014Montreal Symphony Or-\nohestra\n7:00\u2014News\n7:10\u2014Weekend Review\n7:20\u2014Our Special Speaker\n7:30\u2014Capital Report\n8:00-CBC Stage\n9:00\u2014Symphony Orchestra\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Life and Literature\n10:30\u2014Sunday Night\n11:57\u2014News\n12:00\u2014Marine Weather\n6- 00\u2014Sharpe at Sin\n9:00\u2014BBC News\n9:15\u2014Morning Concert\n9:59\u2014D.O.O.T.S.\n') 0(1\u2014Morning Visit\n10:15\u2014Pacific Express\nning gave these spices and the'10:45\u2014Dominic Andrews\nfine linen.\nAmong all the memorials that\nthe Master keeps will be Mary's\nalabaster box, still broken, and\nthe fragrance of the perfume filling both heaven and earth. And\nthen we will say. \"I wonder if he\nhas anything of mine?\"\nRev. H. R. Whitmore,\nFairview United Churoh.\nMONDAY, APRIL 10,  1961\n3:30\u2014Blues and The Ballad\n4:00\u2014Thirty Minute Theatre\n4:30\u2014Tempo\n6:00\u2014Preface\n6:05\u2014Roving Reporter\n6:15\u2014Rawhide\n6:30\u2014Music On The Menu\n7 0(1\u2014Newt\n7:30\u2014Top Grade\n8:00\u2014Songs of My People\n8:30\u2014Summer Fallow\n9:00\u2014Montreal Bach Ohoir\n9:30\u2014Chamber Music\nIU (\u201e\u25a0 -News\n10:15\u2014The Movie Scene\n10:30\u2014Reith Lectures\n11:00\u2014The Big Time\n11:57\u2014News\n12:00\u2014Marino Weather\n11:00\u2014Kindergarten of the Air\n11:15\u2014Off the Record\n12:00\u2014Don Messer Show\n12 15\u2014News\n12:25\u2014CBC Showcase\n12:30\u2014Music\n12 .Vi\u2014Five to One\n1:00\u2014John Drainie Tells a Story\n1:15\u2014Tommy Hunter Show\n1:45\u2014Program Resume\n2:00\u2014Holiday Classroom\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SAT., APRIL 8, 1961\u20145\nKimberley Newlyweds To\nMake Home in Victoria\nAs one of Paris' prominent\ncosmetologists, Mr. Laurent is\non a two-month tour of Canada\nto advise women on co-ordinating make-up with their clothes,\ncomplexion and color of eyes\nand hair. Mr. Laurent says\nmake-up can be gayer for special evening occasions but always must be discreet and soft.\nThis lighter look includes everything from eye make-up to lipstick.\nWith   practice,    any   woman\nshould be able to apply all her\ncosmetics within 10 minutes, he\nsays.\nCREAM  NECESSARY\nA model's face was cleansed\nwilh a cream which, Mr. Laurent insists, is an absolute necessity as a foundation. He dotted\nher face with a pale, beige-\ntoned base which he blended\nsmoothly, to give a \"definition\nto the cheek bones,\" with a\ntouch of light rouge.\n\"The make - up must match\nher complexion,\" he said. \"If it\nis too ruddy, then use a base\nwhich is lighter. A paler complexion needs a darker base.\"\nMr. Laurent, in an interview\nfollowing   the   demonstration, j\nsaid he prefers a grey or light\nblue eye shadow which will suit\nalmost any woman.\n\"The pastel tones accentuate\nthe color of the eyes and make\nthem sparkle. But gold is the\nmost natural of all eye\nshadows, giving eye lids a light\nsheen. But be careful of going\nto extremes.\"\nBy using liquid eye liner and\nmascara in the same shades as\nIhe model's hair, Mr. Laurent\nshowed how the eyas are\nwidened and made more interesting. The brows were pencilled lightly and brushed along\nthe natural brow line.\nDARKER  OUTLINE\nWith a lipstick br_sh of soft\npink, he filled in the shape of\nthe mouth and outlined it in a\nslightly darker pink to give emphasis.\n\"As long as the make-up is\ndiscreet, you oan wear a little\nof everything during the daytime. But you can do anything\nyou want with cosmetics for the\nevening as long as they are\nused softly.\n\"The most common mistake\nolder women make is with\nheavy make-up in colors whioh\nare too bright, sparkling and\nsharp. They think this will help\nhide the wrinkles and sallow\ncomplexion. However, they appear years older and look ridiculous. They should use the soft\npastel shades.\"\nHere's a trick he says should\nhelp women who must wear\nglasses while applying makeup:\nStand beside a sunny window\nand use one hand to hold a\nmagnifying mirror and \"the\nother to apply eye make-up. Anolher solution would be to place\nthe glasses on the end of the\nnose and look through them into\nHie mirror.\nKIMBERLEY - Baskets of\ngladioli, potted 'mums and ribbon-\ntied floral pew markers decorated\nAll Saints Anglican Ohurch, when\nat 4 p.m. on Saturday, April 1st,\nBeverley Delayne Neal of Kimberley became the bride of Mr,\nJoseph Dan Martell of Victoria.\nThe bride is the only daughter\nof Mr. and Mrs. Aubrey James\nNeal of Kimberley and the 'bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs.\nJohn Martell, also of Kimberley.\nRev. Canon R. E. M. Yerbugh\nofficiated. Mrs. G. Plant was organist and Mrs. K. Bonell, soloist, sang the Lord's Prayer and,\nduring the signing of the register,\n\"O Perfect Love,\"\nGiven in marriage <b_ her father, the bride was lovely in her\nbouffant, floor-length gown of\nOhantiHy lace and net, styled with\nsabrina neckline and lily point\nsleeves. The long torso lace bodice was outlined with pearls and\nsequins and the full skirt was of\nnet. Her ahapel veil of illusion net\nnet was held by a tiara of pearls\nand sequins and she carried a\ncascade bouquet of red rosebuds,\nAs matron of honor, Mrs. Lillian Ratcliffe chose a pale yellow\nbrocade sheath with nylon diiffon\noverskirt and brocade summer-\nbund, bandeau en tone, and white\naccessories. Her casoade bouquet\nwas of white Easter lillies.\nThe two bridesmaids, Miss Janice Cox of Marysville and Miss\nMary Ann Sahlein of Vancouver,\nwore gowns similar to that of the\nmatron of honor, the former in\nlilac and the latter in aqua.\nBest man was Mr. Bob Nesbitt\nof Kimberley, and ushers were\nMr. Terry Neal, brother.of the\nbride, and Mr. Jerry Bond, both\nof Kimberley.\nFor her daughter's wedding,\nMrs. Neal chose a gold lace over\nsatin sheath with (matching jacket, gold hat, hone pearl accessories and gold-tipped white oarnations. Mrs. Martell wore a\nprincess-line gown in dark turquoise with lighter turquoise hat\nand turquoise and black accessories. Her corsage was of pink\ncarnations.\nThe wedding reception was held\nin the Union Hall which was decorated with pink and white\nstreamers, bells and flowers. The\nbride's table was covered by a\nlace cloth made by her grandmother, Mrs. Annie Neal of\nMoose Jaw and centred by. a 3-\ntiered wedding cake, embedded\nin pink tulle and tiny rosebuds\nand flanked by white tapers in\ncrystal sconces and bowls of red\nroses.\nA toast to the bride was proposed by Mr. W. Chandler .and to\nthe attendants by the best man.\nMr. Jim Patterson, MC for the\nevening, read congratulatory telegrams. The guest book was in\nABOUT\nMr. and Mrs. Fred Doubt and\ni family of Kamloops, formerly of\nNelson, were recent guests of\nMr. and Mrs. Grant Clark of the\nNorth Shore.\n* *   \u2666\nMr. and Mrs. Andre L. Stevens,'\n213 Mill Street, have as their!\nguest Mrs. Stevens' sister, Mrs.\nR. C. Mott of Falconbridge, Ont. J\nMiss Sue Kilpatrick of Sudbury, I\nOnt., who has also been visiting [\nMr. and Mrs. Stevens, returned^\neast Friday morning. \\\n* *   *\nPatients at Willowhaven Private Hospital at Willow Point\nwere entertained by the South\nSlocan Girl Guides and their leader, Mrs. D. Axworthy with songs\nand gifts of flower baskets, one\nfor each patient. The Catholic\nWomen's League of the North\nShore also sent Easter baskets to\neach patient, delivered by Mr\nand Mrs. Peter Klassen.\nMR. AND MRS. JOSEPH DAN MARTELL OF VICTORIA.\nPhoto by Aikmcms' Studio of Kimberley\ncharge of Mrs. W. v_i\u201eri,u_i m \u00ab.     . ~,\nVariety Program\nEnjoyed By\nSenior Citizens\nFRUITVALE \u2014 Variety enter-'\ntainment and stories concerning\nearly days in Fruitvale were eri-:\njoyed at a meeting of the Senior Citizens Fruitvale Branch No.\n44 held at the home of Mrs. C. H.\nPaterson, with Mrs. O. Roseneau.\nas co-hostess.\nProgram conveners were Mrs.-'\nPaterson and Mrs, Roseneau who\npresented a program including,\ngroup vocal selections by W. Corbett, Mrs. Roseneau, Mr. and\nMrs. Paterson, Mrs. A. DeBruyn,\nMrs. H. Edmondson and A. Nash.\nReadings by Mrs. E. Ganton. a\nvocal quartette selection by Mrs.\nDeBruyn, Mrs. Paterson,- Mrs.\nRoseneau and Mrs. Edmondson\nand stories by P. McLaughlin followed. Mrs. DeBruyn read \"The\nStrange Camel\". Mr. Corbett,\nMrs. Nash and Mrs. Paterson\nsang, \"The Old Rugged Cross.\" .\nGuest speaker Mrs. K. Grupp\npresented the history of Fruitvale, referring to data gathered\"\nby the Women's Institute for their\ncentennial book. Historical anec--\ndotes were told by Mrs. E. Young,\nA. Webster, Mrs. E. I. Mason arid-\nMrs. DeBruyn.\nW. Oampbell of\nKimberley and Mrs. Dan Ferguson, Calgary.\nThe bride presented her bouquet to the groom's grandmother, Mrs. J. Green.\nFor a honeymoon to U. S.\npoints, the bride chose a two-\npiece mauve suit with hat en\ntone, bone pearl accessories and\nwhite carnation corsage.\nMr. and Mrs. Martell will reside in Victoria.\nOut of town guests were Mr.\nand Mrs. A. E. Grainger, uncle\nand aunt of the bride, Lois and\nSusan and Mr. Eddie Grainger,\nall of Calgary; Mr. and Mrs. J,\nGreen, grandparents of the groom\nof Sardis, B. C, Mr. and Mrs.\nDan Ferguson and Mr. and Mrs.\nK. Blenner Hasset of Calgary.\nFred Stewart. Cranbrook, Miss\nMary Sahlin, Miss Ileane Lilley\nand Gordon Samper of Vancouver; Mr. and Mrs. K. Sahlin of\nYahk; Les Mawson, Creston; Mr.\nand Mrs. M. Martell, Lethbridge:\nMr. and Mrs. Leslie Mawson,\nCranbrook; Mr. and Mrs. Jack\nGreen. Picture Butte. Alta.; Mr.\nand Mrs. V. Keller. Kiipp, Alta.;\nMr. and Mrs. J. Hayden, Vauxhall, Alta.; Mr. and Mrs. H.\nSandham, Coalhiirst, Alta. Mr.\nand Mrs. Gordon Wyllie, Shaugh-\nnessy, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Green,\nEnchant. Alta.\nFruitvale Notes\nMr. and Mrs. H. McCutcheon\nand children spent the weekend\nvisiting the former's mother, Mrs.\nC. E. McCutcheon.\nMr. and Mrs. H. Ralph and son\nare spending the Easter holidays\nvisiting the latter's brother and\nsister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. M.\nZonailo of Vancouver,' also his\nbrother-in-law and sister, Mr. and\nMrs. J. McCoy of Seattle.\nJ. Ohuibra. teacher at the Junior\nHigh School, is holidaying with\nhis wife and family in Vancouver.\nMr. and Mrs. A. Ferguson of\nRegina are spending the holidays\nat the home of Mr. and Mrs. S.\nWalsh.\nFOOD FOUBLES\nDon't make a fuss if your\nchild refuses to eat a certain\nfood, but serve it in a somewhat different way the next\ntime.\nAROUND the corner . . .\nor AROUND the world!\nBefore YOU Move -PHONE 33\nPACKING - STORAGE - SHIPPING\n\"Local Moving a Speciality\"\nWest Transfer Company\nPhone 33 Nelson, B.C.\nCertified Estimates \u2014 Without Obligation\nProvince Wide \" Nation Wide ** World Wide\nThe University of British Columbia\nSummer School of Arts\u20141961\nJULY 3 -AUGUST 19\nTUB A TBE. Guest Director ROBERT GILL, Hart\nin_-.ll.\u201e: House Theatre, Toronto. Acting,\nSpeech, Stagecrafts, Scene Design, Directing, Children's\nTheatre \u2014 July 3 - August 19.\nJutlKlfr. Guest Direetor HANS BEER, Associate\n_*.U_l$_o Director Opera University of Southern\nCalifornia. Opera Workshop July 3 - August 12. High\nSchool Band and Orchestra Workshop July 3 - July 22.\na nv Among guest artists will be Shoji Hamada,\nAK I : Oliver Strebelle, Ulfert VVIIke, Don aJrvls.\nPainting, Drawing, Ceramics. Sculpture \u2014July 3 - Aug. 12.\nr_AMrT. \u2022 Guest D,redor JEAN ERDMAN, Amerl-\nWAIMV* \u2014* can dancer and choreographer. The Art\nof Movement, Music and The Dance, Design, Dance Techniques, Composition and Production \u2014 July 3 - Aug, II.\nSummer Sehool on Public Affairs\nSummer School of Communications\nFOR DETAILED INFORMATION PLEASE WRITE:\nSUMMER SCHOOL OF THE ARTS\nThe Department of University Extension\nUniversity ol British Columbia\nVancouver 8. B.C.\ni\n HP   , .\u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 .\u25a0 \u2022\u2014^ \u25a0..,\u25a0\u25a0. \u25a0.,- :\u2014-^#i^^^\n6 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, SAT., APRIL 8, 1961\nAlberta To Go Ahead\nWith School Finance\nEDMONTON (CP) - The Alberta government will go ahead\n\u2022With its school-financing plan.\n| This was made clear in the\nlegislature Thursday by Premier Manning who said \"fullest\ncbnsideration\" will be given to\npoints raised during two days\nof sittings by the House's agriculture committee.\nPremier Manning said that\n\"with flew exceptions there, does\nnot seem to be any major criticism of the basic principles underlying the program,\" which\nis retroactive to Jan. 1.\nToday the private bills committee at a morning sitting was\nto question witnesses who argues Thursday for and against\na bill which would permit dental\ntechnicians to make and fit false\nteeth.\n$0 PROROGUE\n;, ;Except for that one commit-\n|ee hearing, the only business to\n.he handled by the House are\n.bills and prorogation is expected some time next week,\nihe eighth week since the regular session opened.\nOf the 13 briefs on the gov-\nI eniment's school-financing plan,\n-nine recommended delay for\n^further   study,  two urged   out\nright abandonment, one asked\nfor more generous treatment of\nmunicipalities and the other\ngave qualified approval.\nPremier Manning said the\nmajority of the po_i_ raised\nduring the hearings concerned\nthe financial effects of application of the plan on individual\nmunicipalities.\nIf adjustments must be made,\nhe added, they can best be put\ninto effect as the program ls\napplied.\nThe premier told the House it\nwould be \"extremely difficult\"\nto come to worthwhile conclusions while the government and\nmunicipalities have nothing to\ngo on but hypothetical situations.\nCONTINUE PLAN\nThe government, he said,\nfeels it should proceed with implementation of the plan but\nwith \"full assurance\" to all municipalities and school boards\nthat they will have an oppor-\nlunity to discuss their difficulties with the government.\nHe added that it is the government's intention to give fullest consideration to the points\nraised and where problems are\nreal and valid \"we will do all\nYour Money Goes Farther.. .\nYon want to spend your money today In the way that\n\u2022 will get you the most for It. A modern heating plant tn the\nhome will save you money and the saving tn fuel Is amazing\nWe can serve you best by first learning what you want, to\njust phone us today and we will gladly estimate your requirements.\nKOOTENAY PLUMBING & HEATING\nCOMPANY   LIMITED\n351 Baker St. Nelson, B. C. Phone 666\nPLAN NO. \u25a0 R7B-IJ95\nAREA . 1293.75 SO, FT.\nFRONTAGE\" iZ'-i\"\nPROPOSED  W-I..AW SUITE\nin our power to iron them out.\"\nA special cabinet committee\nwould deal with all submissions.\nUnder the plan, all municipalities will pay into a provincial\nfund on the basis of 32 mills on\nan equalized assessment. The\nprovincial government will add\nsome of its own money and then\ndistribute the fund to municipalities.\nAny school board whioh wnats\nto spend more than the program\nprovides will incur \"unapproved\" costs and would have\nto colled the money from Its\nratepayers.\nDEATHS\nBy THE  CANADIAN PRESS\nBrussels \u2014 Professor Jules\nBordet, 91, a Nobel prize winner for medicine in 1919.\nNew York\u2014Thomas A. Scott,\n83, former president and board\nchairman of Merritt \u2022 Chapman\nand Scott Corporation, of a\nheart failure.\nGuatemala \u2014 Herman Mutz,\n64. assistant manager of the International Nickel Company of\nCanada, of a heart attack.\nTrust Fund Not\nEasy lo Operate\nLONDON, Ont. (OP)-City of.\nficials are anxious to liquidate a\ntrust fund that has been on\ntheir books for the last 95 years.\nBut they can't find anyone authorized to provide the necessary signature.\nThe fund originated in 1863\nwhen the London Savings Bank\nwound up its operations, paid its\ndebts and was left with a credit\nbalance of $15,000. The bank's\ndirectors gave the money to the\ncity, stipulating that interest on\nthe sum should pay for the care\nof indigent hospital patients.\nAlthough London had no hospital pf any size at the time,\nthe fund was duly established in\n1872 with the mayor, the warden, the county judge and the\nohairman of the board of trade\nas signing officers.\nFive years later, the London\nGeneral Hospital was built on\nthe site where Victoria Hospital\nnow stands and the fund was\nput to its prescribed use.\nW. N. Roberts, assistant superintendent of the Victoria,\nsays that the $600-odd interest\nearned by the fund annually\nmay have been a significant\nsum In 1872 but it is \"peanuts\"\ntoday. He suggested it could be\nput to better use in some specific project suoh as expanding\nthe nurses' residence.\nCity Treasurer C. 0. Logan\nagreed. But the bank holding\nthe fund found the last authorized signing officers shown on\nils records were the mayor,\nwarden and president of the\nChamber of Commerce who\nheld office in 1925.\n\u25a0viti'i\"    (iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimmiiMiiiiiiiimiiiMiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimi'i\n_      ' \u2014\n|-Your , Individual ]\nHoroscope \u2022    j\n. .uummi  ft    Frances Drake '\"\"\"\"\"i\"\"'^\nFor Sunday, April 9, 1961\nDRUNK WALKER JAILED\nSELB, West Germany (Reuters)\u2014A court has jailed a 59-\nyear - old pedestrian for two\nmonths for drunken walking.\nThe man was found lying in the\nstreet cursing West German\nChencellor Konrad Adenauer.\n... It's great to have a\na good friend...\nOne of YOUR best friends is your local newspaper\n... a friend who keeps you in the know about what's going on in your hometown, across the nation and around\nthe world ... a friend who helps you with your homemak-\ning, who saves you money, time and steps in your shopping, by telling you about the values in your hometown\nstores.\nWhat's more, your friend the local newspaper helps\nyou stretch your horizons and revitalize your interests,\nwith mentally - stimulating reports and comment on\neverything from foreign travel to gardening. It's a friend\nwho informs you, entertains you, advises you . . . and, a\nfriend who helps to guard your personal liberties. Edited,\nprinted and delivered by your neighbors, your local newspaper is, in every sense of the word, a friend to you and\nyour family.\nTHE NELSON\nDAILY NEWS\nLook in the section tn which\nyour  birthday  comes  and find\nwhat your outlook is, according\nto the stars,\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 20 (Aries)\n\u25a0 Your Mars nil in tendency \u2014\nbetter for a Sunday \u2014 softens\nvigorous' action,   tendency   to\nargument. Other planets are auspicious   and  you   can  have  a\npleasant,   useful   time,   if  you\nchoose.\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus)\n\u2022 Happy outlook. Your Venus,\nMercury  and  other  planets  in\nexcellent   positions.   Responsive\nperiod for charity, useful social\naffairs,    family    Interests,    all\nwholesome    matters.    Enjoy\nchurch.\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini)\nEncouraging influences for you\nthis   auspicious   Sunday.   Start\nyour   day   right   by   going   to\nchurch,   then  attending  to  the\nactivities  you  enjoy \u2014  family\natherings, writing letters, hobbies.\nJUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer)\n\u2014 Indifferent influences but this\ndoes not mean that it is an un-\nfavorable period. Be more patient with essential tasks and\nother duties. Enjoy your church\nand other interests wholeheartedly.\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leo)\n\u2014 Quiet indications early part of\nday but going to more spirited\nand favorable ones as P.M.\nstarts in. You will find happiness\nand peace of mind in prayer and\nthen wholesome activities.\nAUGUST 24 to OCTOBER 23\n(Libra) \u2014 Today and tomorrow\nshow benefic influences. These\ncan be happy, productive and\nprogressive days if yo\u00abi have\nright objectives and work that\nway. Don't neglect spiritual\nneeds.\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER\n22 (Scorpio) \u2014 Neither stimulating nor dull period. Many influences honor wholesome activities, sincerity and kindly acts of\nhumane character. Fund-taking\nfor church, charity also favored\nnow.\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER 21 (Sagittarius) - Stirring,\neventful offerings this happy\nSunday. Thank God for all His\nblessings; pray for those in\ntroubled lands and seek to cheer\nland help youngsters, the aged\nand ill here at home.\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY\n20 (Capricorn) \u2014 Good indications top today's aspects. Necessary laborious work favored,\nalso other Interests and artistic\nprofessions. Family, children's\n: activities can be helped and\nbenefit you.\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY\n19 (Aquarius) \u2014 Auspicious day\nI for you, especially if you carry\nthrough a prearranged schedule\nand attend to things well as they\nappear. Many subjects of interest\nhonored these days, join in.\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\n(Pisces) \u2014 More favorable than\notherwise but you may not find\nall things easy, either. Prayer,\npatience and a cheerful attitude\nall you need to bring proper\nresults and pleasant endings to\nactions.\nYOU BORN TODAY: Possess\na noble nature, are generous,\nbrave, tactful. You have leadership qualities and can hold a\nposition of responsibility requiring keen intelligence and analytical powers. You have strong\ncharacteristics, are often too impetuous and impatient but will\ncome around to right reasoning\nas a rule. Self-control Is very important to your well-being and\nsuccess. You can be helpful in\nweighty decisions, efficient In\nemergencies. Do cultivate your\nfiner qualities, broaden your\neducation and seek God's help\nalong tho way. Birthdate of:\nMany renowned writers and leaders in industry, and Chas.\n(Pierre) Baudelaire, French poet.\nFrench Police Search\nFor Algerian Killers\nPARIS (AP)-Freneh police\nmade a nation - wide sweep\nagainst suspected Algerian and\nFrench terrorists Friday as killings and bombings increased\nafter the collapsed of hopes for\nimmediate negotiations to end\nthe Algerian rebellion.\nParis police hunted an Al-\ngeran execution squad that\ncarried the hit-and-run war between rival rebel factions into\na suburban hospital Thursday,\nkilling two persons and wounding 12.\nIn Algiers the U.S. consulate\nwas bombed after it closed for\nthe day and an attempt was\nmade to burn the American cultural centre. Both attacks were\nattributed to Frenoh rightists retaliating for U.S. moves to get\npeace talks started between the\nFrench and the Algerian rebels.\nPolice rounded up known\nFrench extremists in Paris and\nthe Frenoh provinces also for\nquestioning.\nSCUTTLED TALKS\nNegotiations between the\nFrench and rebels were to have\nstarted today in Evian - Les-\nBains. But the chief rebel group\n\u2014the National Liberation Front\n(FLNI\u2014refused to meet after\nthe French announced Ihey\nwould hold simultaneous negotiations with a rival rebel group,\nthe National Liberation Movement (MNA). The French rejected the FLN demand that it\nbe designated chief spokesman\nfer the Algerian natinalists.\nThere appeared to be little\nchance either side would make\na serious move before Tuesday\nto   get   talks   started.   French\nFor Monday, April IO, I96J\nLook in the section in which\nyour birthday comes and find\nwhat your outlook is, according\nto the stars,\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 20 (Aries)\n\u2014 Substantial work, necessary\nduties newly favored. Clever\nmanagement, detailed analysis\nstepping stones to surer goals. Be\ndiscreet in artistic and romantic\nmatters, also finances.\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus)\n\u2014 The more 'practical issues,\niifg\u201e needed changes, maritime\ninterests rate attention. Set aside\ntrivial and uncertain things not\npractical. Tabu carelessness, impatience.\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini)\n\u2014 Day \"on the fence.\" It behooves you to be on your toes.\nDepend on experience, tradition,\nknowledge and sound rules for\noasic matters. No halfhearted\nefforts !\nJUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer)\n\u2014 Release tensions, pressures\nthrough a calm, middle-Of-the-\nroad attitude, deliberate pace.\nClever strategy properly employed can lead to substantial\ngain. Get at urgent matters Now!\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Led)\n\u2014 Stabilize plans, economize efforts where possible. Poise, tolerance can lighten any burden\nthat may confront. Don't l__n toward set rules to exclusion Of\nsound modernism.\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER\n23 (Virgo) \u2014 With adroitness,\nsidestep errors, unscrupulous\nschemers. Check on health, you\nmay neglect this. Don't hesitate\nto assume rightful activity in\nday's program.\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER\n23 (Libra) \u2014 You have innate\nstability, use it to advantage.\n_eep your head though pressures\nare great, don't plunge forward\nwithout forethought. Have steadfast courage, hopeful attitude.\nOCTOBER 24 tO NOVEMBER\n22 (Scorpio) \u2014 Don't seek Only\nperfection in Others and be not\nso disappointed, also others will\nbe more tolerant of your imperfections. Reciprocity a big word,\nwhen really practiced is conducive to happiness.\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER 21 (Sagittarius) - Helpful\nInfluences still linger since yesterday's fine Jupiter aspect.\nShould be good day to get the\nball rolling for whole week \u2014\naction, achievement, future planning.\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY\n20 (Capricorn) \u2014 Contrariness\nshould have no place in your setup. Harmony, concord are right\nemblems to wear, you can pile\nup good returns and blessings\nfor your efforts. Faith !\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY\n19 (Aquarius) \u2014 Day may hold\nsome complexities, Irritating\n6pots. They can be handled If you\ncalmly direct attention to Important aspects of matters ind are\ncautious in Judgment.\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\n(Pisces) - No disorder indicated.\nIn your schedule so be up to ypur!\nbest, give full attention and ter-l\nvice where due: you can havej\nvictory, gratification. Your sincerity, humbleness a real help.\nYOU BORN TODAY: Original1\nin thought, ambitious, impetuous;\ngenerous, sympathetic. Aries is\nstrong-minded and capable but\ncan also be fickle and self-\ncentred. Up to you to analyze\nyourself (you can do it better\nthan anyone else) and correct\nwhat can become hindering\nfaults. Aries children are highly\ndeveloped individuals, active\nbright. They should be encour\naged, helped to fine achievement\nthrough kindly understanding and\npatience. They will respond to\npraise and are then reasonable,\nhappy. Need firmness, too. Birthdate of: William Hazlitt, British\ncritic, essayist; George ArllsS,\nactor; William Booth, founder of\nthe Salvation Army.\nitish Honor\nCanadian Film\nLONDON (CPl-A Canadian\nfilm, \"Universe,\" has won the\nBritish equivalent of an Oscar\nfor the best animated film\nshowed in _)(_.\nThe British Film Academy\nawards, sponsored by the Society of Film and Television\nArts, are given annually in\nseven categories for the best\nfilms released in Britain during\nthe previous year. Entires from\nother countries are considered.\nIn this year's animated film\ncategory, an American short,\n\"The Interview,\" and * Yugoslavian entry, \"Piccolo,\" were\nrunners - up to the Canadian\nfilm.\n\"Universe\" also has been\nnominated for the annual Hollywood Oscar (Or short films\nalong with (Our other finalists.\nThe awards will be. announced\naboui April 17.\nIt has been televised in Italy,\nand was recently bought by\nBBC television.\nThe 28-minute movie waS produced by the National Film\nBoard of Canada, which describes it as \"a journey through\nspace.\"\nPresident de Gaulle has scheduled a press conference for that\nday, and the rebels hope he will\nsay something to clear the way.\nThe hospital raid Thursday in\nsuburban Montfermeil was one\nof the most violent episodes in\nthe war between the FLN and\nMNA, conducted from speeding\ntaxicabs and dark doorways for\n614 years in Paris.\nSix men in a taxi drove up to\nthe hospital where Algerian victims of a recent FLN-MNA\nclash were In a surgical ward.\nThree of the raiders, wearing\nraincoats, charged up to the\nthird floor.\nPOLICEMAN DISARMED\nThey disarmed a French policeman guarding the Algerians'\nroom and killed him with his\nown machine-gun.\nBursting into the room, they\nfound Mohand Talba, believed\nto have been a member of the\nMNA, in bed. They poured a\nstream of bullets into him and\nhe died within an hour. A second Algerian hid under his bed\nand escaped harm.\nThe gang then ran from room\nto room, spraying bullets. One\nof their victims was a seven-\nyear-old French girl, wounded\nas she lay in bed.\nThe three gunmen then rushed\nto their waiting taxi, knocking\nout a ward attendant as they\nran and beating a nurse with\ngun butts. In the ward, two policemen who tried to stop them\nwere shot in the feet.\nMore than a dozen Algerians\nwere later arrested at an Algerian hostel and an Algerian\ntaxi driver was picked up for\nquestioning.\nNELSON   READY   MIX\nCONCRETE LTD.\n- All Sizes Crushed Rock\n* Ready-Mix Concrete\n* Pea  Gravel  for  Roofing\n* Road Gravel        * Sand\nPhone 871\nPREMIER   SAND\nand GRAVEL LTD.\niiiwirg      m \u25a0 \u00bbi\nELECTRIC\nMOTOR\n(REWINDING\nService and Repairs\nWe  Rewind  All  Size  Motors\nand Armatures\nSee Us About All Types ol\nINDUSTRIAL CONTROLS\nColeman   Electric\nLTD.\nPhone 2055 Nelson. B.C.\nm\nOntario Court Upholds\nArbitration Board\nTORONTO <CP)-Th\u00ab Ontario\nCourt Of Appeal thursdiy upheld the right Of ah arbitration\nboard to award damage* in an\nillegal strike.\nThe court was considering an\nappeal by Looal 1 - 14, Oil,\nChemical and Atomic Workers'\nInternational Union ICLC).\nagainst a Court order by Chief\nJustice J. C. McRuer upholding\nthe award of an arbitration\nboard in what it defined an Illegal strike at the Polymer Corporation limited Sarnia, Ont.,\nplant in February, 1956.\nProf. Bora LflBkin, arbitration\nbeard chairman and University\nof Toronto labor law specialist.\nmade the award but deferred a\nhearing to a s 6 e S s damages\npending outcome of the union\nappeal.\nIn the Appeal Court judgment\nMr. Justice J. B. AyleSworlh\nsaid the Industrial Relations\nand Disputes Investigation Act\nrequires parties tn bargain collectively in good faith and to include in an agreement a provision for lett'ement of differ-\nvioletion of the agreement,\nences concerning meaning and\nbe remiss if they did not assess\nHe said the arbitrators would\nand award compensation for the\nviolation of collective agreement.\nDavid Lewis, representing the\nunion, said th* only grievance\nthe company and the union\nwhether there had been a misin-\nmight refer to the board was\nterprelation or violation of collective agreement,\nBuy, Sell, Trade With Classified\niLa^M^\nKOEHLE\nELECTRIC\n410 Kootenay St.\nNelson, B. C.\nPhone IBM Nights, 544-R\nGLOBE  RAISE9  PRICE\nBOSTON (AP) - The Boston\nGlobe announced today that effective April 10 Ihe price of its\nweekday editions at newsstands\nwill increase two e\u00abnU to 10\ncents.\nSASHLESS\nWINDOWS\nCOME OUT FOR\nEASY CLEANING\nMake your home\nbrighter . . . your\nhousework lighter,\nwith Pierson Sash-\nless Windows. They\nare fast and easy to\ninstall. Cost no rn6re\nthan ordinary old-\nfashioned   windows.\nPierson Windows are on display for your\ninspection . . , come in for a demonstration\nand full information.\nT. H. Waters & Co. Ltd.\nNELSON, B.C.\n101  Hall St. Phone 156\ni\n - \u2014        .\n\u25a0V '\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0\"\"     -::        \u25a0 \"'.-.;:-,:;'\u25a0'\u25a0';'\u25a0\":'    .' ' '.'\u2022\u25a0'.\"'\u25a0'\"\nMaroon Coach Blames\nDefeat on Com\n\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0  '\"'\u25a0 \"\u25a0-\u2022\u25a0i ':'\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0'.\"\u25a0\u25a0\"\u00bb'\u2014r\ncy\nAnkle Break Puts\nfritz Out of Series\nBy BILL TAYLOR\nWinnipeg Maroons, a team that has been known\nin Winnipeg airclss to males checking look like child's\nplay, relaxed for a few seconds Thursday night and it\ncost them a victory.\nWinnipeg papers were loaded with excuses for the\nMaroon loss,\nMaroon coach Gordie Simpson blamed the defeat\non complacency. \"I guess we have to lose one after each\nwin to remind us this isn't in the bag,\"\n\"If we work up to our capabilities, there's no reason\nwhy we can't end this thing in six games. If not, we're\nthrough,\" Simpson allowed, '\nA tough break for the Leafs is\nthe loss for the rest of the series\nSoccer Opener\nHere Sunday\nof Fritz Koehle, who limped of.\nthe ice in the Second period. Examination revealed a small bone\nhad broken in an ankle and Fritz\nis wearing a cast. He will be able\nto hobble around with crutohes,\nhowever.\n' Maiglio is still looking for help\nNelson and Spokane soccer In the scoring column from the\nteams will clash Sunday after- guys who should be putting the\nnoon in a soccer league game.     ! puck In Ihe net.\nA  league executive  meeting |   Three stars of Thursday's game\nwill  also  be held,  when  it is ; lvere Gerry Koehle, Bill Juzda\nand Maglio.\nLeafB held a tough workout on\nBuckaroos Down\nComets (-4\nPORTLAND (CP) - Portland\nBuokaroos, doggedly coming from\nbohind three times, whipped Spokane Comets 6-4 here Friday night j\nto take' a 2-1 lead In their best-of-1\nfive Western Hookey League\nquaterflnSl Series.\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Right-\nwinger George Ford scored the\nwinning goal at 14:35 of the sec-\n| onf sudden-death overtime period\nto give Victoria Cougars a well-\nearned 4-3 victory over Vancouver\nCanucks and a 2-1 lead in their\nbest - of - five Western Hockey\nLeague quarterfinal series.\nhoped a schedule will be drawn '\nup.    , I\nNelson players will be Ivan\nLillico, F. Brenscheldt. Stan\nGrill, Richard Eggers, E. Tolle6,\nJoe Jacoe, A. Szabo, R. L. Fields,\nJ. Karasz, C. Stevens and G.\nRenk. Spares are H. Wolf and\nP. Bayerie. Others wishing to\nturn out are asked to contact\ncoach Fred Taylor. Game starts\nat 2 p.m.\nOther league teams will be\nfrom Trail and Grand Forks,\nand interest has also been found\nin Pullman, Wash., Kimberley,\nCranbrook and Nakusp.\nCABLE\nAll Sizes\nFULL LINE\nWINCH LINE\nCHOKERS\nLogging-Mining-Construction\nSINNERUD\nEQUIPMENT\nLTD.\n301 Vernon St     Nelson,\nPHONE 1030\nB.C.\nFriday morning, spending a lot\nof time on power plays and penalty killing. Leafs are looking\nforward to putting the Maroons\nbehind the eight-Mi tor the first\ntime this afternoon.\nMarsh Severyn, Leaf defence-\nman, Is on the limp with a bruised knee. He will be in action today, however.\nLeaf replacement defenceman\nGord Andre feels that if this series was being played in Nelson,\nMaroons would be ludcy to win\na game. Should the series go \u201e\nseven games, the final game will\nbe played in the Olympic rink\nhere. The Olympic has a smaller\nice surface which should be more\nadvantageous to the Leafs' ragged style of play.\nThe Leafs were treated to a\ntour of the olty Friday afternoon\nand team members took in the\njunior final game last night.\nThe giant telegram is now\nproudly displayed on the dressing\nroom door leading to the ice surface.\nThe boys are hungry for victory\nand talk only of two weekend\nvictories. Work, work and more\nwork is the war-cry of the Leafs.\nI think we will take them.\nGM\nGENERAL MOTORS\nDIESEL\nPOWER\nDIETRICH-COLLINS\nEQUIPMENT LTD.\nFt. of Cedar St.               Nelson, B. C.\n PHONE 2202\t\nCkihohiisuL _\/.TJt.(D'isimL\nWE OFFER:\nFREE   INSPECTIONS\nFREE ESTIMATES TO REPAIR\nRepowering Trucks a Specialty\nFACTORY  TRAINED   PERSONNEL\nATTENTION\nCONTRACTORS,\nMUNICIPALITIES\/\nTOWNS, Etc.\nWe are holding an unusually large, unreserved\nAuction Sale of Contractors' Equipment in Edmonton, Alberta, on Monday, May 2nd.\nThis sole is being held primarily tor Glen Contractors Ltd., of Edmonton, who have discontinued\ntheir contracting business, but there will be other\nitems consigned from other sources.\nWe would like to draw your attention to this sale\nos it probably will be the largest of its kind ever to\nbe held in Canada.\nThe equipment will be sold on a strictly non-reserved basis, and no by-bidding.\nTo financially sound customers, finance terms will\nbe offered with 1 \/3 cosh down payment.\nA complete list will be mailed on request and will\nappear in this paper at a later date.\nStewart Equipment Co., Ltd.\nAirdrie, Alberta\nAUCTIONEERS:\nFrank Gwartney, Licence No. 1.\nEarl Galvin, Licence No. 188.\nHOCKEY SCORES\nEastern Professional\nHull-Ottawa  2 Kitchener-Waterloo 3\n(Best-of-seven  semi-final  tied\n3-3)\nInternational League\nSt. Paul 6 Muskegon 2\n(St.  Paul leads best-of-seven\nfinal 2-1)\nOntario Junior A\nSt. Michael's 1 Guelph 2\n(Guelph   leads   best-of-seven\nfinal 2-0)\nMemorial Cup\nFort William 4 Winnipeg 6\n(Winnipeg  wins\nwestern semi-final 4-3)\nEdmonton 3 Regina 1\n(Edmonton wins best-of-seven\nwestern semi-final 4-2)\n1M    '\nBOWLING CHAMPIONS off to Vancouver for the\nWestern Canada High School Five-Pin championships\nSaturday are, from left, Diane Skapple, Judy Foster,\nDonna Shankland, Judy Waterer and Linda Peresinni,\ncaptain. The girls won the Kootenay title in Trail,\nMarch 18. Bowlers Dot Waterer and Wilf Fahlman\naccompanied the team to the tournament, a four-game\ntotal-pin event. \u2014 Daily News photo.\nBy W. K. WHEATLEY\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nRod, Gun Zone Clubs\nMeet Here Sunday\nControversial proposal for a\nI0O per cent increase in annual\ndues for membership in the B.C.\nFederation of Rod and Gun Clubs\nwill be discussed Sunday at the\nquarterly zone meeting of the\nWest Kootenay Rod and Gun Club\nAssociation.\nA recent federation meeting\nproposed the member's assessment be increased from 25 to 50\ncents annually. A second proposal\nwas a possible increase of member's assessment from 25 to 75\ncents annually with a $100,000\nliability insurance policy to be\nprovided for the zone clubs.\nAdam Doyle, William Smith\nand Ralph H. Northrup, president\nof the Nelson club, Nelson delegates to the zone meeting were\ninstructed to \"not commit themselves until they have more information\" regarding the propos\ned $100,000 liability insurance\npolicy.\nTrail Rams Drop\nHoop Opener\nPENTICTON (CP) \u2014 Victoria\nFirst United Ohurch defeated\nVancouver Shop-Easy 46-39 and\nPenticton Legion trounced Trail j\nRams 42-23 Friday in the opening!\nround of the B.C. boys bantam |\nbest-of-seven^ round-robin basketball playoffsf-- DETROIT (CP) \u2014 Chicago\nhere. i Biack Hawks  and Detroit Red\nThe   four-team   championship! Wings \u00a3\u00ab* Friday to Detroit,\nends today where \"ney meet tonight in the\n ' [second game of the Stanley Oup\nfinal, and the master minds of\nboth teams professed an urgent\nneet to correct mistakes made\nin the series opener.\nFirst business of the day for\nthe Red Wings was to survey\niheir injuries. They turned out\nto be serious.\nBoth goalie Terry Sawchuk\nand defenceman Marcel Pronovost are out of the lineup for Ihe\nsecond game. The Wings announced that there is no chance\nof either playing as the club endeavours to pull even in the\nbest-of-seven series.\nRed Wings have called up Lou\nMarcon from Edmonton of the\nWestern Hockey League. Mar-\ncon played parts of the last two\nseason with Detroit.\nWRENCHED SHOULDER\nSatoehuk suffered a severely\nwrenched left shoulder in Thursday night's first game in Chicago, won by the Hawks 3-2,\nand had to be replaced after the\nfirst period by Hank Bassen.\nPronovost,   one   of   the   best\ndefencemen    in    the    National\nLeague,   played   little\nSawchuk,  Pronovost Out\nOf Hawks1 Lineup Tonight\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SAT., APRIL 8, 19611-\nTubbs Says...\nSpokane Will Have\nHockey \"Regardless\"\nSPOKANE (AP) - Spokane\nwon't be without organized\nhockey if the professional Spokane Comets of the Western\nHockey League shift their franchise to California.\nof whether the\nComets leave or stay, we're\ngoing to continue to push to get\nsenior Amateur Hockey back\nhere,\" said Clarence TUbbs,\nspokesman from the Spokane\nHockey Club, Inc. The club holds\na franchise in the Senior Amateur Western International\nHockey League.\nTUbbs and a dozen other local\nbusinessmen have sought unsuccessfully for the last two\nyears to get Colliseum ice dates\nfor their proposed team, Spokane Jets.\nTubbs said he feels senior\nhookey is stronger than Eve in\nIhe area, citing the Trail Smoke\nEaters' success in winning the\nWorld Amateur Hockey title ta\nEurope.\nHe said the way it shapes up,\nthe WIHL would be a five-tearii\nleague with representatives from\nSpokane, Trail, Nelson, R\nland and Kimberley-Oranforoo.\nyear that the provincial government should grant monies for the\nFish and Game Branch to obtain\nthe additional facilities and staff\nrequired to permit the continued\ndevelopment of hunting in the\nKootenay district to its maximum\npotential. Mr. Thompson said\nabout 15,000 hunters spend more\nthan one million dollars annually\nin the East Kootenay District and\nare making a significant contribution to the district tourist industry.\nTO HEAR REPORTS\nThe zone president said committee reports scheduled to be\nheard include the following:\nFish committee (Kootenay Lake\nKamloops); Duck Lake commit\ntee (annual meeting of Chambers\nof Commerce of Southeastern British Columbia), safety committee;  and Columbia River Com-\n1 mittee.\nMr. Thompson said the rod and! \u2122<*ey .  ,  ...    ...\ngun clubs are interested in the \u2122>re lhan one Pmod' Hls nshi\nPercy Du ton Ne son, member,j ljSh hatchery requirements neces-! ankle, injured by a shot a few\nrecently asked that more mfor-,sary  following  Columbia  River\\ days  ago in  practice,  was hit\nmation  be  compiled  as  to  the development.   Also  under  study by   the  puck   again   Thursday\nterms of-the liability insurance, are   additionaI   game   wintering night.\nP0lIey- J grounds which should be provided'    Pronovost's  loss  is  regarded\nAlso expected to be discussed j by controlled burning of Crown'as   by   far   tlie   most   serious.\nat the zone meeting will be proposed action to maintain Duck\nLake as a resting place for wild\nlife. The possibility of land at\nDuck Lake being reclaimed for\nagricultural purposes is also expected to be discussed at the\nannual meeting of the Associated\nChambers of Sommerce of Southeastern B.C., T. J. Thompson,\nzone president, said.\nMr. Thompson said the associated   chambers   resolved  last\nLands to preserve wildlife, Mr\nThompson said.\nMember club reports will be\nheard.\nThe zone president said the\nagenda is intended to provide\nmaximum scope for discussion.\n\"There are no contentious resolutions in at the moment, nor is\nthere a backlog of work to contend with. The board is clear for\nnew projects to further existinl\nobjectives,\" Mr. Thompson said.\nBassen is a capable goalie who\nsplit the chores with Sawchuk\nduring the regular season and\nin Thursday night's game produced a workmanlike job in\nholding the Hawks scoreless\nfrom the time he took over.\nTlie'Hawks have no such serious injuries but are without Eddie Litzenberger. sent to hospital Thursday wilh a virus infection.\nLA., 'Frisco Shopping\nAround for Hockey Clubs\nSPOKANE (API-California's\ntwo biggest cities\u2014Los Angeles\nand San Francisco \u2014 are shopping for hookey clubs and they\ncould do their buying in the Pacific northwets's Western\nHockey League.\nWHL directors meet in Seattle\nThursday to discuss awarding\nfranchises to San Francisco and\nLos Angeles for next season.\nPacific northwest hockey\nsources feel southland clubs\nwould draw big crowds\u2014pointing to the more than 200,000 fans\nPortland Buokaroos drew during 35 home games in their\nfirst year in the Western\nHockey League.\nLeague president A1 Leader\nsaid in Seattle Friday that Jim\nPigott, owner of the league's\nViotoria franchise, has the inside track for the Los Angeles\nspot. He said Pigott requested a\nfranchise shift two years ago.\nAt Spokane, Melvin Smith;\npresident of the WHL-s Spokane\nComets, said if the team's franchise is moved, San Francisco\nwill be lhe destination.\n\"We haven't made the decision to move to San Francisco,\"\nsaid Smith, \"and we haven't\ndefinitely  been   assured   a  go-\nahead from San Francisco. But\nwe are studying and considering the move carefully.\"\nSmith said: \"I'm reluctant to\nmake such a move, but a person has to face facts. There apparently isn't enough interest\nand fans in Spokane to support\na professional team.\"\nThe crowds were better in\nSpokane this season, averaging\nabout 2,700 a game, but costs\nhad risen' sharply, partly because of player purchases,\nSmith said.\nWINNIPEG MAY MOVE\nTlie Spokane spokesmen - Review said the Winnipeg WHL\nfranchise, owned by Jack Perrin, also has been checking into\na possible California move.\n\"There is a strong possibility,\" said The Review \"that if\nthe Comets go to, San Francisco, it would be a joint operation with Penrin's Warriors.\"\nLeader said the key man in\nthe franchise Shift talks is Bill\nNicholas, general manager of\nthe Los Angeles sports arena,\nwho Leader said was making a\nfinal overture to the National\nHockey League.\nLeader said Nicholas was expected   to   tell   NHL  president\nI .\nClarence Campbell that unless\nLos Angeles is admitted to the\ncircuit Ihis year, the California\ncity will affiliate with tlie WHL.\n\"When I hear from Nicholas\nthat playing dates are available,\" said Leader, \"Ihen the\nWHL will be able to take action.\"\nHe 6aid the San Francisco\nCow Palace is available and\nwould be ready for play with a\n$220,000 ice surfacing job.\nSpokane joined the WHL in\ndie 105.-59 season, moving up\nfrom the senior amateur Western International League.\n\"As much .as I don't want to\nlake professional hockey away\nfrom Spokane,\" said Smith,\n\"the situation is just that it\nisn't feasible to keep on subsidizing the Comets' operation.\"\nSpokane manager Roy McBride said at Portland, \"We've\nbeen looking over the California\nsituation and I think they've\nbeen looking us over, too.\"\nHe added that the team has\nbeen in Spokane a long time and\nthe fans in the past have indicated Ihey could support a professional franchise. We're still a\nSpokane team and haven't cut\nany ties.\"\nHe was replaced in the opener\njy Chico Maki, a rookie, but the\nyoungster was used little.\nMeanwhile, the rival coaches\nwere worried about mistakes of\nomission and commission.\nCoach Rudy Pilous of the\nHawks was thankful for the\nopening - game victory, giving\nhis team the jump on the\nWings, but fretted over what he\nconsidered physical and mental\nlapses.\nCoach Sid Abel of the Red\nWings, acknowledging a corn-\nmen d a b 1 e improvement in\nWings' play in the second and\nthird periods, felt lhat earlier\nmistakes cost his club at least a\nchance of sending the game into\novertime.\nTo most observers the bitter\nstruggle, mistakes or no mistakes, had two phases; the\nHawks' three-goal outburst in\nan all-out drive in the first period and the resurgent Red\nWings' equally gallant comeback effort that fell short.\nSNEAKY  PASS\nBefore leaving Chicago with\nhis Hawks, several hours after\nIhe Red W i n g s' departure,\ncoach Pilous was still studying\nways to foil what he calls Detroit's \"sneaky, long pass.\"\nIt's a lonesome-forward play,\nwith one player sprung loose\nand a well-timed pass fired at\nhim so he can take it in stride.\n\"We haven't played the Red\nBroadcast of\nGame Assured\nBut Need Funds\nAn additional $90 will ensure\nfull broadcast of the game Sunday afternoon between the\nNelson Maple Leafs and Win*\nnipeg Maroons.\nRadio Station CKLN's campaign ior funds or sponsors to\nenable broadcasting of the\ngame reached a point where\na broadcast can be planned,\nmanager Alan R. Ramsden\nsaid Friday night.\nHowever, more funds are\nneeded to take care of extra\ngame time. Line facilities will\nbe available at 12:30, at the end\nof the first period. Funds received so far will not take\ncare of overtime periods.\nIf funds raised more than\ntake care of expences, lt is\nplanned to turn any surplus\nover to the team. A strict account of all donations Is being kept.\nWings in three weeks and we've\ngot to revamp our defensive\nstyle again in order to meet that\nplay,\" said Pilous.\n\"It was different when we\nmet Montreal Canadiens in the\nsemi-final. The Canadians usually attack with a whole line as\na unit.\"\nPilous said he thought the tension of trying to hold- the lead\nin Thursday's game forced his\nteam into playing too carefully.\n\"It's simply a mental thing,\nwith a 3-0 lead, but careful\nhockey just isn't our style,\" he\nsaid.\nHe was equally perturbed\nover Detroit's finst goal, whioh\ncame on the Wings' power play.\n\"We' should have iced the\npuck, but one of our guys has\nto try to carry it out\u2014tried to\ndo tricks in our end. It looked\neasy but the Red Wings\npromptly closed in on him and\nin a matter of seconds had the\npuck.\"\nStrikes 'n' Spares\nResults of Friday's mixed five\npin bowling: Rockets 0, Pin Pushers 4; Whatsits 0, Spotters 4; Hot\nShots 1, Mavericks 3; ladles' high\nsingle and aggregate, Shirley U-\nling9wor(h 323 and 689; men's\nhigh single, AMn Floren 296;\nmen's high aggregate, George\nLane 681; team high single and\naggregate Pin Pushers 10_, and\n2786.\nCouples' league: Eric 0, Eugene\n4; George 1, Jack 3; Charlie 1,\nArnie 3; Vern 1, Gus 3; Rio 0,\nDave 4; Bob C. 1, Bob B. 3;\nladies's 'high single Wilma Buckley 246; ladies' high aggregate\nMarlene Amorozo 585; men's high\nsingle and aggregate, Jack Little\n301 and 699; team high single and\naggregate, Eugene 489, and 1256.\nSecond Wire\nTo Be Sent\nMaple Leafs\nThe morale boosting telegran\nsigned by 600 Nelson Mapl\nLeal supporters also will boos\nthe players' spirits to the toni\nof $120.\nFans behind a second tell\ngram being organized Frldaj\nnight said this amount had beei\nplaced In the bank for the team\nPrime movers In the scheme\nJack Skellern, Bob Pnlersoi\nand others set up shop on Bake:\nStreet tn an effort to obtain 1001\nnames (or the second wire.\nProceeds from this telegran\nwould also go towards the Lea\nfund, they said.\n_______________MMM*MM\nSOUTH   SLOCAN  GROUP\nCOMMITTEE\nPresents Private 90-Mlnute\nFILM SHOW\n\"WILDLIFE OF THE\nKOOTENAYS\"\nWith Commentary by\nGame Warden Jack McKlll\nThursday, April 13,\n8:00 p.m.\nNO. 3 HALL, SOUTH SLOCAN\nADULTS 75c  STUDENTS, Mc\nProceeds Towards Scouts and\nCubs Activities\nTickets from Group\nCommittee, Fred Whiteley _\nor at the door.\nATTENTION GOLFERS I\nSALMO GOLF COURSE\nNOW OPEN!\nEnjoy a Round of Golf This Weekend!\nGreens Fee $1.00\nSWEDISH HAMLET\nYttertiium, yttrium, terbium\nand erbium are chemical elements, all named after Ytterby,\na hamlet near Stockholm,\nSweden.\nNELSON and DISTRICT DEALERSHIP for\nA Canadian-Built Boat\nWith the Emphasis on SAFETY\nPrices Range:\nCar Top\nSUCH FEATURES AVAILABLE AS:\nRide-Guide Steering -- Metal Framed Plexiglass Windshield\nFolding Upholstered Seats\nJEFFERY RADIO\nand Appliances\nLtd.\nPHONE 1302\nNELSON, B.C.\nBaker St.\nWf\nThis is your chance- lo\nenrol for top aviation\ntraining - work with\nIhe latest equipment-\nearn good pay as you\nlearn.\nContact l.he PCAF\nCaieer Counsellor who\nwill ans wer all your\nquestions . . . tell you\nof the many other\nbenefits of a'career in\nthe RCAF.\n&tfk hm tic\nNELSON. B.C.\nat the NELSON HOTEL\nOn Tuesday, April Uth, 1961\nFrom 12:30 p.m. to 5:00 p.m.\nCAf CAREER COUNSELIOR\n_____\n 8-.\u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, SAT., APRIL 8, 1961\nVANCOUVER STOCKS\n(Closing Prices)\n?,\nMINES\nBearer Lodge\nBethlehem Gop,\nBralorne\nCariboo Gold ...   I\nCraig\nGiant Mascot\nGranduc\nHigMami Bell\nMidwest Coppr\nMt. Wasfliih-ton\nNatio__ Es\nPend Oreille\nQuatsino\nReeves MacDonald\nSheep Creek\nSherritt Gordon\nSibbak Premier\nSilver Standard\nSunshine Lardeau\nTaylor\nTorwest\nOILS\nTrojan\nWestern Exploration\nA P Consolidated\nCalgary & Edmonton\nCharier\nHome\nOkalta Com\nRoyalite\n-ijval Can\nUnited\nVantor\n' NDUSTRIALS\n\\ .erta Distillers\nWberta Distilers Vt\nB C Forests ,\nB C Power\n.06\n1.16\n5;90\n1.07\n9.?0\n-.41\n2.26\n2.00\nJ6V4\n.46\n.05.\n2.30\n.18_\n1.62\n1.00\n3.90\n.40\n.10\n.27\n.41\nJS_\n.12\n.14\n17.23\n1.10\nM.50\n.33\n9.55\n.09\n1.55\n.26%\n2.16\n1.70\n13.87%\n34.00\nB O Telephone\nCanadian Colliedes\nCrown Zeller (Can)\nInt Brew B\nInland Nat (Jas ',\nMacM & Powell River\nTrans Min\nWestminster Paper\nWestern Plywoods\nUNLISTED\nAlta Gas Trunk\nTrans Oanada Com\nTrans Mountain Unit\nWest Coast Unit\nWest Coast Vt\nBANKS\nBank of Montreal\nCan. Bank of Cam.\nImp. Bank of Can.\nRoyal Bank of Oan.\nFUNDS\nCan. Inv. Fund\nCommonwealth Int.\nFirst Oil and Gas\nGrouped Income\nInvestors Growth\nInvestors Mutual\nLeverage\nTrans Canada \"C\"\n46.25\n7.00 .\n20,75\n5.95\n6.25\n16.50\n1A.SVA\n4S.87W\n11.50\n31.26\n-23.75\n14.37%\n84.00\n16.75\n62.78\n64.00\n72.75\n76.00\n9.56\n8.51.\n4.47\n3.73\n6.55\n12.24\n7.56\n6.10\nDeadline tor Classified Ads \u2014 S p.m.\nHELP WANTED\n63.76\n65.00\n73.75\n77.00\n10.49\n9.35\n4.89\n4.08\n7.13\n13.31\n8.31\n6.60\nIF YOU NEED MORE MONEY\n\u2014 you should enquire about\nselling Rawleigh's famous line\nof Household Necessities. Full\nand part-time Districts available. For full details 'write W.\nT. Rawlei-h Co. Ltd., 589 Henry\nAve., Dept. .HB-153, Winnipeg,\nMan.\nCARRIER BOYS FOR NELSON\nDaily News routes during Summer months to relieve regular\ncarriers. In Cranbrook, apply\nMrs. Stanley Willisson, 411-13th\nAve.; in Nelson, apply Circulation Dept.\t\nEXPERIENCED FRUIT TREE\npruner wanted. State telephone\nnumber and rate of pay to Box\n9538, Nelson Daily News.\nORCHARDS BLOOM\nOLIVER (OPI\u2014Apricot trees\nin this area are blooming at\nthe earliest date in 25_ years.\nMost orchards were in full\nbloom Thursday, a day ahead\nof last year and only two days\nbehind the earliest date recorded.\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\nPACIFIC STANDARD TIME\nKR_M-TV \u2014 Channel 2\nSATURDAY\n10:45 Sign On\n10:50 KREM News\n10:55 Almanac\n11:00 The Answers\n11:30 Northwest Farm Summary\n12:00 Common Wealth of Nations\n! !2:30 Pip the Piper *\n! 1:00 Topic\n1:30 University Conversation\n2:00 Saturday Matinee\n:30 Sword of Freedom\n_00 Wrestling\n5:00 TB-A\n6:00 Championship Bowling\n7:00 Saturday Nite Fites *\n7:50 Make That Spare *\n8:00 Grand Jury\n8:30 Leave It To Beaver *\n9:00 Lawrence Welk \u2022\n10:00 Roaring Twenties *\n1:00 Play Of The Week\n1:00 Almanac\n1:05 Nightcap News\n1:10 Prayer and Hymn\n1:15 Sign Off\nSUNDAY\n10:00 Sign On\n10:05 Almanac\n10:10 Week End Digest\n10:15 Sacred Heart Hour\n10:30 Big Picture\n11:00 Faith For Today\n11:30 Herald of Truth\n12:00 Meet The Professor *\n12:30 Pip The Piper *\n1:00 Direction 1S61 *\n1:30 Talk Back\n2:00 Slide Role\n2:30 From This Foundation\n3:00 TV Hour of Stars\n3:46 U.S. Steel\n4:00 Championship Bridge *\n4:30 Star and Story\n5:00 Mattys' Funday Funnies\n5:30 Rocky and His Friends *\n6:00 What's The Story\n6:30 Walt Disney Presents *\n7:30 Maverick *\n8:30 Lawman *\n9:00 The Rebel *\n9:30 Asphalt Jungle *\n10:30 Churchill, The Valiant\nYears *\n11:00 Silents Please (Premier)\n11:30 Star Performance\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\n(Continued)\nEXPERIENCED GRILL COOK\nwanted for summer months.\nApply Box 8505, Daily News.\nHELP WANTED\u2014FEMALE\nIN YOUR OWN EXCLUSIVE\nterritory sell an unconditionally guaranteed product which is\nadvertising nationally on TV.\nAvon Cosmetics. Write to \u2014\nMrs. E. C. Hearn, Box 14, R.R.\n4, Kelowna, B.C.\nAUCTION SALE\nTIMBER SALE X849S1\nThere will be offered for sale\nat public auction, at 10:30 .a.m.\nLocal Time on May, 5th, 1961, in\nthe office of the Forest Ranger,\nGreenwood, B.C., the Licence\nX84961, to cut 3,266,000 cubic feet\nof larch, fir, yellow pine, lodgepole pine, cedar and balsam\ntrees and trees of other species,\nexcept spruce trees, on an area\nsituated on vacant Crown Land,\nWilliamson-Sebastion Creeks and\nKettle River, Kettle River P.W.C.,\nSimilakameen Division of Yale\nLand District.\nTen (10) years will be allowed\nfor removal of timber.\nProvided anyone unable to attend the auction in person may\nsubmit a sealed tender, to be\nopened at the hour of auction and\ntreated as one bid.\nFurther particulars may be obtained from the Deputy Minister\nof Forests, Victoria, B.C.; the\nDistrict Forester, Nelson, B.C.;\nor the Forest Ranger, Greenwood,\nBeverdell and Kettle Valley, B.C.\nCHRISTINA LAKE PROPERTY\nfor sale \u2014 Large lot, approximately one and one half acres\nwest side of Christina Lake,\ntwo hundred seventy-nine feet\nfronting lake. Price $6,000.00.\nFor further information oontact\nH. N. Wiebe, Real Estate,\nGrand Forks, B.C. ,\n48 AC. FARM, PASSMORE. 15\nac. cleared. Has river frontage.\nHalf mile from MUI. NEW\nFOUR ROOMED BUNGALOW.\nFull cement basement. 2 older\nhouses, barn, chicken house.\n$7700.00. Good terms. T. D. Rosling _ Son Ltd., 717 J. B. Brown\n1065-X.\nWOMAN TO ASSIST WITH\nhousecleaning. Modern home.\nPhone 1835-L.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nMACHINIST, MILLWRIGHT \"A\"\nof foreman oalibre, age 34.\nThoroughly experienced incl.\nwelding, pipefitting, wiring and\ncomp. engines, would like work\naround Nelson. Apply to Box\n9539, Nelson News.\nCHRISTINA LAKE - 175 FT.\nlake frontage, 3 acres total.\n5 room cottage, furnished,\nlights and water. Situated is\ncove. Good road. Full price\n$20,500. Your terms may suit.\nBox 865 Grand Forks. Phone\n153-M for appointment.\n47 ACRE FARM, 10 CLEARED,\nriver frontage, 1\/3 mile from\nlarge lumber industry. 5 room\nhouse, wired for range, hot, and\ncold water. Barn, other buildings. Reasonably priced. Apply\nGeorge Swetlikoff, Passmore.\nWALL CLEANING BY MACH-\nine. Perfect results, no mess.\nNow is the time to clean your\nwalls. Don't delay. Call now and\navoid the rush. Phone 1140-Y.\nKXLY-TV \u2014 Channel 4\nSATURDAY\nBread Basket\n9:00 Captain Kangaroo *\n10:00 Magic Land of Alakazam \u2022\n10:30 Roy Rogers *\n11:00 Sky King \u2022\n11:30 Mighty Mouse *\n12:00 Amos 'n Andy\n12:30 This Is Alice\n1:00 Plaiyhouse\n1:30 Yesterday's Newsreel\n1:45 Sports Album\n2:00 Masters Golf *\n3:00 Action Theatre\n4:46 Dan Smoot\n5:00 Ringside With Rasslers\nG:00 Deputy Dawg\n6:30 Tales of Texas Rangers\n7:00 Shotgun Slade\n7:30 Perry Mason *\n8:30 Checkmate *\n9:30 Have Gun, Will Travel *\n10:00 Gunsmoke *\n10:30 Death Valley Days\n1:00 Bie 4 Movie\nSUNDAY\n8:00 The Eagle Stirred-Jewish\nOratorio \u2022\n9:00 Mormon Conference *\n11:00 Oral Roberts\n11:30 Hawkeye\n12:00 Robin Hood\n12:30 Patent Pending\n12:45 Yesterday's Newsreel\n1:00 Master's GoM *\n2:30 Young People's Concert *\n3:30 Playhouse\n4:00 Bowling Stars\n4:30 Texas Rassling\n5:00 It Is Written\n5:30 G. E. College Bowl *\n6:0 Navy Log\n6:30 20th Century \u2022\n7:00 Lassie *\n7:30 Dennis The Menace *\n8:00 Ed Sullivan *\n9:00 G. E. Theatre *\n9:30,Jack Benny *\n10:00 Candid Camera *\n10:30 What's My Line *\n11:00 CBS News *\n11:15 Yesterday's Newsreel\n11:30 Robin Hood\nPHONE US NOW FOR CON-\ncrete work, sidewalks, patio,\nfloors, driveways. Hank Zyls-\ntra, phone 839-X, after 5,\n1752-L-3.\nBUILDING ROCK WALLS, CE-\ntnent work, cement finishing\nand landsoapimg. Plione 687-X\nafter 4:30 p.m '\nIF YOU\" WANT A NEW PLAN-\nter around the house, bricks or\nRoman tiles, phone Hank Zyls-\ntra 839-Y or 1752-L-3 after 5.\nAUCTION SALE\nTimber Sale X82859\nThere will be offered for sale at\npublic auction, at 10:30 a.m. Local\nTime on June 2nd, 1961, in the office of the Forest Ranger, Beaver-\ndell, B.C., the Licence X82859, to\ncut 1,007,000 cubic feet of fir,\nlarch, lodgeploe pine spurce, balsam, cedar trees and trees of\nother species on an area situated\non Crown Land, East of Triple\nLakes, within Kettle P.W.C. Sim-\nilkanmeen Division of Yale Land\nDistrict.\nTen (10) years will be allowed\nfor removal of timber.\nProvided anyone unable to attend the auction in person may\nsubmit a sealed tender, to be\nopened at the hour of auction and\ntreated as one bid.\nFurther particulars may be obtained from the Deputy Minister\nof Forests, Victoria, B.C.; the\nDistrict Forester, Nelson, B.C.;\nor the Forest Ranger, Beaverdell,\nB.C.\nBLEWETT, 5% miles out, 18%\nacres. 2 bedroom house, cement\nbasement, outbuildings, garden,\norchard, berries, pasture good,\nwater, 220 wiring. $5500 cash or\n$6000 terms. Phone 134-R-3 or\nwrite John Bogaard, R.R. No. 2.\nIF YOU WISH TO SELL YOUR\nProperty Why Not List with\nAPPLEYARD'S REALTY -\nPhone 269. Established 48 years\nin Nelson. Finances available\nto get Deals through.\nCHRISTINA LAKE PROPERTY\nfor sale. One lot with modern\nsummer cottage at Texas Point.\nFor further information contact H. N. Wiebe, Real Estate,\nGrand Forks, B.C.\n63 ACRE FARM LOTS OF\npiped water, good 3 bedroom\nhome with plumbing, pasture\n15 acres under cultivation, timber and poles. Valley Service,\nAppledale.\nCHESTERFIELD AND RUG\ncleaning. Dutch Cleaning Service. Ph. 2190.\nBABY SITTER FOR HIRE.\nFairview only. 25c an hour. Ph.\n2211-Y.\nFOR THE BEST IN BODY\nworks see Ted's Auto Body, 1\nmile Granite Road, phone 98.\nELDERLY LADY WOULD LIKE\nbaby sitting evenings. Phone.\n798-L. \t\nGARDENS PLOWED, ANY SIZE.\nPhone 171.\nHAVE YOUR GARDEN PLOW-\ned. Phone 602-Y.         .\nPOUND DISTRICT ACT\nPURSUANT to the provisions of\nSection 11 of the \"Pound District\nAct\", Chapter 292, R.S.B.C. 1860,\nnotice is hereby given of the appointment of.W. G. KENNEDY,\nGeneral Delivery, Nelson, B.C.\nas pound-keeper for the Ymir\nRoad Pound District.\nThe location of the pound premises is that part of Lot 5 of Lot\n304 Plan 2305 lying to the east of\nthe Nelson-Nelway Highway, as\nshown on said plan.\n(Signed) Frank Richter,\nMinister of Agriculture.\nB.C. Department of Agriculture,\nVictoria, B.C.\nMarch 22nd, 1961.\n100' BY 150' CN BALFOUR\nhighway. 2 B.R.s, langje L.R.\nwith fireplace. Picture windows.\nCash down $4750. Wm. Kalyniuk\nAgencies. Ph. 1777.\t\nNICE 6 ROOM STUCCO HOUSE.\nBasement. Bearing fruit trees.\nNear Castlegar. $9,500 terms or\ntrade for Vancouver home.\nWrite Box 6, Kinnaird, B.C.\nN KASLO. 3 BDRM. HOME\nwith full concrete basement.\nFruit trees. 12 acres of land.\nContact Mrs. A. Garay, 374\nBinns St., Trail.\nFOR SALE: COMMER CIAL\nproperty on No. 3 Highway at\nChristina Lake. For further details contact H. N. Wiebe, Real\nEstate, Grand Forks, B.C.\nBUSINESS\nOPPORTUNITIES\nKHQ-TV \u2014 Channel 6\nSATURDAY\nI. E. Farm Summary\n9:00 Shari Lewis * (C)\n9:30 King  Leonard _ His\nFriends * (C)\n10:00 Fury *\n10:30 Lone Ranger\n11:00 Pro  Basketball * (Playoff)\n1:00  .-Toons\n2:00 Captain Gallant\n2:30 The Third Man\n3:00 Bowling Stars\n3:30 True Story *\n4:00 Detective Diary *\n4:30 Tales of (he Vikings\n5:00 Five O'Olock Movie '\n\"Young Tom Edison\"\n6:30 Bachelor Father\n7:00 Blue Angels\n7:30 Bonanza * (C)\n8:30 Tall Man *\n9:00 The Deputy *\n9:30 Nation's Future\n10:30 Late Movie\n\"Sullivan's Travels\"\nSUNDAY\n10:00 Local Choirs\n10:30 Frontiers of Faith\n11:00 Contrails\n11:30 Pro Basketball *\n1:30 Greatest Drama\n1:45 Our Gang\n2:00 Week's Best Movie\n\"Over 21\"\n4:00 Pro Wrestling\n5:00 Celebrity Golf *\n5:30 Chet Huntley *\n6:00 Meet the Press * (C)\n6:30 Medic\n7:00 Shirley Temple \u2022 (C)\n8:00 National Velvet *\n8:30 Tab Hunter *\n9:00 Chevy Show * (C)\n10:00 Loretta Young *\n10:30 This Is Your Life\n11:00 Late Movie\n\"Massacre at Sand Creek'\nCBC-TV \u2014 Nelson, Channel 9; Trail, Channel 11\nROBERTSON -MILLIARD - CATTELL REALTY CO. LTD.\n456 Ward St. Nelson Phone 1912 For Information\nEXCLUSIVE!\nPHILCO - BENDIX\nEQUIPPED\nKING KOIN\nLAUNDERETTE\nAMAZING\nPROFIT POTENTIAL\nWith\nDOUBLE-LOAD\nDOUBLE-PROFIT\nWASHERS\nand\nCoin Operated\nDRY CLEANING\nMACHINES\nFor Information Without\nObligation . . . Contact\nKoin Laundry Sales\nLtd.\n4117 Fourth Street, N.W.\n'    Calgary, Alberta\nTelephone:   AV 9-4776\nI will not be responsible for any\ndebts incurred in my name by\nanyone other than myself.\nD. Rae Drapef,\nCrawford Bay.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\nHOMES, big and small, WE sell\nthem ALL-ihut we need YOUR\nLISTING. Phone 68 for REAL\nESTATE. McHardy Agencies\nLtd.\nBUILDING LOT \"FOR SALE ON\nbusiness intersection, corner ol\nFront and Josephine St. For information write Box 9510, Nel-\nson Daily News.        \t\nMODERN APT. HOUSE, CEN-\ntral, partly furn., $13,500, half\noash and terms. $2400 revenue\nyearly. Box 9870, Daily News.\nFOR SALE - LEVEL BUILD-\ning lots bordering city limits\nPhone 2046-L. Name your\nterms.\nCALL US FOR ALL YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS\nSERVICE STATION AND GRO-\ncery store with cabins on No. 3\nHighway with two and one half\nacres fronting. Approximately\none-half mile from the City of\nGrand Forks, B.C. Modern\nbuildings, for store and owner's\nquarters.' Priced to sell. For\nfurther details contact H. N.\nWiebe, Real Estate, Grand\nForks, B.C.\nSATURDAY\n2:30 Oxford Cambridge Boat\nRace\n3:00 Canadian Bowling Cham-\nslhip\n4:30 Speaking French\n5:00 Northern Manitoba Trappers Festival\n5:30 Bugs Bunny\n6:00 Stanley Cup Playoffs\n7:15 Juliette\n7:45 King Whyte\n8:00 News\n8:16 Mr. Fixit\n8:30 Dennis The Menace\n9:00 Red River Jamboree\n9:30 Aquanauts\n10:30 Peter Gunn\n11:10 Sign Off\nSUNDAY\n12:30 Face to Face\n1:00 Country Calendar\n1:30 The 25th Masters\nGolf Tournament\n2:30 Good Life Theatre\n3:00 One On Every Street\n3:30 Silents Please\n4:00 Twentieth Century\n4:30 Junior Magazine\n5:00 News Magazine\n5:30 CBC News Magazine\n6:00 Walt Disney Presents\n7:00 National Velvet\n7:30 The World ofMusic\n8:00 Ed Sullivan Show\n9:00 G.M. Presents\n10:00 Background\n10:30 Fighting Words\n11:00.News (Toronto)\nGET INTO BUSINESS FOR\nyourself. Hamburger Drive-in\nwith living^ quarters and_ fully j on a property with 70 feet of\nFAIRVIEW\nA modern, new 3 bedroom\nhome overlooking the city with\na breathtaking view of the\nKootenay Lake. This lovely\nhome has a beautifully laid out\nliving room, dining room and\nkitchen area with a large light\nbrick fireplace comprising one\nwhole wall. The basement with\na front entrance and windows\nhas been designed for either\nadditional living space or a\nseparate suite. These plus\nmany additional features. For\nfurther   information   call   us\nWW- $23,500\nPrice     T      '\nTWO MINUTES\nFROM BAKER ST.\nHere is a house with 2 B.R.s\non the main floor with a large\nliving room and dining room,\nnice family size kitchen and\nadjoining pantry. Upstairs\nthere are 2 bedrooms and a\ncentral hallway. This home\nneeds redecoration but is in\nvery good condition. Excel-\nlently priced       $(0,000\nMILL STREET\nThis 3-bedroom home close to\nthree schools; ideal family\nhome with a closed-in sunporch,\nheated by gas, with a large,\nfull basement. Terms to be\narranged by purchaser. Owner\nwill consider all $8250\noffers. Price \t\nRR1\nAt six mile we have a fairly\nnew large concrete building\nwith a completely windowed\nfront. This building could be\nused for any number of commercial purposes. It is situated\n$3000 down.\n125 Chatham St.\nPh. 1617-L.\nLOT 60 X 120 ON 8TH STREET.\nTerms, Water. Phone 1272-L.\nNEARLY LEVEL CLEAN LOT,\n50x100. Gas, water, Ph. 2147-L.\nFAIRVIEW, 4 BDRM., OIL HEAT\ndouble plumbing. Phone 1036-X.\nAPPLIANCES\nSAVE\nwith\nROCKGAS\nGas Appliances\nHeating Installations\nBulk Tanks\nBOTTLE AND BULK\nDELIVERY\nInstallations by Licensed\nGas Fitters.\nFor Information, Free Estimates\nPH. 2230\nRockgas Propane\n610 Railway    J. Tasker, Mgr.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES\nFOR SALE OR TRADE FOR A\nlarger horse \u2014 1, 3-year-old\nGelding Shetland pony. Apply\nto J-S Hiding Stable, Fruitvale\nor Phone 4963 Fruitvale, B.C.\n1 COW, FIRST CALF, FRESH-\nened. Maroh 1st. Guernsey\nstrain, very quiet. Apply George\nM. Osachoff, Pass Creek, B.C.\n(Programs subject to change by stations without notice.)        'K\"rLiUFr\"i.-l.G High ^Plffan\nequipped. Can be rented for $80\nper month complete. Good business location in Nelson area.\n-Apply Box 9611, Nelson Daily\nNews. \t\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES\nSPRINGER SPANIEL $15.00 \u2014\nAlso Collie Lab., Cross pups\n$5.00. Bird's Kennels, Blueberry\nCreek.\nIFOR SALE TO GOOD HOME IN\ncountry for male pups. Phone\n872-X.\nGUINEA PIGS FOR SALE. JOHN\nEvens, Notre Dame College.\nhighway frontage and is at a\nsacrifice $3800\nprice of \t\nLTD.\nINSURANCE - REAL ESTATE\n582 Ward St. Nelson, B.C.\nPHONE 2470\nBUILDING LOT 60\nblks. from bridge\nShore. Ph. 1724-R-l\nX   210.   2\non  North\ni PUREBRED GUERNSEY COW\njust freshened, second call. Ph.\n672, Nick N. Poohaohof-f, Slocan\nPark.\nBOATS and ENGINES\nFACTORY BUILT 16'-3\" LAKE\nCraft boat. Fiberglass bottom,\n16 h.p. Evinrude motor, like\nnew. Mastercraft trailer makes\nup as utility trailer. Oars, pad-\ndel and tarp etc. Phone 1919-L,\nAdam Doyle, 1304 Robertson\nAve.\nTHERMOCRAFT BOATS, HOLS-\nclaw boat trailers and Mercury\noutboard motors also excellent\nused motors. Jeffery Radio and\nAppliances.\n ',       \t\nPiniiltflgp ^\u2014'   \" '%m\ni0i\nSMALL INVESTMENT   -\nThat's the Want Ad Story ~  PHONE   1S44\nYOU CAN  NOW PHONE YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS IN UNTIL 5 P.M. ON SATURDAY\nFOR SALE\nMISCELLANEOUS\n(Continued)\nRENTALS\nFURN. CABIN AND BOATS FOR\nsale or rent. 6 miles east of\nNelson, No. 3 Highway. Also\nfurn. rooms for rent in good\nhome. Phone 369.\nRENTALS\ni Continued)\nSMALL\u20142 BEDROOM COTTAGE\ntor rent. Well located, newly\ndecorated, nice location, $48 a\nmonth. Ready for occupation\nMay 1st. Box 8566, Daily News.\nUNFURNISHED, ONE BED-\nrooni apart. Apply Bevanne\nApart. Ph. 1903-L.\nMACHINERY\nl Continued)\nFURNISHED SUITE FOR\ncouple\u2014May 1st to Sept. 1st.\nPhone 394-R evenings.\nWINTER RATES\nHOUSEKEEPING AND SLEEP-\ning   rooms,   weekly,   monthly\nrales    Dishes,   linen  supplied.\nparking. Allen Hotel. 171 Baker.\n8-ROOM MODERN APT SELF\ncontained, unfurnished central.\nGas range, heat and hot water\nAdults. Ph 2108-L __^\nAVAILABLE APR. 1STH, TWO-\nbedroorm home 1423 Kootenay\nStreet. $65 per month. Phone\nLincoln 6-3581,,Armstrong, B.C.\nSMALL FURN. STE., SELF-\ncontained, stove and fridge.\nNear Civic Centre. Phone 271-Y\nor 905 Edgewood Ave\n3 ROOM HEATED AND FUR-\nnislied apartment. Central.\nPhone 474-L.\nHEATED, SELF - CONTAINED\napt, 3 rms and bath. Gas stove.\nUnfur. Close in. Ph. 272.\nCLEAN 4 RM. STE. AND BATH\non Silica St. Phone 2023-L after\n5 or weekends.\nMODERN FURNISHED 1 BED-\nroom apt. Available May 1st.\nPhone 2075.\nNEWLY DECORATED. PARTLY\nfurn. 2 room apt. 723 Silica.\nFURN. 2-RM. SUITE. APPLY\n140 Baker St. or phone 491-X.\nHOUSEKEEPING ROOM FOR\nlady. Phone 1564-X.\nMAY 1st \u2014 ATTRACTIVE 3 RM.\nFurn. Apt. heat and water supplied. _ block off Baker.\n414 Fall St. Phone 2416.\nCLEAN, COMFORTABLE\nsleeping rooms, weekly or\nmonthly rates. Queen's Hotel\n621 Baker\t\nHOUSE FOR RENT. GAS HEAT.\nApply Benny's Grocery. Phone\n1236.        \t\n8 RM. APT., BATHROOM -\nAdults only. 1421 Front St, oppositeine^vSafeway^h^541-Y.\n8 BEDROOM HOUSE, WITH\nlarge kitchen, gas furnace. $80\nper month. 820 Silica St.\t\nHSKP. AMD SLEEPING RO(5M\nReasonable. 705 Victoria St.\nAlley. \t\n2 BEDROOM COTTAGE OPPO-\nsite Junior High Sohool. Plf.\n513-L. .. I\nFOR RENT - HOUSEKEEPING\nroom $20 mo. Ph. 405-L,\t\nCOTTAGE FOR RENT NORTH\nShore. Ph. 1685-Y-l.\n2 ROOM  HOUSE WITH BATH.\nPhone 342-R.\n3 RM. S.C. SUITE, FAIRVIEW,\nheated, adults. Ph. 1281-L.\n13  BDRM.   HOUSE.   CLOSE  IN.\n$40 mo. Ph. 1526.\nMACHINERY\nWelding and Machine Sh^r\nSteel Fabricating, Mill Repairs,\nNew and Used\nIndustrial Machinery\nStevenson Machinery Ltd,\nPhone Nelson 97\nTRACTOR ANn. MOWER FOR\nsale. Apply 2105 Fall St. W.\nShukin.\nBUSINESS   &   PROFESSIONAL\nDIRECTORY\nA handy alphabetical guide to goods and services\navailable in Nelson.\nELECTRIC  SETS\nAND ENGINES\nPRICED TO SELL!\nA full 10% discount off Finning's entire stock of used engines and electric sets. Up to\n90-days warranty. Many units\nopen to YOUR OFFER! Contact\nyour nearest Finning store or\n| representative today I\nI USED EQUIPMENT\ni  145 H.P. Engine - 1949, Cat.\nI D13000 w\/steel base, open D8\nclutch, two pillow blocks. 145\n! H.P. intermittent at 1000 rpm.\nj 30-day   warranty,   fob   Cran-\nI  brook. FT-5513. List price $3750.\n| SALE PRICE $3375.\n!  40 KW Electric Set - 1955, Cat\nD315 w\/self-regulated gen. 240\/-\nI 280 V. 60 eye., 3 phase, at 1800\n| rpm., 50 KVA. Certified Buy,\nI 60-day warranty, fob Cranbrook.\nI FT-5670. List price $3750. SALE\nPRICE $3375.\n145 H.P. Engine \u2014 older rnodel,\nCat D13000, on steel base. 145\nHP at 1000 rpm. This one's a\nreal bargain! Certified Buy,\n30-day warranty, fob Nelson.\nFT-4421. List Price $3950. SALE\nPRICE $3555.\nMAKE AN OFFER\n8 KW Electric Set - Kohler\nI plant w\/Waukesha motor. 10\nI KVA, 60 eye. 1200 rpm. In fair\nto good condition! Fair Buy,\nfob Nelson. FT-5310. Listed at\n$375, WHAT OFFERS?\n199 HP Engine\u20141952, Cat. D337\nw\/case, clutch, outboard shaft,\nbearings. 199 HP intermittent\nat 1600 rpm. Certified Buy, 30-\nday warranty, fob Vernon. FT-\n5491. Listed at $3750. WHAT\nOFFERS?\n1.5 KW Light Plant - Hobart\ngen. w\/Continental gas engine.\n3 KVA, 3 phase, 60 cyc\u201e- 125\nV. In fair shape! Fair Buy, fob\nNelson. FT-5465. iLsted at $425.\nWHAT  OFFERS?\nYour Caterpillar Dealer\nFINNING  TRACTOR\nfl-cni?  137\u2014Nelson\n\"Where Used Equipment Is a\nBusiness \u2014 NOT a Sideline\"\nAUTOMOTIVE,  BICYCLES\nMOTORCYCLES\nAppliances\nNELSON REFRIGERATION\nCommercial Refrigeration Serv.\n205 High St. Phone 1917\nAPPLIANCES\nRepaired and Serviced\nD. McCUAIG Phone 695\nEngineers\nand Surveyors\n(Continued)\nAssayers and Mine\nRepresentatives\nG. W. BAERG, B.C.L.S.\n373 Baker St. Nelson\nPhone 1118  Res 2315\nI ALEX CHEVELDAVE\"\n: B.C. Land Surveyor\u2014Phone 5342\n448 Columbia Av., Castlegar. B.C.\nH. 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)\n213 Baker St. Phone 1234\nCITY   AUTO   SERVICE   LTD.\nDodge - DeSoto Sales & Service\nGranite Rd. Phone 447\nRENAULT  SALES &  SERVICE\nat Frank's Auto\nPhone 2195 295 Baker St.\nNORTH SHORE SERVICE\n..  (Standard Triumph)\nAcross Lake Phone 1841\nPARKVIEW MOTORS LTD.\n(Rambler \u2022 Volkswagen)\n323 Nelson Ave. Phone 1454\nSTAR   AUTO  SERVICE   LTD.\nBorgward Sales and Service\nYmri Rd. Phone 1648\nBeauty Shops\nTHELMA'S BEAUTY SHOPPE\n877 Baker St. Phone 244\nBuilding Supplies\nBEE BUILDING SUPPLY LTD.\n301 Baker St. Phone 1704\nBURNS LUMBER CO. LTD.\n802 Baker St. Phone 1180\nCOLUMBIA TRADING CO.\n801 Front St. Phone 1511\nCommercial Signs\nFor all your sign needs\nHAMER SIGNS - Phone 1112\nDivers' Air Station\nSCUBA  AIR TANKS FILLED\nNo Waiting\nCOLUMBIA TRADING\n901 Front St.\nRAY G. JOHNSON\nB.C. Land Surveyor and Engineer\n1015 Eighth St.   Nelson   Ph. 2309\nGarages\nALLEN MOTOR SERVICE\nCor. 7th at Davies      Phone 1798\nLandscaping\nLARRY'S BLACK LOAM\nTOPSOIL - Phone 171\nNursery Stock\nPlant now for future blooms.\nBulbs that have flowered in our\ngreenhouses \u2014\nDaffodills and Narcissi $2.00 per\n100.\nTulips $1.00 per 100,\nGRIZZELLE'S FLORISTS\nNelson, B.C.\nPainting\nand Decorating\nF. H. DOYLE\nPainting and Decorating\nPhone 2311 _ Free Estimates\nSaws Sharpened\nGUARANTEED\nUSED  TRACTORS\n1956 I.H.C. TD-182\nWith hydraulic blade and winch\nrebuilt,\n1956 I.H.C. TD-142\nWith hydraulic Wade and winch\nrebuilt.\n1956 I.H.C. TD-9\nWith hydraulic blaJe and winch\nrebuilt\n1952 I.H.C. TD-9\nWith hydraulic blade and winch\nrebuilt.\n1956 I.H.C. TD-61\nWith hydraulic blade and winch\nas new 1100 hours.\n1960  I.H.C. TC-5\nWith hydraulic blade and winch\nAlso\t\n1950 I.H.C. TD-9\nHydraulic  blade  and  winch\nfair condition.\n1953 I.H.C. TD-14A\nHydraulic    blade    and    winch\nfaiy. $3500\ncondition.\n1953 TD-14A\nhydraulic   blade   and   winch\n$4750\nNEW CHEVROLET BISCAYNE\nNEW CHEVROLET BEL-AIRS\nNEW IMPALA HARDTOP\nNEW CHEVROLET %-TONS\nNEW CORVAIR\nNEW 1961 ENVO\\\n3\u20141960 Chevrolet V. Tons\n3\u20141960 Chevrolet Sedans\n5\u20141960 Envoy Sedans\n1\u20141960 Corvair\n2\u20141960 Chevrolet Station Wagons\n2\u20141959 Chevrolet %-Tons\n3\u20141959 Chevrolet Sedans\n1\u20141959 Fiat Station Wagon\n1\u20141958 Chevrolet %-Ton\n1\u20141958 Chevrolet Sedan\n2\u20141958 Oldsmobile Sedans\n1\u20141958 Pontiac Coach\n1\u20141957 G.M.C. ',2-Ton\n2\u20141957 Chevrolet Sedans\n1\u20141957 Chevrolet Station Wagon\n1\u20141956 Fargo Mi-Ton\n1\u20141956 Pontiac Sedan\n1\u20141956 Meteor Coach\n1\u20141956 Plymouth Coach\n1\u20141956 Meteor Sedan\n1\u20141955 Chevrolet Mi-Ton\n1\u20141955 Ford Fairlane\n1\u20141955 Chevrolet Sedan\n1\u20141955 Chevrolet Coach\n1\u20141955 Vauxhaull Sedan\n1\u20141955 Austin Sedan\n1\u20141954 Oldsmobile Sedan\n1\u20141954 Hillman Sedan\n1-1954 Chevrolet Coach\n1\u20141954 Austin A-40 Sedai\n1\u20141954 Pontiac H.T.\n1\u20141953 Plymouth Sedan\n1\u20141953 Pontiac Sedan\n1\u20141953 Chevrolet Bel-Aire\n1\u20141953 Cadillac\n1\u20141953 Austin Sedan\n1\u20141953 Chevrolet Sedan\n1\u20141953 Pontiac Sedan\n1\u20141952 Ford Coupe\n1\u20141952 Chevrolet Sedan\n1\u20141952 Pontiac Sedan\n1\u20141952 Vanguard Sedan\n1\u20141951 Studebaker '\/i-Ton\n1\u20141951 Dodge Sedan\n1\u20141951 Dodge Coupe\n1\u20141951 Chevrolet Hardtop\n1\u20141950 Ford Tractor and\nSnow Blade\n1\u20141949 Cadillac Sedan\n1\u20141949 Ford Sedan\n1\u20141948 Plymouth Sedan\n1\u20141947 Chevrolet Coupe\n1\u20141940 Ford _-Ton\n1-17 ft. Boat\n24-Hour Wrecker Service, Ph. 35\nCHEVROLET - CADILLAC\nOLDSMOBILE \u2022 CORVAIR\nENVOY\nREUBEN   BUERGE\nMOTORS  LTD.\nAUTOMOTIVE,  BICYCLES\nMOTORCYCLES\n(Continued)\n1957 G.M.C. 1 TON, 4 WHEEL\ndrive, new engine, new front\ndrive unit, new brakes. Very\ngood condition. 1950 G.M.C. _\u25a0\nton panel 4 wheel drive. Very\ngood condition. Can be seen at\nKay Motors Ltd., 2880 Highway\nDr., Trail, B.C. Phone 1329.\nSIDES GRAIN FED BEEF-43C\nlb,; sides heavy beef \u2014 35c lb;\nsides of pork \u2014 32c tb.; fronts\nheavy beef \u2014 30c lb.; hinds\nheavy beef \u2014 43c lb.; hinds\nlight beef \u2014 49c lb.; fronts\nlight beef \u2014 38c lb. These prices\ninclude cutting, wrapping and\nfreezing. Delivered to Nelson by\nNelson-Creston Transfer. Whit-\nford's Meat Plant. Phone\nEL 6-2556, Creston.\nfair\ncondition\nScissors, pinking shears, etc\nHipperson's Hdwre.     Phone 497\nSporting Goods\nFred Whiteley's Sport Shop\n8 Baker Street Phone 160\nTire Shop\nDUNLOP TIRE DEALERS\nALGAR'S TIRE SERVICE LTD.\n520 Lake St. Phone 252\nVacuum Cleaners\n& Equipment\nCo. Ltd.\n702  Front St.    Ph.   II\n110\nDivers' Tank Filling Station\nNORM'S SPORT SHOP\n300 Baker Street - Phone 2397\nEngineers\nand Surveyors\nBOYD  C.   AFFLECK.  MEIC\nBC Land Surveyor, PEng (Civ.i\n218 Gore St.   Nelson   Phone 1238\nSaran braided hoses fit all\nvacuums \u2014 $8.95 exchange\nService and repairs to all makes.\nBEN SUTHERLAND\nPhone 258\nTrailers\nFor all your Mobilehome desires\nAlways Consult a Fully Qualified\nMobilehome Solicitor,\nCONSULT\n\"Mr. Mobile Homes\"\n\u2014 Mobillng In the Kootenays \u2014\nPh. JU-6-2424 -  Rae Masse\nCranbrook. B.C.      PO  Box 2205\nTORO\nMowers Are\nHere Today\nMAC'S   WELDING   AND\nEQUIPMENT CO. LTD.\n514 Railway St. Nelson\nPHONE 1402\nBINGHAM EQUIPMENT CO.\nLtd. Complete selection ot new\nand used logging, construction\nsawmill equipment. Heelbooms,\nloaders, etc. Rent, rental purchase, terms. Larry Hewlett,\nBox 505, Nelson. Phone 2253-L.\nPROPERTY   WANTED\nWANTED - HOUSE OR LOT.\nHave trailer to trade or sell. H.\nColten. Phone 5145, Castlegar.\nP.O. Box 941.\n323 Vernon St.'\nNelson, B.C.\n\u201e. -. ,\nDEALS\nat PEEBLES\nDEALS\nat PEEBLES\nUsed\nCars\nYou'll Like\nat PEEBLES\nCELEBRATING\nPEEBLES\nHILLMAN\nCOMMER\nSUNBEAM\nSHOW\nDrop in to\nPEEBLES\nMOTORS\nTODAY\nCOTTONWOOD WRECKAGE\nService - Repairs done, English and Canadian used car\nparts. '51 A-40, '58 Studebaker,\n'52 Chev. '49 Pontiac, '50 Ford\nmotors. Phone 2100. Box 382,24\nYmir Road, Nelson.\n200 AMP. LINCLON WATER-\ncooled welder is in very good\nshape with steel rubber tire\ntrailer. Twin power Mom\nwrecker with 2-6 ton winches\ncomplete. What offers? International Cub tractor used little,\npower lift, snow blade, plow,\nmower with 2 blader, power\ntakeoff, disc, harrows and rake,\n$1100.00. Valley Service, Apple-\ndale.\n1957 PLYMOUTH SPORTS SUB\nburban station wagon, V8 automatic, power brakes, tinted\nglass, windshield washers, winterized K. Vierke, Box 1100\nCaslle'ar\nNORM'S NEW SPORT SHOP\nnow open\u2014Divers' supplies (aqua-lung) Weatherbys, Browning rifles and shotguns. Reload-\nj ing supplies, fishing and boating. Everything for the sportsman. 300 Baker St. Ph. 2397.\n1960 FORD STATION WAGON\nsacrifice price of $2500. No\ntrade-in. Custom radio and low\nmileage. Ph. 1692.\nWANTED - 114 OR 2 TON\ntruck. State make and year.\nPaul Kimoff, R.R. No. 1,\" Winlaw, B.C.\nMR. GROCER - USED SPE-\ncials and Demos. Counter Top\nLo Boy $198.00; Butcher Cases\nHi Boy $200.00; 6' Frozen Food\n$598.00; 12' Dairy $800.00; 6x6\nWalk In $598.00. To Olear! Write\nBox 460, New Westminster, B.C.\nFOR SALE '59 CHEV., $2000.\nLike new. 10,000 miles. Black\nand white. Box 127. Crescent.\nValley. B.C.\nFOR SALE 1958 VOLKSWAGEN\nDeLuxe, top condition, low mileage, good rubber. Phone 2355,\nNelson.\n'57 DODGE V-8 2-DOOR HARD\ntop.   Automatic   2-tone color.\nVery  clean.   708 - 7th. Phone\n1039-Y.\nLEAN GRAIN FED PORK FOR\n, sale. Side 29s a lb. cut, wrapped\ni quick frozen 32s a lb. delivery\nNelson-Creston Transfer. New-\n!   dan   Farm,   Creston.    Phone\nI   EL 6-2495.\t\nFOR SALE - ONE BERKEL 8-\nfoot deep freeze counter, one\nBerkel Gravity Slicer; one\nCorona Cashier. H. Clever, Box\n39, New Denver.\t\n\"\"' MUST SELL\nNearly new Singer slant needle,\nall atttachments plus automatic\nSg-Zagger and Button-Holer. $75\noff new mice. Ph. 1808-Y-l.\nFOR SALE\n_MISCELLANEOUS\nOLD STYLE\" TAYLOR SAF E~^\n2x2x14 in. Sawdust burner unit.\nNo hopper. What offers. Box\n8501, Daily News.\nWARM AIR FURNACE, AUTO,\nstoker, fan, warm air pipes.\nPhone Ross. 6-3705. Write Box\n1197.\nSEE OUR SELECTION OF USED\nradios, washers and refrigerators. Jeffery Radio and Appliances.\nPLASTIC PIPE _-IN. X 100 FT.\nrolls $5.00. Also in stock all\nsizes and fittings to 2 in. Colum-\nbia Trading Co., 901 Front St.\nFOR SALE 2 \u2022 16\" BOTTOM\nplough. Apply Box 62, Robson,\nB.C.\n21\". PHIL-- TV, ELECTRC.\nHygiene Vacuum, good condi-\ntion. Phone 2013 after 5 p.m.\nSINGLE PEDESTAL OFFICE\ndesk, excellent condition. $45.00.\n820 Silica St._ ,\t\nROTO-TILLER NO. 3, DEEP-\ndigging and mulching tines. As\nnew. Box 164, Trad, B.C.\nPORK FOR SALE. HALF OR\nwhole. 28 cents a pound. Ph.\n171\nFOR SALE: 5 H.P. REMINGTON\nChain Saw. 18\" blade. As new.\nPhone 411-X before 2 p.m.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SAT., APRIL 8, 1961 \u2014\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST A GOLDEN LAB. PUP. 6\nmos. old. Female and spaded.\nAround Corra Lynn. Ph. South\nSlocan 278 collect.\nSEWING   MACHINES\nRENT A SINGER SEWING MA-\nchine (delivered) and returned\n$5.00 per month, $2.00 per week.\nSinger Sewing Center, Phone 41.\nMAN'S BICYCLE - TWO 5,\n16 tires. Phone 245-Y.\nHEALTH FOOD CENTRE OPEN\ndav and evenings. 924 Davies\nCONCRETE   LAUNDRY   TUBS\nwith fittings. Phone 552.\nUSED   VACUUM   CLEANERS\n$19.50 and up. Phone 1108. __\n1 USED KIT. CAB. SINK, USED\ndoors and windows. Ph. 2403.\nBED,  BOX SPRING WITH OR\nwithout mattress. Phone 1389-Y\n\u2022N-lamt\nlathi Kims\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       $ 1.25\nThree months    3.50\nSix months     6.50\nOne year 12.00\nBy Mail to United Kingdom or\nthe United States:\nOne month S 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 carrier In Cranbrook,    phone   Mrs.   Stanley\nWillisson;\nIn Kimberley, A. W. Brown;\nIn Trail. Mrs. Syd Spooner;\nMarket Trends\nNEW YORK (AP)-The stock\nmarket was mixed Friday with\na spotty advance carrying' some\"\nissues up as much as four\npoints, but the list,was gener-'\nally sprinkled with losses.\nTrading climbed back over\nthe 5,000,000-share mark for ttie.\nfirst time in .three days after ^\ndecline attributed to a call for.\ncaution on the port of investors\nby the president of the New;\nYork stock exchange.\nTpe Dow Jones average of 30\nindustrial stocks advanced 4.3\nto 683.68, topping, its previous^\n1961 high of 679.38 March 22...\nThe average now' is nudging\nthe all-time high of 685.47 established Jan. 5, 1960. '\nAmong the oils, which ettv\ntraded continued interest m\nfurther predictions by industry\nexecutives of increased oil del\nmand, Cosden Petrol eujnj\nspurted 3_. Texaco, Royal\nDutch Petroleum and Kerr McGee gained fractionally.\nChrysler, aooused by the justice depart ment of illegally\npressuring its dealers to stop\nhandling StudYbaker-Paokani\nLarks, declined %. A Chrysler\nspokesman denied the dharge..\nROOM   AND   BOARD\nROOM   AND   BOARD.   PHONE\n1519 or 411 Silica Street.\nWANTED TO BUY FOR CASfl.\n1952, '53 or '54 used car in good\ncondition. Wrtie Box 8914, Daily\nNews.\nORNAMENTAL IRON WORK.\nFree estimates. Your choice of\n1600 designs. Fast service. Trail\nSales and Machine Ltd. Ph.\n1851.\nTRAILERS\nRA LYN MOBILE HOME SALES\nRollohome, Safeway, Shasta.\nNew and used, terms and\ntrades. Trail \u2022 Cranbrook \u25a0 Nakusp.    ,\nAM\n'59 PONTIAC LAURENTIAN 4\ndoor automatic, radio. Also '52\nMercurv '.-ton. Phone 1047-L.\n1959 GMC % TON PICKUP -\n14,090 miles. Like new. $1600,\nBox 127, Crescent Vallev, B.C.\n1 - 1952 MERCURY PICK - UP.\nVery r>0orl shape. $475. Phone\n4028. Fruitvale.\nFOR SHLE - '59 CHEV PIC_T7P\nGood condition, $1500.00. Box\n13. Crescent Valley, B.C.\n1957 FORD AUTOMATIC, $1300.\nPhone 105B-L.\t\n1958 AUTOMATIC  V-8.   .DOOR\nPontine\u2014$2000.  Ph.  1627-R-l.\nWE   PAY   f4?H   FOR   GOOD\nused cars McElrov Motors\nFOR SALE\nMISCELLANEOUS\nPROPANE GAS\nBOTTLE AND BULK\nDELIVERY\nPHONE Nelson 2230\nProcter 261\nKaslo 92M\nIt Costs No More\nTo Have the Best.\nROCKGAS\n610  Railway  St. Nelson\nOUR BIG SALE - YOUR BIG\nSavings. Larry's block loam\ntop soil. Prices reduced on\nblack loam, brown garden soil,\nfill, sand and gravel by the\ntruck load, on all orders placed\nnow. Deliveries to start in April.\nPhone 171 now.\n>iire to see\nHILLMAN\nON DISPLAY TODAY\nPeebles Motors\n*    *    *\nNew Dealers for\nHILLMAN\nCOMMER\nSUNBEAM\n*   *   *\nMyself ond my Carpenters have been working'\ncarefully and diligently for the past several month?,;\nand have created this modern home which is literally,\na gem. S\nThe HOME Says;\nI am completely decorated in new, soft pastel;\nshades. My kitchen is designed with maximum foeilk\nties and convenience. -..-\u2022\nMy floor of durable hardwood oak have a lasting,\nshining finish.\nI have central hall plan \u2014 three large bedrooms\nwith built-in, sliding door, cupboards to contain your\nwardrobe.\nMy living room contains a cheery fireplaet wWl\nraised hearth.\nI have a full basement which is divided to contain\nseparate entrance garage\nI will be able to keep you comfortable oH yeat\nround by your merely twisting a dial.\nThe AGENT Says;      \"\nIt will be our pleasure to personally guide your. Inspection of this fine home located on Stanley Street in\nthe 1300 block between Robson and Gore Street*.\nInspection Times:\nSUNDAY and MONDAY\u20142 p.m. to 5 p.m.\nand \u20147 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.\nWILLIAM  KALYNIUK AGENCIES\nFOR THE BEST IN REAL ESTATE\n534 Josephine Street\nPhone 1777\nNELSON, B.C,\n\u2014\u25a0\u00bb>*>\u25a0\u00bb*\u00bb\u00bb\nel Emerge Motors Ltd\nPhone 1135 -- 608 Vernon St. -- Nelson -- 1744 Phone\nSPRING - SALE!\n'59 Pontiac\nStation Wagon\n6 Cyl.  Al Shape.\n$2695\n'56 Austin A55\nEconomical  Transportation.\nIn Top Shape.\n$695\n'56 Chev. Sedan\nV-8. Automatic.\nReady To Go.\n$1395\n'59 Consul Sedan\nSave Gase and $$$\n$1495\n1958 THAMES\nPANELS\n$695\n'60 Dodge Sedan\nA One-Owner Car\nWith Low Mileage.\n$2695\n'57 Olds \"88\"\nV-8. Automatic\nRadio. 2-Tone.\n$1695\n.   '55 Ford Sedan\nV-8. Automatic.\nA good buy.\n$895\n'57 Ford Sedan\nV-8.\n$1395\nNEW\nTHAMES\nPICKUP!\n'54 Ford Sedan\nV-8. Standard.\n2-Tone Black and White.\n. $495\n'58 Edsel Hardtop\n2-Tone Red and White\nV-8. Automatic, Radio.\n$2195\n'53 Ford Sedan\nV-8. Standard.\nReady To Go.\n$395\n'55 Plym. Sedan\n$595\n'56 Plymouth\n2-Door.\n$695\n'59 Ford 1\/2-Ton\n6 Cylinder. Standard.\nCustom Cab.\n$1995\n'57 G.M.C. Fa-Ton\n$1295\n'56 Merc- .i-Ton\nIn Al Shape.\n$1095\n'54 Intern. Vi-Ton\nA Good Used Truck.\n$395\n'55 Dodge H\/Top\n$895\nNew FORDS - New MONARCHS - New FALCONS\nOn Display Now at\nMel Beerie Motors Ltd\n 10 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, SAT., APRIL 8,1961\n-r\nYou May as Well\nSAVE\non These SPECIALS\nNew Stoppette Roll-On Lotion\nDeodorant:\n(Giant size magnum) $2.25 value only\t\nDesert Flower Cream\nDeodorant:\n2-jar special value $2.50 only \t\nDesert Flower\nBeauty Ice:\nPlus free toilet water. Only\t\nPepto-Bismal:\nSpecial. Send bonus offer back and receive 25c.\n$1.23\n$1.25\n$n.oo\n69'\nJust Remember You Can Get Them\nat\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nOdds...\n\u00ab* Ends\n...byKD.B.\nj j [    '.'   PIONEER DIES\n'., SVANCOUVIER (CP)- A link\n; with   Britislh   Columbia's   past\n; Was .broken here Wednesday by\n-' file death.of Mrs. Alfreda Fors-\nItindi widow of one of the pion-\n' W-jof *' steamboat service in\n&e Kootenay regions. Mrs. Fors-\nhjnd, 82, was the wife of the\ncaptain of two steamboats which\nserved the Arrow Lakes area.\nCOOLEY IN HOSPITAL\nBAKER-FIELD, Calif. (API\nFormer western bandleader\nSpade Cooley, 50, charged with\nmurdering his wife, was transferred from jail to hospital\nThursday with a heart ailment.\nPhysicians said his condition is\nnot believed to be serious but\nthat he prdbably should remain\nin hospital at least a week.\nHere we are, well into' the\nmonth O- April and aocording\nto the weather watchers we are\nabout two weeks ahead of time,\nI checked back to last year and\nfound that on this date I v\nproundiy announcing the blooming\nof my crocuses and I have had\ncrocuses blooming for at least\ntwo weeks this year at the same\ntime. My violets, which did not\ndo too well last year for some\nreason (late frost I believe) are\nmaking up for their year's rest,\ngrowing beautiful long stems and\ngiant blooms complete with unrivalled fragrance.\n*   *  \u00ab\nI did not i .patch the pool this\nspring, perhaps I shall be sorry\nlater on, but the old patching\nseemed to be holding well. I've\nplanted the lily and water iris,\nso the garden looks \"lived in'\nonce again. I believe I have\nwdrked off most of the rook urge\nI mentioned in the last column\n(this accounts for the lack of\ncolumns lately) but I still inane\na goodly length of fence to put\nin \u2014 I have promise of help if\nneeded \u2014 but I'm hoping to accomplish it on my own. It _\nreassuring though to know if I do\nget stuck aid is forthcoming.\nBarclay Products\nLTD.\nOF '\nCASTLEGAR and GRAND FORKS\nAre Pleased to Announce the Appointment of\nMr. Alec MacLean\n(West Arm Freight Line)\nRR 1 - Nelson, B. C.\nAs Our Bulk, Settle and\nAppliance Dealer for\nthe Nelson Area.\nPhone 678-R-l or 77\nNelson\nFor Bottle Pick-Up or Delivery\nCONTACT MR. ALEC MACLEAN\nFOR\nCOMMERCIAL and DOMESTIC RATES\non BULK PROPANE\nATTENTION!\nCENTRAL TRUCK\nCUSTOMERS\nNEW LONGER HOURS\nFor Your Convenience\nTo give you more efficient service our Parti Dept.\nwill now be open 8 A.M. to 6 P.M. MONDAY TO\nFRIDAY. 8 A.M. to 1  P.M. SATURDAY.\n.NAKUSP AREA\t\nFor Mechanical Repairs and Parti Service\nContact\nRALPH STEVENS\nPHONE 223\nNow Located 411  Slocan St., Nakuip\nCENTRAL\nTRUCK\nand EQUIPMENT CO. LTD.\nPHONE 100 PARTS\u2014PHONE 1400 OFFICE\n702 Front St. Nelson, B.C.\nMacmillan and Kennedy to\nSupport South Viet Nam\nBy HAROLD MORRISON\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nWASHINGTON (OP)-Prime\nMinister Macmillan and President Kennedy have agreed to\nseek ways of bolstering the pro-\nWestern government in South\nViet Nam to keep the political\nsituation in the Southeast Asian\ncountry bordering Laos from\ndeteriorating further.\nThey noted (hat as a result of\nCommunist raids more people\nare' being killed in South Viet\nNam than in Laos.\nThe Communist Viet Cong\nrebels have stepped up their attacks in recent weeks in an apparent attempt to disrupt Sunday's general election in which\nSouth Viet Nam President Ngo\nDinh Diem is heavily favored to\nbe re-elected. Some of lhe Viet.\nCong hit-and-run attacks are reported to have reached battalion\nsize.\n(In Saigon Thursday Diem j\nwas reported seeking an increase in the $150,000,000 a year\nhe. gets from the United States\nso that he oan bolster his 150.-\nOOO-man army to crush lhe Viet\nCong.)\nMacmillan and Kennedy, *\nspokesman .said, did not announce their strategy for South\nViet Nam, but they were agreed\nthe situation there must not be\nallowed to deteriorate further.\nHELP DIEM REGIME\nWays will be sought to bolster\nthe Diem regime to halt depletion of its trained personnel by\nCommunist penetration, subversion, kidnappings and assassinations.\nThe spokesman noted that\nSouth Viet Nam has only a\nlimited number of trained engineers, teachers, doctors and\nother professional persons.\nCruising  down   ttie   Potomac\nThe Record Rock\nby The Sour Notes\nCONNIE   FRANCIS   AT   THE\nCOPA . . . Connie Francis who\nNone of my garden pets hasma<!\u201e .il big J-* \"\u00bb. l\u2122\u2122se\n j      _. \u201e\u201ej Si-nu..  T,world is now firmly establishing\nherself with the adult crowd with\nher  two. most  recent  released\nappeared \u2014 Frog and Trilby. I\nfeel certain Frog will be back, but\nI'm wondering whether I shall\nsee the turtle again. I have come\nacross a bit of information about\nturtles. Apparently they are found\nin the warmer parts of B.C. and\nare called the Western Painted\nTurtle. They can be distinguished\nby the brilliant colors on the un-\nderpart (as I recall, Trilby was\nsort of yellowish on his under\nparts, though he was with me so\nshort a time I soarcely had time\nto take a good look at him. Fresh\nwater turtles are called Terrapin and though they have no\nteeth, their jaws have chisel -\nlike biting edges.\n* *  *\nWith the return of the golden\nhoneymaker I have another note\nI have been hoarding over the\nwinter on the sanitary ways of\nbees. A naturalist reports that\nshould a bee die. in the hive he is\nimmediately pushed out by two of\nhis fellow workers and the cell\nis aired out by two of the little\ncreatures standing at the doorway using their wings as ventilators.\n* *\nThere, that wraps up al the\noddments I'have been collecting\nto spring on you at an unguarded\nmoment. Now it is about time I\ntoured the waterfront, for as you\nnoted by the picture on front page\nFriday great changes are being\nwrought there.\nalbums. Through them she serves\nFrancis and a happy entertaining j\nrecording for the general public.\nSONGS TO A SWINGING BAND\n(Connie Francis) ... No smokey\nnightclub hubctub gackground but\nthe clarity of the engineer's recording  studio  is  Connie's  su.\nnotice she is rapidly maturing j roundings  for  twelve standards\ninto a versatile supper club per-, treated with the big band sound.\nThe throbbing voice of the pert\nmate-! singer swings, croons, soars,\ntorches before the shouting brass\nof the orchestra ol Richard Wess,\nwho also did double duty as\narranger.\nSeveral numbers are given the\nballad with the beat treatment:\n\"How Long Has This Been Going\nOn,\" \"It Might As Well Be\nSpring,\" old torch smoothies like:\nFrancis sticks strictly to singing | \"Angel Eyes,\" \"Gone With The\nand leaves the comics and dram- j Wind.\"\nformer.\nThe best example of\ning of the young Brooklyn miss\nis on this recording, recorded live\nat the famed New York night\nspot. It gives a good cross section of the teenage queen's talent\nand voice toned to the adult\nappeal.\nBacked by a driving orchestra\nconducted  by   Joe   Mell,   Miss\natics to other artists.\nThe old Louis Armstrong\nstoniper, Ol' Man Mose receives\nthe light rock beat treatment. She\nAt the other end of the musical\nscale are fhe sizzling tempos of:\n\"My Love, My Love.\" \"Love Is\nWhere You Find It,\" \"Swanee,\"\nthen tosss in for variety the jand the shuffle rhythms of O.\nJewish Hava Naguila and the Man Mose\" and \"You're Nobody\nItalian Mama, Jealous of You.      '\u2122 Somebody Loves You.\"\nWarmed up she delights with Miss Francis, who sounds to us\nan Al Jolson medley in a love like a young Jo Stafford, lives up\nletter   tribute   to   the   famed | to the album title, a swinging\naboard the 92-foot\nyacht, Honey Fits Kennedy and\nMacmillan Thursday sat at a\ncabin table in a two-hour afternoon conference that ranged\nover the world's trouble spots\nfrom Laos and South Viet Nam\nto Berlin and Russia, wrapping\nin the prospects of a nuclear\ntest ban treaty and disarmament.\nThe talks were recessed today\nwhile Maomillan flies to Boston\nfor an address at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.\nA final session of the two men\nand their advisers will be held\nat the White House Saturday\nmorning after whioh they plan\nto issue what one official called\na business-like statement on the\nrange of their discussions. Macmillan leaves for Ottawa Sunday.\nRESULTS OF MEETING\nFrom authorities who participated in the meetings which\nbrought the two men together\nfor a total of 10 hours from\nWednesday morning through\nThursday night, the following\npicture of immediate and potential cold war trouble spots\nshapes up:\n1. The British - U.S. negotiations with, Russia for an agreement to prohibit the testing of\nnuclear weapons penmamently\nunder an international policing\nsystem are making little progress.\n2.. Since the. test talks at\nGeneva have been regarded by I\nthe Western powers as a possible first step toward disarmament, a failure at Geneva would\ninevitably be considered as a\nblow to disarmament.\n3. The chances of a new East-\nWest confrontation over West\nBerlin were rated high, although Maomillan considered\nlhat Khrushchev may choose to\nexert primary pressure for\nCommunist expansion in some\nof (he underdeveloped countries\nin Africa and Asia. Both Macmillan and Kennedy agreed that\nKhrushchev's statement that he\nwants a solution of the Berlin\nproblem this year must be given\nserious weight.\nStock Quotations\nThe Dally News does net hold Itself responsible In the event\nof an error In the following lists.\nTORONTO STOCKS\n(Closing Prices)\nMINE- '\u2022\nAcadia Uranium .07\nAdvocate .75\nAgnico .67\nA_n_riho .10\nAumaque .06%\nAunor 2.80\nBarnat 1.59\nBase Metals .10%\nBabds Yukon .06%\nBuff Red Lake .04%\nCampbell C 7.20\nCassiar 13.50\nCentral Patricia .91\nChimo .69\nCooh WH1 3.35\nCons Denison\nCons. Discovery\nCons Halliwell\nCons Mining & Smelting\nCons Regcourt\nConwest\nCraig\nD'Aragon\nEast Malartic\nElder Gold\nFalconbridge\nFaraday\nFrobisher\nGeco\nGiant Yel.\nGoldale\nGunnar Gold\nHasaga\nHollinger\nHudson Bay\nInt. Nickel\nIron Bay\nJoliet Que.\nR JNJowsey\nKenville\nKerr Addison\nLabrador\nLeitch\nLexindin\nLittle Long Lac 1.89 RUMMAGE SALE\nLorado 1.35 Capitol Theatre\nMacDonald .19 Sat, April 8th, 10 a.m.\nMadsen R. L. 2.65 New stook.\nMalartic G. F.\n\"Mammy\" singer. The tunes are\nfamiliar but the lyrics are\nmodern.\nTopping the program she concludes with what has become an\nunofficial American tradition,\n\"When The Saints Come Marching In\" and interjects a few bars\nof \"Bill Bailey Won't You Come\nHome\" for spice.\nCopa marks, a successful New\nYork nightclub debut for Miss\nTen Days Hence Great\nEvent Will Take Place\nBy  BOB THOMAS\nHOLLYWOOD (AP) - The\nballots are cast, campaigning\nhas ceased, and now begins the\nwait for the 1960 Academy\nAwards.\nTen days hence, a new set\nof statistics will be added to the\nMotion Picture Academy's 33-\nyear records.\nFive have won the best-actress award twice \u2014 Bette Davis, Olivia de Havilland, Luise\nRainer, Ingrid Bergman, and\nVivien Leigh. Three have doubled for the best \u25a0 actor honor\n\u2014Fredric March, Gary Cooper\nand Spencer Tracy.\nWalter Brennan is the only\ntriple winner among the acting\ncontenders; he got his in the\nsupporting category. Anthony\nQuinn scored in support twice.\nNo supporting actress has been\nable to win more than a single\nOscar.\nONLY WOMAN HEAD\nMiss Davis has two other distinctions besides her double\nwin. She was the only woman\npresident of the academy. And\nshe owns the most acting nominations \u2014 nine.\nNet Earnings\nBy THE  CANADIAN  PRESS\nAnalogue Controls Inc., year\nended Oct. 31: 1960, net loss,\n$454,328;  1959,  net loss $38,536.\nCanadian Delhi Oil Ltd., year\nended Dec. 31: 1960, net loss\n$181,278; 1959, net loss $368,599.\nFargo Oils Ltd., year ended\nDec. 31: 1960, net loss $80,694;\n1959, net profit $321,751.\nHolt, Renfrew and Co. Ltd.,\nyear ended Dec. 31: 1960, $301,-\n250, $1.51 a share; 1959, $338,-\n700, $1.69.\nMacMillan, Bloedel and Powell River Ltd., year ended Dec.\n31: 1960, $24,575,651, $1.18 a\nshare) (first annual statement\nsince amalgamation).\nFollowing here are Katharine\nHepburn with eight. nominations and Greer Garson with\nseven. Norma Shearer and Deborah Kerr have six apiece.\nFive - timers are Irene Dunne,\nSusan Hayward, Miss Bergman,\nMiss de Havilland and Jennifer\nJones. The latter two include\none support nomination apiece.\nThe male stars don't seem to\nrepeat as frequently. Tracy is\ntops with seven nominations\nLaurence Olivier has been up\nsix times. March, Paul Muni,\nJames Stewart, Marlon Brando\nand Cooper made it five times.\nsinger.\nALLAN FUNT'S CANDID j\nCAMERA . . . (produced by Ker-:\nmit Schafer) . . . Lontime laugh-'\ngetter of radio and recently television, the peeping torn microphone of Allan Funt has been\ntransmitted to records by Kermit\n\"Mr. Blooper\" Sohafer.\nSomewhere in the transmission\nthis novel approach to laughs has\nlost some of its charm. It could\nbe its visual exposure on tele-'\nvision or it could be that the\nsituation heard are themselves,\nthough novel, are not really\nhilarious. j\nThe beauty of the recording is j\nthat (he fall-guy's answer to (he\nprompting questions of Mr. Funt;\nare unrehearsed and true stun-:\nned feelings at (hat moment are\nfreely expressed.\nThe two best tracts are \"The'\nShoe Salesman,\" and \"Chained.\",\nThe first involving a miffed I\nwoman who has lost one of her]\nshoes in a shoe store and refused i\nto accept a substitute. The other;\nis tlie dumbfounded reaction of a\nlocksmith who finds a secretary!\nchained to her desk. |\nTruth is stranger than fiction;\nbut the same cannot be said for\ncomedy. I\nFAILURES UP \u2014 Canadian\nbusiness failures totalled 2,699\nduring 1960, up 21 pencent from\nthe year previous. The bureau\nof statistics reports that the defaulted liabilities that resulted\nfrom the failures was up by\nmore than half. Graph shows\nnumber of failures by years\nsince 1955.\u2014CP Newsmap.\nSeek Tax Deal for Parents\nOf Handicapped Children\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014An appeal for\na better tax deal for parents of\nhandicapped children wass put\nbefore Finance Minister Fleming Friday.\nThe cost of all therapeutic\ntreatments and special training\nof handicapped children should\nbe allowed as medioal expense\nexempt from income tax, it was\nurged in a joint brief by the Canadian Bar Association and the\nCanadian Institute of Chartered\nAccountants.\nTheir brief \u2014 aimed1 at Mr.\nFleming's next budget \u2014 also\ncalled for an end to, income tax\ndiscrimination against husbands\nwho employ their wives in business and it proposed that (he income tax appeal board be raised\nin effect, to the status of a court.\nOn that point, it said the five-\nmember board has to a large\nextent provided taxpayers \"a\nprompt and inexpensive determination of their rights.\" But\nsome anomalies existed in the\nboard's constitution.\nSUGGEST CHANGES\nIts members should be appointed on the same basis as supreme or superior court Judges\nand receive comparable salaries. And it should be under tlie\njurisdiction of the justice de-\npartmenU-not the revenue department.\nOn the husband-wife employment issue, the brief said the\nrevenue minister shouldn't have\nthe discretion of adding tlie income of an employed wife to\nthat of her employer husband\nfor income tax purposes.\nInstead, a reasonable income\npaid to a wife, where her husband is (he employer, should be\ntreated as a separate income.\nMoreover, her husband should\nbe allowed to deduct the wages\nas a business expense.\nThe brief proposed a number\nof changes in the estate tax legislation, including one section\nwhich gives differing treatment\nin cases of infirm widowers depending on whether they have\ndependent children.\nBASIC EXEMPTION\nIt said (hat at present, when\na wife dies, there is a basic $40,-\n000 exemption for her estate if\nshe leaves a h__a_d\u2014healthy\nor infirm \u2014 without dependent\nohildren. But if there is an in\nfirm widower with a dependent\nohild, an additional basic exemption of $20,090 is allowed plus\n$10,090 for each child. No extra\nexemption is allowed for dependent ohildren of a healthy husband.\nThe brief also tackled the\nthorny problem raised when a\nwidow is left a life pension or\nannuity. The government sets an\narbitrary value on the pay-\nments, based on the widow's Ufe\nexpectancy, and levies estate\ntax on that value.\nThe brief said this takes no\naccount of oases where the widow remarries and her pension\nstops \"so that in fact there may\nbe tax paid on something whioh\nis never received.\" As well, the\nestate had to find money quickly\nto pay the tax, whereas a widow\nmight not get the payments until later.\nIt proposed (hat en estate be\ngiven the option of paying the\ntax on lO-yeai instalments, with\nthe installment- ending if the\npension stops as a result of the\ndeath or remarriage of the\nwidow.\nMaihoy\nMaritime Mining\nMcLeod\nMeta Uran\nMining Corp.\nNew Alger\nNew Bidlaimaque\nNew Delhi\nNew Hosco\nNoranda New\nNorgoW\nNoiynetals\nNorpax\nNorth Oan\nNorth Rankin\nOpemtska\nPine Point\nPlacer Devd\nPreston E. D.\nQuebec Lithium\nQuemont\nRadiore\nRayrock\nRio Algom\nSan Antonio\nSherritt Gordon\nSteep Rook\nSullivan Con\nTaurcanis\nTeck Hughes\nThamp-Lund\nUnited Keno\nUpper Canada\nVentures\nViolamac\nWaite Amulet\nWiltsey Goglin\nWright Hargreaves\nYale\nYellowknife Bear\nYoung (H.G.) Gold\nOILS\n| American Leduc\nBanff Oils\nBailey Selburn\nBata Petroleum\nCalgary and Edmonton\nOanadian Devonian\nCdn Highcrest\nHome A\nMidcon\nNat. Pete\nNew Continental\nOkalta\nPacific Pete\nPetrol\nPlace\nProv Gas\nRoyalite\nStanwell Oil\nTriad\nUnited Oils\nYank Canuck\nWestern Pacific\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi\nAlgoma Steel\nAluminum\nAnalog\nArgus 2nd pfd.\nAtlas St.\nB.A. Oil\nBathurst Power\nBeatty Bros.\nBell Telephone\nBrazilian\nB.C. Electric 4%s\nB.C. Forest\nB.C. Packers A\nB.C. Power A\nBurns A\nCanadian Breweries\nCanadian Canners\nCanadian Celanese\nCan. Cement\nCan Chem Co\nCanadian Dredge\nCan. Curtis Wright\nCan. Malting\nOan Oil\nCanadian Pacific Rly\nOan. Packers A\nCan. Packers B\nCookshutt\nColumbia Ce_ulo?e\nCons Gas\nDist. Seagram\nDom. Foundries\nDom Magnesium\nDom. Stores\nDom. Tar - Chemical\nDom. Textiles\nBd_y Match\nFamous Players\nFanny Farmer\nFord U.S,\nGatineau\n.Gatineau 5% pfd\nGen. Steel Wares\n10.25\n3.20\n.41\n23.62%\n.09\n3.50\n9.39\n.18\n1.53\n1.28\n48.75\n1.60\n.1314\n19.00\n9.90\n.26\n8.00\n.14%\n24.37%\n49.00\n66.50\n1.85\n._\"_\n.30\n.05%\n11.00\n23.25\n1.54\n.02%\n1.89\n1.35\n.19\n2.65\n.70\n.14%\n.98\n1.00\n.14\n12.25\n.03%\n.06%\n.11\n.89\n44.50\n.06\n2.77\n.11\n1.60\n.70\n6.55\n17.00\n17.75\n5.40\n4.65\n9.00\n.68\n.79\n9.35\n1.55\n4.05\n9.15\n1.46\n.57\n1.70\n.95\n8.50\n1.24\n39.00\n.78\n6.40\n.08\n1.05\n.10\n.97\n.52\n.11\n1.01\n6.50\n.07\n17.87%\n5.00\n.27\n12.00\n.36\n1.80\n13.12%\n.75\n.37\n2.35\n9.60\n.38\n2.39\n1.61\n.05\n.16\nGoodyear\n135\nGoodyear pfd   \u25a0\n.44\nHoward Smith\n43%\nImperial Oil\n43%\nImp. Tobacco\n13%\nInd. Ace.\n56\nLoblaw A\n36%\nLoblaw B\n38%\nMassey Ferguson\n13%\nMolson Brewery\n26%\nMont. Loco'\n14%\nMoore Corp.\n59\nNat. Steel Car\n11%\nPage Hershey\n25%\nPower Corp.\n58\nRuss. Industries\n10%\nShawinigan\n29%\nSimpsons, A\n32%\nSt. Lawrence Corp.\n23%\nSteel of Canada\n79%\nTexaco\n65%\nUnion Gas of Can\n18%\nUnited Steel\n6%\nWeston George\n51\nWoodwards A.\n17%\nA NO-IRON\nSHIRT  FEATURE\n\u25a0y\nFORSYTH\nTERYLENE\nand COTTON\nAn intimate blend of\n65% Terylene and 35%\nCotton.^ Safe in bleach\nand featuring the 2-way\nconvertible cuff.\nEMORY'S\nLTD.     ^\n'THE MAN'S STORE\"\nNews of the Day\nRATES:\n30o line, 40c line black lace type; larger type rates\noa request Minimum two Uses.\nELECTROLUX 8ERVICE\n512 Richards St., Ph. 1108, Nelson\nNew colourful tricycles\nby OCM.\nEDEY'S CYCLE SHOP\nW.I. South Slooan\nCoffee bour and bake table at the\nhome of Mrs. J. D. Yeatman\nWed., April 12th from 10 a.m.\nMILADY'S FASHIONS\nWEDDING DRESSES TO CLEAR\nAT HALF PRICE.\nPretty Pricillas in flocked white\ndacron,   sewed  criss-cross,   for\nonly one rod size 80x63 at $7.25 or\n80x81\nSTERLING FURNISHERS\nL.A. TO F.O.E.\nSpecial meeting Monday, 8 p.m.\nto welcome Provincial President.\nDinner $1.50 at Nelson Hotel 6\np.m. Auxiliary welcome.\nFOR ASPHALT PAVING\nESTIMATES\nPhone 537\nD. Porteous, Nelson, B.C.\nL.A. \u2014 Canadian Legion\nTEA AND BAKE SALE\nApril 15th-2:30-5\nDoor Prae.\n\"Nuclear War\u2014Could we\nSurvive\"\nHear Byrns Cunry, Director oi\nEmergency Measures organization on CBC, April 9, at 7:20 p.m.\nP.S.T.\nHAIGH TRU-ART\nBEAUTY SALON\n\"We have that expert touch that\nmeans so much.\"\nPlate, Sheet, Safety,. Wired, and\nPatterned Glass and glass repairs\nT. H. WATERS & OO. LTD.\n101 HaU St.   Nelson   Phone 156\nHome Builders and Renovators\nSale in full swing \u2014 See Friday's\nNelson News for many money-\nsaving values.\nCOLUMfilA TRADING CO.\nTHE NELSON LION'S CLUB\nNeed items for their\nWhite Elephant Auction Sale\nto be held approx. June 2nd,\nFor pick-up phone 962 or 1614.\nBOOK APRIL 26th FOR\nCIVIC CHOIR CONCERT\nGuest Artists \u2014 Capitol Theatre\nAdults $1.00 \u2014 Students 50c\nTickets\u2014A. Fraser and members\n38\n37%\n35%\n3\n49%\n26\n35%\n_%\n11\n48\n4.40\n91%\n14\n15%\n34\n11%\n46%\n13%\n24%\n29\n6%\n14%\n1.60\n68\n29%\n23%\n55%\n55%\n15\n5%\n18%\n37 .\n50%\n9%\n68%\n'7%\n. 11%\n25\n18%\n22%\n78%\n36%\n102%\nKIN AUCTION OF THE AIR\nTuesday, April lith, C.K.L.N.,\n8 p.m. Bargains and prizes tor\neveryone. Sponsored by Nelson\nKinsmen- Club. Proceeds for\nHealth Centre.\nKIWANIS AND SttVER KING\nSKI CLUB AUCTION SALE\nHume Hotel Parking Lot\n1 p.m. Saturday, April 8th\nWriting desks, beds, furniture,\netc.\nROSE BUSHES\nB. C. Top Gtede\n$10.00 DOZEN\nEvergreen^ \u2014 Fruit Trees\nFlowering Shrubs.\nCOVENTRY'S FLOWER SHOP\nPhone 962\nAQUILA COFFEE PARTY\nCome and enjoy hot buttered muffins with your coffee at the Aquila\nCliib of St. Saviour's Pro-Cathedral Coffee Party in the Memorial\nHall, April 10, 10 a.m. to 12 noon\nfor just 25s. Bake table \u2014 free\nbabysitting.\nWorld Briefs\nTAKES OWN LIFE\nMUNICH (Reuters) \u2014 Heinrich Heimann, a former member of the Nazi secret police\n(Gestapo), has committed suicide in his cell in Landsberg\nPrison near here, it was disclosed today. He was being held\nfor trial on suspicion of having\nshot men, women and children\nduring the Nazi occupation of\nPoland.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nACHESON STARS CTASE\nTHE HAGUE (Reuters)\u2014Former U.S. state secretary Dean\nAcheson arrived today to represent Cambodia before the\nInternational Court of Justice in\na dispute with Thailand over a\ntemple on the border between\nthe two countries.\n* \u00ab   *\nCOSTS CAUSE INCREASE\nST. LOUIS (AP)-The price\nof both St. Louis daily weekday\nnewspapers will be raised to\nseven cents a copy, effective\nMonday. The afternoon Post-\nDispatch made the announcement Thursday and the morning\nGlobe - Democrat Thursday\nnight. Both gave rising costs as\nthe reason for (he two-cent increase.\n* *     *\nPLAN EXCHANGE PROGRAM\nWARSAW (AP)-A plan for\nPolish - Cuban co - operation in\nscience, education and culture\nwas signed today, the Polish\npress agency (PAP) announced.\nIt provides for exchanges of\nteachers, students, artists and\nexhibitions, and also for cooperation in radio and TV.\n\u2022 *  *\nWHISTLES COST LIVES\nLONDON (AP)-Wolf whistles\ncost two young London lads\ntheir lives, a coroner found\nThursday after hearing evidence\nfrom two girl witnesses. Joan\nTaylor, 16, and Iinda Parker,\n14, said Brian Marley and Arthur Oddy, both .17, turned to\nwhistle as they drove past on a\nmotor scooter, swerved, hit a\nbus and were killed. The verdict was accidental death.  .\nN. J. H. S. Jr. Red Cross\nTEENAGE FASHION SHOW\nAND TEA\nSp. Hudson's Bay Oo.\nL. V. Rogers High\nSat. April 16th at 2 p.m.\nHair styles by Nelson Styling\nCouncil.\nGrand opening draw of the\nGraceanna Beauty Bar. 10 lucky\nladies for a free shampoo, set,\ncut and a rinse are Mrs. C. E\nBradshaw, Mrs. Thelma Nicker\nson, Mrs. Mary Smith, Mrs. Bol\ntes, Mrs. Nelly Koodrin, Mrs. R\nMarshall, Mrs. Falconer, Mrs. L.\nVital, Mrs. Brown, Mrs. Edie McDonald.\nIN MEMORIAM\nIn loving memory of Alfred\nKristiansen who passed away April 8, 1960.\nYour memory is as dear today\u2014\nAs the day you passed away.\nAlways remembered by his loving wife, daughters, son-in-law\ngrandchildren and little Kerry.\nCARD OF THANKS\nCOUCH\u2014We wish to express our\nsincere thanks to all those who\nwere so kind to my wife and our\nmother during her extended illness. Special thanks to Drs. Fowler and Yule, nurses and staff ol\n(he Castlegar and District Hospital, members of the O.E.S. Minto\nChapter, the Rev. H. Pratt, and\nto all our friends and neighbours\nand organizations who o_ereH\ntheir assistance and condolence-\nduring our recent sad bereavement.\n\u2014F. B. Couch, The Hardin?\nfamily. Rick and Julia Couch,\nand The Harrower family.\nHave the Job Done Right!\nWIC GRAVEC\n\u25a0 LIMITED       *J\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 81S\nWINCARNISj\nMEDICATED'TONIC    j\nHelps strengthen nerves. Give.5 I\nentire 'system a feeling of ;\nhealth and robustness. !\nPrice $1.95 j\nYour Rexall Pharmacy      I\nCITY DRUG'\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_04_08","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\/1.0434067","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":"1961-04-08 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":"1961-04-08 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"Nelson Daily News","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}