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This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" |**ttrai *moiaiA\nTEMPERATURES\nNELSON     50 65 \u2014\nToronto  38 68 \u2014\nCalgary  31 60 \u2014\nPentlcton \u2014 29 70 \u2014\nVancouver    .._... 41 56 \u2014\nWfiitehorse    __- 18 33 .06\nSpokane    -..  33 64 \u2014\nout\nPublished at Nelson, government, financial, trading and education centreof'the Kootenay-Columbia area\nFORECAST\nKOOTENAY: Mainly cloudy\nwith a few showers. Little\nchange in temperature. Winds\nlight and southerly. Low and\nhigh at Cranbrook and Crescent\nValley 35 and 60.\nNELSON, B. C, CANADA-TUESDAY MORNING, MAY 12, 1964\n10 Cents\nNo. 18\nlane Disasters Claim 183 Lives\nAn  Editorial\nKnow Your Neighbors Better\nMay 14 to 18, inclusive, West Kootenay residents\nwill have a golden opportunity to become belter acquainted with their neighbors in the Creston Valley.\nWe refer, of course, to the 23rd annual Creston\nValley Blossom Festival, which promises to be a memorable occasion ior all those who take the short route\nover the new Kootenay Skyway into Creslon during\nthe planned activities.\nHighlights ol the program will include a gymkhana, hootenanny, bonspiel, sky diving and many\nother worthwhile attractions. The red carpet is down\nand it only remains for West Kootenay residents to\nwalk right in and live it up.\nCreston can be justly proud of her Blossom Festival. Here we have a typical example of what happens\nwhen determination, organization and plain old fashioned hard work converge at Ihe same spot. Events\nsuch as this one publicize not only the immediate community but the entire Koolenay-Boundary area as well.\nUndoubtedly the Blossom Festival will leave many\nEast and West Kootenay residents with a much better\nunderstanding of one another, their mutual problems,\nneeds and wants, and it is only fitting, therefore, that\nthiB newspaper joins with all of West Kootenay in extending to the people of Creston, and in particular those\nindividuals whose hard work made this coming festival\npossible, good wishes for every success,\nNew Microwave Network\nLinks Vancouver, Montreal\nMONTREAL (CPl-Transport\nMinister Pickersgill flicked a\nswitch Monday to open the Canadian Pacific - Canadian National Telecommunications mic-\nnew telecommunications facility\nwill be used to equate manufacturing with sales and inventory, deployment of sales forces\nand   the   movement   of   goods\nU.S. Crash in Philippines\nWorst in Five - Day Period\nfrom  plant  to  market,  for,\nBy The Associated Press\nA  grimly  accelerating   series  of  air   tragedies\nthe  world  have  claimed   183   lives   during  a\nmiles network linking Montreal! Iatc,\" Mr. Crump said. | {j^\/, P\"\u2122*   W\"h   10   0,her   PerSOnS   missina   and\nto'Vancouver, built at a cost of,    _     .,   \u201e    , ..   ,    .; _ ,   , . , \t\nDonald   Gordon,  president of,             Gravest of the disasters was the crash of a U.S.\nCanadian  National, referred to ! military jet transport in the Philippines early Monday\nrowave network.\nHe   sent   simultaneous   mes-  today's business, it may well be \\ around\nsages to cities along the 3,282 j said,   tomorrow   is   often   too\n$41,000,000.\nCanada's\nsecond   microwave\nnetwork  also  forms  the Canadian   portion   of   the\ndifficulties in building the 127-\nwealth communications system\nthat stretches to Great Britain,\nAustralia and New Zealand, The\nfirst microwave network was\nopened in 1958 by the Trans-\nCanada Telephone System.\nMr. Pickersgill, in his messages to opening ceremonies\nheld simultaneously in Montreal\nOttawa, Toronto, Winnipeg, Re-\ngina, Saskatoon, Calgary, Edmonton and Vancouver, said\nthe network will mean faster\nand more reliable communications for Canada.\n\"In a country as large as\nCanada, it is impossible to exaggerate the importance of\nsuch instant and widespread\ncommunication.\"\n\u2022HIGHWAY IN SKY'\nNorris Crump, chairman and\npresident of Canadian Pacific,\nopened the ceremonies by describing the network as a \"highway in the sky\" offering Canadians \"the most sophisticated\ncarrier\" of communications.\n\"Modern business relies on\ninstant    information    and   this\nCommon-  ,ower \u2122twork caI!able ,of car.| dents during Ihe day may\n, rymg   600   voice   channels  each i.    ..    , .,,    , ,\u00ab    .,       ; '\nwith a loss of 75 lives. In addition, three other acci-\nrymg\non duplicate two   -   way radio\nfrequency channels,\n\"Our technical personnel and\nconstruction crews have carried out a job of grand proportions; one that is equivalent in\nscope to many of the pioneer\nrailroad works that took place\nin earlier days.\"\nSHAKE  CONSTRUCTION\n] Canadian Pacific Telecommu-\nI nications built 77 towers from\nj Montreal to Duff, Sask. and will\nmaintain this portion of the sys-\nI tern. Canadian National Tele-\n! communications built 50 towers\n| from Duff to Vancouver and\nwill be responsible for the western section. Most of the towers\nwill be unmanned.\nCanadian Overseas Telecommunication Corporation, Crown\nagency handling the Commonwealth communications system\nlink across Canada, will lease\n60 voice circuits, six of them\nradio-telephone, from the new\nmicrowave system.\nm \u00ab\u00ab.\n'% _\u2022 v-i$b'',L\nt-&i\\ **\u25a0__&_.__\n\u25a0vs. -\nV\n_t_P\"\n3_\n. 1 t~\n*>\u25a0\u25a0)r \u25a0\n1              \u25a0    7\nw\nfm\nm\n%i. m - 1\n. \u2022\n..j\n*> |\n\u2022 ^___^_____r^     V              B\nf$\n_8^m\n11\n;^$tpp*' jgsw. *n\n;\n\u25a0..\u25a0#|.\n,J?M,   i\n\u00bb, ''' nlP^. * J\n_\u25a0__. \"^\n*m<<r**    ^\\\n* r. JHI\nr^              .\nitrkish - Cypriots\n\u2022hoot Greeks\nCP from AP-Beuters\nFAMAGUSTA \u2014 Two Greek army officers and\nSreek-Cypriot youth leader were shot dead by Turkish-\npriots Monday in a new chapter of Cyprus violence.\nP Greek government called it \"cold blooded Turkish\npoer ... a barbaric and inhuman act . . .\"\nA third Greek officer waa wounded when the\nmen tried to leave  the  Turkish-Cypriot-held  old\n\"1 area of Famagusta. The three officers were in\nilian clothes.\nfe \"ouiuled man, Capt. Pan-\ns Tarsoullis, SB,, told a rein a Famagusta Greek-\n' hospital later that he\ni comrades had entered\nkish quarter by. error.\nWe were on the Way out,\" He\nI. \"when armed Tyrks (Cyp-\nW stopped us and ordered\nI ol the car. Urea. Dorks\nJform and a civilian, all\nt with sub-machine-guns,.\nI'\"1 at us without gjv-\n\u00bb chance.\" He sild' Be'\n1 unarmed. \u2022 ;\nJEVE MEN AHMED\n\u00abW Nations headquarters\nf, however, it,believed the\n\"\u2022en were armed and a\n\"\"it read over th. Gteek'\n\u2122  radio: by .Greek   De-\n1 Minister Petj.'GarouTal-\n\u2122 lhe weapons rf  the\ni officers were delivered to\n'Siista hospital\nalias saidi&iGrert.\n.car had gtpe'Hiitolithe\nquarter of'Mmtlttiufta\n, \u2122. tfe rimpmgttt,\n\u25a0 gunned .doija -after 'Hrtow--\nr.Welr Identity,card*; ^TUt\n\"\u2022 Wooded\" \"\" \"\n\u2022^constitutea\" a\n1 a<. contrary^\nK.     ioterbatioaal\nIMckred.\nThe UN said evidence gathered by Irish troops on the\nscene indicated the four men\nbad fired weapons and a spokesman said'it was not clear who\nstarted the shooting.\nIn Athens a statement issued\nby- the Greek premer said \"I\nexpress my deep sorrow for the\ntragic event This shows who\ndisturbs the peace on Cyprus\n... We are awaiting the fulfill-\nmept of the responsibility of the\nIjk force for the re-establishment of moral order In Cyprus.\"\nIDENTIFY MEN\nThe dead men were identified\nby the UN as Maj. Detnetrlos\nPoulios, 37, Capt Vassilios Kap-\ntas, 83, and Costakis Pandel-\nides, head of the young Greek-\nCypriot Society III Nicosia and\nson of the Nicosia police chief.\nWhile 'hundreds of-Cypriots\nhave been killed or wounded in\nthe bitter communal fighting,\nthis waB the' first time the\nGreek army contingent on the\nIsland suffered casualties. A\nTurkish falrray contfligent ba\u00a3\ncome under fire but no one was\nhit. Both contingents are on the\nisland as.:part. of the treaty\nguaranteeing Cyprus independ.\nence and security following independence from Britain.\nAn almost immediate result\nwas the outbreak of sniping fire\nin Famagusta and the seizure\nby Greek - Cypriots of seven\nTurkish-Cypriots. Famagusta is\nan east coast port of 5,000 people including some 6,000 Turkish-Cypriots.\nIn Nicosia, Turkish Vice-\nPresident Fazil Kuchuk called\nthe incident \"deplorable.\"\nBelgium Faces\nSecond Strike\nBRUSSELS (Reuters) - Belgium laced the threat Monday\nnight of another doctors' strike\nin the event of a breakdown in\nnegotiations resumed by. the\nmedical unions and the government last month.\nMedical sources Warned that\nthe doctors' unions had taken\nsteps to call another strike at\nshort notice because Of now difficulties wheh had arisen In the\ntalks.\nRepresentatives of the doctors\nresumed negotiations with 1be\ngovernment April 22 after an 18-\nday strike by 12,000 physicians\nIn protest against a new National\nHealth Insurance Act.\n.The main difficulty was reported to be the provision of the\nnew health insurance law calling\nfor Higher reimbursement for\npatients treated by doctors signing the new health rules than for\nthose treated byrpriyate doctors.\n-'_\"-\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMI\nMouth - to - Mouth\nBreathing   Saves\nPekinese's  Life\nTORONTO (CP) - A humane society inspector restored a Pekinese dog to life\nearly Sunday by using mouth-\nto-mouth breathing when the\ndog collapsed.\nWildfred Patey, 38, said he\nwas strolling 13 Pekinese dogs\nto kennels when the elderly\nmale collapsed from a stroke\nor heart seizure and stopped\nbreathing.\nMr. Patey, familiar with St.\nJohn Ambulance emergency\nprocedures, said he knew several ways to restore the dog's\nbreathing, but the mouth-to-\nmouth method was the best.\n\"In four or five minutes he\nwas restored and he looks fine\nnow,\" Mr. Patey said Monday.\nUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIN\nWhooping Crane\nGets Assist\nFrom Scientists\nOTTAWA (CP) - The stately\nwhooping crane, obviously unable to pull Itself from the brink\nof extinction, is going to get an\nassist from Canadian and United States wildlife scientists.\nAn International plan to hatch\na breeding flock of whooping\ncranes with eggs gathered\nfrom the birds' summer nesting area in the Northwest Territories was .announced Monday\nby Resources Minister Laing!\nIf all goes well, 100 new\nwhooping cranes will eventually\nbe -added to the wild population\nevery year \u2014 more than three\ntimes Hie total number of wild\nbirds now known to survive.\nV\nSecurity Tightened Up\nFar NkNaraaTa's Visit\nSAIGON (API\u2014Security was\ntightened Monday for the arrival\nof U.S. Defence Secretary McNamara after a Communist\nagent suspected of plotting to\nkill him tried to break away\nfrom police custody.\nOne of three Viet Cong terrorists arrested for mining a\nbridge over which McNamara\nwill pass today, Nguyen Van\nTroi, lei-fed from a second-\nfloor window at police headquarters, police reported.\nTroi landed on a vehicle and\nwas taken unconscious to hospital. He suffered a broken leg\nin the fall.\nSecurity sources said police\nhad rounded up a number of\nother Viet Cong suspects, some\narmed with hand grenades and\nother weapons, in a series of\nraids since the three were\nseized Saturday night. Some\nhigh explosives have been unearthed.\nDespite the reported death\nplot, McNamara showed no particular concern as he took off\nfrom Bonn for this South Vietnamese capital after three days\nof talks with West German leaders.\n\"You can say that I have no\ncomment to make, absolutely no\ncomment,\" he told reporters in\nBonn.\nU.S. officials were silent on\nwhether a new route would be\nchosen for McNamara's drive\nfrom the airport to this capital.\nMcNamara. who ..visited Saigon only last March, is making\na second visit to check on the\nway the U.S. - supported war\nagainst the Communist Viet\nCong guerrillas is going,\nArriving ahead of McNamara,\nwas Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor,\nchairman of the U.S. Joint\nchiefs of staff.\nhave killed 16 others.\nA U.S. Navy patrol plane\ncrashed at sea 20 miles off the\nSpanish coast. Wreckage was\ndiscovered during an air-sea\nsearch but none of the 10 persons aboard was found. The\ncrew of a Spanish fishing boat\nsaid they saw the long-range\nP-2V patrol plane strike the sea\nand burst into flames, during\nmanoeuvres off the U.S. Polaris\nsubmarine base at Rota. Spain.\nNear Seale, Ala., a U.S. Air\nForce C-119 carrying 43 student\nparatroopers to a jump zone\nmade a crash landing in a\nfield, and burned. Two men\nwere killed and 11 injured, the\nArmy said.\nThe C-119 plane, with a crew\nof four, plopped into a cultivat\ned field and burned after one\nof its engines failed. One victim\nwas trapped in the flames, the\nother died from crash injuries.\nSix of the 11 persons were taken to hospital.\nTlie public relations office at\nnearby Fort Benning, Ga., said\nthe pilot, Maj. F. L. Myers, had\ntried to reach Lawson Army Air\nField at Fort Benning after\nthe engine failure but had lost\ntoo much altitude.\nBOMBER CRASHES\nIn southern England, a Vlll..\ncan bomber, one of the type\nequipped to carry JBritata's H-\nbombs, went down Id flames,\nkilling four crew members. Two\nothers parachuted to safety.\nThe aircraft was attached to the\nBritish ministry of aviation.\nLast Thursday, an RAF Valiant bomber crashed in Lincolnshire, killing five men.\nThe Philippines tragedy involved a U.S. C-135 jet transport that crashed less than half\nNational Guard\nStops Mass\nDemonstration\na mile from a runway at Clark\nair base, after a flight from\nTravis Air Force Base in California. Seventy-four of 83 military personnel aboard died. In\naddition, a man was killed in a\ntaxicab that was hit by the\nplane as it came down.\nLast Thursday, 44 persons\ndied in the crash of a Pacific\nAirlines plane near Concord,\nCalif. A gun was found in the\nwreckage and investigators\nsought to determine if the pilot\nhad been shot at the controls by\none of the passengers.\nITS SAND DUNE\nOn Friday, an Argentine Air\nForce courier plane, landing in\ndense fog near Lima, Peru, hit\na high coastal sand dune. There\nwere only three survivors\namong 49 persons aboard.\nTwo crashes on Saturday took\nan additional seven lives.\nNear Cooperton, Okla., a\nC-124 military transport crashed\nand burned in a driving rainstorm. All of its six-member\ncrew died. The plane, which apparently exploded in the air,\nwas en route from Dover, Del.,\nto Clovis, N.M.\nAlso on Saturday, Capt. Eugene J. Devlin, 31, a member\not the air force Thunderbird\nprecision flying team, was\n\u25a0Wtfc*r-when his F-105 jet exploded just before a scheduled\nlanding at Hamilton Air Force\nBase, Calif. The six-man team\nwas returning from an air show\nat Seattle.\nCAMBRIDGE, Md. (API-National guardsmen threw tear\ngas grenades into a crowd of\n250 to 300 integrationists in a\ndemonstration which erupted\nafter an appearance here of-\nGovernor George C. Wallace of\nAlabama Monday night.\nIt was the second time the.\nintegrationists defied national\nguardsmen to march, Wallace\nhad left Cambridge before the\nsecond demonstration in which\nthe soldiers used the tear gas\nto  break  up the crowd.\nThe demonstrators had assembled the second time in front\nof the Negro Elks' hall where\nthey had held a rally prior to\nWallace's appearance. Suddenly\nsinging and chanting, they\nlocked their arms and walked\ntoward Race Street, scene of\nracial turbulence last summer.\nBISHOP TAKES\nFORGIVING LOOK\nAT PROMISCUITY\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014A bishop\nof the Church of England says\nhe believes there are circumstances when sexual intercourse\noutside marriage is not tm-\nraoral.\nSuch a circumstance could\noccur with a couple seriously\ncontemplating marriage, said\nRt. Rev. Wilfred A. Westell,\nBishop of CrecSton, Devon, England.\nHe said he would not condone\npromiscuity.\n\"I don't think that just because a bay aad gftMiave had\npre-marital intercourse they are\nunfit for marriage,1' he said in\nan interview, Saturday. -\n\"They have ndt rartnmitted an\nunforgivable sin . ..\n\"There is an old saying that\nthe greatest of sins are gin,\ngambling and girls. I don't be-\nlieve it. There are worse sins\nthan sexual wrongdoing.\"\nDOLLAR UP\nNEW YORK (CP)-Canadian\ndollar up 1-64 at 92 17-32 In\nterms of UIS. funds. Week ago\n92 3544,\nPound sterling down 3-64 at\n$2.79 59*1.\nParliament\nMonday\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nPrime Minister Pearson said\nthe international joint commission is the most appropriate\nforum for Great Lakes water\nlevels talks.\nOpposition Leader Diefenbaker\ncriticized Trade Minister Sharp's\nreport on Geneva tariff talks.\nAssociate Defence Minister\nCardin said there is no discrimination against French-Canadians\nin armed services promotion.\nThe government was urged to\nretrain military personnel, retired early, for civilian life.\nFormer Conservative defence\nminister Harkness accused the\ngovernment of diminishing Canada's defence capability.\nPearson Speaks To\nCanadian   Students\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014Prime Minister Pearson said here Monday\nthat current \"defeatist talk\"\nabout the future of Canada and\nits parliamentary institutions is\nnonsense.\nSpeaking to a group of 243\nhigh school students from across\nCanada who are taking part in\nthe Rotary Club's annual Adventure in Citizenship,\" the\nprime   minister  said:\n\"There is a great deal of negative crisicism in Canada today\nabout the decline of our parliamentary institutions. We are\nalso subjected to defeatist talk\nthat our citizens will not stand\nup to the problems that are\nbefore us.\n\"This is nonsense. Our young\nCanadians will be equal to the\ntest, just as they were equal to\n.%&_\n_____________________________\nRobles Takes\nLead in\nPanama Election\nPANAMA CITY (AP) - Government candidate Marco A\nRobles surged into a command\ning lead Monday night In official\nreturns from more than half\nof the vote cast in Panama's\npresidential  election.\nRobles, a; banker and advocate of a bard, line toward the\nUnited States on Panama Canal\ntreaty Issues, led the pre-election favorite, Arnulfo Arias, by\n13,316 votes.\nBackers of Arias, 63, twice deposed, as president, looked grim\nas the electoral tribunal gave\nRobles 66,447 votes and Arias\n73,131 on the basis of returns\nfrom 709 out Of 1144 voting stations.\nRobles, SS, was backed by the\ngovernment coalition of outgoing president Roberto Chiari.\nAlias drew his. main support\nfrom bit own Panamcnlsta\nparty;\n...... , '\nU.S. Sees No\nChance of Red\nChina at UN\nBy MAX HARRELSON\nUNITED NATIONS (AP) -\nThe United States was reported\nMonday to have reached tlie\nconclusion that there will be no\nsignificant shift in favor of seating Communist China at the\nnext session of the United Nations General Assembly.\nAuthoritative sources said\nU.S. officials now feel that\nFrance's recognition of the Peking regime in January will\nhave little effect on the assembly vote when the question of\nChina representation comes up\nin the fall\nThis view contrasts sharply to\nthe widely held opinion a few\nmonths ago that France's action\nwould spark a substantial shift\namong the former French ter\nritories in Africa. Some diplomats even predicted the seating\nthe  problems of founding con- of the  Chinese Communists  in\nfederation.\" the UN as a result.\nRusk Seeks\nNATO Allies\nCo-operation\nBy MOHSIN AH\nTHE HAGUE (Eeuterst\u2014U.S.\nState Secretary Dean Rusk\nMonday plunged into a last-\nminute round nf meetings with\nWestern foreign ministers in\npreparation for today's opening\nsession of the NATO ministerial\ncouncil.\nCyprus was ei_pected to be\none of the key issues to be discussed at tlie meeting today\nalong with Cuban trade, the war\nin South Viet Nam and guerrilla\nactivity in tlie South Arabian\nFederation.\nRusk scheduled meetings\nMonday night with British Foreign Secretary R. A. Butler.\nWest German Foreign Minister\nGerhard Schroeder and French\nForeign Minister Maurice\nCouve de Murville.\nRusk met earlier in the day\nwith the retiring NATO secretary-general Dirk Stikker of\nThe Netherlands. They reviewed East-West relations and took\nstock of the 15-nation NATO defence alliance.\nExternal Affairs Minister\nMartin is heading Canada's delegation.\nDIES IN FIRE\nEDMONTON (CP) - Brian\nKuzio, five months, of Thorsby,\nAlta., died ami three members\nof his family were injured when\nfire struck a one-storey frame\nhome Saturday In hospital here\nare Mr. and Mrs. Steve Kuzio\nand a daughter, Donna, 7.\nRiver Treaty Alternative\nCompletely Fair-Fulton\nBy ARCH MacKENZIE\nOTTAWA (CP)-Davie Fulton\ncame back to Parliament Hill\nMonday to call the 1961 Columbia River Trealy, which he\nnegotiated, a completely fair\nalternative \"on the basis on\nwhich it was negotiated.\"\nHe rebuked treaty critics, repeated his long-held contention\nthat British Columbia did a fast\nswitch in 1961 that delayed ratification and admtted frankly\nthat he lost when he took the\nIssue to the people of B.C.\nMr. Fulton had a fuller house\nthan the Commons external affairs committee normally attracts In its prolonged study of\nthe controversial treaty and the\nJan. 22 protocol added by the\nLiberal government.\nIn his submissions of Just under an hour, he was flanked by\nsenior civil servants and technical staff who helped him In\nthe 1961 treaty proceedings and\nwho earlier had aided External\nAffairs Minister Martin in his\ntestmony.\nMr. Fulton in detail put on\nthe record events leading up to\nthe treaty's signature, the split\nbetween the federal arid B.C.\ngovernments and his decision in\n1962 to retire from the federal\ncabinet to assume the Conservative party leadership in B.C.\nThe former justice and works\nminister continues his testimony, under examination, today.\nHe emphasized that while he\nstill personally disagrees with\nthe major revision In the treaty\n\u2014sale of power In the U.S.\nrather than bringing it back to\nthe province\u2014he regards thc\nmatter as settled on the basis of\nthe smashing Social Credit victory last Sept. 30 in British\nColumbia.\nAny suggestion that Canada's\nposition was inadequately assessed or prepared is simply\nnot true, he said in praising the\nadvisers who helped on the pre-\ntreaty negotiations.    - - -   \u2022\nHe, also lined up with Resources Minister Williston of\nB.C. in indicating that an alternative to the treaty plan of\npower and flood control storage\nin Canada\u2014the so-called McNaughton or Canada plan\u2014was\nnever put before the U.S. negotiators.\nHe said the controversial\nHigh Arrow Dam\u2014which ls not\npart of the McNaughton sequence of development\u2014was in\nthe picture from the start. \u2022 . \u25a0\nSCEME VETOED\nB.C, had early vetoed the\nMcNaughton scheme, including\nEast Kootenay storages.\n\". . . The present treaty is\nfar from a second-best choice,\"\nMr. Fulton said. \"It is, on the\nbasis on which it was negotiated, a completely fair altar\nnative.\" Without that treaty,\nColumbia River development\nwas Impossible.\ny;\n 2\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, MAY 12, 1964\nSparkling  Dance Recital\nDraws Capacity House\nOutstanding costumes and a\npleasing variety of dance numbers drew spontaneous bursts\nof applause from a capacity and\nience at the opening night of Nelson Dance Theatre's \"Show Case\n'64.\"\nThe variation* came in types\nof dances ranging from ballet to\njazz routines by pupils of Doris  classical number performed\nThe audience was taken to the]\nshuns of New York in the\n\"Bronx lilues.\" in which sloppv-\nswealered senior girls. Michelle\nGrant. Sheila MrUaii. Sandra\nHughes. Sheila Morey and Rev-\nerley McNeill, funned Ihe chorus.\nGaiety marked a light, bouncy\nQo until foiiinqA.\nCity council in a session thai Monday has brought council out\nby\nMerriman and Joyce Gordon.\nMaster of ceremonies was Gordon Olson.\nPetite little maids in perky little caps and feather dusters in a\nrhythmic opening number performed \"Wee Hazels'' They\nwere JoAnne Hughes. Dpbby\nGrant, Linda Nuyen-s, Marilyn\nHanson and Judy Cochrane.\nJoyce Gordon, ballet mistress.\nHACK to m.n WEST\nAn outstanding number was\n\"Guns at Cheyenne,'' which took\nthe audience to the old west.\nGunsiinger V. r n a Krislensen\ndropped into town, a real lough\nlone homhre. pilled against five\nadult dancers Hed and while\ncostumes added to lhe effective-\nadjourned at midnight\nApproved a $13,000 renovation\nof Gyro Park Pool with a maximum depth of three feet at one\npoint, despite pressure from the\nNelson Gyro Club to build a\nmore costly training pool.\n...\nI\/earned Transco Construction\nCo.'s high rise apartment building has received required endor-\nsation of its neighbors\nDecided to view the \"Gordon\nHead Dip\" this morning. City\ncrews began filling in the dip\nin preparation for creating\nbetter gradual grade for paving\nbut  complaints  from   residents\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT \u2014 Shows 7:00 - 8:27\n\"THE   RIGHT \"SECRET OF THE\nAPPROACH\" PURPLE   REEF\"\nThere comes a time\nin every father's life.,\nwhen his baby\nbecomes\na~babe?..\nt     __>\nJajvies\nDEE\njaKE .\nShESMlNE\nDriver Hurt in Crash\nReported Improving\nA Trail driver, whose sedan I\nleft the road near Porto Rico\nearly Saturday morning, was reported to be in good condition\n\\', i_ow\n..A-ow.   t.Roeear :rwi_w_ :. .joun\ncolor\nness of this number. Chorus girls\nwere Holly Hinilt, Phyllis Morton, Hilda Ahfaller ami Cheri\nWall in.\nA beautiful performance of an\nauthentic Hawaiian hula dance\nwas lhat by 10-year-old JoAnne\nHughes.\nJoyce Cordon directed a ballet\ndemonstration of the work of the\nschool's ballet department in a\ndance featuring Sheila Morey,\nDebby Wakeham and Gloria Rivers.\nA jazz blues number, \"77 Sunset Strip.\" was staged by Krna\nKristensen and Hilda Abfalter in\nprovocative costumes. They\nwore bowler hats, red and white\nstriped vests, tight slit skirts\nand black mesh stockings.\nBlue lighting set the mood for\na beautifully done classical ballet\nnumber, \"Mognlight,\" by Mrs.\nGordon.\nAn   exceptional   twirling   act\nwas presented by Holly Hinitt in\nthe theme, \"I-ida Rose.\"\nOFF TO SPACE\nA trip into space was next as\nthe senior girls performed in a\nmodern interpretive ballet,\n\"Space.\" The sun was played by\nSheila Morey, comet by Beverley McNeill, earth by Michelle\nGrant, moon by Sandra Hughes\nand star by Sheila McLean. They\nwork striking black costumes unrelieved except by large sequin-\nned chiffon scarves and sequin-\nned black masks.\nThree charming little girls,\nMary Laurino, Wendy Sawyer\nand Vita Laurino, did a catchy\nlittle number, \"Alley Cat.\"\n\"Dark Horizon,\" took the audience into primitive Africa to the.\nsound of fearful drums. The girls the bodies of five persons\nwere in black, wearing huge, Three of the victims were the\nhideous masks and carrying vi-1 man's children, the fourth was\ncious looking spears. While the a stepdaughter   and   the   fifth\nfor an inspection.\n\u2022   *\nThe Lions Club donated $1500\ntowards construction of a wading pool at Uphill Park and in\nturn council bestowed the name\nLions Park\"\narea.\non the recreation\nThe Civic Employees Union\nhas vetoed the two-week shutdown holiday scheme and council will re-open negotiation on\nit and holidays.\n*   *   \u2022\nThe city is prepared to pay\n$40,000 for 18 acres of laajtjfce-\nlonging to Victor and William\nHampshire  in  upper Fairview.\nNo injuries were incurred\nwhen a one-ton truck collided\nwith the rear of a Department of\nHighways   sweeper   about   one\nand improving in Kootenay Lake' mile east of Nelson Friday,\nGeneral Hospital Monday.\nLory DeBiasio's vehicle apparently went out of control and\nleft the road, shearing off a\npower pole and rolling several\ntimes down into the bush.\nA passenger, Dale Sanft of\nTral, was taken to hospital and\nreleased.\nDust from the highway sweeper is believed to have obscured\nthe vision of truck driver George\nWilliams of Nelson. Driver of the\nsweeper was Peter Boldt.\nBoise Man\nHunted In\nDeath of 5\nBOISE. Idaho (API - Police\nhunted for a 54-year-old Boise\nman  Monday after discovering\nTreaty's Orderly Development\nWon Support of Cominco\ngirls were still on the stage. Mrs.\nGordon danced \"Quiet Village,\"\nas a jungle maiden.\nThe finale. \"Follies 64\" was a\nsparkling act featuring beautiful\ncostumes of pink and silver and\ngorgeous headdresses worn by\nvivacious chorines of the Zieg-\n(ield era.\nShowcase '64\nNELSON  DANCE THEATRE\nDirected by Doris Merriman\nTONIGHT-8:15 p.m.\nat the (Entrium\nAdvance Tickets at the Loom and Needle\nNewspaper\nAdvertising\nPays Over and Over\nAUTO - VUE\nDRIVE-IN - Trail. B.C.\nLast Time Tonight\n\"RIDE THE HIGH COUNTRY\"\nRandolph Scott\nClay-Llston Fight \u2014 8:25 p.m.\nShow Time, Approx. 8:25 pm\nSiahliqhL\nDRIVE-IN\nTonight and Wednesday\n\"THE NUTTY PROFESSOR\"\ni Color*\nJerry Lewis, Stella Stevens,\nDell Moore\nShow Time 8.30 p.m.\nT. ledingham\nDies af Coast\nA former longtime resident of\nNelson, Thomas W. Ledingham\ndied in Victoria May 8.\nMr. Ledingham had resided In\nVictoria for the past 15 years\nand spent 10 years in Vancouver,\nwhere he moved from Nelson.\nHe came to Nelson in 1913 to\nstart a bakery business and was\nactive in this work until 1937,\nwhen he moved to the Coast.\nAn ardent Nelson Curling Club\nmember, he was one of the originators of the Vancouver Curling\nClub, and at Victoria was an honorary member of tbe Victoria\nCurling Club.\nBesides his wife. Jessie, he is\nsurvived by a cousin. Elsi\u00a7 Birss\nof Victoria. Funeral service today will be followed by private\ncremation.\nCASTLE Theatre\nCastlegar, B.C.\nLast Times Tonight\n\"ABSENT-MINDED\nPROFESSOR\"\nFred MneMurray, Nanry Olson\nShows at 7:00 and fl.00 p m\nLast Times Tonight\n\"DRYI.ANDERS\"\nJames Douglas\n2nd Feature:\n\"THE  IRON MAIDEN\"\nDoors Open 7 p.m.     Show 7:30\nM._=M__K\nTrail\nPhone 364-2111\n\\V%. Store\nSjourFurs\nwm\nModern, scientific methods |\nba-ed on 293 fairs experience processing and caring J\n(or furs.\nYour Doctor's\nPrescriptions\nFilled\nPromptly\nWhile' You Wait\nor by Delirery.\nSAMPLE'S\nNELSON\nPHARMACY   LTD.\n\"Your Fortress of Health\"\n63* Baker 81. Nelson\nPhono S52_23U\nCity To Host\n150 Florists\nOver 130 florist1, from the\nUnited States and Canada will\ndescend upon Nelson this week\nend for the Florist Telegraph De\nlivery Association's 12th annual\nconvention.\nFlorists who will he coming\nmainly from the Pacific Northwest but also Texas and Detroit\nwill spend the better part of Saturday, Sunday and Monday in\neducation seminars.\nA tour of the Nelson district\nhas been arranged for the vis\nitors in their spare hours.\nwas tentatively identified as his\nformer wife.\nOfficers said Edna Reasons,:\nthe estranged wife of missing\nRaymond A. Reasons, told them\nhe called her and said he had\nkilled the children. Their bodies\nwere found, together wilh that\nof the stepdaughter, in Reasons'\nhouse Sunday.\nSeveral hours later, tbe body\nof a woman police tentatively\nidentified as Estelle Reasons,\nabout 45, was pulled from a car\nsubmerged in a canal. Police\nsaid she was a former wife of\nReasons.\nHer body was wrapped in a\nblankcl\u2014as were the bodies Of\nthe other four victims. Sheriff\nGilbert said she had been shot\nin the chest. A rifle was found\nin the car.\nThe car was the same one\nthat Patrolman Rex Mehl said\nhe tried to stop when the driver,\na man, acted suspiciously. Mehl\nsaid he chased the car until it\nplunged into the canal.\nMehl said the driver, carrying what appeared to be a rifle,\njumped from the car into the\ncanal and disappeared.\nPolice said they helieved the\nman in the car was Reasons.\nAt the Reasons home, a note\nfound near one of the four bodies read: \"I've hurt them\nlong enough.\" It was signed\n\"Daddy,\"\nNeighbors identified the children as Eddie Ray Reasons,\nabout 14, Pamela, about 13, and\nPatty, about 12. The young\nwoman with them was identified as Reasons' stepdaughter,\nSally Gohman, about 20.\nCoroner E. D, Paris said Miss\nGohman had apparently been\nbeaten to death with blows on\nthe head. Her body was found\nin an upstairs bedroom.\nParis said the two girls had\nbeen strangled, apparently with\nwire, and the boy had been\nshot. Bodies of two of the children were on mattresses on the\nfloor of the living room and the\nthird child was in a bed\nstairs.\nConference\nIn Nelson Today\nNelson is host today to the\nB.C. Hospitality Conference, a\none-day meeting.\nSpeakers will be R. L. Colby,\ndirector of lhe B. C. Government\nTravel Bureau; Karl Severson,\ntourist service consultant, technical branch of the department\nof education: Roy Corbett. managing director. B.C. Hotels Association; Phil Edgecumbe, executive secretary, B.C. region,\nCanadian Restaurant Association; Fred Martin, president, B.\nC. Motels and Resort Association\nand John Buckley, travel representative, B.C. Government Travel Bureau.\nThe bureau representatives\nwill report on recent surveys and\nfuture plans, the department of\neducation on adult education, on-\nthe-job training and there will be\na discussion on local conditions.\nRailwaymen\nEnd Walkout\nCHICAGO (AP) - A shaky\npeace was restored to the U.S.\nrailroads Sunday as the sixth\nwalkout by railway workers\nsince Thursday came to an\nend.\nA federal court injunction obtained Sunday in Chicago halted\na work stoppage on the Pennsylvania Railroad.\nThe stoppage, called a wildcat strike by management, began Saturday night when 40\nmen reported sick. About 120\nmore called in sick Sunday.\nThe Pennsylvania walkout followed a seven-hour strike by\nfiremen against the New York\nCentral in Mattoon, 111. The men\nreturned to work following telegrams from union officials advising them that their walkout\nwas unauthorized.\nFour other brief strikes\nThursday\u2014the day the railways\nput into effect an arbitration\nruling eliminating hundreds ol\nfiremen's jobs \u2014 followed the\nsame pattern.\nThe strikes were flarcups Ln\nthe five-year dispute between\nthe rail lines and the operating\nunions about work rules and\nup-1 what management calls \"feath-\nerbedding.\"\nMissing UBC Students\nFound bv RCAF 'Cooter\nVANCOUVER (CP>\nThree\nCHOQUETTE\nFUELS\nPH. 352-7535\nThe Finest Stoker Cools\nORDER  NOW!\nOnr Specialty \u2014\nSTOKER MIXES\nUniversity of British Columbia\nstudents munched raisins at\nRCAF Btatlon Sea Island Monday and said they had done a\n\"foolish thing\" In getting lost In\nGaribaldi Park, 40 miles north\nof Vancouver.\nCheryl Fuller, 19, John A.\nJessup, 20, and Harold Mlsehke,\n23, all of the Vancouver area,\nNow Many Wear\nFALSE TEETH\nWith More Comfort\nfastebth, % pleasant alkaline\n(non-ecldl powder, holds ftlM teeth\nmore nrmly.To est _nd talk tn mora\ncomfort, Juet rprlnkle a little FAS-\nTEETH on your plataa. No gummy,\ngooey, paaty taata or feallng. Checks\nOpiate odor\" (denture breath). Oat\n_0_8TEETH  at any drug  counter.\nwere located and rescued by an\nRCAF helicopter earlier Monday.\nThe 'copter, following ski\ntracks, located Ihe skiers at a\nsignal fire In the dilution Creek\narea south of Garibaldi  Lake.\nThey were cold, wet and hungry but otherwise unharmed\nfrom four days on the blizztird-\nswept mountain plateau.\n\"All w. had was fruit _alt_,\nwafer aftd One aspirin,\" Jessup\nsaid.\nAll three ware equipped with\nsleeping bags, but little else, he\nsaid.\n\"Wa slept under some trees\nand stars and It waa quite romantic,\" he aaid.\n\"After doing a fool thing like\nthis I wouldn't really say we\nwere experienced outdoors\nmen.\"\nThe waather ranged from\npelting snow to chilling rain and\nthe air search for them waa curtailed Sunday.\nMy advice to those going into\nGaribaldi is either go with an\nexperienced guide or walk .n\nwell-marked trails,\" said Jet\nsup, a veteran of crosa-country\nskiing events.\nRescue officials said th. students were only \\ few mil*,\nfront the safety of i road and\nwere following a Creak tfiit\ncros'sM ft.' \"\nThe trio left here 4*.ly Wure-\nday on a._ oh.ss-cou_.try tour.\nThey were reported missing late\nSaturday (CCT) when they tolled to rendeivbua -with the other\nmembers of the expedition at a\nlakeside cabin\nThey built lean-to'a out at\nskiis and lit a fire to dry their\nbelongings.\nCominco's support of ratification of the Columbia River\nTrealy presented by West Kootenay Power and Light Company\nrepresentatives lo lhe External\nAffairs Committee at Ottawa\nwas because, \"It provides for\nthe orderly development of the\nCanadian part of the basin.\"\nBecause of ils interest, fuller\ndetails of the brief, presented by\nFt. G. Anderson, power company\npresident, are presented by tha\nDaily News, as follows:\nOn Tuesday, April 28. Mr. Anderson appeared, along with W.\nW, Wadeson, Cominco hydrolo-\ngist, bofore Ihe External Affairs\nCommittee in Ottawa and presented a submission on behalf of\nCominco in support of Ihe Columbia River hydro development\naccording to the terms of the\ntreaty and protocol.\nThe brief stresses the Impor\ntance of large quantities of low\ncost power to Cominco and also\nto the economy of the Kootenays\nlt gives details of Cominco's in\ndustrial plants and their 1963\nproduction.\n\"Because a major part of Cominco's production is sold in the\nexport market and must compete\nwith world prices.\" the brief\nsays, \"costs of production are of\nvital importance, and the avni\nability and use of low cost power\nis a major element of these\ncosts.\"\nTlie submission describes the\nnower system of Cominco on the\nKootenay and Pend d'Oreille\nRivers, and the loads and re\nsources of its generating sta\ntions. With regard to the treaty\nthe brief says:\n\"Cominco supports the Columbia River Treaty as clarified by\nthe protocol, because it provides\nfor the orderly development of\nIhe Canadian part of the basin\nby arranging for the control of\nCanadian rivers and leaving\nthem in their natural channels\nto increase the potential power\nproduction at sites close lo present load centres. As a general\nprinciple. Cominco opposes the\ndiversion of the Kootenay River\ninto the Columbia since it would\nalienate present or potential\nnower resources frorn an area\nihat is already highly developed\nindustrially to a location that is\npresently remote from any major load centre.\"\nThe Cominco submission reviews the effect of the High\nArrow, Mica Creek and Duncan\nLake projects on the Cominco\nsystem and notes that, of these\nprojects, the Duncan Lake dam\nwill have major beneficial effects. The main stress of the\nbrief is in favor of the Libby\nproject and Its potential benefits\nto the Kootenays In general and\nthe Cominco system in particular. The submission says:\n\"The Libby reservoir will have\na major impact on the reach Of\nKootenay River downstream\nfrom Nelson. Nol only would\nthere be a substantial improvement in the firm energy capability of the present Kootenay\nRiver plants, hut the stream-\nflows would be improved to the\nextent that further development\nof the river would be practicable.\nWith the Canal plant, described in the International Columbia\nRiver Engineering Board report,\nand the fifth unit at Brilliant, thc\neffect of Libby plus Duncan\nwould be to increase the firm\nenergy capability of the Kootenay River helow Nelson, B.C.,\nby 268,000 kw calculated through\nthe 42-month critical period for\nrecorded flows similar to the\nperiod September, 1928, to February, 1932. For this critical period\nthe benefit credited to Duncan\nwould be 58,000 kw and the benefit from Libby therefore would\nbe 210.000 kw.\n\"This increase in power potential resulting from Ihe Libby project is of the utmost importance\nto Cominco for Its luture Industrial expansion and for the economy of southeastern B.C.\n\"The project iB well situated\nfor ils flood control function since\nit is cloie to the Bonners Ferry\nand Creston reclaimed lands and\nit will benefit the population cen\nIres on the shores of Kootenay\nLake and on the Columbia River\ndown to Trail.\n\"Cominco is satisfied lhat the\norojects which would come Into\nbeing on implementation of the\ntreaty would form the nucleus\nof a comprehensive development\nwhich would provide adequate\ncontrol of the Columbia ft|ver\nsystem without requiring the diversion of Kootenay River away\nfrom existing power Installations\nand existing Industrial developments, which are substantial.\n\"These projects would materially increase the power potential\nof the. Kootenay River downstream from Nelson and thus not\nonly provide for expansion of industry, but also secure the commercial and domestic power requirements of the growing popn-\nlation of southeastern British Columbia.\n\"The control which the treaty\nprojects would provide, much of\nwhich would be effective within\na mailer of five years, would\nserve to eliminate the threat 61\nmajor floods, such as occurred\nIn 1894 and 1948. This is of the\nutmost importance to a population residing largely in the river\nvalleys of a mountainous country.\n\"The advantages of the treaty\nprojects would not be confined\nto the people and the industry of\nsoutheastern   British   Columbia,\nbut would have immri]l)[\nlong-range   _.!\u201e.[\u201e.,.,   ,\u00ab\u2022\nboth direct and m,rn<!rt 'H\neconomic  well hemp, n{\nColumbia and Canada\n\"The treaty and the\nwhich  have her\n\u2022 \"II t_|\n.ratted\nt,   i-        . .resented n\nParliament represent ihe r\nof years of study and n\nrem\nand In our opinion, crartij?\nsettlement which would h< A\nvantageous and lair in both c\u00bb\nada and the United Stales\n\"It is respectfully auhmitu\nthat the trealy should b( 3\ntied,\" \"\u25a0\nB.C. Insured  Economica\nBy Giant Power Projects\nVANCOUVER ICP) - Former postmaster general William\nHamilton believes that some\ntime within the next 12 months\nBrilish Columbia will be \"off\nand   flying\"  economically.\nMr. Hamilton, now in private\nbusiness as president of Canadian Park and Tilford, Ltd., told\na service club meeting Monday\nthat already pulp and paper expansion is beginning to affect a\nwide range of secondary and\nsupporting businesses in the\nprovince.\nBut most important perhaps\nwere the giant Peace and Columbia river power projects,\neach of which would require an\ninvestment of about a billion\ndollars in tlie next 10 years, the\nequivalent of adding a new to\nper cent markup on the province's capital   investment   pro-\nJunior Colleges Should\nOffer Teachers Course\nVANCOUVER (CP) - W. J..is a fine example   of   teacher\nPeck, newly-elected chairman of I training in such an institution.\"\nIs nn question thai\nduct.   \"There\nboth these projects are S0JJ\nand will be needed in ihe {,\nture,\" Mr. Hamilton said \u25a0\nthey are completed, how,\nmassive capital investment 4\nthis kind is likely to taper n_'\nHe said plans should be raj\nnow to attract new industry\nthe province so as to step inn\nthe breach afler the hyilrrxlu\ntrie boom is completed\nHe said the $2.onono_ anmj\nbudget of Hie provincial i\u00ab.J\u00bb\ntrial development should\ndoubled, a provincial econorn\ncouncil should he lormed and a\nannual provincial economic cot\nference should he held\nthe Weslern School Trustees Association, said Monday any new\njunior colleges In the province\nshould offer a course in teacher\ntraining, despite any opposition\nwhich might emanate from the\nCollege of Education at the University ol B.C.\nThe Cowichan Bay first vice-\npresident of the B.C. School\nTrustees Association, who was\nnamed chairman of the Western\nbody at its recent Lethbridge\nconventd6n, said in an interview:\n\"Our educators of teachers\nhave already dug In their heels\nlo prevent any teacher training\noutside the UBC faculty in Junior colleges.\n\"Bul Alberta allows il and the\nLethbridge  Junior  College . . .\nThe Lethbridge college also\noffered second year medicine\nand dentistry as well as general\nsecond year arts.\nMr. Peck said the B.C. dele\ngation to the conference was impressed \"by the way Lethbridge\ncollege has combined the concepts of academic and vocational education in thc same building .. . It is like an extension\nof a composite high school with\nuniversity and technical courses .\nHe said the Saskatchewan delegation said they were raising\nschool salary scales in that province to hold teachers, many of\nwhom were leaving for better-\npaying jobs in B.C.\nThe 1864 Western regional conference will be held in Vancouver.\nfrke:\n5 New Shortle Rollm\n6 New S.ylins Tricks\nFree With the Purchase.\n\"ADORN\nSelf-Styling Hair Spray\nOnly $1.89\nAl\nMayo Pharmacy\nLtd.\nComer Baker and Ward Sta\nPh. 352-2613 Nelson. B.C\nCoast Plumbers\nContinue Strike\nVANCOUVER (CP) - No new\ndevelopments were reported\nMonday by labor officials who\nmet to find a solution to the\nstrike of 81 plumbers against\nBurrard Dry Dock Limited.\nThe officials said the talks will\nresume Friday when a new plan\nto end the strike may be put forward by the union.\nAt Monday's meeting were\nRuss St. Eloi, business agent for\nthe plumbers; secretary Paddy\nNeale of lhe Vancouver Labor\nIf You'reTIRED\nALL THE Till\nNow ind then (wybodj fib I\n\"tired-out\" leelinj, and mij U\nbothered bv barkirhet. PerKifin\ning leriouily wrong, juit i ItnpmT\ncondition caused by urinary irrilit\u00bbH\nbladder diicomlort. That'i ih* troll\ntako Dodd'i Kidney Pill.. Dodf I h*\nstimulate the kidneyi to re!i\u00abt lb\ncondition which nuy often time Wr\niche and tired feeling. Then j\u00ab W\nbetter, rest better, work better. U\nDodd'i Kidney Pill* now, Look I* ill\nblue boi with the red hind it ill **\ncounteri. You can depend on Dom Ml\nCivic Centre\nStaff Honors\nMr., Mrs.  Boates\nThe Nelson Civic Centre staff\ngathered on Friday evening to\nhonor Mr. and Mrs. F. M.\nBoates, who are leaving to reside in North Vancouver.\nCouncil; secretary Pat O'Neal of\nthe B.C. Federation of Labor,\nand Tom Gooderham, regional\ndirector of the Canadian Labor\nCongress.\nTwo weeks ago, 10 other unions at the yard accepted a 40-\ncent-an-hour raise to end a 12-\nweek strike. The 550 workers, excluding electricians, were making $2.70.\nThe plumbers refused to go\nback to work demanding ap ex-1\ntra 10 cenls an hour to give them\nwages equal to the electricians.\nThe company has announced it\nwill have to start laying off other\nworkers this week because full\noperation of the yard was not\npossible without the plumbers.\nWorld   demand   for   British\nwool  textiles grew by 10 per\ncent   in   1963   to   \u00a3165,000,000,\nwith sales to Canada accounting\nA. E, Blackwell, who was with for about \u00a316,000,000.\nthe.Civic Centre when it first\t\nopened,  presented  Mr.  Boatea!\nAnnounce New\nHealing Subslanefl\nShrinks Piles\nEieluirr _ helling lubilmrf f_\u00b0*\u00ab ''\u25a0\"\nhemorrhoid, end repiir du_ir\u00ablo>\nA renowned research institute jj\nfound a unique healing mbHW\nwith the ability l\" shrink Wj\nrhoids painlessly. Il relievesitd_\nand discomfort in minuta I\nspeeds up healinR ol the innB.\ninflamed tissue. t\nIn case after case, while \u00ab*\nreltpving pain. :iclu:il redurtm\n(shrinkage) took place.\nMoat important nl all-rw*\nwereso thorouch lb:it tln'irnpre*\nment was maintained nvera\nof many months.\nThis waa accomplish\"1 \u00ab\u2122j\nnew healing substance l^m\nwhich quickly helps bra! if\"\ncells and stimulates growth ol \u25a0\u2022\ntissue. M\nNow Bio-Dvne is offered r_\u00ab\nment and suppository form *j\nPreparation H. Ask [r,r it atillfW\nstores\u2014money bark gu_r_n\u00bb\nwith a gift on behalf of the staff.\nVANCOUVER (CP) - An exhausted and cold swimmer who\nsaid he waa swimming three\nmiles across English Bay to\nlose weight, almost lost his life\nSunday. The unidentified man\nwaa dragged from the water by\ncrew member! of a patting tug.\nHe had covered about half the\ndistance.\nCall Ui Titty\nfar\nSummer.\nCoal  Discounts\nPhone 352 5373\nQUEEN CITY\nFUEL\n524 Aallway St.'  Nelson, B.C.\nWANTED\nUSED\nOUTBOARDS\nTrade U.\" to 6\n1*64 JOHNSON\nOn Display at\nCOLEMAN\nELECTRIC\n** With a\ntermpian loan\nI put less money\ninto financing\nand more into\nthe ear\"\ntirtt\u00ab- btjor, y_\u00ab iho\/, triuni- arrange with RO'1 B*1*\nfinance In advance with a loW-cost ttrnpan loan. It p\"1'Z.\nIn power, biiiaWng power in your pocket. (With to *''\nyou save, get that dptional equipment you wanted') Fas \u00bb\noften within 24 hour*. For toy big purchase, tor'\"\" '\"'\"\nbu.ine.slikeway...\nfinance In advance at\nROYAL BANK\n\u25a0.^iim^\n___\n\u25a0  \\i.    \u2022\u25a0\u25a0            ,    ,\u25a0\u25a0 '\u25a0'-,!. \u2022' -.\u25a0\u25a0-,- \u25a0\u25a0\n--\u25a0 '  - '  \u2014 _- 1_ _i^___,\u201e._^\n Stock Quotations\nnail.  News does not bold Itsell responsible to the event\nof an error In the following lists.\nClosing   prices   supplied   by   Doherly,   l-oadhous.   t\\\nBros.. Trail.  B.C.\nJlri'uaig\nTORONTO STOCKS\nn-STKlAI.-S\nibi\n,.l\u00bbs Corp.\nprta \"\nerla\noin.i Sleel\n15.62\n19.75\n3.95\nDisl. VT 3.95\nnudum\n9.75\nlink 34.75\n32.50\n15.112\n12.37\n65.00\n71.25\n;.. c cm\n,k ol Mont\nlk 0[ N\u201eS'      \u2022\u201e,,-,\nhhurst Power 20.1>2\n53.75\n33.00\n30.00\n18 12\n60.50\n22.00\n25.50\n45.75\n13.00\n34.00\n11.87\n14.00\n19.50\nI Telephone\nOil\nForest\nPackers A\nTelephone\ngar. Power\n& Dom. S\nCement\nCollieries\nIron\nHreweries\ni fanners\nIndustries\nIn,,, Hunk 65.00\nI pacific Illy. 44.00\n\u201e,..!! 14-12\nCellulose\n< M. k S.\n, Paper\ns (las\n.llirook   Tim.\n12.37\n35.37\n41.50\n11.37\n2.60\nSoaftrams   59.00\nu S|\u201ercs        20.25\nBridge       21.12\n' T-r 4 C. 21.37\nFoundries 22.12\n\u201e' Textiles 25.00\n|y Match Co. 45.00\nlv Paper 19 50\nronbridRo       72.50\n,lls Players 19.75\nmv Farmer 43.00\nd'Morlo To. 59.25\nd ot Canada 187.00\nI Sleel Wares 13.75\n.\u25a0hound Line 13.50\nlakes Power 22.62\nP Oil A 19.90\ne Oil R        19.00\nton Bay Co.   16.12\n.rial Oil\n, Tobacco\nAcceptance 22.87\nMinerals       8.75\n,nd Nat   ('.as 7.00\nMinerals   81.00\nI'lilitios      24.00\nNickel\n\u25a0rprov. Pipe\n\u2022rprov  Steel\nuentide\nilaw B\nssev Ferg.\nr.M! Powell R. 30.25\nIson Brew. A 30.75\n50.12\n13.25\n85.00\n85.00\n3.05\n14.00\n7.75\n23.62\nnl l\/icci.\nore Corp.\n\u25a0anda\nlue Flour\n\u25a0ilic Pete\nge Horsey\n.er Corp.\nNat. Gas\nI Bank\nhmans\nada Foods\nII Oil\ner Sleel\nipsons\n[ham\n:l ol Canada 25.87\nders Fin. A 11.62\naco 59.62\nns Mln. Pipe 18.25\nns. Can Pipe 39.00\nion (ias nl C. 21.25\nIker-Cood. 34.25\nitcnasl Tarns 18.25\n\u25a0Ion (loo. A. 17.25\nodwards A 24.75\nlllll Fleet 4.40\nNHS AND OILS\n12.62\n54.62\n49.50\n14.50\n1337\n29.75\n12.87\n7.50\n75.62\n12.25\n11.50\n1737\n16.37\n44.75\n28.25\nlocate\nnico\nnnr\nmat\ntoman Ray\nttilehcni Cop.\nns\n_lorne\ninswick\nHalo Ank\n-amet\n6.50\n.49\n3.60\n.62\n.08''\n6.15\n.23\n4.05\n9.70\n1.90\n.11\nIgary and F.d. 23.50\nmpbell Chil)\nDelhi\nmpbell It L.\nriboo Cold\nssiar Ash\nltral Del Rio\nUral Patricia\narter Oil\nimo\nch Will\nin Lake\nas. Halliwell\nas Mogul\nas Rambler\nnwest\nPPor Corp.\nwhan Cop.\naiemont\nnison\nrkenson\nst Mal.irlic\n\" Sullivan\nrgo\nibex\nCO\na\u00bbl Mascot\nant Vel.\nanduc\nlunar Mines\n.hland Rell\n'linger\nj\u00bbn Ray Mr. 69.12\nfm Ray Oil 18 25\nora E]\n\u00bb Bay\n4.20\n7.65\n14.50\n.65\n10.87\n8.00\n1.52\n2.01\n.75\n3.75\n.23\n.22\n4.25\n1.36\n6.00\n.31\n.51\n18.00\n12.87\n4.90\n1.50\n2.85\n3.00\n1.19\n35.25\n.89\n11.25\n6.10\n7.00\n3.75\n29.37\nfr Addison\nnrador\nkt Dulaiilt\n\u25a0Ich\ntie\nrado\nidxen\nLong Lai\n.29\n.87\n3.35\n7.60\n35.00\n1.35\n2.41\n1.50\n1.73\n2.24\n.67\nilartic\niritime MnR.     '\u201e\u201e\nIf Mm Lake 15.00\nintyre\nKenzip\naeon\n'ional Pel,,\n\u00bbConl OH,\n\u00bb Hosco\nrle\u00bb\nIrmeial\n*gate\n'miska\nthan\n57.25\n.21\n.39\n3.30\n.45\n2.17\n.2514\n3.65\n5.25\n9.35\n5.65\n15.75\n20.00\n4.00\n69.25\n34.87\n32.62\n16.00\n12.50\n65.37\n71.75\n20.75\n53.87\n33.12\n30.37\n19.25\n60.75\n22.37\n26.00\n46.00\n13.12\n34.37\n10.00\n14.25\n19.75\n65.25\n44.37\n14.37\n12.62\n35.75\n51.75\n11.50\n2.75\n59.25\n20.50\n21.25\n21.50\n22.25\n25.25\n46.00\n20.00\n74.00\n20,00\n44.00\n59.75\n192.00\n14.12\n13.87\n23.00\n19.12\n19.37\n16.37\n50.50\n13.37\n23.12\n8.87\n7.25\n81.50\n24.12\n85.37\n85.50\n3.20\n14.25\n7.87\n23.75\n30.50\n30,87\n12.75\n55.00\n49.75\n14.75\n13.62\n30.00\n13.00\n7.87\n75.75\n12.37\n11.75\n17.50\n16.75\n45.00\n29.00\n26.00\n11.75\n60.00\n18.50\n39.12\n21.50\n34.50\n18.37\n17.37\n24 87\n4.50\n6.60\n.51\n3.70\n.64\ni       .09\n6.30\n.24\n4.10\n9.80\n1.95\n.12\n23.75\n4.25\n7.70\n14.75\n.68\n11.00\n8.10\n1.59\n2.04\n.76\n3.80\n.24\n.23\n4.40\n1.37\n6.05\n.32\n.52\n18.12\n13.00\n4.95\n1.70\n2.90\n3.05\n1.20\n36.00\n.90\n11.37\n6.15\n7.10\n3.90\n29.75\n69.62\n18.50\n.30\n.88\n3.45\n7.65\n35.87\n9.40\n2.45\n1.53\n1.75\n2.25\n.70\n.89\n15.12\n58.25\n.21V4\n.40\n3.40\n.46\n2.19\n.26\n3.75\n5.30\n9.40\n5.70\nPetrol 0 4 G\nPeerless\nPickle Crow\nPine Point\nPlace Gas\nPlacer\nPatino\nPreston\nProvo\nQuebec Lithium\nQuemont\nRadiore\nRayrock\nReeves Mac\nRio Algoni\nSan Antonio\nSand River\nSheep Creek\nSherritt Gordon\nSilver Standard\nSiscoe\nSteep Rock\nSullivan Con.\nTeck Corp.\nTemagami\nTorbrit\nTriad Oil\nTribag\nUnion Oil\nUnited Keno\nUnited Oil\nUpper Canada\nViolamac\nWestern iMnes\nWright Harg.\nWilroy\n.66\n.16'.\n.50\n24.00\n.49\n35.25\n7.70\n6.75\nI ill\n1.96\n10.25\n.47\n.92\n3.10\n11.37\n.32'.\n.05..\n1.15\n3.65\n.58\n1.75\n4.90\n2.00\n5.00\n.80\n.59\n206\n1.33\n15.62\n7.45\n2.35\n1.32\n3 25\n6.25\n.67\n1.58\n.70\n.17\n.52\n24.25\n.49 vk\n35.50\n7.75\n6.85\n1.85\n1.99\n10.37\n.47'4\n.94\n3.25\n11.50\n.33'_\n.06\n1.25\n3.70\n.59\n1.78\n4.95\n265\n5.05\n.85\n.60\n2.09\n1.35\n1575\n7.75\n2.36\n1.34\n3.30\n6.35\n.70\n1.60\nBlossom Festival Week\nComes to Creston Valley\nVancouver\nStocks\nINDUSTRIALS\nBurrard Mort.\nGrowers A\nGrowers B\nSun Pub. A\nSun Pub. B\nInt. Brew. R\n5.00\n5.37\n5.37\n17.75\n20.00\n7.50\nMINES AND OILS\nBlue Star\nCanam Cop.\nButtle Lake\nCrown Silver\nDolly Varden\nF.ndako\nHuestis\nJericho\nKoot. B.M.\nMagnum Copper\nMt.  Washington\nNew  Ainsworth\nOttawa Silver\nN.W. Ventures\nPeace River Pete\nPend Oreille\nSilver Ridge\nSkeena Silver\nTrojan\nTorwest\nWestern Kxpl.\nWingdam\nUtica Mines\nFUNDS\nAll Can. Com. '\nAll Can. Div.\nAmer. Growth\nCan. Inv. Fund\nCommon. Inl.\nDiv. Inc. B\nFirst Oil & Gas\n.15\n.12\n.64\n.08\n1.08\n8.05\n.36\n.56\n.16\n.35\n.65\nMVi\n.22\n25'_\n40\n4.00\n.01 \"z\n.12\n.16\n.25\n.16\n.32\n.36\n5.84\n7.96\n10.32\n3.91\n10.20\n5.49\n5.09\nInvestors Growth 8.05\nInv. Mutual\nleverage\nMutual Accum.\nMutual Bond\nMutual Inc.\nTrans Canada C\nGrouped  Income\nUnited Ace.\n14.113\n8.81\n4.55\n7.83\n6.14\n7.62\n4.14\n7.60\n5.50\n5.50\n18.25\n8.00\n.18\n.12'.\n.65\n.09\n1.10\n8.10\n.38\n.57\n.20\n.36\n.70\n.104\n.23\n.26\n.41\n4.25\n.09\n.18\n.25'2\n.18\n.33\n.37\n6.40\n8 72\n11.28\n4.29\n11.18\n6.00\n5.56\n8.75\n15.25\n9.65\n4.97\n8.20\n6.71\n8.37\n4 52\n8.31\nB.C. Highlights\nINVESTIGATF. DEATH\nVANCOUVER (CPI - City\ndetectives were investigating\nthe death of William Alexander\nSpence, 53. whose body was\nfound under tbe sink at his\napartment here. The bartender\nhad a black eye and face cut\nwhen found dead by police.\nCADETS PARADE\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Some\n3,000 army, navy and air force\ncadets took part in the largest\nmilitary church parade seen\nhere in some years. Northern\nAffairs Minister Laing reviewed\nthc parade at Stanley Park. The\ncadets were from Vancouver\nIsland and the Vancouver area.\nGIRL IDENTIFIED\nNEW WESTMINSTER (CPI-\nAn 18-year-old girl who died\nshortly after being struck by a\ncar near her home was identified by police Sunday as Penny\nBlack. She was dead on arrival\nat hospital.\nDRIVER KILLED\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Wallace\nWillis, 36, was killed Sunday in\nthe head-on crash of two cars\nin suburban Burnaby. A passenger in the car driven by Willis,\nand two occupants ol the second\ncar suffered minor injuries.\nPopoff Rites\nHeld at Krestova\nFuneral rites were held Sunday at Krestova for William S.\nPopoff of Crescent Valley, who\ndied at his Goose Creek home\nFriday at the age of 89 years.\nMr. Popoft came to Canada\nfrom Russia with the Doukhobor\nmigration in 1898 and settled in\nPelly, Sask. He was born in\nKawkas in 1875. He came to B.C.\nin 1930 and has resided here\nsince.\nHe is survived by his wife,\nMary, of Crescent Valley; two\nsons, Mike and Alec, and one\ndaughter, Molly Boulin, all of\nCrescent Valley; also 13 grandchildren and 19 great grandchildren. He was predeceased by his\nson, William, of Grand Forks,\nin 1955.\nCRESTON \u2014 Blossoms are bursting out all over,\nand this is the week Creston celebrates the event with\nfive days of entertainment ior young and old, city\nslickers and country dwellers, sportsmen and dancers.\nFollowing is Ihe program for this year, with the\nexception of the Saturday program, which appears on\npage 5 oi Ihe Blossom Festival supplement inside this\nedition of Ihe Daily News.\nThursday\n1:00\n6:00\np.m.\n-Ballet Recital, 60 pupils of Marge Bishop\nDance Studio will present program in\nIhe PCSS Auditorium.\nFriday\np.m.-\n-Blossom Mixed Bonspiel. First draw al\n6:00 p.m.\nGayland Shows and Midway will operate throughout the Festival.\n8:15 p.m.\u2014Queen Show. Seven candidates will\ncompete for Miss Creslon Valley title.\nWinner lo enter PNE contest. PCSS auditorium. Arranged by the Creston Lions\nClub.\n10:00 p.m.\u2014Teen Dance, immediately following Ihe\nQueen show. PCSS cafeteria. Arranged\nby the Cres-Teen Committee.\nSunday\nAll Creslon Churches will have services\nthis Sunday.\n9:00 a.m.\u2014Pancake Breakfast, arranged by the\nKiwanis Club at the PCSS cafeteria\n(2'\/j hours).\n9:00 a.m.\u2014Jaycee Teenage Road-eo starts at Civic\nCentre grounds, sponsored by the Creston Junior Chamber of Commerce.\nLocal Golf Tournament sponsored by\nthe Creston Golf Club, at the Creston\ngolf course, three miles south on Port-\nhill Road.\n1:00 p.m.\u2014Pet Parade and Judging at Civic Centre.\n1:00 p.m.\u2014Sky Diving starts at Creston Flats and\nairfield and will feature jumpers from\nCranbrook, Calgary, Bonner's Ferry,\nEdmonton, Moses Lake and Vancouver.\nOver 30 contestants are expected and\nwill perform jumps from 20,000 feet with\ntwo skydivers in free fall with 4 or 5\n5:00\n5:00\np.m.\np.m.\n8:00 p.m.\nbaton passes. Parking on Ihe old lower\nroad lo Wynndel, jumpers will land\non field near airfield. Arranged by Jack\nRodgers and jumpmaster Dick Armi-\ntage of the Cranbrook Club.\n-Beef Barbecue may be held at the Civic\nCentre.\n-Battle of the Bands \u2014 another event of\ninterest to the Teens. Up to 8 rock and\nroll bands of the Kootenays and Idaho\nare expected to compete for the $150\nprize and trophies; lo be held in the\nPCSS Auditorium.\n-Premiere Showing of the latest color\nsound film on Creston by Ihe B.C. Department of Recreation and Conservation photographer, Bernard Atkins,\n\"Valley of the Swans\" showing Creston\narea and the wildlife and birdlife on\nthe Duck Lake Reserve. Also showing\nwill be the film, \"Kootenay Holiday\"\nproduced previously by the department of the tourist interest of Ihe Kootenay Lake area.\nMonday\n9:00-11:00 a.m.\u2014Cowboy Breakfast al the Rodeo\nGrounds.\n1:00 p.m.\u2014Rodeo . . . Feature Event of the Blossom\nFestival. Calf Roping, Saddle Bronc,\nBareback and Steer Riding, Wild Horse,\nWild Cow Milking, etc. at Rodeo\nGrounds. Arranged by the Creston Riding Club. \u2022\n5:00 p.m.\u2014Beef   Barbecue   at    Civic    Centre    in\nCreston.\n10:00 p.m.\u2014Wind-Up   Fireworks   Display   at   Civic\nCentre Grounds.\nBURTON   LINES UP SPORTS DAY\nBURTON \u2014 Reports were\nheard from various committee\nheads at the progress meeting\nof the Victoria Day committee\nheld in the Burton Community\nHall, with President T. Walton\nin the chair.\nHeard from were secretary\nG. Doughty. Mrs. T. Walton, re\nfreshments;  W.  Isaacs, sports;\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, MAY 12, 1964\u20143\nWell Known Fernie Mining\nMan Dies at Seattle Home\nSEATTLE (AP> - Bernard\nCaufield, 87, former general superintendent of a coal mining\ncompany in Fernie. B.C., died\nSunday at his home.\nBorn in County Cork, Ireland.\nCaufield went to Canada in 1903\nand came to Seattle on his retirement in 1946.\nlie was a past Grand Knight\nof the Fernie Knights of Columbus and an honorary life member of the Fernie council. He\nwas a member in Seattle of the\nThird Order of St. Dominic.\nRosary will be said at 7:30 p.m.\ntoday in the Booth-Ashmore funeral home. Requiem mass will\nbe said at 9 a.m. Wednesday in\nSt. Benedict's Church. Burial will\nbe in Holyrood Cemetery.\nMr. Caufield was a \"rugged\ncharacter in the mining industry who initiated several reforms.\" He was well known as\nmanager of Michel, Coal Creek\nand Fernie Collieries at one\nlime. He retired from the Crow's\nNest Pass Coal and Oil Company\nabout 20 years ago, but was retained   by   the  Great   Northern\nRailway Company as a consultant until his death.\nHis youngest daughter is still\nengaged in the oil and gas industry in the United States.\nMr. Caufield was author of\nseveral books that were published in several languages.\nHe is-'survived by four daughters, Millicent Kennedy, Rose\nMartin, Monica Coulter and Rila\nDyke, all of Seattle, and three\nbrothers, including Jack Caufield\nof Fernie.\nHe was predeceased by his\nwife exactly one year ago, also\non Mother's Day.\nEdgewood Wl To\nPresent Scholarship\nEDGEWOOD \u2014 At the regular. assist in raising money for this\nmeeting of the Edgewood-Inon-1 scholarship, a giant binqo is\noaklin   Women's   Institute   held i being   held   May   22.   Mrs.   H.\nat the home of Mrs. J. Kirch-1\nbaum, the president Mrs. H. E. \\\nFarrer gave a report on the proposed scholarship which is being ;\nset up by the Needles. Fauquier,\nand Edgewood Women's Institutes.\nKendrick of Needles attended\nthe meeting and also spoke on\nthe subject.\nA donation of $25.00 was voted\nto the Inonoaklin Recreation\nCommission to assist with expenses of the forthcoming Red\nTo Have First\nShowing at Creston\nBob Watson, parade; conees-\nsessions, Bill Watson: dance, .1\nMarcolli; grounds, Mrs. J. Mc\nCormack,\nIn sports, races of various\nkinds wil be held, also women's\nnail driving, women's softball,\nmen's baseball and horse races.\nA clean up bee was held at\nthe Burton Community Park.\nTo\nReport Immediate Need\nFor Psychiatric Facilities\nTlie newest film by British Columbia's Department of Recreation and Conservation, \"The Valley of tlie Swans\" will have its\nfirst public showing during the\nCreston Blossom Festival.\nThe half-hour color sound\nmovie filmed over the past two\nyears by department photographer Bern Atkins shows waterfowl life on the sloughs and\nshallow lakes of the Creston\nFlats, that is on the route of\none of the major flyways of the\nmigratory bird travellers, and a\nfavorite stopover of ducks and\ngeese.\nThe film shows scenes of Creston, on Lhe edge of the flats and\nthe wildlife on Leach Lake, Duck\nLake and Si): Mile Slough with\nthe ducks feeding on the variety\nof aquatic plants available in\nthis area.\nThe \"Walt Disney\" type of na-\nThe award of $125.00 is to be  Cross swim classes,\npresented to a graduate of thej    Plans  to  attend  the  District\nNeedles   Secondary   School.   To   Hally in Nakusp were made.\nMrs. J. Kirshbaum was elected\nto represent the W.I. on the\nAdvisory Board of the Recreation Commission.\nIt was reported that $155 from\nEdgewood and $54 from Needles\nhad been sent in to the Red\nCross as a result of tlie canvass.\nMrs, J. Vrooman and Mrs. W.\nPistack were welcomed as\nvisitors.\nThe hostesses Mrs. Kirshbaum, Mrs. R. O. Forslund and\nMrs. L. Muto served refreshments.\ntenay Holiday\" at the Tivoli\nTheatre Sunday during thc festival. Kootenay Holiday takes\nthe viewer from Creston-. around\nKootenay Lake to Nelson, show\ning the vacation possibilities in\nthis area.\nGame biologist Glen Smith and\nFrank Shannon as well as other\nfish and game officials have\nbeen invited by the Blossom Festival committee,\nRadioactive fallout in Norway\nat the end of 1963 was so low\nthat it was difficult to determine\nagainst the   natural   radiation.\nFolk Singers From Kimberley\nto lhe choruses, which are printed on a large board on stage.\nSome of the songs by individual members are originals written by themselves but most are\nCRANBROOK-The Cranbrook\nDistrict Hospital Society planning and sites committee told\nthe delegation from the Canadian\nMental Health Association Cranbrook Branch that it would recommend to the society directors\nnclusion of a psychiatric treatment unit the branch is urging\nas essential to the new hospital\nbeing planned for Cranbrook.\nThc brief was delivered to the\ncommittee meeting by R. H.\nPowell who said people of East\nKootenay must have a complete\nmental breakdown, followed by\ncommittal procedure and be accompanied 600 miles by armed\nescort at public expense before\nthey become eligible for any\ntreatment for emotional disturbance.\nBARBARIC  SITUATION\nHe termed this barbaric and\ndiscriminatory, particularly\nconsidering psychiatric illness ol\nsome degree is the most prevalent and costly disorder of Ihe\nlimes in Canada and accounts\nfor approximately one-third of\nall hospitalizations. The Canadian survey indicates that under\nthe present state of mental health\nin Canada, one of every ten children now attending schools will\nbe hospitalized with mental ills\nat some time.\nINADEQUATE SERVICE\nBimonthly visit ol the provincial government mental health\nteam is the only diagnostic service now available in East Kootenay, and its services are largely to the most pressing needs in\nreferrals of pupils from schools\nof Ihe area. Only 17 cases could\nbe interviewed in 1963 because\nol time limitations.\nHe quoted the address of Hon.\nEric Martin, B.C. minister of\nhealth, at a recent provincial\nCMHA meeting in which the na\ntional policy was quoted as urging decentralization of treatment\nfor mental ill health, with stress\non early recognition and treatment, and as little dislocation as\npossible of the patient from his\nown community.\nTRAFFIC USES\nNEW TUNNEL\nGREENWOOD - The new\nGreenwood tunnel of No. 3 high\nway waa opened to traffic last\nweek on the western section,\nNeither the east nor west section is completely finished yet.\nFirst person to use the new\nroad was Mrs. Helen Dodd of\nGreenwood.\nTenders for the building of\nthe highway were let In April,\n1963, with Interior Contracting\nCo., Ltd., being the successful\ntenderer. Grieg Farstad is the\ngovernment engineer on the project.\nOK CLINIC SUCCESS i Crease clinic and Essondale are\nHe quoted Mr. Martin's report down 50 per cent . . . on-the-spot\nof outcome of establishing a psy- diagnosis and immediate treat-\nchiatric unit in a major Okan- ment <for mental disturbance'\nagan city hospital where \"after are a form of prevention. En-\na full year's experience . . . this largement of these facilities is\nis the right type of program. Ad- now under study.\"\nmissions   from   this   region   to'    Directors  of  Cranbrook   Hos\npital Society, who have depart\nment approval in principle for\nthe new Cranbrook hospital starting at 75 beds, will consider the\nrecommendation at its monthly\nmeeting this week. Hospital Society membership drive is now\nunder way.\nTlie famed \"Lost Dog\" folk\nsong group from Kimberley will\nbe performing at the Creston\nBlossom Festival Saturday night.\nTlie folksinging group, of some\n21 members, all from Kimberley,  i( ,     , .,\nhave  put  on   many   successful ll* P\u00b0Pular fo k \u2122\u2122^r*- ]^\nprograms in the Kootenays and H> ^ on a fu\"-fllled tw\u00b0-,,mir\nhave helped to raise consider- progran1-\nable sums of money for charit-     Present members are Bill Bet-\nlure film carries a commentary abic organizations, Many of their cher, Bill Booth, Can and Win\non the changing types of migra- appearances have been sell-outs. Cavendish, Ann Clemmer, Mag\nThe Lost Dog singers are anlDickeson,   Ann  Ederer,  Harold\namateur   non-profit   group   and Enquist, Bob and Ruth Forres-\noriginated as a small gathering ter,   Frank  Goodwin,   Roy  and\nof people interested in singing to Gwen Holland, Peter and Wendy\nguitars and banjos. Moody, Hugh and Flonde Town,\nNow they are much in demand Struan Robertson. George WiI-~\nfor their style of singing that liams, George and Dale Zino-\nsoon has the audience joining in  vich.\nlory birds over the changes of\nseasons but is predominantly\nthe natural sounds of the bird\ncalls, which will be of special\ninterest to bird lovers.\nMr. Atkins will personally introduce this film as well as another   department   film.   \"Koo-\nRambler No. 1 in sales\nfor North American 6 cylinder wagons\n\u25a0i\nnow comes in a wide new variety of wagon models and engine options\nla economy your watchword? Take a look at the\nAmerican, Canada's lowest priced 4-door wagon. Ita\n6-cylinder engine (90 or 125 hp) delivers the power\nyou need with the gas-saving economy and utility\nyou want.\nIf you're at the other end of the scale and want\nluxury combined with V8 power and performance, the\nwagon for you is the Ambassador V8 (260 or 270 hp).\nIts interiors are rich. Its appointments are tasteful. Its\nfeatures are Buperb. But don't let its elegance fool you.\nThe Ambassador combines luxury with ample cargo\nspace and station wagon convenience. It's unlike any\nstation wagon you've ever owned.\nMaybe you want a happy medium l>etween economy\nand luxury. The Classic is built for your needs. Choose\na 6-cylinder engine (127 or 138 hp) or a V8 (198 hp).\nThe Classic takes the kids to school, your wife shopping, you to the country. It's both a hnrd-working\nhauler and a Sunday-drive pleasure car. No wonder\nthe Classic 6 leads all other 6-cylinder wagons in\nNorth American sales.\nWith a Rambler wagon, annoying station wagon\nsqueaks and rattles are a thing of the past, thanks\nto exclusive Single Unit Construction and Uniside\nbody panels. You can drive it as simply as a sedan, yet\nfull-size cargo space gives it the convenient hauling\nability of a pick-up. You get the world's best rustproofing; Double Safety Brakes; Ceramic-Armored\nJOIN THE MAY SALES MARATHON AT YOUR RAMBLER DEALERS FOR THE DEAL OF YOUR LIFE! SEE\nAND V8 ENGINE OPTIONS\u2014FROM 90 H.P. TO 270 H\nMuffler; distinctive curved-glass side windows; a    J\ngleaming Roof-Top Travel Rack.\nWe could tell you a lot more. We won't. A 15-minute\nlest drive is worth a thousand words. You'll never\nknow how versatile a station wagon can be until you ..^\ndrive a Rambler. Your Rambler Dealer has your test\ndrive ignition keys. See him today.\nYOU'LLNEVER KNOW HOW VERSATILE ASTATIONWAGON-4f\nCAN BE UNTIL YOU TEST-DRIVE A\nRambler 6 wV8\"!\n\u25a0':'\u25a0*%$ t\nA Product o. Arnwlean Merlon (Cinada) _in_iU4.     .'\u25a0\u25a0*\nRAMBLER'S WIDE VARIETY OF MODELS Ah-lb-.!\nP. -'- % ,\nPARKVIEW MOTORS LTD.\n323 NELSON AVENUE\nPHONE 352-5355\nTil\nMl\n $>lsmt lutly Nrlun\nEstablished April 22. 11)02 Nelson, B. C.\nPublished by the NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n266 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia, mornings except\nSundays and holidays in the centre ol the Kootenays with\nthe largest daily circulation in Ihe Interior of B.C.\nAuthorized as Second Class Mail,  Post Office Department, Ottawa,\nand for Payment of Postage in Cash.\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN  PltESS\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN DAILY NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION\nMEMBER OF THE AUDI'I   BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS\nThe Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to tlie use for republication of all news\ndispatches credited to it or to The Associated Press or Reuters in this\npaper and also the local  news  published herein.\nTuesday, May 12, 1964\nTime for Bylaw Repeal\nA city bylaw which was entered\nin the statutes 33 years ago and\nwhich has remained unchanged during the ensuing three decades, holds\nNelson residents liable lor costs\nwhich could amount lo hundreds \u2014\neven thousands \u2014 ol dollars for lhe\nexcavation and repair of city streets\nresulting from sewage repair.\nBylaw No. 766 stales in effect,\nthat when in the opinion of plumbing inspector any plumbing or drainage system in or on any premises\nwithin the city is deiective, he shall\nnotify the owner, who shall be responsible for all costs incurred in\nputling said system in order.\nThis means that if Ihe main sewer\nruns along the north side of a street,\na taxpayer whose property is located on the south side could theoretically be held responsible for the\ndigging up and restoration of an\nentire street, sidewalk and boulevard, if such excavation was necessary fo locate a blockage.\nCity officials point oul lhal there\nhas been no recent case where a\nhomeowner was billed (or the cost\nof repairing city property due to\nsewer repairs, and insist lhal unless\nnegligence on the pari of the homeowner is in evidence, Ihey have no\nintention of invoking lhe bylaw.\nIf the city has no intention of invoking this archaic law, which has\nstood without revision or amendment since 1931, then it should be\nrepealed.\nThis Sword of Damocles, which\nil a thrust were made could result\nin a huge repair bill, has hung over\nlhe heads of Nelson taxpayers long\nenough.\nOther cities of comparable size\nand population, Trail and Kimberley fo name two, reguire property\nowners to assume the cost of damage lo their own property resulting\nlrom s^wer repairs, but see no reason to reguire that individuals be\nheld responsible for damage to city\nproperty.\nIl is unreasonable that Nelson\ncily fathers should feel otherwise.\nA large portion of our taxes and\n34 per cent of our water bills go\ntoward financing the sewer department. Thai should be enough.\nThe city plumbing and building\ninspector is in the process of preparing a new plumbing bylaw which\nhe expects to present to council for\napproval at Ihe end of May.\nIt is to be hoped that outdated\nbylaw 766 will be repealed af that\ntime.\nAdvertising, East and West\nAn Australian advertising man\nwent into an American Btore to buy\na pen. He was offered one that\n\"wasn't advertised\" as il that were\na point in ils favor. (Haven't we all\nrun inlo this sales approach al one\ntime or another?) The trade journal\nAdvertising Age commented ruefully on the incident and said lhal\nperhaps both advertising and retailing have an educational (ask on their\nhands.\nNow a major survey of American\nadvertising confirms that the industry has problems \u2014 even as another\nsurvey in the Soviet Union recognizes the importance of advertising\nand asks for more of it.\nAccording lo the American survey, the typical consumer has a general feeling that advertising is good\nfor him. According to the Soviet report in Izveslia, the Soviet consumer\nneeds advertising to help him choose\namong products as a greater variety\nbecomes available.\nSoviet resistance lo advertising is\nreported lo rise from fear ol lapsing\ninto American advertising \"frenzy.\"\nBul the American consumer is reported to be less annoyed by advertising Ihan indifferent to it.\nThis lack of conscious response\nto much advertising caused concern\nat the recent meeting ol the American Association of Advertising\nAgencies lo which the survey was\npresented. The recent threat of a\n\"massive public revolt\" has subsided. But advertisers face the ques-\ntion of how lo prevent boredom with\nadvertising, which could spill over\ninto boredom with advertised\nbrands.\nIt is the creativity and responsibility of the advertiser thai are challenged, not advertising itself. Capitalism has needed ads lo let people\nknow of its fruits and to help distribute them. Even the supposedly\nbored American consumer in the survey is reported to look on ads as\na source of information. The advertiser with a good product knows that,\nby carefully choosing his message\nand his medium, he can benefit both\nhimself and his customer.\nWe are glad fhaf Izvestia has provided still another example of\nawareness that free enterprise possesses elements worth imitating. And\nmaybe if offered a new gimmick to\nthe industry: It warned thai it did\nnot advocate ads such as the full\npege taken by one Soviet firm fo\nannounce that it was not going to\nadvertise.\n\u2014Christian Science Monifor.\nAnother\nThe Iwo-faced treatment of lottery\nlegislation reform which sent another private member's bill down\nthe Commons drain approaches contempt of Ihe Canadian people. If\nmore than 90 per cent of Canadians\npolled by the press favor legal\nsweepstakes \u2014 as one member said\nduring Ihe exasperating hour in\nwhich the bill was talked out \u2014 there\ncan be no other judgment.\nWhat's going on back there? The\n(act lhal every party pays lip-service\nto lottery reiorm shows our politicians know what the people want.\nYet four similar bills were talked\noul last session. And now a fifth.\nReiorm advocates predicted in\nlecenf debate that the Liberals would\n...utile Ihe latest bill. And, by endorsing Ihe loltery principle in one\nbrealh and niggling over lechnical-\nilics in lhe next, Ihe Liberals did.\nII Ihe governmenl really sup-\npmind lottery reform, if could have\n]:\u25a0:-I a minister speak on Ihe lalesl\nI'll and a vole taken. If it disliked\nLetters to the Editor\nLetters to the Editor on tiny topic ot genuine Interest\nare welcome il they are briel, accurate and fair. They may\nbe published over a nom de plume, but tbe name ot the\nwriter must be given to the Editor as evidence ot good\nfaith. Anonymous letters go into the waslcpaper basket.\nTypewritten letters must be double-spared.\nSchool   Board   Criticism   Seen\nAs  Scorn  by  Salmo  Chamber\nTo tlie Editor:\nSir \u2014 The Salmo Chamber\nreplies to Nelson School Board\ncriticism of the Creston Edilorial\n\u2014 Supporting the Salmo College\nstand as follows:\nThe meeting held in Salmo on\nthe 30 April. 1964 was but confirmation of our stand for public\nhearings on the future of the\ncollege. The bias shown in your\nreport of the School Board meeting is surely evidence of the\ntype of parochial thinking that\nwe have evidenced since tlie\nstart of our campaign and honest\npromotion of the little Village\nof Salmo.\nTlie news released will ..how\nthe people the type of autocratic\nthinking we have long since\nbeen scorned with \u2014 bringing\nthem into the fight for just\nhearings to get tbe true mailers\nout in the open.\nIn reply to your scorn we\noffer the following answers and\nwe are sure you are more Ihan\nable to match them to your news\nrelease.\n1. How well we know thai the\npublic is uninformed on all\naspects of the Regional College\nThe President of thc B.C.\nTrustees Association can condemn the tax structure for education, in our province, and announce that too much of a lax\nload is being unloaded on the\nhome owers and real property\nowners, is it so unreal that we\nagree with him and recommend\nthat before being pushed into the\ncollege that we assure ourselves\nthat this college is just not another attempt to unload more\ntaxes onto the property owners?\n2. What is wrong with asking\nfor public hearings, are we not\nentitled to know what we are\nreally buying \u2014 no one but Lil\nAbner wants to buy \u2014 a pig-in-\na-poke11\n3. Tlie college is not organized\nyet and we ho[* the beautiful\ndream of good honest education\nfor all lhe Kootenays \u2014 is just\naround the corner.\n4. Creston is easily located on\nmost government maps and in\nmost statistical reports as being\nin the West Kootenay Region\nand if you want to find a very\ngood example \u2014 please apply for\na West Kootenay Census Map.\n5. We wonder if in the betjin\nning, that if as much time had\nbeen spent in promoting education and connections in Creslon\nas in other areas involved, if it\nwould be necessary for Creslon\nto sing overtures at this late\ndate1\nfi. You are selling local, higher\neducational autonomy \u2014 so why\nwait until you have formulated\nall your plans before asking us\nwhat we need for education.\n7. Your efforts to ensure the\npublic has all the facts appears\nto he more of your promises,\npromises, etc.\nDo you remember some of\nyour past statements quote \"the\nNelson School Board would have\nno jurisdiction over the college's\nlocation.\"\nWhy do you now say we were\nloo late but when months ago\nwe came begging for a chance\u2014\nLost Bet\nthe bill's details or wished to steal\nthunder from the opposition \u2014 the\nbill came from the Conservative\nbenches \u2014 it could introduce one of\nits own.\nInstead the government listens\nsunctimoniously to the mass of argument put before it. That 30 countries\nnow benefit from official lotteries or\nsweepstakes. That we wink at flouting the law anyway and that millions of dollars leave this country\neach year to nourish other countries'\nsweeps. That \u2014 and this came from\nNew Westminster NDP member\nBarry Mather \u2014 even a modest B.C.\nprovincial sweep could pay for the\nbuilding of at least one chronic hospital every 12 months. And the government waits.\nWhat for? Apparently a magic\nformula, acceptable to every province and every pressure group, by\nwhich individual provinces may\nshoulder the responsibility it evades.\n\u2014Vancouver Sun.\nEvery community should evolve emergency signals and ways\nof giving emergency information.\nEarly action can often save lives\nand prevent destruction. Each\ncitizen should be familiar with\nthe signals and know where and\nhow information will be available.\nyou told us we were too early?\n8. We wonder if you used the\nsame ballots we did, ours read\nsomething like this, \"Are you in\nfavor of establishing a Regional\nCollege in the West Kootenay\nArea.\"\n9. Thanks for admitting lhe\nfact that you purposely withheld\nthe facts on Federal Aid \u2014 why\nmake things worse than they\nare. We want facts.\n10. There are 51 parochial\nthinkers in our chamber not just\none and we will fight for our\nright to expand our theories until\nwe are invited to some non-\nparochial board for our promised\nhearing.\n11. We are glad you mentioned\ndormitories after you feel the\ndoor is locked and your positions\nsecured. Last month it was\nstrictly commuting \u2014 today the\nsmell is leaving and higher\neduction for all people \u2014 with\nlocal autonomy may appear.\nPerhaps if we continue our fight\nsome of thc rub on the financial\nend may disappear as well,\n12. Dr. Macdonald did his\nbest in his survey and report\non the college and no one can\nbut offer thanks to him for the\npresentation and for giving us\nso n.\"C.i nmmunition. We <-'nn't\nconsider U.B.C. a central location for making a survey ol the\neducational needs of the Kootenay. Thanks to his thinking along\nbroad lines, however, and inference that \"things can change\nwith time and should be reviewed,\" we must concur that much\nof his report is\u2014\"a Good guide \"\n13. If you're thinking is fair\nshould you not consider a Salmo\nor District appointment for this\ncouncil0\nWe do not enjoy this hassle \u2014\nat arms length \u2014 but as members of a chamber we feel this\nwhole affair must be aired for\nthe benefit of all the people of\nthe Kootenays.\nWe need not remind you that\nwe are taxpayers, parents and\nvoters and people who have been\nwilling to invest, work, live and\nsupport lhe area and communities in which we live, Rcing\nmade up of a cross section of\nthe area and some of us \u2014 businessmen \u2014 doesn\"t really set us\naside as some sort of atrocious\nheasls only to he seen when you\nwant to raise Ihe mill rate or\nask for donations,\nSalmo Regional College\nCommittee and\nChamber members\nP. A. THOR,\nW.  STRINGER,\nW. TAYLOR,\nH. RABEHL.\nTop Newsman Dies\nIn Auto Crash\nFAIRFAX, Va. (AP)-Taylor\nHenry, 54, editor of a weekly\nnewspaper who was Associated\nPress bureau chief in France\nduring the Second World War.\ndied Sunday of injuries suffered\nin a highway accident.\nHenry was editor of The Poto-\nmax News in Dumfries. Va. He\nwas bringing copies of the newspaper from the printer at Cul-\npeper, Va., last Wednesday in\na pickup truck when it struck a\nbridge abutment at the Rappahannock River near Remington.\nHenry served as AP chief of\nbureau ln Vichy, France, and\nwas captured by the Germans.\nHe was repatriated after serving a year in a German prison\ncamp.\nHenry was a graduate of the\nU.S. Military Academy at West\nPoint, N.Y.\nSilver   dollars   haven't   been\nminted in the U.S. since 1935,\nalthough  the   treasury   department   has   a   reserve  of   some\n3,000.000 cartwheels.\nHUBERT\nl>\nutyit si2\nn '^y\nv;.v.:S.:;:::\";':::\u00a3;:-::':';...:':..:-;:'>v\nMBfafS\n' O\nJ\n___________PK Q___0 ____________________\nt?i_?Pi..;I*_.li.\n____.\nW*^\nft? -_,    pis\nH_    __fflr\n^\n>-\u2014ves j\n\u25a0::. \u25a0#           __\u2014___& \\    1\n\/gO   WA\n\/\np\n^B|       |V\nsSHBI\n___\u25a0 Wm\n- \u00a7t^.\n\t\nKT^fr^t__\\s_\nffi Kin, .\u00ab_\u00ab,-\u00ab Syndic. _*., | %t  W\u201e,ld jfa \u201e*\u201e\u00ab|'\nInternational Developments\nProvide NATO's Theme\nLeaders of the Atlantic\nAlliance open a three - day\nspring meeting in The\nHague Tuesday amid signs\nof disarray among the 15\nmembers. An A s s o ciated\nPress diplomatic correspondent who has covered al-\nalmost every NATO conference since It was formed ln\n1949, examines some of the\nbig issues.\nBy ARTHUR L. GAVSHON\nTHE HAGUE (AP) - In the\nchancelleries of Europe today,\nfrom the Arctic to the Aegean,\nstatesmen and strategists are\nasking;\n\"Is NATO beginning to break\nup?\"\nAnd a big debate is under way\non how the alliance can be restored\u2014or replaced.\nIt may be a sign of their own\nsecurity that the Europeans can\ncontemplate these possibilities.\nIt may be they have succeeded\nin marshalling their resistance\nagainst the real or imagined\nthreat of a massive Soviet assault.\nAt all events, three international developments are dominating discussions on the future\nof the alliance. Tlie developments will form the main theme\nof the exchanges between foreign ministers and their aides\nnow assembling for Tuesday's\nAtlantic alliance council meeting in this capital. They arc:\n1. The reduction of direct\nCommunist military threats in\nEurope. With characteristic flexibility Commun ist pressures\nhave been moved elsewhere, to\nSoutheast Asia, the Middle East\nand Africa and Latin America,\nwhere organized Western defences arc weakest.\n2. The progressive defection\nfrom the alliance of President\nde Gaulle's France. De Gaulle\nis furthering his disengagement\npolicy by seeking to split the\nUnited States from its major\ncontinental European allies.\nThis he is doing by playing on\ntheir fears that Europe might\none day be abandoned to devastation if the U.S. continues to\nmonopolize the nuclear power of\nthe West.\n3. The gunpoint feud over\nCyprus between Greece and\nTurkey, custodians of NATO's\nsoutheastern flank. Already\nPremier Ismet Inonu of Turkey\nhas begun lo talk of reviewing\nhis relations with his allies because of what he regards as\ntheir failure lo back him up in\nCyprus. Significantly, chances\nof a Soviet-Turkish rapprochement are being advertised.\nEach of these developments\nposes its individual and immediate dangers for the alliance\u2014besides weakening it.\nTaken together they form a\npattern of ever-shifting alignments, calling with increasing\nurgency for a reappraisal of\nshared NATO interests.\nCITES OTHER FACTORS\nOn top of all this a tangle of\nother factors have projected the\nalliance into a state of almost\nunprecedented disarray. They\nrange from new strategic concepts and weapons development\nto the loosening of old loyalties\nin each of the world's great\npolitical systems.\nSome examples:\n1. Britain's chief political parties, moving toward an election,\nare arguing whether the nation\nought to resign as a nuclear\npower. At the same time, the\nFrench are concentrating on\nbuilding up a second generation\nof nuclear weapons to replace\ntheir Mirage bomber force. And\nthe Americans, with West German backing, are still trying to\nsell the idea of a mixed-manned\nfleet of Polaris missile-carriers\ndesigned as a means of giving\nEurope a voice in nuclear weapons management.\n2. Outside the NATO area, the\nTod\nay\n\"You called our 24-hour TV repair service last\n*       Wednesday?\"\nIn History\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nMay 12,  1964 ..  .\nBritain's general strike of\n1926 ended 36 years ago\ntoday\u2014in 1926\u2014nine days\nafter it had started. At issue\nwere wages and working\nconditions, especially in the\ncoal industry. The strike involved about 3,000,000 of the\n5,000,000 union members in\nthe total wage-earning population of 15,000,000. The\nchancellor of the exchequer\nput the total loss resulting\nfrom the strike at \u00a359.000,-\n000 and he had to budget\nfor an actual deficit of 136,-\n000,000.\n19J7 - George VI and\nQueen Elizabeth were\ncrowned.\n1958 - Ellen Fairclough\nbecame Canadian minister\nof citizenship and immigration.\nBritish, French and Dutch empires in Asia and Africa have\njust about vanished, leaving\nvacuums tlie Communists and\nothers are rushing to fill. In the\nAden Peninsula, the British are\nfighting a desperate rearguard\naction to preserve llicir last big\nfoothold. In South Viet Nam the\nAmericans are engaged in what\nlooks like the most critical\ncrunch with the Communisls\nsince Cuba. If the Communists\nwere to win out. they could outflank Laos, Cambodia and\nBurma, undermine India and\nJapan and fix their gaze on Australia.\n3, In the Communist world,\nthe Chinese-Soviet split carries\nits own perils as well as promises. The Communist rivals already are competing for favors\nand  influence  among  the  new\nnations   in   Africa,  the  Middle\nEast and Asia.\nSTRATEGY NEEDED\nAll these paradoxes and\nthreats, Western statesmen are\nbeginning to realize, are not going to be met simply by pulling\nsandbags out of one breach to\ntill another. The need, they recognize, is for a coherent strategy around the globe\u2014and this\nis something NATO, in its present form, is not equipped to provide. This also is true of NATO's\ncompanion alliance, tlie Southeast Asia Treaty Organization.\nAdded to the inadequacies of\nboth NATO and SEATO lies another big difficulty.\nSmaller European allies\u2014Norway. Denmark. Belgium. Italy-\nhave no evident wish to identify themselves with the defence\nof British interests in the Middle East or with U.S. policies in\nAs.aCari,>bea\"\"^\nEqually,   As,,,, ,.\u201e\u201e,\u201e\nsuch as Thailand ,\u201e\u25a0 tho l ,\"\npines-could   hardly  car  ,*\nabout helping l\u201e t    *  **\ncess routes to West l.frtl- *\nand open.\nAnd so in Lund,\n\u00ab!||\n\u25a0 w Minna,\n\u00bbnd more talk is gmng M2Jfl\na new concept-,,,,, blWl) 7*\ntotal strategy ford. [f net dull\nwhole non-Comniuiusi world\nAny such project WHlW ^\nmand the reshaping ol ,\u2122\nand SEATO and w\u201e_W b, J\nbe based nn power contribute\nin the firsl place hy u,0 U|1(,\nStates, plus Britain, \\\\N r\nmany and other nation's .,*\nworld interests De Ga.II.ij\noperation would have to i,.\nvited. Whether he \u00abcmld n,tlL\nis another question\nPoland Presents  New Trade\nPlan to GATT Negotiations\nGENEVA (AP)-A way to increase business with the Soviet\nbloc may be emerging from the\nround of trade talks that the\nlate president Kennedy inspired.\nCommunist Poland has come\nup with a proposal that won a\nwarm welcome from the private - enterprise countries, including the United States. It\nprovides Polish participation in\nthe Kennedy Round and Polish\nmembership in the General\nAgreement on Tariffs and\nTrade.\nThe current Communist party\nline says Poland is acting only\nfor itself. But success or failure\nof the proposal is sure to have\nan important effect on the trade\nrelations between other Communist countries and the West.\nSo far Czechoslovakia has\nbeen the one full member of\nGATT from the Communist bloc\nand that is only because it\njoined before the Communists\ntook over its government. Its\nparticipation has been on a limited scale.\nThe Polish proposal introduces an entirely new idea: Instead of lowering tariffs, which\nhave little meaning in a state-\ntrading Communist economy,\nPoland will guarantee to take\nfixed amounts of imports from\nthe non-Communist world.\nADVANTAGES  FOR WEST\nIn return, the private enterprise countries would give Poland the full benefit of trade advantages they give to one another. This would include the\n50-per-cent cut in tariffs envisaged by Kennedy, or whatever\npercentage is finally agreed on.\nlt would also eliminate many\nquotas set up by the Western\ncountries to limit their imports\nfrom Poland.\nAs Polish exports grow in ac-\nKhruschchev\nFavors Arabs\nIn Diversion\nCAIRO (AP) - Soviet Premier Khrushchev gave his support to the Arab world Monday in\nits opposition to diversion of the\nJordan River waters by Israel.\nSpeaking to the United Arab\nRepublic's one - party National\nAssembly, Khrushchev said Israel planned to \"rob the Arab\nworld of its own water.\"\nKhrushchev called on Israel\nto implement United Nations\nresolutions on Palestine, which\nwould reduce Israel's present\nfrontiers.\nKhrushchev arrived in Egypt\nSaturday for a 16-day visit, the\nfirst by a Russian leader to Africa.\nThe assembly rose en masse\nin boisterous cheering at\nKhrushchev's new declaration\nof support for the Arabs.\nThe Israelis have announced\nthat some time this summer\nthey will begin diverting waters\nof the Jordan to irrigate the\nNegev Desert. The Arabs have\nthreatened counter-action to cut\noff the headwaters of the Jordan.\nThe 70-year-old premier also\nassailed British occupation of\nmilitary bases in Cyprus and\nAden. His government supports\nthe \"just and reasonable\" demands of local populations for\nthe evacuation of these and all\nother foreign bases, the Soviet\nleader said.\n\"The presence of foreign armies is the source of danger, tension and disputes between countries,\" Khrushchev added.\nHe denied that there was any\ncontradiction between the Soviet\nUnion's state policy of seeking\ninternational understanding and\nits shipments of arms to foreign\ntrouble spots.\ncordance with these advantages, the Polish government\nwould guarantee to take correspondingly greater imports from\nlhe West. How much trade ac-\nlually increases will depend on\nthe negotiations.\nThe Polish proposal was presented only in outline form. The\nprivate-enterprise countries are\nwaiting to see the full details\nand read all the fine print. Up\nto now they have found nothing to criticize, at least in public.\nThe trade negotiating committee, speaking for all the 75 nations associated wilh GATT, including Canada,said:\n\"The interest of Poland in\nparticipating actively in the\ntrade negotiations is warmly\nwelcomed and there is general\nagreement that it should be feasible to work out a practical\narrangement.\"\nChristian A. Herter, President\nJohnson's chief negotiator, endorsed this for the U.S.\nPOLISH   TALKS  URGED\nThe committee went on to\nurge talks with Poland be\npressed.\nSome Western experts say if\nPoland or any other Communist\ncountry is to take part in the\nKennedy Round at all. the Po\nlish proposal presents a rea\u00bb\nable way of going at,,,,,, \u201e \u201e_\nswapping ol tarifl reductim.\nthe standard form el negmj\nlions in (lie Kennedy R^\ndoes not give the Commiut\ncountries a meaningful l,ar8\u201e\ning counter lo oiler to the |r\u00bb\nenterprise countries\nWhen the stale controls al\nforeign trade, tariffs can 1.4\nminated altogether and gcoj\nstill cannot enter the cum,\nunless the Communist aui___>\nties let it through the Iron ...\ntain and make money or goo_\navailable lo pay (or ,1 T__j\nin effect what the Poles art.-\nfering and the offer is re|\nwell received.\nThe U.S. would lie (lad til\nhave a similar \"guaranteed itj\ncess\" to Wesl Kuropean rr_r.[\nkets for its grain\nSome aspects \u201e[ the Polul\nproposal s e e n, astonishing\nliberal to Western experts 0_\nis that direct _dve.t_.in_ _\nWestern products in Poland\n\"would nol be excluded\"\n\"If they mean what :_._\nsay,\" one ec o n o mist\nmented, \"you could plaswl\nAmerican soft drink signs il|\nover the Polish landscape''\nThis is not too likely lo ti?|\npen.\nMP Can Discuss\nExpenses With\nAnvone at All\nOTTAWA (CPi-Whafs wrong\nwith an MP and a representative of an opposing political\nparty discussing the MP's future election expenses during a\nchat about the MP changing\nparty affiliation?\nThis question is getting a lot\nof attention these days. It is\nnearly always asked W'th the\naccompanying statement that\nelection expenses are legally\nrecognized by the Canada Election Act.\nThe answer seems to be that\nthere's nothing wrong\u2014provided\nthe MP isn't being offered\nmoney or other advantage to\npromote anything being transacted in Parliament or to be\ntransacted there.\nThat's the situation under the\nCommons rules. Under the criminal Code, the same answer\nholds \u2014 provided the situation\ndoesn't involve anything covered\nunder Section 100 which states:\n\"Everyone who gives or offers corruptly to a person who\nholds a judicial office, or is a\nmember of the Parliament of\nCanada or of a legislature, any\nmoney, valuable consideration,\noffice, place or employment In\nrespect of anything done or\nomitted to be done or omitted\nby him in his official capacity\nfor himself or another person,\nis guilty of an indictable offence\nand is liable to\" imprisonment\nfor 14 years.\"\nANYTHING OFFERED?\nThe important aspects are\nthese\u2014was money or advantage\noffered to promote anything before Parliament and was it offered an MP to do or not to do\nanything in hi. official capacity\nas an MP?\nThe whole subject is under\nnew scrutiny with the Commons' decision to have its privileges committee Investigate the\nallegation of Gerard Glrouard\n(PC-Labelle) that he was Invited to switch to the Liberal\nfrom the-Social Credit party\nwith the benefit of a fat election campaign fund.\nAs applied to Mr. Glrouard's\nallegation, the question of\nwrong-doing appears at the moment to be academic. Liberal\nNational Organizer Keith Davit\nhas publicly denied any nient_d\nwas made of money or elects*\nfunds in his talk with Mr G*\nouard.\nMr. Girouard, who suhst.*\ntly switched to lhe Consent\nlive party, has said his reference to benefit was not mi\nin any way to suggest h\"1*\";\nBoth men are expccled li\na chance this week lo gne W\ntestimony under oath lo \u00bb\ncommittee. So also are W\nLiberal MPs-Maunce M\u00ab*\n(York-Scarborough', Herb W\n(Essex Westi, James McS*\n(Lincoln! and Joe Maul*\n(Hamilton Easl> - \u00bb!'\" ,BI\npresent at the GirouardDir.\nmeeting.\nQUESTION PERSISTS\nYet the question ol pnssiW\nwrong-doing persists in ds*\nsions here ol lhe Girouani\"*\ngallons.\nPartly it seems to sin\" <\u2122\nthe fact that Mr Girouani \u2122\na member ol one ol loin W\nsition parties and his i*\u2122\"\nhelp the minority govcrnn\"\nIt's a situation which \u2122\ntempt a party lo buy s>W*\nprevent defeat or In help t*\nlegislation through lhe lm\nmons. f\nPartly the question ol \"\u00ab\ndoing seems lo result from**\namong MPs, fear lh.il '<* \u00a3\nlie may refuse to belifvf \"\u00a3\ncussion about ch.ingin. P\"\ncould skirt the  'sll\"n   j\nnancing the next <*<'\"''\"\ncould be innocent ol \u00bb\u00bb\nMP has referred lo \u00ab\ntempted bribery m\nMany MPs figure If l*J\nis  ready  to belief lh'\nabout   politics   aod  poli\u00ab\u00a3\nTTiey Consider lhal II* \u00abfj\ntion of Parliament is ln<\nmat* sufferer lrom sucn\ntions. ,.h\nThat   might   be  \"\u00ab%\nprompt   them   lo  \"^\nwhole matter as a nw  0\nstanding if it wer.it l\u00bb\nnagging   worry   th\"' ,?\nwill holler \"whitewash ___ ^\nlot niorf *..\njust party advanl\nvantage in the in.'i|r>'\nready to see a JJ^VI\n NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, MAY 12, 1964\u20141\nextra; Nelson Daily News [extra\nt . .\nLargest Daily Newspaper in the Interior of B. C,  Serving the Entire  Kootenay \u25a0 Columbia  Area\n1964\nBLOSSOM\nFESTIVAL\nEDITION\nWay. n-15-16-17-18\nBe Sure You Meet Our Queen Candidates:\nMISS   JILL   ARMITAGE\nMISS  DONNA  BILLEY\nMISS JOAN  PHILLIPS\nMISS  CATHY  RYCKMAN        MISS  SHARON  ZORN\nMISS  LORETTA SALVADOR   MISS   JOYCE   RUDY\nThis  Special Section  Made  Possible  by These  Progressive\nCommunity Minded  Business  Establishments   of  Creston  .  . .\nCreston    Blossom    Festival    Association\nTaks   Stores   Ltd.\nO.K.   Tire   Stores\nSuperior  Cleaners\nBurgess   Variety   Store\nCreston   Motors    Ltd.\nShellcrest   Seryiee\n,'. Y.   Mawson   Sport   Shop\nJohnson's   Meat   and   Grocery\nLarsen's  Studio\nBrownlee's Men's Wear\nCreston   Shoe   and    Re-Nu\nCreston   Sawmills   Ltd.\nKootenay  Lake  Motors\nHotel Creston\nBus   D.po   Restaurant\nFountain   Grocery   and   Seryiee\nBuckna   Studio\nCreston  Motels Association\nCreston   Valley  Co-Op   Association\nVillage  of Creston  \u2022\nValley    Automotive    Ltd.\n 2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUES., MAY 12, 1964\n.-**\u00a3\nONCE AGAIN it's that\ntime of year when Creston\nlovelies vie for the honor\nof presiding over the\ncolorful annual Blossom\nFestival, and each year if\nanything they are lovelier. Candidates for 1964\nare, front row from left,\nCathy Ryckman. Jill Ar-\nmitage, Loretta Salvador,\nSharon Zorn; back row,\nJoan Phillips. Donna Bil-\nley and Joyce Rudy. The\ngirls are all 17 and represent Creston and the surrounding areas. \u2014 Photo\nbs H. M. Buckna.\nThe Citizens of Creston\nWish  to Extend a Hearty  Welcome\nTo All\nCreston Blossom Festival Visitors\nWe're   Proud  of  Our   Fast-Growing   Town   and\nWish   You  Would   Come  and  See   ft.\nPOPULATION \u2014 2403 ALTITUDE   \u2014 2000  Feet\nCENTRE   OF   EAST   and   WEST   KOOTENAY   TRADING   AREA   .   .   .\nSERVING   100.000   RESIDENTS.\nPOPULATION\u2014Trading  Area\u2014*800.\nCLIMATE\u2014Average Rainfall, 18.5 inches. Average Snowfall, 53 inches.\n\u2014Average Temperature, 46.\nPOWER\u2014West   Kootenay   Power  &   Light   Co.   Ltd.   provides   very   adequate   power   and\ncompetitive rates;   most adequate  supply of industrial  load  available.\nNATURAL   GAS\u2014Columbia   Natural   Gas   Ltd.   provides   most   competitive   rates   and   industrial supply rate is based on volume.\nWATER\u2014Adequate   civic    water   supply    available,    and    very    large    reserves    available\nthroughout entire area.\nLAND\u201422,000   acres   reclaimed   land;   20,000   acres   bench   land   on   which   grains,   alfalfa,\nvegetables,   seed   peas,   cereal   grains,   tree   fruits,   small   fruits   and   large   dairy\nand beef industries prosper.\nTRANSPORTATION\u2014Daily rail service,  twice daily bus service,  three daily  truck  lines;\nwell located  on  Southern   Trans-Provincial   Highway.\nSCHOOLS\u2014Kindergarten  to  first  year  university   in   an   accredited   secondary  school.\nHOSPITAL\u2014Thirty-bed  fully  modern   hospital.\nTELEPHONE\u2014B.C.   Telephone   Co.   automatic   dial   phone   service   adjacent   to   microwave station.\nVEHICLE  REGISTRATIONS for  1962  as  follows;  ,\nCars. 2025 \u2014 Commercial,  1171  \u2014  Farm  Tractors,   167\nRECREATION\u2014Fishing, hunting, large resort area on nearby Kootenay Lake, golf course,\nswimming pools, etc.\nSTORES\u2014Modern  chain  stores  and  shopping  centre.\nAREA   TAX   ASSESSMENT\u2014$12,700,000.\nTHE CORPORATION  OF  THE  VILLAGE  OF  CRESTON\nChoose   Your\nJ'jcwjoAjUjl\nMOTEL\nwhile you are in\nCRESTON\nAt  the   New\n1964 Creston\nBlossom Festival\nMay 14 - 15 - 16 - 17 -18\nWe Con Offer You\nthe Finest Accommodation\nand Pleasant Atmosphere\nLITTLE-JOHNS SHERWOOD FOREST CAMP GROUND\nWELLS   HI-WAY   CABINS\nORCHARD   GROVE   MOTEL\nGREEN    ACRE    MOTEL   \u2014    EMPIRE    MOTEL\nSTARLITE    MOTEL    \u2014    BRAC-N-BRAE    MOTEL\nNELLIC.AN'S   MOTEL   \u2014   FIESTA   MOTEL\nBLUEBIRD   MOTEL   \u2014   FLOWERDELL   ALTO   CO CRT\nCRESTON  VALLEY  MOTEL\nSCOTTIE'S ORCHARD CAMPSITE & TRAILER COURT\nVALLEYVIEW   CABINS   \u2014   PLOURD'S   CABINS\nALBERTA   MOTEL  \u2014   PARADISE   MOTEL\nFUMERTON-   MOTEL\nTED'S   CHEVRON    TENT    AND   TRAILER    PARK\n NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUES., MAY 12, 1964 \u2014 3\nVour   Authorized   Pontiac - Buick - CM.C.   Dealer\nInvites   You   tc   See   Their\nNEW and  USED CARS\nWhile   m   Creston   for   the\nBLOSSOM   FESTIVAL\nThey Would Like To Meet You\nKootenay Lake Motors (1959)\nCreston   B.C.\nB.A.   Oils,  Gas  and   Lubrication\nSee   Us   for\nFast,    Efficient\nAUTOMOTIVE\nSERVICE\n*   SHELLUBRICATION\n*  GOODYEAR   TIRES\n*   SHELL GAS and OIL\nSHELLCREST\nSERVICE   LTD.\nPhone  356 - 2730\nCRESTON,   B.C.\n\"LOOK  TO   IMPERIAL\nFOR   THE   BEST\"\nAuthorized\nGENERAL MOTORS\nDealer\n24-Hour Wrecker Service\nCRESTON MOTORS\nSsso.\nLTD.\nDays  Ph.  356- 2353\nNights  Ph.   356-2154\nCRESTON,   B.C.\nCRESTON \u2014 Thriving East Kootenay centre in a wide valley.\nBreadbasket of the  Kootenays\nBy   L.   C.   PLUMB\nCreslon Valley is aptly called I\ntiie Bread Basket of the Koote-1\nnay?.\nCrust on is I he trading centre\nfor a population in the district-\nwhich approaches 10.000 and'\ncould rightly be called Lhe Garden Gateway to the new fast,\nsouthern route to the Coast. It\nlies at the eastern end of the recently completed \"Kootenay Skyway\"\nA steady expanding commun-\nity, Creston is at the base of'\nglorious Kootenay Lake, growing resort region. Completely\nfringed with forested mountains,\nKootenay Lake presents tc the\ntraveller a thrilling, ever-changing panoramic view which compares with the best in the world.\nOne of the last of the lake ferry\nruns in the Interior of British\nColumbia between Kootenay Bay\nand Balfour on the West side is\na much-enjoyed free. 40-minute\ntrip by tourists.\nCreston is only seven miles\nfrom the U.S. border, just above\nthe Idaho port of entry at Port-\nhill. It is 141 miles northeast of\nthe American Inland Empire ;\ncapital of Spokane and 273 miles r\nWest of Lethbridge.\nClimate is healthful and mild.\nDuring the three winter months\nthe mean temperature is only\n26 degrees. Annual precipitation\nin  the region is only  19 inches.\nThe   many  mountain   streams\nfurnish      hydroelectric      power,\nwater    for    irrigation,    and   the\npurest   water   in   the   world   for\ndrinking.   Two   rivers   flow   by'\nCreston \u2014 the Kootenay, a  tributary of the mighty Columbia, j\nand the Goat River, a tributary I\nof  the Kootenay.\nThe paved highways in the\ndistrict are in splendid condition enabling the traveller to\nvisit the many points of interest\nin this wonderland of outstanding   beauty.\nBenchland surrounding Creston is planted to fruit trees producing apples, pears, cherries,\ngrapes. prunes, plums and\npeaches in abundance. Strawberries and raspberries are also\ngrown   in  great   quantities.\nThe finest of wheat and pea\nseed are grown on the Creston\nFlats requiring several elevators\nand a large pea shed storage\nplant to handle the crop. Potatoes, grain and hay, cattle,\npoultry and hog raising add to\nthe agricultural  wealth.\nLumbering is one of the many\nimportant industries here and\nclose to 500 men are employed\nin the forest industry.\nThe   Creston    Valley   schools\nrank with the best in the province. The ultra-modern Secondary School costing $750000 has\nan enrolment of 900 students.\nNewest   industry   here   is   the\nInterior   Breweries    plant    con\nstructed at a cost of $2,500,000\nIt was located here mainly because Creston, with new highway links, is now in a prime\nposition as a distributing centre\nserving tbe Kootenays.\nVALLEY AUTOMOTIVE\nFARM EQUIPMENT\nLTD.\nNEW and USED\n\u2022 Massey-Ferguson\n\u2022 New Holland\nTRACTORS\nBALERS\nMOWERS\nCHOPPERS\nDrop in and Inspect Our\nPARTS and SERVICE FACILITIES\nwhile you are in town for\nour   Festival.\nOodqsL\nPiyjTWJuJtfv\n -NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, MAY 12, 1964\nTHESE WERE SCENES at former Blossom Festivals. At left on a float backed by a huge blossom,\n1963 Queen Gail Patterson along with her princesses\nsmiles at the throng. At right is 1962 Queen Betty-\nHook with her princesses. The 1963 Queen will crown\nthe new Blossom Festival Queen during the festivities.\nWELCOME TO CRESTON,\nOUR BLOSSOM FESTIVAL\nAnd Our Own\nCreston Valley Co-Operative\nAssn. Shopping Centre\nTAK TOYOTA, chairman of\nthe Creston Valley Blossom\nFestival, in a message to visitors, said:\nTbe members oi our committee as well as the citizens\nof Creston, have worked hard\nto provide a program varied\nin scope so that there is some-\nthing of interest for the whole\nfamily. Our wish is that you\nwill  attend   all  of  the  special\nevents which we have plana--*!\nfor you. This year we welcome\nthe residents of the West Kootenays. many of whom will\nvisit this festival for tbe first\ntime, over the newly opened\nKootenay Skyway.\nWe  Want  You   to\nENJOY  YOURSELF\nin   CRESTON\nMay   14-15-16-17-18\nCRESTON\nSHOE   AND\nRE- NU\n435   12th   Avenue\nCRESTON   B.C.\nT^-   Plenty of Free Parking on Our Paved Lot.\n^If   Do All Your Shopping Under One Roof.\n^  Visit Our Numerous Deportments.\n^ Take o Souvenir Home.\nABOVE   ALL   Enjoy  Yourself  While You  Are  in  Creston.\nSUPERIOR\nCLEANERS\nProfessional\n4\nHOUR\nSERVICE\nKOIN  CLEANING\nCRESTON,   B.C.\nCOMPLETE   TIRE   SERVICE\nAND   RETREADING\nComplete   Line  of   New  Tires\nWe Are Fully Equipped  to Service Your  Front-End\nWheel Alignment . . .\nFeaturing:   BEAR  TELALINER   Equipment\nALWAYS INSIST ON THE BEST\nO.K. TIRE STORES\nNext to the Hotel Creston\nCreston,  B.C.\n NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, MAY 12, 1964\u20145\nFESTIVAL   ASSOCIATION   HEADED\nBY   CIVIC  MINDED   RESIDENTS\nThe Creston Valley Blossom\nFestival Association is composed\nof civic -minded citizens chosen\neach year lo stage the Festival\nwith tho .isNiMarK*.* of many like-\nminded people\nA tremendous amount of time\nand effort goc-* into the operniion\nof tho event Over the years, the\nannual   celebration   has   become\nHenry Lemoigne.. Eleanor Gnti\nith.   Jack   Page.   M.   McElgunn,\nTom Gauthier. Don Lindsay,\nFred Sanderson, secretary, and\nPaul  Aasen,   treasurer.\nvn   I hi\nlie  fo\nul  a\nride\nnld\n>t tii.\nB!os.,oi\nU of\n[ead<|i\nling  in pri\\\nlar  accomc\nTo\nitors,\nters arrmgos lo\nhomes when res\ntioas are filled\nThe committee\nTak Toyota, chairman: K. R.\nMcFarland, Rich Hood. Bill\nHerchmer, Lois Staples. A If Edgar. L. W. Char man, E. Mc-\nCurrach. Cliff Carr. Roy Dewar,\nWe   Are   At   Your\nService\nOn   the   East   S-de\nof   T;>wn.\nGROCERIES,   MEATS,\nTEXACO   GAS\nAND   OBL\nFOUNTAIN\nGROCERY\nAnd   SERVICE\nCreston,   B.C.\nSaturday  Schedule\n12:30 p.m.\u2014Giant Parade, featuring 10 bands from\nKootenay3 and Idaho, many floats including entries from Trail-Rossland-\nBonner's Ferry, etc., largest local entry.\nOpening Ceremonies, immediately following   the   parade   at   Civic    Centre.\n2:00 p.m.\u2014Brass Band Concert in the Civic Centre;\nprogram by bands from Creston, Castlegar and Bonner's Ferry.\n2:00 p.m.\u2014Blossom Folk Dance Festival. Display\nof folk dancing by over 20 dance groups\nfrom the Kootenays and Idaho \u2014 one\nof the feature events at the PCSS auditorium. I\n2:30 p.m.\u2014Gymkhana at the Riding Club rodeo\ngrounds on the flats. Barrel races, pole\nbending, and other horsemanship skills.\n(Note: Rodeo is on Monday.)\n4:30 p.m.\u2014Giant Beef Barbecue (till 7 p.m.) at Civic\nCentre. Delicious slow-cooked beef with\nbeans and coffee. Free outdoor entertainment, arranged by Militia of Creston   and   Cadet  Corps.\n7:00 p.m.\u2014Hootenanny. 2-hour program by the Lost\nDawg group from Kimberley; audience\nparticipation program. PCSS auditorium.\n8:00 p.m.\u2014$1000 Blackout Bingo, with 19 other\ncash prizes, in. the Civic Centre. Arranged by the Creston  Elks.\n8:30 p.m.\u2014Square Dance Hoedown. Caller, Vic\nGraves of Nelson, at the Creston Elementary School auditorium. Arranged\nby the Creston Square Dancing groups.\n10:00 p.m.\u2014Teen Dance, Saturday night dance, to\ntwo exciting bands on stage. PCSS\nAuditorium.\n10:00 p.m.\u2014Adult Dance at the Wynndel Memorial\nHall,  six miles  north  of  Creston.\n\"All down the miles of\norchard aisles the pink-\nUpped blooms are seen\nagain-.\" A sight to take\nyour breath away is Creston orchards in Springtime \u2014 Blossom Festival\ntime.\nWe   Are   Prepared   to   Serve   You\nTHE BEST MEALS IN TOWN\nTRY  OUR   MENU\nWe  Cook   Especially   For  You\nBUS DEPO\nRESTAURANT\nIN   THE   HEART  OF  CRESTON\nLet   Us   Help  You\nMake  Your  Stay\nAs   Pleasant  As   Possible\nTRY   OUR   ACCOMMODATIONS\nHOTEL CRESTON\nPhone 356-2111 Creston, B.C.\nWhile You Are in Creston . . .\nDrop  in  and  See  Our  Complete   Line  of\nVariety Gifts \u2014 Sewing Needs\nHand-made Articles\nand Souvenirs\nBURGESS Variety Store\nAND SEWING CENTRE\n: Doors From City Hall\nCreston,  B.C.\nBUCKNA\nSTUDIO\nIN   CRESTON\nPortraits With Personality\nIS   ANXIOUS  TO   MEET  ALL   VISITORS\nTO   CRESTON.\nWe want you to have fun and be sure\nyou take lots of pictures!\nWE  WILL   DEVELOP   THEM.\n\"Home of Quality and Service\"\nPHONE CRESTON  356-2616\n 6 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUES., MAY 12, 1964\nSkyway heads to Creston\nIt Is  Our Pleasure\nTo See  You  and Your Family\nVisit Creston\nEspecially During  Our\nBig  Festive Season\nMAY 14-15-16-17-18\nOur Annual\nBlossom Festival\nWe Know You Will\nEnjoy Yourself .... Have Fun !\nCRESTON\nSAWMILLS LTD.\nCRESTON, B.C.\nA SMOOTH RIBBON of asphalt takes the traveller   to   Creston   through   mountains   and   valleys   of\nscenic grandeur. The Kootenay Skyway rivals anything in B.C. adding one more pearl oi beauty to the\nKootenay  necklace.\u2014B.C  Gov't photo.\ni                                                We   Cordially\nInvite   You   to   Our\nANNUAL   BLOSSOM   FESTIVAL\nDROP   IN  AND  MEET  US\nWHILE  YOU   ARE   IN   CRESTON\n3uah\/kQniu studio\nPh. 356-2998                                             Creston B.C.\n\u2022^^^^r^^^^^^^^^rrrr^^^^^^^^r^^^T^^^^^^^^^^-\nDROP   IN\nPick a Souvenir . . .\nSee Our Display\nof Sporting Goods.\nIt Will Be Our Pleasure To Meet You\n\u2022\nV.  MAWSON'S  SPORT SHOP\nCreston   B.C.\n NELSON DAILY NEWS TUES., MAY 12, 1964 \u2014 7\nThere's   a   little   bit   of\neverything at the Creston\nValley Blossom Festival.\nHere's some thrilling action pictured at a previous\nevent as a young man\nsuccessfully rides a calf\nin true western style,\ncheered on by an enthusiastic crowd at the corral.\nCOME\nTo\nCRESTON\nDROP   IN\nAND  CHAT\nBROWNLEE'S\nMen's Wear\nCreston   B.C.\n'THE  PROS\" TO   JOIN  AMATEURS\nIn addition to the thousands\nof amateur photographers who\nwill be snapping colorful parade and other activities of Creston '_. Blossom Festival, there\nwill also be professional cover-\nam.1 of the five day festivities\ntins   year.\nIn a reply to a request by the\nfestival chairman, the National\nFilm Board stated that photographer Jack V. Long \"of Vancou-. er will cover the event and\ntake footage of other points of\ninterest  in the area.\nThe black and white film will\nbe edited to featuretles of three\nto five minutes and will be made\navailable to newsreel companies\nin New York. London and Paris\nfor television and theatrical use,\nA news release of each item will\nbe supplied in order that any\ncompany using the footage will\nbe able to prepare the commentary.\nThe Blossom Festival parade\nwith the theme '\"Unking of thc\nKootenays. East and West will\nfeature at least eight bands and\nthree drill teams as well as dozens of local and out of town\nfloats, including the new $3000\nRossland-Trail entry, and N'ikki\nthe cougar.\nThe May 14 to 18 celebrations\nheralding the blossoming of the\ntrees in the fruit valley, will see\nseven queen candidates vying\nfor the Miss Creston crown. Beef\nBarbecues, Amateur Rodeos,\nSky Diving, five dances, Teen\nBand Competitions. Hootenanny,\n$1000 Bingo. Folk Dancing, a\nMixed Curling Bonspiel. Golf\nTournament. Gymkhana and\nBand Concert are some of the\nprogramsjscheduled. and the festival conilmattee under the direction of chairman Tak Toyota expects a larger than ever crowd\nfor the 23rd annual Festival with\nthe shorter travelling time over\nthe newly opened Kootenay Skyway.\nFor  Those  Who   Enjoy  Making   Up   Lunches\nSee   Us for  Your\nGROCERY and MEAT SUPPLIES\nJOHNSON'S\nMEATS   and   GROCERIES\n10  Bands To  Parade\nTen bands will parade in the,\ngiant parade in Creston Saturday, third day of the 1964 Creston Valley Blossom Festival,\nThe parade is scheduled to\nstart at 12.30 p.m. under the direction of Roy Dewar. parade\nmarshal. It was arranged by'\nthe  Royal  Canadian  Legion.\nThe bands: I\nP r i n ce Charles Secondary\nSchool, Creston. bandmaster, A.\nWhittred.\nMount Baker High School\nGirls' Bugle Band, Cranbrook,\nMrs.   Metcalfe.\nKootenay Indian School Fife\nand Drum Band, Cranbrook.\nBro.   MacDonald.\nBonners Ferry High School\nBand.\nStanley Humphries Secondary\nSchool. Castlegar. Norman Fish\nwick,  bandmaster.\nTrail   Pipe   Band.   Trail.\nKootenay Kilties Band. Nelson.\nTrail  Shrine Band.\nCreston Shrine  Band-\nRoyal   Canadian   Legion   Band\nof Creston\nIf  You   Are   in   Need   of\nDrug  Store  Service\nDrop   In   and   See   .   .   .\nAVERY-CARR\nPHARMACY   LTD.\nWe Sincerely Hope\nYou   Bring  Your\nWhole  Family to Our\nCreston\nBlossom Festival\nDrop in and ask our friendly staff to show you and\nyour family the very latest in Furniture, Appliances-\nRadio, Stereo, TV,  Records and\nMusical   Instruments.\nTHEY  WILL   BE  PLEASED  TO  SERVE  YOU\nBox 999\nCreston   B.C.\nTAKS\nSTORES LTD.\nI\n(Formerly Creston Electric Ltd.)\n\"THE   STOKE   THAT   SERVICE    Bl'ILT'1\nCRESTON       CRANBROOK       GOLDEN\n NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUES-, MAY 12, 1964\nFROM BLOSSOM  TO  RIPENED FRUIT \u2014 From Springtime's suits  of  careful  husbandry,  the  pruning,   spraying  and   nurturing\niiagrant beauty  to Fall's  glowing harvest \u2014  this  is  the  Creston of the  thousands  of   fruit  trees,   for  -which  the  valley  is  famous.\nStory. Here a charming picker of apples gathers the luscious re- \u2014B.C. Gov't photo^\nBe  Sure   You  Attend ! ! !  The\nCRESTON\nBLOSSOM  FESTIVAL\nMAY 14th. 15th, 16th, 17th, 18th\nThis Year a New Program Is Planned Especially to Please You and Your Family . . Join in the Fun\n* GIANT    PARADE\n* QUEEN   SHOW\n* SKY   DIVING\n* BALLET   RECITAL\n* MIXED   BONSPIEL\n* OPENING   CEREMONIES\n* FOLK   DANCING\n* BARBECUES\n* $1,000   BINGO\n* TEEN   DANCE\n* ADULT   DANCE\nif  PANCAKE   BREAKFAST\n* JAYCEE   RODEO\n* BATTLE OF THE BANDS\n* GAYLAND  SHOWS\nAND   MIDWAY\n* GIGANTIC    FIREWORKS\nON LAST DAY.\nWE INVITE YOU TO COME TO CRESTON AND  ENJOY   YOURSELF!\nCreston Valley Blossom  Festival  Association Committee\n EXEMPLAR DEGREE QUALIFICATIONS have been attained by Ihe members of Beta Sigma Phi Sororily shown\nabove, who were received into the Exemplar chapter al the\nrecent 33rd Founder's Day banquet held in the Memorial Hall.\nPledges presented with the Ritual ol Jewels degree are shown\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUE5\u201e MAY 12, 1964 \u2014 9\n(ouple Feted\nAt Shower in\nHarrop Hall\nHARROP-Many friends from\nHarrop, Procter and LonRbeach\nfilled the hall Monday to congratulate hride-elect Beverly\nMaynard of Balfour, and her\nfiance, l.yle Patilhus of Harrop,\nwith a pre-wedding shower.\nMrs. V. Rowley greeted the\nyoung couple and presenled\nthem with gifts on behalf of district residents. Mr. Paulhus ex\ntended his appreciation and said\nhe felt he had been fortunate to\nbe raised in such a place as\nHarrop.\nOther guests of honor were\nMrs. Maynard, mother of the\nbride-elect, Mr. and Mrs. Joe\nPaulhus, parents of her fiance,\nand Mrs. F. McWhinnie of\nRiondel, his sister.\nMany gifts were opened and\npassed around. Refreshments\nwere served by Mrs. S. Hutche-\nson, and Mrs. L. Kosma, co-\nhostesses.\nin the picture at right. Going up into the Exemplar chapter\nwere, from left, Mrs. G. M. Sproule, Mrs. R. Miller, Mrs. E.\nBachynski, Mrs. T. Cartlidge, Mrs. W. G. Apostoliuk, MrB.\nGeorge Penniket, Mrs. J. I. Laughton and Mrs. B. A. Clarkson.\nMrs. J. S. Todd officiated in bestowing the degree. Mrs. Miller\nwas named Alpha Xi's \"Girl of the Year\" and Mrs. Bachynski\nreceived a similar honor from Iota chapter. Pledges shown\nare, left to right, Mrs. C. H. Buchanan, Mrs. C. B. Bradshaw,\nMrs. C. B. Loff, Mrs. R. Maclean, Miss Carol Gregory and Miss\nKarla Spence. Mrs. T. Swendson, Jr., also a pledge, is not\nshown.\u2014Daily News photos.\nVdds Up Dimes to Collect\n100,000 Towards New YWCA\n43 Intaglio Prints\nSeen Across Canada\n0R0NTO (CP)-In her 30\nars ns a Red Cross worker\nRegina. Mrs. E. C. Leslie\nI never seen a drive for so\nih money, nor found herself\nim (ilveii.\nBut as national chairman of\nl Cross Voluntary Services\nis here for a convention and\nbeen kiting former Regi-\n.s in on how she and her\niy of 2,500 volunteers are\nig in get $100,000 by the end\nJune.\niic said in an interview she\n. iippuinted in March as head\n'.lie women's share of a cam-\n:i\\ fm $l.1150,000 to build a\nv, YMCA building in Regina.\nAppointing 13 key women to\nicr small advisory com-\nittee\u2014 'women who know a\nf people from many walks\nlife - was her first step.\nwunK fi\\e others to take\nc of five campaign areas\ncma was the next.\n\u25a0 weeks after her appoint\nment, she had an army consisting mainly of girl guides and\nmilkmen, which was working on\na novel money-making scheme.\nHANDED OUT  CALENDARS\nMrs. Leslie said the girl\nguides and milkmen handed out\ndime-a-day calendars to housewives throughout the city.\nThe idea is that housewives\ninsert a dime a day into slots\non the calendar.\nEach calendar is expected to\nbring another $3.10 towards the\ncompletion of the proposed\nYWCA building. Calendars are\nbeing returned now.\nMrs. Leslie said she was not\nfazed   by   her   appointment   to\nhead the women's share of the\ncampaign.\n\"The old YWCA was a terrible firetrap and I felt there\nwas a real need for larger\nquarters to accommodate the\nsteady stream of young girls\nwho come to Regina from\nsmaller towns.\"\nShe said the new building will\nhave 92 rooms for residence, a\nswimming pool, a large gymnasium, and many arts and\ncrafts rooms.\nMrs. Leslie said she has a remarkable young mother as her\npublic relations director and as\nfor the project failing she said;\n\"We'll make our goal. I know.\"\nPrint-making has gained such\ngrowing acclaim and interest in\nCanada and abroad, that the\nNational Gallery of Canada has\norganized a special exhibition of\n25 print - makers working in\nParis, where much of the most\ncreative work is being done in\nthis field.\nThe collection of 43 recent\nintaglio prints has drawn great\nattention in the 11 centres across\nCanada where it has appeared.\nThe exhibition is ending its\nsuccessful tour at the National\nGallery, where it is on display\nuntil May 31.\nNicole  Has  Rare Spot- With  Transport   Dept,\nCivil Service Job Leads to\nPosition in   Control Tower\nKilmer Church\ncene of\npring\n(In\n111.\nN V i; It M ERE - Wilmer\nininly    Church    was    the\nen. nl a pretty weddng, Sat-\nApril 25 when  Patricia\na. Urol, daughter ol Mr. and\nlipid ol Neil Mountain,\nw.in, became the bride\nMr   Alvin  Frank  Rauch o!\nIlnier\nlei   llavin Rumsey of Invar-\nf officiated.\n. lovely gown worn by the\nhe entered the oirurch\n\"i\u00b0 arm of her father, had a\n\u00bbr-l.nslh hell skirt of white\nI over  taffeta.   The   fitted\np \"I nylon lace featured a\nwihrarl    neckline    and lily-\nes. Her bouquet was\nAmerican Beauty roses and\nof !h. valley.\nune Rauch. sister of the\n\u00b0\";n was maid of honor, in a\ntz length frock of blue bro-\n* She carried a colonial\n11 .nel nl pink carnations. Mr,\n\u2122kl \"nan of Wilmer was the\nman\nffieplinn was held   at   the\np \"1 Mr. and Mrs. William\nmmelgarn.\nAinsworth\nAINSWORTH   HOT  SPRINGS\n\"P1 Adams of Kaslo held the\nMer s Day church service ln\n' Ainsworth Community hall\nln\"''V Mr and Mrs. Johnson\n\u00b0*\" '-lie guest home at Mirror\n\u25a0\u00bb assisied. A social hour fol-\n\"I afler the sepy^.\nr  ami Mrs.  Alfred Boffey\nM's. My.he Tedford were\n\u2122<\u2122 visitors wth Mr. and\n'   '   A  Anderson.\n',rs   Anna Baker is visiting\nMl\"   and   daughter-in-law,\n'll1'1 Mrs.  Jack  Bsker of\n\u00abison\nJJr ;,,lf| Mrs. M. L. Brothers\nIP *fekend visitors in Trail.\nrnn, Al,TY NAMED\n\u2122 ALBERNI (CP.-Judy\nP r n| a 17-year-old blonde,\n\u25a0 named Miss Alberni Valley\n,i7 n,p hiKh school student\n' Resent the area in the\n.-\"f\" National Exhibition\n'\"> P^eant this summer.\nMONTREAL (CP> - Nicole\nViau. 25. holds down a job\nwhere one mistake would be\nglaringly, perhaps tragically,\nevident.\nMiss Viau is one of Canada's\nfive women air traffic controllers employed by the transport\ndepartment. Two others are in\nMontreal, one is in Toronto and\nanother in Vancouver.\nEight hours a day Nicole sits\nin the control tower at Montreal International Airport, one\nof Canada's busiest, helping ensure that the daily average of\nabout 500 landings and takeoffs\nare made without mishap,\nIt's a job of constant pressures, dictated by the volume\nof air traffic, though sometimes\nrelieved by the weather.\n\"If you wake up and see tbe\nsun you know you're going to\nwork hard that day,\" Miss\nViau says. \"If it's raining, you\nsmile.\"\nHowever, bad weather doesn't\nreduce air traffic as much as\nit used to. Improved approach\naids and increasing use of radar have changed that.\nMOVES ABOUT\nThere are four different positions in the glassed-in tower\nwith its panoramic view of the\nairways and runways. Nicole\nspends time in each.\nIn one she's an air controller,\nhandling all traffic in the air,\nthe arrivals and departures and\ngiving instructions to pilots.\nThe second is a clerical position, usually filled by an assistant contoller unless the tower\nIs short - stffed. In this she\nkeeps a log of traffic.\nIn the third she is in contact\nwith radio-equipped vehicles on\nthe ground. \"If they're not controlled, you might have a plane\nlanding on one of them.\"\nThe fourth position is clear-\n;ance delivery. \"You make sure\n'the pilot has instructions right.\n\"Everyone   prefers   the   air\ncontroller spot because this is\nthe most important one.\nI   \"You couldn't work eight\nhours on  that  post,  especially\non busy days,\"\nMiss Viau has worked for the\nj transport department for seven\nyears. She started as an assistant controller and after\nfour years applied to become a\ncontroller.\nShe admits she wasn't motivated by an interest in aviation.\n\"I went for a civil service job,\nsaw an opening for assistant\ncontroller and applied. With the\nwork, I became interested,\"\nExciting new techniques and\ntrends in print-making have\nhelped make the public more\naware of the print as a work of\nart. As Richard Lacroix (award-\nwinning Canadian represented\nin this exhibition* describes it,\n\"the print-maker must be both\ncreative artist and skilled artisan\" and it is this challenging\ndual role which has attracted\nincreasing numbers to this medium. Only recently has the\nartist been drawn from the\ncolour lithograph method of\nprint-making to explore the\nexciting possibilities in the intaglio processes. This exhibition\nwas specially organized to show\nthese new vitalities and includes\nsome of the original copper\nplates from which the prints\nwere made.\nAmong the artists represented\nare: S. W. Hayter, Jeremy Gen-\ntilli, Zoran Music, Helen Phillips,\nArthur Lull Toledo Piza, Mario-\nPrassinos, Krishna Reddy, Enrique Zanartu, Yoshiko Noma,\nRichard Lacroix and Shirley\nWales. The latter two are Canadians from Montreal, but other\nnationalities include Italians,\nSwiss, Americans, Chileans. Australians, Dutch, Japanese and\nIndians, an indication of the\norigiality and variety contained\nin the collection.\nOb out ihsb J own.\n_PHONE 352-3552_\nHints From Heloise\nBy Heloise Cruse\nBAPTISM  HELD\nAT EDGEWOOD\nEDGEWOOD - At a baptismal service in the United\nChurch, Dawn Annette, the Infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs.\nAlan Devlin of Fauquier, was\nbaptized.\nGodparents were Mr. and Mrs.\nJ. Bakker of Nakusp and the\nservice was conducted by Rev.\nJ. W. Fast\nFollowing the service, tea\nwas served at the home of the\ninfant's grandparents, Mr. and\nMrs. G. E. Hopp.\nDear Heloise:\nFor easy quilt-making use old,\nworn wool blankets for bat\nting . . .\n1 buy five yards of print cloth,\ncut it in half and seam together.\nThen, I take five yards of\nsolid colored cloth and do the\nsame thing.\nI put the right sides together\nand stitch three skies on the\nsewing machine, leaving one end\nopen. This forms a \"hag.\"\nI insert the blanket ... pin\nit in place and stitch the open\nend.\nUsing the machine I stitch\nany desired design that may\nhit my fancy.\nAn easy one is several rows\nall around Ihe edges of the\nblanket stitched six inches apart.\nThese quilts are beautiful, useful and so easy to launder.\nI just throw mine ln the washing machine without a worry\nof ruining the \"batting\" in any\nway   whatsoever.\nLorena Prescolt\n\u2022 \u2022   *\n> A wonderful way to utilize\nthose old, worn and faded wool\nblankets. Don't you agree?\nHeloise\n\u2022 \u2022   .\nDear Heloise:\nThere must Still be a few\npeople who need an old-fashioned ironing board cover In b\nhurry some day- I used the\ncorner of an old fitted sheet\nto cover the point of th. ironing\nboard phis the necessary width\nof the rest of the material and\nfound I had a neat end to work\nwith when tacking, basting, and\npinning it in place.\nMrs. T. E. W.\nGals:\nI Just took an old, worn oul\nfitted sheet and tried it for a\ncover on my ironing hoard. It\nis lantastic. Know why?\nYou will come out with a\npartly-bias piece of material\nalong the length of your ironing\nboard! Wet the sheet then pin\nit to your ironing board. After\nIt dries it's as slick as a whistle.\nHeloise\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nDear Heloise:\nI removed the lint from my\nchenille bedspread by placing\nit in my clothes dryer. I set\nit on \"fluff\" and ran it at least\ntwo hours.\nBe sure to empty the lint trap\neach time you re-set your dryer\non fluff.\nTerry Leson\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nDear Heloise:\nI chop up onions and peppers\nand place them in my ice cube\ntray (with a divider In place)\nBe Sure Ihey are NOT plastic\nas they will smell.\nWhen these cubes are frozen\nf can remove them and put\nthem into a freezer bag and\nthey are all pre-measured for\nchill, spagetti, etc. Saves time,\nspace and waste.\nAfter canning 16 years and\nspending hours peeling tiny pearl\nonions 1 found that I could simply plunge them In boiling water,\nlet them cool as you do peaches\nand tomatoes, and the skin Jus',\nslips right off!\nJanet Reader\n...\nLETTER OF LAUGHTER\nDear Heloise;\nI have a suggestion for wives\nwhose husbands can never\nfind their pipe cleaners, keys.\ncigarette lighter flint, or what-\nhave-you.\nMy husband was like that.\nHe emptied his pockets on the\nnearest drainboard or any handy\nplace he could find. I was al\nwas picking things up, then he\nwould say he didn't know where\nthings were.\nI finally told him to pick out\nany drawer in the kitchen he\nwanted for his personal things.\nAfter that anything I found ly\ning around I would put in this\ndrawer and he could look there\nbefore asking where this or that\nwas.\nI never touched that drawer\nto clean it!\nHe finally cleaned it himself\n. . . when it got so full he\ncouldn't get anything more in\nit!\nIt has worked out beautifully\nbecause he has now gotten into\nthe habit of putting things where\nthey belong, instead of just drop\nping them on the nearest table\nor my drainboard.\nPhamia\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nDear Heloise:\nWhen it comes to baby gifts,\nI buy one yard of terry cloth\nand a matching or contrasting\nwashcloth. I fold the washcloth\nInto a triangle and sew it into\none corner of the piece of terry-\ncloth.\nI   then  bind   this  with  quilt\nbinding and have a huge towel\nwith  a  hood for drying  baby.\nIt's a wonderful gift for mothers.\nMaryetta Bitzer\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nDear  Heloise:\nTo keep up on cleaning my\nrefrigerator^ I dean one-shelf\neach day. When doing lunch\ndishes is a good time. It takes\nbut a few minutes and it doesn't\nseem like a chore when it's part\nof the daily routine.\nJ. M. S\nMiss Marilyn King of Vancouver is a house guest of her uncle\nand aunt, Mr. and Mrs. J. A. McDonald, 424 Hoover Street, while\npractise teaching at the Junior\nHigh School.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nNew members were introduced lo tbe Nelson Ladies Golf\nClub at its opening day tea Saturday in the clubhouse, attended\nby 40 women. Mrs. Jack Kinnon\npresided at the tea table. Entertainment was provided by Mrs.\nTom Shrieves, Miss Lillian Hick-\ney, Miss Gloria Ferguson, Mrs.\nFritz Koehle. Mrs. Gus Adams,\nMrs. Howie Hornby and Mrs.\nMickey Maglio. with Mrs. B. A.\nClarkson providing the accompaniment.\nMrs. ,1, T. McKinlay was honored with a special birthday cake\nand congratulations from fellow\nmembers when the Nelson Senior Citizens Club met Friday\nnight in the Blue Room of tbe\nCivic Centre. Whist was enjoyed\nprior to the tea hour, with Mrs,\nH. B. Lindsay winning first\nprize, Mrs. E. Boates, second,\nand Mrs. E. A. Calbick, third.\nMrs. McKinlay was presented\nwith a cup and saucer. A delegate will  represent  the Nelson\ngroup at the June convention to\nbe held in Vancouver.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nA good crowd attended the\nJunior Hospital Ladies coffee\nparty held in the cafeteria of\nKootenay Lake General Hospital\nMonday morning. President Mrs.\nS. Hallgren demonstrated six\ndifferent hair styles from one basic fashion.\nMrs, E. McGregor poured coffee and serviteurs were Mrs. J.\nL. Smith, Mrs. R. C. Wilson,\nMrs. J. P. Arling, Mrs. T. P.\nWilson, Mrs. C. Isakson. Mrs. P.\nII. Dot Inn was cashier and Mrs.\nII. E. Stewardson and Mrs. Anita Coyle were contest ticket convenors.\nWedding\nAnnouncement\nMr. and Mrs. J. A, McDonald.\n424 Hoover Street, announce lhat\ntheir second daughter, Edith\nGillian, was married in San\nFrancisco on May 5th to Dr,\nHarold Denis, only son of Mr.\nand Mrs. H. Umhey of Los\nAngeles. Dr. and Mrs. Denis will\nbe in residence at Palo Alto,\nCalifornia, after June 30th.\n\u2014112-112\nDAILY   CROSSWORD\nACROSS\n1, Overspreading gloom\n8. A mop\n9. Toward\nthe lee\n10. Wander\nIng\nworkman\n11. Arm joint\n12. Apart\n14. Eskimo\ntool\n13. Man's\nnickname\n16. Brazilian\npalm\n17, A kind\nof tale\n20. Lair\n21. Hesitation\nsound\n22. Girl's\nnickname\n23. Hastened\n24. Pen point\n25. Skirt\nborder\n26. Melody\n28. Hawk\nparrot\n29. Like\n31. Mouthful\n32. Violent,\nreckless\nbehavior\n84. Type\nmeasure\n35. Immerse\n86. Obstacle\n37. Talk: sL\n80, Harangue\n41. Russian\nriver\n42. To be\nexcessively\nfond of\n43. Rational\n44. Scotch\nriver:\npoBs.\nDOWN\n1, Paleness\n2. A book fo>\nphotographs\n8. Man's\nnickname\n4. Actor\t\nAyres\nB. Kind of\nrock\n6. A dog-like\nwild animal\n7. Finnish\nseaport\n8. Baby's shoe\n11 \"rench\nriver\n\u25a0:'>\nL\n_\n<_\nM\nf.\n6\nB\ni\n1\nFr\nV\nl->\n_\nA\nI\n-\nun\n:':\nr\nK\nb\n\\\nA\nPA\n<,\nP\n1_\ni\nb\n1\n-\n1\n.\n-\n\"\n.\nA\nH\n10\nV\n1.\n_\nA\n;\nU\ns\nP\n-\nr\nU\nV\n.\n1\nc\n1\nr\nA\n,:\nfc_.\na\nF,\n1\n*\nk\nt_\n1\n_\nN\nrj\nu\n1\nkf\nA\nG\nu\n__.\nr\nM\"\n_\np\n'-mb\n%\ni\u00a3\ns|\n13. Discover\n15. Hlgb\ncard\n18. Largest\ncontinent\n19. Gist,\nas of\na story\n20. Ob-\nscur* *\u00ab\n23. Pile Ye_rterd__y'i Aniwef\n24. Pinch 32. Valley of\n25. Pronoun the moon\n26. Peer Gynt'e 33, Subside\nmother: 35, University\nofficer\n88. Man's nami\n39. Strange\n40. Spawn\noffish\n27. Commotion\n28. Chance\n29. Marbles\n30. Wither\n%,\n1\n2\n3\n.\n^\n6\n<_.\n7\n8\n%\ny4\n9\ni\n10\n%\nii\nrt\n12\nu\ni4\n%\n%\n15\n%\n1<0\nn\n18\n19\n%\n20\n21\n'^\n%\n73\n%\n%\nli\n'^\nts\n2fe\n27\n%\n23\n%\n23\n3D\n31\n%\n32\n33\n34\n\"\/A\nis\n%\n^\nSo\n37\n38\n'^\n\u00bb\n40\n%\n41\nv4\n42\n%\n%\n43\n%\n44\n%\n5\"-\/?\nDAILY CRYFTOQCOTE \u2014 Here's how to work Iti\nAXTDLBAAXB\nts LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this sample A ls used\nfor the three Vs. X for the two O's, etc Single letters, apos-\ntrophlet, the length and formation of the words we all hints\nBach day the code letters are different\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nFIO     KYI     AKQUTUBKV    FRY!    OYRF\nTKOUQZ      QWKO      OYRF      FKVUBL\u2014\nVK       YRBWIQR8BK8VJ\nYesterday's Cryptoquotet EVERYON-I IB BOUND TO ASSERT KtB RIGHTS AND RESIST THEIR INVASION BY\nOTHJ1R8\/-XANT\nC IMl King Tutures Syndicate, Inc.\nON THE AIR\nPACIFIC DAYLIGHT TIME\nCKLN PROGRAMS 1390 ON THE DIAL\nTUESDAY, MAY 12, 1964\n5:58\u2014Sign On\n6:00\u2014The Morning Show\n6:40\u2014Farm Fare\n6:45-Chapel In the Sky\n7:00\u2014 News\n7:05-Wake Up Time\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Wake Up Time Continues\n8:00\u2014News\n8:05-B.C. News and Weather\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n7:35\u2014Wake Up Time Continues\n8:30-OpcninR Markets\n8:35\u2014Wake Up Time\n9 00\u2014News\n9:10\u2014 Preview Commentary\n9:15\u2014The Archers\n9:30-Alan's A.M. Spot\n9:5\u00bb-D.O.O.T.S.\n10:00\u2014News\n10:10-Music Fill\n10:15\u2014University of the Air\n11:00\u2014News\n11:05\u2014Morning Melodies\nContinues\n10:45\u2014Morning Melodies\n12:00\u2014Tennessee Krnie Ford\n12:15\u2014Sports News\n12:25\u2014 News\n12:30-11.C. Farm nroadcast\n12:55\u2014Noon Markets\n1:00\u2014Stories witli John Drainie\n1:15\u2014Shirley llarmer Show\n1:45\u2014Playroom\n2:00\u2014Afternoon Concert\n2:30\u2014News\n2:33\u2014Trans Canada Matjnee\n3:30-Far Away Places\n4:0O\u2014News\n4:03\u2014Canadian Roundup\n4:10\u2014Countdown\n4:40\u2014Here's What's New\n5:0O\u2014News\n5:05\u2014Ian McFarlane Show\n5:30-Nalional News\n5:40\u2014Closing Markets\n5:45\u2014Bill Good Sports\n5:50\u2014Spotlight on Sports\n5:55\u2014Strikes and Spares\n6:00\u2014National News\n6:05\u2014Grand Old Opry\n7:00\u2014News and Reporti\n7:20\u2014Speaking Personally\n7:30\u2014Report From London\n7:45\u2014 Music For Listening\n8:30\u2014Winnipeg Pops Concert\n9:00\u2014Citizens' Forum\n9:30\u2014Choirs in Concert\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Chapel In the Sky\n10:30\u2014Assignment\n11:00\u2014News\n11:01\u2014Sign Oft\nCBC   PROGRAMS\nWEDNESDAY, MAY 13, 1964\n6:00\u2014Morning Show\n8:35\u2014Max Ferguson Show\n9:00\u2014News and Report\n9:10\u2014Interlude\n9:15\u2014The Archers\n930\u2014Pacific Express\n9:59-D.O.O.T.S.\nI0:00-...orning Visit\n10:10\u2014For Consumers\n10:15\u2014Music Diary\n10:45\u2014Playroom\n11:00\u2014Off the Record\n11:45\u2014Music on the Heather\n12:0O-Don Messer\n12:15\u2014News\n12:25\u2014Bill Good Sports\n12:30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Five To One\n1:00\u2014Stories With John Drainie\n1:15\u2014Tommy Hunter Show\n1:45\u2014Program Resume\n2:00\u2014 Afternoon Concert\n2:30\u2014News\n2:33\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n3:30-Matinee Theatre\n4:00\u2014News\n4:03\u2014Canadian Roundup\n4:10\u2014Countdown\n4:40\u2014Tempo For Teens\n5:30\u2014News\n5:40-Today's Editorial\n5:45\u2014Bill Good Sports\n5:50\u2014Spotlight on Sports\n5:55\u2014Recorded Music\n6:30-MuSic In \"G\"\n7:00\u2014News and Parliament Hill\n7:20\u2014In the Provinces\n7:30\u2014Christian Frontiers\n8:00\u2014Assignment\n8:30\u2014Dixie Land Downheat\n9:00\u2014University of the Air\n9:30-CBC Strings\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Talks\n10:30\u2014Serenata\n11:00\u2014New Records\n12:00\u2014 News\n12:05\u2014Recorded Music\nTELEVISION   FOR  TODAY\nPACIFIC DAYLIGHT TIME\nKREM-TV \u2014 Channel !\n6:30 Woody Woodpecker\n7:00 Guestward Ho\n7:30 Combat '\n8:30 McHale's Navy \u2022\n9:00 Greatest Show on Earth *\n10:00 The Fugitive \u2022\n11:00 Nightheat wilh Bill Denton\nand Bob Young\n11:30 Late Show\nKXLY-TV -\n- Channel 4\n7:00 Adventure Theatre\n8:00 Red Skelton *\n9:00 Petticoat Junction \"\n9:30 Jack Benny \u2022\n10:00 Garry Moore '\n11:00 11 o'clock News\n11:30 Big 4 Movie\nKHQ-TV \u2014 Channel (\n00 Across the 7 Seas\n30 Mr. Novak \u2022\n30 Rural Youth on Parade\n00 Richard Boone *\n10:00 Andy Williams (C) \u2022\n11:00 News and Weather\n11:30 Tonight with Carson (C) \u2022\nCBC-TV \u2014 Nelson, Channel 9: Trail, Channel 11\n2:00 Password\n2:30 Scarlett Hill\n3:00 Take Thirty\n3:30 Friendly Giant\n3:45 Mr. Rogers\n4:00 Fireball XI_-5\n4:30 Cisco Kid\n5:00 Razzle Dazzle\n5:30 Come Listen Awhile\n6:00 Adventure\n6:30 Home Edition\n7:00 7 o'Clock Show\n7:30 Reach For the Top\n8:00 Patty Duke\n8:30 Ben Casey\n9:30 Front Page Challenge\n10:00 Newsmagazine\n10:30 The Nature of Things\n11:00 News\n11:14 Viewpoint \t\nCJLH-TT \u2014 Channel 7. Lethbridge\nMOUNTAIN STANDARD TIME\n9:45\n10:00\n10:30\n10:45\n11:00\n11:90\n12:00\n12:30\n2:00\n2:30\n3:00\n3:30\n3:45\n4:00\n4:30\nTest Pattern\nNational Schools\nChez Helene\nNursery School\nEd Allen Show\nChildren's Singalong\nMonitor 7\nPlayhouse 7 \u2014\n\"Burma Convoy\"\nPassword\nScarlett Hill\nTake Thirty\nFriendly Giant\nMisterogers\nCisco Kid\nPot-Pourrl\nWEDNESDAY\n5:00 Razzle Dazzle\n5:30 Woody Woodpecker\n6:00 Nation's Business\n6:15 Weather. News\n6:25 Tote-A-Boat Quiz\n6:30 Wagon Train\n7:30 Mister Ed -\n\"Ed's Word of Honor\"\n8:00 Red River Jamboree\n8:30 Perry Mason\n9:30 Festival\n11:00 CBC News\n11:15 Night Final\n11:20 The New Breed \u2014\n\/    \"Prime Target\"\n(Programs snblect la mange by stations without notice.)\n 10 \u2014NILSON DAILY NEWS, TUES., MAY 12, 1964\nPREAKNESS NEXT  By Alan Move.\nBaseball Roundup\nLowly Colts Drop Giants;\nIndians Hammer Red Sox\nBy  THE  ASSOCIATED  PRESS\nHome runs by Fred Whitfield\napd Larry Brown accounted for\nseven Cleveland runs Monday\nnight as the Indians cut loose\nafter a lost weekend and\nwhipped Boston Red Sox 11-7.\nDon Zimmer's two-run triple\nin the seventh inning powered\nWashington Senators to a 6-4\nvictory over Baltimore Orioles\nin another American League\nnight contest enlivened by a\nzany force play. Rain washed\nout the Minnesota - Chicago j\ngame. New York and Detroit\nwere not scheduled.\nAt  Los Angeles. Albie  Pear- '\nson slammed a two-run homer, j\ndoubled his next two times up\nand scored three runs to lead j\nthe Angels to a 6-5 victory over j\nKansas City Athletics. The An-\ngels, leading 6-2 after seven in- j\nnings, just about blew their lead\nin the eighth but were saved by i\nBarry Latman's fine relief per- j\nformance, saving   thc   win   for j\nstarter Fred Newman.\nIn  National  League  activity, |\nJulian Javier's   three-run   sev- I\nenth  -  inning  homer  gave  St.\nLouis  Cardinals  a  3-2 decision j\nover Philadelphia Phillies. Cin-j\ncinnati edged Pittsburgh Pirates |\n7-8 on Pete Rose's three - run\nblast in  the eighth  and  Houston's  Dick  Farrell  checked j\nleague - leading San Francisco\nGiants 4-1,\nCleveland, which dropped four |\nstraight to the Yankees over the |\nweekend and fell from first to J\nfourth place in the AL stand- [\nings, cracked Red Sox pitching\nfor 15 hits and an 11-1 lead,\nthen suryived a six run Boston\nrally with two out in the ninth.\nITS   GRAND   SLAM\nWhitfield hit a grand slam\nhomer in the fifth and Brown\nconnected with two on in the\neighth.\nZimmer delivered for the Senators after Baltimore centre-\nfielder Jackie Brandt turned\npitcher Bennie Daniels' apparent base hit into a rare\u2014for an\noutfielder\u2014unassisted force at\nsecond. Don Lock's three-run\nhomer gave the Senators an\nearly bulge. John Powell hit a\ntwo-run blast for the Orioles,\nJavier, whose sixth inning single was the first Cardinal hit off\nPhils slarter Ray Culp, brought\nSt. Lous from behind with his\nhomer after singles by Johnny\nLewis and Charley James.\nThe Phils capitalized on Ray\nSadecki's early wildness for sin-\n| gle runs in the first two innngs.\nSadecki settled down and allowed only six hits while going\nthe distance for his first victory.\nRose's homer, off Pirate reliever Frank Bork, offset a two-\nrun Pittsburgh rally in the bottom of the eighth and provided\nthe  Reds'  winning  margin.\nHouston, held to one hit for\nfive innings by Billy O'Dell,\nkayoed the Giant starter in a\nthree - run sixth, with Mike\nWhite, Rusty Staub and pinch\nhitler Al Spangler driving in the\nruns.\nFarrell scattered 10 Giant hits\nfor his fourth victory in five\nstarts.\nDodger's Woes Increase;\nKoufax, Podres Reinjured\nCHICAGO (API - Star pitchers Sandy Koufax and Johnny\nPodres of Los Angeles Dodders\ncomplained of injuries during a\nworkout in Wrigley Field Monday.\nThe team was preparing for i\nthe opener of a three-game ser-1\nies with Chicago Cubs Tuesday\nand Podres was pitching halting\npractice when he suddenly walked off the mound. He said\n\"something popped\" in his arm\nwhen he threw a fast hall to\nWally Moon.\nKoufax was next on the hill I\nand threw only briefly because\nhis back was bothering him. He\nthen tried lo loosen up on the\nsidelines, but finally threw up\nhis hands in disgust and left for\nthe clubhouse.\nManager Walt Alston said:\n\"Podres hurt his arm first\nwhen he was hit on the inside of\nthe elbow by Warren Spahn\nmore than two weeks ago. After\nthe workout today. Johnny said\nthe arm wasn't hurting him any\nmore than il did before. Koufax\ndeveloped a stiff back pitching\nin San Francisco Saturday.\nThere was a coid wind blowing\nand he apparently got chilled.\nwms ssTABiis\/lep tub\n'too eooe \/ie\/shbor\"\nroucy\/ii r\/ie\nKB\/lTdCKY PBRBy\neyeeco\/iwts r\/\/e\nmsr mmp\/ajbrep\never m #\/\/\/mi*\nCIA9S\/C \u2014\nNORTHERN\nPANCER\n\/Von1 TR\/ES\nfORA\n$WLAR\nf\/RST \/ft\nTH\u00a38&7tt\nPREAKNESS\n\/IT\nfWd\/CO\nOiMAy\/6.\nm\nOWAER,\n{.p.rmoR,\nCAME\nCCOSB\ntwe\/f\/f\/s\nV\/CTORIA\nPARK\nRAfl\nfECO\/iP\n\/\/trm\nI960\nPREAK\/ICiS,\nHrK\nDiatrt but ed by King feature* tlj\/ndientt\nSieve Owen\nIn Critical\nit's\nEASY to OWN\na new\nMcCulloch...\n(with your good credit)\n\u2022 Lowest Down Payment\nAs low as $2.50 per week\n(Model MAC 15)\n\u2022 Up to 12 Months to Pay\n\u2022 Quick Credit Approval\n\u2022 Complete Insurance\nCoverage . . . Protection\nduring Contract against\n\u2022 MRl\n\u2022 THtrr\n\u2022 DAMAGE by falling traei\nTHY *N EASY HANDLING McCULLOCH\nTODAY!\nFOR FURTHER DETAILS SEE ...\nMAC'S\nWELDING\n& Equipment Co.\nLtd.\n514 Railway St.\nPhone 352-5301\nMAJOR LEAGUE\nSTATISTICS\nBy  THE  ASSOCIATED   PRESS\nNational  League\nAB Ft    H Pet.\nMays. San Fran. 81 24 39 .481\nWilliams, Chicago 79 17 32 .405\nClemente, Pitts 103 20 41 .398\nBoyer. St. Louis 97 16 35 .301\nCardenas. Cinci.    82 13   29 .354\nRuns\u2014Mays. 24.\nRuns Batted ln\u2014Mays, 30.\nHlts-Clementc, 41.\nDoubles   Clemente, 9.\nTriples \u2014 Banks and Santo,\nChicago, Allen, Philadelphia,\nand Boyer. 3.\nHome Runs\u2014Mays, 11.\nStolen Bases\u2014Wills, Los Angeles,  10.\nPitching\u2014Marichal, San Francisco. 5-0.  1.000.\nStrikeouts \u2014 Maloney. Cincinnati, 37.\nAmerican League\nAB R    II Pet.\nOliva. Minnesota 102 23 45 .441\nFregosi, Los Ang 65 17 26 .400\nBressoud, Boston 90 15 34 .378\nFreehan, Detroit 54 5 20 .370\nTillman, Boston     64   5   21 .328\nRuns\u2014Oliva and Rollins. Min-\nnesola, 23.\nRuns Batted In \u2014 Wagner,\nCleveland, 25.\nHits\u2014Olivn, 45.\nDoubles\u2014Bressoud and Mathews, Kansas City. 7.\nTriples \u2014 Versalles, Minnesota, and Ilinton. Washington. 4.\nHome Runs\u2014Colavito, Kansas\nCity, 9.\nStolen Bases\u2014Aparicio. Baltimore, 9.\nPitching \u2014 Lamabe, Boston,\nand Kline. Washington. 3-0\n1.000.\nStrikeouts \u2014 Wickersham, Detroit, 36.\nNot Aware of Expansion\nProposals - Campbell\nONEIDA, N.Y. <CP> -Steve\nOwen, longtime coach of New\nYork Football Giants, is in critical condition at Oneida City\nHospital, it was reported Monday night. |\nI A hospital spokesman refused\nto disclose the nature of Owen's\nillness but did say that the 66-\n\\ year-old football veteran, who\nalso coached Canadian teams,\nwas in an oxygen tent.\nOwen, who coached the National Football League Giants\nfor 23 years before retiring in\n1953, suffered a heart attack\ntwo years ago but made a good\nrecovery.\nOwen went to Canada in 1957\nto serve as a Toronto Argonaut\ncoach under IIamp Pool, Midway in the 1959 season Pool was\nfired and Owen served as bead\ncoach of the Eastern Conference team for the rest of the\nseason.\nOwen moved to the Argo front\noffice in I960, but went back to\ncoaching when Calgary Stam-\npeders of the Western Conference ran into trouble. He guided\nthat team to the western playoffs, but the next season was\non the move again, this time to\nSaskatchewan.\nIn two seasons he rebuilt thc\nRoughriders and took them into\ntbe western playoffs. He won\nCoach-ofthe-Year honors but\nthe Roughriders decided not to\nrehire him,\nOwen last fall coached Syracuse Stormers of the United\nFootball League, He has been\nliving in Oneida.\nMONTREAL (CP> - Clarence Campbell, president of the\nNational Hockey League, said\nMonday night the NHL has not\nbeen approached officially regarding expansion to the West\nCoast.\nHe was commenting on the\nexpansion proposals advanced\nby Stafford Smythe and Harold\nBallard, the president and vice-\npresident, respectively, of Toronto Maple Leafs of the NHL.\nCampbell made it clear he\ndoesn't doubt any of the talk\nbut he was emphatic that nothing has been submitted to the\nNHL for approval.\n\"I am not aware of any proposal that  is being considered\nby the league for expansion to\nthe West Coast at this time,\" he\njsaid in a telephone interview.\nI   He was  reached at   a   late-\nnight working   session   in   his\ndowntown Montreal office.\nHe added another word:\n\"One thing, if it doesn't make\ni any sense economically it isn't\ngoing to happen.\"\nWON'T SPECULATE\nBut beyond that he said he\ndd not want to be drawn nto\nany speculation.\nCampbell has said in the past\nhe does not view ultimate\nexpansion favorably. But he\nsaid it is not economically feasible at this time.\n\"Anyway no one is breaking\ndown our door to get a franchise,\" he remarked a short\ntime ago.\nAn expanded NHL stretching\nto the coast is envisaged in\nplans announced last Friday in\nSeattle by Smythe at tbe Western Hockey League's annual\nmeeting.\nSmythe offered to build an\n$8,000,000 coliseum seating 20,-\n000 in Vancouver provided the\ncity donated the land.\nBallard confirmed the plan\nand both men said the proposal\npresupposed an NHL franchise\nfor Vancouver under an expanded league.\nHouse of Sparton\nTakes Meet\nTlie House of Sparton racked up\n343 {joints to take top honors in\nthe annual Nelson Junior High\nSchool track meet, held Friday.\nSaxon house placed second with\n323 points. Normans were third\nand Vikings fourth.\nJim Boyce capped a tremendous all-round performance\nwhen he picked off the poultry\nin the boys' division of the featured \"turkey trot\", when he\nran the mile in 5:27.\nMichelle Grant won the girls'\nsection with a score in the hall\nmile open race.\nThe school gives turkeys to\nthe winners of these events as\na means of encouraging students to train and compete in\nthe longer races.\nComplete results follow:\nShot Put \u2014 Sr. Boys: Perry\nBedard, second, Greg Kalyniuk.\nJr. Boys: Sandy Kieth, second,\nMilton Langill; Sr. Girls: Nancy Grady, second, Susan Wal-\nlach; Jr. Girls: Pat Munroe,\nsecond, Janice Lennon.\nDiscus \u2014 Sr. Boys: Pat Reid.\nsecond, Paul Joyce; Jr. Boys:\nSandy Kielh; Sr. Girls: Vida\nSwanson, second, Natalie Hadikin.\nHigh Jump \u2014 Sr. Boys: Rich\nMagaton. Bob Jeffs (tie) 4' 10\",\nsecond, Kevin Stinson; Jr. Boys:\nAllan Henning, 4' 6\", second,\nJim Stinson; Sr. Girls: Faye\nMydansky, 4' 1\", second, Janet\nSokoloski; Jr. Girls: Margaret\nMcMurchy, 4' 1\", second, Pan-\nFerguson. *\nBroad Jump \u2014 Sr. Boys:\nSpence Cox   117'   1\"),    second,-\nPaul Joyce; Jr. Boys: Reiner\nAugustine (16' KW), second,\nTed Allen; Sr. Girls: Faye My-\ndanski (13' 5\"), second, Judy\nBiddlecorabe; Jr. Girls: Pat\nMunro (13' 5.4\"), second, Chris\nRobinson.\n60-Yard Dash - Sr. Boys: Jim\nBoyce, second, Paul Boyce; Jr.\nBoys: Ted Allen - Reiner Augustine (tie); Sr. Girls: Judy\nBiddlecombe, second, Faye My-\ndanski; Jr. Girls: Pat Munro,\nsecond, Torrey Cassan.\n100-Yard Dash \u2014 Sr. Boys:\nJim Boyce, second, Murray Winlaw; Jr. Boys: Reiner Augustine, second, Doug Carlson; Sr.\nGirls: Bernice Kary, second,\nMichelle Grant; Jr. Girls: Chris\nRobinson,  second, Pat Munroe.\n220-Yard Dash \u2014 Sr. Boys,\nPaul Joyce, second, Murray\nWinlaw; Jr. Boys: John Wright,\nsecond, Chris Kristofferson; Sr.\nGirls: Judy Biddlecombe, second, Faye Mydanski - Linda\nClarkson (tie).\nHop, Skip and Jump \u2014 Sr.\nBoys: Gary Cuthbert 137' 6!\"),\nsecond, Jim Boyce.\n440-Yard Dash - Sr. Boys:\nBob Jeffs, second, Alex Beris-\noff; Jr. Boys: Murray Dodds,\nsecond, Roy Johnston.\nRelay - 440 Yards \u2014 Sr. Boys:\nSpartons, second, Saxons; Jr.\nBoys: Spartons, second, Vikings;\nSr. Girls: Saxons, second, Spartons; Jr. Girls: Saxons, second,\nVikings.\nTurkey Trot \u2014 Boys: J5m\nBoyce, second Arnold Abr09imo;\nGirls: Michelle Grant, second,\nSandra Reese.\nBrown Bomber\n50 Wednesday\nPENNANT  RACE\nBy  THE  ASSOCIATED   PRESS\nPACIFIC   COAST   LEAGUE\nEastern Division\nW L   Pet. GBL\nArkansas 13   6   .684   \u2014\nOklahoma City 14 II .560 2\nDenver 15 12   .556    2\nSalt Lake City 13 12 .520 3\nIndianapolis 8 9 .471 4\nDallas 6 17   .261    9\nWestern Division\nPortland 15 10 .600 -\nSan Diego 14 11 .560 1\nTacoma 12 11 .522 2\nSpokane 13 12 .520 2\nSeattle 10 12 .455 34\nHawaii 7 17 .292 74\nFootball\nSigning*\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Tackles\nLonnie Dennis and Bill Frank\nhave signed unprecedented five-\nyear contracts with British Columbia Lions of the Western Football conference, the club said\nSaturday.\nThe pair are the kingpins of\nthe Lions' offensive line. Dennis,\n26, is a four-year veteran import\nfrom Brigham Young University.\nFrank, also 26. is a second-year\nimport from Colorado and is one\nof the league's strongest players\nat six-foot-four and 255 pounds.\nTheir contracts are the first\nsigned for more than three years\nby a Lion player.\nAmerican League\nChicago\n12   6\n.667\n\u2014\nNew York\n13   7\n.650\n_\nCleveland\n12   9\n.571\n,14\nBaltimore\n13 10\n.565\n14\nMinnesota\n12 11\n.522\n2',.\nLos Angeles\n11 13\n.458\n4\nBoston\n10 13\n.435\n4t.\nWashington\n12 16\n.429\n5\nDetroit\n9 13\n.409\n5\nKansas Cily\n8 14\n.364\n6\nNational League\nSan Francisco\n15    7\n.682\n\u2014\nPhiladelphia\n14    8\n.636\n1\nMilwaukee\n14   10\n.583\n2\nSI. Louis\n15   11\n.577\n2\nPittsburgh\n13   12\n.520\n34\nCincinnati\n13   12\n.520\n34\nChicago\n9   11\n.450\n5\nHouston\n11   16\n.407\n64\nLos Angeles\n10   15\n.400\n64\nNew York\n6  18\n.250\n10\nALLAN CUP REF\nTHREATENED\nTO QUIT\nWINNIPEG (CP) - The Tribune says the third period of thc\nfinal game of Ihe Allan Cup hockey final here Thursday night\nwas delayed 10 minutes when the\nreferee threatened to quit.\nReferee Bill Roberts of Montreal was angered in a dispute\nwith Canadian Amateur Hockey\nofficials over travelling expenses, the newpapcr said Friday.\nThe story said he took off his\nskates in the officials' quarters\nat the Winnipeg arena after the\nsecond period. He made it clear\nthey would slay off unless he got\nmore money.\nWhen the game was delayed\na public address announcer said\nRoberts was having a broken\nskate fixed.\nThe story said Roberts would\nsay nothing about the dispute,\nbut a CAflA official said It was\na misunderstanding about air\nfare.\nRoberts finally returned to the\nIce. The newspaper said the upshot of the dispute was not\nknown, Winnipeg beat Woodstock\nAthletics 5-3 ln the game to take\nthe best-of-seven senior hockey\nfinal 4-0.\nSavoys Trounce\nKimberley\nNelson Savoys unleashed a\npowerful first half attack, Sunday to down the Kimberley Ca\nnadians 5-2 and move into a sec-j\nond place tic in Western International Soccer League standings.\nCarrying the play to the Canadians on that club's home\nfield, Savoys exploded for three\nquick goals in the opening minutes, and led 4-1 after a half.\nThe teams split a pair of counters in the second frame which\nwas marked by stout defensive\nplay on the part of Savoy back-\nfielders. Hans Schick, Joe Jacoe\nand Quinto Maida.\nHeinz Schmidt opened the\nscoring for the Nelson eleven\nwhen he blasted a hard shot to\nthe corner at the one minute\nmark.\nGoals by Willie Rudolph and\nJohn Carr made it 3-0 before\nKimberley's outside left beat\nSavoy goaltender Eric Tolles\nwith a clean shot on a break\naway.\nAndy Vingo got that one back\nnear the end of the half.\nCanadians stormed back in\n(he second half and tested the\nSavoy defence on several occa\nsions but Nelson was equal to\nthe task at hand.\nA penalty kick resulted in a\nKimberley goal, but Richard\nEggars put the game on ice\nwhen he booted a pass from\nHans Schick past the Kimberley\ngoalie to make the score 5-2 midway  through  the period.\nln other WISL action, Spokane\ndowned Trail.\nLEAGUE STANDINGS\nW L T Pts\nSpokane         3 11      7\nNelson           2 12     fi\nKimberley     3 2 0      6\nTrail     2 2 1      5\nGrand  Forks       0 5 0     0\nClarence   Campbell\nScores \"Archaic\"\nHockey Rules\nOTTAWA (CP) - It is rather\nhopeless to expect Canada to regain its international hockey supremacy until the \"archaic\nrules\" governing eligibility are\nchanged. President Clarence\nCampbell of the National Hockey\nLeague said Thursday \"Amateur teams in Canada can't\nmatch the state-sponsored teams\nin Europe,\" he said. Until the\nrules were revised to remove\namateur status from state players the international scene would\ncontinue to be dominated by\nthem.\"\nMr. Campbell also held out\nlittle hope for such a rule change.\n\"As long as hockey involves na\nUonal pride and prestige.\"\nSpeaking to the Men's Cana\ndlan Club of Ottawa, the NHL\npresident recalled the first time\nthe Olympics added hockey to\nthe winter program:' It was 1920\nand that year Winnipeg Falcons\nscored hundreds of goals against\nforeign opponents.\nBy BOB MYERS\nLOS ANGELES (AP) - Former world heavyweight champion Joe Louis reaches another\nmilestone in one of sports' most\nremarkable careers Wednesday\n\u2014his 50th birthday.\nAnd in the typical, simplified\nphilosophy of Joe Louis, he\nviews the matter this way:\n\"My mind tells me I'll be 50\nbut my legs say I might be\nolder.\"\nNo, the Brown Bomber isn't\nready for the wheelchair, but\nhe admits that on a golf course\nhe does enjoy an electric cart.\nLouis makes his headquarters\nin Los Angeles now but he's\nlikely to show up most anywhere in the country. And if he\ndoesn't have his golf bag in tow,\nhe'll know where to locate one,\nas well as the nearest course.\nGolf has been Joe's main passion for years, and too often in\nthe company of golf sharpies,\nhis biggest weakness.\nRETIRED UNSCARRED\nOver the years Joe hasn't\nchanged much. He emerged\nwithout a scar from his 71 bouts\n\u2014bouts in which he bombed 54\nopponents and outclassed 13\nothers by decision.\n\"I weigh 240 now. My last\nfight, with Rocky Marciano, I\nweighed 214. I got to step up on\nmy diet. I'd like to weigh\naround 225. No more.\"\nJoe said he has several things\ngoing for him now, including a\nconnection with a New York\npublic relations firm. He\nseemed a little vague about it,\nhowever, indicating he might\nwelcome something more substantial.\nHe was a sort of adviser for\nSonny Liston in his losing fight\nwith Cassius Clay. But since\nSonny says the government still\nhas his purse tied up, it is\ndoubtful that Louis has received\nany compensation.\nEARNED (4,000,000\nJoe himself doesn't bother to\ngo into details. Money never\nhas been important to him. He\nearned almost $4,000,000 in\npurses, plus more out of the\nring in the good years.\nWhere it all went no one\nreally knows. But in I960 an Internal Revenue Service aide\nsaid the government, while not\nofficially closing the books, has\nabandoned any hope of getting\nFIGHTS\nBy The Associated Press\nBoston \u2014 Joey Archer, 158,\nYork, outpointed Johnny Torres,\n1554, Paterson, N.J., 10.\nManila \u2014 Flash Elor_e,--I35,\nManila, outpointed Takashi Mai\nsumoto, 133, Japan, 12. Elorde\nretained his Orient lightweight\ntitle.\nJohannesburg \u2014 Kenny Lane,\n1364, Muskegon, Mich., stopped\nStoffel Steyn, 135, South Africa,\n9.\nNew Glasgow, N.S. \u2014 Les\nSprague, 145, Amherst, N.S.,\noutpointed Bobby Barrett, 150,\nBoston,  10.\nIchlnomya, Japan \u2014 Tatusya\nTnkaml, 1214, Japan, outpointed Curly Agiiirre, 122, Philip-\n| pines, 10.\nf\"\nJOE  LOUIS\n. . . Gloves Made\n4 Million\nmore tax money from the ex-\nchampion.\nLouis originally owed $545,000\nin taxes on his earnings. Interest had brought the amount to\nmore than $1,250,000 by 1960.\nMoney was for living, Louis\nseemed to figure, and with the\nhelp of many friends, Joe lived\nwell when he could afford it.\nToday he and his third wife,\nMartha, a Los Angeles lawyer,\nseem comfortably, if not sumptuously, fixed.\nEast\nKootenay\nEquipment Co. Ltd.\nPhone 426-3321\nCranbrook, B.C.\nNatal\nTruck\n& Car\nSales\nPhone 425-7718\nP.O. Box 459,\nNatal, B.C.\nCentral\nTruck\nand\nEquipment\nCo. Ltd.\nPhone 352:2633\n702 Front St.,\nNelson, B.C.\nGodfrey's\nMotor Inn\nPhone 356-2333\nCreston, B.C.\nWIDE\nTRACK\nFRONT AXLE\nis just one\nimportant reason\n40\u00b0 Wheel turn for more maneuverability. Turning radius is up to 14% shorter\nthan trucks of similar size.\nExceptional stability. Plant your feet\nwide apart and you'll know why wide\ntrack stance reduces load sway and protects components from strain.\nImproved tracking. Loadstar follows\neasier in ruts left by other dual wheel\ntrucks. And wherever the wide-set front\nwheels can go, you know there's room\nfor rear dual wheels too.\nEasy handling. Wide track axles, plus\nflat-angled steering wheel and perfected\nsteering gear make for effortless control. Drive it and you'll agree.\nYou'll earn more with an\nINTERNATIONAL\nLOADSTAR\n\u2014built, sold and serviced by truck men.\nINTERNATIONAL HARVESTER\nCOMPANY OF CANADA, LIMITED\n1296 Station St.\nVancouver, B.C.\n___\n NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUES., MAY 12, ..\u00a34 \u2014. llg\nBIRTHS\nEDWARDS-To Mr. and Mrs.\nRichard Edwards, 514-2nd Street,\nNelson, at Kootenay Lako General Hospital, on May 8. a son,\nBOECHLER - To Mr. and\nMrs. Ernest Boechler, 420 Houston Street, al Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital, on May 7, a\nson.\nYOUNG - To Mr. and Mrs.\nFrederick Young, B20 Cottonwood Street, at Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital, on May 9, a\nson.\nDUNFPAN - To Mr. and Mrs.\nWilliam Dunfpan, SIR Robson\nStreet, at Kootenay Lake Genera! Hospital, on May 10, a\ndaughter.\nHELP WANTED\u2014FEMALE\nWTD. IMMEDIATELY STENO-\ngrapher and invoice clerk. Apply in own handwriting stating\nexperience and references.\nBoundary Sawmills Ltd., Midway, B.C. -111-116\nimmedTately, EXPERIENC-\ned waitress. Also kitchen help.\nCastlegar City Centre Motel.\nPh. 352-7277. -112-114\nHOUSEKEEPER FOiTeLDER-\nly couple. Ph. 352-6095.\n-110-115\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nHELP WANTED\nBuiltmore Construction\nBulldozer for hire (TD14).\nLow rates. Phone 352-0216\n\u2014105-tfn\nPARTSMAN-REQUIRED FOR\nlarge Kootenay industry\nShould have Heavy Duty or\nAutomotive parts experience\npreferably, high school education, neat handwriting. Duties\ninclude checking shipments,\nfilling stock orders, posting to\nKardex system, binning stock,\nand related tasks .Secure future for right man with company offering Medical and\nGroup Insurance Pension Plan,\nand excellent working conditions. Apply National Empoly-\nment Service, Nelson, B.C.\n -112-117\nWANTED - GOO-TrELIABLE\nman with I.L.M.A. Grading\nticket, top wages and a good\nplace to work. Phone 255 evenings or write Box 366 Invermere, B.C. -110-115\nWANTED - LOGGING CON-\ntractor to log 18 million F B.M.\nstump to dump. State type and\nsize of equipment. Box 187,\nNelson Daily News.\n-109-113\nCAR PETS, CHESTERFIELDS\ncleaned   beautifully   in   your\nhome. E. Boswell. Ph. 3.2-3728\n94-119\nPIANO TUNING AND REPAIR.\nG. Stenberg.  Ph. 352-6892.\n-106 tin\nWILL   TILL   GARDENS.    PH.\n352-2439. Campbell.        -98-tf\nMACHINERY\nPUMPS\nUsed 14\" and 2\" Piston Pumps.\n1500 G.P.H.\nStevenson Machinery Ltd.\nPhone 352-3561\nRENTALS\n2500 SQ. IT. OF OFFICE\nspace for lease in Nelson \u2014\nsuitable for Construction. Insurance, elc. Will renovate lo\nsuit tenant, central location.\nKeasonabie rent. Wnle 801\nVictoria St.. Nelson, B.C.\n-108-113\nAUTOMOTIVE,   BICYCLES\nMOTORCYCLES\nHSKPG. AND SLEEPING RM\nweekly, monthly rates Dishes,\niinen supplied, parking. Allen\nRooms, 17] Baker St\n-27-tln\nCOTTONWOOD W R E CKACE\nwrecking '51 Olds, '55 Chev.,\n'55 GMC pickup, \">6 Ford, '.\"i7\nPlymouth hardtop, '53 Consul,\nPlyinoullis, Ford.1-. Chcvs ,\nPontiacs, .* ton Chev. truck,\n'55 Meteor. Good motors, '56\nFord, '52 Pontiac, '53 Consul,\n52 and '53 Chev. Ph. 352-5815,\nBox 382, 24 Ymir Road.\n\u2014110-tfn\nHANDY, CLOSE - IN, SEM1-\nfurnished, apt. $40 month. Private entrance, laundry facilities, immediate occupancy.\nPhone 352-3910. -108-113\n1.   2   BDRM.   DUPLEX   API'S.\nGround level. Downtown area.\nAlso furn. suite. Ph. 352-5252.\n-102-lln\n3 RMS. AND BATH. FURN.\nGood home. Reasonable rent.\nNorth Shore. Ph. 352-7493.\n-109-114\nLARGE 2 BDRM UNFURN\nheated apt Elec. range Adults\n$95 mo  Ph. 352-5073 eves.\n-27-tln\n2 BEDROOM APARTMENT,\nnewly decorated, close to\nschool. Available June 1. Ph.\n352-3353. -105-tfn\nINTERNATIONAL 151 TD15\nDrott, log grapple and bucket.\nNew rails, balance in nice\nshape. Evin's Contracting Ltd.\nPhone 365-8203 or 365-8387.\n-110-115\n2 BEDROOM APT. LIVING RM.\nkitchen and bathroom Phone\n352-3003. -86-tf\nSMALL HOUSE-GaIThEAT.\nSuit 1 or 2 adults. Also suites.\nPh. 352-7195. -U2-tln\nHOUSE, 913 STANLEY ST. -\nPh. 352-3788 between 7 ind 8\np.m. -107-112\nAPPLICATIONS   NOW   BEING I\ntaken for summer holiday re-\nlief carrier boys. Apply Nelson\nDaily News. __!_!_t_.n\nCEDAR POST MAKER AND\nBoard Makers. Apply Box 607,\nRossland^B.C. -98-114 j\nLOST AND FOUND      |\nLOST-LADY'S ELGIN WATCH.\nBlack cord strap. Ph. 352-<>752. !\n-112-112\nVALLEY AUTOMOTIVE LTD.\nMassey-Ferguson, New Hoi\nland New and Used Farm\nEquipment. Parts. Sales and\nService. Phone 356-2254, Creslon. B.C. -110-tfn\nFOR SALE - GANG PLOW,\nwalking plow, hay rake, 2\ntrailers, harrows, 3 Surge\nmilker. Fred Storgard. Slocan\nCity. -110-112\nRead the Classiiled  Daily\nBUSINESS   &   PROFESSIONAL\nDIRECTORY\nA handy alphabetical guide to  goods  and  services\navailable Id  Nelson.\nAutomobile Dealers\nBILLS' MOTOR-IN LTD.\niStudebaker-Lark)\n213 Baker SL       Phone 352-3231\n-tfn\nNORTH SHORE SERVICE\n(Standard-Triumph)\nOpen 8 a.m. \u2014 9 p.m.\nAcross Lake        Phone 352-2929\n -tfn\nPARKVIEW MOTORS LTD.\n(Rambler - Volkswagen)\nNelson Ave.    Phone 362-5355\n-tfn\nBuilding Supplies\nBEE BUILDING SUPPLY LTD.\nEverything ln waterproof\nplywood.\n301 Baker SL      Phone 352-3135\n-tfn\nBURNS LUMBER CO. LTD.\n602 Baker SL      Phone 352-6661\n-tfn\nCOLUMBIA TRADING CO\n901 Front St. Ph   352-5571\nLots of free parking.\n-Un\nCabinet Makers\nJOS. C. MERMET\nProfessional  Kitchen   Remodeling  Serving Nelson and Dist.\n1020 Davies SL - Nelson\n-tfn\nContractors\nART RAVESTEIN\nRenovations, Cement Work\nand General Carpe_.r\u00bb\nPhone 352-7433\nEngineers\nand Surveyors\nALEX CHEVELDAVE\nB.C Land Surveyor\u2014S3 Pine St.\nPh. 3*8-5342 - CaatlOgar. BC\n-Un\nGarages\nUpper Fslrvlew Motors Ltd.\nCor. 7th St Davies   Ph. 352-2525\nTransistorized Ignition\n-Un\nPrinting\nNEL\u00abON DAItt NEWS\nPrinter. - Utht. jfr apbert\nColor PrUiti&tf\nPhono 352-3553\n\u2014Un\nPhotb Copying\nPOWELL ENGRAVING\n460 Ward SL Nelson. B.C\nPhone 862-75jl.\nContracts - Blrtb Certificates\nLegal Documents - Important\nPapers\n-tfn\nRadio & TV Service\nVIDEO ELECTRONICS\n405 Hall SL - Phone 352-3355\n-tfn\nRefrigeration\nRefrigeration Sales and Service\nCARLSON EQUIPMENT\nNelson. B.C. - Phone 352-5455\n-tfn\nSeptic Tank\nService\nSEPTIC TANK SERVICE\nNelson Septic Tank Service\nClean, efficient, dependable.\nAll  work guaranteed.\n24-hour service.     Ph. 352-2136\n\u201477-tf\nSKIPS SEPTIC TANK SERVICE\nSewage    and    Home    Disposal\nSystems. Free Estimates.\nPhone 352-5714.\n-90-115\nSporting Goods\nFred Whltelcy's Sport Shop\n488 Baker Street   Phone 352-7741\n-tfn\nSteam Baths\nDeLuxe\nSLIM GYM\nReducing - Physical Fitness\nSauna Baths\nPhone 352-521.       369 Baker St.\n-101-tf\nTopsoil\nLarry's Topsoil, Sand sad Gravel\n9th and Davies St. Ph. 352-2355\nDays or 852-7576 Evens.\n-Un\nUpholstery\nCASTLEGAR CUSTOM\nUPHOLSTERY\nRecovering - Remodelling\nCarpet - Tiles\nCraftsmanship Guaranteed.\nCall for free estimates - no\nobligation,\nPbone 365-5686\n\u201469-114\nWelding & Iron\nWbrks\nWELDtNO AMD ERON WORM\n(Erminno M. LOrdntl, Pro*.)\nOrtiam_M_! It6li Work, Gates.\nRailings, Stairways. Handrails,\nGeneral Welding. Portable Welder available. P.O. Box 27. Ph\n225-3285. Riond.l.\n\u2014104-tfn\n1956 INTERNATIONAL PF 180\ntandem dump truck. Mechanically good. Needs rubber.\nSwap for late model Pickup,\nautomobile, property or what\nhave you? Ph. 385-8188 or Box\n648, Castlegar. -1011-113\n'52 PONTIAC, '58 VOLKSWAG-\nen Station Wagon. '58 Ford\nFairlane Convertible, '52 Monarch hardtop, power windows.\nNorth Shore Service. Ph. 352-\n2929. -110-lln\n'58 FAIRLANE 500 H.T., AT.,\nCont. kit, 4 new tires. Phone\n359-7569 evenings between 5\nand 6. -110-121\nBUSINESS\nOPPORTUNITIES\nL U C R A T1VE DEALERSHIP\navailable for Trail, \"Nelson\nterritory. This is a full Urne\noperation lo sell Factory-limit\nCedar Homes, Cottages and\nMotels. Interested party1 or\ncompany must be prepared to\ninvest in model for display\npurposes. Reply Box 169,' Nelson Daily News. \u2014110 .12\nGENERAL STORE FOR WLE,\nliving quarter-, gas pumps,\ngood business Small dov\/n\npayment phis slock, balance\nlow payments and interest.\nApplv East Robson Store Ph.\n365-3671 Castlegar.       -101-112\nWANTED\nMISCELLANEOUS  >  .\nSPOT CASH FOR USED FURNI-\nture, antiques, coins, old gold,\nguns and jewels. Home Furniture Exchange Ph 352-8531.\n413 Hall St.. Nelson, B.C.\n\u201498-tf\nPROPERTY   WANTED\nFOR    SALE    -    '51    AUSTIN\nSedan and spare parts. What\noffers?  J.  Bogaard,   Blewctl.\n-107-112\n'57F0RD CRESTLINE. EXCEL-\nlent   shape.   New   rear  tires.\nNew valve job. Ph. 352-6359.\n-112-117\n1958 CHEV. STATION WAGON.\nExcellent cond. $1,550. At Oswald Motors, Castlegar.\n-111-113\nHALDANE    APARTMENTS   -\nFurn. or unlurn. Ph. 352-6721.\n-65-tfn\nAPARTMENT, ADULTS ONLY.\nBox 1317 Nelson Daily News.\n-27-tfn\nCENTRAL  DRIVE   IN  BAKER\nSL BasemenL Ph. 352-6024.\n-52-tl\nFOR   RENT - HOUSEKEEP-\ning Room. $20 mo. Ph. 352-7462.\n-82-tln\nHOUSEKEEPING ROOM FOR\nrent, with fridge. KWC Block\nor Ph. 352-6979. -112-114\n2 BEDROOM LOWER DUPLEX,\ngarden, close in. Ph. 352-3808.\n\u2014107-tfn\nFOR SALE. TD14 WITH BLADE\nand winch. Earle Cutler. Ph.\n352-3435. -110-115\nFURN.   HSKPG.   RM.   APPLY\n140 Baker SL or ph. 352-3384.\n-51-tf\n2 BEDROOM FURNISHED\nhouse. Late May for 4 months.\nPh. 352-2594. -110-115\nLOWER DUPLEX, 3 BDRMS.\nPh. 352-2861. -95-tf\n4 ROOM APT. 120 VERNON ST.'\n$50 a month. Ph. 352-2979.\n-112-lfn\nSELF   CONTAINED   3   ROOM\napt. Ph. 352-6484. -108-tfn\n2 B.R.  APT.  UNFURNISHED.\nPh. 352-6148. -110-115\n5 ROOM HOUSE. CLOSE-IN. -\nPh.  352-3020. -112-lln\nFOR  SALE\nMISCELLANEOUS\nWe   recommend   the  type  of\nfertilizer for the job it should\ndo. Ask us for information at\nELLISON'S\nComplete Farm and\nGar-den Centre\n\u2014112-112\nCOMPLETE LINE OF TOP\nquality Wall-to-Wa!l Carpeting,\nDraperies. Upholstery, Boat\nTops, Carpet Installation. Call\nToll Free Zenith 6910 for appointment in your area, or contact Gordon Wall Upholstery\nLtd., 1195 Cedar Ave., Trail,\nB.C. Ph. 368-6545. -99-124\nSIDES OF CHOICE BEEF, 49c\ncut and wrapped. Sides of pork\n29c, cut and wrapped 33c.\nHome cured hams and bacon.\nFree delivery. Call Newdan\nFarms, Creston, B.C. Phone\n356-9901 or 356-9769 \u201486-tf\nFOR THE BEST IN USED\nautomatic washers, dryers, refrigerators, television, etc. contact Nelson Electric Co. Ltd.,\n574 Baker St.. Nelson, B C.\n-27-tfn\nSOFT ICE CREAM MACHINE.\nVariety Glass sections \u2014 price\ntags and counters. Priced to\nclear. Write 801 Victoria SL,\nNelson. -108-113\nSINGER SEWING MACHINE\nCo. Sewing machines, vacuum\ncleaners, floor polishers, typewriters. 339 Baker St. Phone\n352-3631. \u2014111-116\nAPPLES $1 PER BOX AND UP\nBring container. 1 mile from\nferry. Robson, B.C. P. Evdo-\n' kimoff. -72-tf\nPERFECTA, HOME KNITTING\nMachine, like new. W. D.\nOgllvle, R.R. No. 1, Nelson,\nB.C. -110-115\nALTO SAXAPHONE FOR SALE.\nPh. 352-5531 or 332-6862.\n-107-112\nPOWER SAW AND NEW FORD\nPhone 352-6805. -106-111\nROOM  AND  BOARD\nCLEAN PRIVATE BDRM. FOR\ngentleman. Near Legion. $29 a\nmonth. Ph. 352-5030 Or 352-3644.\n-99-tf\nFOR    YOUNlt   GENTLEMAN\nPh  352-6352. -44-tl\nROOM    AND    BOARD   WITH\nwash   P.J. 3524805      -112-117\n1956 MERCURY SEDAN. GOOD\ncondition. $425. Ph. 352-6433.\n-110-lfn\nWISH TO SELL' WE NEED\ntwo \u2014 3 bedroom homes in\nlower Fairview. Parties have\n$4500 as down payment. Win.\nKalvniuk Agencies. Phone\n352-2425. -104-tlll\nBOATS AND ENGINES\nSTARCRAFT CRUISERS. RUN-\nabouts. cartops Inboard and\noutboard models Demonstrations anytime. Also gixid selec:\nlion ol used equipment Kaslo\nMarine Service. ..\u201472-1.\n14' SATLBO.vi7~NEW SAIL:\nneeds work, sell or trade on\ncanoe. Call 362-7605. eve*,\nRossland. \u2014111-113\nPROPERTY, HOUSES\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\nPERSONAL\nMUST SELL!! EXCELLENT\nlocation, Close to schools, bus\nslop. All paved streets. New\nwiring. Six rooms. Full price\n$4500. Wm. Kalyniuk Agencies\nLtd.. 534 Josephine St., Phone\n352-2425. -Ill-tin\nPERSONAL SUNDRIES i SVJP-\npiies. 60'fe savings  Free price\nlist  and  sample  on   request,\nBox 8. Stalion C. iVTnnlpeg  * i\n'\u25a0'..- -27^\nTRAILERS\nFOR SALE - 5 ROOM HOUSE\nwith garage on 2 acres.\nLocated in Salmo. Apply K.\nJohnson, 216-B Vernon St. or\nReuben Buerge Motors, 8 In 5.\n-108113\nNORTH SHORE. COZY 4 ROOM I\ncottage at 6 mile.   Ideal  for\nretired couple. Additional B.R.\ncould be easily added. Robertson, Hilliard. Ph   352-7252.      j\n-112-112 '\u25a0\nSALMO - THREE BEDROOM\nhouse. Rewired, decorated inside and out. $5500 F.P. Less\ncash. Terms. Trade. Vacant.\nA. W. Morns, Salmo, B.C.\n-110-135\n3-4 B.R. HOME ON EXTRA\nlarge sloping lot near G.N.\ntrackage, Uphill. Low price\nfor all cash. William Kalyniuk\nAgencies. Ph. 352-2425._ -97-tf\nFOR^SALE\" - TWO ROOM\nmodern cabin, sleeping porch,\non two 25-foot lots, furnished.\n$1400. S. McLellan, Ainsworth.\nPhone Balfour 431.     -112-117\nS. NELSON. VIEW LOCATION.\nComfortable 3-4 B.R. home on\nlarge lot. $6,500. $1,000 D.P.\nReasonable payments. Phone\n352-3049. -1110-125\n1-4    BEDROOM    HOME    ON\nJohnslone Road near the North\nShore school. Phone 352-W72.\n-104-115\nNEW 3 BEDROOM HOME,\nbeautiful view. Good terms.\nPhone 352-2735. \u2014110-tfn\nFOR SALE - 3 BEDROOM\nhome on bus route. Good location. Ph. 352-6487.       -107-112\nFOR SALE: 1960 45 FT. X 10\nFt. Mobile Home. Auto, washer and dryer. 30\" range, hilly\nfurnished. Terms. Box 91. Sal-\nmo.   Phone 357-9356.    -103 tin\nlatlg 5.pm\nCirculation   Dept,   Ph.   85T.355'-\nPrice per single copy. 10 cents\nBy carrier per week. 40 cents\nin advance\nSubscription-rates:\nBy mail in Canada\nOutside Nelson\nOne month . $ 2 oo\nThree months    !.. ,. __... - 5 00\nSix months        . . ..  10 00\nOne year > .   , y  '18.00\nBy mail to Unltpd Kingdom\nor lhe Commonwealth\nOne month .\u2022.     ..    $ : oo\nThree  months\" _.....,    6.00\nSix months            111)0\nOne year .   : 20 oo\nBy Mai! to USA. or\nForeign Countries\nOne month    .... $ 2 50\nThree months    7 00\nSix months  -r\u00bb-13\u00ab\u00ab\nOne year   24 00\nWhere extra postage is required.\nabove rates plus po__agti.\nFor delivery by carrier in Cran-\nbrook,    phone    Mrs.    Stanley\nWillison:\nin   Kimberley.   Mrs.   A.   W.\nBrown.\nIn Trail. Mrs   W  E:6\/>ooner:\nLONGBEACH 2 BDRM. HOME\non 7 acres. Access to beach\nPh. 352-2155. -82-133\nLIVESTOCK,  POULTRY\nAND   FARM   SUPPLIES\nFOR ARTIFICIAL BREEDING\ndairy and beef cattle, phone\n352-6874. Nelson and District\nA.l. Centre, 709 Third St.. Nel\nson. J. Ds Jong, Technician\n-tfn\nYOUNG SADDLE HORSES,\nwell broke. Will sell on trade\nfor cattle. Write Box 202,\nTrail, B.C. -103-115\nFOR SALE-SHETLAND MARE\nwith 10-day-old filly. Also. 2\nyr. old Pinto filly. Earle Culler. Ph. 882-S435.       -.110-115\nFOR SALE-HORSE AND COW.\nCow just freshened. Bill Osachoff, R.R. No. 1, Winlaw.\n______ -112-117\nWanted -good, quiet.\nfarm horses. Eli Laktin, Winlaw, B.C, \u2014107-112\n2 WEEK AND 12 WEEK OLD\nchicks. Also, ready to lay\npullets. Ph. 358-3808.   -110-tfn\n\"Jump, Jump.\"\nSay Onlookers\nNEW YORK (AP) \u2014 A man\nwho threatened lo jump .nto the\nEast River Sunday from the\nBrooklyn Bridge ^\u25a0^gi jeW_Hl-\u00ab\naged by bystanders who\nshouted \"jump, jurap,^ rstlic.\nreported. ,\u25a0 j.\nDeputy Chief Inspector William McCarthy said .litjty 10(\npersons '        -   \u25a0  --\nguan.\nafter\nhad \"troubles.\" He gav* the\npedestrian his wallet, ring and\nwatch. [\nPolice ordered pedestrians to\nleave the bridge and brought a\nloudspeaker lo the scene. Thq\nman was finally, (qlked into\ncoming down by ftev. James\nConroy of Loyola University at\nScrub Oak. N.Y. F^thef Smrof\nhappened lo be driving *y at\nthe time. -*\u25a0  ' (\nManguan was taken to jjospi-\nLai lor observation.\nMILKING COW FOR SALE. -\nJohn Stoochnoft, Appledale.\n-110-115\nGOOD MILKING COW FOR\nsale. Apply Nick Swetlikoff,\nSouth Slocan. -111-116\nWANTED TO RENT\nCOUPLS WITH 1 CHILD WISH\npartly furn. _ bedroom hous*\nor apt. on June 1. Ph. 352-5476.\n-110-115\nTEACHER ATTENDING- NDU\nwould like house for 6 wks in\nexch. for caretaking. Call 312\n7695 eves. Rossland.     in-ii3\nTunisia Readies\nFor Takeover\nTUNIS (AP) - I..\ngovernment Is con.p|eftt\nfor rapid takeover of .\nheld by French settlers)\nThe action is likely,^\"\nnew difficulties in '\nlationship with Frajj\nmajor  economic\nformer French prqtsotW\nThe National Asi \"'\nTuesday to approi\norizing Ihe government tn wise\nsome 500.000 acres of French\nfarm property. I\n________\n__________\n Vim'\n\u201e.....,,..\nlj|WN_LSON DAILY NEWS, TUES., MAY 12, 1964\n\"ifs Spring\"\nNew Lovely Scent by Houbigant\nSPRAY MIST    $2.50\nCOLOGNE         2.25\nDUSTING POWDER .      2.50\nIn the Cosmetic Section at\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\n| Your Individual j\nHoroscope\nBy Frances Drake\njm*MM\nDoctor Barred From Operations\nPALMERSTON, Ont. (CP)-\nDr. D. E. Clunas of Harriston,\nhead of the medical panel at\nPalmerston General Hospital,\nconfirmed Sunday that the key\nfigure  at  a  hospital  death  in-\nadded, however, that there was\nno significant evidence of negligence.\nA surgical clamp was found\nin Mrs. Noer's body during an\nautopsy   March  J!  bul  the jury\nquest    last    month    has    been1 found this did not contribute to\nbarred from operating   at   the her death,\nhospital. j    Thc  hairing  of  Dr.  Graham\nDr. Clunas said the eight-doc- was said to have been effective\ntor panel was supported in its.from March 8, the day afler the\nrecommendation by (be hospi- women's death, but Dr. Clunas\ntal's board of directors thai the said be did not know why the\noperating room be barred to Dr. j fact Dr. Graham was barred\nRobert K. Graham, 38. I was nol brought out at the in-\nA coroner's jury   ruled   that quest.\nMrs. Ina Noer, 54, of Palmer- \t\nston. died as a result of two sur- Mary and Aliza Chalkhurst,\ngical errors during a gallstone born in England about 1550,\noperation Feb. 28, Dr. Graham were tho earliest recorded con-\nwas   her   surgeon.   The   jury i joined twins.\nLook in tlie section in which\nyour birthday comes and  find\nwhat your outlook is, according\nto the stars.\nFor Wednesday, May 13, 1964\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 20$\niAries* \u2014 With originality AM)\npatience, you can put this day\nout of the ordinary. Some particular problem can be happily\nsolved now. Offer distinguished\naction.\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus)\n\u2014 With only mild planetary in-\n| fluences, you can expect a more\nor less average day. However,\nif you have been careful with\nassets recently, you should enjoy dividends soon.\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini)\n\u2014 There are plenty of opportunities for you now. but you may\nhave to ferret them out for yourself. With your know-how, this\nshould he easy \u2014 and you'll enjoy it!\nJUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer)\n\u2014 Greatly improved influences\nto help those of you who have\nenergies, disposition and general\nset-up under control. Stimulate\nthe best in yourself and in others\nand the day will produce in\nmany ways.\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23 <Leo)\n\u2014 A favorable day, on the\nwhole, but do not be heedless or\nlet \"little\" things go unattended. You can be super-excellent\nin some areas.\nAUGUST 24 lo SEPTEMBER\nHow do you shave\non top of Mt. Everest?\nGet there before the barber shop closes.\nGather wood, build a fire, melt snow, thaw soap, and use a blade.\nUse a regular shaver with a 37,621 foot extension cord,\nor\n:\u00ab.EMINOTOl-|\n\u25a1\nUse a cordless Remington Lektronic II. It works anywhere.\nThe Lektronic II is self-powered.\nIt workn outdoors, indoors, upstairs, downstairs. Even on mountain tops.\nSo forget about sinks, cords\nand outlet*. With the Lektronic\nII you get a powerful shave anywhere.\nEnergy cells store up power for\nmany fast, comfortable shaves.\nTo recharge, simply plug in the\nspecial cord overnight.\nIf you forget to recharge, juBt\nplug in the cord and shave.\nThere's no waiting. No half-\nshaved face.\nLike all Remingtons, the Lektronic II has adjustable roller\ncombs for comfort. And a more\npowerful motor. And surgical\nBteel cutters.\nBut the big feature is cordless\nconvenience. Great for around\nthe house, in the office, the\ntravelling man. Even mountain\nclimbers.\nYou must fit in there somewhere.\nREMINGTON\n23 (Virgo) \u2014 Mild influences.\nPlan and execute a decisive\nprogram, devoid of all clutter,\nPay special attention to details\nand figures. Composure, good\nhumour important.\nSEPTEMBER 24 lo OCTOBER\n23 (Libra) \u2014 You may run into\nsome incompetence and ill will\nnow. Not everyone will feel cooperative or up to doing their\nbest, so much will depend upon\nYOUR actions, mediation, and\nability lo hurdle obstacles.\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER\n22 (Scorpio) \u2014 Especially favored now: business matters, the\ndevelopment of new and better\ntactics and systems \u2014 all if you\ncare about better-than-everyday\nresults. Re-examine your own\nideas,\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEM\nBER 21 (Sagittarius) - A\nfriendly day if you cooperate\nwith planetary influences. And\nthis is not difficult for tbe Sagit\ntarian who normally strives continually for advancement. Forward!\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY\n20 (Capricorn) \u2014 The unusual\nmay have started out as thc\nusual; anything can grow to an\noutsized problem or situation if\npermitted. What you WANT\nmany not be best in the end, so\nstudy carefullv.\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY\n19 (Aquarius) \u2014 Foggy think\ning, beclouding issues could stymie day's progress. Arm for proper perspective, clear vision.\nOnly then will you be alble to\nreap the benefits possible.\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\n(Pisces) \u2014 Avoid a tendency\ntoward impulsiveness now. You\nmay feel \"lukewarm\" about\nsome suggestions made, but\nlook into them, anyway. They\nCOULD prove of value.\nYOU BORN TODAY are\nroundly talented and eager fo\nlearn, but must learn to curb a\ntendency to procrastinate. Determination, faithfulness to duties, deep love of family, liveliness and artistic taste are outstanding Taurean traits. Too\nanxious at times, careless al\nothers, you MUST learn self-\nmastery. The higher aims should\nbe yours for your mind is geared to far-reaching accomplishment. Birthdate of: Sir Arthur\nSullivan, music composer.\nMARKET TRENDS\nNEW'YORK (AP.'-The stock\nmarket Monday went through\nanother session of mild decline\nas volume sank to the smallest\ntotal in nearly three months.\nThe stock list held an irregular upward balance during most\nof the day but trading dried up\nas it became apparent that the\nlist was going nowhere in particular.\nVolume was 4,510,000 shares\ncompared wilh 4,930,000 Friday,\nthe lightest since Feb. 19 when\nit was 4,260,000.\nThe Dow Jones industrial\naverage took a minor loss of\n1.50 at 827.07.\nChemicals and rails were\nmostly higher and utilities were\nsteady on balance. Steels,\nwhich rallied last week, showed\nlosses.\n01 1,340 issues traded, losers\noutnumbered gainers by 550 to\n507.\nStandard and Poor's 500-stock\nindex declined .10 to 80.90.\nTEXAS THE  LEADER\nTexas Gulf Sulphur remained\npopular wilh traders and advanced 1% to 56 on 297,100\nshares, making it the most active stock. Second was Chrysler, which erased an early gain\nand closed with a net loss of V.\nat 50% on 148,100 shares. Third\nwas Radio Corp., up Vi at 33'__\non 119.900 shares.\nAmong Canadian issues\ntraded, Walker Gooderham and\nCanadian Pacific each rose %\nwhile Distillers Seagrams was\nup Vi and Aluminium Ltd. and\nInternational Nickel advanced\nV_ apiece. Dome Mines and\nMclntyre Porcupine lost Vi\neach.\nOn the American Exchange,\nprices were irregularly lower.\nVolume was 1,390,000 shares\ncompared with 1,510,000 Friday.\nScurry Rainbow Oil rose V_,\nCanadian Javelin %.\nTORONTO (CP)-Blue chip\nstocks were in demand on the\nstock market in moderate trading Monday,\nMotors were strong with\nChrysler and General Motors\nahead \"4 each to 55V. and 96V..\nFavorites in the steels were Do-\nfasco, up \u00a5< to 22%, and Al-\ngoma, up V_ to 69Vi. Dominion\nSteel and Coal, however, was\nhit by selling and dipped .4 to\n16.\nTlie best gain in the main list\nwent to Reichhold Chemical, up\n2 points to a 1964 high of 30V_.\nReichhold reported record sales\nand earnings for the first quarter of this year. Texaco also\ncame under support as it gained\none point to 60.\nNoranda boomed ahead 2V<\npoints to 49% in leading senior\nbase metals higher. Falconbridge lent support with a gain\nol Vj, to 73%. Hudson Bay count-\nNorsemen Give Up\nNorth Pole Skiing\nOSLO (AP) - Bjoren Staib\nand his Norwegian expedition\nhave abandoned their attempt\nto ski across the North Pole.\nStaib radioed  the newspaper\nAftenpo5ten he  was  giving upjered Ihe trend with a loss of V4\n250 miles short of the polo. He to 694.\nsaid his group would encounter Tombill sagged 37 cents to\ntoo many open stretches of wa- $1.16\u2014it earlier sold as low as\nter and too much broken ice on 99 cents\u2014in the speculative seethe return trip in June. tion. National Exploration\nStaib said he and his five churned through 156,700 shares,\nhul was unchanged at 19 cents\nat the close.\nSmall gains to Cochenour Wil-\nlans and Giant Yellowknife\ngave the gold index sufficient\nstrength to show a gain. However, Hollinger slipped % to\n29% for the groups most significant price change.\ncompanions had travelled 375\nmiles in 41 days from the Canadian communications base\nAlert to the U.S. ice island station Arlis II.\nThe expedition arrived in Arlis Sunday and is waiting for\na plane to take them to Greenland.\nNews 0\/ the Day\nRATES: 30c line, 40c line bold lace type; larger type rales\non request. Minimum two lines.\nCOPY DEADLINE - PLEASE NOTE\nCopy  for  this  column  accepted  until  3  p.m.   tor  Insertion\nln next day's publication.\nHaigh Tru-Art Beauty Salon\n576 Baker St.        Ph. 352-3313\n\u201429-h\nBINGO\nLEGION HALL TONIGHT\n-29-h\nVETERANS\nWelfare officer at Legion 10 a m\nto noon, Thurs., May 14. Phone\nfor appointment. \u2014111-113\nJust received! 5 and 7 quart\nPresto pressure cooker-canners\nHIPPERSON HARDWARE\nThe Nelson Air Cadet Squadron 561 VOLKSWAGON SALE\npostponed to July 11.    _ 110-112\nDiamonds, Watches, Gifts,\nRepairs, Engraving.\nTED ALLEN'S JEWELLERY\n-29-h\n80\nUnbleached Sheeting\nat *1.49 yd.\nSTERLING FURNISHERS\n-111-112\nMr. and Mrs. S. Cristofanetti\nwill be at home on Sunday, May\n17 to their friends and neighbors\non the occasion of their Silver\nWedding Anniversary.   \u2014112-112\nJr. Ladies Hospital Auxiliary\nWinners of Raffle: Miss Donna\nTurner, Hair Style Certificate;\nMiss Elaine Proctor, a cake.\n-112-112\nMr. and Mrs. Alan Merry will\nbe at home to all their friends on\n(he occasion of their Golden\nWedding Anniversary at the\nI.O.O.F. Hall, Slocan City, on\nSaturday evening, May 16, 7 - 9.\n-112-112\nNelson Little Theatre presents\n\"THE BROWNING\nVERSION\"\n(Festival Winning Play)\nPlus added variety\nentertainment.\nTHURS. 4 FRL, MAY 14 & 15\nNelson Jr. High School\n-112-h\nLEDINGHAM _ At Oak Lodge\nPrivate Hospital, Victoria, B C\non May 8, 1964, Mr. Thomas W!\nLedingham of 1051 San Marino\nCrescent, Victoria, a resident, of\nVictoria for the past 15 years\nformerly of Nelson and Vancouver, He leaves his wife Jessie\nand cousin, Elsie Birss of Victoria. He was an Honorary\nmember of the Victoria Curling\nClub. Funeral services in McCall\nBros. FLORAL CHAPEL, Johnson and Vancouver Sts., Victoria\non Tuesday, May 12 at 1:15 p.m.\nRev. R. Morris officiating. Followed by PRIVATE Cremation.\n(Flowers gratefully declined)!\n  -112-112\nDividends\nBy TH ECANADIAN FRE^S\nJamaica Public Service Ltd.,\n15 cents, July \u00bb; record May 29.\nWalter M. Lovmcy Co. Ltd.,\n25 cents, July IS, record June\n15.\nInvestors showed little interest In western oils and the index took a small setback.\nOn index, industrials were up\n18 to 153.90, golds .32 to 134.49,\nbase metals .29 to 66.11 and the\nexchange index .15 to 144.01.\nWestern oils were down .49 to\n97.82. Volume for the day was\n4,033,000 shares compared with\n4,468,000 Friday.\nMONTREAL (CP)-Sharp de,,\nclines in banks prevented prices\nfrom achieving more than narrow advances on the Montreal\nand Canadian Stock Exchanges\nMonday.\nThe composite index climbed\n0.1 to a new high of 144 8. Advances led declines 95 to 80.\nTrading was active \u2014 industrial turnover reached 200.900\nshares and mines and oils\n1,352,100 shares.\nIndustrials rose 0.3 to a new\nhigh of 150.5. Moore Corp., and\nSoutham advanced % each to\n55 and 28Vi. Chemcell and Dominion glass dipped Vfe each to\n14% and 17%.\nPapers advanced 0.2 to 136.0.\nDominion Tar rose % to 21V_.\nAbitibi fell Vt to 15%.\nUtilities advanced 0.1 to 132.5.\nTrans - Mountain Pipe Line\nclimbed Vi to 18%. Bell Telephone slipped V..\nBanks  dropped   0.6   to   126.6.\nNova Scotia dropped % to 71.4\nand Montreal % to 65%. Toronto-Dominion went against the\ntrend with a rise of Vi to 63...\nFalconbridge plummeted one\npoint to 73V4, International Nickel % to 85Vi and Hollinger and\nHudson Bay Mining Vi each to\n29% and 69V4. Noranda bolstered the sagging senior base\nmetal list with a gain of 2Vi\npoints to 49%.\nIn senior oils Texaco rose %\nto 59% and Imperial % to 50V_.\nDominion Bridge advanced\n%   to 21Vi  and Dofasco  %  to\nB.C. Highlights\nSUFFER BURNS\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Mrs.\nRonald Walker of Port Hardy\nand her 18-month-old son Patrick were being treated in hospital here Sunday for burns\nreceived when a gas lamp exploded in their home. They were\nflown here from Port McNeil, a\ncommunity on northern Vancouver Island. Neither was in serious condition.\nCONDITION FAIR\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Mrs.\nLillian Barker, a 51 - year - old\nVancouver housewife who had\nthree plastic valves inserted in\nher heart in a rare operation\n22V. in primary metals. Dosco I three weeks ago, was reported\ndipped V. to 16.\nIn speculative mines on the\nCanadian Exchange, Fano, the\nmost active trader, dropped one\ncent to 29 cents on a turnover\nof 280,900 shares and Mount\nPleasant six cents to $1.24 on\n124,500 shares.\nWhite Star Copper climbed\nfive cents to 82 cents on 174,500\nshares, New Formaque one cent\nto nine cents on 77,000 shares\nand Native Minerals 1V_. cents\nto 21 cents on 61,000 shares.\nin fair condition in hospital Sun\nday. A team of six doctors and\ntwo nurses took six hours to\ncomplete the operation during\nwhich Mrs. Barker's heart was\nstopped for 80 minutes.\nHove the Job Done Right1\nVIC GRAVEC\nW        LIMITED J\nMASTER   PLUMBER\nPhone 352-3315\nSUPP-HOSE\nWith or Without Seams\nPrevents Leg Fatigue\n$4.95 Poir\nLYCRA Supp-Hose\nMEN'S Supp-Hose\n$5.95\n$4.95\nYour Rcxall Pharmacy\nCITY DRUG\nBox  460 Phone 352-3611\nSALE\nof\nSPORT\nCOATS\nWe   nave   60   u,. ,\nSport C\u201eats \u201en J. \u00abJ\nweights, Harrolc, T \"\nHarris Tweeds.\nSIZES llli-44\n45.00 - SALE 35.9S\n39.50 \u2014 SALE 319j\n35.00 - SALE 27.95\n32.50 - SALE 25,9} \u25a0\nThese come in Short,\nRegular and Toll Mod^l\n\u00a3mory-Q\nLTD.    ^'\nTHE MAN'S STORE\nNewspaper   Ad\u00bbertiiinj .\nPays Over ond Over\nFOR 1ESS THAN 10\u00ab\nA DAY YOU CAN OWN fl\nNEW ESSO OIL BURNER\nFOR AS LITTLE AS $1.85 PER MONTH\n(and no down payment)\nFOR AS LITTLE AS $4.95* PER MONTH\n(and no down payment)\nr\nYOU CAN OWN A NEW\nESSO OIL BURNER\nYOU CAN OWN A NEW, COMPLETE\nESSO OIL FURNACE UNIT\nNew Esso Heating Equipment Finance Plan\nMakes it so easy for you to own the kind of equipment\nthat assures safety, comfort and convenience\u2014Esso\nheating equipment.\n\u25a0 No down payment\u2014you have 10 years to pay.\n\u25a0 Esso heating equipment is fully guaranteed by\nImperial Oil.\nEasy budget terms are also available on other makes of heating equipment through your Esso heating equipment dealer.\nOF SPECIAL INYERESTs\nIf you are considering renting\nheating equipment, be sure you\ninvestigate the economics carefully. For pennies a day you can\nown your own heating equipment\nand get all the advantages of Esso\nHome Heat Service I\nStep up today to the economical\nsafety and comfort of Esso Home\nHeat Service.\n\u2022Installed to your existing duct work.\nAdditions or modifications to your\nduct work can also be financed.\nIMPERIAL OIL LIMITED\nCALL  352-3713    NOW\n..-.-  V.\n_______\n_______\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_1964_05_12","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:identifier"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.; Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"IsShownAt":[{"label":"DOI","value":"10.14288\/1.0435465","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. <br>Blossom festival edition.","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 Nelson Museum, Archives and Gallery: https:\/\/nelsonmuseum.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":"1964-05-12 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1964-05-12 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. 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":""}]}