{"@context":{"@language":"en","AggregatedSourceRepository":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","Collection":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","DateAvailable":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DateIssued":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","FileFormat":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","FullText":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Genre":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","GeographicLocation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","Identifier":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","IsShownAt":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","Language":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","Latitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","Longitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","Notes":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Provider":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","Publisher":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","Rights":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","SortDate":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","Source":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","Title":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","Type":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","Translation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description"},"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2023-03-27","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1955-06-06","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0429012\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" wumm.\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0;.:'\u25a0>; :-.\u25a0\u25a0\" -v. \u25a0'\u25a0\n\u25a0\nIP5\" ^p\n\t\nIPffplS\nBB^-Wf\n1\ni         t . <     y \u25a0 i\n<W;.\nat\n\u25a0   -\n]&.\u2022&><\u2022'xmm\n\u25a0t^H'*\n\u25a0  \u00a7g\nIB'\n\"' a\\m          i\n^^\n'.Si; flj\n\"\u25a0\":\u2022\u25a0\" ;'=>\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.;..                  \u25a0'\u2022-;\u25a0'\u25a0\" i\nYUGOSLAVIA'8 MAR8HAL TITO (left) greets the Red Chinese\nambassador, Vu 8yu Tsyuan, as the latter presented his credentials\nIn Belgrade. This Is the first time Red China has sent an ambassador\nto Yugoslavia.\u2014Central  Press Canadian,\nDiem Forces Hem\nIn Soars Rebels\nGov't Throws 30 Battalions Against\ni        Religious Leader's Private Forces\nBy JOHN RODERICK\nSAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP)\u2014Premier Ngo Dinh\niDiem hurled more than 30 army battalions Sunday against\nIthe private forces of Gen. Tran Van Soai, a leader of the\nTdissident Hoa Hao religious sect. By nightfall the rebels\nwere hemmed into a triangle of watery ricelands with little\npope of escape.\nDiem, who had delayed an all-out\nensive against Soai's 3000 to 5000\nlien for two weeks despite sniping\nkttacks, gave the go-ahead after a\nieries of^Hoa Hao assaults on Bassac\nriver ferry posts early Sunday. The\nlovernment kicked off its attack\niear Can Tho, 90 miles south of\niaigon, with 16,000 troops.\n\"I Reports of casualties said the\n|ghtning operation  cost the  army\nree killed and the Hoa Hao 10.\n[ Thousands of government troops\nvarmed across the broad Bassac\nsampans, under the protection\nVietnamese naval units which\ninly a few hours earlier had taken\nver from Trench naval forces at\nIan Tho. By noon the troops had\nBeared the highway leading east\nrom Can Tho to Vin Long.\nJ In mid-afternoon, other army\npiking forces occupied all the main\nputes Unking .Sadec, Long Xuyen,\nftd Lai Vung. These towns, all\nJrmy bases, form an equilateral\nMangle of about 30 square miles of\nIce paddie* within which Soai's\ntrees  appeared  trapped.\nAs dusk fell over the rich fiefdom\nfrom which Soai has been reaping\nhuge profits in crops and transport\ntaxes for years, \"the army's light\ninfantry elements fanned into the\nrice fields. The troops ferreted out\nretreating Hoa Hao men, many of\nwhom threw down their arms and\nsurrendered.\nSoai himself vanished from his\nheadquarters with his young wife,\nLe Thi Gam. She is a Vietnamese\namazon who heads a woman's army\nof some 500 trousered troops.\nOnly a month ago Diem's forces\nsmashed Binh Xuyen's private army\nof ex-river pirates in bloody street\nfighting in Saigon. The Binh Xuyen\nforces were commanded by Gen. Le\nVan Vien.\nWith the attack on Hoa Hao soldiers, Diem pressed his second\nmajor showdown with the feudal\nrebel forces dividing anti-Corn-\n. munlst South Viet Nam.'Thft^Wi-\nmler insists that all armed forces\nmust be under army command If\nthe country Is to resist pressure\nfrom Communist-held North Viet\nNam.\nlational Lottery lo Finance\nlospitals Proposed by TLC\nBy JOHN LeBLANC\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\n[WINDSOR, Ont. (CP) - The 70th\nJhd last annual convention of the\n|rades and Labor Congress of Can-\nclosed out Saturday with de-1\nlands on government for a national!\nIttery to finance hospitals and for I\nIderal ownership of a natural gas;\nIpeline from western Canada to\nlie East.\nICanada's largest and oldest cental labor body, due to go out of\npcistence in a merger with the Ca-\nadian Congress of Labor, also pas-\n\u00a3d a miscellany of other resolutions\nits sixth convention day includ-\n[lg demands for:\n11. The right of- employee organiza-\nlons to have collective bargaining\n|ith governments;\n12. Reduction   of  the  number  of\nnmigrants   allowed   into   Canada\nIhile there is unemployment;\n3. A federal royal commission on\nthe spread between production costs\nand retail prices;\n4. A revival of the\" slumping merchant marine, with modern ships.\nm\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKootenay: Sunny with a Jew\ncloudy periods in the afternoon.\nLittle change in temperature. Light\nwinds. Low-high at Cranbrook 45\nand 70, Crescent Valley 40 and 70.\nNELSON, B. C, CANADA\u2014MONDAY MORNING, JUNE 6, 1955\nNo. 38\nWASHINGTON. (AP) - Britain;\nthe United States and France are\nexpected to ask Marshal Tito's Yugoslav government soon *for much\ncloser co-operation with their strategic plans for the security of Western Europe.\nThe request will test Tito's basic\nposition In the east-west contest\nfollowing his conferences with Russia's leaders.\nOne aim of western strategy is\nto strengthen the total defence position in southern Europe to counterbalance the neutralization ' of\nAustria which lies between Yugosla;\nvia and Germany.\nAnother objective, in the light of\nthe just cancelled Russian mission\nto Belgrade, is to determine where\nMarshal Tito, as an independent\nCommunist leader, really stands.\nSpecifically, officials would like to\nknow what his military position\nwould be in event of Soviet aggression or threat to the peace jn Europe.\nThe basis of concern on this point\nis that Tito has been receiving substantial military help from the Wes.\nA I ItO S\nOperation\nFORD WORKERS\nON STRIKE\nNegotiators Said\nNear Agreement\nOn New Contract    '\nBy NORMAN WALKER\nDETROIT (AP) \u2014 A strike began\nSunday night at'some Ford. Motor\nCo. plants as company and CIO\nUnited Auto Workers union negotiators were reported nearing agreement on a historic new contract.\nFirst picket lines in the walkout were thrown around. Ford\nplants at Cleveland and Buffalo,\nN. Y.\nFord officials repdrted other pickets stationed around the Ford Jet\nengine plant at.Chicago;\nFord, which already had agreed\nto a guaranteed wage plan and\ni other contract improvements, altera powers for several years and though  not to thc extent wanted\nthe purpose of that help is *\u00b0 by the UAW, was locked In a tense\nstrengthen the over-all defence of showdown bargalnmg session with\nfree Europe. . ,\u201e,:\u201e\u201e presidcnt WaUcr p, Heuther.\nU. S. Ambassador James Riddle-,    Meanwh\u201e arat(J mion\nberger has been called home from, ^^ Genera] Uotms\nBelgrade to report to Sate-.Seete-.-^^        m be{ore\nEden Issues Warning\nMiracle Baby Dies\nHOUSTON, Tex (AP) \u2014 Life\nflickered out late Friday night for\nlittle \"Miracle Ann\" Dupree, a\npremature baby girl pronounced\ndead after birth but found on an\nembalming slab to have been\nalive.\nDr. M. Desmond, woman physician in charge of* the premature\nnursery at City County Hospital,\nreported the Infant's death early\nSaturday.\nDoctors had given the baby a\nbetter than. 50-50 chance. She\nweighed only 30% ounces.\ntary   Dulles   on   the   Tito-Russian I\nmeetings.\nThe state* department has also\nauthorized Riddleberger to advise\nthe Yugoslav foreign office that\nJune 24 would be a suitable date\nfor opening four power talks on\nrelations between Yugoslavia on the\none hand and Britain, the United\nStates and France on the other.\nmidnight until 1:30 p.m. EDT today.\nThe intensity of the Ford bargaining sessions, continuing right\non after the GM talks recessed,\nindicated the parties were getting\ncloser to a new contract.\nVagueness of the UAW's precise\nhour for a strike led to advance\nwalkouts.\nSkating Star\nBeaten, Robbed\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 Peter First-\nbrook, jroung Canadian skating star\nand former partner of Barbara Ann\nScott, Friday night was beaten sad.\nMj.he*>-bJ' fbiir'Tronths who\"-foreed\nhim to drive around the city and\ncash some traveller's cheques he\nhad with him, police said.\nA Hamilton youth, Andrew Brady\n22, was arrested Saturday on a\ncharge of armed robbery.\nThe 23-year-old skater' told police he was driving home around\nmidnight when the four, in an old- com(,  wi]]  ^.^ whether\nmodel car, stopped him and asked  ,s movjng ^ rigM ^ ^^ ft(_\nSICILIAN VOTE\nTO INDICATE\nITALIAN TREND\nPALERMO, Sicily (AP) - Sicilians Voted Sunday in an election\n\u00abxpected to mark a victory for mid-\ndle-of-the road democracy.\nIdeal weather brought out an estimated 80.per cent of the 3.7H*kS? .\u00bb.;\u201e\u00a3,\n'000 eligible votes' te decide amongr'   VANL\n837 candidates running for 90 seats\nin the legislature.\nThe results are important for two\nreasons: Sicily is semi-autonomous\nand the regional legislature has\nconsiderable power.\nIt is the broadest Italian poll since\nthe 1953 general election. The out-\nHOSPITAL GROUP\nSEEKS MEET\nWITH CABINET\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014The B. C.\nHospitals' Association will seek a\nmeeting with the provincial cabinet to discuss the hospital wage\nfreeze, Percy Ward, association\nsecretary, said  Saturday.\nHe said the meeting Is sought\nwith the cabinet because the as\nsociation realizes Health Minister\nMartin In ordering the wage\nfreeze was carrying out cabinet\npolicy.\nDESIGNED TO REVIVE and  revitalize  India's ancient folk art\nland culture, a pilot project has been started at Jharsa, a village\ntbout 20 miles from  Delhi.   The project Is the first of lt|' kind  In\nIndia and Is likely to be taken up on an all-India scale. Above photo\nshows  an  art class  In  session.   The  children,  using  crayons,  are\nencouraged to draw what they visualize In their imagination.   Later\nJ many of the youngsters, after they have learned tp draw in class,\nfuse the mud plastered walls of the village houses to do their con-\noption of \"murals.\"-\u2014Central Prone Canadian.\nif he would drive an injured companion home because their car\nwouldn't go.\nFirstbrook said he drove them to\na mid-town house and then was\nforced to accompany them to several\nhotels in the city and cash the!\ncheques, which one of the four had |\nfound in the glove compari.ment of I\nthe skater's white convertible. |\nHe said they roughed him up toj\nmake him comply. He displayed a!\nbattered nose to prove it.\nCraig Ready To\nAppear Before\nSloan Commission\nVICTORIA (CP)\u2014Sammy Craig,\ncharged by Liberal Gordon Gibson\nwith accepting an offer of timber\nto withdraw his appeal against a\nforest management licence, is ready\nto appear before the Sloan commission anytime.\n\"We're ready to come anytime\nwe're needed,\" said Arthur Burns,\nsolicitor tor the partner in C and B\nLogging  Co.,  Tofino.\nMr. Craig is charged by Mr. Gibson with accepting an offer of 26,-\n000,000 feet of timber from B. C.\nForest Products in return for withdrawing his appeal against the BC-\nFP forest management application.\nMr. Craig has denied Mr. Gibson's story. Mr. Gibson told the\ncommissiop that the denial is saying that he perjured himself and\ndemanded that Mr. Craig be called\nto testify.\nmiddle  of the road,  even  though\nlocal issues figure importantly.\nAHIee Hinting\nClimbers Aim at\nAmerica's Highest\nUnconquered Peak\nLOS ANGELES (AP) \u2014 Four\nmountaineers \u00a3unday began man's\nfirst attempt to climb the highest\nunconquered peak in North America, the parents of one of them\nreported.\nThe mountain is ice-capped, 15,-\n030-foot University peak in a remote area of Alaska near the Yukon boundary.\nThe climb is expected to take a\nmonth. It has been given the name\nof McCall memorial expedition ln\nhonor of Dr. John McCall, University of Alaska geologist who died\nrecently of polio.\nThe American Geographical Society is backing the expedition*\nDURHAM, England (AP) \u2014 La\nbor party leader Clement Attlee\n3et the politicians talking Saturday\nnight with what could be a hint he\nis thinking of retirement.\nHe told a party rally: \"Leadership now will be passing on to\nyounger generations . . . The young\npeople are coming on.\"\nAttlee is 72. His party was defeated in last week's elections and\nAttlee would be 77 by the time\nanother election is due.\nVeteran socialist Hugh Dalton\nstepped down from the party's\ncouncils Friday and urged other\nelders to follow suit. But Dalton\ninsisted Attlee should stay as lead'\ner, saying Attlee alone could re\nconcile feuding factions inside the\nparty.\nBishop Beattie to\nLive in Kelowna\nRt. Rev. Phillip Roger Beattie,\nfourth Bishop of Kootenay, will live\nin Kelowna, the diocesan executive\nhas announced.\nThe diocese is buying a house\nthere which will be the Bishop's\nresidence. He will move in at the\nbeginning of July.\nKelowna, where the Synod office\nis located, will thus become the\nfirst home for a Bishop of Kootenay.\nThe late Rt. Rev. A.\" J. Doull, first\nBishop of Kootenay, and his successor Archbishop W. R. Adams,\nboth lived at Vernon. With the late\nRt. Rev. F. P. Clark the episcopal\nresidence came to the Kootenays;\n\u2022to Nelson, where he had been rector of St. Saviour's.\nBishop Beattie goes to the Okanagan this' week, but he will return to Nelson at the end of this\nmonth for a confimation service at\nthe Church of the Redeemer.\nFORCES CLASH\nATGAZA\nEgypt Protest to\nUN Armistice\nCommission\nGAZA (Reuters) \u2014 Egyptian and\nJsraeli forces clashed Sunday for\nthe second time in six days in the\ntroubled Gaza strip, named by\nEgypt as a possible ground for\n\"total war.\" ,\nAn. Egyptian spokesman said\nEgyptian forces repulsed an Israeli\nattack made by two armored cars\nand four trucks. The vehicles allegedly advanced to the truce line,\nmiles east of Gaza, and fired on\nEgyptian positions with machine-\nguns while other Israeli forces\nshelled Egyptian positions from the\nsettlement of Nah'al Oz.\nEgypt filed a protest aver the\nclash to the United Nations mixed\narmistice commission and called\nfor an emergency meeting of the\ncommision. Meanwhile, truce commission observers were sent to the\nscene.\nLast Tuesday, a similar border\nclash turned into one of the most\nserious of many recent incidents in\nthe Gaza area. .Two Israelis and\none Egyptian were reported killed\nin the three-hour exchange of fire.\nTrend to Major\nCrime\u2014I\nmhmm\nWalter Mulligan In a report Saturday says there is a \"definite trend\"\ntowards major crime- in Vancouver.\nHe reported murders up; drug, arrests down; robberies with violence\nup; car thefts up; bootlegging down\nsharply; traffic deaths and injuries\ndown, and the number of traffic\ntickets issued down.\nIn the first five. months of the\nyear there have been six slayings\nin the city, compared with year-long\ntotals of seven In 1954 and 1948. The\n1954 and 1948 totals were 10-year\nhighs for homicide.\nChief Mulligan said robberies with\nviolence increased by 71 to a high\nof 257.\nCivilian Soldiers\nTroop Colors\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 Canada's\ncivilian soldiers \u2014 the men from\nthe offices and factories who don\nthe Queen's uniform after hours-\nhonored their sovereign here Sat.\nurday with all the pomp and cere\nmony of Empire.\nFlanked by military aides and a\nbevy of local mayors, Governor-\nGeneral Massey took the salute as\n400 troops of the Canadian Grenadier Guards and Ottawa's Governor-General's Foot Guards marched past in the ancient trooping the\ncolor ceremony.\nHard-Earned Prosperity\nNear Smash-Up U.K. Told\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014Prime Minister Sir Anthony Eden\nSunday night warned Britons that crippling rail and dock\nstrikes threaten to \"smash up our hard-earned prosperity\"\nand throw Britain into eco-\nColonel Too Much\nFor Armed Bandit\nNORTH BAY, Ont. (CP) - A\nSten-gun toting bandit slightly\nwounded Col. C. E. Reynolds, chairman of the Ontario Northland Railway commission, in an attempt to\nrob his home Saturday night.\nA 'suspect was captured' early\nSunday following a night-long vigil\nby heavily-armed police.' The man,\niSentifletf-'Sy'-XIol. Beynoias--a* -his^\nassailant.'was unarmed when lakarf\ninto custody.\nTwo shots were fired from the\nSten gun as Col. Reynolds grappled\nwith the bandit outside the Reynolds' home on the outskirts of\nNorth Bay.    .\nCol. Reynolds said the, bandit\nstepped around a corner of the\nhouse, his Stan gun levelled, and\nsaid to Col. Reynoldst \"This is a\nstick-up and I'm not fooling.\"\nThe railway executive told police\nhe threw a bucket he was carrying\ninto the bandit's face and .grabbed\nfor the gun. The assailant broke\nfree and fired two quick shots at\nCol. Reynolds.\nOne bullet grazed the outside of\nhis right arm, just below the elbow.\nThe bandit vanished into thick\nwoods.\nMiracle Drug Calms\nMentally Upset Boy\nBy ALTON  L. BLAKESLEE\nATLANTIC CITY (AP) \u2014 This is\nthe story of Jackie, a juvenile de\nlinquent changed into a good boy\nwith aid of a miraculous calm-down\ndrug.\nIt's a Jekyll-Hyde story, in reverse.\nThe medicine which helped change\nJackie from bad to gbod was chlor-\npromazine. How it helps some children is shown in a scientific ex-\nhibit at the American Medical Association's annual meeting opening\ntoday.\nJackie ifl 12, His father was a\ndrunkard and mean; his mother\n\"grossly irresponsible.\" The couple\nbecame divorced.\nJackie, then 9, already was destructive, sullen. He became surly,\ntruculent, a fugitive from school.\nHe lied, he stole. He resented his\nmother's common - law marriage\nwith another man.\nJackie was entered at the' Governor Bacon health centre in Del\naware City, Del., staying there two\nyears. Then he visited his mother,\nwho insisted he live with her.\n\"One year later, he was so overtly\naggressive and unmanageable that\nhe had to be readmitted,\" said Drs.\nJames A. Flaherty and Robert L.\nGatski, telling Jackie's history.\nQUICK CHANGE\nHe was started on chloroproma-\nzine, and at once began to change.\nHis room didn't have to be locked,\nfor the first time in three weeks.\nHe slept well.\n\"During the day he was quiet\nand co-operative,\" the doctors said.\n\"Jackie now responded to phsycho-\ntherapy, adjusted to the norms of\nthe group, and showed progress in\nhis school work.\"\nJackie soon will go home.\nJackie is one of 45 children treated with chlorpromazine, a tranquillizing or calm-down drug which is\nmaking many mental patients able\nor willing to take psychiatric treatment, Drs. Flaherty and Gatski said.\nYOUNG MOTHER\nDIES OF POLIO\nBOISE, Idaho (AP)\u2014A 33-year-\nold mother died of bulbar polio at\nMontpelier Sunday.\nIt was the sixth fatality in the\ncurrent outbreak of the disease\nwhich has stricken 78 persons in\nIdaho, nearly all since the mass\npolio vaccination program was\nhalted April 27.\nMrs. Annabelle Nelson died at\nMontpelier Hospital after an illness\nof just one day, state health director I. J. Peterson reported. Her\ntwo children were vaccinated last\nApril with Salk vaccine from the\nCutter laboratories in Berkeley,\nCalif.\nShe is the 38th victim to develop\npolio after close association with\nvaccinated youngsters in the state\nand the third fatality in this group\nThe other three deaths occurred\namong 19 youngsters who developed polio after the Cutter vaccine\ninjections.\nnomic chaos.\n\"I am not going to leave you in\nany doubt about the'deadly seriousness of what is happening' to our\ncountry,\"  the prime minister said\nin a country-wide radio broadcast\nfrom his country home, Chequers.\nHe warned that the rail strike,\nnow in its second week, It going\nto bring unemployment since \"you\ncannot stop most of the trains In\na   land   like   ours   without  soon\nbringing some factories to a halt.\"\nEden said the strike will Interfere  with  attempts  to  build   up\ncoal supplies for the winter, forcing  Britain  to  Import coal   If It\ncontinues.   The   twin   stoppages\nwere also crippling the vital export trade on which  British economy depends to pay Its imam-\nmoth Import bill.\n\"That is how the stoppages are\nweakening the nation\u2014just when it\nwas getting strong and prosperous,\" the prime minister said bitterly.\nPROSPERITY MAY GO\n\"If we go on like this we shall\nsmash.up our hard-earned prosperity.\"\nEden said his government is ready\nto help in fresh negotiations between the striking rail workers and\nthe British transport commission,\nwhich runs the state-owned railroads. He said the strike \"can only\nend when negotiations begin.\"\n\"And let me repeat, for the sake\nof everyone in this land\u2014Including\nall grades of railwaymen and citizens\u2014the quicker the better.\"\nThe 'prime minister made his\nstern assessment of the country's\nstate after receiving a grave reT\nport on the strikes' effects on British industry from Labor Minister\nSir Walter Monckton.\nliner crews continued to add to\nBritain's labor troubles.\nUSE PRE88URE\nMeanwhile, complaints came that\nthe strikers were attempting to\nspread the stoppage by strong-arm\ntactics against non-striking rail\nworkers, who are still keeping a\nfew British trains running.\nAn official of the non-striking\nNational Union of Railwaymen said\nreports were reaching the union ot\npressure on NUR men to join th\u00bb\nstrike, including one case where a\nunion official was slugged on hit\nway to work. He said 'contemptible*\npressure-was also being put on the\nwives of non-strikers.\nGood progress was reported Sunday ln an all-out weekend effort to\nget important freight moving again\nby train, truck and canal barge.\nThousands of tons of coal were\nshifted from mines, and loads of\nfood, iron ore, gasoline and other\npriority goods were moved from\nother centres. But the'over-all situation remained grave.\nMemorial Honors\nNormandy Fallen\nBAYEUX, France (Reuters) \u2014\nThe Duke of Gloucester Sunday\nunveiled a memorial here in memory of more than 1,800 Commonv\nwealth men killed in the Normandy\nlandings and the Allied sweep across France from June to August\n1944. The men have no known\ngraves.\nField Marshal Viscount Montgomery, deputy supreme '\u25a0 Allied commander in Europe, who commanded\nland forces in the Normandy land-\n\u25a0 JBteel vJcpmpanles_Jurve   siready.. IngSj ^n^^Sir^GIgdwyo.Jfbib^iSrit-\n'drawn 'tip'pfans for'restricted'worE\ning, and many engineering plants\nreported that production has been\ncrutailed through lack of rail-borne\nsupplies.\nDRAW GRIM PICTURtf\nMonckton's report, outlining these\nindustrial stresses, was drawn up\nby experts who have been grimly\nassessing the full effects of the\nstrike by 70,000 locomotive engineers and firemen.\nNo signs of an early rail settlement were apparent Sunday, and\n. other strikes among transatlantic\nisli ambassador in Paris, came to\nBayeux, which was decked with\nflags for the occasion. About 40\nCanadians were present.\nCOEUR D'ALENE, Idaho (AP)\u2014\nDonald Aflderson Allen, 27-year-old\nSpokane man, was killed and hii\ncompanion Injured Sunday when\ntheir car skidded off the highway\nfive miles east of here, struck a\nrock cliff and rolled about 50 feet\nbefore stopping upright. Charle*\nMcCartney, 20, Spokane, escaped\nwith cuts and bruises.\nTUNISIA BILL\nNEARLY COMPLETE\nPARIS (Reuters) \u2014 Prime Minister Edgar Faure's government Sunday night put the finishing touches\non the Tunisian home rule bill to\nbe presented for parliamentary rat'\nification, as reports mounted of new\nnationalist violence in Algeria and\nMorocco.\nHaving reached the age where he finds it Increasingly difficult\nfor him to tour the country and demonstrate the more sensational\nfeats of faklrlsm, 8cara-Bey, a Parisian disciple of the art, It now\npassing his knowledge on to the younger generation fn a school hi\nthe French capital. Two such pupils, 17-year-old Jacqueline Amara\n(left) and 22-year-old Marianne Guillemot, are ready to go on tour\nand perform the sensational art of passing a sword through their\ncheeks as they have demonstrated here with the help of their\nteacher.\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nMINE RESCUE PRIZE\nTO CUMBERLAND\nPRINCETON, B' C. (CP) \u2014 The\nSlmilkameen Valley Mine Safety\nAssociation held its 25th annual\nmine first aid rescue competition\nhere Sunday, with Cumberland taking the big prize.\nThe mine rescue cup was won\nby the Cumberland team under the\ncaptainship of J. J. Thompson,\nAnd In This Corner. \u2666 \u2666\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014The telephone rang In suburban North York\npolice station Saturday. Before the desk sergeant could get out a\nword an excited voice said:\n\"There's two cougars In my backyard. They're about two feet\nhigh and are leaping back and forth over the fence. Send a coupfo of\nsharpshooters quick.\"\nA constable sped to the address. Me found the baekyard ''cougar*\"\nwere just a pair of playful racoons,\nMONTREAL (CP)^-Police Sunday night sought animal-loving\nthieves who made off with a horse and a canary in separate thefts\nduring the weekend. Hormidas Girard reported someone stole his\nhorse, valued at $100, tethered in a field near his home. Police said\nMrs. H. Casse told them a thief took her canary.\nNORTHAMPTON, Mass. (AP)\u2014Jane Stewart, who graduate* from\nSmith College today, was a little puzzled Saturday when tha iceman\ndelivered a graduation gift.\nIt was from T. S. Fitch, a friend of her family In Washington, Pa.\nThe gift\u2014a ton of ice\u2014was slowly melting on a dormitory lawn.\nFitch said he Intended the whole thing as a joke.\nVICTORIA (CP)\u2014An unsanctioned demonstration drive proved\ntoo much for a tractor here Saturday night.\nThe three-wheeled, $1,000 machine was taken from a soles lot,\ndriven rigorously, and. abandoned upside down and badly damaged.\nPolice received several calls from people who heard the heavy\nmachine being raced around.\n . \u2014-^ V \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\u2022-'.\u2014\u2014\"*-'\u25a0\n:- :. : y    \u25a0    ;>-\u25a0\nWMv-   '      ',.     \u2022\u2022'\u25a0   \u25a0   .     ; ! -\u2014I ! \u2014\u25a0      .    \u25a0   -y:y\\r \u25a0;\u25a0.-\u25a0 V'-:-   '  'yyA\nI\u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, JUNE 6, 1955\nfQNIGHT TO TUESDAY \u2014 Complete Showi at 7:00-9:00\n^THE DAZZLING DARLING^\nOF A FABULOUS ERA!\n\u25a0&       \u2014\u2014, Ralterf MOIIIEV-John McCUlUM -John I0STIH - Marfite HlflH\n\/>t*4u    \u00abee CLUNES.. Walstta ELyiN. SybH TKORNDIKE. (been VICIORU\n\u00a3\u25a001*   \u25a0\u00bb-\"\u00ab'\u00ab-\u00bb'\u00ab\u2022\nRegular Prices\nSTARTS WEDNESDAY\nGrace Kelly's Oscar Winning Performance\n\"The Drimatlo\nThunderbolt\nof the Year!\"\nLook Magazine\nGRACE KELLY\nwh&>^\niWl\nNew Denver Wins 15-8\nOutlaws Defeat teafs\n1140 in 10 Innings\n\u25a0 Coach Ken White's squeeze bunt\nscored Tom Marshall from the\nthird with the winning run as\nNelson Outlaws defeated Nelson\nMaple Leafs 11-10 In a 10-lnnlng\nthriller at the Clvlo Recreation\nGrounds Sunday night. Net pro-\n' ceeds of the baseball game will be\ngiven te the Strathoona Fire Relief Fund.\nIn an afternoon game, the Sll-\nverton-New Denver team went on a\nhitting spree to dump the Outlaws\n15-8, Good crowds attended both\ngames.\nOutlaws tied the night game with\nfour runs in the eighth and two in\nthe ninth after tha Leafs had piled\nup a 10-4 lead.\nThere was no scoring until the\nsecond inning when a hit batsman,\nLes Hufty's single and Lome Bay's\ntriple sent home two runs. Outlaws\ntook the lead in the bottom of the\nthird with three runs on just one\nhit, Ron Brown's single. A hit batsman, Marshall's steal home, a walk,\nan error and an interference play\ncontributed to the rally.\nLeafs scored a single run in the\nfourth to tie the game. Singles by\nLes Hufty, a stolen base by Bay and\nRed Wassick's single did the damage. Outlaws scored one in the bottom of the fifth to take the lead\nagain. George Behwell's single and\nan error accounted for the run.\nTAKE   BIG   LEAD\nTwo walks, Wendy Keller's sacrifice and Jack Scales' double gave\nthe Leafs two runs in the sixth. The\nspree continued in the seventh\nwhen Les Hufty's double, singles by\nBay and Jim Todd, two walks and\nan error accounted for four tallies\nto give the Leafs a 9-4 edge.\nSingles by Les Hufty and Bay, the\nLeafs two big h'itters, gave them\nanother run ln the eighth before the\nOutlaws again came to life.\nlittle trouble retiring, the Leafs. In\nthe bottom ot the inning Tom Marshall led off by working Les Hufty,\nthe Leafs' second and losing pitcher\nfor a walk. Ha went to second on\na passed ball and to third on Jim\nMcNabb's single. White laid a per-\nfecj bunt down the first base line\nto win the Bhme.\nWendy Keller started on the\nmound for the Leafs and was re\nlleved by Hufty in the third. Ron\nBrown started for Outlaws, was relieved by Win Storgaard who in\nturn gave way to southpaw Grill\nthe winning pitcher.\nIn the afternoon contest, Outlaws\ngot off to a good start with five\nruns in the first inning'but did little\ndamage after that. Two walks,\nsingles by Brown, Rich Wassick and\nEarl Lobb and doubles by Benwell\nand Al Bender featured the attack.\nHAYASHI HOMERS\nNew Denver hit the scoreboard\nin the second inning with two runs.\nNobby Hayashi led off with a homer. The other run came on an error\nand singles by Mike Todd and W.\nMorrison. New Denver added five\nmore In the fourth on singles by\nTodd and Nobby Hayashi, doubles\nby Bill Harcus and Bud Leask, pitcher Ken Gordon's triple and a\nwalk.\nToday; 600 Pints of Blood Sought\n, A 600-pint quota has been set for\nthe two-day Red Cross Blood Donor\nClinic which starts 'here this afternoon.\nTh? mobile unit with 14 nurses\narrived in Nelson Saturday afternoon from Rossland where they\nhave just completed a clinic. This\nmorning they will be setting up the\nclinic facilities prior to its opening\"\nat 1:30 at the Canadian Legion.\nClinic hours both days will be\n1:30 to 4:30 p.m. and 0:30 to 0:30\np.m.\nReef Cross blood supplies all hospitals free of charge and plays s\nleading life saving role in which\neach donor participating shares. .,\nChairman of the Nelson clinic is\nMrs. Stanley Morris.\nMrs. Inksfer,\nFormerly Here,\nVm Suddenly\nMrs. Ian McDonald Inkster of Re.\nvelstoke,    the   former   WInnifred\nChandler, well known in Nelson for\nthe part she ,took in Little Theatre\nactivities before her marriage, died\nsuddenly in Vancouver Saturday.\nWord of her death was received\nThe Slocan team continued to hit ,n Ka8i0 by her parents, Mr. and\nthe ball hard and piled up three) Mrs p. g  chandler. She had visit-\nmore runs in the sixth on Gordon's | ed ti,ern oniy a few days ago.\nngle, doubles by B. Morrison and\nNobby Hayashi and an error. Out-\nTaws replied with a single run in\nthe eighth on a walk, Brown's\nr.lngle and a sacrifice.\nOutlaws made some bad fielding\nplays in the top of the ninth to\nBorn in Kaslo ln 1924, she was\nbrought up and attended school\nthere. In Nelson she was employed\nat Collinson's Jewellery, Milady's\nand by Dr. W. C. Murphy, chiropractor.\nAs a member of the Little Theatre\nall New Denver to score five runs' she was a willing worker, partial-\non just two hits, a single by B j iarly hackstage. She did a great deal\nMorrison and Gordon's double. In 0f work on propii make-up and\nthe last of the ninth Outlaws com-| costuming.\nAn error, a walk, a passed balllnleted the scoring with two runs. She is survived by her husband\n\u2022>nd Blackie Fabbro's single and: Singles by Ed lsakson and Stan j and young son in Revelstoke; her\nTim McNabb's double, did the scor- Donaldson and Marshall's\" triple j parents, two sisters, Mrs. F. Landing;. Rich Wassick's triple, a walk'netted the pair.\nNelsonite First\nInSafelyWeek\nChest Canvass Moves\nTo North Shore Today\nThe Community Chest's appeal for $20,000 in its current\ndrive for funds will be carried into Willow Point this week.\nThe canvass of residences in that section of the North\nShore will get under way today, Fraser Tees, campaign\nchairman, announced today.\nJ. C. Muir is in charge, and will haye several assistants.\nind an error were good for two\nmore Outlaw runs ln the ninth, ty.\ning the game 10-10.\nIn the extra Inning, Stan Grill,\nthird of three Outlaw pitchers had\nGrill, Storgaard and Brown\nshared Outlaw pitching duties in\nthis game too with Grill taking the\nloss. Gordon went all the way for\nSilverton-New Denver.\nHot DeMe Over Defence Policies,\nMilitary Heads' Statements, Expected\nTHE\nSTARLIGHT\nDRIVE-IN\nTONIGHT and TUESDAY\nCartoon \u2014 9:00 p.m.\n\"So This Ii Paris\" \u2014 9:06 p.m.\n8horts 10:46 \u2014 Cartoon 11:16\nLast Complete Show 9:00 p.m.\nm WondirM story\n. THREE SAILORS\nON LEAVE...\nTHREE (IMS    *\nIII LOVE\ntndflvo\nlittla Orphans\nti TnuMI -\nt\nSEE OUR AD ON PAGE 3\nAUTO VUE\nDRIVE-IN\nTRAIL,   B.  C.\nTONIGHT, TUE8DAY,\nWEDNE8DAY,  THURSDAY\nTime: 9:00 p.m.\n\"SHANE\" (Technicolor)\nWith Alan Ladd and Jean Arthur\nCARTOON  and   NEWS\nFernie United\nTakes Lethbridge\nFERNIE, B.C.\u2014Fernie United defeated Lethbridge 2-0 here Sunday\nin Fernie's opening game of the\nCrowsnest Pass Football League.\nTaking advantage of a strong wind\nin the first half the United scored\ntwice on goals by the veteran Mike\nCairns at the 25-mimite mark and\nHerbert Planneger two minutes\nlater.\nThe wind died down during the\nsecond half and Fernie continued\nto dominate the plan. It was the\nsecond defeat in two days for the\nLethbridge squad, which lost 2-1 at\nLethbridge Saturday.\nPHONE   1814   FOR  CLASSIFIED\nREAD   THE   CLASSIFIED   DAILY\nCastlegar Quells\nTwo Bush Fires\nCASTLEGAR \u2014 The Castlegar\nvolunteer fire department during\nthe weekend was called to quell\ntwo bush fires in the village.\nThe second blaze Sunday afternoon scorched about an acre of\nground on the Castlegar school district property adjoining the site\nof the future district hospital.\nTwo residents, Alex Popoff and\nJohn Konkin, first noticed the fire\nand fought it with spades and buckets of water for about an hour before telephoning the fire department\nat about E:20 p.m.\nAnother bush fire occurred Friday afternoon shortly before 5\no'clock burning off a small portion\nof the hillside property of W. Plot-\nnikoff sr. This blaze was also partly\nout before  firemen  arrived.\nFAVORITE SPOT\nMarienbad, in Czechoslovakia, old\nmineral springs resort, was a favorite spot for the German author,\nGoethe.\nCastlegar Cubs\nDown Trail 13-3\nCASTLEGAR \u2014 .The Castlegar\nJunior Cubs, who are replacing the\nSenior Cubs ln the Trail and District Fastball League' this season,\nsoundly trdunced a disorganized\nCrown .Point Hotel squad from Trail\nby a 13-3 score Sunday before 300\nfans at the Castlegar. ball park.\nPlaying their first scheduled home\nRsme of the season, the youthful\nrnftball artists grabbed a 4-1 lead\nin the opening inning, and added\ntwo more counters in the second,\nexploding for another four in the\nfourth and three in the sixth.\nOTTAWA fCP) \u2014 Opposition\nparties in the Commons are preparing fo ask the government pointed\nquestions about Canada's defence\npolicies and some of the men who\nrun the armed forces.\nstrom in Slocan City and Mrs. R. E.\nGreen in  Kaslo, and\nWilliam in the Yukon.\nSafety Week proved Id be highly\nSuccessful in the Kootenays, Inter'\nlor Lumber Manufacturers' Assoc-\nlation reports. .<,\n\" Final figures showed that out of\n75 interior operators in the association who took part infthe effort,\nwith more than 3000 employees,\nonly five minor accidents were recorded.\nC. H. Huiberts, an employee of\nKootenay Forest Products Ltd., Nelson, won first prize for hla essay\non \"Why I Should Be Safety Minded,\" Second was R. L. Blair of\nKelowna, and third was John Hoo-\ndikoff of Boundary Sawmills, Ltd.,'\nMidway. Prizes valued at $100 were\nawarded by Safety Supply Company ol Vancouver.\nMr. Huiberts' essay follows:\n\"For this day and age of fast living, each and every one of us must\nbe safety-minded at all times, to\nprocure the welfare of our community and prolong the lives of our\nfamily, friends and fellow men.\nBy neglecting to profit by safety precautions, our own lives are\nat stake. This fact seldom enters\nthe mind of the motorist who speeds\nor the lumberman who feels that\nsafety shoes are just \"a load on the\nfeet.\"\nTo the citizen who feels that safety rules are strictly for the birds,\nthere is bound to be an accident. An\naccident which may diminish the\nfamily income, or slow down the\nproduction line of a large company.\nThis means a financial loss to the\nemployee and affects the exports\nand Imports of our country.\"\nCarelessness could bring lifelong\nInjury   or   even  fatality   into, our\nParishioners Come\nHere for Ordination\nBiggest factor in the Cubs'  fVifc forces.\nPassmore, Giants\nSplit Two Games\nRIONDEL \u2014 Passmore walloped\nRiondel Giants 20-0 in the opener\nof a Nelson and District Fastball\nLeague doubleheader here Sunday,\nbut the Giants came back to sweep\nthe second game 7-3.\nBill Konkin blanked the Giants\non  six  hits  while  his  teammates\n,,,     . ..   ,     , ,       backed him up with-an 18-hit at-\n\u2022nieywll get their chance when | ,ack ^ !Cored nlne of their\nDefence Minister Campney s esUm- ,\u201e ,h   e, m ,\u201e\u201e,\u201e\u201e on double,\nales are before the House sometime UUm ^ Burn, and \u201ex wa]ltg\nm mid-June. The debate Is expec-!Konkln fflnned \u201e Glants Mlke\ntedtobeoneof themostcontrover-;z -,   ft p^^ top hItter\nsial of the session. | with four for five.\nMost discussion likely will centre j Bishop started on the mound for\non statements contained ln a gov-1 Riondel with Stuart relieving him\nernment white paper on defence und: |n the eighth. All Riondel hits were\nrecent remarks by Air Marshal Royj singles except Paulus' eighth inning\nSlemon, chief of the air staff, and I double.\nAir Vice-Marshal John L. Plant. I Bishop pitched a seven-hitter In\nThe white paper, to be tabled a (|le seCond game to give his team S\nfew days prior to the debate, will spiit He struck out eight Pass-\nbring the House up to date on the! more batters. Top Riondel hits were\npresent status of the three armed Jack   SutcU\u00a3f,   double   and   Rees'\n\"\"\"      .     \"   ,\u2014 j u. .u\u00ab, homes    Fatalities   caused   through\nGreen in  Kaslo, and  one brother \u2122\u00bb   Iola      .\u201e\u201e. .i, ijij\ncarelessness by someone who lauea\nto realize the fact that \"Prevention\nis better than cure.\"\nSafety propaganda is staring us in\nthe face. Let us take notice today,\nit may take a life tomorrow.\nWill you and I be the safety-minded folks who make our motto\n\"Safety First.\"\nwas the ragged play of the visitors\nwho had six errors chalked against\nthem. Cubs collected three hits off\nPointer moundsman Jim Patterson,\nand Castlegar chucker Bill Perehudoff was touched for only two hits\nby the Trail crew. Patterson walked! couver and Chilliwack\ntriple.\nOther main subjects will Include i    Kmakin   and   stoochnoff   shared\n?\"'\".! aAr_.'!ef!i1Ce!J_!'ad:'.r_n.e;W,?rk\u201e;P1'chln\u00ab. *ores for Passmore, each\ngiving up six hits.\nin the north, the presence of U. S.\nservicemen on Canadian soil, Canadian forces abroad and recent thefts\nZaytsoff and Gorkoff hit doubles\nfor   Passmore   and   Konkin   who\nfrom No. 11 works company In Van- pitched tne opened \u201e\u201e , homer ,\u201e\nseven batters, and struck out one,\nand Perehudoff walked six and sent\ntwo'down swinging.\nBill Kanigan got two of the three\nhits for Castlegar, and Vic Kravski\ngot the third. For Trail, Jim Patterson and L. McAuley had one hit\neachi\n343 Give Blood\nAt Rossland\nROSSLAND \u2014 With 343 donors\nattending the blood clinic held here,\nRossland fell 57 pints short of its\nquota. Last time the clinic was\nheld the quota was exceeded,by 28\npints.\nEd Batt, president of the Rossland Red Cross, said the response\nfrom the 20-40 age group had been\npoor. He said most donors were in\nthe over 40 class. However local\nhigh school students were commended Sot turning out in fairly\nlarge numbers.\nMr. Batt felt women were carrying the load to a great extent and\nhe would in future like to see more\nmen donate.\nMembers of the Eagles lodge\nwere commended for. appearing in\na body.\nD. D. Martin was the first to\ndonate and Mr. Batt was the last,\nThe Weather\nNelson   (Sunday)     42 78 \u2014\nSt.  Johns     36 33 \u2014\nWinnipeg     51 74 -\nRegina     51 67 .05\nCalgary       46 63 \u2014\nCrescent Valley  43 72 \u2014\nPenticton      54 74 .01\nVancouver   50 61 .01\nVictoria      40 60 \u2014\nWhltehorse   ,  35 46 \u2014\nSpokane     57 74 \u2014\nJohn Diefenbaker (PC-Prince Albert) already has expressed indignation at what he termed a \"spate\nof statements\" indicating that\nsomething in the nature of a military junta is trying to take the\nplace of Parliament.\"\nHe was referring to a report quoting Air Vice-Marshal Plant as saying in Toronto that the army should\nbe scrapped to make more manpow\nthe  ninth inning\ngame.\nof   the   second\nMichael Amsden\nHurt at. Yellowknife\nSerious head injuries 'were suffered by Michael Amsden, son of\nMr. and Mrs. Philip H. Amsden.\nNorth Shore, in a mine accident at\nYellowknife, Northwest Territories,\ner available for a stronger air force. I it was learned in Nelson Saturday.\nAir Marshal Slemon was reported j Mr. and Mrs. Amsden have flown\nin Montreal t0 have said Canada | to Yellowknife, where their son has\nand the U. S. are heading toward a i been working prior to returning to\nunified air defence system and an University of British Columbia this\nover-all commander for lt. ' fall.   Details of the accident were\nMr. Campney told the Commons j not available, but it is known his\nthat it is not proper for high of- J head was crushed.\nficers to make statements on gov-1 -i\u2014. . .\nernment policy. However, he said he i PREVIOU8 WOOD\ncould not comment on the two re-1    Interior decorations of the British\nports until he'had  checked their House of Commons are carved from\naccuracy. ] 300-year-old Shropshire oak.\nTbditOft Mod and $iul Qkb\nSOCIAL MEETING\nPOSTPONED\nto June 13th\nOwing to Visit of Blood Donor Clinic\n150 Attend   *\nEagles' Banquet\nNelson Aerie, Fraternal Order of\nEagles and their women's auxiliary\nheld their annual banquet Saturday\nnight at the Eagles Hall. Over 1?0\nattended.\nRev. Allan Dixon of Trinity United Church was guest speaker and\nMrs. Dixon was also a guest. Several Eagles' officers also spoke and\nseveral presentations were made.\nA dance followed the banquet.\nCorsages were presented to auxiliary president Mrs. J. A. McNabb,\npast president Mrs. G. L. Kirkham,\nMrs. A. H. Smith and secretary Mrs.\nF. W. Cartwright. Past president's\npin was presented Mrs. Kirkham\nand a mother's pin was presented\nto Mrs. Smith. Certificates for perfect attendance were presented to\nMrs. Cartwright and to Mrs. I. Valentine.\nMembership drive certificate was\npresented to Harold Casemore. A\nmembership drive pin was presented to Mrs. Kirkham for Mr. Kirkham who was absent. Pins presented were received from the Lodge's\ngrand aerie.\nA. H. Smith was banquet chairman.\nFALL KILLS MAN\nVICTORIA (CP) - Arthur L,\nLuck, a 39-year-old meat market\noperator was killed Sunday when\nhe fell from the roof of a house in\nSaanich. He died in a Victoria hospital.\nLuck was helping his brother repair the roof when he fell to the\npatio.\nOrdained a deacon by the late\nRt. Rev. F. P. Clark late last year,\nRev. William Edlngton of Fruitvale\nSunday morning in St. Saviour's\nPro-Cathedral, was ordained as a\npriest by the new Bishop of Kootenay, Rt. Rev. P. R. Beattie.\nA large number of hls.parlshiori-\ners from Fruitvale, Salmo and Ymir\nwere in the congregation as Bishop\nBeattie performed the laying on of\nhinds, and delivered the Bible,\nchalice and paten to the new priest.\nVen Archdeacon B. A. Resker of\nCastlegar, whose extensive parish\nwas separated to make the Fruitvale parish over which Mr. Edlng-\n29 CONFIRMED\nBY NEW BISHOP\nTRAIL (CP) \u2014 Rt. Rev. Philip\nRobert Beattie, newly installed\nbishop of Kootenay, confirmed 20\nyoung people and nine adults during\nhis first visit to St. Andrews Anglican church In Trail Sunday night\nBishop Beattie said the example\nof the home was all-important in\nencouraging youth to walk in the\npath of Christianity.\nSpeaking on the meaning of\nChristianity he said it was important to remember tha{ the earth did\nnot come into being haphazardly\nthrough the banging of atoms as\nsome people claimed, but rather the\nearth was created.\nton now has charge, presented the j\ncandidate.\nThe service was conducted by I\nVery Rev. T. L, Leadbeater, Dean]\nof Kootenay.\nAt crowded St. Andrew's-by-the-l\nLake\"; at Willow Point in the after-P\nnoo, Bishop Beatntie confirmed fivel\nboys and three girls, presented bvl\nDeani Leadbeater. Members of thef\nconfirmation  class  were  Anthony]\nTees,   Charjes   Riesterer,   Edwart\nHealfy, Patrick Duff, Gordon Kleef\nSusan-Nield, Beryl West and Mar\ngaret Kleef,. A reception was hel(\nin the church hall after the service\nYOUR INSURANCE ADVISSI\n\"i\\ow ;.)ir\u2014can i m...:si you in\na FIRE INSURANCE policy?\"\nrtonervrson. hilliakd.\n;Af IGLL  H6ALTY  CO. LTC\nriHt   l   GENUAL   INSUHANU\nI'llUNES ill2 - It 12\nPHONE 1844 FOR CLASSIFIED\nNELSON\nREADY-MIX\nCONCRETE LTD.\n$13.50 cu. yd.\nDelivered In Nelson\n\u2022AVE TIME - SAVE  MONEY\n\"D6 It the easy way\"\nPHONE 871\nThli adtcrtiiemcot ii Dot published or\ndisplayed by ihe Liquor Control Boijrd\nor by ibt Government of British\nColumbia.\n\u2022 MONDAY\n\u2022 TUESDAY\n\u2022 WEDNESDAY\nFEATURES\nat\nm\/T Liberty\nORANGE JUICE:\nFraservale. 8 oz\t\nFROZEN FOODS ... The\nEconomical, Quick and Tasteful Way of Preparing Appetizing Meals I\n2,., 35*\n\u00ab for $1.00\nFANCY PEAS M ^\nKM 2Pk.43c\nCHERRY PIES,^\nSwanson,;i. \\*   fjC\n2 In pkg. Pkg.   _    \/% ^0\nKernel CORN _ \u201e\n\\tt1- \u20142pk45C'\nRedi-Whip S       5$c\nFish N' Chips Sz?*. 59c\n2 \u201e 51*\nGREEN BEANS:\nReady Cut, Nabob Fancy.\nHAVE YOU, RECEIVED\nA SHARE OF OUR\n$\n1250\nAPPRECIATION GIFT\nTO OUR CUSTOMERS\nand THE CONSUMERS OF NELSON ?\nIf you have not received a green\ncard . . . write', phone, Or ask one of\nour clerks. BE SURE YOU DO!\nWATCH FOR\nDavie Crockett!\nREWARD from LIBERTY for return of baby stroller\nleft in front of the store . . . Urgently Needed.\nIBERTY\nFOOD STORE\n wo\nroad br\nRK ON APPROACHES to the new Waneta\nIdge, Is shown In this picture. The bridge,\nbuilt in 1954, Is a considerable improvement over\nthe forrner grossing.\u2014A. L. Fryllng photo.\nWeslArm Track\nWinners Named\nPROCTER \u2014 Official results of\nthe iour-school sports meet held at\nProcter have -been announced.\nWillow Point won the West Arm\nInter-School Cup for the third successive year with a score of 331\nProcter had 289, Harrop 210 and\nBalfour 172. Since the enrolment of\nthe last two schools is half of the\n!lrst two their scores are doubled.\nHighest score of the district' in\nthe elementary division was 28,\npiled up by Barbara Falkner of\nWillow Point, who wins the West\nArm Schools individual .cup for\n;irls. Dennis Hutcheson is the win-\n;er of the individual cup for boys\n\/ith a s*core of 22 and is also the\n\/inner of the individual cup posted\niy the Flashlight Club for the high-\nSflt scorer in the Procter-Harrop\nichools. Runnersup in this compet-\ntlon are Beth Ogden, Sharon Fel-\ner and David Fitchett, all of Proc-\ner, with 18 points each. Dennis\ns the second son of Mr, and Mrs.\n. Hutcheson of Harrop,\nHouse A massed 238 points and\n\u25a0on the inter-house softball game,\nidd will receive the Flashlight tro-\nihy cud for the second year. House\nt had 174. This house won the cup\nhe first three consecutive years.\n. Leone Friesen in the junior girls\nif the Procter High School and\nJrant Hazlewood in the senior boys\nled with 30 points each. Both made\np their scores with six firsts and\nsach will receive a cup posted by\nhe Students' Council. Grant was\nie winner last year also, .\nThe   students   will   attend   their\nSILVERTON KEEPS\nWATCH ON CREEK\nSILVERTON \u2014 Main subjects discussed at the monthly meeting of\nSilverton commissioners, were the\nfire department and the Creek.\nIt was agreed to hire someone to\npatrol the creek as soon as high\nwater was feared. That someone\nalso be hired to watch the sluice\ngate at the waterworks dam,\n# Prices had been received for hose\nfor the fire department and further\ninformation would be obtainable after they held their meeting.\nA donation was given to the Community Club.\n$125 Fine Imposed\nFor Impaired Driving\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Found guilty of\ndriving while impaired, Victor Pighin was fined $125 and court costs\nwhen -he appeared before Magistrate Richard Shiell.\nFor failure to observe the compulsory truck stop at a highway railway crossing J. T. Frost was fined\n$5 and costs.\nDEATHS\nOttawa \u2014 Henry Atwood Bridges,\n60, member of the Canadian Pension Commission.\nSaskatoon \u2014 W. H. Moor, 77, for\n21 years general secretary of Saska\ntoon YMCA.\naward banquet at which Gordon\nSargent will be guest speaker June\n17. Cups and crests will be presented at the graduation exercises\nIn the community hall, to which\nthe public is invited.\nGrand Forks Has\n21 Graduates\nGRAND FORKS \u2014 Twenty-one\nyoung men and women graduated\nfrom Grand Forks high school at a\nbanquet and ceremony Friday.\nDr. K. Argue of UBC delivered\nthe draguation address, several\nav\/ards were presented, and chairman was Wi. E. Brown, supervising\nprincipal. W. J. Zoellner, grade 12\nteacher, introduced the graduates.\nKaren Honholt was valedictorian,\nShirley Ann Forrester gave the\nfarewell from the school, and presentation of a class gift to the school\nwas made by Barry Lusk.\nMembers of the class are Barry\nLusk, Donneva Hunt, Peter Meyer,\nKaz Sugimoto, Bill Meyer, Evelyn\nEsouloff, Zenas Pahoda, Harriet\nMillican, George Mudie, Donna\nDoan, Kazuto Nakamoto, Myrtle\nFisher, Stan Sandner, Karen Honholt, Frank Rossi, Laura D'Andjea,\nCarl Stone, Mary Rezansoff, Ron\nNishi, Mary Stoushnoff and Mike\nHorkoff.\nAs a finale to their graduation\nfrom high school, the graduates\ntravelled to Coulee Dam Saturday\nand spent the day .there.\nResist Big City Bait,\nFernie Graduates Told\nFEHNIK \u2014 When graduation exercises of the Fernie High School\nwere held in the new school auditorium Friday night, 18 graduates\u2014\n12 girls and six boys\u2014were honr\nored upon an historic occasion; il\nwas the first graduation exercise\nand prom held ln the new auditorium.\nIn the past several years the\ngraduation exercises have been held\nin a local theatre and the prom in\na. public hall.\nS. Crpokes, supervising principal, welcomed the large crowd\nof 700. In congratulating the graduates, he warned them that the\nday of the Individual Is past. Today the Individual spoke through\nthe group. He advised the graduates not to sneer at other groups\nhut ti fteep heart arid mind open\nto others who think differently.\nEvelyn Lewis, president of the\nstudents'  council,  introduced  Glen\nEDMONTON (CP)\u2014H. M. Tucker\nof Vancouver was elected dominion\npresident of the Associated Canadian Travellers. He succeeds H. F.\nShaw, Sudbury, Ont\nRegional vice-presidents elected\ninclude: D. McCunn, Brandon, Man.;\nM. L. Sterzer, Yorkton, Sask.; C.\nS. McNabb, Edmonton.\nR. D. Buchan of Calgary, secretary-treasurer, was appointed general-manager of the association.\nGray Crnek Parents\nAttend Graduation\nGRAY CREEK\u2014Mr. and Mrs. W.\nKocher and Gail attended the graduation ceremonies at Prince Charles\nhigh school at Creston for the graduation of Audrey Kocher. Next year\nAudrey plans to attend Notr.e Dame\nCollege in Nelson and then Victoria\nNormal School.\nMr. and Mrs. Oscar Wirsig were\nalso present at the Creston graduation dinner and dance. Their son,\nRalph, has successfully completed\nhis course. Ralph will continue his\nstudies at Creston for one year\nand then he hopes to take an engineering course at UBC. Claus Wirsig\nhas received his BA degree from\nUniversity of Alberta, Edmonton. He\nintends to return next year for his\nmaster's degree.\nAmerican Motors To\nCut Production\nMILWAUKEE (AP). \u2014 American\nMotors Corp., producer of Nash\nand Hudson automobiles, announces\nthat 3400 workers at its two Wisconsin plants will be laid off in a\n\"downward adjustment in production.\"\nThe layoffs, effective Tuesday,\nrepresent a 20-per-cent cut in the\nproduction force in plants here and\nin Kenosha, Wis.\nRUNAWAY POWER MOWER\nTAKES OFF MAN'S TOES\nMARKHAM, Ont. (CP)\u2014A Mark-\nham township policeman lost three\ntcfes recently when he tried to\ncatch his runaway power lawn-\nmower.\nAfter the machine got away from\nhim he stepped in front of it as\nit zig-zagged across the lawn. It\ncut the big toe off his right foot\nand two toes off his left foot.\nDeGeorgio, the newly-elected president of the 1953-56 council. Vice-\nPrincipal W. S. Creamer presented\ngraduation rings to Ihe members of\nthe graduation class. ,\nWIN SCHOLARSHIPS \/\nThe Fernie -branch, Registered\nNurses' Association bursary, was\npresented to Florence Novlck,\nGrade 13, by Mrs. Lily Hogan, president of the branch and matron, of\nthe Fernie Memorial Hospital.\nLegion President Aubrey Dayman presented the Legion scholarship to another Grade 13 student,\nShirley Lees.\n\\ The 3300 Club scholarship was\nawarded to Olga Rumen of the\ngraduating class. The award was\npresented by 3300 club president\nDick Pauls. Council pins for scol-\ntrship were presented by Mr.\nCrookes.to Olga Rumen, Brenda\nQuail, John Baschzok and Edward\nRahal.\nThe address to the graduates\nwas given by Ivan H. R. Jeffery,\nInspector of schools. He advised\nthe graduates to resist the lure of\nthe big city. B. C. was the last\nfrontier of Canada. Opportunities\nabounded In the small'placet.\nHe outlined a check list of the\nqualities  desired  of a  graduate.\nThese were; 1. Development of a\nsaleable skill; 2. Development ef\nhealth, both mental and physical;\n3   Knowledge  of rank and duty\nof  cltlienshlp;  4.  Understanding\nof  the  family  group;  5.  Ability\nto buy goods and services; 8. Un-\n. ence; 7. Appreciation of beauty In\nderstandlng of the methods of id-\nart, literature, music and nature;\n8. Making valuable use of leisure\nthe rights  of others; 10.  Ability\ntime;  9.  Respect for others  and\nto think, express thoughts, understand and make decisions.\nThe invocation was given by Canon R. E. M. Yerbugh. Choral selections  by  the  Class  of  '56  were\n\"May   the   Good   Lord   Bless   and\nKeep You\" and \"Good Luck, Good\nHealth, God Bless You.\" The graduating   class   sang   \"Now   Is   the\nHour.\"  Valedictorian   was  Brenda\nQuail.\nAt the graduation banquet block\nletters were presented to Brenda\nQuail, Edward Rahal, Jon Quail,\nOlga Rumen, Beverley Brewer and\nJack Fetzko by the Students' Council president, Evelyn Lewis. Block\nletters are awarded for extra-cur\nricular activities. The historian's\nreport a 10-year forecast of the\ngraduates, was read by Beverley\nPayne.\nMembers of the graduating class\nare Beverley Brewer, Ida Corrigan,\nMarion Costa, Gerta Heger, Evelyn\nPayne, Patricia Pferpont, Brenda\nQuail, Olga Rumen, Lois Sangala,\nSernardlne Walls, John Baschzok,\nJohn Fetzko, Daniel Johnstone, Richard Pennington, Jon Quail and\nEdward Rahal.\nHigh Rental ol\nFruitvale Hall\nDraws Criticism\nFRUITVALE - Criticism of \"excessive\" rents charged for use of\nthe Memorial hall, was voiced at\nthe quarterly meeting of the Fruitvale advisory council of the Recreation Commission In Legion'Hall, attended by representatives of 11 organizations, the village and school\nboard.\nThe rentals were deterring local\ngroups from making use of the\nhall, many of those present felt.\nPresident John Newton, reporting\nfor the square dance club, said sessions would be resumed in the\nfall, with groups for beginners and\nadvanced dancers. As classes would\ntherefore be smaller, the group\ncould not afford the community\nhall rental, and- would have to seek\ncheaper quarters.\nTeen Town plans softball games,\nhikes and picnics, and are looking\nfor adults with knowledge of rocks,\ntrees and wildlife, to accompany\nthem on hikes. i\nTO WRITE MLA\nDuring discussion of children's\nplaygrounds and picnic sites, members learned that Hillcrest Park ls\nready. A picnic and p\u00a7rk will be\nset U\u00a3 in front of the Legion hall\nthis summer. Hon. R. E. Sommers\nwill be asked to have an area set\naside at the Champion Lakes for a\nground where campers Could play\nball.\n. A new fall fair feature was announced. Fruitvale Rotary. Club and\nthe Bank of Montreal have posted\ntrophies for annual competition by\nadult and Juvenile entries in entertainment displays sponsored by a\nclub and presented by Its members.\nDrama, square dance and gymnastics clubs have been approached and\nothers may participate. Judges will\nbe fromjiut o'f town.\nFormer Cranbrook\nWoman Buried There\nCRANBROOK \u2014The body of Mrs.\nWilllata Meier, who died at Blair-\nmore Thursday, was brought to\nCrarrbrook for funeral service at\nChrist Church by Rev. R. G. Preston Saturday  afternoon.\nShe was the former Doris Leask\nBrookes, daughter of the late Mr.\nand Mrs. Robert Brookes, and was\nborn and grew up*ere, attending\nCranbrook schools. After her marriage she and her husband established their home at Blairmore 27\nyears ago and lived there ever since.\nShe is survived by her husband,\nand by two sons, Dennis in Calgary\nand Garry in Medicine Hat, a sister\nMrs. Harry Killins and a brother\nJames.Brookes, both in Cranbrook.\nHIGHE8T POINT\nHighest spot in Ceylon Is Adam's\npeak, reaching 7420 feet.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, JUNE \u00ab, 1955\u20143        ]\nNatal Clinic Called Off . . .\nKimberley Retains Its\nBlood Donor Record\nSilverton Plans\nTo Improve Rink\nSILVERTON - M. Wright, reporting on the skating rink at the\nregular monthly meeting of the Silverton Community Club, held in the\nMunicipal Hall, stated W. H. Johnston, R. Harding and himself had\nmade a thorough examination of\nthe rink. There was a tremendous\namount of work to be done and he\nsuggested a building bee for new\ndressing rooms before Fall. Meanwhile, a \"clean-up\" job will be done\naround the building.\nW H. Johnston, reporting for baseball, said the junior baseball team\nwas doing exceedingly well and the\nsenior team wished to pick out\nthe best boys to go along with it.\nHe asked for caps to be bought for\nthe junior teams. This was granted.\nHe had approached an outside ball\nteam to play at Silverton July 1.\nSocial convener J. Fairhurst re-\noprted $25 had been realized catering for the Board of Trade* dinner,\nand $35.45 from refreshments sold\nat a baseball game.\nThe treasurer reported receipts\nfor May were $304 ancrexpenses $50,\nmaking a net profit to the club\nof $254. x\nMembership, to date stood at 80.\nMerchants of the Village had been\ncanvassed and donations presently\nreceived amounted to $54.\nR. N. Hambly. reporting for entertainment, had sent for amusement games. Partition had been\nerected in the Club House so that\nthere was now a dressing room for\noutside teams.\nDISHE8 WANTED\nMrs. M. Wright asked the club to\nsponsor a drive for dishes and cutlery, all organizations in the Village to be asked if they would\nhelp. Heavy industrial wire and\ntwo-inch pipe to erect a new backstop for the baseball diamond again\nreceived discussion. Chairman R._\nPeachey was requested to find out\ncost of this wire.\nMrs. R. Fairhurst reported she\nhad contacted Mrs. L. LincF! supervisor of the school, regarding voting for the Dominion Day Queen.\nThe schedule for the Dominion\nDay sports was drawn up.\nNEW SAVINGS BANK\nGRAY CREEK \u2014Gray Creek post\noffice is now authorized to transact\nsavings bank business. Prior to this,\nthe nearest savings bank office has\nbeen Creston or Nelson.\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Well over 2000\nbottles of blood have been collected\nin East Kootenay by the southern\nAlberta Red Cross mobile unit In\nits annual Spring visits to Kimberley, Cranbrook, Creston, Invermere\nand Fernie.\nKimberley provided more than\nhalf, 1118 bottles, for its three-day\nclinic and successfully defended its\ncontinent record for highest pei\ncapita contributions, one bottle fc\nevery five- residents.\nThe whole East Kootenay toli.\nfor the year is still incomplete,\nsince incidence of Infectious jaundice at Michel-Natal necessitated\ncancellation of the clinic there, and\nif this is re-scheduled for Fall, a\nsecond Cranbrook clinic may also\nbe set for that trip.\nProcter Couple\nGel \"Summons\"\nSUNSHINK BAY \u2014 Mr. and Mrs.\nAlec Maclean of Sunshine Bay have\nreceived a summons, but they ara\"\nnot worried.\nThe formal declaration commands\nthem to appear in London, Ont., between June 30 and July 9. It ls tha\nLondon Centennial Committee'!\nstunt method of. drawing people to\nIts' 100th anniversary celebrations.\nThe farrflly spent four \u25a0years ln\nLondon, while FO Maclean flew\nplanes at Crumlin and Malton airports, and overseas. They returned\nto their native West in 1947, with\nmany pleasant memories of .the\ntown and the friendliness of its \u2022\npeople.\nThe phony summons bears the\nsignature of London's mayor G. E.\nBeedle, on behalf of the Centennial\nCommittee.\nMedals Presented to\nInvermere Students\nINVERMERE \u2014 At the graduation banquet and dance which\nlaunched eight graduating students\nat' the Invermere Schopl Friday\nnight, Lynn Tunnacliffe won the\nmedal presented by the school council to the best senior girl student\nand Brian Wannop the medal for\nbest senior boy student. Similar\nawards were given to Irene Lewis\nand Earl Evans as best junior students.\nThe house\u2014trophy was won by\nAlpha House who wrested it from\nGamma House for the first time.\nAlpha House sponsor is W. A. Hay-\nden and house captain Barbara\nLaird. The trophy was presented by\nMr. and Mrs. J. A. Laird for inter-\nhouse competition.\nTOPS  IN  ENTERTAINMENT THIS WEEK\nCartoon 9:00 p.m. \u2014 \"So Thii It Paris\" 9:05 p.m.\nShorts 10:45 p.m. \u2014 Cartoon 11:1.5 p.m.\nUST COMPLETE SHOW 9 P.M. TONIGHT\u00aband TUESDAY\nTM Wonderful story of\n. THREE SAILORS\nON LEAVE...      .\nTHREE SIHLS    *\nIII LOVE\nand Flit\n, lillla Orphans\nIn Traiiblstt\nt\n'THE CRITICS SAY... A bit of froth with riot a serious\nmoment. A thoroughly delightful evening for patrons of\nevery category. A musical full of tuneful tunes, funny situations, skilful dancing, in beautiful color and with a story\nthat never gets in the way, sets a fast pace and you end up\nconvinced you've had a wonderful time and wishing all your\nfriends had been there.\nA four star musical comedy, if if if if\nat the\nSTARLIGHT DRIVE-IN\nAT REGULAR ADMISSION PRICES\n*%f\\ FREE PASSES\ntiXJ GIVEN AWAY\nBY THE\nFOLLOWING\nFIRMS\nBUS SCHEDULE\nLeaves Arrives\nNelson - 6:50 a.m.      Kaslo - 9:00 a.m.\nKaslo - 3:30 p.m.        Nelson - 5:30 p.m.\nPHONE\nFOR FURTHER INFORMATION\nNelson-Kaslo Coach Lines\n806 FIFTH ST. S. E. Fyfe PHONE 1582-L\nFREE ADULT PASS TO\nSTARLIGHT DRIVE-IN\nTo the First Five Purchasing\nSPRAY and STAY\nReg. $1.75, 4 oz. Egg Creme Shampoo, reg. 75c\n$2.50 Value Both for $1.75\nTHAT'S AT\nNELSON PHARMACY\n\"YOUR FORTRESS OF HEALTH\"\n433 Josephine St. Nelson Phons 1203\nWEDNESDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY and SATURDAY\nCARTOON \u2014 9:00        \"FAR COUNTRY\" \u2014 9:10\n8HORT8 \u2014 10:60     CARTOON \u2014 11:20\nLast Complete Show 9:10 p.m.\nFilmed in Beautiful Jasper Park\nmusicn MUSIC!! MUSIC!!\n\"So This Is Paris\"\nA Sound Track Recording\nA Great Musical Show Recorded for You by Decca\nAVAILABLE AT\nMcKay & Stretton Ltd.\nYOUR MUSIC CENTER\nPhono 1555 532 Baker St.\nMUSIC!! MUSIC!! music!!\nCUSTOM SEWING CENTRE\nHome of\n\u2022 TURISSA     *NECCHI      \u2022BERNINA\nSewing Machines\nCome In and See\nOur Large and Varied Selection of Materials.\nSPECIAL FOR THIS WEEK\nCotton Plisse ... 59c yd.\nThe First Five People\nTo Purchase Three Yards of This Special Receive <\nFREE PASS TO THE STARLIGHT DRIVE-IN\nCustom Sewing Centre\n307 BAKER ST.\nPHONE 1653\nSPORT SHIRT\nSpecial\n*4*50\nPlain shqdes in gabardine made with long sleeves and\nwashable.\nTo the first five, customers buying one of these shirts we will give\nA PASS TO STARLIGHT DRIVE-IN THEATRE\nEmory's Ltd\nQorilla\nWORK BOOTS\nComfort Fit With Either Gro-Cork or Cats Paw Soles.\nPriced From\n$7.75 ,o *14.50\nGoodyear Welt Contrueted.\n350 BAKER ST.\nWADE'S\nPHONE 1350\nFREE PASS TO STARLIGHT DRIVE-IN\nTo the First Five\nPurchasing Any of the Above Type of Work Boot.\n4\n ''\u25a0'\u25a0 '\u25a0'\u25a0'\u25a0 :'-\u25a0\u25a0\".:       \u25a0 \"\u25a0: \u25a0\u25a0'-,.\u25a0\u25a0-\".''\u25a0'\n.\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.,   ,     \u25a0    ,,,,  ,\u25a0\u25a0    .  .   \u25a0.,,;   V.  v.\u2014 ;    \u25a0   \u25a0     \u25a0\niuiuihuip^ Iiw\u00abww u . ^mmmmmi\/mmtf^^v^ k*^m^\nJMsiUt Batti) NeUlB Not Worrying\nEstablished April 22. 1902\nBritish Columbia's\nMost Interesting Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday by the\nNEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n266 Baker Street, Nelson. British Columbia\nAuthorized as Second Class Mail,\nPost Office Department, Ottawa.\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS.\nMonday, June 6, 3955\nIt Helped 21,000\nFifty thousand pints of blood were\nused in British Columbia during the\npast year to aid 21,000 patients. The\nolood bank needs new deposits. Be\nsure you are one of those to visit the\nclinic here Monday and Tuesday and\nmake your blood gift.\nFull Sports Week\nSuggested For July\nIn an effort to sell Nelson and the\nKootenay to a larger tourist public, the\nNelson Summer Bonspiel executive is\nsuggesting that the various clubs and\ninstitutions of the city join in makirfg\nthe week a mammoth sport affair instead of merely a bonspiel. The executive! believes that more should be made\nof the week in view of the fact that it\nis the city's only summer event.\nSome of the everts suggested for\nsuch' a week would be: an open golf\ntournament run by the Nelson Golf\nand Country Club on its highly scenic\ncourse above Rosemont; a fish derby\nrun by the Nelson Rod and Gun Club;\na .tennis tournament by the Nelson\nTennis club (the Labor Day tennis\ntournaments of the twenties and thirties were something to remember); a\nflower show sponsored by the Garden\nclub; and power boat and.water sports\nto be run by the Nelson Power Boat\nAssociation.\nThese were some of the sports suggested but there are also other sports\nthat could be run such as trap shooting,\nLittle League baseball tournaments,\nladies' softball tournaments, and men's\nbaseball tournaments.\nThe bonspiel committee is already\ncovering a huge area with its bonspiel\nadvertising and could include other\nitems along with.it.\nHow Much Road\nMileage Do We Need?\nFigures by the Dominion Bureau of\nStatistics show that for the seventh\nconsecutive year the ratio of motor\nvehicles per mile of surfaced highway\nhas risen. Whereas in 1945 there were\n11.4 motor vehicles per surfaced road\nmile in Canada, there were 18.0 in 1953.\nIn other words, 50 per cent more cars\nand trucks were travelling.on Canada's\nsurfaced highways in 1953 than there\nwere at the end of the war.\nDuring the post-war period, says\nthe Canadian Good Roads Association,\nthe development of the Canadian road\nand street systems, inadequate to start\nwith, has seriously fallen behind the\ntrend in motor vehicle traffic as shown\nby the following facts:\n1. From 1945 to 1953 total motor\nvehicle registrations increased by\n126 per cent, surfaced mileage\nonly by 38 per cent.\n2. At the same time heavy vehicle\nregistration (trucks and buses)\nincreased even more rapidly\u2014by\n156 per cent\u2014than passenger cars\n(117 per cent).\n3. The trend in design and production   has   been   towards   faster,\nAbout. Credit\nThe rise ln consumer credit to a record\nlevel of $1,885 millions is no reason for excitement. This Is a credit-based economy and it's\nlikely to stay that way.\nMore significant is the fact that the major\nelement in the rise of $19 millions from the\nprevious quarter was ap increase in cash personal loans: borrowings from banks, money\nlenders, loan companies and credit unions.\nWhile this item increased, there was a drop\nin charge acocunt borrowings and only a\nminor increase in installment credit.\nInstallment buying and charge accounts\nare'forms of consumer credit that are used\nchiefly by those who are borrowing against\na stable-future; cash personal loans are more\noften sought in emergencies. It's possible, then,\nthat the shift in consumer credit is another\nreflection of the uncertainties of the employment situation. Canadians aren't taking on s*o\nmany new obligations. They are consolidating\ntheir .debts and in some cases using their\ncredit to tide them over rough spots.\nThis change in the credit picture isn't very\ngreat, proportionately. It does suggest that\nCanadians are making good use of the flexibility of our consumer credit structure. Most\nimportant of all, the fact that a high lever of\ncredit is available to consumers suggests that\nfinancial institutions are not pessimistic about\nthe future.\u2014Financial Post.\nThey Scare Easy\nThey say an elephant is terrified of a tiny\nmouse it can hardly see. The same sort of thing\napparently happens with some of those mammoth United States industries when there is a\nhint, of foreign competition. In a panic 'they\ncSll on Washington to hoist the tariff.\n\u25a0 The latest example is furnished by the\nRadio-Electronic-Television Manufacturers Association. It wants the present U.S. duty raised\nfrom 12H per cent to a whopping 35 per cent,\nBays otherwise it won't be able to meet competition from tired old Great Britain and the\nbrash newcomer West Germany.\nWhat are the facts?\nTotal electronic imports into the United '\nStates in 19S3 came to $3,300,000\u2014or 0.006 per\ncent of the US. production. During the first\neight months of 1954 such imports dropped to\n$1,800,000 while U.S. industry volume hit $5,-\n000,000.000 and U.S. exports totalled about\n$300,000,000 in 1954,\nThey scare pretty easily, some of these\nbig fellows.\u2014Toronto Financial Post.\nlarger, heavier and more powerful motor vehicles.\n4. The average Canadian travelled\nfarther in his motor vehicle\u201esince\ngasoline consumption went up by\n187 per cent from 1945 to 1953.\nSome $600 million is budgeted -for\nroads and streets in Canada this year.-\nThe greater part of the outlay is financed directly by Toad users through\ngasoline taxes and licence fees which\nare collected at the provincial level.\nThe federal government derives\nsubstantial revenue's from motor transportation. Special excise taxes have\nbeen levied on cars since 1918 and on\ntires and tubes since 1953. In addition,\nthe sales'tax (first levied in 1920), now\n10 per cent, applies to these, products\nand also to gasoline and lubricants.\nCustoms duties also apply, in addition\nto the special excise and sales tax, to\ncars and a wide range of automotive\nequipment. The Canadian Tax Foundation estimates that the federal government in 1954 collected $250 million\nfrom all these sources of indirect taxation \u2014 considerably more than the\nprovinces derived from their gasoline\ntax.\n\"It thus appears,\" says the Canadian Good Roads Association, \"that the\ntotal revenues collected from motor\ntransportation, both at federal and at\nprovincial level, exceeded road expenditures by between $100 million and\n$150 per annum in recent years.\"\nIt is estimated that a $600-million-\na-year road program for ten consecutive years would be required to bring'\nCanada to a stage where it was keeping abreast of road needs.\n? Questions?\nANSWERS\nOpen to any reader. Names of persona\nasking question* will not be published.\nThere Ii no charge for this service.\nQuestions WILL, NOT BE ANSWERED\nBY MAIL oKceot where there l\u00ab obvious\nnecessity for privacy.\nR. H., Trail \u2014 Is there anyone in the district\nwho insulates houses by use of a blower?\nO. Lightle, Box 69, Castlegar, does this\nkind of work.\n.C. W. J., Thrums \u2014 What is the smallest acreage that is considered as farm land for tax\npurposes?\nThe land must be worked by bona fide7\nfarmer and there must be at least two acres\nunder cultivation.\nMrs. A. A. J., Fruitvale \u2014 Can members of a\nsmall service club in unorganized territory take orders for selling cards tp their\nfriends to earn club money without a\nlicense?\nWe advise you'to consult your  nearest\nChief of Police.\nO. C, Fernie \u2014 In a professional boxing\nmatch, can a doctor stop the fight? Or\ndoes he advise the referee to do so? Who\nhas the jurisdiction? Can the referee overrule the doctor?\nThe referee cannot over-rule the dottor.\nThe doctor would examine the injured man\nand if he says the fight must stop the referee\nmust then make the announcement.\nSubscriber, Sandon \u2014 Is there an agency for\nSpirella corsets in Nelson?\nWatch   for   notices   in   our   advertising\ncolumns.'\n\\\nInterested, Trail \u2014 Can you tell me where the\nMandan Indians roamed in former days?\nThe Mandans are a sect of the Siouan tribe\nbut their speech allies them with the Winne-\nbagos. Unlike most Indian tribes, which were\nnornadic, the Mandans lived in villages, in\ndome-shaped earth-covered lodges clustered\nbehind stockades. They planted maize, beans,\npumpkins and sunflowers; hunted buffalo,\nmade pottery, and had an origin-myth of\nemergence from the lower world by a vine.\nThey treasured a sacred palladium in an ark\nand performed reremonies, which while akin\nto Plains rites, were distinctive. Their culture\nthus had eastern or south-eastern affiliations.\nToday their tribal identity is merged with the\nHidatsa, who are close to the Crows. Theories\nconnecting them with the mound builders of\nOhio are dismissed as unwarranted, and with\nthe Welsh as \"fantastic.\" In sign language\nthey are known to other tribes as \"the tattooed\npeople.\"\nNear-Hero\nIn the dark days of. Prohibition there appeared on the American market a beverage\ncalled near-beer; the man who. invented it,\npeople used gloomily to say, was a poor judge\nof distance. No such criticism' can be levelled\nat the sporting journalist who has just coined\nthe phrase \"near-hero.\" He used it to describe\na jockey who, in a steeplechase at Plumpton\nran under very bad conditions, was the last in\na field of seven to part company with his\nmount. Nobody finished: nobody won: and\nnobody could be the hero of a contest which,\ntechnically, never took place. But this jockey,\nwho got within two fences of home, was the\nnear-hero.\nThe term will be widely recognized as\nfulfilling a long-felt want in literature as\nwell as in life. It will save critics of the modern novel a tremendous amount of circumlocution. It is seldom possible to describe the\nprotagonist of such works as their hero without being suspected of arriere pensee. \"Denzil,\nan unhappy schizophrene who, in order to\nescape from the soulless domination of an\ninvalid aunt, takes to shop-lifting and, after\nvarious humiliating failures, at last succeeds\nin being sentenced to a short term of imprisonment, is the hero of Miss Gulp's latest\u2014\nand in my view finest\u2014novel.\" Hero, It does\nnot sound right. How much simpler and more\nconvenient to call Miss Gulp's lustiest brainchild a near-hero, and to leave it at that.\u2014\nYour Horoscope\nA fear of mixed influences and fortunes\nis foreseen. Care over minor business details\nis particularly advisable. The child born today may be clever, good-natured and fond of\nsports. A happy life is predicted.\nIt's Been Said\nGood nature is one of the richest fruits of\ntrue Christianity.\u2014Henry Ward Beecher.\nThey'll Do It Every Time\nBy jimmy Hatlo       Today's Bible Thought\nThey had no leisure so much as\nto  eat\u2014Mark  6:31.\nThat is a good time to escape from\nthe turmoil of life and commune\nwith the Infinite. He may have\nguidance as well as comfort for\nyou.\ndim\u00a3 Hot\nDRESSED IN COLORFUL NATIVE COSTUME9, a group of\ngirls from India arrive by ocean liner at New York. They will study\nhome-rnaklng on  U.S. farms, then  return tp their  native country.-\n\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nBritish Love of Adventure Gets\nAlberta Game Branch Gels to Work\nOn Elk Herd-Management Programs\nBy THE  CANADIAN   PRE88\nStarving elk in Alberta forest reserves have prompted the Alberta\ngovernment's game branch to start\na herd-management program. Its\naim is to eliminate herd movement\nto Settled areas and reduce the\nnumber of elk that die each winter.\nAs the first step in the project,\nall elk in the Crow's Nest and\nClearwater forest reserves of southwestern Alberta have been counted.\nThe area covered extends along the\nslope tf the Rockies, from Waterton\nNational Park to the Highwood\nrange.\nExperts say there are too many\nelk in the area and in recent years\nanimals from southern sections\nhave wandered into settled districts, making free lunches of haystacks and crops. Because of the\nover-population of elk. winter feed\nis limited, and the animals cannot\nobtain enough nourishment. Many\nelk have starved to death. Weakened females which do survive the\nwinter often do not calve.\nSUCCESSFUL IN U.S.\nWith a direct herd-management\nscheme, tried successfully in the\nUnited States, the reserve will have\na far smaller elk population than\nat present. Eventually there will\nbe better grazing conditions, resulting in  fewer winter kills,  and  a\nlarge calf crop In the late spring.\nThe 1954 open season on elk wai\nthe first step ln the direct management plan. About 700 elk wero\ntaken, reducing the over-population\nproblem.\nTOOK N08E COUNT\nAt the start, however, the elk\npopulation had to be counted. This\nwas completed by the end of April. \u25a0\nThe count, was relatively easy' on\nflat prairie sections, where a plan*\ncould be used, but on the final\nnorthern section, which ls a series\nof ridges, flight at a constant altitude is Impossible, so this area was\ngiven as absolute count, by men on\nsnowshoes.\nAreas of greatest concentration\nwill be studied closely by parties\nwho will study causes of deaths,\nestablish the ratio of males to'females, and Investigate browsing\nconditions and food resources.\nForestry men reported that even\nwith good binoculars, they had\ntrouble distinguishing between\ncows and large calves In the elk\nherd. The game branch hopes that\nby fall herds will be well-enough\nmanaged to stop the elk starvation,\n'and keep herds from damaging\ncrops.\nBy JAME8  F.  KING\nLONDON (AP) - Some Britons\ntake a secret delight in a chance\nto display their traditional dogged-\nness.\nThe railway strike has brought\nsome hardship and inconvenience,\nbut a \"we can take it\" attitude,\nsuch as that displayed during the\nwar. is clearly present. Again the\nEnglishman has shown himself a\ngenius at improvisation without\ngrumbling.\nHundreds of thousands normally\ncommute daily by trains to their\njobs into London and other big\ncities. Though they have lost this\nmeans of transportation, somehow\neveryone seems to get to work \u2014\nand on time. Absenteeism has been\npractically negligible.\nThousands have to start out from\nhome hours earlier than usual and\nwait and wait in long lines at bus\nstops and subway terminals.\nLIKE THE CHALLENGE\nThose arriving late for woj*k\nseem genuinely apologetic about\nit. Few, however, offer an excuse\nor alibi. They sound rather a little\nashamed about failing to meet the\nchallenge presented by the strike.\nFor many, the rail tieup has\nlighted the spirit of adventure. The\nupheaval in the regular routine of\nthe daily commuter is taken as a\nrelief from boredom.\nThere's a gleam of pride .in the\neyes of the charwoman as she\ntells how she made the journey to\nher work \u2014- walking, hitchhiking\nand by bus \u2014 in a manner that gave\na sparkle to what before was daily\ndrudgery.\nThousands who normally use the\ntrains are driving to work in their\ncars\u2014and motorists seem to enjoy\ngiving a lift for company on a ride\noften taken alone.\nHundreds of extra policemen in\nLondon have put into an operation\na parking plan io effective you\ncan drive through the centre of\nthe capital easier than before the\nstrike.\nMore than ever, perhaps, the\nstrike has broken down the tradt\ntional British , reserve. They talk\nto one another now on the slightest pretext \u2014 without being formally introduced. ,\n6-6\nThe wonder to me is that Eve\nstayed straight as long as she did\nwithout any neighbors to be scared\nof.'\nSuggests Speedways. .\nOffers Solution\nTo Rail Strikes\nLONDON (AP) \u2014 The Evening\nStandard says Britain should give\nserious thought to scrapping its\nstrike-torn railway system and using the roadbeds for motor traffic.\nLord Beaverbrook's paper recalls\nthat-Brig.-Gen. T. I. Lloyd, deputy\nchief engineer of the war office,\nonce suggested removing every rail\non the 20,000 miles of Britain's main\nlines and building high speed superhighways on them.\nCutworms (hew\nAcres of Grain\nREGINA (CP)\u2014Voracious army\ncutworms are chewing their way\nthrough thousands of acres of new\ngrain crop on the southern prairie,\nthe provincial government said\ntoday.\nA sudden outbreak of worms is\nreported from several sections of\nsouthern Saskatchewan and Al\nberta. Unless checked, the worms\nare expected to,, feed on burgeoning\ncrops for another week before entering the pupae stage.\nR. E. McKenzie, provincial director of the plant industry branch\nsaid in a statement Saturday. The\ninfestation extends over 10,000\nacres of southern Saskatchewan \u2014\nfrom  Val   Marie   west  to   Consul,\nIn a small country with distances; with  most  dflmage  in  tne  Estend\nshort  and   traffic- dense,  railways! area\nThe\nare out of date, his argument went.!\nOF  MAJOR  IMPORTANCE I\n\"The railway strike gives every\nreason for reopening this' suggestion,\" says the Evening Standard.\n\"Never before has the importance\nof the country's highways, as the\nchannel both for passenger traffic\nand tne transport of goods, been so\nforcibly emphasized.\"\nMeanwhile other transport authorities urged the nation to make\nmore use of its canal system, -which!\ntotals 2400 miles. The canals\n1953 carried 13,000,000 tons of\nfreight, about- one twenty-fourth\nof that borne by railways.\nThe Daily Express says deepen\ncanals and bigger barges are needed\nand the system should be extended\nto connect the Thames,, Severn,\nMersey and Humber Rivers.\ninsects have attacked al\nfalfa, flax and commercial mustard in southern Alberta, but no\nwheat has been reported damaged.\nWlHIBBF\nBUY1H\n[Dfflil HUH!\n$7.95 Gallon\nPHONE 1844. FOR CLASSIFIED\nBURNS\nLUMBER\n602 Baker St.       Ph. 1180\ntake\nLayoff At Halifax\nLighter Than Feared\nHALIFAX (CP)\u2014The naval dockyard here last week had its biggest\nlayoff \u2014 170 men \u2014 since just after\nthe Second World War.\nEarlier this week dockyard officials feared up to 245 men would\nbe laid off but jobs were found for\nabout 75.\nAll affected were \"casual laborers\" hired only for one job but\nmany had been employed for up to\nfive years.\nA dockyard spokesman said they\nwill be rehired when work is available. Their union said it will likely\nbe fall before work picks up.\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Red-faced\nBritish authorities Friday confessed\nthey had forwarded a'package of j\ngovernment pamphlets to Mau Mauj\nterrorist chief Deden Kimathi at\nhis own request.\nThe package even used the title\nadopted by Kenya's number one\nterrorist. It was addressed from\nHer Majesty's Stationery Office to\n\"the prime minister, Sir Deden Kimathi.\"\nBRITISH   UNDERSTATEMENT\nA spokesman for the stationery\noffice, which Issues all government\npamphlets, said the whole thing\nwas \"an unfortunate oversight.\"\nHe said the office receives up to\n2000 requests a day from all parts\nof the world, a large proportion\nfrom Africa.\n\"Many Africans with no authority give themselves titles,\" he said.\n\"In replying, we normally use the\nform of address given by the writer\nin order to humor him.\"\nThe package to the terrorist chief\nwas mailed to Nyeri, Kenya, where\nit was turned over to police before\nKimathi got his hands on it.\nPlan RCAF Reunion\nOTTAWA (CP)-Canadian fighter\npilots who flew with 127 Fighter\nWing, which fought over Europe\nduring the Second World War, will\nhold their first reunion in Toronto,\nJune 11.. The wing included 421,\n416. 403 and 443 squadrons of the\nRCAF.\nand\nfirst\nSign Trade Treaty'\nOTTAWA   (CP) \u2014 Canada\nEthiopia have signed their\ntrade treaty, extending most-favored-nation tariff treatment on imports. Imports from Ethiopia, mostly\ncoffee, totalled $98,000 last year. Exports to Ethiopia totalled $11(1,000 \u2014\nmostly tires, tubes, aircraft parts\nand rubber goods. t\nDo You Need\nA LINE OF TOP QUALITY\nBathroom\nFixtures\nIn White or Color I\nWe\nHave Theml\nKootenay\nPlumbing\nAND HEATING CO   LTD.\n351 Baker St Phone 666\nBolted ilcltvtfrtmd pane!) of alloy ftttt permll\nready removal of our new lightweight refute\nburner to new location*. Volcano blgit-fum:e\ntype graft end smooth interior rtanderd hi el\nmodeli. Priced ei low m $2,200. Term*\navailable. Approved by B.C. Underwriter*.\nFer dtlailt tontad\nWESTMINSTER IRON WORKS CO. LTD.\n111!   QUEENS   AVENUE NEW   WESTMINSTER,  B. C\n\u25ba\nYou're always we\/come of NIAGARA\nAt Niagara we have tho money you nood In the\namount you want. You may borrow up to $1500\nor more and take up to 24 months to repay . . .\nwith payments arranged on a monthly dale selected\nby you. Loans up to $1500 are life-Insured at no\nextra cost to you\u2014and on many*amounts rates at\nNiagara are lower than elsewhere. Convenient ways\nfor you to borrow will be discussed privately so, If\nyou need money promptly\u2014come In anytime.\n\"Wort? ore fvst a hw of our many loan plans\"\nYOU\nGET\nMONTHLY PAYMENTS\n12\n15\n20\n24\n$300\n66I.IO*\n800\nIJOO  '\n$ 28.37\n74.40\n119.80\n$ 23.33\n61.15\n114.50\n$40*\n48.05\n88.83\n$41.40\n75.90\n* Orto ef many of our convejitW avon-dallar payment p!an%\n_^^_mnn\u2014 '.\u2014\u2014\nIAGARA\nLOANS\nliliiir\\^i^l BRANCHES FROM COASI-TOCOAST\n560 BAKER STREET PHONE 1636\n 'yy;::-y \u25a0::]\"\"\u25a0\n......\n3 New Styles by\n\u2022' Avocado Green Pump\nWith Illusion Heel\n\u2022 Beige and Ivory Illusion\nHeel Sandal\n\u2022 White Nylon Mesh\nSandal\nAAA, AA, and.B.\nAll $14.95 a Pair.\nR. ANDREW\n& CO.\nI LEADERS IN FOOTFASHION\nEstablished 1902 .\nir Infection Keeps\nrincess Grounded\nLONDON   (AP)\u2014Princess  Anne,\nlir-year-old   daughter ;of   Queen\nIzabeth,   has   a   \"slight   ear   in-\nItlon,\"   Buckingham   Palace   an-\npnced Saturday.\ni a result the little blonde prin-\n1 had Jo cancel her first airplane\ni. \"With Prince Charles, her 6^-\n|u--old brother, she was to have\nback   to   London,   Sunday,\n|m Balmoral Castle, Scotland.\nEW DENVER \u2014 LAC William\nkige of Calgary arrived On a\nhth's leave through the illness of\nI mother, Mrs. H.'B! Yonge, a pa-\ntit in Slocan Community Hospital\nZincton.\nIrs. James Forsythe and her\nIghter, Virginia J. Forsythe, left\n] Cheney, Wash., to visit her two\njighters, Mrs. George Newbern\n1 Mrs. Carman Stewart and their\nhtlies.\n\\RGED FOR DIRT\nTANFORD - LE-HOPE, England\nf) \u2014 Trucks carting clay and\n|lk left much of their' load on\nroads near this Essex town,\nhicipal officials from Stanford\n| nearby Thurrock have decided\nthree   contractors   responsible\nbid foot the \u00a358 cleaning bill.\nINE8E OIL\nIEENBURN . . .\nI8TERN MONARCH\nBLT - GREENHILL\nINMORE  Briquettes\nCoal\nPHONE 889\nITOWLER\nFuel & Transfer\nRecipes...\nVegetables' Cooking\nTime Can Be Reduced\n(bMAA. lip. Wiik\nTMoauul TJtcudm.\n9188\n14V4_24V4\nFITS PERFECTLYI\nWant to look taller, slimmer?\nChoose this smart step-in that's designed for your half-size figure \u2014\nproportioned to fit! Smooth, simple\nlines \u2014 flattering! Easy-sew too!\nChoose shantung, linen, or cooLcot-\nton. Add saddle-stitch trim in bright\ncontrast color.\nPattern 9188: Half Sizes: 14%,\nWVt, nVt, 20%, 22%, 24%. Size 16%\ntakes 3?\u00bb yards 39-inch fabric.\nThis easy-to-use pattern ' gives\nperfect fit. Complete, illustrated\nSew Chart shows you every step.\nSend THIRTY-FIVE CENTS (35c)\nin coins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern. Print plainly SIZE,\nNAME, ADDRESS, 8TYLE, NUMBER.\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN, NDN. 60 Front & W.\nToronto, Ont\nPOST OFFICE  HELPER\nNEW DENVER \u2014 Mrs. John M.\nHarris of Sandon is relieving in the\nSouth Slocan post office for two\nmonths.\nall good cooks prefer...\nj o\nRgTALOTV\nGREEN PEAS\nSANITONE mm\nIT'S GENTLE AND THOROUGH\nYET COSTS NO MORE\n' LADIES' and MEN'S\nSUITS, TOPCOATS\nOR SHORTIES\t\nSLACKS, TROUSERS\nOR SKIRTS \t\n$1.25\nPhone 1175\nFree Pickup and Delivery\n2-DAY SERVICE\nKOOTENAY LAUNDRY\nand DRY CLEANERS\n182 Baker St.\nNelson, B.C.\nBy  MARGARET CAftR<\nMaking vegetables attractive to\nlook at and appetizing to taste is as\nmuch a, part of our job In'cooking\nthem as is the problem of \"iefainlng\nall their nutritive elements,.'\nFor some years now we^have been\nswamped .with -literature' about\ncooking to conserve food value; but\nwe must not lose sight of the importance color and flavor play in\nvegetable cookery. It is important\nof course, that we should conserve\nthe valuable mineral salts and vita\nmins \u2014 that we shouldn't \"throw\nthem down the sink\" or desroy them\nby overcooking, but fortunately,\ncookery methods producing the best\nflavor and color in most cases preserve the food value as well.\nIn general the rule to remember\nis \"COOK VEGETABLES FOR AS\nSHORT A TIME  AS POSSIBLE.\"\nYou can shorten the cooking\nperiod:\n1. by preparing the vegetables in\nthe form in which they will become\ntender in the shortest time;\n2. by having water actually boiling when vegetables are added;\n3. by bringing water quickly back\nto boiling point;\n4. by maintaining the boiling\ntemperature throughout cooking\nperiod. .    .\nHOW TO BOIL VEGETABLES\nExcept for strong-flavored vegetables and some green ones, the procedure for boiling fresh vegetables\nis as follows: _\n1. Use very little water. All vegetables are hlg' in water content, and\nmany of them can be cooked without adding much water. The amount\nof water you use depends upon the\nsize of the pan and the amount of\nvagetable to be cooked. In general,\nwe can say that from Vt inch to 1\ninch of water in the pan is sufficient. Mere boiling water may be\nadded later in cooking if necessary.\n2. Salt the water, allowing % to\na\/t teaspoon of salt for each pound\nof vegetable. Salting may be done\nlater if you wish.\n3. Use a tight-fitting lid that will\nkeep the steam in the pan. Most of\nthe vegetable must cook in steam\nsince you are not using enough\nwater to touch all the vegetable.\n4. After quickly bringing the\nwater to the boiling point again,\nlower the heat so that the water\nboils gently. Note that you do want\nthe water to boil, but not so vigorously that the steam is lost around\nthe edges of the lid.\n5. Try to cook vegetables so that\nwhen they are done, there is no\nliquid left In the pan. You may\nleave the cover off the pan the last\nfew minutes of cooking to allow\nthe remaining water to evaporate.\nIf you have used too much water\nand have some liquid left, remember that vitamins and minerals are\ndissolved in it. Plan to use this\nliquid in sauces or soups.\nGREEN VEGETABLES\nAll vegetables contain mild acids\nwhich \"go off\" In the steam as the\nvegetable is cooked. If you cover\nthe pan, you keep the acids in. During the cooking, these acids may\nact upon the pigment which gives\ncolor to green vegetables. The color\nwill change from green to brownish-\ngreen. Hence, the problem in cooking green vegetables is to allow the\nacids to contact the green color as\nlittle as possible. Some green vegetables cook so quickly that it is\npossible to cook them in a covered\npan without harming the color. But\nfor green vegetables that require\nlonger cooking, you may'place the\nlid on the pan so there Is an opening hrough which the steam can\nescape. Or you may leave the lid off\naltogether during the first five\nminutes of cooking, and then cover\nthe pan to shorten the cooking time.\nYou can experiment and see which\nmethol you prefer.\nSTRONG-FLAVORS\nVegetables such as cabbage, broccoli, brussels sprouts, arid turnips\nare called strong-flavored vegetables. If the cooking period is long,\nunpleasant flavors and odors develop in these vegetables due to the\naction of the acids and the heat on\ncertain flavoring materials. Cook\nthem in the following ways to ob\ntain the natural vegetable flavor:\nFor whole vegetables, or those\ncut in large pieces, you may use a\nmoderate amount of boiling water\nand an uncovered pan. This way\nthe plant acids are diluted and are\nalso allowed to escape with the\nsteam. This method produces a mild\ner flavor, but there will be a greater\nloss of nutrients. You can, if you\nlike, use a smaller amount of water,\nif you put the lid on the pan halfway through the cooking period.\nCabbage, cauliflower, and turnips\nmay be cut into small pieces and\ncooked until just tender in a small\namount of water in a covered pan\nThe vegetables cook so quickly this\nway that no objectionable flavor\ndevelops.\nFruitvale Institute\nHears of Conference\nFRUITVALE \u2014 An Interesting report on the recent district conference of Women's Institutes in Grand\nForks was given by Mrs. L.. Charlton at the June meeting of Fruitvale Institute at the home of Mrs.\nD. C. Mason.\nThe group's next meeting will be\nheld in September.\n'.-\".\u2022' BY TRACY ADRIAN,\nWHITE, WHICH Is becoming to all ages and Is one of the most\npopular shades for hats this season, has yet another advantage\u2014It\ncan go with any combination of colors and Is the perfect brlghtener\nfor dark outfits, A white lacy straw, cool to look at and cool to\nwear, Is used for this little rat with a squared-off crown and a lifted\nbrim. A slim white feather Ii drawn through velvet petals and\ngives side width.\nNakusp Pair Celebrate\n50 Years Wedded Life\nNAKUSP \u2014 Mr. and Mrs. Robert\nMcWhlrter of Nakusp celebrated\ntheir golden wedding anniversary\nrece\/itly.\nThe couple were wedded in Scotland. In 1907, due to ill health, Mr.\nMcWhlrter left Scotland and came\nto Canada, settling in Nakusp. Thi\nnext year Mrs. McWhirter followed\nhim and they have ever since made\ntheir home here. They are among\nthe few real oldtimers still residing in Nakusp.\nOn his arrival In Canada, Mr. Mc-\nWhirter started work with the\nCPR as a shipwright and spent a\ntotal of 30 years with the company.\nAt his retirement, he was in charge\nof work and personnel at the local\nyard.\nAll the family attended a golden\nwedding luncheon.\nMr. and Mrs. McWhirter had with\nthem their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Vaughn of\nVancouver and their son and daughter-in-law and family, RCMP Sgt\nand Mrs. David McWhirter, Robert\nand Richard of Edmonton.\n8T. LAURENT MESSAGE\nMany townspeople called to wish\nthem continued health and happiness. Ninety-seven signed the visitors' book. Two golden ribbons were\nreceived by the happy couple each\nbearing 50 or more name~s of friends\nwishing them happiness. One was\nsent from Vancouver from former\nNakusp people, the other was from\ntheir friends in Nakusp. Messages\nof congratulations were received\nfrom Prime Minister St. Laurent\nand H. W. Herridge, MP, for Kootenay West.\nTea was served by Mrs. Vaughn\nand Mrs. David McWhirter assisted\nby Mrs. A. M. Barrow, Mrs. J. Parent Jr., Mrs. P. Hurry, Mrs. William Jupp and Mrs. Don McCusker.\nMrs. M Jordan presided at the tea\ntable.\nMrs. McWhirter's corsage was of\ngolden flowers, as was Mr. McWhirter's boutonniere. These- had been\npresented to them the previous\nnight at a combined gathering of\nthe Ordpr of the Eastern Star and\nMasons. Mrs. McWhirter is a charter member of the former and Mr.\nMcWhirter was a Mason before\ncoming to Canada and is a charter\nmember of the Nakusp lodge.\nIt was the second golden wedding\nanniversary in Mr. McWhirter's\nfamily within two years. Mr. McWhirter's brother and sister-in-law\ncelebrated 50 years of marriage in\nScotland about two years ago.\nCAR CAPERS\nLEICESTER, England (CP)\u2014Students celebrating a holiday decorated automobiles with whitewash.\nNew Denver Group\nGives to. Fire Fund\nNEW DENVER \u2014 A donation of\n$10 to the Strathcona Fire Relief\nFund in Nelson was voted by the\nWomen's Association of Turner Me-\nm :\u2014  \"-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'.. \u25a0\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, JUNE 6, 1935\u20143\nNelson SocM\n1  ^.:..-   \"\u25a0\nELECTED, president by acclamation at the district conference\nof West Kootenay Women'a Institutes In Grand Forks, was Mrs.\nC. B. White of WlllOw Point,\nabove. She has been particularly\nactive in the Willow Point group.\nVogue Photo.\nFive Girls Become\nGuides at Silverton\nSILVERTON \u2014 Twenty-eight\nGuides, Brownies and their mothers\nattended a pot-luck supper arranged by the Girl Guides.\nThe table was beautifully arranged- emphasizing .their colors. Ser-\nviettees carried the motto of Guides\nand Brownies and the cake was iced\nwith the motto of both groucs\nLieut. Velma Detta said grace.\nAfter supper five girls were en-\nmorial United Church at its meeting i rolled as Guides. They are Jacque-\nat the home of Mrs. W. Mott.\nThe group has recessed for the\nsummer months.\nline Senning, Wanda and Wilma\nMcLeod, Sharon Elsmore and Donna\nDetta.\nPATTERN A686\nbit \\Jleq CaMM\nCLASSIFIED ADS GFJI RF.3ULTS,\n\" PROMINENT DESIGNED\nOleg Cassinl, American designer famous for gowning filmdom's\nmost glamorous stars, created this shapely sheath for you, to\ndazzle your own special audience! It's THE silhouette to celebrate the summer of 1955! Curving about the shoulders is the very\nloveliest decolletage\u2014a little bow effect smuggled against the gentle\nscoop of neckline. Sleek, slim unbroken lines below\u2014pure magic\nfor any figure! Intense black was poured into the designer's linen\n, original\u2014then lit with a stark white bow. Sparkling shades of\nsilk \u2014barathea, shantung, bengaline \u2014also await your sewing\npleasure. And a pleasure it is to sew, to wear, to be admired in\nyour very own Cassini creation! Pattern A686 is available in Misses'\nSizes 10, 12. 14, 16 and 18. Size 16 requires 3 yards 39-inch fabric.\nSend FIFTY CENTS (in coins) plus three cents tax for Pattern\nA686 to N.D.N. Prominent Designer, Pattern Department, 60 Front\nStreet, West Toronto, Ont. Please print plainly YOUR NAME,\nADDRESS with ZONE, STYLE NUMBER and SIZE.\nFOR PERFECT WASHINGS\n^f WOOL, NYLON, SILK, RAYON\nSONS OUT STMHS\nUSE EVERY WASHING!\nt^S SOAP NEEDED i\nPHONE 1844\nMts' Margaret Vance arrived\nSunday from Spokane where she ls\nattending the Sacred Heart school\nof nursing to spend a month's vacation with-her parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nE. L. Vance, 418 Hoover Street.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. R. D. C. Bacon, 815\nFifth Street,-left Sunday for Winnipeg, and Montreal en route to\nToronto, where they will reside.\n\u2022 \u2022   . *\nMrs. G. S. Godfrey returned Friday to her.home at 809 Mill Street\nafter visiting her daughter, Mrs.\nMadge Denny, in Vancouver.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u00ab\nPaul Wham and Kenneth Gamon\nof Spokane and Dale Probert of\nAlaska will leave today for Spokane\nafter spending the weekend as\nguests of Mr, and Mrs. R. H. Wllks,\n713 Sixth Street.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. J. W. Graham, 424\nRobson Street, returned Sunday\nfrom Vancouver where they visited their son Weldon.\n.   ,   ,\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Gordon K. Burns\nand daughter Mary, 604 Latimer\nStreet, have left for Vancouver to\nattend the graduation of Betty\nBurns' from York House.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. P. G. Morey, 720\nHoover Street, had as their guests\nover the weekend their son and\ndaughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Guy\nMorey and family of Trail.\nBABY QUILT\nLovable little animals from farm\nand zoo \u2014 keep baby company in\nslumberland! Embroidered in colorful array on this cozy-warm quilt\u2014\neasy, thrifty, fun to do!\nPattern 647: Animal quilt! Embroidery motifs, applique transfers,\ndiagrams; 32x44 inches.\nSend TWENTY-FIVE CENTS in\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor\" this pattern to Laura Wheeler,\nNDN, 60 Front St. W., Toronto,\nOnt. Print plainly PATTERN NUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS.\nLOOK. FOR smartest ideas ln\nNeedlecraft in our Laura Wheeler\nCatalogue for 1055. Crochet, knit\nting, embroidery and lovely things\nto wear. Iron-ons, quilts, aprons,\nnovelties \u2014 easy, fun to make! Send\n25 cents for your copy of this book\nNOW! You will want to order every\nnew design in it. ,\nPHONE  1844 FOR CLASSIFIED\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS\nBUY\nON OUR BUDGET PLAN\n10% DOWN\nBalance 18 Monthi\nDanco-Enokson\nWedding Held\nNEW   DENVER  \u2014  In   wedc1\nrites solemnized recently at Sac\nHeart    Church    by    Rev.    Fathc-\nHenke, the former Evelyn Alberta\nEnokson became the bride of Milare\nJohn Danco.\nThe bride is the daughter of Mr.\nand Mrs. Ole Enokson of New Denver and the groom is the son \u25a0 of\nMr. and Mrs. John Danco of Calgary. Mr. C. E. Carlson of Drumheller gave his niece in marriage.\nFor her wedding the bride was\ngowned in a strapless model of\nwhite nylon net.with thatching lace\njacket and a full bouffant skirt\nwith rhinestone trim.\nHer fingertip veil misted from a\nJuliet cap of sequins and seed\npearls and she carried a white orchid surrounded by white split carnations and lily of the valley. -\nMiss Evelyn Bosetti, bridesmaid,\nwore a strapless gown of deep rose\nnet over taffeta with a bouffant\nskirt and a bolero. With it she wots\na matching tiara and carried pale\nblue carnations. Miss Marian Gosse,\nalso a bridesmaid, wore a strapless\ns>own of ice blue over hooped taffeta. Her bolero and tiara matched\nher gown, and she carried pale\nyellow carnations.\nMr. Charles Machtmes was\ngroomsman and Mr. Alfred Grainger' was usher. Miss Virginia\nMoore sang \"Ave Maria\" and Miss\nGaye Galivan played the wedding\nmusic.\nAt the reception held at the Club\nSkyroom. Father Henke proposed\nthe bridal toast. Later the newly-\nweds left on a trip to Great Fall,\nMont.\nMr. and Mrs. Danco will make\ntheir home at 1313, 11th Avenue.\nFruitvale Sisters\nEn Route to Europe\nFRUITVALE \u2014 En route by train\nand boat for a four month holiday\nin Europe are Margaret and Gen\nNelson, daughters of Mr. and Mrs.\nAndrew Nelson. This will be Gen's\nfirst visit; Margaret having been\non a visit a few years ago with her\nparents. Their itinerary includes a\nshort visit in England, a lengthy\nvisit in Sweden, with relatives both\nthere and In Norway. Before embarking for home they plan a tour\nof other countries on the Continent, including France.\nFLYING VISITS\nJOHANNESBURG, South Africa\n(CP)\u2014South Africans flocking to\nLondon and the Continent for the\nsummer season are spending more\nthan \u00a31,000,000 a month on air\nfares. About 900 seats are available\non .18 planes each week, average\nreturn fare to Europe being \u00a3300.\n!   OUR SERVICES\nPERSONALIZING\nof Stationery, Cards, etc.\nMETALIZING\nof Baby Shoes.\nPERSONAL  SHOPPING\nREPAIRS\nTo leather wallets, purses, etc\nMENDING\nof Shell  Jewellery\nand Ornaments.\nHobby Shop\nAT YOUR GROCER'S\nJN-34\nH-Q-L-P\nWith\nTwo Day Service\nAnd Free Pickup and Delivery\nPHONE 288\n327 Baker Street\nEMPIRE\nDRY CLEANERS\nHIGHEST QUALITY \u2014 LOWEST PRICES\n -\u25a0v.'- :yy\":.yr^yy::   \u25a0 \u2022 ; \u25a0 ~\n\u2014\u2014\u2014; \u2014\u2014 \u2014\u2014     '\nfr\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, JUNE 6, 195S\nA STATEMENT OF PUBLIC INTEREST ON\nTHE PENSION PROPOSALS OF THE UNION\n*\nOn Wednesday, May 11, tha Canadian Mine-Mill Co-ordinating Committee, representing\nthe Union negotiating committees now bargaining with the International Nickel Company\nand the Consolidated Mining and Smelting Company, along with the Canadian Research\nDirector of the Union and the Executive 'Secretary of the Canadian Mine-Mill Council, met\nwith the Honorable James Sinclair, Minister of Fisheries.\nThis meeting was also attended by James Byrne, M.P., Kootenay East; Mr. L. Gauthier,\nM.P., Nickel Belt; Aubrey Simmons, M.P., Yukon, and two members of the Department of\nFinance.\nThe Union placed before these representatives of the government its views on the\nInternational Nickel Company and the Consolidated Mining and Smelting Company pension\nplans. The Union referred the government representatives to the statement of principles and\nrules on pension plans as established by the Department of Finance.\nDuring contract bargaining with the International Nickel Company and the Consolidated\nMining and Smelting Company, spokesmen for these companies had maintained that these\nprinciples and rules were loosely drawn up and a mere guide to tax exempt government\napproved pension plans.\nThe Honorable Mr. Sinclair and the members of parliament present at the above mentioned\nHob. Walter Harris,\nMinister of Finance,\nParliament Buildings,\nOttawa, Canada.\nDear Sir:\nThe Honourable Mr. James Sinclair, Minister ot Fisheries, with whom we had an interview today, May 12 suggested that we refer the matter set out below to yo'u. It\nconcerns the Pension Plans of International Nickel Company\nof Canada and Consolidated Mining and Smelting Company\nof Canada.\nLocals 480  (Trail), 598  (Sudbury), 637  (Port Col-\nborne) and 651 (Kimberley), representing 24,000 hourly\nemployees of the above two Companies, have for some time\nbeen concerned with a number of features of the Pension\nPlans of these two Companies.   These features are of course\nof great importance to tne employees affected; we believe\nthey are also of interest to the Government.   There is one\nfeature in particular which does not appear to be in conformity with the Principles and Rules respecting Pension\nPlans issued by the Taxation Division of the Department of\nNational Revenue and which constitutes a serious injustice.\nThese plans are \"non contributory\", the Company alone\nmaking contributions to the respective Pension Funds established under the Plans.   Since the Companies' contributions\nare exempt from Corporation Income tax at rates which\nhav* been fairly high over the past years, the amounts\nwhich the Companies have saved in taxes to the Federal\nGovernment as a result of these contributions are very considerable.   Of the $25.6 million in the C. M. & S Pension\nFund at the end of 1954, $10.9 million represent taxes saved\non contributions made since 1941.   Of the $72.0 million in\nthe INCO Pension Fund, $27.8 million represent taxes saved\nin the same way since 1941.   It may thus be said that the\nGovernment and people of Canada have a very large stake\nin these Pension Plans and the Funds established thereunder.   Consequently, they have a very legitimate interest\nin the manner in which these Funds are administered and\nin ensuring that the benefits of the Plans do in fact contribute to the security and welfare of the employees who\nare covered by them. The Principles and Rules referred to\nabove derive their Importance from this point of view.\nMoreover, the Companies always prjint out that when they\ngrant a wage increase, they must also increase their contributions to the Pension Plans, since the pensions which\nare earned and paid unon retirement are calculated as a\npercentage of wages.   Evidently, the Companies consider\npensions as an element cf remuneration, tn which, therefore\nthe employees should have t^e same ricrht snd security as\nthey have to their wages.   This is far from being so, however.\nIn the foreword to the booklet of Principles and Rules\nissued by the Taxation Division, the Minister of National\nRevenue states:\n\"The approval of employeei' superannuation or\npension funds or plans will be governed by the\nprinciple* and rulet published herewith. These\nwill extend and apply to the continuing approval\nof plant now operating a> well as thoie which may\nbe established in the future\".\nPart 10 (b) of the Principles and Rules reads as follows:\n\"The right provided by employer contributions\nmust vest in the employee within a determinable\nperiod, and particularly on the attainment by the\nemployee of an age which would prejudice him in\nthe event of severance from employment. Therefore, vesting should be absolute upon attaining age\n60, oubiect to a minimum period not exceeding 20\nyears of service or participation\".\nThe above language gives the strong impression of\nhaving the foree of law.\nNotwithstanding the above, neither the INCO nor\nC. M. & S. Pension Plan provides for vesting rights of individual employees in respect of whom contributions have\nbeen made by the C o m p a n i e s. It is true that these\ncontributions are Irrevocable and cannot be used for any\nother purpose than the payment of Pensions, However, tho administration of th* Plans, and indeed also the\nRulea and Regulations governing them, are wholly in the\nhands of officials of the Companies appointed for that purpose by the respective Boards of Directors; the employees\nrepresented by the Union having no say in the matter whatever.. As a result these officials have the power\n\"... to amend the rules and regulations In any\nparticular, or discontinue or suspend or reduce! such\nPension and other benefit payments ... in whole\nor in part\". (Section 11\u2014Rules and Regulations\nINCO Retirement System).\nIn other words, they have the power to exclude from\nbenefits large numbers or even the majority of th* employees on whose behalf th* Pension Plans ar* supposedly\nestablished and thus, possibly, to defeat the reason of public\npolicy for which th* Company contributions to th* Plans\nar* exempt from taxation.\nIn particular, Part 10 (b) quoted above would seem\nte require mor* than that the Company contributions should\nbe irrevocable. In our view, the real meaning of \"vesting\"\nas used above is that th* individual employe* should have\nth* right to retain his equity in the fund, in the *v*nt of\nbeing severed from employment. This right should b\u00ab unconditional and absolute at th* latest when th* employee\nreaches age 60, after a minimum period of service not to\nexceed 20 years. In th* great majority of \"contributory\"\nPlans the employer's contributions to th* Pension Fund are\nso Vested in the individual employees. However the employee's right to his equity in th* Fund shduld' not depend\nupon whether these contributions hav* been matched by\ncontributions of his own; whether the employ*** contribute\nor not should mak* no difference to what happens to the\nemployer's contributions and th* employees' rights thereto:\nIn other words, vesting rights for individual employees\nshould b\u00bb established irrespective of whether th* Plan is\n\"contributory\" or \"non contributory\". However, both th*\nINCO and C. M. & S. Pension Plans specifically deny any\nvesting rights. Seetion 8 of the Rules and Regulations of\nthe INCO Retirement System states:\n\"The membership (in the System) of any employee shall terminate upon the cessation of hit\nemployment by the Companies for any cause whatever,   or   upon   hit   becoming,   a   pensioner\".\n(Absence from the service of the Companies due to\nleave of absence, lay-off on account of lack of work\nor other acceptable cause for mor* than a year,\nconstitutes cessation of employment.)\nIf a man is discharged after many years' service the\npenalty incurred in the. loss of his accumulated Pension\nrights is one of extreme and wholly unjustified severity. In\nthe event of layoffs, the employees not only lose their current income in the form of wages, but also their rights to\nfuture income after retirement, in the 'form of Pensions.\nOn the other hand, if vesting rights were guaranteed in\naccordance with th* Income Tax Rule quoted above, this\nwould facilitate th* mobility of labour and give to workers\nsomewhat greater possibilities of advancing themselves by\nmoving to new jobs.   The lack of vesting rights in the INCO\nand C. M. & S. Plans is a serious injustice and hardship to\nthe employees whom we represent.   We respectfully submit\nthat it should be rectified at an early date.\nFinally, with regard to age of retirement: the INCO\nPension Plan provides for voluntary retirement at 65, and\ncompulsory retirement at 70. The corresponding' ages in the\nC. M. & S. Plan ar* 60 and 65, provided the employees\nstarted work before 1940. In our view, considering the\nexhausting work and extreme hazards involved in the mining\nand smelting industry these retirement ages should be\n-lowered and should be less than those found in Pension\nPlans in other industries. Consideration might he'given\nto this point in establishing appropriate standards for the\napproval by the Government of Plans in the various industries, and in particular when INCO and C. M. & S. Plans\nagain come up for approval.\n\u00bb All of which is respectfully submitted; on behalf of:\nInternational Union of Mine, Mill '&, Smelter Workers.\n\"A King\" President, Loeal 480 \"M. Solski\" President,\nLocal 598 \"R. Methot\" President, Local 637 \"C. Thompson\"\nPresident, Local 651.\nmeeting emphatically declared that this was not the case, that the booklet issued by the\nDepartment of Finance and signed by the Honorable James McCann was a binding statement\nof government policy and must be. enforced in any pension plan that is approved by the\ngovernment for taxation exemption, such as the International Nickel Company and the Consolidated Mining and Smelting Company pension plans.\nThe Honorable Mr. Sinclair and the members of parliament referred to expressed\nthemselves fully in accord with the proposals made by the Union, and as a result of\nthis discussion the letter reprinted below was forwarded to the Minister of Finance, the\nHonorable Mr. W. Harris, who had expressed himself as being fully in sympathy with\nthe views of the Union.\nThis letter has since been acknowledged by the Honorable Mr. Harris and was referred\nby him to the Minister of National Revenues, the Honorable Mr. McCann, who has the respon*\nsibility in the approval of pension plans.     \u2022\nThis matter is now being pursued by the Union and will continue to be pursued until the\nrights accorded in the principles and rules of the government pension policy is established for\nemployees covered by these pension plans.\nThe Union fully expects that the position taken ,by the responsible\ngovernment officials will be enforced in the forthcoming approval oi\nthese two pension plans which cover more than 24,000 members of the\nUnion.\nBepredoeed hen Is the TITLE PAGE \u2022( tie Bin* Beet\nentitled PENSION FLANS Issued by the Tuition Dlvidon\nof tht Department of Notional Revenue\nAfOfWMflf Of\n\u25a0     Principles <\u00bbJ tale,\nhtpmtHnm\nPENSION\nPLANS\nfor Mm pirpeset ef\nTHE INCOME TAX ACT\n\u2022 luted br\nTAXATION MVBttM\nMPAHMWT OT NATONAl KVM4\nNOTE this final paragraph of the FOREWORD!\nk\ni or]\n\"approved by tho Minister ln respect of>\n'constitution and operations for th* taxation y\u00ab\nunder consideration;\"\nThe approval of employees' superannuation or pension\nfunds or plant will be governed by the principles and rules\npublished herewith. These will extend and apply to th*\ncontinuing approval of plant now operating as well as\nthose which may b* established in th* future.\n$-\u00ab*%&* ctZ\u00ab\nJune, 1930.\nMinister ef National Reeentto.\nThis statement is issued by the International Union of Mine-Mill and Smelter Workers, to inform the\npublic with the true facts.\nSigned by the Canadian Mine-Mill Co-ordinating Committee, representing the Union negotiating committees now bargaining with the International Nickel Company and the\nConsolidated Mining and Smelting Company: M. Solski, president Local 698, Sudbury, Ont.; A. King, president Loeal 480, Trail, B.C.; R. Methot, president Local 637, Port\nColborne, Ont; R. C. Thompson, president Local 651, Kimberley, B.C.; C. Hadley, president Loeal 690, Calgary, Alta.; H. Murphy, Regional Director, Western Canada;\nW. Kennedy, Board Member District 8, Eastern Canada; N. Thibault, Canadian Vice-President, International Union of Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers.\n .\n. \u2022       ..V.-..,.,.-.V..v',;-    , '\u25a0\t\nSPORTS\nBears Edge Kokanees\n12-10 in Rough Battle\nA small but enthusiastic crowd\nof fans witnessed 60 minutes of\nrough and tumbld lacrosse at the\nCivic arena Satuftlay night when\nTrail Golden Beat's downed Nel-\nton Kokanees 12-10 In a close\nfight-ridden contest\nKokanees are donating half of\nthe game proceeds, about $40, to\nthe 8trathcona Hotel fire relief\nfund.\nThe defeat was Nelson's fourth in\nfive starts and put them a game up\non the bottom-placed Spokane Lions\nwho have yet to win. The Bears\nnow hold second place, two games\nbehind the undefeated Rossland\nRedmen.\nDuring the first period, the Trail\noffence was sparked by Jerome,\nwho scored three times, twice unassisted, with bullet-like underhand\nshots. This period eventually proved\nto be the downfall of Nelson. Trail\nscored five times with only two replies from Nelson.\nOn two occasions during the second period, lacrosse sticks were\ndropped to the floor and fights followed. A fist fight between Harvey\nand Kilt was quickly followed by\nmore meyhem between Koenig and\nAnderson. All four were penalized.\nAt one stage, five players were in\nthe penalty box.\nScoring highlight in the second\nquarter was an unassisted goal by\nNelson's Bemie Clarkson, making\nhis first appearance for Nelson. After out-manoeuvering two Trail de-\nfencemen ln a floor-length run, he\noutwitted Boisvert with a high corner shot.\nThe third quarter was uneventful\nboth teams scoring twice and leaving Nelson tdow two goals.\nOpening minutes of the fourth\nquarter   saw   Nelson's   Mayo   and\nRECREATION GROUND\nSCHEDULE\nJune 6 to 12\nSOFTBALL DIAMOND\nMONDAY:\n5:00- 6:15\u2014Sr. Ladies' Softball\n8:15- 7:30\u2014Nelson Cricket Club\nTUESDAY:\n8:00 Sr. Men's Softball\nWEDNESDAY:\n5:00- 8:00\u2014Track St Field Soccer\nTHURSDAY!\n5:00- 6:15\u2014Nelson Cricket Club\n6:15- 7:30\u2014Senior Ladies' Softball\nFRIDAY:\n6:00        \u2014Senior Men's Softball   \u25a0\nSATURDAY:\n3:00        \u2014Nelson Cricket Club\nSUNDAY:\n10:00-12:00\u2014Madden Hotel\n12:00- 2:00\u2014Hume Hotel\n2:00- 4:00\u2014Nelson Transfer\n4:00- 6:00\u2014Senior Ladies' Softball\nBASEBALL DIAMOND\nMONDAY:\n6:15- 7:30\u2014Outlaw Baseball Club\nTUESDAY:\n6:00- 7:30\u2014Maple Leaf Baseball\nClub\nWEDNESDAY:\n5:00- 7:30\u2014Track & Field Soccer\nTHURSDAY:\n6:00- 7:30\u2014Outlaw Baseball Club\nFRIDAY:\n5:00- 6:15\u2014Junior Baseball\n6:15- 7:30\u2014Maple Leaf Baseball\nClub\nSATURDAY:\n2:00        \u2014Nelson Cricket Club\nSUNDAY:\n2:00- 8:00\u2014Nelson Maple Leafs\nGallicano Hj the score with a goal\neach. However, a two-goal reply\nfrom Trail was decisive. The game's\nlast goal scored .by Maglio resulted\nin confusion. Tht goal Judge flashed\nthe light, but referee Joe Wallach\nsignalled \"no goal.\" After consultation, however, the goal was allowed\nBRIEF BATTLE '\nThe final fight of the game broke\nout with 70 seconds remaining. Veteran Fred Graves and Trail forward Anderson brought fans to\ntheir feet with a brief but fierce\nencounter.\nTop  scorers for the  Bears was\nJerome,  who  speared three  along\nwith an assist. Nelson's high man\nwas Harold Mayo with three.\nLineups:\nNelson \u2014 Pearson: Lapointe,\nMasi, Freno. Jacobson, Graves. Maglio, Gallicano, Mayo, Harvey, Koenig, McLean, Harrison, Peloso.\nClarkson.\nTrail \u2014 Boisvert; Exner, Hulbert,\nAnderson,   McNeill,   Stewart,   Jerome,   Robertson,   Kilt,   Kosianslc,\nSecco, Leduc, Kendall, Casler, Lyon.\nSummary:\nFirst period\u20141, Trail, Jerome .50;\n2, Trail, Secco 5.10; 3, Nelson, Maglio 7.00; 4, Trail, Lyon 8.00; 5, Trail,\nJerome (Kendall) 11.27; 6, Nelson,\nGallicano (Mayo) 10:45; 7, Trail,\nJerome 12:00.\nPenalties \u2014 Freno, LaPointe, Hulbert.\nSecond quarter \u2014 8, Robertson\n(Jerome) 2:20; 8, Trail, Jerome 5:70;\n10,' Nelson, Mayo (Gallicano) 9:20;\n11, Nelson, Harrison (Freno, Jacob-\nson) 14:50; 12, Nelson, Clarkson\n14:46.\nPenalties \u2014 Klit, Harvey, Anderson. Lyon, Koenig, Anderson, Freno.\nThird quarter \u2014 13, Trail. Kendall\n(Leduc) 5:57; 14, Nelson. Harrison\n(Clarkson) 6:57; 15, Trail, Lyon\n11:00; 16, Nelson, Mayo (McLean)\n12:20.\nPenalties \u2014 Masi, Kendall, Freno\nMayo, Kendall.\nFourth quarter \u2014 17, Nelson\nMayo :49; 18, Nelson, Gallicano 1:07\n19, Trail, Jerome 1:15; 20, Trail,\nKlit (Robertson) 4:00; 21, Trail, Klit\n9:16; 22, Nelson, Maglio 13.00.\nPenalties \u2014 Anderson, Klit,\nGraves.\nFurgol Seb Pace\nFor IMP\nSAN FRANCISCO, Calif. (AP) -\nU. S. open champion Ed Furgol fired a two-over-par 72 at the lake\ncourse of the.. Olympic Country\nClub Saturday to set the pace for an\nestimated 180,000 duffers to National Golf Day competition.\nPatty Berg, playing with Furgol\nto establish the women's figure,\nshot a 77, three over women's par.\nA crowd estimated at some 7000\nfollowed the player* over the 6700-\nyard layout in perfect weather.\nGolfers playing on local courses\nin Canada and the U. S. who bettered the scores posted by Furgol\nand Miss Berg receive medals inscribed \"I beat Ed Furgol\" or \"I\nbeat Patty Berg,\" as the case may\nbe.\nSwimmers Give Up\nNear Nine-Mile Mark\nTrabert, Seixas\nWin Doubles\nPARIS (AP) \u2014Davis Cup champions Tony Trabert and Vic Seixas\nof the United States, Sunday won\nthe French international tennis\ntournament doubles by defeating\nItaly's Orlando Sirola and Nicola\nPietrangeli 6-1, 4-6, 6-2, 6-4.\nIn the women's doubles Americans Darlene Hard and Beverly Baker Fleitz of tr[e U. S. won 7-5, 6-8,\n13-11 over Britain's Pat Ward and\nShirley Bloomer.\nMiss Hard teamed with Gordon\nForbes of South Africa to win the\nmixed doubles 5-7, 6-1, 6-2 over Jen-1\nnifer Staley of Australia and Luiz\nAyala of Chile.\nTrabert won the singles Saturday for the second straight year\nand Angela Mortimer of Britain\nwon the women's singles.\nUBC HENLEY TEAM\nSTIRS INTEREST\nLONDON (CP)\u2014The Times says\nthat   \"perhaps   the   most, popular\nof all\" the overseas entries in the\nRoyal   Henley   Regatta   this   year\nwill be that of the University of\nBritish Columbia's eight-oared crew.\nThe regatta starts late this month\nand the UBC eight is entered in\nthe   grand   challenge   cup   against\nentries from Russia, Argentina and\nI the United States. The Times com-\nI ment, which is not elaborated, oc-\n! curs in a review of the 28 overseas entries for the regatta.\nMay Arrange NHL\nTrade Before Fall\nDETROIT (CP) \u2014 Jack Adams,\ngeneral manager of Detroit Red\nWings may organize another National Hockey League trade before\nSeptember.\nThe Wings have Just completed\nbig trades with Chicago Black\nHawks and Boston Bruins. Adams\nsaid the Wings are in a \"strong position\" in player talent, but are\nfaced with the problem of protecting the players before the NHL\nplayer draft in September.\nNHL teams can protect 18 play^\ners and two goalies against draft\nby other teams. The Wings now\nhave 17 regulars and four juniors\ncoming up, three more than can\nbe put on the protected list,\nMattel Sets\nCourse Record\nEDMONTON (CP) \u2014 Henry Mar-\ntel, professional at the Highlands\nGolf Club, set a course record on\nSaturday  with an eight-under-par\n64.\nPlaying in connection with the\nNational Golf Day tournament, Mar-\ntel racked up seven birdies and\ntwo pars on the back dine for a\nscore ot 30. He had two birdies and\na one-over-par on the first nine.\nThe previous record of 65 was\nheld by three golfers, MarteJ, Frank\nWilley, professional at the Riverside club here, and Bobby Locke\nof South Africa.\nBaseball Standings\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nW L Pet Gbl\nNew York     35 15 .700\t\nCleveland       30 18 .625   4\nChicago    \u2014   29 18 .617   iV,\nVICTORIA (CP) - Beefy Bert\nThomas, cheated by wind and tide\nIn his second and greatest effort\nto swim the Strait of Juan de Fuca,\nsaid here Saturday night hell try\nagain next month.\nThomas, a 29-year-old logger from\nTacoma, Wash., was pulled from\nthe bone-chilling water early Saturday morning while within nine\nmiles of his goal, Port Angeles.\nWash., 18.3 miles from here as the\ncrow flies. He had been in the water\nfor 10 hours, 22 minutes.\nFor swimmer Thomas, the distance would be closer to 20 miles.\nHe had planned to try again Sunday or Monday but changed his\nmind after talking it over wfth\nhis navigator, Capt. Hugh Evans.\nNo firm date has yet been set.\n\"I'm going to stay here until I\nmake lt,\" he announced.\nTO TRY AGAIN\nThomas stayed ln the water three\nhours longer than Pat Russel, 18-\nyear-old University of British Columbia co-ed from Vancouver. In a\nbylined Vancouver newspaper interview Saturday, she too let it be\nknown she would make another attempt.\n\"I am going to swim that .strait\neven If it costs me a year at university,\" Miss Russel said.\nShe gave up after seven hours and\n14 minutes when about 9^ miles\nfrom here.\nThe water temperatures ranged\nbetween 48 and 49 degrees.\n27 21 .563 7\n20 27 .426 13tt\n21 30 .412 HVs\n18 30 .375 16\ncm\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, JUNE 6, 1955\u2014T\nThis advertisement is not published\nor displayed by The Liquor Control\nBoard or by the Government of\nBritish Columbia.\nDetroit  \t\nWashington ...\nBoston   \t\nKansas City    \u2014\nBaltimore       15 36 .294 20\\4\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nW L Pet Gbl\nBrooklyn     37 12 .755\nChicago       30 20 .600   IVi\nNew York      26 25 .520 12\nx-Milwaukee       24 24 .500 12%\nCincinnati      21 26 .447 15\nSt. Louis  -    20 26 .435 15%\nx-Philadelphia     20 28 .417 16%\nPittsburgh       16 33 .327 21\nx\u2014Does not include June 5 suspended game, to be'completed June\n6.\nPACIFIC COAST LEAGUE\nW L Pet Gbl\nSan  Diego     41 24 .631 \t\nSeattle      35 30 .538   6\nOakland       31 32 .492   9\nLos Angeles  31 33 .464   9%\nSan Francisco  30 33 .476 10\nHollywood     29 32 .475 10\nPortland     27 31 .466 10%\nSacramento     27 36 .429 13\nSnead Cods 4th\nRound Robin Title\nGREAT NECK, N. Y. (AP) \u2014\nSam Snead shattered the Deepdale\ncourse record with a five-under-par\n65 Sunday to capture his fourth-\nround-robin golf championship with\na runaway score of 46 points.\nThe West Virginian three-putted\nthe final green from 30 feet, missing\na three-footer for his only one-\nover-par in a superb round of 32-\n33 over the 6693-yard par 35-35\u201470\nlayout.\nLOLLY DEAR TAKES\nPRESIDENT'S HANDICAP\nWINNIPEG (CP) \u2014 Lolly Dear,\nowned by the Welcome Home farms\nof Calgary and ridden by Fred\nDodge, won the $1,500 President's\nHandicap Saturday, feature race\nat the opening of a 28-day thoroughbred racing meet at Winnipeg's\nPolo Park.\nCANADIANA LOSES\nTO KING MAPLE\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014That remarkable mare, Canadiana, finally was\nbeaten at Woodbine Park Saturday when she bowed to King Maple\nIn the running of the $5,000 Connaught Cup stakes. Other gallant old\nmare, Teddy's Sister, was third and\nthe consistent Verey Light finished\nfourth.\nMALAYA WINS WORLD\nBADMINTON TITLE\nSINGAPORE (AP)\u2014Malaya won\nthe Thomas Cup, symbol of world\nbadminton supremacy, for the third\nstraight time by defeating Denmark\neight matches to one Sunday.\nPHONE 1844 FOR CLASSIFIED\nTexan Wins U.K.\nGolf Title\nST. ANNES, Eng. (AP) \u2014 Joe|.\nConrad, a diffident little Texan, won\nthe 60th British amateur golf championship Saturday with a 3-and-2\nvictory over gritty Alan Slater, a\nYorkshire tool business executive,\nto complete a sweep for the United\nStates in Walk Cup and amateur\nplay.\nThe key shot in the rugged match,\nplayed In bitter weather, came on\nthe 27th green. The American was\nsagging badly then, his game coming apart. Slater had pulled back\nfrom an a 11-but-fatal ' five-down\ndeficit and at that point was one\ndown. He was playing superb un-\nder-par golf.\nBoth men were on the green with\ntheir tee shots. Slater calmly sighted a ^0-foot putt and stroked It in\nfor a birdie 2. He must have felt he\nhad squared the match. Then \u20acon-\nrad took his stance, placing & 12-\nfooter with a downhill roll.\nThe Texan needed that putt to\nsave his lead, to restore his own\nconfidence and to throw cold water\non Slater's hopes. Conrad popped it\nin and went on to win.\nBritish Cricket\nMANCHESTER, Eng. (Reuters)\u2014\nA display of tremendous hitting by\n28-year-old Paul Winslow saved\nSouth Africa from total collapse\nagainst Lancashire Saturday and\nenabled the tourists to rally from 81\nfor seven to 154 all out. Lancashire\nreplied with 64 for the loss of three\nwickets at close of play.\nWinslow practically assured himself of a place in the South Africa\nside for the first test match against\nEngland on Thursday. He scored 53\nof the eighth wicket stand of 56\nwith Fuller in 15 minutes.\nClose of play scores:\nSouth African Tourists 154, Lancashire 64 for three.\nWorcestershire 79, Middlesex 134\nfor two.\nSurrey 85, Yorkshire 108 for\nseven.\nLeicestershire 70 for six vs Derbyshire (rain curtailed play).\nCambridge University 235 for\nnine declared, Free Foresters 34 for\ntwo.\nEssex 103 for three vs Glamorgan,\nstart was delayed.\nGloucestershire 180, Hampshire 21\nlor no wicket.\nKent, 267 for nine vs Nottinghamshire.\nSomerset 189, Sussex 21 for two\nNorthamptonshire 149, Warwickshire 60 for two.\nFOUR-FOOTER\nBEATS TWO-FOOTER\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 A sprinting charger named Lavender Belle\noutran a charging sprinter named\nHarry Nelson here Saturday\u2014but\nonly by a few yards.\nThe contest was all part of a\nspecial day of racing at Lansdowne\nPark, with proceeds going to the\nchildren's health centre.\nThe special race, plus a card of\neight other horse versus horse events, brought an estimated 10,000\npeople to the plush Lulu island\nplant\nNelson, one of Canada's top sprinters, broke poorly, and although he\npicked up after covering a few of\nthe 100 yards, couldn't hold off\nthe steady driving of Lavender\nBelle.\nThe four-year-old horse, ridden\nby Bunny Johnson, started from\nthe 125-yard mark, with Nelson\ntaking off from starting blocks 100\nyards away from the wire.\nNeither of the contestants was\nclocked ln the race.\nBaseball Scores\nNATIONAL   LEAGUE\nCincinnati       100 010 121\u20146 15 1\n(Pittsburgh-    000 001402\u20147 10 1\nNuxhall, Freem (7) Fowler (7)\nKllppstein (8) and Burgess, Landrith; Friend, Face (8) Surkont (8)\nand Peterson, Kopack (8). W\u2014Sur-\nkont, L\u2014Kllppstein. HR: Cin \u2014\nPost.\nCincinnati       000 210 020\u20145 13 0\nPittsburgh     001 000 000\u20141   9 0\nCollumn and Landrith; Purkey\nLaw (9) and Koback. L\u2014Purkey\nHRr: Cin\u2014Jablonski, Pgh\u2014Purkey\nSt. Louis .... 000 001 201 5\u20149 12 0\nBrooklyn .... 201 000 100 0\u20144 8 2\nJones, Moford (5), Schultz (7)\nLaPalme (8) Smith (9) and Sarni;\nErskine, Hughes (7) LaSora 10) and\nCampanella. W\u2014Smith. L\u2014Hughes.\nHrs: St. L. \u2014 Moon Boyer (2); Bkn\n\u2014Campanella.\nSt. Louis     010 301 001\u2014 6 11 0\nBrooklyn       000 640 OOx\u201410 11 2\nLawrence, Modford \u25a0 (4) Tiefe-\nnauer (5) LaPalme (6) Schultz (8)\nand Burbrink; Spooner, Roebuck (5)\nand Walker, Campanella (8). W \u2014\nRoebuck, L\u2014Lawrence. HRs: St. L\u2014\nMusial; Bkn \u2014 Ho ges, Zlmmer.\nMilwaukee       102 002 000\u20145 11 2\nPhiladelphia   ..   022 000 000\u20144   7 1\nCrone, Jolly (2), Johnson (3) and\nRice, Crandall (7); Roberts and\nSeminick. W\u2014Johnson. HRs: Mil\u2014\nMathews (2), Logan; Pha \u2014 Tor-\ngeson.\nMilwaukee     000 000 0\u20140 5 1\nPhiladelphia      004 000 x\u20144 5 0\nCalled in 7th, curfew; to be cbm-\npleted today.\nConley, Crone (5) and Crandall;\nWehmeier and Lopata. HR: Pha \u2014\nLopata.\nChicago     100 100 000\u20142 7 0\n.New York    000 101 Olx\u20143 5 0\nDavis, Andre (6) Jeffcoat (8) and\nChiti; Maglie  and Westrum. L \u2014\nAndre. HR: NY\u2014Lockman.\nChicago      000 000 003\u20143 7 1\nNew York    000 010 000\u20141 6 1\nJones and McCullough, Chiti (9),\nHearn, Grissom  (9)  and Westrum.\nL\u2014Hearn. HRs: Chi \u2014 Baumholtz;\nNY \u2014 Hofman.\nAMERICAN  LEAGUE\nWashington   ....   200 040 000\u20146 10 1\nCleveland         001 100 101\u20144 9 3\nSchmitz  and  FitzGerald;  Feller,\nMossi (5). Wight (7) and Foiles. L\u2014\nFeller. HRs: Cle \u2014 Wertz (2), Avila.\nWashington       200 000 100\u20143 8 0\nCleveland     000 000 60x\u20146 8 1\nStone, Pascual (7) McDermott (7)\nRamos   (7)   and   Edwards:   Wynn,\nGarcia (8) and Hegan. W \u2014 Wynn;\nL \u2014 Pascual.\n\u25a0New York ...!:...   210 000 000\u20143 5 0\nChicago       500 000 OOx\u20145 6 0\nByrne, Sturdivant (1) Konstanty\n(7) and Berra; Donavan and Lollar.'\nL\u2014Byrne. HRs: NY \u2014 Carey, Mc-\nDougald; Chi \u2014 Rivera, Lollar.\nNew York ....   100 100 000 .1\u20143 7 3\nChicago     000 010 100 0\u20142 7 0\nFord .Morgan (7) Konstanty (10)\nand Berra; Pierce and Lollar. W \u2014\nMorgan; L \u2014 Pierce. HRs: NY \u2014\nCarey, Mantle, Hunter; Chi \u2014 Car-\nrassquel.\nBaltimore .... 000 000 000\u2014 0 3 3\nDetroit     000 422 02x\u201410 12 0\nMcDonald, Rogovin (5), Kretlow\n(8) and Smith, Moss (7); Maas and\nWilson. L\u2014McDonald.\nBaltimore       102 110 100-6 11 2\nDetroit     100 100 201\u20145 10 1\nJ. Wilson, Schalock (6) Moore (7)\nJohnson (7) and Smith; Zuverink,\nBirrer (4) Aber <5) Crisante (8) and\nHouse. W\u2014J. Wilson. L \u2014 Zuverink. HR:  Bal \u2014 Abrams'.\nBoston      100 200 100 0-4 13 3\nKansas City    000 004 000 1-5 10 1\nNixon, Kiely (6) Hurd .(6) and\nWhite; Raschl, Gorman (7) Sain (9)\nBoyer (10) and Astroth, W. Shantz\n(7). W\u2014Boyer; L \u2014 Hurd. HR: Bos\n\u2014White.\nBoston    100 020 010\u20144 8 2\nKansas City     110 000 010\u20143 8 1\nBrewer and Daley; Herbert. Boyer (9) and W. Shantz. HH: Bos\u2014\nZauchin.\nSATURDAY\nNATIONAL   LEAGUE\nCincinnati 6, Pittsburgh 0.\nChicago 9. New York 8.\nSt. Louis 1, Brooklyn 6.\nMilwaukee 11, Philadelphia 8.\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nWashington 14. Cleveland 5.\nNew York 4, Chicago 3.\nBaltimore 2, Detroit 5.\nBoston 5. Kansas City 1.\nPACIFIC COAST LEAGUE\nSacramento 4, Los Angeles 5.\nSeattle 7. San Francisco 5.\nOakland 7. San Diego 9.\nHollywood 9, Portland 4.\nPACIFIC COAST LEAGUE\n(Sunday)\nSeattle 5-4, San Francisco 3-1\nOakland 11-5, San Diego 5-1.\nSacramento 9-2, Los Angeles 10-3\n15 Track Marks Fall as Castlegar\nAthletes Capture High School Meet\nStanley Humphries Junior-Senior high school of Castlegar walked off with' top honors and the\nConsolidated Mining and 8meltlng\nshield for A class schools In the\nWest Kootenay High-School track\nmeet at the Civic Recreation\nGrounds, Saturday.\nA total of IB records were broken throughout the day by the\n247 competitors from  10  district\nManducco, Trail Junior; J. Portelance, Nelson, M. Posnikoff, Salmo.\nGirls 14 and under\u2014broad jump:\nB. Brown, Trail Jr.; P. Nora, Rossland; M. Gordon, Fruitvale; 100\nyard dash: G. Seaton, Castlegar; B.\nBrown, Trail Jr.; P. Nora, Rossland'; hop, step and jump: P. Gav-\nrlllik, Trail Jr.; P. Ostrekoff, Castlegar; P. Thompson, Rossland;\nhigh jump: P. Nora, Rossland; G.\n-,,   \u2014,.,      ._     \t\nschools as crowds of contenders I Seajpn,    Castlegar;    L.    Cameron,\n\"     \"  '--. .L.  Im 11      T_  .     tC      3     ,]\u201e,.U.     (I      Cnn+nn\nand spectators crowded the\ngrounds and bleachers to cheer\non their school athletes\nHume Hotel trophy for the tops\u2122. Rossland.\nTrail Jr.; 75 yard dash: G. Seaton\nCastlegar; J. Kary, Nelson; E. Muth,\nRossland; 330 relay: Trail Jr., Nel-\nschool. ui the B Class was won for\nthe second consecutive year by\nSalmo junior-senior high school who\ncopped 54 points to Protcer's, Fruit-\nvale's and Argenta's one.\nStanley Humphries high school\ntotalled 110 points while Nelson\njunior and senior high schools, winners of last year's meet, followed\nsecond- place with 86. J. Lloyd\nCrowe high of Trail captured third\nspot with 82, followed by Rossland\nwith 74, and Trail junior high with\n54.\nA highlight of the well-organized\nmeet was the high jumping event\nfor boys. 14 and under class, when\nMike Penney of Rossland, under\nfive feet, set a new record of five\nfeet, five inches. The previous record was four feet, 11 inches.\nNelson boys over 16 relay medley\nteam. Composed of Don McRory,\nJim Elsener, Keith Harmsten and\nSettimo Zanon, provided the big\nthrill of the day for .Nelson fans as\nZanon crossed the tape in one minute, 44.4 seconds, to set a new record.\nNEW VAULT MARK\nComparatively new event, boys\nover 16 pole vault, provided many\nthrills as Glen Cividen of J. Lloyd\nCrowe high slashed the 10 feet, five\nand three-quarter inch record, to\nset a new. mark at 10 feet, 11 in-1\nches\nBoys 16 and under\u2014broad jump:\nB. Murray, Castlegar; J. Bell, J. L.\nCrowe; H. DeRosa, Trail Jr.; discus:\nB. Somerville, Trail Jr.; G.Koochin,\nCastlegar; B. Peterson, Nelson; 100\nyard dash: B. Murray, Castlegar; K.\nHalsey, Nelson; J. Bell, J. L. Crowe;\n220 yard dash: R. Bush, J. L. Crowe;\nB. Murray, Castlegar; C. Hazelwood,\nProcter; shot put: B. Peterson, Nelson; E. Christofoli, J. L. Crowe; H.\nDeRosa, Trail Jr.; hop, step and\njump: D. Bunder, Rossland; H.\nSherstibitoff, Castlegar; J. Staff,\nSalmo; high jump: 'A. Penney,\nRossland; K. Peerless, Nelson; T.\nRichards, Trail Jr.; relay; J. L.\nCrowe, Nelson, Trail Jr.\nGirls 16 and under\u2014broad jump:\nM. Elsener, Nelson; E. Penney,\nRossland; M. Nazaroff, Castlegar;\nhigh jump: Y. Patton, Castlegar;\nL. Farenholtz, Nelson; F. Ceauces-\nseu. Trail Jr.; 100 yard dash: M.\nElsener, Nelson; A. Treat, Salmo;\nE. Jackson, J. L. Crowe; 300 relay:\nNelson, Castlegar, Rossland; discus:\nM. Casey, Trail Jr.; C. Parsons, Salmo; E. Penney, Rossland; 75 yard\ndash: A. Treat, Salmo; E. Penney,\nRossland; G. Robinson. Nelson; hop,\nstep and jump: V. Kinakin, Castlegar; M. Elsener, Nelson; A. Treat,\nSalmo.\nBoys over 16\u2014pole vault: G. Cividen, J. L. Crowe; S. Zanon, Nelson;\nWalker, Castlegar; G. Cividen, J. L,\nCrowe; B. Dodds, Salmo, and X.\nCabianco, Trail Jr.; high jump: A.\nFarenholtz, Nelson; G. Gibson,\nRossland; J. Patterson, J. L. Crowe;\nmedley relay: Nelson, Rossland, J.\nL. Crowe; hop, step and Jump: W.\nCatalano, J. ,L. Crowe; J. Elsener,\nNelson; P. Strawberg, Salmo; 440\n[yards: K. Grieve, RoBsland; F. Konkin, Salmo; J. Patterson, J. L.\nCrowe; mile: K. Grieve, Rossland;\nB. Townshend, Castlegar; N. Ewln,\nSalmo.\nGirls over 16\u2014discus: M. Hanson,\nSalmo; J. Molyneux; M. Cain, Nelson; 100 yard dash: S. Plott, Castlegar; L. Stevens, Salmo; R. Waghan,\nCastlegar; 440 relay: Castlegar and\nJ. L. Crowe; Salmo; broad jump: S.\nPlott, J. L. Crowe, G. Lietner, Castlegar; B. McFadden, Nelson; high\njump: S. Plott, J. L. Crowe; R.\nPitts, Castlegar; M. Phillifent, Nelson; 220 yard dash: N. Lyons, J. L.\nCrowe; E. Kraft, Salmo; G. Leltner,\nCastlegar; hop, step and jump: E.\nKraft, Salmo; V. Berno, J. L.\nCrowe; V. Glebtff, Castlegar; 75\nyard dash: M. Lyons, J. L. Crowe;\nM. Cummings, Nelson; L. Stevens,\nSalmo.\nies- ,   .    ,      .,      \u201e,\u201e,, I P. Scheiber, Argenta; 100 yard dash\nOther records broken throughou ,      w .      '     *      ' .   \/-,,\u201e,\u201e\nthe day came in the girls' 14 and\nunder broad jump, when B. Brown\nof Trail Junior High jumped 17\nfeet; P. Walker of Stanley Humphries, 10 minutes, 2 seconds in the\nboys over 16, 100 yard dash; S.\nPlott of J. Lloyd Crowe, 11 minutes, seven seconds in the girls'\nover 16, 100 yard dash; B. Cowlln\nof Stanley Humphries. 102 feet, 7^4\ninches in the boys' over 16 discus; Y.\nPatton of Stanley Humphries four\nfeet, 9H inches in the girls' under\n16 high jump; D. Bertota of Rossland, 17 feet, 4 inches in the boys'\n14 and and under broad jump; N.\nKonkin of Salmo, 40 feet, 2% Inches\nta the boys' over 16 shot put; B.\nBrandon of Stanley Humphries, two\nminutes, 16.6 seconds in the boys'\nover 16, 880 yard run; S. Plott of J.\nLloyd Crowe, four feet, SVs inches\nin the girls' over 16 high jump; P.\nNora of Rossland, four feet, seven\ninches ln the girls' 14 and under\nhigh jump, Stanley Humphries boys\n14 and under 440 relay in 50.6 seconds; J. Lloyd Crowe boys under\n16,' 440 relay in 48.2 seconds.\nThe\"meet was opened at 10 a.m.,\nby Mayor Joseph Kary. School\nboard members, inspectors and teaching staffs were present throughout the day, along with official\nstarter Carl Locatelll.\nThe presentations to the top\nschools in the two divisions were\nmade by school inspector J. J. McKenzie to J. F. Smith, coach of\nthe Castlegar team and Ernie Coleman, Salmo coach.\nTop athletes of the day for Nelson High were Marjorie and Jim\nElsener while for Castlegar it was\nB. Murray and G. Seaton, for Rossland, D. Nora and D. Bertoia; Salmo\nA. Treat and E. Kraft and J. Lloyd\nCrowe. Glen Cividen.\nResults of the various events were\nBoys, 14 and under\u2014broad jump\nD. Bertoia, Rossland; G. Wanoff,\nCastlegar; J. Makortoff, Nelson;\nhigh jump: M. Penney, Rossland; G\nRelkoff, Castlegar; N. Manducco\nTrail Junior; 220 yard dash; M. Brett\nTrail Junior; H. Bonderoff, Castlegar; W. Garroway, Salmo; 75 yard\ndash: D. Bertoia, Rossland; M. Brett,\nJ. L. Crowe; G. Bonderoff, Castlegar; 440 relay: Castlegar, Trail Junior, Nelson; hop step and jump: N.\nP. Walker, Castlegar; J. Elsener,\nNelson; B. Dodds, Salmo; discus: B.\nCowlin, Castlegar; N. Konkin, Salmo; J. Kosiancic, Rossland; shot\nput: N. Konkin, Salmo; M. Geiger-\nich, J. *L. Crowe; J. Kosiancic; 880\nyard run: B. Brandson, Castlegar;\nN. Ewln, Salmo; P. Jarvis, Rossland; broad jump: F. Stoochnow,\nCastlegar; B. Phillips, Nelson; B.\nDodds, Salmo; 220   yard   dash: P.\nRich Ferguson\nWins Mile Race\nMILWAUKEE, Wis (CP) \u2014 Rich\nFerguson of Toronto won the mil*\nrace for the University of Iowa\nSaturday night in the Central Collegiate Conference track and field\nmeet. Ferguson, who placed third\nbehind Roger Bannister and John\nLandy in the British Empire Games\nfour-minute mile at Vancouver last\nsummer, clocked 4:13.5 for tha event.\nIRIENDLY\nlAMILY\nINANCE\nF!\nPersonal Loans\nFor   Bills,  Fuel,   Repair*,  Cart,\nor any good reason.\nMOUNTAIN\nFINANCE CO. LTD.\nSuite 212,   Medical Arts Bldg.\nPHONE 1786\nJackson Racks Up\nNine Putouts\nNEW YORK (AP \u2014 Ransom\nJackson of Chicago Cubs became\nthe first National League third\nbaseman since 1900 to make seven\nputouts In a nlne-lnnlng game\nSaturday. As the game with New\nYork Giants finally went 12 Innings, he finished with a total of\nnine putouts. Records are not\navailable for extra-Inning games.\nThe all-time record for putouts\nby a third baseman Is 10, set by\nBill Kuehne of Pittsburgh May 24,\n1839. Pat Dlllard of the St. Louis\nclub In the National League had\nnine putouts June 18,1900.\nIf\nbefore you say SCOTCH... say\nDEWAR S\nI T     N\nAvolbbU h\n26Vi oz. and\n13'A 03. bottlci\nVSt\nThis advertisement is not published by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia\nA SPECIAL RCAF OFFICER\nThe RCAF Recruiting Unit- Will Be in Trail June 6th and 7th\n10 a.m. to 6 p.m. at the Canadian Legion\nand Creston, June 9th, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. at Canadian Legion\n \u2014 :\t\n-^\u2014' ! ; ; --\u2014        -\n8\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, JUNE 6, 1955\n\u00a3\nO\nN\nE\nRr\nA'\nN\ng:\nE\nR\nB\nL\nO\nN\nD\nI\nE\nf\n\u00bbc\n^R\nIE\nh\n2-E\nn\no\n,o\nSN\n>|A\n*L\nId\nId\niU\n\u2022K\nk\n|Z\ni\u201e\n\/as\n| A\n|w\nV5E\n\u00bbi\nU( G\nII\nfor' \u25a0 |\nSALE\/    j\n\/^ii\\\\7r^.\ng=\ni>-b\nM i\n-\n* o\nj\nC.Atll_       p\n7\/\u00abSV \/MT CANS77U USB J\nHIM AND TONTO INMr\nPLAN. BAN PAGE HIS HEAP\nANP 77EHIS HANDS\/\nIT'S A VT=py STYLISH HAT..\n'LL BET IT BELONGS TO ONE\nOF THOSE 600D-LOOKING\nMODELS I SEE AROUND\nTOWN.'\nGuaranteed Annual Wage Proposal\nPoses Big Questions in Business\nBy  NORMAN  WALKER\nDETROIT (AP) \u2014 Social and labor relations history is being made\nin the auto industry contract negotiations. Some form of the guaranteed anual wage seems sure to become part of any final agreement.\nWhat will it mean to workers7\nTo business? Its effects are likely\nto have a deep effect on the U.S.\neconomic system.\nThe bRSic concept of the plan is\nsuplementary unemployment compensation. It means that an employer'agrees to pay, either through a\nseparate fund he sets aside or\nthrough current revenues, money to\na worker when he is laid off in\naddition to the sums the worker\ngets in state unemployment compensation.\nSome employers, though not the\najuto firms now concerned with the\nproblem, have argued this is pay for\nidleness. The union counter-argument is that it's the penalty tho\nboss must pay for failing to provide\nsteady work.\nOTHERS MAY FOLLOW\nOnce adopted by the auto Industry\nthe plan would be pressed on other\nindustries. The unions argue that If\nenough of industry goes along with\nthe idea, employers seeking to avoid\nthe penalty payments will see to it\nthat production is kept steady.\nThat, they claim, will prevent or at\nleast minimize depressions,\nWill woikers, if assured of a considerable portion of normal earnings\nwhether or not they have jobs, lose\nsome of their incentive when employed?\nWill employers hesitate to take\nchances like they have in the past\n\u2014in expansion, new products, new\nmachinery \u2014 because of their worker income guarantee obligations\nWill the guarantee deter the start 6f\nnew business enterprises?\nTIME  WILL  TELL\nThose are questions that wiM have\nto be answered from experience.\nThe fact that employers may\nagree to such a plan implies a recognition that the state unemployment\ncompensation benefits, financed by\na government tax on payrolls, are\ntoo low when an employee is idle\nthrough lack of work.\nThis is likely to lead to redoubled\nefforts tn get state legislatures to\nboost the, amount and duration of\nthe state jobless payments \u2014 a step\nurged by President Eisenhower.\nA number pf state legislatures\nboosted their' unemployment com-\npesation standards, this y$ar, but\nnot -to the extent urged by the\nEisenhower administration.\nPredict Rise in\nPrice of Zinc\nNEW YORK (AP) - A rise in the\nprice it zinc appears imminent, barring a strike in the automobile industry.\nThe belief that 7.1nc is due for a\nrise, probably by ^-cent a pound\nto 2Vt cents, East St Louis, has been\ngrowing in metal circles for weeks\nas stocks have declined and demand, has continued strong.\nThe auto industry is a big User\nof special high-grade zinc for die-\ncasting. This grade is in short supply.\nMeanwhile, business in lead has\nbeen good. Demand increased steadily as May wore on and one big\nproducer reported a boom toward\nthe end of that month. There's no\ntalk of a price rise in this metal,\nhowever. Supplies are adequate.\nSilver was boosted again last\nweek, this time by Vt cent an ounce\nto BOVt cents, the highest level in\nnearly 35 years. Mexican silver Is\ngoing into coinage for Saudi Arabia\nandto fill a big contract with West\nGermany, Russia and Japan are\nholding back their supplies.\nMajor Metal Prices:\nCopper\u201436 cents, a pound, delivered. Foreign 35-45 cents, nominal. New York.\nLead\u201415 cents a pound, New\nYork; 14.80 cents, St. Louis.\nZinc\u201412 cents a pound, East St.\nLouis; 12.50 cents, New York.\nSilver\u201490.50 cents an ounce, New\nYork; 78.50 pence, London.\nThe\npleasant\nchewing\nsatisfies\nthat\nlittle hungry\nkeep your fig\nB.C. Fishermen\nTagging Crabs\nVANCOUVER CCP) \u2014 Northern\nB.C. crab fishermen are co-operating with scientists from the Pacific\nBiological Station in a crab tagging\nprogram designed to bring greater\nknowledge of the crab populations\nion the Hecate Strait and Dixon\n\u25a0Entrance crab fishing grounds.\n; T. H. Butler, in charge of the\nwork, stated that between 1500 and\n, 2000 crabs will be tagged in the\n' current    northern    crab    fishery,\nfeel ing\"-and helps\nure neat and trim!\nESEZPr\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0JJJ.mi* oui.i V,\nEnjoy chewing Wrigley's Spearmint every day!\n.   TELEVISION FOR TODAY\nKXLY TV  -  Channel 4\nll:00-Sign On\n10:10\u2014Test Pattern\n11:30\u2014Houseparty\n10:25\u2014Color Test Program\n11:45\u2014Secret  Storm\n10:40\u2014Bible Reading\n12:00\u2014Big Payoff\n10:45\u2014Sheilah Graham\n12:30\u2014Bob Crosby\n11:00\u2014Home\n12:45\u2014Bob Crosby\n12:00\u2014Tenn. Ernie Ford\n1:00\u2014Welcome Traveler\n12:30\u2014Feather Your Nest\n1:30\u2014Road of Life\nl:00-\"Pittsburgh Kid\"\n1:45\u2014Musical Interlude\n2:00\u2014Elaine Gray Kitchen\n2:00\u2014On Your Account\n3:00\u2014Ted Mack's Matinee\n2:30\u2014Valiant Lady\n3:30-The Greatest Gift\n2:45\u2014Brighter Day\n3:45\u2014Concerning Miss Marlowe\n3:00\u2014Old World Flavor\n4:00\u2014Hawkins Falls\n3:30\u2014Search for Tomorrow\n4:15\u2014Lady Fair\n3:45\u2014Guiding Light\n4:45\u2014Modern Romances\n4:00\u2014Love of Life                     i\n5:00\u2014\"Howdy Doody\"\n4:15\u2014Woman's World\n5:30\u2014Bar 6 Roundup\n4:30\u2014Garry Moore\n6:30\u2014Mr. Engineer\n4:45\u2014Garry Moore\n7:00\u2014\"Fighting  Devildogs\"\n5:00\u2014What's Cookin'\n7:30\u2014The Front Page\n5:30\u2014Strike It Rich\n7:40\u2014Newspaper of the Air\n6:00\u2014Rick Meyers Show\n7:45\u2014News Caravan\n6:30\u2014Doug Edwards\n8:00\u2014Sid Caesar\n6:45\u2014Perry Como\n9:00\u2014Medic\n7:00\u2014Superman\n9:30\u2014Robert Montgomery Presents\n7:15\u2014News\n10:30\u2014Liberace\n7:25\u2014Weather Vane\n11:00\u2014Little Theatre\n7:30\u2014Western Roundup\n11:15\u2014Tony Martin\n8:00\u2014Burns and Allen\n11:30\u2014Curtain Time\n8:30\u2014Godfrey's Talent Scouts\n12:00\u2014Secret File U.S.A.\n9:00\u20141 Love Lucy\n12:40\u2014News Headlines\n9:30\u2014December Bride\n10:00\u2014Studio One\n11:00\u2014The Unexpected\n11:30\u2014Boston Blackie\n12:00\u2014Late Show\nKREMTV\n\u2014 Channel 2\n3:45\u2014Test Pattern\n4:00\u2014\"Foma Is the Spur\"\n5:10\u2014Health and Happiness .Club\n5:15\u2014\"Wings Over Pacific\"   .\n6:30\u2014Shadow Stumpers\n6:55\u2014Newsbeat  Spokane\n7:00\u2014Western Movietime\n7:55-rWhat's the Weather\n8:00\u2014Play of the Week\n8:30\u2014Voice of Firestone\n9:00\u2014TV Reader's Digest\n9:30\u2014James Mason\n9:45\u2014Music of the Masters\n10:00\u2014\"Devil's Cargo\"\n11:30\u2014Wrestling from Hollywood\n12:30\u2014Layman's Call to Prayer\n(Programa subject to change by stations without notice.)\nTELEVISION SERVICE\n30 a.m. to 5 p.m.\u2014Phone  1300\nEvenings \u2014 Phoije 1033-R    \u2022\nDally Except Sundays\nand  Holidays\nMc&Me\nIN  CRE8TON   IT8\nCreston Electric\nFOR 'R.C A.   VICTOR   TV\nSALES  ANO.SERVICE\nWork Continues\nAl Velvet Mine\nWork at tho Velvet Mine, seven\nmiles southwest of Rossland ls\npressing forward on the No. 8 level\nThis mine is one of the main projects of Mid-West Copper and Uranium Mines Ltd.\nDrifting en the No. 8 level is aimed to Interact a diamond drill hole\nat 200 feet. The drill hole assays .37\nounces gold, and 3.8 per cent copper\nA progress report by the mine\nmanager, Ralph Sostad, states that\nwork on the No. 6 level has shown\n130 feet of ore. Three assays taken\nfrom his ore are: No. 13451 across\n2.4 feet, assayed .24 ounces gold and\n2.55 per cent copper, gross value\n$26.64; No. 13452 across 2 feet, assay\ned .48 ounces gold and 1.82 per cent\ncopper, gross value $29.66, No. 13453\nacross 10 inches assayed .62 ounces\ngold and 1.60 per cent copper; gross\nvalue $32.31.\nThe report states that company\nofficials were impressed by'the ore\n\u2022Msslbillt'es in a zone ISO. feet-by\n200 feet In deith This aoroxlmate\nzone Is located between the No \u00ab\nand No. 8 levels and at latest assays\nwould hove a gross value of nearly\n?210,OC!0.\nA raise from thp No. 7 to the No. 8\nlevel which was found on the property was discovered to be unmapped.\nV\u00bb\u00bbV>r> IM1TATF CANADA\n\u2022 KIAMESHA LAKE, N.Y. (AP)-\nA machinists' union leader has\nurged the United Stales Congress\nto provide for thi licencing of automobile mechanic, as now Is done\nIn Canada. The? suggestion, from\nHarold Reardon, of the International Association of Machinlsti\n(AFL), came out of a panel dls\u00ab\ncussion of the problems of automation as they affect the automotive trades.\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS\n1240 ON  TOE DIAL\n(Pacific Daylight Time)\nMONDAY, JUNE 6, 1955\n6:30\u2014Wake-Up Time\n1:00\u2014CKLN Reports\n,7:00\u2014News\n4:15\u2014 Hollywood  Calling\n7:05\u2014Wake-Up Time\n1:30\u2014Radio  Feature!\n7:10\u2014Farm Fare\n1:45\u2014Matinee\n7:15\u2014Chapel in the Sky\n2:00\u2014Pacific  News\n7:30\u2014 News\n2:15\u2014Classic Corner\n7:35\u2014Rise 'n Shine\n2:3I)-Trans Canada  Matinet\n7:50\u2014March of Truth\n3:30\u2014Miscellaney\n7:55\u2014 Wake Up Time\n3:45\u2014B. C. Roundup\n8:00\u2014News\n4:30\u2014Nonsense Time\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n4:45\u2014Camp  Wilderness\na Irj\u2014Bieaklasl Club\n5:00\u2014Sacred Heart Program\n8 45\u2014Serenade\n5:15\u2014Tops and Pops\n8:55\u2014Women Today\n5:30\u2014Sports News\n9:00\u2014Homemaker   Harmonies\n5:35\u2014Spotlight on a Star\n10:00\u2014CKLN Entertains\n5:45\u2014Bowling News\n10:15\u2014News\n5:50\u2014News\n10:20 -Musical Program\n6:00\u2014Rawhide\n10:30\u2014Story Parade\n6:15\u2014Canada at Work\n10:45\u2014Musical   Kitchen\n6:30\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n11:00\u2014News\n7:00\u2014News and Roundup\n11:05\u2014Call One-Nine\n7:30\u2014Summer Fallow\n12:00\u2014Five Minutes for Freedom\n8:00\u2014Bob McMullin Show\n12:05\u2014Sportsman's Corner\n8:30\u2014Symphony OrcheBtra\n12:10\u2014Spotlight Star\n9:30\u2014Distinguished Artists\n':' 15\u2014Sports News\n10:00\u2014News\n12:20\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Provincial Affairs\nIZ 30\u2014 Farm Broadcast\n10:30\u2014Classic Tales\n12:55\u2014Here's Our Story\n11:00\u2014NEWS  Nightcap\nCBC PROGRAMS\n(Mountain Standard Time)\nTUESDAY, JUNE 7, 1955\n00\u2014 Marine Broadcast\n:15\u2014Musical  Minutes\n:30\u2014 News\n:35\u2014Musical Minutes\n;40 -Morning Devotions\n55\u2014March Past\n00\u2014 News\n10\u2014Here's BUI Good\n15\u2014Breakfast Club\n45\u2014Laura Limited\n00\u2014BBC News\n15\u2014Aunt Lucy\n:30\u2014Laura Limited\n:45\u2014Composer's Corner\n00\u2014Morning ..Visit\n15\u2014The Happy Gang\n45\u2014King Ganam Show\n00\u2014Kate Aitken\n15\u2014Kindergarten of the Air\n30\u2014 A Man and His Music\n15\u2014News\n25\u2014Showcase\n:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n55\u2014Five to One\n.00\u2014 Afternoon Concert\n:45\u2014Today's Guest\n:00\u2014B. C. School Broadcast\n:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n:45\u2014Today's Music\n:30\u2014Jubilee Road\n:45\u2014Sleepytime Story Teller\n:00\u2014At Home With the Lennlcta\n:25\u2014Traffic Jamboree\n:45\u2014News\n:55\u2014Int Commentary\n:00\u2014Rawhide '\n:15\u2014Roving Reporetr\n:30\u2014Let's Make Music\n:00\u2014News\n:30\u2014Leicester Square\n:00\u2014Summer Songs\n:30\u2014The Rhythm Pals\n:00\u2014Lux Radio Theatre\n00\u2014News\n:15\u2014Arthur L. Phelps\n:30\u2014Anthology\nDAILY CROSSWORD\n14.\n15.\n16.\n17.\n18.\n.19.\n20.\n24.\n26.\n27.\nSI.\n32.\n33.\nACROSS\nGirl's name\nFragment\nPungent\nvegetable\nCity\n(India)\nBlack\nand\nblue\nInsert\nAlways\nComes in\nMan's\nnickname\nAffirm\nLand.\nmeasuri\nRussian\nfarmers\nLittle\nisland\nSource\nOffice of\na deacon\nNear to\nGroup of\nthree\u25a0\nField\nofficer\n(abbr.)\nSpring\nback\nDoga  (kind\nRiver\n(So. Am.)\nKind of\nwool fabric\nPart of a\nflower\nSoldier\nfrom\nAustralia\nCloses, as i\nhawk's eyei\nConcerning\n(Scot)\nDOWN\nDistribute\nThe  cosmoi\n3. Dwelt\n4. Coconut\nhusk fiber\n5. Finish\n6. Spicules\n7. Mutually\nopposed\n8. Flower\n9. Biblical\nname\n10. Caresses\n10. Girl's\nname\n18. Pen name\nof George-\nWilliam\nRussell\n19. Help\n20. Of the\nbreast\n21. Negative\nreply\n22. Long,\nnarrow,\nflat-bo t.\ntomed\nsled\n23 Pig\npen\n25. Musio\nnote\n28. Bay\nwindows\n29. Nothing\nSO. Interna,\ntional\nlanguage\n33. Gorse\n34. Knocks'\n35. Fencing\naword\n36. Attractive\nHaau naoa\naaana aaaaia\naiiura BBuiais\nnna aaua aui\naHEiuBuaBja\nbhbei      liH'Jia\nHHHBHfflaH61\nKUU HHHM SB\nBil   HHMK   HBP\nmtsaaa. atmm\nSaturday's Answer\n37. For whs,t\nman waa\nPenrayl.\nvanla\nnamed?\n38. Denomina*\ntion\n40. Measuro\n(Anc.\nArab.)\n1\n1\n3\nA\ns\nl\nw\n7\n8\n9\nIO\nII\nl\na\n15\nV\/A\n14\nIS\n%\nIfe\nf<\n17\n%\nIS\n^r\nU\n%\n19\nf\/\/A\n70\n21\n22\n33\n34\nIS\n^A\n%\n%\nit\n27\n26\n29\nso\nfA\n31\nf(\n^\n%\n52,\n^A\n33\n^A\nVt\n35\"\n3to\n%\n57\n58\n39\nI\nAa\n41 .\n'\/\/<\nAl.\n45\n^\nA\nDAILY CRYPTOQUOTE\u2014Here's how to work it:\n\u2022     AXYDLBAAXR\nIs   L O N O F E L L O W\nOne letter simply stands for another In this example A ls use!\n\/or the three L's. X for the two O's, etc Single letters, spot\ntrophies, the length and formation of the words are all hlnto\nBach day the code letters are different\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nD EAXLMT ESAUYJZXX. DKPKDEQ\nDJQ  R S ALMX Y - Y SEDTZ.\nSaturday's Cryptociuote: AND, GH! HE HAD THAT MERRY\nGLANCE THAT SELDOM LADY'S HEART RESISTS\u2014\ni\/WHt\n1    '    '' \u25a0 :  -   ..::,:.\u25a0''.,\u25a0...,,\n : :. i_ \u2014 \u25a0'\u2022,- '\u2022 \u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u2022,\u2022\n :\t\n WBP1\nwtwmm*\\\nW1^8I$?P!\nij^^mfs^^ifiT'\nr\u00b0il\nMORE FUNDS for VACATION\nUSE WANT ADS\nSIRTHS\nMORI \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs. Shlgeru\nMori of New Denver, at the Slocan\nCommunity Hospital in New Denver June 1, a son.\nFORSYTHE \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs.\nQulntin A. Forsythe of New Denver, at the Slocan Community Hospital in New Denver June 3, a\ndaughter.\nHELP WANTED\nFMlTTNTORMATldN A V AIL -\nable about Canadian. U.S.A and\nForeign job opportunities paying\nhighest salaries. Write Immediately Dept. 86G National Employment Tnfo Serv 1020 Broad. Newark. N.J.. U.S.A.\nWANTED MAN WITH STEAM EX-\nperience. Certificate not necessary but should have thorough\n\u25a0knowledge of steam power. Sand-\nner Brothers Lumber Company,\nCascade. B. C.\nWANTED 2ND CLASS STEAM\nengineer for shift work. Aoply\nMaster Mechanic. . Crow's Nest\nPass Coal Company Limited, Ml\nchel. B. C. \t\nSALESMEN-IMMEDIATE OPEN-\nIng. Large national organization.\n$7500 to $10,000. Write, wire. Utility, 330 South Dearborn, Dept\nCDS. Chicago 4.\t\n\"WANTED AT ONCE. RAWLEIGH\ndealer in Nelson. Writt\nRawlelgh's F.-12. Winnipeg, Man\nAUTOMOTIVE,     '\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\nHELP  WANTED\u2014FEMALE\nLEARN  HAIRDRESSING\nWoman wanted. Greater opportunity    Better    pay     Pleasant\nwork  Catalogue free   \u2014 Write\nMANUEL HAIRDRESSING\nSCHOOLS\n, S26A 8th Avenue. Calgary\nBranches1   Winnipeg.  Regina.\nSaskatoon and Edmonton.\nCanada's National  System\nWANTED. COMPANION - HOUSE-\nkeeper for elderly lady immediately. Ross Osborne. Robson B. C\nor Phone C?*tle\"ar 2331.\nWOMAN TO HELP LOOK AFTER\nchildren and do housework and\nlive   within.   Phone   1577-Y,   124\nHouston  St.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nYoung   marr7ed~~man- de\"-\nsires selling position in Nelsoo.\nSteady, reliable job of permanent nature wanted. No fast promotion deals please. Presently\nselling in Calgary. Box 2503\nDaily News.\nJANITOR  WITH -15  YEARS'  EX\nperience, desires work anywhere\nBox 3481. Daily News.\nIF BUILDING A HOME OR RE-\nmodelling, for reasonable estimates, nhone 1883-L.\nMINE ACCOUNTANT FULLY EX-\nperienced,   available   end   June\nBox 3445, Nelson News.\nReliable Painters \u2014 Spray, Brush\nor Roll. Ph. 1823-R-3.\nHANDY MAN WANTS ODD JOBS.\nPhone 25B-R.\nRENTALS\nFOR RENT, MODERN 2-BED-\nrooro cottage on lake shore, Willow Point. Insulated, furnished,\nor unfurnished. P. G. Ludgate.\nph. 482-X-4.    \t\nHOUSEKEEPING OR SLEEPING\nrooms, dishes, linens and maid\nservice. Day, week, or monthly\nAllen Hotel, 171 Baker St.\nS-ROOM SUITE. LOVELY LOCA-\ntion, close to Civic Centre. Very\nnice rooms, semi-furnished. 912\nVernnn. Phone 757-X.\nSEMI-FURNISHED APARTMENT.\n4 rooms and bath. Newly decorated. Close to city centre. Phone\n330-L.\nFULLY FURNISHED APT. FOR\nrent July and Aug. Hallett, 302\nMedical Arts. ph. 823-L.\nLight housekeepingTrOom\nfor rent, 116 Vernon St. or phone\n984-R.\nFOR RENT: DESIRABLE 3-ROOM\napartment, private entrance. 517\nCarbonate St. Ph. 1097-X.\nSEMI-FURN. MODERNlJPSTAIRS\nsuite; plenty cupboard space, central, available Aug. 1st. 519 Silica\ni ROOM APT. AND BATH PART-\nly furn. Block from Baker. Call\n306 Victoria.\n6-ROOM APARTMENT, J OH N -\nstone Block, from June 1. T. D\nRoslins. 568 Ward St.. nhone 717.\nWANTED: UNFURNISHED TWO-\nbedroom apartment for 2 adults\nApply Box 3475. Daily News.\ni ROOM FURNISHED APT. ON\nground floor.  140 Baker or call\n491-L.\nHOUSE FOR RENT. 3 BEDROOMS,\nduolex. Aonly 131 Pine St.\nFURNISHED HOUSE  JULY  AND\nAupust Phone 973-R after 6.\nGARAGE    FOR    RENT   BEHIND\nLegion hall. Phone 484-R-l.\nlEDROOM FOR RENT OR ROOM\nand board. PJione 1759-Y.\n$50 MO. PRIVATE 4-RM. APT.\nand bath. Gas range. Ph. 423-Y.\nWANTED    MISCELLANEOUS\nWANTED TO BUY: CARS AND\ntrucks for wrecking. Buyers of\n.scrap iron, batteries, brass, aluminum, copper. Used parts for cars\nand trucks for sale, Western\nAuto Wrecking, Box 132 Granite\nRd., Nelson, B. C.\nBOATS AND ENGINES\n14 FT. CAR TOP RUNABOUT,\nwhite and mahogany finish. $150.\nPhone Castlegar 2521\nFOR SALE 14-FT RUNABOUT,\niVi\" beam for outboard motor T\nAllan, ph   5S-W   Nakusp, B. C.\nPHONE  1844 FOR CLASSIFIED\nReopening\nReuben Buerge Motors\nUsed Car Lot on Vernon Street,\nBetween Traders Finance\nand Liberty Food Store.\nLOOK FOR\nNEON'SIGN\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\n1954 Plymouth Sedan\n1953 Austin Sedan\n1953 Ford Coach\n1952 Chevrolet Sedan\nit   if   if\nSPECIAL   SPECIAL   SPECIAL\n1955 Pontiac 8 Sedan\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\n1951   Chevrolet Sedan\n1950 Austin Sedan\n1949 Chevrolet Coach\n1947 Plymouth Club Coupe\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022    '\nTRADES AND TERMS\n\u2022 *~ \u2022\nPhone 1661\n600   BLOCK   VERNON   ST.\nAT JOSEPHINE\nREUBEN\nBUERGE\nMotors Ltd. '\nPhcn<\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nETC,, FOR SALE\n*~*m***mr*iry*-m\u00bbm+*\nFOR QUICK SALE\nENTIBE ROOMING HOUSE\nFURN1SHING6-MVST SELL\n520 VERNON ST,     Phone 1457-L\n1948 PONTIAC SEDAN IN G O O D\nshape, for sale, or could trade\nfor Mi-ton pickup. Write or see\nFred  Riebalkin,  Appledale,   B.C.\nfarm for'-Sale, iso acres of\nland more or less, living house,\nbarn and cabin, ideal place to raise\nsheep. Also 5 room house on 7\nacres of land at end of View St.\nApply Nels Bystrom, Box 205,\nNelson.\nLAKESHORE PROPERTY fff\nCrescent Bay, gradual slope to\nlake, two parcels 90 feet in width\nand about 450 feet in depth. $1700\nand $2000. For Information, T. D.\nRosling, 568 Ward Street.\t\nAPARTMENT HOliSE, 5 SUITES\nrented $150 monthly. 4 rooms for\nowner, 2 bathrooms, utilities,\nbasement furnace, $14,000. Maher,\n914 Stanley. Nelson. B. C.\nCHEV. SEDAN, GOOD TRANS\nportation. 2 extra tires, $125.\nBaker, 1106 Beatty Avenue, ph\n743-L-3.\n1949 FORD FOUR DOOR SEDAN\ngood condition, Priced to sell.\nPhone 161-L-2\nFOR SALE 1951 DODGE SEDAN,\nexcellent condition throughout.\nPhone 632-Y-2.\nFOR SALE: 1950 5-TON FORD.'AL-\n\u00abo 2 dump boxes. 11%-ton endless\nchain block. Phone 1312-R.\nHALF-TON   TRUCK   FOR   SALE\n$125. Phone'500 or 289-R-4.\n1949 AUSTIN   PANEL  IN  GOOD\ncondition. Real bargain. Ph. 1707\n1950 FORD FOR SALE, $825   P,\n461-X-3.\nSUN MOTOR BIKE, PRACTICAL-\nly new. used 4 months. Ph. 1681-L\nMACHINERY\nUSED\n2 only-\nINTERNATIONAL TD-14'S\nWith  hydraulic  dozers  and\nlogging winches.\n2 ONLY-'\nCATERPILLAR D4's\nWith Hydraulic Bulldozers\nand Logging Winches\nI ONLY-\nINTERNATIONAL TD-6\nHydraulic dozer and logging\nwinch\u2014Like new.\nALSO\n1\u2014INTERNATIONAL UD18A\nDIESEL   POWER  UNIT\nRebuilt.\n1-G.M.C.   6-71   POWER   UNIT\nDiesel.\nCENTRAL\n& Equipment Co. Ltd.\n702 Front St.\nPhone 1400      Nelson, B.C.\nSAWMILLS   MACHINERY\nFOR SALE\n1 only\u201442\" opening boss dog Carriage with hammer dog; double\naction E. long set works and 66\nfeet of track.\n1 only\u2014Right  hand  bottom saw\n. arbour   with   roller   bearing   2-\n15\/16\"   diameter    with \u25a0 balance\nwheel mounted.\n1 only\u2014Top saw arbour; 2 7\/16\"\ndiameter.\n1 only\u2014Heavy duty carriage friction feed.\n1 only\u201424 ft. adjustable bearing\ngang slasher, with saws.\nPrice on application. Write Box\n300 or phone 39. Creston, B.C.\nFOR QUICK SALE: 1953 CHEV.\nDeluxe with radio and air conditioner. Can be seen at 1013\nFront St., phone 1244-R.\nWILL PAY CASH FOR SUITABLE\nsecond mortgages or agreements\non Nelson properties. Give details\nand discount you will allow\nReoly Box 4024 Daily News.\nNEW 2-BEDROOM HOUSE, FULL\nbasement, oil furnace, hot air to\neach room. View property. Fair-\nview. $8900. Terms $4000 down.\nPhone   1272-R.\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\n.   (Continued)\nONE WHITE ENAMEL COAL St\nwood range, like new; must sell.\n$75.00. Phone 1279.\nWHITE ENAMEL COAL AND\nwood cook stove, like new. Phone\n922-R.\nFOR SALE: KEROSENE FRIG,\n'and Electrolux vacuum cleaner\nBox 2540, Dally News.\nHURRY, HURRY, LIMITED SUP.\nply of top soil. Phone 794-R-l.\n9 CU.   FT. KELVINATOR  FRIG.,\nvery good condition. Ph. 1246-R.\nHOUSE   TRAILER.   PHONE   1725.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\n2\" MILKING \"COWS   FOR   SALE\nApply   Fred   Riebalkin,   Apple-\ndale, B.C.   .\nWANTED - COWS,   CALVES.\nbulls for butchering. Carl Jensen.\nSavoy Hotel.\nCOW   FOR   SALE,   FRESHENED\nAoply M. Demoskov. Thrums.\n ROOM XND BOARD\nBOARD^AND ROOM WITH SEW-\nlng and washing, wanted by\nyoung man. Appjy Box 3290, Nelson Daily News.\nREDUCED FOR QUICK SALE\nnew 4-room house, corner lot. 50'\nxlOO'. across from school, close\nto everything. Contact Trail\n2394-L-l.\nOWNER TRANSFERRED, SPLEN-\ndid buy, 3-bedroom bungalow.\n520 Gordon Road. Phone 1315-X.\n5 ROOMED HOUSE AND BATH\n6 lots in Fairview Close to school\nand bus, splendid view $4500.\nMono down   Phone 792-X.\nB'OR SALE OR EXCHANGE\nacres of land for late model truck\nand some cash.  Apply Box 25\nNelson\nCASTEEGAR-SMART, NEW 4-\nroom bungalow, newly decorated\ninside and out. Full basement\ncorner   lot.  Ph.  Trail   2394-L-l.\nFOR SALE - MODERN 2 BED-\nroom house in Kinnaird. Garage\nbig garden, young fruit trees on\nproperty.\nFOR SALE OR REN fl \"\"NEW\nbuilding at Salmo, 25x63. Phone\n263 Trail.\nFOR SALE\u20143 BEDROOM HOUSE\nwith any amount of land up to 8\nlots. Phone 687-L-l.\nWANTED TO BUY: 2 OR 3-BED-\n- -room house in or out of Nelson.\nPhone 1417-L after 4:30\nFOR SALE: 2 CORNER LOTS\",\ncorner of Innis and Kootenay\nPh. 314-Y after 5:30.\n8~ROOM BUNGALOW. APPLY 318\nObservatory eveninrts.\nFOR SALE  MISCELLANEOUS\nWORM BAIT FISHERMEN\n$2.00   brings   you   100   large,   fat\nRedworms promptly, prepaid express. Canned ready for fishing\nDiscount on quantities.\nO'Brien's   Earthworm   Hatchery.\nCanada's   Largest   Wormbait\nBreeders\n560 Vernon Dv. Vancouver 6\nDRY KINDLING WOOD. 1 CORD\n$12, 2 cords $23. Slabwood. 1 cord\n$12. 3 cords $30 Also cull lumber, good for fences, barns, shedp.\nrepairs, wood. etc. 2 carrier loads.\nannrox. 4000 b.m. material, special\n$22.50 Ph. Markoff Store, Pass-\nmore 2-X.\nFOR SALE: COMPLETE ELEC-\ntroplating set and Instruction\nbooks. Eternalize baby shoes in\nbronze. Reasonable price Can be\ndone in snare time or full time\nbusiness. Cutler's New and Used\nFurniture  Store\nLUMBER LIQUIDATION SALE\n2x4.  2x6,. 2x8,  1x8,  1x8\n$30 per Thousand B.M.\nDelivery Anywhere\nAcross Markoff Store\nS KUDRA, SLOCAN PARK. B.C.\nPhone Passmore 2-X\nDEALERS IN ALL TYPES OF\nused equipment, mill, mine and\nlogging supplies; new and used\nwire rope, pipe and fittings, chain\nsteel plate and shapes. Atlas Iron\nSt Metals Ltd.. 250 Prior St., Vancouver. B. C. Phone PAcific 6357.\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP METALS,\ncopper, brass, lead, aluminum\nHighest prices, prompt payment\nActive Trading. 935 E CordovB.\nVancouver\n21\" R.C.A. TV, 1955 MODEL, MA-\nhogany finish, as new. Light\nsleeping trailer. Owner leaving\ntown. Phone 532-R.\nFOUR-SHELF BRANTFORD PAS-\ntry oven, suitable for camp or\nboarding house. Cheap for cash.\nBox  1. Slocan  City.\nAutomatic   kohler   light\nplant,  used  very  little.   Western\nAuto Wrecking Granite Road.\nCOAL HOT AIR FURNACE AND\npipes, $35. Apply 324 2nd St., or\nnhone 996-Y.\nBOMBER HOISTS, 1300 LBS. CA-\npacity, $45, while they last. Active\nTrading Co., 935 E. Cordova, Van.\nCUTLER'S NEW AND USED\nfurniture, basement, 301 Baker St.\nPhone 47. ''We buy used furniture.\"\n14-GAUGE GALV. BERRY-WIRE\n12c per lb\u201e full rolls 10c per lb.\nColumbia Trading, 902 Front St.\nLEAVING TOWN, MUST SELL\nall household furniture and goods\nAonlv 909 Latimer.\nPRACTICALLY NEW RED D AU~-\ntomatic water heater. 519 Silica.\nROOM  AND   BOARD  FOR  TWO\nPhone SW-Y  davs.\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES, ETC.\nGOLDEN LAB RETRIEVER, 1%\nyears old, Inoculated. Must sell.\nBest offer.  Phone 639-Y.\nPERSONAL\nALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS BOX\n388   Phone llil-L-3 or 366-R\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST \u2014\"one\"gasoline\" drain\nhose between Winlaw and Nelson.\nPhone 133.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL   DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS AND MINE-\nREPRESENTATIVES\nE     W \" WIDDOWSON    St   CO\nA savers  'Ull Josephine St    Neleon\nii   S   ELMES    ROSSLAND   B   C\nAisavpi .Chemist Mine ReD\nEKGitiiEERli   AND   SURVEYORS\nG. W. BAERG\"\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor\n373 Baker St.      Nelson       Ph. 1118\nand Box 34, Fruitvale, B. C.      j\nSuccessor to ihe late A. L. Purdy,\nB.C.L.S.\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\nBaton you buy\nTRY A\nMcCULLOCH\nHtW\nmodel 33-B    \u00bb\n10 major improvements\nNo other saw can beat a McCulloeh\nModel 33B for high tpeed woodcutting, light-weight and\nprofessional-quality features. Hub\nautomatic dutch, built-in chain\noiler, rewind starter, and floatlcss\ndiaphragm carbureter for full-\npower itarting In any position\nwithout adjustment. Don't be\nfooled; before you buy, test the\ncutting speed and easy handling\nof a McCulloeh\nModel 33B\nAvailable with\n12,16 or 20-inch\nblades. Tp\nSee\nH. \"Fritz\" Farenholtz,\nC. Ross or Alex McDonald\nWELDING & EQUIPMENT\nCO. LTD.\n614 Rallw.iv St        Nelson  B.C.\nPHONE 1402\nBOYD   C    AFFLECK    MEIC\nBC   Land Surveyor P   Eng   (Civili\n218 Oore.JSt      Nelson      Phone 1238\nS\"   V    SHAYLER.   PC    BOX ~2n2\nKimberley    Phone 54\nB C  Land Survevoi   Engineer     j\nFire Damage Heavy\nCORNER BROOK, Nfld. (CP) -\nFire raced through a downtown\nbusiness block in Corner Brook\nlast week, destroying a hotel, a\nfurniture store and a 12-room\nheme. One fireman wm slightly\ninjured. Damage was estimated at\n$150,000.\n9risk Activity\nMay Offset\nAutomobile Cuts\nBy WALTER BREEDS Jr.\nNEW YpRK (AP)-Auto.produc\ntion In the United State! dropped\nlast week to Its lowest level of\nthe year, but activity In most other\nlines held close to record levels,\nThings hummed ln steel production, coal mining, heavy construction, rail-freight traffic and electric-energy consumption.\nBusiness men sizing up the outlook for the summer had reason\nfor optimism. Some slowdown in\nover-all activity was inevitable,\nmany felt, but the dip would be a\nmild one, and not last long.\nThe trend was apparent In the\nUnited States' basic industry\nsteel. Mills at nearly 97 per cent\nof capacity, were unable to keen\npace with new orders; some would\nshut down for long-overdue repairs.\nMAY BREAK 1953 RECORD\n\"The terrific pace is an eye-\nopener even to the most optimistic,\" commented the trade weekly.\nIron Age. \"If production continues\nat about the present pace \u2014 and\nthere ls a good chance that it will\n\u2014 IDSS's record of 11,600,000 tons\nwill be broken.\"\nCutbacks ln auto production reflected sporadic walkouts and the\nMemorial Day holiday, but It was\nevident most automakers would\nhave slashed their outout anyway.\nWard's Automotive Reports estimated' the week's production at\n132,774 cars and 2\u00ab.'4S trucks\nagainst 167,485 and 39,727 the week\nbefore. ,\nDetroit sources said most manufacturers had scheduled June-July\ncutbacks long before company-union talks on the Guaranteed Anal Wa\u00abe reached the crisis point.\nSTART 1966 MODELS\nThis year U.S, automakers have\nbuilt more than 3,709,000 cars,\nagainst 2,800,000 at the same time\nlast year Inventories are at an all-\ntime high of SOO.OOO.'At least seven\nmanufacturers are expected to shut\ndown In the next two months to\nstart production of 1956 models.\nThe concensus seemed that brisk\nactivity in other fields would offset the auto decline. Department\n(ore sal?s for the week ended May\n5!) were 10 ncr cent hlRher than\nthe same week of 1954; retail sales.\nDun and Brarlstreet said, ranged\nrom 4 to 8 per cent higher than a\nvrar asto.\nTrade observers said declines in\nauto purchases would free vast,\nsums of consumer dollars for other,\n.-.r-o-fs.   Vacation   resorts   mkht!\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, JUNE 6, 1955\u20149\nSlumps Experts\nBy HENRY BAKER\nCanadian  Press Staff Writer\nPowerful waves, of buying swept\nthe major Canadian and United\nStates stock exchanges last week\nsending prices to near-record levels\nIndustrial issues set the trend in\nboth Toronto and New York, with\ndemand heaviest in the last two\nsessions. Toronto industrials were\nparticularly strong and enthusiasm\nspread to golds, western oils and\nbase metals,\nWeekly gams of $2 and more in\nblue-chip stocks were common\nMany lower-priced mining issues\nrecorded gains of more than SI.\nMclNTYRE UP $7\nSeveral Issues had even sharper\nclimbs. Mclntyre went ahead $7 to\nS6T.12Vi emonK golds and International Paper S8.S0 to $106.90 in In\ndustHals.\nThe surge has financial experts\nstumped. They have been predicting for months that a corrective\nsell-off action ls Just around the\ncorner. Yet prices continue to rise\nSteels and motors were strong in\nboth Toronto and New York. Toronto industrial index hit an all-\ntime high Friday and ended at\n406.80, up 8,38'on the week. Oolds,\nwestern oils and, base metals, were\nstrong. The last group reaching the\nhlohest Index levels since 1081.\nThe Associated Pre<> average,\nbased on 60 key Wall street stocks,\nclimbed 81-30 to $56.60, a. gain of\n$1.70. '   \u25a0; \"\"\nBULLISHNESS GENERAL '. ;\u00abf ,-\nIn Toronto trading speeded ub\nas prices climbed with bullishness\nspreading to uraniums and lower-\npriced reining stocks.\nVolume was, 7.000,000 shares Friday. Numher of Issues traded and\nvalue of transactions during the\nlast five months neSrly equal fig\nures for. al'. 1984.\nBetween $1 and $2 higher among\nToronto  industrials  were   Algoma.'j\nAlunjinum, Ford A, Transmonntsln\nPine Line. Southam snd CPR.\nCanadian Car went ahead $8.80\nCanadian Car A $4.50, Canadian\ndredge $3 25 and Hinde and Douche\n53.\nCanadian Vickers dropped $5\nGeneral Dynamics $4.30' and Western 13.50.\nNoranda   registered   the   biggest\nAutomobile purchases sparked a\nwhirlwind rise of more than $500,-\n000,006 in the total instalment debt\nof the American people during\nApril. At month's end instalment\nindebtedness was $23,300,000,000\u2014\na record high.\nIng $2.75, followed by Ooco, $1,874,\nQuebec Lithium $1.37V4 and Inter^\nnational Nickel $1.25. Steep Rock\nwent up .05 to $10.80.   .\nGunnar shot up $2.B2H amon|\nleading urolniuma and Canadian\nCollieries and prldo)l were way out\nIn front ln Western oils, bouncing\nahead $2 and 91.28 respectively.,\u00bb,\nIn Montreal -.\u00bb:,,heavy buying\nwave hit the lasttwo sessions.   $1\nPapers, utilities, senior oils and\nbeverages showed, strength! Mined\nalso moved up..    \u25a0   '\nWeekly index gains at Toronto:\nIndustrials 2.35 ta 405.50, golds 1.33\nto 83.21 base metals 2.82 to 187.02,\nwestern oils 2.08 to 109.70.\nWeek's volume; 38,015,000 sharei.\nPrevious week: 18,716.000. Stockl\nadvancing 377; declining' 243; unchanged 130.\nWeekly index changes at Montreal; banks off .02 to 46.77, utilltlos\nuo 2.3 to 126.2, Industrials up 4.6 to\n277.9, combined Up 3.0 to S280,\nnepers up 22.89 to 1399.61 and goldf\noff .32 to 82.65. ,.\nWeek's volume;. 370,831 Industrials and 2,103,800 mines,\nStocks advancing 174; declining\n133, unchanged 118.\nTutils!a fains\n^m Rule\nPARIS (Reuters) ti The Frenen\nand Tunisian premiers have signed an agreement granting home\nrule to the No?th African protectorate for the first.'tin* since 188.1.\nPremier Edgar-. Faiira ot Frarfch\nand Tunisian -premier Tahar Ben\nAmmar put their names to.the pact\nIn Faure'a official -raldenca.\nThe agreement, worked out over\nthe last nine months, grants Tunisia Internal autonomy but leaves\nFrance in control of thi territory;!\nforeign and defence affairs. France\nestablished its Tunisian rule by\nforce 74 years ago.\nBritain Buying\nB.C.'s Lumber\nPORT ALBERNI, B.C. <CP),-\nMore than half of the 13,541.330\nboard feet o{ lumber shipped from\nthis port ln Mity went to tha United\nKingdom market.\nThirteen deep-sea ships, one making two calls here, sailed with\nproducts of Port Alberni mills. Be-\nsides 20,312 tons of lumber, 156 tons\nof plywood and 4072 tons of pulp\nwere exported.\nCLASSIC IED ADS GET RESULTS\nMACHINISTS\"\nBENNETTS  LIMITED\nMachine Shop      Acetylene and\ncler-lnc welding   motor rewind\nin^    Ph.,ne  M3   324   Vernon  St\nTIMBER    CRUISER\nrimOL'r  Cnnst-t    Anywhere in  Ef(\n1.\"   \"irii   st ( w \u2022 \\k. f-tTv    w f \u25a0\nNi'lium lathi Nettn-\nClassified     Advertising Ratei\nPer line, 1 time .20\n2 consecutive times .3.^\n3 consec.Aive times -4ft\n4, 5 and 6 conseculive\ntimes 60\n26 consecutivj times $182\nNon consecutive insertions     .20\na line per time\nBox numbers   11 extra.\nPUBLIC    (LEGAL!    NOTICES\nTENDERS, etc. - 20c per line\nfirst insertion 16c per line each\nsubsequent insertion\nALLABOVE RATES LESS 10%\nFOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nSubscription Rates:\n(Not  More  Than  Listed  Hers)\nBy carrier per weeK\nin advance .30\nBy carrier per year $1560\nUnited States. United Kingdom\nOne'month ... $ 1.26\nThree months        $ 3.75\nSix months        ., $ 7.50\nOne year $15.00\nMail in Canada outside Nelson\nOne month .. $ 1.00\nThree months            $ 275\nSix months            $ 5.50\nOne year $10.00     |\nWhere extra postage Is required\nabove  rates  plus  postage\nT. A. RICE, vice-president In\ncharge of rnanufacturing of the\nInternational Harvester Company\nof Canada, Limited, Hamilton,\nOnt, was elected president of the\nCanadian Manufacturers' Association for the year 1956-56 at the\n84th annual general meeting In\nMontreal. He succeeded J. A. Calder of Montreal.\n(Continued In Next Column)       I READ   THE  CLASSIFIED  DAILY  J\n.Buying\u2014Selliii\nYour Classified Want Ad on This 'Handy\nORDER FORM\n *\nai\t\nFIRST LINE\nSECOND LINE\nTHIRD LINE\nFOURTH LINE\nFIFTH  LINI\nSIXTH LINI\nSEVENTH LINE\nEIGHTH LINE\n\u2022  Put one word in each space.\n(Each group ot numbers or letters count as one word )\nO  Put your address or phone number in the ad.\nO  Box numbers count as four words.\n(Box 00 Nelson News.)\nTO CALCULATE RATES USE THIS TABLE\nPw Lin*\n1  Insertion\n2 Conaocutivo  Insertions\n3 Consecutive Insertions\n6 Consecutive Insertions .\n26 Consecutive Insertions\n$ .20\n.38\n.45\n.60\n1.82\n\u2022 Minimum charge is two lines\n\u2022 Add He for Box Number\n\u2022 Deduct 10% from above rates if payment is\nenclosed\n\u2022 Take advantage of the low six time rate\nNon Consecutive Insertions 20e\\ a Line Per Time.\nYou Reach Over 36,000 Readers With Your Nelson Daily News Classified Ad\nNo of Days Ad Is To Run *\u25a0\nYOUR  *UME   \u201e ..  ..\nBill Me  . i_\nADDRESS    : \u2014\u00bb ,  Payment Enclosed ; -\t\n- Nelson Daily News\nClassified Advertising Department, Nelson, B.C.\n \"For the Overburdened Purse\"\nJergens ever-popular Hand Lotion\u2014 iCClfc\nWith free cake of Woodbury Facial Soap  OD^\n1 package Facial Soap of 4 cakes\u2014 3 I if\nWoodbury. Special Price    ., 3 I ^\nGiant Size Colgate Lather Shaving Cream\u2014 \u00abC 3 <t\nWith 5 Personna Blades free   03t*\nLarge Size Lifebuoy Shaving Cream\u2014 g> j J.\n-With 1 cake Lifebuoy 8oap free   03t\nA Special for Suffers or Rheumatism\nLumpago and Kindred Ailments\n100 Dolcin Tablets\nAt Regular Price of $2.39 with 50 TABLETS FREE.\nMIA M N\nto\u2014Kelson daily news, Monday, June 6,1955\nfreeze Forces\nHospital fo\nCut Work Staff\nVICTORIA (CP) \u2014 St. Joseph's\nhospital authorities here say they\nsee no alternative but to cut staff\nto meet increased costs.\n\"It's the public that's going to\nsuffer,\" commented one official. \"We\n.are just not in a position to cope\nwith Pur 1955 budget.\"\nA government freeze order has\nleft the responsibility oi increases\nin wages this year to hospitals.\nThe St. Joseph's official said she\ndid not know \"how we can cut out\nservices because it would directly\naffect the sick people We are here\nto benefit\" She said also she did\nnot see how the benefits could be\nmaintained with less staff.\nCo-ordinating Committee members prepare Red Cr;ss bedding for distribution to Strathcona Hotel fire victims\nin Memorial Hall. Red Cross shipped 100 blankets, 53 quilts, 25 pillows,\/25 pillow cases and 50 sheets'for the victims.\nLeft to right are Chairman of the Co-ordinating Committee George Hoover, Mrs. Ted Swendson, Rev. Allan Dixon,\nMrs. W. C. Murphy, Mrs. Dixon, E. W. White, E. E. Hopwood and R. B. Morris.\u2014Vogue photo,\nORD TRUCKS\n\u25a0 \u25a0:*\u25a0;..\ngive you true, gas-saving, short-stroke\noverhead-valve V-8 engines\nin every series in the line!\nFold Trucks for '55 bring you the gas-saving, money-saving power of\nshort-stroke overhead-valve V-8 engines right through the entire line\u2014\nfrom light delivery trucks to mighty \"Big Jobs\"! This great new line of\nMoney-Makers offers you five proved short-stroke V-8's, plus new engineering in valves, heads, crankshafts, electrical and cooling systems.\nRemember, with longer life and greater gas economy, short-stroke\nengines are money-makers\u2014so- don't be talked into an old-fashioned\nlong-stroke engine in the next tiuck you buy. Make sure of money-making power by going FORD! Your Dealer-invites you to drop in and\ntalk trucks with him any day. Make it soon!\nMake sure its SHORT-STROKE\nBefore you buy any new truck, look under the\nhood and be sure you're getting the kind of power\nthe whole trucking industry is gradually turning\nto\u2014true short-stroke power. Only if the stroke is\nas short or shorter than the bore, are you getting\na true short-stroke engine* Check the specifications and be certain I\nFord's proved, modern\nshort-stroke V-8 engines\ncut piston travel, cut internal friction, save gas\u2014and\nmake-money!\nFord Trucks give you high\npayload capacities, carry\nmore pounds per load, to\nsave trips, boost earnings 1\nAgain in '55, Ford'a\nfamous Driverixed cabs\nlead the way in comfort,\nconvenience and safety-\nfeatures that pay off in\nmore work per hour!\n1 '\nSEE YOUR FORD-MONARCH DEALER\nMEL BUERGE MOTORS Ltd.\n608 Vernon St.\nLOOK FOR THE.\nPhone 1744\nSIGN OF VALUE WHEN YOU BUY A USED TRUCK-SEE YOUR FORD TRUCK DEALER\n190 Men Idle al\nToronto Plant\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014Massey Harris-\nFerguson Ltd, laid off 890 men at\nthe weekend i,n its Toronto plant\nand more layoffs are expected this\nweek, a union official at the plant\nsaid.\nThe layoffs, which cut the Toronto plant work force by about\n20 per cent, was described\" by\nJames S. Duncan, chairman of the\nboard, as an \"unfortunate seasonal\nsituation, \"caused partly by the\nbad crop situation in western Canada, t\nBill Kerns, president of Local\n439, United Automobile Workers,\n(CCL-CIO), blamed the layoffs on\nthe loss of export markets by Canada's farm implement makers and\non the decentralization of company\noperations to plants in Germany\nand Australia.\nAnother Westbound\nAir Record Beaten\nMONTREAL \u2014 (CP) \u2014 A Trans-\nCanada Air Lines Super Constellation established a transatlantic\nwestbound record Saturday, a TCA\nspokesman reported.\nThe flight from Prestwick, Scotland, to Montreal was completed\nin 10 hours and five minutes, cutting 25 minutes from the previous\nrecord set by the same type of\nplane from Prestwick to Montreal\nOct. 24, 1954.     s\n10-Year-Old Forges\nMother's Signature\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 A 10-year-\nold girl, who stole a $2 cheque\nissued to her mother and cashed\nit at a bank,'was probably this\ncity's youngest forger, police disclosed Saturday.\nPolice said the girl admitted taking the cheque from her mother's\ndresser and signing her mother's\nname and her own on the back.\nThe girl was given a stern warning and released into the custody\nof her parents.\nRemember\nDAD\nFATHER'S DAY\nJUNE 19th\nLet us help you select\nDad's gift. The would\nappreciate \u2014\nSPORT SHIRTS\nPAJAMAS\nTIES\nDRESS SHIRTS\nSLACKS\nSPORT COAT\nT SHIRTS\nKMORY'C\nLTD.\n'THE MAN'S STORE\"\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED  DADVS\nPARIS (AP) \u2014 Foreign Minister\nAntoine Pinay told the French cabinet that the western powers currently are leaning toward Geneva\nand July 18 as the place and date\nfor the proposed top-level Big Four\nconference, informed officials said.\nThe cabinet heard a report from\nPinay on preparations for the conference.\nSays Missions\nNot Wanted\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014The 81s\/general assembly of the Presbyterian\nChurch in Canada was told last\nReek India is turning against the\nmissionary movement as a result of\ntremendous upsurge in Hinduism\nand nationalism,\n\"I dont think I'll finish out my\nnext five-year term in India before\nI'm asked to leave,\" said Rev..\nRussell Self of Toronto who has\nspent six years there.\nThey are beginning to turn\nagainst the missionary movement\nand we must work with speed in\nthe time left to us.\"\nMr. Self, 39, said India is a land\nof rigid religious customs and Is\neconomically poor because of it.\n\"They desperately need the Colombo and Point Four plans but\nthey also need Christianity.\"\nMr. Self said United States missionaries have been virtually driven\nout because of U.S. foreign policy. '\nCOMMITTEES NOT ENOUGH\nThe retiring moderator, Rev. J.\nL. W. McLean of Victoria, recommended the church set up a committee to evaluate the state of the\nChurch in Canada and the world ;\ntoday.\nRev. J. D. Smart of Toronto op- |\nposed, saying he didn't think a\nChurch could 'be reborn by appointing another committee.\n\"We should use the existing ma-.\nchine\u00bby of the Church and do more\npreaching, teaching and evangel- J\nism,\" he said.\nMayor Joseph Kary received a $25 donation for the\nStrathcona Fire Relief Fund from president of the Chinese Youth Association, Lawrence Mar, Sunday night at\nthe Nelson Civic Theatre. The donation was made from\nthe proceeds of the association anniversary showing of\nthe Chinese film, \"A Man From the Country.\"\u2014Daily\nNews photo.\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c line, 40c line black face type; larger type rates on\nrequest Minimum two lines, 10% discount for prompt payment\nEagles meet tonight at 8 p.m.\nRotary Luncheon, Monday, 12:15\np.m. Hume Hotel.\nDRY  CHICKEN   MANURE\n$1 sack  delivered, ph. 559-X-8\nFuller  Brush   Representative\nDon E. Sergent \u2014 Phone 1395\nBuy your horse collars and logging harnesses at Markoff's, Slocan\nPark.\n8LABWOOD FOR SALE. LONG\nCORDS OR CUT TO 8TOVE\nLENGTH.\u2014PHONE 330-L.\nMine wedges and loading sticks.\nT. H. WATERS St CO. LTD.\n101 Hall St. - Nelson - Phone 156\nB. C. Government Employees\nmeeting, Canadian Legion, Wednesday June 8 at 8 p.m.. Refreshments.\nGenuine Austrian Scythe Blades,\naluminum snaths, hay forks and\nrakes, carborundum and sandstones,\netc.'\u2014HIPPERSON'S: \u25a0\n'.'Dan River\" fine Chambrays and\nGinghams in checks and small plaid.\n36c and $1.10\nTAYLOR'8 DRY GOOD8\nHeintanan Piano Tuner will be\nIn Nelson until Juris 10. Phone 258.\nBen Sutherland Music & Appliances for appointment.\nChimneys cleaned and topped.\nFurnaces, stoves cleaned by vacuum\nPounder's Chimney Service\nPhone 1541-L\nNew 'Stretchie\" swim suits ln all\nsizes. Trunks for boys from $1.49.\nSwimsuits for girls from $1.59.\nEBERLE'S on Baker St\nColdwell Boxed Towel Sets. Come\nin a variety of colors.\nSTERLING   HOME   FURNISHERS\nProtect your potato crop with\nGreen Cross Potato Dust. Prevents\nblight,, destroys insects, simple to\nuse. \u2014 HIPPERSON'S.\n.  x     THIS WEEK'S 8PECIAL\nHardwood bookcases in walnut\nand natural finishes, $16.95. One set\nof maple double bunks with new\nspring-filled mattresses, $89.50 com\nplete. Also on sale one Inglis and\none General Electric washing ma\nchine, in excellent condition.\nWe  Buy and Sell  New and  Used\nFurniture.\nHOME   FURNITURE   EXCHANGE\nYOUNG 8ENATOR\nYoungest member of the United\nStates Senate in 1955 is 36-year-old \u2022\nRussell Long (Dem., Louisiana).\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS\nHAIGH\nTRU-ART\nBeauty   Salon\nPhone 327\n670 Baker, 8trooJ\nCAMPBELL, SHANKLAND\n& CO.\nChartered Accountants\nS76 Baker St. Phone 235\nAuditor!\nHave the Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVES\nLIMITED\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON1\nOPTOMETRIST\nVI8UAL  TRAINING\nMedical  Arts  Building\nSuite 206 Phone 141\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED and REPAIRED\nRECORING\nJim's Radiator Shop!\n616 FRONT ST.   PHONE 63\nCARD OF THANK8\nI would like to convey my thanks\nto Dr. Morrison and Nurses and\nStaff of Kootenay Lake General\nHospital, also to all friends and\nneighbors who sent cards and flowers to Mrs. D. T. Hubert during her\nillness and at the time of her passing.\nMrs. C. E. Mason\nFUNERAL   NOTICE\nBAILEY \u2014Funeral service for\nthe late Lewis Cobban Bailey will\nbe hejd Tuesday June 7, 1955, at 2\np.m. from Clarke's Funeral Chapel.\nRev. James M. Taylor will officiate.\n(No flowers ' by special request).\nCremation to follow.\nAsk Your Grocer for\nEllison's U-Bake Bread Mix\nWhole Wheat or White\nIt Makes Excellent\nHome-Made Bread.\nELLISON MILLING\nA  ELEVATOR  CO.   LTD.\n-   PHONE 238\nGive  yourself an\nELIZABETH ARDEN\nHOME PERMANENT\nComplete Kits\u2014$4.26\nRefill Kit\u2014$2.00\nPin Curl  Kit\u2014$2.50\nGives a natural-looking curl\nCity Drug\nYOUR. REXALL PHARMACY\nPHONE 34\nntaa\n'\n;;.U; ;\u25a0\u25a0\u2022 \u25a0\u25a0>\u25a0.-.   . \u25a0\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1955_06_06","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0429012","@language":"en"}],"Language":[{"@value":"English","@language":"en"}],"Latitude":[{"@value":"49.493333","@language":"en"}],"Longitude":[{"@value":"-117.295833","@language":"en"}],"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.","@language":"en"}],"Provider":[{"@value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","@language":"en"}],"Publisher":[{"@value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Company, Limited","@language":"en"}],"Rights":[{"@value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","@language":"en"}],"SortDate":[{"@value":"1955-06-06 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1955-06-06 AD","@language":"en"}],"Source":[{"@value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","@language":"en"}],"Title":[{"@value":"Nelson Daily News","@language":"en"}],"Type":[{"@value":"Text","@language":"en"}],"Translation":[{"@value":"","@language":"en"}],"@id":"doi:10.14288\/1.0429012"}