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Civilian To Be-Killed...\nTerrorists Shoot\nBritish Official\nNICOSIA, Cyprus (Reuters) \u2014 Cyprus terrorists,\narmed with automatic weapons, shot dead a British colonial\nofficial and severely wounded his Cypriot Turkish driver\nin the south coast city of Limassol Wednesday.\nThe victim was Thomas Mylrea, 28, an official of\nthe Cyprus education department and father of a two-\nmonths-old boy.\nout\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKootenay: Cloudy with a few\nshowers Thursday. Continuing\ncool. Light southerly winds at\ntimes reaching 20 in the main\nvalleys. Low and high at Cranbrook and Crescent Valley 40 and\n55.\nGunmen shot him down from\nbehind as he got out of his car at\na Greek school, the Limassol gymnasium, to conduct an English examination.\nMylrea is the 40th Briton \u2014 and\nthe fourth British civilian \u2014 killed\nin Cyprus since terrorist activity\nbegan 14 months ago in support\nof a Greek Cypriot campaign for\nunion of the island with Greece.\nENTERTAINMENT SPOT8\nCLOSE\nTroops cordoned off the area\nwhere Mylrea was shot and\nlaunched an extensive search for\nthe Cypriot gunmen. The closing\nof all entertainment places owned\nby Greek  Cypriots was  ordered\nfrom dusk to dawn until further\nnotice.\nTroops enforced a strict round-\nthe-clock curfew in the \"black\nspot\" village of Khlorakas after\nterrorists flung a bomb at a truck-\nload of soldiers enforcing a nightly curfew. No one was hurt by\nthe explosion.\nIn Nicosia, the capital, two\nTurkish Cypriot policemten were\ncharged with murder when a\nGreek Cypriot watchman in the\nwest Cyprus town of Paphos died\nof bullet wounds received last\nSaturday.\nNELSON, B.C., CANADA-THUHSDAY MORNING, JUNE 7, 1956\nNot More Than 6o Dally, 10c*Saturday\nNo. 39\n1 ^^^>anadians Win\nTop\\>erby Prizes\nBy The Canadian Preu\nThe click of a camera shutter\nseitled a small fortune on'a trio\nof Canadians Wednesday as a\nstartling Epsom Derby photo-fin-\nis..i decided the luck of the Irish\nsweepstakes draw for $5,896,000 in\nprizes.\nA  Montreal  theatre  manager\nand two Toronto ticket-holders,\nan employee of an auto-wreek-\nIng firm and a federal laboratory\ntechnician,  won   $140,000   each, stakes  which  yielded  $19,300  to\nbecause  they   drew   Lavandln, I George Philips of St. John's, Nfld.\nI\nStratford, Ont, and Peter Flocco,'\nMontreal.\nAltogether 105 Canadians drew\nhorses but .some of them didn't\nshow ,up at the post. The least they\nwill get,, however, is $1341 each\nand Canada's share of the 8500\nminor prizes should boost the na-\ntoinal winnings to byond $800,000.\nAlso based on the derby outcome was the Quebec Army, Navy\nand Air Force Association sweep-\nthe  wliiner  In  the  field  of 27\nstarters.\nThe second-place spot awarded\nMontaval when the photos were\nexamined  provided   windfalls of\nOfficials said the incident was #6,000 for a Saskatchewan miller I\nF. Kert of Montreal won $11,500\nfor his ticket on Montaval and the\nthird' prize of $7700 went to Harry\nOliver of Winnipeg who held Hoi-\nstar.\nnot connected with recent Gerco-\nTurk Cypriot rioting on the island.\nCommons Adjourned ...\nJohn L MacDougall\nCoast M.P., Dies\nBy DAVE MclNTOSH\nCanadian Prets Staff Writer\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 The Commons bell rang for the last time\nWednesday   for   John    Lome\nMacDougall,\nThe 67-year-old Liberal member for Vancouver Burrard died\nsuddenly, apparently of a heart\naeliure, at the  bell  summoned\nhim  to  Wednesday's   2:30   p.m.\nCommons sitting.\nThe   gruff  but  friendly-voiced\nScot succumbed  in  a  washroom\nnear his fifth-floor office' in the\ncentre  block   of   the   Parliament\nBuildings. At 3:20 a.m.  Wednesday he had been in the Commons\nehamber for final passage of the\npipeline legislation.\nThe Commons adjourned for the\nday immediately word reached the\nfloor that Dr. MacDougall was\ndead.\nLEADERS CONFER\nPrime Minister St. Laurent sent\n\u00ab noteto.Opposition leader-Drew,\nwlio walked across the aisle to confer quietly with him.\nMr. Drew returned to his seat\ntnd whispered to John Diefenbaker (PC. \u2014 Prince Albert) who\nwas speaking on' Mr. Drew's mo-\nQUEBEC ELECTION\nTO BE TWO\nPARTY BATTLE\nQUEBEC (CP) \u2014 A predominantly two-party fight in the June\n20 Quebec election shaped up on\nWednesday when 278 candidates,\nseven of them women, were nominated to contest the province's 93\nfonstituencies.\nIn 48 of the constituencies it will\nbe a battle between Union Na-\ntionale and Liberal candidates. In\nthe remaining ridings the number\nof candidates varies from three to\na high of nine.\nNominations closed \u201e at 2 p.m.\nEDT Wednesday.\nThe number of candidates nominated was the highest since 1948\nwhen there were 311. But the total\n* was well below the record of 333\nin 1944. In the last general election in 1952, a total of 241 candidates were nominated and five\nsubsequently withdrew.\nDOLLAR HIGHER\nNEW YORK (CP) \u2014 The Canadian dollar was 1-16 higher at a\npremium of 1 1-16 per cent in\nterms of U.S. funds. Pound sterling 5-32 higher at $2.80 9-32.\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 The U.S.\ndollar closed at a discount of 1%\nper cent in terms of Canadian\nfunds, up Vi. It took 98^ cents\nCanadian to buy $1 American.\nPound sterling $2.77Va, unchanged.\ntion to censure Speaker Rene\nBeaudoin.\nMr. Diefenbaker appeared stun-\nned;;Se.coU^*i;not.say,an*?thisig fflr.\nseveral moments and then, in a\nshaking voice, said:\n\"I move the adjournment of the\ndebate. The prime minister knows\nwhy.\"'\nMr. St. Laurent immediately seconded this motion and in a choking voice said:\n\"Many of us already have been\ninformed of the very tragic event\nthat occurred a few moments ago\nin this House by the sudden death\nHon. John L. MacDougall, M.P.\nof our very esteemed colleague,\nbeloved by all of us.. . .\n\"I thlhk that it would be fitting,\nin view of the fact that this tragic\nevent has occurred in this very\nbuilding, at the moment' he was\nproceeding to come and answer the\ncall of the bell to take part in our\ndeliberations this afternoon, that\nwe might adjourn the House as a\ntribute to his memory and as an\nindication to all his friends of how\nterribly shocked we are.\"\nDr. MacDougall, a dentist who\nhad to give up his practice because of First World War disabilities \u2014 he was wounded three\ntimes \u2014 had complained of not\nfeeling well during the last two\ndays. He had suffered a chronic\nheart condition for years and was\na diabetic.\nDr. MacDougall, a native * of\nTiverton, Ont., was born Nov. 18,\n1898, of Scottish parents.\nHe was first elected to the Com- j\nmons in the 1949 general election\nand was returned in 1953.\nHis   Commons    speeches   were\nnoted for their humor. A Baptist.\nhe was fond of Biblical references.\nHe was British Columbia Lib-\neral whip In the Commons and\nformer   chief   organizer   of   the\nB.C. Liberal Association.\nand two more Ontario residents.\nFour more Canadians in the West,\nOntario and the East won $28,000\nby virtue of Roistar's third placing.\n$800,000 JACKPOT\nCanadian winnings for the first\nthree horses, all told, should reach\n$800,000.\nThe big winners: L. H. Fleming\nMontreal; John Moler, Toronto,\nand D. H. Beaton, Toronto.\nMontaval \u2014 ($56,000): Colleen\nMartin, Toronto; John Parr,\nMoose Jaw, Sask.; and S. Curtis,\nRCAF station, Edgar, Ont.\nRoistar \u2014 ($28,000): Mrs. Irvin\nWeiner, Vancouver; Mrs. C. Beag-\nley, Toronto; Mrs. Fred Kennard,\nThreatofWar\nVanishes.\nSays Bulganin\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Russia's\nPremier Bulganin Wednesday hailed an era of world peace with a\nMoscow radio statement explain-1 fensive\nFRENCH PLAN\nBIG MOP-UPS\nSeal OH Mountain\nArea in Move To\nFlush Out Rebels\nALGIERS, Algeria (AP) \u2014 The\nFrench 7th Mechanized Division\nsealed off a section of the Kabylie\nmountains in north central Algeria\nWednesday in the stepped up campaign against nationalist rebels.\nThe French are trying to dupli\ncate their \"iron gates\" encircle,\nment of last week in which it was\nclaimed 500 rebels were killed or\ncaptured.\nSix thousand troops backed by\nAlpine units cordoned off the big\nmountain area, 55 miles east of\nthis capital city. The troops then\nconverged in a giant sweep aimed\nat flushing out rebel bands based\nin the region.\nThe operation closely followed\nthe pattern of the \"iron gates\" of*\nthe greatest French vic\ning that Russia now is disarming\nbecause the threat of war has\nvanished.\n\"There is nowhere a possibility\nof war breaking out,\" the broadcast said.\n,.. ^uig-minjofferel^this-afi* tbje- -\u00ab\u2022\u2022**\nplanation for Russia's recently announced intention to cut the Red\narmy* by 1,200,000 men without\nawaiting an international disarmament agreement.\n\"In Europe, Britain will not start\na war, the French do not want it,\nthe Germans cannot make it,\" he\nsaid.\n\"We hope that the Western\npowers will follow our example\nand do likewise. If clear indications of understanding are given\nand there is goodwill, the results\nwill be positive.\"\n(jJcdsA.\n(JslosIa.\nWed. Tues.\n1948\nNELSON ...\n....   18.00   17.98\n17.02\nHope \t\n...   27.33   27.19\n33.10\nMission   \t\n.   .    19.24    19.04\n24.21\nPrince George     25.46   25.95\n30.81\nTrail \t\n    42.80   42.30\n43.08\nRevelstoke\n    29.05   29.13\n30.76\nWardner  ....\n    11.62   11.97\n11.90\nCreston  \t\n    ,25.01   25.10\n23.50\ntory o\u00a3 the 19-month rebellion\u2014in\nwhich the 7th Division supported\nby the 19th Infantry Division trap,\nped a big rebel force In the Riban\nmountains farther east.\nMOPPING UP OPERATION\n\u25a0\u25a0*.. With' almost ;\u00ab\u00bb,00(Hft>Bi*<TOli*\nat its disposal in the big north\nAfrican territory, the French high\ncommand apparently ia aiming at\nbreaking the back of the nationalist uprising through a series of\nmassive mopping-up operations in\nkey regions.\nIn Algiers harbor, 14 American-\nmade helicopters rose from the\nflight deck of the French- aircraft\ncarrier Dixmude and were flown\nby French pilots to an interior\nbase.\nThe shipment represented a de\nlivery on recently signed contracts\nbetween the French defence ministry and the two American firms.\nIt will be followed by other consignments of helicopters later this\nyear and next\" year.\nMOSLEMS SWEAR LOYALTY\nFrench officials reported that the\ninhabitants of 210 Moslem villages,\nlocated about 120 miles east of Algiers, have formally proclaimed\ntheir loyalty to France in a moun\ntain valley ceremony.\nIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIMHIIIIinillllllllHIIIII\nROYAL BURIAL FOR BOY'S BEST PAL\nNEWARK, N.J. (AP) \u2014 A 13-year-old boy is going to spend\n$140 to bury his best pal \u2014 a dog.\nvTommy Gorse and his dog, Wow Wow, were born the same\nday and Tommy named the dog at the age of three when he\nbabbled the words, \"Wow Wow.\"\nInfant and pup grew to boy and dog,' staying side by side day\n\u00abnd night. The dog followed the boy to school each day.\nBut the dog died Tuesday of an internal hemorrhage.\nTommy's father, Thomas N. Gorse Sr., tried to persuade the\n. boy to bury his pet either in the country or in the backyard.\n\"But he was determined,\" said the father. \"He asked me if I'd\nbury a pal of mine in the backyard, and they certainly have been\npals.\"' *\nSo Tommy is spending $140 of his savings for college and\nmedical school \u2014 earned doing home chores \"and baby sitting \u2014\nto bury the dog in Restdale Park, Chester, N.Y., a famous animal\ncemetery\nService will be held Sunday and the pet will be buried in a\nsilk-lined casket in a concrete vault. The plot will receive perpetual care.\nII1III11H1IIII1IIIIIIIIIIH1IIIIIIIIIII1IIIIIIIHIMIIII1IIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIHIIIIIIIHIUII'\nMRS. CONSTANCE HITCHCOCK, 66-year-old grandmother\nand a former San Francisco newspaperwoman, poses with Erie\nJohnston aboard her 38-foot ketch Makai at Honolulu after a\n28-day voyage through storm-tossed waters. Johnston, a former\nSan Jose, Calif., newsman, told reporters that she skippered the\ncraft 2800 miles from Tahiti, much of which was through towering seas. \"It was the worst trip In my 30 years of sailing,\" he\nadded. Mrs. Hitchcock, who doubled as a cook, said \"we ate mostly\ncanned things\" during the rough trip. The other member of tht.\ncr.cw, Yves Jarsalllon of Lyons, France, was away in Honolulu\nwhen this picture was taken.\u2014AP Wlrephoto.\nPipeline Gets Approval\n\"In Principle\"\nTrail's Bay Avenue Flooded ...\nCreston, Revelstoke\nRiver Levels Down\nIt appeared   Wednesday   the quantities of heavy driftwood has\nbattle with high water had been\nwon at Creston but the flood\nthreat continued at Trail where\nwater wat all the way across\nparts of Bay Avenue. Flood\nworkere at the smelter city,\nhowever, were cheered by a report of a .08-foot drop in the\nColumbia at Revelstoke,\nCool overnight temperatures\ncaused a drop In the Kootenay\nRiver level at Creston from\n26,10 to 26.01. At Trail, the Columbia went up six Inches overnight Tuesday.\nWater was lapping at stores\non the far side of Bay Avenue\nWednesday night and It was\nnecessary to close down the\nOdoon Theatre when two pumps\ncould not cope with the situation.\nTen families were evacuated\nfrom Groutage Avenue in Trail\nWednesday as water lapped along\nthe street. Health inspectors planned to visit other beleagured\nhomes today to see if the flooding\nconstitutes a health menace.\nCity engineer George Sanders\nsaid residents who declined to\nleave any possibly threatened area\nwould be forcibly evacuated.\nTwo more pumps arrived from\nVancouver Wednesday,, bringing\nto seven the number in use keeping sewer lines free.\nTwo families on Castlegar's\nNinUvAyenue were evacuated and\n*t Je^'*t*w*Vntt#): jiomes in -the:\nlow lyihjr.Eastern part of th* village have flooded basements.\nWater level at Castlegar Wednesday night was 32.21 feet.\nDRIFTWOOD WORRY\nKootenay Lake ferries Anscomb\nand Balfour and the Columbia\nRiver ferry at Castlegar continued\nto operate. On the main lake, service was again halted when it became dark, and at Castlegar, only\nbuses, transportation cars- and\nemergency vehicles were taken\nacross at night.\nDriftwood is the big worry at\nCastlegar now, officials said. Great\nbeen blown upstream, but calmer\nweather is expected to release it,\nthey said. Some of the trees are of\n\"tremendous length\", they said.\nDriftwood is also giving ferrymen difficulties at Nelson, and\nnight trips are especially hazardous.\nAn army liaison officer said 100\nThird Reading Expected Before\nNoon Today, With Royal Assent\n.   To Make Bill Law by Afternoon\n*\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014The. government's thorny pipeline\nlegislation, which spent three storm-tossed weeks in the\nCommons, was put through two critical stages' by the\nSenate Wednesday night.\nSecond reading \u2014 approval in\nprinciple \u2014 was given after 6Vi\nhours of debate and the bill was\nput through' a clause - by - clause\nstudy without amendment in another hour.\nThe Senate only Wednesday\nmorning got the legislation from\nthe Commons. All that remains\nnow is third reading, which the\nupper chamber is expected to give\nwith little or no. debate when it\nAsks Withdrawal\nOf Censure Motion\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014Prime Minister\nSt. Laurent today appealed to Opposition leader Drew in the Commons to withdraw his censure motion against Speaker Rene Beaudoin.\nThere was no immediate reply\nfrom Mr. Drew though it was indicated the Progressive Conservatives would carry the motion to a\nvote.\nDESTITUTE WIFE\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014Mrs. Florence\nFitton, whose mail-driver husband\nRobert is to be hanged next month\nfor murder, Wednesday said she is\ndestitute and expecting a third\nchild in September. Mrs. Fitton\nsaid she and her mother- in - law\nare doing sewing in efforts to\nmeet rent and other bills, but the\nheat already has been cut off at\ntheir home. Fitton is under sentence to die July 1 for the rape\nslaying of schoolgirl Linda Lamp-\nkin, 13, last January.\niMiHiMiimiiniiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiin\nFlood Workers\nShaken Up\nCRESTON (CP) - Several\nsoldiers and airmen, including\nBrigadier. George Kitching,\n\u25a0 commanding officer of British\nColumbia area command, were\nshaken up Tuesday when their\naircraft hit turbulent air over\nthe  flooded  Creston  Valley.\nThe Brigadier was on an inspection tour. RCAF officials'\nsaid the Canso flying boat\ndropped 150 feet, throwing\nthe passengers, around in the\ncabin. The Brigadier suffered\na bad head bruise. Sgt. Frank\n\u25a0Smith, his secretary, needed\nseven stitches to close a head\nwound.\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIII\nof the 150 engineering troops rush-, reassembles   t 10:30 a.m. EDT t0.\ned into the Creston area to work\non the dikes will be withdrawn on\nSaturday.\n\"If normal recession now takes\nplace, the level should drop a\nfoot In the next six days,\" aald\nmagistrate Guy Constable at\nCreston. \"This will be an enormous relief to the entire area.\"\nArmy spokemen said it was possible that 50 more soldiers would\nbe sent back into the area, but\nthis would only be to spread the\nexperience around as many men\nas possible.\n25 Years for\nBank Robbers\nNEW. WESTMINSTER, B. C.\n(CP) \u2014 Three bank robbers drew\nsentences Wednesday of 25 years\neach for tije armed robbery in\nAprjl'of a bank at nearby Coquit-\nlam in which another bandit was\nKilled'and\"ah ' RCMP constable\nwounded. \" '\nSentenced by judge Bruce Fraser\nwere William Banks, 29, Howard\nG. Folster, 22, and William Gary\nOwens, 20.\nAll three had pleaded guilty to\narmed robbery of the Coquitlam\nbranch of the Royal Bank of\nCanada April 3.\nConstable Bud Johnstone, since\npromoted'to. corporal, was shot\neight times as he dashed into the\nbank. However he returned the\nfire and killed William Herbert\nHowerton of Vancouver and\nwounded Banks.\nBanks testified at the trial that\nHowerton suggested the robbery\nIn late March while all four were\ndrinking beer in a New Westmin-\nsetr hotel.\n\"At first we thought he was\njoking but we were all short of\nmoney and decided it might be\na good idea,\" he added.\nThe robbers got $10,000 out of\nthe bank but their escape was\ninterrupted by constable Johnstone and another RCMP constable\nwho recovered the- money and\ncaptured all the bandits within an\nhour of the robbery.\nday.\nSolicitor-General Ross Macdonald, governor leader, indicated\nthat the bill, after being approved\nby the upper house, will be given\nroyal assent this afternoon to\nmake it law.\nMEETS DEADLINE\nThus the government's deadline\nfor the bill's passage is almost\ncertain to be met.\nThe bill would lend up to $80,-\n000,000 to Trans-Canada Pipelines\nLtd. to build this year the prairie\nsection of the $375,000,000 gas line\nfrom Alberta to Montreal.\nUnder the government agreement with  Trans \u2022 Canada, the\nbill has to be'eomo law no later\nthan today If the company lo to\nbe held to Its agreement to build\ntho 575-mile prairie leg to Winnipeg by Dec, 31.\nDelay of third and final reading of the bill was made at the\ninsistence of Senator John T. Haig,\nopposition leader.\nHe said he diet not want the Senate accused of passing such.a controversial bill in a single day,\nSHARP CONTRAST\nSecond reading of the bill came\nROYAL YACHT IN\nSWEDISH WATERS\nSTOCKHOLM (AP) \u2014 Britain's\nRoyal yacht Britannia, carrying\nQueen Elizabeth and the Duke of\nEdinburgh, entered Swedish waters Wednesday en route to Stockholm for an official three-day visit.\nFlags flew in a brisk wind and\nship's whistles screamed a welcome as the Britannia entered the\nOresund straits at 17 knots, followed by. her three escorts\u2014two\nBritish warships and the Canadian\ndestroyer escort St. Laurent.\nAs the royal squadron speeded\nthrough the, narrow straits with\nboth Sweden and Denmark in full\nsight, a bright sun was shining\nthrough light summer clouds. Big\ncrowds, lined the shores and quais\nof seaside resorts and port cities,\nwaving and cheering.\nDUE FRIDAY\nWaters around the ships were\ncrowded with small vessels, sailing yachts and motorboats, some\nfilled with young people dressed\nonly in bathing suits.\nThe Britannia is expected to\nreach the Alma ground, outside\nthe Stockholm archipelago, early\nFriday morning.\nSwedish warships will escort the\nroyal squadron through the archipelago of 24,000 islands and skerries to the disembarkation point\nnear the Stockholm royal palace.\ni suddenly,   '\nSpeaker Wishart Bobinson put\nthe motion for the reading after\ncompletion of a speech.by Senator\nRalph Borner. (PC-Saskatchewan)\nwho strongly opposed the bill and\ncame put instead for public ownership of the.2200-mil\u00abHn\u00ab.  \u2022\nWednesday's speedy progress\nwas in sharp contrast to that in\nthe Commons, where the bill spent\nthree weeks under severe Conservative and CCF fire, before it\nreached a comparable stage of\npassage.\nOnly indication of disapproval\ncame when some senators said\n\"on division\" as the Speaker put\nthe question. This is a parliamentary device used to indicate opposition without a recorded vote.\nEarlier, it had been expected\nother senators would take the\nfloor on the bill and that debate\non second reading would go to\nmidnight or beyond.\nUNUSUAL MOVE\nSolicitor - General Macdonald,\ngovernment leader,, then carried\nout his undertaking to Senator\nJohn T. Haig, Progressive Conservative leader, to move the bill\nbe studied clause-by-clause by a\ncommittee of the whole house.\nThis is an unusual move for the\nsenate which normally gives such\nwork to outside committees.\nThus Senate passage of the bill,\ncontestedvfor weeks with every\nparliamentary device by the Conservative and CCF opposition in\nthe Commons, moved to its second-last stage.\n$375,000,000 PROJECT\nSolicitor - General Macdonald,\ngovernment leader in the Senate,\nopened debate with the statement\nthat Trans-Canada is the .only\nagency able to build the 575-mile\nprairie section to Winnipeg this\nyear.\nIf the line were not begun now.\nthe $375,000,000 project might be\ndelayed two and perhaps three\nyears.\nSenator John T. Haig, leader of\nthe seven-man Progressive Conservative group in the 102 - seat\nchamber, opened a quiet, unspectacular criticism of the bill.\nThe only issues! he said, is\nwhether the loan should be made\nto a company 83-per-cent American - controlled so that United\nStates investors \"can make money\nall the way around.\"\nCalgary Man\nHighways'\nChief Engineer\nVICTORIA (CP) ,- Highways\nminister Gaglardi announced the\nappointment of Fred T. Brown, 48.\nof Calgary as chief engineer fo?\nthe B.C. Highways Department,\nWednesday.\nHe will succed Neil McCallum\nwho resigned Jan. 31 because his\nposition had become \"untenable.\"\nMr, Gaglardi said Mr. Brown,\nformer chief estimator for Mannix\nConstruction Ltd., will take over\nthe position 4n two or three weeks.\nSalary is $10,800 a year, plus\n$2400 for the chief engineer's membership on the highways board\nwhich details construction plans.\n\"Hr^'SrowS'was defected' by the\nCivil Service Cbmmissiori from 12\napplicants, including two from\nwithin the Highways Department.\nThe position as been vacant\nsince March 31 when Mr. McCal-\nlum's resignation became effective.\nHe resigned following a reorganization of the department decentralizing control.\nFour other top-ranking highways department, engineers also\nresigned around the same time.\n. A.graduate of the University of\nNew Brunswick, Mr. Brown is\nmarried and has three children.\nHis previous appointments include chief construction engineer\nat Goose Bay for the federal department of transport; construction and maintenance engineer for\nImperial Oil Ltd. at Montreal;\nresident engineer for the Aluminum Company of Canada at Ar-\nvida, Quebec; structures engineer\nin charge of construction and\ncontracts for the Toronto subway.\nIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nA Declaration.\nOf Love ... in\nThe Classified\nKETCHIKAN, Alaska (AP)\n\u2014This reflection of romance\nappeared in the classified ad\ncolumns in the Ketchikan\nDaily News Wednesday;\n\"I am responsible for all\ndebts and obligations of my\nwife, Shirley, both present\nand future, and am more than\nhappy to be the provider for\na woman who has borne me\ntwo lively children, and whose\nlove and care has made the\npast three years of married\nlife the nicest years of my life.\nOn this, our third wedding\nanniversary, I wish to publicly express my gratitude.\"\nIt appeared over the name\nof Norman S. Nelson.\nIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nAnd in This Corner...\nSCHENECTADY, N.Y. (AP) \u2014 An army carrier pigeon based\nhere quit on a mission Saturday because of rain. The same thing\nhad happened the Saturday before.\nNow he's lost.\nThe army said Tuesday that if the bird is ever found it will fly-\nin an airplane \u2014 to Fort Monmouth, N.J., for a refresher course.\nDETROIT (AP) \u2014 Eddie Williams met three men In.a Bar and\nInvited them home to watch the late movie on television.\nEddie went to sleep. He told police he woke up at 4:30 a.m. to\nfind the visitors gone. So was the television set.\nCOLUMBIA, S.C. (AP)\"\u2014 The moonshining business isn't altogether mechanized yet.\nSouth Carolina liquor agents say they arrested 63 persons while\nsmashing 126 stills during May. Thpy confiscated 20 trucks and\ncars and two boats along with one wagon, one horse, and a mule.\nSupport Community Chest Household Canvass Tonight\n^\u2014\n\u2014\n -\t\naf-p-pror.\n:\t\n2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, JUNE 7, 1956\nTHE ROSE\nGtob\nTonight Thru Saturday \u2014 Complete Shows 7:00-9:05\nAUTO-VUE\nTRAIL, B.C.\nLast Times Tonight\nTime 9:00 p.m.\n\"BEACHCOMBER\"   (Technicolor)\nRobert  Newton, Glynls Johns\nSHORTS, CARTOONS, NEWS\nCASTLE THEATRE\nCastleaar, B.C.\nm Last Times Tonight\nTimes 7 and 9 p.m.\n\"FLAT TOP\"\nSterling Hayden, Richard Carlson\nFINED $20 AFTER\n2-CAR ACCIDENT\nRobert Sibbet of Nelson was i\nfined $20 and costs in city police '\ncourt Wednesday when he plead-;\ned guilty before Magistrate R. S. !\nNelson, to charge of driving with-1\nout due care and attention.\nThe offense occurred Tuesday i\nat 5:45 p.m. when Sibbet's car collided with' one driven by Robert!\nLeeming of Nelson, causing ap-1\nproximately $160 damage. The accident took place in the 1400 Block i\nAnderson Street when Sibbet allegedly hit the other car while |\nturning off Front Street onto An- j\nderson Street.\nSTARLIGHT\nDRIVE-IN\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\nTime    9    p.m.    Last   Complete\nPerformance 9:40 p.m.\nTor Your\nNew Baby\nDIAPER BAG\nNova  \"Two-Way\"\nTexturlzed\n\"Talc Scented\" Plastic\nPink or Blue, $2.19\nNelson Pharmacy\n\"Your  Fortress  of  Health\"\n433 Josephine St.\nPhone 1203       Nights: 394-L\n+ IS ON THE BIG\n%A THEATfK SCREEN\nAnted\nIS MORE HE-LARlOUS\nTHAM EVER IN WARNER BROS.1\nALL-NEW ALL-OUT\n**\u25a0          RtOTOFFUNI\n_i* _-\nflft?\n\\w Buiidinq >nows Decline\nIn May; Permits Total $1JrJW\nBuilding permits issued ' at the\nNelson City Hall during May\nshowed a considerable drop in\nthe amount of money being spent\non construction and repair from\nthe previous month's figure.\nA total of $17,719 was recorded\nfor May while $37,979 was recorded for April and $191,042 for\nMarch of this year. The May\nfigure was also considerably less\nthan that of May last year which\ntotalled $53,681.\nThe total for the first five\nmonths of 1956 is much greater\nthan that for the first five months\nlast year. This year's total to the\nend of May is $212,736 while the\n1955   figure   was  $98,826.\nThe following permits were\nissued during May:\nNelson Transfer, Hendryx\nStreet, to build an office on the\nWest Transfer parking lot, estimated at $900; Gladys A. Ewing,\n423 Silica Street, to remove partition and install bath, $900; H. D.\nMoir, 524 Gore Street, to replace\nkitchen and add two bedrooms,\n$3500; W. W. Bennet, 711 Nelson\nAvenue, to enlarge bedroom and\ninstall washroom in basement,\n$800; Laurence Simpson, Nelson\nwaterfront, to demolish a wood\nframe garage on the West part of\nthe property and re-erect East of\nCedar Street, $500; Andre Orbe-\nPythian Rites\nFor H. John\nGraveside services were conducted Thursday by Salmo\nKnights of Pythias Lodge No. 59\nfor Henfy John, Salmo village\nclerk and former well known Nelway customs officii figure, who\ndied in Kootenay Lake General\nHospital Sunday. He was 65.\nSalmo Memorial Community\nChurch was crowded for services\nconducted by Rev. Allan Dixon\nof Nelson and there was an abundance of floral tributes.\nHymns sung were \"Rock o{\nAges, and \"Abide With' Me.\" with\nMrs. W. Milburn accompanying\nat the organ.\nHonorary pallbearers were B. C.\nAffleck, Dr. N. E. Morrison,. R.\nH. Getchell, H. E. Doelle. A.\nNewman, S. T. Dawson and Mark\nRoberts, while active pallbearers\nwere R. McCameron, W, Hearn,\nJ. Hutton, O. Smith, W. Benton\nand J. Fraser. Interment was in\nSalmo  cemetery.\nHani, 624 Victoria Street, to Improve the attic room, make a\nsecond issue from the rear, install\na bathroom and sink, make a\nwalk way and install a separate\npower meter, $700.\nProvincial Government, to re-\nerect a house from 908 Nelson\nAvenue on 815 Third Street, $1500;'\nIOOF 302 Baker Street, to Install\na fire-door and fire escape, in the\nIOOF building, '$894;, Mrs: C.\nScally, 402 Observatory Street, to\nreshingle roof, stucco house and1\nmake minor repairs, $1300; D. S.\nWebster, 609 Second Street, to\nchange the position of the kitchen,\nwindows \u00bband doors, $150; J.\nMferas, 606 Front Street, to build\na fire escape, $100; R. L. Duncan,\n904 Silica Street to enlarge windows, $150.\nLouis-Coletti, 911 Fourth Street,\nto build a concrete foundation,\nfloor and fireplace, $1900; F B.\nPearce, 620 Kootenay Street, to\nstucco house and build new porch,\n$600; Neil Derby, 510 Cottonwood\nStreet, to reshingle South side of\nhouse and renew the durold, $75;\nJ. H. Johnson, 204 Chatham Street,\nto close off one door and line one\nsmall room, $40; Edith M, Brown,\n904 Stanley Street, to close in\nverandah, $75; Elmer C. Douglas,\n1124 Stanley Street, to replace\nplaster with plywood in three\nrooms, $300; George R. Stewart,\n504 Lake .Street, to install footings\nfor construction of a shop, $350;\nJ. C. Waldi,e, 1707 Kootenay\nStreet, to build garage, $200; Grace\nReese, 612 Fifth Street, to build\na garage and side shop and move\nthe front \" porch, $450; Mrs. J.\nMilne Sr., 618-A Victoria Street,\nto refinish the exterior of the\nhouse with imitation rock siding,\n$200; Enrico Laurino, 620 Victoria\nStreet, to re-side the building with\nduroid siding, $650; James Bureau,\n604 Sixth Street, to remove existing mullion frame and check rail,\nwindows and replace frame.\nV. Civetta, 709 Gore Street, to\nbuild garage and tear down woodshed, $100; C. J. Boettger, 519\nLatimer Street, to reside house\n$1085; C. E. Bambrick, 307 Car.\nbonate Street to build car port.\n$50. '\nCommunity\nChest \"Bite\"\nTonight\nEighty Community Chest canvassers in Nelson will conduct a\n\"blitz\" or residential areas tonight.\nDonations may be made by\ncheque, cash or Instalments\nthrough banks, employers or\ndirect. Canvass of the business\narea is being conducted by 18 canvassers. Goal of the campaign on\nbehalf of 19 beneficiary agencies\nid $20,000. i\nChest agencies this year are\nCanadian National Institute for\nthe Blind, Easter seals (Lions\nClub), Knights of Pythias Cerebal\nPalsy fund, B.C. Cancer Society,\nCanadian Arthritis and Rheumatism Society, camps Koolaree,\nLourdes and Galilee, Auxiliary to\nMount St. Francis, Beta Sigiria Phi,\nSoroptimist Club; Kokanefe chapter; IODE; Nelson Ministerial Association, St. John Ambulance\nSociety, Boy Scout Association,\nAir Cadet League, Navy League,\nLadies' Auxiliary to Nelson branch\nof the Legion and the Kootenay\nLake General Hospital Auxiliary\nPlus\nCARTOON.and SHORTS\nHISTORIC GAME\nOld records show that cricket\n\u2014then spelled \"creckett\"\u2014 was\nplayed at Guildford in Surry, England, about 1550.\nmmuim    \u25a0&**\nTHE NEW\nThe Weather\nSynopsis: The Pacific storm\ntrack has settled down over southern B.C. and the forecast is for\nthe present cool and cloudy weather to continue today. Cloudy skies\nWednesday kept temperatures\ndown to 57 at Vancouver. Warmest spot in the province was Penticton with 66 degrees.\nNELSON      39   52   .02\nMontreal     50   73    -\nOttawa     \u2014    45   77    _\nWinnipeg        60   69 1.05\nRegina _-    49   69    \u2014\nCalgary        34   59    \u2014\nKimberley         _   38   58    \u2014\nCrescent  Valley       38   58   .11\nVancouver           49   57   .08\nVictoria        48   60   .01\n4 Coffee Spoons\nIn the new \u201e\u201e.     ~     %\npattern    JlftMJ Jittlfi*\nOnly $1.25\nRegular value $3.00\nThree Months\nFor Dare\nGUELPH, Ont. (CP)\u2014 Two men\nwho police said stood on the Canadian National Railway tracks and\ndared a locomotive engineer to run\nthem down were sentenced Wednesday to three months in jail\n\u25a0Tohn Stakey Hamilton and Edward Breese were convicted on\ncharges of being drunk on railway\nproperty.\nOn 48-piece service for 8\nIn Bountiful New Cherrywoed Chest\nIncludes: _   .\n8 Teaspoons, 8 Dessert     0nly\nor  Soup  Spoons,   8 <>TAQ5\nforks, 8 Salad Forks, *\/7\n8 H.H. Stainless Knives,\n2 Tablespoons, 1 Butter\nKnife, 1 Sugar Spoon, 1 Cold Meat\nFork, 1 H.H. Pie Knife, 1 H.H. Salad\nServing Fork, 1 H.H. Salad Serving\nSpoon.\nRegular Open Slock Price....  $110.00\nREMEMBER . . .\n\"NOT AN   PENNY\nMORE  FOR  CREDIT\"\nAS LOW AS\n$1 Down\n$1 A WEEK.\nUse Your Credit\nThe Olson's Way.\nMrs. Jamieson\nTo Speak Hep .:\u201e.\nMrs. Laura Jamieson, who ls\nspeaking in this district on behalf\nof the CCF Party, is one of B.C.'s\noutstanding women, prominent in\nmany of the province's most progressive organizations.\nWidely interested in education\nand in social problems, her activities have embraced such active\nfields as lecturing at Vancouver\nnight schools, president of the\nB.C. Parent-Teacher Federation\n1925-26, and member of Vancouver\nCity Council 1948-50. Intensely interested in co-operatives, she organized the first co-operative residences for girls in Vancouver, and\nwas house mother at one of these\nfor several years.\nShe is president of the New\nVista Society, a Coast group dedicated to the building of housing\nunits for elderly citizens.\nFor    nine   years   a   Juvenile\njudge for Burnaby, Mrs. Jamie-\nson's experience with juveniles\nwill be at the disposal of local\ngroups 8unday night when she\nwill   meet  people   Interested   In\nthis   problem   at   the   home   of\nMrs. F. W. M, Drew at a non-\npolltlcal meeting.\nMeetings have been arranged for\nMrs. Jamieson in Creston tonight.\nNelson Friday and Kinnaird-Cast-\niegar area early next week.\nMrs. Jamieson has been active\nin the CCF for many years and represented Vancouver Centre in\nthe Legislature from 1939-45 and\nagain in 1952-53.\n24 Write\nTheory Exams\nA total of 24 Nelson and district\nstudents wrote Toronto Conserva\ntory of Music theory.examinations\nFriday and Saturday. Four of the\nstudents wrote a total of 14 grade\nfive examinations, the largest\nnumber of upper grades exams\never written in Nelson.\nThe exams were supervised by\nMrs.' Elva Kettleweil, representa\ntive of the Toronto Conservatory\nin Nelson.\nFrom June 21 to 25 inclusive,\ntotal  of  78  Nelson   and   district\nstudents will take their practical\nexaminations in piano and singing\n! at St.  Paul's United  Church.\nPiano examiner E. J. Farmer\nand voice examiner G. Lambert of\nToronto will examine three shr\ndents in solo performance for the\n| ARCT, four grade 10 piano' stu-\nj dents and two grade 10 voice stu^\ndents, as well as numerous others\nin the earlier grades.\nThe Nelson branch of the Reg\nistered Music Teachers Associa\ntion will hold its third and final\nrecital of the year at Trinity\nUnited Church on Monday night.\nOver 20 students of high school\nage will participate in the recital,\nfeaturing both  voice  and  piano,.\nSeveral   of   the   performers   are\nwinners of the recent Kootenay\nMusic Festival in Nelson.\nI\t\nFuneral at Coast for\nTrailite's Brother\nTRAIL \u2014.Funeral services will\nbe held in Vancouver today for\nStanley William George, brother\nof Mrs. A. H. Brewer of Trail.\nPresident of the Canadian In-\n40 Mining\nCerlificaies\nIssued Here\nA total of 40 mining certificates\nwere recorded and 56 certificates\nof work were issued at the Nelson\nMining Recording office last\nmonth.\nSixteen of the certificates of\nwork were taken out by Lewis\nSimpson; 14 by F. J. Brady; six by\nNels Noren; four by C. Senesael\nand E. H. Carlson; three by J.\nSapples; two by D.R. Terzian and\nJohn Stoochnoff Jr., and one each\nby James Turk, H. J. H. Yarbury,\nCharles Mayerall, Guy Gregg and\nC. Gallagher.\nThe following mining certificates were recorded:\nD. Atkinson and F..G. Allen of\nHaney, \"Robson\" Nos. 4, 5 and 6,\nsituated Northwest of the cemetery\nat Deer Park; Edward Arnot of\nNelson. \"Sunset\", two miles North\nof the junction' of Beavervale\nCreek and Beaver Creek and one\nmile East of Beavervale Creek;\nPeter Vrkljan of Nelson, \"Connie\"\nNos. 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11 and 12, on\nthe ridge between Swift Creek and\nHellroaring Creek in the vicinity\nof Salmo; William Koncewicz of\nCastlegar, \"Bil-Mecky\", 2000 feet\nfrom Bear Creek and 300 feet\nNorthwest of No. 3 highway, also\n\"Copper-Gold,\" \"Good Faith\" and\n\"Phey-Luck\". all on Bear Creek.\nG. P. Beatty of Nelson, \"Fluke\"\nNos. 1', 2, 3 and 4, two miles North\nof\u201eDeer Park; William Rozan of\nNelson, \"Sunset\" and \"Sunset\" No.\n1, on the West side of Copper\nMountain at the head.of Hall and\nForty-Nine Creeks; D. J. Enders-\nby of Fruitvale, \"New Look\" Nos.\n9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15 and 16, on a\ntributary of Boulder Creek about\ntwo miles above its mouth; A. R.\nGrams of Nelson, \"Firestone\" No.\n1, five miles West of Deer Park on\nthe Lower Arrow Lake towards\nBroadwater, B.C.; Ronald Tjader\nof Trail, \"Birch,\" \"Gimpy\" and\n\"Rummy,\" all in the vicinity of\nMeadows, west of Salmo; J. G. McMahon of Nelson, \"Marlene,\" and\n\"Marlene\" No. 2, \"Joan\" and \"Joan\"\nNo. 2, all at Beasley; D. R. Terzian\nof Nelson, \"Job\" No. 2 at Beasley;\nAlfred Derdall of Nelson, \"Rusty.\"\nat the confluence of Hall Creek\nand Salmo River and one half\nmile South of the highway bridge.\nSalmo-Trail Gun Club\nPlans 33-Acre Project\nTRAIL \u2014 Trail Rod and Gun.\nClub voted unanimously to back\na proposed development of com-'\nbined rifle range and park situated\nnear Ross Spur.\nIt is'to be a joint effort with\nthe Salmo Rod and Gun Club.\nThirty three acres is to be purchased and a rifle range developed, fitting in with dominion marksmanship specifications. Bruno\nRelmerm, president of the Trail\nclub said that it is hoped to have\na West-Kootenay shoot as an annual event.\nThe Trail club elected three\nmembers of the executive for the\nnew organization to be known as\nthe Salmo-Trail Gun Club. Al\nParslow was elected president to\nserve a one^year term; Fred Edmunds, secretary-treasurer, one-\nyear term; Don Allen, director f6r\na two-year term. The executive\nwill proceed to Salmo .Monday\nnight where the remaining three\nexecutive members will be elected\nafter the Salmo club has approved\nthe plans.\nJohn Welton gave a report on\nthe provincial convention held in\nince George. The zone conven-\non will be held in Kaslo on June\nth.     '\nShort Circuit Causes\nPower Interruption\nA fou^-minute interruption in\nelectrical power in Nelson and\nalong the North Shore at 11:32\nTuesday night, was caused by a\nsevere short circuit on the 12,000-\nvolt system. The short affected the\nmain station at Nelson and caused\na complete blowout.\nFather's Day: June 17th\nJv ^LcuUm (bad\nUSE\nfydfJMifL Oil\nYou cannot go wrong\nby making our store\nyour    shopping    centre\nfor\nFATHER'S\nDAY\nFrom the inexpensive\ngift for the little guys to\ngive, to the more luxurious items for the larger\nfolk, we offer a large\nand varied selection for\nyour choice.\nGodfreys'\nPHONE W*V}&1>\\ BOX\n! stitute of Sanitary Inspectors and\nI International Interim Committee\nj for three years, Mr. George died\nJ at his home in Vancouver Monday\n. at the age of 67.\nBesides his sister in Trail he is\nsurvived  by  his   wife,   Mildred;\n' one son, Stanley E. of El Cerrito.\n[Calif, one daughter, Mrs, Cathe\nrine Bennett Elliott of Boundary\nBay and five grandchildren.\nKaslo Residents\nFlooded Out\nKASLO \u2014 Several Kaslo residents have been required to move\nto higher ground as Kootenay\nLake at Kaslo is reported at the\n25-foot level.\nKaslo ball park is completely\ncovered and 800 feet of A Avpnue\nis flooded while 600 feet of B\nAvenue is under water. The basements of the homes in this area\nare also flooded.\nKaslo Creek dropped four or\nfive inches Tuesday night-but the\nlake continued to rise Wednesday.\nHear About\nModern .Miracles\n<at\nThe\nSolvation Army\nTHURSDAY \u2014 8 P.M.\nReclaimed Derelicts From\nVancouver's Skid Road.\nConviction Upheld\nAppeal  by  Ernest Johnson   of!\nNeedles, convicted of operating a\nmotor vehicle without a licence,\nwas rejected  in  county court in\nNelson Wednesday by His Honor ,\nJudge Eric P. Dawson.\nJohnson was convicted of driving a farm tractor without an\noperator's license by Archibald i\nHerridge. justice of. the peace at\nNakusp, He was defended by M. j\nE. Moran, while Warren N. Fergu-\nson acted as crown counsel.\nOLSON'S\nCREDIT JEWELLERS\n364 Baker St.\nPhone 1149\nARRIVES IN MOSCOW\nLONDON (AP) - James Muir,\npresident of the Royal Bank of\nCanada, arrived in Moscow Tuesday at the invitation of the chairman of the U. S. S. R. state bank\nboard, Moscow radio said Wednesday.\nFRIENDLY\nAMILY\nINANCE\nPersonal Loans\nFor  Blllti.  Fuel,  Repairs,  Ca-i\nor any good  reason.\nMOUNTAIN\nfINANCE CO. Ltd\nSuite 812   Medical  Arte Sldg\nPHONE   U86\nPANELYTE\n54 BEAUTIFUL COLORS IN STOCK\nINSTALL IT YOURSELF\nOn Counter Tops and Walls\nIn Kitchens, Baths, Playrooms\n\u2022 RESISTS STAINS, ABRASIONS   ,\n\u2022 CIGARETTE BURNS\n\u2022 WILL NOT CHIP, CRACK OR PEEL\n(faMchxbtxL\nENTERPRISES LIMITED\n301 Baker St. Nelson, B.C. Phone 17Q4\nIs the Day to Give\nto the\nCOMMUNITY\nCH\nHousehold Canvass\nVoluntary Workers Will Call Today and Tonight.\nBe Prepared To Give as Much as You Can.\nRemember Your Donation Takes the Place of 19\nSeparate Appeals For the 19 Agencies in the Community\nChest Group.\nCAMPAIGN HEADQUARTERS\nCHAMBER OF COMMERCE ROOMS\nPHONE 40\n  mmmmmm:\nGolden, One of BX\/s Oldest\nTowns, Considers Incorporation\nGOLDEN \u2014The community of\nGolden, one of the. province's\noldest settlements, is taking initial\nsteps toward incorporation as a\nvillage, under the Municipalities\nAct.     '\nGolden was established in the\nearly 1880s when the Canadian\nPacific Railway was extended\nthrough the Rocky Mountains to\nlink the province with the rest\nof Canada as stipulated by the\nBritish North America Act. It was\ninitially just a sub-camp from the\nmain construction headquarters\nin the area at Donald, which ls\nnow a ghost town.\nGolden with a population of\nabout 1000, is the largest and\noldest unincorporated settlement\nin the province. Its main occupations are railroading as midway\npoint between Revelstoke and\nField, lumber Industry in operating camps in the vicinity, and\ntourists because of its Trans-\nCanada Highway location near\nnational parks.\nLETTERS STARTED  IT\nSeries of general meetings .of\nrepresentatives through the community has resulted in a resolution to take steps toward incorporation with steering committee\nDr. J. E. Taylor, S. F. Thompson,\nGeorge\" Keenleyside, SI F. Feuz\nand George Marrs, while G. R.\nLanglands and Eugene LaRue\nhave been named alternates. Proposal arose from a.series of highly\nCritical letters to the Golden Stalin January pointing out defects\nin the community,- to which there\nwas a spirited response.\nAt the final meeting the committee Investigating proposed\nIncorporation reported that the\ncommunity provincial tax at unorganized territory with fire\nand street-lighting Improvement district levy now standi\nat 15.41 mills which currently\nreturni $6217. Principal service\nreturned from this It tnow removal and road maintenance In\nthe community at a coat of\nabout $5000.\nUnder the Act village tax rate\nmaximum would be 20 mills, and\nStore Your\nFURS\nNOW\nat\nCUSTOM\nSEWING CENTRE\n\u2022      580 Baker St.\nPhone 1653\nEast Kootenay\nFarmers Re-Elect\nNayook Man\nCRANBROOK \u2014 East Kootenay\nCentral Farmers' Institute annual\nmeeting here named L. G. Pippen\nof Mayook to continue for a third\nyear as its president, with K. M.\nMarples of Windermere vice-\npresident, A. B. Smith secretary-'\ntreasurer, and D. K. Archibald of\nCreston and J. R. McDonald of\nRoosville directors. Central representatives named to the provincial\nboard were Mr. Smith and R. B.\nHarris of Windermere, and auditor reappointed is Ronald Bailey.\nAssembling in Cranbrook to\nattend this meeting were deputy\nminister of agriculture William\nMcGillivray, and Institute supervisor for the province, Major L.\nW. Johnson of Victoria, interior\nsupervising agriculturalist G. A.\nLuyat of Kamloops and B.C,\nForest Service Nelson District\nForester H. B.'Forse of Nelson.\nthe village commission would\nhave the authority within limitations of the Act to administer the\nfinances' for the village which\nwould allow for necessary improvements, particularly in public utilities. No proposals have yet\nbeen made as to limits of the proposed village which must be\nunder rtOOo acres according to the\nAct. When the matter comes up\nfor ballot all adults within the\nproposed limits will be qualified\nto vote.\nProviding incorporation is approved, revenue sources in addition to the village levy would\ninclude per capita provincial\ngrants-in-aid, licence revenue\nand a local share of liquor and\nmotor vehicle licence revenue.\nFAIRWAY\n\u25a0    FOODS   LIMITED\"\nPHONE 1177 FREE DELIVERY\nMaple Leaf\nBacon\n39'\nLUNCHEON MEAT: ICam. 12 ox, tint .. .,     394\nTULIP MARGARINE:      M - ** lbs. $1.00\nBEEF STEW: York. 15 or. tins    S.\nPRUNE PLUMS: York. 15 ox. tii<.\nRIB ROAST:\nStanding\t\nBLADE ROAST:\nAnd Hound Bone.          \u201e.\nPORK ROAST: Z-g\nShoulder. ..: \u201e..\u2022. ;;gj..\nSTEAKS: T\nSirloin, T-Bone  . Lb.\nSTEAKS:\nRound and Delicpted        Lb.\nYOUNG FOWL: \u25a0\u00a3\nAve, 5 lbs. ..-.\u25a0  ...... Per lb;\nBEEF, VEAL, and PORK:   3\nMinced.        mw   lbs.\n33*\n2 for 290\nLb.\nLb.\nLb.\n59'\n39'\n39'\n69'\n59'\n53'\n89*\nMoyie Sawmill\nBoasts Newest\nIn Machinery\nCRANBROOK \u2014 A new stationary sawmill in Aldridge vicinity three miles South of Moyie is\nbeing completed this month and\nwill start production June 30,\nwith double shifts planned by\nJS&B Lumber Company Ltd.,\nbuilder of the new unit. Location\nis at the Northern end of a timber\nsale of 40 million board feet,\nlargely spruce with some fir,\n.larch, white pine and balsam\nbought by the company last year\non Sunrise and Sundpwn Creeks\nwhich flow into the Moyie River.\nThe sawmill will be equipped\nwith gangsaw, circular headsaw\nwith one of the new gangsaws\nwhich have been introduced successfully in this district this year,\nand a new type of 40-inch edger\nmanufactured at Klamath Falls,\nOre. It will turn out 50,000 f.b.m.\na shift.\nSTORAGE  POND\nThe mill is located alongside a\npond which has been excavated,\nand   will   be   fed   by   Sundown\nCreek,  large  enough   to store  a\nsubstantial log reserve which will\ntide   the  mill  over  any  logging\nweather   interruptions.   The   mill\nwill employ about 15 men a shift.\nRough   lumber   produced   there\nwill be trucked continuously the\n23.miles from the Aldridge green-\nchain to the company's planer on\nthe South end of Cranbrook, for\nfinishing, yarding and  shipment.\nTimber   sale   runs   Southward-\nfrom   the   new   plant   about  six\nmiles to around 5000 feet altitude\nwhere  a crew of about  15 men\nwill be located in camp on the\nlogging   operations   to   feed   the\nmill,   and   three   logging   trucks\nwill haul down to the mill site.\nOperating   logging  equipment\nof the company on  Iti timber\nsale    Includes    its    spectacular\nfour-wheel flexible  power log-\ngermoblle which handles up to\n6000 feet of logs a trip.\nCompany   president   is   E.   V.\nHorsman, with Bert Nelson vice-\npresident and logging supervisor.\nWalter Barrett secretary-treasurer\nand general manager, and directors are John Kurie  and Robert\nSparks who is also in charge of\nthe greenchain.\nJS & B last year had its logging\ncamp and portable mills in operation in this ne'w timber sale, but\nthese were closed in ..early April\nfor spring runoff which is continuing and is preventing any\nwork at present at higher levels\nabove the new mill.\nHltl i M1MII IIIIIIIMUMIIII\nSnowball Fight\nClimaxes Hike\n\u25a0CRAWFORD BAY\u2014traces of\nIjiigering Winter can. turn a\nSummer hike into out-of-seasbri\nsport.\nWhen members of the Crawford Bay and District 4H Club\nclambered to the top of the\nHazel May mountain,, leader\nWillard Foster refereed a snowball fight. Sixteen boys and girls\nmade the climb.\niiimiiiiiiiiiii.ii.iiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiitir,\nNeedles School\nTakes Honors\nIn Track Meet\nNAKUSP\u2014Students of Needles\nEiementary-High School brought\nhonor to their school by winning\nU.c annual Arrow Lakes track\nT.eet. held here recently. , .\nIn second place was Edgewood\nElementary School. Nakusp High\nSchool came third, Arrow Park\nElementary-High fourth, Nakusp\nElementary fifth, land Burton Elementary sixth.\nDivisional winners were pee-\nwee boys, Burton; peewee girls,\nEdgewood; midget boys, Edge-\nwood; midget girls, Burton; juvenile boys, Nakusp Elementary;\njuvenile girls, Needles; junior\nboys, Needles; junior girls,\nNeedles; intermediate boys, Nakusp High; intermediate girls, Arrow Park; senior boys, Nakusp\nHigh; senior girls, Needles.\nIndividual top scorers in each\ncategory were peewee boys, Ken\nPalmer of Nakusp; peewee girls,\nSusan Palesch of Edgewood; midget boys, Harvey Palesch of Edge-\nwood tied with J. Finch of Arrow\nPark, midget girls, Lanny Hender-\nlon of Nakusp; juvenile boys,\nBarry Johnson of Nakusp Elementary! juvenile girls, Peggy Farrer,\nEdgewood; junior boys, Gerald\nHascarl of Nakusp Elementary;\njunior girls, Sheila Milne of\nNeedles; Intermediate boys, K.\nNatsuhara of Nakusp High; intermediate girls. Beverley Mole of\nArrow Park; senior boys, .three-\nway   tie,   between   Noel   Wilson,\n 1\n\u25a0i     ''\"''\"' '\u25a0 \\ t-    i*.    ' '\u25a0'\u25a0' \"\u25a0'    ''' \"\nFarmers Urf e 6ovrl lo Intensify\nStudy ol Cosily Cattle Disease\nCRANBROOK \u2014 -rtoproyincitil\nDepartment of Agriculture has\nbeen asked in resolution form by\nthe East Kootenay Central Farmers' Institute to increase its research into vibriosis as H affects\nrange cattle in the province and\nto increase assistance toward'\ndiagnosis of this costly cattle disease, when it is supected in any\nsection of B.C. The meeting defeated a resolution from Ta Ta\nCreek Institute that the government program, tp eradicate Bang's\ndisease be concentrated more on\nanimal vaccination than on the\ncurrent bldod-testing program.\nTransfer of administration of\ncrown grazing lands from'the B.C.\nForest Service to the Department\nof Agriculture was supported- by\nthe meeting, along with increase\nin inspectors and stricter enforcement of the Noxious Weeds Act.\nAlso supported was opening of\nvarious East Kootenay game reserves for big game hunting in\nthe 1956 season, and establishment\nof a minimum $50 penalty for\ntrespass on private lands by\nhunters and suspension of hunting\nlicense.\nColliery Workers\nGo On Summer Hours\nNATAL \u2014 In accordance with\na vote among union members, all\ndepartments in the Michel colliery have gone on a summer\nschedule of work whereby shifts\nstart an hour earlier.\nStarting times are now 11 p.m.,\n7 a.m. and 3 p.m. On October 20\nworkers will revert to the former\nstarting hours of 12 p.m., 8 a.m.\nand 4 p.m.\nB.C. Power Commission assistance toward community installa-.\ntions for electrification of th?\nscattered or isolated farm lands\nv\/ithout this utility will be asked.\nRemoval of all weight and size\nrestrictions on trucking through\nKootenay and' Banff National\nParks is being 'asked of the Department of Resources following\nreconstruction of this road as\nTrans-Canada Highway IB.\nm5\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, JUNE 7, 1956 \u2014 3\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimi\nWhen in Spokane\nLeave Your Car at the\nCITY RAMP\nGARAGE\nTHE ONE STOP SERVICE\nfor\nChevron Gasoline and Olli\nMotorola Radios\nParking\nWE NEVER CLOSE\nFirst \u2014 Stevens \u2014 Sprague\nI1IIIM Ml!! I; l!i Mill MlilMllll 11 MM IM MS I\nWELCOME   CANADIANS\nTo the\nChungking Inn\nSpokane's Most Popular\nRestaurant for Famous\nCHINESE  DISHES\n\u25a0   and\nAMERICAN  FOODS .\nVisit the Ping-On Lounge\nfor Cocktails and TV .\n710  W.  SPRAGUE\n*,M\u2122th  and\nDavenport   Hotels\n\"Canadian Monev Accepted\nat Par\"\nStop at the\nNESTISH\nMOTEL\n10915 E. Sprague\nOpportunity, Wash.\n18 Large, Modern Family Units\nTV \u2022 Kitchenettes \u2022 Telephones\nPHONE WA5231\nArthur Payne. Prop.\nSPOKANE\n\u2022 CHOICE  STEAKS\n\u2022 PAN FRIED CHICKEN\n\u2022 COCKTAIL LOUNGE\nThe\nSKYLARK\n618 W. Sprague,   Spokane, Wn.\nDirectly  Opposite the  Ridpath\nFREE 2-Hour Parking at the\nRamp for  Customers\nMEET ME AT\nPHIL'S\n\"THE FINEST IN FOOD\nAND COCKTAILS\"\nIN SPOKANE\nEnjoy  Our  Italian  Cuisine\nVisit tho  Ripple Room\n110   NORTH   HOWARD\n2 doors south of\nOrpheum Theatre\nSPOKANE,   WASH.\nRosslanders Give\n492 Pints of Blood\nROSSLAND (CP)-A total of\n492 pints of blood, largest amount\never donated here at one time, has\nbetn collected by the Canadian\nRed Cross clinic.\nDenis Stanley and Wayne Highland, all of Nakusp High; senior\ngirls, Beryl Mole of Arrow Park.\nIs Your TV\nHard On the Eyes?\nIf if is, you had better have it checked by our\nEXPERT TECHNICIANS\nWE Specialize in TELEVISION SALES & SERVICE\nOnly an   EXPERT can give you the TV reception you deserve.\nPHONE 1300 DAYS \u2014 1033-R NIGHTS.\nALL WORK ABSOLUTELY GUARANTEED,\nMcLennan, McFeely & Prior Ltd.\n476 BAKER ST.\n(NELSON BRANCH)\nNelson\nPHONE 1300\nAll-HIIE IRONING TAIUE\nHoi been fudged outjfanding\nfor its good design, aa bated\non its form, function, originality, good value and consumer acceptance by the\nNational Industrial Design\nCouncil.\nMORPHY-MCHAROS ZA-10\nUici ony tap water.\nAutomatic. Heat-controlled (jivci mere\nsteam for heavy fabric),\nless (er light)-\nWhen you Buy A\nSTAINLESS STEEL WASHER\nTWO-TONE\nDouble tubs, one inside\nthe other. 6-minute wtih-\ning action. 4-port bell\nbearing mechanism. Indestructible cost iron\nsafety wringer. 6-year\nguarantee. All-white or\ncolour choice.\nFINISH\nJ07 45\nO\/.tXTI\n$50,\nEXTRA VALUE\nMINIMUM\nTIUDE-II!\n'87.*\nTOTAL EXTRAS\nMcKay & Stretton Ltd.\nNelson, B.C. Phone 1555\nP53\nTERMS TO SUIT YOU \u2014COM! IN AND SEE US\nholiday\nexciting\nKAMLOOPS\nCARIBOO\ncountry\nFor Information Write lo\nBRITISH   COLUMBIA .GOVERNMENT\nTRAVEL   BUREAU,   VICTORIA,   B.C.\nAutomatic Heating is EASY TO BUY... Use EATON'S Special Offer!\nStart Paying MUCH LATER...MOW...with a 10% Down Payment\nInstall your Heating Equipment 1st Payment won't be due till October\nNOW, while you're thinking about it! NOW is the time to get what you've always wanted . . . Automatic Heating! And a proven, TECO\nfurnace is so very easy to buy! Clean, comfortable, warm, filtered ai r! And all automatic, too. Just set your thermostat. , . for constant,\neven temperature heating . . . whenever you want it, as long as yo u want it! No more manual labour with your house heating, no more\ndust, ashes, messy basements.\nThat's what a TECO AUTOMATIC FURNACE DOES\nFOR YOU. IT'S A GIFT TO YOUR HOME!\nTO YOUR FAMILY!\nKaton's TECO furnace has abating of 94,000 B.T.U.'s and Is\ndesigned for efficient, economical use. It will be installed by\ncompetent workmen and assure you years of satisfactory service. See this unit at Eaton's, think of what a benefit automatic\nheating will be in your home and you'll be sure to pick this\nTeco unit on this SO VERY EASY TO BUY PLAN!\nTECO, 94,000 B.T.T.'i\nfurnace and air\nconditioning unit,\nTECO Pressure Burner\nand all necessary\ncontrols,\nTotal Price For\nFurnace and Burner.\n139\n.50\n50\n$\nYou can instal this furnace yourself or upon\nrequest we can have this completely installed\nfor you.\nWe have a good selection of furnaces to\nchoose from in oil, coal and gas.\nCOME IN - WRITE IN\nPHONE IN\nBuy Now on EATON'S\nBUDGET PLAN TERMS\nMail This Coupon To\n*T. EATON C\u00b0\n1 \u25a0      CANADA       ^tlMITED\n636 Baker St Nelson, B.C.\nPlease check'any of the following you are interested in:\n(  )  PLUMBING      (  )   HEATING      (  )  CONVERSION   BURNER\n( ) APPLIANCES ( ) RADIO  and  TV ( ) FURNITURE\nAn Eaton salesman will contact you to learn of your problems.\nYou of course will not be under any obligation.\nYour Name  \u201e\t\nYour Address\t\nCity or Town   \t\nDown\nIMinimum  Purchase   15.00'\n10 Months to Pay on Purchases  Under 75.00\n18 Months on Purchases of   75.00 gndunder 200,00\n24 Months on Purchases of 200.00 and under;400.00\nUp to 36 Months on Purchases of 400^00 and over\nAn equitable carrying charge is made for this accommodation     ..V\n636 BAKER ST.\nNELSON\nPHONE 1860\n\t\n , ,\t\nI\n'\"\u25a0-.=*\n\u2014~-\n-\u2014\u25a0\n;.\u2022-. -\u25a0    \u25a0    :        \u25a0   : \u25a0 .-\nNflamt Satlg Nwia\nEstablished April 22, 1902\nInterior British Columbia's Largest Daily Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday and statutory\nholidays  by   the  NEWS  PUBLISHING  COMPANY\nLIMITED, 266 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia.\nAuthorized as Second Class Mail, Post Office Department, Ottawa.\nMEMBER  THE AUDI!   BUREAU  OF CIRCULATIONS\n'   MEMBER Ub   THE CANADIAN  PRESS\nThe Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news\ndispatches credited to It or to The Associated Press or Reuters in this paper,\nand also the local news published therein.\nThursday, June 7,1956\nObserving Safety Rules Makes for\nHappy Camping\nSummer is with us. True, it is raining and the rivers and lakes are rising, but when the rains have stopped\nand the floods have receded, many\nwill be going to summer camps and\ncabins. It is the highlight of the year\nwhen the family spends its holiday in\nthe wilds under primitive conditions.\nBut every year summer brings with\nit loss and tragedy.\nDeath and injury come from careless driving brought on by the lightheadedness of relief from the daily\nround of work. At holiday times, particularly, there should be no suspicion of haste in driving, no attempt\nto 'keep to a fixed schedule and no\nhurry to arrive at a destination before\ndark.\nFire is and can be as much a peril\nin the hot days of summer as it is in\nwinter. Cabins which have been left\nfor so long should be looked at with\nan eye to possible fire hazard. All\nbrush and dry grass should be removed from the vicinity, the woodshed tidied, and other buildings\ncleared of rubbish and inflammable\nmaterials.\n\u2022 Stoves and chimneys should bs\ncleaned, not only because fires will\nburn better, but to remove the incrustation of tar which'is so dangerously\ninflammable. If oil or gasoline are\nused as illuminants or for other purposes, care should be taken to have\nthe supply in a s?fe place anart from\nthe cabin, and lamps should never be\nleft burning when there is no one in\nthe room. Cigarettes, which are the\ncause of many forest fires, should be\ncarefully extinguished.\nWater in summer is enticing, but\nevery year it takes its toll of life.\nIt is unwise to swim alone. Cramps\nand hidden dangers can cause drowning. Water, indeed, should be given\na great deal of respect. The learner\nshould never attempt to swim beyond\nhis depth or beyond his capacity to\nkeep afloat. As for boats, they are safe\nonly so long as they are carefully\nused. Too many persons aboard and\nan unwise move and a boat will capsize, with resulting disaster. Even\nfishing, that most innocent and peaceful of pursuits, has its dangers. It is\neasy to step into a hidden deep hole\nand find no footing, or to be trapped\nby the foot by rocks on the bottom of\na stream. As in swimming, young\nfishermen should never go alone\nalong an unknown stream.\nThe humble but necessary axe can\nalso be a danger to the inexperienced\nuser. Only a blunt axe should be used\nfor splitting wood, and even then it\nshould be carefully used. For the\nmany minor cuts and bruises of camp\nlife, a good first aid kit should be\ncarried.\nSafety is not automatic; it needs a\nconstant appraisal of possible danger.\nFor a safe and hapoy holiday, make\nit a point to look ahead.\nExemption Plan\nical Gimmick\nLetters To The Editor\nLetters  to  the   Editor  on  any  topic  ot  genuine   Interest  are   welcome   If'they   are\nbrief, accurate and fair   No letter will  be inserted In whole, or in part, except over  the\nsignature  and  addre-s  ot   the   writer.   Unsolicited   correspondence  cannot  be   returned.\nPremier's Tax\nSeen os Polit\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u2014t am writing this letter to give my\nanalysis of Premier Bennett's tax exemption\nplan.\nThe premier stated that legislation would\nbe enacted to gi\\e all heme owners an exemption of taxes o.i the first $1000 of assessment on improvements, and that the government would rebate the municipality for\nthis amount.\nTaken at its face value, this sounds very\ngood, and many people will feel that here :s\none time they are going to get something fo*\"\nnothing. If this was so I would be the first to\ncommend the premier, but*before jumping to\nconclusions let us consider the plan and its\nimplications.\nTo start with, we must realize that we\nare not going to get anything for nothing. It\ntakes so much money to run the country, and\nit all comes from the people. Therefore, if hn\nis going to give it back, he must first tak^Mt\nfrom you. One obvious way to do this is to\nfirst increase the assessment, and then give\nyou a credit.\nThe premier stated that the plan was on\na comparative basis with the exemption on\nincome tax; people with small incomes would\nbenefit; it would encourage people to own\ntheir own homes.\nIf assessments on improvements were\nany criterion as to a man's ability to pay,\nthen it may be fair to compare thjs scheme\nwith the income tax structure, but improvements  invariably  only  indicate  a  person's\nc'.ssi.e to ci'eate a good environment for his\nf-mily, or pride in his community. More\noften than not we find people of modest\nmeans continually improving their home,\nwhich usually represents his life's savings,\nwhile another individual with greater means\nis satisfied to live in a shack. This is the\nreason why our present system of assessments is not* fair, inasmuch as it does not\nencourage people to improve their homes,\nThe premier's suggested \"tax exemption\"\ndoes nothing to alter this inequality.\nIf his n!?n limited the asses-msnt on\nhomes up to a certain value, and a person\nwas e::?mntei from increased assessment due\nto his desire to make modest improvements,\nf'en I am sure most people would agree that\nthere was merit in the plan.\nAs-long as we are going to carry on our\npresent system of taxing improvements. I\np*n su**e the average person is not interested\nin the exemption, but the total figure that\nhe murt pay.\nIf the premier is sincere in his efforts\nto help those in need, why not totally ex\nem~t the homes of people who are receiving\ntha cost of living bonus, social assistance,\nmothers' allowance, war veterans' allowance,\netc.? I am sure 'a move such as this would\nreceive the commendation of everyone.\nOr, why not get rid of some of the nuisance taxes, such as the 70 cents per diem\nthat the municipality pays to the hospital\ninsurance fund; the 5 per cent tax on meals\nand clothing; the discriminatory tax on fuel\n?Questions?\nANSWERS\nOpen to any reader. Names ot\npersons asking questions will not be\npublished There Is no charge tor this\nservice QUESTIONS WILL NOT BE\nANSWERED BY MAIL except where\nthere Is obvious necessity tor privacy.\n\"Flower-Lover\", Nelson\u2014Would you please\ntell me how to press a corsage?\nThe usual way is to place it between\ntissue paper (or wax paper), taking care the\npetals and leaves are not folded, then put\nanother layer of paper over it and cover\nwith something weighty, such as a book.\nPerhaps other readers may know different\nways of preserving a corsage?\nInterested, Robson\u2014Just what is the trouble\non Cyprus? Cyprus was annexed by\nBritain during the 1914-1918 war. Why\nall the rioting and bloodshed? What do\nthe people of Cyprus want?.\nIt is easier to answer the last question\nfirst. A number of Cypriots want to be reunited with Greece. At present the population of Cyprus is 80 per cent Greek, and 20\nper cent Turkish. The Steering Committee of\nthe U.N. General. Assembly in 1955 voted\ndown a proposal by Greece to discuss self-\ndetermination for Cyprus. The vote in favor\nwas four\u2014Soviet Union, Poland, Egypt. Mexico; against, seven\u2014United States, Britain,\nFrance, Chile. Luxembourg, New Zealand,\nNorway. Abstaining were Nationalist China,\nEthiopia, Haiti, Thailand. Earlier in September, 1955, negotiations in London between\nBritish. Greek and Turkish foreign ministers\nled to Greek dissatisfaction with the British\nproposal, which offered Cyprus \"internal\nself-government compatible with strategic\nrequirements^ but not self-determination.\nThe British government, friendly toward\nlarger representation for the people of Cyprus, stressed the needs of the \"internal situation\" (Recently Sir Anthony Eden stressed\nagain the \"international situation\" by stating\nthat Britain needed bases on Cyprus to protect her oil interests in the Middle East.)\nTurkey has also made it clear that the island\nis important to her for the security of Anatolia. The Imperial Ottoman Bank and the\nBank of Athens have agencies in the principal towns.\nThe history of the island is involved and\nbloody, but to bring it nearer to the present\nstate of confusion* The Turks took over from\nthe Venetians in 1573, and the Turkish administration lasted for 200 years, There followed years of riots and civil wars. In 1878,\nGreat Britain, by treaty with the then Sultan,\ntook over the occupation and administration\nof Cyprus. On the outbreak of war with\nTurkey in 1914. Cyprus was formally annexed to the British Crown. With the excen-\ntion of a few non-Cypriot Turks temporarily\nresiding in Cyprus, all the inhabitants accepted British nationality, \"the Greek-speaking inhabitants with enthusiasm.\" says Major\nSir Charles W. J. Orr in the 'Encyclopedia'\nBritannica, \"and their Turkish-speaking compatriots without demur.\" It is only comparatively recently that Greece has shown any\ninterest in freeing the island from British\nrule.\nNew Banff Hi&hway\n(Calgary Albertan)\nThe more one considers the population\nand traffic growth in these parts, the more\nmistaken it seems to be to build only a two-\nlane highway between Calgary and Banff.\nIn its first year after completion, we\npredict, the road will be literally jammed\nwith traffic from one end to the other, especially on summer weekends, and accidents\nwill be caused by cars trying to break into\nand out of the jam.\nYour Individual\nHOROSCOPE\n\u25a0By Frances Drake-\nLook in the section in which\nyour birthday comes and* find\nwhat your outlook is, according\nto the stars,\nFor Friday, June 8, 1966\n1 MARCH 21 to APRIL 20 (Aries)\n\u2014Try your best to clean up desk,\nbench or whatever your duties so\nyou may take It a bit easy for\nthe weekend and enjoy healthy\nrecreation with family, good\nfriends.\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus)\n\u2014 Friendly influences on the\nwhole, but don't overcrowd your\nday with unnecessary extra chores\nor work. Many small tasks can be\nhandled quickly, efficiently. Try\nto clear slate for the weekend.\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini)\u2014\nA -friendly period for your, talents\nand abilities, You might enjoy\nworking at a hobby as a change\nfrom Usual routine. It could ease\nWatch Your Lanquaae\nDISCORD (DIS-kord): Noun\u2014Want of\nconcord or agreement; disagreement; hence,\nstrife and conflict. Music\u2014a want of concord\nor harmony; a combination of musical sounds\nwhich strike the ear harshly; dissonance.\nOrigin: Old French\u2014Discord; earlier, Des-\ncort, from Descorder.\noil; the amusement tax on all non-profit\ncultural, educational and sports activities.\nSuch a move would help many people, remove some very disagreeable taxes, and reduce the administration costs that they involve.\nWhen you analyze the premier's scheme,\none cannot help but come to the conclusion\nthat it is nothing more than a political gimmick, and his sincerity is aimed more at attracting votes rather than what will do the\nmost good.\nLEO T. NIMSICK, M.L.A.\nThey'll Do It Every Time\nBy Jimmy Hatlo\nTODAY'S BIBLE\nTHOUGHT\nAnd while he yet spake with\nthem, Rachel came with her\nfather's sheep; for she kept them.\nGenesis  29:9.\nThe Bible is full of charming\nromances. Rachel's coming into his\nlife made a real man of Jacob. A\ngood woman always has that influence.\n(hint ?(sL\nSlory of Skid\nRoad Told Here\nConducting services at the Salvation Army Wednesday night\nand again Thursday night, Captain William MacCorquodale tells\nthe stpry of \"many miracles\"\nfrom Vancouver's Skid Road.\nCapt. MacCorquodale is stationed al the Salvation Army Harbour\nLight Corps. Harbour Light is an\nalcoholic rehabilitation centre.\nServices aire held each day, and\nhundreds of men queue up long\nbefore opening hours. During the\npast year 80,000 have attended the\nservices and the men are given\nsomething to eat after each service,\nThe Captain tells of men coming in who are too weak to hold\ntheir bowl of soup; but many stay\nfor spiritual counsel, which is fol-\nloweo!*by medical attention, clean!\nclothes, a room, and a job provided by Harbour Light's own labor\nbureau.\nSince its beginning three years\nago, the work has rapidly expanded and many have been restored\nto health and usefulness. Once recovered, the men are encouraged\nto help others take the same step.\nThe Captain recently returned\nfrom Germany where he worked\namong' Canadian occupation\ntroops. Since being appointed to\nhis present position, he has seen\nmany climb back from \"the bottom rung of the ladder to sanity\nand respectability.\" He is accompanied by three converts who tell\nof their escape from alcoholism.\nColored slides are shown, illustrating Vancouver 'jungle life'\nand the work of the Salvation\nArmy among the men and women,\nof Skid Road.\nwill stand by you when you need I lawyers; can succeed in any work\nthem. Always pray when troubled you seriously undertake and stick\nor confused and things will with. Take sensible care of health.\nstraighten out, run smoothly. You Birthdate: Charles Reade, novel-\nhave musical appreciation; make ist, dramatist.\nsplendid    salespeople,    debaters, I King* Features\nAppoint Successor\nTo C. K. Morison\nVICTORIA (CD\u2014R. L. Davison\nlibrarian for Vancouver Island regional library, wilh headquarters\nat Nanaimo, has been appointed\nsuperintendent of the Public Library Commission in Victoria.\n. He is to succeed C. K. Morison,\nwho retires Aug. 31 after 16 years'\nservice, first as provincial librarian, then as superintendent.\nThey Just Made It\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014A total of 70\nvotes, possibly a record on a single\npiece of legislation, were needed\nin the Commons to bring about\napproval of the government's pipeline legislation.\nThe breakdown:\nGovernment motions to advance\nthe legislation: 24.\nOpposition motions to delay or\nchange the proceedings: 14.\nProcedural questions raised by\nthe opposition: 5.\nAppeals from rulings of the\nchair: 24.\nMisc-i'Weous votes: 3.\nTotal: 70.\nI though*^ maybe that\" specialist\ncould find what was wrong with\nme, but a doctor don't use big\nwords like that unless he's hidin'\nhis ignorance.\ntension, be to good advantage IF\nyou don't strain.\nJUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer) \u2014\nGood rays today. Open up new\nand worthwhile channels if you\ncan. Don't let important people\nor papers Wait, and don't be\nannoyed if you have to wait yourself.\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leo)\n\u2014 Sidestep propositions you are\nnot sure of or which have not\nbeen well thought Over beforehand. Be co-operative, diplomatic\nin discussions, in business or with\nfamily.\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER 23\n(Virgo) \u2014 Advice to Gemini obtains for you now. Keep health\nup td' par; get in some outdoor\nexercis*e where possible; aiso\nsound recreation and sleep. Virgo-\nans often require more rest than\nthey take.\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER\n23 (Libra) \u2014 Vigorous activities,\nmilitary, naval and air force\naffairs, outdoor sports sponsored\nnow. Finances, good investments\nalso favored. Happy going!\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER\n22 (Scorpio) \u2014 Generous aspects\npromise many fresh advantages,\nbenefits. It is a stimulating day\nwith many and varied interests\u2014\na challenge to the ambitious.\nHave healthy fun, too.\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER\n21  (Sagittarius)  \u2014 Your Jupiter j\nis among the planets well aspected j\nthis promising day. Get essentials \\\ndone quickly, though thoroughly,\nto  better  enjoy  some recreation\nin    free    time.    Plan    weekend\nsensibly.\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY\n20 (Capricorn) \u2014 Financial matters, home, personal affairs can\nremain on the credit side today\nand much can be accomplished\nthrough clever management, proper allocation of tasks.\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY 19\n(Aquarius) \u2014 Extremes should be\navoided; also extravagance. Day\ncan be highly responsive and remunerative if you handle your\naffairs intelligently. Be enterprising; don't dally.\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\n(Pisces) \u2014 Your Neptune is going into a full and benefic aspect\nfor several days. .Make the most\nof every sound offering that can\nenhance assets, better your affairs\nall 'round. Good new opportunities now.\nYOU BORN TODAY have unusual talents and versatility; are\nrestless, interesting and usually\nlight-hearted. Be careful not to\nyield to flighty notions. Be 'loyal\nto friends and, of course, family;\ndon't heed schemers. Loved ones\nJ&a&y CELEBRATES\nNEW B. C. BRANCH OPENING\nSPECIAIS'FOR\nSUPERLINE\nWASHERS\nRegular Price $159*50\nReduced to   IV#\nBoatty has, opened its new factory\nbranch In New Westminster. To celebrate,\nwe were offered a \"buy\" on these\nwashers at low, low prices. We're passing\nour savings on to you.\nThese washers are not built to sell\ncheap. They're the same superior quality\nthat has sold more Boatty Washers than\nany other make. They carry the Beatly\n6-year guarantee. Have 6-minuto clothes\naction, friction-free Econa-miier mechanism, big porcelain tub and touch-\nrelease safety wringer. At a price lower\n'Man any we've ever offered on a top\nline machine.\nGet yours while they last!\nAlso available with pump\nat slight extra cost.\nLOW DOWN PAYMENT\nTERMS TO SUIT YOU\nWilson <& St enson\nSALMO, B. C.\nPHON!**; 38\n_\n I ABOUT THE TOWN\nTilllimmiiinillllilliiliiiiiiiiiiMiiiiHiiiuiiiiiiiH By Alice Stevens\nPHONE   1369  OR   1844\nThe last meeting until September of the Kiwanis Hostess Club\nwas held, at the home of Mrs.\nGeorge Latta, Vancouver Street.\nIt was reported at the business\nmeeting that a baby layette and\nclothing had been distributed to\nthree families in Nelson and district. Co-hostesses wtjre Mrs. W.\nH. Langridge and Mrs. J. S. Livingstone. A pot luck supper at the\nH. C. Cawley home on the North\nShore will begin the next season's\nmeetings.\n* *   \u2022\nR. B. Morris, 302 Vernon Street,\nis a patient in Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital. *\n* *   '*\nMiss Helen Brader, daughter of\nMr. and Mrs. M. J. Brader, Selby\nStreet, and Miss Del ores Kraft,\ndaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Erling\nKraft, Kokanee Street, have re-\nturnned to Vancouver after attending the Bachynski-Swanson\nwedding Saturday.\n* \u2022   *\n\u2022\nRelatives and close friends were\nguests Monday evening at a linen\nand cup and saucer shower honoring Miss Laverne Vance whose\nmarriage to E. R. Manderscheid of\nSpokane will take place June 8.\nCo-hostesses were Mrs, H.. A. D.\nGreenwood and Miss Denise\nGreenwood, 201 Behnsen Street.\nMother of the bride-elect, Mrs. E..\nL. Vance, poured while her sister,\nMiss Margaret Jane Vance, and\nMrs. Neil Hood assisted serving.\nGifts were presented to the bride-\nto-be in a white basket daintily\ndecorated with white lilacs and\npink tulips.\nMr. and Mrs, Vernon Hall of\nVancouver have sent word to the\nformer's parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nLeslie Hall, 810 Silica Street, that\nthey have become the parents of\na baby son, Patrick. Mr. Hall is\nwell known here, having attended\nNelson schools,\n* \u2022   *\nW. R. Gibbon, Q21 Silica Street,\nis a patient in Kootenay Lake\nGeneral \"\u25a0Hospital.\n* *   *\nRecent visitors to Spokane were\nMiss Aileen Slen, Carbonate\nStreet, and Mrs. A. R. Ramsden,\nNinth Street.\n* *   *\nMr. and Mrs. Joseph Hopwood\n(nee Joan Green) have returned\nfrom their honeymoon and have\ntaken up residence in their Summer home at Queen's Bay.\nMies Judy, Maglio, 1503 Cedar\nStreet, has left to attend the Kin-\nman Business University, Spokane\nWashington.\nLister Notes\nLISTER \u2014 Mr. and Mrs. Robert\nScott of Calgary were visiting the\nlatter's parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nHerman Sommerfeld.\nMr. and Mrs. Carl Larsen of\nCranbrook visited Mrs. C. A. La-\npointe, Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hus\ncroft and Mr. and Mrs. H. Denv\nchuk.\nMr, and Mrs. L. Minshall of\nMelville, Sask., are visiting Mr.\nand Mrs. Ed Knoll and Mr. and\nMrs. Hugo Sommerfeld.\nMr. and Mrs. Clayton Carleton\nof Orkney, Sask., visited Mr. and\nMrs, Ray Ragsdale and Mr, and\nMrs. H. Demchuk.\nWilliam Noren is visiting J.\nForner at Medicine Hat.\nTMad^L   FASHIONS\nEnjoy Summer Sportr\nand   Picnics\nBath Suits\nCotton Skirts\nShorts and Bras\nJeans, Slacks\nPedal Pushers\nCool, colorful\nSundresses\n\"THE STORE OF COURTEOUS SERVICE\"\nCAPITOL GROCERY\nand MEAT MARKET\nGroc. Phone 264 Meat Phone 831-832\nFREE DELIVERY:\nSIDE\nBACON\nBreakfast, \"TO**\nMaple Leaf. Lb. ' ^\nReady To Serve\nHAMS\nMaple Leaf.\nlb. 79c\nCHEESE\nFURTERS\nMaple Leaf.\nlb. 47c\nCottage Rolls: CO*\nHalf or whole  Lb. m* *W\nWeiners: ^Q*\nMaple Leaf  Lb. m* S\nPot Roasts: CO*\nCross Rib '... Lb. ** +*\nVeal Rolls: AC*\nBoneless                                       Lb. * \u2022**\nVeal Steaks: AC*\nShoulder  Lb. *J\nBoiling Fowl: 41)*\n4 to 5 lb. ave -   Lb. *-*\nHamburger:                       3 89*\nLean   \u201e  mw   ibs. W ^\nCall Early For Your\nROAST VEAL and PORK\nBates-Brown Wedding\nTakes Place in Spokane\nOf Interest In Nelson, the bride's\nformer home, is the recent wedding in Mission Avenue Upite'd\nPresbyterian Church in Spokane\nof Annie Regina Brown, daughter\nof Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Brown,\nand Donald Hope Bates, son of\nMr. and Mrs. J. 0. Bates of Calgary. Rev. G. Wright officiated at\nthe double ring ceremony.\nThe bridal gown was styled\nballerina-length and fashioned of\nlace, with three-quarter length\nsleeves. A white shoulder-length\nveil fell ln soft folds from her\nJuliet cap, and she carried a white\nprayer book mounted with a white\norchid'.\nThe maid of honor^Miss Gall\nCady, of Spokane, wore a powder\nblue ballerina-length dress of\ncotton and silk and a powder blue\nfeather headpiece with a short\nfront veil. Her bouquet was composed of pink carnations.\nThe groom's older brother, Mr.\nRobert Bates of Calgary, was best\nman, and Mr. Stanley Bates of\nCalgary, another brother, and Mrs.\nDouglas Brown of Nelson, brother\nof the bride, were ushers.\nTha organ was played by Mrs.\nF. Hesse, and soloist was Mrs. M.\nConnors who sang \"I Love You\nTruly\" and the Creed.\nA buffet reception took place at\nthe home of the bride' parents.\nCentering the bride's Jable was a\nthree-tiered wedding cake decor-\natd with blue bells and pink carnations, with a bride and groom\nornament.\nThe bride donned a winter white\nknitted suite with tan accessories\nbefore the newlyweds left on a\nwedding trip to Nelson, Calgary\nand Montreal.\n\u2022 Milk for pupils became free of\npayment in all schools in Britain\nin 1946.\nKASLO MUSIC\nREVUE DRAWS\nLARGE CROWD\nKASLO \u2014 The Halleran Studio\nheld its Firjal Music Revue of the\nseason in the School Auditorium\nwith a capacity audience in attendance.\nOn the program were the Boys'\nBand; the \"King's Pie\", with Mother Goose songs and stories acted\nby 22 pre-school children; Large\n\"Pie\" containing children as\nblack birds (Drum and Bugle\nboys in costume also took part in i\nthis feature); pre-school Rhythm\nBand and March, a vocal solo by\nSusan Perkins, \"Kitty of Coler-\naine\"; Irish Jig\", \"Jump Jim\nCrow\", dances by Senior Rhythm\nGirls in Irish costumes, trio, \"Old\nMacDonald Had a Farm\", with\nAlan Tarr, trumpet; Glen Leyden,\nclarinet, and Tony Barteline, baritone; violin solo, Kathleen Bed-\nwell, trumpet solo, Colleen Gil-\nker; the Senior Rhythm Band,\nthree numbers, including Anvil\nChorus with solo parts by Colleen\nGilker and Victoria Bedwell; and\nGirls Orchestra, three numbers,\n\"School Parade\", \"Love's Greeting\", \"Americanization.\"\nTwo outstanding numbers on,\nthe program were piano solos by!\nGloria Greensword \"Study\" and!\nFlorence Allen \"Waltz\". Theyl\nwere students when the studio J\nopened. Other selections were vo-l\ncal solo, \"Road to Mandalay\" by!\nMike Halleran; trumpet solo, by1\nDavid Hand \"Belle of the Ball\";!\nDance Band, \"Almost Tomorrow\"\nsolo by Carol Ringheim \"Memories Are Made of This\", \"Hot Dig-1\ngety\", solo by Judy Mclntyre with'\nband boys. Excerpts from Exam\nWork \"Grade IV\", clarinets, Leigh\nMiller, Douglas Palmer; trom-'\nbones, Boy Handley, Bruce Mitchell; trumpets, Lance Miller, Pat\nWalker, Grade VI, trombone, Terry Halleran; trumpet, Bob Morton.\nBoys' Band, selections, De Mo-\nlay Commandery; \"Saints Come\nMarching In\" by tiny majorettes\nTeresa McLanders and Betty Wallace; Our Director, \"Liberty Bell\"\nwith majorettes Barbara Hewat,\nKaren Surina, Roberta Mclntyre, J\nMary Davidson and Marlene Bacon. The selection, \"Band Who!\nCould Only Play One Tune\" was!\nplayed as band march, hymn, fun- j\neral march and waltz.\nHonor Band, Swing Flags-\nCarol Ringheim, Judy Mcltnyre,\nVerna Frie.\nDance   \u2014   senior    majorettes,\n\"Warming up\" March, Boys' Band, GfcsBaby'sOi\u2122 Tabled.\n\u25a0Girls'  Orchestra, Majorettes and Sweet, mild UtUe tablet*.\n.,    .       \u201e Nothing  better  to  help\nSwing Flags. ; de,, out bowsla mildtly\nMrs. Halleran was presented f ^J?*jZs?%&\nwith a dainty corsage of carna- j Ueed for more than 60\ntions, also on behalf of the Bands j rma.\n_    ,      . .    ,     _,  .       >. ,1     Equally good  lor the\nOrchestra     and     Majorettes,     by I restlessness and levorfshneBS resulting from\nBruce Mitchell, matched luggage I ^KWKTpft\u00a3\u00ab\u00a3*.\nand on behalf of the music pupils j take! Get a package today at drugstores.\nand pre-school group, a silver ;\ntray by Stanley Baker. To Mr.\nHalleran went a box of cigars]\npresented by B. F. Palmer. I       TABLETS\nSalmo Nurse Becomes\nBride in Vancouver\nSALMO \u2014 Seattle, where the Paul  McKclvlo   and   Mr.   Allan\nDIETICIAN . . . Wing Cmdr.\nMargaret Clark lo head of the\nRCAF food service branch. She\noverseee all food requirements\nfor the air force which In 1956\nnumbered more than 50,000 men\nand women. A native of Winnipeg, Ghe graduated from the\nUniversity of Manitoba In home\neconomics and served as command messing officer from 1942\nto 1945 for the now-disbanded\nNo. 4 Training Command with\nheadquarters In Calgary. She\nwas with the. veterans affairs\ndepartment for two years before\nreturning to the RCAF. \u2014 (CP\nfrom National Defence).\nCONSTIPATED\nBABY...\ngroom is attending University of\nWashington, will be the home of\nDavid Ernest Campbell and his\nbride, the former Katharine\nIrene Hanson, who were married\nin Shaughnessv Heights United\nchurch in Vancouver.\nThe bride, a graduate of Vancouver General Hospital schoqj\nof nursing, Is the daughter of\nMr. and .Mrs. Carl Hilbert Hanson of Salmo. The groom Is the\nson of Mrs. Ernest Albert Campbell and the late Dr. Campbell.\nRev. C. M. Stewart performed\nthe ceremony after which a\nreception was held at the home\nof the grooms mother.\nThe bride wore a gown rriade\nwith white Chantilly lace bodice\nbuttoned down the back and\npanel of lace down the front of\nthe nylon organdie and tulle skirt.\nShe carried gardenias and steph-\nanotis.\nMrs. Roy Bridge of Port Alberni was her sister's matron of\nhonor, .wearing sky blue nylon\norgandie over whispering taffetar\nMiss Janice Gordon of Nanaimo,\nMiss Moira Jack of Duncan and\nMiss Arline Campbell, sister of\nthe groom, were bridesmaids,,\nwearing nylon organdie over taffeta in a lighter shade of blue.\nMr. Philip Owen was best man\nand Mr. Geoffrey McLennen, Mr.\nUNION PLANS\nBENEFIT DANCE\nFOR INJURED MAN\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Under sponsorship of the Woodworkers Industrial Union of Canada, one of\nthe largest benefit affairs in years\nis shaping up in a dance Friday at\nthe KP Hall, all proceeds of\nwhich will go to Ed Romanick\nand family. He ls a former union\nmember who later became a\nlogging truck contractor. He became ill nearly two years ago and\nwas recovering from an operation\nwhen he suffered a spinal injury.\nHe has been incapacitated for the\npast 'seven months. In hospital\nhere for part of that time, he was\nalso taken to Vancouver for\nspinal surgery. He is now confined\nto bed at his Second Avenue\nhome and his recovery will require over a year of bed rest.\n' Everything for the dance is being donated including the hall,\nmusic and supper, and a spectacular array of donated merchandise\nas door prizes. Advance ticket\nsales are. going on through the\nsponsoring organization, and the\nScandinavian Brotherhood, mem\nbers of the Eagles, Mine, Mill and\nSmelter Workers at Kimberley,\nfellow workers in logging and\nsawmills, and many stores in\nCranbrook.\nSquires of Edmonton were ushers.\nMrs. Irma Zimmer, the bride's\nsister, came from Chicago for the\nwedding.\nAt the reception toast to the\nbride waj proposed by Mr. D. G.\nChamberlain of Williams Lake\nwho was her principal at Rossland\nHigh School. Mr. Chamberlain is\na former Nelson teacher.\nThe couple left for a honeymoon\nin the Canadian Rockies, Yoho\nValley, Lake Louise and Banff.\n%LBdbLCM$L\n(%. eXatVuL (tfheiltVL.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, JUNE 7, 1956 \u2014 3\n\"Granny\" Goes\nFishing at 101\nOSHAWA, Ont. (CP)\u2014Known to\neveryone here as \"Granny,\" Mrs.\nJennie Wilson played hookey from\nthe formal festivities of ther 101st\nbirthday celebration to go fishing\nin Oshawa harbor.\nAsked what luck she was having,\nMrs. Wiison smiled. \"I'm not worried ahout catching anything,\" she\nsaid. ''I've already got 12 grandchildren, 11 great-grandchildren\nand three great - great - grandchildren.\"\nAs a young girl, she was so\ndelicate that her mother predicted\nshe would \"never see 20.\" She\nattributes her long and happy life\nto \"keeping busy doing things.\"\nAt 101 she still plans the meals\nfor the six adults and three children with whom she- makes her\nhome.\nINDEPENDENT WORKER\n\"She 'gets her own breakfast,\nDeer Park\nDEER PARK \u2014 Mr. and Mrs. W.\nJ. Hale of Renata were recent\nvisitors to Deer Park, the guest\nof Mr. and Mrs. F. Briggeman.\nMr. H. Jamieson and son Barry\nof Fort St. John, B.C., are spending\na holiday the home of Mr. Jamie-\nsons parents, Mr. and Mrs. D. D.\nJamieson.      \u2022\nA. Law left for Elko, where he\nwill attend a course Tit the B.C.\nForest Service Lookout school be\nfore taking over his post at the\nBulldog Lookout.\nJ. Kline and A. Montpellier of\nTrail were  at Deer  Park  on\nfishing trip.\nNow In Stock\nBroadvein Jaspe\nStandard Gauge\nLinoleum Tile\n10 beautiful decorator colors\nIn a modern tile. Newest of\nthe fine floor tiles.\nONLY 14c\nFor a 9\" x 9\" Tile.\njji&mcw\nwashes her own dishes, makes her\nown bed, and even goes shopping\nfor a new dress, which she selects\nherself,\" said Mrs. Jennie Malloy,\na 21-year-old granddaughter.\n\"I like the new fashions,\" admits Granny. \"They are much\nbetter than skirts that drag on\nthe ground and being buried in\npetticoats.\"\nYou Are Invited\nTo Drop.Jn and\nSee Our\nNEWLY\nRENOVATED\nPREMISES\nWe are sure you will like\nthe new look in our\nstore.\nCome In anytime\nANDREW'S\nLEADERS IN FOOTFASHION\nEstablished 1902\nELEGANT FILET\nRoses \"bloom\" ln filet orochet\n\u2014combined with bands of regular\ncrochet to form a stunning cover!\nPattern 822. Crochet TV cover\n24 inches; bridge cloth 40 inches;\ntablecloth 56 inches \u2014 ln mercerized string; smaller in No. 30 cotton. Chart and directions.\nSend TWENTY-FIVE CEfJTS In\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern to Laura Wheeler,\nNDN, 60 Front St. W\u201e Toronto,\nOnt. Print plainly PATTERN\nNUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS.\nOur gift to you\u2014two wonderful\npatterns for yourself, your home\n\u2014 printed in our Laura Wheeler\nNeedlecraft book for 1956! Dozens\nof other new designs to order \u2014\ncrochet, knitting, embroidery,\niron-ons, novelties. Send 25 cents\nfor your copy of this book NOW\u2014\nwith gift patterns printed in lt!\n11 restlessness and levertshness resulting 1\na   digestive upsets at teething time and other\n; minor baby illn. Taste good and are easy to\n| take! Get a package today at drugstores.\nSALE of COATS\n5 ONLY \u2014 FULL LENGTH\nRegular $49.50 NOW $35.00\nRegular $75.00 NOW $55.00\nRegular $39.50 NOW $25.00\nPlui\nSHORTIES      \u00a3\nRegular $25.00\nNOW ONLY\n$19:95\nCHARGE\nACCOUNTS\nINVITED\n*\u00bb\u00ab\u2022\u00bb\u2022 \u00bb** |j\nGENERALipELECTRIC\n10 CU. FT.\nREFRIGERATOR\nDELUXE FEATURES\nAutomatic   Defrost\nTurn   Qut   Shelves\nTwin  Vegetable\nCrispers\nMagnetic  Door\n\u2022 70  lb.  Food  Freezer\n\u2022 Butter 8torage\n\u2022 Brightly Colored\nInteriors\nS\n95\nTerms Arranged\nNelson Electric Co. ltd.\nGENERAL\u00ae ELECTRIC\nAUTHORIZED DEALER\n574 Baker St. Phone 260\nQUTCHERTERIA\nWEINERS\nSwift's Premium Quality.\n2 lbs. 65c\nFRICASSEE FOWL\nReady for the     CO*\npan. Lb.  Js\nBOLOGNA\nFirst Grade.        TUT*\nBy the piece. Lb.\u00abfc\u00ab?\nFRYING CHICKEN\nPanco brand.     \"ICG\nPer Ib   I J\nPORK SPARERIBS\nShort cuts. \/LQ$\nLean. Per Ib. .. *T if\nBOIL BRISKET\nGrade A. *)C^\nPer Ib.  d*J\nBREAKFAST SAUSAGE\nFresh     *\\        \/TQ0\ndaily.     *m Ibs. 05*\n\u2022 Cucumbers\nFirm. ^Q^\nPer Ib 1*2\n\u2022 Tomatoes\nCalifornia. ^Q<\u00a3\nField. Lb.   d*7\n\u2022 Radish\nFrsh. \"\u2022}        %Ct\nbch. dm for   I J\n\u2022 Cantaloup\nChoice.       \"^Q**\nEach ...-- d.y\nA Complete Line of Delicatessen\nSalads, Roasted Chicken Pies,\nBaked Spareribs, Roast Beef and Veal\nPHONES 527-528 FREE DELIVERY\nPrompt, Courteous Service\n mmma,          .\n6 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, JUNE 7, 1956\nBans Rock-and-Roll\nSANTA CRUZ, Calif. (AP) -\nPolice Tuesday banned public\ndancing to rock-and-roll music In\nSanta Cruz. They said the heavy\npounding beat o'f rock and roll\nleads teenagers to \"highly luggei-\ntive, stimulating and tantalizing\nmotions\" A dance at civ.ic auditorium was closed because the\nmusic \"drove to abandon\" too\nmany teenagers there.\nOLD EXPLORER\nSir William Parry, Arctic navigator who died in 1855, entered\nthe British navy as a midshipman\nat 13 years of age.\nEdgewater Seoul\nCharier Given\nINVERMERE-Boy Scout Field\nCommissioner J. B. Scrivener of\nPenticton, presented the charter\nof the Edgewater Boy Scout group\ncommittee Tuesday to Chris Mad-\nton, president of the sponsoring\norganization, the Lake i^Wlnder-\nmere District Lions Club.\nThe charter was then presented\nto Jack Price, chairman o(. the\nEdeewater group committee.\nThe presentation was made at a\nparents night program in the\nEdgewater Community Hall followed by\" a demonstration of\nScout Cub activities. Scoutmaster\nis Allan Ramage, assistant Scoutmaster David Moore, Cubmaster\nJoe Siken and assistant Cubmaster Lloyd Payne*\nBuy, sell, trade the classified way\nSwedish Horsemen\nBear Olympic Torch\nSTOCKHOLM (AP) - Swedish\nriders have taken over the Olym-.\npic torch, and Wednesday sped\nthrough the deep woods of southern Sweden to reach Stockholm In\ntime.for the opening ceremonies\nof the Olympic equestrian games\nSunday.\nThe Stockholm Games are a\nprelude to main events at Melbourne in November. Foreign\nhorses are not permitted to enter\nAustralia, so the equestrian events\nwere switched,here.\nSweden is defending champion,\nand experts predict England and\nPEER'S NAME\nChatham ln New Brunswick was\nso named in 1814 after the second\nEarl of Chatham, a British commander in the war of 1812.\nGermany, together with Denmark\nand the United States, are the\nteams likely td provide the main\ncompetition this time.\nSwim Classes For All\nAt Crawford Bay\nCRAWFORD BAY - More than\n30 children and many of their\nparents attended a meeting to\ndiscuss swimming classes for the\nsummer. Instructor, William La\nPlante outlined the program and\nsuggested that Hans Linkowskl\ntake the swimming Instructors'\ncourse at Trail this summer.\nClasses for the children will be\nheld Wednesday evenings and\nSunday afternoons, and adult\nclasses for beginners on Friday\nevenings. Possibility of buying an\ninhalator for the district was\ndiscussed.\nStays Juicy;\nNever tumbles\nwhen you oook ground beef with\nBETTER-BLENDING,\nCarnation\nSpecial qualities of Carnation\nnot found in ordinary milk\nkeep ground beef moist and firm\nright through cooking    1 \/\n% cop (small can) undiluted\nCarnation Evaporated Milt\nlegg\nIVi pounds ground beef\nYi cup cracker crumbs\n1 Vi teaspoons salt\nNEW WAYS TO SERVE GROUND BEEF\nVi teaspoon pepper\n1 teaspoon dry mustard\nVa cup grated onion\nVi cup chopped green pepper\nBlend all ingredients\ntogether until smooth\nFor Wonderful Hamburger! - form mixture as\npafties; brofl.\nMeat Leaf. Bake meat mixture ia paper-fined loaf\npan in moderate oven (350\u00b0 F.) about 1 hour.\nCONFIDENTIALLY YOURS\n-by Byrne Hope Sanders\n' MONTREAL, Juno 7th \u2014 .Thank you. Mrs.\nCarney! From Nelson, B.C., comes a mouthwatering idea for using a family favoriU,\nBORDEN'S CHATEAU CHEESE. I tried it last\nnight \u2014and it wag a very great success \u2014so ths\n110 goes to Mrs. J. J. Carney with Borden'i\ncompliments!\nCAULIFLOWER  AND\n1 m-HllnB cauliflower\n1 cup  water\nV. tSP.   Hit\n3 tb-Bpt.   butler\n3 tbsps.  flour\nSOUFFLE\n1 cap milk\n. 1 cup Borden'i Chatun\nCheese, grated\nS eggs, separated\nsalt and pepper\nPlace the whole cauliflower in boiling raited water ln covered saucepan.\nCook until almost tender. Do not overcook. Mako cheese nauco by melting\nbutler ln top ol double boiler, then add flour, pepper and aalt, stirring\nuntil blended. Add milk slowly, stirring constantly. Add cheese, cook- until\nsmooth and thickened, stirring. Remove from beat, pour cheese sauce a\nlittle at a time Into alighUy beaten egg yolks. Beat egg whites until stiff\";\nelowly pour cheese sauce Into them while folding. Separate cauliflower\nInto tiny flowerets and add to egg and cheese mixture carefully. Pour Into\ncasserole and bake ln moderate oven 350\u00b0F. \u2014 40 minutes. Serves I to 6.\nRemember that each week Borden's offers 110 for the most interesting\nrecipe using one of their famed cheeses. Pirst recipe, when duplicated,\nwins. Send yours to me at Confidentially Yours, 1411 Crescent St,\nMontreal.\nOh lovely Junet D'you ever get used to the delights of full-flowering\ngardens \u2014and, too, of the first fresh vegetables\ncoming in? Now's the time for glowing health\nand that means plenty of nutritious, sunny-\nsweet   BLUE    BONNET   -MARGARINE \u2014\nbetter for flavor, better for nutrition, better for\nenergy!   Use   it  generously  a-top  your  fresh\nspring vegetables ... in your hot rolls \u2014on <$t\nyour morning toast. Blue Bonnet Margarine ia i^\nmade from pure vegetable oils and pasteurised \"iff;\nskim milk with essential minerals and vitamins. *-$\nYou'll quickly agree that \"Everything1* better\nwith Blue Bonnet on it!\"\nCover Your Face , . . with your\nfingers   and   take\nan honest look at\nyour   hair-do,   all\nby   itself.   Ia   it|\nreally aa pretty aa'\nit   might   be?   If\nyou   hoped   for\nsomething better\u2014\njust try LANOLIN\nPLUS Hair Spray\nSet\u2014the    \"triple\nEurpose\" spray. It\neeps your hair-style soft and\nsecure \u2014guards against wind and\ndamp-day droopiness ... It makes\na perfect pin-curl set . . . giving\nyou lustrous curls that will last up\nto a week . . . And it actually\nbeauty conditions your hair to .a\nsilky, just - brushed look that\nmakes your -hair \"come alive\".\nLanolin Plus Hair Spray Set can\ntransform your hair. $1.50 at all\ndrug counters.\nOur Beautiful Budgie ... Sir Isaac . . . loves the time of free flying\nwe're giving him every day. But first we trained him in his cage, to\nsit on our fingers, and get used to us. Then we clipped his feathers\na bit, to control his- flight, and save him from injuring himself. He'll\ncome to my fingers, now, when I say \"Ride!\" . . . Having him is\nnothing but a continuing pleasure, as he's thriving so well on hia\nBROCK'S NATURAL FEEDING DIET-He seems to get exactly\nthe right amount of proteins, vitamins and minerals to keep him in\nthe \"pink of perfection\".\nMy Plan U To Have No Plan* ThU Year On Vacation! Ill just take*\nmy car and roam wherever the spirit leads me,\nstop and go as I please, when I please and have I\nno money worries . . . because before I leave\nI'll be sure to buy Travellers Cheques at my\nlocal BANK OF MONTREAL branch. Travellers Cheques are cashable at all banks and at\npractically all stores, gas stations, hotels and\nmotels. They're inexpensive aad absolutely safe\n\u2014money back guaranteed in case of loss or\ntheft. If you're going away this summer, buy\nTravellers Cheques before you leave\u2014they're\navailable at your B of M branch and 3'ou too can be on the way to\na carefree vacation. \u25a0\nlet*t  Really Relax.  ThU Year,\neven if ws still\nhave to work\nhard, too! Let's\nhave the leisurely enjoyment of a cup of j5\nInstant Chase\n&. Sanborn\nCoffee \u2014in the garden, on\nporch . . . whether it's morning, noon or. night 1 Just look\nthrough the window on your\njar of INSTANT CHASE k\nSANBORN! See the rich coffee\ncolor that means rich coffee\nflavor! The Chase <fe Sanborn\npeople with over 100 years coffee\nexperience . , . know how to\nCAPTURE all the precious coffee\nflavor. Here, at last, is an Instant\nwith all the fine flavor of freshly-\nmade coffee! That's a promise\nfrom Chase <fe Sanborn to you and\nto me!\nYou Know You Save at\nAPRICOTS\nEnsign. *) 3**V < 1   1C\nChoice. dm for 5 7 O for     \\.IJ\nCUT GREEN BEANS\nMolkin's. -y       3 3< -C OC*\nFancy. 15 or. __ Am  for 3 3 O for     > J\nPORK AND BEANS\nMalkin's. *\\ OfT^ L\\\\ m1H^\n15 oz. tin ._ dm  for JLj O for       I m\\\nCREAM CORN\nYork. Choice.      *\\ 3 3\"* \/J OC\u00a3\n15 oz. tin d. for 33 O for      *0\nCHOICE PEAS\nr?tA^_.....2f0r29# 6 f0r 85*\nBLACKBERRIES\n2 for 47^   6 for 1.25\nYork, Fancy\n15 oz. tin .\nPerhaps we are sold out many times, but keep asking.\nEver So' Wonderful\nWhite Sliced\nDutch Maid\nBREAD\n2fo3V\n16 oz.\nOnly   ..... Am for\n100% Whole Wheat\nSliced Bread\n16*\nBABY FOODS\nGERBER'S.\nLarge selection.\n6 ,.59'\nSPECIAL INTRODUCTORY SALE\nIt's Time to Plan (or\nDAD'S BIG DAY!\nJune 17th it Father's Day! Now's the time to call a family conference and plan\nthe biggest. . . the most thrilling day possible for Dad! Shop now at your friendly\nLiberty for that extra special gift for your father . . . plan a surprise outing for a\nfamily get-together that'includes his favorite foods. Dad works hard to make\nevery day the best for you . . . So make this Father's Day a great day to salute a\ngreat guy .. . your Dad! Make his budget to bring home more food for less at\nLIBERTY. Low prices every day on every item is the key answer to stretch'your\nfamily's vacation dollars.\nEffective Thurs., June 7 to Tues., June 12\nDON'T MISS THESE SPECTACULAR\nCANNED FOOD VALUES\nSALADA. Orange Pekoe.\nA grand tea for Summer\n\"Pick Me Up.\" 120's. ...\nTEA BAGS\ncooked Spaghetti\nPEACHES\nCOFFEE\nTOMATOES \u00bb\u00bbKIN'! \u2014 2 tins 57c\nCATTELLI.\nIS oz\t\nROYAL CITY, Halves.\nChoice. 15 oz. tin\t\nMALKIN'S BEST. New blend,\nnew aroma. You'll enjoy it\nto its last drop. l\t\n$1.49\n2 for 29c\n2 tins 41c\n_ $1.05\nAt Liberty, by far best\neating . . . More tender,\njuicier than ever.\nStanding\nRib Roast\nGrade A. PQ'\nPer Ib.   jy\nRolled\nPrime Rib Roast\nEnjoy this wonderful buy\nof quality. \/CO**\nGrade A. Lb. _ OJF\nLean Brisket Beef\nServe with Spring | QC\nCarrots. Gr. A. _   I JF\nCubed Beef Steaks \u2014\u25a0*\u25a0\u25a0\u00bb\u25a0 69c\nMinced Beef\nVeal Patties\nServe Meat Ball Style\nand Macaroni. Fresh.\nLean.\t\nFresh, flavorful.\nNo waste. \t\n3 ibs. 85c\n__ ib. 45c\nBigger, fresher selection, priced low.\nFlavorful. II     |Q.\nImperial Valley.lD.   I7C\nI Cantaloupes\nPotatoes \u2122rksJO lbs. 49c\n25 Ibs. $1.13\nlb. 39c\nlb. 12c\nB.C. HOTHOUSE.\nNo. 1. Tasty firm.\nFLORIDA.\nWhite. Indian River. \t\nor GREEN\nONIONS.\nCloverdale's finest.\nCrisp, green. .\nCALIFORNIA.\nField.  _.\nBoth for 49c\nMazda Oil\n16 oz. glass .. 43c\n32 oz. glass,.. 83c\nSalad Time Favorite With Vinegar,\nSUPER\nSAVINGS\nat Liberty\nCamay\njj Reg. Bar\u00bb A. IT\n2 Bath Bars 27 T\nBlue Cheer\nGiant  83*\nLargs      ^JLt\nTide  Giant  pkg.   83c\nOxydol Giant Pkg. 87c\nSpic & Soon Gt. pkg.\n85e\nBlue Duz Giant pkg.\n87e\nIvory Soap\nPenonal     it >)r<f\nSize. *T bara A.}*\nFluffo\nShortening\nL.29*\nPacific Milk\n4 tins 61c\nCase of 48 tins $7.29\nCOMPLETE\nSTOCK\nInsect Control\nNeeds for the\nHome.\nMOTH\nPROOFER\nBlack Flag push button.\nKills moth larvae.\nGuaranteed moth proof\nfor a full year.\nWill not stain.\n$1.49\nCATTLE\nSPRAY BOMB\nBlack Flag.\nKills stable flies,\nmosquitoes,  house  flies,\netc.     Tin\n$1.35\nFLY DED\nPush button insect killer.\n59c, 98c\nINSECT\nSPRAY\nFor flying type insects.\n16  OZ. TIN 430\nDEODORIZER\nWizard Push Button.\nPine Scent.\n79c\nAUTO BRITE\nSilicone process for\npolishing cars in one easy\noperation.\n98c\nAeromist\nGlass Cleaner\n6 oz. 15*\n16 oz. 29<S\nAero Floor Cleaner\n32 oz. \"T\/\nAero wax\nPaste Wax\n2.    Ib. tin. 75\nAerowax\nFloor Wax\nNo rubbing. Qt.   \/ D\n$-1.39\nVi gallon. I\n_____^___\n :\t\nuJ i -\t\n  ,\t\n\u2014 ,   '\u2022\nNEL50N DAILY NE\\f\/S, THURSDAY; JUNE 7, 1956 \u2014 7   -\nJACKETS\nfor All Occasions\nShadow tone checks highlight the summer jacket scene,\nftyled for action with shoulder pleats and roomy fit, this\nwill be first choice for many wise shoppers. Choose from\nsmart check combinations of red and black, brown and beige\nor blue and brown. ,     ,\nSizes\n10 to 18.\n12\n95\nCRISP CRISKAY JACKETS\nExquisitely styled for day or evening wear in cool white\ncotton criskey. % sleeve with cuff and two *J   ^Q\npockets. Sizes 12 to 18     m9 .\"T *\n5.95\nWHITE POPLIN JACKETS\nStyled by Jerron of Vancouver, this popular jacket is tailored  to  perfection -from  long  wearing  sanforized  poplin.\nZipper front and pockets.\nAll sizes. 12 to 20\t\nLOWEST PRICES!\nNylo-Wisp Nylons\nSheer 60 gauge, 15 denier nylons knit from high twist\nnylon for longer wear, extension welt to assure good\nfit. Nylo-Wisp nylons are cello wrapped. The first\nhands to touch them are your own. So for    ftsatt\nyour best buy, you should buy Nylo-Wisp   \u00abp Tj\nnylons. Sizes 8% to 11 in\nproportioned lengths. Pair  _ LJ\nSPECIAL!\nKNEE-HIGH NYLONS\nShop today, Friday and Saturday for\nthose oh, so cool knee high nylons.\nNow available at a new low price.\nSmart summer shades. Buy several\npairs now and save. Sizes 8Vz to 11.....   \u2022\nSPORT JACKETS\n35\nPAY ONLY $7 DOWN!\nNow Is the time to choose a handsome new sport jacket for summer casual and holiday wear! The wide,selection includes Harris\nTweeds, new \"twist\" tweeds, and tone-on-tone weaves. All carefully tailored In* single breasted style. Sizes 36 to 44. Pay as low\nas ?7 down on convenient budget terms\t\n$\nCOMFORTABLE CASUAL SLACKS\nThe perfect mate for your new sport jacket is a choice of several popular fabrics \u2014 including rich, long wearing \"Nyleetian\" gabardine, and\nwhip-twist weave \"Tyconda\" cloth. Men's sizes 28 to 40 in light and\n.darker shades _\t\n9\n95\n98\nSUMMER SANDALS\nSriORT SLEEVE\nSPORT SHIRTS\nReg. 3.95\nSanforized \"leno\" mesh weave\nfabric for cool summer comfort \u2014 and at an amazing low\nprice! Short sleeve sports\nstyling in sizes small, medium,\nand large. 3  QC\nWhite only  J.7J\nby \"SUSAN\"\nRenowned for quality and fit\n\u2014 yet priced to suit all pocket\nbooks! Both flattie and medium wedge heeli in a wide\nvariety of styles. All are foam\ncushioned throughout for extra comfort. White, panamt,\n' pink, in sizes 4ty to (\" Qf\"\n9. A A and B widths. J e**\\\\f\nMEN'S SPORT SHOES\nNew styling \u2014 new colors to brighten a man's summer\nwardrobe ! All have springy, comfortable foam soles.\nUppers are styled in gore front or moccasin vamp in\npanama light brown.\nSizes 6 to 11\t\nCHILD'S, MISSES'SANDALS\nStyles for the junior miss fcnd boys too! Cool strap sandals in white, red or brown. Closed heels ^ QQ\nfor better fit. Sizes 9 to 3     Ar^JpO\n6.95\nBOYS' SUMMER\nSPORT SHIRTS\nNylon and rayon blend \"pucker\" fabric\u2014\na new miracle blend that dries in a jiffy\nand requires no ironing! Smart sport styling in short sleeves. Plain shades of white\nor blue. ^   AQ\nSizes 8 to 16.     Zr**T7\nLOWEST PRICES!\nConvertible\nBABY CARRIAGES\nLower than ever prices on baby carriages that are\neasily converted into a go-cart. Complete with adjustable back rest, chrome plated, easy-to-fold\npusher, painted frame and no-tilt safety stand,\nfour bow hood that is ^^ ^_\ncompletely water proof,      ^^ ^^J    00\nrubber tired wheels.\nIn silver grey.\n32\nRegular 8.95 CHILDS' STROLLERS\nSturdy steel construction with metal foot rest covered in plaid water re-\npellant duck'. Special !\t\n6\n99\nPlanned for You \u2014 the Home Maker\nThe Bay .88 DAY in HOUSEWARES\nCHECK THE VALUES OFFERED... SHOWING REGULAR PRICES\nOne of the Biggest Housewares ond\nKitchen Gadget Promotions Ever Offered in Nelson.\nBringing you over 1000 pieces made up\nof dozens of different? every day items\nand every one selling at the one low\nprice.\nFor Easier and More Helpful Kitchen\nAid - Check this mass array of housewares items and shop early for best\nselection.\nAluminum Strainer:\nIron Board Covers: .\nHot Dish Mat Set:._\nShower Spray:\t\nBroiler and Rack: ...\nMuffin Frame (12):.\nFlour Mat: \t\nClothes Basket Liner: ..\nMixing Bowls (2 pee.):\nDouble Chopper: \t\nNylon Clothes Brush: .1\nBottle Opener: \t\n1.19\n1.10\n1.00\n1.10\n1.00\n1.00\n1.19\n1.25\n1.20\n1.19\n1.19\n1.00\nUtility Pack:\t\nCookie Sheets:\t\nSalt, Pepper Sets: .'.\nPaper Dispenser, 3 way:\nCookie Tin:\t\n4 Pee. Cannister Set: \u2014\nSoap Flake Dispenser: _\nBread Box: \t\nBread Board: \t\nCup Rack:\nWall Thermometer: .\nCandy Thermometer:\n1.29\n1.00\n1.00\n1.95\n1.29\n1.59\n1.29\n1.95\n1.19\n1.19\n1.19\n1.19\nServing Tongs:\nCoaster Sets:...\n1.19\n1.19\nEACH ITEM SPECIALLY\nPRICED AT\n.88\nSpecial!\nEASY \"SPIRALATOR\"\nWashing Machines\n$169\n| Reg. $199-A special purchase brings\nthis deluxe model to\nyou at a saving of\n$30.\nOnly Easy makes the\nSpiralator for cleaner washing. Come in\nand compare this\nvalue.\nLimited quantities.\n5 year guarantee on\ntransmission\nassembly.\nNew Attractive\nDELUXE LOUNGER\nNew styling in 2-pc. lounge suites that are sure to\nbe a hit \u2014 check today, the lounge is a modern\nchesterfield by day, a comfortable double bed by\nnight. Matching chairs. Ice blue or charm pink.\nBEACH TOWELS       WHITE RAINBOW\nSpecial purchase of slight seconds,\nfrom a leading manufacturer. Generous size in bold colorful multi-\nstripes. Select yours now and save.\nEach  v\t\n1\n69\nBORDER BLANKETS\nOther Beach Towels at 1.29, 1.98, 2.49\n6\n2 p\u00ab suite *199    W*B*SS0 SHEETS   funnelette sheets\nThey're so serviceable, so washable, white blankets of\na combination of wool, rayon and nylon. It's camping\ntime. What better answer for that ex-\nIra blanket at home or for camping.\nColored borders of rose, green, blue\nand gold. Each blanket singly but\nfirmly whiped in size 70x84. Each\n99\nSeamist in Modern Styling ... Lovely\n3 pee. BEDROOM SUITE\nConsist of one large Mr. and Mrs. dresser with plate\nglass mirror, regular 4 drawer chiffonier, and attractive bookcase bed in 4'6\" size. All drawers have\ncentre guides. You'll love the sea mist coloring.\n3 pee. Suite $f 89\nLong wearing, bleached snowy\nwhite, quality Wabasso sheets.\nClassed as subs., but flaws so minute would not affect wearing qualities. Your choice of sizes 81x100\nor 72x108. Pair \t\n6\n66\nWABASSO\nPILLOW CASES\nSnowy white, bleached to match\nWabasso sheets. Plain or hemstitched.\nSize 42x36. Pair \t\nPopular everywhere. Made of warm durable flannelette that doubles beautifully for light summer blankets.\nThey're perfect campers too. Don't mind rough treatment. Freshen up in one washing. Whipped C\" CTfl\nedges. Most in pink borders. Size 70x84      J.J\\J\nTerry Towel Clearance\nThirsty absorbent bath size terry towels in colors of\ngreen, blue, white, flamingo, pink.   . *TQ\nSize 20x40. Each  *l*\n,\n.39\n ;\u2014i\u2014i.\t\n ppr-\u2014'\u2014 rr-\n8 \u2014 NELSQN DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, JUNE 7, \\9U\nFirst Grade\nBUTTER\nMeadow Woods\nlb. 67c\n2 lbs. $1.J3\nSpreadeasy Cheese\nLarge Eggs\nCanned Milk\nMedium Cheese\nBurns.\n2 lb. pkg.\nBreakfast Gems, in cartons.\nDozen\t\nPacific or Carantion.\n16 oz. tin\t\nBerkshire Ontario.\nLb.\t\nInstant Mil-ko5tir\"Mlk3'bpks\nMakes up to 12 quarts.\nPaper Napkins\nWax Paper K\nBiscuits \u00bb\nSCOTKINS.\nFamily size.\nDAVID'S,\nvarieties.\nPeanut Butter \u2122J\nStrawberry Jam \u00bb\nMarmalade S\u00ab\nEMPRESS Pure,\nox. tin\t\n2 for 37c\n2 lor 49c\n2 for 69c\n\u2014 55c\n 69c\n 36c\nCottag\n_    fl*AAeA    Blossom Time. Serve with-your favorite salad\nC    VllccSv    16 oz. carton \u00bb\n\\r\\\nCream Corn: A      CQ*\nCountry Home. Fancy. 15 oz. tin.     \u25a0    for mW w\nLuncheon Meat: J\nS5'\nChuckwagon Dinner: *)      *5Q**\nBurn's. 15 oz. tin. Am   for W w\nCanned Tomatoes:      *)      C[Q*\nAylmer. 28 oz. tin mm\\ for \u00bbw *r\nFancy Peaches: J      4**5*\nCastle Crest. 15 oz. tin **\u2022   for    *mw\n2 ...29'\nSwift's Prem. 12 oz. tin.\nfor\nCastle Crest. 15 oz. tin.\nSpaghetti:\nTaste Tells. 15 oz. tins.\nMild Cheddar Cheese:\nBerkshire Canadian t\t\nSharp Cheddar Cheese: \u00a3lTt\nBerkshire Ontario     Lb.    O aw\nKraft Imperial Cheese: Off*\nDanish Bleu Cheese:\nSmooth tangy flavor _  \t\nSwiss Gruyere:\nLb.\nCHEESE -\nJLQ*      Baby Gouda Cheese: A-Z*\n*** Kraft. 10 oz. vkl      * \u2022*\n33'\n..Lb.\n12 portions.\n69'\n49\u00bb\nKraft. 10 oz. pkg.\nDelux Cheese Slices:\nKraft. Assorted. 8 oz. pkg\t\nSpreadeasy Cheese: 55*\nBurns'.  >. \u201e Lb. mtS egf\nBurns'Cheezip: fZLZt\nCheese spread. 16 oz. jar \u201e  wa^\nCream Cheese Spread: 25*\nKraft. Assorted. 9 oz. pkg    mmu9 \u25a0\nPINEAPPLE\nGREEN PEAS\nL ALAN I, Spears.\n20 oz. tin\t\nSUGAR BELLE.\nAssorted. 15 oz. tin\nTOWN HOUSE\n48 oz. tin\t\nServe Cantaloupe and Ice Cream\nCANTALOUPE\n_Lb23*\nImported.\nSweet and juicy.\nICE CREAM\nParty Pride. Assorted flavors.\nQuart carton \t\n45'\n2 for 59c\n4 for 59c\n2 for 59c\nV\nPolly Ann\nFRESH BREAD\nFull 16 oz. loaf. Sliced, wrapped.\n2 for 27c\nTOMATO JUICE\nFancy. Serve chilled.\n48 ax. tin\t\n2 for 75c\nDELMAR MARGARINE\nQuality. Economically\npriced. 1 Ib. pkg.\t\n3 for 95c\nWhite\n'or Brown.\nWhole Bean Coffee\nAIRWAY: A mild and mellow blend\n^b\" M.03 \u00a3__f2.04\nNOB HILL: Rich, aromatic blend.\n1  lb. $|  \"I <J    2 Ib.\npkg. I \u2022 I Am    pkg. _\n'1.11\nSHIRRIFF'S\nSUNDAR TOPPINGS\nA delicious topping for your favorite ice cream.\nCherry or Butter-Scotch. 9 oz. Jar 36\u00ab>\nPineapple, 9 oz. jar 38ei\nStrawberry, 9 oz. jar 41*\nFamily Circle\nMAGAZINE\nNow on sale. Featuring . . . Dodge tho heat cooking . ..\nNeweot In summer play cloths , , , Read \"Mother of tha\nBride\" and  many other Interesting features.\nSTILL ONLY 7c\nTriple Thick Aluminum\nCookware\nFEATURING THI8 WEEK\n3 QUART SAUCEPAN\nRetail Value $0.00. Your for only sixteen 25c certificate!\nor $4.00 cash.\nCHUCK ROAST BEEF\nAlb.\n'Safeway trimmed.\nBlade Bone removed.\nGrade Red \t\n\\\\ i \/\/\nRound Steak or Roast\nRUMP ROAST\n1st and 2nd cuts\nBeef. Grade\nShoulder Veal Roast -\u00b0r lb.45c\nFrying Chicken\nYoung .tender. Cut up in frays.\nlb. 59c\nWEINERS\nNo. 1 Fancy Quality.\n2 Ibs. 65c\nBEEF LIVER\nYoung, tender,\nlb.35c\nlb.39\\\nHead Lettuce-- lb. 17c\nCrisp Celery-* lb. 15c\nCorn-on-Cob <^ \u00b0 2 Cobs 25c\nBOLOGNA:\nNo. 1 fancy quality. Sliced or piece _ Lb,\nCOOKED HAM:\nLean sliced    Vt lb.\nHEADCHEESE:\nNo. 1 quality. Sliced   _ _.. Lb.\nCHEESE LOAF:\nMacaroni. No. 1 quality sliced  Lb.\nCHICKEN LOAF: CC*\nMock. No. 1 quality. Sliced Lb.    -*,\u2022*\nGARLIC SAUSAGE RINGS: 30*\nNo. 1 quality    Lb.   ** *\n1\u00a5\n49*\n49'\n49'\nPRICES EFFECTIVE: JUNE 7th, 8th and 9th.\nWe Reserve the Right To Limit Quantities\nCANADA SAFEWAY LIMITED\nAVOCADOES:\nCalifornia. Size 35. Each   \t\nGREEN PEPPERS:\nCalifornia. Plump, shiny Lb.\nCUCUMBERS:\nCalifornia Field -    Lb.\nGRAPEFRUIT: J\nFlorida Ruby Reds mm lbs.\nAPPLES: 7\nWinesap. Extra fancy  mm  lbs.\nCAULIFLOWER:\nSnoiyhite heads   Lb.\n25'\n39*\n35'\n27'\n29'\n29'\n'        '     \u25a0*\n*i*MnHk\u00ab\n  , ; _ , ,\t\nmi\nSPORTS\nNatal-Michel Little League\nAssociation Elects Officers\nNATAL \u2014 At a general meeting\nNatal-Michel.Little League Association was reorganized for the\n1956 season.\nThe officers, unanimously reelected for this term, were: President, Silvio Reghenas, Michel;\nvice-president, Paul J. Chala, Natal; secretary, Mrs. Helen Guzza,\nMichel; treasurer, Mrs. Emma\nUngaro, Michel. The executive-\ncommittee also re-elected included\nMrs. Lea Beviiacqua, Mrs. Susie\nStorm, Mrs. Amolia Tappay, Mrs.\nA. Cianfrancisco, Mrs. Katharine\nSavage Loses\nTo Bobby Boyd\nCHICAGO (AP) \u2014 Bobby Boyd\nof Chicago, No. 2 middleweight\ncontender, rallied for a lOth-round\ntechnical knockout of game Milo\nSavage of Salt Lake City in a televised bout at Chicago Stadium\nWednesday. *\nSavage had carried the fight to\nhis opponent until the final two\nrounds when his left hip, injured\nwhen he slipped out of the ring in\nthe fourth round, gave way.\nSavage slipped once in the ninth\nround and then went down again\nfor an official knockdown. Then,\nwith tha 10th and final round only\n27 seconds old, Boyd landed a\nsharp right to the head and Savage buckled to the canvas.\nHe tried to get up, but his left\nleg seemed to collapse and referee\nJoey White signalled the end.\nLEAGUE LEADERS\nBy The Associated Press\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nAB R H Ptc.\nMantle. New York 172 46 70 .407\nMaxwell, Detroit 109 26 41 .376\nVernon, Boston ... 115 19 42 .365\nKuenn, Detroit ... 180 29 65 .361\nBerra, New York 139 27 47 .338\nRuns\u2014Mantle, 46:\nv Runs batted in\u2014Mantle, 52.\nHits\u2014Mantle, 70.     -\nDoubles\u2014Kuenn, 15.\nI * Triples\u2014Runnels, Washington, 5.\nHome runs\u2014Mantle, 21.\nStolen bases\u2014Kuenn, 7.\nPitching\u2014Brewer,   Boston,   7-1,\n.875.\nStrikeouts\u2014Score, Cleveland, 86.\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nAB R H Ptc.\nRepulski, St. Louis 107 22 42 .393\nLong, Pittsburgh 162 32.61 .377\nBoyer, St. Louis ... 180 37 66 .367\nBruton,Milwaukee 111 18 38 .342\nBailey,   Cincinnati   108 16.36 .333\nRuns\u2014Blasingame and Boyer,\nfit. Louis, 37.\nRuns batted in\u2014Boyer, 47.\nHits\u2014Boyer, 66.\nDoubles \u2014 Furillo, Brooklyn,\nBell, Cincinnati and Dark, New\nYork, 12.\nTriples\u2014Bruton, 7.\nHome runs\u2014Long. 15,\nStolen bases\u2014Mays, New York,\n11.\nPitching\u2014Lawrence, Cincinnati,\n6-0, 1.000.  \u25a0\nStrikeouts\u2014Friend, Pittsburgh,\n62.\nM. Chala, Mrs. Rosie Reghenas\nand Mrs. Cecelia Androlick.\nCoaches appointed to handle the\nLittle League Yankees were Paul\nJ. Chala and Tony Corney while\nNick Rocchio and Joe Tappay will\nlook after the Pony League Dodgers.\nIt was decided to enter the Little\nLeague team in the Crow's Nest\nPass Little League which had a\npossibility of a six team entry.\nThe Pony League team would not\nenter the CN.P. League but would\nplay exhibition games this year. It\nwas also decided to hold a collection at the pay-office on payday.\nThe Association accepted the\nsuggestion of staging a Peanut\ndrive throughout the Natal-Michel\ndistrict which would be held for\nthree days on Thursday, July 5,\nFriday, July. 6 and Saturday, July\n7. All profits from the sale of\npeanuts would go towards the\nsupport of Little League baseball\nin the community.\nUmpires appointed for all Natal-\nMichel games were Tom Krall and\nJohn McGinnis of Natal.\nThat Gibson Girl\nEnters 4th Round\nFor Peek at Books\nMANCHESTER, England (AP)-\nAlthea Gibson of New York ad\nvancecj to the fourth round of the\nwomen's singles in the Northern\nlawn tennis tournament Wednes\nday. She defeated Mrs. Heather\nBrewer of Bermuda 6-3, 6-1.\nIn the men's singles Sam Gianr\nmalva of Houston, Tex., defeated\nDon Fontana of Toronto 1-8, 6-1\n10-8 in a fourth round match.\nNatal-Michel Teams\nWin Weekend Game\nNATAL\u2014Playing in exhibition\nLittle League and Juvenile bast-\nball games at Hillcrest on Sunday,\nNatal-Michel teams won but one\nof three games played during the\nday. Natal-Michel Yankees, well\nbalanced Little League nine that\nwon top honors in last year's Little\nLeague tournament on Labor Day,\nat Fernie, took a commanding 10-3\nlead and held on to edge Hillcrest,\n11-10.\nSandy Tymchuk and Joe Deu-\nInuca combined to pitch their team\nto their initial win of the season.\nNatal-Michel Juveniles lost both\nends of a double header, 15-2 and\n8-5 with Allan Chala and Peter\nReghenas pitching for the losers\nNext Sunday the Crow's Nest\nPass Little League will commence\nits schedule when Hillcrest travels\nto Natal-Michel to oppose Yankees\nat Natal Ball Park in a double\nencounter. Other teams in the\nleague include Blairmore and\nColeman.\nLavandin Ekes Out Victory\nBy Neck Over 40*to*l SM\nMoore Suggests\nPossible Bout\nAgainst Parker\nLONDON (AP) - Light heavyweight champion Archie Moore\nclaimed the vacant heavyweight\nthrone again Wednesday, then\ndonned a top hat and swallow tail\nmorning 'coat and mixed it up\nwith the swells at the Epsom\nDerby.\nThe way 39-year-old Archie sees\nit, he is \"entitled to the heavyweight championship because\nRocky Marciano nominated me as\nhis logical successor.\"\nManager Charley Johnston said\nArchie might make a \"heavyweight title defence\" against towering James J. Parker of Toronto\nin Canada next month instead of\nmeeting the winner of Friday\nnight's New York Floyd Patterson-Tommy (Hurricane) Jackson\n12-rounder  in  September.\nParker is not listed among the\ncontenders by either the National\nBoxing Association or by Ring\nmagazine.\nThe NBA has decreed that the\nwinner of this two-fight series\nwould have to fight the heavyweight then rated as No. 1 by the\nNBA.\n* ByALAN HARVEY\nCanadian Press Staff Writer ' .\n. EPSOM, Surrey, England (CP) \u2014 In a pelting rain\nand a driving finish, the French coM Lavandin sneaked\nthrough on the rails at Tattenham corner Wednesday and\nheld on to win the 177th Derby by a neck from Montaval, a\n40-to-l outsider. \u25a0 j '\nLavandin, the 7-to-l fayfcrlte in\nfield of 27 top three-yeaf'-olds,\nsurged past tiring horses in the\nstretch to give jockey W. R.\n(Snapper) Johnstone his third\nDerby triumph. The bay colt by\nVerso II was the first horse ever\nto run ln the derby for his owner,\nParisian perfume magnate Pierre*\nWertheimer.\nQUEEN'S HOR8E FIFTH\nThe Irish colt Roistar filled third\nCoal King Season\nEnds Profitably\nNATAL \u2014 Natal-Michel Coal\nKings Hockey Club held a windup\nbanquet and social with players,\nwives and invited guests and\nfriends present. Short speeches\nwere made by president Frank\nMcVeigh, manager Ed. Whalley\nand coach Jimmey McVeigh.\nAlthough not enjoying in successful season as regards victories\nCoal Kings ended the season with\na bank balance to start next year's\noperations.\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 Only two\nplayers were drafted Wednesday\nas the National Hockey League's\nannual summer, meeting held its\nintra-league \"grab.\"\nDraft price was $15,000 in each\ncase.\nDetroit Red Wings drafted Tom\nMcCarthy, leftwinger who played\nfor Saskatoon and Vancouver in\nthe Western Hockey League last\nseason, from New York Rangers.\nThe Rangers drafted Larry Ca\nhan, defenceman who played 21\ngames for Toronto Maple Leafs\nlast year and 39 with Pittsburgh of\nthe American Hockey League,\nfrom Toronto.\nFred (Bun) Cook\nQuits as Coach\nCLEVELAND (AP) \u2014 Fte'd\n(Bun) Cook, coach of Cleveland\nBarons of the American Hockey\nLeague for 13 years, resigned\nWednesday.\nCook gave no reason for hl3\nresignation and said he had no\ndefinite plans for the future. But\nhockey sources speculated that he\nmay have another coaching job or\nis angling for one.\nThe former New York Ranger\ngreat came to the Barons in the\n1943-44 season from the Providence\nReds.\nSince then his Barons have won\nfive Calder Cups and seven league\nchampionships.\nJim Hendy, general manager of\nthe Barons, said he was accepting\nCook'r resignation with regret.\nWhen he was with the Rangers\nhe was part of the famous line\nthat also included his brother, Bill\nCook, and Frank Boucher.\nBritish Cricket*\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Wednes-\nday's British cricket close of play\nscores:\nEssex 278 for 4 vs Somerset.\nWorcester 208 for 6 vs Middle\nsex.\nTh\u00ab Army 282 for 4 vs Oxford\nUniversity.\n'Warwickshire   193,   Cambridge\nUniversity 57 for 8.\nDerbyshire 96, Lancashire 9 for\n1 wicket.\nGlamorgan 203, Nottingham 17\nfor 0 wicket.\nLeicester 321 vs Kent (to bat).\nYorkshire 245 for 4 Sussex.\nGloucestershire 66 for 2 vs\nNorthampton, rain curtailed play.\nTh\u00ab outstanding performances\nincluded Hallam of Leicester who\nhad 126 and teammate Shirreff\nwho had 111 for 8. Insole acored\n126 for Essex and Savill 99 not\nout\nplace, two lengths behind Montaval. Then came three English em\ntries \u2014 Lord Astor's Hornbeam\nfourth, the Queen's Atlas fifth and\nClaude Leigh's Monterey sixth.\nMonterey set the pace most of the\nway.\nThe rout, of the homebred horses\nleft English spirits as desolate at\nthe rain-splotched Epsom lawns,\nAfter, weks of dry weather, the\nskies 'opened just before post* time\nand drenched the big crowd drawn\nto one of Britain's oldest sporting\nspectacles.\nEnglish hopes in this classic\nrace, run continuously since 1780,\nwere pinned on Maj\/ L. B. HolU-\nday's Pirate King, Maj. R. Mac-\nDon ald-Buchan art's Induna and H,\nJ. Joel's Full Measure. Pirate\nKing was second behind Monterey\nturning for home but faded rapidly\nFull Measure never showed and\nInduna, one of the last to get away\nfinished ninth.\nThe time was 2:36 2-5 compared\nwith Mahmoud's record of 2:33 4-5\nin 1936.\nRangers-Hawks\nTrade Rumors\nStill Persist\nMONTREAL (CP)\u2014The annual\nsummer meeting of the National\nHockey League concluded Wednesday with a two-session closed\ngathering keeping any major\ndevelopments to itself.\nThere was no further word on\nthe proposal that professional\nhockey as a whole take over sponsorship of minor clubs, providing\na share-the-talent alternative to\nthe present individual sponsorship\nsystem.\nIt was announced that the annual all-star game will be played\nhere Oct. 9 with Montreal Canadiens, the Stanley Cup and league\nchampions, meeting the all-star\naggregation coached by Jimmy\nSkinner of the runner-up Detroit\nclub.\nRumors of a trade between Chicago Black Hawks and New York\npersisted but no announcements\nwere made.\nFights\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, JUNE 7, 1956 -* \u00bb\nPirates Plaster Cubs-\nRetain Slim NL Edge\nPhoenix, Ariz.\u2014Jimmy Martinez\n160, Phoenix, outpointed Al Andrews, 161, St. Paul, 10.\nMontreal \u2014 Davey Moore, 135.\nSpringfield, Ohio, knocked out\nCharlie Slaughter, 133, Plainfield,\nN.J., 4.\nBy Tha Associated Press\nDale Long, Frank Thomas and\nRoberto Clemente powered Pittsburgh to an 8-2 ^victory over .Chicago Cubs Wednesday night to retain the Pirates' slim National\nLeague lead. And in the American,\nBoston ended Detroit's winning\nstreak at seven games 5-4 while\nfirst-place New York broke its\nfour-game slump 10-5 over Kansas\nCity. The Yankees hold a 3^-game\nbulge. ' \u25a0\"\n\/Long, whose 16th homer came\nwith a man on in the first off\nloser Paul Minner, left the game\nwith a pulled leg muscle after a\nsecond-inning single. The injury\nwas not considered serious.\nCincinnati -stayed within four\npercentage points of the Bucs, belting Philadelphia 7-3 on seventh-\ninning homers by Frank Robinson\nand Gus Bell that gave unbeaten\nBrooks Lawrence his seventh victory. St. Louis, four points back\nof the Redlegs, took New York\nGiants 3-2 in 11 innings. And\nBrooklyn made it three straight\nover the faltering Milwaukee\nBraves 5-2 as Don Newcombe won\nhis eighth game.\n7-GAME STREAK\nElsewhere    In    the    American\nLeague,   Cleveland   held   second\nwith a 5-1 decision over BaltimorJt\nwhile Chicago White Sox wer-s\nwalloped 12-7 at Washington.      | *\nThomas, shifted from the oujt-\nfield to third base, put it away\nfor the Pirates, smacking his 11th\nhomer with two op in the fifth.\nClemente, who had a homgr\namong his four hits in four trips,\nnow has a string of seven cort-\nsecutive hits and a seven-game\nhit streak.\nROYALS' MEETING\nNOT CURTAILED j\nBY DOWNPOUR\nTuesday evening's pouring rain\ndid not discourage Nelson Royals\nfrom holding their scheduled\nmeeting at Civic Recreational\nGrounds. The^ only concession\nmade was to move indoors.        ii\nFlo Kelly said after the meeting\nthat Wednesday's scheduled contest in Salmo had been postponed.\nRoyals now hope to open they\nseason Sunday afternoon against\nRiondel at Civic Recreatiqp\nGrounds. A scheduled contest th\nRiondel last week was postpone^.\nShe also asked that players having uniforms be sure to take thei\u00bb\nto the practice Friday night.\nBatteries\nMINING - LOGGING\nAND AUTOMOTIVE\nRepairs to All   Types\n) Lake St. Phone l\nARROW  BATTERIES\n$250,000 Posted\nBy Detroit Lions\nDETROIT (AP) \u2014 Directors of\nDetroit Lions pro football club\nWednesday agreed to put up $250,-\n000 in a good faith escrow fund\nso they can look into possible purchase of the Detroit Tiger baseball club.\nMore than a half dozen syndicates are expected to post similar amounts by the deadline this\nweekend for a chance to look at\nthe Tigers' books.\nTrustees of the estate of the late\nWalter O. Briggs have ordered\nsale of the ball club on grounds\nthat it is not a good business for\ntrust fund investment.\n(fortes   ffkm\nRoyal Reserve?\njjfc^    n       CANADIAN    WHISKY\n\u2022   \u00bb   \u00bb   I   I   t   \u00bb        W   M   I   |   \u00ab   ,        AT A ,0\u00bbUI\u00bbI \t\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia\nFREE DELIVERY\nSottl&dfisLQM\nINTERIOR   BREWERIES   LIMITED\nPHONE 24 and 175\nBe Sure To Order by Brand Nome\n\u2022 COLUMBIA   LAGER      \u2022  FERNIE LAGER\n\u2022 KOOTENAY \u2022 COLUMBIA\nPALE ALE CREAM STOUT      '\nEMPTY   BOTTLES COLLECTED  ON  DELIVERY   ONLY\nnow!\nYOUNG MEN WITH\nJUNIOR MATRICULATION\nCan Get a College Education\nThrough This Plan\nIn addition to the senior matriculation\nentry through the Regular Officer Training\nPlan, a limited number of qualified young\nmen with Junior Matriculation can now go to\nCollege with all educational expenses paid by\nthe Department of National Defence. Through\nthis Plan . . . which applies to the three services . . . junior matriculants attend either\ncivilian College, or the College Militaire Royal\nde Saint-Jean, and receive Officer Cadet pay\nand allowances, free medical and dental care,\nand 30 days annual leave. In summer you\ntrain with the service of your choice: the Navy,\nArmy or Air Force.\nYour graduation leads to the Queen's\nCommission and a professional career in the\nserviqe of your country. If you are between 16\nand 20, physically fit and have either senior\nor junior Matriculation, take advantage of this\noutstanding educational and career opportunity. Get the full facts Fill in and mail this\ncoupon today! Applications must be in by\nJuly 1st.\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia\nRegular Officer Training Plan\nSelection Board\nNational Defence Headquarters\nOTTAWA, Ontario.\nPlease send me, without obligation, ftill information on tha\nRegular Officer Training Plan. i\nName\t\nAddress\t\nCity\/Town\" . , .\nProvince\t\nTelephone\nNavy\nMy Service Preference Is:\nArmyA\nAir Force\nef^i \u2022 -g \u00abg .   A -T% SUPER-SPEED\nGillette Razor\n-    PLUS QUARTER-HOUR\nSports Record\n$2.79 VALUE\n-Both For\nRegular Price ot\nRazor Mono\nF*%n\n[\/^\u25a0L\n\u2022 Your Gillette\nw\u00a3m B^\nSuper-Speed Razor\n5s^     changes blades\nT^Hs\nj^^hwith  a  twist,\n'\u25a0Brill shaves in a breeze\nill\nKgy and  rinses   clean\n&^7  instantly!\nDAD can live and relive some of the greatest\nmoments in sports with this thrilling\n7-inch, long-playing disc condensed from the\n$5.95 Columbia album. And there's just no\nmatch for the clean, comfortable shaves he\ngets with today's Gillette Super-Speed Razor!\nSet includes razor, handsome transparent\ntravel case and a handy dispenser of Gillette\nBlue Blades.\nGive the man who already has a Gillette Super-Speed Razor ...\nA specially wrapped\nFather's Day CARTON OF\n50 GILLETTE BLUE BLADES\n\u2022 You'd go a long way to top a generous supply of\nGillette Blue Blades. And just sfee this real man-style\ngift carton that contains 60 blades in handy, time-\nsaving dispensers with safety compartments for used\nblades. It's a great gift for Dad!\n\u2014\u2014.\n\u25a0 ''- \u25a0A-:\"4'':\n ' '\u25a0\u25a0   '\n'\n\t\n-\u2014\n\u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0\n\t\n\u25a0   *\u25a0-.-.\u25a0 '.\u00bb\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\n,':\u25a0'.\u25a0\u25a0'\n10 \u2014 NEftON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, JUNE 7,1956\n\u25a0\u25a0L\nr\nL\nA\nB\nN\nE\nR\nH\nE\nN\nR\nL\nO\nN\nE\nR\nA\nN\nG\nE\nR\nO\nN\nD\nI\nE\nF-PGGERIN'AH WAS GONNA\nDIE,AH-o\"I.P.l!,-SOLD MAH\nSKULLTOTH'   J\nMOOSEUM.\n^K|\n( ^*1\nS- ' **!    A\n)    gW\n\u20220>*        ^Mf\"*!ir*i*ri5-f \/ GOTBALDVS \\\n-^rF^m\u2014fMlff'^'\/.     > ,   <5WV\/ r,^\nlaUI-R^'ra^^\nv^PT    \"^vJ^IIOF ^iMf^r^LW^i\nLmSk\ni&JgMmWb\n^^T^^^^^f^^F'i\nrf y|\n##3111\nt^.'-\u2014'   \/K^   l&lS^r^Bi\nROLDIXBILLl )MtTFIX-m\/\nNO NEED TO\nSHOOT!\nJUSTIVAiVH THEM\nUNTILWEGET   <\n7MSM TIED.-Sy^\nb \/\/I\nk\nMmu\\W\/\/.   \\'$\n\\ws\u00a3r\n^^^HUJIl'MQ^J^\nm\nFSi\u00a7il\nJVjjSjj K^\n5Ss\n\u00ab\u00a7\u00bb\n!-jjjjJI|ll|lfl'\"                J\nWHY?!\n[did sou know ..\nmama's mad at ) \u00ab^\nLvOU.RADCry? r-' %\n\u25a0Brc^-y^^-\u2014           (\u00a7\u00bb\n|pj '                    A\nrti P        W^\nw1 m\nPi:\nin\n\\    \u2022 .\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS\nfho Daily Nttwrdoei \"not hold I tool t responsible in tho evnni\nOf an error In the following  Hits\nMogul    ; \u201e 1.    2.95\n)iiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiniiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiii!i \"\nQuotation    lists    from    tha\nCanadian   stock   markets   are\nCompiled and published by the\nDaily   News  as  m   service   to  '\nsubscribers. The lists are added   to   or   reviled   constantly.\nStocks In which there Is particular  interest, and  not  now\nquoted, can be  added  at the\nrequest of readers. ,\na\nit I j i in 1111111111 e 111111 ri 1111111111111111 \u00a3\nTORONTO  STOCKS\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nAlgom Uranium _    18,50\nAnacon Lead      2.80\nAnglo Rouen      1.17\n\"   '   \" .15\n40\n.23\n2 15\n.1)4\n.20\n1.40\n10.50\n.73\nAubelle\nAumacho  \t\nAumaque \t\nAunor   \t\nBase Metals\t\nBaska Uranium\nBrilund _\t\nBrunswick ...\nBuffalo Ank\t\nCampWl C       19.62%\nCampbell R L      5.75\nCan Met   _a.     2.30\nCassiar _      8.40\nCentral Patricia       1.38\nOhimo          1.20\nChromium  _....     3.50\nCoin Lake  _ 13\nCons Denison       9.95\nCons Discovery       3.45\nCons Halliwell\nCons Howe\nCons Red Pop '.\nCons Rcgcourt .\nCons M & S \t\nCons Sanorm\t\nCon Sub __\t\nConwest\n1.53\n4.15\n.41\n0\u00b0\n32^37 Vt\n.15\n4.00\n6.25\nCopper Corp       1.98\nCopper Man  \u2014 25\nDuvan   '. _      1.20\nDyno            1.10\nEast Amphi  10\nEast Sullivan        5.00\nFalconbridge   _    34.00\nFaraday    :.      1.40\nFrobisher       4.35\nGeco             18.62%\nGeo Scientific Pros      2.45\nGiant Yel            4.95\nGolden Manitou       3.15\nGrandines       _ 37\nGunnar Gold     17.50\nHarminerals  _ 80\nHeadway      1.41\nHollinger      26.00\nHudson Bay _    79.00\nInspiration  .....:      1.25\nInt Nickel _    92.00\n3.30\n1.19\n.37%\n.09\n20.25\n21.25\n.11%\n.15\n4.40\nIron Bay\nJollet Que \t\nJonsmith  \t\nKenville\nKerr Addison ..\nLabrador    \t\nKeyboycon\nLake Lingman\nLakeshore   ...\nLittle Long Lao      1 53\nLorado\nLouvic't \t\nMacassa      \t\nMadsen R L \u201e\t\nMalartic G F.\t\nManeast .\nMaritime Mines .\nMcMarmac \t\nMilliken \t\nMining Corp \t\n1.15\n.25\n2.10\n2.50\n1.55\n.24\n3.00\n.16\n2.01\n.24.75\n.28%\n.28\n.18\nMulti Mlns  I      1.25\nNew Alger _ _ 28\nNew Highrldge\nNew Harricana\nNew J.ason   ....\nNew Lund\nNew Thurbois\nNiipssing ..Mines _     4.00\nNoranda New     57.00\nNlsto       23%\nNorgold      '_ 20\nNormetals _..    6.75\nNorpax   '  .-.      1.42  '\nNorth Can      1.50\nOpemiska    _    14.62%\nPickle Crow _ \u201e      1.48\nPurdy M        28\nPreston E D          6 50\nQuebec Copper       2.05\nQuebec Lab 16%\nQuebec Lithium _    11.37%\nQuebec Metallurgical      3.75\nQuemont 26\nRainville      1.40\nRadiore  _      1.17\nRayrock      _      1.80\nSan Antonio    90\nSherritt Gordon      8.75\nSilver Miller       1.35\nSteep Rock       _    19.m\nSlocan Van Roi 24\nSullivan'Con  _     5 60\nTeck Hughes      2.03\nTemagami            7.00\nThomn-Lund  _      1.65\nTombill  44\nTrans Cont Res  42\nVentures     38.25\nViolamac              2f28\nWaite Amulet     14.00\nYale  41\nYellowknife Bear      2.11\nYukeno    _ 10%\nOILS\nAmerican Leduc _      1.15\nBata Petroleum 16\nCal & Ed       _    25.75\nCdn Atlantic       7.30\nCan Collieries         9.75\nCentral Expolrers  _    4.75\nCentral Leduc         4.35\nCon East Crest  68\nCons Peak _..      1.47\nCoast Polio Shots\nStart Again Soon\nVANCOUVER (CP) - School\nchildren will start receiving polio\nvaccine shots here again next week\nafter a week-long stoppage resulting from a shortage of the vaccine.\nDuvex\nGreat Sweetgrass\nHighcrest \t\nHome A  _...\nRroy       _\nMarigold \t\nMidcon    \t\nNat Pete    ...\nNew Continental ..\nNew Gas Expl  \t\nOkalta     _\nPac Pete  \t\nPathfinder \t\nPetrol  _..\nPonder\n.34\n3.50\n. .41%\n15.75\n2.46\n.30\n1.06\n4.35\n.80\n1.60\n2.80\n16.00\n1.41\n1.50\n.74\nRoyalite       13.'5\nSpooner\nTrans Era \t\nTriad  \t\nUnited Oils      \t\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi \t\nAlgoma Steel   \t\nAluminum\nAmer Tel & Tel ....\nAtlas St   \t\nBAOil         _\nBathurst Power \t\nBell Telephone .....\nBrazilian       \t\nB C El 4%s\nB C Forest\nB C Packers B \t\nB C Power A \t\nBurns A    \t\nBurrard A \t\nCan Brew    \t\nCan Canners \t\nCan Celanese \t\nCan Cement  _.\nCan Chem Co\t\nCan Dredge x.\t\nCan Oil ._\t\nCan Pac RIy \t\nCockshutt    \t\nCons Gas\t\nDist Seagram   \t\nDom Foundries\nDom Magnesium\nDom Steel Ord   .\nDom Stores\nDom Tar & Chem _    155fi\nDom  Textiles\nFddy Paner\nFamous Players\nFord A      \t\nGatineau  \t\nGoodyear\nGoodyear nfd\nThe\npleasant\nchewing\nsatisfies\nthat\nlittle hungry feeling'-and helps\nkeepyourfigure neat and trim!\n.37\n.43\n8.90\n235\n.    38\n. 102%\n.. 126%\n. 179%\n-   26%\n41\n.   38  \u2022\n.   46%\n7\n. 100%\n..   16\n.   12%\n..   39%\n.   12%\n.     8%\n.   30\n.   41\n.   18\n.   31 Vt\n.     9\n.    21%\n..    23\n..   31%\n6V4\n..    20=4\n..    351\/4\n..    23%\n..    12%\n.    20%\n37%\nVancouver Stocks\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nBeaver Lodge _ 36\nBeta Gamma  v 14\nBralorne   \u2022      5.30\nCan Lithium        1.08\nCanusa  _ 03%\nCariboo Gold  58\nFarwest Tungsten   25\nGiant Mascot  - 78\nGranduc _ -.     5.85\nGrandview         .13\nHamil Sil       04\nHighland Bell  77\nJackson Mines   41\nJaye Ex _        _ DO\nKoote Base Metals  03\nNational Ex  58\nPac Eastern Gold  11\nPend Oreille            4.00\nPioneer Gold .        1.90\nPremier Border    18\nQuatsino _ 71\nRexspar  ]      .34\nRix-Athabaska  80\nSheep Creek            1.60\nSherritt Gordon        8.70\nSilback Premier          .22\nSilver Ridge         14\nSilver Standard      58\nSunshine Lardeau   29\nSurf Inlet    10\nTaylor      27\nTrojan 54\nUnited Estella    : 18\nUtica -  05\nWestern Exploration  63\nYale 39\nOILS\nAltex 22\nA P Consolidated 47\nCalgary & Edmonton     25.25\nCharter _  .'.      1.90\nCommonwealth          4.50\nDel Rio         3.50\nHome   __     _   12.25\nNew Gas Ex       L55\nOkalta Com         m\nPacific Pete          16.00\nPeace River Gas       9.65\nRoyalite      _    13.00\nRoyal Can  _ 11%\nSparmac   26\nUnited      2.30\nVanalta      _      .20\nVantor      '1.14\nVulcan     58\nYankee Princess  80\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlberta Distillers       1.75\nAlberta Distillers Vt       1.50\nB C Forests     15.75\nB C Power     39.50\nInt Brew B       _      5.05\nInland Nat Gas  _      5.86%\nLucky Lager       4.50\nMacM & Bloedel B     43.00\nMid Western         4.05\nPowell River  _   54.00\nWestminster Paper      23.00\nWestern Plywoods  _   22.50\nUNLISTED\nBluebird  02%\nNew Mol Mac \u201e    15\nSunloch  _     3.50\nWestminster Mines  79\nWoodbury     12%\nBANKS\nBank of Montreal _    49.50\nCan. Bank of Com. 51.00\n1 Impelral Bank ol Canada 56.00\nRoyal Bank of Canada . 58.00\nFUNDS\nBalanced. Mutual       5.20\nCan. Inv. Fund              9.19\nCommonwealth  Int _     8.00\nGrouped Income         3.88\nInvestors Mutual     10.05\nLeverage       5.81\nTrans Canada \"C\"        6.05\nMarket Trends\nNEW YORK (AP) - The stock\nmarket was the subdued type with\nprice sagging quietly. Losses some\ntimes went to around two points,\nbut most were fractional.\nCanadian issues were mixed on\nthe New York exchange. Hiram\nWalker was up 3\/4 and Granby\nMinring %. Aluminium Ltd. and\nInternational Nickel both fell %\nHudson Bay Mining slipped Vit\nCanadian Pacific dropped V\\ and\nDistillers Seagram was off Vfe.\nDome Mines was unchanged.\nTORONTO (CP) - The stock\nmarket, after two days of mixed\nprices, eased lower. Trading\ncrawled along at the slowest pace\nsince Dec. 12, 1955.\nThe downward trend was the\nfirst time the market had retreated\nsince early last week when the\ndrop was followed by two successive sharp advances.\nAll indices were down with industrials losing 1.03 points. Most\nsections among industrials had\nmore losses than gains, despite\nsubstantial gains of more than $3\nby three stocks.\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 The Montreal and Canadian stock exchanges\nwere firm in early trading but\nfaded in the afternoon stretch to\nclose on ah irregularly lower note.\nModerate trading showed mainly\nfractional changes with scattered\nissues moving in a point range.\nUtilities were mixed. Losses In\nthe papers were general.\n7%\n57\n17%\n117\n146\n50\nGypsum Lime     34^\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\nTimes Shown Are Pacific Standard Time\nKXLY TV - Channel 4\n:00\u2014Sign On\n: 15\u2014Love of Life\n:30\u2014As The World Turns\n:00\u2014Looney Tunes\n:30\u2014Bob Crosby\n:0O\u2014Brighter Day\n-.30\u2014Edge Of Night\n:00\u2014TBA\n:30\u2014Search For Tomorrow\n:00\u2014Garry Moore\n:45\u2014 Whats Cooking\n:30\u2014Strike It Rich\n:00\u2014Looney Tunes\n:30\u2014Sheena\n:00\u2014Robin Hood\n:30\u2014Jungle Jim\n:00\u2014I Search tor Adventure\n:30\u2014Climax\n:30\u2014Four Star Playhouse\n:00\u2014Bob Cummings\n:00\u2014Arthur Murray Party\n:3n\u2014Spokane Wrestling\n\"i\u2014Follow That Man\nKHQ TV - Channel 6\n!:40\u2014Test Pattern\n1:45\u2014Color Test Program\n1:55\u2014Bible Reading\n1:00\u2014Tenn   Ernie Ford\n1:30\u2014Feather Yquc Nest\n1:00\u2014Today On The West Coast\n1:00\u2014Matinee Theatre\n2:00\u2014Now The News\n1:00\u2014Women\n2:00\u2014Trouble With Father\n:00\u2014Bar Six Roundup\n:00\u2014Mr  Engineer\n:30\u2014Howdy Doody\n00\u2014Little Rascals\n30\u2014Cartoon Carnival\n00\u2014Landscape For Living\n30\u2014Frontpage\n45\u2014News\n00\u2014Bet Your Life\n:30\u2014Dragnet\ns:00\u2014Hall Of Stars\n8:30\u2014Theatre \u2022\n9:00\u2014Video Theatre\n10:00\u2014 Liberace\n10:30\u2014Boston Blackie\n11:00\u2014Mr. and Mrs. North\nHiram Walker .\nHoward Smith ,\nImperial Oil ....\nImp Tobacco ....\nInt Metals \t\nInt Pete   \t\nLoblaw A\n69%\n46%\n49%\n11%\n41\nsm\n18%\nLobjaw B  18%\nMassev Harris     ! :. 7%\nMcColl Frontenac  _ 50\nMoore Corn  44!A\nNat Steel Car .' 29y8\nPage Hersey   _   88\nPowell River   :... 55%\nRuss Industries   12%\nShawinigan  84\nSicks Brew     .'  26\nSimpsons A  1934\nStandard Paving   4134\nSteel of Can          60%\nUnion Gas of Can  48\nWestern Grocers A \u201e  22\nWinnipeg Gas     -14%\nNorway To Loosen\nDollar Area Trade\nLONDON (CP)\u2014The Financial\nTimes, in a report from Oslo, says\nthe Norwegian government plans\nto liberalize trade with the dollar\narea. The trend toward freer trade\nwith North America is part of\nNorway's plan to ease still further\nimport restrictions on goods from\nWestern Europe.\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY (CPJ) \u2014 The cittlt\nmarket was active at the Calgary\nstockyards Wednesday, with 1100\ncattle and 25 calves on offer.\nGood and choice butcher steer*\nsteady; odd package strictly choice\nlight steers 19.50; common and medium grades steady; good and\nchoice butcher heifers steady to\nstrong with odd sales topping 18.\nAll classes of fed calves steady;\nmedium and good cows steady to\nstrong, with odd sales up to 14.80;\nbulls steady; the few early sales\nof stocker and feeder steers steady.\nAll classes veal calves up $1 or\nmore to date this week; odd sales\nup to 26.50.\nChoice steers 18.75-19.40; good\n18.25-18.75; medium 17-18; common\n14.50-16.50; choice heifers 17.50-18;\ngood 18-17; medium 15-16; common\n12.50-13.50; common 11-12; canners\nand cutters 6.50-10.50; good bulls\n12.50-13.15; common to medium 9-\n1%; good feeder steers 17-18; good\nstock steers 16.50-17.50; common\nto medium 13-18; good and choice\nveal 21-25; common to medium\n13-20.\nHogs sold 30 cents higher Tuesday at 24.80 A grade; two loads\n19.35 liveweight for eastern Canadian shipment; sows 25 higher\n12.50 liveweight.\nGood lambs 19-20.\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS\n1240 ON THE DIAL\n(Pacific Daylight Time)\nKREM TV - Channel 2\n11:45\u2014Test Pattern\n12:00\u2014Afternoon Film Festival\n2:00\u2014Movietime on 2\n3.30\u2014 The Ruggles\n4:00\u2014Storyland\n4:15\u2014John Dalv\n4:30\u2014Shadow Stumpers\n4:50-Watch The Birdie\n5-nO--MieKpv Mouse Club\n6:0O\u2014Kit Carson\n7:00\u2014Eddie Arnold\n7.2.5\u2014News\n7.30\u2014Stop The Music\n8:00\u2014City Detective\n8:30\u2014Amazing Junninger\n9:00\u2014News\n9:30\u2014Guy Lombardo\n10:00\u2014Regal Theatre\n10:30\u2014News\n10:35\u2014Hollywood Off Beat\n11:30\u2014Layman's Call to Prayer\n(Programs subtect to change by stations' without  notice I\nREAD AND USE\nThe Nelson News\nWANT ADS\nEXPERT   TELEVISION\nSERVICE\nOn All Makes ot Sets.\nPhone 1300 Days, '1033 R Nights\nExcept Sundays and Holidays.\n. Mc and Mc\nTHURSDAY, JUNE 7, 1956\n6:30\u2014Wake-Up Time\n12:55\u2014News\n7:00\u2014 News\nL0O-CKLN Reports\n7:05\u2014March of Truth\n1:15\u2014Matinee        \u2022\n7:10-Farm Fare\n1:30\u2014Pacific News\n7:15\u2014Chapel in the Sky\n1:45\u2014Sacred Heart\n7:30\u2014News\n2:00\u2014School Broadcast\n7:35\u2014Sports News\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n7:40\u2014Rise 'n' Shine\n3:30\u2014House of Commons RepoH\n8:00\u2014News\n3:35\u2014Music for Relaxing\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n3:45\u2014Today's Music\n8:15\u2014Musicale\n4:30\u2014Heidi\n8:30\u2014Home Gardening\n5:00\u2014Summer Skies\n8:35\u2014Musicale\n5:30\u2014Closing Markets\n8:45\u2014Serenade\n5:40\u2014Sports News\n8:55\u2014Entertainment World\n5:45\u2014Strikes and Spares\n9.00\u2014News\n5:50\u2014News\n9:05\u2014Homemaker Harmonies\n6:00\u2014Rawhide\n10:00\u2014News\n6:13\u2014Hit Parade\n10:05\u2014Homemaker   Harmonies\n6-45\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n10:15\u2014Happy Gang\n7;30\u2014Promenade Symphony\n10:45\u2014Story Parade\n8:30\u2014Prairie Playhouse\n11:00\u2014News\n9:00\u2014Chamber Music\n11:05\u2014Call One-Nine\n9:30\u2014Dancetime\n12:00\u2014Novelty Time\n10:00\u2014News\n12:15\u2014Sports News\n10:15-Talk\n12:20\u2014News\n10:30\u2014The Waiting People\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n11:00-NEWS Nightcap\nCBC PROGRAMS\n(Mountain Standard Time)\nFRIDAY, JUNE 8, 1956\n00\u2014Fisherman's Broadcast\n15\u2014Musical Minutes\n30\u2014News\n35\u2014Musical Minutes\n40-^-Morning Devotions\n55\u2014Musical March Past\n:0O--News\n:10\u2014Here's Bill Good\n:15\u2014 Morning Music\n:45\u2014Musical Program\n00\u2014 BBC News\n: 15\u2014Aunt Lucy\n30\u2014Laura Limited\niOO-^Morning Visit\n:15\u2014Happy Gang\n;00\u2014Your Good Neighbour\n: 15\u2014Kindergarten of the Air\n:3Q\u2014Man and His Music\n15\u2014News\n:25\u2014Showcase\n:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n55\u2014Five to One\n00\u2014Afternoon Concert\n2:00\u2014National  School  Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n3:30\u2014Program Resume\n3:45\u2014B. C. Roundup,\n4:30\u2014Billy Bartlett\n4:45\u2014Camp Wilderness\n5:00\u2014Traffic Jarr.boret\n5:30\u2014Tumbleweed Trail\n5:45\u2014Presenting\n6:00\u2014Rawhide\n6:15\u2014Roving Reporter\n6:30\u2014Friday Feature\n6:45\u2014Bill Good\n7:00\u2014News\n7:30\u2014Toronto Symphony\n8:30\u2014Vancouver Theatre\n9:00\u2014Musical\n9:15\u2014John Fisher\n9:30\u2014Sports Review\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014By Invitation\n10:30\u2014Parade of Choirs\nPopi\n\t\n\t\nJ : :\t\n  . ! \u2014\u2014\n'' .    . ' M *\n,\n\u25a0\u25a0'**. .\u25a0\u25a0'\".'\".\u25a0\u25a0\u00bb.' \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0 *\nmy\nSMALL INVESTMENT   -\nLARGE RETURNS\nThat's the Want Ad Story   -   PHONE   1844\nBIRTHS\nANDERSON \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs,\nRoland Anderson of Harrop, at\nKootenay Lake General Hospital,\nJune 5, a son.\nJOHNSON \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs.\nRaymond Johnson, 1015 Eighth\nStreet, at Kootenay Lake General\nHospital, June 6. a daughter.\nHESLIP \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs.\nJames Heslip, 311 Innes Street, at\nKootenay Lake General Hospital,\nJune 6, a daughter.\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nHELP WANTED\nSEALED TENDERS addressed to\nthe undersigned and endorsed\n\"TENDER FOR FOUR BUILDINGS, McKAY CREEK INDUSTRIAL COMPOUND, KOOTENAY NATIONAL PARK, BRITISH COLUMBIA\", will be received in the office of the Secretary,\nuntil 3.00 p.m. (E.D.S.T.) WEDNESDAY, JULY 25, 1956.\nPlans and specifications can be\nseen and forms of tender obtained\nat the offices of the Chief Architect, Department of Public Works,\nOttawa, Ontario, the District Architect, 1110 West Georgia Street,\nBegg Building, Vancouver, B.C.;\nthe District Architect, 10018\u2014\n105th Street, Edmonton, Alta.; the\nPost Office. Kamloops, B.C.; the\nPost Office, Calgary, Alta., and the\nPost Office, Banff, Alberta.\nTo be considered each tender\nmust be accompanied by a security in the form of a certified\ncheque or bonds as specified in\nthe forms of tender and made on\nor according to these forms and in\naccordance with the conditions set\nforth therein.\nThe   Department,   through   the\nChief    A r c h i t e ct's   office,    or\nthrough the office of the District\nArchitect,    1110    West    Georgia\nStreet, Begg Building, Vancouver,\nB.C., and  the District Architect,\nVAN BETWEEN AGE 22-35 FOR j 10018\u2014105th    Street,'   Edmonton,\ngeneral   office   work.    Some  Alta., will supply blue-prints and\n\u25a0   knowledge of bookkeeping and I specification of the work on de-\ntyping preferred. Write to Box | posit of a sum of $100.00 in the\n7153,  Daily  News,  stating  age,     \t\nApplications   Are   Requested\nFor Position of\nVILLAGE CLERK\nVILLAGE OF SALMO\nPart time work three days a week.\nState qualifications and salary expected. Applications to be sent to\nChairman of\nVillage Commissioners\nBy June 12th\nN a TI oWa!Tcc\u00a5cern~has\nopening for courteous, ambitious man with car to contact\nestablished customers in New\nDenver, Nakusp area, $85.00 per\nweek to start, plus expenses.\nWrite Don Sargent, 208 Morgan\nSt., Nelson, B.C\nPUBLIC NOTICES\n(Continued)\nNotice is'hereby given that the\nTrustees of School District No. 7\n(Nelson) will receive bids for the\npurchase from it of Lots 22, 23 and\n24, in Block 15 official Plan of the\nCity of Nelson.\nEach bid shall be in writing accompanied by a certified cheque\nfor the amount thereof payable to\nthe Trustees and shall be delivered to the office of the Secretary\nat 554 Stanley Street, Nelson, B.C.\nbefore the hour of 5 o'clock in\nafternoon of Friday the 29th day\nof June, 1958.\nThe Trustees shall not be bound\nto accept any bid and cheques not\naccepted will be returned.\nDated this 6th day of June, 1956.\nJ. S. Livingstone\nSecretary-Treasurer.\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\nNew Cars\nexperience   and   qualifications.\nAll replies confidential.\nWANTED - 2 DISTRICT MGRS.\nwith direst selling experience\nto take charge of non-competitive line for East and West Kootenays. Commission and over-1\nride. Box 3490, Nelson Daily ]\n. News.\n\u25a0S-IAN, 22-40, AMBITIOUS, MAR-\nried, good car, to service established Fuller Brush territory.\nAbove average earnings. Fulltime only. Call or write D. E.\nSergent, 208 Morgan St., ph. 1335\n^ANTED\u2014EXPERIENCED SUR\nvey personnel, transitmen and\ndraftsmen for southern interior.\nPermanent employment to suitable men. Department of Highways, Nelson.\nWanted - single young\nman for timekeeper, East Kootenay mine. Typing required.\n\u25a0Write giving full particulars,\nBox 7207, Nelson Daily News,\nform of a CERTIFIED bank\ncheque or money order payable to\nthe order of the RECEIVER GENERAL OF CANADA. The deposit\nwill be released on return of the\nblue-prints and specification in\ngood condition within a month\nfrom the date of reception of tenders. If not returned within that\nperiod the deposit will be forfeited.\nThe lowest or any tender not\nnecessarily accepted.\nROBERT FORTIER,\nChief of Administrative Services\nand Secretary.\nDepartment of Public Works,\nOttawa, May 28, 1956.\nWANTED: BOOK KEEPING\nmachine operator, shorthand\nhelpful but not essential. Good\nsalary to qualified person. Ph.\n121.\nYOUNG MAN FOR FRONT END\nwork in Service Station. Must\nbe reliable and conscientious.\nApply DeFoe Service Ltd.\nWANTED -^ACCOUNTANT TO\nkeep books and payrolls Nelson\noffice Copper Leaf Mines Ltd.,\nRoom 8, 490 Baker Street.\nOPPORTUNITY FOR YOUNG\nman to learn trade in local\nfirm. Write to Box 7163, Nelson\nDaily News.\n\\VANTED: MAN 22-25 FOR OF-\nfice work. Some book keeping\nknowledge preferred. Box 7241\nNelson Daily News.\nWANTED   -YOUTH TO LEARN\npress work, Apply Fred Brown, I Miner's\nDaily News, after 8 p.m.\nMessenger boy with bicy-\ncle, day work, must be 15. Apply CPR.\nWANTED\u2014COMPANION HOUSE\nkeeper in the forties. Write Box\n271, Fruitvale. B. C.\nSALESMEN WANTED\nDEPARTMENT OF MINES\nMINERAL ACT\n(FORM F)\nNotice of Application for\nCertificate of Improvements\nGroup 1: AmcoNos. 1,2 Fr., 3 Fr.,\n4, 5, 6, 15 Fr., 16 Fr.: Group 2: Am-\nc? Nos. 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 13. 18 Fr., 23\nFr. Group 3: Amco Nos. 35. 36, 37\nFr., 38 Fr., 39 Fr., 40 Fr., 41 Fr., 42\nFr.; and Amco No. 12 Mineral\nClaims Situate in the Nelson Mining Division\nWhere located: Group 1 \u2014 Billings Creek drainage area -^ just\nsouth of the Sheep Creek road.\nGroup 2. 3 and Amco No. 12 \u2014\nBillings-Bennett creek area \u2014\nsouth of the Sheep Creek road.\nLawful holder: THE AMERICAN METAL COMPANY, LIM-\nITED.\nNumber of the holder's free\nrpiner's certificate 70833 F.\nTake  notice that  John  L.  De-\nLeen,   Agent   for   The   American\nMetal    Company,    Limited    Free\nCertificate   No.  69075   F,\nintends, at the end of sixty days,\nbut not later than one year, from\nthe date hereof, to apply to the\nMining Recorder for a Certificate\nof Improvements for the purpose\nof obtaining a Crown grant of the\nabove claim.\nAnd further take notice that action, under section 85 of the \"Mineral Act,\" must be commenced be*\nfore the issuance of such Certificate of Improvements.\nDated this thirty-first day of\nMay, 1956.\nJOHN L. DeLEEN.\nAgent,\nAMBITIOUS SALESMAN\nto call on grocery, drug, hardware, confectionery, variety\nstores, service stations, departmental and chain stores and supermarkets. We have fast-selling\nrepeat items that show big vol-1 LAND REGISTRY ACT\nume and high commissions, The | (Section 161)\nright man is assured a secure  TN THE- MATTER of Legal Sub-\nfuture   with   an  expanding  or- i divisions 12, 13 and 14 of Section\n.in\n1956 Oldsmobile 4-Door\nSedan\n1956 Chevrolet Bel Air\nV8 Sedan\n1956 Chevrolet Bel Air 6\nSedan\n1956 Chevrolet Bel Air Hard\nTop V8 Sedan\n1956 Chevrolet Deluxe 6\nSedan\n1956 Chevrolet Deluxe 6\nPower Glide Sedan\n1956 Chevrolet Bel  Air V8\nCoach\n1956 Chevrolet Sedan\nDelivery\nUSED CARS\n1956 Meteor Hard Top\nCoupe\n1956 Meteor Niagara Sedan\n1954 Ford Sedan\n1954 Chevrolet Sedan\n1953 Ford Sedans\n1953 Meteor Sedans\n1953 Chevrolet Sedans\n1953 Austin Sedans\n1953  Buick Sedan\n1953  Pontiac Hard Top\nCoupe\n1952 Dodge Sedan\n1952 Chevrolet Sedan\n1952 Chevrolet Hard Top\nCoupe\n1952 Vanguard Sedan\n1952 Austin Sedans\n1952 Austin Station Wagon\n1951  Chevrolet Sedan\n1951   Oldsmobile Sedan\n1951   Austin Sedan\n1951  Meteor 2-Door Sedan\n1951   Plymouth Sedan\n1950 Chevrolet Sedan\n1950 Plymouth Sedan\n1950 Mercury Sedan\n1950 Austin Sedan\n1948 Mercury Sedan\n1947 Chevrolet Sedan\n1947 Oldsmobile Sedan\n1947 Pontiac Coach\n1947 Mercury Sedan\n1946 Plyn   uth Sedan\n1942 Plymouth Sedan   '\n1942 Chevrolet Fleetline\nCoach.\nUSED.TRUCKS\n1951 Chevrolet Vi-Ton\nPickup\n1950 Mercury Vi-Ton\nPickup\n1949 Ford '\/->-Ton Pickup\n1950 Austin  Vi-Ton  Pickup\n1949 Austin  Vi-Ton  Pickup\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\n(Continued)\nTrucks\n1952 I.H.C. Panel\n1953 3\/i Ton,\nStudebaker\n2\u20141949 I.H.C. KBS7\n1\u20141950 I.H.C. L182\n1\u20141950 Ford 3 Ton\nWith 4-5 Yd. Dump\n1\u20141951  Ford 3 Ton '\nWith 4-5 Yd. Dump\n1\u20141950 Cab-Over White\nWith   Trailing   Axle.\n21 Ft. Deck and Winch.\n& Equipment Co. Ltd\n\u2022702 Front St\nPhone 1400   Nelson, B C.\nFOR SALE \u2014 1956 DODGE RE-\ngent, 43,000 miles. What offers?\nPhone 1610-X.\n1951 STUDEBAKER V-8 MOTOR\nand transmission. $125.00. Phone\n1234, DeFoe Service.\n194ff STUDEBAKER SPECIAL\ndeluxe ^edan, overdrive, radio,\nheater, good rubber. Ph. 1428-L.\nRENTALS\nSMALL OFFICE AND WARE-\nhouse with shelving conveniently located in Truck Terminus\nBldg. on ground floor .Phone 77\nfor particulars.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC. FOR SALE\n(Continued)\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, JUNE 7, 19S6 \u2014 11\nMACHINERY\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\nBLACKWOOD SPECIAL\n2 Lots 800 Blk. Latimer St.\n$200 down, $25 per tftftft\nmonth. Full price    .\" \u00abP\"\u00bb\u00ab\nNORTH SHORE\nFOUR 'BEDROOMS ONE FLOOR\nLiving   room   with   fireplace,\ndining   room,' \"kitchen,   bathroom, entrance hall and four\n-   bedrooms all qn the same level.\nTiling throughout all but living\nroom. Full high basement.with\nwash-tubs, automatic oil fumade, piped to all rooms. Workshop and fruit and vegetable\nstorage.\n. .ONLY 8 YEARS OLD.\nABOUT ONE ACRE LAND.\n.   5 MINUTES TO FERRY.\nUNFURNISHED MODERN\nheated 3 room apartment. Wired\nfor electric range plus laundry\nand storage room, bath and\nshower. Phone 1715-Y.\nHOUSEKEEPING OR SLEEPING\nrooms, fully furnished with frig.. I\nday, week or monthly rate. Al- j\nlen Hotel, 171 Baker St.\nATTRACT IVE APARTMENT\navailable July 1st. Three rooms\nand tiled bath. Fleming Apart-1\nments, 224 Behnsen St. Ph. 130.1\nFOR RENT - 3 \"ROOM SUITE.\nSelf contained. Victoria St., ph.\n1470-X.\nCOTTAGE   FOR    RENT.    SUIT-1\nable for elderly couple   Phone 1\n'   1647-R.\n3   ROOM   SUITE   FURNISHED,\nclose in. Vacant June 15. Phone\n653-R.\t\nHOUSE WANTED \u2014 UN'FURN\"-\nished, responsible tenant. Please\nphone 1276-X.\nFOR RENT: SUMMER COT-\ntage partly furnished, North\nShore. Phone 678-L-2.\nganization. Choice territories\nnow open. Write Lightmaster\nCorporation Ltd.. Hamilton. Ont.\nHELP   WANTED \u2014FEMALE\nGARAGE WITH DEALERSHIP\nrequires girl for office typing\nand bookkeeping, experience\nrequired, shorthand heipful but\nnot essential. Permanent position with benefits and good salary. Apply Box 7119. Nelson\nDaily News.\nSEAMSTRESS FOR LADIES\nand gents repairs and alterations. Apply Jonella Cleaners.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nH. ZYLSTRA\n1ST CLASS CEMENT WORK\nup-to-date methods, old country\nstyle. Specialty: Floors, walks,\ndriveways, wet basements and\nfireplaces   Phone 1364-R.\nEXPERIENCED RELIABLE MID-\ndle-aged woman wants job\ncooking in camp. Any number\nof men. Box 3895, Daily News.\nELECTRICAL^ONtRACTOR-^\nFrank DiBella, 414 Falls, phone\n1184-Y.\t\nRELIABLE GIRL WTlTTBABY\nSit evenings. Phone 604-Y.\nFOR HANDYMAN\"-\"ROpGH\ncarpenter   Phone 256-R.\nDRESSMAKER7^ SHOP. PHONE\n1678-L.\n2. Township 24, Range 19, West of\nthe 5th Meridian, Kootenay District.\nProof having been filed in my\noffice of the loss of Certificate of\nTitle No. 84996-1 to the above mentioned lands in the name of Ellis\nV. Keith and bearing date the 9th\nDecember, 1950 I HEREBY GIVE\nNOTICE of my intention at the\nexpiration of one calendar month\nfrom the first publication hereof\nto issue Provisional Certificate of\nTitle in lieu of such lost Certificate. Any person having any information with reference to such\nlost Certificate of Title is requested to communicate with the undersigned. .\nDATED AT NELSON, B.C.\nthis 6th day of June,\n1956.\nL. A. McPhail,\nDeputy Registrar.\n(Continued  tn  Next Column'\nTEACHERS WANTED\nkTmBERLEYTb.C., S C ~HO 0~L\nDistrict No 3: teachers for Junior and Senior High School\ngrades; Ind. Arts (Woodwork);\ngood salary schedule. 'Box 1329.\nKimberley. B.C.\nPHONE   1844   FOR   CLASSIFIED\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES\npartIihihuahua\"PUPS FOR\nsale. Phone 1705-X.\nHOME WANTED FOR 7 MONTH\nToy Collie. Ph. 405-R.\nMotors. Ltd.\nYOUR CHEVROLET -\nOLDSMOBILE DEALER\n323 Vernon St Phone 35\n(Formerly Nelson Transfer!\nWE ARE WRECKING 300 CARS\nand trucks; rebuilt transmissions for all makes and models;\nnew and used tires, custom radios, parts and accessories for\nall makes and models We ouy\nwrecked cars and scrap metal\nWestern Auto Wrecking. Box\n132, Nelson   Phone 189-R 4\nFOR SALE-2 LOGGING KBR8,\nKBR11 International trucks,\nwith or without trailer, ready\nfor work. Jim Tedesco. Phdne\n558-R..\nNEW DODGEllNGTNErilS H.P\nComplete, radiator and batteries\nand transmission, $190.00. Phone\n1151-X after 5 p.m.\nFOR RENT \u2014 MODERN 3 BED-\nroom home on 4 lols: Garage.\n$85.00 per month. Phone 1918-X\nFOR \"RENT - HOUSEKEEPING\nroom. Phone 405-L.\nHOUSING PROBLEM?\nMay We Help You Locate in\nThe Right District at the\nRight Price?\nEXCLUSIVE BUT NOT\n. EXPENSIVE\nNewly rebuilt 3 B.R. home.\nL.R. and D.R. den with fireplace. Other quality features.\nFull basement and rumpus\nroom. 4 lots landscaped with\ndrive-in garage. Viewing by\nappointment.\nIDEAL FAIRVIEW\nLOCATION\n2 B.R. bungalow and guest\nB.R. L.R. with mantel fireplace. Kitchen with nopk.\nGlassed-in porch. Full basement. Coal furnace. 40' x 120'\nlandscaped lot, drive-in garage. Financing \u00ab I ft JJflA\navailable. Only   * ' \u00ab\u00bb\u00ab\"\"\nDO IT YOURSELF PLAN\nNearly finished, (6 Mile), 3\nB.R. home, all on one floor.\nL-shaped L.R. Well planned\nkitchen. Pembroke bath. Lot\n125' x 196'. Low J8500\ndown payment  ^\nNORTH SHORE\nVIEW PROPERTY\n1 mile from ferry, 3 acres and\n200' lake frontage and open\ncreek. 3 B.R. home all on first\nfloor. L.R.. D.R.' combination,\nkitchen nook and B.R. Rock\nfoundation. Insulated through-\nTUetrTnPsriCedright$'0-000\nLONGBEACH\n1.06 Acres. Beautifully terraced garden with brook trout\npond and right - of - way to\nbeach. 3 B.R. English type\nhome featuring continental\nfireplace in L.R. Oil CfiQAft\nfurnace. Only $0\u00bbUU\nSOUTH SLOCAN   .\nFAMILY HOME\nCleanest newly painted 4 B.R.\nHome. 72' x 125' lot in lawn,\nfruit trees and berriej^ Near\nP.O.\" and shopping CQAnn\ncentre. Full price \u2022*><\u00bb\"\"\"\nOnly $1500 Down .\nATTENTION CARPENTERS\nNorth Shore (acrqss iake.Irom-\nthe hospital). Almost finished\n2 B.R. home. .Family kitchen,\nL.R. with picture window. Immediate occupancy. C\/fCAA\nTerms. Only        '    '\"w\"v\nEvening Appointments. Call\nSylvia   Brashear,  1821-L,\nC. D. BLACKWOOD\nAGENCY\n536 WARD ST. PHONE 99\nReal  Estate Agents and.\nInsurance Agents\nTerms.\n$12,500\nSEE\ncHardy\nAgencies Ltd.\nReal Estate and Insurance\nPhone 135 or Eves., 1065-X\n1. Three B.R. older-type home.\nCncrt. foundation. iCCAft\n2 lots. Terms      J33UU\n2. Very smart 2-B.R. bungalow.\nWall-to-wall carpet in L.R. Oil\nfurnace.   $75   a   month   with\ngS\u00a3 down':        $8000\n3. Brick side by side Duplex.\nRevenue $95 a SLQOAA\nmonth. Price \u00ab*\u00bb\u00bb*\u00ab U\nGood terms.\n4. Lovely home, i (II   J AA\nlots. Terms.       . *\u2022*> * \u25a0\u00bb \u2022 UU\n5. Summer cottage. Beach frbnt-'\n, age. West Arm Kootenay Lake.\n14 miles from C40AA\n. Nelson.  . ,    .   <P4^UU\n6. Neat cottage, large CJTAAA\ngarden lot. Term?.    \u00abP\u00ab\u00bbW\"V\nC. W.  APPLEYARD  & CO\nLimited\nReal Estate and Insurance\nPhone 269 Nelson, B.C.\n5 ROOM BUNGALOW. 2 BR\nsun porch, garage, wired for\nrange, hoi air furnace, insulated\nIVi lots, good location $6200\nPh 307-R.\nLOGGER\nMINE OPERATOR\nGENERAL CONTRACTOR\nWould you like the follow--\ning features for your next\ntractor?\nLow Initial Cost\nLow Upkeep\nTop Trade In Valu\u00bb\nServiceability\nHigh Speed Portability\nTorque Converter Drive\nAutomatic Transmission\nNo Clutch\nPower-Steering\nPivot Turns\nAbility to purchase the following attachments for your\ntractor from the same manufacturer:\nBulldozer and Angledozer\nBlades,   Winches,   Front   End\nLoaders,   Backhoes,   Log\nLoaders,   Forklifts.\nIf ypu are interested ln obtaining a crawler type tractor\nwith these features, cut out\ncoupon and mail. Mark your\nspecial preference.\nBENNETTS LIMITED,\n324 Vernon Street,\nNelson, B.C.\nPhone 593\nSend ln thii coupon.\nDear Sir\nWe are Interested tn the following; rn Bulldozer, p Angledozer, r~t Front End Loader,\nr-j Backhoes. r] Log Loaders,\ni\u2014i Forklifts.\n|  My address t\u00ab\t\nPROPERTY WANTED\nWANTED\u20143 TO 4 BEDROOM\nhouse in good condition. At\nleast one bedroom on main\nfloor. Box 3885. Nelson Daily\nNews.\nBUSINESS   OPPOR I UNITIES\nSOAL BUSINESS FOR SALE.\nAlso 4 yard steel box. Atkinson\nFuel, phone 1126.\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\nTHREE-BED ROOM HOUSE\n$14,000. 207 High St Terms if\ndesired Phone 1731-X or write\nowner, R. A Dyke, 4501 West\n9th. Vancouver, BC.\nMODERN HOUSE KNOX ROAD,\n14 acres, \u00abnile from Nelson.\n$10,000 or will trade Vancouver\nproperty. Write Box 7202, Nelson Daily News.\nFAIRVIEW, 3 BEDROOM HOME,\n3 corner lots, garage, laVns, garden  1421 Front St., phone 622L\n131, ACRES. TIMBER. 8-ROOM\nhouse. 2 miles this side of Slocan City   Phone 217-R.\nFOR SALE\u2014 2V, LOTS. No 1\nfirst-class soil, fruit trees. Ph\n231-L13.\nBUILDING LOT NEAR SCHOOL\nand bus route  Ph   1048-R.\n.1 .CORNER  LOT 50X60.  CLOSE\nin  Phone 1083-L\n3-ROOM    HOUSE,    BASEMENT,\n2 lots, fruit trees. Phone 419-L.\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nFOR RENT -  FURNISHED\nhousekeeping room. *Ph. 954-R.\nFOR RENT-WAREHOUSE 50x100\nfor storage   Phone 1055\nROOM WITH COOKING FACILl- j\nties. 576 Baker St. Apt. B.\n'      BUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nA8SAYERS AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nE   W   W1DUOWSON & CO\nAssavers 301  losephine St   Nelson\nH   S   ELMES   ROSSLAND   B   L\nAssavei   Chemist   Mine Rep\nE N GI IMfcERS   AWO   SURVEYORS\nG   W   BAERG\nBritish Columbia   Land* Surveyoi\n373 Baker St      Nelson     Ph   1118\nand Box 34. Fruitvale, BC\nSuccessor to the late A   L  Purdy\nBOYD C   AFFLECK  M L 1 C\nBC Land Surveyoi   P Eng (Civill\n218 Gore St      Nelson   Phone I23B\nS   V   SHAYLER   PC   Box  252\nKimberley    Ludlow   2-2136\nRC   Land   Survevoi    Civil   Rnsrr\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS   LIMITED\nMachine   Shop.   Acetylene   ana\nelectric welding   motor rewind-\nIns  Phone 593      324 Vernon St\n1948 MOTORCYCLE INDIAN\nChief, fully equipped $350.00\ncash Phone Trail 215-X after\n6pm\n1953 DODGE CORONET V-8 MO-\ntor, good condition, good rubber, radio. Sacrifice price. Phone\n41-Y. Salmo.\nNelamt lathi Nf?ma\nCirculation Dept   Phone 1844\nSubscription Rates\nPrice pel single copy 6r Monday\nto Friday   10c on Saturday\nBy carrier   per week\nin  advance 35\nBy Mail in Canada outside Ne.sur.\nOne month $ 1 25\nThree months         $ 3 50\nSix mdnths                $ 6 50\nOne year . $12 00\nBy  Mail  to  United. Kingdom\nor  the  United. States\nOne\" month . $ I 75\nThree  months             $ 5 0U\nSix   months             $ 9 50\nOne year $18110\nWhere extra  postage is  requireo\nabove rates Dlus Dostage\nIREAD THE CLASSIFIED  DAILY\nClassified  Ads Get  Results\nTwo lots on First Street. Three\nB.R.'s. Part concrete foundation. Needs some repairs and\npXTX.'but *4<>00\nTwo lots on Sixth Street. Three\nB.R.'s. Full concrete basement.\nEight years old. C I A AAA\nBargain price       $ ' \"\u00bbvvu\/\nBrand new two B.R. bungalow\nin new subdivision. Gil furnace. Modern CIA tTAH\nconstruction.    .    $ \u25a0 ^,OUU\nThree lots in garden. Close in.\nTwo B.R. bungalow. Oil furn-\n\u25a0aS\"*       $'2,500\nAcreage op Granite Road about\n2 miles from town. A good buy\nton. handyman.       $5599\nFor Appointment To View.\nPHONE B. J. KELLY AT 1912\nTerms may be arranged.\nRobertson,   Hilliard,\nCattell Realty\nCo.,. Ltd.\n456 Ward St. Phone 1912\nDEALERS IN ALL TYPES Of\nused equipment; mill, mine and\ntogging supplies, new and used\nwire rope, pipe and fittings\nchain, steel. plate and shapes\nAtlas Iron & Metals Ltd, 250\nPrior St.. Vancouver. B C. Ph\nPAcific 6357\nOur  representative  will  contact you without delay.\nA   product  of  the   American\nTractor  Corporation.\n\"Terratrac\"\nLIMITED\nMACHINE SHOP \"\n324 Vernon St. Ph 593\nFOR SALE - ID 14 CAT WITH\nhydraulic dozer winch and canopy. Can be seen at Finning\nTractor as is $3,500.00. L. D.\nMoore, Ymir, B.C\nRITCHIE SAW SERVICE. HAM-\nmering, gumming, welding,\nagent for Spear & Jackson\nSaws. 205 Hall St. Phone 1910\nNEWMAN 8B BALL-BEARING\nplaner, daily capacity 30-40 M.\n713 Victoria. \t\nPERSONAL\n\u00ab -JS&,\nTh\u00ab \u00abw power- lawn mower will mow\nlawoi, iwecp up or mi\/kh leaves and\ndippings, trim ond tdgt, and cwt groti\nor wcodi of any height.\nSecret of iii remarkable performance\nii on entirely hew design, using highspeed, twin cuttefs and (our tiny safety\nblades. Inside each cutter ore wide support wheels on wHich the mower rkloi.\nThis new type of mowet wont scalp a\nlown, no motter how bumpy or hilly. It\ncuts over edges and along walls or fences\njust 01 easily cm on a wide lawn. It cuts\n0 broad, 30-inch swath in arty kind of\ngrots, ond through weeds of any height.\nSee a demonstration of this wondemf\nnew kind of power mower before you boy.\nnew Mcculloch\npower lawn mower\nSEE -,\nH.   \"Fritz\"   Farenholti\nC. Ross or Alex McDonald\nMAC'S\nWELDING & EQUIPMENT\nCO., LTD.\n614 Railway St.     Nelson, B.C.\nALCOHOLICS  ANONYMOUS]\nBox 388 01 Phone 368-R\nAPPROXIMATELY 3000 FEET\nused 1-inch black pipe with\nthreads and couplings, 10c per\nft. 2W O.D. boiler tubing, good\ncondition, 14 ft. lengths. 20c per\nft. Columbia Trading, 902 Front\nStreet.\nLUMBER LIQUIDATION SALE\n2x4. 2x6. 2x8. 1x6. 1x8 Bds Al]\ndressed stock $30 per thousand\nB M 4000 B M or more. Immediate del free S Kudra. Phone\n1757-R\nSENTyA MESSAGE TO FATHER]\non Father's Day. We will record [\nyour voice at home. Phone 230-R\nINVISIBLE MENDING. CIGAR- |\net burns, moth holes, cuts and 1\ntears Prompt service, reason-'\nable rates Mary Ward. 209 Vic- j\ntoria St.\nKlR A.ND LARCH CULL LUM\nber. good fire wood, limited sup\nply 1 truck load equals 2 cord?\nSpecial $15 delivered Ph  1757-R\nFAMILY SECURITY PLANS OF\n$10. $20, $30 plus per month with\noptional low-cost insurance protection at Hall Securities Ltd.\nStrand Building, Trail. See Max\nTenenbein in Kimberley and\nTom Moorcroft in Nelson:\nRAPID-GRO  MIRACLE  SPRAY\non   plant  food,  65c,  80c,  $1.50.1\nColumbia Trading, 902 Front St.'\nGE COMBINATION RADIO, 3 -\nspeed record player, walnut cabinet, 5 years old. Phone 542-R.\nMcCLARY COAL AND WOOD\nrange, used only 4 years. $85.00.\nPhone 1361-X.\nLOST AND FOUND\t\nLOST - MALE BRITTANY]\nspaniel, liver and white, be. j\ntween Yahk and Kitchener. Answers to name of Britt. Phone ]\nKimberley 2-3353.\nCOMBINATION COAL GAS Mc-\nLary range. 412 Silica.   .\nPORK   WHOLE OR HALF 'REA-\n. sonable Ph  171.-714 Baker I\n1953   MALL   CHAIN   SAW.   PH~\n1841. . ;\nLOST - CHILD'S SUNSHINE\nkiddie car in vicinity of Third\nStreet. Reward. Phone 1939.\nLOST - GLASSES IN CASE.\nPlease leave at Daily News.\nVA H.P. Medium Priced\nSaw with the 2-cycle\neconomy engine, 18\"\nto 42\" bar.\n5V2 H.P. in the larger\nclass serves on tougher and longer cutting\nhours. Can be fitted\nwith 1 8\" -to 54\" bar.\nBe Sure You Try One of\nThese  Fine Saws Produced bf\nMALL TOOL LTD.\nLOST\u2014BROWN HUDSON'S BAY I\nbag containing boy's swimming \\\ntrunks and socks. Phone 715-L.\nCompany Ltd.\n\"If It's Machinery You Need.\nConsult Us First\"\n214 Hall St.        Nelson, B C\nFOR SALE\u2014$9500, TERMS, 3 -\nbedroom stucco home, stone\nfoundation, full basement with\nfurnace and tubs. Large windows, lovely kitchen, 2-car cement garage, iiji blocks from Civic Centre. Phone 1489-X.\nFINE HOME - 3 BED*ROOMS,\nfull basement, fully automatic\nstoker heat, fireplace, 3 level\nlots, close in on bus route,\n$12,500\u2014$4,500 down. Phone 662\nbusiness hours.\nFURNITURE. FRUIT J A R S , j\ngarden tools, books. Ph. 355-Y. 1\nFOR SALE\u2014GOOD, USED PINEj\nsiding. Phone 761-L after 5 p.m. 1\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES, ETC.:\n1 SOW WITH 6 YOUNG PIGS J\nWill' trade fbr cow to freshen. 1\nAlso 6 weaned pigs. Ph. Rossland 63542.\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\nWANTED TO BUY - TIMBER\nand bush land in vicinity 01\nKootenay Lake Apply Box 2736\nNelson Daily News\t\nURGENTLY REQUIRED-SAW\nlogs, all species, top prices Ph\n1200  Kootenay Forest Products\nCLEAN COTTON RAGS, ne wool\naccepted. Will pay 10c per lb.\nNelson Daily News.      \t\nNelson\nREADY-MIX\nCONCRETE LTD\nPHONE 871\nROOM AND BOARD\n80-ACRE FARM, 25 UNDER CUL-\ntivation. 3 bedroom house, hot\nand cold waler, hydro electric,\n2 miles from school Fruit trees,\nberries, etc,,. $6,500. Terms can\nbe arranged. A. L. Maynard, ph.\nBalfour U-R.-:    ...-   \u25a0\u25a0\nFAIRVIEW. 655l5~~F A M IL Y\nhome. 3 bedrooms. 2 corner lots,\ngarage, new furnace, wired for\nrange and TV, reasonably priced. Terms  Phone 1842-L.\ni AYRSHIRE COW. SECOND\ncalf, freshened lately, heavy,\nmilker. Pete Relkoff, Raspberry!\nVillage. \\\nFOR  SALE  -  50  1-YEAR-OLD\nlaying,hens. Apply P. K. toob-\n. ko\u00ab; Brilliant. B.C.\nLOT 60x75. WATER. SEWERAGE\nand gas. Phone 1949-L.\n'Continued  in  Next .Column*\n \u25a0- 1_\nFOR SALE.- 4 COWS. 2 JUST\nfreshened Apply W. A Pere-\n:verzoff. Brilliant\nFOR SALE\u201426 FRESH TESTED\ncows   Apply to A   Miastowski.\n\"\u25a0 Yahk. B  C.\nFOR SALE - JERSEY \"COW,\njust freshened, second calf Bit]\nPoohachoff,  Winlaw,   B.C.\nFQR SALE -' 2 COWS.'GOOB\nm:7!:en. Apply M^s Voykin\",\nPorio Rico, P. O. Ymir.\n\u25a0    '      _i '\u2014\u2014\nROOM   AND    BOARD    AVAIL-\nable June  15 for 2 gentlemen\n210 Vernon Street.\nBOARD   AND  ROOM\" FOR\nyoung gentleman   Phone 1179X\nROO\"M AND BOARD FOR~TWO\nyoung men. Phone 890-L.\nBOATS AND ENGINES\nFOR SALE - CABIN CRUISER\n17' 6\" x 6' 4\" beam. 25 h p Evin\nrude, remote control, speed 24\nPhone 1622-L after 4\n19 . rj. CABIN \"CRUISER. IN-\nboard Wisconsin marine engine\nand boat house. Phone 752.\nBuy. sell   trade the classified  wai\n_,\t\nOttawa's Low-Price\nButter Policy Works\nOTTAWA (CP) - The government's policy of providing low-\nprice butter to institutions cost $1,-\n752.977 in the first 15 months of its\noperation and resulted in a nine\nper cent increase in -use of butter\nby those helped.\nThat information was reported\nto the Commons by Robert Mc-\nCubbin, parliamentary assistant td\nAgriculture Minister Gardiner.\nRoss Thatcher (Ind., Moose Jaw-\nL?ke Centre) asked for the report.\nMr. McCubbin said the program\n;s continuing.\nSince February. 1955. the government has been selling its butter\nHocks to hospitals, pyphanages and\nother- institutions at'* .40 cents a\npound.\n \u25a0\u25a0\n\u25a0'-.\n;-;*:\u25a0\u25a0   .....\nmm\u2014\n\t\n<'\u25a0:,\u25a0\u25a0!\u25a0.:.\"..! . \u25a0\u2022.*'\u25a0   -J-\n12 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, JUNE 7,1956\nCUT THIS OUT AND USE IT\nBEACH CHECK LIST\nBeaoh Balls (Colorful and Lots of-Fim> ;.-.\u201e.\t\nBeach Palls (Plastlo and Tough)  *\t\nBeach Shovels (To Go With the Paile)\t\nCoco-Butter (To Help With Your Tan) \t\nBeach Bags  .\n(Keep Your Small Accessories Together) ........\n6-12 Insect Repellent (In Stick or Liquid, Spray)\n8un Hats (Nifty and Neat)  .'\u00bb\t\nSwim Caps (Marilyn Bell Swim Caps Are Good)\nEar Protectors (80 Necessary to Some) \t\nSwim Fins (Add to Your Speed In the Water) ....\n8un Tan Lotions (Get That Healthy \"Look) \t\n\\yOtdXau.\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\n:.Z:Z\n-}\nS3.\n'v':\":'.'\u25a0:;',<?-\nZ.:'':Z<>i\n\\ *\nzm\n&\n** \u2022\nSill\ngrand:\neating1 j\n\u25a0\nyou'll\nenjoy  all*. MALKIN'S FAMILY\nt OF FINE FOODS\nCool suggestions for outdoors or .at home\nCOLEMAN\nCOOLERS\nNo. 631:\nNo. 632:\nNo. 633:\n$14.95\n19.95\n27.95\nELECTRIC\nFANS\nStandard and Oscillating\n5Q.00 $1A.40\nto\n'20\nTherma-Seal\nINSULATED BAGS\nNo. 135x14\". \u201e. $4.85\n1 GALLON PICNIC JUGS\nWith Tap:   $7.65\nLess Top:    5.70\nICE IN PL CANS\nCan be used over and aver.\n49V\nSpecials On\nMcCLARY REFRIGERATORS\n  J2A6\n 1 $23095\n__ $27095\nNo. DR 72-5:\nReg.  $305.95. .\nNo. SR 72-5t\nReg.  $280.95.  .\nNo. SDR 72-5:\nReg. $335.95.\n,95\nWood Vallance Hardware\nCo. Ltd.\nWHOLESALE-RETAIL\nPhone 1530 Nelson, B.C.\nAsk ^ore Support\nFor Civil Defence\nMore support from the. City for\ncivil defence In Nelson wan\n\u2022ought by a delegation of two\nwhich appeared before the City\nCounoll Monday night.\nE. W. White, civil defence coordinator,  and  C,   Ft.  Higgens,\nmember of the organization  In\nNelson, asked \"morale\" support\n\u2014the backing that would\u00bbtjlvc\ncivil  defence authority  In  the\ncity \u2014 and material support' \u2014\n\"perhaps In assisting us to find\na permanent home\".\nCivil defence was the responsibility of the municipality \"first\"\nand   not   of   some   organization\n\"above   or   below\",   Mr.   White\npointed out.\n\"It takes a certain amount of\ntrouble to bring out the important\nthings,\" he commented, pointing to\nthe lack of \"positive leadership\"\non the Nelson flood scenes as an\nexample of where civil defence\ncould take over \"if it had the authority\".\n\"For every civil defence volunteer\u2014and they are all volunteers\u2014\nthe only incentive is charity, a desire to help'others. The only remuneration is the advantage of\noccasionally attending a course at\nArnprior (Ontario)\u2014and that\nsometimes a nuisance and certainly\nbrings no monetary gains.\"\nHe asked that Councillors attempt to gain more knowledge of\nthe workings of the Canada-wide\neffort, pointing out that half the\ncosts were provided by the Dominion Governrnent, one-quarter\nby the provincial government, and\nthe remaining one-quarter by the\nmunicipality.\n\"If it wasn't essential the Government of Canada wouldn't stand\nbehind it so solidly, attempting to\nbreak the apathy so evident across\nthe country..\n\"France fell because she had no\nciyiLdefence. . . . Britain did not\nfall\" because she had a civil defence,\"     ' \/      .    \"\nThree hundred names were on\nthe. civil \"defence roster In the\n.Nelson   area,   the   co-ordlnator\npointed out; and a meeting place\nwould assist In making the group\na \"very active\" one. He suggested\nthat perhaps one of the \"huts\"\n(single room units used as additional classrooms) from the old\nhigh school could be turned over,\n(Sty Council had not been apathetic, Mayor Joseph Kary stressed.\n\"We tried to the best of our knowledge to be helpful, approving requests that come in, offering the\nsupport   of   our   superintendents,\nwho have given their word to be\nalways ready and able to help.\nNOT APATHY\n\"It rnay be misunderstanding ..\nbut it is not apathy. We do appre\nciate what is being done, and we\nall realize the seriousness and the\nneed of civil defence, and what\ncan result without it.\n\"But we have all been assured\nthat civil defence in Nelson was\nwell under control. This is the first\ntime we have heard otherwise.\"\nCivil defence co-ordinator was\nasked to prepare a confidential report on civil defence activities in\nthe area for Council's study.\ni ...       ....... (\nFarmers Press for Flood Control\nMeasures, Tighter Weed Program\nJhs ZGijhwayA\nNo. ^\u2014Rossland, Trail, Castlegar,\nNelson, Balfour, Kootenay Bay,\nCreston, Goatfell \u2014 good, Kootenay Lake ferry back on schedule.\nGoatfell, Cranbrook, Fernie',\nCrowsnest \u2014 good, construction\nwork at Moyie Hill.\nNo. 3A \u2014 Trail, Salmo \u2014 good.\nRossland, Paterson \u2014 good.\nCreston, Porthill \u2014 detour via\nCanyon.,\nNo. 6 \u2014 Nelway, Vernon; Nelway, Nelson South Slocan \u2014 good.\nSouth Slocan, Nakusp, Needles,\nMonashee \u2014 fair to good, water\non road \u00bbnear Burton. Monashee,\nVernon \u2014 fair, construction work\n5 miles east of Lumby.\nNo. 95\/\u2014 Kingsgate, Cranbrook,\nGolden \u2014 fair, construction work\nKingsgate, Yahk.\nNelson, Kaslo \u2014 fair to good.\nKaslo, New Denver \u2014 fair to good.\nKaslo, Lardeau \u2014 fair  to good.\nLardeau, Gerrard \u2014 water on\nroad 9 miles from Lardeau and\nseveral other sections.\nDanish Warships\nSalute The Queen\nCOPENHAGEN (Heuters)-Thc\nQueen came to the quarterdeck of\nthe royal yacht Britannia early\nWednesday morning for a 21-gun\nsalute from two Danish warships.\nShe is en route to Stockholm for\na three-day state visit to begin Friday.\nThe salute was delayed for half\nan hour to give the Queen more\ntime to sleei after a particularly\nstormy night.'\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\nSays Nothing New\nAbout Automation\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 Automation\nsays a Canadian industrial leader,\nis just a \"trick phrase-rlike 'technocracy' or 'operations research'\nW. E. Williams, president and\ngeneral manager of the Procter\nand Gamble Company of Canada,\ntold the annual convention of the\nCanadian Manufacturers' Associa\ntion there is too much, emphasis\non automation as \"something new'\nand not enough of personnel training to handle it.\n\"Actually, the first Chinese who\n\u2022developed a water wheel to replace the bucket was utilizing what\nhas currently become known as\nautomation.\"\nMr. Williams, whose remarks\nwere released to the press ln advance of delivery, said, that automation can be classified as simply\npart of the art of staying in bust\nClassified Ads Get Results\nDON  ELDEF* 8TUDIO I     Pedal Pushers\u2014big variety.\nBaker St.     -     Phone IMS' All Sizes at\n I      EBERLE'S\u2014652  BAKER 8T,\nThick creamy milk shakes and\nmalteds at Wait's.\nSocial Credit Bake Sale Saturday, June 23rd, Mc &. Mc's Store.\nTwilight  Club  Meeting\n\u2022Tonight at 8 p.m.\nSlug Bait\u201eBran or JBellet.\nCOVENTRY'S FLOWER SHOP\nHigh quality sanforized Ginghams in novelty checks and plaids\n36\". Yard 95c.\nTAYLOR'S  DRY GOODS\nAlaska Fish Fertilizer\nfor better gardens.\nMAC'S FLOWER SHOP\nPHONE 910\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nI OPTOMETRIST\nI VISUAL   TRAINING\nMedical  Arts  Building\nSuite 206 Phone 141\nThree resolutions were dealt\nwith by representatives from five\ninstitutes at the semi-annual meeting of the West Kootenay-Boun-\ndary Central Farmers' Institute in\nNelson.\nTwo which passed concerned\nflood water control. The Federal\nGovernment is urged to dredge\nGrohman Creek narrows to facilitate runoff water, and the provincial government will be asked to\ninstall culverts and bridges to take\ncare of runoff and debris on district creeks.\nThe third resolution called for\n\"a more practical and efficient\nspraying program for weed control and more rigid enforcement\nof the Noxious Weed Act on pri\nvate land. This resolution arose\nfrom a number of complaints in\npast years over the manner in\nwhich the provincial government\nhas been conducting weed control\nby cutting weeds along the side of\nthe highway and leaving them to\nflourish beyond the reach of\nmower.\nA letter from H. W. Herridge,\nMP, on the work being done to\ndiscover the cause of small cherry\ndisease was read to the delegates.\nMr. Herridge reported that work\nwas being carried out at Summer-\nland, Creston, Vancouver and St.\nCatharines, Ont. A field laboratory\nwill be built at Creston this year\nto continue experimentation.\nA report on the advisory board\nmeetings held at Victoria this\nspring was given by Kenneth\nWallace.\nIt was reported that at a meeting\nwith a special delegation, Hon. P,\nA. Gaglardi promised to agree to\nlet farmers work out their taxes\nHave The Job Done Right\nWIC GRAVEC\nU        LIMITED        **\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\n7de Sfieeiat\nPIN CURL PERMANENT FOR\nCASUAL HAIR STYLES!\nthis year without having to sign an\naffidavit that they were in financial difficulty.\nIt was pointed out at the advisory board meeting that students\nwishing Jo attend agricultural\ncourses and who needed assistance'\ncould receive both by applying to\nthe University of British Columbia.\nTwo 'small alterations to the bylaws were suggested and will be\nvoted upon at the annual meeting\nin October or November.\nALARMING DROP\nFarming is decreasing a\\ an\nalarming rate in the Kootenay\narea, reports from central institutes in B.C. indicated. Dairying and\npoultry farming were reported\nthe most successful at present, but\nit is \"unlikely\" that the interior\nvegetable marketing board will\ncontinue in the Kootenays.\ni R. Foxall of Associated Growers\npresented a brief prepared by the\nNelson Chamber of Commerce indicating the benefits possible from\na dam at Mica Creek. A study was\nalso made on the development of\nthe Upper Columbia Basin.\nInstitutes represented at the\nmeeting were Kaslo, Balfour,\nFruitvale, Salmo and Boswell.\nRainwear\nBe prepared for wet\nweather in one of these\nPorolared Plastic\nRaincoats\nThe coat that breathes.\nLets body heat out but\nwon't let wet in.\n$6.25\nPOPLIN RAINCOATS\n$19.95 and up\nEmory's\nLimited\n\"THE MAN'S STORE\nThe world's biggest volcanie\ncrater is on Mount Poas in Costa\nRica, Central American republic.\nCHARM\nBEAUTY SALON\nAll   Beauty   Culture\nand Cold Waves\nMedical Arts. Bldg.\nSte.  211 'hone  1922\nHelen\" McCallum. Prop.\nVOGUE STUDIO\n460  WARD  ST. \u2014  PHONE   1552\nNice selection of Drapery, 48\"\nwide. Priced from $1.69 yard. ' !\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS.\nBricks, lime,. cement, flue-lining, j\nT. H. WATERS & CO. LTD.\n101 Hall St. - Nelson - Phone 156\nAgents for Speed Queen Automatic Washers and Dryers, Canada's firiest automatics.\nJeffery Radio and Appliances\nPhone 1302 Nelson, B.C.\nWe have Plastic Windbreakers\n$3.30 and Slickers $4.50 in small,\nmedium and large.\nWOOD, VALLANCE\nHARDWARE CQ. LTD,\nAsk Your Grocer for\nEllison's\nU-BAKE BREAD MIX\nMakes  Delicious  Bread the\nEasy and Quick Way\nELLISON MILLING\nA ELEVATOR CO, LTD.\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED    and    REPAIRED\nRE CORING\nJim's Radiator Shop\n516 Front 8t Phone 63\nPublic Square Dance \u2014 Church\nof Redeemer Parish Hall, Friday,\n8 p.m. Vic Graves, M.C.\nPlan to attend the First Presbyterian Church Tea   and   Bake\nJ Sale Sat. June 16th, 2:30-5 p.m.\nLESLIE'S FIRE EQUIPMENT\nNow equipped to re-charge C02\nextinguishers. 536 Stanley Street.\nPhone 1915 or 441-L.\nMrs. Laura Jamison will speak\nat the'Legion, Fri. June 8th, 8 p.m.\nTOPIC: WHY B.C. NEEDS THE\nCCF. FOR DEMOCRACY WITH\nPROSPERITY,\nLarge selection of coal, wood\nand electric ranges.\nWE PAY  TOP PRICES\nFOR  USED 'FURNITURE\n| HOME FURNITURE EXCHANGE\nPHONE  1660.\n. ,\u201e One  Gibson   electric  range,  40\",\nJunior Womens Hospital Aux-  special    $249,50     chrome    suite\nlliary    Rummage    Sale    Capitol $59 50\nTheatre, Saturday, June 16, 9 a.m., We pay cash fo\" \u201esed furniture.\nBIRCH'S FURNITURE\n307 BAKER ST.    \u2014    PHONE 47\nWhen you want to know about\ninsurance, see C. W. APPLEYARD\n& CO. LTD. for'complete information and complete protection. No\nbetter way to receive security,\nservice and satisfaction.\nPACKAGE POLICY SAVE8 20%\nCITY DRUG CO.\n\"Your  Rexall  Pharmacy\"\nIf you have a child .who will be\ncommencing elementary school in\nSeptember, 1956, please register\nchild's name with the Principal of\nthe school in your area. Age of\nadmission is six years by December 31,1956.\n\u25a0Ill\ndREATHO\/mmiWliV SERVICE\nBus leaves Nelson, 1:15 P.M. Connects at\nSpokane with Western Star (lv. 9;15 P.M.)\nor Empire Builder (lv. 11:59 P.M.). Connection at Seattle or Everett with\nstreamliner International arriving Vancouver 12:15 P.M: Railway tickets honored on bus.\nW. G. HAROID, City Freight and Passenger Agent\n557.Ward Street, Nelson, B. C.   PHONE: 67\nHAIGH\nTRU-ART\nBeauty Salon\nPhone  327\n676 Baker Street\nit,  *\u2022\"\nw PIN CURL\nPERMANENT\n\u2022 NO NEUTRALIZED\n\u2022 NO RE-SETTING\n\u2022 NO TIRESOME\n$175\n>\u201eiMr,iMf' Completewith Bobbl\nWINDING pins and mckllna\nCAMPBELL,   SHANKLAND\n-     &CO.\nChartered Accountants\nAuditors\n676 Baker SL Phone 235\n1~\"\t\nFLEURY'S\nPHARMACY\nGiant\nCivic Arena\nSaturday, June 9\n8 p.m.\nPossible $1200 in Cash If You Play\nDouble Your Money Bingo\n20 Games for $2.00 Door Prize\nHELP KEEP HOCKEY ALIVE\nSPECIALS\nTHURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY\n$JiocsUiy* QopwdmswL\nCoffee\n$1.05\n'1\nChase and Sanborns.\nLb _ _\nChase and Sanborn's      $!\u25a0''*\nInstant. Large 6 or. jar\nCHEESE SPREAD\n35'\n59'\n2 \u201e33'\n3,k,29\u00bb\n3 29'\n\u25a0* pkts. *\u25a0 +\nIngersoll.\n8 oz. jar mS ml       16 or. jar\ncorn ' 2   29*\nSalad Queen, Fancy Quality. 15 oz. tins .... \"\u25a0   for *T *\npeas 7   45*\nSalad Queen, Fancy Quality. Sieve I   mm   Jor       <-\u25a0\nPEAS\nSalad Queen, Fancy Quality. Sieve 5\t\nJELLO\nBlack Raspberry, Grape, Black Cherry.\nJELLO\nInstant Puddings\t\nINSTANT CHOCOLATE CQ*\nCadbury's. 16 oz. tin    ''     '\nBLENDED JUICE\nMalkin's. 48 oz. tins\nTOMATO JUICE\nHeinz. 20 oz. tins \t\n10 oz. tins.   \u2014\nMEAT BALLS\nBurns'. 15 oz. tins\t\nBEEF STEW\nSwift's Premium. 15 o**;. tins\n\/ SPAGHETTI\nWith Cheese and Tomato Sauce. 15 oz. tins\nMILK 2      31*\nPacific. Tall tins  ' J   f'\"'   '-\nDOG FOOD\nZip\t\nPEAS\nAylmer. Fresh frozen,\nSTRAWBERRIES 1      1K\nAylmer. Fresh frozen. \"kt!-       '\n39'\n2,\u201e33'\nfor\n2 for 23*\n2\u201e,75'\n2.65'\n2 ,\u201e29*\n3   1**\n. m9   tor fcft\u00ab\n^\u25a0\u25a0pktsV-3\n1 pkts.\n(pJwtJluaL (bsLpwdmsriL\nlOmatOeS    B.C. Hothouse   Lb    TV\nT...U\u00bb    California Field. *)0*i\nlomatoes 14 <\u00ab. alio tube z.o\n16'\n9*\nCrisp green\nstalks. Lb. __ \t\nCelery\nIdDDdCje    Solid  green  heods.   Lb.  \t\nNew Potatoes\nGrapefruit\nCalifornia. A 3#\n5 Ib. cello bag \"3\nCoachilla Valley.   J       J \"J**\nLarge  size  80's.   dm for^3\nRhubarb Locai.\nWatermelon\nlbs\nRed ripe. Lb. \t\nStrawberries Fresh Daily.\nIYUloL QspcudmsmL\nSTANDING RIB ROASTS\nBlue Brand Beef.   Lb.\nROUND BONE ROASTS\nBlue Brand Beef  Lb.\nPOT ROASTS\nBoneless. Blue Brand Beef.  Lb.\nLEAN BREAST OF VEAL\nFor braising.  ...... Lb.\nDOMINION BACON\nBurns'. By t^e niece \u2014          Lb.\nSAUSAGE 3\nHomade. H.C  lbs.\n25*\n9'\n59'\n43'\n43'\n29*\n3\u00bb *******\nmt **\n$1.00\nSTAR GROCERY\nPhone 10\nH. A. D. GREENWOOD\nNelson, B.C.\n1 '\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1956_06_07","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0429082","@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":"1956-06-07 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1956-06-07 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\/1.0429082"}