{"@context":{"@language":"en","AggregatedSourceRepository":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","Collection":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","DateAvailable":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DateIssued":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","FileFormat":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","FullText":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Genre":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","GeographicLocation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","Identifier":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","IsShownAt":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","Language":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","Latitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","Longitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","Notes":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Provider":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","Publisher":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","Rights":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","SortDate":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","Source":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","Title":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","Type":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","Translation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description"},"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2022-04-04","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1957-05-04","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0429924\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" WEATHER  FORECAST\nKootenay; Sunny and warm.\nWinds northerly 15 in -main valleys. Low-high at Cranbrook 38\nand 75, Crescent Valley 35 and\n75. i\nSunday outlook\u2014Sunny and warm*\nm**!m\nSATURDAY EDITION\nwith COMICS -10c\nVol. 56\nM__SON, B.C., CANADA\u2014SATURDAY MORNING, MAY 4, 1957\nNot mora Than to Dally, 10c Saturday\nNo. 12\n60\nThis Is Nelson's\".\nDiamond Jubilee Year\nYear's of Progress\nCost of Li vi\nHits New High\nIndex 3.7 p.c. Higher Than Last Year;\nCommodities, Services Cause Gain\nOTTAWA ' (CP)-Canada's cost-,\nof-living index hit a peak 120.9\nper cent during March, the bureau of statistics reported Friday.\nThe figure represented a 0.3-percent gain over February.\nThe index, based on 1949 equalling 100, was 3.7 per cent higher\nthan the 116.6 level of the same\nmonth last year.\nWhile gains in food prices equalled those in the over-all index, at\n0.3 per cent, the bureau said an\nadvance of 0.7 per cent in\" commodities and services other than\nthe main categories listed accounted for the index increase.\nMore Rain\nWashes Texas\nDALLAS (AP) \u2014 Cloudbursts of\nmore than six inches in north\ncentral and central Texas Friday\nbrought new flood threats to a\nstate hit by 16 days of deluges and\nfloods.\nThe cloudbursts hit several\nareas. Some tornado funnels were\nsighted.\nWichita Falls near the Red\nRiver was bracing for possibly the\nhighest water in seven years. A\ngroup of communities on the upper\nBrazos River about 40 miles west\nof Fort Worth found water rising\nagain and the Bosque River watershed about 60 miles northwest of\nWaco in central Texas got heavy\nrains. ^\nA thunderhead dumped .60 of an\nInch. of. rain in_ 15 minutes at\nGainesville Friday\" afternoon and\na flood warning was issued for\nElm Creek in the city, which is\ndirectly north of Fort Worth.\nBoard Asks\nTo Study New\nLegislation\nVANCOUVER \u00ab!P) - The\nBoard of Trade has asked Premier Bennett for an opportunity\nto study and comment on new\nlegislation before lt Is passed In\nthe legislature.\nIn a resolution to the premier,\nthe Board complains that important legislation Is often rushed\nthrough \"without citizens being\nable to place their views before\nthe government.\"\nALL'S WELL WITH\nMAYFLOWER\nLONDON (Reuters)-The Mayflower II, replica of the Pilgrim\nFathers' sailing ship, Friday reported \"all's well\" from a position just west of the Canary Islands. \u2022\nHer captain, Australian - born\nCtndr. Alan Villicrs, radioed that\nthe vessel, which had been becalmed, was travelling at a\napeed of six knots,\nPreston Heads\nNews Publishers\nTORONTO (CP)-J. C. Preston,\ngeneral manager of the Brantford\nExpositor, was elected president\nof the Canadian Daily Newspaper\nPublishers Association at the an-\nnifcl meeting here.\nMajor categories, listed are food,\nshelter, clothing and household operation.\nThe bureau said much of the\ngain was accounted for by medical costs.\n\"Substantial increases for prepaid health care, coupled with\nlesser increases in doctors', dentists' and optical-care fees moved\nthe group index.\"\nFood jumped 0.3 per cent to\n116.7, from 116.4, through sharply-\nhigher increases in tomatoes, lettuce, cabbage, and smaller ones\nfor fresh . fruits, sugar, bread,\nchocolate bars and beef.\nPotatoes, celery, tea, coffee,\neggs, bananas and pork were\ndown.\nAlso up 0.3 per cent was clothing, which showed at 108.5, from\n108.2 during February. Included\namong items that gained in price\nwere footwear and some men's\nand children's garments.\nThe household-operation index,\nhowever, decreased 0.1 per cent,\nto 119.4, from 119.5, because of\nlower prices for appliances.\nFurniture, floor coverings, textiles and utensils increased.\nThe shelter figure remained unchanged at 134.\nHungarians\nMoving From\nAbbotsford\n.ABBOTSFORD (GF-) \u2014One hundred Hungarian immigrants left\nthe over-crowded reception centre\nhere Friday and 100 more will go\ntoday. Within 10 days at least 600\nwill be moved from the congested\ncamp.\n\"It's the greatest morale\nbooster this camp can have to\nsee an outflow of people from it,\"\nsaid Norman W. Massey, immigration officer in charge. People\nrealized they were on the road\nback to normal living when they\nstarted moving out of the camp.\nThe plan to move 600 of the\n1600 immigrants in the camp was\nannounced by Charles E. S m i t h,\nCanada's director \"of immigration.\nEighty immigrants were moved\nThursday by bus to Vancouver, 45\nmiles west.\nMost of those moved will be accommodated in'immigration\nbuildings, hostels or private homes\nin British Columbia. Some may\nleave the province.\nWILDCAT STRIKE\nIDLES 40,000\nDETROIT (AP)-Wildcat walkouts at the Chrysler Corporation\nFriday shut down production of\nPlymouth, Dodge and Chrysler\ncars, making idle more than 40,000\nworkers.\nOnly the DeSoto division kept\ngoing, but the company said all\nits major operations in the Detroit\narea will be closed down today\nuntil Monday morning. Overtime\noperations for Saturday were cancelled.\nThe shutdown followed- a dispute\non the local level over what Pat\nCaruso, president of Local 212,\nUnited Auto Workers, called \"job\nsecurity protection.\"-\nBoth the company and the union\nsaid the strikes were not authorized.\nUN SECRETARY-GENERAL Dag Hammarskjold and Pope\nPlus XII pose outside the pontiff's private study at the Vatican\nApril 30 following a 40-minute talk. The subjects discussed were\nnot Immediately disclosed. Hammarskjold arrived In Rome by\nplane from New York April 29 for talks with Italian officials\non the Middle East situation.\u2014AP Wirephoto via radio from Rome.\nAtomic Arms To. Be\nNATO Defence Forte\nFinancial Aid in Columbia\nDevelopment Offered by PM\nBy JOSEPH E. DYNAN\nBONN (AP) -The Atlantic alliance told the world and Russia\nFriday night that all members\nwill continue to base their defensive shield on the use of atomic\narms if necessary.\nForeign ministers of the North\nAtlantic Treaty Organization\nended their sessions here with a\njoint statement that the best hope\nof deterring Soviet attack is the\nterrible firepower of modern nuclear weapons.\n\"Pending an acceptable agreement on disarmament,\" said the\nministers, \"no power can claim\nthe right to deny to the alliance\nthe possession of the modern\narms needed for its defence.\"\nREPLY TO RUSSIA\nNATO officials said the council\nmeant that as its joint retort to\nMoscow's recent move to keep\natomic guided missile bases from\nthe soli of Scandinavia, West Germany, Greece and Turkey.\nThe 15 nations asserted that the\nallianee- \"must-be in -position to\nuse all available means to meet\nany attack which, might be\nlaunched against it.\"\nThey added that if the Soviet\nUnion is really afraid of Western\ndefence preparations, \u201e has only\nto:\n\"Accept- a general disarmament\nagreement embodying effective\nmeasures of control and inspec-\nMAYOR, POLICE\nDISAGREE\nON CURFEW\nMONTREAL (CM - Any suggestion that curfew restrictions on\nthe city's night clubs and restaurants would be eased by 1 e a v i n g\nenforcement of liquor laws to provincial police was met Friday by\nMayor Jean Drapeau with a directive dealing with issuance of\ncity permits.\nThe executive move was seen\nas a conflict between the mayor,\nwho came into office three years\nago on a reform ticket, and the\nrecently reinstated director of police, J. Albert Langlois.\nThe history of the conflict involves also a judicial inquiry\nwhich found Mr. Langlois guilty\nof permitting vice conditions some\n10 years ago and ordered his dismissal, along with other police officers. Mr. Langlois had this decision upset through an appeal to\nthe courts and returned to office\nnore than a month ago, with a\nmeasure of fanfare among his supporters.\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 George Hees,\nformer president of the Progressive Conservative Association of\nCanada, plans a speaking tour in\nSaskatchewan and Alberta May 6-\n12, Conservative headquarters said\nFriday night.\n:_T31_MK\nIT'S ONE OF THE EARLIEST of flying machines, found In attic of house occupied by the\nlate  German  inventor  Alois  Wolfmucller  and\nbelieved to have been built In 1894.. It Is shown\nat Landsberg airport with a modern German\nplane. 8obn It will be In a museum In Munich.\ntion within the framework of the\nproposals made on numerous occasions by the Western powers.\"\nThe 15 nations warned that the\n\"prolonged division of Germany\nand the anomalous situation of\nBerlin\" is a continuing threat to\nworld peace, and they pleaded for\nearly German reunification.\nThe ministers pledged to strive\nby all possible means to induce\nthe Soviet Union to honor its\nagreement that Germany should\nbe reunified by means of'free\nelections\u2014a reference to the Geneva \"summit\" talks of 1955.\nThey coupled this with a new\nstatement of resolve to intensify\nwith peaceful means a common\npolicy for the restoration- of Germany as a free and united state\nwithin the framework of a European security system.\nCranbrook Radio\nStation Approved\nBy CBC Board\nOTTAWA (CP) - The CBC\nboard of governors said Friday it\nwants to study programming\nstandards of metropolitan radio\nstations before recommending\nnew licences for those areas.\nThat was the main reason it\ngave In recommending deferment on three Vancouver area\napplications for the use of a\nchoice spot on the radio dial\u2014\n730\u2014which was released last\nyear by Mexico to Canada's east\ncoast.\nThe board recommended approval for a 1000-watt radie station in Cranbrook, B.C., sought\nby Robert A. Reagh, former\nLethbridge, Alta., broadcaster.\nSeek to Develop\nNorthern Canada\nEDMONTON (CP)-The establishment by the federal government of a statutory committee to\nstudy and make recommendations\nfor the development of northern\nCanada was urged Friday by a\nnorthern development conference.\nThe resolution, approved by 100\ndelegates attending the conference's concluding session, said the\ncommittee should be composed of\nrepresentatives of industry both in\nthe north and other areas' of Canada.\nAccident Rale\nHits Record Low\nVANCOUVER (CP) - The accident frequency rate in British Columbia's forest products industry\nwas at a record low last year, the\nWorkmen's Compensation Board\nannounced Thursday.\nFor the first time since records\nhave been kept, the rate for the\nlogging industry was less than 100.\nThere has been a decline from\n191.12 in 1947 to 94.02 last year in\nthe same period, the accident frequency for the entire wood products industry has declined to 49.94\nfrom 119.37.\nB.C. Forest Products Ltd. won\nthe multiple logging operations\naward with more than a million\nman hours. -\nSays \"We Have Nothing\nTo Spare or Give Away\"\n,    By HAROLD MORRISON\nCanadian Press Stall Writer\nVANCOUJiTER (CP)\u2014Prime Minister St. Laurent Friday\nnight offered fo: help finance power development of the\nColumbia River-'providing,the British Columbia government\nfinds federal action \"appropriate and perhaps even necessary.\"\n\"We^iave nothing to spare or give away,\" he said, in\nan apparent reference to United States industrial proposals\nto develop Columbia River power for American interests.\n\"Water resources are valuable in, perpetuity \u2014 and\nperpetuity is a long time. We must beware of any bargain\nthat looks attractive in the short-term but that would sign\naway great blocks of power\nNan Who Shot\nCostello Sought\nNEW YORK (AP)-Fears that!\na shot that creased \u2022 Frank Costello might ricochet into gangster\nwarfare has sent 60 detectives into a hunt for the gunman who\ntried to kill the onetime underworld czar.\nOfficials said Friday they want\nto get the gunman before\n\"friends\" of Costello catch up\nwith him and start a war of vengeance. Fearing another attempt\non the 65-year-old gambler's life,\nthey posted two detectives in the\nlobby qf the Central Park West\napartment house where Costello\nlives.\nJfystery surrounded the motive\nfor tha arnBush on Costello, the\nmost Publicized wjtne8s,oftthe..l951\nUnited States crime hearings conducted under Senator Estes Ke-\nfauver.\nCostello, also known as the\nprime minister of the underworld,\nhas been in and out of prisons\nsince then, ill and fighting government efforts to deport him to Italy. Police have given no indication he has been active in the\nrackets recently.\nPilots Land Safely\nOn No. 1 Highway\nLYTTON, B.C. (CP) - An\nAmerican pilot escaped injury\nThursday when he crash-landed\nhis light plane on Highway No. 1\nabout six miles east of here.\nMarvi Barton, of Estacada, Ore.,\nsaid his plane had run out of gas\nin route to Dog Creek and he\npicked the highway as the only\nlevel spot in the area.\nAs the light J model Piper Cub\nglided down to the road, it narrowly missed a truck driven by\nCharles Wower of Lytton.\nThe plane sheared off its landing gear on impact, but the pilot\nwas unhurt and little other damage was done.\nBonds Worth $1200\nFound In Old Car\nCOLVILLE, Wash (AP) - Five\nU.S. Savings Bonds worth $1200\nhave been found in an abandoned\nold car in the city dump by a 22-\nyear - old Colville logger, Police\nChief Phil Averill said Friday.\nMike Swan, who had claimed\nthe car for junk, found the bonds\nin an envelope under.an old rubber mat in the trunk. He turned\nthem ovor to police.\nFined for Giving\nLiquor fo Minors\nSIDNEY, B.C. (CP)-Two Victoria men were fined $50 each on\npleading guilty to selling liquor to\nminors.\nRobert G. Hough, 22, truck driver., and H. G. Stanton, 30, mill\nworker, were also ordered to pay\ncosts.\nHough faced a further charge of\ncareless driving, for which he was\nfined $35.\nStanton was fined $15 On a second count Of causing a disturbance. It was stated that he used\ninsulting language when refused\nservice in a hotel here.\n\"For heaven's sake don't make\nit worse for the juveniles,\" urged\nMagistrate F. J. Baker. \"They're\nhaving enough trouble as it is.\"\nin the indefinite future,\nThe Liberal leader touched on\nthe power issue, a vital election\nissue in this province, at a political rally.   .\nBEST YET TO COME\n\"Since our Liberal program,\nwhile big, has no room in it for\nelection promises, it'might, to that\nextent, be less spectacular that an\nopposition election program prettied up to attract votes,\" he said.\n\"But an election promise, after\nall, is a mere cream-puff of a\nthing\u2014with more air than substance in it!\" '\nMr. St. Laurent said the only\nelection promise he would make is\nthat the \"best is yet to be.\"\nHe said even the optimistic forecasts  of  the   Gordon   economic\nOptl\nDiefenbaker\nimistic as\nf q$f Jjour Ends\n;      By ALAN DONNELLY\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nSAINT JOHN, N.B. (CP) - The\nProgressive Conservative national\nleader spoke with optimism Friday\nof his party's June 10 election\nchances.\n\"A few short weeks ago they\nsaid it couldn't be done,\" John\nDiefenbaker said at a small luncheon meeting at St. George, 50\nmiles west of here.\n\"It can be done and it will be\ndone.\"\nMr. Diefenbaker, on the second\nlast day of a week-long tour of\nthe three Maritime provinces,\nmade two speeches in Charlotte\nconstituency, at St. George and\nat St. Stephen. Charlotte has been\na Liberal riding since 1935 and\nwas won in the 1953 election by\n975 votes.,\nFriday night he was scheduled\nto speak in St. John-Albert riding\nat Saint John, where Conservative\nThomas. Bell is seeking re-election\nFind Two Skeletons\nOver 2000 Years Old\nLADNER, B.C. (CP) - University of B.C. archeological students\nhave uncovered two skeletons here\nbelieved to be of Indians who lived\n2000 years ago.\n5 Sons' Kidnapping\nBelieved for Money\nMARRAKECH, Morocco (AP)\nMoney, perhaps millions of dollars in cash has emerged as a\nprime motive behind the myster-\nclouded seizure of five sons of the\nlate Thami El Glaoui, millionaire\npasha of the Berbers.\nReliable reports Friday from\nMarrakech, where the live brothers vanished two days ago, said\nMoroccan government officials\nare investigating transfers of capital out of financially - pressed\nMorocco by the Glaoui family.\nThe five, heirs to the vast holdings of the Glaoui, were whisked\noff to unknown places by troops\nof the irregular Moroccan Army\nof Liberation who also took over\ntheir yellow-walled palace.\nTheir kidnapping, or arrest,\nwhich caught the central government in Rabat by surprise, was\nbelatedly given official status Friday. An interior ministry communique, issued some 36 hours\nafter the Glaouis' seizure, accused the five, ahd six of their\nassociates, of \"anti-nationalist activities.\"\nGlaoui had been despised by\nMoroccan nationalists because  of\nthe support he gave to the French\nwhen they dethroned Sultan Mohammed V and exiled him for\ntwo years in Madagascar.\nA DANGER TO STATE\nThe government statement,\nwhich left many questions unanswered, said \"important financial\nmeans were mobilized and used,\nnotably abroad, to service enterprises of a kind fringing danger\nto the security of the state.\"\nAlthough all evidence indicates\nthe Rabat government was not officially aware that the guerilla\nArmy of Liberation planned to\nseize the five brothers, the second\ncommunique used the legalistic\nword \"arrest\" and denied that the\nfive had. been \"kidnapped.\"\nIn Marrakech, word -was current that there, was $17,000,000 \u00ab\ncash in the palace waiting to be\nsplit up by the family when the\nheavily-armed guerrillas struck.\nEstimates of the fortune include\n750,000 acres of real estate, large\nmanganese and cobalt mining interests in southern Morocco and\nvast investments in securities\nheld abroad.\ncommission may look \"somewhat\npale and timid\" to what is actually achieved in Canada during\nthe next 25 years. .\nThe Gordon commission \"guesses\" might look almost \"Progressive Conservative\" compared to\nthe performance that was likely.\nMr. St. Laurent said that under\nTrade Minister Howe's direction,\nthe government was actively pursuing new trade negotiations with\nAustralia, New Zealand and members of the future West Indies federation. In trade, 1957 \"looks like\na record-breaker.\"\nNEEDS INCREASING\nIn British Columbia, power\nneeds over the next quarter-century were likely to increase \u2022 by\nfive or six times current capacity. ;.\nCanada  would   not  take   any\ndog - in - the - manger\" stand\nagainst the development of resources that would benefit the\nU.S.\nBut the Liberal government's\npolicy was to prevent \"any improvident deal that would jeopardize B.C.'s.. long;t'erm industrial\ndevelopment.\"\nCost of developing the Columbia\nRiver for power has been estimated at as much as $1,000,000,-\n000. Mr. St. Laurent said the\nstatement made here-by Fisheries\nMinister Sinclair, saying, the federal government is prepared to\naid in the development, was authorized by the cabinet.'\nThe Canadian and American\ngovernments are to meet in Washington later this month to reach\nagreement on a division of the Columbia . River between the two\ncountries. .\nINTEREST RATES LOW\nOnce that was reached, the fed\neral government would provide\naid for Columbia River power in\nthe same way as it joined with the\nOntario government to finance\nconstruction of the northern Ontario leg of the trans-Canada natural gas pipeline. The offer also\nwould be similar to, the federal\noffer to link Nova Scotia and New\nBrunswick power distribution.\nNo Change in\nWheal Price\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 The government Friday announced maintenance of the existing initial prices\nfor wheat and barley for delivery\nin the crop year starting Aug. 1,\nbut cut the initial price on oats\nby five cents.\nTha prices for the next crop\nyear announced by Trade Minster Howe are $1.40 a bushel for\nNo. 1 northern wheat, 60 cents a\nbushel for No. 2 cw oats and 96\ncents for No. 3 cw six-row barley. They are prices for the basic\ngrades delivered at the Lakehead.\nGovernment officials declined to\nexplain the cut in the basic price\nfor oats. It is 65 cents for the current crop year ending next July\n31.\nHowever, it was taken to be a\nhint to western grain growers to\nhold back on production of. oats\nstocks of which stood at 366,463,-\n000 bushels on March 31,' up from\n238,161,000 bushels in 1956.\nIt was reported here that oats\nstocks in western Canada this\nyear are more than double ,what\nthey were last year, indicating\nthat there may be a,heavy crop\nto add further to the'present supply. 3\nCouple Sought\nTo Make\nHome for Boys\nVICTORIA (CP) - The Family\nan^ThlldreffsWelfare'Socie'ty announced they are looking for a\ncouple willing to turn their home\ninto a group home for youths as a\npilot program in a new plan of\ncaring for. adolescents.\nIt is an emergency step .towards\nestablishment of agehcy-run group\nhomes for boys and girls between\n14 and 16 who do hot fit well into\nfoster homes and are too young\nto be independent.\nDavid Woodsworth, director of\nthe.Society, said they are looking\nfor a couple who are willing to help\non an experimental basis by taking\nin four or five boys with the Society subsidizing them.\nThe homes are planned for three\ntypes of youths, he Said.' They are\nboys who havfe dropped out of\nschool but are not working steadily. Those working steadily but are\nnot capable of complete independ-'\nence, and boys who are still attending school.\nThe common factor with them all\nis age and inability to get along\nwell in foster homes.\nFIRST CHINESE-CANADIAN to receive a call to be pastor\nat an all-white Anglican church, Rev. Andrew Lam, shown w|th\nhla wife and two children, will move from Vancouver to Winnipeg\nearly In May. In Vancouver, Mr. Lam has been pastor of the\nGood Shepherd Mission In the city's Chinatown for the past 16\nyears. Tho decision to move to Winnipeg was made after years\nof discussion with Anglican clergy and laymen. \t\nAnd in This Corner\u2666 \u2666 \u2666\nHOUGHTON, Mich. (AP)\u2014Reporter BUI Brlnkman of the\nHoughton Mining Gazette saw the flretrucks go by his newspaper\noffice window and called the police to find out where the fire was.\nThe police didn't know. Brlnkman tried the fire department\n\u25a0 and was told; \"Are you kidding? You're sitting on It\"\nThe fire was In tho press room of Tho Gazette, one floor below\nBrlnkman, >     '\u25a0   \u25a0\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 A London contracting firm Thursday\nlaunched an urgent search for a stray dinkum digger dosey loader\n\u2014all 6_ tons of it..\nThe dinkum disappeared from a north London building site\nand the owners are worried. A new dinkum digger dosey loader\nwould cost about $5000.\n. What's more they are afraid their dinkum may get into trouble\nin the hands of an unskilled man. It is a complicated mobile ex-\noavating shovel which only an expert can drive.\n 2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, MAY 4, 1957\nLAST TIMES TODAY \u2014 Shows ot 2:00 - 7:00 - 9:10\nWILL-AMI HOLDBN\nIN A NEW AND CHALLENGING NOLI IN\n\"TOWARD THE UNKNOWN\nPROM WARNKR DnOG. IN WARNBRCOLOR\nCO-tTMINHD\nLLOYD NOLAN-VIRGINIA LE1TH\nSTARTS MONDAY\u2014\nRKO Radio Piciures pr\u00ab5\u00abnts    \" .       \u25a0 ;\u2022   \u2022 :* - \u2022;\u2022\"-'   -\nROBERT RYAN \u2022 ANITA EKBERG \u2022 ROD STEIGER\nBSCK mem ETERNITY\nSTARLIGHT Drive-ln\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\n8howi 8:2B p.m. and 9:10 p.m.\nI\nQnemaScopE\nRICHARD WIDMARK^\nBEllA DARVI\nPAVIP WAYNE\nHell and\nHighWater^\nm\nTarrys1 School Opening\nThe new school at Tarrys was\nofficially opened Friday evening\nwith a series of short speeches by\nvisiting digmtaries, but the main\nevent of the night was the Russian\nsupper preceding the program. .\nServed by girls in colorful pla-\ntoks and Russian dresses, the Incomparable meal consisted of suc\u00ab\nculent food prepared by the Doukhobor women of the community.\nThe riienu read \"borsh, peerphi,\nlapshevnlk, plove, kleb, otvar and\npie,\" Setting the atmosphere, Peter\nConkin said a Russian grace which\nwas replied to in a murmur by\nsome 40 persons attending the'ban-\nquet. '\nAfter the supper, a choir of about\n25 Doukhobors entertained With, a\nlovely folk song. Miss Nadine Perehudoff, in a sweet voice, sang a\nRussian love song, followed by\nJanet Bayoff, Olga.and Clara Re-\nzansoff in a trio number.\nPrincipal H. F. Hyson conducted\na tour of the school, part of which\nhas been in use for'some time. Two\nnew classrooms and an activity\nroom have been recently completed by contractor John Negrleff.\nArchitect was Paul D. Smith and\nPartner of Trail.       \u00bb\nThe well-lit, modern school was\nadmired by L. R. Peterson, minister of education for B.C., deputy minister Dr. H. L. Campbell, school Inspector Graham,\nchairman Robert Waldie of Castlegar School District No. 9 and\nSam Conkin, member of Castlegar School Board. Many parents\nand other interested persons\ncomplimented the Improvement\nAssociation on the attractive\nschool. ..   .\nThe program, held in the activity room, was begun with the singing of \"0 Canada\" by a choir under the direction of Mrs. Ross\nCASTLE THEATRE\nCASTLEGAR, B.C.\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\n\"MOBY DICK\" (Tech.)\nGregory Peck, Richard Baschart\nNEWS and CARTOON\nTimes 6:45 and 8:55\nELK DRIVE-IN\nCASTLEGAR, B.C.\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\nShow Time 8:30 p.m. D.S.T.\n\"STAGE TO TUCSON\"\n\u25a0  -Plus\n\"BANDITS OF CORSICA\"\nSC Committee\nRoom Opened\nHere, at Trail\nCommittee rooms for the Social\nCredit have been opened in the\nCapitol Theatre on Ward Street.\nJ. A. Wilson will be in charge\nof the rooms daily and he will be\nassisted by other party workers.\nCampaign -headquarters for the\nparty will open in Trail today,\nwith C. A. Carosella as office manager. Social Credit candidate nominated to contest the federal election in June is D. L. Brothers of\nTrail.\nOfficial agent acting for Mr.\nBrothers will be Rollie Crowe,\nand campaign manager is Carl\nLoeblich.\nYOUR\nPrescriptions\nCOMPOUNDED\nPromptly \u25a0 Carefully\nAt Moderate Prices\nNelson Pharmacy\n\"Your Fortress of Health\"\n433 Josephine St.\nPhono 1203     Nights:  S94-L\nPremiere Theatre\nFRUITVALE, B. C.\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\n\"MOHAWK\"  (Tech,)\nNeville Brand, Scott Brady,\nRita Gam\nAuto-Vue Drive-ln\nTRAIL, B.C.\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\n\"Come Next Spring\" (Tech.)\nSteve Cochrane, Anne Sheridan\nCARTOONS\nShow Time Approx.'8:00\nALEX PAPOU\nTO SUCCEED\nE. MARNOCH\nA former-Nelson man, Alec Pa-\npou, is returning here next week\nto serve as equipment mechanic\nwith the Canadian Pacific Railway\ncommunications department.\nMr. Papou started with the com\npany as a telegraph messenger\nhere, and has recently been at the\nCPR's Vancouver office. He will\nreplace Ernest Marnoch, who left\nFriday to become equipment mechanic at Kamloops.\nIn Nelson about a year and a\nhalf, Mr. Marnoch is married, and\nhas a small daughter. He\nwas a member of the choir of St.\nPaul's-Trinity United Church.\nFleming, followed by \"Country\nGardens\" and \"Lullaby\". 'Two\nsmall youngsters, Terry Perehudoff and Alan Boolinoff, both seven, ,pleased the gathering estimated at 73 with a duet, .\"Bouquet\nof Rosemary\",\nRESPONSIBILITY\nDr. Campbell, who last visited\nTarrys when the school there was\nan unattractive one-room building,\ninstroduced Mr. Peterson, who\ncongratulated the junior choir and\ntwo youngsters, saying that one\nwouldn't hear finer singing by children of their age anywhere in the\nprovince. He also expressed his\ngreat appreciation\" to the women who cooked for the. unique\nbanquet.\nIn speaking of the new school\nand its responsibility to the young\npeople of the community, he stated\nthat there was more to bringing\nup children, than merely giving\nthem the tools.\n\"Young people today are required to have more knowledge\nand technical skills than their parents before them,\" he said, adding that shortages exist in almost\nevery profession. \"Emphasize desirable attitudes,\" he advised,\n\"such as Integrity, honor and all\nthe other ingredients of 'good character.\"\nMr. Peterson pointed out that\nthe  Doukhobor  culture  has  a\ndefinite place In Canadian community Hie.\" It i\u00ab Important that\nyou pass down your culture, even\nto your cooking and singing, he\nsaid. \"Only In that way can Canadian culture be enriched.\"\n\"The opening of this school symbolizes a faith in education,\" he\nconcluded, \"our faith that our children will, by receiving education,\nbe better able to meet the challenge and frustrations of life and\nthe world will become a better\nplace In which to live.\"\n' Mr. Peterson instructed the principal to give the students a holiday\nin appreciation of their preparations for opening day.\nVaried Program as\nDrama Festival Opens\nHi-life\nMILLER\nMOYIE'S STORY\nTOLD IN TIME\nThe story of SS Moyie's last run\non Kootenay Lake last Saturday is\ntold in Time, weekly international\nmagazine, which reached Nelson\nThursday, five days after the voyage.\nSplit second timing was required\nto' get the story into this edition.\nFiled by CP Telegraphs Saturday\nnight, the story was sent to Time\nby Daily News writer Dorothy Mcintosh, and the edition printed and\nmailed to Western Canada shortly\nafter receipt of the story.\nA picture of the veteran sternwheeler appears with the story.\nHumphrey\nAWNINGS\nate\nAND THEY'RE INEXPENSIVE, TOO I Sit THEM UUV!\nFINISHED WITH BRILLIANT, DECORATOR-APPROVED COLORS\nNo more hoi, Huffy roomi. Humphrey'! BwutU\nlul Scroll End Awning* fcoup cut tha lurt'i glori\nond heat, yet allow full circulation of air. Get a\nmaximum amount of light, piut excelUnl\nwtothir proiecilon, oil AT A MINIMUM OF\nCOST. No itorage or maintenance noceitafy.\nInilollatlon ol iheie custom-built awnlngi will\nbring you eompllmenti for years to come. A\nlelecllon   of   colon  and   arronggmentt   are\navailable. -\nDistributor and Fabricator\nG. W. CAMERON\nPhone 1568-1052-Y-1024-Y\nDistrict Bank\nMeet Here Today\nHeading a district meeting in\nNelson today of the Canadian Bank\nof Commerce will be R. G. Mijler,\nregional superintendent, Vancouver, who is making his first official\nvisit to the Kootenays. Mr. Miller,\naccompanied by Mrs. Miller, arrived by train Friday night.\nPersonnel from the. bank's\nbranches at Grand Forks, Trail,\nCastlegar, Salmo, Nakusp, Creston, and Fernie will attend. Wives\nof those who are married are also\nattending.\nA staff banquet Is to be held at\nSt. Paul's-Trinity United Church\ntonight, .and in the afternoon, a\ntea for Mrs. Miller and wives of\nall bank personnel will be held at\nthe home of J. W. Graham, manager of the Nelson branch, and\nMrs. Graham, 424 Robson Street.\nMonday night, Mr. Miller will\nbe a guest along with L. Crandall,\npresident of the E. B. Eddy Match\nCompany of Canada, G. A. Gordon\ngeneral manager of Canadian Exploration Mining Company, Salmo,\nM. C. Donaldson of Salmp, Mr.\nGraham and other businessmen at\na dinner at the Summer home of\nMr. and Mrs. K. R. Yale.\nMr. Miller has been superintendent since February, 1957, when he\nsucceeded W. T. Cook, retired.\nBy TOM D'AQUINO\nWell, it is nice to get back into\nye ole desk again, but not nice to\nget our exam results. We hope\nthat you all had as Happy Easter\nas we did. On Monday morning\nfollowing the ministers' reports,\nMr. Lee gave a run-down on the\nbusy schedule of events which will\ntake place between now and June.\nOn Wednesday,' House nominations took place. These nominations were for the position of\nHouse President and three members of parliament. Next Wednesday, the elections will take place\nfollowed by | the election of the\nPrime Minister later in the month.\nThe band is all ready for its\nbig trip to Kelowna on May 10.\nSquare dancers are doing well.\nThey are going to Creston on the\n18th to participate in the Blossom Festival.\nYesterday was the big day of\nthe week. In the morning, the\nstudents formed in rank and file\nand marched to get their Salk\nvaccine anti-polio shots.\nIn the afternoon, the big House\nspcraspred Musicale was held. To\nthe beat of Latin drums memberB\nof House D opened up the program\nwith a clever representation of\nthe Banana Boat Song\/Following\nseveral individual performers who\nwere Louise .Anderson (piano)\nMarlene Amorosa (accordianl,\nMarvin Smith (trumpet) and Judy\nAllen (piano), House B presented\na trio of flute, cello and \"piano.\nHouse C proudly presented a quartette band orchestra and House A\nconcluded the program with a girl\ngroup' singing \"Now is the Hour.\"\nThe judges, Mrs. H. Herbion, Mr.\nJ. Norris and Mr. E. Baravalle\nwill give the results at next assembly.\nIn athletics, Softball has commenced and the Houses are preparing their athletes for the coming West Kootenay and High\nSchool Track Meets.\nTheatrical groups from three\nWest Kootenai centres Friday\nnight provided comedy, supernatural suspense, and human drama\nfor the opening night audience of\nthe Regional Dram. Festival at\nNelson Junior High School auditorium.\nKaslo, Nelson and Trail enthusiast] of the theatre presented the\nfirst three one-act plays of the\ntwo-day festival. Five will be produced in afternoon and evening\nperformances today.\nW. J. Zoellner of Grand Forks\u2014\nwho declared himself as \"pleased\nto see eight plays on the agenda\nin these days when it's so easy\nto get' entertainment just by flicking a switch\"\u2014is adjudicator.\nHimself a great enthusiast of\ntheatre work and production, Mr.\nZoellner has done 'a \"great deal\nof work in Grand Forks and at the\nCoast,\" said Mrs. Jane Nicholson\nof Trail in introducing the adjudicator.\nAn aura of the supernatural\nwaa provided by tha. Kaslo Theatrical Society In Its presentation\nof \"The Opening of a Door\"\u2014a\nplay that was \"supernatural In\nthe fullest sense,\" Mr. Zoellner\nsaid. He congratulated the cast\nfor a \"fascinating show\" In the\nproduction of a play that was a\n\"difficult choice\". Members\n\"\u25a0trove hard for reality, the offstage noises were good, although\nthe tense of climax was spoiled\nby audience laughter.\" The adjudicator   felt   the   cast   had\nachieved  a  large  measure  of\nsuccess. .\nIn*the play, directed by Harry\nAlmack, were Irene Bisbee as Esther Fraserj Clive Yoxall as Martin Fraser; Kay Yoxall as Mrs.\nParrish;   Gloria  Greensword  as\nRuth Parrish; Jack Humphreys as\nOwen Bennett; and Wendy Barra-.\nclough as Lottie. Stage manager\nwas Clive Yoxall. It was written\nby Wall Spence.\nNelson Little Theatre brought\nsophisticated comedy to its enactment of \"The Invisible Worm\"\nby Elda Cadogan\u2014a \"good comedy and a good festival choice.\"\nIt was a \"thoroughly enjoyable\ncomedy,\" the adjudicator said,\nplayed wholeheartedly and energetically.\" Props were \"very\nsuitable,\" action was \"spirited\"\nand teamwork pace \"good,\" al-\noccasionally cues were not \"quite\nquick enough.\"\nCast comprised John Applewhaite as Paul; Audrey Denison\nas Tracy, and Hewitt Ferguson as\nDr. Eric Johnston. Director-was\nE. J. Leveque and stage manager,\nClifford Came.\n\"Night Club,\" presented by the\nTrail Little Theatre,\" was a peak\ninto the human drama that flows\nthrough a big city night club.\nIt was played \"with sincerity,\nand I believe there is great tal-\nRCMP Inspector Bloxham\nGoing to Prince Rupert\nent in this group,\" Mr. Zoellner\ncommented. He offered his \"hear?\nttest congratulations for the handling of the play.\" The set was excellent, \"simple yet thoroughly\nbelievable,\" and the tast \"fully\nunderstood the intention of the author.\" \u25a0:\u25a0;.-.\nTaking part in the play adapted\nfrom a story, by Katherine Brush\nwere Grace Poole as Mrs. Brady;\nLaura Landucci as the hat checker; Joyce Kawaluk, Joan Gill,\nHelen Fltzslmmons, Connie Nicholson, pizabeth Davies, Audrey\nCamp', Louise Henderson, Dolores\nTarchuk, Jane Nicholson, Betty\nThorpe, Joan, Fulthorp, Margaret\nSeery and Noreen Roe, as The\nGirls. Director and Stage manager was Connie Nicholson.\nTrophies to be awarded at the\nclose of the festival' tonight are\nthe Pol. A, W. N. Taylor Trophy\nfor the best play; The Nelson\nDaily News Trophy for the best\nactor; the N. C. Stibbs Trophy\nfor be6t actress. Certificates of\nmerit will be presented for the\nbest supporting actor and actress\nand the best visual presentation.\nPANEL DISCUSSION\nA panel discussion on production will be held in a classroom\nIn the Nelson Junior High School\nthis morning at 9:30, it was announced. People from West Kootenay centres \"who had a great\ndeal of experience in drama production\" will take part, along with\nMr. Zoellner. Interested persons\nwere Invited to attend, to join\nin the discussion and question the\npanel.,    <\nOTTAWA (CP) - The RCMP\nannounced the transfers Friday of\nthe following officers:\nInsp. Eric Porter, 49, from St.\nJohn's, Nfld., to officer-commanding of Calgary-sub-division.\nInsp. H. E. Bloxham, 44, Calgary, from officer commanding\n' Nelson, B.C, oub-dlvlslon, to officer commanding Prince Rupert, B.C., sub-dlviilon.\nInsp. Edgar S. Batty, Dauphin,\nMan., 47, from Vancouver subdivision to officer commanding\nNelson sub-division.\nInsp. Gordon A. Gerrie, 4ft, Winnipeg,   from officer  commanding\nPHONE  1844  FOR  CLA88IFI-D\nS firmer\nStars of Tomorrow\nSponsored by\nTrail-Rossland Shrine Club\nA Great Show With Great Talent\nFEATURING:\nNORMA ROBERTS\n3 Times Winner on Horace Heldt Show\nTop Talent Award Winner\nMISS  CANADA  PAGEANT\nTV Appearance in Hollywood and Los Angeles\nSHOW  TIMES\n8ALM0   HIGH   SCHOOL  AUDITORIUM\nMay 8th \u2014 Show Time; 8 p.m.\nCASTLEGAR 'HIGH  SCHOOL  AUDITORIUM\nMay 9th \u2014 Show Time; 7 p.m.\nROSSLAND  HIGH  SCHOOL  AUDITORIUM\nMay 10th \u2014 Matinee 6 p.m.; Evening Show 8130 p.m.\nTRAIL  JUNIOR  HIGH  SCHOOL\nMay 11th \u2014 Matlnea 2:30 p.m.; Evening Show 8 p.m.\nStudents SOei\nAdults $1.00\nF. Stenson, 16,\nPasses Here\nJubilee Meeting\nCancelled\nRegular weekly meeting of the\nNelson Jubilee and B.C. Centennial\nCommittee was cancelled Friday\nwhen only three members of the\ncommittee turned up for the meeting in the Chamber of Commerce\nboard room.\nMembers on hand for the meeting were Aid. W. S. Ramsay, Arthur Foster and John Learmonth,\nwith newly - appointed secretary\nMrs. Ethel Cochrane also present.\nWith V. C. Owen, chairman, unable to attend due to pressure of\nbusiness (a B.C. Telephone Co.\n\"workshop\" was being held), and\nMrs. L. G. Catley, vlce-ohairman,\nill with the 'flu, meeting was cancelled when other members had\nnot arrived by 6:40 p.m.\nRett J. N. Allan, president of\nthe Ministerial Association, was\nalso present. .\nFrederick Stenson, 76, of 1134\nFalls Street, died in Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital Friday after a\nshort Illness.\nHe was born in Burton-on-Trent,\nEngland, in June, 1881. As a young'\nman he worked as a carpenter,\nsettling at Fort Macleod when he\ncame to Canada in 1902. He went\nto work with the CPR on the bridge\nand building, gang, working through\nthe Crow's Nest Pass to Cranbrook.\nAt one time he was working with\na crew who had raised the roof of\nthe station at Cranbrook so they\ncould build a second storey to the\ndepot on top of the main building.\nSoon after the roof had been raised, a freight train rumbled past\nthe depot and the vibrations caused the roof to collapse, killing several and injuring Mr. Stenson in\nthe wreckage. ,..,\nIn 1915 he engaged in farming\nat Fort Macleod. He also lived at\nCalgary for some time before coming to the Slocan Valley. He enlisted in the 225th Battalion at Nelson but was discharged six months\nlater on medical grounds. He then\ncontinued to combine farming and\ncarpentering in the Slocan and Nelson areas. He also worked at Bonnington Falls, Kaslo and other\npoints until 1946 when he and his\nwife took up residence in Nelson.\nHe is survived' by his wife, the\nformer Gertrude Presley; three\nsons, Thomas Frederick of Nelson,\nAlbert Cecil of Kamloops and Reginald Guy of Salmo; a daughter.\nMrs. Muriel Louise Speirs of Nelson; a sister, Mrs. Edith Clark of\nBournemouth, England; and 12\ngrandchildren.\nCars Given\nSafety Test\nMany local motorists found out\nFriday night that their cars were\nnot in as good condition as they\nthought they were.\nAs an introduction to \"safety\nweek\", which starts officially Monday, city police, RCMP, and members of Nelson Lions Club co-operated to check cars Friday night on\nthe 700 block Baker Street. In the\nwords of one officer, \"it is quite\nevident that people are careless\nof the equipment in which they are\nriding.\"\nCars which were okayed received\na \"passed\" sticker on their windshields. Those rejected got a \"rejected\" sticker, and a blue slip\ntelling them the work necessary.\nThey must report to police by Wednesday.\nThe tests, similar to those conducted regularly in larger cities,\ncovered all phases of car operation, including headlights, tail\nlights, stop lights, clearance lights,\nlicence plate light, windshield wiper, horn, mirrors, steering, signals,\nbrakes, muffler, tail pipe, registration slip, driver's licence, licence\nplates, as well as name and address signs, gross weight signs,\nflares and flags on trucks. One officer lamented lt was not possible\nto carry out similar tests oftener\nhere.\nIt's miraculous that it's even\ngoing,\" a policeman remarked after a car with seven counts against\nit drove by. Later he saw what he\ncalled \"the granddaddy of them\nall,\" with nine strokes against it.\nAnother car was rejected on five\ncounts.\nSeargeant J. H. Crozier of the\ncity force directed setting up operations. City police chief Robert\nHarshaw, on duty at Hall at Baker\nStreets, where the test line started,\nsaid, the drive was specially aimed\nat getting older cars.\nH. E. BLOXHAM\nNew Westminster sub-division to\nsecond in command, Vancouver\nsub-division.\nInspector Bloxham came to Nelson from Chilliwack in the Spring\nor Summer of 1954 to succeed Inspector J. B. Harris who wai\ntransferred to Calgary. He is married, and has one small daughter.\nDuring his three years here, Inspector Bloxham has been a member of Nelson Rotary Club, and\nwas active on the executive of the\nNelson and District Boy Scout's\nAssociation. He is now in Eastern\nCanada on official business.\nTeacher Shortage\n\"Not Desperate\"\nTRAIL \u2014 Hon. Leslie R. Peterson, minister of education, stopped\nbriefly in Trail Friday. He attended a luncheon meeting with the\ntrustees of School District No. ll.\nIn an interview Mr. Peterson\ndescribed the teacher shortage In\nB.C. He said that it was a point\nof \"some concern but not a desperate situation.\" Teachers were\ncorning here from the Old Country\nand everything was being done to\nencourage young people to enter\nthe profession.\nMr. Peterson arrived in the\nKootenays Thursday and opened\nthe new junior high school at Na\nkusp. Friday evening he went to\nTarrys to open an addition to the\nschool there.\nDruggists' School\nHere Next Week\n\"Capsule College\" will open in\nNelson Monday.\n\u25a0 This college Is primarily for\ndruggists in Nelson and district.\nNow in its third year of operation,\nCapsule College is an educational\nservice Of the Pharmaceutical Association of B.C.\nGibb G. Henderson, inspector of\nthe Association, will be one of the\nfour lecturers at the course, Other\nlecturers are J. W. Crooks, T. H.\nBrown and G. A. Groves.\nCOLLISION AT\nINTERSECTION\nMinor damages resulted fr6m a\ncollision about midnight Thursday\nat Baker and Ward Streets. City\npolice are continuing investigations.\nThe accident involved cars driven by James Baker, an Alberta\nresident, and Ray Benedetti of\nNelson.\nSHUTTLEWOHTH\nSTRAW HATS\nfor men ,\nThis aeaton'i\nPEARL \u2022\nSAND \u2022\nOYSTER  \u2022\ncolon . . \u2022.\nOXFORD\nCREAM\nNATURAL\nThis season's prices....\n$2.95 - $3.50 - $4.95\nGodfreys'\n\u2022270-\nON\nSummer Coal Prices\nGALT - CADILLAC - DRUMHELLER\nDISCOUNTS AVAILABLE NOW!!\nLump $2.50 ton       Nut $2.00 per ton\nEgg $1.50 ton     Stoker $1.80 per ton\nChoquette Fuels\nPHONE  530\nNelson, B.C.\n719 BAKER ST.\nThe Weather\nNELSON  42 75\nOttawa _...   33 42\nToronto    27 44\nWinnipeg  39 59\nRegina   44 70 \u2014\nSaskatoon _.:   48 .78 \u2014\nCalgary :..  43 69. \u2014\nEdmonton  45 71 \u2014\nKimberley   36 75 -\nKaslo   42 75 -\nKamloopi   87 75 \u2014\nPehtlcton  38 68 .12\nVancouver    46 68 \u2014\nWhitehorse ._   84 50 .02\nGolfers\nHere is a buy you cannot afford to miss...\n2 Woods\u20145 irons Golf Bag and Caddy Cart\nRegular Price $97.00\nSEASON START PRICE\n$\n82\n00\nREMEMBER, We Have a Complete Ronge of GOLF CLUBS AND ACCESSORIES.\nJACK BOYCE\nSPORTING GOODS\nPHONE 160\nNELSON, B. C.\n Commemorative Tribute for Rose,\nTrail Blazer Turned Murderer\nv3S3\nHenry Rose.  \u2022 V    '\nThat name has come into the\nnews lately with an announcement\nthat Gray Creek Intends to mark\nthe site of the Rose cabin as a contribution to the E^ C. Centennial.\n'\u25a0\u25a0'Until\"only recently, the moss'\ngrown log cabin where Rose once\nlived stood in full view df the\nSouthern transprovincial highway\nsouth of Gray Creek. Few people\ntravelling past knew that the cabin\nhad befonged to Rose. Yet the\nname of Rose is well, if not altogether pleasantly, remembered.\nHe gave that name to Rose\nPass\u2014the divide in the Selkirks\nbetween Kootenay Lake and the\nEast. Kootenay (Crawford Creek-\nSt. Mary's River) which is being\npromoted as a future highway\nroute.  .',,\nHe was also a murderer and the\nlast person to be executed at'\npoison.\nAs a prospector in pioneer West\nKootenay, Rose seems fo have had\na career as transitory as quicksilver. In a few years he passed from\na certain fame to very certain notoriety. He was a dark man of\nsombre aspect. As far as personality is concerned, he seems to\nhave been an -'enigma.\nAt the mur,der trial in 1902 he\ntold the court he was 64, born in\nOttawa of Scottish and English\nancestry. He had come to B. C.\n12 years before. He had prospected ii\u00bb the Duncan river country. Later he crossed over to the\nSt. Mary's district from the Crawford Bay area, and in so doing had\ngiven his name toMhe pass.\nHe would, therefore, have been\none of the first settlers along the'\nmid-eastern shore of Kootenay\nLake, -making his headquarters at\nthe cabin at Gray Creek.\nCHANGE TOOK PLACE\nIn the few years that followed,\nRose the pathfinder, became\nman of another sort.\nOn the night of June 4, 1902, a\nbrutal fight took place on a beach\nnear Nakusp. J. J. Cole, a rancher\nwas killed i,and Nels Demars, a\nrespected oldtimer of the Colum-\n' bia river, was left badly wounded\nand unconscious.\n...by train to\nVANCOUVER\nRelax, enjoy your trip!\nTravel free from weather\nworries and road hazards all\nthe way to the Coast-\nA. M. Steele,\nBaker and Ward Sts.\nPhone 203\nWord of the stark drama reached Nakusp next morhing.\nHertr'y' Rose, who had accompanied the two men by boat from\nNakusp, was immediately suspected. He was taken to Revelstoke'\nand charged with both murder\nand assault with intent. On June\n8 he was brought to Nelson to\nawait trial. .\nDemars, who was close on 80,\nwas taken to hospital with a fractured skull, and little hope was\nheld for his recovery.\n, By a turn of fate, however, this\nColumbia river pioneer who had\ncome in the early 1860s and placer\nmined most of the streams in\nEast ahd West Kootenay,-recovered\nto be a leading Crown witness at\nthe trial.\nAccording to newspaper accounts\nof the day, Rose persisted in his\nstory that Demars had told him\nthey had been set upon by two\nunknown men during Rose's ab\nsence.\nOn October 2, Rose appeared in\nAssize Court in Nelson before chief\njustice Hunter. The court room was\ncrowded. No murder trial in Nelson had aroused such keen interest as this one, due to public sympathy for old Nels Demars, highly\nregarded among the prospecting\nfraternity.\nOne newspaper, .unable to resist\ntaking pn upriteous stand during\nthe sensational mongering, considered it was performing a duty by\nstating as part of a news report on\nthe trial:\n\"Since the trial started, there\nhas been a great deal of talk about\nthe forbidding nature of the prisoner's appearance. There is nothing to warrant such talk. Rose is\nby no means.a beauty, but there\nwere a number of other men in\nthe, courtroom whom he could distance in a contest for points in\npersonal appearance. He is a\nswarthy, heavy-jowled man, but\nhe has not one bad eye.\"\nThe same paper, commenting on\nthe favorable impression made by\nthe judge, tossed off this compliment: \"He is not like some judges\nthat have been seen on the bench.\nHe is never in a trance, and always knows just where the case\nis at.\"\nDemars testified that the trio\nhad set out from Nakusp by boat,\nwith a quantity of whisky, some of\nwhich they drank, Their destination was the Rose ranch seven\nmiles, south of Nakusp, which they\nnever reached. Two miles out\nthey decided to land at a beach.\nRose and fcole began squabbling,\nDemars called out to them and\nwas rushed at by Rose and repeatedly struck unconscious. He\ndidn't know anything until he found\nhimself in bed in the Leland Hotel\nin Nakusp the next day.\nEXCITEMENT MOUNTS\nOn October-4, Rose himself entered the witness box. \"Word was\nsoon carried out to the street that\nRose was in the box, and eager\nlisteners kept crowding into the\nlimited space of the court room\nuntil the atmosphere of the place\nbecame almost unbearable.\"\nRose, described as \"the most collected witness examined in this\ncase,' \"attempted to disprove a damaging chain of circumstantial ev-\nFURNITURE\nMOVING\nPHONE 889\nTowleR\nFUEL AND TRANSFER   '\nidenee forged by officers of the\nCrown in the preceding1 two days\nhearing.\nHe told of leaving and returning\nto the scene, asking Demars if he\nhad killed Cole, and Demars saying \"Two men came from the\nwoods with a chip,\"\nThe case went,to the jury on\nOctober 6, and early on the 7th\nthe jury returned a  verdict of\nguilty.\nPUBLIC HANGING\nRose was executed publicly In\nthe jailyard at Nelson at 8 a.m. on\nNovember 21, and went.to the gallows stoutly maintaining that he\nwas innocent. Immediately before\nthe fatal bolt was sprung, Rev.\nFather Althoff read to the spectators, Rose's last words of. protestation and farewell- and Rose knelt\nand received the last sacrament.\nNow, 55 years later, a community removed from the scene of his\ncrime, and close to the pass that\nbears his name, will place a memorial marker at his cabin.\nWhen the snow melted this spring\nGray Creek people discovered that\na slash fire under the power line\nhad totally consumed the walls of\nRose's cabin. The stone fireplace\nroofed with earth is all that remains. This is regarded locally as\nample vestige of his rough home\nfor commemorative purposes..\nSo Rose, the name-giver, will\nhave recognition over his ignominy.\nExcellent Progress\nMade on Salmo Church\nI\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, MAY 4, 1957 \u2014 3\nSALMO' \u2014 A favorable report\nshowing that considerable work\nhas. been done on the Salmo Community Memorial Church cheered\nmembers of the Association at\ntheir annual meeting this week.\nMrs. R. G. Stepson's financial\nreport showed cash on hand of\n$280 and accounts receivable of $36.\nThe basement had been finished\nand painted, and the main part of\nthe church is now being sheeted\"\nwith plywood.  This project was\nNo One Blamed\nIn Boy's Death\nCRANBROOK \u2014A coroner's jury\ninquiring into the death last Thurs:\nday of nine-year-old Albert. Bruce\nClifford found death was accidental\nwith no blame attached to anyone.\nThe verdict blamed his inexperience as a cyclist in traffic for the\naccident.\nEvidence presented at the inquest showed he was riding his\nbicycle on the shoulder of the high,\nway just west of the city when a\nHighways Department truck operated by Lawrence Turney, also proceeding west at normal speed,\novertook him. The youngster is\nthen reported to have swerved on\nto the highway and into the side\nof the truck.\nHe was rushed to hospital immediately by Cranbrook District\nAmbulance and died two .hours\nlater. \"\" '\u25a0:. \u25a0 -r\nNAKUSP GROUP\nELECTS OFFICERS\nNAKUSP\u2014Mrs. Ron Jordan was\nelected president at the annual\nmeeting of the Nakusp Recreation\nCommission. Also named were\nTom McKenzie, vice-president;\nMrs. C. Sadd, secretary, and N.\nWoldum, treasurer.\nA special committee appointed\nto bring in suggestions for co-ordination of various sports organizations' efforts, was asked to continue this work for a further period. Reports showed that a contour map of the park had been\nforwarded to Victoria.\nPTA Mokes Badges\nFor Sports Winners\nBALFOUR\u2014Final arrangements\nwere made at the Parent Teacher-\nAssociation meeting for\" the sports\nday celebration to be held at Procter for the school closing .\nMembers made badges to be\nworn by the prize winners in sport\nevents. .;..;.\"-\nby\nApalhv Toward\nTB Noted\nSalmo Speaker\nSALMO \u2014 A graphic description\nof the tuberculosis situation in\nCanada was given by R. J. (Bob)\nHunter of the B.C. Tuberculosis\nAssocjatoin at Rotary Club's meeting Tuesday night..\nHe said that there was considerable apathy- in the attiude of the\nput-lie toward this situation. The\nfact that the death rate and the\ntuberculosis hospital occupation\nwar down possibly brought on this\noutlook. However, he pointed out\nthat the incidence of tuberculosis\nwas still at the same level but\nnew- treatment and drugs made\nit possible to have short-time hospital stay and many cases were\ntreated at home. The main problem at the present time was case\nfinding so that the disease could\nbe. treated in its early stages.,\nA film was shown to the members in which the tuberculosis situation was well described. It covered the effects of the disease as\nwell as the methods of detection\nand. treatment.\nSPECIAL SURVEY\nThe TB Association is conducting a special survey of the Salmo\narea during the latter part, of May.\nA serious attempt will be made to\nhave 100 per cent.coverage in this\narea for everyone over the age of\nsix years.'\nSeveral local organizations\nSalmo are taking part in the work\nof this drive and the Rotary Club\nhas taken on publicity.\ncarried on under the supervision\nof Mr. Pederson.\nR. Ungaro haa taken over con-\nv e n e r s h 1 p of landscaping the\nchurch grounds and more work\nwill be done in this respect shortly.\nUnited and Anglican Church services have been increased to once\na week this year, and Presbyterian\nservices are held twice a month,\n\u25ba Several funerals and marriages\nwere conducted at the church in\nthe past year, all held free of\ncharge.\n\/ Directors elected for the year\nahead were F. T. Middleton, president;'Ed. John,'vice - president;\nMrs. Stenson, treasurer; Mrs.\nJohn, secretary,; along with Mr.\nMunch,'Mrs. Ungaro, Mrs. Grace\nJohn, C. Hansen and Mrs. Sauter,\nA vote of thanks went to Miss\nJoanne Thielle for her faithful\nwork as janitor of the Church, and\nto the Ladies' Aid for various projects undertaken to raise funds for\nimprovement.of the church.\nANNIVERSARY\nCONTINUES\nSAVINGS! SAVINGS! SAVINGS!\nFOR YOU ON OUR ANNIVERSARY SALE\nNelson Electric Co., Ltd.\nPHONE 260\nAuthorized _. Dealer\nGENERAL\u00a9 ELECTRIC\nNELSON,  B.C.\nSAYS DOPE CLUES\nHIDDEN IN 'PEG\nRADIO BOARDS\nWINNIPEG. (CP)-Radio station\nCKY said-in a broadcast Friday,\nthat a former prisoner.'of Stony\nMountain, Man., penitentiary\/now\nback in the prison on a narcotics\ncharge,   told' the   station   that\nphoney\" dedications on Winnipeg\nradio stations were being used as\ntipoffs for the smuggling of dope\ninto the penitentiary.\nThe station said the man had\nbecome \"very angry\" at CKY\nwhen his dedication had not gone\nor, the air at a specified time, but\nlater admitted the dedication was\nmeant fdr a tipoff to men inside\nthe'penitentiary that he had. left\na parcel tp be picked up by prisoners working - outside the walls\nduring the day.\nUnder the setup, the man outside would place a request for a\ncertain musical record to be dedicated to certain persons, such as\n\"for Bill, Mary and Joe.\" this\nwould be a tipoff to certain prisoners at. Stony Mountain that a\npackage would be in a specified\nhiding spot near where a'prison\ngang would be working outside the\nwalls the next day.\nCKY says it has been investigating for about a year the possibility it was being \"used\" by such\ndedications. ,\nWarden Charles DesRosiers of\nStony Mountain and RCMP at\nWinnipeg said they know nothing\nof the station's charge.\nParis Gold Price\nDrops as War\nPotential Lower\nPARIS (Reuters)\u2014An improvement in the Middle East situation\nwas mainly responsible for a\ngradual decline in gold prices on\nthe Paris gold market this week\nbuUbusiness continued at low levels. \u25a0 \u2022 -\n. Hoarders still were more interested in the stock exchange than\nin the gold market, despite various bullish factors. The possibility of new taxes and the difficult\ngold and foreign exchange position of the treasury failed to attract demand though a technical\nrally was noted at the end of the\nweek.\nSpurrell Fund\nTolal $315,\nNEW DENVER - Final total of\nthe Rev. J. W. Spurrell fuhd was\nannounced Friday as $3156.46. Officials said this money, minus expenses, has 'been sent to Mrs.\nSpurrell and her young son, who\nnow' live about 40 miles from\nMoncton, New Brunswick.\nMoney came from the Kootenays\nand other points for the survivors\nof Mr. 'Spurrell, who was killed\nthis winter by a snowslide near\nKaslo.\nAnglican minister at Kaslo and\nNew y Denver, Mr. Spurrell had\nbeen in the district only a few\nmonths.\nBIG BUSINESS\nTOKYO (AP)-The transportation ministry expects 160,000 tourists to visit Japan this year and\nspend $70,000,000. This is 30 per\ncent more than last year, and\ncompares with 26,125 visitors in\n1938.   '\u25a0:'\u25a0:        :; j \u2022\n$5000 Reward Posted for\n\"Recognizable\" Sasquatch\nPRIME MINISTER Louis St.\nLaurent made a brief whistle\nstop at Field Thursday qn his\nway to Vancouver by train,\nlllllllllllllllllllllllllimmiiiiiiiiiiiil\nST, LAURENT\nPOPULAR WfTH\nFIELD CHILDREN\n\u2022. FIELD, B.C. (CP) \u2014 The\nchildren of this railway divisional point were given a\nschool holiday Thursday at the\nrequesf'of Prime Minister St.\nLaurent.\nHe told some 50 children at\n, the rail station, as they-gathered about him, that he did\nnot have power as prime minister to grant them the day off.\nSchools were a provincial responsibility, but he said he\nhad asked the local school\nauthorities if they would grant\nthe holiday and the authorities\nagreed. *\nThe children received the\nnews enthusiastically. One asked if the prime minister would\ncome back tomorrow so that\nanother holiday could be declared.\nii 1111 i r it r 11! 1111 in 11 mil 1111 (\nMiners Again Urge\nNational Coal Policy\nNATAL \u2014 The need for'a national coal policy for Canadian\nminers was stated emphatically\nhere this week.\nIt was hammered on at a May\nDay mass meeting attended by\nminers from throughput the Crowsnest Pass, at which guest speakers\nwere James Byrne, MP for Kootenay East, Leo Nimsick, MLA for\nCranbrook; Tom Uphill, MLA for\nNAKUSP HONORS\nACTIVE WORKER\nV. C. SMITH\nNAKUSP - The Rotary Club,\nChamber of Commerce and Arrow\nLakes Hospital Board combined\nhere to sponsor a farewell party\nfor Mr. and Mrs. V. C. Smith, who\nare leaving here to go to Vander-\nhoof.\nMr. Smith has been, manager for\nthe B.C. Power Commission's district here since coming to Nakusp\n10 years ago. He is charter president of the Rotary Club, has served\nseveral terms as Chamber of Commerce president, ahd for nine\nyears has been hospital board\nchairman. His wife has been active in the Hospital Auxiliary, the\nPTA, and has taught CGIT and\nExplorer groups.\nAn engraved silver tray was presented to the couple. Dr. F. B.\nMaxfield, Rotary's incoming president, expressed the town's regrets\nat their departure. Mike Fraitzl\nspoke for the Chamber of Commerce, and R. Cook, secretary-\nmanager, spoke for the hospital.\nUN Force Shoots\nArab Looter     *\nCAIRO (AP)-The United Nations Emergency Force Friday re-,\nported that a Palestinian Arab\nwas killed by a UNEF guard from\nIndonesia who discovered four civilians trying to make off with\narmy equipment.\n.The, shooting occurred at an Indonesian camp in the Gaza Strip\ntown of Rafah.\nOLD-AGE PENSION\nIn Denmark, old-age pensions\nare paid to men at 65 years, and\nto single women at 60 years.\nBalfour Comm^tees Map\nHall Building Program\nBALFOUR \u2014 A joint meeting of\nthe Centennial committee and the\nHall building fund committee was\nheld at the home of Mrs. W. Kline.\nUnder dis.cussion was just what\ncould be built with the money in\nhand, so that some part of the new\nhall could be ready f6r dedication\nfor the Centennial celebration, to\nbe held July 4, 1958. Two donations\nof $50 each have been received.\nThe. publicity convener gave a\nreport, on information received regarding pamphlets for the Centennial celebrations. Pamphlets will\ncontain the program for the day's\nactivities, local advertisements and\nthe history of Balfour.\nFernie, and Howard Day, CCF candidate in the federal ridingf\nA national coal policy was seen\nas one way to arriving at a solution to the problem of decreasing\nmarkets and resulting unemployment of coal miners.\nCoal burning turbines were regarded as a likely boost to the sagging industry. Progressive company policies had also illustrated\nthat the industry could be maintained at a normal level.\nThe meeting also declared that\ntrade with the Republic of China\nshould be opened, as a friendship\nmove.\nGeno LeRose Heads\nTrail Kinsmen    \u25a0\nTRAIL (CP) \u2014 Geno LeRose,\nwho has never missed a meeting\nof the Trail Kinsmen Club in 12\nye*s, Thursday night was elected\npresident for the 1957-58 term.\nNew directors include Ron\nHeath, Bruce Young, Jim Moynes,\nRichard Tookes. Other officers:\nDavid Bunn, registrar, Vic Arciri,\ntreasurer; Earl Braemer, secretary and Sandy George, Bulletin\neditor.\nOpen Verdict\nIn Man's Death    '\nCALGARY (CP) - An open\nverdict was-returned in the death\nof George Roberts, 53, of Marysville, killed in a car-train collision\n10 miles East of here April 5.\nThe coroner's jury said that because of a snowstorm, visibility at\nthe time was practically zero, and\nconflicting evidence left the jury\nunable to determine who was the\ndriver of the car at the time of the\naccident.\nB. C. Centennial Committee Convenes\nIn Cranbrook; 1958 Tours Announced\nCRANBROOK\u2014On the grounds that a Sasquatch hunt\nfalls short of the \"permanent project\" requirement, the B.C.\nCentennial Committee currently visiting East Kootenay, Friday at Cipnbrook officially rejected a Harrison proposal\nthat the hunt be subsidized from the special grant amount\navailable ot local centenary committees on the basis of 60\ncents per capita. >\nHowever, the committee has posted a $5000 cash payment open to the whole province to the first person producing an authentic Sasquatch which is recognized as such\nby the central committee.\nThe offer is open from January\nto December 31 of the province's\ncentennial celebration in 1958. The\ncommittee's official announcement\ndid not include information on\nwhat they will recognize as\nauthentic.\nAt Its East Kootenay meeting\nhere, first of a series under way\nthrough the province, L. J. Wallace, recreations director (or the\n- province, announced ttie provincial centennial program wonld\ninclude a tour of the province\nMainland and Interior during\nthe year of the Vancouver Symphony Orchestra. The Victoria\nSymphony will tour ttie Island.\nOther province - wide special\nitems during the year, not necessarily coinciding with local celebration dates, will be tours by\nprovincial arts and oraftc displays.\nA provincial museum caravan -\nwill be arranged by provincial\narchivist Dr. Willard Ireland, a\nmobile provincial industrial display, and the RCMP Musical Ride.\nAll 21 local centennial committees\nin East Kootenqy were represented\nat the meeting here.\nSlocan Park Man\nAwarded $2193\nIn Damages\nROSSLAND (CP) - Fred Kon-\nItin of Slocan Park was awarded\n$2193 damages Thursday by Chief\nJustice Sherwood Lett of the B.C,\nSupreme Court for damages to his\nproperty caused by the logging operations of John Polonikoff.\nA second Slocan Park man,\nNick Zaitsoff, who was seeking\n$400 in the same case, had his\nclaim disallowed.\nMr. Konkin had told the court\nthat his water-system, including a\nwooden tank and piping to his\nhouse, was destroyed when Mr.\nPolonikoff bulldozed a side road\nto get a jammer site in the spring\nof 1956.\nHe said the tank disappeared,\n200 feet of pipe was washed out\nand two acres of land ruined by a\nresulting slide. He sought $2500.\n' In handing down his judgment,\nChief Justice Lett said he found\nthe defendant negligent by temporarily blocking the natural course\nof the stream that supplied the\nwafer system and diverted water\nin building the short road to his\njammer site.\n\"Proper precautions at the end\nof logging operations would have\nensured the water remaining in its\nproper path,\" Mr. Justice Lett\nstated.\nThe jurist added that he felt Mr.\nKonkin was entitled only to restoration of what was, destroyed. He\nreduced the special damages claim\nto $1793 and; awarded $400 general\ndamages for inconveniences caused the plaintiff.\nClassified Adt Get Rcnulto\nMAY-SENT'S\nSURPLUS\nKETTLE   FALL8,  WASH,\nCLOSING OUT\nALL MERCHANDISE\nAT COT .PRICES\nYour Money Worth 5% Mora\nThan Oura,\nCongratulation*\nSTOP IN - LOOK SEB\nBB-MB*\"*\nWMM M\u00ab W\u00ab__\nEfficient Units for Every Heed in\nLO-BOY, HI-BOY and COUNTER-FLO MODELS\nNokusp's New Wharf\nUnder Construction\nNAKUSP \u2014 The dominion government public works department\nhas started construction of the\nnew wharf here. Pile driving is\nunder way.\nThe wharf, to be located west\nof the present wharf, will be of a\nstationary type of suitable width\nfor vehicles. It has been made a\nnecessity by heavier loads from\nthe ferry \"Lardeau.\"\nFormer'Forks\nMan Dies at Coast\nGRAND FORKS - A former\nGrand Forks resident, William\nGray, 71, died Monday in Vancouver. Funeral was Thursday.\nSurvivors are one son, Dr. Alexander Gray, of Prince Rupert;\nthree daughters, Mrs. C. Breden-\nberg of Ladysmith, Mrs. James Allan of Nanaimo, and Mrs. Stanley\nJones of Vancouver; and five\ngrandchildren. .\nIASY TO INSTALL\u2014hnot*\nproper completely oss\u00bbmWe_>\nCOMPACT \u2014 oeeoplM into*\nImum floor space. ^\nECONOMICAL \u2014 tOO%\nprimary radiating surface cn\u00bb\ntracts maximum efficiency froa\nfuel; spun, glass and aluminura\nfoil insulation ensure _dta\nsavings.\nEFFICIENT \u2014 Pewer-pfk Mat\non burner maintains constant\nflame to ignite main burner whea\nheat b called for.\nATTRACTIVE \u2014 finished _\nattractive brown and tan colour\ncombination, Infra-red baked\nto a durable, easy-to-cloca\nfinish.\n5 forts\u2014 nmW\nAttention Home Owners\nIf you have signed up for gas and are anticipating\non installing a gas-fired heating plant this year,\nda not wait . . . avoid the fall rush. Contact\nBENNETT'S LTD. now . . . for free estimates on\ninstalling your heating plant. No obligation whatsoever ... have your job estimated and engineered\ncorrectly by the largest and best heating ..dealers\nin Nelson. <\nName Line Brands\nCanadian Fairbanks Morse\nBENNETTS LTD..\nMachine Shop\n324 Vernon St.\nPhone 593\n jfriamt !.atig-5fn\u00bbB\nEstablished  April  22.  1902 .     \u25a0       ,'\nInferior 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 a* Second Class Mall, Post Office Department, Ottawa,\nMEMBER  Of   THE AUDIT   BUREAU  OF CIRCULATIONS\n-    MEMBER OF   IHE CANADIAN PRESS\nThe Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use tor republication of all news\ndispatches credited to it oi to The Associated Press or Reuters In this paper,\nand also the local news published therein. -\nSaturday, May 4, 1967\nRoad'e'O a Natural for Teenager\nAnything   which   will   make   for    ulations ior safe driving and they have\ngreater safety on the roads should receive the encouragement and endorsement of everyone. The Nelson Junior\nChamber of Commerce has expressed\nitself as disappointed with the lack of\nentrants for its Safe-Driving Poad-eo\nwhich is to be held at the Recreation\nGrounds May 10.\nThis is a competition which all\nparents of teenage drivers should insist that their children take part. It is\ndesigned as part of a national drive\nto turn teenagers into top-flight motorists and has received the endorsement\nof law enforcement officers and insurance companies,\nThe competition demands a great\ndeal of skill and knowledge. The competitors have to write tests to show\ntheir knowledge of the rules and reg-\nto engage in road tests which demonstrate their mastery of the car.\nSimply by entering in such a competition a young person acquires a\nconsiderable amount of experience\nwhich cannot help but be beneficial\nto him; Only one can reach the final\nand proceed to Vancouver, but all\ngreatly increase their driving ability.\nIt is the element of evaluation of\ndriving skills which make this competition so valuable. When lt is remembered that teenagers make up\nonly 15 per cent of all drivers and\nyet are responsible for 30 per cent of\naccidents, it is clear that all of them\nshould take.part in this competition\nboth to satisfy their own desire to prove\ntheir worth and to demonstrate to the\npublic at large that they are capable\ndrivers.\nA Dyin& Party\n. Canada's Most\nControversial Man\n\"Canadians dislike and mistrust any\nshow of cheerfulness . . . Canadians are\nslaves to prejudices ... A lady in Canada\nis a dawdy mammal given to culture and\ngood works.\" Thus speaks Robertson Davies,\nCanada's most controversial man of letters\nin his latest p\/ess interview.\nMr. Davies has succeeded In shaking\ninstitutions from St. John's to Victoria during the last 17 years. Just 43, ho Is the son\nof Senator Rupert Davies who published both\nthe Kingston, Ont., and Peterborough, Ont.,\nnewspapers while Robertson attended Upper\nCanada College, Queen's University and Oxford. Returning to Canada in 1940, Robertson\ntook over the Peterborough Examiner himself and since then has turned out 12,000\n, words a week.\nHe has crossed swords with do-gooders,\nservice clubs, uplifters, .temperance, societies, women and tax collectors, to name\nonly a few\u2014and the latest interview, which\nappears in full in. the current issue of The\nStar Weekly, is proof that he is still ready\nto state his views about anything and everything he considers worthy of his criticism or\napproval,.\nIn his own words: \"I grow more ferocious as 1 grow older. But I am not, as some\npeople claim, in a perpetual ill-temper.\"\nOf modern education, Robertson iDavies\nsays: \"Children are, in the main, very intelligent and full of curiosity, but we do not\nask them to use their (leads .. . Three times\nthe work could be got out of children than\nmodern schools demand.\"\nPet hates, Canada's future, leading personalities and a dozen other subjects have\nverdicts passed on them in the latest interview with Robertson Davies.\nBut^strangely enough, while Davies,\nlooking down from his lofty perch pulls the\ntrigger on all manner of targets, he himself\nis regarded with fond admiration. This is\nperhaps demonstrated by the way his books\nand plays are received. Despite the fact that\nthey flail Canada for its shortcomings they\nare usually widely acclaimed, and his stage\nplays are greeted with wild enthusiasm.\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS\nTho Dally News does not nolo itself responsible in tho event\n'     of an error In the following Hate.\nTORONTO STOCKS\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES I\nAcadia Uranium .\nAlgom Uranium .\nAmal Larder \t\nAnacon Lead \t\nAnglo Rouen\t\nAtlin Ruff\n 12%\n....   23.37V.\n       .20\n..\u201e    1.70\n..._      .80\n 8?\nAubelle         .09%\nAumaque\n-Barnat\t\nBase Metals \t\nBaslea Uranium\nBoymar\t\nBrilund \t\nBrunhurst  \t\nBrunswick\nLoyal members of the Labor Progressive\nParty, their ranks shattered and emaciated,\nhave remained true to their national leader\nand founder. Mr. 'Tlm\u00a5 Buck has survived\nanother crisis in time to lead the remnants of\n, what was once a dangerous minority group\ninto another nuisance campaign for the forthcoming federal general election.\nDespite attempts by party dissenters to\nbreak away from the Russian orbit and\nestablish an Independent Canadian Communist party, Mr. Buck won the endorsement of\nthe majority to follow the old party line. It\nwas a shrewd stand to'take; Mr. Buck is\nat least assured of some support, if not in\nCanada, from Moscow.\nCanadian support for the Communists has\nall but vanished since their heyday of the\nlate 1940's. The imprisonment of Mr. Fred\nRose for conspiring to communicate information unlawfully to Russia removed the last\nCommunist member for, the House of Commons. Party representation in the provincial\nlegislatures is limited to one member in\nManitoba. Only the odd Communist has sur-\nvived'on the municipal level.\nIn the last federal election the Labor\nProgressive party polled 55,463 votes, 1.1 per\ncent of the national total. It would be safe\nto say that many of these votes were cast by\ncrackpots and pranksters and the party may\nexpect their support again this year. But the\nsame will not be true for those who once\ngave them valid support. The pinks, the\nfellow-travellers and even Marxist adherents\nhave departed. Party membership is believed\nreduced to between'5500 and 7000.\nWe cannot completely write off the Labor\nProgressive party. Although down in numbers it is now made up of a hard core of\nbelievers and with .Mr. Buck firmly .in the\ndriver's seat, .the party can be expected to\nmake a renewed bid for support. But we\ncan predict it will fare poorly\u2014indeed disastrously. And we can note that, freely functioning in a free society, the Communists\ncome to fhe bad end they deserve.\n\u2014Toronto Globe and Mail.\nPress Comment\nTRY THE TRUTH\nAdults complaining about some of the\nstories in today's elementary school readers\nbeing insipid have a pretty point. Today's\nkids are a grownup lot.\nIt is thd age of serious speculation and\nexperiment in space travel, ..for instance.\nAutomation, atomic power, jet propulsion,\nconquest of disease, and internationalism are\na few of the subjects in the air even very\nyoung children breathe.\nSo much for the school books, then.\nBut what about television? Some Of the\nprograms are worse than Insipid.\nCritics say some of the school reader\nstories are \"enough to put a child off reading for life.\"\nWe think some of the television programs\nare enough to put a child off life for all\neternity.\u2014Vancouver Sun.\nKeep smiling. It makes everyone wonder\nI what you're up to.\u2014Edmonton Journal.\nBEST OTHER SEX\nMen gripe about women, but they're the\nbest other sex we haye.\u2014Niagara Falls Review.\nHere are two new excuses for ducking\nOut of a cocktail party. The new American\nUndersecretary of State, Christian Herter,\ntells his hostess he has arthritis and can't\nstand up longer than for one .drink. German\nForeign Minister'Von Bretano tells his chauffeur to leave th? engine running when he\ngoes in.\u2014Sherbrooke Record. .\nBUDGET BITTERS\nAlready there are some bitter comphihts\nin Britain about the latest budget. But then\n'was there ever a budget, in' Britain or anywhere else, that did not get its share of\ncriticism?\u2014Brantford Expositor.\nHOUSECLEANING\nThe wise woman sweeps out hsr husband first before going ahead with har house-\ncleaning. And he doesn't mind a bit.\u2014St.\nThomas Times-Journal.\nWe can see many advantages in fixed\nelection dales for federal and provincial\nmembers. Politicians may see many disadvantages. At least we hope that someone\nsome day will have nerve enough to arise\nG\u201eoin& Modern\nIn mist Canadian minds the Eskimo is\npictured chiefly as a well bundled up person\nsitting stoiidly in aB igloo or beside a hole\nin the ice, waiting for a seal to surface. He's\nnot so readily imagined as an industrious\nfollow with\" a growing bank account.\nYet the Eskimo is showing an adaptability to the white man's ways, and up\nnorth where the radar lines are being built\na few of those native sons have banked as\nmuch as $2000. One group of 235 radar line\nworkers have saved about $200,000.\nWhat those Eskimos save for isn't so\ndefinitely known. It can't be to get a new\ncar  or even an old one, in their next' to . whether rifles, outboard motors, phonograph\nroadless land, Nor are they likely to be sav-     \u00ab\u2022 \u00ab\u00bb>\u00ab\u2022 \u00ab\u2022\u201e,,_ .u.. _._\u25a0\u25a0\u201e ...    ' Kuysflirai'\"-\ning up for vacations. Just where would an\nEskimo go for a vacation?\nThis much is sure\u2014they're intelligent\npeople  and ' will  know  what  they  want,\nMental Health\nThis is National Mental Health Week.\nDr.; George S. Stevenson, an Ame[ican\ncolleague of Dr. Clarence M. Hincks, founder\nof the Canadian Mental Health Society, states\nthe main characteristics of good mental\nhealth are:\n1. A tolerant, easy-going attitude toward\nyourself as well as others.\n2. A realistic estimate of your own abilities \u2014 neither underestimating nor overestimating.\n3. Self-respect.\n4. Ability to take life's disappointments\nin stride.\n5. Ability to give love and consider the\ninterest of others.\n6. Liking and trusting other people and\nexpecting others to feel the same way about\nyou.\n, 7. Feeling part of a group and having\na sense of responsibility to your neighbors\nand fellow men.\n8. Acceptance of your responsibilities and\ndoing something about your problems as they\narise.\n9. Ability to plan ahead, and setting of\nrealistic goals for yourself.\n10. Putting your best efforts into what\nyou do and getting satisfaction out of doing it.\nTourist Harvest\nA growing country, with an increasing\ncuriosity about itself, can make an appreciable contribution to its own tourist industry.\nThis is now being done by Canadians, who\nare expected to provide about half of the\n$600,000,000 tourist trade forecast for their\nnation this year.-\nEven those who .cater to tourists perhaps\ntoo readily assume that most of them come\nfrom the United States. Certainly the American contribution is large, and the industry\nwill welcome much more of ii But the potential of this profitable trade is larger by\nfar than the spending of any one country.\nTourist service should be provided in terms\nof that larger market.\nIt's an industry-a consumer of supplies\nand a big employer-in a real sense.\n_ Inquiries at tourist agencies Indicate a\nlarger volume of business this year than\never. Soon at this port of entry we will\nget a preview of this holiday travel, as it\npertains to United States visitors. Memorial\npay, May 30, traditionally starts the Amer-\nlean tourist flood. Service staffs at bridge\nand tunnel will.be the first to record the\nresults\u2014Windsor Star.\n14%\n.30\n.83\n.40\n.OBVb\n.63\n.10%\n10.12V.\n2.45\n.17\n.07\nB.A. Oil ' ......\nBeatty Bros\t\nBell Telephone ......\nBrazilian .:...\t\nB.C. Electric 4%s .\nB.C. Forest\t\nB.C. Packers A .....\nB.C. Power A\t\nBurns A.\nS3\n5%\n43%\n9\n91\n11%\n16%\n45%\n11%\n25%\nThe Week's News\nBuffalo Ank\t\nBuff Can\t\nBuff Red Lake\nCampbell C  10.75\nCan Met  \u201e   4.70-\nCassiar  _  ,7.50\nCentral Patricia  2.72\nChimo  ....:  1.30\nCoin Lake  12%\nCons Denison  23.37V.\nCons. Discovery   2.85\nCons Halliwell  97\nCons Howe :  3.25\nCons Mining & Smelting .. 25.75\nConstted Pop  ... .21\nCon Sanorm  .12V.\nCon Sub 4  2.95\nConwest  ...'. .\u201e.\u201e  6.70\nCopper forp  .60\nCopper Man-\nD'Aragon \t\nDonalda\n 30\n      .21\nEast Malartic     1.20\nEast Sullivan     4.35\nElder Gold  \u2014 \u2022    .38V.\nFalconbrldge :  36.25\nFaraday  _    2.70\nFi;obisher      3.05\nGeco -   17.00\nGeo. Scientific Pros     1.01\nGlen Uranium 45\nGoldale .....      ,21\nGoldcrest   14\nGold Eagle       .09\/\nGolden Manitou ,.\u00ab.   -1.20\nGrandines      .16 ,\nGunnar Gold  20.37V.\nHarminerals  38\nHasaga   .....     .24\nHeadway   77\nHollinger   29.12V4\nHudson Bay _   74.00\nInspiration 70\nInt. Nickel  107.00\nIron Bay  _     4.50\nJoliet Que 54\nR J Jowsey 86\nKenville  10\nKerr Addison   15.00\nLabrador      20.87M\nLake Lingman , 11\nLakeshorc      5.50\nLexindin  :       .34\nLittle Long Lac     2.59\nLorado     1.38\nMacassa  .,    2.05\nMadsen R. L .'.    1.60\nMaheast 28\nMaritime Mining      1.74\nMcLeod     1.01\nMilliken     3.95\nMining Corp    17.75\nMogul     1.65\nMulti Mins  __ 90\nNew Alger -     .17\nNew Delhi      1.17\nNew. Fortune _     .15\nNew Highridge :      .29\nNew Harricana     ' .34\nCanadian Breweries\t\nCanadian Canneas  11%\nCanadian Celanesa  \u201e 14\nCan. Cement  28%\nCan Chem Co  7 ,\nCanadian Dredge  20%\nCan Oil  31%\nCanadian Pacific Rly  33%\nCan. Packers B  36Vi\nCockshutt   8%\nCons Gas \u2022   37\nDist. Seagrams  30%\nDom. Foundries  ,  32%\nDom. Magnesium  15%\nDom. Steel Ord  22%\nDom. Stores _ 50\nDom. Tar & Chemical  11%\nDom. Textiles  77s\nEddy Paper i  50\nFamous Players   17\nFanny Farmer \u201e  22%\nFord A   104%\nGatineau     30\nGatineau 5% pfd  , 7\nGoodyear   \u2022 180\nGypsum Lime \u201e 23%\nHoward Smith  \u201e \u201e 35\nImperial Oil   55%\nImp. Tobacco  12V4\nInt. Metals\t\nInt. Pete  55%\nLaura Secord   19\nLoblaw B  !  19%\nMassey Harris  6%\nMcColl Frontenac \u201e 80\nMont. Loco  16%\nMoore Corp  64\nNat. Steel Car  26%\nPage Hershey \u201e 130\nPowell River  42%\nPower Corp  73\nRuss. Industries  11%\nShawinigan  _.._\u2022  86\nSicks Brew   21\nSimpsons A  18%\nSoutham\nStandard Paving .\nSteel of Canada\t\nUnion Gas of Can .\nUnited Steel.\n55\n39\n65\n79%\n17%\n22\nor other things that make life easier or pleas-\nanter. Perhaps refrigerators, although sale\nof those appliances to Eskimos used to top\nthe outsider's list of impossibilities.\n\u2014Windsor Star.\nThey'll Do It Every Time\nBy Jimmy Hatb\ny_STEr?D4V'\n(AND A LOT OF\nOTHER DAYS')\nWINDBEI3R\"\/\nWtfBNED MPS'.W*.\n4G4lNSf FALLING\nFOR A F4ST-\nrA\\.vm& SAVES*\naMAHS LIME\"\"\nTODAY'S BIBLE\nTHOUGHT\nThis poor man cried out and,\nthe Lord heard him, end delivered\nhim out of all his troubles. Psalm\n34:6,\nCountless men have since Uiat\nday cried unto the Lord In their\ndistress and the Lord has indeed\nheard them. Because of their cry\nwe have a vastly better world.\n0unLfoL\nNew Jason .\nNew Lund\nNlpissing ..\nNisto\nNoranda New .\nNorgold\n.12%\n.43%\n2.85\n.10\n51.50\n.26\nNormetals   .'.     4.55\nNorpax   .-.     1.29\nNorth Can      1.60\nNorth Rankin     1.51\nOpemiska    13.50 \u2022\nPickle Crow     1.27 -\nPlacer Devel   12.25\nPreston E. D ;     8.20\nQuebec Copper  83 j\nQuebec Lab \u201e. 15%\nQuebec Lithium |_     8.75\nQuebec Metallurgical      2.17\nQuemont   13.12%\nRadiore      1.18\nRainville -      .95\nRayrock -    1.58\nSan Antonio 59\nSherritt Gordon    6.35\nSilver Miller      .71\nStadacona   33\nSteep Rock    22.00\nSlocan Van Roi 12\nSullivan Con-     3.45\nSylvanite       1.45\nTeck Hughes     1.71\nTemagaml        4.05\nThomp-Lund 92\nTombill 52\nJW4UX Mb i TIP\nOF THE H\/iTUJ Ml\nTO E.R.TWy'LOR,\nP.. BOX 283,\nU FERI4,\nTOMS\nBob says every man who wins\nauccess does it with a woman's\nhelp.or in spite of her.\n5.50\n.70\n41.62%\n1.74\n8.75-\n.13%\n1.30\n1.79\n.39\n2.70\n18.00\n.09%\n.   31.00\n.50\n8.06\n5.62%\n8.35\n1.40\n4.40\n.18.\n.31\n20.50\n2.45\n.14\n1.42\n4.00\n.64\n2.20\n2.62\n24.62%\n1.00\n3:30\n18.87%\n' .55\n..    1.41\n8.00\n3.65\n.40\n1.78\n32%\n135%\n45\n-     . 27%\nVentures \t\nWlltsey Goglin \t\nWright Hargreaves\nYellowknife Bear \t\nOILS\nBanff Oils\t\nCalgary and Edmonton ..\nCanadian Devonian\t\nCentral Explorers -\t\nDuvex\t\nLong Island Pete\t\nNat. Pete \t\nOkalta\nPaelfic'Pete\t\nPetrol\t\nStanwell Oil\t\nTriad         \t\nUnited Oils        \t\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitlbi\nAtlas-St .._.. -..-\nWestern Grocers A\t\nWinnipeg Gas       I5y4\nVancouver Stocks\nClosing Prices\nMINES\nBeaver Lodge       .29\nBralorne       4.60\nCariboo Gold 60\nFarwest Tungsten 30 '\nGiant Mascot _ 15%\nGranduc     3.55\nGrandview  12\nHamil Sil  05\nHighland Bell      1.15\nJackson Mines 08\nNational Ex I _     .42\nPend Oreille _   2.70\nBy JOSEPH MacSWEEN\n.. Canadian Press Staff Writer ....\nThe election battle was on In\nEast and West. John Diefenbaker\nwas in action in the Marltlmes.\nLouis St. Laurent carried the fight\nwestward. M. J. Coldwell and\nSolon Low made major radio\nspeeches.\nAs the tempo quickened, Mr.\nDlefenh-aker told Prince Edward\nIslanders they \"will be the poorest pf. the poor relations in' Canada unless you take action now.\"\nIt was time to put the Progressive Conservatives into power for\na new taxation deal, among other\nthings, he said.\nPrime Minister St. Laurent challenged the strength ot the Social\nCredit party in Alberta.\n\"You know, even our opponents\nadmit\u2014privately, of course\u2014that\nwe Liberals are going to be Mec-\nted on June 10,\" he said. It wouid\nbe \"regrettable\" to see Alberta's\nmembers off In a distant corner\nol the .Commons with a third or\nfourth party.   \u25a0\nIn Winnipeg anonymous\ntin-eat against the prime mlniste'\nturned out to beMhe work of a\ncrank, \"*\n.McCarthy dies   .\nJoseph R. McCarthy, who for a\ntime was at once the most hated\nand the most admired senator in\nthe United States, died at the age\nof 47 from a liver ailment.\nThe Wisconsin Republican's\ndeath ended one of the most controversial careers in modern US.\npolitics. The senator's witch-hunting investigations added a new\nword \u2014 McCarthyism \u2014 to the\nEnglish language but his power\nwanted' after Senate censure in\n1954, He accused the Roosevelt\nand Truman admlnlstrations-and\nby Implication the Elsenhower a*\nministration \u2014 of \"treason\" for\nwhat he claimed to be their failure\nto root out Communists.\nEmbattled Jordan, pinched between the Eastern and Western\nworlds, settled down after two\nwjieks of political turmoil and 30\ndays of religious fasting.\nYoung King Hussein, who has\nemerged for the time being at\nleast as a strong ruler, proudly\nannounced: \"The crisis In Jordan\nis ended.\" He blamed Communist\ndesign and Egyptian Intrigue for\nthe uproar.\nHussein, 21, kept the country\nunder martial law. The United\nStates 6th Fteet, moving signifi-\nPioneer Gold .\nPremier Border\nQuatsino\n1.40\n.10\n.49\nReeves MacDonald      1.75\nSheep Creek  ,'. 96-\nSilback-Premiei-....\nSilver Ridge\t\nSilver Standard ....\nSunshine Lardeau.\nTaylor ..:.\t\nTrojan \t\nUnited Estella \t\nUtica\n.. .14\n.. .06\n.. .45\n.. .22\n... .13\n.. .25\n... .13\n... .02\nWestern Exploration  45\nOILS\nAltex  .28\nA P Consolidated  46\nChamerblain   2.30\nCharter   3.70\nHome   20.00\nNew Gas Ex  2.15\nOkalta Com  2.60\"\nPacific Pete  24.26\nRoyal Can   .10%\nSparmac  21%\nUnited   3.65\nVanalta  31\nVantor  31\nVulcan 70\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlberta Distillers  1.60\nAlberta Distillers Vt.-.  1.45\nB C Forests '.  11.25\nB C Power .'.  45.50\nB C Telephone  43.75\nCrown Zellar (Can)  19:25\nInt Brew B  4.10\nInland Nat Gas  8.75\nLucky Lager-  4.05\nMid Western :  3.65\nWestminster Paper   25.00\nWsetern Plywoods  14.50\nUNLISTED\nAuwon  -  .08\nTranscana Unit   196.00\nTranscana :  26.00\nBANKS\nBank of Montreal   50.50\nCan Bank of Com   49.00\nImperial Bank of Canada 49.00\nRoyal Bank of Canada .... 71.00 \u2022\nFUNDS\nCan Inv Fund   9.96\nCommonwealth Int.   8.38\nGrouped Income  4.37\nInvestors Mutual  11.32\nLeverage  -\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 6-13\nTrans Canada \"C\"  6.95\nPRESS INSTITUTE\nRE-ELECTS KEATE\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014Stuart Keate\nof the Victoria Times was reelected chairman of the Canadian\ncommittee of the International\nPress Institute at the committee's\nannual meeting Thursday.\nG. V. Ferguson, Montreal Star,\nwas chosen vice-chairman and Wilfred Eggleston, Carleton College\njournalism department, corresponding secretary.\nHugh Buchanan, Lethbridge\nHerald, Tom Kent, Winnipeg Free\nPress, and Camllle l'Heureux, Ot\ntawa Le Droit, were appointed as\nan executive committee.\nW. B. C. Burgoyne, St. Catherines (Ont.) Standard, will attend\nthe general assembly .of the institute in Amsterdam May 14 to 16.\nThe institute is an association\ndedicated to the prinviple that understanding amon.g journalists\nleads to understanding among\npeoples.      ' ,\nTo Move 600\nFrom Carrtp,\nAbbotsford\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Director\nof Immigration Charles Smith has\nset plans in motion to remove \"at\nleast 600 immigrants from the\nHungarian refugee camp at Abbotsford within the next 10 days.\"\nMr. Smith said he hoped\nto \"reduce the Abbotsford\ncamp from 1,600 immigrants to\n1,000 within the next 10 days\nCamp capacity was described as\nbeing 1,000.\nMr. Smith made plans for im-\nmediate relief of the camp by\ntransferring 80 immigrants from\nAbbotsford, 45 miles east of here,\nto Vancouver Thursday night. The\nimmigrants would be integrated\nin jobs and homes in the Vancouver atea.\nCommenting on conditions in\nthe camp he said: \"It is one of\nthe ' best camps I have seen.\nThere is definite overcrowding\nbut morale, hygiene and feeding\nfacilities are more than satisfactory.\"\nMr. Smith said a plan is 'in process that will see the camp population cut by _B0 by the weekend.\nHe said these 280 would be integrated throughout the province.\nCONSIDER DISPERSAL\nThe department was \"considering the possibility of a general\ndispersal which may or may not\nbe out of the province.\"\nDiscussing the reason for overcrowding, he said, \"we naturally\nhave an immigration schedule\nthat is planned at least six months\nIn advance.\"\nThe plan broke down because\n\"the domestic economic situation\nwas not as was anticipated.\"\nMr. Smith said he felt this situation was temporary and the\nplan would soon be functioning\nsmoothly. The 80 immigrants\ntransferred to Vancouver will be\naccommodated temporary in the\nimmigration building.\nThe biggest difficulty at the\ncamp was the Infringement on\neducation facilities caused by the\nsurplus. Classrooms were converted to dormitories to meet the\nemergency..\nMr. Smith said \"even though\nthere is no threat to the health or\nhappiness of the immigrants the\ncramped conditions provide a situation that must be speedily rem-,\nedied.\" Vancouver immigration\nofficials had been working 16\nhours a day for 10 days to relieve .the situation.\ncantly in the troubled area, and\n*10 000,000 in U.S. money helped\n(he king subdue his enemies.\nRussia blamed the U.S. for the\nJordan   trouble,   and   the   U.S.\nblamed Russia.      ,\nEDEN RECOVERS\nSir Anthony Eden left hospital\nand moved to a country estati\nnear Boston to recover from his\nbile duct operation.\nThe former British prime minister, accompanied by Lady Eden,\nwas 'pale but smiling as he \"left\nh'tspital after a 16-day stay.\nHe is scheduled to leave eany\nnext   week   for   Ottawa   where\nhe will be guest of Governor-General Massey.\nTEST TOLL\nDr. Linus Pauling, a Nobel prize\nwinher, estimated Britain's forthcoming H-bomb tests in the Pacific will result in 1,000 fatal cases\nof blood cancer.\nDr. Pauling, chemist at the California Institute of-Technology, is\nohe of a number of scientists to\nwarn against the dangers of radi?\nation resulting from nuclear tests.\nBu.t the scientist made clear\nthat the effects of such tests are\nsmall when compared with natural\nradiation. Still, when even a small\npercentage of hazard was apnlied\nto the human race, \"the number\nbecomes large enough to anyone\ninterested in human suffering to\nbe concerned about it.\" ,\nAIR INSPECTION\nThe Russians offered air inspection of part of their territory in\nreturn for an aerial look-see at a\nlarge part of the westefn United\nStates and -Alaska.\nThis plan, unveiled at. the United\nNations disarmament sub.-commit-\ntee conference in London, was\n.Russia's .jeply to President Elsenhower's challenge for mutual,\nsky patrols...\nCritics said the, Russians, in effect were demanding a look at\nindustrially-important sections of\nthe -U.S. while In return ottering\nscrutiny of non-important parts of\nSiberia. Canada was not mentioned in the Soviet announcement.\nSome, sources in the U.S. stale\ndepartment said that at least Russia was showing a rrftre positive\nattitude to the Eisenhower plan ,\nthan formerly.\nMAY DAY\nMay   Day   was   celebrated   in\nMoscow   with   heavy   artillery,   ,\ntanks, infantry, blunt talk\u2014and a\ndash of sex.\nThe cream of the Soviet Unionls\nmilitary might, followed by about\n1,000,000 Muscovites, tramped\nthrough Red Square in Ojright sunshine and'festival mood. Jet aircraft roared overhead. ^\nRussia's defence minister, Mar-''\nshal Georgi Zhukov, made tha\nmain speech, denouncing tho\nUnited States for trying to \"locate\natomic units invthe territory of\nother countries.\" In other capitals\nin Europe and Asia, there were\nother big May Day parades.\nThe Moscow parade was enlivened by pretty girls in red bathing suits forming a .tableau of\nwaving flowers on a float. '\nThe annual spring ice jams\nmenaced shipping off the east\ncoast. The big ferry William Carson freed a dozen vessels, including two' with 131 passenger's\naboard from drift ice and led them\ninto harbor at Sydney, N.S.\nThe Carson crunched through\nice 20 feet thick in places to reach\nthe ferry Burgeo which became\nstranded with 72 passengers on a\nregular run from Port aux Basques, Nfld., to Sydney.\nIndia, Canada,\nSign New Pad\nNEW DELHI (Reuters) - India\nand Canada today signed an\nagreement providing for a new\nannual quota of Indian immir\ngrants to Canada.\nThe' agreement modifies one\nsigned in 1951 and provides for\nadmission of 150 immigrants who\nare not close relatives Of Indians\nalready settled in Canadai\nTh\". 1951 agreement provided\nfor admission to Canada of 150 Indian citizens yearly in addition to\nclose relatives of Canadian citizens of Indian origin.\nOther relatives of Canadian citizens were to be admitted as \"preference quota immigrants\" but no\nquota was fixed.\njfcAL _t SsxoruL\nMetals Prices,\nNEW YORK  (CP)-Commo_ty.\nspot prices:\nLead, NY, .18\nZinc, East St. Louis, .13%\nSilver NY .91%.\n\"Look, our wedding was\nthree years ago. Isn't it about\ntime your mother stopped\ncrvimr?\"     \t\n V\nQ4^\nLt.-Goy. and Wife\nVisit London Mayor\nLONDON (CP) - Frank Ross,\nlieutenant-governor of British Columbia, and Mrs. Ross lunched at\nthe Mansion House Friday as\nguests of Sir Cullum Welch, lord\nmayor of London,\nThey attended Thursday night\nthe lord mayor's annual Easter\nbanquet for members of London's\ndiplomatic corps. On Saturday\nthey will watch the Football Association Cup final as guests of\nSir Bracewell Smith, chairman of\nWembley Stadium.\nThe lieutenant \u2022 governor and\nHospital Day to Be\nObserved at Nakusp\nNAKUSP - Hospital Day this\nyear will be celebrated in Nakusp\nMay 11, and, In line with the oc\ncasion; the Ladies' Auxiliary to the\nArrow Lake Hospital will be entertaining visitors at tea in the afternoon. It is hoped that as many as\npossible of local and district people\nwill take the opportunity of visiting\nthe hospital.\nhis wife, who arrived in Britain a\nweek ago, are expected to visit\nScotland next week.\nWm. Cflureli\nJA.\nm. Pattf 0-\u00aermity\ntarn flUturri!\n\"THE   CHURCH   WITH   A   CHALLENGE\"\nMinister:\nREV.  E.  DONOVAN  JONES.  B.A.,  B.D.,  Th.M.\nDirector of Musics,\nMERLIN  R.  BUNT,  Phone 278-L\n11 a.m.\nFamily Worship\n9:45 S.S. cancelled so that\nchildren may come at 11 a.m.\nwith parents, Usual 11 a.m.\npre-school S.S. classes. An\nillustrated sermon for the\nwhole family. All visitors\nwelcome.\nAnolican Church of Canada\nST. SAVIOUR'S PRO-CATHEDRAL\nRector: REV. CANON GEORGE W. LANG, B.A., L.Th.\nSUNDAY, MAY 5TH, SECOND SUNDAY AFTER EASTER\n8:00 a.m.\u2014Holy Communion.\nCelebrant: The Lord Bishop of Kootenay\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Choral Communion.\nPreacher: The Lord Bishop of Kootenay.\nIn order that the greatest number of the Cathedral Church\nfamily may be Informed, a statement of importance to\nevery parishioner will be made in the Cathedral following the 11 a.m. Choral Eucharist. A full attendance Is\nurged, especially In view of the presence of our Bishop\nand father-ln-God.\n8:00 p.m.\u2014Evensong at St. Andrew's-by-the-Lake,\nWillow Point.\nPreacher: The Lord Bishop of Kootenay.\n(Parishioners gathering following the service.)\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evensong.\nPreacher: The Rector.\nMattins Daily at 9:00 a.m. throughout the week.\nThe usual Wednesday celebrations will be cancelled\nowing to the rector's absence at the Deanery Meeting,\nIteutttu little (Eliurrl)\nRev. H. R. Whitmore, Minister.\nOrganist: Mr. Angus Fraser.\n\"COME LET US WORSHIP TOGETHER\"\n10:00 a.m.-SUNDAY SCHOOL, Junior, Intermediate, Sr.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Nursery, Primary, and Kindergarten.\n11:00 a.m.-MORNING WORSHIP.\n\"Doubling For Christ.\"\n.  7:30 p.m.-EVENING SERVICE.\n\"Walking With God.\"\nfStaatntt\n(ftouimatt- (Etrttrrij\n803 Baker St.\nPastor: E. HANSON\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday School.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning Worship.\nSpeaker:\nMr. E. Jansen.\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evening Service.\nSpeaker Lt. Grice\nTUESDAY:\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Sewing Circle at\nthe home of\nMrs. Aro.\nTHURSDAY:\n7:15 p.m.\u2014Choir Practice.\n8:15 p.m.\u2014Prayer Meeting.\nFRIDAY:\n6:45 p.m Junior League.\n8:00 p.m.\u2014Young Peoples.\nlira. (Mptrrtj nf\nGHjriat &ri-ttttat\nA Branch ol the Mother Church\nThe First Church of Christ.\nScientist in Boston.  Mass\nSunday School 9:40 a.m.\nSunday Service: 11:00 a.m.\nSubject:\n\"EVERLASTING\nPUNISHMENT\"\nWednesday Testimonial\nMeeting\u20148:00 p.m.\nReading Room. 209 Baker St.,\nOpen Daily from\n2:30 to 4:30 p.m.\nSunday and Thursday Eves.\n7:00 to 9 p.m\nALL   CORDIALLY\nWELCOME\n-First BaptiBt\n(Eljurrlj\nCottonwood and Fourth Sts.\nMinister: REV, K. IMAYOSHI\n716 8tanley 8t, \u2022 Phone 1420iL\nSUNDAY:\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Welcome to\nSunday School.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014\"FORGIVENESS\"\n(Communion\nService)\n7:30 p.m.\u2014\"FAITH\"\nTHURSDAY:\n8:00 p.m.\u2014Bible Study \u00abnd\nPrayer.\n9:00 p.m.\u2014Finance Committee\nIrtipl\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday School\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning Worship\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evangelistic\nTUESDAY: i\n8:00 p.m.\u2014Bible Study\nFRIDAY:\n8:00 p.m.\u2014Young People's \\\nSUNDAY:\n5:45 p.m.\u2014Radio Broadcast\nPastor  Rev.  Reuben  Swanson\nextendi \u2022 cordial Invitation\nto you.\nPhone 886-Y.\nAbout the Town-\n~\u2014~\u2014  By Alice .Stevens\nPHONE   1360 OR  1844\nErnest Marnoch, 305 Hall Mines\nRoad, left Friday for Kamloops\nwhere he Is employed. Hit wife\nand daughter, Susan will follow at\na later date.\n,*;\u25a0;.\u2022'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'*\nA double birthday party was\ncelebrated Thursday afternoon at\nMount St. Francla Infirmary when\nguests of honor were Mrs, Mary\nWill, 92.year old, and Mrs. Anna\nFrank, 81 years old. Forty patients\nand many friends sang \"Happy\nBirthday\" as tha two were wheeled in to the parlor where two decorated cakes awaited them. Mrs.\nLloyd Catley entertained at the\npiano. Those serving Included Mrs.\nD. Maloney, Mrs. Marie Frost.\nMrs. J. H. Crozier, Mrs. C. Jorgen-\nson and Mrs. R. J. Patterson.\n# \u00bb  *\nFriends in the B.C. Forest Service building held a miscellaneous\nshower in honor of Miss Joseph\nStefanac who is to be married\nMay 11 to Kenneth White. The.\nparty was held at the home of Mrs.\nM. Karpiuk, Observatory Street,\nand games and bingo were enjoyed.\nThe group presented the guest of\nhonor with a corsage, and gifts\nwere brought to her in a gaily decorated box.\n\u00bb *  *\nMr. and Mrs. P. O. Bird, Observatory Street, have returned\nfrom West Vancouver where they\nvisited their son-in-law, and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. William De-\nRidder, formerly of Nelson. On\ntheir return they spent a few days\nwith friends at Christina Lake.\nmujfjlljoua-\n812 Stanley St. \u2014 Nelson\nSUNDAY:\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning Worship.\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evening Service.\nWEDNESDAY:\n8:00  p.m.\u2014Believers' Meeting\nSATURDAY, 10:00-12:00 a.m.\nGOOD NEWS CLUBS\nfor children.\nALL ARE WELCOME\nPastor D. O. Wine\nPhone 1710-X\nAnglican Church\nof Canada\nChurch ot\nThe Redeemer\nFairview\nCanon W   J. Silverwood.\nA.K.C.. BSc.  Vicar\n8:00 a.m.\u2014Holy Communion.\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday School.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning Prayer.\n7:30 p.m.\nConfirmation Service\nThe Bishop of Kootenay\nReception in Parish Hall\njjJrrahijtprtatt\nGUjurrl)\nSUNDAY:\n10:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday School\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Holy Communion\n3:00 p.m.\u2014Salmo,\nHoly Communion\n-klnatum Army\n613 Victoria St\nLieut and Mrs, G. .rice\nSUNDAY\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday School\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Holiness Meeting\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evening Service\nSALMO\nIIILLCREST\nPENTECOSTAL CHURCH\n10:00 a.m.\u2014Sunday School\nand Service\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evangelistic\nService\nPastor: Robert A. Delgatty\nPhone 82-F\n$t. 3Jiilju*0     ,\nCultural, (Eljitrdj\nCorner Stanley and Silica Sts\nREV. CARL J.  HENNIG\n;e. 317 Sllloa St. \u2022 Phone 729-X\n10:00 a.m.\u2014Sunday School.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Divine Service.\nYou Are Cordially Invited I\nLutheran Hour\nCJAT 8:00 a.m.\nCHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST\nOF LATTER DAY SAINTS\n(Mormon)\n10:00 a.m.\u2014Sunday School .\n11:00 a.m \u2014Sacrament Meeting\nEagles Hall   641  Baker St.\nFor Auxiliary Meetings call\nBranch President Phone 2010-R\nMiss Wendy Clark and Miss Maureen Kennedy have returned to\nVancouver after visiting Miss\nClark's parents, Mr. and Mrs. W.\n_. Clark, Terrace Apartments;\n* \u2022 *\nMr. and Mrs. Earl Jorgenson,\n424 Sixth Street, have returned\nfrom holidays at Vancouver and\nSalem, Ore. -At Vancouver Mr.\nJorgenson attended B. C. Teachers'\nFederation annual meeting.\n* *   \u2022\nMrs. Verner F. Nelson and Mrs.\nMike Evdlklmoff, Golf Links\nRoad, were in Vancouver to attend\nthe funeral of their father, T. W.\nChernoe.\n* \u2022  *\nABM A. R. Waters, of the Naval\nHospital, Halifax, who has been\nvisiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nArthur, Waters, 524 Latimer Street,\nhas returned to duty.\n\u00ab  \u00bb  \u00bb\nMrs. W. L. Carmlchael, the\nformer Doloret Loewen, and two\nchildren Kathy and Douglas of\nLulu Island, spent the holidays\nwith her parents and parents-in-\nlaw, and brother, Mr. and Mrs\nH. Loewen, Mr. and Mrs. F. W.\nCarmlchael and Rod and Mr. and\nMrs. Keith Loewen.\n* *   *\nMr, and Mrs. B. Lowery of Langley, B.C., former residents of Nelson, revisited the city Friday, going on to Trail to visit their son-\nin-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.\nGilbert Kay.\n* *  *\nMrs. A. Trlnca, Vernon Street,\nis home after 10 days in hospital.\nEngagements\nMr. and Mrs. H. Lindhorst of\nNelson announce the engagement\nof their only daughter, Doris, to\nMr. Ivan Bey Stanles, eldest son\nof Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Stanles of\nCreston. The wedding will take\nplace Saturday, Mav 18, at 7:00\np.m., in St. Paul's-Trinity United\nChurch Nelson\n(Dmaa lip. U\/dk\nLINE DIVINE!\nOh, the fashion magic of a\n\"princess\" dressl This halter-neck\nstyle does the most beautiful things\nfor your figure\u2014its fitted and flaring lines\u2014divine! Add to this,' the\nvery perfect cover\u2014a dream of a\nlittle holero!\nPattern 9023: M i s s e s' Sizes 12,\n14, 16, 18, 20. Size 16 dress requires\n4% yards 35-inch. Vi yard contrast\nfabric. Bolero, % yard.\nThis easy-to-use pattern gives\nperfect. fit. Complete illustrated\nSew Chart shows you every step.\nMR. AND   MRS.  LEROY  FREDRICK  WILLIAM  WAGNER\nFruitvale Newlyweds\nTo Reside In Kitimat\nFRUITVALE-A wedding of district interest was solemnized in the\nSt. Paul's United Church here. The\nchurch was decorated with bouquets of daffodils. Rev. Mr. Hooper\nunited in marriage Evelyn Frances\nMikalishen and LeRoy Fredrick\nWilliam Wagner. The bride is the\nsecond daughter of Mr. and Mrs.\nStephen Mikalishen of Montrose,\nand the groom is the eldest son\nof Mr. and Mrs. Adam Wagner of\nFruitvale.\nThe bride entered the church on\nthe arm of her father to the strains\nof the wedding march played by\nMrs. J. Gladdish.\nThe bride wore a light grey tweed\nsuit with turquoise accessories. She\ncarried her grandmother's white\nsatin prayer book covered with\ngardenias which were later worn\nas her corsage. -\nMiss Frances Jablonsky of Trail,\nas matron of honor, was attired\nin a blue suit with beige accessories and a corsage of pink earna-\ntior.s. The bride's younger sister,\nMiss Beverly Mikalishen as bridesmaid wore a beige suit with pink\naccessories and a corsage of pink\ncarnations. The groom was supported by his youn\"er brother, Mr\nWillord Wa'Jier, The usher was\nMr. Lloyd Shlm'al of Trail.\nA reception was held in the\nFruitvale Memorial Hall for 200\nguests;\nThe guests were received by the\nbride's mother in a green flowered\nafternoon dress with white acces-\nsorl-s and a white carnation corsage. The mother of the groom was\nat'irecl in a pink and navy suit with\npirk access-ries and white carnation corsage.\nThe three-tiered wedding cake\nwas embedded in white tulle and\ndaffodils. White tapers in crystal\nho'\/lers flanked the cake.\n- The bride's grandmother, Mrs\nN. Uhrynowech of Trail and the\ngroom's   grandmother.   Mrs.   F.\nMarket Trends\nNEW YORK (AP)-A rally by\nrails rook the stock market temporarily past Its 1957 high Friday\nbut the carriers failed to keep\ntheir gains, and the market was\nleft irregular at the close.\nRising Canadian stocks included International Nickel, up Vi\non sales of 2,300 shares, Mcintyre\nV\/i, Hudson Bay Mining Vi and\nDome Mines Va. Lower were\nAluminium Ltd., off % on sales\nof 1,600 shares, and Distillers -\nSeagrams Vi.\nPHONE   1844   FOR   CLASSIFIED\nAnglican Services\nFRUITVALE-SALMO PARISH\nSALMO COMMUNITY CHURCH\nSATURDAY: May llth\n11:00 a.m.\u2014The Apostolic Rite of Confirmation.\nThe Administrant: The Rt. Rev. P. R. Beattie,\nB.AM D.D., the Lord Bishop of Kootenay.\nST. JOHN'S CHURCH-, FRUITVALE   -\nSATURDAY, May 4th *\n5:00 p.m.\u2014The Apostolic Rite of Confirmation.\nThe Administrant: The Rt. Rev. P. R. Beattie,\nB.A., D.D., the Lord Bishop of Kootenay.\nCandidates presented by Rev. J. C. Davenport,\n\"    L.Th.\nST. JOHN'S CHURCH, FRUITVALE\nSUNDAY, May 5th\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Family Service and Choral Communion.\nThe newly confirmed will receive their first\ncommunion with their families.\nSALMO COMMUNITY CHURCH\nSUNDAY, May 12th\n11:15 a.m.\u2014Family Service and Choral Communion.\n'        The newly confirmed will received their first\n\/ communion with their faml'ies,\n\/ Celebrant: Rev. J. C. Davenport.\nHaines Sr., of Fruitvale, were hon\nored at the bride's table. The toast\nto the bride was made by Mr.\nFrank Uhrynowich. Mrs. F. J. R.\nHaines cut the wedding cake.\nThe young couple took a honeymoon trip to Spowane, Wenatchee\nand points South'.\nOut of town guests included Mr.\nand Mrs. John Mikalishen, Mr. and\nMrs. W. Mikalishen of Grlndrod,\nMr. and Mrs. P. Krumenacher,\nMrs. Ed Insul, Mr. E. Spruney\nfrom Vancouver, Mr. John Gauley\nof Bengough, Sask., Mr. and Mrs.\nGordon Haines of Nakusp and Mr.\nand Mrs. P. Cote of Nelson.\nThe newlyweds will reside In\nKitimat.\nOur\nFather's\nBusiness\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, MAY 4, 1937 \u2014 5\nNakusp Hospital\nMatron Retires\nNAKUSP - An afternoon tea\nwas given by the staff of the Arrow Lakes Hospital In honor of the\nretiring matron, Mrs. D. B. West.\nAn electric mixer was presented\nto her by Mrs. Wiles, who expros-\ned tHe wishes of those present for\nher health and happiness in the\nfuture.\nClassified Ads Get Results\nBUY\nON OUR BUDGET PLAN\n10% DOWN\nBALANCE   IS MONTHS\njjx&mw\nSouth Slocan Expects\n100 WI Delegates\nSOUTH SLOCAN - Main business of the monthly meeting of the\nBonington-South Slocan Women's\nInstitute was final preparation fc\/\nthe annual district conference to\nbe held here on Thursday.\nAt least 100 delegates from the\nvarious Institutes in the area are\nexpected to attend, with Mrs. J. C.\nRoylance of Greenwood, provincial\npresident; and Mrs. Stella Gummow, superintendent, also to attend.\nThis is the first time the Bon-\nninglon-South Slocan Institute has\nbeen host to the conference since\nlt was first organized in 1919.\nMrs. N. Brewster was nominated\nas delegate from South Slocan.\nMrs. C. Murray gave a report on\nthe recent Guide conference in\nTrail, which she attended.\nPublic health clinics usually held\nat the same time as the Institute\nmeetings each month, have been\nI would like to draw your attention to a few thoughts that we\nfind recorded in the book of Genesis, relative to our first parents\nAdam and Eve. God placed them\nin the garden of Eden, and they\nwere privileged to eat of every\ntree of the garden, except the tree\nknow'edge of good and evil. Satan\ncame along and speke to them,\nand as a result they heeded the\nvoice, thereby throwing the whole\nworld into sin.\nPrevious to the day that they\nsinned, they walked and communed with God, but when thev\nd'sobeyed, their fellowship with\nGod was broken.\nThe Scrintures tell us that they\nhid themselves from the presence\nof The Lord God amongst the\ntrees in the garden. I wonder if\nthey are not much the same as\nwe find people today. There are a\nlot of people who are .endeavoring\nto hide from God, but that is one\nthing that is' impossible to do. The\nScripture saith, neither is there\nmy creature that is not manifest in\nhis sight: but all things are naked j\nand opened unto the eyes of him\nwith .whom we have to do. There j\nare those who feel uncomfortable\nin church because they are not,\nright with God, and I even sup-\nnose there are those who feel a\n'ittle uncomfortable when they\nhear God's word presented today\ntoo.\nAdam hid himself, and God saw\nthat he was removed from the\n\u25a0ight, and was dwelling in darkness. I can imagine\/if you were\nlooking into a dark room with\nsomeone in it, you possibly would\ncall out these words \"Where art\nthou?\" What type of a covering are\nyou trying to use, to hide from\nGod? There have been those who\nhave been trying to use all different ideas, to appease their conscience, to prove everything was\nalright with them. In John 3 it\nsays,'and this is the condemnation,,\nthat light is come into the world,\nand men loved darkness rather\nthan light, because their deeds\nwere evil. For every one that doeth\nevil, hateth the light, neither\ncometh to the light, lest his deeds\nshould be reproved. But he that\ndoeth truth cometh to the light,\nthat his deeds may be made manifest, that they are wrought in God.\nWhile Adam was hiding himself,\nGod called to him, \"Adam where\nart thou?\" I wonder if you are\nhearing His voice calling to you,\nand as'ring you, \"Where are you?\"\nHow is your relationship with\nGod? The trouble with the world\nis that it needs to be re-instated\nback to God again, and the only\none th\"t can re-instate us is Jesus.\nThere is onlv one mediator between Gcd and man,- the man,\nChrist' <'Je>\\\nRev. Reuben Swanson.\nS. Africa Keeps\nAnthem For\nRoyal Events\nCAPETOWN (Reuters)-Inter-\nior Minister Dr. Eben Donges\nsaid Friday that God Save the\nQueen will continue to be played\nin South Africa wherever it is\n\"constitutionally proper to do so.\"\nHe was speaking In a parliamentary debate on Thursday's announcement by Premier Johannes\nStrljdom that the Afrikaans hymn\nDie Stem (The Call) would be the\nsole national anthem of South\nAfrica. It previously had an equal\nplace with God Save the Queen.\nStrljdom said Die Stem would\nbe played at functions where the\ngovernor-general or the Queen as\nQueen of South Africa, appeared.\nDonges said today God Save the\nQueen will still be played where\nconstitutionally proper. A recent\nexample was the visit of the Earl\nof Selkirk, first lord of the admiralty.\nStrljdom said: \"The whole question of the national anthem boils\ndown to this\u2014God Save the Queen\nis the national anthem of another\nsovereign, independent country.\n\"The time has come for South\nAfrica to stand on its own feet.\"\nBeck Surrenders\n\u25a0 WASHINGTON (API - Dave\nBeck, teamsters' union president,\nsurrendered Friday on an indictment accusing him of income tax\nevasion.\nThe U.S. marshal's office said\nBeck came in voluntarily- for the\ntechnical surrender, making it unnecessary for marshals to seek\nhim out on telegraphic word from\nTacoma, Wash., that he had been\nindicted.\nBeck was taken to the cell block\nin the basement of the federal\ncourthouse and fingerprinted in\nthe routine given all persons under\nindictment.\nAfter this, Beck was to be taken\nbefore district Judge Edward M.\nCurran for the setting of bond for\nhis appearance in Tacoma to\nanswer to the indictment.\nThe indictment returned against\nBeck at Tacoma accused him of\nevading more than $56,000 in income taxes in 1950.\ncancelled owing to the program of\npolio vacciantions to take place in\nmany and June. South Slocan children, aged 1 to 6, will receive shots\nThursday morning.\nJaycelfes To\nHe!p Decorate\nFor Jubilee\nA needy mother is to be given a\nlayette for her newborn baby, a.gift\nfrom Nelson Jaycettes.\nThe group is also busy with plans\nto assist the jubilee decorating\ncommittee, a report on which was\ngiven at the last meeting by Mrs.\nMarion Truscott. The meeting was\nheld at the home of Mrs. Henry\nLeMoigne, Mill Street, with Mrs.\nWarren Ferguson and Mrs. Kenneth Frederickson as co-hostesses.\nDoor prize, supplied by Mrs. Denis\nColman, was won by Mrs. Irwin\nBlack. An oddments raffle netted\nthe club $4.\nUntil election of officers for the\ncoming season, Mrs. Black was\nasked to carry out secretarial duties in the place of Mrs. Al Larson\nwho has moved from Nelson.\nfly, tXtuma. LVharfeA.\nVERSATILE DESIGN\nPansles \u2014 one of spring's prettiest blossoms! Let these gay\nflowers grace your home all year\nround, in easy filet crochet!\nUse tnis versatile design as a\nchair-set, scarf ends, decoration\nfor buffet. Pattern 655: chart, filet\ncrochet directions.\nSend THIRTY-FIVE CENTS In\ncoins... \"(stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern to (Name\nof Your Newspaper), Needlecraft\nDept, Address. Print plainly PATTERN NUMBER, your NAME and\nADDRESS.\nOur gift to you\u2014two wonderful\npatterns for yourself, your home\n\u2014 printed in our Laura Wheeler\nNeedlecraft Book ... Plus dozens\nof other new designs to order \u2014\ncrochet, knitting, embroidery,\nIro-ons. novelties. Send 25 cents\nfor your copy of this book NOW\n\u2014with gift pattern printed in itl\nNAKUSP GRANDMOTHERS\nNAKUSP \u2014 Every year since\n1922 Mrs. Ralph Islip of Nakusp\nhas entertained the grandmothers\nof her acquaintance on May 1,\nwhich was the birthday of her\nmother. This year was no exception\nto that custom.\nThe drawing room was enhanced\nby a profusion of spring blossoms\nsuch as daffodils and snapdragons.\nThe dining room table, coVered\nwith an ecru lace cloth, was centred .with a silver bowl of carnations. Mrs. Walter Wright poured,\nassisted by Mrs. Thomas Mitchell.\nThe visiting grandmothers, most\nof whom are In their seventies and\neighties sang the songs ol long\nago. Mrs. J. Parent Sr. delighted\nthem by singing a new song \"What\nWill Be, Will  Be\",  Mrs.  Merton\nEmbree sang several of her favorite songs and Mrs. H .E. Hall sang\n\"Home'Sweet Home\", Mrs. G. P.\nHorsley and Mrs. Mitchell accompanied at the piano.\nMrs. Islip was assisted at the tea\nhour by her daughter, Mrs. Jack\nHarris, and her two granddaughters, lone and Patsy Harris.\nGuests attending were Mrs. A. E.\nFowler, Mrs. Mark Dumont, Mrs.\nStevenson, Mrs. Wright, Mrs. G.\nP. Horsley, Mrs. E. C. Johnson,\nMrs. Jordan Williams, Mrs. E. H.'\nHall, Mrs. T. Harvey, Mrs. M. Em-\nbrae, Mrs. Ada Howitt, Mrs. Mitchell, Mrs. G. Hempseed Mrs.\nRaymond, Mrs. A. Swallow, Mrs.\nR. McWhirtcr, Mrs. Couller. Mrs\nS. Hepworlh and Mrs. II. Water-\nfield. .\n 6 _ NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, MAY.4, 1957\nExtra Payment\nCauses Strike\nSYDNEY, Australia (Reuters)\nMore than 150 truck drivers struck\nFriday because their employers insisted on giving them too much\n| money\u2014incentive payments which\nthey said they do not want.\nThe drivers have posted pickets\nto prevent  anyone   taking   their\njobs at wages which include the\nincentive .payments averaging about 2 a week. Six months\nago the men accepted on a trial\nbasis the incentive payments plan,\nbased on speed on handling loads.\nThe rush for extra money\nbrought disregard of traffic regulations and squabbling among\ndrivers eager to get loads away\nquickly.\nSo the men decided unanimously\nthey would not tolerate the incentive plan any longer and when\ntheir recent pay envelopes still in-\nCampbell Jailed\nFor Seven Years\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Gilbert\nCampbell, 50-year-old Vancouver\nfireman, Friday was sentenced to\nseven years in prison for dealing\nin a forged document.     '\u2022\nCampbell was found guilty by\nan Assize Court jury April 16'of\neluded the extra \"speed\" money,\nthey decided to strike.\ndealing In the forged $900,000 will\nof hotel owner James Thomson,\nwho died in 1948.\nMr. Justice J. G. Ruttan imposed the sentence. At the trial\nMr. Justice Ruttan directed the\njury to dismiss a forgery charge\nagainst Campbell after a handwriting expert testified he could\nnot positively identify Campbell's\nsignature as that which appeared\non the will.\nA third charge of attempting to\ndefraud the Thomson heirs was\ndropped. C a mp b e 1 l's lawyer,\nThomas Dohm, filed notice of appeal against the conviction.\nIn the\nSunny South\n\u25a0________      [JfjT^^?^f^f^^ji^:^]\nThe Frozen North\nOr Down on\nthe Farm\nAnd you can have your\nfavorite Newspaper The\n\/ \u25a0,'..;'  '   '   ,\nNelson Daily News\nBy Mail\nPHONE 1844\nRockets Make\nUl Danish\nBases Useless\nCOPENHAGEN (AP)-With the\nrocket age coming, the United\nStates ts pulling out of one of its\nthree air bases in Greenland, Denmark's huge island in the Arctic,\nIt was reliably learned here that\nU.S. military experts consider the\nNarssarssuak base obsolete. Landing conditions for jet fighters pf\nthe latest types are increasingly\ndifficult because of high rocks\nnarrowly surrounding the base\nairstrip.\nThe Narssarssuak base was established during the Second World\nWar near Greenland's southernmost tip.\nDanish military sources say the\nAmericans have moved most of\nthe equipment and men to the\nSoendre Stroemfjord \u2022 base (Bluie\nWest Eight), about 450 miles to\nthe north. This base has been expanded considerably in recent\nyears and now is almost as big\nas the huge- Thule base in the\nnorthwest corner of the island, tha\nsources said.\nSports World Focuses\nOn Churchill Downs\nLOUISVILLE, Ky. (API-Kentucky, becomes the centre of the\nsports world-again today when 10\ncolts match speed and stamina in\nthe 83rd running of the Kentucky\nDerby at Churchill Downs. \u2022'.\nTen w i 11 go, if the Cal u-\nmet Farm's Gen. Duke recovers\nsufficiently from a bruised left\nfront foot in time to enter the\nstarting gate at about 2:30 p.m,\nPDT for the l_-mile classic.\nThe Calumet ace, along with\nhis stablemate, Iron Liege, had\nbeen listed as the favorite combination for the $125,000 - added\nthree-year-old duel until the Duke\nreinjured his foot while finishing\nsecond to Federal Hill in Tuesday's Derby Trial Stakes.\nThat shifted the odds in favor\nof his arch rival, the speedy Bold\nRiiler from the Wheatley Stable of\nMrs. Henry Carnegia Phipps. Bold\nRuler remained the choice at 8 to\n5. The Calumet pair was listed at\n2 to I*',\n\"We'll blow him out a slow\nquarter of a mile Saturday morning, and .if the foot shows as\nmuch improvement as it has\nsince Thursday, why we probably\nwill start,\" Gen. Duke's Trainer\nJimmy Jones said.\nThe other seven horses are\u00abMis-\nter Jive, a colt owned by John L.\nAppelbaum of Toronto; Federal\nHill, property of Clifford Lussky,\nLouisville; Round Table, the hope\nof Travis M. Kerr from Oklahoma City; Irish - bred Gallant\nman, running for Ralph Lowe of\nLatest Model Car\nNeeds No Extras\nDETROIT (AP)\u2014An automobtli\nfor which no extras need be\nbought is in production on the assembly lines of one of the industry's leading producers\u2014but this\nunusual advantage is reflected on\nthe price tag.\nIt's Cadillac's new Eldorado\nBrougham, on which even air conditioning is \"s t a n d a r d\" equipment. It also has an air suspension system\u2014the first American-\nmade passenger car to replace\nsteel springs with air bellows.\nWith a list price of more than\n$13,000, it is the highest - priced\nproduction car made by an American auto company.\nGeneral Motors and Cadillac engineers demonstrated the newest\n\"prestige\" car at the GM technical centre near here Thursday.\nMULTIPLE BIRTHS\nThe births of more than one child\noccurs in approximately one of\nevery 85 confinements in Canada.\nMidland, Tex.; Shan Pac, owned\nby T. Allie Grissom of Detroit;\nand two Chicago - owned colts,\nMrs. Ada L. Rice's Indian Creek\nand William S. Miller's Better\nBee. Each will carry V.6 poundi.\nWhether you like\n.*t taping tilSrarfflnJfor arersuf^spfn\n9tt Hi\u2122. FtSHEWnwH\nMosl pop.fot sira.\n... or must work on the water\n\" ': \u25a0:\u25a0'\u25a0 2uiet\n*\u00bb_*p taenm\nSTMOmtV-i\nELEtlulC-S\nOUTBOARD\nMOTORS\nCANADA'S CHOICE FOR MOST FVN AFLOAT\nWho doesn't thrill to the wonderful world of healthy fan\noffered by oar magnificent lakes and waterways.' The friendly\nbeaches and sunlit waters promise carefree day* to all\u2014and\nthe priceless enjoyment of every fun-filled hoot can be doubled\nby an Evinrude that fits perfectly to your kind of boating fun.\nWith these latest nine Evinrudcs you'll get an all-new performance because of thrilling new features. Here's nerve-\ntingling new power, the sharpest of styling and traditional\nragged Evinrude stamina. A new Safti-Grip dutch banishes\nshear-pin worries, while Eas-A-Matic starting guarantees sore\neasy starts; and the 3 H.P. model has the exclusive Fisherman\nDrive. All electric models have 12 volt marine type systems\nwith generators optional for the }5 H.P. models. Here you'B\nfind the motor \"right\" for you\u2014for your kind of boating fan.\nrotskp. ufflt\n_-in_t_E_Tdvt_l\n3*o35h.p.\nINaUOING_NEW1_H.Pv\nAND 3 NEW 35RP. MODELS\nAll the fun of ou-X-adt-g can be\n. Evinrude dealers have a convenient Time Payment P_u_\nSee your dealer today, you. find htm ___o_o_W_-cpho\u2014\u2022\ndirectory under \"Outoo\u00bbrd Motors\"\nWrite tor free Kterotwe and your copy of the now Honoboo.\nfor Weekend Skippers\".\n6\nEV.NR0DE  MOTORS\nKTCRfiOOOtKM CANADA\nDrwwoo ot Oottoofd Hbom Corpaahoo at\n\u00bb \u00ab fcWIr-Bc\nWAfM   Canada Ltd. also mm\/Mmtn of Lawo-Boy\nf -VP_rJ9    aw) lawn-Cruiser power mowers, Snow-Boy and\nSnow^rotser snow blowers, and Iron-Horse gas-\notme engines. S-tetdtaty *T_E_L Ptooew\" Chan\nSSns, V&KO-vet, B>C\nan nm-m, aus sat\nbfora  hontpowtK\n_nm\u00abt_r-o.__\nJ; C. Chesser\nEVINRUDE SALES \u2014 Riondel, B. C.\n\u25a0'-\nJeffery Radio and Appliances Ltd.\n446 Word St., Nelson, B.C. Phone 1302\nNelson Marine Service\nCity Wharf, Nelson, B.C., Phone 1459\nTaylor\/ Pearson and Carson (BC) Ltd.\n SPORTS\nFlin Flon Team Regains\nJunior Cup Series Lead\nREGINA (CP) - Flin Flon\nBombers scored two goals in the\nthird period Friday night to defeat\nOttawa Canadiens 3-2 and take a\n3-2 lead in their best - of - seven\nMemorial Cup Canadian junior\nhockey finals.\nManager-coach Sam Pollock of\nthe Canadiens was thrown out of\nthe game before the start of the\nthird period for objecting too vigorously with the referees. Assistant coach Scotty Bowman took\nover for the remainder of the\ngame.\nNearly 5000 fans crowded the\narena to see the Bombers take a\nlead in the series for the second\nFULL SCHEDULE\nIF LEAGUE FORMS\nA tentative schedule of game-\nnights for the upcoming West\nKootenay Lacrosse League season\nwill see games played on Monday,\nTuesday, Thursday and Saturday.\nTrail Juniors will play at home\non Mondays, Rossland Seniors will\nentertain home fans on Tuesday,\nTrail Seniors will occupy Cominco\nArena on Thursdays, while Nelson\n\u2014if they field an entry\u2014and Rossland Juniors will play at home on\nSaturday nights.\nEntry of the Rossland J u n i-o r\noutfit was a bit of a surprise, said\nHarry Mason, who along with Laurie Kubin represented Nelson at\nthe league meeting in Trail last\nweekend. No information was\navailable in regard to the rumored\nrequest for entry of, a Castlegar\nunit.    ,\nNelson, facing difficulties in locating sufficient players, received\npermission to wait until May 12\nbefore stating their intentions. League schedule will probably start\nMay 21 in Rossland.\ntime. The sixth game will be played here Monday and the seventh,\nif necessary, Wednesday.\nCentre 0 r 1 a n d Kurtenbach,\nwinger Patty Ginnell and Barry\nBeatty scored goals for Flin Flon.\nForward Dick Dumouchel and centre Billy Carter counted for the\neastern champions .\nTEMPERS FLARE\nFlin Flon took a 1-0 lead in the\nfirst period but Canadiens tied the\ngame in the second.\nAlthough the game was far from\nbeing the best of the series, it provided the crowd with plenty of action. Tempers were at a high pitch\nin the late stages of the game.\nBowman took over in the Ottawa players' box and he went\nafter the officials after the final\nbell.\nReferees Dutch Van Deelan and\nCurly Brault, both of Edmonton,\nhanded out nine penalties. Ottawa\ntook five, including a misconduct\nto Johnny Annable for talking\nback to the referees.\nBoth teams played a close game\nat the start and close checking\nwas featured for the remainder of\nthe contest. The ice appeared\nsticky, with temperatures in t h e\nstadium nearly 70 above.\nChisox Rewrite Club History\nith 11-6 Triumph Over Nats\nCUT EYE FORCES\nOUT WILF GREAVES\nPITTSBURGH (AP) - Middleweight Wilf Greaves, Edmonton native who now fights out of Pittsburgh, suffered a cut under his\nright eye in training Friday forcing cancellation of his scheduled\nMonday bout with Johnny Neal of\nMilwaukee.\nBaseball Standings\nBy The Canadian Press\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nW LPct Gbl\nChicago  11  2   .846\nNew York   9  5   .643 2>_\nCleveland    7  6   .538 4\nBoston    8  7  .533 4\nDetroit      7  9   .438 5_\nKansas City    7  9   .438 S_\nBaltimore     6  8  .429 S_\nWashington      413  .235 9\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nMilwaukee   12  2   .857\nBrooklyn    10  4  .714 2\nSt. Louis    7  6   .538 4_\nCincinnati     8  7  .533 4_\nPhiladelphia    7  7   .500 5\nNew York    6  9   .400 6 _\nPittsburgh   4 11   .267 8_\nChicago     3 11   .214 9\nBEDARD, MATE OUSTED\n.. BOURNEMOUTH, Eng. (CP) -\nBob Bedard of Sherbrooke, Que\".,\nand P. G. Nicholls of New Zealand\nwere eliminated from the semifinals of the men's doubles matches\nof the British hard courts tennis\nchampionships Thursday.- South\nAfrica's Fordon Forbes and Abe\nSegal defeated them 7-5, 6-3, .6-2.\n\u25a0bring, Sawmill, -orjtcj\nand Contractors'\nEquipment\nPitcher Surkont\nReleased by Giants\nNEW YORK (AP) - The New\nYork Giants Friday announced the\noutright release of veteran righthander Max Surkont to their Minneapolis farm club of the American Association.\nThe 35-year-old veteran of eight\nyears service in both majors was\npurchased from San Francisco last\nAug. 20 and appeared in eight\ngames, winning two find losing two.\nThis season, used exclusively in\nrelief, he hurled three scoreless\ninnings against Brooklyn but was\nhit hard in his next two appearances.\nBaseball   Scores\nBy The Canadian Press\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nBoston     000 000 000- 0  4  2\nDetroit    000 030 03x\u2014 6  7  1\nSullivan,   Chakales   7  and\nWhite; Foystaek   and   House. _:\nSullivan. MR:  Detroit\u2014House.\nWashington    040 000 022\u2014 6 14  1\nChicago      106 011 20x\u20141113  0\nKemmerer, Ramos (3), Shifflett\n(4), Hyde (6), Btodowski (8) and\nBerberet; Keegan, Staley (2) and\nLollar. W: Staley L: Kemmerer.\nNew York .. 301 001 300\u2014 8 10 1\nKansas City   200 012 000\u2014 5  8  2\nTurley, Larsen (6) and Berra;\nBurnette, Host (1), Gorman (6),\nColeman (7) and Smith. W\u2014Larsen; L\u2014Coleman.\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nSt. Louis .... 000 000 000\u2014 0 5 2\nBrooklyn     301  020  OOx\u2014 6  8  0\nCheney, Merritt (1), Mizell .(5),\nDavis   (8)   and  H.  Smith;   Newcombe and Walker. L\u2014Cheney.\nCincinnati....   003 005 003\u201411 12  0\nNew York-..  001 315 000-10 10  2\nFowler, Acker (4), Klippstein\n(6), Jeffcoat (6), Sanchez'(7) and\nBailey; Worthington, McCall (6),\nBurnside (7) and Westrum, Katt\n(7). W\u2014Sanchez; L \u2014 Burnside.\nHRs: Cincinnati\u2014Bell, Whisenant;\nNew York Schoendienst, Sauer.\nChicago   001 004 100\u2014 6 13  5\nPhiladelphia   012 030 21x\u2014 9 11   1\nPoholsky, Hillman (5), Collum\n(6), Valentinetti (7), Littlefield\n(7), Lown (8) and Neeman; Card-\nwell, Miller (6), Farrell (7),\nHearn (8) and Lopata. W: Farrell; L: Collum. HRs: Philadelphia\n\u2014Anderson, Bouchee.   _\nMil      00i 006 000   01\u2014 8 13   0\nPitts     010 000 303   00\u2014 7 16   1\nConley, Phillips (7), Murff (9),.\nSpahn (11) and Crandall; Friend,\nKuzava (6), O'Brien (6),\u00bb Swanson\n(8), Kline (9); Purkey (11) and\nFoiles.. W-Muflf; L\u2014Purkey., HR:!\nMilwaukee\u2014Aaron.\n.    By ED WILKS\nAssociated Press Staff Writer\nMilwaukee Braves and Chicago\nWhite Sox, baseball's two hottest\nclubs, kept rolling along Friday.\nThe Braves, winning their third\nconsecutive extra - inning game,\nknocked off the Pittsburgh Pirates\n8-7 in 11 frames to retain their\ntwo-game lead in the N a 11 o n a 1\nLeague. The White Sox, off. on\ntheir best start ever, made it five\nin a row with an 11-6 job on Washington in the American.\nHank Aaron drove in four runs\nand scored the clincher for the\nBraves, now 12-2, while the second-place Brooklyn Dodgers were\nbreezing past St. Louis 6-0 as Don\nNewcombe won his ninth in a row\nagainst the Cardinals with a five-\nhitter.\nCincinnati defeated ,New York\nMachen Mauls\nMaxim Again\nLOUISVILLE, Ky; (API-Youthful Eddie Machen, No. 2 aspirant\nfor a heavyweight title shot from\nSan Francisco, made ring-wise\nJoey Maxim of Miami, Fla., his\n21st consecutive victim Friday\nnight with a unanimous 10-round\ndecision.\nMachen, 190%, turned in his second straight victory over the former v light-heavyweight champion\nwithout too much trouble.\nMaxim  weighed  189.\nAll three officials gave 24-year-\nold Machen the decision by a substantial margin. After a comparatively slow first four rounds, in\nwhich the 35-year-old. Maxim won\none and held his youthful opponent\nin another, Machen picked up\nsteam.\nMaxim, who had won 83 of his\nprevious 111 fights, seemed to tire\nbadly in the closing rounds.\nDrobny, Lew Hoad\nEnter Net Finals\nBOURNEMOUTH, Eng. (AP) -\nSore-arm Lew Hoad of Australia,\nthe WimnledOn champion, and\nJaroslav Drobny, who won the\nWimbledon crown in 1954, won\ntheir way Friday into the final of\nthe British hard courts tennis\nchampionship.\nHoad, improving each day,\nturned, back Jack Arkihstall, a\nfellow Australian, 8-6, 8-6, 6-3.\nDrobny, a self-exiled Czech who\nhad adopted Egyptian citizenship\nand a London home, eliminated\nGordon Forbes of South Africa 6-3,\n6-3, 3-6, 6-0.\nClassified Ads Get Results\nGiants in an 11-10 free-for-all with\npinch-hitter Pete Whisenant drilling a three-run homer to win it in\nthe ninth. Philadelphia outlasted\nChicago Cubs 9-6 in the other NL\nnight game.\nThe White Sox, now 11-2 for the\nseason, continued their success\nwith a six-run third inning triggered by Larry Doby's bases\nloaded double. That kept the Sox\ntwo games ahead of New York\nYankees, who open a three - game\nseries in Chicago today.\nThe Yankees made it three in a\nrow by defeating the fast-sinking\nKansas City Athletics, 8-5. And\nDetroit Tigers, behind Paul Foy-\ntack's.four-hitter, blanked Boston\nRed Sox 6-0.\nCOLD WAVE IN WEST\nA cold wave in the mid-west\u2014\nonly 1,405 showed up in Chicago\nwhere the mercury rested at 45\ndegrees\u2014postponed Baltimore at\nCleveland, where the temperature\nwas 34.\nThe White Sox, whose previous\nbest start was a 10-3 mark by the\n1920 club which finished second,\nhad four RBIs from Doby and two\neach from Sherm Lollar and\nBubba Pllpish. Gerry Staley won\nit in relief of Bob Keegan, giving\nup 10 hits but only two runs ia\n7 1-3 innings. Russ Kemmerer,\nlate of Boston, lost it.\n-Don Larsen won his second in\nrelief for the Yankees, although\ngiving up two A's runs that tied it\n5-5 in the sixth after' relieving\nBob Turley. Rip Coleman, the ex-\nYank, lost it, giving up three runs\nin the seventh on Billy Martin's\ntwo-run triple and Andy Carey's\nsingle.\nBACK-TO-BACK WINS\nThe   Tigers,   putting   victories\nMarshall Paces\"\nMountie Victory ,\nVANCOUVER (AP) - With first\nbaseman Jim Marshall figuring in\nall the scoring, Vancouver Mornv\nties Friday edged San Diego Padres 4-2 in a Pacific Coast League\nbaseball game here to take a 2-1\nedge in their series.\nSan Diego .... 011 000 000\u2014 2\nVancouver .... 002 Old Olx\u2014 4\nMesa and Jones;    Palica\nWhite.\n7 2\n5  1\nand\nLAURIN PEPPER CALLED\nBACK TO FORBES FIELD\nPITTSBURGH '(AP)\u2014Pittsburgh\nPirates announced Friday they are\nrecalling righthanded pitcher Lau-\nrin Pepper from Hollywood of the\nPacific Coast League.\nPepper had a 1-1 record with the\nPirates last season' He appeared\nin four games for Hollywood, winning two and losing one.\nback-to-back for only the second\ntime this season, backed up Foy-\ntack's excellent pitching with four\noutstanding catches by a right\nfielder Al Kaline, Har.vey Kuenn's\ntwo-run triple and a three - run\nhomer by Frank House. Frank Sullivan was the loser, as the Red\nSox, who had won six of seven,\nlost their third In a row. Ted Williams again was out of the Boston\nlineup with \u2022 cold.\nGarrell Trophy\nGoes fo Elik\nNEW YORK (AP) - Boris (Bo)\nElik, leftwing of the Calder Cup\nchampion Cleveland Barons has\nbeen named the American Hockey\nLeague's 1956-57 \"rookie of the\nyear.\"\nHe will receive the Dudley\n(Red) Garrett Memorial Trophy\nand $300 bonus.\nThe league said Elik compiled\n26 points of a possible 30 points in\nthe voting by sports writers and\nbroadcasters in league cities.\nSecond place went to goaltender\nMarcel Paille, also with Cleveland, 15 points. Then followed: Al\n(Junior) Langlois of Rochester, 7;\nRay Cyr of Providence, 4; Ab McDonald of Rochester and George\nBouchard of Springfield, one each.\nWALLACE'S TITLE\nCOVETED BY TWO\nNEWCASTLE, Eng. (AP)-The\nwinner of a 10-round bout between\nSouth Africa's Tommy Dupreez\nand Sam Langford will be recognized as the leading challenger for\nthe British Empire light' heavyweight title. This was sanctioned\nFriday by the British Empire and\nCommonwealth boxing championships committee.\nThe fight is scheduled for Newcastle, May 23. Gordon Wallace of\nBrantford, Ont., is the Empire\nchampion.\nSIX FOOTBALL\nTEAMS ON HAND\nFOR LEAGUE MEET\nNATAL \u2014 Reorganization meeting of the Crow's Nest Pass Eaat-\nball Association was held in the\nMichel Hotel on Sunday, April 28\nwith delegates present from thesix\n.teams that will again this year\ncomprise the CNP football league.\nWalter Barber of Kimberley was\nre-elected as president with Jimmy\nOliver of Kimberley to continue\nas secretary. The six teams will\nconsist of Lethbridge ANAF; Lethbridge Athletic Club previously\nknown as Legion; Michel Buffs\nFernie United; Cranbrook Rovers\nand Kimberley Canadians. A tentative schedule will see the Lethbridge AEAF making a swing into\nthe East Kootenay for two games\non May 19 and May 20, against\nKimberley and Fernie or Michel\nA complete schedule, which will\nbe a home and home game series, will be released by the president in the near future. All clubs\nwill be affiliated with the Alberta\nFootball  Association. \u25a0  \u2022\nFIRST, AS USUAL\nBy Alan Mover\nCIVIC\nCENTRE\nGO\nDANCING\nTONIGHT\nMusic by .\n\"THE KOOTENAIRES\"\nADMISSION \u2014 50c\nST\u00a3N6Et}i\nMAHA6EP OF *\nT\/\/S YANKS,\nmo t#i$\n$\u00a3A$ori smut.?\nT\/E JOE\nMcwr\/trs cms\n\u25a0Recopp< &\/; \u25a0-\nWIUHllfS Hl\u00a3\n8t# pe^Uamt-\nAHP WED,\nPERHAPS, MAf&E\nJOE'Z  GEYE\/i\nWORIP\nC\/IAMP\/OliZHlPS.\nPO<&IBLt\" CAW*\nfipzt psal eis\nPROBLEM WILL BE\nH0W7O6ET\nPOM TO 23\nPCAYER2 3\/\nqpEMisie pa\/~\nWITH THE HEHl\nTALEHTHE HAZ\n'AVA\/LA01E, THE\n\"0\u00a3 PEPFE55ER'  .\nmAypAllE7b57APr\nZ-PlATbOli PA5E8A1.1..\nDltMbxtcd by King featuna Byniicah\nDON'T MISS THE\nSIMPSONS-SEARS\nBOA? SHOW\nTRUCK TERMINUS\n701 FRONT STREET\nMay 16th \u2014 17th \u2014 18th\nVt^\u00bbftml-Wt&_\nCarpenter Signs\nWith. Roughriders\nREGINA (CP) \u2014 Ken Carpenter,\na Western Interprovincial Football\nUnion all-star halfback for the\nlast two years, has signed for his\nfourth season with Saskatchewan\nRoughriders, team \"manager Dean\nGriffing announced Friday.   '\nA graduate of Oregon State,\nCarpenter starred for three years\nwith Cleveland Browns before\njoining Regina.\nFights\nBy The Associated Press\nLos Angeles\u2014Julian Valasquez,\n130, La Habra, Calif., knocked out\nJimmy Moser, 130, Los Angeles, 6.\nRevere, Mass.\u2014Burke Emery,\n166%, Sherbrooke, Que., outpointed\nBobby King, 172, Everett, Mass.\nCECCARELLI RECALLED\nBALTIMORE (AP) - Baltimore\nOrioles recalled pitcher Art Ceccarelli from Vancouver Mounties\nof the Pacific Coa'st League Friday\nto let doctors see how a spring\ntraining injury is progressing.\nNARROW MARGIN\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Young\nEngland beat, England in the eve-\nof the cup final soccer- match at\nHighbury Friday night 2-1.   '\nGOLD CUP MATCH\nBELFAST (Reuters) \u2014 In an\nIrish League Gold Cup second\nround soccer game Friday night\nCrusaders at home lost to Glen-\navori 2-0.\nBOURNEMOUTH WINS\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 In an\nEnglish League third division\nSouth soccer game Friday night\nBournemouth beat Watford 4-0.\nThe Highways\nNo. 3\u2014 Cascade, Rossland \u2014\nfair to good., Rossland, Trail, Castlegar, Nelson, Balfour, Kootenay\nBay, Creston, Goatfell, Cranbrook,\nFernie, Crowsnest \u2014 generally\ngood, rough over construction area\nat Moyie north for six miles, road\nclosures.\nNo. 3A \u2014 Trail, Salmo \u2014 Good.\nNo, 99\u2014 King George Highway\n\u2014some rough sections.\nRossland, Paterson\u2014good. Creston, Porthill \u2014 good.\n. No. 6 \u2014 Nelway, Nelson, South\nSlocan, Slocan City, Nakusp,\nNeedles \u2014 good, rough sections.\nNeedles, Monashee, Vernon \u2014 fair\nsubject-to slides on the Monashee.\nNo. 95\u2014Kingsgate, Cranbrook,\nGolden \u2014 muddy sections, some\nsections of blacktop breaking up,\nrough over construction area at\nMoyie north- for six. miles, road\nclosures.\nNelson, Kaslo \u2014 fair to good,\nrough sections at construction\narea. Kaslo, New Denver \u2014 fair\nto good, Kaslo, Lardeau \u2014 fair.\nLardeau, Gerrard \u2014 fair.\nAlaska Highway \u2014 good.\nPersley Pelfs\nRichie Howard\nHALIFAX (CP)-Arthur Persley of Red Cross, La., now fighting out of New York gave- Canadian lightweight champion Richard\n(Kid) Howard of Halifax a boxing\nlesson 'here Friday night in a ,10\nround bout that had Persley in\ncommand all the way.\nIt was Howard's first fight in\nfive months and he looked bad\nmost of the way, missing jabs repeatedly and failing to follow\nthrough when he did land solidly.\nPersley showed 4000 partisan\nfans he was willing to trade\npunches with Howard early in the\nfirst round. In the second Howard\nstarted bleeding about the nose\nand mouth and was bothered with\nblood for the rest of the fight.\nHoward had a three pound weight\nadvantage over Persley, weighing\nin at 138V4.\nSophomore Back\nSigns With Stamps\nCanadian backfielder Eddie\nSimms has agreed to terms with\nCalgary Stampeders for 1957,\nwhich will be his second year\nwith the Calgary organization.\nA native of Verdun, Que., Eddie\nis married and has one son. At\n22 years old and with 180 pounds\ndictributed^over, a. 5'. 11\" frame,\nEddie played sparingly last year,\nbut the Stampeder brass believes\nhe has outstanding football potential.\nHe will arrive in Nelson with\nthe main part of the Stampeder\nsquad early in July.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, MAY 4, 1957 \u2014 7\nNELSON QUINTETS WIN TITLES\nIN BOTH FIVE-PIN CUSSES\nLena Koehle, Barbara Thorn,\nBetty Stewart, Isabel Locatelli and\nDot Waterer of Nelson Markers\ncombined Tuesday and Wednesday\nto annex the \"A\" class championship in the West Kootenay Women's\nInter-City Five-Pin Bowling Tournament at Nelson Bowl-o-drome.\nKid Baseball\nIn Cranbrook\nStarts May 7\nCRANBROOK - Kid Baseball\nAssociation's call for players has\nbrought out about 60 boys up to 16\nyears old at the season's first turnout at Baker Park who were all\nregistered for play in a league\nwhich will start May 7 and play\nthrough the season at Baker, Park\nTuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays.\nThe adult committee on hand\nfor the turnout registered players\nfor six teams, three in the Little\nLeague and three in the Pony League category with the top age\nbracket lifted to include 15-year-\nolds.\nLast season, there were three\nLittle League teams and two Pcry\nLeague teams, which made a difficult playing schedule. This season the schedule calls for play\nin the two leagues, with weekly\nFriday exchange games* between\nCranbrook and Kimberley team's\nin each category.\nA plan is under way for players to sell a season ticket for all\ngames as a means of providing\nrevenue for the necessary playing\nsupplies and for a team of top\nplayers in each category to enter\ninter-city competition..\n| Victory gave Markers temporary\nownership of the Savoy Cup.\nA total-pin score of 5397 in a five-\ngame roll-off gave Markers the victory over the Rossland Happy Five\nwho toppled 4774 pins. E. Penner,\nD,- Grieve, A. Erickson, N. Hughes\nand I. Robertson shared possession\nof the Collinson Cup, annually\nawarded to the' runners-up.\nIndividual honors in Class A competition were won by I. Robertson\nof Rosslandr with a high single of\n304; Dot. Waterer of Nelson, with\na high aggregate of 737, and Barb\nThorn of Nelson with a high average of 223.\nHonors in \"B\" Class, with a handicap of 70 for every 1000 pins\nspilled, went along with the Jur-\nick Trophy to Nelson Variety No. 1.\nE. Farenholtz, B. Renwick, K. Allen, M. Benedetti and M. Arnot\ntotalled 3098 to edge Nelson Variety No. 2 by 11 pins.\nTrundling for the second-placers\nwere R. Coleman, E. Kennedy, D.\nNarfield, H. Choquette and D. Hal-\nliday. ,\nThird went to Nelson Pinsters\u2014\nA. McGinn, M. Defoe, A. French,\nV. Cook and A* Darwin \u2014'while\nfourth went to Nelson Korner Kids\n\u2014D. Fahlman, E. Mowatt, C. Duncan, M. Muraro and N. MacDonald.\nIndividual honors in \"B\" Class\nwent to B. Renwick with a high\nsingle of 284, and H. Jones of South\nSlocan, with high aggregate of 630.\nEntertainment at the banquet,\nheld in Trinity Church basement\nWednesday, was provided by Roy\nKline, Marlene Amoroso, Mabel\nWard and a Lions Club quartet\nformed by Gord Olson, Frank\nBeresford, Konrad Singer, Henry\nStevenson and Jack Bagnall.\nPresident and secretary for the\n1958 tournament, to be held in\nTrail, will be Phyllis Scaia and\nMary Cronie, respectively.\nFAIRBANKS-MORSE POWER PLANTS\nF-M generators are\na\navailable In portable\nsizes from 600 to 2500\nwatts, and in mobile\nunits from 3 lew. to 10\nkw. For long-term jobs,\npermanent units to 100\nkw. are available, AC\ncurrent. For complete\nja\u00abJSS_33 - ' , $ details of capacities, I\n\u25a0-' *,Ui**!\u00ab-8__i_\/   fuels, cooling systems, J\netc., write.\nIn Vancouver: 798 Beatty\" 8t., Tele.:\"\"TA-02ir\nI\nI\nfor ELECTRIC POWER\nGENERATING PLANTS\nSTARCHING MAKES SUCH A DIFFERENCE-...\n\"And it's so easy to starch shirts\nperfectly with GLIDE!\"\nWhat could be easier? To make\nstarch, you simply add Glide to\nwater. That's all! And your starch\nis always exactly the way you require it, never too Stiff, never limp.\nGlide contains blue for! whitening,\nand a special ingredient to make\nyour iron slide smoothly,\nTry Glide, the instant, always perfect starch I\nTHESE WILL LOOK much  SMARTER\nAND STAY CLEAN much LONGER\nSTARCHED WITH GLIDE\nChildren's dresses\nBlouses       Table linens\nUniforms    Daytime frocks\nPetticoats   House dresses\nCrinolines   Curtains\nMen's shirts .\nFDR NEW PRIDE IN YOUR LAUNDERING\nGET\ninstant\nEllBE\nANOTHER QUALITY PRODUCT BY JAVEX\n 8\u2014NELSON DAH-V NEWS, SATURDAY, MAY 4, 1957\nSpring Breakup Still Affecting\nLogging, Small Mines Re-opening\nAnnual Spring breakup, steel-\nlaying for the West Arm bridge,\nand pipeline-laying for Inland\nNatural Gas Company are among\nfactors which affected employment in Nelson and district last\nmonth, according to a report issued\nby the Nelson office of National\nEmployment Service.\nThe logging industry remains in\nthe throes of the annual Spring,\nbreak-up, with few men being employed at this time due to mud\nand water conditions on logging\nroads.\nLarger base-metal mines are\ncontinuing to produce at full\ncapacity, while several smaller\nones are opening up after Winter\nshutdown. Several labor requirements were noted during the past\nmonth, and an increase is expected\nduring the next month or two as\nminers who have wintered here\nbecome restless and decide to\nmove elsewhere.\nOne large sawmill has reopened\nafter several months' shutdown\ndue to the poor lumber market,\nre-emjloying some 75 men.\nDuring April, steel contractors\nfor the West Arm bridge at Nelson,\nwith about 18 men, commenced\nlaying steel. This resulted in hiring approximately five carpenters\nwho can work at heights to commence decking. Dutton-Williams\nBrothers began \"doping\" pipes for\nthe new gas pipeline, hiring some\n30 to 35 men. Slashing contractors\nfor this project employed approximately 35 men during April.\nAbout 16 immigrants were hired\ntor extra gang work at the Canadian Pacific Railway. The Company intends to form an additional\nextra gang In the near future aa\nmore immigrants coma into this\narea.\nRetail clothing firms noted a\nslight Increase in sales during\nApril due to pre-Easter buying.\nFour special placements were\neffected during the month of\nApril by NES. This is considered a\ngood percentage, as such employment opportunities, are always\nscarce in this. area.\nDemand for female clerk-typists\nand stenographers continues to increase, but tie supply is low. Alleviation of this condition is hoped\nfor in June as a number of girls\nin the commercial category leave\nschool.\nOne Iargs logging firm is employing 25 men in one of their\ncamps, making poles, their other\ntwo camps being closed during\nSpring breakup. Another large\nlogging firm in this area is completely closed due to muddy logging roads.\nOperators do not anticipate a\nshortage of workers due to pipeline construction. They feel their\nformer crews will return to them,\nas logging offers steadier employment and they would also lose\ntheir seniority if they stayed on\nanother job permanently.\nDEMAND FOE DRILLERS\nThere are 33 miners registered\nwith the NES. As there will be a\ndemand for rock drillers on the\npipeline lt is believed the majority\n\" of these will be placed in the near\nfuture. This might create a shortage of miners tor underground\nwork.\nWestern Mines at Ainsworth,\nwhich has been diamond drilling\nfor the last two years, has now\ncommenced operation on a small\nscale, employing approximately 12\nunderground men.\nTriumph Mine at Ainsworth is\nalso operating on a small scale\nemploying two to three men.\nProperties such as Van Rol and\nOttawa, in -the Slocan area, are\nleasing, each property having\nfrom four to six men.\nWillett Mine in the Lardeau reopened during April, employing\nfive men.\nCanadian Exploration Limited in\nthe Salmo area, reports 1956 was\none of the beBt years on record.\nOperation of the Emerald Mine\nresulted in a net profit of $2,672,557\ncompared with $1,726,645 during\nthe preceding year.\nOne large sawmill resumed\noperations during April, re-hiring\napproximately 75 mlllworkers.\nAnother large sawmill is operating at top capacity and at the\npresent time has a full complement\nof workers.\nOne small sawmill in Nelson laid\noff about nine female woodhackers\nin April for approximately one\nweek.\nCity public works crews have\nbeen busy during the past month\non a variety of projects. Some 15\nmen and considerable heavy\nequipment has been employed on\nthe 700 and 800 blocks of Vernon\nStreet, .excavating the road and\nfilling.with coarse gravel in preparation for black-topping later in\nthe Summer. City crews have also\nbeen employed slashing the road-\nsite to the new hospital and tenders\nhave been called for the removal\nof three buildings on the hospital\nsite. A crew from Perma-Steel\nEngineering Company of Vancouver erected steel storage sheds\nafter City work crews had built\nconcrete foundations. Cost is approximately $30,000.\nNES received an order from a\nsub-contractor' for Button-Williams\nfor about 30 power saw men to\nslash a\/ right-of-way.- The employer has now laid off approximately half of these.\nCutting and wrapping pipes for\nInland Natural Gas Company was\nstarted in preparation for laying\nthe pipeline. Approximately 35\nmen are employed .under a supervisor from Calgary. There will\npossibly be 800 to 1000 men hired\non this project during the summer.\nThe West Arm Bridge is progressing and steel laying has now\ncommenced. Steel contractor is\nWestern Bridge Company of Vancouver and E. Bickerton, also of\nVancouver, is the steel erector\nAll the steel has been laid across\nthe piers on dry ground and is\nnow being extended across the\nwater. Pilings have been driven\nin low water, near both shores,\nupon which platforms will be built\nin order to erect the steel in midstream. This contractor is employing approximately 18 skilled men\nwhom they brought in and expects\nto bring additional crews later.\nCIVIC CENTRE REPAIRS\nWilliscroft Construction Company\nof Nelson has commenced a repair\njob on the Civic Centre curling\nrink., Contract price was $16,842.\nSome five or six men were employed on this job but more will\nbe hired very shortly.\nKenneth Rigby and Frank Richardson of Castlegar have purchased the former school bus\nstorage site for erection of the\nNelson Funeral Home and Ambulance service at Ward and Silica\nStreets. Architects for this are\nWilliams and Fairbank of Nelson.\nEstimated cost of this building\nwill be $34,000. j\nIMMIGRANTS EMPLOYED\nThe Canadian Pacific Railway\nhired approximately 16 Portuguese\nimmigrants during the month of\nApril. Separations were fewer than\nin March. Officials' point out that\nthey will be bringing in approximately 150 more immigrants in\nthe near future. They intend to\nform an extra gang of 20 to 25\nmen from these immigrants and\ndistribute the remainder to various\ncrews throughout the division.\nThere have been few separations\nor Wrings on the B _ B gang during the.past month and no workers\nare needed at present.\nAlthough most of the hiring for\nthe section is done in Nelson, road-\nmasters on the division have been\npicking up local residents in their\nareas in. addition to the Immigrants\nthat are coming in. The diesel shop\nhad few separations during the\nmonth and there are no vacancies\nat this time.\nCanadian Western Greyhound\nhired one coach cleaner during the\nmonth. They still need one mechanic for holiday relief.\nCanadian Pacific Telegraph and\nB.C, Telephone labor requirements\nwere nil during the month.\nThe B.C. Power Commission is\nbuilding a secondary line to Hills\nand Rosebery areas this year and\nis also renovating the line to the\nOrchard section of New Denver.\nThe West Kootenay Power and\nLight Company crews are making\ngood progress on the line up the\nSlocan Valley, energizing the line\nas they go.\nProduction of the City generating station at Bonnington was up\nduring March from the same\nmonth in 1956. Total generated during March, 1957, was 3,389,100 kilowatts. Ninety new electric light\npoles were unloaded during April\nfor electrical crews during the\nSummer. The City has authorized\nto purchase of a $27,000 voltage\nregulator for the Rosemont substation. This is expected to be\ninstalled during the Summer.\nNumber of passengers using the\nMain Lake ferry in March increased by more than a thousand\nfrom the same month last year.\nSince March 15th the M.V. Anscomb was off duty for annual overhaul. During that period the M.V.\nBalfour was used. She is better\nable  to  handle  oversize  trucks\nTHI8 WAS THE SCENE-April 28 In San\nAntonio, Tex., an Jackie Bonloo, right, a motorist\ntrapped In her car In swirling, flood waters at\nDonaldson and Seeling Boulevard, was resoued\nfrom her plight by quartet of volunteers who\n___\u00a3___*$.\nused garden hose In bringing her to safety.\nJackie was one of many motorists trapped by\nflash floods, Many persons had to be evacuated\nfrom their homes and many structures were\ndestroyed after heavy rains.\u2014Ap Wirephoto.\nCBC Postpones West Coast\nFrequency Applications\nOTTAWA (CP)-The CBC board\nof governors Friday recommended\ndeferment, pending further study,\nof three west coast applications to\noperate on the choice radio frequency of 730 on the dial.\nThe applications came from radio stations CKLG, North Vancouver, and CJAV, Port Alberni,\nB.C., who sought power increases\nand from  Warren T.  Johnstone,\n.,,,1,1 h..\u201e\u201e.a nr k.,\u201e\u201e\u201e \u201et who applied for a licence to oper-\nrouted through B.C. because of _\u00a3\u201e\u00bb_..\u00ab .i\u201eh\u201e\u201e i\u201e _,,_,\nU.S.  road  restrictions.  All roadja'e a 5'?\u00b0\u00b0-watt 8$fein Burn'\n ,.;\u201e,,\u201e\u201e ,\u201e\u201e\u201e\u201e ii\u00bb-j j\u201e\u201e]_\u201e ii,. aby, a Vancouver suburb.\nrestrictions were lifted during the     ''   , ,    ,, . ,     ,\nlatter part of April lt was reported j\nThe board, which heard the ap-\nby the district engineer for the\\^om, last Tuesday, said that\nProvincial Department of High- \u00ab \"f ,b\"'s ot the aPP'ioat\"\u00bbs\nways. MV Anscomb is now back *e North Vancouver or Burnaby\nin service stations would have wide cover-\n''\u25a0'.. I age  in  the  Greater  Vancouver\nSALES INCREASE I al.ea> jt had noted representations\nLadles' wear businesses report; from existing Vancouver stations\na small increase in sales over that that  the   proposals   \"would  ad-\nof a year ago but proprietors gen-1 versely af(ect   their   possibilities\nerally believe that business was for good broadcasting service.\"\nslow  during  April.   These  firms ] THOROUGH STUDY\nhave been busy with pre-Easter |   The board said that before mak-\nsales. Appliance outlets reported\ning   recommendations   it   should\na considerable increase in price; make . thorough' \u00abtudy of the\ninquiries for gas stoves,; heaters, programming End operations of\nand furnace conversion but noja\u201e stationB j. ^ are3| inAmng\nactual increase In sales. With the, CKLG  0p osition to the appIica.\ngo one airline\nSOUTH AMIRICA\nNon-stop from Vancouver to Mexico City,\nthen on\" to Lima and Buenoe Alrea. Fit\ninternational air travel to your budget with\nCanadian Pacific's \"Pay Later\" plan...save\non year 'round family faresl\nSaMmUm PmUk\nadvent of natural gas here.In late\nSummer, it is generally thought\nsales will increase considerably.\nSales of foodstuffs have been\nbrisk during April with many\nlarger stores promoting \"sales\"\nwith slashed mark-ups. Automobile sales are down approximately\n10 per cent from April, 1956.\nWholesale business percentagewise is similar to that of the same\nmonth last year, any differences\nbeing insignificant, particularly in\nfood lines.\nNelson bank clearings for March\nwere down from last year,\n$3,474,923.\nFinance business is starting to\npick up after three slow months\nbut car sales are definitely down\nfrom 1956. \"Tight money\" is apparently affecting the finance business. Finance companies point out\nthat banks are to some extent\nentering the car financing field.\nThey also point out that credit\nunions are also entering this field\nand this will have an adverse effect on wholesale prices of cars\nand trucks. When dealers bring\ntheir stock in from the factories:\nthey have to pay cash and this\nmoney is borrowed from finance\ncompanies. If the retail purchaser\nof an automobile does not finance\nhis car through the finance com\npany, a considerable amount of\nprofit is lost by the financing\nfirms and they feel that they will\nhave to increase the original financing charges to the wholesaler.\nSpecial placements have been\nbetter than for several months.\nOne temporary placement was\nmade of a man- with a rheumatic\n\u25a0heart, another for an epileptic.\nFull time work was found for a\nman with a heart condition, as a\nsolicitor. Another man with a deformed leg was placed as a coach\ncleaner and tire man.\nNumber of applicants increased\nby five to approximately 85. Most\nare older men who can no longer\nperform strenuous duties.\nSix veterans were placed during\nApril, all in the last-war category.\nThere were few job opportunities\nfor veterans in April. Increased\nplacements are hoped for when\nthe pipeline gets fully under way.\nThere were 119 females registered at the month-end. One local\nsawmill laid off eight to' nine\nfemale wood-hackers for a period\nof one week. There are several\nopenings listed for clerk typists\nand stenos \u2014 with a greater shortage of the latter than at any time\nin 1956.,\nOne stenographer was placed at\na local finance. company during\nApril. \u201e\ntlons came from stations CFUN,'\nVancouver, and CKNW, New\nWestminster.\nThe board approved transfer of\ncontrol of two radio stations. Control of CKXL Limited, Calgary,\nnow held . by Frederick Shaw\nwould pass to Tel-Ray Limited,\nwhile control of CJRL, Kenora,\nHume   Hotel\nPhone   204\nDEATHS\nBy The Canadian Press\nMontreal \u2014 Albert Findlay, 69,\none of Canada's leading clock-\nmakers and designers.\nHalifax \u2014 Edgar E. Kelley\nSinclair Greets\nPM by'Copter\nVANCOUVER (CP)-A cabinet\ncolleague Friday found a new way\nof greeting Prime Minister St.\nLaurent\u2014in a helicopter on a fifth-\nstorey landing field in downtown\nVancouver.\nAs Mr. St. Laurent opened his\ntour of the city he visited the\n$10,000,000, seven-storey post office\nbeing completed here.\nWhile the prime minister was\nstanding on the fifth-storey landing\nfield Fisheries Minister Sinclair\narrived in a helicopter from Van\ncouver airport, having completed\nthe five-mile flight in seven minutes.\nMr. St. Laurent shook, hands with\nthe.fisheries minister as Mr. Sinclair stepped from the aircraft.\nLater he told construction workers he hoped Canada would give\nthe lead in expeditious handling\nof mail.around the world.\nOnt., would pass to Stuart King,\npublisher of the Kenora Daily\nMiner,\nIt recommended deferment of\nan application for a new radio\nstation in Saanich, B.C. pending\nstudy of the service and programming of existing stations in the\narea.\nQTHER DECISIONS\nThe board recommended deferment, pending further study of\nsimilar operations, of an application by radio station CJDC to\noperate a low-power TV station in\nDawson Creek, B.C.\nIf recommended approval of a\nlicence to operate a 1,000-watt\nradio station in Cranbrook, B-.C.\nThe application was made by\nRobert A. Reagh, former Lethbridge, Alta., broadcaster..\nTuesday Date ef\nMcCarthy Riles\nWASHINGTON (AP) - Funeral\nservices for Senator McCarthy\nwill be held In the United States\nSenate Monday.\nPlans were set up Friday for service at 9 a.m. MDT in the Senate\nchamber where the Wisconsin .legislator, was finally-condemned by\nhis own colleagues for methods he\nused to prosecute his charges of\nRed infiltration of the government.\nThe funeral is scheduled for\nTuesday at St. MaTy's cemetery\nIn Appleton, Wis., McCarthy's\nhometown.\nBEST TEACHERS\nWomen excel in teaching parrots to speak, probably because\nparrots find it easier to imitate\na woman's voice.\nU.K\/s Grand Old Man\nStill Life of the Party\nBy STERLING SLAPPEY\nLONDON (AP) - Sir Winston\nChurchill had a high old time until at least 1:20 this morning at\nPope Demands\nClearance of\nEurope's Slums\nVATICAN CITY (Reuters)-The\nPope Friday demanded the governments of Europe attack the problem of the Continent's, slums\u2014\n\"this persistent plague of contemporary society.\"\nThe-81-year-old pontiff said that\neven in .the richer European countries the slum population represented 10 or even 20 per cent of\nthe nation. He was addressing a\ngroup from a French charitable\norganization devoted to sending\nSlum children Into the open air.\nHe said that a complex body\nof social laws in all European\ncountries had failed to eliminate\nthe slums.\nThe pontiff attacked slum landlords.\n\"Must we mention the lament*\nable example of those who exploit .the slums?\" he asked.'\n\"Deprived of air and light, living in filth and in indescribable\npromiscuity, adults and above all\nchildren quickly become prey to\ncontagious maladies.\n\"But the moral harm is still\ngreater: Immorality, juvenile delinquency, loss of the taste for\nlife and for work, interior revolt\nagainst a society which tolerates\nsuch abuses, which ignores and allows to stagnate in this way human beings, who, llttlle by little,\nare transformed into wrecks.\"\nBEAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILY\nhis granddaughter's coming - out\ndinner dance.\n\" The 82 \u2022 year \u2022 old soldier-\npolitician - orator - author - historian - war strategist - race horse\nowner \u2022 novelist - artist - farmer-\nnewspaper man-elder statesman\nwent to Claridge's to see Edwina\nSandys launched Into society.\n\"This is most enjoyable\u2014I\nhaven't been to a dance for such\na long time,\" said Sir Winston.\nEdwina is Churchill's first grandchild to bow to society.\nSeveral near-rock 'n' roll numbers were played but the general\nbeat was of the waits and fox trot.\nLOT OF DRINKING\nSir Winston's prescription for a\nlong and happy life: \"A lot Of\ndrinking, a lot\" of eating and eight\nor nine hour slseep, most of it in\nthe daytime.\"\nChurchill fired up several cigars\nand quaffed champagne and his\nfavorite brandy.\nAt midnight Sir Winston and his\nwife retired to the dining room.\nHe sent, congratulations to band\nleader Ian Stewart for a jazzy rendition of Singing The Blues.\nThe Churchills slipped away\nlater. Lady Churchill gave the\nparty for their 17-year-old grandchild, eldest daughter of Defence\nMinister Duncan Sandys and the\nformer Diana Churchill.\nDISLIKES PICTURE\nSir Winston, meanwhile, Is\nmaking no secret of what he\nthinks of his latest portrait, hanging in the Royal Academy's summer exhibition. He is much annoyed.\nThe painting, ,by Ruskin Spear,\nshows his bald head bent toward a\nmicrophone, glasses sliding down\nhis nose and his mouth open and\ntwisted to one side.\nChurchill let it be known at the\nacademy banquet the other night\nthai he didn't like what he saw.\nSpear, said: \"What I did was\npaint a sound. You might say,\nt imagained Churchill saying\n'N-a-r-z-i.'\"\nCalgary Livestocks\nCALGARY (CP) - Receipts to\n11 a.m.:   cattle  209,  calves   10.\nThe bulk of Friday's light offerings was medium to good butcher\nsteers, with the balance of the run\nmostly medium to good cows.\nChoice steers 18-18.50; good 17-\n17.75; medium 15-16.50; common\n12-14.50; choice heifers 16.75-17.50;\ngood 15.50-16.50; medium 13.50-15;\ncommon 11-13; good cows 13-13.50;\nmedium 12-12.75; common 10.50-\n11.50; canners cutters 8-10; good\nbulls 13-14; common to medium\n9-12.50.\nInsufficient good stocker and\nfeeder steers on offer to establish\nreliable quotations. Last sales\nwere on following bases: good\nfeeder steers 17 - 18; good stock\nbteers 16.50-17.50; common to medium 14-16.   ,\nVeal and butcherweight heifer\ncalves being cleaned up at steady\nvri.c) Good butcherweight-heifer\ncalyes 16-18; good to choice veal\n20-23; common to medium 14-19.\nHogs sold steady Thursday 26.25\nA grade. Sows 18.76 : vlvewetght.\nLast sales good lambs 19.50-20.\nNUTS PROHIBITED\nHAIFA, Israel (AP)-After debating the question for three years\nthe city government has decreed\nnuts no longer may be eaten in\nmovie  theatres and their shells\n*iNaa    of\nI editor - in \u2022 chief of the Halifax.; dropped to the floor. Offenders are\naM j Chronicle - Herald and Halifax j liable to a fine of 100 Israeli\n i Mail-Star, of a heart attack.        j pounds.\nAnyone who Drives a Car should\nknow a little about Gasoline\nWe realize of course\nthat you are not Interested In gasoline\nfrom the standpoint\ns\not a petroleum specialist,\nbecause that Is very complicated.,,\nbut we can point out to you\nthat ROYALITE gasolines\ndo make a difference In your car,\nBoth Premier arid Regular ROYALITE\ngasolines are compounded to give you\ngreater motoring satisfaction,\nwhether your need Is for the action-packed\npower of a modern high compression engine\nor for the economical running of an older car.\nROYALITE gasolines\nmeet the need of every motorist for\ndependable clean burning fuels, designed\nto give the best possible performance.\nROYALITE\nPREMIER & REGULAR Gasolines\nROYALITE &   ,\nROYAL TRITON Motor Oils\nThe Hallmark of Motoring  Satisfaction\n NBLSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, MAY 4,1957 \u2014 9   '\nTHE BIG\nVOTE FOR CAN ABA\nHold\non to u)kat we shave and cherish !\nWe live^today'in a world of explosive contradictions. While\nCanadians enjoy soaring prosperity, millions elsewhere are\nhungry. While we strive for peace, the threat of war is ever\npresent. The age of abundance for all mankind now is possible;\nso'is world-wide atomic destruction.\nThese are the big issues. Today, as never before, Canada's\nfreedom and prosperity and the future of our children\u2014all the\nthings we love and want most \u2014 depend on events in the\nworld around us.\nIt's essential to elect a government which promotes prosperity\nat home and peace abroad. History shows we can't have one\nwithout the other.\nOnly the Liberal'Party can do this. It'srhe only party with\nstatesmen experienced and respected in world affairs. The\nLiberal record proves it can promote prosperity at home and\npeace abroad. It's Canada's only truly national party, seeking\nconstantly to re-alfcrm national _#ity, the 90 year old goal\nof Confederation.\nHunger And War\nChildren scavenging for food in the Middle East symbolize\nthe big k\u00bbae$ hi \u00abhe world todayS-htin-ger and the threat of\nUnite. Nations Photo\nwar.\n#\\mW\"?X\\t?v*y-*^.\n;.,;;'\u25a0;_'.     Statesmen At Work\nPrime Minister St. Laurent, at the Bermuda conference typifies\nCanada's, prominence in free- world ec^ncrfe\u2014working to pre-\nlerve our peace and security.\nOur Responsibility\nNo country has more to gain from a world at peace\u2014none hat\nmore to lose. To protect the things we love and want, we participate boldly with* United Natrons, NATO, ttie Colombo Pfcwi...\nShervin-Shr\u00bbgs\u00ab\nOppoRTUNrrrES Unlimited\nLiberal poMcies and leadership at home and abroad have made\nCanada the land' of opportunity. New people and-capital are\n\u2022powrwig m as never before, th*\u00bb 'etwiehmg oar future.\n\u25a0 i. ,.'\".\u25a0 Shervfa Shrig-ge\nGrowing Prosperity .   \/\nOur steadily rising standard of living, full employment and\nrecord earnings\u2014reflected in homes like this from,coast to coast'\n--*hav. won the admwatfcm of th* woM.   ..'.\nFor Continued PtospeNty\nvfecuHty\n,.v .'\u25a0 Shervw Sh\u00bb_o_\u00bb\nA BruGMr Future If ...\nOur children know freedom, prosperity, security\u2014their future\nis bright if we, hold firmly to present policies. It's up to u.\n''\u2022 got '*. Let's not lose it\nLOUJS ST. LAURENT\nCanada's Great Leader\nM-E1M\nB.C. Liberal Association\nIN KOOTENAY WEST VOTE \"BILL\" MeLOUGHLIN\n 10 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, MAY 4,19S7\nJ\nI\nG\nG\nS\nJisfis, ill. repavYit sure is, len.'\nYOU TMAT*ZO I IN FACT, I MAD\nNEXT PAY PAV.' \/FORGOTTEN VtVJ\nIS THAT QK.?\/V. CWE ME *ZO\nWinnipeg Grain\nj grain cash prices:\nOats, .No. 1 feed, 64%.\nWINNIPEG  (CP)  - Winnipeg!   Barley, No. 1 feed, 83Vs.\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS 1240 ON THE DIAL\n(PACIFIC DAYLIGHT SAVING-TIME)\nSATURDAY, MAY 4, 1957.\n30\u2014Wake-Up Time\n00\u2014News \\\n05\u2014Musicale\nID\u2014Fargl Fare\n15\u2014Musicale,\n30\u2014News; .\n35\u2014Sports News\n40\u2014Wake-Up Time\n00\u2014News' -\n10\u2014Sports News\n15\u2014Market Review\n20\u2014Breakfast Varieties\n00\u2014News\n05\u2014Musicale   -\n15\u2014Story Parade\n30-Stamp.Club   .\n45\u2014Sounds Fun Club\n00\u2014Postmark UK\n30\u2014Juke Box\n00\u2014News\n05\u2014Saturday Special\n00\u2014The Dinner Bell\n15\u2014Sports News\n-SUNDAY,\n8:45\u2014British Israel Broadcast\n9:00\u2014Overseas News\n9:15\u2014News\n8:30\u2014Harmony Harbour\n10:00\u2014B.C. Gardener\n10:15\u2014Just Mary\n10:30\u2014Musicale\n11:00\u2014St. Paul's-Trinity Service\n12:00\u2014This Is My Story\n12:30\u2014Capital Report\n12:57TB.C. Weather\n1:00\u2014Canadian Scene\n1:30\u2014Critically Speaking\n2:00\u2014Cleveland Orchestra\n3:30\u2014News\n3:35\u2014Weatherman\n3:45\u2014In Reply\n12:25\u2014News\n12:30\u2014Saturday Special\n2:30\u2014Don Messer\n3:00\u2014News\n3:10\u2014Weekend Listening\n3:15\u2014Speaker's Choice\n3:30\u2014Canadian Symphonies\n4:00\u2014Buff Estes Sextet\n4:15r-01d Country Sports\n4:30\u2014This Week\n4:45\u2014Sports College\n5:00-UBC Relays\n5:30\u2014Conversations\n6:00\u2014Moods in Modern\n7:00\u2014News\n7: OS-Scored by Hyslop\n7:30\u2014Hotel Downbeat\n8:00\u2014Halifax Theatre\n8:30\u2014Prairie Schooner\n, 9:oo\u2014Winnipeg Pbps Concert\n10:00\u2014News\n10:10\u2014Sports News\n10:15\u2014Armdale Chorus\n10:30-Sign Off\nMAY 5, 1957\n4:00\u2014UN on the Record\n4:15j-The Four Gentlemen\n4:30\u2014Little Symphonies\n5:00\u2014Billy Graham\n5:30\u2014Musicals\n5:45\u2014Bethel Tabernacle\n6:00\u2014Pacific Playhouse\n6:30\u2014Organ Concert\n7:00\u2014News\n7:10\u2014Weekend Review\n7:20\u2014Our Special Speaker\n7:30\u2014Sunday Chorale\n8:00\u2014Stage '56\n9:00\u2014Winnipeg Sunday Concert\n10:00\u2014News\n10:10\u2014Sports News\n10:15\u2014Art of Translation\n10:30\u2014Sign Off\nCBC PROGRAMS\n(PACIFIC DAYLIGHT SAVING TIME)\nSUNDAY, MAY 5, 1957\n00\u2014News      .\n03\u2014Theme\u2014and Variations\n00\u2014News\n15\u2014The Answer Man\n30\u2014Harmony Harbor\n00\u2014B.C. \u25a0 Gardener _ Weather\n15\u2014Just Mary\n30\u2014In His Service\n00\u2014Chamber Music\n30\u2014Religious Period\n00\u2014Organ Music      '\n30\u2014Capital Report\n00\u2014Canadian Scene\n30\u2014Critically Speaking '\n00\u2014Cleveland Orchestra\n30\u2014News .  \u2022\n3:35\u2014Ask, the Weatherman\n3:42\u2014Weather Report\n3:45\u2014In Reply '\u2022\n4:00\u2014UN on the Record\n4:15\u2014The Four Gentlemen\n4:30\u2014Little Symphonies\n5:00\u2014Music Diary\n6:00\u2014Pacific Playhouse\n6:30\u2014Organ Music\n7:00\u2014News    '    '    I\n7:10\u2014Weekend Review\n7:20\u2014Our Special Speaker\n7:30\u2014Sunday Chorale\n8:00\u2014\u00a7tage Series\n9:00\u2014Winnipeg Sunday Concert\n10:00\u2014News '\n10:15i-Art of Translation\n00\u2014B.C. Fisherman's Broadcast\n15\u2014Musical Minutes\n30\u2014News\nMONDAY, MAY 6, 1957\n7\n7:35\u2014Musical Minutes\n7:\n7\n40\u2014Morning Devotions\n45\u2014Musical March Past\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n8:15\u2014Morning Music\n8:45\u2014Laura Limited\n9:00\u2014News\n9:15\u2014Your Good Neighbor\n9:30\u2014Morning Concert\n10:00\u2014Morning Visit\n10:15\u2014Happy Gang\n10:45\u2014Invitation to the Waltz\n11:00\u2014Radio Theatre\n11:15\u2014Kindergarten of the Air\nll:30-^-Through the Listening Glass\n12:15\u2014News\n12:25\u2014Showcase\n30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n55\u2014Five to One I\n00\u2014Afternoon Concert\n00\u2014School Broadcast\n30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n30\u2014Footlight. Favorites\n45\u2014B.C. Roundup\n30\u2014The Conqueror\n00\u2014News\n15\u2014By-Line ,\n20\u2014Sports       ,-\n30\u2014Roving Reporter\n6:00\u2014Rawhide'\n6:30\u2014Summer Garden\n7:00\u2014News\n7:30\u2014Recital\n8:00\u2014Drama\n8:30\u2014Summer Fallow\n9:00\u2014CBC Symphony\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Provincial Affairs\n10:30\u2014Reflections in Music\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\nTimes Shown Are Pacific Standard Time\nCLASSIFIED\nDeadline toi Cloitirled Ads \u2014 5 p.m.\t\nBIRTHS\nKOLESNIK - To Mr. and Mrs.\nPete Kolesnik of Appledale, May 3,\nat Kootenay Lake General Hospital, a son.\nTARR \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs. Mel-\nvln Tarr of R.R. 1, Nelson, May 3,\nat Kootenay Laka General Hospital, a'daughter.\nHELP WANTED\nAUDITORS\nACCOUNTANTS\nStarting Salaries from\n$3000 to $5000\nDepending on Qualifications\nand Experience.\nNational Organization requires Auditors and Accountants for Interior British Columbia Office. Opportunities exist in promotion in this office and to\npositions in other cities in\nCanada. Employees Benefits include 5 - day week\nand excellent pension and\ninsurance plans. Address\nreplies giving full particulars to:\nBOX 3514,\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\nOur staff is aware of this\ns     advertisement.\nFERRY ENGINEER GRADE 3\nB.C. CIVIL SERVICE\nKOOTENAY LAKE FERRY,\nDEPT. OF HIGHWAYS,\n.    BALFOUR, B.C.    '\u2022\nSalary: $327. per month. Must\nbe a British Subject; hold either\na 3rd class Marine (Diesel) certificate issued prior to Jan. 1,\n1954, OR a 2nd class Marine (Diesel) certificate;.extensive experience and ability to overhaul and\nrefit heavy diesel marine engines and related equipment. For\nfurther information and application forms apply to the Chairman, Civil Service Commission,\nParliament Buildings, 544 Michigan Street,- VICTORIA, NOT\nLATER THAN MAY 22, 1957.\nTHE SALES MANAGER OF A\nBritish Columbia Financial Institution will be in Nelson in the\nnear future seeking the services\nof a man with successful experience in merchandising and intangibles. To such a man we\nhave what appears to be an outstanding opportunity with unlimited possibilities. This position requires a person with both selling\n- and organizing ability, as the\nterritory involved will need at\nleast 4 or 5 salesmen in addition\nto this managerial position. If\nyou possess these necessary requirements, or think you do, and\nare willing to work long hours,\ni please write and Inform us all\nabout yourself to Box .677, Nelson Daily News.\nWANTED - RELIEF AND PER-\nmanent carriers for Nelson Daily\nNews. Apply Circulation Dept\nHELP WANTED\n(Continued)\nWE REQUIRE THE SERVICES\nof an experienced salesman for\nthe Nelson and adjacent- territory-Must have a successful record and preference will be given to men experienced in selling\nelectrical appliances, Insurance,\nbooks, savings plans, or a com-\n\u25a0 parable line. In replying, please\nstate your qualifications, age and-\ntelephone number to Box 3678,\n' Nelson Daily News.\nCASHIER - FOR TRAIL Business firm. Must be capable of\nhandling and accounting for\nlarge cash volume. Experience\nalso required in bookkeeping and\noffice procedure. Salary commensurate with experience and\nability. Reply in own handwriting to Box 3635, Nelson Daily\nNews.\nTHE GREYHOUND BUS DEPOT\nNelson, has an opportunity for a\nyoung man to be trained as a\nticket agent. Applications are to\nbe made in writing to the Depot\nmanager, stating age* education\nand any previous business experience.\nWANTED - EXPERIENCED CAT\noperator for bush, Must take\ngood care of equipment. Apply\nColumbia Cedar Ltd., Box 609,\nRevelstoke, B.C., Phone 2718.\nLUMBER GRADER FOR SMALL\nlocal mill. License desirable but\nnot essential.' Apply - Box 3775,\nNelson Daily News.\nHELP WANTED \u2014 FEMALE\nFEMALE SALES CLE.RK.WANT-\ned for local hardware firm. Can\nbegin immediately. .Hardware\nexperience not essential. Benefits included. State experience if\nany. Apply Box 3690, Nelson\nDaily News.\nAMBITIOUS W6MAN CAN MAKE\ngood money in spare time selling\nadvertising specialties to local\nfirms. Box 3781, Nelson Daily\nNews.\nWANTED - EXPERIENCED\nwaitress. For further information\n\u25a0phone 1567.\nEXPERIENCED GRILL COdK\nwanted. Apply Shamrock Grill\nfor particulars, in mornings.\nWAITRESS AND GRILL \"COOKS\nwanted. Phone 391 or 1877.\nBOATS AND ENGINES\nSEE YOUR FAVORITE 1957\nJohnson outboard on d i s p 1 a y.\nAll h.p. rating and some electric.\nThey're scarce, order early.\nCOLEMAN ELECTRIC, Phone\n2055, Nelson, B.C. Big trades.\nEasy terms.  .\nFOR SALE - CABIN CRUISER,\n17'6\" long, 6'4\" beam. Will take\n25 h.p. or better, good .family\nboat. Phone 1622-L after 5. -\nSCOTT ATWATER OUTBOARD\nmotors, 3 to 40 h.p. at Mac's\nWelding and Equipment Co., 614\nRailway Street, Nelson, B.C.\n16 FT. BY 22 FT. BOATHOUSE\u2014\nPhone 1231-L.\nWANTED   TO   RENT\nWANTED TO RENT - DESPER-\nately require 2 or-3 B.R. house.\nMust be clean. No children, will\nlease. Phone 1160 Ext. 36, or\n1581-L-2. i\nDAILY  CROSSWORD\nKXLY TV - Channel 4\nKHQ TV '- Channel t\nSATURDAY\nSATURDAY\n9:15 Good Morning\n8:10 Test Pattern\n9:45 Dizzy Dean Show \u2022\n8:15 Color Test Pattern\n9:55 Baseball Game of Week *\n8:25 Bible Reading\n1:30 Western Roundup\n8:30 Gumby *\n2:30 Lone Ranger\n9:00 Fury *\n3:00 Bob Harris Show\n9:30 Major League Baseball *\n4:00 TBA\n11:00 Short Subjects\n4:30 Wild BiU Hickock\n11:30 Stars On Six\n5:00 TBA   -..\n12:00 Sea .Wings\n5:30 Tales of the Texas Rangers\n12':'30 Little Rascals\n6:00. Jackie Gleason Show *\n1:00 Western Theatre ,\n7:00 Gale Storm Show *\n3:00 True Story \u2022\n7:30 Hey Jeannie *\n3:30 Detective's Diary *\n8:00 Gunsmoke *\n4:00 Hopalong Cassidy\n8:30 Two For The Money *\n5:00 John Wayne Theatre\n9:00 The Buccaneers\n6:00 Trouble With Father\n9:30 Lone Wolf\n6:30 People Are. Funny *\n10:00 The Late Show\n7:00 Perry Como (C) *\n1\n8:00 Caesar's Hour *             '\nSUNDAY\n9:00 George Gobel'*\n12:30 Good Afternoon\n93:0 Hit Parade *\n1:00 This Is the Life\n10:00 Death Valley Days\n1:30 Oral Roberts\n10:30 Late Movie \"Barricade\"\n2:00 Bowling Time\n3:00 We Believe\nSUNDAY\n3:45-Christian Science\n10:35 Test Pattern\n4:00 See .It Now *\n10:40 Color Test Pattern\n5:00 Annie Oakley\n10:55 Bible Reading\n5:30 You Are There \u2022\n11:00 This Is The Answer\n6:00 Lassie \u00bb\n11:30 Christopher Program\n6:30 Jack Benny *\n12:00 Lake Chelan Boat Races *\n7:00 Ed Sullivan *\n5:30 Hopalong Cassidy\n8:00 G. E. Theater\n6:00 Tales of 77th Bengal\n8:30 Alfred Hitchcock Presents *\nLancers *\n9:00 $64,000 Challenge *\n6:30 Circus Boy *\n\u25a0 9:30 Our Miss Brooks\n7:00 Steve Allen *\n10:00 Errol Flynn Theater\n8:00 Chevy Show *\n10:30 What's My Line\n9:00 Loretta Young \u2022\u25a0\n9:30 Carter Reporter *\n1\n9:40 Molly\n10:05 Malaya Incident\n10:30 The O. Henry Playhouse\n11:00 Cross Current\nKREM TV -\n- Channel 2\nSATURDAY\nSUNDAY\n1:55 Afternoon News\n12:55, Afternoon News\n2:00 Cartoon Time\n1:00 Cartoon Time\n2:30 Roy Rogers\n1:30 Prophetic Herald\n3:30 Gene Autry\n2:00 Faith For Today\n4:30 KREM Cartoons-\n2:30 Living In Balance\n5:00 Bowling\n3:00 College Press\n6:00 Major Fights\n3:30 Medical Horizons.\"\n7:00 City Detective\n4:00 Dean Pike\n7:30 Famous Film Festival *\n4:30 Open Hearing\n9:00 Lawrence Welk *\n5:00 Playhouse 2\n-10 too Ozark Jubilee *\n6:00 You Asked For It\n10:30 Million Dollar Theatre\n6:30 Hollywood Film Theatre\n8:00 Kate Smith (OTO)\n\u2022 9:00 Sunday Spectacular\n(Warner Bros. Features)      |\n(Prodrome subject to change\nby stations without notice.)          |\nam _____\nlinen ______\nH___   U_I_HHB\nand h_e_ he\n___nn_ _r.__\nBHfi   HEIHB\n_____   _M_lD.ii\n_nn_ _\u201ea\n____ ______\nrn_ E-nnn ana\n______ __d_\n___iaa_ _\u201e__\n_____   __H\n20. Af.\nfee\ntion-\nate\n22. Norse\ngod\n23. Loose\nhanging\npoint\n24. Seed\nvessel\n26. Slice\n27. Game bird\n28. Corroded\n29. Compensate\n30. Not      ;    i\nwinnings\n31. A'specialist   40. Metal\n33. Prices ot       41. Fairy\npassage queen\nYeltu-sy's Answer\n36. River\n(Russ.)\n37. Barrier\n38. Species\nof pier\n(arch.)\nACROSS DOWN\nL Cut of beef     _ A primer\nO.Whlp 2. A rushing\nhandles onward\n11. Boredom 3. Girl's\n12. A Great name\nLake              i. Animal\n13. Female fat\nahu                0. Bind\n14. A relative       6. Stir\n15. Song for violently\ntwo                7. Stunted\n16. Skill \u2022    , object\n17. Article 8. Grampus\n(Fr.) 9. Micro-\nIS. Compass spores\npoint 10. Disney\n(abbr.) character\n19. One's 16. Sloths\nrelatives        19. Low\n20. Turkish Island\nheaddress\n21. Aegean\nisland\n24. Small horse\n25. Period\nof time\n26. Against\n27. Small eet\n29. Tiny pool\nof water\n82. Flow\n33. Obese\n3. Farm\nanimal\n35. Bone\n36. Place\n37. Stinging\ninsect\n39. Speak\n_U Minister's\nhouse\n42. River\n(Fr.)   .\n43. Chang*\n44. Girl's\nname\n(po\u00bb\u00bb.) \u2014&+\n45. Explosion\nDAILY CBYFTOQDOTE \u2014 Here's how to work Itj\nAXYDLBAAXR\nIt LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Is used\nfor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the wordB are all hints,\nEach day the code letters are different\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nMSSQVSLL      BT      KUXDDXU,      WMSJ\n1\n7-\n3\nT-\nr-\nl\n6\n7-\ne\n9\nr-\nrr\n^i\nll-\nrr\nV\/l\nIf\nis-\n%\n16\n%\n17\nra\n%\n^\n\u00bb\n%\n20\nil\n21\n23,\n^A\n24\n%\n4\nir\ni\n26\n\u00a7\n31\nrt\n23\n%\n29\n32.\nI\n33\n^\n%\n34\n17\"\n%\n3b\n|\n37\n30\nii\"\nto\ni\n41\n4.\"\n1\n\u00ab\n44\n#\n45\"\nm\nXVV        HUGSQ.        \"WM X W ' L\nUGHMXUQ    OXUMXD.\nM G Dl\" \u2014\nYesterday's Crvptoqoote-OPINIONS CANNOT SURVIVE\nIF ONE HAS NO CHANCE TO FIGHT FOR THEM\u2014\nTHOMAS MANN.\nDistributed by Klnc Features Syndicate\nI\nI    t\n '-\u25a0    \u2022      I III' - ll\nSMAU INVESTMENT   -   LARGE RETURNS\nThat's the Want Ad Story       PHONE   1844\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nALL CARPENTER WORK, CON-\ncrete and cement floors, sanding,\nfloor laying, gyproc joint filling,\nchimneys and fireplaces. Guaranteed, free estimate. Ph. 1437-R\nWE REMODEL ROOMS, KIT-\nchens, verandas. New roofs,\nfootings, kitchen cupboards. Apply Box 289, Nelson,\nYOUNG MARRIED WOMAN DE-\nsires part-time position as steno-\ngrapher. Phone 1044-R.    \t\nTRUCK AND TRAILER AVAIL-\nable tor pole hauling. Phone\n476-R-l or write Box 382, Nelson.\nGARDENS   PLOWED\u2014REASON-\nable. Ph. 1968-R, J. McGovern.\nJOB AS CARPENTER, FINISHER\nBox 97, Castlegar.\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nVANCOUVER ISLAND RESORT\nlodge, just outside Victoria, 18\nrooms, (4 acres), magnificent\nsea view, completely furnished,\neverything first class, established business. Further particulars\nBox 3630, Nelson Dally News.\nMACHINERY\n(Continued)\nAttention\nLoggers and\nAUTqMOTIV.\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\nSACRIFICE SALE\nKaslo's only restaurant.\nNew kitchen equipment\nInterior redecorated, unbelievably\nlow price. Phone Mrs. Taylor,\n Balfour.\nFOR SALE - NEI_50NTutiNESS\nsuitable for lady. Cash or terms\nBox 3509, Nelson Daily News,\nLICENCED HOTEL -APPLY\nRossland Realty, Rossland, B.C.\nMACHINERY\n1\n4J_  H.  P.\nWaterloo No. 30 with 8\"\nplow with  rolling coulter\ndisc harrow 12\"\nGeneral purpose Cultivator\nTwo-row Seeder\nTwo Wheel Weights\nSPECIAL SALE PRICE\nachinery\n\u201e Co. Ltd.\nP.O. Box 230 Phone 18\nNelson, B.C.\nNO TRICKS! .\nNO, GIMMICKS !\nNO GIVEAWAYS !\nYou don't get a free bag of\nfopcorn when you buy a\ninning used machine. Your\nwife doesn't get a free pair\nof nylons. But you do get a\ndependable machine, at an\nhonest price, backed by Fin-\nning's generous warranty. So\nif you're looking for a fair\ndeal on dependable equipment\n. . . see us!\nCAT D6 Tractor (1950) Cat cable\nangledozer, Hyster winch, and\nguards. Thoroughly checked and\nrepaired in our shops! Bonded\nBuy,    90-day    warranty,    f.o.b.\ngSgTL $13,750\nCAT D4 Tractor (1948) Cat hyd.\nangledozer. No. 44 PCU. Looks\nand runs like new! Bonded Buy.\n90-day warranty, $7000\nf.o.b. Nelson. FT-3453. **\" \"\"\"\nINT. TD-18A (1951) Isaacson\nhyd. angledozer, Carco winch,\nguards. In good shape. Buy and\nTry, 3-day  trial,  f.o.b.  Nelson.\njfe $10,000\nINT. TD14A (1952) Pullman angledozer, Carco winch, guards.\nRunning gear 50%. Unit cleaned,\npainted.   Buv   and   Trv.   3-dav\nFT-.4ef9ob:_.Verno.n:.. $8950\nFINNING TRACTOR\n&  EOU1PMENT\nCO. LTD.\nPhone 137 - Nelson\nPhone JU-62281 - Cranbrook\nSALE - PM MODEL 19A D.D.,\nslightly used, with 2 bars and\nchain, $100 off new price. R.\nDauphinais, Phone 48-X, Salmo.\nWe have a complete stock of\nMorse Chain\nSprockets\nGear Reducers\nDodge\nTransmission\nProducts\nCome in and discuss\nany problems\nwith us.\nWRITE, PHONE or WIRE\nLTD.\nMACHINE SHOP\n324 Vernon St.     Ph. 593\nNelson, B. C.\nCAN BE SEEN FRIDAY\nAND SATURDAY\nPROPERTY. HOUSES,\nPARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\niContinucdi\n13,000 Miles\nThunderbird engine, radio,\nwhite walls, dual exhausts.\nOnly $2495\nThis is exceptional value\nSee it and you'll agree\nMOTORS LTD.\nNash, Hudson, Volkswagen\n323 Nelson Ave.      Ph. 1454\nONE COMPLETE SAWMILL\nwith diesel power unit. Cheap\nPhone 3495, Castlegar.\t\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\nChevrolet\nle\n1957 New Oldsmobile\nHardtop\n1957 New Olds. Sedan\n1957 New Chev. Belair\nSedan\n1956 Chevrolet Sedan\n1955 Chevrolet Coach\n1955 Chevrolet Sedan\n1955 Pontiac Coach\n1954 Olds. Sedan\n1954 Austin Sedan\n1954 Mercury Sedan\n1952 Austin Sedan\n1952 Plymouth Sedan\n1951 Plymouth Sedan\n1950 Plymouth Coupe\n1949 Meteor Sedan\nPickups .. . Pickups\n1957 New Chev. Pickups\n1956 Chev. 4-dr. Station-\nWagon\n1956 Chev. 2-dr. Station\nWagon\n1956 Dodge 4-dr. Station\n. Wagon\n1956 Fargo Automatic\nPickup\n1955 Ford Panel -\u25a0\n1955 Ford Station Wagon\n1954 Ford Sedan Dely.\n1954 Chevrolet Pickup\n1953 Pontiac Sedan Dely.\n1953 Dodge Station Wgn.\n1951 Chev. Sedan Dely.\n1949 Dodge Pickup\nTERMS . . . TRADES\nYOU'D BE PROUD\nTo Own One of These\n'55 Plymouth Coupe $1785\n'55 Plymouth 4-dr. $1785\nRadio\n'54 Zephyr 4-Dr. $1250\n'52 Dodge 4-Dr. $1095\n'52 Vanguard 4-Dr. $595  '\n'51  Pontiac 4-Dr. $895\n4\u2014'51 Chevs. from $795\n'50 Dodge 2-Dr. $695 '\nRadio\n'49 Plymouth 4-Dr. $485\n'48 Olds. 2-Dr. $495\nAutomatic.\n'32 Ford 4-Dr. '$50\nPlus Licence.\n'52 Dodge '\/2-Ton $775\nSUPERIOR MOTORS\n(NELSON) Ltd.\nYour Dodge - DeSoto Dealer\n\"BUY A SUPERIOR CAR\"\nBUERGE\nMotors Ltd.\n323 Vernon St   Nelson, B C.\nPhones 35 and 36\nFINANCING A CAR? BEFORE\nyou buy your new or late model\ncar see us about our low cost\nfinancing service with complete\ninsurance coverage. New cars 30\nmonths. Contact Wm. Kalyniuk\nAgencies at 1777 and save\nmoney.\nFOR SALE BY OWNER - 1954\nHillman sedan, heater, radio,\nspotlight. Good tires. Excellent\nmechanical condition, $250 down,\nbalance GMAC. Phone 1589-Y,\n418 Nelson Ave.\nFOR SALE - 1950 PONTIAC SE-\ndan, no down payment. Take\nover balance of payments. Apply J. Myers, Lakeside Auto\nCourt, before 5 p.m.\n1953 VANGUARD, GOOD CONDI-\ntion throughout. No reasonable\ncash offer turned down. Phone\n1925 after 6.\nTANDEM AND SINGLE AXLE\ndump trucks with steady work.\nPhone 5S7-X. Trail.\nCHAIN SAW AND 1NTERNATION-\n,. al truck. Phone 1602-X..\nPROPERTY,   HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\nSPECIALS\n1\u2014A 2-B.R. home with L.R.,\nD.R., K., utility room and\nbathroom,all on 1 floor. Full\nbasement and coal H.A. furnace. Located on 2 level lots\nin Fairview. 30' x 120'. Garage\non property. $7800\nFull price ^' *\"\"'\nWith substantial cash payment down and balance on\neasy terms.\n2\u2014An older type 2-B.R. home\nwith L.R., D.R. and K. on\nmain floor. 2 large B.R.s and\nbathroom upstairs. 1 _ lots In\n\u2122r\u2122:i__ 1$4500\nSmall cash payment may take\nthis one, and easy terms on\nbalance.\nSMART EXCLUSIVES!\n1\u2014A duplex, fairly close in and\nin very good condition. It is\nlocated on one only lot. Both\nsuites now occupied by splendid tenants. Taxes only $110\nper year. Full price of this\nisTnlyUnSal\u00b0W       $5000\nWith considerable discount\nfor cash!\n2\u2014A N.S. property with 5 rooms\nand located on Vi acre. Ample\nwater supply. 3-piece plumbing in bathroom. L.R. with\nfireplace, 3 B.R.s, large family K. and good cement basement. One of prettiest locations on N.S. and some beach.\nFull\nprice  .-\t\nOr good reduction for cash!\n3\u2014A 3-B.R. home on Latimer\nSt. Contains L.R., D.R., K.,\nbathroom and 3 B.R.s. Wired\nfor TV and has gas piped in.\nH.W. furnace and heats very\neconomically. Located on corner 4 lots. Taxes very low as\njust outside of city. Double\ngarage on property. 2-roomed\nself-contained suite in base-\nrmeeducedPr. $\u00bb750\nWith about $2300 cash payment, balance $50 per month\nplus 6% interest.\n4\u2014A 3-B.Tt, home on Stanley St.\nHas L.R., 3 B.R.s, K. and\nbathroom. Not a new house\nbut in fairly good repair. Full\nbasement and H.W. heated.\u2014\nLarge garden spot. <t.f\u00a3KAA\nFull price is only *PO<W\"\nWith only S2000 c?.h payment\nrequired.\nHerb Peacoclk\nReal Estate and Insurance Agency\n532 WARD ST. PHONE 6S\n$7500\nLOST  -  BLAC'C  \"'ALLET.\nward. Phone 1038-R.\nRE-\nBIGHT PRICE LISTINGS\nFAMILY  STYLE 3-BEDROOM\nHOME, 900 BLK. SILICA ST.\nStone.and concrete foundation,\nWired for range, glass lined\nPrice^r tank.      $485Q\n\u25a0    Terms to 'be arranged.\"\nImmediate occupancy.\nSEE THIS \u2014 NORTH SHORE\n1\u2014Sandy Beach, i acre level\nland between secondary road\nand lake. Garden, lawns and\nattractive trees. Dwg. 4 rooms\nand complete bathroom. \u2014\nStone  foundation;   all  year\np_?eL\u00b0wtaxes'..... $5500\nBUNGALOW - CONVENIENT\n600 BLOCK MILL STREET\nTwo-bedroom bungalow with\nlarge living room, fireplace,\n1 dining room, kitchen with\nbuilt-in cupboards and modern\nbathroom. Full concrete basement, hot air furnace; garage.\nCome in and make arrangements to see this newly decorated home. Terms. CfigAft\nPriced at   3>0_UU\nNORTH SHORE\nLOW PAYMENT\n2\u20141.24 acres above mutels. \u2014\nSmall 4-room bungalow; concrete foundation. Excellent\ngarden spot. Oil circulatory\nheater and gas ^KO^H\nfor cooking. ?0^3U\n$1500 Down, Terms.\nHAND PICKED BARGAIN\n4\u2014Nearly new, completely modern bungalow at 6-Mile. \u2014\nLevel land, 100' x 200'. Fully\ninsulated; 4 rooms and dinette. If it must be modern,\n5_Jtt   $7900\nHOME AND INCOME\nAPARTMENT HOUSE\n900 BLK. CARBONATE ST.\nFour  suites,   corner   location,\nconvenient to city centre on\nbus route. Full basement, hot\nair furnace. Mostly furnished.\nIncome $185.00 per \u2022Jft'trtO\nmonth. Cash price   \u2022I'CdU'V\nOr $8900 on terms with\n$3000 down. '\nBEST BUY IN TOWN\n600 BLOCK LATIMER ST.\nModern bungalow style with\ntwo bedrooms and bathroom\ndown.  Extra   space  up. Two\nlandscaped lots. Reduced f-om\n$9250, to \" - \"\nonly\nTerms   can   be   arranged.\nDISTINCTIVE - MODERN\n6\u2014Ultra - modern bungalow, 5\nrooms; fully insulated, including floor; concrete foundation, floor furnace, Attractive L.R. with fireplace, a\ndream kitchen and dinette.\nNearly new and complete. \u2014\nTwo acres, Johnstone road.\nCash\nprice\nOr $11,900 on Terms.\nSPARKLING BEAUTY\nLOCATION\n7\u2014Ultra modern. Six rooms, all\nattractive, plastered, oak\nfloors,   ipsulated,   fireplace,\nhot water heat, monodors. attached garage, double plumbing.   Two   lots,   convenient,\nview location.   $13 500\nCash nnce .       T\u2122\",T\nOr $13,900 with $3900 down\nand easy montlhy payments.\nRemember if it's Rosling,\nit's appraised.\nT. D, Rosling\n& SON LTD.\nM. (Trader) Parker, Salesman\n568 Ward St .       Phone 717\n$11,500\nList Your House\nFunds on Hand to Get the\nDeals Closed\nMANY BUYERS\nWAITING\nC. W. APPLEYARD\n& Co. Ltd.\nPhone 269\nPACKAGE\nINSURANCE\nOur Business Rates are\nTHE LOWEST.\nfor Safe, Dependable\nINSURANCE,\nMeHardy\nAgencies Ltd.\n554 Ward St.\nPhone 135\nAPT. HOUSE FOR SALE. 5 SELF-\ncontanied apartments with one\nhousekeeping.room. All in good\ncondition. Revenue, $335 monthly. Vi block of business section.\nFor further details apply 414\nFalls St., Phone 1184-Y. Idea!\nfor couple. Reasonable.\nNEW 4-ROOM HOUSE NEAR\nhigh school in Castlegar. 3% acre\nfarm, 4_ miles from ferry on\nRobson ride, some buildings and\nfruit trees. Apply. P.O. Box 435.\nor 627 Third Avenue, Castlegar,\nB.C.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\n(Continued)\nVALUE WITH COMFORT\nIdeal Family Home, nine years\nold. 2 bedrooms down and 2\nbedrooms up. L.R., D.R., modern kitchen, bathroom on main\nfloor, full basement with economical automatic oil heat.\u2014\nLocated on four beautifully\ndeveloped lots with lawns,\nflower beds, garden, assorted\nnew fruit bearing trees, near\ntransportation; separate' garage, Could not be replaced for\nselling price      $| 4,500\nD.P.'J5500, balance long terms.\nMake an appointment right\nnow to see this.\nHOME WITH A VIEW\nBrand new 2-bedroom. large\nkitchen with dining area,\nbeautiful living room with picture window, separate garage.\nYou'll be proud to own this\noutstanding Cin ejAft\nvalue. Cash price \u2022P!U\u00bb3Ul'\nOr $11,000 with $600 D.P.\nLet me show you this choice\nhome.\nBUSINESS OF YOUR OWN\nCafe at Kootenay Bay doing a\ngood business, forced ,to sell\n\u2022 feW!!: 56600\nWith $4000 D.P. to responsible\nparty.\nSMALL DOWN PAYMENT\nThree-bedroom horhe located\nZiS 54500\nWith $750 D.P., balance as rent.\nKOOTENAY LAKE FRONTAGE\n9.93 acres with 235.62 feet lake\nfrontage. Good access road,\nlevel frontage room for 2 or\nthree cabins. Buy now and\nenjoy our beautiful lake this\nsummer. Price for $1760\nquick cash sale ...... T\nWANT TO MAKE MONEY?\nEstablished store and cafe\nserving North Shore motels\nand residents. 2-storey building including three - bedroom\nliving quarters. Strategically\nlocated. Good reason for selling. $7500 down payment, balance easy terms.\nSPECIAL\nSmall two-room home on two\nlots. Price, $2100\nfor cash  <k\u00ab\u00abvv\nBUILDING LOTS\nN.H.A. approved seventeen locations to choose from in new\n' subdivision. Priced from $1600\nto $1100. Cash or terms. Buy\nnow for your future new\nhome.\nOUTSTANDING VALUE\nNew three-bedroom home. \u2014\nFun $9500\nWith only $2500 D.P., balance\neasy terms.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\n(Continued)\nFOR SALK 3 BEDROOM HOUSE\nPhone 771-L.\n6-ROOM HOUSE FOR SALE, OFF\n, Baker St. Phone 703-L.\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nFrigidaire has just announced a\nreduction in price on practically\nall Frigidaire refrigerators,\nranges, washers and dryers. See\nus today and save on these new\nprices.\n*\\* '.-.*''\nDid you know consumers report\n\u2014a non-profit organization reporting on various makes of\ncleaners\u2014lists the Eureka No, 1\nbest buy of all cleaners. Just\nthink, for $89,95 you can have a\ntop-notch vacuum cleaner complete with tools.\n. *   *   *\nAlso the Eureka Deluxe 910-C\ncleaner with a powerful 1 horsepower motor for only $99.95\ncomplete with tools.\n* *   *\nOne or two used electric or gas\nfully reconditioned washers for\nsale in our furniture department downstairs.\n* *   *\nHave you replaced that Lino for\na new exciting pattern? We have\nmany new ones in.\nMcLENNAN,\nMcFEELY &\nPRIOR LTD.\n1300 Baker St.\nNelson, B. C.\nWO!.\nAGENCIES\nReal Estate. Low Cost Insurance\nand Auto Financing\n534 Josephine St.       Phone 1777\nNelson, B.C.\nFOR SALE - NORTH SHORE\nresidence, VA mile west of Nelson ferry, modern construction,\n7 years old, 1750 sq. ft., all one\nfloor, part basement, auto, oil\nheat, oak floors in most of house.\nLarge master bedroom with private bath ensuite, L-shaped L.R.\nand D.R. with fireplace, 2 smaller B.R.'s, large panelled playroom, second bathroom, utility\nroom. Completely insulated, storm windows and screen\ndoors. 100 ft. frontage on West\nArm with lovely, sandy beach.\nProperty about 2-3 acre, landscaped with lawn, gardens and\nfruit trees. Price- $15,000. Phone\n383.\nFOR SALE IN KIMBERLEY -\nProperty between City Hall and\ntheatre. Good business location.\nLot 120x30. Six room house could\nbe renovated or moved off lot.\n$6000. Apply Box 22, Kimberley,\nor phone Ried 2-2329.\n5-ROOM HOUSE - BATHROOM,\nfull basement, phone, power.\nSchool bus. 80 acres, 25 cleared,\noutbuildings, 4 miles Nakusp.\nPrice $7000, $2300 down. Box 175,\nNakusp.\t\nFOR SALE - 20-ACRE FARM,\nlarge buildings, electricity and\nplumbing, phone, 10 miles west\n, of Nelson. What offers? Box 361,\nNelson.\n2-BEDROOM BUNGALOW, FUL-\n!y modern, less than year old.\nOil furnace. Lovely view. Near\nnew hospital site. Phone 808-X.\n2 LOTS IN KINNAIRD - 100x150\nft., reasonable. Apply John A.\nGorkoff, 115 Chatham St., Nel-\nson. phone 1365-Y.\nHOUSE, COTTAGE AND CABIN\nat Balfour,, no reasonable cash\noffer refused, terms if. desired.\nV Hoskln, R.R. 1, Nelson.\nNEW, COMPLETE, MODERN\nhouse, never been occupied. Box\n3503, Nelson Daily News.\nBUILDING LOT ON NORTH\nShore overlooking lske and city\nPhone 692-R-l.\nFOR SALE OR RENT\u2014100 ACRES\nfarm, 20 acres cultivated. Running water. L. Mosura, Ymir.\nFOR SALE - 2 LOTS, 3 - ROOM\nhouse. Lights. Water. Mrs. .M.\nRindler, Slocan City.\n15 ACRES OF LAND FOR SALE.\nNew house, young fruit trees. Ap-\nply Nick Kabatoff, Thrums.\nCORNER LOT, 60'xllO', ON 9TH\nand Fell. Phone 1581-L-2.\nNELSON READY-\nMIX CONCRETE\nLtd.\nPhone 871\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, MAY 4, 1957\u201411\nRENTALS\nSMALL OFFICE AND WARE-\nhouse with shelving conveniently located In Truck Terminus\nBldg. on ground floor. Phone 77\nfor particulars.\n2 BEDROOM HOUSE FOR RENT\nFurnished, close in. Adults only,\nNo dogs. Box 3646, NeIso,n Daily\nNews.\nGOOD PLACE FOR BACHELOR-\nWarm, furnished room for rent.\nPhone 1850-L.\n3 BEDROOM HOUSE FOR RENT\non Carbonate St. G. Kirkham.\nPhohe 77, Salmo.\nFOR RENT - 3-ROOM APART-\nment. Adults only. Call 311 Vernon St.\ntlEWLY DECORATED ,3 - ROOM\nself contained suite, near ferry\non lake front. Phone 1095-L\n4-ROOM FURNISHED APART-\nment. Private, Apply Box 1954,\nNelson Daily News,\nHOUSEKEEPING OR SLEEPING\nrooms, furnished, weekly or\nmonthly rates. 171 Baker St.\nBY MONTH - 3-ROOM COTTAGE\npartially furnished, $30. Phone\n46 or apply to 1022 Beatty Ave.\nLIVESTOCK,  POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nFOR HIGH EGG PRODUCTION:\nROP sired W. Leghorn X New\nHampshire crossings. For eggs\nand meat; ROP sired New-\nHampshires X White Rocks.\nSchlaffke's Hatchery and Poul-\ntry Farm, New Denver, phone 84.\nCOW FOR SALE- - RECENTLY\nfreshened.    Alex    Koorbatoff,\nGlade.  B.C. .\nFOR SALE - 1 YOUNG COW, 1ST\ncalf; 1 cow, third calf. Apply Box\n446, New Denver.\nLOGGING HORSES FOR SALE-\nN. K. Poohachow, Winlaw.\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\nWAN-TED - ORDERS FOR FIR\nand larch poles. Peeled or un-\npeeled. Apply Fred Popoff, Slocan Park, B.C.\nWANTED - CLEAN COTTON\nrags without buttons, 10c lb\ndeliverer! to The Dally News.\nROOM AND BOARD\nSELF CONTAINED APT. CLOSE\nin. Phone 357-R.\n3-ROOM FURNISHED SUITE -\nClose In. Phone 653-R\nHOUSEKEEPING   ROOM   FOR\nrent. 608 Front Street.\nTRAILERS\nDEALERS IN ALL TYPES OF\nused equipment, mill, mine and\nlugging.supplies, new and used\nwire rope, pipe and fittings\nchain, steel plate and shapes\nAlias iron _ Metals Ltd., 250\nPrior St., Vancouver. B-C, Ph\nPAcific 6357.\n5-ROOM HOUSE ON 4 LOTS, CAN\nbe divided. Apply 1723 Stanley St.\nPLANET JR. GARDEN-CULTIVA-\ntor, with parts; strong garage\ndours; horse-drawn plow, harrow\nand little used cultivator; some\nwire. Dr. J. J. Carney, R.R. I.\nNelson. \u00ab\nRAPID GROvV, THE OK1GINAL\nspray on plant food. 1 lb. does\nas much as 100 lbs. of regular\nfertilizer. Good for everything\nthat grows. Columbia Trading.\n\u25a0902 Front Street.\n12'~FLAT_BOTTOM\" ROWBO AT,\ncnmoMe deen freeze unit; nine\nthre=c1mB outfit, boy's bicycle;\n125 ft. garden hose and sprinkler\npi-. iw\u00abv- irpii(T,or. R.R. 1, Nelson\nFORI-D HOT MR FURNACE-\nwith air conditioning unit with\nautomatic coal stoker, nractical-\nly new. Ennuire Box 3631, Nelson Dailv News.\nUNUfUAL LINO BARGAIN -\nFrom Scotland, Mi\" thickness inlaid marble tiles at 10% cents:\nV<\" at WA cents; \"La Salle' 945\nGranville. Vancouver, B.C.\nCOW MANURE FOR SALE, $8.00\nper 3 cubic yard load, delivered\nin city.' Phone 1837, W. A. Anderson.\nHEALTH FOOD CENTRE. OPEN\nday and evening. 924 Davies.\nGOOD USED TV AND CHESTER-\nfield suite for sale. Phone 1590.\nDEEP FREEZE - 27 CU. FT., 1\nyear old, $350. Phone 582-Y-3.\nCAVALRY SADDLE, 2 BRIDLES\n(1 new). Phone 1580.\nFULLER BRUSH AGE-NT-GER-\nry Kohnke. Phone 782-L-3.\nFOR SALE 24 FOOT WESTCRAFT\nAluminum U.S. Mfg House\nTrailer in A 1 condition. Fully insulated for cold weather. Ideal\nfor camping or living in outlying\ndistrict. Equipped with gas\nrange, gas refrigerator, oil\nheater with fan, two single beds,\nextra gas tanks, electric water\nheater and lights. Has extra\nheavy duty axle and tires. Electric brakes and controls. Interior\nbirch paneling. Also many extras. Priced at only $1650.00 cash.\nThis price includes duty. See at\n.Jack Preece home Grey Creek\nB.C. Phone 2-Q.\n30' ANDERSON HEAVY DUTY\nTrailer, indoor plumbing, fully\nfurnished. $1200 down will handle.\nCan be seen at Crecent Beach\nAuto Court, evenings.\t\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST - A YALE KEY ON WARD\nbetween Vernon and Carbonate.\nContact Nelson Daily News office.\nROOM AND BOARD FOR YOUNG\nman. Preferably up town. Phone\n999-X.\nWANTED - ROOM AND BOARD\nby young working man. Phone\nRoom 9, Royal Hotel after 7.\nHOTELS and MOTELS\nHAVE BREAKFAST ON US \u2014\nwith the money you save at low\nsummer rates. Canadian money\naccepted. Exchange rate. Colonial Hotel. Spokane, Wash.\nLOST - BLACK ONYX WITH\ndiamond and initial D. Reward.\nPhone 834-L.\nPERSONAL\nAUTHORS INVITED SUBMIT\nMSS all types (including Poems)\nfor book publication. Reasonable\nterms. Stockwell Ltd., Ilfra-\ncombe, England, (Est. 1898).\nALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS -\nFridays. Box 493, phone 366-R\nor 483-R.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS   AND   MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nE. W  WIDDOWSON _ CO.\nAssayers. 301 Josephine St., Nelson\nH   S   ELMES,, ROSSLAND, B.C\nAssayer Chemist Mine Rep.\nENGINEERS   AND   SURVEYORS\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, MEIC\nBC Land Surveyor. P Eng. (Civil)\n218 Gore St.   Nelson,. Phone 1238\nG.\"W.   BAERG,   B.C.\nLand Surveyor\n373 Baker St.. Nelson, Phone 1118\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nMachine   Shop Acetylene and\nelectric welding, m o t o r rewinding   Phpne 593      324 Vernon St\nNrlann latht Nmdh\nCirculation Dept Phone 1844\nPrice per single copy 6c Monday\nto Friday, 10c on Saturday\nSubscription Rates\nBy carrier per wee-\nin advance '   S5c\nBy Mall in Canada outside Nelson:\nOne month       ? 1.25\nThree months      5 3.50\nSix monthB   \u201e   $ 6.50\nOne year       $12.00\nBy mail to United Kingdom or\nthe United States\nOne month           $ l.TJ\nThree months    $ 5.00\nSix months  - _    $ 9.50\nOne year       $18.00\nWhere extra postage Is required\nabove rates plus postage\nFor Delivery by carrier In Cran-\nDrook phone Mrs. Wm. Stevely;\nIn Kimberley Mr. G. A Bate;\nand\nIn Rossland Mrs. Rom Saundry;\nIn Trail Mrs. Syd Spooner.\nMANY DISHES\nThe Canadian Pacific's newest\nliner, the Empress of England,\ncarries more than 35,000 pieces\nof china and earthenware.\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\nJOHN DEERE\nTRACTORS\nwith a reputation that\nCAN'T BE BEAT!\nSEE US TODAY\nMAC'S\nWELDING & EQUIPMEN-r\nCO.. LTD.\n614 Railway St      Nelson, B.C.\nPHONE 1402\nPEEBLES      PEEBLES      PEEBLES\nPick of the Market\nQAULITY USED CARS\n1953 Ford 2-Door Sedan\nCustom Air Conditioner,  Seat Covers,\nGood Rubber, Clean.\nOnly $1195\n1953 Plymouth 2-Dr. Sdn.\nCustom Air Conditioner.  Seat Covers,\nOverdrive. Looks and Runs Like New.\nOur Price\nOnly $1295\n1950 Plymouth Sedan\nHeater, Good Rubber, New Paint. Clean.\nOnly $495\n1949 Chev. 2-Dr. Sedan\nHeater, Good Rubber. Nice and Clean.\nOnly $395\n1949 Pontiac 2-Dr. Sedan\nRadio, Heater, New Paint, Good Tires.\nVery Clean. A Bargain at\nOnly $495\n1952 Pontiac Custom\nSedan   \u2022\nAir Conditioner, Good Rubber.\nA Dandy Family Car. Priced to Clear.\nOnly $895\n1951 Chevrolet Deluxe\n4-Door Sedan. Automatic. Custom\nHeater, Good Rubber. Clean Inside and\nOut. Priced at\nOnly $895\n1950 Chev, 4-Dr. Sedan\nNew Paint, Good Rubber, Heater, etc.\nA Good Buy at\nOnly $695\n1948 Pontiac 2-Dr.\nStreamliner\n6-Cyl.  Custom Radio,  Custom  Heater.\nGood Rubber. Seat Covers.\nPriced Down to\nOnly $365\ni\ni\n1949 Chev. 2-Dr. Sedan\nHeater, Seat Covers, Good Tires, etc,\nBargain Price\nOnly $395\nCHRYSLER -PLYMOUTH - MBIi^MNyiMf\ny%*>\/&?^ \u2666 <m\u00a34*rW.C:\n 12\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, MAY 4,1957\nENTERTAINING and EDUCATIONAL\nVIEWMASTER\nProjector (fascinating colored pictures for all)  $14.95\nTheatre (the screen for above)  1.75\nViewer (3-dlmenslon colored pictures for Individual\nviewing)    2.95\nDeluxe Glftpack (viewer, flash attachment, 2 packages _\nreels)  9.75\nREELS\nParables of Jesus \u2014'3 reels  1.50\nMiracles of Jesus \u2014 3 reels  _ \u201e  1.50\nWizard of Oz \u2014 3 reels  1.50\nBobby the Bunny \u2014 3 reels , .........;  1.50\nRobin Hood \u2014 3 reels  1.50\nCowboy 8tar\u00bb \u2014 3 reels  \u201e  1.50\nSpace Cadets \u2014 3 reels  1.50\nand scores of other interesting subjects.\n\u00a3\u00ab*<<ft_i\n-\u00a3__\u00ab*, C<\u00bb4_!_\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nBitter Editorials Appear\nIn Europe On McCarthy\nLONDON (AP) - The death of\nSenator Joseph McCarthy has renewed in European newspapers\nmuch of the long - dormant passions that once surged around his\nsame.\nNearly all British papers gave\nthe story prominent frontpage\nplay, along with bitter editorials\nof \"McCarthyism.\"\nIn France; all papers referred\n__PLAYMOR_\nFor The Big Week-End\nDfllUE\n9-1 TONITE\nROC-O-TONES\nWITH JANET\nPlaying Modern Tunes \u2014 Lively\nWesterns \u2014 Smooth Waltzes\nRock 'n Roll\nFor  a\nComplete\nAutomotive\nService\nINCLUDING:\nif Body, Fender and\nPainting\nif Automatic Transmission (a specialty)\nif Front End Alignment\nif Tire Balancing\nif Frame Straightening\nif Wheel Straightening\nSEE\nMICKEY  McEWEN\nBEACON\nMotors Ltd.\n701   Baker St.\nPHONES  578-579\nto McCarthy as \"the witch\nhunter.\" The Communist L'Hu-\nmanite said he \"was famous for\nhis relentlessness in using methods- worthy of the inquisition\nagainst communism.\"\nThe word \"inquisition\" was\nused in' the London Conservative\npaper, The Daily Telegraph. Austrian papers announced the death\nwith such headlines as \"Snooper\nSenator McCarthy Dies.\"\nTypical of British comment Is\nan editorial in the Liberal News\nChronicle: \"He built a monstrous\nmyth and made millions believe it\nbut like a fool he overplayed it\nand destroyed both' the myth and\nhimself. America was the cleaner\nby his fall, and is cleaner by his\ndeath.\"\nNOTHING BUT OBLIVION\nOther British comment:\nDaily Herald (Labor): \"He used\nhis position to hound men whose\nonly crime was love of freedom of\nthought.\" \u25a0*$&.\nDaily Express (independent):\n\"He destroyed the innocent with\nthe guilty\u2014that might be his epitaph. Perhaps it is better that he\ndied like this for he had nothing\nto look forward to but oblivion,\nThe Times (independent): \"His\ncareer indicates the great if trans\nient influence which can be obtained in the life of a democratic\ncountry by loud and persistent\nrepetition of the big lie.\"\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILY\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL  TRAINING\nSuite 206 Phone 141\nMedical Arts Building\nHAIGH\nTRU-ART\nBeauty   Salon\nPhone 327\n576 Baker St.\nCAMPBELL,   SHANKLAND\n&  CO.\nChartered Accountants\nAuditors\n576 Baker St. Phone 235\n^ANOTHER D'ARCY SCOTT ATTRACTION^\n..uiY MAN!\" DIG THf 6\/\/,\nsVlO\u00ab TOR'S? COMING TO,\nm**\nHear JOfiNNY CASH tag\nThe Line\", 45 weeks pa (lie Hillbilly\nHil. Parade\n\"There You Go-\nHen CARL PERKINS sins the long he tnide\nfamous. \"Blue Suede Shoes       .      pint hit eurrenl\nQuality hit release \u2014\"Your True Love\"\nSet and hear die mott unusual artist is County\nmusic todty       JERRY LEE LEWIS tnd hil\nPUMPING PIANO\nSee ud hear be-Uiiful WANDA JACKSON tt\nthe tingt her great Capitol releues \"Dou Want\"\nBaby Love* Him\"   .  \"I Golti Know*\n\u2022TWO BANDS\u2014\nJohnny Ctth't TENNESSEE TWO DAND\n\"  IBS BAN\nSTARS OF GRAND OLE OPRY-\nBIG \"D\" JAMBOREE-OZARK\nJUBILEE - RADIO - RECORDS - TV\n^ THE MOST TALKED ABOUT\n\/*  ARTISTS In recorded music\nDINNER FOR MEN OVER 60 YEARS was. a feature of\nLegion Week In Nelson. Over 40 attended the dinner sponsored\nby Canadian Legion Branch 61's entertainment committee. The\nseven pictured above are all over 80 years of age and Charles\nWatts, seated centre, will be 93 today. Left to right, back row,\nAngus MacKenzie, Steve Decker, Michael Moore and John\nBrown; front row,' Fred Moore, Mr. Watts and William Gallagher\/\n\u2014Dally News photo.\nNews of the Day\nRATES: SOo ling, 40o Una ttlnck faea typo: larger typo rate, oti\nraquest Minimum two litis), 10% dlwounUfor prompt payment\nSTORE YOUR FURS\nat Custom Furs, 580 Baker.\nFinals of One-Act Play Festival\ntonight, 8 p.m., Junior High School.\nBabies, Weddings, Portraits.\nVOGUE STUDIO \u2014 PHONE 1552\nOil Paints, Water Colors.\nHOBBY SHOP \u2014 PHONE 1703\nRummage Sale Today.\nSalvation Army, 1:30 p.m.\nA. G. Smith won Granite Road\nWI door prize. Mrs. Rigg won cake.\nB.C. GOV'T EMPLOYEES ASSOC.\nmeeting, Tuesday, May 7, 8 p.m.\nCan. Legion Hall. Refreshments.\nScott Atwater outboards  with\nexclusive   bailamatic   at   Mac's\nWelding and Equipment, Nelson.\nV i\u2014-\nGordon Sutherland .\nPainting, Paperhanging. RR 1,\nPhone 1990, Nelson.\nOne 14 _ ft. car-top boat and 5,\nhorse twin-motor, $225. Star Service, Ymir Road .\nAttention, Summer Home Owners.!!! Clearance Sale on used\nchesterfield suites, studio lounges,\nelectric and coal and wood ranges,\nand complete beds. Also 2 pianos.\nHOME FURNITURE EXCHANGE\nPHONE 1560\nATTENTION, CANADIAN LEGION MEMBERS. QUEEN CITY\nCREDIT UNION CHARTER\nMEETING MONDAY, MAY 6, 8\nP.M. ALL MEMBERS AND\nOTHERS INTERESTED PLEASE\nATTEND.\nPicketing Starts Again\nAt Gaspe Copper Gates\nBy GUY RONDEAU\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nMURDOCHVILLE, Que. <CP>-\nPicketing resumed today for the\nfirst time in more than a week\nat the main gate of the Gaspe\nCopper Mines here.\nFive pickets, members of the\nUnited Steelworkers of America\n(CLC), took up posts near the\ngate. The workers have been on\nstrike since March 11.\nLieut. Gerard Timlin, in charge\nJordan's Ltd.\nWestern Canada's largest distributors of high-style furniture,\noriental rugs and broadloom. A,\nworld-wide reputation built on ser- j\nvice, quality and value. Jordan's'\nexpert carpet laying service avail-'\nable. To vjew samples in your own\nhome, phone Keith McDougald,\n2057-R.\nGolf Club Dance >\nTonight 9:30\nMembers and guests welcome.\nNelson Civic Choir\n, Concert 8 p.m.\nMay 22, Capitol Theatre\nExperienced grill cook wanted.\nApply Shamrock Grill for particulars in mornings.\nHardy Clematis - Large flowered,\npink, purple and red, $2.50 each, at\nCOVENTRY'S, PHONE 962\nDry slab wood for sale, $11.50\nfor 4 ft. cord; $15.50 for 12-inch\ncord. Phone 330-L.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nSTENSON \u2014 Funeral services-\nfor the late Mr. Frederick Stenson\nwill be held Monday at 1:30 p.m.,!\nat St. Paul's-Trinity United Church.!\nRev. E. Donovan Jones will officiate and interment will take place\nin Nelson Memorial Park. Friends\nwishing to pay, their last respects\nmay do so at the Thompson Funer-\nal Home until Monday noon.\nChicken Manure, $1.00 sack delivered. Also top soil, $3.50 yard\ndelivered. Phone 559-X-3.\nFor meals that are diflerent, try\nTHE BALFOUR BEACH INN\nDining Room. Phone 18.\nLakeside Park Lawn Bowling\nClub meeting in Room A, Civic\nCentre, 8 p.m., Tuesday, May 7th.\nAll members requested to attend.\nPainting, Sandblasting, Steam\nCleaning with fully modern equipment, Kootenay Decorators, Phone\n4-K Shoreacres, for free estimates.\nSpecial While They Last-Criscay\ncaps, 79c.\nADRIAN MILLINERY\n259 BAKER ST.\nFOR YOUR NEW HAIR STYLING\nand. permanents, try the Charm\nBeauty Salon, Medical Arts Bldg.,\n.Ste. 211, Phone 1922.\nStandard size doors and frames.\nSpecial sizes made to order.\nT. H. WATERS & CO. LTD.\nPhone 156 - 101 Hall St. \u2022 Nelson\nSpecial Volcanic Fertilizer.  Will\nhot burn. For your garden and\nlawn.\nMAC'S FLOWER SHOP\nThere will be another\nSMORGASBORD at the ROUNDUP ROOM, 5 p.m.-10:30 p.m. on\nSunday, May 5.\nPRE NATAL CLASSES\nwill   commence   at   the   Selkirk\nHealth unit, Monday May 6th. For\ninformation phone 1214.\nPhone 77 for\nall local moving, shipping and\ndistributing.\nSPEEDY DELIVERY\nGE Combination 3-speed. Like new\n$139.50.\nWE PAY CASH FOR USED\nFURNITURE\nBIRCH'S FURNITURE - PH. 47\nDon't forget, Bob Camp, your\nALL STATE AUTO INSURANCE\nAGENT\nwill be at your Simpson Sears\nStore every Saturday. Phone 1490.\nSPENCER SUPPORTS\nDiscount period extended in popular summer material. Dealer: Mrs.\nW. H. Naylor, Box 597, Castlegar,\nPhone 5133.\nCCF Delegates\nBack From Coast\nJ. Campbell of Fernie, G. Smith\nand Tom Wilkinson of Castlegar,\nMrs. Betty Donaldson of Trail and\nJ. Turner of Nelson have returned\nfrom the Coast after attending the\nCCF convention.   -\nH, W. Herridge, who is seeking\nre-election in Kootenay West, spoke\nat some length. His main topic was\nthe proposed development of the\nColumbia River. At the end of the\nconvention a resolution was passed\nurging the provincial government\nto immediately accept the federal\ngovernments offer of $300 million\nfor the construction of a public\npower dam at Mica Creek.\nHerridge spoke also on Veterans'\naffairs and problems concerned\nwith the conservation of natural\nresources.\nThe other federal members also\naddressed the convention. Colin\nCameron of Nanaimo drew enthusiastic applause when he called for\nthe abolition of the H-bomb tests\nand reduction of armament expenditure with the monetary savings\ngoing to increased social welfare\nand reduced taxation.\nTom Hornet of Alberni, said the\nCCF's platform for labor was the\none most closely associated with\nthat of the Canadian trade union\nmovement. He also emphasized\nthat the Social Credit offer of $lot)\na month for old age pensioners\nwas only a basic offer of $60 as\ncompared to CCF's basic proposal\nof $75 with the provincial contribution being matched by the federal government. In addition that\nparty, he said, had made little effort during the last session to obtain a better deal for the older\npeople.\nErhart Regier concentrated on\nhousing and the national health\nscheme. Harold Winch spoke on\npenal reform, divorce legislation\nand the abolition of capital punishment. .\nRandolph Harding, MLA, for Kas-\nlo-Slocan, was elected second vice-\npresident of the B. C. section of\nthe CCF.\nSawlog Scale\nDown This Year\nSawlog scale to date this year in\nNelson Forest District is over 35,-\n000,000 f.b.m. below the fourth-\nmonth total in 1956. In April the\nscale was nearly 8,000,000 below\nApril last year.\nDetailed figures follow:\nSAWLOGS: (f.b.m.) 1956      1957\nFir     8,182,600  7,860,588\nCedar      3,235,974     855,567\nSpruce     10,371,771  8,208,522\nLodgep.  Pine      697,469     873,071\nHemlock      1,695,111  1,232,549\nBalsam         534,563     423,684\nWhite Pine ....      753,745   1,441,267\nYellow Pine ..      369,420     293,171\nLarch      6,339,329  5,505,215\nBirch   776 603\nCottonwood ....      232,939\nTotal:        32,413,697   26,694,237\nTotal to April 30:\n148,196,048 113,192,719\nMINOR PRODUCTS:\nPoles and Piles (lineal feet) 77,283,\n680,206; Mine Timbers (lineal feet)\n25,204, 101,957; Mine Props (cords)\n496, 1181; Hewn Ties (pieces) 345;\nCordwood (cords) 94, 213; Fence\nPosts (cords) 215, 812.\nApple Spray Advised\nFor This Weekend\nCRESTON \u2014 Apple scab spores\nare now mature and infection of\ndeveloping foliage could take place\nat any time when sufficient rainfall occurs, J. E. Swales, district\nhorticulturist, states. He recommends that the first lime sulphur\nspray for control of apple scab\nbe applied in Creston Valley and\nearly sections pf the Kootenay-\nArrow Lakes district by this weekend and, in later sections of the\nKootenay-Arrow Lakes district, the\nfirst apple scab control spray\nshould be completed by next weekend.\nHave The Job Dane Right\nVIC GRAVEC\n\"        LIMITED        **\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nNORWAY'S OLDEST\nMrs. Wilhelmina Olsen, Norway's oldest woman with nine\nchildren and 48 of their descendants, was 107 years old in March,\n1957.\nof the 110-man provincial police\ndetail in the area, gave permission Thursday for picketing to resume. It was stopped April 25\nwhen police enforced a company-\nobtained injunction.\nLieut. Timlin laid down strict\nregulations. Only six men are allowed to picket at one time, they\nmust keep moving and no picket\nmay come closer than 15 feet\nfrom the main entrance or walk\nfarther than 100 feet from either\nside of it. They may carry pla\ncards but intimidating language\nor gestures are forbidden and no\nshelters are allowed.\n\"NO CONTRACT  NO COPPER\"\nPacards carried such slogans\nas: \"No contract, no copper\" and\n\"Our rights are not for sale.\"\nMeanwhile, in Quebec City, provincial government officials considered a request from Claude Jo-\ndoin, president of the Canadian\nLabor Congress, for a meeting\namong representatives of the government, union and company.\nMr. Jodoin said in Montreal today that he has not received a reply to the request.\nTrouble between the company, a\nNoranda Mines subsidiary, and\nthe USWA began brewing last\nJune when the company obtained\nan injunction preventing the Quebec labor relations board from\nhearing a union application for\ncertification.\nOIL TANK BLAST\nOne thousand workers walked\nout March 11, three days after the\ncompany dismissed the union's local president. Two hundred workers subsequently left the area to\nseek jobs elsewhere.\nViolence appeared imminent\nafter a company oil storage tank\nal Mont-Louis, 22 miles north,\nwas damaged heavily last Friday\nby what police said was a dynamite explosion.\nThe provincial police detachment here was augmented and 35\nmen hired by the company from\na Montreal private detective\nagency were brought in.\nTension rode high through the\nweekend but since has subsided\nThe company maintains that be\ncause the union is not certified,\nthe strike is illegal.\nOdds...\nand Ends\nbyHD.B.\nMr. Lake of the B.C. Telephone\ndropped an interesting document\non my desk the other day. It was\nthe payroll for the Idaho Mine for\nthe month ending October 31, 1917.\nHe said that on one of his trips\nwith the linemen to the Alamo\nMine, half, way between Three\nForks and New Denver, they came\nacross the mine's office buildings\nwhich had collapsed with age.\nThere were all kinds of papers\nscattered around, he said, but this\nparticular one caught his eye.\n* *  *\nIt reveals that there were about\n12 employed at this mine. Victor\nZammatteo was foreman, A. Cleverly was cook and the miners Were\nG. Nevastra, A. Calgaro, C. Celeste, ,S. Comparin, G. Ehoi, W.\nFlaherty, O. Johnson, O. Donohue,\nG, Pacey, B. Depratto and D. J.\nDay. I do not know whether any\nof those names will be recognized\nby any of you.\n* *  #\nEach employee paid one dollar\nin the two weeks to the Miners'\nUnion Hospital at Sandon and $15\nboard for two weeks. Wages were\nalso interesting \u2014 the miners were\ngetting $4.50 and $5.00 a day, the\nforeman made $6.00 a day and the\ncook $3.00' a day. At these rates\nminers made between $135 and\n$150.a month. This is quite different to miners' wages today,\n*-' *  *\nOn checking with a mining man,\nI found most miners make around\n$14 a day along'with $5 or $6 bonus\nand their board is around $3 a day.\nHe said that in 1917 wages were\n\"really good,\" but dropped in 1936\nto $4.25 a day.\n* *   \u2022\nMr. Lake says the linemen are\nalways coming across odd things\nlike this payroll. He recalls one\nday they were out near the little\n\"Pop Inn,\" a ways beyond Tag-\nhum Bridge, when he picked up\nan old, old booklet that had some\ncomments on the West Arm bridge\nthat was to be and mentioned such\nthings as, \"when we get the\nbridge \u2014\" and so forth. He didn't\nknow what date the booklet was\npublished, but it was a real oldy\nand the present bridge a-building\nwas then as remote as the Stone\nAge, but apparently, they didn't\nrealize that.\nW. R. JOHNSTON'S\n, Ladies' - Men's\nMade-to-Measure\nSUIT\nSALE\nDon't miss this opportunity\non a terrific saving of\nmade-to-measure   Suits,\nSport Coats and Slacks.\nReg. Suit $62.50\nSale $52.50\nReg. Suit \u00a372.50\nSale $62.00\nReg. Suit $82.50\nSale $70.00\nPMORY'C\n^     LTD.      U\n\"THE  MAN'S STORE\"\nBOX 100 PHONE 31\nSays McCarthy\nDied Due To\nSmear Tactics\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 Ronald Go-\nstick, director of the Canadian\nAnti-Communist League said Friday the death of Senator Joseph\nMcCarthy was attributable to a\ngeneral breakdown in his health\nbrought on by \"the smear attack\"\nlaunched against him by the \"left\nwing and 'liberal' press and propagandists in recent years.\"\nIn a telegram to Senator McCarthy's widow, Mr. Gostick said\nhis death came as a great shock\nto anti-Communists and Christian\npatriots in Canada. The telegram\nsaid:\n\"In an age of moral cowardice\nand appeasement- of evil, his refusal to compromise and readiness to give life in defence of\nGod and country is a shining example to inspire others. . . .\"\nDouglas To Tour\nOntario for CCF\nOTTAWA (CP) - CCF Premier\nDouglas of Saskatchewan will\ncampaign in Ontario between May\n13 and May 16 on behalf of CCF\ncandidates in the June 10 election, CCF headquarters announced\ntoday.\nThe tour will begin at the Lake-\nhead May 13.\nStanley Knowles, national vice-\nchairman of the party and member for Winnipeg North Centre in\nthe last Parliament, will tour British Columbia and French-speaking CCF Vice - Chairman Mme.\nTherese Casgrain. will address a\nnumber meetings in the Atlantic\nprovinces. Dates for these will be\nannounced later.\nPHONE  1844  FOR  CLASSIFIED\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED and REPAIRED\nRE-CORING\nJim's Radiator Shop\n516 Front St.\nPhone 63\nNATO Agrees\nOn Readiness\nBONN (Reuters) \u2014 The final\ncommunique issued by the NATO\ncouncil Friday said \"the Atlantic\nAlliance must be in a position to\nuse all available means to meet\nany attack which might be\nlaunched against it.\"\nThe communique added: \"It is\nthe availability of the most modern weapons of defence which\nwill discourage attempts to launch\nany such attack on the alliance.\"\nv__\nDEVELOPING\nI\nHelpfulSnapshotAavlcti\nREXALL  PHARMACY\nCity Drug\nBox 460\nPhone 34\nFORMER resident of Nelson,\nMrs. William Fleming, above,\ndied recently in Victoria. Mrs.\nFleming lived in Nelson for\nabout 10 years during the 1920s.\nAmong survivors is Mrs. R. D.\nHickey of Nelson, a daughter.\nBurial took place in Vancouver.\nPROCLAMATION\nWHEREAS the general safety, health and welfare of our\ncitizens depends upon,wholesome surroundings arising\nfrom good clean living conditions, and traffic safety and.\nWHEREAS the lives and property of our people, are endangered by many hazards, and\nWHEREAS unity of effort is required for the future development and safety of our community:\nTHEREFORE, I, Joseph Kary; Mayor of the City of Nelson, do hereby designate May 6th to 11th respectively, as\nSafety Week. And call upon all departments of the.City,\nits commercial organizations, civic clubs', schools,\nchurches, boys' and girls' clubs, and other associations,\nfor community safety to insure its success.\nDated this 4th day of May, 1957, A. D.\nJoseph Kary,\nMAYOR.\nCity of Nelson, British Columbia.\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1957_05_04","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0429924","@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":"1957-05-04 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1957-05-04 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\/1.0429924"}