{"@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":"1957-04-30","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0429970\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" 60\nThis Is Nelson's\nDiamond Jubilee Year\nYears of Progress\nU.S. Offers Jordan\n$10 Million in Aid\nFunds for Economic Development,\nFurtherance of Political Stability\nBy JAMES NOAMS\nAMMAN, Jordan (Reuters)\u2014The United States offered\nJordan $10,000,000 Monday to assist in the economic development and the maintenance of political stability in the\nHashemite kingdom.\nAmerican' Ambassador Lester Mallory called on Jordanian Foreign Minister Samir Rifai to present the offer,\nAn Embassy statement said:\n\"Recognizing the brave steps\ntaken by his majesty King Hussein and the government and people of Jordan to maintain the integrity and independence of their\nnation and desiring td lend support to their, objectives, the U.S.\ngovernment ^announced today that\nit is prepared promptly to provide\nhis majesty's government with $10,-\n000,000 ih economic aid funds to\nassist in economic development\ni and the maintenance of political\nstability in the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan.\nFURTHER AID\n\"The U.S. government undertakes to maintain a continuing review of Jordan's problems in cooperation with his 'majesty's government to determine what further\nsteps may be required.\"\nIn Washington a state department spokesman said the money\ncould \"conceivably\" be used for\nsupport of the Jordanian army, the\ncore of which is the 20,000-strong\nArab Legion, formerly subsidized\nby Britain.\nRifai later told a press conference Jordan's present government\nhas no intention of inviting Ameri\ncan presidential envoy James Richards to visit the country.\nAn American mission, headed by\nRichards, has been touring the\nMiddle East to explain President\nEisenhower's aid plan for the area.\nNOT INVITED\n\"It is not the intention of this\ngovernment to invite Mr. James\nRichards to visit Jordan,\" Rifai\ntold the conference. '\nHe did not mention the $10,-\n000,000 offer, but, said \"we welcome aid from anyone,, anywhere, provided it is offered unconditionally and does not interfere in any way with our freedom, sovereignty and independence.\"\nIt was considered certain Jordan\nwould accept the U.S. offer. '\nRifai held his press conference\nafter returning earlier Monday\nwith King Hussein from a 24-hour\nvisit to neighboring Saudi Arabia\nwhere the Jordanians held urgent\ntalks with King Saud. .\n'An official statement described\nthe visit as \"private\" and said\nmerely that the two kings and\ntheir advisers discussed \"the present situation.\"\nChance To Clear Sacked\nAdmiral's Name Sought\nBy R. B. MacLURKIN\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014A retired\nBritish admiral's 16-year-Iong battle to clear his name brought new\ndemands Monday for a public investigation of his case.\n- The story began when stocky,\nside-whiskered Admiral Sir -Dudley North was relieved of his command 'because He allegedly permitted Six French warships to\npass unchallenged out of the Med-\nitejraneah in September, 1940,\nA few days later, the warships,\nobedient to orders from the Vichy\ngovernment, opposed the landing\nof fighting French and British\ntroops in the African port of\nDakar. Their presence has been\nblamed for the costly failure of\nthe allied action \u2014 two years\nbefore the allies' successful North\nAfrican landings.\nThe London Daily Mirror Monday urged a public hearing for the\n75-year - old admiral, who now\nlives in a little stone cottage\nclose to the sea on Britain's south\n.coast.      . ' \u2022'-.\nOkanagan Not\nSigning for\nFree Vaccine\nKELOWNA (CP) - Poor response is being experienced by\nSalk polio vaccine clinics in the\nOkanagan Valley.\nThe clinics for children between\nthe ages of one and six are being\n\"conducted throughout the South\nOkanagan Health Unit. In the Kelowna District, only 700, of a possible 2500 children have been registered for the free vaccine service.\nThree clinics will be held at Kelowna this week, starting today. In\nthe Penticton District, only 400 of\na possible 1200 youngsters have\nOffers to Help\nHunt \"Snowmen\"\nKATMANDU, Nepal (Reuters)\u2014\nA lama of Katmandu offered Monday to lead hunters of the \"abominable snowman\" to a mountain\nlair in the Himalayas where, he\nsaid, a whole family of the yeti\nlive.\nAt the same time, he warned\nthat the powerful man-like beast\nhas a hatred of human beings and\ncan tear them \"to shreds\".\nThe lama, a high priest of a\nBuddhist shrine here, expressed\nconfidence he could locate a lair\nof yeti\u2014the name natives give the\nbeast\u2014on the Tibet-Nepal border.\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nBombs Away!\nUTICA, N.Y. (AP) - An un-.\ninvited spectator made things1\ndifficult for. jurors in Oneida'\ncounty court Monday.\nA pigeon flew in an open\nwindow and sat through the\nentire session, perched on a\n\u2022 ledge above the jury box.\nCourt attaches were unable to\nevict him.\nAfter a bald-headed juror\nhad an unhappy experience,\nother jurors took the precaution of putting handkerchiefs\non their heads.\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiinii\nHEARING SOUGHT\nThe newspaper said North lost\nhis post as British-commander in\nthe North Atlantic without any\nhearing, inquiry or court martial.\nFive admirals of the fleet appealed in vain for a hearing.\n\"It is not too late to reopen\nthe case of the sacked admiral,\"\nthe Mirror said. \"It is never too\nlate to do justice . . . this old\nsailor should 'be given a public\nhearing.\n\"He was broken and disgraced\nby secret justice.\"\nThe Admiral's case is put to\nthe public in a book by a British\nnewspaper man, NoeJ Monks, entitled That Day at Gibraltar.\"\nIt tells how North's demands for\na chance to clear himself by an\nimpartial inquiry have been repeatedly rejected by the admiralty and Parliament.\nSAYS KIMBERLEY\nSTEEL SMELTER\nWILL NULLIFY TAX\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2022- The president of the B.C. and Yukon Chamber of Mines said Monday the provincial government's new tax on\nore in the ground \"has no meaning\nany more\" in view of an announcement of plans for a $5,000,000 steel\nsmelter at Kimberley, B.C.\nHenry L. Hill said he will call\na meeting of the Chamber execu-\nfive to consider the announcement\nby Consolidated Mining and smelting Co. of a mill for production of\npig iron and steel.\nMr. Hill said the Cominco announcement will make it unnecessary to reserve any new iron ore\nmined in B.C. since the company\nhas reserves that will last for decades.\n\"Consequently, the -tax the government has imposed on ore in\nthe ground has no meaning any\nmore,\" he added. Mr. Hill said the\ntax was aimed mainly at iron ore\nexported- from the B.C. coast to\nJapan.   |\n\"The government said it wanted\nto keep the ore in B.C. to encourage\na local steel industry. Well, now\nit looks like it's going to have one\nand the legislation should be made\nimoperative immediately.\"\nm:\nVol. 56\n\/$\u00ab**\niMil\nim\n>    W5ATHER   FORECAST\nKb. .-nay: Clcimiiig over this\nevening. Little change in temperature. Light winds. Low and high\nat Cranbrook and Crescent Valley,\n40 and 75.\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiir.\nT.\/QJ. t\u00bb NELSON, B.C., CANADA\u2014TUESDAY MORNING, APRIL 30, 1957\n^lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nNot more Than Co  Dally,   lOo  Saturday\nNo.  8\n; Joe Becwer's Death\n| Blamed on Heartbreak\n\u25a0 UMATILLA, Ore. (AP)\u2014Joe the beaver Is dead and his\nmyriad Jans are convinced a broken heart cut short the career\nof the gritty little dam builder.\n(,:   Joe mad% the news recently by his stubborn attempt* to\n.build his own dam as an adjunct to McNary Dam.\nDay after day, Joe gnawed down shoreslde saplings and collected debris trying to add his own littk bit to man's best efforts.\nJoe's engineering problem was that its chose the McNary Dam\nlocks.as the site .of his dam\u2014and each tinie the locks opened to\npermit passage of a vessel, there went Joe's dam. Undaunted,\nJoe would start again from scratch.\n, About two weeks ago, though, lock attendants reported that\nJoe apparently had abandoned his project and headed downstream.   . t..   '\u25a0;\nBut the story had another chapter.\nJoe came back and Started, all over again\u2014this time from the\ndownstream side of the dam. But once more Joe was doomed to\nfailure.. Each Joe-built .dam was washed away by the rush of\nwater from behind the giant lock gates.\nA few days ago, attendants found Joe's body floating in-a\nshallow pool alongside McNary's lock guardwall.\nHeartbreak, .they opined, one failure too many. \u25a0     ;;\nlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\n13 West Europe\nNations Sign Pact\nBy JOHN BUSH\nSTRASBOURG, France (Reuters)\u2014Thirteen West European nations solemnly pledged Monday to\nguarantee peace\" through the\namicable settlement of any disputes between them.\nAll the signatory nations are\nmembers of the 15-nation Council\nof Europe, an advisory body of\nEuropean legislators which is\nmeeting here.\nMonday's agreement was signed\nby the foreign ministers' or\ntheir deputies of Britain, France,\nWest Germany, Belgium, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Greece,\nIceland, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg and The Netherlands.\nAustria and Turkey \u2014 the other\ntwo council members \u2014 promised\ntheir governments soon will sign-\nthe convention.\nThe council's committee of ministers, in addition to signing the\npeace - guarantee\", agreement, discussed in secret a British \"grand\ndesign\" plan for a parliamentary\nassembly embracing Western Europe, the United States an* .Canada. '...': .\"._  \u201e\u25a0 -   -.\/'. '.;-\u25a0;'\u2022' \"\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0.'\nDISPUTES TO THE HAGUE\nUnder the agreement signed\nMonday, the signatories agree to\nsubmit to the international court\nat The Hague any legal dispute\namong themselves.'. Non-legal disputes will go before a conciliation\ncommission and if this fails, the\ndispute will be presented to a five-\nmember arbitration tribunal.\nDisputing nations must   accept\nthe judicial procedure but are\niree to refuse conciliation or ar-'\nbitration. .\nA Council of Europe spokesman\ndescribed the convention as \"a\nsolemn act to guarantee peace in\n\"Europe.\"\nAfter their signing ceremony at\nthe council's headquarters here,\nthe committee b\u00abgan their closed-\ndoor session at which British Minister of State David Ormesby-\nGore outlined his country's plan\nfor ap \"Atlantic Parliament.\"\nConference sources said the\nBritish minister called for a grand\nassembly to supersede existing\nEuropean assembles.\nSMALL BOY SAVES\nTOT FROM CREEK\nKELOWNA (CP) - -An eight-\nyear-old boy helped save a two-\nyear-old tot from drowning in the\nwaters of Mill Creek Sunday morning. . \u2022<\nYoung herd of the near-drowning\nwas Dennis McLennan, who was\nplaying with some boys along the\ncre\u00abk bank, -\nMcLennan said he heard a commotion, then saw Terry Mosdell\nstruggling in the water.\nRushing to the boy, Dennis held\nhim up with one hand while he\ntried to hold on to the grass on\nthe bank with the other. He lost\nhis grip- several times, but managed to hold little Terry up.\nMotel proprietor Allistair Duncan heard the boys yelling for help\nand rushed down to pull both boys\nout.\nRoyal Family\nAdmires Horses\nOf Mounties\nBy ED SIMON\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nWINDSOR, Eng. (CP)-A cautious Prince Charles occasionally\ngave a horse's:* muzzle a gingerly\nirat:*Princess Atine took no Chances\n\u2014 and probably couldn't , have\nreached nose-level if she had tried.\nThe occasion was Monday's\nroyal sneak preview of the red-\ncoated RCMP detachment which\nwill perform its famed musical\nride in various parts of Britain\nduring the next five months.\nThe Mounties did no riding Monday. Horses and men stood ramrod stiff for their inspection by\nthe royal family. Then each man\nsnapped an eyes-left as he led his\nmount past the reviewing party to\nthe Life Guards' modern stables at\nWindsor's Combermere Barracks.\nAnd finally the Queen, the Duke\nof Edinburgh and the children filed\nthrough' the stables to get better\nacquainted with the gleaming black\nhorses and the men who put them\nthrough their intricate paces.\nCommie Quits\nLONDON ,(AP) - A firebrand\nCommunist who once led pre - war\njobless demonstrators into Buckingham Palace quit the party\nMonday in disgust. Donald Ren-\nton, 44, had been a member for\n28 years. He denounced British\nReds for upholding Soviet intervention in the Hungarian rebellion last fall and warned the\nbasic issue before the party was\n\"loyalty to principles and not\nloyalty to leaders.\"\nSoviet Warns West Against\nAny\nin\nJordan\nWarren L. Yemm, 47-year-old\nmachine salesman, sits dejectedly at a Chicago police station\nwhere he is charged with bigamy. Yemm believes he has six\nwives, but isn't sure, and planned to make it seven. It all came\nto light when two of his wives\nhe has been living with met for\nthe first time when they identified him in a police station as\ntheir husband. He was arrested\nafter a relative of Yennn's'next:\nintended wife asked' police ;to investigate him. Police said he re\u00bb.\ncited a list of four other women\nhe married and later left, He,\ndivorced none.\u2014AP Wirephoto.\nBlames \"Foreign Forces\" for Present\ni   Explosive Situation in Middle East\ni MOSCOW (Reuters) \u2014 Russia Monday warned the\nWestern powers \u2014 and \"above all the United States and\nextremist \u2022 circles in Israel and Iraq\"\u2014against intervention\nin the affairs of Jordan.\n\"The new state of tension linked with the Jordan\nevents is pregnant with grave dangers,\" the Soviet government said. \"It may lead to serious consequences.\"\nA Soviet foreign ministry statement, released by the\nofficial .Russian news agency, Tass, said the events in Jordan and their influence on the Middle East situation generally were \"the product of a gross interference by foreign\nforces, the product of a new imperialist plot representing\na serious threat to peace.''\n'. The \"plot\" was intended to \"re-\nimpose the yoke of colonial oppression\" on the Arab peoples and\nto \"plunder them of their wealth'\"\nthe ministry said.\n.The Soviet .government would\nnot be fulfilling its duty if it did\nnot draw attention fo \"these attempts made on the countries of\nthe Near and Middle East,\" the\nstatement added.\nReferring to United States 6th\nFleet movements in the Eastern\nMediterranean, it said:\nMILITARY DEMONSTRATION\n\"This is 'an open miUtary demonstration'against the countries of\nthe Arab East which even further\nexacerbates. the situation in' that\narea.\n\"This is an example of how the\n750 Strikers\nCollect Pay\nMURDOCHVILLE, Que. CCP) -\nThe United.Steelworkers of America (CLC) announced late Mon-.\nday that \"nearly all\" of 750 members still in the district \u2014 among\nthose who went on strike at Gaspe\nCopper Mines, Ltd. seven weeks\nago \u2014 called for their weekly\nstrike pay without incident during\nthe day..\nA large provincial police force\ncontinued to patrol this copper\nmining town in the Gaspe Peninsula and posted guards at t w o\nroads leading to the community.\nOf the 1000 who went on strike\nMarch 11, some 500 reside outside\nthis 300-home town,, some,as far\nas 100 miles away. About 300 live\nhj the town itself. Some of .the\noriginal strikers left soon after\nthe walkout was called to seek\nwork elsewhere,     \u25a0\nThose coming from outside to\ncollect strike pay,began arriving\nearly Monday morning, filing past\nthe police guards on the two\nroads.\nB.C. to Have Say\nOn Columbia,\nSays St. Laurent\nWINNIPEG (CP) - Federal aid\nto., help harness the Columbia\nRiver in -British Columbia for\npower .was promised Mohdaynight\nby Prime Minister'St. Laurent.\nHe told a political rally his government will recommend such aid\nif re-elected,; but only if British\nColumbia first approves.\nPower. was a resource of the\nprovince. The Columbia River\nwould be treated as a national project only If B.C., felt federal action\nwas necessary and appropriate.\n\"What is important is that this\ngreat resource be used in the best\ninterests, of that province and of\nCanada as one country,\" Mr. St,\nLaurent said, adding that he would\nelaborate on his statement when\nhe speaks in Vancouver Friday.\nimperialistic circles of the United\nStates are trying to get a firm\nfoothold in the Near and Middle\nEast, to squeeze out of there.the\nBritish and the French in order\nto take up their place, to submit\nthe peoples of this area to an even\nheavier burden of colonial oppression.\n\"The stubbornness with which\nthese circles are endeavoring to\ncarry outthelr plans shows that\nIt is not a question of Isolated\nepisodes but a continued policy\nto achieve such a situation in\nthe Middle East that. American\nmulti-millionaires would become\nthe masters there.\"\nThe statement said the \"imperialist content\" of what it described\nas \"the Dulles - Eisenhower doctrine\" already had become clear\n\"Yesterday it was Egypt, today\nit is Jordan, and tomorrow it will\nbe some other Arab state that will\nbecome the object of imperialist\nplotting,\" is added.\nCOAST CHINESE\nMOURN KO BONG\n: VANCOUVER (CP) - Chinese\nof Vancouver and Victoria ane\nmourning this week the death of\nKo Bong; a pioneer fighter for free\nChina,,\nFounder of the New Republic,\nChinese language newspaper published in Victoria, Ko came to\nCanada more than 50 years ago\nfrom his birthplace in the district\nof Sun Wei, Kwangtung province.\nHe:settled in Victoria and spent\nhis later years in Vancouver.\nHe. was a long-time friend of\nChina's famed Dr. Sun Yat-Sen<\nKo'was also known by his anglicized name Of G. B. Simon.\nThe funeral will be Wednesday.\nTexas Drought Area\nNow Fighting Floods\nDALLAS, Tex. (AP) - The\ngreatest flood in the history of the\nSabine River bore down on cities\nalong that stream, thew'eather\nbureau said Monday night, .as\nscores of other Texas rivers and\nstreams brought creeping destruction to parts of Texas.\nThe floods ranged from the Red\nRiver to the Gulf of Mexico.\nAlready 11 persons have\ndrowned in the 11 days of heavy\ndownpours on a state that only a\nfew' weeks ago was labelled a\nU.S. May Have To\n(ul Oil Imports\nBy GEORGE KITCHEN\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nWASHINGTON (CP) - Canada's privileged position in the\nAmerican oil market may be endangered by a drastic review the\nEisenhower administration plans\nto make of its policy on imports\nof foreign crude oil. .\nPresident Eisenhower already\nhas indicated he proposes to or-,\nder ah investigation to determine\nwhether imports of crude oil are\nthreatening national security. He\nsays \"there is reason\" to believe\nthey are.\nIf the president finds a threat\nto national security, he is required by American law to take\naction to reduce imports, presumably by.placing them under quota\nrestrictions or by raising the tariff.\nEisenhower's decision indicates\nthe breakdown of two years of efforts by the U.S. office of Defence Mobilization to get voluntary agreement among importers to limit their imports to 10 per\ncent of U.S. production.\nSt. Laurent\nPoints To\nLast 4 Years\nBy HAROLD MORRISON\nWINNIPEG (CP) - Prime Minister St. Laurent urged Ca.iadians\nMonday night to return the Liberals for a sixth consecutive term\nitcthey ..want.'to.'maintain'Bhd. expand the greatest wave of prosperity in Canadian history.\n\"We all know that these past four\nyears, have been, generally, the\nbest ever experienced in Canada,\"\nthe 75-year-old Liberal leader said\nas he launched his cross-country\nelection campaign in this Prairie\nmetropolis with a review of the\ngovernment's stewardship.\n\"Let us be encouraged by our\nrecent advances to tackle with renewed energy the problems we\nstill have to meet. No one who\nlooks around Canada today can fail\nto be proud of the progress that\nis everywhere evident.\"\nHis keynote speech contained no\nmajor election promises. The reelection pitch was based mainly\non the Liberal record. \u25a0 .\nHe-also suggested the pipeline\ndebate had been loaded with a lot\nof hot air..\nSuez Closing Cost\nU.S. $8 Million\nWASHINGTON (AP) - Closing\nof the Suez Canal cost the U.S.\nNavy $8,000,000 in extra fuel transportation charges.\nAnd the state department\ndoesn't expect to collect on all of\nits bills for evacuating American\ncitizens and foreigners from the\ntroubled area.\nFOREST FIRE opposite the Brilliant Dam at Castlegar was being fought Monday by 18 men. The blaze\ncovered about 50 acres of brush and grass, reportedly\nset ablaze by a spark from a controlled fire used by\ncrews in clearing work for laying of natural gas pipeline.\nB.C. Forest Service officials were hopeful the blaze would\nbe controlled late Monday.\u2014Daily Wews photo.\ndrought disaster area by the federal, government.\nThe weather bureau forecast\ncontinued heavy rains at least\nthrough Saturday. .  ..':\nDamage could not be counted.'\nBut in Dallas alone, destruction\nwas estimated at $6,500,000. More\nwas to come in the state\\\nPASTURES GREEN\nThC bright side of the picture\nwas. in the greening pastures and\nfields, \u00abnd city water supply lakes\nthat, are full for the first time in\nhistory.\nBut on the dark side were the\nflood threats, thousands of persons forced from their homes by\nhigh water, bridges washed oufct\nand flooded highways and roads.\nThe'siege of devastating\nweather began April 18, and included cloudbursts, tornadoes, flash floods and steady\ndownpour.\nAnother tornado struck Sunday\nnight near Edcouch near the Mexican border in South Texas.\nNumerous tornado funnels were\nsighted Monday around San An-\ngelo in West Texas, Waco in Central Texas, Denison in North\nTexas, and Orange in Southeast\nTexas, but apparently none\ntouched the ground.\nLOW DECIDES NOT\nTO MAKE TOUR\nOTTAWA (CP) - Social Credit\nLeader Low apparently' has decided against making a coast-to-\ncoast tour in his campaign for the\nJune 10 federal election.\n- His office here released a partial itinerary Monday and he later\namplified it from his Alberta\nconstituency of Peace River. Except for an Ottawa date, it shows\nno engagement east of Winnipeg\nfor theiiocial Credit leader.\nAt the party's big Toronto campaign kick - off two weeks ago,\nparty officials told a reported Mr.\nLow planned to cross the ^country\nin his bid for votes. One official\nsaid the Social Credit leader\nwould cross Canada twice.\nHowever the itinerary issued by\nMr. Low Monday shows the following schedule:\nTonight, High Prairie, Alta.;\nMay 1-2, Edmonton; May 3, Medicine Hat; May 4, Abbotsford, B.C.;\nMay 6, Victoria afternoon, Vancouver evening; May 7, Regina;\nMay 8, Battleford, Sask.; May 9,\nBrandon, Man.; May 10, Winnipeg; May 11, Ottawa; May 13,\nEdmonton; May 14, Vegreville,\nAlta.; May 15 to end of campaign,\nPeace River area.\nAnd in This Corner. \u2666.\nCALGARY (CP)\u2014A woman phoned a newspaper office here\nMonday, said a pheasant was perched on her porch and suggested\na photographer be sent there to take a picture. ,\n'      Skeptical  editor answered  that the  bird  probably would  be\ngone before a photographer arrived and asked the woman to check.\n|        The woman checked, returned with apologies and admitted \"the\nbird Is stuffed:\"\nSPOKANE (AP)\u2014Spokane's a'nnual \"courtesy week\" got off\nto a slow start Sunday. Two police officers on motorcycles ahd\ntwo others in a prowl car watched the downtown area to cite \"the\ncourteous driver of the day\" and said they couldn't find one.\nHAMILTON (CP)\u2014Police Monday responded to a woman's\ncomplaint that a man clad only in pyjamas was sipping coffee In\na downtown restaurant. The man had a few complaints of his own.\nHe said other restaurant customers had anno,.ed him with remarks about, his attire. He wasn't wearing pyjamas anyway\u2014he\nhad on a suit he had bought on a recent trip to Florida.\n \" n-\n2\u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, APRIL 30, 1957\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\u2014Shows at 7:00-8:36\nDOWN TO THEIR LAST\/'\nWEAPON... GUTS\/\ngbrbsbw\nPlus\u2014\"Flying Leathernecks\"'\nJohn Wayne, Robert Ryan\nStarts Wed\u2014'RUMBLE ON THE DOCKS\"\n\"URANIUM BOOM\"\nCIVIC\nJ=\n'starlight \"1\nDRIVE-IN       |\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT      \u25a0\n\" \u00a3 mi at.ii mm sttcim susm.   ^ '\n[Cinemascope;\nTAKES YOU\nI KtnH\nROBERT   TERRY\n1V\/AGNER-UOORE-ROLAHD.\nttUlUMIUU.\nI      CARTOON and SHORTS\nTimes 8:00 and 8:35 n\ntarn \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nPractice, Teachers\nAt Nelson Schools\nFive local young people have returned to Neison for practice teaching at the schools where they themselves studied. Trainees of College\nOf Education normal schools in\nVancouver and Victoria, they will\nnow teach for three weeks.\nAt Hume Elemetary School are\nMiss Joan Gibbon and- Terry\nElmes, while Miss Beverley Ingle-\ndew, Miss Audrey Allen and Miss\nAudrey Kocher of dray Creek are\nat Central Elementary and M i s s\nMaureen Kennedy is in the L. V.\nRogers.High School.\nAlso at Hume School are J a c k\nDenny of Argenta and Miss Geor-\ngina Mitchell of Prince Rupert.\nMiss Dauna Jorgenson will be coming soon to Central School.\nPremiere Theatre\nFRUITVALE, B.C.\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\n'GOOD MORNING MISS DOVE\"\n(Magnetic) Cine-Tech.\nJennifer Jones, Robert Stack\nCASTLE THEATRE\nCASTLEGAR, B.C.\nTonight and Wednesday\n\"GENTLEMEN MARRY\nBRUNETTES\"   (Cine-Tech.)\nJane Russell, Jeanne Crain\nTimes: 6:45 p.m. and 8:45 p.m.\nConsideration, Co-operation Lack\nProblems in Reducing Accidents\nLack of consideration and co-operation is the chief problem of\nthose attempting to reduce accident rates, Robert Kidd president\nof Nelson chapter, West Kootenay\nSafety Association, told Rotary\nClub at its Monday luncheon meeting.,\nIndustry is the starting place\nfor 'building a crusade for safety,\nthe director of Kootenay Forest\nProducts safety program said.\nAuto-Vue Drive-In\nTRAIL, B.C.\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\n'A MAN CALLED PETER' (Cine.)\nRichard Todd - Jean Peters\nCARTOON and NEWS\nTime: Approximately 8:00 p.m.\nFIRE INTERRUPTS\nPRACTICE SESSION\nMembers of the Nelson Fire Department -interrupted their Monday night practice to extinguish a\nsmall fire in a parking lot owned\nby George Green in the 400 block\nVernon Street.\nFiremen were having pumping\npractice near the Nelson ferry\nwhen the call came in about 8:10\np.m. Number one engine and the\nChief's car responded. Within a\nfew minutes they extinguished a\nblaze apparently caused by someone carelessly discarding a cigarette in the grass. It, had spread\nto a fence and door.\nNo damage was reported.   '\nRITES HELD\nAT FERNIE FOR\nMRS. WHITELAW\nFERNIE \u2014 Funeral service has\nbeen held here for Mrs. Matthew\nWhitelaw, who had lived here for\nmany years. Dr. Norah Hughes\nconducted the service, assisted by\nthe Evergreen chapter, Order of\nthe Eastern Star. Interment took\nplace in Calgary. '\nPallbearers were William Chapman and Peter Lancaster of Michel, and James Shaw, Harry Wilson, Dr. M. McRitchie and Ross\nColgur of Fernie. Honorary pallbearers were Milt Ray, Louis Maffioli, Frank Britney, Dr. S. East\nWilliam Thomson, Ernest Gibson\nand William McGinnis.\nA,native of Scotland, Mrs. White\nlaw was a member of Knox United\nChurch and the Order of the Eastern Star. Her husband is purchasing agent for the Crow's Nest Pass\nCoal Company, stipendiary magis-\nstrate, and head of the Fernie\nMemorial Hospital Board.\nBesides her husband, Mrs. White-\nlaw is survived by two sons, Kenneth and Jack, both of Fernie; a\ndaughter, Mrs. William L. Cook\nof Calgary; five grandchildren;\nthree brothers, John Paterson of\nSan Francisco, William and Robert\nPaterson in Scotland; four sisters,\nthree of whdm are in Scotland, and\nMrs. Nellie Hart of Wolfville, N.S.\nCAMERAS\nFILMS\nDEVELOPING\nMARK XII COLORAMA\nCAMERA and FLASH\nComplete $5.95\nNelson Pharmacy\n\"Your Fortress of Health\"\n433. Josephlno St.    '\nPHffNE 1203\nCastlegar\nHospital\nCost Pared\nCASTLEGAR - William Waldie\nand John Williams were elected for\nthree-year terms on the board of\ntrustees of the Castlegar and District Hospital Society, for the rural\narea and the village of Castlegar,\nrespectively. Mr. Waldie succeeds\nretiring trustee John Waldie while\nMr. Williams was re-elected by acclamation.\nMembers of the society expressed their thanks for the work these\nmen had done in helping the organization.\nO. B. Ballard, chairman of the\nRobson meeting and A. Sylvest,\nwno chaired the Castlegar meeting, opened a discussion period.\nQuestions dealing with ways to\ncut down the cost of the structure\nfrom the lowest bid of $459,000 to\nconform to the Architects' estimate\nof $383,000 were answered by the\ntrustees who stated that so far\nmany items not an absolute necessity, though highly desirable, had\nalready been cut from the original\nplan.\nFloor coverings and plumbing\ncould be changed, and blacktopping\nof the parking area and driveways\ncould wait until a later date.\nSo far the amount eliminated is\nabout $37,000 of the $76,000 more\nthan the original estimate.\nThe trustees felt the picture is\nmore promising than it was a week\nago.\n\"While we recognize that work\naccidents which take a toll of 4000\ndeaths and\" 160,000 lost-time injuries each year constitute a\nshocking problem... it is no\ncloser to us than the greater totals\nof killing and maiming accidents\non the highways and in the homes\nacross this Dominion.\"\n* The answer did not rest entirely\nin removing hazards, Mr. Kidd\nsuggested. \"Most of the hazards\naround us are here to stay and\nwe are steadily creating others.\nThe solution lies in our learning\nto safeguard against those-hazards.\"\nThe effort, he continued, must\nbe largely educational. \"Side by\nside with the development of\ntechnical standards that will teach\nus, to live with this wide variety\nof hazards must go a broad program of information and communication that will. reach into\nevery home, every school and\nevery workplace. I would even\ninclude churahes in the activity.\"\nMr. Kidd was introduced by W.\nJ. Shukin.\nluncheon guests were Rotarians\nJames Crawford of Kamloops and\nThomas Brett of Trail; V. C. Owen\nand Dr. J. C. Carpenter.\nfowtaL failing^..\nRequest for mayor and other members oi, City Council\nto attend the next executive mooting of Associated Property\nOwners signed by the president, W. R. Hunter, was received and filed by City, Council Monday night. Mayor\nJoseph Kary said he thought council should have further\ninformation about the reason they were requested to attend\nas all aldermen had many meeting commitments to meet\nand he thought it only reasonable that they should be asked\nto   attend   for   specific\nParents See Cubs\nWork in Fairview\nA firsthand .view of how cub\nmeetings are conducted was given\nFairview parents Monday night,\nCubmaster Bob Maber of the 3rd\nNelson Cub Pack put his .iboys\nthrough their paces as parents of\nthe boys watched.\nAbout 25 cubs played games and\nreceived instruction in various\nphases of their training. Nine boys\nwho recently joined the pack passed their tenderfoot tests and began working on their first stars'.\nTotal pack membership is 30.\nof\npurposes.\"\nLeo S. Gansner, city solUcitor,\n-advised ' council that they could\nneither forbid nor 'regulate bows\nand arrows in regard to the request by the -Parent-Teacher%s-\nsociation of Central and South Nelson Schools that bows and arrows\nbe forbidden. His letter said that it\nis assumed \"that if they are not\nsubject to regulations by the city\nthey are subject to regulation by\nthe school board. In any event it\nis suggested that whoever has\ncontrol and regulation of them\nmight consider making a regulation forbidding possession or use\nof bow and arrows on school\ngrounds'. It would at least lessen\nthe possibility of injury,\" he\nthought.\nA. letter from Rev. Reuben\nSwanson, pastor of Bethel' Tabernacle, asked permission to \"park\nmy car for longer periods of time\nthan two hours\" in front of the\nEducation Costs Discussed\nAt UBCM Executive Meeting\nDiscussion of \"various phases ofin the present school finance form-\nTabernacle. Alderman W. S. Ramsay moved that the letter be received, and the city clerk write to\nMr. Swanson that8 \"no special\nparking   priviledges   could  be\ngranted.\"\n*   *  *\nRequest by Kiwanis Club to place\nmarkers at the entrance of the\ncity was tabled, with Alderman J.\nW. McClelland asked to report\nback at the next meeting on the\nIntention of the club. Aid. McClelland, a Kiwanian, explained that\nhe was not present at the meeting\nand so he'was unable to provide\nfurther information than that contained in the letter.\nCouncil Vote Close\nOn Boulevard Changes\nThe Weather\nNELSON     41   77    -\n64   .10\nOttawa\t\nToronto \t\nWinnipeg _\nRegina \t\nSaskatoon\nCalgary\t\nEdmonton ..\nKimberley\nKaslo \t\n44\n42\n42\n39\n49\n\u202240\n46\n34\n73\n75\n82\n83\n77\n71\n78\n    38   73\nGrand Forks   43  86\nKamloops ..J. .-   38  83\nPenticton    ...  43  84\nVancouver    50 63\nVictoria     50  69\nWhitehorse  25  44\nSan Francisco   50  71'\nSpokane   51   82\nPHONE   1844  FOR  CLASSIFIED\nIt's  all\nPRE-PLANNED\nOur experts \"blueprint\" every dbiail in advance-\nfake all the work and worry off your hands. And\nwe move you in a \u00aeSanitized Van I No extra cost.\nWEST TRANSFER CO.-\n719 Baker St.\n\"agent\nPhone 33\nNelson, B.C.\nSERVING UNITED STATES,\nCANADA, ALASKA,\nHAWAII & PUE-R.TO RICO\nMrs. Koorbatoff\nPasses at 66\nMrs. Polly Koorbatoff,, 66,\nCrescent Valley died Monday at\nTrail-Tadanac Hospital where she\nhad been a patient for two weeks.\nBorn in Russia in June, 1891, she\nlived at Verigin, Sask., 13 years,\nat Glade 24 years and at Crescent\nValley 23 years. She is survived by\nher husband, Alex, three daughters, two sisters and one brother.\nmunicipal administration'-' took\nplace during the executive meeting\nof the Union of B.'C. Municipalities\nlast week in New Westminster.\nMembers include Mayor Joseph\nKary of Nelson and Mayor Clifford Swan of Kimberley.\nEmphasis was also placed on\nmounting costs of education, which\nare becoming Jltop-heavy\" in. all\nmunicipalities compared to government grant, according to Mayor\nKary, and on the Shops Closing\nAct, which the Union asked the\nprovincial government to repeal\nlast year. Part of the Municipal\nAct has been rewritten, 'but not,\nit is reported, to the UBCM's liking.\nMayor Cates, of North Vancouver, Reeve MacSorley of Burnaby\nand Reeve Richardson of. Chilli-\nwrack were appointed to a committee set up at the request of the\nCity of Cranbrook to investigate\na new Municipal Act clause which\ngives statutory exemption from\ntaxation to private schools. It was\nmoved the committee report to the\nexecutive prior to the annual convention to be held,in September\nin Nelson, with a view to preparing\neither a resolution or list of question for the convention.\nSeveral items in the new Municipal Act were discussed ,and\nquestions asked of the UBCM solicitor. In view of the opinion ex-\nat 'the last  convention\nTransferred\nA native of Nelson, Scott Mclvor\nis being transferred by the Canadian Bank of Commerce to Salmon Arm where he will be assis:\ntant accountant.\nMr. Mclvor entered the Nelsoh\nbranch two years ago upon leaving high school. He will be moving to Salmon Arm next week.\nula, and discuss generally the\nproblem of distribution of education costs. They would then report\nto the president and education\ncommittee members before further action was taken.\nSUPPORT INQUIRY\nA draft brief asking the B.C.\ngovernment to appoint a Royal\nCommission into education in B.C.,\nprepared by the education committee of the UBC Alumni Association was read. The Union executive will support it. The Alumni\nAssociation will be asked to add\na section concerning functions and\nfinances of private schools.\n' Suggestion from the Board of Directors of the B.C. Centennial committee re courtesy parking stickers received \"100 per cent support,\" but will be turned over to\nlocal centennial committees for action.\nA letter from Lower Mainland\nPark Advisory Board disapproving of the proposed change in appointment of park board members\nunder the new Municipal Act was\nreceived and filed.\nPreparations are \"well in hand\"\nfor the 1957 convention in Nelson,\nMayor Kary reported. He also\nwent to Vancouver on civic business.\nSkiers Present\nPlan lo Gyros\n\"Skiing as a sport is snowballing,\" said Helmuth Mayrhofer, addressing members of the Nelson\nGyro Club at their supper meeting\nin the Hume Monday.    '\nMr. Mayrhofer and Dr. W. C.\nMurphy attended the meeting to\nshow a film on the Silver King ski\nhill developed by 32 members of\nthe Silver King Ski Club Society as\na ski centre for the community.\nThe two ski club members presented plans of the club for future development that would, it was feasible, allow them to invite the Winter Olympics to stage the skiing\nevents at the Silver King Ski Hill.\nMj\\ Mayrhofer said that it was\nnot until 1924 that skiing became\na part of the Olympic Games, and\nnow skiing has become a popular\nwinter sport for any place possessing a good hill as developed at\nBanff, Kimberley and Rossland,\nHe said the basic requirements for\ndeveloping a centre were mountains suitable for skiing, good\ntransportation, a city close by to\nprovide accommodation where\n\"tourists would be welcomed.\nDr. Murphy outlined the method\nto be used for financing the development, of interested citizens\nloaning money by means of \"Ski\nLifter\" certificates. He asked Gyros to support the proposed development.\nCity Council decided Monday\nnight to change parking from\nparallel to angle on Vernon Street\nfrom Ward tp Cedar Streets, and\nput in concrete boulevards instead\nof grass, trees, or shrubs.\nAid.' C. F. Blakeman and Aid.\nJ. W. McClelland opposed the angle\nparking move. Against concrete\nboulevards were Aid. G. E. Mermet $nd Aid. W. S. Ramsay, while\nAid. Elizabeth Wallach abstained.\nMayor Joseph Kary explained she\nwould have to be counted as favoring the measure.\nThe change will involve taking\nout parallel parking signs. .One\nsuggestion had been to concrete\nthe boulevards and install parking\nmeters, which would gain about 14\nspaces in three blocks. It was said\nthis would require hand shovelling\nof snow in Winter since machines\nwould be unable to get around the\nmeters, and would constitute\ntraffic hazard.\nAid. George Eckmier thought it\nwould be possible to grow grass\nin the boulevards and keep it green\nbut Aid. McClelland disagreed\nAid. W. S. Ramsay thought crews\nlast year \"didn't really make much\nof an effort\" to grow grass there.\nWorks superintendent E. E. Olson\npointed out cutting the grass would\ncost some of the money saved by\nnot having the area shovelled in\nWinter.\nAid.   Wallach   said   she   didn't\nthink a concrete boulevard would\nneed to be six feet wide, as now\nplanned, but Mayor Kar,y said\n'\u2022you're going to have an awful\njob narrowing those boulevards\nnow,\"\nMayor Kary had suggested that\none block be grassed and planted\nwith shrubs, since \"we're at odds\"\nover the matter. This could be\nchanged later, he added. Aid. McClelland and. Aid. Blakeman said\nno.\"\nMagistrates\nAt Convention\nCity Court Magistrate R. S. Nelson and Stipendiary Magistrate\nWilliam Evans of provincial court\nare attending the B.C. Magistrates'\nConvention this week at Harrison\nHot Springs.\nPythian Sisters\nNelson High was\n\"Jewel\", says\nMiss Cottingham\n' The former Nelson High School\nis remembered as \"a jewel of a\nschool,\" by Miss Mollie Cottingham, newly-elected president of the\nB.C. Teachers' Federation.\nAfter the federation's convention\nin Vancouver last week, Miss Cottingham, who taught here from\n1940 to 1943, said of Nelson high\nschool, \"every teacher knew every\nstudent, and we had a teachers'\nmeeting every week. It's an ideal\nsituation, but an impossible one in\na big city school.\"\nIn her earlier teaching days,\nschools were smaller and parents\nnerhaps \"more concerned with\ntheir children's education.\"\nMiss Cottingham taught in 'other\nInterior centres, and will take a\nyear off from her duties at the\n3200-nuptI John Oliver Hi?h School\nin Vancouver during her term as\npresident of the 9200-member federation.\nMiss Cottingham taught under\nthe late L. V. Rogers, who is commemorated in Nelson's present\nhigh school. While here she wrote\nher Master of Arts thesis for University of British Columbia on the\nhistory of the Kootenays.\nNEW DENVER \u2014 Annual convention of West Kootenay Pythian\nSisters at New Denver on the\nweekend included representatives\nfrom temples at Salmo, Trail,\nFruitvale, Nakusp, Rossland, Castlegar, New Denver and Nelson.\nDistrict deputy grand chief Mrs.\nJames Draper of New Denver presided. Visitors were grand officers, Mrs. E. Bereau of Nel6on\nand Mrs. Glover and Mrs. Blank-\nley from Vernon; past grand chief\nMrs. Palmer and Mrs. Delia Parent, past supreme representatives\nMrs. M. McKenzie and Mrs. Downey. Six past district deputy grand\nchiefs were presented with corsages. Five degree staffs were\npresent. Fruitvale won the shield.\nJames Draper opened the convention.\nA turkey banquet.in the evening\nwas attended by 165.\nNext year's convention will be\nat Nakusp.\nDAY'S\nSuntan King\nTROUSERS\nMade   of   9   oz.  Twill,\nWell Cut and Sanforized\n$6.50\n$4.95\nTROUSERS\nPair\nMATCHING\nSHIRTS\nKlondike King Trousers\nTough   -   Tailored\nWashable\nPair   $7.95\nGodfreys'\nPHONE \u25a0*\"170*et BOX\nthe executive decided to continue\nendeavors towards repeal of shop\nclosing regulations.\nPresident J. F. Fitzwater of\nKamloops, reported on correspondence with Premier W. A. C.\nBennett about municipal administration costs of the new Provincial\nHome Owners' Grant. He said Mr.\nBennett has not given him any indication the B.C. government\nwould be prepared to bear any of\nthe administration costs.\nMayor. P. B. Scurrah of Victoria, and Reeve C. A. P. Muri-\nson of North Cowlchan were asked,\nto visit Hon. L. R. Peterson, education minister, at the earliest opportunity to try to learn what\nchanges the government proposed\n\u00a3-BUY\n'COAL FOR\nNEXT WINTER\nSAVE &s mueh as\n$2*8$ P\u00ab* ton\nON YOUR NEXT WINTER'S HEATING\nBY BUYING YOUR COAL NOW\nAT LOW SUMMER PRICES.\nSAVE the inconvenience of large fuel .bills next foil\nand winter by buying your coal now and.paying\nin easy monthly installments.\nBETTER COAL, summer mined coal is more selectively mined, more carefully prepared\nond treated. \\ 1\nIT PAYS TO BUY YOUR COAL NOW!\n3rd and FINAL Announcement\nThe following are the Current rotes concerning the television and.\n.   cable system owned and .operated by ourselves.\nINSTALLATION.\n$150 and $3 Per Month Rental.\n$75 and $5 Per Month Rental.\nThis coven one outlet installed. For more than one outlet and special  services  apply to the TV\nDepartment for rates. ,\nTRANSFER CHARGE $25\n(Moving from one house to another.)\nDISCONNECTION AND RECONNECTION $12.50\n(Covering vacation or any other temporary reason    -\nDISCONNECTION AND RECONNECTION $15\n. , (By reason of default on rental payments)\nInstallations are not transferrahle\nfrom one person to another\nAnyone abusing their privileges or altering the line, are subject to disconnection without notice.\nAboye prices subject to change without notice.\nT.Y. Service Dept. \u2014 Phone 2050\nMcLENNAN, McFEELY & PRIOR\nLTD.\nStore Phone 1300\n476 Baker St.\nA\n NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY\/APRIL 30,1957 \u2014 3\n\/\/-H3\n^a**^ *****\nI     '      ,\n\u2022'.-'\"'     ' ' \u00bb  \u2022\u00bb\u00ab .  l|\n^\n,     1                                 j\n.' -\n\\,\nSTERNWHEELER MOYIE, on its last run Saturday, was\ngreeted by large crowds of Kootenay Lake area residents at various\npoints along, the route. Above and at right is the flag becked wharf\nPaper Reports\nBig Timber Deal\n$1 Vi Million Rumored Price Paid\nFor Tract Between Nelson, Creston\nPORTLAND (AP)\u2014The Oregon Journal says Tony\nFernandez of Longview, Wash., has paid $1,500,000 for\n' 144,000 acres of timberland in the Kootenays.\nJohn Sizer, a broker for Time Realty Inc., confirmed\nthe sale but declined to disclose the purchase price.\nThe Journal said Fernandez purchased the tract between Nelson and Creston, from the Kootenay Logging\nCompany at Tye.\nThe logging iirm is owned by six Portland residents\n\u2014George Van Vleet, Jr., Mabelle Van Vleet, Claude Johns,\nRalph Sowgill, Frank Dillard and F. Cobbs, Jr.\nThe tract contains an estimated one billion board feet\nof timber The Journal said.\nFernandez has not yet announced plans for developing and logging the area, the paper said.\nRecreation Commissions Pleased\nWith Playground Trainee Course\nTRAIL \u2014 Twenty young people\nattended the Playground Leaders'\nTraining Institute for,West Kootenay held here recently under\nsponsorship of the Trail and Nelson Recreation Commissions in cooperation with the Community Programmes Branch of the B.C. department of education*\nMissing Girl's\nMISS GRACE FROLAK\nTRAIL - Officials at Kettle,\nFalls,. Wash., Monday informed\nTrail police that the body of 21-\nyaar-old Miss Grace Frolak was\nfound in the Columbia River Saturday by a group of boys near\nthat Washington community.   .\nThe discovery ends . a mystery\ndating to February 14, when Miss\nFrolak disappeared from her Trail\nboarding house, leaving a note addressed to her sister, Mrs. H. M.\nBuckna, in Creston.\nKettle Falls police, who performed the post mortem, said\nthere was no evidence of foul\nplay and the body has been released for burial at Creston.\nThe body was found in .Lake\nRoosevelt just below the kettle\nFalls bridge.\nThe largest number of those attending \u2014 11 \u2014 were from Trail.\nOther candidates taking part were\nAldore Godin, Doreen Mauchline,\nJackie Payette, Bob Redhead and\nBob Sybulka of Fruitvale, Gail\nSeaton of Castlegar, Patty Lewis\nof Kinnaird, and Barbara Hellekson and Judy Seaby of Nelson,\nWhen .'asked for their opinions\non the course, the youths taking\npart were highly enthusiastic, and\nsaid they would like to see the future courses held on the same\nlines.; ;\u25a0\u25a0\nRecreation Commissions, especially -those interested in developing\nplayground programs for the first\ntime, Were also pleased, with the\ncourse. -'   ,\nLeading speakers were Robert\nStangroom of Nelson, regional consultant for the Community Programmes Branch; Ray Gould,\nTrail Recreation director, and Joe\nJohnson, Nelson recreational director.\nWork Goes Ahead on\nCrawford Bay Wharf\nCRAWFORD BAY \u2014 Construction work is going ahead at the\nCrawford Bay wharf, for which\nfederal government expenditure\nwas approved in recent months.\nDistrict men are being employed on\nthe job.\nTrail Continues\nFatality-Free Record\nTRAIL (CP) \u2014 Another accident-free weekend here has raised\nto 865 the number of days this\ncity has gone without a traffic fatality. It is the best record of any\ncity in the province over 10,000\npopulation.\n50 Persons Confirmed\nBy Bishop Beattie\nTRAIL (CP) \u2014 The largest confirmation service ever conducted\nin an Anglican church here was\nheld Sunday night in St. Andrew's\nChurch.\nRt. Rev. P. R. Beattie of Kelowna, Bishop of Kootenay, confirmed 50 members of the parish.\nHearings Set for May 6\nIn Coal Miners' Dispute\nTRAIL (CP) \u2014 Stipendiary Magistrate Rollie Crowe of Trail Sat:\nurday was named chairman of an\narbitration board in the coal workers' dispute at Fernie.\nContract negotiations went into\narbitration following a breakdown\nin talks between the Coal Operators' Association of Western Canada, the Crow's Nest Pass Coal Co.\nand Local 18 of the United Mine\nWorkers of America.\nThe hearings will start in Fernie\nMay 6,\nat Kaslo and part of the crowd of 600 who turned out. Band, fire\nengines and motorboats were also, on hand. \u2014 Daily News Photo.\nmm i I\nfill    I\naf est Mi\nAt\nLIBERTY\nOpen Till 9:00\nTonight and. Friday\nLow Prices ... Compare Liberty's everyday savings . . . there's more for your   I Mother's Day Chocolates\nmoney when you shop for well known brands. Compare brands and variety . .\nyou can trust the Quality and reap the big savings at Liberty this week.\nOLD COLONIAL .\nlb. box\n77t\nCold Meats\nBurn's Shanyock.\nVacuum packed. Each\nBurn's Bacon\nSecurity Brand.\nPiece. Lb. ',\nBologna\nBurn's Shamrock.\nPiece. Lb.\t\nWeiners\nBurn's.\nIn bulk. .\nRib Pork Chops\nBum's Best.\nPer  Ib.\t\nShamrock Bacon\nBurn's.\nVi lb. pkt.\n29*\n_ 45'1\n:__ 29'\n2,bs69*\n59'\nAT\nRolled Roast\nWaste free, trimmed, tender\neating Diamond \"A\". The very\nfinest you can buy.\nlb. 69c\nFOODS for\nLIBERTY Has a Complete Variety ,.. Priced Low.\nL6\u00ab:.59*\n 21*\n2 ,\u201e43*\nHeinz Baby Foods:\nifozen $1.17\t\nBaby Cereal:\nAll varieties. Heinz. 8 oz. pkg. ..-\t\nBaby or Junior Meats:\nHeinz. 3>4 oz\t\nJumbo Eggs\n\"A\" fresh.\nDoz. in ctn tJ S\n\"C\" Cracks\nCooking eggs. \/CQ\u00a3\n2 doz. in ctn. ....\n69'\nSECOND BIG WEEK... * ,     .\nMALKIN'S CANNED FOOD SALE\nPEACHES  Malkin's Choice. 15 oz. ....   4  for   \u00b09<f.\nCREAM CORN Molkins Fcy.   6 )m 85$\nMARMALADE Mmn-8 Sevllle. a4 oz, tln 39#\nInstant Coffee jw^*^^ *T\nLICORICE ALLSORTS *-. 29c\nJELLO ske:         6,or 58\nLipton s Soups s^-^sa.1\"-- 8 pks 89\nc\nc\nSpecials From Nalley Valley\nYour Choice\nCucumber Chips\nHamburger Relish1\nGreen Relish\nHot Dog Relish\nBread 'n Butter Relish 1\nLawn Mowers\nA special price to anyone interested in\npurchasing. Our cash prices on Sunbeam\nElectric, Lawnboy, or Firestone mowers\ncan save you up to $20.00. Fruitvale\norders delivered in 24 hours.\nGarden Hose\n3 Yr. Guarantee: 50'. $2.49\nLifetime guarantee 50'. 3.95\nBedding Plants\nRaspberry Canes: Washington Variety. Du, 75\u00a3\nStrawberry Plants:  ,._ .'.  2 doz. 75'<\nCauliflower Plants: Early Snowball: 2 doz. 69\u00a3\nSweet Pepper Plants: Doz.  .. 49<\nBall Aster;: Mixed New Creation. Doz.  45 \u00a3\nDahlia: Decorative. Special   5 for 95\u00a3\nTomato Plants: Hybrid, Burples. Big yield. Dz, $1.19\nOVER 20 VARIETIES BORDER PLANTS AND\nEVERGREEN SHRUBS.\nTEA BAGS Salada. 120,' $149\nFLOUR Cream of the West. 25 lb. bag    \"\u2022\u25a0?\nCAKE   MIXES   Betty Crocker.     3   for   $1.00\nCORNED BEEF Sttsses n ot 3 (Bt $100\nCHEEZ WHIZ Kraft. 16 oz 59*\nFaml\nSee the Large Variety B.C. Grown Fresh Produce\nWinesap Apples\n$100\n7 lb. bags\nLemons\nSunkist.\nCarrots\nCalif., New\nClip-top  . (\t\n-M9\n2^19\nMushrooms\nButtons \u2014 Money's. 6 oz. cups\n29c\nLucky No. 644\nWorth $36.00 to customer holding this on their\ncash register tape on\npurchase of last week-\nToday is the last day\nfor entry of \u00a310.00 Liberty meat labels to contest box for the Mix-\nmaster ,\u2014 Winner must\nbe prepared to name a\nLiberty clerk.\nBRING YOUR\nMALKIN'S\nCOUPONS\nIN TODAY\nPrices Effective TODAY to SATURDAY, May 4\nYOUR Key To \"BEST VALUES\"\nLIBERTY\nNELSON - FRUITVALE\nPhone        Phone\n1192 4151\nVARIETY\nSERVICE\nEl\n\u2022(..' >\n Nflsmt \u00a3l&Ug$riua\nlistnblished  April  22   1902\nInterloi British Columbia's Largest Daily Newspaper        .\nPublished every  morning except Sunday and statutory    ,\nhollduys    by    ttie   NEWS    PUBLISHING    COMPANY\nLIMITED, 266  Bake:  Street,  Nelson,  British Columbia   <\n'   Authorised as Second Class Mall. Post Oflloe Department Ottawa, '\nMEMBER   Of  THE  AUUH   BUREAU   OB   CIRCULATIONS\nMEMBER Or-   I'HE CANADIAN  PRESS\nThe Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to tha use toi republication of all news\ndispatches credited to it oi to The Associated Hess oi Reuters in this paper,\nand also the local news published therein.\n'V\nTuesday, April 30,1957\nA Steel Plant For the Kootenays\nThe dream of a primary steel and    a large stock-pile of tailings from the\niron industry in the West to make it\nIndependent of the East has long been\ncherished by the people of British Columbia.\nOn Texada Island, not far from\nVancouver, there are large deposits of\niron of good quality. So far this has\nbeen exported to Japan and all efforts\nto establish an iron industry near has\nbeen unsuccessful. It has looked for\nsome time that it is impossible to Interest steel .manufacturers to establish\na plant in British Columbia.\nNow, however, the president of the\nConsolidated Mining and Smelting\nCompany of Canada, our own well\nknown Cominco, announces that the\ncompany will build a new multi-million dollar plant in Kimberley to use\nSullivan Mine. These tailings contain\niron in large quantities, and it is proposed to build a unit capable of producing 150 tons of pig iron and steel\ndaily. Electric furnaces will be used\nand 150 men will be employed.\nThe news should bo a cause of\nmuch pleasure to the people of Kimberley and the Kootenays. In its wake\nlt should bring other industries and the\nwhole enterprise should be a stimulant\nIS progress,\nvThe decision is a tribute to the\ncourage and enterprise of the company\nand of their belief in the possibilities\nof the Kootenays, and we wish the\ncompany every success in their undertaking.\nForming, a Cabinet\nSome Liberal campaign speakers profess\nto be concerned about how John Diefenbaker\nwould form a ministry. The implication Is\nthat the venerable members of the St. Laurent cabinet are indispensable\u2014that at least\nthey should only be replaced by Liberals.\nThe theory is ridiculous, not merely because governments did the job long before\nthe present one and will do so long after it,\nbut because the electorate does not change\nor retain government for the reason an opposition has or has not a ready-made ministry. Anyone doubting this is invited to scan\nthe record. i\nLaurier, second choice for the Liberal\nleadership, became prime minister when the\npeople disposed of a crumbling administration, and In due course he boasted of a\n\"Cabinet of all the talents.\" His government\nwas overthrown mainly on tha reciprocity\nissue, not because R. L. Borden had a shadow\ncabinet; the latter appointed numerous min-\nWorks Two Ways\nMr. Howard C. Green, Vancouver-Quadra\nProgressive Conservative, regret6 that when\nthe seaway is opened no deep-sea Canadian\ncargo ship will be available to operate on it.\nNo ocean-going ships of Canadian registry\npresently use the canals, he added.\nHis regret will be shared by many other\nCanadians. The dream of a Canadian merchant navy has been pretty well shattered\nby competitive conditions and the \"demands\none would make on federal subsidization.\nStill it has a broad importance to the Canadian economy in peace or time of stress that\nshould not be overlooked.\nThe foreign cargo ships that will carry\nour cargoes along the seaway are anything\nbut liabilities, however. As dollar-earners for\nthe lands sending them out, they will have .\na dual role in the seaway's international _\ntrade, as well as our own.\nUnless dollars get abroad, foreign nations\nwill lack the means to buy from us. We can\nnote foreign flags in our ports without feeling that we built a seaway for the exclusive\nuse of other nations.\u2014Windsor Star.\nSo you're getting along i in years and\nhaven't made a name tor yourself? Here\nare some-words of comfort from some research people who looked into the histories\nof about 400 famous men. each one Ihe\nmost outstanding statesman, painter, warrior, poet or writer of his time. Of the\ngroup's greatest achievements, 35 per cent\ncame when the men were between sixty and\nseventy; 23 per cent when they were between seventy and eighty, and 8 per cent\nwhen they were more than.' SO. In other\nwords, 66 per cent .of the world's greatest\nwork has been done by men past sixty.\nFeel better? \u2014 Atlanta Constitution.\nisters never before in the Commons. On the\nother hand, Mr. Melghen in 1926 found quite\na good ministry right in the chamber. Depression conditions defeated the Liberals in\n1930 and the Conservatives five years later.\nTake Ontario. The embattled farmers in\n1919 rejected a Conservative government and\nhad.to scurry around for a ministry, formed\nwith Labor aid. Howard Ferguson had most\nof his 1923 cabinet behind him in the legislature when he successfully attacked the UFO\ngovernment for extravagance, but he announced only one name beforehand. Mitchell\nHepburn offered the electorate no ready-\nmade cabinet when he brought the same\ncharge with more ciphers in 1934 and made\nit stick. George Drew in 1943 had to get\nmost of his ministers from among newcomers. One is now premier.\nVoters turn out governments for misconduct or what they <regard as inept administration, or just because, too long in\noffice, ministers lose touch with the public\nand become arrogant. Canadian voters do\nnot worry about the calibre of new cabinets\nwhen they vote a party into office; why.\nshould they? As far as Mr. Diefenbaker is\nconcerned, he could choose not only from\nthe able group of PCs behind him In the\nlast House but from men all over tha Dominion, capable of giving the Canadian people\nbetter service than tji'w have had for tlrse\nmany years.\u2014Toronto Telegram.\nGems of Thought\nFREEDOM OF THE PRESS\nLet it be impressed upon your minds, let\nit be instilled Into your children, that the\nliberty of the press is tha palladium of all\nthe civil, political and religious rights.\n\u2014Junius.'\n* *     *\nGive me tha liberty to know, to think, to\nbelieve, and to utter freely, according to\nconscience, above all other liberties.\n\u2014Milton.\n* *      *\nIf \"the general spirit of tha paople\" Is\nlow, nothing can save freedom of the press;\nbut when the spirit is hish, no politician can\nlay hands upon it\u2014Gerald W. Johnson.\n.,   *    ' *     #\nEqual and exact justjee to all men . . .\nfreedom of religion, freedom' of tha precs,\nfreedom of person under the protection of\nthe habeas corpus; and trial by juries impartially selected,\u2014these principles form the\nbright constellation which has gone before us.\n\u2014Thomas Jefferson.\n* *      *\nAn enslaved press is doubly fatal; it not\nonly takes away the true light, for in that\ncase we might stand still, but it sets uo a\nfalse one that decoys us to our destruction.\n\u2014Colton.\n* *     *\nWhen the press is gauged, liberty is besieged.\u2014Mary Baker Eddy.\n? Questions?\nANSWERS\nOpen   to  any   reader.   Names  ot\npersons asking questions  will- not  be v\npublished   There is no charge toi this \u2022\nservice.  QUESTIONS  WILL  NO'l   BE\nANSWiUED  BV  MAIL except where\nthera ta obvious necessity (or privacy\nCurious, Salmo \u2014 Can you tell us what the\nofficial flag of Nova Scotia looks like?\nThe official flag of Nova Scotia is the\nblue cross of St.Andrew on.a white field,\n.with the Royal Lion mounted thereon, For\nyour further Information the flag was originally authorized by Charles I in 1625. In\n1929, on petition of Nova Scotia, a Royal\nWarrant of King George V was issued, revoking the modern Arms and ordering that\nthe original Arms granted by King George I\nbe borne upon shields,' banners, and otherwise according to the laws of Arms. Since\nthat time the Nova Scotia flag has been in\ncontinual use.\nP. M., Nelson \u2014 Where would one write to\nbuy United Nation stamps for a collection?  .\nUnited Nation stamps my he purchased\nby mall from the United Nations Administration, New York, U.S.A. First' day pf Issue\nservicing is provided for all new United\nNation stamps.\nG. S\u201e Ca_stlegar \u2014 Would be glad to have\nrecipe for making Welsh rarebit.\nWelsh rarebit: Two tablespoons butter,\none teaspoon Worcestershire sauce, half-\nteaspoon paprika, quarter-teaspoon prepared\nmustard, half-pound sharp cheese, half-cup\nginger ale, one egg beaten lightly. Melt butter and add seachlngs, cheese. Stir In double\nboiler until cheese is soft, and ginger ale,\nthen add eggs, and cook until thick, Serve\non toast or crackers.\n1,400,000 Entered\nSince tha'end of World War II almost\n1,400,000 immigrants have entered Canada,\n164,857 in 1956. And 1957 promises, to be\nperhaps the biggest immigration year since\nprior to World War L- To get a proper concept of what this means, these 1,400,000 are\nequal to the population of British Columbia.\nOne feature is that more than 400,000\nhave come from the British Isles and more\nthan 100,000 from the United States. The\ninflux from tha former will be much higher\nthis year than the 31,319 of 1956. Another\nfeature is that 68.4 per cent of tha post-war\ntotal have been less than 30 years of age, in\nthe most productive stage of life or soon to\nenter it.\nThere is a direct relation between th,ese\nfigures and tha concurrent announcement\nfrom Ottawa that Canada's economy is growing at a faster rate than-that of the United\nStates. In 1041-53 Canada's national production went up 104 per cant; thet of the Unltet!\nStates 74 p.?r cent. Thjs ra'Md pace never\ncould have been achieved h-rl it not been for\nthe assistance provided b\" tha toil end ta'ents\nof Ihosa who erne, to Canoda from other\nlands.\u2014Windsor Star.\nSliding, Scale Interest\nThose wile jjut'CbasS government annuities hereafter wiil gat Hum un the .basis\nof a lour p:r cant interest rate rather than\ntha 3'2 per cent as formerly.\nIt is because interest rat:s generally have\nbeen going up. But there are sure to be some\nasking why not revise the rates on these\npreviously- purchased to tha advantage of\ntha beneficiaries who find tliGt the cost of\nliving, against which the annuities were\npurchased as, protection, has also gone up.\nThe same cou'.d be asiied with respect\nto other bonds ar.d their interest. But borrowers don't do that. Tha lenders are stuck\nfor the term of the contract.\n. If someone could devise a scheme for\nlending money on a cost of living bonus plan\nit would be considered as a great boon to\nhumanity and an- encouragement for that\nmuch to bo admired virtue of thrift.\u2014Port\nArthur News-Chronicle.\nPress Comments'\nOne little bit of Canada less near the\nvillage of Hmdlenhorough in Kent, England.\nIt is the burial place of a Canadian horse,\nwho died there after 16 years of service\nfollowing his duties in the 1914-1918 conflict.\nOver tha grave of \"Captain\" there stands\na stone memorial and an inscription.\n\"Captain: Only a horsa. He was brought\nfrom Canada and served throughout the\nGreat War. Afterwards he did 16 years faithful service on this farm. May his spirit graze\nin green pastures.'-\n\u2014Brockville Recorder and Times.\n'[ Theyll'Do'lt Every Time'\nf.i. I >-\u2022> rrl U. t MM Mtl*\n\u25a0When dining out, Am the waitress\nPULLS A 800-BOO ON THE ORDER,     '\nBULLGP4W IS RE4L BIS ABOUT IT-\nORDERED\nST6\/JK? OH,\nI'M SO SORRy..\nXLLT4KE THE\n\\BAKEOSALMpri\nBACK AriD\nkOMNGE IT-\nNO\/ NO\/ NO\/\ny.~, MA-H\/V-PERFECTLY\nK'J ALL RIGHT'\/ DELIGrtTFUL\nSURPRISE-MA-M\/4-1\nNEVER KMOW WH47 I\nWMT.ArNWAY-U.A-tiA-\nTHE RSH LOOKS DELICIOUS.'\nNO\/NO\/DOU'TCH\/WGE\nTHE 4MOUNT oM THE\nCHSCk'-THE NOVELTY\nis Worth the\n.DIFFERENCE\u2014\nMm\nBy Jimmy Hatlo\nSUT AT' HOME-BE THERE A SLIGHT\nCH4NGE OF VENUE IN THE MENU-\nHEH-HEM-WS4R IS DECLARED\/.'\nNEVER MIND! 4NSWER \\\nTHE QUESTION \/ DID I   C\nOR DID I NOT S4V I     (\nW4NTED PRENCH LAMB  \u00ab\nCHOPS P4ND4RE THESE\nFRENCH L4MB CHOPS? NO.'.'\n| THEY'RE LOIN CHOPS\/THEREFORE I WILL NOT E4TLOIN\nCHOPS\/1 WILL (SO TO MV\nCLUB WHERE I MM GET\nWH4T I ORDER\/\/   J^,\n^GOOD NIGHT\/\/ SW7*\n*mM\nTrWNX AHO A rWTUJ IW\nTIP TO CM, MEANEV,\n13\/4 MflOBOB Slvo., '\n\u00a3\u25a0\";..-,vj:)t,C4LIF.     '\nTODAY'S BIBLE\nTHOUGHT\nBut continue thou In tha things\nwhich thou hast learnt, and been\nassured of, knowing of whom thou\nhast learned them. 2 Tim. 1:14,\nWe never complete our education. We must continue to add to\nour store of wisdom.\nOunt did.\nOpening\nDay\nF. tVPEARCE\nPa don't say it In plain words,\nbut no married man can praise\nanother woman's figure without\ncriticizin' his wife's.\nOpen days are a great deal of\ntun at schools and I always en-\njojfed them, but the opening day\nfor the Dally News plant was\nequally as good but very much\ndifferent,\nWe had looked forward to it for\na long time, for though we had\nbeen in our new quarters for some\ntime, there were still many little\nthings to be done before the building could be really said to be completed. |\nIt was a great day. There was\nthe opening ceremony and then\nthere'were the crowds. People of\nall sorts,, many of whom I knew\nand many I did not, the women\nadmiring the space, light and comfort of the rooms and the men\nIntent on the machines.\n1 There' was plenty for all to see.\nThe-new Scan-a-graver which reproduces on plastic plates the pictures which appear in the paper.\nIt Is something to look at and\nmarvel without understanding how\nit works. It has a wonderful collection of tubes and condensers\nbelow an electric eye and a cutting stylus above and how it does\nthe job only the modern scientists\ncan say.\nNEWEST BABY\nOf course we like our editorial\nroom and tucked away with the\nold type teletype we have our\nnewest baby, the maehine which\nprints the news on a tape in code-\nsomething we have to learn to\nread,-and when the tape is fed\ninto another new machine attached\nto a linotype, automatically sets\nthe type.\nOne thing which surprised me\nvery much was the clear way in\nwhich all our operators could explain what their machines can do,\nwhich confirms my belief that almost everyone who knows his subject can teach. Lately the boys\nhave been kidding me, they say\nthat with the coming of automation\nthey will become teachers, and I\nam sure if they know their subjects as thoroughly as their machines they would make a very good\njob of it. But I don't think they\nwould find it as easy as they think.\nOf course I met many friends\nand among them one whom I\nesteem highly, though we are oh\nopposite sides of the politico-\neconomic fence.'As he says, \"I am\na poor sort of Englishman he is\ntrying to Canadianize.\" Just at\npresent he says he is so mad with\nme that he has to wait until he\ncools down and then he is going\nto write me a sixteen-page letter\nabout the present council and the\nratepayers association. Isn't that\nsomething to look forward to?\nDUBBED IN PHOTO\nI thought the best photos were\nthose' taken of the sta'ff when they\nwere intent on the job, if you exclude those eminently photogenic\npersons who head the establishment. Mine, I thought, was not too\nbad considering that I forgot my\nappointment and the photographer\ndubbed me in from another. It was\na pretty good job even if my\nfriends in the Post Office complained that it wasn't.\nWe finished the day with a banquet which was really that, at St.\nSaviour's Hall. Mrs. Steve Cameron, who handled the job, seems\nto me to have missed her vocation.\nShe should have been a caterer.\nEverything she puts on is worthwhile and everybody enjoyed the.\nmeal.\nThere were speeches, most of\nwhich I did not hear, but my eyesight is not too bad and I was\nsurprised to see how distinguished\nand handsome our. staff is and\nwhat pretty wives and sweethearts\nthey have acquired. Gosh.\nOne thing which did not surprise\nme was that all this work Involving the expenditure of $159,090 was\ninitiated by a man who is 67 years\nof age. I only met Major Green\nonce, but he impressed me as a\nman who still retained his courage\nand joy of life. Despite a severe\ndisability which would keep another man inactive he still finds\ntime to do his .work and enjoy it.\nGASLIGHT PARODY\nRAISES QUESTION\nWASHINGTON (AP) - Comedian Jack Benny Monday was\ngranted a U.S. Supreme Court review of an order barring use of a\nfilmed parody on the copyrighted\nmotion picture Gaslight.\nThe U.S. district court in Los\nAngeles issued the ban on the\nground that a parody or burlesque\nmust be treated no differently\nfrom, an ordinary appropriation of\ncopyrighted material. The district\ncourt helo? infringement exists if\nthere is a \"substantial taking\" of\nmaterial.\nBenny's parody, intended for\ntelevision use, was entitled Auto-\nlight. The order against its ..se\nwas Issued- on request of LoeW's\nInc., holder of the copyright on\nthe movie Gaslight, and Patrick\n\u25a0Hamilton, British author of the\nplay Gas Light. Joining in tho appeal to the high tribunal were\nCBS and Hie American Tobacco\nCompany, a sponsor of Benny's\nprograms.\ny L^\u00abT.0 ? Y ' ,N   ,S *P 1 T \u2014 Th\" OambrMie crew, left, with two Americana In the shell,\nleads Oxford crew to wire to win traditional race alone Putncy-Mortlake course on Thames River.\nYour Individual\nHOROSCOPE'\n\u25a0By France* Drake -\nLook In the section in which your\nbirthday comes, and find what your\noutlook is, according to the stars,\nFor Wednesday, May 1st, 1957\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 20 (Aries)\n\u2014Soundly progressive and aggressive action and thinking will put\nthis day on the right side' of the\nledger. Regretting the past or fearing the future can Make a poor\nfuture. Remember that now I\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus)-\nWhlle your Influences are not particularly stimulating, your fine\nintuition and sense of values should\ntell ybu to keep plugging steadily\nat worthwhile goals. You will\nattain! \\\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini) -\nDon't be too quick to judge till\nyou know all the facts, and, even\nthen, be considerate and tolerant\nin your attitude and speech. You\ncan make or broak this day\nthrough your own approach.\nJUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer)\u2014\nForget past errors (except to re-\nm'ember not to repeat them when\nsimilar situations arise), and strive\nto make this the best day for solid\nachievement in a long while. Build!\nBuild! Build!\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leo)\u2014\nInfluences generally good for Leo-\nite leanings. Exercise your innate\ningenuity. Some hours usually favorable, progressive. Seek rightful\ngains now. .\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER 23\n(Virgo) \u2014 Where there is a will.. .\nyou knqw the rest. Precision, ^accuracy will help you over the\nhurdles, which are not as big as\nthey may seem. New opportunities\nare in the offing; prepare to take\nadvantage of them.\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER 23\n(Libra) \u2014 Having regrets, wishing\nthings were different won't solve\nanything. It is never too late to\nDo Something about whatever you\nthink needs changing, improving,\nGo forward!\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER 22\n(Scorpio) \u2014 Keep things going\nsmoothly \u2014 this means especially\nwhen they seem roughest. At other\ntimes they will mostly take care\nof themselves. Best' use of your\nabilities, standing by well thought\nout decisions urged.\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER\n21 (Sagittarius) - Work, think and\nplay In reasonably moderate doses\n\u2014not too much of one and too little\nof another, How you handle this\nday can be important to. your\nfuture,\n' DECEMBER 22 to JANUARY 20\n(Capricorn) \u2014 You may have to\ncurtail your activities or press a\nlittle harder, depending upon how\nyou have been doing up until now.\nThis goes for both work and play.\nBe purposeful, but don't overreach. Guard principles.\nSir Anthony\nSays Goodbye\nTo Hospital\nBOSTON (AP) V- Sir Anthony\nEden, pale but chipper, left New\nEngland Baptist Hospital Monday\ntor a week's convalescence In\nnearby Milton, He underwent bile\nduct surgery 16 days ago.\ncrowded,lobby of the hospital to\ncr< \u25a0 j.l '..!', ' . \". ..,.,.::'.\u2014, *\ntell its staff, reporters and .photographers: \"I am glad to have this\nopportunity to thank the hospital\nfor the wonderful care which they\nhave once again taken of me,- and\nto thank everyone in it for their\nhelp.\" ,\nEden.aiso said: \"I want to thank\nDr, Richard Cattel (his surgeon)\nto whom once again I owe a debt\nfor his brilliant surgery and to Dr.\n(John)  Norcross, my physician.\n\"To all I can only express my\nheartfelt thanks.\"\nThe 59-year-old statesman will\nfly to Ottawa May (f for further\nrest and a visit with Government-\nGeneral Vincent Maesey.    .\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY 19\n(Aquarius) \u2014 Your planet is more\nauspiciously aspected today than\nmany others. You may be able to\nget more out of the day than some,\ntherefore, but much will depend\nupon your will power. Give your\nbest;. It is a Jot.\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\n(Pisces). \u2014 Here are two hints may\nprove helpful now: Take all matters seriously, but not yourself;\ndon't let annoyances get the better of you; smile, instead.\n*YOU BORN TODAY are governed by Taurus, the Bull. Remember how sturdy that bull is.\nHe is innately stable, minds his\nown business, yet when Infuriated\nis highly dangerous, Curb your\nemotions and inclinations, count\nten, then ten more before you argue and you will bocome the eloquent example of Inner strength\nyou were meant to be. Good music, outdoor activities, religion are\ntonics' for your soul. You_ love\nhome life, but enjoy travel,\" too;\ncan appreciate all things good In\nlife and people. Be careful In\nyour selection of associates.\nBirthdate of:  Joseph    Addison,\nfamed essayist, poet, statesman;\nGeo. Innes, landscape painter.\nKing Features\nMeany Rejects\nBeck's Proposal\nWASHINGTON (AP) - AFL-\nCIO President George Meany Monday rejected a proposal by the\nteamsters union president, Dave\nBeck, for negotiations on Beck's\nouster as 'an AFL-CIO officer in\nadvance of a May 20 hearing on\ncorruption charges.\nBeck on April 18 asked Meany '\nto name a (ive-man committee of\nAFL-CIO executive council members to confer with another five-\nman group named by Beck \"for\nthe purpose of discussing my suspension.\"\nMeany' replied that he\nwould not name such a.group but\nwould convey Beck's request to\nthe 28-member AFL \u2022 CIO council\nfor such action as it desires at\nthe May 20 council' meeting.\nMeany noted Beck will have a full\nopportunity to discuss his case at\nthat time.\nThe exchange of correspondence\nbetween Meany and Beek results\nfrom Beck's suspension by the\nAFL-CIO council March 29 as both\nan AFL-CIO vice-president and a\ncouncil member.\nThe council acted after Beck\nrefused to answer questions before the Senate rackets investigating committee, Invoking the U.S.\nconstitution's fifth amendment's\nprotection against possible self-\nincrimination.\nWilson Witnesses First\nArmy Missile Firing\nWASHINGTON (AP) - Defence\nSecretary E. Wilson has\nlast \u2022.v..'.;:!'.J I. r\nwitnessed the first successful fir-\nGreece Plans\nCyprus Talks\nWith Lloyd\n-BONN Germany (CP)\u2014Greek\nsources said Monday Foreign Minister Evangelos Averoff of Greece\n\"very likely\" will confer privately\nhere this week with Foreign Secretary Selwyn Lloyd of Britain in\nan effort to work out some answers to the Cyprus dispute.\nThe sources said Averoff and\nArchbishop Myrlarthes Makarios,\nrecently released from British-\nimposed exile, have agreed to\nstand firm against placing the\nCyprus problem before the NATO\ncouncil of foreign ministers. The\n15 foreign ministers meet here\nThursday for their annual spring\nsession.\nReports have been circulating\nin Athens that U.S. State Secretary Dulles W'H coma here with\nfresh proposals to settle the Cyprus dispute among three NATO\nmembers \u2014 Greece, Turkey and\nBritain,\nGreek sources here said Averoff and Makarios want direct\ntalks between Cypriots and the\nBritish government, arguing that\nCyprus wants to ally itself with\nGreece. Britain and Turkey are\nopposed to such an alliance.\nAll's Well On\nMayflower II\nLONDON (Reuters) - Mayflower II, after more than 24\nhours silence, has reported her\nposition as S00 miles west of Cape\nSt. Vincent 300 miles north of\nMadeira and that \"all is well.\"\nA spokesman of the Mayflower\nproject here' said today a message from the 182-ton wooden replica of the Pilgrim Fathers' vessel, now attempting to duplicate\n(he original Mayflower's 171h century voyage across the Atlantic to\nMassachusetts, had been received\nSunday night.\ning of a completed United States-\nmilitary ballistic missile \u2014 the\narmy-developed Jupiter.\nAuthoritative officials at defence headquarters saicrflatly that\na Jupiter, the army's entry in the\n1,500-mile range missile'Competition, was the weapon that the secretary saw launched successfully\nlast weekend in Florida. t\nUpon his return Sunday from\nthe mlsSile centre on Florida's\neast coast, Wilson said he had\nseen a successful missile launching but he avoided specific identlf-.\nication of the weapon, saying that\nmaybe he had \"talked too much\nalready.\"\nDefence officials Said the Jupiter missile sent up Friday had\nfallen short of the full range of\n1,500 miles scheduled for U. S. intermediate range ballistic weapons..\nThey Indicated that the Jupiter\nhad travelled around .600 miles,\nthat its launching and flight had\nbeen without mishap and that the\nweapon achieved a \"satisfactory\ndegree of accuracy.\"\nJUPITER FIRST\nAlthough test vehicles and rockets have travelled several thousand miles, the Jupiter launched\nFriday was the first complete assembly of an American ballistic\nweapon, with a dummy warhead,\nto have achieved the reported distance of 600 miles.\nJust one week before Wilson observed the launching of the army\nJupiter, an air force Thor, an intermediate range ballistic missile,\ncame to an untimely end.'\nThe Thor had ascended several\nthousand feet after a successful\nlaunching and appeared to be\nfunctioning well. But a range safety officer, whose radarscopa\nshowed that the missile was wandering off its appointed course,\ndliberately destroyed the missile\nby electronic means for fear the\nweapon might get out of hand and\ncause damage or loss of life,.\nEarlier this year the first Thor\nlaunched from the Florida missile\ncentre crashed after it had risen\nonly a few feet. A faulty valve\nwas blamed.\nOne rocket-powered part of a\nJupiter was successfully launched\nfrom Florida last year and was\n\u2022reported unofficially to have traveled more than 1200 miles. But\nthat was not a completed missile\nfor miitary purposes.\n h6\nAbout the Town\nPHON6   1369 OR   1844\n' By 'Alice Stevens\nIn honor of May bride-elect, Miss\nVerna Mae Murphy, Mrs. S. Bos-\ntock and Mrs, L. Nicholson enter-,\ntained at a shower at the home of\nthe latter, 518 Ml)l Street\/Contest\nwinner wbb Mrs. R. Nuyens, honors in whist wenHo Mrs. A. Grod-\nzki fend bridge honors to .Mrs,' H.\nCrysler. After a delicious lunch,\nMiss Murphy was presented with\ngifts from those present.\n\u2022 * *       f\n' Mrs. A. W. Laine, 613 Carbonate\nStreet, has been attending a PTA\nmeeting in Vancouver.\nNotre Dame students, Miss Cecelia Rains, Miss Helen Brcsnnhnn'\nand Miss Lorle Straub have re:\nturned. from ' Chewelah, Wash.,\nwhere they visited their parents,\n*. '*  * \u25a0 *...\nMrs. Glen Weatherhead and children of Nakusp visited Mr. and\nMrs, W. Weatherhead, Fourth\nStreet;\n\u2022 \u2022 >\nMiss Marion Rolf of Vancouver\n0MAJL lAp. U)iik\nPrinted Pattern\nSIZES\nPRINTED PATTERN\nHALF-SIZE GEM\nLucky half-Sizars I This Printed\nPattern is designed for your figure\n\u2014 to make you taller, smarter,\nslimmer! Notice the extra illusion\nor length in the tucked bodice;\neasy, graceful step - in lines; 3\nsleeve versions for any .season!\nPrinted Pattern 9111: Half Sizes\n1414, 16V4, 18%, 20%, 22%, 24%.\nSize 16% takes 4% yards 35-inch.\nPrinted directions on each pattern part. Easier, faster, accurate.\nSend FIFTY CENTS <50c) in\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern. Please print\nplainly SIZE,\" NAME, ADDRESS,\nSTYLE NUMBER.\nSend  your  order  to  MARIAN\nMARTIN, care of the Nelson Daily\n, News, Pattern Dept., Nelson, B.C.\nCOAT   '\nSALE\nSave Up to\n30%\nand Miss Anne Rolf of \"Victoria\nvisaed their parents, Mr. and Mrs.\n^verett Rolf? Fourth Street.\n* \u2022 *\nLloyd Catley, Observatory Street,\nhas left for Regina to attend the,\nfuneral of 'his father, George H,\nCatley.   '\u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0:<,\nMr. and Mrs. Steve Gatensbury,\n710 Kokanee Street, visited Salmo\non the weeketid.  ~ <\n* * *\nMr. and Mrs.' Ian Greenwood of\nK\u00abIowna'were guests of the former's mother, Mrs, Hugh Greenwood, Radio Avenue..\n* * *.\nMrs. Helen Peachey, 305 Hall\nMines Road, 'has returned from\nVancouver, where she was guest\nof former Balfour residents, Mr.\nand Mrs. J. Peachey, who cele-,\nbrated their 88th wedding anniversary Saturday. .\n* * *\nMiss Audrey Allen, Knox Road,\nwho has been attending Victoria\nCollege of Education, is practice\nteaching in Nelson.\n* # *\nMrs. J. Steadman was a Vancouver visitor.\n* \u2022  *\nDuncan Maxwell of Vancouver\nwas a guest of Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Allen, Gore Street.\n,  \u25a0 *  * *\nD'Arcy Bacon of Q u a 1 i c u m\nBeach, formerly of Kootenay Cottages at Gray Creek, spent a few\ndays in Nelson1 and district.\n* \u2022'\u2022\u25a0.'\nThe executive of Nelson Little\nTheatre festival committee ehjoy-\ned a luncheon meeting last week\nat the home of Mr. and Mrs. Roy\nPollard, Silica Street. Topic of the\nmeeting was plans concerning the\ncoming festival.\n* \u2022 \u00bb\nBill Bunt of Vancouver end Douglas Bunt of Chilllwack visited their\nbrother and sister-in-law, Mr, and\nMrs. Merlin Bunt, 805 Victoria\nStreet. ,\n* * *\nMiss Jane Miller,- 702 Baker\nStreet, and her niece, Sharon Le-\nverlngton, have returned after\nspending the past week in Vancouver where Sharon performed at\nthe B.C. Dance Festival.\n* * *\nMrs. Ted Burns has returned\nfrom San. Francisco and San Mateo, Calif., where she visited her\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Flynn.\nMrs. Burns also visited Dr. and\nMrs. J. Slippen in Menlo Park,\nCalif., and her brother-in-law- and\nsister, Mr. and Mrs. Dlnty Moore.\nAt a meeting of the match and\nentertainment' committee of the\nwomen's section of .Nelson Golf\nand Country Club at the home of\nMrs. R. A. Jack, it was decided\nto hold an informal golf tea Saturday afternoon. Those who wished\nto golf could do so.\n* * *\nMr. and Mrs. D. A. Griffin and\nfamily of Vancouver visited Mr.\nGriffin's mother, Mrs. Blaze, at\nthe Annable Block and Mrs. M.\nHeywood. ,\nAnna Sprott Heads\nB. C. Women Liberals\nNEW WESTMINSTER (CP) \u2022-\nAlderman Anna Sprott .of Vanou-\nver Was elected president of the\nB.C. Women's Liberal Association\nat the annual convention Saturday.\nMrs. E. T. Parkinson, Vancouver,\nwas named vice-president to represent B.C. at the National, Federation of Liberal Women.\nOther officers elected included:\nMrs. Don MacDonald, New Westminster, recording secretary; Mrs.\nJ. R. Smith, Vancouver, treasurer;\nMrs. W. E. Curran, Vancouver, organizing - secretary; and Mrs. Ron\nCampbell, New Westminster, historian.   .\nPerseverance Pays Off\nFor MP's Painter Wife\nOTTAWA (CP) - When Mrs.\nDorothy Applewhite says she\nloves to paint, she means it.\nTwenty years ago a broken wrist\nnearly ended a hobby started when\nshe was a child. She was left with\nan unsteady right hand, but she\nspent a year learning to write\nwith her left hand, and in four\nyears mastered painting left-handed, .\n\"It shows what you can do\nwhert'you have to,\" Says, the wife\nof Edward Applewhaite, Liberal\nmember for Skeena, in the last\nparliament. .\u2022    \u25a0 t .'\nMr. Applewhaite is well known\nin the Nelson district, having been\nbrought up here, He is the son' of\nthe.late Mr. and Mrs. E T, Apple-,\nwhaite of Nelson end Willow Point.\nKeep'in Trim ....\nWorking Wives\nMeed Energy\nFor Two Job|^\nBy IDA JEAN KMN\nIn the past, several years married women have gone back to\nwork in ever increasing numbers.\nWhile there has been a steady increase from all age groups, surprisingly enough, the greatest\nnumber are in the M to 64 age\nbracket,\nToday the most requests for\nreducing diets \u2022 are conjingN from\nWorking wives in this nj'ddle age\ngrouprlt might seem that holding\ndown two jobs would keep women\non the thin, side, but with the\nwide variety of\" ready to serve\nfoods on the market, cooking is\nno longer a problem.\nEven so, doing two jobs takes\nmore energy, and homemakers\nwho also go to business t try to\nkeep up their strength by' eating\nmore food.'But excess fuel doesn't\nmake'extra strength, it goea to\nfat, particularly In middle age,\nIt's a fact that after age 25, we\nuse five per cent fewer calories\nwith each passing decade. So\nthorn it is, pounds pile on in\nmiddle age.\nIf you are a working wife and\nwould like to lose 15 to 20 pounds\nand step, up your energy, tune in.\nProtective nutrition but fewer\ncalories Is the answer. Doing\nmoderately active work, you burn\n2400 calories dally, If you have a\nsedentary job and your housework\nIs light, then you will use around\n2000 calories a day. On a protective diet of 1200 calories a day,\nyou can reduce one and a half\npounds a week.     \\\nTo build strength and sllmness,\nplan each meal around a> complete\nprotein food, or a double protein\nif you wish. In terms of food, this\nmeans to have an egg and\/or lean\nmeat at breakfast, of cereal with\nmilk, plus a fruit or juice, a slice\nof toast and Coffee. Allocate 250\nto 300 calories for tha first meal.\nNever skip breakfast,\nIf you carry lunch, follow this\npattern: Sandwich, two thin slices\nof bread and a thick. filling of\nlean meat, chicken or cheese, plus\na thin spread of mayonnaise and\na bit of mustard. Wax wrap\ncelery, carrot slivers, radishes or\na tomato, For dessert, fresh fruit,\nor a slice of angel food cake,\nAlso, tea or coffee.\nA late afternoon energy pickup\nis'a must for most dieters. The\npickup should be limited W 100\ncalories. If possible have this\naround 4:00. Some working wives\nprepare a snack before they leave\nin the morning, such as celery\nstuffed with cottage cheese, or a\nhard cooked egg, and eat it the\nminute they get home \u2014 even\nbefore taking off their hats. Fortified, they 'then start dinner\npreparations.\nDinner can be a good, meal for\n450 calories. If you wish, save\ndessert to have as a snack later,\nEven with her left hand, \"I've\ndone more paintings than I could\ncount,\" she said. In an interview\nhere. \"They're scattered all over\nCanada.\"\nMOUNTAIN SCENES\nBorn in London, 'England, and\nbrought to New Westminster as a\nchild, she specializes in painting\nBritish Columbia's majestic coastal\nranges, \u2022\nHer canvasses are \"medium\nnlze\" because they Milt her 'wrong\nside' approach better, She sketches\nscenery, but paints colors from\nmemory.\nFreer movements fer the left\nhand was slow coming, \"but I'm\ngetting'it now.\" At Christmas,'she\nproduced 70 greeting \"cards in wet-\nercolors,\nWhile a. grandmother and .busy\nas the wife ef 4 member of* parliament, she has always made time\nfor painting, \"It's relaxing when:\never I feel tired or discouraged,\"\nshe said.\nHer work has been exhibited for\nthe Parliamentary Wives' Association here and at a repertory\ntheatre. She says she has sold \"a\ncouple.\"\nBut most of her paintings go to\nfriends, and she sometimes forgets- where her gifts have gone.\n\"It's embarrassing,\" she says, to\nwalk into a room and admire a\npainting\u2014and find it's your own.\"\nPhone 50 - 569 Ward St.\nTHE -Tl LENT OBSERVER- Pigeon pet perches\nitself on shoulder of master, nlne-yesr-oId.Cub scout Bohdan\nFoltueok, who raised bird from a flcilRlinc in Phoenix, Arizona,\nPort Alberni\nWoman Honored\nAt Guide Meet\nTRAIL (CP) - Mrs. Max Wright\nof Port Alberni Saturday night was\npresented wHh a Sliver Beaver and\na life membership in British Columbia\" Girl Guides Association at\nthe windup of the annual Association convention here.\nThe two awards were made because of Mrs. Wright's outstanding\nservice to the Guide movement in\nthe province.   '\nMrs. A. F. Wilks of Vancouver,\nwho succeeded Mrs. Wright as\nprovincial commissioner for the\nnext three years, made the presentation at the annual banquet,\nGray Creek\nGRAY CREEK - Mrs. Craig\nhas returned from a holiday at\nBurnaby where she was the guest\nof her parents. Mr. Craig and son\nGrant drove to Wetherhill, Sask.,\nwhore Mr. Craig will remain on\nthe farm. Eleanor Craig stayed\nwith Lynn Oliver for the holidays.\nMr. and Mrs. George Botham\nand Mrs. Wayne Vlckery are staying with relatives in Alberta.\nD'Arcy Bacon from Qualicum\nvisited old friends here. He came\nwith Mr. and Mrs. Fred Wllmot\nwith whom he stayed at Riondel.\nMr, and Mrs. Cliff Oxtoby visited Spokane.\nMiss Elizabeth Oliver has arrived from Westbourne, Man,, where\nshe has spent the winter months.\nEdward Adams is a patient.in\nCreston Hospital with rheumatic\nfever.\nPC CANDIDATE\nTOURS SLOCAN\nTRAIL-Dr. C. H. Wright of\nTrail, Progressive Conservative\ncandidate In the forthcoming federal election, and his campaign\nmanager fe, B. Scott have returned\nfrom a three-day organizational\ntrip through the Kaslo-Slocan area.\nDistrict committees were, set up\nIn the following areas, with chairmen as Indicated: Rionedl, E. M.\nCaldicott; Kaslo, Roy Green; New\nDenver, James Greer; Nakusp, E.\nW. Hakemanj and Slocan City,\nHoward Parker sr.\nRecipes...,   \u2022\nRhubarb Delectable\nAs Early Spring Fare\nBy MARGARET CARR\nIn the spring anyone's fancy\nwill ttirn to thoughts of delectable desserts when they're made\nwith the products of the new\nseason. For example, rhubarb,\nwhich 1) as much a symbol of\nspring Ss robin* and meadowlarks,\nlends itself to lots of good eating,\nAs the name suggests In our\nDouble Bailer Pudding, there's no\nneed to heat up the oven to make\nthis fruited better pudding' 'The\nlight,- tender batter Is simply\nspooned over the' hot rhubarb\nmixture. In the top of the double\nboiler \u2014 then covered closely \u2014\nand cooked aver boiling water for\napproximately IVi hours, It's a\ntempting dessert with a pink and\npretty theme that captures the\nflavofof spring.\nCandy Tuft RhubSrb Torts has\na crunchy crust of brown sugar\nand rolled oats which forms a\nperfect foil for the rosy chunks\nof rhubarb.\nRHUBARB DOUBLE\nBOILER PUDDING\nTwo'cups W-inch slices strawberry rhubarb, % cup granulated\nsugar, 1 tablespoon com starch, 2\ntablespoons water, 1 cup plus 2\ntablespoons once-sifted all-purpose\nflour, IVi, teaspoons baking powder, Vi teaspoon isalt, 3 tablespoons shortening, 1\/3 cup fine\ngranulated sugar, 1 egg, Vi teaspoon grated orange rind, Vi teaspoon vanilla, Vi cup milk.\nGrease top of double boiler\ngenerously with butter or margarine. \/Measure cut - up rhubarb\nInto, prepared pan. Measure the\n% cup sugar; mix In corn starch.\nStir into rhubarb; stir In water.\nCover and place over boiling\nwater to heat while preparing\nbatter. Combine flour, baking\npowder and salt In sifter. Cream\nshortening; gradually blend in\nthe 1\/3 cup sugar. Add and beat\nIn egg, orange rind and vanilla.\nSift dry Ingredients Into creamed\nmixture, part at a time, alternating with additions of milk. Top\nhot rhubarb mixture with batter.\nCover pan closely.\nPlace   over   plenty   of  boiling\nwater  and  cook  until  batter  Is\nset \u2014 about IVt hours. For serving\ncarefully  upmold   Into  a  rather\ndeep dish. Serve warm.\nCANDY TUFT\nRHUBARB TORTE\nBasel. .\nOne cup sifted pastry flour, V\u00ab\nSalmo Notes\nSALMO\u2014Mrs. A. Peters returned\nfrom Greenwood where she visited\nher son-in-law and daughter, Mr.\nand Mrs. J. Greenwood.\nMiss Mary Harris returned to\nCalgary after visiting Salmo and\nSpokane.\nMr. and Mrs, David Orr of Burnaby visited Mrs. Orr's son and\ndaughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. C.\nTreat.\nMr. and Mrs. James .Greenwood\nand family of Kimberley visited\nMrs. A. Peters,.\nNineteen Pythian Sisters of Salmo motored to New Denver on\nSaturday to attend the District\nConvention.\nMiss Georglna Metcalfe returned\nto her home In Salmo after attending Normal School in Victoria\nfor the past year.\nMrs. Botterol of Vancouver visited her mother, Mrs. Sina Anderson.\nThe system 'of railways in West\nGermany extends for 70,000 kilometres, with 24,400 bridges njong\nthe routes.\ncup brown 'sugar, 1 cup rolled\noats (quick or old fashioned, uncooked), Vt cup melted butter or\nmargarine,\nPUIIng:'     \u25a0\nThree cups fresh rhubarb, cut\nin 1-inch pieces,. 1 Cup sugar. 1\nteaspoon salt, \",i teaspoon cinnamon, Va teaspoon nutmeg, 2-egg\nyolks,\nMeringue:\nTwo egg whites, redfood color.\nIng, 1 tablespoon sugar,\nFor the base, combine flour,\nsugar, oats and melted butter.\nPeck firmly into ungreased 7 x 11-\ninch pan, Combine rhubarb, sugar,\nsalt, spices and egg yolks; spread\nover base. Bake In hot oven (4O0\ndegrees F.) about ap minutes,.\nFor meringue topping, add one\nor two drops red food coloring to\negg whites; beat until frothy. Add\nsugar very gradually, beating\nuntil meringue stands in lustrous\npeaks; spread on top of rhubarb,\nBake in a slow oven (325 degrees\nF,) about. 15 minutes or unt|l\nmeringue is delicately browned.\nIndian Silks\nOutstanding al\nTrade Fair\nBy JOSEPH MaeSWEEN\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nNEW YORK (CP)-Gorilla-hida\nhandbags, exquisite Indian silks,\ngaucho saddles from Brazil and\nEskimo carvings were a few of\nthe thousands of exhibits at the\nNew York World Trade Fair.\nOfficials calculated the exhibits\n\u2014including some of former King\nFarouk's jewels \u2014 were worth\n$500,000,000 and that 1,000,000 persons, including 10,000 buyers,\nflocked to see the displays at the\nColiseum.\nCanada's comparatively modest\nexhibits included wild mink pelts,\na jewelled cashmere sweater from\na Toronto knitting firm and a demonstration of a new-type steam\niron, There also were examples\nof Eskimo artistry in soapstone,\nSEEKS MARKET   -\nIndia showed a dazzling array\nof rainbow-hued silks from the\nland where the art of subtle dyeing has been known for 5000\nyears.\n\"We want to find out if our handworked products can be sold as\nare or what variations can be sold\nto tap the potential of North\nAmerica,\" said N. N. Tikku, chief\nof the Indian delegation at the exhibit.\nThe gift of Italians in feminine\nstyling was seen in enormous Florentine straw satchel handbags, big\nas suitcases and some lined with\nplastic for summer holiday use.\nSome of the bags were equipped\nwith attached canes for the arm-\nweary. Gorilla-hide bags, to be\nsold for $48 retail, and sliver-\nhandled silk umbrellas also were\nseen. .     .\nBRAINY, SEWEh\nKnitting machines were demon'\nstrated by several countries. One\nportable 15-pound knitter makes a\npair of socks in two hours and a\nsweater in five.\nJapan showed a 17-pound \"wish\nIng dial\" sewing machine. The\noperator merely sets the dial and\nits \"computer brain\" goes into action, adds numbers, computes pat\ntern relations and produces decorative designs.\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILY\nNELSON PAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, APRIL 30, 1957 \u2014 5\nOES Holds\nColorful\nBazaar\nIn a letting of yellow daffodils\nand other spring flowers in the\npolors of the order, Rose City chapter, Order of the Eastern Star,\nheld its annual .bazanr Saturday\nin IOOF hall.\nMrs. C. Robinson, worthy matron, received the visitors. Pourers\nwere Mrs. J. H. Argyle, Mrs. William Anderspn, Mrs. N. C. Stibbs\nand Mrs. G, Schupe. Serving were\nMrs. Arthur Stromstead,' Mrs. N.\nBrown, Mrs. J. McLean, Miss\nMary Waldie, Miss Carol Buckley,\nMrs. M, B. Ryalls, Mrs. B. Riley\nand Mrs. H. Mackenzie.\n' General convenor was Mrs. J.\nS. Livingstone. Those in charge\nof various departments were Mrs,\nO. Pearson and Mrs. Dill, sewing;\nMrs. P. Zacharlas and Mrs. F.\nLowe, bake table and delicatessen; Mrs. V. Graves and Mrs.\nF. Wheeler, candy table; Mrs. I.\nHendrickson and Mrs. William\nChristie, kitchen arrangements;\nMrs. Stromstead, decorations;\nMrs. William Young and Mrs. R.\nB. Brummitt, tea tables;- fibre\nflowers, Mrs. G. Stewart, and\ncontests, Mrs. G. Burgess,- Mrs.\nWilliam Morton, Mrs; W. Ferguson and Mrs. J, P. MacDonald.\n45 Entries in\nBread Baking\nCompetition\nA successful bread baking contest, sponsored by the Aqulla Circle\nof St, Saviour's Pro-Cathedral, was\nheld Friday evening at the Memorial Hall. There were 45 entries.\nWinners were Mrs. W. C- Gor\nesky, Castlegar, first; Mrs. F,\nWhitfield, second; and Mrs. J. Paul\nthird, The judges were Mrs. D.\nJamieson and Mrs. G. Colettl. Winner of the door prize was Mrs. P.\nKlassen.    '\nRefreshments ,were served. Unclaimed bread was taken to the\nNelson Hostel^or Aged Men.\nBoswell Party\nAids Centennial\nBOSWELL \u2014 A stag party was\nheld at the hail on Saturday night.\nBingo was played. Funds are to\nbe put towards the centennial celebrations.\nAre You ...\nGetting Married?\nIt Will Pay to\nSao Us!\nt% 3oum, uJhmlsA,\nKITCHEN COLOR\nConversation piece In the kitchen! Rudy Rooster adds hie colorful note to this apron, that's\neasiest sewing and embroidery!\nIdeal shower gifts, bazaar item!\nPattern 754: Transfer of motif\n11 x 18(4 inches; thrifty apron\ntakes just % yard 35-inch fabric.\nSend THIRTY-FIVE CENTS In\ncoins,., (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern to (Name\nof 'Your Newspaper), Needlecraft\nDept, Address, Print plainly PAT-\nTERN NUMBER, your NAME and\nADDRESS.\nOur gift to you\u2014two wonderful\npatterns for yourself, your home\n\u2014 printed in bur 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\n95 CGIT DELEGATES\nAT ROSSLAND PARLEY\nROSSLAND \u2014 About 95 members\nof the Canadian Girls In Training,\nrepresenting. United Churches from\nGreenwood to Fernie met here on\nThursday and Friday. Theme of\nthe gathering was \"Let Your Light\nSo Shine.\"\nLocal CGIT girls were in charge\nof the conference at St. Andrew's\nUnited Chtirch, and billets were\nprovided for those from out-of-\ntown. Vespers were led by Miss\nNancy Hplman of Vancouver, United Church girls' work secretary for\nBritish. Columbia.\nClosing event Friday night was\na social held In conjunction with\nthe West Kootenay Boys' Conference held that day at Knox United\nChurch in. Trail. Representatives\nof the Naramata Christian Leader\nship Training School addressed\nboth groups about their experiences\nand activities at the school, established 10 years ago by its present\nprincipal, Rev. R, A. McLaren, to\nswell the ranks of church lay\nleaders,\nTheme of the boys' gathering,\nsponsored by, the B. C. Older Boys'\nParliament, to which boys 15 to\n21 came from all parts of the\nfWest Kootenay, was \"Youth\nSpeaks Out\/' Features were a\nmock trial, \"Parents on Trial,\"\nand a forum when local ministers\ntried to answer questions \"Youth\nAsks About Religion.\"\nJack Way of Vancouver, United\nChurch boys' work secretary for\nB. C, was present.\n\u25a0!;;^^,M?:;.:^:V:':-:;.:\nl>:^W:m':-$y';mmmW\n|||l|||||||||:|:|||||||||p||:\na^Byj^ayfjgggwg\n' -'H;      \"<:v'-'\nmmmisi^m^iim-\nliililllllfcilliliiS\ny;\\:^m:^m^y'y:y^Wm0MW> ''\ni.:.mmmm\\::m:mm\n\u2014~r,\u2014T--^- r-\u2022\u25a0\"\u25a0\u2022 -r- \u25a0*\"\u00bb- V*--' v-i-.-.w\u2014\u25a0   ?&>\"TJT,lr\"i VIS^;1. \"   t''^\n113-7^\n 6 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, APRIL 30 ,1957\nSt. Laurent Confident\nOf Liberal Victory\nWRCT.\"tW','.*r.\nBy  HAROLD  MORRISON\nCanadian  Press Staff Writer\nWINNIPEG  (CPl-Prime  Minister St. Laurent expressed conr\nfidence Monday that the \"coach\"!\nisn't going   to   bench a winning\n1 team on June 10.\nBy coach, he told a press conference, he meant the Canadian\nvoter and by winning team, he of\ncourse meant the Liberals who\nhave \"demonstrated ability to collaborate with Canadians in building a Canadian boom.\"\nThe 75-year-old Liberal leader\nheld a brief meeting with reporters . and radio commentators\nshortly after his arrival to deliver\nhis keynote speech, launching a\nsix-week - election campaign.\nA crowd of some 600, including\n32 schoolchildren, met him at the\nBIG REUNION\nREGINA,(CP) \u2014-Four sisters\nwith broad Scottish accents were\nreunited here after a separation\nof 47 years. Mrs. William Wallace\nof Mankota and Mrs. G. Whitman\nof Shamrock gave a warm welcome to their sisters from Dun-\n' dee, -Mrs. Lily Guild and Mary\nYoung.\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED- DAILY\nClassified Ads Get Results\nunion station where.two kilted pipers led him into the concourse to\nthe tune of Bonnie Lassie.  ... .\nGARSON THERE\nJustice Minister Garson '\u25a0 was\nthere to greet him,; along '.with\nW. G. (Gib) Weir, party whip;\nand other Liberal stalwarts. Mr.\nSt. \u25a0' Laurent later met provincial\nparty organizational'leaders at a\nprivate luncheon.\n- In the afternoon he shook hands\nwith Liberal supporters gathered\nfrom various parts of the province\n\u2014between 400 and 600 in number.\nWith him was his daughter, Mrs.\nHugh O'Donnell of Montreal, who\nhelped entertain. ,\nMr. St. Laurent said he felt fine\nafter the hour-long handshaking,\n\"The secret of hand-shaking is\nall in the grip\u2014a firm grip,\" he\ntold a reporter, demonstrating by\nshaking the reporter's hand vigorously,\nMAKING PLANS\nAt the press conference, he said\nthere was no doubt in his mind\nabout the June 10 outcome,\nthough the party. would have to\nwait until the ballots of the 9,000,-\n000 voters were collected to find\nout. what was on the voters'\nminds. '\nMy own feelings are such that\n1 am makirfg plans to attend the\nprime ministers' conference in\nLondon June 26.\"'\nSTOP and SWAP for SAFETY\n.W     Brand Hew, Plus Quality    ^\nifimfont g\n' Champion 8\na      TIRES\nPOPULAR SIZE\n670:15\nandyanr retroaflahls Hro\nV^.   $12.45 -SIZE 600:16\nduring the big\nBOOST FOR NELSON and particularly the Mid-Summer Bonspiel was given by Nelson delegates at the recent Teen Town\nconference in Trail. On the float above are Phillip Jacques, Gerry\nPoulin, Inn Steel and Connie Robinson. Passenger Is Tom D'Aquino\nand driver was Gordon Jeffs. \u2014 Daily News Photo.\ni\nCITY TIRE SERVICE\n206 Baker St.\nPhone 1427\nCLARKSON MOTORS\n924 Nelson Ave.\nPhone 205\nf\nParkview Motors Ltd.\n322 Nelson Ave. Phone 1454\nRailway Trainmfeh's Vote Leans\nHeavily Toward Joining CLC\nBy JOHN LEBLANC\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA (CP) - Canada's biggest independent rail union \u2014 the\nBrotherhood of Railroad Trainmen \u2014 is preparing to enter the\nCanadian Labor Congress.\nThe trainmen have been taking\nan unpublicized poll of their 111\nCanadian lodges for about a\nmonth, and informants said Monday the vote to date is running\nheavily in favor of affiliation with\nthe 1,000,000-member congress.\nThe brotherhood, one of the\nmost potent of railway unions,\nhas some 22,000 members in Canada.\nIn entering the CLC, it would\nbe tossing overboard more than a\nhalf century of traditional independence. However, it would be\nfollowing the same course as the\nBrotherhood of Locomotive Fire-\nBusiness Spotlight\u00bb'...\nPower-Driven Machines Increase\nNumber of While-Collar Workers\nBy FORBES RHUDE\nCanadian Press Business Editor\n\"It is the experience of a great\nmany industrial organizations\nthat'as the number of productive\npeople required to turn out a\nproduct decreases, the number of\nclerical and other employees \u2014\nthe so-called white-collar group\n\u2014 tends to increase. Sometimes\nthe clerical increase is even\nfaster than the decrease among\nproductive employees.\"\nThe quotation is from a recent\naddress by George L. Wilcox,\npresident of Canadian Westing-\nhouse Co. Ltd.\nARMY OF LABOR\n\"This army of administrative\nlabor which provides the so-called\n'clerical' work of business,\" Mr.\nWilcox continued, \"is made up of\nclerks, expediters, checkers; messengers, office secretaries and so\non.\n\"Accurate figures are difficult\nto obtain, but it.has been estimated that the number of people\nengaged in such occupations ! in\nCanadian business is close to 1,\n000,000.\n\"In fact, this Canadian clerical\nThe Highways\nNo. 3 \u2014 Cascade, Rossland -\nfair to good, Rossland, Trail, Castlegar, Nelson, Balfour, Kootenay\nBay, Creston, Goatfell \u2014 good.\nGoatfell, Cranbrook, Fernie,\nCrowsnest \u2014 fair to>good, rough\nover construction area \"at-Moyie\nnorth for six miles, road closures\nat the following times: 8:30 a.m.\nto 10:00 a.m.; 10:15 a.m. to 12:00\nnoon,.1:30 p.m. to 4:00 p.m., excepting Sundays and holidays.\nNo. 3A\u2014Trail, Salmo\u2014good.\nRossland, Paterson\u2014good. Creston, Porthill \u2014 good.\nNo. 6\u2014Nelway, Nelson, South\nSlocan\u2014good. South Slocan, Slocan City, Nakusp, Needles \u2014 good\nwith some rough sections. Needles,\nMonashee, Vernon \u2014 fair.\nNo. 95 \u2014 Kingsgate, Cranbrook,\nGolden \u2014 muddy sections \u2014 some\nsections of blacktop breaking up.\nRough over construction area at\nMoyie. north for six miles.\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.\nTrans-Canada Highway between\nLytton and Spences Bridge due to\nconstruction work will be closed\nto traffic effective April 29 to\nMay 16th inclusive at the follow'-\ning times: 5:00 a.m. to 7:00 a.m.;\n7:30.a.m. to 9:00 a.m.; 9:30 a.m.\nto 1:30 p.m.; 2:00 p.m. to 6:00\np.m.; 6:30 p.m. to 10:00 p.m.\nAll times referred to are Day-\nligt Saving Time. Closures will be\neffective six days, of the week.\nKamloops district effective 6:00\na.m. May 1;\narmy is roughly equal to the\ntotal number of all hourly.- rated\nwage earners in all our manufacturing enterprises combined.\nIncreasing productivity per worker in the factory often merely\nshifts the'cost from the production\nfloor to the office.\nMIGHT BE HEALTH\nThis was not necessarily bad\nand might be both inevitable and\nhealthy.\nFor, as power-driven machinery took over more and morepro-\nductive work, a whole new army\nof people were naturally going to\ncome into existence to desi.\nprogram, maintain and otherwise\ndeal with those machines and\ntheir, products.\/\nNevertheless', \u00abn this field of\npaperwork and office, activity, industry probably would find one of\nthe next great fields for improving productivity.\n\"Experts tell me,\" said Mr.\nWilcox, \"that in devising and installing equipment and methods\nto improve office productivity we\nare at least 20 years behind the\nfactory.\"   \/ .   \u2022'\u25a0 \u25a0\nDRASTIC CHANGES    ....\nThe \u25a0 situation would require\ndrastic changes and real , soul-\nsearching as to wether so much\npaperwork is really needed.\nThe time might come within 25\nyears when data processors, cbm-\np u t e r s, calculators, inventory\ncontrol machines and the like\nwould take over a major part of\nthe clerical work of the average\ncompany.   '\n\"I am told by some of our experts,\" said Mr. Wilcox, \"that a\ncompany in the future, upon receipt of its orders in a central\ncomputer, could automatically estimate a delivery date, bill the\ncustomer, aid engineers 'in calculating design, produce manufacturing information for the articles, allocate the job - cost to\nvarious budgets, organize the\npurchasing of raw materials, pay\nthe people involved with the production, and find an optimum\nshipping routes-all by electronics.\"\nForm New Company\nMONTREAL (CP) - Canadian\nSteel Foundries (1956) Limited of\nMontreal and English Steel Cor-\nEngland, in an announcement\nMonday said they have formed a\nnew company, Canadian Steel\nWheel Limited.\nThe company will manufacture\nwrought steel railway wheels and\na new plant will ;have a capacity\nof 200,000 wheels a year.\nCanadian Steel Foundries is a\nmember of the A. V. Roe Canada\n-(-group, a subsidiary of the Haw-\npresident of Canadian Car Co.,\nker Siddley group of England,\nand was formed to take over the\nsteel foundry division of Canadian\nCar Company, Ltd.\nmen and Enginemen, which dispensed with a similar long history\nof no alliances by joining the congress last year.'\nThe trainmen have obtained the\ngo-ahead for CLC entry from the\ncongress leadership. All they need\nnow is a majority of their local\nlodges voting for affiliation.\nUp to Monday, officials said, returns received here showed a current vote of 49 lodges for affiliation and five against. A majority\nwas expected in the next fortnight\nor so.\nWhen this is obtained, international President W. P. Kennedy of\nCleveland will come to Ottawa\nand make a formal application to\nthe CLC for admission. This can\nbe granted by the' CLC executive\nwithout prior reference to a convention.\nIt was understood that the\nBrotherhood of Locomotive Engineers, with about 9,000 members in\nCanada, also is considering trying\nto get into the congress. However,\nthis independent union has made\nno overt move up to now.\nShould the engineers enter it\nwould give the congress just\nabout all orthodox Canadian\nunions apart from those in the\nCanadian and Catholic Confederation of Labor, which heads Quebec groups-totalling some 100,\nmembers. The Quebee body and\nthe CLC have been having discussions aimed at an association between the two, which would leave\nthe CCCL with autonomy.\nStill outside the pale of the CLC\nare a number of unions that have\nbeen Communist - dominated.\nAmong these are the International\nUnion of Mine, Mill and Smelter\nWorkers and the United Electrical\nWorkers.    '\nPresent RCAF Unit\nBadge to Commander\nMETZ, Franoe (CP)\u2014The official unit badge for the RCAF's\nNo. 3 Fighter Wing was presented\ntp the wing's commanding officer\ntoday at a ceremonial'parade held\nat the Zweibruecken, Germany,\nfighter base.\nGroup Capt. J. K. F. MacDonald received the' badge from Air\nVice-Marshal ]A. B. Godwin, commander of Canada's Nato air division in Europe.\nThe unit badge displays the\nmotto \"Freedom's Vanguard\"\nunder a German eagle charged\nwith three maple leaves. Air Vice-\nMarshall Godwin said the badge is\nsymbolic of the NATO link between Canada and Germany.\nScience Now Shrinks\nPiles Without\nPain or Discomfort\nFinds Healing Substance That Both\nRelieves Pain\u2014Shrinks Hemorrhoids\nToronto, Ont. (Special)\u2014For\nthe first time science, h;is found a\nnew healing substance with the\nability to shrink hemorrhoids and\nto relieve pain and itching.\nThousands nave been relieved\nwith this inexpensive substance\nright in the privacy of their own\nhome without any discomfort or\ninconvenience.\nIn case after case, while gently\nrelieving pain actual reduction\n(shrinkage) took place.-     *\nMost amazing of all\u2014results\nwere so thorough that sufferers\nmade statements like \"Piles have\nceased to be a problem!\" -\nThe secret is a new healing substance (Bio-Dyne)\u2014discovery of a\nfamous scientific institute.\n,, Now this new healing substance\nis offered in suppository or ointment\nform called Preparation H. Ask\nfor it at all drug stores\u2014money\nback guarantee.\nU.S.-6th Fleet\nUnits Head\nToward Beirut\n, \u25a0 \\\nBEIRUT, Lebanon (AP)^-Some\nunits of the United States 6th\nFleet, including, six'transports of\nan amphibious squadron, will arrive in Beirut waters Tuesday on\norders of the American government, the U.S. Embassy here announced Monday.\nThe .squadron comprises an amphibious .landing force made up\nof transport and auxiliary types of\nships. It will contain a battalion\nof Marines made up of 1,798 men\nand 84 officers.       -\nAltogether, with navy men, the\nsquadron will have 221 officers\nand 3,585 men. The units will\nstay in Beirut- three days. Two\nother destroyers of the 6th Fleet\nwill arrive May 2.\nThe unit's arrival coincides with\norders issued to the 6th Fleet to\nsail to the eastern Mediterranean\nin support of King Hussein of Jordan in his struggle' with leftist\nelements. Hussein has charged\nthat international communism is\nbehind disturbances in Jordan.\nCanada's first regular postal\nservice started in 1734, between\nQuebec, Trpis - Rivieres and Mon-\ntreal^    '\u25a0'\u25a0'\nEisenhower Faces\nStiff Challenae\nka*   i\nBy. JOHN HEFFERNAN\nWASHINGTON   (R e u t e r s)-\nPresident Eisenhower returned to\nVonBrenlano\nDenies Sldry\nOf Atom Arms\nBONN (AP)\u2014Foreign Minister\nHeinrich von Bretano said Monday West Germany has no intention now- of arming itself with\natomic weapons. It might come to'|\nthat, he added, but not necessarily and not for a*long time.\nj Von Brentano made the statement, which is a bit different\nfro,m what the government has\nbeen saying, in giving reporters\nhis reaction to Russia's note warning against atomic bases in West\nGermany.\nThe note, Von Brentano said,\nwas based on Russia's assumption\nthat West Germany intends to\narm itself with A-weapons. That\nassumption, von Brentano\" said,\n\"is wrong.\"\nThe declaration was in an eight\npage statement read by von Brentano at a press conference.\nNOT DIFFERENT\nHe was asked whether his\nview wasn't different from that\nstated by Defence Minister Franz\nJosef Strauss and Chancellor Kon-\nrad Adenauer, who have said\nWest Germany should get atomic\nweapons along with the other\nNATO allies.\nVon Brentano replied it wasn't\ndifferent, that Strauss, had said it\nwould take 20 months at least before West Germany could get A-\nweapons.\nHe added that \"it may be a\nnecessary development\" for West\nGermany's army to poss\natomic weapons after \"two or\nthree years unless a world - wide\ncontrolled armament system is\nput into force.\nVon Breiitano's statement\nbristled with angry, words. He\ncalled the Soviet note \"incomprehensible\" and \"grotesque,\"--\"a\nmassive threat and an attempt at\nintimidation with a view to sep\narating the federal republic from\nher allies.\"\nPreviously, Adenauer's Christian Democrat party had' said the\nSoviet note was calculated to\nhelp the Socialist opposition in\nthis year's elections. .'   i\nMINERAL OUTPUT\nNova Scotia annually produces\nabout 6,000,000 tons of coajand\n4,000,000 tons of gypsum, among\nother minerals. sg-\nWashington Monday from his 10-\nday work-and-golf stay in Augusta,\nGa., faced with possibly the most\nchallenging domestic political situation he has yet experienced.\nLooming larger and larger was\nthe long-heralded battle with Congress \u25a0\u00a3 controlled by the Tival\nDemocratic party\u2014over the president's record peacetime budget\nof $71,800,000,000.\nSkirmishing and manoeuvring\nwill start in September in preparation for the Congressional\nelections in November, 1958.\n'\"' The\" major aim of the Democratic party at present is to trim\nthe administration's budget sufficiently this year to allow a vote-\ngetting tax reduction to go into\neffecb in January.\nWANTS G.O.P. CONGRESS\nThe president's goal is to further the march- of his \"modern\nrepublicanism\" and to win back\ncontrol of the Congress for the\nRepublican party next year.\nTo accomplish this he must\nmaintain the present era of peace\nand prosperity. This involves continued heavy' expenditures by the federal government\nto meet the costly social and economic program, more huge outlays for defence and a foreign\naid program which the president\nholds vital for the United States'\nown security^\nIn other words, budget cuts sufficiently large to allow an immediate tax reduction are not possible from the president's point\nof view.    '\nEconomy - minded Democrats\nare likely to receive considerable\nsupport from right-wing conservatives in the Republican party as\nthey seek to make reductions in\nfederal spending. This, in turn,\nwill pose the question how much\ninfluence the president continues\nto have over his own party.\nHe is constitutionally debarred\nfrom seeking a third term in the\npresidential election of 1960. Some\npoliticians believe that, because of\nthat factor Eisenhower's political\nstrength has been somewhat diminished.\nMurmurs of criticism of the\npresident's frequent trips to\nAugusta to play golf continue to\nbe 'heard. The latest came from\nStewart Alsop,, a political commentator. He said that the fact\nthat. Eisenhower.was in Augusta\nthroughout the dangerous crisis in\nJordan raised the questions: (1)\nWhat really was the state of his\nhealth and <2) did he really have\nto spend so much time away\n,from Washington.\nPHONE  1844  FOR  CLASSIFIED\nMake a\n\u25a0'\u25a0 wi.' \"'\u25a0\u25a0'\u2022\u25a0\u25a0     .' \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0   \u25a0\nGood     '\nImpression\nMaking a \"Good Impression\" on printed stationery can\n. be made mueh easier for you . . . and with more \"eye\"\nappeal .V. when you have your printing done by the Nelson Daily News Commercial Printing Department.\nNo matter if yourorder is just for 100 cards, it will have\nas much attention as if the order were 50,000 . . . Why\nnot have your stationery make a \"Good Impression\" by\nletting us redesign all your printing needs.\nCommercial Printers\n.    \/,, , - DIVISION OF\nNews Publishing Co. Ltd.\nPublishers of Nelson Daily News\nPHONE 1844  '-   NELSON\n tm\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, APRIL 30, 1957\u20147\nfrOmWiMti\/ifa\nBUY NOW and SAVE I\nGOLDEN\nSALAD DRESSING\nFRESH COFFEE\nCHOICE PEAS\nAylmer Fancy; 15 \"oz^ Tin\n\u2022     \u2022     \u2022'    \u2022   ' \u2022\nNalley's Salad Time; 24 oz. Jar\n6 for 75\u00b0\n49'\nTom-Boy, Mild and Mellow; 16 oz. Bag\nDewkist Sieve 5; 15 oz. Tin\ne       i       e       e       0\nrar n\n\u2022       t ^B aW*kaaaa\\^B\n10f0,99\nAylmer\nTOMATO\nJUICE\n48 ex. Tin\n25\nChristies\nGRAHAM\nWAFERS\n' m ox. Pkg.\n25\nBetter Buy\nJAM\nApple and Strawberry\n48 oz. Tin\n69\nChoice\nTOMATOES\nAylmer 28 ox. Tin\n2fo49c\nBetter Buy\nGREEN\nBEANS\nCut-Standard\n15 ox. Tin\n6\u00bb69\nBrunswick\nSARDINES\n3i ex. Tin\n10<or75e\nSwift's\nPREM\n12 <w. Tin\n39'\nFROZEN PEAS\nYork; 12 ox. Choice Ctn.\n2 - 29'\nFrozen Strawberries\nFroxo; 12 oz. Choice Ctn.\n2\u00ab\u00ab69'\nFISH AND CHIPS\nDelnor; 14 ex. Carton\n53\nORANGE JUICE\nBroders; 6 ex. Frexen Tin\n2for33:e\nICE CREAM\nPeter'.; Half Gallon*.\nEach 89c\nSTEAKS\nUnion Tender Grown\n1%' 2 Lb. Avg.\nEACH\nS Grade \"A\" Red\nib.65c\nHome Brand\nSIDE\nBACON\nSliced Rindlest\nib 5 9\nGrade \"A\" Red\nChuck Roast\nBEEF\nlb.25C\nReady-to-Eat\nHAMS\nWhole, Half er Quartered\nib. 59\nPORK SAUSAGE\nHome Brand\nSkinless\nSalmOH   Red Spring\nCod'Ling\nHaHbUt     Frosty Fresh\nPRICES EFFECTIVE\nAPRIL30,toMAY4\n.      WE RESERVE THE RIGHT\nTO LIMIT QUANTITIES\n 8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, APRIL 30, 1957\nJewish Woman Would\nAllow Women Rabbis\nBy MEL SFJFRIN\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 A leader \"of\nthe women's branch of Reform\nJudaism in North America appealed Monday for a lowering of\nthe barriers to. women becoming\nrabbis.\nj Miss Jane Evans of New York,\nexecutive director of the National\nFederation of Temple Sisterhoods,\ntold 1000 delegates to the group's\nconvention that \"women are uniquely suited by temperament, intuition and spiritual sensitivity to\nbe rabbis.\"\nI The federation is affiliated with\nthe Union of American Hebrew\nCongregations, the parent body of\nReform Judaism in North America\nwhich is holding its 44th biennial\nconvention here.\nThere has. never been a woman\nordained as a rabbi although in\nthe reform movement a plea for a\nchange in attitude was first made\n25 years ago.\nNEVER ORDAINED\nOne woman completed the course\nof; study for rabbis at the. Hebrew\nUnion College in Cincinnati but\nshe never was ordained.\nWomen have been permitted to\nconduct reform Jewish religious\nservices although not rabbis\nThe proposal'that women be\npermitted fo become rabbis in the\nreform movement was'maqe at\nthe 1955 meeting, of the Central\nConference of American Rabbis\nbut was tabled.\nIt is to be taken up at the next\nmeeting of the rabbis in Miami,\nFla., in June.\nIf the rabbis should agree, it\nwould require action on the part\nof the board of governors of the\nHebrew Union Colleges in New\nYork, Los Angeles and Cincinnati\nbefore women could'be ordained.\nMiss Evans maintained that \"If\nwomen can serve as teachers, they\ncan serve as preachers, too.\"\n'Not enough women, are being\ngiven the responsibility for leadership warranted by their service\nand devotion. Although women\nhave conquered virtually every\nbarrier in their efforts to win the\nfullest measure of equality, they\nstill face, serious obstacles in the\nfield of religion.\"\nHer pleas received support from\nRabbi Barhett Brickner of Cleveland, past president of the Central\nConference of American Rabbis.\nTwo American rabbis disagreed\non whether the reform movement\nshould have a uniform guide fir\nreligious observances.\nRabbi Solomon Freehof of Pittsburgh told the convention he opposes adoption of a code of reform\nJewish practices as contrary to the\ndeclaration of independence laid\n,down by founders of the reform\ngroup more than 70 years ago.\nHEP\nMOTH\nPROOFER\nPushbutton\nMothproofing\nin Two Minutes\nWith No Mothball\nOdour.\nOldtimers Asked\nContribute '-,\nTowns' Histories\nVICTORIA \u2014 Old-time residents\nin all parts of British Columbia\nhave, been invited to contribute \u2022 to\ncommunity histories being written\nin their home towns.\nBritish Columbia Centennial Committee; in an effort to assist local\ncommittees to gather material is\nasking, through newspaper advertisements, all B.C. old-time residents to communicate with their\nhometown... .\"   \u25a0'''.\nIn addition to aiding in the compilation of community histories, the\ninformation sent in is expected to\nbe i useful ..in publicizing the Centenary locally, helping to keep interest high.\n\"If many of the pioneers will\njust send in the date and place of\ntheir birth (or the,first place in\nwhich they resided) the result will\nbe very helpful to those writing, histories,\" said B.C. Centennial chairman L. J. Wallace, \"and earlyJday\nstories and anecdotes will be very\nwelcome.\"\n\"The suggestion that a solicitation of material be carried out on\na province-wide scale was the original idea of one of the local centennial committees,\" Mr. Wallace\nsaid. \"Since all local committees\nhave the same need, a mass appeal\nis the simplest one, and we are\nhoping for an excellent response.\"\n\"Replies should not be sent to\nthe B.C. Centennial Committee at\nVictoria,\" Mr. Wallace pointed out,\n\"but directly to the local committee in your hometown.\"\nPilot Killed\nAl Nanaimo\nNANAJMO (CP) - A student\npilot was killed Monday at Cassidy\nAirport, the first fatality there\nsince the field was opened In '1942.\nContractor Alec V. Richardson,\n43, of Duncan died in the crash of\nhis light plane .and the instructor,\nHans Reuter, 32, of Nanaimo, was\ncritically injured.\nReuter is unconscious in Nanaimo hospital. He suffered a fractured skull, broken left leg and\nfacial injuries. '\nThe crash occurred about 50\nyards off the main runway at Cassidy, seven miles south of here.\nThe plane had just become airborne when it plunged to the\nground, hitting a small knoll.\nLarge Naval\nConference -\nOpens, U.K.\nLONDON (CP) - The largest\nnaval conference since the Second\nWorld War opened at the Royal\nNaval College, Greenwich, Monday.\nAbout 20 high-ranking Canadian\nnaval officers are attending. Main\npurpose of the gathering is to allow the chiefs of staff of Commonwealth navies to exchange\nviews and to participate in an exercise, given the code name JTair\nlead, in which matters'of common\ninterest in naval strategy and tactics will be studied in the light\nof current technical developments.\nThe conference continues until\nMay 2. The Canadian party includes vice-Admiral H. G. DeWolf,\nchief of naval staff, Rear-Admiral\nR. E. S. Bidwell, flag officer Atlantic Coast; Rear-Admiral H. F.\nPullen, flag officer Pacific Coast,\nand Rear-Admiral H. S. Rayner,\nchief of naval personnel.\nDOUBLE    IMAGE \u2014 Spanish painter Luis Quintanilla puts final touches to portrait\npf cellist Fablo Casals who insisted on practicing during sittings tn his Puerto Rican hime.\nlllth Battery\nNews\nUnit Orders, Part One by Lieut.\nF. W. M. Drew, Commanding Officer.\n1. Duties \u2014 Orderly NCO for\n-weekending-May-3, Bdr-Wolfhard;\nnext for duty, L\/Bdr. Denholm.\n2. Parades \u2014 Tues., April 30,\n1955 hours, training as per Syllabus; Thurs. May 2, 1955 hours,\nSports Parade.\n3. Dress \u2014 Tues. April 30, 1955\nhours, Battledress, boots, puttees,\nweb belt, beret. Thurs., May 2,\nSports Dress.'\n4. Notice \u2014 Major T. H. Fell,\nCommanding Officer of the 24th\nMAA' Regiment will attend the\nUnit's Parade on Thursday. Any\n.persons wishing to make inquiries\nabout the HI MAA Bty are invited\nto do so on Thursday night.\nMan Charged in\nSupermarket Case\nKINGSTON, Ont. (CP)-Norman\nDouglas McCaud, 25, of Toronto\nwill appear in magistrate's court\nFriday on a charge of the $25,000\narmed robbery of a supermarket\nhere April 6.\nIt is expected McCaud will be\nremanded again, since Crown Attorney T. J. Rigney said he him-\nseh will not be able to appear\nFriday. ' >\nMcCaud was arrested in Montreal April 10 following a scuffle\nwith two policemen. They said he\nwas carrying about $2,500 in cash\nwhen picked up.\nMcCaud is charged with being\none of two armed men who held\nthe family of Harold B. Gilroy,\nKingston supermarket manager,\nhostage while one of them forced\nhim to go to his - store and open\nthe safe. The men escaped with\ntwo bags containing $25,000 in\ncash and $2,300 in cheques.\nVANCOUVER (CP) - The Van-\nChurch School\nGraduates Assist\nAt Fairview United\nMiss Helen Morrow of Brandon,\nManitoba, and Robert Burns of\nKamloops assisted at Sunday morning worship in Fairview United\nChurch.\nThey are two of nine graduates\nof,the Naramata Christian Leadership Training' School,.:near Penticton, who are now on tour in \"the\nKootenays. A similar team will\nmeet with the Women's Federation\nand Canadian Girls in Training of\nSt. Paul's-Trinity United Church\nTuesday night. Other groups are\nmaking similar tours in various\nparts of the province.\nMiss Morrow gave up a position\nas secretary of a Brandon radio\nand television station to take the\nsix-month course at the school,\nwhich seeks to produce lay.workers for the church. She has been\nengaged on the Naramata secretarial staff. Mr. Burns worked for\nthe Canadian National Railway and\nSchool Board in Kamloops, then\nenrolled in a refrigeration and\nventilation correspondence course,\nwhich he studied part time at the\nschool.\nNo Abduction, Just\nDomestic Argument\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 Police reported Monday that a woman who\nsaid she saw a young girl struggling with a cab driver at an intersection was watching the tail\nend pf a domestic argument between man and wife\u2014not an abduction.\nThe woman phoned police early\nMonday with a story that touched\noff a street-by-street search of the\nnorthwest section of the city. The\ncaller said the cab sped away be-\n-_.,\u2014      ., (.;ilin:i    ntitu   niv;   *-uu   oui,u   unuj    >-'>-\n?\u00a3&!5M?\"S SSraB fore she could get near enough to\na scholarship fund of $2500 will\nbe made available to students attending the University of B.C. Summer School and Festival of the Arts\nin July and August.\nThe Summer School of Fine Arts\noffers courses in music, drama,\nand arts and crafts.\nApplications for Vancouver Festival Society scholarships, which\nare for varying amounts, must be\nreceived by the Extension Department at UBC by May 15.\nLast year 60 students received\nvarious scholarships and bursaries to attend fine arts courses during the summer.\nHighlight of the summer school\nhelp the girl,\nPolice found the. taxi and took\nthe bewildered driver to the station for questioning. It developed\nsaid a police spokesman that he\nhad a row with his wife. She tried\nto get out of the cab- and he\nyanked her back,\nPCs Would Increase Sales of\nB.C. Lumber lo Red China\nProtests Increase\nOn Nuclear Tests\nof the theatre will be the production of the Tempest directed by\nDouglas Seale, distinguished Britj\nish producer.'        '-'\"'.\nCourses..will be given, in acting(\nspeech, directing, stage costume,\nmake-up, stagecraft, and drama\nmethods in'schools.\nVANCOUVER (CP) - The Progressive Conservatives, if elected\nthis June, will increase the sale of\nBritish Columbia lumber products\nto Red China, B.C. party spokesman said today, i\nB.C.'s Progressive Conservative\ncandidates in the federal election\nmet here Saturday to- discuss the\nnational policy announced by party\nleader John Diefenbaker in Toronto\nlast' week.\nLeon Ladner and A. C. Des-\nBrisay, joint chairmen of the B.C.\ncampaign, issued a statement Monday \"of what a Conservative government will mean to British Columbia.\"\n\"To provide markets, the Conservative party will actively encourage the export of lumber,\npulp, newsprint and other forest\nproducts to all parts of the world,\"\nthe statement said. \"We will call\na commonwealth trade conference\nto arrange for the sale of our products in our traditional commonwealth markets which have been\nlost.\n\"We will also increase government facilities for trade throughout all parts of Asia, including\nJapan and China.\"\nIn agriculture, the Prairie Farm\nRehabilitation Act would be extended to B.C. so that federal assistance would be available for irrigation,, flood control and reclamation projects.\nREVISE, HOUSING ACT\nHousing \u2014 The Conservatives\nproposed that a ministry of housing\nbe set up; that the National Housing Act and regulations be revised\nso that land costs can be considered a part of building costs; that\nNHA loans be available for the purchase, of'existing houses in good\ncondition as well as the building\nof new houses; that money for\nthese purposes be available at reasonable rates of interest; that the\nlederal government, assist in_ the\nfinancing by the municipalities of\nessential services in new residential areas.\nHighways ..\u2014 \"A Conservative\nfederal government will assist in\nthe building of the PGE extension\nfrom Prince Gednjfc to the Peace\nRiver for the whole of its length.\nWe'believe that it is vital that the\nTrans-Canada Highway should be\ncompleted across B.C. at once and\nshould be extended to the north\nend of Vancouver Island.\"\nCOLUMBIA RIVER\nColumbia River \u2014 \"We propose\na joint investment program between the dominion and the B.C,\ngovernments for the development\nof power pn the Columbia River.\"\nMunicipalities\u2014Progressive Conservatives would make \"grants\nequivalent to full municipal taxes\non all crown property; exempt\nmunicipal and school boa'rd purchases from full sales and excise\ntaxes.\"\nBOTH LUCKY\nMEOPHAM, Eng. (CP)-Marie\nCaleno won three prizes in the\nwhist drive in this Kent village\non the. same day her husband won\n\u00a3590 in the football pool.\nLet Slim and Jerry show you the thrilling\npower of the fabulous D-44. Truly an\nengineering masterpiece \u2014 more reason\nwhy more  Canadians  use  McCullochs\nthan any other chain saw. Select yours\nfrom the world's most complete line \u2014\n8 models over 40 variations \u2014 quality at   \u2022 \u2022 \u2022 \u2022 \u2022 *\u2022;\u2022\u2022\u25a0..\u2022 jj\nthe lowest price ever.\nBy BRIAN KENNEDY\nTOKYO (Reuters) \u2014 Japan has\nopened a campaign against a new\nseries of United States nuclear\ntests to be.held in Nevada next\nmonth'.\nAt the same time, Tokyo students clashed with police outside\nthe British Embassy during a protest demonstration against forthcoming British H-bomb tests in the\nSouth Pacific.\nScientists in Western Europe reported new evidence of increased\nradioactivity in the atmosphere\nfollowing at least five nuclear tests\nin Russia.\nThe Japanese government has\nsaid it is opposed to nuclear tests\neven within the territory of the\ntesting country because radioactive fall-out might be harmful to\nother countries.\nBRITISH TESTS\nPROTESTED\nJapan has protested bitterly\nagainst British plans to. explode at\nleast one H-bomb in the Christmas\nIsland area, south of Hawaii, this\nsummer. The government also\nasked the Soviet Union to suspend\ntests held in Russia.\nWest German scientist Walter\nGerlach said in Munich that his\ninstitute has recorded increased\nradioactivity pollution of the air\nfollowing Russian nuclear tests.\n\u2022 The U. S. and British govern\nments said Russia exploded nuclear weapons April 3, 6,10,12 and\n16. . '\nDANE SAYS\nNO DANGER\nIn Copenhagen the Danish board\nof health announced that increased\nradioactivity in the atmosphere\nhad been detected over Denmark\nsince mid-March. But it added that\nthere is no danger to the pollution.\nTorleif Hvinden, chief of the\nNorwegian defence research institute, said in Oslo that increased\nradioactivity over Norway first\nwas recorded a week ago and may\nbe due to the Soviet tests.\nIn Paris, a spokesman for\nFrance's atomic energy commission reported an increase of radioactivity over the capital on the\nnight of April'24-25.\nTahitians studying in Paris announced that the Tahiti student association passed a resolution expressing \"lively anxiety\" at the\nforthcoming Christmas Island test.\ntJSLdJL CL SsCOtuL\nPARKING FINES\n' Five Nelson men pleaded guilty\nlast week to parking meter infractions. They were fined $1 and costs\neach by Magistrate R. S. Nelson\nin city, court. \/\n\u00bb Involved were I. M. Hprie for an\ninfraction March 27 on the 600\nblock Baker Street; L. L. Katel-\nnikoff for an infraction April 4 on\nthe 400 block Ward Street; J. C.\nDerbyshire for an April 6 infraction-on Vernon Street; Melville\nCollett for a March 30. infraction\non the 400 block Ward Street; and\nR. M. Wakely for an' infraction\nMarch 30 on the 300 block Baker\nStreet.\nAll but Wakely submitted written\npleas.\n\"Mother doesn't complain\nwhen you sit up late with me,\nHarold, but she does object\nwhen you drink the milk on\nyour way out in the morn-\nine.\"\nNeed to\nre-roof your\npresent home?\nThe beauty ia color and pattern of J-M Asphalt\nShingles is instantly apparent to the eye<jPn your\nroof they will lift your home well above the ordinary. But charm is by no means all.\nChoosing J-M Asphalt Shingles assures a roof\nthat will also give you absolutely dependable\nprotection id anyweather, year after year without\nworry. If you live in a high-wind area there are\nself-tocking types of J-M Asphalt Shingles you\nmay find specially advantageous. i\nBut whatever color or style you prefer, J-M\nAsphalt Shingles will give you a roof that will\nprove a sound, safe and enduring investment in\nhome improvement. A roof you can trust. Ask\nyour J-M dealer, to show you samples, or write for\nfree, full-color folder to; Canadian Johns-\nManville, Pbrt Credit, Ontario.\nJohns-Manville\nMore Than 400 Lines of Products for Home, Farm and Industry\nASBESTOS TEXTILES REFRACTORIES SPINTEX HOME INSULATION\n.PACKINGS & GASKETS    . TRANSITE PIPE ACOUSTICAL MATERIALS\nINDUSTRIAL INSULATIONS ASBESTOS SIDING INSULATING BOARD PRODUCTS\nBRAKE LININGS ASPHALT SHINGLES ASBESTOS WALLBOARDS B-2124\nEOR     J-M    BUILDING    MATERIALS     SEE     TOUR    H E A R E S T     10 H H S -M AN VILLE    DEALER\n JNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, APRIL 30, 1957\nm\nThanks Folks!\n\u2022 \u00ab \u2022\nfor the terrific response you gave to our New\nDeluxe SAFEWAY!\nTo show our thanks we are presenting to you this\nline-up of\nAPPRECIATION\nVALUES\nm   m\nthere's a Bounty of Bargains\nin every department!\nPrices Effective April 30th Thru May 4th\nIn Both Nelson Safeway Stores\nmta#immnja)ia)tfc$\nill\nEnter SAFEWAY'S\nBIG CONTEST\nJt's Easy! It's Fun! Win One of These\nNorthern Electric Appliances\n1st PRIZE\nNorthern Electric\n11 cubic foot\nRefrigerator\n2nd PRIZE\nNorthern Electric\niLECTRIC STOVE\n3rd PRIZE\nSylvania\n21\" TELEVISION SET\n4th to 10th PRIZES\nSYLVANIA TABLE RADIOS ^\nThe contest is now open ... Enter as often as you wish. -\nEntry blanks and rules at both Nelson Safeway store*.\nThis is a local Contest for Nelson Safeway customers only.\nAMPLE FREE\nPARKING\n135-Car Parking Lot for Your\nConvenience.\nFinest Food Selection\nin the\nKOOTENAYS\nSPEEDY CHECKOUT\nSERVICE\nBy the Most Courteous\nClerks in Town\nCanada IOf SAFEWAY\n\\\nWe Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities \u2014 CANADA SAFEWAY LIMITED\n r-NELSON DAILY N*EWS, TUESDAY, APRIL 30, 1957\nSAFEWfiy'S your\nTops Brand\nDog Food\n15 oz. cant\n10.faf.951\nAll Popular Brands\nCIGARETTES\nPer Carton\nof 10.\n$<V88\n2\nYour BEST place to save because...\nyotir total food bill is lower here\nshopping trip after shopping trip.\nYour BEST place to save because...\nweekly specials mean 'bonus* savings for you.\nYour BEST place to save because...\nquality merchandise gives meaning\nto low prices.\nYour BEST place to save because...\nour unconditional guarantee protects\nyour every purchase.\nHeinz Tomato\nKETCHUP\nlloz.\nbottle\n27\nEdward's\nCOFFEE\nDrip or\nRegular\nPacked\nVacuum\n16 oz. Tin\n99\nParty Pride\nICE CREAM\n-89\nAll\nFlavors\nHalf Gallon\nTownhouse Grapefruit\nJUICE\n2i\u00ab69\n48 oz.\nCan _\nLalani Fancy\nCRUSHED\nPINEAPPLE\n20 oz.\nCan _\n29\nTaste Tells\nChoice; 15 oz. tin\nTeste Tells\nChoice; 15 oz. tin\nTownhouse\nSieve 4; 15 oz. tin\nCREAM CORN\nGREEN BEANS\nFANCY PEAS\nCORN-on-COB\nPORK and BEANS\nPEAS and CARROTS\nSAUERKRAUT\nTownhouse\n3 to 4 cobs per tin; each\n.4** 59'\n4f\u00b0r65'\n4\u00ab-.65c\n27\nRobin Hood\nCAKE MIXES\n2i\u00ab55'\nWhite or\nChoc.\n15 oz. pkg. \t\nTaste Tells\n15 oz.  Can\nPolka Dot\n15 oz. Can\nStone Crock\nFancy; 28 oz.\n6 f<\" 69'\n4 for 6 5*\n2o49\nCourt Fancy\nSOCKEYE\nSALMON\n1145\n73\/4 OZ\ncan  _\n.\nCAMPBELL'S TOMATO OR\nigetable\n10 oz. cans .\n10c\nB\u00a9r\nair\nPremium Frozen Foods\n... Safeway Guaranteed Products\nGREEN PEAS n oz. Pk9. ______ 4 for 65$\nGREEN BEANS n 0, Pkg. _____ 2 f\u00bbr 49tf\nMIXED VEGETABLES n*t Pkg. 2 <* 45$\nFRENCH FRIED POTATOES 9 0,2 for35tf\nSTRAWBERRIES 15 o, pkg 2 for 694\nORANGE   JU\/Cf   Concentrated; 6 oz. 4 for 65$\nPrices Effective April 30th\nThru May 4th Inclusive\nPure Strawberry\nJAM\nFamous Empress Brand\u2014\n48 oz. can....\nTASTE TELLS CHOICE\nPRUNE PLUMS\n15 oz.\ntins\n49\nc\nWE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES \u2014 CANADA SAFEWAY LIMITED\n NELSON,DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, APRIL 30,1957--.\n5.6J.\nBEST place to save!\nInstant Powdered\n16 oz. pkg.\nDavid's Sweet\nBISCUITS\n13.. Varieties\n75c\nYour BEST place to save because...\nyou find here the brands you know\nand depend upon.\nYour BEST pkce to save because...\nfriendly, courteous service makes\nshopping more fun.\nYour BEST place to save because...\nSafeway's own brands mean duality\nfoods at extra savings*\nZIPPY DILLS\nExceptional Value.\n28 oz. tin\t\nSALAD DRESSING\nYouU be dollars ahead this year...shopping Safeway. Oar low prices on\nItem after item\u2014right down the fene\u2014mean important savings on your\ntotal food bill. Combined with top quality merchandise and friendly cow-\n.teous service, these low prices make Safeway \"your BUST place te saveT\nPiedmont. _&___\u2022   \u25a0\u00ab__\u25a0\n32oz.jor per jar\n65\nNEW\nt\n10\nSHAFTER\nWHITE\nPOTATOES\nlbs.\nfor\n59\nc\nSafeway's your Best Place to buy\nGarden-Fresh FRUITS and VEGETABLES\nAll Produce sold by Safeway is rushed  from field  and  orchard  and\nkept fresh under ideal  conditions until you buy!\nASPARAGUS\nTender\nGreen Spears.\nlb. 19c\nNEW CABBAGE\nFirm,\nHard,  Fresh\nib.9c\nGRAPEFRUIT\nFlorida\nIndian River\n2 ibs. 21c\nTOMATOES\n25e\nFancy Field\n14 oz. ctn. Per carton\nHEAD LETTUCE\nCrisp, Firm.\nCalifornia -\nib. 13e\nPRICES EFFECTIVE APRIL 30rh TO MAY 4th.\n...At Safeway you buy Produce by the\nPound ... This means that you Pay for\nonly what you  select.\nj*.;:::::::::::;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::\nIP\nill;     oiiif\nvoor^&STpltKetosave!\nj'1\nWe Reserve the Right To Limit Quantities\n \u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, APRIL 30,1957\n-tf-\nB\u2014S\nSTEAKS\nCHUCK\nRUMP\nCUT-\nSAFEWAY'S your Best\nplace to save on TOP QUALITY\nGovernment Graded\nand Inspected\nDisplayed in Gleaming White Refrigerated Cases\nWrapped in Sanitary Film\nso you can examine what you buy!\nAll Meats Sold by\nAre...\nSirloin\u2014T-Bone\nClub Grade\nBlade-in*\nRed lb.\nc\nROAST\nBEEF\nROAST  1st and ^nd cuts\nBEEF\nGrade f 1 Red Ib.\nc\nGrade H Red Ib.\nc\nFOWL\nCello\nPack     |b.\nC\n* Properly aged for\ns tender, eating\n* Trimmed of excess\nwaste before weighing\n* Unconditionally Guaranteed\n... or your money refunded\nWith SELF - SERVICE MEAT you\nDO NOT pay for the weight of\nthe film, packing trays etc.\nYou pay ONLY FOR THE MEAT\n'      \u25a0_-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0--\u25a0\u2014\u2014\u2014\u25a0   \u25a0\u25a0      IMI\u2014^\u2014    111 I   \u2014   T\u2014\nSelf-Serviee Meats in Our ,\nFairview Store Only.\nFresh Shoulder\nVEAL CHOPS\nFinest\nQuality Veal\nIk\nCampfire\nSIDE BACON\nSliced-Cello pkg.   .\nPER\nPOUND\nI\n59\nc\nFresh Breakfast\nSausage\nFresh Cod\nFILLETS\n\u25a0mMM\n-v to sciyp\n\u25a0!\u2022!\u2022\u25a0\u2022\u2022::\u2022:::\ny\/e reserve the right to limit quantities\nCANADA SAFEWAY LIMITED\n SHORT\nCIRCUIT\nBy JOHN  SHORT\nSpirt*. \u00a3ditiA\nthing about it.\nLast year was a time ot trial1 lor\nNelson tans. They knew at the\noutset that their club would not\nwin a championship; most of them\nwere aware that a cellar finish was\nnot beyond the realm of possibility.\nThe executive made enemies, but\nwhat executive in recent history\nhas done otherwise?, Certain observers criticized last year's team-\nleaders for their extreme frugality,\nwhile in their next breath they\ntossed barbs at previous executives\nfor their inability to make ends\nmeet.\nIt was a losing battle, as fan support dropped off and towards the\nend of the season players' performances \"dropped off also.\n*  *  +\nThere is, however, a distinct\nchance that Nelson lost the battle,\nand won the war. Indications lend\ncredence to the belief that any\nBOWER AHL's\nTOP'GOALIE\nNEW YORK (AP) - Johnny\nBower, goaltender for Providence\nReds, was named the American\nHockey League's most valuable\nplayer Monday for the second consecutive year.\nThe award, made by a vote of\npress, radio and television representatives, consists of the Leslie\nCunningham Trophy and a $300 league bonus.\nBower is the first goalie to win\nthe American League's MVP designation and the second player\nto win it twice. The other was\nCarl Liscombe of Providence in\n1947-48 and 1948-49.\nBower previously had pocketed\ntwo $300 bonuses for having the\nlowest goaltending average during\nthe regular season and for his\nunanimous selection as a member\nof the first all-star team.\nIn the MVP voting, the 31-year-\nold Bower received four of the six\nfirst place votes and 21 of a possible 30 points on a, 5-3-1 basis.\nSecond with 14 points was Freddie\nGlover of Cleveland, league-leading scorer. Others listed were\nBronco Horvath, Rochester, 10\npoints; Willie Marshall, Hershey,\n5; Paul .fiarives, Providence, 3,\nand Jimmy Moore, Cleveland, 1.\nBig Klu To Get\nHead tp Toe Tests\nCINCINNATI (AP). - Ted Kluszewski, ailing Cincinnati first baseman, entered hospital Monday for\n\"as cbmplete an examination as\nanyone in the world ever had.\"\nBig Klu, racked with pain from\na hip ailment, has not played since\nthe opening game of the season.\nHe has appeared several times as\na pinch hitter.\nGabe Paul, general manager of\nthe Cincinnati Redlegs, said the\nfinest specialists in the country\nwill be. called 'to examine the\nmuscle man from head to foot.\nBob Masterson's address Friday night at the first\nannual Nelson Sportsmen's Dinner becomes more topical by\nthe minute. , ,\nBob, here to confer with Jack Morgan in regard to\nCalgary Stampeders' return to Nelson during July to train\nfor the forthcoming Western Interprovincial Football Union\nseason, said surprisingly little about his club's chances in\nthe pending gridiron wars,\nInstead, he stated definitely and with emphasis that,\n\"if any citizen allows an organized sport to, escape from a\ntown, he is doing a great dis-service to his community.\"\nTh>t statement is one .which will be remembered hy\nmany people tonight as Nelson Maple Leafs hold their\nannual meeting, I sincerely hope that those who allow his\nstatement to penetrate their inner mindB will also bear in\nmind that they must dosome-\nexecutive led by Norman Stlbbs\nwould not lose money.\nTonight'we will find out whether\nindications, are correct.\nWe will also learn whether last\nyear's executive will dip into their\nexpected surplus (however slight)\nahd help dissolve the deficit incurred by previous .operations.\nThe fact that eight men are being held responsible for a combined deficit \u2014 before the season just\npast \u2014 of $8200, strikes this observer as the height of unfairness.\nAfter all, every single one of us\nreceives certain benefits from the\nfact that Nelson can operate a Senior A hockey club.\n* *  *\nWhitby Dunlops are expepted\nwithin the next few days to win the\nAllan Cup. Whitby, for your information, draws its fans from a\npopulation area considerably smaller than ours. They are being kept\nsolvent by an active booster club\nand insignificant numbers of rabid\nfans. \u25a0\nBefore we do anything else, I\nmaintain that we should do our\nutmost to clear previous debts from\nabove the heads of the men currently being held liable. If it involves dropping out of senior hockey for a year \u2014 and I see no reason why it should \u2014 that is what\nshould be done.\n* \u2666  *\nAs the situation now stands, Nelson is unable to spend any large\nchunks of money for talent, for\ntwo reasons. The first is that large\nexpenditures increase the possibility of further indebtedness.\nAnd the second is that too few\npeople are interested in Nelson's\nhockey future. Take hockey away\nfrom them, and those who gripe\nwith their hands in their pockets\nwill be among the first to scream.\n* *  \u00bb \u2022\nShort's Briefs; A short while ago,\nseveral unsavory rumors circulated through town about former\nCKLN sportscaster Earl Warren.\nBruce Clark stopped in Monday\nafternoon to prove they were all\nunfounded. Earl has a lucrative\nposition with one of Winnipeg's\nlargest motor firms, and is still\ndabbling in radio and television.\nSilverton Blanks\nNew Denver Juniors\nSILVERTON - The third game\nof the Slocan Junior Baseball League saw Silverton whitewash New\nDenver 10-0 here Sunday.     .  \u2022\nPengelly received credit for his\nthird win against no losses, his\nrecord now standing at 33 strikeouts and an earned run average of\none.\nSilverton rapped out nine hits to\nNew Denver's three and each made\nthree errors.\nBatteries: Pengelly and Tow-\ngood;, Takenaka, Mori (8) and\nMori.\nClassified Ads Get Results\nAndy Hebenton Wins\nLady Byng Trophy\nMONTREAL (CP) - Andy\nHebenton of New York Rangers\nis the 19BB-B7 winner of the Lady\nByng Memorial Trophy, the National Hockey League announced\nMonday.\nThe trophy, along with $1,600,\nis awarded a rwi u a 11 y to \"the\nplayer adjudged to have exhibited\nthe best type of sportsmanship\nand gentlemanly conduct combined with, a high standard of\nplaying ability during the season.\" \u25a0-\u25a0;    '-\u2022'\nThe 27-year-old New York right\nwinger received' 45 points' in the\nwidely scattered ballottlng! Two\nformer winners, Earl Reibel of\nDetroit Red Wings, with 39 points,\nand Sid Smith.of Toronto Maple\nLeafs, with 37, were closest to\nHebenton. -\nTwenty-six players received one\nor more points. Nearest the three\nleaders were Don McKenney, Boston Bruins, 31; Floyd Curry,\nMontreal Canadiens, 27; Alex Delvecchio; Detroit, 24, and Red\nKelly, Detroit, 23.\nWhen the first ballot was held\nat the half-way mark of the season, Hebenton was\" third with 15\npoints. Reibel led then1 with 24\nand Curry was next with 20. During the campaign Hebenton scored\n21 goals and had 23 assists. He\nspent only 19- minutes in the penalty box,'\nHebenton Is a native of Winnipeg, where he played amateur\nhockey in the Montreal Canadiens\nchain. He turned professional with\nCincinnati, then In the American\nHockey League, in the 1949-50 season.\nHe played the next five seasons\nwith Victoria Cougars of the Western Hockey League and was purchased by Rangers at the start of\nthe 1955-58 season.\nInter-Cities Five-Pin\nTourney Begins Today\nPlay begins tonight, in the 15th\nannual West Kootenay Inter-Cities\nfive-pin bowling tournament at\nNelson BQwl-e-drome, Dot Waterer\nrevealed Monday.\nSome 145 bowlers making up 29\nteams from Nelson, Trail, Rossland and South Slocan will compete from 7 p.m. Tuesday until\nThree-Year-Olds\nSeek Derby\nTrial Slakes\nBy JOHN CHANDLER\nLOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) - The\ninitial skirmish leading up to the\n$125,O0O-added Kentucky Derby on\nSaturday will find half a dozen\nthree-year-old stars battling today\nin the one-mile Derby Trial Stakes\nat Churchill Downs. .\nHeading the field for the trial\nwill be the powerful Calumet\nFarm pair of Gen. Duke, and Iron\nLiege'. The entry box closed Monday but there were no surprises.\nFor 14 years, Ben and Jimmy\nJones of Calumet have used the\nTrial as their final big sharpener\nfor the Derby.\nAlso entered were Clifford Lus-\nsky's .Federtd Hill, W. S. Miller's\nBetter Bee, and the Ada L. Rice\nentry of Indian Creek and Man Up\nStairs.\nUnder the allowance conditions,\nGen. Duke and Federal Hill pack\ntop weight of 122 pounds while\nMan Up Stairs has 114. The others\neach must tote 116. On Saturday\nall starters pack 126 pounds'.\nThe%Trial stakes was lnaugur\nated in 1938, and has proved a\ngood barometer to judge the Wi-\nmile Derby four days later. Last\nyear was such an occasion, when\nNeedles took the Derby.\nCalumet has won six Trials,\nstarting with Ocean Wave in 1943,\nand running through 1956 when\nFabius tobk the Tuesday prep, but\nfinished second to Needles. Cita\"\ntion in 1948 and Hill Gail in 1952\nwent on from Trial victories to:\ncapture the Derby from Calumet.:\nThere are three skipping tho (\nTrial and waiting for the big one;\non Saturday\u2014Ralph Lowe's Gal-j\nlant Man, Travis M. Kerr's Round\nTable, and T. A. Grissom's Shan;\nPac.\napproximately 5 p.m. Wednesday\nbefore the champions have been\ndecided.  \u25a0 ..\nA banquet will be held Wednesday evening at conclusion of the\ntournament, at which trophies will\nbe presented. The title will be decided on a total-pins basis. Trail\nwon last season in scratch competition, while Nelson took top honors\nin \"B\" class, which included a\nhandicap of 70 for every 1000 pins.\nThe draw follows;\n7 p.m. \u2014 Nelson Hopefuls, Nel-.\nson Dreamers, Nelson Variety No.\n1, Nelson Spartan's, Nelson Krazy\nKats.\n9 p.m. \u2014 Nelson Pinsters, Nelson\nKorner. Kids, Nelson Blo-outs, Nelson Variety No. 2, Nelson Keidis,\nNelson Elamms.\nWednesday:\n'11 a.m. \u2014 Rossland Freddies,\nRossland Choppers, Trail Maple\nLeafs, South Slocan Kilowatts,\nSouth Slocan 'Transformers, South\nSlocan Generators.\n1 p.m.'-. South Slocan Insulators,\nSouth Slocan Outlets, South Slocan\nShort Circuits, Rossland Do-Dots,\nRossland Double M's, Rossland Go-\nGetters..\n3 p.m.\u2014 Nelson Try Hards, Trail\nAllan's Atoms, Rossland Happy\nFive, Nelson Markers, Trail Five\nAces, Trail Gremlins.\nThree Judges\nTo Score\nHamla-Bell Bout\nMONTREAL (CP)-When Cherif\nHamla and' Bobby Bell meet In\ntheir 10-round featherweight bout\nhere tonight, three judges will\nscore the bout on the five-point\nsystem.\nSecretary Gerry Gosselin of the\nMontreal Athletic Commis-\nI sion said Monday that the system\nof scoring by rounds has been discarded and that the referee's job\nwill be only to handle the fight.\nThe maximum of five points\nwill be scored for either or both\nfighters in each round, or one of\nthe men will be rated under five\naccording to his showing. Total\npoints will decide the winner,\nHamla, Algeria - born Parisian,\nstill rates the favorite over Bell,\nwho hails, from Youngstown, Ohio.\nTalk continued In boxing circles\nof a possible meeting between the\nwinner and Hogan Bassey of Nigeria for the world featherweight\ntitle vacated by Sandy Saddler.\nBassey scored a win over Miguel\nBerrios of Puerto Rico in Washington last Friday.\nCharles Michaelis of the Palais\nde Sport, Paris, is expected to be\non hand for the Maria-Bell fight\nand it is believed he will try to\nget the world-title fight for Paris,\nif Hamla wins.\nIN MONTREAL?\nPromoter Eddie Quinn of Montreal, however, is still holding to\nthe possibility of a Hamia-Bassey\nfight in Montreal, with an eye at\nthe same time on the crowd the\nHamla-Bell fight draws,\nBerrlos' loss was something ot\na surprise to Quinn, who was all\nset to bring the Puerto Rican here.\nBut Quinn said he thinks Montreal\nwould be one of the best spots to\nhold a Hamia-Bassey fight and that\nno other North American city except possibly New York would be\ninterested.\nThere was also talk that Bas-\nsey's success might mean a title\nfight in England, in London or\nNottingham.\nKentucky Derby\nGolf Play in Red\nLOUISEVILLE, Ky. (AP) - The\n$30,000 Kentucky Derby Open golf\ntournament faced an uncertain future today: It operated at a loss.\nJust how much will not be\nknown for another week, said\ntournament chairman Bill Hey-\nburn.\n| \"It will depend on the final figures whether we try to stage the\n72 - hole tournament again next\nyear.\"\nHeyburn said 10,000 turned out\nfor the final round Sunday, but attendance was disappointing the\nfirst three days.\nNagoya, Japan \u2014 Flash Elorde,\n13314, Philippines, outpointed Hi-\ndeto Kobayashi, 134V4, Japan, 12.\nFor Oriental lightweight title.\ni3p3'\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, APRIL 30, 19S7\u201413\nRampaging Braves Open Eastern\nSwing; AL Teams Move West\nBy The Associated Press.\nThe Milwaukee Braves, hottest\nteam in both major leagues, open\ntheir first eastern swing In New\nYork today obviously Impatient to\ntest their bulging muscles against\nthe champion Brooklyn Dodgers.\nThey'll have to stew awhile.\nThe Braves, whose pitching has\nbeen solid and whose bats have\nboomed 15 home runs, play two\ngames with the\/New York Giants\nat the Polo Grounds. They then\ngo to Pittsburgh for three, They\nreturn for' games Sunday and\nMonday against their pennant rivals at Ebbets Field.\nWhile the National League\nspreads out over the-east, American League teams go west with\ntwo questions paramount;\n1. How long can the Chicago\nWhite Sox hold their; early pace?\n2. Are the New York Yankees in\nOttawa Canadiens Up\nTwo in Junior Final\nFLIN FLON, Man. (CP)-Mur-\nray Balfour fired three' goals in\nthe third period Monday night to\nlead Ottawa Canadiens to a 5-2\nvictory over Flin Flon Bombers\nto give Ottawa a 2-1 lead in their\nbest-of-seven Memorial Cup junior hockey final.\nThe balance of the Canadian\njunior hockey final now will be\nplayed in Regina with the fourth\ngame 'billed for Wednesday.   The\nOdds Shrink\n9n Fullmer\nCHICAGO (AP)-The referee assigned to the Gene Fullmer-Ray\nRobinson middleweight title bout\nWednesday night will be instructed\nto call a foul at any signs of rabbit\npunching or holding in a clinch.\nIf the fight follows the same pattern it did when Fullmer lifted the\nmiddleweight crown from Sugar\nRay in Madison Square Garden\nfour months ago, the referee may\nbe busier than the two fighters.\nThe scheduled 15-round fight at\nChicago Stadium will be televised\nand broadcast, ABC, 8 p.m. MDT\n(7 p.m. Nelson time).\nThe. Illinois Athletic Commission\nwill appoint the referee just prior\nto ring time.   \u2022\nJim Norris, president of the International Boxing Club, foresees\na gate of around $175,000 and attendance up to 14,000.\nMeanwhile, the odds favoring\nFullmer have shrunk to about 2-1\nfrom 16-5. The gradual decrease\ncame during the last week when\nRobinson showed flashes in workouts of his former self, before he\nbegan racing against age. Robinson says he will be 36 Friday. The\nrecord says he will be 37. Fullmer\nis 25.\nFights\nHollywood \u2014 Ramon Tiscareno,\n146, Los Angeles, stopped Alvaro\nGutierrez, 146, Mexico City, 6.\nfifth is set for Friday and the\nsixth for Saturday'.\nBalfour, former Regina Pat now\nwith the eastern champions and\ntaking' part in, his third straight\nMemorial Cup final, came back\nto haunt Flin Flon. His three\ngoals brought Canadiens from behind a 2-1 deficit for their second\nstraight win.\nBalfour scored four goals\nagainst Bombers last year while\nplaying with Regina to spark\nPats' 9-6 victory In the seventh\nand deciding game of their western semi-final series.\nMike Legace and Claude Richards younger brother, of National Hockey League star Maurice (The Rocket) Richard, scored\nsingles for Ottawa.\nBomber marksmen were defenceman George Konik and\ncentre Ron Hutchinson. \\.\nTo Open Tennis\nSeason Sunday\nNelson Tennis Club will officially\nopen its season next Sunday, secretary-treasurer Mrs. J. DeYoung\nsaid Monday.\nAt a meeting Saturday night, con\nsiderable enthusiasm was generated over the wonderful condition of\nthe courts. Mrs. DeYoung said a\ngroup of 14 had played on this\ncourts Sunday and found it \"a pleasure.\"\nA 'round-robin tournament has\nbeen scheduled for May 19, involving netters from Nelson, Trail,\nRossland and.Tadanac, Mrs. De-\nYoung said. Discussion concerning\nthe annual Murray and Chesser\nCup competitions led to the deci\nsion that the tournaments should\nbe held earlier in the season.\nNegotiations have been carried\non between district clubs to arrange a series of tournaments to\nextend through the playing season.\nPlans at present call for \"five or\nsix\" tournaments on the local\nscene. .       \u2022\nfor the pennant fight of their lives?\nTWO-GAME LEAD       , ,\nFans in Milwaukee and Chicago,\nelated over the early success ol\ntheir heroes, might ponder ode\nsobering statistic. The baseball,\nstandings showed these teams\nleading: Milwaukee in the National\nLeague, Chicago in the American\nLeague.\nThe Braves move east with a\ntwo-game lead over the Dodgers\nand four over the third - place\nPhiladelphia Phillies.\nIn winning nine of their 10 starts,\nthe Braves have received good.\npitching from their entire staff but'\nparticularly from two. i\nLefty Warren Spahn has started\nthree games, finished three and\nwon them all. Lew Burdette has\nmanaged to carry a spitball cpn-\ntroversy with Cincinnati's manager.\nBirdie Tebbets, and at the same\ntime win two of his three games,\nlosing only a close 3-2 decision to\nChicago.\nREESE MISSED\nMilwaukee power has been asserting itself. Joe Adcock has hil\nfive home runs and Hank Aaron\nhas smashed four.\nMeanwhile, the Dodgers haven't\nbeen awing anybody, although tluf\n\"old pros'\" have managed to keoj\nwithin hollering distance of firs'\nplace. Duke Snider Is hitting .211\nand Roy Campanella is b a 111 n j\n.219. Also the Brooks have mlssei\nthe steadying influence of short\"\nstop Pee Wee Reese, out with a\nbad back. '. .   \u25a0'\u25a0\nThe American League has developed into a tighter race than\nthe National League.\nAndre Rodgers, injured In a pick-\noff play against the Phillies at\nPhiladelphia Saturday, suffered!\nsprained left ankle, but no frao\nture, the New York Giants said\nMonday.        \u2022' \u25a0{\nThe inflelder, who also turned\nup a slight wrench in his left knee,\nwill be out of the lineup \"two or\nthree, days.\"\nBatteries\nMINING - LOGGING\nAND AUTOMOTIVE\nRepairs to All Types\n509 Lake St Phone 898\nARROW BATTERIES   i\nBACKACHE\nMay beWar nine;\n. Backache is often caused1 by lazy kidney\naction. When kidneys get out of order,\nexcess acids and wastes remain in tho\nsystem.. Then backache, disturbed rest\nor that tired-out and heavy-headed feeling\nmay soon follow. That's the time to take\nDodd's Kidney Pills. Dodd's stimulate\nthe kidneys to norms! action. Then you\nfeel better\u2014sleep better\u2014work better.\nGet Dodd's Kidney Pills now. ' 51\nPHONE   1844   FOR   CLASSIFIED\nIllustrated: :\"<\u00ab\nSuper 88\u20142-Door Holiday Coupe\nA GENERAL MOTORS VALUE\nTon can see it's a mighty uipreaSiVe car. But wait.\n\\v_it 'til you feel what it means t6 own this finest\nof all Oldsmobile*. :\nSure, it's sensational ia the showroom\u2014here's the\nrich, the brighter kind 6f elegance that makes any\nman's heart heat a little faster, But wait 'til you\nfeel the pride when ell that flawless grace and glamour\nbecome part of your way ef life!\nSure, it's spectacular on a demonstration drive\u2014\nhere's the famous big-cnr ride, the flashing Rocket\npower that brings a sudden joyful light to any\nman's eyes. But wait 'til you feel the thrill when afl\nthai incredible comfort and response areyOuri to enjoy\ndaily1! And Watch hew the lady in y6ur life takes to\nOldsmobile'i celebrated fashion, Oldsmobile'e luxury, blcUmopileV sheer sens* of style. Her .excitement's catching\u2014adds a big bonus to your pride.\nGive ia to that urge. Make the important move up\nto Olds. You like it ndw\u2014but just wait 'til you\nstart living with it... It's easier to arrange than\nyou think. Come on in, price the finest of all\nOldsmobiles! _,   ,\nREUBEN BUERGE MOTORS Ltd\n323 VERNON ST.\nPHONE 35\n 14\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, APRIL 30, 1957\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS\nTrie Dally Newa does not Hold Itself responsible In ttie event\nof an error In the following Hit-\nTORONTO  STOCKS\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES  '\nAlgom Urtfnium    22.00\nAmal Larder 17\nAnacon Lead     1.60\nAtlin Ruff 85\nAumacho  23\nAumaque   14\nBarnat      .30\nBase Metals  :      .77 \u25a0\nBaska Uranium 35'\nBoymar -     .07%\nBrilund  48\nBrunhurst ' -10V4\nBuffalo Ank     2.43\nBuff Can 15\nBuff Red Lake 07%\nCampbell C     10.75\nCan Met     4.85\nCassiar \u2022     7.60\nCentral Patricia      2.65\nChimo ,..'.'.     I-39\nChromium   -     3.10\nCoin Lake .\u201e'._ 12%\nCons Denison    22.25\nCons. Discovery \u2022     2.95\nCons Halliwell      1-07\nCons Mining _ Smelting'..   25.50\nCons Red Pop 22\nCpn Sub     3.05\nConwest     6.80\nCopper Corp      .68\nCopper Man -     .27\nD'Aragon  32\nDonalda 22\nEast Amphi 09%\nEast Malartic     1.31\nEast Sullivan      4.45\nFalconbridge '.    37.50\nFaraday      2.75\nFrobisher      2.90\nGeco    17.50\nGiant Yol     4.85\nGlen Uranium 47\nGoldale  22%\nGoldcrest  13\nGolden Manitou     1.15-\nGunnar Gold   20.00\nHarminerals      . .38\nHasaga 20\nHeadway .'. 83 .\nHoHiflger   29.35\nHudson Bay   72.00\nInspiration  75\nInt. Nickel  107.12%\nIron Bay     4.75\nJoliet Que \u201e 54\nJonsmith 17\nR J Jowsey 83\nKenville  10%\nKerr Addison     15.25\nLabrador    20.50\nLake Lingman       .11%\nLakeshore     4.75\nLexindin  38\nLittle Long Lac     2.30\nLorado      1.46\nLouvic't  '...     .15\nMacassa \u201e    2.05\nMadsen R. L     1.58\nMalartic G. F     1.50\nManeast 32\nMaritime Mining  1.70\nMcLeod      1.09\nMilliken     3.85\nMining Corp    17.75\nMogul'     1.50\nMulti Mins      .92\nNew Alger         .16\nNew Delhi     1.12\nNew Fortune 15\nNew Highridge       .29\nTeck Hughes\t\nTemagami .-...;\t\nThomp-Lund \t\nTombill\t\nTrans)Cont Res .......\nUnited Keno \t\nVentures  .....\nViolamac\t\nWalte Amulet\t\nWright Hargreaves .\nYah?   \t\nYellowknife'Bear...\nOILS\nAmerican Leduc\t\nBanff Oils\t\nBailey Selburn .\nBata Petroleum'.....:\t\nCalgary & Edmonton'\nCan Admiral\t\nLong Island Pete\t\nMarigold .'.-..\nMidcon .\nNew Harricana .\nNew Jason\t\nNew Lund \t\nNipissing <.\t\nNisto .\nNoranda New .\nNorgold\t\nNorpax\n.12\n.39%\n2.85\n.11\n52.00\n.26\n1.28\nNorth Can   1.60\nNorth Rankin   1.57\nOpemiska   13.37%\nPickle Crow  1.25\nPlacer Devel  12.50\nPreston E. D  7.75\nQuebec Lab  \u201e. .16\nQuebec Lithium  9.00\nQuebec Metallurgical   2.24\nQuemont   13.87%\nRadiore   1.10\nRainville  1.00\nRayrock  1.50\nSherritt Gordon  6.50'\nSilver Miller i  .75\nStadacona .\/. .-. _ , .30\nSteep Rock   22.25\nSlocan Van Roi 12\nSullivan Con \u2022  3.50\nSylvanite    1.53\nNew Continental.\nNew Gas Expl\t\nOkalta \t\nPacific Pete \t\nPetrol i\t\nPonder \t\nProv Gas \t\nRoyalite\t\nSpooner\nVANCOUVER STOCKS\nStanwell Oil\t\nCdn Atlantic\t\nCanadian Collieries.\nCanadian Devonian.\nCan Decalta\t\nCentral Explorers...\nCon East Cres't\t\nCons Peak\t\nDuvex \t\nGreat Sweetgrass ...\nHome A\t\nKroy \t\nLiberal Pete\t\nTriad \t\nUnited Oils\t\nYank Canuck \t\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitlbi   \t\nAlgoma Steel\t\nAluminium\t\nAtlas St\t\nB.A.Oil\t\nBell Telephone\t\nBrazilian\t\nB.C. Forest\t\nB.C. Packers A\t\nB.C. Packers B \t\nBurns A\t\nCanadian Breweries\t\nCanadian Canners\t\nCanadian Celanese .....\nCan. Cement \t\nCan Chem Co .'.\nCanadian Dredge \t\nCan Oil\t\nCanadian Pacific Rly .\nCan Packers A .',\nCan Packers B -.\t\nCockshutt \t\nCons Gas \t\nDist. Seagrams \u25a0\t\nDom. Foundries\t\nDom Magnesium\t\nDom. Steel Ord\t\nDom. Store's .\nDom. Tar & Chemical...\nDom. Textiles\t\nEddy Paper :\t\nFamous Players\t\nFanny Farmer \t\nFord A\t\nGatineau\t\nGen. Steel Wares \t\nGoodyear pfd\t\nGypsum Lime ....:.\t\nHoward Smith !\t\nImperial Oil\t\nImp. Tobacco\t\nInt. Metals\t\nInt\/'Pete\t\nLaura Secord \t\nLoblaw A \t\nLoblaw B \t\nMassey Harris\t\nMcColl Frontenac v..\nMont. Loco\t\nMoore Corp\t\nPage Hershey ....\nPowell River\t\nPower Corp \t\nRuss. Industries\t\nShawinigan  _..\nSimpsons A\t\nSoutham ... \u25a0\t\nStandard Paving ::..\nSteel of Canada\t\nUnion Gas of Can\t\nUnited Steel\t\nWestern Grocers\t\nWinnipeg Gas\t\n1.75\n4.00\n.93'\n.59\n.28\n5.60\n41.62\n1.75\n9.10\n1.30\n...   .29%\n.35\n.40\n2.65\n16.75\n.09\n29.50\n.48  \u25a0\n.14%\n.25\n1.42\n.65\n2.10\n2,70\n23.87%\n1.02\n.57\n3.55\n17.62%\n.54\n1.39\n7.55\n- 6.00\n8.00\n1.50\n4.35\n.47\n.14\n.18\n.96\n20.62%\n.68 \u2022\n2.46\n7.90\n3.65\n.10\n32%\n130Vi\n130\n26%\n.   50V4\n.43%\n8%\n11%\n17\n45%\n11%\n'25%\n14\n14%\n29%\n7y4\n19\n31%\n32%\n56%\n36%\nVh\n37%\n29%\n30%\n16\n22\n\u2022 49%\n10%\n8\n50\n17%\n21%\n, 103\n30\n6%\n. 45\n23\ni       35\n. \u2022 54%\n12%\n39%\n56%\n19\n. 19%\n19%\n67s\n79\n. '   16%\n62%\n124\n42\n71\n11%\n86%\n. 18\n55\n39\n64\n:# - 78%\n17\n23\n15\nMINES\nBeaver Lodge :.\nBralorne \t\nCanusa \t\nCariboo Gold\t\nFarwest Tungsten .\nGiant Mascot\t\n.. .26\n.. 4.40\n.. .07\n^ .60\n.. .18\n..      .16\nGranduc  u...r     3.60\nGrandview  12\nHamil Sil       .05%\nHighland Bell     1.30\nJackson Mines     \u25a0 .07\nKootenay Base Metals,.... 01%\nNational Ex 42%\nPend Oreille      2.69\nPioneer Gold  ...'     1.35\nPremier Border 07%\nQuatsino ...     52\nReeves MacDoriald     1.80\nSheep Creek           1.01\nSilback Premier 14%\nSilver Ridge      07\nSilver Standard  43\nSunshine Lardeau 23\nTaylor  :. 14\nTrojan ....: 20\nWestern Exploration 45\nOILS\nAltcx   : 31\nA P Consolidated 45\nChamberlain      2.30\nCharter     3.65\nNational Pete     2.05\nPacific Pete    23.50\nRoyal Can  10\nSparmac  _\nUnited  \t\nVanalta  _ _..\nVantor  _\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlberta Distillers \t\nAlberta Distillers Vt\t\nB C Forests .\u2022\t\nB C Telephone\t\nCro*wn Zeller (Can)\t\nInt Brew B   \t\nInland Nat Gas\t\nLucky.1 Latjer         :\t\nMacM _ Bloedel B\t\nMid Western\t\nPowell River   \t\nWestminster Paper\t\nWestern Plywoods\t\nUNLISTED\nAuwon   \t\nMidwest Copper\t\nTrans' Canada Common ....\nWoodbury \t\nBANKS\nBank of Montreal\t\nCan. Bank of Com. ....-\t\nImperial Bank of Canada.\nRoyal Bank of Canada\t\nFUNDS   | ,\nCan. Inv. Fund\t\nCommonwealth Int\t\nGrouped Income  _\nInvestors Mutual :\t\nLeverage    \t\nTrans Canada \"C\"\t\n.22\n3.65\n.32\n2.15\n1.60\n1.40\n11.75\n45.00\n19.50\n3.75\n8.87%\n4.05\n31.00\n3.65-\n42.00\n24.50\n14.25\n.29\n26.00\n.04 I\n50.00\n47.50\n48.00\n69.50\n8.34\n4.32\n11.29\n6.10\n6.85\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\nTimes Shown Are Pacific Standard Time\nKXLY TV - Channel 4\n1:80 Good Morning\n::45 Cartoon Time\n1:00 Romper Room\nI Search For Tomorrow *\n1:45.Guiding Light *\n1:00 Valiant Lady\ni:15 Love of Life\n1:30 As The World Turns *\n:00 Our Miss Brooks *\n:30 Houseparty *\n1:00'The Big Payoff \u00bb\n1:30 Bob Crosby Show *\n:00 Brighter Day *\n,:15 Secret Storm *\n:30 Edge of Night *\n1:00 Johnny's Flower Time\n:15 What's Cookin'\n::00 Garry Moore-*  ,\n1:30 Godfrey Time *\n::45 Movie Man Matinee\ns:30 Strike It Rich *\ni:00 Klixy The Klown\ni:30 Sgt. Preston of Yukon\n1:00 Regional News and Weather\n6:15 Doug Edwards News *\n6:30 Rosemary Clooney Show\n^00 $64,000 Question *\n:30 Superman\ni:00 Phil Silvers \u2022\n::30 Mickey Rooney Show\ni:00 To Tell The Truth *\ni:30 Red Skelton Show *\ni:O0 Badge 714\n1:30 The Movie Man\nKHQ TV - Channel 6\n30 Test Pattern\n45 Color Test Pattern\n55 Bible Reading\n00 Tic Tac Dough *\n30 It Could Be You*'\n00 Home *\n38 Local News\n45 Home *\n00 Price Is Right *\n30 Tenn. Ernie Ford *\n00 Matinee Theatre (C) * ,\n00 Queen For a Day *\n45 Modern Romances *\n00 Topper *       ,\n:30 Truth or Consequences *\n:00 Women\n\u202200 Matinee On Six\n:00 Matinee On Six\n:00 Five O'clock Movie\n\"Postman Didn't Ring\"\n.6:30 Weatherwise\nThe Front Page  '\n6:40 Newspaper of the Air\n6:45 NBC News *\n7:00 Arthur Murray Party (Cr\n7:30 Panic *\n8:00 Jane Wyman *    \u25a0;! '\n8:30 Circle Theatre *\n9:30 Hold That Note *\n10:00 I Led Three Lives\n10:30 News Desk*\n10:35 Late Movie.\n10:45 \"The Last Chance\"\nKREM .TV \u2014 Channel 2\nI Test Pattern\nl Frankie Laine\ni Pride of the Family\nFeaturama\ni News\nI KREM's Kamera\nl Beauty Tips\nI Featurama   '\u25a0\ni Popeye  .\ni Mickey Mouse Club\n6:00 Kit Carson\n6:30 Newsroom\n6:40 Weather Sketch\n6:45 John Daly\n7:00 Polka Time ...\n7:30 Warner Bros. Presents\n8:30 Wyatt Earp\n9:00 Broken Arrow   \u2022\n9:30 DuPont Theatre\n10:00 Channel 2 Theatre\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS       '    , 1240 ON THE DIAL\n(PACIFIC DAYLIGHT SAVING TIME)\nTUESDAY, APRIL 30, 1957\n00\u2014News\n05\u2014Morning Devotions\n10\u2014Farm Fare\n15-Chapel in the Sky\n30\u2014News\n35\u2014Sports News\n40-Wake-Up Time.\n00\u2014News\n10\u2014Sports News\n15\u2014Opening Markets\n:20-J3reakfast Varieties\n55\u2014Entertainment World\n00\u2014News\n05\u2014Shoppers' Guide\n: 35\u2014Story Parade.\n45\u2014Shoppers' Guide\n00\u2014News\n: 05\u2014Shoppers' Guide\n15\u2014Happy Gang\n45\u2014UBC Digest\n00\u2014News\n05\u2014Woman's World\n15\u2014Western Roundup\n00\u2014The Dinner Bell\n:15\u2014Sports News\n: 25\u2014News\n: 30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Prairie News\n1:00-CKLN Reports\n1:15\u2014Matinee\n1:45\u2014Pacific News\n2! 00\u2014School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n3:30\u2014Sacred Heart\n3:45\u2014Footlight Favorites\n4:00\u2014Today's Music\n4:30-Ruff V Reddy\n4:45-The Story Man\n5:00\u2014Rolling Home Show\n6:00\u2014News\n6:10\u2014Strikes V Spares\n6:15\u2014Closing Markets\n6:20\u2014Silent Friends\n6:35\u2014Cavalcade of Music\n7:00\u2014News\n7:30-Polka Party\n8:00\u2014Premiere on the Air\n8:30\u2014Anthology\n9:00\u2014Let's Make Music\n9:30\u2014Leicester Square\n10:00\u2014News \u2022\u00bb\n10:10\u2014Sports News\n10:15\u2014Critics At Large\n10:30\u2014Sign Off\nCBC PROGRAMS\n(PACIFIC DAYLIGHT SAVING TIME)\nWEDNESDAY,\n7:00\u2014Fishermen's Broadcast\n7:15\u2014Musical Minutes\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Musical Minutes\n7:40\u2014Morning Devotions\n7:55\u2014Musical March Past\n8:00\u2014News and Weather.\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\u2014The Happy Gang    \\'\n10:45-The Word of the Lord \u25a0'\n11:00\u2014Radio Theatre\n11:15\u2014Kindergarten of the. Air\n11:30\u2014The Listening Glass '\u2022':\n12:15\u2014News ;\n12:25\u2014Showtime\n12:30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast-\nMAY  1,  1957\n12:55\u2014Five to One\n1:00\u2014Afternoon Concert\n1:45\u2014Today's Guest\n2:00\u2014Holiday Time\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n3:30\u2014Closed Circuit\n3:45\u2014B.C. Roundup\n4:00\u2014Today's Music\n4:30\u2014Music for. Young Pianiste .\n4:45\u2014Legends of England\n5:00\u2014News \/\n5:15\u2014By-Line\n5:20\u2014Sports'\n5:30\u2014Music by McMillan\n6:00\u2014Rawhide\n6:15\u2014Roving Reporter\n6:30\u2014Musical Diary\n7:00\u2014News.\n7:30\u2014Introduction to Wed. Night\n7:40\u2014Jenufa\n10:00\u2014News and Weather\n10:30-Recital\n10:45-CBC News\n\u00a330(11-113 HH_n\u201e\nlasnuti  H_iaaa_\n___\u25a1 __Q HE\nH_ H_H _r_rj\n____H_   t-DJ-D\n33HH   _QDH__\n_bh nnu    as\nam __u r____\nBHDHHH ____\n____H   HUHQB\nHuman a__S-\n(Programs subject to change by stations without notice,)\nDAILY  CROSSWORD\nACROSS 3. Flutters 18. River\ni. Arched            4. Piece ' (Lat-\n6. Frontiers-    '      out '-' via)\nman's sho\u00ab .    5. Lion's' 20. Super-\n9. Construct           cave.\"' vise\nagain             _ A     r' 21. Mock\n10. God of ,   honey- -22.Fel-'\nlove' '    buzzard low\n12. Empyrean t. Operatio             (slang)\n13. White melodies _t.Mul.\nfrost , 8. A                      berry\n14. River (Ft.) writer; 27. Look!       fetterterJs Answet\n15. Not   . of - 29. Tel.               IL Arthurian\nsuitable musie                luri.                  knight:\n16.Scrutinize       S.Greek urn ' 4*.Anglo*\n19. Habitual letter (sym.) Saxon-\ndrunkard       11. Hunting        32. Sloth serf\n20. Sphere dogs 35. Commune      43. AflMrmatlvt\n23. A sunk          15. Breathe (It.) reply.\nfence in 37. Prickly 45. A bullfinch\n25. Selenium      il. Bracelet pear (var.)\n(sym.)                ornament-     39. Pause            46.Coal sis*\n26. Plant of\nviolet\nfamily\n28. Change\n30. Man's\n' nickname\n31. Spoken\n38. Bitter\nvetch\n34. Tear\n36. Bearing\n38. Wound\nmarks\n40. Comply\n44. River (Fr.l\n45. Withstand\n47. Trees\n48. Gains\nknowledge\n49. Consume\n50. Not true\nDOWN\ni. Malt\nbeverage \u2022\n1 Independent\noultanato\n(Arab.) \"'\"T\nDAILY CRYPTOQCO-E \u2014 Here's how to work Iti\nAXYDLBAAXR\n. to LONGFELLOW ,\nOne letter simply stands for another. In thio 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 words are all hints.\nBach day the code letters are different  .\n'    A Cryptogram Quotation\nVi   YKQWIY   All   K    AIYFRO   QWKtt\nWIKY    ROI    KO_    JKZ-IJNKY    N SIA Q.\nYesterday's  Cryptoquote\u2014IF  FATE  MEANS  YOU  TO\nLOSE, GIVE HIM A GOOD FIGHT ANYHOW\u2014WH<LJAM\n''    MCFEEJ.    .\"-.\nf<\n1\ni\n5\u2014\n+\n-\n1\nr-\nr-\nj\n%\ni\n\u2022\n'\ni\n10\n.\n%\ni3\ni\nis\nf,\nt\nI.\n%\n%\n%\nlb\n17\nIS\n1\n19\n\u2014\na\nii\nit'\n%\nh\nz+\ni\nu\nVi .\ns>\n%\n26\"\nit*\nia\n\u00a7\n31\nn\ni\n\u00bb\n)4\nSs\nt\nii?\n.7\nW\/\n7A\n3S\n*9\n%\n^\n4o\n*r-\nw-\nBP\nH\n1\n\u00ab\nIII.\n\u26667\n%\n4t '\nW\nw\nil m\n \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\n(aoS\nSMALL INVESTMENT   -\nLARGE RETURNS\nThat's the Want Ad Story       PHONE   1844\nROOM AND BOARD\nWANTED - ROOM AND BOARD\nfor two articled students, double\nv or single. Phone 340-R after 5.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, Af RIL 30, 1957\u2014W\nWANTED - ROOM AND BOARD\nby young working man. Phone\n\u25a0 Room 9, Royal Hotel after 7.\nROOM AND BOARD FOR YOUNG\nman. Phone 1876-R.\nBIRTHS\nCHERNKOFF\u2014To Mr. and Mrs,\nHarold Chernkoff, of Thrums, at\nKootenay Lake General Hospital,\nApril 27, a son.\nPETTIPICE - To Mr.\" and Mrs.\nCharles Pettipice of Kootenay Bay,\nat Kootenay Lake General Hospital, April 28, a son.\nBRECK \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Breck, 614 Gore Street, at Kootenay Lake General Hospital, Ap-\nril 28,' a daughter\t\nHELP WANTED\nEARN EXTRA MONEY. SELL\nEverlast, the colorful new dishes\nguaranteed not. to break when\ndropped. Every \"home is a prospect. Exclusive territories available right in your own community. Write manufacturer,\nGlenn S. Woolley _*Cb>, Aax\nOntario. . \t\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 F6R SMALL\nlocal mill. License desirafile but\ndot essential. Apply Box 3775,\nNelson Daily News.\t\nWANTED - RELIEF AND PER-\nmanent carriers for Nelson Daily\nNews  Apply Circulation Dept.\nEXPERIENCED GRILL COOK\nwanted. Apply Shamrock Grill\nfor particulars in mornings. \u25a0\u25a0\nFREE ESTIMATES ' ON EXCA-\nvating and loading. Ph. 476-R-l\nor 136S-L-4.\nYOUTH FOR GARDEN WORK-\nGrijzelles' Greenhouses.\nHELP WANTED \u2014 FEMALE\nSTENOGRAPHER WANTED FOR\nlocal office by large interior business. Top salary paid.^Good\nworking conditions with company group health and insurance\nplan, 5-day week. Apply giving\nfull personal details to Box 3791,\nNelson Daily News.\t\nAMBITIOUS WOMAN CAN MAKE\ngood money in spare time selling\nadvertising specialties to local\nfirms. Box 3781, Nelson Daily\nNews.\t\nWAITRESS AND GRILL COOKS\nwanted. Phone 391 or 1877.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nALL CARPENTER WORK, CON-\ncrete and cement floors, sanding\nfloor laying, gyproc joint filling-\nchimneys and fireplaces. Guaranteed,Jreeestimate;Ph:1437-R\nTRUCK AND TRAILER AVAIL-\nable for pole hauling. Phone\n476-R-l or write Box 382, Nelson.\nGARDENS   PLOWED-REASON-\nable. Ph. 1968-R, J. McGovern.\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nNELSON READY-\nMIX CONCRETE\nLtd.\"\n\"    Phone 871\nDEALERS IN ALL TYPES OF\nused equipment, null, mine and\nlogging supplies, new and used\nwire rope, pipe and fittings,\nchain, steel plate and shapes.\nAtlas Iron & Metals Ltd., 250\nPrior St, Vancouver, B.C., Ph\nPAcific 6357.\nGLASS COUNTER TYPE SHOW\ncases, two 6 ft. x 42 x 24 (standard) ; one 8 ft. x 36 x 24 (lower).\nCall 1350 or see them at Wade's\nLeather Goods, 350 Baker St.,\nNelson.\nRAPID GROW, THE ORIGINAL\nspray on plant food. 1 lb. does\nas much as 100 lbs. of regular\nfertilizer. Good for everything\nthat grows. Columbia Trading,\n902 Front Street.\nUNUSUAL LINO BARGAIN-^\nFrom Scotland. Vs\" thickness Inlaid marble tiles at lO1^ cents:\nVt\" at UVi cents: \"La Salle' 945\nGranville. Vancouver. B.C.\nFOR SALE - QUAKER OIL\nheater, coal and woodstove,\nand oil pump. Call 216-D Vernon\nor phone 581-X.\nFOR QUICK SALE-AUDIOTONE\nhearing aid, practically new at\nVt price. Contact 313 Latimer St.,\nPhone 1429-R. \u25a0\n16 H.P. JOHNSON 1950 MODEL\ngood condition, snap for cash.\nAlso Electrolux vacuum. Phone\n727-Y, evenings. \t\nCOW MANURE FOR SALE, $8.00\nper cubic yard load, delivered in\ncity. Phone 1837, W. A. Anderson.\nFOR \"SALE - CONVERTED\nCycles complete oil furnace.\nPhone 1647-R.\nFOR SALE- - 9 CU. FT. SERVAL\nKerosene Fridge in good condition. R. Avis, 'Appledale.\nHEALTH FOOD CENTRE. OPEN\nday and evening. 924 Davies.\nMANURE FOR SALE\nPhone 369-Y-3.\n$4 YD.\nFULLER BRUSH AGENT\u2014GER-\nry Kohnke, Phone 782-L-3.\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nSACRIFICE SALE\nKaslo's only restaurant.\nNew kitchen equipment\nInterior redecorated, unbelievably\nlow price. Phone Mrs. Taylor,\nBalfour.\nFOR SALE-HILLTOP  COFFEE\nshop,  beside  gov't view point,\ntop of Taghum Hill. Price: $11,-\n500. Phone 1387-R or write Box\n291.\t\nNELSON BUSINESS FOR SALE,\nSome terms, or partner. Apply\nBox 6042, Nelson Daily News.'\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nDEPARTMENT OF HIGHWAYS\nNELSON-CRESTON !\nELECTORAL DISTRICT\nPROJECT' No. 870\nSOUTHERN TRANS-PR.OVINCIAL\nHIGHWAY\nSALMO-CRESTON CUT OFF 3A\nSUMMIT LAKE-JUNCTION\nHIGHWAY No. 6\nSection No. 1\nSta. 552+00 to Sta. 769+10.6\n(4.11 Miles)\nNOTICE TO CONTRACTORS\nSealed tenders, marked \"Tender for Project No. 870\u2014Summit\nLake-Junction Highway No. 6\nSection No. 1\" \"will be received\nby the Minister of Highways,\nParliament Buildings, Victoria,\nB.C., up to 12 o'clock noon (Pacific Daylight Saving time) on\nThursday, the 16th day of May,\n1957, and opened in public at that\ntime and date.\nPlans, specifications, and conditions of tender may be obtained from the Department of Highways, 635 Burrard Street, Vancouver 1, B.C., The Regional\nHighway Engineer, Department\nof Highways, Nelson, B.C., or\nfrom the undersigned, on deposit\nof a sum of ten dollars ($10),\nwhich will be refunded on their\nreturn in good condition within\na period of one month of the\nawarding of the contract, except\nin the case of the successful contractor where the plan deposit is\nnot refundable.\nNo tender will be acepted or\nconsidered which contains an escalator clause or any other qualifying conditions, and the lowest\nor any tender will not necessarily\nbe accepted.\nF. T. BROWN,\nChief Engineer.\nDepartment of Highways,\nParliament Buildings,\nVictoria, B.C.    .\nFile 1128\nDate April, 1957.\t\nLAND REGISTRY ACT\n(Section 161)\nIN THE MATTER OF an undivided 3\/13th interest in and to:\n\u2014That, part of Parcel No. 1\n(D.D..23767-A) of Sublot 73 of\nLot 4598, Kootenay District, Plan\nX-34, shown outlined in red on\nReference Plan 89733-1.\nProof having been filed in my\noffice of the loss of Certificate of\nTitle No. 91093-1 to the above-\nmentioned lands in the name of\nAlex Peter Boolinoff and bearing\ndate the 29th day of July, 1952,\nI HEREBY GIVE NOTICE of my\nintention ^at the expiration of one\ncalendar month from the 'first\npublication hereof to issue Provisional Certificate of Title in\nlieu of such lost Certificate. Any\nperson having any information\nwith reference to such lost Certificate of Title is requested to\ncommunicate. with the undersigned.\nDATED AT NELSON, B.C.,\nthis 25th day of April, 1957,\nL. A. McPHAIL, .\n'\u25a0 . Deputy Registrar\nTenders are called for the demolition of the church \u2022 hall of\nthe Presbyterian Church, corner\nof Kootenay and Victoria Streets.\nDemolition to commence not earlier than June 1st and to be completed by June 30th.\nTenders to be submitted in writing to J. Selley, 302 Sixth St.,\nNelson.\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES\nWOULD LIKE GOOD HOME FOR\nlittle rough haired terrier. Owner\ngoing away and cannot take him\nalong. W. T. Belt, Gen. Delivery,\nNelson, B.C., or phone 241-X-2.\nMACHINERY\nSALE - PM MODEL 19A D.D.,\nslightly used, with 2 bars and\nchain, $100 off new price. R.\nDauphinais, Phone 48-X, Salmo.\nNplaon iatlji mm\nCirculation  Dept. Phone  1844\nPrice per single copy 6c Monday\nto Friday. 10c  on  Saturday\nSubscription Rates\nBy carrier per ween\nin advance 35c\nBy Mail in Canada outside Nelson\nOne month        \u25a0\u25a0    $ 1.25\nThree months  \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-.. - $ 3.50\nSix months    _..    $ 6.50\nOne year $12.00\nBy mail to United Kingdom or\nthe United States\nOne month           $ 1.75\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-\norook phone Mrs Wm Stevely:\nIn Kunberley Mr G A Bate;\nand\nIn Rossland Mrs ROss Saundry:\nIn Tra_ Mrs. Syd Spooner.\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\n1957 Buick 4-Dr. Sedan\n1957 Buick 2-Dr. Hardtop\n1.957 Chev. 2-Dr. Hardtop\n1956 Ford Fairlanfr 4-Dr.\n1956 Plymouth 4-Dr.\nSedan\n1956 Buick 4-Dr. Hardtop\n1956 Austin Sedan\n1956 Hillman\nChev. Belair\nPontiac Sedan\nChev. Belair\n1954 Pontiac Sedan\n195,4 Austin Sedan\nMeteor Sedan\nPontiac Sedan\nAustin Sedan\nFord Sedan\nAustin Sedan\n1955\n1955\n1954\n1953\n1953\n1953\n1953\n1952\n,       * .* \u25a0'*\n1956 Chev. St. Wagon\n1954 Ford Pickup\n1953 Chev. Pickup\n1952 Austin Pickup\n1951   Willy's Jeep 1\n1950 Mercury Pickup\nWE PAY CASH FOR\nLATE MODEL USED CARS\nAUSTIN Sales and Service\n803 Baker St.     Nelson, B.C.\nPhone 2000\nChevrolet\n\u00bbI_M\nCadillac\n5 new Oldsmobile Sedans and\nHardtops\n3-new Chevrolet Station\nWagons\n3 new Chevrolet Sedans and\nHardtops\n'56 Chevrolet Station Wagon\n1954 Chevrolet' Sedan\n1954 Austin Sedan $575\nLicence 261-693,\n1954 Mercury Sedan $2200\nLicence 296-069\n1953 Mercury Sedan $1900\nNew motor. Lie. 261-711\n1952 Plymouth Sedan $600\nLicence 298-669\n1952 Austin Sedan $475-\nLtd.\nMotors\n323-Vernon St.  Nelson, B. C.\nPhones 35 and 36\nCOTTONWOOD WRECKING\nService \u2014 Used parts, batteries,\ntires for '47 Olds. '47 Chev and\n\u2022 '49 Meteor and Mercury, and '37\nFord and '46 Plymouth, '47-49-\n50-51 Austin, .Hillman, Prefect.\nVanguard. Morris Minor cars.\nFor sale, '48 Desoto, licensed; '51\nFord; '48 Chev sedan delivery.\nPhone 1363-L-2. or write Box\n382, 24 Ymir Road, Nelson,\nFOR' QUICK SALE - 1949 FORD\n% ton panel, good motor, rubber\nand running gear. No reasonable\noffer refused. Terms can be arranged. Can be seen at Kaslo\nMotors or phone Kaslo 5-G.\nFOR SALE - 1947 CHEV 5-PASS.\nAl condition. Phone 1221-X, 7:30\nto 8:30 p.m.    -\nTANDEM AND SINGLE AXLE\ndump trucks with steady work.\nPhone 587-X, Trail.\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\n(Continued)\nFOR SALE - GIRL'S BICYCLE.\nPhone 1572-L.\nMOTORCYCLE    FOR    SALE -\nAlex Soukoroff, Mountain Stn.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\nList Your House\nFunds on Hand to Get the\nDeals Closed\nMANY BUYFfRS\nWAITING\nC. W. APPLEYARD\n& Co. Ltd.\nPhone 269\n5-ROOM HOUSE - BATHROOM,\nfull basement, phone, power.\nSchool bus. 80 acres, 25 cleared,\noutbuildings, 4 miles Nakusp.\nPrice $7000, $2300 down. Box 175,\n\u2022 Nakusp.\nFOR SALE -\u25a0 20-ACRE FARM,\nlarge buildings, electricity and\nplumbing, phone, 10 miles west\n\u2022of Nelson. What offers? Box 361,\nNelson.\n2-BEDROOM BUNGALOW, FUL-\nly modern, less than year old.\nOil furnace. Lovely view. Near\nnew hospital site. Phone 808-X.\nHOUSE, COTTAGE AND CABIN\nat Balfour, no reasonable cash\noffer refused, terms if desired.\n' V. Hoskin, R.R. 1, Nelson.\nFOR SALE - 3-ROOM HOUSE,\nwith new electric stove and oil\nfurnace. Phone 1016.\nBUILDING LOT ON NORTH\nShore overlooking lake and city.\nPhone 692-R-l.\n15 ACRES OF LAND FOR SALE.\nNew house, young fruit trees. Ap-\nply Nick Kabatoff, Thrums.\nSALE OR TRADE ON SUITABLE\ncity property, 5 acres land, tractor, machinery, some stock. Hot\nand cold water bathroom. W. W.\nCorn, Appledale.\nFOR SALE   - UNFINISHED\n\u25a0 house on 3 acres of land  between Kinnaird and Castlegar.\nWrite Box 176, Castlegar.\nLOTS FOR SALE ON HOUSTON\nSt. \\Vt blocks from bus. Phone\n1571-X.\nRENTALS\nFOR RENT - 2 BEDROOM MOD-\nem home, available July 1st.\nGarden may be planted now. Ph.\n1708-R.\nONE FURNISHED ROOM, IN-\neludes garage. Apply James Ge-\nnero, 600 bjock, Munro St.,\nRosemont.\nFOR RENT \u2014 2-RM. FURN. APT.,\nbath and gas. 107 Chatham. Ph.\n1084-R, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.    .\nHOUSEKEEPING OR SLEEPING\nrooms, furnished, weekly or\nmonthly rates. 171 Baker Sti\n3-ROOM HEATED, FURNISHED\nsuite with electric range, fridge,\nwashing machine, etc. Ph. 1968-R\n3-ROOM COTTAGE AT 4-MILE;\ncheap. Phone 782-X-l.\nROOM    FOR    RENT,\ntown. Phone 934-R..\nDOWN-\n2-ROOM FURN. APT.,\n. Phone 839-R.\nCLOSE IN.\n3-ROOM FURNISHED SUITE -\ngarage, close in. Phone 653-R.\n1 BEDROOM SUITE FOR RENT.\nPhone 894-L.\nHOUSEKEEPING   ROOM\nrent. 606 Front Street.\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST -% BEIGE REAR WHEEL\nfender skirt, between Kaslo, New\nDenver, Vernon, Easter Monday,\nReward. Call Nelson 1923-X re-\n\u2022 verse.\nLOST-BUDGIE BIRD IN VICIN-\nity of 301 Sixth Street. Reward.\nPhone 1208-X or. 927.'\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nAS6AYERS AND   MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nE W  WIDDOWSON _ CO\nAssayers. 301 Josephine St., Nelson\nH   S   ELMES,  ROSSLAND.  BC\nAssayer Chemist Mine Rep\nENGINEERS   AND   SURVEYORS\nBOYD C   AFFLECK, MEIC\nBC Land Surveyor. P Eng (Civil 1\n218 Gore St    Nelson.   Phone 1238\nG.  W.   BAERG,  B.C.\nLand\" Surveyor\n373 Baker St   Nelson. Phone 1118\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nMa en me   Shop  Acetylene  and\nelectric welding, ni 0 I 0 1   rewinding. Phune 593      324 Vernon St\nBOATS AND ENGINES\nSEE YOUR FAVORITE 1957\nJohnson outboard on display\nAll h.p. rating and some electric.\nTheylre scarce, order early\nCOLEMAN ELECTRIC, Phone\n2055, Nelson, BtC. 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.\nWILL SELL OR TRADE - 21\ncabin cruiser for good used car\nor terms. Phone 1409-L.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nONE YOUNG MILKING GOAT-\nApply G. Savinkoff, Taghum,\nB.C.\nCOW FOR SALE -\nfreshened. Alex\nGlade. B.C.\nRECENTLY\nKoorbatoff.\nFOR SALE - 1 YOUNG COW, 1ST\nca|f; 1 cow, third calf. Apply Box\n446, New Denver.    1\nLOGGING hOKSE FOR SALE'\u2014\nPete Konkin, Slocan City.\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\nWANTED TO BUY-A MANURE\nspreader in good condition. Apply Box 17, Trail, B.C.\nWANTED - CLEAN COTTON\nrags without buttons, 10c Ib\ndelivered to The Daily News.\nWANTED   TO   RENT\nENGLISH FAMILY WOULD\nlike 2 B.R. house to rent, with\ngarden, in or around Nelson.\nPhone 716-R.\n2-BEDROOM SUITE OR HOUSE\nurgently needed. Phone 1828.\nHOTELS ond MOTELS\nHAVE BREAKFAST-ON JJS~\nwith the money you save at low\nsummer rates. Canadian money\naccepted. Exchange rate Colonial Hotel. Spokane. Wash.\n PERSONAL\nALCOHOLICS\" ANOrlYMOUS  -\n,  Fridays. Box 493. 'phone 366-R\nor 483-R.\nCLASSIFIED    DISPLAY\nJOHN DEERE\nTRACTORS\nwith a  reputation that\nCAN'T BE BEAT!\nSEE US TODAY\n9\nWELDING _ EQUIPMEM\nCO.   LTD\n614 Railway St.       Nelson, B.C.\n- PHONE 1402\nCalgary Livestocks\nCALGARY (CP)\u2014Receipts to 11\na.m. Monday on Calgary public\nstockyards: cattle' 1160, calves 25.\nSales last week: cattle 4487, calves\n228, hogs 1318, sheep 33.\nBulk of the offerings were1 good\nand choice butcher steers and\nheifers, balance mostly cows. Liberal run off trucks. Cattle market\nslow.\nInsufficient stocker and feeder\nsteers sold early to give reliable\nquotations, indications earlier.\nLast sales good stock steers 17.00-\n18.00, good stock steers 16.50-17.50,\ncommon to medium. 14.00-16 00.\nNo veal or butcherweight heifer\ncalves sold early, last sales good\nbutcherweight heifer calves 16.00-\n18.50, good to choice veal 21.00-\n24.00, common to medium 14.00-\n20.00\nHogs closed 15 higher last week\nat 26.90 A grade. Sows unchanged\n16.75 liveweight.\nDIVIDENDS\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nEddy Paper Co. Ltd. com S7_\ncents, class A 25 cents June 15,\nrecord May 16.\nGreat Lakes Paper Co. Ltd. 40\ncents June 28, record June 14,\nCanadian Breweries Ltd.-com\n37% cents July 2, record May 31,\npfd. 31% cents July 2, record\nMay 31.\nDome Mines Ltd. 17%- cents\nJuly 30, record June 28.       ,   '\nCanadian Canners Ltd. class A\n18% cents July. 2, record May 31.\nInternational' Metal Industries\nLtd. class A com 50 cents, pfd.\n$1.12% July 2, record June 14.\nChrysler Corp. 75 cents June-13,\nrecord May 13.\n\u25a0 George Weston Ltd. class A 12%\ncents July 1, record June 10, pfd.\n$1.12% June 1, record May 15.\nAlgoma Steel Corp, Ltd. $2 June\n29, record June i:\nLoblaw Groceterias Co. Ltd.\ncom. 51% centajlst pfd. series A\n37% cents, 2nrTpfd. 51% cents\nJune 1, record May 8.  '\nLoblaw Cos.  Ltd.  class  A  10\ncents, class B 10 cents pfd.\ncents June 1, record May 8.\nSoutham Co. Ltd. 50 cents,' June\n26, record June 14.\nJune 15, record May 15.\nStandard Brands Inc. 50 cents\nJune 15, record May 15.\nROTHERHAM, England (CP) -\nAmong articles left behind by patrons of a movie theatre in this\nYorkshire town was a corset. \"It\nis the most unusual find for many\nyears,\" said an attendant.\nMarket Trends\nMONTREAL (CP) - The Montreal   and   Canadian   stock   ex- i\nchanges showed  a steady  to\"\nirregularly mixed pattern in active afternoon industrial trading.\nNEW YORK (AP)-The' stock'\nmarket moved closer to its 1957 \u25a0\nhigh as steels led a moderate ad-.\nvance Monday.\nWhile key industrials stepped^\ntwo points or more, the rails lag-\nahead for gains of fractions to\nged, failing to confirm the upward\nmove.\nTORONTO (CP) - Industrials\nand western oils led the stock;\nmarket to a moderate advance oh\naverage volume Monday. ~-.\n1ATEST REPOrU\nAsk your Investment Deafer\nfor th\u00bb latest Report\nand Prespsetus of\nCALVIN BULLOCK\nLid.\nEXECUTORS AND TRUSTEES FOR OVER HAIP A CENTURY\nwith\nplans for your\nWILL\nROYAL TRUST\nCOMPANY\nAsk for our\nbooklet \"Practical\nHints on Planning\nYour Will\".\n1205 GOVERNMENT, VICTORIA\nR. W. PHIPPS, MANAGER    '\n626 PENDER ST. W., VANCOUVER\nGEORGE O.VAU, MANAGER\nSelling\u2014Rentiiij\nibur Classified Want Ad on This Handy\nORDER FORM\n',\n;Y ' .. ,'. ' :-\n(\nji'l'iy \u25a0\n\\\nFIRST LINE\nSECOND LINI\nTHIRD LINI\nFOURTH LINE\nFIFTH LINE\nSIXTH LINE\nSEVENTH LINE\nEIGHTH LINE\nPut one word in each space.\n(bach group ot numbers or letters count as one word )\nPut your address or phone number in the ad.\nBox numbers count as four words.\n(Box 00 Nelson News.)\nTO CALCULATE RATFS USE THIS TABLE\nPer Line\n1 Insertion  _\n2 Consecutive\nInsertions\n3 Consecutive Insertions .\n6 Consecutive Insertions .\n26 Consecutive  Insertions\n$ .20\n.35\n.43\n.60\n1.82\n\u2022 Minimum charge it two lines\n\u2022 Add 11c for Box Number\n\u2022 Deduct 10% tram above rates if paymen* Ii\nenclosed\n\u2022 Take advantage of the low six time rate\nNon Consecutive Insertions 20t> a Line Per Time.\nYou Reach Over 36,000 Readers With Your Nelson Daily News Classified Ad\nNo of Days Ad Is To Run ______\n\u2014\" ] 1 '  Bill Me .\nYOUR  MAME\nADDRESS\nPayment Enclosed\nNelson Daily News\nClassified AtHverfisHmg Department, Nekom, B.C.\nwm\n 16\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, APRIL 30, 1957\nREDUCE\n\u25a0 1 Wm\nHelena Rubinstein's revolutionary\nnew way to permanent weight control!\nEat desserts! Drink water! Have salt!\nHave bedtime snacks! Eat what the\nfamily eats! Have sandwich lunches! Eat\non a budget! Stop juggling calories!\nAnd you will lose weight safely!\nThat's Helena Rubinstein's advice to\nyou and she backs it up with a plan that's\nmedically tested, practical, economical.\nShe helps you to a slimmer, beautiful\nfigure, with her new \"Reduce-Aid\" tablets\nas part of the plan.    -.    '  \u00ab   .\nThey contain Appe-Curb* to help curb\nyour craving for fpod. A 4-week supply\nOf 140 COStS jUSt 3.50. *Tmdemart ,\nIn the \"Reduce-Aid Plan\" is Helena\nRubinstein's 4-Plan Reduce Book worth\n1.00 by itself. It includes a lunch-out plan\nfor career women, a plan for the woman\nwho cooks for a family on a budget and\ndozens of features that destroy old myths\nof dieting! Start slimming today with\nthe \"Reduce-Aid Plan\"... and enjoy it!\nSpecial purse kit, to carry\none day's supply, free\nwith your purchase of\nREDUCE-AIDS.\n140 tablets 350\nMANN DRUGS LTD.\n__.__PLAYMOR.___\nSpecial - Nite Only\nWed. May 1\n(TOMORROW NITE)\n-Fronting bis great recording\norchestra is that man with\nloads of talent and a terrific\npersonality.\nKING PERRY\nonniE\n9-?       Admission $1.35\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c line   40o line Black race type: larger type rates sn\nrequest -M'nlmum. two |l.rt?s   10% discount for prompt payment\nSoft led\" Cream in cones or bulk i\nat Wait's News.\nBabies, Weddings, Portraits. <\u25a0\nVOGUE STUDIO \u2014 PHONE 1552\nGranite Road WI Spring Bazaar\nShirley Hall, 2:30, Wed. Door prize.\nBINGO\nLEGION HALL TONIGHT.\nStamp Albums', Stamps.\nHOBBY SHOP \u2014 PHONE 1703\nNewburgh Raspberry Canes, disease resistant, 25 for $1.75 at\nCOVENTRY'S FLOWER SHOP\nLadies' Gloves, all lengths in as-\n\u2022    sorted; colors and fabrics.\nADRIAN MILLINERY\nTOT 'N' TEEN SHOP\nBeautiful Carriage Sets in pastel\nshades.\nScott Atwater outboards with\nexclusive bailamatic at Mac's\nWelding and Equipment, Nelson,\nTickets for the Drama Festival,\nFri. and Sat. Pick up at\nMAC'S  FLOWER  SHOP\nFor meals that are different, try\nTHE BALFOUR BEACH INN\nDining Room. Phone 18\nWEIGHS INDEPENDENT!* with scoop or\nplatform. Exceptionally sturdy, with\nIron frame and Iron platform. Scoop\nwon't spill when set down with loose\nmaterials In It. Durably finished In grey\ncrackle enamel with brass counterpoise\nand loose weights. 240-lb. capacity.\nAvailable from any of F-M's 16 branches\nacross Canada.\nIn Vancouver:\n798 Beatty St   Phone TA0211\nFAIRBANKS-MORSE\nUNION   SCALE\nwith scoop and platform\nGordon Sutherland\nPainting, Paperhanging. RR 1,\nPhone 1990, Nelson\n15V4\" awning material by the yard\nfor deck chairs.\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nCANCELLATION\nFirst Baptist Church coffee party\nand bake sale May 1.\nPhone 77. for\nall local moving, shipping and\ndistributing.\nSPEEDY DELIVERY\nHardware Week.is'still on. Drop\nin and save on our specials.\nWOOD VALLANCE\nHARDWARE CO. LTD.\nHousehold, store, office and cafe\nfixtures of all kinds.\nT. H. WATERS & CO. LTD.\nPhone 156 - 101 Hall St. - Nelson\nFOR YOUR NEW HAIR STYLING\nand permanents,  try. the Charm\nBeauty Salon, Medical Arts Bldg.\nSte. 211, Phone 1922.\nClearance of All Electric Ranges,\nWE PAY TOP PRICES FOR\nUSED   FURNITURE\nHOME  FURNITURE\nEXCHANGE,  PH. 1560   -\n\u25a0 Memberships for\nNELSON TENNIS CLUB\nnow  accepted.   Phone  1839-X  or\n743-R-3  for  particulars.   Opening\nday, Sunday, May 5.\nBelgian. Afshar Rugs now on display, $5.95 and up.\nWE PAY CASH FOR USED\nFURNITURE\nBIRCH'S FURNITURE - PH. 47\nWinners of O.E.S. grocery hamper draw in aid of Cancer Projects-\nFirst prize, Mrs. Glen Yates, Davies St.; second prize, Mrs. J.\nHaines, Victoria St.; third prize,\nMrs. Edith Telford, Creston, B.C.\nDEATH NOTICE\nKOORBATOFF - On April 29 at\nTrail-Tadanac Hospital, Mrs. Polly\nKoorbatoff, age 68 years, of Crescent Valley. Funeral services will\nbe conducted Thursday afternoon\nat Crescent Valley. Carberry's\nFuneral Home, Trail, in charge of\narrangements.\nHELP NEEDED HERE \u2014 Workmen demonstrate the\n\"proper technique\" {or draining this decorated eight-gallon stein\nfeatured at the International Spring Fair in Frankfurt, Germany.\nNeighbors Help\nInjured Farmer\nBELLINGHAM, Wash. (AP)-A\nformer prisoner of war now laid\nup by injuries suffered on his farm\nwill have his usual crops this summer, thanks to some old-fashioned\nneighborliness.\nSome 23 friends and neighbors,\nbringing along their own tractors\nand equipment, turned out Saturday ,to plow and disk, 40 acres on\nthe farm of Harry J. Forsberg, 46,\nof nearby Ferndale.\nWhile the men toiled in the fields,\ntheir wives helped Mrs. Forsberg\nprepare meals to feed the hungry\ncrews. v\nMonday a smaller group returned to plant'the fields in oats and\nalfalfa.\nTwo weeks ago Forsberg was injured in a fall from his tractor. It\nwill be two months or more before he is able to get around.\nForsberg was captured with the\ngarrison of Wake Island in the\nearly days of the' Second World\nWar and was a prisoner of the\nJapanese more than three years.\nThe Forsbergs have five small\nchildren.\n$55 Million\nPulp Mill\nStart This Year\nSITKA, Alaska (AP) - Plans to\nstart construction this summer on\na $55,000,000 Sitka pulp mill were\nannounced Monday by Tadao Sasa-\nyama, Japanese industrialist and\npresident %i Alaska Lumber and\nPulp Co.\nAlaska Lumber and Pulp is a\nwholly owned subsidiary of Alaska\nPulp Co., a Tokyo corporation\nwhich must operate under United\nStates and Alaska laws in the pulp\nenterprise.\nIt has a preliminary contract\nwith the U.S. Forest Service for\n5,225,000,000 feet of timber to be\nharvested on a sustained yield\nbasis. Pulp will be shipped to\nJapan.\nD-A Refused\nNew Trial\nPORTLAND (AP) \u2014 District Attorney William Langley, convicted\ntwo weeks ago of failure to prosecute gamblers, was turned down\nMonday on his motion for a new\ntrial but he still clung, for the time\nbeing at least, to his office.\nTlje penalty for conviction is removal from office and a possible\nfine of $50 to $500, but circuit\njudge Frank J. Lonergan withheld\nentering judgment. Had he entered\nthe judgment, this would have put\nthe conviction officially into effect.\nThe judge said that although he\nwas rejecting Langley's motion for\na new trial, he would give Lang-\nley's attorney until Thursday to\nprepare arguments supporting'the\nview that Langley still can keep\nthe office if he appeals to the state\nsupreme court.\nThe attorney, K. C. Tanner, told\nthe court that in his view an appeal\nto the supreme court for 'a new\ntrial would automatically stay the\nsentence.\nMAYOR DONATES\nPAY BOOST\nTO CHARITY\n. CALGARY (CP)-A $1500 salary\nincrease approved by, city council\nfor Mayor Don MacKay will be\ndonated by the mayor to charity.\nMayor MacKay. said Monday: \"I\nshall divert it to some worthy project in Calgary as I did with my\nprevious $1000 boost.\" . .\nWith the latest increase Mayor\nMacKay's salary is $13,500 annually.'\nPleasant Surprise\n, SYDNEY, Australia (CP) -Desmond Brand, 21, of Sunshine, Victoria, bought a lot, intending to\nbuild a home on it.\nWhen he took his girl to see it\nboth, rubbed their eyes. The house\nwas already there.\nThe Victoria Supreme Court has\nheld that the house belongs to\nBrand, because he knew nothing\nabout it, and because the builder\nlater refused to negotiate with him.\nThe builder says, he will appeal.\nNews of Ihe Day\nATTENTION CANADIAN\nLEGION MEMBERS\nGeneral meeting, Thursday, May\n2, 8 p.m. Trail branch is bringing\ntravelling gavel. Films, and refreshments.\nThe final Golf School will be\nheld this Wednesday evening, May\n1, 6 p.m., instead of Fri., as previously announced.    ' \u25a0 .,\nCO-OP SERVES\nT800 FARMERS\n\u25a0ST. BRUNO, Que. (CP) - The\nletters CCS are the symbol of a\nnew era for the farmers of the\nLake St. John region, a backwoods\nlogging country before an industrial boom brought improved communications and prosperity.\nChaine Co-Operative du Sagu-\nenay, is a co-operative establishment where 1800 farmers take\ntheir livestock, poultry, eggs, butter and cheese for distribution to\n30 affiliated parish co-op stores\nscattered over the area.\nA growing surplus of meat production is finding its, way into the\nMontreal and Toronto markets,\nand 98 per cent of the cheese\nproduction is exported, much of it\ngoing to the United Kingdom.\nWhile this rugged area is developing into a busy industrial region\nthe organization of the co-op wholesale organization has also spurred\nfarm production.\nThe $1,000,000 establishment\nbuilt in this town, 25 miles north\nwest of Chicoutimi, can handle all\nthe region's business on the spot\nand is large enough to take care\nof future increases. Slaughterhouse\nfacilities can handle 300 hogs\nday, 50 calves., 50 lambs and _\u201e\ncattle. Freezers have enough space\nto fill 90 freight cars.\nLast year, CCS facilities pro\ncessed 28,427 hogs,' 2157 cattle, 5,-\n365 calves, 4292 lambs. They estimate 1957 production will be 15\nper cent higher.\nReports Say Everest Was\nToo Much for Russians\nLONDON (AP) \u2014 A weird story\nreadied here Sunday that 40 Russian moutaineers died attempting\nto beat the British in scaling Mount\nEverest in 1952.\nSir John Hunt, who led the British ascent of the world's highest\nmountain in 1953, commented: \"I\nthink there 'is some truth in the\nstory.\"\nThe Warsaw newspaper Szandar\nMlodych carried the report about\nthe Soviet expedition, saying it\nwas under direct orders from Stalin.\nA Polish climber named Paw-\nlowski was quoted as saying the\nSoviet mission was to plant the\n\"flag of peace\" on top of Everest\nas a dramatic gesture in Stalin's\npeace offensive at that time,\nTheS Soviet expedition reached\n26',400 feet, within 2600 feet of the\ntop of Everest. In December, 1952\nthe Russians radioed that they\nhoped to scale the peak within two\ndays. That was the last heard from\nthem. Presumably the expedition\nwas wiped out by an avalanche, by\nthe paper's account.\nHunt says he remembers a mystery plane circling Everest while\nthe British expedition\" was training\non 'the mountain in April, 1953, before launching an ascent.\nFROM NORTH\n\"It came from the north at 15,-\n000 feet, circled round for a while\nthen turned ,back to the north,\"\nhe said. \"We vaguely wondered at\nthe time whether it was a Russian\nplane. We had heard Russians had\nset off from the north, or Tibet\nside of Everest in 1952.\n\"I think there is some truth ta\nthe   Warsaw   newspaper's   story\nen. McCarthy\nReported in\nWASHINGTON (AP) - Senator\nJoe McCarthy was reported to be\nin serious condition in the nearby\nBethesda, Md., Naval Hospital\nMonday. \u25a0\nA hospital spokesman said McCarthy entered the institution Sunday with \"acute hepatitis (inflammation of the liver) and his condition is considered serious.\"\nThe Wisconsin Republican has\nbeen treated at Bethesda twice in\nthe last two years for a wartime\nknee injury.\nHepatitis is caused by a virus\nwhich attacks the liver, upsetting\nits normal function.\nMAN'S RIGHT OF\nPROGRESS NOTED\nMan's God-given right of progress was emphasized at Christian\nScience services Sunday..\nScriptural readings in the Lesson-Sermon entitled \"Probation after Death\" included the following\nfrom Isaiah (9:2): \"The people\nthat walked in darkness have seen\na great light; they that dwell in\nthe land of the shadow of death,\nupon them hath the light shined.\"\nThe following selection, was read\nfrom \"Science and Health with\nKey to the Scriptures\" by M a r y\nBaker Eddy: \"Every day makes\nits demands upon us for higher\nproofs, rather than professions of\nChristian power. These proofs consist solely in the destruction of sin,\nsickness, _nd death by the power\nof Spirit, as JesuS destroyed them,\nThis is'an element of .progress,\nand progress is the law of God,\nwhose law demands of us only what\nwe can certainly fulfil.\"\nTHIS CITY OF NELSON\nARBOR\nWEEK\nCitizens are requested te clean up yards, alleys, attics, basements, repair fences and do everything\npassible to improve the appearance of our city and\neliminate fire hazards. Please burn all brush, leaves\nand other combustible material and the city will\nprovide trucks to remove unburnable refuse if placed\nhandy to pick up\" Burning permissible without permit between the hours of 9 a.m. and 7 p.m, from\nMAY 2nd to 9th, under supervision of occupier. \u2022\nAny hauling service to augment the city's fleet of\ntrucks will be appreciated.\n' < '   .\nPlease Have Rubbish Ready\nBy May 2nd\nTrucks Will Not Call Twice\n\"mifi C^an. .%':\/\u25a0\nyoiVL CW\nThe CITY'OF NELSON,\nHealth and Sanitation Committee.\nBut I don't believe that 40 Russians\nreached a height of 26,400 feet.\n'It is more likely that an advance team of six men tried to\nreach the top and disappeared, as\nwas reported in some Italian and\nSwedish papers. |\n\"We had-always thought that\nany attempt on Everest from the\nnorth was asking for disaster. The\nSwiss knew that and their expedition tried frorn the south.  '\n\"I went to Moscow in 1954 to\ntell the story of our climb. A group\nof Russian climbers told me then\nthat Russia did not send an expedition to Everest.\"\nOdds...'\na*d Ends\n\u2022    byM.D.B.\nWas checking back through our\n\"City,Book (this is a book in which\nare pasted clippings of all city\ncouncil doings) and found that in\nJuly 1954 council was having difficulty agreeing on boulevards or\nno boulevards on Vernon Street\nand what size they should be. Public works department was given\nthe go-ahead on 6-foot boulevards,\nwith the result that we had a\nboulevard in the 500 block last\nsummer with marigolds making\ntheir splash of color amid all the\nconcrete.\n* * *        ,.\nThis year the 600 block on Vernon has sprouted a boulevard of\nsolid cement. How much better it\nis than that wretched green grass\nand those gaudy flowers. It looks\never so much more businesslike-\ngood hard solid business.\nis '\u2022-'*\/'\nThis sidewalk down the middle\nof the street will, during the summer at least, prevent (or will it)\nthe jaywalking from cars that park\nbeside it and during the winter\nthe great mounds of snow can still\nbe piled on it and people can return to their jaywalking. Well,\nhere's to more and better cement,\nbusiness before pleasure and farewell to a once lovely street. (P.S.\nall this is entirely my own opinion)\n* . *  *\nAlso scrounging through this\nsame book I notice a headline on\na story dated April 12,1955, saying\n\"Fire Chief Orders City Hall Destroyed in Year.\" It must be hard\nlines to be a fire chief these days.\nSidewalk superintendents have\ntheir choice these days \u2014 look up\nat the bridge work or look down\nat the gas pipeline going in. The\nlatter draws a goodly number of\ncurious onlookers and is ap example of assembly line precision.\nIt also makes a heck of a noise\nfirst thing in the morning while\nI'm trying to make more noise\nsawing a log.\n* * .-\u2666\nMy pool looks lovely, I unveiled\nit from its wrappings of. damp\nDaily Newses (just another use\nfor this versatile paper besides\nlighting the fire with it after which\nsomeone or other roars they\nhaven't read it.) Anyway, as I\nwas saying the pool as holding water and now all I have to do is\nwait for the birds to come and\nbathe and drink. Boy, that was a\ngood job done!\nSHIRTS\nSHORTS\nChange Now\nTo Cooler Underwear\nWe have the Brief style\nin\n\u2022 MOODIES\n\u2022 WATSON'S\not the Boxer in\n\u2022 FORSYTHE\nStock up Today\nEMORY $\nLimited\n\"THE MAN'S   STORE\"\nBOX 100 PHONE 81\nLONG CAREERS\nPRESTON, Ont. (CP) ,- Miss\nRosalie Paltler and her sister\nLouise, whose French - speaking\ngrandfather Nicholas Pautlerwas\na pioneer in this district, have\nbeen in the dressmaking business\nfor 60 years. Rosalie, 77, and\nLouise, 87, still live in the house\nin whieff they were born.\nHave The Job Done Right\nUIC GRAVEC\nW        LIMITED        \u2022*\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED and REPAIRED\nRE-CORING\nJim's Radiator Shop\n516 Front St. Phone 63\nj. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL  TRAINING\nSuite 206 Phone 141\nMedical Arts Building\nHAIGH\nTRU-ART\nBeauty  Salon\nPhone 327\nS76 Baker St.\nCAMPBELL,   SHANKLAND\n& CO.\nChartered Accountants\nAuditors\n576 Baker St. Phone 235\nQUICK RfiffF Of\nm-  HEADACHES\nNEURALGIA\nRHEUMATIC PAIN\nand\nCOLDS\nYour  Rexall   Pharmaoy\nCity Drug\nBox 460\nPhone 34\nCITY OF NELSON\nBus Schedule No. 3\nEffective May I, 1957\nCity\nRobson\nCity\nLakeside\nCentre\nand\nCentre\nPark\nUphill\nHendryx\nTo\nUp\nDown\nFairview\n* 6:35 AM\n* 6:45 AM\n* 7:10 AM'\n* 7:20 AM\n7:30\n' 7:40\n8:00\n8:10\n8:20\n8:30\nt 8:05\nt 8:15\nL8:40\nt 8:25 HS\n8:50\n9:00\n9:10\nt HS\nt 8.40\n9:20\n9:30\n9:40\n9:50\nt 8:50 HS\nt Garage\n10:00\n10:10\n10:20\n10:30\n10:40\n10:50\n11:00\n11:15\n\"11:00\n\u202211:15\n\u202211:30 '\n\u202211:45\n11:30\n11:45\n12:05 PM\n12:15 PM\n' 12:25 Sun\n12:35 Sun\n\u202212:07 PM\n\u202212:20 PM\n\u202212:30\n\u202212:45 Garage\n12:45\n12:56 .\n1:06\n1:17\n1:27\n1:38\n1:48\n1:59\n2:09\n2:20\n2:30\n2:41\n2:51\n3:02\n3:12\n3:23\n3:33\n3:44\n3:54\n4:05\n\u2022 4:00\n\u2022 4:15\n4:15\n4:28\n4:38\n4:50      \u00bb.\n* 4:30\n\u2022 4:45\n\u2022 5:07\n\u2022 5:20\n5:07\n5:20\n5:30\n5:45\n\u2022 5:30\n\u2022 5:45 Garage\n6:00\n6:10\n6:20\n6:30\n6:40\n6:50\n7:00\n7:10\n7:20\n7:30\n7:40\n7:50\n8:00\n8:10\n8:20\n8:30\n8:40\n8:50\n9:00\n9:10\n9:20\n9:30\n9:40\n9:50\n10:00\n10:10    \u25a0\n10:20\n10:10\n\"10:40\n\"10:50\n\"11:00\n\"11:10\n\"11:20\n\"11:30 Garage\n* Daily except Sundays and Holidays.\nt Daily except Saturdays, Sundays and Holidays.\n\u2022 Daily except Sundays.\nHS To High School via Latimer and Hendryx Streets.\nTHIS SCHEDULE REPLACES NO. 2\nClip this schedule and save for reference until copies are\navailable from Drivers, Transit Office and City Hall.\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1957_04_30","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0429970","@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":"1957-04-30 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1957-04-30 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\/1.0429970"}