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Low high\nat Cranbrook, Crescent Valley 45\nand 75. Sunday outlook little,\nchange.\n'm\n_lf\u00a7g\u00a7p\n\/5S5\nwith COMICS - 10c\nVoL 56\nNELSON, B.C., CANADA\u2014SATURDAY MORNING, JUNE 8, 1957\nNot mora Than 6c  Dally.  10c Saturday\nNo.  41\n60\nThis Is Nelson's\nDiamond Jubilee Year\nYears of Progress\n60 Rebels Fall\nTo French Forces\nNorth African Districts of Bordeaux,\nMarseilles Checked in Dawn Raids\nALGIERS (AP)\u2014French forces killed 60 rebels throughout Algeria in the last 24 hours, army headquarters reported Friday night.\nThe rebels suffered their heaviest loss near Melouza,\na village 80 miles southeast of Algiers where 302 Algerians\nwere massacred last week. The French blamed the rebels\nfor that massacre. ,\nFrench authorities said 24 rebels were killed in a\nnight clash a few miles north of the village. There was\nno indication any of the rebels took part in the massacre.\nNine other rebels\nwere killed\nnear the Tunisian border. Tjje\nnew weapons they were carrying\nindicated they had just received\nequipment in Tunisia where authorities are friendly to the Algerian nationalists.\nThe French said 27 more rebels\nOregon Firm\nTo Get Timber\nIn Canada\nLONGVIEW, Wash. (AP) - Incorporation in Oregon of a $2,000,-\n000 firm dealing mainly in export\nof poles and pilings to Japan was\nannounced Friday by Tony Fernandez, Longview timber operator.\nFernandez said headquarters of\nthe firm, Forest Timber Products\nof Oregon, will be opened soon in\nPortland. A temporary office is\nnow set up at Gresham, Ore.\nFernandez is president and principal stockholder. Associated with\nhim are Jess Barker, Portland log\nbuyer, vice-president and James\nMoore, Gresham, secretary.\nOne of the main sources for poles,\nand pilings handled by the. firm\nwill be Canada, Fernandez said.\nThe company also will deal in\nwholesale lumber and other \"timber\nproducts.\nThe company has tentative plans\nfor. a. sawmill and pulp plant, Fernandez said.\nMan Pushed From\nPM's Rostrum\nTORONTO (CP)\"- An unidentified, young man tried to mount\n.the rostrum while Prime Minister\nSt. Laurent was speaking in\nMaple Leaf Gardens Friday night\n'\u2022Wit.was shoved back by Vincent\nRegan, local Liberal association\npresident, and fell down the steps.\nThe man struck his head on the\ncement floor but within a few\nhiinutes he was up again and was\nled out by policemen who would\nnot allow reporters to question\nhim.\nThe man was mounting the rostrum toward Mr. St. Laurent\ncarrying a torn placard bearing a\nphotograph of the prime minister\nwhen Mr. Regan pushed him away.\nwere killed in mop-up operations\nthroughout the territory.\nIn France, police raided the\nNorth African districts of Bord-\naux and Marseille at down. They\nchecked the identity of more than\n2,000 North Africans and arrested-\nsix.\nDespite the police roundups,\nNorth African terrorists staged\nthree more attacks in Paris overnight.\nTwo of these, for the first time,\nseem to have been wilfully aimed\nat Frenchmen.\nA Frenchman was shot and\nkilled in a cafe owned by an Algerian but frequented by Frenchmen. A French locksmith was\nwounded in another attack.\nSTRIKE HALTS\nPIPELINE\nINSTALLATION\nKELOWNA (CP) - The natural\ngas pipeline project in'Kelowna\nhas been brought to.a standstill\nby a wildcat strike of pipefitters\nand welders.\nThe strike started Thursday when\nDutton Williams Limited dismissed\na.worker for imtompetence.\nSlipt. E. W. McLaren said the\naction Was taken when a home\nowner phoned Inland Natural Gas\nto cancel the installation of meter\nservice because of damage done\nto a\" neighboring house. On checking the report, Mr. McLaren said\nthe workman who did the installation was -.promptly dismissed because of his work.\nFifteen fellow unionists walked\noff the job, thus tying up the entire\nproject because others cannot work\nuntil the pipefitter and welders carry out their phase of the operation,\nCanadians Mark Ballots\n400 Baffling\n3 Forest Fires\nPRINCE GEORGE, B.C. (CP)-\nFout hundred men battled three\nmajor forest fires in central British\nColumbia Friday.\nA fourth big fire was burning\nnear Fort Ware, 300 miles northwest of here in the Rocky Mountain\ntrench. The fire area was so inaccessible that authorities decided\nto let it burn until rain puts it out.\nThere was no estimate of the number of acres destroyed.\nFive new fires broke out in the\nPrince George district Thursday\nbut all were extinguished or\nbrought under control.\nBiggest of those still causing anxiety was at Buckhorn Lake, 20\nmiles southeast of here, where 2,000\nacres of old logging slash had been\nconsumed. Onemill'had been destroyed and preparations were made\nto evacuate several others.\nStruggle To\nSave Quints\nFails\nLOURENCO MARQUES, Portuguese East Africa (Reuters) \u2014 A\nyoung Portuguese doctor, his wife\nand a Franciscan nun struggled\ndesperately but in vain Friday to\nsave quintuplets born Thursday to\na 30-year-old African woman.\nCeline Chilemane Covane, who\nhas nine children born as twins,\ntriplets and quads, was enjoying\nthe congratulations of Portuguese\ncolonial officers and excited villagers when she learned her five\nnew babies were dying.\nThe quints\u2014four boys and a girl\n\u2014averaged two pounds 14 ounces\nin. weight and 'were a month premature. First reports frpm,Chai-\nChai village hospital said all'were\n\"doing fine\", but Friday morning\nthey began to weaken.\nThe team-that delivered them-\nDr. Manual Moraira, his doctor\nwife, and Sister Maria da Luz \u2014\nfought death in vain.\nCeline's 40-year-old husband, Sil-\nvestre Tachucane Nadhlane, went\nto the hospital to console his grieving wife..\nHe turned to the bed where the\nfive little- figures lay dressed in\nyellow. Silvestre gently touched\neach one in turn, then walked out\nof the hospital.\nSt. Laurent Scores\nPC Secret Program\nVOTING DATE SET\nGUELPH, Ont.'(CP) -Voting in\nthe federal constituency of Wellington South, deferred due to the\ndeath Monday of Liberal candidate H. B. Hosking, has been set\nfor July 15. Nomination day w.ill\nbe July 2. Alfred D. Hales, Progressive Conservative candidate,\nand Thomas. Withers, CCF, are\nexpected to be renominated. The\nLiberal Association has not announced a candidate to succeed\nMr. Hosking, member of the House\nof Commons for the last eight\nyears.\nBy HAROLD MORRISON\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nTORONTO (CP) - Prime Minister St. Laurent charged Friday\nnight that the Progressive Conservatives attempted to wreck the\nlast Parliament and that John\nDiefenbaker has deliberately refused to allow the country to see\nhis party's platform.\n\"Surely, Mr. Diefenbaker is the\nfirst leader of a political party in\nCanada that has kept its platform\nsecret,\" the 75-year-old Liberal\nleader said in the wind-up of his\nOntario tour and his last major\naddress of the six-week election\nfight.\nThe Conservatives say it is time\nfor a change, but what kind of a\nchange do they want? Mr. St,\nLaurent asked! Do they want to\nincrease rather then reduce\ntaxes? Do they want to change\nCanada's growing social welfare\nprograms? Do they want to pro-\nTHE 676-TON Norwegian training' ship Christian Radlch Is\nshown as she sail, majestically Into New York harbor. It Is on\nthe next-to-last leg of a 17,500-mlle cruise, which began last\nDecember 8 In-'Oslo. The three-masted rigger, one of the world's\nmost famous sailing ships, Is manned by .2 cadets and 12 officers,\nDiefenbaker Urges\nBreak Power Monopoly\nCCF Charges\nFarmer Betrayed\nBIGGAR, Sask. (CP) - CCF\nLeader Coldwell Friday night\ncharged the Liberal and Conservative parties with \"betraying\" the\nfarmer and urged the establishment of an agricultural parity\nboard.\n'Both the Liberals and the Conservatives have supported all\nkinds of special privileges for special interests ' but have opposed\neven the most elementary justice\nfor agriculture embodied as that\nis in a program of full parity,\"\nhe said.\nHe spoke at a party rally. in\nthis town, 65 miles west of Saskatoon, as he neared the end of a\ntour of his own riding of Rose-\ntdwn-Biggar winding up his election campaign.\nHe said the Liberals and Conservatives support tariffs as a\nsubsidy to industrialists and supporting special.tax exemptions for\noil and gas and mining companies that \"cost the public treasury many millions of dollar's\nevery year,\" but oppose full parity\nfor the farmer.\nmote   federal   treasury   deficits\nrather than surpluses?\nMUST OPEN EYES\n\"If they, want to restore their\nshattered fortunei. the Conservatives must change their policies\ntheir attitudes,\" Mr. St. Laurent\nsaid. \"They must throw off gloom\nand put aside pessimism. They\nmust stop living in the past . . .\nthey must open their eyes to the\nshining future unfolding for our\nbeloved land.\"\nIn a rally staged in Toronto's\nMaple Leaf Gardens for the 18\nLiberal candidates in the Toronto\nand York ridings, Mr. St. Laurent\nasked his audience to compare\nCanada's recent growth with the\ndepression of the 1930s when a\nConservative government was in\npower.\n\"The Liberals came into' office\nin 1935 and conditions in Canada\nhave been improving ever since.\nHAMILTON (CP) - John Diefenbaker closed out his national\ncampaign for the prime .ministry\nFriday night with an appeal to\nCanadians- to \"break the monopoly of power of a government too\nlong in office.\"\nThe Progressive Conservative\nleader called on voters in Monday's election to \"restore.in this\nnation the flag of freedom on\nParliament Hill\" which had been\nbrought down by Liberal \"master-\nmen.\"\nIn his final major address of\nthe federal, election campaign,. the\n61 -year.-old party chief said\nPrime-. Minister 'St. \"Laurent Ijns\nbeen talking \"nonsense\" and Has\nbeen \"trying to bring in side issues in the dying days of the \"campaign in order to thwart the wishes\nof the electorate.\"\nMr..Diefenbaker spoke to about\n1600 people in an. overflow -meeting, at a collegiate auditqriurfl. ...\nEarly today he was to leave by\nplane for his home constituency\nof Prince Albert, Sask., to await\nthe results of the vote.\nCLOSING RALLY\nWith him on the platform .at\nthe closing rally was Ontario Premier Frost, who called him Canada's next prime minister and\njoined with him in denying Liberal charges of a Diefenbaker-\nFrost \"conspiracy\" to get more\ntax money for Ontario at the expense of the remainder of Canada.\nBefore' the Hamilton meeting,\nMr. Diefenbaker addressed another overflow crowd of 800. in\nnearby Burlington, where he said\na major issue of the election is\nwhether Canadians want a Parliament representing the people\nor one dominated by three or four\nmen such as the last one.\nAt Hamilton, he said Canadians\nare being overtaxed at the whim\nof the federal cabinet backed by\na group of yes-men, and he repeated a promise of a special fall\nSession of Parliament to undertake tax cuts.\ninto\nit.\nPENTICTON. (CP) - A heavy\nrain near Bridesville is reported\nto have flooded homes, highways,\nfields, making roads impassable.\nBridesville is 20 miles East of Osoyoos.\nLynne Blaine said a very heavy\ndownpour started about 9 o'clock\nThursday night and by 10:30 water\nwas running down\" the streets and\nhomes.of the small commun-\nThe' Bridesville Creek overflowed its banks damaging alfalfa\ncrdps.   .\nPower was disrupted for a short\ntime and it was necessary to restrict traffic on Anarchist Mountain to one way.\n. The school at Bridesville was\nclosed Friday due to. back roads\nbeing impassable, Blaine said.\nNearly a, mile of Anarchist\nMountain highway was undermined on the east lane as the result of the torrential downpour. The\nroad for a time was covered with\nmud, boulders and roots and logs,\n9 Million Voters\nTo Choose Gov't\nBy ALAN DONNELLY\nCanadian Press Slalt Writer\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014Canadians vote Monday to choose\ntheir representatives in the cpuntry's next parliament.\nThe political party that elects the most MPs will form\nthe government\u2014the prize for which politicians hdve campaigned since parliament was dissolved April 12.\nNo single major issue has dominated the election\npicture. Seeking support from the country's 9,000,000 voters\nare: _\n\u2014^he Liberal party with 262 candidates, led by 75-\nyear-old Prime Minister St. Laurent, bidding lor a renewed\nmandate, mainly on its record during \u00a32 years, in office.\nPCs\nPLEDGE TAX CUTS\n\u2014The Progressive Conservative\nparty with 255 candidates under a\nnew leader, 61- year -old lawyer\nJohn Djefenbaker, and a platform\nthat pledges tax cuts, higher pensions, better federal-provincial tax\nsharing, what it terms \"restoration\" of parliamentary rights.\n\u2014The\" CCF party with 161 candidates, led by M. J. Coldwell,\n63, which promises broader social\nsecurity measures, economic controls to stem inflation, lower taxes\nfor low-income groups;  and stif- ,   ,.,,,.\n(er taxes for the \"wealthy and|p-m- dayllght tIme'\nFailing fo\nThaw Finns\nHELSINKI, Finland (CP)-Rus-\nsian Communist party chief Nikita\nKhrushchev and Premier Nikolai\nBulganin received a cool response\nFriday as they travelled about the\nFinnish capital on the second day\nof their week's visit here.\nKhrushchev maintained a beaming face, throughout the day especially after emerging from a political and trade conference with Finnish officials.\nThe two leaders were reported\nseeking \\a communik'ue', on the\nmeeting that would stress the desirability of a neutral Scandinavia.\nBut the communique, released pn\nFriday night, said only that Russia recognizes that Finland endeavors to keep out of conflicts\nwith great powers.       *\nIt also stated that three working committees were appjinted to\n\u2022 study general relations between\nthe two countries, cultural questions and trade.\nprivileged,\"    largely   through   a\ncapital gains levy.\n\u2014Social Credit, with 115 candidates led by Solon Low, 57. This\nparty has no chance of gaining a\nmajority in the 265-member Commons. It has campaigned for\nlower taxes, universal old\npensions ot between $60 and $100\n\u2014the present level is $40, increasing to. $46 next month \u2014 and a\nmanaged money supply to balance consumption ef goods\nagainst productipn. ,\nSKTYtSEVEN others\n-43ixt# - spven other candidates\nunder assorted party and independent; labels.. These Include 10\nLabor \u2022 Progressive (Communist)\ncandidates, a sharp . reduction\nfrom the 100 who ran and lost in\n1953; . a; single Christian. .Derno,-\ncrat candidate., in.'British Columbia and one Saskatchewan man\nrunning under a National Credit\nControl label.\nThe 860 candidates listed above\ndo not include .Liberal C. W. Carter, returned by acclamation, in\nNewfoundland's Burin - Bhrgeo\nconstituency;, or any candidates\nin    Ontario's    Wellington    South\nwhere Liberal Henry Hosking\ndied after nomination day,, forcing a deferred July election.\nIn the 1953 eledtion, 897- were\nin the race. Mr. St. Laurent\nscored his second victory as Liberal leader when 173 Liberals,\n51 Progressive Conservatives, 23\nCCF members, 15 Social Creditors and three independents were\nelected.\nOn' Monday the polls will be\nopen between 8 a.m. and 6 p.m.\nlo-al standard time\u20149 a.m. to 7\nSocialists Favor\nBourges>MaunoMry\nPARIS (Reuters) \u2014 Chances of\nending the French government\ncrisis brightened Friday night when\nSocialist deputies voted 51 to 33\nin favor of participating in a cabinet led by Maurice Bourges-Maunoury.\nHalting Tests Would Jeopardize\nSafety, AEC Scientist Asserts\nBy FRANK CAREY\nWASHINGTON (AP) - Dr.\nShields Warren, an expert on\natomic medicine, said Friday it\nwould be \"inexcusable\" for the\nUnited States to \"jeopardize\" the\nfree world's safety by halting nuclear weapons. tests.\nHis testimony before a U.S.\nSenate-HoU6e atomic subcommittee supported the position taken\nby Dr. Willard F. Libby, a member of the U.S. Atomic Energy\nCommission and a nuclear scientist.\nLibby has just written the subcommittee that the U.S. cannot\nhalt atomic tests if it is to develop\nthe   modern   weapons   \"urgently\nneeded fpr our defence.\"        \u2022\n\"There is no substitute for testing to determine the reliability of\na weapon,\" Libby said.\nISSUES STATEMENT.\nWarren followed up with this\nstatement Friday:\n\"I firmly believe as a physician\nthat it is inexcusable for us to\njeopardize our own safety and\nthat of the rest of the world in order to eliminate a risk of as low\nan order of magnitude as is constituted by any reasonable pro-\ngrarjj df atomic weapons testing.\"\nThe \"risk\" Warren referred to\nis the risk of disease, deformity\nand death from the radioactive\nfall-out of an atomic explosion.\nLibby's view is that the fall-out\ndanger is relatively slight and\nsibility of national annihilation if\nan enemy develops superior\nweapons.\nOther scientists, including Dr.\nLinus Pauling, a Nobel prize winner, are calling for an end to the\ntests because of the fall-out hazard.\nPauling, who circulated a petition signed by 2,000 scientists and\nurging that the tests be halted,\nwas to have been questioned by\nthe U.S. Senate Internal security\nsubcommittee June 18.\nThe Socialist party executive and\nparliamentary group met after\nBourges-Maunoury had presented\nhis. proposed program to them.\nReports from the meeting said\nSocialist leader Guy Mollet. spoke\nfavorably of the prospects of a\ngovernment led by Bourges-Man-\nnoury, who served as defence minister in the outgoing Mollet cabinet.\nOn the other side of the political spectrum, Roger Duchet, secretary-general of the strong Conservative party, said his group\nis \"very favorably disposed\" toward the. radical minister.\nBut party leader Antoine Pinay,\nemerging: from a meeting with\nBourges-Maunoury, said they had\nnot talked about Conservative participation.\nKootenay at Nelson \u2014 Wednesday, 11.70; Thursday, 11.75; Friday, 11.70.\nCAMPAIGN ENDS    -...        \u25a0 ,.\nMore than six weeks of, campaign oratory ends this weekend.\nAppeals by radio and television,\nunder law, are cut off at midnight Friday night, 48 hours before election day.\nCampaigners for the various\nparties, pulling few punches, presented electors with a wide array\nof issues.\nMr. St. Laurent's campaign emphasis was on Canada's prosperity and what the Liberals had\n'done since 1935. It was what\" he\ncalled a. \"no promises\" campaign\nthough he made, or hinted' at,\nsome as the contest progressed.\nHe .said.Erogressiye Conservative\npromises would cpst $1,500,000,000\na year' and' couldn't possibly be\ncarried out if tax cuts that fiarty\nalso pledged were pat-into effect.\nMr.. Diefenbaker, . in . rebuttal,\nsaid his program would not, cost .\nan extra $300,000,000 a year. It\ncould he- implemented \u2014 and unnecessary taxes cut 'without a\ndeficjt, he said. \u25a0 , ; , ;\u25a0'-.,.\u2022\nPIPELINE DEBATE ISSUE\nOne of the campaign issues, as\npredicted, was last .year's .bitter\nCommons pipeline'debate in\nwhich the Liberals applied debate-\nlimiting, closure to push through a\nbill to help finance the trans-Canada natural gas pipeline with government funds.\nMr. Diefenbaker, echoed by\nCCF speakers, said the 'Liberals\nrode roughshod over Parliament,\nbarring discussion that wpuld\nl'iave shown that pipeline backers\nstood to make \"millions.\"\n. Mr. St. Laurent Replied: \"What\nthey really mean is that Parliament, has prevented ,them from\nriding roughshod over it.\"\nThe prime minister's age also\nbecame an election issue. Mr.\nDiefenbaker regularly reminded\nhis audience's that Mr. St. Laurent gets the old age \"pension, payable to all Canadians at 70 years\nof age.   '\nMr. St. Laurent's reply was to\nwage a campaign almost as vigorous as that of Mr. Diefenbaker.\nAll three major parties opposing the Liberals said the government has over-taxed Canadians.\nProgressive Conservatives and\nSocial Credit candidates said\nover-taxing amounted to $500,000,-\n000 last year. All three promised\ntax cuts, the CCF specifying that\nbenefits would go to low-income\ngroups.      ' .\nAnd in This Corner \u2666..\nBLOOMFIELD, P.E.I. (CP)\u2014On three consecutive days last\nweek, Mrs. Cornelius Boelhouwer of Brookfield, P.E.I., became a\ngrandmother, a mother and again a grandmother.\nMrs. Boelhouwer's daughter, Mrs. Anthony Indeway of York,\nP.E.I., gave birth to a son. The following day, Mrs. Boelhouwer became .the mother of a daughter, her eighth child. Mrs. William\nBuerwarder of Charlottetown, another daughter, gave birth to a\ndaughter to finish the cycle the third day.\n___f__i\nTWO ANTENNAE for a repeater station at\nSalmo, one of.12 to be built in B.C. on the last\nsection of the trans-Canada nilcro-wave system,\nwere unloaded at Nelson Friday. Instalmtg Is\nbeing done by Northern i.lcct.ic Company\nunder direction of Northwest Telephone Company. The Salmo antenna which will face east\nwill receive signals from the preceding station\nlocated at Creston. The signal will be fed down\nthe tower Into the station and will bo amplified\nwithin the station, then sent west on the other\nantenna to the next -receiving station at Santa\nRosa near Grilnd Forks. Initially this system will\nadd telephone circuit, and provide live television between Vancouver and Eastern Canada.\nThe Salmo unit would provide for feeding live\nTV programs to Nelson area If Nelson were to\nhave a TV station. It Is expected the microwave system will be In use In Autumn, 1958.\n\u2014Dally News photo.\nLUTON, England (Reuters)\u2014A former sergeant-major accused\nof being drunk and disorderly was asked in court Friday what his\ndrinking capacity is.\n\"Eighteen pints when I sit down,\" said Thomas David Bolter, 37.\n\"Well, what about when you stand up?\" asked the Crown counsel;\n\"I fall over,\" replied Bolter. The court acquitted him.\nDALLAS, Tex. (AP)\u2014Catzuml Otsuka went through the routine\nof having his name changed in district court.\n\u2022 The new moniker? It's George CMzumi Otsuka.\n\"Everybody calls me George,\" he explained to Judge D. B.\nWood.\nHOLLYWOOD (AP)\u2014When movie and television players turned\nout to make their donations at the annual blood bank partv Thursday, who did the Screen Actors Guild have on hand to help check\nblood pressures?\nJayn< Mansfield..\nThe nartv-sponsorin^ guild had no comment concerning Miss\nMansfield's effect unon individual Wood nressures. but after a while\nthe actress was switched to the job of carrying trays of bottles.\nSACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP)\u2014Note for nudists: The Western\nSunbathing Association will hold its annual: convention at nearby\nWilton July 26-28. At the Oak Leaf Ranch, to be exact.\n 2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JUNE 8, 1957\nLAST TIMES TODAY \u2014 Complete Shows 2:00-7:00-9:00\n\/rSWEG8EA7\u00a3ST\/\/\n:_____-    I      .'\nIAYHEf.flHSFlElDO.g__r\nwilt 0WM. Sit rt\nJULIE LONDON\nRAY ANTHONY\nBARRY GORDON\nStarts Monday\u2014\"YOU CAN'T R|UN AWAY FROM IT\"\nrSTARLIGHT-!\n|       DRIVE-IN       ||\nI LAST TIMES TONIGHT\n\u00ab   Times 9 p.m. and 9:30 p.m.\n\"COMANCHE\"\nI ;        (CINEMASCOPE)\"\n_      ,     Color by Deluxe'\nLl Dana  Andrew*\n|| Kent Smith\nLinda Crista.\n\u25a0_\u25a0\u25a0    WkWmU    _\u25a0_\u25a0    ____\u25a0    ____\u25a0    \u25a0____!\nUBC PROFESSOR\nSPEAKS AT TRAIL\nGRAD EXERCISES\n. TRAIL \u2014 Graduation exercises\nwere attended by a large group\nof parents at L. J. Crowe High\nSchool Friday night.\nS. Graham, inspector of schools,\nhanded out certificates.\nR. Walton, of School District No.\n11 Board, spoke and W. J. Hart-\nrick,..principal, acted as master of\nceremonies. Guest speaker was\nVt. W. Robbins, professor of Eng-\nlich at University of B.C.\nAuto-Vue Drive-In\nTRAIL, B.C.\n.LAST TIMES TONIGHT\nTime 8:45 p.m.\n\"GUYS   AND   DOLLS\"\n(Cinemascope)\nCARTOONS\n\"Canada at Crossroads,\"\nBlack Tells Meeting\nELK DRIVE-IN\nCASTLEGAR, B.C.\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\nOne Show 9:10 p.m.\n\"JACK McCOLL, DESPERADO\"\n..(Color)\nStarring George Montgomery\nPlus \"THE MAGGIE\"\nPremiere Theatre\nFRUITVALE, B. C.\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\n\"RAWHIDE YEARS\" and\n\"WHITETAIL BUCK\"\nTony Curtis, Colleen Miller\n\"Canada is at the crossroads\" because of a \"political upheaval\"\nand \"tremendous economia development\", Hon. W. D. Black,\nMLA for Nelson-Creston, minister\nof municipalities, and provincial\nsecretary, told about 50 people\nFriday night at a meeting in thel\nLegion Hall in support of D. L.P\nBrothers, Kootenay West, Social\nCredit candidate in Monday's federal election.\nHe thought it would not be too\nlong before Canada ranks with\nleading world nations, and told the\npeople, \"Your responsibility as a\nvoter is to hear all the candidates.\"\nMr. Black agreed it was desirable\nto get back to the two-party system federally but not with \"in\"\nand \"out\" parties. Regarding large\nmeetings which John Dielenbaker,\nConservative leader, has addressed,\nMr. Black said, \"I'm delighted\nthat people are interested enough\nto come out and have a look at the\nman anyway.\"\nMr. Brothers explained it would\nbe possible to raise old age pensions to $100 monthly since there\nis a \"great deal of inefficiency and\nwaste in Ottawa,\" Mr. Black said\nthis would be fulfilling one of the\nCASTLE  THEATRE\nCASTLEGAR, B.C.\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\nShows at 2:00, 6:45 and 8:50\n\"The Man Who Knew Too Much\"\nJames Stewart, Doris Day\n' (VistaVision)\nNews \u2014 Cartoon      '\nFINED $10\nCreating a disturbance on the\nNorth Shore cost A. C. Hawkins\n$10 and costs when he pleaded\nguilty Thursday in provincial\ncourt before Stipendiary Magistrate William Evans.\nSIGN COMES\n|   DOWN . . .\nBusiness goes on as usual. Men\nare busily taking down the old\nsign, to make room for a new,\nmodern And highly attractive\nwrought Iron sign now being designed by Mike Roberts, which\nwfll more than make np for the\nblank space that occupies the\nfront of Andrew's Shoe Store.\n'Adv..\nMAKE EVERY DAY A\nCOLOR PICTURE DAY\nANSCOCHROME\nHigh Speed Color Film\nFringe Area\nPolling Places\nVoting on Monday will be conducted at six polling divisions on\nthe outskirts of Nelson, in addition\nto the Civic Centre and Church\nof the Redeertier parish hall. The\ncomplete \"list of West Kootenay\npolling places, exgept for the Nelson fringe area; is carried on\npage four today. ,\nHere are the other six polling\nlocations:\nNo. 104 \u2014 E. J. Boyes residence,\n1028 Elwyn Street.\nNo. 105 \u2014 Earl Wilson residence,\nformerly Gerigh's Lodge, Selby\nStreet.        '\nNo. 106 \u2014 J. C. Fukala residence, 1111 Hall Mines Road.\nNo. 107 \u2014 I. E. Lewis residence,\n1309 McQuarrie Ave.\nNo. 108 \u2014 W. Greavison residence, fiea_y Avenue.\nNo. 109 \u2014 Mount St. Francis.\nKootenay Film\nCouncils Meet\nIn Nelson Today\nThe Association of Kootenay\nFilm Councils formed in October,\n1956, has completed plans for the\nfirst annual meeting which will be\nheld this year in Nelson with the\nNelson and District Film Council\nas host. Delegates from the East\nind West Kootenay will represent\ntheir respective film councils at\nthe business meeting which will\ncommence this afternoon in St.\nPaul's-Trinity United Church Hall.\nDistrict representative of the\nNational Film Board, Thomas\nWhitehead, will be in attendance\nand plans will be formulated for\nthe activities of the forthcoming\nseason.\nProjects of the past year to be\nreviewed include the children's\nprogram, the Kootenay Interna\ntional Film Festival and the travelling art show. Miss Helen Wagner\nof Trail, president of the Association, will chair -the meeting. Other\nofficers of the Association are, W.\nLeahy of Nelson, vice-president,\nMiss Margaret Rowe of Trail, secretary, and Mrs. M. Plant of\nGrand Forlts, treasurer.\nFollowing the business meeting\na banquet will be held after which\nnew\"-film*releases will be shown\nby the National Film Board\nrepresentative.\nfundamental beliefs,\" \"honor our\nfathers and mothers.\" Both the\ncandidate and the MLA thought\nthe present \"tight mdney\" system\nwas creating, hardships in Canada.\nMr. Brothers was \"most definitely\" in favor of immigration, but\nwarned that immigrants might be\nunable to get jobs if the \"tight\nmoney\" rule went on too long.\nYOUNG SENATORS\nEvery. Canadian who wanted to\nbuild a house should be able to\nobtain loans at about two or three\nper cent, not the present six per\ncent, candidate Brothers thought\nand interest payments should be\ndeducted from income tax. He also\nadvocated \"transferable\" superannuation benefits, so a man\nwould not lose his retirement credits if he changed jobs.\nYoung men should be put in the\nSenate \"so it will be respected\nand riot laughed at,\" Mr. Brothers\nthought. High freight rates in the\nB. C. Interior, he said, meant that\nany industry which came her^|\n\"could not compete with other industries in Canada\" he asserted,\nmaintaining the Social Credit party\nwanted to see B. C, dealt with fairly in comparison with other provinces.   ,\nAccording to Mr. Black, Social\nCredit is a \"movement of positive\nand not negative thinkers.\" He\nexplained the relationship between\npresent federal conditions, and\nconditions in B. C. when Social\nCredit took over from the Coalition government in 1952, referring\nparticularly to debt reduction. Both\nmen agreed the Liberals and Con-\nservatives\u00bbwere \"great parties at\none time\" but Mr. Black said they\nhad \"deserted their principles.\"\nChairman of the meeting was\nMrs. W. J. VanMaarion, .president\nof Kootenay'West Social Credit Association, j. A. Wilson introduced\nMr. Brothers, who presented Mr\nBlack.\nOdds.\nEnds\nby M. P. B\nand\nAh, these pre-election days _re\nexhilarating with Uncle Louis hauling out his latter day vocabulary\nof stinging remarks arid John listening with glee. These are the days\nwhen Uncle Louis is complaining\n.about all John's promises probably because John thought of a few\nQradudtes Bid Farewell\nTo High School at Banquet\nClass of '57 Friday night bid a\nformal farewell to the halls of\nL. V. Rogers High School\nFinding themselves \"looking not\nonly ahead but back to three of\nthe most enjoyable years of our\nlives\" were 80 students who joined\ntheir teachers in a graduation banquet. The banquet followed by\ntoasts both serious and light-hearted and a dance were a prelude\nUncle Louis didn't think ol: andjt7 award presentations scheduled\nfor next Wednesday afternoon.\nTraditions which extended from\n1901 were the heritage of the class\nof '57 and Marvin Smith, in proposing a toast to the school hoped\nthe students of future classes\nwould perpetuate and cherish\nthem.\nPrincipal Gerald H. Lee wished\n\"one of the nicest graduating\nclasses ... all the happiness and\nprosperity in the future.\"\nThe toast to the school board\nand the Department of Education\nwas made by Ruth Bambrick\nwhen she thanked the board for\nthe \"nearly $1000 spent on each\nof us in the last three years\" and\nexpressed the hope the education\nreceived in those years would be\nput to good use in future.\nWHAT NOW?\n\"You've graduated \u2014 what are\nWright Completes\nCampaign Details\nDr. C. H. Wright of Trail, Pro-\ngressive Conservative candidate\nin Monday's election, and E. B.\n(Ted) Scott, his campaign manager, were in Nelson Friday for,\nfinishing details of the campaign.\nThey met a number of sopporters\nin the Committee Rooms during\nthe morning and\" early afternoon.\nLater Dr. Wright visited Mount St.\nFrancis where he talked to many\nof the residents.\nOn the way back'to Trail to attend graduation exercises at the\nJ. Lloyd Crowe high school, he\nstopped at Salmo to sit in at a\ncampaign committee meeting.\n35 mm.\n620 size\n120 olzd\n$2.40\n$1.60\n$1.60\nNelson Pharmacy\n\"Your Fortress o_ Health\"\n433 Josephine St.\nPHONE 1203\nCentennial Plans\nTo Be Discussed\nAt Meeting Today\nMembers of Nelson's Diamond\nJubilee and Centennial - Celebrations Committee will meet tonight In the office of Community\nPrograms Branch regional consultant Robert Stangroom, Medical Arts Building.\nPurpose of the meeting Is to\ndiscuss plans for observing\nB.C.'s Centennial next year, and\nthose having Ideas for projects\nhave been asked to bring them\n, to the attention of committee\nmembers. The B.C, Centennial\ncommittee will be here June 19\nand 20 to discuss arrangements.\nNelson School District (No. 7)\nREGISTRATION of\nBEGINNING PUPILS\nParents, who have not already done so, are requested to register the names of children who will\nbe commencing school for the first time in September, 1957. To begin school a child must be six years\nof age by December 31, 1957. Please register with\nthe PRINCIPAL of the nearest elementary school\nAT ONCE.\nKOOTENAY COTTAGES\nRESORT\nReserve Your Holiday Cottage Now.\nFinest Accommodation, Attractive,  Restful\nSurroundings, Dining Room, Private Beach,\nBoots, Tennis\n4\"A\"A\"A\"_' and AAA Members V\nEAST SHORE KOOTENAY LAKE\n10 Miles from  Kootenay Bay Ferry\nPHONE 2-J GRAY CREEK\n27 VOTE AT\nADVANCE POLL\nTwenty-seven ballots have been\ncast so far in the Nelson advance\npoll, is was reported Friday night.\nFinal session well be from three\nto 11 p.m. today at the Chamber\nof Commerce.\nThirteen persons voted Thursday,'\nand fourteen Friday.\nTennis Instruction\nStarts Monday\nRecreation director Joe Johnson\nannounced Friday that tennis in\nstruction, part of the recreation\ncommission's summer program,\nwill start Monday night. Classes\nwill be held from 5:30'to 6:30 on\nMonday, Wednesday and Thursday\nnights for two weeks with Russ\nHawes as instructor,     ..\nJohn saying Uncle Louis has no\nright to complain because he also\nis making election promises. You'd\nthink the electors had been singing\n\"O Promise Me\" the way they are\ngoing at it.\n* *  *\n. Now, all we need is a gimmick\nto get the citizens out to vote.\nHow about a nice shot of the Prime\nMinister, Diefenbaker, Coldwell\nand Low, arms linked, hippety-hop-\nping down the street singing \"A-\npolling we will go.\" Okay, it was\nonly a thought \u2014 and they could\ndo an eyes right as they passed\nParliament Hill.\n* *  *      ,   .\nReally, I know it is no joking\nmatter and we will all need our\nwits about us Monday as we queue\nup to mark our little \"X\". We will\nhave to sort over all the fat and\nlean of the campaign speeches,\nevaluate past performance and\nconsider if there's the possibility\nof better and s%e our duty and do\nit. There, that is my little election\nspeech for today. Be seeing you\nunder the B or under the I or under the N, be sure, to GO. (Some\npolitical party has not recognized\nin me a born cheer leader).\n*- *  *\nWell, enough of that for today.\nSee where the blood drive is coming up too, they'll get it from us\none way or another \u2014 what the\ngovernment doesn't get the Red\nCross will. Oh, I am cynical today.\n* *  \u2022\nYou know that wasp I was telling\nyou about that thought he would\nset up housekeeping in my doorway? Well, he went over and built\nhis little grey globe on the underside of the, stringer of my fence. I\nwas looking at it closely and the\nwasp poked his head out of his\ndoorway and looked at me long and\nhard as if he just dared me to oust\nhim. I understand they eat mc*-'\nquitoes 'and things like that, so\nI said to him, \"Well, okay, you\ncan stay, but no monkey business.\" He buzzed at me and turned his head back into his house and\nwent ton about whatever he was\ndoing in there \u2014 making lunch or\nhanging pictures or whatever\nwasps do in their papier mache\nhomes.\n* *  *\nI feel sorry for the French Premier\" playing his little game of\nEanie, Meenie, Miney, Mo.\n* *   *\nFragile purple iris I had given\nme and which I planted by the\npool are blessing me with their\nbeauty.  Oh, they are lovely.\nLegion Plans Float\nIn Jubilee Parade\nKiwanians to\nBuy Cardiograph\nor Hospital\nLegion participation in Nelson\nDiamond celebrations planned for\nJuly S to 14 was discussed at the\nbranch's June meeting.\nS. J. Newell, president, read a\nletter from the Diamond Jubilee\nCommittee requesting participation\nin the various celebrations arranged for the week. The subject\nwas extensively discussed and all\nLegionaires who spoke on the sub:\nject were of the opinion that entry\nof a float would provide on excellent opportunity for them tp bring\nthe work of the Legion before the\npublic.\nMembers recalled that a \"very\ngood float\" had been entered In\nthe 1947 Golden Jubilee parade\nand  suggested that this year's\nfloat be planned along   similar\nlines.\nN. G. MacLead, vice-president,\nwas named Legion representative\nto the judging panel to pick the\nJubilee Queen June 14 and 15. Mr.\nNewell also asked for Legionaires\nto volunteer for work on the same\nevenings as the organization has\nbeen asked to handle the bingo\ngames. He estimated about 12 to 15\nmen would be required. i\nMr. Newell gav,e a short report\non the zone meeting held at Cranbrook in May. He remarked that\nthe discussion hecame \"very hot\"\nwhen the matter of payment to\nHungarian refugees was considered\nwhich he said, were higher than the\namount given to disabled veterans.\nThe four main, topics discussed\nat the convention were membership, the need for low rental housing, plans for starting Boys' Town\nand the Canadian Olympic train:\ning plan, he reported. '  '\n4E4 MEMBERS\nW. H. Burns, secretary-manager.\nreported that last year's high in\nmembership had now been reached\nwith 484 members in the Nelson\nbranch.\nMr. MacLeod outlined to members the progress peing made in\nrenovation of the lounge. Three\nfirms have submitted estimates\nand suggested plans. With B. C.\ncommand allowing $10,000 to be\nspent on the job, he suggested the\nonly way to carry out the work\nwould be with volunteer labor.\nMembers approved that the\nhoyse committee, under the chairmanship of Mr. MacLeod, proceed\nto explore plans with the intention\nof using volunteer labor. Members\nalso approved that the Legion hold\na meeting in. July instead of going\ninto recess as has'been the proc-\ntice during the Summer months.\nTransfer membership of Gerald\nHoulden from Penticton branch\nwas accepted. New memberships\napproved were T. L. Brown, A. E.\nClarke, William Forsyth, Joseph\nJani, Frank Matthews, D.L. Menard, Henry Spatuk, W. D. Stephen,\nM. D. Poirier, Miss Barabara L.\nStevenson, G. C. Tattrie, Mrs. Mabel (John) Tawse and W. G. Wal-\nford.\nRefreshments and films followed\nthe meeting.\n$105 Levied\nIn Fines\nFines totalling $105 were imposed Thursday by provincial court\nStipendiary Magistrate William\nEvans on traffic charges. All persons involved'pleaded guilty.\nWilliam Bailey paid $10 and\ncosts for speeding at Kinnaird.\nThe case was waived to Nelson.\nR. G. Sheridan of Nelson paW $25\nand costs for speeding, anl $15\nand costs for crossing a double\nline, both of which occurred near\nFruitvale. R. K. Kaulback of Edmonton paid $10 and' costs for\nspeeding on the North Shore. J. O.\nHoltzapple and G. R. Fraser of\nNelson were each fined $15 and\ncosts for crossing a double line on\nthe North Shore. Peter Bilinski of\nNelson was fined $15 and costs\nfor speeding through the South\nSlocan school zone. ,\nTWO FINED $35\nA Nelson girl was fined $10\nThursday by juvenile court judge\n|\u00bbWilliam Evans when she admitted\ndriving a car without a drivers'\nlicence.\nR. G. Mirkovick, also of Nelson,\nwas fined $25 and costs for permitting a minor to drive without a\nlicence. He pleaded guilty.\nAn appeal for aid,for purchase\nof equipment for Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital won quick response from Nelson Kiwanis Club\nThursday night.\nA. K. McAdams of the hospital\nboard hardly finished a talk to the\nclub before a resolution asking its\ndirectors to consider purchase of\nan electrocardiograph was passed.\nThe directors met immediately after the cjub meeting at the Hume\nand approved the purchase.\nCost of the equipment is expected\nto be in the neighborhood of $900\nbut one-third of the cost of hospital equipment is borne by the\ngovernment, Cardiograph registers the duration and intensity of\nthe heart's movements.\nMr. McAdams had explained that\nmost of hospital's funds went into\npurchase of supplies, food and\ndrugs and operation of the hospital and little money was available for purchase of the modern\nequipment that is saving lives in\ntoday's hospitals. Such a piece of\nequipment was that recently given\nby Lion's Club\u2014a special type of\nbed in which a patient may b\/\nturned over without moving his\nbody.\nIt had been used recently for a\ncritical accident case.\nMr. McAdams recalled that the\nKiwanis club had purchased an X-\nray eliminator last year and two\nfood warmers were given several\nyears ago.\nThe club decided the equipment\nwould be purchased with money\nraised in its coming annual nut\ndrive.\nA letter from the department of\nhighways informed \u25a0 the club that\nits request to install a Kiwanis\nroad sign on the North Shore had\nbeen granted,on condition that if\nother Nelson clubs wished to install a general sign the Kiwanis\nsign would be incorporated, in the\ngeneral sign. The club decided to\ntake steps to have its sign installed.\nHTJGE INCREASE\nWorld population will increase\nby 60 per cent between 1956 and\n1984, according to a United Nations estimate.\nIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli\nNelson Booster\nA resident of Venice, California, is another booster for the\ncity of Nelson.\nJack F. McCathy visited the\nNelson -Chamber of Commerce\nFriday and left with 200 pamphlets of Nelson to distribute on\nhis return trip to California. Venice is a small suburb in Los\nAngeles.\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nyou going to do now'?\" was the\nquestion posed in the reply of F. N.\nEmmott, school board chairman.\nThe department has given you\nthe opportunity to learn a trade\nor a profession that is going to\nmake a -living for you. What is it\nasked?\". The school board chairman mentioned teaching as one of\nthe most outstanding professions\ntoday. He said there was none\nother \"so necessary\" for it was\nthe groundwork of every profession\nin the field.\nA toast to the teachers \"who\nhave guided us through three of\nour most difficult years\" was proposed by Barbara Forse and replied to by J. J. ..earing, who\nsaid \"this year stocktaking was\na pleasure for business has certainly been good.\"\nThe young people were \"leaving\nthe pampered life of a student to\nbecome a member of the community where you are expected to give\nas well as to receive,\" remarked\nMiss S. Makinin, in toasting the\ngraduates. \"We hope these last 12\nyears have interested you enough\nto continue your education, not\nnecessarily a formal education but\nto learn, for when you stop learning, you stagnate, you're not alive,\nyou're just existing.\"\nTEACHERS THANKED\nThanks for help given by the\nteaching staff was expressed in a\nreply made by Carole Ryalls.\n, Denise Greenwood, accompanied\nby Mrs. H. Herbison, made a\npleasant break in the evening's\nprogram with a vocal solo. \"Last\nI Will and Testament\" and \"The\nFuture of the Class of '57\" were\npresented by John Jepsen, Niel\nMorrison, Jim Wilks, Donna Mae\nTrozzo, Heather Erb and Muriel\nSmith.\nBanquet chairman was Pat\nClarke, while guests at the head\ntable were principal and Mrs. Lee, -.\nschool district secretary J. S. Livingstone and Mrs. Livingstone, Mr.\nand \"Mrs. Emmott and Nelson\nAllen, schools inspector.\nTHE GRADUATES\nCarole Anderson, Lillian Anderson, Ruth Bambrick, Jocelyn\nBanks, i.elly Bing, Carole Bush,\nPauline Butling, Myrna Cain, Mildred Crissal, Mary Dvorak, Frances\nEberle, Audrey-Mae Elmes, Muriel\nLouise Elmes.\nHeather Erb, Barbara Forse,\nJoan Franklin, Denise Greenwood,\nSherley Gustafson, Betty Hellekson, Brenda Hicks, Gail Horswill,\nBarrie Huxtable, Sylvia Krane,\nFrances Lundstrom, Lynne Mclvor, Heather MacLeod.\nJosephine McMullin, Joan Mc-\nRory, Florence Nutter, Jane Pearson, Olga Poznikoff, Carole Ryalls,\nIrene Siminoff, Muriel Smith, Noreen Spence, Karen Stern, Donna\nMae Trozzo, Doris Valentine.\nBrian Acres, George Anderson,\nRoland Anderson, Gordon Batley,\nRichard Bonderud, Robert Brown,\nSydney Brown, Gordon Bystrom,\nKenneth Carlson, Tom Carney,\nPatrick Clark, Raymond Collinson,\nLep Fitchett, Bill Gibbon.\nKenneth Halsey, Grant Hazel-\nwobd, Michael Horswill, Bernard\nIrving, John Jepsen, Tom Jepsen,\nChuck Kidd, Ian Leslie, Neil Morrison, Bob McLean, Gordon Niehaus, Terry O'Neail, Art Peterson,\nBarry Peterson.\nRonald Rusnack, Jim Sawada,\nBob Schwab, Marvin Smith, Victor\nSmith, Gary Speirs, Ted Swendson,\nPeter Thorn, Frederick Wa.h,\nGeorge Ward, Jim Wilks, George\nWilliscroft, Bill Workman, John\nZalewski.\nNelson Jaycee Wins\nB.C. Oratorical Contest\nCLIFF SHERLOCK\nKELOWNA, B.C.  (CP) -\nCliff\nSherlock of Nelson captured the\nB.C. Junior Chamber of Commerce\npublic speaking award at Thursday\nnight's oratorical contest.\nThe 27;year-old. speaker, an active member of the West Kootenay\nClub, was given the nod over four\nother contestants. They were Don \u2022\nLane, representing East Kootenay;.\nEmil Meister, North Okanagan; Al i\nHickey, Lower Mainland, and Ron\nMclsaac, Vancouver Island.\nThe subject of debate was \"the\nimportance Jaycees have ift the\ncommunity.\"\nAbout 350 Jaycees from various\nparts of the Pacific Northwest are\nhere for the three-day parley,\nwhich winds up with the presidential ball Saturday night.\nA mile-long colorful parade\nsnaked its way through city streets\nThursday night, with 40-odd Jaycee units taking part. The evening\nended with a dance.\nMr. Sherlock will be going on to\nCalgary shortly to compete in the\nWestern Canadian and Northwest\nTerritories regional . championships.\nThe Weather\nNelson   55  65\nWinnipeg   ;.  37  71\nKimberley   53  73\nKaslo   53   66\nGrand Forks  49' 67\nPenticton   58  69\nVancouver  _  55  70\nVictoria   51  65\nSpokane  52  69\nINTERIOR\nWALL CLEANERS\n(Expert  Paint  Cleaning  Service)\nPHONE 1122 1105 SELBY ST,\nLet us clean your walls with this\nNEWLY INVENTED Machine.\n\u2022 - Free   demonstration   and   estimate\non request.\n\u2022 We service Nelson and district,\nr\nFather's Day: June 16th\nGive   Him   a   gift  with   a   lift . . .\nSomething that's fun to wear..\n\u2022 T-SHIRTS, light, colorful and sensible.\n\u2022 SPORT SHIRTS, long or short sleeves.\n\u2022 STRAW HATS, well-styled and very cool.\n\u2022 JACKETS, for dress or play. ,\n\u2022 SHOES, of the cosual type, featherweights and\nsome even washable.\n. . . by the way if you're stuck for ideas, use our\nGIFT  CERTIFICATES\nGODFREYS'\nPHONE \u2014 270 \u2014 BOX\nShare the Wealth       Humanity First\nSASKATCHEWAN OIL POTENTIAL IS GREAT,\nand the CCF. Government of that province is\nguarding this development Wisely, so that the\npeople of Saskatchewan will share this wealth\nfrom their own natural resources.\nProtect Your B. C. Interests\nVote' CCF. Vote Herridge\nThis Advertisement Sponsored by CCF. Campaign Committee\nIS\n Riondel Women Don\nOld Duds, Tour Mine\nRIONDEL \u2014 Wives of Consolidated Mining and Smelting Company emloyees of the Bluebell\nMine here have been taken on their\nfirst tour of the mine and mill.\nNinety women, dressed in old\nclothes, and many of them dubious\nabout' venturing underground,\nshowed up at the safety office to\nform into groups of six for the mine\ntour. After signing the guest book,\neach woman was issued with a\nhard hat, belt and miner's lamp.\nThey found the gear difficult to\nmanage, and the guides had the\njob of adjusting.\nAt the portal, they boarded the\nMISS MURIEL BAXTER\nWoman Retires\nAs Principal\nCRANBROOK\u2014For many years\nprincipal of Central School here,\nMiss Muriel Baxter has submitted\nher resignation to the Cranbrook\nDistrict School Board, which has\naccepted it.\nShe has been on a year's leave\nof absence from the principalship\nto serve as teacher consultant for\nboth Cranbrook and Fernie school\ndistricts. She will continue in this\n- capacity when the fall term resumes.\nMiss Baxter is a daughter of a\npioneer Cranbrook family, and as\na child attended Central School\nand Cranbrook High School before\nentering the teaching profession.\nman cage which carried them down\nto the 225 level at an angle drop.\nThere they examined the underground trains used for transporting\nsupplies of powder, props, and machinery, to the miners.\nThey viewed an open stope,\nplugged their ears to the.noise of\na diamond drill in operation, and\nfurther on came to an immense\nstope reached by,ladder where a\ndrill and mucking machine . were\nworking.\n\"It was like being in Aladdin's\ncave, and far larger than had been\nimagined,\" one member of the\nparty said.\nAlong more passages they came\nto the underground repair shop,\nsaw ventilation equipment and\nviewed the \"doghouse\" where the\nmen eat their lunches on wooden\nbenches lining a square cut out of\nthe rock.\nOnce they had ascended, groups\nof 14 formed for a conducted tour\nof the mill where they saw flotation process separating the lead\nand zinc ores. The women were\nsurprised by the weight of a handful of lead.\nThey also went .to the dock where\nthe concentrates are stockpiled for\nshipment by barge to Procter and\nthence by train to the Trail smelter.\nAfter a scrub up, the women\nwere guests at a lunch in the cafeteria. Douglass Campbell, Bluebell\nsuperintendent, spoke on Cominco's\nsafety month, and the role a\nminer's wife can play in safety.\nCBC Target\nOf Criticism\nFrom Socred\nRIONDEL \u2014 The CBC spends a\ngreat deal of public money trying\nto \"shove culture down the throats\nof the Canadian public,\" Donald\nBrothers, Social Credit candidate in\n\u25a0Monday's federal election, told an\naudience here.\nIn an attack on Liberal government policies, he said the Social\nCredit party favored immigration\n\"but not under the p.esent tight\nmoney and housing policies which\nleave the immigrant, without either\na job or a home.\"\nMr., Brothers further stated that\nit was cheaper to ship wheat from\nCreston to Japan than from Civ.s-\nton to Vancouver, Freight rates,\nhe said, were keeping industries\nout of B; C\nThe Socreds, he continued, were\nof'the opinion that the old age\npension should be increased to at\nleast $100 per month, and that\nsince decrease in the value of the\ndollar, income tax exemptions\nshould be increased to $3000 for\nmarried couples and $2000 for single workers, and that superannuation benefits for wage earners\nshould be transferrable.\nCarl Loeblich of Castlegar introduced the candidate.\nEngineer Elected\nTRAIL (CP) - W. L. Gwyer of\nTrail, assistant manager of the engineering division of Consolidated\nMining . and Smelting Company\nwas elected Friday as councillor\nfor two years to represent the Kootenay branch of the Engineering\nInstitute of Canada.\nIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nAuto Takes Header Into\nRCMP Building At Creston\nCRESTON\u2014RCMP are withholding the name of the driver of\na car which plowed into the RCMP building here Thursday afternoon, causing considerable damage to his own car, a police car\nand a garage nearby. ' .       <\nIt was reported that the car' was travelling along Barton Street\nand turning on to Vancouver Avenue, and instead of completing\nthe turn went into a circle and sheared into the garage and police \"\nbuilding.\nThe matter is under investigation.\n.iiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.\nREGISTRATION\nfhe  Registration of School  Beginners,  District\nNo. 9 (Castlegar), will be held as follows:\nCASTLEGAR Elementary School\nWednesday, June 12, 1:00 to 4:00 p.m.\nROBSON   Elementary School\nWednesday,. June 12, 9:30 to 11:30 a.m.\nVALLEY VISTA  Elementary\nThursday, June 13, 9:30 to 11:30 a.m.\nKINNAIRD  Elementary School\nThursday, June 13, 1:00 to 4:00 p.m.\nTARRYS  Elementary School\nThursday, June 13, 1:00 to 2:30 p.m.\nPupils from   Raspberry,   Brilliant  and   Brilliant\nDam will register at Robson School.\nPlease have proof of age and children must be\nsix years of age on or before Dec. 31, 1957.\nDental Program registrations willtplso be carried\nout at the time of School Registration.\nMedical   examinations   will   be   conducted   in\nSeptember.\nmmmmamaX~mkm*mWmmVaWmmmmWm\n\/5S7\nI NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JUNE 8, 1957 \u2014 3\nMcLoughlin Says ...\nB.C. Gov't \"Short-Changing\"\nPeople On Hospital Costs\nCOMPOSITION IN DESIGN is presented in this picture by framework of the Trinity United Church hall\nbeing built in Creston by H. O. Plumb, contractor. The\nbuilding, which has been main objective of the con- '\ngregation for some time, is expected to be completed\nby, September.\u2014H. M. Buckna photo.\nKootenay West Candidates Speak\nThe four candidates in Kootenay\nWest constituency seeking election\nMonday in the federal election,\nwere invited by the Daily News to\nparticipate in. an election forum,\nTheir views are set forth here:\nD. L. BROTHERS, SOCIAL\nCREDIT\nThe Social Credit program for\nCanada, is a positive one. When we\nget to Ottawa we will:\n1. Increase old age pensions up\nto $100 per month.\n2. Immediately effect a release\nMontreal TLC\nProtests\nGaspe Methods\nMONTREAL (CP) - The Montreal Trades and Labor Council\nhas adopted a resolution protesting \"the methods employed'' by\nGaspe Copper Mines Limited to\nprevent certification of the United\nSteelworkers of America' -(CLO\nas barbaining agent for workers\nat its mine and smelter in Murdochville, Que.\nLouis Laberge, council president, said Thursday night that\nemployers throughout the province are making use of writs of\nprohibition and other court procedures to block certification of\nunions and \"it will continue to be\ntheir way as long as there is not a\nstrong reaction by the unions.\"\nGaspe obtained a writ of prohibition preventing the Quebec labor relations board from ruling on\na union application for certification. Mr. Laberge said the Quebec government is the most antiunion government in Canada.\nGaspe workers struck March 11.\nErikson Elected\nif Invermere\nINVERMERE \u2014A. E. Erikson,\nInvermere merchant, was elected\nin a municipal by-election Thursday to fill a vacancy on the village\ncommission.\nThe other contestant was Mrs.\nCharles Wolfe. Through a'misunderstanding, it had been announced\non nomination day that Mrs. Wolfe\nhas been\" elected by acclamation,\nowing to Mr. Erikson being drawn,\nbut this proved to be erroneous.\nMINISTER DOUBTS\nMASS EVANGELISM\nBUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) -\" A\nMethodist clergyman has challenged the value of the kind of\nmass evangelism practised by\nBilly Graham in his New York\ncrusade.\nDr. Edward Carothers of\nSchenectady, N.Y., spoke Thursday at a session of the Methodist\nChurch. He said the most effective kind of evangelism today is\nbeing done by trained and organized laymen, and that evangelism\n\"should be the work of the congregation, not the pastor.\" ,\nMany who were making \"decisions for Christ\" at Graham's\ncrusade were not keeping them.\nSHARE EXPERIENCES\nThis \"shrinkage\" was in contrast with the results of laymen\n\"who have learned to love God\nand man, and who go into the\nhomes and share their experiences with others.\" These laymen\nbrought into the church persons\nwho \"establish a lasting relationship.\"\nDr. Carothers said the revival\nmeeting method had once been effective, but is \"dying\" because it\nhas \"not proved adequate for the\ncomplex needs of our time.\"\nIn an interview after the meeting he attributed Graham's success in drawing crowds to his \"attractive personality and the resources of modern public relations\ntechniques.\"\nof  the  disasterous  tight  money\npolicy.\n3. Increase the income tax exemptions of married couples to\n$3000 and single people $2000.\n4. Amend the National Housing\nAct to allow long term mortgages\nat lowest possible interest rates to\nencourage home ownership and to\nstimulate home building.\n5. Co-operate with the provincial\ngovernment in the development of\nwater and power shortage of the\nColumbia River to the best advantage of the Canadian people.\n6. Institute a program of transferrable superannuatoin benefits.\n7. Expedite the Trans-Canada\nHighway building program and assist in financing North-South arterial highways so the northern areas\nof Canada will be developed.\nH. W. HERRIDGE, CCF\nThe CCF aims to build a living\ndemocracy and all its programs\nare designed to this end: therefore\nwe welcome the healthy growth of\nlabour unions, farm, veterans' and\nother democratic organizations of\nthe community. Through these\ngroups the fabric of a living democracy is being created in Canada,\nand they must enjoy the fullest opportunity for further growth and\nparticipation in building our nation's future.\nThe CCF believes that society\nmust have a moral purpose that\ntranscends the drive for private\ngain and special privitege. To this\nend we have explained in our literature a bold and imaginative program for the old and the young,\nfor the sick and the needy, and for\nthe comfort, health and welfare of\nevery Canadian family.\nWe. believe that a new relationship of mutual respect and understanding and human brotherhood\nmust be built among people in a\nworld of peace. This is the purpose\nof the Co-operative Commonwealth\nwhich we invite the people of Canada to'build with imagination and\npride. .'.\nW.J. McLOUGHLIN, LIBERAL\nUsing three basic words as its\nslogan the Liberal party, which has\nformed Canada's government for\nthe past 22 years, has come to the\npeople throughout recent weeks on\na record that has indeed made Canada \"the envy of the world.\"\nCanada's   unity,   security   and\nALTA. RESIDENT\nAPPLIES TO RUSS\nFOR CITIZENSHIP\nCALGARY (CP)-A resident of-\nAlberta has applied for Russian\ncitizenship.\nWalter Soren Seversen, 40, of\nSundre has requested permission\nof the Russian government to become a citizen of that country\nand take up residence in Siberia.\nHe is a , trained electronic and\nradio technician.\nBorn to Danish parents in the\nUnited States he lived there until\nhe was 10 years old and then\nmoved to Canada. He has refused\nto take out citizenship papers in\nany country, and his application\nfor Russian papers is his first attempt tt) do so.\nHe said today his application\n,for citizenship was. made-through\nthe Russian ambassador in Ottawa and will take from one to\ntwo years for decision. Until he\nis awarded citizenship for Russia,\nhe will continue to reside at Sundre.\nfreedom are hall marks of a sound\nadministration that recognizes that\ndevelopment is only possible when\na country is strong and free, when\nthe economy is sound and its most\nimportant product, the people, are\nprotected.\nThe aim of the Liberal government has always been to achieve\nthis result and it is for me an honor\nto be a member of thjs party and to\nrepresent the Liberal party in the\npresent campaign in Kootenay\nWest;\n-I ask your support that I may\nprotect your interests by serving\nas your member of the Liberal\ngovernment and to assist that government in continuing its policies\nof economic expansion in Canada,\nof fulfilling its obligations in international affairs and to expand its\nsocial legislation program so that\nCanadians might enjoy the things\nwe have and want to protect the\nmost. \u2022\nDR. C. H. WRIGHT,\nPROGRESSIVE  CONSERVATIVE\nI'm not going to make any bones\nabout it. I think the Progressive\nConservative party is going to win\nthis -election and I think so because:\n1. It has an inspired and dynamic\nleader in John Diefenbaker whose\npolicies appeal to all people as evident from the response he is receiving in all parts of this country,\n2. The Conservative party has\npledged itself to: (a) a national development policy in cooperation\nwith the provinces to develop our\nnatural resources, including the\nColumbia River for the maximum\nopportunity and benefit to all Canadians, (b) to call a Commonwealth\ntrade and economic conference to\npromote and expand Canda's traditional markets for agriculture,\nforest and mineral products, (c) to\neliminate waste and extravagance\nin government and so reduce taxes,\nparticularly those which bear\nheavily on persons in the low income bracket, (d) to restore to the\nCanadian people their rights in\nparliament, to ensure the supremacy of parliament over government\nby council and to reverse the whole\ntrend towards increasing centralization of authority at'Ottawa.\nTrail Minister\nTo Retire Soon\nTRAIL (CP) - Rev. John Scott,\nminister of Emanuel Baptist\nchurch in Trail for the last eight\nyears, announced Friday that he\nplans to retire from the active pastorate at the end of August.\nPrior to coming to Trail, Mr.\nScott had been rector at churches\nin Chilliwack and Summerland. A\nformer grand master for British\nColumbia of the Independent Order\nof Odd Fellows, he will retire to\nChilliwack.\n368-Ac re Park\nSet Aside at Golden\nGOLDEN \u2014 Formalities have\nbeen completed by the Department\nof Lands establishing as provincial\nparkland a 368-acre area in Golden\nvicinity. For its administration C.\nE. Hughes has been named chairman of a board consisting of Ray\nDrown, William Wenman, Matt\nHautala and Ted Jacobson.\nReserving as parkland gives assurance to the community that\nthere will be no private sale of\nland included in the park, but development for community use of\nthis new facility is up to the community itself. A good start has\nben made already in the construction under- way by Golden Lions\nClub of a concrete swimming pool,\nand of a children's playground adjoining it undertaken by the Golden\nKinsmen. The \u25a0 remaining area niters attractive natural conditions\nfor picnics.\nROSSLAND - The federal government's offer on construction of\nthe Mica Creek dam was described\nhere by Liberal candidate W. J.\nMcLoughlin as a continuing effort\nto develop Canadian potential of a\nnational basis,\nSpeaking to an audience of 35\npersons, Mr. McLouglhin said that\nthe Liberal Government was interested in seeing the power potential of the Columbia developed for\nuse in B. C, including the Interior,\nand not as a source of power for\nuse below the border.\n\"It has been the enthusiasm of\nthe Canadian people who have\nbeen aided by the 22 consecutive\nyears of Liberal administration\nwho have developed our\u00bbcountry,\"\nMr. McLoughlin said, \"and this en-\nEx-Pupil To Be\nGuest at Opening\nOf Yahk School\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Cranbrook district school board will formally\nopen its new two-room elementary,\nschool at Yahk the evening of Saturday, June 22.\nA special guest for the ceremonies will be Harry Erskine of Canal\nFlat, now chairman of the Windermere District School Board who\nhad his elementary schooling at\nthe old Yahk rural school. Transfer\nof the new building in its new location within the community from\ncontractors A. E. Jones Company\nLtd. to the school board was effected June 1, and the school is\nnow fully occupied by its enrolment\nof 57 pupils in grades 1 to 6, with\nRichard Allen, principal and Mrs.\nGloria Ottoson, second staff teacher. The former school building on\na low place alongside the highway has been in operation more\nthan 30 years and almost annually\nhad been affected by spring floods\nSR. MATRIC ENDS\nSenior matriculation at Mount\nBaker School here will be discontinued at start of the fall term. The\nCranbrook board has appealed to\nthe Kimberley district board for\nshuttle bus arrangements for\ntransporting Cranbrook senior matriculation to Kimberley daily in\nthe event there are Cranbrook applicants enrolled for this Grade 13\nwork at Kimberley school, I\nFinal plans and specifications, for\nCranbrook's new elementary school\non South Eleventh avenue, authorized by ratepayers, are expected\nthe middle of June but will still require final provincial government\napproval before call for tenders' is\nissued.\nBUSINESS RENOVATED\nCRAWFORD BAY - Mr. and\nMrs. pharles Smith of Creston are\nnew owners of the Wooden Shoe\nhere. The premises are being renovated.\nthusiasm has always been encouraged.\"\nHITS SOCREDS\nMr. McLoughlin attacked the Social Credit ge.ernment's budgeting\nfor hospital construction in the\nprovince and said that despite an\nestimated revenue from the sales\ntax for hospital costs of $34,000,000,\nthe province had budgeted for only\n$31,000,001?.\n\"This,\" Mr. McLoughlln suggested, \"might account for the\ndifficulties  being faced by the\nhospital  districts  In  Castlegar\nand Nelson  in getting government approval for increased construction  costs.  The provincial\ngovernment is deliberately short g\nchanging the people of the province on their hospital costs.\"\nMr. McLoughlin said that Progressive-Conservative leader John\nDiefenbaker  was  to  be  complimented for his one man campaign\nbut couldn't hope to form a government until he could obtain the\nservices of capable men.\n\"The CCF party,\" Mr. McLoughlin said, \"has spent 27 years predicting the very worst for Canada\nand finally had to change it's tune.\nNow they are trying to get elected\nwithout a platform.\"\n\"The Liberals will be returned to\npower next Monday,\" Mr. McLoughlin predicted,. \"because they\nhave over .the years coupled economic expansion and world leadership with a basic Liberal tenet\nthat the most important product in\nour nation is the people themselves.\"\nMr. McLoughlin went on to trace\nthe development of social welfare\nlegislation in Canada, stressing\nthat it has now approached the\nlevel that was first hoped for in\n1948.\nToday the candidate will windup\nhis campaign in Nelson in the\nafternoon and return to Trail tonight.\nDANCE\nTONIGHT\nYMIR\nCOMMUNITY\nHALL\nMusic by\nDEAN CLARK\nand BAND\nADMISSION:\n75\u00a3  per person\n10 Firms Bid on\nCastlegar Bridge\nCASTLEGAR\u2014Ten bids were received by the department of high-1>\nways at Victoria as the result of\nits call for tenders for reconstruc-i\ntion of the bridge over the railway\ntracks downtown Castlegar, part\nof the Southern trans-provincial\nhighway.\nNo award has been made as yet,\nhowever.\nThe successful tender will replace the present old wooden\nbridge with a concrete bridge.\nGolden Pair Charged\nIn Child's Death\nGOLDEN \u2014 Magistrate William\nMcGruder has committed for trial\nMr. and Mrs. L, J. Toms, of Golden, charged jointly with criminal\nnegligence' resulting in the death\nlast January of their infant son.\nPending their appearance at Assize Court for East Kootenay in\nCranbrook in the fall, both are\nbeing held in custody at Vancouver.\nSLOCAN CITY-Hiroshi Oikawa,\n33, of Delta, B. C, brother of Tsuy-\noshi and Linda Oikawa of Slocan\nCity, <jied Sunday. Funeral was\nheld Thursday in New Westminster.\nFOR TRANSPORTATION TO VOTE\n\u2022 PHONE\nProgressive Conservative  H.Q.\nfor\nCHARLES H. WRIGHT\nNelson\u2014Ph. 2117 Trail\u2014Ph. 2820\nKootenay West Progressive Conservative Association\n Nrlamt Dathj J.puis\n- lSstabllshed April  22   100.\nInterior British Co\/umijlcr's Largest Dally Nawtpapw\nPublished every morning except Sunday and statutory\nhollduys   by    the    NEWS    PUBLISHING' COMPANY\nLIMITED, 266 Bake.  Stroot,  Nelson,, British Columbia.\nAuthorized ll Second Clasl Mail. Post Offico Dopoi-tment. Ottawa.\nMKMBfcB O.   l'HE  AUUI'l   BUK-AU  Of  CIRCULATIONS\nMEMBEH O.   IRK CANADIAN  PRESS\nThe Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use foi republication of sil new.\ndispatches oradlied to it ui to rli. Anniented i-icus pi Reuters in (Jul paper,\nand olco tho local newl published therein,\n^ j^_**\u00abw\u00ab__Kl\nSaturday, \/one 8, J957\nAbout Our Editorial Policies\ntlnue to be the editorial policy of this\nnewspaper.\nWe realize that in so doing there\nwill be those who will not be happy\nThis newspaper has been informed\nthat an editorial in Friday morning's\npaper wept too far In advocating Dr.\nC. H. Wright as the best candidate\nfor Kootenay West constituency. It , with this independent policy, but we\nhas even been suggested we will feel-\nrepercussions.\nWe do not think that the people\nof the Kootenays waut their newspaper to have no opinions. We do\n. not think the people of the Kootenays\nwant a \"milk toast\" editorial policy.\nIn the treatment of all candidates\nthroughout this election campaign the\nDaily News has impartially reported\nthe activities, declamations and acclamations of the various candidates.\nBut in our editorial policies we are\nconsistent in speaking out for what\nwe think Is in the best interests of\nthis area. This is the editorial policy\nof this newspaper and this will con-\nexpect that they and their friends\nare broadminded enough to see that\nIn this country people are still free\nto have an opinion and to voice that\nopinion,\nThis newspaper has voiced its\nopinion on; the matter of this federal\nelection and in order that there is no\nconfusiou as to what that opinion is,\nwe say again that the man who can\ndo the best job at Ottawa for Kootenay West ie the Progressive Conservative candidate, Dr. C..H. Wright.   '\nYesterday's editorial is riot the first\ntime  We  advocated  the  sending  to'\nOttawa of the Progressive Conservative candidate.\nMore Recreation\nLeaders Needed\nvicrO-UA-To meet the demand for\nmore trained recreation leaders throughout\nthe province, the Community Progrsmmes\nBranch, Department ef Education, is again\nholding a Provincial Recreation Leadership\nSchool here from July is to 20.\nMore than 129 potential recreation leaders from all harts of B, C. are expected to\nsttend the school. They have been selected\nby recreation consultants of the community\nProgrammes Branch for their participation\nin community activities.\n- In stressing the importance of providing\nmore trained recreation leaders, L. J. Wallace, Community Programmes Director,\"\naaid i\n\"Competent-leadership is the most important essential for success in recreation\nactivity. Take away the craft Instructor, the\nScout leader, the director of a play, the\nchairman of a meeting, and the effectiveness\n\u25a0of-these groups disappears.\"\nA variety of courses will be offered at\nthe two-week school, Courses including instruction in various aspects of sports and\nathletics, playgrounds, hobbles, crafts, dance,\ndrama, recreation for senior citizens, and\nthe organization and administration of community programmes will be given by many\nhighly qualified recreation experts.\nSome of the instructors and lecturers are\nL. J. Wallace; Sydney Risk, field drama supervisor of the University of B, C; Art Stott,\nassociate editor of Victoria Dally Times; W.\nH..Shumard, northwest representative of the\nNational Recreation Association; and Dr.\nHenrietta Anderson, fo.mer principal of Victoria Normal School.\nBy training a^ number of citizens In every community in recreational \"know-how\",\nthe Department of Education hopes tb have\nan effective answer to the question of what\nto do with increased leisure in the age of\nautomation.\nDriver Training Serious Need\nSpeaking at Victoria, David Wright,    school training program Is lacking,\nwinner of the Teenage Road-E-O, says\nIt does not take much to be a .safe\ndriver, just a bit of common sense and\ncourtesy.\nThese two things should be the\nbasis of all our social Intercourse with\nothers. Both are equally important if\nwe are to be successful in our dealings\nwith others, they are, in fact, the very\nfoundation of successful living.\nThey are particularly important attributes for a car driver. As this teenager says, the main trouble on the\nroads today is the failure to use good\njudgment in combination with a few\nbasic rules.\nGood judgment comes from experience, but the basic rules should be\nacquired. How best they can be acquired is the-problem for today. Most\npeople learn to handle a car reasonably well after a few hours' tuition\nfrom another person; whether they acquire the basic rules is another matter.\nTo some extent the Motor Vehicle\nBranch Drivers' Examinations test this,\nbut no one can say they do so completely.\nMotor Vehicle Superintendent\nGeorge C. Lindsay said in speaking to\nthe young drivers that co-operation\nfrom school authorities In the- high\nand though there is a 12-hour driver\ntraining course on the high school curriculum, schools seem to be ignoring it.\nHe says he does not understand their\nattitude and that they don't seem to\ncare about the future of the adolescents.\nJust why hlcfh schools do not adopt\nthe course, involves a number of considerations which might not have occurred to Mr. Lindsay, not the least of\nwhich is that high school teachers already have too much to do.\nBut Mr. Lindsay is right. We should\nhave driver training, not only for adolescents, but for adults. It is from the\nhaphazard methods of learning that\nso many of our accidents result, and\nof course we should continue to have\ntests.\nThere'are very few driver training\nschools in the province, and how efficient these schools are no one really\nknows, but if the Motor Vehicle Branch\nannounced that beginning in 1958 all\napplicants for, drivers' licences who\nhave not held one before must show,\nthat they have attended a recognized\ndriving school for a certain definite\nperiod ,what might happen is that such\nschools would appear in every city.\nHig,k Taxes Impede Progress\neffective opposition. We suggest proof\nof the need of strong opposition is the\nmanner in which the Liberal government handled the pipeline debate a\nyear ago.\nJohn Diefenbaker has proved in this\ncampaign that he is a dynamic force,\na man worthy of leading the government or of forming an effective opposition. Dr. C. H. Wright is a man who has\nthe qualifications to make an excellent\nmember of the Diifenbaker team.\nIf the voters of Canada think it is\ntime for a change in Ottawa, voting\nfor the Diefenbaker team is the only\nway such a change can be effected.\nXpotenay West\nPolling Stations\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS\nrno Diliy Niwi doe* not no id Itself rooponcibto In the event\noi in error In th\u00ab following lliti\nroRONTo stocksi^^,:=;::i:;:: &\nB C Forest   11%\nHere are the polls and polling\nstations where Kootenay West voters cast their votes Monday;\nBeaton, Millar residence; Camborne, Sunshine Lardeau Mine Of-\nlice; Trout Lake, at or near Denny\nresidence; Ferguson, S, Daney real\ndence; Poplar, Alex-Robb, store\nbuilding; Howser, Cannon residence; Marblehead, Abey real-\ndence, Meadow Creek; Argenta,\nG. F. Beguln residence; Lnrdeau.\nWarte residence,\nJohnson's Landing, Johnson\nLanding Recreational hall; Kaslo\nNo, 1, Legion hall; Kaslo No. 2,\nLegion hall; Shutty Bench, eld\nschool house; Mirror Lake, G, ft,\nAbbey residence; Riondel, recreational hall; .Ainsworth, community\nclub; Queen's Bay, Hirst residence-\nBalfour, Woodland hall; Harrop\nand Longbeach, Harrop Packing\nHouse.\nCrawford Bay, Crawford Bay\nHall; Gray Creek, Gray Creek hall\nWest Crestoif, West Creston hall\nBoswell, Boswell Memorial hall;\nProcter, Procter Community hall,\nCrescent Bay, C. M. McNown residence; Willow Point, Crystal hall;\nNelson North Shore, J. F Hogg\nresidence, Johnstone Road; Upper\nNeed More Research.\nIn Cosmetic Field\nThe Increasing use of cosmetics necessitates more and better research into the fundamental properties of (the skin, according\n. to a report from the American Medical Association, received by the Health League of^\nCanada.\nDr. Arnold J. Lehman, \"Chief of the Federal Food and Drug Administration division\nof pharmacology, Washington, D.C., says that\nthe increased demand for cosmetics has led\nto the new use of many known substances\nand the development and extensive manufacture of new synthetic compounds.\n\"Unfortunately, carefully controlled research into the fundamentals of skin properties and mechanisms, and the actions of\nvarious chemicals and drugs on the skin has\nnot kept pace with the many new products\nand the claims made on their behalf,\" he,\nsaid.\nCertain unobjectionable claims have been\nadvanced for the effectiveness of certain\npreparations for reducing skin dryness and\nhiding skin blemishes and wrinkles.\nHowever, in recent years, the trend has\nbeen to advertise such products as being\nmore than just cosmetics\u2014that they serve as\n'skin foods, rejuvenators or tonics\"; \"Contour creams\" for bust development or bust\nreducing, wrinkle eradicators, and \"deep\npore\" cleansers.\n\"To date, however, no conclusive evi-\n\u2022 dence has been offered in support of many of\nthese claims,\" he said. \"For example, there\nis nothing known to science that will restore\ncolor to hair or cure early male baldness.\"\nThe actual value of vitamins, hormones\nand other chemicals in cosmetics is not the\nonly question and problem, Dr. Lehman said.\nThere is also the question of safety\u2014what\npotential harm may follow the indiscriminate\ninclusion of similarly potent chemicals in\ncosmetics .^Health League News Service.\nMechanical\nTeacher Not\nTORONTO (CP) - A Harvard\npsychologist says his colleagues in\nthe United States are developing\nmechanical devices which will\nspeed up educational processes\n_.nd go a long way toward replacing teachers.\nDr. B. F. Skinner told the 16th\nannual meeting of the Canadian\nPsychological Association that the\ndevices will study the behavior\nschedule of students from the\npublic school to the college level.\nStudents would be taught languages, higher mathematics and\nsciences.\nIn an interview after his address, Dr. Skinner declined to\nelaborate. The machines were\nstill in the development stage\n2fd as such were secret. He told\nihe convention;\n\"We are on the verge of sweeping changes in educational techniques. It is not something we\nshould fear, but something teachers should fear.\"\nIt is imperative for Canada to have\nstable government and a strong one-\nparty opposition. Third party, balance\nof power groups can only create instability at Ottawa, and such is not a\nbetter deal for Canadians from Ottawa.\nThe only parties in this election that\nhave a chance of forming a government or a strong opposition are the\nLiberal and the Conservative parties.\nA vote in this federal election for either\nSocial Credit or the CCF will weaken\nthe Government opposition. The important consideration in this election is\nto assure Parliament of a strong and\nTribute Paid to\nPoet, Cricketer\nAn old-time citizen of Nelson and the\nKootenays, Robert Main, who recently passed\non,' was a. person of many parts and activities.\nHis fallow citizens frequently enjoyed his\npoetic efforts on the beauties' of nature\" and\nhis philosophic ideals.\nHe was a true sportsman and an enthusiastic member and present of the Nelson\nCricket Club, and will long be remembered\nas a player who played the game, could he\ncounted on to play, a straight bat, and will\nvery much missed by his fellow cricketers,\n\u2014From an ex-Surreyite and oldtimer,\nC. H. H., Nelson.\nWatch Your Language\nNUMERABLE (NU-mer-a-bul): Adjec-\ntive\u2014Capable of being numbered or counted.\nOrigin:, Latin\u2014NumerabiliS.\nNATO Forces\nStronger\nays\nWASHINGTON (AP) - Gen.\nLauris Norsta.d said Friday NATO's\nmilitary forces now haye \"the capability of destroying whatever\ntargets we must knock out.\"\nThe NATO commander told the\nSenate foreign relations committee the forces are \"three to four\ntimes stronger and many times\nmore effective\" than when they\nwere set up six years ago.\nNorstad appeared before a\nclosed Senate session but parts of\nhis testimony were made public,\nHe voiced full support of President Eisenhower's $3,885,000,000-\nforeign aid program.\nNorstad said that in Western\nEurope \"there can be no question\nbut that the progress we have\nmade could not have been made\nwithout U.S. military assistance.\"\nHe added;\n\"I believe we can continue to\nprevent Soviet aggression and\nachieve our goal of preserving\npeace and freedom.\"\nArrow Lake, Wallace Hall residence; Sldmouth; Galena Bay,\nJohn Nelson residence.\nNakusp Nus. 1 2, 3 and 4, St.\nMark's parish hall; Broiine, Brouse\nand Box Lake Community hall;\nRosebery, 0, Swanson residence;\nHills, Markln'a General Store; Ban-\ndon and Cody,'Virginia Bloch, San\ndon; New Denver North, Bosun\nhall; New Denver South, Bosun\nhall; Silverton, Municipal hall.\nSlocan City, Slocan Lodge No, 40\nhall; Slocan Park, W. E. Storbo\nresidence; Perry Siding, Perry's\nteacherage; Appledale, Appledale\nProgressive hall; Winlaw and Leb\nahdo, Butcher residence,. Winlaw;\nPassmore, Passmore Community\nhall; Crescent Valley, Crescent\nValley Recreational hall; South\nSlocan, Women's Institute hall;\nBird's Landing, Glendevon, West\nDemars, W, S. Ritchie residence;\nArrow Park, Arrow Park Com\nmunlty hall.\nEast Arrow Park, East Arrow\nPark hall; Graham's Landing, Irving Building; Burton, Burton Community hall; Needles, Needles hall;\nFauquier, Fauquier Community\nhall; Edgewood, Club room, Legion\nhall; Renata, W. J. Hale residence;-\nDeer Park, Community Hall;\nSyringa Creek, Sam C. Stewart\nresidence; Robson, Robson Community hall.\nShirley, Shirley hall, Granite\nroad; Blewett, Pratt residence;\nTaghum, Taghum Community hall;\nTarrys, Rainbow residence;\nThrums, Ernie Pratt residence;\nBrilliant! Badminton*hall; Ymir,\nYmir Community hall; Salmd\"Nos.\n1 and 2, Village hall; Reno-Sheep\nCreek, H. B. Mine staff house.\n' Emerald Mine, Emerald Community , hall; Reeves-McDonald,\nRemac Community hall; Erie,\nForbes residence; Park Siding,\nSandy Bell residence; Fruitvale,\nNos. 1, 2 and 3, Legion hall; Beaver Falls, P. Doherty residence;\nMontrose, Nos. 1 and 2, Montrose\nCommunity hall; Columbia 'Gardens, Cumming residence, Greei\nGables Ranch; -Pend d'Oreille, R.\nMoffat residence; Waneta, Arthur\nWray residence.\nCastlegar. Nos. 1, 2 and 3, Legion hall; Kinnaird Nos. 1, 2 and\n3, Kinnaird Improvement Society\nHall; Blueberry Creek, William\nKavaloff residence; China Creek,\nGenelle Community hall; Oasis,\nOasis Community hall; Tadanac,\nTadanac hall; Annable East, An-\nnable Fire Hall; Annable We..,\nAnnable Fire Hall; Warfield East,\nWarfield Community Hall; War-\nfield West, Warfield Community\nHall.\nBeaver Bend, Scout hall; Paterson, G. W. Dimock residence:\nSheep Creek, D. F. Thorpe residence; Casino, Perrin residence.\nNelson West, Nos. 110, 111, 112,\n113, 114, 115, 116, 117, 118, 119, 120,\n122, Nelson Civic Centre.\nNelson Centre, Nos. 121, 123, 124,\n125, Church of Redeemer parish\nhall.\nCity of Rossland, Nos. 126, 127,\n128, 129. 130, 131, 132, 133, 134,\nUnion hall.\nTrail West, 135, 136, 137, 138, 139,\nColombo hall.\nTrail Centre, Nos. 140, 141, 142,\n143, 144, 145, 146, 147, 148, City\nMarket Building.\nTrail EaSt, Nos. 149,150,151,152,\n153, 154, 155, 156, 157, East Trail\nUnited Church.\nTrail East\u2014Sunningdale, No. 158,\nSunningdale School.\nTrail   East\u2014Veteran's   Subdivision, No. 159, Sunningdale School.\nTrail East\u2014Shavers Bench East,\n160,  Shavers  Bench  Community\nhall.    \u25a0\nTrail East\u2014Shavers Bench West,\nNo  161, Shavers Bench Community'hall.\nTrail East\u2014Glenmerry West No,\n162, Douglas   Auto   Court,   2e_3\nHighway Drive.\nTrail East\u2014Glenmerry East, No.\n163, Douglas   Auto   Court,   2985\nHighway Drive.\n(Closing Priced)\nMINES\nAcadia Uranium 13\nAlgotn Uranium    23.00\nAmal Larder 19\nAnacon Lead     1.46\nAtlln Ruff 70\nAubelle 11%\nAumacho 21\nThey'll Do It Every Time\nBy Jimmy Hatlo\nFuHSUS BOWLS IH FOUR LE4SUES AUO\nCAti REMEM8ER THE SCORES OF EVER.\nS_ME FOR THE LAST TEM YEARS \u2022\u00ab\u2022\u2022\nIH 1949 WITH\nTHE MUSMWT TEAM '\nI BOWLED Z38-IH\n1951 WE M_D THE\nINDUSTRIAL LEAGUE- '\nI NEVER BOWLED A\n64ME UNDER 227-lU.\nNEVER FORGET THE\nTHIRTY C_MES I\nPOLLED OVER ON\nTHE HORSBCHESTER _\nALLEYS-\nBor ASK HIM A PERTlMEMT QUESTIOM\nOR TWO \/WENT HIS KIDS-HE DOH'T\nKNOW FROM NOHOW\/.'\nTODAY'S BIBLE\nTHOUGHT\nThis man Is the great power of\nGod, Acts 8:10.     -\nIt is amazing to, see the power\nof God saturated men and women. They multiply their own power in infinity. Exceedingly humble\npeople become giants and turn\nthe world upside down.\nQml;MsL\nNature balances things pretty\nwell. The one that has nice ankles\nain't got much sense, ahd the one\nthat's got a pretty face is curved\nin the wrong places.\nLogging Operators Win\nTax Assessment Appeal\nOTTAWA (CP)-The income tax\nappeal board has ruled that any\nportion of a taxpayer's salary\nwhich is not received as cash in\na taxation year is exemp't from\nincome tax.\nThe ruling was cqntairied in a\njudgment issued today granting\nappeals by Robert Roy Cliffe and'\nhis father, Arthur Roy Cliffe,\nagainst assessments by the revenue department;\nMr. Cliffe and his father own\nand operate Cliffe and Cliffe Logging Limited of Victoria, B.C\nThey said their salaries for the\n1954 taxation far should have\nbeen $7,500 and $6,500, respectively.\nHowever, due to company financial difficulties, Mr. Cliffe drew\na salary of only $4,167 and his\nfather $3,360. They' paid tax on\nthese amounts for 1954 but the\nrevenue department assessed\nthem on their full salaries.\nWORKING CAPITAL\nThe department ruled that\n\"when wages have been credited\nto your account by the company\nand the funds are available they\nare considered to have been received by you.\"\nThe Cliffes said that while the\nfunds were available in the company's accounts they were not\nwithdrawn because they represented their only working capital.\nThe ' board's judgment, signed\nW. S. Fisher, said the amounts\nof salary not received could not\nbe taxed Until they were actually\nreceived. Mr. Fisher said \"I have\nreached the conclusion that the\nsituation in this case is very similar in. principle to that of the\nholder of a coupon bearer bond,\nwho has all the coupons j in his\npossession but who, nevertheless,\nin respect of certain coupons\nwhich have become due and pay\nable during the year, decides not\nto clip or cash them but to postpone receiving actual payment of\nthe Interest until some future\nyear when he may have a real\nneed for the money.\n\"Such a taxpayer is not held\nliable, especially if he reports on\na cash basis, to include as part of\nhis income for the year the\namount of the undipped, coupons\nwhich have fallen due in that year\nbut which have not been cashed.\"\nAumaque 12\nAunor    1.84\nBarnat     25.50\nBase Metals  '.      .88\nBaska Uranium 39\nBoymar 07.4\nBriiund 84\nBrunhurst ll\nBrunswick     8.50\nBuff Can 14\nBuff Red Lake 07V4\nCan Met    4.00\nCassiar     6.90\nCentral Patricia    2.50\nChimo     1.18\nChromium  ,    3.10\nCons Denison   20.00\nCons Dlscoveyr     2.85\nCons Halllwell     1.03\nCons M & S    24.00\nCons Rod Pop 22\nCon Sanorm IO',.\nCon Sub ,     2.30\nConwest    6.25\nCopper Corp 40\nCopper Man   \u25a0 .18\nD'Aragon       .25\nDonalda 20\nEast Amphl 15\nEast Malartic     1.21\nEast Sullivan     4.10\nFalconbridge   35.25\nFaraday 2.78\nFrobisher      2.70\nGeco    14.50\nGiant Yel      4.60\nGlen Uranium  43\nGoldcrest     _      .13\nGold Eagle      .08\nGolden Manitou 86\nGrandines 14\nGunnar Gold    19.35\nHarminerals  32\nHasaga _ 19\nHeadway 78\nHollinger   34.75\nHudson Bay    63.25  \u25a0\nInspiration  75\nint Nickel     l'.OS.i\nIron Bay     3.90\nJoliet Que 47\nJonsmith 17\nR J Jowsey 85\nKenville 11\nKerr Addison    14.75\nLabrador   24.50\nLake Lingman  12\nLakeshore     6.15\nLexindin ...\u201e. 32i_\nLittle Long Lac     2.95\nLorado      1.22\nMacassa     2.05\nMadesn R L       1.60\nMalartic G F     1.69\nManeast  23\nMaritime Mining     1.40\nMcLeod      1.04\nMcKenzie R L 30\nMilliken             3.45\nMining Corp     16.00\nMogul     1.43\nNew Bidlamaque 10\nNew Delhi     1.13\nNew Fortune 13\nNew Harricana 34\nNew Jason 16\nNew Lund 48\nNipissing     2.60\nNisto 08.\nNormetals     4.40\nNorpax     1.28\nNorth Can .'     1.55\nNorth Rankin     1.56\nOpemiska     11.75\nPickle Crow      1.27\nPlacer Develop    11.00\nPreston E D     8.00\nQuebec Lab    13.50\nQuebec Lithium     8.50\nQuebec Metallurgical     2.00\nQuemont    13.50\nRadiore      1.00\nRainville      1.10\nRayrock     1.58\nSan Antonio 55\nSherritt Gordon      6.05\nSilver Miller      .69\nStadacona   -     .35\nSteep Rock    21.75\nSullivan Con      3.10\nSylvanite       1-69\nTeck Hughes     1-95\nTemagami      3.00\nThomp-Lund  90\nTombill  59\nTrans Cont Res 24_\nUnited Keno      4.70 \u25a0\nUpper Can 68\nVentures     42.62',.\nWaite Amulet      7.75\nWiltsey Goglin     23\nWright Hargreaves     1.35\nYellowknife Bear      1.53\nYukeno  07%\nOILS\nAmerican Leduc  35\nBanff Oils      3.05\nBata Petroleum  10.4\nCal & Ed    32.50\nCan Admiral        58\nLong Island Pete  14\nMarigold  21\nMidcon     1.55\nNat Pete     4.10\nNew Continental  61\nNew Gas Expl      2.18\nOkalta         2.82\nPac Pete    30.85\nPetrol     1.01\nPonder     65\nProv Gas      3.50\nRoyalite   21.75\nSpooner  :: 70\nStanwell Oil     145\nCdn Atlantic      9.50\nCan Devonian     9.00\nCan Decalta           1.17\nCommonwealth P.ete 12.36%\nCons Peak 10V4\nHome A  .       19.25'\nLiberal Pete  \u2014   -2.28\nTriad      7.60\nUnited Oils  - -    3.30\nWespac      .44\nYank Canuck  09.\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi  it   30H\nAlgoma Steel : 154\nAluminum    44\nArgus 2nd pfd   46\nAtlas St     27%\nB A Oil     57%\nBalhurst Power    54V.\nBeatty Bros           6%\nBell Telephone \u25a0 42\nBrazilian      9%\nB C Power A  51%\nBurns A  11\nCan Brew ,..\u25a0......:.........._  25%\nCan Canners  M\nCan Celanese i - \u2022  14\nCan Cement  28%\nCan Chem Co    \u00ab%\nCan Dredge I  \u00bb1_\nCan Oil  95%\nCan Pac Rly  84%\nCan Packers' B  35\nCockshutt    -Mi\nCons Gas  38%\nDlst Seagram    81..\nDom Foundries  83\nDom Steel Ord _  24%\nDom Stores      .i  53.4\nDom Tar & Chem  11%\nDom Textiles     8\nEddy Papeu  48\nFamous Players  17Vfc\nFord A   107.\nGatineau ..-  30%\nGen Steel Wares     _%\nGoodyear  190\nGoodyear pfd  44%\nGypsum Lime  24%\nHoward Smith  32\nImperial Oil   ii...\nImp Tobacco :  12...\nInt Pete  84%\nLaura Secord  -19%\nMassey Harris    7%\nMcColl Frontenac  79.\nMont Loco  16%\nMoore Corp  67_\nNat Steel Car   28%\nPage Hershey  139%\nPowell River :  42...\nPower Corp \u201e   79\nRuss Industries .-.. ll%\nShawinlgan   96\nSicks Brew .'   21\nSimpsons A  19%\nSoutham ,..- _._  51\nStandard Paving  42%\nSteel of Can _,...... 71%\nUnion Gas of Can  _  77*4\nUnited Steel  15%\nVancouver Stocks\nMINES\nBeaver Lodge 22*4\nBralorne    4.15\nCariboo Gold  \u201e. .50\nGiant Mascot   12\nGranduc  .:  2.70\nHighland Bell    1.40\nNational Ex   87 .\nPacific Nickel  _  1.21\nPioneer Gold  1.20\nQuatsino 48\nReeves MacDonald  1.40\nSheep Creek  _. ,71\nSilver Standard 35\nSunshine Lardeau _ .16\nTrojan  36\nWestern Exploration  .40\nOILS    .\nAltex  __ .24\nA P Consolidated   .45\nCharter    4.05\nHome   19.00\nNew Gas Ex    2.10\nOkalta Com   2.82\nPacific Pete   30.75\nPeace River Gas  16.25\nRoyal Can  , .80  ,\nSparmac  \u201e _   .24\nUnited     8.20\nVanalta    -.28\nVantor  _  2.67\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlberta Distillers  _._ 1.45\nAlberta Distillers Vt  1.45\nB C Forests   11.50\nB C Power   51.50\nB C Telephone   43.50\nCrown Zeller (Can)  18.00\nInt Brew B   4.35\nLucky Lager \u201e... 4.10\nMacM & Bloedel B   31.00\nMid Western   3.85\nPowell River  42.75\n\"Western Plywoods  15.00\nUNLISTED\nAuwon   07\nTrans Canada Units   153.00\nTrans Canada Com   43.00\nBANKS\nBank bf Montreal  46.00\nCan. Bank of Com  49.00\nImperial Bank of Canada 54.50\nRoyal Bank of Canada  76,00\nFUNDS\nCan. Inv. Fund _ 9.28\nCommonwealth  Int  7.84\nGrouped Income   4.10\nTrans Canada \"C\"   6.65\nDeath Toll at 19\nIn Truck Crash\nFAYETTEVILLE, N.C. (AP)-\nThe death toll in a two-truck collision near here reached 19 today, equalling the record for tha\nworst truck accident jn the United\nStates.\nWillie Gary of Syracuse, .Y\u201e\ndied in hospital from injuries received in the accident Thursday.\nThe accident happened when a\ntractor-trailer truck loaded with\npotatoes slammed into a flatbed\ntruck crammed with migrant e-\ngro farm workers on the way to\na bean field. The workers' truck\ncaught fire.\nThe National Safety Council said\nthe record number of deaths in a\ntruck- collision Occurred in a similar accident in Texas in 1947\nwhen 19 persons were killed.\nfail a. J&aontt\n\"He hasn't any hair, so 1\ncontent myself . with running my hands through hil\nmoney.\"\n_____\n \/557\nPRINCE U.S.-BOUND\nSUEZ (AP) - Saudi Arabia'.\nCrown Prince Faisal arrived\nThursday   On   hit   way   to   the\nUnited States (or medical treat\nment. He was accompanied by\nhil seven sons. Saudi embassy\nsources in Cairo said Faisal is\nsuffering a stomach ulcer and will\nundergo an operation.\ny\na.m.\nWorship and\nReception\nService\n9:45 and 11\nS.S, Depts,\n\"Tomorrow Is the Birthday of\nthe Christian Church. Tomorrow Is Pentecost or Whitsunday. Tomorrow put first\nthings first. Worship God In\nthe Church of His giving with\nJoy and thanksgiving.\"\ng>t. Paul'a- uJrimtg\n.ItittcbCEi.ii.r!.\n\"THE   CHURCH   WITH   A .CHALLENGE\"\nMinister;\nREV.  E.  DONOVAN  JONES.  B.A..  B.D.,  Th.M.\nDirector ot Music;\nMERLIN   R.  BUNT,  Phone  270-1-\nCottonwood and Fourth 8treeti\nSATURDAY: ,\n9:00 a.m.\u2014All-day work party at church.\nCLEAN-UP, PAINT-UP\nSUNDAY:\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Boost Your Sunday School\n11:00 a,m.-\"HITHERTOO  AND  HENCEFORTH\"\n7:30 p.m.\u2014\"DANGERS OF DRIFTING\"\nWELCOME, DELEGATES\nTo 60th Anniversary B.C. Baptist Convention\nTuesday to Friday\nSPECIAL EVENTS:\nTuesday, 7:45 p.m.\u2014W.M.S. Meeting.\nWednesday, 7:45 p.m.\u2014Miss Lois Tupper, McMaster\nUniversity, Hamilton.\nThursday, 7:45 p.m.\u2014Dr. W. J. MacDonald, Gen. Sec't'y,\nBaptist Union of Western Canada.\nFriday, 11:45 a.m.\u2014Communion Meditation\nRev. R. Easter, Victoria.\nREV. K. IMAYOSHI \u2014 Phone 1420-L\nAnglican Church of Canada\nST. SAVIOUR'S PRO-CATHEDRAL\nREV. CANON GEORGE W.LANG, B.A., L.Th.\nNDAY, JUNE 9, 1957 \u2014 WHIT SUNDAY\n\u2014Holy Communion\n(Pulpit for AYP A and Altar Guild,\nBreakfast Following.)\n\u2014Holy Communion, St. Andrew's, Willow Point.\n\u2014Mattins\n.\u2014Evensong\n(Whit Monday):\n10:00 a.m.\u2014Holy   Communion\n(Whit Tuesday) St. Barnabas Day:\n7:00 a.m.\u2014Holy   Communion\n(Ember Day):\n10:00 a.m.\u2014Holy   Communion\n(Ember Day):\n7:00 a.m.\u2014Holy   Communion\n(Ember Day):\n10:00 a.m.\u2014Holy   Communion\nRector:\ni\nSU\n8:00 a.m.-\n9:15 a.m.-\n11:00 a.m.-\n7:30 p.m.-\nJUNE\n10\nJUNE\n11\nJUNE\n12\nJUNE\n14\nJUNE 15\n.jatrorfrtii \u2022Utttteb QHjurrfj\nCorner of Stanley and Silica\nRev H. R. Whitmore, Minister.\nOrganist:'Mr. Angus Fraser.\n10:00 a.m.\u2014SUNDAY SCHOOL.\nJunior,  Intermediate  and  Senior  Departments.\n11:00 a.m.-SUNDAY SCHOOL ,   -\nNursery, Primary and Kindergarten Depts.\n11:00a.m.\u2014MORNING SERVICE\n\"LINKED  LIVES\"\nJr. Choir Boys and Girls at Morning Service.\n2:00 p.m.\u2014Harrop\n3:30 p.m.\u2014Procter\nNO EVENING SERVICE\nP\nE\nN\nT\nE\nC\n0\ns\nT\nA\nL\nlbtlp.13afor ttarl?\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday School\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning Worship\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evangelistic\nTUESDAY, 8:00 p.m.\u2014Bible Study\nFRIDAY, 8:00 p.m.\u2014Young People's.    '\nSUNDAY, 5145 p.m.\u2014Radio Broadcast.\nAn Invitation Is Extended To You.\nPastor: REV. REUBEN SWANSON\nPhone 886-Y     \u2022\nIn Affiliation With Assemblies of God.\nMmhrn\nCEou.ttanl GUjitrrl)\n803 Baker St.\nPastor: E. HANSON\nSUNDAY:\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday School\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning Worship\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evening Service\nTHURSDAY:\n3:00 p.m.\u2014Ladies' Aid\n(In Church)\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Prayer   Meeting.\nFRIDAY:\n8:00 p.m.\u2014Young Peoples.\nAngl\n_ icon Church\nof Canada\nChurch of\nThe Redeemer\nFairview\n.Canon W. J. Silverwood,\nA.K.C., B.Sc, Vicar\nWHIT SUNDAY\n8:00 a.m.\u2014Holy   Communion\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday School\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Choral Commanion\n(Altar Guild    '\narid W.A.)\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evening Prayer\nPreacher:  Rev, W. Edington\nSOUTH  SLOCAN\nJune 16th, \"at 9:00 a.m.\nAbout the -Town\n_\u25a0-\u00bb-*\u2022-\u00bb\u25a0-\u00bb_\u25a0-\u00bb-.\nPHON.  13.9 OR  1B4.\n\u2022 By  Alt.C Stevens\nFourth birthday of Nelson Jay-\ncettes was celebrated at * their\nmonthly meeting held at the home\nof Mrs, Earl Wilson, Selby Street.\nCo-hostesBes were Mrs, Henry LeMoigne and Mrs, William Kalyniuk, Entertainment was supplied\nby Mrs, Wilson and Mrs. Jack Morgan. Prize of the evening was won\nby Mrs. A. R. Ramsden.\n...\nMembers of an oil painting class\nunder the tutorship of Guy Hubbard enjoyed a pot luck supper in\nlieu of their final lesson. The event\nwas held at the home of Mrs. J.\nMcDonald, Hoover Street, Mrs.\nCharles Lowery of Spokane and\nMrs. Hubbard were guests.\n.   *  *\nDonald Andersen, Stanley Street,\nIs visiting Vancouver.\n. *  *  *\nMr, and Mrs, Gordon Ballantyne\nand children, Elizabeth, Marianne\nand Pamela of Prince Rupert are\nvisiting friends in Nelson while\nenjoying a Kootenay vacation. .\n...\nAn outdoor potluck supper in the\n.arden of Mrs. Gordon Webb. 405\nKokanee Street, was the feature of\nthe final meeting of the season of\nFairview United'? Naomi circle. A\nguest was federation president,\nMrs. W. G, Johnson. A short business meeting followed.\n...\nMiss Jean Harvey, Latimer\nStreet, leaves today for a week's\nvacation at Naramata,\n...\nJerry Pickering bf Cranbrook was\nin Nelson recently to participate in\na benefit concert.\nMr. and Mrs. J. H. Coventry,\nDavies Street, are in Cranbrook attending a Rotary Assembly, Before returning to Nelson they will\ngo on to Klndersley, Sask,, to visit\ntheir son-in-law and\"daughter, Mr.\nand Mrs, MHz Arlkado,'.\n...\nMary Whitmore group of Fair-\nview United Church held a pot\nluck supper at the home of Mrs.\nG, V, Frederlksen, North Shore.\nMrs J. C. Chambers was a guest.\n... \u00bb.\nMrs. J. C, Pltblado of Revelstoke\nIs In Nelson for the convention\nof the Ladles' Auxiliary to railway\ntrainmen, and Is also visiting her\ncousin, Mrs. E. C. Allen, at 818\nFifth Street.\n...\nMiss Millie Parker of Trail is\nconvalescing at borne, 812 Mill\nStreet, after a slight operation.\n3. irat GUjurrlj of\nGHjrtBt _. rietttiat\nA Branch ot the Mother Churcb\nThe First Church of Christ,\nScientist In  Boston. Mass.\nSunday School 9:40 a.m.\nSunday Servicfe: 11:00 a.m.\nSubject:\n\"GOD, THE ONLY CAUSE\nAND CREATOR\"\nWednesday Testimonial\nMeeting\u20148:00 p.m,\nReading Room, 209 Baker St..\nOpen Daily trorn\n2:30 to 4:30 p.m.\nSunday and Thursday Eves.\n7:00 to 9 p.m.\nALL   CORDIALLY\nWELCOME\nSi. Soljt.'a\nffiutljpran CEljurrfj\nCorner Stanley and Silica Sts.\nREV. CARL J. HENNIG\nRes. 317 Silica St. \u2022 Phone 729-X\nPENTECOST SUNDAY\n10:00 a.m.\u2014Sunday School\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Divine Service with\nHoly Communion\nTHE LUTHERAN HOUR\nCJAT, 8:00 a.m. Every Sunday\n3Firat\nPrpabgtprlatt\n\u20ac.jurrlj\nTHE  CONGREGATION\nWILL WORSHIP IN\nST.-PAUL'S-TRINITY\nCHURCH.\n^ahtatimt Armij\n513 Victoria St.\nLieut, and Mrs. G. Grlce\nSUNDAY\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Supday School\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Holiness Meeting\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evening Service\nIGiglitljmta.\n812 STANLEY ST.\nSUNDAY: '\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Worship  Service\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evening   Service\nWEDNESDAY:\n8:00 p.m.\u2014Bible Study and\nPrayer\nGOOD NEWS CLUB\nSaturday, 10 a.m.-12 nOOn.\nALL Children Welcome\nSALMO\nHILLCREST\nPENTECOSTAL CHURCH\n10:00 a.m.-Sunday School\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evening Service.\nPastor:  Robert A. Delgatty\nPhone 82-F\nCHURCH  OF JESUS CHRIST\n,    OF LATTER DAY SAINTS\n(Mormon)\n10:00 a.m.\u2014Sunday School\n11:00 am \u2014Sacrament Meeting\nEagles Hall. 641  Baker St,\nFor Auxiliary Meetings call\nBranch President Phone 2010-R\nOur\nFather's\nBusiness\n- Religion is often referred to in\nterms of faith. People are advised,\nin difficult situations, that th.;\nmust have faith. We are told that\nwhat we do not know, we may be\nable to accept on faith.\nOf course, faith, is not much If\nit is only a matter of preaching,\nor good advice. Examples of faith\nare more Inspiring than sermons or\ntreaties about faith.\nThe poets may speak In glowing\nterms of:\n\"Faith, mighty faith, the promise\nsees,\nAnd trusts in that alone;\nLaughs at impossibilities\nAnd says, 'It shall be done.\"\"\nThis is like the agricultural expert sending out pamphlets, on\nhow to grow clover, from the air-\nconditioned comfort of a spacious\noffice; but this may have little or\nno appeal to the teen-age boy mowing the hay in a torrid and humid\nloft of an old barn.\nAn example of faith is more\ntelling. To visualize a Luther\nstanding before Emperor and Pope\nin response to God's call on his\nintegrity and declaring: \"Here I\nstand; I can do none other\" is an\nunanswerable evidence and witness\nof faith. To envisage a Columbus\nwaving his disheartened mariners\non into unknown waters to found\na land that might not be there, is\nan inspiration for us to sail with\ncourage our lesser seas of discovery. To have in mind a Christ rising with new-found strength from\nHis prayer in Gethsemane to bear\na fearsome cross is to give us\nheart in toiling up our \"lesser Calvaries\".\nHave faith, friend, but you will\nnot have it until you venture to do\nthose things that require faith.\n,       -REV. ALLAN DIXON\nWedding Vows\nExchanged In\nNakusp Church\nNAKUSP-At an evenlnft ceremony In Robertson Memorial\nUnited Church here, Edna Pearl\nBowes, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.\nC. K. Bowes of Nakusp exchanged\nvowswlth Waller Donald Frleden-\nberger, second eldest son of Mrs.\nHenry Mnizlclt and the late Gus-\ntave Frledenberger of Plumas,\nMan., Rev. A. A. Burnett officiated.\nEntering the beautifully decorated church on the arm of her\nfather, the bride was gowned In\nballerina length white bridal satin.\nHer fingertip veil of Illusion net\nwas held In place by a fitted cap\nof lace trimmed with sequin and\npearls, and she carried a bouquet of red roses. As her sister's\nmaid of honor, Miss Margaret\nBowes chose pastel green nylon\nnet over taffeta with matching\nlace jacket and headband. As\nbridesmaid, Miss Barbara Smith\nchose yellow nylon net over satin\nand wore a matching headband,\nBoth attendants carried bouquets\nof pink and'white carnations.\nThe groom was atended by Mr.\nWilliam Athorton with Mr. .Ronnie\nHale as usher. Miss R. Hamer\nplayed the wedding music.\nFor her daughter's wedding Mrs.\nBowes chose a powder blue dress\nwith white accessories and a corsage of pink carnations. Reception\nwas held at the home of the bride's\nparents in Glenbank. A three tiered\nwedding cake centered the table.\nA toast to the bride was proposed\nby Mr. J. W. Bailey. A telegram\nwas received from the groom's sister and brother-in;law from Edmonton, Alberta.\nThe couple will make their home\nIn Nakusp.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JUNE 8, 1957 \u2014 5\nFormer Nelson Girl\nMarried In Whitehorse\nIn a double-ring ceremony held\nrecently, the former1 Gall Valerie\nSwan, daughter ef Mr. and Mrs.\nCharles William Swan of Nelson,\nexchanged vows with Const. Frederick Joslln Jenkins, RCMP, son\not Mr. and Mrs. N. T. Jenkins of\nGrassland, Alta. Army padre Capt.\nP. R, Sawatsky solemnized the\nevening rites at the Army Chapel,\nCamp Takhlnl, Whitehorse, Yukon\nTerritory. Floral decorations In the\nchapel were snapdragons and iris.\nThe groom was attended by\nConst. J. G. Vincent, a fellow member of the RCMP from Dawson\nCity, and other RCMP officers\nmade up the guard of honor. Also\nmembers of the force, Sgt. K. D.\nSmith and Cpl. E. J. Ard, were\nushers.\nThe wedding music was played\nby Mrs. Lois Green, and Mrs.\nMargaret Ramsden was soloist.\nThe bride's only attendant was\nStephanie Onysyk, who wore a\nballerina length gown of aqua\nfrosted taffeta crystalette and\ncarried a. bouquet 6T yellow and\nwhite carnations.\nATTRACTIVE GOWN\nGiven In marriage by W02 S.\nGrimsley, the bride was exquisitely\ngowned in a gossamer cloud of\nnylon marquisette with diagonal\nInserts of Belgian lace, drifting\ninto a beautiful chapel sweep. The\nhigh Sabrlna neckline was delicately traced with sequins and pearls.\nThe bride's tiara of seed pearls\nand Irldescents held In place a\nfilmy illusion veil in chapel length.\nThe bride carried a bouquet of red\nrosebuds and lily of the valley.\nA reception at the NWHS sergeants' mess followed the ceremony. The bridal couple received\nthe guests with W02 and Mrs.\nGrimsley and Inspector and Mrs.\nParsons,\nToasts were proposed by Const.\nVincent, Among the gnosis were\nBrigadier and Mrs. H. L. Meuser,\nWing Commander and Mrs, F. H,\nPearce, Staff Sergeant and Mrs,\nW. A, Allen, Staff Sergeant and\nMrs. J. B. Fitzgerald and Mr.\nFred Lucas.\nThe newly-married couple left\nfor Prince George, where they will\nmake their home. For travelling,\nihe bride wore a blue tweed suit\nwith white accessories.\nYWCA Urges Adoption\nNational Health Plan\nBERLIN (Reuters) \u2014 Fourteen\nWest Berlin youths who rioted\nafter seeing the movie Rock\nAround the Clock in January were\ngiven prison terms Thursday ranging from one day to three weeks.\nOne of them told the magistrate:\n\"We were so carried away by the missioner,\nfilm we didn't know what to do Women, of both countries who\nwith ourselves.\" settled the border received from\nVANCOUVER (CP)-The Young\nWomen's Christian Association\nconference Thursday passed resolutions calling on federal and provincial governments to ensure progressive implementation of a na^\ntional health scheme, endorsing\nthe YWCA world peace statement\nand calling on members to assist\nnewcomers to Canada.\n.National President Mrs. Ryrie\nSmith was presented with the\nHenry Marshall Tory award of\nthe Canadian Association for Adult\nEducation by Gordon Selman of\nthe University of British Columbia.\nThe plaque was awarded to the\nnational YWCA for citizenship projects operated last year by members in Halifax, Moncton, N.B., Co-\nbourg, Ont., Kingston, Oshawa,\nOttawa, Winnipeg and Lethbridge,\nAlta.\nU.S. SPEAKER \u2022\nIt Is easier for United States\ncitizens' to enter Canada than to\nenter California from an adjoining\nstate, a leading U.S. official of the\nYWCA said.\nThe Canadian-U.S. border \"has\nstood for us always as a monument and a symbol,\" said Mrs.\nEarl Cranston of Claremont,\nCalif., chairman of the .YWCA\nU.S. western region, former Methodist missionary in China .and\none-time  California  police   com-\n11* a status which was slow In\ncoming to women of the rest of\nthe world, she told delegates at a\nconvention dinner of the YWCA of\nCanada.\n\"We learned to get along together because we had to do so\nand because we so desperately\nneeded one another. If we learned\nways \u25a0 of dealing with our problems and skills in instituting reforms, we exchanged those learnings across our common border,\"\nshe said.\nSHORT OF VOLUNTEERS\nWomen today have many opportunities to serve in paid jobs\nand it has become difficult to find\nthose willing to work for voluntary\nagencies and institutions, she said.\n\"The alternative to these is\nstate - administered organizations.\nThey would doubtless be well-\nheeled, but there would almost\ncertainly be a lack of freedom and\nof leadership such as we have\ndeveloped through the last century.\"\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c line, 40c line black face type; larger type rates on\nrequest. Minimum two lines, 10% discount for prompt payment.\nBabies, Weddings, Portraits.\nVOGUE STUDIO \u2014 PHONE 1552\nFor a varied menu try\nTILLICUM INN - BALFOUR\nAluminum awnings, cool,\nfortable. Ph. 1568 or 1024-Y.\nEmbroidery cottons, designs.\nHOBBY SHOP - PHONE 1703\nVOTE WRIGHT\nJUNE 10\nBricks, lime, cement, flue-lining,\nT. H. WATERS & CO. LTD.\n101 Hall St. \u25a0 Nelson - Phone 156\n36\" Towelling, suitable for beach\nrobes, red and aqua, $1.39 per yd.\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nGordon Sutherland\nPainting, Paperhanging. R.R.\nPhone 1990, Nelson.\nDry slab Wood for sale, $11.50\nfor 4-ft. cord; $15.50 for 12-inch\ncord. \u2014 Phone 330-L.\nRubber Garden Gloves\nCotton lined, $1.50 pr.\nCOVENTRY'S FLOWER SHOP\nSummer Dresses for ladies and\ngirls, All sizes at\nEBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.\nCCF COMMITTEE ROOM\nRoyal Hotel, Phone 658\nfor transportation on June 10th\nWinner of the Past Chiefs Club\ndraw was J. Haines, 424 Victoria\nStreet.\nFor your pets, plastic feeding,\nbowls, just arrived.\nMAC'S FLOWER SHOP\nFor your finest paint job ever \u2014\nUse Pittsburgh Paint \u2014 at\nNELSON WOODWORKING  CO.\nat 273 BAKER ST., PHONE 1150.\nFOR YOUR NEW HAIR STYLING\n& permanents try the Charm\nBeauty Salon, Medical Arts Bldg.\nSte 211. Phone 1922:\nPhone 77 for\nall local moving, shipping and\ndistributing.\nSPEEDY DELIVERY.\nFur Storage, Cleaning and Glazing. Expert fur repairs. Remodelling at\nCUSTOM FURS \u2014 580 Baker St.\nCOMING\nQUEEN'S BAY CHURCH GUILD\nGARDEN PARTY AND  SALE,\nBALFOUR BEACH INN,\nSAT., AUG.  17th, AT  2:30 P.M,\nDon't forget, Bob Camp, your\nALL-STATE   AUTO   INSURANCE\nAGENT\nwill  be  at  your  Simpson-Sears\nStore every Saturday. Phone 1490.\n\u2022 9 cu. ft. Fridge,, good running\norder, $74.50.\nWE PAY CASH FOR USED\nFURNITURE.\nBIRCH'S FURNITURE, PH. 47\nLITTLE THEATRE GENERAL\nMEETING AND WINDUP SOCIAL\nCHURCH OF REDEEMER HALL\nTUES., JUNE 11, 8 P.M. NEWCOMERS MOST WELCOME.\nMr. J. Corner, Provincial Apiarist, will give a lecture on bbekeep-\ning at the Women's Institute Room,\nCivic Centre, June 13, at 8 p.m.\nEveryone interested is welcome.\nNo charge.\nRobins Hatch\nYoung in\nMobile Crane\nTRENTON, Ont. (CP) - Two\nrobins built a nest on an angle\nbar in the boom of a mobile crane\nat the.air force station here,, and\nthanks to the sentimentality of\nman, they managed to hang on\nto the girating boom until their\neggs were hatched.\nThe 20-ton crane shifts around\nthe RCAF base lifting and carrying heavy equipment.\nCrane operator Jack Westall\nlowered the boom one day and\nnoticed the nest neat the pulley\nend of the boom. Instead of\nthrowing it out he taped it in and\nwent about his duties.\nSTUCK TO NEST\nHe expected the robins would\nignore the nest when they saw it\nswinging in giant arcs through\nthe air, but it was their nest and\nthey stuck to it.\n\"Of course when they were expecting both parents took turns\non the nest,\" Westall said. \"Recently when lifting a C-47, a job\ncalling for considerable strain on\nthe boom, the mother spent the\nwhole afternoon on the nest hold-\ni\"\" the e*3gs securely in place.\"\nThe nest was built in April, and\na. few days ago three eggs were\nsuccessfully hatched. The young\nones, used to swinging through\nthe air, promptly flew off, probably in search of a steadier home\nlife.\nMcClung\nMemorial\nTo Be Unveiled\nOWEN SOUND, Ont. (CP) -\u2022 A\nmemorial to Nellie McClung,\nnoted, feminist author, will be\nunveiled today on the farm near\nhere where she was born in 1873.\nThe memorial has been erected\nby the women's institute of Grey\nCounty.\nHer journalist granddaughter,\nNellie Lillian McClung of Edmonton, will officiate at the unveiling.\nA leader In the fight for women's\nsuffrage and a tough battler\nagainst the liquor traffic, Mrs. McClung wove herself Into the pattern\nof life In the Canadian West for\n60 of her 77 years. She died in 1951.\nFILM ON CANCER\nTO BE SHOWN\nTO WOMEN\nA color film on \"Self-examination of Breast Cancer\" will be\nshown to women only, sponsored\nby Kiwanis Hostess club. 'Arrangements were made at the\nclub's final meeting at the home\nof Mrs. N. R. Sardich. It was reported to members that invitations\nhad been sent to various groups,\nbut all interested women would be\nwelcome at Capitol theatre when\nthe'film Is shown June 12. Dr. J. G.\nMcMurchy will be in attendance\nto answer any questions.\nA report was given with regard\nto a bake sale which had been successful. Plans were made to assist\nanother needy family,\nCo-hostesses were Mrs. P. Robinson and Mrs. A. Russell.\nNew Denver\nNEW DENVER - Mr. and Mrs.\nW. M. Sharp and three children\nhave left New Denver to take up\nresidence in Vancouver.\nMr. and Mrs. Ole D. Johnson\nand three children of. Kaslo, the\nformer's brother, Barney Johnson\nof Wycliffe and Mr. and Mrs. G.\nG. Munro and son Weston of\nSeattle, were guests of the Johnson brothers' mother, Mrs. Dena\nJohnson and brother, Cory Johnson.   .\nCandidate Speaks\nAt Coffee Party\nROSSLAND-Trail and District\nWomen's Progressive Conservative\nAssociation entertained at a coffee\nparty in the home of Mrs. Richard\nMorrison, Rossland, on Wednesday.\nMrs. D. R. Merry and Mrs,, H. W.\nGeorge assisted Mrs. Morrison.\nDr. C. H. Wright and Mrs. Wright\nwere present.. During a brief talk,\nDr. Wright stated that John Diefenbaker is prepared to ask for a\nCommonwealt|i Conference in an\neffort to restore lost markets. In\ndiscussing\" homeland ties, Dr.\nWright attacked the attitude of the\nLiberal party during the recent\nSuez crisis.\nFirst Baby Invited\nTo B. C. Centennial\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Margaret\nFlorence McNeil, first white baby\nborn in Vancouver, has been invited to take part in British Columbia centennial celebrations here\nnext year.\nCentennial officials have asked\nMiss McNeil, who now lives in\nPortland, if she can visit the city.\nCHILDREN'S\nPOOLS\n>}>\/..7 J and up\nAT\nToo Few Women\nIn Canadian\nUniversities\nOTTAWA (CP) - Dr. Claude T.\nBlssell, president of Carleton University, says Canadian universities\nneed more women students and\nteachers.\nSpeaking at Ihe closing exercises of a private school for girls,\nDr. Blssell said that there are only\nabout 16,000 women attending university in Canada as compared to\n60,000 men.\nHe said men students Increasingly are \"deserting the more traditional studies in the humanities\nfor studies that attract by the\npromise of more immediate rewards\" like business administration, engineering, medicine, and\ndentistry.\n\"Increasingly, then, the strength\nof these studies in the humanities\nwill depend upon the women in\nour universities,\" said Dr. Blssell.\nAlso It was a \"well-known sociological and psychological fact\"\nthat girls mature far more quickly\nand more surely than young men\nand bring to the'university \"a sophistication ... a social awareness and sureness that is at the\nutmost value.\"\nDr. Blssell said that women\nhave been relatively unsuccessful\n\"in making inroads into the higher\nacademic spheres\" In teaching\ndespite successes In primary and.\nsecondary schools.\n\"In the coming years, the universities are going to be faced\nwith an extraordinary crisis in\nteaching manpower. And I hope\nthey will help solve the crisis by\nincreasing their womanpower.\"\nWoman May\nHave Isolated\nSclerosis Germ\nPHILADELPHIA (AP)-A grey-\nhaired, Russian-born medical researcher announced Friday that\nshe has isolated a micro organism\nthat she \"has 100 per cent reason\nto believe is the cause of multiple\nsclerosis?'\nRose R. Ichelson said the discovery will permit researchers to\nconcentrate , on the immunization\nand cure,pf the disease.\n, Multiple sclerosis, a nervous disorder, affects an estimated 300,-\n000 persons in the United States.\nIt Is a progressive disease which\ngradually reduces Its victims to\nhelplessness.\nUntil now medical men have\nbeen able to give its victims only\nlimited relief, and then only if the\ndisease is diagnosed early enough.\nThere is no known cure for it.\nMiss Ichelson is chief researcher\nat St. Luke's and Children's Medical Centre here.       1\nWAS FORMER MINISTER\nMADRID (AP) - Gen. Juan\nBeigbeder y Atienza, 69, foreign\nminister in the first government\n,of Generalissimo Francisco Franco\nafter the Spanish Civil War in\n1939, died Thursday after a long\nillness.\nS ic Cameras\nStill and movie.\n* Films\nBlack and white and color..\n* Flashguns and Flash Bulbs\n*, Projectors and Screens\n* Tripods and Gadget Bags\nmHamJmjk\nNelson\n\u2022\nCAMERA STORE\n497 BAKER ST,\nm%%\\\n 6 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JUNE 8, 1957\nOVERALL VIEW\u2014 One way io get sidewalk superintendents out of the way in West Berlin is to provide them with a\n35-foot high chair lift over northwest areas under reconstruction,\nMATE   USES   W E I C H T _ Mrs. Jim Kenny uses a\nsliding; seat to shift her weight outboard of the racing dinghy\nsailed by her husband during regatta in Chichester, Eng., harbor.\ni        - ___H\n\u25a0\n|Ur\"\n*> -.:j'\n\u25a0-,-..  , >\n-;::\u25a0:.-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 ym:f ''\"\u25a0\"MM   HH\n1ii_TFv_b_I\nM                       igl BR :\nr \"                                    bBH  ___\u25a0-\u25a0\n\u25a0IB\n\u25a0a\n}:\u25a0\u25a0: ,\u25a0     -_i_i. W$ ]\u25a0\u25a0- mmWlmm:.              :S\nmMil&M^mmWi0mi:m-' '\n!\"\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'                            11 _______3_i\n11\n1\n1 1\n____!          v. __<^___________l\n||l^-:|3|\ni                                \"j\n*tJS * *!\n'        f   fj\nEf-f\/\n_\u00a3 _n\"\u00bb*\n' 'w^*4il(_*'::'Ti.'iSi\nIIS\nU^Jf&tf&i.BFi\u00bb Irs-'.\nSKYWARD STEP \u2014 Camera position and use ef wide\nangle lens causes foot of ihe statue of Prometheus in Rockefeller\nCenter to appear as large as International Building in background.\nSPEEDY DISPLAY- Workmen erect a 120-foot MA\nmobile drilling tower at International Industrial Fair in Hanover,\nGermany. Tower was in position for drilling in MS seconds,\nA RULER'S LEISURE \u2014 Japan's Emperor Hirohlto\nappears far from the cares of state as he pursues his hobby,\nmarine microbiology, in Hie laboratory aboard his 50-ton yacht.\nELECTED -Adolf\nSchaerf, 67-year-old Socialist\nlawyer, has been elected to a\nsix-year term as president of\nAustria. He succeeds Theodor\nKoerner who died in office.\nBLOWING   HER   T Q P \u2014 This Is not a party hat but a British contrivance for drying\nhair at home. Long flexible plastio stocking attached to blower conveys air to top of head.\nARMS ARRANGEMENT \u2014 rzi submachine ram.\nmanufactured in Israel, are exhibited in Beit Dagon as the Jew*\nish nation celebrated the ninth anniversary of its Independence.\nONSMALL SCALE \u2014 Martin Zahl produces tone on\nsix-inch violin he made In West Berlin. Zahl, a former watch*\nmaker, has made ether tiny Instruments which are clearly audible,\nPR 0 S P E C T I V E  WAITING \u2014 Indian peasants have a grandstand seat atop a steep\nHimalayan hillside overlooking the Kangra Valley as they observe a crew exploring for oil.\nSTARK  ART-two\nfigures titled \"Creation\" are\nmoved into position at Paris'\nLouvre Museum. The work by\nJuvin is among pieces displayed by young French artists.\nSTYLED FDR S I N G I N 6 \u2014 Jane Powell models\nher costume of gold Indian sari cloth and ostrich plumes for Lao\nVegas, Nev., act. A whimsical feature Is the bird on her bustle.\nCLOSER  TO\nback and head of a\nSOURCE \u2014 This kid who apparently is using his head climbs onto\nrelative to get closer to handouts from sightseers at Cologne, Germany, zoo.\nCAPABLE BACKSTOP \u2014 Extra arpis of teammates\nhelp catcher Jean Davis during practice of the Lorelei Ladies,\na top female softball team in Atlanta. Batter is Carol Thrasher.\nOINS   ANCIENT   COMPANY \u2014 Swiss Guard recruit, attired in uniform de-.\nsigned by Michelangelo, holds unit banner as he takes oath of allegiance in Vatican City ceremony.\n \/$m\nRackets Investigators\nHear Bakers7 Testimony\nWASHINGTON (AP) - Senate\nrackets investigators Friday heard\ntestimony that a national vice-\npresident of the Bakers Union,\nMax- Kralstein, received some\n$60,000 proceeds from a June,\n-1956, Waldorf - Astoria banquet\nheld in his honor.\nJoseph Tenczar, ousted business\nagent of a .Brooklyn local, told the\ncommittee a story of \"pressuring\"\ncf employers to buy tickets and\nadvertising in connection with the\nbanquet.\nHe said the employers so approached were men with whom\nW. Germany Comes\nTo Terms With U.S.\nBONN (AP)-The United States\nand West Germany have agreed\non a payment of 325,000,000 marks\n($77,000,000) toward the cost of\nkeeping 'American forces in Germany, the foreign office announced Friday.\n'The U.S. had demanded twice\nthat amount. A spokesman said\nthe agreement will be signed today or Saturday.\nSCOTTISH POETESS\nLady Grisell Baillie, Scottish\nwriter bf poems who died in 1746,\nwas the daughter of the first Earl\nof Marshmont.\nKralstein regularly bargained for\ncity-wide baking industry labor\ncontracts.\n$50 CONTRIBUTIONS\nTenczar told about hitting some\n60 employers for $25 banquet tickets plus $50 contributions for getting their names printed on a banquet souvenir program. Committee Counsel Hobert Kennedy asked\nwhether he used \"pressure\" to\nget' the contributions.\n\"I most ctrtainly did,\" the witness replied.\nTenczar said when employers\nbalked a special union \"team\"\ntook over to press them for contributions. He said he assumed\nthey were reminded bargainihg\ndemands might be tougher if they\ndidn't contribute.\n\"I know if I were an employer\nI would have paid,\" he added.\n5TH AMENDMENT AGAIN\nGeorge Stuart, resigned first\nvice-president of., the international\nunion, halted efforts by the committee to question him Thursday\nabout testimony that he misused\nmore than, $40,000 of union money.\nStuart, who .said he is unemployed, used the fifth amendment's constitutional protection\nagainst self-incrimination 23 times\nin 10 minutes. He declined even\nto say that he had been an officer of the union.\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS 1240 ON  THE  DIAL\n(PACIFIC DAYLIGHT SAVING TIME)\nSATURDAY, JUNE 8, 1957\n6:30\u2014Wake-Up Time\n7:00\u2014News\n7:05\u2014Musicale\n7:10\u2014Farm Fare\n7:15\u2014Musicale ^\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Sports News\n7:40\u2014Wake-Up Time\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10-Sports News\n8:15\u2014Market Review\n8:20\u2014Breakfast Varieties\n9:00\u2014News '\n9:05\u2014Musicale .\n9:15\u2014Story Parade\n9:30\u2014Stamp Club\n9:45-Sounds Fun Club\n10:00\u2014Postmark UK\n10:30\u2014Juke Box\n11:00\u2014News\n11:05\u2014Saturday Special\n12:00\u2014The Dinner Bell\n12:15-Sports News   .\nSUNDAY,\n8:45\u2014British Israel Broadcast\n9:00\u2014Overseas News\n9:15\u2014News\n9:30\u2014Harmony Harbour\n10:00\u2014B.C. Gardener\n10:15\u2014Just Mary\n10:30\u2014Musicale\n11:09\u2014St Paul's-Trinity Service\n12:00-This Is My Story\n12:30\u2014Capital Report\n12:57\u2014B.C. Weather\n1:00\u2014Dominion Drama Festival\n1:30\u2014Critically Speaking\n2:00\u2014World Music Festivals\n3:30\u2014News\n3:35\u2014Weatherman , >\n3:45-Musical Program\n12:25\u2014News\n12:30\u2014Saturday Special\n2:30\u2014Don Messer\n3:00\u2014News\n3:10-Weekend Listening\n3: IS\u2014Speaker's Choice\n3:30\u2014Canadian Symphonies\n4:00\u2014Buff Estes Sextet\n4:15\u2014Old Country Sports\n4:30\u2014This Week\n4:45\u2014Sports College\n5:00\u2014Drive-In\n5:30\u2014Conversations\n6:00\u2014Moods in Modern\n7:00\u2014News\n7:05\u2014Music by Hyslop\n7:30\u2014Hotel Downbeat\n8:00\u2014Halifax TJieatre\n8:30\u2014Prairie Schooner\n9:00\u2014Winnipeg Pops Concert\n10:00\u2014News\n10:10\u2014Sports News\n10:15\u2014Canada at Work\n10:30\u2014Sign Off\nJUNE 9, 1957\n4:00\u2014UN on the Record\n4:15\u2014The Commodores\n4:30\u2014Little Symphonies\n5:00\u2014Billy Graham\n5:30\u2014Musicale\n5:45\u2014Bethel Tabernacle\n6:00\u2014Pacific Playhouse\n6:30\u2014Music Diary\n7:00\u2014News\n7:10\u2014Weekend Review\n7:20\u2014Our Special Speaker\n7:30\u2014Sunday Chorale\n8:00\u2014Stage '56\n9:00\u2014Winnipeg Sunday Concert\n10:00\u2014News\n10:10\u2014Sports News\n10:15\u2014Poetry in Reality\n10:30-Sign Off\nCBC PROGRAMS\n(PACIFIC DAYLIGHT SAVING TIME)\nSUNDAY, JUNE 9, 1957\n10\n10\n10:\n11:\nll;\n12:\n12\n1:\n1:\n2:\n.00\u2014News\ni:03-Theme-and Variations\ni:00\u2014News\ni: 15\u2014The Answer Man\ni:30\u2014Harmony Harbor\ni:00-B.C. Gardener & Weather\n: 15\u2014Just Mary\n:30\u2014In His Service\n:00\u2014Chamber Music\n: 30\u2014Religious Period\n: oo\u2014Organ Music\n: 30\u2014Capital Report    \u25a0\n:,0_\u2014Dominion Drama Festival\n\u25a030\u2014Critically Speaking\n00\u2014World Musical Festival\n.30\u2014News\n3:35\u2014Ask the Weatherman\n3:42\u2014Weather Report\n3:45\u2014In Reply\n4:00\u2014UN on the Record\n4:15\u2014The Commodores\n4:30\u2014Little Symphonies \u25a0\n5:00\u2014Music Program\n6:00\u2014Pacific Playhouse\n6:30\u2014Music Diary\n7:00\u2014News\n7:10\u2014Weekend Review\n7:20\u2014Our Special Speaker\n7:30^-Sunday Chorale\n8:00\u2014Stage Series\n9:00\u2014Winnipeg Sunday Concert\n10:00\u2014News.\n10:15\u2014Art of Translation\nMONDAY, JUNE 10,1957\n:00\u2014B.C. Fisherman's Broadcast\n: 15\u2014Musical Minutes\n: 30\u2014News\n: 35\u2014Musical Minutes\n:40\u2014Morning Devotions ,\n:45\u2014Musical March Past\n: 00\u2014News\n: 10\u2014Sports News\n: 15\u2014Morning Music\n: 45\u2014Laura Limited\n: 00\u2014News\n: 15\u2014Your Good Neighbor\n:30-rMorning Concert\n: 00\u2014Morning Visit      *\n: 15\u2014Happy Gang\n: 45\u2014Invitation to the Waltz\n: 00\u2014Radio Theatre\n:15\u2014Kindergarten of the Air\n: 30\u2014Through the Listening Glass\n: 15\u2014News '\u25a0\n.-25\u2014Showcase\n:30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Five to One\n1:00\u2014Afternoon Concert\n2:00\u2014Afternoon Concert\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n3:30\u2014Footlight Favorites\n3:45\u2014B.C. Roundup\n4:30\u2014The Conqueror\n5:00\u2014News\n5:15\u2014By-Line\n5:20\u2014Sports\n5:30\u2014Roving Reporter\n5:45\u2014Rawhide\n6:00-Sons of .the Saddle\n6:30\u2014Music for Strings\n7:00\u2014News\n7:30\u2014Recital\n8;00\u2014Joshua Doan\n8:30\u2014Election Talk\n9:00\u2014CBC Symphony\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Provincial Affairs\n10:30\u2014Reflections in Music\nFOR TRANSPORTATION\nTo and From POLLS\nWest Kootenay Social Credit Ass'n.\nCommittee Rooms, Capitol Theatre\nSpeakers Give N.S.\nInferiority Complex\nBy DAL WARRINGTON \\\nCanadian Press Staff Writer ...\nHALfrAX (CP) - Maritimers\ncan hardly be Warned for feeling\na bit like poor relations when they\nmark their federal election ballots\nMonday.\nFor two months these points\nhave been dinne\/J in their ears by\npoliticians of all parties:\n1. People \"down east\" aren't\nenjoying their share of the national boom. .   \u2022\n2. Ottawa is or should be doing\nsomething about jt.\nLiberal, Progressive Conservative, CCF and Social Credit campaigners have done more talking\non this subject than on all other\nissues.\nMOVE WEST\nThe Gordon commission started\nthe fuss by suggesting some Maritimers might want to move.to\nother parts of Canada where they\nare more prosperous. Finance\nMinister Harris added fuel with\nhis budget announcement of federal power plans to provide\ncheaper power for the area.\nThe federal government proposed to build, in conjunction with\nNew Brunswick and Nova Scotia,\ntwo thermal power plants to provide cheap power and a ready\nmarket for Nova Scotia coal.\nConservative Premiers | Stanfield of Nova Scotia and 'l_em-\nming of New Brunswick took a\nlook and said they would need to\nknow more about it before accepting.\nThings haven't changed much\nsince, although thousands oi\nwords have been said on the subject.\nWorks Minister Winters says\nOttawa is ready to spend up to\n$200,000,000 on the scheme. He\nsays the federal government will\nhelp pay the cost to move Maritime coal lo the power plants if\nnecessary.\n\"ELECTION PROMISE\"\nJohn Diefenbaker, Progressive\nConservative leader, says the proposal isn't worth anything until\nthe cost of the power is known.\nThe Liberals say only engineers\ncan determine that and it will\ntake time; it won't be known before the election.\nPremier Flemming says the\nplan is \"just an election promise\"\nthat will never be carried out.\nPrime Minister St. Laurent says\nhe's sure the plants can give the\nMaritime provinces cheaper\npower. If they tan't then the area\nnust do without. Aid for the coal\nmines was secondary.\nThis- prompted   Premier   Stan-\nFOLKESTONE, England (AP)\nBritain's Communist - led Electrical Trades Union called Friday\nfor an immediate end of nuclear\nweapon tests. One speaker hinted\nthat the union is ready to back\nthis stand with strike action.\nThe 368 delegates attending the\nunion's conference gave unanimous approval to'a resolution calling for an end to the tests and\nurging Britain's labor movement\nto work for immediate abolition\nof atomic weapons.\nThe -same union at Thursday's\nsession decided to campaign for\nwithdrawal of all occupation\nforces in East i and West Germany.\nPolicy decisions of the ETl. attract particular attention because\nof the Red orientation of much\nof its leadership and because its\nmembers are key figures in Britr\nain's   industrial   setup,   including\nfield to say Mr. St. Laurent is\n\"in favor of leaving coal in the\nground ... A Liberal vote is a\nvole against the coal miner.\"\nMr. Winters, Nova Scotia's cabinet representative, says the proposed plants \"could take up to\n1,000,000 tons of Nova Scotia coal\nin a year.\nproduction    of    equipment    f o r\natomic reactors.\nSAFEGUARD OUR RACE\nApplause followed a statement\nby T. C. Searle, who said he saw\n\"no reason why we- should not\nuse our industrial strength at all\nlimes to safeguard our race and\nour rights.\" He obviously referred\nto possible strike action.\nAt another meeting Aneurln\nBevan, foreign affairs spokesman\nfor the Labor party, called for a\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JUNE 8, 1957 \u2014 7\nHONG KONG (AP) -'. Peiping\nRadio said today 85 ex-Nationalist\nChinese generals and high party\nofficials who defected to the Reds\nhave been named to a ''committee\nfor the peaceful liberation of\nTaiwan (Formosa).\"\ncampaign against the \"madness\"\nof the hydrogen bomb.\nSpeaking at, a Turniture workers conference, Bevan said Britain was entitled to make defence\npreparations th&t involved sacrifices to her own people\u2014\"but are\nwe entitled to condemn to death\nlarge numbers of people we shall\nnever know?\"\nDRUG, TESTS ON CATS    '\nTORONTO (CP)-Tests to try\nto establish the cause bf drug addiction are to be carried out at\nthe University of Toronto under\nnew . grants announced Thursday\nby the Banting Research Foundation. Dr. Harry Cullumbine will\nmake the tests, based on the reaction of cats to habit-forming\ndrugs.        \"  .,\nOLD MERMAID\nThe Syrian goddess Atargatis,\nwhose Greek name was Derceto,\nwas always pictured as half\nwoman, half fish.\nD\ni\nKootenay West\nFOR A BETTER DEAL\nFROM OTTAWA\nVote Social Credit\n\u00aeffawa,foo9n@@db the stroit;\n_::'.' W *_.,...,;,-,:::;:, ....,.-.,;... __3\u00bbI_M___\nvoice .of SOCIAL Cl\nInseKted   by   Mational   Social   Credit     Campaign    Committee\n 8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JUNE-8, 19S7\nv\nU.S. Siqns Aid\nPact With Poland\nWASHINGTON (AP) - The\nUnited States today signed a $48,-\n900,000 aid agreement with Communist Poland and premised $46,-\n100,000 more if and when Congress provides authority and\nfunds.\nThe agreement ended 3%\nmonths of negotiations set off last\nFebruary.\nThe long-range purpose behind1\nthe aid program, President Eisenhower made clear, is to let the\nSoviet satellite countries . know\nthat in the case of Poland\u2014as was\ndone previously in the case of\nCICINNATI (AP) - The Cincinnati Zoo has received the\npromise of a gorilla as a gift from\nthe famed humanitarian, Dr. Albert Schweitzer. Three -j_ar - old\nPenelope, a pet i_ Schweitzer's\nmedical mission. In French Equatorial Africa, will make the long\ntrip here with Dr. Byron W. Ber-\nnard, zoo veterinarian who has\nbeen assisting, in the .care of a\nherd of milk goats sent to Dr.\nSchweitzer by friends in ..the\nUnited States.\nYugoslavia\u2014they can look to the\nU.S. for support and assistance\nif they reject'total Moscow control.   -\nAn announcement said the governments agreed on \"early nego\ntiations\" over settlement of \"U.S.\nproperty claims resulting from\nPolish nationalization measures\nafter the war and over the unblocking of about $2,000,000 worth\nof Poland's prewar assets in the\nU.S. ,'.'..- .\nAGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS\nAmong agricultural products\nwhich Poland is to get under the\nfirst half of the total program are\n100,000 metric tons of wheat, 25,-\n600 metric tons of.cotton, 60,000\nmetric tons of,soybeans and 17,500\nmetric tons of fats, and and oils.\nUnder' the second half of the\nprogram, which is to be signed if\nCongress acts, the total of $46,-\n100,000 would provide for 400,000\nmetric tpns of wheat at $25,600.-\n000 and 24,400 metric tqns of cotton at $17,1.0,000\u2014with $3,400,000\nallocated for transportation..'.',\nA metric ton of wheat is about\n36.7 bushels.\nHere One Day Only\nNew-method for saving and'improving hair v. ill bo\ndemonstrated by M. D. Harrison in Nelson at the Hume\nHotel on Tuesday.\nNew Home Treatment Holds\nHope for Those Threatened\nWith Baldness\nMany old-fashioned misconceptions about baldness are\nbeing discarded these days' with\nthe discovery of new and improved methods of treating the\nhair and scalp, M. D. Harrison\nSpecialist has revealed.\nMen who once shrugged off\ntheir gradual loss of hair as an-\nunavoidable fact \u2014 something\nthey just had to put up with\nbecause of heredity, etc.\u2014are\nbeing shown that there is something they can do about it in all\nexcept a small minority of\ncases.\nM.D. HARRISON HAIR AND\nSCALP SPECIALIST, through\nhis intense research has\nbrought about amazing methods for treating local disorders\nof the hair and scalp. The\npromise that this research now\nholds out to balding men and\nwomen is contained'in a remarkably effective method of\nhome treatment which can be\nemployed easily by anyone\nonce the examination 'determines the cause of your individual Hair and Scalp problems.\nNEW METHOD * .\nDEMONSTRATED IN\nNELSON \u00bb\nThe HARRISON method of\ntreatment is being demonstrated this week in this city by the\nwell-known Hair and Scalp\nSpecialist \u2014 M* D, Harrison,\nChief Administrator of the\nHarrison Hair and Scalp Clinic.\nHis years pf experience and\nskill as an expert on hair and\nscalp problems has enabled\nthousands of people doomed to\nbaldness to again enjoy healthier and thicker hair,\nM. D. Harrison will J,e here\nonly one day, and in that time\nis giving residents of this city\nthe opportunity to have a free .\nexamination and advice on\ntheir hair and scalp problems.\nIf you are worrying about your\nhair Roing instead of growing\u2014\nand if you haevn't let your hair\nfall out to the 'drumhead' stage\n^chances are M. D. Harrison\ncan suggest a home treatment\nfo\u00bb- vour soecific needs.\nThe complete examination,\nWhich puts you under no obligation, will be to the point and\nfrank. We do npt accent cases\nwhere it appears doubtful results will be obtained. But the\nchances are 10 to 1 you can be\nhelped.\nREASON  FOR  BALDNESS\nThere are so many common\niac'avs causing hair loss which\nh;.ve been traced down by Hair\nSpecialists and Scientists that\ntoday there are very few reasons for anyone to be bald*\nUsually, the common scalp disorders which cause abnormal\nhair loss are neglected until\nthe hair is lost irretrievably\u2014\nwhere it could hav\u00a7, been pre-\n- vented- with: timely treatment.\nOur motto is:\n\"SAVE YOUR  HAIR WHILE\nYOU STILL HAVE  HAIR\"\nSimilarly, \"recent discoveries\nhave shown that the very nature of our fast-paced modern\nliving has quite an effect on\nthe hair. Strange as it seems,\nnervous tensions and worries\ncan \"tighten up\" the scalp,\ncause drying up of the essential\nsub-scalp tissue which nourishes the hair, and results in\ncomplete baldness if left unchecked. .     .\nThe answer for these and\nmany other baldness causes\nwhich   are   unknown   to   the\n- average person, have been\nstudied in the research laboratories of the Harrison Clinic.\nThe latest discoveries and\ntreatments are now available\nto you through the easy-to-\nfollow home treatments 'devised by the Harrison laboratory.\nFJ-tEE   EXAMINATION\nIt your hair,. your personal\nappearance, your poise and\nyour successful social life are\nworth a few minutes of your\ntime\u2014it will pay you to visit\nM. D. Harrison while he is conducting his FREE CLINIC\nhere. You don't even need an\nappointment\u2014just drop in any\ntime during the hours the clinic\nis in progress, and ask for your\nfree examination.\nYou know whether or not\nyou are becoming bald\u2014and\nnow you' know what to do\nabout it. Visit the HARRISON\nCLINIC while it is in your city\nfor this limited time.\nSee M.D. HARRISON\nat tha\nHume Hotel\nTUESDAY, JUNE 11\nHours: 1 p.m. to'9 p.m.\nOne  Day Only\nlawyer Claims\nProspectors\nVictimized\nREGINA (CP)-Lawyer D. G.\n\"McLeod argued in Appeal Court\ntoday that two prospectors who\nmade a rich uranium find on a\nLake Athabaska island were\nforced by Canadian Pipelines and\nPetroleums Limited agents to\nbreak a contract giving Frobisher.\nLimited ownership of the claims.\nHe said prospectors Jock MacKinnon and S. Daigle had been\nthe victims of \"shrewd and unscrupulous\" Canadian Pipelines\nrepresentatives who were Out to\ndefeat the Frobisher claim by\n\"fair or foul means.\"\nCanadian Piplines is seeking\nreversal of the trial verdict last\nyear which upheld Frobisher's\nownership or a new trial on the\ngrounds the contract is invalid because it was signed on a Sunday\nand violates the Lord's Day Act.\nFrobisher says the contract was\nsigned on a Saturday night.\nMr. McLeod said his two clients\nand two other prospectors thought\nthey had a binding agreement with\nFrobisher until Canadian Pipelines representatives Lawrence\nMorrisroe and E. George Meschi\narrived and influenced them to\nbreak it.\n\"If. Morrisroe and Meschi had\nbeen acting in good faith, there\nwas nothing to prevent them from\nmaking a deal with the prospec-\ntors to the effect that, if the Fro\nbisher deal was not carried out,\ntheir's would be,\" the lawyer said\nCalls Conference\nOn'Flu Threats\nWASHINGTON (AP)-The ... S.\npublic health service has called a\nconference here Monday to consider protective steps against the\nepidemic influenze which has been\nsweeping the Far East\nThe service said it still has not\nreceived reports of any cases in\nthe U.S. of the new strain of type\nA influenza virus. Hundreds of\nthousands have been stricken by\nit in the Philippines. Japan, Cam-\nJ;'\nN'prth Bor-\nong  and\njy made\ni service\nButler Agrees\nNot Io Abuse\nPhone Tapping\nBy WALTER DAVIS\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 The government promised Friday not to\nabuse its \"necessary but distasteful power\" to tap telephone conversations.\nHome Secretary R. -A. Butler\ntold the Commons the tapping of\na lawyer's private telephone conversation would \"not be treated\nas a precedent.\"\nButler's disclosure Thursday\nthat the home office had ordered\nthe wire-tapping caused loud Com-\nmonds cries of \"police state.\"\nLabor members demanded a further statement from Butler.\nButler said the home office ordered the wire-tapping at the request of the bar council, a private body of lawyers investigating\ncomplaints about a lawyer's professional conduct.\nGIVES ASSURANCE\nButler gave an assurance that\nthe power to supply groups outside the public service with transcripts of intercepted telephone\nconversations would be used only\nin defence of the state or for detecting serious crime.\n\"The prerogative powers of intercepting telephone communications can be used only by the personal authority of the secretary of\nstate (home secretary),\" he said.\n\"This power is one which parliament has always recognized to\nbe essential for the protection of\nsociety.\"\n\"Information from this source\nis jealously guarded and it is a\nsettled principle that it is not disclosed to persons outside the public service. ... i\n\"I can further assure the House\nthat the government appreciate to\nthe full the necessity of preventing any abuse of this necessary\nbut distasteful power.\"\nbodia, Sumatra\nneo,  Sarawak,  _'\nother Far East\n. In a weekly he;\npublic Friday; the\njyapis:\n\"The. introduction of infection\nby the Far East strain of virus\ninto the United States is considered to be .a distinct possibility,\nbecause persons who have been\nin western Asia recently are entering the country in substantial\nnumbers and are dispersing \\o all\nparts of the country.\"\nNOT YET PROVED\nThe service says, however, that\n\"its occurrence has not yet been\nproved by laboratory tests.\".\nThe new type A virus does not\nappear to be. affected by the in-\nfluneza vaccines which were developed to protect against previously known A and B types. '\n-. Six American manufacturers\nhave been supplied with specimens of the new type and are\nstudying them preparatory to\nmaking, a vaccine to combat it.\nIn San Francisco, Dr. E. W.\nMorris, chief, quarantine officer\nfor the public health service, said\nthat seaport's usual quarantine inspection has. been tightened because of the epidemic in the Orient.\nThere were 10 influenza cases\namong military passengers reaching San Francisco last Tuesday\naboard the transport Gen. Daniel\nI. Sultan,, in from Manila, Guam\nand Kwajalein. All these cases\n\"are on the mend,\" Dr. Norris\nsaid.\nMORE CASES\nThe cruise liner Preside nt\nCleveland is due at San Francisco Sunday after.calling at.various ports in the Orient. Dr. Norris said he wps told 13 influenza\ncases were aboard.\nA dispatch from Honolulu June\n4 said' Mrs. Angelina Gerosa, 48,\nwho boarded the liner at Manila,\nWASHINGTON (AP)-The state\ndepartment said Thursday it, is\ngiving \"no consideration\" to unfreezing Egypt's $30,000,000 in assets in the United States.\nBeck Refused\nPermission fo\nVisit Europe\nTACOMA, Wash. (AP)-Federal\nJudge George H. Boldt Friday rejected the application 'of Dave\nBeck teamsters union president,\nfor permission to go to Europe.\nHe did give permission for Beck\n'to attend a meeting of the executive board of the International\nTeamsters' Union in Los Angeles\nJuly 1.\nBeck had asked permission to\nleave the jurisdiction of the western Washington federal court to\nattend a meeting of the International . Transport Federation in\nParis.\nThe teamsters chief is at liberty on $5,000 bond awaiting trial\nhere on charges of evading $56:\n000 in 1950 income taxes and of\naiding in, preparing a fraudulent\nincome tax return.\nOPERA SINGER DIES\nNEW YORK (CP)-EUa Flescb\nHungarian-born dramatic soprano\nand former member of the Metropolitan Opera, died Thursday.\nBorn in Budapest in 1902, she fled\nfrom the Hitler regime to Prague,\nand from there came to the\nUnited States in 1939.\nSays Stalin Planned to Deport Jews\nPolitburo Opposition\nCaused Leader's Death\nPARIS (AP) - The newspape.\nFrance-Soir says Joseph Stalin\nsuffered his fatal stroke while in\na fit of rage over politburo opposition to a plan he had to deport\nall Jews from Russia.\nThe then secret police chief,\nLavrenty Beria, the paper adds,\ndanced around the stricken Russian dictator's body, laughing and\ncrying, \"we are free, finally.\"\nThe newspaper says its account\nof the stormy meeting which left\nStalin unconscious on the floor\nwas revealed in Warsaw by P.\nK. Ponomarenko, Soviet ambassador to Poland, during an interview with Polish Communist journalists.\nPLANNED DEPORTATIONS\nTl_ newspaper gives this account of the politburo meeting in\nFebruary, 1953:\nStalin raged against'a \"Zionist\nand imperialist plot\" directed at\nRussia and said be planned to deport all Russian Jews to the remote region of Birobidzhan, lithe Jewish autonomous area in\neastern Siberia.\nV. M. Molotov, then foreign min\nister, tremblingly told Stalin such\na move would have a \"deplorable\neffect\" on public opinion outside\nRussia. Molotov's wife is Jewish.\n. At that pojnt. Soviet Marshal\nKlementi Voroshilov stood uf>,\nhurled his party card to the floor\nand said: \"If one takes such a\nstep I would be ashamed to remain a member of our party\nwhich -will be completely dishonored.\" _'\"\u2022.-\nFLEW INTO RAGK\nj Stalin, flew into a rage. He\nscreamed at Voroshilov: \"It is I\nwho will decide when you no\nlonger have the right to keep\nyour membership card.\"\nThen Stalin fell backward to the\nfloor. Blood rushing to his face\nand his eyes turned up. His arms\nand legs stiffened.\nBeria danced around the body,\nlaughing and crying \"we are\nfree,\" but when Stalin's daughter,\nSvetlana, came in the room and\nembraced tha body, he fell on his\nknees and asked forgiveness.\nStalin's death was announced\nMarch 5, 1953.\ndied at sea. Public health officers\nin Honolulu said she suffered from\ndiabetes but death possibly was\ndue to complications brought on\nby Influenza.\nMeanwhile, in Tokyo, Japan's\nministry of public health said 75,-\n000 students in 1200 schools, including kindergartens, have been\nstricken in the epidemic influenza\nsweeping parts of Asia. The ministry has closed 190 schools and\nordered partial closing of 80 others.\nOf Japan's^ 46 prefectures 32 have\nbeen hit by the epidemip, including\nTokyo and Hokkaido.\nStassen to Fly\nHome for Weekend\nLONDON (AP) - Harold Stassen, U.S. representative on the\nUnited Nations disarmament sub\ncommittee, will fly home this\nweekend for consultations in\nWashington.\nStassen probably will return to\nLondon Monday. He is expected\nto start outlining, a U.S. proposal\nfor a partial disarmament treaty\nsometime after the sub-committee resumes its meetings Tuesday.\nGINGER SEEKS DIVORCE\nHOLLYWOOD (AP) - Actress\nGinger Rogers, 45, Thursday filed\nsuit for divorce from her 30-year-\nold husband, actor Jacques Ber-\ngerac. The actress charged\ncruelty.\nSuggests Ways for Streamlining\nUniversities1 Campaign Funds\nOTTAWA  <CP)-^Ca?adlan uni-equally important;   multiple  re-\nversitles should streamline their,\nappeals for funds in an annual\njoint campaign' to achieve \"good,\nlong-term results,\" the National\nConference of Canadian Universities was told today.\nAndre Bachand, public relations\ndirector of the University of\nMontreal, advocated the following\nmeasures to delegates attending\nthe conference's 33rd annual meeting:\n1. Co-ordination of all solicitations is essential to avoid multiple\nappeals to the same donor.\n2. Timing of solicitation and approach through proper channels is\nquests damage the prestige of an\ninstitution and its future appeal .\n8. Tailored-to-measure solicitation, such as living endowment\nfrom alumni, associates and cor-\npoate associations; capital gifts\nfrom wealthy prospects, either\nduring lifetime or through a bequest.\n; Mr. Bachand named the Association -of Canadian Universities\nas a joint body, through which universities could \"appeal directly to\nthe public and not leave the task\nto other groups, however disinterested and unselfish they may\nbe.\"\nThe leader then.\n*T.*\n-the leader still\n_i\nII_i_.        , ,\nmmSaM\nwith the new GOLDEN ANNIVERSARY\nInternationals\ncelebrating fifty years of truck leadership\nIn 1907, the International Auto Wagon launched a tradition of\ntruck leadership unbroken to this day. NOW, with the Golden\nAnniversary Line, International leads again in functional truck\nstyling and dependable truck performance. From Pick-up to\nHighway Tractor, the new Internationals have more usable power\n. -. more earning power... and the most modern truck-styling of all!\nINTERNATIONAL HARVESTER COMPANY OF CANADA LIMITED.       305\u20149.h ST. NORTH, LETHBRIDGE, ALTA,\nCENTRAL TRUCK & EQUIPMENT\n702 FRONT ST.       . <        NELSON, B. C.\nPHONE 1400\nGODFREY'S MOTOR INN\nCRESTON, B. C.\nPhone 99\n\u2022V\nEAST KOOTENAY* EQUIPMENT\nCRANBROOK, B. C.\nPhone Juniper 6-2771\nROCK ISLAND SERVICE\nTRAIL, B. C.\nPhone 2844\nSPARWOOD ESSO SERVICE\nSPARWOOD, B. C.\nPhone 56-W Natal\n .593\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JUNE 8, 1957 \u2014 9\nSCANAVISION    P'esenu\nWRONG WAY WILBUR\nSta r ring '\nAL \"JUBILEE\" JACKSON     ,\n.  Produced and Directed by\nWALTER E. COWAN, DAILY NEWS AD. DEPT.\nPHOTOGRAPHY BY: IAN BROWN, PHOTOGRAPHER, DAILY NEWS\n.^R8$&!\u00a7$@\u00a7*!3.\nWilbur was dubious about the wafe. glass test. . . Al Freeman.\nFREEMAN FURNITURE CO. is proving the FLOTA-STEEL exclusive individual seat suspension . . . each seat independent, made possible by the\ncombination of double and triple sectionalized springs giving posture-rite\ndesign, individual comfort and support, and assuring no centre sag ever\n... all backed by a 20 year written contructional guarantee. FLOTA-STEEL\nis exclusive at FREEMAN'S.\n^\u00abE_^\"\n\u2022v; Wilbur is going to go fishing and wants an outboard motor (we\nhope he doesn't drown himself). MAC'S WELDING have a complete range\nof Scott Atwater motors from the 3i h.p. model right up to the 40 h.p.\nmodel. Wilbur chose the small model (just as well he did). Scojt Atwater\nmotors have the exclusive Bail-A-Matic power bailer.\nWilbur ripped the upholstery of his chesterfield the last time he\nmoved, but he's catching on now . . . You.just can't put a chesterfield suite\nin a car and expect to move it right. This time he employed the. services\nof WEST TRANSFER CO. he was assured that his furniture would get the\ncareful handling and Wilbur would receive the courteous service he deserves.\nDo you really think those shoes suit you Wilbur. If you'll?ask\nMr. Jones of ANDREW'S were sure he'll show you something more dressy\nfor your type of business. Shoes such as HARTT or MURRAY-SELBY.\nR. ANDREW & CO., 579 Baker St., Phone 533 have been serving you since\n1902 in all types of Footwear\u2014Men's, Women?}, Children's.\nDon't do it Wilbur, you'll blow your head off. You have a nice\ngun there. MeLENNAN, MeFEELY AND PRIOR LTD. have a complete line\nof guns, fishing equipment, camping equipment as-well as all types of\nhardware. The staff at Me & Me will also show you the proper way to load\na gun (outside).\nThat's right Wilbur you're going to need insurance if that's the\nway you handle a gun. ROBERTSON, HILUARD, CATTELL REALTY CO.,\nLTD. have a special policy (just suited for you). Trip accident insurance, it\ncan be taken out for 3 days or on an annual basis. The premiums are very\nreasonable. For insurance of all kinds, see ROBERTSON, MILLIARD, CAT-\nTELL REALTY CO., LTD. or Phone 1912\u2014\"It's the thing to do.\"\n. Wilbur, that tire won't fit your car, it's too big. Ask Mr. Russell\nhe'll tell you the right size for your car. ANDY'S TIRE SERVICE \u00abarry a\ncomplete line of Goodyear tires and have a special on this week on 6:70x15.\nANDY'S TIRE SERVICE also have a.plant for vulcanizing and retreading.\nWmW&lMXmm\n..... g\n911\n____jM\u00ab^' sis\n_W!SKtaiMIS8M\nmmm;        . 11\n''' \u25a0\u25a0:\u25a0\u25a0>\u25a0\u25a0                     w:\n'\u25a0'   '                           \u25a0    \u00a7:\n' ^\nr Ift\npf '\niR T i fvifJ \u00ab *\nI\nStilMU  :.\nl^V.\" W-~\u00ab$iJI&m\n111____!    8__&v':.    .\nMb                                          ''jyT^JB\n1         mm;.\n}:        -    |   |11\nWilbur moved to Nelson only a short while ago and found to his\ndelight the KOOTENAY VALLEY CO-OP milk producers supply the best milk\n' he'd ever tasted. He immediately despatched to the KOOTENAY VALLEY\nCO-OP,DAIRY to see- for himself exactly how the milk is being processed,\nfresh, rich, cool and heady for delivery. Wilbur is pictured here having a drink\nas it came out of the stainless steel bottling machine.\nRelaxing after a hard days shopping is just what Wilbur needs . . .\n(you can take off your hat now Wilbur). THE CAMEO CAFE is a perfect spot\nfor coffee or a full course meal featuring as their specialty, Chinese cuisine\nwith or without chop sticks (you'd better use the conventional utensil Wilbur\nyou don't want to mess up that nice suit.)\n 10 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JUNE 8, 1957\nBetter Public Relations\nNeeded In Universities\nBy BILL BOSS\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA (CP) - A Montreal\npublic relations expert told Canadian university heads Friday\nthey've forgotten that their institutions are supposed to be citadels\nof higher education. \u00bb\nSmyll wonder, said Leonard L.\nKnott, past president of the Capa-\ndian- Public Relations Society,\nthat universities are not understood by the public.\nHe challenged his listeners at\nthe annual meeting of the National Conference of Canadian\nUniversities to abandon the \"ivy\ncurtain,\" decide where they stand\nand then, with help of the best\npublic relations advice available,\nlet the public know about it.\nDELUDED BY INDUSTRY\nThe universities, said Mr.\nKnott, have been deluded by industry and commerce into abandoning their rightful field\u2014learning\u2014to become the handmaidens\nLike having\nan extra\nhired hand!\nmnma\nlightweight U\nBring on your, tough cutting jobs! Lightweight RA\nchain saw cuts timber, firewood, fenceposts \u2014 good ,\nfor pruning trees and fix.\ning farm buildings! Let us\ngive you an on-the-spot\ndemonstration!\nARROW PARK GARAGE\nArrow Park, B.C., Phone 2-N\nArrow Park, B.C.    .\nPHONE 2-N\nterms available\nLi-H.\nv\n\u25a0 MD-STDIAL\nEHCIIIUnillG\nUMItEB\nVAHCOWU.UXm\nof machines and commercial statistics. And by neglecting' public\nrelations universities had \"merely\nsought through publicity .to win\npublic sympathy and financial\nhelp for a situation which\nshouldn't-even exist.\"'\n\"Let us not confuse the training,\nof these technical specialists with\nhigher education. Let our universities remain the centres of truth\nand freedom of thought and ex\nperirnentation and ideas.\"\nDOING ALL RIGHT\nThe universities replied through\nJ. Alex Edmison, assistant princi\npal at Queen's University, Kingston, Ont., in effect that they feel\nthey are doing all right the way\nthings are. ,\n\"Perhaps never before in Canada has the man in the street had\nmore understanding of our needs\nand of our problems, present and\nfuture.\"\nA campaign of public speaking\nby university heads and the im-\npact of work by the Canadian\nChamber of Commerce and various royal commissions concerned\nwith Canada's cultural and economic problems had \"created much\nformidable propaganda on behalf\nof all our universities.\"\nEASILY SHATTERED\nBut Mr. Edmison added that all\nthis good public relations work\ncan be shattered by a few students , deciding \"to imitate\nHollywood actor by shaving their\nheads or perhaps some others\nstart a' goldfish-eating contest.'\nThe exchange- of views came\nduring a symposium conducted by\nthe NCCU, which opened its annual meeting as part of the\ncurrent Conference of Learned Societies at the University of Ottawa.\nDr. G. Edward Hall, NCCU president and head of the University\nof Western Ontario, said the ad\nvent of the Canada Council means\nthe NCCU will play \"an increas\ningly significant role\" in advising\non. scholarships, awards and fel\niowships abroad. It had reorganized itself to meet the task and\nhad set up a headquarters in Ottawa.\nEfficiency Award\nTo HMCS Chippawa\nHAMILTON, Ont. (CP)-Rear-\nAdmiral K. Fi Adams announced\nThursday that HMCS Chippawa,\nthe Royal Canadian Navy establishment at Winipeg, has won the\ninter-divisional efficiency trophy\nfor the second successive year.\nLast year Chippawa held the\ntrophy jointly with HMCS York,\nToronto.\nThe Winnipeg station is the only\nestablishment to win the trophy\ntwice in the four years it has\nbeen offered for competition.\nClassified Ada Get Result.\nTRANSPORTATION\nTO THE POLLS\nPHONE\nTRAIL   27SS ROSSLAND   6-3844\nNELSON   1895\nThis Advertisement Sponsored By\nWEST KOOTENAY LIBERAL ASSOCIATION\nCobra\nPLASTIC PIPE\nFOR FARM AND INDUSTRY\nI-    Easier handling,,,\n||    foster Installation.\n>\nSAVES TIME & MONEY.\nLASTS LONGER!\nCOBRA PLASTIC PIPE, mado from specially com. .uncle. Polyethylene, Ii easily adaptable to any piping requirement on the\nfarm or in industry, particularly where Ion(| lengtht of pipe must\nbe laid over rough ground. Quickly installed, COBRA PLASTIC\nPIPE can be joined readily to existing metallic systems and ii\navailable in all standard pips sites and shipping lengths.\nCOBRA PLASTIC PIPE Is guaranteed against rust, rot, and corrosion and will last indefinitely without deterioration.\nComplete specifications and data supplied an request.\nWrite today fat illustrated bulletin.\nGRANDVIEW INDUSTRIES LTD.\n3l85;i-|.ANDVI.W HWY. VANCOUVER 12,B.fc.     TEL.DEB727\nDivision  or  inniH  io.ll  .amadian  iactoiy  lift\nMcLennan, McFeely & Prior Co., Ltd.\n476 Baker St.      \u2022      Nelson, B.C.\nNelson Machinery Co., Ltd.\nP.O. Box 30      -      Nelson. B.C.\nANNUAL INSPECTION of 561 Squadron, Royal\nCanadian Air Cadets, was occasion for presentation to\nbest Nelson cadet of the year, Donn Livingstone of 616\nThird Street. Cpl. Livingstone is shown receiving the\nBank of Montreal Trophy from bank manager William\nForsyth. At right is R. A Jack, chairman of squadron\nsponsoring committee.\n\u2022 NELSON CADETS were commended by inspecting\nofficer Wing Commander J. V. Watts, youngest wing\ncommander in Canada. Above, cadets go through \"drill\nexercises. On reviewing stand are Flight-Lieut. H. E.\nCarting, Air Cadet liaison officer, and W\/C Watts.\n\u2014Daily News photos.\nNWJ Councillor\nTakes Aim At\nPublic Works'\nBy CAROLYN WILLETT\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nFROBISHER BAY, N.W.T. (CP)\nJohn Parker, elected, member of\nthe Northwest Territories council,\nsays the public works department\nis \"completely inept\" in Building\nin the Northwest Territories.\nHe told the N.W.T. council\nmeeting here Wednesday that the\ndepartment is slow completing\nprojects and1 runs into unnecessary expenditures. .\n\"I don't think we could be in\nworse hands,\" he said.\nMr. Parker, member for Mackenzie North, was supported by\nanother elected council member,\nJ. W. Goodal, member for Mackenzie River.\nSCHOOL NOT BUILT\nMr. Goodall said that last year\n[he Northwest Territories council\nallocated funds toward building a\nschool at Fort Simpson but the\nschool construction is running a\nyear behind.\nMr. Parker suggested the council establish its own public works\ndepartment at Fort Smith and\noffer good salaries to attract competent personnel.\nC. M. Drury, former deputy defence minister who now is president and general manager of a\ntransport company at Montreal,\nsaid public works is faced with the\ndifficulty of finding competent\npersonnel\n\"We might find ourselves transferring incompetents from one\npublic service to another,\" Mr.\nDrury said. Mr. Drury is one of\nfive appointed members of the\ncouncil. There are four elected\nmembers.\nSPECIAL PROBLEMS\nCommissioner -Gordon Robertson said there are difficulties adjusting to northern construction.\nIn a quickly developing country\n\"not only the north but everywhere in Canada there is too\nmuch to be done and too few to\ndo it.\"\nMr.. Parker said he believes\nthat incompetent public service is\nworse in Ottawa or Edmonton\nthan in Fort Smith where the\nknow .-.omething about the territories.\nHowever, he later suggested the\nfederal public works department\nestablish a northern construction\ndistrict which could be treated as\nan area with special construction\nproblems\nSupporting   Mr.   Parker's   sug-\nJodoin Tells ILO How A-Energy,\nAutomation Can Benefit Workers\nGENEVA (AP)-Claude Jodoin,\npresident of the Canadian Labor\nCongress, said Friday the utmost\nmust be done to protect the legitimate interest of workers who will\nbe affected by automation and the\nuse of atomic energy.\nHe opened the general debate\nof the International Labor. Organization conference and said he\nwas \"fascinated by the almost\nmagic-like aspects of \u25a0 automation\nand the use of atomic energy for\npeaceful purposes.\"\n\"We fully share the hopes of\nmankind for its beneficial potentialities.\"\nHowever, he warned that protection is needed for \"those wage\nearners who will be the first to\nbe affected by this newly developing trend.\" '\nCOMBAT IT\nHe advised affiliated organizations to meet the challenge of\nautomation this way:\n\"Press for higher wages, for a\nshorter work week, for longer\nvacations and more statutory holidays,  demand  better  pension\nRoad Meeting\nPlanned for\nGerrard June 23\nA meeting of Chambers of Commerce to discuss the possibility of\nhaving a \"ferryless route between\nRevelstoke and Balfour\" is planned\nfor June 23 at Gerrard.\nJohn Learmonth, chairman of\nthe roads and bridges committee,\nis contacting the Revelstoke: and\nArrow Lake Chambers of Commerce to request they have representatives! attend the meeting.\nChambers and boards of trade in\nthe West Kootenay Interested in\nthe promotion of such a \"ferryless\nroute\" \"are being asked to attend.\nMembers will take their own\nbasket lunches, with coffee to be\nsupplied by the Lardeau Chamber.\ngestion for a special district, the\ncouncil also expressed its willingness, to spend council money to\nfind an acceptable solution, to the\n.problems of northern building.\nThe council also passed a bill\ndesignating the mountain avens\nas the N W.T. floral emblem. The\nmountain avens Is a creamy-whit.\nroc. plant native to the territories.\nREAD  THE CLASSIFIED DAILY\nplans, higher unemployment insurance benefits, higher old-age\nsecurity and family allowance\npayments, the guaranteed annual\nwage, request more and better\nprofessional and technological education and the training and re\ntraining of tne existing labor\nforce.\n\"Only by pursuing these policies can we ensure that automation and atomic energy for peaceful purposes will benefit the populations of the world.\"\niedioneering al Highest Pitch\nAi Day of Decision Draws Nearer\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nA stir of expectancy rises. The\nduelling of election gladiators has\nrisen to its fiercest pitch. The end\nis just four days off.\nWith the day of decision foremost in their minds, Prime Minister St. Laurent and John Diefenbaker clanged swords at close\nrange in Ontario Thursday. They\ncrossed paths twice. Although\nthey did not meet, each knew\nafterwards that the other had\nbeen there.\nBut the activity was purposeful\nin all corners of the campaign\narena. CCF Leader M. J. Coldwell\nand Social Credit Leader Solon\nLow fenced in their own constituencies. Cabinet ministers, interested premiers and others also\nbusied themselves in closing battle.\nPOWER WASTE\nMr. Coldwell defined his proposed conservation authority as a\n\"vast expansion\" of the federal\nPrairie Farm Rehabilitation Administration. Covering all provinces, it would assess potentialities of interprovincial rivers and\nensure that power, irrigation\nwater supplies and recreational\nfacilities would be co-ordinated.\n\u25a0 It was a tragedy for Canada,\nthat great rivers like the Columbia and South Saskatchewan\nshould go unharnessed \"while we\nrecklessly use up the sources of\npower like oil and gas that cannot be replaced once they are\ngone.\"\nIh a recorded radio speech, Mr.\nColdwell said that while the Liberals and Conservatives pretend\nto fight each other \"they have in\neffect entered into a Conspiracy to\nco-operate against the CCF\" by\ntelling voters if they can't vote\nfor one of the. old -line parties,\nthey should vote for the other.\nREMOVE CREDIT CURBS\nIn other campaign thrusts:\nGeorge Hees, former president\nof  the  National   PC  Association\nseeking re \u2022 election in Toronto\nMA Meeting Hears Discussion\nFor and Against Money Control\nBy FORBES RHUDE\nCanadian   Preso  Business  Editor\nTORONTO (CP)-Sharply differing views concerning inflation and\nijvoney controls were expressed at\nThursday's sessions of the annual\nmeeting of the Canadian Manufacturers' Association.\nA. H. Lemmon, vice \u2022 president\nand treasurer of Canada Life Assurance Company, said:\n\"There is no doubt that a period of mild inflation produces a\nbusiness atmosphere 'that is very\nstimulating. The question is often\nasked , therefore, 'why can't we\nhave\" a perpetual inflation of the\nmild variety.\" The difficulty lies\njust there\u2014in keeping it mild.\n\"Those who benefit most from\ninflation resist violently when any\nauthority trjes to slow down the\nrate. Also, once people are convinced that a rising level is inevitable, it beomes next to impossible to control.\nSTABLE ATMOSPHERE\n\"Our free enterprise system\nof economic organization requires\nabove all a stable political atmos-\nhere and confidence in the long-\nterm stability of currency.\n\"Only in such a climate, can\nlong-term plans for development\nbe made and carried to completion, and savings generated to\nfinance the immense capital undertakings required.\"\nIra G. Needles, president of B.\nF. Goodrich Canada Ltd., of Kitchener, Ont., said, on the other\nhand:\n\"Canada can still turn hack\nfrom monetary controls and consumer-credit barriers, but to continue our present policies can create the recession we are told we\nmust try to avoid.\n\"Interest rates have skyrocketed\nto the point where thousands ofn\nfringe borrowers'have been swept\nout of the market. Municipalities\nhave been caught in the squeeze.\nHousing has been particularly\nhard hit.\nCRUEL WEAPON\n\"Tight-money policy has been a\nblunt and cruel weapon. It has\nmade its greatest inroads on the\nsmaller dealer or operator, often\ndoing irreparable harm.\n\"Larger companies have been\nforced to take a hard, cold look\nat expansion plans. The result is\na stifling of capital expenditure.\nShould' we not consider whether\nthis cutting back or holding back\not expansion is seriously hurting\nour economy for a long time to\ncome?\"\nThe high import of'capital, Mr.\nNeedles said, is holding from public view an alarming situation.\n\"I wish,\" he added, \"the public\ncould fully realize that we are operating in a fool's paradise of importations.\nGraham Says\nBroadview, said in a radio broadcast the Conservatives; if elected,\nwill remove credit restrictions.\nAlso on radio, Fisheries Min\nister Sinclair said Canadians still\nremember the last Conservative\nfederal government of the depression years too well to change from\nthe Liberals now.\nOntario CCF Leader MacDonald told a Toronto meeting the\nConservatives' old age pension\nrecord \"is the sorriest of all parties.\" They had opposed the pension when the Liberals introduced\nthem in 1927 under pressure from\nthe late J. S. Woodsworth, first\nCFF party leader.\nConservative Donald Fleming,\nToronto Eglinton, said in a radio\nspeech the issue of whether Canada wants to return to a free Parliament \"transcends all others\"\nin this election campaign.\nTied lo Habit\nNEW YORK (AP)-Eyangelist\nBilly Graham says many modern\nAmericans have gradually sunk\nin sin until their lives are devoid\nof spiritual vitality.\nHe told a crowd of 18,0Q0 in\nMadison Square-Garden Thursday\nnight: \"Round and round they go.\nthe same. old routine, the same\nold grind. Life has lost its anticipation, its' meaning, its thrill,\nLife has become a binding,\nempty, monotonous round . .\n\"I'd like to take you and shake\nyou! I know a cure\u2014Christ! There\nhave never been any bonds or\nhabits that Christ couldn't cure.\nA total of 569 persons responded\nto Graham's plea to \"accept\nChrist.\" So far, 13,320 persons\nhave taken this step.\nAttendance at the crusade,\nits fourth week, has totalled 410,-\n000. The drive has more than\nfive weeks to go.\nGraham said that \"15 years\nago you rarely saw anything in\nnewspapers about religion.\" But\nnow news media were carrying\nmore and more about the gospel\nand religion, and readers ought to\nappreciate it.\n\"The export deficit will fall on\nour heads like a portcullis on th*\nclays   when   capital   imports   no\nlonger cushion our deplorable excess of imports.\n\"We\" should, right now, be bol--\nstering   Canadian   production   to\navoid this damaging impact on\nour economic growth.\n\"The removal of any danger ol\ninflation\u2014real or imaginary \u2014 If\nthe simple process of increasing\nproduction. In many branches of\nIndustry and business, production\nhas faltered and slowed down to l\ncasual walk as a result of the tight-\nmoney -policy.\"\nMr. Needles said that while all\nthe hue-and-cry about credit purchasing was going on, Canadian!\nwere also piling up savings.\n\"We do not heed to worry about\nIhe average Canadian's ability to\nhandle his own finances,\" he said.\nTHIS IS\nBILL\nMcLOUGHLIN'\nBILL McLOUGHLIN\nBorn in Toronto In 1929, Bill\ncame to the West Kootenay in\n1951 to become Sports Editor for\nthe Trail Daily Times.\nIn 1953 he joined the staff of\nRadio Station CJAT as Sport.\nDirector and. Assistant to tho\nNews Director. The following\nyear he was appointed News\nDirector for the station.\nHe received his education in\nToronto completing his studies at\nSt. Michael's College in 1950.\nWhile at St. Mike's he served as\nPublic Relations Director for\ntheir Hockey Club, and prior to\ngraduation served for two years\nas publisher and editor of a\nweekly newspaper in Toronto.\nSince coming to the district\nhis down-to-earth work has produced excellent results particularly with young people in the\nfields of education, sport, and\nyouth organizations. Bill is Past-\nPresident of the Trail Junior-\nBaseball Association, President\nof the West Kootenay Baseball\nAssociation, and for two years\nserved as manager of the Trail\nJuvenile Rep Hockey Club. He\nis also executive member of the\nTrail Minor1 Hockey Association\nand the Trail Basketball Association. In addition, he serves as-\none of the adult advisors of tha\nTrail Teen-Town organization.\nIn other community fields,\nBill is a member of the Counselling Committee of the Trail, and\nDistrict Hungarian _ lacement\nCommittee; an active member\nof the Trail Branch of the Canadian Mental Health Association;\nhas served* in executive capacities for the Trail Liberal\nAssociation; and takes a prominent part in church activities.\nIn 1954 Bill travelled to Ke-\n'mano and Kitimat as guest of\nthe Aluminum Company of Canada. He served as Public Relations representative during the\nDuke of Edinburgh's visit to the\narea. He was chosen as, the\nNewscaster to represent the Interior B.C. Radio Stations. The\nfollowing year,\" 1955, he was\nselected as one of the B.C. Radio\nNews directors travelling to,\nArnprior, Ontario to study and\nreport on Canada's Civil Defence\norganization.\nIn the spring of this year,\nLiberty Magazine presented a\nfeature article in recognition of\nBill's outstanding contribution to\nthe Canadian sports scene.\nWEST KOOTENAY\nLIBERAL  ASSOCIATION\nAdvt.\nLIBERAL CAVALCADE\nHITS NELSON TODAY\n\u201e X If \u00abML\nSee YOUR  LIBERAL  CANDIDATE\nin Kootenay West\nBILL McLOUGHLIN\nThis Advertisement Sponsored by\nWEST KOOTENAY LIBERAL ASSOCIATION\n NELSON DAILY NEWy SATURDAY, JUNE 8,1957 \u2014 11\nPSSillili\nlliliiir\n\u25a0 Wm\nIf V*\nBi\t\nKtli__*-\n\u25a0111\nniiiw\niiiir:;;\nill!\nSiiilt\niii^SH\ni;;lllf.||ilili\n!'\u25a0\u25a0\nSlill\nW$$M$\nMai\nliiil\nps*\n. tt     i\n'Smwm$mimwmmmsmm^^\niiiiii\n,,-::a,--...,.,.:-,.,,::^,,1,,._:^,.::I:,I.\u2122J\u00ab||i||i\nllaiSIIISPiilB\n'Pp.;\nIili.ll\n\u25a0\u25a011\n.*\u00abffc T\niiiiitisiii\ni\niHHIi'\nswfm\ni_\u00abfl^fel\u00bbfi_.;i_\u00bb\u2122B;\n3\u00ab__.p.. l\u00abW_*\u00ab-\u00ab:..\n:!=:\u00bb Si!KifiS S_Sis:;:;58i:'___S_m__gii_\nS\u00bb_i03__|i_,iS\"_i_i.\ns_ssp__M;as_s?^__si._\n-    .\nHP\nlIlllBllllllllllSli\n*\u25a0;, ._t*.\u00abSpS;\u00a7|\nSS..     _?._   .  ,_!__p._\nlailiilliSiP:\nv,_\n\u00bbil.|i\u00abpp*iiiiwi\n\u00ab <\u00bb__\u2022<\u2022' - <_filH\nii\u00abii!iS\nlw_\nII\nilllliilliiffl\n\u00bb_\u00bbli\u00bbl\u00ab\u00bb||l||\n.-in\n'i:i3llilllilll\u00ab\n>mmmmm:MmW:.\n_*s\u00ab:.;s.&'# .._.*_*\n?i%illl\u00abi|iipp|\n\"fli.\nilllSllllilllllli\n\u00ab\u00abSlii_ili\u00bb\u00abPi .:\n\u00abai_\u00bbSi__i*s^\u00bb\nFrom Newfoundland to British Columbia, Canada stands united... prosperous at home, respected in world affairs. Let's\nnot gamble <_ith what we have and cherish., .our unify, security, freedom. Face the big issues. Re-elect a government\nwhich assures prosperity at home and actively works for peace in the world.\n^\u25a0\u00a3.;_%i\nB.C. (LIBERAL ASSOCIATION\n\u25a0 i...r'i.._...i_rw!B_w_'  \u25a0   ii.ii t'lji'-'iii. im \"\"    ,'       \u25a0   .;..    ' \"\"\n_\u00a3\u2022\n 12 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JUNE 8,1W\n7A_-\nSHORT\nCIRCUIT\nBy JOHN SHORT\nSpufdL \u00a3ditot\nthe trooa.\nAnd If he hook, or slices the ball\ntoo often, he gets angry with himself, which takes some of the heat\noff his wife or his boss. Whenever\nhe reaches that stage, he forgets\nabout hitting the ball and starts\nthrowing his clubs.\n\u2022  \u2022 '\u2022\nIf the clubs are new and expansive and therefore worthy of lov-\n\u25a0 ing care, he doesn't throw them,\nhe merely sinks Into an agony of\nself-recrlminatlon\u2014usually In connection with a putter that refuses\nto hit the ball where he wants lt\nto go\u2014and begins slowly and thoroughly to 'pound the club-head\nagainst the turf.\nAfter the turf has' been completely mangled and the golfer's\nanger has subdued to a dull roaring inside his head, his eyes have\nusually returned to their accustomed place In their sockets. By then,\nhe is ready t\" hit another shot.\n\u2022bin*, BawtnlH, Loo**.\ntuul Cont._-.-__'\nEquipment\nATIONAL\nACHINERY\nI Limited\nimm._7.Ef\nFacts are not available to verify this opinion, but It\nappears this season Is the most successful In many years\nfor Nelson Golf and Country Club.\nGolfers have this Summer been found behind every\ntree Imaginable. Several members of Nelson Maple Leafs\nhave taken up the game, many one-time devotees have\nreturned after absences of varying lengths, and newcomers\nwith little or no athletic background or inclination have\ndecided they want to spend as much time'as possible ganging up on a little old golf ball that can't, hit back.\nGolf is a wonderful game. A man gets angry with\nhis wife, sore at his boss or overwhelmed by a yen to\nblow off steam, what he 'does is scoot up to the golf links,\ndrop a golf ball onto a tee, stick the tee into the ground\nand take off for who-knows-where in search of the ball he\nhas  sliced\u2014or hooked\u2014into\nBut before he takes his shot,\nalerts every muscle In his body,\ninstructing them as follows: \"head\ndown, feet steady, legs firm, wrists\ncocked.\" He swings his posterior\none way, his club-head the other,\nand his muscles promptly do whatever they please.\n* *\nHis anger returns, If he is an\naverage golfer. Above-average 'lifers either don't make bad A_s\nor they make them when the gallery's attention is directed elsewhere. And lt helps if his cad:.\/\nhas a larcenous heart, for then\nthe bag-toter can be imposed u>on\n\u2014by intelligent use of his feet \u2014\nto direct the ball toward the cup.\nAnd away from the rough\nPutting, according to most golfers, Is- the worst part. After the\nball has been hacked, shoved,\nmauled, chipped and clobbered\nuntil lt rests on the green, the\nsmallest club tn the bag appears\nmysteriously In the goiter's hand\nand makes him wish he had left\nit there.\n\"Like a pendulum,\" the book advocates as the most widely-accepted means of putting. One wonders\nat this stage why tha book didn't\nsuggest putting \"like a golfer.\"\n,'\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u2022\nBut the ball finally is stroked.\nIt rolls up and down in the general direction ot the cup until lt\nstops\u2014either in or too far away.\nMissing the second putt on one\nSeattle Owner\nSays Rainiers\nMay Fold Up\nSEATTLE (AP) - Owner Emil\nSick .of Status Rainier, aaid Friday there ii a \"strong probability\"\nthat \"we will not field a team\nnext 'year\" In the Pacific Coast\nBaseball League.\nIn an Interview with George N.\nMeyers, Sports Editor of The\nTimes, Sick first said the Rainiers\nwithdrawal ia a \"possibility,\" then\nchanged it to \"strong probability.\"\nHo was assuming that tha\nBrooklyn Dodgers and New York\nGiants will move their National\nLeague franchise to California.\n\"It will disrupt the Paciflo\nCoast League,\" said Sick. \"Even\nif they didn't move Immediately,\nwe would find ourselves playing\nat the mercy of tha capricious Intentions of Walter O'Malley.\"     ,\nSick has owned the Rainiers for\n19 years. In that time the club has\nbeen consistently among the league\nleaders In attendance. He said\nSeattle was the most valuable\nfranchise in the circuit and valued\nlt at $750,000, Including players\nand park property.\niiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii'\nNBA Suspends Archie\nGRAND RAPIDS, Mich. (AP)-The National Boxing\nAssociation suspended light-heavyweight champion\nArchie Moore for not fighting challenger Tony Anthony\nat Detroit in a title defence.*'\nNBA President Floyd Stevens said the BunpGn_ion\nautomatically followed an association mandate which\nordered Moore to meet Anthony,\n\"We had told Moore if he didn't fight Anthony we\nwould suspend him and If he didn't defend hie- title\nwithin 30 days after June 7, we would vacate the title,\"\nStevens said,\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nVeteran Canucks       Top WIFU Punter\nRenins Roughies\nI priport-T rainer\nSigned by Ottawa\nOTTAWA (CP) - Ottawa Rough\nRiders of the Big Four Football\nUnion Friday announced signing\nof a U. S. import and the hiring\not a trainer,\nThe Import is Mike Flynn, six-\nfoot, 200-pound guard from Villa-\nnova University.\nThe trainer Is Richard Mark-\nson, 29, Sacramento, Calif., State\nCollege graduate in physical ther'\nspy-\nBecause we expect trucks to take\nrough Iroalmont,.-M .pare, nocf fort\nto make them as rugged as possible,\nThe full-ironed truck with heavy duty\nball  bearing  wheels illustrated  It\nmade'-of No. 1 grade ash or oak,\nvarnished, with iron parts painted,\nmoss green. Available from any of\nthe   16  Fairbanb-Morso branches\nacross Canada.\ntn Vancouver: 798 Beatty St.\nPh: TA-0211\n\u2014_\u25a0__\u25a0 i\u2014\u25a0 imiwii \u00bb__-_i_\u00bb_iii._i_ii man\nHOME OWNERS \u2022 SPORTSMEN \u2022 CAMPERS\nHUNTERS  \u25a0 FARMERS  \u2022 CONTRACTORS \u2014\nAND ALL WHO\nCUT FIREWOOD . CLEAR LOTS\nPRUNE TREES \u2022 MAKE FENCES\nBUILD CABINS or HOUSES\nor 101 OTHER CUTTING JOBS\nYOU CANT AFFORD\n. NOT 10 OWN\nA PROFESSIONAL CHAIN SAW\nNOW YOU CAN BUY\nTHE FAMOUS\nCHAIN\nMODEL  HC\nAT ONLY\n$\nTRY ONI TODAY 4 PROVE FOR YOURSELF \u2022 AT-\nSinnerud Truck & Tractor\n191 Baker St.       Phone 1030     Nelson, B. C.\ngreen is a dastardly sin. The trick\nis apparently to make as many bad\nshots as you like and then, with\none tried and true swing of your\ntrusty putter, make your partners\nand opponents envious by sinking\na 40-footer,\nIf you do that at least once each\nround, you can convince yourself\nIt isn't as Impossible as lt seems,\nthis game of golf. Maybe you're\nimproving after all.\nOnce you've convinced yourself\nof that, you don't need to be angry\nat the wife or sora at tha boss.\nAll you need is a naw set of clubs\nand you'll ba back tomorrow.\nForal\nBack With Esks\n\u25a0EDMONTON (CP) - Three Canadians, including an Eskimo \"original,\" have signed with Edmonton's Grey Cup football champions for tha 1957 season, the\nWestern Interprovincial Football\nUnion club announced Friday.\nThey are tackle Mike Volcan,\nhalfback Don Simon and lineman\nBUI Briggs. \u25a0\nSimon, 28 - year \u25a0 old Edmonton\nnative Who came up through high\nschool and junior ranks here, occupies a unique spot In Eskimo\naffairs. He Is the sola member of\nthe'1949- Eskimos, Edmonton's first\npost-Second World War team, still\nwith the club.\nVolcan, 26, a native of Hamilton, Is starting his third season.\nBriggs, 31-year-old veteran who\nserved for several years with Toronto Argonauts of the Big Four,\nhas signed for his eighth campaign with Edmonton.\nQueen's Filly\nures Classic\nREGINA (CP) - Larry Isbell,\ntop punter .In the Western Interprovincial Football Union last season, has signed a contract for his\nfourth season with Saskatchewan\nRoughriders, -team manager Dean\nGriffing announced.\nIsbell averaged 44.2 yards on\npunting last season after setting\na western conference record of\n46.3 yards in 1954. The former\nall-American quarterback, fourth\nholdover Import signed by Riders\nthis year, was named defensive\nback on the 1956 WIFU all-star\nFRIC CAPTURES\nCORONATION CUP\nEPSOM, England (AP) - Fric\nshot Into tha lead half a mile from\nthe finish and raced on strongly\nThursday to win the 1 _\u2022 mile Coronation Cup. for France.\nIt waa tha eighth' time since the.\nwar that French owners and'\ntrainers have won the race.\nFric, a five \u2022 year \u25a0 old brown\nhorsa by Vandale out of Frlpe,\nwon \u00a32542 for owner M. Calmann.\nFrio covered\" tha turf course In\n2:34.8 and was ridden by J. De-\nForge.\nEnglish-owned and trained Donald was l v_ lengths away tn second place with Queen Elizabeth's\nHigh Veldt another three lengths\naway in third. \u00bb\nPromoter Solomons\nAstute Bookie\nPays\nCaptu\nEPSOM, England (Reuters)\nQueen Elizabeth's filly Carrozza\nFriday won the Oaks, a classic of\nthe British turf season, in a photo\nfinish with Silken Glider.\nThird In the U-horaa field was\nRose Royale, a French filly owned\nby the Aga Khan. It was. tha\nQueen's first classic victory.\nLester Piggott, who piloted Cre\npello to victory in the derby Wednesday, waa up ton Carrozza.\nCarrozza went to the post' at\n100 to 8. Silken Glider at 20 to 1\nand Rose Royale 11 to 10.\nNorth Bay Club\nMay Leave NOHA\nNORTH BAY, Ont. (CP) - Manager Pete Palangio of North Bay\nTrappers of the Northern Ontario\nHockey Association said Thursday\nthe team may be shifted to Louisville, Ky., before the end of the\nmonth.\nHe said the move will take place\nunless satisfactory arrangements\ncan be made with the arena commission here for a- better financial\ndeal in 1957-58.\nPalangio said ha and Leo Gas\nparlnl of Sudbury, co-promoters of\nthe team, are ready to transfer to\nLouisville, which has a new arena\nseating 17,000 and Is Interested in\ngaining entry Into the International\nHockey League. He added that the\ndecision must be made by June\n15 so that Louisville officials can go\nahead with plans,\nLONDON (API - On June 5,\n1952, British fight promoter Jack\nSolomons bet 10 pounds ($28)\nagainst a bookmaker's 10,000\npounds ($28,000) that he would\nproduce a British world heavyweight boxing champion within\nfive years.\nSolomons paid the bookie the 10\npounds Thursday; The closest he\ncame to winning was when Don\nCockoll fought champion Rocky\nMarclano In San Francisco In 1955\nMarclanb stopped Cockell in nine\nrounds.\nTORONTO (CP) - Twelve horses\nwere named to start in Saturday's\n98th running of the Queen's Plate\nwhen nominations closed today for\nthe1 $25,000-added classic.\nAll are from Ontario stables except Midi Blue, 100 to 1 shot tn\nthe winter book owned by the As-\nsinlboine Stable, Winnipeg.\nCo-favorltes for the, lVi-miles\nrace\" are Lyford Cay, owned by E'.\nP. Taylor of Toronto, and Chopadette, owned by Mrs. Taylor They\nwill run as an entry. Other starters:\nAll's pride, owned by Wilf Farr\nWeston, Ont., and 2 to 1 favorite\nuntil this week; Lad Ator owned\nby M. J, Boylen, Toronto; Flying\nAtom from Bayfield Farm, Toronto; Holiday Ted, owned by Mrs\nJ. D. CulUngham, Toronto; Count\nTeddy, owned by Mrs. R. A. Dew,\nToronto; Senor Teddy, owned by\nCol. K, R. Marshall, Toronto; The\nSchreiber, owned by Blanche Armstrong,. Toronto; Henry B. Good,\nowned by E. C. Pasquale, Toronto;\nand Our Sirdar, owned by F. A,\nSherman of Hamilton.\nCanadian Champ\nOut of Racing\nTORONTO (CP) - Canadian\nChamp, honored Thursday night\nas the horse of the year In Canada In 1956, has been temporarily\nretired from racing,\nBill Beasley of Toronto owner\nof the horse which won the Queen's\nPlate last year, said Canadian\nChamp will not fill his engagement\nSaturday in the Highlander's Handicap at New Woodbine track hare.\nPHONE   1844  FOR  CLASSIFIED\nBritish Cricket\nLONDON (Reuters) - Cricket\nscores:\nDerbyshire 223 and 242. Middlesex 127 and 176. Derbyshire won\nby 163 runs. (Derbyshire 14,\npoints).\nWorcestershire 288 or 7 declared and 207 for 5 declared, Oxford University 188 and 129. Worcestershire won by 178 runs.\n' Northamptonshire 218 and 111\nSurrey 311 and 14 for no wicket,\nSurrey won by 10 wickets. Surrey\n14 points.\nNottinghamshire 250 and 239,\nSomerset 154 and 65 for 1. Draw,\n(Nottlhghamshlre four points).\n' MCC 340 for 8 declared and 188\nfor 5, Lancashire 365 for 6 declared. Draw.\nWest Indies 241 and 309 for 7\ndeclared, Gloucestershire 220 and\n1176. West Indies won by 154 runs.\nBASEBALL\nCHEWELAH, WASH.\nvs\nNELSON OUTLAWS\nSunday, June, 9\n1:30 and 4 p.m.\u2014Civic Grounds\nDoubleheader League Garnet\nOil Products Manufacturer Requires\nROUTE DISTRIBUTOR\nOur client needs man capable of- servicing already\nestablished retail outlets for nationally advertised,\nproduct. This Is a sound, secure, money making\nproposition for man with $f000 to invest In stock.\nInvestment Is fully secured. No selling required so\nwould Ideally suit man^presently contacting automotive trade.\nWrite details and available date In confidence tot\nTRIAD SERVICES LTD.\n2754 W. 4th. Ave.\nVancouver 8, B.C.\n. flOO__SS   REPORT  sr\nVGA\nLEAGUE LEADERS\nBy The Associated Press\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nAb R H Pet,\nMusial, St. Louie .... 177 25 64 .862\nHodges, Brooklyn ... i87 23 60 .359\nFondy, Pittsburgh .. 160 21 67 .358\nGroat, Pittsburgh .... 128 18 45 .852\nRobinson, Cincinnati 187 37 65.348\nRuns \u2014 Robinson and Aaron,\nMilwaukee, 37,\nRuns' batted in \u2014 Musial, 39.\nHits \u2014 Robinson and Schoendienst, New York, 65.\nDoubles \u2014 Musial, 16.\nTriples \u2014.Bruton, Milwaukee\nand Schoendienst and Mays, New\nYork, 4.\nHome runs \u2014 AarOn, 13.\nStolen bases \u2014 Maya, . New\nYork, it.   -\npitching \u2014 Acker, Cincinnati and\nSanford, Philadelphia, 6-1, ,857. .\nStrikeouts - Koufax, Brooklyn,,\n59.\nAMERICAN LttAGUE\nAb __\u2022_.__..\nWilliams, Boston .... 145 28 57 .393\nMantle, New York 152 41 56 .368\nFox, Chicago- 167 32 60 .359\nCerv, Kansas Citj; .102 11 36 .353\nBertoia,  Detroit  '     121 11 39 .322\nRuns \u2014 Mantle, 41.\nRuns batted in\u2014Sievers, Washington, 33.\nHits \u2014 Fox, Chicago, 60.\nDoubles \u2014 Plews, Washington,\n15. .\nTriples \u2014 Simpson, Kansas City,\n3.\nHome runs \u2014 Mantle, 13.\nStolen bases\u2014Landis, Chicago, 9.\nPitching \u2014 Trucks, Kansas City,\n.0, 1.000.\nStrikeouts\u2014Pierce, Chicago, 64.\nFights\nBy The Associated Press\nYoungstown, Ohio \u2014 Rocky Cas-\ntellani,. 159'\/., Cleveland, knocked\nout Lester Felton, 153_, Detroit\n3.\nFort William, Ont. - George\nChuvalo, 204, Toronto, knocked\nout Joe Olson, 164, Milwaukee, 4.\nTO SHARE COSTS\nFROfclSHfcft BAY, N.W.T. (CP)\n-The Northwest Territories council decided Thursday to share with\nthe federal government casta of\nhealth .ervi.e. and maintenance\nOf d_v_l.pi.i_iH road, in the Territories\nThe council approved recommendations oi an interdepartmental report on federal-territorial financial relations-basis of _. proposed new five-year financial\nagreement between the two governments\u2014which would add new\nexpenditures on health and roads\nof about $128,000 annually.\nThe federal government now\n(iaya all coats for health services\nand major road construction and\nmaintenance with the exception of\nlocal roads in the Territories.\nTGA pioneers research into\nnew electronic reservations system\nFaster service\nin the jet' age\nEvery year, more Canadians are taking to the air...\nin 1956, over twO'tnlllion passengers flew TCA. The\nplanned expansion of TCA services is to go on. With\nthe introduction of new fleets of DC-8 jetliners and\nprop-jet Vanguards in 1960 and 1961, TCA will\nbecome the flrat of the world's intercontinental airlines to operate ap all-turbine fleet.\nThe apeed Of air traffic in the jet age... the growing\nvolume of passengers.,. will call for a swiftly-moving\nreservations syatem, capable of keeping in step, So\nTCA is experimenting with totally new methods,\nmaking use of the modern miracle of electronics.\nReservations offices across the continent would be\nconnected directly with a giant electronic \"brain\"\n... completely automatic, able to plot every seat on\nevery flight months in advance, to give flight information and.make reservations,'.*! seconds.\nTCA is setting the pace in jet age'planning,.,\nenlisting the latest methods to bring you still better,\nfaster service.\non the ground ...as in the air\nTCA is planning to bring you still better service!\n\\ ' _i. of the world's great airlines \u00a3|  Uk\nTRANS CANADA AIR LINES ffcty\n_____\n ON PROBATION\nFOR ONE Yf AR\nCHICAGO (AP) -The U.S. Golf\nAssociation ruled Friday that national amateur champion Harvie\nWard had violated \"rules' of amateur status\" and placed him on\nprobation for one year.\nThe USGA's executive committee cross-examined Ward and then\nnotified him of the penalty which\nextends through May 6,1938.\nJoseph Dey, USGA executive director, announced that Ward had\naccepted unauthorized expenses\nfor participating in tournaments\ndating from the British amateur\nIn May 1952 through the Colonial\nopen at Fort Worth, Tex., last\nmonth.\nDey said Ward will apply for reinstatement immediately as an\namateur and will play In the U.S.,\nopen at Toledo, Ohio next week as\nan \"applicant for amateur, reinstatement.\"\nDey said Ward had told the committee he accepted expenses from\nthe automobile agency by which he\nis employed for various tournaments, including the USGA open\nand amateur championships and\nthe Canadian amateur championship.\nOutlaws Play\nTwice Sunday,\nSaturday Too\nHoping to improve their third-\nplace standing in the International\nBorder Baseball League, Nelson\nOutlaws oppose Cheweah at Civic\nRecreation Grounds Sunday In a\ndouble-header. The same clubs\nsplit a pair In Chewelah last-weekend, Outlaws winning the opener\n6-1 and bowing 3-2 in the nightcap.\nHurling chores Sunday will probably fall to Wendy Keller, Stan\nGrill and Win Storgaard. Grill this\nseason has been a pleasant surprise\nindeed. It was his fine pitching In\nlast week's opener that allowed\nOutlaws to split the double-header.\nOutlaws travel to Kimberley today for a pair of exhibition games.\nLefty Gould, Walt Avis and Blair\nOlson will probably handle this\npitching. Stellar rlghhander Les\nHufty 1s on the Injured list.\nFullmer Beats\nTiger Jones\nCHICAGO (AP) - Former middleweight champion Gene Fullmer\nalthough fighting in constant retreat, won a unanimous 10-round\ndecision over Ralph (Tiger) Jones\nat Chicago Stadium Friday night.\nThere were no knockdowns in\nthe televised fight but Jones went\ndown twice on slips .and Fullmer\nonce.\nReferee Joey White voted for\nFullmer 40 to 48, in the Illinois\n\"five-point must\" scoring system.\nJudge Howard Walsh saw it for\nFullmer, 48 to 43, and judge Frank\nClark voted 49 to 44.\nGilchrist's Service\nAlniworth, B, C.\nIMPERIAL GAS AND OILS\nATLAS TIRES\nOpen Sunday! 8a.m. to 10 p.m.\nOn Nelson .Casio Highway\nLATEST PROGRESS on-the development of Silver King Ski Club\nhill is shown in this photograph taken from the lower third of the hill.\nLumberworkers have cleared 'more than seven acres of bushland In\naddition to two acres cleared last year. White arrow shows the \"old\"\ncabin and lift to be erected this Summer. An additional 10 acres is\nexpected to be cleared before the first snow falls. Centre of picture\nshows 210-foot wide clearing which will be widened another 200 feet.\nTotal length of the-hill after the second year of development will be\napproximately 3000 feet, The club Is now engaged In an extensive\nfinance program calling on buiinijpsmen, service clubs and individuals\nfor support in this ve_ture..It hopes the Nelson Centennial Committee\nwill declare the aki hill development the centennial project for Nelson.\nThrough \"ski-lifters\", non-interest loans, it is hoped to realize $.5,000\nthis year to make this second step of development possible. About\n$4000 has been raised so far.\u2014Vogue photo.\nDodgers, Phillies Within Half-Game of NL Lead\nBy ED WILKS\nAssociated Press Staff Writer\nThree-hit pitching jobs by Brooklyn's Roger Craig and Philadelphia's 'Jack Sanford hustled the\nDodgers and Phillies within a half\ngame of first place Cincinnati in\nthe National League pennant race\nFriday night.\nIn the American, Chicago and\nNew York both we're knocked off\nfour-game winning streaks, leaving the White Sox five games\nahead of the second place Yankees.\nCraig beat the skidding Redlegs\n8-8 with his first complete game\nIn almost a year. Sanford, a\nrookie, won his seventh and gained\nhis second shutout with a 1-0 decision oyer the Chicago Cubs.\nBrooklyn now Is just three percentage points tiff of 'Cincinnati\n\u2014 while the third place Phillies\nare only eight points' back of the\nReds. j \u25a0\nBALTS WIN\nThe race tightened right down\nthe line. Fourth-place ,Milwaukee,\ntwo games back, beat Pittsburgh\n5-0; and St. Louis, '4_ back in\nfilth, defeated New York Giants\n5-8 In 11 Innings.\nIn the AL, Baltimore stopped\nthe White Sox 3-2 In 11 innings\nand the c( Detr.it Tigers rallied to\nrap the Yankees 6-8 before a Detroit crowd of 43,474\u2014largest In\neither league this season,\nThe  Tigers  jumped  Into  third\nLOW 15 DAY\nEXCURSION  FARMS\nen the\nPOLAR ROUTE\nEUROPE\nfrom Vancouver and return:\n$623.00\nFor extra savings,\nask your travel agent\nabout Canadian Pacific\nFamily Faresl\nSee year Trawl Agent or\nCanadian Pactjk\nAIRLINES\nHUME HOTEL, PHONE 204\n_IHSI     OP     \u00bbMI\n\"9\"l_   \u2022     G___\nplace, eight games behind as\nCleveland plunged to fourth with\nan 11-7 loss to last place Washington.\nIt was the fifth defeat In a row\nfor the Indians\u2014who haven't had\nsuch a long slump since September, 1953. Kansas City handed\nBoston's Red Sox a fourth consecutive defeat, 6-3.\nHome runs by Rube Walker and\nDon Zimmer bagged the Dodgers'\nfourth, In a row In a two-run\nfourth inning against loser Johnny\nKlippsteln as the Redlegs suffered\ntheir sixth defeat in their last 10\ngames. Craig, whose last complete\ngame was on July 26, 1956, when\nhe beat the Redlegs 6-2,. was\nclipped for two runs in the second\non a walk, Johnny Temple's double and a single by Bo15 Thurman.\nBut the big righthander, now 2-2,\ndidn't give up another hit until\nEd Bailey blasted a one-out homer\nin the ninth.\nCHICO CONNECTS\nSanford struck out 13 (the Cubs\nhave totalled 35 strikeouts in their\nlast three games) in a' duel with\nDave Hillman, who permitted only\nfour hits before being lifted for a\npinch-hitter. Turk Lown no-hit the\nPhils -in the ..eighth. The Phils won\nit in the fourth on Chico Fernandez' sacrifice fly with the bases\nloaded.\nWarren Spahn collected his\nsixth victory and second shutout\nby allowing only seven singles. Del\nCrandall smacked a two-run single\nin the second\u2014which Joe Adcock\nopened with the first of his two\ndoubles\u2014to beat Bob Purkey.\nA two-run homer by Del Ennis\nwon for the Cards and %Larry\nJa\u00abkson, who needed Lloyd Mer-\nritt's relief in the 11th to claim\nhis seventh victory. Hank Bauer's\n10th home run had given the\nGiants a 3-3 tie In the sixth.\nTito Francona's single drove in\nthe winning run for the OrloleB,\nwho had tied It two-all against\nloser Jack Harshman on an eighth\ninning double by Dick Williams.\nGeorge Zuverink was the winner in\nrelief.\nThe Tigers barrelled from behind with four runB after two were\nout. in the seventh. Frank Boiling's\ntwo-run single off Bob Grim, who\nrelieved Don Larsen, opened the\nscoring for a 4-3 lead. Jim Bunning\nlifted for a pinch-hltter In the rally, won his fifth with a nifty five-\nhit job  that included' 10 strike-\nsenior lEITHB\n8:00 p.m.\nTonight\nAdults 50c\nStudents and\nChildren 25c\nNelson Civic Centre\n* rossland redmen\n* nelson'kokanees\n\u25a0\nouts. Mickey Mantle homered for\nthe Yanks, a towering shot off the\nright field roof, and J. W. Porter\nslugged one for Detroit.\nWashington broke up a seven-all\ntie with a four-run eighth. The\nSenators clubbed 16 hits off Tribe\npitching, which has given' up 58\nruns In the five-game Nose Dive.\nHal Smith walloped a home run\nand two doubles, to pace the A's\nwho wrapped lt up with four runs\nIn the second against Willard Nixon. Wally Burnette won it, striking out seven and keeping Ted\nWilliams hltless In an eight-hitter.\nBASEBALL SCORES\nBy The Canadian Press\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nCincinnati  002 000 001\u20143 8 0\nBrooklyn    OH 200 llx-6 11   1\nKlippsteln, Acker (5), Freeman\n(7) and Bailey; Craig and Walker.\nL: Klippsteln. HRs: Brooklyn,\nWalker, Zimmer; Cincinnati, Bailey.\nChicago    000 000 000-0  8  2\nPhiladelphia .. 000 100 OOx-1  4   1\nHillman, Lown (8) and Neeman;\nSanford and Lopata. L: Hillman.\nMilwaukee .... 020 000 300\u20145 9 0\nPittsburgh   .... 000,000 000\u2014O   7   2\nSpahn and Crandall; Purkey,\nFace (6), Swanson (8), B. Smith\n(9) and Rand. L; Purkey, . \u2022 '\nSt. Louis -001.002 000 02-5 9 1\nNew York 002 001 000 00-3   7  2\nJackson, Merritt (11) and H.\nSmith; Barclay and Katt; Westrum (11). W: JacksOn. HRs; New\nYork, Sauer; St. Louis, Ennis.\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nWashington .. 031 OOi 240-11 16 1\nCleveland   .... 000 031 300- 7 10   2\nStobbs, Clevenger (7) and Fitzgerald, Courtney (7); Daley, Garcia (4), Torrtanek (8), McLish (8),\nPitula (9) and Hegan, Naragon\n(8). W; Clevenger; L; Tomanek.\nHRs: Washington, Boiling; Cleveland, Colavito (2).\nBaltimore 100 000 010 01\u20148 8 0\nChicago   .... 000 001 100 00-2 12   2\nCeccarelli, Zuverink (9) and Triandos: Harshman and Lollar. W:\nZuverink.\nNew York   100 002 000\u2014S  7  0\nDetroit   010 001 40x-_ 10   1\nLarsen, Grim (7) and Howard;\nBOnning, Lary (8) and House. W:\nBunning; L:  Larsen. HRs:  New\nYork, Mantle; Detroit, Porter.\nBoston    010 000 020-3   8   1\nFabulous Price Increases\nTo Big Four Footballers\niscn\nN-LSON bAILV NEWS, SATURDAY, .UN* 8, i<\u00bb57\u201413\nmiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiimiiiimiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nKOKANEES SEEK REVENGE\nAGAINST RED-HOT REDMEN\nBolstered by the return to action of several players\nwho were unable to make the trip to Rossland Tuesday\nnight when they were swamped 23-4, Nelson Kokanees\ntonight expect to give Rossland Redmen their toughest\nbattle of trje West Kootenay Lacrosse Association when\nthey meet at Civic Arena.\nKokanees were a badly beaten club Tuesday as\nthey absorbed their second defeat In three nights. But\ngoalie lack Duck, considered in view of .his limited experience to be one of Nelson's most pleasant surprises,\nwas injured in the fourth quarter and Redmen took the\nopportunity to rdm home eight goals without reply.\nKokanees made the trip with only 11 men, including five Juniors, and the hot pace set by the defending,\nchamps took its toll by the end of the game.\n\u25a0 11111 _i \u25a0 i ii i it 1111111111 \u25a0 1111 it \u25a0 11111 \u25a0 111 \u25a0 h \u25a0 i \u25a0 i \u25a0 r 11 j 11 ii 11111 \u25a0 111 \u25a0 11111 it 11111111111111 tt i fn\nHume School Children Cop\nElementary School Meet\nHume School Friday defeated\nthree rivals in the first of what\nrecreational .director Joe Johnson\nsaid will be a series of elementary\nschool track and\" field meets at\nCivic Recreation Grounds.\nScoring 146 points, 20 more than\nWarns Against\nUse of Pills\nTORONTO (CP) - The team\nphysician of Toronto Argonauts of\nthe Big Four Football Union said\nFriday he knew of players who\nwent Into \"crying jags\" and \"fits\nof depression\" after taking pep-up\npills last season.\nDr. Larry Eckert commented on\nthe pills shortly after Import quarterback Tom Dublinski was quoted\nas saying .certain members of the\nArgos took pills during the 1955\nseason. Dublinski said he once experimented with the compounds\nwhile playing for the National\nFootball League Detroit Lions but\nthe way they left him feeling convinced him that once was enough.\nCentral garnered to finish second, Hume moved In front early\nin the afternoon and stayed there\nwith little threat of being deposed. South Nelson picked up 81\npoints, and St. Joseph's, represented by the smallest competitive\ngroup, earned 41,\nAt least 200 children competed\nIn the affair, halted by rain with\nonly two events to go. The Grade\n6 boys' relay, and the tug-of-war\nwere postponed. A 900-poend limit\nwas Imposed with no limit to the\nnumber of members on each team.\nJohnson said he hoped the tug-of-\nwar could be held at a later date.\nAINSWORTH\nHOT SPRINGS\nOPEN\n10 A.M. TO 10 P.M.\nExcept Mondays\nClosed All Day\nDINING ROOM HOURS\n7 TO 9 AM.\nU TO 1 P.M.\n5 TO 7 P.M.\nOTTAWA (CP) - What price\nfootball players?\nJim McCaffrey, manager of Ottawa Rough Riders of the Big\nFour who has been associated with\nfootball since 1923, says the price\nlias gone up from nothing to an average of $8500 for imports and\n$4000 for homebrews.\nTogether with larger squads,\nlonger schedules and costlier operations, tt means a club such as\nOttawa picks up an annual tab of\nslightly more than $400,000.\n\"Any way you look at it, that's\na lot of money,\" he writes in the\nfirst edition, of the Rough Rider\nnews, the ..lub's new six-page\npublication. It is the first such\nfootball club handout In Eastern\nCanada.\nReferring to his early days in\nfootball McCaffrey described them\nas \"the good old days.\"\nPLAYED FOR FUN\n\"The players played for the fun\nand knocks, and believe me, that\nwas about all they got.\n\"Back in the 20'a, football was\nSUNDAY DRAWS\nFOR CHESSER CUP\nFollowing Is the draw for Sunday's Chesser Cup mixed doubles\ntennis tournament at Nelson Tennis Club: ,\n9 a.m. M. Major and K. Major\nvs. R. Kirby and J. Stringer; J.\ndeYoung and Mrs. J. deYoung vs.\nP. Fetterley and Mrs. J. Thorns; J.\nBagnall and Mrs. J. Bagnal vs R.\nThompson and Miss D, Fyfe.\n10 a.m. N. Rhodes and Miss R.\nRogers vs A. MOrecek and Miss\nThome; D. Craw and Miss J. Bat-\ntisella vs. E. Yerex and M. Whitmore; B. King and Mrs. J. Yerex\nvs. A Bacon and Mrs. C. Bacon.\nKansas City .. 140 ooo oix-s 12 0\nNixon, Porterfield (2),.Minarcin\n(7) and White, Daley (7); Burnette and Smith. L: Nixon. HR:\nKansas City, Smith.\nCln-olflcd Adi Got Result.\n_I r T it EI 111 11T111 II riTl I til 111 fill I I It I\nmcintyre wins third\ntitle in succession\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014Pete Mcintyre of Trail won an\neasy third-straight B.C. Seniors Golf championship Fri-\n'driy when he defeated Larry McCooey of Victoria, the\nsame man he faced In last year's final, 5 and 4.\nA brief rally begun by McCooey on the'11th fairway could not overcome Mclntyre's six-hole lead, after\n10 holes.\nIt was the third consecutive Grand Championship\n' Flight win for the 57-year-old Trail blazer. He had no\ntrouble as he defeated Archie Hazeldine of Vancouver\n5 and 4 in Thursday's semi-final, disposed of Pat Rogers\nof Vancouver 4 and 3 Wednesday, and Tuesday topped\nthe qualifying round with a 76 on the 72-par Marine\nDrive course,\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinniiiiiiiiiiiiiiini\nas amateur as they came, even\nmore amateur, probably,- than the\nstruggling sports of rowing and\npaddling today.\n\"Then, as I recall, clubs began\npaying players a small amount.of\nmoney\u2014it started with the munificent sum of five dollars, and gradually things improved to a point\nwhere just before the war the stipend was $15 for. a scheduled game\nand $25- for a playoff contest.\n\"After the war, with the bigger\nInflux of American players, the\ntrend was to higher rewards as\ninterest in football began to grow\nin leaps and bounds.\nSALARIES MUCH HIGHER\n\"Today, a fair average for, American Imports would be roughly\n$8500 per season, and in a few\ncases, considerably more.\n\"Salaries for Canadian players,\nof course, roBe along with those\nof imports, although not as high.\nA good Canadian player can earn\nbetween $3000 and $6000 today,\nwith the average probably about\n$400\u00bb.\nWhat effect have these changes\nhad on the game and the fans?\nMcCaffrey answers: \"As our\ngame stands today, however, I\nthink most people will admit that\nit Is a tremendously attractive\nsport ... I think I can safely\nsay that considering the color, skill\nand'speed of the modern game, lt\nis very doubtful if the fane will\never be willing to settle for less\nin the future.\"\nCATCHER QUITS AGAIN\nSACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) -r\nCatcher Len Neal, purchased\nearlier this week by Sacramento\nof the Pacific coast league from\nSalem, quit Friday because of a\nsalary disagreement.\nNeal played formerly with Oakland and Vanvouver of the coast\nleague.\n\"Dont be v'aq-cie... Jew\nm cm cr\nHate &Hai\nSCOTCH  WHISKY\nB'\n:>[.S.    NAMf.    IN   SCOTCH-\nFAMOUS   FOR   OVER   .100    YEARS\nThis advertisement It not published or displayed by the\nliquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\nHumphrey\nAWNINGS\nAND THEY'RE INEXPENSIVE, TOO! SEE THEM TOMVt\nFINISHED WITH BRILLIANT, DECORATOR-APPROVED COLORS\nNo more do!, il 11 Hy roorm. Humphrey1* Beaut I - COST, No ttorage or maintenance . .concry.\nful Stroll End Awftlngi lte\u00abp out the lun'i glare Imtallatlon of _i\u00ab\u00bb <.t_.ri.-b_i.. ownlngi will\nend heat, yet allow full circulation of air. Get o bring you compllminti for yean to como. A\nmaximum  amount of  light,  phi excellent lelectlor.  of colon and arrangements or*\nweather protection, all AT- A MINIMUM OF \u25a0 available.\nDistributor and Fabricator\nG. W. CAMERON\nPhone 1568-1052-Y-1024-Y\nTonight\nO SASQUATCH\nHUNT\nand\nSTUDENT\nDANCE\n9:00 p.m.\nNELSON  CIVIC CENTRE\nFREE Hunting Licence With Each Admission\n 14\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JUNE 8, 1957\nmW^\/W^X^'\nPhone 1844\nDeadline for Classified Ads\u20145 p.m.\nPhone 1844\nHELP WANTED\nSALESMEN AND WOMEN, FULL\nor part time to handle fabulous\n'MAGIC MATCHING THREAD'.\n100 spools, 90 diff. colors in plastic container. Every home needs\nat least one box. Sell to homes\nor retail .outlets. Clubs, churches,\ngirl guides will order hundreds\nfrom you for fund raising campaigns. Rush $2 for sample and\nfull details. (Cost of sample refunded on first order.) Wholesale\nprice list and details free'on request. Write HALLMARK &\nCRANE, 208-1056 Burnaby St.,\nVancouver 5, ILC.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\n(Continued)\nWANTED - SALESMEN AND\nsales ladies. Training given. We\nguarantee you success. Highest\ncomm. To start at once. Apply\n\"Compact\", Room 1, Allen Ho-'\ntel, Nelson. Interview all day\nMonday, June 10,\nFIRST-CLASS AUTO BODY RE-\npairmen. Must be able to handle\ncomplete job. Top wages paid\nwith other benefits. Phone Trail,\n1740, 1947 Columbia Avenue.\nlEXPERIECED BARBER. GUAR-\nantee $50.00 weekly or 70%,\nwhichever is greatest. Apply\nFashion Barber Shop, 334 Baker\nSt., Nelson, B.C.\n| SINGLE MAN. RESORT WORK,\nto serve in bar. Write or phone\nEarl Campbell, Christina Lake.\nI MESSENGER BOY WITH Bicycle to deliver telegrams. Day\nwork. Apply CPR Telegraph Co,\nI HELP WANTED \u2014 FEMALE\nLEARN HAIRDRESSING\nWoman wanted, greater opportunity.    Better    pay.    Pleasant\nwork. Catalogue free \u2014 Write:\nMARVEL HAIRDRESSING\nSCHOOLS\n326 8th Avenue, Calgary.\nBranches:   Winnipeg,   Regina,\nSaskatoon and Edmonton.\nCanada's National System.\n| WANTED EXPERIENCED AND\nneat waitresses, top wages. Apply Bus Depot coffee shop, Creston, B.C.\n| WANTED EXPERIENCED WAIT-\nress for night shift. For further\nparticulars, Phone 391 or 1877.\nALL CARPENTER WORK, CON-\ncrete and cement floors, sanding,\nfloor laying, gyproc paint filling,\nchimneys and fire places. Guaranteed free estimate. H. Zylstra,\nPhone 136-4-R.\nCOMPETENT STENOGRAPHER\nrequires position for summer.\nAvailable immediately. \u2014 Miss\nRuth Wright, phone 1779-L.\nFOR HANDYMAN, PHONE 256-R.\nPUBLIC NOTICES\n| WANTED - WOMEN TO LOOK\nafter children in their home, day\nand night, Ph. 803-L. $45 per mo.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\n| YOUNG MAN IN EARLY 30s RE-\nquires work as garage mechanic.\nHas experience in Ford, GM,\nChrysler and I.H.C. dealerships.\nGood all-around mechanic and\nwelder. First-class tune-up man.\nAdditional information sent upon\nrequest. Apply Box 4779, Daily\nNews.\nYOUNG WOMAN REQUIRES EM-\nployment until October. Has typing and clerical knowledge, but\nanything considered. Apply Box\n4704, Daily News.\nWILL \"CONTRACT FOR RELI-\nable mill. Have easy way frame\nand cat. Private road preferred.\nJ. Bishop, Nanoose Bay, B.C.\nNOTICE TO CONTRACTORS\nSealed tenders-for the construction of a 2 bedroom Residence at\nGolden, B.C., will be received by\nthe undersigned up to 2 p.m. Pacific Daylight Time July 3rd, 1957,\nand opened in public at that time.\nPlans and specifications may be\nobtained from the District Forester\nat Nelson, B.C., the Forest Rang-\ner(s) at Golden and Cranbrook or\nthe undersigned upon a deposit of\n$5.00 refundable upon return of\nplans and specifications in good\ncondition within thirty days of the\nopening date of tenders. The deposit of the successful tenderer will\nnot be returned.\nTenders will not be considered\nunless made out on the form supplied and signed, and a deposit of\n10% of the tender is enclosed, payable to the order of the Minister\nof Finance for British Columbia,\nwhich shall be forfeited if the len-\nderer declines to enter into the\ncontract when called upon to do so.\nCheques of the unsuccessful tenderers will be returned when the\ncontract is awarded.\nNo tender shall be considered\nhaving any qualifying clauses\nwhatsoever, and the lowest or any\ntender not necessarily accepted.\nTenders must be submitted in the\nenvelope marked \"Tender for the\nconstruction of a Residence at\nGolden, B.C.\nC. D. Orchard,\nDeputy Minister of Forests,\nParliament Buildings,\nVictoria, B.C.\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST - A LEATHER KEY CASE\non the corner of Baker and\nJosephine Street approx. 4:00\np.m. Sat. afternoon. Reward if\nturned in to Nelson Daily News.\nLOST - PARCEL ON HALL ST.\nThursday afternoon, June 6. Contains 1 dress, 1 pk. men's shorts.\nPhone Crescent Valley, 461.\nLOST, DOWNTOWN: RUSTY\nSpaniel. Licence 301. Answers to\nBingo.-Phone 1540-X.\nPROPERTY WANTED\nWANTED, SUMMER COTTAGE\non Kootenay Lake. For details\nPh. 1777, Wm. Kalyniuk Agency,\nReal Estate.\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\nTimes Shown Are Pacific Standard Time\nKXLY TV - Channel 4\nSATURDAY\n45 Good Morning\n15 Dizzy Dean Show *\n25 Baseball Game of the Week*\n30 Western Roundup\nLone, Ranger\n:00 Pob Harris Show\n:00 TBA\n:30 Wild Bill Hickock\n:00 Cartoon Time\n:30 Tales of the Texas Rangers\n:00 Jackie Gleason Show *\n:00' Gale Storm Show *\n:30 SRO Playhouse *\n:00 Gunsmoke *\n:30 Two For the Money *\n\u25a000 The Buccaneers\n:30 The Lone Wolf\n:00 Man Called X\n:30 Late Show\nSUNDAY\nI Good Afternoon\ni Oral Roberts\ni Bowling Time\ni This Is the Life\ni Variety Time       *\ni Christian Science\n' Odyssey *\ni Annie Oakley\ni You Are There *\nLassie *\nMarge and Gower Champion\ni Ed Sullivan \u2022\ni G.E. Theater \u00ab\ni Alfred Hitchcock Presents\ni $64,000 Challenge *\ni Our Miss Brooks\ni News Commentary\ni Errol Flynn Theater\nKHQ TV - Channel 6\n.    SATURDAY\n8:10 Test Pattern\n8:15 Color Test Pattern\n8:25 Bible Reading\n8:30 Gumby *\n9:00 Fury *\n9:30 Major League Baseball *\n(Milwaukee vs. Pittsburgh)\n11:28 Local News\n11:30 Little Rascals\n12:00 Willy\n12:30 Gangbusters ,,\n1:00 Western Theatre\n3:00 True Story *\n3:30 Detectives Diary *\n4:00 Hopalong Cassidy\n5:00 John Wayne Theatre\n5:58 Local News\n6:00 Trouble With Father\n6:3ft- People Are Funny *\n7:00 Perry Como (C) *      *\n8:00 Color Carnival (C) *\n(Jerry Lewis Show)\n9:00 Color Carnival (C) *\n(The Marriage)\n9:30 Hit Parade * '\n10:00 Frontier\n10:30 Late Movie \"High Powered'\nSUNDAY\n1:30 Christopher Program\n2:00 This Is The Answer\n2:30 Zoo Parade *\n3:00 Wide Wide World *\n4:30 Hopalong Cassidy\n5:00 Impact \"Explosion\"\n6:00 Cowboy Theatre *\n6:30 Circus Boy *\n7:00 Steve Allen *\n8:00 Alcoa Hour (C) *\n9:00 Loretta Young *\n9:30 Front Page\n9:40 Molly\n10:05 Stars On Six\n\"The Batchelor\"\n10:30 O'Henry Playhouse\n11:00 Cross Current\nMACHINERY\n\"SMALL\nTRACTOR\"\nSPECIALS\nNeed a small tractor on your\noperation? Then take a look\nat these FINNING specials\u2014\nin good condition and priced\nright! See us now.\nCAT D4 Tractor, 6U series, Cat\nhyd. angledozer, No. 44 control.\nLooks and runs like neW Bonded Buy, 90-day warranty, f.o.b.\nK. $7000\nCAT D2 Tractor (5U) Cat angledozer, Hyster winch. Only 3\nyrs. old, very good condition!\nBuy and Tfy, 3-day trial, f.o.b.\nVancouver, I.TOflft\nFT-3624  5\/ZUU\nCAT D2 Tractor (5U) all eqt.\n1952 modern in generally good\ncondition. As is, f.o.b. ftSI^fift\nVancouver. C-683  *<iOVV\nINT. TD6 Tractor with Malo\nLoader. 1955 machine in gopd\nshape. Complete with winch\nand guards. Buy and Try, 3-day\n^'.t^.: $7ooo\nJOHN DEERE \"420\" Tractor\nwith Ateco Loader. Just one\nyear old. Here's real value! Buy\nand Try, 3-day trial, f.o.b. Chil-\n&& : HI 50\nFINNING TRACTOR\n& EQUIPMENT\nCO., LTD.\nPhone 137 - Nelson\nPhone JU-62281 - Cranbrook\nMACHINERY\n(Continued)\nATTENTION\nLogging and Mining\nOperators\nIf you are planning new construction or alterations,\nSee Us\u2014\nWe can help you design and\nengineer your mill\nALSO\nSupply Chain, Sprockets, Gear\nReducers, Pulleys, Belts, Pillow Blocks, etc,\nMachinery arid Fabricating\nALSO\nCompletely Wire Your Mill\nNew and Used Motors\nCLASS  A CERTIFICATE\nDon't waste time and money-\nshopping.\nDeal With the Largest and\nMost Completely Equipped\nMachine Shop in the\nInterior.\nWRITE, PHONE OR WIRE\nMACHINE    SHOP\n324 Vernon St. Phone 593\nNelson, B.C.\nEQUIPMENT FOR SALE - ONE\n5-6 Lawrence winch with bucket\nand cable; one 52-ft. factory-\nbuilt conveyor with electric\nmotor; one set 20-ton Fairbanks-\nMorse scales; one 1947 l_-ton\nInternational truck with dump\nbox and hoist; l'A-ton Daybrook\npower gate. Phone Trail, 1740;\n1947 Columbia Avenue\nFOR SALE-G.M.C. 671 POWER\nunit, Alco 4-sided planer. Priced\nfor quick sale. Herb Koenig,\nYmir, B.C.\nFOR SALE - 4-SIDED PLANER\nwith blower and pipes from the\nplaner to blower. Capacity, 8000\nto 10,000 ft. per day. First-class\ncondition. $2500. Phone Crescent\nValley, 2-A.\nBARGAIN! 115 VOLT,- 2000 WATT\npower plant for sale, very slightly used. Price $400.00. Can be\nseen at Pete's Electric, Castlegar,- B.C. Apply , to Poznekoff\nPoultry Farm, Winlaw, B.C.\nTRIMACK POWER UNIT, TD1,\n20 Chrysler, 1 American portable\nsawmill complete. A-l shape.\u2014\nApply Mel Lorntsen, Box 395,\nFruitvale, B.C.\t\nWANTED EQUIPMENT FOR\ncrushing plant. (Screen, crusher\nand conveyor). Phone 9041 after\n6 p.m.' or write Box 312 Castlegar.        f \u25a0__      \t\nD-6 CAT FOR HIRE, ROAD\nbuilding,and land clearing. Ph.\n247-X.\nFOR SALE ONE D2 CATERPIL-\nlar. Ba^e cat, good condition.\nApply P.O. Box 283, Trail.\n1 SAWMILL COMPLETE WITH\ndiesel power unit; $1550. Phone\n3495. Castlegar.\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nFOR SALE - NELSON LADIES'\nWear. Snap for cash. Apply Boi\n4005 Nelson Daily News.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS AND  MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nE 'W  WIDDOWSON & CO.\nAssayers. 301 Josephine St., Nelson\nH  S   ELMES. ROSSLAND, B.d\nASsayer. Chemist Mine Rep.\nENGINEERS   AND   SURVEYORS\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, MEIC\nBC Land Surveyor. P Eng. (Qlvil)\n218 Gore St.   Nelson,' Phone 1238\nG. W.  BAERG,  B.C.\nLand Surveyor\n373 Baker St., Nelson, Phone 1118\nM. E. McCORQUODALE, B.CX.S.\nLand and. Engineering Surveya.\n1234 Bay Ave., Trail, Ph. 2752; Office Mgr., Ray Johnson, B.A.Sc,\n1015-8th St.,.Nelson, Ph. 144-R.\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nMachine   Shop Acetylene and\nelectric welding, motor' rewinding   Phone 593      324 Vernon St\nDAILY   CROSSWORD\n4. One-spot\ncard\n' S. Right\n(abbr.)\n6. Neutralize\n7. Cues\n8. Singing\nvoice\n9. Nobleman\n10. Blunders\n14. Entice\n16. Assorts\n18. Merriment\n20. Sesame\n21. Grow old\n22. Hamilton\nand Burr\n23. Covetous\n26. West\nIndies\nfetish\n(var.)\n29, Man's\nname\nSO. Perfume\nwith\nodors\n32. Speak\ncurtly\n(Scot.)\n33. Ireland\n34. Not any\n35. West\nAfrican\nmonkey\n___._  IggO\n___\u201ef_   (SHI.HG\n_____ aiggs\n_H_F_   ______\n__a    ana hbe\naianaaa ___o\n____- s_[___r>\n__a __i_    a_\n______ hhse\n_______ H0t_n_\n_____ _____\n\u25a0 ____ _.___\nYo_t_.-ay'. haamaaj\n37. Mr.\nLevetwpo\n39. Bachelor\/\nof Arte\n(abbr.,)\nKREM TV \u2014 Channel 2\nSATURDAY\ni Roy Rogers Roundup   .\ni Space Ranger\ni KREM\" Cartoons\ni Renfrew of Mounted Police\ni Popsicle Party *\nI Majer Fights\ni Bill Graham *\ni Lawrence Welk *\ni Ozark Jubilee *\ni Championship Bowling\ni Million $ Theatre\n.(Warner Bros..Features)\nSUNDAY\n12:55 News \u2022\n1:00 Cartoons\n1:30 Gene Autry\n2:30 John Hopkins File 7 *\n3:00 College Press *\n3:30 Medical Horizons*\n4:00 Dean Pike *\n4:30 Open Hearing *\n5:00 Circus Time *\n6:00 You Asked For It\n6:30 Hollywood Film Theatre\n8:00 Ted Mack *\n9:00 Mike Wallace Interview\n9:30 Sunday Spectacular\n(Warner Bros. Features)\n(Programs subject to Changs by stations without notice.)\nACROSS\n1. Coin (Iran)\n6. Scabbard\ntrimming\n11. Perform.\n12. Tanker\n13. Coins (It.)\n14. Sacrlflcer\n(baseball)\n15. Girl's name\n16. Precentors\n17. West Indies\n(abbr.)\n18. Darts\n19. Move\n21. Sum up\n24. Showers\n25. Rascal\n27; Building\naddition\n28. Naval\nconstruction\nworkers\n30. Sorceress\n(Odyssey)\n31. Measure\n(Chin.)\n32. Advanta&_\n35. Village.\ncommunity\n(Russ.)\n36. Sarcastic\n37. Passable\n(colloq.)\n38. Wash lightly\n39. Language\n(Afr.)\n40. Leg'joints\n41. Accumu-,'\nlate\nDOWN\n1. Eastern\nstate\n2. Unfriendly\n3. Not any\n(colloq.)\nDAILY CRYPT-QUOTE \u2014 Here's how to work tt.\nAXYDLBAAXR\n, to lOH GF.ELLO W\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Is used\nfor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length 'and formation of the words ars all hint*\nEach day the code letters are different.\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nOXQBR TD AJB BJQHXRB! HARY'WR\nXDTYDR. AJB OYXDHQV \u2014WTTJB YD.'\nYesterday's Cryptoquotes SHE WEARS MER CLOTHES AS\nIF THEY WERE THROWN ON WITH A PITCtJFftgiJ tr\nSWIFT.\nBwntMioi \u00bb> m$3mmtmm*>i\n\\\n1\nJ\n4 \"\n5\n^\nb\n7\n8\n1\nIO\nII\nfyf\n12.\n13\n''\/A\n14\nIS\nVA\n16\n17\n^A\nia\n^A\n4\nft\n1.\n30\n^\n31\n22\n23\n24\n%\n25\n26\n27\n%\n33\n\u00bb\n%\n'^\n%\ni\"\n%\n31\n32.\n33\n34\n%\n3_\n3\"\"\n'^\n37\n38\n%\n39\n*-\ni\n.1\nt-S\n iS'Yl\nsmail investment _ LARGE RETURNS\nThat's the Want Ad Story -   PHONE. 1844\nPROPERtY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\nA GRACIOUS HOME :, .\n1\u2014Exclusive location, unobstructed view up and down\nUie lake, barge living room,\nfireplace; den, fireplace; dining room, two bedrooms, bath\nand kitcnen on main floor.\nSpacious entrance hall. Beautiful oak flooring. Garage on\nsame level witn entry to\nhouse. Upstairs: one nicely\nfinished bedroom, 12x24. Full\nbasement, oil furnace. Landscaped grounds. Must be seen\nto be appreciated. \u2014 Terms.\n?t\u00b0od.vTe..._ $15,500\nLOVELY NEW HOME,\nONE FLOOR\n1\u20143 bedrooms, L.R., fireplace;\nD.R., ultra-modern bathroom\nand kitchen. Oak floors or tile\nthroughout. Wired for range\nand auto, washer. Full, high\nbasement with auto, oil furnace. Plus a lovely S.C. 2-\nbedroom apartment, separate\nentrance. Unobstructed view\nof lake. Well worth your in-\nSSR $17,500\nCLOSE IN, 2 BLKS. BAKER\n8\u2014Absolutely In tip-top condition, newly decorated inside\nand out. _ large rooms upstairs and 5 large rooms down\nwith bathroom and utility\nroom on main floor; oak\nflooring. Basement and hot\nair furnace. Wired for range.\n2 landscaped lots. \u2014 Our ask-\ning price $f ] ,000\nis\nMake us an offer. We are\ninstructed to sell.\nCARBONATE STREET\nA $9500 home must be sold,\nand we are instructed to accept $7900 for quick sale. This\nis a 2-bedroom home built to\nNHA standards, with full high\nbasement and hot air furnace.\nOn two lots. Plastered interior\nand exterior ready for stucco.\nLet us show you this one.\nNEW \u2014 UNFINISHED\n5\u2014Located 224 High Street, just\noff Nelson Ave. 5-room bungalow on 90' x 120' lot. Living\nroom (fireplace), large bright\nkitchen facing the lake. Wired for range. Utility room.\n2 bedrooms and bath. Full\nbasement, 1050 sq. ft. Wiring\ncompleted. Plumbing either\ncompleted or on job. Outside\ncompleted. Inside needs 3\nrooms floor sanding and base\ntrim plus 4 inside doors. \u2014\nA to $6900\nHOOVER STREET\n\u2022\u20144 large rooms and bath on\nmain floor, one room in basement plus hot air furnace,\n_\u00a3!\u00a3 $6000\n. 924 FALLS ST.\nT\u2014'Living room, dining room, 2\nbedrooms, bath and kitchen,\n2 lots, with use of another\n25-foot garden lot. <t C KAfl\nGood terms       .>03UU\nROBSON STREET    -\n8\u2014A. two-bedroom home on four\nf;arden lots. We mean black\nbam and fruit trees. Living\nroom, bath.,, pantry and kitchen, wired for range. Cement\nbasement and hot <R^7f.(_\nali furnace. Terms. *p*'' v\"\nNORTH  SHORE\n8\u2014Just behind the Villa Motel,\nfacing the bridge. \"Two .bed-- .\nrooms, living room, te* i., and\nkitchen with dining a. i; also\ngood, oil range. Wired lor elec.\nrange. Cement basement with\nextra bedroom. Large garden\nlot 60! x 200'. Garage attached\n__rms.5C_ :...$6850\nBLOCK TO CENTRAL SCHOOL\n10\u2014FIVE ROOMS AND BATH,\nONE FLOOR. - Wired for\nrange. Basement and hot air\nfurnace. Everything in nice -\nT\u00b0^on; $6500 i\n1\u2014If you are looking for a cute\nlittle 4-roomed house plus\nbathroom, you should see This\none. Good-sized L.R., K., 2\nB.R.s   and   bathroom.   Base-\nSaw. 2 iol.Gooi $4000\n2\u2014Close to Jr. H.S. An older type\nhome but in splendid condition. L.R. and gas fireplace,\nD.R., wonderful K\u201e utility\nroom, plus toilet\u2014all on the\nground floor. Upstairs: 3 large\nB.R.s and bathroom. Basement\nand good furnace. Property\n\u202250' x 100'. Reasonably close in.\n_u._r..... *750\u00b0\nWith Only $3000 Cash\nRequired. ,\n3\u2014A very nice 4-roomed house\nplus modern bathroom, on 2\nacres on N.S. Lots of garden\nspace and on beach. House is\nwinterized. Some outbuildings.\nFull price $g750\n4\u2014A splendid home, quite close\nin. Has L.R. plus fireplace,\nD.R., all H.W. flooring, and\nmodernistic K; also den, all on\nground floor. 3 large B.R.s and\nbathroom, plus a first-class\nsleeping porch. Garage on\nproperty. Full basement ahd\ncoal furnace. Located on cor-\nK\/r * i*5oo\nReduction   for   substantial\ndown payment.,\n5\u2014Two 25' x 120' lots, uphill. \u2014\nLevelled and $1000\ncleared  ^\n6\u2014A choice of 4 fine bldg. sites\nin Fairview. Surrounded by\nsplendid homes. Each location\n90' x m\\ and $2000\npriced at   ^\nWe need listings as prop-'\nerties are selling Steadily.\nYours will be appreciated\nand action promised.\n'Herb Peacock\nReal Estate and Insurance Agency\n532 WARD ST. PHONE 68\nAgencies \u2022 L tcL\nReal   Estate and  Insurance\nPhone   135  or   Eves.,   1065-X\nList Your House\nFunds on Hand to Get the\nDeals Closed\nMANY BUYERS.\nWAITING\nC. W. APPLEYARD\n& Co. Ltd.\nPhone 269\n_ RM. .\"BEDROOM HOUSE AND\nbath, garage, 6 acres land. All\nfurniture including fridge and\ndeepfreeze. Also on adjoining 6\nacres, 3 rooms and bath, garage,\nchicken house 13'x44'. Hog pen\n24'xl04'. Another 2 rm. house\nsuitable for single man. Running\nwater and electricity throughout.\nCan be bought separate or as 12\nacre lot. $8500.00 buys all. Apply\nP. Bordepchuk, Box 94, Trail.\nMODERN 6 RM. HOME H.W\nfloors, fireplace, tiled kitchen\ntiled vanity in bathroom. New oil\nfurnace, 1 blk. oil city limits.\nPhone 2037-R.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\n(Continued)\nPACKAGE\nINSURANCE\nOur Business Rates are\nTHE LOWEST.\nfor Safe, Dependable\nINSURANCE.\nMeHardy\nAgencies Ltd.\n554 Ward St\nPhona 135\nFOR SALE - NORTH SHORE\nmodern 3 bedroom home West\nof bridge in new location. Hardwood floors throughout. Auto oil\nfurnace in full basement, heats\nfor $120. Wired for electric range.\nBest of construction and materials gives you many extras in\nthis fine home which must be\nseen to be appreciated. Phone\n873-L.\nNORTH SHORE ABOVE FERRY,\n2 bedrooms,. large living room\nwith open fireplace. Well appointed, kitchen and utility rooms. Oil\nfurnace, wired for range.. Landscaped. $5000.00 down. Balance on\n\u25a0tasy terms. Phone 1071-R.\nNEW 3-BEDROOM HOME, SIT-\nuated on landscaped lot in upper\nFairview. Choice property; modern and attractive. Automatic oil\nfurnace, fireplace, Pembroke\nbath, etc. Wired for TV. Lovely\ngarden spot. Some fruit trees.\nPhone 1733-X. Terms.\n3 ACRES LAND WITH 2 BED-\nroom house. Fully modern, full\nbasement,, plenty of water, fruit\ntrees. DVA approval. 5 miles\nfrom Trail on good gravel road.\nSchool bus at door. Box 321,\nTrail\nFOR SALE -MODERN TOURIST\ncamp on busy highway. Store\ngas station and four room house\nCash or terms. For further in\nformation write to Box .1523 Kim\nbarley, B.C\nMUST BE SOLD, OWNER LEAV-\ning, modern 3-4 bedroom home,\n_ mile West of ferry. Automatic\noil heat, wired for any electrical\nappliance. Lots of outlets. Phone\n1662-R.\nFOR SALE IN KASLO NEW 2\nbedroom home, living room kitchen, bathroom, lull basement.\nOverlooking lake by bathing\nbeach. Fenced. Reasonable. Ph.\n64-M or write C. S. Pangburn,\nKaslo.\nFOR SALE - 2-ROOM HOUSE,\ngarage,   _   acre  land.  Upper\n- Bench,  Kinnaird. Apply 34 Columbia Ave., Castlegar.\nCOTTAGE OR HOUSE FOR SALE\nboth modern. V. Hoskin (Balfour) R.R. l, Nelson.\n4-BEDROOM HOUSE, SUITABLE\nfor- rooming \u25a0 house. Hot water\nheat. Call at 923 Vernon Street.\nRENTALS\n(Continued)\nFOR RENT UNFURNISHED Apartment, Central Baker Street\nBlock. Adults only. $55.00 a\nmonth to, permanent tenants.\nAlso several large rooms suitable\nfor offices or bachelor quarters\nfrom $20.00 a month. Box 6080,\nDaily News.\t\nON THE BEACH IN NELSON\nsmall furn. home. All electric,\n'July, August, September. Rent\n$75 month. W. Baker, 1106 Beatty\nAvenue. Phone 743-L-3.\nSMALL OFFICE AND WARE-\nhouse with shelving conveniently located in Truck Terminus\nBldg. on ground floor. Phone 77\nfor particulars.\nFOR REi. r-3-BEDROOM HOUSE\n1 mile from ferry. Private beach,\n\u25a0 Phone 1998-X.\nHOUSEKEEPING \"OR SLEEPING\nrooms, furnished, weekly or\nmonthly rates. Allen Hotel, 171\nBaker Street.\nSUPERB 3 RM. MODERN APT.\n1 br. available July 1 or sooner.\nPhone 130 -after 5.\nFOR RENT 4 RM. MODERN COT-\ntage, North Shore. Ph. 678-L-2. J\n4-RM.\" COTTAGE \"AT   WILLOW\nPt. B. Townshend.'Ph. 1635-L1.\nUNFURN. 3-RM. APT. FOR RENT\n423 Silica St; Phone 1011-L.\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\n1\u2014Getting ready for summer\ncamp? Do you want a new\nlino rug? We have many\nvaried patterns and sizes to\nchoose from,\n2\u2014We have just received a bedroom suite by Hollywood,\nmade all of arborite finish.\nIt's beautiful, durable and in\nmodern designing. \u2014 Cherry\nfinish. You have to see it to\nappreciate it; and very reasonable, too.\n3\u2014If you have a gas line, we\nhave the right range, space\nheater or water tank for you.\nDUO-THERM, the foremost\nin oil heaters, have very\nsmart gas models to grace\nyour home. Brown Gas have\nmany types of ranges to suit\nevery kitchen. Duo-Therm\nand EUco have the finest in\nautomatic gas water heaters.\nSee These at Your\nNELSON READY-\nMIX CONCRETE\nLtd.\nPhone 871\nDEALERS IN ALL TYPES OF\nused equipment, mill, mine and\nLogging supplies, new and used\n'wire rope, pipe and fittings,\nchain, steel plate and shapes\nAtlas Iron & Metals Ltd.. 250\nPrior St., Vancouver. B.C., Ph\nPAcific 6357\nFOR SALE ARROW PORTABLE\nsewing \u25a0 machine. Almost new..\nPh. 803-R or apply at 712 Josephine Street.\n20\" KUMFORD COAL AND WOOD\nfurnace complete with pipes $60.\nPhtfne Trail 967-R or view at 1605\nBailey Street, Trail, B.C.\nFOR SALE - TWIN-VISIBLE GAS\npumps, tar 500 gal. tanks and\nall fittings. Cheap. Apply Sam\nConkin, Slocan Park, B.C.\nFOR SALE 3-PC. CHESTERFIELD\nsuite, $45, 3 pc. bedroom suite,\n$75. Phone 1408-R.\nOLD \"MODEL REFRIGERATOR\nin working order. Baby carriage\nin reasonable condition. Ph. 1538.\n21-iN. ELECTRIC RANGE, ALSO\ncoil-shaped elec. heater. Perfect\n\u25a0 condition. 519 .Silica.\nDA VID BRADLEY CHAINSAW. -\nPractically new. Phone 1602-X.\nSHEEP WOOL, 50c A LB. ABEY'S\nRanch, Lardeau. B.C.\nHEALTH FOOD CENTRE OPEN\nday and evening, 924 Davies St.\nLIVESTOCK,  POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nFOR SALE-COW, HALF JERSEY\n\u20143rd calf. J. Juriloff, Group Box\n3, Nelson. Phone 210-L-3.\nBUILDING LOT ON \"NORTH\nShore overlooking lake and city\nPhone 692-R-l.\nFOR QUICK SALE, BLOCK OF\nlots (22 lots), nice location. Apply Box 331, Salmo, B.C.\n3   ROOM   HOUSE   FOR   SALE.\nPhone 1016.\nRENTALS\nHOUSEKEEPING   ROOM\nrent. Phone 1564-X.\nFOR\n_.. lamr Saili, -.inns\nPrice per single copy 6c Monday\nto Friday. 10c on  Saturday\nBy carrier per weeK\ntn advance 35c\nSubscription Rates\nBy Mail in Canada outside Nelson\nOne month      ._-- .-.-..   $ 125\nThree months j _......    $ 3.50\nSix months      .....    $ 6.50\nOne year   \u25a0           $12.00\nBy mail to United Kingdom or\nthe United States\nOne month      '      $ 1,76\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 Kimberley Mr G A Bate;\nIn rrail Mrs. Syd Spooner\nand\nIn Rossland Mrs' Ross Saundry\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\nCHEVROLET\nOLDSMOBILE\nCADILLAC\nNew 1957 Chevrolet Sedans\nNew 1957 Oldsmobile Sedans\nNew 1957 Oldsmobile Hard-\ntops.\nNew 1957 Chevrolet Pickups\n1955 Chevrolet Coach\n1954 Austin Sedan\n1954 Oldsmobile Sedan\n1953 Mercury Sedan\n1952 Austin Sedan\n1952 Plymouth Sedan\n1952 Cadillac Sedan\n1956 Dodge Suburban\n1956 Chevrolet Station\nWagon\n1955 Pontiac Station\nWagon\n1954 Chevrolet Pickup\n1953 Pontiac Sedan Dely\n1952 Chevrolet Panel\n1951 Chevrolet Sedan Dely\nTERMS \u2014 TRADES\nMotors Ltd..\n323 Vernon St   Nelson.'B C.\nPhones 35 and 36\n1957 Morris Station\nWagon\n1957   Austin A55--Ove.\ndrive\n1957 Austin A55\u2014Standard transmission\n1957 Chevrolet  Hardtop\n1957 Buick Hardtop\n1956 Buick Sedan\n1955 Buick Sedan\n1955 Chevrolet Sedan\n1954 Pontiac Sedan\n1953 Meteor Sedan\n1952 Ford Sedan\n1952 Chevrolet Sedan\n195,1  Ford Sedan\n1951 Chevrolet Sedan\n1950 Austin Sedan\n* \u2022\u2022\n1953 Chevrolet Pickup\n1952 Chevrolet Pickup\n1951 Austin Station\nWagon\n1950 Mercury Pickup\nWE PAY CASH FOR\nLATE MODEL USED'CARS\nMcELROY\nMOTORS\nAUSTIN  Sales and Service\n803 Baker St.     Nelson, B.C.\nPhone 2000 .\nCOTTONWOOD WRECKING SER-\nvice\u2014Used parts, batteries, tires\nfor '47 Olds, '47 Chev., '49 Meteor,\nMercury, '37 Ford, '46 Plvmouth,\n'47-'49-\"50-'51 Austin, Hillman,\nPrefect, Vanguard, Morris Minor\ncars. For sale '48 Chev. Sedan\nDelivery. Phone 1<63 L-2 or write\nBox 382. 24 Ymir Rd., Nelson\nFOR SALE - 1952 2-TON CHEV.\ntruck, stake body, first class con:\ndition, low mileage,, one owner.\nEnquire Box 4116, Nelson Daily\nNews.\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\n(Contlnuedi\n\u2022 LTD.\nvour Volkswagen-Ramble-\nDealer\nBe sure you have checked our.\ntop quality used car bargains\nbefore you buy.\n1955 CHEVROLET\n4-DOOR DELUXE SEDAN\n1  Owner.  New  Car  Condition.\n1953  PONTIAC  DELUXE\nSEDAN\nCHIEFTAIN 6.\nPacked With Power.\n1952 CHEVROLET 4-DOOR\nDELUXE   POWER-GLIDE\nA Better Used Car.\n1950 ROVER SEDAN\nAn English Car in the \u25a0\nLuxury Class.\n1949 MERCURY SEDAN\nLooks and Is as Good as --\nthe Average '51.\n1949 STUDEBAKER\nCHAMPION\nGood, Dependable Transportation\nat a Very Low Price.\nYour Choice of Austins,\nHillmans  and  Morris Minors\nin budget-priced English cars.\nIf you wish a pickup in good\nrunning order for $195, we have it\nALSO 1 USED\nVOLKSWAGEN 1955\nDELUXE COACH\nAll these vehicles are priced\nlow for the early shopper.\n323 NELSON AVE.\nPHONE 1454\n\"BUY A\nSUPERIOR CAR\"\nTERMS - TRADES\n1956 DODGE SEDAN\nIn Yellow, White.\nRadio, Turn Lights.\n'2 \u2014     \u25a0\n1956 STUDEBAKER CHAMPION\nSEDANETTE\nA Low Mileage Car in a\n-Nice Blue.\n1955 PLYMOUTH 4-DOOR\nGreen and White.\nTurn Lights, etc.\n4 \u2014\n1955  DODGE   REGENT  4-DOOR\nAutomatic. Radio, 2-Toned\nin Turquoise and Off-White.\n1953 BUICK 2-DOOR\nAutomatic. Radio, *\nTinted Glass, New Paint.\nAnd Many  Other Excellent\nUsed Cars to Select From.\nSuperior\nYour Dodge-DeSoto bealer\nFINANCING A CAR? _ BEFORE\nyou buy your new or late model\ncar see us about our low cost\nfinancing service with complete\ninsurance coverage. New cars 30\nmonths. Contact Wm. Kalyniuk\nAgencies at 1777 and save\nmoney.\n1954 HILLMAN SEDAN. EXCEL\nlent condition. Low .mileage. En\nquirejifter 5:30. Phone 756-Y\n1948 DODGE COACH, RADIO,\ncovers, 2 winter tires, excellent\ncondition throughout. Ph. 870-R.\nFOR SALE REPOSSESSED 1947\nInternational Pickup. 525 Vernon\nSt. or Ph. 1690.\n'52 AUSTIN. GOOD CONDITION.\n$525.00. Phone 431-R.\nFISH .EATERS\nOspreys, birds about two feet\nlong which prey on fish, are also\nknown as fish hawks, fishing\neagles and bald buzzards.\nWANTED   TO   RENT\nDO YOU WANT TO RENT YOUR\nhome to a reliable couple? If so,\nplease call 11.1-1.. House Is not\nnecessary till Aug. 1, or can take\nimmediately.\nURGENTLY REQUIRED BY TWO\nrespectable young men. two-bedroom suite or housekeeping room\nwith two beds. Guarantee to keep\naccommodation clean. Ph. 1499-L\nWANTED TO RENT 3-BEDROOM\nhome, f hone T47B-.   after 4.\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\nWE PAY MORE FOP SCRAP\niron, and metals. Harris Junk\nCo. Ltd., 904 E. Cordova St.\nVancouver, B.C. Phone TA\n9941,\nWANTED - CLEAN \"COTTON\nrags without buttons, 10c lb\ndelivered to The Daily News\nTRAILERS\n33 FT. 8 MONTHS OLD TRAILER,\nyellow and grey. Beautiful interior. Latest hitch, 4-wheel\nbrakes. Automatic oil heater.\nSell very reasonable. Sunnyside\nTrailer Court, North Shore.\nFOR RENT - CLEAN, WELL\nequipped camping trailer by the\nweek or month. Sleeps 3 to 4.\nPh. 1635-L-2.\nPERSONAL\nREADER'S DIGEST CAN BE HAD\nin English, French, Spanish, German, Italian, Portuguese, Swedish, Danish, Norwegian, Finnish,\nJapanese and Arabic. Contact R.\nPeterson, Box 159, Castlegar, or\nphone 5123.\nA L C H O L I C S ANONYMOUS\nFridays, Box 493. Phone 366-R or\n483-R.\nCLASSIFIED    DISPLAY\nBefore You Buy,\nSee the New   '\nSCOTT-ATWATER\n3.6 H.P. \u2014 5 H.P.\n7i\/2 H.P.\u201416 H.P\u201440 H.P.\nWELDING & EQUIPMENT\nCO.,  LTD.\n614 Railway St.     Nelson, B.C.\nPHONE 1402\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JUNE 8, 1957\u201415\nBOATS AND ENGINES\nSEE YOUR FAVORITE 1957\nJohnson outboard on d i s p I a y.\nAll h.p. rating ana some electric.\nThey're scarce, order early.\nCOLEMAN ELECTRIC, Phone\n2055, Nelson, B.C. Big trades.\nEasy terms.\nFOR SALE OR TRADE-16 H.P.\nEvinrude outboard. Ph.  1099-X.\nHOTELS and MOTELS\nTHE _LM_R HOTEL, OPP. CPR\nDepot, Vancouver, B.C. 100%\nfireproof! 24-hour elevator service. Clean, quiet & comfortable.\nReasonable rates. City centre.\nHOTELS and MOTELS\n(Continued)\nWILL YOU STAY WITH US\nwhen in Spokane, Washington?\nCity center, parking 1 block.\nComfortable rooms w'wo both.\nLow, tow rates. Colonial Hotel.\nVANISHING SARI\nNEW DELHI (Reuters) - Arrival of rock 'n' roll in India's\ncapital, with a weekly program in\na leading restaurant, sees the\ngradual disappearance of the sari,\nthe graceful flowing garment worn\nby all Indian women.\n$ 1760\n$2100\nFamily Home, nine years old. 2 B.R.s down and 2 B.R.S upstairs,\nliving room, dining room, modern kitchen, bathroom, main floor;\nFull basement, economical automatic oil heat, located on four\ncorner lots, assorted new fruit trees bearing, garden, near city\nbus stop. Separate garage. C I \\ AAA\nPrice reduced from $14,500 to     *P \u25a0 ^.\"V\nWith $5500 down payment, balance long terms.\nPhone for an appointment right now and see for yourself.\nKOOTENAY  LAKE FRONTAGE ,\n9.93 acres with 235.62 feet lake frontage. Good access road, near\nHarrop ferry. Level frontage, suitable for two or three summer\nhomes; good beach. Buy now and enjoy our beautiful\nlake this summer. Cash price\t\nFOUR ROOMS.\nLocated at 605 Richards, near bus stop. Full basement, wired for\nelectric range, floor oil furnace, insulated. Low S _9 _f_\ntaxes.  Full price       ..    *P\"*\u00abU\nWith oflly $1000 cash down, balance as rent. \u2022-\nSmall 2-bedroom home at 1416 Vancouver St. on\ntwo lots. Cash price \t\nNORTH SHORE LOT    '\n70 by 210 feet with water and electricity. Level, good     Cl l^ft\naccess, near new church. Low cash price  *P   *<Jv\nN.H.A. APPROVED LOTS\n16 locations to choose from  priced at $1600 to $1100 each. \u2014\nEasy   terms.   .\nrosemont'\nNew, three bedrooms, full basement. Exceptionally well built,\neasy to heat. On two lots. s <_Q^_____\nFull pfice   ...   jaOVU\nWith only $2500 down payment.\n-HOME WITH A VIEW\nNew, 2 bedrooms, large kitchen with dining area, beautiful living\nroom with picture window overlooking the lake.    C 1A \u00a3AA\nSeparate garage. Good sized lot. Cash price       \"*   \"'\"\"\"\nHOME AND BUSINESS\nStore and Cafe on North Shore.. Building is two storeys with\nliving quarters above. 3 B.R.s, L.R., bathroom and good-sized\nkitchen. Business, building and equipment for only $7500 down.\nVendor says will accept a home for part of the down payment,\nWill listen to any proposition you have.\nLow-Cost Auto Financing, Real Estate and Insurance\n534 JOSEPHINE ST. NELSON, B.C. PHONE 1777\nPEEBLES  I PEEBLES 1 PEEBLES\n| Real Bargains, \u25a0 |\nNo Gimmicks\nMERCURY DELUXE\nSEDAN\nCustom  A.C.   Unit,   Custom\nRadio, Power Steering. Power\nj**|   Brakes. Low Mileage, like new\nONLY\n'     CHEVROLET\n2-DOOR SEDAN\nVery Clean. Custom A.C. Unit\nSeat Covers. All New Tires\nTwo-Tone\nP\nCONSUL DELUXE\nSTATION  WAGON\nImmaculate condition\nOnly 9000 Miles\nSave $1000\nONLY\nB\nMETEOR  DELUXE\n, 4-DOOR SEDAN\nCustom  A.C,  Good  Rubber\nNew Paint. A real buy at\nONLY\nS\nA full 17-fftet, 6-inches long with a 6-foot. 4-inch beam. This\nboat can -be driven 24 miles per hour with a 25 h.p. motor, Makes\na gobd family boat. Phone 1622-L all day Saturday or after 5 p.m.\nweekdays. ?\u2022\u2022\nXHl^Still~ PLYMOUTH - FAREDM DUNL0PTIM5\n\u2014  ^:Sii_____\u2014.qp'luHit'iO'90 \u2022 \\OtdU^MQ.-m. :'--.\u25a0-__\n A Present hr Pop on\nFATHER'S DAY\nJust the Gift for a Sporty Father (20 to 70 years)\n' 1 Gillette Razor\n6 Gillette Blue Blades\n1 Fishing Spoon\nAll in strong plastic box\n'\u201e. .\" ALL for only\n$1.29\n.ft\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nNEW\nPHONE  1844  FOR  CLASSIFIED\n. For  a\nComplete\nAutomotive\nService\nINCLUDING:\nir Body, Fender and\nPainting\nft Automatic Transmission (a specialty.\n\u25a0fr Front End Alignment\n\u25a0ir Tire Balancing\n4r Frame Straightening\n\u25a0k Wheel Straightening\nat\nSEE    .\nMICKEY' McEWEN\nBEACON\nMotors Ltd.\n701   Baker St.\nPHONES   578-579\nANCIENT ART\n\u2022 The oldest known samples of\nembroidery are found on mummy\nclothes of ancient Egypt.\nwm\n^m\nDfllKE\n9-1 Tonight\nRO CO TONES\nOn the Bandstand\nSaturday Night lo Dance Night-\nAll Over Canada,\nJoin the Gala Weekend Crowd\nat the PLAYMOR ... The\nKootenay. Favorite Dance.\nRendezvous.\nMOTHER'S DA_*_.CR_ ASE\nLONDON (Renters), \u2014 More\nthan 1,600 telephone calls were\nmade to the United States from\nBritalnon Mother's Day, May 12,\nthe post office announced today,\nThe usual daily number Of calls\naverages about 300. ',\u2022\"\u25a0;.-;\u25a0'\nVITAL FORESTS \u2022  .   ,\nForests provide four-fifths of\nthe raw material for Finland's export industries.\nNESTS WITHSTANDS TRIP\nEAST PROVIDENCE, R. Ii\n(AP) \u2014 A trailer truck arrived\nhere Thursday from Toledo, Ohio,\nwith a robin's nest and three eggs\nstill intact on an undercarriage\ncrossbar after the 820-mile trip.\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL  TRAINING\nSuite 206 Phone 141\nMedical Art* Building\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED and REPAIRED\nRE-CORING\nJim's Radiator Shop\n5X8 Front St. Phone 63\nCAMPBELL,   SHANKLAND\n&  CO.\nChartered Accountants\nAuditors\n576 Baker SL Phone 235\nHAIGH\nTRU-ART\nBeauty  Salon\n(S76 Baker St.'\nPhone 327\nHave The Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVEC\n\u00bb       LIMITED       \u2022**\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\n__!\nDEVELOPING\nHelpfulSnapshot' Advlco\n,REXALL PHARMACY\nCity Drug\nBox 460\nPhone 34\n16\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JUNE 8, 1957\nBE A FAVORITE WITH  FATHER..,'. .\n'\u25a0'\"\u25a0'\u2022'\u25a0. \"'.-\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\n' Give Him I\nFATHER'S\nFAVOURITES\n\u2022 Summer Sportswear\n\u2022 Summer Dress Shirts\n# ._\u25a0\n\u2022 \u2022 Ties\n\u2022 White Dress Shirts\n\u2022 Jewellery\nBuy Them at Father's Favorite Store\nEMORY'S LTD.\n\"THE MAN'S STORE\"\nBox 100 Phone 31\nMINERAL AREA\nCoal has been mined for two\ncenturies   in   Clackmannanshire,\nthe smallest county in Scotland.\nJAMBOREE!\nTO\nJust Cannot Be Beat\nWe  Have Ten  (10)  Carloads Of  New Cars\nBUT ... WE HAVE NO USED CARS\nSO ... WE'RE ON A SWAPPING SPREE I\nYou Could Be the  Lucky Winner of\nAmerica's Most Wanted Cars\nBUICKS - PONTIACS\nand the Small Car With the Big Look\nVAUXHALL\nRemember 30 \u2014- Only 30 Cars\nTo Be Sold and the\n' Winner Will Be Declared\nHeres How 30 to 1\n1. Beginning at noon Friday, June 7th for\n6 weeks or until 30 cars are sold in the\ngreatest new car,sale in Nelson auto\nhistory.\n2. The first 30 customers to finalize car\npurchases become eligible for our 30 to 1\ngame of skill.\n3. The winner of 30 to 1 will receive the\nunit he has already purchased absolutely\nfree. If the winner's purchase was a cash\ndeal, he will receive a complete refund\nless one dollar. If the 30 to 1 winner has\ntraded in a car, the difference in price\nbetween his trade and his purchase car\nwill be refunded. Customer must pay\nconsumers' tax.\nFREE\nCOKES AND HOT-DOGS\nALL DAY TODAY\nNo Delays-On the Spot Finance and Insurance -30 Months to Pay\n\"THE HOME OF MOTORING SATISFACTION1'\nNELSON MOTOR PRODUCTS LTD.\nPHONE 121-122\nNelson, B.C.\n281 Baker St.\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1957_06_08","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0430126","@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":"1957-06-08 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1957-06-08 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\/1.0430126"}