{"@context":{"@language":"en","AggregatedSourceRepository":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","Collection":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","DateAvailable":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DateIssued":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","FileFormat":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","FullText":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Genre":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","GeographicLocation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","Identifier":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","IsShownAt":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","Language":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","Latitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","Longitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","Notes":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Provider":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","Publisher":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","Rights":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","SortDate":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","Source":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","Title":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","Type":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","Translation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description"},"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2022-04-04","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1957-03-26","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0430217\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" 60\nThis Is Nelson's\nDiamond Jubilee Year\nYears of Progress\nTwo PMs Discuss\nNuclear Tests,\nDefence Problems\nBy DAVE McINTOSH\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nTUCKER'S TOWN, Bermuda (CP)-Prirae Ministers St. Laurent and Macmillan met in plenary session\nfor two hours and 20 minutes Monday to discuss defence,\nnOclear tests and other atomic questions of common concern to Canada and Britain.\nSpokesmen declined to disclose the specific subjects discussed under these general headings, but it was\npresumed they included Canadian uranium sales to Britain\nand Anglo7Canadian co-operation in defence research projects.\n\/\/o.'W'V.\nWm\nWEATHER  FORECAST0  ^\nKootenay: A few clouds.' N o i\nmuch change in temperature.\nLight winds. Low-high at Cranbrook 25 and 45, Crescent. Valley,\n25 and 48.\nVol. 55-\nThe first 20 minutes ol the meeting were taken up by Macmillan\nexplaining to the Canadian prime\nminister the communique issued\nSunday alter his iour-day conference with President Eisenhower.\nAll Canadian officials took part\nin the discussion on atomic matters but the defence talks \"were restricted to six persons from each\ndelegation.\n..HOME WEDNESDAY\nThe leaders are to hold two\nmore plenary sessions Tuesday,\nand a communique is to be issued\nj at the end of the conference.\nPrime Minister St. Laurent is\nscheduled to return to Ottawa\nearly Wednesday, and MacMillan\nto London Wednesday evening.,\nIt was understood a prime subject of the day's discussion was\nguided missiles. During the Eisenhower - Macmillan conference,\ntlje U. S. agreed, to give missiles\nto Britain, though without atomic\nwarheads which by law cannot\nbe exported from the U. S.\nA-Canadian spokesman, asked\nRETIRED POLICE\nOFFER SERVICES\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 More\nthan 100 retired police officers\nhave offered their services in a\nmove to smash Vancouver's latest\ncrim ewave, Mayor Efed Hume\nsaid today.\n\"Retired members of the force\nhave offered their services if required which I thought was very\nloyal of them,\" the Mayor said.\nMr. Hume denied suggestions'\ntha city police force was unable\nto control crime.      \t\n+\nMonday whether this offer \\yould\ninclude Canada, said that if missiles are sent in one direction it\nwould be reasonable to assume\nthere could be an extension\nanother direction.\nEaton Re-trial\nSet for April 8\n:NEW WESTMINSTER, (OP)\nThe second trial of Gerald Eaton\non a charge'of murdering eight-\nyear-old Caroline Moore in Langley, April 26, 1956, has been set\nfor April 8, Crown Prosecutor F.\nCraig Munroe said Monday.\niiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiii\nDid He Win the\nRace, or Didn't He?\n'.LONDON (AP) \u2014 Can a\nswimmer be declared the win-\n.'. rier of a race if he loses his\ntrunks and finishes in the\nnude?\nThe Amateur Swimming Association   will   consider   the\nweighty question at a meeting -\nSaturday.\n' The Northumberland and\nDurham branch of the association can hardly wait to get\n. the official decision because\nthat is exactly what happened\nto a young boy recently in\nNewcastle.\nThe youngster finished first\nbut some people maintained\nthat despite the embarrassment, losing your trunks has\nits advantages\u2014you can swim\nfaster without them,\niimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinii\nNo Secret Pacts\nMade at Meet\nSays Eisenhower\nWASHINGTON (AP) \u2014 Possible transfer of guided missiles\nto France was reported to have\nbeen discussed Monday at a\nWhite House conference. President Eisenhower called the meeting to brief congressional leaders\non the Bermuda conference.\nThis word came from Senator\nThomas Hennings (Dem. Mo.) at\nthe break-up of the one hour, 20-\nminute session.\nThe Congress members ..said\nEisenhower had assured them\nthere were no secret agreements\nmade at his Bermuda meeting\nwith Prime Minister Macmillan.\nAt the Bermuda conference the\nUnited States agreed to furnish\nBritain with guided missiles capable of carrying atomic warheads.\nIt was made clear, however, that\nthe atomic warheads would be\nstored in Britain under U.S. custody.\nHennings told reporters the\nquestion of furnishing similar missiles 4o France came up,at Monday's session.. Premier, Guy Mollet ot France !i$- expected to request, equal -military assistance as\n,that Drop)iseilBri^tt.-;i,-:i.,-.. VJ-,..,\n\/NELSQN, B.C., CANADA-TUESDAY MORNING, MARCH 26, 1957\nNot mora Than 6c Dally, 10c Saturday\nNo. 282\nSEN. JOHN McCLELLAN (D.-Ark), right, and Robert Kennedy look over signatures on a telegram which McClellan said\nwas signed by \"502 rank and file teamsters In Portland, Ore.,\" .\n' declaring themselves \"In full accord with your Investigation.\"\nMcClellan heads the special senate committee looking Into alleged\ntleups .between racketeers and labor management,officials. Ken-\nnedy Is tly. committee's chief counsel.\u2014AP Wirephoto.   '     ;\nLast Big Obstacle\nCleared From Canal\nUnited Nations officials said, on\nMonday night that Hammarskjold\nwill return to New York no later\nthan Friday and will not visit Israel.       ->\nBut Egypt's Middle East News\nAgency said the UN secretary-\ngeneral will return to New York\nWednesday to discuss results of\nhis talks with countries using the\nSuez Canal.\n. Egyptian informants said the\nNasser government will issue a\ndetailed memorandum next week\nwhich may reveal some slight\nconcessions to big western users\nof the canal.\n! CAIRO (Reuters). \u2014 The Suez\nCanal was cleared Monday ,of the\nlast obstacle to major shipping,\nthe sunken tug Edgar Bonnet,\nleaving the way clear for transit\nby ships up to 35-foot draft and\n20,000 tons displacement.\nUN Secretary - General Dag\nHammarskjold made a brief visit\nto Ismailia to witness the lifting\noperation at canal kilometre 69.\nThen Hammarskjold .made a\nquick tour of the Canadian-run\nUNEF base at Abu Suweir and\nsaid he was \"very happy\" to have\nCanadians in Egypt.\nLater Hammarskjold, - accompanied by undersecretary Dr.\nRalphe Bunche, and, Maj .-Gen. E.\nL, M. Burns, the UNEF, commander, returned to Cairo to. continue his talks with President\nNasser and Foreign Minister. Mah-\nmoud Fawzi.   ' -   -    \u25a0,..,\nTO MISS ISRAEL\nThe two went; into their third\nsessJojijt^gethep'Boopjaftefyardj.\nMartin Hints Hospital\nPlan in Action Soon\nOttawa Pr\nIn Development of Columbia\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Health Minister Martin started some Commons opposition'members guessing Monday that a natipnal hospi\ntal insurance scheme might be\nnearer\u2014in some provinces\u2014than\nthey thought.\nHe spoke as the Commons opened debate on a government resolution introducing a bill. to en-'\nable the federal government to\nshare half the costs of standard\nward hospital care and diagnostic\nservices with the provinces, -\nMr, Martin said the bill, details of which cannot be disclosed\nuntil the resolution is accepted,\nwould show that \"a favorable\nmodification has been made in\nthe original. requirement that a\nmajority of the provinces must\nhave their plans in actual operation.\"\nAt another point he- said the resolution makes clear \"the requirement that six provinces, representing at least half of the\npopulation of Canada, must have\npassed the necessary legislation,\nconcluded agreements, established\nthe required provincial administrative machinery and otherwise\nqualified for the receipt of contributions before the federal obligation under any of the agreements becomes effective,\"\nLater, Stanley Knowies (CCF-\nWinnipeg iSTorth Centre) asked\nwhether that statement meant it\nwill be possible for accepting pro\nvinces who already have, their\nplans in operation to start draw\ning federal money 'before other\nparticipants have .their plans actually going. \" .,.\nWait for the bill, Mr. Martin\nsaid.\nBut refusing to wait, Mr. Knowies asked whether the minister\nconsidered It fair to let Ontario,\nfor example, go ahead with its\nhospital insurance plans toward a\nJan. 1. 1959, starting date when\ndelay by some other province in\ngetting its plan into operation\ncould hold up the whole works.\nMr. Martin replied;\n\"When we get the bill I will be\nable to explain the arrangements\nwe have made with the province\nof Ontario, which avoids the yery\nthing my honorable friend,' i\nderstandably, is so concerned\nabout.\" '\n,    ' ' \u25a0!\n77v.-;:.\nBUILDING OF A RAIL SPUR for unloading of Steel for the West Arm bridge has commenced In Fairview by Canadian Pacific Railway. E. Blckerton Steel Erectors will ba un\nloading otccl during the Summer for Western\nBridge Co., general contractors for the bridge\nproject-\u2014Daily News photo.\nSUNDAY SPORT\nBILL QUASHED\nVICTORIA' (CP) \u2014 A bid' for\ncommercial snort, in .ya^ppuyer $n\nSuiida^ Vas'rej'eeled MBrtday\" by\nthe private bills committee of the\nBritish' Columbia legislature..\nin Vancouver however, general\nmanager Cedric Tallis of the\nMounties in; the Pacific Coast\nleague, said the club would play\nSunday ball, despite ttie committee's decision.\nThe club has scheduled 11 double-headers for-Sunday afternoon\nplay.   '\nTallis said tickets would be sold\nbefore midnight Saturdays as the\n\"symphony society does\" for Sunday concerts.\nThe city of Vancouver had made\napplication to the legislature for\na charter- change which would\nhave permitted Sunday sport with\npaid admission between the hours\nof 1:30 P. m. and 6 p.m.\nIt was the second time Vancouver's bid had been turned down.\nSimilar action was taken a year\nago.\nThe decision was called \"quite\ngratifying\" by Rev. R. A. Redman\nsecretary of the Lord's Day Alliance in Vancouver.\nFind Ancient Snail\nLONDON (AP)\u2014Moscow radio\nhas announced that Soviet geologists have found a prehistoric\ncreature preserved alive in frozen\near.th for thousands of years. The\nGerman-language broadcast described the creature as an \"antediluvian triton\"\u2014a ma_jine snail.\nillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\n$7500 Gov't Grant for\nMoyie Preservation\nVICTORIA (CP) \u2014 The provincial government Monday\npledged $7500 towards the preservation of the sternwheeler\nMoyie. at present operating on the Kootenay Lake.\nThe. Moyie, last active sternwheeler in Canada, is almost\n60 years old and is scheduled to be withdrawn from service at\nthe end of this.month.\nThe government, through t,rade and industry minister Lyle\nWicks, promised the money on Monday after Randolph Harding\n'(CCF\u2014Kaslo-Slocan) made a plea for preservation on behalf of\nthe Kootenay'Lake Historical Society at Kaslo.\nThe sternwheeler. a steel-hulled vessel built in Toronto in\n1898, operates between Balfour and Lardeau on the Kootenay\nLake. - , '   . '    \"\ni:    \"IIIIIIIIIIIMIHIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllir\nGov't Steps in as\nStrike Talks Collapse\nBy GEOFFREY MILLER\nLONDON (AP)\u2014Attempts to settle Britain's shipyard strike broke down Monday night and the government.stepped in.\n'\u25a0' It set up a court of inquiry to deal with the unions\nand their employers.\nIain Macleod, minister of labor,\nappealed to the unions to call off\ntheir 10-day-long strike while the\ninquiry goes on.        ''\nThe deadlock between the bos-\nses and unions shattered hopes for\nspeedy end to,the spreading industrial upheaval ' undermining\nBritain's economy.\nThe unions rejected a five-percent, wage increase offer and refused to call off a walkout by 200,-\n000 men. They had demanded a 10-\nper-cent cost - of - living increase\nand stopped -working March 16.\nFailure of the talks also ruled\nout a quick end to a new walkout\nby 1,000,000, engineering workers\niri key,factories producing nlanes,\nautomobiles;- electrical equipment\narid, machine, tools. This, stoppage\nbegan. Saturday and hit. Britain\nwith full force, for the first time\nMonday.     .' \u25a0       \u25a0\u2022...-,..'\u25a0.   ;\nBoth strikes' are, masterminded\nby the confederation of-shipbuild-\ning and engineering unions.\nHope had been expressed that if\nSession may\nend thursday\nVICTORIA (CP) \u2014 Legislature\nshould end this Thursday, Premier Bennett said Monday.\nMr. Bennett, said the legislature\nwas running \"right on schedule\"\nand should prorogue Thursday afternoon. . ,\nIf the session prorogues on\nThursday the House will haye sat\nthis year for an even seven weeks.\nWidow to Get\nWinch Indemnity\nVICTORIA (CP) \u2014 A bill was\nintroduced into the legislature\nMonday to grant the sessional indemnity allotted the late E. E,\nWinch, veteran CCF member for\nBurnaby, to his wife.\nThe member was respected in\nthe House for his defence of \"the\ndowntrodden, the aged and the\ninfirm,\" Mr. Speaker Thomas Irwin said earlier.\nMr. Winch was 77 when he died\nHis indemnity Will total $\u00ab00.\npeace was restored to the shipyards a settlement of the engineers' dispute would follow\nquickly.' Their stoppage is the\nfirst stage of a- snowball campaign\nwhich the confederation says will\nbring 3,000,000 workers-to-a'standstill in 4300 factories' by April 6.\nThe. demand here also is for a 10-\nper cent pay boost. \u25a0\nSeriously 111\nHannam Evidence Severe\nBlow to Adams Defence\nBy EDDIE GILMORE\nLONDON (AP)\u2014Superintendent\nHerbert Hannam of Scotland Yard\npulled off one of his famous courtroom tricks Monday and, slipped\nin a- forbidden piece of evidence\nin -the murder trial of Dr. John\nBodkin Adams.   .\nThe society physician is accused of killing a rich widow, Mrs.\nEdith Alice Morrell, by drugging\nher to death with morphine and\nheroin.\nHannam entered the witness box\na few minutes after Mr. Justice\nDevlin dealt the prosecution a\nblow by ruling that Hannam could\nnot tell the jury about Crown\nclaims that Dr. Adams tried to\nconce.al two bottles of morphine\nwhen he was arrested.\nSpectators In the packed court\nroom oi. Old Bailey leaned forward expecting legal, fireworks as\nthe detective told of searching\nAdams' surgery.\n\"In the course of that search;\"\nAttorney - General Sir Reginald\nManningham-Buller  asked, \"was\nany morphine found on the premises?\"\n8TUN8 COURT\n\"Yes,\" replied the detective who\nis rated by Britain's lawyers as\na deadly adversary in the witness\nbox.\n\"What morphia was discovered?\" continued the- attorney-\ngeneral.\n\"There were two bottles of morphia found in Dr. Adams' pocket.\"\nsaid Hannam. '.\n\"I didn't ask you that,\" snapped\nthe attorney-general.\nAn astonished murmur rippled\nover the courtroom as spectators\nrealized that Hannam had got the\nforbidden point across \u2014 that Adams was *rested with morphine\nin his pocket.\nDefence Counsel Geoffrey Lawrence started to his feet to protest. Then he sat down' again. He\nwas too late. \u2022 '\nHannam's testimony against Adams was the most damaging to\ndate in his trial, now in its second week.\nVICTORIA (CP) \u2014 Agriculture\nMinister Ralph Chetwynd has\ntaken a \"very bad turn for the\nworse,\" Premier Bennett told the\nLegislature today.\nMr. Chetwynd was taken to hospital about two weeks ago believed suffering from a heart condition.\nHe was formerly' reported as\nprogressing slowly but was never\ntaken off the critical list.\nMr. Bennett, made the announcement before the House began regular business.\nChant's Pay\nNbt to Be Cut\nVICTORIA (CP) \u2014 A motion\nto teduce public works minister\nW. iN. Chant's salary by $5000\u2014\nthe i total increase granted cabinet\nministers this year\u2014was defeated\nby a voipe vote jn legislature on\nMonday.\nGeorge Gregory (L-Victoria),\nsponsor of the motion, used the\nVictoria courthouse issue as his\nmairt point.\nIn,putting the motion forward,\nMr, j Gregory said the Minister\n\"didn't do-much to earn his salary last year. He doesn't rate an\nincrease this year.\" .    \u2022\nBanks Against\nProposed Changes\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 G. Arnold Hart, riational general manager of the Bank of Montreal, 6aid\nchartered rianks are \"all definitely opposed'! to banking structure\nchanges proposed by the Bank of\nCanada. ' *\nJames E. Coyne, governor of the\nCentral Bank, suggested recently\nthat personal savings held by\nchartered banks \"be confined to\nlong-term securities and mortgage' loans while other deposits\nshould be used for ordinary commercial banking.\nSinclair Announcement Gets\nChilly Response From Bennett\n'.     '\"*       ,      By ERWWERICKE\n, Canadian Press Staff Writer\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014The federal government says\nit is willing to help finance public power development\nof the Columbia River in British Columbia.\nCost of the scheme has been estimated' as high as\n$1,000,000,000., Fisheries Minister \u2022 James Sinclair announced the federal offer at a press conference.' He said\nit would be good only if. public\u2014B.C. and federal\u2014interests develop the Columbia, third largest river system in\nNorth America.   '; .,,\"...    ''.-\u25a0.,.\nMr. Sinclair would not' estimate the total cost of\nColumbia power development but compared the outlay'\nwith the Canadian investment in the navigation section\nof the St. Lawrence Seaway. This, he said, was $300,-\n000,000. '\nHe said the entire Columbia\ndevelopment could be the \"biggest public works project\" ever\nundertaken in Canada.\nThe federal minister said he\nthought Premier. Bennett would\nwelcome the announcement of the\nfederal offer.\nIn Victoria Premier Bennett,\nhowever, did not seem overly im-\n\"I will not discuss Mr. Sinclair's\nelection campaign,\" he said. \"I\nwill discuss, the offer with the\nprime minister..\nPart of Mr. Bennett's cold.treatment may be due, however, to a\nnumber of disagreements he had\nwith. Mr. Sinclair this winter\nconcerning premature announcements from Ottawa on federal*,\nprovincial projects. .        '\nB.C.'s lands minister, Ray WU-\nliston, the minister .directly concerned, approved the principle tt\n'the Ottawa offer, but said; \"I\nwant.to.see what is in tile fine\nprint fir-it.\" '...'.-.\nMAY SAVE FRA8ER       J.       7\n\"We are-all\".interested in any\nscheme which6would-'harnfess'the\npower of the Columbia Biyer'^ta\n'a, -nan npr to \"#'ve.' fiill' tierieBt * of\nit to' the proviiice and to the\npeople of,- Canada: as*a. whole,\"\nMr. Williston-said.*.\n\"We, are -happy, to see ;the- federal author! ty.realizing .that major\ninvestment should be undertaken\nin this part of the country.\"\nMr. Sinclair said: negotiations\nwith.the .B.C. government. could\nbegin as soon, as Canada and the\nUnited States, agree\u25a0 oh'the\u00bbdivision of downstream benefits from\ninfernational'rivers.'\nThe U.S., and _ Canada --entered\ninto direct negotiations at Ottawa\nMarch 19 to expedite a settlement\nof this question. This step was\ntaken when the International\nJoint Commission tailed to come\nto an agreement on the subject.\n\"An early agreement will speed\nup,indu8trial development in both\nBritish- Columbia and the northwest states, and ..will; save the\nFraser River, fisheries' from the\nthreat of power development.\"\nHe said.'he hopes the announcement of federal government willingness to support the B.C. government in developing Columbia\npower \"will act as a spur to negotiations.\"\nSQUABBLE FORECAST\n\"The Americans have taken the\nattitude that we up here couldn't\ndo these things ourselves,'\" he said.\n\"They will know that we are prepared to go ahead.\"   ~\nThe federal government announcement is expected to add\nfuel to the bitter controversy in\nB.C. on whether private or public\nfunds should develop the Columbia.    ., \/'\u2022\u25a0.'\nB.C. Electric, a private company, announced last June it will\nseek authority to construct a $250,-\n000,000 dam at Mica Creek, 80\nmiles north of Revelstoke, B.C.,\nthe largest single power' site on\nthe upper Columbia.\nPublic power supporters in the\nprovince have been demanding\nthat Mica and others in the potential network of storage and power\ndams on the Columbia, be constructed by the publicly \u25a0 owned\nB.C. Power Commission. .\nPremier Bennett and members\nof his cabinet in the past have\navoided any sign of favoring either public or private funds\" for\ndeveloping the huge power source.\nMr. Sinclair said the project\nwould be -. \"tremendous\" and it\nwould do tremendous\" things to\nthe province. It would satisfy B.C,\npower demands for at least 15 if\nnot. SO years.\nThe 'province estimated cost of\nthe entire scheme1 would be $1,-\n000,000,000.\n'\u25a0 Mr. Sinclair said federal assistance would be by either joint or\nfederal rC?own companies doing\nspecific section!. \u2022 ot tfte \"ffevelop-\nmeht. The\" B.C. governfnent could\nlater buy out the federal government's interest at coat, '\u25a0'\"'\nRECALLS ACT '   '\n: He said Ottawa decided to make\nthe otfer because of the responsibility the federal- government\nhas assumed with the passing of\nthe controversial International Rivers Act.\n\u25a0The act, passed'in 1055, gave\nthe federal government jurisdiction over works built on rivers\ncrossing' the International - boundary,' and over the flow of water\nfrom these rivers across the\nboundary. . ' ...\nThe bill was specifically designed to block B.C.'s deal with\nthe Kaiser Aluminum and\nChemical Corp, for construction\nof a storage dam oh the Arrow\nLakes, 50 miles north of the border, to power a U.S, aluminum\nplant,\n- \"When you' do a thing like\nthat, ypu have to take on some\nresponsibility,\" said Mr. Sinclair. ;\"  \\;.;'\nIn Ottawa, -Re|purces Minister\nLesage said the federal government is ready to consider any request from B.C. for development\nof .power on the Columbia. However, he declined to estimate how\nmuch Ottawa might be willing to\nearmark for the development.\n\"We have not yet had any specific .request from the S.C. government,\" he said. \"But in the main\nwe are ready to consider any request that might be made.\"\nAnd in This Corner ...\nNEW YORK (AP)\u2014A Brooklyn watchdog named Queenle Is\nso rattled by motherhood she can't tell friend from .foe.\nQueenle, a German shepherd, and her four new pups remained\nas quiet as church mice Friday night as burgl'ari rifled a cigaret\nmachine In the restaurant operated by her master, William Wise.\nHe didn't expect the pups to be alert, but he thought he could\ncount on Queenle. ,\nShe was ready Sunday. When a patrolman came to examine\nthe scene of the crime, Queenle bit him on the ankle,\nLONDON (CP)\u2014\"If Moses had been a committee,\" said Viscount Massereene, \"the Israelites would still be in Egypt, which\nv(puld have saved us a great deal of trouble today.\"  '\nQUE8NEL, B.C. j(CP)\u2014Gerry Stevens found his face as red\nas the fire truck when the firemen arrived at the Stevens home '\nhere in answer to an alarm.\nMr. and Mrs. Stevens were sitting down to lunch when -they\nsmelled smoke. While Mrs. Stevens phoned In an alarm, her husband went outside to close off the main electrical switch.\nWhile outside, the smell of smoke became stronger. Suddenly\nMr. Stevens found his Jacket pocket smoldering. The pipe he\nhad dropped Into the pocket before sitting down to lunch was\nthe culprit. i\nWARSAW, Poland (Reuters)\u2014Polish soldiers no longer have\nto sing before going to bed. New army regulations, in effect Thursday, said the compulsory songs and the compulsory walk before\nbedtime have been abolished so that soldiers can get more sleep.\nTHE PA8, Man. (CP)\u2014The Northern Manitoba Tourist Operators Association said Friday It doesn't want to discredit the buffalo\nthat Is the official emblem of the province.\nBut it suggested In a brief on tourist trade promotion that\nthe \"highly\" protected\" animal does not appeal to the sporting\nInstinct like \"a comely young woman\" who could be picked to\nappear for the province at sports shows.\n&\n 2\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY^ MARCH 26, 1957\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT \u2014 Showi ot 7:00 - 8:18\n\"SEVEN MEN FROM NOW\"   \"GOODBYE MY LADY\"\nWith   Randolph  Scott Walter  Brennan\nWednesday\u2014\nfrom the producers ol\n^'BLACKBOARD JUNGLE\n\"TRIAL\" I\nCIVIC\nCASTLE THEATRE\nCASTLEGAR, B.C.\nTONIGHT AND\nWEDNESDAY\n\"BAN DIDO\"\n(Cinemascope, Color by Deluxe)\nRobert ..Mitchum, Ursula Tliiess\nNEWS, SHORT and CARTOON\nPremiere Theatre\nFRUITVALE, B.C.\nlast rims Tonight\n\"A Lamp Is Heavy\"\nGeorge Baker, Belinda Lcc\nj*e\n$295 TENDER\nACCEPTED FOR\nRAMP WIRING\nWork commenced Saturday on\nInitial wiring bf the Hall Street\nramp at the Civic Centre. Coleman\nElectrons tender for $895 was accepted] by.the Civic Centre Commission.\nj. B. Morgan, manager of the\nCivie- Centre, said Monday the\nCommission already has some of\nthe required materials, including\nfeeder cable, and fixtures. Lighting\nis, another step towards improving\nthe ramp, built last year.\nj The Commission,   at   a  recent\n' meeting,, decided to use natural\ngas in ,a new Arena heating plant,\nfor which plans and. specifications\nwere to Have been submitted a\nmonth ago by Peat   and  Power\n. Engineering of Vancouver. Mr.\nMorgan, Commission secretary,\nwas ftehed to eonl&et the Company to confirm April 15 as the\nnew date for completion of plans\nand specifications if such confirmation does not awive within six\ndaps.\nSuggested extensions to club\nroom facilities, ashed by the Nelson Curling Club, will be considered along with 1957 budget estimates. '-,.'\u25a0\u2022\nSigning of an advertising contract with .the News Publishing\nCompany wap approved. ...\nClassified Ads Get Results,\n.    Richard Hiidiitit'\nHatches a Miracle\nNEW  EGG  CREME\nSHAMPOO\nFor Dry Hair\n\u2022 With M6 \u2014 The miracle\ningredient that restores\nnatural oils.\n7S\u00ab, $1.25, $2.00\nNelson Pharmacy\n\"Tour. Fortress of Health\"\n433 Josephine St\nPhone 1203      Nights: 894-L\nAuto-Vue Drive-In\nTRAIL,'B.C.\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\n6:45 p.m. and 9:00 p.m.\n\"GOLDEN MISTRESS\"\nJohn Agar, Rosemary Bowe\nFeaturette and'News\n350 Expected at\nRotary Meet\nOver 300 persons have registered for the annual convention of\nDistrict No. 156, RotaTy International, which starts in Nelson\nApril 15, converttion chairman H,\n6. Harrison told members of the\nhost Club at: their weekly luncheon meeting Monday in the Hume.\nAbout 350 registrations are expected. .\nThe convention- will, be one bf\nthe events of Nelson's 60th anniversary celebrations this yiar.\nSpeakers will include Rev. A. L.\nA-qderson, formerly of at. Paul's\nUnited' Church, Nelson, now in\nVancouver; Dr. Gordon M. Shrum\nof the University of British C6\nlumbia, and W. R. Dowjry, also\nVancouver,, governor of this district about 1940, when it extended\nfrom Cranbrook to Vancouver\nPresident D. P. Ta\\tiaank reminded rnembert of the CbmhiUn-\nity Chest annual meeting ThitfS-\nday in the Canadian Legion hall,\nA program on. the 100th anniversary tk Lord Baden-Powell, foiin-\nder of the Boy SCout-Wolf Cub\nmovement, Sad to be cancelled it\nthe last moment, program ShSir-\nman C. W. R. Harper repotted.\nIn its place, Nelson A. Allan led\na sing-song, with P. G. Morey at\nthe piano.\nKenneth Hingwing, guest of his\nfather, Rotarian Joe Hingwing, received applauded thanks for his\nrole as chief cook at. the \"Rotary\nChinese dinner earlier this month.\nOther guests were Rotarians E.\nM. McGauley of Castlegar,. How-\nart.-Dawson.of Victoria* and Fred\nMaxfield of Nakusp.\nMore Students To Receive\nSalk Shots Here in May\nContinuation of tht anti-polio\nvaccination program In May Was\nannounced Monday fay Dr. K. I,\nG. Benson, director of the Selkirk\nHealth Unit.\nDr. Benson said enough Salk\nvaccine has arrived to permit vaccination   Of   school   children   in\nOdds...\nand Ends\n\\..byM.D.B.\nGansner Suffers ,\nSkiing Injury\nL. S. Gansner oil Nelstfft s<_ffer.\ned an injury to his left leg while\nskiing Sunday oh Silver King Ski\nClUb , hill. After, failing, he was\nadmitted to.Icooteriay Lake General HoSplWl for emergency treatment. Monday night Mr. Gansner\nfia \"feeling fine\" at his hbms\nand expe6ted to be walking abbut\nwith his leg;In a east; soon.\nNOMINATING\nCONVENTION\nA nominating convenfipn to select the Progressive\nConservative candidate for the forthcoming Federal\nelection will be held In the v\nSILVER  ROOM  \u2014  HUME   HOTEL\nFriday, March 29 at 8:00 p.m.\nGuest Speaker:\nJohn Hamilton, M.P. Toronto York\nAll those interested are welcome\nKOOTENAY WEST (FEDERAL)\nPROGRESSIVE CONSERVATIVE ASSOCIATION\nIt's amazing how long it has\ntaken ice on thi lakeshore to rpelt\nIn some places there Is still a-\ncrust extending 12 to 14 feet out\nfrom shores,\nSaw a little trufck taking\nChristmas tree' to the city dump\nSunday and was surprised to see\nhow green it was, I stood mine\nupright in the sndw. and iUs completely bereft of needles \"hew. I\nmust get busy and burn it up\nalong with a few cedar boughs,\nalso remnants of Christmas,\n* \u00bb   \u2022 .\nEach year I fight a losing battle\nagainst thimbleberry bushes outside my fence. They creep into ttiy\ngarden and where I have pushed\nthem back frohi my gate they\nare crowding back in full force.\nAbout once during tha time when\nthe berries are ripe I go out and\nHave a feed\u2014I father like their\ntart flavor, though I knbw S0m\u00ab.\npeople seofn them completely.\nHowever, this feed to my mind\ndoes not justify their existence, so\nI shall tackle them again this\nSpring, I guess, .\n* \u2022   \u2022\nA couple Of meanings from Dirt-\nwit's Concise Dictionary: deployed\n---opposite of employed, in dther\nwords out of a job. optimist \u2014\na man who looks at your eyes\nand sells you rose colored glasses.\n* \u2022 \u25a0\u2022\nSpring gear has appeared in\nstore windows, .fishing rods, garden tools and housecleaning things\nlike ladders, mops, window cleaners, etc., are in prominent display\nih hardware stores, Women's\nshops are showing the latest in\nfashions for the Easter parade-\nfrothy flowery things for milady's\nHead, chic suits and colorful summer dress materials. Shoe stores\ndo not lack color either for the\nladies' fpctwear runs the gamut\nof the color chart.\nShirts ahd ties add their spot\nof color in men's stores. More and\nmore you notice wider selections\nof men's clothing. With the trend\nto sport clothes and less consent\ntive ilothlng, men seem to h* becoming more clothes conscious,\nThey still have a long way tb go,\nthough to equal those blue satin\nbreeches and lace cuffs of another\nday.\n\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0   \u2022   \u2022\u2022\u2022   ',\nFlorist shops sre Stealing a\nihareh 6n mother nature with all\nkinds' of spring blooms and Easter\neggs, and rabbits in candy stores\nforetell EaSter's coming. YeS, 1\nthink we Can safely Say spring\nhas come. Now, just you See we'll\nprobably get another snbwstorm\nfor that.\nTHEATRE GROUP\nPRESENTS PLAY\nKINNAIRD \u2014 A three-act comedy, \"The i<ate Christbphef Bean\",\nwill be presented Friday and Saturday in the ___iftftaird.sel.6ol fay\ntht Kinnaird Little Theatre, n6t\nby the School-al stated hi M\u00abt.\nday's paper.\nGrades 11 to 13, as well as pre\nschoolers. Injections have boon\ngiven to children from Grade one\ntp 10.'\u25a0'\nParents of children in Grades\n11 ta 13 will receive consent forms\nsoon. Those aged one to six years\nwho live in Nelson will receive\ntheir injections at the Selkirk\nHealth'Unit, and pre-school chll\ndren in outside areas will in most\ncaaes receive their injections at\nlocal schools, Dr.'Benson said.\nInjeotibns of pre-school children^ will be arranged on an alphabetical basis, and dates will\nbe published when available. Dr.\nBenson \"stated no registration is\nneeded, and asked parents to\nbring their children when asked\nif they wish them vaccinated,\nInjunction\nExtension\nSought Today\nToday, counsel fbr the plaintiffs,\nBoyd C. Affleck and R. R. McCandlish, will seek an extension\nof the temporary injunction granted last Wednesday by His Honor\nJudge E, P. Dawson staying proceeding in removal of monuments\nand trees from Vernon Street's\n400 block. R. B. AUan, Of the law\nfirm of McBride and Allan, is\nrepresenting the plaintiffs.\n.The jpplicaton today seeks an\ninjunction staying the removal of\nthe trees and monuments until\na hearing of the case can be heard\nin Supreme Court this Spring.\nThe temporary injunction Was\nsought last Wednesdsy when the\ncity parks board announced they\nwould proceed with plans to remove the monuments ahd frees\nfront the cerilte Mulevard 6ft Vernon Street which would theft permit the highways department to\nWiden the street in conformity\nWith the arterial highway through\nthe City., \"j\nAid. W. S. Ramsay said Monday\nthat the parks board will proceed\nwith plans to improve the site of\nthe present \"bandshell\" aS approved by resolution of council\nMifch 4. Preparation of.the site\nas. We* Memorial park wherein to\nplace the Cenotaph was approved\nas the second, resolution in a Six-\nstep program intended to remove\nthe trees arid monuirteftts from\nthe central boulevard Of Vernon\nStreet to alternative sites, actiCn\nwhich was blocked when the temporary' injunction was granted.\nAid. W. S. Ramsay said landscaping 6f the \"bandshell\" Will be\ncarried out as improvements are\npast-due for this Oity park. It is\nintended that a retaining Wall Will\nbe built, the building and concrete\nflower beds removed and benches\nbuilt to provide a ddwntdWft park J\nfor residents.\nTRUCK DRIVER FINED\nClifford Agftew of penticton\nWas fined $10 and costs when hi\npleaded guilty before stipendiary\nMagistrate William Everts in pro\nvinclal court Monday to driving\na large .truck without- a ehauf*\nfeUf'S uoenoe.       . :     ;   ' ,\nMrs. 6-ft-tance Eveiyft\u00ab Cummins of the North Shore wai\nfined $10 and costs Monday for\nallowing her daughter, a minor, to\ndrive without a li.ertee.\nThe   girl,   Constance' lSjrfbilf ii\nCunimins, ' was fined $25 and\ncosts fOr driving without a lioehcc.\nBoth pleided guilty before Magistrate EVanS.\nARE YOU MOVING?\nTAAN5FER CD.\nHmmmQ\n&TOHA<G\u00a3\u00abP\u00bbACH\n-Aiiitsfer.Kor.i? AmeHcaft.Van\nNELSON, B.C..\nGYROS TO ELECT\nNEW OFFICERS\nNEXT WEEK\nNew O-fiOers' of NeiSOA Gyro\nclub, to be chosen at the next\nmeeting April 1, will be installed\nApril 12,. president Dr. ft. 8.\nBrummitt told members at their\ndinner meeting Monday night in\nthe Hume,\nAlso planned for the installation\nparty, to whiih members Were\nreminded to invite Wives artd\nfriends, are induction of One hew\nmember aftd presentation of new\nmember kits to those who do riot\nHave them. It is hoped to have\nhonorary rherhbtrs, district eiee-\nutives and Gyros from Cranbrook and Trail attend.\nClub member Jan S. Harts was\nthe featured  Speaker,  taking as\nws topic \"fhe History ef the\nDutch National Anthem\", which\nhe called \"one of the most ifttrlgU-\nihg natiihal aftthertiS I've heard,\"\nBecause of lis uftusual hiStbfy.\nThe anthem has 14 verses, few\nof which are sung. Words are by .\nah. tori j.   fiutoh  poet,   and  Mr.   |)n Vaii  VvAy GnaSHI?\nHarts played a record to allow | UU   1UU \"YC1   UUBB,P\u00ab\nmembers to Hear part of the stirring music, composed By an unknown composer.\nCenotaph Was Six\nMonths in Building\nA Nelson man who watched his\nfather build the Nelson .cenotaph,\nsubject of heated controversy at\nthe moment, was able to give some\ninteresting comments on its construction, Laurence Simpson, Nel\nson contractor, recalled the magnitude Of the task of quarrying\nthe StOnO and shaping the monument 1ft those days without the\nberieflt of modern power tools,\nit Was during the year 1922 that\nhe Watched His father, Charles\nSimpson, at the painstaking work\nof its building. The black and\nbrown granite' was quarried at\nYmir and the white granite of\nthe spire came from a\" place about\nfour miles up the North Shore\nnear the Old Horstead summer\nhome, demolished a few years ago\nduring highway construction.\nMr. Simpson said the work was\nall done by hand with hammer\nand chisels, both the quarrying\nand the shaping of the monument,\nIt took six months to build and\nwheh completed it was raised on\nits present site shortly before Nov.\n11, 1622, Jim Reid, who did heavy\nteaming n those days and was in\nthe coSl aftd wood business with\nGeorge Clerihew, St., trartsported\nthe rough stone from the quarries\nSnd with his big hOaVy teams\nraised the monument Onto    the\nTo Send Slalom\nInvitations\nInitial invitations to a giant\nslalom planned by the Silver Kng\nSki Club will go out this week,\nHelmuth Mayrohofer, who proposed the event to a Club meeting Friday night, said Monday.\nCommittee heads met Monday\nafternoon to discuss various\nphases of the event, which, it is\nhoped, will bring 50 skiers from\nOkanagan, Kootenay, United\nStates, and other- points to Nelson for a day-loftg meet planned\nfor early May. The transportation committee, presently consisting of Walter Palmer and Earle\nHooker, will go up the mountain\nin about two weeks for1 snow tests\nwhich, Mr. Mayrhofer said, - will\nhelp establish how lorig the snow\nwill be around..\nSuggestions about a \"get-together\" planned for the evening\nbefore the mixer were made by\nentertainment committee chairman Dr. W. C. Murphy, in whose\noffice the meeting was held. Other\ncommittee heads are president\nMiss Lillian Hickey and Mrs. Fred\nWhiteley, invitations, registrations\nand billeting; Mrs. Walter Palmer,\nSaturday evening buffet before\nthe meet; and Mrs, Earle Hooker,\nSunday buffet at the slalom site.\nMr. Mayrhofer called Spring\nskiing, the \"most pleasant skiing,\" because of a combination of\nmild weather, featuring sunny\nskies, and in particular granular\nKorrt snow found on the moun\ntain, \"oyertowering\" Nelson with\nits more than 7400 foot altitude.\nTHREE SPEEDING FINES\nKenneth Garrett of.NelsOft was\nfitted. $30 arid costs Mdrtday by\nMagistrate ft. S. MelSori when he\npleaded guilty to speeding 6ft Second Street Oft Friday. City police\nreportedly cloaked his motorcycle\nat 50 miles per hour.\ntwo Nelson moterists were fined a total Of $25 and costs fOr\nspeediftg oh High street fnday\nnight.\nR. B. Hawks pleaded nOt guilty\nbut Was found guilty artd fined\n$10 and costs. G. M. WilllScroft\njuttior pleaded guilty aftd WSS\nfined $15 arid costs.\nAFRICAN GOLD\nSOuth Africa's gold production\nreached a record total in 1950 of\n16,066,600 fine etinees valued at\n$566,066,006.1\nThe Weather\nNelson '      26 \u00ab\nOttawa  23 46\nWinnipeg  .,  32 43\nRegina  2D 39\nEdmonton    36 4t.\nGrand Forks _.,.___.__...,. 29 48\nPenticton , .... 25 50\nVancouver  \u201e_  3S 51\nVictoria    .-..._,..,.. 35 50\nWhitehorse ,__,,.._..__ ,9 32\nLos Angeles.....!.......!..;.., 66 71\nAll of ug do. WA may gossip to\ngrab the centre bf the Stag*. Or\nto knife some Superior person\n(it toSmfl to increase Our Statute\nWhen   We   whittle   the   Other\nfellow <&#__)..'   -        '\nApril Reader's Digest shows\nyou how you reveal your feart;\nyour weaknesses and ambitiono\n(whatever the reasons) by the\nthtogB you toy About othert.\nGet your April Reader's Digest\ntoday: 39 articles Of lasting interest including the best from\ncurrent books and Magazines,\nCondensed to save your time.\nWarehouse Buildings For Rent\n; ROSSLANO a*- Warehouso oh trackage contains approx-\n:   Imatoly 6000 Sq, ft Will give lease With optlort to\npurchase.\nANN,\nW\nWRITE POX 280. NELSON    V\npurchase.\nPHONE NEUON 860\npreviously prepared cement foundation, Methods and tools used\nwere little different from those\nused in the building of the pyramids, Mr. Simpson observed.\nEND OF AN ERA\nHe lObks on the. war memorial\nalso as a memorial to his father\nand to the end of an era in building technique. As he says, \"Since\n1022 the machine age has made\ngreat strides in developing power\ntools to forever replace the ancient methods.\" He observes with\na wry smile,-that \"a major crisis\nnow develops  Whenever  a  hole\nis required to.be drilled in stone\nwithout ah air compressor.\"\nMr,  Simpson adds his  voice\ntc protests prevalent theso days\noyer the  Intended  removal  of\nthe memorial from Its present\nsite. However, he a(l,ds, \"I hope\nthat, In the event it Is moved,\ngreat care will be taken not to\ndamage It\"-        <'\nIt was a couple of years after\nits  erection   that names , of   the\ndead of World War I were' chiselled in the stone by master craftsman, James May, of. the Nelson\nMonumental  Works,  located  beside the City Hall, and added af\nintervals as names were collected.\nAfter    World War II names of\ndead of both wars wei\u00bb engraved\non a bronze plaque which now\ncovers the original engraving.\nMr. -Simpson also recalled His\nfather had done the stone work on\nthe front of the Bank of Com*\nmerce\u2014the marble used there\n.came from MarMehead in the Lardeau. The wall at the Blaylock\nhome, \"LakewOod,\" on the North\nShore, was more o'f his handiwork\nand with granite - from out the\nGranite road he did the stonework of St, Saviour's Pro-Cathedral.\nCars Collide\nAt Intersection\nExtensive damage resulted from\na collision of two motor vehicles\nMonday afternoon at the intersection of Hall and Vernon Streets.\nNo one waS injured, and city police are continuing investigations.\nDrivers involved were Thomas\nCarney, North Shore, and Robert\nBrandson of Kinnaird, Carney was\ngoing east on Vernon when the\ncollision Occurred after Brand-\nson's vehicle had made a left turn\nonto Hall after travelling west on\nVernon.\nHospital Tenders Called\nTenders for construction of the proposed new city-\ndistrict hospital at Nelson have been called foj. by Kootenay Lake General Hospital society. >     <\nContractors may Obtain ; plans and specifications\nafter Friday for the four-storey concrete frame building\nfroito Williams' and Fairbank, architect^, who prepared\nplans for the hew hospital. Plans and specifications will\nbe available for inspection at builders exchanges in Vancouver, Calgary ahd Lethbridge and at KLGH, Tertders\nwill be received until May 23 at the architects' Office.\nThe call for tenders follows several years of work\nby hospital officials, directors, trustees and architects,\nmost recent development being a wire from B.C. health\nrhinister Eric Martin a week ago approving calling foi.\ntenders.      \u25a0 ' \u2022\n\"Othello\" Presented\nTo Receptive Audience\n\"Othello\", produced by the Canadian Players of Stratford, Ontario, appeared oft the stage of\nNelson's Capitol 'Theatre Monday\nunder the Sponsorship of the Rotary Club.- The near-capacity\ncrowd applauded the production\ngenerously. \"-\nThe action of the play takes\nplace on Cyprus where OthOllo\nWas sent to defend the Island\nagainst the Turks. His lieutenant,\nIago, is insanely jealous of his\ncommander and plots his downfall by persuading his wife, Emilia, to 'filch' the handkerchief\nOthello first gave his wife, Des-\ndemOha. He then plants this in\nFewer Serious\nTraffic Accidents\nNelson RCMP officials remarked With satisfaction Monday there\nhave been no traffic fatalities in\nNelson subdivision during the\nlSst month. They said roads are\nclear generally, although some\nfrost heaves and rocks have been\nreported on. highways.\nThis\" is the _irst month since\nlast spring that no traffic deaths\nhave been reported to the RCMP\noffice. By Contrast, six people died\nin traffic accidents during December, when poorer road conditions\nprevailed. Fatal accidents Were\nrecorded in CrOston, Natal, Elko\nand Castlegar.\nLast traffic death was reported\nJanuary 16 at Wardner, and there\nWaS an industrial accident February 15 near Castlegar, when a\nhighway foreman lost his life.\nNORTHERN  ISLAND\nBaffin Island, the largest in the\nArctic' Ocean covers' nearly 260,-\n000 square miles. A\nCasslo's room to be used as evidence that Desdemona has been\nunfaithful to her husband. He is\nso successful at his various acts\nof villainy that he is able to bring\nabout the death of the wife, the\nwounding of Cassio and Othello's\nself-destruction when he is showtt\nhow his best friend has betrayed\nhim.\nThe Canadian Flayers carried a\nminimum of equipment, leaving\nthe play in the hands of the actors\nto take the action of play to the\naudience and make it live. Specially designed and colorful costumes emphasize the fast moving\nand bloody age ih which the play\nwas Written. \u25a0\u25a0',':'*'\nWORK\nPANTS\nWhen you are ready to\nput away the Winter\nWool, we are ready with\na full stock of\n\u2022 DRILLS\n\u2022 DENIMS\n\u2022 WHIPCORDS\n\u2022 NYLON BLENDS\n, All Pre Shrunk and\nFast Color.\n$3.05 to $9.95\nGodfreys'\nPHONE W\"290\"#l BOX\nm\nTONIGHT\nRegular Meeting of\nNelson Rod and Gun Club\nMovies and Discussion of Removal of Conservation\nMonies by the Government\nCome Out and Protect Your\nRights as Sportsmen\nCANADIAN LEGION 8 P.M.\nWe Are Proud to Introduce to You\nOUR COMMERCIAL AND FAIRVIEW DISTRICTS DRIVER\nOUR\nSERVICES\nDRY CLEANING\n4 hour service on request. No\nextra charge for specials.\nPresS jobs on the spot. Minor\nrepair* free. Siring of Rothes\non request also free Of\ncharge.\nLAUNDRY SERVICE\nIncludes  turning of  collars\nand  replacement  of  culfs.\nAlso   new   collars    (Kent, -\nWindsor dr regular),  new\ncuffs (French or regular).\nFree Pickup & Delivery\nOTHER SERVICES\nInclude drapes, curtains,\nruga, chesterfields, chairs,\near teats, etc.   \u25a0'\u2022:.'...'      .\nMOTH PRO-.FING,\nWAfER PROOFING.\nAgents  for:   Hat  Blacking,\n.  Dyeing  artd\nInvisible Mending.\n10ro\nDiscount\nOn All Pry Cleaning\nFer Cash and Carry at\nOur Plant Office,\n.182 BAKER ST.\nor Our Agent\nCustom\nSewing\nCentre\naf 580 Baker St.\nFree Attractive Plastic Covers for Your Wardrobe\n.,     GET YOUR EASTER CLEANING DONE NOW\nKootenay Laundry &\nDry Cleaners Ltd.\nMEMBERS OF THE RESEARCH INSTITUTE\nOF DRY CLEANING AND DYEING\nMR. GEO. BOND\nA native of Nelson residing at 913\nSixth St. A member of the Nel*\nson Volunteer Fire Dept. An enthusiastic sportsman active in\nhunting, fishing ini is a member\nOf the Rod and Gun Club. We\nare certain that you will find\nGeorge courteous and efficient\nwhen calling oh you.\n182 Baker St., Nelson; B.C.\n(SANITONEj\nPhone 1175 or 2020\n J  W. STENHOUSE\nFUNERAL HELD\nKIMBERLEY \u2014 Funeral serv\nice was held in St. Andrew's\nPresbyterian Church here lor\nJames Warren Stenhouse, 52, who\ndied Suddenly at his home, 243\nRitchie Street, last week.\nBorn at Crystal City, Man., Mr.\nStenhouse was a resident of Last\nLake, Sask., the Peace River and\nVancouver prior to coming to\nKimberley. He was employed as\na mechanic at the Sullivan Mine.\nActive in community affairs,\nMr. Stenhouse had served on the\nboard of the Presbyterian Church,\nthe Benevolent Society and the\nPynamiter. hockey executive. He\n. was an honorary member of the\nCanadian Legion branch and belonged to the Curling Club.\nSurviving are his wife and one\nson, Ronald James, at Kimberley;\nf daughter, Mrs. Marlene Nahir-\nniak, Chapman Camp; four grandchildren, and two sisters, Mrs. N.\nWilson, High River, and Mrs. I.\nTopham, Eastend, Sask.\nHighland-Bell Reports\nNew Ore Discovery\nBEAVERDELL \u2014 The small but\nprofitable silver-lead-zinc producer Highland-Bell may be headed for a. fresh production cycle,\nas' a result of new deep ore\ndevelopments.'   .\n\"We are currently developing a\nlot of rich new ore on the two\nnew deep levels,\" K. J. Springer,\npresident, has been quoted as\nsaying.\nAs a result of these develop\nments, capacity of the 50-ton concentrator is to be increased by\n50 per cent immediately.\nThe' company, which has net\nliquid assets in excess of $600,000,\nis becoming increasingly active in\noutside: exploration work.\n\u2022 Two deep levels are now being\ndeveloped from' a 6000,-foot adit\ndriven at a depth of 2900 feet at\nhe Beaverdell property. Both of\nYou don't need to pay\n*25<> to *300 for\nINCONSPICUOUS\n...QUALITY\nHEARING AIDS!\nOffers tin World's Largest-Selling,\nFinest Quality Hearing Aids at $65 to 165\nwMi Tan-Day Money-Back Guarantee!\nDespite some exaggerated cloims,\nth* only big difference in hearing\naids today is price! Zenith offers a\nfull fine of highest quality, up-to-\nthe-minute models, al! at sensible\nprices.' Visit your nearby Zenith\nHearing Aid Dealer, listed in classified phone directory. Or write:\nZenith Radio Corporation of Canada, Ui, Hearing Aid Division,\n11\u00a7S Tocomseh Road E., Dept.\nG5SD Windsor, Ontario.\nfENJTH\nHEARING   AIDS\nOptical Prescription Co.\n405 Hendryx St.\nPhone 500\nthese have picked up the downward extension of ore previously\ndeveloped on the upper horizons,\nbut which was cut off by a major\nfault. |\nThe deep ore looks both more\ncontinuous and richer at depth.\nAnd it should lengthen, too, as the\nore system is working away from\nthe main fault. One section shows\n250 feet of continuous ore that\nwill average over 200 ounces of\nsilver per'Jon across drift width\nThe ore, which remains intensively faulted, is now being deve\nloped over a-length of something\nlike 600 feet and for a slope length\nof 180 feet between \"the levels,\nThere are some big widths, too.\nIn fact, it will take several years\nto mine out the hew ore already\ninsight. :.\u25a0..\u2022\nDevelopment costs from here on\nshould be very low. It will be a\nlong time till work is carried any\ndeeper.      ' i      \/\nDuring the past year, the company produced 636,313 ounces of\nsilver for a gross value of ^583,538,\n(Returns, which are based on the\nsilver only, are equivalent to 92\ncents per ounce after credit for\nthe lead-zinc contained in the\nshipped concentrate).\nIt may take a couple of years\nyet to clean up the old upper\nmine.\nLast year, the company spent\n$75,000 on outside work, and this\nfigure is pointing higher (this is\nequivalent to 12 cents per ounce\nof silver produced).\nActive Interest in Rod, Qun\nClubs Urged at Salmo Banquet\nMore Than 21,000 in\nB. C. Receive Bonus\nVICTORIA (OP)-^More than 21.\n000 B.C. residents are receiving\nbetween $17.51 and the $20 maxl-\nm u m provincial cost-of-living\ntfffras given to old-age pensioners,\nHealth and' Welfare Minister Eric\nMartin said.\nMr. Martin, answering a question placed on the order .paper by\nGeorge Gergory (L-Victoria), said\na total of 26,481 B.C. pensioners\nwere receiving bonnes ranging\nfrom the bottom payment \u2014 less\nthan $2.50 \u2014 to the top payment\nof $20. ...\nThe minister said 99,300 provincial residents are receiving the\nfederal old age seeurits\/ pension\nSADM6 \u2014 It isn't enough for\nmembers merely ta pay their diies\nin sportsmen's clubs\u2014they must\nbe active members and take, part\nin all ctivities.\nThis was emphasized by game\ninspector C. E. Estlin of Nelson\nin keynote address of the second\nannual banquet of the Rod and\nGun Club of Salmo.\nA sumptuous turkey dinner,\nwith a cocktail hour beforehand,\ngether of Salmo district members\nand friends from other West Kootenay clubs,\nAfter R. J. H. Welton of Trail,\nWest Kpotenay Rod and Gun\nClub Association president, said\ngrace, a minute's silence was observed in memory of the late C.\nF, Kearns, former game inspector\nfor B division. '. -\n' Fishing.and hunting, inspector\nEstlin told his audience, are\ngreat attraction for  the tourist\nwas the occasion for tl^ get-to-\nlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nKimberley Finds Homes\nFor More Hungarians\nKIMBERLEY\u2014A second group of Hungarians arrived here\nlast week, and all the refugees have now been settled in homes\nhy the local committee. -.-,,.\n-  In the group were eight single men, two single women and\na married couple with a two-year-old sjbn. .\nOf the first group to arrivej all are working m the coal mines\nat Fernie and Natal-Michel.\nIjllllllllMllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMIIIIIIIIISIII\nIIIIUIj\nTO DISCUSS FISH\nPROTECTION WITH\nJAPAN AND RUSSIA\nVANCOUVER (OP) \u2014 United\nFishermen and Allied Workers\nUnion decided Monday to send\ndelegations to Russia and Japan\nto discuss and study fish conservation.\nOne of the first pieces of business to be discussed at the union's\n13th annual convention today was\nto discuss the advisability pf sending six or eight B.C. fishermen to\nconservation conferences in Russia and Japan,\nThe trip to Russia would start\nnext month and would give B.C.\nfishermen a chance to study fishing methods on Russia's Pacifie\nseaboard.\n, This fall, the union plans to\nsend another delegation to Tokyo,\nto meet Japanese, Russian and\nUnited States 'fishermen at a four-\nnation fishing conference.\nOPP03ED TO PACT\nThe conference will discuss such\nissues as a ban on high seas fishing for salmon which the UFAWU\nfeels is not a good conservation\npractice. Also, the Canadians\nand 6785 are hi receipt of the\n65-69-year-assistance payment by.]\nthe federal government.\nDancers Practise\nFor Blossom Festival\nCRAWFORD BAY \u2014 The Crawford Bay High School junior and\nsenior square dance groups are\npractising regularly for the \"Blossom .Festival\" competition in. May\nat Creston.\nSIGN8 OF SPRING\nCRAWFORD BAY \u2014 Spring is\nwell established here. Snowdrops\nand tulips are pushing -their heads\nup.\nwould oppose granting the Japanese the rights to fish closer to\nCanadian waters. The UFAWU is\nalso worried about the increased\ncatches that the Japanese' are\nmaking. (\nThe UFAWU: convention also\nwent on record as being opposed\nto signing a two-year salmon price\npact in B.C. this year. In 1555 a\ntwo-year agreement was -signed\nwhich \"worked to the advantage\nof the companies\", according to\nthe union. ,\nIt was reported that the union's\nmembership has risen to 7726\nmembers compared with 7031 last\nyear.\nThe convention also received\nfraternal greetings from fishermen\nfrom many parts of the world.\ntrade and therefor* constitute a\ngreat and growing industry in\nCanada.\nBillions of dollars were spent on\nthese sports in the United States\nlast year, and more of this money\nis coming to Canada each year.\n' Mr. Estlin was introduced by\nJack Teague, vice-president of\nthe Salmo club.    .\nChairman H. W. Beckett, president, presented a pair of wall\nplaques to Mrs. C. Wilson in appreciation of her work as secretary.     \u2022    -\nMr. Beckett then outlined work\nof the Salmo club in the last year.\nSeveral parties had been organized to help with construction of\na YMCA camp at Rosebud which,\nalthough not exactly a sportsman's\nproject, was deemed beneficial to\nthe community in general.\nMost Important accomplishment\nhad been the establishment with\nthe Trail club, of a rifle range. A\n47-acre site near Ross Spur was\nbought for this purpose, to accommodate a 500-yard rifle range,\ntrap and skeet shooting and small\nbore and revolver shooting.\nPresident Beckett made mention of generous'support given by\nthe Canadian Exploration and\nH.B. Mines.\nHe. also announced that $100,000\npublic liability insurance had been\nassumed by the club, to be effective April lj\nAmong those at the head table\nwere game wardens P. D. Ewart\nof Castlegar and R. A. (Ted) Rutherglen of Nelson, and J. D. Wallach, president of^the Nelson club.\nNew Santiago Makes\nHigh Grade Shipment\n.7 NE.W..DENVER \u2014 A shipment\nl_of. 80 .tons.of silver-lead-zinc ore\nfrom New Santiago Mines milled\nat Western Exploration has produced 31 tons of concentrate\naveraging 116 ounces of silver per\nton; nine tons of lead concentrates\ngrading 64 per cent and 12 tons\nof zinc concentrates averaging 56.5\nper cent, according to R. Crowe-\nSwords, president.\nThe shipment was made from\nthe company's Bosun property at\nNew Denver. Concentrates were\nlater shipped to the Trail smelter.\nThe ore has been taken out from\na raise from No. 6 to No. 5 leve:\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, MARCH 26, 1957\u20143\nKimberley Hospital\nWorking Capital Cut\n\u00a3MtK\u00abPf-'-*qrnr.'.'.,'Vrl j\n:_.\u00bb- ftamxti\n'\u25a0 WAS ELEVEN\n\"It's like this. I started with Cominco at Trail in 1911.1 joined\nup in W17, bat after the war was over, I came back to the Company\nand I've been here ever since.\n\u25a0'\u25a0 V ,\n\"Forty-six years sounds like a long time to stick around one\nplace, but I like Trail, I was just eleven years old when I came\nhere from the old country'and I've grown up With the place.\nOver at the Smelter, I'm one of the old-timeh .... I was there\nwhen the zinc plant opened, back in '16. \u25a0'.'...'.''\nTrail's a nice place to five... a good place to bring up a family.\nFor instance, I like sports, and with the Company's help we've\ngot one of the finest Community Centres in Canada.\n\"Sure, weSe got kids\u2014three boys, and they all served their\napprenticeshipwith Cominco. So I've gotaboilcrniaker.acarpenter\nand a machinist in the family. Two of them-ate still with the\nCompany; and the other runs his own business bere ih Trail.\nTB be 65 in three years, and I'M retire on my Company pension\nafter,nearly 50 years with Cominco. But VU stiH see my friends\nfrom the Smelter ... they all live around Trail and I plan to\nstay here,too.       -   _.      ,     .\n\"KH be a nice, easy fife for my wife and me from then on... right\nhere, with oar family and friends. We're both looking forward\ntofcT\n\u2014based on an attucti emphsee story\nJUb*-*k>\ntrotmtwte concentrates to mgh jttr&pwfeto\u00ae,., .Ootttinotyt\nexperience ond scientific refumig methods answer site\nmJ*Wi$ dmtmds of modern ktr\\m*y.\ni     tit   COISetttUEB   IIIII6 Alt S i_Elt.lt C0IPANY Of CltlOA 11 Ml It\nacAo   ofp\u00bb\u00ab\u00ab  *\u2022*\u00bb  \u2022*\u00ab_\u00ab  e**te\u00abs   -   tic  \u00bb*. \u00bb\u00abu  st   wist   moutreai.   oueMa\nSESCtU    OFFICE    .    TRAIL.    \u2022RITISH    COLUMBIA\nTADARAC   BRAND   METAIS    \u2022'  ElEPRAHl   BRAND   FERTILIZE!!\n..,.'..- i . \u2022 7\nIS you would like a copy of lists illustration by a M\/eU-knom B.C artist, \u25a0*___\u25a0* tie admlislitg and imlabk Jotfiammgjiist smite lass.\nKIMBERLEY \u2014 An operating\ndeficit of $13,245.41 for 1956 was\nreported by Kimberley and Dis-\ntrict Hospitav ai the hospital society's annual meeting. A $3000\nB.C. Hospital Insurance Service\nadjustment cut this to $10,245.41.\nReasons given for the deficit\nwere salaries higher than approved, medical, surgical and\ndrug allowances not sufficient to\ncover cost of work being done,\nloss of revenue due to cessation\nof special services, mainly discontinuance of the .physiotherapy\nwork at the hospital, and revenue\nfor newborn babies being lower\nthan anticipated.\nAt December 31, 1956, the cash\nposition showed a bank overdraft\nof $4821.91, unpaid accounts\namounting to $27,400.86 plus salaries and wages of $5677.75 for\na total of $33,078.61. Working capital has been reduced from $18,-\n824.98 as at December 31, 1954,\nto $589 (including the provincial\nadjustment of $3000 as at December 31, 1958).\nAdult'and children patient days\ntotalled 12,968 for 1956, an increase of 665 over 1955, Average\nlength of stay increased from 7.41\ndays in 1955 to 7.78 days in 1956,\nbut remained below the provincial average for acute patient care\nOut-patient visits dropped from\n9970 in 1955 to 6705 in 1956, directly attributable to the discontinuance of physiotherapy and the\nadministration of penlcilln.\nRecommendation is expected\nshortly that a radiol6glst be located in the East Kootenay.\nDonations acknowledged included bed lamps and stools, $1000\nfor a caseroom table, an anaes-\nthetizer and a stethescope from\nKinsmen Club, bronchoscope from\nthe Eagles' Auxiliary, $180 for\nfurnishing a room in new hospital\nfrom High School Y-Teen Club,\nand maintenance and replacement\nof radios by the Consolidated\nMining and Smelting Company.\nSalary negotiations by the nursing staff and other employees have\nreached the conciliation stage.\nWith the present hospital obsolete and the wiring condemned with rewiring date set as\nDecember, 1967, main problem\nof the society is getting government approval of plans for\nthe new hospital and the approval of ratepayers to pro-\nceed with Its construction. Site\nfor the hospital hat been prepared. The new hospital has\nbeen named their centennial\nprojeot by both Kimberley and\nChapman Camp.\nA blow to the trustees was news\nthat a working capital of $50,000\nwill be required to be included\nin the total estimates for the new\nbuilding. s\nJ, Q. Quinn and H. Vf. Poole\nwere appointed to the Hospital\nBoard. Board officers are president, J. A. Thompson; vice-president, S. Waites; secretary, S. Si-\n\"mons, and treasurer, Robert Kennedy.\nSocials To Aid\nCentennial Fund\nPROCTER \u2014 Plans for three\nsocial evenings to be held in the\ncommunity hall were laid by the\nProcter Centennial Committee at\na recent meeting.\nChairman is J. McMullin, recording secretary is Mrs. C. A.\nBrady, secretary *\u2022 treasurer is\nMrs. C. Fitchett, and W. A. Henke\nis in charge of publicity. Five additional members are Charles Fer.\nguson, Colin Major, B. J. Fitchett,\nR. L. i Stevenson and J. Persello.\nBuilding sub-committee consisting\nof Hallam MacKinnon and Donald\nCameron will present plans and\nestimates for the proposed centennial project of cloakrooms and\nrest rooms to be built onto the\nfront of the present hall when a,\ngeneral meeting of all residents\ntakes place on April 1.\nA series of \"bake\" bingos suggested by Robert Stangroom, regional consultant for the Community Programs Branch, will begin this Friday evening and continue for the next two consecutive\nFridays. Prizes will be home bak-\n,ing donated by women of the\nProcter area. Mr. Henke will be\ncaller, assisted by Mr. Major and\nMr. Stevenson. Mr. Stangroom\n\u25a0stressed that the success of all\ncentennial ventures depended\nsolely on the support of the districts involved. er.\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILY\nFEELING OFF COLOR\nBecause of irregularity?\nCHEW\nFEEN-A-MINT\nA modern medi-\noinal laxative in\nohewing form,\nPI.1.N-A-MINT is\npleasant to chew and\ngentle in its action, gentle\nenough for little children.\nFeen-a-mdt is a safe, dependable\nand thorough laxative and has a\ndelicious candy-coating \u2014 refreshingly flavoured with mint Why feel\noff-color in the mornings? Or sluggish, headachy and miserable anytime, because you need a laxative?.\nGet FEEN-__-$_ti_.T at,your druggist\ntoday and feel fine again.\nFAMOUS CHEWING LAXATIVE\nl-M\nFAIRBANKS-MORSE\nfor all\nSOUTH BEND Equipment\nTHI COMPLITI SOUTH, BEND LINI\nQuality machine tools are avpll-\nable at Fairbanks-Morse right\nacross Canada. This Includes 9\"\nand 10\" Bench Lathes, 10\" to\n16\/24\" Engine and Toolroom\nf Lathes, Turret Lathes, 14\" Drill\n\u2022 Presses, 7\" Bench Shapers and .\n. 10\" Pedestal Grinders.\nFairbanks-Morse Is your' major |\nSouth Bond Canadian distributor. |\nIn Vancouyer: 798 Beatty  St., Tele.: TA-0211\nICOICH  . I.SK.  [_..ILL__S.\nJOHN WALK! _ MM. L\u00bb\nThe perfect host\nmakes it a point to serve\n.a good Scotch Whisky\nand there's no finer\nScotch Whisky than\nJOHNNIE WALKER\nAvailable in\nS6H oz. and\n'13H os. bottles\nBom 18-0\u2014\nstill eoing stronj\nDISTILLED.   BLENDED   AND   BOTTLED   IN   SCOTLAND\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia\n ^^\u2022^BS^PfPf^lWrPy\nwmmm*\nfelautt Satlg l&mw\n,;' . Established  April W   1902 '   - . -'\nInterior British Columbia's Largest Dally Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday and statutory\nholidays    by    the    NEWS    PUBLISHING - COMPANY\nLIMITED,  266  Baker  Street,  Nelson,  British Columbia.\nAuthorized as Second Qlass Mail. Post Office Department, Ottawa.\nMEMBER  OP   IHE  AUUIl   BUREAU  OF  CIRCULATIONS\nMEMBER Of  THE. CANADIAN  PRESS\nThe Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use (Or republication of all news\ndispatches credited to it oi to The Associated Press or Reuters In this paper,\n.',.'\u25a0..       . and also the- local news published therein.\nTueS(jayj Marcfl 2S> 1957 ~\nCo-Operation Will Help Keef City Clean\nIn the spring, gravel and sand\nthat has been accurriulating all winter through sanding of our streets\nand sidewalks becomes a major problem.\nWithout sand in the winter, travel\nwould be dangerous for both pedestrian and motorist alike. However, as\nsoon as the snow is gone the sand is\nan eyesore and a nuisance, and, for\nshopkeepers especially, a costly\nthing.\nLast year the city purchased a\nmechanical sweeper, and it is reasonable to assume that a more economical and quicker cleanup of roads\nwould result. Some streets, especially\nIn Fairview, have been cleaned\nquickly and well, but it is disappointing that Baker , Street and other\ndowntown streets are not yet finished.   !       \u25a0'\nSidewalks in the downtown area\nare still not cleaned off in some sections, but this is the responsibility of\nthe businesses or concerns adjacent\nto these walks. Sand and dirt tracked\ninto stores is'costly,. since soft goods\ncan be spoiled by the dust, and keep'\ning the stock and fixtures clean is a\nnever-ending problem.\nPossibly the' reason the streets\nhave not been thoroughly cleaned is\nbecause of the number of cars parked\nin the downtown area. If this is the\ncase, we could take a leaf from the\nbook of centres like Kamloops, where\nprohibiting of parking in downtown\nstreets in the hours before 7 a.m. has\nbeen instituted. This makes cleaning\nup streets a quick and efficient operation.\nNelson has a reputation for cleanliness, and with the co-operation of\nshop owners, car drivers and the City\n'Public Works Department we can\nkeep that reputation.\nSchool Districts Need Help\nThe plight of many schopi districts at this time can best be described as close to being desperate.\nSix of them have asked the Minister\nof Education for larger grants this\nyear, but have been refused, and at\nleast in one case;\" Kelowna, there has\nbeen a suggestion from the' mayor\nthat the water rate should be increased in order to provide for the\nincrease In whges which teachers\nwill receive this year.\nAll these school districts which\nfind it difficult to pay their teachers\nand still remain solvent are what\nmight be described as rural districts,\nwith a town or city and a large residential or small farming population.\nUnfortunately for them, they have\nJittle or no industries to support\nschool costs.\nAt a time when teachers were\nhpping that they would reach the\n\u25a0 stage of being paid commensurately\nWith their value to the community,\nthey have found themselves with rising costs which wipe out the gains\nalmost as fast as they are obtained.\nUnder these circumstances they feel\nthat each year they should seek revisions of their salary scales. Any\ngains they may make are passed on\nto the taxpayers. Unfortunately,\nmany of the school districts cannot\nafford these increased costs simply\nbecause taxpayers in these districts\nare hard pressed.\nThe provincial government has\nstated that it will make a revision\nof the scale of grants paid to school\nboards for salary purposes based on\nthe Cameron report of 1945. It can\nbe readily seen that this is entirely\nout of date, but according to government spokesmen no extra help can\nbe given this,year. In view of all the\ncircumstances it would be as well if\nthe government would give such\nschool districts monies on Recount or,\nmake payments retroactive to the beginning of this year.\nLetter^ To The Editor\nLetters to ,tho Editor on any tople ot genuine Interest are welcome It they ara\nbrief, accurate and fair. No letter will be Inserted In whole, or In part, except over the\nsignature and address of tho writer. Unsolicited correspondence cannot be returned.\nLet Progress Find Way Around\nMonuments, Urges'Writer\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u2014When I picked up my Daily News\nthis morning and saw by the headlines that\nthere had-been a stay of proceedings-on our\nmonuments, I could not but remark to myself, 'well, the oldtlmers and veterans have\nwon' one round, anyway, and here's hoping\nthis.isn't just the start in stopping some of\nthe City Council's vandalism.\nOne wonders if any of these people on\nthe Council who authorized the destruction\nreally have given much serious thought to it,\nThere is. an old saying that \"where there\nIs a will there is a way.\" This is perfectly\ntrue, but one must have the will.\nThey talk of these monuments stopping\nprogress. It's too bad about Nelson's progress. One wonders. if, over the years, the\npeople of London,.England, with its many\nmonuments, have ever thought that they\nstopped progress. No! They saw to it that,\n? Questions?\nANSWERS\nOpen to any reader Names ol\npersons asking questions will not be\npublished There is no charge tar this\nservice,  QUESTIONS  WILI.  NOT   BE\nAnswered by mail except where\nthere la obvious necessity tor privacy\nCurious, Arrow Lakes\u2014Can you tell me how\nto cure a skin by \"Indian tanning\"?\nIndian tanning: To tan buckskin, take\neither green or well-soaked skin, flesh it\nwith dull knife; spread skin on smooth log\nand grain it by scraping with sharp instrument, then rub nearly dry over the oval end,\nof a board held upright. Take the brains of\ndeer or calf, dry gently by fire, put into\ncloth and boil until soft; cool off li cfuld. until\nblood-warm, with water sufficient to soak\nskin in, then wring out as dry as possible.\nWash in strong soapsuds and rub dry, then\nsmoke well with wood smoke. Instead \u25a0 of\nbrains, oil or lard may be used and the skin\nsoaked therein six hours. This, according to\nour Information, is Vnown as Indian tan.,\nF. J., Nelson\u2014Would you please print address of Baker Platinum Company?\nBaker Platinum of Canada, Ltd., Toronto, Ont., is sufficient address.\nL. L., Nelson\u2014Will you please print recipe\nfor making mulled ale?-\nOne quart good ale, one glass rum or\nbrandy, a tablespoon of granulated sugar,\npinch each of ground cloves, nutmeg and\nginger. Put the ale,- sugar, cloves, nutmeg\nand ginger into a stewpan and bring nearly\nto boiling point. Add brandy and more sugar,\nand flavoring if necessary, and serve at\nonce. For mulled claret . follow the same\nrecipe and method but substitute powdered\ncinnamon for ground cloves.\nE. D., Creston\u2014Have been told that Harvard\nUniversity was named for an Englishman. Is that correct?\nJohn  liarvard,  an  immigrant Puritan\nminister to America from England, Bachelor\nand Master of Arts of Emmanuel College,\nCambridge, bequeathed to a \"schoale or col-\nledge\" at \"Newetowne\" half- his estate and\n260 books. The college, until  then  unorganized, was called Harvard in his honor,\nand the township name was  changed to\nCambridge in tribute to the English university which had produced Harvard himself\nand other leaders bf the Puritan colony.\nLooking\nThe Part\nf. B. PEARCE\nYonr Individual\nHOROSCOPE'\n\u25a0By Frances Drake-\nGems of Thought\nOPINIONS\nThe history of human opinion is scarcely\nanything more than the history of human\nerrors.\u2014Voltaire.\n* *      *\nNo liberal man would impute a charge\nof unsteadiness to another for having\nchanged his opinion.\u2014Cicero.\n* *      *\nThe pioneer of something new under\nthe sun is never hit:  he  cannot be;  the\nopinions of people fly too high or too low.\n\u2014Mary Baker Eddy.\nPublic opinion is, with multitudes, a second conscience; with some,.the only one.\n\u2014W. R. Alger.\n* *      *\nWhat I admire in Columbus is not his\nhaving discovered a world, but his having\ngone to search for it on the faith of an\nopinion.\u2014Turgot.\n* * * ..'..':\nI will utter what I believe today, if it\nshould contradict all I said yesterday.\n\u2014Wendell Phillips.\neach time war came, these monuments were\nwell sandbagged and kept safe for future\ngenerations. , -\nThere is a request from the Mayor in'\ntoday's paper that citizens go \"all-out\" .to\nclean up and beautify our city for its 60th'\nbirthday, and I believe everyone should-\nmake that effort; but I also believe that cooperation should come from both sides\u2014it\nmakes for plea.santer relations. The complete\ndisregard by the Council for any and all\nopinions and wishes in regard to the monuments is spreading throughout the city and\nstirring up some very bitter feelings.\nThese monuments belong where they\nare. They are sacred relics of the past; let\nthem stay there, and let progress find its\nway around them. It can be done; it's been\ndone before.\n\"I am not, a member of, or have ever\nWatch Your Language\nMEGAPHONE (MEG-a-foiw;; Nuan\u2014A\ndevice to magniiy' sound, or direct it in\ngreater volume, as a very large funnel used\n\u25a0 as S spe'aking trumpet. Verb\" transitive and\nintransitive\u2014To speak or address through or\nas, if through a megaphone. Ofigin: Mega\nplus phone.\n\u25a0 .. . \u2014\n\"'. It's Been'Said\nIn life there are meelin^s which seem\nlike a fate.\u2014\"Owen Meredith\", pseudonym\nof Edward Robert Bulwei'-Lytton, English\npoet. .   .      \"\nattended a gathering of, the Oldtlmers' Association. \u25a0 1 have iived here, fifty years,\nso am-considered one, 1 expect, but I do say\nmore power to the Association and the Veterans to stay with it, and we will surely\nwin out.\n7 (MRS. A, E.) JULIA M. BLACK.WELL.\nNelson, B. C.\nThey'll Do It Every Time\ntohMM* U. t **MA WM\nBy Jimmy Hatlo\nLast August- wow.' how r4st the\nhorsechester street dept ripped up\n4u6e4m 4ve.from.foist tosdcteentm.'\n\"Towy-irs STILL tOQH UP-\/WD IT'LL\nPR064BLY BE A PEW USMT VE4ES TILL\n\u2022MEy GET GROUND TO PlrJlSUlUG IT>\u2014 '\nTODAY'S BIBLE\nTHOUGHT\n\"When George H. Spargo tried\nout for the part.of a newspaper\nmanaging editor In the Civil\nPlayers' upcoming play, The\nFront Page, he thought- he was\nqualified, Spargo is copy editor\nlor the Schenectady Union Star,\nThe director cast him as an escaped convict.\"\nAssuming that the casting director knew his job then there\nmust be some similarity between\ncopy editors and convicts, though\nI for one would be loth to believe it. On the other hand-there\nis no similarity between copy editors and managing editors If the\ndirector Is right, which should be\na i matter of satisfaction to both\nclasses of people.\nOf course these' casting directors have their own ideas of\n\"types\"\u2014as we all do. The mental\npicture of a school teacher .with\nmost people is a severely dressed\nlemale with her hair in > bun\nahd a prunes and prisms look on\nner face. Nowadays the opposite\nis more often the case. She\neither a fancifully dressed sweet\nyoung thing or a matronly lady\nwho has brought up a family, and\nlooks like it.\nPeople in a proiession can often\nspot their fellow workers, usually\nby their speech or mannerisms. I\ncan remember how pleased one\nof my uncles was after he. had retired Irom the police force and\na London policeman asked him if\nhe was a detective. He was not so\namused on another occasion, when\na man rushed up to him speaking\nin Yiddish. But the mistake was\nexcusable, He had the prominent\nnose which was a legacy from the\nPhoenicians who visited the West\nCountry of England before the\nRomans came. \u2022.:_,'-\u25a0\"\nARE CRIMINALS DIFFERENT?\nThough the police say they cannot spot criminals because criminals look like other people I\ndon't think it is entirely true. In\ntact the more I think of it the\nless I like it. If that were true we\ncould turn the statement around\nand say that other people look\nlike criminals. Though now I\ncome to think of it some of my\nfriends ... but I had better not\nenlarge on that because a man\nis known by the company he\nkeeps.\nBut I believe that a policeman\nshould have a pretty shrewd suspicion who is a professional crook.\nI base that on the fact that boys\nwho have been up to mischief always show it to an experienced\nteacher. How.} In some alteration\nol manner. For that matter let\na school teacher come into a room\nwhere there are a number of\nadults and most of them will stiffen up as they did in the days of\ntheir youth. I'm quite sure the\nex-con stiffens up when he passes\na policeman.\nOf course that director could\nnot be expected to \"type\" a managing editor, They are rare birds\noven in the newspaper world and\nlived in a rarefied atmosphere of\ntheir own, but the stage, screen\nand have fiction have their, own\npeculiai notions of newspaper\nplants, publishers and printers.\nPerhaps that is just as well. They\ncertainly make the business look\nmore glamorous than It is.\nThe casting director, however,\nshould not be blamed too much;\nWe were all apt to \"type\" persons.\nOnly the other day a man said\nto me \"so you are a retired school\nprincipal. \\ always' thought you\nwere CPR.\" Ever since then I have\nbeen wondering whether that is\na cc\/mpliment or not. Evidently\nit is, for it means I do look the\npart.\nBut it Is to be hoped that Mr,\nSpargo is successful in his impersonation of a .convict. He\nshould put in some time studying\nthem. Like a 70-year-old friend\nal mine who had the part of an\nold man in a play, said, he spent\na lot of time with old men' studying their behaviour. Perhaps with\na little study I can look'Ilka'* retired school principal.\nLook in the section in which\nyour birthday comes,  and fljd\nwhat your outlook' Is, -according\nto the stars,\nFor Wednesday, Maroh Zl, 1957\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 20 (Aries)\n~-A great day for taking the\nInitiative, for Concentrating on\nyour highest and most worthwhile\ngoals and Working toward them.\nOthers have excellent aspects, too,\nso try even herder than usual.  .\nAPRIL 21 to. MAY- 21 (Taurus)\n\u2014Think and act within reason,\nand don't just think of your Own\nproblems. You may need assistance, advice, even help today, but\nSO will others. Stress a. friendly\nattitude.\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini)\u2014\nThe Week\nAt Victoria\nMan does not live by bread\n. alone. Duet, 8:3. - ;...  .\nWe have deeper hungers. No\none can long find complete happiness in .material things. A hundred million adults and youths\nhave turned to religion in America\nalone. Multitudes,now living will\nso,e the utter collapse of governments that seek that happiness by\nbanishing religion.\nHI8TORIC FLAG\nDenmark's national flag, a\nwhite cross on a red background,\nhas been unchanged for more than\n700 years.\n. Last week we were running\nwith a full head of steam and open\nthrottle towards the finish line.\nBills, resolutions, motions, estimates are being wiped off the\nOrder Paper as quickly as the\nChairman can bang the gavel. At\nthe moment it looks as though\nwe will reach the finish line by\nthe end of this week. -\nOn Wednesday we dealt with\nthe Minister of Mines estimates.\n|,During his salary vote an attempt\nwas made to investigate the\ncharges of waste on the Cassiar-\nStewart road. I read part of the\nreport, submitted by the engineer\nwho was sent there by the govern,\nment to look after the job. The\ngovernment did not wish to hire\nthis report read because it was\nthis report that brought the\n\"waste\" to light. The House was\nin a turm,oll with practically all\nthe government Members taking\nturns at interrupting,\n- The Chairman, who was somewhat weak in a case like this, was\nunsble to keep order and finally\nhad to call > recess for 15 minutes.\nIt was the first time, siniie I have\nbeen here, that this had to be\ndone. The battle was.resumed in\nall Its fury, but finally wore itself\nout and the next order of business\nwas proceeded with.,\nMany of the Bills going through\nare. of-a minor nature or \"housekeeping\" ones and pass with the\nunanimous consent of the House\nThe Bill dealing with the $28\ntax rebate has gone through second reading. We opposed this BUI\non the grounds that the principle\nwas not good and if the Government collected more money than\nit needed, then certain taxes\nshould be lowered. We also ad\nvocated that more good would be\naccomplished if this money was\nused to Improve the standard of\nliving of the people who are in\nneed.\nMr. Gregory, the Liberal Member for Victoria, brought.in a Bill\nto amend the Workmen's Compensation Act. This would have\nmade the decision of the Medical\nAppeal Board binding on the\nBoard. The Bill was defeated by\nthe government ranks.\nMy Bill, asking.for a Certificate\nof Competency for miners met\nthe same late.\nThe perennial resolution standing in my name, asking that briefs\nfrom labor be referred to the\nStanding Committee on Labour,\nwas also defeated, every Member\nof the Government voting against\nit.\nThe resolutiop in my name,\nasking for a survey to be made\nof the housing needs of our senior\ncitizens was also voted down by\nthe government. The purpose of\nthis resolution was to find out\nunder what conditions our older\ncitizens were living and to give\nthe people interested in each community, s first-hand knowledge\nof the needs.\nThe Government with its large\nmajority is loath to give much-\nconsideration to the Opposition,\nbut without the letter's' analysis\nand criticism, the public would\nknow very little of what is\ngoing on. .\nWith that I will say au revoii\nfor another week.\nLEO T. NIMSICK.\nYou may have to maintain one of\nthose stepped-up tempos in which\nyou usually thrive best, but don't\nforget to relax completely lor a\nfew. minutes two or three times\nduring the heavy schedule. Smile!\nJUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer)\n\u2014Don't chafe over what is not\navailable or to your exact liking..\nYou- can improve matters more\nthan you-think by your own \u2014\nand today maybe Solely your\nown \u2014 efforts. Do your best but\ndon't strain.\n. JULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leo)-\nThis is no. time for. looking backwards and having regrets. Whatever went wrong in the past can\nbe altered! rectified, improved, ii\n-you try for it Now. Determination, courage will help to get the\nday off to a good start.\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER 23\n(Virgo) \u2014 Good humor has prevented many a \"rough spot\" from\nbecoming rougher. It can brighten\nhopes, bring about good will\namong co-workers, 'family members,, etc. A day for good will and\nsteady effort. ' t     ,\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER\n23 (Libra) \u2014 Certain planetary\naspects suggest a general need for\nolerance and understanding toward others. Protect Your principles, but don't fret. Some fine\nrays! ,\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER\n22 (Scorpio) \u2014, If you don't take\nyourself and your activities too\nseriously .you can put the day\nover 'wjth satisfactory results.\nBrighten your 'outlook; try something new.\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER\n21 (Sagittarius) \u2014 Excellent, plan\netary configurations which are\nnot confined to the charts of\nfew. All have an equal chance to\noetter their standing now. Start\nearly, but not over-excitedly^\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY 20\n(Capricorn) \u2014Tend to important\nmatters first, but don't neglect\nsmall details. You have a level\nhead; be ready to make ,\"tight\"\ndecisions.\nJANUARY 21 ib FEBRUARY ,19\n(Aquarius) \u2014 Don't let any grass\ngrow.under your feet. Others may\nbe trying to upset or take away\nyour opportunities. You can stop\nthis by .using your commpn sense,\nA great day for advancement.\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\n(Pisces),\u2014 Like Aquarius, don't\nlet anything sway you from th^\nachievement possible now. And\nthough results may hot come until-\nlater, the work'you do todqy is\nIndian Baby's Death\nFound Accidental\nNORTH VANCOUVER CP) -\nA coroner's inquiry has found that\nthe death of a 14-month-old boy\non; the Mission Indian reserve\nThursday was accidental.\nThe youngster, David Brian\nBaker, was found hanging from\nthe side of a bed with a. bedspread tangled about his throat at\nthe home of his grandparents, Mr,\nand- Mrs, Ray Baker.\nEfforts to revive him were unsuccessful.\nCoroner Dr. Harold Dyer said\nMonday the youngster was apparently playing on his mother's bed,\ngot his head through a.hole in the\nspread and fell over fhe side. The .\nspread was tucked in tight against\nthe wall, he said.\nwhat will really oount, Up and\ndoing I\nYOU BORN TODAY: Your ambition is ustially tempered with a\nsteady gait, a most valuable twosome for marked success when\nproperly applied. With originality\nof thought and enough caution to\nrestrain undue changeability and\nrestlessness, you can hurdle real\nobstacles to top achievement'. You\nare suited to a position of trust\nbut are often too modest to show\nyour rue worth. You can be relied\nupon in difficult situations. Don't\nbe' gullible, especially whAe\nboastful, domineering people are\nconcerned, Curb worry, self-pity.\nGive^. your Innate cleverness \u2022\nchance.       ^;\nStar Weekly Secures\nDale Carnegie's\nUnpublished Works\nO f t e a i great man'\u2022\ncrowning achievement lies\nin scribbled notes In a desk\ndrawer. The late Dale Carnegie, too,left a legacy of\npersonality success secrets\nin manuscript form.\nNow The Star Weekly\nhas secured the Canadian\nrights to present these uh-\ntold secrets in an exclusive three-issue series entitled \"Mow To Put Yourself Over.\"\nThis week read the first\ndynamic article. You'll\nalso get an exciting picture section, an eight-page\nfashion review, complete\nnovel, short stories, factual\narticles, the best colored <\ncomics, sports, cookery\nand homecrafts.\nThe Njpw-.fitair.yeekly'        I\nFor day in, day out HOME COMFORT\nYear in, year out FUEL SAVINGS\nINSULATE with\nJohns-Manville\nSPINTEXT^1\nAvailable in types for new or existing homes. For\nfolders, see your nearest J-M dealer, J-M-Approved\nHome Insulation Contractor, or write Canadian\nJohns-Manville, Port Credit, Ontario.\nrt-* Jfat\nIt's strange they spend millions-\nto rnske a v>od movie for you to\nenjoy and have it ruined for you\nby a few bags of popcorn.\nLIQUOR CONTROL BOARD\nNotice To\nContractors\nGovernment Liquor Store\nKelowna, B.C.\nSEALED TENDERS' endorsed \"Tender, Government\nLiquor Store, Kelowna,\" will be received by the undersigned fdr the erection and completion of* premises for use as a Government Liquor Store, Leon\nAvenue, Kelowna, General Contractors can obtain\ncopies of the plans and specification on application\nto Whittaker and Wagg, Architects, 543 Bastion\nStreet, Victoria, B.C., and on payment of the sum\nof $25.00, which amount will be refunded on return\nof said plans ond specifications. Contract to include\nfair wage clause.\nA copy ef the plans and specifications of tne pro-\n\u25a0 posed building herein mentioned may be examined\nat the office of the Vendor, Government Liquor\nStore, Kelowna, B. C.\nTenders must be In the hands of the Secretary,\nLiquor Control Board, 1016 Langley Street, Victoria,\nB.C., an or before 4:00 p.m., Tuesday, April 23rd,\n1957, and will be opened in public at that time and\nplace.\nT. R. BERRY,\nSecretary,\nLiquor Control Board,\n1016 Langley Street,\nVictoria, B.C.\n w\nAbout the Town\n\u2022-\u25a0*-\u25a0*\u25a0*-**-\u25a0 By Alice Stevens\nPHONE  1369 OR  1844\nMr, and Mrs. C. F. Grant have\nreturned to their home in Procter\nafter spending the winter months\nin Santa Cruz, Calif.\n* .   .\nAttending a Lions zone meeting\nin Spokane last weekend were\nBill Wicken, Frank Beresford,\nWalter Ebdon, Henry Stevenson\nand Grenville Bill.\n_   *'   \u2022\nLawrence Chaluck, Silica Street,\nhas returned from SOokane where\nhe visited Mr. and Mrs. Leo Cho-\nquetle.\n* \u00ab   \u00ab\nMr. and Mrs. A. Sandvik of\nVancouver are visiting Mr. and\nMrs.   A.   Koenig,   223%   Vernon\nStreet;\n* \u25a0,   ft\nThree brothers of Mrs. Fetterley, Arthur, Leslie and William\nMorice, spent a couple of days\nvisiting Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Fetterley, 811 Sixth Street, on their\nreturn to Lancer, Sask., after having spent the winter in California.\n* *   \u00ab\nJ. J. McEwen, Fourth Street,\nhas returned from a visit to Vancouver.\n* '\u00ab   ft\nMr. and Mrs. G. Bill and children,  311   Sixth  Street,   recently\nvisited Kitimat.\n* *   *\nThe Dr. Annie Smith Circle of\nJfceAt a- SsujiruL\nSt. Paul's-Trinity met at the home\nof Mrs, Marie Frost, 305 Hall\nMines 'Road. ,A spring tea which\nwill be held in May was discussed\nby the group. Refreshments were\nserved by the hostess, assisted by\nMrs, G. R. Pickering,\n* *   ft\nMr. and Mrs. J. A. Knoepfli have\nreturned to their home at Balfour\nafter spending the winter in Santa\nCruz, Calif.\n. *   \u00ab   \u00ab\nMrs. F. E. Gattinger of Guelph,\nOnt., and MrS. A. E. Feldmann of\nFlin Flon, Man., are guests of\ntheir mother, Mrs, F. E. McAlpine,\n406 Goi-e Street. Mrs. Gattinger is\naccompanied    by    her   daughter\nMarney.\n* 7   *\nMr. and Mrs. Ron Gardner of\nTrail visited the former's;parents,\nMr. and Mrs. W. Gardner, Stanley\nStreet.\n* \u00ab   *\nSome Nelson residents who motored to Trail Saturday to see the\nG. B. Shaw play, \"Man'and Superman\", were Dr. G. Szkeley, Mr.\nand Mrs. Earl Jorgenson, Mrs. F.\nNiven, John Norris, Mrs. W. L.\nHolmes, Miss\/Leslie Holmes, Mr.\nand Mrs. F. W. N. Drew, Miss\nMary Jarvis, Mrs. J. Erb, Mr. and\nMrs. L. McPhail and Miss Sheilah\nMcPhail.\n* *   *\nJ. M. Sti-achan, W. W: Brown\nand Arthur Ness are spending a\nweek in Calgary attending a su-\nperintendettts' convention,\n* \u2022   \u2022\nMrs, C. M. Coventry, 1716 Stanley Street, is visiting Vancouver.\nOUTSTANDING WORK In providing Interest and manual therapy for patients Is being\ndone by the Canadian Arthritis and Rheumatism Society In Nelson. Here', Mrs. R. Main, left,\nand Mrs, E, Sjoberg, right, are learning weaving\nfrom Mrs. J. N. Allan, wife of the minister of\nFirst Presbyterian Church and an enthusiastic\ndevotee of.the craft. Mrs. Main Is learning use\nof a small loom for weaving narrow products\nsuch as belts. On loom at back being operated\nby Mra. Sjoberg broad articles can be made.\n\u2014Daily News photo.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. TUESDAY, MARCH 25, 1957\u20145\nWoman Shuns \"Officialese\" in\nWording Unusual Weather Bulletins\nBy SYLVIA HACK\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nBUXTON, Eng.  (CP) \u2014 Sometimes the weather report in this\nDerbyshire borough says frankly:\nWe have only the foggiest ideas\nabout today.\"\nOr on a December day the yellow sheet on the wall of the\nchemist's shop will announce that\nBuxton's temperature is \"joining\nthe Antarctic expedition.\"\nThe forecasts and phraseology\nboth come from Edith Pilkington,\na lively, white-haired woman in\nher 50s, who enjoys, the job of official   meteorologist  because   she\nv^AXettAHti\n\"You keep on saying money\nisn't worth much these days,\nand then you make a fuss\nwhen I spend some of it.\"\nRedoes ...\nJellied Cranberry Pie\nEasy4oMake Treat\nBoSwell Notes\nBOSWELL-The Memorial Hall\nCommittee sponsored a whist\ndrive Saturday which drew a fair\nattendance.\nMrs. J. Pryke took the women's\nhigh prize and Paul L. O'Sullivan\nthe men's high. Other prizes went\nto Miss K. Embree and Norman\nE. Bainbridge. Supper was served\nby the Hall Committee.\nJ. Pryke was a business visitor\nto Trail.\nC. H. Bebbington has returned\nfrom visiting his daughters, for\n10 days, at Grand Forks and Nelson.\nLSIttigCIt B Thli omening votcine\nworkl from within to remove tho cause\nond atlotk the comploint. Vet tonligen\nB tan be taken cosily by mouth. So\nmany thousands have already found\nlolling relief from the blinding heod-\nothei, the choking, gasping agony of\nSinus. Ask your druggist for free lanti-\ngen Booklet and start treatment today.\nBy MARGARET CARR\nParty red jellied cranberry stars\ncrown this distinctive all-year-\nround dessert pie.\nIt's a dream of a combination\u2014\na creamy pie filling over crushed\ncranberry sauce. Then a topping of\ncanned fruit with cranberry\njellied sauce. Then a topping of\ncanned fruit with cranberry\njellied sauce shining through a\nclear fruity glaze.\nIt's a delicate pie, thoroughly\ndelightful and so easy to make.\nJust reach for packaged pie crust,\npie filling mix, canned fruit and\na one-pound can jellied cranberry\nsauce. To blend with the delightful tang of cranberry flavor you\nhave your choice of pie fillings \u2014\nlemon, orange, cocoanut cream\nand vanilla. How you'll love that\nmake-ahead-of-time-ease. (Make\nthe pie the day before and store\nin refrigerator.)\nServe this dream of a cranberry\npie as a scrumptious party dessert\nany time. Guests will love it with\ncups of your best coffee or fragrant tea.\nAnd just think \u2014 you can serve\nit all year round \u2014 canned cranberry sauce is always in season.\nFillings\nDREAM OF A CRANBERRY PIE\nPrepare  lemon  pie  filling  ac-\nWedding,\nAnnouncements\nand\nInvitations\n*~A- s>\/?*'\nWEDDING ANNOUNCEMENTS or INVITATIONS require the correct wording, the choice\nof type, and the latest designs in stationery . .,\nWe guarantee all these essentials in regard to\nSocial Printing. Ask to see the various samples\nthat we carry in stock . . . Also \"Thank You\"\nCards, Wedding Cake Boxes. If out of town,\nwrite, for samples and prices.\nCommercial Printers\n' DIVISION OF     '':..';\u25a0;\n:'\u201e \"' \u25a0 }'\u25a0\u25a0;'\u25a0\u25a0 '.'\u25a0.'''\"''' V \u25a0'.'.';.\nNews Publishing Co. Ltd.\nPublishers of Nelson Daily News\nPHONE 1844   -   NELSON\ncording   to   package   directions.\nCool slightly.\nUnmold can of jellied cranberry\nsauce. CuV three or four slices Vi-\ninch thick. Then with cookie cutter cut stars, large and small, or\nshape.you prefer, out of each.\nGlaze\nCombine one tablespoon corfi\nstarch and\"dash of salt in a saucepan. Gradually stir in %-cup juice\nfrom canned fruit and 1-3-cup\nlight corn syrup. Bring to a boil\nand cook until clear and thickened, stirring constantly. Cool\nslightly before spooning over\nfruit.\nFruit\nDrain  and   blot   canned  fruits\n(pineapple, peaches,  pears,  apricots, fruit cocktail mix)   on absorbent paper.\nTo Finish\nSpread remaining crushed cranberry sauce on bottom of baked\nand cooled eight-inch pie shell.\nSmooth pie filling over sauce..\nCompletely cover filling with\ndrained fruit and cranberry cutouts arranged in an attractive\npattern. Spoon glaze over fruit.\nChill. ,\nKitchen Notes\nGlaze can be made in advance.\nKeeps for a week when stored in\nrefrigerator. Just before using,\nwarm it slightly for easy pouring.\nJellied cranberry sauce will un-\nmould perfectly if you open one\nend of the can first, then turn it\nover on to board or plate \u00abnd\npunch hole into other end. Mould\nwill slide out when can is lifted.\nTo give greater variety in color\nthe fruit can be tinted a delicate\ngreen or pink by adding a few\ndrops food coloring to the juice\nand letting them stand in juice\n10 or 15 minutes.\nFirst meeting ot a new club, St.\nPaul's-Trinity 2nd Nelson Cubs\nand Scouts Mothers Auxiliary, met\nlast week at the home of Mrs. J.\nCrozier with Mrs. J. Florlo co-'\nhostess.\nOfficers elected were president,\nMrs. Crozier; vice - president, Mrs.\nFlorio; secretary, Mrs. J. McClelland; treasurer, Mrs. C. A. Peters;\nSunshine secretary. Mrs. C. Clark.\nRecipes .*..\nPineapple\nGives Flavor\nTo Hawaiian Dish\nBy MARGARET CARR\nNot all of us will vacation in\nHawaii this year, but we can all\nbe \"world travellers\" via recipes\nwith a foreign touch.\nOne would expect a dish such\nas Pork Chops, Hawaiian from a\nland where pineapple is king and\noriental Influence runs high. The\nrecipe is quite similar to Chinese\nsweet-sour pork.\nThe pork chops, delicately\nbrowned, are glazed with a colorful sweet-sour sauce which includes pineapple cubes, green\npepper; tomato wedges and celery\n\u2014 almost as beautiful as Hawaii\nitself.\nBecause the fruits and vegetables are added, during the last\nfive minutes of cooking time,\nthey retain their pleasing color\nand texture when served.\nJust the right amounts of soy\nsauce, pineapple juice, vinegar\nand prepared mustard are combined in the sauce to give a\nflavor that's difficult to describe\nbut easy to enjoy.\nThis streamlined combination,\nserved over steaming white rice\n(the quick-cooking kind), is practically a meal in itself. Chilled\nfruit cocktails might be served\nbefore dinner, and for dessert \u2014\ncoffee ice cream.  \u2022*\nThe hostess who is giving a\nHawaiian luncheon or dinner\nparty might well consider using\nsea shells on fish net for table\ndecorations, Flowers for the\nladies would be in order, since\nexotic blossoms grow profusely\non the islands.\nThis Hawaiian dinner is \"a good\nchoice budget-wise, as pork is\nplentiful and prices are moderate. Centre loin pork chops are\nhandsome and more expensive\nthan rib chops \u2014 but the rib\nchops are just as- flavorful and\ntender. Chops that are well\nmarbled with fat are best because the melting fat gives flavor\nand moistness to the meat as it\ncooks.\nHAWAIIAN PORK CHOPS\nFour loin or rib pork chops, Ys\nTEACHERS AS\nCIVIL SERVANTS\nTO BE STUDIED\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014The question whether school teachers\nshould become civil servants will\nbe studied by a special committee\nof the B.C, School Trustees Association.\nPresident A, W. E. Mercer of\nNew Westminster was authorized\nat a weekend meeting to set up\nthe committee which hopes to report to the annual convention in\nVictoria next September.\nThe committee will investigate\nthe arguments for and against\nhaving teachers' salaries paid by\nthe government and assigning positions in the same way as it doe's\nfor other civil servants such as\npublic health nurses, public works\nengineers and forest service employees.\nProcter PTA to\nPlon Sports Day\nPROCTER \u2014 Belts made of\nbraided plastic will be <Jemon-\nstrated at the March Meeting ol\nthe Procter PTA in the school following the business which will\nconsist of forming* committees and\nmaking plans for the annual May\nsport's day when the West Arm\nelementary schools compete for\nindividual trophy cups and an inter-school cup,\nThe PTA donated $10 to the\nkootenay Lake General Hospital\nmattress fund out of proceeds\nraised by a successful film night\nheld last month in lieu of regular\nbusiness meeting;\nloves'to study nature.*She dislikes\nfusing \"officialese,\" and the racy\nstyle of writing gives her a chance\nfor self-expression.\nAt the end of Christmas week,\npressure was recorded as \"down-\nin-the-mouth,\" an done day in\nMarch the bulletin said \"we've\nstill no fixed policy, but believe\nin trying everything once.\"\nThe \"Buxton weather prospects,\" as the bulletins are called,\nfascinate people who visit the borough. Miss Pilkington has had requests for them from all parts of\nthe world.\nMiss Pilkington, who has taken\nan interest in Buxton's weather\nsince she was a schoolgirl, is\nproud of the barograph presented\nto her by the air ministry.\nShe approaches her work partly\non a scientific basis, partly\nlocal knowledge built up over the\nyears and she's a firm believer in\nwaiting for inspiration.\"\n\"I have perfected the gentle art\nof ambiguity when in doubt,\" she\nsays.\nRadio reports are useful, combined with cloud and pressure\nstudies.\nAside from the weather forecasts which take up about two\nhours a day, Miss Pilkington\nworks as a pharmacist in her\nbrother's chemist's shop.\nHer interest in the weather began as a'child \"when she helped\nher father, who for 25 years tended the weather instruments at the\nDevonshire Royal Hospital and\nwas honorary meteorologist at\nBuxton during that time.\nMiss Pilkington was the first\nBritish woman to receive an official appointment as a meteorologist.\nIT'S CHROME SET\nTIME!\nTrade Your Old Set\nfor the \u2022      ,\nNEWEST in STYLE!\nt\nPHONE   1844   FOR   CLASSIFIED\nCanadian Style\nChanges Announced\nFresh as a flower, colorful as a butterfly, the new\nSpring styles from Can- a\nad a's couturiers are\nmore appealing than ever\nv this year...\nand they\nseem inexpensive, tool\nSee them in\nfull color in\nthe special\n8-page fashion section in\nthis week's Star Weekly.\nThis is your exclusive review of Canadian Spring\nStyles prepared under the\ndirection of Fashion Editor Gwen Cowley and endorsed by the Canadian\nFashion Council. Take a\nlook now at the clothes\nthat every woman will\nsoon be wearing.\nThe New Star Weekly\nANCIENT PORT\nThe Mersey Hiver, on which the\nseaport of Liverpool is built, has\nbeen a well - known anchorage\nfor more than 1000 years.\ncup water, \\Ys teaspoons salt, 1\nchicken bouillon cube, 2 tablespoons cornstarch, 1 cup water,\n1\/3 cup .pineapple juice, Yt teaspoon Worcestershire sauce, 1 teaspoon soy sauce, 1 tablespoon\nvinegar, y\u00bb teaspoon prepared\n,mustard, 1 small can pineapple\ncubes, drained, Ys green pepper,\nsliced. 1 tornato, cut into wedges,\ny. cup chopped celer, 4 cups\ncooked rice.     '.'\nBrown pdrk chops slowly in' hot\nfrying pan. Add the Ys cup water\nand the salt, cover and simmer\nfor about 40 minutes. Remove\nchops and pour off fat. Crush\nbouillon cube with spoon in frying pan. Add cornstarch, the one\ncup water, pineapple juice, Worcestershire sauce, soy sauce, vinegar and prepared mustard, and\nstir to combine. Simmer until\nthick, stirring constantly. Add\n.pork chops,'pineapple, green pepper, tomato and celery and simmer\nfor five minutes. Serve over looked rice. Makes four servings.\n2\n$1.30 VALUE\nFOR ONLY\n2 JARS ONLY 99(5\nregular $1.30 value!\nw\nTwice as handy at one thrifty price!\nHere's the Noxzema Slsin Cream jar that gets the popular\nvote! And no wonder! Greaseless, medicated Noxzema in\nthis handy, compact jar can be kept close at hand wherever\nyou are... in the boudoir, bathroom, nursery, kitchen, or\noffice. So stock up today at this special thrifty price... two\njars (regularly valued at $1.30) for only 99*.\nYou get a jar for the boudoir or bathroom\nNoxzema's deep-eleansing, healing action makes it a perfect\ncomplexion cream and powder base-helps heal blemishes\nand minor skin irritations.\nYou get a jar for the kitchen\nNoxzema's soothing medication keeps hands lovely, helps\nheal burns, children's chapped skin and baby's skin irritations.\nStock up today and save.\non this limited offer!\n$|30 value for only $^$\n NKiPiPiPMPPMWMPilWAIMPi\n\u00ab\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, MARCH 2\u00ab, 19ST\nSHOP and SAVE at SAFEWAY\nSENSATIONAL SAVINGS\nON\nBRANDS YOU KNOW!\n%^ CAM AY\ntfO*lUfN$ <OLO OetM*   \u25a0\u2022'\u25a0:\u25a0\nffiltSi\nTide\nGiant Size Deal; Pkg.\n\u25a0T.\nrisco\nFree Cannister Set; 3 lb. tin\t\n$\n&S\n1\npic ot \u00abjpan\nNew Green; Giant Pkg\t\nB\nonus\nFree Silverware Inside; Giant Pkg.\n\u2022     \u2022     \u2022\n72\n79\nI\n4|P Q V   For Easy Dishwashing; Pkg.\nPink Camay\n4for35\nFor Beautiful Women ....\nGi\neem\nThe Modern Toothpaste . . . .\nSIL 7ku>\nJumbo D\ni\nBig Towel Inside; Pkg\n2 (or 49\nc\nUZ\n$\n\u2022    \u00bb     f     \u2022     \u00bb     e\n1.19.\nC^ayL-lAtL\ni\nIFLUFFO llb$. 57\u00a3 * CHEER Gt 77e * IVORY BARS lOfor 69c\nPRICES EFFECTIVE MAR. 26 TO APRIL 6th\nITEM BY ITEM DAY BY DAY SAFEWAY HAS THE LOW PRICES\nPERSONAL\n Hop Day\n30 Years\nTORONTO (CP) - Clsrsnce\n(Hap) Day, general manager of\nToronto Maple Leafs, ended his\n30-year-career with the National\nHockey League club Monday in a\nmove that was his answer to a\n' public rebuke for the team's failure this season.\nIn a two-minute conference with\nConn Smythe, president and managing director of Maple Leaf Gardens, the 56 - year . old Day announced simply that he was \"not\navailable\" next year.\n'His actioft severing all connections with the team terminated a\ncareer that started in 1927, and\nwhich saw the Maple Leafs,win\none Stanley Cup while he was a\ndefenceman, five when he was\ncoach and one while he was assistant manager.\nThe abrupt end followed a week\nof speculation by the public and\ndenials by Smythe that a major\nFights\nBy The Associated Press\nHolly wood\u2014Tommy Tibbs, 130.4\nBoston,  outpointed  Paulia Arm-\nstead, 139, Los Angeles, 10.'    .     ,\nCloses\nin NHL\nshake-up in the Leafs' organiza-.\ntion was imminent because the\nteam failed to make the NHL\nplayoffs this year.\nDay's move came only a few\nhohrs after another longtime Leaf,\nJimmy Thomson, this year's captain and secretary of the NHL\nplayers' association, announced\nthat he would never again play\nwith the Toronto club. The 30-\nyear - old de.enceman said he\nwould refuse any offer of a contract with the Leafs next year because his loyalty to the team had\nbeen questioned.\nNO  REPLACEMENT NAMED\nDay refused to comment on his\nresignation, and Smythe said it\nwas a \"grave disappointment\" to\nhim, Smythe said he didn't know\nwho Day's successor would be.\nOnly eight days ago in New\nYork, Smythe had publicly rebuked Day, coach Howie Meeker\nand Thomson at a press conference. .       \u2022\nHe described the season, which\nended with Leafs finishing in fifth\nplace, as a \"year of failure\" and\nlisted his general manager and\ncoach as among the main factors\nthat had influenced the club's fortunes.\nForces 8th Game\n<M\no,\nMOORE DEFENDS\nTITLE JUNE 7\nDETROIT (AP)\u2014Archie Moore\nagreed Monday to defend his light\nheavyweight boxing title in Detroit June 7 against the winner\nof the- Chuck Splser - Tony Anthony bout April S,\nMoore last defended his crown\nlast June in London against Yo-\nlande Pompey.\nUnanimous\nDecision for\nTiger Jones\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014Ralph (Tiger)\nJones of New York scored a\nunanlmdlis decision over Toronto's\nArthur King Monday night before\na crowd of 9000 at Maple Leaf\nGardens.\nJones,'third .- ranking middleweight, weighed 157 >\/_:-pounds, six\npounds more than hia opponent.\nHe was in control all the way and\nhad King in trouble In the seventh, eighth and ninth rounds with\nboning lefts to ' the head and\nbody.\nJones was knocked down in the\nfifth round, but got up at the\ncount of one and complained to\nreferee Bobby Lawrence of Toronto that he had been pushed.\nOfficials made him take the compulsory nine count. \u25a0      \u25a0 \u25a0\nare you\n17 and 25?\n,.. if so this is for you\nYour Naval recruiting team ean new offer you\n oorno wonderful career opportunities ....\nFor full details see the Naval recruiting team\nat the Hume Hotel in Nelson, Wednesday and\nx Thursday, March 27 and 28.\nKeep Canada Strong\nGO PUCES GO NAVY\nRoyal Canadian Navy .\nEVERY\n4*SHAVE\nWe make this offer so you can convince yourself that\na medicated 3-Way shave does give you fast, smooth,\npainless shaves\u2014and no fooling!\nINTRODUCTORY SALE\nregular price\non all\n3  WHSf! I   tWktM\nWay ihave\nINSTANT LATHER\nPRODUCTS\nMedicated for painless shaves ... with after Shave lotion built right in.\nGET 3 WAY TODAY WHILE THIS OFFER LASTS.\n3 WAY SHAVE MADE BY NOXZEMA\nVERNON   \u2014  Vernon   C\u00abni.\nd!an\u00ab. forced an eighth ind deciding game In the Savage Cup\nseries here Monday night with\na 4-3 win over Spokane Flyort.\nFrank-King's goal at the .even\nminute mark of the third period\nwas the eventual winner. It gave\nthe  Okanagan Senior Hockey\nLeague champions a 4-1 lead at\nthe time, but Flyers narrowed tbe\ngap with two goals in 34 seconds\nby Lome Nadeau and\" Art Jones.\nNadeau also scored Spokane's first\ngoal In second frame to deadlock\nthe game 1-1 alter Johnny Harms\nopened the scoring tor Vernon in\nthe  first. ( Other Vernon scorers\nwere   Merv   Bidoski   and   Odie\nLowe.\nThe Vernon victory deadlocked\nthe series for the third time. Ca-\nAnkle Injury\nSidelines Mantle\nVERO BEACH, Fla. (AP) - Instead of starting Monday's exhibition game with Brooklyn Dodgers,\nMickey Mantle, New York Yankees 'triple-crowd\" winner, was sitting disconsolately on the side'\nlines again\u2014his left ankle heavily\nbandaged.\nMantle had just about recovered\nfrom a badly bruised thumb when\nhe was struck down again by\nanother of a series of injuries that\nhave plagued him over the years;\nWhile working out in the outfield before 'Sunday's game with\nthe Dodgers in Miami, Mantle ran\ninto a hole in the turf and suffired a severely strained ligament\nOUT FOR \"GOOD WEEK\"\n\"These things usually heal very\nquickly,\" said Dr. Sydney Gayrior,\nthe Yanks' team physician, whb\nrushed Mantle to a local hospital\nfor x-rays. \"He may be able to\nrun on lt in five days or so.\"\nBut Dr. Gsynor cautioned\nagainst over-optimlsm. saying it\nis possible that Mantle will be\nout of uniform for a good week.\nMantle wears an elastic tape\nfor support around his weak right\nknee, so1 manager Casey Stengel\nwill probably take no chances on\npermitting his\" star to return too\nsoon. Should Mantle favor his injured left ankle, further injury\ncould result.\nStengel was disturbed about\nMantle's latest Injury, pnly a few\nminutes before Mickey fell, he\nwas remarking to newspaper men\nthat the bruised thumb\" appeared\njust about healed and that he'd\nbe ready to start against the\nBrooks today.\n\"Everybody says_ we are going\nto win the pennant again,\" growled Stengel. \"But nobody has handed me any written guarantee. In\nthis business, things happen.\"\nnadlans won first, fifth and seventh games, Flyers second, third\nand sixth. Fourth game was tied.\nEighth game is slated for Vernon\nWednesday night\nLINEUPS\nSpokane \u2014 Goal: Soflak; defence: . Luke, Lancien, Plante,\nHodges; forwards: Toole, Beattie,\nBodman, 7 Jones, Gordichuk, Zahara, Crawford,' Nadeau, Kubasek, Cirullo,\nVernon \u2014 Goal: Gordon; defence: Stecyk, McLeod, Schmidt,\nLebioda; forwards: Lowe, Harms,\nTrentini, Blair, King, Bidoski, Davison, ' Marquess, Jakes.\nSUMMARY\nFirst period: 1, Vernon, Harms\n(Stecyk, Lowe) 16:00.\nPenalties \u2014 Marquess 5:44, Lebioda 11:51, Beatde 1_:M, Plante\n13:44, Lebioda ft:39, Hodges. 17:39,\nBidoski 18:20;\nSecond period: 2. Spokane, Nadeau (Kubasek, Bodman) 16:08;\n3. Vernon* Bidoski' (King)  17:13.\nPenalties \u2014 Trentini 11:05, Bodman 11:05, Jones 12:33.\nThird period: 4. Vernon, Lowe\n(Schmidt, Marquess) 5:44; 5. Vernon, King (Bidoski) 7:00; 6. Spokane, Nadeau (Kubasek. 11:18; 7.\nSpokane, Jones (Lancien, Gordichuk) 11:52.     i.\nPenalties \u2014 Luke 4:36, McLeod\n16:15.\nHockey Scores\nBy The Canadian Press\nNORTHERN ONTARIO SENIOR\nSudbury 5 North Bay 7 '\n(North Bay leads best-ol-seven\nfinal 2-0, one tied)\nWESTERN CANADA JUNIOR\n\u25a0Fort William 4 Winnipeg \u00bb\n(Fort William   leads   best-of-\nseven semi-final 2-1)\nMEMORIAL'CUP   . i\nOttawa Junior Canadiens 9 Ottawa Shamrocks 3\n(Fitst game best-of-five  quarter-final) ,\nWESTERN LEAGUE\nCalgary 4 Edmonton 2\n(First game best-of-three Prairie division semi-final).       J\nWE8TERN CANADA JUNIOR\nEdmonton 4 Flin'Flon J\n(Best-of-seven   semi-final   tied\n1-1)\n500 See 12-Event\nBoxing Card\nCRESTON - Five hundred\nspectators attended the first .East\nKootenay. Boxing Association 12.\nevent card, at Creston Saturday at\nthe Prince Charles High School,\nwhen fighters, from Cranbrook,\nKimberley, Creston\u25a0\u2022 and Nelson\nparticipated.\nMain event heavyweight four-\nrounds, went on decision to B.\nHuscroft of Creston, J04. pounds\nover G. Lansing of Yahk at 192\npounds. The four-round semi-\nwindup event,' lightweight division, was won on a decision by\nDick Martin of Cronbrook, 132\npounds, over W. Hockley of Kim\nberley, 1^6 pounds,\n. In preliminary events, 85-pound\nclass J. Hanson of Creston won\nfrom V. Munroje of Cranbrook; 90\npound class B. Romano, Creston\nwon from Dedisky, Kimberley and\nP. Lalonde, Creston fought to a\ndraw decision against C. Fabro,\nKimberley.\nIn catcHeweight A. Leavitt at\n107 pounds, Creston beat E. Bosen-\nham of Creston. In bantamweight\nJ. Heavener of Creston at 118\npoinds beat E. Bodry of Creston,\n120 pounds. G. Nakahara of Cranbrook at. 118 pounds, won from D.\nCrawford of Creston, 121 pounds.\nIn light-welter class G. Bens of\nCreston, 152 pounds, beat J. Nes-\ngaard,'. Kimberley, 156 pounds.\nThese wins were all on judges'\ndecisions. In light-welter again\nBob Gee Won, Cranbrook at 136\npounds, knoclqW out J. Jacoe,\nNelson, 138 pounds in the first 50\nseconds, and in middleweight A.\nMen, Cranbrook at 159 pounds\nscored a first round'\u25a0\". knockout\nover.D. Vigne of Creston, 158.\npounds.\nEast Kootenay Boxing Commissioner Herb Stanton of Kimberley\naccompanied the Kimberley entries. Tony Holder and Bill Bour-\nden were referees snd C. W. Fer.\nguson timekeeper, with judges\n'Colvln McBurney of Cranbrook,\nW. Ferguson of Creston and J.\nHolder of Kimberley.\nCranbrook fighters have trained\nuhder supervision of Joe Renney\nand Ray Murrell over the winter.\nCranbrook Club will be host to a\nreturn card at Cranbrook in April.  ...\nGOODWJii 'iM\nforywr\ntmey\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by. tho Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia\nDurelle Wins\nIKO in Seventh\nNEW YORK (AP) - Yvon\nDurelle, Canadian light-heavy\nweight champion, stopped Clar\nence Floyd of New York Mon\nday. night in 'the seventh round\nto win a scheduled 10-rounder by\na technical knockout'. t :\nDurelle, from: Bale Ste. Anne,\nN. B\u201e weighed 175. Floyd, substituting for injured Angelo Defendis, in the main event at St.\nNicholas Arena, weighed 167.\nDurelle was a 2-1 favtfrite and\nJustified the betting as he outclassed the lighter, Floyd in the\nfight stopped at 1:17 of the sev.\nenth.\nDurelle, 27, dropped Floyd for\nan eight count with a smashing\nright and a follow-up left as the\nround started., He chased ljis wob\nbly opponent around the ring,\npounding left and rights to the\nhead and body until referee Joe\nLo Biano ended it\nFloyd, however, got in some\ngood licks, especially in the first\nrtfund, and opened cuts over both\nDurelle's eyes. But he couldn't\nstand Up to the battering punches\nDurelle was firing, and the Cana\ndian swept all rounds after 'the\nfirst.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, MARCH 26, 1957\u20147\nSemis Start tonight\nIn Detroit, New York\nBritish Rugby\n1   LONDON (Reuters)\u2014Results of\nMonday's rugby games:\nRUGBY LEAGUE\nBradford 3 Keighley  18\nHull 41 York 3\nRUGBY UNION\nBristol   11 .Harlequins   12\nOld Ruthlishlans 27 Aberdeen\nUniversity  6 ,7\nBy DAVID DILE8\nDETROIT (AP) \u2014 The greatest\none - two scoring combination in\nNaitonal Hockey League history\nwill shoulder Detroit Red Wings\nhopes in the club's 27th Stanley\nCup series, beginning here tonight against Boston Bruins.\nGordie Howe and Ted Lindsay,\nthe old pros of the title-winning\nRed Wings, ran away with the\n1056-57 scoring race. Their combined 174 points is the highest total ever amassed in a single season by two players on the same\nclub.\nThe two finished one-two in the\nNHL scoring, Howe taking first\nplace with 89 points and Lindsay,\na 13-year-veteran of NHL wars,\nedging Montreal's Jean .Beliveau\nfor second place with 85.   .        .\nFor Howe, it marks the fifth\ntime he has won the title, and in\nhis ll seasons in the big leagues\nhe has finished In the, top 10 in\nscoring eight times. Lindsay, who\nhas been the league's leading\nscorer only once, nevertheless has\nbeen in the tpp 10 eight times in\nhis 13 seasons.\nTWO TOP GUNNER8 '\n\"It'll be up to those two fellows,\" general manager Jack\nAdams said as the Wings set out\nin quest of their eighth Stanley\nCup. \u00bb\n\"Wo figure to get that odd\ngoal here and therefrom the\nother fellows,\" said Adams, \"but\nHowe and Lindsay are the blue-\nchip players and they'll come\nthrough. We dont have to wor-\ni ry about them.\"\nThe statistics back up Adams'\nthinking. Howe and Lindsay have\nscored about 40 per cent of aji-\nDetroit goals this season.     H\nBut Adams, in hockey prtiStt-\ncally all, his life and connected\nwith the Detroit aggregation for.\n30 years, doesn't pick* his Wings\nfor the title.\n\"This is the strangest playoff I\ncan recall,\" he remarked. \u2022 \"Bos-,\nton has more hungry players.\nThey're aggressive and they're\nalways digging. Montreal and Dei\ntroit have a solid nucleus, bUt both\nare going to need extras' effort.''\nNew York could surprise, but\nright now I'd rate it a toss-up\namong Boston, Montreal and our\nown boys.\"\nAuburn Lineman\nTo Join Bombers\nWINNIPEG (CP)-Chuck Max-\nime, 24-year-old guard from the\nUniversity of Auburn, has signed\nwith Winnipeg Blue Bombers of\nthe Western Interprovincial Foot-\nball Union club officials announced Saturday.\nThe 225 - pound lineman, regarded as an excellent blocker,\nwas drafted by Chicago Bears of\nthe National Football League a\nyear ahead of time due to his\nbrilliant play. This was made possible by his year in the armed\nservices after leaving high school.\nBatteries\nMINING - LOGGING\nAND AUTOMOTIVE\ni  Repairs to All Types\nBOO Lake St Phone 853\nARROW BATTERIES\nTha STRONGEST, SAFEST fire ever b\u00abi7f...\nnow of fewest prices everf\nU3N\nNow only $1.35 more\nthan regular tires!*\nNote, the supremestrength and safety of\nFirestone Nylon Cord Tires are yours for\nonly a very little more than you've been\npaying for ordinary tires.\nChances are you've been wanting nylon tires\n\u2022 \u2022 -most safety-conscious motorists do.\nGreater Strength-for greater blowoot protection.\nGreater Resistance ta Heat Damage-for longer\ntire life. .\nGreater Resistance to Molituro-raoisture can't\naffect nylon.\nlower Cost-tier MHe-because they're stronger-\nthey last longer!\njJjYou pay only $1.35 more lor Firestone Nylon TOO\" Tubed Tires than lor regular first line tubed tires f\u00aba BTO-IS)!\nWhen you buy your now cor\nei reploc* yow prMon. tiren\n.;}\nSPECIFY HMSIOM NVIONt\nfjrt$fOnt LIFETIME GUARANTEE\nThoro's no rim* limit on the\nFirestone Guarantee! Firestone\nbacks its claim to superior quality by guaranteeing for life every\ntire against flaws in workmanship\nand materials!\nHere's What Quality Moan* In lire*\nEvery tire that eaarriee the Fireetone\nbrand has to earn the name. Only\nthe finest rubber compounds, cord \u25a0\nmaterials and tire building methods\nare good enough for Firestone.\nTho World,\nfomoui Noma\nTl I*fc$tf0tt fc   Is your Guarantee el Quantyt\n9\nCITY TIRE SERVICE\n206 BAKER ST.\nPHONE 1427\ni\nCLARKSON MOTORS\n924 NELSON AVE.\nPHONE 205\nPARKVIEW MOTORS LTD.\n323 NELSON AVE.\nPHONE 1454\n 8\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, MARCH 26, 1957\nAnglo Rouen\nAtlin Rutf- \t\nAubelle \t\nAumacho   __,\nAumaque  \t\nBarnat\t\nBase Metals  \t\nBaska Uranium .\nBibis Yukon\t\nBoyjnar ....'. _\nBriiund \t\nBruhhurst\t\nBrunswick \t\nButt Can .\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS\nThe Daily News does not Hold Itsolt responsible In tho event\nof en error In the following lists. ,\nTORONTO STOCKS\nClosing Prices\nMINE8\nAcadia Uranium  .13%\nAlgom Uranium  20.50\nAmal Larder  \u201e .... .20\nAnacon Lead  1.50\n.75\n.77\n.10%\n.25\n.13\n21\n.73\n..-_      .08%\n.45\n.11\n.13\nBuff Red Lake \t\nCan Met  \u201e  4.35\nCampbell C  .\". i,\/._.. 10.37%\nCassiar    _   8.10\nCentral Patricia  1.95\nChimo \u201e 1.03\nChromium  ...: _.  3.00\nConiarum .....;....._..... .38\nCons Denison  _  82.25\nCons  Discovery     2.98\nCons Halliwell  .77\nCons Howe   3.10\nCons Mining & Smelting 25.75\nCons Red Pop  18\nCon Sanorm 17\nCon Sub   2.40\nConwest  .._   6.20\nCopper Man  \u201e\u201e 25\nDonalda    .22\nEast Malartic \u201e  1.15\nEast Sullivan _ _  4.50\nFalconbridge  _ 35.25\nFaraday\nFrobisher   _\u2022.\nGeco  _\nGiant Yel \t\nGlen Uranium ...\nGoldale  \t\nGoldcrest   \t\nGolden Manitou .\nGrandines \t\nGunnar Gold \t\nHarminerals  \t\nHasaga\t\nHolliriger   \t\nHeadway   \t\nHudson Bay \t\nInspiration\n2.55\n2.61\n16.00\n4.95\n.42\n.20\n.12\n1.30\n.18\n20.62%\n.42\n.17%\n24.50\n.80\n79.00\n.70\nInt Nickel   100.37%\nIfon Bay .\nJoliet Que ....\nJonsmith\t\nR J Jowsey\nKenville\n3.75\n.43\n.17\n.74\n_    _     _        .12%\nLabrador   ...    19.00\nLake  Lingman          .12\nLakeshore '     4.60\niexindin       .22\nLittle Long Lac      2.50\nLorado     1.46\nMacassa   _       1.85\nMadsen R L      1.70\nMalartic G F       1.45\nManeast         _      .23\nMaritime Mining      1.67\nMilliken   _     3.10\nMcLeod         1.10\nMining  Corp\nMogul    ...\nNew Alger ,-  .:\nNew Bidlamaque ......\t\nNew Delhi   .._\t\nNew Fortune \t\nNew Highridge .._\nNew Harrieana\t\nNew Jason\t\nNew Lund   \u00ab.__\nNipissing\t\nMsto\nNor\nbranda New \t\nNorgold  ....\u201e,..\nNormet-iJs   \t\nNorpax   .....\nNorth Can\t\nNorth Rankin \t\nOpemiska    \t\nPickle Crow \t\nPreston E D\t\nQuebec Copper \t\nQuebec Lab  \t\nQuebec Lithium      9.20\nQuebec  Metallurgical  ._    2.00\nQuemont       13.12%\nRadiore        1.30\n16.25\n1.45\n.13%\n.09\n.85\n.16%\n.27\n. .24\n.14\n.35\n2.99\n.11\n47.37%\n.23%\n4.80\n1.22\n1.70\n, 1.24\n11.25\n1.18\n7.90\n.86\n.20%\nRayrock\nSan Antonio \t\nSherritt Gordon .\nSilver Miller \t\nSteep Rock .,..\t\nSlocan Van Rot .\nSullivan   Con  _\nSylVanite   ..._.\t\nTeck Hughes \t\nTemagami   \t\nThomp - Lund .\nTombill\n1.51\n.61\n6.75\n.84\n20.00\n.11\n3.40\n1.38\n1.65\n3.00\n1.00\n.37\n.24\nTrans Cont Res _\t\nUnited Keno  5.85\nUpper Canada _  .78\nVentures    ... _.. :.. 33.75\nViolamac    .'.  1.74\nWaite Amulet  __..... H.00\nWiltsey Goglin   '    .IS\nWright Hargreaves   1.30\nYale   \u201e... '    .30\nYellowknife Bear  _. 1.39\nYukeno   I - .09\nOILS\nAmerican Ledutt ..  .43\nBanff Oils     2.70\nBailfey Selburn   16.75\nCalgary and Edmonton 27.87%\nCan Admiral  45\nCdn Atlantic   6.10\nCanadian Collieries   5.50\nCanadian Devonian   8.10 '\nCan Decalta __..'.! .._. 1:40\nCentral Leduc  7.95\nCommonwealth Pete ...... .10%\nCons Peak : \u201e.... ?1\nGreat Sweetgrass  '..... 1.30\nHighcrest ...: 32\nHome A  17.50\nKroy _  .86\nLiberal  Pete  2.32\nLong Island Pete\nMarigold   \t\nMidcon  \t\nNat Pete\n.14.\n.28\n1.17\n4.20\n.62\n1.60\n2.50\n19.00\nNew Continental ....\nNew Gas Expl .'.\nOkalta  ..\t\nPacific Pete \t\nPetrol 99\nPonder      60\nPrpv Gas  __.-....     2.45\nRoyalite    .-. _    16.50\nSpooner\nStanwell Oil ..:...\nTriad   ..'\t\n\"United Oils .*.:,..\nYank Canuck ..\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi\t\nAlgoma Steel\t\nAluminum\n.67\n7.7S .\n2.80 '\n43\n38\n118%\n119%\nAtlas St      27\nB-A Oil  :     ilVi\nBathurst Power     56%\nBell  Telephone\nBrazilian \t\nB C Forest\t\nBurns1 A _\t\nBC Power A .\nBurrard A\nCanadian Breweries ...\nCanadian Canners \t\nCanadian Ceianese       13%\n44%\n9%\n12%\n11\n45%\n7\n24\n13%\nCan Cement  - -  24%\nCan Chem Co _'. _  IVs\nCanadian  Dredge   ._, 18%\nCan Oil   27%\nCanadian Pacific Rly  - 32%\nCan Packers B  36%\nCockshutt   \u201e....- 7%\nCons Gas  _   \"35\nDist Seagram    25%\nDom Foundries   267b\nDom Magnesium  _,  15%\nDom Magnesium _,_. 15%\nDom Steel Ord ' _ 21\nDom Stores _  42\nDom Tar & Chemical   11%\nDom Textiles \u2014 8\nEddy  Paper   _ _. 50\nFleet Air   _. _ .75\nGatineau  :  28\nGoodyear     _ 170\nHiram Walker  : -. 23%\nHoward Smith    35\nImperial Oil     52\nImp Tobacco  _  11%\nInt  Pete      ' 51\nLaura Secord  _  18%\nLoblaw A\nLoblaw B \t\nMassey Harris _\t\nMcColl Fronteilae .\nMont  Loco\t\nMoore Corp'\t\nNat Steel Car \t\nPage Hershey ...._\u201e\nPowell River _\t\nPower Corp\t\nRuss Industries .....\nShawinigan   \t\nSicks Brew \t\nSimpsons A \t\nStandard Paving ...\nSteel of Canada ....\nUnion Gas of Can .\nTaylor Pearson\n17\n16\n6%\n68%\n15%\n58\n25%\n115\n41%\n68\n11\n84\n20*\n18\n34%\n63\n72\n10\nUnited Steel   .?.     15%\nWestern Groce*s A \u2014      20\nCalgary Livestocks\nCALI5ART CCP) \u2014 Trading was\nactive and prices steady to strongi\non the Calgary livestock market\nMonday. Six hundred eattie j and\n25 oalves were offered, bulk of\nthem medium to near-good butch-\ner steers and heifers, the remainder mostly .medium quality replacement eattie.\nChoice butcher steel's 17.50-18.\ngtfod 16.50 to 17.50, medium 14.50\nto 16-; common tt to 14, choice\nbutcher heifers 118 to 16'.T5; good\n14.50 to J5.80, medium M to 14,\ncommon HI to 11.50, godd cows'\n11.25 to 1\u00bb; good bulls 1>1 to 12,\ncomjnon to medium 8 to 10.50,\ngood feeder steers 17 ttf 17.75;-\ngood stock steers 16.50 to 17.50;\ncommon to medium 14 to }\u00a3, good\nstock steer calves 16.50 to 18, good\nbutcher-weight heifers ealves 17\nto 18.50; good to choice veal\ncalves 18 to 22, common'to medium. 14 to, 1-7. i\nGood lambs W-18.75.\nClosing Prices\nMINES\nBeaver Lodge\t\nBralorne  __.:.._..-,\nCariboo Gold \t\nGiant Mascot\t\nGranduc    7. ; \u201e.\nHamil Sil _\t\nHighland Bell\t\nNational Ex  :. ........\nPend  Oreille   :\t\nPioneer Gold\t\nPremier Border \t\nQuatsino .'. '.\nReeves MacDonald _\t\nSheep Creek \t\nSilback Premier \t\nSilver Standard\t\nSunshine Lardeau\t\nTaylor  \t\nTrojan   _\t\nWestern  Exploration \t\nOILS\nAltex  \t\nA P Consolidated \t\nCharter  \t\nDel Rio.\t\nHome\t\nNew Gas Ex\t\nOkalta Com __\t\nPacific Pete\t\nPeace River Gas  -.'\t\nRoyalite    \t\nRoyal Can \t\nSparmac\t\nUnited  _\t\nVanalta    .....\nVantor   \t\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlberta   Distillers   \t\nAlberta  Distillers Vt _\nB C Forests\t\nCrown Zellar Can) \t\nVANCOUVER STOCKS\n.30\n5.20\n-.46   .\n.15\n3.80\n.01%\nHO\n.44\n.70\n1.35\n.08\n.55\n1.60\n1.15\n.16\n.16\n.21 .\n.15\n.21%\n.38\n.21\n.47\n2.85'\n5.50\n17.00\n1.60\n2.40   '\n19.00\n11.50\n16.00\n.08\n.22\n2.75\n.26%\n1.44 '\n1.55\n1.30\n12.00\n18.50\nInland Nat Gas \t\nLucky Lager  r..\t\nMid Western\t\nPowell River\t\nTrans Mtn \t\nWestminster Paper'..\nWestern Plywood-!\t\nUNLISTED\nAuwon   .......\nBluebird\t\nWestern Mines \t\nWoodbury   \t\nBANKS\nBank of Montreal  .:\t\nCan Bank of Com .............\nImperial Bank of Canada\nRoyal Bank of Canada-....\nFUNDS\nCan Inv Fund _\t\nGrouped Income \t\nInvestors Mutual\t\n\u25a0    7.25\n3.50\n3.35\n41.00\n115.50\n23.75\n15.00\n.08\n,01%\n.45\n.05\n48.50\n48.00\n48.00\n66.00\n4.05\n10.90\nDIVIDENDS\nBy The Canadian Press\nBathurst Power and Paper Co.\nLtd., class A 75 cents June 1, record May 6.\nSangamo Co.   Led.,   15   cents\nMarch. 28, record March 26.\nTuckett Tobacco Co. Ltd., pfd.,\n$1.75 April 15, record April 11.\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG   CP) \u2014 Winnipeg\ngrain cash prices;\nOats, No. 1 feed, 69.\nBarley, No. 1 feed, 89%.\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS 1240 ON THE DIAi.\n(PACIFIC 8TANDARD TIME)\nTUESDAY,\n7:00\u2014News\n7:05\u2014Morqing Devotions\n7:10\u2014Farm Fare\n7:15\u2014Chapel in the Sky\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Sports News\n7:40\u2014Wake-Up Time\n7:50\u2014Rise 'n' Shine\n' 8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n8:15\u2014Opening Markets\n8:20\u2014Breakfast Varieties\n8:55\u2014Entertainment World\n9:00\u2014News\n9:05\u2014Shoppers' Guide\n10:00\u2014News\n10:05\u2014Shoppers' Guide\n10:15\u2014Happy Gang\n10:48\u2014Composers in Modern\n11:00\u2014News\n11:05\u2014Story Parade\n11:15\u2014Woman's World\n11:30\u2014Western Roundup\n12:00\u2014Novelty Time\n12:10\u2014Sports News\n12:20\u2014News\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadeast\n12:55\u2014Prairie News\n1:00\u2014CKLN Reports\nMARCH 26, 1957\n1:15\u2014Matinee\n1:45\u2014Paoific News\n2:00\u2014School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n3:30\u2014Sacred Heart \u25a0\n3:45\u2014Footlight Favorites\n4:00\u2014Today's Musie\n4:30\u2014Those Who Wrote Masia\n4:45\u2014The Story Man\n' SiOO-^Barn Danoa\n5:15\u2014By-Line\n5:20\u2014Closing Markets\n5:25\u2014Musicale\n5:45\u2014Strikes and Spare*\n5:50\u2014News\n6.00-Rawhide\n6:15\u2014Musicale\n6:30\u2014Parliamentary Roundup\n6:35\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n7:00\u2014News and Roundup\n7:30\u2014Polka Party'\n8:00\u2014Premiere on the A-ir\n'8:30\u2014Anthology\n9:00\u2014feet's Make Musio\n9:30\u2014Leicester Square\n;lfl^0\u2014Mews\nlflSo\u2014Sports Mews\n10:;lj_\u2014<\u00a7SiiMcj. at 3__wge\n10.30\u2014Sign Of*\nCBC PROGRAMS\n(PAGIFle STANDARD TIM*\u00bb\nWEDNESDAY,\n7:00\u2014Fishermen's Broadcast\n7'i'5\u2014Musieal Minutes\n7:30\u2014Mews\n7:85\u2014Musioal Minutes\n7:40r-Morniiig Devotiqns\n7:55\u2014Musical March Fast\n8:0O\u2014News and feather\n8:10\u2014Spohs News ,\n8:15\u2014-Morning Mtieic\n8:45\u2014Laura limited\n9:00\u2014News\n9:15\u2014Your Good Neighbor\n9:30\u2014Morning Gonoert\n10:00\u2014Morning Visit '\n10:15\u2014The Happy Gang\n10:45\u2014The Word of the lord\n11:00\u2014Radio Theatre\n11:15\u2014Kindergarten af ttie Air\n11:30\u2014The Listening Glass\n12:15\u2014News <\n12:25\u2014Showcase\n12:30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\nMARQW 27, tW\nlose*}.\n3:4S--\u00bb<S. Eoj\n4:30\u2014Mtueie lor 3\n4:<S\u2014Legends of 1\n5:00\u2014News\n5:lj5\u2014By-Line ,    7\n5:30-Music tw MoMMNa\n6:00\u2014Rawihjfdfe\n8:15\u2014Roving'IJepoBtit    .\n6:30\u2014Musical Diary\n7:00\u2014News\n7:30\u2014Introduction to We<_. Wight\n7.40\u2014CSC Wednesday JBgift\nlOiflp\u2014Newe and Weather\n10:15\u2014The Art of the Movies\n10:30\u2014Recital\nDAILY CROSSWORD\nSWITCH FROM STEAM\nBERN, Switzerland (Reuters.\u2014\nThe last steam locomotive soon\nwill disappear from the'Swiss federal railroads, r^w almost entirely electrified. Some 200 ste&m locomotives, all more than 40 years\nold, will be replaced by diesel locomotives as reserves in case of\npower breakdowns.\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\nTimes Shown Are Pacifie Standard Time\nKXLY TV \u2014 Channel *\n:30 Good Morning\n:45 Cartoon Time\n:00 Romper Room .\n:30 Search For Tomorrow *\n:45 Guiding Light *\n;0O Valiant Lady *\n15 Love of Life\n:30 As The World Turns *\n00 Our Miss Brooks *\n:30 Houseparty *\n:00 The Big Payoff \u2022    -\n:30 Bob Crosby Show\nO0 Brighter Day *\n:15 Secret Storm \u2666 \u2022\n:30 Edge of Night \u00bb\n:00 Johnny's Flower Time\n:15 What's Cookin'\n:00 Garry Moore *\n:30 Godfrey Time\n:45 Variety Time\n00 Movie Man Matinee\n:30 Strike It Rich \u00ab '\n:00 Klixy The Klown\n:30 Sgt. Preston of Yukon\n:00 Regional News and Weather\n6:15 Doug Edwards News *\n6:30 Rosemary Clooney\n7:00 $64,000 Question \u2022\n7:30 Superman\n8:00 Phil Silvlrs \u2022 -  ,\n8:30 Mickey Rooney Show\n9:00 To Tell The Truth. *\n9:30 Red Skelton Show \u00bb\n10:00 Badge 714\n10:30 The Movie Man\nKHQ TV \u2014 Channel 6\n:4<t Test Pattern\n:45 Color Test... Pattern.\n:55 Bible Reading\n:00 Tic Tac Dough 1\n30 It Could Be You *\n00 Home *\n:35 Local News\n40 Home \u00ab\n:00 Price Is Right \u00bb\n30 Tenn. Ernie Ford *\n00 Matinee Theatre (C) *\nO0 Queen For a Day\"\n45 Modern Romances *\nOO It's a Great Life * :'-   \"\n30 Truth or Consequences *\n00 \"The Ghost Catchers\"\n:30 Mr. Engineer\n:00 Hopalong Cassidy\n:30 \"Cowboy and the Blonde\".\no:45 Weatherwise\nThe Front Page\n6:55 Newspaper of the Air\n7:00 Trouble With Father\n7:30 Jonathan Winters *\n7:45 NBC News *\n8:00 Big Surprise *\n8:30 Panic\n9:00 Jane Wyman \u2022\n9:30 Kaiser Aluminum Hour *\n10:30 News Desk\n10:35 Late Movie\n10:45 \"Man Who Wouldn't Die\"\nKREM TV \u2014 Channel 2\n11:45\n12:00\n12:30\n1:00\n2:25\n2:30\n2:45\n3:00\n4:15\n5:00\nTest Patterfi\nFrankie Laine\nPride of the Family\nFeaturama\nNews\nKREM's Kamera\nBeauty Tips\nFeaturama\nPopeye\nMickey Mouse Club\n6:00 Kit Carson\n6:30 Newsroom\n6:40 Weather Sketch\n6:45 John Daly\n7:00 Polka Time\n7:30 Warner Bros. Presents\n8:30 Wyatt Earp\n9:00 Broken Arrow\n9:30 DuPont Theatre\n10:00 Channel 2 Theatre\n(Programs subject io change by stations without notice.)\n5. Gazed open.\nmouthed\n6. Emmet*\nT. Hawaiian\nfood\ni. Scented.\nfilled btsgjs\nM. Astern\n(neut.)    '\n& Extraordt.\nnaitpeMti.\n.      (slang)\nsi. Painful\nspots'\n\u00ab. Island\n(Malay\nArch.)\nU. Two-toed\n(loth\nUUSiila (jail.:\nUai!)!=l!_)-a!l_l|\namaa wusi.\nII !__;_i!]_lt:\nrarriar.jHH  at__\nI       Ull:\n'.!r.l.-'i_.:..(.J\n.Mr..       m-lM   _w_\nwnui-j.-uxi'\na__iji      nas\nA0BO88\nLUseltss\n5. Breaches   ..\n9. Handle\n(Rom.\nAnttq.f\n10. Wild on\n11. Likely\n12. Science ot\ntight to\nvision\n14. Successes\n17. Exclamation\n18. Disciplined\n19. Indian\nweight\n20. Disfigure\n21. Unable to\napeak''\n22. Creek\n(Lft.)\n25. Conjecture\n26. Armadillo\n27. Play on\nwords\n28. Cut oft\n29. Ranches\n(Sp.)\n83. Mulberry\n34. Happiness\n35. Voiced\n(PhoneL>\n87. Egg, of\na louse\n38. Factor\n89. Pudding\nstarch (E.I.)\n41. Affirmative\nvotes\n12. Foreboding\nDOWN\n1. Steam\n2. Cavities\n3. Exist\nt. Sodium\n\u2022   (sym.)\nDAILY CRmOQUOTE \u2014 Here's how w work Ito\nAXVDLBAAXB\n| Is LONG FELL O.W\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this sample A M \u00ab_M\ntor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single lettera, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words a\u00bb eB hints.\nEach day the code letters ore different\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nZXOX    Q N K X 0    V1XTOMIV   J IS*\nKIVV    CX   QSIFZV    HK\u00bb\u00bb    VEQAIBOF\n\u2014 uasAXUwxsox.\nYesterday's Cryptoquote: GODS!  HOW THE SON  VB> ,\nGENERATES FROM THE SIRE!\u2014HOMER.\nDistributed by Kins Futures Byniilcats\n small investment - LARGE RETURNS'\n\u2022 That's the Want Ad Story       PHONE   1*44\nBIRTHS\nPYE \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs. Terry\nP-\/e of Victoria, St Wai JtibilM\nHospital in Victoria, March 25, a\n(laughter. Mrs. Pye is the former\nfcetty Duff of NeiSbrt.\nMANDERSCHIED \u2014 To Mr. and\nMrs. E. R. Maftderiehlef at Providence Hospital, Seattle, Mar. 19,\na son. Mrs. Manderschied is the\nformer Laverne Vance of Nelson,\nAc.\nHELP WANTED\nLEARN BLUEPRINT* READING\nby home-study and earn more\nmoney. Diploma aWkrded. Free\nfolder. Primary School of Drafting, Blueprint Reading Dept. C3,\nBox 123, Station Q, Toronto.\nDRAFTSMEN EARN BIG\nmoney. Learn by home-study.\nDiploma awarded. Free folder.\nPrimary School of Drafting,\nDept. G, Box 123, Station Q,\nToronto.\nHELP WANTED \u2014 FEMALE\nWANTED E STENOGRAPHER,\npreferably with , experience although not essential. Five day\nweek, benefits. Good starting\nsalary .with regular Increases,\nApply Box 3389, Nelson Daily\nNews.\nWANTED - EXPERIENCED\nstenographer who would also\ntake charge of accounts receivable. Pleasant working conditions, MSA and other benefits.\nApply Central Truck and Equipment Co., 702 Front St., Nelson.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nYOUNG MARRIED MAN WITH\nextensive GM parts experience\navailable for position in or\narbund Nelson, B.C. References\noh request, Apply Mr. G. Robert, 2754 W 12th Ave., Vancouver, B.C.\nMARRIED COUPLE WOULD\nlike position cooking in camp.\nOwn transportation. Will go\nanywhere. References if required. Box 112, MontTose.\nWE SPECIALIZE IN REMODEL-\nling old houses, new footings,\nnew roofs; Apply Box 269, or\nphone 1581-Y-3 between 5 and\n7 p.m.\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nIN THE SUPREME COURT OF\nBRITISH COLUMBIA IN\nPROBATE.\nIN THE MATTER OF THE\nESTATE OF HENRY JOSEPH\nLANGLEY, DECEASED\nTAKE NOTICE that by Order\nof His HonOUr Eric P. Dawson,\n.7L.J,, _ madi the 18th day of\n\"March,'1987, Thom&s G. C. Fox,\nQfficial Administrator fbr the\nNelson-Creston Electoral District was granted Letters bf Ad-,\nministration of the Estate of\nHenry Joseph Langley, Deceased and all parties having claims\nagainst the said Estate of the\nsaid Deceased are hereby required to furnish same, proper'\nly verified, to the undersigned\nadministrator of the said Estate\naf. the Court House, Nelson, B.C.\non or befdre the 23rd day of\nApril, 1957, after which date I\nwill distribute the assets of the\nsaid estate having regard only\nto the claims of which I then\nhave notice.\n' DATED at Nelson, B.C. this\n25th day of March, 1957.\nTHOMAS G. C. FOX,\nOfficial Aministrator,\n_.       Ferguson & Ferguson,\nSolicitors.\nI WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE\nfor any debts incurred in my\nrtame' by any persons other than\nmyself. Dietrich Walde.\nROOM AND BOARD\nBOOM   AND   BOARD   FOR\nvoung gentleman Phone 1179-X\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS  AND  MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nE. W. WIDDOWSON & CO.\nAssayers, 301 Josephine St., Nelson\nH. S   ELMES, ROSSLAND.  B.C\nAssSyer Chemist. Mine Rep\nENGINEERS  AND   SURVEYORS\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, MEIC\nBC Land Surveyor, P Eng (Civil)\n218 Gore St.   Nelson,   Phone 1238\nG. W.  BAERG,  B.C.\nLand Surveyor\n373 Baker St., Nelson, Phone 1118\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nMachine   Shop Acetylene and\nelectric welding, motor rewinding  Phone 593      324 Vernon St\n\u00a3falaott 0aili| taa\nCirculation  Dept. Phone 1844\nPrice per single copy 6c Monday\nto Friday, 10c on  Saturday'\nSubscription Rates\nBy carrier per week\nin advance 35c\nBy Mai] in Canada outside Nelson:\nOne month        $ 1.25\nThree months    $ 3.50\nSix months   .    $ 6.50\nOne year           $12.00\nBy mail to United Kingdom or\nthe United States\nOne month         $ 1.75\nThree months' :    S 5.00\nSix months     $ 9.50\nOne year       $18.00\nWhere extra postage is required\nabove rates plus postage\nFor Delivery by carrier In Cranbrook phone. Mrs Wm Stevely;\nto Kimberley Mr G A Bate;\nto Rossland Mrs Ross Saundry;\nand\nIn Trail Mrs. Syd Spooner.\nRENTALS\nModern 3-room apartment\n\u2014partly furnished; new stove\nand   refrigerator,   separate   entrance; ground floor. Ph.,332-X.\nNOD\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nor sleeping room. Heated, frig.,\ngas stove. Week or- ftibrtth. Rates.\n171 Baker St.\nREVENUE PROPERTY FOR\nrent. References required. Apply Box 3222, Nelson Daily\nNews.\nFOR RENT \u2014 2 ROOM AND 1\nroom suite, both furnished. Apply 614 Victoria.\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\nFOlOtENT \u2014 2 RM. APART-\nment, gentlemen preferred. Ph.\n650-X.\nFOR RENT FURNISHED HOUSE-\nkeeping room. Phone 217-R.\nSEF - CONTAINED FURNISHED\napartment, central ly located,\navajlable May 1. Phpne 1542.\nTWO ROOM SUITE VACANT \u25a0\nclose in. Phone 149. V\nFOR RENT \u2014 HOUSEKEEPING\nroom. 606 Front St.\nFOR RENT - 3-ROOM SUITE.\nPhone 693-L evenings.\nLAKESIDE COTTAGE FOR TWO\n\u2014Phone 1.703 or 1604-R.\nSUITE FOR RENT. PH. 343'Y.\n3-ROOM   FURNISHED   APART-\nment. Central.'Phone 839-R.\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\n\u2022 Chevrolet\nOldsmobile\nCadillac\nSPECIALS\nSPECIALS\n1949 Studebaker Pickup\nLicence No. C83-322.\n$195x\n1954 Austin Sedan\nLicence No. 261-693.\n$775\n1949 Ford Sedan   '\nLicence No. 265-571.\n$375\n1949 Olds Sedan\nLicence No. 243-977.\n$475 :'\n1949 Chevrolet Panel\nLicence No. C76-159.\n$575\n1949 Dodge Pickup\nLicence No., Nil.\n$375\n1948 Dodge Sedan\nLicence No. 238-227.\n$295-\n1948 Chrysler 9-Pass.\nLicence No. 264-868.\n$275\n1951 Ford Pickup\nLicense NO. C83-725.\n> $275\n1947 Ford Sedan\nLicence No.'263-450.\n$275   .\n1947 Dodge Sedan\nLicence No. 263-921.\n$350\n1946 Mercury Sedan\nLicence No. 264-174.\n$275\n1950 Plymouth Coach\nLicence No. 264-336.\n$375\n1954'Vanguard Padel\nLicence N6. C94-316.\n$375\nMotors Ltd.\n323 Vernon St. Nelsort, B C.\ni   Phortes 35 dhd 36\nMU$T SELL '54 CHfiV. JbELUXE\n\u2014brand hew geMllrii motor,\nrear end, tiros ahd Mikes. Custom radio, signai-iighti, ut un-\nditioner. Nothing down, take\nover payments. Phone 44-L-l.\n1957 Austin A-55\n1957 Austin A-95\n1957 Buick 2-Dr. Hardtop\n1957 Pontiac Sedan\n1956 Hillman Sedan\n1956 Volkswagen\n1956 Austin A-90    _\n1956 Pontiac Sedan\n1955 Chevrolet Belair\n1955 Pontiac Sedan\n1954 Hillman Hardtop\n1954 Ford Sedan\n1954 Austin Sedan\n1954 Chevrolet Belair\n1953 Pontiac Sedan\n1953 Meteor Sedan\n1953 Dodge Club Coupe\n1952 Chevrolet Sedan\n1951 Austin Sedan\n\u2022   *   *\n1956 G.M.C. Pickup\n1954 Ford Pickup\n1953 Chevrolet Pickup\n1952 Austin Pickup\n!950 Mercury Pickup\nWE PAY CASH FOR LATE\nMODEL USED CARS\ncElrp.y\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\n(Continued)\nAUSTIN Sales and Service\n803 Baker St      Nelson, B.C.\nPhone 2000 '\nCOTTONWOOD WRECKING\nService \u2014 Used parts, batteries,\ntires for '47 Olds, '47 Chev ahd\n'49 Meteor and Mercury, and '37\n. Ford and '46 Plymouth, '47-49-\n50-51 Austin, Hillman, Prefect,\nVanguard, Morris Minor cars.\nFor sale, '50 Chev Vs ton pickup. Phone 1363-L-2 or write Box.\n382, 24 Ymir Road, Nelson.\nCLOSING OUT SALE FOR $400\nor reasonable offer,. of $650\nworth wholesale price, garage\nfast moving accessories: Earl J.\nFink, Box 190, Kinnaird, B'C.\n'49 METEOR \u2014 WILL CONSIDER\ntradfe-in. Philip Pereverzoff,\nCrescent Valley.\nSPECIAI_-1951 THAMES LIGHT\ndelivery. Phone 1841.\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nDEALERS' IN' ALL TYPES OF\nused equipment, mill, mine and\nlogging supplies, new and used\nwire -rope, pipe and fittings,\nchain, steel plate ahd shapes.\nAtlas Iron & Metals Ltd., 250\nPrior St., Vancouver. B.C., Ph\nPAciflc 6357.\nFOLDING AUDITORIUM\nChairs, used. Wood construction,\nplywood seats and backs, triples\nOnly, each chair $2.96. Columbia\nTrading Company, 902 Front\nStreet, Nelson.\nNEVER USED BEAVEK 6-INCH\njointer, drill press and accessories, Vt h.p. motor. A bargain\nfor cash. Also 3_^ mm. photographic nnlarger and all accessories. Phone 1542.\nBARGAINS IN NEW SLAB\ndoors. Rejects, all sizes, $5.95\nujj. Plywood cuttings, all thicknesses, half price. CoiUihbia\nTrading, 902 Frbnt St.\nFOR SALE McCLARY ELECTRIC\n4 burner range, automatic timer,\nclock Snd broiler, window oven.\nUsed 3 months. Ph. 1686-Y between 7. ahd 9 p.m.\nWILLIS PIANO, 4 YRS. OLD \u2014\nwalnut, like new. Also R. C.\nAllen adding machine, snap for\ncash. 311 Ithion St.\nFOR SALE \u2014GEESE.AND TUR-\nkey eggs, artd first and second\ncut alfalfa. Mrs. D. Jackson,\nCartyort, B.C.\nAPPROX. 1000 FT. OF 2 INCH\niron pipe, in good \u25a0 condition.\n35c ii ft. Can be seen at 611 Front\nStreet.       .\u25a0,--,,\nSPENCER COAL AND WOOD\nrange and tattle, $10. Apply 120\nVernon St.\nHEALTH FOOD CENTRE OPEN\nday and evening 924 Davies Stj\nolWSfilNE BABY CARRIAGE\u2014\ngobd condition, $15. Ph. \u00a748-__.\nFOR SALE\u2014HOUSEHOLD FUR-\nniture, including piano. Phone\n1321-Y.\nFOR SALE - BELL PIANO -\nfumed' oak with bench. Phone\n413-L.\nALFALFA HAY - $20 PER TON\n\u2014first, $25 second cut. Staples\nand Sutcliffe, Creston.\nKENMORE DKLUXF, WASHING\nmachine, $45. Phone 1068-R.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\nTENDERS TO PURCHASE. AND\nremove 12-room house from 10-\neatldn known as 129 Baker\nStreet will be received up to and\nincluding Mar. .31, 1957. Highest\nor any tender not necessarily\naccepted. Successful ^tenderer to\nremove house immediately. Tender to state price and removal\ndate. For further particulars\ncontact. Manager, Peebles Mo-\n.tors, l63 Baker Street, Selson.\nPhone 1090.\nwill Sell or trade 250\nacre ranch for property in Nelson, Castlegar or Kinnaird. Good\nwater, 15 acres in meadow, farm\nequipment, sawmill, 3-ton truck,\npower anc| - wood, saws, blacksmith outfit, complete with\nother tools for farming and logging, 3 heifers, cow, horse and\n40 chickens, P. J. Popoff, South\nSlocan.\nFOR SALE BY OWNER\u2014HOUSE,\n3 bedrooms, L.R., D.R., modern\nkitchen, all one floor, all large\nrooms', 1200 sq. ft. Full basement, coal stoker, rewired, 2\nblocks from public and Jr. High\nschool, 610 Mill St., phone 1882,\nPrice $B500. Terms can be arranged.\n(Continued in Next Column)\nFOR- SALE TWO STOREY- CE-\nmejit building With basement,\nhot water heating, with apartment upstairs, Baker St. next'\nBeacon Motors, price and terms\napply Ferguson & Ferguson,\nSolicitors, 1-373 Baker St., Nelson.,\nFOR SALE AT CASTLEGAR -\nOne 4 bedroorq house with full\nbasement and garage, on Green\nSt. near high school. Also, one\n2-bedroom house, new, on Robson St. above ferry. Apply F.\nYonkman, Box 397, or phone\nCastlegar, B.C., 37117\nREVENUE PROPERTY FOR\nsale, 3 lots, nice lawn and garden. Apply Box 3387, Nelson\nDaily News,\nUNFINISHED, LIVABLE, 2-BED-\nroom house in Fairview, full\nbasement, wired for range or\nnatural gas line. Phone 1228-R.\nBEAUTIFUL BUILDING SITE\non. North Shore, overlooking\ncity, 82 it. road frontage. Phone\n918-Y. 7 v     ,\u201e \",    '\nHOUSE, COTTAGE AND CABIN\nat Balfour, no reasonable cash\noffer refused, terms if desired.\nV. Hoskin, ,R.R. 1, Nelson:\n34tOOM JfOUSE ON 2 LOTS \u2014\nextra lot if wanted. Reasonable,\nPhone 1072-X after 5.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nHIGH QUALITY CHICKS\nR.O.P. Bred Leghorns, also Siberia Farms Standard grades of\nNew Hampshires, Hamp-Leghorn\nCrosses. Buy our chicks, tiiey will\nsatisfy you. Over 30 years' experience with chicks and poultry. Apply our agent, Nelson Farmers'\nSupply Ltd., or write direct to\nNew Siberia Farms, R.R. 3, Chilliwack, B.C.\nGOOD MILKING COW FOE\nsale, just freshened. Apply J.\nHoobanoff, Taghum,\n2 FRESH COWS FOR SALE -\nB. Chernenkoff, Crescent Valley\nMACHINERY\nONE D2 CATERPILLAR FOR\nfor sale, in very good condition.\nCan be seen in Pend D'Oreille\nValley,\nTD14 A 1 H CRAWLER TRAC-\ntor, 1954 mbdel, excellent condition, going cheap. Apply Box\n3211, Nelson Daily News)\nFOR RENT \u2014 PORTABLE AIR\ncompressor, 210 capacity. Phone\n44S-Y after 5 p.m. \u25a0\nf'LANER)_-CAP. . 40-60 M| HD 7\ncat With hjrdraUlic blade and\nwinch, 6x6 trucks. 713 Victoria.\nI\nANTED MISCELLANEOUS\nWE BtlY OLA WASHING MA-\nehirtes. WJ. prices paid. Box\n3302, Nelson Daily News.\nWANl.U - CLEAN COTTON\nrags without buttons. 10c ib\ndpTlUfrerl  lo th(\u00bb  fjfl'lv   Ni>lv.\nHAY MOWER AND DISK HAR-\nfow for Gibson tractor.'Bill J.\nSavinkoff, Thrums.\nLOST. AND FOUND\nLOST ON SATURDAY NIGHT\nat Air Cadet dance, pearl ring.\nReward. Phone 1497-X after 4\np.m.\nLOST \u2014 LADY'S WRIST WATCH\nblack cord bracelet. Finder\n^please phone 787.\nBOATS AND ENGINES\nSEE YOUR FAVORITE 1957\nJohnson outboard On display.\nAll h.p. rating and some electric.\nThey're scarce, order early.\nCOLEMAN ELECTRIC, Phone\n2055, Nelson, .B.C. Big trades,\nEasy Tenuis,\nHOTELS and MOTELS\nMORE AND MORE PEOPLE\nfind the- Colonial Hotel auits\ntheir needs when in Spokane.\nClean, comfortable rooms w\/wo\nbath. Sensible rates.. Parking\nnearby. Opp. Payless Store.\nREST  HOMES\nHAVE VACANCY IN MODERN\nlicenced Rest Home for 1 elderly man. Apply Box 276, creston,\nB.C.\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nNELSON BUSINESS FOR SALE.\nSome terms. Or partner. Apply\nBox 6042, Nelson Daily News.\nPERSONAL\nALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS -\nFridays. Box 493, phone 366-R\nor 483-R.\nAccepted by CIR\n\"T.'D. Rosling, Nelson realtor,\nhas been accepted as a Fellow of\nthe Canadian Institute of Realtors,\nan honor conferred on him by the\nCanadian Real Estate institute,\nToronto. He Is one of 11. B.C.\nrealtors, the first in the interior,\nwho can use the letters F.R.I,\nafter his name.\nMr. Rosling said the honor is\ngiven usually for \"past work for\nbenefit of real.'estate in general\nin Canada.\" He is also a member\nOf the B.C. Real Estate Association, and has served on the Real\nEstate Agents' Licencing Board\nof B.C., a government-appointed\nbody, for six years. This Board\nmeets once a month in Vancouver. ,\nAim of the Board, according to\nMr. Rosling, is to supervise licencing of realtors for the public's\nprotection. Gradual efforts are\nbeing made to have, real estate become more of a profession, Mr.\nRosling said. 1\nMost realtors in Canada are\nmembers of .the Canadian Real\nEstate Association, according to\nMr. Rosling.    Conferring of the1\nfri upon him   also  brought a!\nplaque and seal.from the Association.\nThe Highways\nNo. 3 \u2014 Cascade, Rossland \u2014\nPour inches new snow, bare sections, muddy sections, icy sections,\ncarry Chains, Rossland, Trail,\nCastlegar, Nelson, Balfour, Kootenay Bay, Creston, Goatfell \u2014\nbate, frost heaves. Gbatfell, Crart-\nbrook, Fernie, CrOwSnest \u2014 fair,\nfrost heaves, very rbugh over construction areas.\nN0.-3A \u2014 Trail, Salmo \u2014 bare,\nfrost heaves, use caution.\nRossland, Paterson \u2014 bare, good.\nCreston, Porhill \u2014 good. .\nNo. 6 \u2014 Nelway, Nelsbri, South\nSlocan \u2014 bare, frost heaves, use\ncaution. South SlOcart, Slocan City,\nNakusp, Needles \u2014 bare South\nSlocan to SldCart City, sbme frost\nheaves, rough sections remainder.\nNeedles, Monashee \u2014 bare and\nmuddy sections lower levels, icy\nsections upper levels, carry chalrts,\nMonashee, Vernbn \u2014 fair to good.\nNo. 95 \u2014 Kingsgate, Cranbrook,\nGolden \u2014 fair, very rough over\nconstruction. ai\"eas, muddy sections from McMufdo to Edgewater,. numerous frbst .heaves.\nNelson, Kaslo \u2014 rough and\nrhuddy sections. Kaslo, New Denver \u2014. rough sections, p6s_lble\nsmall .rocks, Sluffs. Kaslo, Lardeau\n\u2014fair. Lardeau, GerrSrd \u2014 fair,\nClosed Poplar to Gerrard.\nAlaska Highway .- bare, ex-\n'reniely rnush south end.       \u2022  \u25a0\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILY\nj@r$ toll\nTheir Way Into\nHouse Parly\nVANCOUVER (CP) - A gang\nof eight teenagers tried to force\ntheir way into a house,party dur.\ning the weekend and householder\nFred Corrado was struck by a\nbottle, police report.\n;Corrado said he' forced the\nyouths out of the house and a\nlight started ih the yard. Neighbor\nDick Axelsdn, who came to Cor-\nradb's aid, Was hit irt the face by\na rock. Mrs. Corrado was also\n\"pushed around\" in the melee.\nMr. Corrado, treated at hospital\nfor face cuts, said the party was\ngiven for his 14-year-old daughter.\nVA youth, also 14, was taken to\nthe juvenile detention home by\npolice who jsald he faces several\ncharges. *\nSunday night police officer.\" dispersed ' more than a score of\nyouths at a suburban intersection.\nPolice said they believe a gang\nwar was in the offing.\nSef at $50,\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Bail was\nSet at $50,000 for John William\nBuckell, 42, accused of shooting a\npolice constable and a bank accountant.\nBuckell was remanded t0 March\n29 to face charges of attempted\nmurder and bank robbery.\nHe is accused of shooting Robert Compston, 33, and Constable\nKenneth Miles, 27, following an\nattempt to hold up the main\nbranch here of the-Royal Bank of\nCanada March 15.\nCompston suffered the loss of\nhis spleen when he was shot in\nthe chest but is expected to be\nreleased from hospital this week.\nMiles was released from hospital\nthis week.\nMachine May\nCurb Cancer\nBy   JULIUS   GOLDEN\nSAO PAULO, Brazil (AP) \u2014A\nrtew X-ray machine may help\nstem stomach cancer just as chest\nX-rays diminished the danger of\ntuberculosis.\nThe .machine, invented in'Brazil\nby a father-and-son team, permits\nthe filming and televising of\nmovements of internal organs.\nSeveral medical congresses have\nheard papers on the device and\nthe Philips Company of Eind-\nHoven, The .Netherlands, has be-\niun: production.\nAccording. (0 Brazilian medical\nmen, the,invention opens a newi\nera of medical research and radiology. Besides hewing a. path for\nthe early discovery of stomach\ncancer, it also limits' the amount\nof: dangerous X-rays to which\npatients are subject.\nDEVICE TOOK 26 YEAR8\nThe machine was perfected by\nAustrian-born Jose Jany, 59, Who\n.came to Brazil 'In 1920 as an Immigrant, and his 33-year-old son,\nErich. JOse, rotund and bald,1\nworked 25 years on the device.\nThe Janys have patents in Brazil\nand patents pending in the United\nStates and the United Kingdom.\n\u2022 '\u25a0\u25a0.\u25a0;\u25a0 \"\"\u00abn\nNELSON DAH.Y NEWS, TUESDAY, MARCH 26, 1957.--9\nAudrey Hepburn Holds Firm Views On\n.     How To Be Happy Though Married\nBy BOB THOMAS\nHOLLYWOOD (AP) - \"In a\nmarriage, there must be more giving than taking.\"\nAudrey Hepburn cited that adage as the formula for making her\n|tman_iage to Mel Ferrer a success. One of the most sought-after\nstars, she is turning down all of-\nMarket Trends\nNEW YORK (CP) \u2014 Industrial\nIssues paced a moderate stock\nmarket, decline Monday in another day of slow trading.\nKey stocks were\" off from fractions to around a po'int or more.\nRising Canadian stocks on the\nNew York exchange included Canadian Pacific, up % on sales of\n4200 shares, International Nickel\nYs and Granby Mining Vs. Down\nwere Aluminum Ltd., Off Wi, on\n2600 shares, Hudson Bay Mining,\noff % and Distillers-Seagrams, Vs\nlffwer.\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 Prices rebounded from their lows, near the\nclose of trading but the stock\nmarket had to settle for a moderate decline Monday. All indices\nwere lower.\nTrans Mountain Pipe Line was\noff two paints to 117%. Bank of\nNova Scotia gained 1% points to\n57'A, while Premier Trust added\ntwo points to 68.\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 The Montreal and Canadian stock exchanges Monday closed irregularly mix\ned with industrial movements\nranging to more than four points.\nPrice Brothers led increases\namong papers, gaining two points\nt6 54 while Powell River added\none at 42. International Paper at\niOYs and Howard Smith at 34%,\neach dropped a po'int. Base metals\nwere down with Noranda at 47%\ndropping IY* and Aluminium easing Hi to 119yd.' Trans-Mountain\nOil Pipe fell lowest, losing 4%\nat 115.    '\nRAWENE, N.'Z. (CP) \u2014 The\nHokiango harbor board, meeting\nhere, decided to merge with the\ncounty council. The county courw\ncil, meeting later, decided to seek\nmore information, befdre .agreeing. The>ame nine men make up\nboth the board and the council.\nfers just tb remain with her husband. v\n\"I don't plan to go to work until next November, when I'll do\nThe Nun's Story,\" she remarked.\n\"These six, mon ths-I'll be able, to\nspend with Mel, and I feel that's\nvery important.\n\"Acting is important to me, and\nprobably always will be. But marriage means'' more. And to make\na marriage work, you have to\nmake certain concessions. You\ncan't be working all the time. I've\nwondered why many Hollywood\nmarriages don't work.\nMUST GIVE AND TAKE\n\"Perhaps they are entered into\nin haste. Perhaps the people don't\nrealize there must be more giving\nthan taking in a marriage. You\ncan never take more than you give\nif both people are to be happy.\"\nShe and Ferrer didn't marry in\nhaste, I pointed out.\n\"No, we were able to get to\nknow each other in. the .seven\nmonths' we were In Ondine,\" she\nsaid. \"Then he went off to make a\npicture, and I went to Switzerland to weigh the possibilities. I\ndecided it would be best for us to\nget married.\"\nThe Dutch-born actress made\nthese remarks as she cuddled her\nYorkshire terrier,' Famous, in the\nsun-filled patio of her Bel-Air Hotel suite. The Ferrers were here\nbriefly before taking oft for Mex-\nico, where he will make The Sun,\nAlso Rises.     ,   ' '\/:\u25a0\n\"Packing,   packing,   packing -3\n\"That seems to be all-1 do.\" .\nA year ago, she was here for\nFunny Face, went to Paris for locations. Then the.FerrerS went to\nSt. Moritz, their vacation home at\nBurgenstock, Switzerland, then to.\nNew York for Mayerling on TV,\nback to Burgenstock for a rest,\nfrom that ordeal, to Copenhagen\nand over the North Pole to LoS\nAngeles.\nOh, yes, she: also'sandwiched in\na picture in Pauls, Love   in   the\nAfternoon with Gary; Cooper and I\nMaurice Chevalier.\nI asked her just 'where is home.\n\"Unfortunately, we don't know*\nshe replied. \"Mel's children are ,\nhere, so there are certain ties. 1\nwas brought up in Europe. We\nlove our place in Burgenstock,\nwhich is where we were married.\nThe place there is beautiful.\"\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\n\u2022 Loading and Excavating Economy.,\nyVlTH A'-JOHN DEERE CRAWLER TRACTOR and LOADER\nLists Qualities\nFor Teachers\nPRINCE RUPERT (CP)-Seven\nqualities which teachers must\nhave to keep the mental health of\ntheir pupils at a high level, were\npresented by Dr. J. H. Smith,\ndirector of Skeena Health Unit,\nin his 1956 report,\nTo maintain a good atmosphere,\na teacher should be able to:\n1. Influence people without\ndominating them;\n2. Arouse' interest and maintain\nmotivation without establishing\nfear;\n3. Create a feeling of mutual\nconfidence between teacher and\npupil;\n4. Bolster a child's self-confidence without making himself\ncritical;\n5 .Understand and accept with\ntolerance the wide diversity of\npersonalities;\n6. Keep the \"long view\" and\navoid \"becoming disturbed over\ndSily frustrations;\n7. Have a high degree of personal integrity and interest in\nother people.\nKiddies Die\nAfter Drinking\nAnti-Freeze ,\nNEW WESTMINSTER (CP) \u2014\nTwo baby brothers died in Royal\nColumbian Hospital here Monday\nafter drinking a quantity of antifreeze.\nPdliCe artd the New Westminster\ncoroner's oiflce were investigating\nthe deetHS of William Wesley Da-\nVeykU, 2, hi. brother, Stewart,\n2. ]The boys came from neighboring Port Coquitlam. It was reported they drank the anti-freeze\nmixture Sunday.\nSee H. \"Fritz\" Farenholtz, 7C. Ross or Alex McDonald\n'     MAG'S-\n.       WELDING fr EQUIPMENT CO., LTD.\n014 Railway St,\" Nelson, B.C. Phone 1402\nI \u2022\n vt-^ \"~T-r - ~~~~. \u25a0.-\u00bb.\u2014. .,,.\nMUTUAL FUND YIELDS\nMarch 25, 1957\nDlvi-\nPrice     dend\nLeverage Fund\u2014\u2014\nCommonwealth  Int.\nCanadian Invest. F.\nCorporate Inv. *\nInvestors Mutual * .\n* Approximate\nI\n.. 5.77\n. 8:10\n. 9.63\n.. 9.14\n.10.88\n.22\n.33\n.38\n.35\n.31 .\nYield\n%\n3.81\n4.07\n3.95\n3.83\n2.85\nHALL SECURITIES LTD.\nStrand Building, Trail, B.C.\nTelephone: 2378\nEXECUTORS   AMD   TRUSTEES   FOR   OVER   HALF   A   CENTURY\nyour family needsl\nthe protection\nyour Will\ncan give them\nOnly you can put your wishes into\nyour Will. We can help you do this.\nTHE\nROYAL  THBK\nCOMPANY\n1205 OOVERHMEIfl, VICTORIA   \u2022   626 P.EHMR ST. Wii VANCOUVER\nR. W. PKIPfS, MANAGER GEORGE O. VALE, MANAGER\nAll; for our ____!_.\n\"A Practical Way lo\nHas 1am Will\"\nH'\n 10\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, MARCH 26, 1957\nAQUAMARINE\nBY REVLON\nAS FRESH AS THE BREAKERS AT WAIKIKI\nAquamarine Shampoo\n$2.85 Value NOW   $1.95\nAquamarine Lotion\n$2.00  Value   NOW  $1.25\n..\u25a0''''\nA Bargain in Quality\nMANN\nDRUGS LID.\nHUGE BLEASTS\nThe African.hippopotamus may\ngrow to l4 feet long with a weight\nof more than four tons.\nAluminum Total Assets\nExceed Billion Dollars\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 Aluminum\nLimited and consilidated subsidiaries reported net income of $55,-\n657,372 for ,1956, compared with\n$48,193,952 the previous year.  \u2022\nNet Income per share, says the\nannual report, amounted to $5,56\ncompared with $4.83 in 1955.\nConsolidated sales and operating revenue totalled. $483,008,000.\nThey were $412,000,000 in 1955.\n\u25a0 In^ breakdown, the company's\nmain subsidiary, Aluminum Company of Canada Limited, lists net'\nincome before preferred dividends\nof $45,321,082 and sales and operating revenues _of $355,000,000.\nThese totals were $41,160,799 and\n$308,000,000 in 1955.\nConsolidated 1956 primary aluminum production was 700,000\ntons, compared with 607,000 tons\na year previous. Canadian output\nlast year was 620,300 tons.\nMORE CONSTRUCTION SEEN\nNew facilities construction cost\n$125,000,000 and 1957 is expected\nto see that amount exceeded. The\nreport adds that the company's\nnet total assets passed the billion-dollar mark for the first\ntime, standing at $1,084,451,925 at\nthe end of 1956 after depreciation\nreserves of more than $387,000,000,\nQuebec smelters increased primary aluminum capacity by 31,-\n500 tons and operations at Kiti-\nmat, B.C. were expanded to 'add\n90,000 tons capacity. The latter\noperation \"is beginning to contribute to the company's earnings,\" president Nathaniel V.\nDavis said. Kingdom and United\nStates late in 1956 and. 1957 .sales'\nhave been slightly below production. The . resultant \"relatively\nsmall\" stock of saleable metal is\n\"basically a healthy: ahd desir-.\naj_le development.\"\nEXPANSION' AS PLANNED\nExpansion would proceed as\nscheduled 'at Kitimat, Quebec's\nSaguenay area and on .alumina\nand Bauxite sources in the British West Indie? and French Wes.t\nAfrica. Expanding usage of. the.\nmetal in transport, communications and industry appeared certain,\nA sales breakdown for 1956\nshowed Canada's shipments down\nslightly at . 596,500 tons. There\nwere 224,400 tons'delivered to the\nU.K., a reduction, 267:100 to the\nU.S., an increase, 90,500 to Canada, an increase of 5500 tons, and\n66,300 tons to all other markets,\nanother increase.\nNot just a job-but a career!\n\\m\n...that's why there's a great future in aviation\nfor skilled technicians\nTo keep one pilot and his plane in the air requires twelve men on the ground, to\nmaintain and service modern aircraft and equipment. In this air age, the aviation\ntechnician is a key man . . . there's a constant and increasing demand for his\n\u25a0 specialized skill.       -*   \u2022  \u25a0\nThe RCAF will give you thorough training in the servicing,\n,     maintenance, overhaul, repair and operation of\nAERO-ENGINES, AIRFRAMES, HYDRAULIC SYSTEMS, RADIO-RADAR, ELECTRICAL,\nINSTRUMENT, MOTOR TRANSPORT & HEAVY CONSTRUCTION EQUIPMENT\nNew courses are starting!.. . In the RCAF you'll get aviation training and\nexperience that will be invaluable always and anywhere \u2014 and you'll earn\nwhile you learn! Make aviation your career\u2014in the RCAF! For full information,\nsee, write or phone:\nfldAF    CAREER    COUNSELLOR\nR.C.A.F. RECRUITING UNIT\n206-8th Avenue East Calgary, Alta. Phone 6-3688\nSTRESS DOMINION\nOVER MATERIAL LAWS'   '\nMan's God-given dominion pver\nmaterial laws of sickness and lim-\ntation was emphasized at Christian Science services Sunday.\nScriptural selections in the Les-\nso'n-Sermon entitled \"Matter\" included the following from Isaiah\n(33:22,20): \"Look upon Zion, the\ncity of our solemnities; thine eyes\nshall see Jerusalem a quiet habitation, a tabernacle that shall not\nbe. taken down; not one of the\nstakes thereof shall ever be removed, neither shall any of the\ncords thereof be broken. For the\nLord Is our judge, the Lord is our\nlawgiver, the Lord is Cur King,\nhe will save us.\"\nFrom \"Science and Health with\nKey to the Scriptures\" by Mary\nBaker Eddy, the following was\nread: \"Every law of matter or the\nbody, supposed to govern man, is\nrendered null- and \u2022 void by the\nlaw of Life, God.\"\nThe Golden Text was from Col-\nossians (3:2): \"Set your affections\non things above, not on things on\nthe earth.\"\niludenlt on\nGonzaga Roll\nDenis Charles Edgar, 908 Vernon\nS'~_et, Nelson, a junior student\nin arts and sciences at Gonzaga\nUniversiy, Spokane, received an\naverage 'of 3.71, according to a\nllst.of honor roll marks released\nby the university.\nOther. Kootenay students.listed\nare Hobert P. Cabianca,-1148 Third\nAvenue, Trail, sophomore in engineering, 3.31; Michael D. Kob-\nluk, 1903 Second Avenue, Trail,\nfreshman in economic and business, 3.00; Eugene J. Koslancic,\nRossland, senior in arts and sciences, 3.00; Joseph Maftse, Osoyoos, senior in arts ahd sciences,\n3.40; Mario Mondin, 317' Rossland\nAvenue, Trail, junior in arts and\nsciences, 3.28; Lea Fern Pickering, Slocan City and Nelson, jun.\nior in arts and sciences, 3.87; and\nJames A. Sutcliffe, Riondel, junior\nin electrical engineering, 3.58.\nIn order to get a straight \"A\"\naverage, a student must register\n4.00.\nSternwheeler\nSought for\nHarrison Lake\nAGASSIZ, B.C.' (CP) - Kent\nCentennial Committee will ask\nthe provincial government to put\na stern wheel steamer on Harrison Lake to run between Harrison\nHot Springs and Port Douglss\nduring the centennial year Summer.\nDuring the. early days of the\nCariboo Gold Rush, the main\nroute to the diggings was by\nsteamer up the Fraser and Harrison Rivers and Harrison Lake,\nstartin? the land journey from\nPort Douglas at the head of the\nlake. i       \u25a0   .\nA century ago Port Douglas .was\none of the main cities of the new\nprovince, but with the loss of the\ngold rush .traffic it quickly faded.\nThe area now is occupied by an\nIndian reserve and a logging\ncamp and none of the original\nbuildings is still standing.\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c line  40e lino Black face typo: larger type'rates en\nrnauost   Minimum two linn  10% discount for prompt payment\nFor Rent: Lakeside cottage for\ntwo. Phone 1703 or 1804-R.\nBINGO\nLEGION  HALL TONIGHT\nBabies, Weddings, Portraits\nVOGUE STUDIO\u2014PHONE 1552\nPyrolace Kits, Accessories.\nHOBBY SHOP \u2014 PHONE 1703\nSoft Ice Cream in cones or bulk\nat Wait's News\nBoys' hard wearing tweeduroy\npants, sizes 8-14, $6.75 at\nEBERLE'S ON BAKER 8T.\nOnion  Sets  and seeds for your\n. garden.\nMAC'S   FLOWER  SHOP\nProtect your tables with silence\ncloth. .\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nCarriage covers and Spring\nBunny Bags.\nTOT 'N' TEEN 8HOP\nEVERYTHING FOR YOUR\nGARDEN.\nCOVENTRY'S FLOWER SHOP\nSee our lovely assortment of new\nSpring Millinery.\nADRIAN MILLINERY\nFor\" meals that are different, try\nTHE BALFOUR BEACH INN\nDining Room. Phone 18.\nGordon Sutherland\nPainting, Paperhanging. RR 1,\nPhone 1990, Nelson\nPhone 77 for\nall local moving, shipping and\ndistributing.\nSPEEDY DELIVERY\nSatin back pure silk mixtures,.\nBlue, red, maize, aqua, 45\" yard,\n$175\nTAYLOR'S DRY GOODS\nWe can equip your home \"with\nconvenient combination storm and\nscreen doors of finest quality\nT. H. WATERS & CO. LTD.\nPhone 156   101 Hall St.   Nelson\nAttention, Anglers! Our. fishing\ntackle is on display for your \u25a0\n, inspection.\nWOOD  VALLANCE\nHARDWARE CO. LTD.\nBargain on Stove Ranges, to clear.\nWE PAYTOP PR1CE8 FOR\nUSED FURNITURE\nHOME  FURNITURE\nEXCHANGE, PH. 1580.\n42\" x 30\" office desk, solid oak,\n.   $19.50.\nWE PAY CA8H FOR USED\nFURNITURE  AND ANTIQUE8\nBIRCH'8 FURNITURE\n307 BAKER ST. \u2014 PH. 47\nBIG CAVERNS\nUnderground air-raid shelters in\nSweden will accommodate more\nthan 1,000,000 persons.\nHAIGH\nTRU-ART\nBeauty   Salon\n-   Phone 327\n576 Baker St.\nHave The Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVEC\n*        LIMITED      \u2014f\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815.\nBusiness Spotlight....\nBritish Manufacturers Consider\nBy FORBES RHUDE\nCanadian Press Business Editor\nH.; O, McHaffie, new president\nof the Canadian Association of\nBritish Manufacturers, thinks that\nthe best way for British, firms'to\nget \"a substantial part\" of tlje\nCanadian market is,to set up manufacturing or assembly operations\nhere.    .\nHowever, he' said in an interview, British industry has made\ngood progress In the Canadian\nmarket since the immediate postwar years, and he suinmed the\nsituation, up as follows;   .\n\"Canada is a growing market;\nwe would like our share of lt; we\nthink we have something to offer;\nand, though our build-up has been\nslow,\" we are here to stay.\"\nIn 1958 British exports to Can-\nada totalled $497,600,000 compared\nwith $394,300,000 in 1955; and in\nJanuary they set an all-time record of $34,400,000, ah increase of\nmore than 21 per cent over the\npreceding January. Canada's 'exports to Britain in 1956 totalled\n$812,600,000 compared with $769,-\n300,000 in 1955.\nHERE SEVEN YEARS\nMr, McHaffie, who has been in\nCanada seven years, with headquarters in Toronto, is director of\nBritish Thomson-Houston Company Canada Ltd., subsidiary of\nthe big British manufacturers of\nelectric plant and. accessories; and\nis also on the board of Balfour\nBeatty and Co., Ltd., British engineering firm which is associated\nwith Russell Construction Ltd., of\nToronto.\nHis own firm of British Thomson-Houston recently set-up an assembly operation in Montreal for\nproduction of high-voltage switch\ngear, with an eye on the particular requirements of the Canadian\nmarket,\nRecently it has undertaken the\npower-survey part of the proposed\ndevelopment of a vast area\nnorth-central British Columbia by\nthe Swedish industrialist Axel\nWenner-Gren. For the present,\nthis involves assessment of the\nconsiderable survey material already available.\nMr. McHaffie thinks the current\nindustrial trouble in Britain i^ill\nbe settled ^'relatively quickly,\" because, \"whatever other faults the\nUnited Kingdom mly have, it does\nhave the ability to overcome difficulties and make compromises.\"\nTHREE TRADE CENTRES\nAs new head of the Canadian\nAssociation of Briti_sh Manufacturers, he succeeds Lewis J-B. Forbes, president of Pilkington Broth-\ners (Canada) Ltd. and vice-president of Canadian Vickers Ltd.\nwho has headed the association\nsince it was formed six years ago.\nMr. Forbes remains on the association executive and council as\nimmediate past president.\nThe association operates three\nBritish Trade Centres in Canada\n\u2014 in Toronto, Montreal and Vancouver.\nJohn L,' Bonus, association general manager, says it was formed\nin the belief that if British participation in the Canadian, econ.\nomy was to grow, British industries themselves must do something direct to reach their prospective customers, and not just\ndepend on government agencies,\nit first approached Canadian industries interested in \"two-way\"\ntrade \u2014 those which on one hand\nsold their products in Britain and,\non the other, could use British\nequipment.    .\nThese industries were particularly the fisheries (especially British Columbia salmon); pulp and\npaper; and metal mining; with\noil added because of its largn\nequipment purchases.\nINTERCHANGE.\nIt had encouraged groups of\nBritish industrial representatives\nto come to Canada and Canadian\ngroups-to go'.to Britain.\n\"Interchange of personalities U\none of our main activities,\" Mr.\nBonus commented.\nIn this connection, a British\ndelegation will arrive in Canada\nTuesday to examine the construction field.\nMembers of this team are Hal-\nford Reddish, chairman and managing director of Rugby Portland\nCement Company; R, S. Jukes,\nmanaging director of British Plaster Board Holdings Ltd., a native of Ontario . whose company\nowns Western Gypsum Products\nLtd., Winnipeg; Andrew Atha, director of Guest,(Keen and Nettle-\nfolds (Midlands);| Ltd., a member\nof the 1950 'Uritij-h Iron and Steel\nCorporation's' Hiission to Canada\nwhich was followed by an $1,81\n000 order for rails and accessories\nfrom British Columbia's Pacific\nGreat' Eastern ' Railway; H. E,\nPeirce, managing director of Hall\n'and Company,)'' Croydon; Fred\nDavies, delegation secretary who\nstudied at McGill University\nunder a fellowship in 1948-1949.\nThe delegation will be in Ot.\ntawa March 26, Toronto March 29\nto April 3; and in Montreal April\n4 to April 9. They also plan a\nvisit to Western Canada later this\nyear.    .\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL  TRAINING\nSuite 206 Phone 141\nMedical Arts Building\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED and REPAIRED\nRE-CORING\nJim's Radiator Shop\n518 Front St. Phone 63\nCAMPBELL,   SHANKLAND\n&  CO.\nChartered Accountants\n' Auditort\n576 Baker St. Phone 235\nWater Reveals\nWater .(plain or sparkling) is your most reliable\nguide to the whole truth about any whisky. Water\nadds nothing, detracts nothing, but reveals a   ,\nwhisky's true natural flavour and bouquet. Put\nSeagram's \"83\" to the water test snd you'll\nagree \u2014to be that good with water, it must\nbe a superb whisky and a more satisfying\ndrink with any man's favourite mixer.\nCHARM\n|BEAUTY SALON\nAll Beauty Culture\nand Cold Waves\nand Marcelling.\nMedical Arts Bldg.\nPhone, 1922  Ste. 211\nHelen McCallum, Prop.\nMake your own Home Made\nBread with ELLISON'S\nU-BAKE BREAD MIX\nFull Instructions on every packam\nPhone 238 or coll\nELLISON MILLING\na ELEVATOR CO   LTD.\n<3__i&\u00a3u\n9&\u00bbj_ity\nCU    #\nThis advertisement li not published or displayed by\n\u2022hi liquor Control Board or by Kit) Government of British Columbia.\nTHEY'RE HERE\nOur New Stock of\nSpring\nJACKETS\n\u2022 Ivy League Stripes\n\u2022 Wool Tartans\n\u2022 Smart Tweeds\n\u2022 Reversibles\n\u2022 Neat Cheeks\nChoose yours while the\nstock is complete.\n[MORY $\nLimited\n\"THE MAN'S STORE\"\nTwo More Doctors\nAccepted at KLGH\nTwo additional doctors have\nbeen permitted to practice at the\nKootenay Lake General Hospital.\nAdministrator R. H. Procter reported they had been accepted by\nthe medical staff and they were\nsubsequently^ approved by the\nKLGH Board of Directors.\nDr. J. D. Longley of Kaslo is\ntemporarily serving in place of\nDr. A. A. Barrera, and Dr. W. K.\nMassey has returned to Nelson to\noffer radiology services.\nFormer director of the Kootenay\nTravelling Clinic, division of tuberculosis control, Dr. Massey\nserved a two-year tenn as junior\nresident in radiology at Montreal\nGeneral Hospital, associated with\nMcGill University:\nPHONE   1844   FOR   CLASSIFIED\nHaving   Dandruff  Trouble?\nUSE\nSABOL\nThe highly effective\nDandrolytlc   Shampoo\nTreatment\n$1.75\nAt Your Rexall Pharmacy\nCity Drug\nBox 460   . Phone 34\nMany men forget that a day may come when they will no\nlonger have financial freedom \u2014 when regular earnings\ncease and $iey may have to look to others, for even the\nnecessities of life.\nNOW, when you are in your prime, set aside the few\ndollars a month needed to help ensure financial freedom\nin retirement.\nSUPPOSE you are 28 now. For only $16.44 a\nmonth, you can have an income of $100 a month\nfrom age 65 for life, by purchasing a Canadian\nGovernment Annuity.\nIt's hard to beat a Canadian Government Annuity as an\ninvesiment. At $16.44 a month you pay $7,299.36 by\nage 65 \u2014 and you get at least $12,000 \u2014 more if yon\nlive past 75! \u00bb\nVarious plans are available to suit yonr circumstances.\nConsult your District Annuities Representative for details,\n, or mail the coupon below, postage free.\nFIDE\nDEPA1\nOF   I A 6 C\niTo: Director, Canadian Govatnmonf Ann.ilinj, 57IA7A-W1I   j\n. Dopartmant of labour. Ottawa, fPoi.aao Free)\n- R A I        I . leaia MM. m* comploto Information on Canadian Govotnmont Annultiot |\nT M I N T j |\nCANADIAN\nGOVERNMENT\nANNUITIES\n(Mr.\/Mrt.\/Mitt)\nAgt when annuity fa ifqrt 7*fophonn \u2014 |\nI unrlontand thai information fliven will ba hlld sir icily eonfidtnllol. j\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1957_03_26","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0430217","@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":"1957-03-26 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1957-03-26 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\/1.0430217"}