{"@context":{"@language":"en","AggregatedSourceRepository":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","Collection":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","Contributor":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/contributor","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"}],"Contributor":[{"@value":"Gibbon, A. W.","@language":"en"},{"@value":"Ramsden, C. W.","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2023-06-01","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1959-05-23","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0432991\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" SATURDAYlDITION\nwith COMICS-IOc\n^ - \u2014 ; . - ^ \u201e\n1351!:;\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKootenay\u2014Sunny. Little change\nin temperature. Winds light. Low\nand high at Cranbrook, 32 and 65;\ni        Crescent Valley, 35 and 70.\nSunday outlook\u2014Mostly sunny.\nVol, 57\nPublished at Ne1scjLqgiJ's:LAtno<3y v. government, financial and trading centre of the Kootenay-Columhia prea.\n\u25a0 p *  *vIOWTyinijj     n\u2014~~ '   h ',     ; r\u2014'\u2014i\u2014;\u2014-\u2014       \u25a0     \u2014\u2014\u2014  '' >\t\n\u00b0*> \u00bbc e,v.\u201e P*M- 9* CyiNADA4-SATyHDAY MORNING, MAY 23, 1959           <\u25a0 .\n... \/    .        ,'     \"fy . j   .,   ' .iv   \"    ..\u201e, .   .,,v.     .   .   ; .'   \" il'\u201e  '         ':\\   .     .   .  \u25a0..:')  -   r      ,,'                           ;                        ,\nNot More Than Go Dally, lOo Saturday.\nNo. 27\nFormer Military Leader Outlines\nPlan for Reducing World Tension\nOXFORD, England (Reuters)\u2014Field Marshal Viscount\nMontgomery said Friday night the West has no one to\nlead it in negotiations with Russia to end the cold war.\nBritain's outspoken wartime commander, whose recent criticism of American leadership touched off a furor\non both sides of the Atlantic, returned to his attack on\nWestern politicians in the last of two lectures at Oxford\nUniversity.\nin NATO a large group of nations\nwith purely parochial interests\nwhich are confined to the NATO\nares. There is another small group\nwith world-wide interests. It has\nnot been possible to hammer out\na common policy between these\ntwo groups,\nBut because of the achievements\nof the last 10 years in building up\nthe West's economic and military\nstrength.Europe now was the area\nwhere the military danger -was\nleast.\n\"The real dangers now He elsewhere \u2014 notably in Asia and Africa\nMontgomery said it was essential to work for a friendly China\niiiiiimiiiimiiiiifiiiiii.iiiniiiiiiiiiiii\nBut Not That\nSort of Hold-up\nSPOKANE (AP)-Mrs. Robert Larson heard a radio report Thursday night that a\nsouth side drug store was\nbeing robbed.\nShe put in a fast call to her\nhusband, a pharmacist due\nhome soon from the late shift\nat a south side drug store.\n\"Is someone holding you\nup?\" she asked.\n\"Yes,\" he said, \"I'll call you\nback.\"\nMrs. Larson quickly telephoned police.\nWithin minutes, two officers\nburst in on a startled Larson\nwho was just cleaning up for\nthe'hight ,.,,&,,,'\u25a0\/.;;,!..'\u25a0, ,:\u201e;,.\nstraighten things out. Someone hadn't really held him up,\nat least hot in the police blotter\nsense. He said he meant to tell\nhis wife he was being \"held\nup\"\u2014delayed by a late cash\ncustomer.\nThe robbery was at another\ndrug store 20 blocks away. A\ngunman there got $250.\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nMontgomery said the Western\nalliance never would reach the\nnecessary degree of unity for successful negotiations with Russia\nwithout leadership.\n\"And at the moment, there is\nno obvious acceptable leader in\nsight \u2014 if by leader we mean\nsomeone who is able and willing\nto give clear and sensible guidance\nto the whole group and i\" \"hom\nall the member nations ! I ' absolute confidence.\"\nSIX FACTORS\nMontgomery, although he conceded that few military leaders\nmake good politicians, advanced\nsix \"realistic factors.\" which must\nbe accepted by both sides before\nEast-West tension can be brought\nto an end:\n1. The West must realize that\nRussia has no intention of launching a nuclear war on the West.\n2. The West will never attack the\nEast;\n3. It is illogical to expect Russia\nto agree that a united Germany\narmed with nuclear weapons can\nbe integrated into the Western alliance \u2014 in any case, the reunification of Germany is not practical\npolitics at present;\n4. It is illogical to try to solve\nthe German problem without first\nsolving the problem of European\nsecurity;\n5. It is illogical to work on the\nassumption that the East German\ngovernment does not exist;\nS. It is Illogical to work on the\nassumption that the true, governmentjftffla^MiRWW**-' y'\u25a0\nWORLD-WIDE STKUGOI\/S   '\nHe criticized some NATO nations\nfor failing to regard the struggle\nagainst International communism\nas a world-wide one and not just\nconfined to the NATO area.\n\"Because of their lack of vision\nthe West is badly placed at the\npresent time in what is essentially\na global problem.\n\"The difficulty is that there is\nAnti-Combines Laws\nRevision Difficult\nBy DON PEACOCK\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA (CP) - The government is drafting revisions in the\nanti-combines legislation to allow\ncertain types of competition-eliminating business mergers, it was\nlearned Friday.\nWell-informed sources say that\nframers of the new legislation are\nencountering some difficulty in\nwriting this modification into the\nlong-standing principle of anti-\ncombines law that maintenance of\nbusiness competition is its chief i\npurpose.\nSome idea of what the government has in mind was given in a\nrecent Toronto speech by Justice\nMinister Fulton.\nAmong principles and purposes\nhe said the government intends to\nretain in the legislation is \"by\nmaintaining competition, to bring\nabout the most effective allocation\nof resources and the highest possible standard of living.\"\nInformants say elimination of\ncompetition for the purpose of getting control of prices, restraining\ntrade or other factors detrimental\nto the public interest will still be\nillegal under the legislation.\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nLooks Deceiving\nCLEARWATER, Fla. (AP)\nBoats bob at their moorings\non three sides of it and flags\nfly gaily from its roof. Saucy\nseahorses adorn its walls.\nIt looks just like a yacht\nclub.\nActually, it's Clearwater's\nnew sewage .treatment plant,\ndesigned to be a showplace\nrather than an eyesore.\nThe new v plant had to be\nlocated near a luxurious residential development. Its designers took this into consideration and came up with a\nbuilding which looks like anything except what it is.\nIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nBut they say the government\nplans to ask Parliament to approve\na modification which would add tp\nthe existing principle \u2014 that free\ncompetition is in itself in the. best\ninterests of the public\u2014a qualification as to what kind of free competition is desirable and what isn't.\nOther changes to be proposed,\nsources say, include a provision\naimed at penalizing businesses that\nengage in misleading advertising,\nsuch as misrepresenting prices\nas being wholesale prices.\nThe government is understood to\nwant to make possible merger of\ncompeting companies that might\nactually result in a more efficient\noperation and be of greater benefit to the public interest than under\nnormal competition.\nThe prospective changes in the\nanti-combines law\u2014which in its\ninfluence on the pricing of goods\nin every section of the economy\nhas an effect on the buying of virtually all Canadians \u2014 follow protests in recent years from various\nbusiness elements.\nSHIPBUILDING\nON DOWNHILL\nVICTORIA (CP)-A shipbuilding\nindustry spokesman said Friday\nCanada is \"disintegrating\" as a\nshipbuilding nation and the industry faces an uncertain future after\ncompletion of present contracts.\nHarold Husband, president of the\nCanadian Shipbuilding and Ship\nRepair Association and president\nof Victoria Machinery Depot Limited, made his comments in an\ninterview during the trial run of\nthe recently completed RCN destroyer-escort Terra Nova.\nDOLLAR HIGHER\nNEW YORK (CP) - The Canadian dollar closed up 3-32 at $1.04\n1-16 in terms of U. S, funds. A\nweek ago it was $1.03%.\nPound sterling up 1-16 at $2.81%.\nNAMED AS outstanding scholars of Notre Dame College' in Nelson when commencement exercises took place Friday night were Leone Jurick of Trail and Tom\nSiska of Grand Forks. Miss Jurick the previous night won the provincial finals in\nthe Knights of Pythias public speaking contest in Burnaby. For another picture and\nstory on the Notre Dame exercises, see page 2.\n\u2014Daily News photo by Mickey Carlton.\nPrisoners\nGranted\nAmnesties\nOTTAWA (CP) - Some, at\nleast, of the 20,000-odd convicts\nserving time in Canadian prisons\naqd jails will have special reason\n-^'^IjmB'^^f'ftpB^^SlB^y!\nthe.: Queen and Prince Ehilltt.\nJtuStlOe \u2022 Minister Fulton a*\nnounced Friday that on the occasion of the royal visit beginning\nlate next, month, sentences- of six\nmonths,or longer will all be reduced, at the rate of 30 days for\neach year left to serve.\nHe noted that similar amnesties\nwere granted in 1935 on the silver\njubilee of King George V, in 1939\nwhen King George VI visited Can\nada, in 1953 at the coronation of\nQueen Elizabeth II and in 1957\nthe year the Queen opened Canada's Parliament, the first reigning monarch ever to do so.\nAmnesty was granted in 1957 on\nthe same basis as this one will be.\nRemission of sentences will be\nmade as of June 23.\nMr. Fulton's announcement gave\nno figures as to how many prisoners will be affected and how many\nwill be released on amnesty day\nas a result of the action.\nApplication\nRejected\nVANCOUVER (CP)-The British\nColumbia labor relations board\nhas rejected an application by the\nCanadian Trainmen's Union (Ind.)\nfor certification on the Pacific\nGreat Eastern Railway.\nJohn Inkman, vice-president of\nthe CTU, said 100 of the 190 PGE\nemployees had signed up when\napplication for certification was\nmade in March.\nThe labor relations board, in\nturning down the bid, said the\nCTU was \"not a trade union within\nthe meaning of the Labor Relations Act.\"\nThe latest decision was the second major rebuff for the union.\nLast year it failed to become the\nbargaining agent for employees\non B.C. Electric .Railway lines in\nVancouver and the board gave the\nsame reason for rejecting the\napplication.\nHomeowners' Grant\nTo Be Increased\nVICTORIA (CP) - Premier\nBennett told a press conference\nFriday that the provincial home\nowners' grant will be increased\nfrom Its present $28 level next\ny?sr. ...\nBut he would not soy by how\nmuch.\nFIRST LIFE GOVERNOR\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014Governor-Gen\neral Massey is to become the first\nlife governor of the Dominion\nDrama Festival.\nThe honor, will be bestowed at\nthe closing ceremonies of this\nyear's DDF tonight at the Royal\nAlexandra Theatre.\nHerter Urges Resume\nDisarmament Talks\nr\nExplained\nPLANES, ARMS\nSEIZED IN U.S.\n12 Charged With\nConspiracy to\nBribe Officer\nMIAMI, Fla. (AP)-Federal officers Friday seized an arms-laden\nplane and charged 12 persons, including a Dominican Republic official, with conspiracy to export\nthe guns and ammunition to that\nisland nation.\nThe Dominican government man\n\u2014 Augusta Ferrando, consul at\nMiami \u2014 also was charged with\nconspiracy to bribe a United States\nofficer to let the arms go through.\nHe furnished $25,000 bond.\nAdmitted to $10,000 bond on the\nsame charges was Joseph Liquori,\na Miami policeman who once\nworked for the Dominican Republic.\nLiquori formerly was bodyguard\nto Dominican strong man Rafael\nTrujillo's playboy son, Rafael Jr.,\nand accompanied young Trujillo\non a west coast yacht cruise which\nmade headlines in connection with\nparties attended by Hollywood\nfilm beauties.\nLeonard Trento, Newark, N.J.,\nwas admitted to $25,000 bond on\ncharges identical to those against\nFerrando and Liquori.\nArgue Says Speculators Will Benefit;\nWinch Labels Board 'a Sham', 'Stooge'\nQJTAWA (CP)\u2014Flexibility to protect the public Interest arid to maintain healthy conditions in the oil and,\nnatural gqs industry is the objective of the government's?,\nproposed Rational energy board, trade Minister Churchill,\nsaid Fridqy.\nA set of rules rather than a statutory formula will'1\nprovide tfce firm framework guiding the five-man board\nin regulating pipeline tolls, tariffs and traffic conditions.\nSpeHing out the details of the bill in the Commons,'\nthe minister said this explains why there is no reference'\nto the foils' formula recommended in the first report of the\nBorden royal* commission on\nGENEVA- (CP) - U. S. State\nSecretary Christian A, Herter\nmade a new bid to the Soviet\nUnion Friday to resume the long-\nstalled general disarmament negotiations.   .,.\njgerter told, Soviet; Foreign.HHb\nIsWr'-Ahdiiei.-^i^toiriyko' Ih'r'tfir\nBig Four conference that the U. S.\ndoeSjliot irrevocjdbly- link disarnji*\nament' measures, with, German unification.\n\"We are prepared to resume\ngeneral disarmament negotiations\nin an appropriate forum at any\ntime,\" he said.\nHerter appealed to Gromyko to\naccept the Western peace plan\nlinking German unification with\nsuccessive stages of a system for\nEuropean security and a start on\nglobal disarmament.\nHe said that in the West's view\n\"there is a definite relationship between reunification of Germany.\nNurses' Salaries\n\"Disappointing\"\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Salaries\npaid to nurses in provincial government hospitals were described\n'Friday as \"very disappointing\"\n.during closing sessions of the. annual meeting of the B. C. Registered Nurses Association.\n\"The salaries are below what\nis being paid by the general hos-|\npitals,\" said Evelyn E. Hood of\nVancouver, the association's director of personnel services.\nLatest agreements with B. C.\ngeneral hospitals resulted in basic\nsalary of $280 a month, she said.\nThe association had made representations to the civil service commission of B. C. for salary .adjustments for nurses employed by\nprovincial hospitals. Miss Hood\nsaid the salaries finally approved\nwere \"very-disappointing.\"\nEuropean security and certain disarmament measures.\"\nBut he made plain that the\nUnited States is prepared to resume the general disarmament\ntalks\u2014which staHed-in the United\nNations two;years ago---apart frorh\n'^Big 'Four: .16^^\nBlast-West differences over Germany. -; \\ \\\nIn the fast-paced session of little\nmore than an hour that wound up\nthe secdAd week of the Conference,\nthe Western powers also called on\nthe Russians to accept a stopgap\nsolution of the Berlin crisis.\nFrench Foreign Minister Maurice Couve de Murville, speaking\nfor the U. S\u201e Britain and France,\ntold Gromyko that \"it is normal\nand the easiest thing to do\" to reunite Berlin under four-power control as the first step toward ending the division of Germany.\nParliament\nBy The Canadian Press\nTrade Minister Churchill said\nthe government's national energy\nboard bill seeks to protect the\npublic interest and maintain a\nhealthy oil and gas industry without (Jigid toll and regulation formulas.\nI Liberal spokesman Armand Du\nmas' (Villeneuve) said the bill\ngives the cabinet wide arbitrary\npowers.\nCCF House leader Hazen Argue\nsaid oil and gas speculators\u2014once\n\"pampered pets\" of C. D. Howe\u2014\nnow are Prime Minister Diefen-\nbaker's \"dear dollies\".\nMr. Churchill said prospects for\nincreased export of oil are encouraging, particularly to the west\ncoast.\nAgriculture Minister Harkness\nannounced continuation of price\nsupports on wool, amounting to 60\ncents a pound based on the average wholesale price for western\nand Ontario wool this year.\nMachine Guns\nFire on Crowds\n,RIQ DE JANEIRO  (AJR)-Bra:\nziljan. .marinss;. opened - fire With\nsun-machine'apris and pistojs Frf\nday on an angry crowd that rioted,\nfor three\" hours after a ferryboat\nstrike stranded thousands of .commuters.'\nThe mob burned the ferry dock,\noffices arid a restaurant ln downtown Niteroi, a town of 200,000\nacross the bay from' Rio. Stores\nwere looted and a dockside warehouse destroyed.        '\nGovernment sources said marine\ngunfire killed one person and\nwounded between 30 and 50.- News-\nnaper reports said up to' 12 were\nkilled and 64 wounded.\nThe trouble broke out during the\nmorning rush hour after ferry\nworkers staged a sudden strike at\nmidnight demanding pay increases\npromised them May 1.\nRed China Qoods May\nTravel U.S. Roads\nWASHINGTON (AP) - The\ntreasury Friday agreed to permit\nCanadian .\"trucks carrying goods\nfrom' Communist China to travel\nover United States roads en route\nto other points, in Canada.\nThe cargoes will be locked up\nand placed under bond for the trip\nover U.S. highways. Such goods\ncannot be delivered to, any point\nin the U.S. because of a law prohibiting imports from Communist\nChina. \"   .     .   \u25a0\nThe state department recommended the action after the stopping of sdme Canadian truckers by\nU.S. customs agents drew, criticism\nin Canada. The trucks stopped carried shrimp which had been picked\nup, from ships at Vancouver for delivery to Eastern Canada.\nCanadian truckers often U6e U.S.\nhighways in the northwest to travel from one Canadian city to another.\nThe ban went into effect Feb. 19\nwhen Gill-Pix Express Line trucks\nwere stopped at the border, near\nVancouver. The shipments were\ndestined for Eastern Canada.\nCanadian \u2022 protests, brought the\nUiS. reply that the prohibition was\ninvoked as a protection of American national security. The Americans argued that an article in the\nGeneral Agreement on Tariffs and\nTrade permits such action.\nThe Canadian answer was that\nthe stoppage constituted a breach\nof the 34-country GATT pact. Another article,, officials here main\ntained, binds member countries to\nallow merchandise of pact nations\nto travel freely over national territories^\nHOW JAILS TO\nHANDLE DRUNKS\nTO BE STUDIED\nVANCOUVER (CP) - An official of the British Columbia Alcoholism Foundation Friday called\nfor a full-scale medical-legal study\non- the treatment of persons arrested and jailed for drunkenness.\nEdward McRae, executive-director of the foundation, said the attorney-general's department should\ninvestigate how intoxicated persons are handled from the time\nthey are arrested until they complete a prison sentence.\nMr. McRae's comments follow\nthe death last week of a man in\nVancouver city jail after he was\narrested for drunkenness for the\neighth time in a year. The prisoner\nwas noticed ill and taken to hospital where he was pronounced dead\non arrival.\n\"Our officials know a better\nmethod of handling drunks cart be\ndevised but frankly we don't know\nwhat it is. The system needs overhauling but any improvements can\nonly come from an investigation,\"\nMr. McRae said. \u2022><.    ..\nenergy,\nIt suggested pipeline tolls be set\nto allow fair and reasonable returns on shareholder equity.\nThat omission, CCF House\nLeader' Hazeh Argue repeated\nFriday, means that \"Texas Buccaneers\". , and Canadian speculators will reap fresh benefits at\nthe consumer's expense.\nMost pipeline financing depends\ni bond issues rather-: than sale\nof stocks, he-said. Thus, gas pipeline tolls would be based on \"bloated\" capital, gains rather than the\nsmall amount of actual investment\nthat the promoters had sunk in\ntheir ventures.\nAt little or no speculative risk,\nthese 'promoters had reaped fabulous and unwarranted profits\nmerely); through exercising options\nto buy stock cheap and sell dear.\nArmand Dumas, Liberal party\nspokesman from the Quebec constituency! of Villeneuve, said the\nbill deadly repudiates the recommendations of the government-appointed Borden commission.\nRETAINING POWER\nThe government was retaining\nwide, -arbitrary power to be exercised |Shrough cabinet order-in-\n1 father than through Par-\n\".ut fiie, liberals approv-\ntep^dple'jBf^sllSTO*'0\"\ning the national energy,board.\nMr. Churchill said-the bill will\nsimplify existing legislation arid\nregulations. It would control import and export of gas and the\nexport of electricity and \u2014 only\nthrough cabinet proclamation if\nthat was deemed necessary\u2014import and export of oil.\nCabinet approval would be required for board certificates to\nbuild and operate pipelines as well\nas import and export permits.\nThe bill establishes the energy\nboard as the sole pipeline authority replacing the board of transport commissioners\u2014a step, con\ntrary to Borden report recommendations which urged retention of\nsome transport board duties.\nWOULD STUDY\nThe board would provide a con\ntinuing  and  consistent  study  of\nHarriman May\nVisit Red China\nWASHINGTON (AP)-W. Aver-\nell Harriman, former governor of\nNew York, Friday received U.S.\nstate department permission to\nvisit Communist China in the role\nof newspaper man if the Chinese\nReds will let him in.\nThe department said the decision to validate the New York\nDemocrat's passport was approved personally by State Secretary\nChristian A. Herter, now attending the Big Four foreign ministers' meeting in Geneva.\n''tcdnA. t&weh.\nKootenay Lake at Nelson: Friday, 7.85 feet above zero; Thursday, 7*60- feet.\nhydrocarbon and electric energy\"\nmatters during a time of swift'\nchange, Mr. Churchill laid.,     \u25a0: \u25a0'.\nAt its heart lay the matter of\ntraffic, tariffs and tolls, previously'\nnot controlled. The government\nhad felt for some time that the5\ngap shpuld be closed between reg8\nulation of prices at the pipeline\npoint of intake and regulation- of\nprices at the point where it left\nthe pipeline for distribution to,\nconsumers.\nImport-export licences now\nwould be issued only after a public\nhearing where those affected could\nstate their case.\nMc. Churchill said the cabinet\nis retaining control of oil import'\nexports because of various factors.\nCanada now waa selling where it\ncould and there was a threat of\nprice collapse inherent in the\nworld oil surplus. Fast action\nmight be required In that event\nand it was deemed better to leave\nthe matter in cabinet's i hands\nrather than with Parliament.\n\"BETRAYAL  OF  CANADA\"      \u00ab\nHarold Winch (CCF-^yancouver\nEast) described the proposed\nhoard as\"a sham\" and.a \"bei\ntrayal of Canada\" because it would\ngive the board no real power, retaining this for the cabinet.  ..,-\u25a0-\n-TOu^wwr me ;*-\"n$ate |\nenergy policy that does not take, -\nin every; nrbvftioe arid everything\nof an energy-producing nature in\nthis coiihtry,\" he said..   .\nBut as far as he could see In\nthe government bill \"no authority\nwhatsoever . . . is included to enable this board when established\nto be able to proceed.\" -\u2022... -\u00ae;\nAt another point he safdt     \u2022 \u25a0\u00bb  :\n\"The board is not a. policy-makr\ning or administrative board at\nall; it is a political stooge of the\ngovernment in power.\"\nThe board could not issue a licence without cabinet approval\nand it could not revoke or suspend\na licence without similar approval.\nIt would be subject at, all times\nto cabinet approval and that, he\nsaid, \"makes it a political stooge\nand not a policy-making or administrative, board.\"\n\u2022i\nPicket Test Case\nAppears Doomed\nVICTORIA (CP) - Victoria's\nlabor men's \"test case\" against\nBritish Columbia's controversial\nnew Bill 43 seemed doomed to fizzle out Friday unless a city contractor seeks redress as an injured\nparty.\nBacked by the B. C. Federation\nof Labor, Victoria Building Trades\nCouncil Thursday picketed a nonunion construction project and\nchallenged the government tb take\npunitive action under the new labor legislation.\nThe Bill prohibits picketing of\nnon-union shops.\nAttorney-General Robert Bonner\nsaid Thursday that \"it is quite impossible to challenge tjhe government by these manoeuvres.\"\nHe pointed out that the Act\nmakes provision by which the injured party may seek redress.\nBut the \"Injured party\" J. Hen-\nson Jr., said the picketing did not\nhamper his operations.\nHe charged the unions with having failed to ask him to sign any\nagreement but said he was paying his men union wages anyway.\nHis basic wage for carpenters, he\nsaid, was $2.65 an hour. Some men\nget more.\nHe said he had not considered\ntaking action against the picketing\ngroup \"because I have been too\nbusy.\"\nUnion officials said it is not true\nthat the contractor has never been\nasked to sign a union agreement-.\n\"We have approached him before\u2014we have asked him many\ntimes in the past,\" saiU Don Bushnell, secretary of the Victoria\nBuilding Trades Council.\nAnd in This Corner .. \u2666\nRALEIGH, N.C. (AP)\u2014Traffic officers erected a new sign at\na busy street intersection on the North Carolina State College\ncampus this week. It said: \"Yield.\"\nIt bears a new message now. Someone appended: \"Not to temptation.\"\nCLIFTON. N.J, (AP)\u2014Clifton High School announced its honOr\n\u25a0 roll Friday. The list Includes Charles Brain and Nancy Scholar,\nCHICAGO (AP)\u2014Museka and Aribt, Brookfield Zoo's okapls, are\n< showing signs of an historic parenthood.\nIf Museka becomes a mother, the offspring will be the first\nokapi born in an American zoo, Robert Bean, director, said.\nThe okapi is an unusual antelope, resembling a zebra at the\nbottom and a giraffe at the top.\nAribi, Bean said, is strutting about like a proud father already.\nMuseka is a bit quieter, decidedly chubbier and is eating with ah\nappetite for two.\nBAYONNE, N.J. (AP)\u2014The fortunes of war are fickle. Thursday the escort carrier Guadalcanal was towed a few miles upstream\nform the naval base here to be scrapped. She is listed in U.S. Navy\nrecords as the only American vessel to capture an enemy submarine on the high seas during the Second World War.\nThe submarine she captured\u2014a German U-bcat\u2014has been preserved as a museum attraction in Chicago.\n\"1\n\u25a0''\u25a0\u25a0-\"\u25a0' -\u2022\u25a0\u2022   \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 ' \u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\"\u2022'  '\"-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 \"-'\ni\naaaaaaaaaa\n\u25a0HM\n,  \u00bb-,:.';\n \u2014-\u2014.\u2014,\u2014\n-~\u2014\n2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, MAY 23,1959\nFfpWWWPlP\u00abW'-)i\" mfjrxwmw'' *m ' ^imfmmmmsmP-\n\u25a0-'.'V,'U:'-  \u25a0\u00ab\u25a0\u25a0!.\u25a0#. \u25a0-\n^SP^S^SF\nKiddies\u2014At the Matinee Today\u2014\n\"THE   MAN   BEHIND  THE  GUN\"\nSERIAL CARTOONS COMEDY\nAdmission 20c\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT \u2022\nShows at 7:00 - 9:15\nM-a-M pmanta\nBy the (junior ot\n\u25a0'PROM HERB\nTO BTSRNITY\"\nPRANK\n: SINATRA\nDBAN\nMARTIN\n,.      .v.,      SHIRLEY\n,N  -'.'IImaoLAINE\nPrices:\n90rj - 60* - 25*\nMonday\u2014\"Harry Black and the Tiger\"\nPlus\u2014\"The Fiend Who Walked the West\"\nSOME\nCAME\nRUNNING'\nrinimiBoopi ind METROCOLOR\nI 1,771\nDRIVE-IN\n\"I Tonight - Mon. - Tues.\n'     One   Showing  8:45   p.m.\nSEVEN BRIDES i\nl\nFOR SEVEN BROTHERS\nI   iur.in.JANE POWELl  r\n|        HOWARD KEEL\nTTP FOR DRIVERS\nFaulty spark plugs can waste as\nmuch as one gallon of gasoline in\nvery 10.\nPrescription\nService\nPrompt, Courteous Service\nWhile You Walt or\nBy Delivery\n(Service Is Our Watchword)\nNELSON\nPHARMACY\n\"Your Portress of Health\"\n433 Josephine St., Phone 1201\nAUTO-VUE\nDRIVE-IN   THEATRE\nTrail. B.C.\nLast Times Tonight\nShow Time approx. 8:45\n\"NO TIME FOR SERGEANTS\"\nAndy Griffith, M. MeCormick\nCARTOON - NEWS\nELK DRIVE-IN\nCASTLEGAR. EC.\nLast Times Tonight\n\"THE r\/.I.\"\nJack Webb, Monica Lewis\n\u2014 Plus \u2014\n\"POWDER RIVER\"  (Color)\nOne Showing 8:50 p.m.\nCASTLE THEATRE\nCastlegar, B.C.\nLast Times Tonight\n!^GOD IS MY PARTNER\"\nWalter Brennan, M. Moss\n\u2014 Plus \u2014 .\n\"Courage of Black Beauty\"\n(Color)\nPRINCE GEORGE (CP) - A\nmass vehicle check here resulted\nin 15 charges being laid against\ndrivers and some 150 motorists\nbeing ordered to correct defects\nin their vehicles.\nonntE\nPlaymor -- Tonight\n\"MEN  OP  NOTE\"\nTested and proved by professionals\nNEW HOMELITE 7-21\nPlunge-cut bow is a natural for\npulpwood culling ... 14' and\ntt'ilzu.\nBrush cutler ittachas io seconds (or easy cutting ot brush,\nbrambles, undergrowth.\nGEAR DRIVE CHAIN SAW\nThe new Homelite 7-21 Is a real\nprofessional's chain saw. Gear\ndrive gives you lugging power to\nfell trees up to 7 feet in diameter,\ncut 20' trees in 18 seconds. Balanced 21 pounds (less bar and\nchain), goes anywhere easily \u2014\neven in roughest terrain. Starts\nfast In any dimate or altitude.\nHomelite's Magic 7 features save\nmoney because they cut down-time\nand maintenance. Full power in any\ncutting position. Precision built\nwith famous Homelite short-stroke,\nhigh compression engine. Try it\nyourself in a free demonstration.\nNow 7-MONTH WARRANTY\nHomelite iales & Service Ltd.\n536 Stanley St.\nNelson\nPhone 2042\nTHE BISHOP OF NELSON, Most Rev. W. E. Doyle, extended congratulations\nto William Laurie - of Trail, member of the graduating class of Notre Dame Collage, after he had won drama trophy at annual commencement exercises Friday\nnight. The bishop is chancellor of the college.\n\u2014 Daily News photo by Mickey Carlton.\nChin Injury Led to Death\nOf Garrett, Court Is Told\n\"Open Friendship, Trust\"\nGiven College, Bishop Says\nOnly the \"co-operation, patience\nand assistance of the people in\nand around Nelson\" have made\npossible the progress of Notre\nDame College, Most Rev. Wilfred\nE. Doyle, Bishop of Nelson, told\nthe 1039 graduating class at a\nbanquet Friday night. Parents and\nfriends of the graduates filled the\ndining room of the college to hear\nthe Bishop's address.\nThe \"open friendship, trust and\nconfidence\" which the city and district had given Notre (Dame were,\nthe Bishop said, the inspiration toward a move which would soon\ndouble the college's enrolment.\n'We can only continue so successfully with the support of the citizens of Nelson.\"\nHis Excellency looked forward\nto the \"ready acceptance by stu-\nCause and time of the death of\nClarence Douglas Garrett, 35,\nwere brought out In Nelson Friday\nin the fourth day of the trial of\nLarry Popoff, 23, one of three Ooti-\nschenia men accused of the alleged\nmurder of Garrett.\ndied of exposure. \"It is possible\nbut not probable. I may have\nbeen a contributing lactor in his\ndeath.\"\nHe said the position in which the\nbody   was   found   was   constant\nTestifying before an all-male jury j with both sleep and death. It was\nand Mr. Justice F. K. Collins, Dr. | also noted that- there was some\nLawrence Duggan, of Trail, patho-j blood in the lungs, and three quar-\nlogist for the West Kotenay area, ters of a pint of blood in the sto-\nsaid death was apparently caused' mach.\nby loss of blood through a two-inch:    He stated there was no evidence\njagged slash in the man's chin.     | of pneumonia in the lungs.\nThe doctor said that the cut w?s!    Testimony of Sgt. Arthur Zim-\noutside the jawbone, and penetrated through to the inside of the\nmouth. The flesh was'completely\ntorn away from the jaw, he said.\nThe upper lip was also separated\nfrom the upper jaw.\nI have never seen wounds like; as to the admissibility of the state-\nthis  before.\n\"There were numerous head\nwounds; cuts over the eyes, a two-\ninch laceration on the right side of\nthe head, cuts on and about the\nlips, and a multitude of bruises and\ncuts on the head and upper body.\"\nHe said that the small cuts and\nbruises on the head, with the exception of the slashed jjaw, would\nnot have had an effect on the cause\nof death.\n\"Death occurred between 12 and\n24 hours prior to my preliminary\nexamination.\" It was revealed\nunder examination by Crown prosecutor Leo S. Gansner that death\noccurred between 11 p.m. Oct. 4\nand 11 a.m. Oct, 5, the day the\nbody was discovered.\nDr. Duggan said the man died\none or two hours after the jagged\nslash on the chin had been inflicted.\nHe said the injury to the chin was\ncaused by a blow below the chin.\nSUGGESTS KICK\n\"I doubt very much if lhe blow\nwas done with a fist. It would take\na great amount of force to separate\nthe flesh from the bone as this was.\nA kick would be much more like\nit.\"\nAsked by Mr. Gansner if .33 per\ncent alcohol content of the blood\nwould make Garrett intoxicated.\nDr. Duggan replied that with that\namount of alcohol, a normal person\nwould be in a coma. The possible\nlethal dose is .5 per cent.\n\"I doubt if he would have been\nable to move around qujckly, if\nat all.\"\nUnder cross-examination by defence counsel Douglas T. Wetmore of Trail, the doctor said\nGarrett could conceivably have ceipts and a single 10-cent coin.\nThere were no bills. The wallet was\nintroduced  as  Crown  evidence.\nOn the afternoon of the next day,\na series of inquiries were made l,y\nSgt. Zimmerman and Corporal\nR. J. Mills. Purpose was to de! ermine identity of persons last seen\nwith Garrett.\n\u2022 He stated that Larry Popoff was\ndiscovered working ata building\nin East Trail with his cousin Harry\nPoooff. Larry Popoff was taken to\nRCMP headquarters in Trail for\nquestioning in connection with\nGarrett's death.\nSgt. Zimmerman said the questioning, of Larry Popoff was done\nby himself with Cpl. Mills in attendance.\nCpl. Angus McDonald, in charge\nof the Castlegar detachment, testified he was unable to recognize\nthe body of the man as being that;\nmerman, RCMP, was interrupted\nin mid-afternoon at the request of\nthe'Crown prosecutor that the jury\nbe excused while testimony1 concerning a statement was given.\nJudgment by Mr. Justice Collins\nment will be given today,\nSgt: Zimmerman is non-commis\nFUNERAL HELD\nFOR B. D. FRANK\nFriends from Nelson, Trail, Kimberley and Alberta points attended\nthe funeral service at Thompson\nFuneral Home Friday afternoon\nfor Bernard Doffner Frank, 57, of\nKimberley, who died in Mount St.\nFrancis Infirmary earlier this\nweek.\nRev. Canop W. J. Silverwood of-\nsioned officer in <charge of the j of Garrett, even though he hadj ficiated, and hymns sung were\nSaskatoon general investigation de- known him for about 18 montns. | \"Abide With Me\" and \"Unto the\npartment. At the time of Garrett's' He identified a pair of shoes and; Hills Around.\" Mrs. W. A. Manson\ndeath he was temporarily attached] a torn shirt found near the body,  was organist. ,\nto the Nelson RCMP subdivision,    as well as some hair found in the     There were many floral tributes.\nTELLS OF FOOTPRINTS I cab of a truck belonging to Larry!    Pallbearers  were  William  Bain\nHe said he found  a  series  of I Popoff. j Jr. of Trail, C. Shonsta of Kimber-\nEx-Nelson Man\nTo Be Interne\nAlSpokane\nA former Nelson man who is\nswitching from a career in pharmacy to medicine, received his\ndoctor's degree from University\nof B. C.' during graduation this\nweek,\nHe is Norman Staley, who received elementary and high school\neducation in Nelson.\nHe received his degree jn phar\nmacy from UBC and practised in\nKelowna for one year, then decided to return to the university to\nearn his degree in medicine.\nMr. and Mrs. Staley and two\nyoung children. Donna and David,\nwill move soon from Vancouver\nto Spokane, lhere Mr. Staley will\nbe an interne at Deaconess Hos\npital. Mrs. Staley is the former\nMildred Hawes, daughter of Mr.\nand Mrs, F. W. Hawes, 111 Richards Street.\nMr. Staley's family is well\nknown in the city, having lived\nhere for a number of years. Mr.\nStaley Sr., was foreman of Williams Transfer on Ward Street: he\nnow operates a garage in Vancouver.\ndents and their parents\" of the\nproblems attendant upon increasing the staff and facilities. He\nadded that past success was due\nin great part to the work of staff\nmembers, to the assistance of the\nCatholic Women's League, which\nprepared the banquet, and to the\nco-operation of civic groups including City Council.\nThe college was unique, the\nBishop said, in that its students\nnot only learned in the classroom\nbut also \"from scrubbing, floors\narid winning awards.\" The college\ntuition fees are partly paid by\nmaintenance work by the students.\n\"The better kind of leaders are\nnot just born \u2014 they are made,\"\nBishoo Doyle added, saying \"and\nthat is the purpose and hope of\nNotre Dame. We want to assist the\nHolv Spirit by using our talents to\ntheir greatest extent.\"\nArmand Lalonde of Natal, president of the Student Council, as\nvaledictorian, said: \"Tearing up\nyour roots is not a pleasant contemplation, but we are going to\ncarry on the principles and ideals\nof our d-dicated professors in\nlarger fields.\"\nWashing dishes had turned out,\nsaid Mr. Lalonde, to be almost as\neducational as studies, not only\nin cutting expensss but also In\n\u2022he' social rewards this co-opera-\n'ion brought about.\nAWARDS PRESENTED '\nWilliam Lauri\" of Trail, mem,-\nber of the graduating' class, announced the presentations of student awards. Rev. LeRoy McKen-\n'.ie presented awards for outs'and-\ning scholarshin to Thomas Siska\nGrand Forks, and Miss Leone Jur\nick of Trail, both first-year stu-\nd?\"ts.\nBen Sutherland gave trophies he\nhad presented, to Donald Burin\"\nnani of Trail and Florence Kraoh\ner of Spokane for outstanding citi\nzenship. Terry Bressanutti of Trail\nreceived the athletic award.\nWilliam Gaines accented from\nRev. Thomas HaSsett the softball\ntrophy on behalf of the Trojan\nteam and Joe Leins the basketball\naward from coach Terry Wayling.\nArmand Lalonde took the table\ntennis singles trophv and teamed\nup with Ken Ramdin to win the\ndoubles as well.\nWilliam Laurie was presented\nby A. L. Cartier with the dramatics\naward, and Father McKenzie presented the public speaking trophy\nto Miss Jurick. who had won the\nKnights of Pythias provincial oratory contest.\nRev. L. J. Smith, rector of Notre\nDame,' made the opening addressi\nwelcoming the parents and telling\nthe graduates that \"we hope and\npray you will go on to make a success of life and that this will lead\nto higher educational steps.\"\n\"We are a small family, small\nenough and big enough to get\nalong together, \"College spirit,\"\nhe said, \"of a family working together, living together, playing\ntogether and praying together\"\nwas the essence of the success of\nNotre Dame.\nAlderman A. K. McAdams An\nbehalf of the city, wished the graduates success and said the fact\nNotre Dame students came from\n\"everywhere from Edmonton to\nHong Kong\" had established the\nschool's success.\nIn publication of the school's annual. Don Buchignani paid tribute\nto the assistance of Miss Myra\nMcGillivray. dean of women, in\nassisting in its preparation.\nGraduates who received their\ndiplomas from Bishop Doyle were:\nRay Blummenschein, West Sum-\nmeriand; Agnes Carty, Salmo; Edward Gotzy, Fernie; Richard\nPoole, Trail: Pat Johnson, Vancouver; Odd Risa, Norway; Daniel White, Revelstoke; William Ja-\nvanovic, Rossland; Florence Kra-\ncher, Spokane; Armand Lalonde,\nFernie: Milton Langlois, Spokane;\nWilliam Laurie, Trail.\nSEES NEED\nAt Mass. held in the college\nchapel in the afternoon. Rev. J. A.\nClarmont, Calgary, said the world\ntoday is in dire need of educated\nleaders ready to play a vital role\ntoward the betterment of mankind.\n\"We need men and women with\nclarity of reason and courage\u2014the\ntvpe of people who will help stem\nthe rushing avalanche of immorality, selfishness and greed enveloping the world today,\" he said.\n\"Notre Dame College is dedicated to Christian and intellectual\nadvancement. This college has\nnot failed its graduates and I pray\nthey will not fail their college.\"\npartially o b literated footprints\nleading from the place where Garrett's body was found to the road\nand on toward Kinnaird for a distance of about 25 feet. Scattered\nalong the prints were fragments\nof Garrett's shirt Snd underwear.\nHe said he removed Garre't's\nwallet from, a pocket. It was\nsmeared with blood on the outside, and there were several\nsmears of blood on the inside. The\nwallet contained a number  of re-\nIfs Freezer Time at Simpsons-Sears!\nNow you can own a famous 15 cu. ft. COLDSPOT FREEZER\nfor as little as $269.00!\nVisit SIMPSONS-SEARS today for the best Freezer values in town. For example:\nCustom DELUXE models with white P 0 R C E L AI N enamel\ninterior\n15 cu. ft. Now only  $349.95 20 cu. ft. Now only  $399.95\nOther chest type Standard Freezer with\nPORCELAIN   Enamel White ENAMELLED interior\ninteriors\n10 cu. ft Now only $269.95\n15 cu. ft. Now only $309-95\n20 cu. ft. Now only $359.95\nSPECIAL   FOR   THE   GARDENER!\n50 ft. of Garden Hose free with each power\nmower purchased from floor stock. (One\nweek only.)\n10 cu. ft. Now only $239.00\n15 cu. ft. Now only $269,00\n20 cu. ft. Now only $319.00\nSimpsons-Sears\nLIMITED\n556 Baker St. Nelson, B. C.\nTwo Promoted\nTo Corporals\nPromotion of two Nelson subdivision RCMP officers has been\nannounced.\nConstables R. J. Davidson of the\nCrescent Valley detachment and\nJ. D. Flamank of the Nelson detachment have been promoted to\nthe rank of corporal.\nCpl. Flamank has been with the\nforce for nine years. Previously\nhe was a member of the British\nColumbia provincial police. He\nserved in Prince George with the\nprovincial police and was trans\nferred to Trail when the law enforcement of that city was taken\nover by the force in 1949. He was\ntransferred to Kaslo in 1955, and\njoined the Nelson detachment Aug,\n1, 1958.\nMarried with four children, Cpl.\nFlarhank is extremely active in\nScouting. He Is district Scoutmaster.\nHe said he had noted  marks\nof a scuffle on (he road near the\nbody.    \"They     were     unusual\nmarks.  The  soil  was  disturbed\nas though something had been\nthrashing around.\".\nHe testified that there was blood\non the foliage around the body, and\na large pool of blood under the\nman's head.\nUnder cross-examination by Mr.\nWetmore, Cpl. McDonald said lhat\nthere were no upper teeth in the\nman's mouth.\n\"I have never been satisfied on\nwhether or not he had an upper\ndenture.\"\nHe said that Garrett had been\ntaken into custody for drunkenness\ntwo days before the discovery of\nthe body. He said Garrett was held\novernight, then fined and released.\nAt the time of his release, he had\n$33.50 in his posession.\nThe trial will continue at 10:30\nthis morning.\nley and E. W. Craig, A. P. Jenkins, William Hall and James\nLeeming. Interment, took place at\nNelson Memorial Park.\nAnother Bottle\nDrive Planned\nNelson and District Boy Scout\nAssociation will hold another in\nits series of bottle drives June 20,\nproceeds again going to buy equipment for Scouts and Cubs.\nThe lads will be knocking on\ndoors in quest of gifts of milk,\nbeer and pop b ottles, flower pots\nand clean cotton rags, which are\nre-sold.\nThe last collection day earlier\nthis spring realized about $300.\nSuspended Sentence\nFor Burnaby Youth\nIn the only case heard in provincial court Friday, Stipendiary\nMagistrate William Evans extended the court's mercy to a young\noffender, found guilty of ob'.ainhe;\ngoods over the value of $50 by\nfa'se pretences.\nThe magistrate suspended sentence in the case of Barry James\nWilson, 19, of Burnaby, and placed\nhim on a $100 bond for 12 months\nin surety of good behavior.\nTHE WEATHER\nNELSON     37\nKimberley    '31\nKaslo     34\nPenticton     31\nVancouver    46\nVictoria     '.. 49\nSpokane 44\n70     \u2014\n66\n72\n75\n70\n71\nHIGH SCHOOL\nGRADUATION\nSET FOR JUNE 4\nGraduates from L. V. Rogers\nhigh school will have their day on\nJune 4 when at 8 p.m. graduation\nexercises will be held in the school\nauditorium.\nR. A. Phillips, school board\nchairman, will introduce the speak-\ners.\nElmo Wolfe of Argenta will make\nthe keynote sDeech on the subject\nof \"Men to Match Mountains,\" referring to man's contest against\nnature in the rugged country of\nB. C.\nThe valedictory will be given by\nColin Horwood, and the school\nchoir and band will present musical numbers.\nAwards for scholarship, athletics\nand other endeavors will be given\nat Awards Day June 11. A banquet\nand dance for the graduating class\nhave already been held.\nIn the junior high school the custom of holding a graduation ceremony will be drppped this year in\nfavor of an Awards Day. to be\nheld probably June 19. Principal\nB. B. Crawford expressed the\nopinion that \"graduation\" was\nnrobably a premature statement\nfor young people who still had\nseveral years of school ahead of\nthem, and that the presentation of\nawards won for good citizenship,\nscholarship and achievement in\nother school activities, seemed\nmore titling.\nRUMMAGE  SALE\nat\nThe Salvation Army\nTODAY \u20141:30 P.M.\nFormer Nelson Man\nJoins Royal Tour\nA former CKLN announcer now\nwith the Canadian Broadcasting\nCorporation in Montreal has been\nplaced in charge of all broadcast\narrangements for the royal tour\nin Canada this summer.\nTom Derbyshire, who was a\nmember of the Nelson radio station staff in the early war years,\nwill be a member of the press and\nradio staff accompanying (he touring party. He is supervisor of engineers for CBC in Montreal.\nSPRING CONCERT\nBoys' Studio Choir\nUnder the Direction of\nMrs. T. J. S. Ferguson\nGuest Artist: Elfreda Sewell\nConcert Violinist\nMay 27th - 8 p.m.\nCAPITOL THEATRE\nAdults $1.00        Children 35c\nProceeds in Aid of K.L.G.H. Children's Ward'\nGOLDEN\nVIGORO\nWill Not Burn\n25 Ib. size $2'9\u00b0\nNow Is the Time to Feed the Lawn With Golden Vigoro!\nHorticultural\nPEAT MOSS Garden Bail\nil, approx. 45 lbs.\n2.45\nBlue Whale\nNursery   Bale\nPeat Moss\nApprox. 65 lbs.\n4.30\nDeath to\nDandelions\n2-4-D\nWith   hose   spray   attachment. All broad-leaf weeds.\n16 fl. oz.\n1.89\nFertosan\nThe wonderful powder that\nconverts garden rubbish into manure in five or six\nweeks.\n50*\n1.50\n1-Ton\nSize   .\n4-Ton\nSize  .\nWeedex\nWonder Bar\nNo spraying, just pull it behind you.  Covers 20,000\nsq. ft. Safe control of all broad leaf plants\t\n4.95\nMAKE YOUR OWN COMPOST\nRot It with \"ROT-IT\"\nWorks Quicker With Moisture\n5 Qg*t     10       $1.60\nlbs.     _03       lbs. \u201e    I\nELLISON'S\n523 Front Street\nPhone  1830 Nelson\n^-mmml^^mmm*mmim*^mmm,m*mmt,mmmm\n__\n        ' \u25a0\n\u25a0\u25a0-.'-,::\n m***mm**mm**w**w***^\n-^-\u25a0''\u25a0^Tmr^T''^^\n:--'-c'-:':'\u2022.\u25a0.'  '.'>  .v^\n'-.\nI;\nR53I\nGUEST SPEAKER at the 58th annual banquet meeting of the Trail Chamber\nof Commerce, E. W. Disher of Vancouver Thursday sounded a note of warning concerning Canada's world trade which he claims is being \"threatened on every side.\"\nAfter the meeting he stopped to chat with newly-appointed first vice-president Howard Gane. Mayor L. A. Read told the gathering Trail has the \"makings of the finest\ncity in Canada.\"\u2014Daily News photo by Mickey Carlton.\nSOUTH SLOCAN\nSCHOOL HOLDS\nTRACK MEET\nSOUTH SLOCAN - Mount Sentinel high school held a day of\ntrack and field events with competition between the three school\nhouses \u2014 Apache, Blackfoot and\nCherokee. The Blackfoot \"tribe\"\nscalped the other two houses, and\ntook the honors for most points\nIn the competitions.\nStudents with the individual\nchampionships were, their houses\nsignified by letters:\nSenior boys' champion, John\nSoukeroff. C; runner-up, Pat La-\ntondras, B; senior girls' champion,\nJanice Plotnikoff, A; runner-up,\nLeslie Hammond, C; junior boys'\nchampion, Michael Brewster, A;\nrunner-up, Albert Cunningham, B;\njunior girls' champion, Lena Zaits-\noff, B; runner-up, Gloria Catton,\nA.\nSeveral students are slated to\nenter the West Kootenay inter-\nhigh school track and field competitions today at Nelson. Best bet\nwill be Janice Plotnikoff.\nSlocan City's Lucerne high\nschool girls' softball team journeyed to South Slocan Thursday\nnight to trounce the Mount Sentinel girls 24-15. A return match\nwill be played at Slocan City on\nMay 28.\nHotel Builder\nDies At 78\nKIMBERLEY - Builder and\noperator for many years of the\nCanadian Hotel in Kimberley,\nDonald Alexander (Dan) MacKinnon died at St. Eugene Hospital in Cranbrook at the age\nof 98.\nHe was born at Mount Young,\nCape Breton Island, and lived\nat Coleman, Alta., for several\nyears before settling in Kimberled\nin 1926. He and his wife operated the hotel there until its sale\nin 1947 when they moved to Cranbrook and built and operated the\nAlmo Tourist Court. Mrs. MacKinnon died in 1951.\nSince his retirement Mr. MacKinnon lived at Kimberley and at\na rest home in Cranbrook. Surviving him are two daughters, Mrs.\nG. A. Giovannetti of Sidney, N.S.,\nand Miss Catherine MacKinnon of\nKimberley, four grandchildren,\nand one brother and four sisters in\neastern Canada.\nBurial in Westlawn cemetery at\nCranbrook followed the funeral\nservice at Kimberley Presbyterian\nChurch Thursday afternoon.\nPhone 1844 for Classified.\nTesting of Cattle\nCompleted at Creston\nHon. Newton P. Steacy, minister i\nof agriculture, has announced that\nthe livestock branch of the B.C.\ndepartment of agriculture has completed blood testing of cattle in the\nCreston district. This marks the\ncompletion of blood testing work\nin the entire East Kootenay brucellosis control area, which has now\nbeen declared free of brucellosis.\nSome 800 herds of cattle were\ntested under this eradication program, over an area extending from\nRiondel to Alberta and from Donald to the international boundary.\nAll breeding stock over the age of\nsix months was tested. Because\nmany of the animals were range\ncattle these were available for testing only during winter months,\nwhich necessitated the program being spread over several years.\nThe minister has pointed out that\nthe immunizing of calves each year\nhas been an important part of this\neradicatino program in building up\na reserve of immune animals. This\nis a major factor in reducing the\nincidence and spread of brucellosis in the area.\nINSTITUTES HELPED\nMr. Steacy paid tribute to the\n\"valuable assistance\" given by\nF a r m e r s'   Institutes   through\nout East Kootenay in this work\n\"This co-operation in supplying in\nformation and help has made it\npossible to complete this important\nwork with a minimum of delay.\nWith the completion of this phase\nof the control program, the area is\nbeing turned over to the federal department of agriculture and will\nhenceforth be known officially as\na federal brucellosis control area\nunder the federal \"Animal Contagious Diseases Act\".\n\"ABOUT FACE\" FOR SOME RESIDENTS...\nHighway Diversion Brings\nChanges at South Slocan\nSOUTH SLOCAN - Work on the\nnew cut-off of the Southern Trans-\nprovincial Highway to bypass\nSouth Slocan has seen considerable\nblasting and rock moving at the\n'bottom of Bonnington Hill, but the\nonly evidence thus far in the village itself is a wide swath left by\na bulldozer chewing its way along\nthe proposed route west of Bonnington.\nFor the most part the new road\nwill follow Canadian Pacific Railway tracks, being situated just\nabove them. Motorists will have a\nmagnificent view of the West Koo-\n\"Fair Deal\" Urged\nBy Chamber Speaker\nPENTICTON (CP)-Maurice G.\nFinnerty, first vice-president of\nthe British Columbia Chamber of\nCommerce, said here a \"fair deal\"\nfor labor, management and consumers will solve B.C.'s economic\nproblems.\ntenay Power and Light Company\nNo. 3 Plant, the Kootenay River as\nit foams down the gorge and enters\nthe Slocan Pool, and the entire\nvalley, overlooking Shoreacres.\nThis view is almost entirely hidden to the motorist travelling on\nthe present highway.\nOwners of the first five or six\nhomes on the lower side of the\npresent road west of the St. Matthews' Anglican Church are faced\nwith the prospect of an \"about\nface\" in their gardening efforts.\nOne homeowner, Mrs. I, R. Jones\nsays: \"For many years we have\nconcentrated our gardening on this\nside of the house, facing the present road. Now, look what we have\nfor a front yard,\" she said, as she\nwaved her arm down the steep,\nrocky slope. What once was just\nthick underbrush and tall trees is\nnow just a rocky jumble for several hundred yards behind six\nhomes, including Mrs. Jones'.\nMr. and Mrs. H. E. Dahlquistl\nare probably the ones who will\nbenefit most by the new construction. Their house, which was built\nby the late Mrs. Holden with the\nnew road in mind, is situated just\nabove the railway tracks. They\nhave had a long hike down the\nhill to the present road, at approximately the \"Entering South Slocan\" sign. Access to their home in\nwinter has been determined by\namount of snow.\nThis new route through the village is not only a blessing to some\nlike the Dahlquists but will also\nbring problems, some considerably\nmore serious than the prospects\nof new- gardening projects\nThe four businesses in the village, with a)l the traffic now passing their doors on the present road,\nare waiting and watching the new\nconstruction route which will -direct traffic away from their places\nof livelihood. Most dependent on\ntraffic of the highway, is garage\noperator R, Duns-more, J. Hendren\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, MAY 23, 19S9 \u2014 3\nEmployment Situation\nShows Improvement\nCRANBROOK \u2014 The National\nEmployment Office for Cranbrook district covering the area\nfrom Kootenay Lake to Elko, reports that unemployment insurance\nbenefits totalling $94,376 were\npaid to claimants during April.\nThe report concerning employment applicants and claimants\nshows a wide margin of improvement in employment compared\nwith the situation a year ago. Registered for employment were 1,150\npersons, compared with 1,644 persons for the week last year, and\nwho operates a grocery and variety\nstore, will also face a drop in business when the new road is opened. Shoe repairman W. Woiken\ntakes a \"wait and see\" attitude\nand this is typical of the others\nJ. Stuart, whose grocery is combined with South Slocan Post Office, expects some effect to his\n'business, hut people will still come\nfor mail.\n1,214 persons registered for the\nprevious week. Of the unplaced\napplicants 918 were men, compared with 1,375 for the week last\nyear.\nActive claimants of benefits this\nweek numbered 1026, compared\nwith 1,513 active claimants a year\nago.\nHamilton Heads\nKimberley Lions i\nKIMBERLEY - Brian  Hamilton was elected president of the ,\nKimberley Lions Club at the an- '\nnual meeting Tuesday night.\nGeorge  Felker  is  treasurer  and\nButch Zak secretary. J\nonncE\nPlaymor \u2014 Tonight\n\"MEN  OF  NOTE\"\nKimberley Firemen\nCalled as Relief\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Kimberley fire\ndepartment was summoned because more hose was needed and\nbecause Cranbrook firemen needed relief, Fire Chief V. Doll said\nhere in clarifying reports on this\naspect of a fire which destroyed\ntwo hotels here last Saturday.\nFire Chief Doll said his men had\nbeen working on the fire for four\nor five hours' and were badly in\nneed of relief. All the Cranbrook\nfire department hose, a. mile and a\nquarter long, had been used.\nNew Gov't House Not Really\nAn Expense, Premier Says\nVICTORIA (CP)-New Government House is not really an expense to the province, Premier\nBennett maintained Friday.\n\"It is an investment that repays\nitself many fold in industrial development,\" he said at a press\nconference, adding this is \"cash\nreturn.\"\nAsked whether this meant the\npalatial suites of Government\nHouse would be used to host visiting industrialists, the premier declined further comment.\nHe said B.C. is the most British\npart of Canada, \"therefore we\nhave the best Government House,\nand so we should.\"\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c line, 40c line black face type; larger type rates on\nrequest. Minimum two lines. 5% discount for prompt payment.\nJunior Hospital Auxiliary Rummage Sale, Capitol Theatre, Saturday, May 23, from 9 a.m.\nChicken Manure \u2014 $1 sack delivered. Also top soil. P. H. Mms-\nden, phone 559-X-3.\nPhone 263\nSNAPPY SERVICE\nFor your hauling needs.\nRESERVE JUNE 5\nFor Beta Sigma Phi Yellow Rose\nBall.\n\"Tiie Case Of The Invisible Ear\"\nIs Solved By Perry Mason\nErie Stanley Gardner, creator of \"Perry\nMason\", sayB, \"I think more people should\nrealize the extent to which recent scientific\n\"F?\u00bb*Mnh        diftcoverJes can help in restoring lost hear-\n\u25a0      \u25a0:**\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0 r        ing, juataB glasses can sharpen dim vision\".\nLike Mr. Gardner, you'll be amazed at the\niMs$H eaBe an(* clarity with which Otarion'a ex\nclusive, patented \"Target Hearing\" lets you\nhear where you look. You'll be amazed, too,\nwhen you discover that with \"Target Hearing\" even your best friends may not know\nyou're wearing a hearing aid unless you tell\nthem. There are no irritating, old fashioned\nErie Stanley Gardner wo. cords or wires in your hair or clothing, no\none of ihe fini io discover unsightly \"blobs\" behind your ear. With\nwhat a iremendouj revolutionary \"Target Hearing\" a tiny, al-\nCWdoHii\"\"Target most invisible tube leading to your ear\n;tta<jflng\" bring, to on oc- brings you a whole, wonderful world of\n.live penon. \"1 can't begin       sound without the annoyance of unwanted\n\"\u25a0Ip tell you how much latii- 1(, i       ji, \u2022\nfoetloi. 1 gal out ol lt\", background   noises.\n. '\u2022\"i\"- Write in today.\nNome \t\nAddress \t\nPhone \t\nInstitute (or Better Hearing, 618 Main St., Pentfcton, B.C.\nRummage Sale at the Salvation\nArmy today, 1:30 p.m.\nELECTROLUX SALES, SERVICE\n512 Richards St.. ph. 1108, Nelson\nMAY FAIR TODAY\nSt. Paul's-Trinity Hall. Floor show.\n3 p.m. and 8 p.m.\nChenille, Velvaluv, Fibre, Foam,\nLeaves.\nHOBBY SHOP\u2014OPP. BUS DEPOT\nPlate,  Sheet,  Safety,  Wired  and\nPatterned Glass and glass repairs.\nT. H. WATERS & CO. LTD.\n101 Hall St.    Nelson    Phone 156\nFUR STORAGE\nAlterations, Repairs, Cleaning\nCustom Sewing Centre\n580 Baker St. Nelson, B.C.\nYoung puppies and Walnut trees\nfor sale, wood and coal kitchen\nrange, also heater. Mrs. C. Becker,\n1418 Vancouver St.\nThe Maxwell Power Mower\neverything! See it at . . .\nCOVENTRY'S FLOWER SHOP\nPHONE 962\nhas\nBamboo  Drapes,  practical  and\nhandsome, in natural, finished with\nruffelette tape.  4x7 panels  at\n$2.80; 6 x 7 at $4.20.\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nLarge selection of garden tools\nand glassware. Special, 50 ft. hose\nwith coupling, 3-year guarantee,\n$1.79. Garbage cans, special $5.95.\nWheelbarrows $9.95.\nHOME FURNITURE EXCHANGE\nMothers' Circle of Kokanee\nChapter DeMolay WEDGWOOD\nCHINA FILM AND DISPLAY in\nFairview United Church Monday,\nMay 25, 8 p.m. Adm. 50c. Free\nrefreshments.\nWhat's most important\nin a DUMP TRUCK?\nYou may answer... \"engine\"... \"fransrnission\"... \"rear axle*... \"frame\" or \"body.\"\nAnd taken one by one, these are all important factors.   But remember...\nBALANCED Truck Engineering\nis the key to dependable truck performance\nYOU'RE depending on the whole truck for long and profitable service.\nOnly when all components are balanced can a truck do your job as it should. For\nexample, engine power can be put to work efficiently only if the transmission,\npropeller shaft and rear axle are matched to the engine's capacity.\nHow eon you be sure of getting balanced truck engineering? Your best plan\nis to buy your trucks from truck specialists. International engineers have\nlong experience in solving the special problems of truck design. International\nsales representatives are trained to analyze your job and recommend the\nbalance of components that will be ideally matched to your job.\nJust as important, International truck specialists offer prompt and efficient\ntruck service to keep your trucks on the job.\nBALANCED TRUCK ENGINEERING\ni       INTERNATIONAL TRUCKS\nInternational Harvester Company of Canada Limited \u2014 305 - 9th Street North, Lethbridge, Alberta.     \u2022\"\u2022\nCentral Truck & Equipment\nCo. Ltd.\n702 FRONT ST. NELSON, B.C. PHONE 1810\nGodfrey's Motor Inn\nCRESTON, B.C.\nPHONE EL-6-2333\nRock Island Service\nTRAIL, B.C.\nFRUITVALE ROAD\nPHONE 2844\nEast Kootenay Equipment\nCo. Ltd.\nCRANBROOK, B.C.\nPHONE JU-6-2771\nSparwood Esso Service\nNATAL, B.C.\nPHONE NATAL\nLudy's Repair Shop\nGRAND FORKS, B.C.\nPHONE 30\n py- \u2022   '.   ,'   \u25a0 \u25a0 \"-tywjpp\nHP\u2014\u2014 *\u00ab$Wf\n^P^v^gsw\n^ff^P^ippsfl^ppf^i^p^\n'^^\nNflamt HaiUj Nnua\nEstablished April 21   im Nelson,  BC,\nPublished by the NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n266 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia, mornings except\nSundays and holidays in the centre oi the Kaotsnays with\nthe largest dolly circulation In the Interior oi B.C.\nAuthorized at Second Class Mail   Post Otfico Department.  Ottawa\nC W. Ramaden, Publisher.\nA. W. Gibbon, Editor,\nMEMBER OF ru\u00ab: CANADIAN PRESS\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN DAIU NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS' ASSOCIATION\nMEMBER OF THE AUDIT BUREAU Of CIRCULATIONS\nThe Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to trie ute tor republication ol at) news\ndispatches credited to it or to The Associated Prats or Reuters to this oaper.\nand alto the local news oublished therein\n Saturday, May 23, 1953\t\nMayor vs Council\nMayor C. E. Oliver of Penticton\nhas flown to Victoria to ask the department of municipal affairs who\ncity clerk H. G. Andrews obeys, him\nor the city council.\nThis looks like a simple question\nwhich has a simple answer. The city\ncouncil was elected to run the city\naffairs and the mayor was elected\nas its head. It is customary to describe\na mayor as a chief magisrtate, though\nthere seem to be no records of magistrates trying cases unless the present\nease Is one. In this he seems to have\ndecided that he runs the city. His\ncouncillors disagree.\nNo doubt the mayor objects to the\ntail wagging the dog, or in this particular Instance, the body of the council telling the head what to do, but\nhe evidently does not believe in bowing gracefully to majorities.\nParticularly al this time of the year\nwhen tax assessments are in the mail\nthere are many taxpayers who will\napprove of Mayor Oliver's action.\nThey would like to defy the council,\ntoo, and-Ihey will watch his battle\nwith the council with sympathy as\nwell as amusement.\nBut underneath all this farcical\nsituation is a minor defect in our municipal elections which can bring about\nsuch situations as this. Our mayors\nare elected to their office with the\npresumption that they should head\nand direct the council while the council is elected to run city affairs. They\nmay have nothing in common and\nthe council may decline, as in the\ncase at Penticton, to follow the mayor's\nleadership. In which case they can\nmake the mayor's life unhappy.\nThere is something of a suspicion\nthat much the same thing is happening in other cities and that the mayor\nhas far from a decisive voice ln city\nmatters. This does not necessarily\nmean that such cities are badly governed, but rather that they are not\nas effective as they should be because\nthere Is a lack of cohesion and unanimity of purpose.\nThe abolition of separate elections\nfor mayors by the taxpayers and the\nsubstitution of an election by the council of one of its already elected members would be much more serviceable\nthan the present system. It would be\nmore likely to result in the choice of\nan individual agreeable to the council\nand there would be no question of\nthe mayor forcing his policy on the\ncouncil since he would be acting as\nchairman and thus without policy of\nhis own.\nInterpreting tke News\nBy STEWART MACLEOD\nCanadian Preta Staff Writer\nAlthough missile! are gradually taking\nover as Britain's chief air weapon, the end\nof the manned fighter era is nowhere in\nsight.\nIn fact, say defence ministry spokesmen\nin London, the manned fighter will be required Indefinitely \u2014 \"unless \u2022 missiles learn\nto make positive identification of aircraft.\"\nThey also say manned aircraft are the only\nweapons that can hedge-hop into enemv territory without being spotted by radar.\nBritish defence planners took a long look\nat the future of manned aircraft before deciding that the new TSR-2 fighter-bomber\nshould be brought into production about 1965\nVerse\nRules in Rhyme\nfor the School Bus\nWhen in the queue, I mustn't try\nTo trip, or push, the passer-by.\nI must not chalk up words obscene,\nNor put slugs in the slot machine,\nI must not fight to get upstairs.\nNor gamble for the unpaid fares.\nI really must not slash the seat,\nNor on the upholst-ry wipe my feet.\nI must not push folk off the bus.\nNor shout, nor kick, nor smoke, nor cuss.\nI must hot\" smash the window glass,\nNor spit upon the folk we pass,\nI must not keep a chain or razor\nIn the pocket of my blazer \u2014\nBut If you do, you need not fret,\nA talklng-to is all you'll get.\nWe can't deny the simple truth \u2014\nYou're just a maladjusted youth,\nYou're really mummy's pride and joy,\nHer mixed-up, teenage Teddy-boy.\n-British Weekly.\nat a cost of \u00a3200,000,000. They made the\ndecision about four months ago.\n'- It will Uetefcout 1967 before the RAF is\nequipped with a lull complement of TSR-2S.\nSince defence spokesmen say the aircraft\nwill be in service \"for a good many years\"\nthis means that Britain's manned fighter\nplanes would be going strong until 1975. even\nif no additional models are designed.\nThe TSR-2 will he essentially low-level\naircraft which Defence Minister Duncan\nSandys has described as \"highly suitable for\nlimited war operations.\"\nIt will be capable of high-altitude all -\nweather performance and will carry air-to-\nair missiles. It will also have space for an\natomic bomb and will take off from 600-yard\nunsurfaced runways.\nDefence spokesmen describe the TSR-2\nas a \"completely versatile aircraft, capable\nof doing any job.\"\nThe need for manned aircraft was\nbrought out sharply at the time of the 1956\nSuez action when British pilots were ordered\nto destroy military installations without\nstriking nearby towns. Pilotless missiles, say\nthe defence planners, could never accomplish such a mission without large-scale destruction.\nManned aircraft appear te be winning\nrenewed favor in some ether European countries because of their ability, by changing\nheight at random, to sneak under the radar\nscreens. Both French and West German da.\nfence spokesmen have publicly pointed out\nthe advantages of aircraft over missiles.\nPRESS COMMENT\nPOLITE SNARL\nA psychologist says that breakfast Should\nbe eaten in silence. Oh come, can't w* even\nsnarl \"Good morning\" to the children?\n--PeterbOro Examiner.\nNot laws against certain speeds but\nagainst certain drivers are needed to make\nour highways safer. \u2014 Fredericton Gleaner.\nF. B. Pearce...\n.. .Writes\nWhen I was down beside the sea,\nMy little grandson said to me,\n\"Let's go and see the sea.\"\nSo we went tnd saw the sea. \u2014\nAnd. when we had seen th* sea\nHe said, \"We've seen tht sea\nNow left go home and see\nWhtt grandmother has for tea.\"\nAnd in between times he would say,\n\"Let's pity bill,\" or \"let's go for a car\nride.\" From which it may ba gathered that\nhe was a little boy though even quite big\nboyt say the same things.\nOf course, if t little boy has a librarian\nfor a mother he will want to read, \u00bbnd if all\nhit family read he will conclude that it It\nth* proper thins to do and will try to learn\nfor himself. ThiJ little boy knows Snd can\nwrite all the capital letters learned from\nthe breakfast food boxes. His next step will\nprobably  be to learn words  and if his\nmother is not careful he will learn to read\nbefore he goes to school. This is unfair to\nthe teachers and leaves them frustrated.\nWell, wouldn't you be frustrated if you were\nall set to teach the child,\nLook,  look!\nSee Spot run,\nSee Bobby run\nSee Betty run.\nand the child is already reading something\nintelligent?\nBut the fact that he knows all his letters\nreminds me of the days when little girls\nwould come to school on the first day of\nschool with an eager little youngester in tow\nand announce proudly \"This is Bill. He is\nsix on the tenth and he knows his alphabet\nand can count.to a hundred.\"\nIn those days the whole family took.an\nInterest in seeing that the youngest child\nlearned and my memory may be at fault\nbut I cannot remember any child in the rural\nschools in which I taught who did not know\nhow to read. It is true that many of my\npupils of those days never went to high\nschool, but there was not one who went\nthrough the eighth grade who had any difficulty In reading.\nBut teachers complained that parents were\nteaching their children by wrong methods\nand the rebuffed parents left everything to\nthe teachers and the result was the need\nfor remedial reading classes.\nIn particular the teachers objected to\nthe children learning their alphabet first. It\nwas Unscientific by their methods. They\nmuch preferred the looks and say method\nwhere guessing was at a premium and they\nwere doubtful about phonics. The trilth being\nthat they did not know their phonics very\nwell themselves and it never occurred to\nthem that many of the letter names are an\neasy introduction to phonics said reading.\nThe child puts its mouth in the same position when it says \"b\" as it does when it\nsays \"boy\" and \"big\" and though some\nletters like \"c\" do not follow the rule the\nexceptions are easy to learn.\nBut th* worst effect of the teachers' assumption that only they could teach reading\nwas the destruction of the belief that learning to read is easy. Once it became a matter\nfor skilled teachers only, then the children\nacquired a belief of. their, own that it was\ndifficult and they began to find it so.\nTempus Fti&it\nTo calculate the time of day, choose a\npoint on the celestial sphere as the time\nreckoner. This may be either the vernal\nequinox, the apparent sun, or the mean sun.\nIt is noon when the time reckoner is in upoer\ntransit, and noon plus the hour angle for\nany other position. This is simple enough, as\nany schoolboy will testify.\nBut when, you remember that the\nsidereal day is approximately 3 minutes\n55.909 seconds shorter than the solar dav,\nand that the solar day is lon\u00bber when the\nearth is near perihelion than when it is near\naph^'ion, it becomes a bit more complicated.\nTo simplify matters, then, the businessman in Chattanooga sets his w?tch by th*\nlocal civil time, which is deduced from\ncivil time at the meridian of Greenwich,\nEngland. Now difference of local time corresponds to difference of longitude, so if\nthis Chatt\u00bbnoo\u00bba businessman is fiving to\nChicago, all he has to do is gain an hour bv\nlosing an hour on his watch. So far so good.\nBut now Comes th* hard nart. Is Chii*\u00b0,\u00abo on\nDaylight SaviM Time? Or ma'\"he Chattanooga is. And did he Start from Chattooga\non Eastern Standard Ti-* or Central Time'\nAt this point the bu\"*'\u00abman mav well\nsith resigned'v aH give uo hit quest for the\nright time.\u2014The Chriltitn Science Monitor.\nIt's Been ^oirl\nThe Public wishes its-If to be managed\nlike a wr>man: ore n-uia' eav p^th'n* to it\nexcept what it likes to hear.^Goethe.\nTODAY'S BIBLE\nTHOUGHT\nBIBLE THOT SAT\nIf Thy servant have found favour in Thy sight. . . Send me\nunto Judah, unto the eity of my\nfather's sepulchres, that l may\nbuild it.\u2014Nehemiah ii. 5.\ndtml disL\nWhat is Jane so uppity about?\nIf her husband's nose didn't stay\non the grindstone, hers wouldn't\nhave no excuse to turn up.\nFire Kills Father\nAnd Four Kiddies\nONTARIO, Calif. (A?) - Four\nsmall children and their father\ndied Thursday night when flames\nraced through their home.\nRobert Burk, 29, an unemployed dairy worker, wat baby-\ntatting with th* children while his\nwife, J\u00aban, 26, was working at a\nwaitress at a coffee shop. He died\nalong with hit family, Barbara,\n6, Tony, 7, Terry, 4, and Bobby\nLynn, 2.\n~ :*.&..\nRCN Ships, British Frigate, To\nEscort Royal Yacht Britannia\nOTTAWA (CP)-Eighteen RCN land Prince Philip'will board th*\nships and a British frigate will Britannia it Sept-Ilet, Que., June\nescort the roytl ytcht Brltalnhla 20, sailing across the river mouth\ninto the St. Lawrence River next' to Gaspe under escort by th* Royal\nmonth when the Queen beglnt her! Navy's HMS Ulster - an antl-\ntour of mainland Canada, it wat submarine frigate - and the Cana\nannounced Friday.\nFollowing   the   initial   two-day\nvisit In Newfoundland, the Queen\nREDS FIND KASSEM\nHARD TO PRESSURE\nBy TOM MASTBRSON\nBEIRUT, Lebanon >AP) - The\nCommunis is appeared Friday to\nhave lost their bid lor a quick\npower grab in Iraq.\nThey still are the strongest single political group in Iraq but\nthey seem to have backed away\nfrom any kind of showdown- \u2014\nat least for the momtnt.\nAt the same time Abdel Karim\nKassem, the Iraqi revolutionary\npremier, is gaining new stature\nin the Middle East.\nIt seems clear that Kassem has\nnot only stiffened his back against\nCommunist pressure, but also apparently has forced the Reds to\nback down and has made it stick.\nThe Communists, who have\nlong commanded the street mobs,\nhave been making an open grab\nfor power since the abortive Mosul revolt in March.\nBut what looks like an almost\nDuke of Windsor\nHas No Comment\nOakes Murder\nPARIS (AP) - The Duke of\nWindsor Friday declined to reply\nto a request that he return to\nthe Bahamas in connection with\nthe proposed re-opening of the\nSir Harry Oakes murder case.\nThe duke was governor of the\nBahamas at the time of the 1943\nslaying and following murder\ntrial, at which Alfred de Marigny,\nson-in-law of the Canadian multimillionaire, was acquitted.\nA resolution to re - open the\ncase was passed by the Bahamas\nassembly and member Cyril\nStevenson said it was imperative\n.the duke return to tell what he\"\nknows of the case.\nInformed of the new developments, the duke authorized his\nsecretary to say that, after consultations with his lawyers, he\nhas no comment at this time.\nNEW YORK (AP)-Private detective Raymond C. Schlndler,\ndisputing a statement by a member of the Bahamas House of Assembly, says he has no new evidence in the unsolved slaying of\nSir Harry Oakes.\nSohindler  said  Thursday:\n\"I've had no information 6ince\n1944 . . . when 1 offered to break\nthe case. Then I was told by Government House that, if I investigated the Oakes case or interviewed anybody about it, I would\nbe deported.\"\nThe resolution for renewal of\nthe investigation, passed by the\nassembly, was introduced by\nCyril Stevenson who said Sohindler had new evideno ln the\ncase. He did not specify the nature of the  purported evidence.\ncomplete reversal in tactics was\ndisclosed during the last 72 hours\nby Radio Baghdad. A series of\nbroadcasts and programs quoting\nnewspaper editorials gave the situation a different look.\nThe Communists have suddenly\nended their intensive campaign to\nget into Kassem's cabinet.\nUntil three days ago the Communists had carried out an unceasing drive aimed at getting\nrepresentation in the cabinet. The\nsubject was dropped on Wednesday.\nBACK DOWN\n' Obviously reluctantly, the Communists backed down Thursday\nfrom their demand for immediate official recognition of political parties.\nThis followed an announcement\nWednesday tha. the' left-wing National Democratic party, which\nholds most of the cabinet posts,\nwas quitting political activities in\nresponse to Kassem's insistence.\nKassem earlier this month said\nthe time was not ripe for political parties in Iraq.\nAn editorial in the main Red\nnewspaper, Ittihad el Shaab, said\nin effeot the Communists will not\nnow press for immediate recognition. \"This question can be solved\nin time,\" it added.\ndian vessels St. Croix and Restl-\ngouche.\nThe following mornlnl the roytl\nyacht and her escorts will be met\noff Gaspe by the destroyer escorts\nGatineau, Kootenay, Crescent, Cayuga, Athabaskan and Micmaci the\nfrigates Swansea and FOrt Erie;\nthe submarines Ambush and Aid-\nerney; and minesweepers Resolute, Fundy, Thunder, Chlgnecto,\nQulnte tod Chaleur.\nHEADS WEST\nThe two submarines and six\nminesweepers will drop out of the\nescort shortly after the royal yacht\nleaves Gaspe that afternoon, and\nthat night the Fort Erie\nSwansea also will leave.\nOn Monday, June 22, the Briton\nnia will be escorted up the Sague\nAll nine ships will accompany\nthe Britannia from Tadoutsac to\nQuebec City, where the Queen will\narrive June 28. The following day,\nthe Ulster will be joined ln escort\nby the Kootenay and Gatineau \u2014\nthe other Canadian vessels drop-,\nping out - for the trip to Troit-\nRivieres and Montreal.\nU.S. ESCORT\nThe United States Navy destroyer Forrest Sherman, along\nwith the Ulster and Gatineau, will\nescort the Britannia at the official\nopening ceremonies for the St,\nLawrence Seaway near St. Lambert lock Friday. June 26.\nDuring the rest of the royal\nyacht's passage through the seaway and the Great Lakes, escort\nduties will be shared by the Ulster,\nGatineau and Kootenay, along with\nthree U.S. ships joining in Lake\nand1 Huron and Lake Michigan while\nthe Queen is ln American waters.\nShe visits Chicago July 6.\nLater in July, when the Queen\nnay River to Port Alfred by the sails from Shedlac, N.B., for visits\nUlster, St. Croix and Restlgouche,' to Charlottetown and Cape Breton,\nwhile the six other Canadian de- j the Britannia will be accompanied\nstroyers anchor at Tadoussac, by the Canadian destroyer escort!\nwhere the Saguenay meets the Algonquin, Iroquois and Huron,\nSt. Lawrence. I plus the Ulster.. ...\u201e.'.\n3usiness Spotlight...\nMajor Pumice Deposit\nTo Be Worked In B.C.\nVANCOUVER (CP) - A road\nbuilder plans to spend $600,000 to\ndevelop a find of pumice, a rock\nthat has stepped from grandmother's kitchen into the construction industry.\nJohn Mclsaac, 41, of White-\nhorse, a road builder in British\nColumbia and the Yukon for 17\nyears,  will  develop a  claim\nQrant Starkweather\nStay of Execution\nLINCOLN, Neb. (CP) - Mass\nkiller Charles Starkweather Friday was granted a two-week stay\nof execution a little more than an\nhour before his scheduled appointment with death in the electric\nchair.\n. Federal district Judge Richard\nRobinson of Omaha granted the\nstay to allow Starkweather to appeal the denial Thursday of his\napplication for a writ of habeas\ncorpus.\nJohn Greenboltz, acting Nebraska penitentiary harden, gave\nfirst word of the development to\nreporters and witnesses as they\nshowed up at the prison during\na pre - iawn thunderstorm this\nmorning to witness the execution.\nGreenholtz said he received\nthe word in a telephone call from\nRobert Conrad, administrative assistant to Governor Palph Brooks.\nHAD NO COUNSEL\nConrad said Judge Robinson,\nafter study and conferences\nthrough the early- nornir.g hours,\nfound that Starkweather had been\nwithout the help of counsel in his\nhabeas  corpus  efforts Thursday,\nThe 20 - year - old condemned\nkiller had sought the writ on\ngrounds his constitutional rights\nhad been violated.\nEleven knife and gun slayings\nteoreoillonish Complain About\nTale of Black and White Rabbits\nMONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP)^A\nbook for young children about a\nwhite rabbit marrying a black\nrabbit has drawn protests in\nAlabama.\nIt was withdrawn from general public library circulation\nafter segregationists complained\nthat it reflected pro-integration\nviews.\nThe book is The Rabbits' Wedding, published by Harper Brothers last year for children between the ages of three and\nseven. It was written and jllui-\ntrated in color by Garth Williams.\nThe story tells of the marriage\nof the black and white rabbits at\na moonlight wedding attended by\nall the other animals of the for.\nest.\nAfter criticism of the book appeared, Miss Emilv Wheelock\nReed, director of the Alabama\npublic library service division,\nwhich lends books to local 11-\nbraries throughout the state, ordered th* book placed on the\nagency's reserves shelves.\nMiss Reed said the rabbit book\nhad not been bannW, but merely\nwithdrawn from general circulation. LibiBrians seeking the volume for their local libraries now\nmay obtain it only by specific\nrequest.\nGOT COMPLAINT?\n-' She sai< she and members of\nher staff had received complaints\nabout the book and that a member of the legislature, Senator\nE. O. Eddins, ouestioned it.\nMeanwhile, the oub'ishers issued a s*at\">met\u00abt frcm the author,\nnow in California, who laid: \u25a0\n\"I was completely unaware that\nanimals with white fur, suth as\nwhite polar bears and white dogs\nand white rabbits, were considered blood relations of white beings. I was only aware that a\nwhite horse next to a black horse\nlooks very picturesque.\"\nWilliams said his story was not\nwritten for adults. He said they\n\"will not understand It, became\nit is only about a soft furry love\nand has no hidden message of\nhate.\"\nwere blamed on \u2014 and admitted\nby\u2014the youthful former garbage\nhauler following a murder rampage 16 months ago.\nU.S. district judge Robert Van\nPelt Thursday rejected applications for a writ of habeas corpus\n-id a stay of execution, filed by\nthe youth's parents.\nKILLING SPREE\nStarkweather, a five- foot -five,\nbow-legged redhead, vaulted into\nnotoriety ta January of 1958.\nAccompanied by his 14-year-old\nsweetheart, Caril Ann Fugate, he\nset out on a killing spree. Nine\nvictims in and around' Lincoln\nwere counted in three days as the\nfugitive teen-agers kept one jump\nahead of the law.\nThe trail ended with capture of\nthe pair near Douglas, Wyo.,\nJan. 29 after a parting-shot killing of a shoe salesman on a Wyoming highway. Starkweather\nsubsequently admitted the previously unsolved slaying of a Lincoln filling station attendant,\nbringing his string to 11.\nStarkweather was tried specifically in the Jan. 27 shooting of a\nBennet, Neb., high school student,\nRobert Jensen, vAose body was\nfound in a storm cave with that\nof his girl friend, Carol King.\nGIRL FRIEND CONVICTED\nCaril, now 15, was convicted of\nmurder on grounds she aided and\nabetted Starkweather in the Jensen killing, and drew a life sentence. Her appeal to the state supreme court is pending.\nStarkweather was a principal\nwitness against Caril at her trial,\nand the girl's lawyers have since\ncontended, in seeking a new trial,\nthat, false testimony by Starkweather convicted the girl.\nOnly Wednesday Caril asked\nGovernor Ralph Brooks to stay\nStarkweather's execution so he\nwould have \"plenty of time to tell\n(he truth.\" She alto asked the\ngovernor to arrange a face-to-\nfacs meeting with Starkweather\nbefore his execution in the hope\nof drawing from him a statement\nthat Caril was innocent. Brooks\nrejected the pleas.\nPresbyterians Plead\nFor United Churches\nINDIANAPOLIS (AP)-A plea\nfor church unity was addressed\nto the other churches of the Presbyterian and reformed tradition\nin the United States and Canada\nThursday by the United Presbyterian Church in the U.S.A.\nThe invitation to union was extended to five g o u p s In the\nUnited States and two in Canada,\nwhich have total membership of\n8,250,000. The United Presbyterian Church itself hat 3,159,562,\nmembers.\nA combination of these bodies\nwould produce a church ranking\nwell up among the largest Protestant denominations in English-\nspeaking North America.\nTh* United Presbyterians' 171st\ngeneral assemb'y adopted a committee   recommendation   that   a\nletter be sent to the seven olher\nchurch bodies.\nThe unity plea vas addressed\nto: Associated Reformed Presbyterian Church, Cumberland Presbyterian Church, Cumberland\nPresbyterian Church ln the\nU.S.A. and Liberia, Evangelical\nand Reformed Church Hungarian\nReformed Chirch in America,\nPresbyterian Church in the U.S.\n(Southern), and Reformed Church\nin America, all ... the United\nStates; and the 'reibyt'erian\nChurch in Canada and the United\nChurch of Canada.\nAll of these churches trace\ntheir origins to John Calvin in\nGeneva or John Knox in Scotland\nduring the 16th-century Reformation, when Protestantism arose\nthrough separation from the Roman Catholic Church.\nstaked by veteran prospector\nJohn Ryan, 56, last year on tha\nLillooet River northeast of here.\nMr. Mclsaac says development\nof the only major deposit of pumice ln B.C. will be launched with-,\nin a month.\nIt will require construction of\n16 miles of new roa' to join a\nroad being punched from the\nLillooet River to Bralorne Pioneer Mines Ltd.\nUSED IN CONCRETE\nPumice, grandmother's kitchen\nabrasive, is used principally as a\nlightweight aggregate in certain\ntypes of concrete. It is also used\nas a cement additive in small\nquantities.\nMr. Mclsaac hopes to have an\nopen pit quarry jn production by\nthe fall.\nHis biggest and nearest markt^.\nis Vancouver,  which  now takea^Y\nabout 100,000 cubic yards a year.\nThe current price is $9 a yard.\nVancouver's supply now comes\nfrom Crater Lake, Ore.\n\u2022 Mr. Mclsaac hopes to be able\nto cut the price to enlarge the\nlocal market and compete in\nSeattle.\nMr. Ryan staked his deposit in\nAugust, 1957. The lease covers\n563 acres. There is visible pumice of unusual purity on a cliff\nface 220 feet high and 2,600 feet\nwide, estimate of visible pumice\nruns to 20,000,000 yards.\nOne of the teams which open\nthe way for amateur explorers,\nsettlers and home-makers will be\nactive again on the west coast\nthis summer.\nOn foot, by helicopter and boat,\nabout 50 men .vill be mapping\nand charting the British Columbia terrain and coastline.\nThey are part of the larger\nforce of more than 1.000 men\nbeing sent into the field this\nsummer in 81 separate field-survey parties by the federal mines\nand technical surveys department,\nT'-e crews will be paying special attention to regions with potential mineral, water power, forest and other resources.\nIn B.C., crews will be working in the Interior, along with th*\nnorth coast, in th* Fraser Valley,\non Vancouver Island and among\nlhe Queen Charlotte and Gulf\nIslands.\nUnited Church\nNew Edifices\nVANCOUVER (CP) - T h *\nUnited Church of Canada plans\nto build 600 new churches in this\ncountry in the next five years,\nthe church's associate secretary\nsaid  Thursday,\nRev. James Fraser of Toronto\ntold the British Columbia conference that $53,000,000 was raised\nlast year, the largest amount in\none year in the church's history.\nPresent property was valued at\n$300,900,000.\nBut he warned against smugness.\n\"Last year some 727,000 families gave $6,810,000 to our missionary maintenance fund.\" Mr. Fraser said. \"In round figures that\nsounds wonderful, but break It\ndown and it is $9 a\nfamily, cr the price ol a ]\nof ctgarets every two wej\nHe   told   the  conference\nnext month 113 ministers\nordained and 18 more wil!,-\nfrivn other churches.\n\"This is the highest since 1925.\nand we are in the position where\nwe now can onlv accept the best\ncandidates for the ministry.\"\nClassified Ads Get Jtcsults!\n '\u25a0\";v\":>.v^rr^Wf?r\n^mm!,m^m^mWm]rW!mMfm^^mWmWmimm -'^wfm^M'v^^mm-i^f\nComb\nCfwrefi\n&%t \u00aeaforttarie\nSpecial Revival Services\nTHE CARTMELL  TRIO\nTuesday, May 26th to 31st\nEach evening at 8:00 p.m.\nSunday 11:00.a.m. and 7:30 p:m.\nSaturday Evening  (All  Musical)\nREV. R. SWANSON \u2014 Phone\nAnglican Church of Canada\nST.   SAVIOUR'S  PRO-CATHEDRAL\nNELSON, B.C.\nDean: THE RIGHT REVEREND P. R. BEATTIE.\nB.A.  D.D.  Lord Bishop of Kootenay\nRector: THE REVEREND CANON GEORGE W. LANG.\nB.A., L.Th.\nTRINITY SUNDAY\nMoy 24,  1959\n8:00 a.m.\u2014Holy  Communion\nbj-11:0O a.m.\u2014AN departments of the Sunday School.\nj%.'$jl$P0 a.m.\u2014Mattins and Sermon.\n...7:30 p.m.\u2014Evensong\u2014Discussion following, in\n~JW place of sermon.\n(A.Y.P.A.  in attendance at this\nservice.)\n\u2014 MIDWEEK SERVICES \u2014\nWEDNESDAY:\u2014\n10:00 a.m.\u2014Holy Communion.\nMattms Daily at 9:00 a.m.\nWelcome To Worship\nCONFERENCE SUNDAY\n11:00 a.m.\nA special service of lay witness conducted by Elders\nJ. Steed, E. R. Bennett and H. McGowan, the\nmessage delivered by the latter. Everyone is particularly urged and invited to share in this intpiring\nwitness to Christian lay leadership.\nSunday School\u20140:46 and 11:00\nNursery at 11:00 a.m.\n%t laul'a-Srtettg Httttrt (Ltljitnrii\nlosephine and Silica Sts.\nMinister: REV. DONOVAN JONES, B.A.. B.D., Th.M.\nMusic Director: MERLIN R. BUNT\nSAINT\nPAUL'S\nEvangelical\nLutheran Church\nDavies and Sixth Streets\n(The  Friendly Church With  a\nFriendly Welcome)\nThe Rev. Ernst    H. Nygaard,\nB.A., B.D.. Pastor\nPhone 1855-R\n10:00 a.m.\u2014Sunday School\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning   Worship\nGuest Sneaker:\nA. Henriksen report on\nSynodica! Convention\nEVERYBODY INVITED\nMISSION\nCOVENANT\nCHURCH\n802 Baker St. '\nPastor: E. HANSON\n9:48 a.m\u2014Sunday  School\n00 a.m Morning\nWorship\np.m\u2014Evening\nWorship.\n iDAY:\nSpjh'fc.m.\u2014Prayer  Meeting\nFRIDAY:\n8:45 p.m.\u2014Junior League.\n8:00 p.m.\u2014Young People's.\nAll Welcome.\nPhone 1844 for Classified.\nlira! Baptist\nQUiurrfj\n(Cottonwood and Fourth Sts. I\nMinister:\nREV. R. CROSS\nPhones:\nRe\u00ab. 1582-Y Church 1880\nSUNDAY:\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday School\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning Worship\n\"What On Earth\nAre You Doing for\nHeaven's Sake?\"\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evening Service.\n\"Apostacy.\"\nTHURSDAY:\n8:00 p.m.\u2014Church Business\nMeeting.\nCORDIAL WELCOME\nValuation Army\n513 Victoria St.\n2nd. Lt. and Mrs. B. Wiseman\nSunday, May 24, 1959\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday School.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Holiness Meeting.\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Salvation Meeting.\nTHURSDAY:\n2:30 p.m.\u2014Home League.\nA Warm Welcome Awaits You\nAt The Salvation Army\n(3551\nCU)Dut ihji Jvjlvil\nBuy, sell, trade the Classified way.\nPHONE   1844\nInspiration for a number of \"bon\nvoyage\" gatherings, Miss Madeline Rande, 824 Baker Street, will\nleave June 6 from Vancouver for\nEurope, sailing aboard the Duiven-\ndyk through the Panama Canal.\nMiss Rande who has been on the\nstaff of Kootenay Lake General\nHospital for the past 10 months,\nwas guest of honor at a handkerchief shower held at the home of\nMrs. H. H. Currie, 824 Baker\nStreet, by the Stitch V Chatter\nClub.. Hospital staff members also\nhonored Miss Rande at a gathering held at the home of Mrs. Elsie\nOpenshaw of the Granite Road\nThe Duivendyk will dock at Liverpool, England. Miss Rande will\nvisit relatives in Sweden before\nleaving on a continental tour with\na friend. Miss Rande has been on\nthe nursing staff of hospitals in\nHawaii, the United States and other\npoints of British Columbia prior to\ncoming to Nelson.\n*   *  *\nReturning from Vancouver, Mrs.\nJoseph Zanon, 214 Gore Street and\nMr. and Mrs. John E. Perdue, 314\nObservatory Street, attended graduation ceremonies at University of\nBritish Columbia this week at\nwhich Mrs. Zanon's son, Settimo\nC. Zanon, received his degree of\nBachelor of Appplied Science in\n3tetfti>tD\nInttri. QHfurrif\nFifth and Elwyn Streets\nMinister:\nREV. H. R. WHITMORE\nOrganist:  Mr. Angus Fraser\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Senior Sunday\nSchool.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Primary.   Kindergarten and Nursery\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning Worship.\nThe Women's  Federation  will\nbe in charge.\nSpeaker:\nMrs.   Swift of Castlegar.\n10:00 a.m.\u2014North Shore United\nChurch Hall\nSunday School.\nA FRIENDLY CHURCH\nFOR FRIENDLY PEOPLE\nffiral CMfurrlf oi\nGlljriat $ri?nttol\nA Branch of the Mother Church\nThe First Church of Christ\nScientist, in Boston. Mass.\nSunday School: 9:40 a.m.\nSunday Service: 11 a.m.\nSubject:\n\"SOUL AND BODY\"\nWednesday Testimonial\nMeeting - 8:00 p.m.\nReading  Room, 209 Baker St.\nOpen Daily From\n2:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m.\nSunday Evening\n7:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m.\nALL CORDIALLY\nWELCOME\nAnglican Church\nof Canada\nChurch of\nThe Redeemer\nSecond . and Davies Streets\nFAIRVIEW\nRector\nCanon W. J. Silverwood\nA.K.C., B.Sc.\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday School.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Holy Communion.\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evening   Prayer\nSOUTH SLOCAN:\n3:30 p.m.\nSt John's\nLutheran Church\nTHE CHURCH OF\nTHE LUTHERAN HOUR\nCorner Stanley and Silica Sts\nRev. Carl J. Hennig, Pastor\nRes. 317 Silica St   Phone 729-X\nPENTECOST\n10:00 a.m.\u2014Sunday School.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014\"The Big Mistakes\nof a Big Man.\"\nALL ARE CORDIALLY\nWELCOME\nftrat\nprpshgtmatt\nGUjitTri?\nMinister E. A.  Hircock\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday School.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Communion\nService.\n2:00 p.m.\u2014Baptismal Service.\nCORDIAL WELCOME\nTO ALL\nGOSPEL LIGHTHOUSE\n812 Stanley Street\nSUNDAY:\n2:30 p.m.\u2014Gospel   Meeting\nGuest Speaker\nAll Welcome\nCHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST\nOF LATTER DAY SAINTS\n(Mormon)\n10:30 a.m.\u2014Sunday School\nEagles Hall, 641 Baker St.\nFor Auxiliary Meetings call\nBranch President   Phone 372-L\nelectrical engineering. Mr. Zanon\nreturned to Nelson with his family\nand will leave Monday for Montreal, where he will be on the staff\nof Northern Electric Company.\n* *   *\nMrs. A. J. Mann and Mrs. T.\nTemple of Moose Jaw were guests\nof Mr. and Mrs. A. Bryant of\nCrescent Bay en route to Summer-\nland, B.C.\n* *   *\nAlpha Xi chapter of Beta Sigma\nPhi met at home' of Mrs. G. A.\nGrant. Cohostess was Mrs. D, R,\nNuyens. A oultural program on\nmodelling was presented by Mrs.\nE. W. Mercier and Mrs. D. Capper.\n* \u00ab   *\nResident in Nelson prior to' 1922,\nwhen his family left for New Westminster, Daniel J. Herb of Vancouver has just returned for the first\ntime to \"the old stamping grounds\"\nand has spent the past two days\nhere. Mr. Herb is the son of the\nlate Dan Herb who owned a blacksmith shop on Vernon in the early\ndays, and hoped to contact some\nof the oldtimers while in Nelson.\nSpring Outing\nPlanned for\nPlans were made for arthritis\npatients' annual spring outing when\nmembers of the Women's Auxiliary\nto the Canadian Arthritis and\nRheumatism Society met Tuesday\nafternoon in the hospital.\nIn place of a June meeting, members will drive patients to Balfour\nfor tea, and it was estimated that\nguests will number 40.\nPatients who are able to get\nabout will be entertained at members' homes during the summer\nmonths in place of regular auxiliary visits.\nSeveral reports were made during the meeting: Mrs. C. H. Hamilton for transportation committee,\nMrs. Vincent Fink for the visiting\ncommittee, Mrs. N. E. Morrison\nfor the window display committee.\nMrs. J. A. McDonald represented\nthe group at a CARS board meeting and was in charge of clinic\nassistance during the month.\nMrs. Cecil Alexander was welcomed as a new member.\nIODE to Purchase\nFilm for Schools\nA film to be purchased by Imperial Order Daughters of the Empire chapters in East and West\nKootenay was shown to Kokanee\nChapter at a meeting held at the\nhome of Mrs. Nelson A. Allen, 621\nGore Street, this week.\n\"The Sceptre and the Mace\", a\nfilm of the opening of Canadian\nParliament by Queen Elizabeth,\nalso outlines the story of parliament's origin. IODE chapters will\npurchase the film for availability\nto all schools in their districts.\nT. G. Whitehead, Kootenay representative of the National Film\nOur\nFather's\nBusiness\nThe   foundation   of   Christian\npractice must be laid In Christian\nknowledge and faith.\nWe must first understand how we\nreceive Christ Jesus the Lord, and\nthen we shall know better how to\nwalk in him. There is a great deal\nof duty prescribed in Romans:\nChapter 12. The exhortations are\nshort and to the point, briefly summing up what is good, and what the\nLord our God in Christ requires\nof us.\nRomans: Chapter 12: \"I beseech\nyou therefore, brethren, by the\nmercies of God, that ye present\nyour bodies a living sacrifice, holy,\nacceptable unto God, which is your\nreasonable service. And be not conformed to this world: but be ye\ntransformed by the renewing of\nyour mind, that ye may prove what\nis that good, and acceptable, and\nperfect, will of God.\nFor I say, through the grace\ngiven unto me, to every man that\nis among you, not to think of himself more highly than he ought to\nthink; but to think soberly, according as God hath dealt to every man\nthe measure of faith. For as we\nhave many members in one body,\nand all members have not the\nsame office: So we, being many,\nare one body in Christ, and every\none members one of another. Having then gifts differing according\nto the grace that is given to us,\nwhether prophecy, let us prophecy\naccording to the proportion of faith;\nor ministry, let us wait on our\nministering: or he that teacheth,\non teaching; or he that exhorteth,\non exhortation: he that giveth, let\nhim do it with simplicity; he that\nruleth, with diligence; he that\nshoweth mercy, with cheerfulness.\nLet love be without dissimulation.\nAbhor that which is evil; cleave to\nthat which is good. Be kindly af-\nfectioned one to another with\nbrotherly love; in honour preferring one another: not slothful in\nbusiness; fervent in spirit; serving\nthe Lord; Rejoicing in hope; patient in tribulation; continuing instant in prayer; Distributing to the\nnecessity of saints; given to hospitality. Bless them which persecute you: bless, and curse not\nRejoice with them that do rejoice,\nand weep with them that weep. Be\nof the same mind one toward another. Mind not high things, but\ncondescend to men of low estate.\nBe not wise in your own conceits.\nRecompense to no man evil for\nevil. Provide things honest in the\nsight of all men. If it be possible,\nas much as lieth in you, live peaceably with all men. Dearly beloved,\navenge not yourselves, but rather\ngive place unto wrath: for it is\nwritten, Vengeance is mine; I will\nrepay, saith the Lord. Therefore if\nthine enemy hunger, feed him: if\nhe thirst, give him drink; for in\nso doing thou shalt heap coals of\nfire on his head. Be not overcome\nof evil, but overcorne evil with\ngood.\"\nLIEUT. B. WISEMAN,\n1 The Salvation Army.\nBoard, gave the showing. Kokanee\nChapter ha sgiven $50 towards the\nfilm purchase.\nProvincial headquarters will receive $10 from the Kokanee Chapter to further extension of their\nwork against cancer.\nEducation secretary Mrs. R. B,\nBrummitt reported that applications for bursaries had been received and decisions on their award\nwill be made by principal of the\nhigh school and Mrs. Brummitt.\nChapter members will attend\nchurch parade at St. Saviour's Pro-\nCathedral Sunday, May 31.\nCo-hostesses at the meeting were\nMrs. A. E. Murphy and Mrs. H. A.\nMackenzie.\nNew Denver\nNEW DENVER - T. Ken Smith\nhas left Vancouver to attend a bank\nmanagers' course.\nMrs. B. Y. McBride of Brice-\nbridge, Ont., who came to visit\nher three sisters, Mrs. M. O'Reilly,\nMiss L. C. Meinardus and Miss\nErna Meinardus, was called back\nto Bricebridge owing to the sudden\ndeath of her son-in-law.\nMr. and Mrs. James Draper have\nleft for Vancouver and coast points.\nMr. and Mrs. Roy Yokoyama of\nBrookes. Alta., were visitors for\na week at the home of the former's\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. M. Yokoyama, Rosebery, and also Mr. and\nMrs. Sueo Mori.\nMrs. J. H. McDonaugh returned\nfrom Vancouver where she attended the graduation of her daughter,\nMiss Jeannette McDonaugh, of St.\nPaul's Hospital.\nMiss Ruby Tinkus, stenographer\nat the Welfare office, left for coast\npoints and will continue on to her\nhome in Montreal, Que.\nMrs. John Anderson of Vancouver is spending the summer with\nher parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. L.\nHarris.\nMr. and Mrs. C. L. Wemp, who\nwere visiting Mrs. Wemp's sisters,\nMiss L. C. Meinardus, Mrs. M.\nO'Reilly and Miss Erna Meinardus for seven days, returned to\ntheir home at Ferndale, Wash.\nToni Pearson of Calgary, Alta.,\nspent the weekend with his mother,\nMrs. D. Pearson, and aunt, Mrs.\nIsabel Pendry.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, MAY 23, 1959 \u2014 S\nFull Program Includes Election\nOf Officers at Hume PTA Meet\nAinsworth Notes\nAINSWORTH - Honoring Mr.\nand Mrs. P. E. Olson, who with\ntheir family have left to live in\nIreland, a party was held in the\nCommunity Hall. Mr. Olson and\nFlash both showed colored films\nof local scenes. On behalf of the\ncommunity, Mr. and Mrs. Olson\nwere presented with a parting\ngift.\nMrs. Schad who spent the past\ntwo weeks visiting Mr. and Mrs\nA. Ragotte, has returned to her\nhome in Cranbrook.\nComplimenting Mrs. Olson, who\nhas left for Ireland, members of\nthe Ladies' Aid surprised her at\nher home. On behalf of the mem\nbers, Mrs. Olson was presented\nwith a parting gift.\nGary Anderson of Vancouver,\nspent the long weekend visiting his\nhome here.\nVICTORIA (CP)- The provincial recreation ministry has accepted 43-acre Smiths Landing\nPark on Sproat Lake as a gift\nfrom MacMillan and Bloedel\nLimited, to be developed as a\nprovincial  park.\nHOTEL\n#213 Riverside   W214 Sprague\nSpokane,   Wash.\niooms with batb $3.50 to $4.50\nWithout bath $2.00 to $2.50\nSuites $6.50\nWELCOME   CANADIANS\nCurrent Premiums Paid\nWith a full and varied program\nincluding election of-officers, members of the Hume Parent-Teacher\nAssociation brought their current\nseason to a close Wednesday night\nin the school activity room.\nVersatility of 46 members of the\nNelson junior band, conducted by\nB. E. Ryall, delighted their audience as they mastered a - well-\nchosen program. Largely composed of boys and girls from the sixth\ngrades of all Nelson public schools\nand the seventh grade of the junior\nhigh school, the band is brought\ninto full complement by a few students from grades eight and nine.\nAfter a welcome by J. M. Mor-\nley, Hume School principal, Mr.\nRyall explained the purpose of\nband music \u2014 to make harmony\nwith all instruments working together. Because \"very young musicians favor clarinets and trumpets\", instruments from the higher\ngrades had to be included, he said.\n\"You Asked for It\" was the subject chosen by first grade teacher,\nMiss Agnes Jerome as she spoke\nto parents of children who will enter grade one next fall. She said\nparents must accept their children's limitations in the learning\nsituation. Many children are slow\nto mature and may be only five\nyears old mentally.\n\"Some find it more difficult than\nothers, but all need sympathy and\nunderstanding,\" she stated. Children with a wide range of experience and vocabulary are the best\nstudents. \"They get that from being read to,\" said Miss Jerome as\nshe listed ways in which parents\nmight prepare their children.\nParents can listen carefully, correct pronunciation and grammar,\ncorrect baby talk, show children\nhow to cut out pictures, which develops arm and finger muscles,\nand help them to hold crayons properly In coloring. They should not\nbe taught writing beyond printing\ntheir names, with a capital letter\nat the beginning only, she pointed\nout.\nIf parents try to teach spelling,\nMiss Jerome said, they should remember that in grade one only\nphonetic sound is used, never the\nalphabet. In teaching numbers only\nconcrete things should be counted.\n\"A child who has been taught to\nlisten and follow directions will\nprogress much more quickly than\nthe over-indulged child, \" said Miss\nJerome. She felt teaching of discipline and manners is the parents' job, not the teacher's. \"We\nhave gone a long way lately in forgetting to teach children manners,\"\nshe told her listeners.\nBecause some children will require two years to complete grade\none work, she asked parents to accept the situation. Those who have\ncompleted the first year will forget 65 per cent of what they have\nlearned during the holidays, and\nshe asked that they be encouraged\nto read books during that time.\nMiss Jerome concluded her talk\nby asking parents to mark clothes\nEarly Days in\nBoswell Recounted\nBOSWELL - At the Boswell\nWomen's Club meeting, held at\nthe home of Mrs. Paul L. O'Sullivan, Mrs. Cummings, president,\ngave an interesting account of her\narrival in Boswell 19 years ago.\nRay, her eldest son, was the first\nwhite baby to be born here.\nThere were very few settlers\nalong the lake at that time, she\nsaid, and transportation had to be\nby boat or horse, riding along a\ntrail.\nplainly and to state any physical\nhandicap when registering children\nfor their first year of school.\nMrs. W. L. Carter was elected\nnext year's president of Hume\nSchool PTA during the business\nmeeting. J. M. Morley was named\nhonorary president and A. R.\nRamsden, vice-president. Others\nelected were: Mrs. Paul Berekoff,\nrecording secretary; Mrs. J. M.\nMorley, corresponding secretary;\nMrs. M. Cushner, treasurer; Mrs.\nH. F. Lake, publicity and history.\nOther committee members are:\nJ. M. Boates and Mrs. G. C.\nBurns, membership and magazines; Mrs. Robert Irving and Mrs.\nC. H. Jones, social and hospitality;\nMrs. G. A. Fleming,- Mrs. R. L.\nShort and Mrs. Walter Greavison,\nways and means; Mrs. M. A. Martyn and Mrs. N. H. Wesley, program; Mrs. G. A. Clark, health;\nRev, H. R. Whitmore and Rev.\nCanon W. J. Silverwood, community standards; Mrs. D. Irwin, pianist and Mrs-B. MacLean, sunshine.\nIn the roll call of parents attending the meeting, Miss Jerome's\nroom won the travelling award\nwith 10 parents present. Miss\nNancy Chernenko was named winner df a blanket contest.\nProceeds of. the year's activities\nwill be used to purchase an adding\nmachine for,the school. Mrs. Louis\nHanic, president, announced that\n$197.37 was added to the Bursary\nFund this year through collections\nat the Christmas carol sing and\nthe Shamrock tea. Bonds totalling\n$1600 now make up the fund.\nMrs. Jones reported on a recent\nmeeting of the Nelson branch,\nCanadian Mental Health Association which she attended.\nRefreshments were served by the\nsocial committee.\nonncE\nPlaymor \u2014 Tonight\n\"MEN  OF  NOTE\"\nTHE SKYLARK\nRESTAURANT\nAnd\nfoddaiL   dbu\/ufn\nPAN-FRIED CHICKEN\nA SPECIALTY\nCHOICE STEAKS\nAerosi From Rldpath Hotel\nSPOKANE, WASH.\nAINSWORTH, B.C\nBETTY OLSON\nAinsworth Hot Springs Swimming Pool\nOpen all day, all week, all year\n(or your convenience\nSUITS and TOWELS\nre\nT URN E R'S\nAinsworth' Tourist  Court\n* Reasonable Rates\n\u25a0k Equipped  for  Light\nHousekeeping\nWrite for Reservations Now\nGILCHRIST'S\nSERVICE\nIMPERIAL\nGAS and OIL\nATLAS TIRES\nOpen 7 Days a Week\nMIKE'S COFFEE BAR\nLUNCHES - PAPERS - SUNDRIES\nLUNCHES MADE UP FOR THE FISHERMAN\nrajra\nMeter-model\nmovie-maker\nat low, low price t\nBROWNIE |V|(MH& CAMERA\nScopesight f\/1.9\nMew dimension to Brownie movie-moking\u2014and now, Brownta\nriovies are simpler, surer than everl This new Brownie model\nlas a built-in exposure meter with a pointer that shows right\nn lhe viewflnder. Just turn a dial to center the pointer (you\ndon't even hove to take the camera from your eye)\u2014emd \u2022%-\noosure's right. . . automatically. Built-in rUters, tool\n(RamMUfL\n497 Baker St.\n$94.50\nCamera Store\nPhono 106\nEATON'S\n$\nFRIDAY  and   SATURDAY - MAY 22nd and 23rd\n2 pee. Chesterfield Suite\n90 TRADE-IN\nON YOUR OLD\nCHESTERFIELD SUITE\nAll Air-Foam Rubber\u2014Cool\nSoft \u2014 Mothproof \u2014 Retains Its Shape \u2014 Covered\nin Fabrics Loomed by Ava-\nlon With DuPont Nylon.\nYour Choice of Lovely Modern Colors.\nRegular $339.50\nTrade-In   $90.00\nEASY BUDGET TERMS\nEATON'S\nSALE\n^$249.50\n636 Baker\n. <T. EATON C\u00b0\n\u25a0 \"       CANADA       ^^Ll*\nLIMITED\nPhone 1860\n wmm\n.\u25a0 \u00bb.:<\u2022;,:\n\u25a0     . .:      . ',,    \u25a0     '    \u25a0\n. \u25a0    \u25a0   .. \u2014l_\u2014 '.'.''\u25a0\u2022\u25a0 \"\" '\u2014r~~\"-\u2014\"   \u25a0 ,   \u2022\u2014'\u25a0\u2022';.\u25a0\u25a0:\u2014-\u2014\/\nWywW<^\"W'X^W^'Ki!^!Z$W\n6 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, MAY 23, 1959\nj Compressed Air Propels\n; Newly Developed Levacar\nBy BEN PHLEGAR\nDETROIT (AP) - I rode 15\nmiles an hour on a film of air\nin a sleek white and red vehicle\nsome experts believe is a prototype of the train of the future.\nThe vehicle is the first, full-\nscale Levacar, a wheel-less, air-\npropelled car, which slides on air\nabout l-32nd of an inch above a\nmetal strip.\nThe Levacar is a development\nof the Ford Motor Company,\npioneered by Dr. Andrew A.\nKuoher, vice-president of engineering and research.\nThe model is built for one passenger and is slightly smaller\nthan a Volkswhgen. It has a 1V4-\nhorsepower blower to propel it.\nCompressed air is forced through\nthree metal pads on the underside of the car. These look somewhat like the bottom of a household steam iron.\nINTER-CITY TRANSPORT\nDr. Kucher envisions the Leva-\ncar as highspeed ground transportation between cities such as\nDetroit and Chicago.\n\"It would skim over flat rails,\nlike the present railroads,\" he\nsaid, \"at speeds of 200 to 500\nmiles an hour.\"\nPower would come from gas\nturbines. The rails would provide\nan even surface for the compressed air and would be used in\nbraking.\nDr. Kucher 68id the Levacar\nhas no application as a free read\nvehicle. Neither would it be practical for short commuter trips\nbecause it would need 15 to 20\nmiles to gain full acceleration\nand a similar distance to slow\ndown.\nThe model which Ford has installed at its rotunda in suburban\nDearborn weighs 450 pounds, is\n94 inches long, 48 inches high and\n54 inches wide,\nSTRAPPED IN\nWhen you ride In it you are\nenclosed in a transparent canopy.\nYou are strapped in with a car-\nHuber-Wareo\nGRADERS  and\nROAD ROLLERS\nATIONAL\nACHINERY\nT\nQmWmM\nVGranvllIe Island\nVancouver 9,\nB.C.\nstyle safety belt. The air i6 turned\non and the car moves slowly\naround a circular platform.\nYou fee! as if you were getting\nready for a takeoff in a light\nplane. As the car speeds up, the\nsensation from the inside is one\nof considerable speed, and centrifugal force pushes you against\nthe fancy, white leather upholstery.\nThe model has no brakes. When\nyou turn off the po-ver. you begin\nan eerie, coasting ride, which in\nsome ways must be similar to\nthe feeling of weightlessness\nwhich comes at extremely high\nspeed.\nLondon Negroes\nSeek Special\nPolice Duties\nLONDON (Reuters) - Negroes\nin Britain will apply to become\nspecial policemen to protect\nthemselves and their community,\nAlao Bashorun, chairman of the\nCommittee of African Organizations in Britain, said Friday.\nThe move follows the slaying\nlast Saturday night of Kelso Cochrane, 33-year-old West Indian, in\nNetting Hill, scene of last year's\nracial riots in London.\nThe special constabulary Is\nmade up of unpaid volunteers\nwho carry out certain police duties ta their spare time.\nBashorun said: \"In view of the\ncontinued tolerance .by the authorities concerned of propaganda\nInciting hatred against colored\nresidents, we demand that we be\ngiven authority as special constables to protect ourselves in the\ncommunity.\" Police at Scotland Yard said: \"The applications will be dealt'with in the\nsame way as those, from white\npeople. The forms are obtainable\nat any police station.\"\nThorouah Cleaning\nBefore Paint Used\nIf a wall Is not thoroughly clean\nbefore it is painted, chances are\nthe paint will peel off after it is\ndry.\nThis is because it's impossible\nto get a good bond on a dirty sur\nface. If there is oil or grease on it\noften the case in kitchen walls\npaint does not dry properly.\nBlast furnaces for smelting iron\nore were first used in Belgium\nabout 1340.\nLOOK! THE PANES COME\nOUT FOR EASY CLEANING!\nNEW\nFULL VISION\nSASH LESS\nWINDOWS\nmake your home brighter\n. . . your housework lighter\n. . . they're fast to install\nand provide perfect performance summer or winter.\nEasy to screen and even\neasier to storm glaze Pierson\nWindows cost no more than\nordinary old fashioned windows.\nIn just one hour ... one man, working alone can install\nall the Pierson glass in a five-room home! And Pierson\nWindows are made for use with all inside and outside\nwall treatments. In every Pierson package you get a\ncomplete, weather treated. Western red cedar frame; sll\nthe outside casing and mou'dinK: panes of 3\/16\" bevel\nedged, crystal glass: patented Pierson locking catch fall\nthe hardware needed) and full assembly and installation\ninstructions.\nPierson windows are on display for yonr Inspection . . .\ncome In for a demonstration, full information and a free\nestimate.\nT. H. Waters Co. Ltd.\nHERE'S HOW\nTHEY WORK:\n1 Panes slide in spec-\n\u25a0 ially grooved frame\nas shown. Note deeper\ngroove on Inside to permit\neasy lifting and removal\nof glass for cleaning or\nwhen painting. Pierson\nWindows cannot bind due\nto sweating or swelling.\n\u00abJ Pierson Window\n\u2022\"\u2022 consists of two or\nmore horizontal sliding\npanes of 3\/18\" crystal glass\nthat move smoothly and\npermit effortless operation\nwet or dry.\n3Easy-to-lnstall pat-\na ent Pierson oatch is\nall the hardware needed.\nCatch acts as a handle for\nonening or closing the\nwindow and exerts, when\nin closed position, iust\nenough oressi're to create\na draught and water tight\nseal.\n101 Hall St.\nNELSON, B.C.\nPhone 156\nJ hi Vlfod&hn diomiL\nCare of Carpets Not Costly\nIf-These Ingenious Tips Used\nRug care needn't be rugged, nor\ncarpet conservation costly. You\ncan look and feel more appealing\nat day's end, save money, too, just\nby using the ingenious tips and\nshortcuts carpet experts have devised.\nTake your staircase, for example. The edges of stair steps\ntake the heaviest blows, and in\nmany homes the carpet over the\nstep edges is badly worn. The rest\nof the carpet is in perfectly good\nA Borne designed for a corner lot, or for the\nowner who prefers something out of the ordinary,\nthis plan features three bedrooms, and living\nroom with fireplace on an Inside wall, In addition\nto the dining room adjaoent to the living room, is\nthe kitchen with nice eating nook. The stairs\ndown to the basement are close to the back door\nand kitchen areas for convenience. This Is a\ncharming home for family living. Designed for\nN.H.A. approval, working drawings are available\nfrom the Building Centre, 116 E. Broadway, Vancouver 10. Write for our free booklet, \"Seleot\nHome Designs,\" enclosing 25c to cover cost of\nmailing and handling.\n5-Man Union Jury\nTo Try Mine,\nMill Executives\nSUDBURY, Ont. (CP) - Three\nsuspended executive members of\nLocal 598, International Union of\nMine, Mill and Smelter Workers\n(Ind.), will be tried, by a five-\nman union jury established here\nat a general meeting Thursday\nnight.\nExecutive members Jack Quen-\nneville, union warden; Ray For-\ntin, trustee, and Tom McQuald,\nconductor, are charged with unbecoming  conduct.\nTwo general members will be\ntried, at the same time on charges\nof manhandling the union's secretary-treasurer, Raymond Poirier, after a meeting earlier this\nmonth when he was knocked out\nduring a fracas.\nDate for the trial has not been\nset.\nConviction would mean expulsion from the union for life.\nFord To Purchase\nNon-Voting Stock\nDETROIT (CP) \u2014 Ford Motor\nCompany announced Thursday\nthat it will make an offer early\nnext monty to purchase up to a\nmaximum of 775,628 shares of the\nclass A (non-voting) stock of\nFord Motor Company of Canada,\nLimited.\nThe parent firm la offering $188\n(U.S.) a share, approximately 30\nper cent more than the closing\nprice of the stock on the American Stock Exchange Thursday.\nThe company announced it\nwould al60 purchase at the same\nprice all 30,208 shares of Ford of\nCanada's class B (voting) stock\nnot now owned by Ford Motor\nCompany.\nErnest R. Breech, chairman of\nthe board of the U.S. company,\nsaid Ford proposes to acquire the\nadditional shares to give it a more\nrepresentative ownership in Ford\nof Canada.\nThe Detroit company now owns\n27.5 per cent of Fird of Canada\noutstanding stock Aim of the\nU.S. firm is to boost total holdings of stock in the Canadian\nfirm to about 75 per cent.\nDumfries in Scotland was given\nthe rank of a royal burgh in 1190\nby King William the Lion.\nTwo Leading Automobile\nFirms Plan Small Cars\nBy THE CANADIAN  PRESS\nTwo of the automotive industry's big three\u2014Ford and Chrys-\nIf.-\u2014have announced plans for a\n\"compact\" car, likely to be in\nproduction next year.\nRhys M. Sale, president of Ford\nMotor Company of Canada, said\nin Toronto Thursday his company\nplans to make a car known as the\nFalcon for distribution through its\nFord-Monarch-Edsel dealers and\na somewhat similar automobile,\nstill unnamed, for sale in Canada\nthrough Merdury- Lincoln -Meteor\ndealers.\nFrank Hogan, executive vice-\npresident of Chrysler Corporation\nof Canada Limited, said in Windsor that the Valiant, a new small\ncar planned by his firm's parent\ncompany in the United States, will\nbe built in Canada should it be\ndecided to offer the car for sale\nln this country.\nMADE IN CANADA\nMr. Sale said Ford is planning\nfor production of the Falcon and\nthe other model in its Canadian\nplants.\nThere was still no word from\nGeneral Motors of Canada Limited. A spokesman at shawa,\nOnt., said he had \"nothing to say\non the subject\" except that the\nCity Dwellers Find Gardening Joy in\nWindow Boxes, Foundation Areas\nmatter of building a small car is\nbeing investigated.\nMr. Sale said:\n\"The economy cars will be\nadded to our existing -range of\npassenger cars ... We will continue to import Ajglia, Prefect,\nCor.-ul, Zephyr and Zodiac cars\nfrom Ford of England and the\nTaunus 12M and 17M from Ford\nof Germany.\"\nDespite silence from General\nMotors, industry spokesmen say\nthey, too. will have a smaller car\n\u2014probably called the Corvair.\nRumors place the GM introduction date at Oct. 9.\nContlnuinj increases ln population these daya put living\nspace at a premium. In Bmall\ntowns and large cities, land is\nbecoming more and more\nlimited.\nIf you live ln an apartment,\ntwo-flat, town house or other\nresidence with little or no yard\nspace, you and your family can\nstill enjoy the fun of gardening. Attractive window boxes\nwhich will beautify your building's exterior may be Inexpensively purchased or built in the\nhome workshop.\nSpace (and your landlord, If\nyou have one) permitting, you\ncan extend your gardening to\nthe foundation area.\nFor most colorful results, select annual flowers and start\nfrom seed. Annual flowers are\nespecially bred by skilled horticultural scientists to give you\nwidest choice of color, shape\nand size.\nTry some vegetables, too.\nMany vegetables can be quickly\ngrown from seed in relatively\nemail spaces. You'll harvest a\nbushel of enjoyment when you\nplace fresh-jplcked vegetables\nfrom your very own window\nbox or foundation area on your\nfamily table.\nFor SERVICE\n381 BAKER ST.\nNELSON. B C.\nPHONE     666\nCALL\nKootenay Plumbing\nand Heating Co. Ltd.\nA   COMPLETE   PLUMBING   AND   HIHINO\nSERVICE\nFrench Play\nPleases\nAdjudicator\nBy EDNA BLAKELY\nCanadian  Press  Staff Writer\nTORONTO (CP) - The work of\na Montreal cast from L'Ateliar du\nPrOmescenlum was admired by\nadjudicator Michel St. Denis, at\nThursday n i g h t's Dominion\nDrama Festival performance.\nThe Eugene Ionesco drama,\nVietimes du Devoir was done in\nFrench by the Montreal group.\nMost of the adjudication was also\nIn French, which 6et the English-\nspeaking . critics into a flurry of\ncomparison of notes.\nMr. St. Denis had little fault\nto find with the play. He admired\nthe actors, the costumes, the set\nand the precision of the play. He\nthought the play was directed\n\"too lyrically\" and complained of\nthe diction.of leading man, Uriel\nLuft.\nKNEW THEIR WORK\nHowever, the adjudicator, obviously pleased with the play, said\nit was done with \"a clear mind\nby artists who know what they\nare doing.\" Mr. St. Denis singled\nout leading actress Claude Brabant for her performance.\nPlaudits were also given for\nstage management and music.\n\"That is theatre,\" Mr. St. Denis\nsaid of all the minor parts of tiie\nshow.\nA second French play, Le Mlli-\ntaire Fanfaron will be performed\nSaturday night by La Compagnle\nNina Diaconesco of Montreal.   ,\nThe only western entry in the\nDDF, the Medicine Hat Civic\nTheatre, presents The Diary of\nAnne Frank tonight.\nEight drama groups between\nMedicine Hat and Halifax are\ncompeting in the eight-day festi-\nvial which ends Saturday night.\nThe top prize is $1,000.\nPope Receives\nGreek Royally\nVATICAN CITY (Reuters)\nPope John Friday received King\nPaul and Queen Frederika of\nGreece in audience at the end of\ntheir three - day state visit to\nRome. Informed sources believed\nthe meeting could lead to better\nunderstanding between Greece\nand the Vatican, which withdrew\nits apostolic delegation from\nAthens irt 1950.\nOne cause was the refusal of\nGreece to allow a permanent\nrepresentative of the Holy See in\nAthens with purely ecclesiastical\nfunctions.\nshape, yet the whole stair c&roet\nneeds replacement.\nSolution? There are two. First,\nuse a felt or rubber cushioning under all stair carpets: the base absorbs much of the punishment,\nmakes the carpet last longer.\n*  *  *\nThe other-idea is to lay the carpeting with an extra foot folded\nagainst one of the risers. Then, at\nthe very first sign that the carpet\nis beginning to wear along stair\nedges, just lift the tacks and move\nit down an inch or two! It's foolproof!\nThe same principle works for\nroom carpets. Turn them around\nevery few months, and you'll distribute the carpet wear evenly.\nMoving the furniture now and then\nis another carpet saver, and you\nmight consider using scatter rugs\nimmediately in front Of chairs.\nWARM IRON HELPS\nIf furniture you move leaves behind a circle or square of crushed\ncarpet pile, don't despair. Place\na warm (not hot) iron over a damp\ncloth, and apply to the crushed\narea. Don't press too hard, and you\nmay be able to bring the pile up\nlike new.\nAs in car maintenance\nweight control, the time\nmoney-saving idea in carpet cleaning is to attack the problem while\nit's small, the kids have just\nromped through the room ... or\nthe party is ovef and there are\ntobacco ashes en the floor ... or\nthe TV show is over and you notice\nthat a few crumbs from your\nmunchlngs have fallen to the\ncarpet. Sweep the litter up now,\nand it won't have a chance to become imbedded in the tufts. It's\nimbedded dirt that makes cleaning\nharder, cuts carpet fibres, dulls\ncarpet color.\na    *    #\nTo avoid imbedded dirt, use a\ncarpet sweeper daily. And keep a\nsmall sweeper handy, if your home\nis large, to pick up soil as soon as\nit's made. Among full-size sweepers, the newest are so smartly\nstyled, so there's no need to hide\nthem in closets. You can keep one\nhandy anywhere.\nFor the dust and grit that does\nmanage to sink in, use a vacuum\ncleaner once a week. The upright\nkind, because of its beating action,\n.generally does a better job than\nthe cleaner that relies on suction\nalone.\nCritic Pans\nGlen Gould\nClass A Ford Shares\nTouch Ail-Time High\nTORONTO (CP) - Class A\nshares of Ford Motor Company\nof Canada Friday rocketed ahead\nOn the Toronto Stock Exchange\nfollowing Thursday night's announcement that Its parent firm,\nFord Motor Company of Detroit,\nhas offered oo purchase thhe outstanding stock of the Canadian\nfirm.\nFord A, which closed on the exchange Thursday at $138 a share,\nopened at $175 and touched\n$17, an all-time high, before retreating to $172 in the first half\nhour on a volume of nearly 1,000\nshares.\nThe Canadian company's B\nstock, which seldom trades,\ndidn't move.\nDIVIDENDS\nBy The Canadian Press\nAsbestos Corp. Ltd., 30 cents.\nJune 30, record June 9.\nGiant Yellowknife Gold Mines\nLtd., 15 cents, June 29, record\nJune 5.\nPower Corp. of Canada Ltd., 50\ncents, June 30, record June 5.\nPORT ALBERNI (CP) - Mrs.\nAlice Crakanthorp, 96, bom here\nlong before any city existed, received a special paii of scissors\nfrom Municipal Affairs Minister\nBlack after Mr. Black used them\nto cut a ribbon at tha opening of\nPort Alberni's new city hall.\nDEATHS\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nMontreal \u2014 Guy Cunliffe, 55,\nbusiness editor of the Montreal\nGazette and a newspaper man.for\n35 years.\nMontreal\u2014Antonio (Tony) La-\nbelle, 64, widely known in Canadian travel organizitions and one\ntime operator of a travel agency\nin Winnipeg.\nLONDON (CP) - Neville Car-\ndus, dean of British music critics,\ndeals harshly with tiie London\ndebut of Canadian pianist Glenn\nGould.\nCardus writes for the Manchester Guardian, whioh went to\npress too early Thursday to permit its reviewer's jarring comments to coincide with the praises\nof the London colleagues for\nGould's Royal Festival Hall performance Wednesday night.\nThe 70-year-old critic writes\nthat Gould's playing of Beethoven's Fourth Piano Concerto\nlacked intensity.\n\"How could anybody play intensely with crossed legs? For\nmy own part, I might be unable\nto listen intensely to Beethoven\nwith my legs crossed, let alone\nplay him.\"\n\"BONELESS\"\nCardus says the 27 - year - old\nTorontonian is. \"refined and musical\" in his playing but that his\nrhythm sounded \"boneless\" and\nthat his rendition of the concerto's slow movement \"fell far\nshort of sublimity or any kind of\nBeethovenish. eloquence.\" -\n\"The effect often suggested a\nmusical box.\"\nCardus disapprovingly comments on Gould's use ef a low\nchair with a back rather than\nUie customary piano stool and\nmakes the acid suggestion that\nthe pianist might find a deck\nchair even more comfortable.\n. \"Yet he is obviously talented\nand musical in a thoughtful, if\nself-conscious way. More of creative and energetic rhythm might\ngo into his playing If he were\nto build up his strength so that\nhe could sit up erect On the\naustere piano stool of common\nusage.\"\nSHAMPOO\nEven the most careful carpet\nsweeping and vacuuming can't prevent your carpets from becoming\nstained and soiled, and so shampooing from time to time is necessary,\nand Recent tests showed that a sham-\nand poo every few months will lengthen\nthe life of a carpet. It takes no\ntests at all, however, to know that\nthe average home-maker hates\nlike'the dickens to bear the expense\nof outside carpet shampooing yet\nis no more fond of the exhausting\nwork in home shampooing.\nEnter the hero. A designer recently came up with a long-handled\napplicator that makes it possible to\napply shampoo evenly with no\nmore effort than it takes to\nvacuum. No bending ! You pour\nsome shampoo and water into the\ntank of the applicator, then a\nplastic sponge releases it gradually\nand two sturdy brushes work the\ncleaner deep into the carpet. As\nthe foam dries, dirt is concentrated\nin powder residue. You wait for the\ncarpet lo dry, then vacuum and the\nwhole job is over.\nBut the most important thing is\nplanning. If you set yourself a\nschedule, decide when you'll sweep,\nwhen to vacuum and when to\nshampoo, then stick to it, you'll\nfind that you are saving work,\nmaking your carpets look h\u00bbtter\\.\nand last longer and doing the very >:\nsame thing for yourself.     ;   ,\nKOEHLE\nELECTRIC\n410   Kootenay  St.\nNelson, B. C.\nPhone 1630 Nights 544-R\nOLIVER (CP) - A three-man\ncommittee will study means of\nobtaining better domestic water\nsupplies for Oliver residents.\nCommittee members will also\nstudy the lagoon system of sewage disposal and a delegation will\ngo to Grand Forks to examine\nthe system used there.\nBUILD WITH  AN\nLOAN\nWe Are Qualified N.H.A. Builders\nComplete  Construction   3  Months.\nAny NHA Approved Plan\nFOR A GOOD QUALITY  HOME\t\nPHONE   2107\nMaple Leaf Construction Co.\nof Nelson Ltd.       SAM ZAITSOFF, Gen. Mgr.\nLota Available Lakeview Crescent and Fairview\nMoving?\nMom\nSays\nIt's just so easy to more when you ha.\nWEST TRANSFER do the job. We never\ntouched a dish in the cupboard or a coat\nin the closet. WEST TRANSFER'S efficient staff packed and moved everything. And when you get to where you*re\ngoing, everything is unpacked and put\naway. r\nSo When You're Moving Call\nWest Transfer\nPhone 33\nCO.\nNELSON\n719 Baker\n _ , ,\u2014,\t\n ,    \u201e,.....   .     '  \u2014 ! ,\nasi\nYour Individual\nHOROSCOPE\n<\u2014\u2014 Bf Vrmm**\u00bb Pr\u00bbfc\u00ab \u25a0\t\nFor Sunday, May 24, 1959\nCoast IWA Calls For\nSpecial Convention\nLook in the section in which your\nbirthday comes and find what your\noutlook Is, according to the stars.\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 20 (Ariesi\nSensible caution urged in all business activities. There are some\nsplendid rays for social and cultural pursuits however; also foi\nsports and Other outdoor activities.\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus)-\nRays not so auspicious for gains\nin business, but the day can be\notherwise productive of much good\nif thoughtful, conscientious action\nprevails. Personal matters favored.\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Qeminl)-\nIt may be necessary to hold emotions and judgments under control\nnow. Mistakes can be made if you\nare not alert. Talk things over with\nthose who have helped in the past.\nJUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer)-\nMore can be realized in familiar\nactivities than in untried ventures\nnow. Be careful about details.\nThere's a tendency to overlook\nthem here.\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Lee)-.\nNote Gemini and Cancer. Your indications similar. Small, seemingly\nunimportant details are very necessary in order to produce satisfactorily. Finish tasks carefully. And\nbe patient while doing so.\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER 23\n(Virgo) \u2014 Relish this type of day\nsince it can give you time for serene study, for action, planning for\nthe days ahead. Don't try too\nmuch; even small accomplishment\nis fine.\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER\n28 (Libra) \u2014 Don't make changes\nunless absolutely necessary. Look\nahead; be prepared. Carry a surplus of good will and you will want\nfor little.\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER 22\n(Scorpio) \u2014 The aspects governing\nmost persons are somewhat restrictive today. Not yours. Handle\nall tasks ln Scorpio's competent\nmanner and head straight for your\ngoals.\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER\n21 (Sagittarius) - Good Influences\ncontinue. Keep eyes and ears open\nnow for some very constructive\nleads.\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY 20\n(Capricorn) \u2014 This day may not\nbe entirely easy. Watch what you\nsay, how you aot. And that means\nYOU - not just the \"other fellow\"\nIf you care about .harmony and\ngood results from efforts, co-oper\nate NOW.\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY 19\n(Aquarius) \u2014 A good day for revising outmoded methods and gathering more knowledge in your\nown line. Improve associations,\ntoo. Bo guarded in answers where\nothers are touchy.\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\n(Pisces) \u2014 Good Neptune influences. Especially favored: Water\nsports, travel, confidential matters\nand those pertaining to the sea.\nYOU BORN TODAY are among\nthe most interesting and capable\nof the Zodiac's children. You have\ndiverse talents, well-rounded capability, a likeable personality. Sometimes you are too restless and\nchangeable to be understood. Cultivate a steady and reliable tempo\nin all things. You folks are so receptive to knowledge and have the\nknack for disseminating it so\ncleverly that you should never stop\nstudying, experimenting, researching. Birthdate: Victoria, Queen of\nEngland; Sir Arthur W. Pinero,\nEnglish dramatist.\nFor Monday, May 25, 1959\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 20 (Aries)\n\u2014Top influences for those who are\nbusinesslike, practical, not supersensitive or touchy. Get a good\nstart and follow through competently\u2014as Ariens usually do.\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus)-\nGet out your scissors and cut all\nred tape. Get to the core of important matters early in the day\nand resolve to leave none incompleted. Avoid even the slightest\ntendency to procrastinate.\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Geminil-\nYou can have a goodly share of\nfresh advantages, perhaps unusual\ngains, if you will be concise (without being abrupt), heed fair play,\nand maintain harmony. Creative\npursuits encouraged.\nJUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancert-\nDo not be gullible now, Be properly suspicious of high-sounding\nproposals. If you need advice, go\nto those who really know the answers.\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leo)-\nThe grass is not necessarily \"green\non the other side of the fence.\"\nDig deeper to find your own opportunities. Emphasize your talents and self confidence.\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER 23\n(Virgo) \u2014 Please read Leo. Your\nindications similar. Show your\nwares with cleverness and skill.\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER\n23 (Libra) \u2014 You may tend to\nwork too hard and to play too\nhard during this planetary period.\nBe your sensible self and strive\nfor a happy medium. Despite a\nfew tricky spots, the day generally favors all sound enterprises.\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER 22\n(Scorpio) \u2014 The quality of your\nefforts and the soundness of your\naction are the factors whicih will\nhelp you now. Personal interests\nmay have to take a back seat for\nthe time being. Concentrate on important matters.\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER\n21 (Sagittarius) \u2014 You can make\nfine headway now in worthwhile\nendeavors. Be analytical If you\nwould avoid unnecessary mistakes.\nAnd do keep emotions under control.\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY 20\n(Capricorn) \u2014 Sift through problems to find those which should be\nhandled   first.   Occasional   quiet\nDAILY   CROSSWORD\nACROSS\nI. Social division of Indl;\n6. Grates\n11. Oil of\nrose\npetals\n12. Consciou'\n13. Shop\n14. Proof,\nreader's\nmark\n15. Bugle call\n16. Pass\nthrough a\nsieve again\nIT. Rhode\nIsland\n(abbr.)\n18. Ever\n(poet.)\n19. Overhead\ntrain\n10. Forward\n23. Rabbit\n25. Snobbish\n27. Engine\ncovering\n29. Artists'\nstands\n32. Overhead\nS3. Bird's cm\\\n!4. Pronoun\n85. Frothed\n88. Prolactin |\nend of a\nchurch\n10. Seoul is lti\ncapital\nII. Pitcher's\ntarget\n42. Ruhr city\n43. Avid\n44. Peruses\n45. Birds\nDOWN 21. Substan.\n1. Cuban tlve\nleader pro-\n2. Gain noun\n3. Traffic sign it. Help\n4. Sailors 23. Owm\n6. Before 24. De-\n6. Black snake       voured\nl. Mllkflsh 26. Haw.\n(poss.) thorn\n8. Hindu berry\ngarment 27. Bhucker    YMlwdiy'i Aniwer\n9. Like better 28. Antagonize    87. Gift (obs.)\n10. Colonize 30. Hear 38. Like a wing\n16. Amertoai> SI. Guides 89. Knif IL'\nduck S3. Resources sc -var.t\n18. Unit ot 86. Celestial        41. Benchlike\nwork bear seat\nHajua mmi;\nmmms maHUiii\nuani'ita anaisE\nHEHIiiUi   EIHBBli\naam -isra nrgs\nlaa   iuhhhu\nciuuu.'i an\nagoali aama\naa  UIU  ElUQHH\nlaeiuiifi aaanti\n\u25a0aaua Igia\n1\nriz\n1\n4      7\n6      9       10\n5-23\nDAILY CRYPTOQUOTE \u2014 Here'i How to work It:\nAXYDLBAAXK\nIs LONGFELLOW\nOne lettor simply standi tOr another. In this sample A Is used\nfor the three L's, X for the two O's, ete. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all hints,\neach day the code letters are different\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nSMLGDS      RO      DSM      ORDLO      KVRWt\nURKGM      IA      NGRCC,      LWJ      MHMV-\nURCM,      IA      SMLGDS \u2014 DSIECIW.\nYesterday's Cryptoquote: DRINK TO ME ONLY WITH\nTHINE EYES, AND I WILL PLEDGE WITH MINE\u2014JON-\nEON.\n<<51959, Kin\u00ab.r\u00ab\u00bbtiir\u00ab Syn\u00abl\u00abt\u00bb, ln\u00ab.)\nVANCOUVER (CP)-A special\nconvention of delegates from the\n30,000 - member International\nWoodworkers bf America (CLC)\non the coast has been called for\nMay 30 to consider postponement\nof a strike set for June 16.\nUnion policy-makers Thursday\nnamed Jim Bury, secretary of\nthe British Columbia Federation\nOf Labor, to represent the IWA\non a conciliation board being\nformed in the union's dispute\nwith the B.C. forest industry.\nLabor Minister Lyle Wicks said\nhe had ordered the conciliation\nboard to handle negotiations because \"lt was obvious that negotiations were not being carried\nout in good faith.\"\n\"TOO GRAVE\"\n\"The issue is too grave for me\nto put the responsibility on one\nman.\" he told his constituents at\nnearby Malllardville Thursday\nnight.\nThe current contract between\nthe union and employers expires\nJune 16. Conciliation proceedings\nare not expected to be completed\nby then.\nThe union seeks a 20-per-cent\nincrease over the present basic\nhourly wage of $1.72.\nEarlier this year the IWA\nadopted a no-contract, no-work\npolicy during its annual convention in Vancouver.\nMr. Wicks said earlier Thursday in Victoria that \"There is no\nsuch thing in this province as a\nno-contract, no-work agreement.\"\n\"The old collective agreement\ncarries on until a new agreement\nis signed,\" he said.\nUNION CRITICISM\nThe IWA criticiztd the government's move to set up a concilia-\nthinking can often unearth hidden\npoints of vantage.\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY 19\n(Aquarius) \u2014 Hard work, shrewd\naction, will pay dividends. Play\nthe game straight, be upright and\nfear no one.\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\n(Pisces) \u2014 Give special attention\nto matters close to your special\nsphere of activity. True friends will\nhelp to put you on the right course,\nbring you home a winner\u2014plus.\nHeart and home interests highly\nfavored.\nYOU BORN TODAY are a most\nversatile person; are conscientious\nand industrious\u2014in fact, may be\ntoo active at times. Be sensible\nabout health and avoid rushing,\nnervous tension. You have many\ntalents but choose occunation and\nassociations wisely. These are\ngreat days for specialists and you\ncan be an efficient one. Curb\nwasteful haste. Study best methods, then move discreetly. Keep\nyour aims lofty. You can reach the\nheiehts.\nBirthdate: Ralph Waldo Emerson, poet-essayist; Bulwer-Lytton\n(Baron Lytton), statesman, novelist.\ntion boarc, saying it had entered\ntalks under a conciliation officer's supervisi n on the understanding that a report would be\nmade and a conciliation board\nwould not be necessary.\nMr. Wicks denied having joined\nIn a gentleman's agreement that\nnegotiations would be allowed to\nbe completed under conciliation\nofficer Reg Clement.\n\"No minister is in a position\nto give a commitment on a situation, the development of which is\nnot entirely clear,\" said Mr.\nWicks.\n\"However, the law is clear that\na minister, at his discretion, may\nnot call for a conciliation board.\"\nHe believed there is a \"real\nhope\" for settlement of the dispute.\nThe three executive members\nare holdovers from the seven-\nyear regime of Mike Solskl who\nwas defeated by Mr. Gillis in an\nupset election two months' ago.\nWENT TO MEETING\nThey were suspended temporarily last Friday for attending a\nspecial membership meeting May\n8 which Mr. Gillis did not sanction.\nAt Thursday night's rowdy\nmeeting, nominations were called\nfor members of a trial committee and 10 men were named. Four\ndeclined to stand and one was not\npresent. The other five wr ap-\npointd.\nMr. Quenneville told the meeting he was only \"performing my\nduty\" by attending the May 3\nmeeting. He said i.e was shown\n- petition signed by 2,500 members and felt it was his duty to\nattend. The local has 13,000\nmembers.\nMr. Poirier was attacked following a meeting two weeks ago\nwhen an overwhelming vote of\nconfidence was given to the Gillis\nexecutive for its action in dismissing recreation director Weir\nReid.\nA-Clocks May\n(heck Relativity\nWASHINGTON (AP) - Atomic\nspace clocks may be used to\ncheck on Einstein's theory of\nrelativity.\nIn brief, the theory of the late\nphysicist Albert Einstein holds\nthat time moves more slowly in\nspace because of a gravity factor\u2014primarily the earth's gravity\nforce.\nThe National Aeronautics and\nSpace Administration said Friday\nit is investigating three types of\natomic space clocks for possible\nuse in satellite tests of the Einstein theory.\nThe tests would be made by\ntaking simultaneous ground and\nspace readings from extremely\nprecise clocks.\n9:45\n12:00\n12:30\n2:30\n3:00\n3:30\n4:00\n4:15\n4:45\n5:00\n5:30\n6:00\n6:30\n7:00\n7:30\n8:30\n9:00\n9:30\n10:30\n8:45\n12:00\n1:00\n2:45\n3:00\n3:30\n4:00\n4:30\n5:00\n5:30\n6:00\n6:30\n7:00\n8:00\n8:30\n9:00\n9:30\n10:00\n10:15\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\nPACIFIC STANDARD TIME\nKXLY-TV - Channel 4 KHQ-TV - Channel 6\nSATURDAY SATURDAY\n7:45 I.E. Farm Summary\n8:00 Ruff and Reddy\n8:30 Fury \u2022\n9:00 Sky King\n9:30 Howdy Doody\n10:00\u2014Major League Ball *\nNew York at Baltimore\n12:30 I Led Three Lives\n1:00 Western Theatre\n2:00 Q-Toons\n2:30 I Led Three Lives\n3:00 True Story *\n3:30 Detective Diary *\n4:00 I Led Three Lives\n4:30 Action Theatre:\n\"Pride of Maryland\"\n5:30 Northwest Passage *\n6:00 Medic\n6:30 People Are Funny *\n7:00 Perry Como *\n8:00 Black Saddle *\n8:30 Cimarron City *\n9:30 D.A.'s Man *\n10:00 Death Valley Days\n10:30 Late Movie:\n\"Outcast of the Island\"\nSUNDAY\n10:00 Major League Baseball '\nNew York at Baltimore\n12:30 I Led Three Lives\n1:00 Medic\n1:30 Christopher Series\n2:00 This Is the Answer\n2:30 Q-6 Movie Parade\n2:35 Impact\n3:30 Casey Jones\n4:00 Circus Boy\n4:30 Danger Is My Business\n5:00 Week's Best Movie:\n\"Kid From Cleveland\"\n6:30 Steve Allen *\n7:30 Pete Kelly's Blues \u2666\n8:00 Chevy Show *\n9:00 Loretta Young *\n9:30 State Trooper\n10:00 David Nlven\n10:30 Late Movie:\n\"Cardinal Richelieu\"\nBaseball Game of Week '\nThoroughbred Races *\nWestern Roundup\nHeckle and Jeckle\nRobin Hood *\nLone Ranger *\nCaptain Kangaroo\nSanta Anita Races '\nTBA\nFarmer Alfalfa\nMighty Mouse\nAnnie Oakley\nCartoons\nCisco Kid\nJack Benny Special *\nHave Gun-Will Travel *\nGunsmoke *\nPerry Mason\nLate Show\nSUNDAY\nBaseball Game of Week '\nRingside With Rasslers\nEarly Show\nWorld in Focus\nAir Force Story\nOral Roberts\nSong Shop\nCollege Bowl *\nNews Commentary\n20th Century *\nLassie *\nBachelor Father *\nEd Sullivan *\nG.E. Theatre *\nAlfred Hitchcock\nRichard Diamond *\nWhat's My Line' *\nSunday News Special *\nLate Show\nKREM TV - Channel 2\nSATURDAY\n00 Scarlet Pimpernel\n80 Vagabond\n00 Country Time\n15 Capt. Cy's Cartoons\n00 Jubilee USA\nSO Championship Bowling\n80 Dick Clark *\n00 Huckleberry Hound\n30 Jubilee USA *\n00 Lawrence Welk *\n:00 Sammy Kaye *\n:30 Big Story\n:00 How to Marry a Millionaire\n:30 Channel 2 Theatre:\n\"High Sierra\"\nSUNDAY\n2:45 Bible Answers\n3:00 Baptist Bible Fellowship\n4:00 Roller Derby\n4:30 Telecourse\n5:00 Paul Winchell *\n5:30 Lone Ranger *\n6:00 You Asked for It *\n6:30 Maverick *\n7:30 Lawman \u2022\n8:00 Colt .45 *\n8:30 Deadline for Action *\n9:30 Meet McGraw\n10:00 Nightcourt\n10:30 Sunday Spectacular:\n\"Objective Burma\"\nTour Commissioner\nSuggests Priority\nFor Red Ensign\nOTTAWA (CP)-Lt.-Gen. Howard D. Graham, commissioner\nfor the Royal Tour, has suggested\nto provincial program co-ordina-\ntors that where flags are flown\nfor decorative purposes, the Red\nEnsign should take precedence.\nTour officials said the commissioner listed an order of priority. In this, the Red Ensign would\ncome flr\u00bbt, the Union Jack second and the provincial flag, if\nthere was one, third.\nOfficials said Gen. Graham had\ngiven this as guidance rather\nthan as a directive.\nCoast Legion\nPlays Bingo\nWithout Tax\nVANCOUVER (CP)-Bingo was\nplayed at a Canadian Legion\nbranch here Thursday night without collection of a 10-per-cent\nprovincial amusement tax required by a cabinet order-in-\ncouncil announced Wednesday.\nOfficials of Mount Pleasant\nbranch of the legion said they\nwere acting on legal advice that\nthe British Columbia cabinet's\norder-in-council is invalid.\nA statement said the B.C. Supreme Court \"has found that the\nbranch is not liable to collect\namusement tax from its club\nmembers.\"\n\"The premier has sought to\nnullify the court decision and to\nimpose taxation by executive decree, retroactive to 1957, and we\nsay that only the legislature, not\nthe premier, can change the\nlaw.\"\nAMUSEMENT PLACES\nThe order-in-council declared\nthree legion branches in Vancouver area to be places of amusement in order to collect special\nhospital aid tax from the bingo\ngames.\nThe order was retroactive to\nMay 8, 1957. The government\nclaims about $300,000 is due from\ntwo years' back taxes.\nThe matter was taken to the\ncourts last November after the\nlegions refused to pay. In two\nsubsequent appeals, the final one\nlast Tuesday, the courts held that\nthe branches didn't have to pay\nthe  tax.\nThe legions claimed immunity\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, MAY 23, 1959 \u2014 7\nSTAMP CORNER\nBy   JAMES   MOMTAGNES\nOn June 18 Canada will issue a\nstamp to commemorate the visit\nof Queen Elizebeth to Canada this\nsummer. The stamp will Mature a\nrecent portrait of the Queen and\nwill be the first time this portrait\nhas appeared on a postage .stamp.\nIn recent years there have been\nnumerous stamps to mark international visits of reigning monarchs\nand presidents of republics. Canada has had a number of such\nstamps. For the topical collectors\na display of these various head-\nof-state-visit stamps make an interesting sideline.\nIn 1957, Canada had a 5 cent\nstamp for the visit of Queen Elizabeth and in 1951 there was also a\n4-cent stamp for the visit of the\ncouple that year. In 1939, the visit\nof King George VI and Queen Elizabeth brought out a special three-\nvalue set of stamps.\nThroughout the British Commonwealth there have been other such\nstamps for royal visits. In 1954,\nAustralia had a set for the visit\nof Queen Elizabeth. A set issued\nby Australia in 1951, recalled the\nvisit of King George V as the Duke\nof York. New Zealand had a set\nfor the visit of Queen Elizabeth\nand Prince Philip In 1953.\nAfrican parts of the Commonwealth have also issued a number\nof royal visit stamps. South Africa,\nSouthwest Africa, Southern , Rhodesia, Basutoland, Bechuanaland\nand Swaziland Issued stamps for\nthe visit of King Georgie VI and\nthe royal family in 1947. Kenya and\nUganda overprinted two values of\nthe regular set in 1952 for the visit\nof Princess Elizabeth from which\nshe was recalled on the death of\nher father and returned as Queen\nElizabeth.\nIn'the Caribbean area Bermuda\noverprinted a six-penny stamp for\nthe 1953 visit of Queen Elizabeth\nand Prince Philip, and Jamaica\noverprinted a two-pence stamp for\nthe visit. Elsewhere Nigeria had a\nstamp for the royal visit of 1956,\nGibraltar, Ceylon, and Aden in\n1954.\nOther countries have also issued\nsuch stamps. France, in 1938, is-\nfrom the taxes because their\npremises are not open to the\npublic. The new order-in-council\nis effective whether the club is\nopen or is restricted solely to\nmembers.\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS 1890 ON THE DIAL\nPACIFIC  DAYLIGHT  TIME\nSATURDAY, MAY 23,  1959\n6:00\u2014News\n6:05-Wake-Up Time\n6:30\u2014News\n6:35\u2014Wake-Up Time\n6 55\u2014 Farm Fare\n7:00\u2014News\n7:05-Wake Up Time\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014 Wane Up Time\n8.00\u2014News\n8.10\u2014Sports News\n8:15\u2014 Wake-Up Time\n8:50\u2014Here's Health\n9 no -News\n9:05\u2014Birthday Book\n9:15\u2014Saturday Show\n9:45\u2014At Liberty Store\n10:00\u2014 News\n10:05\u2014Sports News\n10:15\u2014Musicale\n10:30\u2014Game of the Week Baseball\n1:30\u2014Dairy Queen\n8:15-Hobby Club\n3:30\u2014Sports College\n3:45\u2014Stu Davis\n4:00\u2014Don Messer\n4:30-Polka Party\n5:00\u2014News\n5:05\u2014 Rolling Home Show\n6:00\u2014News\n6:10\u2014Sporls News\n6:15\u2014 Rolling Home Show\n7:00-News\n7:10-For Valor\n7:30\u2014Serenade\n8:00\u2014News\n8:05\u2014Serenade\n8:55\u2014News\n9:00\u2014Now I Ask You\n9:30\u2014Leicester Square\n10:00\u2014News\n10:10\u2014Sports News\n10:15-SPCA Program\n10:30\u2014Parade of Choirs\n11:00\u2014News\n11:10\u2014Sign Off\nSUNDAY, MAY 24,  1959\n9 00\u2014News\n9-15\u2014British Israel\n9:30-The Continentals    .\n10 00-News\n10:10-World Church News\n10:15\u2014Just Mary\n10:30\u2014In His Service\n11-00\u2014St   Paul's-Trinity\n12:00\u2014Tabernacle Choir\n12:15\u2014Suoris Scores\n12:25\u2014News\n12:30\u2014This Is My Story\n1:00\u2014News\n1:03\u2014Points West\n1:30\u2014Critically Speaking\n2:00\u2014News\n2:05\u2014Something for Sunday\nS:0O-Waltz Time\n3:30\u2014Something for Sunday\n4:00\u2014News\n4:05\u2014Something for Sunday\n5:00\u2014Billy  Graham\n5:30\u2014Capitol Report\n6:00\u2014Bethel Fireside Hour\n6:30\u2014Harmony Harbor\n7:00-News\n7 10\u2014Weekend Review\n7 20\u2014Our Sc-ecial Speaker\n7:30-CBC Stage\n8:30\u2014Sunday Chorale\n9:00\u2014Symphony Orchestra\n10:00\u2014Neiys\n10.10\u2014Sports News\n10:15\u2014Silent Friends\n10:30-On Sunday\n11:00\u2014News\n11:10\u2014Sign Off\nCBC PROGRAMS\nMOUNTAIN STANDARD TIME\nSUNDAY, MAY 24,  1959\n(Programs subject to changeIrJ stations without notice,\n7:00\u2014Random Hour\n9:00-BBC News\n9:15\u2014Neighborly News\n9:30\u2014The Continentals\n10.00\u2014B.C. Gardens, Weather\n10:15\u2014Just Mary\n10:30\u2014In His Service\n11:00\u2014Chamber Music\n11:30\u2014Religious Period\n12:00\u2014Music and the Dance\n1:00\u2014News\n1:03\u2014Points West\n1:30\u2014Critically Speaking\n2:00\u2014Music Diary\n2:30\u2014Impressions of China\n3:00\u2014Bluenose Ballads\n3:30\u2014News\nMONDAY,\n6:00\u2014Sharps at Six\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n8:15\u2014Sharps\n9:00-BBC News\n9:15\u2014The Archers\n9:30\u2014Morning Concert\n10:00\u2014Morning Visit\n10:15\u2014Happy Gang\n10:45-Muslc in Black and White\n11:00\u2014Kindergarten of the Air\n11:15\u2014Off the Record\n12:15-News\n12:25\u2014Showcase\n12:30\u2014BC. Farm Broadcast\n13;SB-FiV# ta One\n3 35\u2014Ask the Weatherman\n3:45\u2014In Reply\n4:00\u2014Winnipeg Summer Concert\n5:00-Carl Tapscott\n5:30\u2014Capitol Report\n5:57-Weather\n6:00-Concert Hall\n6:30\u2014Harmony Harbor\n7:00\u2014News\n7:10\u2014Weekend Review\n7:20\u2014Our Special Speaker\n7:30-CBC Stage\n8:30\u2014Sunday Chorale\n9:00\u2014Symphony Orchestra\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Romanticism\n10:30\u2014On Sunday\nMAY 25, 1959\n1:00\u2014Pacific Express\n1 45\u2014Program Resume\n2:00\u2014School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n3:30\u2014Song Shop\n4:00\u2014Agostini\n4:30\u2014Tempo\n7:00\u2014News\n7:30\u2014Little Symphonies\n8:00\u2014Vancouver Theatre\n8:30\u2014Summer Fallow\n9:00\u2014Man to Man\n9:30\u2014Man to Man\n10 (Ill-News\n10:45\u2014Festival in Sound,\n10:.Id-Distinguished Artists\nRecent new stamps to reach Canada include (top, left to right)\nfrom Russia a stamp for an atomic powered ice-breaker, from\nPoland a stamp to a navigational congress, from Italy a stamp for\nthe 10th anniversary of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization,\nand (lower, left to right) from Vatican City a set featuring Pope\nJohn XXIII, and from Romania a set showing regional costumes.\nsued a stamp for the visit of King\nGeorge VI and Queen Elizabeth.\nEgypt, in 1946, issued a stamp for\nthe visit of King Ibn Saud of Saudi\nArabia, Ghana last year overprinted its first stamps for the visit of\nits prime minister, Kwame Nkru-\nmah, to Canada and the U. S., Italy\noverprinted an airmail stamp for\nthe 1956 visit of its president to\nCanada and the U. S. Philippines\nhad a stamp showing its president\nQuirino and Indonesia's President\nFrance has issued this stamp\nto the 175th anniversary of its\nnational mining school.\nSukarno on a 1953 visit, Iran in\n1957 issued stamps for the visit\nof Italy's President Giavanni and\nIraq's King Feisal, while Brazil\nas early as 1920 marked a royal\nvisit of King Albert of Belgium\nwith a special stamp.\nBesides these, there are many\nmore such stamps, of visits of\nheads of slate.\nNew issues . . . West Germany\nhas issued a stamp to mathematician Adam Reise who died 400\nyears ago . . . Italy has issued a\nstamp to British poet Lord Byron\nwho died in 1824. . . . Netherlands\nissues its annual summer charity\nstamps on May 11, depicting work\nof protecting is low-lying land from\nthe sea . . . Japan has issued\nstamps for the wedding of Crown\nPrince Aklhito.\nFirst regular meeting of the\nnewly-formed Nelson Stamp Club\nwill be held at the Hume Monday\nnight. The meeting will be in the\nnature of a get-acquainted affair\nand members have been asked to\ntake their albums to the meeting.\nDuplicates and catalogues are also\nsuggested as it is hoped there will\nbe time for trading. Prospective\nmembers and visitors are also invited, G. C. Burns, secretary-treasurer, advised.\nCanada issues this stamp on\nJune 18 for the visit of Queen\nElizabeth II.\nIkQi^AkctQwM\nWhat a wonderful story a picture like this can tell! Daughter\nreceiving her graduation gift from a proud father and mother.\nBe sure to include something like it ln your graduation\nsnapshots.\nKemember Graduation Day in Snapshots\nGraduation is a day to be\nremembered \u2014 and what better reminder could there be\nthan an album of snapshots?\nIt's so easy to do, there's really\nno excuse for letting such an\nopportunity go by.\nBegin with a snapshot of the\nstudent as she studies for her\nfinal examinations. There will\nbe a lot of other preparations\nlike selecting the dress she's\ngoing to wear. You could show\nher holding and admiring it as\nBhe displays it to friends.\nIt's a good idea to plan your\npictures to tell a connected\nstory. That makes them much\nmore interesting. Then too,\nexcitement increases as graduation day draws closer, so\ntry to capture that \"feeling\" in\nall your pictures.\nOn graduation day you\nmight start with a picture of\nthe one who is to graduate\nwearing her graduation gown\nand mortarboard. She could\nbe standing oh the steps of the\nuniversity with members of\nher family.\nA general shot of the students lining up for the parade\nto the convocation would add\ncolor to your story followed\nby a close-up of your special\nsubject among her fellow students. Your next important\nshot would be when the grad- |\nuate kneels before the chancellor to receive her degree.\nUse a flash bulb for this and\nall your interior shots. In fact,\nyou would get better outdoor\npictures if you used flash\nbulbs for fill-in lighting.\nTake another flash-shot\nafter your subject has turned\nand is facing the audience.\nAfter the graduation exercises, you will have many opportunities to get some interesting candid shots on the\ncampus; and now is the time\nto get a good picture of her\nalone and showing her with\nher roses. This would make an\nexcellent color picture.\nRemember that you are the\none to remain calm in aU this\nexcitement so that each shot\nwill be free of camera movement. Then too, watch your\nlighting and place yourself in\nsuch a position that your light\nsource is behind you or to one\nside. Cameras with set focus\nand shutter speed should not\nbe closer than five feet unless\nyou are using a close-up\nattachment.\nGraduation day comes but\nonce and an album of snapshots telling the story, whether the graduate be a young\nwoman or a young man will\nbe treasured always.\n23 \u2014 George H. Kay\n \u25a0 ^.'?:'!?'v~J,7;'\",^Jvr:\nmmmmmmm\nmmmmmmmmmm imhY*'-:   '\n\u25a0\u25a0', ..'\u25a0'-.!, \u25a0  .     .-     i    \u25a0\u25a0-.    .,\u25a0-.'    \u25a0\n :\u2014s\u2014- \u25a0     . \u25a0. \u2022.-< \u25a0\nI \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, MAY 23, 1959\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS\nThe Dally News does not hold Itself responsible In the event\nof an error In the following lilts.\nTORONTO 5TOCKS\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nAcadia Uranium  11\nAlgom Uranium    15.37%\nAmal Larder  _      .30\nAnacon Lead 69\nAnglo Rouen 30\nAtlin Ruff 14%\nAubelle  ...: 06\nAumacho   15\nAumaque   14V4\nAunor      2.97\nBarnat      1.74\nBase Metals 18\nBaska Uranium 20\nBoymar  _     .10\nBrunhurst  05%\nBuffalo Ank     1.61\nCampbell C      8.80\nCampbell R. L    11.87%\nCan Met  49%\nCassiar      10.62%\nCentral Patricia  _    1.35\nChimo   64\nCoin Lake  _     .16\nCons Denison    14.00\nCons Denison Wts     2.85\nCons. Discovery      3.90\nCons Halliwell  78\nCons Howe     4.00\nCons Mining & Smelting ....   21.00\nCons Regcourt  13\nCon Sanorm ...' '.. 07\nCon Sub  66\nConwest   _    4.05\nCopper Corp  38\nCopper Man  12\nCraig        4.60\nD'Aragon  31V4\nDonalda 12\nEast Amphi 09\nEast Malartic     1.64\nEast Sullivan      2.11\nElder Gold      1.25\nFalconbridge       25.12%\nFaraday  82\nFrobisher      2.20\nGeco          20.50\nGeo. Scientific Pros     1.15\nGiant Yel     8.15\nGlen Uranium 10%\nGoldale  20%\nGold Eagle  16%\nGunnar Gold     14.75\nHarminerals  14\nHasaga   19%\nHeadway 40\nHollinger     32.75\nHudson Bay     54.62%\nInspiration  51\nInt. Nickel     89.50\nIron Bay      2.00\nJoliet Que 30\nJonsmith  21%\nKenville        08\nKerr Addison    20.25\nLeitch           148\nLabrador       27.37%\nLakeshore     5,75\nLexindin  04\nLittle Long Lac     2.25\nLorado  29%\nLouvic't  08%\nMacassa  _     2.90\nMacDonaid   33\nMadsen R. L. .'.     3.20\nMalartic G. F     1.17\nManeast  08\nMaritime Mining      1.57\nMart McNeely _      .34\nMcLeod     1.18\nMcMarmac   08%\nMcKenzie R L  40\nMining Corp     4.75\nMulti Mins  53\nNew Alger  08\nNew Delhi      22\nNew Harricana  _     .12\nNew Hosco  _      .99\nNew Jason  08%\nNew Lund      37\nNoranda New     50.75\nNorgold     _...      .07%\nNormetals       3.65\nNorpax          .16\nNorth Can     _ __    1.55\nNorth Rankin      1.68\nOpemiska      9,65\nPickle Crow      1.17\nPlacer Devel     11.75\nPreston E. D     6.50\nQuebec Lab  _      .05%\nQuebec Lithium  _    5.20\nQuebec Metallurgical  83\nRayrock   14\nSan Antonio      57\nSherritt Gordon  _    3.50\nSilver Miller  43\nStadacona    11\nSteep Rock     13.12%\nSullivan Con  _    2.25\nSylvanite     1.15\nTaurcanis      _ 87\nTeck Hughes     2.11\nTemagami        3.60\nThomp-Lund  66\nTombill  84\nUnited Keno      4.05\nUpper Canada      1.15\nVentures     29.25\nViolamac       2.35\nWaite Amulet      6.60\nWiltsey Goglin   15\nWright Hargreaves      1.53\nYale  36%\nYellowknife Bear      1.31\nYukeno  ...        05\nOILS\nAmerican Leduc  17\nj Bailey Selburn            8.70\nCalgary and Edmonton ....   29.00\nCanadian Devonian      4.80\nCentral Explorers          2.36\nCommonwealth Pete      3.30\nCon East Crest  45\nDuvex   08%\nHome A    17.37%\n 56\n...      .22\n 13\nB.C. Packers B \t\nB.C. Power A\t\nBurns A \t\nCanadian Breweries\t\nCanadian Canners \t\nCanadian Celanese\t\nCan. Cement \t\nCan Chem Co\t\nCanadian Dredge \t\nCanadian Curtis Wright .\nCan Oil \t\nCanadian Pacific Rly \t\nCan. Packers B \t\nCan Hydrocarbide \t\nCockshutt \t\nCons Gas \t\nDist. Seagram \t\nDom. Foundries \t\nDom Magnesium \t\nDom. Stores\t\nDom. Tar & Chemical ..\nDom. Textiles    \t\nFamous Players \t\nFanny Farmer \t\nFord A\t\nGatineau\t\nGen. Steel Wares ..,\t\nGoodyear  \t\nGypsum Lime \t\nHoward Smith \t\nImperial Oil \t\nImp. Tobacco \t\nInd. Ace\t\nLoblaw A \t\nLoblaw B   \t\nMassey Harris \t\nMont. Loco \t\nMoore Corp. (New) \t\nNat. Steel Car \t\nPage Hershey\t\nPowell River \t\nPower Corp.     \t\nRuss. Industries \t\nShawinigan  \t\nStandard Paving \t\nSteel of Canada\t\nTaylor Pearson \t\nTexaco   . \t\nUnion Gas of Can \t\nWeston George \t\nWoodwards     \t\nCLASSIFIED\n17%\n39%\n12%\n41%\n16>\/4\n20%\n32%\n11%\n31%\n3.55\n30%\n28%\n53%\n9%\n15%\n39'\/,\n32%\n48%\n9%\n79%\n16%\n10%\n23%\n18%\n171%\n43%\n17\n186\n47%\n42\n41%\n13%\n37%\n35%\n35%\n15%\n19%\n311%\n17\n30%\n37%\n64\n12%\n31%\n50\n76\n19\n72%\n16%\n41\n23%\nDeadline tor Classified Ada \u2014 5 p.m.\nBIRTHS\nTHOMAS - To Mr. and Mrs.\nRae Thomas of Ymir, at Kootenay\nLake General Hospital, May 21, a\nson.\nWAITE - To Mr. and Mrs.\nClark Waite, Lardo, at Kootenay\nLake Genera! Hospital, May 22, a\nson. Mrs. Waite is the former\nJoan Broadfoot.\nHELP WANTED\nRAWLEIGH'S SPECIALS, SAM\npies, sales aids, quality line of\n170 home and farm needs may\nanswer your desire for larger in\ncome. Full time or spare time\nplans. Write today for booklet\n\"Your Way to a Better Living\"\nThe W. T. Rawleigh Co. Ltd.\nDept, EE-153, Winnipeg^, JWan\nDO YOU NEED $115 PER WEEK\nminimum -guarantee to survive'\nBe a Fuller Brush Man! Phone\nElliot 6-2726,, Creston, for infor\nmation between 7 and 8 p.m. In\nTrail phone 231-X-3. Or write\nEmployment Manager, Fuller\nBrush Co., Box 1160, Creston\nB.C.\nWANTED - SINGLE MIDDLE\naged men for farm chores, $50\nplus room and board. A. Town-\nsend (Parks), Fruitvale, B.C.\nMACHINERY\nWANTED - LUBRICATION MAN\nwith some mechanical knowledge. State references and wages\nexpected. Box 1527, Daily News.\nFIRST CLASS MECHANIC, ALSO\nexperienced lubrication man.\nGive full detail and experience.\nBox 1461, Nelson Daily News.\nHELP WANTED \u2014 FEMALE\nVancouver Stocks\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nBeaver Lodge  17%\nBralorne      7.35\nCanusa  .-. 06\nCariboo Gold      1.41\nCraig      4.55\nFarwest Tungsten 13%\nGiant Mascot  25\nGranduc           1.50\nGrandview      20\nHighland Bell      1.90\nPend Oreille      2.65\nQuatsino  20%\nReeves MacDonaid       1.10\nRix-Athabaska Uran  40\nSheep Creek           1.40\nSherritt Gordon      3.35\nSilback Premier  06\nSilver Ridge  07\nSilver Standard     23\nSunshine Lardeau  15%\nTaylor   25\nTrojan  15%\nUtica  ...  01\nWestern Exploration  28\nOILS\nA P Consolidated     51\nCalgary & Edmonton     28.50\nCharter      1.55\nHome     16.75\nOkalta Com      1.05\nPacific Pete           14.87%\nPeace River Gas  71\nRoyalite      8.25\nRoyal Can  27\nUnited       2.15\nVanalta  29\nVantor  90\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlberta Distillers          2.90\nAlberta Distillers Vt     2.40\nB C Forests     16.37%\nB C Power    38.00\nB C Telephone            46.00\nCanadian Collieries       6.75\nCrown Zeller (Can)     23.00\nInt Brew B      4.50\nInland Nat Gas        '     6.12%\nMacM & Bloedel B     40.50\nMid  Western        1.50\nPowell River          37.25\nTrans Mtn (New)     14.00\nWestminster Paper     32.00\nWANTED: E X P E R I E N CED\nstenographer for business office.\nWood, Vallance Hardware Co.,\nNelson.\nWOMAN TO TAKE FULL\ncharge of motherless home. Ph\nRossland 6-4587 or write Box 688\nRossland,  B.C.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nFOR THE BEST IN BODY AND\npaint work, see Ted's Auto Body.\n1 mile Granite Road, or phone\nbus 98: res  1186-Y.\nFOR EXPERIENCED SEPTIC\ntank cleaning, phone 1994-L for\nrates and appointments.\nRUG CLEANING, INVISIBLE\nmending. Dutch Cleaning Serv\nice, phone 2190.\nMr. Logger\nKnow that there is no\nsubstitute for experience.\nThe  new, more powerful\nand heavier\nJOHN  DEERE\nCRAWLER\nDIESEL OR GASOLINE\nIs a proven machine.\nDon't  Forget\u2014After Sales\nService  Is What Counts.\nWE  SELL QUALITY\nAND SERVICE\nSee H.  \"Fritz\"  Farenholtz,\nAlex McDonald, Gordon Coutts, at\nWELDING  &  EQUIPMENT\nCO. LTD.\nPHONE 1402\n514 Railway St.    Nelson, B.C.\ni\nBold New Concept\nIn Regulator Design by L.A.\n90%   ot   all   normal   repairs\neliminated in a few minutes.\nWith   an   exchange  cartridge,\nCosts Only $2.95\nSingle Stage Design With\nNear Double Stage\nPerformance\nYet Sell for $65 Per Pok\nSEPTIC TANK CLEANING SER-\nvice. Free inspection. Reasonable\nrates. Phone 884-Y.\nFOR   BULLDOZING,   LOADING\nand grading, phone 973-L.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\nOn Display at\nson\n708 Vernon St. Nelson\nPHONE 97\nCustom Machine Shop\nWelding \u2014 Steel Fabricating\nWelding Supplies\nWestern Plywoods\nUNLISTED\nAlta Gas Trunk 24.00\nAuwon .06\nMidwest Copper .23\nTrans Can Com 27.87%\nTrans Mtn Unit 14.00\nTorwest .92\nWestern Mines .. .12\nBANKS\nBank of Montreal 57.00\nCan. Bank of Com. 61.00\nImp. Bank of Can 74.50\nRoyal Bank of Can 83.00\nFUNDS\nCan. Inv. Fund 9.16\nCom. Int. 8.27\nGrouped Income 3.96\nInvestors Growth 6.37\nInvestors Mutual 11.56\nLeverage 6.63\nTrans Can \"C\" 5.85\nAll Can. Com. 7.89\nAll Can. Div. 6.49\n16.25\n25.25\n.24\n28.12%\n14.50\n.94\n.14\n58 00\n62.50\n75.50\n84.00\n10.05\n9.09\n4.33\n6.89\n12.50\n' 7.29\n6.4(1\n8.58\n7.05\nKroy\nLong Island Pete\nMarigold \t\nMidcon       \t\nNat. Pete\nNew Continental .\nOkalta \t\nPacific Pete\t\nPetrol      \t\nPlace Oil\n3.20\n.39\n1.15\n14.87%\n1.92\n1.68\nProv Gas      2.80\n1.50\n.60\n4.55\nUnited Oils        2.18\nRoyalite\nStanwell Oil .\nTriad\nYank Canuck\nWestern Pacific\t\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi \t\nAlgoma Steel \t\nAnalog \t\nArgus 2nd pfd\t\nAtlas St\t\nB.A. Oil \t\nBathurst Power ...\nBeatty Bros.   \t\nBell Telephone \t\nBrazilian \t\nB.C. Electric 4s\nB.C. Electric 4%s\nB.C. Forest\n.08%\n.23\n34%\n38\n10%\n36%\n26\n37%\n46%\n11%\n42%\n6%\n77\n88\n16%\n~*        B.C. Packers A       'JL7%\nOWN   A   BUSINESS\nOF YOUR OWN\nA well-established grocery and\nlunch counter 6 miles out on\nthe North Shore. This, of\ncourse, is known as the Question Mark. The bldg. is 4O'x60',\nhas all the necessary equipment including stoves, fryers,\nfreezers, coolers, etc. \u2014 This\nbldg. has 165 feet highway\nfrontage, excellent parking\nfacilities. Owner must sell. \u2014\nPrice, plus stock,   $9500\nMake your own terms.\nON   MILL STREET\nA substantial family home,\ncomplete with coal hot water\nheating system. Make us an\noffer and assume the balance\nof (he present agreement\nwhich is $2800 at 5%.\nREAL ESTATE and INSURANCE\nPhone 70 582 Ward St.\nP. E. Poelin\nREAL ESTATE & INSURANCE\n582 Ward St., Nelson, B.C.\nIt Listed at a\nFAIR PRICE\nWe  Can  Sell  Your  Property\nFinances Available\nTo Get the Deals Through\nLIST   TODAY\nC. W. Appleyard\n& Co. Ltd.\nREAL ESTATE and\nINSURANCE AGENTS\nEstablished 45 Years\nBOX 26 PHONE 269\n42) Baker St. Nelson. B.C.\n1 \u2014 1955 HD5\nAllis-Chalmers\nCrawler\nEquipped  with   Carco   Angledozer.  Carco Winch, Driver's\nGuard,   H.D.   Roller   Guards,\nElectric  Starting  and  Lights.\n1 \u2014 1948 HD5\nAllis-Chalmers\nCrawler\nEquipped   with   Carco   Angledozer   Carco Winch, Drivers\nGuard.\n2\u20141953 Chevrolet\n'\/2-Ton  Pickups\n1\u20141956 Tandem Axle\nG.M.C. Truck\nRco Trucks. Allis-Chalmers\nCrawlers, I.E.L. Chain Saws,\nWillys Trucks.\nTruck & Tractor Ltd.\n301 Vernon St.     Ph. 1030\nSchield Bantam Crane\nModel T-35, % yard dipper\nbucket, mounted on 6 x 6 International Carrier. 825-20\nrubber.\nTop Condition. Terms.\nPHONE  1786  OR  643-L\nNELSON. B.C.\nBureau of Statistics\nCorrects Errors\nOTTAWA (CP) - The bureau ol\nstatistics said Friday imports of\nBritish and European motor vehicles in the first quarter of 1959\ntotalled 21.919, not 30,306 as it reported Thursday.\nA bureau official said the error\nwas its own.\nThe bureau also corrected an\nerror in the value placed on imports in the first quarter of 1958,\nplacing it at $30,306,000, instead of\n$21,919,000 as it reported Thursday.\nThe imports this year, valued at\n$43,754,000, compared with imports\nof 13,539 units in the first quarter\nof 1958.\nRESCUE TRAPPED HORSE\nFRESNO, Calif. (AP)\u2014A horse\ntrapped in an abandoned well\nsince Sunday was rescued Wednesday in nearby Miramonte.\nOwner Clay Thompson found the\nhorse after a three-day search.\nWith the aid of three state forestry men he pulled it out wilh\nropes.\nTRADE YOUR PROPERTY OR\nequity in your present dwelling.\nIf your dwelling is too large or\ntoo small, see us. We have properties we can trade. Prices have\nnot been raised for trade purposes. Come in an discuss your\nreal estate problems, no obligation. T. D. Rosling & Son Ltd.,\n568 Ward St.\nWANT-A-GAHDEN AND FRUIT\ntrees? 2 corner lots, bright 3-\nbedroom home. Modern kitchen.\nLaundry room. 504 Richard. Ph.\n1984-X.\n2-BDR. BUNGALOW, GAS HEAT\ned. 580 Seventh Ave, Castlegar\nPhone 7651.\nUNFINISHED 3-BDR. HOUSE ON\n% acre lot, some fruit trees, at\nRobson. Box 316, Castlegar.\nFAIRVIEW,    5    BDR.,    LOVELY\ngrounds. Ph. 1036-X, 814 Fourth\nWANTED   -   GOOD \"BUILDING\nlot. Phone 765-R.\nFOR   SALE   -   4-BDR.   HOUSE.\nVernon St. Phone 350 evenings.\nPERSONAL\nFOR SALE: SMALL TRACK\ntype loader with snow blade and\nfarm attachments. Phone 4557\nCastlegar or can be seen in Robson, 3.3 miles north of forry.\nrjOHTDEERE CRAWLER WITH\nangledozer; also 11953 Ford tractor with pulley plow and hay\nmower. All in very good condition. Phone Nelson 134-L-l.\n5 H.P. SIMPLICITY TRACTOR\nwith mower, roto-tiller, blade,\ncultivator. Reasonable. Alex\nSookerookoff, Slocan Park.\t\nREQUIRE $3500 - 2nd MORT\ngage. Good security. Repayments\n$125 per month lor 38 months.\nBox 992, Daily News.\nNplaim ilaUij JfatOB\nCirculation Dept., Phone 1844\nPrice per single copy 6c Monday\nto Friday, 10c on Saturday.\nBy Carrier per week 35c\nin advance.\nSubscription Rates\nBy Mail in Canada Outside Nelson:\nOne month        S 1.25\nThree months        3,50\nSix months        6.5(1\nOne year             12.00\nBy Mail to United Kingdom or the\nUnited States:\nOne month       $ 1.75\nThree months      5.0(1\nSix months     9.00\nOne year              18.00\nWhere extra postage is required\nabove rates plus postage.\nFor delivery by carrier in Cran\nbrook, phone Mrs. Wm. Stevely;\nIn Kimberley, A. W  Brown;\nIn Trail. Mrs. Syd Spooner:\nIn Rossland, Mrs. Ross Saundry\n S^VSKljP*\nmmum\n'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.:\u25a0\u25a0 v1, ,\u25a0;.' ;.\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0!\"\nmm\nT\u2122^^-^^\"^^\nfPfn^^Mf;\nS\u00ae?K^^\u00ab\n^\u00abW^^^\n\u25a0\/ifl\nSMALL INVESTMENT   -\nThat's the Want Ad Stcn?^\u2014 PHONE  1844\nYOU CAN NOW PHONE YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS IN UNTIL 5 P.M. ON SATURDAY.\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\nNew Chev. Cars\nand Trucks\nNew Olds Sedans\n'58 Chev. Pickup\n'58 Chev Sedan\n'58 Pontiac Sedan\n'57 Meteor Tudor\n'57 Nash Metropolitan\n'57 Chev. Station Wagon\n'57 Chev. Sedan Qelivery\n'56 Volkswagen\n'56 Ford Sedan\n'56 Chev. Pickup\n'56 Ford Pickup\n'56 Olds Sedan\n'56 Chrysler Sedan\n'56 Plymouth Coach\n'56 Cadillac Sedan\n!56 Zephyr Sedan\n'55 Olds Sedan\n'55 Ford Sedan\n'55 Chev.~ Sedan\n'55 Austin Sedan\n'55 Hillman Sedan\n'55 Chev. Coach\n'55 Chev.  Panel\n'54 Consul Sedan\n'54 Monarch Sedan\n'54 Studebaker Sedan\n'54 Chev. Sedan\n'53 Chev. Coach\n'53 Ford Pickup\n'53 Chev.  Hardtop\n'53  Pontiac Sedan\n'53 Austin Sedan\n'52 Ford Sedon\n'52 Morris Sedan\n'52 Chev.  Coach\n'52 Pontiac Sedan\n'52 Chev. Sedan\nCASH - TERMS - TRADES\nmerge\nLTD.\nCHEVROLET - OLDSMOBILE\nCADILLAC\n323 Vernon Street\nNelson Phone 35\nSF 180^A' 190 in. W.B. INTERNA-\ntional tandem on air. Motor completely overhauled and equipped\nwith full-flow oil filter, new\nbrakes, rubber practically all\nnew. The truck has been gone\nover from front bumper to rear\naxle and is in new condition.\n$6500. Write or phone Sparwood\nEsso Service, phone Juniper\n5-6448, Sparwood, B.C.\nSfivui.tui^i.vu u\\ ii .1 o L I S H\ncar repairs. Used parts for 1949\nto '52 Austins, '49 to '52 Hill-\nmans. 10 to '54 Morris Minor.\n'51 Morris Minor motor; '62\nVanguard; good '50 Pontiac mtr.;\n'49 Monarch; '49 Chev; '51 Ford\nconvertible Cottonwood Wreckage Service, phone 2100. Box\n3ii-  -'.i \"m\"  Hr-irl   Nelson\n\"1953 CMC MODEL 630, COM-\nplete with flat bed lumber trailer,\nrollers and large winch. This\ntruck is in first class condition.\nIt can be easily converted to logging, This is a real buy at $3500,\nWrite or phone Sparwood Esso\nService, phone Juniper 5-6448,\nNatal P.O., Sparwood, B.C.\n1957 700 FORD TRUCK WITH AIR\nbrakes, saddle tanks and 28-foot\nlumber trailer with rollers. Very\ngood condition and ready for the\nroad, $5200. Write or phone Sparwood Esso Service, phone Juniper 5-6448, Natal P.O., Sparwood,\nB.C.\n1953 FORD STATION WAGON,\none owner, 39,000 miles, radio,\ntinted glass, fully undercoated.\nExcellent condition throughout.\nEd Pickard, Ainsworth, B.C.\nFOR SALE - CHEVROLET PAN-\nel delivery. May be viewed at\nClarkson Motors, 924' Nelson\nAve., phone 205 or 455-Y.\n\"52 TWO-DOOR CHEVROLET -\nlike new Radio. Phone 226-R\n9 a.m  to 2 p.m. or after 5 p.m.\nCASH FOR SMALL USED CAR,\nMetropolitan preferred. Box 1545,\nDaily News.\nFOR SALE _ 2-DOOR '53 FORD,\ngood condition, $650, Ph. 792-L.\n1957~PLYM6UTH V-8, EXCEL\nlent cond., $1595. Phone 2170.\nWANTED TOJIENT\nWANTED TORRENT - GARAGE\nanywhere in Nelson. Call Harry\nit B.A. Oil, 91 Government Rd\nor phone 72 or 892-L.\t\nWANTED TO RENT WITH Option to buy\u20143 bedroom home in\nFairview. Phone 437-R.\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\nWANTED-GOOD USED CHILD'S\ntricycle, suitable for 5-year-old.\nPhone 1967-X. \t\nWANTED    -    CLEAN    COTTON\nrass   Nelson  Daily News\n1'OY'S 3-GEARED BICYCLE, IN\ngood condition. Phone 1068-R.\nCL \\N COTTON RAGS WANTED\nAny quantity. Peebles Motors.\nH\nI\nA\nN\nD\nL\nO\nI\nS\nRENTALS\n3 ROOMS AND PRIV. BATH -\nultra modern fridge, gas stove,\nauto, gas heat, furn. or unfurn.\nPriv. parking. Also 1 housekeeping room with everything furnished. Sleeping rooms, weekly,\nmonthly rates. Priv. parking.\n171 Baker, phone 385.\nFOR RENT END MAY - LARGE\nhouse % mile from Baker St.\nWood and coal range and furnace, 2 bathrooms. Suitable for\n2 couples or small family. Box\n1526, Daily News,\nOFFICES TO RENT - 3 ROOMS,\nredecorated, Aberdeen Blk., $65;\nalso one large room Johnstone\nBlk., $45; or will alter to suit\ntenant. T. D. Rosling & Son Ltd.,\n568 Ward St., phone 717.\n3-BDR, DWELLING ON VERNON\nSt., immediate occupancy, $65.\nAlso your choice of apartments,\n$40 to $85 per month, immediate\noccupancy. T. D. Rosling and\nSon Ltd., phone 717.\nFOR RENT - A 3-ROOM AND\ngas-heated apt., only 1 block\nfrom Baker St., oft Hall St. Rent\n$40. P. E. Poulin, 582 Ward, ph.\n70.\nNEW 3-RM. APARTMENT WITH\nbath. Hot water and heat. Alio\n3-room cotlage, partly furnished.\nPhone 940-X. Close to bridge on\nRR 1.\nHOUSEKEEPING ROOMS IN THE\nAnnable Block. For information\ncall 70, P. E. Poulin or call in to\n582 Ward St.\n3 ROOM AND 2 ROOM FURNISH-\ned apartments. Adults only. Apply 204 Vernon. Ph. 1698 after 12\nnoon.\nWE HAVE A NICE, BRIGHT,\nspacious office in the Truck Terminus Bldg. For particulars,\nphone 77..\nAVAILABLE JUNE 1-3-RM. APT.\nwith bath, furn, or unfurn. Heat\nand water supplied. % block off\nBaker. Ph. 1184-Y, 414 Falls St.\nHOUSEKEEPING ROOMS - $18;\nsleeping rooms $15; 5-room suite,\n$50; 2-room suite $25, 705 Victoria St.\nWANTED - 2 BEDROOM, BATH,\nkitchen near lake for July or\nAugust. Phone 2018-X.\nGROUND FLOOR, 1 BEDROOM-\nfridge, stove, heated. Private entrance. Phone 542-R,\nTOR RENT - MODERN 4-ROOM\nheated apt., self-contained, private entrance. Ph. 1137-R.\nFOR RENT - 2 ROOM PARTLY\nfurnished house, $20 per mon.\nBox 1359 Nelson Dailv News.\nFOR RENT - UNFURN., SELF-\ncontained, heated flat Adults.\nPhone 394-R\nSMALL HEATED FURNISHED\nsuite, self contained. $40. Phone\n1542.\nNICE CLEAN SLEEPING ROOM,\nlight housekeeping if desired.\nSeparate entrance. Ph. 1286-L.\nSMALL APT. FOR BUSINESS\nlady. Close in. Box 1489, Daily\nNews.\nSMALL LAKESIDE COTTAGE -\npermanent tenants. Box 1488,\nDaily News.\nMODERN 3-ROOM APT., FRIG.,\nand electric stove, heated. Private entrance. Phone 2070-Y.\nHOUSEKEEPING ROOM FOR 2.\n__Phonejl05-L.\t\nr        \u25a0\"   -'MTE   FOR   RENT   -\n6410 Wasson.\t\n4-riau.u    APT.\nPRIVATE\ntrance. Close in. 412 Silica.\nEN-\n3   ROOM   SUITE   FOR   RENT\n610 Front Street.\nHOUSE   FOR  RENT.   NO  CHIL-\ndren. Ph. 1991-R after 4 p.m.\nFURN ISHED APT MAY TO\nSept. Adults. Ph  394-R evenings.\nFOR RENT - LARGE 2 \u25a0 ROOM\nfurnished apartment. Ph. 378-R-3\n3-BDRM.  HOUSE,  918 VICTORIA\nSt. between 10 a.m. and 1 p.m.\nSLEEPING ROOM WITH LAUN-\ndry done. Reasonable. Ph. 1231-Y\nFURNISHED,   HEATED   APART-\nment. 713 Victoria Street.\nAPARTMENT FOR RENT _ AP-\nply 1278.\n2-ROOM  COTTAGE FOR RENT.\nPhone 1685-Y-l.\nCOSY   HOUSEKEEPING   ROOM\nall found. 526 Josephine St.\nBEDROOM,    KITCHEN   FACILI\nties, close in. Phone 343-Y.\nBOATS AND ENGINES\n22-FT. CABIN CRUISER, 70 H.P.\nGrey marine motor, newly reconditioned, good as new. Boat\nhouse available. Phone 455-Y\nPETS. CANARIES. BEES\nWANTED - GOfJD HOME FOR\nspayed female Spitz type. Phone\n1099-X\nF\nCOLLIE PUPS. PH\n241-X-3.\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nFOOD STORE EQUIPMENT - 1\ncash register, electric; 2 Toledo\ncomputing scales; 2 grocery islands; 1 12' fruit and vegetable\ndisplay case, mirrored, with bins\nand lights; 1 steel fire safe; 2\nrefrigerated meat cases; 4 meat\nblocks; 1 Hobbard meat Cutter\nand grinder; 1 Hobbard sausage\nstuffer; 1 tender steak delicator,\n\"Berkel\"; oil heater; automatic\nlighting switch with clock and\ntransformer. Write Daily News,\nBox 1218, or call 601 Latimer St.,\nphone 455-Y.\nNEW TV SETS--HI-FI SETS\ntable radios, clearance prices.\n21\" Sylvania TV set, new guarantee, $259: GE car radio, $32;\n15-tube Hallicrafters communication receiver, like new, original\ncost $525, to clear $295. All merchandise on sale this Saturday.\nHurry down. Soren's TV and Ra-\ndio, 108 Baker St., phone 231.\nDEALERS IN ALL TYPES OF\nused equipment, mill, mine and\nlogging supplies, new and used\nwire rope, pipe and fittings;\nchain, steel plate and shapes.\nAtlas Iron & Metals Ltd., 250\nPrior St., Vancouver, B.C. \u2014\nPhone PAcific 6357.\n2500 EXCELLENT FOLDING\nchairs, banquet tables, chu\/ch\npews, beer parlor chairs, carpet,\nlinoleum and tiles. LaSalle, 945\nGranville St., Vancouver, phone\nMU 5-5034, night RE 3-3929.\nCAMERA 4X5 SPEED GRAPHIC\n\u2014speed light and extension light.\nA1J accessories plus enlarger. Excellent condition. $950 new. $450\ntakes all. Write P.O. Box 463.\nFRESH EGGS - STEADY SUP-\nply, case or % case lots. L. T,\nAbbott, Wynndel, B.C., phone\nEL 6-2476 evenings.\nLOOKING FOR GOOD USED RE-\nfrigerators and outboard motors?\nSee Jeffery Radio and Appliances\nLtd.   Nelson, B.C.\nSEVERAL CHESTERFIELD\nsuites (used) and a few chairs.\nKerr Apartments, phone 1278\nHEALTH   FOOD CENTRc OPEN\ndav anrl evenincs  924 Davies Si\nPORK FOR SALE - WHOLE OR\nhalf. Phone 714-R-l after 6.\n18-IN.    CUT    ROTARY    POWER\nmower, reasonable. Ph. 873-R.\nKurt SiiLt, - FROM ,-,00 TO M\ncu   vcls  ol too soil  Ph   1752-L-3.\nDOUBLE   BEDSTEAD   AND\nsmall dresser. Phone 398-R.\nELECTRIC  TABLE  SAW,   8   IN.\nblade. Phone 629-L.\nFOR SALE - RANGETTE, USED\n10 months. Phone 1140-L.\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nSERVICE STATION - STORE\nwith coffee shop and dwelling,\non % acre level land, highway\nNo. 3, doing good business. Price\n$23,500, with $6000 down and\nstock at inventory. For full particulars, T. D. Rosling and Son\nLtd., phone 717,        \t\nYOUR OPPORTUNITY FOR A\nbusiness of your own \u2014 Major oil\ncompany has service station to\nlease in Nelson area. Interested\nin young man with energy and\nambition and some capital. Financial assistance available. Ph.\nMr. Stanger, 1598.\nOWNER MUST SELL BY MAY 23.\nReason marriage. Entire business at sacrifice $1500 cash. Going concern. Enquire Mae's\nSnack Bar, Nelson.\nBUSINESS FOR SALE - COFFEE\nbar and billiard parlor. Priced\nfor quick sale, $6000 plus stock,\n$4000 down will handle. J. H.\nGrant, phone 35, Salmo, B.C.\nWANTED - LADY PARTNER IN\nbusiness. Going concern. Box 849,\nNelson Dailv News.\nSAWMILL FOR SALE\n2171-R.\nPHONE\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST - BULOVA WATCH WITH\ninscription thereon. Valued as\nkeepsake. Phone 779-L after 5.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nWANTED: 10 TO 12 GOOD MILK\ncows. Ayrshire or Holstein, freshened or to freshen. Write John\nHamon, Box 324. Trail, B.C.\nFOR SALE - 6 MOS. OLD HOL\nstein bull from our registered\nsire and best grade dam. M. D.\nMacKinnon, RR 1.\nFOR SALE - ONE 3-YEAR-OLD\nAyrshire bull. Louis Bourgeois\nCrescent Valley.\nFOR SALE: PIGS READY TO\nbutcher 20c a lb. A Townsend\n'Parks' Fruitvale. B C\nROOM AND BOARD\nROOM AND BOARD FOR WORK\ning man. Phone 674 R.\nMARKET TRENDS\nNEW YORK (API-Industrials\nFriday paced a moderate stock\nmarket gain which pushed the\nAssociated Press average to a\nrecord high.\nRails faltered after a brief continuation of Thursday's big rally.\nThe carriers and utilities finished\nthe day irregularly lower.\nGains by rubbers, tobaccos and\nchemicals combined with selective strength among steels, motors, electrical equipments and\nolher groups to give the market\na routine upturn.\nThe Associated Press 60 - stock\naverage rose 50 cents to a record\n$230.20, topping the May 14 high\nof $230.10.\nBoeing was the most active\nup   %   at   37%   on   42,100\n. .. Motor, up 1, was heavily Iraded following Thursday's\nmeeting of shareholders at which\nHenry Ford II expressed \"reasoned optimism\" and confirmed\nreports of the company's new\neconomy car; the Falcon.\nFord also announced offers to\npurchase at a substantial premium 775,628 shares of class A nonvoting stock of Ford Motor Company of Canada Ltd., its Canadian subsidiary, and also all outstanding class B voting stock that\nit does not own. This led to a delayed opening of these issues on\nthe American Stock Exchange as,\na flood of buy orders jammed the\nexchange facilities. The Amstock\nhad a net gain of 33% at 177%\nwhile the B stock rose 33% to\n184%.\nInternational Nickel was up\n%, Mclntyre Porcupine %, Aluminium Ltd. and Dome Mines %\neach, Hudson Bay Mining lost %,\nCanadian Pacific and Distillers\nSeagrams %.\nAmerican Slock Exchange\nprices were mixed. Canadian\nMarconi gained %, Shawinigan 7\/s,\nPreston East Dome 1-16 and Sapphire Petroleums 5-16. Fargo Oil\nlost %, Eureka and Molybdenite\n1-16.\nTORONTO (CP) - The stock\nmark*, led by Ford A, Friday\nan announcement Thursday night\nthat the pa-rent United States cctn-\npany of Ford Motor Company of\nDetroit has offered to buy 47.5\nper cent of the outstanding stock\nof Ford of Canada at $188 (U.S.\nfunds) a share or $1\"1 in Canadian currency.\nFord, A opened at 175 and\ntouched 176, an all-time high, in\nthe first hour. It. slowly settled\nto its closing price.\nVolume in the stock was extremely heavy at 4,675 shares.\nThe rest of the market advanced in most sections on index.\nIndustrials added a bit more than\na point to their index while base\nmetals gained a point. Western\noils were up one-quarter and golds\nlost a little ground although gains\nin the section outnumbered losses.\nThe final volume of 2,885.000\nshares was the second-heaviest\nthis week. Thursday's sales totalled 2:357,000.\nGolds were led by a one-point\ngain to 90 by Mclntyre. Coppers\nmoved up with Opemiska and\nCampbell Chibcugamau leading.\nSenior base metals were fractionally higher.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nH   S   ELMES, ROSSLAND, B C.\nAssayer    Chemist     Min Rep\nBLUEPRINTING, SUPPLIES\nDrafting Service and Supplies\nReproduction on paper and linen\nTRAIL BLUEPRINTING\nAND SUPPLY CO. LTD.\nSuite 18. 1234 Bay Ave., Phone 2358\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS\nRAY G. JOHNSON   B.A. Sc.\nB.C. Land Surveyor\n1015 Eighth St    Nelson   Ph   144-R\nBOYD C   AFFLECK, MEIC\nB.C Land Surveyor P Eng  (Civil)\n218 Gore St     Nelson    Phone 1238\nG W BAERG, B C.\nLand Surveyor\n373 Baker St    Nelson   Phone 11.8\nALEX CHEVELDAVE\nB.C. Land Surveyor\nSlocan Park, B.C.\nINSIISUNC!-.\nWAWAMKSA MUTUAL\nINSURANCE CO\nAgent,  S54  Ward Si\naMcHardy  Agencies  Ltd.\ncarved out its strongest advance\nin two weeks as most sections\nmoved higher amid heavier trading.\nFord A featured trading with a\n33%-point leap to 171% following\nWestern oils were featured by\nSapphire Petroleum which\njumped 43 cents to $1.49 on a\n155,150-share volume.\nIndex ixianges: Industrials up\n1.07 to 526.15; golds off .17 to\n94.17; base metals up 1,00 to\n174.48; western oils up .28 to\n128.12.\nMONTREAL (CP)-The Montreal and Canadian stock exchanges, with Ford of Canada A\nproviding the spark, bounced\nback from three straight declines\nand moved narrowly ahead Friday.\nFord A gained 33% at 171% following the announcement Thursday night that U. S. Ford offered\nto buy at least 540,000 shares of\nits Canadian subsidiary at $188 a\nshare in U. S. funds.\nThe issue opened at 176 and\nslipped back to 168 before closing at 171%, Turnover in the\nstock was exceptionally heavy.\nFive of the six stock indexes\nwere ahead.\nBesides banks, the only index\nlosers, the foods and base metals\nwere narrowly lower. In the foods\nLoeb declined % at 12% and\nSteinberg's was off % at 31.\nGainers included, pipelines, constructions, steels, papers and-\nbeverages.\nPenny mines and oils closed\nabout mixed.\nPEEBLES\nReal Bargains Today\n'56 Plymouth V8\nIn Beautiful  Blue  and White\nCombination. \u2014 Only $1459.\n'53 Pontiac Coupe\nOne Owner Really Looked\nAfter This  Beige Beautv.\nIt's Only $898.\n'54 Chrysler Windsor\nAutomatic. Ranio, Shiny Black.\n$1295.\n$59\u2014Plym. '41 Sedon\n$59\u2014Pontiac '41 Sedan\n$59\u2014Box for Dodge '\/2-Ton\nTRUCKERS   ATTENTION \u2014\nWe Have Several Good\nDUMP TRUCKS\nPriced From $500 Up to $1250\nPEEBLES\nhow's'tmlQt\nToday'* Insurance\nProblems\nAnswered by\nRobertson-Hilliard-\nCattell Realty Co. Ltd.\nQUESTION: I know that\nExtended (in Canada use\nBroad) Coverage insurance\npays for damage to the insured building bv vehicles,\nbut is vehicle damage to\nfences- and walks also covered?\nANSWER: Damage to walks\nand fences is not covered bv\nthat form of insurance.\nHave you an Insurance problem of your own? Come In\nor write us, we'll be glad to\nhelp you without charge or\nobligation of an; kind.\nYour Insurance\nHeadquarters\nFREE ADVICE\nRobertson-\nHilliard-\nCattell\nRealty Co. Ltd.\nPh. 1912-1913     4S6 Ward St.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, MAY 23, 1959\nRead the Classified Dally.\nBeacon's Better Buys\n1958 Meteor 8-Cyl. 4-Door Ranch .Wagon\nTwo-Tone Paint. Like New. Only 5000 Miles.\n1957 Meteor-Rideau 500 2-Door Hardtop\nTri-Tone Paint, Radio, New Tires.\n1957 Ford Sedan 6-Cyl.\nAutomatic Transmission. (Just traded in on a new Pontiac)\n1956 Plymouth Tudor Hardtop\nTwo-Tone Paint. Seat Covers.\n1956 Plymouth Tudor\nTwo-Tone Paint. Seat Covers  New Factory-Rebuilt Motor.\n1955 Buick Hardtop Coupe\nAutomatic Transmission, Two-Tone Paint.\n1955 Custom A50 Fordor\nSplit Front Seat, Leather Upholstery.\n1957 Ford-built Zodiac Fordor\nRadio. Two-Tone Paint.\n1954 Plymouth Club Coupe\nSeat Covers. New Factory-Rebuilt Motor.\n1954 Vauxhall\n1954 Meteor Tudor\n1953 Ford Fordor Sedan\nAutomatic Transmission.\n1953. Monarch Fordor Sedan\nRadio.   Two-Tone  Paint.   Visor,   Spotlight.\n1953 Pontiac Laurentian 4-Dr. Sedan\n1953 Pontiac Sedan\nTwo-Tone Paint.\n1953 Chevrolet\nAutomatic Transmission.\n1951 Ford Fordor\nRadio, Overdrive.\n1950 Chevrolet Tudor\nNew Paint.\n1950 Chevrolet Tudor\n1947 Mercury Sedan\nTRUCKS \u2022\n1957 Mercury 1-Ton\nChassis and Cab. Dual Rear Wheels and Spare.\n1954 Mercury 1-Ton Flat Deck\n1954 Ford Sedan Delivery\nRadio. Full-Width Seat.\nBEACON MOTORS LTD.\nPontiac - Buick\n701 BAKER-ST.\nVauxhaul \u2014 G.M.C. Dealers\nNELSON. B.C.\nREDS SEIZE TRAWLER\nTRELIENBORG, Sweden\n(Reuters)\u2014A Swedish trawler reported Thursday that it was arrested by a Soviet patrol boat\nduring a salmon-fishing trip in\nthe Baltic  and  its carch confis\ncated. The crew of the trawler\nMigo said that the craft was i\nfined 400 crowns ($80) for fishing-\nwithin the 12-mile limits claimed \u00ab\nby Russia, as well as losing a .\ncatch* valued at 3,000 crowns *\n($575),\nThe\na\nA\n:i\n.Big\nNew\nName\nin the\nSmall Car\nField is\nFIAT\n...\nMODELS  NOW  ON   DEMONSTRATION\nTrade - ins\nAccepted\nUSED  CAR  SPECIALS\n1949 Ford Sedan\n1951 Austin Sedan\nALLEN Motor Service\nDAVIES ST.\nEverything Your Car Requires\nNELSON, B.C.\nPHONE 1798      -.\n>Star Home\nif Fully landscaped with rockery, patio,\nfencing and sidewalks\nif Automatic oil heat 100,000 B.T.U.\nVery economical.\nif N.H.A. Quality Construction\nif Low interest rate on N.H.A. mortgage\nonly 5 per cent\nif 3-Bedroom Bungalow style\nMany more features which you must see for yourself.\nOpen for Inspection\n2 in A VQ  May 24th'2'5\nUl\\ 1 L?     May 25th, 2 to 5\nLocated at 810 Ninth St., Fairview Heights. Watch for\nOPEN   HOUSE Banner in Window.\nYou must see this home for the modest price\nand value received!\nwill \"handle\nREMEMBER \u2014 We will consider your present home equity for\nthe down payment.\nWilliam Kalyniuk   .\nAgencies\nREAL ESTATE BROKER\nPHONE 1777 NELSON, B.C. 534 JOSEPHINE ST.\nPLAIN TALK FROM PEEBLES\n1-\nThere's a Place for Shimmy .\nbut NOT on the Highway!\nRemember the \"Shimmy\" ... a wierd, hip-swinging dance '-\u2022\nthat originated somewhere in the Pacific islands? The same word\nwas used to describe the front wheel wobble that plagued the cars\nof the twenties, 1 saw a car doing that the other day . . . first   -\none for a long time. I've forgotten that cause of shimmy . . . loose \"\u2022\u25a0\nor worn king pins, I think.\nYou seldom if ever see shimmy on a modern car, but steer-   '\u2022'\ning and wheel alignment can be the\ncause of trouble ... and thats one \"\nof the points you should check when .;.\nshopping for a used car.\nTires   givfe   some   clues.   Uneven \u25a0\nwear, cuts  and  bruises  are danger  ,\nsignajs that should warn you to check\nsteering  and wheel  alignment' care-   ,\nfully.\nIf the car looks right on the lot.\ntry a hand off test on a quiet street.\nGet the car headed straight, then take\nboth hands off the wheel. If tho car\ntends to wander, there may be wheel\nalignment or steering troubles that\ncould cost you a stiff repair bilj after\na few thousand miles. If you still like .\u25a0,\nthe car. plav it safe. Have it well <\nchecked  by  a  competent  mechanic.\nYou won't find any cars on our \"\nlot with steering or wheel alignment\ntroubles. Every car has been tested, and adjusted . . . worn parts   '\nhave been replaced . . . and every car is ready to give you miles\nand miles of trouble-free, economical driving. Come in soon, look\nover our big stock of used cars \u2014 all makes, models and priced   .\nright. Thev are REALLY the best buys in the Kootenays today]  -\nHARRY D. HARRISON\nP. S.\u2014If you have a \"shimmy\" in your present car, our\n\"BEAR WHEEL ALIGNER EXPERT\" can fix It!\nGeneral Manages\nPEEBLES MOTORS LTD.\n'53   Boker Street    -    NEISOK\nTelephone .1090 \u25a0\nc   GOOD  PLACE..TO''\"6'E'AL':, 'V '<\u25a0\u25a0\n\u25a0i\n^^^^j^l\n wmmmw^mm\nfO\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, MAY 23, 1959\n.. .'and for the\nFINEST\nin\n\u00bb i\n(Prescription\nService -\nIt's\nWest Kootenay Track\nMeet Scheduled Today\nMileff Wins\nUnanimous\ndecision\nNEW YORK (AP) - Argentina's Alex Miteff closed Wayne\nBethea's left eye to a narrow slit\nFriday night oh the way to a unanimous decision over his. substitute opponent in a 10-round bout\nat Madison Square Garden. Miteff\nweighed 204%, Bethea zosvt.\nThere were no knockdowns in\nthe heavyweight match which was\nmarred by much tugging and shoving in the middle stages. Referee\nRuby Goldstein warned both men\nfor holding.   >\nBoth referee Goldstein and\njudge Frank Forbes scored it 7-3\nand jujdge Artie Aidala 5-4-1, all\nfor Miteff.\nBethea, a plodding 3%-to-l underdog, replaced high - ranked\nZora Folley who had beaten,Miteff in January Folley pulled out\nof the rematch when his doctor\nadvised him not to box for a month\nbecause of a cracked bone in his\nhand.\nThe 24-year-old Miteff now has\nan 18-3-1 record for 22 pro fights.\nBethea's career record now is\n19-10-2 for 31 starts.\nThe West Kootenay school track\nmeet, washed out by rain a week\nago, will go on today at the Civic\nCentre, weatherman permitting.\nMore than 300 entrants are expected to take part.\nGrand Forks and Greenwood\nhave dropped out this year, but\nthe Nelson junior high school and\nL. V. Rogers senior high, Salmo\njunior-senior high, Castlegar high,\nTrail junior high school and Trail's\nJ. Lloyd Crowe high, St. Joseph's,\nNelson, South Slocan Mount Sentinel high, Fruitvale junior high\nand Rossland high are expected.\nThe show will get started at 9:30\nPLAYMOR\nd n n c e\nTONIGHT\nSpotlight's On Trail's Popular\nMen of Note\n9:30 to 1 \u2014 Adm. $1.00\nSaturday Night is Dance Night\nEverywhere . .. Don't Miss AH\nthe Fnn . . . Enjoy Life.\nGO DANCING\nin the mflrning and should wind\nup about 3 in the afternoon.\nAdvance information is that Bina\nBrown of Trail, Colin Horwood,\nNelson, and Arvi Fellegrin of Castlegar are the performers most\nlikely to establish new records.\nMcElroys Bow\nTo Whiteleys\nIt's early in the season and even\nthe big-leaguers are having their\ntroubles. In Nelson's Babe Ruth\nLeague McElroy's ran into tough\nluck Thursday night when they\ndropped a 16-6 decision to White-\nleys.\nIt wasn't by any means a pitchers' duel. Jim Cain for Whiteleys\nallowed only five hits and walked\nnine, while Reg Bunt and Dayton\nKlein gave up nine hits and 10\nwalks for the Macs. Big difference\nwas in fielding with McElroy errors giving them their main\ntrouble.\nHeading into the third inning, it\nwas a tied-up ball game at 3-3, but\nthings came apart and Whiteleys\nscored six more runs and then\nadded five in the fourth. McElroys\nmade a comeback in the fifth with\nthree runs but it wasn't enough.\nThree Whiteley .players, pitcher\nJim Cain, Gordie Schmidt and\nGordon Dewar banged out doubles.\nRain Washes Out\nGolf Tourney\nMEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP)-A rain\nstorm swept the $25,000 Memphis\nOpen Golf Tournament Friday,\nwashing out all scores, including\na seven-under-par 63 posted by\nBob Goalby.\nThe washout came with 11 three'\nsomes still on the course. It was\na bitter blow fpr some, a break\nfor others. The 18 holes must be\nreplayed today. The delay moves\nthe final round to Monday.\nTom Veech, a rookie pro from\nMilwaukee, remains the leader by\nvirtue of his course record-equalling 63 fired in the first round.\nWhen the rains came, he was on\nthe 18th and two under par.\nThe blow was particularly severe for Goalby, of Crystal River,\nFla., and Pete Mamir of Buffalo,\nN.Y. Mazur's 30-34\u201464 was the\nbest round of his pro.career. His\nfirst round score was a mediocre\n72.\nGoalby was the third to equal\nthe competitive record over the\n6501-yard 34-36\u201470 Colonial Country Club course. It was the best\ntournament round of his career,\ntoo. His first round was a par 70.\nCary Middlecoff, the Memphis\npro, was among those who greeted\nthe stroke of weather with cheers.\nHis putter got out of control today\nand he added a 34-38\u201472 to his\nfirst-round 69.\nAl Balding of Toronto remained\namong the leaders with his 32-\n36\u201468 on the first day.\nARC SERVICE\n49 Ymir Road\nIS NOW OPEN\nHOUR\nSERVICE\nDAILY\nFor Motorist Convenience\nARC SERVICE\n49 Ymir Rd.\nPHONE 2193\nWilhelm Pitches Orioles\nTo 5*0\nBy The Canadian Press\nKnuckleballer Hoyt Wilhelm of\nBaltimore Orioles poured salt into\nthe wounds of the reeling last-place\nNew York Yankees Friday night,\nshutting them out 5-0 oif a one-\nhitter.\nWilhelm held the world champions hitless through the first seven\ninnings. Jerry Lumpe, leadoff man\nin the New Yorkers' eighth, slapped out a single which epoiled\nWilherm'e Chances of duplicating\nhis no-hitter against the Yanks on\nSept. 20.\nThe defeat kept the battered\nchamps glued to the cellar where\n(hoy tumbled Wednesday for the\nfirst time in 19 years.\nTRIBE SITS TJGHT\nThe Cleveland Indians held their\nfirst-place position in the American\nLeague with a 1-0 triumph over\nthe revived Detroit Tigers. The\nBoston Red Sox handed Washington's Senators their fifth straight\nsetback 4-3. Chicago White Sox\nkept on the heels of Cleveland by\nnipping Kansas City 2-1 behind the\nfour-hit pitching of Bob Shaw and\nTurk Lawn.\nIn the National League, Hank\nAaron led the first-place Milwau\nkee Braves to a 10-5 victory over\nPhiladelphia   Phillies.   Aaron  got\nanks\nCRICKET MATCH\nSET FOR SUNDAY\nFirst local cricket match will\nbe staged Sunday at the Civic\nCentre with Trail here. During the\nhalf-time break the air cadet inspection will be held on the field\nPCL STANDINGS\nPee Wee, Shrimp\nBall Today\nPee Wee and Shrimp League\nbaseball will go on at 10 a.m. today at Queen Elizabeth Park. A\nwork party for coaches, parents\nand other interested persons will\nbe held at 1 p.m. today and again\nat 9 a.m. Monday. Those coming\nout to help are asked by recreational director Ernie G*are to come\nequipped with rakes, hammers and\nsaws.\nSacramento   25 11\nSan Diego  20 16\nSpokane 3.  18 117\nPhoenix   18 19\nVancouver   15 17\nPortland   15 17\nSeattle   IS   22\n.604\n.556 5\n.514 9%\n.486 IVi\n.469 8\nhis 13th home run and added a\ndouble and.pair of singles to boost\nhis average to .468.\nIn other games, Pittsburgh Pirates beat Cincinnati Reds 4-3 on a\nninth-inning home run by Dick\nSchofleld and St. Louis Cardinals\nwon a 14-inning marathon from\nChicago Cubs *\u2022!. \\\nAt Baltimore, Wilhelm walked\nsix and struck out two in his masterful pitching performance: The\nOrioles knocked Bob Turley from\nthe mound with a four-run first inning, which included Gus Triandos' ninth home run of the year.\nBRINGS IN TED\nFrank Malzone doubled home\nTed Williams with the seventh-inning run for the Red Sox which\n-beat the Senators. Dick Gernert\nalso homered for the Red Sox\nand Jim Lemon and Reno Bertoia\nhit homers for the Senators.\nCleveland's'Garry Bell, and De\ntroit's Paul Foytack were engaged in a scoreless pitching duel until Vic Power and Minnie Minoso\nhit a pair of doubles in the seventh to provide the Indians' single\nrun,\nA double by Gino Cimoli in the\n14th inning broke the 1-1 deadlock at Chicago and a walk by\nBill Henry,, the losing pitcher,\ngave the Cards a second insurance\nrun. Jim Brosnan was the winning\npitcher.\nThe Los Angeles Dodgers shot\nSan Francisco out of second place\nin the National, beating them 2-1\non Don Drysdale's nifty six-hitter\nand Gil Hodges' single with two\non in the thirteenth inning.\nRobinson, Basilio\nBoth Want Title Bout\nNEW YORK (AP) - Both Sugar\nRay Robinson and Carmen Basilio\nsaid Friday they wanted to fight\nfor the world middleweight title.\nThey made their statements at a\nhearing before the tfew York\nState Athletic Commission considering removal of Robinson's title.\nThe hearing was adjourned until\nWednesday.\nTempers rose with the temperature in Hie crowded meeting room\nas the lawyers bickered with one\nanother and with the witnesses.\nMartin Machat, Robinson's lawyer, introduced a new contract for\nthe Sept. 21 fight in Philadelphia.\nThe commission had declared a\nprevious contract invalid at its\nmeeting last Wednesday. Under\nthe new contract Basilio would receive a $225,000 minimum guarantee and Robinson 45 per cent.\n469 8 I Machat spent most of the after-\n.371 UVi | noon  questioning Basilio     as to\nAgar Says Canadians\nEnd Season in Black\nVERNON (CP) - George Agar,\nmanager,- coach and sometimes\nplayer, with Vernon Canadians of\nthe OSHL, doesn't claim to be a\nmagician. But some here believe\nhe must be in view of his statement\nThursday night before a civic banquet recognizing the club's achievement in reaching the Allan Cup\nfinal this spring.\nCanadians, Agar said, will be\nabsolutely free of debt when the\nclub's financial statement is released next Week.\nThis statement was considered\nremarkable in the face of the'financial losses experienced in the\nWestern Canada championship\nplayoffs en route to the Allan Cup\nfinal and in the final, in which\nVernon lost to the champion Whitby Dunlops at Toronto.\nAgar said following that series\nthat the club had gone thousands\nof dollars in debt financing the\nplayoff trips.\nHis newest statement also was\nconsidered remarkable in view of\nthe crippling lpsses suffered by the\nPSHL's other three clubs this\nseason\u2014one of the poorest, financially, in the league's history.\nKelowna Packers went $7000 in\nthe hole. Penticton-Vs lost $13,000\nand Kamloops accumulated debts\ntotalling $10,000, some of which was\ncarried over from previous seasons.\nAgar praised the co-operation of\nhis players, but he didn't say how\nthe club had cleared off its debts\nThree years ago, Canadians became the first senior club in Canada to operate on a co-operative\nsystem whereby players split any\nprofits at the end of the season.\nAt the start of last season, Agar\nhanded the franchise back to the\ncitizens of Vernon, but when the\nelected executive experienced financial disaster, the club rfturned\nto the co-op basis.\n\u2022whether he already had signed a\ncontract to box Gene Fullmer for\nthe ti^le, in case Robinson's crown\nis vacated. All Basilio would say\nwas, \"no contract is on file with\nthe New York commission for me\nto fight. I'm free to fight Robinson.\"\nRobinson flared back at Melvin\nKrulewitch, commission chairman\nwhen he was being questioned.\n\"I'm not going to argue with\nyou,\" he said. \"Go ahead and take\nthe title away. You have been trying to take it away right along.\"\nThe commission is considering\nvacating Robinson's title apparently because he declines to' de\nfend it. The National Boxing As\nsociation has already taken the\ntitle from Robinson.\nFrick Certain\nThird League\nIn Oiling\nNEW YORK (AP) - Baseball\ncommissioner Ford Frick said Friday talk of a third major league\nwas \"no nebulous thing.\" Ho said\nhe was certain that such a league\nwas being organized.\nSome time ago Frick said he\nbelieved baseball would have a\nthird major league within five\nyears. \"I still stand by that,\" he\nsaid. \"It might be sooner. It all\ndepends. At the present time I\nhave no meetings scheduled, actual or tentative, with anybody\nabout the third league.\"\nAccording to the rules, spelled\nout in Columbus, the third league\nwould have to apply to Frick at\nleast 10 months before it planned\nto operate. That would leave only\na few weeks before the deadline\nfor operation in 1960. As ball parks\nwould have to be built, players\nacquired and numerous other deals\ncompleted, 1961 or 1962 probably\nwould be the earliest possible date\nfor operation.\nFrick said the qualifications for\nbecoming a major league, first\nlisted in 1951 when the Pacific\nCoast League was talking of going\nbig time, had been altered somewhat.\nUnder the old rules, a city had\nto have a park with a capacity of\n25,000. Under the new rules, it\nmust be committed to build such\na park.\nSEATTLE (CP) - Emil Sick\nowner of Seattle Rainiers of the\nPacific Coast Baseball League,\nsaid Friday a proposal for a third\nmajor league will \"have to be\ndeveloped a little more before I\ncan take it seriously.\"\nQueens Fall lo\nBeavers (-4\nNelson Queen's just aren't experiencing good luck these days\nThey dropped another game In the\nWest Kootenay fastball league\nhere Friday night, and then only\nin the last inning after having held\na lead over Montrose Beavers all\nthe way up to the wire.\nFinal score was 6-4 for the\nBeavers, who shoved home three\ncounters in the last inning on two\nwalks, an error and a double by\nMontrose's Paugh.\nUp until that disastrous ninth\nQueen's looked headed for a win\nas MacFarland, who chucked the\nfirst four innings, and Malinkow-\nski scattered hits to keep Montrose\nnicely bottled up.\nBrown went the route for Montrose, giving up eight hits, but having no serious trouble except in\nthe sixth when Queen's put together four hits for three runs. It\nwas a tight game which established the fact this is going to be a\ntough league for anyone's money,\nand that Queen's just need a bit\nof luck to be the team to beat.\nScore by innings:\nMontrose    000 110 103\u20146\nQueen's    001003 000\u20144\nTime for\nSTRAW\nHATS\nIt looks like we're due for\nhot weather . . . keep a\ncool   head  in a\nNew STRAW HAT\n\u2022 New Stylet\n\u2022 New Colon\n$3.25* to $5.00\nAt\nEMORY'O\nLTD.     \u00b0\nTHE  MAN'S  STORE\nBritish Soccer\nTeam Wins (-1\nTORONTO (CP) - West Brom-\nwich Albion Friday night defeated\nthe Ontario All-Stars 6-1 in an\nexhibition soccer game at Varsity\nStadium before some 7500 fans.\nThe English League First Division team scored four goals in the\nfirst half and two in the second\nin the first game of their Canadian tour.\n\" Inside left Brian Whitehouse and\nleft half Bobby Robson were top\nscorers for West Bromwich, each\nscoring two goals. Other Albion\nscorers were Ronnie Allen and\nDerek Hogg. Mike Campo scored\nfor Ontario.\nNoxon Cup Play\nOpens Sunday\nMrs. Eddie McGregor of Bonnington, winner for the last two\nyears, will be in the defending\nrole when Noxon Cup play opens\nSunday among women golfers at\nthe Nelson Golf and Country Club.\nIn the three-quarter handicap\nevent, two nine-hole matches will\nbe played Sunday and the tournament will be completed the following Sunday.\nOpening draws afe:\n9 a.m.\u2014Mrs. Bud Cooper vs Mrs.\nG. Miller, Mrs, W. G. Hamilton vs\nMrs. D. M. Disney; 9:10 a.m.\u2014\nMrs. W. N. Ferguson vs Mrs. C.\nLocatelli, Mrs. C. H. Blunt vs Mrs\nL. M. McBride; 9:20 a.m.\u2014Mrs. W.\nOlson vs Mrs. W. C. Wicken, Mrs.\nMcGregor vs Mrs. D. Koehle\n1 p.m.\u2014Miss Betty Duckworth vs\nMrs. B. Hesketh, Miss Lillian Hoc\nkey vs Mrs. J. Koehle.\n\u25a0\u25a0mJllJUtaMaH^MIMIIlftattl\nORDER NOW 11\nGRADUATION\ngift photos   IJj\nBe the first in your set to have\na portrait made in cap and\ngown.\nPhone or Call Now for Appointment\nIxeTi wick, s p\u00b0rtmit studh\n\"PORTRAITURE OUR SPECIALTY\"\nBaseball Scores\nNational League\nSt. Louis\n000 100 000 000 02\u2014 3 8 1\nChicago\n000 000 001 000 00\u2014 1 9 1\nBlaylock, Brosnan (1-3) (9) and\nH. Smith; Bobbie, Elston (8) Henry (\n(7-2) (10) and S. Taylor. '\nCincinnati     .   102 000 000\u2014 3   8 0\nPittsburgh        200 010 001- 4   9 1\nPurkey, Jeffcoat (0-1)  (9)   and\nBailey;   Law   (4-1)   and  Burgess.\nHRs: Cincinnati\u2014Lynch (7). Pitts- {\nburgh - Scholfield (1).\nMilwaukee        330 210 010\u201410 16 11\nPhiladelphia     000 001 211- 5 12 0;\nBurdette   (7-2),   and   Crandall:\nRoberts (2-3), Phillips (2), Meyer,\n(5), Robinson (8) and Hegan. HRs: |\nMilwaukee\u2014Aaron  (13).  Philadel-:\nphia\u2014Freeze (4). j\nDetroit        000 000 000\u2014 0   4 ll\nCleveland   ....   OOO 000 lOx- 1   2 0 j\nFoytack, (1-6) Narleski (8) and I\nBerberet, Wilson (8); Bell (4-2)1\nand Naragon.\nWashington      201 000 000\u2014 3   9 2 I\nBoston ..  .        020 010 lOx- 4 11 0\nPascual (3-4) and Fitzgerald; De- \u25a0\nlock (5-1) and Daley. HRs: Wash-'\nington \u2014 Bertoia (7), Lemon (101.\nBoston \u2014 Gernert (6).\nNew York . 000 000 01KW 0 1 0\nBaltimore        400 010 OOx\u2014 5   7 1\nTurley, 3-5 Coates (1), Sturdi-\nvant (5) Kucks (8) and Berra:\nWilhelm (6-) and Triandos. HR:\nBaltimore\u2014Triandos (9).\nChicago       101 000 000-' 2  7 3\nKansas City     000 001 000- 1   4 3\nShaw, 4-0), Lown, (9) and Lollar;\nGrim (4-4) and House.\nS. Fran. 000 000 001 000 0\u20141  6  2\nL.A  000 001 000 000 1\u20142  5  0\nAntonelli, Worthington (1-2) (12)\nand Landrith; Drysdale (4-4).and\nPignatano. *\nPACIFIC COAST LEAGUE\nPhoenix 6, Salt Lake City 7 .\nSacramento 4, San Diego 6   '\nPortland 8, Vancouver 8.\nSeattle 3, Spokane 1.\nIs Your\nFIX THE\nMIX-UP\nCONTEST\nEntry in for Series 3?\nALL ENTRIES FOR THE   THIRD SERIES MUST\nNOT BE  IN  LATER THAN  SUNDAY.\nHAIGH\nTRU-ART\nBeauty Salon\nPhone 327\n576 Baker St\nHave lhe Job  Don* Right I\nVIC GRAVEC\n1        LIMITED        **\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nStop in for KODACHROME\nMovie\nFilm\nall types ... all sizes\nYour Rexall Pharmacy\nCITY DRUG\npick your playground\nthen .. .\nGo GREYHOUND!\nHow you travel can add as much enjoyment to your holiday\nas where vou travel! Once you've picked your playground \u2014\nplan on a relaxing trip all the way with Greyhound! By\nGreyhound you see more \u2014 save more \u2014 get more comfort\nper mile! Ask your agent about the convenient schedules, heart-\nof-town arrivals and departures, low bargain fares.\nEntries May Be Left\nat the Editorial Department\nSunday From\n4 p.m. to 8 p.m.\nSAMPLE BARGAIN FARES FROM NELSON:\nRound Trip\nVANCOUVER   $ 28.80\nPORTLAND    $ 29.00\nSAN FRANCISCO   $ 54.90\nLOS ANGELES  $ 64.90\nTORONTO  $ 98.78\nNEW YORK  $134.98\nWatch Monday's,\nedition of the Nelson Daily News for Series 4\nGet jull information\nfrom your nearest\nGreyhound Agtsst.\nAsk Mm, too, about\nGreyhound's Vacation\nPlanninff Service.\nGREYHOUND\nTHE BIG BUY IN HOLIDAY TRAVEL\na^a^_\n\"fa*^\"\u2014    '  -  \u25a0   \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\n, -fi; A riferiAsv,;:;\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1959_05_23","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0432991","@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":"1959-05-23 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1959-05-23 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\/1.0432991"}