{"@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":"2023-06-12","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1960-04-21","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0433379\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" (*\u00bb\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0*-.,\"''\nI    -. ..-p.. \u2022'\u25a0'..\u25a0..I\nV . .      \u25a0 .       -,.;-    \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0,<>.\u25a0\u25a0:\u25a0   \u25a0       \"\nI\n\"      ~ ' \u25a0\u25a0    \u25a0 \u2014\u25a0 .. I...-, ... i     .      .    .   \u25a0\u00ab;!j^yiffij^)Jy:\u00bb}^i;i.w,i^ i   .    , i      i.'llwlglP\nI0&\n*<ro\nThe Interior's\nLargest Daily Newspaper   J& \u25a0   *o\u00abff v^.\nMareh Daily Average Pret\u00bb Run \u2014 9149.     ^VUg^^AlHo^1*\nPublithrto-jaog ?*^0o?oj nnsportation, government, financial and trading centre of the Kootenay-Columbia area\nWEATHER  FORECAST\nKootenay: Cloudy with sunny\nperiods and scattered afternoon\nshowers Thursday. Winds light occasionally southerly 20. Low and\nhigh at Cranbrook 28 and SO, Crescent Valley 32 and SO.\n35M\u00a3\nVol.57\n**ZZ\nNELSON, B. C, CANADA\u2014THURSDAY MORNING. APRIL 21. 1960\nNot Mora Than 7c Daily, 10c Saturday\nNo. 275\nVenezuelan Forces Swiftly\nBottle Up Rebel Insurgents\nCARACAS, Venezuela (AP) -\nBacked firmly by Venezuela's political,  labor  and  military  lead-\nSANTA CLAUS NOT\nWELCOMED IN\nVICTORIA BY PTA\nVICTORIA (CP) - The coming\nof Santa Claus may warm \u25a0 the\nhearts of a businessmen but it\ndoesn't evoke the same enthusisam\namong the 4,500 Parent Teacher\nAssociation members in the Greater Victoria area.\nThe council has asked the Chamber of Commerce to use \"its influence in requesting businessmen not\nto play up Santa Claus at Christmas.\"\n\"We feel it isn't necessary to play\nup Santa Claus weeks before\nChristmas. It contributes to the\nover-excitement of children and is\nharmful to them.\n\"If people feel it is harmful to\nchildren they should not let them\nln the stores,\" said Aubrey Kent.\ners, tihe government of President\nRomuio Betancourt moved swiftly\nWednesday to crush a rebellion\nnear the Colombian border. Popular demonstrations cheered the\npresident's actions amd jeered at\nthe rebellion.\nThe rebels were led by a dis.\ngruntld Venezuelan general. 'They\ncrossed the border from Colombia\nseized the mountain city of Sail\nCristobal ami tired to start a\nnation-wide revolution. They failed.\nTiie government sent planes and\ntroops against insurgent positions\nand said rebels were quickly bottled up.\nThe interior ministry said Wednesday night there was street\nfighting in San Cristobal but the\ngovernment expected all rebel\nactivity to be snuffed out within\nhours.\nTANKS ADVANCING\nA tank column supported by\nhowitzers and infantrymen was\nsaid to be advancing toward San\nCristobal for what was described\nas a final attack on the rebel\nstronghold.\nInterior  Minister  Luis  Augusta\nDOLLAR LOWER Dubuc said the street fighting in\nNEW YORK (CP) \u2014 Canadian the city was between rebel troops\ndollar off 1-32 at $1.03 39-64 in trying to enforce martial law and\nterms of U.S. funds. Week ago civilian groups backing the gov-\n$1.03 9-16. I ernment.\nCABINET RESIGNS\nSeen as Face Saving Move\nAccepting Blame for Riots\nSEOUL (CP) \u2014 The 12-m\u00a9mbar South Korean cabinet presented its-resignation this\nmorning to President Syngman Rhee.\nTheir action was reported to have followed a decision to assume responsibility for\nthe violent anti-government student riots this week.\nThere was no immediate confirmation whether the 84-year-oJd president returned unopposed to his fourth terms as president March 15 in an election the students claim was\nrigged, had accepted the resignations.\nThe cabinet ministers resigned en bloc.\nThe move was viewedhere as a possible attempt to have the cabinet accept blame\nfor the harsh military measures used to suppress civilian demonstrations protesting the conduct of the recent elections.\nRhee's government has been officially rebuked by the United States and criticized\nby   other   countries   for\nHEADLINE MAKER. In bobbysox and ponytail hairdo is a demure looking 17-year-old Beverly Aadland, the\nlate Errol Flynn's protege and cause of the most sensational juvenile delinquency case io rock Los Angeles.\nBeverly, here accompanied by Sgt. Shirley Maxwell of\nthe juvenile detail and Sgt. Jim Page, has been held in\ncustody since the accidental shooting of William Stanciu\nin her bedroom.\nMrs. Aadland Boasts About\nBeverly's Hollywood Antics\ndemocratic handling of civilian demonstrators.\nPresident Rhee, as the continuing executive power, is not subject to the ups and downs of cabinet membership. A cabinet resignation might enable hkn to save\n[ace by shifting the target from\nhimself to his departed minister.\nTROOPS KEEP GUARD\nHeavily armed troops and police kept a vigilant guard while\nguiet but uneasy Seoul counted\nits dead.\nThe government put Bhe death\ncount from Tuesday's rioting at\n115 and it seemed likely to reach\nor pass 150.\nCabinet resignations have been\noffered several times in the past.\nThey are regarded as a face-saving move that does not necessarily, involve any policy change.\nThe U.S. state department has\ndeclared the anti. - government\ndemonstrations which nearly\nbrought revolution reflected popular dissatisfaction over the conduct of the March elections.\nKMee' has promised to investigate, and correct \"major causes\nof discontent.\" :.\nBut there were no major battles on the soaiq, of those, which\nerupted Tuesday, causing soma. 80\ndeaths and injuries to 1,000per-\nSeek Understanding\nAt Meet-de Gaulle\nOTTAWA   (CP)\nCharles de Gaulle of France is\nhoping that a detente\u2014cessation\nof strained relations \u2014 between\nEast and West will be achieved\nat next month's summit meeting\nin Paris.\nThat is the salient point that\nemerged from a statement issued\nWednesday by Prime Minister\nDiefenbaker on talks which he\nhad Tuesday with the French\nleader, now in Quebec City.\nThe statement indicated that\nGen. de Gaulle is not expecting\nany major break - throughs on\nEast-West issues at the summit\nconference but welcomes it.as an\nopportunity to lay the basis for\nunderstanding.\nWANTS BETTER CLIMATE\n\"The president was most hopeful that the conference would produce a climate of detente in\nwhich such difficult problems as\nthose .presented 'by the situation\nPresident \u25a0 in Berlin,  the partition of Uer-\nsons. It was the worst internal \\ WenII-Gfell    To\nImport Labor\nCharges Winch\nLOS ANGELES (AP)\u2014Officials\nsay they have a tape recording\nin which Beverly Aadland's\nmother boasts her daughter had\naffairs with two major film actors, a movie producer and two\nmillionaires.\nBut, says the district attorney's\ne f f i c e, Hollywood personalities\nwon't be questioned about it because there's nothing to support\nFlorence A a d 1 a n d 's rambling\nclaims.\nBeverly, 17, was the late Errol\nFlynn's final fling. She has been\nfn custody since a young man-\nabout-Hollywood was fatally shot\ntn her bed. Detectives say the\nslaying of William Stanciu, 21,\nwas accidental.\nMrs. Aadland, 53, faces a hearing next Monday on charges she\ncontributed to her daughter's delinquency.\nInvestigators made the tape recording public Tuesday. They\ntold this story:\nLee Dimon was wired with a\nminiature recorder by district attorney investigators after the 26-\nyear-old Hollywood man reported\nthat Mrs. Aadland wanted to hire\nhim to beat up one. of Beverly's\nadmirers.\nThe district attorney's office\nsaid that at one point of the\nhour-long recording Mrs. Aadland\nsays her daughter loved Flynn\nand \"still cries about him at\nnight.\"\nuprising since the South Korean :\nrepublic  was  founded  12 years\nago.\nCONDOLENCE MONEY\nPresident Syngman Rhee's beleaguered government Wednesday 'night promised to pay \"token condolence money\" of 500,000\nhwan (about $750) tp the family\nof each demonstrator killed in the\nbattles with police. The money\nwill be paid as bhe bodies are\nhanded over.\nRhee pledged in a statement\nWednesday that a thorough investigation of the demonstrators'\ngrievances would be held as soon\nas order was restored.\nThe 85-year-old president has\nbeen under fiery criticism since\nhis election March 15 to a fourth\nterm in office. Demonstrators\nhave claimed the election of Rhee\nand his running mate, Vice-President Lee Ki Poon-g, was rigged.\nUnder pressure from his own\npeople and Washington, Rhee announced:\n\"The first task is the full restoration of law and order so that\nthe necessity for martial law no\nlonger exists.\n\"Once civil processes are back\nto normal, the government will\ndevote its maximum energy to\nthe investigation of these disturbances. Those who are guilty can\nbe assured of punishment. Those\nwith major grievances can be\ncertain of redress.\"\nSbmL CtfwsoiL\nBy PYRAMUS\nGosh, what a mess the purple-\npeople eaters have made on the\nnewly green lawn so neatly kept\nby parks men at the old street\ncorner terminal!\nWe saw -hamburger wrappings,\nmilk shake containers, straws, potato chip plates, chocolate bar\nwrappers, serviettes and what-have-\nyou \u2014 even a discarded bridge\nticket \u2014 scattered gaily all over\none particular square of the lovf\/y\nslope of the lawn above the railroad track.\nPleeza eata da hamburgers, but\npleeza clean upa da messl\nSEEN IN PASSING-boug Carlton, Dale Euerby, Richie Koblca-\nvlch and John McKinnon gravely\ncontemplating work being done by\nBernle Hummelink and Dave Fer.\nrier, who were planting silver\nmaple trees around the corner at\nNelson Avenue and Behnsen streets\n. . . Bob Steed riding his bike up\nKokanee Avenue . . . Colin Kirk\nand Ted Towgood .playing marbles\non Fourth Street.'\nBell Hop \u2014 \"Did you ring, sir\nIrate Guest\u2014\"No. I was'tolling.\nI thought you were dead.\"\nDiefenbakers Off\nOTTAWA (CP) - Prime Minister and Mrs. Diefenbaker fly to\nMexico to return the state visit\npaid to Canada last October by\nPresident Lopez  Mateos. \u2022\nDuring the two-day and three-\nnight visit, Mr. Diefenbaker will\nmake  four  speeches and give  a\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Outspoken CCFer Harold Winch said Wednesday he has heard that Swedish\nindustrialist Axel Wenner-Gren is\nrecruiting low-paid European labor\nfor work in the Rocky Mountain\nTrench development in British Columbia.\nMr. Winch, member of parliament \u2022 for Vancouver East, told a\nmeeting of more than 550 unemployed workers here that a Danish friend had reported Wenner-\nGren interests have been advertising in Danish papers for tradesmen.\n\"And the rates are nowhere near\nthe trade union rates in B.C.,\" Mr.\nWinch added. Secretary Pat O'Neal\nof the B.C. Federation of Labor also told of advertising campaigns\nin Holland and Denmark.\n\"We must do all we possibly can\nlo prevent it,\" Mr. O'Neal said.\nAttorney-General Bonner, who is\nalso trade and industries minister,\ncommented later in an interview\nthat the memorandum of agree\nment between the B.C. government\nand Wenner-Gren B.C. Develop\nment Company stipulates prefer\nence shall be given to B.C. labor\nand materials.\nNO LABOR SHORTAGE\nHe thought the report was a\n\"malicious rumor,\" adding:\n\"There is no scarcity of B.C.\ntradesmen and I am quite certain\na corporation incorporated in the\nprovince, such as Wenner-Gren\nB.C. Development, would not for a\nmoment contemplate such a practice.\"\nmany . . . could continue to be\nthe subject of further discussions\namong the Big Four powers,\"\nthe statement said.\n\"He was hopeful that some\nagreement might be reached on-\nthe reciprocal control of missiles\nand of strategic aircraft capable\nof carrying atomic weapons.\n' \"Such an agreement might include an. undertaking by each\nside to ban the use of missiles\nand planes as vehicles for nuclear devices and authority to.\neach side to inspect the activities\nof the other.\"\nGAVE STAND ON TESTS\nThe statement said Mr. Diefenbaker took the opportunity to re-\naffirdm the Canadian government's opposition to further nuclear weapons tests. Canada favors . the -cessation .of tests with\nor withoul. inspection arrange-1\nrnsnts......). \u25a0 ... .\nPresident: de Gaulle was represented as hopeful that some form\nof East-West agreement can be\nreached on assistance to underdeveloped countries.\n\"President de Gaulle was most\ncordial and frank in his private\nconversations with me, as well as\nwith members of the cabinet,\"\nsaid Mr. Diefenbaker.\n\"In the course of a tour d'hori-\nzon of die international situation,\nhe put forward in the clearest\nterms his views and hopes on the\nmethods of achieving world\npeace.\"\nGNASHVIUE^An elderly man threatens a placard-carrying\nNegro with a shovel during a student demonstration against\nlunch counter segregation in Nashville, Tenn.\nMore Arrests in\nS*A* by Police\nVive de Gaulle\nEchoes Quebec\nQUEBEC (CP) - There were\nexcited cries of \"Vive de Gaulle\"\nand \"Vive la France\" Wednesday\nas French President Charles de\nGaulle paid a visit to this capital\nof French Canada.\nThe shouts came from a crowd\nof about 1,000 lined up along St.\nLouis Street where Gen. de Gaulle\nplaced a wreath at La Croix du\nSacrifice, which stands almost in\nthe shade of the high stone wall\nsurrounding the old section of the\ncity.\nThere were cries of delight when\nthe French leader stepped into the\ncrowd to shake hands with anyone\nnear him. He bussed a red-headed\nbaby girl on the cheek as she was\ncarried along on her father's\nshoulders.\nThe ceremony at the cross \u2014\nwhich commemorates those who\nfell during the First World War \u2014\ntook place 35 minutes after de\nGaulle arrived from Ottawa where\nhe opened his Canadian tour Monday.\nJOHANNESBURG (Reuters )-\nPolice and soldiers arrested another 550 persons in raids on African townships Wednesday, breaking the back of a stay - away-\nfrom-work campaign.\n\"We must admit the campaign\nhas been a flop,\" said a former\nofficial of the banned African National Congress,\nWith most workers ignoring Hie\nwork boycott call, police waited\nuntil they left for their jobs and\nthen raided the townships in armored cars looking 'for \"undesirables.\"\nMeanwhile, it was announced\nPrime Minister Hendrik Var-\nwoerd is recovering from the attempt to assassinate him April 9\nand will resume his duties within\na week.\nWednesday's arrests, in townships outside Capetown, Port Elizabeth and East London, brought\nto at least 1,200 the number rounded up in raids since Monday.\nSEIZE WEAPONS\nAt East London, 200 police\nraided townships for the third\nstraight day, detaining 345. About\n140 were arrested at Port Elizabeth. Another 50 were held at\nLanga Township near Capetown\nand a quantity of weapons were\nseized.\nAll main centres in South Africa reported Wednesday that\nAfrican workers were back at\ntheir jobs.\nDefence headquarters in Pretoria announced that university\nstudents will be released from\nmilitia service Sunday.\nAt Vereeniging, a police captain reported that police opened\nfire without being ordered to do\nso when 67 Africans were killed\noutside Sharpeville police station\nMarch 21.\nCapt. H.G. Theron told a judicial inquiry into the shootings that\n\"things went very quickly\" after\nhe arrived at Sharpeville with 25\nother policemen to find a swelling crowd of 10,000 to 15,000 Africans.\nIn Capetown, Foreign Minister\nEric Louw told the House of Assembly that Verwoerd is expected to be able to give his full\nattention to affairs of state in\nabout a week, but he might have\nto perform his duties in his bedroom.\nLouw said Verwoerd is making\ngood progress at Pretoria Hospital in recovering from bullet\nwounds in Hie cheek and ear suffered while he attended an a-gri-\ncultural fair at Johannesburg.\n*David Pratt, the white farmer\narrested for the shooting, has yet\nto be formally charged or appear\nin court.\nPoison Meal May\nHalt Young Escapee\nSALEM. Ore. (AP) - Police\nwere searching Tuesday night for\na heavily armed escaped prisoner\nwho may have cooked himself a\npoisoned meal  during his  flight.\nState police said Ronald Fred\nWilson, 22, who escaped from\nthe state prison last Saturday\nmade himself at home in an unused shed on a tree farm south\nof here.\nVomit on the floor indicated he\nhad eaten poisoned wheat left in\nthe shed for use against field\nmice. It was described by police\nas \"very potent against rats and\nmice.\"\niHiiiiimiiiiiiiiiimiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiin\nWILD WEST\nBACK EAST\nDETROIT (AP) \u2014 The first\nman in nigh on to 80 years was ,.\nconvicted Wednesday in Wayne   '\n(Detroit) county of cattle rustling.\nA non-cowboy jury took'two\nhours to convict Floyd W. Hal-\nford of what would cost him\nfive years in prison and a\n$2500 fine. Once upon a time,\nthough, he could have been\nhanged.\nHalford was convicted of\ngrand larceny, but Judge Neal\nFitzgerald told the jury:\n\"This is as close as you come\nto the old west outside of television. This case really adds\nup to cattle rustling.\"\nLawmen brought Halford into\ncourt after a hereford disappeared from the range on\nHenry McMullen's farm in suburban Belleville.\nTrie lawmen charged Halford\nand Jack D. Sweeney killed the\ncritter while it was grazing\nand butchered it on the spot.\nSweeney, deputies said, hightailed it after his arraignment,\nforfeiting his bond, and hasn't\nbeen seen since.\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin\nJOBLESS HITS\nSEASON HIGH\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014. Canada's unemployment rose to 566,000 inmid.\nMarch amid signs that the jobless\ntotal was at or near its annual\npeak.\nThe figures announced Wednesday by the government showed \u00bb\nrelatively small rises of $11,000\nfrom mid-February's 858,000 Unemployed.\nThis increase was only \u00ab fraction of the additions to jobless rolls\nin the three previous months.\nMarch normally is the high water\nmark for unemployment before the\nspring pick-up in business.\nThe March unemployment figure, however, was 41,000 higher\nthan a year earlier, due mainly\nto a growth of 157,000 persons in\nthe labor force during the 13\nmonths.\nNew jobs took up' nearly three-\nquarters of this expansion in the\nlabor force. Employment at the\nMarch 19 survey date was 5,668,000,\nan increase of 116,000 from a year\nearlier and 5000 higher than at mid-\nFebruary.\nThe jobless total represented 8.1\nper cent of the March labor force\nof 6,234,000. This compared wtih\n10-per-cent unemployment when the\npost-war peak of 597,000 was reached in March, 1958. One year ago\nMarch unemployment was 8.6 per\ncent of a labor force of 6,077,000.\nNewspapers Chide U.S. Over Coins\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nCanadian newspapers have not\nworked up any particular indignation over a United States paper's suggestion, that Americans\nspend their vacations at home to\navoid the Canadian discount on\nU.S. currency.\n\u2022 A Canadian Press survey.of reaction in this country shows papers pointing out that the discount . rate is set in the U.S.\nmoney markets and also noting\namiafbly that in most parts of\nthe U.S. Canadians can't even\nspend their money despite it's\nr\/remhim value.\nWhat impelled the Detroit\nTimet' f r o n t-page suggestion\nMonday was the recent decision\nof Canadian, banks to discount\nU.S. coinage, previously accepted\nat  face  value  though  paper\nmoney was discounted.\n\"Smacks not only of cupidity\nbut also usury,\" The Times said.\n\"Aw, c'mon, fellas, don't get\nsore,\" admonished the Ottawa\nCitizen. \"It's not our fault . . .\nthe trouble is our bankers aren't\nsentimental.\" Four American\nquarters were worth only 96 cents\nCanadian on Wall Street.\nLEGAL RACKET\nThe . Toronto Globe and Mail\nsaid sharp Money boys have been\nworking a legal racket by importing ;JJ:S. coinage, converting\nit to. Canadian notes' at par and\nchanging these back to U.S.\nmoney at ih;e discbunt wjth the\nresult that about 25 per' cent of\ncoins cirouMdng in Canada were\nAmerican,\nThe banks had been forced to\nprotect -themselves from this \"legal racket.\"\n\"The splenetic outburst of The\nTimes was composed more of\npure ignorance than of sensible\nconsiderations,\" Bhe Calgary Al-\nbertan commented.\n\"A moment's reflection is all\nthat is necessary to recall that\nit is not really Canada which\ndiscounts the American Dollar, it\nis the U.S. which does it by\npaying more far Canadian, dollars.\"\nThe Halifax CJironide-Herald\nsuggested that Canadian tourist\nofficials, \"instesd-of decrying the\nunfortunate change,\" should try\nto offset adverse propaganda\nbeing voiced in flhoU-S.\n\"This might well take the form\nof a kindly letter of explanation,\ndistributed at the border, on the\nwhys and wherefores . . . \"\nINSTRUCTIVE TRIP\n\"Let -The Times, purely in the\ninterests of science, send one of\nits reporters deep into Michigan\nwith a pocketful of Canadian\nmoney to try to spend or exchange at a bank,\" the Montreal\nStar advised. \"His experience\ncould be instructive.\"\n\"We think that all americans\n. . . ought te know that the\npremium on the Canadian dollar\nis not of our making\" the Edmonton Journal said. \"In fact,\nwe do not like it. The premium\ncan be traced to the law of supply\nand demand.\"\nFrench Vital In\nThe Free World\nQUEBEC iCP) \u2014 President de\nGaulle said Wednesday French life\nand thought are \"indispensable if\nthe free world is to go on.\"\nIt is essential that French\nthoughts should not only continue\nand blossom out throughout the\nworld ... but we French must recognize that a great struggle is un\nder way.\"       \u201e\nSurrey Teacher\nHeads B.C. Assoc.\nVANCOUVER (CP) - A 39-year-\nold social studies teacher from Surrey Wednesday was elected president of the 11,000-member B.C.\nTeachers' Federation.\nWes Janzen of Queen Elizabeth\nHigh School was elected by acclamation at the annual convention.\nHe is a director of night schools\nfor Surrey and was first vice-president of the federation last year.\nKen Aitchison of Burnaby South\nHigh School was elected first vice-\npresident and Harald M. Palsson,\nSooke mathematics and science\nteacher who is vice-principal of\nElizabeth Fisher Junior High\nSchool, was named second vice-\npresident.\nVANCOUVED (CP) - Police\nsaid one of the men who stabbed\nand beat a Chinese grocer to death\nEaster Sunday stole the victim's\ncoat and hat to hide his own bloodstained clothing.\nAnd in This Corner . . .\nWORCESTER, Mass. (AP) \u2014 It doesn't happen often, but these\nfiremen were really buffaloed.\nAnswering a call to a burning hay and feed shed at Green Hill\nPark Wednesday, the fearless firefighters were met by three buffalo\nsnuggled together in an open pen adjoining the shed, happily enjoying the warmth of the fire.\nIt's one thing to pull a parked car out of a barn. It's another to\npull out parked buffalo, especially when they rise np, draw back and\nbrace for a Charge.\nWhile five tons of hay and buffalo mash crackled merrily firemen\nand animals glared -at each other. Finally the buffalo relayed, retreated to the rear of the pen and let the firemen go to work.\nThe buffalo may rue their stand, though. Until the lost feed Is\nreplaced, they will have to eat deer mash.\nAIKEN, S.C. (AP) \u2014 A well-dressed, middle-aged man appeared\nin the choir loft of St. Mary's Roman Catholic Church and asked the\nnun if he might join in singing the offertory hymn.\n\"I'm very sorry,\" she said politely but firmly, \"only choir members are permitted in the loft. You'll have to go downstairs.\"\nAfter mass the rejected votalist, who has heen visiting the area,\njoined the pastor, whom he had met- previously. They chuckled over\nthe strictness of the choir director.\n\"Someday I'd like to audition you, sister,\" a smiling Bing Crosby\nsaid as he left the church.\n'.\n mm\n\u25a0\u25a0 \u00ab\u25a0' ' i .  '\u2014-\n-  \".\u00bb-\u2022.\u25a0 - \u25a0- T~        :     r-^ .\u25a0'\u25a0'\" ; :    ~ ' '\u2014: ~ \u2014m\n2\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, APRIL 21, 1960\nTONIGHT\nFRIDAY-SATURDAY\nWALT DISNEY SPINS\nMOTION       ^,k\nPICTURE      ( (3\nMAGIC!\nWith a Touch\nO'Blarnejj\nA Bit O'Romance\nand a Heap\nO'Laughter!\n1\nStarlight Drive-ln\n10 Mllen East of Nelson\nTONIGHT   and   FRIDAY\n\"VERTIGO\"\n(Technicolor)\nJames Stewart, Kim Novak\nELK DRIVE-IN\nCASTLEGAR, B.C.\nTonight, Friday, Saturday\n\"JOHNNY  TROUBLE\"\n2nd Hit\u2014\n\"SLATES OF BABYLON\"\n'Color)\nRichard Conte, Linda  Christian\nOne Showing 7:15 p.m.\nCASTLE  THEATRE\nCastlegar. B.C.\nTonight, Friday, Saturday\n\"FAREWELL TO ARMS\"\n(Color I\nRock Hudson, Jennifer Jonet\nShows at 6:30 and 9:00 p.m. '\nAUTO-VUE Drive-ln\nTrail, B.C.\nTonight,  Friday,  Saturday\n\"GUNSMOKE IN TUCSON\"\n2nd Hit -\n'JOY RIDE\"\nCARTOON  and NEWS\nTHE WEATHER\nNELSON   \t\nKimberley    35 51 .01\nVancouver  44 52 .15\nVictoria       41 50 .22  strelches\nSOUTHEND, England <CP>-\nVisitors to this Essex resort will\nS4 52 \u2014 j ^ a^le to relax on golden\nbeaches this summer. Sand from\nbuilding sites has been transported    to    cover    the    mud\nBRAND NEW . .. AND CLASSICALLY\n^&acc<xAu\u00a3\nExcel-Board Ceiling\n\"SUPERCOAT\"\u2014 Washable Finish (Eggshell White,\nFire Retardant, Needs No Further Painting).\n12\"xl2\"x!\/2\", 64 pes. per box $8.96\n16\"xl6\"x,\/2\". 36 pes. per box            8,96\n16'x32\"xVi\". 18 pes. per box       ;..    8.64\n12\"xl2\"x,\/2\" Random ptn.\nAcoustic Tile, 64 pes. per box          13.40\n12\"xl2\" Beige or Grey Fissurtone       11.52\nNo Extra Charge for Broken Quantities\nFree Delivery\n$QSL\nS'dldinq. Supply <2td.\n301   Baker  St. Phone   1704\nELECTION OF OFFICERS. Elected president of the\nNelson Kinsmen Club Tuesday nlghl was G. E. Wakeham\nwho succeeds outgoing president W. H. Johnston. Shown\nare: back row, left to right, Ron Corbett, Denis Horobin, D.\nC. Lingard, J. B. Hughes and K. M. White, directors; front\nrow: H. G. Bentham, registrar, W. H. Johnston, past president, G. E. Wakeham, president, Alex Jensen, secretary\nand G. C. Bruce, treasurer.\u2014Daily News photo.\nCollege Names Five Business\nLeaders To Head Fund Drive\nHospital\nNames 1960\nCommittees\nSpecial and standing committees\nfor Kootenay Lake General Hospital administration were named at\na board of directors' executive\nmeetnig held Tuesday night.\nStanding Committees:\nExecutive \u2014 Chairman, H. D.\nHarrison: Vice-Chairman, J. H.\nCoventry; Treasurer T. C. Lambert. J. A. Cullinane, C. H. Bland;\nInvited Member, Mayor T. S.\nShorthouse.\nSecretary \u2014 R. H. Procter.\nFinance \u2014 T. C. Lambert. W. P.\nF. Green, J. C. Ratcliffe.\nPersonnel \u2014 J. H. Coventry, K.\nD. McRae, J. A. Cullinane, F. E.\nParsons.\nProperty \u2014 H. J. Witchell, C. H.\nBland. K. R. Yale.\nPatient Care and Welfare \u2014 Mrs.\nL. G. Catley, G. J. Stuart.\nWomen's Auxiliary Liaison \u2014\nMrs. H. E. Doelle.\nPlanning Committee \u2014 Executive Members.\nDisposal of Assets \u2014 H. D. Harrison, J. A. Cullinane, H. R. Stafford.\nBylaws Revision \u2014 K. D. McRae,\nC. H. Hamilton.\nLandscaping - K. R. Yale, J. H.\nCoventry. Mrs. L. G. Catley.\nPurchasing - K. D. McRae, H. J.\nWitchell. K. R. Yale.\nNotre Dame University College\nBuilding Fund Campaign Headquarters announces appointment of\nArea Chairmen for Castlegar,\nCranbrook, Creston, Kimberley\nand Trail.\nNotre Dame campaign office announced the following Area Chairmen appointments: William T.\nWaldie. prominent business man in\nCastlegar, Eric McKinnon, president, of the Cranbrook Foundry in\nCranbrook, Dr. J. S. Miller of Creston, L. J. Nicholson, manager of\nIhe Chemical-Fertilizer Division of\nConsolidated Mining and gmelting\nCompany in Kimberley and P. F.\nMclntyre. personnel manager of\nConsolidated Mining and Smelting\nin Trail.\nHis Honor Eric P. Dawson, Honorary General Chairman, and officials of Notre Dame expressed\ntheir deep appreciation to these\nmen for their unselfish action in\nacting on behalf of Notre Dame in\nits present campaign to provide\nfunds for the erection of a new\nresidence to accommodate 200 male\nstudents on campus for the 1960-61\nterm.\nGOAL $315,000\nThe goal in Ihis campaign, which\nwill be conducted in the Kootenay\nand Okanagan Valleys, is $315,000.\nCommittees are now being formed\nin these areas. The Area Chairmen\nexpressed the hope that the people\nof their particular area will recognize the need for an institution such\nas Notre Dame and will offer their\nservices in this campaign to provide for the planned expansion of\nits facilities.\nA spokesman stated, \"Notre\nDame has provided a truly great\nservice for the youth of the inler-\nior for the past 10 years without\nonce making a public appeal for\nfunds. Now that the present facilities prove inadequate to meet the\ndemands placed upon it by the\npublic, it is only reasonable lo expect the public should be ready and\nwilling to give financial assistance\nto this fine college.\"\nAt a recent convention held by\nthe British Columbia Teachers.\nFederation, Ihe president of Ihe\nfederation, R. B. Cox, told the\ngroup, \"true educational progress\nstems from a system where there\nis a large measure of local autonomy, and where local interest\nin the welfare of their own boys\nand girls encourages a community\nto go beyond the required minimum in providing education opportunities.\"\nThe founders of Notre Dame\nCollege had this principle in mind\nwhen the college was first established approximately 10 years ago.\nThe capital for the college up to\nthis time, has been provided by\nthe members of the Nelson Diocese exclusively. A few small\nfederal grants have heen received\nIn the post hut these grants were\nfor partial maintalnance and far\nfrom being sufficient tn afford\nexpansion of the facilities of the\ncollege.\nDue to its tremendous growth\nfrom 12 students 10 years ago to\nils present enrollment of 162 students and with an anticipated 250\nto 300 students for the 1960-61 term\nit now becomes necessary to make\na public appeal for the funds needed to provide the facilities to accomodate the ever increasing enrollment,\nFEW REALIZE\nAs stated by Mr. Waldie of\nCastlegar, \"few people realize the\ntremendous community service\nNotre Dame affords the youth of\nthe interior of British Columbia\non a non-denominational basis. Approximately 50 per cent of the\npresent enrolment at Notre Dame\nis made up of youths of faiths\nother than Catholic. The applications received thus far for the\n1960-61 term indicates that this figure will be increased to 75 py\ncent. In view of the community service rendered hy Notre Dame, to\nIhe youth of British Columbia, without regard to faith, race or creed,\nit should be considered an honor\nand a privilege to participate in\nand to contribute to this very\nworthy program.\"\nA committee spokesman pointed\nout that, \"any student completing\ntwo years at Notre Dame satisfactorily, qualifies himself to enter\nthird year at the University of British Columbia. In some instances,\nhowever, it would be wiser for a\nstudent to transfer to the University\nof British Columbia after one year\nat Notre Dame.'\nThis is particularly true as regards to the faculty of engineering\nThe advisability in this case is by\nreason of the fact thai, in this\nfaculty concentration begins in the\nsecond year of .university. In any\ncase, however, credit is given by\nlhe University of Brilish Columbia\nfor the courses transferred from\nNotre Dame,\nNO REFUSALS\nThe committee spokesman furlher stated, \"There have been no\nstudents from Notre Dame College\nwho have been considered by the\nadministration of Notre Dame as\ntransferable students, who have\nbeen rejected by the University of\nBritish  Columbia   for   admittance.\nAs is the case with every college,\nthere are certain students who\ncomplete a year at Notre Dame\nwho are not considered as transferable students because of insufficient credits or insufficient\ngrades. Naturally, if these students\napply to the University of British\nColumbia, or any other college for\nthat matter, on their own, Notre\nDame will not give an academic\nrecommendation. The transcript is\nsent to that college wilh a \"not\nrecommended\"  annolation.\nStudents may select their requirements from a wide range of\ncourses:\nFirst  year\u2014Biology   100.  Chem\nistry 101. English 100, 101, Mathematics 100, 101, French 110. 120,\nLatin 110, 120, History 101, Physics\n101, Philosophy.\nSecond year: Chemistry, English.\nEconomics. French, Latin, Mathematics, Business Administration.!\nPhilosophy, History, Psychology,!\nSociology, Speech, Zoology and!\nPhysics. I\nFather Aquinas Thomas, Regis-\nIrar, stated, \"PNOtre Dame takes\npride in that it has provided al\nmuch less than normal cost, a solid\nand substantial education for 620\nstudents in its short history. Many\nof its graduates are presently utilizing this education for the development of others particularly in\n(he field of education.\n\"Thus Notre Dame has been a\nbenefactor to its community, the\nprovince and society in general as\nwell as to the students who have\npassed through its halls. In order\nlo continue to work and to increase\nits efficiency, particularly in view\nof the rapidly increasing student\nbody, Notre Dame University College is in need of both mora1! and\nfinancial support.\"\nMrs. M.  Nesteroff,\nSlocan Park, Dies\nMrs. Mary Nesteroff, wife of\nJohn Nesteroff of Slocan Park, died\nsuddenly Wednesday mnrnin' in\nthe Kootenay Lake General Hospital at the age of 38.\nBorn in Brilliant, B.C., she moved\nto Slocan Park with her parents at\nan early age and lived there after\nshe was married in 1942.\nShe is susvived by her husband;\none son, John; two daughters.\nNina and Marie; parents. Mr. and\nMrs. Nick Zaitsoff: two brothers,\nNick and Peter, all of Slocan Park;\nand one sister, Mrs. Mable (Pred>\nOsachoff of Vallican.\nFuneral arrangements are being\nmade by the Thompson Funeral\nHome and the funeral will be al\nSlocan  Park  on  Saturday.\nJ.   C.   HEILSCHER\n53 Years\nService End\nFor Engineer\nA well-known Nelson resident,\nJ. C. Heilscher retired recently\nas en?i::eer after 53 years with\nthe CPR.\nBorn in Nakusp, Mr. Heilscher\nwes raised ar.d educated at Midway, B.C. where he was employed\nby the CPR as engine-wiper in\n1917. Promoted to the position of\nfireman in 1922, he came to Nelson where he was engaged in\nyard work.\nShortly after becoming engineer\nin 1944, Mr. Heilscher worked in\nthe Tadanac yards for several\nyears before being stationed in\nNelson where he worked to the\npresent time.\nMarried, Mr. Heilscher has sons\nnow living in Vancouver.\nMr. Heilscher plans to continue\nliving at his house at 209 Second\nStreet  in  Fairview.\nColor Blindness Nol\nUncommon in Canada\nWorld Briefs\nCLYDEBANK, Scotland <C?>\u2014\nThirty angry schoolboys marched\nto the education offices of this\ntown and demanded more lessons. They say they spend four\nhours a week doing nothing.\nMOSLEM STYLE\nSAIGHTON, England (CP)-A\nsoldier who joined a regiment\nstationed near this Cheshire town\nas Cyril Jones, now is Sgt. Mohammed Daud bin Abdullah. He\nhas adopted the Moslem faith.\nPOLICE  YIELD\nLINCOLN, England iCPl-Po-\nlice cars in Soulh Lincolnshire\nhave hao to abandon their radios.\nResidents complained the police\nsignals caused interference on\ntheir television screens.\nOLD SMOKES\nBINGWOOD, England (CP>-\nA packet of cigarets about 50\nyears old was found under floorboards during demolition of an\nancient inn near this Hampshire\ntown.\nUSE\nG LE EM\nThe Toothpaste With\nGL-70\nfor busy people who can't\nbrush after every meal\nGiant Size 63*\nFREE   NAIL   SCISSORS\nFLEURY'S\nPHARMACY\nHarold Mayo, Proprietor\nI   PHONE 25 NELSON, B.C.\nOLD   SPICE\nTOILETRIES\nFOR   MEN\nPro Electric\nStick Deodorant\nCologne\nAfter .Shave\n75c\n51.25\n$1.50\nNELSON\nPHARMACY\n\"Your  Fortress of H\u00b0airn\"\nPhone l?.n      413 Insephlne mi.\nNelson. B.C.\nWitch Doctors\nPose as Lawyers\nPORT ELIZABETH, South\nAfrica (AP) \u2014 \"Lawyers\" who\nconsult charmed bones instead of\nlaw books and chew \"magic\nsticks\" in place of cigars are\nswindling superstitious Africans\nin Port Elizabeth.\nThey are witoh doctors claiming\nto have power to aid clients who\nhave fallen afoul of the law. Ao\ncording to one lawyer, these\nmen\u2014and in some casos women\n\u2014will accept a \"brief\" for crimes\nranging from petty offences to\nrape or murder.\nThey have incantations and\nblack magic recipes for every\nshade of legal distinction, And\nthere is a schedule of charges to\nmatch.' A serious charge\u2014one\ntried in the supreme court, for\ninstance\u2014might cost a client as\nmuch as \u00a325, but terms are arranged to suit all pockets.\nSIMPLE PROCEDURE\nAn African who has had dealings with witch doctors explained\nthe procedure: the client in\ntrouble attends a consultation\nwith the witch doctor of his\nchoice and sets out the case\nagainst him. The witch doctor\nlistens impassively. As soon as\nhe has gleaned the basis of the\ncharge, he stops the client's explanations and announces his fee.\nIf the client thinks it too high,\nhe can take his case to a qualified legal practitioner\u2014at his own\nrisk, naturally.\nIf the client agrees to the fe\u00ab,\nthe witch doctor questions his\nadvisory spirits. Finally the\neltent is given an herbal brew in\nwhich to wash and is assured that\nhe now is immune from conviction.\nIf the case is important enough\nto warrant the witch doctor's\npersonal attendance at the trial,\nhe will sit well back in the public\n\"allery, chewing a twig, watching\n'he process of what, he has said.\nis a fnregrne conclusion.\nIf the prosecution proves superior tn pi'imM 'umbo? '\"Hie\nspirits were angry.\"\nWINNIPEG fCP) - About 10.\nper cent of Canadians are bothered with color blindness, says an'\nexport in physiological optics.        j\nC. W. Bobier, chief instructor inj\nthis field at the Ontario College;\nof Optometry at Toronto suggested,\nin an interview here that all chil-i\ndren should be tested for color!\nrecognition between the ages of\nfive and 10. _      ;\n\"It's important that people know\njust  what problem  they  have  in.\ncolor blindness and the only way\n| is to have a test as early as pos-,\n' sible,\" he said. |\nMr. Bobier, who visited Wmni-j\n, peg for the Manitoba Optometricj\nI Society convention, heads a group1\ninvestigating Color problems and\ntheir relationship to industry.\nAmong the industries that have\nasked for such studies is the tobacco industry. Quality tobacco is\ngraded according to color. The\nindustry's selecting experts must\nbe able to recognize all shades.\n\"Another important field where\ncolor plays a big part is the electronic industry with its color codes.\nThis work could be very difficult\nfor someone who is color blind and\nmany mistakes might result.\"\nIs green the most restful color\nto the eye?\n\"It probably blends with our\nenvironment, but there are a lot\nof other colors which do the same\nthing,\" he said. His own bedroom\nis painted a smoky rose color.\nYou Can Depend 0h\nhi i.:.r *..i \" tm\nDodd's\nj   ,'K>I  d N E Y\nWhen kidneys fail\nto remove cxneafl\nacids ftnd wantps,\nbackache, tirnrl\nfeelinR, disturbed\nrfitt often follow.\nDodd's Kidney\nPills stimulate\nkidneys to norma!\nduty\nfe.'l\nepbet-\nter. work brtter.\nYou ran depend\non Dodd's. Get Dodd's at any druset-r*;.\nAnn*\"*!\nR.C.M.P.\nPOLICE BALL\nApril   22\u2014Friday \u2022\nCivic Centre\nMusic by\nTRAIL SERENADERS\nTickets by Reservation\nCall   2300\nCNR To Retire Its\nLast Steam Engine\n\u2022    MONTREAL (CPi  - Aller 124\nj years, use of   steam   engines   on\nj the Canadian   National   Railways\nwill end this summer with retirement   of   the    last    steam    locomotive.\nThe CNR said its plan to con- i\nvert to diesels\u2014started in  1948\u2014\nwill  be completed   in  June.  The\nrailway will have 2,144 diesel locomotives  and  28  railiners\u2014self- J\npropelled   coaches\u2014in   operation, j\nrepresenting   an    investment   of\n$397,000,000.\nDiesels have proven themselves .\ncheaper and faster with less\nmaintenance and lower long-term\nrepair costs than stea-m engines.\nWhen the CNR started its dieselization plan it had 2.463 steam\nlocomotives in operation. Now\nthere are about 100\u2014all serving :\nin Western Canada.\nMost of Hie abandoned engines i\nhave been   demolished  and  sold j\nfor scrap.  A few   of   lhe   older\nones have been sold to museums\nand historical societies for $4,000\nto *1.000 each.\nThe CNR pioneered the use of\ndlesels in 1925 when a self-\nnnwered passenger car went\nfrom Montreal to Vancouver in\n\u00ab7 ho\"rs in 19?9 a two-unit diese'\nt-qve\".^ between Montreal and\nToronto.\nDiesel locomotives are coming\nto the Sydney and Louisburg Railway in Cape Breton but it is expected to be another five years\nbefore the last of that line's colorful steam engines disappears.\nThe S. and L. is a coal - hauling\nrailway owned by Dominion Steel\nand Coal Corporation.\nThe 29 puffers left on the line\nare mostly veterans of other railways. Some of the larger units\nwere bought from U.S. railways\nwhen diesels started to come into\ntheir own.\nThe S. and L., has ordered four\ndiesels and more are expected\nbut the switch will not be completed until 1965.\nThe railway was formed in 1893\nwhen the Dominion Coal Company was founded. Its chief purpose was to carry coal and steel\nlo ocean terminals at Sydney or\nLouisburg from Cape Breton collieries and the Sydney steel plant.\nAnother Dosco subsidiary, the\nCumberland Railway and Coal\nCompany, has a half-dozen ancient steam engines. One of them\nstill hauls a mixed train every\nday over the company's rail line\nlo the CNR Snrinehitl .lurction on\nthe Nova Scotia mainland.\nLIMITED TIME\nr\\ OFFER\t\n^**\\***r THI  MNIIt IIUItHMI    .   -.    I\nPIECE   SERVICE\n-\nHi]\n95\n795\nINCLUDING CHEST\nHr<TTO*4lMMk   HALLMARK\nCHEST\n%mm^\nA   beautiful\ndrawer chest \u2014\n\u00ab*\u00a3-<\u25a0;\u25a0*\u25a0     \u25a0 ^ itr-^IKjO^B^^^'\nin mahogany or\nj^psp\nwalnut tinisk.\nColorful  anti-\ntarnish lining.\nCONTENTS                    (! Forb\n8 Teaspoons                   8 Knives\n8 i o'clock Tea             8 Dessert Spoons\n8 Salad Fotks                 I Cold Meat Fork\n*Trsdemsrla cf\nOntlislM.\nCOLLINSON'S\nJEWELLERY LTD.\nNELSON'S DIAMOND HEADQUARTERS\nBusiness Established Since 1897\nPhone  120 Nelson, B.C.\n BSJ^P1    .    ,.l... ..\n,      .'\u2022\u2022\u2022\n,I;.J,_.   .'\n-       '     .-J,.     '   -\u25a0\u25a0       '   \u25a0'-      -I\"'      J      -        I\".   J-7.\nColumbia Cellulose Annual Meet\nHeartened by Celgar Developments\nCASTLEGAR \u2014 Biggest interest to shareholders in\nColumbia Cellulose Co. Ltd. was the tale given by T. N.\nBeaupre, president, to the shareholders in Montreal April 20,\nconcerning the growth and development of the company's\npulp mill at Castlegar, B.C.\nWhile net saleB of the company as a whole went\nahead, Mr. Beaupre thought it was of particular interest that\nshareholders should know their Celgar development, at\nCastlegar, B.C., was nearing completion and approaching\nproduction   under   favorable' \"~\nconditions.\nMr. Beaupre said that in the annual report, it was stated that the\ncompany looked forward to further progress in 1960. Sales and\noperating costs during the first\nquarter were thirteen per cent\nahead of the same peiod last year.\nCELGAR IMPORTANT\nOf particular interest to shareholders at this time is the progress\noi the new pulp mill and sawmill\nwhich are being constructed near\nCastlegar, B.C. by Celgar Ltd., a\nwholly-owned subsidiary. The con\nstruction of the five hundred ton\na-day bleached craft pulp mild is\nprogressing satisfactorily. To date\nover $13,000,000 have been spent\nand an additional $13,000,000 have\nbeen committed on firm price\ncontracts. The structural work\nwill be completed around July 1.\nEquipment is now being installed\nin the wood room and the recausti\ncizing plant. Installation of the pulp\ndrying machine and one of the\nboilers have also begun.\nSenior   management   personnel\nfor this new pulp mill have been\nEffects on Fish and\nGame Disturb Fernie\nFERNIE \u2014 Fernie Rod and Gun\nClub is requesting the provincial\ngovernment to study the effects on\nfish and game when power development takes place on the Kootenay\nRiver. The club maintains the artificial lakes formed will mean the\nloss of many spawning grounds and\nthe flooding of extensive game wintering areas.\nIn a resolution forwarded to the\nHon. Earle C. Westwood, B.C. provincial Minister of Recreation and\nConservation,, the club urges the\nconsideration of additional fish\nhatcheries to take care of the newly-created lakes. It also asks that\nconsideration be given to provide\nadditional game wintering areas by\ncontrolled burning of Crown Lands\nor otherwise, so as to preserve and\nkeep in perpetuity the valuable\nwild life resources.\nKLEENBURN .     .\nWESTERN MONARCH\nGREENHILL . . .\nCANMORE   Briquettes\nCoal\nPHONE 889\nTOWLER\nFuel & Transfer\nIn preambles to its resolution the\nClub stated emphatically that it\nwas in favor of the power development of the Kootenay River because of the great economic advantages that would ensure.\nThe club also pointed out that\nthe East Kootenay area embodied\nsome of the finest big game hunting and fishing to be found in North\nAmerica, and the contribution the\nwild life resources are making directly and indirectly toward the provincial revenues and incomes.\nsecured and these men are now\nworking with the consulting engineer.\nThe supporting woods operation\nhave been stepped up, and this\nyear some one hundred thousand\nunits of pulp wood wiU be cut in\nthe Arrow Lakes district.\nSTART IN NOVEMBER\nIt is expected that the steam\nplant and the wood room will be\nstarted up in November, in order\nto build up a stockpile of wood\nchips to make pulp in January.\nGood wood resources and modern\nmill equipment assure that Celgar\ncraft will be ol premium quality.\nThis has been confirmed by week\ndown in the pilot plant, and by\ntests made by independent pulp\nand paper manufacturers, as well\nas by a large testing organization\nin Ihe United States. i\nWorld markets for craft pulp I\nhave improved during the last year,\nand further improvement is forecast by virtually every authoritative source. Pulp sales representatives have canvassed the market\nin detail.\nIn order to obtain the best economic utilization of the resources\nof the forests of the area, a new\nsawmill is being constructed adjacent to the pulp mill. It will\nprovide modem dry kiln and re-\nmanufacturing facilities, which are\nlacking in the company's present\nsawmills. This integrated unit will\ndraw its steam and water requirements from the pulp mill\nwhile supplying the by-products\nof lumber, in the form of wood\nchips amd hog fuel to the pulp mill\nAt the extraordinary general\nmeeting, following the annual\nmeeting, Columbia Cellulose's\nshareholders approved of the step\nin the financing of the overall\nCelgar 'project and authorized the\ncompany to increase its capital\nby ten million dollars through the\nissue of seven per cent redeemable\npreferred shares to which Chemcell\nLtd. has agreed to subscribe.\nion\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, APRIL 21, 1960\u20143\nTime Now To Spray\nTo Beat Apple Scab\nSOUTH   NELSON\nELEMENTARY\nSCHOOL\nSub-trade bids are invited\non the proposed reconstruction of the above.\nBids are to be in our Calgary office by April 27th.\nPOOLE\nConstruction Co. Ltd.\nBox 760\nCalgary, Alta.\nBy J. E. SWALES,\nDistrict Horticulturist,\nB.C. Department of Agriculture,\nCreston, B.C.\nKootenay apple growers are advised that apple scab spores are\nnow mature in looal orchards.\nScab infection may occur at any\ntime if the developing blossom\nbuds and foliage remain wet for a\nsufficient length of time.\nGrowers who are following an\neradicant spray program should\nkeep an accurate record of temperatures and the number of\nhours that the foliage remains wet\nTo Junk HPD\nIn Favor of\nPhysical Ed\nVANCOUVER (CP) - British\nColumbia high school students are\ngoing to learn less aibout maimers\nand get more exercise.\nThe Provincial Department of\nEducation is sending directives\nto school boards ordering a new\ncourse which will put more emphasis on physical education and\nless on how to behave on dates,\nthe problems of smoking and drinking, and so on.\nThe new course, to be named\nHealth, Physical and Guidance:\nwil start in September. It will\ndevote up to four periods a week\nto games and physical education\nand one to 'guidance on social\nmatters.\nThe present personal development course provides for two\nperiods of physical activity andl\nthree on personal problems each\nweek.\n. Personal development also covers such matters as conduct, manners, social responsibility and\ndieting.\nA Vancouver school board official\nsaid the effect of the change will\nbe to put responsibility for teaching children these topics back in\nthe hands of the parents.\nin order to determine when apple\nscab infection periods occur. An\neradicant spray should be applied\nas soon as possible (within 48 \u25a0\nhours) after an infection period j\noccurs.\nIt is recommended that growers\nwho rely on protectant sprays for\napple scab control apply the first\nspray not later than the pre-pink\n(cluster bud) stage. If an infection\nperiod occurs at a time when the\ndeveloping foliage and blossom\nbuds are not protected by a good\ncovering of fungicide, apple growers should apply an eradicant\nspray as soon as possible.\nWHOOPERS HEAD NORTH\nWASHINGTON (AP)\u2014Only 18\nwhooping cranes were counted\nTuesday in an aerial survey of\nthe wintering area in Texas, the\nU.S. fish and wildlife service reported. This indicated that 15\nwhoopers have started the long\njourney to northern nesting\ngrounds. Thirty-three of the rare\nbirds wintered in and near the\nrefuge.\nEARLY BIRD GETS THE WORM? Daily News photographer-reporter, Don Sawatsky, thought that the early-\nbird pictured above missed the worm and just got cold.\nThe unidentified swimmer seemed to be enjoying himself\nas he dived off the city wharf and swam among boats\nthat are moored there. The swimmer was caught by Don\nabout 10 p.m. Wednesday just as he was ready to diva\nfrom the wharf and after he had hit the water. Burrrrrr!\nBut swimming after dark? Could be he doesn't want\npeople to know of his secret desire to swim hardly before\nthe ice is out. Maybe, too, this is why he wouldn't divulge\nhis name.\u2014Daily News photo.\n\"No Smoking\" Rule\nIn Trail Council\nFor the present,  \"no smoking\" evening at least,\" there was to be\nto be the rule in Trail's new\ncity council chamber, Mayor Leslie\nRead ruled Tuesday night.\nThe mayor was speaking during\nthe initial session of the council\nin its spanking new quarters.\nAshtrays were absent from the\ngleaming council table for perhaps\nIhe first time in Trail's civic history.\nThe mayor ruled that \"for this\nMore Boys Than Girls\nBorn in East Kootenay\nRestmore Luxury\nCHESTERFIELD\nSUITE\nFoam   Rubber Cushions\nWorkmanship   and\nConstruction\nGuaranteed\nFor 5 Years\n$100 Trade-in\nAllowance\nNTkMc\nCRANBROOK - East Kootenay\nHealth Unit vital statistics reported\nin ^Iareh for the previous month\nrecord 83 births in the six districts\nof the unit, with boys showing a\nheavy lead over girls. They numbered 48 compared to 35 girls.\nFernie led, recording 20 of the\nbirths. Deaths in the same period\nnumbered 27, with Creston recording 11 of these. Heart disease continued leading cause, accounting\nfor 13 deaths, and there was a\nsingle accidental death during the\nmonth.\nSpecial events of the unit last\nmonth were headed by the periodic cancer clinic visit at Cranbrook\nfor two days for consultations\nwhen 84 persons from East Kootenay points referred hy their own\ndoctors for examination or post-\n| operative check visited the clinic.\nOrganization of a Water Improvement District for the community\nof Windermere for provision of a\nI piped water supply for residents\nwas approved in support at a preliminary meeting.\nPublic health nursing clinics for\nregular check of infants and preschoolers drew an attendance during the month of 972. with 123 in\nfants and pre-schoolers newly enrolled for this service of immunization, weight and growth check and\nadvice.\nImmunizations against whooping\ncough, diphtheria and tetanus were\ncompleted for 275 of these youngsters and 188 were vaccinated\nagainst smallpox. Also completed\nwere 242 Salk vaccine inoculation\nseries. Immunization in school clinics completed 242 series and did 318\nsmallpox vaccinations.\nEducation Blamed for\nPoor Literary Ranking\nWINNIPEG (CP) \u2014 Intellectual, depth of insight rather than for\ncrimes are committed against breadth of information, for nour-\nyoung readers in the name of edu-| ishing tastes rather than disclosing\ncation by inflated and meddlesome1 talents.\nminds, Dr. B. C. Diltz, Dean of' \t\nthe Ontario College of Education\nsaid Wednesday.\nDr. Diltz, from Toronto, told the\nconvention of the Manitoba Education Association \"books like Tom\nSawyer and Treasure Island\" are\nbeing \"written down to a graded\nintelligence by psychologists and\nsociologolists\" who know nothing\nabout literature.\nHe said almost everything in\nprint today goes by the name of\nliterature. \"Ii you wihs to find\nout why one beverage or detergent\nis better than another you will be\nreferred to the literature of the\nsubject.\"\nHe said teachers should teach for\nTranscona Night\nTrain Makes\nIls Last Run\nno smoking during council proceed\nings.\n\"I for one,\" he said, \"regret\n(hat action, along with my friend,\nAid.   Harold  Dixon.\n\"But there is no receptacle at\nthe rear of the chamber for the\npublic.\n\"So. please, no smoking tonight.\"\nActually, there were ashtrays\npresent in the council chamber.\nThey had been placed in council\ntable drawers by the building superintendent on the instructions of\ncity comptroller L. G. Anderson.\nWhether they will ever again be\nused remains to be seen.\nNon-smokers on the council are\nin the majority. They are Aid.\nAlex Brokenshire. Aid. J. L.\nCrowe, Aid. W. A. Curran and Aid.\nF. E. DeVito.\nCRANBROOK\nSPORTSMAN\nDIES TUESDAY\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Robert Benson\n(Scotty) Mitchell, operator of his\nown hardware store here since 1942,\ndied Wednesday following a short\nillness. He was storekeeper for B.C.\nSpruce Ltd. at Lumberton for many\nyears before that.\nHe was born in Scotland 62 years\nago. He was one of the Kootenay's\nbest known sportsmen in baseball,\ncurling, golf and softball.\nSurviving him are his wife Hazel\nat home, two sons, Dr. Robert\nMitchell of Vancouver and Harold\nof Quesnel, and three grandchildren.\nFuneral arrangements are tentatively set for Saturday afternoon.\nTRAFFIC FATALITY\nNEW WESTMINSTER (OP) -\nRobert Lee Smith, 45, of Surrey,\nwho suffered head and internal\ninjuries and multiple fractures\nwhen struck by a car on the\nTrans-Canada Highway April 12,\ndied in hospital here Tuesday.\nINTEGRATION MOVEMENT\nALGIERS ('Reuters)\u2014The formation of a new political movement advocating permanent integration of Algeria as part of\nFrance was announced Tuesday,\nft is called Le Mouivement Al-\ngerie-Sabara amd was founded by\nformer army reservists, backbone of the abortive settlers' revolt in Algiers tn January.\nFAST RELIEF FOR\nTIRED\nFEET\n1 ADMIRAL ILL\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Admiral\nSir Charles Lambe, the first sea j\n| lord,  is suffering  from   coronary j\nj thrombosis,   the   Admiralty   an-1\n1 nounced  Tuesday.   An   Admiralty j\nj statement said Lambe's condition ]\n| \"has remained unchanged during I ment   store   employee   who\ni the  weekend\"   and   that   he  has ] member of (he Nan reserve\nbeen visited at a hospital here hy\nIx>rd Evans, one of Queen Elizabeth's physicians.\nPriest Remeels\nMan Who\nSaved His Life\nWINNIPEG (CPI - A Roman\nCatholic priest from neighboring\nSt. Boniface has finally met the\nman who saved his life seven\nyears ago.\nRev. Henri Ouimet. a Jesuit,\nhad his right leg severed below\nthe knee under the wheels of a\nWinnipeg streetcar. He might have\ndied from loss of blood but for an\nunknown bystander, who port\ntourniquet on the leg with a belt\nand pen.\nHis benefactor disappeared without giving his name when other\nhelp arrived.\nRecently, Les Walker, a depart\nAccidental\nHanging\nKills Scout\nVICTORIA (CP) - Death of a\n13-year-old Boy Scout patrol leader was by accidental hanging,\ncoroner Dr. E. C. Hart said Wednesday.\nThe body of Stephen Foster Pel\nlow, was found Monday by his\nfather, Francis A. Pellow, and\nscoutmaster David Kerridge, in a\nscout hall in neighboring Esquimau.\nDr. Hart, who conducted an in\nformal inquiry only, said the boy\n\"was in the habit of playing with\nthese things (ropes),\" and was\nknown to have shown other boys\nhow people were hanged.\nWINNIPEG (OP) - The night\ntrain from Transcona has made\nits last run.\nFor 50 years the train ran from\nIhe ONR shops in the nearby\ncommunity to Winnipeg carrying\nrailway workers home. Now, be--\ncause more and more workers\nare driving their own cars to the\nshops, the train is being replaced\nby buses.\nSam Robinson, a retired railway man who rode the train for\n40 years, went along on the last\nrun and reminisced about the j\npenny ante card games that\nsometimes prompted the players\nto stay aboard for the ride back\nto Transcona and then walk\nhome.\n\"The boys will miss the train,\"\nhe said. \"It was a good excuse\nto say the train was late when\nyou got home a little later than\nusual.\"\nEmployees with more than 10\nyears of service rode free while\nothers paid five-cent fare each\nway. The return-trip bus fare is\n35 cents.\nCOME IN --- Let Us INTRODUCE You to the NEW 1960\nGENERAL\u00a9 ELECTRIC      FILTER-FLO\nWRINGER WASHER\n7     7        ^,>S^*Wl\u00bbMW\u00ab\u00bbWWS\u00bb\u00abWW,*,'*^ J\nA General Electric exclusive. Moving, metal\nfilter catches every ipeck of lint. It's completely non-clog, removable, cleans in seconds. The G-E Filter assures you of a completely lint-free wash \u2014 the cleanest wash\nROUGHA'M. England (CP)-A\nfarmer of this Norfolk district\n\"I'm calling it an accident. There has designed a rocket-firing bird\nis no definite proof of anything scarer to keep off pigeons that\nelse. It's a doubtful case, but I'm ruin his crops. It fires missiles\ngiving it the benefit of the doubt.\" more than 100 yards.\nis   a\nwas\nThousai\nPHONE\nchatting with Rev. John J. Grimes,\nRoman Catholic chaplain at HMCS\nChippewa here. He happened to\nmention the incident of the injured\npriest and told how he had applied\nthe tourniquet.\nThe chaplain knew that Father\nOuimet had an artificial leg and\nbrought the two together.\n\"It was a complete surprise to\nme.\" Mr. Walker said. \"But I was\nvery glad to meet the father. I\nhad often wondered how he made\nout and what had happened to\nhim.\"\nFather Ouimet said: \"After\nmore than seven years of wondering who the man was it was\nwonderful to meet my \u2014 what do\nyou say \u2014 saviour.\"\nEye Defects Cause\nOf Many Failures\nPHONE 1844 FOR CLASSIFIED\nKIMBERLEY - \"Visual Problems in Our Schools\" was the\ntopic discussed by Dr. J. S. Clark\nwhen he addressed the April\nmeeting of the Chapman Camp\nP.T.A.\n\"Eye defects,\" Dr. Clark stated,\n'shave increased so greatly that\n90% of all grade 12 students are\neffected. At the age of six only\n3% of pupils show physical eye\ndefects. The tremendous increase is\ndue to the increased amount of\nreading done, which for the normal child, has increased by seven\ntimes in the last 50 years and\ndoubled in the last 20.\n\"Reading is a foreign occupation\nto man. whose eyes were originally intended just for seeing the\nworld about him. This did not. cause\nstrain because of the rapid changes\nin distance covered by his vision\nas he hunted, worked, etc. Today\nour reading load demands close\nconcentration for long periods\nunder poor conditions.\n\"Government requirements for\nschool lighting are 30 foot candle\npower far below the amount\nrecommended by eye specialists\nPoor posture too, affects the func\ntion of the eye and causes defects.\"\nIn the business session date of\nthe P.T.A. Fun Fair was set as\nMay 27. Ten dollars was voted\ntoward the convention delegates\nexpenses.\nRefreshments were served by\nMrs. Fisher and her committee\nat Ihe close of the meeting.\nThis new activator is perforated te give the\nfastest drainage of any wringer washer \u2014\nand the fastest, cleanest wash. Any chance\nof a clogged drain is completely eliminated.\nThe Perforated Activator is recessed into\nthe tub bottom to protect small delicate\nfabrics from snagging.\nYou'll end wash-day worries forever with\nthis new G-E Filter-Flo Wringer Washer \u2014\nand the cost? Just a few dollars down \u2014\ntake months to pay.\nGENERAL^ ELECTRIC\nWRINGER WASHERS\n119\nNelson Electric\nAs\nLow\nAs .\n.95\nWITH\nTRADE\nCOMPANY LIMITED\nPHONE 260        NELSON, B.C.\n574 BAKER ST.\nGENERAL\nELECTRIC\n'ikT\u00bb<\n ;\"..\u25a0\u2022\u25a0.!.\u2022\u2022 \"\u201ei;',.!\u00bb: II. JIM\"1,!.\n'IIW.W111^\n\u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0-, \u25a0    \u25a0\n\u00a3W?tV: \u25a0    \u25a0   \u25a0 ; \u00ab7#fev.7\n-^^\u2014-^^^^^^^\"\n^\u2122\n^^\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nNflami Hatty Nwua\nEstablished April 8S, UM Nolson, B.C.\nPubllohod by Ih* NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n366 Balfoi Stroot, NeJoon, Brltlih Columbia, momlug* exoepl\nSundays and holiday* Is lb* aonlro ol th* Kootanay* with\nthe lai-goot daily ovulation In th* Interior oi B.C\nAuthored st Sscood Class Mall, Pol) Office Department, Cttuwt.\nC. W. RAMSDEN, PubUihu.\nA W. GIBSON, Editor.\nMEMBISR OF 1'HIS CANAfllAN PMSt\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN  DAILV NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS' ASSOCIATION\nMEMBER OF THE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS\nTlio Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to th* um tor republication ol ill news\ndispatches credited to It or to The Associated Press or Reuters In this\npaper and also the local news published therein.\nPeaceful Satellites\nThe peaceful uses oi space should blllty oi kooping a continual photo-\npredominate over Its potentialities ior\nstrife. The space age opened under\nhappier auguries than the atomic age,\nThe earth aatellllea, irom Sputnik to\nTIROS, has been devoted to widening\nthe horizons oi knowledge, So have\nthe moon probes. Men seeking peace\nshould endeavor to preserve this\nemphasis.\nWorld thought Is loo much obsessed wilh weapons. From some discussions of defense one might gather\nthat all rockets are missiles and\n\u2022 missiles alone count ln military preparedness. And now TIHOS is being\nlabeled a \"spy In the sky,\"\nOf course the reconnaissance value\noi satellites ls obvious, TIHOS' pictures\ngive startling evidence oi the possl-\ngraphtc and lnira-red watch on th*\nglobe, Such an aid to Inspection could\nbecome Important in arms control.\nBut TIROS' Immediate concern Is\nwith th* woalhor; lt is spying on cloud\niormatlons and movements, This kind\noi ssrvic* could become highly valuable to the whole world. It could well\nbe established as a co-operatlv* International undertaking. And similar\nvalues should be developed by communications satellites.\nMoreover, it should be recognized\nthat even when satellites are developed ior reconnaissance they will still\nbe primarily agents of peace \u2014 promoting arms controls and lessening\nboth the iears and lhe temptations of\nsurprise attack, \u2014 Christian Science\nMonitor.\nInterpreting the News\nBy ALAN HARVEY to serve in the French military forces\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nThe warm applause and admiration that are certain to accompany\nGen. de Gaulle during his Canadian\ntour find little echo in France.\nIt Is another tribute to the general's monumental aplomb that he\nhas felt able ta leave a political void\nbehind him during his extended visit\nto North America and the West Indies. Problems are piling up at home.\nRlghtwing politicians are becoming\nincreasingly restive at the limitation\nof their parliamentary powers under\n\u25a0 de Gaulle's one-man rule, ond there\nare stirrings on the left as the Socialist\nParty gropes for a new coherence.\nThe Algerian problem, os usual,\ndominates everything. Some accounts\nsuggest the beginnings of an alliance\nbetween the classical right, exasperated at its impotence, and all those who\noppose de Gaulle's policy of self-determination for the Algerians.\nIn such a coalition, partisans of\n\"French Algeria\" would use the liberal move on Algeria and eventually\nperhaps, to try to dictate de Gaulle's\nultimate successor.\nCriticism of de Gaulle is becoming somewhat less restrained and the\npolitical lobbies are quietly canvassing the future leadership possibilities\nof former finance minister Antoine\nPinay end Jacques Soustelle, ex-minister for the Sahara, who have In\ncommon a burning ambition for high\noffice.\nOn the left, the Algerian question arouses entirely different reactions. In Lyons recently, an organization representing high school and university students declared that the war\nin the overseas territory has jeopardized France's e'onom'C future, divided its youth, caused thousands of\ndeoths and resulted in the gradual\ndisappearance of many civil liberties.\nThe left - wing Paris newspaper\nL'Express, commenting on the declaration, warns the time may be near\nwhen groups of young men will refuse\nToo Tired To Play\nFrom Scotland's Clydeside comes\nthe encouraging news that engineers\nare demanding a cut of two hours ln\nlhe Friday working day. The reason?\nWhen they work a full day on Fridays\nthey are too tired to enjoy their\nSaturday leisure I\nThere Is a weary old joke that says\nthat if business Interferes with pleasure, then cut out business. And that\nseems to be the Intention of these\nengineers.\nA man must keep In good shape to\nenjoy his leasure, and how can he do\n'. that if he has lo work eight hours the\nday before his day off?\nWhich is the way to Sanity Street?\n\u2014 HamiJlon Spectator.\nIn Algeria.\nDomestic discontents ar\u00bb widespread. They include the complaints\nof small farmers who find that agriculture cannot keep pace with industry; of miners In a country producing\ntoo much coal; of civil servants and\nemployees of nationalised industries,\nwhose salaries are often lower than\nthose In private industry.\nCanada and South\nAfrica\nWhat sort of \"action\" could or\nShould the Canadian government take\nnow lo affect the course of events ln\nSouth Africa?\nFrom various quarters at home\nand abroad, including places as far\naway as Addis Ababa, come complaints that Ottawa ls too tepid on this\nissue and should \"do something\"\nabout 11; and the burden of this advice\nalways ls lhat Canada should act ln a\nmanner unfriendly to the government\nOf South Africa.\nThis fact, of course, reflects the\ncountry's opposition to apartheid and\nsympathy with the aspirations oi the\nAfricans; and without doubt these\nsenliments are creditable to Canadians,\nBut those who clamor for action,\nmeaning diplomatic or economic\npressure, may be overlooking the\njuridical aspect of the situation. South\nAfrica Is a sovereign state and the\nCapetown government ls a lawful\nregime,\nIts laws may be unjust, they may\nbe imprudent, they may be unworkable ln lhe short or even the long\nrun; that Is certainly how they look to\n|ho outside world. The question ls\nwhether outsiders, no matter what\ntheir Opinions, should give aid and\ncomfort to violent insurrection against\nthese laws.\nLet us not blink the fact that the\nSouth African government was in a\nstate of siege and that anything done\nto the injury of that government would\nbe encouragement to the besiegers,\nprovocation to the besieged.\nA peaceful settlement in South\nAirlca, If It ls ever to come at all, will\nbe Ihe result of a slow process of conciliation, perhaps to be forwarded at\nthe Commonwealth conference in\nMay. Meanwhile, boycotts, expulsions\nand like measures are far more likely\nto add fuel to flames than put them\nout. \u2014 Financial Post.\nLetters to TKe\nEditor\nLetters to the editor oo any topic ol\nlehuin* interest are welcome If they\nare brief, accurate and lair, They\nmay be published over s nom de\nplume, but ths name ol ths writer\nmust be given to the Editor as evidence ol good faith, Anonymous letters gp Into ths wsstepsper basket,\nTypewritten lettera must be double\nspaced.\nReader Happy Over\nSports Coverage\nTo the Editor:\nSir-1 wish to go on record as heartily\nendorsing your very worthwhile efforts In\nat long last, bringing to your reading public,\nfull coverage on sporting events, especially\nboxing news and fighters,\nFor years the Dally News has neglected\nto report on the tight game, apparently\nsome female reporter was Involved who had\nno clue whatever as to what the male public\nwanted In the line of sports. Also, I wish to\ncommend your very fins effort in reporting\non all sports of high Interest to the public. I\nbelieve, after the public becomes awars that\nthere Is a live-wire sports reporter within\nthe ranks of ths Dally News, much Interest\nwill be evidenced ln your paper, which has\nlong been lacking, simply because of very\npoor sports reporting.\nThank you again.\nNICK KREUSE.\nWatch Your Language\nELOCUTION - (el-o-KEW-shunl-noun;\nmanner of speaking In public; the art of\noratory. Origin: Latin\u2014ex, out, plus loqui,\nto ipeak.\nAnxious To Contact\nColumbian College Grads\nTo Uie Editor:\nSir\u2014I am enclosing a copy of some publicity whioh I prepared for the Columbian\nCollege Reunion planned for May 28 and 29.\nWe are anxious to contact all the alumni in\nBritish Columbia and feel that local papers\nare the best means to do so.\nA good many students who attended the\nCollege came from the Kootenay district so\n1 hope you will publish all or part of what I\nhave written.\nThanking you in advance\nI MRS, I JEAN CIMOLINI.\nJll-Sth, New Westminster.\nSirens for Parade\nSeen as Danger\nTo The Editor:\nSir\u2014It has always been my Impression\nthat a siren of any sort was an urgent warning for a motorist to give the right of way\nto the vehicle using the siren, whether it be\nan ambulance, police car or (Ire truck. Does\nthe law not state that all moving vehicles\npull up to the curb to be out ol the way of\na fire truck immediately upon hearing Its\nsiren?\nAnother point I would hke to make Is:\nAre there not heavy penalties imposed, and\nrightly so, on anyone turning in a false\nalarm, one of the reasons for this being the\ntraffic dangers to which tlremert's Mves,\ntheir equipment and the lives of motorists\nare needlessly exposed.\nThis is of course as it should be, but\nwhat about the other side of tiie picture?\nWhy should Uvea and vehicles of the public\nbe exposed to similar danger, while desperately trying to safely get out at the way ol\nfire trucks and police oars that are roaring\nback and forth through the business section\nwith sirens screaming, as they were the\nother evening when welcoming the Victoria\nGood Will Tour lo our dty?\nWe are indeed fortunate that there were\nno accidents caused on Ihis land similar\noccasions in the past' by this foolirth and\nunnecessarily dangerous use ol lhe City fire\nfighting equipment. Even though p?rhaps\nsome local residents might be posted on\nsuch a coming event land they would never\nexpect the sirens) what about the strange\nmotorist passing through our city? ls he to\nheed the siren warning or not? Who would\npay the cost of broken headlllghls or a\ncrumpled tender which could easily result\nIf a motorist were to collide with another\nwho had heeded the alarm. Whv should any\nmotorist be subjected to this needless\ndanger?\nHow Is the motorist to know that the\nnext time a siren walls It is a fire or other\nemergency or a false alarm? The motorist\nhas as much reason to condemn this\nauthorized false alarm as firemen have to\ncondemn the work of a false alarm prankster.\nPlease do not misunderstand. The good\nwill intert Is not being criticised. Give Uie\nvisitors a hearty welcome, a ride through\nthe city stopping perhaps at view points and\npoints of Interest and a banquet If ycu will.\nI am sure the visitors will enjoy and retain\nthe memory of such an excursion, carried\nout in this adult lashion. But p'ease \u2014 NO\n\"FALSE ALARM\" sirens to distract and\nendanger the mot-rist '\nA CONFUSED MOTORIST.\nTROUNCE - (trouns) - verb; to punish\nseverely or flog. Origin: uncertain.\nGretna Green,\nGermany\nThe East German Government is\nreported to have lowered lo 18 the age\nat which young people can be married\nwithout their parents' consent. The\nage used lo be 21, It is still lhat ln\nWest Germany.\nSince 1945, East Germany has lost\n3,000,000 of its people \u2014 a large proportion of them young\u2014through flight\nlo West Germany. Their loss has been\nseverely felt in Industry. The new law\nmay be an effort to attract replacements by offering West German\nRomeos and Juliets a chance lo get\nmarried and a refuge from pursuing\nPapaa \u2014 a sort of Marxist Gretna\nGreen, In iacl.\nIt's an Interesting experiment, but\nwe doubt whether there are enough\nbroken hearts In West Germany to\nmake up ior Ihe losses caused by\nempty stomachs on the other side of\nthe border.\u2014Toronto GJobe and Mall.\nCPR May Reduce\nCross Canada\nTrain Service\nMONTREAL (CP)-The CPR\nhas under active consideration reductions in its trans \u2022 continental\nrail service by partial or total\nelimination of one of lt6 transcontinental trains, a spokesman\nsaid Wednesday,\nHe said the possibility of reducing or eliminating the schedule of\n\"The Dominion\" has been under\nconstant study for about two\nyears but that no decision has\nbeen reached,\nif a change came, he said, it\nwould normally be when time\nchanges occur. It was too late to\nreduce the Dominion's schedule\n(or the summer, but an opportunity for a change would come\nIn October when Canada returns\nto standard time after the daylight time of Ihe summer months.\nThe spokesman said the CPR\nhas kept the matter under study\never since the CNR announced\ntwo years ago It w\/auld reduce Its\ntranscontinental service by eliminating the Continental train and\nretaining Ihe Super-Continental.\nThe CNR's decision was withdrawn after many protests were\nreceived from communities\nserved.\nReduction of service was a\nmatter of economics, with dwindling passenger business resulting from lhe growth of airlines\nservice.\nFRIENDLY OVERTURE \u2014 The usual enmity between cats and doss Is totally\nIscklns In siiburben Pittsburg* home of Mrs. Jeanne O'Connor. She reports that Queenle,\ntht boxer, became friendly tilth Glgl the moment tne kitten became a household pet.\nInjury Forces\nGlen Gould To\nCancel Tour\nTORONTO (CP) - Recurrence Columbia\nof a shoulder injury has forced\nconcert pianist Olenn Gould to\ncancel all engagements for the rest\nof the season, Ws manager announced Wednesday.\nGould will be In a cast for four\nto sh: weeks.\nAmong the cancelled engagements were concerts in Montreal,\nDetroit, Los Angeles and Urbana,\nIII.\nThe pianist plans to resume activities in time for scheduled summer appearances at the Stratford,\nOnt.. Shakespearean festival and\nthe Vancouver festival.\nFine Arts School Aimed\nTo Serve the 90 Per Cent\nThe Initial phase of bringing a non-denominational I executive secretarial courses In-\nfederated college lo Nelson will be fulfilled with the lncep- duding shorthand, typing, account-\ntion of the Fine Art faculty this fall, on successful completion ln& commercial law, business\nof the current fund-raising campaign. Its purpose wilf be to i ELn*\"8,h mi calculation, penman-\nserve the 91 per cent which universities cannot, *% letter writing, transcription,\nDirectors of Ihe Nelson School ol Fine Arts and the * nHTSSrU rf'USS\nUnited Church Presbytery envision lhat, with establishment L f a^^l^tnf \u00bb^m?lnJ\n-i \u00bbu* *, \u25a0 \u201e._.i *y*i _ is \\. *.. t -oi n * .s-t e* . i work are studied under accounting,\nof he year-round Nelson School of Fine Art this September (bU9,WS9 mMnet, medlMi^ntal\nas the first faculty of a federated college ln Nelson, business I faoraurutl: stenographic; special-\nadministration and commercial departments will comorlse ized industry secretarial; business\nthe second faculty. It Is hoped that Ihe curriculum will be\nset by the Department of Education or the University ol British\nDue to the nature of subjects of-\n! fered at the Fine Art sohool, a\n: relatively small percentage of\nj students will be Served by this\nI faculty. There is a much larger\nI group of students who would re\nadministration; secretarial science\nand general business and special\ncourses.   All   these  courses   are\nPresbytery thus has planned for comprised of a variety of relevant\nestablishment of two faculties \u2014\none In applied art, commercial art\nand fine art and another in business administration and commerce,\nlo  enable   students   not  entering\nspond to a vocational faculty and! university to take their place in\nat present have no opportunity ofi business or Industries and develop\nInto professionals with Ihe specialized training they have received.\nInstruction within our province.\nIn the second faculty of business\nadministration and commercial\nfields, they would receive training\nafter high sohool graduation, equipping them (or entry Into the bust-\ni ness world, the trades, the pro-\nI fesslonal field or self business.\nLEADERS IN BUSINESS\nThe business administration faculty, benefiting post-high school\nstudents Is designed to prepare\nyoung people to enter commercial\nlife and to proceed to positions of\nleadership  in business.  Emphasis\ndelphla  to consult\nspecialists.\nwith\nf**\\*w***9m*,mmm***,wm m\u00bb*mmm^mmmm*,mmw9*imw*fW'*i1\u00bb*trw\u00bb<s,\nYour Individual\nHoroscope\n**\"! I\ni ir--\"\"\"-^\nBy Frances Drake \u00bbm\u2014\u00ab*\u2014\u2014j I\nThe   27-year-old   muslclon   ap-\nS^^?11? ^\/TH   The   non-denominational   feder-; In this faculty is placed on basic\nnight and Wednesday left for Phila- ated   college  envisioned  hy  the I principles and fundamental eon-\nmedical directors of the Nelson School of cepts presented mainly from the\n'Pine Arts and the United Ohurch I public or social viewpoint.\n\"I This two-year diploma course\nwill train students to proceed to\npositions of leadership in business,\nenabling these young people to\ntake employment at the end of the\nfirst or second year. The course\nmeets more than basic requirements for employment,\nIncluded in this comprehensive\ntraining are English literature and\nComposition; accounting; secretarial science (typing); commercial law, introduction to business,\nprinciples of economics, principles\nof psychology; physical education;\nand business mathematics.\nIn the second year are included\nbusiness communication and expression; mathematics of business\nand finance; Secretarial science\n(shorthand!; marketing principles;\nproblems ln business administration; economic geography; Canadian and American history; public\nspeech; physical education.\nBUSINESS DEGREE\nGraduates of the business administration training faculty will\nLock In the section in which your\nbirthday comes, and find what\nyour outlook Is, according to the\nstars.\nFor Friday,  April  22,   1060\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 20 (Aries)\n\u2014 Don't underestimate this day or [ more,\nthe people wilh whom you deal. It\ncan be upsetting if your attitude\nIsn't right, or surprisingly pleasing (maybe results later though).\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Tauruil-\nVenus' oncoming favorable aspect\ntends to building enthusiasm, increased Interest in Issues, Don't be\nlacking in the Important matters.\nPromote good will, you can so\neasily.\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini) -\nForget trifles, annoyances, there\nare big things, some new is.sues\nand possibly activities, and so\nmany things to be attended to that\nthere Is no time for worry or misgivings.\nJUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer)-\nBe grateful for everything, and\nthis fresh day, too. Aim to improve\nsmall Items. It's fascinating and\nbuilds in value so quickly. Popularity requires a readv smile.\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leo)\u2014\nEverything comes to him who\nwaits.\nsuggests some revising, reviewing,\nurges your best in the wholesome,\nco-operative way that really accomplishes. Note advice to Cancer.\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER\n(Libra) \u2014 We can always do\nIncrease our productivity,\nadd a few items to Our agenda\nWHEN WE TRY. Today you may\nfind this necessary, Interesting,\nBut keep all within reasonable\nbounds.\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER 22\n(Scorpio) \u2014 Do your own work\nfirst, then lake on those extras, up\nto a sensible line. Plan for pleasant\ndiversion wilh loved ones, happy be able to continue at UBC or any\nsubjects and they will be of eight\nmonths to one year's duration, except for secretarial science and\ngeneral business, which Is a two-\nyear program.\nOf loo students entering grade\none, nine are university material\nand the other 91 students attend\nsenior matriculation, nursing\nschools, business colleges and\nhigher technical schools or other\neducational Institutions, and it is\nfor this 91 per cent that the proposed federated college will provide.\nSome who are not university\nmaterial nevertheless try the university program and may fall. This\ncollege will prevent such a waste\nof time, money and effort.\nsenior university to obtain a bu\nness  degree   in  any  of  several\nfriends. No frowning.\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER\n21  (Sagittarius) - Good day for specialised fields,\nsteady application to duties. It re-' COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT\nquires it if you would achieve in j    The commercial department pre-\nany   noteworthy   measure.   Meet- pares post-high school students for\nIngs.    plans,    revising    schedule j positions In the business and in-\nfavored, dustrlal world, specially providing\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY 20! [or them an insight Into the under-\n(Capricorni - Some will feel tired, I standing and skill necessary for the\ncannot wait for work-day to end. particular business or profession\nRemember to remain cheerful and with which he wisnes to become\nleave that important good im- associated\npresslon after you. Be understand\ning, never cynical.\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY 19\nbut faster to you who goi (Aquarius) - Uranus fine aspect,\nby working fer things you; But by same token, don't take on\nB.C. Police To\nUse Four-Part\nTraffic Ticket\nVICTORIA (CP) - Introduction\nof a uniform traffic ticket with a\nbuilt-in summons was announced\nWednesday by Attorney-General\nBonner of British Columbia.\nThe one-ticket program will be\nlaunched in unorganized areas of\nthe province where the RCMP enforces law Mr. Bonner said he\nhopes other parts of the province,\nIncluding large cities, will adopt it.\nThe new ticket Is a perforated,\nfour-part form. It comes in four\ncolors and the summons ls Included.\nWith a series of check marks in\n80 optional squares a constable\ncan record almost any offence.\nIf an incident should defy the\nselection system, a small space is\nprovided in which police can write\nIn the offence.\nMr. Bonner said the ticket will\nprovide Uniform information to the\nmotor vehicle branch and to\neliminate \"a great deal ot clerical\neffort which used to be required in\nconnection with traffic tickets.\"\nHe  said   several   municipalities\nhave already indicated they will\nIncluded in this department are adopt the new ticket.\nHUBERT\n(Virgo) \u2014 Planet Mercury's aspect\ndunt dhi.\nWL\nmeet\nwish. No better day than this to j too'muoh, You tend to\"try to please\nwind up affairs In sturdy business-; m\u201ere than should be exnected, andi\nlike manner. , sllr|Henlv   arc   fatigued.   Personal\nAUGUST 24 lo SEPTEMBER 23 a!Utn fflvored\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 201\n(Piscesl \u2014 You know well the'\nsaying, \"Charity is a virtue of the!\nheart, and nol of the hands,\" but |\nbe reminded to prelect your asse's[\n(time, talents and moneys) (romi\nthe unwise, [\nYOU BORN TODAY; This is the\nbeginning nf Taurus, hill Ihere are\nstill some waning tendencies from\nAries. You have Inner strength,\ndeep devotion to solid things, to\nhome, loved onei, sometimes to old\nthoughts, antiques. You appreciate\nmusic, good literature (if developing your fine God-given gifts), are\nenthusiastic about life in general,\nand like cheerful company, Ouard\nhabits, they grow so fast. Eat,\ndrink. Indulge pleasures ln sane\nmoderation tor health, happiness.\nDon't discourage al some returns\nfrom efforts, you eventually win\nprized laurels. Birthdate of: James\nBuchanan, Mth U.S. President.\ntf John ever brings Amy flow-\ners, she thinks he's been up to\nsomething. Then she feels ashamed\nand treats him nice, and he thinks\nshe's flxln' to ask for something.\n\"How, let's not be bashful, Cedrio! Say 'AWK AWKr.\n8EGAWK1' for Mr. Dooloyl\"\n mm\n^^^^B^raS^iWIiWIWSBSpS'^SH\n**^*^**^***^****^*************^^***^*^***^******************^****^******9*********************^^^^m\nPrincipals Easter Monday\nWedding To Live in Nelson\nMR. AND MRS. DAVID IAN STEWART OF NELSON\n\u2014Phofo by Vogue Studio.\nPrincess and Husband To\nMove Into Kensington\nLONDON (CP) - Princess Margaret and Antony Armstrong-\nJones will move into a rent-free\n\"grace and favor\" residence at\nKensington Palace probably In\nmid-June.\nA spokesman at Princess Margaret's home said the couple\nwould move into their home after\ntheir honeymoon aboard the royal\nyacht Britannia.\nHe added that they probably\nwould be back In Ixmdon by mid-\nJune as Margaret's first public\nengagement alter her wedding\nMay 6 will be on June 24 when\n\u2022he will open a school.\nA statement from Buckingham\nPalace said:\n\"Tlw Queen has offered to the\nPrincess Margaret and Mr. Antony Armstrong-Jones a grace\nand favor residence at Kensington Palace which they have been\nvery pleased to accept.\"\nKensington Palace, in the west\nend of  London,' was  the  birth\nplace of Queen Victoria. In recent generations it has been divided Into separate apartments\nand houses for relatives of the\nRoyal Family and officials who\nhave given long service to the\nroyal household.\nThe Duchess ol Kent, aunt of\nthe Queen and Princess Margaret, Uvea there with her family.\nThe residence where Margaret\nwill live was formerly occupied\nby the late Marquees of Carisbrooke.\nParent* of the principalis oame\nfrom Alberni and Medicine Hat to\nattend the wedding ceremony Monday at Cathedral of Mary Immaculate uniting In marriage Sharon\nEileen Bodaly and Mr, David lan\nStewart,\nRev, F. J. Monaghan officiated\nat the nuptial service for the\ndaughter of Mrs. P. C. Bodaly ot\nAlberni, B.C., and the late Mr,\nBodaly, and the son of Mr, and\nMrs. John Stewart of Medicine\nHat, Alta.\nFor the Easter Monday service,\nthe altar was decorated with yellow and white chrysanthemums\nand Easter lilies. The bridegroom's\ntwin brothers from Medicine Hat\nwere altar boys.\nYellow rosebuds and stephanotls\nof the bride's bouquet complemented her lovely floor-length full-\nskirted gown of ohanUHy lace and\nnet. The bodice was fashioned ol\nlace, the lace panels over net\nruffles gave a graceful air to the\nskint. A tiara hold her veil.\nThe bride's attendants were\ngowned In Identically styled waltz\nlength dress featuring lace bodices and chiffon over satin skirts.\nThey carried Easter Miles, and\ntheir accessories were white.\nThe bride's sister, Mrs. Jack\nAckerman. was matron Of honor\nin blue and Miss Raye Anne Davies. as bridesmaid, was in pink,\nMr. James Stewart of Medicine\nHat, brother of the bridegroom,\nwas best man.\nUshers were Mr. Lnrne D.\nShockey of Nelson and Mr. James\nPilla of Vancouver.\nThe bride's mother was In blue\nwilh matching accessories, and\nIhe bridegroom's mother was in\ngrey  with  matching  accessories.\nStreamers of yellow and white\nbells provided decor ln the Cathedral Hall for the reception. The\nbride's table was centred wilh\na three-tiered wedding cake flanked with yellow candles. Marry wedding gifts were arranged on another table.\nTelegrams from Ihe bridegroom's\ngrandfather, aunt and uncle In\nMedicine Hat were read.\nFor a trip through the western\nUnited States, the bride donned\na light grey suit and accessories.\nOut of town guests at the wedding were parents of Ihe principals, also the bridegroom's five\nbrothers and two sisters from Medicine Hat, and Mr. James Pilla\nof Vancouver.\nQueens Bay\nDavid Baravalle has left for Ed-\nmonton, where he will receive Instruction In preparation for teaching at Ihe Edmonton Recreation\nDepartment's summer art course,\nwhich opens In June.\nPHONE 1841 FOR CLASSIFIED\nEVERYBODY'S\nDownstairs Department Store\nGIANT tt?XmMr\nStarts Monday, April 23 and continual through to\nMay 7. It'i a \"STOMWIDE SHOWER OF SAVING\"\nat EVERYBODY'S DEPARTMENT STORE, BENEATH\nALBERTSON'S, NORTHTOWN, SPOKANE, WASH.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, APRIL 21, 1960\u20141\nCollectors Will Have New Item-Girl\nGuide Golden Jubilee Stamp Issue\nCollectors will have another\nshort-term Issue to add to their\nstamp collection with first sales of\nthe commemorative stamp printed\nfor the Canadian Girl Guide Association's Golden Jubilee this year.\nThe stamp went on sale Wednesday, with the Nelson office selling a good proportion of their 12.000\nprints, -.*.\u00bb\nFirst sale was made to Margaret\nTaylor of the First Nelson Guide\nCompany, daughter ol Mr. and\nMrs. A. A. Taylor, and postal clerk\nW. C. Leahy made the sale.\nThe stamp Is a two-color five\ncent stamp. On a blue background\nIs Imposed the Olrl Guide trefoil\u2014\na three-lobed leaf \u2014 bearing the\nmotto \"be prepared\" around it,\nand In a gold halo around this is\n\"Girl Guide Association,\" both in\nEnglish and French, The dates 1910\nand 1080 are nrlnted in gold.\nCANADIAN AHTIST\nThe design was prepared by Canadian artist Helen Fitzgerald of\nToronto, who also designed the\nAssociated Country Women of the\nWdrld commemorative stamp issue'\nOrganized in 190(1 by Lord Baden\nPowell in Britain, the first Girl\nGuide company was formed In St.\nCatherine's, Ont., in 1010 and the\nmovement spread quickly throughout other provinces of Canada,\nwhich at present has Ihe third largest Girl Guide population In Ihe\nworld, wjth Great Britain and the\nUnited States having the largest.\nCanadian Guides boast the most\nnortherly company In the world at\nAklavlk, Northwest Territories.\nThis company was formed In 11)37,\nand was first of the northern\ngroups, which Include a few Es-j\nklmos.\nOlrl Guides have a link with the\npost office through their postal\nbadge, earned by Guides who have\nreceived Instruction In good mailing practises.\nThe postmaster general has said\n\"The commemorative stamp Issue\nls a tribute to all who have encouraged and assisted the Association, and to thousands of Canadian\ngirls who have benefitted from its\ncharacter-building activities.\"\nProgram\nConveners\nRead Play\nReading of the play \"Followers\",\niiom the book \"Cranford\" was ,ii\nhighlight of the program of Alpha\nXi Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi, held;\nat the home of Mrs. J. L. Laughton i\nIn the Bevanne Apartments this)\nweek. j\nThe reading was part of Ihe study\nliterature through reading of plays J\nand program conveners were Mrs.1\nNorman MacLeod, Mrs. T. E. Cartridge, Mrs. Don Capper and Mrs.\nD. R. Nuyens. !\nTentative arrangements were\nmade for the annual spring banquet,\nlo be held next Wednesday In tho!\nNelson Hotel.\nCo-hostess was Mrs, William\nDeFoe. i\nABOUT\nCOLLECTOR'S ITEM. First stamp in Nelson of an Issue commemorating the\nGolden Jubilee of Canadian Girl Guides, which went on sale Wednesday, April 20 ln\npost offices across Canada, is bought by Margaret Taylor, Girl Guide of the First Nelson\nCcmpany, irom postal clerk W. C. Leahy.\u2014Daily News photo.\nDeer Park\nDEER PARK - H. Jamieson I\nKimberley was a recent guest 0\nhis parents, Mr. and Mrs. O. D\nJamieson.\nMr. and Mrs. C. M. Ktrkendal\nol Procter were guests of till\nformers father, M. A. ktrkendaU\nMr. F. G. Hanvblin baa retumet\nto his home In Deer Park ftftei\nspending tiie past 0 months wit!\nfriends and relatives at Prtna\nGeorge, Vancouver and othel\npoints, He was accompanied b)\nhis son, L. Hamblta of Hane]\nwho spent a few days in Deal\nPark.\nMr. and Mrs. D. D. Jamiesot\nhad as their weekend guest, th<\nlatters niece, Mrs. Tilda Harrll\nof Calgary.\nMr. and Mrs. O. D'Andrea an<\nson Norman spent tihe Easter week\nend with relatives in Trail.\nC. S. Phelps and son Wayne r\u00bb\nturned trom a weekend trip tt\nSalmon Arm, where obey visit*\nhis parents, Mr. and Mrs. D\nPhelps,\nMrs. F, Briggeman wat a re\ncent visitor to Renata where sill\nwas the guest of Mrs. L, Wither,\nwho recently returned firam Vancouver.\nCross.\nFretty Baby\nIf b\u00bbbf li croti of Uctty. it is usually I\n\u25a0igfl that iomithing in hi! or her lfttll\niy*<em li 'out of offlir\", And in mtflf\ncum, mild, gcrttl* Blby'l Own Tableti can\npromptly ' put it right\", Thlfi tho reasoa\nmon ind more modern mothers tt\u00abp Bib? I\nOwn Tablets on hind for Initam use whet)\nminor ailments, colic and upsets, due to need\nOf \u2022 corrective, cause bibr to lia fretful)\nK*\u00ab|jh and \u00ab)(!\u00ab\u00bb. Cllnleilly and tlm*\ntared. Baby's Own Tablets are thoroughly\ndependable. Jult i\u00ab for yourself how quic*\nIt these easy-to-take sweet-rasting little\ntablets have baby feeling happy and conV\nfortable again. Ask your doctor about them,\nOct a package at your druggllt,\n\u2022 Motherl For Irregularity and minor dlgai-\ntlv\u00bb uptali of oldar child, 3 to 15, fllvt\nBlInlcaHytoitodChlldron'aOwnToblotS\nTorontonian, Wife of\nDiplomat, Now Writer\nBy   EL1ZIBETH   MOTHERWELL\nCanadian  Press  Stall  Writer\nOTTAWA (CPI\u2014\"1 lost a hobby\nand (ound a profession,\" says\nPhyllis Brelt Young of the discovery that her first book had\nrisen near the top of the most- | WRITER FIRST\nI read list of current Canadian lie- j    Blue-eyed blonde mother of\nUsher and Is also to be brougut\ncut ln England.\nThe Torontonlans   was   written\nin the living room ol the Youngs'\nOttawa apartment overlooking j\nthe Rideau canal. .\nlion.\nOIL TREES\nThe   oltlclca   trees   of   Brazil, I\nwhich yield oil-bearing nuts, may\ngrow to 100 years or older.       j\nEXCEPTIONAL BUYS IN\nUSED APPLIANCES\n1 ONLY\nRoyal Albert Coal and Wood Range.     $35.00\n1 ONLY\nMcClary Coal and Wood Range.  $59.00\n1  ONLY\nSylvania TV (like new).          $219.00\n1  ONLY\nKenmore Automatic Washer. $98.00\n1 ONLY\nThor Conventional Washer.    .....      $39.00\n1  ONLY\nSpeed Queen Conventional Washer. $29.00\n1 ONLY\nCrossley TV (21 \"console)  $169.00\n1 ONLY\nSlightly Used Annex Heater.   $49.00\n2 only Repossessed ]959 Frigidaire 11-cu. ft.\nRefrigerators.\nc lie\nBATTERY RADIOS\nFor Summer Cottages\nEach Only *J9.95\nWM\nPHONE 1300\nNELSON, B.C.\nMrs. Frank Pashley and her son\nand daughter, David end Susan j\nof Vancouver are guests of Mr. |\nand Mrs. R. C. Hawes, 708 Third   \"\nStreet.\n* *   *\nMr. and Mrs. S. Romance o!\nCalgary have been guesis of their\nson-in-law and daughter, Mr. and\nMrs.   J.  F.   Hogg  ol  the   North\nShore.\n* *  *\nThe executive of the Couples\nClub of Uie North Shore United\nChurch finalized plans for a pot\nluck supper and showing of films\nthis Saturday at a meeting this\nweek. A phoning committee will\nbe appointed to remind district\npeople of all social events.\n* *   *\nMr. and Mrs. W. R. French, 420\nRichards Street, have had aj\nguesis their son and duughter-in-\nlow, Mr. and Mrs. Jack French,\nand infant son Russell of Calgary.\n,  ,  ,\nMr. and Mrs. J. Nagy of Rose-\nmont have had as guests irom\nVancouver their son-in-law and\ndaughter. Mr. and Mrs. Johnny\nYanko and two granddaughters,\nRhomlle and Sherrey, who have\nreturned to the Coast via the\nUnited States.\nPsyche,   the   story   about   the\ndaughter of a middle-class Toronto family who is kidnapped in\ninlancy and Is reunited with her\nparents alter she grows up wilh I\nan interesting a s s o r t m ent of j\n\"uardians,   was   written   largely .\nas a spare-time effort. i\nNow  she  spends  most  of her j\nafternoons at the typewriter and j\nwriting   has   become   a   regular\npart of her routine.\nBorn in Toronto, Mrs. Young\nacquired a love of the English\nlanguage from her father, tihe\nlate Prof. G. F. Rrctt. 9he now\nlives in Ottawa with her husband,\nDouglas, a diplomat.\nLOVES CANADA\nMrs. Young began writing because of her affeclion for the\nlanguage. \"That is not my reason now. I write because 1 love\nCanada and 1 wish more 'and\nmore people would write about\nCanada as it is today.\"\nHer second book, Tbe Toronlo-\nnians, Is soon to be published.\nIt's setting is also Toronto, \"a\ncity I know as I shall never\nknow any other city\u2014from the\nresidential suburbs right down to\ntiie lakefront.\"\nPsyche, plotted in Canada but\nwritten in Geneva where the\nYoungs spent five years on a\ndiplomatic posting, has been\nbought    by   an    American   pub-\nmarried daughter, Mrs. Young\ncomplains of a tendency on tiie\npart of Canadians to regard wo-\n.nen authors as women rather\nthan writers.\nI \"Tiie quality of one's work\u2014or\nlack of It\u2014should be emphasized,\nrather than what one ls otherwise,\" she says.\nShe lakes Issue with (be suggestion that Canadians are dull.\n\"Canadians  are a  vital  and ex- J\nciting people. ... I would rather i\nbe  Canadian  than  anything else\nIn life.\"\nMrs. Young says nostalgia\nbrought the couple home from\nEurope. \"Canadians on the whole\nlend to come home. Other nationalities are satisfied wild being\nexpatriates, C a n a d lans won't\ntrade Canada even  for luxury.\"\nMrs. Frank Merriam of Wynndel is a patient in Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital.\n#   *   \u00ab\nJ. M. Young, 401 KOkanee Avenue is a patient in Kootenay Lake\nGeneral   Hospital.\nSqr^Xaiuui Irfhsud&h\nCHILDREN ENJOY\nSERVICE, NORTH\nSHORE HALL\nChildren's church was held at\nthe North Shore United Ohurch\nHall Easier Sunday when the entire Sunday School gathered in\nthe hall.\nThe primary class under direction of Mrs. Neale sang two Easter\nhymns.\nA flannel-graph of the Easter\nstory was presented by Mrs. Fred\nLowe. The intermediate class under Mrs. Rruce Bradshaw sang\nhymn selections. Mrs. Mel Davies\nplayed Ihe piano accompaniment.\nThe scripture lessen was read\nby R. (Dick) Wallace. Tills was Ihe\nparable ol the sower, and later\na gift ol seeds was given to each\nchild.\nA cross of daffodils on evergreens formed an effective backdrop for the service. Seven candles\nand an Easter My were on the\npulpit, the lily being taken to\nWiU'owhaveri Hospital later.\nBIG   INDUSTRY\nGross outut of Britain's electronics industry approached \u00a3475,-\n000,000 in 1959.\nJob's Daughters\nOn Way lo Grand\nSession al Coast\nBethel No. 10 will attend the\nJob's Daughters Grand Session to\nbe held in Vancouver this week'\nend at the Kelly Douglas audi\ntorlum.\nGrand officers and guardians\nwill be introduced at the informal\nopening. Flag bearers from all\nBethels will perform a flag ceremony.\nRuring the three-day session,\neach Bethel has an opportunity to\nenter choir or skit competitions.\nLater, workshops will be held.\nApproximately 600 girls and their\nguardians will banquet at St. Giles\nHall,\nSunday morning, the session will\nclose with oluu-cii parade at Ker-\nrisdale Presbyterian Church. They\nwill tour Hie cancer clinic, where\nB.C. Job's Daughters have furnished and maintained a children's\nward.\nAttending from Bethel No. 10\nwill be Erla Shannon, Diane Taylor, Sheila McGovern, Sandra Nie-\nhaus. Sheila Morris, Dana Disney,\nBetty Chambers, Andrea Ma'nson,\nMadge Wallace, Margaret Catley,\nDonna and Brenda Palmer, who\nleft Wednesday for Trail and will\ncontinue from there today to the\nCoast. Guardians accompanying\nthe girls are from Trail.\nELEGANT ACCENTS\nMatched accessories are smarter I Dress up your home with tWa\nchair and scarf set.\nRoses and tulips \u2014 beautiful ln\ndiet crochet. Pattern 615: charts;\ndirections 1214 x 16-lnoh back, arm\nrest 7 x 12V4, scarf 16 x 31 or\ndesired length ln No. 50.\nSend THIRTY-FIVE CENTS ln\ncoins istamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern to Laura Wheeler,\nNDN, 60 Front St. W., Toronto.\nPrint plainly PATTERN NUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS.\nNewl Newl Newl Our 1960 Laura\nWheeler Needlecraft Book Is ready\nNOW! Crammed with exciting, unusual, popular designs to crochet,\nknit, sew, embroider, quilt, weave\n-fashions, home furnishings, toys,\ngifts, bazaar hits In the book\nFREE - 3 quilt patterns Hurry,\nsend 25 cents for your copy.\nCONFIDENTIALLY YOURS\n\"\"\"^\"^ hy Ryrno Hope Sander1\".\nMONTREAL, April 21\u00bbt-Here'i my word to th\u00ab\nwise homemaker who would like to be a wonderful cook. Try the flavour magic of MAGGI\nCHICKEN BOUILLON CUBES and you'll agree,\nI'm sure, that here's a whole new way to make\nmeals taste better. Yes, Maggi Cubes make a\ndelicious hot drink or appetizer (only 4 calories\na serving too!) ... but there's so much more\nyou can do with them! Add gourmet flavour to your stewa, gravies\nand caaserole dlahea\u2014simply by adding Maggi Cubes. Drop two\nor more Maggi Cubes In the boiling water before you add rice,\npeas or carrots. Delicious! Look for the yellow and red package\nof Maggi Chicken Bouillon Cubes next time you shop!\nAVOID YOUR FAMILY'S WRATH .,, by double-checking your\nshopping list for SNACKERS. Yes, once\nyou've given your family a taste of golden-\ncrisp McCormick's Snackers, they'll Insist\nthat you keep a box or two always on hand\nfor delicious snacks, anytime. You see,\nSnackers are the crackers made specially for\nsnacks and parties, too. From one box of\nSnackers you get four favourite shapes... .    .\nround6, triangles, aquares and fingers \u2014 always fresh and snappy!\nIdeal for entertaining and perfect with soups, cheese and peanut\nbutter. Next time you shop, don't say crackers \u2014say SnackersI\nSPRINGTIMI 18 PLAYTIMi ... but still no time to neglect the\ndanger ot unsanitary, slow drains! How to\ntake care ot this problem with a minimum\nof time 'n' trouble? Just put quick-and-easy\nGILLETT'S DRAIN CLEANER to work.\nYou'll find Gillett's Drain Cleaner has a\nspecial churning, boiling action . . . quickly\nand completely scours out every trace of\nthe greasy mess that collects In clogged-up\ndrains.  All you do Is put 2 tablespoons of Gillett's Drain Cleaner\nin every drain, every week ... and you know that all your drains\nare fast-running, clean and sanitary.\nHOW   NICI   TO   MAKE   THE   'APRIL  CHANCE\nclothes to fresh spring dresses!  The best way I\nfrom winter\n\u2014   \u201e    - yi\nknow to keep your spring clothes fresh foi\nmany wearings is to trust to the complete protection of ETIQUET (Deodorant and Antl-Per-\nspirant.) You can buy It ln Cream, jar or tube;\nhandy Stick\u2014or In the new, unbreakable Etlquet\nRollt bottle. The built-in Rolit marble simply\nrolls on exactly the right amount of lotion to\nkeep you fresh and dainty all day long. Choose\nyour own favourite method of applying this famous deodorant . ..\nCream, Stick or Rolit . . . you can always count on Etiquet for\ncomplete, day-long daintiness.\nDOES THE RECIPE CALL FOR CREAM? No need to make a\ntrip to the store when you have NESTLE'S\nPURE THICK CREAM handy. Unopened, thia\ntine country cream keeps Its freah quality Indefinitely, right on your kitchen ahelf. After\nthe tin is Opened, it stays fresh in the refrlg-\nerator as long as dairy cream. Use Nestle'a\nCream in any recipe calling for the smooth\nrichness of cream. And whenever you need\nsour cream to make delicious treats . . . simply mix 1 (6 oz.) tin\nof Nestle's Cream with one tablespoon of lemon Juice and let Hand \u2022\nfor a few minutes. Remember in any recipe calling for sweet or\nsour cream, Nestle's Pure Thick Cream is perfect.\n'IN ANY DISCUSSION ABOUT DOO POOD, nourish-\nment is the key word.  And so many dog owners have |\ntold mc that all their dog-feeding problems are solved\nby DR. BALLARD'S CHAMPION DOG FOOD.   You\nsee, actual  analysis has proven that\nDr. Bollard's gives your dog up to 94% I\nmore nourishment than many of the\nso-called \"bargain\" branda selling at I\nonly   a   few   cents\nless.   You   really\ncan't afford to give\nyour dog anything,\nbut   the   best . .\nDr.   Ballard'\nChampion  Dog'\nFood I\nA BARGAIN IS A BARGAIN . . . only when you have the cash\nto take advantage of It. That's why I urge my\nfriends to open \"special purpose\" accounts at\ntheir neighbourhood branch of the BANK OP\nMONTREAL. Be sure to make regular depositi\nand you'll be delighted as you watch your\nsavings grow. Then when some attractive bargain presents itself, you're there with the ready\ncash to take advantage ot lt. Wonderful \"buys\"\nare always turning up, and money in the bank\ncan make the difference between wishing and\nhaving.   So why not open your own \"special\npurpose\" account at your neighbourhood B of M today?\nHAS THIS EVER HAPPENED TO YOU? A letter from a Halifax\nlady says that when she was papering a room she\nstooped to pick up a roll of paper, ana was stricken\nby a sharp pain ln the back, so severe that she\ncouldn't stand up.   She goes on to say:  \"I had\nheard of TEMPLETON'S T-R-C's through friends\nand so decided to try them.  I am thankful to say\nthat they gave me complete relief from pain.\nSince then, she says, she takes T-R-C's for relief\nany time she gets a back-ache or lumbago. Do try\nthem yourself if you suffer from arthritic, neuritic,\nsciatic or rheumatic pain . . . and tell your friends\nabout long-famous, reliable T-R-C's.\n \u2014\u25a0\"\"\nS^NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSPAY, APRIL 21, 1960\ntahl Frosts\nfit Fruit\nI Washington\nJteATTLE   (API\u2014Damage  was\nestimated   light   althouigh   light\nfrost hit Central Washington fruit\norchards in early bloom last\nweek and some orchards were\nheated, the federal-state crop reporting service said Wednesday. \u25a0\u25a0'\nPoilenizing conditions in Chelan, Okanogan, Douglas and Yakima counties during the week\nwere described as generally poor.\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS\nKootenay Valley Hospital\nImprovement District No. 4\nNOTICE OF . . .\nAnnual Meeting\nZone No. 1\nQueen's   Bay,   Procter,   Harrop,   Long   Beach,   and\nWest to Kokanee Creek.\nNotice is hereby given that the Annual\nGeneral Meeting of the Property Owners of the above Zone will be held in\nHarrop Community Hall\nThursday, April 28,1960 at 8:00 p.m.\nFOR THE FOLLOWING PURPOSES:\n(a) To receive from the Trustee of the Zone a report on the\nundertakings of the said Improvement District for the\npreceding fiscal year ond a statement of the financial\ncondition of the said Improvement District prepared by\nthe auditor.\n(b) To discuss with the Trustee any matter relating to the\nundertakings or finance of the said Improvement\nDistrict.\nfe)   To elect a Trustee for the ensuing three years.\nTrustee: Mr. C. M. McNown,\nChairman of the Meeting.\nDated the 21st day of April,  1960\nBy Order of the Board,\nJ.\u00a3 fismniksL\nSecretary-Treasurer\nKootenay Valley Hospital\nImprovement District No. 4\nNOTICE OF . . .\nAnnual Meeting\nZone No. 3\nWest of Beasley Bluff, South Slocan, Crescent Valley,\nSlocan Park and Passmore.\nNotice is hereby given that the Annual\nGeneral Meeting of the Property Owners of the above Zone will be held in\nWomen s Institute Hall\nSouth Slocan, B.C.\nFriday, April 29, 1960 at 8:00 p.m.\nFOR THE FOLLOWING PURPOSES:\n(a) To receive from the Trustee of the Zone a report on the\nundertakings of the said Improvement District for the\npreceding fiscal year and a statementof the financial\ncondition of the said Improvement District prepared by\nthe auditor.\n(b) To discuss with the Trustee any matter relating to the\nundertakings   or   finance   of   the   said   Improvement\nDistrict,\nfc)   To elect a Trustee for the ensuing three years.\nTrustee: Mr. G. E. Penniket,\nChairman of the Meeting.\nDated the 21st day of April,   1960\nBy Order of the Board,\nJ.\u00a3 finnnlksL\nSecretary-Treasurer\nKootenay Valley Hospital\nImprovement District No. 4\nNOTICE OF . . .\nAnnual Meeting\nZone No. 5\nFrom Hall Creek, Ymir, Sheep Creek, Erie, Ross\nSpur, Canadian Exploration and H. B. Mines,\nSouth to the U.S. Border.\nNotice is hereby given that the Annual General\nMeeting of the Property Owners of the above Zone\nwill be held in\nSalmo Village Hall\nThursday, April 28, 1960 at 8:00 p.m.\nFOR THE FOLLOWING PURPOSES:\n(a) To receive from the Trustee of the Zone a report on tbe\nundertakings of the said Improvement District for the\npreceding fiscal year and a statement of the financial\ncondilion of the said Improvement District prepared by\nthe auditor.\n(b) To discuss with the Trustee anv matter relating lo the\nundertakings or finance of the said Improvement\nDistrict.\n(c) To elect a Trustee for the ensuing three years.\nTrustee: Mr. G. D. Christie,\nChairman of the Meeting,\nDated  the 21st day of April,   1960\nBy Order of the  Board,\n5- \u00a3. fiwmht\nSecretary-Treasure'\nWELCOMES  CAPITAL\nACCRA, Ghana (Reuters)-\nPatrice Lumumba, president of\nthe Congolese National Movement, said here Tuesday that\nafter the Belgian Congo becomes\nindependent June 30, it will follow\na foreign policy of non-alignment\nand positive neutrality. It will\nwelcome foreign capital and techniques, however, and will establish democratic institutions he\ntold a press conference.\nCoast Mayor Wants\nMore  Police Patrols\ni -VANCOUVER (CP) - Mayor\nTom Alsbury has- asked police\nchief George Archer how many\nconstables could be relieved of\nclerical work and put on patrol\nduty.\nHe expressed concern about the\nnumber of policemen on patrols\nfollowing the Easter Monday\nmurder of grocer Tom Fat.\nKootenay Valley Hospital\nImprovement District No. 4\nNOTICE OF . . .\nAnnual Meeting\nZone No. 2\nNorth Shore from Kokanee Creek to Grohman Creek\nNotice is hereby given that the Annual\nGeneral Meeting of the Property Owners of the above Zone will be held in\nWillow Point\nElementary School\nFriday, April 29, 1960 at 8:00 p.m.\nFOR THE FOLLOWING PURPOSES:\nfa) To receive from the Trustee of the Zone a report on the\nundertakings of the said Improvement District for the\npreceding fiscal year and a statement of the financial\ncondition of the said Improvement District prepared by\nthe auditor.\n(b) To discuss with the Trustee any matter relating to the\nundertakings   or   finance   of   the   said   Improvement\nDistrict.\n(c) To elect a Trustee for the ensuing three years.\nTrustee: Mr. R. A. Grimes,\nChairman of the Meeting.\nDated the 21st day of April,   1960\nBy Order of the  Board,\n$.\u00a3. fl&nnifal\nSecreta ry-Treasu rer\nKootenay Valley Hospital\nImprovement District No. 4\nNOTICE OF . . .\nAnnual Meeting\nZone No. 4\nSproule Creek, Taghum, Blewett, Granite Road,\nRosemonf, Uphill, South Nelson, Upper Fairview,\n(all outside City Limits) and South Shore to Atbara.\nNotice is hereby given that the Annual\nGeneral Meeting of the Property Owners of the above Zone will be held in\nShirley Hall\nFriday, April 29, 1960 at 8:00 p.m.\nFOR THE FOLLOWING PURPOSES:\n(a) To receive from the Trustee of the Zone a report on the\nundertakings of the said Improvement District for the\npreceding fiscal year and a statement of the financial\ncondition of the said Improvement District prepared by\nthe auditor.\nIbl To discuss with the Trustee any matter relating to the\nundertakings or finance of the said Improvement\nDistrict.\nfc)   To elect a Trustee for the ensuing three years.\nTrustee: Mr. W. A. Anderson,\nChairman of the Meeling.\nDated the 21st day of April,   1960\nBy Order of the  Board\n$.\u00a3. tpmniksL\nSecretary-Treasurer\nKootenay Valley Hospital\nImprovement District No. 4\nNOTICE OF . . .\nAnnual Meeting\nZone No. 6\nIndustrial Zone\nNotice is hereby given that the Annual General\nMeeting of the Property Owners of the above Zone\nwill be held in\nWEST KOOTENAY\nPOWER & LIGHT CO. OFFFICE,\nSouth Slocan, B.C.\nThursday, April 28, 1960 at 4:00 p.m.\nFOR THE FOLLOWING PURPOSES:\n(a) To receive from the Trustee of the Zone a report on the\nundertakings of the said Improvement District for the\ncondition of the said Improvement District prepared by\nthe auditor.\nTo discuss with the Trustee any matter relating to the\nundertakings or finance of the said Improvement\nDistrict.\nTo elect a Trustee for the ensuing three years.\n(b)\n(c)\nTrustee: Mr. C. H. Bland,\nChairman of the Meeting.\nDated the 21st day of April,   1960\nBy Order of the  Board,\n5*S- finnmht\nSecretary-Treasurei\nCITY SICHT \u2014 New 26-story skyscraper dwarfs\nall about it in Dusseldorf, West Germany. Residents have\ndubbed the 304-foot high building the \"frozen towel.\"\nRegiment's Headquarters\nSeized by Cuban Rebels\nCARACAS, Venezuela (API-\nRebels seized control ot an army\nregiment's headquarters at San\nCristobal near the Colombia border Wednesday in an attempt to set\noff a country-wide revolt against\nPresident Romulo Betancourt's\ngovernment.\nBetancourt ordered troops to\nSan Cristobal to quell the uprising, and pledges of support\ncame to him from military, political and civilian sources.\nThe moderate Venezuelan president announced he would use all\nconstitutional powers to crush the\nrebellion, but would not suspend\nconstitutional guarantees in this\noil-rich country.\nThe strong military garrison at\nCaracas announced its support for\nBetancourt's government.\nLeaders of the country's three\nmajor political parties appealed\nover a national radio network to\ntheir followers in San Orislobal to\noppose the insurrection.\nSEIZE HEADQUARTERS\nThe rebels seized control of the\nSimon Bolivar regiment's headquarters at San Cristobal.\nThe head of the Central Workers Organization, Jose Gonzalez\nHavarro, called for its 1,200,000\nmembers to go out on strike. He\nsaid this would be a demonstra-\nlion of opposition to the \"criminal\" insurrection he declared\nwas counting on the support of\nthe Dominican Republic.\n\"Hie government announced last\nSaturday that it bad smashed a\nnlot for an armed invasion of\nVenezuela from Colombia by officers dismissed from the army\nfor their supnort of former dictator Gen. Marcos Perez Jimenez.\nVenezuelan naval craft and air\nforce planes were patrolling the\ncoast on the lookout for two\nlishing boats which the defence\nminister, Gen. Jose Lopez Hen-\nriquez, said Tuesday had sailed\nfrom Spain with arms for the\nplotters.\nSERIES   OF   UPRISINGS\nBetancourt, a moderate wilh a\nreputation as a social reformer,\nhas faced a series of minor uprisings, threats and harassments\nsince he took office early in 1959.\nHe was elected a year after the\noverthrow of Perez Jimenez, now\nin exile in Florida.\nA series of bombings a few\nmonths ago was blamed by the\ngovernment on supporters\nof Perez Jimenez. Officials said\n6 f f i c e rs and policemen who\nserved in the dictator's 10-year\nregime were trying to stir up\ntrouble to unseat Betancourt.\nStiff sentences of penal transportation to the jungles were announced for rioters. Betancourt's\ntroops also beat down an uprising in Caracas last Aug. 4.\n!    Venezuela,   a   tropical  country\nrich  wilh  American  investments\ni in oil and iron ore, lies on the\n| northern hump of South America\nfacing   the    Caribbean.   It   has\nabout  6,000.000  people,   and  because of  the  country's rich  resources, has the highest per capita income in South America.\n\"Wise Men\" Propose\nNew Economic Forum\nNEW PGE SHAREHOLDERS\nWEST VANCOUVER (CP> -\nMunicipality of West Vancouver\nis now a substantial shareholder\nin Pacific Great Eastern Railway. Comptroller Elmer Barnes\ntold municipal council Tuesday\nnight he had invested $525,000 idle\nreserve funds in five per cent\nPGE shares.\nBy HAROLD MORRISON\nCanadian  Press  Staff  Writer\nWASHINGTON (CP) - A draft\ntreaty to help reduce lhe threat\nof a dangerous European trade\nsplit and to give Canada and the\nUnited States stronger voices in\nEurope's economic affairs was\nproposed today by a committee\nof four \"wise men.\"\nThe proposal would establish a\nnew economic forum in Paris\naimed at achieving international\nsolidarity between Europe and\nNorth America, based on reduction of trade restrictions and expansion of aid to underdeveloped\ncountries.\nSpecifically, as outlined in the\ncommittee's report, the proposal\nwould eliminate the 18 - country\nOrganization for European Economic Co-operation \u2014 in which\nCanada and the U.S. have enly\nassociated membership\u2014and replace it with a more powerful 20-\ncountry organization.\nFULL  MEMBERSHIP\nCanada and Uie U.S. would\nhave lull membership in this new\nbody which possibiy could go into\noperation by Sept. 1, 1961, ii at\nleast 15 ol the 20 countries involved ratity tile proposed treaty.\nEconomic experts from all 20\ncountries will examine the proposed scheme early next month\nand perhaps by next July spokesmen lor the 20 governments may\ngather to hammer out some preliminary understanding.\nThe new forum would bring together the principals in Europe's\ntrade rivalry \u2014 the six-country\nCommon Market, headed by\nFrance and West Germany, and\nthe seven-country Free-Trade Association headed by Britain.\nBritain has complained the U.S.\nseems to be giving more encouragement to the Common Market\nthan the Outer Seven. Britain\nalso has expressed fears Common\nMarket countries may ring themselves with a high tariff aimed\nagainst Britain's vital exports.\nCanada also has expressed concern over the future of-her European markets.\nPLANNING COMMITTEE\n\u2022Last January representatives of\nthe 20 countries set up the four-\nman committee of \"wise men\" to\ndevise some scheme for strengthening economic co-operation inside Europe and between Europe\nand North America.\nCommittee chairman W. Randolph Burgess, U.S. ambassador to\nthe North Atlantic alliance, reported the four investigators\n! found \"substantial agreement\"\namong those consulted in the 20\ncountries on these points:\nWestern Europe and North\nAmerica made extraordinary progress during post-war years:\nA turning point now has been\nreached;\nCountries with great economic\npower recognize their responsibility to the poorer countries.\nWorking with Burgess in a hurried three-month effort to devise\na replacement for the crumbling\nOEEC were Sir Paul Gore Booth\nof  Britain.  Bernard  Clappier  of\nFrance and Xenophon Zolotas ol\nGreece.\nMAY ABSTAIN\nThe committee said some decisions taken by the new body\nbecome binding on all agreeable member countries. Each\ncountry would have the right to\nabstain from such decisions.\nThe chairman would be a cabinet minister elected for one or\ntwo years.\nActing as a sort of general manager with strong powers would be a secretary-general\nappointed for a least five years.\nTVie challenge of our time it\naid to needy countries, the committee said. It suggested members of the new organization increase the flow of private and\npublic capital into underdeveloped areas and that Europe increase the life of export credits.\nOn trade, it conceded that Europe will have to live with its\ntwo trade blocs but suggested the\norganization become a forum for\n\"joint examinations\" of trades\npolicies to remove obstacles\nstanding in the way of trade liberalization and expansion.\nTwo Teenage Lads\nRob Vancouver\nStore of $2000\nVANCOUVER (CP)-Two Calgary teen-agers went from cash\nregister to cash register on three\nfloors of the Hudson Bay Company department store here early\nWednesday and collected $2,000 before police caught them.\nPolice said tne boys, who stole\n$50 from one of their parents to\nget here Monday, hid in the store\nat closing time Tuesday.\nThey used wrecking bars from\nthe hardware department to\nsmash open-every cash register\non the first three floors and were\npreparing to go to the fourth\nfloor when police answered a\nsilent alarm they had tripped.\nThe pair, aged 15 and 16, were\nbeing held by juvenile authorities.\nPolice said the boys hid in a\nbroom closet and stayed there\nuntil 10:30 p.m.. when they ate\na large meal by picking food\nfrom the grocery department\ncounters and had a football, game\nwith cabbages.\nAs they- made their tour of\ncash registers they filled two\nsuitcases with sweaters, socks\nand other clothing.\nPolice said when they arrived\nthe pair had money in every\npocket, stuffed under their shirts\nand in the suitcases.\n\"They told us they were almost\nready to leave when we arrived,\nbecause they didn't have much\nroom left to carry more money,\"\nan officer said.\nft is believed the boys planned\nto escape by a fire escape. Police\nsaid there is no night watchman\nin the store.\nCLASSIFIED AOS GET RESULTS\nElectric Water Heating costs are low\u2014most of our customers use an Electric Water\nHeater in their homes at a cost of approximately $2.50 per month\nIn most areas served by our company, if you have an Electric Water Heater in use,\nyou get a very favourable rate, which also reduces the cost of Electricity for other Electrical Appliances. This rate is one of the lowest in North America.\nCall on our representatives and ask about the low cost of Electric Water Heating in\nyouT home.\nWEST KOOTENAY POWER\n ;    !';    \u25a0\u25a0..-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u00ab \u25a0\u25a0_\u25a0\n.      \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0     \u25a0\u25a0\u201e\u25a0-.:- -v.v.,^1\n?'!??'PB.^?'^^^f!Wff'!^!^^^^?S!^P^Sr!Hff\n : ' .'\" ';\",,   \u25a0 .\" '\u25a0'T\n\/63li\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, APRIL 21, I960\u20141\nCfawk TfUd A^fa&UHhfdtf\nJee-Shirtsl\nFancy T-Shirts with collar and\nplacket front. \u2014 polo or two-way\ncontinental style. Popular patterns and shades. Sizes: Medium\nand Large only.\nMen's Sheen\nCotton Pants\nMade from quality pre-\nshrunk sheen cotton in\npopular suntan shade.\nSizes: 34, 36 and 38 only.\nClearance\nClearance\n2.79\n2.99\nPah\nMen's Corduroy\nSportshirts\nThese shirts are fully washable and ideal for the teenager. Shades of brown, grey,\nblue and beige. Small size only. (14-14'* neck)\nReg. 7.98 value\n'Shag' Sweaters\n82% wool and 18% nylon for\neasy washing and long wear.\nLong sleeves and crew neck.\nShades of olive, brass, brown\nand charcoal. Sizes S, M, and\nL.\nMen's Dress Pants\nTailored from hard-wearing\nVenetian Gabardine in shades\nof brown, blue and grey. Some\nwith charcoal stripes. Waist\nsizes 35. 37 and 39 only. Clearance.\n5.99\nPair\nClearance\n2.99\nClearance\n4.99\nMen's Flannelette Workshirts\nMade  from good  quality  flannelette  in popular  plaid\npatterns. Shade- ol red and grey. Medium size only.\nReg. to 1.10\nMen's Worksocks\nWool and wool blends with nylon heel and toe \u2014 a rugged\nhardwearing sock at a great\nsaving. Clearance.\nClearance\n1.49\n.69\nPair\nReg. 4.98 Men's Whipcord Workpants\nMade from cotton whipcord \u2014 tough and rugged. Dark\ngreen shade. Waist sizes 32 to 40 only.\nClearance\n3.99\nPair\nMen's\nBoxer Shorts\nWash 'n wear fabric, in neat\npalterns. Balloon seat. Sizes:\nS, M, and L. Clearance.\n.89\nPair\nReg. $1 value\nBoys' T-Shirts\nCan be worn as Tee-shirt or\nunderwear. Crew neck, white\nonly. Sizes 8 to 14. Clearance.\n.79\nReg. 6.98 Boys'\nDress Pants\nSmartly styled in grey and\ncharcoal with \"lure\" stripe effect. Four pockets and fully\nculled. Sizes 16 and 18 only.\nClearance.\n4.99\nPair\nBoys'\nFancy T-Shirts\nWashable cotton with two tone\nor matching collars and plackets. Horizontal stripes in red,\nblue, grey, navy and brown.\nShort sleeves. Sizes: 8 to 14.\nClearance. .\n7.49\nReg. .69 Boys'\nStretchy Socks\nMade from 100% nylon, one\nsize only \u2014 fits most boys'\nfeet. Fancy bright patterns\nand shades. Clearance.\n2  pain     I\nBoys' Flannelette\nShirts . . . Vi-price\nGood quality flannelette shirts,\nsome with fancy knit trim.\nLong sleeves. Assortment of\ncolors, broken size range 8 to\n16. but mostly size 10. Reg. to\n2.98. Clearance.\n1.49\nBoys' Wash-n-\nWear Sportshirts\nLong sleeves, made from cotton broadcloth or plisse.\nSizes: 6'to 14. Clearance.\n1.49\nPiece Goods and Staples\nReg. 1.79 yd.\nCORDUROY \u2014 WASHABLE\nBrown. Blue and Green only.\n36\" wide. Yd. \t\nReg. 11.95 QUILTED\nTAFFETA  BEDSPREAD\nAqua wilh floral centre.\nI only. Double bed size.\nReg. 2.29 RAG MATS\nMulti-color. 27x50.\n6 only. Each \t\nReg. 2 for 1.49\nSTRIPED TERRY TOWELS\n20x40.  Limited quantity.\nEach\nReg. 11.95 WHITE\nLINEN TABLECLOTH\n72\"x72\".\n1 only\nReg. 4.98 PLASTIC SHOWER and\nWINDOW CURTAIN SETS\nAssorted\ncolors.        \t\n.99\n7.99\n1.49\n.49\n6.99\nReg. 4.98 COTTON MATS\n27x50.\nGreen only. Each   \t\nReg. 7.50\nHOMESPUN BEDSPREAD\nRose, Blue and Green. Single\nbed size only. Each\nReg. 2.95 CUSHIONS\nCorduroy covered.\nEach \t\n2.99\nReg. 2.98 WINDOW FRILL\nNylon dot. Blue on white only.\nEach\nReq. 2.29 COTTAGE\nSTYLE CURTAINS\nIn white cotton scrim with print\ntrim. Each\nReg. 3.29 Pr.\nLUSTROUS DRAPES\nIn floral and modernistic pattern.\n36x84. Pair\nReg. 4.50 Yd. PLAIDS\nWool tartan. 54\" wide.\nYard\n2.99\n4.99\n1.49\n1.49\n1.29\n1.99\n2.50\nCar Coats Reg. to 16.98\nSheen and cotton cord car coats, fully lined in large assortment of styleB and colors. Sizes: 10 to 20.\n10\n99\nDuster Coats . . . Reg. 19.98\n6 ply bengaline duster coats, fully lined,\nlovely assortment oi styles and colors.\nSizes: 10-20.\nWashble Cotton Dresses\nReg. to 8.98\nElastic waist dresses in American polished cottons. Beautiful prints, large array\nol styles. Sizes: S, M, L.\n16\n88\n4\n99\nReg. 10.98 Bulky\nKnit Cardigans\nThe so popular cardigan ir\nhigh bulk orlon, assorted\nstyles   and   colors.   Sizes:   S,\nM, L.\n8.88\nReg. 4.98\nOrion Sweaters\nCardigan style and some novelty's. All high bulk orlon.\nSpring colors. Sizes 8 to 14.\nSlim Jims\nAssorted plaids, washable and\nsanforized, tapered leg. Sizes\n12 to  18.\nOnly\n3.88\nReg. 7.98 Boys'\nImitation Leather\nJackets\nMachine washable motor cycle .jackets, dust like the big\nboys. Waterprool and long\nwearing. Black or brown.\nSizes 3 to 7.\n1.99 ,\nCotton Blouses\nAsorted styles in washable\ncotton blouses, sanforized.\nSizes 32 to 40.\n.99\nReg. 3.98 Leotards\nNylon, full fashioned leotards.\nJust right for camping use.\nAssorted colors. Size average\nand tall.\nReg. 19.98\nReversible Skirts\nImported all wool reversable\nskirts. Large assortment of\nplaids First quality. Sizes 12\nto 20.\n16.88\nPlastic Pants\nReg..29\nSoft piasLlc pull-on type pant.\nFirst quality. Stock up at this\nlow price. Sizes S. M. XL.\npairs\n*1\nPrice\n1.99\n5.99\nBoxer Longs\nReg.1.98\nAssorted cotton fabrics. Some\nwith zipper front. Sizes 3 to\n6X.\n155\nReg. 55.96\nCrib and Mattress\n\"Sealy*' 6-year-size spring-\nfilled mattress plus a \"Stork-\ncraft\" 6-year-size crib with\n4-side teething rails, drop\nside, adjustable mattress,\nposture board.\nSome 11.52.\n$5.00 down.\nOnly 44.44\nJackets\nReg. to 3.98\nAssorted cottons, corduroj,\nsuede cloth. All first quality.\nZipper fronts, assorted trims.\nSiz?s 3 to 6X.\n7.99\nReg. 5.98 Nylon\nBabydolis, Gowns,\nSlips\nFirst quality lingerie at a saving! Lovely lace trims. Solnrs\nwhite, pink and blue. Sizes 32\nlo 40.\n399\nReg. 3.95   Roby\nRevolving Sprinkler\nWater activated rotary sprinkler heads, watertight connection. Limited T AQ\nquantity.  Special                                  *U.~f *\nReg. .99 Metal\nBrume-Type Rakes\n14'     fan    type metal tynes.  Ideal  for  spring\nclean-up.\nSpecial, each  \t\n.39\n.49\nReg. $3. Wall Plaques\u2014Half  Price!\nWall plaques in house design or butterflies.\nFigurines\nSpanish Dancers\nReg. $6. Sale\nBallet Dancers.\nReg. $10. Sale   ...\nHarlequins.\nReg. $8. Sale \t\n$4\n$8\n$6\nReg. 7.98 Laundry Hamper\nWicker laundry hampers. 2 only. White with yel-\n  5.98\nlow lid.\nAll yellow. Sale\nReg. 1.19 Tea Pots\nBrown Betty teapots, 6 cup size.\nColors: Brown or Black. Sale\n.89\nReg.  .69.  Clothes Pin  Bag\nCloth  Clothes  Bags made to hang on line  or\napron. Assorted Colors.\nSale\nReg. 7.50 Auto Floor Mot\nTwin mats for front of cars. Approx. size: driver's side 22\"x27\": passenger side, 22\"x31\".\nColor: Grey with black diamond. c Cft\nSale 3.3U\nReg. 3.49 Rotating Food Chopper\nIdeal for chapping vegetables for       \u2022)   Aft\nsalads, easy to use. Sale X.\" V\nReg. 3.79 Creams and Sugars\nKozy Kraft creams and sugars. Aluminum covers. Assorted colors. *\\ Aft\nSale                                        2..*T3r\nReg. 12.99 Melmac Sets\n20 piece Melmac Breaklast Sets.\nAssorted patterns. Sale\nReg. .79 Inflate-a-Toy\nInflatable pull toy. Made of vinyl\nplastic. Sale \t\nReg. 3.49 Clothes Line Sets\n50 ft. plastic covered clothes line, 2 pulleys, 2\nhooks, 1 line tightener. |   *lft\nSale 1.17\nReg. .35 Cups and Saucers\nSemi-porcelain cups and saucers.    Tall   style\nAssorted patterns. |~\n       JI\n9.99\n.49\nSale.\n'Ior\n$1\n35 mm Film\nFor   all   cameras   designed   to   use\nstandard 35 mm film magaines.\nReg.   4.30.   Kodachrome   Type   F.\n20 exposures *y   QQ\nRoii i..yy\nReg. 1.25 Kodak Tri-X\nS6 exposures, safety.\nReg. 4.98\nHome Movie Cartoons\n100 foot reels, famous characters\nsuch as Bugs Bunny. Tweetic. Pork\nPig, Daffy Duck and many others.\n.87\n3.99\nReg.  1.39\nTravel Case\nPlastic   case   contains   soap,   soap\ndish, toothbrush holder\nsponge and brush.\n$1\nReg. 3.75\n\"Giro\" Mist Esscent\nSpray mist parfums \u2014 New Horo-\nzons. Danger and Reflexions. Limited quantity.\nCostume Jewellery\nAssorled styles in lighl  and bright\nearrings.\n4 for $1\nPlastic Bangles\nColors- of Black,  Blue, Green  and\nTan.\nReg. 4.98.\nMusical Powder Boxes\nGay colorful Musical Powder Boxes.\nAn ideal Mother's Day gift.\nReg. 209.98\n2 pc. Chesterfield Suite\nNo-sag base on kiln-dried hardwood frame topped with\nfull 5-inch foam rubber cushions. Long wearing ireize\ncover in attractive green color. 1 only.\nClearance \\ 5 9 98\nBox Springs \u2014 Reg. 39.50 -- 49.50 -- 59.50\nWe have a quantity of Box Springs which the coven\nhave been discontinued. Double and 3\/4-sizes only.\n2 only. 220-coil. Reg. 39.50. Clearance .\n1 only. 312-coil   Reg. 49.50. Clearance\n2 only  300-coil. Reg. 59.50. Clearance\n29.50 \u25a0;'\n38.SO\n47.50'\nA   few   mattresses   with   discontinued   covers   are   available   at\nsimilar savings.\nCedar Chests\nYour choice of walnut or\nlight finish. Lined with select Tonnesse red cedar. $100\nmolh insurance wilhout extra\ncharge. Prestige chests by\nLane.\n1 only. Reg.  89.98.\nClearance $74\n1 only.  Reg.   119.98.\nClearance $99\n1 only.  Reg.  145.01).\nClearance $115\nCorduroy Crawlers\nBib front, snap catch crawl-\nReg. 36.50\nDeilcraft\nStep Tables\nTruly   a   fine   furniture   finished   in   dark   walnut   high\ngloss. Don't miss this.\n2 only. Reg. 36.50. :\nSpecial\n22.50\ners. Sanforized corduroy,\nsorted sizes.\nAs-\n1.49\nGirls' Pedal\nPushers and\nSlim Jims\nAssorted sheens and plaids in\nsanforized cotton. First quality. Sizes 8 to 14,\nLighter   finish.  2  only.\nReg. 49.98\nSpecial 36.50   :\n1 only 33' round Coffee Table.\nReg. 94.50\nSpecial   gj   QQ\nReg.  .50  Each\nk Tile\nEach tile is 9\"x9\"x3\/18. Made\nfrom easy upkeep resilient\ncork with vinyl treated face.\n35 only (covers 3'x6' hall etc.)\nEach   tile\n25c\nReg. 3.95\nLink Rubber Mats\n1.99\nEach\nApprox. 17\"x23\". Made from\ntires. Keep your entranceways\nclean, front and back. Lim-:.\nited quantity.\nClearance \t\n2.88\nReg. to 3.98\nGirls' Dresses\nCottons and synthetics, assorted styles, colors. Some\ncounter soiled, no subs. Ideal\nfor everyday wear. Broken\nsizes Irom\n<, to 14\t\n1.88\nReg. to  18.98\nGirls' Suits\n17 only. Spring fashions in\ngirls' 2-pc. suits. All wool fabrics, pleated and straight cut\nskirts. Assorted styles. Choose\nyours early. Spring colors.\nSizes 7 to 14. 1 7   Q Q\nClearance IA..OO\nReg. 59.50 each\nPadded\nHeadboards\nHeavily padded with h eavy'i,\nduty cotton back plastic over\nwhite cotton felt. Natural ivory\nfinish. Not a sale set but a i\nprestige article at clearance\nprices. 2 only ITJS ft ft'\nSale Spec.  Each3*..UUi\nf\nReg. 79.50\nConnor f\nVacuum Cleaners;\nRound cannister model with!\nheavy duty motor\u2014all metal -\ncase on easy roll <tCC?\ncastors. 2 only *\u00a5 JJ.\n3.99\nEach\n.10\n1.85\nEarrings\nReg. $1  to  1 50 in  assorted  styles\nand colors\nNylon Scarves\nAssorted    colors   in    fancy   nvlon\nscarver *\\ <t\"l\nfor spring. *\u2022  for   S\u00bb I\nPlastic Rain Bonnets\n2 for   .29\nReg. 1.35\nJergens -- Woodbury\nJergen's, Woodbury. Ideal gif's for\nFather's Day. etc. Contains .-'It\nshave, lather shave, soap and cologne for men.\n2 for $1\nReg. 5.95, 6.95\nDresser Sets\n3 pi?ce dresser sets including hand\nmirror, comb \"\"d ''\"\"\"h.\nReg.  13.95\nMen's Oxfords\nBaycrest quality leather oxfords In\nBalmoral, Gore and Blucher styles.\nLimited quantity only. Sizes: 6'i. 7,\n8, 9, 9Vj, 10. I01*..\nReg. 4.98\nLadies' Casual Shoes\nClosed toe and heel, wedge heel\ncasuals in white and beige.\n3.99\nReg. 9.98\nBoys' Senior\nSavage Oxfords\nLimited quantity only of high quality Senior Boys Oxfords. Sizes: 34\nto 7 In the group.\nWomen's Air-Step Shoes \\\\\n16 pairs only. Originally sold for 14.95, now clearing at this'.;\nlow, low price. Sizes limited.\n6.99\nA\nMule House Slippers\nSizes Small, Medium, Large In Broade mules, with foarn.j>\nEoles. * ?<\n.59\n6.99\nDon't forget to check the Clearance Tables in all\nDepartments. Hundreds of Money-Saving Bargains for the thrifty shopper.\nIn  handy\nplastic case\nT.\n9.99\nINCORPORATED   2??  MAY 1670.\n ~\n*************************^\n^^p^^\"\n\u25a0    I \u2022\", I;.-   -;   \u25a0..--->\n\u2022\u25a0   '      ''..' >:\n7.-. I-;'\u25a0-,!;.-.HI-:-:, 7.   .-,:'\u25a0.-', !-!'. \"'.' ....,.i.;...\". ,.-,'  , '. J\". U'......  \u2022 ..\u25a0,..',.',.!.' ,..!..   \u2022 ,,i.*\\ .\u2014! \u2014^ ^ '.,.;\u25a0 *,ri If\n8\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, APRIL 21, 1960\nNATO GUARD\u2014 Laborers set lip 60-foot high\nparabolic steel antenna, at Hanover, West Germany, for an\nindustrial fair. It's part of NATO's north-south radio net.\nCharcoal May Tell Vancouver\nIsland's Prehistoric Secrets\nFrench Paper\nPrints Letter\nTo Peugeot\n'PARIS (Reuters)\u2014The Paris\nnewspaper L'Aurare Wednesday\npublished what it claimed.was the.\ntext of the ransom letter addressed by the kidnappers of\nfour-year-old Eric.Peugeot to his\nfather.\nIt,said the letter, inspired by\na crime novel called \"abduction\"\nby Lionel White, published in\n1955, said:\n\"\u2022Dear M; Peugeot,\n\"This is what people will read\nin the papers \" y*1 do not carry\nout our conditions: 'Little Peugeot is dead, horribly tortured, because his parents refused to pay\nthe ransom asked of them.'\n\"I would not.like to put your\nson in the hands of my friend\nDede. Dede is a good type, but\nhe' is a little crazy.\n\"Be reasonable, M. Peugeot.\nYou will hand over the sum of\n50 millions, that is.5(k),000 new\nfrancs at a place which will be\ntold you. Above al, do not tell\nthe police. Be reasonable, as we\nare with you, over, this sum.\"\nThe letter was found at the St.\nOloud golf course on the outskirts\nof Paris near the spot where\nEric Peugeot was kidnapped\nApril 12. The child was returned\nuriharmed 'Friday after his father\npaid over the ransom demanded.\nBy ELIZABETH MOTHERWELL\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA- (CP) \u2014 A piece of\ncharcoal found by a woman archaeologist may tel a story of human\nhabitation on' Vancouver Island\n4500 years ago.\n'The charcoal was found by\nKatharine Capes while examining\nSO mounds of earth .dotting a\ngrassy valley three miles from\nCourtenay,. B.C. She believes the\nmounds were cremation plots.\nDigging into one with a hand\ntrowel, she came upon an animal\nshape outlined in stone.\n' \"The placing of the stones was\n.too obvious to be anything but\nman-made,\" she related in an\ninterview here.\nProm beneath this formation she\nunearthed a chunk of charcoal,\nlater proved by radio-oarbon test\nto date irom about 2500 BC.\nTwo other charcoal samples\nwere taken from another mound\nand now are at the University of\n- Saskatchewan where an attempt\nis being made with electronic\nequipment to determine whether\naM tliree resulted from man-made\nfires.\nMiss Capes, who spends her\nwinters' cataloguing at the National Museum in Ottawa and her\nsummer on exxjavation work, said\nthat if the two samples of charcoal not yet dated are found to\n. match the age of the first, it will\nbe evidence of possible human\nBfe on Vancouver Island in 2500\nBC. Such a discovery would ex\n:tend the known age of west coast\nhabitation 1000 years.\nShe took a fourth charcoal\nsample from a shell midden \u2014\ngarbage heap \u2014 and said a test of\nits age might, indicate that the\nmidden was the habitafion site of\nthe mound builders.\nMounds   similar -to   those\nplored by Miss Capes were noted\nby early settlers but many have\nsince been destroyed by farmers'\nplowis.\nCREMATION FIRES\nPrevious investigators of the\nlandmarks suggested charcoal\nfound in the lower strata of the\nmounds resulted from a cremation fire while those in upper\nstrata were.from the burning of\npersonal effects. Miss Capes said\nshe is the first investigator to subject her findings to radio-carbon\ntests by which their age may 'be\ndetermined.\nA native of Courtenay, 60 miles\nnorthwest of Nanaimo, Miss Capes\nbecame interested in field work in\nher final year at the University of\nBritish Columbia following Second\nWorld War service in the RCAF.\n\"I wanted an outdoor job plus\nsomething on ivhich I.could use\nbrainpower.\"\nShe took her master degree at\nthe University of Toronto and\nstudied at the Institute of Archaeology in London.\nSHELLS HIT  QUEMOY\nTAIPEI, Formosa (AP)-Com-\nmunist Chinese guns lobbed six\nshells on the offshore Quemoy islands Tuesday night, the Chinese\nNationalist defence ministry reported. The action was the first\nagainst the islands in six days.\nTwo Major Units of\nCanada's  NATO\nBrigade Returning\nOTTAWA (CP) - Army headquarters announced Wednesday\nthat two major units of Canada's\nNATO brigade will return to Canada on rotation in the fall after\nthree years' service in West Germany.\nThe 3rd Regiment, Royal Canadian Horse Artillery at Camp\nGagetown, N. B., and including\nthe battery at Camp Valcartier,\nQue., will rotate with the 1st\nRegiment, now stationed at Fort\nPrince of Wales with the *h Canadian Infantry Brigade group.\nThe 1st Battalion, Queen's Own\nRifles of Canada at Calgary, will\nchange stations with the 2nd Battalion, now at Fort MacLeod near\nIserlohn.\nThe troop movement will start\nin October and wil! be completed by the end of November.\nAlberta's Experimental Station\nStudies Biological War Hazard\nBy GARTH HOPKINS\nCanadian Press   Correspondent\nMEDICINE HAT, Alta. (CP)-\nFrofn the, outside, Suffield Experimental Station looks like a\nmedium-sized industrial plant.\nFrom the Inside, it has the .appearance of a large university\nscience laboratory.\nBs workers are engaged in research on biological warfare.\nScientists and technicians of the\nDefence Research Board of Canada here are on a constant\nsearch for means to combat\nchemical or bacteriological attacks which could, with: little or\nno warning, render a nation helpless.\nBEADLY GAME\nThey\" are playing a deadly serious game \u2014 first determining\nwhat effect bacteria or gas might\nhave on humans, then hunting for\nan antidote. For while Canada\nand other countries have signed\nthe 1925 Geneva Protocol outlawing use of. \"asphyxiating, poison-\nour or other gases and bacteriological methods of warfare,\" she\ncan never be sure they will never\nbe used by others.\n. Canada is working with Britain\nand lhe United States in the research. Each year for the last 14\nyears the three nations have met\nto exchange information and plan\nresearch so there will be no unnecessary duplication.\nWork on defence against such\nwarfare has been broken down\ninto three parts: Development of\nphysical\" defence by such means\nas protective masks and clothing;\nrapid and accurate detection in\nthe event of attack, and ascertaining how substances affect the\nbody and what can be used to\ncounteract them.\nMEDICAL ASPECT\nSuffield, on 1,000 square miles\nof land 28 miles northwest of\nMedicine Hat, is responsible only\nfor the medical section. Other aspects are being studied at DRB\nplants in Eastern Canada.\nA.M. Pennje, chief superintendent at Suffield, says the station's\njob is \"elucidating the hazards\"\nof biological warfare.\nCanadian Labor Congress\nSeeking Higher Revenues\nUnited Arabs\nUncover Six\nSpy Rings\nCAIRO (Reuters)\u2014The United\nArab Republic announced Wednesday that six Israeli spy rings had\nbeen uncovered and 10 spies arrested\u2014five Europeans and five\nEgyptians.\nThe U.A.R. Information department confirmed a newspaper\nstory (hat an Israeli agent had\nplotted to poison President\nGamal Albdel Nasser.\nThe department told a press\nconference that the story, reported by the newspaper Al\nAhram, wa6 true. .\nThe Europeans arrested were a\nDutchman, Meewis Goudswaard;\ntwo Italians, Raimondo di Pietro\nand Ferdinando Pacciolla, and\ntwo Greeks, Nicolas Coys and\nGeorge Stamatiou.\nThe information ministry said\nthe spy rings had been operating\nfor the last three years in the\nU.A.R. and in Rome, Geneva,\nMunich, Zurich and Amsterdam.\nRadio sets had been seized by\nthe U.A.R. general intelligence\nagency.\nThe story said Israel had made\ncontact with an employee of a\nCairo catering firm and made\nhim one of their \"network of\nagents.\"\nThe agent was to pour some\ndrops of poison into Nasser's\nglass.\n' When the plot was discovered\nIhe agent confessed and handed\nover the poison bottle, invisible\nink which he used to write to Israel and a radio set. Authorities\nsent radio messages in the\nagent's name to Israel and received replies, Ihe story said.\nObservers believe the alleged\nplot must have been discovered\nshortly before Nasser's visit to\nIndia. They recalled that special\nfood was taken aboard his plane.\nBy ARCH MacKENZIE\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA (CP)-The costs of\nCanadian organized labor are going up.\nNext week the Canadian Labor\nCongress, which claims 1,150,000\nmembers, will seek more revenues from its affiliates to keep\nits expanded operations in the\nblack. Otherwise it faces a $70,-\n000 deficit for the 1960 calendar\nyear.\nThe CLC biennial convention\nstarting Monday in Montreal will\nbe asked to approve an increase\nin the per capita dues paid by affiliates.\nTeachers Approve\nFour Principles\nVANCOUVER (CP)-The B.C.\nTeachers Federation approved\nfour principles Tuesday in its objective of controlling the qualifications of its own members.\nThey are:\nThat the federation should be\nprepared to categorize its membership in terms of their basic\nqualifications; that it should be\nprepared to determine and state\nthe basic competence of its membership; that it should be prepared to deal with incompetency\nor inefficiency in any of its members, and that these principles\nshould be reflected in salary\npolicy.\n(At present, certification of\nteachers is controlled by the provincial government. It is based\nsolely on the number of years of\ntraining.)\nThe convention instructed its\nmembership committee to draft\na detailed report on implementation of the plan for presentation\nat the next federation general\nmeeting next year.\nIt would be at least another\nyear before it could be implemented, even should both the\nprovincial government a sohool\nboard go for it.\nThe provincial government has\ndeclined in the past to give the\nfederation any control over qualifications  of  teachers  since  1948.\nDELICIOUS ANY WAY-ANY DAY!\n^\/ Peach shortcake\u2014peach cobbler\u2014peach pie\u2014peach,\ncompote\u2014peaches with ice cream\u2014there are dozens of dishes\nyou can make quickly, easily with rich, juicy Royal City Peaches!\nOr. enjoy them by themselves\u2014the new pack of Royal City\nPeaches is the best everl It's the finest of B.C.'s crop, processed\nand packed with all the fresh-picked flavor that has made\nRoyal City the best-tasting canned fruits. That's why\n'most everyone reaches for Royal City Peaches I\nB.C.'S OWN \u2022 B.C.'S BEST\nThe question is one of four subjects expected to gain most attention at the convention. The\nothers are support in principle\nfor.a new Mowing party and the\nstatus of the Seafarers' International Union and the Teamsters\u2014\nthe SIU facing expulsion for raiding and the other found guilty on\ntwo raiding charges.\nBUDGET INCREASE\nThe CLC proposes a $1,309,000\nbudget this year, $89,000 more\nlhan a year ago. Anticipated revenues at existing rates are $1,-\n220,000.\nInternationally chartered unions provide most of the CLC finances and this amounted last\nyear to $671,000 in monthly payments based on per capita membership. The CLC proposes that\nthis fee be increased to 10 cents\na head from seven cents.\nLocally chartered unions kicked\nin $281,000 on the basis of 75\ncents per union member per\nmonth with five cents going to a\n\"defence\" fund,, used, among\nother things for strike pay. The\nnew scale would be $1.05 monthly\nincluding 25 cents to the.defence\nfund.\nNational unions \u2014 bigger ones\npurely Canadian in setup \u2014 provided $112,000.\n\"In our defensive research we\nhave to try to determine how\nwidespread the danger resulting\nfrom a biological attack would\nbe. If certain bacteria were able\nto live a long tine and travel\nlong distances in the atmosphere,\nthen the danger would be great.\nHaving established the degree of\ndanger, we then have to find an\neffective means of combatting\nit.\"\nThe job involves painstaking research carried out under rigid\nsafety precautions.\nHOT LABS\nAfter basic research on a given\nstrain of bacteria, the job moves\ni*to one of the \"hot\" laboratories.\nThese labs are top-secret. It\nwould be easier to rob the mint\nin Ottawa than to gain unauthorized admission to one of the hot\nlabs.\nIn these laboratories the results of other experiments are\ntested, using a virulent strain.\nThe tests involve exposing animals, usually rats or rabbits, to\nIhe bacteria which has been\nweakened or strengthened under\nclosely - controlled atmospheric\nconditions.\nThese tests show what effect\nthe bacteria will have under certain conditions.\nFrom this   point   th\"   research\nturns to finding  an   antidote   or\ndeveloping preventive therapy.\nCLASSIFIED   INFORMATION\nInformation coming from the\nhot labs is secret. B.J. Perry,\nsuperintendent of research says\ncautiously:\n\"Our research suggests an indication of the possible reason for\nthe increased incidence of particular bacteria ... for instance\nthe increase of some strains of\nstaphylococci in hospitals in recent years.\"\nIn other words, scientists think\nthey know why staphylococci now\nare able to survive and multiply\nunder conditions that caused\ntheir death a few years ago.\nResearch into gaseous warfare\nfollows the same general pattern\nas the biological experiments.\nSays Mr. Pennie:\n\"Our appraisal of the hazards\nand our medical defence against\nsuch an attack have made great\nwill no doubt continue to do so.\nstrides in the last three to five\nyears. Our knowledge of the* situation has increased greatly and\n\"Speaking from the knowledge\nstandpoint of biological warfare,\nI can say that we are very definitely better off than we were\nfive years ago.\"\nGARDEN AIDES \u2014 Circus clowns Frankie\nSaluto, left, and Blinko sniff tulips after helping in spring\nbulb show planting in New York's Rockefeller Center.\nPACIFIC MILK\nHAS FRESHER\nSWEETER FLAVOR!\nthe only evaporated milk processed in B.C.        _\nWmm\nEXCLUSIVE\nwmm\nwm\nOFFER FOR ROOSTER BOOSTERS!\nlfe Rooster Booster\nRooster Booster Today\n J,.^.,,^ ,,\n::.\u25a0!\u25a0.'\u25a0.        ;   \u25a0-\u2022 .      \u25a0\u25a0   \u25a0 \u2022.:.   -,',- --.\u25a0'.-\u25a0. .'.\u25a0'>\u25a0->\":.,-, ;\u2022    \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0       \u25a0      \u25a0   .\u25a0'\u25a0\\T^T\n\u25a0r^^^HWU-1 .-I-.-.-J.... ..j\n^F!^*^     . ;       \\      -     \u25a0.    \u25a0-.'  \u25a0  \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0: \u25a0 \u25a0     ~ \u25a0'.\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0:\u25a0 .\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0'-\" : r \u2014^\u2014-\u2014-7\u2014-\nI\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, APRIL 21, 1960\u20149\nosave!\nYour BEST place to save because.\nyour total food bill is lower here\nshopping trip after shopping trip.\nAll Purpose\nCake Mixes\nPork & Beans\nMonarch. White, Chocolate or\nYellow. 15 oz. pkg SAVE 37*\nTaste Tells or Rainbow\nBrand. 15 oz. tin -SAVE 15c\nMeat Pies\nManor House. Beef, Chicken or\nTurkey. 8 oz. pkg SAVE 33*\n4 f.,99c\nENGLISH TOFFEE\nFresh, Tasty. Pound 49^\nHeinz Cucumber\nBAMBOO RAKES: ea. 29*\nKosher Dill Chips\n 2 ^ 49c\n16 oz. Jar.\nSPORK\nBurn's, Luncheon Meat;\n12 ox. tin\t\n29c\nBroadway's Great Musicals\nRecord No. 12\nROBERTA\nAll 12 Records Have Now Been Offered Por Sale.\nEach\n$169\nYOUR TOTAL FOOD BILL IS LOWER AT SAFEWAY\nCracked Wheat\nBread\nSkylark, 16 oz. loaf, regular price\n2 for 39e\nThis\nWeek\nL \u2122k j jC\nCorn Flakes\nKellogg's; 12 oz. package\nSEE OUR DISPLAY FOR CONTEST RULES .'\n29c\nMix Em\nMatch Em\nHunt's Fruit Cocktail\nor Peaches\n15 oz. tins   .\n2 for 45'\nLucerne\nFresh Milk:\nHomo. Half Gal Ctn.\n45'\nWhipping Cream: 3Q*\nTops the lot. ik Pt     J \u00b0\nHalf & Half:\nCoffee Cream. Pt. Ctn.\n29*\nCottage Cheese:   AQ^\n719   n?     r-ln *>   *r\n32 oz. ctn.\nQuart\nCarton\nIce Cream\n49c\nLucerne\nMarmalade\nEmpress Pure, Seville Orange,\ns - 69c\nSockeye Salmon\nGold Seal, 7} ox. tin\n55*\nDiced Beets\nTaste Tells, Choice\n15 ez. tin\n2 for 29*\ntfrnssmsssssassaKtmnaBfaBa\nAirway Coffee\nMild, Mellow, 1 Ib. bag\n65*\nBartlett Pears\nTown House, fancy,\n15 oz. tin\n2 for 49*\nBaseball Gloves\nRight or Left Hand\nEach\n*3.95\nCelery\nFresh, Crisp, Tender\nIb.\n9c\nB.C. Grown . . . Government Inspected for _ _ -^\nWholesomeness, Cut Up on mm   j^ niAUl PAt^iA^C\nTrays; Avg. 2i to 21 Ibs. ..Ill fl if UVifeiW U   UlCiWV^\nPound\nCalifornia Whites\n5 ibs 49c\nBeef Chuck Roast ssra=^_ ib 49c Rgj.^\"barb     ^\nlb5Jc Rose Bushes       0O\n\u2122T#C        ^Year-Old Nome Varieties. Each     ...     jj\/f\nGladiolus Bulbs   ,Q\nbox07C\nWeiners\nSide Bacon\nBulk.\nNo. 1 quality.\nBurns' Campfire.\nSliced, rindless. 1 Ib. pkg.\nPrices effective\nApril 21-22-23\nla Both Nelson Safeway Stores\nSAFEWAY\nWe Reserve\nThe Right To\nLimit Quantities.\nNo. 1 Holland Large Bulbs.\n \u25a0\"\"\u25a0\u2022--^\u25a0\"\"--\u2014r?*rr\n.\nwwi-i.,'.\n10 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURS., APRIL 21, 1960\nDe Gaulle and Diefenbaker\nAiming Towards Same Goal\nBy JAMES NELSON\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA (CP)-A meeting of\nminds, if not agreement on common policy, has been achieved\nby French President Charles de\nGaulle and Prime Minister Diefenbaker, diplomatic sources said\nWednesday.\nThe French and Canadian policy-makers now know, as a result of Iheir private talks during\nGen. de Gaulle's 36-hour visit to\nOttawa, what the other country\nis striving to achieve.\nThe ultimate goal is common\nto both: Disarmament and lasting\nworld peace. But the two leaders\ndiffer on details of how the objective is to be reached.\nWANT FAST BAN\nCanada wants an end to the\narms race as quickly as possible. France will continue testing\natomic bombs until there is a\ncomplete ban on them, and wants\ndisarmament, too\u2014ultimately.\nNEW UN RECORD\nUNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP)\nThe number of visitors taking\nguided tours of the United Nations set a one-day record Tuesday of 6,576. The old record was\n6,283 at Easter time in 1957.\nA Canadian official closely connected with the de Gaulle visit\nsaid the private talks and cabinet meetings Tuesday had run\naccording to expectations. There\nwere no new issues raised.\nGen. de Gaulle is reported to\nilsve done the most talking in Ihe\nprivate conversations with Mr.\nDiefenbaker. He described principally his recent state visit to\nLondon, and Russian Premier\nKhrushchev's visit to France. He\nalso brought the Canadian government up to date on French\nprogress towards self-determination for Algeria. '\nSTRONGER FRANCE\nOn Ihe Canadian side, there\nwas satisfaction that France is\nno longer such a weakened link\nin the Western alliance, that Premier Khrushchev appeared to\nGen. de Gaulle to be more amenable than Stalin, and that in time\nAlgeria will become less of a\ndrain on French military\nstrength.\nFor Canada. Mr. Diefenbaker\nand External Affairs Minister\nGreen are reported to have told\nthe president that the Western\npowers generally expect the\nWeslern   Big  Three\u2014Britain,  the\nUnited States and France \u2014 to\nhave all their interests in mind\nat next month's summit meeting.\nParticularly, Canada wants to\nbe fully consulted on all NATO\ninterests, both militarily and economically. Gen. de Gaulle is understood to have agreed.\n\"You are acquainted with the\nelements of our thinking on the\ngreat issues of foreign policy,\"\nMr. Diefenbaker told Gen. de\nGaulle in public at Ihe luncheon.\nDROPPED WORDS\nMr. Diefenbaker also had this\nsentence in his prepared notes.\n\"We will be following with intense interest each stage of the\nnegotiations and, as occasion requires, w will not fail to express\nour views in full candor so that\nyou and your Weslern colleagues\nat the summit will be in no doubt\nas to where we stand.\" But he\ndid not deliver the part after\n\"negtoations.\"\nAn official of his office said\nlater that the speech was cut because the luncheon ran 20 minutes overtime, but that the text\nof his speech represented the Canadian view.\nWhy the prime minister chose\nto drop those particular words remained without an answer.\nRAPID READER \u2014 Jane McNamce, 12. stacks\nsome of the 220 books, ranging from \"Black Beauty\" to\nShakespeare, that she's read in 215 days at Fort Knox, Ky.\nCONVICTION  QUASHED\nLAHORE, Pakistan (AP)-The\nPakistan Supreme Court Tuesday\nthrew out the conviction of former defence minister Mohammed\nAyub Khurro on a black market\ncharge. A special court in Ka-\nrchi had sentenced Khurro to five\nyears imprisonment and a fine of\n$53,000 alter finding him guilty in\nFebruary, 1959, of selling his\nauto on the black market at three\ntimes the pirce fixed by the gov\nernment.\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS\n;H*\nDRINK\nmm\nEVERYDAY\nHELPS YOU\nFEEL BETTER\nLOOK BETTER\nSLEEP BETTER\nEvery meal we eat is better balanced\nnutritionally if it includes milk.\nChildren need at the very least a\npint of milk a day; adolescents a\npint and a half; and adults a pint\na day.\nCreamed Soups\nHeat milk and canned soup in separate\npans. Before the milk boils, stir it into\nthe hot, soup. You'll get the smoothest,\nbest-tasting soup ever.\nHeating Milk\nMilk scorches easily so if you can't\nkeep an eye on it while it's heating,\nuse a double boiler. Milk tastes better\nif it doesn't boil.\nn\nF\n'\u00aeP\nMilk is our most nearly perfect\nfood. Protein of high quality, calcium and riboflavin (vitamin B2)\nare all supplied by our fresh B.C.\nmilk. Milk packs a wealth of\nnourishment into every glass . . .\nthere's no waste . . . and the cost\nis low in proportion to food value.\nServe B.C. milk to your family\nevery day.\nAN IMPORTANT B.C. INDUSTRY\nThe dairy farmers of British Columbia are\nindependent business men striving to give you\nthe finest dairy products at the lowest possible\nprices. Dairying contributes over $36,000,000\na year to our economy but the importance\nof the dairy fanlera cannot be measured in\ndollars alone. Dairying is a most essentia!\nindustry and our B.C. dairy products are\namong the best in the world.\nServing B.C. Milk Puddings\nIt's the milk in puddings that makes\nthem so good for you, and if you serve\nfresh, frozen or canned B.C. fruit as\ngarnish to your pudding you'll have a\ndessert that's doubly good. Try vanilla\nmilk pudding with B.C. peaches,\nchocolate pudding with B.C. pears,\nbutterscotch with B.C. cherries and\nlemon with B.C. apricots.\nPerfect Custard Every Time\nKeep the oven at 300\"F. Place the\nbaking pan in a pan of hot water.\nAdd a tablespoon of heavy cream for\nevery cup of milk your recipe calls for.\nYour custard can't go wrong if you\nmake it this way.\nBRITISH COLUMBIA DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE\nTHE HONOUEABLE NEWTON P. STEACY, MINISTER\nLeading Industrialist Says\nCanadian Dollar Handicapped\nMONTREAL <CP>-P. M. Fox,\npresident ol St. Lawrence Corp.,\nWednesday called the present valuation of the Canadian dollar a\n\"grievous handicap and hazard\nto the country.\"\nAddressing the annual meeting\nof shareholders, Mr. Fox said the\npremium on the Canadian dollar\nhits the domestic market as well\nas the export business.\n\"When an American sells something in Canada and is paid tn\nCanadian dollars he gets 105\ncents,\" said Mr. Fox. \"He can\nenter the Canadian market cut\nCanadian prices by five per cent\nCeremonies To\nMark Navy's\n50fh Birthday\nOTTAWA (CPI - The Royal\nCanadian Navy will mark its SOth\nanniversary with special ceremonies starting May 4 and continuing through Uie summer, the\nnavy said Wednesday.\nThe oflicial anniversary is May\n4, the date royal assent was\ngranted Uie Naval Service Act in\n1910, but celebrations wilh a jubilee theme will be held until the\nend of the year.\nThe Battle of the Atlantic will\nbe commem<morated with special\nchuroh services across the country\nNavy Week observances starting the same day will be held\nby the Navy League of Canada.\nIn Halifax, the anniversary will\nbe marked with the sailpast of\nships of the Atlantic Fleet followed by a flypast of 40 navy aircraft May 19.\nAnniversary events on the west\ncoast will include a jubilee ball\nat HMCS Naden in Victoria by\nthe Pacific Command on May 19\nand participation in tbe May 23\nVictoria Day parade.\nand, in his own money, still re\nceive as much as his Canadian\ncompetitors.\n\"A Canadian selling something\nin the United States is usuaiij\npaid in U.S. dollars which he\n,hen has to change into Canadian\ndollars to pay his costs of busi\nness and of living. When he\nmakes the change he does not\nget 100 cents a dollar-he1 gets\nonly 95.\"\nPOINTS TO LOSSES\nMr. Fox said the newsprint industry lost $32,700,000 last year\nby being paid in U.S. funds. On\nthe basis of newsprint making up\n14.3 per cent of the value of exports to the U.S. last year, the\nannual lotal export loss to Canada   was  $228,700,000.\nAlthough there was no way of\nshowing exactly how much is lost\ndomestically, he said a trade\nanalyst had calculated from various data that the internal sales\nrevenue loss was at least $50,-\n000.000  to  $55,000,000 a  year.\n\"It was as though all our\nnickel exports had suddenly been\nwiped out. plus our pulpwood exports to boot.\"\nMr. Fox said U.S. investment\nin Canada and Canadian borrowing in New York determine the\ncurrent over-valuation of the Ca\nnadian dollar and tae marginal\nlaclor of municipal and provincial government borrowing\n\"seems large enough\" to be effective in adjusting dollar valuation.\nReferring to a reduction of the\ndollar differential to 96% cents\nfrom 95 in March, Mr. Fox said\nthe improvement had been attributed lo Finance Minister\nFleming's budget statement\nMaroh 31 \"that borrowing by Ottawa in the 1960 fiscal year would\nbe down to $210,000,000 versui\n$900,000,000 in  1959.\"\nLate Czar's\nSister Dies\nIn London\nLONDON (API - The Grai.d\nDuchess Xenia, sister of the late\nRussian Czar Nicholas il, died\nWednesday at the age of 85.\nShe was the widow of Grand\nDuke Alexander Mikhailovidi and\none of the few Romanoffs to have\nsurvived the revolution.\nRelated to the British Royal\nfamily, the duchess escaped the\n1917 revolution on a warship provided by King George V.\nSydney Risk\nAmong (anada\nCouncil Winners\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014Special awards\nannounced Wednesday by the Canada Council will send four Canadians overseas for research into\nsuoh varied subjects as collective\nbargaining, typographic design,\narctic arohaelogical sites and the\ntheatre.\nAlbert Cote, Montreal, will\nspend a year in France to study\nlegislation and techniques of collective bargaining.\nAllan R. Fleming, Toronto, will\nvisit The Netherlands, Switzerland, Germany and England for\nfive weeks to exchange ideas with\nEuropean typographic designers.\nGordon R. Lowther, Montreal,\ncurator of anthropology at Mc-\nCord Museum, McGill University,\nwill spend a year at Cambridge\nUniversity to complete a study of\nthe distribution of archaeological\nsites in the Canadian Arctic.\nSydney Risk, drama supervisor,\ndepartment of university extension, University of British Columbia, will spend,a sabbatical year\nstudying Uie theatre in New Zealand, Australia and Europe.\nGoing On\nHOLIDAYS?\nDon't Miss Important\nNEWS ITEMS\nWhich Take Place While You Are Gone.\nHave the\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\nSAVED FOR YOU\nBy Your\nCARRIER BOY\nJust ask him to save your paper till you come\nback giving him the date of your return. He will\ndeliver the back copies along with the current\nissue on the date specified.\nOUR\nCarriers Are Anxious\nTo Give This\nSPECIAL SERVICE\nTo Their\nHolidaying Customers\nThis Summer.\n -\"l-.-J   ;.-.        | i j\t\nm6\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURS., APRIL 21, 1960 \u2014 11\nERASINC THE LINE \u2014 Workmen start demolition of a portion of Hitler's\nSiegfried Line at Landau, West Germany. It will take several years for complete eradication of this \"West Wall\" for hundreds of pillboxes must be levelled in the region.\nRhee To Make Amends For\nPeople's Major Grievances\nSEOUL, Korea (AP) - President Syngman Rhee has pledged\nSouth Korea's people redress for\ntheir \"major grievances\" as soon\nas order is restored to their riot-\ntorn country.\nOnce martial law ls ended, said\nthe 85-year-old president in a\nstatement, \"the government will\ndevote maximum energy to the\ninvestigation of these disturbances. Those vAo are guilty can be\nassured of punishment. Those\nwith major grievances can be\ncertain of redress.\"\nIt was  Rhee's  first  statement\n\"repressive measures unsuited to\na free democracy.\" Herter called\non the government to protect de-\nocratic rights. Many Koreans interpreted the statement as a call\nfor new elections.\nRhee's statement appeared a\nmove toward meeting the complaints, but its full meaning remained to be determined.\nIt called on the South Korean\npeople to \"display their patriotism and follow the instruction of\nresponsible authorities.\"\n\"The first task is full restoration of law and order \u2014 so that\non the nine days of anti-govern-, neces9it     for   martia,   ,aw\nment demonstrations  culminating I j exig(s\nin riots in Seoul Tuesday in which '\nRhee declared.\nBut while promising redress of\nave  no  indication  of   what  the\nat  least  92 persons  were killed. I\nThat  was  the  official  death   toll\nannounced by the government Wed-, meTrmer[i would do to meet its\nnesday, and at least 50 of the bun-, ^.^\ndreds of injured were in critical ]\ncondition. \u2022 C\u00abINET \u00bbH\u2122   ,  ^      .    ,\nI    Rhees cabinet met throughout\nTROOPS KEEP ORDER (Jhe day   Tanks and armed mm.\nWith  martial  law   proclaimed , bat troops ^^ maJOT pubUc\nTuesday in Seoul and four other \\ wkHn|! in Sem)l tat M far &fi\ncities, much  of the capital was <\t\nquiet.  People went sullenly  and I\nquietly to   work.   Schools   were |\nclpsed, bus service was still dis- j\nrupted,  and thousands  lined the\nsidewalks in outlying districts of\nthe  capital,   sunning  themselves\nand discussing the riots. \\   LOVELOCK, Nev\nWhile troops stood guard at , British sergeants,\nmajor government buildings, police kept up operations against\nscattered bands of demonstrators\nroaming the outskirts of Seoul.\nScattered gunfire continued\nthrough the night, and shortly after dawn police shot and killed\nthree members of an armed\ngroup defying the curfew.\nAnti - government demonstrations were reported tn Taegu.\nKwangju, Congju, Suwon. Iri and\n, Inchon, but no casualties were reported. Both Taegu and Kwangju\nare under martial law.\nThe demonstrators are demanding nullification of Ihe March 15\npresidential election, in whioh\nRhee won a fourth term and his\nrunning mate, Li Kiang-poo, defeated Vice-President John M.\nChang, both by overwhelming\nvoles. The demonstrators charge\nthat Rhee's liberal party rigged\nelections and also accuse the police of brutality against election\ndav demonstrators.\ntroops left to the police active operations against holdout demonstrators.\nBuildings still smoked from\nfires set by Tuesday's rampaging\nmob.\nLeaders of R h e e 's Liberal\nparty, the opposition Democrats\nand independents tentatively decided to reconvene the National\nAssembly Friday to discuss the\ncrisis. The Democrats had urged\nan immediate session of the assembly, which was in recess until\nnext Monday, but Hie Liberals insisted on a coolimg-o{f period.\nSeoul hospitals began turning\nover the riot dead to relatives\nin the afternoon. The health ministry announced that 500,000 hwan\nmajor  grievances,   the  President   (about $?50) and 2Q ^ g( ^\nton sheeting would be given each\nbereaved family as compensation.\nCrowds of Koreans searching\nfor missing relatives gathered\noutside the hospitals, scanning ttie lists of the dead posted\noutside.\nHiking Sergeants Keep\nAhead oi Walking Woman\n(AP) \u2014 Two, Dr. Moore, 56, said she could\nbeing over- j not \"in good conscience\" endorse\ntaken on a cross-country walk- j the product commercially and\ning match by the amazing Dr. 1 unworkable \u2014 they were made\nBarbara Moore. Wednesday ac-'added \"out arrangements were\noused her of catching a ride to1 hurriedly\ncover 109 miles in one day. !    Dr     Moore   lhopes    to   reach\n\"It's   impossible   without   help   Winnemucca.   72   miles   farther\nfor her,\"  Sgts. Patrick  Moloney   easl  a|on,g  us   j^^y  m m\nand Mervyn Evans told the Asso-1 the Nevada Desert.\ndated Press. They spoke by tele-\nphone  from  Mill  City,  some  50\nSUPPORT FROM HERTER\nThe demonstrators drew surprise support Tuesday from State\nSecretary Christian Herter of the\nUnited States, who charged that\nRhee's   government   had   adopted\n\"I may overtake those soldiers\ntomorrow,\" she remarked Friday night after running the last\n\u202210 miles into Lovelock. She was\non the road 17 hours.\nMoloney  and  Evans,  who left\nSan  Francisco  a  day  ahead  of\nDr. Moore, are starting at Humboldt,  53 miles  ahead  of her.\nAll three hope to better the 79-\nbag now.\" she said. \"This slows! day record for a hike across the\ndown my pace as  I  can swing j United States,\nonly one arm.\" j    Dr.   Moore,   after  commenting\nNO ENDORSEMENT ! on   the  loss  o( her  escorti saMp\nDavid Solomon, a salesman for j \u25a0\u25a0I-Ve  spent  $3000   on   ^  ^\nmiles ahead of Dr. Moore, who\nwas at Lovelock. The sergeants\nstarted from San Francisco one\nday ahead of the Russian-born\nwoman. '\nDr. Moore said she ran Ihe last j\n40 miles into Lovelock. She re- j\nsumed her walk without an escort, j\n\"I'll  have  to   carry   my  own\na balanced food company of New\nYork, dropped off the bag in\nLovelock Tuesday with Mrs.\nMaizie Jesse, an Associated\nPr e s s correspondent. Solomon\nsaid   Dr.   Moore   refused   to  en-\n. ,     .  , \u25a0     \u25a0 7,1,7,      7,7.11,1,10717,11.       ni       VYdUSW\ndorse his   firm s vegetable   nice j M mi]es nor[1]easl o[ Ren0\nextracting  machine  and that  ne\nwas quitting  the venture.\nWoman Vegetarian Hiker\nRuns Into Nevada Town\nLOVELOCK, Nev. IAP) - Dr.\nBarbara Moore, 56-year-old British vegetarian, ran\u2014not walked\u2014\ninto this Nevada desert cowtown\nTuesday night, an incredible 109\nmiles from her starting point Wednesday morning.\nDeserted by her escort and estranged from her sponsor, the\nEussian-born physician had been\n17 hours on the road from the\nNevada state line. 13 miles west\nof Reno. This indicated an average of 6.4 miles per hour since\nshe started al 3:30 a.m. She arrived at 8:45 p.m.. sunburned and\nswollen in her effort to break the\ntranscontinental walking record.\n\"1 ran the last 40 miles,\" she\nsaid. \"I've run this far before in\nEngland.\" A .reporter found her\nseveral miles outside town, and\nfollowed her as she ran into town.\nWILL KEEP ON\n\"I'm tired she admitted, \"but\nHi keep on going without help.\n\"My escort. David Solomon,\nleft me because our arrangements proved unworkable. They\nwere made hurriedly. Solomon\nleft my things scattered about\nJike a cuckoo.\" she said referring to his dropping off some of\nher supplies with a Reno phy-\nohdatrist and some with the As\nsociated   Press   correspondent  in\nLovelock.\nDr. Moore said she hoped to\nstart out again about 4 a.m.,\nbut isn't sure that she'll be\nable to make Winnemucca in central Nevada, 72 miles eastward.\nThere is little human habitation\nin between.\n\"I'm a persistent person,\" she\nsaid. \"I may overtake those two\nsoldiers tomorrow.\" She referred\nto two British sergeants who expected to reach Humboldt, 53\nmiles east of Lovelock Wednesday\nnight.\nEscort Solomon, salesman for\na New York food company which\nhad sponsored her cross-country\nwalk with a car laden wilh fruit\njuices and a machine for extracting vegetable juices, drove\nahead to Lovelock. 96 miles northeast of here and announced he\nwas quitting.\nHe handed Dr Moore's valise,\ncoat, sunvisor and supply of\ncanned orange juice to the AP\ncorrespondent at Lovelock and\nsaid he was returning to New\nYork.\nTh? breakup rame because Dr\nMoore wouldn't endorse the fooil\nccmnanv's machine for extracting juices from grass.\nand I don't want to quit\nShe started before dawn Tuesday near the California line west\nof Reno. By midafternoon she\nwas showing signs of sunburn\nand dehydration. At Wadsworth,\nshe\nlearned lhat Solomon had left\nher.\nWhen she reached Lovelock,\nDr. Moore had covered about\n320 miles since leaving San Francisco a week ago.\nMarch Defence\nOrders Total\n$46,333,626\nOTTAWA (CP) - Contracts totalling $46,333,626 were awarded\nin the last half of March by the\ndefence production department\nand Defence Construction (1951)\nlimited.\nMore than $31,000,000 of the\ntotal consisted of 76 contraots for\nrepair and overhaul of a wide\nrange of equipment, the list of\ncontracts showed Wednesday.\nBristol Aero-Industries, Montreal, Winnipeg and Vancouver,\nwere awarded 11 such contracts\ntotalling $4,236,200.\nNorthwest Industries Ltd., Edmonton received contracts totalling $2,599,000.\nThe contracts are for repair\nand overhaul of equipment including airframes and components,\naero engines and components,\naeronautical instruments, commercial vehicles and electrical\nand electronic equipment.\nPRICES EFFECTIVE    TO APRIL 25th\nLIBERTY - - - Kootenay's favorite family store ... the li nk in the chain that binds highest quality and lowest\nprices together! Here are some special prices that mea n you're bound to save when you buy! Stock up and save\nlike the many, many thrifty, smart homemakers are \u2014 EAT BETTER FOR LESS!\nPot Roast\nGrade A, Union's\nsavoury aged; Ib.\n39c\nSolo Margarine\n\u00a3lbs.\u00a3|y Cottage Roll K7f Liver KKf\n_ r\u00bb\u00ab *\u2022 Union's; Ib.     *J *J\\* Baby Beef; Ib       *J tjs.\nTomato Rice Soup\n2~ft Lamb Stew OQr Frying Chicken QQf\nTINS   Ajt Leon; ,b'    MmJ\\ Grade A, Cut Up; each      7 #V\nRaspberries      2 \u21228 59c\nST. LAWRENCE\nCorn Oil $2.79\nFor salads, cooking; 128 oi.\nPeaches - 5 \u00ab\u00ab $1\nGrapefruit Juice 6^$l\nBartlett Pears -l 4 \u00ab\u00ab $1\nTomato Juice \u00ab\u00ab*\u2022-U^$\\\nChoice Cherrio\nCut Green Beans- 6tins$1\nCream Corn *=\u25a0 \u2014 6tin< $1\nApple Juice--    3tins95c\nEACH and every fresh fruit and vegetable is fully guaranteed to\nbe fresh, wholesome, and priced to save you money. Compare\nquality and price!\nTOMATOES\nGREEN ONIONS\n2 bunches 15c\nFirm  field.\nIdeal for\nslicing.  \t\n!>>. 25\n\u2022t,o m ato & s\nSWEET ASSORTED PARTY MIX\nBISCUITS\nor FIG BARS.\n1 70r\n#   FULL LBS.    M    ^W\nPotatoes:\nNew California\nFresh Milk\nPalm's, local, pasteurized\n2os45c\nCanadian Cheese     AQf\nMild, special; Ib.         \"T \/ W\n5 ,,45*\nOrange Sale: C      gC*\nSweet heavy juice. Florida.    **   lbs. ^ **\nSKIPPING ROPE\nDouble Dutch.\neach\n33*\nHI-FI  RECORDS\n| Broadway  Hits. .\nFlower Drum Song\nOklahoma and Carousel\n2 Good Reasons Why Liberty's Plants Are Best\n1. Guaranteed To Grow in Every Respect \u2014 Lowest Prices! 2.  Liberty's   Plants   Are   Outdoor   Framed   \u2014  Stronger,   Climatized!\nPETUNIAS\nGiants of California;  Dozen\n59f     WEED KILLER\n*\/ # V and plantain, Black  Flag; pt.\nEARLY CABBAGE ?\u00ab\u00bb-49c     BALL CEDAR\nOR LETTUCE     Am T # V \u201e\u201e._.,. _\u201et\nRound; each ...\nALYSSUM\nMauve, Border \t\nPYRAMIDAL CEDAR\n30 inches tall, this is fast growing,\ncan be trimmed, to control size; pay only\n    59c\n $295\n $2.99\nV) 99     ROSE BUSHES QQf\n*?*\u00bb\u2022*   * No.  1, B.C., Strong, Healthy Plants;  Each   %J I \\,\n3\u00b0\u00b0z$l      MUGHO PINE\n7 r\\.....i   ._.,:.!  \u201e\u201e,!,\nDwarf, special each\n \u00ab^W^\u00ab^^^^iP!if!pPB!PWWP\n\u25a0\n^\u2014',\u2014.  ;\u2014   .. , \u2014:\u2014\u25a0 :\u2014-\u2014w\". \"\u2014:\u2014~ ~\u2014:\u2014-.- .,\u2022...,.-..' .:\u2022'\n12\u2014 NELSON DAILY NlWSxfHUM.t_Aj'lt(l, 31, 1\u00bbM\nSHIFT IN PHILLIES. Hired to replace Eddie Sawyer,\nright, who resigned unexpectedly as manager of the\nPhiladelphia Phillies, was Gene Mauch, 34, who had\nbeen handling the managerial reins at Minneapolis before being called up. Sawyer, 49, declined lo give any\nspecific reason for his stepping down, except \"I didn't\nwant to manage.\"\nNEW\nfrom\n\"A British Columbia Industry\"\nCANADIAN PARK & TILFORD LTD.\nNORTH VANCOUVER, B.C. V-J70R\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard or by the Government of British Columbia\nTraveller Cliff Pennington\nTo Dress With Oil Kings\nEDMONTON (CP) - Wo U\nOlerc, Edmonton Oil King manager, isn't officially saying so but\nit's assumed by all, including\ncoach Harry Allen, that Cliff Pennington, Canada's most publicized\njunior hockey player, will be in\nIhe Edmonton lineup for (he\nMemorial Cup finals.\nLe Clerc remains close-lipped,\npending official notification to the\nCanadian Amateur Hookey Association, but Allan is sure Edmonton's three newest recruits will be\nPennington and two Brandon\nWheat Kings, defenceman Dune\nMcCallum and rightwinger Ed\nEhrenverth.\nThese three will Join Bobby\nCox, Ray Crellin and Harold\nFleming of Lethbridge Native\nSons ln the six-man-replacement\nallowed by the CAHA.\nOil Kings left by train Wednesday for Toronto to play either St.\nCatharines Teepees or Broekvllle\nCanadiens for the Canadian\njunior championship. The Oilers\nwon the Western title Tuesday\nnight by defeating Brandon 6-1\nand winning the best - of - seven\nseries 4-8.\nSTAYING IN SHAPE\nThe well - travelled Pennington,\na part-time member of a number\nof teams this year, has been turning up regularly at ttie Edmonton\narena the last couple of weeks,\nstaying in shape for something or\nother.\nWhile Allen did not say until\nafter Tuesday night's Western Canadian junior final who his new\nreoruits might be, it was assumed Pennington might be staying in shape for Oil Kings or7\nWheat Kings. Pennington declined comment.\n\"The kid's a terrific player,\"\nsaid Allen, \"and he wants to play,\nor else he wouldn't have stayed\nin shape the last two - three\nweeks.\"\n\"He's been criticized,\" commented Le Olerc, \"but I know\none club glad to have him.\" He\nremembered the nine goals and\nsix assists Pennington had\nagainst Oil Kings in the six-game\nFlin Flon-Edmonton series\u2014\"It's\na pretty good average.\"\nSays   Allen:    \"Cliff,   a   great\njunior, has everything we need.\nWith his shot from lhe point he'll\nscars those Eastern kids and if\nwe ever get around to teaming\nhim up with' Ed Joyal \u2014 they\nshould rate as one of lhe best\ncombinations In Memorial Cup\nhistory.\"\nIn McCallum, Oil Kings have a\nrugged, clever defenceman \u2014 the\nkind that can either knock you\ndown or take Ihe puck away, and\nin Ehrenverth they have a 190-\npound hustling rightwinger.\nAllen is not sure what his starting lineup will be. \"We'll wait and\nse*. I've got a lot of talent to\ndeal with and I want to be sure\nbefore I start changing things\naround.\"\nPennington, who turned 20 Monday, has been a talked-about lad,\nespecially this year. After setting\na Saskatchewan Junior Hockey\nLeague scoring mark in 1056-59,\n82 goals, he beaded east this\nyear. He had a brief stint with\ntht NHL Montreal Canadiens and\nthen went to Kitchener-Waterloo\nDutchmen of the Ontario Senior\nHockey Association.\nHAD HASSLE  WITH BAUER\nThere, he had a short hassle\nwith coach Bobby Bauer, but\ntravelled with the Dutchmen to\nSquaw Valley to represent Canada in Ihe Olympics. He had been\ndrafted by the Dutchmen under\nspecial CAHA Olympic regulations which were later revoked.\nAfter the Olympics Pennington\nplayed six games with Dutchmen, until they were eliminated\nfrom the OSHA, whereupon he returned to Flin Flon, then in the\nmidst of SJHL, playoffs.\nHere troubles arose. Pennington\nwas signed by Bombers to a Manitoba Association card on Jan. 25\nbut was not registered with the\nSJHL commission prior to Feb.\n10, violating the league's constitution.\nThe CAHA ruled him eligible to\nContract Delay Riles\nChamp, Challenger\nFELLER UNHURT\nFROM AIR CRASH\nCHICAGO (AP) - Bob Feller,\nformer Cleveland pitcher, dam\naged his private airplane in a\nlanding Tuesday but escaped unhurt.\nThe landing gear on 'his tko-en-\ngine craft failed to lock and the\nplane scraped the runway of Meigs\nField, a lakefront airport.\nFeller, who was alone in the\nplane, was en route to Rockford,\nHI., to speak to a club meeting.\nThe landing bent the propeller\nends an dscraped a panel on the\nplane's belly.\nFeller, 41, retired from baseball\nin 1956 and is an insurance ex\neoutive. He has been flying since\n0dfltf i\nwW* ALEX MORRISON\nmasi\nArnold Palmar won Palm Springs\n1960 Doiort Classic with help of\nbottor posture and head position.\nARNOLD PALMER Is tt\nmighty aggressive player and\nextremely keen on shooting for\nbirdies, even eagles whenever\npossible.\nSuch competitors generally\ndon't want to dwell too much on\nswing esaentials. Palmer is outstanding in his willingness to\ngive the necessary attention to\nbasic items. Realizing that he\nwas bent over too much and\nthereby having trouble moving\nhis arms, hands and the club\nthrough the downswing he concentrated on posture in both\npractice and play.\nBy standing more erect ln his\nstarting position for all clubs\nand then keeping his head from\ndropping by holding his chin at\nthe same level he enjoyed better body action as well as movements of his arms and hands.\nWith body and hands working\nIn harmony he was able to\natrlke the ball with greater\nforce and accuracy though using\nmuch less physical strength.\nC by Kins Features Syndicate Inc.\nBy MURRAY ROSE\nNEW YORK (AP) - Ingemar\nJohansson and Floyd Patterson\nfretted Wednesday as the state\nathletic commission scanned the\ncontract for their return heavyweight title bout at the Polo\nGrounds, June 20.\nThe official signing is all set for\n10 a.m. EST today at the offices\nof the commission. Since the boxing brass gave the promoting\nFeature Sports Inc. permission to\nannounce the signing ceremony,\nIhere was puzzlement over the\ncommission's searching scrutiny\nof the document.\n\"It's easy to understand,\" said\na commission spokesman. \"The\ncommission doesn't want to be\nhurried Ihis time. For the first\nfight, whioh caused all that\ntrouble afterwards, the commission was asked to okay the fight\nand iron out any problems later.\n\"This time the commission is\ngoing to have any problems\nironed out first. Actually the contract already is 99 per cent approved because the commission\nwas informed of each move in\nadvance. We don't anticipate anything that would hold up tomorrow's signing.\"\nWANTED SIMPLE CONTRACT\nJohansson, as well as the commission, was insistent on a dear,\nsimple contract that spelled out\neverything in connection with the\nfight and no extra ifs and buts.\nThere's another copy in Swedish,\nloo, for Ingo's benefit.\n\"I know what's in there,\" said\nthe champion from Sweden. \"It's\nsimple and we deal only with the\npromoter who takes care of\neverything. No different companies for each little thing like for\nthe first fight.\"\nUnder the new contract, Johansson and Patterson are expected to get 30 per cent each of\neverything\u2014the gate receipts and\nthe ancillary rights (radio, television, movies, etc.).\nIf Johansson loses he will get\na return bout. But if Ihe unbeaten\nSwede wins again, he will be free\nto pick his next opponent.\nINGO ANGRY\nThe tanned, trim, champion\nwas burned up When the signing\nwas set for today instead of Wednesday. He had planned to fly\nback to Geneva, Switzerland,\nWednesday night for \"pressing,\npersonal  reasons.\"\nNow he hopes to take off immediately  after the signing  and\nluncheon today. He will resume\ntraining in Geneva with English\nsparring partners. Then he will\nhead for Grossinger, N.Y., May\n5 to finish his training.\nPatterson, who lost his title to\nJohansson on a third round technical knowkcout, also was irked\nover the delay, but philosophical.\n\"I've waited for the signing for\n10 months and I guess I can wait\nanother day,\" said Floyd. \"But\nit seems it is more trouble get-\nling ready for a heavyweight\nfight than it is to have a presidential election.\"\ncompete in the 6JHL finals\nagainst Regina. SJHL commissioner Frank Boucher said no and\nwarned Flin Flon Ihey would b\u00ab\nfined $2,000 If they used him. Pennington played the fourth game of\nIhe six-game series.\nThe Bomber centre appealed\nBoucher's ruling. The CAHA\nvoted In favor of Pennington and\ndeclared him eligible to play\nagainst Edmonton. Oil Kings did\nnot protest.\nTeeth Hold Up\nSoccer Match\nCOPENHAGEN (AP)-A Danish soccer club ns up In arms be\ncause a referee searched for his\nlost false teeth during a league\nmatch\u2014and missed a goal.\nReferee Henning Erikstrup lost\nhis teeth just as he was about to\nblow the final whistle, and spent\nseveral costly minutes recovering\nthem. In the meantime, the Ebel-\ntoft team scored a goal to tie\nNoerager, 4-4.\nErikstrup promptly blew his\nwhistle, cancelled the goal, and\nawarded a 4-3 victory to Noerager.\nEbeltoft protested that the\nmatch had not ended formally\nwhen they scored the fourth goal.\nErikstrup admits this, but\nclaims extraordinary circumstances.\n\"Why, I simply had to get my\nteeth back. Otherwise, some\nplayer might have put his big\nboot on them and crushed them,\"\nhe said.\nW MASTW \u2022\nslSiSi'llSltjlllIillPlllJlil;!'\nly Alan Mover\nIF\nm\nCM\nCOMB.\nTHROUGH\nW\/Tri\ntoME-\n<?of?r of\n'SUM\"\nia? -rue\nU.S. AMP\nPR\/TltH\nOPEHS\nMP TMS\nP.6.A.\n<DU'rlbu(\u00abd bv Mina Jrealuit: \u00bb\u201e,\u25a0.... *\/\u00ab\nProbable Pitchers\nNEW YORK (AP) - Probable\npitchers in the major league\ngames Thursday (won-lost records in brackets):\nAmerican League\nKansas City, Garver (0-0) al\nChicago, Shaw (0-O).\nWashington, Lee (0-0) at Baltimore, Estrada (0-0) night.\nNew York, Gabler (0-0) at Boston, Mortbouquette (0-0) only\ngames  scheduled.\nNational  League\nPhiladelphia, Simmons (0-0) at\nPittsburgh, Umbricht  (0-D  night\nCincinalti. O'Toole (1-0) at Milwaukee,  Willey  (0-0).\nA-MAYS-INGI\u2014That Giant ot\nthe Giants, Willie Mays,\nthefts second in game with\nCards in San Francisco and\nthen gets to third when the\nball gets away from shortstop Daryl Spencer. Willie\nhad four hits this day, too.\nRIDER SUSPENDED\nTEN RACING DAYS\nNEW YORK (API-Stewards at\nAqueduct race track Tuesday\nsuspended Mamual Ycaza, Panamanian jockey, for 10 days effective Thursday. Ycaza was to\nhave ridden Edward Seinfeld's\nDon Rickles in the $75,000 Wood\nMemorial Saturday.\nThis is (lie second important\nsuspension in a week at Aqueduct, Eddie Arcaro was suspended for 10 days for careless riding, preventing him from riding\nNever Give In, another Wood\nMemorial candidate.\nThe action against Ycaza was\ntaken after stewards viewed the\nmovies of Monday's eighth race.\n\"Riey said the film showed \"careless riding in the stretch.\"\nNEW MANAGER ARRIVES\nCHILLIWACK (CP) - Fred\nMadden, newly-appointed civic\nproperties manager, has arrived\nhere to take over. \"Rie former\nassistant manager of Victoria\nMemorial Arena. Mr. Madden\nsucceeds Percy Downtown, who\nleaves this week to take over as\nmanager of Winnipeg Enterprises\nLimited.\nFemale Athletes Not Feminine\nClaims Elliott's Coach Cerutty\nBy  J.   C.   GRAHAM\nCanadian   Press   Correspondent\nAUCKLAND, N.Z. (CP) _ Famous Australian track coach\nPerty Cerutty has raised a storm\nhere by his claim lhat there is\nno place for women in the hard\nsphere of Olympic Games contests.\nSport for women, he says,\nshould be conducted as it was in\nIhe Victorian age.\nCerutty, controversial coach of\nmany world record breakers, has\nextreme ideas of training for athletes. He teaches Ihem to think\nof themselves in jungle conditions and to compete, fangs\nbared, every faculty strained in\na fight for survival.\nBECOME MASCULINE\nHe is credited with producing\nsuch miracle racers as Herb Elliott, who ran the mile in three\nminutes, 54.5 seconds.\nBut he warns women away\nfrom his training camp. He says\nthe regime he demands would\nmean their surrendering femininity  and  becoming masculine.\n\"Having women running, jumping and throwing was all right\nwhen sport was truly amateur\nand    largely    the    province    of\nschoolgirls,\" Cerutty says. \"It\nwas the same with women in tennis in Queen Victoria's day. They\nweren't taken seriously and nobody minded.\n\"But sport today is on new\nlevels. Men train and condition\nthemselves in strength and ferocity. AH these things are detrimental to women. They can't\nhope to keep up without surrendering their sex.\"\nAthletes in Australia and New\nZealand challenge Cerutty's\nclaim. Some agree women should\nset a limit to their effort, but\nothers dismiss Cerutty's theories\ncompletely.\nNew Zealand track and field\nadministrators and coaches point\nout that two of the greatest Australian women runners, who have\njust been touring New Zealand,\nare particularly feminine and\nglamorous.\nWOMAN HATER?\nThey are Betty Cuthbert, triple\nOlympic gold medal winner, and\nMrs. Marlene Mathews - Willard,\nmultiple breaker of world sprint\nrecords.\nNeither is impressed by\nCerutty's warnings. Said Betty\nCuthbert:\n\"Mr. Cerutty is being old^ash-\nioned. Times have changed since\ngirls were barred from doing anything. I think he just hasn't got\nused to the idea.\"\nMrs. Mathews - Willard declared:\n\"I don't know what Cerutty\nhas against us. Just see how\nmany women athletes are married\u2014and they certainly are feminine. He must be a woman\nhater.\"\nThis charge 05 - year - old\nCerutty indignantly denies. \"I'm\nno woman hater, I love 'em,\"\nhe says. \"But they must be\nwomanly. I've never wanted to\ncuddle a weight - lifting amazon\nyet.\"\nCerutty says he is not criticizing any present-day women athletes but merely issuing a warning on what will happen if they\nattempt the physical conditioning\nundertaken by top male athletes.\n\"They'll have to have muscular\nstringy limbs, hard faces, arrested bust development, unwomanly shapes. Do we have to\nwait until our girls cannot become mothers before we draw\nattention to the danger?\"\nLEAFS BEGIN\nFRONT OFFICE\nTALENT HUNT\nTORONTO (CP) - Toronto\nMaple Lcals started a crosscountry search Tuesday for a\ncombination coach and general\nmanager to run their minor\nhockey organization.\nStafford Smythe, head of the\nseven-man management committee which runs the National\nHockey League club, said Leafs\nwant a man to run Iheir junior A\nand junior B Marlboros and supervise midget and minor clubs.\nCoach Turk Broda and general\nmanager Peanuts O'Flaherty\nhave stepped down from their\nposts with Marlboros.\nUltimatum Given\nTo Empire Champs\nLONDON (Reuters) - The British Commonwealth and Empire\nBoxing Championships committee\nhas informed Dennis Adams of\nSouth Africa and Dick Tiger of\nNigeria that unless they defend\ntheir Empire titles within the next\nthree months the committee will\nconsider declaring the titles vacant.\nContenders for Adams' empire\nflyweight title are Frankie Jones\nand John Caldwell of Britain,\nLloyd Gordon of Canada and Freddie Ngidi of South Africa.\nContenders named for Tiger's\nempire middleweight title are\nYama Bahama of the Bahamas.\nTerry Downes of Britain and Wilf\nGreaves of Canada.\nNORTHERN VENICE\nAmsterdam, sometimes called\nthe \"Venice of the North,\" is\nbuilt on 90 islands connected by\n300 bridges.\nIN PERSON\nNELSON\nCIVIC CENTRE\nM O N D AY\nApril 25th\nThe Nation's Leading\nCowboy Recording Star\nALSO-\nHAWKSHAW   HAWKINS\nBUDDY EMMONS\nJEAN SHEPHERD   \"\nJOHNNY JOHNSON\n2 SHOWS\n4:30 p.m. - 8:00 p.m.\nAdults $1.25 \u2014 Children 75c\nChildren   Matinee 50c\nBe Your Own Decorator\n\u25a0'-STEPHENS &^540\nSELECT YOUR COLOR\nwith confidence I\nWe have Stephens Color\nSelector\u2014a brand new idea to\nhelp you choose the right\ncolor for your rooms. See the\ncolor harmony of your room\u2014in\nminiature\u2014before you buy.\nAPPLY YOUR PAINT\nwilh ease \/\nWe supply all your painting\nrequirements. And, naturally,\nwe have every possible shade of\nBallet 540 paint in stock] no\nother paint smooths on with such\nspeed and ease. And it dries\nso quickly you can hang your\ndraperies ln just 2 hours.\n. AND WE HAVE A FREE COLOR SELECTOR FOR YOU\ndrop in tomorrow!\nf:7<jM\u00bb\nrxjg%$^\u00a3:y&*\n(Bsul (BuUdinq.\nSupply ZCimibuL\nI 301 Baker St.     Ph. 1704 |\nNelion,  B.C.\niSiSs-S-s\n \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0 '\".,   ''\u2014\n\u25a0\u25a0\u2022^\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0^'\u2122yWi^ ,^...,,.,,7^.,,^^,^.,^^,,^\t\n;,-,\u25a0 :,:\u25a0 *\u25a0; ri\"1\"' -;-..V-\\^\u2014j^\u20141^-7--\u25a0:\u25a0_-Tr-i-_\n,.,,\u201e,.  -----  -  ,;\u25a0;-,-: ;  .\u25a0    ..--;-:-:\nGene Fullmer Keeps\nMiddleweight Crown\nBloody Headbutting 15-Round Bout\nLeaves Fighters With Even Points\n\/&n\nBOZEMAN, Mont. (AP) \u2014\nSturdy Gene Fullmer and Joey\nGiardello battled 15 bitter rounds\nto a draw Wednesday night as\nFullmer retained the National\nBoxing Association version ot the\nworld middleweight title.\nThere were several minutes of\nwild confusion at ringside before\nSonny O'Day, chairman of the\nMontana State Athletic Commission, came up with an official announcement that Fullmer had retained the title.\nAt first the commission debated\nwhether to declare the vote ol referee Harry Kessler for Giardello\nas the decisive [actor.\nAfter a consultation with other of-\nmiddle of the ring ind grabbed the\nmiddle 0 fthe ring and grabbed the\nmicrophone to confirm the draw\ndecision.\n\"Under the official rules of boxing,\"  said  O'Day,  \"the  decision\nhas to be a draw. Fullmer retains\nhis title.\"\nSPLIT DECISION\nReferee Kessler, an Import from\nSt. Louis, called it 145-142 In favor\nof Giardello. Judge Jay Evans of\nButte scored it for Fullmer 145-142.\nJudge Billy McFarland called it\nall even, 145-145.\nThe Associated Press card had\nIt 145-145 an dall even in rounds.\nThe brawl was marked by a\nfierce head-butting duel in the\nfourth round when referee Kessler\nstopped the contest for several seconds and warned both fighters. The\nblood was streaming from a cut\nunder Giardello's right eye and\nfrom a gash on Fullmer's forehead.\nFor a moment it seemed Fullmer, thoroughly disgusted, was\ngoing to climb through the ropes.\nWhen they resumed they ripped\nInto each other with both hands.\nThere were no knockdowns in\nthe   wild   aflair,   staged   before\nh\nJoey Giardello\nHe soon was rushing in with both\nGene Fullmer\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURS., APRIL 21, 1960 \u2014 13\nBig Leagues Fighting Close Battles\nQiants Qain Tie for NL Lead,\nTigers Defeat Cleveland 6-4\nBy THE CANADIAN PBESS\nThe San Francisco Giants regained a tie with Los Angeles for the National League lead as young Mike McCormick beat the Dodgers 1-0 with a two-hitter Wednesday. In\nthe American, Al Kaline delivered the winning run for the\nsecond straight day as the Detroit Tigers, powered by two\nejc-Indians, defeated Cleveland 6-4.\nIn the only other NL afternoon\ngame, Cincinnati scored three in\nthe ninth and five in the 10th for\na 10-5 victory over the Milwaukee\nBraves. Roy McMillan hit a pair\nof homers and drove in five runs\nfor the Reds.\nPhiladelphia was at Pittsburgh\nfor a night game.\nIn tiie other AL day game,\nBoston won its first, whipping the\nNew York Yankees 7-1 behind the\nfive-hit pitching of Jerry Casale.\nWashington  played   a  night\ngame  at Baltimore  in  the  only\nother game scheduled In the majors.\nFIRST  TWO-HITTER\nMcCormic,  21,   gave  up  noth\ning but singles for his first two-\nhitter in the majors and fifth\nshutout. He had the Dodgers hit-\nless until Maury Wills singled in\nthe sixth. McCormick walked one,\nstruck out three.\nThe Giants, managing five\nsingles, handed right-handed Don\nDrysale his first defeat in three\ndecisions on hits by Willie Kirk-\nland and Don Blasingame in the\nfifth.\nMcMillan, tagging starter Warren Spahn for his homers, bad\nfive hits, one an RBI single in\nthe lOth-inning break-through that\nbeat reliever Don McMahon. A\npinch-single by rookie Tony Gonzalez drove in the clincher.\nEarly Season Scores High\nThe Reds, trailing 3-0 after Ed\nMathews' two - on homer in the\nfirst, took a 5-4 lead with three\nin the ninth, two on a M'cMillan\nsingle off reliever Lew Burdette.\nThe Braves then tied it on Ray\nBoone's pinch single. Winning re^\nhands flailing, taking the edge off STRIKES 'N' SPARES' liever Raul Sani*ez cut that ra\"y\nGiardello's sharp rallies. |jii\\irvw   i-i   jr nn*.*, ^^ Jm  Adcock  on\n1   Variety Club bowling results for       gTOmi   out   ^   the   bases\nGiardello dug into his reserve , ,       . ,\nto   regain   the  offensive   in   the  Wednesday night\neighth and ninth, shaking up Gene I   Cheerios 2, Jets 1, Rollettes 1\nwith  his   sharp   left  hooks   and! Goons 2,  Luniks  1,  Five-Pins  2.\nloaded,\nHOMER BREAKS TIE\nKaline, whose two\nran single\nright   uppercuts   and   outboxing | High single and aggregate went^O; ^ ^sAeiy.s opener ,n ^ m\nDoris  Holliday of  Five-Pins,\njand 600. Team high single and ag-j\ngregate, Five-Pins 863 and 2359.    I\nJunior Ladies:   Flyers 3, Spar-\n... ,      \u201e    ,    ,,.    , \u201e . .Ions 1, Gorgers 0, Royal Bank 1\nditch sally by Giardello was not I Cornerpjns  s   Dynamos   x   Hl\u00a3\u201e\nenough to save Uie round for him. lsing]e and aggregate, Jane Pearson\nhim.\nThe tide swung the other way i\nin the 10th wilh Fullmer driving i\ninside  with  both  hands.  A  last-!\ninning, hit a tie-breaking home\nrun in the ninth as the Tigers\nscored twice against loser Jim\nPerry. Ex-Indians Rocky Colavito\n,;nd pinch - hitler Norm Cash\nrashed homers that brought the\nabout 12 000 in the fieldhouse of   \u00ab* \u00bbth, moving around on legs\nt,,i\u201e, , IiI-q*   Hra-D   ovru>\/-tfiH   ir.   fall   hi.rvi   nt\nGiardello was boxing neatly in ;0f Royal Bank, 291 and 609. Team; Tigers    from    behind.    Hockey's\nlhat were expected to fall him at  Bank, 905 and 2502,\nthis stage of the long brawl.\nMontana State College.\nCROWD BOOS DRAW j\nThe  crowd,  normally   favoring , SLAMS GENE'S HEAD\nFullmer, seemed  to  think  Giar-      Giardello  kept   booming   home\ndelto deserved the decision. They\nbooed the draw and cheered for\nKessler's verdict. They yelled\nagain when Giardello's handlers\nhoisted him on Iheir shoulders in\nthe middle of the ring.\nGiardello, a 3-to-l underdog,\nsurprised the crowd by moving\nwith speed even in the last half\nof Ihe fight. It had been expected\nthat Fullmer's body punches\nwould take the steam out of him.\nHowever, Fullmer closed\nstrong to win the 14th and 15th\non Kessler's card and the 15th in\nEvans' scoring.\nJudge McFarland scored the\n13th and 14th even and called the\n15th for Giardello in arriving al\nhis draw verdict.\nCrowds Jeer\nFullmer came out with his\nhands high, hiding his chin behind his right arm. He waited for\nGiardello to take the lead while\nthe crowd began to jeer. Pal Joey\nof Philadelphia soon obliged with\na right to the head and closed\nthe round with a solid left-right\ncombination.\nGiardello took charge in the\nsecond after he had been roughed\nup on the ropes by Fullmer. Joey\ndrove home a stiff jab and followed with a right lo the body\nas he crashed through Fullmer's\ncrude defence.\nlt was Fullmer's turn to gel\nthrough wilh his attack in the\nthird, driving forward in his wild\nhead-long style. He drew a warning from referee Kessler for butting.\nTTie big explosion of the fight\ncame in the fourth. They had\nbeen slugging away for about two\nminutes when a cut opened\naround Giardello's right eye from\na head collision. The aroused\nGiardello dashed across the ring\nand slammed head on into Fullmer.\nKessler jumped between the\nmen to warn both for the butting. There was confusion as Fullmer, fuming, walked toward his\ncorner shaking his head with\nblood streaming down his lace.\nKessler finally waved them\nback to action after a delay ol\nseveral seconds.\nDuring the excitement Tony\nFerrante, Giardello's manager,\njumped into the ring to protest lo\nKessler. He was ushered out by\ncommissioner O'Day.\nIt was Fullmer moving into Ihe\nlead in the sixth and seventh,\ncharging in with his awkward offence while Giardello waiting,\nlooking for a chance to land a\nclean shot. It seemed Giardeilo\nwas tiring.\nIn the seventh it was the same\nstory. Fullmer waited and Joey\nwaited, dropping his hands in disgust.\nFullmer Flails\nBut Fullmer couldn't wait long.\nhigh single and aggregate, Royal j came wilh two on. Tom Morgan\nwon  it  in  relief  of  Don  Mossi,\nBoth   leagues   wound  up   their; who\nbowling  for  the  season. | hits.\ngave   up   Cleveland's   four\nthose slamming punches to the\nhead and body in the 13lh and\n14th while Fullmer punished him\nin the clinches in the last two\nroonds.\nMost of the ringsiders seemed\nto think that Fullmer's persistent\noffensive earned him the edge.\nHowever, Giardello was sharp at\n158V4 pounds, his lightest in many\nyears. Fullmer weighed 160\u2014the\nclass limit\u2014for his second defence of the title he won by\nknocking out Carmen Basilio last\nAugust.\nBasilio Next\nBasilio, a ringside spectator,\nwill.be Fullmer's next opponent,\naccording lo a dressing room\ncomment by Marv Jenson, manager of the stocky champ from\nWest Jordan, Utah.\nA June 15 date at Salt Lake\nCity,of Missoula, Mont., had been\npencilled in Ihe Wednesday night\ntelevision calender for a rematch,\nif Giardello had won, or a Basilio bout if Gene retained his title.\nJenson said Gustav Schulz, the\nEuropean champ from Germany,\nwould be next if he couldn't get\ntogether on terms with Basilio.\nGiardello had waited 12 years\nfor-his chance at Ihe title and he\ncame so close lhat he probably\nwill get another chance.\nHe may have to wait a while.\nFullmer called the fourth round\nbutt \"lhe most unsportsmanlike\nthing I've ever seen in the ring.\"\nGiardello claimed he butted\nFullmer \"only because he butted\nme three times before that.\"\nBoth men were spattered with\nblood and referee Kessler's shirt\nlooked like a butcher's apron.\nIn Giardello's dressing room he\nwas claiming the NBA title.\n\"He's going to have to come\nback east to win it from me.\" he\nsaid. \"All the people oul there\n'the crowd) thought so too.\"\nBLEEDING\nAND MAD\nBOZEMAN. Mont. (API -\nBloodied champion Gene Fullmer said challenger Joey Giardello, who battled him to a\ndraw Wednesday night, \"does\nnot deserve a rematch because of the way he butted me\nin the fourth round.\"\nFullmer called the butt \"the\nmost unsportsmanlike thing I've\never seen in the ring.\"\nGiardello said he butted\nFullmer \"only because he'd\nhutted me three times before\nthat.\"\nBruised, bleeding and mad,\nJoey claimed the title belonged\nlo him.\n\"I'm the champion,\" the 29-\nyear-old bad boy of boxing insisted. \"I not only think so but\nall those people out there think\nMaroons Swamp\nHull To Win Cup\nMeet Smoke Eaters for\nAllan Cup Best-of-Seven\nCHATHAM, Ont. (CP) - Chatham Maroons swamped Hull Legionnaires 19-0 Wednesday night\nto win the Eastern Canada Senior A Hockey crown and a berth\nin the Allan Cup final against\nTrail Smoke Eaters of British\nColumbia.\ntion   of  goalie  Cesare   Maniago,\ncollected at least one point.\nHull goalie Roger Fortin was\nused for target practice by the\nMaroon snipers. Who bombarded\nhim with 55 shots. He played well\ndespite the 19 pucks that got past\nhim. Time and again he was left\nChatham took the best-of-five | alone l0 defend against Maroons.\nseries 3-1 and will open against\nthe Smoke Eaters in Trail Mon\nday.\nGary Sharp and Billy Forhan\neaoh scored four goals with Jim\nConnelly adding three. George\nAitken scored twice while defenceman Elmer Skov, Joe Malo,\nFred Pletsch, Berle Klinck, Jack\nStoddard and Ted Power added\none goal each.\nThe Power-Connclly-Sharp line\n'Picked up 20 scoring points between them while Foran, Malo\nand Stoddard registered 13 points.\nEvery Maroon, with the excep-\nWith regular defenceman Jack\nDouglas out of action wilh a\nbroken right hand, Maroons\nbrought Berle Klinck from Woodstock Maroons Senior B team as\ndefensive insurance. Klinck scored\none of the goals.\nHull sorely missed the services\nof ex-National Leaguer Leo Gra\nvelle, along with defenceman Gillis Lucelle who was felled by the\nstick of Frank Bathgate in Monday's  third game  of  the   series\nBathgate drew a one-fame suspension for his part in the fracas\nRousseau Scores Four\nTo Lead in 10-5 Win\nCasale struck out eight and\nsocked a two-run' double for the\nRed Sox, who scored in the second for a 5-0 lead against loser\nBob Turley. The Yankees scored\non Tony Kubek's double and\nRoger Marls' single in the Ihird.\nRoig Sparks\nSpokane Win\nSAN DIEGO, Calif. (AP) -\nTony Roig paced Spokane's 12-hil\nattack with four safeties Wednesday\nnight as the Indians defeated San\nDiego Padres 9-5 in a Pacific\nCoast League baseball game.\nSpokane ,.. 200 104 002\u20149 12 2\nSan Diego 010 112 000\u20145 10 2\nYoung, Churn (4), Palmquisl (7),\nand Pagliaroni; Peters, Robinson\n(7) and Napier. W \u2014 Palmquist\n(2-0). L - Peters (0-D. Hr. San\nDiego, J. C. Martin.\nBaseball Standings\nPacific Coast League\nW L   Pet Gbl\nSpokane     6   1   .857    \u2014\nPortland       3   2   .600   2\nSacramento    4   3   ,571   2\nSeattle      4   4   .500   2M\nSan  Diego      4   4   .500   2Mi\nTacoma      1   1   .500   2t4\nVancouver    1   3   .250  3Vi\nSalt Lake City   ....   1   6   .143   5\nNational  League\nLos Angeles .52   .714   \u2022\nSan Francisco     5   2   .714   \u2014\nMilwaukee       3  2   .600    1\nPittsburgh       4   3   .571    1\nClnrinatti       3  3   .500 IVi\nChicago       2   4   .333 2Vi\nPhiladelphia       2   4   .333 Vk\nSt. Louis 1   5   .167 Vk\nAmerican League\nW L Pet. GBL\nDetroit       2  0   1.000  \u2014\nChicago       1   0   1.000   Vi\nWashington      2   1    .677   <k\nBaltimore        1   1    .877   Vi\nNew   York       1   1    .500    1\nBoston     12    .300    1\nKansas  Oity       0   1    .000 Vk\nCleveland       0   2    .000    2\nEISENHOWER LIBRARY\nAUGUSTA, Ga. (AP) - President Eisenhower has offered to\ngive the government the buok of\nhis private and presidential papers and a $3,000,000 library to\nhouse them. The government has\naccepted. The library is under\nconstruction near Eisenhower's\nboyhood home at Abilene, Kan.\nWorld Briefs\nRELUCTANT  RUNAWAYS\nTORONTO (CP) - Three children who planned to run away\nfrom home Monday night, then\nwaited until morning because\n\"it's not as scary then,\" were!\nfound Monday night huddled beside a beach bonfire. Ronald\nSlockill, 12, his brother Wayne,\n11, and nine - year - old sister\nSandra told police they left for\nschool then \"runned away just\n'cause we wanted to.\"\nBUYS  STUDIO\nHOLLYWOOD  (API-Comedian\nRed   Skelton   is   buying   Charlie\nChaplin's  old  movie  studio  and\nplans to produce movies and tel-1\nevision shows there. He said he '\nplans to begin operations May 1. j\nThe price of the landmark al Sun-1\nset Boulevard and La Brea Ave- |\nnue   is   reported   to   he   about\n$1,500,000. |\nART FAILS FLAT\u2014This ls the\ncontroversial statue, made by\nsculptor Emilio Greco in\nRome, which will hold the\nOlympic torch this summer\nIn Rome. The flat-chested\nfigure,, with a well-rounded\ntummy, has been tagged\n\"Flat Fanny.\" The sculptor\nput a shoestring bra and a\nthin band around the bulging hips \"just because it\nlooked better that way.\"\nMerchants Lead Hoop\nBest-of-Five 2-1\nHAMILTON (CP) - Richmond\nMerchants of Vancouver took a\nOne-game lead in the best-of-five\nfinal for the Canadian women's senior basketball title Wednesday\nnight with a close 45-43 win over\nHamilton's Quigly Tigerettes.\nMerchants now lead the series\na-l with the fourth game scheduled\nfor tonight.\nAbout 600 fans saw the contest\na see-saw affair from start to finish. Play (lashed up and down the\nflor with close checking.\nThe British Columbia champions\nhad to survive a last-minute drive\nby Hamilton to clinch the game.\nIn the final four minutes of play,\nTigerettes led 43-42 and managed\nto hold off Merchants' rushes until\nthe one-minute mark. Then Zoe\nShepherd took a long pass, split\nthe Hamilton defence and played\nup a neat basket.\nPROVES WINNER\nThe basket proved to be the win\nning score. During the final 30 secf\nonds  the  British  Columbia  tean\nfroze the ball to hold their lead.\nIn the first few minutes of plajl\nHamilton moved into the lead and\nhad a slight 19-17 edge at the end,\nof the first quarter.\nMerchants came back in the!\nsecond quarter with Zoe Shepherd]\nand with fine defensive play.\nELECTRIC MOTOR\nREWINDING\nService and Repairs\nWe  Rewind All Size Motors\nand Armatures\nSet  Us  About All  Types ol\nINDUSTRIAL CONTROLS\nColeman Electric\nLTD.\nPhone jr5S Nelson, B.C. I\nSSI     W   '>!\u00ab<   \u00bb!\u25a0 SS****\nQUALITY TRUCK TIRES...\n...at low, low prices\nRIB HI-MILER ROAD LUG\ngood\/year\n\u2022 Cooler running at high \u2022 Wide choice of sizes at\nspeeds. '\"  low prices.\n\u2022 Exclusive 3-T cord for \u2022 Super traction tread design,\nlonger carcass life .... Ideal for use on and off\nmore recaps. the highway.\n\u2022 Available in nylon or  . 3-T cord in nylon or rayon.\nrayon' \u2022 New low price.,\nfioorfyear auto tires as low as $10.88\nAndy's Tire Shop\nPhone  1930,\n323 Vernon St.\nNelson, B.C.\nMONTREAL ICP) - Captain\nBobby Rousseau scored four goals\nWednesday night to lead Brock-\nville Canadiens to a 10-5 victory\nover St. Catharines Teepees in\nUie Eastern Canada Memorial\nCup final.\nTeepees lead the best-of-seven\nseries 3-2. Next game is Friday\nin Toronto and a seventh, if\nnecessary, will be at the Montreal Forum Saturday.\nGilles Francoeur scored two\ngoals and Andre Drolet, Keith\nMcCreary, Wayne Freitag and\nGermain Monger one each for\nCanadiens.\nVic Hatfield scored twice for\nTeepees and Chico Maki, Murray\nHall and Rick Predowich added\nsingles.\nThe  winner of the series will\nmeet Edmonton Oil Kings in Ihe\ndominion junior final.\nWIDE  OPEN  GAME\nThe game was open and fast\nall the way with centre Rousseau\nthe big attraction of the night.\nHe opened the scoring after\nonly 32 seconds of the first period. Drolet let loose a 15 - foot\ndrive at 3:27 to increase Canadiens lead.\nSt. Catharines big line of Maki-\nRay Cullen - Hatfield connected\nfor the visitors' first goal at the\nseven-minute mark when Maki\nscored from close range. Brock-\nville's McCreary scored at 12.21\nto give Canadiens a 3-1 first period lead.\nTeepees made a comeback in\nlhe middle period after Rousseau\nhad stretched Canadiens lead\nwith a shot from the front of the\ngoal at 3:33.\nSCORES IN FIRST GAME\nHall was standing by the Brock-\nville goalpost to tap in Duke Harris' pass at 14:41. Predowich,\nplaying his first game in the series, slammed in a 20-footer three\nminutes later and Hatfield scored\nat 18:58 when he backhanded a\nshot along Ihe goal line that just\nmanaged to reach the far left\ncorner.\nBrockville cut loose with six\ngoals in Ihe final period that gave\nthem the game. Freitag, Rousseau. Francoeur, Franc o e u r\nagain, Rousseau and Munger in\nthat order poured in the goals for\nthe Habs.\nTeepees collected a consolation\ngoal at 19:48 when Hatfield\nscored unassisted.\nReferee Andy Gurba of Brandon, Man, called nine penalties,\nall minors, five to Teepees. Four\nof Ihe 15 goals figured in the penalties.\nGHTEST\nml LATEST\nA gentle, smooth blend of very light Cana\u00ab\ndian whiskies, matured in white oak barrels for\nsix years, with all the fine character and strength\nlong associated with Corby whiskies.\nTo-day the trend is to lightness... and your\nfriends will appreciate the lightness of Corby'i\nVERY LIGHT. It gives zest to long drinks,\nblends graciously in cocktails . . . and really\neparkles \"on the rocks.**\nCottons\nVery Light\nCanadian Whisky\nBY THE DISTILLERS OF PARK LANE\nAND CORBY'S SPECIAL SELECTED\nThis advertisement is nol published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the Government ol British Columbia.\n ~~ \".'.'.'  -    \u25a0'\u2022   \u25a0'..'.\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\n-r- .-\u25a0 \u25a0     \t\n14 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURS., APRIL 21, I960\nL\nA\nB\nN\nE\nR\nH\nE\nN\nR\nY\nB\nR\nA\nD\nF\nO\nD\nR\nD\nO\nN\nA\nL\nD\nD\nU\nC\nK\nJ\nU\nL\n\u2022I\nE\nT\nJ\nO\nN\nE\nS\nB\nL\nO\nN\nD\nI\nE\nB\nU\nZ\ns\nA\nW\nY\nE\nR\nB.\nB\nA\nI\nL\nE\nY\nJ\nI\nG\nG\nS\nU\/EOiri]SMj\u00abrt,\u00bb-AH ^\n1 SOTA  J WAMPST'KNOW\n\u2022HOUR ABUWttiWHUT-\n, lut!.'  am iSGrrriitf- \u2022\nHAIlfTYrJ \/AHALIUSVMS\n. SATIS- ^ A CAREFUL  \u201e\nRED ITS ] SHOPPER.?)\nA WQWfo-Jr    jS\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS\nThe Daily News does ool bold Itself responsible In tbe event\not as error In  tbe following lists.\nTORONTO STOCKS\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nAcadia Uranium \t\nAdvocate ;     \t\nAlgom Uranium \t\nAnacon Lead \t\nAblin Ruff  \u201e .._\t\nAumaque   _\t\nAunor  _\t\nBarnat \t\nBase Metals \t\nBaska Uranium\t\nBibis Yukon \t\nBrunswick   \t\nBuffalo Arik    __\t\nBuff Red Lake ....'. _\t\nCampbell C\t\nCassiar      ^\t\nCentral Patricia i\t\nChimo'..  :. _\nChromium   _ _.\nConiaurum        \t\nCons. Discovery  ..._\t\nCons HaHiwell \t\nCons Howe     \t\nCons. Marcus\nCons Mining & Smelting ....\nCons Regcourt \t\nCon Sanorm \t\nCon Sub _\t\nCopper Corp  _\t\nCopper Man  _\t\nOraig  \t\nD'Aragon _...\nDonalda     \t\nEast Amphi  \u201e\t\nEast Malartic \u25a0 _\t\nEast Sullivan\t\nElder Gold \t\nFalconbridge\t\nFaraday      ,..\t\nFrobisher\t\nGeco \t\nGeo. Scientific Pros.\t\nGiont Yel.\t\nGunnar Gold\t\nHasaga    \t\nHeadway  _\t\nHollinger\t\nHudson Bay \t\nInspiration  ..._ _\t\nInt. Nickel \t\nIron Bay    \t\nJonsrrath      _ _\t\nR J Jowsey\t\nKerr Addison  ..._\nLabrador     \t\nLakeshore ..._\nLeitch    \t\nLorado   \t\nMacassa    \t\nMocDonald\nMalsen R. L.     \t\nMalartic G. F\t\nMaritime  Mining \t\nMcMarmac \t\nMcKenzie R L\t\nMilliken        \t\nMining Corp.  \t\nMulti Mins \t\nNew Ridlamaque \t\nNew Hosco \t\nNew Lund       \t\nNipissing.        \t\nNoranda New ..._\t\nNorgold \t\nNormetals   _\t\nNorpax \t\nNorth Rankin \t\nOpemiska       \t\nPickle Crow  _.\nPlacer Devel\t\nPreston E. D\t\nOuebec Copper \t\nQuebec  Lab\nQuebec Metallurgical   ..\nOuemont       \t\nRadiore        \t\nRainville        \t\nRayrock \t\nSherritt Gordon  \t\nSteep Rock  \t\nSulUvan Con     \t\nSvlvanite \t\nTaurcpnis  \u201e.\nTeck Huehes    \t\nTemagatni        _\t\nThomp-Lund        \t\nTrans Cont Res \t\nUnited Keno        \t\nUpper   Canada   \t\nVentures  _\t\nViolamac \t\nWaite Amulet     \t\nWillroy \t\nWiltsey Goglin     \t\nYale\t\nYellowknife Bear      \t\nYoung (H.G.I Gold  \t\nYitkeno \t\nOILS\nBsnff Oils\nBailey  Selburn\nCalgary and Edmonton\nCanadian Devonian\nCdn Highcrest       \t\nCon East Crest    \t\nDuvex \t\nHome A        \u2022\t\nMarigold\t\nMidcon\t\nNew Continental    \t\nOkalta\n07\n3.30\n11.00\n.53\n.08 Vs\n.10\n2.56\n1.39\n.13\n.08\n.09\n3.25\n2.05\n.08\n4.95\n12.50\n1.16\n.61\n4.50\n.46\n355\n.49\n2.55\n.63\n17.62W\n.07\n,04'4\n.35\n.19\n.08%\n3.90\n.23\n.06%\n.06\n1.49\n1.51\n1.20\n30.75\n.70\n162\n16.75\n.85\n10.62%\n8.45\n.16\n.25\n24.00\n44.50\n.33\n103.75\n2.90\n.11%\n.31\n21.62%\n22.00\n4.15\n154\n.32\n2.70\n.19\n3.00\n.83\n.88\n.06\n.20\n.92\n11.50\n.36%\n.07%\n.68\n.15\n.90\n40 00\n.04 .\n3.10\n.09\n.87\n5.80\n.87\n11.75\n4 10\n.12\n,03'4\n.47\n9.55\n.63\n.26\n.51\n278\n9.95\n1.65\n83\n.49\n1.68\n1.55\n.72\n.16\n6.00\n1.10\n23.75\n1.52\n6.45\n1.26\n.09\n.18%\n1.01\n.78\n.03%\n1.10\n600\n17 37%\n2.80\n.35\n.42\n.06\n.     9.25\n.08'4\n.43\n.24\n.43\n10.62 k\nPacific Pete  _..\nPetrol '\t\nPonder      _ 29\nPlace Oil       .72\nProv Gas     2.13\nRoyalite        8.15\nSpooner 13\nStanwell Oil 38\nTriad  _ _...    2.80\nUnited Oils        1.37\nYank Canuck  - 05\nWestern Pacific\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi  \t\nAlgoma Steel \t\nAluminum       _ _.\nArgus 2nd pfd _\t\nAtlas St\t\nB.A. Oil\nBathurst Power\t\nBell Telephone\t\nBrazilian \t\nB.C. Electric 4s    _\t\nB.C. Electric 4%s \t\nB.C. Forest       \t\nB.C. Packers A  _.\nB.C. Power A\t\nBurns A \t\nCanadian Breweries _.\nCanadian Canners _.\nCanadian Celanese \t\nCan. Cement       \t\nCan Ohem Co\t\nCan. Curtis Wright  _.\nCan.  Malting \t\nCan Oil\nCanadian Pacific Rily \t\nCan. Packers A   \t\nOan. Packers B  \t\nCockshutt \t\nColumbia Cellulose\t\nCons Gas\t\nDist. Seagram     \t\nDominion Bridge \t\nDom. Foundries  _...\nDom. Stores       \t\nDom. Tar 4 Ohemical ...\nDom. Textiles    \t\nFamous Players \t\nFanny Farmer _.\nFord U.S\t\nGatineau\t\nGatineau 5% pfd  _.\nGen. Steel Wares\t\nHoward Smith   \t\nImperial Oil     \t\nImp. Tobacco\t\nInd. Ace _ _\nLoblaw A \t\nLoblaw B  _.\nMossey Ferguson \t\nMolson Brewery\t\nMont. Loco     \t\nMoore Corp\t\nNat. Steel Car \t\nPage Hersbey  _\t\nPower Corp\t\nRuss.   Industries   \t\nShawinigan  \t\nSicks Brew\t\nSimpsons A \t\nSoutham \t\nSteel of Canada \t\nUnion Gas of Oan\t\nUnited Steel       \t\nWeston George \t\nWoodwards A. \t\n.18\n38 Vs\n34 Vs\n29\n44\n23'tj\n294\n40\n44V4\n4.05\n7U4\n84\n12%\n14\n32\n13\n33'\/,\n12'4\n19\n27\n1.80\n49>4\n21%\n26\n46\n43%\n16Vi\n3.95\n37 Vs\n28%\n19%\n43%\n49','\u00ab\n14%\n9\n20%\n16\nMVs\n34%\n93 V\u00bb\n11%\n41\n31%\n12%\n34%\n26 V,\n26'4\n9M.\n22V,\n16%\n40%\n14\n27%\n46%\n10%\n26%\n23\n28%\n81\n74%\n13\n7\n34\n17V4\nFrench, British\nSee Channel\nTunnel Possible\nPARIS (Reuters)\u2014A railroad\ntunnel linking Britain and France\nunder the English Channel is\n\"technically and financially realizable\" and could be built in\nfive years, a study group reported to the French and British\ngovernments  Wednesday.\nThe tunnel, in which cars would\nbe carried on railroad flatcars,\nwould bring Paris within four\nhours 20 minutes rail travel.time\nof London and enable 1,800 vehicles to cross under the channel\nevery hour in each direction.\nThe proposed tunnel would be\n32% miles long, emerging on the\nFrenTh side west of Calais and in\nBritain between Dover and\nFolkestone.\nThe group said that if completed by 1965, the tunnel would\nat once carry a minimum traffic\nof 3.180,000 passengers a year,\n676,000 motor vehicles and 1.230,-\n000 Ions of freight.\nThe total cost\u2014about $300,000-\n000\u2014could be raised by private investment provided the French\nand British governments guaranteed the scheme, the report Said.\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\nPACIFIC STANDARD TIME\nKHQ \u2014 Channel 6\n6:15 Front Page\n6:45 NBC News *\n7:00 Highway Patrol\n7:30 State Trooper\n8:00 Bat Masterson *\n8:30 Producer's Choice *\n9:00 Sea Hunt\n9:30 Tenn. Ernie Ford <C> \u2022\n10:00 You Bet Your Life *\n10:30 News\n10:40 Late Movie:\n\"Kid From  Cleveland\"\nKREM-TV - Channel 2\n5:30 Rocky and His Friends\n6:00 Huckleberry Hound\n6:30 Newsbeat .\nProfile: Benton\n7:00 This Man Dawson\n7:30 Steve Canyon *\n8:00 Donna Reed *\n8:30 Real'McCoys *\n9:00 Pat Boone Show *\n9:30 The Untouchables *\n-0:30 Adventures In-Gardening\n11:00 Nightbeat\n11:15 Jack Paar *\n1:00 Nightbeat News\nKXLY-TV \u2014 Channel 4\n8:15 University Profile\n8:45 Song Shop\n9:00 Red Rowe *\n9:30 On The Go *\n10:00 1 Love Lucy \u2022\n10:30 December Bride *\n11:00 Love of Life \u2666\n11:30 Search For Tomorrow '\n11:45 Guiding Light *\n12:00 Ray Milland Show\n12:30 Susie\n1:00 Take 4\n1:15 Dan Smoot\n1:30 As the World Turns *\n2:00 For .Better or Worse *\n2:30 Houseparty *\n3:00 Millionaire *\n3:30 Verdict Is Yours *\n4:00 Brighter Day *\n4:15 Secret Storm *\n4:30 Edge of Night *\n5:00 Navy Log\n5:30 New City Council\n5:45 4-Star Report\n6:15 Doug Edwards *\n6:30 Amos n' Andy\n7:00 Lock-Up\n7:30 To Tell The Truth \u2022\n8:00 DuPont'Show of the Month\n9:30 Markham\n10:00 CBS Reports *\n11:00 News\n11:05 4-Most Feature\n(Programs subject to change **J stations without noti.oe.)\nVANCOUVER STOCKS\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nBeaver Lodge \t\nBralorne        \t\nCanusa' \u2022\t\nCarbio Gold \t\nCraig\nGiant Mascot  \t\nGranduc \t\nHighland Bell  .'\t\nNational Ex      \t\nPend  Odeille     \t\nQuatsino\nReeves MacDonald   \t\nSheep  Creek \t\nSherritt Gordon   \t\nSilback  Premier  \t\nSilver  Ridge\nSilver Standard\t\nSunshine Lardeau \t\nTaylor\t\nTrojan  \t\nUtica '   _\nWestern  Exploration \t\nOILS\nA P Consolidated\nCalgary 4 Edmonton \t\nCharter\t\nHome \t\nOkalta Com   \t\nPacific  Pete       \t\nPeace River Gas  _\t\nRoyalite     \t\nRoyal  Can  \t\nUnited \t\nVantor \t\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlberta Distillers       \t\nAlberta Distillers Vt \t\nB C Forests \t\nB   C   Power \t\nB C Telephone       \t\nCanodian   Collieries   \t\nCrown  Zeller  (Can)  \t\nInt Brew B\nMacM & Powell \t\n\u2022   .08%\n5.05\n.04%\n.93\n3.95\n.24%\n1.01\n1.75\n.04\n2.45\n:16\n1.65\n.78\n2.70\n.33\n.04%\n.25%\n.12\n.14\n.09\n.00%\n.12\n.42\n16.87%\n.90\n9.25\n.38\n10.37%\n.38%\n8.00\n.1.1\n1.39\n.43\n2.25\n1.80\n12.62%\n32.00\n43.25\n9.37%\n18.75\n3.35\n.16%\nTrans Mtn      \t\nWestminster Paper ....\nWestern Plywoods\t\nUNLISTED\nAlta  Gas Trunk   \t\nTrans Canada Com ...\nTrans Mountain Unit\nWest Coast Unit\t\nWest. Coast Vt \t\nBANKS   '\nBank of Montreal\nCan. Bank of Com.\nImp. Bank of Can.\nRoyal Bank of Can\t\nFUNDS,\nAH   Can.   Com.   ..:\t\nAll Can.  Div\t\nCan.  Inv.  Fund\t\nCommonwealth Int\t\nFirst Oil and (las ....\nGrouped' Income .:\t\nInvestors Growth\t\nInvestors Mutual \t\nLeverage\nTrans Canada \"C\" ..\n9.50\n33.50\n14.25\n20.82%\n20.25\n9.50\n78.00\n13.50\n50.00 51.00\n50.00 51.00\n53.00 54.00\n68.00 68.50\n7.02 7.63\n5.54 6.04\n8.46 9.29\n7.81 $.5?\n3.57\n3.53\n5.71\n10.54 11.50\n6.20 6.61\n5.50 6.00\n$.6t\n6.17\nOver 300 Teenagers\nConverge On\nKelowna Teen Town\nKELOWNA (OP)-More than\n300 teen-agers from all parts trl\nthe province are converging on\nKelowna for the annua) provincial\nTeen-Town  conference.\nRegistration took place Wednesday and lhe first round of the\nsocial'functions started off with a\ndance. . ,\nBusiness sessions start Thursday morning.' The conference\nconcludes Friday night with a\nmayor's ball and crowning of Hl\u00bb\nnew Teen-Town Sweetheart.\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS 1390 ON THE DIAL\nPACIFIC STANDARD TIME\nTHURSDAY, APRIL 21, 1960\n: 54\u2014Sign. On\n55\u2014Farm Fare\n00\u2014Chapel in the Sky\n: 15-Wake-Up Time\n:25\u2014Sports News\n30\u2014News\n35-Wake Up Time\n: 00\u2014News\n: 10\u2014Sports News\n:15-WakeUpTime\n: 30\u2014Opening Markets\n: 35\u2014Dee's Show\n: 40\u2014Wake-Up Time\n: 45\u2014The Archers\n00\u2014News\n: 05\u2014Morning Devotions\n: 10\u2014Story Parade\n20\u2014Alan's A.M. Spot\n:59\u2014D.O.O.T.S.\n00\u2014News\n: 05\u2014Wheel of Fortune\n10\u2014Carnation Quiz Party\n15\u2014Tommy Hunter Show\n45\u2014John Drainie Tells a Story\n00\u2014Edge of Tomorrow\n15\u2014Woman's World\n20\u2014Album Time\n:45\u2014Food. Facts\n12:00\u2014News\n12:05\u2014Polka Party\n12:15\u2014Sports News\n12:25\u2014News\n12:31\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n12:54\u2014News and Noon Market*\n1:00\u2014Pacific Express\n1:45\u2014Sacred Heart Program\n2:00\u2014Holiday Time\n2:30\u2014Trans Canada Matinee\n3:30\u2014Ottawa Philharmonic\n4:00\u2014B.C. Road Report\n4:05\u2014Rocking With Boates\n5:00-NHL Hockey Playoff\n7:15-CBCNews\n7:45\u2014Christian Science\n8:00\u2014The Redemption of Man\n8:30\u2014Roaring 20's\n9:00\u2014Musicale\n9:30\u2014Eventide\n10:00\u2014News\n10:10\u2014Sports and Weather\n10:15\u2014Personal Appearance\n10:30\u2014Drama\n11:00\u2014Pacific Exohange\nll:37-News\n12:00-Sign Off\n6:00\u2014Sharpe at Six\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n8:15\u2014Sharpe\n9:00-BBC News\n9:15\u2014Much Ado about Music\n9:30\u2014Morning Concert\n9:59\u2014D.O.O.T.S.\n10:00\u2014 Morning Visit\n10:15-The Tommy Hunter Show\n10:45\u2014John Drainie Tells a Story\n11:00\u2014Edge of Tomorrow\n11:15\u2014Kindergarten of the Aair\n11:30\u2014Off the Record\n12:15-News\n12:25\u2014Showcase\n12:31-B.C. Farm Broadcast\nCBC   PROGRAMS\nMOUNTAIN STANDARD TIME\nFRIDAY, APRIL 22,  1960\n12:55\u2014Five to One\n1:00\u2014Pacific Express\n1:45\u2014Program Resume  ' .\n2:00\u2014National School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Trans Canada Matinee\n3:30\u2014Hersenhoren Strings\n4:00\u2014Court of Opinion\n4:30\u2014Tempo\n7:00\u2014National News\nT: 30\u2014Evening Concert\n8:00\u2014CBC Symphony Orchestra\n9:30\u2014Songs of My People\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014The Four Gentlemei\n'\"\"fl\u2014Anthology\n11:00\u2014Tuned to Dancing\n11:57\u2014News\nDAILY   CROSSWORD\nACROSS\n1. Tall\n5. Glass water\nbottle\n11. Ostrichlike\nbird (var.)\n12. To charm\n13. Armadillo\n14. Mlllpond\n15. Sun god\n16. Soils\n18. Donkey\n19. Coin (Jap.)\n20. Goddess of\nvengeance\n21. Sale notice\n23. Pillages\n27. Underworld\ngod\n29. Iota\n30. Alas! (L.)\n31. Gets off an\nairship\n34. Compass\npoint\n(abbr.)\n35. Also\n36. Trouble\n38. Airplane\nengine\n39. Sailor's bed\n(3. Close to\n14. Chesapeake,\nfor one\n45. Lament\n46. Trifling\n48. Anglo-Saxon serf\n49. Tallies\n50. Plexus\nDOWN\n1. To lead\n2. Body of\nKaffrr\nwarriors\n3. Cogwheels\n4. A strengthening piece\n5. Give over\n6. Genus of\nducks\n7. Male\nsheep\n8. Part of\n\"U> be\"\n9. Deserted\n10. Epochs\n17. Brazilian\npalm\n18. Chief\n20. Latvian\nriver\n21. Affix\n22. Of\nfood\nrules\n24. Not\n(prefix)\n25. Vapor\n26. Girl's\nname\n28. Blemish\n32. Behold!\n33. Boil\nslowly\n37. Slack\n38. Crowds\n39. Detest\n40. Affirmative\nvotes\n41. Jargon\nBBIIh)  [OBHiar*\nIsHHB  BHfclKWri\nmhhssnii   ami\n\u201e     SHBHO  HH\nbheb wuhhih\naaiiian HwtiiiH\nran mmm\nHHQ     QHIK1I4\nHHaasis HHUH\naKUOQU  fclB'ilii\nHHiaaara wasa\nYenterdny'o Anawej\n\u202242. Leg Joint\n44. Prickly\nenvelope of\nburdock\n47. Negative\nreply\n|S~\n4-21\nDAILY CRYPTOQCOTE \u2014 Here's how to work Hi\nAXYDLBAAXR\nIs LONGFELLOW\nOne letter olmply stands for another. In this sample A Is used\nfor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apos\u00bb\ntrOphes, the length and formation of the words are til hints,\nEach day the code letters are different\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nMSD      KLJKLJGLV      8NLAM      Of\nTBFDV       GA      VLKKDJ       DPDV\u2014RDNMV.\nYesterday's Cryptoquote: LOVE IS EVER THE BEGINNINfJ\nOF KNOWLEDGE, AS FIRE IS OF LIGHT\u2014CARL'HJt\n(fi 1160, King rattans Synllate. too.)\n ^^^^\u25a0^^\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0pp\n^^^^^^^^^^>-..jy-4\u00bbyi;tlMM-\ni'--.-'\": \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0(\u25a0>-.'\u25a0\u2022.\u25a0'\u2022\n..v.l,,..,Ji.U!ilL.,u,.iLi,u.,jj.i,i. 'W^^*^p-fP....    .i,jij,..i. 11 y\u00bb\u00bb^:j i.j ... i,\u201e.,u\n'O&C)\nSMALL INVESTMENT\nLARGE RETURNS\nThat's the Want Ad Story  ~  PHONE   1844\nYOU CAN NOW PHONE YOUR CLASSIFIED  ADS IN UNTIL 5 P.M. ON SATURDAY.\nBIRTHS\nPEVEREZEFF - To Mr.and;\nMrs. Andrew Peversefi, Shcre-j\nacres, at Kootenay Lake General\nHospital, April 20, a son.\nHELP WANTED\nARE YOU SATISFIED WITH\nYOUR PRESENT INCOME? II\nnot, write at once lor information\nabout selling Rawleigh's well\nknown line ol Household Necessities. Good Profits. Steady full\ntime work. W. T. Rawleigh Co.\nLtd., Dept. CC-153, 589 Henry\nAve,. Winnipeg 2, Man\nRURAL NELSON: EXCELLENT\nopportunity to take over well developed Watkins Products route\nln rural district outside Nelson.\nGood paying business of your\nown. Training given. Personal interview can be arranged. Write\nWatkins Products, Inc., P.O. Box\n4015, Station \"D\". Vancouver.\nDISTRIBUTORS WANTED, MALE\nOR FEMALE. Humorous Greeting Cards. Samples sent on request. Cameo Greeting Cards,\nSuite 301, 600 Bay Street, Toronto, Ontario.\nHELP. WANTED \u2014 FEMALE\n$\u00bb LADIES $$ BEAUTY IS OUR\nbusiness. Why not make it yours?\n\"AVON Cosmetics\" offers .nn excellent earning opportunity for\nwomen who qualify. Sell a product unconditionally guarantee-!\nand advertised. Yes. it's \"AVON\nCALLING\" for women who want\nto earn. For information write to\n\u2014 Mrs. E. C. Hearn. 2233 Aberdeen St.. Kelowna. B.C.\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTOR :ycles, BICYCLES\nLOCAL SUPERMARKET R'E-\nquires experienced or inexperienced clerk. Gcod starting salary\nand medical benefits. Apply Bos\n9377 Daily Nev^\t\nWANTED: 'CANDY ATTENDANT.\nUsherettes. Apply Civic Theatre.\nEvenings.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nFOR THE BEST IN BODY AND\npaint work, see Ted's Aulo Body\n1 mile Granite Road, or phone\nbus 98. res  1 IBB-Y\t\nEXPERIENCED SEPTIC TANK\ncleaning, reasonable, dependable service. Phone 594-Y, pre-\nviously listed as 834-Y and 1991 L.\nCLERK-TYPIST, INVOICE AND\nbilling eiop. desires full or pr:rt\ntime employment. Apply Box\n9369 Daily News.\nEXPERIENCED SEPTIC TANK\ncleaning. Low rates, free inspection on tank and drain fields\nPhone 161-L-l.\nCHESTERFIELD. RTjG~CLEAN\ning, moth proofing Dutch Clean-\ning Service. Phone 2191)\nWILL DO PRUNING - FRUIT\ntrees and shrubbery, rock work\nand gardening. Ph 687-X aller 4\nHOUSE REMODELLING AND~RE-\npairs. Phone i5ni-Y-3.fi lo 8 p.m.\nRENTALS\nHOUSEKEEPING   AND   SLEKP :\ning    rooms    weekly,     monthly\nrates    Dishes,   linen   suooued\nparking   Allen Hotel. 171  Bauer ;\nCONVENIENT CLOSE-IN APT.\nfor 2 or 3 business girls. 1 blk.\nfrom city centre. Ph. 347-Y or\n303-Y cr call at 519 Silica St.\t\nFOR RENT-A REVENUE HUME\nwith apt. in basement 200 block\nVernon St Rent, $75 00 For in\nformation, call 70\nATTRACTIVE 3 ROOM FURN\napt., oil heat and hot wat?r supplied, hi block olf Baker. Ph\n1184-Y.\t\nSMALL NORTH SHORE, LAKE\nside cottage, near bridge Bux\n7636 Daily News\n5 RM. FLA T. FURN. OR\nunfurn. Completely private Ph\n1259-X or Ph. 89.   _\nROOMS WITH OR WITHOUT\nbaths Low weekly or mn-'ihh\nrate  Savnv Hotel\nSUITE FOR RENT~SUITABLE\nfor coupls- or 2 girls. 116 Vernon\nSt. Ph. 964-R,-\t\nFURNISHED 2 ROOM SUITE\nsuitable fo- 2 girls. ClosP in\nPhnne 672-H.\t\nCOMPLETELY FURN HOUSE:\nkeeping rooms, with frig. Ph.\n1329-Y. 914 Stanley SI.\t\nLARGE CLEAN SUITE. REAS-\nonable rent lo reliab'e party.\n420 Victoria SI. No child-en.       '\nHOUSEKEEPING\" ROOM, \" GAS\ncooking. Ph. 491-X or apply 141\nBaker Street. __\nHOUSEKEEPING AND SlEEF-\ning rcoms. K.W C, Blcck, 430\nBaker Street.\t\nFURNISHED 4 RM APT PRI\nvale. Ph  4?3-Y.\nSMALL SUITE FOR BUSINESS\nwomen  Bo;: 7709 Daily News\nMODERN 3 RM SUITED WIRED\nfor electric range. Phone 781-L-2\nFOR RENT.: 2 BDRM. APART-\nment. Ell) Front SI. t\nFOR RENT: 5 RM. APTT ON\nYmir Rd. Phone 44-X-l.\nPARTLY FURNISHED COTTAGE.\nFairview. Phone 12B7-L.\nNew Chevrolets\nNew Corvairs\nNew Chev. Trucks\nNew Envoys\n959 Vauxhall Sedan\n959  Pontiac Stn.  Wagon\n959 Chevrolet Impalo HT.\n959 Chevrolet Bel Air Sdn.\n959 Chevrolet Biscayne Sdn.\n959  Fiat Station Wagon\n959 Austin Jeep\n959 Chevrolet Stn.Wagon\n958 Chevrolet Pickup\n958 Meteor Sedan\n958 Chevrolet Sedan\n957 Chevrolet Convertible\n957 Consul  Sedan\n957  Bedford Van\n957  Dodge  Pickup\n955 Ford Sedan\n956 Chevrolet Sedan\n956 Austin  Sedan\n956  Pontiac Sedan\n956  Fargo  Pickup\n956  Ford Station Wagon\n956 Ford Pickup\n955 Zephyr Sedan\n955 GMC.  Pickup\n955 Chevrolet Sedan Del.\n955  Plymouth Sedan\n955  Ford Sedan\n9^55 Dodge Hardtop\n954 Austin Sedan\n954  Ford Sedan\n954 Pontiac Sedan\n954  Nash  Sedan\n953  Pontiac  Sedan\n953  Buick Sedan\n953 Chevrolet Sedan\n953  Dodge  Sedan\n953  Ford Sedan\n953  Ford Station Wagon\nTERMS - TRADES\nChevrolet,   Oldsmobile,\nCadillac,  Corvairs,   Envoys\n24-Hour  Wrecker Service\nPHONE  35\nReuben\nIBuer^e\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\ni Continued1\np e fTbTfTs pontiac \"prTze\nspecials. '50 hardtop, automatic\ntrans., radio; '54 Ijardtop in red\nwith white top, lovely car; '56\nPontiac Laurentian V8 automatic, striking 2-tone, radio,\nvery clean. Hurry for these bargains\u2014they're good. Peebles\nMotors, Phone -090, Nelson.\nFOR SALE: 1946 4 WHEEL DRIVE\nWillys Jeep. Steel cab. Apply Box\n9362 Daily News..\n1957     FARGO     PICKUP,     NEW\ntires, low mileage, A-l condition.\nF. Konkin. Shoreacres.\nWE PAY CASH FOR GOOD USED\n, cars   McElroy Motors Ltd\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\nLISTINGS - HAVE YOU BEEN\nwanting to sell your property?\nWe, require properties ol every\ndescription. It costs nothing to\nlist Kindly give us a phone call\nor come in personally William\nKalyniuk Agencies, 534 Josephine\nSt., Nelson, B.C  Phone 1777.\nFOR SALE: NEW 2 BEDROOM\nhouse. 14 min. drive from city\ncentre. l\\'s acre land, lots of\nwater. Close to city power. All\nwired. Low down payment. Low\ntax district. Ph. 606-X-3.\nMUST SELL 1955 MONARCH LU-\ncejne  Offers phone 1027-R\nMACHINERY\nUsed\nEquipment\n1956 International TD18\nH82 Series)\nDirect lift hydraulic angledozer,\nlogging winch, operator's guard.\nVery good $18,500\ncondition. v      '\n1957  Internationol TD9\n(91 Series)\nl'i-yd.  Drott loader. 870 hours.\nLike\u201enew $13,500\ncondition. \u2022*\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\"\u25a0,\n1952  International  TD-14-A\nHydraulic    angledozer,    logging\nwinch,   operator's   guard.   New\nchains, shoes, rollers $9500\nand sprockets. *\n1952 Caterpillor D-4\nWide   gauge.   Hydraulic   angledozer, logging winch, $6000\noperator's guard.        *^\nInternational UD 1091\nDiesel powpr unit. 203 belt horse-\npower,  extended $6500\nCENTRAL\nWILLOW PT. 5 ROOM SMALL\ncottage, modern and wired 220.\nApprox. 1 acre level garden\nhighway, also building lots for\nsale. Access to lake $4,000.\nTerms. Box 9370 Daily News.\nATTRACTIVE 4 ROOM STUCCO\nhouse on 3 acres. Paved highway,\nelectricity. Schools and stores\nhandy. $5500. Paul Markoff, Slocan Park.\n10 ACRES. SMALL HOUSE, HOT\nand cold water, large barn,\nlarge garden space, fruit trees,\nat Taghum. Contact E. C. Play-\ndon. 310 Vicloria Street.\n6 ROOM MODERN INSULATED\nbungalow, one acre, good water,\ncity light, lake frontage and sandy beach. For particulars Ph.\n804-R-2.\nVIEW LOT, CLEARED, N.H.A.\napproved, new Nasookin subdivision North Shore. $850 cash\nor terms. Ph. 1337-R.\n35 ACRE FARM AT HARROP. 7\nacres cleared. Buildings. $1500.\nEric W. Denny, R.R. No. 1, Ph.\n461-R-2.\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nPROPANE GAS. $6.00 PLUS TAX\nper 100 pounds delivered to any\nhouse along the road between\nKaslo and Nelson Bridge. Delivery one day per week. E. H.\nMarphet, P. O. Box 506. Phone\n145 or 52-X, Kaslo.\nBEATTY WASHING MACHINE\nwith roller stand and two square\ntubs in very good condition. $40;\n1 Beaver 8 in. tilting arbor saw.\n$85; Coleman oil fired hoi water\ntank, cap. 30 U.S. gallons, $75.\nPhone 2124.\nLEAN GRAIN FED PORK FOR\nsale\u2014whole or hall 28c a whole\nside. 30c lb. cut and wrapped.\nReady for the freezer Newdan\nFarm, Box 570. Creston, B.C. Ph\nEL6-2435. We deliver.\nBOY'S ENGLISH BICYCLE, 3\nspeed, Calliper brakes, $35; Beatty watfier, $15; baby bassinet\nwith matching pad, $2. Ph. 672-R.\nNEW SHIPMENT .338 WIN. MAG-\nnums, loading tools and supplies\nReload your own. 10c each\nNorm's Gun Shop, 171 Baker St.\n_ BOATS AND ENGINES\nBOAT FOR SALE WITH OR\nwithout boathouse at Kootenay\nLaunch Club. 18 toot with 5V4\nH.P., 4 cycle inboard aircooled\nmotor. Fibreglass cabin with removable canvas top, will sleep\ntwo. Economical and safe, excellent for fishing. Complete with\nboathouse $795. Without $550.\nTerms can be arranged. Phone\n717 or 1277-X.\nSKAGIT FIBRE GLASS BOATS.\n14' deluxe 70\" beam\u2014now on display Complete job $795. Nation's\nfinest craft built in Vancouver.\n17' and 20' deluxe jobs available.\nEasy terms right here. Peebles\nMotors, Ph.  1090 Nelson.\n15 H.P., 25 H.P. AND 35 H.P.\nGale Bucanneer Outboards. Order yours now. Easy terms.\nPeebles  Motors.\n14' AND 16' MAHOGANY BOATS.\nComplete, on display\u2014$495 and\nup. Peebles Motors, Ph. 1090\nNelson.\nTRADE UP TO A MERCURY:\nOutboards 6-80 h.p. Glasspar,\nFiberglass boats. Jeffery Radio.\nBOAT TRAILERS FROM $149,\nfor outboards up to 22 feet. Easy\nterms.  Peebles Motors,  Nelson.\nFOR SALE: COMPLETE SAW-\nmill, value $2,000 or will trade\nfor logging truck. N. Poohachow, j\nWinlaw, B.C. j\nWANTED ABOUT 10 MORE\nsteady customers for fresh eggs.\nDelivered every week. Frank\nToering. Phone 687, Harrop.\n36 IN. McCLARY COMBINATION\ngas and wood stove. $75; electric\nhot water tank with fittings, $8.\nPh. 591-L.\nPORK, WHOLE OR HALF.\nWhole about 140 lbs. 30c lb. Ph.\n1766-L-2. Guy Hamilton.\nLTD\n323  Vernon Street\nNelson.   B   C.\nWE ARE WRECKING '57 CHEV\nsedan, '57 Plymouth, Con. '55\nMerc '2 Ion, '54 DeSoto, 49 to\n53 Fords, Chevs, Plymoutlis. Pon\ntiacs, Studebakers. Trail Auto\nWreckers, Phone 2441.\ncWTuInVoo^TvrTtTckagFsEr\nvice English and Canadian used\ncar parts. '52 Willis motor and\n'53 Ford parts. Ph. 2100. Box 382,\n24 Ymir Road, Nelson\nT\n& Equipment Co. Ltd.\n702 Front St.\nPhones   1810 -   100\ntO\nContractors   Equipment   \u2014\nLate Model Cats, Backhoes,\nScrapers,    Trucks,    Trailers,\nEtc.\nEdmonton, Alberta,\nMay 2nd\nWatch this paper for complete\nlist, or write to:\nStewart Equipment\nCo. Ltd.\nAirdrie,  Alberta\nAUCTIONEERS:\nFrank Gwartney, License No. 1\nEarl Galvin, License No. 188\n1934 FARGO TRUCK 3 TON SPE-\ncial wilh meter overhauled and\nflat dr-:k. Can be seen at Imperial Oil Ltd. bulk plant, Nelson,\nB.C. Phone 133_.\t\nSALVAGE 1059\" RENAULT SE-\ndan. Can be seen at Marathon\nMotors, Salmo. Submit bids to\nG. F Hartridge Insurance Ad-\njuster. 490 Baker SI. Nelson.\nI950~PLYM0UTH, SOUND. RUN-\nning condition, good rubber all\nyear around. Highest offer will\ntake. Ph. 121-L-l.\t\nFOR SALE: 1948\"PONTIAC, GOOD\nmechanical condition, good tires,\nneeds some body work. Phone\n462-L-2.\nMODERN. COMPLETELY FURN-\nished and heat.  Phone 2075.\nFURNISHED, HEATED APART-\nmenl.  713 Victoria  Street.\nLIVESTOCK,  POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nFOR SALE: GOOD MILK COW.\njust freshened. Apply Wm. Kal-\nmakoff, Shoreacres.\t\nGOOD COW FOR SALE. JUST\nfreshened   Ph. 572 South Slocan\nBuy,   Sell,   Trade   With   Classified\n\u202255 FORD RANCH WAGON. A-l\nshape. Automatic trans. Lots ol\nextras. Radio, heater, etc. 7 tires\nCall 353-Y after 5 p.m.\nSOUTH NELSON BODY WORKS\nTop quality workmanship Phone\n2324. 49 Ymir Road\nFOR SALE: 1949 Ford Tudor with\nradio, good mechanical condi-\ntion. Ph. 1766-L-2.\t\n1951 OLDSMOBILE 98 SEDAN.\nRadio. Make offer. Phone 4509 al\nCastlegar.\nFOR SALE: TD14A-1954 MODEL\nDiamond T truck, 10-wheel drive;\nWillys Jeep four wheel drive,\nCoutts sawmill, edger and Caterpillar power unit. E. B. Carlson,\nR.R. No. 1. Nelson. Ph. 402-X-l.\nFOR SALE: ONE TD-9 TRACTOR,\nalmost new. Ed Paul, Box 186,\nRossland. BC\nFOR SALE: SMALL CAT, EQUIP\"\nped with hydraulic bucket. Phone\nSouth Slocan 467.\n1957 CHEV SEn-\\N FORQUICK\nsale. Apply Taghum Service,\nTaghum. B.C.\nNelmm Sailtj News\nCirculation Dept., Phone 1844\nPrice per single copy 7c Monday\nto Friday, 10c on Saturday.\nBy Carrier per week 35c\nin advance\nSubscription Rates\nBy Mail in Canada Outside Nelson.\nOne month     $ 1 25\nThree months           SI?\nSix months            6 50\nOne year 12.0a\nBy Mail to United Kingdom or tha\nUnited States-\nOne month $ 1 75\nThree months              5 00\nSix months ..    .. 9 01)\nOne year 18 00\nWhere extra  postage is required,\nabove rates plus postage.\nTWO GOOD BUILDING SITES\nfor sale. One on Douglas Road\nand one on Union Street. $1500\neach. Phone 1649-Y.\nCRIB WITH SPRING-FILLED\nmattress, single bed, good condition. Ph. 1494-Y.\nFOR SALE: 36 ACRES NEAR\nKaslo. B.C. Fifteen acres hay,\nfruit trees, buildings. Mrs. H. C.\nBrown. 1024 Redlern St., Victoria.\nLOT FOR SALE AT QUEEN'S\nBay, $1,01X1, or trade on late mo-\ndel car. R. Fisher. Balfour 155.\n2 PCE. BROWN SAMSONITE\nluggage, 1 travel wardrobe and 1\nsuitcase. $45. Ph. 773-L-3.\nPORK FOR SALE, WHOLE OR\nhalf. C. Bing. R.R. Nn. 1. Phone\n714-R-l alter 6.\nSMALL FARM WITH 2 BR.\nhouse located on beach, 6 mi.\nWest ofJWson^Ph. 1672-Y-2.\nFOR SALE OR RENT (RENT j\ncheap) Farm at -Shoreacres.'\nMrs. A. Olyschick.\nMUST SELL 3-BEDROOM HOUSE\n$5090. Big discount for cash.\nBox 8561, Nelson Daily News.\nBEATTY WASHING MACHINE,\ngood condition, $35. Call Mrs.\nBrashear. Ph. 2124 or 1966-R.\nSINGER REVERSE SEW\ntreadle sewing machine. Ph.\n347-Y or 303-Y.\nWinnipeg Police\nChange Shape\nTo Suit New (ar\nWINNIPEG (CP) - The trend\ntoward \"compact\" cars is one\nfactor in the changing shape ol\nthe Winnipeg policeman, says\nChief Constable  Robert Taft.\nGoing out of style is the tall,\nburly constable who came into\nhis own in handling barroom bullies and unruly crowds. In his\nplace the department favors Ihe\nman who comes closer to the\nminimum height of five feet. 10\ninches.\nOne reason, says Chief Taft, is\nthat bigger men can't jump in\nand out of today's low-slung, low-\nroofed cars quickly enough.\nIn earlier days, the force preferred its constables te stand\nabout six feet, four inches tall and\nweigh more than 200 pounds.\n\"Two men like that could take\nup the whole end of a bar,\"\nChief Taft said in an interview,\nWORK CHANGES\n\"A quarrelsome fellow could\nback away from men like that\nwithout losing face\u2014he'd be considered a fool to do anything\nelse.\"\nBut today, a policeman's work\nis different.\n\"A man may be riding a\ncruiser one month and be out on\na beat the next. Our motorcycle\nmen spend the winter in the detective  department.\n\"We like a man who looks like\nan ordinary, successful businessman or tradesman when he gets\nout of uniform,\" the chief said.\nThe ideal policeman, he said,\nlikely  looks  something like this:\nFive feet, 11 inches tall; 170\npounds; of unimpeachable character and reputation; good intelligence and common sense,\nand a tolerant attitude.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURS., APRIL 21, 1960 \u2014 \u00bb\nMARKET TRENDS\nNEW YORK (AP) - The stock\nmarket took ils worst loss in\nmore than six weeks as blue\nchips, headedsby American Telephone, fell sharply Wednesday.\nWord from ttie president of At\nand T that the big utility planned\nno dividend boost in the near future was Ihe big news of Ihe day.\nAt and T fell 4-ys.\nThe Associated Press 60 - stock\naverage fell 2 to 213.10.\nAmong Canadian stocks,\nGranby Mining rose '-b while active Aluminium Ltd., Canadian\nPacific and Dome Mines all lost\n%. Distillers Seagrams lost %\nalong with International Nickel,\nand Walker Gooderham dropped\nVi.\nAmerican stock exchange\nprices declined on volume ol 1,-\n050,000 shares. Among Canadian\nstocks, Molybdenite and Jupiter\nOils rose small fractions while\nPreston East Dome lost Vs and\n\u2022Canadian Marconi dropped Vs.\nMONTREAL'(CP) - The Montreal and Canadian stock exchanges finished lower for the\nsecond successive session Wednesday. Trading was light.\nIndex changes: Banks off 0.28\nat 53.52, utilities up 0.1 at 137.5,\nindustrials off 0.8 at 286.8, combined off 0.4 at 237.1, papers off\n2.8 at 430.0 and golds off 0.21 at\n77.66.\nInternational Paper led the\ndownward drift with a loss of\n3t4 at 106t4. Irnperial Bank fell\n2Vi. Canadian Vickers lis. General Dynamics 1V\u00bb at 39% and Industrial Acceptance 1.\nOn the plus side, Bathurst\nPower B rose 1 at 28 and interprovincial pipe improved % at\n55%.\nTORONTO CP) - Trading\ndropped still lower Wednesday\nafternoon as investors ignored\nIhe stock market.\nOn index, industrials fell 3.86 at\n490.52. with golds off .49 at 86.9B,\nbase metals off 1.36 at 158.97 and\nwestern oils off 1.09 at 92.39.\nU.S.   Ford  led  the  depression\nI among industrials with a drop of\nI 3V< at 67V4. with International Pa-\n1 per off IV4 at WbVs, Distillers Sea-\nFOR SALE: 70 ACRES, SMALL\nhouse, spring, near Kinnaird.\nPhnne 4726, Castlegar, B.C.\nTRANSFERRED    HOUSE   MUST\nsell  Ph 1759-X.\nBUILDING MATERIAL, STONE\nsiding, single beds, stoves. Ph.\n201-L.\nHEALTH FOOD CENTRE OPEN\nday and evenings  924 Davies Si\nBLEACHED    OAK     TABLE,    4\nchairs and buffet. Ph. 354-R.\n1 DROP-LEAF KITCHEN TABLE\nand 4 chairs, wood. Phone 398-R.\nSMALL HOUSE ON 2 CRNR. LOTS\ncheap for cash. Ph. 514-L.\t\nMODERN 3 BEDROOM HOUSE.\nUphill. Ph. 2037-R.\t\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nREPAIRS TO ALL TYPES OF\nelectrical appliances. Vacuum\ncleaner and polisnei armatures\nrewound $8 each. Repairs to\nautomatic washers a specialty\nColumbia Electrocentre, 1180\nBay Ave , Trail  Ph 2538.\nPRECISION GR1NDING-CIRCU-\nlar saws, scissors, pinking shears\n\u2014Hipoerson's, Nelson. Ph. 497\u2014\nMar. Wells Store, Salmo, Ph. 37.\nFurnace. Major Appliances. Etc\nTunc-Ups and Repairs, Phone 2333\nD   McCUAIG SERVICE-NELSON\nNELSON REFRIGERATION\nCommercial Refrigeration Service.\n205 High St. Phone 1917\nASSAYERS AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nH   S   ELMES.  ROSSLAND, BC\nAssayer    Chemist    Min Rep\nENGINEERS   AND   SURVEYORS\nRAY G. JOHNSON\nB C   Land Surveyor and Engineer\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.L.S.\n373 Baker St. Nelson\nPhone 1118 Res. 2315\nALEX CHEVELDAVE\nB.C. Land Surveyor - Phone 5342\n448 Columbia Ave.. Castlegar, B.C.\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\nWANTED: PEEELED CEDAR\npoles loaded on cars 35 to 75\nfeet long Dumont, 1164 West\n32nd Ave , Vancouver, B.C\nstyle E. complete or pails for\nsame. Phone 1462-X. Write E. D.\nPerrin, RRl, Nelson,\nWANTED:     LARGE    PROPANE\nfridge. Ph. 4726 Castlegar.\n\"DURO\" SHALLOW WELL PUMP\nWANTED:   GOOD TOPSOIL. PH.\n1240-X from 1-5 p.m.\nBABY  CONVERTIBLE   STROLL-\ner and walker. Phone 1288-L.\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nOPENINGS AVAILABLE W THE\nIMMEDIATE DISTRICT [or men\nand women as representatives\nfor Watkins Quality Products.\nFull or Part-time For appointment, write Box 8261, Nelson\nDaily News.\nSELF - EMPLOYMENT ON A\nfull time or part tune basis. No\nmerchandise to buy. Possible\nearnings in the $15,OO0-$30,O00\ncategory. Write lor free details\nConsolidated Industries, Box 24-\nAT, Louisville, Illinois.\nMODERN HARDWARE ' BUST\nNESS FOR SALE. Well established independent Marshall-\nWells store. Situated in the centre\nof a thriving lumbering industry.\nFor further particulars write Box\n9301 Nelson News.\nMODERN AUTO COURT FOR\nsale. Excellent year round business. Phone Castlegar 5200 or\napply Eli's Auto Court, Castlegar.\nFOR SALE - WELL ESTAF\nlisbed paying business in choice\nlocation. For furlher particulars\nand terms, apply Box 9381, Nelson Daily News\nCHAMPION LAKE CONCESSION\ntrailer. What offers? Ph. 545.\nThis business did well last year\nopening weekends only.\nFOR SALE: CASETRONT END\nloader and back hoe, dump truck\nand gravel pit. Phone Castlegar\n5200 or apply Eli's Auto Court.   .-\nWANTED TO RENT\nWANTED TO RENT: 2 BEDROOM\nhouse 2 miles from town. Phone\n1686-L. Reasonable rent.\n2 OR 3 BEDROOM HOME, BY\nMay 15. Ph. 411-R.\nROOM AND BOARD\nBOARD AND ROOM FOR ONE-\nor two yohng gentlemen Ph\nMrs  Trusrotl II79-X\nROOM  AND BOARD FOR GEN-\ntleman. Phone 606-X-3.\nREAD  THE  CLASSIFIED   DAILY\nPIONEER POST\nThe first post office in Canada\nwas established at Halifax in\n1755. *\nWorld Briefs\nDANCE TEACHER DIES\nFORT WORTH, Tex. (AP) -\nMrs. Olaude P. Coates, 61, who\ntaught dancing and show business\nlo Mary Martin and Ginger\nRogers, died in hospital Tuesday.\nOnce an 'understudy to famed\nshimmy dancer Gilda Gray, Mrs.\nCoates operated a studio here\nunder her stage name, Norene\nThrasher. Cause of her death was\nnot reported.\nACTRESS JAILED\nHOLLYWOOD (API - Actress\nGreta Thyssen was jailed Tuesday after an argument with a\npoliceman at a traffic light. \"She\npushed me.\" said officer Gerry\nJackson, who stopped the shaipley\nblonde when she ran a red light\nin her car. \"That's not so.\" said\nGreta. \"I thought he was going\nto kiss me.\" She was booked on\nsuspicion of disturbing the peace.\ngram off IVi 'at 28%, and Canada\nMalting and Gordon Mackay^A\nboth off a point at 49V4 and Wm.\nBritish \u2022 American Oil slipped\"**\nat 2914, wilh Bathurst Pulp and\nPaper and Canadian Oil off Is-A\n40 and 2IV4.\nCanadian Vinegars brought\nsome cheer to the market with a\ngain of 1 at 31, while Interprovincial Pipe went ahead % at\n55%, Hardee Farms improved V4\nat 1114 and Moore gained Vi at\n40%,\nFalconbridge and Labrador set\nIhe pace among mines, both off\n% at 30% arid 22, while Hollinger\ndropped ik at 24, and Cassiar and\nDome slipped Vs at 12V4 and 1914.\nMclntyre-Porcupine moved ahead\nVs at 25y4.\nDenison saw the only change\namong senior uraniums, off 10\ncents at $9.80.\nRoyalite took a beating among\nWestern oils, off 70 cents at $8.15,\nwhile Hudson's Bty dropped Vn\nat 12, wilh Dome Petroleum iff\n20 cenls at $7.80, and Canadian\nDevonian and Canadian Huifty\noff 10 cents at $2.80 and $6.35L\nPacific Petroleum moved up \"V\u00bb\nat 10%. ,i\nVACUUM\nthatsmpther-\ning blanket of\nwinter litter off\nyour lawn now\u2014\nfor a greener lawn\nfaster\u2014with tbe\nonly rotary mower that actually\nbags everything *t\nvacnnms ttpj\nMany models\nCall, Write or See\nH.  \"Fritz\"  Farenholtz,   \u25a0\nAlec  McDonald,  Gordon Coutt*\nWELDING & EQUIPMENT\nCO., LTD.\n514 Railway St.       Phone 1402\nSALE    -    SALE\nMel BuerMe Motors L\nPhones\u2014Garage 1744, Car Lot 1133\n608 Vernon St., Nelson, B.C.\nUSED\n1958 Edsel\nCitation  Hardtop\n$2995\n1958  Ford Custom\n300 Sedan\n$1995\n1957 Chevrolet Tudor\n$1795\n1957  Ford Sedan\n$1695\n1957 Monarch Sedan\n$2195\n1956 Ford Sedan\n$1595\n1956 Ford Tudor\n$1495\n1955 Meteor Sedan\n$1195\n1954  Ford Sedan\n$895\n1953 Monarch Sedan\n$795\n1959 FORD\nCONVERTIBLE\nPower Window \u2014 Power Top\nAutomatic \u2014 Power Brakes\nPower Steering\n1957 MERCURY\nMONTCLAIR\n$229^\n1955 PREFECT SEDAN\n1960 FORD GALAXIE\nOn Demonstration. $300 Off\nOnly\n$389^\nI960 New Falcon   -\nRanch Wagon\n$2995\nI960 New Falcon Sdn,\n$2795    :\nI960 New Zephyr Sdn.\n1960 New Anglia   I05E\n$1745\nNew Prefect Sedan\n$1765\nI960 New Ford\nRanch Wagon\n$3595\n1956 Ford\n1955 Ford\n1957 Ford Pickup\nLong Wheel Base\n .^  \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u2022>.-. \u2022\u25a0>! J' .\" ,,:\u25a0'-.-\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0v.-1'\u2014\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0- \u25a0'\u25a0'-.   :'\u25a0 -\",-\u25a0'\u25a0-.'\u25a0 '\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 'i-1.-..\u2014-\u2122-r\u2014r\u2014TT*-T'TTr\"--~rT^^\n16 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURS., APRIL 21, I960\nA New Idea in Ball Point Pens ....\nPlatignum\n29* and 49<\n- - - 8 colors to choose from\n... good for sketching, map making\n- \u2022 - office, school or home use.\nand a new and complete line of\nPHOTO ALBUMS\nSCRAP BOOKS\nAUTOGRAPH  BOOKS\nSTAMP ALBUMS\nFor a complete Stationery selection - - - see\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c line, 40c line black face type; larger type rates\non request Minimum two lines.\nTrails Cases and metal Suitcases Kites, Gliders, Marbles, Skipping\nMAX KASPER Ropes, Kits at HOBBY SHOP.\nTHE SERENADERS BIG DANCE\nJ5AND PLAVMOR SAT. NIGHT\nBtECTROLUX SALES, SERVICE\nSI? Richards St., Ph. 1108, Nelson.\n\u25a0 Dance at Balfour to Music of\nSjlvertone Orch., Sat., April 23\nSKp.m.\nPhone.263\nSNAPPY  SERVICE\nFor your hauling needs.\nl-Beautiful floral bedroom rayon\nBrapery. 58\" wide at $2.65.\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nCANADIAN LEGION\n' Work Party at Hospital Saturday\naBd Sunday. Come and do your bit.\nSobial Credit Women's Auxiliary\nRummage Sale, Capitol Theatre,\nSat, April 23rd, 9 a.m.\n3-year guarantee on 50-ft. garden\nhoses with couplings; $1.90 each.\nAnd - a large selection of garden\ntools. \u2014 Phone 1560\nHOME FURNITURE EXCHANGE\nGENERAL MEETING\nELECTION OF OFFICERS\nNELSON TENNIS CLUB\nSUNDAY, APRIL WTH\n7:30 p.m. - 222 View St.\nMcKay and Stretton Ltd. oan\nsolve your heating problems, large\nor small. Propane, Natural Gas\nor Oil.\n532 Baker St. Phone 1555\nNelson, B.C.\nMILADY'S FASHIONS\nParty and some Formal Dresses.\nSee our window display.\nLUMBER SALE\n(Lower Grades)\n2x4s, $20 per thousand feet.\nlxGs, 1x8s, 1x10s\nAll $20 per thousand feet.\nKOOTENAY FOREST PRODUCTS\nLocal Sales \u2014 Phone 1200\nBicycles \u2014 Tricycles for all ages.\nParts \u2014 Repairs \u2014 Accessories\nEDEY'S CYCLE SHOP\n737 Baker St.\nDON'T  FORGET\nScouts and Cubs City Wide Bottle\nDrive Saturday, April 23, starting\nat 9 o'clock.\nChildren's White Party Dresses-\nsuitable   for   Confirmation,   first\nHoly Communiori.\nEBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.\nEUMIG \u2014 Europe's finest Movie\ncameras & projectors \u2014 choice of\nmodels all reasonably priced.\nCUSTOM CAMERAS, 394 Baker St.\nWe  have a  special  on  a  few\nsquares  of  discontinued  lines  in\nDiiroid Shingles. Ideal for a small\nroof.\nWOOD, VALLANCE HARDWARE\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nNESTEROFF \u2014 Funeral services for Mrs. Mary Nesteroff, beloved wife of John Nesteroff of Slocan Park, will be held from the\nfamily residence, Saturday at 3\np.m. and interment will take place\nin the Slocan Park Community\nCemetery. Thompson Funeral Ser\nvice.\nYACHT IN TROUBLE\nNANAIMO (CPI-A fishboat,\ntowboat and aircraft joined forces\nTuesday to aid the 50-foot yacht\nImpala when she damaged both\npropellers on a submerged log\nnear here. An HCAF amphibian\nplane directed first Hie fishboat\nRestless and then the tug Island\nCommander before the boat and\nits three Vancouver occupants\nwere towed to Pender Harbor\nagainst 35-mile-anJhour winds.\nOdds...\nEnds\nand\nbyM.D.B.\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS\nI aim trying to ignore the\nweather. All I hope is that it\nwarms up;a bit so'I oan get outside and gather my little heap of\nrubbish together, this being\"Arbor\nWeek and all. If'the-weather continues this way I-hope the powers\nthat be will consider, extending the\nweek a little longer in hopes it will\nwarm up so a person can get outside to do something without fear\nof catching pneumonia.\n* *  *\nAccording to a radio broadcast\nrecently, plants grow better to\nmusic. Under careful testing it was\nfound that plants fed music during\nthe day far outstripped othere\ngrown under the. same conditions\nbut without the soothing strains of\nBeethoven and Brahms, fiecord\ncompanies have missed a bet here.\nThere is music to eat by, music*to\ngo to sleep by, music for dreaming\nby and goodness knows what else.\nNow there should be music to grow\nplants by.    ,\n* *  *\nThis music of course must be\nchosen carefully to conform to\neach plant's taste. The \"Song of\nIndia\" might suit the climbing or\ntrailing plants. Sweet peas and\nnasturtiums just might respond to\nthis sinuous melody. Oanna lilies\nwould need something of a little\nsterner staff, perhaps something\nby Bach, would unfold those big\nleaves and then a little of the\n\"Ritual Fire Dance\" to hurry the\nriotous blooms.\n* \u2022  \u2022\nA Strauss waltz might be Just the\nthing for morning glories \u2014 ta ta\nTUM, U ta TUM, ta ta TUM, ta\nta TUM, with a blossom popping\nopen on eaoh \"TUM.\" Perhaps I\nshould try a little Ravel on my\nwater lilies, who knows, \"Afternoon of a Faun\" could be the very\nthing to make them bloom their\nutmost.\n* *  *\nOf course there would be some\nflowers, that might like a little\npopular music thrown in, though I\ncan see columbines doing nicely\nto the \"French Minuet.\" Pansies,\nwhose friendly things with wistful\nfaces might grow happily to old\nfavorites > like 'Memories,' \"There's\na Long, Long Trail' or \"Sweet\nGenevieve.' -Roses might require\nthe sustained singing tones of the\nviolin to grow in sweetness and\ngrace. A little Tschaikowsky might\ndo the trick, \"Chanson Triste\" or\nthe theme from the Fifth Symphony.\n* \u2022  *\nThese are only suggestions, you\nmight have your own ideas in the\nmatter and being a completely new\nfield it can benefit from, a little\nexperimentation, Let me know how\nyou make out. You might try it on\nyour indoor plants to start with\nbefore you go to the expense of an\nextension cord for your hi-fi or\nstereo.\nOLD INJURIES FATAL\nVANCOUVER (CP)-A 77-year-\n\u2022old woman severely injured in a\ntraffic accident Jan. 31 died in\nhospital here. Mrs. Annie Gled\nhiH of North Burnaby was struck\nby a taxi. She was the sixth traffic victim in Burnaby this year,\nall of them pedestrians.\nHEAPQUARTERS\nfir fishermen\nA good selection of Spinning and Trolling Rods.\n$26.95\n$19.95\n$21.90\n$15.85\n$3.20\n$4.10\n$5.50\nLargest selection in town of Fishing Lures in Brand names.\n$3.45\nMITCHELL SPINNING REEL.\nNo. 300 and 301\t\nMITCHELL SPINNING REEL\nNo. 314: \t\nOCEAN CITY SPINNING REEL\nNo. 310\t\nTRUE TEMPER SPINNING REEL\nNo. 330\t\nBAIT CASTING REELS\nUfi from\t\nFLY CASTING REELS\nUp from  \t\nTROLLING REELS\nUp from \t\n$5.15\nPlain Willow Creels\nFrom  . .. \t\nWillow Creels: Leather trimmed\nUp from\nnT\"8     $1.65 to $4.25\nA good  selection of  Hooks, Swivels,\nLine, Floats, etc.\nBe Ready to Go!\nGet your  Licence  and   Supplies\nAt\nTACKLE\nBOXES\nFrom        $2.55 to $9.30\n60'\nPocket Size\nMetal Tackle Box. _\nWood, Vallance Hardware\nPhone  1530\nCo. Ltd.\nWHOLESALE - RETAIL\nNelson, B. C.\n\" '    '\u2022'\u25a0; \u25a0'^'^;S:':3v:;;\u20227S7:7\u00ab<S\nL- \"     .'''V'^-'H'';^^^ \" 7 V-    :;\u25a0?%:- >\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\nS E A S O N A L1- S L U M B\u201eE R \u2014 Pair of hippopotamuses Illustrate best way to\nenjoy the sun on a balmy sprlne'ilay In Japan. Huge mammals are residents of Tokyo zoo.\nCanada's Oil Production\nTo Double In Ten Years\nTORONTO' (CP)-Doubling of\nCanada's oil production during\nthe next. 10 years was predicted\nWednesday by . E. D, Loughney,\npresident of British Amerioan Oil\nCo. Ltd., at the company's annual\nmeeting.\nThis growth, Mr. Loughney\nsaid, could be expected from an\norderly expansion of markets in\nwhich Canadian crude would be\ncompetitive with crude from other\nsources\u2014even though a levelling\noff in the rapid growth of the last\n12 years seemed likely.^\nMr. Loughney said that because\nof competitive disadvantages, \"it\nis as clear'now as a year ago\nB.C. Urged To,\nKnow More of\nIts History\nVANCOUVER (OP) - An historian says British Columbians\nare different kind of Canadians.\nBut, says Dr. . M ar gar et\nOrmsby, University of B.C. lecturer and centennial history\nauthor: \"We can't say any more\nbecause we don't know any\nmore.\"\n\"We don't know much about\nthe economic development of this\nprovince, of early engineering\nand mining, or the first salmon\nfishing, or the \u2022 colorful past of\nthe lumbering industry.\"\nShe urged social studies teachers to talk to retired engineers,\npioneer fishermen and loggers\nand the skippers of early coasters before they die. For the first\nstep to completing a history is\nthe collection of material.\nthat movement of Canadian crude\ninto the Montreal market at this\ntime would require government\nintervention in some form to force\nrefiners in the area to use Canadian crude.\n\"In our opinion such action\nwould result in either a reduction\nof well-head prices to the producer in Western Canada, or in\nhigher prices for refined petroleum products in Eastern Canada,\nor possibly a combination of both.\nU.S. MARKET VITAL\n\"Even if the Montreal market\nwere to bfe supplied by Canadian\ncrude, the continuing growth of\nthe producing industry in Western\nCanada at a rate in excess of the\nnormal, rate of growth in our own\ndomestic,requirements, must depend, in the long run, on expansion, of exports in the United\nStates.\"\nMr. Loughney 6aid he exipects\n1960 crude production to average\nabout 550,000'barrels a day (compared with around.500,000 barrels\na day in 1959)  and that by the\nend of the' year production should\nbe around .600,000 barrels a day.\nEven at this level the industry\nwould be producing only at some-\n, thing in excess of 50 per cent of\n; meeting the target suggested by\n, the Borden   commission  for  the\n: end of 1960.\n! \"We do net regard this short\nfall as a matter for serious concern,\" Mr. Loughney said. \"There\nis a potential additional market\nof 50.000 barrels a day on Ontario\nwhich, we think, is assured for\nCanadian crude in due course.\nSTEADY GROWTH\n\"This would leave a further increase of some 50,000 barrels a\nday in export markets needed to\nreach the suggested target level.\nIn our opinion, the industry can\nlook for a steady growth in mai-\nkeU that will close this gap in\nfairly short order.\"\nHe oautioned against too rapid\nexpansion!,\n\"Exploration in the Far North.\nwhere costs were extremely high\nand where \"formidable problems\nof transportation\" remain to \u25a0 be\nsolved,\" should be viewed ai a\nnecessary and desirable long-\nrange program for mapping- out\npotential oil reserves. \u2022  '\n\"We should not,, however'\u2014if\nthese efforts are' successful m\nfinding oil at an early stage\u2014expect that markets will be provided for production in this area\nwithout regard to cost and to the\ncomparative economics\" of existing sources of supply.\"\nMir. Loughney said British\nAmerican expects to make capital expenditures of some $60,-\n000,000 this year, compared witii\n$71,000,000 in 1959.    . \" - -\nUN Economists\nPredict Better\nTimber Markets\nGENEVA (AP)-Wood-produc-\ning countries can look to the\nfuture with \"cautious optimism\"\nfollowing a year of exceptionally\nfavorable developments in the\nEuropean timber markets,\nUnited Nations economists reported Wednesday.\nThere was a \"strong recovery\"\nin the volume of softwood trade\nduring the last year, they said,\nand indications were that general\ntimber consumption would re\nmain at a high level also this\nyear.\nIn a special timber market review, the UN Economic Commission for Europe'said Finnish exports of sawn softwood soared to\n3 postwar high by a 25-per-cent\nincrease over 1958. The Soviet\nUnion recorded a 20-per-cent increase  and  Sweden  17-per-cent.\nWhile imports from the main\nexporting countries and Russia\nrose, those from North America\ndeclined with Canadian exports\nfalling by about 23-per-cent. Tihe\ncommission blamed the decline\npartly on a crippling west coast\nstrike and partly on non-competitive Canadian prices for certain goods.\n\"The buoyant tendency of the\ntimber market at the turn of the\nyear seemed to foreshadow continued active fellings during the\n1959-60 campaign so that the volume harvested should in all probability eqlfal the very high level\nof the 1957-1958 crop,\" the commission said.\nProduction of sawn softwood in\nEurope totalled 10,610,000 standards, or seven-.per-cent more\nthan in 1958.\nTrade in hardwoods, like most\nother forest products, expanded\nunder the stimulus of renewed\ndemand.\nSPRING\nJACKETS\nDiscard that heavy winter\njacket for a new spring one\n\u2022 OAIMCORDS\n\u2022 CLUB STYLES\n\u2022 POPLINS\n\u2022 DRIZZLERS\n\u2022 GOLF-RITES\nGet Yours Today at\nEMORY'C\nLTD.      \u00b0\nTHE MAN'S STORE\nMore Reflecting\nSignboards For\nRailway Crossings\nOTTAWA (CP)-The board of\ntransport commissioners Wednesday issued another list of railway\ncrossings across the country where\ncrossing signboards must be fitted\nwith reflecting material to assist\nmotorists.\nSeveral lists had been issued\npreviously.\nThe additions run into several\nhundred unprotected crossings\nfrom Newfoundland to British Columbia. Next July 31 is the deadline for the Canadian Pacific and\nCanadian National Railways to\nimplement the order.\nPratt's Daughter\nInjured In\nCar Accident\nJOHANNESBURG, South Africa (Reuters) \u2014 Susan Pratt, 22,\ndaughter of a wealthy white\nfarmer held for the attempted\nassassination of prime Minister\nHendrik Verwoerd, suffered\nshock and minor injuries Tuesday night when a car she was\ndriving overturned.\nHer stepfather, C. W. Cumming, said the girl was \"fleeing\"\nfrom the \"hounding of the press.\"\nShe was taken to Pretoria General Hospital, where Verwoerd is\nrecovering from two bullet\nwounds in his face, inflicted at\npoint - blank range April 9. The\ngirl's father, David Pratt, is being held for the assassination attempt.\nPolice Fired At\nNegroes Without\nOfficial Orders\nVEREENIGING, South Africa\n(Reuters) \u2014 Police opened fire\nwithout being ordered to do so\noutside Sharpeville police station\nMarch 21 when 67 Africans' were\nkilled, a police officer \" told i\njudicial inquiry Wednesday.\nCapt.' H. G. Theron said he\nwent to Sharpeville with 16 white\nand nine African policemen. Vm\nwhite policemen had machine-\nguns, rifles and revolvers. The\nAfricans had dubs.\nWhen he arrived at Sharpeville police station there were\nabout 10,000 to 15,000 Africans\nthere and the crowd was steadily\nincreasing.\n\"Everything then wwvt v\u00bbry\nquickly,\" Theron said. \"Stones\nwere thrown at the police and\none policeman grabbed at ki\u00ab\nface as if an object h-ad struck\nhim. Without being ordered, one\nof our men fired a shot and\nother shots followed.\"\nDe Gaulle Hopeful\nOn Disarmament\nBy JACK BEST\nCanadian  Press  Staff  Writer\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014French' President Oharles de Gaulle let it be\nknown Tuesday he does not expect any agreement on Germany\nto result from next month's summit conference between the Western Big Three and-Russia.\nHe appeared hopeful, however,\nlhat progress oan be made towards nuclear disarmament. As\na first step he proposed elimination of atomic carriers, \"over\nwhich mutual control is still\npracticable.\"\nPresident de Gaulle outlined his\nviews at a luncheon given\" by the\nCanadian government and at a\nsubsequent press conference. He\narrived- in Ottawa Monday night\nand left Wednesday for Quebec\nCity.\nEMBASSY  DINNER\nTopping off a crowded day\nTuesday, the. 69-year-old head of\nstate and Mme. de Gaulle entertained at a dinner and reception\nat the French Embassy. Guests\nincluded Governor - General and\nMme. Vanier, and Prime Minister and Mrs. Diefenbaker.\nIt was the second such affair\nfor Gen. de Gaulle, and his wife\nin 24 hours. Monday night, within\nhours after their arrival here by\nair, -they were guests of the\nVaniers at a dinner-reception at\nGovernment House, where the de\nGauDes stayed during their .visit.\nMuch of the president's time\nTuesday was taken up in com\nferences with Prime Minister\nDiefenbaker and members of the\ncabinet.\nIn his luncheon address Gen. de\nGaulle expressed satisfaction at\nthe approach of the summit conference, which opens May 16 in\nParis.\n\"INSOLUBLE\" PROBLEM\n\"What must be avoided now is\nfruitless discussion of insoluble\noroblems, such as, for instance,\nmight arise-over -Ihe problem of\nthe German people.\"\nAmplifying at a press conference,  Gen.  de  Gaulle said:   \"If\nwe want a detente we must recognize that there ar^ certain issues which cannot be decided at\npresent.\"\nThis was not to say he would\nrefuse to discuss German reunification, \"but we recognize\nthat there can be no agreement\nunder present circumstances.\"\nWhat is also involved at the\nsummit conference, President de\nGaulle said at the luncheon, \"is\nat least a beginning to nuclear\ndisarmament, starting with missiles and aircraft, which are the\natomic carriers, and over which\nmutual control is still practicable.\"\n\"Finally, there must be organized a basis of co-operation to\ntranscend political rivalries in\nthe development of needy peoples.\"\nGen.  de Gaulle spoke entirely\nin   French,   his   remarks   being\ntranslated by an interpreter.\nVITAL INTEREST\nThe visiting statesman was introduced at the luncheon by Mr.\nDiefenbaker, who said that Canada, while not a participate at\nthe summit, \"has nonetheless a\nvital concern with the outcome.\"\nNoting that Gen. de Gaulle was\nacquainted with the elements of\nCanadian foreign policy thinking,\nthe prime minister said:\n\"^lone of them is greater than\nan end to the arms race with its\nfinancial burden on national economies and all its grave dangers\nto peace,\"\nCOiipled with a reduction of\narmaments, Mr. D i e f e n baker\nsaid relaxed international tension\nwould permit a \"world offensive\nagainst poverty.\"\nPresident de Gaulle's busy day\nbegan at 9:45 a.m. when Mr.\nDiefenbaker and External Affairs\nMinister Green called on him at\nGovernment House.\nLater the visiting. statesman\nolanted a tree on the Government\nHouse lawn, visited the Parliament Buildings, placed a wreath\natl the National War Memorial,\nand visited city hall.\nRock V Roll Singing Miner\nToo Much For Fellow Diggers\nBy STEWART MaoLEOD\nCanadian   Press   Utaff   Writer\nLONDON (CP)\u2014Rock 'n' roll\nsinger Terry Hale, a 19-year-\nold digger of rhythm, has \"been\ncalled on the carpet as an unsatisfactory digger of coal.\nHale, an aspiring recording\nstar, tries to do both at once.\nBut his captive listeners at the\nunderground coal face don't dig\nhim. They want to dig coal in\npeace.\nThey complained to the management against. interference\nby \"coal mine carolling.\"\nHale called them a \"bunch\nof squares.\"\nAnd the fight was on.\n%The long-haired rock 'n' roller belted out one tune after\nanother at the Worksop, Nottinghamshire, mine while the\nunderground manager belted\nout  a consistent refrain:\n\"Shut up!\"\nHale says he heard that order so often \"you could have\nwritten a beat number to the\ntheme.\"\nBut the determined singer,\nwho doesn't make enough\nmoney from his crooning to\nquit working, kept up the music\n\u2014\"sort of unconscious like.\"\nThe underground manager,\ntired of shouting \"shut up!\"\nparaded Hale before an official\nof the coal board.\nThe official decided that Hale\nwas employed only to dig coal\nand since other miners didn't\ndig Hale there was no point in\nthe singer digging at all.\nHale was out of a job.\nTuesday he turned up at his\nlocal labor exchange, willing to\nforget the four years he spent\nas an apprentice miner. He\nasked    for   any   job    \"where\nthey'll let me sing.\" He doesn't\ncare what work is involved.\nRev. John Oates, 29-year-old\nleader of a Roman Catholic\nYouth club, is backing the\nyoung miner. He says he has\nfaith in Terry and \"if he can\nget himself a steady job ... 1\nthink we will be able to fix him\nup with a recording test.\"\nMeantime,   employment   officials   are   digging   through   the\nfiles in search of a music-loving boss.\nHave  the  Job  Done  Right I\nWIC GRAVEC\n*        LIMITED        \u2022*\nMASTER  PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nWorld Briefs\nFRANKFURT, West Germany\n(AP) \u2014 Jordanian Ek\u00bbnornics\nMinister Khalusi Hhairy arrived\nhere by air Tuesday at the head\nof a government delegation for\neconomic and financial talks with\nWest German government officials.\nU.S.S.R. ECONOMIC AID\nUNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP)\nThe Soviet Union has told the\nUnited Nations it is giving economic and technical aid to 14\ncountries with no strings\nattached. It lift d Western-allied\nIran and Turkey and non-aligned\nAfghanistan, Burma, Cambodia,\nCeylon, Ethiopia, Guinea, India,\nIndonesia, Iraq, Nepal, the\nUnited Arab Republic and\nYemen. The list omitted Communist countries.\nPOLICEMAN KILLED\nPARIS (AP)\u2014A traffic policeman who had just gone off duty\nwas shot and killed Tuesday night\nby three Algerians. Three policemen in a patrol car opened fire.\nOne assailant was killed and another seriously wounded. The\nthird escaped. It was the 26th\nattack on Paris police by Nor*h\nAfricans since 1956.\nREXALL\nEudiphos  with   Lecithin\nA tonic for the treatment of\ndisorders due to\nnervous exhaustion.\nAlso of value during\nconvalescence.\nPrice  $1.50\nSold Only at\nYour Rexall Pharmacy\nCity Drug\nHAIGH\nTRU  ART\nBeauty Salon\nPhono 327\n576 Baker St\nLamb's\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbic\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1960_04_21","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0433379","@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":"1960-04-21 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1960-04-21 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\/1.0433379"}