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W.","@language":"en"},{"@value":"Ramsden, C. W.","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2023-06-13","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1960-06-30","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0433412\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" ' \u2022    _'    \u25a0\n...     \u25a0> \u25a0:'\u25a0 ',, .      \u25a0 , .    .;-'   I.      .11\n\u25a0\u25a0-.\u25a0       '..'.'\nibiq\nThe Interior's\nLargest Daily Newspaper\nMay Daily Average Press Run \u2014 9077\n\u20220*8\n^rllm^\ntesstt i\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKOOTENAY: Sunny, cloudy per-\ntods and a few showers along the\nridges Thursday. Low - high at\nCranbrook and Orescent Valley\n45 and 85. Friday outlook \u2014 Variable cloudiness.\nPublished at Nelson, transportation, government, financial and trading centre of the Kootenay-Columhia area\nVol. 59\nNELSON, B. C, CANADA\u2014THURSDAY MORNING, JUNE 30, 1960\nNot More Than 7c Dally, 10c Saturday\nNo. 59\nWENN-GREN PLAN CRUMBLING - STRACHAN\nCastro Seizes American Oil\nRefinery by Armed Force\nRussian Crude Oil Issue Brings\n+**\u2022\nMost Bitter Attack on U.S. Yet\nBy HAROLD K. MILKS\nHAVANA (AP)\u2014Premier Fidel Castro seized one of the two American-owned oil\nrefineries in Cuba Wednesday after telling a mass meeting he was ready to take over\nthe property of all Americans in Cuba \"down to the nails in their shoes.\"\nThe seizure order against the Texaco Oil Company's $26,000,000 plant in Santiago\nde Cuba followed the refusal of three companies \u2014 two American and one Dutch-British\n\u2014 to process Russian crude oil bought from the Soviet Union with Cuban sugar.\nCastro ordered his Nalional Institute of Petroleum to \"intervene\" \u2022\u2014 a practice here\negual to confiscation \u2014 the Texaco plant unless its operators accepted 25,000 barrels of\nRussian crude and process it.\nCompany officials had been ordered to refuse the Russian oil.\nIntervention, backed by armed\nworkers and militiamen already\nin virtual control of the refinery,\nresulted.\nNelson, District Prepares\nFor Dominion Day Activity\nWhile residents of outlying districts and towns are jubilantly celebrating the annual Dominion Day\nholiday, Nelsonites will be busily\npreparing for the most hectic week\nof the year \u2014 Bonspiel Week.\nNo official holiday celebrations\nare planned for the Queen City and\nfollowing week's activities will get\noff to a start on Saturday with a\nhockey game between Trail Smoke\nEaters and the Nelson Maple Leafs.\nThe golf course's annual club competition will be held Friday.\nMany residents will be leaving\nHume Hotel\nSold to\nEdmontonian\nThe Hume Hotel has been sold,\nit was officially announced Wednesday night by manager Emil\n\"Chummy\" Schumaker.\nTlie deal becomes effective as of\nJuly 1 and the new management\nis expected to be here on July 6.\nThe hotel was bought by H, G.\nCurlett of Edmonton, Alberta and\nan extensive renovation is going to\nbe carried oul under the new management\n.Mr. Schumaker was notified of\nthe sale Wednesday and said that\nhe is going to stay with the new\nmanagement until July 16 to show\nthem the mpes before leaving Nelson fnr Alberta,\nTerry Maber will be the new\nmanager.\nthe city tonight after work to spend\nthe long weekend in cities south of\nthe border, on the coast, neighboring cities and in Alberta.\nSunday many Nelsonites along\nwith visitors from the United\nStates and Kootenay will partake\nof the Kinsmen Kootenay Lake\nFishing Derby.\nTo be held in conjunction with\nthe celebrations in Salmo is the\nopening day for the new golf course\nwhich was only completed six\nweeks ago. The first official day\nof golfing is open to anyone who\nwould like to try their hand on a\ncourse which is perfectly flat because it is built on an old airstrip.\nMany golfers from Nelson will\nprobably take advantage of this\nopportunity.\nAt Nakusp the celebrations'are\nscheduled to begin at 9:30 in the\nmorning. Like Salmo, ball games,\na parade, queen crowning, etc. will\nbe held.\ni \u25a0 \u25a0 11 \u25a0 \u25a0 i r 111111111 \u25a0 i \u25a0 1111\niiiiiii\nNo  Paper  Friday\nThe Dally News will not be\npublished Friday, July 1, Dominion Day. Next regular edition will be published Saturday.\nII Illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nKILLED FIVE. Jazz pianist\nMelvin \"Dave\" Rees is being\nheld on $100,000 bail in Memphis,\nTenn., on charges that he killed\nat least five persons, including a\nfamily of four near Washington,\nD.C., in the past four years. His\nwife, nightclub singer Pat Rees,\nhas accused the FBI of \"persecuting   my   husband\"   and   de-\nINDEPENDENCE\nIN CONGO TODAY\nLEOPOLDVILLE, Belgian Congo iReuters) \u2014 Tlie Congo and its\n14,000,000 inhabitants Wednesday\nnight prepared for independence\ntoday afler 79 years of Belgian\nrule.\nBehind the joyful confusion of\npreparations for independence ludk-\ned disruptive political rivalry secession threats by some groups and\nthe fart that tihe new country is\nshy of experienced government administrators.\nThere has been virtually no\ntransitional period during whieh\nCongolese could learn government\nby experience.\nRivalry still exists between Patrice Lumumba, the country's first\npremier, and President Joseph\nKasavubu, who until five days ago\nwere not on political speaking\nterms. Other political leaders like\nKatanga province's Premier Moise\nTshombe, want a bigger share of\npower.\nVIOLATE LAW\nAgents of the institute took over\nthe Havana headquarters of Texaco an hour later, it was reported.\nCastro accused Texaco of violating a 1938 law which directs all\nrefineries in Cuba to refine\n\"state-owned\" oil at the orders\nof the government.\nThe other companies, Standard\nOil of New Jersey and Shell, said\nthey had not been molested as\nyet.\nThe three companies have said\nthey cannot process the Russian\noil because they have obligations\nto their traditional suppliers, in\nthis case Venezuela.\nCastro contends he can buy Soviet crude oil for $1 a barrel under the Venezuelan price.\nThe companies have a $75,000,-\n000 investment in Cuba plus an\nestimated $60,000,000 in foreign\nexchange the Castro government\nowes them for crude oil already\nimported and processed.\nThe U.S. Embassy had no comment on the seizure except to say\nthe situation was being watched\nclosely.\nBITTER ATTACK\nThe seizure climaxed Castro's\nmost bitter attack on the United\nStates, Tuesday night.\nHoarse with anger, Castro\ncalled the new sugar act now\nbeing deliberated by Hie U.S.\nCongress, immoral, stupid and\ncriminal. The bill would give the\npresident authority to fix the\namount of sugar Cuba may sell\nin the U.S.\nCastro warned that for every\npound cut by the United States\nfrom Cuba's sugar quota, his government will take one of the 36\nAmerican - owned sugar mills\nhere. The American mills, which\nproduce a third of Cuba's sugar,\nare valued at more than $100,000,-\n000.\nGET HEP, KEEP COOL, NELSON. With\ntemperatures hovering In the 80-degree and above\nrange the past few days, Nelsonites should take\na lesson from these veterans of heat waves. Down\nLos Angeles way, where the mercury bubbles in\nthe 90's, Laura Grant, 12, at left, struck upon\nthe most recent cooling system for humans since\nlemonade stands were popular.\u2014AP photo.\nRed Chinese Cross Nepal Border;\nTibetans Looking  for Showdown\nKATMANDU, Nepal (Reuters)\nA force of 2,000 Red Chinese\ntroops killed an unarmed Nepal-\nese army officer and captured 16\npersons in a surprise sweep over\nthe Nepal-Tibet border Sunday,\nit was disclosed Wednesday.\nThe Nepalese cabinet met in\nemergency session and the government later sent a protest to\nChina against the \"unprovoked\"\nattack in the wild Mustang area\nwhich juts into Tibet.\nThe government demanded the\nNepalese prisoners be returned.\nIt said tiie Chinese action was a\nviolation of international law and\na Chinese-Nepalese border agreement signed earlier this year.\nQUELLING REVOLT\nChina   has   admitted   that   its\narmy is trying to put down a\nTibetan revolt, according to a\nNepalese announcement Tuesday.\nChina told Nepal that troops\nwould be moved into the de-militarized zone between Nepal and\nTibet to fight the revolt \u2014 an\napparent attempt to close all\nescape routes from Tibet.\ntndian newspapers reported an\narmy of nearly 200,000 Tibetan\nnomads was fighting its way\nacross Tibet and ready for a door-die fight with the Ohinese overlords.\nThe Times of India said the\nnomads assembled in the Aindo\nhor and Chang areas of northeastern and eastern Tibet and\nstarted a march across hundreds\nSoviet Premier Chides\nCanada's Defence Stand\nFlames Destroy 26 Race Horses,\n5 Barns, One Man at Edmonton\nEDMONTON    <CP>\nInves-\nmanded  release  of lie  detector j tigators   .searched   the   rubble   of\nanswers given by him.\u2014TTS. five   barns   Wednesday   to   deter-\nShs&L C&wstiiL\nBy  PVICAMUS\nThey're ripping out the parking\nmeters in our block and il jusl\nmakes our teeth ache io watch \u2014\nit's for alt the world like having\na tooth drilled out of its socket \u2014\nGrrrriiiinnndd-\nSo Wednesday afternoon everyone\nhad free parking except one small\nlight-colored car, which had 20\nminutes up on the one meter left\nIn the block.\nA cultured woman is one who by\nIhe mere shrug of her shoulder can\nadjust her shoulder straps.\nuphill bus , . Mrs. J. A. Curran\nenjoying the slimmer afternoon\nfrom her verandah . . . Bill Mor\"\ngan, his wife and son enjoying\na short visit here before proceeding\non to Vancouver (Mrs. Morgan is\nthe former Maybclle Stephenson)\n. . . Nonle Buckley dressing the\nwindow . . . Sheila Wait holding\nthe fort while her dad was out of\ntown briefly.\nTraffic Cop 'to\n\"Use your noodle,\nnoodle.\"\nnew   driver':\nson:  use your\nSEEN IN PASSING - Elaine Nervous Teenager: \"Gosh!\nWynne talking to her mother, Mrs. I Where is if I've pushed and pulled\nLionel Wynne while waiting for the | every gadget on this car.\"\nmine the cause of a two-alarm\nblaze that killed one man and\nsent two other persons to hospital. At least 26 race horses were\ndestroyed.\nThe one-hour fire started in one\nof the barns at the Edmonton\nExhibition grounds and quickly\nspread to four other stables.\nAbout 70 horses were in three of\nthe five wooden structures. Two\nof the burned buildings were vacant.\nThe old stables were to be demolished in a couple of weeks.\nNew concrete stables are to be\ncompleted by mid-July.\n(jdal&A. df&veh,\nKootenay River at Nelson: Wednesday, 9.60 feet above zero; Tuesday, 0.60 feet. Last year, June 27,\n13.68.\nNEW YORK (CP) \u2014 Canadian\ndollar 7-64 lower at $1.02 1-16 in\nterms of U.S. funds. Week ago\n$1.01  13-16.\nFred Miller, assistant manager\nof the Edtnonlon Exhibition Association, said there is \"definite\nsuspicion\" surrounding the origin\nof the fire. Fire department officials said they could not issue a\nstatement until a complete investigation is made.\nMiller said tlie manner in\nwhich the fire started and spread\nso quickly is being investigated.\nHe said two men who were passing the barns when bhe fire\nbroke out described it as a \"display of fireworks.\" He said they\nreported flashes at the north end\nof the razed string.\nft was the second major fire\nat the stables in a little more\nthan a year.\nKilled in the flames was Rex\nIreland, 68, well - known Edmonton owner and trainer who wns\nasleep in a bunk near his horses.\nMrs. Millie Pederson of Bowden,\nAlta., also an owner, and stahle-\nhand Robert McMahon were\ntreated in hospital for burns.\nOTTAWA (CP) - Soviet Premier\nNikita Khrushohev has oliided\nPrime Minister Diefenbaker over\nwhat he terms the influence of the\nUnited States on Canadian foreign\npolicy.\nIn a letter released Wednesday\nby the Soviet Embassy, Khrushohev expressed hope that the stand\ntaken by Canada at the East-West\ndisarmament talks in Geneva \"is\nnot the last word of the government of Canada.\"\nThe letter was handed to External Affe'rs Minister Green Monday\nby Russian Ambassador Amasasp\nAroutunian. It informed Mr. Diefenbaker lhat the Soviets were\nbreaking off the \"fruitless\" negotiations at Geneva and referring\ntlie disarmament question back to\nthe United Nations.\nMr. Khrushchev said that instead of discussing concrete disarmament measures, the Western\nrepresentatives at the 10-power\nconference sought to justify military preparations and the existence\nof military bases on foreign territory.\nTruman Backs Out\nWASHINGTON (AP) - Former\npresident Harry S. Truman jolted\nhis Democratic party Wednesday\nwith an announcement he will not\nattend its national convention in\nLos Anegles next month\nTruman gave no explanation of\nhis decision, which was a shocker\nto politicians wondering how such\na confirmed political firehorse\ncould stay away from a national\nconvention.\nFIND HISTORIC DESK\nMONTREAL ICP) - A search\nfor the original desk used by\nSamuel Cunard, founder of the\nCunard Steam - Ship Company,\nhas ended in the offices of a\nHalifax coal company. The\nheavy oak desk, at which Cunard\nplanned his shipping service,\nturned up in the office of the S.\nCunard Company, a coal company founded by the same man\nmore than a century ago. It is\nbeing shipped to Montreal where\nit wilPbe restored and placed in\nI the care of Dudly Pag, Cana-\nlin.\n\"1 must tell you frankly, Mr.\nPrime Minister, that the Canadian\nrepresentative ... is not an exception in this respect.\"\nCanada was represented at the\ntalks hy Lt.-Gen. E. L. M. Bums.\n\"The stand taken by the Canadian representative . . . arouses a\nlegitimate question: Whether Canada is not influenced by lhe -line\nin international affairs whidh is\nbeing pursued by the government\nof the United States and which has\nprevented the fruitful discussion of\nthe major international problems\nby the heads of the four powers.\"\nof miles of perilous mountain\ntrials and windswept plains.\nIt said the nomads hoped to entrench Ijhemselves in western\nTibet to fight the Chinese, who\nwere sending in troops reinforcements to intercept them.\nThe newspaper said several\nhundred Communists already\nhad been killed in skirmishes.\nReports reaching towns near\nthe Tibetan border in the last\nfew weeks have said that almost\nthe whole of Tibet was in revolt.\nillllimilllllllllllllllllllHMIIIlllllllIll\nAnother Swim\nCrqze Launched\nNEW YORK (AP) - *HleW\nused to be a standing gag by\ncomedians to the effect they\nwere going to swim the English\nChannel the hard way \u2014 under\nwater.\nIt's no longer a gag. A cute\nLong Island housewife, Jane\nLisle Baldasare is going to try\nto do just that. Late in August\nshe will take off from Gris Nez,\nFrance with a tank of air on\nher back, and if her luck holds\nout won't bob to the surface\nagain until she reaches Dover,\nEngland.\nShe and her consultant, frogman Art Stanfield, figure it will\ntake 50 to 100 hours.\nMrs. Baldasare is a comely\nblonde of 25. She looks too fragile and feminine for such an\nordeal, but she already has\nremained under water for 100\nhours, and has covered 14 miles\nwithout surfacing.\niiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimi\nFavoring ol\nColumbia, a\nDefinite Sign\nVICTORIA (CP) \u2014Opposition Leader Robert Strachan\nsaid Wednesday a statement by Lands and Forests\nMinister R. Williston that Columbia River development\nmust come first indicates the\n\"Wenner-Gren paper empire\"\nis showing signs of crumbling.\nHe said Mr. Williston's statement,\nmade at Kamloops, represents a\nmajor policy change in that it\nwould favor Columbia development\nover Peace River projects being\nsupported by the interests of Swedish financier Axel Wenner-Gren.\nHe said it shows the Wenner-Gren\nplans for developing northern B.C.\n\"will be pushed into the mists of\nthe future.\"\nThe Pacific Northern Railway, in\nwhioh Wenner-Gren interests are\nalso involved, is a \"circus,\" said\nMr. Strachan in a press release.\nIt was only a one-mile raflway,\nhe said.\nThe cabinet has approved a go-\nahead for two miles of interchange\nand one mile of the 700 miles of\ntrack to the Yukon planned by the\nrailway.\n\"For the last few years we have\nbeen told day after day that B.C.\nwould lie down and die if we did\nnot develop the Peace River at\nonce and at the same time as die\nColumbia.\" the CCF leader said.\n\"The Peace, we were told, was\nfeasible,  essential  and so on.\"\n\"Today we are witnessing the\nfirst outward signs of the crumbling of the Wenner-Gren paper empire.\"\nThe PNR would be \"as hilarious\nas the Keiowna bondfire if it was\nnot for the fact that it has been\na cruel hoax,\".cm job-hunters in\nNorthern B.C.\nBB'S CANADIAN DOUBLE. Eighteen-year-old Liz Hollick of\nHamilton. Ont., sets men's hearts aflutter when she walks down\nthe street. She is a dead-ringer lor France's sex-kitten, Brigitte\nBardot. Liz has never seen a BB movie. \"I'd he too emharrassed\nwatching my double running around the screen with very little\nclothes on.\" she says.\u2014TTS.\nCM&S to Seek\nPower From\nUSA. Grid\nVANCOUVER (CP) - The Sun\nsays the Consolidated Mining and\nSmelting Company is applying to\nthe Pacific Northwest power grid\n(or an inter-connectjon to handle\nfuture requirements for its new\nsteel mill at. Kimberley.\nThe paper says the company,\nwith headquarters at Trail, has\nenough power to operate the project at the start this fall. Its\ncapacity then will be 100 tons a\nday.\nBut Ihe growth of the operation,\nits eventual capacity is expected\nto be 500 tons a day, would create\nshortages in the not too distant\nfuture.\nAdditional generation could be\ninstalled at the company's hydroelectric plant at Waneta on the\nPend Oreille River but this would\nrequire an inter-connection with\nthe northwest grid.\nLands and Forests Minister Williston said in a speech at Kamloops Monday the Columbia river\ndevelopment planned by the British Columbia, Canadian and United\nStates governments is necessary\nbecause the Kimberley smelter\ncannot get enough power under the\npresent situation.\nDancing   Gardener\nWaits For Funds\nCALGARY (CP) \u2014 A 45-year-ald\ngardener who spent $36,000 on dancing lessons and loaned another $15,-\n000 to a dancing studio operator,\nis still waiting for the promised\nreturn of his money.\nHoward Lyons said in an interview Wednesday he understood a\npublic tmstee. appointed hy the\ncourts to handle his affairs, had\nimposed a time limit to speed up\nthe refund.\nThe loan was made to Robert\nBonds, former operator of the Arthur Murray dance studio here.\nSoviets Shoot For\nAccuracy in Tests\nLONDON (Reuters) - New\nRussian rockets to he test-fired into\nthe central Pacific next month will\nbe aimed at target areas only half\nas big as the zones used in tests\nearly this year, the Soviet news\nagency Tass announced Wednesday night.\nRussia claimed the reduced target area indicates its missiles have\ngreat accuracy.\nENJOY THE HOLIDAY \u2014 DRIVE WITH CARE\n mm\n\u2014**\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014       . i   \u2014\u2014\u2014\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, JUNE 30, 1960\nWE HAVE\nMOVED\nTO\n639 BAKER ST.\n(Eagle Block)\nEatons Are Across the Street From  Ul.\nSame Phone Number\nSame Courteous Service\nSame Upright Neon Drug Store\nSAMPLE'S\nNELSON\nPHARMACY\nLTD.\nFormerly 433 Josephine St.\nFor Real Camping Pleasure . ..\nBe SURE to choose your equipment from our\nlarge selection!\nTENTS\nUMBRELLA\n9'xl 2x7'6\"\u2014$71.00\n9'xl2'x7' \u2014 $62.75\nCOLEMAN CAMP STOVES\nPALMETO\n9'x9'x6'6\"\u2014$42.55\nGROUND  SHEETS\nAW k T \u2014 $5.95\n2-Burner\n03\n71\n3-Burner\n,95\n'29\nCOLEMAN   LANTERNS\nSport Lite \u25a0 #200\n$16.95\nMajor \u00a3236\n$19.95\nSummer Lite #3101\n$9.95\nLlqua Fuel\n851\nCOLEMAN  CAMP OVEN\n#5010 \u2014 $11.50\nCAMP COOK SET, ALUMINUM #15043\nFlashlights 50C and up\nCOLEMAN COOLERS\n3 Sizesi\n$14.95 - $21.95 - $29.95\nSee Us for Sleeping Bags and\nAir Mattresses\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Co. Ltd.\nWHOLESALE \u2014 RETAIL\nPhone 1530 Nelson, B. C.\nTOP SEA CADET for the past year has been Norman\nBoulet, seen here receiving a framed picture of an early\nBailing vessel as his reward for efficiency from Commanding Officer of the Nelson Sea Cadets, Lt. Jack Lees.\nNorman is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Boulet, 620\nHouston Street.\u2014Daily News photo.\nExhibition Directors Plan for Fall\nA meeting of the West Kootenay\nIndustrial and Agricultural Exhibition board was held June 28 with\n13 members present. President\nMrs.  Elsie Bereau presided.\nJACK BOYCE\nCLOTHING\nLIQUIDATION\nEnds Tonight\n$65.00   Suits   for   $22.50\n$49.50   suits   for   $14.95\nYOUR LAST CHANCE\nOnly a Few Left\nMrs. L. Hanic was given a vote\nof thanks for sending letters to all\nclubs and organizations In town\nto promote interest in entering a\ndisplay at the fair. Several have\nreplied  favorably.\nA. B. Gilker is making arrangements to have Casey-al-Bat \u2014 a\nbaseball play \u2014 here. Plans are\nbeing marie for live demonstrations\nin all sections \u2014 floral displays,\nhome-cooking, cake decorations,\nA judges committee was formed.\nMrs. Helen Catley. Earl Hunt, Mrs.\nMarg Doerksen and Mrs. Inez Eck-\nmier. The booklet is out and will\nbe available on Friday.\nPHONE   1844   FOR   CLASSIFIED\nm NELSON one DISTRICT\nFESTIVITIES EVERYWHERE\nHEY KIDS!\nRemind Mom To Take\nPalm Quality Ice Cream\nAlong.\nSold\nEverywhere\nNelson \u2014900 \u2014Trail\nIt Says... If You REALLY Want\nA THRILL\nBe Sure To Attend Nelson's\nCHAHKO-MIKA\nFRIDAY, SATURDAY, SUNDAY, July 8, 9, 10\n* A QUESTIONNAIRE *\nHave  You   Ever  Seen?\n1. A man standing on h:s head\non a spar tree 1C0 feet abore\nground ?\n2. A hydroplane being driven in\nexce;s of  100 m.p.h.?\n3. The v'rv'M's champ'on log\nbirlcis   in  cotton?\nHave You  Ever Seen?\n4. The world's best loggers competing against eoch other in\nthe thrilling jobs of their\ntrade?\n5. Miners competing for\ntrophies?\n6. Miners competing against\nloggers?\n7. World champion lady log\nbirlers?\nIF THE ANSWER IS\n\"NO\" TO ANY OF\nTHESE QUESTIONS:\nPlan To  Attend\nCHAHKO-MIKA\nWhere You Will See These\nand Many More Exciting Events.\nCivic   Grounds,   Nelson\nB5r<t>1\"j\\\/r     r\"f*\\S\\~.*TC      Go  on  Sole  Saturday,  July  2,  at   KOOTENAY  STATIONERS.   $1.50.\nI\\*-'3    rtVC      h*LtVEI5 Call-In, Write, or  Phone 362.\nFuneral Held For\nHorlick Youngster\nCASTLEGAR - A large congregation, including many of his\nsehool mates attended the funeral\nWednesday morning of 11-year-old\nRichard Horiick, who was drowned\nat Pass Creek near here on Monday.\nA guard ol honor was lormed at\nSt. Rita's Church by the Cubs and\nScout1; ol the district. Richard was\na member of the second Castlegar\nWolf Cub pack and had recently\nachieved an award for the best all\nround cub. The well-liked youngster\nwas also a member of the Little\nLeague baseball team.\nThe lamily moved here Irom\nTrail in 1957 and Richard attended\nCastlegar elementary school where\nhe had completed grade five.\nHe is survived by his mother,\nfour sisters, Charlotte at Woodland\nSchool, New Westminster, Beverley, Malene and Elaine at home\nand one brother, Ronnie, at home.\nHis father predeceased him on October 28, 1959.\nPallbearers were Mike Daniel,\nPete Chubarty. Nick Sybulka and\nM. Melanka. The service was conducted by Rev. Father E. A.\nBrophy. Interment was in the family plot at Park Memorial Cemetery, Kinnaird.\nVancouver Headlines Gave\nUntrue Picture of Tragedy\nAdults Not Witnesses to Pass\nCreek Drowning ot Young Boy\nCASTLEGAR \u2014 Blaring headlines in Tuesday's\nissue of a Vancouver paper were branded yesterday by\nlocal residents and police officials as untrue and distortion\nof the facts.\nHeadlines in the story of the\ndeath of 11-year-oid Richard Horlick by drowning in Pass Creek\nproclaimed \"Crowd of 100 Stands\nStares While Boy Drowns in\nOrcck.\"\nj the adults saw the boy jump from\nthe raft.\nCLAUS W.  NORD\nFUNERAL HELD\nFuneral services were held Wednesday for Claus Wilhelm Nord,\n65, from the chapel of Thompson\nFuneral Home. Rev. D. N. Robinson of Fruitvale officiated.\nHymns sung were \"The Old Rugged Cross\" and \"Rock of Ages\"\nwith Mrs. W. A. Manson as organist.\nPallbearers were Swan Lund-\ngren, A. Burgess, M. Burgess, J.\nDaly, E. P. Haukedahl, E. Emil-\nson. Interment was in Nelson\nMemorial Park.\nONLY FIVE WITNESSES\nRCMP evidence indicated only\nwitnesses tn the drowning wore\nfive youngsters, tha! of the adults\nwho were attracted later oy tho\nexcitement few knew the cause.\nVillage Chairman N. T. O-lo-.v |\nsaid Wednesday he believed a gre.n'\ndeal of the story was not true and'\nthat \"it should be tracked down in j\norder that it may be reiuted\";\nName of the person aWe.^ertly making the charge was not given in the'\nnews story. ;\nAn RCMP constable who was;\ncalled to the scene told The Daily\nNews yesterday that the story\nisn't correct as written. He sun-\nported Mr. Ogfow's statement, estimating that there were possibly\n75 persons at the scene after the\ntragedy occurred.\nThe officer continued that there\nwere only five persons who sawj\nthe boy drown \u2014 all of whom!\nwere children. I\n\"Many of the ornwd did not\nknow   what   the excitement was\nabout. One gentleman spotted the\nbody just as we got there and pointed it out to us.\"\nThe news report stated t'hat all\n100 or more bystanders knew the\nlad had disappeared in the creek.\nIt contradicted itself in a following\nparagraph, stating a 14-year-old\nsaid that he did not think any of\nFor the  Finest  in\nPrescription\nService\nCALL 25\nFleury's Pharmacy\nHarold  Mayo  (Prop.)\nCorner Baker and Ward Sts.\nPhone 25 Nelson\nKootenay Army Men Show They\n(an Look After Themselves\nVERNON-The Nelson and Trail\nmilitiamen know how to look out\nfor themselves.\nOperating on the old army adage\nthat \"any fool can be uncomfortable,\" they slept and ate in comfort while 1100 other militiamen\nen route here slept and prepared\nmeals in driving rain.\nThe men of the 24th Medium\nAnti-Aircraft Regiment from Nelson and the 44th Field Squadron,\nRCE. of Trail, rented the curling\nrink near Osoyoos for the night\nfor $12.50. They were warm and\ndry and cooked meals on the propane stoves in the building.\nThis week they are joining the\nother militia units from Vancouver\nIsland and the mainland for a week\nof intensive training at the Mission\nHill camp here.\nIt is the largest concentration of\nmilitia troops here since the war.\nJ. M. MacAuley Now Dean\nOf Studies at Notre Dame\nProfessor James M MacAuley of British Columbia. He is a vet\nlias returned to Notre Dame Col-jeran of both World War II where\nlege to take up the position of.he served as a navigator in the\nDean of Studies. He has spent the'RCAF and of 17 years of teaching\nKnown\ntnroucjnout\nthe  world!\nChoose  from  our\nselection of fhe\nworld's most honored\nwatch.\nCOLLINSON'S\nJEWELLERY LTD.\n\"NELSON'S  DIAMOND HEADQUARTERS\"\nBusiness  Established  Since   1897\nPhone  120 Nelson,   B.C.\npast year studying for his Master's\nJ. M. MacAULEY\nDegree at the Graduates School of\nStudies of the University of St,\nLouis while on a leave of absence\nfrom Notre Dame,\nProfessor MacAuley is a native\nof New Denver. British Columbia.\nHe has a bachelor of arts degree\nfrom the Laval University, Quebec and a'bachelor of education\ndegree received at the University\nin   British   Columbia's   secondary\nschools.\nThe professor will receive his\nMaster's Degree in Psychology in\nJuly as a result of his studies in\nthe past year. This fall he will be\nlecturing in education and psychology at   Notre  Dame.\nTONIGHT\n7:30 p.m.\nChannel No. 7\nCJLH Lethbridge\nSEE and HEAR\nHoliday Will\nMake Traffic\nHazard Greater\nNelson RCMP subdivision issued j\na warning Wednesday to motorists!\n'o be extra careful on the highways i\n;his weekend, the first long sum-!\nmer holiday weekend.\nTraffic will be especially heavy j\n;n the Nelson district as curlers!\nand spectators flock here for the I\n' ,'clson Midsummer Bonspiel and \u25a0\nmany other cars pass through fori\nCalgary and its Stampede which]\nstarts  Monday,\nMany motorists with their families will be taking to the highways j\nfor their annual summer vacation,\n\"Additional highway patrols will i\nbe on the highways to assist you\nin making your trip a pleasure,\nnot a tragedy.\n\"Special attention is being directed to drivers who drive in such\na manner as to impede the normal\nor reasonable movement of traffic.\n\"Courteous drivers pull over on\nthe shoulder of the highway to\nassist faster traffic in passing* be\na courteous driver.\"\nPRIME MINISTER\nTHE RT. HONOURABLE\nJOHN DIEFENBAKER\nin the television seriel\n\"The Nation's Business\"\nThe Progressive Conservative Party\nA HEAVY-LIGHT\n'COMBINATION\n7  \u00a30GGfRS\n700\\ DIRECT   DRIVE\nCHAIN SAW\nHEAVY...\nIN POWER\nLIGHT...\nIN WEIGHT\nWEIGHS  ONLY   19  POUNDS, (less bar and chain]\nGET A FREE DEMONSTRATION FROM\nGMELITE\nSALES  & SERVICE  LTD.\n536 Stanley St. Nelson, B.C. Phone 2402\n I hi I\nLarge Argenta Crowd Hears\nNelson Boys Studio Choir\nARGENTA - Over a hundred\ntwenty-five people crowded into\nthe Argenta School to hear the second annual concert given by the\nNelson Boys' Studio Choir here.\nLed by Mrs. T. J. S. Ferguson and\naccompanied by Mrs. H. Herbison,\nthe choir sang a large selection of\nboth sacred and secular pieces.\nThe full choir opened the program with \"Praise My Soul the\nKing of Heaven.\" with David\nHerbison singing a solo part. Following this, John Campbell sang\n\"Now Another Day Is Gone.\"\nKen McBride sang the solo part\nof \"The Prayer of the Norwegian\nChild,\" with the full choir singing\nthe chorus. Following this, the\nmore experienced half of tlie choir\nsang two pieces: \"How Soft Upon\nthe Evening Air\" and \"Give Here\nUnto Me.\"\nThree more of the choir were\nfeatured when Gregory Cook sang\n\"Come Let Us AH This Day,\" and\ntwo Davids: Herbison and McElroy\nsang a duet: \"Lord My Soul\nWaiteth.\"\nThe full, choir returned to sing\nthree more sacred numbers:\n\"David of the White Rock,\" \"I\nWill Sing of Thy Great Mercies,\"\nand \"The Lord's Prayer.\" In the\nlatter two, David McElroy sang the\nsolo parts.\nSeparating the two parts of the\nprogram was a short talk by Leonard Lythgoe, an ex-choir member\nwho had returned to Nelson to hear\nagain the group in which he sang\nfifteen years ago. He spoke highly\nof the fine work and the quality of\nthe singing produced by Mrs.\nFerguson, the director of the choir.\nTwo lively numbers opened the\nsecular half of the afternoon with\nthe full choir singing \"Venice,\"\nand \"An Old Sea Chanty.\" This\nwas followed by a solo from one of\nNOTICE\nQueen City Fuel Customers\nImportant* Announcement* Soon\nPhone 1518\nFOR REQUIREMENTS AND INFORMATION\n3 easy ways to pay insurance premiums with the\nALL-NEW\ncad-ia\nPLAN\nSee your Acadia agent today!\nMcHardy Agencies Ltd.\n5S4 Ward St\nNelson\nPhone 135\nthe youngest members of the choir,\nRicky Campbell, Who song \"Circus\nClown.\"\nThe audience chuckled with delight at \"Soldier, Soldier, Will You\nMarry Me?\" sung by the full ohoir,\nwith Douglas Walkley singing the\nsolo parts. A fitting light piece:\n\"Ln\" Liza Jane\" was then sung\nby Tommy Latta, another of the\nyounger members of the choir.\nDonny Stewart sang \"Over Hill\nand Over Dale,\" from Shakespeare, followed by tbe full choir\nsinging two old favourites, \"Kentucky Babe,\" and \"Blue Danube.\nDavid Herbison sang the next\nsolo, \"There Is a Lady,\" and then\nhe was joined by David McElroy,\nDouglas Walkley and Gregory Cook\nwho sang the quartet, \"What's in\nthe Air Today?\"\nAt this point. Mrs. Ferguson\ninterrupted the program to present\nchoir pins lo all the boys in the\nohoir who had moved from the\nsixth to the seventh grade at\nschool. Almost all of these boys\nhad been with the choir for four\nyears. Denis Truscott, one of the\nchoir boys then presented a gift to\nMrs. Ferguson in appreciation of\nher work with the group.\nThe last number of the afternoon\nwas the full choir singing, \"Crown\nof the Year.\" However, the enthusiastic audience was unwilling\nto slop applauding until an encore\nwas given by the older half of the\nchoir, \"Du, Du, Liegst Mir Im\nHertzen.\"\nAfter the concert, the community\nand the choir moved to the Wolfe\nhome for a light supper and a\nshort period of informal community singing before the boys started\nthe long trip back to Nelson.\nSANTIAGO, Chile (AP) - Two\nearth quakes shook Southern\nChile Tuesday in the area of\nValdivia, port city of 100,000\nwhere BO per cent of the buildings were destroyed by shocks\nand tidal waves in May. Valdivia\nlias experienced daily tremors\nsince Ihe first d e v a s t a ling\nquakes, and Japanese seismologists surveying tlie area said it is\nlikely that they will continue for\ntwo years.\nNel\nson\nBOWLADROME LTD.\nRENOVATION REOPENING\n1 PM JULY 2nd\nWe are more than pleased to announce   to  our  many   friend]   and   customers\nour premise!  are  now newly  renovated and we'v* added a new recreation room.\nDrop Down\nand play the\nnew Game\nSensation\nTABLE\n\"SHUFFLE-\nBOARD\"\nTHE GAME FOR\nYOUNG AND OLD\nModern\nAlleys\nThe  most\nUp-to-Date\nBowling Alleys\nip the\nKootenays\nJot yoWL (Mdstd ConvsmismaL\nWe Have Installed\nVENDING MACHINES FOR\nCoffee-Soft Drinks-Hot Chocolate\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, JUNE 30, 1960 \u2014 3\nAinsworth School  Term Ends\nWith Picnic  and Sports Day\nUGANDA VISITOR. Guest the past few weeks of Father\nMorclli of Holy Cross Church, Creston, has been lhe Rev. Emmanuel Kibi\/.ii'e of Uganda, East Africa. Father Kibizige is in\nCanada to take courses in social sciences to assist him in his youth\nwork in Uganda. He has recently completed a course at Antigonish,\nN.S. After visiting B.C. parishes he will go to Madison. Wisconsin,\nto continue his studies. \u2014H. M.  Ruckna photo.\nSwim Classes Set\nTo Open July 4\nAINSWORTH - Parents and\nIriends attended the annual sports\nday and picnic. An afternoon of\nvaried sports was enjoyed. One of\ntlie highlights of the afternoon was\nthe bicycle ride performed by all\nthe pupils on their gaily decorated\nbicycles.\nThe mothers joined the pupils in\na game of softball. A supper was\nenjoyed by all. Mrs. Currie, the\nteacher, handed out report cards\nafter supper.\n100-yard dash iseniors) \u2014 Patty\nBurns, Lyle McLellan; (juniors'\u2014\nGail Hansen, Eva Sonnenburg,\nLoraine Habert: ipre-school) \u2014\nDiane Hansen, Peter Sonnenburg,\nBrad Hartland.\nSoftball throw (senior)\u2014Lyle McLellan, Dennis Currie. David Snyder; (jr.i\u2014Gordon McLellan, Doug\nSnyder, Lorraine Habert; (preschool)\u2014Diane Hansen, Eva Son\nnenburg, Peter Sonnenburg.\nTurtle race (sr.I\u2014Patty Burns,\nLyle McLellan, Hcide Sonnenburg\n(jr.I\u2014Gordon McLellan, Lorraine\nHabert, Palsy Sirak.\nStanding hroad jump (sr.) \u2014\nDavid Snyder, Lyle McLellan,\nPatty Burns; (jr.)\u2014Gordon McLellan, Lorraine Hahert, Gail Hansen,\nEgg and spoon race (girls) \u2014\nPatty Burns, Lorraine Habert,\nGitli Sonnenburg: (hoys'\u2014Donald\nHabert, Doug Snyder, Lyle McLellan.\nSwimming and Water Safety\nClasses of the Community Programs Branch throughout West\nKootenay will start at Robson, July\n4, continuing to the 15th. Other\nplaces and dates:\nJuly 11-21 - Slocan City, 9:30\na.m.; Silverton, 11:30 a.m.; New\nDenver, 1:00 p.m.; Nakusp, 3:30\np.m.\nJuly IK-27 \u2014 Nelson-North Shore,\n9:00 a.m.; Balfour, 10:30 a.m.;\nAinsworth 1:30 pm; Procter.\n4:00 p.m.\nJuly 25 to August 5 - Soulh Slocan. 10:00 a.m.; Crescent Valley,\n10:00 a.m.: Rrtbson, 1:00 p.m.\nAugust S to August 17 \u2014 Kootenay Bay, 11:00 a.m.: Crawford\nBay, 1:00 p.m.; La France-Bos\nwell, 3:30 p.m.\nITALY'S TRADE\nItaly's adverse trade balance in\nthe first two months of I960\u2014excess of imports over exports\u2014\nwas 87 per cent higher than in\n1959.\nFurther information can ne had\nfrom your local recrealion commissions or J. R. McKeen, Recrealion\nConsultant, School Inspector's Office, Nelson, B.C.\nScott-Atwater\nOutboard Motors\nBail-n-Matic Ends Hand Hailing\nModern Electric\n\u00abay Ave. Phone 133\nTrail, B.C.\nPARSLOW'S\nGunsmiths - Locksmiths\nSporting Goods\n1319 Boy Ave.        Ph 1998\nTRAIL, B.C.\n*m\\mmmm*mmm*m%m\\m\\mmA\\m\\m\\mmm\\Mm\\m\\m\\mmAM\nPlayers Club\nElects Officers\nINVKHMKKK - Tho Lake Windermere Players al, the annua!\nmeeting held at Invermore re-elect\ned the Rev. Desmond Kirranitt, In\nvermere, a.s president and Mrs. R\nB. Harris ol Windermere as vice\npresident. The secretary is Mrs\nA, J. Dnbbie of Invermere and the\ntreasurer Mrs. Louis Xewhmiser o(\nAtha'lmer.\npjans for a three-act piny and at\nleast two one-act plays were made.\nA tfrmip lo consist of Mr. Kim-\nmitt,   Mrs.   Harris.  Tony   Holers,\nMrs. Koberl  Wark and Anhrey I\nYoung was appointed t<> read plays\n\u25a0for possible production.\nMom Whyte Opens\nBeach at Taghum\nMrs. Bertha \"Mom\" Whyte is\nopening a public beach at Taghum\non Friday wilh tenting space avail\nahle plus a booth where hot dogs\nand cold dunks can be purchased.\nTlie area is leneed olf and broken\nglass has been cleaned up. Workers\nare busy cleaning the glass from\nlhe   water   at   the   beach.\nThe family will lie moving down\nto the beach from Blewett to carry\nout their business.\nShoe race (senior)\u2014Patty Burns,\nLyle McLellan, Nancy Sinclair;\n(jr.)\u2014Lorraine Habert, Doug Snyder, Gail Hansen.\nNovelty race (girls)\u2014Nancy Sinclair, Heidi Sonnenburg, Gitti Sonnenburg; <boys>\u2014Eva Sonnenburg,\nDavid Snyder, Lyle McLellan.\nFour corner relay\u2014Lyle McLel\nlan, Patty Burns, Lorraine Hahert,\nGail Hansen and Doug Snyder.\nThree-legged race (senior! \u2014\nPatty Burns and Heidi Sonnenburg.\nDavid Snyder and Gordon McLellan, Lorraine Habert and Patsy\nSirak: 'junior' \u2014 Nancy Sinclair\nand Heidi Sonnenhurg, Diane Hansen and Eva Sonnenburg; Brad\nHartland and Peter Sonnenburg.\nOfficial Flag\nTo Return to\nCreston  Village\nCRESTON In an unofficial\nannouncement Premier Bennett\n\"has stated that he will return the\nB.C. official flag, displayed here\nwtien the cabinet met recently in\nsession, to Oreston. This was the\nfirst time the flag was unfurled\non the mainland of the province\nsince it was adopted in the early\nyears of the century, lt is expected copies will he available soo.n for\nother communities and government\n\u25a0buildings.\nSummer Discounts on:\nGREENHIU\t\nWESTERN MONARCH\nCANMORE Briquettes\nPHONE  889\nCoal\nTOWLER\nFuel & Transfer\n\u25a01*  -W-'-\n^     ON  PARADE! . *\n-V Brand new, last-stepping members ot the Kodak Camera Parade)\n\"k      Color slides, color prints, black-and-white shots.\ncoL0R s4\u00bbes shoot Anytime!\nColor Prints . . . black-and-white *\nThey're all caty wilh a\nV|   BROWNIE\nStarflex\nCamera\n$12.95\nAlso in complete gilt outfit\nIndoors or out . , . color or\nblack-and-whitel\nBROWNIE\niStarflash\nCamera\n$10.95\nComplete Outfit $12.45\nBig Selection ot Kodak Cameras BBSH  I B'S Selection ol Kodak Cameras\nPicture it NOW \\\nSee it again and again    \"^\nGET\n>\"\\. if #1R M llf    \\u\nKODAK\nBrownie 8 ca^UM7\nHERE! *ll-tim\u00ab low price...      \"7,95\nFilm-Finishing Headquarters\nHi-Fi and Stereo Recordings\n394 Baker St.        NELSON, B.C. Phone 889\nHAZLEWOOD DRUGS LTD\nPrescriptions.\nStalionerv. Toiletries, Books\n943 Spokane St.     Phone 11\nTrail,   B.C.\nFAMILIAR   STATUE\nTin- lowering Statue of Liberty\nin   New   York  harbor,   a   Rift  of\nl;he  French people,   was  shipped\nacross tlie Atlantic in 1885.\nCOME IN ... Let Us INTODUCE you to the NEW 1960\nGENERAL^ ELECTRIC F I LT E R- F LO\nWRINGER WASHER\nA General Electric exclusive. Moving, metal\nfilter catches every speck 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\never.\nThis new activator is perforated to give the\nfastest drainage of any wringer washer \u2014\nan dthe 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.\nr\u00a3\nYou'll end washday worries forever with this new\nG-E Filter-F lo\nWringer Washer\u2014\nand the cost? Just\na few dollars\nd o w n \u2014 t- a k e\nmonths to pay.\nGENERAL\u00ae ELECTRIC\nWRINGER WASHERS\nAs\nLow\nAs .\nWITH\nTRADE\n,\\t*p\nNELSON ELECTRIC\nPhone 260\nCO. LTD.\nNelson, B.C.\nGENERAL\nELECTRIC\n574 Baker St.\n WmW**^\n^^^^^^^~>\u00bb~-\u2014\n-^-^_^_^^-^^^^\n..^\u25a0\u00bb;*,i^i;j5v.^.j\u00bbv^,iiji!ii|B,ii,j;wi|jjp\nNrlBim Haily Nfitia\nEstablished April 22, 11X12 Nelson   8C.\nPublished by the NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n266 Bi4l:oi Street. Nolaon. Britilh Columbia, mornings except\nSundays and holidays to the centre ot the Kootenays with\nthe largest dally oLculation in the Interior el B.C.\nAuMonzcd ai Second Class Mall. Post Olfico DtputMttt, Ottawa.\nC.  W.  RAMSDEN,  Publisher.\nA. W. GIBBON. Editor.\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN  DAILV  NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS'  ASSOCIATION\nMEMBER OF THE AUDIT  BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS\nThe Canadian Press 13 exclusively entitled to the use lor republication ol all news\ndispatches credited to it or to The Associated Press or Reuters in this\npaper, and also the local news published therein.\nThursday, June 30, 1980        ~\nRecreation Program Filh Need\nBoredom can afflict children as well\nas adults. The day after school was out\none boy remarked lo his parents, \"Here\nlt is fifteen minutes past one and I'm\nbored already.\" He is not lhe only\nchild to find life is not always pleasant\nwhen there is nothing to be done. The\nlistless altitude of many of them shows\nthat Ihey don't know what lo do next.\nIt was not always so. Perhaps children were not so fortunate in past\nyears. They had chores to do, and not\nall the day long for themselves. If engaged in doing nothing or playing,\nthey were quick to duck out of sight\nif an adult appeared.\nNeedless to say, the youngsters of\nthose days became alert and resourceful, with a strong disposition not to let\nadults know they were around. If they\nhad a chance to be idle they rejoiced\nIn lt, and if Ihey wanted to play they\nhad no difficulty in finding a game\nwithout asking mother or having an\nadult to supervise them. Indeed, supervision was the last thing they wanted,\nand a great many of their games the\nadults definitely frowned upon.\nProgress has caught the children up\nin its net, as it has the rest of the population. Thanks to our expanding civilization, they have no chores lo do.\nMost people are happiest If there\nIs something they have to do, and\nchildren especially need part of their\ntime to be under direction. Thus the\nprogram of summer play initiated by\nRecreation Director Ernie Gare fills a\ngreat need.\nThere is something for every child;\narts and handicrafts, athletics and\ngames, music and dancing, drama and\nspecial events. Youth calls to youth,\nand all of this will be handled by high\nschool students who have been training especially for this. Additional\nadults will be needed at limes to help\nwith special programs.\nThe four playgrounds are well distributed through the city, and each is\nin easy reach so that children should\nnot have far to go lo join in the activities. Parents should urge their children\nlo attend regularly and participate to\nthe full.\nIt is regrettable that there are\nno swimming pools available. The\nglamor of summer is lost if there is no\nwater for children to play in. Whatever\nthe cost, pools must be provided. That\nat the Uphill playground should be\nmade Ihis year, and the Gyro Pool put\nback into operation for next year's use.\nInterpreting the News\nBy WILLIAM L. RYAN\nNEW YORK (AP) \u2014 China's Communist leaders, in a sullen mood, may\nhave been planning a military venture\nin Asia and have been balked by Soviet Premier Khrushchev,\nRecent torrents of argument and\nInnuendo emanating from Moscow,\nPeking, and the Communist world\nstrengthen a suspicion that this is the\ncase.\nIn violent exchanges, the Chinese\nby implication accused Khrushchev\nand the Kremlin of impeding further\nCommunist conquests. Retorting, the\nKremlin seemed to accuse Peking of\nrecklessly endangering the whole\nworld movement.\nKhrushchev's arguments seem to\nhave prevailed for now, and to hove\nrallied support from Soviet and European Communists. But the quarrel is\nfar from ended\nPointedly, Chinese politburo member Peng Cheng, addressing the recent\nRomanian Communist congress, reminded Khrushchev that Moscow is\npledged to view any attack on Red\nChina as an attack on the whole Communist camp.\nOne can speculate that Peking\nforesaw a possibility of armed conflict\nwith the U. S. Possibly Peking planned\nto move against Formosa, an attack\nwhich would involve the U. S\nRecent Peking activities could\nhave been preparation for such action. The week of June 21-28 officially was \"hate the United States week\"\nin Red China. The propaganda and\nmilitary shows were violent.\nKhrushchev may have scented\ndanger. Suddenly, a wide-ranging\nCommunist wrangle erupted over Lenin's precept thot war between communism and capitalism is inevitable\nKhrushchev laid down his line:\nThere must be no divergent views in\ninterpreting questions of the world revolution; world war is not inevitable,\nbecause of today's conditions; communism must win the world by other\nmeans, though none could soy just\nwhen or how\nPeking reacted violently to such\ntalk. All this, it said, could disrupt the\nCommunist movement. Those preaching peaceful competition with capitalism, said Peking, \"have set the struggle for world peace against the movement for national independence and\ndemocracy.\"\nj The Communist world leadership\nnow is involved in explaining the quarrel to the rank and file and to the\nworld. The argument may prove decisive for the future of the monolithic\nworld movement.\nBack to the Bicycle\nTo cope with automobile traffic in\nthe next 10 or 20 years, Canada is\ngoing to need an enormously expanded and improved network of highways\nand streets.\nBut this is Ihe only car-using country, Michael Jacot writes in the Imperial Oil Review, lacking a national\nauthority that plans, co-ordinates and\nfinances roads. (Ottawa has paid for\nparts of the Trans-Canada highway\nbut this is not a significant fraction of\nIhe aggregate total national mileage.)\nWith five million cars, Canada has\nabout 500,000 miles of traffic arteries\nof all types; if everyone look to the\nroad at the same time, there would\nbe one car for every 180 yards.\nBut 90 per cent of the country's\nautomobiles are concentrated on just\n10,000 miles of roadway in about a\ndozen big cities. If these cars were all\nout at once, as Ihey often seem to be\nduring daily rush hours and holiday\nweekends, there would be one for\nevery 11.5 feel of roadway\u2014a physical\nimpossibility since the average car\ntakes more room than that.\nToday's traffic jams and delays are\nsure to get worse before they Improve.\nMotor vehicle registration doubled in\nIhe last 10 years. Should it double\nagain ln the next decade, the existing\nroad system will be hopelessly inadequate. If it's not improved, urban people will have to move forward to the\nhelicopter or back to the bicycle.\nAssuming that motor cars won't\nperish with the dinosaur, the question\nis whether road-building is now, or\nsoon will be, beyond the financial resources oi the provinces. Highways,\nunder the BNA Act, are their business\nexclusively; but modern travel may\nhave made Ihe BNA Act, in this respect as it is in others, out of date.\n\u2014Financial Posl.\nLetters to The\nEditor\nLetters to the editor on any topic ol\ngenuine interest are welcome if they\nare bnet, accurate and fair. They\nmay be published over a nom de\nplume, but the name ot the writer\nmust be given to the Editor aa evidence ol good faith. Anonymous letters go into the wastepaper basket\nTypewritten letters must be double-\nspaced.\nCastlegar  Congratulates\nTrail  Ladies' Team\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u2014At the West Kootenay Mine Safety\nAssociation's 14th Annual Mine Rescue and\nFirst Aid Competitions held at the Cominco\nArena In Trail on Saturday, June 18, last, it\nwas announced that the Castlegar St. John\nladies' team consisting ol Mesdames L. Pop-\noff (captain), L. Osochoff, P. Andersen, C.\nStadler and P. Bartsoff had placed second in\nthe Senior Ladies' Open event and were\nawarded second prizes.\nSubsequent to this, a letter was received\nfrom the secretary of the association stating\nthat an error had been made in reading out\nthe results, and that the Trail ladies had\nplaced second and the Castlegar ladies had\nplaced third. The association decided that\nthe Castlegar ladies would retain their prizes\nand that the Trail ladies would receive duplicate prizes.\nAs coach ol the Castlegar St. John ladies'\nteam, I wish to state on behalf of our team\nthat we feel that where a genuine error has\nbeen made it i.s only fair that it i.s corrected.\nand we offer our congratulation to Ihe Trail\nladies' team.\nI would like to add that this was the first\ntime our team had entered any competition,\nand the fact they placed third in the senior\nladies' open event speaks well of their prowess. They are a credit to the high standard\nof first aid work in the Kootenays and lo the\nInstructors of the Castlegar St. John Ambulance Centre.\nROBERT RIVERS.\nBox 694, Castlegar, B. C.\nTwo Old Rivals Aim\nFor Top Congo Job\nWhy Ignore\nThe Warnings?\nTo stay solvent, a businessman\nheeds economic danger signals, takes\nperiodic Inventory and, il necessary,\nshakes up his whole organization to\nkeep his business healthy.\nWhy doesn't he pay as much attention to his personal health? Health\ndanger signals don't go away on Iheir\nown accord any more than economic\ndanger signals. They spell trouble\nahead. '\nThe cost of ignoring health care is ,\nenormous. FP's special report in this j\nissue\u2014the first ever prepared in Can- i\nada on the big business of health \u2014\nestimates the national health bill is !\na staggering $3500 million a year or'\n$200 for every Canadian.\nBut if we spend all these millions\non remedial care, why don't we spend\nmore on preventive medicine? Canadians should, in short, pay more attention to keeping lit.\nAnd it's largely a matter of education and habit. Nothing takes the place\nof physical check-ups. Why wait lor\npolio to strike a city before lining up\nfor free \"polio shots? Why invite a\nserious cancer by ignoring warnings?\n\u2014Financial Posl.\nBRUSSELS, Belgium (API-\nTwo old rivals lor political leadership in the Belgian Congo are\nteaming up in the top Jobs when\nthat big Alrican territory gains\nindependence Thursday.\nThe premiership goes to Patrice Lumumba, 34, and the\npresidency to Joseph Kasavubu,\n42. They are both firm nationalists, but dissimilar in physical\nappearance and outlook.\nLumumba, shrewd, fiery chiei\nof the National Congolese Movement, won the premiership\u2014the\nexecutive post \u2014 as chief of a\ncoalition claiming 84 votes in the\nnew 137-seat House of Represent\natives.\nKasavubu, whose Abako party\nholds 12 seats, accepted the figurehead presidency after it was\nproved he couldn't become premier.\nHere are profiles of the two\nmen:\nLumumba\nLumumba Is a slim, goateed\nmember of the Batetela tribe.s.\nwidely spread throughout lhe\nCongo, thich were described by\nan early Belgian explorer as\n\"renowned for their bravery, tall\nand handsome.\" He wears\nglasses with thick lenses.\nHis European - style wardrobe\ni.s reputedly Ihe best amor\u00bbg\nthose of African leaders He is\nmarried  and has  three  children.\nA (flOO-a-month clerk for 11\nyears at the post office al Stanleyville, on the Congo Itiver just\nbelow Stanley Falls, he was sentenced in 1956 to two years'\nimprisonment for embezzlement\nEmerging, he worked briefly lor\na brewery, then quit to devote\nhimself  fully to politics.\nLate last year he was jailed\nlyiefly by a Stanleyville court\nfor causing riols during his\nparty's congress.\nLumumba is unpredictable.\nA lew years ago, he appeared\nwith a gang of demonstrators\nbrandishing signs  reading:\n\"Down with the minister of\ncolonies, down wilh the genera!\ngovernor. The Congo of the hula\nmatari (the white chief 1 is\ndead.\"\nNow he asks Africans to\nrespect white persons and properties and promises friendship to\nBelgium and the Belgians.     1\nEuropeans who know him well\nsay Lumumba will accept assist-\na n c e, financial or otherwise,\nfrom anyone he sees fit. including Communists, but Ihey must\nexpect little from him in return.\nLumumba is a nationalist first\nnf all.\nKasavubu\nKasavubu is short, bulky and\nso quiet he has a reputation as\na mystery man.\nHe i.s married and has seven\nchildren.\nRorn in 1917 in the Lower\nCongo area of Maynmbe, not far\nfrom the Congo River's mouth on\nthe Atlantic, Kasavubu is a\ndescendant of Chinese coolies\nimported lo build Ihe Molndi-\ntuaos.\nleopoldville   railway   in   the   late\nHe studied for the Roman\nCatholic priesthood near Lulua-\nbcurg in the Kasai province, but\nsoon decided the white cotton\nrobes of the African clergy were\nnot for him.\nHe got a job in 1942 as a clerk\nin the Leopoldville government\noffices, then created the Abadko\nCultural Movement of Lower\nCongo Africans which became\nthe first important Congolese\npolitical party.\nKasavubu was the first African\nleader lo raise his voice against\nBelgian rule. He was the first to\ndemand a constitutional assembly to prepare for independence\nfor the Congo, a territory of\n904.737 square miles and a population  of   U.SOO.OOO.\nllelgian authorities said Kasavubu planned an attempt tn\noust the Belgian government by\nforce in early 1959, but dynamite\nhe had prepared exploded prematurely.\nSoviet Automation Results\nSurprise Western Experts\nBy STANLEY JOHNSON\nMOSCOW (API - Western experts say they are flabbergasted\nby Soviet achievements in automation.\n\"They will really get way\nahead unless we buckle down to\nwork,\" said one British authority attending the first International Congress on Automation In\nMoscow.\nTiie British visitors said the\nRussians had used a \"leap frog\ntechnique\" \u2014 skipping intermediate oteps the West had to\nmake\u2014in their development of\nautomatic devices for compulation and control systems in\nindustry.\n\"They sat down to think for\nfive or six years and now lhe\nresult of Ihis thought is beginning to pay off,\" said one visitor\nONLY   MIT  COMES  CLOSE\nThe consensus of Westerners\nafter a tour of the Soviet Institute of Automation and Telemechanics was thai it was far\nahead  of  arrylhirrg  in  the   West,\nwith only the Massachusetts Institute of Technology remotely\napproaching the standards of the\nRussian institute.\n\"We've been a bit shattered,\"\nsaid one Western delegate to the\nthis level had been reached.\"\nWhat called forth the pany-\ngerics are Russian sell-optimlv\ning systems, now in production,\nand pneumatic computing instruments, neither of which, the\nexperts said, have been achieved\nin the We.st.\nTlie first of these is basically\na self - correcting control system\nwhich automatically seeks the\noptimum level. The Russians ara\nusing it to control temperatures\nin sleel mills and also to keep\npower in radio transmitters at\nthe most efficient level.\nThe pneumatic computers have\nno moving parts and thus are\nmore reliable than the electronic\ndevices used in Ihe West. They\nalso can be safely used in such\nplaces as chemical plants where\nelectronic controls would be hazardous.\nHow To Deal With Your Tensions\nGems of Thought\nIt's when you're safe at home that you\nwish you were having an adventure. When\nyou'r: having an adventure you wish you\nwere safe at home\u2014 Thornton)Wilder.\nFreedom From War\nThe thoughtful, able and civilized\nAdlai Stevenson may or may nol run\nfor the Democratic nomination, but his\nrecent speech deriding the Republican\nimplication thai it is impossible to\nnegotiate with Soviet leaders is one\nof the few sensible things we've heard\non this vital subject for quite awhile [\nnow. He wisely said:\n\"We shall have lo talk and bargain\nwith the Communist countries for years\nand years to come. Instead of worrying about what Russia will do, let's\nconcentrate on what we can do next.\"\nHe suggesls:\n1. Forging a NATO deterrent power\nthat does not depend on \"budget\nbureaucrats.\" Mr. Diefenbaker, who\nwent to Washington lo discuss this\nvery matter, could only agree.\n2. Creating an Atlantic Council lo\nstrengthen the Western alliance as a\npolitical and economic community.\n3. Organizing a mighty free world\neffort lo aid under-developed countries\nwith goals other lhan merely stopping\nthe Communists.\n4. Creating a permatient, special\npeace and disarmament agency under\nthe Secretary ol Slate \"as a symbol\nof our determination to lead the world\naway from madness.\"\nStevenson's fresh and positive approach to the real issues of our\ntroubled times deserve serious attention from Ihe next U.S. president whoever he is.\u2014financial Posl.\nGaitskell Wins\nBig Vole of\nConfidence\nLONDON (Reuters) - Labor\nparty leader ttu&j uaUsKeu wu.i\na massive voie ol commence\nirom leuow socialist iegisiator.s\nWednesday despite left wing at\ntacks on his delonce policy\nTlie official count at tlie end of\na closed door meeting was given\nas 179 for Gaitskell, seven\nagainst and  18 abstentions.\nThe Labor Parliamentarians\nmet after left wing socialists\nwithin the party bitterly criticized Gaitskell's 6tand on unclear\namiamenl and called for his\nresignation.\nGaitskell's defence policy urgr--\nBrltain. since it has abandoned\nits own long-range Blue Streak\nrocket, to rely entirely on the\nUnited States to supply the mi-\nclear armory for western do\nfence.\nTbe leader's critics have\ndemanded the Labor party support unilateral nuclear disarmament,\nOunL Phi\nixUM\n'This is the fifth in a scries by\nDr, George Stevenson, noted authority on mental health problems. >\nBy PR. GEORGE S. STEVENSON\nIn the last few articles, we've\nbeen dealing with positive action\nwhich must be taken to help our\nemotional   problems.   Here  are  a\nfew more suggestions.\nGO EASY WITH YOUR CRITICISM: Some people expect too\nmuch of others, and then feel frustrated, let down, disappointed.\neven \"trapped\" when another person does not measure up. The\n\"other person\" may he a wife, a\nhusband or a child whom we are\ntrying to fit into a preconceived\npattern \u2014 perhaps even trying to\nmake over to suit ourselves. Remember, each person has his own\nvirtues, his own shortcomings, his\nown values, his own right to\ndevelop ;is an individual. People\nwho feel let down by the shortcomings (real or imagined) of\ntheir relatives, are really let down\nahout themselves. Instead of being\ncritical about the other persons'\nbehaviour, search out the good\npoints and help him to develop!\nthem. Tins will give both of you1\nsatisfaction, and help you lo gam|\na belter perspective on yourselfi\nas well.\nGIVE TUP: OTHER FELLOW A;\nBREAK: When people are under \u25a0\nemotional tension they often feel I\nUiat Ihey have to \"get there first\" j\n\u2014 lo edge out Ihe other person.\nno mailer if the goal is as trivia!\nas getting ahead on Lhe highway.\nIf enough of us feel that way \u2014\nand many of us do \u2014 then everything becomes a race in which'\nsomebody is bound to get injured\u2014\nphysically, as on lhe highway, or!\nemotionally and mentally, in the[\nendeavour lo live a full life. It,\nneed not be this way Competition'\nis contagious, bill so is cooperation. |\nWhen you give the oilier fellow a J\nbreak, you very often make things |\neasier for yonself; if be no longer!\nfeels you are a threat to him, he\nstops being a Ihreal to yon.\nMAKE YOURSELF \"AVAIL-]\nABLE,\": Many of us have the feeling that we arc being \"left out.\"\nslighted, neglected, rejected. Often,\nwe jusl imagine that other people\nfeel Ihis way ahout us. when in\nreality they are eager for us to\nmake lhe firsl move. It may be\nwe,  not   the  others,   who  are  de*\nBelgium and\nCongo Sign\nNew Treaty\nLEOPOLDVILLE    iAP>   -    A\ntreaty   of   friendship   and   assistance was signed here  Wednesday I\nbetween Belgium and Ihe Belgian j\nCongo,   which   is   becoming  inde- !\npendant Thursday. The trealy  is\nsubject lo approval by the Congo\nParliament.\nNo   details   were   immediately\nI announced, but the pact's provi-\n| sions are believed to cover such\nmailers   as   continuance   of   Belgian economic aid and the future\nrole  here  of  some  Belgian  civil\nservants.\nMeanwhile, troubles of an international character were brewing\nfor the new republic. Foreign\nMinister Justin Rom-boko told a\nreporter the Union of South Af- j\nrica has been informed that its\npresence at the independence\nceremonies \"would be urvwel-\ncom.\"\nRomhoko said the decision was\nmade by the cabinet following\ncriticism in both houses of Parliament nf Soulh Africa's strict\nracial  segregation  policies.\nFulherl Youlou. president of\nthe Cnn^n Republic, a former\nFrench territory across the\nriver, has protested this country's choice of the same name\n\u25a0predating ourselves. Instead of\nshrinking away and withdrawing,\nit is much healthier, as well as\nmore practical, to continue to\n\"make yourself available\" \u2014 to\nmake seme of the overtures instead of always waiting to he\nasked. Of course, the opposite of\nwithdrawal is equally futile: to\npush yourself forward on every occasion. This is often misinterpreted\nand may lead to real rejection,\nThere is a middle ground. Try it.\nSCHEDULE YOUR RECREATION: Many people drive themselves so hard that they allow\nthemselves   too    little   time   for\nrecreation \u2014 an essential for good\nphysical and mental health. They\n\u2022find it hard to make themselves\ntake time out. For such people a\nset routine and schedule will help\n\u2014 a program of definite hours\nwhen they will engage in soma\nrecreation. And in general it a\ndesirable for almost everyone to\nhave a hobby that absorts him in\noff hours \u2014 one into which he can\nthrow himself completely and with\nplea-sure, forgetting all about his\nwork.\nThe next article of this series\nwill explain the philosophy oi\nmental health.\n.'ilMIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIItlinHllllllllllllllinillllllllMltllMIMIHIItinilHIIMIIII^\n9 9 ~\nIt's Kate's fault You can't drink\nwith a fellow to be a good sport\n'til'I you get him hooked and then\nexpect him to quit when youiland\nhim. T\nj      Horoscope      j\naiimiiimmiiiiii gv  Frances  Drake  ||||\"l\"||\"i|\"mtf\nLook in the section in whioh youri (Scorpio) \u2014 Sympathize with, but\nbirthday   comes,   and   find   what ] be   not   unwisely   intrigued   into,\nyour outlook is, according to tbe j others'    problems.    Your   affairs\nstars. i need   accuracy,   efficiency;   keep\nFor Friday, July 1, lOfitl        i fit,   keep  healthful  hours.   Watoh\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 20 i Aries) \u25a0 leanings; eat sensibly.\n- Use your wits and good humor' NOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER\nto break through day's obstacles 21 'Sagittarius) \u2014 Vindictiveness\nand impasses. Be not harnessed to: in lhe air. Pettiness, finding fault\nrigidness; yet also prize and pro-; likely, so be your innately big self,\nleet rational rules, common-sense1 not letting annoyances affect effort\nmethods. lor disposition: correct errors thus\nAPRIL 21 (o MAY 21 (Taurus*- easier.\nVenus' aspect urges strengthening! DECEMBER 22 to JANUARY 20\nforces against intimidation, pessi- (Capricorn) \u2014 Wishing to avenge\nmism and inadequacy. Alarm,[old hurts, unforgiving attitude may\ndoubts can lake a useless toll If; meet you at unexpected turns.\nyou permit. j Don't heed it's wily misleading. Be\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 'Gemini)\u2014I above it, smiling, busy, thinking\nSteady, consistent endeavor brn-1 about the good things,\nportant now i il usually is', the: JANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY 19\nopposite will tempt. Waiting till I (Aquarius) \u2014 Planet Uranus in\nlast moment to gel things done. I favorable aspect suggests getting\ntrying to do too much affect efforts! at duties and extra plans early,\nadversely. j staying   with   them   more  assifhi-\nJUNE 22 to JULY 23 'Cancer'\u2014 \u25a0 misly. You may uncover fresh\nWhy nol completely slop lo re- quantities to toll up assets,\nview, go over methods, and ot.hers'j FEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\nsuggestions? You may find one; (Pisces) \u2014 Waiting till matters\nvaluable alternative, and it alone have calmed down is best for\nIs worth the delay. But no fussy j action in some respects. But don't\ndawdling ! j hesitate to act where losses could\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23 < Leo)\u2014 be sustained by delaying. Say \"no\"\nA day for extra verve, also to where you should,\nstress personal dignity and reserve, j YOU BORN TODAY: Cancer,\nSeek correct answers; act upon j variable, determined, inquisitive,\nwise rules, carefully determined sensitive, imaginative; conserva-\ntactics. You could make mistakes live, also able to work on and\nif too quick. I develpo the original.  Don't make\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER 23] self and loved ones feel badly\n(Virgo' \u2014 The straight and true'through bickering, dissension, you\npath, under calm, unbiased think-j don't intend this. Work hard main*\ning: observing regulations, dis-! taining the harmony you prize,\ncharging duties with restraint andj And shun jealousy. Could succeed\nbest performance are expected, as politician, writer, home-maker,\nwill he highly honored. 1 nurse,  companion,  secretary, his-\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER torian. May like old things, my-\n23 iLibra) \u2014 \"Envy is a pain oftsterious places. Adept at outdoor\nmind that successful men cause sports, you may not indulge them\nIheir neighbors \" So zn' forward: much. Don't dwell on ills; use daily\nwith your natural stimulus, buti your great gifts, you will succeed\nexpecting opposition And under- with nobility. Birthdate of: George\nstand, he compassionate. j Sand. l!>th century French novelist\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMRER 22! and playwright.\nHUBERT\nUNCULTIVATED   LAND\nNearly 80 per cent of the land\ntotal in East and West Pakistan\nis either uncultivated, forested or\nunproductive land.\n\"He doesn't LOOK like the outdoor type, doe-sie?\nBet lua wife's relatives ara visiting,'*     f\n \\\u00ab \u25a0     ..\"     ' \"\u25a0     !     ' ~      ;    \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0   .,\u2022-:.;\u2014\u25a0 \u2022\u25a0-\u25a0.:.\u25a0;      ' \"\\ '. \u2022'\u25a0'    ' ;\u25a0      ..:':'\"      ~ Tfl! :\u2014' \u25a0 '\u25a0 WH&M\n^foztt M& Jaw\/L\nPHONE  1844\nDr. and Mrs. John Brumimitt\nwith their two sons, Michael and\nBruce, and daughter Susan were\nweekend visitors of Dr. Brum-\nmitt's parents, Dr. and Mrs. R.\nB. Brummitt, 820 Davies Street,\nand Mrs. Brummitt's parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. M. Pecash ol Ainsworth.\nThey were en rente to University\nof M-k-higan. at Ann Arbor where\nDr. Brummitt will teach while continuing his studies toward a fellowship in pediatrics. Since his graduation from University of British\nColumbia, Dr. Brummitt has spent\ntwo years at Vancouver General\nHospital and one year at Shaugh-\nnessy Military Hospital in Vancouver.\nVksdkvtagL\nfly. 3mUicl (dh&sdsA\nMr. and Mrs. Colin Moir of Medicine Hat, who have spent the past\nmonth in Nelson visiting Mrs. A.\nE. Murphy of the North Shore, left\nfor tlieir home Wednesday morning.\n* *   *\nMiss Lynn Jones, Kerr Apartments, who has heen Home Economics teacher at the Nelson Junior High School, will leave next\nweek for Montreal, Smith America\namd then England. Miss Jones will\nmotor to Montreal with L. V, Rogers High School teacher, Miss Joan\nGallant, who will spend her holidays in Nova Scotia. After visiting\nrelatives in Montreal. Miss Jones\nwill travel through the Carihhean\nto South America and alter spending some time there will leave for\nher home in Liverpool.\n* *   *\nMr. and Mrs. James Bereau, 604\nSixth Street, have had as guests\nMatl Tul'ly of Lodi. Calif., and Mr.\nand Mrs. Craig Tally of Los Angeles.\n* *   *\nMr and Mrs J Ringheim and\ndaughters Donna, Ann and Brenda\nof Vancouver are visiting Mrs.\nRingheim's parents, Mr and Mrs.\nE. J. Leveque. 801 Fourth Street.\n* *   *\nMrs. N H. Collrtl was presented with a farewell gift from beauty\ncounsellors al tiheir last meeting\nat tlie home of Mrs. E. W. Kuhn,\n512 Innes Street, Ihis week. Mrs\nCollett is leaving for Grand Forks\nJuly 4 to join her husband.\nGAY  GARDEN  SPREAD\nYear 'round hobby ! Multicolor\nmedallions are light to hold\u2014ideal\nfor thrifty accessories.\nMake a gay, multicolor scarf,\ndresser set, bedspread. Use all\nyour scraps of string for these\n5-inch flower medallions. Pattern\n790: crochet directions.\nSend THIRTY-FIVE CENTS in\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern to Laura Wheeler,\nNDN, 60 Front St. W., Toronto\nPrint plainly PATTERN NUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS.\nNew! New! New! Our 1960 Laura\nWheeler Needlecraft Book is ready\nNOW! Crammed with exciting, unusual, popular designs to crochet,\nknit, sew, embroider, quilt, weave\n\u2014fashions, home furnishings, toys,\ngifts, bazaar hits. In the book\nFREE \u2014 3 quilt patterns. Hurry,\nsend 25 cents for your copy\nNew Denver\nMr. and Mrs. James Draper were\nNanaimo visitors. Mr. Draper attended magistrates convention.\nThey also spent Uie weekend in\nVictoria and Ganges visiting with\nfriends.\nMr. and Mrs. .1. Pedley of Burnaby were guests for a week of\ntheir son and daughter-in-law, Mr.\nand Mrs. S. J. Pedley and three\n-children.\nKeith Wilson of RCA, Edmonton,\nand his friend Miss Jacqueline\nTigette of Edmonton, were visiting\nfor a week with his parents Mr.\nand Mrs, D. Wilson and his brothers before leaving for Vancouver to visit    relatives,\nBoswell Notes\nBOSWKLL - Dr, and Mrs, Marcus Bach of Iowa, have arrived\nhere to spend the summer at their\nhome on the lake.\nHerb Webb and daughter Diane.\nwith her friend, Miss Janet Winter.\nof Edmonton. Alta., are spending\nI a vacation here.\nJ    Mrs.  Frank   Polio  and  children\nj of Cranbrook are spentii'iu a few\ndays  with  her   parents,   Mr.   and\nMrs. E. Whitney.\nRCMP CONSTABLE AND MRS. WALTER THOMAS  McAULEY of Burnaby.\nRCMP Scarlet Coats Worn at\nMcAuley-Davis Wedding Party\nSOUTH SLOCAN \u2014 Full dress uniform of the Royal\nCanadian Mounted Police worn by men of the wedding\nparty added a note of brilliance to the bridal procession at\nthe afternoon marriage ceremony uniting Elizabeth Dianne\nDavis of Nelson and South Slocan and RCMP Constable\nWalter Thomas McAuley of Trail and McAuley, Man.\nSt. Matthew's Anglican Church was scene of the service read by Rev. Canon W. J. Silverwood for the daughter\nof Mr. and Mrs. Douglas J. Davis of South Slocan and the\nson of Mr. and Mrs. Eric J.\nMcAuley of McAuley, Man.\nThe attractive bride was smartly\ngowned in a princess-style white\nballerina-length lace dress with\nscalloped neckline and three-quarter length sleeves. Her fingertip\nveil of illusion net was held by\na cap of seed pearls, and her bouquet  of scarlet roses  provided a\n.\"\u2022\u00bb'\u25a0!\u25a0\u25a0'.\u25a0,-\u25a0,,   '\u25a0:..   -.;.;.,.\u25a0:-.*     -\u25a0 *\u2122,*,r^.^.;\/-fU***Jv^i^-\u00bbf^VV^m,?;';;V.-' \u25a0\u25a0!....\u2022;\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, JUNE 30, 1960 \u2014 5\nFuture Met Star Determined\nTo Make the Top Rung Fast\nfurquoiseiorganza gown topped with\na jacket featuring three-quarter\nlength sleeves. Her accessories\nwere white, and she carried a\nbouquet of yellow carnations.\nFlower  girl   Devon   Dayman  of\nNelson  carried  a  basket  ol   pink\nand blue carnations, which complemented her pink organza frock,\nstriking  note\"of\" contrast\"'to~\"her    Scarlet-coated. RCMP Constable\nensemble, as did the uniforms ofi Roman Kostinsky of Castlegar sup-\nlhe bridegroom and his attendants.! por,ed lhe bridegroom as best man\nland   Constable   Donald   Silzer   of\nHer shoes were of white brocade,Trail was usher,\nsalin and she wore a single strand!    ,,      \u25a0\u25a0   n   \u201e ,    . , ,,\u201e,\nof pearls, a gift of the bridegroom. L Mfrs'  \"'  E,', Dalquut sang    Oh\n6   \u25a0      j Perfect Love    during the service\nMiss Donna Mae Trozzo of Cran-|    Pink wedding bells and vases of\nbrook, as maid of honor, wore a peonies, iris, columbine and green-\nerly ornamented No. 3 Plant Hall\nHarrop Girl Best\nGuide of Balfour\nFirst Company\nBALFOUR - Judy Anderson of\nHarrop was chosen best Guide of\nthe year at the closing meeting of I decorated in pink and white rose-\nfor the wedding reception.\nPINK AND WHITE DECOR\nThe bride and bridegroom were\nseated in front of an archway decorated with greenery and cedar\nboughs. A three-tiered wedding\ncake embedded in white tulle wa.\nDANISH  LANDMARK\nThe five - towered church of\nKalundborg in Denmark, built in\n1170, is still a prominent touri.st\nattraction of the town\nASK   FOR\nKOOTENAY\nBLEACH\n\"THE  FINEST\"\n(Dmaa. Up. UJiik\nTrtomian. VTlwdw.\nPrinted Pattern\nSummer Foofwear\nIs in the Spotlight\nat ANDREW'S\nThere is built-in comfort,\ncoolness and easy-care in the\nnew washable white leather\nshoes women are wearing with\na variety of styles and colors of\nskirts, dresses and suits this\nseason, The washable whites \u2014\nboth all-white and combinations\n\u2014 are available in smooth and\ngrained leather. Washable white\nleather shoes that come clean\nwith the swish of a damp, soapy\nsponge, are a valued and versatile addition to any shoe\nwardrobe.\nEasy on the eyes, new all-\nleather casual, dress and daytime shoes are easy on the feet\nas well. When the mercury\nsoars leather, a naturally porous material, allows the font to\n\"breathe.\" Fresh air comes into\nthe shoe right through the\nleather and keeps the foot bathed In dry, cooling air.\nA new Persian style influence\nis reflected in smooth leather\nlate aflernoon and evening\nshoes that show deep D'Orsay-\ncnt shell pumps wilh slim pointed toes and very high stiileto\nheels. The front of these new\nfeather-weight shoes frequently\nfeatures  a   pleated  effect.\nBursting in high key past-el\nshades nf orange, green, lilac,\nvetlow and Pior blue, new suede\nleather shoes add sparkle to\ncool summer ensembles. These\nsuede beauties either match\nsummer floral prints, nr give\ncolor highlight to all-white costumes. In the neutrals, bone\ncontinues to play a leading role.\nSee all the latest fashions in\nshoes at\nR. ANDREW\n& CO.\nLEADERS IN FOOTFASHION\nEst. since  1902\nthe First Balfour Guide Company\nat the home of Caplain Nora Nelson Satuiday, and was presented\nwith a compass.\nPresentations were also made to\nLynn McNown and Donna Kosma\nas host Guides in their patrols.\nFinal arrangements were made\nfor Guide Camp at Queen's Bay in\nJuly.\nPamela Rowley and Judy Anderson passed their Second Class First\nAid under Lhe direction of Mrs.\nM. Wellwood. Games were played, j\nled by Lieutenant Mrs. J. Houston,]\nand refreshments were served by\nthe girls.\nbuds, emphasiznig the pink and\nwhile decor motif of the hall. Pink\ntapers and vases of flowers were\narranged on the table. The cake\nwas decorated by Mrs. S. Fisher\nof South Slocan.\nAssisting the newlyweds in tiie\nreceiving line, the bride's mother\nwas gowned in a two-piece beige\nensemble with mauve accessories\nand mauve corsage. Mrs. McAuley\nchose navy blue lace for her son's\nwedding, with light blue corsage\nand  white  accessories.\nCanon Silverwood proposed a\nloast to the bride and the bridegroom proposed a toast to the'\nbridesmaids. The bride and bridegroom passed the wedding cake\nto their guests.\nFor a honeymoon trip to Spokane\nand district, the bride changed into\na pink sheath dress topped with a\nbolero, pink gloves, flowered hat\nand white accessories.\nBURNABY THEIR HOME\nThe newlyweds will make their\nhome in Burnaby. where the bridegroom has been transferred with\nthe RCMP. The bride has been\ntransferred from the Nelson branch\nof the Imperial Bank to the New\nWestminster  branch.\nOut of town guests at the wedding included the bride's grandmother. Mrs. A. Lees, and her\naunt, Miss H. Lees, of Vancouver;\nher brothers, RCN Petty Officer\nD. R. Davis pf Sidney, B.C., RCMP\nConstable d. J. Davis and Mrs.\nDavis of Winnipeg and RCMP Constable Bruce Davis of Canmore,\nAlia.; the bridegroom's parents,\nMr. and Mrs. E. J. McAuley of\nMcAuley, Man., and his brother\nand sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. L.\nMcAuley of Saskatchewan; also\nMiss  K.  Hare of Edmonton.\nOFFICERS   ELECTED\n11 ONT It E AL (CPi - G.H.\nGreenbough of Hamilton Tuesday\nwas elected president of the society of industrial and cost accountants of Canada. Members\nchosen to Ihe executive included\nA.P. Bowsner, Calgary, Alta.,\nand  R. Syme,  Winnipeg.\nRobson Notes\nROBSON - Mrs. A. Nixon and\ntwo sons are guests of her parents\nfor the summer while Mr Nixon is\nin Vancouver taking a course at\nUBC.\nMr. and Mrs. C. Tench of Rossland and Mr. and Mrs S. Gavrilik\nof Trail were Sunday guests of\nMrs. D. Gavrilik.\nMrs. D. Magee returned from\nher holidays after visiting many\nB.C. and U.S.A. points.\nMr. and Mrs. H. Johnson who\nspent the past week in Penticton.\nreturned borne Sunday evening.\nMr. and Mrs. Garry Hyson relumed home from tiheir honeymoon, and have taken up residence in Robson.\nBy BRUCE LEVETT\nCanadian  Press  Staff  Writer\nTORONTO (OP) - \"Teresa,\"\nthe interviewer wrote, \"is still\nclimbing the lower rung of an\nexceedingly tall ladder.\"\nBut Teresa doesn't agree\u2014she\nIs going to take the elevator or\nshe won't bother going.\nTeresa Stratas, tiny 21-year-old\nexplosive daughter of a Toronto\nGreek restaurant owner, has\ngiven the mighty Metropolitan\nOpera another two years to develop her to her potential.\n\"It's my one big criticism ot\nthe Metropolitan,\" she says.\n\"They are slow in developing\nNorth American artists. You\nmight make it in six or seven\nyears with them if you're lucky.\"\nFEW COMPLAINTS\nTeresa is just finishing the first\nyear of a three - year contract\nwith them.\n\"K, at the end of the three\nyears I'm not progressing according to my ability, I'll go\nsomewhere else \u2014 Europe, or\nHollywood, perhaps.\"\nSo far, she has few complaints.\n\"I have been assigned 25 roles\nfor next year. Most of them are\nan improvement over this year's\nroles.\"\nHer  favorite  role  is  Buttertly\n\u2014\"I love everything Puccini ever\nwrote\"\u2014the part she will sing in\nVancouver next month.\nDEBUT AS MIMI\n\"I love to do Madame Butterfly, but 1 wouldn't want to do it\nat the Met just yet. It's just too\nmuch to do at the Met \u2014 emotionally and vocally\u2014I guess it's\npsychological.\"\nIt was in another Puccini lead\n\u2014Mimi in La Bc'ieme\u2014that Teresa made her professional debut.\nShe was 19 when she gatecrashed the Toronto Opera Festival auditions and won the role.\nHer family gave her a small\ndog, named Mimi, to commemorate the event. She has had a canine   Mimi  with her  ever since.\n\"Today, this is Mimi,\" she\nsays, fondling a golden cocker\nspaniel. \"It's a shame he's a boy.\nDo you think it will give him a\ncomplex?\"\nThe five - foot, dark - haired\nbeauty\u2014she has been compared\nwith Maria Callas in looks and\ntemperament-\u2014has developed an\nintense personality which dominates any group she joins.\nMINOR ROLE\nThis quality has projected\nacross the Metropolitan stage to\ncritics and reviewers, such as\nthe one from Musical America,\nwho wrote:\n\"The role of Inez in II Trova-\ntore   is   a   minor   one,   but   she\nbrought an insight into the char-  Metropolitan  so  young\u2014\"In  five\nacter that took it completely out\nof the doldrums of being just another  lady-in-waiting.\"\nTeresa   says  she  realizes   how\nlucky she is to have reached the\nyears in a school, I couldn't\nlearn what I have learned in one\nyear at the Met. They are wonderful people and the finest\ncoaches in America.\"\nGET5,SET\n3*W\nFamily\nShoes\nCome, bring the family, you'll find all the\nnewest, smartest shoe styles for Mom, and the Girls,\nDad and  the  Boys .  .  .   Play and dress up shoes.\n411\nBaker Si.\nNelson,\nB.C.\n807\nBaker Si.\nCranbrook,\nB.C.\ncMILADY'S\nFASHIONS\nNew\nMaternity Wear\nFor the  Lady in Waiting\n\u2022fr Smart   2-Pc.   Dresses\n449 Baker Si.\nPastel Tops\nWashable Skirts\nPedal  Pushers\nNelson\nPhone 874\nCONFIDENTIALLY YOURS\n*?rr\">\\ \u2014by Byrne Hope Sanders\nMONTREAL, June 30th\u2014Going to Europe this\nsummer? . . . then there's one thing I heartily\nrecommend that you do at the same time you\nmake your reservations. Drop into your nearest BANK OF MONTREAL branch and ask for\nyour free copy of their new Currency Guide.\nIt's small enough to fit snugly into your nurse\n    or pocket and it tells you at a glance the dollar\nequivalents of no less than 11 European currencies. It also lists\nthe addresses of the B of M offices in London and Paris so you\ncan take advantage of the many B of M Travel Services. Hope\nto see you in Paris this summer\u2014at the B of M!\nCOOL, CRISP AND FRESH . . . salad greens are at their best\nright now. For perfect salads, simply add\nthe light and lively flavour of MIRACLE\nWHIP Salad Dressing. You see, Miracle\nWhip's flavour is unique in that it enhances\nother good flavours without overwhelming\nthem. This is just one of the reasons for\nits popularity . . . Miracle Whip is so popular that it's always fresh on your grocer's\nshelves! Buy Miracle Whip in the economical 32-ounce jar . . ,\nand for exciting salad ideas, write for the free booklet \"Salads'\n\u2014to the Information Division, Canadian Department of Agriculture, Ottawa. \t\nHERE I AM with some wonderful news for all you who like Saltines\nreally crisp! And of course that's the way\nSaltines should be\u2014Yes, I am talking about\nMcCORMICK'S VERY THIN SALTINES -\ncrisp \u2014 fresh \u2014 never too salty and so deli-\nciously thin! McCormick's Very Thin Saltines\nare inner-wrapped in individual quarter pound\nsections \u2014 and their fresh, just right flavour\nis protected by a special \"flavour-guard\"\nInner Pack. Yes, McCormick's Saltines are\nalways delicious, yet cost no more than ordinary crackers. Try\nMcCormick's Saltines in the pound or convenient new half pound\nsize \u2014 You'll love them \u2014 I do'\nA HEALTHY, FULL-GROWN DOG needs just one good, well-\nbalanced meal a day. That's why I recommend Dr. Ballard's BURGERBITS Dog Food!\nActually, Burgerbits beats meat for nourishment ... has twice the value of prime beef\nat half the cost! With those crunchy, munchy\nchunks appetized with rich pan drippings, Dr.\nBallard's Burgerbits is a dog's lull-course meal\nwith appetite appeal PLUS!\nEVEN IN THE WARMEST WEATHER shopping chores must be\ndone, and so often it's the feet that suffer.\nNow more than ever you'll want to make sure\nthat your feet are free from painful corns. At\nthe first sign of trouble, simply reach for\nFREEZONE. a soothing liquid preparation\nthat relieves pain as it removes corns. It's\neasy to use . . . follow the simple directions\non the bright yellow package. Just a few\ndrops on the corn and pain fades away. The\ncorn lifts off completely in a few days without\ncutting or having to apply bulky plasters. I suggest you buy\nFreezone and keep your feet free from corns the year 'round!\nBE PREPARED for hay fever season! If you are a hay fever or\nasthma victim you will find this letter from a\nQuebec lady interesting: \"I have suffered a\ngreat deal, in summer, from attacks of hay\nfever. I get sore, itchy, watery eyes and itchy\near passages. I consider myself very fortunate to have found in Templeton's RAZ-MAH\na remedy that gives me quick and satisfactory\nrelief. I heartily recommend RAZ-MAH to\neveryone who suffers as I have done.\" Why\nnot take a tip from this lady? If you suffer from hay fever or\nasthma, be prepared for hay fever season\u2014do try RAZ-MAH! For\nyoung children: RAZ-MAH Greys Juniors.\nbra    Ideal\ngardening\nHall Sizes\n221;.    21' :\u2022\nSUPER-SIMPLE\nLook slim, smart. COOL in this\neasy-sew sundress with wide shoulder straps lo conceal\nfor work, relaxing.\nDoubles as jumper, loo\nPrinted Pattern IIOBI\n144,   IB':.   181!.   20\nSize lfi'j dress takes 3U yards 39-\ninch fabric\nSend FIFTY CENTS '30c in\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted' for this pattern Please\nprint plainly SIZE, NAME. ADDRESS, STYLE NUMBER.\nSend your order lo MARIAN\nMARTIN. N.D.N., fio Front St.. W .\nToronto, Ont.\nJUST OUT! Rig, new 19611\nSpring and Summer Pattern Catalog in vivid, full-color Over 100\nsmart  styles all sizes\nall occasions. Send now! Only 2ac\nWIN  A  GE   ELECTRIC  KETTLE!\n50   consolation  prizes!   Deluxe  mode!.   Lustrous  chrome  plating.\nAutomatic  shut-off valve.  Vaporizer.  Never  boils dry!\nHERE'S HOW TO WIN:\n\"TEA AS IT SHOULD\nQuality Nabob and Kadana\nteas enhance every meal . . .\nbring bright refreshment to\nevery table. They're flavorful, fragrant, delicious.\n1. In 25 words or less, complete this statement: \"I like (NABOB) (KADANA) tea\nbecause . . .\". Print or write entry clearly.\nBe sure to include your name and address.\n] 1. Include a label (or facsimile) from the\nNabob or Kadana tea you choose to write\nabout.\ni 3. Send your entry to: NABOB TEA CONTEST,\nBox 2132, Vancouver 3, B.C.\ni 4. Contest is open to all Canadian residents,\nAll entries must be postmarked by midnight, August 7,1960\nexcept employees of Kelly, Douglas & Co.\nLtd., its subsidiaries and advertising agency.\n5. Only one prize will be awarded to any one '\nentrant.\n6. The judges' decisions are final. Entries will i\nbe judged on the sincerity, originality and ,\naptness of the completed statement.\n7. All winners will be notified by mail, or in\nperson, as soon as possible after tbe close\nof the contest.\nMAIL YOUR ENTRY NOWI\n ^^^^^\nm%&^!**mm\n*******\n-----rmmmm,., a   _,,     ,\n\u2022\u25a0  \".:\nGiant Beach Towels\nin Novelty Patterns\nComical designs\n\u2014all-over patterns\n\u2014 stripes. Thick\nweight of terry\ncloth is very ab-\ns o r b e n t. Sizes\nfrom 30\" x 60\"\nto 36\" x 72\".\nLive Outdoors and Enjoy it... Swim,\nPlay or Relax in these Smart Togs\nBathing\nBeauties for the Ladies\n2.98\nMen! for Leisure Wear\nPick These Sport Shirts\nLONG SLEEVES\nHuge selection, seme wash and wear!\nChecks, plains and novely patterns in all\nthe most wanted shades. *t   QQ\nSizes: S, M, L, XL. Special   3  V^\nSHORT SLEEVES\nPopular plaid pattern in a wide variety of\ncolors. Wash 'n' wear \u2014 means little or no\nironing.   Ideal   shirt  for  vacations    Sizes:\nS, M, L, XL.\nSpecial \t\n12.95\nA) These swim suits are beauties \u2014 you'll\nagree when you see them! A sun-worthy\ncollection by Catalina . . Pedigree . . . Sea\nNymph . . . Jantzen. Made for flattering\nfit \u2014 with unusual style touches. In lastex,\ncotton knits, velvalure, beautiful cotton\nprints. Newest colors and patterns for\nI960. Choose yours now and get ready for\na wonderful Summer. Sizes: 32 to 40, 12\nto 20.\nMen - Skintite Swim Trunks in\nTrim Lastex or \"Helanca\" Knits\nColorfost \u2014 sun ond water tested! Colorful\nnew patterns \u2014 checkerboards, bulky squares, pin\njtripes. Elastic or drawstring waist, inside coin pocket, knitted support.\nBlack, royal, red, navy, white.\nSixes: 30 to 42.\n3.98\nMen's Swim Trunks by \"Jantzen\"\n*~7!Wi<ie choice of boxer and skintite styles In novelty\n.patterns and handsome solid colors.\nin men's sizes.\n3.95\nS Boys' Neat Fitting Skintite Trunks\nFaille or satin lastex, woven tartans,\nPrinted designs, loced sides, many un-\nusuol touches. Sizes: 26 to 34, S, M, L\nJANTZEN \"Water Sport\" trunks.\n1.98\nSizes:  10 to 16.\n2.95\nMEN'S\nSHORT   SLEEVE\nDRESS SHIRTS\nWonderfully cool and\ncomfortable. \u2014 Air\nweave, wash 'n' wear\nLeno cotton. Sizes 15\nto 17. n   QQ\nWhite only. A. 7\"7\nBoys'  Tee   Shirts\nCotton knit with collar and placket\nfront. Ideal for holiday wear - coo]\nand comfortable. Shades of black,\nblue, red and brown. | \/% r\\\nSizes 8 to 14. I ,17\n2  for  2.49\nBoyi'  Boxer  Style  Swim  Trunks\nMade from pre-shrunk cotton with full elastic waist and cr.lton mesh Inner support. Popular plaid patterns in bright colors. 1 ^Q\nSizes 6 to 14. Terrific value at       ' \u2022**\nLadies Blouses\nSleeveless blouses in large\ngroup of styles, all sanforized cotton, some novelty\nstyles Colors: Red, White,\nBlue, Black, Maize $1\nSizes. 32 to 38        I\nLadies Shorts\nS a n f o rized cotton short\nshorts ond Bermudas: ideal\nfor holiday wear. Colors\nWhite, Black, Green and assorted novelties $*|\nSizes   12 to 18 II\nThese Crisp Cotton Skirts Will Go\nAnywhere Under the Summer Sun!\nGl Team these pretty cotton skirts with all your Summer\nblouses and be set for sun \u2014 fun \u2014 travel1 In some ot the\nloveliest cotton prints you've ever seen \u2014 polished and plain\ncottons \u2014 some have a no-iron finish to save you time. Graceful full-skirted styles with box or unpressed pleats or circle\nskirts. In lovely colors \u2014 pastels and bright tones. 5izes:\n10 to IS.\n$4\n98\nBigger Girls' Swim Suits\nCI   Cotton   \"skort\"   styls\nin  prints,   lastex   in  solid    n   AA\ncolors. Sues:  8 to   14.        J.lO\nLittle Girls' Swim Suits\nD!   Many pretty styles in\ncrisp   Drip   'n'   Dry   cot-    A   AA\ntons.  Sues:  4  to 6X Z.TO\nLittle Boys' Swim Trunks\nEl Boxer style, fully\nlined, change pocket\nPlaids, solid rotors Sir\". \u25a0\n2  to 6\nSanforized Bedford Cord\nShorts for Bigger Girls\nThe trim styles girls look best in1 Regulai\nlength with cuffs or Jamaica style\nColors: red, antelope, wilhw \u00abfl # -Q\nrjreen,  black    Sixes:  7  to   I-1       I   ft 7?\nGirls' Neat Pedal Pushers\nin Wide Choice of Fabrics\nT.irPodOr type in popular fabrics: Bedford\ncord, nnisley prints, star n< hou ids tooth\nchec1\"-. In practical color-, *\nfor Summer. Sizes: 1 to  M        j\n1.49\nReg. 1.29\nBoys' Short Sleeve\nSport Shirts\nGuaranteed   washable,   full   cut\nNice group of plaids, QQ\ni.c--   2 to 6x\nReg. to 2.93 Value\nBoys' 2-Piece\nShort and Shirt Sets\nCanadian made of good quality\ncottons, some linen type fabrics\nAssorted styles |    \/t*J\nSizes' 6 and 6x only.       I \u2022   \u25a0  I\nShorts for Little Girls\nPopfins in Summer Colors\nCool,   comfortable   choice   (oi    little\nColors     turquoise,    red,    royal\nblue  or   tan    S:zrs:  3   to  6X\n98\nTots' Cotton T-Shirts\nAre a Must for Summer\nSoft   and   comfortable   Interlock    knit.    In\nwhite,   blue   and   mane   with\nattractive   printed   design.\nSues: 2 to 6X.\n89\nSkim About This Summer\nin Well-Cut Slim Jims\n)) In cotton sheen or textured verticord.\nSo neot to wear at home \u2014 at the lak*\n\u2022-- anywhere ynu wont to look srrtort and\nfeel comfortable. In cho ce\nof.Sunny   colori   for   Sum-\nSizes.   12 to 20\n3.98\nMisses' Cuffed Shorts in\nMadras Plaids, Sharkskin\nNeat cuffed styles. Madras plaids come\ntn green, brown or blue tones. Sharkskins\nin green or white with\nsmart sell tie belts\nSizes:   10 to   18\n2.98\nMisses' Pedal Pushers in\nMadras Plaids, Sharkskin\nCuffed styles Madras plaids in green,\nbrown, blue Sharkskins in green or\nwhite with self tie belt\nand slash pockets,\nSues:   10 to  18.\n3.98\nKeep Cool in One of These\nMisses' Cotton Halters\nNeat tittmg styles let you bore your shoulders   to   the   sun   prettily.\nIn  choice  of   lovely  colors\nSizes:  10 to  18.\n1.98\nWomen's ond Girls' Socks\nChildren's Bobby Socks\nin Bulky Knit Cotton\nin Sturdy Knit Cotton\nBulky  knit  cotton  is ven\/  soft and ob-\nVou enn  never have too many of  these\nsorbent   Grand to wear with\nfor active little feet   Combed\nsport    shoes    Or    looters.    In           PA\nwhite.  Sizes: 8Vi  to  11.          >J7\ncotton   In   white  only.                     ^\\ -Q\nSizes: 6V2 to 8V2.                   J\/\nf)a}^(M5 6\u00ab|t (Lompunn,\n6 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, JUNE 30, 1960\nBritish Market Not\nEasy To Dabble In\nBy  DAVID  OANCIA\nCanadian Press  Stall Writer\nLONDON (CP) - Six months\nalter the virtual elimination of\ndollar import restrictions, Canadian exporters are learning\nthat the British market Is not one\nthey can dabble ln.\nThey are finding competition\nIntense and buyers' requirements\nexacting. To garner any reward\nat all ln this rich market, they\nhave discovered that only a systematic approach will work In the\nlong run.\nTheir problem of selling more\nCanadian goods in Britain has\nbeen further complicated by the\nrecent rise In the British bank\nrate. By tightening the money\nsupply, the United Kingdom government Is restraining consumer\nexpenditures, an action bound to\naffect expenditures on imports.\nSOME   SUCCESS\nDespite the complexities of entering a market they have been\nvirtually out of for two decades,\nthe Canadians have recorded a\nfew success stories. These are\nreflected  in  the  trade  figures.\nDuring the first four months of\nI960, Britain purchased $267,000,-\n000 worth ot goods from Canada,\na jump of 21 per cent over the\ncorresponding total a year ago.\nIf the trend continues, Canadian\nsales during the current year\nshould hit the $1,000,000,000 mark\nfor the first time in history.\nTrade officials attribute much\nof Ihis year's increase to higher\nsales of industrial raw materials.\nBut of almost equal significance\nis the fact lhat the figures show\nfor the first time since the 1930s\na large number of consumer articles.\nThese include cottons, slippers,\ndress's,   sporting   goods,   fabricated sleel products and a host\nof miscellaneous items.\nMONTREAL DRESSES\nS. G. Tregaskes, Canada's deputy trade commissioner In London, cited the success of Montreal\ndress manufacturers as an example of the opportunities available to Canadians.\nLast November the Montrealers\nheld a fasbuon show and sold\nroughly $400,000 worth of dresses.\nEarlier this month Ihey held another and chalked up orders\ntotalling  $150,000.\nFrom   this   and  other  similar\nstories, trade officials have concluded that price \u2014 a primary\nconcern of buyers\u2014is not always\nthe determining factor in whether\na sale is made. Any product, they\nsay, offering unusual features, attractive design and after-sale\nservice of bhe type Canadians\nexpect will find a ready market\nta Britain.\n\"Canadian firms should not become completely defeatist about\nthis big, concentrated market,\"\nTregaskes said. \"If they do the\nproper ground work, a great\nmany are going to be pleasantly\nsurprised that they can do business here.\"\nAFFLUENT SOCIETY\nTrade officials point to the\ntransformation of British Boclety\nas the best Indicator of Improved\nopportunities. Britain appears to\nbe developing into an affluent society.\nConsumers are beginning to\ndemand more and better washing\nmachines, television sets, stoves\nand central heating units. During\nthe last decade the number of\nautomobile owners has shot up to\n6,000,000 from 2,000,000. There are\n11.000,000 television sets in the\nnation's   15,000,  homes.\nIf the people continue to become more affluent and If the\nCanadian manufacturers become\nmore active, the sales of consumer products produced ln\nNorth America may once again\nrecapture an important part of\nthe British market.\nBusiness Spotlight . . .\nFledgling Training Camp\nBecomes Powerful Base\nGREENWOOD, N.S. (CP)-Alr\nforce officials say the RCAF\nbase here will play an Increasingly important role In Canada's\ndefence. In the process its economic imprint will be felt.\nGrown from a fledging training camp, established in 1942 as\npart of the Commonwealth training plan, the station has mushroomed over the (lat floor of the\nAnnapolis Valley Into one of the |\nlargest, most powerful bases in\nCanada.\nChurches,  schools  and modern\nliving   quarters   camouflage   the |\nsecurity   gate   of   the   air   force,\nbase ln what appears to be a \\\nmodern town.\nBut Greenwood Is not a town.\nIt's a settlement of the families j\nof 2,600 men and women on the i\nair  force  payroll  here.  Popula-'\ntion Is about 4,000.\nIndoor and outdoor swimming\npools, recreation halls, a movie;\ntheatre and a bowling alley have I\nall been built at the base\u2014but j\nnot by defence funds. The money\ncame from profits at the air\nforce messes.\nInto the stations pour tons of\nfood, fuel and building materials,\nsupporting the economy of the\narea.\nAmong the big construction\nprojects was the laying of tha\nmain, 9,000-foot runway. There\nare other smaller strips.\nAbout a dozen airplane hangers have been built. Three are\nnow under construction.\nThere is a constant demand at\nthe base for highly specialized\nequipment which is serviced\nlargely by maritime firms.\nIn the last year of the Second\nWorld War Greenwood served ai\na training unit and for two years\nafter the war operated on a minimum maintenance basis.\nSince 1947 steady growth has\nbuilt the base into the strongest\nair defence and search and rescue centre of the Maritimes.\nSome 40 planes are stationed\nat the base now.\nSupporting these craft In their\nround-the-clock defence Jobs are\na host of ground crews and dozens of secondary Industries.\nAir force officials say there Is\nno immediate Indication that defence will be cut. On the other\nhand they expect increases which\nwill mean a greater economic\nboost to the area.\nVIENNA (APi-The Austrian\ngovernment Wednesday cancelled\na projected trip by Soviet Premier Khrushchev to Ihe nation's\nhighest mountain, explaining that\nthe altitude might endanger his\nhealth. The mountain is 8,160 feel\nhigh. The Soviet premier arrives\ntoday for a state visit.\n610 Railway St.\nAppliances\nHeating Inst.\nPropane\nSales,\nService\nPROPANE\nLTD.\nPhone 2230\nNew Brunswick's\nVole Outstrips\nPopulation\nFREDERICTON (CPi - Tlie\ntotal number of votes in Monday's New Brunswick election\noutstripped the province's 1950-\nestimated population of 593.000 by\nmore than 177,000.\nThe reason is that the voter in\nNew Brunswick provincial elections has not one vote but anywhere from two to five.\nA multiple-constituency system\nallowing each candidate to run on\nan at-largfl basis gives the voter\nthe right to one choice fnr each\nseat representing his con-1\nstituency.\nThus five - seat Gloucester\nCounty, the largest in the province, gives the voter an effect\nfive votes. Others range from two\nto four.\nFor this reason, it is impossible lo tabulate the exact turn-\noul at the polls. The system does\nnot apply to federal elections\nhere.\nThousands Hear\nPope John's\nBenediction\nVATICAN CITY (Reuters)-\nAbout 50.000 persons crowded\ninto St. Peter's Square in brilliant sunshine Wednesday to hear\nPope John give his apostolic benediction to the city of Rome and\nto the world from the window of\nhis study in the Vatican Palace\nThe Pope recited the angelus\nprayer, and said:\n\"Today is Uie special feast of\nSt. Peter the Apostle, formidable\nrock of the church. I shall give\nyou the most solemn blessing of\nthe holiest feasts.\"\nLong lines of worshippers\nmoved slowly through the basilica to kiss the foot of an old\nbronze statue, representing St.\nPeter on a throne, dressed in a papal cape and papel triple crown.\nTOO MUCH SEX\nPORT COLBORNE. Ont. (CPI\nTwo candidates for a labor union\noffice were each fined $250 in\ncourt here because their campaign literature unreasonably and\nunnecessarily exploited sex. They\nwere convicted of distributing\nobscene written and pictorial\nmatter to employees of the International Nickel Company refinery. \u00bb\nCUD\nthe friendly drink for modern people\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the Government ol British Columbia.\n- T\n '\u25a0   . ...   '...'.',,.        \u2022 \u2022\u2022 \u2022\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, JUNE 30, 1960 \u2014 7\n*\nHees Promises To Look\nInto Railway Layoffs\nBy   ARCH   MacKENZIE\nOTTAWA (CP) - Serious consideration was p r o m i sed by\nTransport Minister Hees Tuesday for a suggested railways\nstaff freeze while a royal commission investigates the social\nand economic impact ol rail layoffs.\n\"I will give the matter serious\nconsideration , . . serious attention,\" Mr. Hees told Hazen Argue, COF house leader, in the\nCommons.\n\"It's a shame that \"thousands\nof railway workers are being\ndismissed after 25 or 30 years of\nservice with no visible means of\nsupport,\"  Mr.  Argue declared.\nMr. Hees, he said, claimed that\nhe was powerless to Intervene\nwith the publicly - owned CNR,\nWHEN YOU GET TO\nBALFOUR . . .\nStop at . . .\nTILLICUM\n\u2022 GOOD FOOD\n\u2022 SOUVENIRS\n\u2022 CABINS-BOATS\nFor Your Enjoyment\nwhich apparently was concerned\nsolely with the financial balance\nsheet rather than any welfare\nand suffering of its employees.\nHe suggested a royal commission investigation of the hardship\nthat ensued, perhaps by the current royal commission on transportation afler it had finished its\nwork dealing mainly with freight\nrates.\nMurdo Martin (CCF - Timmins i suggested the government\nponder taking over the privately-\nowned CPR to add to the publicly - owned CNR so that a division could be made between\nwhere trucks and trains should\noperate. Any such action should\nbe accompanied by a traln-\nirg program to adapt displaced\npersonnel to new Jobs.\nDuring  Your Stay  .   .   .\nTHE BALFOUR\nGENERAL STORE\nWill  Keep You Supplied\n\u2022 FRESH MEATS\n\u2022 VEGETABLES   '\n\u2022 GROCERIES\n\u2022 FISHING TACKLES\nImperial Oil and Gas\nNOW OPEN\nCAMP PARADISE CAFE\nAV2 MILES NORTH OF KASLO\n\"Camp Paradise \u2014 where the\nRainbow  and  Fisherman  meet.\"\nMeals Served Every Day\n7 a.m. to 7 p.m.\nWater Ski is\nFROM THE ONLY COMMERCIAL\nMANUFACTURER IN THE KOOTENAYS\nU)sl maksL Jhn \/But!\n_ BAR NONE\n\u25a0B        For Maneuverability and Control\nP| THEY HAVE NO EQUAL\nSPECIAL V-BOTTOM\nDESIGN\n\u2022 Slalom\n\u2022 Jumping\n\u2022 Banana\n518.50\nM. E. OBAL\nSash & Door Co.  Ltd.\nBox  122 Trail, B.C. Ph. 2065\nQUEENS BAY\n1 Mile East* of Balfour\nPHONE BALFOUR 148\nFOR RESERVATIONS\n\u2022fr Trailer Parking\nfr Camping  Grounds\n-fr Swimming\n\u2022fr  Cabins\n\u2022fx   Boot  Rentals\n\u2022fr   Boat  Launching and  Mooring\n\u2022fr  Gas and Oil\nGet Your Official\nFISH DERBY TICKETS HERE\nThis Is a \"Weigh-In Station\"\nWashington Clips\nExpense Sheets\nBEACH DAYS HERE. Kootenay's many lakes and\nbeaches are drawing holidayers in hundreds as the current hot spell continues. Typical ol what the area has\nto offer the tourist Is this beach at Champion Lakes, which\nhas been crowded on recent weekends.\n\u2014Daily News photo.\nEVERYBODY'S\n%    ^BOATING\nANEW OWNER of a boat-\ntrailer outfit may experience difficulty in maneuvering1\nthe trailer for launching or\nparking in the garage for storage.\nThe one point to remember Is\nthat the trailer backs in the\nopposite direction from the car.\nIf you want the rear of the\ntrailer to go to the right, turn\nyour steering wheel to the left,\nand vice versa. It's as simple\nas that, but practice Is necessary-\nHere's a little tip we've noticed some boaters use when\nlaunching into a confined spot\nor one that's rough with rocks\nor soft and sandy. They attach an extra bumper hitch onto\nthe front of the car and then\npush the trailer into tho water\nand \"back up while pulling it\nout. This leaves the car's wheels\non higher and solid ground.\n\\\n CM'JHISJREE^reON FOR YOU\"  ^CRAPBOni-\n! Ett)rik Slcuiui     ^\n| BY NANCIE'RIDEOUT        ,*!\nNational Women's Water Ski Champion\nTODAY'S TIP\nDOCK TAKE-OFF\nL\nA big difference between a water tc! off and\nbeing launched from a dock Is timing. You ust shift\nyour weight from your seat to your skis ct |ust the\nright moment; you rise to a skiing stance just as the\ntow line tightens and draws you off the dock. You\ntherefore must sit facing the boat's transom, even If It\nmeans turning sideways. Your skis, put on before you\nsit, are held [ust beneath water with tips protruding.   \u25a0\nU.S. Protectionists Could\nUpset Canada's Zinc Markets\nBy HAROLD MORRISON\nCanadian  Press Staff Writer\nWASHINGTON (CP) - Tariff\nprotectionists have launched A\n.surprising double - pronged move\nin Congress to adopt legislation\nwhioh could virtually bar Canadian and other exporters trom\nthe U.S. lead and zinc market.\nWorking hand In hand, the\npowerful ways and means committee of the House of Representatives and the Senate finance\ncommittee quietly approved bills\nsimilar in intenl^-to more than\ndouble existing U.S. tariffs on\nthese two metals.\nPassage by these two committees indicates the advocates have\nmustered tremendous strength in\ntheir drive to eliminate competing imports. The bills now go before the two Houses for full debate. Canadian authorities fear\nthere is sonne possibility the legislator! will be adopted in this\npresidential election year.\nBesiged by appeals from domestic producers and protests by\nCanadian, Australian, Mexican\nand Peruvian diplomats, the Eisenhower administralion' is attempting to persuade Congress\nthat passage of such legislation\nwould not be in the best interests\nof U.S. foreign policy.   .\nBut with U.S. mines demanding help and with 1 1960 election\nto win, legislators in the midwest mining areas-^with support\nof congressional committee kingpins\u2014apparently intend to try to\nram the bill through Congress\njust before it adjourns early in\nJuly.\nThe only hope for Canadian\nand olher exporters in such an\nevent is the exercise of a veto\nby   President  Eisenhower.   How\never, supporters of the tariff increases are anticipating this possibility and intend to make it difficult for Elsenhower to reject\nthe legislation.\nThe Senate committee's proposal is tied to the end of the\nDill which the Eisenhower administration supports\u2014the closing of tax loopholes in the U.S.\nVirgin Islands Caribbean territory.\nIn  such  a  case  he  would  be\nunable   to   reject   the   tariff   increases   without   also   rejecting\nthe Virgin Islands legislation.\nSUBSIDY LEGISLATION\nAdding to the lead-zinc problems of Canada and other exporters is passage by the House\nof legislation which would subsidize a large part of U.S. lead-\nzinc production. This would tend\nto encourage marginal, uneconomic mines to remain in competition with imports.\nThis legislation, now before Ihe\nSenate, will provide for subsidies\nof from three to five cents a\npound for some 500 small and\nmedium-sized  U.S.  mines.\nCongressional advocates of the\ntariff increases argue that while\nthey recognize the interests of\nCanadian and other exporters,\nthey no longer can ignore the\ndistressing position of U.S. lead-\nzinc  mine operators.\nLast March the U.S. tariff commission, In a majority report, refused to recommend higher lead-\nzinc tariffs because of technical\nand other reasons.\nBy HAROLD MORRISON\nWASHINGTON (CP) - Times\nare tough for any Congressman\nwith a yen for a little easy living\non taxpayers' money.\nUnder new rules being adopted\nby both Houses of Congress,\nmembers may no longer be able\nto pass off their liquor bills as\nlood, hire fancy tropical cabanas\nas meeting places or masquerade their wives as secretaries\non overseas junkets.\nInstead of charging as much as\n$103 a day for hotel and other\nexpenses as one Congressman is\nreported to have done, members\nwill be limited to a strict $25-a-\nday expense account while travelling on government business.\nIt a member wants any higher\nliving, it will have to come out\nof his own pocket.\nAnd if he spends more than $1J\na day, he'll have to itemize each\nexpenditure, right down to taxi\nfares and tips for maids.\nMAY STILL PUBLIC ANGER\n| This may hamper those with\nambitions to display generosity,\nwealth and dignity before overseas crowds, but it may also help\nstill the roar of public protest\nthat followed disclosure in a series of press reports that some expense accounts had been padded\nand reshaped to cover asy living.\nOn report told of a touring\nCongressman oharglng drinks ln\na Honolulu cocktail bar to \"food\"\nwhile others treated their wives\nto nightclU'bbinig and asked the\ngovernment to pay. One committee, on a serious investigation in\nthe Panama Canal area, simply\nhad to hire a swimming pool cabana at a plush hotel amd have a\nfew drinks while thinking the\nwhole   matter   over.\nMinister Unaware\nOf German Influx\nOTTAWA (CPi \u2014 Immigration\nMinister Fairclough told the\nCommons Wednesday she is not\naware that German immigrants\nare leaving Canada in large numbers.\nShe was commenting for Hubert Badanai (L\u2014Fort William I\non a statement by Managing Editor Heinz Scholz of the Toronto\nethnic newspaper Der Courier.\nMrs. Fairclough told the House\nthat her department does not\nkeep a record of departures.\nGREEK FREIGHTERS\nMerchant ships under ttie\nGreek flag totalled 4,584.000 tons\nin April, i960, compared with 1,-\n563,000 tons at the end of 1957.\nJust Good Food . . .\n\u2022 PAN-FRIED CHICKEN\n\u2022 SEA FOODS\n\u2022 CHOICE STEAKS\nThe Skylark\nRESTAURANT and\nCOCKTAIL LOUNGE\nW. 518 Sprague Ave.\nFREE\n2  Hr.   Parking at City Ramp\nAAA APPROVED\nLIBERTY MOTEL\nNorth 6801  Division St.\nSpokane, Washington\n\u2022 Ultra-Modern, Air Conditioned 2 to 8-Person Units.\n\u2022 15 Minutes to Downtown\nShopping.\n\u2022 FREE TV\nMR.  and MRS.  R.  W.\n\"BOB\"  WHIPPS\nOwners and Manager.\nPhone  HU-7-4112\nConfronted by Hie reports,\nthose named were quick with denials, charging they were the innocent victims ot Intimidation\nand smear. But most of them,\nwhen asked about details of their\nexpenditures, seemed vague as\nto what exactly was spent. Some\nhad made notes, they said, bul\nlater decided to throw them\naway.\nWELCOME CANADIANS\nTo The\nSHADOWS\nMOTEL\n(North Division at the \"Y\")\n\u2022 Modern Trailer Park\n\u2022 TV ln Units   \u2022 Kitchenettes\n\u2022 Telephones\nO Personalized Service\nYour Hosts\nJune and Ed McGregor\nN9025 Division     Ph. HU-7-1980\nIN SPOKANE\nThe Flame\nFOOD and COCKTAILS\nRib Steak\n$1.50\nSmall  Orders  for  Children.\nOut of the High Rent District\nE2401 Sprague\nTurd  at  Altnmont  Street\nALWAYS OPEN\nWonderful\nWandermere\nSPOKANE'S FAVORITE\nFAMILY PLAYGROUND\nOpen to the Public\n\u2022 Golfing\nEquipment  tor  Rent  or\nSale.\n\u2022 Swimming\nSandy Beach.\n\u2022 Fishing\nNo  Licence  Required  \u2014\nWe  Furnish Equipment\n\u2022 Picnicking\n\u2022 Dine and Dance\nAll Facilities Are Open to\nThe Public\n24 MODERN UNITS -- KITCHENETTES\nFREE TV \u2014 Sleep Off the Highway\nHEATED POOL NOW OPEN!\nW. 1923 -6th    SPOKANE, WASH.    Ph. RI-7-3067\nRough n Ready\nCAMP GROUND\nPropane Gas Cooking\nFireplaces\nLarge Community\nFireplace\nShower Bath\nLaundry Facilities\nWaterfalls\nFree Train To\nAll Campers\nSee the City and the\nValley\nOne Rate   I\nCovers All I\nDISHMAN\nEAST SPOKANE\nWrite   Eastwood   Motel   for   Free   Folder\n5502 E. Spragoe Ave., Spokane, Wash.\nTOO LITTLE SLEEP\nNIAGARA FALLS, Ont. (CPI\nLack of sleep after attending an\nall-night drive-in movie contributed t6 the death ot Paul Coates,\n20, a coroner's jury ruled Wednesday. Coates died shortly after\nthe car in which he was riding\nleft tiie Niagara River parkway\nabout 6 30 a.m., May 23 and\nstruck  a  tree.\nDIES ON HOLIDAY\nBRIGHTON, Ont. ICP) - A\nNapanee high school teacher,\nstarting her summer holidays in\na new car, was killed in a head-\non collision near this community.\nGrace Jarombe, 45, died when\nher small foreign-made vehicle\ncrashed with a larger car diven\nby Donald Andrews, 30, of London, Ont.\nAIR-COOLED  ROOMS\nHOTEL\nPEDICORI)\nW21.1  Riverside    W214 Snraeup\nSpokane. Wash.\nRooms with bath $3.30 to $4.50\nWithout  bath $2 00 to $3 00\nSuites S7 00\nWELCOME   CANADIANS\nCurrent Premiums Paid\nVisit\nEnjoy\n*#. PARK\nV*      SPOKANE'S  FAVOR\nSPOKANE'S FAVORITE PARK\n3200 WEStToONE AVE.\nFree Parking \u2014 Picnic Tables\njUdjLthfL...\n\u2022 Jack Rabbit Roller Coaster\n\u2022 Scooter Cars      \u2022  Octopus\n\u2022 Rocket Ship\n\u2022  Merry-Go-Round\nU'udL Bul...\n\u2022 Nut House       \u2022  Free Zoo\nChildren  10c  72 ror\n(Under 12)\nTeenagers  15c O f\u00b0r\nAdults   20c       6 'or\n -^m^m\n7&W?1\n.\u2022=\u25a0\u2022\u2022\u2022 :  i- \u25a0\n^^.^\u25a0'\u25a0^.'W^pvjjpiyiiyisup^iii.. ,,\u00bb    ' ' , <\u25a0!..,<\u25a0\n\t\nft\n8.\u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS,\nTHURSDAY, JUNE 30, 1960\nSpokane Jets Win 20 Coliseum Games\nFullmer Retains Title As\nWildman Basilio Pulled\nEntry Into WIHL\nSeen as Certainty\nSALT LAKE CITY (API -\nChampion Gene Fullmer retained\nhis National Boxing Association\nworld middleweight boxing title\nWednesday night when he stopped\nCarmen Basilio in a wild 12th round\nof a scheduled 15-round fight.\nReferee Pete Giacoma stopped\nthe match of 2:54 of the 12th with\nCarmen badly hurt but refusing\nto go down. A crowd of 12.000 or\nmore vigorous Fullmer backers\nwent wild.\n' Fullmer, 159V4, from nearby\nWest Jordan, Utah, repeated the\ntechnical knockout he scored over\nthe 33-year-old ex-champion last\nAug. 28 in San Francisco,\nBasilio, from Chittenango. N.Y.,\nweighed   156'2   for   the   160-pound\ndivision match.\nBASILIO GOES WILD\nBasilio, who had carried on a\nrunning verbal war with the referee, the crowd and the champion's\ncorner all evening, went wild at\nthe sudden end.\nHe charged into the referee attempting to get at Fullmer, but\nwas finally dragged back to his\ncorner.\nIt was a step\nif not the end, of\nfor the one-time\nBasilio's face\nfrom blood after\neven exceeded th\nin San Francisco\nFullmer stopped\nrounds.\ntoward the end,\na brilliant career\nonion picker.\nwas   bright   red\nthe  brawl  that\nbruising battle\nlast year when\nCarmen   in   14\nPee Wee League\nWednesday results:\nCarmichaels  3,  Collinsons  1.\nDauphines 10, Pat's Aces 8.\nOrphans 6, DeFoe's 0.\nShoe Centers 4, Ken's Cafe 0.\nRobhillcats 38,  Whiteley's 4.\nKoehle's Heaters by defeault over\nCity Auto.\nCivic Hotel vs Lumbermen not\nplayed.\nSHIMP FINALS\nOPEN TODAY\nShamrocks and Hippersons, winners of their respective semi-final\nseries, meet in the first game of\nthe Civic Recreation Commission's Shrimp League championship\nfinals today at Civic grounds.\nBecause the finals will he seven\ninning games, today's game time\nhas heen set for 3:30 p.m.\nThe series is a \"best of five\"\nwith the second game scheduled\n[or Saturday at the Uphill park.\nBASEBALL  SCORfe^\nPACIFIC COAST LEAGUE\nTacoma       000 002 000\u20144 13 1\nVancouver ooo i.iij {,,.\u201e   u   _ u\nRenfroe and Haller: Bamberger,\nPaine (5) and Fitzgerald '9> and\nWhite. WP\u2014Renfroe (3-4); LP-\nBamberger (5-61.\nSalt Lake City 001 002 0-3 8 o\nSeattle .    . .   000 200 0\u20142 3 1\nWitt  and  Silvera;   ij......\u25a0.,:!  ..\nBevan. W\u2014Witt (5-2). l^Beamon\n15-5). HR: Salt Lake City, King:\nSeattle, Coleman.\nO'KEEFES WIN\nVICTORIA (CP) - New Westminster O'Keefes just about assured themselves of an inter-city lacrosse league playoff spot when\nthey defeated Victoria Luckies 12-10\nbefore 2001 fans here Wednesday\nnight.\nBasilio's handlers kept yelling j\nthat Fullmer was butting and at\none stage the referee cautioned I\nboth coiners. To which Basilio\nshouted   back: |\n\"I'm  doin'  all  right.  He's  but-;\ntin' like hell.\"\nDOES FLIP\nThere were no knockdowns officially but in the eighth Fullmer\ncaught Basilio wilh a good left\nhook. Carmen half slipped, went\noff balance and turned a complete hcad-over-heels flip in a\nneutral corner. He jumped to his\nfeet immediately and the referee\nsaid it was not a knockdown.\nFullmer, a 28-year-old church\nelder, fought much the same asj\nlast year, using his two-inch reach [\nlo advantage with a left jab thatj\ncontinually kepi Basilio Irom get-\nling set  for a punch.\nAt no time was Basilio able to\npally gel  a  hard  shot  at  Gene.\nFullmer started Ihe windup wilh\ni terrific boll to the body early\nn the 121h. He followed with another hard right to the jaw and\nCarmen was in trouble.\nBasilio held and clinched grimly\nas the referee followed Ihe Iwo\nbattlers, trying lo separate them\nWore he slopped it?\nEarly in Ihe eighlh, just before\nt was knocked for the flip, Basilio\nook lime off to stick oul his tongue\nJl a ringside tormentor.\nThe crowd laughed and jeered,\nas il had in the fiftin when Basilio\ndirected his attention to Fullmers\nmanager.  Marv Jenson.\nThi.s was only the second lime\nin 76 fights over a period of\nyears that Basilio had been stopped.\nThe victory was Fullmers 52nd\nin 56 fights and his 23rd knockout\nThere was jubilation In Nelson\nWednesday when news of Spokane Jels' success In gaining 20\ngame dates at the Coliseum was\nheard.\nWestern International Hockey\nLeague president Ernie Cook of\nTrail received word by long distance telephone Wednesday afternoon from Danny McDougall,\nwho played with the amateur\nSpokane Flyers.\nThe news is a good sign that the\nJets will join the WIHL this winter. Much ol the jubilation greeting the news stemmed from the\nfact that Trail Smoke Eaters will\nbe lost to tiie league when Dhey\ntravel to Europe as Canadian representatives in World hockey championships in Switzerland. Kimberley Dynamiters may also bolster\nthe League.\nMcDougall said the dels will have\nfour Fridays, three Sim-days, five\nWednesdays, seven Thursdays and\none Tuesday.\nArrangements will be pushed at\nNelson July 9 when the league executive meets in connection with\nKimberley and Spokane entry possibilities. Monty Baersch, a vice-\npresident, well known Spokane\nsportsman, will attend. He represents the Jets in the WIHL. Clarence Tubbs, a prime mover in the\nJet organization, and McDougall\nare also expected to attend.\nPlayers who will likely turn out\nwilh the Jets are to take part in\nthe Midsummer hockey game here\nSaturday night. McDougall, Carl\nCirullo and Lome Nadeau, and\nBlinky Boyce, with Spokane Flyers\nof the Western Hockey League lasl\nseason, are to play.\nMilwaukee Blows Chances\nMore men-on more occasions-enjoy\nWH ITE\nOWL\nthan any other cigar in Canada!\nWhy? Because White Owl, blended with Havana,     V\noffers you a unique combination of satisfying taste;\nsmooth, mellow mildness and a particularly pleasing\naroma. It's the most popular cigar in Canada.\nBLENDED WITH HAVANA\n104 ea. \u2014 Buy the handy pocket pack of S's\nSugfjoitoii prko\nBy  THE  CANADIAN  PRESS\nMilwaukee's second place\nBraves blew a chance to gain\nground in the National League\nrace by splitting a double-header\nwilh the last place Chicago Cubs\nWednesday, winning 3-1 after a\n3-2 defeat. Pittsburgh's game\nwith San Francisco was rained\nout, leaving the Pirates with a\n2*2-game lead.\nIn Uie American League, Roger\nMaris belled two more home runs\nand right-hander Jim Coates won\nhis 13th in a row with a three-\nhilter as Lhe first place New\nYork Yankees whipped Kansas\nCity,  10-0.\nCleveland replaced Baltimore\nin second place, by one percentage point, by beating Uie Birds\n5-3. It was the third straight loss\nfor the Orioles, who are 14\ngames behind New York. The\nIndians, who have played fewer\ngames, trail by two.\nSI. Louis regained fourth place\nin the NL, defeating Cincinnati\n5-2 and slipping tiie Reds into a\nfifth place tie with Los Angeles.\nThe Dodgers swept a twi-night\ndoubleheader at Philadelphia, fi-3\nand 5-2, as the Phils tied the\nmajor league record by striking\nout 24 times.\nBoston ended its losing string\nat live by beating Detroit in tlie\nother AL game. The Chicago\nWhite Sox and Washington were\nrained oul.\nADCOCK   HOMERS   TWICE\nJoe Adcock socked his 10th and\nIlth home runs and Hank Aaron\nunloaded his 18th for the Braves\nin the second game at Chicago\nbehind the seven-hit pitching of\nJoey Jay (2-2). Adcock's first\nshot broke a 1-1 tie in the fourth\nagainst loser Bob Anderson (2-5).\nBob Will, whose third-inning\nsingle ruined Jay's shutout bid in\nthe nightcap, beating Milwaukee\nreliever Ron Piche 'l-3> with a\ntie-breaking pinch single in the\nninth inning of the opener. Dick\nEllsworth  (4-5)  was the winner.\nMaris, the major league home\nrun leader with 24. tagged Ray\nRobert '3-8> for a pair of two-run\njolts as New York made it 10 in a\nrow over the A's at Yankee Stadium. The first came with two out\nin the first inning, and tlie other\ncapped a three-run sixth. Clete\nBoyer    also    homered    for    the\nYanks, who had 10 hits. Coates,\n9-0 this season, gave up nothing\nbut singles, two by Danny Kravitz and the other by Norm Siebern. He walked two and struck\nout six.\nTwo-run homers hy Ted Williams and Russ Nixon did it for\nthe Red Sox against Jim Bunning\nI5-5L Nixon's was the clincher,\ncoming in the sixth with Williams, who had hammered his\n504th in the first inning, on base\nwith a single. Bill Monbouquette\n'7-7) was the winner.\nThe Dodgers took the opener\nin a two-run eighth against reliever Dick Farrell (5-2) after\nblowing a two-run lead. Frank\nHoward, who homered and drove\nin three runs, singled home the\nwinning run. Larry Sherry <6-4'\nwas Lhe winner in relief of Don\nDrysdale. 'Hie Dodger pair\nstopped Pancho Herrera's hitting\nstreak at 20 games, longest of\nthe season in the majors.\nThe Dodgers Ihen beat Gene\nConley '3-41, making his first\nstart  in  three weeks because of\nI back   trouble,   with  four  runs  in\nIhe   nightcap   fourth.   John   Rose-\nboro's single scored the winning\nrun after Norm Larker extended\ni his hitting   streaic   to   14   games\nj with a two-run single. Sandy Kou-\n! tax  i3-8i  won it, but needed Ed\nRoebuck's   relief   in   the   eighth\n; after  blanking  the Phils on two\n! singles  for six  innings.\nRookie     Ray    Sadecki     (2-3),\nj whose   only   other   major   league\nI victory   was   a   three-hit   shutout\n' over   Cincinnati   two  weeks  ago,\nj beat the Reds with a four-hitter\nthis   time.    He   needed   Lindy\nMcDaniel's save after Wally Post\nhomered in  Uie ninth.  Stan Musial,   shaking    his    slump    with\nseven   hits   in   12   trips,   singled\nhome  the  Cards'  first two  runs\nin a three-run  third against Jay\nHook   '6-7*.   Curt   Flood   capped\nthe winning frame with a single.\nSouthpaw   Dick   Stigman   (4-4)\nbeat the Orioles witih a six-hitter\nand capped  a  winning three-run\nfourth by driving in two runs with\nI a single. Jerry Walker (2-1) was\n' Ihe loser.\nHave &\nGOODMfM. Wi\n(brywr\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia\nTOMORROW . . . take the family to\nDOMINION\nSALMO\n^ Sports -\n^ Junior Baseball\n^- Parade -\nJC Dance -\n\u2022 * Golf-\nStarting\n9:00 a.m.\nDAY\nFor Children and Adults.\nPrizes\n1:00 p.m.\n9:00 p.m.\u2014KP Hall\nOfficial opening 10 a.m. \u2014 Golf all day \u2014\nFree   lunch   and   refreshments  available.\nWHAT BETTER WAY TO SPEND DOMINION DAY?-From9a.m.\nright through the day, there are activities to appeal to everyone,\nyoung or old. If you are a golfer you can bring the kids, happy in the\nknowledge that they will be having fun while you are beating par!\nEnd a happy day by attending the Dance at the K.P. Hall.\nHow To Get to the Golf Course\n\u2022 The course is located 2.8 miles south of Silmo on the airport. A sign will be erected\nat the  blinker  light  in  Salmo \u2014 Just  follow the arrow!\n\u2022 Own a plane? Just land on the course, you're welcome to do so.\n2,577 yards of broad, level fairway on\nwhich to test your skill. The new Salmo\ncourse should prove a delight to those\ngolfers who find a rolling, uphill course\ndifficult and tiring.\nAn Invitation to All\nGOLFERS\nto attend the official\nopening\nof the\nPutting on the 1st Green\nSALMO DISTRICT GOLF CLUB\nDOMINION   DAY,   FRIDAY,  JULY   1st\n10 A.M.\nFun  Filled\nHoles\nOf Golf\n(2.577 Yards)\nPar 35  Men\nPor 43  Ladies\nThis Advertisement Sponsored By:\nASSOCIATED ENTERPRISES LTD. OF SALMO\nLooking down fhe Fairway by the 3rd tee\nGREEN  FEES\nOpening Day Only\n$2.00\u2014which   includes\nTROPHIES\nTwo handsome trophies will be awarded to\nthe lady and gentleman carding low score\non opening day. Names of winners to be\nannounced at K.P. DANTE.\nPRIZES\nWe admit a hole-in-one is difficult to get\nbut it happens. If it should happen to you\ntomorrow you'll be $25 richer.\nFREE LUNCH\nGreen Fees of $2.00 include a FREE LUNCH.\nA refrigerated Iruck will he on the premises\nto  serve   refreshments   at  moderate  prices.\n\u25a0jiiihii tiiin\n iw.phj\u00ab>,,.i     ,.u4ipwp..     , -mmm-   , i      -, ...jimsy\nr\u25a0-;-;)\u25a0-.-.'-.\u25a0*. - , - , *\n^^^PlipSfSpppPiiiiil^^\n\/^7\nAustralians Monopolize\nMen's Wimbledon Singles\nWIMBLEDON (API\u2014The WUn-, Fraser, 26, a blond Melbourne\nbledon tennis championships took crusher who was top - seeded,\nreached his season's finest form\nin smashing India's frozen-faced\nRamanathan Kirtsnan, 6-3, 6-2,\n6-2.\nHOT  AND COLD\nLaver, 22, a bandy-legged\nQueenslander wilh fiery red hair\nand   a   flaming   style   to   match\non a familiar look Wednesday when Australian Neale Fraser and Rod Laver shot their\nway into the men's singles final.\nIt's the four* all-Australian\ntitle match in the last five years\nand the first In this Ivy-crusted\nevent involving a pair ol lefthanders. Both are former runners-up.\nBoston Pitcher\nGets Suspension\nBOSTON i API - American\nLeague President Joe Cronin\nWednesday sent a telegram to Boston Red Sox pitcher Ike Deloek\ninforming him he has been suspended for three days without pay\nfor his actions Tuesday night when\nhe was removed from the mound.\nDeloek made an objectionable\ngesture in lull view of the fans\nwhen he was booed as he walked\nto the dugout.\nThe suspenstor started Wednesday.\nwhen in form, blew both hot and\ncold in eliminating Italy's flash\nNicola Pietrangeli 4-6, 6-3, 8-10,\n6-2, 6-4.\nThe two Australian Davis Cup\nteammates wilt clash Friday for\nthe crown, won last year by\nAlex Olmedo, who since has\nturned pro.\nJust as was lhe case Wednesday, Americans will be on the\nsidelines today when the women\nplay for finalist berths. Brazil's\nMaria Bueno. the defending\nchampion, [aces Britain's six\nfoot Christine Truman, and South\nAfrica's pretty Sandra Reynolds\ntakes on another briton, left-\nhanded Ann Haydon,\nA pair ol 19-year-old Australians, Boh Hewitt and Mike Mulligan, eliminated the last U.S.\nmen's doubles team, Barry Mac-\nThe game was a replay as (he   Kay   of  Dayton.  Ohio,   and   Ron\nCapilanos Gain\nSoccer Semis\nVANCOUVER (CPI - Capilanos\nscored two quick goals Wednesday\nnight then hung on desperately lor\nlhe remainder of the game to defeat Columbus 2-1 and move into\nthe semi-finals of the Dominion\nCup soccer competition, B.C. section.\nFrank Patrick\nDeath Follows Brother\nLester's by Month\nDies\nand professional teams raking\ntbe country for stars, Frank and\nLester, the elder by two years,\nbecame members of bhe Renfrew\nmillionaires at $3,000 a season.\nReturning to the coast, the Pa-\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, JUNE 30,1960 \u2014 ?\ntrick boys persuaded their father\nto sell his lumbering interests\u2014\nfor $1,000,000 cash \u2014 built artificial ice plants in Vancouver and\nVictoria and launched the Pacific\nCoast Hockey League in 1911. It\nremained In constant operation\nas a major league until 1926.\nFrom 1911 to 1917 Frank was\nVancouver's star defenceman,\nmanager of the team and pres\nident   of   the   league,   a   record\nunique in hockey.\nIn 1915, Frank's Vancouver\nMillionaires, with such greats as\nCyclone Taylor, Frank NighSoij,\nMickey McKay and Hughie Let-\nman, defeated Ottawa Senators\nfor tbe world title in three\nstraight games, taking Ihe Step-\nley Cup to the Pacific coast for\nthe first time.\nVANCOUVER (OP\u00bb - Frank\nPatrick, the younger half of the\n| Patrick brotlier act that made\nthe name synonymous with\nhockey in Canada, died Wednesday, four weeks after the death\nof his brother,  Lester.\nHe was 74 and had been in ill\nhealth off and on since 1945 when\nhe suffered a heart attack.\nHe had a hockey career that\nspanned 38 years and his days as\na great player, team manager\nand league president won him\nelection to the Hockey Hall of\nI ame,   just as  the  career of  his\nteams had lied 2-2 last Sunday.\nCapilanos, sole remaining Mainland League squad in the competition, now meet Carlings of the\nPacific Coast League in tlie semifinal Sunday afternoon.\n,, ,   , ,   \u201e     ,,       , -    -\u201e i illuslrous   brother  had   done   for\nHolmberg  of   Brooklyn,   7-5,   5-7,   .\n11-9, 6-4. |\nThe   upset   followed   oefeat   of I    Flar>k starte<i Ws carPer as a\nthe No. 1 seeded team of Fraser I \">\"\u00ab\"\u25a0 tm>S\" r\"snlr>S **>--\u00ab\u2122an\nand   Rov   Emerson.   Australia's I '\"   Montreal   amateur   ranks   in\nace Davis Cup pair, by two fight-   m\u2122' !Ie CTded \" in 1941 at-e''\ning   Britons,   Mike   Davies   and I s(,\u2122nB tw\" *'ears as \u2122naSer of\nBobby   Wilson.   6-3   6-4,   3-6,   4-6,   Montreal Canadiens.\n3 In 1941 he entered a war indus- ,     ,     ,        ,   ,   ,\nU.S. hopes of a p*ce of Wktv   try, but four years later a serious | ward  ?\u00ab\u00ab,  J\u00abahied  puck  kick-\n.ledon silverware  were  left  with'heart attack forced him into re-1 \"*\u2022 *\u00ab pe.naltyJ,\u00b0r *!\u00b1ngJ^\nLhe  mixed doubles  and  women's   tircment.   He   returned  to  ho^i-   the    boards    **    ma\"y    other\ndoubles representatives. I tal several times in the interven\ning    years    and    facing    death\nbrought htm no fear.\nSHREWD DEAL\nAs the NIIL expanded, the Patricks were faced with a player\nwar and lacked the means to bid\nagainst the wealthier Eastern interests. Frank went east to see\nwhat could be salvaged and in\n1!>26 sold [or $250,000 a group of\nplayers the Eastern teams could\nhave obtained for nothing had\nthey played a waiting game.\nPatrick finally moved east in\nHI33 as managing director of the\nNHL under President Frank Cal-\nder for one year. He coached\nBoston Bruins for two seasons,\nthen returned to the Pacific\ncoast until 1939 when he was\nnamed manager of Montreal Canadiens.\nDuring his career, he became\none of the game's great innovators. He introduced the post-\nschedule playoff system, the for\nCoast Golfer Takes\nLead in B.C. Open\nVANCOUVER (CP)--Little Don\nRoss celebrated his first anniversary as head pro of Vancouver's Maple Ridge Golf Club Wednesday   with   a  blistering   five-\nrounds of 34-32. He was seldom in\ntrouble.\nOne year ago to the day, Ross\ntook over Maple Ridge after a\nyear's   apprenticeship   as   second\nWhen you buy a\nPioneer you buy a\ntaw of quality and\ndependability\u2014built\nto match any job.\nJCTX\nPIONEER\nV\nunder  par  66  and   a  two-stroke | assistant at Marine.\nlead in lhe $3,000 B.C. Open Golf j    He hit 16 of tihe 18 greens and\nChampionship. used only 29 putts in gaining his\nj opening   round   lead   over   U.S.\nprofessionals Harry Umbenetti of\nSeattle's Mount Si Golf Club and\nof   Portland.\nRoss toured Marine Drive's lusti\n6,020-yard par 36-35\u201471 layout in J\nFor Local Concrete Blocks\nSee Mr. Oscar Hanson\nPhone 885-R \u2014 42 Ymir Rd.\nSUPER 600\nfor production cutting-\nmaximum performance\nwith minimum maintenance-take the Pioneer\n600   $214.50\nIncluding pivot grip\nand 16\" attachments.\nELECTRIC  MOTOR\nREWINDING\nService and Repairs\nWe  Rewind All  Size  Motors\nand Armatures\nSee  Us  About All Types ol\nINDUSTRIAL CONTROLS\nColeman Electric\nLTD.\nPhone 805S Nelson, B.C.\nGRAY CREEK STORE\nP.O. Box 20 Crawford Bay, B.C.\nPhone: Gray Creek 2-Y\nNELSON   READY   MIX\nCONCRETE   LTD.\n\u2022 Ready-Mix Concrete\n\u2022 All  Sizes Crushed   Rock\n\u2022 Pea Gravel lor  Hoofing\n\u2022 Road   Gravel      \u2022 Sand\nPhone 871\nPREMIER  SAND\nand  GRAVEL   LTD.\nMid-Summer HOCKEY\nSATURDAY &\u2022\nNELSON CIVIC CENTRE\nTrail\nSmoke Eaters\nvs.\nNelson\nMaple Leafs\nTICKETS ON  SALE\nLast year's season ond contract\nticket holders must pick up their\ntickets by 5:00 p.m. tonight at\nthe Civic Centre.\nGENERAL\nTICKET SALES\nKootenay Stationers\nToday   and   Saturday\nBoth\nBoh   Duden\ncarded 68s.\nDefending champion Lyle Crawford of Vancouver Langara and\namateurs John Curie and Len\nMorgan of Vancouver and Tom\nStorpy of Seattle finished the\nopening round tied for fourth spot\nthree strokes behind Ross.\nCurie had the best nine of the\nday. carding a four-under 31 on\nIhe hack nine to go with his outgoing  38.\nB.C.  Lions To\nTrain at Keiowna\nVANCOUVER (CPI - British\nColumbia Lions plan to take 54\nplayers, including centre-linebacker Ed Sullivan, to their hard-\nwork training camp in Keiowna,\ncoach Wayne Robinson said Wednesday.\nSullivan, a I.ion standout in the\nWestern lnterprovinrial Football\nUnion last season, had announced\nearlier he was quitting football,\nbut he changed his mind this week\nand Robinson said the former\nNotre Dame lineman will arrive\nhere this weekend\nThe club wil! leave Sunday, winding up a two-week pre-Kelowna\nCamp here where more than 60\nplayers have heen participating in\nnightly conditioning workouts to\nprepare them for the heavy bodily\ncontact planned for the two-week\nstay at Keiowna.\nLions will return to Vancouver\nJuly 17, just three days before\ntheir first exhibition game, scheduled here against Montrea-l July 20.\nPERMANENT   SEATS\nThe five permanent members\nof the 11 - member UN Security\nCouncil are the United States, the\nUnited Kingdom, the Soviet Union, France and Nationalist\nChina.\nchanges thai helped make hockey\na modern sports spectacle.\nIt was Frank Patrick who\ncoined the phrase \"super stars,\"\nwhich he applied first to fit\nHowie Morenz and Cyclone Taylor.\nA tall and handsome man in\nhis youth, he won the respect of\nhockey men with his ability on\nthe ice and his honesty in business affairs. Players knew his\nhandshake was as iron-clad as a\ncontract.\nIn his last months, he bad a\nlined and worn face and his\nwords came slowly. But his recollections of the ail-time stars\nstood out clearly.\nBROTHER DIED JUNE 1\n\"Cyc Taylor could do it all,\"\nhe recalled not long before his\ndeath. \"He could stickhandie,\nrag the puck, score and skate . . .\nTaylor could skate like a cyclone\nraging out of hell.\"\nFrank's death, as a result of a\nseries of heart troubles, came on\nthe heels of the death of Lester,\nat the age of 76, from cancer on\nJune 1.\nTwo Patricks \u2014 sons Lynn and\nMuzz of Lester\u2014continue to keep\nIhe name alive in hockey, Lynn\nas manager of Boston Bruins and\nMuzz in the same position with\nNew York Rangers.\nFrank's one son, Joseph, was\nan outstanding hockey player\nwhen he attended Harvard University but didn't continue into\nthe professional game. He now i.s\nan investment dealer in New\nYork.\nFrank also had two daughters.\none now Mrs. Grant Ross, wife\nof a U.S. naval captain and living in Lajolia, Calif.; the other,\nFrances, married to an Australian and living in Australia.\nHis wife, Catherine, also survives.\nAt the same time, this man\nwho was often called the \"brains\nof modern hockey,\" a man who\nintroduced such sweeping,\nchanges to the sport as the blue\nline, who with his brother was the\nfirst to build artificial ice arenas\nand put numbers on athletic uniforms, said:\n\"I don't care to have my name\nin print anymore. People aren't\ninterested in reading about old\nhas-beens.\"\nBorn in Ottawa Dec. 21, 1885,\nFrank Patrick grew up in Montreal. As an amateur he played\nfor Montreal Victorias and for\nthree years at McGill University\nstarred also in football and track.\nHe moved with his father to\nNelson in 1908, but a year later,\nwith hockey booming in the east\nFor Your Entertainment\nAnd Enjoyment\nTonight Through Saturday\u2014Complete Shows 7:00-9:00\nFHE WHOLE WEST WATCHED\n...AND HELD ITS BREATH!\nHe Ro'de Into Dodge\nLooking For A Drink\n... A Woman ... And\nA Man To Kill!\nJOELMcCREA\n\u00a5-\u00a5-**\nELK DRIVE-IN\nCASTLEGAR, B.C.\nTonight, Friday, Saturday\n\"THK HALLIDAY BRAND\"\nJoseph Cotton, Vlveca Llndfors\nPlus - \"THK FEARMAKERS\"\nCASTLE  THEATRE\nCastlegar. B.C.\nTonight,  Friday, Saturday\n\"PARIS HOLIDAY\"\n(Color-Scope.)   Bob  Hope\nNEWS - CARTOON - SHORT\nAUTO-VUE Drive-ln\nTraU, B.C.\nTonight and Friday\n\"THE VIKINGS\"\nKirk Douglas, Janet Leigh,\nTony Curtis\nShow time approx. 8:55\nOFTEN IMITATED, BUT NEVER EQUALLED I\nLimit's\nNAVYaRUM\n25 oz bottles and\n12 oz flasks\nHearty in body,\nyet light in flavour\nand aroma.\nalio\nLftixili's\nRUM\nVERY LIGHT\nHiis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia\nRuns  Held  Down\nIn Cricket Match\nBRISTOL, England I Reutersl \u2014\nTwenty wickets fell for only 205\nruns in an exhibition cricket match\nbetween the South African tourists\nand Gloucestershire Wednesday.\nHustled out for 116 in their first\ninnings, the visitors turned the\ntables on the county side by skittling them for 81.\nBut the game swung Gloucestershire's way again when South\nAfrica lost a cheap wicket in its\nsecond innings to finish with eight\nruns for one wicket at the close\nof play.\nSTARLIGHT DRIVE-IN\n10 Miles East of Nelson\nTonight, Friday\n\"THE HORSE'S\nMOUTH\"\n(Color)\nAlex Guinness, Kay Walsh\nA wonderful comedy that the\nwhole family wilt enjoy.\nDOOR  PRIZE\nFRIDAY\nA WEEKEND AT\nTHE RIDPATH\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\n1 Hotel in Spokane for 2 persons|\n\u25a0 INCLUDES:\n\" Hotel    Accommodation    for    I\nI Nights\u2014 Breakfast   for  Z  Days,-\nCar Storage Free\u2014Plus Pinner|\n\u25a0 for 2 at the Safari Room of the\n1 Flamingo      Restaurant,     Sr,.no[]\nI Worth  of  Free  Rides at  Nat.\nPark. \u2014 $5.00 Worth of Gas at\n\u25a0 Fairview Esso. ,,\nDon't Forget\nSALMO\nDOMINION DAY\nCELEBRATIONS\nFRIDAY, JULY 1\nSPORTS  \u25a0  BASEBALL\nPARADE - DANCING\nFUN FOR ALL\nSTARTS\nFRIDAY\nFIGHT\nFILMS\nIngemar\nJ\n0\nH\nA\nN\nS\nS\n0\nN\nvs\nFloyd\nP\nA\nT\nT\nE\nR\nS\n0\nN\nAll Important\nAction in\nSlow Motion.\n-\u00a5\u2022*\u00a5- -\u00a5\u25a0-\u00a5\u25a0\nIE\nPLAYMOR - TONIGHT\nALBERTA'S FABULOUS CHECKERS\nFor The Big Pre-Holiday\n9:30\nto\n1:00\nDANCE\nAdmission\n$1.00\n ********\n10\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, JUNE 30, 1960\nBank of Canada Interest Rises\nOTTAWA (CP) - The Bank of\nCanada interest rate rose Wednesday to 3.32 per cent with the sale\nof $95,000,000 in 91-day government treasury bills.\nIt was the third weekly rise in\nthe rate, an indicator of conditions in the short - term money\nmarket. Last week the rate was\n3.23 per cent, continuing a climb\nfrom tbe low of 2.90 per cent\nreached three weeks  ago.\nThe rate, minimum charge by\nthe central bank on its infrequent\nloans to chartered banks, is set\nat one-quarter of one per cent\nabove the average yield on the\nweekly sale of 91-day treasury\nbills.\nThe bank announced Wednesday,\nwhen tenders closed one day\nearlier than usual because of the\nJuly 1 Dominion Day holiday,\nthat $95,000,000 of the bills were\nsold by tender at an average\nprice of $99,233 for an aiverage\nyield of 3.07 per cent.\nHighest price on the $95,000,000\nissue was $99,244 for a high yield\nof 3.02 per cent, the low price\n$99,225 for a yield of 3.10. Last\nweek the average price on a similar sale was $99,263 for an average yield of 2.98 per cent.\nWednesday's bank rate compares\nwith the record high of 6.41 per\ncent last Aug. 13 and the record\nlow of 1.12 per cent on July 31,\n1958.\nThe bank also announced the\nsale of $25,000,000 in 183-day bills\nat an average price of $98,405\nand an equivalent yield of 3.23\nper cent. Highest yield was 3.28\nper cent and the lowest 3.21 per\ncent.\nLast week the average price\non a similar sale was $98,434 for\nan average yield of 3.19 per cent.\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\nPACIFIC STANDARD TIME\nKHQ-TV \u2014 Channel 6\nTHURSDAY\n6:15 NBC News \u2022\n6:30 Front Page\n7:00 Bat Masterson *\n7:30 Producer's Choice *\n8:00 Sea Hunt\n8:30 Tenn. Ernie Ford (C)\n9:00 You Bet Your Life *\n9:30 Highway Patrol\n10:00 Manhunt\n10:30 News\n10:40 Lale Movie\nFRIDAY\n5:45 Front Page\n6:00 Cavalcade of Sports\n6:45 Song Shop\n7:00 Head of the Class <C\n7:30 Cimarron City (Ci *\n8:30 Masquerade Party i(\n9:00 Rivenboat\n10:00 Life of Riley\n10:30 Nows\n10:40 Late Movie\nKREM-TV - Channel 2\nTHURSDAY\n5:00 Three Slooges\n5:30 Rocky and His Friends\n6:00 News\n6:30 Huckleberry Hound\n7:00 Donna Reed *\n7:30 Real McCoys *\n8:00 Pat Boone Show *\n8:30 The Untouchables *\n9:30 This Man Dawson\n10:00 News\n10:15 Jack Paar Show *\n12:00 Dateline Europe\n12:30 News\n12:35 Hymn and Prayer\nFRIDAY\n5:00 Three Stooges\n5:30 Captain Gallant\n6:00 News\n6:30 Wall Disney Presents *\n7:30 Man From Black Hawk *\n8:00 77 Sunset Strip\n9:00 The Detectives *\n9:30 Black Saddle *\n10:00 Tombstone Territory\n10:30 U.S. Marshal\n11:00 News\n11:15 Late Movie\n12:50 Nows\n12:55 Hymn and Prayer\nPublic Utilities Commission\nDelays Certification of PNR\nKXLY-TV - Channel 4\nTHURSDAY\nSong Shop\n1 Love Lucy *\nDecember Bride *\nLove of Life *\nSearch For Tomorrow\nGuiding Lighl  *\nRay Miiland Show\nSusie\nTake 4\nAs The World Turns +\nFull Circle *\nHouseparty *\nMillionaire *\nVerdict Is Yours *\nBrighter Day *\nSecret Storm *\nEdge of Night *\nMatinee\nBig Playback\n4-Star Report\nDoug Edwards *\nAmos n' Andy\nBetty Hutton *\n.Johnny Ringo *\nZane Grey Theatre *\nMark-ham *\nPhil Silvers *\nLock Up\nShotgun Slade\nNews\n4-Most   Feature\nFRIDAY\nSong Shop\nI Love Luoy *\nDecember Bride *\nLove of Life *\nSearch For Tomorrow\nGuiding LigW *\nRay Miiland Show\nSusie\nTake 4\nAs The World Turns *\nFull Circle *\nHouseparty *\nMillionaire *\nVerdict Is Yours *\nBrighter Day *\nSecret Storm *\nEdge of Night *\nMatinee\nBig Playback\n4-Star Report\nDoug Edwards *\nAmos n' Andy\nJohnny Midnight\nHotel DeParee *\nFriday Nite Showcase *\nDecember Bride *\nTwilight Zone *\nPerson To Person *\nRawhide *\nNews\n\u20221-Mosf Feature\n(Programs subject to change by stations without notice.)\nDAILY  CROSSWORD\nACROSS\n1. Frigid\n5. Subsides\n& News\nmedium\n10. Of the\ncheek\n12. Verily\n14. Method\ncfiearning\n15. Chum\n16. Poetic foot\n18. Foxineas\n21. Japanese\nmeasure\n22. Bow of\nlight\n211. Beards ol\nrye\n25. Form\n28. Part of a\npie\n29. Tardy\n30. Cooling\ndevice\n31. Part of \"to\nbo\"\n32. Guided, as\na plane\n36. Noise\n39. Polynesian\ndrink\n40. Form ot\nlotto\n41. Cocktail\nmixer\n44. Steps over\nafence\n46. Catkin\n47. Snow\nvehicle\n48. German\nboy's nome\nDOWN\n1. Panama or\nErie\n2. Strangely\n3. An untruth\n4. Female,\ndeer\n6. Printer's\nmeasure\n8. Yeast, on\nbrewing\nliquors\n7. A daub\na Planet\n(fposs.)\n9.Yeaia\nXL With,\nstand\n13. Phonograph\nrecord\n17. Like\nJO. Back of\nthe neck\n20. Before\n23. Italian\nriver\n24. Chinese\ndialect\n25. Trousers\n26.RUB-\nal\ncluster1*\nof\nhouses\n27. By\n28. Mr.\nCooHflge\nSM). Coniferous\ntrees\n82. Italian\nriver\nS3. Seized\n34. Levels\n35. Flit\n37. Indigo\nHEHH        W\u00aem\nliBiiBI!!   ISBBlr'L\"\n&m  IHEM   ISHIS\nHGIUSH\nVeoterdny'o Ansnar\n38. Burrow,\ning\nanimal\n42. Exclamation\n43.Candlenut\ntree\n45. Man's\nnickname\n%\ni-\n1\n3\n4-\nfA\n$\n6\nT\ne\n^\n9\n^A\n|t>\n11\nlo\n13\n4\nrt\nts\nf\/t\n%\nI*\n17\nIS\n19\nio\n%\n%\n71\n%\n%\n%\n\u25a0a.\n%\nii\n24\n%s\n14>\n*1\n^\/A\nia\nw\n%\n3\u00b0\nWt\n%\n|\n31\nm\n%\n32\n33\n34-\n35\n36\n37\n3B\nft\n%\n39\n4t>\n^A\n4|\n42.\n43\n44\n4S\nft\n4t>\n%\n47\nf,<\n4&\nV\/<\n6-30\nDAUY CRXPEOQUOTE \u2014 Here's how to m>rl< its\nAXYDLBAAXR\nIs LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this sample A it mad*\nfor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apoa\u00ab\ntrophes, the length and formation of the words are all hint*.\nBach day Uie code tetters are different.\nA tojptogram Quotation\nLHOHOEHI.      TDN      S P S O AS \u2014 J O W !\u2022\u2022\nOS I.\nYesterdays Crypt-ouniUM WB HEAR NOT THE ATRY\nFOOTSTEPS OF THB STRANGE THINGS THAT A' MOS*\nHAPPEN\u2014HAWTHORNE.\n(\u00a9 1360, King futures Syndicate, fco.)\nVANCOUVER (CP) - The\nPacific Northern Railway apparently intends to get its construction started before tiie June\n30 deadline set in an agreement\nwith the British Columbia government.\nBut on the eve of a planned\ntrip by government and railway\nauthorities to the line's proposed\nsouthern terminal area, legal\nsteps were taken in an attempt to\nhalt temporarily any and all\nconstruction.\nJust what form the start of\nconstruction was to take was not\nclear here and none of those\nresponsible could be reached\nTuesday night for elaboration on\nthe few details reported.\nThe 800-mile line, to run from\nSummit Lake, 30 miles north of\nPrince George, to the Yukon\nboundary, is to become part of\nthe northern B.C. development\nundertaken by interests of Swedish financier Axel Wenner-Gren\nthree years ago.\nPLEDGED START IN JUNE\nIn an agreement with the province, these interests pledged to\nstart construction of the rail line\nby the end of June, I960.\nWith the deadline just a day\naway, arrangements have been\nmade for a chartered DC-3 airliner to leave Vancouver at 10\na. m, MDT today for Prince\nGeorge, taking the official party\nto Summit  Lake.\nThose aboard the flight were to\ninclude Premier Bennett, Transport Minister Wicks and Lands\nMinister Williston from tihe government Bernard Gore, key\nWenner - Gren representative in\nboth   the   railway   and   the   pro\nposed hydro-power development\nol the Peace River by the same\ninterests Einar Gunderson, PNR,\ndirector and executive vice-president of the provincially - owned\nPacific Great Eastern railway\nand two engineers from the railway.\nPrince George city council was\nto join the group for the 30 mile\ntrip aboard the PGE to Summit\nLake.\nThe PNR, established several\nweeks ago to build the proposed\nrailway line, has been given government permission to proceed\nwith the start of construction and\nhas obtained land at Summit Lake\nwhere it is to join with the PGE,\nfor marshalling yards.\nBut it has not obtained certification from the Public Utilities\nCommission.\nOn this point, the city of Prince\nRupert, 300 miles west of Prince\nGeorge and on the Canadian National Railways line, took legal\nstops.\nTuesday, the city obtained a\nwrit ordering the PNR lo appear\nin Supreme Court in Vancouver\nJuly 6 for hearing of the city's\napplication for an injunction stopping preliminary work on the\nline.\nThe injunction would have\nwork slopped pending hearings\nbefore tiie public utilities commission and issuance of a certificate of public convenience and\nnecessity.\nPrince Rupert claims the railway would hinder rather than\nhelp development of the north M\nbuilt from Summit Lake rather\nthan from the CNR connection\nat Prince Rupert.\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS 1390 ON THE DIAL\nPACIFIC DAYLIGHT TIME\nTHURSDAY, JUNE 30, 1960\n5:59\u2014Sign On\n6:00\u2014News\nfi:05\u2014Farm Fare\n6:15\u2014Wake-Up Time\n6:30\u2014News\n6:35-Wake-Up Time\n6:45\u2014Chapel in the Sky\n7:00\u2014News\n7:05-Wake Up Time\n7:25\u2014Sports News\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Wake Up Time\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n8:15\u2014Wake Up Time\n8:30\u2014Opening Markets\n8:35\u2014Wake-Up Time\n8:45\u2014The Archers\n9:00\u2014News\n9:05\u2014Morning Devotions\n9:10\u2014Birthday Book\n9:15\u2014Armdale  Ohoms\n9:30\u2014Alan's A.M. Spot\n9:59\u2014D.O.O.T.S.\n10:00\u2014News\n10:05\u2014Wheel of Fortune\n10:10\u2014Interlude\n10:15\u2014Tommy Hunter Show\n10:45\u2014John Drainie Tells a Story\n11:00\u2014News\n11:05-Story Parade\n11:16\u2014Album Time\n11:30\u2014Sacred Heart Program\n11:45\u2014Food Facts\n12:00\u2014Musicale\n12:15\u2014Sports Nows\n12:25\u2014News\n12:31\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n12:54\u2014News and Noon Markets\n1:00\u2014Vacation Time (CBC)\n1:45\u2014Vacation Time\n1:55\u2014News and Road Report\n2:00\u2014Vacation Time (CBC1\n3:30\u2014Vacation Time (CBO)\n4:00\u2014Vacation Time\n5:55\u2014Dee's Show\n6:00\u2014National News\n6:10\u2014Sport News\n6:15\u2014Rawhide\n6:30\u2014The '20s Roar\n7:00\u2014CBC National New*\n7:30\u2014Christian Science\n7:45\u2014Canada At Work\n8:00\u2014Little Symphonies\n8:30\u2014Science Review\n9:00\u2014Room for Argument\n9:30\u2014Eventide\n10:00\u2014News\n10:10-Sports and Weather\n10:15\u2014Personal Appearancs\n10:30\u2014Jazz Workshop\nll:00-Sign Off\n50\u2014Sign On\n00\u2014News\n05\u2014Farm Fare\n15-Wake Up Time\n30\u2014News\n35-Wake Up Time\n45\u2014Chapel in the Sky\n00\u2014News\n05\u2014Wake Up Time\n: 25\u2014Sports  News\n: 30\u2014News\n:35-Wake-Up Time\n: 00\u2014News\n: 10\u2014Sports News\n: 15-Wake  Up Time\n: 30\u2014Opening Markets\n: 35\u2014Wake-Up Time\n:45\u2014The Archers\n00\u2014News\n05\u2014Morning Devotions\n: 10\u2014Birthday Book\n15\u2014Jeremy Jones\n30\u2014Alan's A.M. Spot\n: 59-D.O.O.T.S.\n: 00\u2014News\n05\u2014Wheel of Fortune\n10\u2014Interlude\n: 15\u2014Tommy Hunter Show\n45\u2014John Drainie Tells a Story\n00\u2014News\n05\u2014Story Parade\nFRtDAY, JULY 1, 1960\n11:15\u2014Album Time\n11:30\u2014Sacred Heart Program\n11:45\u2014Swift Money Man\n12:00\u2014Musicale\n12:15\u2014Sports News\n12:25\u2014News\n12:31\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n12:54\u2014News and Noon Markets\n1:00\u2014Vacation Time (CBC)\n1:45\u2014Vacation Time\n1:55\u2014News and Road Report\n2:00\u2014Vacation Time (CBC)\n2:30\u2014Vacation  Time\n3:30\u2014Vacation Time (CBO)\n4:00\u2014Vacation Time\n5:55\u2014Dee's Show\n6:00\u2014News\n6:10\u2014Sports News\n6:15\u2014Rawhide\n6:30\u2014A Touch of Strang*\n7:00\u2014News\n7:30\u2014Evening Concert\n8:00\u2014Who's the Composer\n8:30\u2014Maple Sauce\n9:30\u2014Songs of My People\n10:00\u2014Nows\n10:10\u2014Sports and Weather\n10:18-The Four Gents\n10:30\u2014Choral Series\n11:00\u2014Sign Off\nCBC PROGRAMS\nPACIFIC DAYLIGHT TIME\nFRIDAY, JULY 1, 1960\n6:00\u2014Sharpe at Six\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n8:15\u2014Sharpe\n9:00\u2014BBC News\n9:15\u2014Much Ado about Music\n9:30\u2014Morning Concert\n9:59\u2014D.O.O.T.S.\n10:00\u2014Morning Visit\n10:15\u2014The Tommy Hunter Show\n10:45\u2014John Drainie Tells a Story\n11:00\u2014House of Horton\n11:15\u2014Off The Record\n12:15\u2014News\n12:25\u2014Showcase\n12:31\u2014B.C   Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Five to One\nSATURDAY,\n6:00\u2014Bert Nelson\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Bert Nelson\n9:00-BBC News\n9:15\u2014Hobby Club\n9:30\u2014Pre-Sohool Program\n9:59\u2014D.O.O.T.S.\n10:00-World Church News\n10:15\u2014News\n10:2*--Regional Weather\n10:30\u2014Game of the Day\n1:30\u2014Musical Program\n2:00\u2014Time For French\n2:15\u2014 Chansonettes\n2:30\u2014Outlook\n3:00\u2014 News\n3:10\u2014Weekend Listening\n1:00\u2014Pacific Express\n1:45\u2014Program Resume\n2:00\u2014Pacific Express\n2:30\u2014Trans Canada Matmes\n3:30\u2014Just Noodlin'\n4:00\u2014Court of Opinion\n4:30\u2014Tempo\n7:00\u2014National News\n7:30\u2014Evening Concert\n8:00\u2014Who's the Composer\n8:30\u2014Maple Sauce\n9:30\u2014Songs of My People\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014The Four Gentlemen\n10:30\u2014Form In Music\n11:00\u2014Tuned to Dancing\n11:57\u2014News\nJULY 2,  1960\n3:15\u2014Ask the Weatherman\n3:30\u2014This Week at the U.K.\n3:45\u2014Just For Laughs\n4:00\u2014Ray's  Record\n4:30\u2014Chico Vallee\n5:00\u2014Upper Canada Jazz Club\n5:30\u2014Big Band Show\n6:00\u2014Four's Company\n7:00\u2014News\n7:10\u2014Pre-World Music Festivals\n9:00\u2014The Happy Timers\n9:30\u2014The Continentals\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014This Week\n10:30\u2014Call The Tune\n11:00\u2014Western Jamboree\n11:57\u2014News\n SMALL 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\nPROPERTY, MOUSES,\nFARMS, tTC, FOR SALE\n'Continued'\nATTRACTIVE 4 ROOM HOUSE\non 3 acres. Small down payment,\neasy terms. Paul Markoff, Slocan Park.\nHOUSE IN EXCELLENT LOCA-\ntion. 4 bedrooms, oil furnace,\ngrounds landscaped, fruit trees,\ngarage   Apply 612-5th Street.\nHELP  WANTED\nFOR SALE - ON NORTH SHORE\n5 rooms and bath on large lot.\nPhone 303-L,\nH\nyOU CAN ADD $15 TO $25 Al\nweek to your present income\nselling Rawleigh Household nee- j\nessities. Full time district also i\navailable. For full details write I E\nW. T. Rawleigh Co. Ltd., Dept. j ^j\nEE-153, 589 Henry Ave., Windi- \u2022_*\npeg 2, Man\nHIGH-SCHOOL GRADUATE WITH\npleasing personality to learn appliance selling. This is an opportunity with unlimited possibilities. Apply Box 411 Daily\nNews.\t\nAPPLICAT10NS~WILL BE RE\"\nceived (or position Assistant to\nthe Principal, Stanley Humphries\nHigh School. Castle-*ar. 30 teachers, 700 punils. Applications to be\nin hands of Sec. bv 3 o.m. Julv 7.\nfWXNTED - EXPERIENCED\nwelder. Good wages and working\nconditions. Aoply National Em-\nplovment Office. Nelson.\t\nHcLP  WANTED - FtMAU\nAVON - WORLD'S LARGEST\ncosmetic company has immediate openings lor energetic women\nto service excellent AVON territories in Nelson and rural areas,\nsuch as Procter, Kaslo, Riondel,\nAinsworth. McMurdo and other\npoints north of Nelson. Part time\nwork, earnings start at once.\nWrite to - Mrs. E. C. Hearn,\nBox 14, R.R. No. 4, Keiowna, B.C.\nEXPERIENCED WAITRESS\nWanted. Phone 1877 or 391.\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nPRECISION GRINDING, CIRCU\nlar Saws. Scissors. Pinking\nshears. Hipperson's, Nelson, Ph\n497.\nWILL WATER AND MOW YOUR\nlawn. Phone 1196-X for estimates.\nReliable.\nSEPTIC TANK TROUBLE'' FOR\nprompt cleaning service low\nrates. Phone 161-L-l.\nCHESTERFIELD, RUG CLEAN-\ning. Dutch Cleaning Service -\nPhone 2190.\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nFINAL CLEARANCE - 2 PCE.\nChesterfield Suite, reg. $389.50\u2014\n$279.00; 2 pee. Chesterfield Suite,\nreg. $467.50 \u2014 $350.00; Mahogany\nDesk, reg. $89.50 - $59.50; Tri-\nlite Lamp, reg $34.95 - $20.00;\nBedspreads Mi price; All Pictures\nand Table Lamps priced to clear;\n2 used Oak Office Desks, $95.00\nand $115.00; 2 used Office Chairs,\n$15.00 each; 1 Swivel Arm Oliair,\n$35.00; 1 used G.E. Vacuum\nCleaner, $30.00; 2 large Store\nCounters, $25.00 and $50.00;\nLarge Display Table, $20.00.\nFreeman's 'use alley entrance I\nNOTICE TO CREDITORS\nJAMES BUCHANAN BREMNER, j\nDECEASED I\nNOTICE is hereby given that'\ncreditors and others having claims j\nagainst the estate of JAMES BU-I\nCHANAN BREMNER, late of(\nYmir, British Columbia, deceased,!\nare hereby required to send themi\nto the undermentioned Solicitors\nfor the Executors, at 415 Baker\nStreet, Nelson,. British Columbia,\nbefore the 30th day of July, 1950,\nafter whioh date the Executors will\ndistribute the said estate among\nthe parties entitled thereto, having\nregard only to the claims of which\nthey then have notice.\nDATED at Nelson, British Columbia, this 28th day of June, A.D.\ni960.\nANDREW BURGESS.\nJOSEPH H. DUNN.\nExecutors.\nMcBRIDE & ALLAN,\nSuite 3, 415 Baker Street,\nNelson, B.C.\nSolicitors for the Executor.\n.300 WEATHERBY AND .338 MAG-\nnum rifles. Imports from Liege,\nBelgium. .303 BR Jungle Carbines, new and used. .3006 and\n.303 Army amo mfg. by Winchester $2.50 box of 20. Reloading\nsupplies. Gunsmith. Norm's Sport\nShop, 171 Baker. Ph. 385,\nLLOYD DOUBLE SLEEPER\nstroller, suitable for twins or\ntots. Canopy attached, new condition. $30. 2 wicker bassinets with\nmattress. Good condition. $6.50\neach. Apply 609 - 4th St. Nelson\nor phone 482-R2.\t\nMcCLARY COAL AND WOOD\nenamel stove and tank. Suitable\nfor summer home. $18. Phone\n1597-Y.\n33\" ELECTRIC RANGE WITH\nautomatic timer; Venetian blinds\nfit window 40\" x 80\". 817 Carbonate St. Ph. 2305.\nDPRIGHT CRAIG PIANO, 2 Lionel electric trains, quart sealers,\n1 ironing board, 1 hand floor pol-\nisher. Ph. 1939.\t\nROYAL VACUUM CLEANER\nwith appliances, good workin?\ncondition. $20. Phone 1619 X.\n10 CU. FT. KEROSENE FRIG. -\nExcellent condition. Apply Box\n157. Castlegar. B.C.\t\nHEALTH FOOD CENTRE OPEN\nday and evenings. 924 Davies St.\nNOTICE TO CREDITORS\nROBERT McDOUGALL,\nDECEASED\nNOTICE is hereby given that\ncreditors and others having claims\nagainst the estate of ROBERT\nMcDOUGALL, late of Kaslo, British Columbia, deceased, are hereby\nrequired to send them to the undermentioned Solicitors for the Executor, at 415 Baker Street, Nelson,\nBritish Columbia, before the 30th\nday of July, 1960, after which date\nthe Executor will distribute the\nsaid estate among the parties\nentitled thereto, having regard only\nlo the claims of which he then has\nnotice.\nDATED at Nelson, British Columbia, this 28th day of June, A.D.\n1960.\nJOHN McDOUGALL,\nExecutor.\nMcBRIDE b ALLAN,\nSuite  3.  415   Baker  Street,\nNelson, B.C.\nSolicitors for the Executor.\nLAND~REGISTRY~ACT\niSecton 161)\nIN THE MATTER OF Lot 15. in\nBlock 47, Nelson City.\nProof having been filed in my\nOffice of the loss of Certificate of\nTitle No. 12285-1 to he above-\nmentioned lands in the names of\nDAVID GRIEG MOSSES AND\nJESSIE MOSSES and bearing date\nthe 2nd day of May, 1922 1 HEREBY GIVE NOTICE of my intention\nat the expiration of one calendar\nmonth from the first publication\nhereof to issue Provisional Certificate of Title in lieu of such lost\nCertificate. Any person having any\ninformation with reference to such\nlost Certificate of Title is requested\nto communicate with the undersigned.\nDATED AT NELSON, B.C., this\n22nd day of June, A.D. 1960.\nL. A. McPhail,\nDeputy Registrar.\nNelson   Land   Registry   District\nDale of first publication June 23,\n1960.\nAUTOMOTIVE, i\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\nNew Chev. Sedans\nNew Chev. Pickups\nNew Corvair Sedans\nNew Envoy Sedans\n'59 CHEV SEDAN\n'59 CADILLAC SEDAN\n'59 VAUXHALL SEDAN\n'59 SIMCA SEDAN\n'59 CHEV. PICKUP\n'59 FORD SEDAN\n'58 VOLKSWAGEN SDN\n'58 OLDSMOBILE SEDAN\n'58 KARMANN GHIA\n'57 CHEV. SEDAN\n'57 PLYMOUTH SEDAN\n'57 PONTIAC SEDAN\n'56 PLYMOUTH SEDAN\n'56 VOLKSWAGEN\nDEL. VAN\n'56 CHEV. PICKUP\n'56 CHEV. SEDAN\n'56 BUICK SEDAN\n'55 PONTIAC SEDAN\n'55 PONTIAC STN WGN\n'55 CHEV. SEDAN DEL.\n'55 CHEV. SEDAN\n'54 AUSTIN SEDAN\nMACHINERY\nTEACHERS   WANTED\n'        TEACHERS WANTED\nSchool   District  No.   6\n(Kootenay Lakei\nJewett   Superior \u2014 two   room\nschool at Meadow Creek, a rural\narea  near  head of  Kootenay\nLake.\n1. Qualified MALE teacher as\nprincipal, to teach about twenty\npupils  grades   7-10.\n2. T e a c h e r lor Elementary\nGrades 1-6, also ahout twenty\npupils.\nRIONDEL-,1. A. Cochran School.\n1. One primary lor grades 1 and\n2.\n2. One secondary for Mathematics and Science Grades 9 to 12,\nand French 20.\nApply with full particulars qualifications and experience, references and last Inspector's report\nto Alt. Watson, Secretary Treasurer, School District No. 6 (Koo-\ntenav Lake'. Kaslo. B.C.\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\nwTNYE~Dr>EELED~~CEDAR\npoles loaded on cars 35 lo 75\nfeet long Dumont. 1164 Wesl\n32nd Ave , Vancouver, B C\nWANTED: SINGLE DRUM JAM\"\nmer and 1928 Durant motor. Box\n228 Nelson News.\nWANTED - 2ND HAND \"STDT-\nwalk bike. Phone 1573-Y.\nBUSINESS OPPOR I UNITIES\nLAND FOR SALE\nSealed Tenders (marked \"Tender\nFor Property\"' will be received by\nIhe undersigned up until 5:00 p.m..\nWednesday, July 13th, 1960 for the\npurchase of property described as\nLots 4-9 (incl.I part of Parcel 16 ol\nLot 4588, Plan 2605 (53865-11 situate\nbetween the highway and Daltor)\nAvenue and between McEvoy\nStreet and Thompson Street.\nFor turther information please\ncontact the City Clerk. Highest Or\nany tender not necessarily accepted.\nTHE   CORPORATION   OF\nTHE  CITY   OF  FERNIE.\nF. J. BUTALA,\nCity Clerk,\nThe Board of School Trustees,\nSchool District No. 5 (Creston) will\naccept tenders for the construction\nof a Standard 2-Room School at\nGray Creek. Plans, Specifications,\nForms of Tender, and Instructions\nto Bidders can be obtained from\nthe Oflice of Ihe Secretary-Treasurer, School District No. 5 (Creston i, on the deposit of $20.00, the\nsum of which is refundable, on\nreturn of Plans and Specifications\nin good condition.\nBids will close and be opened\not th* Office of the Secretary-\nTreasurer, School District No. 5\niCreston>, at 5:00 P.M. Wednesday.\nJuly 13, 1960. Lowest 6r any tender\nnot necessarily accented.\nTERMS - TRADES\nChevrolet,   Oldsmobile,\nCadillac,   Corvairs,   Envoys\n24-Hr. Wrecker Service\nPHONE 35\nMl\nLTD\n323 Vernon Street\nNelson,  B   C.\nCOTTONWOOD WRECKAGE SER\nvice English and Canadian used\ncar parts. '56 GMC '\/i T. Pickup\nparts and '53 Ford parts. Phone\n2100. Box 382, 24 Ymir Road, Nel\nson.\n'59 CADILLAC SEDAN DeVILLE\nFully power equipped, ivory with\nblack and ivory interior. 8900\nmiles. Immaculate condition\nPhone Nelson 2251-L.\nlime\nIS   HERE\nIN STOCK:\nCASE  MOWERS\nTo Fit Any Tractor\nBalers - Rakes\nHay Conditioners\nForage Harvesters\nEtc.\nSPECIAL\nFERGUSON   \"35\"\nEquipped  With  Mower,\nPlow,   Disk\nBeautiful  Shape\nEASY TERMS - BIG TRADES\nWrile \u2022 Phone - Wire\nEAGLE\nEquipment Ltd.\nPhone  142 Box 321\nYour  Case Quality  Dealer\nFor East and West Kootenay\nIn Creston, Call\nCharlie McNiven\nPhone EL-6-9893\nBOATS AND ENGINES\nHAVE YOU\nSEEN IT?\nThe   13-Foot\nSAPPHIRE BOAT with Trailei\nand 25 hp. Scott Engine\nTHE BEST BUY EVER\nBe Sure to See It  at\nWELDING & EQUIPMENT\nCO, LTD\n514 Railway St.       Phone 1402\n14 FT. PLYWOOD RUNABOUT-\nSteering wheel, windshield,\nspeedometer, running liglits and\nseat cushions. Factory built, used\none year. $350.00 complete. Ph.\nBalfour 156.\nRENTALS\n(Continued'\nFOR RENT: SMALL HOUSE, 3\nrm. and bath. 2044 Fall St. Ph.\n2288.\nFOR RENT: 2 OR 3 BEDROOM\nhouse. Close in. Automatic gas\nheat. Phone 1059-X.\nBRIGHT,   CENTRAL,   COZY\nfurn. apt. for two. Phone 1703.\nFOR     RENT    -     FURNISHED\nhousekeeping room. Ph. 405-L,\nFOR RENT - 6 ROOM HOUSE\nPhone 2263-L after 5.\nPARTLY   FURNISHED  2   ROOM\nsuite. 723 Silica St. Ph. 718-R\nFOR RENT - SUITE. FOR IN-\nformation Phone 2199-L.\nCLEAN   SLEEPING   ROOM.   AP\nply 410 Victoria Street.\nHOUSE FOR RENT - PHONE 135\nMcHardy Agencies Ltd.\n3 ROOM SUITE AND SLEEPING\nroom. 606 Front St.\nTRAILERS\nTIRED   OF\nPAYING RENT?\n35-FOOT HOUSE TRAILER\nFully Equipped\nA Special Price at\n$1955.00\n$695 Down and $56 per month\nPHONE\nMEL BUERGE\nMOTORS LTD.\n1744 or  1135\nFOLD-DOWN CAMPING TRAIL\ner. 5.-<ply construction, 8' x 6'6\".\nNew 8 oz. duck cover, sleeps\ntwo. Best offer takes it. Phone\n1404-R Trail after 5 p.m.\n6): 8 LIGHTWEIGHT HOLIDAY\nor hunting trailer. Sleeps 2. con\ndition as new, sacrifice at $195\nPhone 577-Y-l evenings.\n31 FT. MOBILE HOME - GOOD\ncondition.  $2000 cash.   Box  '.\nSalmo.\nFOR SALE: 2 WHEEL UTILITY\ntrailer. Phone 2148.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\nBOAT . . . 144' FACTORY-BUILT\nmoulded plywood ninabout with\nwindshield, remote controls,\nsteering wheel etc. Phone 2086 or\n106.\nFOR SALE - KB-8 LOGGING\ntruck, bunks, trailer. Can haul\nlong logs. Can be financed. Phone\n1733-R evenings.\n'54 DELUXE FORD, 4-DOOR,\nheater, $1,000. For further information phone 120, W. E. Storbo,\nSalmo, B.C.\n1948 DODGE SEDAN - EXCEL-\nlent condition all around. Very\nreasonable for cash. Phone 257-X\nafter 6.\nCARLOT OPEN EVERY DAY\ntill 8 p.m. Later by appointment.\nSee our wonderful selection\nPeebles, Motors, Nelson.\nFOR SALE. 1948 PONTIAC, GOOD\nmechanical condition, good tires.\nneeds some body work. Phone\n462-L-2\n1954 FARGO TRUCK - MOTOR\noverhauled and in excellent condition. Imperial Oil Ltd., Nelson.\nSOUTH NELSON BODY WORKS\nTop quality workmanship. Phone\n2324, Ymir Road.\t\nWE PAY CASH FOR GOOD USED\ncars. McElroy Motors Ltd.\n14 FT. RUNABOUT, COMPLETE-\nly equipped wilh 15 h.p. motor\nand trailer. Gift at $625. A. A.\nLambert, Kinnaird   B.C.\nCUT PRICE SALE - NEW 15'\nfibre-glass boat. Windshield and\nhdwe. Will sell $250, less than\nwholesale cosl. Phone 385.\nTRADE UP TO A MERCURY:\nOutboards 6-80 h.p. Glasspar,\nFiberglass boats   Jeflery Radio\nRENTALS\nDUPLEX AT 6 MILE. EACH\npart 4 rooms, 2 bedrooms, electric stove, close to beach $50. T.\nD. Rosling & Son Ltd., 568 Ward\nSt.\nFURNISHED 2-ROOM SUITE,\nsink with hot and cold water.\nPhone 491-X or apply 140 Baker\nSt. Also housekeeping room.\nLIVESTOCK,  POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES. ETC.\nVERNON    STREET\nGo\njo: d. return nn invi\n$15.03^ will handle. Phoi\nafter 6:00 p.m.\nBUILDING\neslnrnt.\none 510-R\nFOR SALE: COW JUST FRESH-\nened. Apily J. W. Argaloff. Bril-\nllant, BC.\t\nFO.t SALE - 1 WcLSH PONY.\n1 bay mare ab-:ut 1401 lbs. Phone\n171. Shorty's Repair Shop.\n'56 OLDSMOBILE 88, $1800. Phone\n417-X.\t\n'47 CHEV.. 5 PASS. COUPE -\nGood tires. R and H. Ph. 383-X.\nROOM  AND BOARD\nROOM AND BOARD FOR YOUNG\ngentlemen. Phone Mrs. Truscott\nPhone 1179-X\nLOST  AND FOUND\nLOST:   ONE  BLUE BUDGIE.  IF\nfound p'-jese \"h. 190-X. Reward,\nPETS.   CANARIES,   BEES\nBAR-0 R\\NCH SELLING OUT -\nLow prices, phone 599-L-2.\nHOUSEKEEPING   AND   SLEEP-\ning    rooms,    weekly,    monthly\nrates.    Dishes,  linen    supplied;\nparking. Allen Hotel, 171 Baker.\nCLETN^O'USEKEEPING    AND\nsleeping rooms. Very reasonable.\nti block from Bus Depot. 705 Vic-\ntoria_SI. Alley .\n3^SL~MOT5M!^SEOf^S)N-\ntained    apt.,    unlurn.,    central.\nHeat and hot water. Adults. Ph.\n2106-L.\n3 ROOMS. SELF \u25a0 CONTAINED\nfurnished apartment. Close in.\nPhone 1453-L\nCABINS, 4 MILES FRoM tf\u00a3L-\nson. Phone 782-R-l lor reservation^\t\nFURNISHED AND UNFURNISH-\ned 1 and 2 bedroom aiartments\n507 Silica St   Phone 303-L.\n3 HuTiM HOUSE, N.-'WLY DECOR-\nated. Available July 1. Phone\n338- R.\nVENDOR WANTS\nIMMEDIATE\nSALE!\nHe reduced, therefore, price of\nthis BEAUTIFUL NORTH\nSHORE PROPERTY. Approx.\n% mile from Nelson bridge, on\nnicely landscaped grounds, 165'\nbeach frontage, wharf, boat-\nhouse, and small cabin. Deluxe\nhome, 4 B.R.s, L.R. (fireplace),\nD.R. Very good decoration inside and outside. Cemenl basement. Please see us for further\ninformation.\ncHardy\nAgencies Ltd.\nINSURANCE - REAL ESTATE\n654 Ward St. Nelson, B.C.\nFOR SALE - TO CLOSE ESTATE\nlot 50' x 120'. Corner Mill and\nCellar Sts. Phone 841-X.\n2 BDRM. COTTAGE. 6 ML, N.S.\nLovely set up, a real home. Box\n500 Daily News.\nFOR SALE\u20142 BEDROOM HOUSE\non 50 x 100 lot in Castlegar.\nPhone 328-L-l Nelson.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, JUNE 30, 1960\u201411\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS\nThe Dally News does not hold Itself responsible in the event\nof an error In the following lists.\nTORONTO STOCKS\nLOVELY   NORTH   SHORE   SUM-\nmer property. Phone 474-L.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nREPAIRS TO ALL TYPE OF\nelectrical appliances, Vacuum\ncleaners and polisher armatures\nrewound, $8 each. Repairs to\nautomatic washers a specialty\nColumbia Eloctrocentre, 1180\nBay Ave.. Trail. Phone 2538.\nFurnace, Major Appliances, Etc.\nTune-Ups and Repairs, Phone 2333\nD. McCUIAG SERVICE-NELSON\nNELSON REFRIGERATION\nCommercial  Refrigeration Service\n205 High SI. Phone  1917\nASSAYERS AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nH.  S.   ELMES,  ROSSLAND,  B.C.\nAssayer,   Chemist,   Min   Rep.\nENGINEERS   AND   SURVEYORS\nRAY G. JOHNSON\nB.C. Land Survevor 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. 2316\nALEX CHEVELDAVE\nB.C. Land Surveyor \u2014 Phone 5342\n448 Columbia Ave.. Casllegar. B.C.\nJfolamt Sathj Nrwa\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 Oulside Nelson:\nOne month                $ 125\nThree months        3.50\nSix months      6.50\nOne year 12.00\nBy Mail to United Kingdom or tfhe\nUnited States:\nOne month              $ 1.75\nThree months       5.00\nSix months      9.00\n. One year 18.00\nWhere extra postage is required,\nabove rates plus postage.\nFor delivery by carrier in Cranbrook,     phone    Mrs.    Stanley\nWillisson;\nIn Kimberley, A. W. Brown:\nIn Trail, Mrs. Syd Spooner;\nIn Rossland, Mrs. Ross Saundry.\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nAdvocate     \t\nAlgom Uranium  _\t\nAnacon Lead \t\nAnglo  Rouen   \t\nAumaque        \t\nAunor\nBarnat \t\nBase Metals     \t\nBaska Uranium \t\nBrunswick \t\nCampbell C \t\nCassiar \t\nCentral Patricia \t\nChimo \t\nChromium \t\nCons.  Discovery      \t\nCons HalUwell\nCons Mining & Smelting . .\nCon Sanorm\nCon Sub \t\nConwest \t\nCopper Corp \t\nCopper Man \t\nD'Aragon         .\t\nDonalda \t\nEast Amphi     \t\nEast  Malartic  \t\nEast Sullivan  -\t\nElder  Gold        \t\nFalconbridge   \t\nFaraday      \t\nFrobisher  \t\nGeco \t\nGiant Yel\t\nGunnar Gold \t\nHeadway       \t\nHudson Bay  ....\t\nInt. Nickel \t\nJoliet Que.       \t\nKerr Addison\t\nLabrador .\nLakeshore    \u2014\nLeitch  \t\nLexindin  _\nLittle Long Lac   ..*.- _\nLoradO         _ _\nMacassa        \t\nMacDonald    ...a\t\nMadsen R. L \t\nMaritime Mining\t\nMcLeod\nMcKenzie R L __\nMilliken        \t\nMining Corp ...\nMulti Mins  \t\nNew Delhi    \t\nNew Hosco  \t\nNew Jason \t\nNew Lund       __\nNoranda New\t\nNorpax        \u2014.\nNorth Can      \t\nNorth Rankin ...__-,\t\nOpemiska    \t\nPickle Crow ...... _\nPlacer Devel  >.\nPreston E. D  \u201e\nQuebec Copper  \t\nQuebec Lalb        _\nQuebec Metallurgical __\nQuernflnt  .\nRadiore  \t\nRainville   . . \u25a0\t\nRayrock   \t\nSan Antonio\n5 ACRES WITH 2-STOREY. 3-\nbedroom house on concrete foundation, located at Renata. Has\n50 assorted fruit-bearing trees.\nPresently rented. Give - away\nprice $4000. With $1000 down.\nWilliam Kalyniuk Agencies, 534\nJosephine St., Nelson, B.C. Phone\n1777.\nLISTINGS - HAVE YOU BEEN\nwanting to sell your property?\nWe require properties of 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.\nWILL TRADE FOR WHAT HAVE\nyou? Dwelling 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, corner location, Latimer\nSt., double garage, $7,900. Also\nmodern bungalow at 6 mile, 4\nrooms and dinette. '-2 acre,\n$7,900. T. D. Rosling k Son Ltd.,\n958 Ward St.\nAT PROCTER. BUNGALOW, 4\nrooms and balh on main street.\nLot 50*1:115', $3,600 also l'i miles\nwest of Procter about 1 acre orchard and graden, 4 rooms, bath,\nfireplace, roothouse. outbuildings\nand garage. Creek. $3,900. T. D\nRosling & Son Ltd., 568 Ward St.\nFOR SALE - LOT 5, BLOCK 1 OF\nlot 838 Kootenav District Plan 746\nPoplar district. Submit offer\ncash or terms to William Nolan,\n116 Tree View Dr., Toronto 14,\nOnt.\nLondon Finds\nTest Reaction\nMetres Good\nBy STEWART MaeCLEOD\nLONDON (CPi - Tsst-your-\nreaction.. meters, installed in\nCumberland pubs so drivers\ncan see whether they have had\ntoo much to drink, are doing a\nbooming  business.\nBut not in the way the government  intended.\nPatrons of the state \u2022 owned\npubs, in which the government\ninstalled these do - it - yourself\ntesting machines, have discovered that the gadgets are\nideal for a little gambling.\nThis development is naturally\ncausing considerable consternation in official circles.\nThe machines are designed to\nwarn drivers when their reactions are too slow for sa'e\ndriving. After depositing a\nthree-penny piece. Ihe driver\nmust react to a signal within\na few seconds. If he does, he\ngets his money back and is\nconsidered a safe bet on the\nroads.\nIf the money stays in lhe\nmachine, he should walk.\nBut apparently the pub patrons have decided it's more\nfun to bet on each others reactions. The chief constable of\nCarlisle\u2014the county seat\u2014was\ncalled in Monday ta investigate\nthe gambling craze, but he decided to give the machines another chance.\n\"It is premature to condemn\nthese  things,\"  he said.\nSome of the pub clients\nagreed.\n\"We always thought the machines were just a gimmick.\"\nsaid railway worker .lames\nCantwell, \"but it has become a\ngreat gambling game. I've won\n15 shillings in half an hour.\"\nBuilder Norman Harrison\nshared this view. \"It's a real\ngame of skill \u2014 better than\ndominoes.\"\nEXCELLENT REAL ESTATE IN-\nvestment with sm H f'o vn ojy-\nm?nt. Net income $1500 yearly\nPhone 474-L.\nSTART   WITH   TRIPLETS\nPETERBOROUGH. Ont. (CP'\nTriplets were born to Mrs. Clement Lucas, 28. Tuesday at St.\nJoseph's Hospital here. Hospital\nauthorities say the two girls, both\nI weighirg [our pcunds. and a boy\nwrhhin-* f- nr priinr!? 10 our.es\narc all (loin-: w?!l 'l*he triplets\nare the Lucas'  lirsl  children.\nShemtt Gordon\t\nSteep Roc4t  \t\nSullivan Can  \t\nSylvairite        .\t\nTeck Hughes\t\nTemagawil         .\t\nTrans Cont Res\t\nUnited Keno       .\nUpper Canada ..   \u201e\nVentures   \u2014_\nViolamac   _\nWaile  Amulet   \t\nWiltsey  Goglin       \t\nWright Hargreaves \u201e\nYale  \t\nYellowknife Bear\t\nYoung (H.G.) Gold\t\nOILS\nAmerican Ledue  \t\nBanff Oils  .._\nRailey Selburn \t\nRata Petroleum\nCalgary and Edmonton . .\nCanadian Devonian \t\nHome A \t\nLong Island Pete  \t\nMidcon  _ _\nNew Continental  _\t\nPacific Pete      _\nPetrol  ....\nPonder       .... \t\nPlace Oil \t\nProv Gas \t\nRoyalite         \u2014\t\nSpooner\t\nStanwell Oil\t\nTriad \t\nUnited Oils       \t\nYank Canuck  \t\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi \t\nAlgoma Steel\t\nAluminum \t\nAnalog\t\nAtlas St _\nBA. Oil\t\nBathurst Power  \t\nBeatty Bros\t\nBell  Telephone    \t\nBrazilian\t\nB.C. Forest \t\nB.C. Power A     \t\nBurns A \t\nCanadian Breweries   \t\nCanadian Canners     \t\nCanadian  Celanese    \t\nCan.  Cement\t\nCan Ohem Co \t\nCanadian Dredge\nCan. Curtis Wright \t\nCan.   Malting \t\nCan Oil \t\nCanadian Pacific Rly   \t\nCan. Packers A     \t\nCockshutt\t\nColumbia Cellulose \t\nCons Gas\t\nDist. Seagram      \t\nDom.  Foundries\nDom. Stores\nDom. Tar & Chemical    ...\nDom. Textiles\nFamous Players\nFord U.S. \t\nGatineau     \t\nGoodyear \t\nHoward Smith    \t\nImperial Oil     \t\nImp. Tobacco \t\nInd. Ace. \t\nInt. Pete\nLoblaw A \t\nLoblaw R\nMassey Ferguson       \t\nffo'son  Brewery\n.Moore Co'\"i\nNat. Steel Car\n3.60\n9.90\n.42\n.144\n.06\n2.30\n1.35\n.1U4\n.06\n3.50\n5.95\n11.25\n.97\n.48\n4.70\n3.05\n.44\n18.25\n,04'A\n.34\n3.10\n.lfi'i\n.08 W\n.20\n.05\n.05\n1.36\n1.50\n.98\n31.75\n.70\n1.81\n18.00\n8.75\n7.25\n.25\n43.50\n64.75\n.21\n12.00\n17.12%\n3.40\n1.40\n.02\n1.69\n,\u00bb5\n2.50\n.16\n5.65\n.78\n1.00\n.19\n.93\n10.75\n.26\n.09\n.73\n.05\n.12\n87.50\n.09\n1.10\n.58\n6.40\n.65\n.13\n\u00bb,75\n.11\nM%\n.60\n8.75\n.53\n.20\n.47\n.93\n180\n7.95\n1.48\n.80\n1.60\n1.86\n.14\n6.90\n.99\nS3.76\n1.2ft\n6.05\n.00%\n1.03\n.14\n.94\n.66\njm\n.84\n5.30\n.04\n16.00\n2.25\n7.20\n.08 \";\n.30^\nl\\\n8.00\n.60\n.49\n.44\n1.69\n6.25\n.11\n.36\n2 15\n.93\n.03\n38H\n31%\n30\n4.35\n20    1\n254.1\n33>,'.i\n4*i !\n44'i!\n4,30\n11 I\n31 '4 I\n13\"^ |\n35\u00bb. |\n13 I\n20 I\n26'i.\n6\n13'2\n1.55\n53' 2\n20\n23' b\n44\n17\n3.90\n39\n28':\n4F-,\n52'.,\n13*,\nfl\\\n191-41\n64',\n35\n132\n.18':\nSON\nll'i\n38'4\n43\n28\n2!l'.i\n41\n13\nPage Herehey \t\n22%\n44\nRuss. Indstries \t\n9V4\n26*,g\n27\n19\n         15%\nSt. Lawrence Corp.\n174\n69Vj\nTexaco                                     49\nUnion Gas of Can         13'i\nWeston George          34\nVancouver Stocks\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nBeaver  Lodge     06\nBralorne                4.80\nCanusa             03V4\nCariboo Gold \t\n.70\n      5.20\nGiant Mascot \t\n.21H\n      1.26\nHighland Bell\nMidwest Copper\nNational  Ex\nPend Oreille\nReeves MacDonald\nSheep Creek\n1.40\n 10\n.03'i\n..     2.52\n1.75\n.88\n      2.65\n        .33\nSilver Ridge      \t\nSilver Standard    _\nSunshine Lardeau   ...\nTaylor  .\nTrojan  \t\nUtica\nWestern Exploration\nWestern Potash\n _      .03V4\n.16\n       .08\n._      .11\n 10\n.00=4\n.      .06\n _      .05\nOILS\nCalgary k Edmonton\nCharter \t\nHome \t\nOkalta Com   \t\nRoyalite       \t\nRoyal Can        \u25a0, ,\nUnited        \t\nVantor         __\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlberta Distillers\nAlberto Distillers VI .\nB C Forests\t\nB C Power       _\nB C TelajVhone .._\nCanadian Collieries _\nCrown Zeller (Can) _\nmt Brew B\nMacM 4 Bloedel B ._\nTrans Mtn .._\u201e,\nWestminster Paper _\nWestern Plywoods \t\nUNLISTED\nAlta Gas Trunk    \t\nTrans Canada Com ...\nTrans Mountain Unit\nWest Coast Unit\t\nWest Coast Vt\t\n14.75\n.75\n7.05\n31.50\n6.10\n.im\nSOO\n.30\n1.90\n1.75\n11.00\n31.is\n43.60\n8.50\n18.30\n2.90\n14.S7V4\n8.37 >i\n82,80\n11,60\nTT.0_\u00bb\nM.1SV4\n8.23\nK.OO\n0.25\nBANKS\nBank of Montreal _\nCan. Bank of Com. _\nImp. Sank of Can\t\nRowel Bank of! Ctaa _\nFUNDS\nAH Can. Com.  _\nCan. Inv. Fund     \t\nCommonwealth }nt. .\nFirst Oil and Gas _\nGrouped  Income\t\nInvestors Growth \t\nInvestors Mutual \t\nLeverage   _a\u2014-\nTrans Canada \"Cr _\n02.90 B3.80\n52.25 53.25\n57.00 8B.0O\n66.00 G7.0D\ne.40 dee\n8.43 02.\")\nT.82 8.98\n5.90 6.20\n8.36\n6.69\n3.67\n6.19\n10.74 11,64\n6.31 6.82\n6.25    6.75\nWorld Briefs\nWIN FOR WCTU?\nTORONTO iCP)-Th\u00ab Sign of\nIhe Steer, one at Toronto's best-\nknown restaurants has closed\nafter its owner said it was impossible to run lt undr existing\nliquor laws. German-born Hans\nFread, who in 26 years turned a\nsmall eating place into a $250,000\nshow spot, said the closing is \"a\nvictory tor the Woman's Christian Temperance Union.\"\nNOVELIST   DIVORCED\nPARIS (AiP) \u2014 Novelist Fran-\ncoise Sagan and publisher Guy\nSehoeller were divorced Wednesday. No grounds are announced\nIn such cases here, but Miss\nSagan said it was a case of incompatibility. \"I went to bed at\nfour a.m. and he got. up at seven\nto go horseback riding,\" she said.\n\"It makes me sad, but we could\nnot continue.\"\nINLAND\nNATURAL 6AS\nCYRUS H. McLEAN\nJohn A. McMahon, Pretid-ent of W4of\u00abt\nNatural Gai Co. Ltd. take* pleasure\nW announcing the appointment of\nCyru* H. McLean to the company'n\nBoard of Director). Mr. McLean k\nPreiident ond a Director of the British\nColumbia Telephone Company, President and a Director of the Northwest\nTelephone Company, the Philippine\nLong Distance Telephone Company,\nCom panto Dominicana de Telefojios,\nC Por A., Dominican Republic, The\nWest Indies Telephone Company and\nthe Alaska Telephone Corporation. He\nis also o Director of International\noperations for General Telephone &\nElecliomci Sr-fvice Corporation nnd a\nDirector of Anglo-Canadian Telephone\nCompony and Ihe Bant: of Nova *o''0.\n \u25a0-.'\u2022\u25a0.\n\"'-\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0 7   \u25a0\n-  \u25a0   \u25a0'.\u25a0   .     \u25a0':\u25a0,..:\u25a0-.:\u25a0\n.\u25a0\u25a0-.\u25a0\u25a0..\u25a0-   -   \u25a0  ***:.\u2014\" \"\u2014:  .  ;\u2014! 1 *r.\u2014\n\t\n12\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, JUNE 30, 1960\nHoliday Pictures\nCan't Be Duplicated\n$12.95\n'12.85\n$19.50\n$45.00\nHOLIDAY FLASH:\n(Complete   outfit).   .\nSTARLET:\n(Complete  outfit).      \t\nBROWNIE TWIN:\n(Complete  outfit).\nCROWN 3 TURRET:\n8 mm movie camera.\n\u2022 Films . . . B & W, Coloured, 8mm, 35mm, etc.\n\u2022 Batteries\n\u2022 Flash  Bulbs including  GE  Pov\/ersprite\n\u2022 Developing \u2014 1   Day Service.\nh OFF STARFLEX\nand Other Cameras\nAs Marked in Our Camera Section.\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nGORDON'S\nTEXACO  SERVICE\n206 Baker St. NELSON Phone 1427\nBRAKE SPECIALISTS\nSAFETY\nGIVE YOURSELF A- BRAKE!\nOdds. . .\na\u00bbd Ends\n...byM.D. B.\nMy unkind remarks about spinach drew a letter in defence of this\nhumble green. Dutch by birth, my\nfriend says her people like to \"do\nup\" vegetables, and encloses her\nown special method for serving\nspinach. You \u2022 drain the boiled\nspinach thoroughly and chop it\nfine. Then you add two finely\ncrumbled slices ol bread moistened\nwith a bit of milk, a piece of butter\nand a few drops of lemon juice\nShe suggests adding nutmeg,\nrather than pepper and then gar\nnish the mixture with slices of\nhard boiled eggs. I hate to admit\nit, but it does sound as though it\nwould be tasty.\n*   t   *\nShe also included a way to cook\nred cabbage: cook finely shredded\ncabbage till tender with a little\nwater, salt and a couple of cloves.\nWhen cooked remove cloves, add\ngenerous piece of butter, two tablespoons vinegar and a tablespoon\nof sugar. This also sounds delicious\nand since I am partial to cabbage\nI believe I shall give it a try. Many\nthanks to my friend for her kindly\ninterest.\nLess Borrowing\nCuts Dollar Premium\nSpecial\nWRITTEN\nGUARANTEE\n30,000 Miles or 1  Year\nEXAMINE BRAKE SYSTEM,\nREPACK WHEEL BEARINGS\nJULY ONLY\n$A50\n4\nVISITORS  AND TOURISTS\u2014\nwe are OPEN DAILY\n8 a.m. to 10 p.m. \u2014 Including Sundays\nAnother repercussion from a\ncolumn came from Mr. John\nBrown, who was on the first sidewalk laying team in Nelson, and\nhas a picture of the six who worked on this job in 1909. This first bit\nof sidewalk was laid on Victoria\nand Josephine streets, where the\nsubstation is now. This was the site\nof the fireball and city offices at\nthat time. The team included Dune\nMcQuaig, Andy Haggert, John T.\nBrown, George Hepple and Alf\nWood \u2014 it was Alf's first job, Mr.\nBrown recalled. There was one\nother man whose name he couldn't\nreoall, who had only one hand,\nthe other anr\/ being fitted with a\nhook.\n\u00bb   *   *\nMr. Brown who worked for the\ncity for 40 years, said he had been\ntold by the late W. E. Wasson,\none-time city clerk, that it was for\nthis project that project that the\ncity borrowed money for the first\ntime.\nOne of our office golfers came\ndown from the golf links with a\npenny postcard with a one-cent\nstamp featuring the picture of\nKing George V. When some work\nwas being done in the clubhouse\nthese old postcards showed up. It's\nquite a while since a penny would\nsend a postcard.\n*   *   *\nPeople are remarking on the\nabundance and size of peony\nblooms this year and are crediting\nit to the wet spring which also\nseemed to bring lilacs out in prolusion as well. As for me, I\nplanted a peony about four years\nago and it simply refuses to bloom.\nMy neighbor thinks perhaps it is\nin too shady a spot, so I guess I\nshall have to move it. I guess it\nwill be a lew years before I have\npeonies.\nMONTREAL \u2014 Sharply reduced\nborrowing in the United States in\nrecent months by Canadian provinces, municipalities and1 corporations has been a major factor in\nthe decUne of the premium on the\nCanadian dohar since March,\naccording to the Bank of Montreal's\nBusiness Review for June, just\nissued.\n\"By the same token, the few\nlarge issues sold in recent weeks\nmay go far to explain ourrent relative steadiness in the rate,\" the\nbank says.\nTracing developments in the\nCanadian-U.S. exchange picture\u2014\nwith the Canadian dollar currently\nat a premium between one and two\nper cent \u2014 the B of M says the\nsituation has produced both advantages and disadvantages for\nCanadians.\n\"Canadian  e;.-porters.  other recipients of foreign funds and visitors to Canada welcome the change,\nwhile importers, Canadians travelling abroad and those who must\n' meet foreign currency obligations\nj find themselves at a financial disadvantage  compared  with  a  few\nmonths ago.\n!    \"Indeed,   most   Canadains   are\ndirectly or indirectly aware of the\n; altered   exchange   rate,   and   dis-\n' cussion of its causes and effects\nhas been widespread.\"\nTWO TO FIVE PER CENT\n[ Reviewing events in 1956-1959,\nbank recalls the massive volume\nof foreign capital flowing into\nCanada. The volume was so large\nthat it not only provided \"the\nmeans of settling Canada's large\ndeficits on merchandise and other\ncurrent account transactions, but\nresulted in demand for the Canadian dollar that kept the premium\nin a range broadly between two\nper cent and five per cent.\"\nThis pattern continued into the\nearly part of 1960. But after March\n7#\u00a3fiWBEGfm.\nMake frhe most of it ! Get ready now for a wonderful summer . . . see us for\n\u25a0un, fun and vacation needs.\nTENTS\nHIKERS\n7'x7'x5'\n$17.95\n9'x 12'x 3'.   36.95\nPalmetto   with   pegs  and\n9'x9'x6'6\"      36.95\nCellacloud   tilled.\n72\" x 80\".\nWool frlled.\n36\" x 72\".\nDacron tilled,\n72\" x 7a\".\nSLEEPING\nBAGS\n$16.95\n8.95\n17.95\nCanvas Water Bags\nGallon    *1.25     Gallon       1.60\nPicnic baskets, vocuum bottles, insulated jugs, fishing tackle, tennis\nand golf sundries, rifles, ammunition,   packboards,   pack   sacks,  etc.\nInsect Repellants\nSTA-WAY ond OFF\nSure Protection  From  Insects\nColeman\nCamp Stoves\nFor    quick,    easy\ncooking.   Folding.\n2   Burner.\n$21.95\nCOLEMAN LANTERNS\nReal daylight\nstretchers\nGROUND SHEETS\nWaterproof Duck\n4J'x7'\t\n$16.95\n$4.95\nAir\nMattresses\n$3.39 to $8.95\nYOUR MARSHALL-WILLS STORE\nHipperson Hardware Co. Ltd.\nPHONE 497\n(OWNERS)\n395 Baker St.\nSurprise Party\nEnds on Sad Note\nI    A surprise birthday party for\nj young Nelson man came as a jolt\ni to his wallet Tuesday in provincial\ncourt.\nRon Gorsline entered a plea ol\nnot guilty before Stipendiary Mag\nistrate William Evans on a charge\nof impaired driving. He was found\n1 guilty, fined $100 and had his driv-\nI er's licence endorsed.\nj    His counsel, G. B. Arnesen con\n; lended his client would not have\nI been in court Tuesday if it had\nnot been for the birthday party\n| for Gorsline, who innocently had\nthought he was answering a call\n\\ [or wrecker service at Balfour.\n| His friends had put in the fake\ncall for the wrecker at Balfour,\nsurprising him \"with the party when\nhe arrived.\nOn his way back to Nelson, the\nvehicle failed  to take a corner\nj plunging over the embankment and\n[wrecking the wrecker.\nj K. L. Magus of Castlegar pleaded not guilty to charges of failing\n| to have mud flaps on his heavy\ntruck tandem and driving contrary\nto restrictions on his licence.\nHe was found guilty on both\ncharges and assessed fines of $15\nFor each, plus court costs for each\nthe trade deficit widened and, even\nmore important, Canadian borrowing in the U.S. declined.\nThese factors combined to\nsqueeze the premium on the Canadian dollar to less than two per\ncent, and this situation has continued more or less without change\nuntil the present. \\\nMarket psychology\" can, for\nshort periods, accentuate movements in exchange rates, the review says. But, in the longer run,\n\"the rate is bound to be determined\nby the underlying ebbs and flows\nof real international transactions\non both current and capital account, which bulk so large in the\nfunctioning of the Canadian economy and which themselves are\nalways changing,\" the B of M review concludes.\nSecond Cement\nTruck Crashes\nWilkins Trucking firm of Clares-\nholm. Alberta, is still having\ntrouble with cement and highway\nNo. 3 between Kootenay Bay and\nCreston.\nSaturday afternoon one of its\ntrucks went out of control on the\nKootenay Bay ferry landing hill,\nsmashing into one car, sideswiping\nanother, and injuring two persons\nbefore somersaulting into the ditch.\nAt 2:30 a.m. Tuesday another of\nits cement trucks rammed into a\nrock bank Ihree miles south of\nBoswell, dumping 15 of its 400 bags\nof cement onto the highway.\nDriver William Gaunt of Calgary\nwas not injured.\nLittle damage resulted to the\ntractor-trailer unit.\nMacmillan Hopes\nKhrushchev Will\nReturn To Geneva\nLONDON (Reuters) _ Prime\nMinister Macmillan told Soviet\nPremier Khrushchev in a letter\nWednesday he hopes Russia will reconsider its decision to withdraw\nfrom the Geneva 10 - power disarmament conference \"so that\nnegotiations on disarmament can\nbe restarted as soon as possible,\"\nMaomillan's letter was delivered at the Soviet foreign ministry in Moscow a*nd released here\nby the foreign office.\nIt replied to Khrushchev's letter Monday which was handed\nover to Macmillan a lew hours\nafter the Communist walkout\nfrom the Geneva disarmament\nconference.\nIn his letter, Khrushchev\nblamed the West lor the stalemated talks and accused it of\ntrying to \"dupe\" people anxious\nfor the disarmament problem to\nbe solved.\nMacmillan said in his 1,000-\nword reply: \"I must tell you\nfrankly that I am deeply disappointed, as well as surprised, at\nyour decision to withdraw from\nthe negotiations.\n\"The Geneva conference was\nset up as a result of an agreement between the lour foreign\nministrs last August it cannot\nbe properly broken off by any\none group.\"\nReferring lo criticisms by\nKhrushchev of a recent visit by\nBritish Defence Minister Harold\nWatkinson to the United States,\nMacmillan said: \"Until agreement on disarmament is reached\nwe intend to maintain our collective defence arrangements.\nDistrict Boat\nCruise Planned\nSpanish Armada bubbled down\nto the depths of the English Channel in the 16th century, but Kootenay Lake Boat Club hopes to\nhave as imposing a fleet of water\ncraft Saturday \u2014 but with a happier ending.\nIn the first large cruise of the\nseason, members, their families\nand 'friends will rendezvous at\nLakeside Park in Nelson. At approximately noon the armada will\nmove up the West Arm of Kootenay Lake. At Balfour they will be\nstrengthened by craft from Riondel, Kaslo, Ainsworth, etc., at\nabout 2 p.m. and then will set sail\nfor Sawmill Bay.\nA second party will leave Balfour\nfrom 7 to 8 p.m. to join the first\nparty at Sawmill Bay, where a\nwiener roast will be held.\nSunday morning the energetic\nones may enter the Kinsmen Fish\nDerby.\nAPPOINTED   EDITOR\nKINGSTON, Ont. (CP I-Donald\nM. Soutter, 33, has been ap-\nappointed city editor of the Kingston Whig-Standard and Murray\nJ. Kennedy, 35, telegraph editor,\nR. D. Owen, executive editor, announced Wednesday. Mr. Soutter,\nwho has been sports editor since\nJanuary, 1959, will also continue\nsupervision of the sports staff.\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c line, 40c line black face type; larger type rates\non request. Minimum two lines.\nBINGO\nEAGLE HALL TONIGHT\nCastrol Motor Oil in all grades\nEDEY'S CYCLE SHOP\nGolf Olub Dance, Saturday,' July\n2. 10 to 2 a.m. Chinese Food served.\nMOTHERS\nAnd all interested in the Gyro\nPark please come to Gyro Park\nPoo! on Thursday evening, June 30.\nat 8:00 p.m.\nTrail Business College\nNew  Term   Begins  September\nBaby Dresses and Pram Suits\nTOT-N-TEEN SHOP\nELECTROLUX SALES, SERVICE\n512 Richards St.,  Ph. 1108, Nelson\nMillinery and Accessories.\nADRIAN MILLINERY\n259 BAKER ST.\nCotton plaid auto blankets, priced at $3.50 each.\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nRugs or Wall-to-Wall Carpet\nJORDAN'S LTD.\n924 Cedar St., Ph. 2251-L, Nelson\nLadies \u2014 Summer playshoes \u2014\nmule type slippers with wedge\nheels. \u2014 $1.98 at EBERLE'S.\nELKS 2-CAR BINGO\nNelson \u2014 July 8th \u2014 9:00 p.m.\ntickets   $3.00   at   Simpsons-Sears.\nPhone 263\nSNAPPY SERVICE\nFor your hauling needs.\nIT'S HERE NOW - THE\nAMAZING CARAVELLE.\nFRANK'S AUTO SERVICE\nKill those garden pests \u2014 get\nthe best insecticides from\nCOVENTRYS' FLOWER SHOP\nPhone 962.\nBE   A   BONSPIEL BOOSTER\nA  limited  miaiaJber  of bonspiel\ncaps are on sale at Leno-Whitnster\nPrinting and at Civic Centre office.\nFirst come \u2014 first served.\nSQUARE DANCES\nDANCE  AT CHRISTINA  LAKE\nJULY 1st\nFOR INFORMATION\nCALL 2113-L IN TRAIL.\nHOUSEHOLD  APPLIANCE\nREPAIRS and SERVICE\nPhone D. McCuaig\nWeek Days 2333\nNights and Holidays 622-Y\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nCORBETT \u2014 Funeral services\nfor Mr. Victor Jamieson Corbett\nwill be held at the Thompson Funeral Home, Saturday at 2 p.m. Rev\nE. A. Hircock will officiate.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nVINGO \u2014 Solemn High Mass lor\nDr. Joseph Vingo will be sung at\nthe Cathedral of Mary Immaculate,\nthis morning (Thursday! at 11\no'clock. Rev. M. E. Berrigan.\nC.Ss.R. will be the celebrant. Rev.\nF. Monaghan will be the deacon\nand Rev. D. Langi, C.Ss.R. will be\nthe sub-deacon. Interment will take\n-place in Nelson Memorial Park\nThompson Funeral Service.\nWOULD UP PAPER PRICES\nMONTREAL (CP> - An\nAmerican publisher said Tuesday newspaDers must raise their\nstandards, prices and circulation\nto remain in competition with\ntelevision for public attention\nand advertising dollars. John K.\nHerbert, publisher of the American Weekly Magazine, a weekend supplement whioh claims\nmore than 10,000,000 readers,\nspoke at the opening session of\nthe Intern ational Circulation\nManagers Association.\nHAIGH\nTRU   ART\nBeauty Salon\nPhone 327\n576 Baker St\nHave  the  Job   Done  Right!\nVIC GRAVEC\n*        LIMITED **\nMASTER   PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nINSECT\nREPELLENTS\n612 LOTION \u2014 622 LOTION\nSKEETER SKATTER \u2014 OFF\nREXALL REPELLENT STICK\nSuntan  Lotions and Creams,\nBathing Caps\nYour Rexall Pharmacy\nCity Drug\nChoquette\nFuels\n\u2014 PHONE 530 \u2014\n\u2022 Furnace\n\u2022 \"McGNIvary Cobble\"\n\u2022 Briquettes\nSUMMER DISCOUNTS\nORDER NOW\nBe Cool and Casual\nFor the Weekend Ahead\nT SHIRTS\n\u2022 White Trimmed\n\u2022 New Gold and Green Shades\n\u2022 Porous Cool Cottons\nBEACH TOGS\n\u2022 Swim Wear\n\u2022 Terry Cloth Scardigans\n\u2022 Beachcombers\nWASH N' WEAR SLACKS\n\u2022 Cottons\n\u2022 Suntans\nEMORY'S ltd.\nTHE MAN'S STORE\nNUCLEAR   BARGE   SAVED\nHOUSTON (AP) - Tugboats\nrescued 50 workmen Tuesday as\na spectacular shipyard fire\nthreatened tlie United States first\nnuclear service barge. Flames\nand smoke billowed furiously\nfrom a 700 - foot dock and a\n$2,000,000 drydock at the Todd\nShipyards a half - hour before\nbeing brought under control. The\n$1,000,000 Atomic Servant was\ntowed to safety, as was a tanker\nand a dredge under construction.\nHILL FOR COOKE DELAYED\nWASHINGTON (CP) - Legislation to help speed United\nStates citizenship for Jack Cooke,\nToronto radio station owner and\npublisher, has hit a roadblock in\ntiie Senate judiciary committee.\n,', spokesman said no early decision appears likely. \"Usually a\nbill of this kind tells us why il\nis so urgently needed, but this\none doesn't,\" t h e spokesman\nsaid.\n-SCO M wma\nALWAYS\nON TAP-\nwith a\nFAIRBANKS MORSE\nClaMfated\nWATER HEATER\nGAS OR ELECTRIC\nCOMPLETELY AUTOMATIC\n\u2022 Two coats of flawless glass-tike lining\nkeeps water crystal clear and makes tank\ncompletely rust proof.\n\u2022 Dial type thermostat permits easy selection of water temperature from 125\u00b0 to\n175\u00b0.\n\u2022 Fiberglas Insulation keeps water piping\nhot for instant use.\n\u2022 Made of heavy gauge enameling steel\nwith gleaming baked white enamel\nfinish.\nLIBERTY\nAvailable in Round and\nTable Top Models, In\ncopacitiei for every\nneed.\nCSA -Approved.\nAPPLIANCE\nDEPT.\nPHONE   1192\nand make friends with the lighter flavour\nand delightful taste of this\nCanadian Rye Whisky. Calvert House\nsurely belongs at your house.\nGO   LIGHT,   GO   MODERN,   GO   CALVERT.\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1960_06_30","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0433412","@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":"1960-06-30 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1960-06-30 AD","@language":"en"}],"Source":[{"@value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","@language":"en"}],"Title":[{"@value":"Nelson Daily News","@language":"en"}],"Type":[{"@value":"Text","@language":"en"}],"Translation":[{"@value":"","@language":"en"}],"@id":"doi:10.14288\/1.0433412"}