{"@context":{"@language":"en","AggregatedSourceRepository":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","Collection":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","Contributor":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/contributor","DateAvailable":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DateIssued":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","FileFormat":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","FullText":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Genre":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","GeographicLocation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","Identifier":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","IsShownAt":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","Language":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","Latitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","Longitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","Notes":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Provider":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","Publisher":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","Rights":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","SortDate":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","Source":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","Title":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","Type":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","Translation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description"},"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"Contributor":[{"@value":"Gibbon, A. W.","@language":"en"},{"@value":"Ramsden, C. W.","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2023-07-24","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1962-06-14","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0434453\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" \t\nIlf'tf\n60\nYears of\nDaily Service\nto the Kootenays.\nPublished at Nelson, transportation, government, financial and trading centre of the Kootenay-Columbia area\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKootenay: Sunny with cloudy\nperiods Thursday. A few showers\nduring the afternoon. Warmer..\nWinds light. Low and high at\nCranbrook and Crescent Valley\n40 and 70.\nVol. 61\nNELSON. B. CGANADA-THUHSDAY MpRNING, JUNE 14, 1962\n10 Cents\nNo. 45\nB.C. Power Fears\nAssets May Be\nSold Below Value\nBy JOHN E. BIRD\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014Fear was expressed before the\nSupreme Court of Canada Wednesday by the British\nColumbia Power Corporation that there is imminent\ndanger that the assets of its expropriated subsidiary\nB.C. Electric, may be sold at less than their true worth.\nFor this reason J. J. Robinette\nof Toronto, Counsel for the corporation, asked the court to restore a judgment of the B.C.\nSupreme Court naming Henry\nLeslie Purdy, a former president of B.C. Electric, as receiver of that company.\nThe corporation is the former\nparent company of B.C. Electric which the B.C. provincial\ngovernment   expropriated   last\nFranco-Soviet\nTrade Talks\nBreak Down\nPARIS (Reuters) \u2014 Franco-\nSoviet trade talks in Moscow\nhave been broken off by the\nRussians after a demand which\nthe French government considered unacceptable, a French\nforeign ministry spokesman\nsaid Wednesday night.\nHe described the breakdown\nas \"a Soviet offensive against\nthe European Common Market.\"\nThe talks began May 16 on,an\nextension of an existing trade\nagreement for the years 1963 to\n1965.\nThe spokesman , said Russia\nsought an extension to Soviet\nproducts of preferential tariffs\nenjoyed by the six. Common\nMarket countries.      '  -\nThe Moscow talks progressed\nsatisfactorily and the list of\nquotas was almost settled two\ndays ago, he said.\nBut then the head of the Soviet delegation said the signature\nof the new trade agreement\nwould be conditioned on success of talks due to be held in\nSeptember on customs tariffs,\nthereby trying to obtain preferences under the most-favored-\nnation clause. France found\nthis unacceptable.\nPrincess Royal\nBegins Tour\nVICTORIA (CP) - The Princess Royal, slight, 65-year-old\naunt of the Queen, stepped from\na giant RCAF Yukon here Wed\nnesday night to begin a 16-day\ntour of Canada.\nCheers from some 400 brownies,\ngirl guides and sight-seers mingled with the roar of a 21-gun salute as the smiling, blue-eyed\nPrincess Royal stepped from the\nplane after a 15-hour direct flight\nfrom London.\nThe Princess was greeted by\nLieutenant - Governor George\nPearkes, Premier Bennett and\nother dignitaries.\nShe then inspected an honor\nguard of the Canadian Scottish\nRegiment (Princess Mary's).\nAugust. Mr. Purdy was named\nreceiver at the request of B.C.\nPower pending completion of\ncourt action in which the corporation seeks to have the expropriation legislation declared\ninvalid.\nHINGES ON DECISION\nThe case hinges on a decisnon\nof the B.C. Appeal Court which\nreversed the B.C. Supreme\nCourt, taking B.C. Electric out\nof receivership. Mr. Robinette\nis appealing to the Supreme\nCourt against that action.\n\"Apart from its electrical\nbusiness, the undertaking of the\nelectric company included\nassets devoted to a freight railway, an urban and interurban\ntransit system and a gas distribution system,\" Mr. Robinette\nsaid.\n\"The appellant (B.C. Power)\nis fearful that these assets, as\nwell as the electrical undertaking, may be disposed of with\nconsequent prejudice to the real\nvalue of the shares.\"\nCommission Tackles Big Job\nOf Clearing Jungle of Red Troops\nGiven 75 Days to\nSEVERED ARM SEWN BACK ON\u2014While surgeons at Massachusetts General Hospital to\nBoston fight to save his right arm, sewn back on alter it was torn off by a train, Everett Knowles Jr., 12, manages a smile as he toys with a baseball given to him by Jot\nCronln, president of the American League.   \u25a0\nBoy With Arm Rejoined\nTo Body Out of Hospital\nBOSTON    (AP)    \u2014    Everett a freight train while he was en\nKnowles  Jr.,  12,   was released\nfrom  hospital  Wednesday,  only\nUnderground\nBlast Set Off\nWASHINGTON (AP)-The U.S.\nAtomic Energy Commission Wed-j premier\u2014as his stand-in shortly\nRid Laos of Army\nBy ERNESTO MENDOZA\nVIENTIANE (Reuters) \u2014 The three-nation international control commission on Laotian neutrality Wednesday faced the formidable task of clearing the country of\nthe \"phantom\" army of Communist North Vietnam troops\nroaming its jungles and high\nplateaus.\nMeanwhile, Western fears\nwere growing over the announcement Tuesday that pro-\nCommunist Prince Souphanouvong will be in charge of the\nnew Laotian coalition government when Premier Prince Souvanna Phouma leaves Friday\nfor a visit to France.\nSouvanna' named Vice-Premier. Souphanouvong, rather than\nright - wing strongman Gen.\nPhoumi Nosavan\u2014also a vice-\ndays after his completely\nsevered right arm was rejoined\nto his body in a unique operation.\nDoctors said the youngster will\nmake periodic visits to Massachusetts General Hospital for examinations until he is ready for\nthe fourth and most important\noperation of the series.\nHon. R.  L.  Kellock,  counsel j   The final operation will be to\nfor B.C. Hydro, said B.C. Power i rejoin   the  nerves  leading  into\noriginally asked for the appointment of a receiver to prevent\nthe intermingling of the assets\nof the former electric company\nwith those of the former power\ncommission. He said this argument no longer exists as \"intermingling has in fact occurred.\"\nMr. Kellock'said the electric\ncompany -h^icetoMJ to \u25a0 exist\nand that its assetS^Haye passed\ninto possession of fhe Ctown. As\na result the appointment of a\nreceiver could now have no\noperation or effect.\nAlcatraz Age\nHelped Escapees\nSAN FRANCISCO (AP) -\nPrison officials declared Wednesday that erosion and the general\nage of Alcatraz federal prison\nmade it easier for three bank\nrobbers to escape Tuesday.\nThey also said there is a remote possibility the prisoners\nstill are on the 12-acre island in\nSan Francisco Bay.\n\"Alcatraz is old,\" Fred Wilkinson, assistant director of the bureau of prisons at Washington,\nD.C., said. \"It is in a debilitated\ncondition. It would take a lot of\nmoney \u2014 $5,000,000 \u2014 to bring it\nup to the standards we require\nfor maximum security.\"\nBoth officials said the general\nerosion of pipes and concrete in\nthe prison \"undoubtedly contributed to the ease of the escape.\"\nNEW YORK (CP) \u2014 Canadian\ndollar unchanged at 91 47-64 in\nterms of U.S. funds.  Week ago\n91%. Pound sterling 1-16 higher\nat $2.80 55-64.\nthe arm to give it feeling and\nsensations. No date has been set\nfor this operation.\nThe boy's arm was cut off by\nMan Charged\nIn Strangling\nSASKATOON (CP) - Steve\nKozaruk, 35-year-old construction\nworker, was charged with capital\nmurder Wednesday in connection\nwith the strangulation - of an Indian woman in a downtown hotel\nroom.\nKozaruk, under heavy police\nguard in City Hospital, was formally charged after he regained\nconsciousness.\nHe was found unconsicous early\nWednesday on the floor of a hotel\nroom. On a bed in the room was\nthe body of Rose Whitehead,\nabout 35.\nPolice said Kozaruk will be\nquestioned in connection with the\nslaying of a Winnipeg woman\nlast weekend and the slaying of a\nSaskatoon City Hospital nurse-\nlast month.\nPolice said it appeared that the\nwoman had been strangled.\nPolice said the man will be\nquestioned in connection with the\nstrangulation last Saturday in a\nWinnipeg hotel of Mrs. Anne\nYourkin, 52-year-old mother of\nfour children. Police said the wo\nman was strangled by a towel.\nPolice chief Kettles said the\nman also would be questioned in\nconnection with the sex slaying\nlast month of Alexandra Wiw-\ncharuk, 23-year-old beauty queen\ncandidate, who battered body was\nfound in a river bank grave two\nweeks ago.\nroute home from school May 23.    nesday night touched off an un-\nDoctors  connected  the  blood derground nuclear test blast in\nvessels in the first operation\nrestoring the circulation of blood.\nA secon doperation set the arm\nbones about three inches below\nthe shoulder socket, using a steel\npin.\nA third operation sealed the\nopen wound with grafts of skin\ntaken from his thigh.\nNevada.\nIt was the 37th test announced\nin the Nevada series that started\nlast Sept. 15.\nThe AEC said the test device\nwas of low yield \u2014 with an explosive force equal to less than\n20,000 tons of TNT.\nHustling\nOn the Hustings\nEuropean * Moslem Truce Talks\nContinue Despite Rejections\nBy BASIL CHAPMAN\nALGIERS (Reuters) \u2014 Negotiations aimed at achieving a\nreconcili a t i o n between Europeans and Moslem nationalists\nin Algeria were reported continuing Wednesday despite the\nAlgerian p r o v i sional government's rejection of any extra\nguarantees for Europeans in an\nindependent Algeria.\nReliable French sources said\nthere were new contacts between European c o m m u nity\nleaders and Moslem members\nof the Franco-Algerian interim\nadminis t r a t i o n at nearby\nRocher Noir even after provisional Premier Ben Youssef\nBen Khedda, flatly rejected the\npossibility of additional guarantees.\nIn Tunis, Ben Khedda said\n\"my government categorically\nexcludes this possibility.\"\nHe accused the terrorist European Secret Army Organization of using demands for guarantees to wreck the Franco-\nAlgerian agreement reached\nlast March to end the Algerian   ropeans 10 to one in a popula-\nwar. tion of 10,000,000.\nCONTINUE CAMPAIGN There have been  suggestions\nIn Algiers, the Secret Army's ] that the Secret Army might\nscorched earth campaign con- \\ transform itself into a legal po-\ntinued with a series of bomb j litical party representing Euro-\nand fire attacks on government, peans and conduct pre-referen-\nbuildings and schools. Railway, i dum campaigning in the same\ngas and electricity offices, a ! way that the Moslem National\ntechnical   college   and   two | Liberation Front, backed by the\nBRANTFORD ,, (CP)...-,. Prime\nI^rstBai.'I^Sbpker- said Wed-\nnesday'tliei^biicies of his government have.\"lieked\" Canada's unemployment problems.\nHe said the next report on the\njobless situation \u2014 expected a\nday or two after next Monday's\nelection \u2014 will show the largest\nnumber of employed workers in\nthe history of Canada. The report\nwill cover May's manpower situation.\n\"By July or August we will\nhave virtual full employment.\"\nMr. Diefenbaker made the declaration \u2014 his firmest yet on the\nunemployment problem \u2014 in a\nspeech to more than 500 persons\nin the Oddfellows' Hall here.\nMONTREAL (CP)-The essential decision whether to keep the\ndollar pegged at a fixed exchange\nrate or let it float can be made\nonly after confidence is re-established in this country's -currency,\nLiberal Leader Pearson said\nWednesday.\nThat will be a first step by a\nLiberal government formed after\nMonday's federal election, he\ntold a press conference.\nIf a nuclear war does come, it\nwill be a \"tragedy in the night'\nrather than one climaxing a long\nperiod of steadily worsening relations.\nHe made his tragedy-in-the-\nnight reference to a nuclear attack when asked to state policy\non civil defence, especially expressways for evacuation.\nMr. Pearson said an attack of\nthe type he anticipated if it did\ncome made evacuation useless.\nHe said the whole question of\ncivil defence needs review.\nVANCOUVER (CP) - New\nDemocratic Party Leader T. C.\nDouglas suggested Wednesday\nnight there is convincing evidence that the Liberal Party had\na  hand  in  the  demonstrations\nthat took. place in Chelmsford,\nOnt, when Prime Minister Diefenbaker was there, .\nThe NDP chief noted that it Was\nin Vancouver that the first serious\ndemonstration toot place at a\nDiefenbaker public meeting.   .\n\"By the time he reached Canada's eastern shore, the prime\nminister needed the whole police\nforce of the city of Sydney to as\nsure the maintenance of order.\n\"The demonstrations which\nhave taken place right across the\ncountry may have been organized\nby his political opponents. To the\nbest of my knowledge, however,\nthe New Democratic Party has\nnot been responsible in any way.\n\"At the Chelmsford riot, for\ninstance, there has been overwhelming evidence that the Liberal party was not unconnected\nwith the rowdyism.\"\nFOAM LAKE, Sask. (CP) -\nSocial Credit Leader . Robert\nThompson said Wednesday night\nthere is reason to believe Canadian wheat sales to Communist\nafter signing an agreement that\ngave his neutralist faction the\ndominant position in the coalition, to take office next week.\nMUST CLEAR OUT TROOPS\nUnder the provisional agree-\nment on, Laotian neutrality\ndrawn up by the 14-nation Geneva conference on Laos, all\nforeign troops must be cleared\nout of the country within 75\ndays after the agreement is formally signed by conference\nmembers and the coalition government.\nBut officials of the OTmmis-\nsion\u2014made up of Canada, Poland and India-restlmate the\njob may take two years,\nIn Singapore, Malcolm MacDonald, British \"co-chairman of,\nthe Geneva conference oh Laos\nsaid that with the formation of\nthe coalition cabinet to present\na united viewpoint it was only\na matter of days before the\nLaotian problem was completely settled and a formal\nneutrality agreement concluded.\nMacDonald said, he would reconvene the Geneva conference\nto complete the task of ossur-\nschools were set ablaze.\nIn an outbreak of Moslem\ncounter-terrorism, four gunmen\nkidnapped five Europeans\u2014two\nmen, two women and a 13-year-\nold girl\u2014from an apartment in\nthe Algiers working class quarter of Bab el Oued.\nIn a statement from Tunis\nissued shortly after Ben Khedda\nspoke, the provisional government called on Algerians to vote\nfor an independent Algeria\nwhen the self - determination\nreferendum is held July 1 and\ntold Europeans \"your future is\nin your own hands.\nA vote for independence from\nFrance is considered certain\nsince Moslems outnumber Eu-\nprovisional g o v e r nment, has\ndone.\nThe provisional government\nstatement listed National Liberation Front aims as land reform, industrial and economic\ndevelopment, with large-scale\nmeans of production placed \"at\nthe service of the people\" and\na fair distribution of the national income.\nIt said there would have to\nbe a social revolution in an\natmosphere of austerity accepted by all.\nIn Paris, meanwhile, it was\nannounced that a total of 92.000\npersons, most of them Europeans, left Algeria for France\nin the first 12 days of June.\nRUSS ATTACK\nPOLICE PLAN\nGENEVA (Reuters) \u2014 Russia\ncast further gloom over the 17-\nnation disarmament conference\nWednesday by attacking Western\nproposals to create a United'Nations peace observation corps to\npolice a disarmed world.\nChief Soviet delegate Valerian\nZorin made the criticisms on the\neve of a month-long recess by the\nconference.\nChief U.S. delegate Arthur\nDean said Wednesday that a UN\npeace observation corps 'is\n\"must\" because his and other\ncountries would not want to shed\ntheir weapons without the existence of an effective international\npeace force to defend them\nagainst aggression.\nZorin claimed that the obvious\nintention was an army of mercenaries, an authoritative Western source reported after the\nclosed meeting.        -\nGunman. To Hang\nTORONTO (CP) - Ronald\nTurpin, 28, Wednesday night was\nconvicted of capital murder in\nthe shooting of a Metropolitan\nToronto policeman. Mr. Justice\nG. A. Gale of the Supreme Court\nof Ontario sentenced him to be\nhanged Sept. 25.\nConst.  Fred  Nash  was  slain\nin a gun battle in the early hours\nof Feb. 12 on an east-end street\nTestifying in his own defence,\nTurpin   admitted   shooting   the\nChina   are  hurting \"countries\" policeman but claimed he did it\nfriendly to the West. only  in   self-defence   after   the\n\"We have good reason to be- policeman fired at him first,\nlieye that Canadian wheat is not    rn his charge to the jury Wed-\ngoing to the empty bellies Mr. nesday,   Mr.   Justice  Gale  told\nDiefenbaker   is   so   concerned them they must acquit Turpin if\nabout,\" he said, \"but is helping\nthe Chinese government to meet\nits wheat commitments to Russia\nand is being used indirectly\nagainst the interests of countries\nfriendly to the West.\"\nHe   declared  wheat   sales  to\nChina would provide only short-\nthey believed he did not kill Const\nNash intentionally.\n(daisA ZLwslIa.\nKootenay Lake level Wednesday, 8.15 feet above zero; 1961,\nterm relief to Canadian farmers. 17.35 feet; 1948,17.23 feet.\ning an independent and neutral\nLaos and \"there are only two\nor three Individual points to be\nsettled before an agreement can\nbe concluded.\"\nMEET KING\nToday, Souvanna, Souphanouvong, Phoumi and right-wing\nleader Prince Boun Oum will\nmeet King Savang Vatthana in\nthe royal city of Luang Prabang to inform him their talks\non the formation of a coalition\nwere successful.\nSouvanna's decision to appoint Souphanouvong acting\npremier was felt in some quarters to be a prelimina_y defeat\nfor the West in its relations\nwith the coalition cabinet.\nThe Pathet Lao leader has\nbeen outspokenly anti - American, but has also pledged himself to do his \"utmost to safeguard the genuine neutrality\nand independence of Laos.\"\nMeanwhile, Soviet Premier\nKhrushchev and U.S. President\nKennedy in an exchange of\nnotes agreed that harmony in\nLaos resulting from a neutral\ncoalition government would be\nmost helpful in solving other\nraid war problemay ,)\nMayors Ask\nDetergent Study\nWINNIPEG (CP) \u2014 Canadian\nmayors and reeves decided Wednesday ot urge the federal,government to study the pollution of\nCanada's main rivers by. foaming detergents.\nThe motion first came before\ndelegates to the conference of\nthe Canadian Federation of\nMayors and Municipalities from\nthe city of London, Ont., calling\nfor the complete ban of synthetic\ndetergents from public sale for\ntwo years.\nHowever, delegates agreed with\nthe resolutions committee that\ninstead of asking for a ban, the\nconference should urge the federal study, through the National\nResearch Council, of methods of\ncounter-acting the effects of detergents on sewage treatment.\nThe foaming chemical in detergents, called hydro-carbons, now\ncannot be broken down through\nnatural sewage treatments and\ntherefore is dumped into the\nrivers to further pollute and kill\nfish.\nThe conference delegates were\nalso unanimous in a motion to ask\nfederal and provincial governments to institute with municipalities a federal-provincial program of augmented works for\npublic projects as a means to cut\ndown unemployment.\nWheat Seeding\nSlightly Behind\nOTTAWA (CP) - Seeding of\nCanada's 1962 spring wheat crop\nwas 92 per cent completed by\nMay 31, the Dominion Bureau of\nStatistics said in its first seasonal\ncross-country seeding survey\nWednesday.\nThis is slightly behind the 98-\nper-cent figures at the same time\nlast year and the 1956-60 average\nof 97 per cent.\nSeeding of the five principal\ngrains in Canada\u2014wheat, oats,\nbarley, flaxseed and mixed grain\n\u2014 was 83-per-cent completed at\nMay 31. This was below the 91\nper cent of 1961 and the 1956-60\naverage of 88.\nKennedy\nWarns\nNikita\nBy LEWIS GULICK\nWASHINGTON (AP) - President Kennedy cautioned .Soviet\nPremier Khrushchev Wednesday against any \"untoward action anywhere\" that might upset progress in creating an independent and neutral Laos.\nAt the same time, Kennedy\njoined Khrushchev in lauding\nthe new Laos agreement on a\ncoalition government and in ex-\nSeeding of all grains in the \u201e\u201e0\u201ein\u201e   t,\u201e\u201e\u201e   ,,,\u201e   \u201e\u201e,ai\u201e\u201e\u201e\u201e,,\nPrairie provinces, where the bulk' ^s\u00bbLh\u00b0!!u*&?l\u00a3S*\nof spring-sown gran is grown,\nwas 83-per-cent completed at May\n31 compared with 93 per cent a\nyear earlier..\nNab Escapees\nNear Creston\nCRESTON \u2014 Three juvenile\nescapees from Bowden, Alberta,\nreform school were captured in\nCreston Valley Wednesday.\nRCMP received word that the\ngetaway car was seen at Moyie\nat 11:20 a.m., and set up a roadblock outside Erickson, B.C. Constable W. Bailie saw the trio leave\nthe car.before they approached\nthe roadblock. Intending to hide,\nthe escapees ran down to the\nCPR trestle on the Goat River at\nErickson.    ,\nConstable Bailie requested help\nand Corporal E. Boechier of Nel\nson and Constable Crimson, along\nwith & Alton and D. Lawrence of\nCreston, arrived quickly at the\nscene. A search of the area was\nmade and at 1:20 p.m. the trio\nwas caught, and brought into\nCreston.\nThey had been missing for\nthree days and had allegedly\nstolen four cars in their bid for\nfreedom.\nThey are being held at Creston\npending their return to Alberta.\nPeter Verigin II Blamed\nFor Freedomite Troubles\nQueen Mother\nVisits Seaway\nOTTAWA (CP)-Wednesday was\na day by water for the Queen\nMother, having her first look\nat the St. Lawrence. Seaway\nwhich her daughter, the Queen,\nopened three years ago.\nAnd a stroll through the ancient-looking streets of Upper\nCanada Village was to give her\na sharp switch of Scenery from\nthe brilliant splendor of Ottawa's Confederation Square\nTuesday when she placed a\nwreath at the national war\nmemorial.\nMcNaughton Says\nTreaty Defective\nMONTREAL (CP) - General\nA. G. L. McNaughton, recently\nretired Canadian chairman of the\nInternational Joint Commission,\nWednesday called for revision of\nthe controversial Columbia River\npower treaty.\nGen. McNaughton told the 75th\nannual meeting of the Engineering Institute of Canada the proposed pact between Canada and\nthe United States is \"defective\"\nin at least two major aspects.\nThe first related to the physical\nplans of development and the second to control of storage.\nwill ease . cold. War disputes\naround the world.\nKennedy spoke in a short,\nfriendly note responding to one\nfrom \"the Soviet chief Tuesday\nnight.\nWashington officials adopted\na wait -and \u2022 see approach on\nwhether Khrushchev's note of\nharmony on Laos will spread to\nother East-West frictions, independence and neutrality for\nLaos is the one major goal Kennedy and Khrushchev have been\nable to agree on since they met\nin Vienna a year ago.\nKenned6 wrote in part to\nKhrushchev:\n\"I share your view that reports from Laos are very encouraging.. ...\nMUST PRESS FORWaiRD .\n\"It is of equal Importance\nthat we should now press forward with our associates in the\nGeneva conference, to complete.these arrpnizeinents and to\nwork closely together in their\nexecution. We must continue\nalso to do our best to persuade\nall concerned in Laos to work\ntogether to this same end.\n\"It is very important that no\nuntoward actions anywhere be\nallowed to disrupt the progress\nwhich has been made.\"\nA significant measure of\nKhrushchev's \u25a0 intent,- U.S. officials said, willbe the degree to\nwhich he exercises his influence\nfor withdrawal of\" Communist\nNorth Vietnamese forces now\nin Laos.\nUnder the Geneva agreement,\noutside forces are supposed to\nbe pulled out of Laos once the\ncoalition government comes into\nbeing. They include an estimated 10.000 North Vietnamese\naiding the pro - Communist\nPathet Lao forces, and some\n300 U.S. military advisers helping the nro - West troops of\nPhoumi Nosavan.\nSpokane Workers\nGo Back to Jobs\nSPOKANE (AP) \u2014 Work resumed Wednesday on an estimated $250,000,060 worth of construction projects in eastern\nWashington and northern Idaho\nfollowing settlement of the lengthy\nwalkout by union carpenters and\nTeamsters.\nThe Teamsters came to terms\nTuesday with the contractors,\nfour days after tlie contractors,\nwho walked out May 16, had\nreached agreement.\nMeanwhile, details of the carpenters settlement were announced.\nThe three-year contract calls\nfor a 60-cent hourly increase,\nsame as the Teamsters.\nNEW WESTMINST5R, B.C.\n(CP) \u2014 A lengthy document read\nat the preliminary hearing of 70\nleaders of the radical Sons of\nFreedom sect Wednesday blamed\nthe leadership of Peter Verigin\nII, who died in 1939, for some of\nthe sect's troubles.\nThe document was seized by\nRCMP from the briefcase of Joe\nE. Podvinikoff, one of the Freedomites charged with conspiring\nto intimidate the fepjta) and provincial government \"by acts of\nterrorism.\nThe statement was issued by\nthe religious sect's governing\nfraternal council, dated May 27,\n1961.\nWhat the Freedomites had done\nhas been in accordance with\nVerigin's teachings the documents\nsaid. Verigin II, who succeeded\nPeter (the Lordly) Verigin, the\nfirst spiritual leader of the Doukhobors in Canada, was accused\nin the document of forcibly intro\nducing corrupt teachings and\nlicentious behavior. Peter Verigin\ndied  in  a  train  bombing.\nThe document said Verigin II\nhad compelled the Freedomites\nto disrobe and organized a nudist\narmy at a nocturnal gathering\nnear Grand Forks.\nHe wanted to prove his army\nwas stronger than the .government's and this led later' to the\nimprisonment of some' of. the\nDoukhobors.\n\u25a0The council declared it re-\nnounces the teachings of Verigin\nHand would return to the original Doukhobor iaiVa.\nTheir present spiritual leader, Stefan Sorokin, who lives in\nUruguay, had urged them to renounce all Verigin's teachings or\nhe would leave them.\nThe document repeated an earlier charge that crimes of which\nthe Freedomites were accused\nwere instigated by John Lebedoff,\ntheir deposed leader.\nThe document said Verigin II\norganized the wrecking of Peter\nthe Lordly's tomb and the burn\ning of buildings, schools, bomb\ning of railway tracks and other\nacts.\nAt Verigin's tomb, he had set\nan example by putting his shoulder to it and pushing it down a\nhill. Six others appointed by him\nthen bombed the tomb.\nFreedomites also acted as a\nresult of Orthodox leader John\nVerigin's commands because they\nwere told that if crimes were\ncommitted as a sacrifice they\nceased to be crimes.\nThe document also said according to teachings of Verigin II,\nthe more trouble made resulted\nin stronger repentence.-\nAnother document claimed Attorney-General Bonner sought a\nspecial feather in his cap by\nsolving the Doukhobor problem\nand did not care if innocent\npeople suffered.\nThe hearing is continuing.\nAnd in This Corner . . .\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 City hall's pugnacious starling has been\nevicted from its home to guard against possibility of an aerial\nattack on Queen Mother Elizabeth.\nThe starling had its nest atop the coat of arms hanging above\nthe entrance to the modernistic building. The nest was just below\na balcony to be used today by the Queen Mother. City building\nsuperintendent W. F. Bennett says the bird \"attacked everybody\nwho went out there.\"\nWorkmen placed the nest \u2014 containing \"three or four eggs\nand one little, small bird\" \u2014 in a tree on the city hall property.\nVICTORIA (CP)\u2014Premier Bennett was waiting for a heckler\nin his office this morning \u2014 but the man didn't show up.\nThe man made a date with Mr. Bennett at a Social Credit\nrally Tuesday night.\nHe had a run-in with Mr. Bennett about provincial debt.\nMr. Bennett was ready to show him \"the books\" at 11 a.m.,\nthe agreed time. He also had deputy finance minister G. S. Bryson\nstanding by'.\nBut the man, who wouldn't give his name Tuesday night,\nhadn't arrived by lunch time.\nSANTIAGO, Chile (AP)\u2014Rationing of electric power was suspended in Santiago Wednesday to allow Chileans to follow the\nBrazil-Chile semi-final game In the World Cup soccer tournament\non television and radio.\nUnder rationing regulations iu this power-short Chilean capital the heavily populated Nunoa district was to have electricity\ncut off Wednesday afternoon.\n\"V\nI\n  '\u2014\n_ \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURS., JUNE 14, 1962\nTwo Pay Fines\nFor driving a motor vehicle\nwithout a driver's licence, Andy\nVlaihovich of South Slocan was\nfined $20 and costs by Magistrate\nLAYMORl\nDon't Miss The\nINVADERS\nDRIKE\nThis  Saturday\nK. D. McRae Monday. He was\narrested by city police on Carbonate Street.\nSergi Astra Hantseff of South\nSlocan was fined $20 and costs\nfor permitting a minor to drive\nhis vehicle. Hantseff also had his\ndriver's licence endorsed.\nWilliam 0. Eby of Nelson was\nfined $10 and costs and had his\ndriver's licence endorsed for\ncrossing the solid double line near\nTaghum.\nAuto-Vue Drive-In\nTRAIL. B.C.\nTonight and Friday\n\"MIDNIGHT   LACE\"\n(Color)\nDoris Day - Rex Harrison\nShow Time, Approx. 9:10 p.m.\nCritics One-Party\nFollowers - Herridge\nThe charge that a riding supporting a member of the opposition suffers economically was denounced by New Democratic\nParty candidate H. W. Herridge\nWednesday.\nAddressing about 100 people in\nCASTLE   Theatre\nCastlegar, B.C.\nTonight and Friday\n\"JAILHOUSE ROCK\"\nElvis Presley\nShows at 6:45 and 9:00 p.m.\noiaraing\nDEBBIE\nsim\nDebbie's SettingTraps...\nFORME\nWMMS\nONLY!\nun v   jinn\n6RIFFITH-PR0WSE\nmum    in\nSITTER-SGOTT\nCOLOf? by DE LUXE\nCinemascope\n7:00 - 9:00\nPhone  352-5833\nHear Hon. E. Davie Fulton\nMINISTER OF JUSTICE\nDitcuMi\n1. THE  BURNING  QUESTION:\nThe Sons of Freedom and Prison Reform.\n2. THE QUENCHER:\nThe Columbia River Development.\nSilver Room, Hume Hotel\nTonight\u20148 p.m.\nRefreshments Following Meeting\nInserted by Nelson Progressive Conservative Committee\nSUNNY WEATHER AHEAD?\nShop At\nBEE\nBUILDING SUPPLY\nFor All\nYour\nBuilding\nMaterials\n* Drain\nTile\n12\" (Agricultural P3\nTile)\t\n* 8? *3 8\u00b0\nOutside. From ... (J9'\u00ab\n* Fiberglas Panels\nFor Sundeeks, Awnings, Pofios; 8 ft. sheets \t\n* Window Screen\nFiberglas. Will not corrode, stain, stretch. From\n* Formica\nCounter Topping   4x8 sheets\t\n$T50\nsq.ft. 21'\n19\nthe Royal Canadian Legion Hall\nthe MP for Kootenay West for the\npast 17 years, labelled critics of\nhis representation who believe in\nthe charge as followers of a \"one-\nparty\" system.\n\"Anyone who suggests that a\nriding will be punished by sending an Opposition member to parliament believes in a one-party\nsystem,\" he said.\nMr. Herridge's remarks were\nobvidusly aimed at the Progressive Conservative campaign slogan. The PCs urge that it's time\nfor a change, a time for Kootenai\nWest to get on the government\nbandwagon, and to join in the\neconomic growth of the rest of\nthe nation.\nMr. Herridge said that there\nhad been 10 to 12 times more\nmoney spent in Kootenay West\nduring his tenure of office than\never before.\nHis power of elocution in the\nHouse of Commons was not solely\nresponsible for this upsurge, he\nadmitted. He cited the natural\ncircumstance, the natural industrial expansion of the area, its\nincrease in population and the inflated dollar.\nFRIENDS IN GOV'T\nHe said the government had always been good to him. His personal friendship and influence, as\na member of the opposition, with\ngovernment ministers and members, had been beneficial to his\nriding.\nHis intervention, he said, pro\nduced the rebuilding of the Ga\nlena Bay wharf and launching\nramps throughout the interior.\nThe launching ramp at Boswell\nwas the first undertaken in Canada, he said.\nHis criticism of government\nmembers was that the back\nbenchers' oratorical powers are\n\"chained by the party whip,\"\ntherefore their own thoughts are\n'suppressed\" in the interest of\nthe party.\nIn his own case he could speak\nfreely as a member of the opposi\ntion.\n\"What do you want? A muzzled\nbackbencher of the government\nor a front bencher who says what\nhe thinks?\" he asked.\nIn international affairs, he felt\nit was Canada's role to lead the\nnon-nuclear nations in pressing\nfor complete disarmament. He\nalso predicted that within two\nyears the United States will officially recognhe Red China, \"as\nCanada should.\"\nOn devaluation of the Canadian\ndollar, he said, \"This devaluation\nhas only raised the cost of living\nin Canada, besides making the\nCanadian people pay $400-$500\nmillion extra for United States\nImports.\"\nOn the Columbia River development, he said the NDP was not\nopposed to development but to\nIhe present treaty.\nNAMED aUJC TO QUEEN\nLONDON (Reuters) - RAF\nGroup Capt. Leonard Henry\nTrent, 47, a New Zealand-born\nholder of the Victoria Cross has\nbeen named aide-de-camp to the\nQueen.\nBonner Again\nAsks for Troops\nAttorney-General Robert Bonner reiterated his request that a\ngarrison of troops be.placed in\nthe Nelson area as a psychological damper on radical Freedomites, when he spoke to a public\nmeeting in the Hume Hotel Wednesday night.\nThe attorney-general's audience\nrocked with laughter when he\nstated, \"Harkness (defence minister) wants me to declare an\nemergency. I don't have to declare one.\"\n\"What with nO troops in the\nKootenays and no warheads on\nthe Bomarcs I don't know where\nwe're going.\"\nMr. Bonner said when he arrived in the Kootenays he was\nimmediately told over 100 Freedomite homes had been burned.\n\"I've often wondered how to get\nrid of Krestova. They pay very\nlittle rent there,\" he quipped.\nMr. Bonner was speaking at a\ncampaign rally for Social Credit\ncandidate for Kootenay-West, Les\nRead.\nOf the Bomarc, Mr. Bonner\nsaid that with all the money spent\non the missile the country could\nput 300,000 students through four\nyears of university, pay all fees,\nand give the students salaries so\nthey could get married before\nthey graduate.\n\"MASQUERADING\"\nHe rapped the Conservative\ngovernment for \"masquerading\"\nunder the pretext of achieving\nsomething great when It sold\nlarge quantities of wheat to China\nlast year.\n\"China bought wheat from us\nlast year because they were in\nfamine,\" he stated. Ordinarily\nChina does not buy that much\nwheat from Canada, he said, and\nCanadians cannot expect China!\nto have a famine whenever Canada wants to sell her wheat.\nMr. Bonner spoke on various\naspects of world trade and the\nEuropean  Common Market.\nHe reminded the audience of\nPresident Kennedy's recent statement, \"Trade or fade,\" for the\nUnited States.\n\"In Britain they say, 'Export\nor Expire.' And what do we say\nin Canada? 'Follow John'.\"\nCanada must adopt the attitude\nof the United States in world\ntrade, he stated, \"trade or fade.\"\n\"We cannot be a nation of order-takers,\" he said, \"we must be\na nation of salesmen.\"\nThe attorney-general restated\nthe Social Credit party's position\non the Peace-Columbia projects.\n\"We must move ahead rapidly on\nboth projects,\" he said.\n\"Never have I seen so much\nconversation and so little action.\nBut the inaction is not on the part\nof your provincial government.\"\nHe criticized Gen. A. G. L. McNaughton for statements attributed to him on the Columbia\nRiver project. Mr. Bonner said\nthat Gen. McNaughton had no objections to the forms of negotiations discussed at meetings prior\nto the signing of the treaty and\nfelt it regrettable that the general\nshould make such statements\nnow. \"It only serves to confuse\nthe issue,\" he said.\n\"The Peace and the Columbia,\nside by side, will be most advantageous to British Columbia,\"\nMr, Bonner told his audience of\n200.\n\"These projects should be done\nnow at today's prices in order\nthat in years ahead we can look\nforward to decreasing instead of\nincreasing power rates.\"\nMr. Read spoke to the audience\nbefore Donald Brothers, MLA for\nRossland-Trail, introduced Mr.\nBonner.\nIt was anticipated that there\nwould be a Freedomite demonstration such as occurred at the\nDiefenbaker rally in Trial but no\nFreedomites were present. City\npolice and RCMP members were\non hand, but there were no disturbances.\nVehicle Check\nStudied Here\nAn annual vehicle safety check\npatterned on the Vancouver pro-,\ngram is the hope of the Nelson\nSafety Council.\nAid. Albert Maida broached the\nsubject at city council meeting\nMonday, and also urged as a\nsafety precaution that all city\nvehicles be equipped with safety\nbelts.\nThe basic plan for the qity\nwould be the issue of a safety\nsticker, stating that the vehicle\nhad been checked out by a competent mechanic and was found\nmechanically fit to be operated\non public thoroughfares.\nThe sticker could be Issued for\na year or possibly six months\nbefore being renewed, Aid. Maida\nsaid, implying that the plan now\nis only in its infancy and many\nsuggestions would be incorporated into it before it is finalized.\nCouncil looked favorably on the\nIdea and agreed to study its possibilities.\nAid. Maida's suggestion on\nsafety belts was also received for\nstudy.\nJudge Lectures Boys\nSentenced on Arson\n\"Basically I don't think you are\nbad boys and see no reason why\nyou can't, with proper guidance\nand God's help, become decent\ncitizens,\" Juvenile Court judge\nK. D. McRae told four Freedomite boys Wednesday.\nLater he sentenced them to two\nyears in Brannon Lake Institute\nfor arson.\nHe told the boys, charged with\nburning an abandoned shack, that\nthe influence of their parents,\nolder brothers and sisters, and\nthe community they live in was\nvery strong.\n\"Therefore,\" he stated, \"I must\nremove you from your home and J\nenvironment in the best Interests'\nof yourselves.\" I\nHe also ordered that the juve-1\nniles be made wards of the\nsuperintendent of child welfare.\nThis will be in effect until the\nboys are 21 years old.\nHe said he thought he should\nhave them separated from the\ninfluence of themselves but be-\nBrush With Ferry\nCostly to Youth\ncause he did not have the authority to have them separated at\nBrannon Lake he said he would\nhave no objection to the boys\nbeing sent to different institutions.\nThree of the boys admitted to\nthe charge while the fourth\npleaded not guilty.\nJudge McRae called the boys'\nactions of burning the vacant\nbuilding, a \"foolish and wicked\nIhing to do.\"\nHe told them he deplored the\nfact that they, having been born\nin Canada, should partake in such\nactivities.\nHe called on the boys to \"erase\nIhe strange quirk\" about migration through jails from their\nminds.\nHe said he didn't approve of\nyoung men being sent to jail on\ntheir first offence but in this\ncase he felt releasing them would\nbe the wrong thing to do.\n\"At the industrial school you\nWill be given the opportunity to\nlearn something useful,\" Judge\nMcRae said.\nA Glade youth who lost his finger in a boating accident several\ndays ago was fined $125 and costs\nin provincial court Wednesday.\nMichael Zeabin, 20, pleaded\nguilty to operating his boat in the\nKootenay River as a danger to\nnavigation.\nZeabin and two companions\nwere rescued from a dunking after doing a few \"power turns\"\nnear the Glade ferry, then hitting\nthe ferry cable. Two holes were\npunched in the bottom of the boat\nand all three occupants thrown\ninto the icy waters.\nPolice said the collision almost\nbroke the ferry cable. Under considerable strain at this time of\nyear, the cable ferry was carrying two cars and 15 passengers at\nthe time.\nThe incident was Investigated\nby Crescent Valley RCMP detachment on June 2 and the prosecution was also conducted by the officers.\nSince the accident RCMP have\nissued warnings to boaters to\ndrive with extreme caution, particularly at this time of year\nwhen waterways are high with\nthe spring runoff.\nPassengers in the boat were\nbrothers Bill and Pete Makonin,\nboth 14. After the collision one of\nthe brothers was pulled onto the\nferry by passengers. The other!\nwent under the ferry and downstream. He managed to grab the\noverturned boat and was later\nrescued by ferry operator Pete\nKoorbatoff In his own boat.\nZeabln's   finger   was   crushed\nwhen he grabbed the ferry cable\nand his hand went into a pulley.\nHe let go of the cable and was\nswept downstream. Bill Shlakoff\nof Glade rescued him in another\nbat. Police said Shlakoff got to\nZeabin \"just in time.\"\nHe was taken to Castlegar and\nDistrict Hospital where his finger\nwas amputated.\nTO MEET U THANT\nPARIS (Reutersl - President\nde Gaulle will meet Acting UN\nSecretary-General U Thant at\nthe Elysee Palace here July 17,\nhigh sources said.\nTV REPAIRS\nPhone\n352-3355\nVIDEO ELECTRONICS\n405 Hall St.\nFormerly Soren's TV\nNow ... .\nSUMMER\nCOAL\nDISCOUNTS\nAll Popular Brands\nAvailable\nDial 352-5018\nQUEEN  CITY\nFUEL\n524 Rallwaj St.. Nelson\nlc SALE\nDr. Chase\nD.M.H.\nCough Syrup\nFor Children or Adults\nRegular Price $1.50\nNow 2 for $1.51\nFleury's Pharmacy\nHarold Mayo (Prop.)\nCorner Baker and Ward Sts\nPh. 352-2613       Nelson\nBeef\nFront Shoulder Roasts\n45c Ib.\nAH  Fresh  Cut Meals  at\nWHOLESALE   PRICES\nCITY LOCKER\nPLANT\n611 Front St.      Nelson, B.C.\nPHONE 352-5841\nFiremen's Signing Delayed\nBy Conditions of Practice\n1 NELSON SHRINE CLUB presents ... H\nI\nI SirtiliqhL DRIVE-IN |\n\u25a0 Tonight, Friday, Saturday\nII        \"OPERATION PETTICOAT\"\nStarring CARY GRANT, TONY CURTIS\nin Eastman Color\nI [ Show Time 8:\nShow Time 8:55 p.m.\n\u00ab\u00ab-9\nFOR FATHER'S DAY\nInclude  a  Tube  nf  the  NEW   HAIRDRESSING\nKINQ'S MEN\nLarge Tube-98c\nSamp!\nJe NELSON\nC 5 PHARMACY LTD.\n\"YOUR FORTRESS OF HEALTH\"\n639 Baker St. PHONE 352-2313 Nelson, B.C.\nA snag in the number of practices a year that a permanent\nfireman should attend has delayed the signing of the 1962 agreement between the city and local\n1343 of the Firefighters Union.\nThe city solicitor informed city\ncouncil Monday that the local is\nreluctant to sign the agreement,\nbut the signing is only a matter\nof time, as the union must accept\nthe award of the arbitration\nboard.\nTlie solicitor stated that recently two representatives of the local\nvisited him to discusi the agreement stipulation of *5 practices\nannually for regulars.\nThey contended that this requirement is not feasible under\nthe new platoon system and the\nrecent reduction in staff.\nThe condition was agreed upon\nby the arbitration board which\npondered arguments of the local\nand the city at the time when\nthe fire staff consisted of eight\nregulars, an assistant chief and\na fire chief.\nAmong the contentions of the\nFIND  BOMB\nMEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP)-An\nanti-submarine bomb with 2'i\npounds of TNT in its nose was\nfound on the Memphis waterfront a few feet from the anchorage of three explosive-\nladen barges. The police emergency squad took the bomb to\nthe Memphis naval station for\nchecking. The depth - charge\nbomb, called a Hedgehog, was\nnestled on the bank of Mud\nIsland, opposite the heart of\nMemphis' downtown district. It\nwas not known how it got there.\nTONIGHT\nON TELEVISION\n-Kill^\u00ae*\"'\nTHE PRIME MINISTER\nlilM\nOF CANADA\nIk- _\u25a0\n\u25a0fc\nA-AA.;A;'AA^^K\u2014m K\u00abU\nJOHN\nDIEFENBAKER\nCJLH\nLethbridge\nChannel 7\n8:15 p.m.\nTlit Pwflrt*_Vt Comefvbtfri Party of Canada            P\n*,\nfiremen presented to the solicitor\nwas that a fireman working the\nday shift should not be required\nto attend an evening practice the\nsame day. They feel they should\nhave another 24-hour period in\nthe week when they would not be\ncompelled to attend practice and\nthat they should not have to turn\nout on either of their consecutive\ntwo days off.\nIf these beliefs were agreed to\nit would be extremely difficult for\nthe regulars to fulfill the practice\nquota, the solicitor believed.\nThe matter was referred to the\nfire, and water committee for\nstudy and report.\nNELSON SHRINE CLUB presents\n\"The Greatest\nLittle Show On Earth\"\nFEATURES:\n\u2022 Flying Trapeze\n\u2022 Funny Clowns\n\u2022 High Wire\n\u2022 Juggling\n\u2022 Trampolines\nFriday, June 15\n\u2022 Trained Dogs and\nMonkeys\n\u2022 A Cast of 75 Young\nPeople, Ages 2-19.\n1 Show 8:30 p.m.\n[I     Saturday, June 16 - 2 Shows, 2:00 and 8 p.m.\nNELSON CIVIC CENTRE\n|j Admission:  $1.00\nI ALL SEATS RESERVED\nTickets  Available  From  KOOTENAY  STATIONERS\nn and Any Noble II\nOriginal   HIDE-A-BEDS\nAvailable in Colors of\nYour Choice.\nSPECIAL\n1 Only\u20142 pee.\nSuite\n\u2022 Nylon Cover\n\u2022 Foam Rubber\nReversible   Cushions\nReg. $229.50\n169.50\nCHESTERFIELDS\nFOR YOUNG LIVING.\nFOR YOUNG BUDGETS.\nBeautiful chesterfields designed to be lived with \u2014\nthat  reflect  your good  taste,  your way of  life,\nand  also to  immediately give the  impression  of |\ncosting  much  more, because  of obvious quality.\nNewest Styles   Newest Fabrics   \/il\nQuality Constructed\nThroughout    BEST VALUES\nAsk about our Chesterfields which carry a 5 year\nGuarantee on materials alone!\nNELSON HOME FURNITURE\nAND APPLIANCES LTD.\nl640 Baker St.\nPhone 352-6432\nNelson, B.C.\n1\n ffi$.\nSalmo Fire\nTruck Meets\nAll Tests\nSALMO \u2014 Wednesday, the fire\ntruck recently purchased by the\nvillage of Salmo was subjected\nto an acceptance test by the Canadian Underwriters' Association.\nThe test consisted of pumping\nfor a period of three hours from\nthe Salmo River to ensure that\nthe pump met specifications and\nof a road test to ensure that the\ntruck met acceleration and maximum speed requirements when\nloaded.\nThe test was witnessed by Bud\nTaylor for the village and D. R.\nMontador of the association. The\nequipment operated smoothly and\nwas found to comply in all respects with specifications.\nNEW DENVER\nPIONEER DIES\nAT CALGARY\nNEW DENVER - Word has\nbeen received of the death of a\nformer New Denver oldtimer,\nMrs. Martha Cropp, who died at\nCalgary Monday at the age of 92.\n1 Mrs. Cropp came to New Denver in 1890 from Beachville, Ont.,\nand left in 1942 to make her home\nIn Calgary with her daughter,\nMrs. Jessie Campbell.\nCastlegar-Kinnaird\nKinsmen Club\nNEWSPAPER\nBINGO\n$1000 Cash Prize\nToday's New Number\n0-61\nDrawn by Henry Bentham,\nPres., Kin Club, Nelson\nPrevious Numbers Called\nB \u2014 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 10, 12, 13\nI \u2014 18, 19, 20, 21, 28\nN \u2014 31, 34, 35, 36, 38, 43, 44, 45\nG \u2014 48, 49, 50, 52, 54, 55, 59\nO \u2014 63, 64, 65, 66, 67, 68, 74, 75\nBingo Cards $1.00\nAvailable at\nCRANBROOK\nInterior Video\n& Electronics\nCRESTON\nAvery-Carr Drug Store\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURS., JUNE 14,1962 \u2022\nCONTEMPLATING the ruins of their home at\nGoose Creek, 7-year-old Nicky Kootnikoff and his dog,\nBuddy, complete the atmosphere of desolation which\nhangs over the charred remains of villages in Douk\nhobor communities which have recently felt the torch\nof arsonists. Nicky is the young brother of Harry\nKootnikoff, 17-year-old youth killed Feb. 16 when a\nbomb he was carrying in a car exploded.\n\u2014Photo by George Diack ot Vancouver.\nORDER VACCINATIONS\nDUNDEE, Scotland (AP) -\nDundee health authorities Wednesday reported 11 cases of infantile paralysis and ordered an\nintensified campaign to vaccinate children.\nSalmo Cooperates With\nChamber in Civic Cleanup\nWHY BORROW MONEY\nTO BUY FURNITURE?\n($)\nThe soundest financing is ofirawl by\ndaaalers whose ads show this symbol.\nIt pays to ask for\nIAC TIME PURCHASE PLANS\nIt's a Happier Home With\nGENERAL\u00a9electric Small Appliances\nG.E. Cord Reel Cleaner\nFeatures the GE double action cleaning unit. 20-ft.\ncord. \u2014 Comes with five interlocking QQ QC\nattachments. Model VC-3.  \/\/.\/J\nG.E. Automatic Toaster\nA fast-action breakfast toaster. Heavy \"J 2 QF\nchrome finish. Model T-31  \"tJ.\/?\nG.E. Hair Dryer\nModel D-l. A portable fast-drying hair dryer that       jgf\\ \"SSSSk\ncan be adjusted to \u25a0JO   QF\n3 heats   .... 4.0.y J\nG.E. Waffle Baker\nModel G-l. A table model waffle baker which\ndoubles as a family-sized \"(J  QF\nsandwich grill  afcj.J' J\nG.E. Automatic Fry Pan 11 \/?!==! S\nModel S-22. The indlspensible family cooking aid\n\u2014 just set to temperature \"l1? ftr\nrequired.  Only   JL I ,sj\nG.E. Electric Can Opener\nA portable unit which opens cans       \"Jyi   QF J1 ML\nelectrically in seconds   Aa\".?3\nG.E. Hand or Stand Mixer\nModel M-50. Beats at 12 kitchen       3\u00ab\"y  r(\\\nspeeds. Choose a kitchen color  SI i3U      \u00bb, \/   -..\u25a0\u2022;.\nG.E. Electric Kettle\nModel K-43. Automatically cuts back boiling water  affi_a___j\u00bbl!\nto a gentle boil, controlling vapor. Q  QQ\nOnly   7.\/0  \u201e,,,.,\n\u202211m\nG.E. Electric Iron .1\/\nModel F-94. Handle is air cooled for comfort and\nsafety. Fastest and easiest to use of 1 Q Q C\nall irons. Only   I\/\u2022\/3\nG.E. Polisher\nModel CS-18. With exclusive floating brush action. \/  -i    \\^*k ?^~\\MiMJ~~^\nWeighs only 12 lbs. Can be used as a \u00bb\u00bb Q  Q Q a4--jN<r^^4jia__??__J_-\nwaxer-polisher. Only   afcOoOO\nNELSON ELECTRIC\nCO., LTD.\n574 Baker St.    ^^f^J^j^L^M       Nelson,\nPh. 352-553S   1    i nil B.C.\n^II_______P\nSALMO \u2014 Salmo village commission will donate use of village\nequipment for a civic clean-up\nsponsored by the Chamber of\nCommerce, whose letter requesting village cooporation was read\nat the meeting this week.\nThe letter also requested a\ngrant for this purpose in view\nof the tourist promotion being\nundertaken, and the commission\nagreed to a grant of $200. John\nHolden and Ken Henderson of the\nChamber were, present and outlined some of the actual plans\nunder way.\nTlie commission voted against\nissuing a trades licence for an\nauction sale by a promotion firm\nafter studying a flyer put out by\nthe compainy advertising the sale.\nThe fire brigade will use a\nbuilding, which is to be removed,\nfor a practice session since the\nowner telephoned from Ontario\nauthorizing the commission to\nhave  the building removed for\nsalvage. The fire brigade will\nproceed when a letter authorizing this move is received.\nThe hew fire truck satisfactorily underwent an acceptance test\nWednesday. Transfer of the vehicle to village ownership will now\ntake place.\nThe commission will adopt the\nshorter form of the national building code (1953) as the new building bylaw. Copies of the form\nhalve been received. The clerk\nwill write to. the department of\nmunicipal affairs for the exact\nform such a bylaw would take.\nThe commission will put in 400\nfeet of culvert lo carry away running water and will use coarse\ngravel to take care of seepage\nfollowing discussion of the drainage problem along Second Street.\nPermission was granted Hearn\nBros. Lumber Co. to build a hangar on the Salmo airstrip. Six\nbuilding permits were approved\nto a total .'value of $20,000. Two\npermits were for new homes.\nTender To Be Called\nFor 67-Passenger Bus|\nKINNAIRD \u2014 A signed consent\nhas been forwarded by Kinnaird\nVillage to the school board for\nthe purchase of a new school bus\nfor District No. 9.\nThis was.approved at the Monday meeting of Kinnaird commissioners when the written request\nfrom the school board advised,\n\"Last year the grade seven pupils were retained in elementary\nschool in their own area. However, this year they are grade\neight and will be transported into\nthe high schol. Tills will cause additional bus transportation and in\norder to handle it we will require\nanother 67 passenger school bus.\"\nApproximate cost of the bus is\n$13,000.\nC. H. King, secretary of the\nschool board, asked for an early\nreply so that tenders may be called and \"the order placed for delivery by August 30, 1962.\"\nA. E. Staite, department of\nhighways superintendent, has agreed with certain safety measures\nproposed by council, it was learned at the meeting. In a recent interview between Mr. Staite and\nComm. G. Rust, proposals were\nmade to establish cross walks in\nthe newer developed areas of the\nvillage. Also stop signs and an extra lane at the junction of No. 3A\nand No. 3 highways was proposed\nto the highways official in order\nto control traffic, especially\nheavy motor vehicles descending\nfrom the slope of No. 3.\nCommissioner Pat Romaine\nsuggested clearing more land for\nexpansion of the cemetery. The\nclearing process will go ahead,\nthe meeting decided, but the actual extension of the cemetery is\nto be kept for priority work on\nthe Winter Works program.\nBuilding permits for two garages were approved for G. E.\nJones and Steve Gallo.. These\nwere in the amount of $500 each\nC. Pepper received his. permit at\nthe meeting for construction of a\nnew home on his present lot, in\nthe. amount of $13,000. Council\nspecified that a time limit be set\non removal of the former house\nwhich is situated behind the proposed building.\nThe meeting ended to reconvene at the Kinnaird Fire Hall\nfor discussion witli volunteer fire-\nVillage Helps\nWith Life\nGuard Wages\n.. NEW DENVER-The New Denver village commission voted $50\ntowards hiring a part time guard\nat New Denver for the summer.\nThis move was brought about\nby a letter read at the last commission meeting from the recreation committee requesting financial assistance along this line.\nThe new mowing attachment is\nin use cutting boulevards in the\nvillage and bedding plants have\nbeen purchased for the flower\nbeds at tbe village hall, the commission was advised.\nAn application ,was granted J.\nA. Roberts for a building perriilt,\nto build a new garage. i||\nThe new blacktop sidewalk oil\nSixth Street will be rolled again\nby impact roller. All winter\nworks projects are completed.\nDOVER, England (Reutersl \u2014\nTwo young Britons set out-\nacross the English Channel for\nFrance Wednesday on a floating\nbicycle built for two. Jim Wood\nand Ron Brooks, 20-year-old\nstudents at Birmingham University, said they expect to\nbeach their paddle - wheeled\n\"Toto\" (for tandem over the\nocean) in France in about 12\nhours. .    .\n* * NEWS FLASH \u2022 *\nDON'T TELL\nMcLachlan\nHolds a\nNEW LOCATION\n1\n\u25a0\ni\n\u25a0\nI\nI\ni\n13;=,'.. AA \u25a0   '\u25a0'     \u25a0  A\nNew Location\u2014561 Baker St.\n\u25a1\n1\nQ\nl\ni\nB\nI\n1\nD\nI\ni\nDIAMOND\nRING\nDOOR PRIZE\nDrop in and register during the\n3-day sale!\nPRIZES -- PRIZES - PRIZES\nToo Many To Be Mentioned To Be\nDrawn Thursday, Friday, Saturday,\nJune 14, 15, 16\nRINGS\nUP TO\nDiamond Rings\n% PR!\nSTAINLESS STEEL SERVING\nPIECES \u2014 V2-PRICE\nSee Our Bargain Table\nMexican Tooled Leather\nHANDBAGS\n% OFF\nCostume Jewellery\nSLASHED  IN  PRICE!\n1\nI\nl\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\n\u25a1\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\n\u25a0\n\u25a1\nI\nI \u2022 BRASS SERVING PIECES   Vi PRICE j\nI*'\n1\nI\nI\n1\nLACHLANj\nJEWELLERS LTD\nL.\nPH.  352-2116\nNELSON\n561 BAKER ST.\n\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\n!\n 3&J00U iailg tfania\nEstablished April 22. 1902 Nelson, B. a\nPublished by the NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n266 Bukei Street, Nelson, British Columbia, mornings except\nSundays and holidays in the centre oi the Kootenays with\ntho lurgest daily circulation in the Interior ol B.C.\nAuthorized as Second Class Mail, Post Office Department, Ottawa,\n.... and for Payment ot Postage in Cash.\n-\u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0 \u2122 C. W. RAMSDEN, Publisher.\n.\"\"\"\" A. W. GIBBON, Editor.\nMEMBER OF THE C<\\iNAIUatN PRESS\nMEMBER OF THE C\\NAUl<\\iN DAILY NEWPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION\nMEMBER OF THE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS\nThe Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication ot all news\ndispatches credited to it or to The Associated Press or Reuters tn this\npaper and also the local news published therein.\nWednesday, \/une 13, 1962\nOur Communities Becoming Showplaces\nOne of the important things, so\noften overlooked by city governments, is the necessity for the continual development of civic beauty.\nIt should be the aim of every community, not only to provide for good\nstreets and services, but also to make\nthe city as attractive as possible. In\nthis respect it is surprising what time\nand effort will do. The city of- Trail,\nwith few natural advantages, has\nsteadily jitSsued a course of beautifying its-teiiain but not without resistance $\u00a7p; those who favor parking lots ifirftedd of parks.\nIts lqtfiStP-'sub-division has been\nplanned vinui. ah eye to its appearance as well as utility. All the services will ,abe in.place before the lots\nare sold.'^a purely residential area\nthe power lines have been placed\nunderground and the plan has departed from the orthodox by having\ncfcrved streets instead of the conventional straight ones. When completed\nthe:' new sub-division should be a\nmost desirable place in which to live.\nIt is surprising how places can\nagiow from small beginnings. Our\n\"Cottonwood City\" began as a shack-\ntown of squatters during the great\ndepression. Today a sense of civic\npride is shown, in the improvements\nwhich the. residents are making to\nthe property. The courage of Ihe first\nsettlers is paying off. It is far from\nbeing a shack town today.\nOne of the more pleasant car\nrides in this area is from the ferry\nat Castlegar to Trail. Live, active\ncommunities have grown up along\nthe road and their development is a\nconstant source of interest. Kinnaird\nand Castlegar started with better beginnings than Cottonwood City but\ntheir development has been painfully haphazard.\nToday they are aware of this and\nhave vigorously attacked the problem and new sidewalks at Kinnaird\nand the removal of a sand bank in\nCastlegar testify to the determination\nof those communities to make them\nbetter places in which to live,\nLooking into the future we can\nsee that bank a stellar attraction to\ntourists and a source of pride to the\ncommunity. Planted with grass and\nflower beds it will catch all eyes and\nthe Village Commission is to be congratulated on its vision and foresight.\nIn Kinnaird the wide boulevards lend\nthemselves admirably to landscaping\nand plans should be made to develop\nthem to the full.\nAll communities in the Kootenays\nshould work strongly together to turn\nthis district into the showplace of\nBritish Columbia. We are already far\non the way to make that happen.\nThe True Tribute\nwould boomerang and gain him new\nfriends.\nThe size of the Forum gathering,\nexceeding 9000 and one of the largest\naudiences in election history, was the\ntrue tribute to the magnetism and\npersonality of Canada's prime minister, and the desire of the mainland\narea to see and hear Mr. Diefenbaker\nat first hand.\nMost of the audience, through the\nvery turmoil which frustrated them\nand robbed them of the full flavor of\nthe prime minister's oratory, would\ngo away angered by the hooliganism\nand thus inclined that much more in\nhis favor.\nNor did the unemployed and\npeace council contingents among the\nplacard carriers do themselves any\ngood by their prominence among the\ndissidents.\u2014Victoria Colonist.\nIt is a new and disturbing trend\nin Canadian politics to have the kind\nof rowdyism that erupted at the giant\nrally gathered in the Vancouver\nForum to hear Prime Minister Diefenbaker. As a port cily where much\nflotsam and jetsam dim the lustre of\nVancouver a latent turbulence always exists but the hooliganism was,\nas civic leaders there are forced to\nadmit, a black mark on the mainland\ncity.\n' Quite obviously certain well-organized, groups came in force to ruin\nthe prime minister's appearance and\nprevent him from delivering a major\nelection speech.\nAmong them undoubtedly were\nleft-wing agencies of varying shades\nincluding Communists and their sympathizers, and Ihe type of hoodlums\nwho glory in disturbances of all kinds.\nThere seems lo have been inadequate\nsecurity arrangements made for\nhandling a crowd of the size that\nattended, however, and in this both\nstewards and police can probably be\nfaulted.\nIn the result Mr. Diefenbaker was\nforced to curtain his remarks and\nprevented from outlining in full the\npolitical message he had for the\npeople of Vancouver.\nYet in the end it would be a victory for the Conservative leader. His\ncapacity' in. Ihe face of deliberate\nrowdyism and the manner in. which\nhe dealt with interrupters was bound\nto win him much admiration. He held\nto his theme wilh courage in spite of\nthe attempts to create a riot, and as\nthe exponent of free speech and fair\nplay himself the denial of these rights\nby  those   bent  on  stifling   freedom\nTartan\nMr. Robert Thompson, national\nSocial Credit leader, says all his\nparty's candidates in the election\ncampaign are to wear bow ties made\nup of a green, white, black and tan\ntartan. The green and white represent Social Credit colors, but the\ntartan as a whole is one assumed\nby Mr. Roy Thomson, the Canadian\npublisher now living in England. Mr,\nThompson spells his name differently\nand is not of Scottish origin. It all\nsounds a trifle confusing, but then\nso are the monetary theories propounded by Ihe Social Crediters.\n\u2014Offawa Cilizen.\nUmpire's Decision\nTwo young Toronto baseball\nGstvvici' r\\f   ll\\r\\i ir\\ lt1     players have complained to the po-\nems of l nougni lice lhat a.   w\u00a3o volunteere\/to\nSORROW AND JOY\nSorrow has its reward. It never leaves\nus where it found us.\u2014Mary Baker Eddy.\n-\u25a0 .     *      *      *\nSorrow is the source of literature, joy\nis the source of virtue.\u2014Austin O'Malley.\n\u00bb      *      *\nJoys are our wings; sorrows our spurs.\n\u2014Jean Paul Richter,\n* *      *\nSorrows remembered sweeten present\njoy.\u2014Robert Pollok.\n.y        *        *\nThere is a sweet joy that comes to us\nthrough sorrow.\u2014Charles Haddon Spurgeon.\n* *      *\nI shall not let a sorrow die until I find\nthe heart of it, nor lei a wordless joy go by\nunfil itT.t_ik-S_i_._je a hit.--Sara Teasdaie..\nboy\numpire their game enforced his decisions, when they were disputed, by\nholding a pocket knife lo their throats.\nWe suppose that the boy must\nhave taken it a little too literally when\nsomebody told him that the umpire's\ndecision was final.\n\u2014Toronto Globe and Mail.\nIt's Been Said\nNot to know what has been transacted\nin former times is to be always a child.\n. . . If no use is made of the labors of\npast ages, the world must remain always\njn (he infancy of knowledge.\u2014Cicero. _\nACCEPTING CHEQUE for the Cancer Society is Nelson chairman Roy Pollard.\nAt the recent Fraternal Order of Eagles convention in Nelson, Eagles' Conquer\nCancer fund chairman Arthur Darwin of North Vancouver presented Mr. Pollard\nwith an $8000 cheque on behalf of the provincial Eagles. Shortly after, the Nelson\naerie, presented the Cancer Society with $1000.\u2014Daily News photo.\nSuggests Municipalities Halt\nSubmitting Identical Tenders\nWINNIPEG (CP)-A city engineer suggested Tuesday that\nCanadian municipalities get together to halt the company\npractice of submitting identical\ntenders.\nW. D. Hurst of Winnipeg put\nforth the proposal at the 25th\nannual conference of the Canadian Federation of Mayors and\nMunicipalities.\nHe told a discussion group\nthat identical tenders result\nfrom verbal agreements between officials of bidding companies.\nThis, he said, is a violation\nof the Combines Act, but little\neffective legal action has been\ntaken to halt the practice.\nIf municipalities get identical\ntenders for a particular article,\nMr. H u'r s t suggested, they\nmight get together and agree\nto buy it for a long period of\ntime from a single manufacturer.\nHe suggested, as a result,\nthat other companies \"would\nget mighty tired of getting no\nmunicipal business at all.\"\nSCHEME TERMED LEGAL\nMr. Hurst said he has been\ntold by legal experts that there\nis nothing illegal about municipalities \"combining\" to carry\nhis suggestion out.\nMunicipalities as buyers are\nexempt from legal restriction\non combining. Selling companies are not.\nMr. Hurst said no one municipality buys enough of any\nproduct lo seriously alfect a\nlarge corporation.\nHe added: \"It may well be\nthat we in Canada might come\nto tbe same conclusion as the\nUnited States and permit the\nbreaking up of large corporations where it appears necessary in the public interest.\"\nIn other business, S. D. Chut-\nter of Ottawa, general manager\nof the Canadian Construction\nAssociation, advised delegates\nnot to abuse the commonly\nused tender provision that \"the\nlowest or any tender will not\nnecessarily be  accepted.\"\nThe preparation of each tender, he said, involves much expense which the bidder is willing to incur as long as the\nlowest competent bidder gets\nthe contract.\nA low bid should only be rejected if it does not conform to\ntendering provisions, the bidder\nis demonstratably unsuited for\nthe contract or the bid is dangerously low.\nCITES TAX PROBLEMS\nIn a discussion on municipal\nfinancing, James Lowther, Ottawa city finance commissioner,  said  Canadian   munici\npalities are in financial straits.\nHe said municipalities have\nto take what is left for taxes\nafter federal and provincial\ngovernments are paid.\nTo make the financial road a\nlittle easier, Mr. Lowther suggested provincial and federal\ngovernments guarantee debentures issued by municipalities\nas well as provide direct loans.\nMunicipal bonds could be\nmade tax exempt and provincial-municipal or national-municipal loan funds could be set\nup.\nIndustry Minister Gurney\nEvans of Manitoba urged municipalities to work and plan together on a regional basis\nrather than try to outdo each\nother with competitive industries.\nLiberals Have Ability\nOn Big Jobs-Oglow\nEach province is gradually assuming more responsibility in\nCivil Defence training. The Civil\nDefence College at Arnprior,\nhowever, will continue lo operate\nhut will be stressing top echelon\ninstruction.\nNAKUSP - N, T. Oglow, Liberal candidate, speaking before\nan audience here emphasized the\nknown ability of the Liberals to\nnegotiate on large international\nventures such as the Columbia\nRiver development.\nHe said the St. Lawrence Seaway was rapidly proceeded with\nonce Mr. SI. Laurent told the\nAmericans that Canada would go\nit alone if necessary. There had\nbeen no delay or political bickering because of Ihe participation\nof a Tory government in Ontario\nand Mr. Duplessis in Quebec.\nAny differences of opinion had\nbeen quickly smoothed out, property-flooding claims settled fairly, and work proceeded with on\nschedule.\nMr. Oglow said thai this would\nbe the pattern with regard to Columbia construction with a Liberal government in office. He felt\nlhat Mr. Pearson's known ability\nas a negotiator and his stature\nwith the Americans could only\nbe in Canada's favor in seeking\na just and prompt review of the\ndisputed terms of the Columbia\nTreaty.\nMr. Oglow reviewed \"the many\n[irm plans\" of the Liberal party\nlor fighting unemployment and\nfor allaying the known fears of\nCanadians about their future in a\nrapidly changing world. The best\nway to reduce the numbers of\nHUBERT\n\u00a9 King Features Synalitale, laic, 1962. World rights xaaemi.       \\f)Wfn\\j\nunemployed, said Mr. Oglow, was\nto encourage more industry, more\nsmall businesses, and more education of young people at the\ntechnical and university level.\nHe dealt with the tariff-reducing policies of the Liberals as a\nprimary method of encouraging\nindustry, and said that this was\nnot a matter that would be deferred to some dimly distant\ntime in the future but would be\nprogrammed immediately after\nthe election.\nHe said the Industrial Development Bank would be much more\naggressive in seeking to aid small\nbusinessmen with good ideas to\nget started. These were the\npositive means of defeating joblessness, but also there were detailed and specific plans in the\nLiberal platform to increase Old\nAge Pensions, broaden unemployment coverage, institute the portable pension, start a Canada-wide\nhealth and medical plan, and\nmany other means of defeating\nmisery and insecurity.\nMr. Oglow was sorry that he\nhad not been invited to the debate\nthe following Saturday between\nthe Conservative and the NDP\ncandidates on the subject of the\nColumbia River Development.\nHe explained also that a four-\nway meeting of all the candidates\nin Nelson for Monday liad fallen\nthrough when Mr. Dewdney and\nMr. Read had refused to participate. This had been a considerable disappointment to the I.W.A.\nexecutive, which had suggested\nthe meeting.\nMr. Oglow expressed the opinion that in the last analysis this\nelection could produce only one\nof the two major parties as the\nnext government of Canada, and\nhe asked his audience to think il\nover before rewarding either of\nthe splinter parties with their\nvotes.\n\"Son-in-law, you need, exercise!  Why don't you\n\u2022 mature gracefully like me?\"\nNehru Disagrees\nOn ECM Hurting\nGreat Britain\nNEW DELHI (Reuters) -\nPrime Minister Nehru told a\npress conference Wednesday he\ndoes not subscribe to the view\nthat Britain's entry into the European Common Market would\ndeal a \"death blow\" to the\nCommonwealth.\nBut he said that India is interested in making arrangements\nso that its exports to Britain\n\"will not be Kit\" as a result of\nBritish entry.'- ' '\nSask. Doctors Will Be Blamed\nIf Medical Service Delayed\nREGINA (CPI - Health Minister W. G. Davies said Tuesday night the medical profession will bear full responsibility\nif there is a crucial inadequacy\nof medical service in Saskatchewan after July I.\nMr. Davies was commenting\non an announcement by the\nSaskatchewan College of Physicians and Surgeons on aspects\nof the hospital \u2022 based emergency service it plans to institute in response to the government's medical care plan.\nThe college, which opposes\nthe compulsory scheme, has\nsaid it will withdraw from all\nbut emergency services after\nJune 30.\nThe health minister said the\ngovernment has \"constantly reiterated\" statements that there\nis do need for the emergency\nprogram announced by doctors.\n\"The government has assured\norganized medicine of its willingness to undertake any\nchanges or amendments in legislation to guarantee professional status and the practice\nof medicine.\"\nSTILL SOME QUESTIONS\nOn the emergency services,\nMr. DaVies said there are still\na number of questions to be answered.\nHe said the college announcement did not give the information on the number of doctors\ninvolved in emergehcy service\nand more information is necessary \"to determine to what extent the service to be provided\nis adequate to offset any serious\nlack of medical care across the\nprovince.\"\nMr. Davies said he hoped the\ncollege would   respect  the   de\ncision of a number of doctors\nacross Saskatchewan who have\nstated their intention of providing service as usual after July\n1.\nIn its announcement the college urged hospitals which it\nhas not designated as emergency centres to make immediate arrangements to transfer\npatients needing continuing\ncare.\nThe college, which said it will\nestablish teams of doctors to\nprovide safe, competent emergency service at about 20 hos\npitals, suggested the other hospitals should start slackening\nadmissions by the last week of\nJune.\nThe announcement said the\nemergency care will be provided free. However, it did not\nspell out which hospitals will be\nused, nor what services will be\nprovided.\nThe college met at Saskatoon\nduring the weekend to map out\nthe emergency program and\nthen met with Saskatchewan\nHospital Association representatives to outline the plan.\nG. L. London Retires\nAs Agriculturist\nAfter 36 years to the day, in\nthe Department of Agriculture,\nG. L. Landon, formerly of Nelson,\nretired on May 29 at Victoria.\nMr. Landon started with the\ndepartment as Poultry Inspector\nfor the Kootenays May 29, 1926\nwith headquarters at Nelson.\nAfter 20 years with the department at Nelson, Grand Forks,\nand New Westminster he was appointed Poultry Commissioner\nand in 1954 was appointed Director, Agricultural Development\nand Extension Branch.\n\u25a0 Following his graduation from\nthe University of British Columbia, he was Poultry Inspector\nfor (he Kootenays at Nelson and\nin 1930 at Grand Forks. In 1940,\nhe was appointed District Agriculturist for the Lower Mainland\nwith headquarters at New Westminster.\nIn 1948, Mr. Landon went to\nLions Creating Park\nAt Cottonwood Lake\nLions Club work parties are\nnearing realization of a three-old\ndream at Cottonwood Lake.\nFor the past few Saturdays and\nSundays, work parties have been\nbusy clearing brush, carving a\nroad out of the side of a mountain, constructing table and\nbenches at Cottonwood Lake.\nTo date six to eight picnic\ntables have been erected in a\nshaded area by the small mountain lake, a parking lot levelled\nand a road pushed through.\nBrush clearing, and construc-\n\u25a0tion of a barbecue pit still remain\nto be completed before the area\nIs unofficially opened July 1.\nThe Lions began planning the\nClergyman Clamps\nDown On\nTight Grooms\nHAWORTH, England\n(AP)_Rev. Charles Manchester threatened Wednesday lo stop the wedding tbe\nnext time a tipsy bridegroom\ncomes lurching up his aisle.\n\"At least hall the bridegrooms I marry smell like\na brewery,\" the Church of\nEngland parson complained\nin his parish magazine.\n\"If I had a couple of\nwhiskies or a few beers as\na stiffener before taking\nthe service, the bride and\nbridegroom would take a\ndim view of it.\n\"What I want to do is to\nget rid of that stiying:\n\"Something old, something\nnew, something bottled and\nsomething  brewed.' \"\nproject three years ago and\nstarted actual work last summer.\nImprovements of the park will\ncontinue for the duration of the\nLions sponsorship.\nBilly Graham's\nCrusade Holds\nYouth Session\nCHICAGO (AP) - Evangelist\nBilly Graham's \"Crusade for\nChrist\" held a youth session\nTuesday night and about 200\nteen-agers described by crusade\nleaders as members of street\ngangs showed up.\nGraham, addressing the 14th\nmeeting of his 19-day Chicago\ncrusade, said the 200 teen-agers\nwere his special guests. Several\ngirls were included in the group.\nA Graham aide said that\nmembers of street gangs have'\nbeen attending sessions of the\ncrusade since Saturday when\nthe evangelist spoke to a youth\ngroup in an area of high petty\ncrime on the South Side.\nAfter Graham's sermon, several dozen among the 200 were\nin the 1,265 persons who came\nforward to make \"decisions for\nChrist.\" Crusade officials, said\nthat 10,565 persons have now\nmade such decisions during the\nfirst 14 rallies.\nMcCormick Place officials\nestimated the crowd at 36,000,\nraising the attendance for the\ncrusade to 446,000. The crusade\nends Sunday.\nUnited States Believed\nDoing Some Snooping\nWASHINGTON (API - With\nRussia expected to resume atmospheric nuclear testing soon,\nthe United States is reported\npreparing to do a little snooping of its own.\nThe Russians have four instrument ships posted around\nChristmas and Johnston Islands\nin the Pacific to gather information about the U.S. test series that began April 25 and\nnow has reached about the midway point. There is every\nreason to believe the Russians\nhave collected considerable data in the weeks their\n\u25a0 ships have been there.\nAlthough neither nuclear\npower says anything publicly\nabout its own snooping operations, each has kept close check\non what the other has been\ndoing.\nThe new Soviet series could\ncome at any time in view of\nPremier Khrushchev's recent\ndeclaration that the U.S. experiments have \"forced us to renew our tests.'.'\nTlie Russians normally test in\nremote regions or deep, in the\nheart of the Soviet Union.\nThis. makes it. more difficult\nto get a reasonably close look,\nbut there is clear evidence this\nhas not hampered the United\nStates in obtaining scientific in\nformation about Soviet test results.\nU.S. WELL INFORMED\nThe Russian tests hist fall, it\nis k n o w n, were conducted\nabove uninhabited Novaya\nZemlya, a crescent shaped island on the edge of the Arctic.\nAs far as is known, the United\nSlates does not have the kind\nof instrument ships being used\nby the Soviets to spy on U.S.\ntests in the Pacific.\nBut it is believed U.S. nuclear\nsubmarines\u2014which have proved\ntheir ability to operate in the\nA iv*f if*     aw\/in      m     iim yi int*\neven in winter\n. .lad a grandstand\nlast Russian tests.\nArctic even  in winter \u2014 may\nhave had a grandstand seat for\nthe '\u2014 \"      \u25a0\u25a0- '   '\nThe most modern U.S. subs\ncarry advanced radar gear and\nsupersensitive underwater listening equipment.\nThis radar can spot cloud formations\u2014and that could include\natomic and hydrogen mushroom clouds\u2014Irom as much as\n200 miles away.\nSound detecting devices can\npick up shock waves, of the sort\na nuclear blast might send\nthrough water.\nA watching sub might mark\nthe precise time of a nuclear\nexplosion\u2014a factor important in\nlater analysis of the airborne\ndebris drifting across the world.-\nCopenhagen, Denmark, to attend\nthe World Poultry Congress. He\ntoured poultry centres in Holland and Great Britain.\nFor many years, he was in\ncharge of the poultry flock approval work in the Fraser Valley.\nThere he blood tested and approved poultry flocks for the\nDepartment of Agriculture.\nMr. Landon has had 39 years'\nexperience in agricultural extension in Canada, being Extension\nPoultry Husbandman from 1923\nto 1926 at Macdonald College,\nQuebec.\nBusiness Spotlight..\nTaxes Seem To\nPuzzle Most\nBy FORBES RHUDE\nCanadian Press Business Editor\nOf all economic topics that bewilder individuals and corporations, taxes probably are the\nmost bewildering.\nAnyone can criticize them, but\nwhat to do about them is another matter.\nIn discussions at business\ngatherings \u2014 addressed by experts, semi - experts and just\nplain sufferers \u2014 a number of\nwidely-agreed - upon comments\nments emerge that may be summarized as follows:\nThe Canadian tax system\nneeds revision.\nTaxes are too high, but there\nis little chance of reducing their\ntotal and probably little chance\nof avoiding increase.\nHowever, while the total may\nnot be reduced, the rate of tax\non the individual or individual\ncompany may be. This can be\ndone if the country prospers to\nthe extent that a lesser rate of\ntax from an increased output\nwill yield as much or more than\na higher rate from a smaller\noutput.\nDON'T SPEND MORE\nIn the meantime, government\nshould not embark upon any\nlarge new expenditures that\nwould either increase the existing tax rate, or that would eat\nup the increased yield of higher\nproduction without granting individual relief; and people\nshould not ask governments to\nundertake such new expenditures.\nTaxes now are so high that\nthey are reaching the area of\ndiminishing returns.\nTo the extent that they are too\nhigh, or not properly distributed\nin comparison with practices in\nthe rest of the world, they stifle\nexpansion, reduce employment,\nand make Canadian industry\nnon-competitive.\nHigh taxes and their varying\nimpact have become a vital factor in business decisions. An expansion desirable on other\ngrounds, for instance, may be\ndiscarded because it is of a nature that existing tax regulations would hit particularly\nbard.\nSEE TALENT WASTE\nTlie complexity of the tax\nstructure, and its effect upon\nevery decision, has resulted in\nIhe growth of large and high-\npriced staffs of experts whose\npurpose in life is to find the\npaths with the least tax penalties. This is described by many\nas a waste of talent.\nToo much time is spent on\nfinding loopholes and, on the\npart of government tax authorities, to plugging loopholes.\nTbe tax system has grown up\non a patchwork basis and now is\nut-of-date.\nAll these arguments and many\nothers were heard al tax discussions at the recent annual meeting in Montreal of the Canadian\nManufacturers' Association.\nSome of the purposes of tax\nstudy and ultimate revision\nwould be:\nTo assess the effects of taxes\non economic development: possibly to make changes in the\ntax base: and to make the system simjBer.\n WH\nOlc^o^s\nMR. AND MRS. JOHN BUDVESEL OF NELSON\n\u2014Photo by flenwiclr Studio.\nPLAYBOYS\nK%     ...the shoes\nthat do something\nJ     for a man!\nNationally advertised\non television \u2014 $9.95\nIn a variety of colorful shades of non-\n,scuff, non-crush \"Living-Leather\", this\nPLAYBOY slip-on is designed to stay\njnug on the foot. Walk-on-air insoles and\nHewetson's famous foam soles give relaxed comfort to every step.\nHEWETSO\n411  Baker St.\nNelson\nFRANCES R. ESSICK\nDRAPERY\n16th Anniversary Sale\nOf course you will want to do most of your shopping\nat home. Shop at ESSICK'S N-221 POST IN SPOKANE for those hard-to-find Drapery and Uph. Fabrics. We will hold these special prices for your.vacation.\n\u00ab83t\n-. *7.98\nper yd.   104-count  Bancroft  finish,\nsateen lining (not 88).\nSpecial purchase of Chrom-fast damask. The mjfgr. gave us a real value\nper yd.       *or our anniversary.  List 4:50 yd.,\nthistle, gold, turq.\n$0 QQ Upholstery special of the better 7.50\nat    O.xO to 9.70 grades from a jobber who\nper yd.       v\/enr bankrupt.\nBetween\nWard's and Payless\nN-221 POST\nYOUR FRIENDS ACROSS THE BORDER IN SPOKANE\nESSICK'S\nBudvesel - Lissa Vows\nHeard at Cathedral\nCharming in her bouffant, Iace-\nappliqued gown, Marilyn Baye\nLissa, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.\nArmond Lissa of Nelson, exchanged wedding vows before the altar\nof Cathedral of Mary Immaculate\nwith Mr. John Budvesel, son of\nMr. John Budvesel of Nelson.\nRt. Rev. F. J. Monaghan officiated at the marriage service.\nGiven in marriage by her father, the bride was gowned in marquisette nylon and lace over taffeta, with fitted bodice, lily point\nsleeves and bib front. Tiny plea-\nwere featured around the hemline. Her frothy illusion veil was\nheld by a pearl-studded coronet\nand she carried a colonial bouquet of carnations and tiny red\nroses.\nShe was preceded down the\naisle by her little sister, Julianna\nLissa, in a yellow frock with\nwhite velvet flowers and matching hat, carrying yellow daisies,\nand her little borther, Allen Lissa\nas ringbearer. Bridesmaids Miss\nNancy Fergusion and Miss Rita\nLissa chose yellow and blue as\nshades for their gowns in the new\nshort   length  and  they   carried\nAbout\nthe\nTown\nMiss Phyllis Prysiazniuk, 214\nVernon Street, is a patient in\nKootenay Lake General Hospital.\nB.C. Highlights\nSTOLEN TRUCK FOUND\nVANCOUVER (CP) - A Hudson's Bay Company truck, stolen from the rear of a hotel here\nMonday was found Tuesday in\nan apartment garage. The vehicle was looted of cigarets\nworth $1,400 and a money box\ncontaining about $400.\nDIRECTOR APPOINTED\nPRINCE GEORGE (CP) -\nJunior High School principal\nPhil Macgregor has been appointed director of the new\nPrince George vocational school.\nMr. Macgregor has been principal of Connaught High School\nsince it opened in 1958.\ncolonial bouquets of white carnations and white accessories.\nMr. Alex Schesnuk and Mr.\nJoe Budvesel were best men and\nMr. Harry Soukeroff was usher.\nThe mother of the bride chose\na beige lace gown, with which\nshe wore coral accessories, for\nher daughter's wedding.\nA reception was held at the\nLord Nelson Dining Room. Father\nMonaghan proposed a toast to the\nbride and the newlyweds cut a\nthree-tiered wedding cake topped\nby a miniature bride and groom,\nthe tiers separated by swan pillars. Three tiny wax dolls were\nhidden under the skirt of the\nminiature bride doll, an old Ita-\nUna custom for wishing the new\nIyweds good luck.\nThe guests enjoyed dancing\nduring the reception.\nThe newlyweds left for a trip\nto Calgary and Banff and have\ntaken up residence at Kline's\nTrailer Court in Nelson, where\nthe bride is on the staff of the\nRoyal Bank of Canada and the\nbridegroom i s employed b y\nKline's Service Station.\nNCW Urges System Checks,\nControls Nuclear Testing\nBy PATRICIA RUSAK\nHALIFAX (CP)-A system of\nchecks and controls of nuclear\nweapons testing was urged\nTuesday by the National Council of Women.    '\nA ' resolution passed at the\ncouncil's 69th annual meeting\nasked the government \"to do\neverything possible through the\nUnited Nations\" to see that\nsuch a system is established.\nCouncil President Mrs. Saul\nHayes of Montreal told the 135\ndelegates such a system is not\nonly to inform the population\nof the extent of radioactive fallout but to control testing when\nthe fallout level becomes dangerous.\nMrs. Hayes said reiteration of\nthe council's concern as formerly expressed to External\nAffairs Minister Green will\nstrengthen its resolution to the\nInternational Council of\nWomen.\nThe NCW will urge other national councils in the ICW to\npress their governments to\nwork through the UN to effect\nchecks and controls.\nAmong 12 resolutions adopted\nby the council during its second\nday of business was a request\nthat at least four women be appointed to the Board of Broadcast Governors.\nThe four are to include the\npermanent member,. one from\na rural area, and one who is\nFrench-speaking.\nThe council asked the government to \"refrain\" from reappointing male members to the\n15-member board after current\nterms of office expire \"until\nsuch time as at least four\nwomen have been so appointed.\"\nOther requests to the government included removal of the\n11-per-cent tax on margarine\nand repeal of income tax act\nsections which make it impossible for a wife employed by\nher husband to file a separate\nincome tax return.\nThe council asked the government to consider, under the\nEmergency Measures Act, \"the\nregistration of all citizens in order that an identification card\nmay   be   given   them,   stating\ntheir name, address and blood\ntype, and all other necessary\nspecific information.\"\nSuch a card would be carried at all times.\nChurch Women\nTo Present\n$750 Cheque\nThe five groups of Fairview\nUnited Church women held a\npot-luck supper in the fellowship\nhall. Following the treasurer's\nreport, a motion was carried to\npresent the board of stewards\nwith a cheque for $750.\nMembers were asked to assist\nwith the Red Cross blood clinic\nand with serving tea at Mount\nSt. Francis.\nA letter was read from Miss\nJean Walker of Dondi, Angola.\nMiss Walker is the Fairview\nwomen's missionary for prayer.\nTwo films were shown, \"The\nOpening of the St. Lawrence Seaway,\" and one on Pacific fisheries in the north.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURS., JUNE 14, 1962 \u2014 5\nPrincess To Be\nFirst To Hold\nHonorary Office\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014The Princess\nRoyal will be called to the bar\nand elected an honorary bencher\nof the Law Society of Upper Canada at a special convocation at\nOsgoode Hall June 21, Joseph\nSedgwick, treasurer of fhe Law\nSociety, announced Tuesday.\nHer. Royal Highness will be the\nfirst woman ever to hold the office and the third member of the\nRoyal Family to be elected to it.\nEdward VII (then Prince of\nWales) was made an honorary\nbencher in 1860 and the Duke of\nWindsor received the honor in\n1919.\nSouth Slocan\nSOUTH SLOCAN-Mr. and Mrs.\nD. Davis of South Slocan have\nas their guest for the summer\nmonths, Mrs. Lees of Vancouver.\nAccompanying her: on the trip\nwere her daughter, Miss H. Lees,\nand Mrs. T. Cobbledick of Vancouver. ....\nMr. and Mrs. J. Stuart of South\nSlocan have as their guest their\nson-in-law and daughter, Mr. and\nMrs. H. G. Griemann of Ottawa,\nand two granddaughters.\nMr. and Mrs. Rowland Svh-'\nof  Vancouver  were   wee'-: :\nguests of Mrs. B, Yeatman.\nand Mrs. C. Thring of Rol.\naccompanied them on a tour\nthe No. 3 plant.\t\nYour Headquarters for\nSUMMER FOOTWEAR\nThongs at Popular Prices ...\nRunning Shoes . . . White Casuals . . . Canvas\nKedettes . . . Women's Italian Sandals $5.99\nWE'RE  FINICKY ABOUT FIT\nR. ANDREW & CO.\n579 Baker St.      Nelson\nRead Urges Canadian\nControlled Unions\nRIONDEL - Two \u2022 thirds of\nCanada's union members are deprived of an effective voice in\ntheir union's affairs because they\nare a small minority section of\nmuch larger U.S. unions, a public\nmeeting was told here Monday\nnight.\nKootenay-West   Social   Credit\ncandidate Les Read, making a\nmajor  policy  speech  on  labor,\nsaid the Socreds \"recognize the\nimportance of properly organized\nand conducted unions in providing security for the working man\nbut we suggest that these unions\nshould  be controlled  by  Canadians and not by foreign unions.\"\nMr. Read said the economic\npositions of the United States\nand Canada are vastly different and thus standardization of\nunion policies between the two\ncountries works to the Canadian\nunion man's disadvantage.\nThe  former  mayor  of  Trail\nhailed   union   leaders   at   Cominco's Kootenay operations and\nat the pulp mill at Castlegar as\n\"solid-thinking, individuals   with\ntheir feet planted firmly on the\nground. They are not the kind\nwith their heads in the clouds.\nThe   Socred   standard - bearer\nsaid the union locals at Trail and\nCastlegar showed \"respect and\nsincere recognition tor the political rights of their individual\nunion members\" when neither\nlocal attacked the B.C. legislation which prohibited the payment of political dues through the\ncompulsory check-off of union\ndues.\nUnion members in the Kootenays have long realized that they\nprosper best when they can go to\na government on a friendly basis,\nsaid Mr. Read. He said this\ncreates \"a mutual basis of understanding and respect.\"\nThe Socred candidate was\njoined on the platform by Muni\ncipal Affairs Minister1 W. D.\nBlack who spoke on developments j\nbeing carried out in B.C. by the\nprovincial government.\nRepeating a charge made at a\nmeeting earlier in the election\ncampaign, Mr. Read said that the\nCanadian Labor Congress, which\nhas outlawed Mine-Mill union\nfrom CLC membership, is out to\ndestroy Mine-Mill in the Kootenays. \"No union man can vote\nfor a party which is out to destroy his union,\" said the candidate.\nEarVs Yearling Hereford\nWins Championships\nT\nCRANBROOK - Lome Earl of\nthe South Country 4-H Club won\nthe Royal Bank silver bowl and\nMiracle Feeds Trophy at the\nEast Kootenay 4-H Calf Clubs\ncompetition and show here Monday. Reserve championship Walk-\nley Trophy was presented by\nRichard Walkley of Kimberley to\nBill Blaine of the Wycliffe 4-H\nClub.\nEarl's entry of a yearling Hereford weighed 910 pounds and in\nthe evening got top price in the\nauction when Overwaitea bid\n35Vi cents a pound to take the\nanimal. Blaine's Hereford weighed 930 pounds and sold to Macleod Auctions at 29'^ cents a\npound. Judge was Harold Steves\nof the Canada Department of\nAgriculture.\nShowmanship placings within\nclubs rated Glen McDonald first,\nBarry McDonald second, and\nLome Earl and Billy Oestreich\ntied for third in South Country\nClub, and May Joe, first, Terry\nShubert .second, and Billy Blaine\nthird, in Wycliffe Club.\nMay Joe was awarded the Lin-\nnell Jewelry Trophy, newly put\nup, for judging dairy cows, fol\nlowed by judging of market\nsteers, with runners-tip Lome\nEarl and Shan Fitzpatrick. The\nlatter was also awarded the\nAlistair Munro Memorial Trophy,\nalso new in competition, for the\ntop member from the South\nCountry 4-H Club.\nThis was the fourth annual\nEast Kootenay show and auction\nand the most successful to date,\nwith 20 yearlings entered, either\nHereford or Aberdeen-Angus. Ken\nHurlburt of Macleod Auctions\nconducted the sale, with prices\nranging from 25'\/i cents up to 35Vi\ncents, for the 18 animals sold.\nBuyers were from Cranbrook\nmainly, with two from Fernie\nand one each from Kimberley\nand Grasmere.\nPrior lo delivery to buyers\ncompetitors examined carcasses under supervision of Mr.\nSteves to show the effects of\nthe meat of the feeding program they had been carrying out\nsince receiving the calves last\nOctober.\nCONFIDENTIALLY YOURS\n-\"-\"^ \u2014by Byrne Hope Sanders\nTORONTO, June 14th \u2014Are you completely\nsatisfied with your upcoming vacation plans?\nIf, perhaps, a little extra cash would, change\nyour plans from a \"make do\" holiday to one\nyou and your family would really enjoy, then\nI suggest that you drop in to your neighbourhood branch of the BANK OF MONTREAL.\nFind out about the convenient B of M Family\nFinance Plan. This low-cost, life-insured plan will provide immediate funds to insure a \"dream\" vacation. And you can pay\nback your loan in convenient monthly instalments tailored to\nyour income . . .talk it over with the people at your neighbourhood branch of \"My Bank\".\nAT LEAST ONCE A WEEK, sometimes oftener, I make sure\nmy kitchen and bathroom drains are completely germ-free ... and I do it the effective way \u2014 with GILLETT'S DRAIN\nCLEANER. Yes, I've learned from experience (and experiment) that only the churning, boiling action of Gillett's Drain Cleaner\ncan completely clean the germ-breeding\nmuck from drains. Liquid disinfectants\ncan't budge the greasy mess ... but Gillett's Drain Cleaner\nis completely effective every time. If you want the satisfaction\nof fast-running, clean and sanitary drains, just put 2 tablespoons\nof Gillett's Drain Cleaner in every drain, every week!\nONE OF THE MOST DELICIOUS buffet lunches I've ever\nenjoyed ... hot rolls, cold meats, a salad\nand a 'surprise' dish starring LIBBY'S\nSAUERKRAUT. Easy and quick to prepare . . .\nCombine Libby's Sauerkraut, sliced franks, thinly\nsliced apples and seedless raisins. Mix and cook,\ncovered, 10 or 15 minutes. Crisp, zesty and delicious!\nYes, any dish, hot or cold, starring Libby's\nSauerkraut is an immediate success with everyone. Libby's\nSauerkraut is one of the most exciting, versatile vegetables I\nknow, high in appetite appeal ... low in cost ... it is no\nwonder that 9 out of 10 cans of sauerkraut sold in Canada come\nfrom Libby's modern kitchens!\nCONFIDENTIALLY, ALL YOUR WASHDAYS WILL BE WOR-\nRY-FREE when you use CALGON, the\nwonder water conditioner. See how clean\nand naturally soft your fresh-washed sheets\nand towels can be! Calgon, the Water\nDoctor, cures 'Hangover Dirt' ... the film\nof soil, minerals and soap or detergent that\nsticks to your sheets and clothes. (It's like\nthe ring you get in your bathtub). Hangover Dirt makes everything stiff and\nscratchy . . . it's the 'Laundry Demon' that Calgon prevents\nand removes . . . without bleach. Do take the worry out of\nwash-day . . . with Calgon!\nBABY'S DAINTY THINGS and all your fine fabrics deserve the\nbest of washing care . .. that's why I recommend safe, safe SUNLIGHT SOAP. Sunlight\nis all soap . . . pure soap ... it takes the\nbest of care of delicate fabrics and your\nhands, as well. Yes, Sunlight leaves baby\nclothes softer, fluffier, more comfortable\nthan any packaged laundry detergent can. It\ncleans them beautifully fresh and sweet . . .\nand it's best for your pretty, personal things,\ntoo. What's more, Sunlight costs less than\nany other bar soap or cleaner. Buy it in the economical twin-\nbar pack . . . and discover its thousandaand-one usesl\nWomen's Wear\nLadies' Sleeveless Blouses\nCotton prints and plain shades with or\n1.49\nwithout collar.\nSizes: 10 to 18.\nRayon  Panties\nReg. .40 and .59 values. Colors: white,\npink, blue, mint, aqua, maize. Sizes:\nS,  ML. ad 1 40\nSpecial     t prs. I.\"\"\nNylon Briefs\nLace trim and inserts. Colors: white,\npink,   blue,   aqua,        <J 1 ^Q\nrose. Sizes: S, M, L.    \u00ab\u25a0\u00bb prs.  l.tT\nBras\nReg. $2 values. Embroidered cotton contour styles and satin. Sizes 32 to 36A,\n32 to 38B, 34 to 36C. T ^Q\nEach        '\u25a0^7\nRayon Gowns\nReg. 1.98 value. Waltz and full length.\nColors: aqua, blue, pink, lilac, yellow.\nSizes: S, M, L. 1 ^O\nEach  l\u00abtT\nDrip-Dry Cotton Half Slips\nSeam-to-seam shadow panel, lace trim.\nColor: white. Sizes, S, M, L. l *Q\nEach       I'tT\nPiece Goods, Staples\nPillows\nUtmost in sleeping comfort. Feather\nfilled. Blue and white l  AQ\nstriped ticking. Each   I .IT\nPillow Cases\nWhite percale, colored border, with\npastel embroidery. 1  AQ\nPair     l.tT\nTerry Towels\nFluffy,   quick   drying dish towels.\nFloral ty I 4Q\ndesigns  *\u2022 for l.tT\nBath Towels\nGood assortment of towels with stripes\nor plain. Hemmed or i  AQ\nfringed edges. Each     l.tT\nFace Cloths\nNow is your chance to stock up on\nface cloths for the in 1 ^Q\nsummer camp    '*\\   for l.tT\nBeach Towels\nInexpensive towels for the young fry\nto take to the beach. \u25a0!  aq\nBright multi-striped.     l.tT\nDrapery Samples\nDrapery samples, one yard      i ^Q\nlength, average 45\" wide  I .IT\nSuiting\nPicolena, light weight suiting. Plaids\nin grey, yellow l ^Q\nor green  l.tT\nPrints\nGay patterns in stripes, check, loral\nand  spots. n n   aq\n36\"  wide     O yds. l.tT\nNotions\nChild's Anklets\nNylon  stretch.  Assorted  colors.  Sized\n5\u201ersl.49\n4 to 6'a-i and\n6 to 8'4\nAngel Treads\nLadies' casual slippers for summer\nwear. Assorted colors. Sizes: | ^Q\nsmall, medium and large  l.tT\n3-Ply Wool\nNylon reinforced all purpose yarn. Non\nshrink, non-stretch. c l AQ\nAsstd. colors.      3 prs.  '\u2022\"'\nFull-Fashioned Nylons\n51 gauge, 15 denier. Beige and blush\nshades. Q        1 AQ\nSizes: 814 to 11    \u00ab\u25a0> prs. l.tT\nSeamless Nylons\nFirst quality, 400 needle seamless mesh\nnylon hose. Sizes 9-11. \u00bb>        * ^q\nMed. beige shades.\nprs.\nChildren's Wear\nLittle Boys' Sharkskin Pants\nContinental style, 2 pockets, zipper. Colors: sage, loden, blue. Sizes: | AQ\n2 to 6X. Pair    l.tT\nLittle Girls' Bedford Cord Slims\nPlains and'prints. Tapered legs. Colors:\nwhite, red, navy, blue. Sizes: l   A Q\n2 and 6 only. Pair  ' \u25a0\"'\nRayon Briefs\nLace trims, prints, plain band leg\nstyles. Colors: white, pink, blue, maize,\nmint. \u00a3. 1 AQ\nSizes: 2 to 6     O prs.  l.tT\nSport Shirts\nReg. 1.98 to 2.49 values. Long sleeves,\nPrints in red, blue, grey, beige, green,\ncocoa. \u00ab| ^Q\nSizes 3  to  6X.   Each     | .tT\nChilds' Pyjamas\nAssorted flannelette styles for boys and\ngirls. 1 AQ\nSizes:  2 to 6     l.tT\nLittle Boys' Shirts\nAssorted short sleeve cotton shirts.\nSizes: I) 1 AQ\n3 to 6X    \u25a0*   for l.tT\nGirls' Wear\nRayon Briefs\nLace trims, prints, plain band legs.\nColors: white, pink, blue, maize, mint.\nSizes: 8 to 14. C 1 AQ\nSpecial    \u2022\u00bb prs. l.tT\nGirls' Crinoline Slips\nPaper taffeta skirts, lace        \"i  AQ\ntrim. Sizes: 2 to 6X  l.tT\nMinicare Cotton Blouses\nSwiss embroidered. V necks. Johnny\nand Peter Pan collars. Color: white.\nSizes: 8 to 14. 1  AQ\nEach    1-tT\nMen's and Boys' Wear\nMen's Hose\nMen's first quality hose, assorted patterns and colors. Wools and wool\nblends. Sizes: i\\        i  aq\nIOV2 to 12    -\u00a3 prs'. l.tT\nMen's T-Shirts\nMen's substandard T-shirts. White.\nShort sleeves, crew n i in\nneck. Sizes: S, M, L. -C   for l.tT\nMen's Athletic Briefs\nMen's cotton ribbed substandards of\n1.29 line. White. n        -i  aq\nSizes:  S, M, L.   *\u25a0   for l.tT\nMen's Athletic Shirts\nCotton ribbed, stubstandards of 1.29\nline. Sizes: n |  aq\nS, M, L. White.   \u25a0*   for l.tT\nMen's Work Socks\nMen's 2-lb. wool blend work socks.\nGrey twist. n        -i AQ\nOne size    J prs. l.tT\nBoys' T-Shirts\nBoys' first quality white. Short sleeves.\nPre-shrunk. \u00ab%        | aq\nSizes: S, M, L  \u25a0*   for l.tT\nBoys' Stretch Socks\nBoys' 100% nylon socks. Assorted patterns and colors. Fits \u00ab} l ^Q\nsizes Ti-lOVa    v prs. l.tT\nHousewares\nCups and Saucers\nImported   chinaware, floral   designs,\ntall and c        1 ^Q\nsquat styles  \u00ab\u25a0>   for l.tT\nKiddies' Fishing Outfit\nFibreglass rod, plastic reel, sinker and\nfloat. 35 feet nylon line, arid flies for\nfly casting. 1 AQ\nReg. 1.98     l.tT\nOfficial Softballs\nRegulation size with chrome tanned\ncover and yarn wound com- \"i AQ\npressed cork core  l.tT\nCoffee Mugs\nFire   King,   green  or white   colored.\nHeat proof. Q        1 40\nglassware.             ...... O   for l.tT\nWedge Car Cushions\nFilled with the new colored material.\nFor greater comfort on long drives.\nReg.  1.29. n 1  AQ\nSpecial       *\u25a0   for l.tT\nInfants' Wear\nInfants' Dresses\nSome substandards. Nylon, dacron and\ncotton, some with slips. Embroidery,\napplique and lace trims. Colors: pink,\nblue, maize, white, mint. Sizes l ^Q\n9 to 18 months. Each     l.tT\nCrawlers\nReg. 1.98 to 2.49 values. Printed corduroy and boucle cord. Snap crotch,\nshoulder sraps. Colors: pink, blue, mint,\nmaize, lavender. Sizes: \"i  aq\n12 ot 24 months. Pair   l.tT\n\u2022  Za?\\r ^*i^ * m  ~i\nINCORPORATED   2??  MAY 1670. '\u25a0.\n \u00ab\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS,\nTHURS., JUNE 14, 1962\nU.$. Motorists\nPick Up 599,\nLiability Cards\nAs of May 81, 599,000 nonresident motor vehicle liability\ncords have been requested by\nUnited States motorists, Minister\nof Recreation and Conservation\nHon. E. C. Westwood said recently.\nThe cards are dispensed free to\nUnited States motorists planning\nto enter B.C. by applying to their\nlocal insurance agent, Purpose of\nthe \"pink slip\" is to prove that\nthe touring driver is covered by\nthe minimum amount of Insurance required by B.C. Motor\nVehicles Act.\nThe non-resident pink slip is a\nmatter of convenience, not necessity, for the tourist. By having\nready proof of his insurance\ncoverage, any United States\nresident would automatically\navoid embarrassing situations\nsuch as Impoundment of his\nvehicle if it were Involved in an\nfl reid cut\n\"The \u00abuperlntendent of Insurance estimates that 750,000 pink\ncards will be issued before the\nend of the year,\" Mr. Westwood\nMid. \"Last year-800,000 pink\nslips were sent out If the entire\nl}.month period.\"\nperloc\nBritain; America\nInquire About\nNehru and Mlgs\nNEW DELHI (Reuters) -\nBritain and the United States\nhave made inquiries on whether\nIndia Intends to buy Soviet MiG\nlighten, Prime Minister Nehru\ndisclosed Wa3dnesday.\nA report in tha New York\nTimes said Prime Minister\nMaonlllan and President Kennedy have been consulting urgently on proposals to try to\npersuade India to turn down a\nSoviet offer of MIGs.\nThe report said: \"Among\nother things the West Is eonsid-\nering an offer of British or\nFrench jets to India. . . .\"\nIt was understood that the\nBritish government told Nehru\nin a recent note that since Indian forces are largely\nequipped with British arms the\nproposed purchase of MIGs\nmight lead to a leak to Russia\nof secret details of British\nequipment.\nMAY  BUILD  THEM\nNehru said his government\nconsidered the MiGs more suitable because of cost and because they can be manufactured in India. But no final\ndecision had been reached on\nwhether to buy them.\nThe Indian defence ministry,\nheaded by V. K. Krishna\nMenon, was reported to have\nproposed buying two squadrons\nof MiG-21 fighters and later\nmanufacturing them under licence In India.\nNehru said: \"We have felt\nfor some considerable time that\nour air force wai relatively\nweak, more especially after\nsoma much lBter type of aircraft was given at aid to Paid-\n\u2022tan.\"\nPakhrtsjl received F-104 eu-\neertonto fighter-bombers from\nne United States last year.\nMote Safeway your headquarters for Barbecue Buys all\nthrough the Cook-out Season!\n\u25a0 i \u25a0\u2014 mttmrnt******\nCalifornia Field,\nFull, Sweet Kernels.\nServe Hot, Buttered\nCorn. It's Delicious.\nGeneva Favors\nResearch\nRocket Range\nGENEVA (Reuters) - An international conference here Wednesday formally recommended\nsetting up a research rocket\nlaunching range on the geomagnetic equator in time for\n\"the international year of the\nquiet sun\" in 1964-66.\nIt also recommended the preparation of a charter for tha\ncreation and operation of international sounding rocket launching facilities.\nThe recommendations were\npart of a report adopted by a\nsubcommittee of the United\nNaitions committee on the\npeaceful uses of outer space.\nThe \"quiet sun\" year is a\nperiod of minimum solar activity.\nTomatoes\nImported Field.\n14 oi. carton. ..\nCucumbers\nCalifornia\nField\t\nL ^ y 8\nc\nOranges\nAfrican navels,\nThin-Skinned, Juicy,\nReal Taste Treat.\n6i99e\nWhole Fryers\nLibby'i Fancy,\n48 oi. tin. __.\nTomato Juice\nSockeye Salmon\nGold Seal, Faney Red.\n6 ei. tin.\nPineapple\nToilet Tissue\nEnchanted lile.\nSliced, Crushed or i'id-Dita.\n15 Of. tin\nScott, White or Colored.\nPkg. of 4 rolls. .\t\n3:89\n2:99\nManor House.\nFrozen Freshf\nGov't, inspected.\nThe finest tasting\nChicken you will\never eat! Grade\nBarbecue Sauce\nKraft 10 oi. bottle.\t\nH ib jTO\nc\n45\nPrem Luncheon Meat\nSwift's - 12 oz. tin\n3199\nPiedmont.\nDressing\nCastlegar Ferry\nTraffic Climbs\nTraffic on the Castlegar ferry\nhas shown an increase In May\nover May 1961.\nFollowing are figures for May\nwith M\u00aby 1961 figures in\nbrackets:\nRound trips. 5724. '5124); automobiles and drivers, 60,084,\n(53.6421; passengers, not drivers,\n107.32(1. 1102.7031; trucks, 18,246,\n(17,211i; trailers, 998, (801);\nbuses. 840, 18611; motor-cycles,\n10| 171); livestock, 30, (40).\nCragmont\nSoft Drinks\nBubbling with pleasure, S popular favorite\nto choose from.  12 oi. mira can\n$1.00\n10:$1\nCharcoal Briquettes\n10 lb- bag 99C 20 lb- bag 1.89\nToothpaste\nCrest, with fluoriitan.\nGiant Tube.\n65'\nFruit Cocktail: J      4Q*\nFancy; 15 oz. tin    \u2022*\u00bb for   \"^\nGreen Beans: _)      A\".*\nBlue Lake;  fancy:  15 oz. tin  ;..\u2022\u25a0\u2022 for   *-^\nSliced Beets: J      2(V\nChoice;   15  oz.  tin     \u25a0\" for \u00ab* ^\nTomato Catsup: \")      AQ*\n11 oz. bottle     \u2122\" for   '^\n i,\t\n \/WS\"!\ne \u2022 \u2022\nChoote you. favo-it-s from bur fabulous vtttoly of bwbdcuo m6*t&! Tern.\n'em with good partners from Our produce and grocery departments. Cook-\nout time brings delicious eating and more fun with family and friends. To\nhelp you enjoy this carefree season, Safeway is ready with an outstanding\nvariety of cook-out foods. Some are shown here...many more await you at\nour store. All at Safeway's famous low prices.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS,\nTHURS., JUNE 14,1962\u20147\nSAFEWAY\n*s \"'*\u00ab*%, >., \u25a0'^%^00^m^ffi^^^\nFrankfurters j Chuck Steak | Ground Beef\n        a   t._ ....ilk, oaa_a..,\u00bba>aat lnaana>a>\u00bboa4 I Sofowov ouarantood nualitv; Coiiado choice.\nNo. 1  quality, deliciously seasoned;\nIb.\n33c\nHot Dog Buns\nSkylark, Fresh sliced. Pkg. of 12. \u201e\nPrepared Mustard\nFrench's. 16 oz. jar. ... ,\u2014\nTop quality government inspected,\nCanadian beef; Canada choice.\nIb.\n49\nIb.\n49\n3 0C | Seasoned Salt\nQkW    Am I  Lawry's, 8 oz. jar.\nJ jFC ! Meat Tenderizer\nafl-M a |   Adolph, 3i ox. jor. ...\nSOCl Hamburger Buns\ntt0   jW       I Skylark, Fresh sliced. Pkg. of 12\n5 5   I hamburger Lift\ntaW   taw French's 2i oz. pkg.   \t\n39\n31\nCross Rib Roast\nBeef \u201e AQ\nCanada Choice.\nPork Spareribs\nCut for Barbecuing.  -\nIb.\nIb.\n59\nCanned Milk\nFruit Drinks\nPotato Chips\nPacific, Carnation or Delta.\nCase of 48 tins _.,\u2014-,-\nEmpress Orange, Grape, Apple.\nNalley's;\n9J oz. ctn.\nLucerne Bonus Quality\nFresh Milk\nHomogenised, minimum 3.8%\nbutterfat;  Half-gallon ctn.\n45\nHalf & Half:\nCoffee cream. Delicious on fresh fruit. Qt. ctn.\nWhipping Cream: 38\u00b0\nExtra rich, extra thick; whips fast. '4-pt. ctn. ...\"*\"\nCottage Cheese: IC*\nRegular, farmer style.\n2 per cent pineapple, drycurd. 16 oi. ctn.\n57*\n38'\n25'\nHome and High School\nEncyclopedia\nA volue of a lifetime for a lifetime of use.\n$1.49\nVolume 20\nNow on Sole.\n1\nCigars:\nPopular brands, pkg. o! 8 .\nFather's Day\nSunday, June 17\n49*\nPipe Tobacco:\nv, lb. tin priced up to\nSafeway stocks a good slection of Dad's favorite tobacco'.\nCigarettes:\nAll popular brands available at Safeway by the ctn\n\u20221.71\n\u00bbac(\n$3-25\nRed Seal\nCohoe Salmon\n1 Fancy; 7J ox. tin.\n2 r 89\u00a3\nDuncan Hines\nCake Mixes\nDeluxe assorted;  19-oz. pkg.\n2o79c\nDr. Ballard's\nPet Foods\nChampion varieties; IS oz. tin\n8<?99c\nPrices Effective:\nJune\n14, 15, 16\nWe Reserve the Right\nTo Limit Quantities\nVienna Loaf: 23*\nSkylark, covered with sesame seeds; 16 oz. loaf\nFrench Bread: 22*\nSkylark, serve it hot;  16 oz. loaf '   '  -1\nBrown.V Serve Buns:\nSkylark, serve golden brown, piping hot; pkg. of 12 '\nWhite Bread: *       \/K\nOvenjoy. 16 oz. loaf, \t\nt \t\n,33'\n410! 49c\nYour\nIndividual\nHoroscope\nLook in the section in which\nyour birthday comes and find\nwhat your outlook is, according\nto the stars.\nFor Friday, June 15, 1962\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 20 (Ariesi\n\u2014 Be ready for new leads. If end-\nof-week tendency to let down is\noverindulged one loses In man\"\nways. Too much thought about\nweek-end activities overlooks present last-minute opportunity.\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus)\n\u2014 Let Venus' benefic aspect stir\nenthusiasm. Still, you may have\nto rouse self to bridge that void\nbetween thought and action. This\nholds whether the interest is\nbusiness or personal.\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini)\n\u2014 Share hopes, pleasures with\ndear ones. Life Is increasingly enjoyable, produces many wonders\nprovided we face it staunchly and\npace ourselves as required. Community spirit pervades.\nJUNE 22 to JULY 23 Cancer)  '\n\u2014 Planets Indicate stronger need\nfor serenity and unexcitable caution. Don't jump at conclusions,\nneither accept without question.\nDo strike out cynicism. A sage\nthought, a precise move!\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leo)\n\u2014 Whole day stresses careful\nthought and action. Much can be\nachieved in a quiet manner without fanfare. Others will chide\nthemselves for not having done\nlikewise. Be hopeful, wisely cooperative.\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER\n23 (Virgo) \u2014 Don't be pressured\ninto doing what you have not had\nsufficient time to think over. Examine data before reaching decisions. Develop workable, potent methods, deriving surer, last-,\ning gains.\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER\n23 (Libra) - Problematical issues should be handled as they\nappear. Putting off \"small\" items\ncan be dangerous; Soon the backlog becomes too much to do efficiently. Your best asked NOW.\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER\n22 (Scorpio) \u2014 Could be very productive period if you don't procrastinate, nor overpress matters. Handle all in creditable, uncluttered manner \u2014 your innate\nway. Avoid extremes, enjoy a\nhappy day.\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER 21 (Sagittarius) \u2014 Next two\ndays call for careful review of\nwhat you are doing, and how\ngoing about it. Perhaps a slight\nchange or an added step Is the\nanswer lo a doubtful matter.\nEmploy help eagerly. '\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY\n20 (Capricorn) \u2014 Relegate com-\nbaliveness to sidelines, but oppose where necessary to protect\nprinciples. Properly allocate duties, socials. Do not expect the\nunreasonable; let conscience\nguide.\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY\n19 (Aquarius) \u2014 Visual appeal is\none thing, the value beneath\ncould well be another. Give each\nits apportionment of weighing in\nfor efficacy, productivity. Listen\nlo merit-wise suggestions.\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\n(Pisces) \u2014 You are not one to\ngive up but can be discouraged.\nDon't be! Maintain harmony, improve relations with others. New\ntrys or usual routine require more\npolishing before presentation.\nYOU BORN TODAY have a\nvery active, seeking mind, are\nusually busy physically, too, right\n(hrough life. You should, normally do, have interesting (sometimes it becomes a remunerative)\npastime. You have initiative,\nbundles of energy, and a real desire to be a part of as many vital things as you can. While all\nthis goes on, you want loved ones\nto know and share, and BE ENTHUSIASTIC about your projects. Choose companions and\nlilemate thoughtfully, and do\nshare your ideas with them for\ngoo dof all. Gemini is personable: pettiness, smallness are be\nnealh you. May be sharp in an\nswers. but do not mean to hurt.\nSo be careful not to \u2014 think before you speak, act! Many diplomats in Gemini \u2014 you can ge\nalong under OR over people\nAchieve without anxiety, strain\nBirthdate of: Mine. Schumann-\nHeink, opera singer; Edward the\nBlack Prince of Wales; many\nauthors, composers, chemists.\nVOTING RECORD SET\nPRINCE GEORGE (CP) -\nVoters turned out to advance\npolls in record numbers in\nPrince George and Dawson\nCreek. Two hundred, seventeen\nvotes were taken in Prince\nGeorge compared with 31 in\n1958. In Dawson Creek 116 advance votes made compared\nwith two in  1958.   f\n 8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURS., JUNE 14, 1962\nCOLLECTED $30,000,000\nUNITED NATIONS (AP) -\nThe executive board of the UN\nChildren's Fund said Tuesday\nnight it has collected $30,000,000\nin pledges for 1962 to continue\nits child and mother welfare\nprograms. The 30-nation board\ncompleted a week's session\ndealing with 124 new projects\nin 64 countries for which it\napproved  spending $16,569,593.\nThis Week's Food Buys\nShop Here For Low Low\nPrices Every Day\nCookies r r c\nDare's, asstd.; 11\n1 lb. pkg.  tjtj\nIce Cream\nPalm;\nHalf gallon \t\nMargarine\nSolo  \t\n__ 89c\n4 ibs. 89c\nPotatoes\nNetted Gems;\nNo. 2 \t\n10ibs39c\nWatermelons ^ |Ac\nT\"b69c\n2 ^ 29c\nCoffee\nMalkin's ...\nLemonade\nOr Orange Drink Mix,\nWyler's \t\nPicnic Relishes   <\\,    a^c\nNalley's; \/ fQr [I VW\n12 oz. jar   Mm TT M\nOrange Crush\nPer ctn. of 6,\nplus deposit  ,\t\nJello Cookies\nChristie's _.\n39c\n3 for 99c\nCream Corn      r     #%#\\c\nDel Monte; Q \\\u00a7\\ V M\n15 oz. tin\nCottage Cheese \u00ab%      *qc\nOr Sour Cream, I [Qf \u00a3AA*4j\nPalm\nRIB BEEF STEAKS 7Q\u00ab\nGrade \"A\", Choice; Lb   ' ^\nCHUCK STEAKS 4Q?\nTender, for Barbecue; Lb.     * *\nAssorted Cold MEATS A      QQ*\nSwift's; 6 oz. pkts.,     \" for    ^^\nKENS\nProduce &\nConfectionery\nWE DELIVER\n317 Vernon Street Phone 352-3910\nGETTING READY FOR OPEN OPENING\u2014Preparing for the 62nd National Open Golf Tournament, worlanen are erecting a huge, ateel scoreboard at Oakmont Country Club, Oakmont, Pa. The Open la scheduled for June 14-16.\nRain Increases Palmer's\nChance of Taking Open\nBy WILL GRIMSLEY\nOAKMONT, Pa. (AP) - A\ndrenching rain dulled the fangs\nof frightening old Oakmont and\nArnold Palmer's stock skyrocketed Wednesday on the eve of\nthe 62nd U.S. Open golf championship.\n\"It's a break for the big\nhitter and the gambler \u2014 and\nthat means Palmer,\" host pro\nLew Worsham said after an\nearly morning downpour forced\ncancellation of final practice\nrounds over the Oakmont Country Club. \"The course will play\nlonger but a man will be able\nto gun for the pin.\"\nBold, gambling golf is the\ntrademark of the bronzed 32-\nyear - old professional from\nnearby Latrobe, Pa., who is a\n5-1 favorite to make the Open\nthe second triumph in his bid\nfor a professional \"grand\nslam,\" which includes the Masters, British Open and U.S. PGA\ntitles..\nPalmer already has the Masters, one of his six tournament\nconquests in a potential record-\nbreaking financial year, and he\nwill go after the British and\nPGA next month in the space\nof three weeks.\nAlthough 150 of the world's\nfinest golfers tee off today in\nthe sport's toughest tournament,\nthe event has evolved into a\npersonal knock-down battle between   Palmer,   the   game's\nWANTED\nUSED   OUTBOARD\nMOTORS\nTop Trade-In Allowance Given\non 1962 Johnson Outboards\nCOLEMAN\nElectric Ltd.\n502 Front St.        Nelson, B.C.\nPHONE 353-5401\nfiercest   competitor,   and   Oakmont,   irreverently   tabbed   the\n\"Hades of Hulton\" after a road\nthat runs nearby.\nHOGAN LONE MASTER\nThis is the fourth Open that\nhas been held on these rolling\nhills in the Pennsylvania steel\ncountry and so far only one\nman\u2014Ben Hogan, the 1953 winner\u2014has beaten its par for the\n72-hole route, and only two,\nHogan and Sam Snead, have\nbroke 290. Hogan won the fourth\nof his Open crowns at the peak\nof his career with a 283 nine\nyears ago and Snead finished\nsix strokes behind at 289.\nSince then par for the 6,894-\nyard layout has been reduced\nfrom 72 to 71 with a change\nin the 455-yard first hole. But\n208 strategically placed traps,\nwiry rough and greens so fast\nthey putt like table tops make\nOakmont as rugged and gruesome an an antagonist as she\never was.\n\"I don't believe the rain has\ngiven me an advantage,\" said\nPalmer. \"I liked the greens as\nthey were\u2014hard and fast. I\nthink they're the finest greens\nI've ever seen. The rain will\nmake the rough tougher and it\nwill mean that the greens will\nbe chopped up for the late\nstarters.\"\nDEFENDS  TITLE\nThe defending champion,\nGene Littler of San Diego,\nCalif,, still keyed up from his\n$25,000 first prize victory in the\n$100,000 golf classic in Clifton.\nN.J., last week, said: \"I don't\nthink the rain helps anybody. It\nwill certainly make the rough\ntougher.\"\nIn the field are America's\nbest golfers, pro and amateur,\nremnants of an original Held of\nmore than 2,500, plus such outstanding foreign threats as\nGary Player of South Africa,\nBruce   Crampton   of   Australia\nand Stan Leonard of Vancouver\nand Al Balding of Toronto.\nThe\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\nTelephone Number\nIs\n352-\n1\nDial This Number for\nALL DEPARTMENTS\n3Msmt lailij \u00a3ta\nBraves Sign\n$100,000\nBonus Player\nMILWAUKEE (AP) - Daniel\nSchneider, 19, Tucson, Ariz.,\none of the most sought-after\nyoung pitchers in the nation,\nwas signed to a farm club contract Monday by Milwaukee\nBraves for a bonus reportedly\nin the $100,000 bracket.\nSchneider, a sophomore at\nthe University of Arizona, was\nsigned to a contract with Louisville in the American Association by scout John Moore.\nThe Braves announced that\nthe young left hander will come\nto Milwaukee to workout with\nthe Braves and will accompany\nthem on most of a road trip\nbeginning on Friday. He will\nnot, however, be added to the\nroster.\nSchneider, six-foot-three, 190\npounds, won six games without\na loss in his freshman year and\nhad a 13-1 record in the past\ncollege season, posting his 13\nvictories in-a-row.\nPlaying last year in the Canadian Summer League, Schneider posted a 9-1 record for Saskatoon, striking out 106 in 92\ninnings and posting a 1.90\nearned run average.\ngolfing. X\nwith ALEX MORRISON\nTeacher o\/ Champions\nGARDENER DENIES STATEMENTS\nAGAINST YANKS MANTLE, HOUK\nReported Mantle\nNeed Operation,\nHouk Going Blind\nWATERFORD, Conn. (API-\nBilly Gardner, reserve infielder\nsold by New York to Boston\nearlier this week, vehemently\ndenied Wednesday statements\nattributed to him that Yankee\nmanager Ralph Houk was going\nblind in his right eye and that\nMickey Mantle would soon undergo a knee operation.\n\"It's utterly ridiculous,\"\nGardner said at his home here.\n\"I never said those things. How\ncould I? They're not true.\"\nThe story appeared in the\nBoston Globe under Hy Hur-\nwitz' byline.\nHurwitz, a veteran sports\nwriter who has been travelling\nwith the Red Sox for many\nyears, insisted he quoted Gardner correctly.\n\"Certainly he mude those\nstatements,\" Hurwitz said. \"I\ncouldn't possibly have made\nthem up. He probably was teed\noff at losing out on a possible\nworld series cut.\"\nHouk, wounded during the\nSecond World War, has a bad\neye and further damage would\ncause blindness, Horwitz quoted\nGardner as saying.\nSAYS HOUK CUT\n\"During the fracas with Baltimore in New York, somebody\ncut Houk on the face and he\nwas bleeding at the mouth,\"\nGardner's quote continued.\n\"What's more, he has all the\nYankee players worried. Ralph\nhas a bad eye. If it gets further\ndamaged he would lose his\nsight.\n\"That's why everyone left the\nbench to protect him.\"\nSwitching the conversation to\nMantle, Hurwitz quoted Gardner as saying:\n\"Mantle is really worried\nabout the knee. He won't be\nable to play for a couple of\nweeks and he may even have to\nsubmit to an operation.\"\nMantle has been sidelined\nfor nearly three weeks with a\npulled muscle in his right leg.\nRecently it was announced the\nYankee slugger probably would\nbe back in the lineup in less\nthan a week.\nDENIES STATEMENT\n\"The only thing I said about\nMantle was that Mickey was\nquite worried at first, when the\ninjury occurred,\" said Gardner.\n\"He thought it was the left\nknee, the one that had been\noperated on before. I said nothing about needing another operation.\n\"And I said nothing abou\nHouk going blind or that he\nwas cut in the face and bleeding. In fact. I said as far as I\nknow, nobody got hit.\"\nHouk, reached by telephone at\nYankee Stadium, also termed\nthe statements \"utterly ridiculous.\"\n\"I fully expect Mantle to be\nback in the lineup in a few\ndays,\" Houk said.\n\"As for me going blind,\" he\ncontinued, \"I never even wore\nglasses until this summer and I\nstill am bothered with them because they are new to me.\"\nIn  gripping  the club  Ihe main .\npre\u00absure\u00bb should be wilh fhe left\nlilllo fingers and  between  the\nright thumb and forefinger.\nIF YOU'RE interested in the\nexplanation   for  most   of   the I\nhajid  troubles  experienced  by j\ncountlcsa golfers here it is.       i\nIn most cases the hands aim- i\nply reflect the player's wrong\nbody action or head position.\nThe fundamental parts of the\nswing are much like the hub,\nspokes and rim of a wheel.\nYour body action and head\nposition can be taken as the\nhub, your arms as the spokes\nand your htands as the rim. Obviously, a faulty hub prevents\nthe rim from running true. So\nyour hands can only be aa\ngood as permitted by your body\naction and head position.\nIn a sense your hands are in\nthe result phase. Basic causes\ngeneraJly are found only within\nyour body.\nDespite this dependence .of\nthe rim on the hub most players prefer to think and talk\nabout the hajidg as an independent part of the swing.\nThus they aisk for the trouble\nthey would like to avoid.\nMajor League\nLeaders\nBy THE  ASSOCIATED PRESS\nAmerican League\nAB R  HPct.\nJimenez, K. City 180 22 63 .350\nRollins, Min 229 30 80 .349\nRunnels,  Bos 212 29 72 .340\nKaline, Detroit 146 32 49 .336\nRobinson, Chi       216 32 71 .329\nRuns\u2014Green, Minnesota,  48.\nRuns Batted In\u2014Wagner, Los\nAngeles, 45.\nHits\u2014Rollins, 80.\nDoubles\u2014Robinson, 21.\nTriples\u2014Robinson, 6.\nHome Runs \u2014 Gentile, Baltimore, 11.\nStolen bases\u2014Wood, Detroit,\nand Howser, Kansas City, 16.\nPitching \u2014 Donovan, Cleveland,  8-2,  .800.\nStrikeouts \u2014 Pascual, Minnesota, 75.\nNational League\nAB R  HPct.\nF. Alou, SF 215 39 74 .344\nMusial, St. Louis 150 25 51 .340\nWilliams, Chi 235 48 79 .336\nDavenport, SF 204 39 68 .333\nT. Davis, LA        251 46 82 .327\nRuns \u2014 Mays, San Francisco,\n58.\nRuns Batted In\u2014T. Davis, 64.\nHits\u2014T. Davis, 82.\nDoubles \u2014 Robinson, Cincinnati, 21.\nTriples\u2014Ranew,  Houston,  70.\nHome Runs \u2014 Mays, 21.\nStolen Bases\u2014Wills, Los Angeles, 33.\nPitching \u2014 Purkey, Cincinnati,  10-1, .909.\nStrikeouts\u2014Koufax, Los Angeles, 132.    {\nRAJLPH HOUK\n. . . going blind?\nMICKEY MANTLE\n. , . needs operation?\nBILLY GARDNER\n. . denies statements.\nFormer Boxer Develops\nPneumatic Boxing Glove\nLONDON (Reuters) - A former British boxing champion\nhas devised a pneumatic boxing\nglove to reduce the risk of\ncrippling, or even fatal, brain\ninjuries to professional boxers.\nEric Boon, a 42 - year - old\nbusinessman, says he has tested\nhis glove by punching a brick\nwall and has felt no jolt in his\nhand or wrist.\nBoon, who won the British\nlightweight championship before\nthe Second World War when he\nwas only 19, knocked out 50 of\nhis opponents. It was the sight\nof some of them in later years\nthat led him to invent his glove.\nThe glove has two air compartments, one inside the other.\nThe first shock of a blow is\nabsorbed by the outer compartment and, if the blow is a hard\none, by the inner compartment.\nPUFF-BALL BOXING\nWould the public pay to watch\n\"puff - ball\" boxing with gloves\nlike Boon's?\nHe thinks so. \"Nowadays\nthere is so much holding after\na boxer has been hit and dazed\nthat the fight often becomes a\nshambles.\n\"With my gloves, boxers would\nbe able to keep exchanging\nblows and hit back to the last\nround \u2014 it would be a more\nexciting fight for the spectators,\" Boon says.\nInterest in Boon's glove was\naroused in Britain after the\ntragic death of welterweight\nchampion Benny (Kid) Paret\nfollowing a title fight in New\nYork this spring.\nIt prompted Dr. < Edith Sum-\nmerskill, a longtime foe of professional boxing and a baroness\nin addition to being a medical\ndoctor, to introduce a bill in the\nHouse of Lords to have the pro\nsport outlawed.\nThe bill was supported by a\nnumber of doctors but was defeated.\nMoss Hopes To Be\nBehind Wheel Soon\nLONDON (AP) - Stirling\nMoss, badly injured in a crash\nlast April, said Monday he\nhopes to be back in a racing\ncar cockpit in six to eight\nweeks.\n\"It'll take me time to get\nback to my old form, but I\nreckon I should be lapping\nGoodwood at 1:34.2 within a\nhalf-hour of getting into my\ncar,\" Moss said hopefully.\nIt was on the Goodwood circuit April 23 that the British\nace crashed at more than 100\nmiles an hour, suffering serious\nhead and limb injuries.\nSpeaking to reporters from a\nhospital wheelchair, he said he\nexpects to leave the hospital in\ntwo weeks and fly to The Bahamas.\nMoss, 32, said he plans to \"get\nfit with plenty of water skiing,\nswimming and sailing.\n\"My wife will also be thera\nand I expect I shall meet her.\nShe has written to me about the\naccident and had she been in\nEngland, I am sure she would\nhave visited me.\"\nMrs. Moss, the former Kath-\nerine Molson of the Montreal\nbrewing family, now makes her\nhome in Nassau. The couple\nmarried in 1957 and separated\nin February, 1960.\nDoctors feared at one time\nthat Moss would \u2022 never regain\nfull use of his left limbs because of bruising of the brain.\n\u25a0'mAi\nWhen It somes to whisky...\n[j      m rm a oAecioMt*\n*Specialist: Anyone\u2014\nafter a taste of Walker's Special Old\nYou're a Specialist in good taste when you\nchoose Walker's Special Old. Good taste,\ngood looks, and fine quality have made it\nCanada s popular choice in whisky. Next\ntime\u2014make it a point to buy Walker's\nSpecial Old.\nHIRAM WALKER & SONS, LIMITED\n(aa.taa.il.. ., ,,\u00bb, \u201e\u201e,,\u00ab,,, ,0\u00bb \u201e\u00bb,, ,,, ,,,,, )fJ THE 9PAR1HJNa OECANTII1\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or hy the Government of British Cofumbii\nir\n \/4S3\nBeats Woman\nAngels' Belinsky\nFinds Halo Slipping\nBEVERLY HILLS, Calif.\n(AP)\u2014Bo Belinsky, Los Angeles Angels' n i g h t c 1 u bbing\npitcher, left a bon voyage party\nfor singer. Eddie Fisher at 4:45\na.m. Wednesday and 15 minutes\nlater a woman companion accused him of beating her.\nThe Los Angeles Times headlined the story:\n\"Belinsky denies one-hitter.\"\nBelinsky, 25 - year - old southpaw whiz, started off the season with six victories including\nSandlot\nScoreboard\nPat Severyn smashed in five\nruns for Dodgers Tuesday as they\ntrounced Yanks 10-1 in a Shrimp\nLeague match.\nSeveryn, in batting in five runs,\nhad a single and triple. Tony Ar-\ncuri hit a triple and Pat Price\nclouted a double.\nIn a second Shrimp League\nmatch, Indians defeated Red Sox\n11-6. Ronny DeLucrezio knocked\nin two runs for Indians and Bob\nBobroske batted in four tallies.\nLen Planiden had a double.\nNelson Sport\nSchedule\n4 p.m.\u2014Sandlot ball, South Slocan vs. Caps at Civic B.\n6 p.m.\u2014Babe Ruth Baseball,\nHippersons vs. Whiteleys at\nQueen Elizabeth Park.\n6:30 p.m. \u2014 Play-for-fun soft-\nball, Nelson Hotel vs. Savoy at\nUphill; City Auto vs. Independents at Civic A; Grey-Palm vs.\nKootenay Forest at Civic B.\n7 p.m. \u2014 Women's softball,\nHardrocks vs. Junior High at\nJunior High grounds.\nAlgars Win\nFirst Game\nIt took Algars until the final\ngame of the Babe Ruth season to\nscore a victory, but they did it\nTuesday night, slipping by Hippersons 5-4,\nAlgars scored the winning run\nin the bottom of the seventh inning off reliever Bob Phillips,\nwho allowed two hits. Phillips re\nlieved starter Larry Black after\nBlack tossed the first six frames,\nallowing five hits, while walking\nnone and fanning nine.\nD. Shankland went the distance\nfor Algars giving up one hit. Tlie\nfour runs Hippersons collected\ncame on five Algar miscues. In\nthe seven innings Shankland fanned four and walked one.\nWith the regular league play\nfinished the Babe Ruthers now begin playoffs. Algars and Hippersons will meet in the best of three\nsemi-finals, with the winner meeting first place Whiteleys for the\nleague championship. The series\nopent Saturday at Queen Elizabeth Park.\nHipperson . 000 103 0-4 1 4\nAlgars       001 021 1\u20145 7 5\nShankland and Kienholtz; Black\nPhillips and Stephenson.\na no-hitter and a two-hitter. He\nter \"it's all a blown-up publicity stunt.\"\nHe told officers he ordered\nthe woman out of the car when\nshe became belligerent, suggesting she take a cab.\nThe pitcher said he then\npulled Miss Eves from the car\nond her eye apparently hit\nsome object.\nMiss Whitaker told police:\nsoon became a favorite Hollywood celebrity.\nHe's been battled out in every\nstart since.\nBeverly Hills police gave this\naccount of the incident:\nGloria Eves, 33, of Hollywood,\na restaurant cashier, ran to a\npolice car screaming:\n\"He's beating me up. He's\nalso beating up my girl friend.\"\nOfficer B. E. Gruenzel said\nhe found Belinsky in the front\nscat of a car with another Angel\npitcher, Dean Chance.\nAlso in Belinsky's expensive\npink Cadillac convertible was\nBridget Whitaker, 33, of Hollywood.\nPolice said Miss Eves was\nbleeding profusely from a cut\nover her left eye and her dress\nwas bloodstained. It took five\nstitches to close the wound at\nan emergency hospital.\nBelinsky denied hitting the\nwoman and later told a repor-\n\"the whole affair was an accident.\"\nBelinsky was called on the\ncarpet for 45 minutes by Angel\ngeneral manager Fred Haney\neven before he dressed for Wednesday night's game. About 10\ndays ago, manager Bill Rigney\ngave his pitcher a stern lecture\nabout extra - curricular activities.\nBut it had little effect.\nLast Friday night Bo showed\nup at a Hollywood birthday\nparty with singer Connie Stevens. He left at 7 a.m.\nSunday night, after being\nknocked out of the box that afternoon, he escorted singer Kay\nStevens to a night club. That\nparty broke up at 5 a.m.\nHe was out at Warner Brothers Monday acting in a 77 Sunset Strip television show.\nLater Rigney announced he had\nimposed substantial fines on Belinsky and Chance. He declined\nto give the amounts but said:\n\"Perhaps he (Belinsky) will\nunderstand now that we meant\nwhat we said\" about outside activities.\nRotary Scores\nWin Over ACT\nRotary scored six runs in the\nfirst two innings to defeat ACT 7-5\nin Little League action Wednesday night.\nT. Stinson hurled for Rotary allowing six hits, as he fanned 11\nand walked four. D. Cavalier hit\nthe only extra-base hit off Stinson,\na two-bagger.\nCavalier went the route for ACT\nwiving up 11 base hits, including\ntwo  doubles  to  Ted  Allen.  He\nstruck out 11 and walked five.\nRotary   330 010-7\nDOUBLE OR NOTHING - - By Alan Mover\nf*ANKB(Jpp\nv\/uanomI\nRBPeArgp\nJ? POi\/BLB\n5PRMT\nW\/M\u00a3R   I\n\/.C.-f-A. \t\n\/user, i\nMM 111\nra\nr\/\/\u00a3 SB\n2MB . -\nfir\n\u00a3C16BHE, '\"\u25a0-\noReson,\nJMa  *\n&- ,\t\n\/6. I\n*.\nanp o\/is weex ca?\u00a3k,\n\/IT VMLrWr, C\/IUF.,  \"r#E\nWOfUP'e f\/l*7\u00a35T tfC\/Wr\"'\nMCL P\u00a3f\u00a3NP MS\nA.A.U. loo-ywp crow,\nffiMK became\nF\/X5T BVEK To PO f\/\/\u00a3\n\/OO \/\/\/ 9.2 \/A1 tCMMf\nuzr ys\/iR.\nDktrlLulcJ bu liimi Fealurti SimrfiValtf\nBASEBALL RESULTS\nAMERIC\\N LEAGUE\nW L  Pet Gbl\nNew York     32 22 .593  \u2014\nMinnesota      35 25 .583   \u2014\nCleveland       32 23 .582     \u201e\nLos Angeles     31 25 .554   2\nDetroit       28 27 .509   4_\nChicago    ' 29 31 .483   6\nBaltimore       28 31 .475   6V>\nKansas City    27 33 .450   8\nBoston       24 32 .429   9\nWashington   ........   20 37 .351 13'\/_\nCleveland       000 002 000-2 4 3\nWashington ....  010 001 llx-4 5 1\nRamos (3-3) and Romano; Os-\nteen (3-5), Hamilton (8) and Ret-\nzer. HRs: Wash - Retzer (5),\nHicks (3).\nCleveland       000 301 000-4 7 1\nWashington ...    010 000 000\u20141 6 1\nDonovan (9-2) and Romano;\nStenhouse (4-2), Hannan (8) and\nSchmidt. HR: Cle\u2014Romano (11).\nBaltimore  000 000 000-0 2 0\nBoston     011 110 O0X-4 8 1\nEstrada (3-8), Hoeft (5), Stock\n(8) and Landrith; Schwall (2-7)\nand Tillman.\nDetroit at New York, ppd., rain.\nMinnesota .... 100 000 021\u20144 10 0\nLos Angeles    020 000 00O-2 10 2\nKralick, Moore (7) (4-1) and\nBattey; Chance, Duren (8) (2-6)\nSpring (9) and Rodgers. HR:\nMin\u2014Allison (5).\nChicago     002 000 100-3 8 0\nKansas City ..   100 100 20X-4 8 1\nBuzhardt (6-6) Fisher (7) and\nLollar; Rakow (5-7) Jones (8)\nand Azcue.\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nW L\nLos Angeles  44 20\nSan Francisco .. 42 22\nPittsburgh  34 25\nSt. Louis   33 25\nCincinnati  32 25\nMilwaukee   28 32\nHouston   25 34\nPhiladelphia   .... 24 35\nChicago    20 41\nNew York  16 39\nPet. GBL\n.656\n.570\n.569\n.561\n.467\n.424\n.407\n.328   22lk\n.291   23V4\n14\n16%\nPCL Standings\nW  L  Pet. GBL\nSalt Lake   3222\nSan Diego  33 23\nSeattle    31 24\nTacoma   30 27\nPortland 30 30\nHawaii   25 29\nVancouver    23 30\nACT   100 220\u20145 Spokane   16 35\n.593\n.589\n.564\n.526\n.500\n.463\n.434\n.314\nMAKE YOUR GARDEN AND YARD\nCARE A B-R-E-E-ZE!\nGet the\nPROPER TOOLS\nMthe PROPER PRICE\nSee Us First for\n\u2022 GARDEN RAKES\n\u2022  HOES   \u2022 SHOVELS\n\u2022  FORKS, etc.\nWe Carry the Finest\nPower\nMower\nAvailable.\nBUDGET\nPRICED\nSee Them Today!\nNelson Farmers1 Supply\n524 Railway St.\nLTD.\nNelson\nPhone 352-5373\nPhiladelphia  000 000 010-1   9\nSt. Louis   001 130 lOx\u20146   9\nBennett (2-2), Green (5), Owens\n(7), and Dalrymple; Gibson (8-4)\nand Oliver.\nPittsburgh  .. 100 013 001-6 14   3\nChicago  000 111 010\u20144   8   1\nMcBean (6-3), Olivo (8), Face\n(8) and Burgess; Koonce (4-2),\nElston (8), Cardwell (9) and\nTappe, Barragan (8). HRs: Pgh.\nVirdon (3); Chi., Williams (12)\nLos Angeles 010 010 000-2 7 .\nMilwaukee  .. 000 001 000\u20141   3   0\nKoufax (9-2) and N. Sherry,\nRoseboro (3); Spahn (6-7), Fischer (9) and Crandall. HRs: L.A.,\nKoufax (1); Mil., McMillan (6).\nSan Fran 000 000 000-0   3   0\nCincinnati   .. 000 212 OOx\u20145   9   1\nSanford (6-6), Lemay (6), Bo-\nlin (8) and Bailey; Purkey (11-1)\nand Edwards. HR: Cin., Coleman\n(10).\nNew York at Houston, ppd.,\nrain.\nPACIFIC COAST LEAGUE\n^   fry, \"'\"' \u25a0^\u2022M\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURS., JUNE: 14, 1962 \u2014 9\nBucs' Face Tosses Cubs Aside\/\nDodgers Widen Gap Over Giants\nTwins Climb Within\n10 Points of Yanks\nSalt Lake .... 000 040 100\u20145 10   1\nSan Diego   . 012 101 20x\u20147 12   0\nPrince, Tyriver (3), Goerger\n(8) and Grace: Ellis, Risenhoo-\nver (5), McWilliams (6) and\nGonder. W: McWilliams (7-3); L:\nTyriver (3-2). HR: Kubiszyn.\nFirst: i\nVancouver 000 000 000 0-0   3   0\nTacoma ... 000 000 000 2-2   M\nCollum and Henry; Thomas,\nNavarro (8) and Orsino. W: Navarro (3-2); L: Collum (3-4). HR:\nTacoma, Phillips.\nSecond:\nVancouver  . 010 000 000\u20141   3   0\nTacoma     ... 001 100 OOx\u20142   8   0\nPleis, Rantz (8) and Henry;\nSovde and Orsino. W: Sovde (1-0).\nL: Pleis (5-2). HR: Vancouver,\nTaylor.\nHawaii at Spokane, called in\n5th, rain.\nSeattle at Portland, ppd., rain.\nBy The Associated Press\nElroy Face, Pittsburgh's ever\nready relief pitcher, made his\nfourth appearance in five games\nWednesday and saved the Pirates' fifth straight victory \u2014 a\n6-4 conquest of the Cubs at Chicago.\nThe little righthander retired\nfour straight Cubs to assure Al-\nvin McBean his sixth victory in\nnine decisions.\nThe Pirates put the game on\nice in the sixth with a three-run\nromp against loser Cal Koonce.\nTwo games were rained out,\none in each league. Detroit's\nAmerican League battle at New\nYork was postponed as was\nNew York Mets' National\nLeague encounter at Houston.\nNight action in the National\nsaw Los Angeles Dodgers move\ninto a two-game lead over second place San Francisco by virtue of a 2-1 win over the Braves\nat Milwaukee.\nThe Giants paved the way to\nthe wider lead by losing 6-0 to\nCincinnati Reds. In other National contest St. Louis downed\nPhiladelphia 6-1.\nLos Angeles fire-baller Sandy\nKoufax o u t d u e 1 e d Warren\nSpahn with a three - hitter and\ncracked his first major league\nhomer.\nKoufax struck out six and\nwalked only two in posting his\nninth victory against two defeats. His 370-foot line homer\nin the fifth provided the decisive run.\nSpahn, a 41 - year - old southpaw who began his professional\ncareer before Koufax started\nschool, suffered another heartbreaking defeat \u2014 his fifth by\none run this season. He struck\nout seven and walked only one\nbefore being lifted for a pinch-\nbatter in the eighth. He was\nleft with a 6-7 record as the\nresult of the vain bid for career\nvictory 316.\nAt   Cincinnati,   Bob   Purkey,\nace of the Reds pitching staff,\navenged the Reds' defeat in a\ntwi-night doubleheader Tuesday j\nnight by shuting out San Fran- j\ncisco on three hits.\nHAD  NO-HITTER  GOING ]\nPurkey, now 11-1, had a no-1\nhitter going until two-thirds of\nthe way through the seventh in- j\nning.\nAt   St.    Louis,   Bob   Gibson |\nstruck out 12 batters, his career ,\nhigh, as he pitched the Cardin- j\nals to their ninth victory in 10\nganies.\nNight   American   League   ac-;\ntion saw Dick Donovan end the\nfive - game winning streak of\nWashington   Senators,   his   for-.\nmer teammates, when Cleveland Indians won the second\ngame of a twi - night double-\nheader 4 - 1 after losing the\nopener 4-2.\nAt Boston Don Schwall\nblanked Baltimore with two hits\nas the trouble-plagued Red Sox\nright hander defeated the Orioles 4-0.\nSQUEEZE PAST SOX\nAt Kansas City, fancy base\nrunning by Dick Howser plus\nclutch hitting by Manny Jimenez\nand Jose Tartabull squeezed Kansas City Athletics past Chicago\nWhite Sox 4-3.\nHowser ran his stolen base total\nto 18, twice swiping second and\ntwice scoring as Tartabull singled\nhim home. Tartabull also had a\nstolen base in the A's seventh\ninning when they scored twice to\novertake the Sox.\nJimenez, battling for the league;\nbatting leadership, had two hitsj\nand raised his average to .353. He\nsmashed a single that drove Tartabull in with the winning run,\nand a double to lead off the\nfourth. A single by Gino Cimoli\nbrought Jimenez in to tie the\nscore 2-2.\nAt Los Angeles, Minnesota\nTwins came from behind on Bob\nAllison's two-run homer in the\neighth inning and took over second place in the American League\nby defeating Los Angeles Angels\n4-2.\nThe victory moved the Twins a\nhalf game  ahead  of  Cleveland\nand left them Only 10 percentage nez, 148, Fresno, knocked out\npoints back in the first place! Floyd Sampson, 141, Reno, Nev.\nNew York Yankees. 3.\nDOING WELL\u2014Only 19 years\nold, Joe Moeller, a 6'5\" rookie\nrighthander of the Dodgers,\nis doing right well, already\nhaving won four games for\nthe L.A. club. Moeller's first\nyear in pro ball, in 1961, was\nspent at Reno, Greenville\nand Spokane and he finished\nwith a record of 20 and 9.\nFIGHTS\nBy The Associated Press\nSacramento, Calif.\u2014Zora Fol-\nley, 199',4, Chandler, Ariz., stopped Paul Andrews, 202, Los Angeles, 7.\nOmaha \u2014 Bill Nielson, 190V4,\nOmaha, stopped Jackie Richards,\n189%, Detroit, 5.\nFresno, Calif. \u2014 Gabe Terro-\nCzech, Brazil Teams\nMeet in Soccer Final\nSANTIAGO, Chile (CP-AP1-\nCzechoslovakia and defending-\nchampion Brazil won their semifinal matches in the World Cup\nsoccer tournament Wednesday\nand qualified for Sunday's\nchampionship game.\nBrazil knocked out host country Chile 4-2 before a roaring\ncrowd of 80,000 in Santiago's\nnational stadium. The Czechs\ndefeated Yugoslavia 3-1 in Vina\ndel Mar, on the Pacific coast.\nBoth semi-final games were\nmarked by rough play, with\none incident threatening to cost\nBrazil the services of star right\nwinger Garrincha in Sunday's\nfinal.\nGarrlncha, who scored two of\nBrazil's four goals, was sent off\nthe field by Peruvian referee\nMaximo Yamasaki at the 82nd\nminute, two minutes after\nChile's centre forward Honorio\nLanda had been ejected.\nISSUES WARNING\nIn the Czech - Yugoslavia\nmatch Swiss referee Dienst\ncalled the two captains together\nand warned that \"any more\nrough play and somebody's going off.\"\nThe warning did the trick\nand tempers on both sides\ncalmed down.\nThe International Federation\nof Football Associations could\ndisallow Garrincha from the\nfinal game for Wednesday's in\ncident. It is expected to rule on\nthe matter today or Friday.\nThe right winger scored the two'\ngoals that gave Brazil a 2-1,\nlead at halftime. altogether lift\nhas scored, four, goals in the7;\ntournament; tying for the best,\nindividual performance.\nThe goals Wednesday came-\nat the ninth and 32nd minutes\u2014,\nthe second on. a header from..\nZagallo's corner . kick. Chile's,\",\ninside right Tore narrowed the\nlead in the 43rd minute when,\nhe scored from a free kick. \\\nWIDENS MARGIN    :. f\nBrazil moved away again\nthree minutes after the half on.,\na goal by centre forward Vava1;\nbut Chile's Leo.nal Sanchez;\nmade it 3-2 by scoring from the ;\npenalty spot in the 62nd minute.;. \u2022\u25a0\nVava added his second goal of;;\nthe half at the 70th minute to;; '\u2022\u2022\nsew up the'game for the de-;\nfending champion Brazilians.     ?\nAt Vina del Mar,' Czech inside right Schera_- 'scored' two;\ngoals within four minutes \u2014 at'\nthe 80th and 83rd.minute \u2014 to:-.-,\nbreak a 1-1 -lie and defeat the,'\nYugoslavs. ,   \u25a0 .-     |?j\nInside left Kdraba had opened\nthe scoring for Czechoslovakia \u2022\nin the 70th minute and Yugoslav   centre   forward. JerkOvic \"\ntied it in the 70th minute.\nPHONE 352-3552\nFOR CLASSIFIED\n;;;:;;::p;:;:v;:;;-:;;;i;;ffiv\nfor Acclaim\nForsythe Wins\nTeir Golf Cup\nNEW DENVER - Q. A. Forsythe carded a net 68 to capture\nthe Johnnie Teir Memorial Trophy at the Slocan Lakes Golf\nClub's first tournament of the\nyear Sunday.\nRunner-up to Forsythe was\nNeil Sutherland with a 69. In third\nplace was M. Stembert with a 70.\nLow gross honors were won by\nDoug Newton as he finished the\ncompetition with a 79. Two\nstrokes back was Barrie Johnson,\nwith Tad Mori third.\nDespite the continual downpour\nof rain, 16 of the 18 competing\ngolfers completed the course.\nClub president Dr. E. A. Baja\npresented the trophy and prizes.\nSlocan Braves Dump\nKinnaird Team\nSLOCAN \u2014 Errors were costly\nfor the Kinnaird Pony League all-\nstars Monday as they dropped a\n10-1 decision to Slocan Braves.\nA. Gordon hurled Braves to\ntheir second win of the season,\nlimiting the visitors to five hits.\nHe issued two walks and fanned\nfour.\nVersich went the distance for\nKinnaird, giving- up 10 hits while\nwalking three and Striking out\nfour.\niiiimiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiHMiiiiiiiii\nHigh Jinks\nBarred at\n19th Hole\nOAKMONT, Pa. (AP) \u2014 No\nmore high-jinks at the 19th hole\nof hte U.S. Open golf championship.\nFor two days an Improvised\nbar in Ihe basement of the staid\nOakmont  Country Club, scene\nof this year's open, has been j\ndoing a landslide business. |\nThe reason: Shapely hostesses j\nIn revealing tights imported j\nfrom an after-hours night club |\nin downtown Pittsburgh.\nThe place had a gay nineties\natmosphere with the girls \u2014 |\nblondes, brunettes and redheads |\n\u2014attired in skimpy, sequined, I\nsequined costumes showing j\nmore than most Bikini bathing !\nsuits.\nThen suddenly Wednesday the j\ngirls reported for work and only j\nto be told they were no longer j\nneeded. Orders had come down\nfrom the club's front office. |\nThere were reports members' ,\nwives had complained.\n\"I had nothing to do with it,\"\nsaid Joe Dey, executive director\nof the U.S. Golf Association,\nwhich runs the tournament. \"I\ndidn't know the place existed.\nI've been busy upstairs.\"\nIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIII\nPlay-For-Fun\nTwenty-one runs in the fourth\nand fifth innings gave Eagles a\ndecisive 27-8 victory over Grey-\nPalm Tuesday.\nH. Miller and B. Wakaluk clouted home runs.\nIn a second B division match,\nPaul Peters and Danny Sjoberg\nclouted two circuit drives each\nas Cemetery Ghosts dumped\nHomelites 17-7.\nIn the last game of tlie evening\nNorth Shore squashed Royals\n15-5.\nAcadian has gained enthusiastic\nacoeptance with the Canadian\nmotoring public.\nVV   1 i f,'*',?,r\nfor A\n4\nction\nFeel the brisk response of Acadian'a\nlively 4- or 6-cylinder Econoflame\npower!\nfor Agility\nAcadian'a nimble 110 inch wheelbase is\nlong enough for comfort, short enough\nfor easy, positive manoeuvring.\nfor Accommodation\nRoom for six people to stretch out and\nride in day-long comfort. And they can\nall pack their luggage in Acadian*s\ngenerouB trunk.\ni at slight extra tost\nInvader 4-Door Sedan\nA GENERAL MOTORS VALUE\nFOR STRAIGHT WvALUE SEE\nWhitewaU fire* optional at extra east\nAT YOUR ACME\nPONTIAC-BUICK\namiRNOW!\nBe sure to see \"The Tommy Ambrose .Show\" on the CBC TV network aa Friday evenings. Check local listings for channel and time.\nAuthorized Dealer for the West Kootenay\nBEACON MOTORS LTD.\n701 Baker St. t' NELSON,  B.C. \" Plito\u00abe~3_^fe-664.\n NELSON DAILY NEWS, THUfcS., JUNE 14, 1962\nf!   H\n\/ THlaMKl THERE !\n_    f   MUST BE SOME j\n'j   I   MORE NAMES FOR\nV   \\ HASH I HAVEN'T\n,^^\\     USED .VET\nO        V ag?T=\nr Tv 1       j^j\n6-rt fiL\ng\u20acp^\nMARKET TRENDS\nNEW YORK (AP) - Tw6\nstrong selling waves assaulted\nstock market prices Wednesday. The market resisted one\nbut succumbed to the second.\nLosses were sharp.\nThe Dow Jones industrial average sank below the 1962 \"bottom\" set in the plunge of\n\"black Monday\" May 28. Other\npopular market indicators did\nriot break to new lows.\nNevertheless, many stock\nmarket followers watch the\nDow Industrials for the market\ntrend. To them, Wednesday's\naction was a signal that the\nmarket must now seek support\nat a considerably lower level\nbefore a consistent rally can be\nmounted.\nTAPE RUNS LATE\nIn the final gust of selling,\nthe ticker was four minutes behind transactions as prices sank\nto their worst of the day.\nThe Dow Industrials sank 6.90\nto 574.04, penetrating the closing low of 576.93 set May 28.\nAn    estimated    $3,900,000,000\nwas clipped from the quoted\nvalue of stocks listed on the\nNew York Stock Exchange,\nbased on the fall in the AP\naverage.       .\nVolume rose to 5,805,000\nshares' from 4,690,000 Tuesday.\nInternational Business Machines touched a new low of\n32214, closing with a net loss of\n12%  at 322%.\nGold shares backed away\nfrom recent gains. Dome Mines\nlost Vi. .\nInternational Nickel advanced\na point.\nAmong other Canadian issues,\nAluminium Ltd. was up %.\nHudson Bay Mining lost a point\nand Walker-Gooderham was off\n1%. Mclntyre Porcupine lost %\nand Granby Mining Vi.\nPrices fell sharply on the\nAmerican Stock Exchange. Jupiter Crop, was down Vi and\nCanadian Marconi Va. Brazilian\nTraction rose Va. Other Canadian issues finished unchanged.\nTORONTO (CP) - The stock\nON THE AIR\nPACIFIC DAYLIGHT TIME\nCKLN PROGRAMS 1390 ON THE DIAL\nTHURSDAY, JUNE 14, 1962\n59\u2014Sign On\n00\u2014News\n05\u2014Farm Fare\n15-Wake-Up Time\n30\u2014News\n: 35\u2014Direct Report\n45-Chapel in the Sky\n: 00\u2014News\n:05-Wake-Up Time\n: 25\u2014Sports News\n30\u2014News\n,35-Wake-Up Time\n: 00\u2014News\n: 10\u2014Sports News\n: 15\u2014Political Talk\n:20\u2014Wake Up Time Continues\n: 45\u2014The tochers\n: 00\u2014News\n: 05\u2014Sacred Heart Program\n:20\u2014Alan's A.M. Spot\n: 59-D.O.O.T.S.\n: 00\u2014News\n05-Birthday Book\n13\u2014Relaxing Program\n:30\u2014Pacific Express\n: 00\u2014News\n: 05\u2014Morning Melodies\n:45\u2014Sing With Bing\n: 00\u2014Let's Sing Along\n: 15\u2014Sports News\n12:25\u2014News\n12:31\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Noon Markets\n1:00\u2014Stories With John Drainie\n1:15\u2014Holiday Time\n5:45\u2014Closing Markets\n5:50\u2014Holiday Time Continues\n5:55\u2014Political Talk\n6:00\u2014National News\n6:10\u2014Sports News\n6:15\u2014Political Talk\n6:20\u2014Supper Serenade\n6:25\u2014Musicale\n6:30\u2014The Bible Speaks to You\n6:45\u2014Canada at Work\n7:00\u2014News and Roundup\n7:20\u2014Speaking Personally\n7:30\u2014The 20's Roar\n8:00\u2014Soundings\n8:30\u2014Political Broadcast\n8:45\u2014Worth Repeating\n9:00\u2014Canadian String Quartet\n10:00\u2014News\n10:10\u2014Sports and Weather\n10:15\u2014Talk\n10:30\u2014Eventide\n11:00\u2014News\n11:01\u2014Chapel In the Sky\n11:16\u2014Sign Off\nCBC PROGRAMS\nPACIFIC DAYLIGHT TIME\nFRIDAY JUNE 15, 1962\n6:00\u2014Morning Show\n8:40\u2014An Orchid From Gisele\n9:00\u2014BBC News\n9:15\u2014Morning Concert\n9:59-D.O.O.T.S.\n10:00\u2014Morning Visit\n10:10\u2014For Consumers\n10:15\u2014Playroom\n10:30\u2014Pacific Express\nU:00\u2014Off the Record\n11:45\u2014Patti and Peter\n12:00-Earl Mitten and the\nValley Rhythm Boys\n12:15\u2014News\n12:25\u2014Showcase\n12:30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n12:55-Five to One\n1:00\u2014Political Broadcast\n1:15\u2014Tommy Hunter Show\n1:45\u2014Program Resume\n2:00\u2014Talk\n2:30-News and Trans-Canada\nMatinee\n3:30\u2014Halifav Theatre\n4:00\u2014Music From Halifax\n4:27\u2014Tempo\n6:15\u2014Rawhide\n6:30\u2014Evening Concert\n7:00\u2014News and Reports\n7:20\u2014Speaking Personally\n7:30\u2014Radio International\n10:00-News\n10:15\u2014Living Memory\n10:30\u2014Little Symphonies\n11:00\u2014Tuned to Dancing\nll:57-News\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\nPACIFIC DAYLIGHT TIME\nKREM-TV - Channel 2\n6:30 Huckleberry Hound\n7:00 Sea Hunt\n7:30 Ozzie and Harriet *\n8:00 The Donna Reed Show\n8:30 The Real McCoys *\n\u25a09:00 My Three Sons *\n9:30 The Law and Mr. Jones *\n10:00 The Untouchables \u00bb\n11:00 Nightbeat\n11:15 Movie\nKXLY-TV - Channel 4\n7:00 Tallahassee 7000\n7:30 Accent *\n8:00 Frontier Circus *\n9:00 Noah and The Flood *\n10:00 CBS Reports *\n11:00 11 o'Clock News\n11:30 Tonight Show *\nKHQ-TV \u2014 Channel 6\n7:00 Best of Groucho\n7:30 Outlaws *\n8:30 Dr. Kildare \u2022\n9:30 Hazel \u2022\n10:00 Sing Along With Mitch IO*\n11:00 News and Weather\n11:30 Late Movie:\n\"Fighting Seabees\"\nCBC-TV \u2014 Nelson, Channel 9; Trail, Channel 11\nCouMsiif. of\nROBERTSON - HILLIARD - CATTELL REALTY CO. LTD.\n456 Ward St.\nNelson\nPhone 352-7252 For Information\n\"There's a reason you should place your insurance with\nus. Do you know what it is?\"\n2:00 Chez Helene\n2:15 Nursery School Time\n2:30 Startime Special\n3:00 Open House\n3:30 The Verdict Is Yours\n3:55 Cross Section\n4:00 News\n4:30 Let's Look\n4:45 Rope Around the Sun\n5:00 Razzle Dazzle\n5:30 Dick Tracy\n6:00 Playbill\n8:00 Political Telecast\n8:30 My Three Sons\n9:00 Ghost Squad\n9:30 Perry Mason\n10:00 Wrestling\n11:00 News\n11:14 Viewpoint\nCJLH-TV - Channel 7, Lethbridge\nMOUNTAIN STANDARD TIME\n12:00 Today on Seven\n1:00 Stage Seven:\n\"Spin a Dark Web\"\n2:20 Midday Edition:\n(News and Weather)\n2:30 Open House\n3:00 Quintet\n3:30 The Verdict Is Yours\n3:55 Cross Section\n4:00 Georgia\n4:30 The Friendly Giant\n4:45 Sing Ring Around\n5:00 Razzle Dazzle\n5:30 Kids Bids\n6:00 Sports, Weather, News\nFRIDAY\n6:30 Purity Pop-Up\nPicture. Contest\n6:35 A Look at Agriculture\n7:00 Tlie Real McCoys\n7:30 Pete and Gladys\n8:00 Country Hoedown\n8:30 Car 54, Where Are You ?\n9:00 Tommy Ambrose\n9:30 Perry Mason\n10:30 Peter Gunn\n11:00 CBC News\n11:15 Viewpoint\n11:20 Mystery Theatre:\n\"Dick Barton at Bay\"\nmarket took its fifth consecutive setback Wednesday in light\ntrading, with all index sections\ndropping below Tuesday's closing levels..\nAmong industrials, International Paper dropped 1% to a\n1962 low of 29, and Moore Corporation fell 1% to 441\/s. Losses\nof % went to BA Oil, Bank of\nNova Scotia and Imperial Oil,\nwhile Canadian Celapese, Abitibi, Alberta Gas and Dominion\nStores all declined in a Vi to\n% range.\nOther losers included Inter-\nprovincial Pipe Line down Vi,\nCanadian Imperial Bank of\nCommerce, off Vi.\nAluminium   gained   %   and\nBank of Montreal Va.\nINDICES DOWN\nOn index, industrials fell 3.79\nto 546.92, golds 1.8 at 99.88,\nbase metals .78 at 186.95 and\nwestern oils 2.00 at 97.95. The\nclosing volume was 2,048,000\nshares compared with Tuesday's\n2,337,000.\nInternational Nickel was best\namong base metals, rising %.\nDenison and Hudson Bay Mining both declined % and Falconbridge Vi.\nIn western oils, Calgary and\nEdmonton dropped %, Hudson's\nBay Va and Great Plains Development Vi, while Pacific Petroleum rose %. Golds were weak-'\nened by losses of l',4 and Hi to\nPlacer and Dome respectively.\nMONTREAL (CP) - Stocks\ncontinued their week - long decline on the Montreal and Canadian exchanges Wednesday, although the sharp losses taken\nWednesday morning were recovered in many cases during\na strong afternoon rally.\nBanque Provinciale fell a\npoint to 44%, Banque Cana-\ndienne Nationale lost 1% to 64%\nafter losing three points Wednesday and Bank of Nova Scotia\nfell .%  to  65%.\nBase metals, however were\nfirm. International Nickel added\nVa to 65% after falling three\npoints Tuesday and Aluminium\nrose Va to 21 in heavy trading.\nMoore plunged 1% to 44\namong papers. Rolland A added\nVs to 10 and Price gained 1%\nto 46.\nTrans - Mountain Pipe Lines\nlost % to 13%. Pacific Pete\nrose Vi to 12% and Hudson's\nBay Company was untraded.\nOn index, banks were off 0.50\nat 60.11, utilities off 0.6 at 131.8,\nindustrials off 2.0 at 303.9, combined off 1.6 at 246.5, papers up\n0.7 at 481.4 and golds up 0.04\nat 78.26.\nNET EARNINGS\nBy  THE  CANADIAN PRESS\nAugustus    Exploration    Ltd.,\nyear ended Dec. 31: 1961, $163,-\n933; 1960, net loss $82,286.\nPaton Manufacturing Co. Ltd.,\nyear ended April 30:1962, $52,-\n348, $1.50 a share; $45,284, 91\ncents.\nStock Quotations\nThe Dally News does not hold itself responsible tn the event\nol an error In the following lists.\nTORONTO STOCKS\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nAdvocate 5.55\nAnacon Lead . .40\nAumacho               ,: . .09%\nAunor         ' 3.75\nBamat 1,35\nBibis Yukon .06\nBrunswick 3.50\nBulolo 6.90\nBuffalo Ank 1.70\nBuff Red Lake .05%\nC G Arrow .43\nCampbell C 4.50\nCampbell R. L. 18.62%\nCassiar 11.50\nCentral Patricia 1.81\nCoch Will 5.40\nCons Denison 10.25\nCons. Discovery 1.14\nCons Halliwell .40\nCons Mining 81 Smelting   20.37%\nConwest 6.25\nD'Aragon .17\nEast Amphi .05%\nEast Malartic 2.40\nEast Sullivan 1.62\nElder Gold 1.23\nFalconbridge 48.50\nFaraday 1.50\nFrobisher .15\nGeco 24.62%\nGiant Yel. 13.87%\nGoldale .29%\nGunnar Gold 8.75\nHarminerals .11\nHasaga .17\nHeadway .24\nHollinger 20.50\nHudson Bay 53.37%\nInt. Nickel 65.75\nIron Bay 1.41\nJonsmith .18%\nR J Jowsey .30\nKenville .04%\nKerr Addison 9.60\nLabrador 23.50\nLake Lingman .10\nLeitch 1.62\nLexindin .03\nLittle Long Lac 1.80\nIaorado 1.54\nLouvic't .06%\nMacDonald .21\nMadsen R. L. 2.46\nMalartic G. F. .82\nManeast .04\nMaritime Mining .60\nMcLeod 1.15\nMcKenzie R L .19\nMining Corp. 13.50\nMulti Mins .30\nMurray .96\nNew Hosco .80\nNoranda New 30.00\nNormetals 2.85\nNorpax .15\nNorth Can 2.20\nNorth Rankin .26\nOpemiska 5.50\nPickie Crow .80\nPlacer Devel 25.00\nPreston E. D. 5.75\nQuebec Lab .05%\nQuebec Metallurgical .90\nQuemont 9.50\nRayrock .83\nRio Algom 8.95\nSan Antonio 1.75\nSherritt Gordon 3.65\nSiscoe 1.64\nSteep Rock 5.75\nSullivan Con 1.52\nTeck Hughes 1.65\nThomp-Lund .65\nUnited Keno 7.40\nUpper Canada \"1.78\nViolamac .70\nWiltsey Goglin .18\nWright Hargreaves 1.06\nDAILY  CROSSWORD\nACROSS\nI.Indian com\n6. Hollow\nforms\n11. Possessed\n12. All around\n13. Talk wildly\n14. King's\nson\n15. Center of\nhurricane\n16. American\nIndian\n17. Precious\nstone\n18. Like a whip\nsound\n21. ChEinges\n23. Ins and\n27. Whirls\n28. Actress-\nsinger \t\nLondon\n29. Famous\nbuccaneer\n, 30. Dairy\nproduct\n31. Wrap in\ncloth\n33. Japanese\nmeasure\n36.'  and\nHers\n37. Rubbish\n40. Stinging\nInsect\n42. Tall\n43. Head of\nmonastery\n44. Feel one's\nway\n45. Those entertaining\n46. Strum\nDOWN\n1. Additional\n2. Absent\nI. Put, aa\nmoney, into\nstocks\ni. Zuider t\t\nj. Boy's\nnickname\n1. Windy\nmonth\n'. Geisha\ngirl's sash\nI. Not brief\n(.Leader: It.\n). Branch\n[.In bridge,\nto skip a\nbid\ni. Knights\nI, Joins, as\nmetals\n>. Adolescence\n.. Noah's\n40-day home\n!. Hawaiian\ngarland\n:. Further\ni. \"The\nthat\nbinds\"\ni. Indian\nweight\ni. Projects\n>. To go-ad\n!. Hones\ni. Title of\nIran's ruler\n. Wandering\nworkman\ni. Spheres\n!. Former\nRussian\n,r\n1\nM\npBr\n0\nO\ns\nrm\nE\nS\nV\nF\nN\n.I\nU\nS\nM\n5\nt\\\nT\n2\n1\n-}\n_\nh.\nT\nt\\\nT\n1\n-\n3\n0\nI\nN\n)\nP\nb.\n1\nsj\n0.\nN\nf\\\n1\nIV\nA\n\u2022\/\nP\n1\nO\ns\nb.\n1\n1\n1\nb\np\n|\n5\n5\n1\nN\n0\n1-\nT\nW\nr.\n1\nT\n3\nY\n|\nR\n0\n1\n5\n1.\nS\nT\n1\nc\nY\n1\nG\nE\nt>,\nR\nr\nM\nh\nP\n1\nW\n0\n<5\na\n1\nE\n1\n1.\nt\\\nS\n5\nI\nE\nr\nA.\nT\nL\nE\nYMl,\n5|K\n5\nE\nU\nR\nM\nYesterday's Anajwer\n39. Objective\ncase of\n\"they\"\n41. Negative\n42. Her Royal\nHighness\n(abbr.)\nsecret police 44. Great\n(abbr.) (abbr.)\n1\n1\n3\n4\n5\nVa\nb\n7\n8\n9\nIO\nII\nV\na\n13\nVa\n14\n15\"\nVa\nito\nVa\n17\n^\n%\n18\n19\n20\nVa\nV\nV.\n71\n22\nV\n23\n24\n25\"\nIt,\nn\n%\n2a\n29\n%\n30\n%\nVa\nVa\n31\n32\nV\nVa.\n33\n34\n35\nVa\n3fo\nV\n37\n38\n39\n40\n41\nVa\n41\n43\nVa\nYYt\n44\n45\nVy\n4fa\nt.14-\n< Programs subject to change by stations, without notice.)\nDAILY CRYPXOQUOTE - Here's how to work It:\nAXTDLBAAXE\nis    LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Is used\nfor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. single letters, apos-\ntrophies, the length and formation of the words are all hints\nEach day the code letters are different.\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nOTTVf    SUO    UK    BIDOLV    IKKLN-\nOTUS,       IKKLNOTUS       SLMLZ       BID\nBIDOLV.\u2014FUSEKLFFUB\nYesterday's Cryptoquote: NEVER GIVE ADVICE IN A\nCROWD.\u2014ANON\n(0 IS-, King Features Syndicate, Inc.)\nYellowknife Bear\nYoung (H.G.) Gold\nOILS\nBanff Oils\nBailey Selburn\nCalgary and Edmonton\nCanadian Delhi\nCanadian Devonian\nCdn Highcrest\nHome A\nMidcon\nOkalta\nPacific Pete\nPonder\nPlace.\nProv Gas\nSpooner       1\nSlanwell Oil\nTriad\nUnited Oils\nYank Canuck\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi\nAlgoma Steel\nAluminum\nAnalog\nAtlas St.\nB.A. Oil\nBathurst Power\nBeatty Bros.\nBell Telephone\nBrazilian\nB.C. Forest\nB.C. Power A\nBurns A\nCanadian Breweries\nCanadian Celanese\nCan. Cement\nCan Chem Co\nCanadian Dredge\nCan. Malting\nCan Oil\nCanadian Pacific Rly\nCan, Packers A\nColumbia Cellulose\nCons Gas\nDist. Seagram\nDom. Stores\nDom. Tar & Chemical\nDom. Textiles\nEddy Paper\nFamous Players\nFord Can\nFord U.S.\nGatineau\nGatineau 5% pfd\nGen. Steel Wares\nGoodyear\nGoodyear pfd\nImperial Oil\nImp. Tobacco\nInd. Ace.\nLoblaw A\nLoblaw B\nMassey Ferguson\nMetro Com\nMetro Pfd\nMolson Brewery\nMont. Loco\nMoore Corp.\nPage Hershey\nPower Corp.\nRuss. Industries\nShawinigan\nSimpsons A\nSoutham\nSteel of Canada\nTexaco\nUnion Gas of Can\nUnited Steel\nWeston George\nWoodwards A.\n1.00\n.19\n1.25\n6.50\n22.00\n3.05\n3.70\n.16\n10.3714\n.21\n.13\n12.75\n.38\n.58\n1.55\n.1415\n.26\n1.36\n1.38\n.10\niSVi\n42\n21\n1.60\n29%\n29%\n51\n914\n51%\n33,4\n11 Vi\n16%\no%\n50\n291\/4\n25%\n6%\n11%\n68\n28\n24%\n54'\/g\n3.85\n17%\n413\/4\n11%\n17%\n16%\n24\n1614\n142\n46%\n31\n101\nWl\n129\n47%\n42-\"'i\n13Ji\n23%\n8\n8%\n1014\n7%\n22V4\n25%\n14\n44%\n19%\n50\n1614\n22%\n27%\n26'1\n17%\n46\n17%\n534\n15%\n14%\nVancouver\nStocks\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nBeaver Lodge\nBeth Cop\nBralorne\nCanam\nCanusa\nCariboo Gold\nCraig\nGiant Mascot\nGranduc\nHighland Bell\nKamloops\nMt. Washington\nNational Ex\nPend Oreille\nQuatsino\nSheep Creek\nSherritt Gordon\nSilbak Premier\nSilver Ridge\nSilver Standard\nSkeena\nSunshine Lardeau\nTaylor\nTorwest\nVantor\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlberta Distillers\nAlberta Distillers Vt\nB C Forests\nB C Power\nB C Telephone\nCanadian Collieries\nCrown Zeller (Can)\nInt Brew B\nInland Nat Gas\nMacM 81 Powell River\nTrans Mtn\nOILS\nCalgary & Edmonton\nCharter\nHome\nPacific Pete\nPeace River Gas\nRoyal Can\nUnited\nUNLISTED\nAlta Gas Trunk\nTrans Canada Com\nTrans Mountain Unit\nWest Coast Vt\nFUNDS\nAll Can. Com.\nAll Can. Div.\nAmerican Growth\nCan. Inv. Fund\nCommonwealth Int.\nDiversified \"B\"\nFirst Oil and Gas\nGrouped Income\nInvestors Growth\nInvestors Mutual\nLeverage\nMutual Accum.\nMutual Bond\nMutual Inc.\nTrans Canada \"C\"\nUnited Accj Funds\nV\n.84%\n2.10\n7.20\n.12%\n.06\n1.35\n17.50\n.77\n2.60\n2.10\n.09\n1.20\n.86\n2.00\n.10%\n1.40\n3.45\n.42%\n.03%\n.23\n.12\n.07\n.15\n.26\n.13\n2.15\n1.80\n11.25\n16.75\n50.00\n6.12%\n22.00\n5.00\n4.50\n17.87%\n13.37%\n21.62%\n1.00\n10.00\n12.50\n.11\n.05\n1.32\n25.12%\n21.00\n13.25\n13.75\n80 8.55\n59 6.13\n.14 7.88\n,59 10.52\n20 8.99\n85 4.20\n96 4.33\n26 3.56\n24 6.78\n70 12.72\n79 7.44\n3.54\n7.19\n5.29\n60    6.10\n,47    5.98\n  \u2014\n^Ifppp^pp\"-^\u2014I\n^^m^^^^mmmm\n\t\n)H55\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURS., JUNE 14,1962 \u2014 11\n352-3552\nBIRTHS\nFARENHOLTZ - To Mr. and\nMrs. Alfred Farenholtz of Nakusp. at Trail-Tadanac Hospital,\nJune 11, a son, Maury Alfred.\nLINDSAY - To Mr. and Mrs.\nWallace Lindsay, 719 Stanley\nStreet, at Kootenay Lake General\nHospital, June 13, a son.\nHELP WANTED\nINTERVIEWS WILL BE HELD\nat the Inland Natural Gas office\nat 1198 Pine Ave., Trail, from\n7 to 9 p.m., Wed., June 20th,\n1962 for applicants to the position of sales representative in\nthe Trail-Nelson area. Prior\nsales experience In heating profession definitely an asset.\nUsual company benefits will\napply.\nRELIEF CARRIER BOYS FOR\nSummer months in Fairview\nsection. Apply Nelson Daily\nNews Circulation Department.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nMAN HANDY WITH TOOLS\nwould take part time job of any\nkind. Ph. 352-3097.\nTRAILERS\nNOW FOR THE FIRST TIME IN\nthe West Kootenays, a complete\nparts service. Ra Lyn Mobile\nHomes, Trail, B.C.\nTEACHERS - SUMMER Assignments available. Interesting and profitable work. Flexible hours. Write Box 6660 Daily\nNews.\nWANTED\nMISCELLANEOUS\nUSED FURNITURE AND ANTI-\nques.    Home   Furniture    Exchange. Ph. 352-6531, 413 Hall north\nStreet.\nWANTED USED GUN TYPE OIL\nfurnace. From 80,000 \u2014 100,000\nB.T.U. Ph. 352-3774 after 5.\nWANTED: USED ELECTRIC\nmotors, all sizes. Coleman Electric, Phone 352-3175.\nBUSINESS   &   PROFESSIONAL\nDIRECTORY\nA handy alphabetical guide to goods and services\navailable In Nelson.\nAppliances\nWashing Machines\nRepaired and Serviced\nD. McCuaig\nPhone 352-2533 or 352-2355\nAsphalt Paving\nNelson Asphalt Paving Ltd.\nPhone 352-7621 - Nelson, B.C.\nAutomobile Dealers\nBEACON MOTORS LTD.\nPontiac \u2014 Buick\nVauxhall - GMC\n701 B.nker St.        Phone 352-6641\n24 Hour Wrecker Service\nFront End Aligning -\nAutomatic Service\nBody and Paint Shop\nBILLS' MOTOR-IN LTD.\n(Studebaker-Lark)\n213 Baker St. Phone 352-3231\nRENAULT SALES & SERVICE\nat Frank's Auto\nPhone 352-6411 295 Baker St.\nNORTH SHORE SERVICE\n(Standard-Triumph)\nOpen 7 a.m.-ll p.m.\nAcross Lake PhoneJ52-2929\nPARKVIEW MOTORS LTD.\n(Rambler - Volkswagen!\n323 Nelson Ave.     Phone 352-5355\nSTAR AUT()~SERVICE LTD.\nMorris, M-G Cars, Wolsely\nYmir Road Phone 352-7421\nForester\nROBERT B. WALKLEY\nB.C. Registered Forester\n510 Fifth St - Nelson - Ph. 352-7065\nGarages\nUpper Fairview Motors Ltd.\nCor. 7th at Davies    Ph. 352-2525\nInsurance\nWATER ACT\n(Section 8)\nWe, The Board of School\nTrustees, School District No. 7,\n(Nelson) of 554 Stanley Street,\nNelson, B.C. hereby apply to the\nComptroller of Water Rights for\na licence to divert and use water\nout of Sandy Creek which flows\nwesterly and discharges\ninto Kootenay River and give\nnotice of our application to all\npersons affected.\nThe point of diversion will be\nlocated at C3 W.R. Map 5226 D.\nThe quantity of water to be\ndiverted is 5000 gallons a day.\nThe purpose for which the\nwater will be used is domestic.\nThe land on which the water\nwill be used is Lot 4 of Lot 8370,\nKootenay District Plan 875.\nA copy of this application was\nposted at the proposed point of\ndiversion and on the land where\nthe water is to be used on the 18th\nday of May, 1962 and two copies\nwere filed in the office of the\nWater Recorder at Nelson, B.C.\nObjections  to  this  application\nmay be filed with the said Water\nRecorder or with the Comptroller\nof   Water   Rights,   Parliament\nBuildings, Victoria, B.C., within\nthirty days of the date of first\npublication of the application.\nBoard of School Trustees,\nSchool District No. 7, Nelson\nApplicant.\nBy J. L. Livingstone,\nSec. Treas.,\nAgent.\nThe date of first publication Is:\nJune 14th, 1962.\nALLSTATE INSURANCE\nAGENT\nSimpsons-Sears, Trail Ph. 364-1144\nNelson: Saturdays. Ph. 352-5531\nJewellers\nCUTLER'S JEWELLERY\nFor fine watches and repairs\nPhone 352-9012      511 Baker St.\nLandscaping\nBeauty Shops\nTHELMA'S BEAUTY SHOPPE\n577 Baker St. Phone 352-3636\nBuilding Supplies\nBEE BUILDING SUPPLY LTD.\n301 Baker St. Phone 352-3135\nBURNS LUMBER CO. LTD.\n602 Baker St. Phone 352-6661\nCOLUMBIA TRADING~CO.\n901 Front St. Phone 352-5571\nLarry's Topsoll, Sand & Gravel\n9th and Davies. Ph. 352-2355 days\nor 352-7576 enenings\nNovelty Shops\nSOUVENIRS! NOVELTIES!\nThe Cutest - HOBBY SHOP\nPaint Contractors\nF. H. DOYLE\nPaint Contractor\nPhone 352-7311 - Nelson\nPlastics\nPLASTIC LAMINATING\nMembership Cards, Photos,\nSmall signs, etc., sealed in plastic\nSHIRLEY'S PLASTICS\nPhone 225 Balfour\nCleaning Service\nChesterfields, carpets cleaned\nDUTCH CVEANING SERVICE\nPh.   352-6323.\nm\nm\nContractors\nir a Quality Custom House\nPhone 352-5915\nPLE LEAF CONSTRUCTION\nElectrical\nContractors\nD. E. WALSH\n9 Electrical Contracting\nB     Balfour - Phone 301\nI\nEngineers\nI  and Surveyors\nI      BOYD C. AFFLECK\nB.C.L.S., P. Eng.\n818 Gore Street. Nelson\nPhone 352-3341\nT\nRAY G. JOHNSON\nftp. Land Surveyor and Engineer\n3\u00bb Baker St. Nelson. Ph. 352-7117\nALEX CHEVELDAVE\nJjf.C. Land Surveyor \u2014 33 Pine St.\nPh. 365-5342 - Castlegar, B.C.\nBAERG & CAMPBELL\n,373 Baker- Nelson -Ph. 352-7434\nBox 653 - Creston +- EL 6-4224\n909 Baker\u2014Cranbroo^\u2014JU 6-3622\nPlumbing & Heating\nLAND REGISTRY ACT\n(Section 162)\nIN THE MATTER OF Lots 1 and\n5 of Lot 8513, Kootenay District, Plan 1331 save and except from said Lot 1 the pails\noutlined in red and blue on\nPlan D.D. 33446-1.\nProof having been filed in my\noffice of the loss of Certificate\nof Title No. 4814-1 to the above-\nmentioned lands in the name of\nADDIE MOFFATT and bearing\ndate the 12th September, 1917 1\nHEREBY GIVE NOTICE of my\nintention at the expiration of one\ncalendar month from the first\npublication hereof to issue Provisional Certificate of Title in\nlieu of such lost Certificate. Any\nperson having any information\nwith reference to such lost\nCertificate is requested to communicate with the undersigned.\nDATED AT NELSON, B.C.,\nthis ath Day of June 1962.\nL. A. McPHAlL,\nDeputy Registrar.\nNelson   Land   Registration\nDistrict.\nDate of first publication June\n14, 1962.\nJOB TRAINING\nOPPORTUNITIES\nBRITISH COLUMBIA\nVOCATIONAL SCHOOL\n- BURNABY.\n(Sponsored   by   the   Federal\nProvincial Governments)\nAll classes commence September,\n1962.\n1. AERONAUTICS\nA course of a total of 16 months\nduration consisting of two eight\nmonth periods in school with a\nfour month period of \"on the\njob\" training intervening.\nApplicants must be between the\nages of 17 and 20 years of age,\nbe physically fit and have a minimum of Grade XII standing with\nPhysics 91 and Mathematics 91.\nApplicants with less background\nwill not be considered.\nThe course is made up of work\nin Aero Engines and Airplane\nMechanics leading towards employment with the Aircraft Industry and eventual attainment of\na Department of Transport \"M\"\nLicence.\n2. ELECTRONICS\nA course of 11 months duration\non a broad basis of electronics\ncovering the theory and principles\nof operation, maintenance and\ntesting of electronics equipment\nused in communication, aircraft,\nradar, television and industrial\ncontrol fields.\nApplicants must be 20 years of\nage, be physically fit and have\na minimum of Grade XII standing\nwith Physics 91 and Mathematics\n91.\n3. GENERAL WELDING\nA course of 11 months duration\nfor suitable applicants 17 years\nof age or over with a Grade X\nor equivalent education.\nApplication forms and further\ninformation may be obtained\nfrom the following agencies.\nDirector of Technical & Vocational Education, Department of\nEducation - Victoria, B.C.\nPrincipal, B.C. V o c at i o n a 1\nSchool - Burnaby, 3650 Willing-\ndon Avenue \u2014 Burnaby, B.C.\nPremier Sand\nand Gravel Co.\nTED SCHMIDT\nPLUMBING AND HEATING\nReasonable Rates.     Ph. 352-5828\nPrinting\nNELSON   DAILY   NEWS\nPrinters - Lithographers\nColor Printing\nPhone 352-3552\nRadio & TV Service\nVIDEO ELECTRONICS\n405 Hall St. - Phone 352-3355\nSeptic Tank Service\nHave the Job Done Right.\nNELSON\nSEPTIC TANK SERVICE\nFree Inspection Ph. 352-3663\nFree Inspection - Reasonable\nRates. Ph. 352-6459.\nSporting Goods\nFred Whlteley's Sport Shop\n8 Baker Street    Phone 352-7741\nDEPARTMENT OF\nLANDS AND FORESTS\nTIMBER SALE X86568\nSealed tenders will be received\nby the District Forester at Nelson, B.C., not later than 11:00\na.m. (Local Time) in the forenoon on the 6th day of July, 1962,\nfor the purchase of License\nX86568, to cut 246.000 cubic feet\nof: Fir, Larch, Balsam, Cedar,\nWhite Pine and Other Species.\nOn an area situated:\u2014Nine\nMile Creek \u2014 Fruitvale, Koote-\nnav District.\nFive (5) years will be allowed\nfor removal of timber. As this\narea is within the Salmo S.Y.U.,\nwhich is fully committed, this\nsale will be awarded under the\nprovisions of Section 17 'la* of\nthe \"Forest Act\" which gives the\nlimber sale applicant certain\nprivileges.\nFurther particulars can be obtained from your local Forest\nRanger, from the District Forester, Nelson, B.C., or from the\nDeputy Minister of Forests, Victoria, B.C.\nNEWS FOR\nPARENTS AND\nYOUNG MEN\nINTERESTED IN\nJOB TRAINING\nOPPORTUNITIES\n(Sponsored by Federal-Provincial Governments)\nFree training scheduled to commence in September 1962 at the\nB.C. Vocational School-Burnaby,\nis offered to young men in Pre-\nApprenticeship trade classes\nwhich are intended to lead to\nApprenticeships in the following\ntrade:\nBoatbuilding (Wood), Bricklaying, Carpentry, Electronics, Iron-\nworkers, Electrical, Lathing,\nPlastering. Plumbing and Steam-\nfitting, Sheet Metalwork, Sign\nPainting.\nPreference is given to candidates between the ages of 16 and\n20 years and who have a minimum of Grade X education.\nAll tuition fees are paid and a\nmonthly subsistence allowance\ngranted plus one return transportation to Vancouver from place\nof residence.\nApply immediately to:\nTbe Director of Apprenticeship,\nDepartment of Labour,\n411 Dunsmuir Street,\nVancouver, B.C.\nTV and Appliances\nLiberty Appliance Sales\n324 Hall St. - Phone 352-2910\nTenders will be accepted up to\n3:00 P.M. Tuesday. July 3rd, 1962,\nfor the Painting and Redecorating\nof various School rooms in School\nDistrict No. 7.-\nForm of tender may be obtained at the Secretary's office at any\ntime.\nTenders to be clearly marked\n\"Tender for Painting and Rede\ncorating Schools.\"\nLowest or'any tender not necessarily accepted. Forward to the\nSecretary's office, 554 Stanley\nStreet, Nelson, B.C.\nClassified Ads Get Results !\nRENTALS\nFOR RENT: 2 B.R. MODERN\nbungalow, oil furnace. Adults\nonly. $95 Mo. Also centrally located deluxe 1 B.R. apartment,\nadults only. $85 Mo. 1 B.R.\napartment on level $75 Mo.\nOther 1 B.R. apartments ranging from $35 to $65 Mo. T. D.\nROSLING & SON LTD., Phone\n352-3581.\nGROUND FLOOR SUITE\n3 rooms and bath. Use of automatic laundry. Furnished or\nunfurnished. Lots of heat and\nhot water. 3 blocks Baker St.\nPh. Mr. Brown 352-3581 or\nevens. 352-2356.\nDELUXE MODERN APT. 1 BR.,\n. liv. rm., bath, and kitchen.\nElectric stove and fridge. Excellent location. Heated. $70 per\nmo. Unfurnished. Adults only.\nFleming Apartments. Phone\n352-3815 or 352-7514.\nPHONE   352-3828\nCONCRETE  SAND\nCONCRETE GRAVEL\n1-inch,   2-inch,   4-inch\nCrushed Rock\nPEA   GRAVEL\nFOR   ROOFING\nAbove Materials\nGuaranteed Clean\n3\/i\" and Hi\" Crushed\nRoad Gravel\nPIT  RUN   FILL\nFILL SAND\nNEED\nFLOOR COVERINGS?\nSee Simpsons-Sears. Low, low\ncatalogue prices. Fast shipping\nservice from Vancouver. Complete selections of samples at\nour store.\nSIDE GRAIN FED YOUNG\nbeef, 43c per lb.; side grain fed\nyoung pork, 35c per lb.; side of\nheavy beef, 39c per lb. Cut,\nwrapped and frozen. Delivered\nby Nelson Transfer, phone\n6-2556, Whitford's Wholesale\nMeats, Creston.\nSTEAM BOILER FOR SALE -\nOne 80 H.P. Blain Package\nBoiler fired with Bunker B oil,\npractically new. Also 8000 gal.\nsteel tank. Contact Sun-Rype\nProducts Ltd., 1165 Ethel\nStreet, Kelowna, B.C.\nSUNBEAM OIL BURNER 200,000\nBTU's with squirrel cage blower complete with all controls.\n58\" x 85\" outside dimensions.\nExcellent condition. $500.00.\nKootenay Soft Drinks, Trail,\nB.C.\nGUARANTEED REPAIRS TO\nall   Singer   sewing   machines.\n. Competent adjustments to all\nother makes. Written estimate\nin advance. Singer Sewing\nCentre. Phone U.\nGIBSON DELUXE 17 CU. FT,\nfreezer, special $279. 20 cu. ft.\nfreezer $299. Beatty DeLuxe\nWringer Washer $119 plus your\ntrade-in. Liberty Appliances,\nphone 352-2910.\nLIKE TO HUNT OR FISH? SEE\nthe Honda 62 and Ridgerunner\nsportsmen's headquarters \u2014\nNorm's Sport Shop, 300 Baker\nStreet. Phone 352-2015.\nSMALL 1 BDRM. COTTAGE.\nNorth Shore, 214 mile from\nbridge. Winterized. Suitable for\ncouple only. Rent $40 month,\navailable July 1st. Ph. 352-7717\ndays, 352-5073 evenings.\nMODERN APT. ON NORTH\nShore. V4 mile from bridge.\nRange and refrigerator included. Ideal for couple. Phone\n352-5205.\nLARGE SELF - CONTAINED\napt. fully turn., incl. wash\nmach., fridge and stove. Heat\nand hot water, central. $75 mo.\nPhone 352-2300.\nRICHARDS ST. ATTRACTIVE\nbungalow, 3 small BR's., insulated, basement, garage. $75\nmo. Apply Box 4089, Daily\nNews.\nWINTER RATES\nHOUSEKEEPING AND SLEEP-\ning   room,   weekly,   monthly\nrates.   Dishes, linen supplied,\nparking. Allen Hotel, 171 Baker.\nAUTOMOTIVE,   BICYCLES\nMOTORCYCLES\nFOUR ROOMS AND BATH, 63\nHigh Street, close in. No hills.\nAvailable June 15, unfurnished.\n$55 a month. Apply Ferguson\n& Ferguson, 1-373 Baker St.\n3 ROOMED SELF-CONTAINED\napartment, newly decorated.\nSteam heated. Electric stove\nand fridge included. Phone\n352-3732.\nTHREE BEDROOM HOME FUL-\nly furnished, downtown location. For the months of June\nto Sept. inclusive. Ph. 352-3977.\n3 RM. SELF-CONTAINED MOD-\nem apartment. Unfurnished.\nCentral. Heat and hot water.\nAdults. Phone 352-5403.\nDUPLEX 4 RM. APT. BATH,\nheated, private entrance, gas\nrange. Adults. Close in. Phone\n352-7491.\n3 RM. FURN. APT. CLOSE-IN.\nNo hills. Electric stove, fridge.\n$45. Ph. 352-2354.\n3 RM. APT. AND BATHROOM.\nAvailable July 1st. Adults only.\n1421 Front St. Ph, 352-5182.\nUNFUR. 1 & 2 BDRM. SUITES.\nHeated. 411 Silica St. Call after\n4:30.\nMOTORS\nLTD.\nYOUR\nGENERaAL   MOTORS   DEALER\n323 Vernon St.\nPhone 352-3121\n24-Hr.  BCAA Recommended\nWrecker Service\nNEW  CHEVROLETS\nNEW %-TONS\nNEW CORVAIR MONZA COUPE\nNEW CORVAIR 700 COUPE\nOK USED CARS\nCHEVROLET   MODELS\n1961 Chevrolet Sedans\n1959 Chevrolet Coach\n1958 Chevrolet Sedans\n1957 Chev. Sedans\n1956 Chev. Sedan\n1956 Chev. Station Wagon\n1955 Chev. .Sedan\n1955 Chev. Station Wagons\n1953 Chev. Sedans\nFORD MODELS\n1960 Frontenac Station Wagon\n1956 Ford Sedans\n1955 Ford Sedan\n1954 Ford Sedans\n1953 Ford Sedan-Delivery\nCHRYSLER MODELS\nSPECIALS\n1961 Valiant Sedan\n1961 Dodge Sedan\n1959 Plymouth Sedan\n1958 Plymouth Station Wagon\n1959 Chrysler Sedan\n1958 Plymouth Sedan\n1956 Dodge Sedans\n1956 Plymouth Sedan\n1955 Plymouth Sedan\n1955 Dodge Hardtop\n1952 Plymouth Station Wagon\n1952 Dodge Sedan\nOTHER   MODELS\n1960 Chev. %-Tons\n1959 Rambler Sedan\n1958 Mercedes Diesel\n1958 Vauxhall Sedan\n1958 Renault Sedan\n1957 Austin Sedan\n1956 Austin Sedan\n1956 Vauxhall Sedan\n1956-Rambler Station Wagon\n30   OLDER   CARS  THAT  ARE\nTHE PERFECT SECOND CAR\nRENT OR FOR SALE COUNTRY\ntype home including 3 cabins,\nrented. Phone 352-6340.\nLARGE CLEAN BEDROOM FOR\ngentleman. Near Legion. $30\nmonth. Ph. 352-5030.\nFOR SALE COFFEE COUNTER\nand show case, island counters,\npop cooler, meat cases, cube\nmachine, etc. Box 86, Fruitvale,\nphone 367-6381.\n2 RM. SUITE GROUND FLOOR.\nApply 140 Baker Street. Ph.\n352-3384.\nNEW MODERN BEDROOM\nsuite, living room, electric\nstove, fridge, and 1956 VW for\nsale. Box 6806, Nelson News.\nTWO-BEDROOM APT. HEAT,\nfridge, stove. Adults. Ph. 352-\n2592.\nDINING ROOM TABLE, 4\nchairs and buffet. $45.00. Box\nspring and mattress. Like new.\n$55.00. Phone Balfour 221.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAMD FARM SUPPLIES\nFOR SALE: 15 GRADE HOL-\nstein cows with or without 250\ngal. 7.P. bulk tank. Phone Andrews 7-7339 or write Eugene\nLong, Copeland, Idaho, U.S.A.\nGUERNSEY MILKING COW. 3\nyrs. old, just freshened. Joe\nZambon, New Denver, B.C.\nFRESH COW FOR SALE. JACK\nNichvolodoff, Pass Creek. Box\n177, Castlegar, B.C.\nGOOD MILK COW FOR SALE.\nPopoff, Blewett, Ph. 352-5770.\nBOATS AND ENGINES\nTHERMOCRAFT FIBREGLASS\nbok aluminum boats; sail\nboats; Wacanda boats; Spring-\nboats; Johnson motors; Gator\nboat trailers; boating accessories; trailer supplies; trade-ins.\nBarrett Trailer Sales. Fruitvale, B.C.\n11   FT.   CAR   TOP'PLYWOOD\nboat. New. Phone 352-7493.\nNEW MEN'S AND WOMEN'S\nmoulded sole footwear, handy\nfold away for vacationers. R.\nAndrew and Co., Nelson.\n24-IN. FOUR BURNER PRO-\npane range complete with tanks\n$90. Ph. G. Fleming, 352-6291.\nSMALL COLEMAN OIL HEAT-\ner, pipes, barrels, etc. 91 High\nSt.\n1961 MODEL HARMONY 2 PICK\nup guitar; Fender \"Deluxe\" -\n12\" amp. Phone 352-3251 after 5.\nBLONDE COMBINATION RA-\ndio \u2014 record player. Phone 352-\n2400.\nMAYTAG AUTOMATIC WASH-\ner. Like new. $145.00. 516 Silica\nSt. after 5:30.\n1961 VIKING FRIDGE - MUST\nsee to appreciate. $225.00. 418\nSilica Street.\nBRAND NEW BLUE AND\nwhite Austin seat covers for Vi\nprice. Phone 352-3337.\n1-HORSE WAGON. CHEAP. AP-\nply John Poznekoff, Winlaw.\nBUSINESS\nOPPORTUNITIES\nFOR SALE: COFFEE BAR AND\nPoolroom. Thriving business in\nexpanding community, Salmo,\nB.C. Price, reasonable. J. H.\nGrant, Phone 357-9710, General\nDelivery, Salmo, B.C.\n1 BDRM. APT. - CENTRAL.\nClose in. Heat and water supplied. Phone 352-2809.\t\n3  BEDROOM   HOUSE,  PHONE\n352-2630 evenings.\nSELF - CONTAINED 4 - ROOM\nsuite, unfurnished. Ph. 352-6871.\n4 RM. APT. GAS HEAT. PHONE\n352-5069 or call 1008 Stanley St.\nNEAT BRIGHT APT. FOR TWO.\nClose in. 352-6024 - 352-5880.\nFOR   RENT   -   2   BEDROOM\nhouse. Phone 352-5401.\nFOR RENT - HOUSEKEEPING\nroom, $20. Phone 352-7462.\n3 RM. APT. WITH BATH, GAS\nrange. Ph. 352-3962.\nAUTOMOTIVE, BICYCLES\nMOTORCYCLES\n(Continued)\n195 9 14-TON CHEV. OVER-\nloads, radio, hilch, long box,\ninterlocking rear end. Kline's\nTrailer Park G. Jackart.\n6 CYLINDER WILLYS JEEP\ntruck, good condition, reasonable price. Can be seen at\nTaghum Service, Ph. 352-3864.\n1960 VOLKSWAGEN, A-l CON-\ndition. Phone 352-2938, after\n6 p.m.\n2-TON AUSTIN TRUCK, HOIST,\ngood cond. Ph. 352-34Q1 after 5.\n'55 CHEV. 4 DOOR SEDAN. 404\nElwyn St. Ph. 352-6352.\n'47 WILLYS JEEP. $550. PHONE\n352-6972 evenings.\n1951 METEOR HARDTOP-NEW\nmotor. A. Stach, Winlaw.\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\nColumbia Trading\nCompany\n901 Front St.       Nelson, B.C.\nPHONE 352-5571\nColumbia Trading Continues\nTo Slash at  Building and\nRenovating Costs!\nDecorative Wall Panels\nMahogany V-groove panels\n(utility grade) 4x8x3\/16.\nEach  3.99\nColonial Board, random groove\nhardboard, 4x8x>A. Pre-finish-\ned, pastel shades 3.19\nPioneer Ply, knotty pine, random V groove. 4x8x14. .. 4.69\n4x8xVi Pinstriped Fir Plywood.\nEach  3.75\n4x8xVi Sylvacord. Each .... 4.75\n4x8xI\/<i Tropicana. Each .... 4.75\nMOTORS\nLIMITED\n323 Vernon St.\nNelson, B. C.\nChev.,   Olds,   Cadillac,\nCorvair, Envoy, Chevy II\n24-Hr.  Recommended BCAA\nWrecker Service\nPHONE 352-3121\nPLYWOOD\n4x8x5\/16 Unsanda^d\n4x8x% Unsanded _\n4x8x% Unsanded _\n4x8x'\/ai Unsanded'_;\n4x8x14 Sanded \t\n4x8x% Sanded\t\n.2.79\n.4.95\n.6.25\n.4.80\n2-BDRM. BUNGALOW. $65 MO.\nAvailable July 6. Ph. 352-5030.\nLIGHT HOUSEKEEPING ROOM\nApply 140 Baiter or Ph. 352-338.4\n2  ROOM FURN.   APT.  APPLY\n614  Victoria  St.   Ph.   352-2696.\nFOR RENT - SUITE. ADULTS.\nPhone 352-6732 or 352-7195.\nSMALL STORE ON BAKER ST.\nfor rent. Ph. 352-7696.\n3   BEDROOM   APT.   PRIVATE,\nclean. 131 Chatham St.\n2   BDRM.   HOUSE.\nPhone 352-2806.\nGARAGE.\nDELUXE 2 BDRM. FURN. APT.\nAdults. Phone 352-5252.\n3 ROOM APT. $65, HEAT AND\nwater. Phone 352-7581.\n3 BDRM. HOUSE FOR RENT OR\nsale. Phone 352-2865.\nPROPERTY WANTED\nWANTED TO BUY - SMALL\ncheap house in Nelson. Nick\nDerhousoff, R.R. 2, Nelson.\nNEW CAR GUARANTEE - 90\ndays or 4000 miles. New pep for\nyour old car with an Allstate re-\nmanufactured engine. Guaranteed trade in allowance regardless of condition. No crate deposit needed. Fast shipping service from factory. Priced as\nlow as $11.00 monthly. Simpsons-Sears Limited, 556 Baker\nSt., Nelson, Phone 352-5531.\nFOR SALE $2,500.00, 1954 FORD\nF-800. Air brakes, excellent\ncondition, long wheel base with\nhydraulic Tag - a - long axle,\ngood 900 rubber, good quantity\nspare parts included. Ideal\nlumber hauling truck. Sandner\nBrothers Lumber Co. Ltd., Cascade, B.C. Phone: Christina\nLake 447-9315.\nCOTTONWOOD WRECKAGE\nwrecking '53 Zephyr, 1951 3 ton\nG. M. ft, Plymouth, Fords,\nChevs, Pontiacs, Morris Oxfords, 14 ton Fargo. 15\" wheels\nfor Ford, Chev. and Dodge.\nGood 270 G.M.C. motor. Phone\n352-5815, Box 382, 23 Ymir Rd.\nWANTED BY JUNE 16, LATER\nmodel car in good shape. Will\npay up to $1000 cash. Johnny J.\nPoznikoff, Hills, B.C.\n1961 TR3 .SPORTS ROADSTER.\nGood deal. Phone 352-3511.\nFRIDAY  ONLY  SPECIAL 1\n4x7xVi\" Sanded. Each 2.50\nMORE BARGAINS IN\nSMALLER SIZES\nCome In and Look Them Over\nArborite and Formica. Many\ncolors and designs.. 24\" and\n30\" widths up to 10-ft. lengths.\nPer sq. ft 39\nFull 4x8 sheets; patterns or\nwoodgrains. Each  18.00\nSEASONAL SPECIAL\nScreen Doors\nAll sizes. Each  6.95\nDoors\nFir Slab Doors. 1%\" thick. \u2014\nAll sizes 6.50 to 6.90\nPassage Lock Sets. Each .. 1.99\nPlastic Pipe\nVa\" \u2014 100 ft. rolls 3.95\nV \u2014 100 ft. rolls 5.90\nFull stock of Plastic Adapters\nand Fittings.\nAgricultural Drain Tile\n3\". Per foot   .15\nRoofing Time\nIs Here Again\n45-lb. roll roofing for this sale\nonly. Per roll  2.95\n55-lb. roll roofing 4.25\n210-lb. square butt shingles. \u2014\nMany beautiful colors to\nchoose from. Per 100 square\nfeet (3 bundles)   10.95\nCorrugated\nFibreglass Panels\n(Heavy 6-oz. weight). Colors:\npink, green, yellow, white,\nblue. Per panel   8.50\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\nAT ERIE. 2 BDRM HOUSE,\nlarge living room, kitchen, on\n1 acre, lights and water, $3500.\nWill accept half as down payment. Sue Bourdon, Salmo,\nB.C.\nAT CHRISTINA LAKE 25 ACRES\non junction of Highways No. 3\nTrans \u2022 Canada and No. 395.\nIdeal business location. Apply\nT. Burger, Box 1339, Rossland,\nphone 362-5302.'\nNEW HOME, 3 BDRM., HARB-\nwood floors, full basement with\nrumpus room,. car port, fully\nlandscaped, beautiful view. Ph.\n352-2587.\n14 ACRES AND 4 ROOM HOUSE.\nWill accept reasonable offer.\nJohn Derhousoff, R.R. 2, Nelson.\nAT HARROP, 8 ACRES, 2\nbdrm. modern house, water, 220\nw 1 r In g, newly decorated\nthroughout. $6500. E. Harrison.\n4 BDRM. HOUSE IN FAIRVIEW.\nGarage. Auto, gas heat. $10,506.\nPh. 352-2036.\nGOOD PASTURE OR HAY. 16\nacres. Mrs. H. E. Sanders, R.R.\nNo. 1, Nelson, B.C.\nSECLUDED, \u25a0 CENTRALLY Located family home. Garden and\nview. Ph. 352-5784 after 5 p.m.\nWANTED T0...8.ENTHQR BUY\nsmall farm between :Castlegar\nand Nelson. Ph.\" 359-7479.     . -\nFIVE ACRES OF LAND. APPLY\nJohn Poznekoff, Winlaw, B. C.\nMACHINERY\nFire\nExtinguishers\nFor:\nCar, Truck\nTractor, Chain Saw\nHome, Boat\nWe Have Them!\nMAC'S\nWelding & Equipment Cr\nLtd.\n814 Railway St.     Ph. 352-5301\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES\nFOR SALE OR TRADE: CHIL-\ndren's ponies with saddles and\nbridles. Also one Shetland stallion. Earl Cutler, Nelson. Ph.\n352-2023\nK 9 REG. BOARDING KEN-\nnels. Fruitvale Highway. G. A\nCrawford prop. Ph. 367-2483.\nCOCKER PUPS, ALSO CHIHU-\nahuas. Bird's Kennels Blueberry Creek.\nSEWING MACHINES\nBEFORE YOU BUY A SEWING\nmachine see the new Kenmore\nPush-Button Twin-Needle Automatic Zig-Zag at Simpsons-\nSears. Only $99.88. Backed by\nour famous 20 year guarantee.\nPERSONAL\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST - MAN'S WRIST WATCH.\nHoverta Rotomatic. Reward.\nPhone 352-6103.\nROOM AND BOARD\nSwap for Dressed Lumber\nI960 Dodge Sports Suburban\nStation Wagon\nExecutive car. Al shape.\nAlso TD9 with hydraulic dozer,\nnew motor. \u2014 Can deliver.\nWatson Construction Ltd.\nWatson, Sask.\nWANTED TO RENT\nWANTED - UNFURNISHED,\nself-contained four room apt.\nAdults, close in. Cooking range\nneeded. Rent or lease. Apply\nBox 6782, Nelson Daily News.\nROOM AND BOARD\n352-6352.\nA WOMAN TO HELP OUT IN\na home in exchange for room\nand board. One boy entering\nhigh school. Object matrimony.\nApply Box 6840.Daily News.\nROOM AND BOARD. 1018 STAN-\nley St. $75 washing incl.\n\u25a0 PHONE\nREQUIRE 3 BEDROOM HOME\nby July. Either city or North\nShore. Phone 352-6622.\n.Nelson\nlatlij News\nCirculation Dept., Phone 352-3552\nPrice per single copy, 10 cents\nBy carrier per week, 35 cents\nin advance.\nSubscription rates:\nBy Mail in Canada\nOutside Nelson\nOne  month   $ 1.25\nThree months         3.50\nSix months  _      6.50\nOne year ... 12.00\nBy Mail to United Kingdom or\nthe Commonwealth\nOne month $ 1.75\nThree months        5.00\nSix months         9.00\nOne year 18.00\nBy Mail to U.S.A. or\nForeign Countries\nOne month $ 2.50\nThree months       7.00\nSix months *\u25a0',-   13.00\nOne year           24.00\nWhere extra postage is required,\nabove rates plus postage.\nFor delivery by carrier in Cranbrook,    phone  -Mrs. -Stanley\nWillisson;\nIn Trail. Mrs. S.\nyd Spooner:\n 12 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURS., JUNE 14,1962\nFATHERS DAY\nSUNDAY, JUNE 17th\nond you have your choice of the following:\nCOUTTSCARDS\nFisher Easy-Grip Lighter. $1  QQ\nSmart,,. so smart! .     I \u2022 < O\nOLD SPICE SETS and Items. $1   nr\nUp from      I\u00bb.fc3\nBuxton (quality) WALLETS, finest     9A   CA\nleather. Up from     *\u00bb JVJ\nLeather WRITING SETS. ?l>   7<>\nUp from  _       \\J \u00bbalmj\nDESK SETS (pen and base). $4   f?(\\\nUp from ,    TWU\nGood BOOKS (a real choice in our new Bookroom)\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nSafety Guarantees Rejected\nFor Europeans In Algiers\nVINELAND, N.J. (AP) -\nMayor Albert V. Giampietro,\naJ2, collapsed after a heated discussion of his  policies  at the\ncity council meeting Tuesday\nnight and died a few minutes\nafter being admitted to hospital.\nWlnxwsdL\nROTARY\nMOWER\nSPECIAL\n\u2022 2i H. P.\n\u2022 Rope Start\nClinton 4-Cycle Motor\n\u2022   18 Inch Cut\nOffset Wheels\nSPECIAL\nONLY .__\nL\nSee Us For Gift\nSuggestions For\nFATHER'S  DAY\nWOOD, VALLANCE\nHARDWARE  CO.  LTD.\nWHOLESALE - RETAIL\nNelson, B. C. Phone 1530\nTUNIS (Reuters) \u2014 Premier\nBen Yousseff Ben Khedda of\nthe Algerian provisional government Wednesday rejected the\npossibility of extra guarantees for\nEuropeans in Algeria.\nThe rejection came amid continuing negotiations in Algiers\nfor a peace pact between Europeans and Moslems before Algeria votes in a referendum\nJuly 1 that is certain to bring\nindependence from France.\nThe European terrorist Secret\nArmy Organization has been\nseeking a pact that will give\nEuropeans ironclad guarantees\nfor their future in an independent Algeria ruled by the Moslem majority.\nPresent guarantees for the\nEuropean minority in Algeria\nare covered in fhe Franco-Moslem agreements signed last\nMarch that ended the seven-\nyear - old nationalist insurrection in the North African territory.\nBen Khedda rejected the Secret Army's demands for extra\nguarantees in an airport statement here before leaving for\nRome on his way to a meeting\nof the Casablanca group of African countries in Cairo.\nSUSPECTS SABOTAGE\nHe said: \"We can see at\npresent a series of manoeuvres\naimed at sabotaging the Evian\n(cease - fire) agreements and\nmaking one believe in their\npossible revision under the pretext of giving supplementary\nguarantees to Europeans.\n\"My   government   categorically excludes this possibility.\n\"The effective return of peace\ncan only come through loyal ap\nplication\" of the cease - fire\nagreements reached in the Alpine resort of Evian in March,\nBen Khedda said.\nThe Secret Army, had demanded strict guarantees for\nEuropeans \"in black and\nwhite.\"\nUntil these guarantees are\nmet, the Secret Army has announced it will continue its\n\"scorched earth\" campaign\nagainst key economic and military centres.\nIn Algiers alone, 10 buildings\nwere smouldering from bomb\nand arson attacks Tuesday. Another 10 buildings were destroyed or badly damaged Monday.\nBut the Secret Army has decided to let up on its attack on\nMoslem civilians.\nOnly two Moslems were killed\nthroughout the North African\nterritory Tuesday. This toll\namounted to only a small fraction of the number killed before\nthe European - Moslem talks\nwere opened, late last month.\nAfro-Asian Group Work\nOn Resolution for UN\nUNITED NATIONS (CP) -\nAfrican and Asian delegations\nworked Wednesday on a resolution for the UN General Assembly\nasking Britain to call a conference soon to draft a new constitution for Southern Rhodesia.\nThe 51 - power Afro - Asian\ngroup scheduled a late afternoon\nmeeting in an effort to finish\nthe draft before the start of assembly debate Thursday on the\nsembly debate' today on the\nish African territory.\nThe assembly voted 62 to 26\nTuesday, with 15 abstentions, to\ndebate Britain's plans for a new\nconstitution for Southern Rhodesia. Forty - one members of\nthe Afro - Asian groiro charged\nthe proposed constitution would\nperpetuate the rule of the white\nminority.\nCANADA DISSENTS\nCanada and the United States\njoined Britain in opposing the\ndebate.\nTemporary Command Laos\nIn Hands of Red Prince\nBy PETER ARNETT\nVIENTIANE, Laos (AP) -\nPro - Communist Prince Souphanouvong will take temporary command of Laos' new\ncoalition government late this\nmonth.\nNeutralist Prince Souvanna\ndesignate of the new government,\nsaid Tuesday he and right-wing\nleader Gen. Phoumi Nosavan will\nhe in Europe at the same time.\nDuring their absence, he said,\n\"the whole burden of state affairs will fall on Souphanouvong.\"\nPhoumi, like Souphanouvong\ndue to become a deputy premier, will lead a cabinet delegation to Switzerland June 24 or\n25 to ratify the 14-power Geneva agreement on Laos pledging the little Southeast Asia nation to neutrality in the Cold\nWar.\nSouvanna said he is going to\nSouvanna,   Souphanouvong   and\nPhoumi.\nDISSIDENTS WARNED\nPrince Souvanna, Souphanou-\nvong's half-brother and ally in\npre-coalition manoeuvring, welcomed the U.S. pressure that\nforced the right-wing Vientiane\nregime to give way to the coalo-\ntion. But Souphanouvong has\nshown no softening in his anti-\nAmerican position.\nImmediately after the coalition agreement was signed at\nthe rebel headquarters in\nKhang Kay Tuesday, the pro-\nCommunist prince declared:\n\"One must not forget that\nnear our frontiers (in Thailand\nand South Viet Nam) there are\narmed American forces and\nthese forces will support the reactionaries to sow troubles and\nprovocations on our lands.\nThe Geneva accords call for\nthe withdrawal of   all   foreign\nLater the Afro-Asian group\nspent almost two hours in private session discussing a resolution on Southern Rhodesia prepared on the basis of a text\noriginally drawn up by the assembly's special committee of\n17 on independence for colonial\nterritories.\nThe committee report found\nthat the proposed constitution\nwould leave the territorys Negro majority unrepresented \"either in the legislature or in the\ngovernment established by the\nwhite community.\"\nThe constitution was drawn\nup at a London conference last\nDecember and accepted by both\nNegro and European political\nparties, but the Negro parties\nlater disowned it.\nThe drafting committee's resolution would ask Britain to restore all rights to the Negroes\nimmediately and to do away\nwith all laws that \"directly or\nindirectly sanction any policy of\npractice based on racial dis-\nscrimination.\"\nYoung Germans\nUse Soup Spoons\nTo Dig Tunnel\nBERLIN (AP)\u2014Three young\nEast Germans dug their way to\nthe West with old soup spoons\nand small coal shovels in the\nsecond dramatic tunnel escape\nfrom East Berlin during the\nWhitsun holiday weekend, informed sources said.'\nThe informants said the\nmakeshift tunnel collapsed after\ntwo of the men had broken\nthrough to safety and that they\nhad to dig out their friend. One\nof the refugees gave this account:\nThe three, skilled laborers 19\nand 20 years old, locked themselves in a factory on the border after work ended Saturday.\nThey dug non-stop for 72 hours,\nuntil their breakthrough was\ncompleted Tuesday afternoon.\nThey had no food and only\nstale drinking water. Lack of\nfresh air hampered their crude\ndigging efforts. As they labored,\nthey could hear the steps of\nEast German border guards\noverhead.\nLast Saturday, 11 East Germans were brought out of East\nBerlin through a 60-foot long\ntunnel dug by six young West\nBerlin men.\nPM Accussd of Flirting\nWith \"Ethnic Wooing\"\nU.K. to Discuss\nS. Vief Nam\nWith Russians\nLONDON (Reuters) - Britain will take up with Russia a\nreport on the situation in South   Mawdsley making high score.\nKaslo women served afternoon\nKaslo, Riondel\nGolf Clubs\nEnjoy Play\nKASLO \u2014 Kaslo Golf Club was\nhost to the Riondel Golf Club\nlast weekend.\nAlthough it rained during the\nplay, the 30 visitors enjoyed a\nlively competition. Mrs. Macdon-\nald and Mrs. Walton tied for\nfirst, with Mrs. Walton winning\ndraw for low score. Mrs. Lawrence took prize for highest score.\nIn men's competition, Mr. Rae\nand Mr. Packman tied, with Mr.\nRae winning the prize, and Mrs.\nFrance to attend the wedding of j troops from Laos wiUlin 75 days\nhis daughter\nJust what powers Souphanouvong. will be able to wield while\nrunning Laos was not clear.\nThe bulk of the cabinet posts\nare invested in neutralists, and\nthe coalition agreement stipulates that all decisions related\nto the ministries of defence, interior and foreign affairs must\nhave the unanimous agreement\nof the three   faction leaders\u2014\nrmaeurm   aT^.rK*nri \u00bb\ntfliPI\nHBBT GIFT \/\nYou con really \"be good to father\" if you come\ndown here tomorrow, and browse through our\nchair department. You'll find doiens of different\ndesigns, for dozens of different fathers. But all\nof them have one important thing in common.\nThey're  comfortable!  That's  what   men  want.\nGIVE HIM A SUMMER CHAIR ALL HIS OWN\nLAWN CHAIRS \u00ab* $5.95\nWHEN YOU THINK OF FATHER, THINK FIRST OF . . .\nSTERLING\nHOME FURNISHERS\n441  Baker Street\nNelson, B.C.\nPhone 352-7711\nlone .3--\/\/ ii       11\nwmm    -_i _H_ \u25a0_*.\"\nafter the agreement is signed by\na unified Laotian delegation.\nThis applies to the several hundred U.S. military advisers to\nthe royal army, and an estimated 10,000 Communist North\nVietnamese troops and some\nRed Chinese advisers reported\naiding the Pathet Lao.\nViet Nam prepared by the\nthree-nation International Control Commission, a foreign office spokesman said.\nThe Canadian and Indian\nmembers of the commission\nhave sent a majority report\u2014\nthe Polish, delegate dissenting\u2014\nto Britain and Russia who are\nthe co-chairmen of the 1954 Geneva  conference on Indochina.\nUsually reliable sources said\nthe majority report accuses\nCommunist North Viet Nam of\ncarrying out subversion and aggression against South Viet\nNam. The report also contains\nsome criticism of South Viet\nNam, they said.\nOfficials here said no proposals have yet been put to Russia\nin regard to the report which\nreached London this week.\nBARBECUE DATE SET\nSATURNA ISLAND (CP)-\nThe featured annual lamb barbecue on this gulf island will be\nheld July 1, organizers said\nTuesday.\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c line, 40c line bold face type: larger typo rates\non request. Minimum two lines.\nTrail Business College\nNew Term Begins Sept. 4\nKing for a Day Gifts for Father-\nHOBBY SHOP\nHEAR PETER DEWDNEY\nCKLN TODAY 5:55 P.M.\nSt. Matthews \u2014 South Slocan\nSunday next 2:30\nHaigh Tru Art Beauty Salon\n576 Baker St. Ph. 352-3313\nVote the top name on the ballot\u2014\nDEWDNEY, PETER       X\nNELSON GROCERY, Ph. 352-6831\nService, Quality, Free Delivery\nComplete stock of Sporting\nand Camping Supplies\nWOOD,  VALLANCE  HDWRE.\nDiamonds, Watches, Gifts\nRepairs, Engravings\nTED ALLEN'S JEWELLERY\nSaves gears and tears\nPh. 352-5252 - Sterling Hotel\nNELSON DRIVING SCHOOL\nClearance special in little girls\nassorted blouses, sizes 2-6x, 2 for\nonly 95c at EBERLE'S\nVote the top name on the ballot-\nDEWDNEY, PETER       X\nRed Cross Blood Clinic\nat the Canadian Legion\nJune 14 and 15\n1:30 \u2014 4:30 and 6:30 \u2014 9:3i\nGood selection of Arnel drapery.\nPre-shrunk  drip dry and color\nfast. Priced from $2.29 per yd.\nSTERLING FURNISHERS\nLES ON RADIO\nHear Kootenay-West Socred candidate Les Read on CKLN at 8:15\nthis morning and at 6:15 this evening.\nNelson Shrine Club presents\n'Greatest Little Show on Earth\"\nNelson Civic Centre June 15-16\nTickets $1.00 available Civic\nCentre or Kootenay Stationers.\nluncheon. Mrs. Ian Macdonald of\nRiondel thanked the host club for\nits hospitality, inviting Kaslo for\na return game June 24 on their\nsix-hole course.\nEremenko\nRites Held\nCASTLEGAR \u2014 Funeral services for Alexander Eremenko of\nCastlegar were held from the\nPentecostal Church, with Rev. R\nK. Webb officiating.\nHymns sung were \"What a\nFriend We Have in Jesus\" and\n\"Nearer My God to Thee.\" Solos\nwere sung by Miss L. Stadager,\nwho sang \"Oh Love That Will Not\nLet Me Go\" and W. Lennox, who\nsang \"How Great Thou Art.\" Organist was J. Lang.\nPallbearers were G. Phillips, E.\nHoldquist, H. Webber, J. Heglin,\nP. Lang and H. Heglin.\nHonorary pallbearers were A.\nE. Spence, G. Pratt, L. B. Campbell, M. E. Moran, W. G. Waldie,\nE. A. Lewis, G. A. Sumner and\nR. T. Waldie.\nThe church was filled to capa\ncity and many floral tributes\nwere in evidence.\nInterment was in Park Memorial Cemetery.\nBy THE  CANADIAN PRESS\nTwo opposition party leaders\nhave charged Prime Minister\nDiefenbaker with unfair wooing\nof the so - called \"ethnic vote.\"\nLiberal Leader Pearson and\nT. C. Douglas, New Democratic\nParty chief, both seized Tuesday on the prime minister's\nstatement Monday that he\nwould personally present a\nUnited Natoins resolution calling for freedom of Soviet satellite countries.\nMr. Pearson called it \"a cruel\nand deceiving thing.\" Mr.\nDouglas said it was a \"cruel\nhoax.\"\nBoth saw it was offering a\nfalse hope to New Canadians\nfrom Eastern Europe that their\nhomelands might be liberated\nin that way.\nHOLDS DINNER\nMeanwhile, Prime Minister\nDiefenbaker switched back and\nforth Tuesday between two\nroles\u2014campaigner and host to\nthe Queen Mother at Ottawa.\nHe made no political speeches\nin two brief sorties across the\nOttawa River to neighboring\nHull and Aylmer, Que., and\nTuesday night entertained the\nQueen Mother at a small dinner party.\nRECORD SET\nIn Ottawa, Chief Electoral\nOfficer Nelson Castonguay estimated that possibly 100,000\nCanadians\u2014a record number-\nvoted in advance polls last Saturday and Monday.\nDeputy returning officers in\nat least nine polls in eight constituencies have been fired for\ncounting advance poll ballots.\nBy law, the votes can't be\ncounted until two hours after\nregular polls close next Monday night.\nWednesday Mr. Diefenbaker\nswung back to all - out campaigning in Southern Ontario at\nCaledonia, Brantford, Gait,\nHespeler and Guelph. Mr. Pearson, after a city hall reception\nin Montreal, moved on to a\nnight meeting at Kingston. Mr.\nDouglas flew from Toronto to\nVancouver for a night rally and\nMr. Thompson was scheduled to\nspeak at Dauphin, Man., and\nFoam Lake, Sask.\nThe NDP leader had two big\naudiences Tuesday night as he\nmade his last campaign\nspeeches in Eastern Canada.\nHis comments about the ethnic\nvote were made to an early,\nevening audience of 1,500 in\nHamilton.\n'SHAM MOVE'\nMr.  Douglas said  the prime\nminister's  statement had  been\na \"sham move,\" hedged with\nthe  qualification  that  the res- j\nolution against Soviet imperial\n5,000 or more in Montreal's big\nShow Mart, attacking the government as having misled\nvoters y\/ith unfulfilled promises\nand having \"betrayed by the\nincompetence of its administration the good faith of the Cana-\n3ian people.\"\n\"The Conservatives can't\nwin,\" he declared.\nBut there was a danger that\nMonday's election might produce a weak government lacking a working majority.\n\"The one possibility of effective government for Canada\nafter June 18 . . . lies in electing a Liberal government with\na working majority.\"\nEarlier, in Ville St. Michel,\nMr. Pearson said the effect of\nreducing the Canadian dollar's\nexchange value was to raise\nconsumer prices \"and not even\nthe threats of Prime Minister\nDiefenbaker are able to stop\nthis increase.\"\nMr. Thompson, speaking in a\nfree-time telecast on the CBC\nnetwork, said a Social Credit\ngovernment would extend family allowances to the 20th birthday.\nPROMISES PAYMENTS\nIt also would provide payments to elder citizens to help\nthem share in the benefits of\nCanadian production. Mr.\nThompson added that this\ndoesn't mean his party is joining in the auction block competition among the old - line\nparties in raising old age pensions.\nThe Liberals' hockey star\ncandidate, Red Kelly of Toronto\nMaple Leafs, spoke on a free-\ntime CBC radio broadcast to\ndescribe as \"pure hokum\" the\ninsistence of Finance Minister\nFleming that the dollar's exchange rate, had been devalued\nonly after careful planning. Mr.\nKelly is a candidate in York\nWest.\nAnother NHL player, Eric\nNesterenko of Chicago Black\nHawks, was on hand to meet\nMr. Douglas when the NDP\nleader arrived in Toronto.\nQuebec Liberal Premier Jean\nLesage, who hasn't actively\ncampaigned for Mr. Pearson on\ngrounds this isn't the custom in\nQuebec, said in the provincial\nlegislature that Mr. Pearson is\n\"a great Canadian who will be\nthe next prime minister of Canada.\"\nPremier John Robarts of Ontario spoke at an election meeting near London, reiterating\nthat he is supporting the Diefenbaker government in the campaign. He said he'll be with the\nprime minister in campaign\nwind-up rallies  at  Toronto\nJUNE\n17\ntfa)yc&$\nT:\nSUMMER\nPAJAMAS\nShort Sleeves and Legs\nfor Cool Comfort\n\u2022\nKNIT SHIRTS\nEnjoy Colorful Knit Shirts\nIn Patterns, Solids\n\u2022\nWHITE SHIRTS\nShort Sleeve, In\nTerylene or Cool Cotton\nThese are among the\nmany gift suggestions to\nplease Pop on Father's\nDay.\ngMORY'Q\nTHE MAN'S STORE\nPost Office\nBusiness Up\nBusiness conducted at the Nelson Post Office in May has shown\na general increase over the same\nperiod last year.\nThe sale of postage stamps and\ntotal business transacted was\nincreased last month over a\ncomparable period last year. The\nincrease is also the highest\nfigure recorded this year.\nFollowing are May's figures\nwith May 1961 in brackets:\nPostage stamps: $12,774,\n($10,579); other revenue, $618,\n(315); total business transacted,\n$195,359, ($194,017); money orders\nissued 3776, (3663); money orders\npaid, 4152, (4595).\nism would be introduced only if I Thursday night and at Hamil-\nsupported by other UN mem-   ton Friday night.\nbers. An economic world often- \t\nsive to raise living   standards T\\T7 A TTTC\nwould be  a  better  counter  to JL\/J_ A 1 ITvJ\ncommunism   than   \"phoney\nsabre - rattling.\"\nThen Mr. Douglas hopped by\nhelicopter   to   Toronto   where\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nMoscow \u2014 Gen. Andrey Va-\nsilyevich Khrulev, 70, a former\npart This 'speech \"to'a crowd j dePu'y S\u00b0viet Defence Minister\nestimated at 6,000 was carried I \u2122d \u00ab Communist Party mem-\nlive on the CBC's television net-   ber^ since 1918.\nCHURCH GROUPS\nATTEND FUNERAL\nAT N. DENVER\nNEW DENVER - Rev. Bruce\nPellegren of Nakusp officiated at\nthe recent funeral service for\nMiss Lena C. Meinardus at St. ,\nStephen's Anglican -Church in\nNew Denver.\nMany floral tributes were offer-\nered and members of St. Stephen's Women's Auxiliary and St.\nStephen's Church Helpers were\nin attendance.\nHymns sung were \"The Lord is\nMy Shepherd\" and \"Nunc Dimlt-\ntus\" was intoned.\nPallbearers were T. W. Clarke,\nW. E. Rowe, T. M. Leask, Q. A.\nForsythe, J. L. Irwin and J. W.\nButlin.\nCremation followed.\nPLANS BOMB PETITION\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Mrs.\nBetty Grubb, 35, arrived in\nLondon Tuesday after walking\n110 miles from Gloucester with\nher four young children. She\nplanned to petition the Queen\nand the Soviet and American\nambassadors for an end to\nnuclear tests.\nwork.\nSocial democracy is the only\neffective weapon to counter\ncommunism, Mr. Douglas said.\nHis party stood for an independent foreign policy \"not\ndominated by any foreign\npower, no matter how friendly\nthat power may be or how close\nto our borders.\"\nMr. Pearson's attack on the\nprime minister's \"free the satellites\" statement was made at\na Montreal luncheon with representatives of ethnic groups\u2014\nwho applauded when he said he\ndoesn't like the term \"ethnic\ngroups.\" He said he doesn't like\nperpetuating divisions of that\nkind.\nCHARGES  BETRAYAL\nAt night the Liberal leader\naddressed a roaring crowd of\nWashington \u2014 John Ireland,\n82, one of Britain's leading music composers between the two\nworld wars.\nNew York \u2014 Taylor S. Gay,\n55, a $90,000-year-vice-president\nof the Phillips Petroleum Company.\n.Have the Job Done Right!\nVIC GRAVEC\n\u2122 LIMITED       *\"\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 352-3315\nDividends\nBy  THE  CANADIAN  PRESS\nAlberta Natural Gas Company, 20 cents, June 30, record\nJune 20.\nHudson Bay Mining and\nSmelting Co. Ltd., 75 cents,\nSept. 10, record Aug. 10.\nNorthern Telephone Ltd., common 4V4 cents, July 16, record\nJune 29.\nToronto Star Ltd., 75 cents,\nJune 30, record June 18.\nPRESCRIPTION\nSPECIALISTS\nTour Rexall Pharmacy\nCITY DRUG\nPatients In Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital can have The\nDaily News sent to them every\nmorning.\nPhone 352-3552\nCirculation Department,\nDaily News.\nJr. High Fashion Show, Grade 8\nParents and friends welcome.\n2 p.m., Friday, June 15\nFor your June wedding see\nMAC'S FLOWER SHOP\nfor al! your floral requirements.\nSOCIAL CREDIT\nCommittee Rooms Capitol\nTheatre \u2014 Phone 352-5211\nRedwood Tubs and Planters, and\nPlastic Liners.\nCOVENTRY'S FLOWER SHOP\n495 Baker St.\nCARD OF THANKS\nWe wish to thank all those\npeople who helped me (Bruce\nHucal) and my two friends after\nour boat overturned. Special\nthanks to Mr. Mundy, Dr. Bar-\nrera and to the people from Camp\nParadise. Thank you all.\n\u2014Nick and Bruce Hucal.\nCARD OF THANKS\nWe wish to thank our many\nfriends for their acts of kindness\nin our recent bereavement. Special thanks to the Pythian Sisters,\nthe Rebekah Lodge, Rev. Whitmore and the Thompson Funeral\nHome.\n\u2014The Renwick Family.\nThere's somethin\nSPECIAL\nabout\nSeagram's\nSPECIAL OLD\nFiner Taste is a Seagram's Tradition    HI\nAvailable in 12 oz. & 25 oz. sizes\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by Ihe Government of British Columbia\nk\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1962_06_14","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0434453","@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":"1962-06-14 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1962-06-14 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\/1.0434453"}