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W.]","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2023-08-02","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1964-03-28","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0434889\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" MAGAZINE\njd$0tt i\nVoL 62\n\/      *' \u202200n .HlA\u00b0Xd \/SON, B. C, CANADA-SATURDAY MORNING, MARCH 28, 1964\nff r. 9zgfff . \u2014\t\nIB\n10 Cents\nNo. 285\nTHIS JOYFUL EASTERTIDE ... In churches throughout the land this\nscene will be duplicated many times over as the Easter Message is put forth\nin word and song. The two choristers are, left, David Powell, 12, and Daryl\nWakeham, 13, of St. Saviour's Pro-Cathedral junior choir, shown as they\nrehearsed hymns for Easter.\u2014Daiiy News photo by Dick Proctor.\nWinter Weather Keeps\nEaster Travellers Home\nBy The Canadian Press\nBitterly cold winds and some snow in parts of\nCanada Good Friday kept holiday travellers bundled\nup in heavy outer clothing and cut down the volume\nof road traffic, especially in Eastern Canada.\nIn Winnipeg, fur hats were more common than\nEaBter bonnets, but in Edmonton it was clear and unseasonably warm.\nThe Canadian Highway Safety Council has predicted that 38 persons will die accidentally on highways and city streets during the three-day weekend.\nHolidayers in Winnipeg trudged through a foot of\nsnow, left from a storm earlier this week, and tempera'\ntures hovered around zero\nmost of Good Friday.\nMost stores and business offices were closed across the\ncountry, but for what is believed\nthe first time in history, the\nCommons and the Senate sat for\na briet morning session on Parliament Hill in Ottawa.\nThe session meant that Parliament Hill, outside the chamber, functioned like an ordinary\nday with restaurants open and\nmost staff members working. In\nthe afternoon the hill simmered\ndown to holiday level.\nActivities across the country\nincluded church services and\ntravel and a demonstration by\nthe Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament on the Peace Bridge\njoining Fort Erie, Ont., and Buffalo, N.Y., across the Niagara\nRiver.\nThe group formed a half-hour\nvigil line on both sides of the\nUnited Nations flag in the centre of the bridge. Seven Canadian adults and four children and\ntwo Americans participated.\nThe Campaign for Nuclear\nDisarmament has scheduled its\ntraditional Easter peace walk today in Toronto, Montreal, Ottawa, Kingston, Ont.. Saskatoon\nand Vancouver.\nIn Vancouver, government ferries doubled their sailings to and\nfrom Vancouver Island for the\nweekend. Ferries were reported\ncarrying capacity loads Friday\ndespite cloudy skies.\nTemperatures in all parts of\nj British . Columbia   except   the\nnorthern interior were in the 50-\ndegree range.\nWeather forecasts for the remainder of Easter weekend are\nfor sunny and cold weather in\nEastern Canada and continuation of cool temperatures in the\nPrairie provinces.\nIn Calgary and Edmonton, 30-\ndegree temperatures brought\nmotorisls out in full force and\nforecasts indicate more warm\nweather was in store for the re-\nQuake Causes\nDamage Along\nKootenay Lake\nKootenay Lake was sent rolling\nup the beaches from Nelson to\nKaslo as the Alaskan earthquake\nstruck Friday night.\nAt least one boathouse contain\ning a launch and rowboat broke\nfrom its moorings and floated\naway at Kaslo, while one marine\noperator stood guard on the\nlarge number of boats in his\ncharge.\nAt Nelson, John Janssens\nrushed out of his boathouse\nwhen it suddenly began shaking, and was amazed to see the\nlake rise six inches and fall\nagain three times within about\nhalf a minute.\nThe lake at Nelson and Kaslo\nwas \"calm; not a ripple on it,\"\nobservers said.\nThe missing boathouse at Kaslo\nThe   runaway   boathouse   at\nPaper\nmainder of the weekend. Extra\ntrains and buses are scheduled.\nChristians throughout the\nworld turned once again this\nEaster weekend to the promise\nof the crucifixion for solace in\ntroubled times.\nRoman Catholic and Protestant Good Friday services recall-\neld the blackest day in the history of the Christian faith, the\nday Christ died on the cross.\nThis year the start of Jewish\nPassover observance coincided\nwith the Protestant and Roman\nCatholic Good Friday.\nIn Rome Pope Paul VI carried\nan eight-foot wooden cross Friday night in a procession from\nthe ancient Colosseum. The leader of the Roman Catholic Church\nalso blessed those toiling for\nworld peace and condemned\nCommunist treatment of Catholics as another crucifixion.\nPILGRIMS PRAY\nAnd in Jerusalem throngs of\npilgrims from .around the world\nfollowed Christ's path to Calvary, singing and praying in the\ntwisted, stone-paved streets of\nthe old city.\nThe solemn pageantry in Jerusalem began at daybreak when\nthe great wooden doors of the\nChurch of the Holy Sepulchre\ncreaked open and 2,000 worshippers crowded into the tottering\nrotunda that Christian tradition\nholds houses the marble tomb of\nChrist.\nDefence\nWhile\nHighlights\nInteg r a t i p n of Canada's\n- aitm-tii^* aafrair\/ Mice Into -\na unified defence service, beginning with appointment of\na single'chief of staff.\n\"Considerable savings\"\nthrough integration of headquarters, administrative and\ntraining staffs now maintained by each service.\nTen-year plan for development of flexible, mobile military units available for service anywhere.\nNuclear weapons essential\nfor Canada's current roles in\nNorth American air defence\nand NATO.\nAllout thermonuclear war\nirrational and improbable.\nChinese may get nuclear\nweapons\u2014but not an effective\narsenal.\nNew multi-purpose tactical\njet plane under study.\nFuture air squadrons to\ngive direct support to ground\ntroops.\nNATO army brigade group\nto be left in Europe.\nTwo Canada - based army\nbrigades to be re - equipped\nand retrained as a mobile\nforce for NATO or UN peacekeeping work.\nFourth brigade in Canada\nto be gradually converted into\nspecial service airborne force.\nAir transport capability to\nbe \"substantially\" increased\nand navy's sea-life increased.\nConstruction of two or three\nnuclear submarines for anti-\nsub work being carefully studied, with no early decision\nlikely.\nPossible savings of $1,000,-\n000,000 over 10 years from integration indicated by Defence\nMinister Hellyer.\nSavings to be used for new\nmilitary equipment.\nNo mention of Honest John\nnuclear rocket battery in Europe.\nAdjustment in NATO's military organization perhaps necessary as result of air-ground\nlink for Canadian NATO\nforces.\nAir Chief Marshal Frank\nMiller tabbed by Mr. Hellyer\nas new head of single defence\nstaff.\nMinister foresees possible\nsingle uniform for all three\nservices.\nKaslo is owned by Mr. and Mrs.\nE. G. Ringheim. It had been tied\nup at the government approach\nin the Kaslo bay. A friend telephoned them to report the boat-\nhouse was missing. It was later\nfound half a mile away and the\nchains were found to have snapped.\nJack Morris almost lost his,\nbut one chain held.\nFred Jones went to Investigate when he heard \"a commotion down at the boats\"\nmoored at his marina and was\nshocked to find the water rolling up the beach. It rolled up\nand down several times, he\nsaid, and when the water line\ncould be measured it was found\nto have travelled three feet up\nthe beach and from 10 inches\nto a foot on boathouse piles.\nMr. Janssens, who lives on the\nNorth Shore directly across from\nNelson, called a neighbor to observe the eerie water movement.\n\"It sure gave me a funny\nfeeling,\" he said. \"I couldn't\nunderstand it. The lake was\ncalm and clear, not a ripple on\nit. I thought the ropes holding\ntlie boat were going to break.\"\nHe -jaid the wate level-ro?e\naliiJ'teli a distance'of s_ indites\nabout three times in about half\na minute.\nArmed Forces'\nMorale Low\n- Diefenbaker\nSASKATOON (OP) - Opposition Leader John Diefenbaker\nsaid Friday the defence department white paper, tabled in the\nCommons Thursday, could seriously affect the already low\nmorale of the armed forces.\nEn route to his home in Prince\nAlbert for Easter, Mr. Diefenbaker said integration of the\nforces could result in a loss of\nindividuality. He said Defence\nMinister Hellyer's action to demobilize reserve forces has \"seriously weakened the navy and.\ngenerally speaking, there has\nbeen a very marked drop in\nmorale.\"\nMr. Diefenbaker told 200 persons, who met him here, the\nopposition would continue to\npress for guarantees that veterans would not be affected by\nthe government plan to turn\nveterans hospitals over to provincial and municipal authorities.\nRips Heart Out of Anchorage;\nFires, Low Temperatures\nAdd to Widespread Havoc\n50 Homes Fall Over Cliff;\n50 Known Dead, 30 Missing\nFAIRBANKS, Alaska (AP)\u2014Governor William A. Egan's office in Juneau,\nAlaska, said Friday night at least 50 persons have been killed and 30 are missing in an earthquake that tore through Alaska.\nSix bodies have been removed from the more than 50 homes that tumbled\ndown a cliff in Anchorage. The missing were reported by a ham operator to have\nbeen standing on the dock at Valdez when it went out. Two died there.\nThe main street of Anchorage, the state's largest city, was reported levelled.\nEgan called an emergency meeting of his cabinet in Juneau. He said Gen.\nAndy Lipscombe, chief of the army's Yukon Command in Fairbanks, had reported\nAnchorage's main street \"completely flattened.\"\nIn Washington, a spokesman at national headquarters of the American\nRed Cross said Seattle would be used as a marshalling point to rush Red Cross\npersonnel and supplies into the stricken areas of Alaska.\nHe said nurses had already been placed on the alert and military planes\nwould be requested if necessary to fly them into the earthquake area.\nThe  headquarters was  not able to contact its regular staff in Alaska\nA state trooper in Kenai said\nhe had radio contact with Anchorage. He reported to civil de-\nllllllini iiiiiilimiimiiiiilliiil\nL-A-T-E    r\n!4-A*S-H\nValdez wiped out;\nMuch of Seward on fire;\nDead estimated between\n50 and 300;\n17-foot tidal wave sweeping up Cook Inlet;\nHospitals running short of\nwater;\nAll utilities cut off;\nHuge cracks in roads, residents warned to stay\nhome.\nniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiMiiiiiimiiiii\nfence officials here that things\nwere \"pretty tragic up there.\"\nHe said about 50 homes on\nTurnagain Bluff had gone over\nthe cliff, although Ihe number\nhad not been confirmed. The\ntrooper said Presbyterian Hospital in Anchorage and the hospital at Elmendorf had been evacuated. A third hospital in Anchorage was taking in the injured.\nMost communications with the\ncity of 48,000 persons were cut\noff. All airports were unusable\nand a hangar collapsed on aircraft at the Elmendorf Air Force\nBase at Anchorage.\nSEWARD ON FIRE\nThere was a report from Vince\nChellis, civil defence co-ordinator, that Seward was \"half gone\nand on fire.\" A Standard Oil\ntanker was tied up there when\nMother Saves Tots\nAfter Plane Crashes\nEASTON. Wash. (AP) - A\nyoung mother who stamped an\nS O S in the snow was rescued\nwith her two children Friday\nfrom a mountain plane crash in\nwhich her stepfather was killed.\nThe mother, Mrs. Lynn Rein,\n23, of Seattle,' saved, her young\ndaughters by bundling them into\na suitcase through the cold\nnight.\nThe stepfather, Robert Kitts\nof Wenatchee, Wash., was flying\nMrs. Rein and daughters Mi-\nchele, 3, and Christine, three\nmonths, to Seattle Thursday\nwhen the light plane's engine\nquit over Stampede Pass north\nof here.\nMrs. Rein said Kitts tried to\nglide to a safe landing after\nthe engine quit suddenly.\n\"He told me to put the babies\nin the back of the plane and to\nstrap the safety belts,\" she told\na reporter. \"We were dropping\nfast... it was black . . . dark.\n\"I stayed up in front with\nhim. As we were going down we\nhit a tree, then I don't remember anything for a few moments.\n\"Bob never woke up. Something went through his neck.\"\nMrs. Rein said she pulled the\nbwo children from the wreckage. Michele was hanging from\nthe fusilage by her foot.\n\"f grabbed Michele's suitcase\nand opened it and put them in\nit for a bed and covered them\nwith all the clothes I could\nfind. We just huddled together\nand waited ... it seemed like\nthe night would never end.   .\n\"Then I tramped an SOS in\nthe snow. I heard the planes\nflying last night. All three of\nus tried to crawl into the suit\ncase to keep warm but I was\ntoo big to fit. It was terribly\ncold.\"\nSearch planes sighted the SOS\nand the three were rescued by\nhelicopter. Mrs. Rein had only a\nbruised elbow and knees. The\nchildren were unhurt.\nthe earthquake hit, but apparently broke away and was burning in the bay.\nAt Kodiak City, the U.S. Navy\nwas evacuating its base for fear\nof a tidal wave. All people living\non Cook Inlet, at whose Head lies\nAnchorage, were ordered evacuated to higher ground.\"\nEgan described the situation\nas \"real bad.\"\n\"The dock apparently went in\nand the water supply was\nknocked out.\"\nAn unconfirmed report from\ncivil defence headquarters here\nsaid there were about 30 people\nstanding on the waterfront at\nValdez when it washed out. A\nham radio operator said there\nwere two confirmed deaths.\nA ham radio operator at\nWhitehorse, monitoring Alaskan\ncalls, said there are reports that\nparts of Anchorage are on fire,\nSeward is burning out of control,\npart of Valdez has slipped into\nthe ocean and the town of Homer\nhasn't been heard from.\nTemperatures in the area were\nabout 27 degrees above zero.\nfn Seattle, the University of\nWashington seismologist said\nthe earthquake apparently centred in the bay across from Seward. He had previously said it\nmight have occurred in' the Aleutians, traditional breeding\nground of Alaskan earthquakes.\nThe Seward area is about 1500\nmiles northwest of Seattle and\nearth tremors were felt there.\nThey were also reported in British Columbia.\nThe earthquake hit here at\n7:37 p.m. (PST) and was so\nstrong it knocked out the measuring equipment of the coast\nand geodetic survey. No damage was reported in Fairbanks\nproper but there was some reported at Eilson Airport, 27\nmiles away.\nThe water supply and power\nwere reported cut off at Glenn-\nalien, 170 miles northeast of\nAnchorage.\nThe 60-foot control tower at\nAnchprage International Airport\nwas down and 3000 feet of runway was reported torn up. Other\nNine Found Guilty\nIn Train Robbery\nAYLESBURY, England (AP)\nA jury found nine men guilty\nThursday on charges of taking\npart in Britain's great train robbery\u2014the theft of $7,800,000 from\nthe Glasgow-London mail train\nlast Aug. 8.\nA 10th man was found guilty\nof conspiring to obstruct the\ncourse of justice.\nThe verdict came after three\ndays of deliberation and a trial\nthat lasted nine weeks.\nJudge Edmund Davies said he\nwould defer sentencing the convicted men until after the trial\nof eight other persons accused\nof complicity in the giant\nmoney snatch, the largest cash\nrobbery in the annals of world\ncrime.\nairports in the area also were\nsaid to be unusable.\nCommunications between Fort\nWainwright here and Anchorage's Fort .Richardson were out\nand the U.S. Air Force here said\nit had no contact with Elmendorf.\nLipscombe said' Et-Gen. Raymond Reeves, commander of\nthe Alaska Command, has order-\nad troops into Anchorage.on a\nstandby basis,\nTWO WERE KILLED\nIn Fort St. John, B. C, a ham\nradio operator said monitored\ncalls from Alaska indicate at\nleast two persons were killed in\nthe city of Valdez, Alaska.\nAt Whitehorse, Terry Delaney,\nCBC radio reporter, said there\nwas minor damage in the city\n900 miles northwest of Edmonton. All communications to Alaska from Whitehorse were cut\noff.\nThe tremor shook the Prince\nGeorge area of nortlwentral\nBritish Columbia about 10:45\np.m., but no damage was reported.\nBuildings trembled and lamps\nswayed from the ceiling in\nPrince George. There were\nmany phone calls to police, the\nradio station and newspaper.\nThe tremor lasted about 30\nseconds.\nNEW ORLEANS (AP) - The\nearth moved slightly over southern Louisiana Friday night,\nchurning sudden waves up to\nsix feet in rivers and bayous.\nSome small boats were overturned or smashed, but there\nwere no reports of injuries or\nmajor property damage.\nThe earth movement, more of\na rolling action, occurred ap -\nproximately the same hour as\nthe major earthquake in Alaska.\nCYPRUS   MEDIATOR - Sakari\nTuomioja (above), Finland's\nambassador to Sweden, has\ntaken on the job of U_I.\nmediator on Cyprus, pending\napproval of the British,\nTurkish and Greek governments. He accepted the post\nafter a 90-minute talk with\nSecretary General U Thant\nIn Geneva, Switzerland.\nWorld News\nBriefly\nNICOSIA (AP) - Archbishop Makarios, the president of\nCyprus, welcomed Canadian\ntroops to Cyprus Friday aid\nsaid he regards them not as\nsoldiers et an aggressive war\nbut as \"soldiers of. peace.\"\nHe said ill an Interview that\nhe is fully aware the Canadians' mission is a delicate\none, and added:\n\"I believe, however, that it\nwill be a successful one. We\nare In any case aiming at the\nsame target \u2014 the return ol\npeace and normal conditions\nto tills island.\"\nCOLORADO SPRINGS, Colo.:\n(AP)\u2014A Russian satellite burned up between the Great Lakes\nand ihe northeastern Canadian\ncoast Thursday night, calculations of a North American Air;\nDefence Command agency show.\nA spokesman for the space\ndetection and tracking system'-?\nof NORAD said Friday it is \"en-;,\ntirely possible\" that fragments'\nof Cosmos 23 fell in mid-Ontario,;\nnorthern' Quebec and the. Atlan-'\ntic Ocean.\nDORTMUND (AP) - A coal..\nmine accident and a gas explov\nsion in a steel plant Friday\nclaimed a total of 18 deaths in\nWest Germany's industrial Ruhr\nValley. Another 26 persons were\ninjured in the disasters which\nmarred Good Friday.\nMOGADISHU (Reuters) - A\nSomali government spokesman\nsaid Friday 150 Ethiopians had1\nbeen killed or wounded and seven Somalis killed in heavy fighting now going on at three bor-*\nder villages. . ,\nThe spokesman said the Hghta\ning\u2014in which 22 Somali soldiers,\nwere wounded \u2014 was going on\nat Inaguha, Debogorialle and\nHabas following an attack on\nThursday by Ethiopian ground'\nand air forces.\nWASHfNGTON (AP) \u2014 The\nU. S. space agency launched\nBritain's second satellite into orbit Friday.\nA Scout rocket carrying the\n150 - pound spacecraft was\nlaunched at 12:26 p.m., from\nWallops Island, Va. It climbed\nto a 90(Mnile altitude where the\nsatellite went into its orbital\npath.\nSEOUL (AP) - About 500\nteenage Korean high school students clashed twice with Seoul\nairport police Friday, the fifth,\nday marked by demonstrations ':\u25a0\naccusing President Chiing Hee |\nPark of conducting sell-out diplomacy with Japan.\nHAVANA (AP) \u2014 Cuban Premier Castro angrily denounced\nhis transport minister and editors of his party newspaper on\nThursday night while trying to\nscuttle rumors of internal con-,\nflict in his United Party of Socialist Revolution.\nTHE WEATHER\nKootenay: Sunny. Little change\nin temperature. Winds light.\nLow-high at Cranbrook 15 and\n45, Crescent Valley 20 and '45.\nSunday: Cloudy.'\nNELSON   28 44     --\nToronto   20 30    Tr\nCalgary   2 32    .01\nPenticton   32 51\nVancouver   32 61\nWhitehorse   17 33    .05\nSpokane  28 49\n 2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, SAT., MARCH 28, 1964\nCominco Endorses\nColumbia Project\n| TRAIL - Consolidated Mining\njpaA. Smelting Company Thurs-\ndayendOffled the revised Columbia River Treaty with the United\nStates, saying it will contribute\nto the well-being of Canada.\nW. S. Kirkpatrick, president of\nth* company which has vast operations la this Kootenay area\nthrough which the Columbia\nflows, .made Jtjle company's first\npublic comment on the treaty\npow before the Commons Exer-\nnal Affairs Committee.\n. Mr. Kirkpatrick, here on a visit\nfrom his heed office ln Montreal,\n\u25a0said in en interview the com-\nELECTED president of the\n1 Royal Canadian Legion at an\nexecutive meeting Thursday\nI night was J. G. James, above.\n: Mr. James succeeds Gordon F.\n| Olson, who resigned because of\nJressure of business. Mr.\nantes was first vice-president\n'- end James Heuston of Balfour\n'second vice-president.\npany endorses tho projects outlined in the treaty.\nThey would ensure the future\neconomic power requirements of\nCominco and other industries\nand the economic well-being of\nthe Kootenay as well as British\nColumbia and Canada generally.\nMr. Kirkpatrick has special\npraise for the Libby Dam across\nthe Kootenai River In the United\nStales, permitted under the\ntreaty.\nHe said the dam is of special\nimportance to the Kootenay and\nto the U.S. It would store flood\nwaters of the upper Kootenay in\nCanada for release during the\nfall and winter months to aug\nment normal low flows.\n\"The storage of the flood\nwaters In Libby would provide\nmuch needed flood relief for the\nBonners Ferry area in Idaho,\nthe Creston area and ether communities downstream. Libby\nstorage releases could have the\neffect of more than doubling the\nfirm power potential of the Kootenay River below Nelson.\"\nfAi   \u25a0             '       -.S3 <\u25a0     i'    . >S\nm\nYiYk\ni\n$M1\nFour Kindergartens\nPlanned for Fall\nFour kindergarten classrooms\ndotted throughout School District\nNo. 7 could be realized by September, Charles Cuthbert, dis-\ntrict superintendent of schools,\nsaid Friday.\nProvision for establishing the\nkindergartens had been outlined\nin the board's referendum in 1961\nand when completed would mean\nthe final stages of the $829,000\nconstruction program, he said.\nThe tentative plan would see\nclasses housed in the Central,\nSouth Nelson, Hume and Salmo\nelementary schools.\nBoard policy, set earlier this\nweek, will see the kindergartens\nestablished as soon as accommodations are available in September.\nProvision for the classroom in\nCentral School was made in the\nrecent renovation program, Mr.\nCuthbert explained.\nThe room is now used by students as a lunchroom but recommended renovations will be made\nduring the summer with toilet facilities added.\nSTARTS MONDAY \u2014\nV**, ONE PERFORMANCE NIGHTLY 8:00 P.M.\nput a fence In front of these men...ind they'll climb It.,\nput a wall In front of them,..and they'll tunnel under It...,\nput a risk In front of them...and they'll take It...\nput a great adventure on the screen and ygy will never forget It!\nLAST TIMES TODAY \u2014 Shows 2:00-7:00-9:10\nKIRK DOUGLAS-JAMES MASOK-PAULLUKAS-PETBt LORRE\nmTDisNrtwA\/tfM\/w\n2Qooo Leagues\nSea\n\"W\n\u2022 eiNtMAteoft*\nTECHNICOLOR'\n(Children 35c Anytime)\nSEP[COMPANY mm\nTEVE McQueen\nJAMES GARNER\nBICHARD A1TENB0R0UGH\n\"\"\"'THE GREAT ESCAPE\"\nijlES DONALD CHARLES BRONSON DONALD PLEASENCE JAMES COBURH\n__,.\u00ab\u00bb. JOHNSURGES n^.JlMESClimUrVRBURNlII , Pf*UL BRiC^iU\n1 01 LUXE I\nCIVIC\nL_\nMLIED\nVMLINES, mc\nWORLD'S   LARGEST   MOVER\nWEST TRANSFER\nCOMPANY\n719 Baker St. Nelson Ph. 352-3333\n\u2022\u2014\u2014Exclusive Agents \u2014 East and West Kootenays\nThe present activity room in\nthe South Nelson School will be\nconverted into a kindergarten\nand tenders will be called within\nthe next week for a new activity\nroom.\nIf the room is not completed\nby September, Mr. Cuthbert said,\nthe children would use other\nquarters until construction is\ncompleted.\nTenders will also be called\nsodn for the two-room addition\nto the Hume School, one for the\nkindergarten class.\nMr. Cuthbert hoped construction would be completed by September.\nThe fourth kindergarten in the\nSalmo School coincides with construction of another classroom.\nPlans for the two rooms will be\ncompleted in two weeks and tenders will be called then, he said.\nUnder the Public School's Act\na minimum of 28 pupils Is required before a kindergarten can\nbe established, Mr. Cuthbert noted. The four classes could accomodate 240 students.\n\"I don' think we'll have that\nmany though,\" Mr. Cuthbert\nsaid..\nThe board is advertising for\nfour kindergarten teachers\nwhose qualifications equal that\nof a primary teacher.\nWith the building program now\nin its final stages, Mr. Cuthbert\nsaid the district could start planning another referendum for additional equipment and facilities\nrequired for the senior and secondary school services.\nThe equipment would be needed for the new senior and junior\nprogram levels within the next\nfew years, the superintendent explained.    -\nContinuing, Mr. Cuthbert stres-\nthe district's need to prepare for\nan Influx of students with the\nproposed Columbia construction.\nHe also noted the present three\nto four per cent increase of students over the past year, a trend\nwhich would Indicate additions to\npresent facilities.\nSPECTACULAR PHASE of the Notre Dame University expansion program was reached with the installing of eight three-\nand-a-half-ton glue-laminated beams over the recreation hall portion of the new dining-lounge building, now rising in the area\nbehind the university and the residences. The beams are 65 feet\nlong. The triangle-shaped ends, called haunches, were bolted on\nbefore the beams were set into place. In this picture, columns\nand plates can be seen in foreground ready to receive the next\nbeam as one is swung info position.\u2014Photo by Bob Buckley.\nPetition Seeks\nFacilities for\nChronically III\nA petition urging the provincial government to provide chronic hospital or nursing home\ncare for elderly citizens Is being circulated in Nelson.\nOne hundred per cent support\nto date is the report of E. A.\nCalbick, who has been circulating the petition on behalf of the\nElder Citizens Association of\nB. C. during the past week.\nIn his limited campaign, he\nhas acquired 95 names to date\nbut intends to expand his scope\nof operations during oncoming\ndays and bring the petition to\nBaker Street.\nBecause of the cost of nursing-home care and the necessity\nfor both rehabilitative and custodial care hospitals, the petition asks the government to Institute a system of long-time-\ncare hospitals and nursing\nhomes which will come under\nthe provisions of the B.C. Hospital  and  Insurance  Services\nUp to 600 Expected\nTo Work at Duncan\nAINSWORTH-The labor force\nat work on the Duncan Lake dam\nat the peak of construction will\nreach approximately 600 men.\nSocred candidate Burt Campbell, speaking here Thursday\nnight in the Community Hall, said\nthat the total area needed for the\nconstruction camp at the dam\nsite will be about 40 acres.\nMOTHER, FIVE\nKIDDIES ESCAPE\nAS HOME BURNS\nKINNAIRD - A mother and\nher five children escaped a fire\nThursday that destroyed their\nhome here.\nMrs. Loretta Lacoursiere managed to clear the house with her\nchildren ranging in age from\nfour to 13 years when an overheated oil stove in the kitchen\ngnited a wall and the floor.\nAll contents were lost and it\nwas not known if they were covered by insurance.\nHer husband, employed by a\nCastlegar lumber company, was\nnot at home at the time.\nGRAND  RE-OPENING\nAuto-Vue\nDrive-In Theatre\nTrail, B.C.\nTonight, Sat., Mon. and Tues.\n\"MY SIX LOVES\"\n(Color) Second Grand Feature\n\"ROCK.A-BYE  BABY\"\nAlso Cartoon \u25a0 Show Time 7:15\nCASTLE Theatre\nCastlegar, B.C.\nTonight Thru Tuesday\n\"MUTINY ON THE BOUNTY\"\nMarlon Brando, Trevor Howard\n(Color - Cinemascope)\nONE PROGRAM AT 7:30 P.M.\nAdvanced Prices: Adults $1.00,\nStudents 75c, Children 50c\nONE PROGRAM SAT.  MAT.\nAdults 85c \u25a0 Students 60c\nChildren 35c\n\u00ae!jp Qlrttrium\nTONIGHT\n'Eric and Eva\"\nEaster\nCHOCOLATES\nBeautifully Boxed With\nFloral Decoration\nSmiles 'n Chuckles Elite\n$2.50 to $4.00\nGreeting   Cards\nand  Gifts\nSAMPLE'S\nNELSON   PHARMACY\nLTD.\n\"Your Fortress of Health\"\nPhone 352-2313\nS39 Baker St. Nelson\nSince the project will last only\nfour years, lt is expected that\nthe camp community established\nwill be of a relatively temporary\nnature. The general contractor\nfor the project will be responsible for the construction of the\ncamp and it is expected that he\nwill establish trailer complex\nbunkhouse units.\nIn addition to the contractor's\noffices, warehouses, workshops,\nstorage and vehicle - areas, it Is\nexpected that there will be single\nmen's bunkhouses, a mess hall,\ntrailer parking area, operators'\nhouses, field office buildings, fire\nhall, recreational facilities and a\ncommissary.\nMrs. Keizer Dies\nAt Castlegar\nCASTLEGAR (Staff) - Mrs.\nRuby E. Keizer, aged 63 years,\ndied here Thursday night from\nnatural causes, police said.\nShe is survived by her husband\nhere and a son and daughter residing in the area.\nChamber\nTo Hold\nA series of draws will be held\nduring the forthcoming summa-\nmonths in the hope of inducing\ntourists to spend a larger portion\nof their holidays in the Nelson\narea.\nSpeaking at the Nelson Chamber of Commerce monthly meeting, Albert Maida, tourist committee chairman, said that tourists often pass through Nelson, or\nstop for only an hour or two. It\nwas felt that a draw program\nwill be an incentive for visitors\nto spend two or three days in\nthe area, and enjoy the many\nlourist attractions Nelson has to\noffer.\nTo enter the draws, tourists\nwill merely register with the\nChamber. Regular drawings will\nbe held, with prizes consisting of\nfree meals and accommodations,\nboat tours on Kootenay Lake, and\noccasional flights over the Kootenay district.\nMembers approved a proposed\nmotion petitioning the provincial\ngovernment to implement a plan\nof road development into Kok-\nContests Designed\nTourists in Nelson\nCommission Approves\nReduced Lifeguard Program\nanee Park. The motion threatens\nthat if the legislature refuses to\ntake early action in this regard\nthe Chamber will ask that the\npark be put under federal control, and transferred to the Fed-\n(anal Flat\nMan Injured in\nTractor Mishap\nINVERMERE \u2014 Arnold Ellis\nis in fair condition in Windermere District Hospital after the\nbulldozer he was operating, pushing rocks on a bridge project\nnear Canal Flat, went too near\nthe edge and turned over on him\nFriday morning.\nWitnesses to the accident were\nGunther Hillicke of Invermere\nand Boleslaw Awguowicz, who\nwere operating another vehicle,\nwhich was used to pull the bulldozer off Ellis and one of the\nmen went to Canal Flat for help.\nFirst aid men arrived and a\ndoctor was summoned from Invermere. The man was removed\nin a station wagon with the doctor and taken to Windermere hos-\noital. Mr. Ellis and his wife\nlCmily live at Canal Flat.\nEconomy almost forced the\nlifeguards off the beach at Lakeside Park Wednesday.\nTwo Civic Centre Commissioners questioned the policy of\nlifeguarding the beach under\nthe minimum arrangement proposed by the recreational heads\nof the city.\nCommissioners L. G. Algar\nand L. N. McEachern questioned the need of employing three\nlifeguards on the beach and\nthree more in Rotary Pool, each\non a four-hour daily work schedule which would provide necessary overlapping during\npeak swim periods.\nMr. Algar said he was not op-\nNEXT WEEK\nAt The\nNelson\nCivic Centre\nCLIP and SAVE\nSUNDAY\n12:45 p.m.\u2014Beginners'\nSkating\n2:00- 4:00\u2014Family   Skating\nMONDAY\n8:15.10:15\u2014Adult Skating\nTUESDAY.\n2:00-3:50\u2014Tiny Tots'\nSkating\n4:00- 5:45\u2014Children's\nSkating\nTHURSDAY\n2:00- 3:50\u2014Tiny Tots'\nSkating\n4:00- 5:45\u2014Children's\nSkating\nFRIDAY\n7:45- 9:45\u2014Guys' and Dolls'\nSkating\nposed to lifeguards but wanted\na good look at the arrangement.\nCommissioner McEachern al-\nson wondered about, the employment of two guards for the\npool and two for the beach during the afternoon peak periods.\nAid, F. A. Beresford wasn't\noverjoyed with the hiring of a\npool manager and then a maintenance man to care for the\n\"antiquated\" pool filter system.\nHe felt that a pool manager\ncould combine both jobs. Other\ncommissioners disagreed.\nNew commissioner Ernie\nGare stated that from his own\npersonal experience a maintenance man is essential to handle\nthe \"outdated\" filter system.\n\"We are operating the pool\nwith a filter 6ystem which\nwas outdated years ago,\" said\nsecretary-manager F. M.\nBoates. \"There is at least five\nhours of maintenance work\nthere daily.\nMr. Boates admitted that it\nmay be difficult to get outside\nlifeguards to work in Nelson under the experimental plan,\nwhich calls for lifeguards to\nwork four hours a day, seven\ndays a week. The shifts for\nboth pool and beach would be\n10 a.m.-2 p.m., 2 p.m.-6 p.m..\nand 1 p.m.-5 p.m. This would\nallow for two guards to be on\nduty during peak afternoon\nhours.\nThe plan calls fdr employment of 13 persons: Six guards,\none manager, one maintenance\nman ,two ticket handlers and\nthree guards possibly for Gyro\nPool. Also employed would be\nfive swimming instructors for\nmorning learn-to-swim  classes\nThe plan allows a reductidn Of\nIhree guards from last year's\nwork schedule when guards\nworked a six-hour day.\nMr, Algar wondered if the\ncity should be responsible for\nguarding the beach, that it\nmight be belter to put the onus\nof responsibility on the individual by posting proper signs announcing that tlie beach was\nunguarded and to swim is at\none's own risk.\nMr. Boates felt the cily had a\nmoral obligation to the taxpayer to guard the beach and was\nsupported by Mr. Gare and\nguest Max Gordon, regional\nrecreation director for the Kootenay.\nAfter a lengthy discussion, it\nwas decided to accept the plan\nprepared by Mr. Boates and his\nassistant. Roy Hammond.\nIn othe commission happenings:\nDon Cummings, citizen of the\nyear and recreation director at\nCoquitlam, will be the guest\nspeaker at a recreation seminar\nat L. V. Rogers High School\nSaturday.\nThe commission approved the\namended agreement with the\nNelson Curling Club as recommended by city council. The\namended agreement includes\ndeletion of any refernce to mu\nnicipal taxation and retaining of\nthis year's rental arrangement\nlor the curling rink.\nA committee of commissioners Gare, Mrs. Marie Bradshaw,\nAid. Beresford and chairman J.\nS. M. Harts was formed to take\nthe first step In studying the\nexisting recreational and parks\npolicies. The group will define\nthe policy and aims of the survey to be undjrtaken.\nChurches Plan\nService Clubs\nCompete in\n'Spiel Tonight\nNelson service clubs will compete tonight in the annual inter-\nservice club bonspiel at the\ncurling rink, vying for the J. S.\nDay and Son Trophy. Junior\nChamber of Commerce is host\nclub.\nThe draw:\nJ. Leeming, Elks vs G. Olson,\nLegion; R. Laidlaw, Elks, L\nMaglio, Lions; E. Stewardson,\nKiwanis vs T. Mason, Jaycees;\nR. Koehle, Gyro vs F. Beresford, Lions; E. Hopwood, Gyro\nvs G. Sutherland, Kiwanis. A\nturkey supper will be served.\neral Parks Board for develop,\nment.\nThe motion will go before the\nAssociated Chambers of Commerce of Southeastern B.C. for\nratification, before being presented to the government in Victoria.\nConsiderable discussion preceded the passing of the resolution. Some members felt it was\ntoo strongly worded. Others feared that it would be construed as\na petition to have the area fully\ndeveloped, and that if this happened, Kokanee might lose its\nidentity as a wilderness park.\nChamber president H. Farenholtz pointed out, however, that\nthe motion simply asked that a\nplan of development of roads and\naccess routes be implemented,\nnot that the entire park be developed.\nA. R. Ramsden remarked that\nthe government has had such a\nplan before them for years and\nthat the Chamber was merely\nasking them to implement it.\nSpeaking with regard to the\narea's publicity campaign, Mr.\nRamsden said that the new\nChamber of Commerce pamphlets are being prepared. He\nsaid that lie felt the toll-free Kootenay Lake ferry was one of the\nmost outstanding tourist attractions in the area and should be\npublicized to the fullest extent.\n\"I think there is no other place\nin Nortii America where a family can take such a beautiful lake\ncruise absolutely free,\" he said.\nMATCH CAUSES\nCAR MISHAP\nTRAIL \u2014 A flaming match\nfolder was the cause of a minor\naccident here Friday.\nDonald C r a n t z, proceeding\nalong Columbia Avenue, lost control of his vehicle when he tried\nto light a cigarette and ignited\nthe match folder.\nHe was not injured when his\ncar ran into a sandbank.\nSpecial church services will\ncelebrate  Christ's  resurrection\nEasier Sunday.\nProtestant and Catholic churches will feature processional\nparades, Holy Communion and\nother special observances Sunday.\nDuring the morning a choral\nprocessional will take Protestant\nparishioners to Gyro Park and\nfollowing a service there the congregation will march back to the\nchurch.\nEaster Day, Anglican Churches observe Communion services during the morning and\nevening. Holy week services will\nalso be held Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday and Saturday.\nCatholic churches will conduct\nregular masses Sunday. Tonight\na vigil service will be held.\nThe Salvation Army will conduct services during Easter morning and evening.\nMc*Mc\ntor\nMOBILE\nRADIO\nPh. 352-5581\nSPECIAL\nBath Oil Pearls\nand\nBubble Both Pearls\nby DELAGAR\n$2.98 Regular. $1.98\n$1.50 Regular. 98c\nMayo Pharmacy\nLtd.\nCorner Baker and Ward Sts.\nPh. 352-2613 Nelson, B.C.\nCHOQUETTE\nFUELS\nPH. 352-7535\nThe Finest Stoker Coals\nORDER  NOW!\nOur Specialty \u2014\nSTOKER MIXES\nII\nIRWIN HOFFMAN\nMusical Director and Conductor\nFeaturing:\nESTHER GLAZER\nViolinist.\nPlaying Tschaikovsky's\nViolin Concerto in D Minor\nWith FULL ORCHESTRA \u25a0 63 Musicians\nNelson Civic Theatre,\nTuesday Night, April 7,\n8:00 p.m.\nTickets: $2.00 and $2.50\nFrom  Rotorian\nMembers\nX\n \u25a0\n.\n\"-*\u2014' :\u2014\u2022^m.\nStock Quotations\nThe Dally News does not hold Itself responsible In the event\nol an error In the following lists.\nClosing  prices supplied  by  Doherty,  Roadhouse 4\nMcCuaig Bros., Trail. B.C.\nTORONTO STOCKS\n13.37\n18.87\n2.95\n2.95\n58.62\nit\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi\nAsbestos Corp.\nAlberta Dist.\nAlta. Dist. VT\nAlgoma Steel\nAlta. Gas Trunk 32.50\n32.37\n13.50\n10.62\n62.00\n67.62\n17.37\n51.50\n30.25\n27.25\n16.50\n57.50\n21.75\n23.25\n42.62\n12.12\n32.00\n9.62\n13.25\n19.87\n60.75\n37.87\n14.75\n11.12\n34.12\n39.62\n11.50\n2.50\n18.75\n53.50\n76.25\n18.37\n19.12\n24.87\nAluminum\nArgus\nArgus C Pfd\nBk. of Montreal\nBank of N.S.\nBathurst Power\nBell Telephone\nB.A. Oil\nB.C. Forest\nB.C. Packers A\nB.C. Telephone\nCalgary Power\nCan. _ D. S.\nCan. Cement\nCan. Collieries\nCan. Iron\nCan. Brew.\nCan. Canners\nCan. Industries\nCan. Imp. Bk.\nCan. Pac. Rly.\nChemcell\nCol. Cellulose\nCons. Min. _ S.\nCons. Paper\nCons. Gas\nCrest. Timber\nDom. Bridge\nDist. Seagrams\nDom. Foundries\nDom. Stores\nDom. Tar & Ch.\nDom. Textiles\nEddy Match Co.  44.50\nEddy Paper\nFalconbridge\nFam. Players\n, Fanny Farmer\n\u2022 Ford Motor Co.\nFord of Can.\nGen. St. Wares\nGreyhound\nGt. Lakes Pow.\nHome Oil A\nHome Oil B\nHudson Bay Co\nInd. Accept.\nImperial Oil\nInt. Minerals\nImp. Tobacco\nInd. Minerals\nInland Nat. Gas\n18.50\n64.75\n19.75\n42.50\n59.75\n179.00\n12.62\n13.25\n23.00\n15 12\n16.25\n15.87\n24.37\n47.00\n71.75\n12.12\n9.12\n7.00\nIntl. Utilities\nInt. Nickel\nInterprov. Pipe\nInterprov. Steel\nLaurentide\nLoblaw B\nMassey Ferg.\nMacM Powell R\nMolson Brew A\nMont. Loco\nMoore Corp.\nNoranda\nOgilvie Flour\nPacific Pete\nPage Hersey\nPower Corp.\nQue. Nat. Gas\nRoyal Bank\nRothmans\nSalada Foods\nShell Oil\nSimpsons\nSoutham\nSteel of Can.\nTraders Fin. A\nTexaco\nTrans Mtn. Pipe 17.50\nTrans Can. Pipe 36.75\nUnion Gas of C. 21.75\nWalker-Gooder,\nWestcoast Tr.\nWeston Geo. A\nWoodwards A\nZenith Elect.\n22.87\n80.50\n80.50\n3.30\n14.37\n7.12\n19.62\n27.62\n28.50\n12.50\n53.75\n44.25\n15.12\n11.87\n26.62\n10.62\n7.12\n72.87\n11.50\n11.12\n16.37\n42.25\n28.00\n23.50\n11.87\n56.00\n34.00\n17.25\n15.37\n24.00\n4.30\nMINES AND OILS\nAdvocate\nAgnico\nAunor\nBarnat\nBethlehem Cop.\nBibis\nBralorne\nBrunswick\nBuffalo Ank\nCalgary & Ed\nCampbell Chib\nCan. Delhi\nCampbell R.L.\nCariboo Gold\nCassiar Asb.\nCentral Del Rio\nCentral Patricia\nCharter Oil\nChimo\nCoch. Will\nCoin Lake\nCons. Discovery\nCons. Halliwell\nCons. Mogul\nConwest\nCopper Corp.\nCowichan Cop.\nCraigmont\nDenison\nDickenson\nEast Malartic\nEast Sullivan\nFargo\nFrobex\nGeco\nGiant Mascot\nGiant Yel.\nGranduc\nGunnar Mines\nHighland Bell\nHollinger\nHudson Bay Mg.\n6.30\n.49\n3.85\n.65\n6.15\n.24'A\n3.80\n8.40\n1.82\n22.25\n4.85\n6.95\n.67\n10.25\n8.00\n1.13\n1.90\n1.10\n3.80\n.22 Vi\n1.22\n.16\n4.95\n4.05\n.29\n.43\n19.00\n14.00\n5.35\n1.60\n2.81\n2..10\n.76\n38.00\n.76\n10.87\n5.50\n6.95\n3.65\n30.00\n67.00\nHudson Bay Oil 15.25\nHydra Ex.\nIron Bay\nIso\nKerr Addison\nLabrador\nLake Dufault\nLeitch\nLittle Long Lac\nLorado\nMadsen\nMalartic\nMaritime Mng.\n.28'4\n.91\n3.25\n7.15\n38.00\n10.37\n2.25\n1.55\n1.77\n2.22\n.64\n.76\nMattagami Lake 14.50\nMclntyre\nMcKenzie\nMidcon\nMurray\nNational Pele\nNew Cont. Oils\nNew Hosco\nNormetal\nNorthgate\n53.50\n.21 Vi\n.44\n1.15\n2.51\n.32 Vi\n2.52\n3.55\n4.95\n13.50\n19.12\n3.00\n3.10\n59.00\n32.87\n32.50\n14.00\n10.75\n62.25\n68.25\n17.50\n51.62\n30.37\n27.75\n17.25\n57.62\n21.87\n24.00\n43.00\n12.25\n32.50\n9.75\n13.50\n20.00\n61.25\n38.00\n15.00\n11.50\n34.50\n39.87\n11.62\n2.65\n19.12\n53.62\n76.50\n18.50\n19.25\n25.00\n45.00\n20.00\n65.25\n20.12\n43.00\n60.75\n182.00\n13.25\n13.50\n23.62\n15.25\n16.75\n16.00\n24.75\n47.25\n72.75\n12.25\n9.25\n7.25\n23.00\n00.87\n80.87\n3.35\n14.50\n7.25\n19.87\n27.75\n29.00\n12.87\n54.00\n44.62\n15.25\n12.00\n26.75\n10.75\n7.25\n73.00\n11.62\n11.25\n6.50\n42.50\n28.25\n23.75\n12.00\n56.50\n17.62\n37.00\n22.12\n34.12\n17.50\n15.62\n24.25\n4.45\n6.35\n.50\n3.90\n.68\n6.25\n.25\n3.90\n8.45\n1.83\n22.75\n4.90\n7.00\n16.87\n.68\n10.50\n8.10\n1.17\n1.95\n1.11\n3.85\n.24Vi\n1.25\n.17\n5.00\n4.10\n.30\n.43 Vi\n19.37\n14.12\n5.45\n1.65\n2.85\n2.45\n.84\n39.00\n.82\n11.00\n5.55\n7.00\n3.80\n30.25\n67,50\n15.50\n.30\n1.00\n3.35\n7.20\n38.25\n10.50\n2.29\n1.60\n1.79\n2.25\n.70\n.77\n14.75\n54.00\n.22\n.46\n1.23\n2.75\n.33\n2.53\n3.60\n5.00\nOpemiska\nOrmsby\nOrchan\nPetrol O _ G\nPeerless\nPickle Crow\nPine Point\nPlace Gas\nPlacer\nPatino\nPreston\nProvo\nQuebec Lithium\nQuemont\nRadiore\nRayrock\nReeves Mac\nRio Algom\nSan Antonio\nSheep Creek\nSherritt Gordon\nSilver Standard\nSiscoe\nSteep Rock\nSullivan Con.\nTeck Corp.\nTemagami\nTorbrit\nTriad Oil\nTribag\nUnion Oil\nUnited Keno\nUnited Oil\nUpper Canada\nViolomac\nWestern Mines\nWright Harg.\nWilroy\n9.10\n.52\n4.80\n.72\n.14V4\n.49\n25.00\n.46\n32.50\n7.30\n8.25\n1.81\n2.20\n10.37\n.49\n.91\n2.20\n13.00\n.15Vi\n1.08\n3.05\n.32 Vi\n1.70\n4.85\n1.85\n4.70\n.80\n.65\n2.25\n1.37\n12.12\n6.15\n4.96\n1.38\n3.35\n6.10\n.65\n1.52\n9.15\n.54\n4.85\n.74\n.15\n.51\n25.75\n.47\n33.00\n7.35\n8.30\n1.82\n2.25\n10.50\n.51\n.92\n2.50\n13.12\n.16\n1.11\n3.10\n,33Vi\n1.75\n4.95\n1.94\n4.75\n.81\n.69\n2.26\n1.38\n12.37\n6.25\n1.98\n1.41\n3.40\n6.15\n.70\n1.54\nVancouver\nSlocks\nINDUSTRIALS\nBurrard Mort.\nGrowers A\nGrowers B\nSun Pub. A\nSun Pub. B\nInt. Brew. B\n5.00\n5.50\n5.37\n17.62\n18.00\n7.50\nMINES AND OILS\nBlue Star\nCanam Cop.\nCrown Sliver .'\nDolly Varden\nEndako\nHuestis\nKoot. B.M.\nMagnum Copper\nMt. Washington\nNew Ainsworth\nOttawa Silver\nPeace River Pete\nPend Oreille\nSilver Ridge\nSkeena Silver\nTrojan\nTorwest\nWestern Expl.\nUtica Mines\nFUNDS\nAll Can. Com.\nAll Can. Div.\nAmer. Growth\nCan. Inv. Fund\nCommon. Int.\nDiv. Inc. \"B\"\nFirst Oil & Gas\n6.30\n.29\n.02\n.33\n.76\n.07\n.20 Vi\n37\n4.15\n.09\n.12\n.15\n.20\n.18\n.26\n5.59\n7.61\n10.20\n11.27\n9.78\n5.09\n4.71\nInvestors Growth 7.68\nInv. Mutual\nLeverage\nMutual Accum.\nMutual Bond\nMutal Inc.\n13.57\n8.38\n4.31\n7.74\n5.89\nTrans Canada C   7.16\nGIS\nUnited Ace.\n3.97\n7.20\n5.50\n5.87\n5.50\n18.00\n7.75\n.20\n,10Vi\n.08'i\n.94\n6.40\n.30\n.03\n.34\n.77\n.09\n.21\n.38\n4.45\n.09'A\n.12'.i\n.15Vi\n.20 Vi\n.20\n.261i\n6.13\n8.34\n11.15\n12.36\n10.72\n5.60\n5.15\n8.35\n14.75\n9.18\n4.71\n8.11\n6.44\n7.85\n4.34\n7.87\nDUPLICATE\nBRIDGE CHAMPS\nANNOUNCED\nCRANBROOK - Affiliate in\nthe international American Contract Bridge League, Mount\nBaker Duplicate Bridge Club\nopen pairs championships have\nbeen played.\nTaking top place and the\ntrophy were Mrs. W. A. Fergie\nand Miss Muriel Reade. Second\nplace winners were Ralph Chat-\nterson and George Webber of\nKimberley, and third place, Mr.\nand Mrs. George Felker of Kimberley. This was an annual special event, and director of the\nclub, E. A. Herron of Kimberley,\ndonated the proceeds of the\nevening to the Cranbrook Girl\nGuide Association.\nThe club continues its regular\nplay for members and guests\nunder ACBL rulesl each Monday\nevening until the end of May.\n^ >wmm\\ ' \u25a0';\u25a0 - = \u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u2022^ppiiipp!!\nRites Held for\nCreston Youth\nSports Promoter\nTRAIL CITIZEN OF THE YEAR, Steven\nSaprunoff, received a citation at a ceremony\nheld Monday in Trail, with Rev. George Hart\nof St. Anthony of Padua Catholic Church as\nguest speaker. The John Althoff Assembly,\nFourth Degree, Knights of Columbus named\nMr .Saprunoff \"Citizen of the Year,\" the award\npresented by James Gagnon of the Assembly\nbefore approximately 70 citizens. Rev. Rodney\nBooth, chairman of the award committee,\ncited Mr. Saprunoff for his contributions to\nthe youth of Trail. Himself a Cub, Scout, King\nScout, Rover Scout and leader in the Boy Scout\nmovement, Mr. Saprunoff was instrumental in\nconstruction of the East Trail Girl Guide Hall.\nHe served in the Royal Canadian Air Force\nduring the Second World War. He is a minor\nhockey coach, a Legionnaire, member of the\nMasonic Lodge and. of the Anglican Church.\nReeve Percy Halliwell, Arnold Lauriente and\nMayor Joseph Palyga also paid their respects\nto Mr. Saprunoff. The scroll presented to the\ncitizen of the year was designed by Dr. V.\nFanderlik, who described the meaning of the\nvarious insignios, depicting various phases of\nthe recipient's activities. In the photo from left\nto right are Joseph Kobluk, James Gagnon,\nSteve Saprunoff and Isidore Muzzin.\n\u2014Photo by Jack Hand of Trail.\nRezoning 7th, Tenth Avenues'\nTraffic Pattern Topic of Meet\nCRESTON \u2014 George Holmes,\ndied after a lengthy illness at\nthe age of 62.\nMr. Holmes, who had made\nhis home in Creston since 1940,\nwas a great promoter of sport\nInterest among young people.\nAs a result, he was always on\ncall to aid in many branches of\nsport as umpire, referee, coach\nand sometimes player.\nWhile a valley resident, he\nhad served on several Civic\nCentre boards, was a member of\nthe Knights of Pythias, and a\nmember and past president of\nthe Creston Lions Club. Mr.\nHolmes was the originator of\nthe Buds and Buttons little\nleague and the first local Pee\nWee hockey league.\nHe had operated his own\ngarage for a time before taking\nup employment with the village.\nFuneral service was held Wed-\nKINNAIRD \u2014 A hearing on a\nbylaw to rezone a vacant area\non Seventh Avenue to light\nindustry and a petition to keep\nTenth Avenue barred from un-\ndesired traffic coming off Highway 3 or proceeding on to the\nhighway, was the concern of\nfrom 16 to 20 citizens of Kinnaird who attended the Village\nCommission meeting Tuesday.\nOn the petition to keep Tenth\nAvenue closed to Highway 3.\n\"There are a few more points to\nbe arrived at,\" acting Chairman\nGerald Rust told the delegations\nafter discussion. He said that\ncouncil's decisions would come\nas soon as possible.\nThe petition was presented by\nRon Sanvido, a resident of Tenth\nAvenue, for mostly property\nowners in that area. The petition'\ncontained 70 co-signers.\nAmong the 10 points raised by\nthe petition was the effect and\nquantity of traffic resulting\nshould the barrier be lifted at\nTenth. This proposal was opposed by 95 per cent of the\npeople residing from the school\nto the \"dead end,\" the meeting\nwas told.\nThe petition suggested that\nthe opening \"may well lead to\nthe widening of the road to 60\nfeet, the relocating of water\nservices and the decrease of\nproperty values.\" It said that\n\"the ensuing traffic could be\ndetrimental to school pupils'\nsafety at the elementary school\nand at the proposed Junior Secondary School where there will\nbe more foot traffic.\n\"A dangerous hazard could be\ncreated at the intersection of\nHighways 3 and 3A due to the\nincrease in traffic through the\nvillage. It pointed to Tenth\nAvenue as a residential area and\nundesireable as a short cut for\nthe entire village as well as for\ntraffic \"other than local origin.\"\nActing Chairman Gerald Rust\ntold the delegation that the Department of Highways had the\nfinal decision in providing any\napproach to the highway if this\nshould be the intent.\nFrank Jones, a Crestview\nresident and exponent for the\nmove to open the village to\nHighway 3, spoke for the \"only\naccess available\" outside of the\nCrest View Subdivision and the\nroad to Ron's Motel.\nWHAT A WELCOME!\nEVERYTHING'S   BEEN   UNPACKED\nAND   PLACED\nSave time, work and worry by letting us handle your\nmoving .... anywhere!\nOur job isn't over until all your possessions are safely\nresettled In your new home.\nEverything is placed just where you want It by our\nexperts. - CALL FOR A FREE ESTIMATE.\nSTAR-MAYFLOWER\nMOVING and STORAGE\nPh. 352-7313 ^IT\nManager, WALT PALMER\nAlex   Cheveldave   a r g u e d | one of the \"strong arm tactics''\nagainst the points contained on\nthe petition and said that permission from the Department of\nHighways is \"very easily obtainable\" for the opening on to the\nhighway. He said that \"through\ntraffic\" was already in effect on\nthe cemetery road. He felt that\nthe 40 feet width on Tenth\nAvenue was adequate to accommodate the opening of the road\nin view of the fact that highways\nare no more than 50 feet wide.\nHe said that the village could\ncontrol the speed limits and discourage the potential of hazards',\nprohibit transport trucks and\nsee to it that children are kept\nwithin the school grounds.\nConvinced of an eventual\nwidening of the road, Jim Macbeth said that the village could\nnot afford \"ten to fifteen feet on\neach side of the road\" and that\nhe was not prepared to sell\nsome of his property to the\nvillage.\nThe proposal that Tenth\nAvenue would have to be\nwidened was considered to be\nreferred to in the petition by\none of the delegates, who felt\nthat it led people to believe they\n\"would lose property.\"\nRon Johnson said that the\nopening of Tenth Avenue was the\nsolution for a route into Kinnaird\nfor the residents on his side of\nthe highway, and an opening for\nthe fire truck in servicing the\narea.\nMore than 10,000,000 copies of\ntextbooks by Canadians were\npublished and sold in Canada\nduring 1962.\nCOMMISSION\nPAYS TRIBUTE\nTO G. HOLMES\nCRESTON \u2014 Creston Village\nCommission held a special meeting Monday night to receive a\ndelegation of E. Salvador asking\nassistance in planning sewage\ndisposal for a proposed building\nbetween an automotive firm and\nthe bus depot.\nSidewalk remedial work along\nUth Avenue will be included in\nthe 1964 street budget, it was\nnoted.\nA two-minute silence was\nobserved by the commission\nin memory of George Holmes,\na civic employee, who died\nMonday afternoon. The commission will donate a trophy\nto the local minor hockey\nleague to be known as the\nGeorge Holmes Memorial\nTrophy.\nThe Union of Public Em\nployees will be offered a raise\nof 10 cents per hour by the coun\ncil in 1964; 10 cents per hour in\n1965; or 11 cents per hour\n1964 and 5 cents per hour\n1965.\nTenders will be called for the\npainting of tho civic hall.\nPUC Answers Query\nOn Rate Differential\nCRESTON MAN\nGETS TWO YEARS\nFOR FORGERY\nCRANBROOK - Gordon Er-\nling Anderson of Creston, age\n30, was sentenced to two years\nless one day in prison, when he\nappeared before Magistrate\nShiell here and pleaded guilty\nto forging a document and uttering the forged document.\nThe document in question was\na cheque for $800, with which he\nhad bought a car. RCMP in\nCranbrook spotted the vehicle\nfrom its description when the\ncheque came under suspicion,\nand arrested Anderson in Cranbrook.\nKINNAIRD \u2014 In response to\nthe joint effort between Kinnaird\nand the Village of Montrose to\nhave electrical rates reduced in\ntheir specific area, the Public\nUtilities Commission has written\nthat \"the rates of the West\nKootenay Power and Light Co.,\nLtd., have not been fixed by the\nCommission pursuant Section 20\nof the Public Utilities Act, instead they have been filed pursuant to Section 17 of the Act.\n\"At the time of the original\nfiling the rates and areas of\nthe company appeared reasonable to the Commission. In view\nof the circumstances we have\nwritten to the company requesting it to send you direct details\nas to why it considers that there\nshould be a differential between\nyour rates and the rates of\nTrail.\"\nAlong with Kinnaird, Montrose\nis situated in Area, I while Trail,\nRossland and Warfield are Area\nII, which \"has a more favorable\nrate schedule than Area I for\nSays Dental Disease\nStill Major Problem\nno apparent reason.\" Fruitvale,\nSalmo and Castlegar are in the\nhigher rates area in which each\nhouseholder pays about one\ndollar more per month.\nThe P.U.C. continues their\nletter to the Kinnaird Commission as follows; \"The Commission has made a number of\nstudies in connection with the\ndifferential in rates charged to\nresidents in Trail and Rossland\nand certain surrounding communities. The conclusion that\nhas been reached is that these\ncommunities cannot be considered by themselves as special\ncases which would justify them\nbeing included in Area II of the\nWest Kootenay Power and Light\nCo. Ltd. If there is to be any\nadjustment in rates, it would\nhave to include a much larger\narea. While there is no ground\nat the present time for requiring the W.K.P. and L. Co. to\nchange its service areas,. the\nmatter is continuously being\nexamined and studied by the\nCommission.\"\nnesday from Trinity United\nChurch, with Rev. F Cline officiating. Interment followed in\nForest Lawn Cemetery.\nPallbearers were Homer\nEddy, Frank Abar, Gordon Key,\nJack Langlois, Harold Beam and\nJim Brierly, all members of the\nKnights of Pythais.\nSurviving are his widow, Essia\nMay Holmes, at Creston; one\nson, Hilliard Arthur Holmes of\nEdmonton; two daughters, Mrs.\nR. (Ethel) Vigne of Kingsgate,\nB.C., and Mrs. R. R. 'Alice)\nLavery of Calgary; one brother,\nArthur, of Bellingham, Wash.,\nand 13 grandchildren.\nMr. Holmes was born March\n28, 1901 at Boles Over, England.\nHe came to Canada in 1907 with\nhis father, Thomas, and a\nbrother, Arthur, to Michel, B.C.\nHe was married in Calgary in\n1921 to Essia May Herron, and\nwas employed for the next eight\nyears at Kirkland, Wash. In\n1935 the family moved to Cranbrook, where they resided until\ncoming to Creston in 1940.\nMr. Holmes was made an\nhonorary president of the Royal\nCanadian Legion in 1963 and\n1964 for outstanding work with\nthe youth of the community.\nWater, Power\nExtension\nBylaws Ready\nCRANBROOK - Bylaws of\n$103,000 for city water extension,\nand $105,000 for power extension\nexpenditures have been prepared and forwarded to the Inspector of Municipalities for approval, and certification as self-liquidating projects.\nIf this is secured and the borrowing of these sums authorized,\nthe bylaws will be published with\nnotice that unless a minimum\nten percent of ratepayers of the\ncity petition for it, there will be\nno city vote on their approval.\nAPPLY FOR HALFINTEREST\nApplication has been made\njointly by the Department of\nHighways and the RCMP to\npurchase a half interest in the\ncity's power line extension to\nBaker Mountain summit southeast of Cranbrook, constructed\nby the city over the past two\nyears at a total cost of $20,348.\nApplication states the joint applicants are willing to pay $10,174\nfor the half-interest, which the\ncity will then refund to the original financiers, Cranbrook Television Ltd. The mountaintop location will be used by the two applicants in their district radio\ncommunication systems.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SAT., MARCH 28,1964 \u2014 3\nParents Warned\nTo Watch Creeks\nSail a\nto Europe\nand save during\nThrift Season\nTRAIL\u2014Parents were warned\nagainst hazards in local creeks\nwith the coming of spring flood\nconditions, when the Trail District Safety Council met this\nmonth.\nB. C. D. Casey emphasized the\nnecessity of being on guard;\nsome   serious   situations   and\n3200 Persons\nSaw Brigadoon\nCompany Finds\nTRAIL - Over 3200 people In\nthe Trail area enjoyed the stage\nperformance of \"Brigadoon\" in\nFebruary.\nThe annual meeting of the\nRossland Light Opera Players,\nheld in Rossland Tuesday evening, was told that this appears\nto be one of the best attended\namateur stage productions ever\nheld in the district. It was suggested that although \"Brigadoon\" was a financial success,\nits success artistically will be\nbest proved\" when everybody\ncomes back next year for more.\"\nSLATE\nJack Fisher was elected president of-the group for the coming\nyear, succeeding George Bou-\nchier. Vice-president is Charles\nBailey, secretary Anne Fuller\nand treasurer Ella Heaven.\nThe reading committee is now\nbusy studying possible choices\nfor next year. Originally a Gilbert and Sullivan organization,\nthe Rossland Light Opera Players switched to Broadway productions in the last five years,\nreturning to G and S in 1962 for\na repeat of \"Mikado.\" A choice\nfor the 1965 production is likely\nto be made by early summer,\nand casting will take place in\nthe Fall.\nCRANBROOK - Dr. H. R.\nGrimsrud, dental consultant for\nthe Kootenay Health Units, reports for East Kootenay for 1963\ndental disease in children continues a major East Kootenay\nhealth problem. A survey in\nEast Kootenay schools in 1963\nshowed 97.5 per cent of ils child\npopulation 7 to 15 years old\nneeded dental repairs. Statistics\nshowed each child averaged 9.4\nteeth showing results of decay.\nHis report proposed prevention be main objective at the\nhome level, with stressing of\ngood nutrition practice and daily\ndental hygiene at an early age,\nthen advice on routine dental\ncare to parent and child by the\ndentist on the child's initial\ndental appointment.\nEast Kootenay has 12 community  preventive dental  pro\ngrams operating, most of them\nproviding all needed repairs for\neach child immediately prior to\nschool start, and in one rural\narea, Edgewater, providing dental repair service to all children\nfrom three years to and including grade 3 standing.\nE. KOOTENAY COSTS $22,732\nEast Kootenay program costs\nof $22,732 were shared by the\nDepartment of Health and local\nagencies, with services by resident dentists and contract\ntravelling clinics for rural areas.\nSerious consideration by\ncentres with community water\nsupplies, of fluoridation of the\nsupply as a striking aid to prevention of dental disease, is\nrecommended and will be continued to be urged through East\nKootenay, Dr. Grimsrud concludes.\nSlocan M\notel\nNew Fully Modern Kitchen\nand Single Units.\nBaths, Showers, Automatie Heat.\nPhone 355-2216\nCOMINCO PENSIONERS\nFREE\nFERTILIZER\nYour choice of 50 Ibs. of any one of the\nfollowing Elephant Brand Fertilizers will be\ndistributed at Trail, from the Salvage Yard in\nTadanac, between the hours of 7:00 a.m. and\n4:00 p.m. each day from April 2 to April 4\ninclusive.\nAmmonium   Phosphate   11-48-0\nAmmonium   Phosphate-Sulphate\n16-20-0\nComplete  Mixture   13-16-10\nSulphate  of  Ammonia  21-0-0\nPensioners in the Trail district may obtain\na card entitling them to 50 Ibs. of fertilizer by\nwriting to the Welfare and Records Department,\nPersonnel Division, or phone 368-5453 Trail.\nPensioners who are householders outside\nthe Trail district and who-wish to obtain free\nfertilizer should apply immediately to the\nProperty Superintendent at Riondel or Salmo\nor the Personnel Division at Kimberley.\neroi'TOO\nTHE CONSOLIDATED MINING & SMELTING\nCOMPANY OF CANADA LIMITED\nfatlities had occurred at Trail\nand Beaver creeks in the past,\nhe reminded members and it is\nimportant to bring home to\nparents the necessity of care,\nhe said.\nMr. Casey repeated his request of past months that playgrounds be opened up as soon as\npossible as a means of keeping\nyoungsters off the streets and\naway from dangerous creeks.\n\"We should lower the boom on\nthe Park Board officials to get\nsome action.\"\nHe explained that he did not\nmean the supervised places\nsuch as swimming pools, hut the\nordinary playgrounds with\nswings and teeter totters, which\nhe thought could be opened\nright away.\nCar accidents in Trail district\nwere much lower last month it\nwas reported ot the monthly\nmeeting of the Trail District\nSafety Council.\nOut of 77 accidents reported\nfrom the monthly hospital report, only two were car accidents\nand these were of a minor\nnature; 29 accidents were attributed to sports, 16 skiing accidents, 11 hockey, and two\nskating.\nThe Safety Council members\nwere invited to hold the May\nmeeting in the \"Garden Village\"\nof Warfield at the home of Bob\nFarmer.\nRelax \u2014 or let off a little\nsteam on gleaming sports...\ndecks;   eat   magnificently; 7\nsleep like a log in your air- -\nconditioned stateroom. You'll\nwish the ocean were wider! \u25a0 >\nAsk your Travel Agent about\nyour free baggage allowance^\n\u2014 up to 275 pounds; and\nabout the special bargains\navailable on all Thrift Season\nSailings, saving you un to\n25%! .v.\nTHRIFT SEASON \"HAPPY\nSHIP\" SAILINGS to Southampton, Le Havre, Rotterdam.\nFrom  MONTREAL  and\nQUEBEC:\ntHYNDAM Apr. 12\n\"MAASDAM Apr. 30\nFrom NEW YOBK:\nApril\ntSTATENDAM  9\ntROTTERDAM  15..\ntNIEUW AMSTERDAM 23\nSTATENDAM  .30 ',\ntSpecial Tulip Times\nSailings.\n\u2666Also to Cobh\/Bremer-\nhaven.\nP____ __ _______\nI Spring Cruise  . I\n| S.S. RYNDAM to NEW YORK Via I\nBoston, 4_ days from Montreal j\nI Maj 5. j\nPay Later plan available\nSee your Travel Agent or\n540 Burrard Street, Suite 30b.\nVancouver, B.C.\nFor Tickets and\nReservations, Call\nVIPOND\nfor TRAVEL\nHume Hotel, Nelson,\nTrail, Cranbrook\nOF\nEASTER\nPARADE\nBARGAINS\nWE RESERVE THE RIGHT\nTO LIMIT QUANTITIES\n \t\nHelmut Saily Kriua\nEstjitlllshM April ii   1902 Nelson. B U.\nPublished by the NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED.\n266 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia, mornings except\nSundays and holidays In the centre al th* Kootenays with\nthe lurqest daily circulation In the Interior ol B.C\nAuthorized as Second Class Mall, Post Office Department, Ottsws.\nsiid for Payment ef Postage la Cash.\nMEMBER Of  ME CANADIAN PRESS\nMEMBER Or THE CANADlAf\" DAILY NEWPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSOCUT10N\nMEMBER OF THE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS\nThe Canadian Press U exclusivel. entiled to the use tor lepublication ot all sews\ndispatches credited to it or to IDs Associated Press or Reuters In this\nosper and also the local news publish'\"' 'herein.\nSaturday, March 28, 1964\nLet's Take a Serious Look\nAt Our Centennial Proposals\nlarge modern library is a reflection\nof its sincerity and responsibility.\nThe present quarters are regarded\nas only temporary and have been\nsince the library moved into the\nCivic Centre almost 30 years ago.\nIf a university is largely judged by\nits library, cannot the same be said\nof an education centre?\nWith the cult of physical development becoming more vociferous\nwith each additional ounce oi fat that\nis added to Canadian torsos, the indoor swimming pool deserves serious\nconsideration. To do it justice, a pool\nwill prove costly but its benefits to\nthe whole community are practically\nunrivalled. There are few sports that\ncan simulate its muscle tone.\nThe need of an indoor pool has\nlong been obvious here. Nelson's\nyounger swimmers are handicapped\nin that they compete in inter-city\nevents against swimmers and'dlvers\nwho practice year-round or at least\nmonths longer than is possible here.\nNo matter what project is finally\nselected, the centennial club has\nbeen more than generous in allowing the public to participate. There\nhas been ample opportunity ior the\npublic to suggest new projects. Let's\nhave no late gripes but instead expend this surplus energy in support\noi the selected project.\nIt appears that Nelson's centennial project will narrow down to the\neternal conflict oi brawn vs brain.\nThe Centennial Club has a half\ndozen choices but a number of\nthem eliminate themselves because\nof their cost, limited appeal and un-\nsuitability as an anniversary observance.\nA* we see the project, it should\nnot only stand out with a distinctive\nsignificance, but be utilized by the\nmost people and also within the financial means of the city.\nThe Utopian plan oi a combined\nChamber oi Commerce office, hall,\nlibrary, swimming pool and parking\n, plan is a mammoth undertaking and,\nas in the case of the waterfront development, the centennial funds will\nonly be a faint echo of its total cost.\nThe wateriront development is a\nworthy project but as a centennial\nproject would not have a significance\nof its own; its identification being\nsubmerged by the immensity and\ndiversity of the total project.\nA band hall and stage means\nlimited use for a select group while\ndevelopment of Cottonwood Falls\nwill remain in jeopardy until the\nDepartment of Highways' new road\napproaches are concrete.\nWith Nelson promoting itself as\n\"the\" education centre of interior, a\nLobster Up a Tree\nChinese Communist leader Mao\nTse-tung has at least one great advantage over Chairman Khruhschev\n\u2014 and, ior that matter, over President Johnson, Sir Alec Douglas-Home\nand General de Gaulle. He writes\npoetry. Not only that: he writes verse\nthat a Hong Kong Communist newspaper has seen fit to dub \"the great\nepic poems of this great age.\"\nTranslations of some of these\npoems have appeared in a copyrighted dispatch in the Sunday Times and\nin a short article in the Economist\n(both of London). After reading them,\nwe are more than ever supporters\nof Shelley's view about translating\nverse. One might as well put a violet\nin a crucible, he wrote in one oi his\nessays, and hope to extract the perfume. Mr. Mao's muse, particularly\nthrough the apparent clumsiness of\nEnglish translation, seems esoteric in\nthe extreme.\nStill, the verses offer a kind of\nfascinating guessing game, for\neverybody assumes that they are\npoemes a clef. Is Mr. Mao himself\n\"the Golden Monkey\"? Are \"the insect pests\" to be \"exterminated\" the\nperennial American \"imperialists\"?\nAnd who are the \"tiny flies . . .\nbreaking their heads against the\nwall\"? Are they Mr. Khrushchev and\nhis opprobrious \"splitters\" of the\nworld communism? Or is the Soviet\npremier the lobster apparently up\na tree?\nThe imagery is vivid, and the\nthought distinctive. As for the tone\nof the poetry, it suggests a self-confident Chairman Mao. Admittedly he\nand his fellow Chinese Communists\nhave their own problems. But the\nscurrying hither and thither oi Communists elsewhere in the world is\nat least prima facie evidence for him\nthat he has Mr. Khrushchev and his\nfriends all of a dither.\n\u2014Christian Science Monitor.\nAn Invasion?\nU.S. business men running to the\nWhite House for protection against\nCanada seem easily frightened.\nCanadian competition in Great\nLakes shipping bothers them and\nthey feel their government should\ndo something. Yet they show not the\nslightest awareness of Canadian\nproblems in the ports oi the U.S.\ncolossus where, for example, a Canadian ship was halted ior months because U.S. union men would not\nallow it to be loaded.\nMore than shipowners whine.\nThere has been a pretence at panic\nal the suggestion that Canada would\nmake> far more auto parts within its\nborders. This dreadful threat, this\nprospect of a bite from a Northern\nmosquito, made the secretary of\ncommerce, Mr. Hodges, address the\nU.S. auto industry in words of desperation. \"Get on your hind legs and\nfight,\" he told them. It sounded like\nthe Battle of Bunker Hill all over\nqgain.\nTo read the Washington reports\none would think the Canadians were\ncoming down with fire and sword to\ndestroy the ships and factories of\ntheir good neighbor. It's a great\nhonor they pay our fire power.\n\u2014Ottawa lournai\nIncome Tax for\nthe Worker\nBy C. A. MILLER\nBefore mailing an income tax\nreturn a taxpayer should be\nsure that all income is reported. If a T4 is misted or bond\ninterest no shown on the returns, the income tax department will add the omitted income to the return later in the\nyear and assess the taxpayer\non the new taxable balance.\nWhen this is done, the taxpayer\nis charged interest on the balance owing.\nIf the taxpayer received a T4\nslip after his return has been\nmailed, he should never file an\namended return, as the one originally filed can be adjusted\nto include the omitted amount.\nThe T4 slip should never be\nmailed in until such time as the\nassesment notice is received.\nIf it is tent in before you get the\nassesment notice, it is almost\nimpossible to match it to your\nreturn. Returns are not filed alphabetically until after the assessment has been completed.\nOmitted bond Interest should be\nhandled the same way.\nWhen reporting additional income, the report should never\nbe sent to the data center in\nOttawa. Send the T4 slip to your\nnearest income tax office with\nShort Lived\nRailway\nLiquidaied\nVANCOUVER (CP) - The\naffairs of the Pacific Northern\nRailway, once a $100,000,000\nare being wound up.\nWilliam Mainwarlng Wednesday was named liquidator of\nthe railway. But since It has\nno assets or liabilities he won't\nhave much to do. It's merely\na formality.\nThe PNR was Incorporated in\nMay, I960, as part of the\nWenner-Gren (B.C.) Development Company Limited of which\nMr. Mainwaring is a director.\nBuilding of a railway from\nSummit Lake, near Prince\nGeorge, 700 miles northwestward to the Yukon border had\nbeen a condition of reserves\ngranted by the B.C. government\nto the Wenner-Gren enterprise\nto explore for mineral, forest .\nand hydro potential in the north.\nThe application was accompanied by a $15,000 cheque and\ncompanies such as A. V. Roe,\nAssociated Electrical Industries\nLimited of England and Perini\nPacific participated in the\nventure.\nIn June of 1960 Premier Bennett headed a party to the site,\nwhere the premier chopped\ndown a tree to start \"clearing\nof the right of way.\" But the\nPNR never got any farther and\nit became a target for opposition\nin  the legislature.\nIn May, 1963, a cabinet order\ncancelled three certificates issued to the PNR. Cancelled\nwere the company's powers to\nborrow money for railway purposes, approval of preliminary\nlocation of the line and authority to use crown land for the\nright-of-way.\na covering letter and the adjustment will be made there.\nIt should be kept ln mind that\nwhen a taxpayer signs ills return, it is a declaration that\nhit entire income for the year\nhas been reported. If he had not\ndisclosed ail hit income, then\nhe iias committed an offense\nthat is punishable by the courts.\nHe can also be penalized by the\nincome tax department [or evasion of tax. In view of this it\nis wise to report all your income.\nFor personal replies pertaining to income tax problems,\nplease enclose a self-addressed\nfive cent stamped envelope and\n23C in coin for each question\nyou wish answered, and mail\nto Mr. C. A. Miller, care of the\nDaily News.\nQuestion: I forgot to attach a\nT4 slip showing three weeks\nwork. What should 1 do now?\nAnswer: Wait until you receive your assessment notice,\nthen send it in to your local income tax office and request that\nyour return be adjusted,\nQuestion: I have never reported my bond interest received during the last five years.\nI did not know it was taxable.\nShould I report all of it this\nyear?\nAnswer: On this year's return\nshow only the interest received\nin 1963. Send a letter stating the\namounts received each year and\nrequest the returns for the years\nin question be adjusted.\nAbridged\nA Toronto psychologist is setting\nup a scientific mating service. Tests\nof personality, intelligence, attitude,\naptitude and taste will be used to\nfind men and women who were\nmade ior one another.\nOne idea behind this service is\nthat romantic love is a pretty shaky\nsort of a process ior pairing off people who will then have to spend a\nlifetime putting up with one another's\nidiosyncrasies. Doubtless, there is\nsome truth in that. A habit of leaving the cap ofi the toothpaste tube\ncan start the crack that sunders a\ndream oi bliss.\nBut the founder also says that the\nservice will be valuable for busy\npeople who just haven't time to go\nto parties and dinners and all the\nother social functions at which men\nand women usually find partners.\nWell, maybe.\nBut we already have digested\nmagazines for people too busy to\nread magazines, condensed books\nfor people too busy to read books,\nanthologies of famous arias for people too busy to listen to whole\noperas, instant coiiee for people too\nbusy to make the real thing. Isn't\nthere a place ior all this digesting\nto stop?\u2014Olfawa Journal,\nIn the Nelson Zone a survey\ndisclosed there are 30 schools\nconsidered suitable for emergency welfare service use in the\nevent of a disaster\u2014a bed capacity of 8440.\nFinley\nAt It\nAgain\nCHICAGO (AP)-Cherles 0.\nFinley, stormy owner of Kansas\nCity Athletics, demanded Wednesday that New York Yankees\nerect foul-line screens to eliminate \"the easy home run that\nbuilt the so-called Yankee dy-\nFinley, who wrote March 20\nto American League president\nJoe Cronin on the subject, said\nYankee Stadium\u2014with foul lines\nof 296 right field and 301 left\nfield feet\u2014was \"grossly unfair\"\nto the league's other nine teams.\nSuggesting Cronin call a\nleague meeting immediately,\nFinley said the Yankees should\nbe compelled to erect right and\nleft field barriers to produce the\nequivalent of 325-foot foul lines.\nToday\nIn History\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nMarch 28, 1964 . . .\nCanada's foremost humorist, Stephen Leacock,\ndied in Toronto 20 yeaw\nago today\u2014in 1944. A native\nof England, he was a pioneer political economist in\nCanada, as well as an historian of early Canada and\nthe British' Empire. He is\nbest remembered as a humorist and his works have\nbeen translated into many\nlanguages.\n1953 \u2014Chinese and North\nKoreans accepted UN proposals for the exchange of\nsick and wounded prisoners\nin the Korean War.\n1961 \u2014 South Africa's\nfour-year conspiracy trials\nended as the last of 28\ndefendants was acquitted\nof conspiracy to overthrow\nthe government.\nHUBERT\n\t\n0   -\n<\u00a3\n<8\n1   t 9\n) \u2022 <\n\u2022 0\n\u2022   \u2022  \u2022\n[Qixyip \u00bb-te\n<S Kkf Ftawiu Swdlult, lac. I\u00bb4. VIM ri|kt. t\nPublic Okays\nRealistic\nCBC Play\nTORONTO (CP)-The contra-,\nvenial CBC television play The\nOpen Grave, shown on schedule\nWednesday despite religious and\npolitical criticism, scored a hit\nwith Canadian viewers who said\nit. was so real it was frightening.\nCBC switchboards across the\ncountry were deluged with\nphone calls from those who had\nmistaken the play, a modern-\nday allegory of the Easter story,\nfor live coverage of a news\nevent In Toronto.\nWritten by Charles Israel, produced by Jim Guthro and directed by Ron Kelly, the play\nwas labelled sacrilegious earlier\nIn the week by church leaders.\nIts planned showing was criticized in the Commons.\nPresented in the form of an\nactual newscast prepared in\nhaste, it portrays the events\nsurrounding Joshua Corbett, a\nban-the-bomb leader, who is\nhanged for the shooting of an\nRCMP constable at a Peace in\nAction rally. Two days after the\nexecution Corbett's grave is\nfound open, empty and apparently untouched.\nCBC officials, after a special\nscreening for top network executives in Ottawa Tuesday, decided the hour - long program\nwas \"In no way sacrilegious\"\nand approved its presentation.\nHAS NO COMMENT\nIn Ottawa, a spokesman for\nOpposition Leader Diefenbaker\n\u2014who moved for a special debate on the show in the Commons earlier this week\u2014said he\nhad no comment.\nMr. Diefenbaker had said advance information on the program indicated it was \"a flagrant, scandalous and sacrilegious Insult to the majority of\nCanadians.\"\nIn Toronto, CBC officials said\nreaction from telephone callers\nwas two-to-one in favor of the\nprogram and some described\nthe realism in some sequences\nof the play as \"uncanny.\"\nRev. John Morgan of the First\nUnitarian Church in Toronto said\nthe program was a marvellous\ncontribution to Easter.\nW. Wycliffe Booth, Salvation\nArmy commissioner and president of the Canadian Council of\nChurches, said after the program he \"regarded the film as\nsincere but . . . Inadequate.\"\n'WONDER WAS MISSING'\n\"Nothing that was in it could\nmake one realize the wonder of\nthe resurrection,\" he said.\n\"After all, the resurrection is\nthe central truth of Christendom.\"\nThe day before the public\nshowing he had criticized the\nfilm as \"apparently an abhorrent, nightmarish treatment of\na sacred theme.\"\nCorbett was betrayed in the\nplay's trial by Jerome Ingram\n(Judas Iscariot) who committed\nsuicide after the \"resurrection.\"\nHe was prosecuted by Attorney-\nGeneral Patrick Piatt (Pontius\nPilate) and the open grave was\ndiscovered by a reformed prostitute, Marian Morrison (Mary\nMagdalene).\nRev. Emlyn Davies, former\nminister of Toronto's Yorkmin-\nster Baptist Church, said he\nwasn't offended.\nRev. Charles Fielding, professor of moral theology at Trinity\nUniversity, said \"it was not a\ngreat play but probably better\nthan most one sees.\"\nMOST VIEWERS APPROVE\nAcross the country, response\nto the film was overwhelmingly\nin favor.\nIn London, Ont., Rev. George\nGoth of the Metropolitan United\nChurch said it was a \"tremendous performance.\"\nIn Calgary, the TV station received 40 calls within 15 minutes\nafter the show ended. Two were\ncritical and the remainder\n\"gave it all sorts of bouquets.\"\nSimilar reactions were noted\nin  Edmonton.\nIn Vancouver Mayor William\nRathie said \"I didn't think the\nplay was at all offensive.\"\nRev. Murray Thompson,\nUnited Church hospital chaplain, agreed with the mayor. \"In\nfact, I'm in total sympathy with\nwhat they were attempting, and\nI think they were moderately\nsuccessful.\"\n\"Well! Well! So we meet again at Checkpoint\nCharlie 1\"\nB.C. Briefs\nMEET IN APRIL\nKELOWNA (CP) - The fifth\nannual convention of the Interior Logging Association will be\nheld here April 9. More than 200\ndelegates and their wives are\nexpected.\nCONTRIBUTE *5,000\nNANAIMO (CP) - MacMillan, Bloedel and Powell River\nLimited has donated $5,000 to\nNorth Cedar waterworks district to help with construction\nof a new firehali and purchase\nof a new truck for the volunteer\nbrigade. The fire department\ncomes under the waterworks\ndistrict administration In suburban Cedar.\nt\nSPECTACULAR but harmless was this cloud of smoke which blew\nacross the city Wednesday. Waste oil in the CPR sump was ignited when\nsparks from a city dump fire were blown across dry grass.\n.  \u2014Daily News photo.\nGoVOrdinated Defence\nPosture is Possible\nOTTAWA (CP)-The government has set its sights on a\n\"single, unified defence force\nfor Canada.\"\nFirst step will be integrated\ncontrol of all aspects of both\noperations and planning in the\narmy, navy and air force.\nThere will be a single chief of.\ndefence staff. And there will be\nonly one staff\u2014not three.\nThe government white paper\ntabled in the Commons Thursday\nby Defence Minister Hellyer\nlisted these advantages in such\na move:\n\u2014A more effective, co-ordinated defence \"posture\" for\nCanada.\n\u2014 Considerable savings. No\ndollar, amount was mentioned.\n\u2014Substantial manpower cuts\nin headquarters and training\nestablishments. The Ottawa\nstaff alone now is nearly 8,000.\n\u2014More money for equipment,\nwith less -spent on \"housekeeping.\" The. equipment goal\nis 25 per cent of the defence\nbudget, about twice the\namount now spent.\nWill all this damage military\nmorale? Will it.ruin tri-service\ncompetition?\nNo, said the white paper.\n\"Esprit de corps by nature is\nassociated with ships, or corps,\nor regiment, or squadron, as\nwell as with the service.\nRETAIN TRADITION\n\"There is no thought of eliminating worth - while traditions\nand there is no reason why morale should not be high\u2014a direct\nresult of effectiveness.\n\"Similarly, there will be no\nlack of competition.\n\"The sailors will press for\nmore ships, the soldiers for\nmore tanks and the airmen for\nmore, planes.\n\"This is as natural as breathing.\n\"Competition will not be lost\nbut it will be contained at the\nservice level.\"\nThe paper said no attempt\nwill be made to mock-up a theoretical establishment to replace\nthe present one. Details would\nnot be prescribed in advance for\norganization.\n\"Inevitable changes will take\nplace under the direction of the\nmen charged with responsibility\nin their various fields.\n\"Streamlined procedures will\nbe worked out in practice.\n\"Standard policies will be\nbased on the best available to\nmeet functional requirements.\"\nOperational control can best\nbe handled by a single command, the paper said\u2014at least\nto the extent that it is exercised in Canada.\nThe government cited the recommendations about the services by the Glassco royal commission on government organization.\nThree separate organizations\nare uneconomic, the commission found.\nThe only unity at present was\nthat of political direction\u2014the\nthree services under one minister.\nBelow that level, the effort\nwas. to get co-ordination, not integration.\nThis was being sought by the\n. chiefs of staff committee. It consists of the chairman, the chief\nof staff of each of the three services, and the chairman of the\nDefence Research Board.\nCollectively, they are responsible for advising the minister\nand the government on defence\npolicy, co-ordination and direction of the already-existing joint\nservice operations and agencies,\nBut the chairman\u2014Air Chief\nMarshal Frank Miller\u2014has no\nover-riding authority. In effect,\nthe committee's decisions must\nbe unanimous. Each member\nhas a virtual veto.\nThough the commission found\n\"reasonable dispatch\" in the\ncommittee's business, it said\nthe system \"permits procrastination.\" Lack of a single command could mean success or\nfailure of any scheme.\nTwo examples were cited:\nIn 1953 it was decided to consolidate military medical services.. It was put under a. tri-\nservice committee. But since\n.then, progress has been\nthwarted by inter-service disagreements \"amounting to a\nvirtual refusal to accept direction.\"\nIn 1950, an attempt was made\nto develop a tri-service, integrated teletype system. But\nwith no one person in command,\nthe effort \"crumbled. Result:\nThere now are \"three wasteful\nand increasingly inadequate networks.\"\nThe cure, as the commission\nsaw it, was to give the chairman of the chiefs of staff more\nand more executive control.\n\"In the opinion of the government this solution does not\nadequately resolve the basic issues,\" said the white paper.\n\"If a single command structure is not established, co-ordination by the committee system\nwill remain with al! its inevitable delays and frustrations.\"]\nHence the government chLse\nthe single command. The decision was reached after 'fthe\nmost careful and thoughtful consideration.\"\nDividends\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nCanadian Vickers Ltd., common 25 cents, April 15, record\nApril 3.\nCommonwealth International\nCorporation Ltd., common eight\ncents, April 30, record March\n31.\nCommonwealth International\nLeverage Fund Ltd., common\nfour cents, April 30, record\nMarch 31.\nEast Kootenay Power Co. Ltd.\nseven per cent cumulative pfd.,\n$1.75 June 15, record May 31.\nMcCabe Grain Co. Ltd., common 35 cents, May 1, record\nApril 15.\nInterpreting the News\nBy ALAN HARVEY\nIn calling for a conference of\nCommonwealth prime ministers, Britain in effect is reaching (or the restoratives.\nIt is something akin to an\nemergency operation. The patient has been languishing for\nmonths, and political doctors\nfeel it is high time the Commonwealth family gathered\nround t h e bedside to see\nwhether anything can be done.\nThe initiative for the mid-\nJuly meeting almost certainly\ncame from Prime Minister Sir\nAlec Douglas-Home, although\nhis elbow may have been\njogged by Prime Minister Men-\nzies of Australia, who likes to\ncome to England if there is\nany chance of getting to a\ncricket match on the side.\nAIMS  DIFFER\nTo understand what Sir Alec\nhas in mind, it should be remembered that the Commonwealth currently must contend\nwith a good deal ot cynicism.\nTlie withdrawal of South Africa\nand the addition of half a dozen\nnew members have tended to\ncreate a distinction between tlie\nold Commonwealth, comprising\nBritain, Canada, New Zealand\nand Australia, and the new\nCommonwealth whose aims are\noften different.\nIdealists feel there is still\nsomething precious in the intangible Commonwealth link,\nsomething to be cherished even\nthough Canada, to take one\nexample, has little in common\nwith Ghana, Sierra Leone or\nZanzibar.\nPrime Minister Nehru of India  says   the   Commonwealth,\nhowever disparate, brings a\ntouch of healing to a raw and\ninflamed world. Canadian ministers have strongly supported\nit as a bridge between East and\nWest, or white and black.\nA more brutal viewpoint,\nwhich' some would merely call\nrealistic, was expressed by Anglo - German writer Sebastian\nHaffner. Writing in the magazine Encounter, he described\nthe post-1945, non-British Com\nmonwealth as a bastard child\nof guilt and vanity that had\nbecome simply a millstone\nround Britain's neck.\nNEW IMPULSE SOUGHT\nThe sense of estrangemen: |in\nCommonwealth affairs has h ien\nevident for some time. It\nis reflected in the slow, decline of Commonwealth organizations, in the talk of a 'wo-\ntiered commonw e a 11 h, |,i a\ngrowing concentration upon regional groupings. The sheer\nweight of numbers\u2014there \u2022 now\nare 18 members\u2014makes for un-\nwieldiness.\nSo Sir Alec, with a certain\ndegree of urgency, is summoning ministers to London. He\nwants to see if the Commonwealth can pull itself together,\n(ind a new impulse. He hasn't\nany special formula, but he is\nopen to ideas.\nAt best, it may be the start\nof a strong process. However\nextensive advance briefings\nfrom London may be, ministers\nare certain to arrive more interested in a specific problem,\nsuch as the future of Southern\nRhodesia, than in some nebulous new concept of Commonwealth.\t\n___\n-\"   \u25a0 ;      \u25a0\n\u25a0:    .    ::.-      -.\n _\u2014,\u2014,\t\n  ' ' '\nf^^^^^^^f^l^mi New\nOrleans Kite Easter Guest Fare\nEaster Is For Everyone\nEverybody likes to have\nguests for dinner now.and'thsn\u2014\nan excuse to get out your best\nchina\" and\"linen,\" a-chamse to\nshow off your culinary achievements.-:        :,\u2022-., -J-. i.r_\u2014\nSeriously, we all like to have\nspecial friends to dinner to\nshare with them the hospitality\nof pur. home and the abundance\nof oiir table. With-this^in mind\nwe've ah Easter menu for four.\nMENU: Tomato Juice with\nLemon Slice; Frozen Peas and\nChicken New Orleans;  Tossed\nGreen-Saladr Baked Macaroon\nPeaches;-:' , \u25a0 '\u25a0       \" \u2022'   .\nFROZEN PEAS AND\nCHICKEN NEW ORLEANS\nVi clip flour :\n2 teaspoons salt\n% teaspoon paprika\nCup butter or margarine\n4jinali:whole clove garlic\n\u2022 1 \u25a0three pound frying chicken\ncut in serving pieces\n1 package (1 pound) frozen\ntrench fries\n1 cup milk\nV cup table cream\nfat? to \u00a9Ijarrt!\nHtttkft QUfttrrly ot-fflatiaJna\nST   PAUL'S-TRINITY\nJosephine and Silica. Sts.\nEASTER  SUNDAY\nProcessional Service\nLeaves Church 8:30 a.m.\n11:00 a.m.\nWorship Service\nNOTICE \u2014 No Sunday\nSchool except for Kindergarten and Nursery\nat 11:00 a.m.\nMinister:\nRev. Peter W. Paris\n.     FAIRVIEW\n. Fifth and Elwyn Sts.\nEASTER SERVICES\n2 Services\n9:30 a.m..and 11:00 a.m.\nProcter, 2nd and 4th\n.-.Sundays \u2014 2:00 p.m.\nMinister:\n.    . Rev. J. Rae Allan .\n\u00a9Itunrl? ai 2fljr\n(Anglican)\nSecond and Davies Streets\nFAIRVIEW\nRector:\nArchdeacon F. D. Wyatt\nPhone 352-5922\nEASTER DAY\n7:45 a.m.\u2014Holy Communion\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Sung  Eucharist;\nPreacher:\nCanon Silverwood\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evening Prayer\nChildren should attend a\nservice \u2014 no Sunday School.\nWEDNESDAY\n7:00 and 9:30 a.'m.\u2014\nHoly Communion\nSOUTH SLOCAN\n9:00 a.m.\u2014Holy Communion\nAltar Book dedicated in \u25a0 .\nmemory of Edith l,ee; vR.I.P.\nEVANGELICAL\nCOVENANT\nCHURCH\n802 Baker St.\nPastor\nDR. SIGFRID E. GREEN\n... \u2022 f.\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday School .\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning .Worship\nYouth Choir\nWill Sing,\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evening Service\nWEDNESDAY:\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Bible Study and\nPrayer  Meeting\nFRIDAY:\n6:45 p.m.\u2014Trail Blazers .\n8:00 p.m.\u2014Young People's\"\nAll Welcome!\nBETHEL TABERNACLE\n(PENTECOSTAL)\n702 Stanley St.\nEASTER SUNDAY\nMORNING\n9:45 a.m.  and 11:00. a.m.\nSpeaker:   Rev. Morrison,\nPrincipal Western Pentecostal\nCollege.\nCollege Male Quartet.\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evangelistic :\nService\nTUESDAY \"   \u2022.\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Prayer Meeting\nTHURSDAY . .\n7:30 p.m.\u2014C.A. Meeting\nREV. H. B. EGGLETON\nPhone 352-7556\nYOU   ARE  CORDIALLY\nINVITED\nTHE\nSALVATION ARMY\n513 Victoria St.\nCommanding Officers\nCaptain and Mrs. R. A.'\nNewbury\nSPECIAL SERVICES\niVlth Envoy Win, MacLuskie\nfrom Vancouver\nEASTER SUNDAY\n1:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday School\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning  Meeting\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Salvation Meeting\nYou are never a stranger\nat the \"Army\"\nFIRST BAPTIST\nCHURCH\nICottonwood and Fourth Sts.)\nREV.   LYLE   KENNEDY\nSUNDAY:\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday School\n11:00 a.m.\u2014\"And Their Eyes\nWere Opened\"\n7:30 p.m.\u2014\"The Kingdom of\nLife That Lasts\nForever\"\nWEDNESDAY:\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Hour of Power\nBt. _kutmtra\nfrn-GIatltekal\n(Corner Ward and Silica Sts.)\nBishop\nRt. Rev. W. R. Coleman\nDean and Rector\nVery Rev. R. W. S. Brown\nEASTER SUNDAY\nMarch 29, 1964\n8:00 am:\u2014Holy Communion\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Holy Communion\nand Sermon\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Holy Communion\n'EASTER. OCTAVE'\nSERVICES\nTuesday, March 31\n8:00 a.m.\u2014Holy Communion\nFriday, April 3\n10:00 a.m.\u2014Holy Communion\nSaturday. April 4 \u25a0\n8:00a.m.\u2014Holy Communion\nFirst ilturrirnf\n(Eltriat &rfetttiBi\nA Branch of\nThe Mother Church,\nThe First Church of Christ,\nScientist, In  Boston, Mass.\nSunday Schdol: 9:40 a:m.\nSunday Service: 11 a.m.\nSubject:\n''REALITY\"\nWednesday Testimonial\n.   Meeting \u2014 8:00 p.m.\nReading Room, 209 Baker St.,\nOpen Daily From\n- -.   12:30.3:00  p;m.\nTuesday.' Thursday, Saturday\n.Wednesday.\n7:00-7:45'p.m.\nSunday Evening\n7:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m.\nALL CORDIALLY\nWELCOME\nItrat\nprrHtnjt, rian\n,.Mwtk\nCorner of Kootenay and\nVictoria Sts.\nMinister:   E. A. Hircock\n11:00 a.m.\nSPECIAL EASTER\nSERVICE\nFamily Worship\nCORDIAL WELCOME\nTO ALL   .\nSt. John's\nLutheran Church\nCorner Stanley and Silica Sts.\nRev. Carl J. Hennig, Pastor\nRes. 317 Silica St. Ph. 352-3882\n10:00 a.m.\u2014Sunday  School\nand Bible Class\n11:00 a.m._\"The First\nEaster and Ours\"\nALL   ARE   CORDIALLY\nWELCOME\nCHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST\nOT  LATTER  DAY  SAINTS\n(Mormon)\n10:30 a.m.\u2014Sunday   School\n6  p.m.\u2014Sacrament   Meeting\nVancouver St. at W. Richards\nFor Auxiliary Meetings Call\nBranch President. 352-6351\nDO WITHOUT\nBritish connoisseurs of food\nhaven't been able to dine on\nquail since importation or sale\nof the bird was banned in 1937.\n1 chicken bouillon cube\n1 package (12 ounce) frozen\ngreen peas partially thawed\nand broken apart\n1 can (10 ounce) sliced mushrooms drained\nVt cup sherry (optional)\nCombine flour 1 teaspoon salt\nand   paprika,   use   to   lightly\ndredge chicken pieces. Set aside\nremaining flour mixture. Heat\nbutter or margarine and garlic\nuntil   garlic   clove   is   lightly\nbrowned;  remove garlic from\npan. Brown chicken in butter or\nmargarine turning as needed to\nbrown   evenly.   Cover;   reduce\nheat and cook until tender, about\n45 minutes.\nTransfer chicken to oven proof j\nserving dish; cover and keep hot.\nAdd French fries to pan drip-1\npings; sprinkle with remaining\n1 teaspoon salt. Stir to coat with !\ndrippings and heat about 5 minutes. Transfer serving dish with\nchicken. Blend remaining flour\nmixture into drippings. Add\nmilk, cream and boullion cube; i\ncook, stirring constantly, until\nthickened, and boullion cube is\ndissolved. Add peas and musfe\nroomsrheat until-peas are tender. Add sjjerry and neat. Serve\nover chicken and fries. YIELD:\nFour servings. \u2022\nBAKED MACAROON\nPEACHES:\n4 canned cling peach halves\nVz cup coconut macaroon\ncrumbs\n2 tablespoons mixed peel,\nfinely chopped\n3 tablespoons peach syrup\n1 tablespoon lemon juice\nDrain peaches reserving syrup. Combine macaroon crumbs,\npeel and moisten with 1 to 2\ntablespoons peach ;syrup. Spoon\ncrumb mixture into peaches;\nplace in shallow baking dish.\nCombine the 3 tablespoons peach\nsyrup and 1 tablespoon lemon\njuice and pour over peaches.\nBake in 350 deg.'F. oven about\n20 minutes, basting frequently\nwith syrup. Serve warm. Makes\nfour servings.\nIODE News ...\nGirl Guide Award\nTo Be Annual One\nLetters of appreciation from\nagencies and individuals for\nassistance from the Kokanee\nChapter Imperial Order Daughters of the Empire were read,\nand continuing assistance in two\nother areas was approved at the\nrecent meeting of the chapter.\nHeld at the home of Mrs. W.\nG. Lambert, 907 Third Street,\nthe meeting heard letters of\nthanks from the Salmo Branch\nof the Royal Canadian Legion\nfor the chapter's donation to the\nRay  Thomas  Fund;   from the\nGirl Guide Association for. the\ncitizenship award; from individuals in , England to whom\nChristmas parcels were sent.\nMembers agreed to make the\nGirl Guide award an annual\npresentation. They also approved continuing financial support of the provincial chapter in\nthe adoption of a child in Dr.\nGraham's homes in Kalimpong,\nIndia.\nIt was noted that another dis- j\ntrict  family  is  being  supplied\nwith milk by the chapter.\nAt Cranbrook . . .\nElectricity Use\nStill on Increase\nCRANBROOK - City Electrical Superintendent George\nBurch reports consumption by\nthe city electrical system continues to rise.\nIt was up four per cent from\nthe corresponding month last\nyear at 2,044,720 Kw. in February.\nThe power extension bylaw\nfor $105,000 is in the hands of\nthe inspector of municipalities\nfor approval. A net gain of six\nmeters to the city system has\nbeen recorded for the year so\nfar.\nENGINEER'S REPORT\nCity Engineer Erie Stinson\nreported the city added two new\nwater connections during the\nmonth, with supply conditions\nexcellent and average pressure\n110 pounds. Three building permits were issued to an estimated\nvalue of $16,200. The new city\ndump was fenced and the mile\nof road approach was completed\nwtih grading and gravelling.\nSewer bylaw work included 1340\nfeet of new 10-inch pipe and\neight manholes.\nAIRPORT\nLandings at the Municipal Airport numbered  55  commercial\nAbout\nThe Town\nMrs. Eric Whittred and infant\nson, Brian, of Calgary, are visiting Mrs. Whittred's mother,\nMrs. G. C. Arnesen, of the Terrace   Apartments,   during   the\nholiday.\n*   *   *\nMiss Karen Hagan of Calgary,\nformerly of Nelson is spending\nthe Easter vacation with Miss\nEvelyn MacDonald and Miss\nJudi Lee of the North Shore.\nSUPPER DISH\nAdd chicken to macaroni and\ncheese for supper In saucepan,\ncook 2 tablespoons green pe,pper\nin 1 tablespoon butter or margarine until tender. Add 1 can\n(15 ounces) macaroni with\ncheese sauce. 1 can '7 ounces)\nboned chicken or turkey, and 2\ntablespoons diced pimiento.\nHeat, stirring often. Serve to 4.\nairline flights and two helicopter\nflights.\nFire Chief. Vernon Doll reported nine alarms, with damage\nlimited to $1224 at the city works\ngarage, no damage an the other\nsix city alarms, and two extra-\nmunicipal calls for which\ncharges were levied. The Cranbrook Ambulance dispatched 16\ncalls from the fire hall.\nINDEPENDENT NATION\nThe republic of Portugal, independent since the 12th century, was a kingdom until a\n1910 revolution- drove out King\nManoel II.\nEaster is a holiday which appeals to everyone.\nTwo theories are advanced\nconcerning the origin of Easter I\nWheatley says that Easter is in\nmemory of the crucifixion and\nthat the holiday is so-called\nfrom the Saxon \"oster\" meaning to rise. The other theory is\nthat Easter may have been the\nname of an old Saxon goddess\nworshipped at the period, the\ngoddess of Spring, \"Eastre\", in\nwhose honor a festival of spring\nis held in the,month of April.\nAs a time of feasting and celebration, Easter goes back into\ngreat antiquity. Many think it\nis a relic of the ancient celebration of the vernal equinox, the\ntime of the original new year.\nAmong the Persians, the new\nyear is looked upon as being\nthe period of renewal in all\nthings\u2014the triumph of the sun,\nof nature, of man. They present\none another with eggs, as typifying the beginning of a new\nlife. This \"Feast of Eggs\" as it\nwas called, was preserved in\nthe Easter festivities of the\nChristians when they changed\nthe new year to January 1. It is\nto be noted that Jews, whose\nPassover is older than the Christian Easter, also use eggs in\ntheir feasting at this period.\nSUN DANCED\nA popular superstition in an\ncient England was that the sun\ndanced on Easter Day and it\nwas common for people to rise\nearly in order to witness this\nevent.\nThe dancing of the sun, the\nblooming of the flowers, the\nawakening of the earth after\nthe winter's slumber, seem to\nsymbolize to the people the\nawakening of Christ and His\nResurrection. People in the\nmiddle districts of Ireland are\nsaid to still rise at about four\no'clock Easter morning to see\nthe sun dance in honor of\nChrist's rise from the darkness\nof the grave.\nAn ancient English custom\nwas to put all the fires out and\nre-light them on Easter eve.\ntypifying the beginning of a new\nlife.\nTHE EGG\nThe egg has been regarded\nby many ancient peoples as the\nemblem of life, a beginning.\nEaster was the time of the solar\nnew year, the incubation of nature. The Christians 'borrowed'\nthe egg and made it part of\ntheir Easter festivities, but they\nmade it an emblem of the re\nsu'rrection, as t h e chick, entombed as it were in the egg, in\ndue tune is brought to life.\nColoring Easter eggs is an an.\ncient custom. The Jews and the\nPersians have done so since\nearly times, and the Italians\nSpanish and people of Provence\ndo so today. The colors symbol\nize flowers to some, the red\nblood of Christ to others.\nPublic sports with eggs are\nheld during the Easter period.\nRolling eggs down a hill is i\ncustom which has been carried\nout in.England for many years.\nDressing up on Easter Day is\na donning of everything-hew and\nfresh for the new year. Everything must be new and clean\nfor the beginning of the new\nyear. It is a leaving of the old\nyear behind and. stepping. forth\nfresh  and  clean  into  a new\nyear.\nSo, the colored eggs, new\nclothes and festive meals to be\nenjoyed this weekend all have\ntheir origin in antiquity, and all\nhave for Christians a direct connection with the Resurrection.\nW\nVf\nMARQUISETTE AND LACE at Castillo \u2014 The\n\"two-piece\" dress in black marquisette from Bian-\nchini Ferier is belted with black satin ribbon. \"A la\nGoya\" hat in black lace trimmed with red rosB by\nCastillo, worn wilh black satin pumps.\nHEARTY QUICKIE\nNeed a hearty quickie for\nSaturday lunch? Try this: In\nfrying pan, cook 1 medium\nonion, chopped, in 1 tablespoon\nbutter or margarine until tender.\nAdd 2 cans '15 ounces each)\nspaghetti with ground beef in\ntomato sauce, 1 cup cooked peas,\n1 tablespoon prepared mustard,\nand Vt teaspoon salt. Heat: stir\nnow and then. Makes 5 to 6\nservings.\nLOOK-ALIKE FOR EASTER \u2014 Like mother, like\ndaughter. Sailors, Bretons, sporty jockey caps and\npretty flowered styles go look-alike ior Easter. The\nToronto millinery industry suggests mother add a\ntouch of sophistication by wearing her cartwheel\nsailor straight on. Junior miss might sit her hat on\nthe back of her head. Always smart Ior spring is\nblack or navy, but for a \"fresher than springtime\"\nlook, wear white or a pretty pastel.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SAT., MARCH 28, W64 \u2014 !\nOrange Bran Bread\nVariations for\nEaster Kafiee-Klatsch\nBy MARGARET CARR\nWhen friends stop by for coffee Easter morning after church\nhe ready with an array of unusual breads\u2014Orange Seed Loaf\nOrange Bran Muffins and Date-\nNut Squares..Does it sound like\na lot of work at such a busy\ntime? It's not, because you can\nmake them all from one bask\nrecipe, Three-in-One Hot Bread.\nDivide the simple orange batter into three portions. To one\nadd anise or caraway seeds for\nthe loaf. Bake part as muffins,\nand add dates and nuts to the\nremainder for pan bread.\nHOT BREAD\n2\/3 cup   soft shortening\n1 cup sugar\n2 teaspoons grated orange rind\n2 eggs\n1 cup bran buds or all-<bran\n31a mips pastry flour\n4 teaspoons baking powder\nYi teaspoon baking soda\n1 teaspoon salt\n1 cup milk\nYi cup orange juice\nBlend shortening, sugar and\ngrated orange rind; add eggs\none at a time, beating well after\neach addition. Stir in bran buds.\nSift together flour, baking powder, soda and salt. Add to first\nmixture alternately with milk\nand orange juice, stirring only\nuntil combined. Makes approximately six cups batter.\nORANGE SEED LOAF\nTo half of the batter (approximately 3 cups) add % teaspoon\nanise or caraway seeds. Spread\nin -greased 10x5-inch loaf pan.\nKAMLOOPS (CP)-A new sub\npost office will be opened\nshortly in North Kamloops as\nsoon as a postmaster is appointed, it was disclosed here.\nWednesday. At present North\nKamloops is served by sub\noffices located in stores with\nstore clerks handling the business.\nBake in moderate oven (350 de\ngrees E-> about 40 to 50 mil\nutes or until tests'.doflil,'.\nstand until cold, before slicinj\nDATE-NUT SQUARES     'i!\nTo half the remaining batte\n(approximately Vh cups) ad\none cup chopped dates and1\ncup chopped nutsr Spread-in ..\ngreased 8x3-inch pan. Bake i\nmoderate oven (300 degrees F.\nabout 26 to 30 minutes. SprinV\nwith icing sugar. Cut in squar\nwhen cool.\nORANGE  BRAN: 'MUFFiNS\nUse remaining batter to (|1\ngreased 2%-inch muffin ,cup\nfull. Bake in moderately ho\noven (400 degrees F:> aboMs'S\nminutes or until ^done. Seig<\nwarm. Makes approximately,\nmuffins.\nLemon Juice Recip\nRelieves Arthriti\n& Rheumatic Pai\nIf you Buffer rheumatic, arthrltll\nneuritis pain, try tbif simple fnexpenit\nrecipe, that thousands aft viing. Get aw\nof RU-EX Compound, a 2 ;weeks suppl\ntoday. Mix it with a quart, of water, jc\nthe juice of 5 lemons. It's eaeyl No trouble\nall and pleasant. Take only 8 tableetioonf ti\n2 times a day. Often within 48 hours \u2022\nsometimes overnight \u2014 relief Is obtalnc\nIf the pains do not quickly leave and'il y\ndo not feel better, return the empty can i\nus and RU-EX will cost you nothing. Y<\nare the sole judge as RU-EX la sola oi\njnoney hack guarantee- Over 8 million O-^\nused. At all drug counters. Adrem Lfa\n231 Bartley Drive, Toronttflfl.   -1\" \u2122^\u2122\nbe above all thisl\nAIRFARES\nREDUCED\n50%\nfor members of your family\nNow everyone can afford to fly! Canadian Pacific's\nFamily Plan fares apply every day except Sunday.\nHead of the family pays full fare. Others pay only\nhalf fare. You all enjoy the speed, comfort and\nconvenience of a Canadian Pacific flight forlitfle\nmore than it costs to go by bus, train or car. For\ndetails of money saving Family Plan fares in'\nBritish Columbia, Alberta and across Canada, calf-\nyour Travel Agent or any Canadian Pacific office.\nCmadLan (Pacific\nTWINS \/ TRUCKS \/ SHIPS \/ PLANES \/ HOTELS \/ TELECOMMUWCATIQNS .\nWORLD'S   MOST COMPLETE   TRANSPORTATION   SYSTEM\nKWT ST.JOHN\n\\r\n_ iCpaweEocK\n. 5jsm_t '\n\"\"\"Ha,.\n-FOR TICKETS and  RESERVATIONS,  CALJ.-\nS*,        VIPOND FOR TRAVEL\nHume  Hotel, Nelson  \u2014  Trail\nCranbrook\n \\ \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, SAT., MARCH 28, 1964\n-V\nModern Living\nIn A Modern Age\nBetter Your Living in 1964\nTTRACTIVE FINISH EASY\nUUST FOLLOW THE SYSTEM\nAn attractive finish that does\nlot show the grain is easy to ob-\naln on fir plywood, the most\nlopulor materia! used by the\nlome craftsman.\nThe surface should  first be\niven a coat of penetrating resin\nlealer to equalize absorption, ac-\nflrdlng to the Paint Industry\nCouncil.\nThe first step, of course, is to\nirepare the surface. It must be\nlanded as smooth as possible, be\n:Ieaned and free of traces of oil,\nease or laminating glue. Nail\nidles and breaks in the surface\nihould be filled and sanded when\nfry.\nIf you are planning to end up\nith a colored, opaque finish\nthlch hides the surface com-\niletely, brush on a coat of pig-\nnented penetrating sealer. After\nI has dried, sand lightly to res-\nore-a smooth surface, and re-\nnove all sandings with your va-\niuum cleaner or a cloth dipped\nmineral spirits.\nH the top coat is to be a gloss\nElectric\nHEAT\nDoes Cost\nLESS!\nEstimates\nFREE\nCOLEMAN\nELECTRIC\nPHONE 352-3175\nNelson, B.C.\nmm\nenamel, the second coat should\nconsist of equal parts of enamel\nundercoat and the top coat. If\nthe topcoat Is to be a latex, apply a second coat of the resin\nsealer. Sand lightly before applying the final coat by brush, spray\nor roller.\nMany people prefer a natural\nfinish on good quality plywood,\none that shows the grain of the\nwood. Ftrst of all you must select\nplywood which has an attractive\npattern and is free of blemishes\nand plugs. Next, sand the wood.\nNow brush on a coat of clear\npenetrating resin sealer. After\nthis has dried, sand lightly with\na fine or extra-fine paper.\nYou can either apply a coat of\nwood slain, a coat of colored penetrating sealer, or you can tint\nclear resin sealer with color-in-\noil of the desired shade, reducing\nthe sealer 25 per cent with paint\nthinner. Whichever you use, let\nstand for a few minutes and\nthen wiep off to get the color you\nwant.\nAfter the color coat has dried\nthoroughly, sand lightly as before, and then brush on one or\ntwo coats of varnish.\nFor modern blond effects, wait\nuntil the first coat of sealer has\ndried. Thin white pigmented\nresin sealer or enamel undercoat\n50-50 with odorless paint thinner\nand brush on surface.\nLet stand for a few minutes\nand wipe off with a clean, lint-\nless cloth. After this has dried\nthoroughly protect the surface\nwith one or two coats of varnish.\nJhtL WjOsd&Jw diomjL\nTROUBLE?\nWhen in need of plumbing\nOr heating replacement or repairs,\nor a gas fitting job . . .\nFor Prompt, Efficient Service\nCALL US AT 352-2454\nKootenay Plumbing & Heating\nCompany, Limited\n351 Baker St. Nelson, B.C. Phone 352.2454\nA pillared front porch combines with brick and siding for\nan unusually attractive exterior\nin this cathedral entry home. A\nproblem lot becomes an asset,\nwith the double garage and sun\ndeck over, taking advantage of\na lot that slopes to the side. (If\nyour lot slopes the other way,\nsimply build the house in\nreverse!)\nAn outside wall fireplace in\nthe large 20' x 16' living room\nleaves one complete wall clear\nlor an Infinite variety of furniture arrangements, while a\nplanter wall dresses up the\nentry.\nIn the dining room, a built-in\nbuffet is a feature, and sliding\nglass doors give access to the\nsun deck at the front of the\nhouse. The kitchen is planned in\nthe efficient step-saving U arrangement, with space for a\nbreakfast nook, and opens onto\nthe sun deck over the double\ngarage.\nThree bedrooms across the\nback enjoy complete privacy,\nwith master bedroom featuring\nplumbing \"en suite,\" and the\nfamily bathroom is located right\nnext door so that an economical\ninstallation of plumbing fixtures\nis\nfiaOB. UU   1560 SOfT!   PLUS cMtci' \u2022\" '      ^K   _T4 \u00ab*\u00a3\nReport Yields Figures on Cancer\nIncidence, Site of Occurrence\nPALM BEACH SHORES, Fla.\n(API\u2014An unprecedented study\nof the health records of thousands of Roman Catholic nuns\nindicates that the incidence of\ncancer\u2014and distribution of its\nsite of occurrence \u2014 among\nnuns is different \"from that of\ntheir fellow women of America.\"\nThe evidence suggests the difference is due to their way of\nlife.\nThis was reported Thursday to\nthe sixth annual seminar for\nscience writers sponsored by\nthe American Cancer Society.\nDr. James T. Nix of New Orleans said the study was aimed\nprimarily at collecting and verifying the cause of death of Huns\nfrom 282 communities in the\nUnited States with a nun population of 116,173, during 1963.\nIt was felt, he said, that\n\"comparison with known data\noh the cause of death of lay\nwomen over 20 years of age in\nthe United States will clarify\nthe relationship of celibacy, abstinence from alcohol and cigarette smoking, and other environmental factors to the type\nof cancer causing death in\nwomen.\"\nDescribing Thursday's report\npreliminary, Dr. Nix said it is\nbased on 1,116 deaths among the\n116,173 nuns, and a study of\nvarious other things such as the\n, frequency of lung cancer and of\nI gallstones.\nAmong the findings:\n1. A confirmation of previous,\nundocumented impressions that\nnuns rarely get cancer of the\ncervix, the entrance of the\nwomb. The theory is, said Dr.\nNix, that this infrequency of\ncervix cancer can be attributed\nto celibacy and virginity.\n2. Deaths from cancer of the\nbreast, womb and ovary were\nrelatively frequent, however,\nwith their number possibly explainable, the doctor indicated,\nby a life without pregnancy and\nbreast feeding.\n3. A pilot study of lung cancer\nincidence\u2014undertaken among a\npopulation where cigarette\nsmoking is forbidden and \"exposure to smoke is largely lim-\nThis is another example of the\nmany fine home plans, designed\nfor N.H.A. approval that are\navailable from the Building\nCentre (B.C.I Ltd., 96 Kingsway\nat   Broadway,   Vancouver   10.\nSelect Homes Designs Plan Book\nis available, along with price\nlist and other information. Send\n50c to cover cost of mailing.\n\u2014Plan   No.   1589   (copyright\nNo. 117093).\nRooms Without Ceilinqs\nHomes of the Future?\nMaterials Choice Make\nDecorating Complicated\nVANCOUVER (CP) - British\nColumbia lumber manufacturers association, in a bid to increase sales, is starting promotion of rooms without ceilings.\nThe rooms are porches, sun\ndecks, patios, and courts built\naround homes \u2014 preferably of\nlumber.\nAdvertising man F. W. Ellis,\noriginator of the idea, says the\nassociation will start campaigning to fill at least some of the\nthree-fifths of most properties\nnot taken up by house.\nA NEW WAY of LIVING...\n_. _ \u2014 .    ii\nWhen You Build or Remodel\u2014Make Your Home a\nGOLD MEDALLION HOME\nThe Gold Medallion emblem certifies excellent Electric Living in\nyour home. Electric heating, the all-electric kitchen, a \"Flameless\"\nelectric water heater; long-life Full Housepower conveniences, planned\nlight for living with plenty of well Ideated switches arid outlets are ln\na Gold Medallion Home. A Gold Medallion award is nit restricted to a\nhigh priced new home. All Of the benefits of Total Electric Living can lie\nenjoyed whether you remodel your present home or build a new home.\nYOUR WEST KOOTENAY POWER\nREPRESENTATIVE OR ANYONE\nIN THE BUILDING INDUSTRY\nWILL BE PLEASED TO TELL\nYOU MORE ABOUT\nCOLD MEDALLION HOMES.\nWEST KOOTENAY\nPOWER\/\nHe says that the majority of\nproperties are of little more use\nthan separating one house and\nuntidy yard from another.\nBuilding rooms without ceilings,\nwould permit owners to get\nmore use out of their property.\nPLANS FREE\nUnder the campaign, plans\nfor rooms without ceilings will\nbe made available free to the\npublic through lumber dealers.\nMr. Ellis says the rooms can\nbe what a person wants them\nto be. j\n\"If you like to eat outdoors.\nit  can  be  an  outdoor  dining \u25a0\nroom.\n\"If you like to sunbathe in!\nprivacy, it can be a secluded I\ncourt off the bathroom.\n\"If you don't like gardening,\nor haven't time for it. you\nlandscape with lumber by turning your property into a floored\nenclosure. Your front yard can\nbe your front room.\"\nTo the consumer the advantage of the rooms was additional living space at moderate\ncost.\nFor the lumber dealer it was\nan increase in the amount of\nlumber used in a house by as\nmuch as 17 per cent.\nHe says the object of the campaign is suburbia\/where people\nare crowded together in Small\nlots, looking into each other's\nlives, street after street.\nMORTGAGE BEATEN\n\"Many of them have beaten\nthe second mortgage back.\n\"Now  they're  better  estab-\nDecorating todoy's home has\nbecome a complicated task because of the large choice of\nmaterials.\nNot only have styles become\npretty much whatever the\nhomemaker would like, but she\nhas an unlimited choice of fab\nrics, furniture, wall coverings,\ndecorative items, carpets and\nanything  else  she  may  need.\nlished and have more money to\nspend.\n\"We want to encourage them\nto add to their enjoyment of\nliving by increasing their living\nspace instead of taking that trip\nor buying a second car for the\nwife.\"\nMr. Ellis says the idea can\nhelp other sectors of the economy, such as suppliers of electric power and outdoor furniture.\nReal estate agencies would\nbenefit because houses with\nsuch rooms sold better than\nthose without.\nThe campaign would intrigue\nthe public and keep architects\nthinking about wood for a long\ntime to come.\nColors, too, have gone to the\nfour winds so that navy blue\nwalls complete with pale pinks in\nany room of the house.\nIn fabrics and carpeting, the\nman-made fibres have made a\ntremendous impact because of\ntheir durability, washability and\nability to take and hold brilliant\ncolors.\nWhere once a cloth was plac\ned over the carpets to protect\nthem, nowadays carpets of synthetic fibre takes rough wear,\nyet can be cleaned to look like\nnew.\nited to vigil lights and kitchen\nranges\"\u2014showed only 33 cases\nof this disease among 100.000\nnuns admitted to 500 Catholic\nhospitals over a 10-year period.\ni\nr\n301  Boker St.\nTHE WHOLE TOWN'S\nTALKING!   \u201e;\nABOUT OUA,\nEXOTIC \/plywjoDdL\nN E WruLL size sheit$\nON DISPLAY\nIn Our Store\n--i _j _-_._-_* \u00ab\n__-^^4J_^_-__JI\n__<_*.^_._4_i.\u00bb_-.\nMAHOGANY\nTAHITIAN TINTS $*21\nBEACH, CORAL, SPRING\t\nGunstock Finishes, American Block Walnut, Character Grade\nCherry, Teak and Rosewood.\nSuper Finish Ribbon Grain Mahogany\nPlain and Pre-finished Mismatched Random Plank,\nRotary Cut Mahogany and Golden Ash.\nPlain Birch (Beautifully Grained),\nUnfinished Rustic Birch.\nPioneer Ply\nBURNS\nYOUR BUILDING SUPPLY HEADQUARTERS\n602 Baker St. Nelson, B.C. Ph. 352-6661\nLUMBER\nCO., LTD.\nBUILDING or REMODELLING NEEDS\nWIRING\nBreakers\nConduit\nFittings\nWire\nPanels\nPlugs\nSwitches\nPLUMBING\nCopper Pipe\nDrainage\nGalvanized\nSoil\nFittings\nSolder\nLead\nHEATING\nTin Pipe\nGalvanized\nMetal Bestos\nFittings\nRegisters\nGrills\nSheetmetal Duct\nPUMP AND WATER SOFTENERS\nWE CARRY A GOOD STOCK OF SUPPLIES AT ALL TIMES\nAND HAVE TOP-NOTCH TRADESMEN\nBoundary Electric - Castlegar - Ltd.\nSatisfaction Is Our Most Important Asset\nPhone 365-5919 625 Columbia Ave. Castlegar, B.C.\n_Rx\u00a3b-a-diib-dTib\nIbot -water filled tub\n\"with.a,\nvv&b5P~hB3ker\nNothihg it more luxurious than\nlots and lots 6f wbnderful hot\nwater for your bath \u2014 water\nheated by dependable GAS.\nHAVE AN INGLIS WATER\nHEATER INSTALLED NOW.\nNO PAYMENTS DUE UNTIL\nOCTOBER, 1964.\nALLOWANCE  MADE  FOR\nYOUR OLD TANK.\nrvrvge. ,\nNATURAL GAS co\nLTD.\n_____\n *?vgwwj'\"\u00ab\u00ab ajwppiMpiv\n_\t\n \u2014\u2014\u2014_\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.  ,-';     \u25a0 '.   \u25a0     \u2022.'.'.\n\u2014\n':|l\nMONTREAL, CHICAGO TAKE EARLY LEAD\nHodge Blanks Toronto In  HH Hawks Come On Strong\nPenalty-Studded Contest\nBy BILL MacDOUGALL\nMONTREAL (CP) - Goalten-\nding king Charlie Hodge continued his domination over Toronto\nMaple Leafs Thursday night as\nMontreal Canadiens defeated\nToronto 2-0 in a penalty-filled\nfirst game of their Stanley Cup\nsemin-final that sent everyone\nscurrying for record books.\nThe two clubs broke the play,\noff record for the highest number of penalties in a single period and the highest number in a\ngame. The Canadiens tied the\nplayoff record for most penalties by one team in a game.\nIn the meantime Hodge was\nbusy playing a steady game to\nshut Toronto out for the fifth\ntime this year\u2014he got four of\nhis eight shutouts against Toronto during the regular season.\nRight winger Bernie Geoffrion\nand Ralph Backstrom scored\nthe goals.\nThe two clubs piled up a total\nof 31  penalties,  breaking the\nWITH  STANE\nAND  BESOM\nIn the semi-finals ot the Lambs\nTrophy competition, the J. Harvey rink beat George Barefoot,\n10-9, and D. Porteous beat L. J.\nMaurer 9-7.\nIn the final draw, J. Harvey's\nrink, comprised of N. Deputan,\nEd Smith and W. Kooznelzoff,\nbeat Porteous 12-6 to win the\ncompetition. Members of the\nPorteous rink were F. J. Bousquet, G. Gilbert and B. Browell.\nFollowing are the draws in the\nPresident-Vice President competition, with president's side named first:\nTuesday, 7 p.m.\u2014N. Lutkiwich\nvs J. Harvey; M. Buerge vs L.\nBicknell; J. Lusk vs R. Commons ; I. Hendrickson vs R. Nuyens; E. Mason vs R. Koehle.\n9 p.m.\u2014R. Hesse vs J. Leeming; I. E. Kraft vs D. Lang; A.\nAllan vs M. B. Ryalls; L. J.\nMaurer vs E. Leeming; G. Beat-\ntie vs H. Ronmark.\nWednesday, 7 p.m. \u2014 F. Carmichael vs H. Miller; D. Cathcart vs A. Dayman; L. Maglio\nvs A. Waters; A. Ronmark vs\nM. Gee; J. Thorn vs G. Barefoot.\n9 p.m.\u2014W. Tozer vs F. Koehle;\nD. Winlaw vs J. Braybrook; A.\nReid vs D. Porteous; D. Benedetti vs J. Sutherland.\nplayoff record of 29 the Leafs\nand Detroit Red Wings set at\nDetroit March 25, 1952.\nThe 16 first-period penalties\nbroke by one the playoff record\nof most penalties in a single period set by Toronto and Boston\nin 1951 and tied by Toronto and\nDetroit in 1952.\nThe 16 penalties were split at\neight apiece and thus each team\ntied the playoff record of most\npenalties to one team in a single period. The record was set\nby Boston in 1927 and twice tied\nby Toronto, in 1951 and 1952.\nWith 16 penalties, the Canadiens tied the playoff record set\nby Boston Bruins in 1927 and tied\nby New York Rangers in 1930\nand Toronto in a March 25, 1952\ngame at Detroit.\nSTART EARLY\nThe clubs wasted no time in\nheading for the penalty box.\nFrank Mahovlich of Toronto\nwent off tor slashing Balon when\nthe game was only a minute and\nsix seconds old.\nA minute and 14 seconds later,\nForum officials were probably\npatting themselves on the backs\nfor having divided the Canadiens' and visitors' side of the\nbox early this season. John Ferguson and Jean Beliveau ot Canadiens and Bob Pulford and\nBob Baun Of Toronto all joined\nMahovlich.\nThe four started mixing it up\n\u2014 switching opponents in the\nmiddle of their tussle \u2014 after\nBeliveau charged Pulford. It\nwas a relatively tame fight.\nDave Keon of Toronto was\ncaught tor tripping Jean-Guy\nTalbot and the Montreal defence-\nman for interfering with Keon at\n2:39. Mahovlich argued too vociferously with referee Frank Ud-\nvari over that call and had a 10-\nminute misconduct slapped on to\nhis original minor.\nAndy Bathgate of Toronto and\nMontreal's J. C. Tremblay\nsquared off and were assessed\nmajors for fighting at 4:53. The\nrest of the penalties\u2014and they\nkept coming as Udvari ruled\nlike a discipline-conscious parent\u2014were all minors.\nGEOFFRION SCORES\nIt was while Leafs were short\na man after the early spate of\npenalties that Geottrion put\nMontreal ahead 1-0 at 6:53. Tal\nbot fired from the point to Provost at Johnny Bower's left.\nThe veteran goaltender went\ndown to smother an expected\nshot from Provost and the Ca-\nnadien slipped the puck across\nthe goalmouth to Geoffrion at\nthe other corner. It was almost\nimpossible for the winger to\nmake a mistake in scoring his\n56th playoff goal of his career.\nBackstrom made it 2-0 at 9:32\nof the second period from a goalmouth scramble. Provost and\nBalon, who with Backstrom had\nbeen buzzing around Bower's\ndoorstep, got assists.\nHodge finished up the night\nwith a total of 25 saves, compared to Bower's 32. The Tor-\nonto netminder was credited\nwith 20 stops In the second period, but many of these were long\nor weak shots. He had little\nchance on either of the goals.\nStrikes and Spares\nFriday Mixed League \u2014 Pinpushers 5, Bombers 2; Hopefuls\n0, ODs 7; Eagles 4, Twisters 3.\nLadies' high single, Yvonne Anderson ot ODs, 246; ladies' high\naggregate, Joyce Dukeshire of\nBombers, 588; men's high single\nand aggregate, Jim Enright ot\nHopefuls, 307 and 785; team high\nsingle and aggregate, ODs, 1094\nand 3101.\nLadies' Matinee B\u2014Alley Cats\n7, Offbeats 0; Go-Getters 0, Jimmie's Gang 7; Joyfuls 0, Cheerfuls 7. High single and aggregate, Jean Bedard of Alley Cats,\n293, 675. Team high single and\naggregate, Alley Cats, 1031, 2807.\nVariety Club\u2014Roliettes 2, 39ers\n2; Cheerios 3, Hilltoppers 1; Button Pushers 3, Five-Pins 1. High\nsingle, Shirley Hindson of Button\nPushers, 237. High aggregate,\nKay Fargher of Five-Pins, 584.\nTeam high single and aggregate,\nButton Pushers, 983, 2526.\nMajor Mixed-League\u2014Reds 3,\nQueens 1; Strikes and Spares 1,\nKinsmen 3; Hopheads 3, Hume 1.\nLadies' high single and aggregate. Dot Waterer of Hume, 285,\n820. Men's high single, Bruce\nMalcolm of Queens, 314. Men's\nhigh aggregate, Dick Barnes of\nKinsmen, 837. Team high single\nand aggregate, Hopheads, 1227,\n3459.\nLacombe Rockets Drop\nDynamiters in Opening Game\nLACOMBE, Alta. (CP) - Lacombe Rockets of the Central\nAlberta Hockey League defeated\nKimberley Dynamiters of the\nWestern International Hockey\nLeague 5-3 before about 1,300\nfans here Thursday in the first\ngame of the best-of-five Western\nCanada Allan Cup quarter-final\nseries.\nThe series continues here Saturday night.\nRockets received two goals\nfrom Al LaPlainte and singles\nfrom Ed Zemrau, Jim Brown\nand Ron Tookey in their victory\nover the British Columbia representatives.\nKimberley goals were scored\nby Walt Peacosh, with two and\nTick Beattie.\nNetminder Russ Gillow of Lacombe turned in an impeccable\nperformance. He turned aside 32\nshots, compared with 18 for Kimberley veteran Earl Betker, as\nRockets were outshot in every\nperiod.\nGillow's efforts helped Lacombe lead 3-2 after, the first\nperiod and 4-2 after the second.\nZemrau's goal was a big one\nfor Lacombe. He took a pass\nfrom former professional John\nKosiancic to score with Lacombe\nshorthanded midway through the\nfirst period. Kosiancic is a Kimberley resident who moved to\nCalgary when he turned professional with Calgary' Stampeders\nof the Western Hockey League in\n1960.\nKootenay Open Shuttle\nTourney Began Friday\nTop seeded players had little\ntrouble advancing in the early\nrounds as the Kootenay Open\nBadminton Tournament got under way at the Civic Centre, Friday.\nIn the men's singles division,\nBill Dalin, Chris Larson, Fred\nStevens and Ernie Smallenberg,\nall scored wins, as expected in\nthe early rounds. Fran Weaver,\nseeded second in the Vancouver\nwomen's division, polished off\nGayle McPherson of Castlegar,\n11-2, 11-3. The other top rated\nwomen's player. Wendy Defoe of\nCastlegar beat Anna Royle of\nVancouver 15-1, 15-2.\nFollowing are the results of\nsome second round play as completed at press time:\nMen's Singles A: Bill Dalin\nbeat K. Savinkoff; Jack New-\nstead beat M. Harvey; John Harvey beat G. Shackieford; G.\nLaurie beat Wayne Enright; Bob\nBrookes beat Dave Collinson;\nRoger Kirby beat Russ Martin;\nE. Smallenberg beat R. St. Dennis; Harvey Bridges beat Ed\nHaley; Jack Harvey beat Bob\nMurray: Frank Gaylord beat Al\nJorgenson; Al Larson beat G.\nSmetanuk; N. Hughes beat Eric\nRasmussen; Chris Larson beat\nGary Enright.\nLadles' Singles A \u2014 Fran Weaver beat Gayle MacPherson;\nWendy DeFoe beat Anna Royle.\nMen's Doubles\u2014KO: Smallen-\nberg-Dalin beat Hester-Smetan;\nWilson-Hughes beat Larson-Stevens; Dobie-Laurie beat Bertram - Murray; Muirhead - Smith\nbeat Harvey-Gaylord.\nLadles' Doubles: Haley-Brown\nbeat Batterton \u2022 Stark; Peters \u2022\nBates beat Fyfe - Shkwarok;\nMacPherson \u2022 Defoe beat Hale -\nMonty; Anderson \u25a0 Donaldson\nbeat Smallenberg \u25a0 Hanson;\nBrooks - Davies beat Bridges -\nButling; Royle \u2022 Weaver beat Lefeaux \u2022 Betlln.\nMixed Doubles: Davis - Dalin\nbeat Butling \u2022 Grant; West \u2022\nRhodes beat Monty \u2022 Wilson;\nSharpies \u25a0 Doble beat Fyfe-Kir-\nby; Weaver \u2022 Hoadloy beat Janet\nand Richard Fairbanks; Brown-\nSutherland beat MacPerson \u2022\nBissel; MacPherson - Muirhead\nbeat Allan - Shackieford; Defoe-\nSmith beat J. and H. Bridges.\nThe tournament will continue\nthrough Saturday, with finals being played Sunday.\nKosiancic was picked up from\nDrumheller Miners as a playoff\nreinforcement for Lacombe.\nPeacosh scored his first goal\non a penalty shot in the opening\nframe. Peacosh is one of several\nDynamiters who played with\nTrail Smoke Eaters in two world\nhockey championship competitions.\nSummaries:\nFirst Period: 1. Lacombe,\nTookey (Dunnigan) 1:15; 2.\nKimberley, Peacosh (penalty\nshot) 5:00; 3. Kimberley, Beat-\ntie (Vincent, King) 6:50; 4. Lacombe, LaPlante (Haley) 13:15;\n5. Lacombe, LaPlante (Tookey)\n17:11. Penalties: Zemrau 4:20,\nGallamore 12:01.\nSecond Period \u2014 6. Lacombe,\nZemrau (Kosiancic) 9:47; Penalties: Rusnell 3:10, Ferguson\n6:38, Kohlman 9:06, Gallamore\n12:48, Betker served by Gallamore 19:05.\nThird Period \u2014 7. Lacombe,\nBrown (Kohlman) 4:35; 8. Kimberley, Peacosh (McTeer, Lilley) 14:55. Penalties: LaPlante\n18:48, Collins 19:55.\nSaves:\nBetker 8    7    3\u201418\nGillow 14   11    7-32\nMINOR HOCKEY\nSCHEDULE\nMinor hockey schedule for\nweek ending April 4:\nMonday:\n9:30-10. 1\u2014Mites; 10:30-12:00\u2014\nPups; 12:30-3:00\u2014Open peewee;\n2:00-3:00-Open bantam.\nWednesday:\n9:30-10:30\u2014Mites; 10:30-12:00\u2014\nPups; 12:30-200\u2014Open peewee;\n2:00-3:30-Open bantam; 5:45-\n7:00\u2014Midgets.\nThursday:\n6:30- 7:45-Open midget; 7:45-\n9:00\u2014A.C.T. Bucks.\nFriday:\n9:30.10:30\u2014Mites; 10:30.12:00\u2014\nPups; 12:30-2:00\u2014Open peewee;\n2:00-3:30 \u2014 Open bantam; 5:45-\n7:00\u2014Open midget.\nSaturday:\n9:30-10:30\u2014Mites; 10:30-12:00\u2014\nPups: 12:30-2:00\u2014Open peewee;\n2:00-3:30 \u2014 Open bantam; 4:00-\n5:30\u2014Open midget.\nBERNIE GEOFFRION\n. . . triggers first goal.\nNHL Summary\nCHICAGO   (AP) -   Stanley\nCup: Detroit 1, Chicago 4 .\nSUMMARY\nFirst period \u20141. Detroit, A.\nPronovost (Martin, Henderson)\n12:16. 2. Chicago, McDonald 1\n(Pilote, Mikita) 13:06.\nPenalties \u2014 Gadsby 3:35, McKenzie 5:17, Howe 7:31, Pilote\n9:51, Murphy 16:35, Howe 17:11.\nSecond period \u2014 No scoring.\nPenalties\u2014M. Pronovost 5:38\nMcKenzie 8:57.\nThird period-3. Chicago, PI\nlote 1, (McDonald, Mikita) 6:42;\n4. Chicago, Balfour 1, (Hay,\nHull) 8:27; 5. Chicago, Mikita 1\n(Pilote, Hull) 16:23. Penalties -\nMacNeil 2:10, Nesterenko 10:26,\nBarkley 16:08.\nSaves:\nSawchuk 7 12   6-23\nHall 10 15   9\u201434\nAttendance\u201415,697.\nMONTREAL (CP) - Stanley\nCup: Montreal 2, Toronto 0.\nSUMMARY\nFirst period \u2014 1. Montreal,\nGeoffrion 1, (Talbot, Provost)\n6:53; Penalties \u2014 Mahovlich,\n1:06, Ferguson, Beliveau, Put\nford, Baun 2:20, Keon, Talbot\nMahovlich misconduct 2:39\nBathgate major, J. C. Tremlblay\nmajor 4:53, Harper 7:33, Talbot\n8:30, Shack double minor, Ferguson double minor 13:09.\nSecond period \u2014 2. Montreal,\nBackstrom 1, (Provost, Balon)\n9:32. Penalties - Stanley 1:00,\nBackstrom 4:56, Provost 11:50,\nShack, Geoffrion 1S:25, Bathgate\n16:32.\nThird period \u2014 No scoring.\nPenalties\u2014Baun :35, Beliveau\n:38, Ferguson 1:36, Pulford 2:43.\nBrewer 7:38, Watson, (bench)\n9:25, Brewer 13:37, Laperriere\n15:54, Provost 14:56.\nSaves:\nBower 4 20   8\u201432\nHodge 6   5 14\u201425\nAttendance\u201413,934.\nSoccer\nSchedule\nAnnounced\nOfficials of the Western International Soccer League met\nrecently in Nelson.\nD. \"Red\" Ius and Reg Hastings, both of Trail, were elected league president and secretary, respectively.\nTeams from Spokane, Kimberley, Nelson, Trail and Grand\nForks were represented.\nApplication to accept an entry from Kimberley in the league was unanimously approved\nIt was agreed that the schedule will be played through the\nspring months with playoffs\ncommencing in the fall. There\nwill be a month off in mid-summer.\nAn all star Kootenay team\nwill be chosen at a later date\nto play a two-game series with\na team from the Okanagan\nLeague.\nSchedule:\nApril 5 \u2014 Kimberley at Spokane; Grand Forks at Trail.\nApril 12 \u2014 Nelson at Trail;\nGrand Forks at Spokane.\nApril 19 \u2014 Kimberley at Nelson; Spokane at Trail.\nApril 25 \u2014 Nelson at Grand\nForks: Trail at Kimberley.\nMay 3 \u2014 Spokane at Nelson-\nKimberley at Grand Forks.\nMay 10 \u2014 Nelson at Kimberley; Trail at Spokane.\nMay 17 \u2014 Grand Forks at\nNelson; Kimberley at Trail.\nMay 24 \u2014 Nelson at Spokane;\nGrand Forks at Kimberley.\nMay 31 \u2014 Trail at Nelson;\nSpokane at Grand Forks.\nJune 7 \u2014 Trail at Grand\nForks;  Spokane at  Kimberley.\nPlayoffs to commence July 12.\nCommunist China Is Australia's eighth biggest buyer of\nwool, purchasing $22,400,000\nworth annually.\nTo Whip Detroit, 4-1\nBy TOM WILLIAMS\nCHICAGO (CP) - Chicago\nBlack Hawks turned on the\npower for three goals in the\nthird period Thursday night to\nbeat Detroit Red Wings 4-1 and\ntake a one-game lead in their\nbest of seven Stanley Cup semifinal.\nThe Hawks, who finished second in the National Hockey League's regular season, were outplayed in the first two periods\nby the fourth-place Wings and\nwere outshot all the way. But\nthey made the most of their\nchances to hold the score to a\n1-1 tie starting the third.\nPierre Pilote, Murray Balfour\nand Stan Mikita scored the third\nperiod goals as the Hawks took\ncontrol over the tiring Wings\nDetroit's Andre Pronovost and\nChicago's Aib McDonald exchanged first-period goals.\nSecond game of the series is\nhere Sunday night.\nGOALIES SHINE\nBoth Glenn Hall in the Chicago nets and Terry Sawchuk for\nDetroit made phenomenal saves\nin the hard-hitting contest which\nsee-sawed between rugged close-\nchecking and wide-open, breakaway style hockey.\nHall stopped 34 shots and Sawchuk 25. Sawchuk robbed Hawks\nbig guns, Bobby Hull and Mikita\n\u2014the league's two scoring leaders over the regular schedule \u2014\non clean breakaways.\nHall played solidly all the way,\nstopping big shots by Wings'\nperennial leader Gord Howe,\nand Alex Delvecchio and Marcel\nPronovost.\nIn one amazing display, he\nperformed highway robbery on\nDelvecchio, Floyd Smith and\nParker MacDonald, scrambling\naround the crease to stop half a\ndozen hard shots in a space of\nabout 20 seconds in the second\nperiod.\nHull and Howe, two of the all\ntime greats of the NHL, played\nopposite each other most of the\nway and Hull appeared to have\nthe better of the exchange. He\nwas constantly dangerous and\npicked up two assists. Howe had\na few good chances, but ap \u25a0\npeared unable to get untracked.\nWINGS GO AHEAD\nDetroit took the lead at 12:16\nof the first with Pronovost poking in a rebound after Hall had\nsaved on rookie Pit Martin's\nlobbed backhand shot from 13\nfeet out.\nMcDonald tied it at 1-1 less\nthan a minute later, when he\ntook Pilote's pass at the Detroit\nblueline, drove straight in on\nthe left wing and drilled a shot\npast Sawchuk's outstretched\nglove to the far corner.\nWings continued to hold an\nedge through the scoreless second, outshooting the Hawks 15-\n12. Hawks' one big chance came\nwhen Hull sent Pilote in the\nclear In the Detroit zone and the\ndefenceman cruised in to within\n10 feet of Sawchuk 'before shooting, but the veteran goaltended\nmade a great save with his leg.\nAfter a stretch of about five\nminutes of close checking in the\nthird, Pilote shot the Hawks into\nthe lead with a blistering 20-\nSavoy Soccer\nMeeting Sunday\nWith soccer league games to\nstart April 5, Nelson Savoy Soccer Club will organize at its annual meeting Sunday afternoon\nThe club members will elect\nofficers, discuss last year's problems and prepare for the new\nseason.\nNelson did well last year, ending the season atop the league,\ntied with Spokane, and this season will have several young\nplayers to strengthen the team\nThe meeting at the Civic Centre\nblue room begins at 1:00 p.m..\nwith all members and players\nbeing asked to attend.\nNelson does not play on the\nopening day, but the Sunday\nfollowing travel to Trail to\nmeet the Italicos. April 19 the\nteam will host the newcomer\nKimberley team.\nHOCKEY  SCORES\nEASTERN LEAGUE\nGreensboro 4, Knoxville 2\n(Best-of-five southern division\nfinal tied 2-2)\nClinton 6, Johnstown 4\n(Best-of-five northern division\nfinal tied 2-2)\nONTARIO SENIOR\nGait 2, Woodstock 3\n(Woodstock leads best-of-seven\nfinal 3-2)\nONTARIO JUNIOR A\nMontreal 3, St. Catharines 6\n(Montreal  leads  best-of-seven\nsemi-finals 3-1)\nfooter from the point that beat\nSawchuk cleanly on the short\nside.\nLess than two minutes later,\nThe Chicago Stadium crowd,\nwhich has a reputation for colorful performances, restrained\nthemselves to bugle-blowing and\ngeneral roaring, with little, if\nany, debris thrown on the ice.\nThe crowd was announced at\n15,697, although there appeared\nto be fans hanging from the\nrafters in the vast arena, which\nhas a capacity of more than 20,-\n000.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SAT., MARCH 28,1964 \u2014 7\nSki Slants\nBySITZMARK\nThe Easter parade this year\nwill be for skiers. For the first\ntime since our hill was developed, we will have good skiing\nat Easter.\nWe expect there will be many\nstudents home for the holidays,\nand a large number of skiers are\nexpected to turn out over the\nEaster weekend.\nExcellent conditions are expected. The hill has more snow\non it than st any time during\nthe year. There is a good base\nand several Inches of new snow.\nThe lifts will run Saturday,\nSunday and Monday, starting at\n10 a.m. If the number of skiers\nwarrant keeping lt open for the\nrest of the week, we plan to do so.\nOver the past couple of wefeks\nour crowds have not been as\nlarge as we would like them to\nbe. Probably some skiers have\nbeen trying other hills.\nWe expect conditions on our\nhill to be excellent, and if you\nwant to get in a lot of rides, get\nup there when the lift starts, at\n10 a.m.\nOn a few occasions lately, the\nskiing has been best from the top\ndown to tower six, so skiers have1\njust been skiing the top of the\/\nhill. However, our prospects for\ngood skiing from top to bottom\nlook terrific, so grab your blades\nand join the Easter parade at the\nSilver King ski hill over the weekend.\nBOBBY HULL\n. , two big assists.\nBalfour, making his first ap\npearance {or Hawks since Jan.\n23, tipped Bill Hay's goalmouth\npass high past a sprawling Sawchuk to make it 3-1.\nSCORES ON\nPOWER PLAY\nMikita's power-play goal put\nthe game out of Wings' reach\nat 16:23. The puck bounced out\nto the shifty centre at the point\nafter Pilote's shot from the\nother point hit tbe backboards\nand rebounded. Mikita slapped\nthe puck as soon as be got it\nand the rising shot was in the\nnet before Sawchuk could move.\nHull's first-period breakaway\ncame within a hair's breadth of\ncounting. He skated straight in\non Sawchuk and drove one of\nhis blazing shots directly at the\ngoaltender. Sawchuk got a piece\nof lt but the puck rolled between his legs and just trickled\npast the post.\nThe game was marked by\nhard hitting by both sides. Referee Art Skov called II minor\npenalties\u2014six to Hawks. Tempers appeared to come close to\nboiling over only in the first,\nwhen three men from each side\ncollided in front of the Hawks'\nnet. The officials stepped in before it developed beyond some\nshoving.\nREUBEN BUERGE\nLEADS AGAIN\nGAS PRICES\nSLASHED\nNo. 1\n47\nGAL.\nNo. 2\n42\nGAL.\nREUBEN BUERGE MOTORS\nLTD.\n\u2022 24 HOUR WRECKER SERVICE \u2022\nChevrolet \u2014 Oldsmobile \u2014 Cadillac \u2014 F85 Starflre \u2014 Corvair \u2014 Chevy II \u2014 Chevelle\n323 Vernon St. Nelson, B.C. Phone 352-3151\nouestimating*\nan audience for\nyour advertising?\n\/i\/dlfyoutadhm a daify newspaper!\nQ\nJ uesswork just isn't good enough when\nyour advertising must build sales.\nWhether yours is a budget in hundreds or\nthousands of dollars, it's important to you\nand it should be thoughtfully and efficiently\nspent.\nNo one would think of taking just anybody's\nword for the condition of a bank's books. No\nsir! Special examiners must audit the books\nand detail the condition to a mathematical\ncertainty.\nIt's the same with a daily newspaper's\naudience of readers. The advertiser-controlled A.B.C. audits our books every year\nso that advertisers may know exactly the size\nof the audience, where it is, and a lot more.\nIf you agree that facts about your advertising medium should be exchanged for your\ndollars, then ask for a copy of our latest\nA.B.C. report\nIt'll be an eye-opener.\nHflsntt latlg \u00a3fatU3\nABC PAID CIRCULATION \u2014 MEASURE OF IHE PAYING AUDIENCE\n___.\n 8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, SAT., MARCH 28,1964\nL\nTHAT NEPHEW O' K\n(mtse.)\nVOURS MUST BE MADE\n\\ THE   J\nr\nL\n> O'STONEOR       >\nSUMPTHIKK'-I'VE    k\n(TDHISS\nTRIED EVERVTMIM6.'\/\nJHVsSKF-)\nNQTAOOIVER\/\/^\nA\nlP~T:,_____,_^l\ntsJt\nB\nlll\/M^SKST^'   i\nPr_\u00a7\nN\nE\nkm\nR\nm\nCLASSIFIED\nBIRTHS\nSTRELIEV-To Mr. and Mrs.\nJohn Streliev, 418 Houston St.,\nNelson, at Kootenay Lake General Hospital on March 25, a\ndaughter.\nI.-\/. Sell, Trade With Classified\nPETS,  CANARIES,  BEES\nPUREBRED GERMAN SHEP-\nherd pups. Ph. 358-2283.\n-73-78\nFOR SALE-HANDSOME REG-\nistered Samoyed male. Reasonable. Ph. 352-7644.     -73-74\nTELEVISION   FOR TODAY\nPACIFIC STANDARD TIME\nKREM-TV \u2014 Channel t\nSATURDAY\nSign On\nAgriculture N.W.\nEn France\nSew With Us\nThe Jetsons *\nCasper Cartoons *\nMatty's *\nBugs Bunny *\nAmerican Bandstand\nT.B.A.\n2:00 Telesports Digest\n2:30 Challenge Golf (C) \u2022\n3:30 Pro-Bowlers Tour *\n5:00 Wide World of Sports *\n6:30 Championship Bowling\n7:30 Hootenanny \u2022\n8:30 Lawrence Welk *\n9:30 Hollywood Palace *\n10:30 Saturday Spectacular:\n\"Caine Mutiny\"\nSUNDAY\n9:00 Sign On\n9:15 Sacred Heart\n9:30 Fisher Family\n10:00 World of Faith\n10:30 The Answer\n11:00 NCAA Swimming\nChampionship *\n\"!:00 Norman Vincent Peale\n^^O Mosaic\n1:00 Discovery \u2022\n1:30 Issues and Answers \u2022\n2:00 Directions \"64\" \"\n3:00 Trails West\n3:30 Trailmaster\n4:30 Science All Stars *\n5:00 Star Route\n5:30 Movie of the Week:\n\"On The Waterfront\"\n7:30 Saga of Western Man\n8:30 Arrest and Trial *\n10:00 The Saint\n11:00 ABC News Reports\n11:30 Late Show\nKXLY-TV \u2014 Channel 4\nSATURDAY\nSunrise Semester\nCaptain Kangaroo\nAlvin and the Chipmunks '\nTennessee Tuxedo *\nQuick Draw McGraw *\nMighty Mouse *\nRin Tin tin *\nRoy Rogers *\nSky King \u2022\nAnn Sothern\nCBS News *\nSaturday Matinee\nCBS Match Play *\n4:00 Bat Masterson\n4:30 Tell It to the Camera\n5:00 Wrestling\n6:00 Mr. Ed \u2666\n6:30 Adventure Theatre\n7:00 Hennesey\n7:30 Jackie Gleason *\n8:30 The Defenders *\n9:30 Phil Silvers \u2022\n10:00 Gunsmoke *\n11:00 11 o'Clock News\n11:10 Big 4 Movie\nSUNDAY\n7:45 Sunday School of the Air\n8:00 Bob Poole's\nGospel Favorites\n9:00 Voice of the Church\n9:30 Oral Roberts\n10:00 Dan Smoot\n10:15 Manion Forum\n10:30 This Is The Life\n11:00 Easter Service St. John's\nEpiscopal Cathedral\n12:00 Sunday Matinee\n1:30 Maverick\n2:30 Sunday Sports Special *\n4:00 Roller Derby\t\n5:00 Easter Concert from\nSt. John's Cathedral\n5:30 Amateur Hour *\n6:00 20th Century \u2022\n6:30 Navy Log\n7:00 Marlneland Carnival'\n8:00 Ed Sullivan \u2022\n9:00 Judy Garland *\n10:00 Candid Camera *\n10:30 What's My Line *\n11:00 CBS News *\n11:15 Local News\n11:25 Four Most Feature\nKHQ-TV \u2014 Channel S\nSATURDAY\n8:30 Ruff V R'eddy (C) * '\n9:00 Hector Heathcote (C) *\n9:30 Fireball XL-5 *\n10:00 Dennis the Menace \u2022\n10:30 Fury *\n11:00 Sergeant Preston *\n11:30 Bullwinkle (C) *\n12:00 Exploring (C) *\n1:00 What Are Spokane\nSchofls Doing?\n1:30 Sheriff of Cochise\n2:00 Matinee on Six:\n\"Go West\"\n3:30 Highway Patrol\n4:00 Rocky and His Friends\n4:30 NBC Sports Special *\n6:00 NBC News *\n6:15 Inland Empire Farmer\n6:30 Temple Houston\n7:30 The Lieutenant \u2022\n8:30 Joey Bishop (C) *\n9:00 Saturday Night\nat the Movies (C) \u2022\n\"Wild River\"\n11:15 Saturday News\n11:30 Late Movie:\n\"Yearling\"\nSUNDAY\n10:00 Spokane Council\nof Churches\n10:30 Frontiers of Faith *\n11:00 Spencer Tracy Theatre:-\n\"Northwest Passage\"\n12:30 Week's Best Movie:\n\"Thirty Seconds\nOver Tokyo\"\n2:30 Rocky and His Friends\n3:00 Northwest Wrestling\n4:00 Wonderful World of Golf'\n5:00 Sawdust Theatre\n5:30 G.E. College Bow! (C) *\n6:00 Meet the Press (C) \u2022\n6:30 Deputy\n7:00 Bill Dana *\n7:30 Walt Disney (C) *\n8:30 Grindl *\n9:00 Bonanza (C) *\n10:00 Breakthrough \u2014 Medicine\nShape of the Future *\n11:00 Sunday News\n11:15 Late Movie:\n\"Barbary Coast Gent\"\nCBC-TV \u2014 Nelson, Channel 9: Trail, Channel 11\nSATURDAY\n00 Scotch Cup Curling\n2:30 Nassau and Riverside\nRacing\n3:00 Bowling\n4:00 Forest Rangers\n4:30 Countrytime\n5:00 Bugs Bunny\n5:30 NHL Hockey\n7:15 Juliette\n7:45 T.B.A.\n8:00 Eleanor\n8:30 The Beverly Hillbillies\n9:00 The Saint\n10:00 Showcase\n10:30 Starlight Theatre\n11:00 News\nSUNDAY\n12:30 Speaking French\n1:00 Keynotes\n1:30 Country Calendar\n2:00 Time of Your Life\n3:00 Heritage\n3:30 Wonderful World of Golf\n4:30 The 20th Century\n5:00 The Sixties\n5:30 Some of Those Days\n6:00 Hockey \u2014\nDetroit vs. Chicago\n9:00 Hazel\n9:30 Flashback\n10:00 Mister Ed\n10:30 My Three Sons\n11:00 News\nCJLH-TV \u2014 Channel 7, Lethbrldgo\nMOUNTAIN STANDARD TIME\nSUNDAY\n12:00 Test Pattern\n12:30 Speaking French\n1:00 It Is Written\n1:30 Country Calendar\n2:00 Time of Your Life\n3:00 Heritage\n3:27 CBC News\n3:30 Wonderful World of Golf\n4:30 20th Century\n5:00 The Sixties\n5:30 Huckleberry Hound\n6:00 Sport, Weather, News\n6:30 Candid Camera\n7:00 Hazel\n7:30 Flashback\n8:00 Ed Sullivan\n9:00 Bonanza\n10:00 T.B.A.\n11:00 CBC\/BBC News\n11:15 Night Final\n11:25 Going My Way\nMONDAY\n9:45 Test Pattern\n10:00 Count of Monte Cristo\n10:30 Chez Helene\n10:45 Nursery School\n11:00 Ed Allen Show\n11:30 Children's Singalong\n12:00 Monitor 7\n12:25 Midday Edition\n12:30 Adventures of William Tell\n1:00 Cimarron City\n1:55 Alpha's Milky Way\n2:00 Password\n2:30 Scarlett Hill\n3:00 Take Thirty\n3:30 Friendly Glam\n3:45 Misterogers\n4:00 This Living World\n4:30 Adventures of William Tell\n5:00 Razzle Dazzle\n5:30 Broken Arrow\n6:00 Sport, Weather, News\n6:30 Windfall\n7:00 The Flintstones\n7:30 Don Messer\n8:00 Garry Moore\n9:00 Playdato\n10:00 Inquiry\n10:30 Monday Night Presents\n11:00 CBC News\n11:15 Night Final\n11:25 Cimarron City\n(Programs subject to change by stations without notice.)\nHELP WANTED\nWritten applications will be\nreceived by the undersigned for\nthe following positions:\n1-STENOGRAPHER\n\u2014Accurate Typing\n\u2014Shorthand\n\u2014Ability to Meet Public.\n2\u2014CLERK-TYPIST\n\u2014Some Typing\n\u2014Payrolls\n\u2014Elementary Bookkeeping\nPlease provide the following information with applications:\nQualifications.\nReferences.\nSalary expected.\nDate available for interview.\nApplications are open to male\nand female applicants and must\nbe marked with reference to\nposition.\nClosing date for applications is\n5:00 p.m. Thursday, April 3,\n1964.\nC.   B.  Loff\nSecretary-Treasurer,\nSchool District No. 7 (Nelson)\n554 Stanley Street, Nelson, B.C.\n\u201473-76\nWANTED - RELIABLE MAN\nas Dealer in Nelson. Experience not necessary. Fine opportunity to step into old\nprofitable business where\nRawleigh Products have been\nsold for years. Big profits.\nProducts furnished on credit.\nWrite Rawleigh's, Dpt. C-153-\n163, 589 Henry Avenue, Winnipeg 2, Manitoba. \u201474-74\nMAN NEEDED WITH CHURCH\nbackground. Full or part-time\n\u2014lifetime security. Experience\nSunday School, ministry helpful. Earn highest weekly commissions. Religious book sales.\nWrite John Rudin _ Co., 22\nWest Madison St., Chicago 2,\nIllinois. -74-74\nTIMEKEEPER, FIRST AID AT-\ntendant required by May 1st.\nPermanent position, M.S.A.\nbenefits. Apply in own handwriting stating experience and\neducation to Box 40, Christina\nLake, B.C. -74-80\nSHOE STORE MANAGER. AP-\nply Unemployment Insurance\nOffice in Trail. -69-74\nRead the Classified Daily\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nDANCE BAND AVAILABLE\nfor parties, cabarets, weddings, etc. Will go anywhere.\nBlue Velvets. Ph. 352-6797.\n-80-tf\nGIRLS WANT BABY SITTING\nafter school, evenings and\nweekends. Ph. 352-6032 or\n352-6452. \u201474-79\nFOR PRUNING AND GRAFT-\ning Call 352-7381 Nelson.\n-41-h\nFOR SALE\nMISCELLANEOUS\nWe must not be Dormant like\nour trees are. Now!! is the\ntime to act. Let us help you\nchoose  the  right   Dormant\nspray for your trees.\nELLISON'S\nComplete Farm and Garden\nCentre.\n-72-74\nUSED APPLIANCES. PORT-\nable Coronado electric sewing\nmachine $25. G.E. 10 cu. ft.\nfridge $124.95. Frigidaire 12\ncu. ft. fridge $98.00. 30\" Ken-\nmore electric range, was\n$115.95, reduced to $99.50.\nMacleod's Ltd. \u201473-78\nLAST CHANCE. THIS WEEK\nonly before the Tax increase.\nUnsanded Plywood\u20144 x 8 x%,\n$2.94; 4 x 8 x Yi, $.407; 4x8x%,\n$4.99; 4 x 8 x % $6.98. Columbia Trading, 901 Front St.\n-72-75\nFOR THE BEST IN USED\nautomatic washers, dryers, refrigerators, television, etc. contact Nelson Electric Co. Ltd.,\n574 Baker St., Nelson, B.C.\n-27-tfn\nSIDES OF PORK 29c PER LB.,\ncut and wrapped 33c per Ib.\nSides of beef cut and wrapped\n47c per lb. Free delivery. New-\ndan Farm, Creston, B.C. Ph.\n356-9901. -tfn\nFEED FOR SALE. ORDER\nnow, grain, hay and straw,\ndelivered. Joe Pogony, Jr.,\nLister, B.C. Phone 356-2605.\n-33-h\nAPPLES $1 PER BOX AND UP.\nBring container. 1 mile from\nferry. Robson, B.C. P. Evdo-\nkimoff. \u201472-tf\nOAK COUNTERS AND DESKS\nwith cash drawers. Glass customer wickets. Ph. 352-5849.\n\u201473-75\nSINGER SEWING MACHINE\nCo. Repairs, sales, rentals. 339\nBaker St. Ph. 352-3631.  -70-75\nON THE AIR\nPACIFIC STANDARD TIME\nCKLN PROGRAMS\n1390 ON THE DIAL\nSATURDAY, MARCH 28, 1964\n58\u2014Sign On\n:00\u2014News and Reports\n: 10\u2014Nelson Till Nine\n: 55\u2014Oxford Cambridge\nBoat Race\n: 30\u2014News\n35\u2014Wake Up Time Continues\n: 00\u2014News\n: 10\u2014Wake Up Time\n30\u2014Birthday Book\n45\u2014Faith for Our Times\n: 00\u2014News\n15\u2014Sports College\n: 30\u2014Western Roundup\n: 53\u2014RCAF Report\n: 59\u2014D.O.O.T.S.\n00\u2014News and Early Roads\n: 05\u2014Music Fill\n30-Hobby Club\n30\u2014Morning Melodies\n12:00-Polka Party\n12:15\u2014Sports News\n12:25\u2014News\n12:30\u2014Musical\n1:00\u2014Metropolitan Opera\n4:30-Let's Waltz\n4:45\u2014Musical\n5:00\u2014Max Ferguson Review\n5:25\u2014News\n5:30-NHL Game\n7:15\u2014The Outdoorsman\n7:30\u2014On the Move\n8:00\u2014Billboard Honour Roll\nof Hits\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Western Program\n10:30\u2014Hoop\u2014Dee\u2014Doo\nll:00-Dance With Dal\n11:30\u2014Sign Off\nSUNDAY, MARCH 29, 1964\n43\u2014Sign On\n45\u2014World Church News\n00\u2014B.B.C. News\n15\u2014Neighbourly News\n25\u2014News\n30\u2014B.C. Gardener\n40\u2014British Israel\n59-D.O.O.T.S.\n00\u2014Sunday Magazine\n30\u2014Russian Gospel\n00\u2014Local Church Service\n00\u2014News\n05\u2014Sports News\n15\u2014Harbour Lights\n30\u2014Canadian Theatre \u2014\nFact or Fancy?\n1:00\u2014Easter In Europe\n2:00\u2014News\n2:03\u2014Capital Reports\n2:30\u2014Sunday Concert\n3:30-Church of the Air\n4:00\u2014Hour of Decision\n4:30\u2014I.Q.\n5:00\u2014Project 64\n6:00\u2014Bethel Fireside Show\n6:30\u2014The Renaissance Singers\n7:00\u2014News\n7:10\u2014Weekend Review and\nOur Special Speaker\n7:30\u2014This Is My Story\n8:00-CBC Sunday Night\n11:00\u2014News\nCBC  PROGRAMS\nSUNDAY,\n: 00\u2014Random Hour\n: 10\u2014Easter Morning\n45\u2014World Church News\n00\u2014B.B.C. News\n15\u2014Neighbourly News\n:30\u2014B.C. Gardener\n:40\u2014Hidden Pages of the\n: 59-D.O.O.T.S.\n:00\u2014Sunday Magazine\n30-CBC Halifax Strings\n00\u2014B.C. Commentary\n10\u2014In Reply\n30\u2014Regional Weather\n33\u2014Critically Speaking\n00\u2014The Spice of Life\n30\u2014Canadian Theatre \u2014\nFact or Fancy?\n00\u2014Easter In Europe\n00\u2014News\nMARCH 29, 1964\n2:03\u2014Capital Report\n2:30\u2014Sunday Concert\n3:30-Church of the Air\n4:00\u2014The Record Shelf\n4:30\u2014I.Q.\n5:00\u2014Project 64\nAir    6:00\u2014Music Diary\n6:30\u2014The Renaissance Singers\n. 7:00\u2014News\n7:10\u2014Weekend Review\n7:20\u2014Our Special Speaker\n7:30\u2014On The Move\n8.-00-CBC Sunday Night\n8:05\u2014St. Matthew Passion\n11:00\u2014News\n11:15\u2014Life and Literature\n11:30-BBC Spoken Word\n12:00\u2014News\n12:08\u2014Recorded Music\nMONDAY, MARCH 30, 1964\n6:10\u2014The Morning Show\n8:35\u2014Max Ferguson Show\n9:00\u2014News and Report\n9:10\u2014Interlude\n9:15\u2014The Archers\n9:30\u2014Pacific Express\n9:59\u2014D.O.O.T.S.\n10:00\u2014Morning Visit\n10:10\u2014For Consumers\"'\n10:15-Now I Ask You\n10:45\u2014Playroom\nU:00-Off The Record\n11:45\u2014Music on the Heather\n12:00\u2014Don Messer\n12:15-News\n12:25\u2014Pacific Showcase\n12:30\u2014B.C  Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Five to One\n1:00\u2014Stories with John Drainie\n1:15\u2014Tommy Hunter Show\n2:00\u2014Holiday Time\n2:33-Trans-Canada Matinee\n3:30\u2014Cornucopia\n4:00\u2014News\n4:03\u2014Canadian Roundup\n4:10-On Parliament Hill\n4:15\u2014Countdown\n4:45\u2014Tempo For Teens\n5:30\u2014Tempo\n5:55\u2014Spotlight On Sporti\n6:00\u2014Recorded Music\n6:30\u2014Musical Program\n7 00\u2014News\n7:20\u2014Speaking Personally\n7:30\u2014Business Barometer\n7:35\u2014Pacific Startime\n8:00\u2014Assignment\n8:30\u2014Radio International\n9:00\u2014Summer Fallow\n9:30\u2014Distinguished Artists\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Looking Through the\nPapers\n10:30\u2014Continental Holiday\nll:00-Hot Air\n12:00\u2014News\n12:05\u2014Recorded Music\nFOR SALE\nMISCELLANEOUS\n(Continued)\nPROPANE  GAS  STOVE  FOR\nsale. Ph. 352-3204.        -73-74\nWILLIS UPRIGHT PIANO. PH.\n352-3060 between 10 a.m. and\n5 p.m. \u201472-74\nPORK   FOR   SALE,   V4   OR\nwhole. Ph. 352-2355.      -67-92\nUSED   110   GAL.   OIL  TANK.\nPhone 352-3805. -74-75\nGREEN FIR. PH. 352-5485 AF-\nter 5 p.m. \u201470-75\nAUTOMOTIVE, BICYCLES\nMOTORCYCLES\nC O T T O NWOOD WRECKAGE\nwrecking '51 Olds., '55 Chev.,\n'55 GMC pickup, '56 Ford convertible, '57 Plymouth hardtop,\n'53 Consul, '53 Zephyr, Ply-\nmouths, Fords, Chev., Pon-\ntiacs, %-ton Chev truck. Good\nmotors, '57 Dodge V-8, \"52\nPontiae, '53 Consul, '52 Chev.\nPh. 352-5815, Box 382, 24 Ymir\nRoad. -36-tfn\nARMY TYPE JEEP. - CAB\nwinch, warn hubs. Good running condition, $650. W. M.\nTaylor, Tanglewood Lodge,\nR.R. No. 1, Phone 184 Balfour.\n\u201474-75\n'57 PLYMOUTH BELVEDERE\nV-8 automatic. Radio. Real\nclean, $775. For details contact\nR. B. Green, Nelson.    \u201474-74\nREPOSSESSION: 1960 2 DOOR\nwhite Corvair. Stored at West\nTransfer Co. Enquiries at the\nBank of Montreal.        \u201473-84\n'52 PONTIAC, '56 HILLMAN\nhardtop, '52 Morris Oxford,\nM.G.A. 1600. North Shore Service. Ph. 352-2929. -tfn\n'57 CHEV. PICKUP. RADIO,\noutside mirrors. R. Beaton,\nNorth Shore. \u201469-74\n'56 FORD CUSTOM STATION\nwagon. Good shape $925. Ph.\n352-6247. -69-74\nMUST SELL-1957 4 DR. CHEV.\nVery clean. Winter and summer tires. Ph. 367-3486. \u201470-74\nRENTALS\nNEW   OFFICE   SPACE   FOR\nrent Ground Floor Baker St.\nApprox. 800 sq. ft. For particulars phone 352-3517 or 352-2687.\n-69-74\nONE OR TWO-ROOM FURNISH-\ned apts. in Annable Block. $21\nand up. Call 352-7217, Poulin\nAgencies Ltd. 582 Ward Street.\n-28-h\nHSKPG. AND SLEEPING RM.\nweekly, monthly rates. Dishes,\nlinen supplied, parking. Allen\nRooms, 171 Baker St.\n-27-tfn\nLARGE 2 BDRM. UNFURN.\nheated apt. Elec. range. Adults\n$95 mo. Ph. 352-5073 eves,\n-27-tfn\nPARTLY FURN. 3 RM. SUITE,\nheated, near Fairview Safeway. Private entrance. Phone\n352-6529 after 6 p.m.    \u201472-77\nLARGE FURN. ROOM. GOOD\nfor a couple or 2 girls. Also\n1 small suite for 1 man. Ph.\n352-5602. 116 Vernon St. \u201472-tf\n2 BEDROOM HOUSE, FULL\nbasement, garden, $55 per\nmonth. 614 Gore St. Ph. 352-\n6360 after 4 p.m. \u201470-75\n4 B.R. COUNTRY HOME Vt\nmile off highway at Taghum.\n$60 month. Ph. 365-5584.\n-73-78\n2 B.R. HOME NEAR TARRYS'\nSchool. Hot and cold water and\nelectricity. Ph. 359-7598.\n-73-75\nHALDANE   APARTMENTS   -\nFurn. or unfurn. Ph. 352-6721.\n-65-tfn\n4 ROOM  APT.   GAS  RANGE.\n724 Baker. Phone 352-5069.\n-tfn\nAPARTMENT, ADULTS ONLY.\nBox 1317 Nelson Daily News.\n-27-tfn\nCENTRAL DRIVE IN BAKER\nSt. Basement. Ph. 352-6024.\n-52-tf\n2 BEDRM. APT. LIVING RM.,\nKitchen and bathroom. Vacant\nMar. 1. Ph. 352-3003.    -36-tfn\nFURN.   HSKPG.   RM.   APPLY\n140 Baker St. or ph. 352-3384.\n-51-tf\nLARGE   PASTURE   $80   FOR\nthe season. Ph. 352-6170.\n\u201471-82\nFURN. 2 ROOM SUITE ON\nmain floor. 140 Baker St. or\nphone 352-3384. -67-tf\n3 ROOM FURN. FLAT FOR\ncouple. North Shore. Phone\n352-7493. \u201472-77\n1 B.R. APT. FURN. OR UN-\nfurn. Private entrance. Phone\n352-5252. \u201473-tf\n4 ROOMS AND BATH. UNFURN\nPh. 352-6871. -45-tf\n2 ROOM FURNISHED SUITE.\n823 Vernon St., Nelson.  -67-72\n2 RM. FURN. SUITE. HEATED.\nPh. 352-5252. \u201469-tf\nHSKPG.   ROOM  -  HEATED,\nfridge. Ph. 352-2796.     -71-tfn\n2 ROOM FURNISHED APT. -\nPhone 352-3470. \u201472-tf\nSMALL   HOUSE   AND   SUITE\nfor rent. Ph. 352-7195.    -73-tf\nPERSONAL\nPERSONAL SUNDRIES _ SUP-\nplies. 60% savings. Free price\nlist and sample on request.\nBox 8, Station C. Winnipeg.'\n-27-246\nMOTHER AND SON WANT\nride to Vancouver, March 29,\n30 or 31. Ph. 355-2378 collect\nafter 5 p.m. \u201473-74\nPhone 352-3552 for Classified\nClassified Ads Get Results\n  .\t\n\u2014\u25a0\n737\nMACHINERY\nUSED\nWe have an excellent selection of used CHAIN SAWS on\nhand at bargain prices.\nBEFORE BUYING -\nCOMPARE\nMAC'S WELDING\n&  fcquipment  Co.   Ltd.\n814 Railway St.     Ph. 352-5301\n-70-tfn\nAvoid   the   Tax   Increase!\nWe Have in Stock for\nImmediate Delivery\nNew I.H.C. 175\nPower Shift Loader\nNew I.H.C. TD-15-B\nPower Shift Tractor\nNew I.H.C. TD-9-B\nPower Shift Tractor\nTAX  INCREASE  EFFECTIVE\nAPRIL 1st\nCENTRAL TRUCK\n& EQUIPMENT CO. LTD.\n702 Front St.        Nelson, B.C.\nPHONE 352-2633\n-74-74\nWANTED GOOD USED 2tt TO\n3V4 ton flat deck or logging\ntruck, Apply Box 445, Nakusp,\nB.C. -70-75\nMACHINERY\ni Continued >\nUSED DRILL-PRESS\n2\" Table, No. 4 Taper Spindle,\nCone Pulley Drive.\nStevenson Machinery Ltd.\nPhone 352-3561\n-74-74\nHEEL BOOM LOG LOADER\nfor sale - 1960 P & H \"loggers\nspecial\" mounted on Kenworth\nTruck, with hydraulic outriggers. Contact Mnrt Browne,\nLA 6-5698 New Westminster or\nBingham Equipment Co. Ltd.,\nTR 9-1455 Vancouver.   -33-tfn\nALLIS CHALMERS TRACTOR\nwith plough. Mayflower Service, Slocan Park.      \u201465-tfn\nBUSINESS\nOPPORTUNITIES\nDRIVE-IN RESTAURANT, GO-\ning concern adjacent to school,\nCivic Centre. Fully equipped.\nYear round business in fast\ngrowing community, main\nhighway location. Cre6ton Valley Realty Ltd., Creston, B.C.\n-69-74\nDRIVE-IN RESTAURANT, GO-\nIng concern adjacent to school,\nCivic Centre. Fully equipped.\nYear round business In fast\ngrowing community, main\nhighway location. Creston Valley Realty Ltd., Creston. B.C.\n-69-h\nEARN $26. SELL 50 CANS OF\nWatkins Pepper and 50 bottles\nof Vanilla. Clubs and organizations may participate too.\nWrite Watkins Products, 560\nWellington Ave., Trail, B.C.\n-69-74\nBEAUTY SALON. EXCELLENT\nopportunity. $5500 cash. Urgent, due to illness. W. Vancouver Island, Alberni. Consider 2 years lease. Apply Box\n145 Nelson Daily News.  \u201469-h\nWANTED TO RENT\nWANTED TO RENT, 3 B.R.\nhome by exeautive of large\ncompany. Will accept lease.\nApply Box 141 Nelson Daily\nNews. \u201463-tf\nBUSINESS   &   PROFESSIONAL\nDIRECTORY\nA bandy alphabetical guide to goods and services\navailable in Nelson.\nAutomobile Dealers\nBILLS' MOTOR-IN LTD.\n(Studebaker-Lark)\n213 Baker St.       Phone 352-3231\n-tfn\nNORTH SHORE SERVICE\n(Standard-Triumph)\nOpen 8 a.m. - 9 p.m.\nAcross Lake Phone 352-2929\n-tfn\nPARKVIEW MOTORS LTD.\n(Rambler \u2014 Volkswagen)\n323 Nelson Ave.    Phone 352-5355\n-tfn\nBuilding Supplies\nBEE BUILDING SUPPLY LTD.\nEverything in waterproof\nplywood.\n301 Baker St.      Phone 352-3135\n-tfn\nBURNS LUMBER CO. LTD.\n602 Baker St.      Phone 352-6661\n-tfn\nCOLUMBIA TRADING CO\n901 Front St. Ph. 352-5571\nLots of free parking.\n-tfn\nCabinet Makers\nJOS. C. MERMET\nProfessional   Kitchen   Remodeling. Serving Nelson and Dist.\n1020 Davies St. - Nelson\n-tfn\nCleanina Service\nDUTCH CLEANING SERVICE\nChesterfield and Rug Cleaning\nFree Estimates. Phone 352-6323.\n-58-83\nCoal and Cartage\nChoquette Fuel.\nQuality Coals. General Hauling.\nPhone 352-7535\n-61-86\nContractors\nART RAVESTEIN\nRenovations. Cement Work\nand General Carpe_r\u00bb\nPhone 852-7433\n-tfn\nEngineers\nand Surveyors\nALEX CHEVELDAVE\nB.C. Land Surveyor-33 Pine St.\nPh. S65-5342 - Castlegar. _ C.\n-tfn\nGarages\nUpper Fairview Motors Ltd.\nC6r. 7th it Davies   Ph 352-2525\nTransistorized Ignition\ni i -tin\nPhoto Copying\nPOWELL ENGRAVING\n460 Ward St. Nelson, B.C.\nPhone 352-7521.\nContracts - Birth Certificates\nLegal Documents \u2014 Important\nPapers.\n-tin\nPrinting\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\nPrinters - Lithographers\nColor Printing\nPhone 352-8552\n-tfn\nRadio & TV Service\nVIDEO ELECTRONICS\n405 Hal) St - Phone 352-3355\n-tfn\nRefrigeration\nRefrigeration Sales and Service\nCARLSON EQUIPMENT\nNelson, B.C.-\u2014 Phone 352-5455\n-tfn\nSeptic Tank\nService\nNelson Septic Tank Service.\nClean, efficient, dependable.\nAH work guaranteed.\n24-hour service. Ph. 352-7360.\n-46-71\nSporting Goods\nFred Whiteley's Sport Shop\n88 Baker Street   Phone 352-7741\n-tfn\nPUBLIC  NOTICES\nNOTICE\nTenders in duplicate will be\nreceived by the undersigned up\nto 5:00 p.m., April Wth, 1964 for\nthe purchase of four (4) 55-\npassenger School Buses. Specifications for which shall confirm\nto the standards laid down by\nthe Government of British Columbia for construction of School\nBuses, and shall be equipped\nwith the following extras:\u2014\n1. Tow hooks on front bumper.\n2. Spare wheel and lire in\ncarrier.\n3. 12 Volt electric system.\n4. Heavy duty alternator.\n5. Heavy duty shock absorbers, front and rear.\n6. 42 oz. upholstery on seats.\n7. Heavy duty floor covering.\n8. Electric windshield wipers.\n9. Solex tinted windshield.\n10. Side - arm traffic control\nStop signal.\n11. Two (2) defroster fans,\nmounted above and at either\nside of windshield.\n12. 900 x 20 Goodyear Hi Miler\nextra grip (or equal) tires on\nrear wheels.\n13. 5 Speed Standard transmission.\n14. V-8 Motor.\n15. Differential of a type to\nsupply positive traction to both\nrear wheels.\n' 16. Book racks above seats on\nboth sides.\n17. Heavy duty horns.\n18. Vacuum reserve tank.\nAn itemized list of extras must\nbe listed separately in the\ntender, and the approximate delivery date noted. Delivery must\nbe on or before August 1st, 1964.\nThe lowest or any. tender not\nnecessarily accepted.\nForward tenders, plainly\nmarked \"Tenders for School\nBuses\" to the undersigned: C.\nB. Loff, Secretary - Treasurer,\nSchool District No. 7 (Nelson),\n554 Stanley Street, NELSON,\nB.C.\n\u201473-75\nSteam Baths\nNELSON STEAM BATHS\nExercise Centre - 369 Baker St\n-tfn\n. TENDERS\nSealed Tenders are invited for\nthe construction of Shop & Home\nEconomics Addition to Mt.\nSentinel School at South Slocan\nfor School District No. 8 (Slocan,\nB.C.)      .\nTenders will be accepted on\nor before 5:00 p.m., April 10th,\n1964 at the office of the Secretary-Treasurer, School Distriot\nNo. 8, Slocan, B.C.\nPlans and specifications and\ntender forms are available from\nthe Secretary-Treasurer, School\nDistrict No. 8, Slocan, B.C. or\nthe Architect, 212 Main Street,\nPenticton, B.C., on deposit of\n$50.00 (by cheque), which is refundable upon return of the\nplans and specifications in good\ncondition.\nA Bid Bond or certified cheque\nin the sum of 5% of the amount\nof the Tender shall accompany\neach tender. Also a letter from a\nBonding Company acceptable to\nthe Owner and\/or Architects\nmust be enclosed with each\ntender stating that the Bonding\nCompany is prepared to issue a\nPerformance Bond of 50% of the\namount of the Tender Should the\nTender be accepted.\nThe lowest or any tender not\nnecessarily accepted.\nSigned:\nME1KLEJOHN & GOWER,\nRegistered Architects.\n\u201473-74\nAUCTION SALE\nTIMBER SALE X87245\nThere will be offered for sale\nat public auction, at 11:00 a.m.\n(Local Time) on 11th, May,\n1964 in the office of the Forest\nRanger. Creston, B.C., the Licence X87245, to CUt 2,389,000\ncubic feet of spruce, balsam,\nlodgeoole pine, white pine, hemlock and trees of other species\non an area situated Priest River,\nwithin Creston P S.Y.U., Koote-\nnav Land District.\nTen (10) years will be allowed\nfor removal ot timber. .\nProvided anyone unable to\nattend the auction in person\nmay submit a sealed tender, to\nbe opened at the hour of auction\nand treated as one bid.\nFurther particulars may be\nobtained from the Deputy Minister of Forests, Victoria, B.C.;\nthe District Forester, Nelson.\nB.C.; or tbe Forest Ranger.\nCreston, B.C.\n-62-h\nTopsoil\nLarry's Topsoil, Sand and Gravel\n9th and Davies St. Ph. 352-2355\nDays or 352-7576 Evens.\n-tfn\nTree Falling\nDanger Tree Falling, Trimming,\nTopping. Reasonable rates. Free\nestimates, fully insured. Eric\nDenny, R.R. No. 1, Nelson.\n-59-84\nWelding &\nWorks\nron\nJohnny's\nWelding and Iron Works\n(Ermanno M. Lorenzi, Prop.)\nOrnamental Iron Work, Gates,\nRailings, Stairways, Handrails, General Welding, Portable Welder available. P.O.\nBox 27. Ph. 225-3285, Riondel.\n-72-97\nPUBLIC  NOTICES\n(Continued)\nTIMBER SALE X91737\nSealed tenders will be received\nby the District Forester at Nelson, B.C., not later than 11:00\na.m. Local Time, on the 27th\nday of April, 1964 Ior the purchase of License X91737, to cut\n1,151,000 cubic feet of: balsam,\nspruce, and trees ol other\nspecies on an area situated:\nGander Creek, Kootenay Land\nDistrict.\nTen (10) years will be allowed\nfor removal of timber.\nAs this area is within the\nSlocan P.S.Y.U., which is fully\ncommitted, this sale will be\nawarded under the provisions of\nSection 17 (la) of the \"Forest\nAct\" which gives the timber sale\napplicant certain privileges.\nFurther particulars can be obtained from the Forest Ranger,\nSlocan, B.C., from the District\nForester, Nelson, B.C., or from\nthe Deputy Minister cf Forests,\nVictoria, B.C. -50-h\nTIMBER SALE X91749\nSealed tenders will be received\nby the District Forester at Nelson, B.C., not later than 11:00\na.m. (Local Time) on the 19th\nday of May, 1964, for the purchase of License X91749, to cut\n3,331,000 cubic feet of: larch,\nspruce, fir, cedar, lodgepole\npine, balsam, and trees of other\nspecies, on an area situated:\nWhite River (Moscow Creek),\nKootenay Land District.\nTen (10) years will be allowed\nfor removal of timber.\nAs this area is within the\nUpper Kootenay P.S.Y.U., which\nis fully committed, this sale will\nbe awarded under the provisions\nof Section 17 (la) of the \"Forest\nAct\" which gives the timber\nsale applicant certain privileges.\nFurther particulars can be obtained from the Forest Ranger,\nCanal Flat, B.C., from the District Forester, Nelson, B.C., or\nfrom the Deputy Minister of\nForests, Victoria, B.C.\n-62-h\nTIMBER SALE X86496\nSealed tenders will be received\nby the District Forester at\nNelson, B.C., not later than\n11:00 a.m. (Local Time) On the\n20th day of April, 1964, for the\npurchase of License X86496, to\ncut 3,019,000 cubic feet of:\nspruce, fir, larch, lodgepole pine,\ncedar, balsam and trees of\nother species on an area situated: White River, Kootenay\nLand District.\nTen (10) years will be allowed\nfor removal of timber.\nAs this area is within the\nUpper Kootenay P.S.Y.U., which\nis fully committed, this sale will\nbe awarded under the provisions\nof Section 17 (la) of the \"Forest\nAct\" which gives the timber sale\napplicant certain privileges.\nFurther particulars can be\nobtained from the Forest\nRanger, Canal Flat, B.C., from\nthe District Forester, Nelson,\nB.C., or from the Deputy Minister of Forests, Victoria, B.C.\n-44-h\nWANTED\nMISCELLANEOUS\nSPOT CASH FOR USED FUR-\nnlture, antiques, coins, old\ngold, guns and jewels. Home\nFurniture Exchange. Ph. 352-\n6531. 413 Hall St. -66 tf\nWESTERN   SADDLE.   WRITE\nBox 852, Castlegar, B.C.\n-72-h\nWANTED - 1 BUNK BED. PH,\n352-3268. -69-74\nTIMBER SALE X90330\nSealed tenders will be received by the District Forester\nat Nelson, B.C., not later than\n11-00 A.M. Local Time on the\n11th day of May, 19H4, for the\npurchase of License X90330, to\ncut 10,000,000 cubic feet of:\nspruce, fir, balsam, hemlock,\ncedar, lodgepole pine white pine\nand trees of other species, on\nan area situated: Blackwater\nRidge, Kootenay Land District.\nTen '10) years will be allowed\nfor removal of timber. As this\narea is within the Kinbasket\nP.S.Y.U., which is fully committed, this sale will be awarded\nunder the provisions of Section\n17 da) of the \"Forest Act\"\nwhich gives the timber sale applicant certain privileges.\nFurther particulars can be obtained from the Forest Ranger,\nGolden, B.C., from Ihe District\nForester. Nelson. B.C., or from\nthe Deputy Minister of Forests,\nVictoria. B.C. -57-h\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND   FARM   SUPPLIES\nFOR ARTIFICIAL BREEDING\ndairy and beef cattle, phone\n352-6874. Nelson and District\nA.I. Centre, 709 Third St., Nelson. J. De Jong, Technician,\n-tfn\nSTUD FOR SERVICE. WRITE\nBox 852, Castlegar, B.C. \u201472-h\nPROPERTY, HOUSES\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\nF.P.\nACCENT\nON VALUE\nAll Listings Inspected\nand Approved\nFAIRVIEW, 4TH STREET\n3-B.R. stucco home. 1 B.R.\ndown, 2 large B.R.s up. Front\nkitchen, - adjacent D.R., L.R.\n(elec. fireplace). Full base-\nmeht; gas furnace. 2 lots,\nfruit trees, and garage. \u2014\nExceptional       $10,500\nvalue  '\nTerms: $75 per mo. inc. 7% int.\nFAMILY GROWING?\n2 blocks from Baker Street.\n4-B.R. home with plenty of\ncharacter. Large L.R. (fireplace), D.R. (fireplace), also\nwall-to-wall carpeting. Remodelled kitchen. Gas furnace. \u2014\nWired for W _ D. \u00ab19 300\nUnequalled value;P,4'0WU\nOnly $2900 down.\n7TH ST. FAIRVIEW\nNewer stuccoed 3-B.R. home;\non 1st floor. Featuring planter\ndivider of L.R., 15x20, and\nkit., many cabinets. Full basement and oil furnace. Garage\nattached. $16,900\nTerms.\nSECLUDED\nDOWNTOWN LOCATION\nMost desirable, charming 3-\nB.R. home. L.R. (stone fireplace) overlooking Cottonwood\nFalls. Remodelled kitchen, adjacent to D.R. Full basement;\nnew gas furnace. Beautifully\nTerms.\nONLY $900 DOWN\nUphill; convenient location. 3-\nB.R. family home. Large L.R.,\nkitchen wilh dining area. Utility room with tubs. Basement\nand stoker furnace. $6900\nVIEW LOCATION\n3-B.R.s, all on 1st floor. Fireplace L.R., adjacent D.R.,\nlarge kit. Economical heating.\nNew wiring and plastered\nthroughout. 6 lots; fruit trees\nand landscaped. $10,500\nTry $3300 down; $80 per mo.\n. including 6% interest.\nDUPLEX - 2-B.R., kit., L.R.,\nbathroom; 1-B.R., kit., L.R.,\npantry, bedroom. \u2014 Gas furnace for each unit. Tenant pays\nheat. Income $120   $6900\nper month. F.P\t\n$2000 down, $75 per month,\nincluding 7% interest.\nTENANT MAKES PAYMENTS\nCLOSE IN \u2014 On 2 lots. Duplex\n\u2014 3-B.R. upper, L.R., D.R.,\nkitchen and B.R., sunporch;\n2-B.R. lower, L.R., kite, dining\nroom, B.R. \u2014 2 new gas fur-\nnFa\u00a3s $11,900\n$3000 down. Only $77.77 per mo.\nincluding 6% interest.\nGRACIOUS AND SPACIOUS\nFamily 3-B.R. home. L.R.\n(fireplace), also den with fireplace adjacent to D.R. Rebuilt\nefficient kitchen. Economical\nheating $10,500\nReduced price ....        '\nPHONE 352-6144\nSylvia Brashear, Res. 332.3846\nMcHARDY\nAGENCIES LTD.\nREAL ESTATE \u2022 INSURANCE\n554 Ward St.        Nelson, B.C.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\n(Continued)\nPROPERTY, HOUSES\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\nLAMBERT\nREALTY  LTD.\nSuccessors to\nC. W. Appleyard & Co. Ltd.\nEst. 1912\nREALTORS and\nINSURANCE AGENTS\n421 Baker SL     Phone 352-3944\n1-MODERN HOME ON LAKE-\nVIEW CRESCENT. Hard,\nwood floors, fireplace. Bedroom and den in basement\nand 2 bedrooms upstairs. \u2014\nAutomatic oil heating. Double garage and $ 16,500\npatio.      *\n$2500 down and $125 per mo.\n2-920 MILL STREET. Comfortable one-storey home; built\n1948. 3 bedrooms', full base,\nment; unfinished playroom\nand bathroom; automatic oil\n$5* $11,000\n$1500 down, $75 per month.\n3\u2014CORNER LOT, level, overlooking park. 4-bedroom family  home.  Excellent  motel\nTerms.   W00\n4-CHARMING 2-BEDROOM\nHOME on large corner lot.\nGas heater, gas hot water;\n220 wiring and automatic\nwashing facilities. Carport.\nGood value $5250\n$1500' wi handle.\n$2,800 DOWN PAYMENT AND\n$75 monthly inc. 6% with purchase 3 B.R. home in Gyro\nPark area. F.P. $11,500. William Kalyniuk Agencies. Ph.\n352-2425. \u201468-tf\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SAT., MARCH 28, 1964 \u2014 9\nCOUPLE WITH ONE CHILD\nrequire 2 B.R. home valued up\nto $10,000. Down payment\n$1,250. William Kalyniuk Agencies. Ph. 352-2425. -64-tf\n$4000 DOWN PAYMENT AVAIL-\nable for 3 B.R. home. Fairly\nclose in. Occupancy required\nby May 15th. William Kalyniuk\nAgencies. Ph. 352-2425.   -67-tf\nSMALL HOUSE FOR SALE,\nRichards Street. Contact Nelson Savings Credit Union.\n-68-75\nBOATS AND ENGINES\n-74-74\nPLEASE LOOK AT ME! I AM A\n3 BR home in a quiet Vocational School area. Large LR; kitchen with eating area; bathroom with shower. Terms.\nOnly $9,500. Robertson, Hilliard. Ph. 352-7252. -70-h\nCome Over Easter\nFARM EQUIPMENT\nSALE STILL ON\nSpecial discounts allowed on all new goods\nsold during month of March, new Massey\nFerguson tractors, plows, mowers, balers. New\nHolland choppers and balers.\nSEE . . .\nOur complete line of used 3-point hitch\ntractors, used balers, etc.\nINSPECT...\nOur newly constructed farm parts and service\ndivision.\nBUY . . .\nFrom the dealer who gives you the SERVICE.\nVALLEY AUTOMOTIVE LTD.\nYour Massey Ferguson, New Holland Dealer\nPhone 356-2254 Creston, B.C.\n\u201474-74\nYOUR\nEASTER  PRESENT\nROBERTSON AVENUE\nNEW FOR YOU WITH VIEW\nIf you are interested in living\nin Nelson's newest premium\nconstructed bungalow with attached carport, we invite you\nto see this dwelling, just com-\nEleted. \u2014 Has \"L\" shaped LR-\n>R with fireplace, dream kitchen with cupboards on 3 walls,\n3 bedrooms with closets, 2 bathrooms, view verandah and patio. All modern features; electric heat with individual thermostats, plastered, oak floors,\nwalnut trim, bi-fold closet\ndoors. Full basement with\nspace for rumpus room with\nroughed-in fireplace (or basement apart. $23,900\nment.) Price *k\u00ab\"\u00bb\u00bbww\u00bb\u00bb\nWith $4000 down.\nT. D. Rosling\n& Son Ltd.\n568 Ward St.     Phone 352-3581\nOpen Saturday and Monday\nWE TRADE DWELLINGS\n\u201474-74\nVERY ADAPTABLE LARGE\nhome ... for a large growing\nfamily. As is ... for revenue\nproducing room rental to University or Vocational School\nstudents; or very inexpensive\nconversion to good revenue\nproducing duplex (I'll help you\ndo it), immediate occupancy.\nPriced so you'll be interested.\nHarrison Ph. 352-3525.    \u201432-h\nON 3 LEVEL LOTS IN SALMO,\non Glendale Ave. 3 B.R. family\nhome, large living room, full\nbasement, auto, oil heat, wired\n220. Priced to sell and terms.\nPh. 357-9524 Salmo.       \u201489-74\nWANTED - HANDYMAN TO\ncomplete this partially built 3\nB.R. home. Elec. radiant heat\nand plumbing installed. 55%\ncompleted. Robertson, Hilliard. Ph. 352-7252. \u201474-74\n2\u20142 B.R. BUNGALOWS. IM-\nmaculate, central. Good home,\ngood revenue. For particulars\napply Box 147 Nelson Daily\nNews. \u201473-78\nSTARCRAFT CRUISERS, RUN-\nabouts, cartops. Inboard and\noutboard models. Demonstrations anytime. Also good selection of used equipment. Kaslo\nMarine Service. \u201472-tf\n1114 FT. LONG NEW PLYWOOD\nboat. Cheap. Apply Box 148\nNelson Daily News.      \u201474-75\nROOM  AND   BOARD\nFOR   YOUNG   GENTLEMAN.\nPh. 352-6352. -44-tf\nROOM   AND   BOARD,   FAIR-\nview. Ph. 352-2870.        -89-74\nBath] Sfawa\nCirculation   Dept.,  Ph.  353-3552\nPrice per single copy, 10 cents\nBy carrier per week, 40 cents\nin advance.\nSubscription rates:\nBy mail in Canada\nOutside Nelson\nOne month    - $ 2.00\nThree months   6.00\nSix months \u2014_  10.00\nOne year   18.00\nBy mall to United Kingdom\nor the Commonwealth\nOne month     $ 2.00\nThree months 8.00\nSix months 11.00\nOne year   20.00\nBy Mai! to U.S.A. or\nForeign Countries\nOne month    $ 2.50\nThree months  7.00\nSix months  _.. 13.00\nOne year \u2014 24.00\nWhere extra postage is required,\nabove rates plus postage.\nFor delivery by carrier in Cranbrook,   phone   Mrs.   Stanley\nWillison;\nIn Trail, Mrs. W. E. Spooner:\nIn Kimberley, Mrs. A. W.\nBrown.\nEASTER\nBRINGS   BIG\nCAR\nBARGAINS\nBUY\n1963 PLYMOUTH SUBURBAN\nV8, 4-Door. 4 Year Warranty.\n1963 FORD GALAXIE SEDAN\nSpotless.\n1963 VOLKSWAGEN 6-PASS. TRANSPORTER\nA Real Bargain.\n1962  DODGE  DART\nEconomy-Plus.\n1960 FORD THUNDERBIRD\nAll Power Equipped. Very Clean.\n1960 ENVOY STATION WAGON\n1960 CONSUL SEDAN\nBoth in Top Condition. Very Clean.\n1960 FORD SEDAN V8\nA Low-Mileage Car, One Owner.\n1959  PLYMOUTH  2-DOOR  HT.\nA Premium Car.\nMany Other Quality Used Can\nTo Choose From.\nCITY AUTO SERVICE\nYour CHRYSLER \u2014  DODGE \u2014 PLYMOUTH\nVALIANT \u2014 LAND\/ROVER - DODGE TRUCKS Dealer\nPh. 352-5346 Nelion,  B.  C.\n803 Baker St.\u2014and Granite Read.\n\"QUEEN   CITY   OF  THE  KOOTENAYS\"\n\u00ae\nPARKVIEW MOTORS LTD.\nPhone 352-5355\n323 Nelson Ave.\nPhone 365-3491\nCastlegar, B.C.\nPhone 352-2713\n722 Baker St.\nBeautiful, Dependable, Economical\nRAMBLER \u2014 Proved Most Useful to the Owner\nVOLKSWAGEN \u2014 Proved Most Economical Ride\nAll Models In Stock - IMMEDIATE DELIVERY\n1962 VOLKSWAGEN MIDGET BUS. 16,000 Miles. ...\n1962 CHEVROLET STATION WAGON. Automatic 8.\n1962 VOLKSWAGEN   DELUXE   \t\n1961 NSU  PRINZ\t\n1961 CHEVROLET BEL-AIR. 6-Cyl., 2-Door. \t\n1981 VOLKSWAGEN  DELUXE   __\t\n1961 RAMBLER AMERICAN. Large Motor.\t\n1960 VOLKSWAGEN.  New Paint, etc.  _._\t\n1960 VOLKSWAGEN \t\n2\u20141959 VOLKSWAGENS \t\n1959 VAUXHALL SEDAN \t\n1958 ZEPHYR SEDAN     \t\n1957 VOLKSWAGEN     \t\n1957 FORD. Automatic 8 \t\n1957 FORD. Standard 6.  \t\n1956 FORD M-TON PICKUP  \t\n1955 DODGE    _\n1955 PLYMOUTH  \t\n1955 CHEVROLET BEL-AIR \t\n1955 DODGE 2-DOOR\n1955 FORD. Standard 8. _ \t\n1955 CHRYSLER     \t\n1955 iEPHYR    \t\n1956 PLYMOUTH. Automatic. \"As Is\"\t\n1954 MONARCH. Automatic.\n1454 AUSTIN CONVERTIBLE\n1954 MONARCH. As Is\t\n195) CHEVROLET SEDAN \t\n1953 PONTIAC SEDAN \t\n1953 VANGUARD\n...$2395\n1952 HUDSON. Real Quality Car\t\n1951 PONTIAC\t\n050 PONTIAC\n. 2795\n. 1595\n. 350\n1895\n. 1350\n1695\n1195\n1095\n945\n995\n1050\n795\n1195\n. 1095\n. 695\n. 595\n. 495\n. 295\n. 750\n. 595\n. 550\n. 350\n. 450\n. 395\n. 295\n. 350\n. 395\n. 295\n. 395\n. 195\n95\n1947 Ford pickup    250\n1 Drinking Glass FREE With $3.00 Gas Purchase\ni i i\nFORD\nMEL BUERGE\nMOTORS\nLTD.\n608 Vernon St.\u2014Nelson\nPhone 352-7202\nCar Lot 352-7511\nOn Display\n1964  GALAXIE   500\nCONVERTIBLE\nRangoon Red\n1964 GALAXIE\nCOUNTRY SEDAN\n1964 FAIRLANE\n500 WAGON\n1964 FALCON V8    <\nWAGON\nDemo for\na Day\nWe invite you to eome\nin and test-drive one of\nour four total-performance demonstrators for\na 24-hour period;\nFORD\nMEL BUERGE\nMOTORS\nLTD.\n608 Vernon St.\u2014Nelson\nPhone 352-7202\nCar Lot 352-7511\nOn Display\n9 ft. \"SCAMPER\"\nPICKUP TRUCK\nCAMPER\nRegular $1495\n$1325\nOnly\n15 ft.   \"SCAMPER\"\nHOLIDAY  TRAILER\nRegular $1695\nOnly\n$1325\nTHE  5J$T\nUSED  CARS\n1963 Falcon 4-Door\nWagon      '\n1963 Ford Galaxie\n4-Door     '\"'\u00a7\u25a0'\n1963 Ford  Fairlane\n4-Door\n1963 Pontiae\nLaurentian 4-^Dr.\n1963 Comet 4-Dr:\n1962 Fairlane 4-Dr.\n1962 Galaxie 4-Dr.\n1962 Falcon 4-Dr.\n1962 Rambler 4-Dr.\n1961 Falcon 4-Dr.\n1961 Galaxie 2-Dr. HT\n1961  Dodge 4-Dr.\n1961 Ford 2-Dr.\n1961 Volkswagen \"'\u25a0     *\n1961 Meteor 4-Dr.\nSedan\n1961 Zephyr Sedan\nOLDER   SPECIALS\n1952 CHEV. SEDAN\nLicenced and    tlAr\nRunning *t,\u00abjrv\n1953 PONTIAC SEDAN\nLicenced and     $ 1Q C\nRunning  * I <r\\t\n1952 MERC. PICKUP\nLicenced and     $1 QC\nRunning .; * \u2022 3f J\nFORD\nMEL BUERGE\nMOTORS\nLTD-\n608 Vernon St.\u2014Nelson\nPhone 352-7202\nCar Lot 352-7511\n>\n ^-\u00ab'*\"\u00bb\nfw*\\i\n10\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, SAT., MARCH 28, 1964\nIn All the Hustle and Bustle af\nEveryday Living, Let Ui\nNot Forget the True\nMeaning of the\nEaster Season\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nI Your Individual j\nh\nBy Frances Drake\n)*MiMjkmmu**Ms\nLook in the section in which\nyour. birthday comes and find\nwhat your outlook is, according\nto the stars,\nf For Sunday, March 29, 1964\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 20\n(-Aries) \u2014 Planetary influences\nindicate a wider scope of interests, possibly greater activity.\nBut be careful not to over-\nextend yourself. Big returns for\nworthwhile efforts.\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus)\n-r Take note whether you are\nheeding sensible suggestions and\nmethods devised for surest all-\nfound purpose. You could be\n.drifting off the straight, sound\npath.   .\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini)\ni \u2014 If it- is a day for rest, take\nIt; do not try to fill in with odd\nor needless activity and tire self\n\u25a0beyond reason. In tasks, be\nthorough but anxiety-free.\n\u2022 JUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer)\n\u2014 Avoid haste and fretfulness.\nThis is a new day for new incentive and strength of -sill, backed\nby hope and self-confidence.\nHave the Job Done Right!\nyiC GRAVER\nLIMITED\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPhone 352-3315\nIn The\nSpring\na young man's\nfancy turns to\nLove\n1\n. LOVE OF AN\nAutomobile\nAnd When He Drives\nDown That Aisle\nof Contentment\nI       He Has a Smile\nThat Only a\nLow-Cost\nCredit Union\nI LOAN\ncan produce.\nThe Lowest Insured\nLoan Rates in Town\nSEE THE CREDIT\nUNION FIRST\nNelson\n\u25a0    Savings\nI     Credit\nj     Union\nLFor Information\nPhone 352-7410       I\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leo)\n\u2014 Curb uncertainty, restlessness. Review past week. Does\nthe new one need better planning co-ordination? Think about\nit NOW. Quiet contemplation a\nmust.\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER\n23 (Virgo) \u2014 Friends, associates\nmay change some plans. Take\nit all in before you let yourself\nfeel disappointed; you will see\nnew values. Make time for\nmeditation and relaxing.\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER\n23 (Libra) \u2014 Do not worry if\nthings do not turn out Exactly\nas you planned. No effort is lost\nthat is sincere and carefully\ndirected even though certain results are slow in coming.\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER\n22 (Scorpio) \u2014 ft may take\nlonger than usual to get matters\nstarted, to make necessary\nchanges, or just keep things in\nline, but you can do it. Give\nyourself a pep talk.\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER 21 (Sagittarius) \u2014 Magnanimous feelings and good\nsound thinking should prevail.\nWhile day should be friendly it\nCould be upset by \"minor\"\nerrors, carelessness. Control\nemotions.\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY\n20 (Capricorn) \u2014 Balance should\nbe your keyword now. Acknowledge a better method or improvement quickly, as your keen\nmind would if unhampered by\ndoubt, outside pressures. Don't\nconcentrate on the materiaUstic\nonly.\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY\n19 (Aqarius) \u2014 More advantages than may appear at first.\nLook around for ways, means to\npromote ideas, and really work\non some new ones. Exercise,\nrest, meditate.\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\n(Pisces) \u2014 If you feel indifferent at first, you may be tired.\nBut real striving for improved\nthinking and planning will give\nyou the lift you need.\nYOU BORN TODAY: Though\neager and swift in action, you\nuse your intelligence and work\nat being accurate. You are too\nimpulsive at times, sometimes\ncausing misunderstanding. You\nlike to have family and friends\naround you, are a generous host.\n1964 holds many new opportunities which should prove a challenge to your clever mind and\ndexterity. Many actors, business\nexecutives and specialists in\nmedicine have been Aries-born.\nBirthdate of: John Tyler, 10th\nU.S. President.\nNOTED POET of Canada, and former Kootenaian, Dr. A. Earle Birney,\nprofessor of Creative Writing at University of British Columbia, is pictured,\ncentre, during his visit to Nelson. At left is Rev. Aquinas Thomas, president\nof Notre Dame University, and at right, Mayor E. T. Bodard. They were\nchatting at a reception at the home of Mr. and Mrs. P. D. V. Murison following his lecture at NDU this week.\u2014Photo by Bob Buckley.\nMARKET TRENDS\nNEW YORK (AP)-The stock\nmarket put on a strong pre-\nEaster weekend performance\nThursday, widening its recovery\nof the previous session. Trading was active.\nIn a reversal of the tradition\nof caution before a long weekend, strength in prices was accompanied by volume which\nrose to 5,790,000 shares from 5,-\n420,000 Wednesday.\nSteels, cigarette issues, sav.\nings-and-Ioans, coppers, chemicals, rubbers, motors, rails and\nelectrical equipments were\namong the gainers.\nThe Dow Jones industrial av\nerage rose 2.75 to 815.91.\nCLOSED TODAY\nStock markets were closed\nGood Friday.\nNot one of the 15 most active\nstocks declined, although two\nwere unchanged. Of 1,329 issues\ntraded on the New York Stock\nExchange, 637 rose and 447 fell.\nNew highs for the year totalled\n163 and new lows 50.\nThe Associated Press average\nof 60 stocks rose 1.0 to 301.7.\nRadio Corp. was the most active stock, up % at 36V4 on 77,-\nWestern Provinces Seel-\nNew Cost'Sharing Program\nWINNIPEG (CP) - Premier\nRoblin's big pitch for Manitoba\nat the coming federal-provincial\nconference will be for expanded\nshared - cost programs and a\nnew look at the roles of both\nlevels of government in national development.\nThe Progressive Conservative\npremier holds the view that\nshared programs can be undertaken on a more flexible basis\nthan the present formulas provide.\nIn fact, he says, Manitoba\nhas stressed that any \"final adjustment\" of inter-governmental\nproblems may be neither possible nor desirable.\n\"Flexible and pragmatic\nchanges made in the full knowledge of the facts and in good\nfaith among the parties to the\narrangements \u2014 these are the\nSaskatchewan\nNET EARNINGS\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nBowater   Paper   Corp.   Ltd.,\nyear ended Dec. 31: 1963, $14,-\n523,000, 54.3 cents a share; 1962,\n513,354,000, 49.8 cents.\nCanadian Malartic Gold Mines\nLtd., year ended Dec. 31: 1963,\n$222,851; 1962, $109,049.\nUnited Amusement Corp. Ltd.,\nyear ended Dec. 28: 1963, $150,-\n108, $1.58 per A and B share;\nDec. 29: 1962, $468,019, $1.45.\nBuffalo A n k e r i t e Holdings Ltd., year ended Dec. 31:\n1963. net profit, $358,746, 22\ncents a share; 1962, net loss,\n$34,415.\nCapital Leasing Corp. Ltd.,\nyear ended Sept. 30: 1963, $115,-\n027, 18 cents a share; 1962, $61,-\n192, 7 cents.\nConsolidated East Crest Oil\nCo. Ltd., year ended Dec. 31:\n1963, $44,582; 1962, $2,430.\nPlacer Development Ltd., 9\nmonths ended Jan. 31: 1964,\n$3,352,251, $1.28 a share; 1963,\n$1,925,208, 74 cents.\nIndustrial Minerals of Canada\nLtd., year ended Dec. 31: 1963,\n$278,231, 67.9 cents a share;\n1962, $198,209, 48.3 cents.\nClairtone Sound Corp. Ltd.,\nyear ended Jan. 3; 1964, $625,.\n000, 52 cents a share; 1962,\n$440,000, 44 cents.\nMadsen Red Lake Gold Mines\nLtd., year ended Dec. 31: 1963,\n$683,981; 1962, $657,920.\nBy RON MacDONALD\nREGINA (CP) - Premier\nLloyd of Saskatchewan goes to\nthe federal - provincial conference in Quebec March 31 de\ntermined to press his view that\nthe federal government's latest\nproposals for sharing tax revenues are inequitable.\nSaskatchewan officials at the\nconference also will work for a\nchange from the present conditional federal grants programs\nin health and welfare to a\n\"block\" grant system with general guidelines rather than\nspecific conditions.\nMr. Lloyd, who faces an\nApril 22 provincial election, has\nsaid the latest tax-sharing proposals by the federal government were a retreat from the\nprinciple of equalization.\nThe Saskatchewan government has proposed that the\nfederal government make\nequalization payments to the\nprovinces to bring the revenues\nof all provinces from income\nand corporation taxes and succession duties up to the level\nof the province getting the most\non a per capita basis from\nthese three tax fields.\nThe    three   tax   fields   are\nshared by the provinces and the\nfederal government.\nHEALTH PLANS HIGH\nSaskatchewan, which introduced the first hospital insurance plan and the first medical\ncare insurance scheme in Canada, will be particularly inter\nested in the question of federal\ncost-sharing on health and welfare programs. Cost-sharing in\nthis field is expected by Mr.\nLloyd to occupy much of the\ncoming conference.\nUnder present arrangements\nthe federal government makes\npayments to the provinces to\ncover part of the cost of various health and welfare programs. Certain conditions are\nattached to the payments made\nfor each program.\nPremier Lloyd has said this\nmakes administration of the\nvarious programs unnecessarily\ncomplicated and may deter\nprovinces from improving certain health and welfare programs because they fear they\nwill find themselves no longer\neligible for federal cost-sharing.\nHealth Minister A. E. Blake-\nney says: \"We favor, in tlie\nhealth field, converting specific\ngrant programs such as National Health Grants to a block\ngrant program.\n\"We do not advocate the immediate termination of existing\ncost - sharing . programs but\nrather a gradual change to one\nwith only general guide liries\nrather than detailed conditions.\"\nPremier Lloyd also may ask\nthe federal government for revisions in the proposed Canada\nPension Plan, particularly to\nallow the self-employed to participate.\npractical  and  desirable  objectives.\n\"They are the objectives that\nrequire a continuity of effective\nconsultation. This is our conception of co - operative federalism.\"\nDIDN'T GRIP PROBLEM\nBuilding an improved \"machinery of consul tation\" was\namong Manitoba's prime aims\nat last fall's Ottawa conference,\nwhich is being continued in Quebec at the end of this month.\nAfter the November session Mr.\nRoblin said he felt some steps\nhad been taken but the talks\nhad not fully come to grips with\nthe problem as Manitoba saw\nit. This is what the province\nhopes to achieve in Quebec.\nOn more specific matters,\nManitoba wants extension of\nthe federal - provincial hospital\nservices plan to include mental\nand tuberculosis hospitals.\nIt will ask for implementation\nof the Fauteux report on penal\nreform which proposes federal\ngovernment responsibility for\nall prisoners with sentences\nlonger than six months instead\nof the present two years.\nMr. Roblin will continue to\npress for changes in the revised tax-sharing formula, presented by the federal government last fall for the 1964-65\nfiscal year.\nHe wants the tax-yield equalization base raised to the level\nof the richest province instead\nof the average of the top two,\nand restoration of a factor in\nthe previous agreement under\nwhich provinces poor in na\ntural resources received com\npensating revenue.\nBritish Columbia\nAlberta\nEDMONTON (CP)-Premier\nManning says Alberta will continue to press for a study which\ncould lead to a completely new\nmethod of sharing costs between the federal and provincial governments.\nThe premier, who will head\nthe Alberta delegation to the\nfederal - provincial conference\nopening at Quebec March 31,\nsays present equalization and\ncost-sharing schemes must be\nthoroughly reviewed and new\nplans developed to replace them\nwhen they expire in two years.\nThe study he proposes could\nlead to establishment of a fund\nfrom which all provinces would\nreceive a share. It would be\npooled from personal and corporation income taxes, succession duties and what he describes as a retail turnover tax.\nThis proposed new tax would\nbe a type of sales tax applied\nto a retailer's gross annual receipts rather than on each\nitem sold.\nThe fund would be aimed at\nenabling all provinces to\nachieve basic standards of\nhealth, education and welfare,\nthe premier said recently.\nHAS CRITICISM\nThe premier said the present\nshared-cost programs in such\nfields as these will be the key\ntopic of the Quebec sessions.\nThere were several criticisms\nof the present arrangements.\nThese included inability of\nthe poorer provinces to participate fully, provinces being\ntaken unawares by an Ottawa\ndecision  after  they have  pre-\nthe federal government into\nfields that are the provinces'\nunder the constitution.\nThe premier also said that\nOttawa might designate a general field, rather than a specific purpose, for the spending\nof grants by the provinces.\nNeeds in health and education\nvaried so much from province\nto province that each should decide how money could best be\nspent, within a general framework laid down by Ottawa.\nMr. Manning also was hopeful that a formula might be devised under which a province\ncould contract out of cost-sharing agreements.\npared budgets and the entry of months.\nB.C. Highlights\n$440 IN GARBAGE\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Detectives spent 21\/4 hours forking\nover contents of a garbage truck\nbefore finding $440 believed\nstolen from a home. The money,\npart of a $4,000 theft, was traced\nto a motel where it apparently\nhad been hidden in a food container. The container had been\nthrown into the garbage by a\nmaid before police arrived.\nWRONG APARTMENT\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Joseph\nFosty and Michael Johnson\nchose the wrong apartment to\nbreak into last January. The\napartment belonged to off-duty\nRCMP constable David McLaren. They escaped, temporarily, in a chase but were nabbed\nwhen they returned to their car.\nIn court Wednesday Johnston\ngot three years and Fosty nine\nVICTORIA (CP) - Premier\nBennett of British Columbia\nmay be going to the resumed\nfederal-provincial fiscal conference at Quebec in a more conciliatory mood than his last appearance.\nHe says he is \"full of good\nwill and eager to co-operate in\nall the aspects of the discussions\u2014I'll do everything I can\nat the conference to preserve\nCanadian unity.\"\nAt the Ottawa conference last\nNovember, Premier Bennett\nsaid the federal government\nshould abandon equalization\npayments \u2014 in which British\nColumbia doesn't share because\nof its already high per capita\ntax revenue\u2014and get out of the\nfields of direct taxation.\nHe contended equalization \u2014\nunder which federal grants now\ngo to all provinces except Ontario and B.C.\u2014does not contribute to national harmony or\nefficient use of public money.\nThe premier says now the\nB.C. government's stand on tax-\nsharing has not changed from\nthat presented last fall, but recent developments indicate he\nmay not be thrusting them forward as strongly at the session\nthat opens March 31.\nSAYS LITTLE\nHe has had almost nothing to\nsay concerning his Ottawa demand that the federal government progressively return the\ndirect tax field to exclusive\nprovincial jurisdiction, perhaps\nover a 10-year period. All he\nhas said in the legislature is\nthat the demands were identical to those made by previous\nB.C. premiers. And Attorney-\nGeneral Bonner at one point\ntold the house that all B.C.\nreally wants is a fair share of\ndirect-tax revenues.\nOn the question of equalization, the premier's statements\nwould seem to reflect adoption\nof a more moderate stand recently.\nIn Ottawa, his brief said\nflatly:\n\"British Columbia is opposed\nto federal equalization grants to\nthe provinces.\"\nIn his budget speech Feb. 7,\nhe said the government opposes\nSIGHT-SAVERS\nCleans,  Polishes and\nProtects Your Glasses\nSilicone Tissues 25c, 69e\nSilicone   Liquid   59e\nYour Rexall Pharmacy\nCITY DRUG\nPhone 352-3811 Box 460\n\"the nature of current equalization grants.\"\n\"We recognize that fiscal-\nneed grants may be required\nto some provinces,\" he added,\n\"provided they are confirmed\nby an impartial study of both\nrevenue and expenditure needs\nof  those  provinces  to  be  as-\nThe premier's major complaint was that the equalization\nsetup did not take into account\nB.C.'s special need for revenue\nbecause of such factors as its\nfast growth, mountain topography and low density of population.\nLANGUAGE SURVIVES\nQuechua, language of the ancient Incas, is spoken today by\nmillions of inhabitants of Peru,\nBolivia and Ecuador, with 28\ndialects.\n700 shares. American Tobacco,\nwhich has just introduced a\ntipped, little cigar, was the most\nactive in its group, rising 1_\nto 3m.\nMotorola spurted 3%, making\na new high. IBM rose 2.\nAmong Canadian issues\ntraded, Hudson Bay Mining\ngained IVi, Aluminium Ltd. Yt\nand Distill ers Seagrams Vs.\nGranby Mining fell % and International Nickel, Dome Mines\nand Canadian Pacific Vi.\nPrices on the American exchange were irregularly higher.\nFargo Oil gained 1-16 and\nPreston Vs. Canadian Javelin\nfell vt.\nTORONTO (CP) - Prices\nsurged upwards on the stock\nmarket Wednesday with the industrial and exchange indexes\ncontinuing their record climb\nand registering the best day's\ngain since Jan. 2.\nTrading was extremely heavy\nas a broad range of speculative\nstocks moved ahead. Volume\nfor the day was 6,364,000 shares\ncompared with 5,238,000 Tuesday.\nThe industrial index closed\nup 1.03 at 144.12 and the ex:\nchange index advanced .92 to\n135.12. Golds were ahead .81 to\n133.52, western oils .65 to 86.63\nand base metals slipped .19 to\n66.28.\nMost sections of the Industrial board were higher with a\nscattering of losses.\nAlgoma rose one point to 58\nand Steel Company of Canada\n% to 23% among steel producers. Steel Company also traded\na block of ' 25,000 shares at\n$23.50 a share.\nBell Phone gained Vi to 52V4\nin utilities, B.C. Forest % to\n26% in papers, Imperial Oil %\nto 467\/b in integrated oils and\nImperial Bank of Commerce Vi\nto 61, trading ex-dividend 50\ncents.\nOn the minus side, Canadian\nWestinghouse declined % to\n34'\/B, Du Pont V4 to 45V. and\nPrice Brothers % to 41.\nThe base metal index was off\nslightly, but most major producers were strong. Falconbridge rose IVi to 65V4 and Noranda <\u00a3 to 44Vi while Labrador\nMining dipped VI to 38V4 and\nDenison % to MY*. Lake Dufault\nwas up 35 cents to 10V4 among\njunior metals.\nBunker Hill was the heavy\ntrader among speculative issues, up five cents to 40 cents\non 420,850 shares. Pax International rose eight cents to 54\ncents, Crestaur five cents to 32\ncents and Allied Pitch Ore three\ncents to 24 cents.\nUnion Oil advanced V* to 12 in\nsenior oils.\nTORONTO (CP)-The stock\nmarket was carried along on a\nflood of speculative trading\nThursday to close the week at\ncord levels. The market was\nclosed Friday.\nThe volume for the day was\n7,204,000 shares, heaviest since\nSept. 12, 1962. This compares\nwith 6,364,000 shares traded\nWednesday.\nOn index, the exchange index\nadvanced .41 to a record 135.53,\nindustrials    .41   to   a   record\n144.53, base metals .58 to 66.86,\nwestern oils .39 to 87.02 and\ngolds .10 to 133.62.\nEASTER\nTHE TIME TO\nLOOK YOUR BEST!\nThe new spring styles are\nmost becoming to men \u2014 they\nhove the happy effect of making them look slimmer and\ntrimmer. Choose yours today.\n.00\n*5950.. $95\nEMORY'S LTD.\nTHE MAN'S STORE\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c line, 40c line bold face type; larger type rates\non request. Minimum two lines.\nCOPY DEADLINE - PLEASE NOTE\nCopy for this column accepted until 3 p.m. for Insertion\nin next day's publication.\nRemember   Pythian    Sisters\nSpring Tea Saturday, April 4.\n\u201474-74\nDuplicate bridge as usual\nMarch 30, Hume Hotel.\n-74-74\nKIWANIS CAR BINGO\nMay 2,8 p.m. Civic Centre Arena\n-70-h\nHaigh Tru-Art Beauty Salon\n576 Baker St.        Ph. 352-3313\n-29-h\nDiamonds, Watches, Gifts,\nRepairs, Engraving.\nTED ALLEN'S JEWELLERY\n-29-h\nDrive with confidence.\nPhone 352-5252, Sterling Hotel\nNELSON DRIVING SCHOOL\n-70-h\nFruit trees and shrubs. Write\nor phone 352-2394 for price list.\nTaghum Nursery, Nelson, B.C.\n-59-h\nEaster Egg Hunt final draw\nMarch 28. You could be a winner\nMACLEOD'S\n-73-74\nOliver's News Stand for your\nEaster plants and flowers.\nOrder early.\n-73-74\nHume Hotel Sunday Special:\nBaked ham with pineapple sauce\nand sweet potatoes, $2.00. 12 - 2\nand 5 - 8. -74-74\nSpecial   FAMILY   DINNERS\nserved in Pierre's Round-Up\nRoom 4-8 p.m. Easter Sunday.\nFor reservations phone 352-6414.\nWe want your unwanted things\nwhich we will sell by auction for\nElks Charities. For pickup call\n352-2850 and 352-3231 or 352-3713.\n-73-74\nTonight at \"The Trivium\"\nEric and Eva.\n-74-74\nLarge shipment of Arnel drapery, washable and fadeproof at\n$2.95 yard.\nSTERLING FURNISHERS\n-74-76\nANNUAL GOLF SCHOOL\nNelson Jr. High School every\nMonday, March 16 - April 13,\n7:30 p.m. Full price, Adults $2,\nJrs. $1. Bring your own club.\n62-h\nPresbyterian Church Spring Tea\nWednesday, April 1. 2:30 - 4:30\nPresbyterian Church Hall. Home\nbaking and sewing. Barbie Doll\nclothes. Minister's jam and marmalade. \u201474-74\nCARD OF THANKS\nWe would like to express our\nheartfelt thanks and appreciation to our friends for thei.\" act!\nof kindness, beautiful flowers,\ncards and sympathy in the loss\nof our beloved baby. Our most\nsincere thanks to Dr. Smythe\nand nurses of K.L.G.H. {or Ui*\nwonderful care they gave our\nson. We will never forget how\nkind everyone has been.\n\u2014Alex and Maureen\nHarasymchuk.\n-74-74\nLego \u2014 the creative building\ntoy. Today's most popular indoor\ntoy. Sets from $2.50 to $27.50.\nSupplemental parts in boxes 50C.\nHIPPERSON HARDWARE\n-74-74\nNet Earnings\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nRobert   Mitchell   Co.   Ltd.,\nyear ended Dec. 31: 1963, $158,-\n397, 70 cents a share; 1962, net\nloss, $78,504.\nEast Kootenay Power Co.\nLtd., nine months ended Dec.\n31: 1963, $168,549; 1962, $150,-\n772.\nLa Luz Mines Ltd., four\nmonths ended Jan. 31: 1964,\n$208,841; 1963, $268,694.\nTraders Finance Corp. Ltd.,\nyear ended Dec. 31: 1963, $3,-\n295,072, 70 c\u00bb\"ts a share; 1962\n$4,643,576, $1.01. I\nVauze Mines Ltd., year ended\nDec. 31: 1963, $203,337; 1962,\n$414,931.\nBuy SELLjRADERENT hire help\n(JIIjp JMaott iailtj -fauia\nCLASSIFIED ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1964_03_28","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0434889","@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":"1964-03-28 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1964-03-28 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\/1.0434889"}