{"@context":{"@language":"en","AggregatedSourceRepository":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","Collection":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","Contributor":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/contributor","DateAvailable":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DateIssued":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","FileFormat":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","FullText":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Genre":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","GeographicLocation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","Identifier":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","IsShownAt":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","Language":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","Latitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","Longitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","Notes":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Provider":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","Publisher":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","Rights":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","SortDate":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","Source":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","Title":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","Type":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","Translation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description"},"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"Contributor":[{"@value":"[Gibbon, A. W.]","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2023-09-14","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1965-03-02","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0436022\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" TEMPERATURES\nNelson\nIS   33\nToronto\nS   29\nCalgary\n\u25a01  30\nSpokane\n21   39\nPenticton\n20  39\nVancouver\n35  46\nWhitehorse\n16  41\nFORECAST     .\nKootenay: Sunny with a few\ncloudy periods. Winds light. Low\nand high at Cranbrook 5 and 38,\nCrescent Valley 10 and 40. Wednesday: Mostly cloudy.\nPublished at Nelson, government, financial, trading and educational centre of the Kootenay-Columbia area\nVol. 63\nNELSON, B.C., CANADA-TUESDAY MORNING, MARCH 2,4965\n10 Cents\nNo. 261\nLow-Cost Medical insurance\nScheme Proposed by Bennett\nU.S.-Russ\nConsidered\nWASHINGTON (AP) - The\nWhite House indicated Monday\nnight that It still would welcome\nan exchange of 'visits this year\nbetween President Johnson and\nSoviet Premier Alexei Kosygin.\nIt did so by saying \"there has\nbeen no change in the situation\"\nsince a speech by\/ President\nJohnson Feb. 3.\nIn that speech, Johnson said:\n\"I have reason to believe that\nUie Soviet leadership would welcome my visit to their country \u2014\nas I would be very glad to do.\nI am hopeful that before this\nyear is out, this exchange uf visits between us may occur.\"\nKosygin said in Leipzig Monday that he had invited Johnson\nto visit the Soviet Union two\nmonths ago and he had received\nno reply.\nJohnson's press secretary,\nGeorge Reedy, said:\n\"Chairman Kosygin apparently refers to an oral message\nfrom the Soviet government\nwhich was received one month\nago.\n\"In this message the Soviet\ngovernment stated that a visit\nfrom the president would be\nwelcomed and pointed out that\nit would, in fact, constitute a return visit.\"\nM8W YORK (CP) - Canadian\ndollar down 9-64 at 92 35-64 in\nterms of U.S. funds. Week ago\nclosed. Pound sterling up $2.79\nJ7-64.\nMONTREAL (CP) - The\nUnited States dollar ln terms of\nCanadian funds was up 3-16 at\n$1.08 1-16. Pound sterling was\nup 9-16 at $3.02.\nVICTORIA (CP) - The British Columbia government Monday introduced legislation designed to provide low-cost medical insurance to all residents who\ndesire it through non-profit insurance agencies.\nPremier Bennett told reporters that under the plan\n\"any person in the province will be able to get medical\ninsurance irrespective oi his age, health or medical\nstatus.\"\n\"This is not to be confused with Alberta's plan.\nIt's more advanced.\n\"I think the people of the province will give it a\nwarm welcome indeed.\"\nHe said under the legislation subsidies will be\navailable to 25 per cent of the population. This did not\ncount those persons who receive free medical care\nunder welfare.\nThe Medical Grant Act introduced in the House by Provincial Secretary Wesley Black\nprovides this form of coverage\nthrough non - profit insurance\nagencies:\nFifty per cent subsidies of\npremiums for all persons who\npay no federal Income tax;\nTwenty-five per cent subsidies for persons whose taxable\nincomes are under $1000;\nEstablishment of a medical\ngrant stabilization fund which\nwould subsidize premiums over\na maximum set by regulations;\nRates and services equal to\nthat provided civil servants under government plan.\n$1,000,000 FUND\nMr Bennett said $1,000,000\nwill be put initially into the\nstabilization fund. Under it if a\nperson's health was so poor that\nhis medical insurance premiums would be higher than the\nmaximum set by the government, the fund would pay the\namount over the maximum.\nFor instance if his premiums\nwere, say, $45 a month but the\ngovernment maximum was $32,\nthen the fund would pay $13.\nMr Bennett said the plan\nmay cost more than the $6,000,-\n000 provided in the 1965-66\nbudget. The additional \\ cost\nwould come out of consolidated\nrevenues.\nInsurance - agencies participating under the scheme must\nbe certified by the government.\nGovernment officials said to\nobtain certification agencies\nwould have to meet four requirements: All would have to\nbe non-profit; they must be\nopen for at least three months\nof the year for unrestricted\napplications; they must provide service comparable to the\ncivil service plan; they must be\ncapable of selling insurance\nanywhere in the province.\nThus private insurance companies would not be eligible to\nparticipate in the plan.\nBut the doctor \u2022 sponsored\nMedical Services Incorporated\nwould.\nPAYS HALF COST\nThe civil servants' plan, Government Employees Medical\nServices, involves premiums of\n$4 a month for single persons\nand $10 a month for families\nThe government pays half\nthese premiums.\nBenefits under GEMS include full payment of medical\nbills up to $600 a year for single\npersons or $1900 for families.\nBills beyond these figures may\nbe paid on order of tbe plan's\ndirectors.\nThe GEMS plan alio coven\ncost of diagnostic x-rays, obstetrical services,, out-patient\nhospital services', 1 specialized\nnursing costs and orthoptic,\npsychiatric and chiropractic\ncare up to stipulated limits.\nIt does not cover dental services, drugs, immunization,\nhealth check-ups or ambulance\nservices.\nAction Against Jones\nTermed Jungle Justice\nVICTORIA (CP) \u2014 Government members of the\nB.C. legislature sat in silence Monday as a long list of\nOpposition members assailed a bill retroactively retiring\nGeorge E. P. Jones as a member oi the government\nPurchasing Commission.\nThe only government speaker when the bill came\nup for second reading \u2014 approval in principle \u2014 was\nProvincial Secretary Wesley Black, who said simply that\nthe government has lost confidence in Mr. Jones.\nBut the Opposition speakers denounced the bill as\n\"retroactive injustice,\" \"a kangaroo proceeding,\" \"a\nViolation oi natural rights,\" \"jungle justice\" and \"defamation by legislation.\"\nAlex MacDonald (NDP \u2014 Vancouver East), first\nto speak) said the Legislature was being asked \"to do a\nretroactive injustice to Mr.\nJones.\"\nHe said the former chairman\nof Hie purchasing commission,\n\u2022uspended by cabinet order last\nOctober, should be given the\nchance to state his case before the Legislature or a committee of it.\nMr. MacDonald was willing\nto have evidence presented in\ncamera if need be. But the\nMLAs should be given an opportunity to \"make a reasonable and rational judgment.\"\nThe Vancouver lawyer said\nthe government either did or\ndid not have cause for seeking\nthe man's removal.\nIf Mr. Jones was being dismissed for cause, why did the\nbill offer him a year's salary?\n\"And if there was no cause, why\nshould we vote for this bill?\"\nHAS A RIGHT\nMr. MacDonald said every citizen has a right to due process\nand a fair hearing. He asked\nthe government not to place the\nlegislature \"in a position where\nwemust vote blind.\"\nThe government action was\n\"surely a kangaroo proceeding'\nand the bill a \"violation of the\nnatural rights of Mr. Jones.\"\n\"It would constitute the leg\nMature as a star chamber.\"\nGordon Dowding (NDP-Burn\n(-by) described as \"extraordinary\" the cabinet's action in\n\"purporting   to   suspend   Mr.\nJones without legislative authority\" and then firing him.\n\"In effect this was an indictment without evidence, without\na hearing . . . after the court\nof first instance held on the\nmerits of the case that Mr.\nJones was not guilty.\"\nMr. Jones was suspended after he was charged with accept\ning unlawful benefits while _\ngovernment official. The charges were dismissed last month\nin a judgment which also objected to the chairman's description in the charges as ar\nofficial of the government.\nThe bill declares him to have\nretired last October but provides for payment of $16,675 in\nlieu of salary.\nMr. Dowding said he also objected to the way in which Mr.\nJones had been \"hauled summarily into court\" to-face the\ncharges and post bond. In contrast a \"friend of the government\" had on Monday been\ngiven \"two weeks to come to\ncourt.\"\nThe MLA did not identify the\nsecond case but earlier in the\nday Vancouver publicist Al Williamson was given summonses\non two forgery charges tn connection with a letter signed 'W.\nA. C. Bennett\" which the Premier has termed \"phoney.\"\nWILLING TO APPEAR\nMr. Dowding said Mr. Jones\nlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilli'\nSki Team On\n$4000 Budget\nIn the last issue of Weekend Magazine, the article entitled \"How Jacobs Is Coaching Our Skiers to Win\" incorrectly reported that the Canadian National Ski team is operating on a $40,000 budget.\nThe team's budget is approximately $4000 based on a\ngrant by the Canada Fitness\nCouncil, or roughly $250 per\nteam member.\nThe $40,000 figure represents the initial outlay by the\nindividual members of the\nteam based on approximately\n$2000 per competitor.\nThis represents a gamble\nby the skiers themselves and\nnot that of the Canadian Amateur Ski Association,\n'IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIII\n23 Bodies Recovered From\nApartment Block Debris\n3'Storey Structure\nDemolished by Blast;\n13 Kiddies Among Dead\nScreams of Trapped\nFilled the Air\nMONTREAL (CP)-\"The air\nwas filled by the screams of the\npeople trapped in the debris.\"\nThat is the way Vender Wey-\nden, 31, described the scene\nafter a massive explosion ripped\nthrough an apartment building\nMonday in suburban LaSalle\nHeights\n\"The blast was the most\nfrightening sound I've ever\nheard,\" said Weyden, who lives\ntwo buildings away from the\nexplosion \"I ran out into the\nstreet and saw the whole building had vanished . . just gone\nto nothing.\"\nMrs. Sims Second\nAccident Fatality\nA second woman is dead as\nthe result of a two-car, head-on\ncollision in Fruitvale Saturday\nnight.\nMrs. Clayton Sims, 35, of\nFruitvale died in Trail-Tadanac\nHospital at 12:35 a.m. Monday.\nMrs. Fred McKim, 42, of Nelson was killed instantly in the\nback seat of a car driven by\nher husband.\nThe accident occurred about\node mile east of Fruitvale on\nHighway 3 at 11: IS p.m. Saturday.\nStill in hospital in Trail is\nClayton Sims, driver of one of\nthe cars; Fred McKim, driver\nof the other car and 18-year-old\nLenore McKim, a passenger in\nthe McKim vehicle.\nAll are reported in satisfactory condition in hospital.\nReleased from hospital Monday was Jay McKim, 9, who escaped with only a shaking up.\nThe accident occurred in a\n45-mph zone on what was described as extremely slippery\nroad conditions.\nThe Sims car was proceeding\nwest and the McKim car east\nat the time of the collision.\nAn inquest has been ordered.\nIn the\nLegislature\nBy The Canadian Press\nThe government introduced\nlegislation providing for a volun-.\ntaty; medica.* tm''piak -**hlcli\nwould operate through \"non.\nprofit\" insurance carriers.\nOpposition members assailed a\ngovernment bill which would retire G. E. P. Jones retroactively,\ndescribing it as \"jungle justice'\nand \"defamation by legislation.'\nResources Minister Williston\nsaid the government may give\nfinancial aid to Kent municipality farmers bit by flooding last\nspring.\nThe legislature gave third\nreading to a bill aimed at stepping up control measures over\nwater pollution.\nBret Price (SC \u2014 Vancouver-\nBurrard) said abortion should be\nlegalized in Canada.\nhas expressed willingness to appear before the legislature and\ndiscuss his case.\nHe' deplored a clause which\nprovides that the bill will supersede sections of the Purchasing Commission Act which permit a purchasing commissioner's removal only on address of\nthe Legislature.\nHarry McKay (L-Fernie) said\ngovernment backbenchers . . .\n\"should be ashamed of themselves\" for their silence. The\ngovernment was seeking \"legislation by defamation.\"\nHe described Mr. Black's\nbrief remarks as a \"weak, sickly, statement.\"\nIf the government was firing\nMr. Jones because of the acquittal \"it is contempt of court.\"\nANOTHER REASON\nWhen Mr. McKay continued\nthat there might have been another reason for the bill, several\ngovernment members nodded\ntheir heads.\n\"So it was something,\" Mr.\nMcKay responded. \"What was\nit?\"\nHe said the government members were \"willing to see a man\ndefamed.\"\nThe government thought it\ncould do anything \"and the people will buy it.\"\n\"Surely to goodness there's a\nlimit.\"\nThe bill was the \"most infamous\" the government had ever\npresented.\nRandolph Harding' (NDP-Kas-\nlo-Slocan) said he was being\nasked to vote on the basis of\n\"a pack of rumors.\"\n\"I have no intention of vot\ning on something when the facts\nhaven't been given to me.\"\nBut if the government proved\nits case against Mr. Jones, he\nwould have \"no hesitation in\nsupporting the action.'\nDebate was adjourned by Mrs\nHaggen (NDP-Grand Forks \u25a0\nGreenwood) after she described\nthe bill as \"a disgraceful tiling.\"\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Lumber\ninspectors who had threatened to\ntie up the British Columbia logging industry with a strike have\naccepted a new contract.\nLumber Inspectors\nAgree to Contract\nDiefenbaker\nAccuses\nFavreau\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Oposition\nLeader Diefenbaker triggered a\nnew Commons uproar over the\nDorion inquiry Monday, accusing\nJustice Minister Favreau of intimidating the two top officers of\nthe RCMP.\nHe said a press statement Friday by the justice minister contradicted evidence placed before\nthe inquiry earlier that day by\nDeputy RCMP Commissioner J.\nR. Lemieux, \"thus refuting the\ntruthfulness of the deputy commissioner and subjecting the\ncommissioner to gross intimidation \"\nMr. Favreal sternly denied\n\"this odious accusation\" and\nSpeaker Alan Macnaughton ruled out Mr. Diefenbaker's bid for\nan emergency all-day debate on\nthe matter.\nFriday night Mr. Favreau issued a statement through Prime\nMinister Pearson's office declaring that Mr. Pearson had not\ntipped off his then parliamentary secretary, Liberal MP Guy\nRouleau, last year that die\nRCMP planned to question Mr.\nRouleau about the Rivard case.\n\u2022V\nRod Beaton, president of Local\n1-288 of the International Woodworkers of America (CLC), said\nthe contract will leave the inspectors in charge of coastal\ngrading.\nThe Pacific Lumber Inspection\nBureau, employer of the 270 inspectors, will lease out its grade\nstamp to interior mills.\nAlthough the new contract provides a wage increase spread\nover two years, the major issue\nin the dispute had been the leasing out of the stamp.\nThe employers had proposed\nleasing of the stamp to all mill\nowners. The effect was to license\nmills to control their own grading. The inspectors had feared\nthat the move would cost many\nof their jobs.\nThe 11 inspectors affected by\nthe leasing of the stamp in the\ninterior will be given priority for\nnew jobs.\nThe contract provides for a 40-\ncent pay increase. Twenty-seven\ncents is retroactive to June, 1964,\nand the remaining 13 cents is\npayable June 13, 1965. The inspectors then will earn $3.07 an\nhour.\nHe joined others in trying to\nrescue victims.\nAt one point a construction\nworker was on his hands and\nknees in the rubble with an ear\nturned against still smouldering\nbricks. He was listening for\nsounds of life.\nSuddenly everyone heard a\nsmall cry\u2014and began to dig\ntwice as fast.\nThe man who had been listening pulled off his gloves so he\ncould move the charcoal - hot\nstones more carefully Another\nman knelt beside him Together\nthey tunnelled to the sound of\nthe thin cry. Gently, they moved\nthe lest stone.\nMOTHER SHRIEKS\nThe blackened face of a small\nboy emerged.\nHis mother shrieked and\nrushed to the men. Others held\nher back until they could pull\nthe small victim free. They carried him to one of the ambulances ringing the disaster site.\nRescuers put mother and boy\ninto an ambulance.\nElie Beaulieu, who lives\nacross the street from the\nblasted apartment building,\nsaid:\n\"I thought it was the end of\nthe world.\"\nAll the windows In his apart\nment were blown out.\nHenri Dupuis, who lives two\nmiles away, said:\n^\u25a0ar^as al. ff'the'ttsst Had'\noccurred under my feet.\"\nAs the.day wore on, haggard,\nweeping next-of-kin began filing\ninto the city of LaSalle Civic\nCentre where a temporary\nmorgue was established on the\ncentre's ice arena.\nCharred bodies \u2014 mostly of\nchildren \u2014 were laid out in\nrows. \u2022\".-'\nCoroner Marcel Trahan was\nscheduled to release bodies for\nburial after they had been identified.\nThe Red Cross promptly issued a special appeal for blood\ndonors. It said its headquarters\nwould remain open until 8 p.m.\nto accept blood donations.\nSt. Johns Ambulance called\nmembers from all parts of the\ncity to the scene. The Royal Canadian Navy sent 400 men from\na nearby station.\nFactory workers, students\nand civil defence workers\npoured in.\nHotels offered rooms to those\nleft homeless.\nPremier Jean Lesage visited\nthe scene with Transport Minister Claire Kirkiand-Casgrain\nwho represents the area in the\nlegislature, and Attorney \u25a0 General Claude Wagner.\nThe premier said he does not\nknow what specifically can be\ndone at this time to aid the victims of the disaster,\n\"There has been enough suffering already: we will see to\nit that nobody has to suffer additionally from such a disaster.\"\nBy JOE DUPUIS and CLAUDE HENAULT\nMONTREAL (CP) - A total of 23 bodies were\nbrought to a temporary morgue Monday in the wake of\nan explosion that ripped through a three-storey apartment structure in suburban LaSalle.\nThe breakfast-time blast levelled one part of the\nu-shaped building, set lire to the other sections and\ncaused damage to many other buildings.\nEstimates of the total toll were, not final as rescue\noperations went on at the\nForest Products\nSoles Hit Record\nVANCOUVER (OP) - Record\nsales and earnings were recorded in 1964 by B.C. Forest Pro.\nducts, the company reported\nMonday,\nNet earnings rose 27 per cent\nto an all-time high of $11,393,000\nfrom $8,951,000 in the previous\nyear.\nNet sales in 1964 totalled $74,<\n493,400, up from $60,445,000 in\n1963.\nParliament\nMonday\nThe Commons continued study\nof the Canada Pension Plan.\nHealth Minister Judy LaMarsh\nsaid a clause in the bill would\nbe used only against \"scheming\ngold-diggers.\"\nThe clause allows a cut-off of\nsurvivor's benefits where there\nhave been \"death-bed\" marriages specifically for gain.\nTom Barnett (NDP \u2014 Comox-\nAlberni) thought the clause left\ntoo much discretion to the minister. .   .\nNDP Leader Douglas suggested there should be an appeal\nfrom the minister's decision.\nMiss LaMrash said there would\nhave to be cogent evidence that\nthe marriage was held only for\ngain for benefits to be disallowed.\nCreditiste Leader Caouette objected to social security numbers\nbeing made available for use in\nQuebec. Quebec, staying out of\nthe national plan, should use its\n|own number system.\nexplosion scene.\nAt one time it was reported\nat the temporary LaSalle morgue that 21 bodies were inside\nand seven more bodies were\nseen being taken in later. However, Marcel Trahan, Montreal\ndistrict coroner, said in a statement issued shortly after 5 pm.\nthat the total of known dead at\nthat time was 22, 13 of them\nchildren. He said 13 of the dead\nhad been identified. Their\nnames would be announced during the evening.\nEstimates of the number of\ninjured went as high aa SO. Dr.\nJ. G. Bonnier of -LaSalle Hospital said he knew of 35.\nMost of the- victims, living\nand dead, were thought to be\nchildren.\nRubble at the .blast-site was\nstrewn with school-books and1\nsatchels.\nCivil defence, Red Cross and\nother organizations combined in\nthe operation of a rescue headquarters at the scene, which is\npart of an apartment development stretching several blocks.\nShovel cranes were lifting the\nremains of the brick structure\nand dumping unwanted rubble\ninto trucks.\nTRANSPORT DEAD\nAbout half the site had been\nsilted through by mid-afternoon\nand the dead were transported\ntwo miles to an indoor hockey\nrink.\nThere, with the ice still in\nplace, the temporary morgue\nwas established and relatives\nsearched for their kin.\nEstimates of the number of\npersons missing in tbe tragedy\nvaried sharply throughout the\nday.\nAt one point police were reporting 100 persons unaccounted\nfor but these were said to include many who had sought\nshelter in neighboring houses.\nThe janitor of the shattered\nbuilding was quoted as saying\n140 persons lived there.\nMrs. Noreen Pineo, head of\nthe rescue liaison, said she had\na list showing 100 persons living\nthere.\nA resident of the development, Wilfred Arseneault, 45,\nthe apartment buildings\nwere heated by natural gas.\nMr. Arseneault said each\napartment had a space heater\nwith heat ducts running into\nevery room.\nThe Quebec Natural Gas Company cut off the supply of fuel\nto four apartment blocks damaged by the blast.\nMarcel Dame, assistant provincial director for civil defence,\nsaid the gas \"will not be turned\nback on until those responsible\nfeel it safe to do so.\nMr. Dame said his workers\nwere surveying the blocks,\nwhich contain a total of 96 apartment units, to see if anyone still\nwas living in them,\nSome residents had been\nevacuated, others left on their\nown, but Mr. Dame said there\nmay be others staying behind in\nunheated apartments.\nMobile public-address systems\nwere cruising the area asking\nresidents to leave their homes\nand telling them of accommodation arranged in hotels.\nRescue workers were reported\nbringing out pieces of bodies\nfrom the ruins after night fall.\nJoseph Corcoran, chief officer\non the scene for the St. John\nAmbulance said at one point\nthat a whole body had not been\nbrought out in two hours.\nThe area, to the west of\nMontreal, was cordoned off by\nauthorities but many spectators\npressed against the barricades.\nLIKE MISSILES\nBricks were scattered across\na wide area. They had been\nhurled like missiles through\nneighboring windows and even\nthrough wal]s.\nThere were 24 units In the\nblock, and 18 of. them vanished\nwith the explosion.\nSeveral cars were badly\ndamaged by the blast. Plate\nglass windows in a shopping\ncentre a half-mile.distant were\nshattered.\nNeighbors told of bricks' whizzing through their windows and\nput their heads as' they ate\nbreakfast at tbe time of the\nblast. .\nMaj.' Maurice St. Pierre, director of the Montreal civil\nprotection Organization, led rescue operations from the rental\noffice of the development, LaSalle Heights.\nCONTINUE CLASSES     .\nClasses went on as usual at\nEnglish-language Roman\ntwo blocks away, even though\nin the auditorium coffee, stands\n1 clothes' centres k-i4 fee?\nup to, accommodate- residents displaced by the tragedy.\nSome 30 other apartments in\nthe area were damaged. Teams\nof carpenters worked'.through\nthe day on repairing shattered\nwindows and walls.. ,\nThe scene of the disaster w\u00ab\u00bb\nsmoke-wreathed after the blast.\nPersons f 1 o c k e d' to blood\nclinics in Montreal and other\nnearby- centres offering blood\nfor those injured in-the-explosion. . \/ \"\u25a0\nCatholic school, St.  Clements,\nMother Kills\nThree Kiddies,\nCuts Own\nDALLAS, Ore. (AP)-A school\nteacher's wife drowned her three\nchildren Monday, then cut.their\nthroats, and finally cut her own\nthroat in a suicide attempt.\nPolice chief Jim Green said\nIrene G. V. Van Kleeck, 40, told\nhim she had been contemplating\nthe slayings for a month. She\nwas taken to hospital where officials said she was expected to\nJive.\nGreene said the woman: told\nhim she drowned her children in\nthe bathtub, then cut their\nthroats because she~ thought they\nmight revive. Then she tuned\nthe knife on herself.\nWORLD'S BIGGEST\u2014A Thloko] Chemical technician alta In\nthe bosun's chair as he Is lowered into tha \"business end\"\nof the world's largest solid fuel rocket engine In Brunswick,\nGa. It contains about 400 tons ot high energy propellant\nThe technician ls Inside the flame nozzle, helping to prepare\"\nthe engine for its first test, a 60-second static flii-u-.\nAnd in This Corner . . .\nPHILADELPHIA (AP) \u2014 Some people collect stamps, or\ncoins, or butterflies. Dr. Samuel G. Morton, in his day,\ncollected and catalogued more than 1000 human skulls.\nThe collection spanned the world and most of recorded\nhistory. After Morton died in 1851, 42 Philadelphia^, recognizing the value of the collection, contributed $4000 to purchase\nit from his estate. They presented the collection to the city's\nacademy of natural history..\nThe academy has been wondering ever since what to do\nwith it.\nREGINA (CP) \u2014 Girls in Saskatchewan couldn't care less\nwhat color gasoline is being used when they're courting in\nfarm trucks.\nThis was revealed Monday in the legislature by Mineral\nResources Minister A. C. Cameron commenting on criticism\nof the government's move to permit the use of tax-free purple\ngasoline in farm trucks.\n\"The opposition claims that every farm boy will be doing\nhis visiting and courting in a half-ton truck using purple\ngasoline,\" he said.\nMr. Cameron quoted an unidentified rural girl. as. saying:\n\"Courting can be just as sweet on purple gas as on red gas.\" \u25a0\n-*\u00a3\n,*>!\u00bb\n 2\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, TU5S., MARCH 2, 1965\n\u25a0?.< \u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0'. \u00ab*^\u00ab\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb>*;'**\u00bbj(g^J*,t\nDonald John Thomson\nWell-Known Pilot\nDon Thomson, Dies\nA ^seaplane pilot who\nknown to woodsmen and out-\ndoorsmen throughout British Columbia and in the northwest\nterritories, Donald John Thomson died in Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital late Sunday\nnight after a lengthy illness. He\nwas in his 53rd year.\nMr; Thomson, who resided at\n885 Fourth Street, obtained his\npilot's licence in 1930 ahd was\nthe second \"man to fly across\nCanada.\nBora in. Toronto April 30,1912,\nhe joined the Sudbury Flying\nClub In 1938 as an instructor.\nFrom 1939 to 1943 he was an\ninstructor with the Royal Canadian Air Force at various stations in Canada, with the rank\nof flight lieutenant.\nAfter leaving the RCAF, he\nflew in the northwest territories\nin connection with the laying of\nthe Norman Wells oil pipeline.\nLater he served with the Trans-\nAmerican Mining Corporation as\nPilot at Yellowknifc.\nHe then Joined B.C. Airways,\nwhich later became Pacific\nWestern Airlines, in 1950 and had\nflown for that company ever\nsince.\nHe was a member and past\nmaster of Granite Lodge 154\nAF it AM, Nelson Chapter No. 5,\nRoyal Arch Masons, member of\nthe Nelson Pilots Association\ntreasurer of the Third Nelson\nSpy Scouts Troop, member of\ntne .Nelson Chamber of Commerce, Nelson Gyro Club and\nmember of the board of stewards\nof Fairview United Church.\nHe -narried the former Kathleen Keenan at Sudbury Sept.\n25, 1939.\nBesides Us wife, he is survived by four sons, John of Edmonton: and Bruce, Robert and\nRichard at home: two brothers,\nGlad, Port Hope, Ont., and Ross,\nPembroke, Ont.\n-Hundreds of firefighters de.\npended on Mr. Thomson's tire\nless efforts in piloting his seaplane from dawn to dusk to drop\ntons of supplies to them, and to\ncarry out reconalsssnce to keep\nB.C. Forest Service men posted\non forest fires.\nHe .landed reinforcement\ncrews where water landing\nareas were available, and dropped radios, power saws, pumps\nFoxall Rakes Council\nOn High-Rise Decision\nwas; and gasoline supplies by parachute, and between air drops,\nflew forestry observers over the\nburning woods so that pictures\ncould be taken for guidance in\nbattling the fires.\nHe made many mercy flights,\nincluding carrying of polio patients in iron lungs, and alto\nparticipated in rescue trips.\nOne rescue journey that made\nheadlines across Canada Involved a flight into remote\nLake in Mount Assini-\nboine Park, 30 miles northeast\nof Invermere, to rescue two\nCalifornia women injured in a\nplane crash.\nIn at least one bad forest fire\nseason, he flew well over 600\nCharges of \"repudiation\" and\n\"betrayal of your own people\",\nwere laid against city council by\nRobert Foxall at a public hear-\nbig on the re-vamped zoning bylaw held prior to the regular\nmeeting of council Monday night.\nOne of two petitioners appearing at the hearing, to represent\nresidents of the Fairview district where a nine-storey high-\nrise apartment building has been\nproposed, Mr. Foxall was also a\nmember of the original group of\nfour who were succesful in having a section of the contentious\nzoning bylaw killed by the Supreme Court of British Columbia on a legal technicality.\nEmphasizing that his presence\nbefore council was to reiterate\nprevious complaints against the\nbylaw, Mr. Foxall admonished,\n\"I feel that what I said before\nwas a waste of time. You didn't\npay tod much attention.\"\nMr. Foxall said that up to the\npresent, he had \"supported\nevery bylaw,\" that taxes paid by\nhim over the years amounted to\nsomething like $4,000, and that\nresultant good streets and improvements were due to \"us old\ntimers who had the foresight.\"\nHis feelings, continued Mr.\nFoxall, were that if the city repudiated the zoning bylaw, \"the\ntown is going to Suffer.\" He added that what it amounted to was\nrepudiation of a contract. \"You\ndid it with a commercial firm\nand now y6u're doing it with an\napartment building,\" he charged. \"I feel you are repudiating\nthe people who have been here\na long time,\" he added.\nExpressing regret that other\nFairview residents could not accompany him to the hearing, Mr.\nFoxall said that if council was\nbent on building the structure he\nknew of other parties who were\nwilling to construct similar projects in \"other areas zoned for\nthis purpose.\"\n\"Why put us in this position of\nDr. Cunningham stressed that\nwithout some safeguard in bylaws \"you can't depend on\nwhat's in the future.\"\nDrawing a parallel with the\nspeaker's profession, Mayor Bodard replied that the bylaw was\nnot unlike medicine and said,\n\"We must progress with the\ntimes and achievements.\" He\nadded that things were changing\nevery day and that \"applied sciences of years ago are not the\napplied sciences of today.'' He\nadded that it was not the intent\nof the bylaw to \"destroy Nelson.\"\nDr. Cunningham said that previous press reports had intimated that the four petitioners, involved in the successful legal\naction against the bylaw, were\n\"non-progressive\". He asked\ncouncil if there was \"no other\nplace in town\" for the high-rise\nwhich would not interfere with\nenvironment, and said that no\nsuitable answer to the question\nhad been given, He added that\nhe had no objection to a four or\nfive-storey building, but that he\ncouldn't envision a high-rise\nstructure on Second Street which\nwould \"break the whole view,\"\nI would have to use a helicopter to examine every site in the\ncity to find a location which\nwouldn't block a view,\" Mayor\nBodard replied.\nHe added that the question\nwas \"literally unanswerable.\"\nCITES SURVEY\nGroup Named\nOn North Shore\nA Centennial committee of\nth-t \"I wouldn't expect you to three was appointed at the an-\ndo that,\" and cited a survey of I m*l meeting of the North Shore\nthe city made by Cave k Ober<\nlander, consulting engineers of\nVancouver. \"What became of\nthis?\" he asked, \"do you use it,\nor refer to it?\" Fairview, he\nsaid, had not been projected as\na commercial zone in the\nsurvey.\nMayor Bodard replied that\nthe bulk of the phraseology\nused in the original bylaw had\nbeen written in by the consulting\nengineers. Using statistics to\nemphasize the need for such\nprojects as the high rise, the\nmayor said that out of a total of\n1892 acres ot land in the city,\n1091 encompassed streets and\nsidewalks, with actual taxable\narea being some 800 acres. Of\nthis total, 62 per cent were\nresidential, 30 per cent commercial and seven per cent\nindustrial. Tax exempt property,\nwhich included parks, government property and schools,\ntotalled some 43 per cent. This\ntotalled a gross exempt value of\n$8,821,185, compared with a\ngross taxable value of $18,-\n428,286.\n\"Now you can visualize why\ncouncil is trying to obtain additional sources of revenue,\"\nMayor Bodard said, adding that\nthis could only be achieved by\n\"encouraging and fostering all\ndevelopment if we want to look\nafter the majority of citizens.\"\nOn a motion by Aid. D. F.\nPorteous, seconded by Aid. H.\n(Fritz)  Farenholtz, the bylaw\nDr.    Cunningham    conceded was formally adopted by council.\nthan usual, which worked out to\nnearly 80 days of flying, at a\nsteady eight hours s day.\nHe first learned to fly with\nthe Leaside Flying Club, later\nthe Toronto Flying Club. He\nworked ai a bush pilot for most\nof his flying career, including\nflying ski-equipped aircraft.\nCASTLE Theatre\nCastlegar, B.C.\n]    Last Times Tonight\n7.-00 p.m. and 9:00 p.m.\n\"KJgSJN' COUSINS\"   (Color)\n. Elvis Presley, Pamela Austin\n- NEWS \u00abd CARTOON\nNEVER BEFORE A SPECTACLE LIKE IT \u2014\nSamuel Bronston's\n\"THE FALL OF THE\nROMAN EMPIRE\"\nWith\nSophia Loren \u00bb Stephen Boyd\nAJec Guinness \u2014 James Mason\nSPaffACLE \u2014 PASSIONS \u2014 SAVAGERY\nSee thffeinoSt breathtaking chariot race ever filmed.\n'TONIGHT AND ALL WEEK\n\"Om Performance) ot 8:00 p.m.\nFRIDAY - SATURDAY\u20142 Shows 6:30-9:00\nPrices: $1.00,  78#, 3S#\nhours, about 100 hours more (M*ingwe have been betrayed by\nour own people?  he asked.\nTaking a swing at the press, he\nsaid \"the matter has been prejudged in fte paper, and every\neffort has been made to put this\nthing across.\"\nAID TAX LOAD\nTaking exception to Mr. Fox-\nall's remarks, Mayor E. T. Bodard replied that action taken in\nthe revision of the zoning bylaw\nto meet technical and legal standards had been done to \"do\nsomething to increase and foster\ndevelopment so somebody can\ncarry the tax load.\"\nRevising of the zoning bylaw,\nMayor Bodard continued, had\nbeen done with the aid of solid-\ntars, and council \"did not act\nout of the scope of our jurisdiction.\" He asked Mr. Foxall for\nthe names of parties mentioned\nwho were Interested in building\napartments. Mr. Foxall decBned,\nsaying that such information was\n\"confidential\".\nReplying to a remark by\nMayor Bodard to the effect that\ncouncil had not made the zoning amendment to be \"at variance\", Mr. Foxall reminded that\nthe changes had not been made\nuntil it was found necesary. Taking the stand it was \"only human to err,\" Mayor Bodard said\nthat council had acted only on\nknowledge supplied.\n\"I claim you're still in error.\"\nMr. Foxall said, warning that,\nshould the high-rise be built,\nFairview residents \"are going to\nlook for a substantial tax reduction,\" and any money gained\nfrom the high-rise in tax revenue\nwould be lost. *   ,\n\"All we ask for is equity and\njustice,\" Mr. Foxall emphasized.\n\"You can't believe in a bylaw\nanymore,\" declared a second\nFairview petitioner, Dr. C. C.\nCunningham, who added that if\nhe had known of Hie present situation before he built in the area,\n\"I wouldn't have settled where\nI am.\"\nSOME SAFEGUARD\nSupporting Mr. Fdxall's stand,\nTrail To Hire\n(oiuullanl\nTRAIL - Town plannig consultant R. A. Williams of Van\ncouver, will be engaged by the\ncity of Trail to study the downtown parking situation. The\nnews of Mr. Williams' study was\nmade to council by city manager Ron Taylor who revealed\nthat the study would cover the\ndowntown area.\nAid. Perry Landuccl said he\nwas looking forward to Mr. Wil.\nHams' study and was confident\nthat beneficial results would be\nderived. Mr. Williams was guest\nspeaker at last Monday night's\nannual meeting of the Trail\nChamber of Commerce.\nSafety Council\nUrged to Act\nOn Poison Sprays\nSuggestion that some form of\naction be taken in connection\nwith the use of poison sprays\nwas put to the Nelson Safety\nCouncil at its monthly meeting\nA letter from Mrs. H. Kings-\nley was referred to the health,\nhome and family committee.\nThe council was advised that\nits recent recommendations for\nplacing of stop signs at certain\nintersections had been referred\nby city council to the public\nworks department for action,\nCIVIC\nYOUR\nDOCTOR'S\nPRESCRIPTION\nDISPENSED\nPROMPTLY\nWhile You Wait\nor by Delivery.\nSAMPLE'S\nNELSON   PHARMACY\nLTD.\n\"Your Fortress of Health\"\nPbone 35.?313\n639 Baker St. . nelson\n50 Courses on Tap\nAt Summer School\nMore than 90 courses covering\na variety of subjects are being\noffered this year by Notre Dame\nUniversity of Nelson for Its third\nannual Summer School from\nJuly 5 to August 13. This was\nannounced today by D. F. Larder, dean of studies.\nCourses offered will be In the\nfields of biology, chemistry, education, English, history, mathematics, medical record science,\nFrench, German, music, philosophy, physics, psychology, sociology, and theology.\nIn addition, by arrangement\nwith UBC in answer to a number\nof requests, Education 460, an\nIntroduction to School Administration, has been scheduled. Because the course, to be instructed by B. B. Crawford, is not\nusually offered at NDU, prospective students must arrange\ntransfer of credits to UBC on\nan individual basis pribr to registration.\nSecond annual Summer School\nof the supplementary education\nprogram for students In grades\none through 12 is being planned.\nExtremely popular last year. It\nprovides enrichment and remedial courses. Supervised dormitories and a social program\nare to be available on the campus. \t\nGossip Worst\nVice, Verigin\nTells Rotary\nBrotherhood Week was fittingly described and advAcated at\nthe weekly meeting of the Nelson\nRotary Club Friday by John J.\nVerigin, honorary chairman of\nthe executive committee of Ihe\nUnion of Spiritual Communities\nof Christ, commortly referred to\nas the Orthodox Doukhobors.\nMr. Verigin blamed ignorance\nand gossip as the main cause! of\ndisagreements and called for a\nbetter understanding of our\nneighbours' problems.\n\"There have been great\nachievements and accomplishments and advances in science j\nand technology.\" he stated, \"and |\nin all this we have to admit that\nthings are not as nite as we\nwould like them to be.\"\n\"Prejudice breeds prejudice\nand hate produces more hate,\"\nhe went on to sey. \"It seems that\nif we are to survive we better\nstart with brotherhood and not\nwith warfare.\"\nCondemning giSSip as the\nworst vice in the community, he\nemphasized \"We must fear the\neffect 6f gossip because goSsip,\nleads to pad feeling*.\"\n\"We must 166k within ourselves first add bur immediate\nsurroundings add then to far\nhorizons.\n\"Unless we turn Into practice\nwhat we preach we are going to\nwind up in trouble.\"\nCourses for which there is not\nsufficient demand will be eliminated from the Summer School\nschedule. Other courses may be\narranged if requested.\nProspective students are being\nasked to notify the university\nbefore March IS.\nCourses planned are: The\nscience of biology, field botany,\nprinciples of chemistry, mathe.\nmatics for teachers, science curriculum and instruction, social\nstudies, curriculum and instruction, language arts curriculum\nand instruction (primary), reading curriculum and instruction\n(primary). Language arts curriculum and instruction (intermediate) reading curriculum\nand instruction (senior), philosophy of education, history\nof education, English literature\nand composition, survey of English literature, Renaissance\nprose and poetry, Victorian literature, molern poetry, American literature.\nHistory of western civilization,\nhistory of Canada, twentieth century history, ancient history,\nmathematics for liberal arts\nstudents, mathematics for teachers, analysis, medical record\nscience practicum, first year\ncollege French (oral-aural method), second year college French\n(oral-aural), first year college\nGerman (oral-aural), second\nyear college German (oral-aural).\nSurvey of music history to\n1600, logic, theories of know!\nedge, metaphysics, philosophy\nof man, theodicy, ethics, introduction to physics, general psychology, pschology of learning,\npschology of adolescence, principles of sociology, the sociology\nof family life, first year theology, second year theology, third\nyear theology.\nRecreation Commission at the\nNorth Shore hall,\nNamed were John Stahger, Peter Klassen and Mrs. J. Carruth\ners. A project has not yet been\ndecided.\nTwo new commissioners elected lo the commission Were D,\nPearce and L. Samuelsoh. Re.\nplacing W. Rosling and D. Hill,\nwhose terms expired in January,\nthey will serve for two years,\nRev. Max Warne of Vancouver\ngave a talk on the hall from Ihe\ninitial stages to the present time.\nAnnual reports of ell clubs\nwere given by representatives,\nincluding square dancing, basketball, scouts, cubs, brownies\nand guides,\nTrail Fire\nDepl. Urged\nEnter Contest\nTRAIL \u2014 City manager Ron\nTaylor presented a sutrmiary to\ncity council on the activities of\nthe Trail Fire Department with\nregard to participation in the\nNational Fire Prevention contest.\nThe matter of Trail's partlcl-\npatlng in the contest was Intro\nduced at a city council meeting\ntwo weeks ago by Aid. Bill\nBarnsley.\nMr. Taylor stated that the\nTrail Fire Department did not\nparticipate in the contest due\nto council's orders made in 1961\nIt was revealed that council\nthen did not think the contest\nworthy of participation.\nPrior to 1961, the city had\nwon many first place prizes for\nthe under 13,ooo population category.\nAid. Barnsley expressed his\nsurprise over Trail's withdrawal\nfrom the contest and urged that\nthe Trail Fire Department get\nback into the competition.\n$132,130 Trail\nRecreation\nWgel Tabled\nTRAIL - The Trail-Tadanac\nParks and Recreation Commission enclosed their budget for\n1965 in the amount of $132,130 at\nMonday night's regular meeting\nof the Trail City Council. The\nCouncil, in making comparison\nto last year's figures, disclosed\nthat the 1964 budget was $113,-\n130 with $106,494 being actual\nexpenditures.\nThe new budget will be studied\nby city manager Ron Taylor and\nthe finance committee.\nThe city received word that\nthe munlcioal development and\nloan board has approved the\napplication for a loan for the\nreplacement of water mains.\nThe loan to the city is in the\namount of $120,000 for a term of\n20 years with interest at iVt\nper cent per annum.\nUninjured When\nThrown From Cor\nA Nelson man, Gerald Bishop,\nescaped injury when he was\nthrown from a car which went\nout of control on Stanley Street\nSaturday night.\nThe car, driven by Dennis\nPenny, was in collision with one\ndriven by Ken Hingwlng. the\nmishap was one of several attributed to slippery streets.\nQUEEN'S BADGE WINNER, Ken Kuhn, right, is congratulated by Bjarne\nThorshaug, Scoutmaster, who presented the token oi merit at special ceremonies at the 2nd Nelson Scout Group Father and Son Banquet held Saturday night. Scout Kuhn was one of three to receive the award, one of tht\nhighest In Scouting, Bob Adderiey and Charlie Ward were the other two\nrecipients. \u2014 Daily News photo.     .\nWEST AFRICA\nLECTURE TOPIC\nAuthority on the subject ef\nlife and conditions in West Af.\nrica today, T. S. Bakshi, associate professor of biological sciences at Notre Dame University\nof Nelson, will speak in the\n\"Contemporary '65\" pubiic lecture series Weldnesday.\n\"New Countries of West Africa\" is the topic. Using* facts\ngathered from personal observations during five years' residence in the area, Dr. Bakshi\nwill deal primarily with Sierra\nLeone and Ghana as he discusses all facets of life in these\ncountries. He will also touch on\nother countries of West Africa.\nKary Again Heads\nCancer Society\nJoseph Kary was reelected\npresident of the Nelson branch of\nthe Canadian Cancer Society,\nB.C. and.Yukon division, at the\nannual meeting Monday night.\nJ. M. Morley was elected vice-\npresident; Mrs. G. D. French,\nsecretary; and Robert Adderiey,\ntreasurer. Mayor E. T. Bodard\nwas named honorary patron.\nIt was reported that $3348.50 in\ncampaign funds and $590.85 in\n\"In Memorlam\" receipts earmarked fpr research, were remitted to the B.C. division. The\nSheep Creek\nMove Office\nAlter 31 years of activity in\nthe Nelson area, Sheep Creek\nMines will soon move its administrative office from Nelson to\nVancouver, following the lead of\nmany other mining companies in\nthe province.\nDirectors of the company\nmeeting in Vancouver Friday\nmade this decision. According\nto J. S. Mcintosh, executive\nvice-president and managing director, \"Vancouver will provide\na better base for the expanding\nexploration program anticipated\nby the company.\"\nOrganized in 1934, Sheep Creek\nGold Mines, as it was then called, first operated the Queen\nMines To\nfo Cocrsf\nMrs. Orlando\nOf Trail Dies\nA resident of Nelson for 64\nyears, Mrs. Laurina Orlando, 83,\ndied in Trail on February 27 after a short illness.\nShe was born in Coppito, Ac-\nquila, Italy on December 2, 1881\nand moved to Trail in 1911.\nShe was a member of the\nCrlstoforo Columbo Lodge and\nthe St. Francis Xavier Parish.\nShe is survived by her husband, Dominic; four sons, Vincent, Fred, Turrino, all of Trail\nand Armando of San Francisco;\nthree daughters, Jemma of Vancouver, Mrs. Dina Hall and Mrs.\nMeva Krug of Trail; 15 grand-\nchildren and 10 great grandchildren.\ngold mines at Sheep Creek, 10\nmiles from Salmo, until 1951,\nwhen the mine was depleted, '\nIn 1940, with the wartime de.\nmand for lead and zinc, the company entered the Slocan where\nit concentrated on the 61d Lucky\nJim mine, 10 miles from New\nDenver, One and a quarter mil\nlion tons of ore were taken from\nthe mine at Zincton before it\nwas closed in 1953. At that time,\nmen and equipment were moved\nto the Mineral King property at\nToby Creek, 28 miles east of\nInvermere, where more than 100\nmen are now employed. To date,\nthe mine has produced two million tons of lead-zinc ore.\nThrough the years, several\nBritish Columbia properties have\nbeen operated by the company.\nIn addition, exploration and development has been active not\nonly in the province, but also in\nMexico, Alaska, Yukon, California, Oregon, Arizona, and Montana.\nSheep Creek's future plans in-\nelude an active interest in (lie\nNelson area which has played\nsuch an important part in its\nhistory.\nNEW WESTMINSTER (CP)-\nMayor Stuart Gifford, who\nwants the provincial government to take over the Queens-\nborough Bridge, says he is getting support for the idea. It\nwould mean dropping the tolls\non the bridge\u2014the only major\nbridge left in B.C. which is not\npart of the toll-free B.C. highways system.\nPICTURED after Saturday night's annual curling\nbonspiel between the Knights of Columbus and the\nNelson Shrine Club are representatives of each side,\nholding the shield which was won by the Knights\nfor the third time, from. left, Les Hart, Howard Moore,\nTony Therrieft emd Erhle Boeehler, In th* back row\nFront row are Frcink Hufty, president of the Shrine\nClub, Arvid Schneider, grand knight, and Louis\nMaglio. Aggregate score for the Knights was 56\npoints and for the Shrine Club, 43 pointB.\n\u2014Daily News photo.\nbranch is an agency of the Community Chest.\nEleven cases were assisted financially, it was reported. The\nunit provides aid to patients\nwhenever the need arises. The\nEastern Star provides cancer\ndressings.\nDelegate to the annual Cancer\nConference at Vancouver March\n14-15 wiU be Mrs. W. R. Higgins\nof Kaslo. Mrs. Higgins has organized the campaign for funds\nin the Kaslo area for the past\nsix years, working with the Nelson branch in all phases of work\nof the unit.\nA vote of thanks was extended\nto Roy Pollard, presently in England, for his efforts and work as\na director of the division. Mr.\nPollard retires this year for\nhealth reasons after six years as\na director.\nA film, \"I'll Choose the High\nRoad,\" designed for elementary\nschool pupils and showing the\ndangers of smoking, was shown.\nPLAYTEX\nBABY PANTS\nSoft Vinyl\nMachine Washable\nSmall, Medium, Large,\nExtra Large\n49** a pair\nMayo Pharmacy\nLtd.\nPh. 352-2613        Nelson. B.C.\nCorner Baker and Ward Sts.\nCHOQUETTE\nFUELS\nPH. 352-7535\nOUR SPECIALTY\nStoker Coals\n\u2022  dfaulintf,  *\n^M^\\\n\u2022Mill\nPhone\n352-5018\nQUEEN CITY\nFUEL\nNelion\nPre-Season\nBOAT SALE\nV Fibreglas Cartoppers\n12' Aluminum\n1-14' Plywood Seml-flnlshed\n2-14' Fibreglas Deluxe ttm-\nabouts\nNew 1965 Johnson Motors\non display.\nw\u00ab h\u00abve a good supply ol\nUSED OUTBOARDS\nCOLEMAN\nELECTRIC\n502 Front St.\nPhone 352-3175\n Stock Quotations\nThe Dally News does not hold Itseli responsible In the event\nol an error In the following lists.\nClosing  prices supplied  by   Doherty,   Roadhouie A\nMcCualg Bros., Trail, B.C.\nTORONTO STOCKS\nNew Jason m'A\nNew Hosco 3.65\nNorlex .19\nNormetal 3.95\nNorthgate 8.75\nOpemiska. 8.80\nOrmsby .40\nOrchan 6.15\nPetrol O.G .78\nPCE Explor. .26\nPickle Crow , .55\nPermo .33\nPine Point 59.00\nPlace Gas .67\nPlacer 27.25\nPatino 9.40\nPreston 8.00\nProvo 2.60\nQuebec Manitou    .26\nQuebec Lithium 3.83\nQuemont 10.75\nRadiore .46\nRayrock .88\nRablan 1.65\nReeves Mac 2.80\nRio Algom 14.75\nSan Antonio .20%\nSarimco .20\nSheep Creek 1.43\nSherritt Gordon 5.75\nSilver Standard 1.41\nSisecoe 2.86\nSteep Rock 6.80      6.85\nSullivan Con. 3.85      3.95\nTeck Corp. 5.90       5.92\nTorbrit .60        .62\nTriad Oil    \u25a0 2.36      2.38\nTribag 4.05      4.10\nUnion Oil 16,75     16.87\nUnited Keno 9.65       9.75\nUnited Oil .72        .75\nUpper Canada 1.71      1.75\nViolamac 2.85       2.95\nWestern Mines 5.201    5.25\nWright Harg. .72        .7B\nWilroy 1.75      1.76\nW. Beaver Lodge   .19       .19V4\nZenmac Metals     .WA     .3814\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi\n13.25\n13.37\nAlgoma Steel\n77.75\n78.00\nAlta. Gas Trunk 38.62\n38.75\nAluminum\n31.87\n32.12\nArgus\n19.62\n19.87\nArgus C Pfd\n15.75\n16.25\nBank of Mont.\n67.75\n68.00\nBank of N.S.\n81.67\n81.87\nBathurst Power 24.25\n24.87\nBell Telephone\n62.50\n62.62\nB.A. Oil\n34.25\n34.37\nB.C. Forest\n30.37\n30.62\nB.C. Packers A 18.25\n18.50\nB.C. Telephone\n67.00\n67.50\nBurns & Co.\n21.75\n22.25\nCalg. Power\n20.12\n20.25\nCan. it D. Sugar 25.00\n25.50\nCan. Cement\n57.75\n58.00\nCan. Iron\n48.00\n48.25\nCan. Breweries\n10.12\n10.25\nCan. Canners\n15.50\n15.75\nCan. Industries\n25.75\n26.25\nCan. Imp. Bank 70.75\n71.00\nCan. Pac. Rly.\n67.87\n68.00\nChemcell\n19.50\n19.62\nCol. Cellulose\n10.37\n10.50\nCons Min. k S.\n45.87\n46.00\nCons. Paper\n48.00\n48.12\nCons. Gas\n13.25\n13.50\nCrestbrk. Timber 6.75\n7.00\nDom. Bridge\n26.25\n26.50\nDist. Seagrams\n37.25\n37.38\nDom, Foundries 26.25\n26.37\nDom. Stores\n26.00\n26.37\nDom. Tar k C.\n23.00\n23.12\nDom. Textiles\n38.25\n38.75\nEddy Match Co\n42.00\n43.00\nEddy Paper\n20.00\n21.00\nFalconbridge\n87.75\n88.00\nFamous Players 24.00\n24.25\nFanny Farmer\n49.25\n50.00\nFord Motor Co.\n57.75\n58.50\nFord of Can.\n160.00\n163.00\nGen. Steel Wares 11.50\n13.50\nGoodyear\n175.00\n180.75\nGreyhound\n13.50\n13.87\nGt. Lakes Power 29.25\n30.00\nHome Oil A\n21.00\n21.25\nHudson Bay Co\n15.25\n15.50\nHusky Oil\n12.62\n12.75\nImperial Oil\n57.62\n57.87\nIndust. Accept\n25.62\n25.75\nImp. Tobacco\n6.75\n7.00\nInd. Minerals\n9.12\n9.50\nInland Nat. Gas\n11.12\n11.37\nInt. Utilities\n31.62\n31.75\nInt. Nickel\n87.87\n88.25\nInterprov. Pipe\n93.87\n94.00\nInterprov. Steel\n3.60\n3.65\nLaurentide\n18.75\n19.00\nLoblaw B\n8.75\n9.00\nMassey Ferg.\n32.12\n32.25\nMacM Powell R 35.00\n35.50\nMGF Man.\n6.87\n7.00\nMolson Brew. A 44.00\n44.62\nMont. Loco.\n14.75\n15.12\nMoore Corp.\n62.87\n63.00\nMidwest Ind. Gas. 3.85\n3.95\nNoranda\n55.87\n56.00\nOgilvie Flour\n15.12\n15.37\nPacific Pete\n11.62\n11.75\nPower Corp.\n15.75\n16.00\nQue. Nat. Gas\n11.25\n11.50\nRoyal Bank\n82.12\n82.50\nRothmans\n25.00\n25.12\nSalada Foods\n12.62\n12.75\nShell Oil\n18.62\n18.75\nSimpsons\n27.12\n27.50\nSoutham\n35.00\n35.50\nSteel of Can.\n28.75\n28.87\nTraders Fin. A\n14.62\n14.75\nTexaco\n54.25\n55.25\nTrans Mtn. Pipe 21.37\n21.50\nTrans. Can. Pipe 38.37\n38.50\nUnion Carbide\n29.25\n29.50\nUn. Gas of Can\n26.75\n26.87\nWalker - Gooder. 38.00\n38.25\nWestcoast Trans. 14.87\n15.00\nWeston Geo. A\n18.00\n18.12\nWoodwards A\n26.75\n27.00\nZenith Elect\n4.05\n4.10\nMINES AND OILS\nAdvocate\n6.26\n6.30\nAgnico\n1.43\n1.45\nAunor\n4.10\n4.20\nBarnat\n.87\n.91\nBethlehem Cop.\n7.80\n7.95\nBibis\n.28\n.29\nBralorne\n5.70\n5.75\nBrunswick\n18.87\n19.00\nCadamet\n.14%\n.15\nCalg k Edmtn.\n20.37\n20.62\nCampbell Chib\n4.20\n4.25\nCan. Delhi\n2.90\n2.98\nCampbell R.L.\n22.25\n23.00\nCariboo Gold\n.55\n.58\nCassiar Asb.\n14.25\n14.38\nCentral Del Rio\n8.55\n8.62\nCentral Patdici.\n1.41\n1.43\nCharter Oil\n2.00\n2.10\nChimo\n1.43\n1.45\nCheskirk\n.11\n.1114\nCoch. WUl.\n2.96\n3.00\nCopper Man.\n.13%\n.14\nCons. Halliwell\n.45\n.48\nCons. Mogul\n5.65\n, 5.75\nConwest\n5.70\n6.00\nCopper Corp.\n.40\n.44\nCowichan Cop.\n.41\n.44\nCraigmont\n15.62\n15.75\nCons. Rambler\n2.43\n2.46\nCygnus \"A\"\n4.30\n4.35\nDenison\n27.75\n28.00\nDickenson\n5.20\n5.50\nEast Malartic\n2.10\n2.20\nEast Sullivan\n5.85\n5.90\nFirst Maritimes\n5.25\n5.40\nFargo\n3.10\n3.15\nFrobex\n1.12\n1.15\nGiant Mascot\n1.65\n1.70\nGiant Yel.\n15.62\n16.00\nGranduc\n7.25,\n7.30\nGunnar Mines\n5.25\n5.30\nHastings M&D\n3.65\n3.70\nHighland Bell\n5.75\n5.85\nHollinger\n32.50\n32.87\nHudson Bay Mg 77.12\n77.37\nHudson Bay Oil\n16.50\n16.75\nHydra Ex\n.23\n.24\nIron Bay\n1.76\n1.80\nIso\n4.25\n4.30\nKerr Addison\n8.75\n8.85\nKey Anacon\n3.95\n4.00\nLabrador\n40.50\n41.50\nLake Dufault\n15.87\n16.00\nLeitch\n4.60\n4.70\nLittle Long Lac\n1.95\n1.98\nLorado\n1.61\n1.63\nMadsen\n2.18\n2.24\nMalartic\n.66\n.74\nMattagami Lake 21.62\n21.75\nMclntyre\n68.75\n69.00\nMcWaters\n.50\n.52\nMcKenzie\n.1014\n.11\nMidcon\n.54\n.56\nNorth Can. Oils\n3.15\n3.20\nNorth Cal.\n1.32\n1.35\nNational Pete\n3.35\n3.50\nGrond Forks Formers Left Out on Limb\nFederal Gov't Action Forces\nMen To Leave Farm, Animals\nVancouver\nSlocks\nINDUSTRIALS\nBurrard Mort 5.00 5.50\nGrowers A 5.25 5.50\nGrowers B 5.25 5.50\nSun Pub. A 26.00 26.50\nSun Pub. B 26.00 27.00\nInt. Brew. B 9.00 \u2014\nMINES AND OILS\nBTM .38 .43\nCanam Copper .20 .21\nCoast Copper \u2014 17.00\nCopper Soo .40 .41\nCrown Silver .15 .1514\nGalaxy 1.09 1.10\nDolly Varden .57 .59\nHuestis .31 .33\nLytton .24 .26\nMagnum .49 .50\nMcKinney .32 .34\nMt. Washington .88 .92\nNew Cronin .34 .35\nOttawa Silver .2314 .25\nPeace River Pete .76 .77\nPend Oreille 4.20 4.50\nSilver Ridge .18 .20\nSkeena Silver .1814 .20\nSkeena Silver .1814 .19\nTrojan. .14 .15\nTorwest .96 .97\nVan Tor Oil .05% .06\nWestern Expl. .12 .14\nUtica Mines 2.42 2.45\nFUNDS - .\nAll. Can. Com. 6.67 7.31\nAll. Can. Div. 8.91 9.77\nAmer. Growth 11.53 12.60\nCan. Inv. Fund 4.28 4.70\nCom. Int. 11.05 12.11\nFirst Oil k Gas 5.70 6.23\nInvestors Growth 8.87 9.64\nInv. Int. Mutual 5.42 5.89\nInv. Mutual 5.09 5.54\nLeverage 9.94 10.89\nDiv. Income 6.17 6.78\nMutual Accum. 5.08 5.56\nMutual Bond 8.28 8.67\nMutual Inc. 6.60 7.22\nTrans Can. C 8.53 9.32\nCorp. Invest. 6.13 6.69\nGroup Income 4.44 4.85\nUnited Ace. 6.06 6.62\nFruitvale Scene\nOf Watson Rites\nFRUITVALE \u2014 Funeral service was held for Harold Watson,\nSr., in St. John's Anglican\nChurch. Mr. Watson died in\nTrail-Tadanac Hospital after a\nshort illness. '\nHe came to Canada 65 years\nago from Scotland at the age of\ntwo years, settling in Vivian,\nMan. In 1919 he came to Fruitvale after serving four years\noverseas in the First World War\nwith the Royal Canadian Engineers.\nFollowing this, Mr. Watson\nworked at the Great Northern\nand Hedley gold mines. In 1936\nhe was employed running diesel\nengines at Ymir Mines. In 1942\nhe moved back to Fruitvale and\nwas employed by CM. k S. until\nhis retirement in 1962.\nHe was an enthusiastic out-\ndoorsman and enjoyed hunting\nand fishing. He was a member\nof the Rod and Gun Club.\nSurviving is his wife, Clara,\nalso two sons, Harold John of\nTrail and Leonard at home; one\ndaughter, Mrs. V. Lesjak (Rose\nMarie) in Grand Forks; one\ngranddaughter, Rhonda Lynne\nWatson of Trail.\nInterment was in Fruitvale\nCemetery, with Rev. D. N.\nRobinson officiating.\nBALFOUR \u2014 Cross-legged\naround a simulated camp fire,\nyoung voices raised in songs\nranging from patriotic to spiritual, Balfour Hall took on the\naspect of a summer camp, as\nthe scouts and cubs of the\nProcter - Harrop Scouting Association entertained their fathers\nand special guests following the\nannual father and son banquet.\nScoutmaster Don Berry, assisted by his son, Assistant Scoutmaster Dave Berry, led the\ncampfire, and called for volun-\nSLOW GROWTH\nUnlike most countries, Belgium, Sweden and Hungary\nhave slow rates of growth, their\npopulations doubling only once\nin 140 years.\nSTANDING BESIDE one of 25 of his paintings he Intends to exhibit in Nelson next\nweek is Dr. Andrea Pontoni, famed traveller and educator. This particular piece of art\nentitled \"Madonna and the Child\" Is drawn with a biblical landscape in traditional\nrenaissance style. The painting will be displayed in a three-day exhibition starting March\n12 at the Kootenay School of Art, director D, O, McGregor has announced. Dr. Pontoni is\npresently teaching at Notre Dame University and this exhibit will be his only one in\nNelson as he is leaving in May. \u2014 DaUy News photo.\nSummer Camp Setting for\nBalfour Father, Son Event\nJob's Daughters\nAid (oast\nCancer Clinic\nDuring 1964, members of the\nInternational Order of Jpb's\nDaughters of British Columbia\nraised $5000 for the Cancer clinic\nin Vancouver. Nelson Bethel No,\n10 plans to add to this amount\nwith a \"blitz this week.\nA second objective for the fund\nis the education of members of\nJob's Daughters to assist them\nwith their schooling. The girls\nalso donate toys to the children's\nhospital in Vancouver.\nThe International Order of\nJob's Daughters is an organization for teenage girls with Masonic relationship. It seeks to in\nspire, desire for knowledge, re-\nspect for parents, love for home\nand country and reverence for\nthe Bible.\nMost towns have a Bethel and\nit is the privilege of each Bethel\nto plan a project for each term\nof six months in order to raise\nmoney for the Cancer Fund and\nthe Educational Fund.\nBethel No. TO in Nelson has\nplanned its annual spring tea to\nbe held Saturday.\nSEARCH ON\nThe Soviet Union is searching\nfor some 700 documents, letters\nand notes written by Lenin\nwhich have disappeared since\nthey were written.\nteers from the Scout ranks to\nexplain and direct the yells,\ngames and skits familiar to the\nboys. John Bowles, president of\nthe local association, responded\nfor the fathers.\nGuests at the head table were\nDr. B. A. Resker, regional commissioner, John Miller, district\nexecutive commissioner, Gordon\nFleming Nelson District commissioner, Nelson Cubmaster\nLloyd Galbraith, Robert Adder-\nley, chairman of the Nelson District Scouting Association, Scoutmaster D. Berry, Procter-\nHarrop, Cubmaster Colin Major,\nProcter-Harrop, Assistant Cubmaster Mac McKay, Balfour,\nand Mr. Bowles.\nA toast to the Queen was proposed by Mr. Bowles. Following\nthe banquet, Dr. Resker greeted\nthe assembly on behalf of the\nKootenay Boundary Region. He\ngave high praise to the founder\nof Scouting, Lord Baden-Powell,\nwhose military background and\nspirit of fair play prepared him\nfor his life's work of scouting.\nDr. Resker had had the pleasure\nof meeting \"B.P.\" as Baden-\nPowell is affectionately known\nto Scouts, and greatly admired\nhim.\nMr.  Adderiey expressed  ad-\nKaslo Board\nNames New\nSecretary\nKASLO \u2014 The Board of Trade\nheld a meeting at the Kinsmen\nCommunity Hall with PTA members catering to the dinner\nmeeting.\nDoug Barraclough has been\nappointed as secretary, as E.\nBarrons has now left Kaslo.\nThe meeting negotiated to\nsponsor a film in April, \"The\nStory of Lonesome Lake.\" A\nrepresentative from Board of\nTrade, J. Cochran, will attend\nthe annual meeting of Associated\nChamber of Commerce at Nelson\nin the near future.\nmiration for the success of the\nfather and son banquet, and\nlater presented the 1965 renewal\nof the Procter-Harrop Scout\nCharter. Cubmaster Lloyd Galbraith of Nelson presented\nAssistant Cubmaster McKay ot\nBalfour with a basic training\ncertificate.\nIn a special ceremony, Cubs\nMiles Kirkendall, Murray Bed-\nard and Charles Peterson were\ninvested into the Scout Troop.\nCatering for the banquet was\nunder the direction of the\nmothers of Balfour Cubs, with\nfood assistance from the Procter-\nHarrop Association, and Nancy\nNoakes, Leah and Kathy Stain-\nton serving.\nGRAND FORKS (CP) - Two\nmen Monday made plans to\nturn their backs on their $65,000\nfarms, abandoning cattle and\nswine to their fate on snow-covered pastures.\nA third man was considering\nsimilar action.\nThe three are farmers whose\noperations were ordered closed\nby the Federal Food and Drug\nDepartment because of a high\npesticide level in the animals.\nThe pesticide, a chlorinated\nhydrocarbon, was used on potatoes fed the animals. The provincial department of agriculture has said the federal department acted hastily in the\nmatter.\nThe farmers are Peter deHaan, Lee Hoodie and Rick de-\nVries.\nMr. deHaan operates a feed\nlot used for fattening animals\nfor market. The other two operate dairy farms. Mr. deHaan\nand Mr. Hoodie said unless they\nreceive federal help by Wednesday they will leave the farms.\n\"I will just call the SPCA and\ntell them I'm leaving my 64 cattle,\" Mr. Hoodie said. \"Then\nI will look for another job\u2014 1\nhave no way of supporting my\nwife and I, much less the animals.\"\n\"I swept the last of my feed\nfrom the loft this morning.\"\nSaid deHaan: \"I will just turn\naround and walk away. I have\nno other way of earning money\nand I cannot continue to feed\nthe animals.\"\nHe said he has to think about\nhis wife and nine-year-old son,\nHe said before the govern\nment closed him, he was shipping about $4000 worth of beef\nmonthly.\nNow the 100 cattle and 200\npigs would die within a few\ndays without food and shelter,\nMr. deVries said he has not\ndecided what to do. His dairy\noperation covers 142 acres and\nis valued at $160,000.\nFraser Carmichael, provincial\nagrioulturlst in the area, supported the farmes' contention\nthat the Food and Drag Department was too hasty. He said\nthe condition has existed  for\nDrilling, Tunnelling\nAt Slocan Property\nSLOCAN CITY - Reporting\nprogress on the exploration program of Arlington Silver Mines\nLimited at its property near Slocan City, B. I. Nesbitt, president\nsays both diamond drilling and\ntunnelling are now in progress.\nDesigned to evaluate the 12 to\n15 feet wide mineralized zone\ndiscovered on \"B\" level while\ncross - cutting towards an old\nstope some 1000 feet in length,\nthe diamond drilling started on\nFeb. 22.\nMr. Nesbitt says also that\ndriving has resumed on \"B\"\nlevel hanging wall drift which\nwill be advanced a further 450\nfeet concurrently with the diamond drilling. He says that airline and rails are being laid in\n\"A\" level in preparation for\nwork there.\nFollowing further assay results, Dundee Mines Limited is\narranging to start underground\nwork at its Dorrigo antimony\n\u2022poperty, says R. Sostad, managing director, adding that drilling\nfrom surface will continue concurrently. He reports also receipt of a wire from J, D. Mason, P.Eng., in charge of the\nNew South Wales, Australia ex\nploration project that government participation in financing\nof underground development of\nthe antimony property has been\nassured by the Department ot\nMines. He expects 50 per cent\nparticipation.\nZone Commander\nTells of Legion\nProvincial Work\nKASLO \u2014 Royal Canadian\nLegion Branch 74 held its regular meeting with Zone Commander Bert Lamb and President A. J. Weir of Branch 51\nattending.\nTwo new members were accepted.\nA report given by President\nW. Seafoot on last year's\nactivities showed some $3000\nhaving gone through the books\nA smoker is to be held March 20\nby the entertainment committee,\nCommander Lamb gave a talk\non Legion affairs throughout the\nprovince.\nMovies were shown by C.\nSeveried on his trip to the Blue\nHawaiian Islands.\nNEW FOHEST RESEARCH LABORATORY IN\nVICTORIA is this $2 '\/a million structure built by the\nDepartment of Forestry oi Canada on 22 acres of\nland to house all research groups in a district\nregional working unit. The building is 265 feet long,\nthree storeys high, with full basement and penthouse.\nConstructed of fieldstone quarried from the Beaver\nLake roadside and terrazzo composition of white\nmedusa cement finished with Italian marble chips,\nthe inside is finished with douglas fir, glulam iir,\nwalnut, bird's eye maple, birch, western cedar and\noak. The building has specialized equipment and all\nfacilities ior the various phases of research. The site\nis about three miles from the centre of Victoria. Contractor was Burns and Dutton Construction,\nabout 10 years and no one has\nsuffered from the ill effects of\nit.\nMr. deHaan said the department is 10 years behind the\ntimes. \"They are trying to catch\nup in three weeks.\"\nThe farmers say the only thing\nthat will save their farms is for\nthe federal government to buy\nthe condemned stock and give\nthem a chance to replace the\nanimals.\nThey have sent telegrams to\nFederal Welfare Minister Judy\nLamarsh, Agriculture Minister\nHarry Hays, and to Povincial\nAgriculture Minister Frank\nRichter.\n\"Mr.  Richter sent me  five\ntons of hay two weeks ago but\nthats all the response Ive had,\"\nsaid Mr. Hoodie.\nMr. Hoodie, who keeps 52 cattle on his 249-acre farm, estimates the government move cost\nhim $20,000.\nIn Ottawa, a Department of\nAgriculture official said plans\nare being considered to assist\nthe three farmers. But he de\ndined to say what they are.\nAnd in Victoria Agriculture\nMinister Richter said the fed\neral government should buy the\ncontaminated animals for research purposes. That would\ngive the farmers enough money\nto buy new stock.\nGrants were approved last\nweek for centennial programming and celebrations in various\nB.C. areas, including the East\nKootenay.\nProvincial government contributions, to total $42,288 and $30,-\n335 respectively, have been approved for Burnaby and Surrey.\nCentennial . committees in\nthese municipalities will receive\n25 per cent of this amount immediately, an additional 25 per\ncent in November and the remainder in November, 1966.\nThe grants, authorized, by\nBritish Columbia's Confederation Centennial Committee, are\ndistinct from the per capita contributions to be made by the senior governments for permanent\ncentennial projects in the communities.\nOther communities In the province for which grants were ap-\nproved -this week are:\nVancouver Island \u2014 Central\nSaanich $1308; Cherry Creek\n$680; Ucluelet and District $498.\nEast Kootenay \u2014 Village of\nCreston $1040; Natal $772; Canal\nFlats $240; Radium and Wilmer\n$300; Spillimacheen $80; West\nCreston $56.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUES., MARCH 2, 1965\u20143\nHi-C's Dance\nFor Endicott\nHome Fund\nSALMO - The Hi-C box social\nnetted $40 toward the fund for\nthe Dr. Endicott Home for Handicapped Children at Creston.\nThe teenagers staged a highly\nsuccessful evening at the Royal\nCanadian Legion Hall when approximately 60 young people got\ntogether for this fund-raising\nfunction.\nSpot and elimination dances\ndrew prizes for several lucky\ncouples before the lunchboxes,\nmade up by the girls, were auctioned off to the highest bidder.\nJosie Besanger, convener for\nthe affair, said club members\nwere well satisfied with the results of their first endeavor of\nthis kind.\nAssisting the young people as\nhosts for the evening were Mr.\nand Mrs. S. Fullbrook and Israel\nPrabhudaas, student minister..\nIn recent weeks the Hi-C Club\nhas been enjoying square dancing at the home of Gerry\nSchlimpfl under the direction of\nMr. and Mrs. R. Cooper of Meta-\nline Falls, -tie Coopers drive in\nfrom Metaline each Thursday\nnight to teach the young people\nthe intricacies of square dancing.\nAfter their graduation, It is\nhoped they will take part in district jamborees. They have already travelled to Metaline,\nwhere they took part hi an evening's \"squaring\" with the out-\nof-province group.\nAt the regular meeting held in\nthe church social room, L. G\/\nMoir showed colored slides of\nthe Alaska Highway and countryside.\nIn its second year, the Hi-C.\nClub has had few drop-out's and\nthrough artful programming has;\ncontinued to hold the enthusiasm\nof the group.\nE. Kootenay Centres\nHave Centennial\nGrants Approved\nPeace River \u2014 South Taylor\n$183; Bessborough $52\nCariboo \u2014 McLeod Lake $160.\nFraser Valley \u2014 Popkum and\nCheam $124.\n70 Attend Father,\nSon Banquet Held\nAt Creston\nCRESTON \u2014 The members of\nthe Second Creston Troop and\ntheir fathers participated in a\nfather and son banquet held at\nthe Anglican Church parish hall.\nApproximately 70 persons\nwere in attendance, including\nCubmasters H. Hertzog, Mrs. A.\nMontgomery; and Scout Leaders\nBill Peters and Constable Leh\nDoyle.\nA   presentation   to   Scoutmaster L. Lelns, who will be\nmoving   to   Castlegar,   was\nmade during the evening.\nThe dinner was served by the\nAnglican Church Guild and the\ntoast to the fathers was proposed\nby Cub James Wright, to which\nRay  McL.  Cooper  responded.\nFilms were later shown to conclude the occasion.\nHelps Yon Overcome\nFALSE TEETH\nLooseness ond Worry\nNo longer be annoyed or (eel lli-at-\neue because of loose, wobbly fals*\nteeth. FASTEETH, an Improved alkaline (non-acid) powder, sprinkled ot\nyour plates holds them firmer so the]\n(eel more comfortable. Avoid embar\nrasament caused by loose plates. Ge-\nPASTEETH at any drug counter.\nEARLY WEEK SPECIALS\nTUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY ONLY\nH A AA X   Union Bran<'- Tender mode, fully\nI inlVlkJ  cooked. Whole or shank half.\nHamburger\nPork\nLean,\nFresh ground.\nNeck Bones and Riblets.\n(Economical spare ribs).\n*-\u00bb   m)B^mvmwmwmmt\u00bb*m~m\u00bb m m -\nSweet and Juicy\nORANGES TOibs.*1 oo\n\u00bb  \u2014 *\u00bb  ^ ' - -*-     \u25a0 \u25a0*\u00ab- --\u00bb_\u25a0\u00bb-\u00bb\u25a0   m*m   m   \u00bb\u00ab\u25a0-\u00bb\u25a0 -_-^\u00bb-__fc-\u00ab^-w\nSUGAR wl 10 b 89\nSpaghetti\nMinute Rice\nor Macaroni,\nCottelli'i. 5 Ibs.\n24 oz.\n79\n69\nSherriff's\nJelly\nPowders\nAssorted\nFlavors,\n9\nWE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES\n mmmm\nNrismt Haily Nritis\nEstablished *prtl. et  isov Nelsun  B C\nPublished by the NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n266 Bukei Stieet, Nelson, British Columbia, mornings except\nSundays and holidays in the centre ot the Kootenays with\nthe largest daily circulation in the interior oi B.C.\nAuthorized as Second Class Mail. Post Office Department. Ottawa,\nand foi Payment ot Postage in Cash\nMEMBER Of   THE CANADIAN PRESS\nMEMBER OF I'HE CANADIAN DAILY NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION\nMEMBER OC THE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS\nThe Canadian Press is exclusive), entitled to the use lor republication ot all news\ndispatches credited to il ni   \u2022     ,r Associated Press or Reuters In this\npaper and also the inra'  news published herein.\n' Tuesday, March 2, 1965 \t\nAn Unforgettable Character\nWarden Joseph McCulley\nQood News for Taxpayers\nPremier Bennett is a great one   to promote the soundest kind of\nurban growth.\nWhat persuaded the premier to\nallow the municipalities a greater\nshare of the expanding provincial\nrevenue than he had budgeted for is\nfor surprises. But he has seldom\npulled a more pleasing rabbit out of\nhis Homburg for more than 80 per\ncent of the taxpayers of the province \u2014 the people who live In the\ncities, towns, villages and organized   of   relative   unimportance   in   the\ndistricts \u2014 than the boosting of the\ngovernment's   population \u2022 based\ngrants to the municipalities by $4 a\nhead.\nThis unexpected new municipal\nIncome will not in all cases actually\nreduce the 1965 mill-rate from last\nyear's, but where it does not, it will\nspare the property-holders the sharpness of the increase that otherwise\nwould have been their lot. And in\nconjunction with the larger homeowner's grant, it should result generally in a smaller outlay for taxpayers in this category.\nThere will be the side-benefit,\ntoo, as Municipal Affairs Minister\nCampbell says, of the higher per-\ncapita payments to municipalities\nencouraging unorganized but developing territories to seek incorporation, either on their own or by\nextension of existing municipal\nboundaries. Thus to the general\nbenefit the grants can be expected\nshadow of his welcome action,\nwhether it was Mr. Campbell's\nurging which he gives some credit,\nthe results oi adverse public opinion\npolls as Mr. Strachan suggests, or a\ncombination of these and the\nthoughts of a possible election \u2014\nfederal or provincial \u2014 in coming\nmonths. (Either way, he would be\nout to show Ottawa how strongly the\npeople oi British Columbia are\nbehind him.)\nNor will most citizens, see It as\nof consequence that, on paper, the\nfurther payments to the municipalities will put Mr. Bennett in the field\nof deficit financing, which ls one of\nMr. Strachan's taunts. The leader of\nthe Opposition knows full well that\nwhatever the budget figures, a\nhandsome surplus at the end of the\nyear is a Bennett trademark. For\nonce he could have accepted a\ngratifying move without captious\ncriticism. \u2014 Victoria Colonist.\nThey Didn't Know\nIt Is always unwise to assume\nthat \"everyone\" knows something\njust because it would seem impossible ior anyone not to have heard\nabout it. A public survey carried out\nin West Berlin, where it might be\nexpected that everyone would, be\npolitically sensitive, recently revealed that 58 persons out of one\nhundred did not know what NATO\nmeant. Some thought it was a soap\npowder.\nThis sounds quite unbelievable.\nThe North Atlantic alliance has been\nin existence for more than half a\ngeneration. Yet public information\nsurveys often turn up .astonishing\nevidence of ignorance.\nWhen George Bernard Shaw was\nat the height of his fame as a playwright, when his name had appeared in newspapers and magazines for almost fifty years and his\nwitticisms were almost as renowned\nas his plays and the films that had\nbeen made from them, a survey was\nheld in the West End of London.\nWhen asked who Bernard Shaw\nwas, six out of ten persons said they\nhad never heard of him. This must\nhave been a shrewd blow to the\nplaywright's ego.\nNo Beans in China?\nNow anyone who likes to look\nbehind the scenes and wonder what\ndiplomatic manoeuver is indicated\nin a news story, can wonder about\nour sale of soybeans to Russia.\nEleven million dollars worth of\nsoybeans have just been sold to\nRussia, the biggest deal the United\nStates has made with the Soviet\nstate since last year's surplus wheat\nsale.\nWhat could il indicate on the\nlevel of diplomatic rumor monger-\ning?\nWell, the soybean is one of the\nnatural crops in Red China.\nWouldn't it seem as if Russia would\ndeal with a Communist pal rather\nthan With the capitalist United\nStah\u00bbs? Actually tht growing of\nsoybeans as a commercial crop is a\nfairly recent development in the\nUnited States.\nYou just never can fell what\nmight  conceivably  exert   a   very\nimportant part in the juggle and\ncross-juggle of diplomatic relations.\n\u2014Portland Oregon\/an.\nSome years ago a survey was\ncarried out among 14-year-old Canadian students. When asked to name\nthe prime minister, many were quite\nunable to do so, replies of others\nranged widely from the names of\npresidents of the United States to\nMackenzie King, who had then been\ndead some years. The number of\ncorrect answers was depressingly\nsmall.\nNo, it is never wise to assume\nthat the obvious is obvious, or that\nthere is such a thing as a household\nword. \u2014 Hamilton Spectator.\nLon& Distance Call\nThe first telephone call across the\nUnited States took place fifty years\nago.\nDr. Alexander Graham Bell was\nat the New York City end of the\nfour-way conversation and his\nfriend, Thomas Watson, in San Francisco. The other two participants\nwere President Woodrow Wilson, in\nWashington and Theodore J, Vail, in\nthe southern state of Georgia.\nThough trans - continental telephone conversations are common\nnowadays the construction project\nbefore the first one was staggering.\nCopper wire, 13,600 miles of it, was\nstrung from New York to San Francisco and every eight miles loading\ncoils had to be fitted to amplify the\nvoices.\nEverything worked perfectly. Dr.\nBell expected it to, but President\nWilson is said to have been amazed\nat the scientific achievement, if not\nat Dr. Bell's humor.\nIn remembrance of the first telephone conversation, in Brantford,\nDr. Bell called to San Francisco,\n\"Come here, Mr. Watson, please. I\nwant you.\"\nImmediately alter this test run\nthe San Francisco - New York City\nline went into commercial use.\nIt is significant that the cost of a\nthree-minute conversation, in 1915,\nwas $20.70. \u2014 Hamilton Spectator.\nBy JOHN LeBLANC\nTORONTO ICPl-The towering man with the philosophy degree and the craggy face ot an\nIrish cop has to be careful to\nkeep his list of visitors straight.\nThe next one might be a scholastic leader, a politician, one\nof his 20,000 charges, or maybe\nan ex-convict friend.\nDiverse as they are, they\nhave a common denominator. If\nthey are not friends of Joe\nMcCulley before they enter the\noffice of the warden of University of Toronto's Hart House,\nchances are they will be by the\ntime he uncoils his six feet, four\ninches to see them out.\nNow nearing 65 and due for\nretirement, Joe has scattered a\ntrail of exuberant amiability\nthrough three major careers\nand a couple of lesser ones. He\nhopes to start a new one when\nthe current job runs out at the\nend of June.\nSo far he has been a collegiate\nschool headmaster\u2014one of Canada's youngest at 27\u2014adviser to\nthe post-war Khaki University,\ndeputy commissioner of penitentiaries for Canada, a TV interviewer and, for the last dozen\nyears, boss and father confessor\nin a unique corner of university\nlife.\nEDUCATE WHLE MAN\nAs warden of Hart House, he\noversees an institution that provides facilities and stimulus for\nstudents to work off extracurricular energies and pick up\nincidental education in a mass\nof topics ranging from politics\nto amateur radio operation. Its\nconcept ties in with his idea of\neducation for the whole man.\n\"You don't want to educate a\nguy just above the neck,\" says\nthe warden, who talks like that\ndespite a couple of years at Oxford and a lifetime in the trade.\n\"Education,\" he also says,\n\"is always the overflow of enthusiasm from one person to another.\" Enthusiasm is what\nWarden McCulley overflows\nwith, plus an uninhibited liking\nfor people. It works both ways.\nWhen the headmaster of Pickering College returned to nearby\nNewmarket after a post-war\nstint overseas with Khaki University, the students unfurled a\nbanner proclaiming:\n\"Welcome Home Joe!\"\nFOLLOWED  HEDITY\nHis career as an educationist\nand officer of the legal system\nhas been a chance blending of\ntwo branches of his family tree.\nHis father was a policeman\u2014an\nIrish one, as the McCulley features testify\u2014at St. Thomas,\nOnt. His mother was for 25\nyears a member of that city's\nboard of education.\n\"If Joe had been a policeman\nlike his father,\" a friend once\nobserved, \"he would have been\nthe world's friendliest, but he\nwould probably have handed out\nsummonses even if it broke his\nheart.\"\nInstead, he worked his way\nthrough the Ontario College of\nEducation and U. of T., where\nhe graduated in philosophy and\npicked up a two-year fellowship\nwhich he used to study modern\nhistory at Oxford. He was back\nWord of Life\nAll that the Father giveth me\nshall come to me; and him that\ncometh to me I will in no wise\ncast out. John 6:37.\nIt's Been Said\nTo be prepared for war is one of the\nmost effectual means of preserving\npeace. - George Washington.\nTruth often suffers more by the heat\nof its defenders than from the arguments\nof its opposers. - William Penn.\nSuccess is counted sweetest by those\nwho never succeed. - Emily Dickinson.\nAs was proved in the Alaska\nearthquake and in the Alberni\ndisaster that followed in its\nwake, Civil Defence is simply\ngovernment in emergency.\ntutoring at Varsity when he was\nnamed headmaster of Pickering, Canada's youngest man in\nsuch a job at that time.\nThe school was reopening\nafter being closed for 10 years.\nWhat the young headmaster did\nwith it became a well-known\npart of Canadian educational\nhistory. He tossed out much\nthat was traditional in private\nschools and added much that\nwas new then including vocational guidance and\u2014to the accompaniment of some uplifted\neyebrows\u2014handicrafts for these\nsons of the well-to-do of the\nmid-1920s.\nIn 1945 he was drafted as a\ncivilian adviser to the service\nsetup that provided Canadian\nsoldiers in England with college\ncourses while they were awaiting return to Canada.\nHELPED POLITICIAN\nThe short-order college had\nsome distinguished faculty\u2014\nfrom the services\u2014and alumni.\nRecently Leslie Peterson, now\nBritish Columbia minister of\nlabor, recalled to Mr. McCulley\nthat it set his foot on the path\nto a university education, the\nlaw and politics.\nIn 1947 he was appointed deputy commissioner of penitentiaries, which gave him the\nchance to meet more people and\nset up education machinery for\nprisoners and staff. He travelled\nwidely and talked to many.\nFriends of those days still call\non him at his campus office,\nlooking for a job, a chat or a\nsmall touch.\nHe continued his interest in\npenal affairs after joining Hart\nHouse in 1952. He served on the\nFauteux federal commission on\nprisoners' remissions of 1953-56\nand is a member of the Ontario\ngovernment's advisory committee on penal reforms.\n\"It's all education,\" he says.\nIn the late 1950s he served as\nhost on a CBC television Interview program called Graphic,\nthough at the time he was\ndrafted he didn't own a TV set.\nHe did have a wide portfolio\nof interesting friends, however,\nand he dipped into it for most\nof the subjects.\nAsked now which of his as\nsorted jobs he has liked best,\nhe says he can't rate them.\n\"1 always like best the one\nI'm doing at any moment,\" he\nsays. \"The main thing is,\nthey've all concerned people.\"\nAt Hart House, he's up to\nhere in people. All 20,000 of Varsity's undergraduates\u2014the coeds to a limited degree\u2014plus\nalumni have the run of the\nplace. It was built between\n1911-19 by the Massey Foundation under .direction of Vincent\nMassey \u2014 later Governor-Gene-\neral\u2014and expresses his belief\nin extracurricular activities as\npart of a liberal education.\nThere's probably nothing like\nit on any campus. It has indoor\nsports facilities, one of the most\nmajestic dining halls of any\nuniversity, a theatre\u2014the famous Hart House theatre\u2014libraries, common room, debates\nroom, music room, chapel, art\ngallery\u2014whose collection of Canadian art ranks next to the\nNational Gallery's \u2014 and such\noddments as photographic dari-\nrooms.\nIt also is somewhat encrusted\nwith tradition, some of which\nthe current warden has pried\noff. Hart House started as a\nmen's institution; now women\nare given some access, though\ncertain areas such as reading\nquarters remain male refuges.\nThe warden\u2014the title derives\nfrom the British and roughly\ncorresponds to dean\u2014supervises\nanything from art exhibitions to\nchess tournaments. \"Informal\neducation,\" he calls it. Most informal of all Is the warden,\nwhose rawboned shape may be\ndraped in a cerise sports jacket\nas he stalks through the multifarious culture; whose car is an\nundergraduate's for the asking;\nand who, unofficially, is a ready\ntouch for the price of a student\nencounter with the law.\nAs retirement time nears\nthe Glasgow-born warden will\nbe 65 in April\u2014he's considering\nsome offers of new jobs but\nplans first to get in some travel\n\u2014his main hobby\u2014around the\nMediterranean.\n\"I've got to do something or\nI'll go crazy,\" he says, \"though\nI'm not going to get tied down\nto a desk.\"\nSUPPORT CONGO REBELS\u2014These 10 (black) African nations have   banded   together   to\nsupport the Congo rebels, Washington officialdom reports. The group took form last\nJuly during the meeting ot the Organization for African Unity In Cairo.  Congo rebel\nstrength Is in the northeast.   Most arms aid flows In from Sudan and Tanzania.\nNational Park To Salute\n1859 Canada -U.S. Pig War\nBy ARCH MacKENZIE\nWASHINGTON (CP) - Congress has been asked to establish a national park commemorating the Canada - United\nStates Pig War of 1859 on the\nPacific boundary.\nThe only shot fired in anger\nkilled a Hudson's Bay Company porker, but the incident\ntouched off 12 years of armed\nhostility centering on just where\nthe border lay.\nDenmark Organizes UN\nPeace-Keeping Force\nCOPENHAGEN Reuters) -\nWhile the United Nations is\nnegotiating the problem of payment for peace missions to The\nCongo and Middle East, Denmark has started tb form a\nnational \"United Nations peace\nforce.\"\nDefence ministry officials estimate that it will cost the\nDanish taxpayer about' 10,000,-\n000 kroner ($1,500,000) a year to\nkeep the 929 men combat-ready.\nDenmark will pay when the\nforce is not active, and the\nUnited Nations will foot the bill\nwhen it is.\nThe units are designed to\nfunction independently, or to be\nincluded in a Scandinavian UN\nforce together with troops from\nFinland, Norway and Sweden.\nOther countries such as Canada and The Netherlands have\nearmarked regular units for UN\nduty, but the Scandinavian experiment is the first in which\nforces are raised for UN service.\nRecruiting among discharged\nnational military service trainees and regular army personnel\nbegan here in the autumn of\n1964. It will last more than a\nyear, as Danish defence officials\nplan a gradual build-up to the\nfull strength of 929 men.\nThe Danish unit will be part\nof   a   combined   Scandinavian\nforce of about 4,000 men\u2014two\nbattalions from Sweden, one\neach from Denmark, Norway\nand Finland, plus general staff,\ntransport control teams, and\nobservation teams made up of\npersonnel from all four countries.\nThere will also be a Danish\nsignals unit, a Swedish technical\ngroup, Danish ambulance and\nfirst aid staff, a Norwegian\nworkshops team and Danish\nmilitary police.\nDanish defence planners ex\npect members of the force to\nbe put on guard duties and\nsimilar tasks rather than all-out\nmechanized warfare if they are\ncalled to serve for the UN.\nBetter equipped than Danish\nregular army units, the UN\nforce will have mainly light\narms, machine-guns, hand grenades and rifles. Each company\nof the battalion will have three\narmored scout cars, and access\nto a pool of four armored personnel carriers for troop transport.\nIncome Tax\nTips\nHUBERT\n\"I believe that recipe Madge Conway gave you Btill\nhas some bugs in it\"\nA column designed for the\nworking taxpayer who Is not In\na position to employ the services of a professional accountant or visit an Income Tax\noffice.\nBy C. A. MILLER\nRetired Supervising Assessor,\nIncome Tax Department\nREFUND OF PENSION\nCONTRIBUTIONS\nWhen the taxpayer has reduced his income each year by the\namount withheld by his employer for pension purposes, he has\npaid no tax on these amounts.\nTherefore, if he leaves this employer and he receives a refund\nof the total amount paid into\nthe plan, and such amount has\nnot been paid into another plan,\nhe is taxable on the sum refunded to him.\nThis lump sum can be taxed\nunder two different methods,\nand the one most advantageous should be used. It can be\nadded directly into Income or\ntaxed under Section 36 of the\nIncome Tax Act. If taxed under\nthis section, it is the effective\nrate of tax paid over the last\nthree yesrs of employment that\nis used. To determine the tax\npayable on the refund, multiply\nthe total of the last three years\ntaxes before deductions by the\namount of the lump sum refund,\nthen divide the result by the\ntotal of the last three years net\nincome. This gives the exact tax\npayable on the pension refund.\nLeave the lump out of the income and add the tax as determined by the above calculation\nto your other tax payable, on the\nline indicated as \"Tax Adjustments.\"\nShould you not have copies of\nyour last three years returns\nadvise the income tax office\nwhere your last three years returns are held, of the amount of\nyour pension refund and ask\nthem to complete a TX15A for\nyou. When you receive this form\nattach it to your income tax return before you send in your tax\nreturn for the year.\nAny tax deduction on the lump\nsum refund should be added in\nwith the other tax deductions.\nFor a personal reply, enclose\na self - addressed, FIVE cent\nstamped envelope, plus 25c for\neach question to C. A. Miller,\nc\/o Daily News.\nQuestion 1. I retired at 65 and\ntook my pension in a lump sum\nrather than a small amount each\nyear. Is this taxable\nAnswer. YES. Section 36 may\nbe to your advantage in the tax\ncalculation.\nQuestion 1.1 was dismissed by\nmy employer and given a year's\nsalary in lieu of notice,, and I\nalso received a lump pension\ncontribution refund. Is the tax\non both of these amounts calculated the same way?\nAnswer. YES. Add them together and apply Section 36\nmethod of computing the tax.\nLloyd Meeds, Democratic\nmember of the House of Representatives from the state of\nWashington, moved the bill to\nestablish the Big War National\nHistorical Park on San Juan\nIsland, located northeast of the\nStrait of Juan de Fuca separating the U.S. from the British\nColumbia coast.\nMeeds recalled that American farmer Lyman A. Cutler,\non June 15, 1859, stepped from\nhis house and was enraged to\nsee a pig belonging to the Hudson's Bay Company back in his\npotato patch.\nWhen he shot it, the company threatened to take him to\nVictoria for an English trial\u2014\nB.C. being a domain of the\ncompany. A treaty of 1846 had\npronounced t h e international\nboundary to lie in mid-channel\nof the Strait of Juan de Fuca\u2014\nbut there were, in fact, at least\ntwo channels.\nThe pig's death set off long-\nsmouldering resentment, Meeds\nrecalled. The Americans called\nfor military help. Capt. George\nPicketts, later a figure in the\nCivil War, arrived July 26 and\nimmediately stamped the island\nas U.S. territory. A week later\nBritish warships unloaded 61\nmarines.\nThe situation cooled with the\narrival of more senior and\nstable heads\u2014Rear \u2022 Admiral\nRobert Lambert Baynes of Britain and American General Win-\nfield Scott.\nMeeds quotes the admiral as\nhaving rebuked those involved\nthusly: \"Tut tut. No, no. The\ndamned fools.\"\nGraduate Works\nTo Calculate\nSoil Moisture\nHALIFAX (CP)-A graduate\nstudent at Nova Scotia Technical College is working on a\nmethod of calculating soil\nmoisture that could be a boon\nto the construction industry.\nBruce Algee, working under\ntwo professors in the electrical\nengineering department, is using a converted radar set to\nstudy a process used in other\nparts of Canada to remove\nmoisture from muskeg, oil,\nlumber and other organic ma-\nterials.\nElectrical energy at microwave frequency can remove\nmoisture, and the difference in\nweight of a substance before\nand after the drying process\nreveals its moisture content.\nThe cost of determining soil\nmoisture, a necessary bit of information in many construction\njobs, could be cut sharply with\na proven method of measuring.\nB.C. Briefs\nVANCOUVER (CP) _ Max\nLyman, who was 101 on Sunday,\nhad no telegram from the Queen\nthis year\u2014that came last year.\nBut his two sons each sent him\na birthday card trimmed with\n101 shiny new quarters.\nFLEE FIRE\nVANCOUVER (CP) _ Six\npersons were forced to flee a\nWest End home early Sunday\nwhen a fire that was started by\na cigarette burned through two\nrooms of a house belonging to\nMr. and Mrs. Colin Bird.\nREVIEWS TIFF\nMeeds told the House of Representatives in a full review of\nthe historic tiff that peacemaking arrangements resulted\nin armed detachments facing\neach other at the western end\nof the long international boundary for 12 years, Including the\nyears of the Civil War. Then\nthe Treaty of Washington of\n1871 referred the matter to German Emperor Wilhelm I for\narbitration and he ruled for the\nU.S.\nAs envisaged after study, the\nPig War park would recreate\nthe English and American\ncamps, preparing for a tourist\ntraffic of more than 100,000 annually after a few years.\nMeeds told the House:\n\"In the 105 years since the\ndeath of that pig, vastly more\nserious problems have been\nraised between this nation and\nCanada. . . .\n\"The Pig War National historical Park will stand in the\nwesternmost end of the longest\nunguarded border in the world\nas a permanent reminder of international restraint and cooperation and of both countriM*\nnational maturity.\"\nToday\nIn History\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nMarch 2, 1965 , . ,\nDr. Vivien Fuchs, British\nexplorer and scientist, completed the first overland\ncrossing of the Antarctic\ncontinent seven years a jo\ntoday\u2014in 1958. This vast\narea received little attention\nfrom explorers until comparatively modern times.\nUntil the rise of the whaling\nindustry the continent had\nno political significance, but\ntoday a number of countries, principally the United\nStates, the Soviet Union,\nBritain, Australia and Argentina, have claimed sovereignty or interest over\nwide areas of the ice-locked\nland-mass.\n1877\u2014The Ontario cities\nof Brantford and Belleville\nwere incorporated.\n1918\u2014German troops occupied the Russian city of\nKiev during the First World\nWar.\nFirst World War\nFifty years ago today\u2014in\n1915 \u2014 the Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry were praised in the\nBritish House of Commons\nby Prime Minister Asquith;\nRussian troops Occupied\nKhopa, southwest of Batum\non the Black Sea.\nSecond World War\nTwenty-five year? ago today - in 1940 - Hitler presented the German ease for\ndomination of Central Europe to American Under-\nSecretary of State Sumner\nWelles; the German High\nCommand, reviewing the\nfirst six months of war,\nclaimed the destruction of\n532 Allied and neutral vessels and  \"small\" German\n NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUSSi, MARCH 2, 1965\u20145\nHoly Land, Iron Curtain Country Round Out Odyssey\nEgypt and the Middle East by Margaret Catley of Nelson, who is presently studying at\nUniversity of B.C. with Ihe express Intent of returning to the countries where she met\nthe real people in not in the usual tourist beats but In unusual and many times dangerous\nsurroundings which are the world to these inhabitants of the historic, many times poverty-\nstricken, always colorful sites.)\nBy JEAN BAKER\nAs Margaret had arrived In\nEgypt at the time of the Feast\nof Ramadan, so she was in Jerusalem during die feast of the\nPassover and on the Easter festival.\nShe, Dale Lewis of California\nand Ruth Breckenhauer of Kitchener, Ontario, with Egypt behind them, found in Israel another world of tensions and conflict, the divided world of the\nJew and the Arab.\nHitch-hiking, as always, they\ncrossed and re-crossed die invisible yet firmly drawn borders\nbetween Israel and Jordan to\nvisit such biblically familiar sites\nas Petra, an ancient city of Jordan, carved from rock, \"a rose-\nbed city half as old as time,\"\nin the Wadi Musa, or Valley of\nMoses, and Ma'an, south of the\nDead Sea; Sodom and Engeddi\non the sea's Israeli west shore,\nwhere they could look across to\nJordan; Jericho, Gerash and\nAmman, capital of Jordan; Ta-\nbaha, site of the Sermon on the\nMount; Safed, \"one of the hottest spots of the Israeli conflict\"; divided Jerusalem, Beer-\nsheeba and Haifa.\nThey found Israeli youth hostels were marvels of stainless\nsteel and glass. During their stay\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS 1390 ON THE DIAL\nPACIFIC STANDARD TIME\nTUESDAY, MARCH 2, 1965\nS:.8-Sign On\n6:00\u2014News\n6:10\u2014The Morning Program\n6:40\u2014Farm Fare\n645-Chapel In the Sky\n7:60\u2014News\n7:05-Wake Up Time\n7:30-News\n7:35\u2014Wake Up Time Continues\n8:00-News\n8:05-B.C. News and Weather\n8:15-Wake Up Time\n8:30-Preview Commentary\n8:35-Opening Markets\n8:39\u2014Wake Up Time Continues\nV.00-News\n9:10-Road and Weather Report\n9:15-The Archers\nt:30-Alan's A.M Spot\n9:59-Time Signal\n10:0O-News\n10:05-Lucky Seven Contest\n10:10-Music FiU\n10:15-Open Line\n11:00\u2014News\n11.-05\u2014Book Mark\n11:18\u2014Morning Melodies\n11:40-Women's World\n12:00\u2014Maurice Pearson Show\n12:15-SportsNews\n12:25-News\n12:30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Spotlight on Sports\n1:00\u2014Stories With John Drainie\n1:15-What's on Tapp\n1:45\u2014Sacred Heart Program\n2:00-B.C. School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014News\n2:33-Trans Canada Matinee\n3:30-To Market With Music\n4:00\u2014News\n4:03\u2014Canadian Roundup\n4:10-Sports Spotlight\n4:15\u2014Pops Parade\n5: oo-News\n5:05\u2014The Rolling Home Show\n5:30-Closing Stock Market\nReport\n5:35\u2014Closing Markets\n5:40\u2014Today's Editorial\n5:45\u2014Business Barometer\n5:55\u2014Spotlight on Sports.\n6:00\u2014Strikes and Spares\n6:05-CKLN National News\n6:10-Country Time\n6:30\u2014Canadian Curling\nChampionships\n700\u2014News and Reports\n7:20\u2014Speaking Personally\n7:30\u2014Music for Listening\n9:00\u2014Christian Frontiers\n9:30\u2014Choirs in Concert\nlOiOO-News\n10:10\u2014B.C. News and Weather\n10:15\u2014Chapel in the Sky\n10:30-The Music Scene\n11:00\u2014News\n11:03\u2014Tuesday Show\n12:00\u2014News\n12:02\u2014Sign Off\nCBC PROGRAMS\nWEDNESDAY, MARCH 3, 1965\n4:03\u2014Canadian Roundup\n4:10-Tempo - Part II\n4:30\u2014Countdown\n5:00\u2014Jazz 'n' Things\n5:30\u2014News\n5:40-Today's Editorial\n5:45\u2014Business Barometer\n5:50-Sports Desk\n6:00\u2014Bob Goulet Show\n6:10\u2014Tempo\n6:30\u2014Music in G\n7:00\u2014News and Parliament Hill\n7:20\u2014Speaking Personally\n7:30\u2014Radio International\n6:20\u2014Canadian Curling\nChampionships\n8:00-Midweek Theatre\n9:00\u2014CBC Vancouver Chamber\nOrchestra\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014ABC of the Universe\n10:30\u2014Sound of the Sixties\n11:00\u2014New Records\n12:00\u2014News\n12:05\u2014After Hours\n1:00-News\n6:00\u2014News\n6:05\u2014The Morning Program\n8:00\u2014News\n8:35\u2014Max Ferguson Show\n9:00\u2014News and Reports\n9:10\u2014Interlude\n9:15\u2014The Archers\n9:30\u2014Pacific Express\n9:59\u2014Time Signal\n10:0O-Morning Visit\n10:10\u2014For Consumers\n10:15-University of the Air\n10:45\u2014Playroom\nU:00-Off the Record\n12:00\u2014Tennessee Ernie Ford\n12:15\u2014News and Weather\n12:25\u2014Spotlight on Sports\n12:30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n12:55-Flve-to-One\nl:00-Stories With John Drainie\n1:15-The Tommy Hunter Show\n1:45\u2014Program Resume\n2:00\u2014B.C. School Broadcast\n9 * SO\u2014News\n2:33\u2014Trans Canada Matinee\nJ:S0-Tempo - Part I\n4:00\u2014News\nTELEVISION  FOR  TODAY\nPACIFIC STANDARD TIME\nKREM-TV - Channel .\n6:30-Woody Woodpecker\n7:00-Sea Hunt\n7:30-Combat*\n8:30\u2014McHale's Navy*\n9:00\u2014Tycoon*\t\n9:30\u2014Peyton Place'\n10:00-Fugitive*\nll:00-Nlghtbeat\n11:30\u2014\"The Four Poster\"\nKXLY TV - Channel <\n7:00-The Rifleman\n7:80-Slattery's People (L)\n8:30\u2014The Red Skelton Show (L)\n9:30-Petticoat Junction <L>\n10:00\u2014The Doctors and the\nNurses (L)\n11:00-11 o'Clock News\n11:30\u2014Big Four Movie\nKBQ-TV - Channel (\n7:00\u2014Bold Journey\n7:30-Mr. Novak\u00bb\n8:30-HullabaHoo*\n\u00bb:30-Have Gun, Will Travel'\n10:00\u2014Bell Telephone Hour* (C)\n11:00\u2014News and Weather\nll:30-Tonlght With Carson* (C)\nCBC-TV - Nelson, Channel I; Trail, Channel 11\n3:00-Moment of Truth\n3:30-Take Thirty\n4:00-As the World Turns\n4:30\u2014Razzle Dazzle\n5:00-Fireball XL-5\n5:30\u2014Music Hop\n6:00-Feature Film: \"Make\nMine a Million\"\n7:30\u2014Reach for the Top\n8:00\u2014Jack Benny Program\n8:30\u2014Danny Kaye Show\n9:30\u2014Front Page Challenge\n10:00\u2014CBC Newsmagazine\n10:30\u2014Eye Opener\n11:00-News\n11:14\u2014Viewpoint\t\nCJLH-TV - Channel 7, Lethbridge\nMOUNTAIN STANDARD TIME\n9:45\u2014Test Pattern\n10:00-Western Schools\n10:30\u2014Across Csnada\n11:00\u2014Friendly Giant\nll:13-Chez Helene\n11:30\u2014Butternut Square\n11:50-CBC News\n12:00-Farm Highlights\n12:15\u2014Midday-Report\n12:25\u2014Pastor's Study\n12:30-African Patrol\nl:00-Route 68\n2:00-Loretta Young\n2:30-Woman's World\n3:00-Moment of Truth\n3:30-Take Thirty\nWEDNESDAY\n4:00\u2014As the World Turns\n4:30\u2014Razzle Dazzle\n5:00\u2014Forest Rangers\n5:30\u2014Lawman\n6:00\u2014Nation's Business\n8:15-Weather, News\n6:30\u2014Rawhide\n7:30-Mr. Ed\n8:00\u2014Red River Jamboree\n8:30\u2014Perry Mason\n9:30-Festival\n10:30-Traffic Safety\nU:00-CBC News\nU:15-Night Final\nll:20-Route 66\nin Israel-Jordan, still sticking to\ntheir budget of two dollars a\nday, they took only three days\noff from exploring this most\nfierce, cruel country, with its\nastonishingly arable tracts of\nland lige oases varying with barren hills, to wash their clothes\nand take a breather.\nTheir travels took them to the\nDead Sea, where, floating on\ntheir backs in the buoyant water,\nthey contemplated whole islands\nof salt in the bowl of the lowest\nspot on earth, 1290 feet below\nsea level. The ghastly surroundings looked like some recently\ncooled asteroid.\nThey got a ride from Amman\nto Ma'an with a Jordanian army\nofficer (retired) who also offered\nthem bananas, bread and goat's\nmilk cheese. They hitch-hiked\nfrom there to the Wadi Musa,\nor Valley of Moses, which is\nfed by a stream, said to be the\nsupply tapped by Moses.\nANCIENT PETRA\nTheir destination was Petra.\nBy donkey and on foot, they entered a cleft in the cliffs of primaeval mountains in which Petra is located. Through this\ncrack, immensely high in places\nand narrow, they picked their\nway until, towards the end \"a\nthing of indescribable beauty, a\npale pink temple\".\nCarved from the face of the\nsandstone, this edifice was believed to be a treasury of an\nancient Nubian city. A doorway\n30 feet high between tall pillars\nleads into ruins within.\n\"Lots of Arabs live In there,\nsupplied by the Save the Children Fund,\" said Margaret.\nThey walked past the temple into\nthe city, all carved Irom the\nrock, amphitheatre, temples,\ntombs, theatres and cobblestone\n\"via\". The only accommodation\nbeing a luxury hotel in this remote spot, they chose to sleep\nin the museum. The next morning Margaret climbed up to see\na monastery on a plateau above\nthe city, ochre yellow in color.\nInvited to dinner by a school\nteacher en route back to Israel,\nthe invitation quickly came to\nan end when Margaret mentioned her destination. The teacher\nwas outraged. She had a map\non the wall, with Palestine colored red (\"occupied Palestine\"),\nand she retorted, \"In four years\nwe are going to war to win what\nis rightfully ours.\"\nAs Margaret moved about in\nIsrael, she passed refugee camps\n\"that people escape into, not out\nof, mainly Palestinian Arabs.\"\nShe found that in Israel these\npeople lack little except freedom\nof movement.\nMISS M. CATLEY\nThey took a side trip, while\nat Jericho, to John the Baptist's\nbirthplace, and where he baptized. \"It looks very much like\nSalmo River,\" Margaret noted.\nKIBBUTZ\nThey visited a Jewish university and a Kibutz (Im), completely self-sustaining Israeli communities of from 50 to 350 persons, varying in size and opulence, where every need Is supplied for the residents of the\ncollective unit. Margaret found\nthis the most interesting part\nof Israel. Children are taken\naway from their parents at four\nmonths of age and raised in nurseries. They live with the same\nage group until they are grown,\nat the same time maintaining\nclose family ties. They go to\nschool four hours a day to learn\nHebrew and at the age of 15 or\n16 go into military training. The\ncountry is armed to the teeth,\nMargaret noticed. Girls in uniform with bayonets were a common sight. The country has an\nair of affluency, with good buildings and good supply of munitions, she thought. She found the\nArab army on manoeuvres \"almost too funny to watch.\"\nOne of the most intriguing incidents in this biblical setting\nwas the North American trio's\nexperience with hashliish. Margaret's story of going out to a\ntent in the middle of the Negev\ndesert sounds like something\nfrom Arabian Nights.\nCurious as to the appeal of\nhashhish, they found that to get\nsome to smoke one had to go\nthrough a series of melodramatic\nmeetings with grubby hawkers\nin an atmosphere of secrecy.\nThey made contact with a fierce-\nlooking native who took them\nout to the desert from Beer-\nsheeba, where they were to be\nguests of a sheik.\nTENT IN DESERT\nLooking more sophisticated\nthan they felt, Dale, Ruth, Dave,\na boy from New York they had\nmet during their tr\u00bbv\u00ab*-, ,-n\/*\nMargaret were invited into a\nthree-roomed tent. Tha fept\nwas left open and a fire was\nburning in the middle of the\nmain room. Here, they reclined\nDAILY  CROSSWORD\n2. Uncommon\n3. Beige\n4. Firmament\n5. Man's\nnickname\n\u00ab. Windy\n7. Descry\n9. Titanium:\nsym.    ,\n10. Lure\n11. Checked\n12. In the\nknow: si\n15. Cutting\ntool\n18. Exclamation of\ndisgust\n19. Bird's\nbeak\n20. Am.\nstatesman\n21. Escape:\nat\n22. By\nway\not\nS3. Continent\n24. Slacken\n25. Girl's\nnickname\nST. A\nlever\n29. Dirt\n80. Oil of\nrose\npetals\nSI. Call to\nattract\nattention\nS3. Young girl\n34. Grate\n-Bill-   -1-1-1\nHamas.-nasi-\nlaaa tmn laara\nUHi__]      tstiau\nHlrJQHH   BfcMUb]\n3HD.HBUI-   BEL-l\naGiinBB bii-imaH\nbbei aisa Haa\nBI.B1HHHHI3HI\nI.iter.t.y'1 Anwar\n85. One of the\nGreat\nLakes\n87. From:\nprefix\n88. Through!\nprefix\n40. Hectare:\nabbr.\n(Programs subject to change by stations without notice.)\nACROSS\n1. Foretell\n8, Lacking\nbrightness\n12. Come\nquickly)\n13. Backbone\n14. Ostrichlike bird\n15. Pig pen\n16. Brazilian\npalm\n17. Hebrew\nletter\n18. Remunerate\n19. Storage\narea\n20. Cat's nail\n22.Moral\nfailing\n23. Mohammedan deity\n25. Heaped\n26. Froth\n27. Resound,\nas a bell\n28. Man's\nname\n29. Unit of\nwork\n30. Exclamation\n82. Part of\n\"to be\"\n83. Place\n34. A plexus\n86.\t\nRapids,\nIowa\n88. Social\ngathering\n39. Insensibility\n41. Keener\nDOWN\n-.Long,\nhandsome\nfeather **mmm _-a\nDAILY CRmOQUOTE \u2014 Here's how to work it:\nAXIDLBAAXR\nis   LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for snother. In this sample A Is used\nfor the three L's, X for tha two O's, etc Single letter*, apos-\ntrophtes, the length and formation of the words are all hints.\nBach day the code letters axe different.\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nCUT    MPQUKYAM    OKDBC    JTV    OUST\nNKTDM    JAY   EYAPYM.\u2014 O J.QHVU\nYesterday's Cryptoquote: THE SKY IS THE DAILY BREAD\nOF THB EYES.\u2014RALPH WALDO EMERSON\n(0 IMS, King restores Sync-taita, l__*\n1\ni\n..\nS\n4\n5\n6\n7\nf*\n'\u00bb\nf\/<\n^\n.\n\u00bb\nIO\nIt\nfa\n1}\n14\n^\nIS\n^\nI.\n17\n$<\n^\nIS\n'^\nl\u00bb\nVA\n%\nin\n-1\n^\n11\na\n2*\n%\nts\nu>\n%\ntl\n%\n\"\/(\n..\nft\nV)\nf<\nty\n10\nsi\nn\n%\nli\nV\/<\n14\nss\nV,\n.7\n^A\nss\n\u00bb\n40\n1\nYA\nb\n'ft\n41\n%\nCleopatra-style\" on mattress\nand bed roll, leaning one arm\non the roll in accepted fashion.\nThe price of hashhish was\nabout three dollars for enough\nfor three cigarettes, but as they\nwere guests they did not have\nto pay. The hashhish itself is\n\"the same color and consistency\nas brown sugar,\" recalled Margaret. They unrolled their cigarettes and mixed tbe stuff with\nup again.\n\"The motor nerves in your\nface go first, then you feel a\ncushion of air on top of your\nscalp. You find yourself concentrating intently on one object \u2014\nmine was a caterpillar,\" are\nMargaret's recollections of the\nepisode.\nThe Arabs, Margaret discovered, do not smoke hashhish, as\nit is against their religion. They\nonly trade in it. They sat at the\nhead of the fire with the sheik\nas honored guests. The sheik\ntook them into another room and\nintroduced them to his wife, who\nhas never seen another man in\nthe five years since their marriage. She was approximately 21\nor 22 years of age. She was nursing her children when the visitors came in \u2014 and her room\nwas ornamented with animal\nskins and rugs. They stayed with\nher for a few minutes, and had\ntoffee, tea and peanuts. The tea\nIncreased the effects of the hashhish, Margaret found.\nSAFFRON WITH MUTTON\nThen came a real Arab meal,\nnative style. First a freshly killed lamb was brought In \u2014 an\nhour later the meal appeared,\nA tub 2V. feet in diameter was\nfilled with yellow saffron rice\nwith stewed mutton on top. Eating was accomplished with one\nhand held behind the back, using the fingers of the right hand\nfor eating. Goat's milk was pass-\n| ed around. What was left was\npassed to the five other men\nand older boys and then finally,\nwhat was left of that, to the\nnative women.\nFrom the adobe mud huts of\nthe Jericho area, Margaret and\ncompany descended upon Jerusalem. They were in time to see\nthe Palm Sunday parade, with\npilgrims from all over the globe.\nThey ate Motza bread and\nkosher food on the Passover festival. At Easter they experienced\na minor earthquake at the Man-\ndelbaum gates, crossover point\nbetween the Israeli and Arab\nworld, and went through die customs and a sort of no-man's-\nland into the orthodox section\nof Jerusalem, where it is still\npossible to be stoned for infractions of the Sabbath (Friday\nnight to Saturday evening). Saturday night is the big night after\n-undown, she found \u2014 \"everything goes like mad.\"\nWALLED CITY\nThey felt that Jerusalem was\na '\"fantastic city\" with its eight\ngates in the surrounding wall\nand \"everything from soup to\nnuts\" offered for sale in the\nshadowed bazaars \u2014 steel work,\nfabrics, swords, food, buttons,\nThey stayed at a hotel inside\nthe Damascus gate for 40 cents\na night in black market currency. They' were overlooking\nthe bazaar, and there were\n\"bells like you've never heard.\"\nThey visited the sites of biblical\nevents that are the usual goals\nof tourists and pilgrims and\nwere suitably impressed. But the\noffbeat and throbbing life of the\nbig city still caught their attention. There were great youth hostels with all the conveniences,\nsponsored by a wealthy American woman.\nFrom Jerusalem their travels\ntook them to Et Tabghah, north\nof Tiberias, where Jesus gave his\nsermon on the mount and stayed\nat a modern youth hostel on the\nshores of the Sea of Galilee. As\nthey sat on the only mile of the\nIsraeli shore, searchlights were\nturned on and a boat without\nlights was seen on the water,\nmoving down the lake. There\nwere four shots, the lights went\nout and they heard no more.\n\"Such a contrast with biblical\ntimes.\"\nThey headed for Haifa, their\nmailing address, and here Dale\nleft for Istanbul. The army had\ncaught up to him and he was\nto return to the U.S.\nBefore leaving Israel, they\nmanaged a youth hostel for two\nweeks, taking over for the owner, a former intelligence officer\nin the British and Arab armies,\nTheir meat was brought to the\ndoor intact and they would cut\noff as much as they needed.\nThere were many jackals\naround.\n\"Haifa is the loveliest city in\nIsrael,\" Margaret remarked,\n\"with its white buildings against\nthe blue sea.\" She was impressed by the temple of the B'Hai\nfaith in Israel, the world centre,\nwith its pure gold leaf ornamentation on top.\nCANADIAN, AHOY!\nHere, they found a Canadian\ndestroyer, the St. Laurent, in the\nharbor and went aboard, to find\nthat the world is a small place\n\u2014 one of the seamen was Roy\nBurton, the son of Mr. and Mrs.\nL. R. Burton, formerly of Nelson and now of Salmo, and Bart\nBatchelor, also of Nelson.\nLebanon was \"very neat, very\ngreen and very American,\" with\nall modern, western food products. \"We bought jars of peanut\nbutter, and we ate three times\navday.\"\nThey visited the site of the\ncedars of Lebanon, but were\nthwarted by a heavy fog.\nDamascus appeared to Margaret to be almost completely\nslums, but with a fabulous bazaar, She bought carved boxes\nand gold brocade.\nThere seems to be a feeling\nof unity between Syria and\nEgypt, she remarks. There was\na ten o'clock curfew observed\nin Damascus. They met six students they had come across previously in Egypt and Lebanon.\nMargaret's next destination\nwas Cyprus. She and Ruth haunted the harbor and managed to\nget a cheap ride across to the\nisland.      ,\nCYPRUS AND GREECE\nAmong Margaret's slides is\none showing her on the walkway\nbetween the Greek and Turkish\nsections of Cyprus\n\"We had got into the Turkish\nquarter quite by accident,\" she\nexplained, and she was walking\nalong the ramp when one of her\nfriends took the picture. She recalls emptying her purse, looking for some suddenly needed\narticle, while poised between\ntwo rows of gun barrels, one on\neither side of the ramp. She\nfound the English portion of Cyprus \"very English.\"\nAfter a visit to Northern\nGreece, the still curious, enthusiastic travellers made their next\ndestination the hard-to-penetrate\ncountry of Bulgaria, behind the\nIron Curtain, a particularly ambitious objective Since they planned to visit a communist centre.\nThe hitchhikers seemed to\nstrike each country during a .a-\ntional holiday. So It was when\nthey arrived in Athens. It was\nthe Greek Easter time. There\nwas no place to stay and no\nmeat available. The travlelers\nhad to stay up all night since\nthe youth hostel was closed, hit\nthey experienced the Greek\nEaster in all its glory.\nThe chief priest stood on top\nof the mountain and lit a candle.\nFrom this, candles held by pilgrims lining the path to the top\nwere lit all the way down the\nline. These devout Greeks then\ncame down the path to the city\nand lit all the candles of their\ncompatriots.\n\"This represents Christ spread\nthroughout the whole world,\"\nMargaret discovered. \"Then\nthere were fireworks and the\nwhole place came alive.\"\nShe heard Faust while in\nGreece at the ancient theatre\nHeroditus Atticus, with the moonlight pouring through the casements, artistic lighting effects\nand wonderful ballet.\nThe houses in Athens seemed\nto her to \"just grow,\" fringed\nby a jumble of rickety staircases, plants and many cats.\n\"Athens is very white,\" she\nremarks. At the temple of Zeus\nshe had the feeling of being the\nfirst and only person there.\n*They sailed from Athens In a\nsmall boat to the Isle of Nikinos,\nwith its \"extremely white houses\nwhich are whitewashed three or\nfour times a year. Six men paint\nthe whole island, which has 365\nByzantine churches, one-roomed\nchapels and three windmills.\"\nThey visited the island of De-\nlos, which holds the house of\nCleopatra and the temple of\nDiana. They visited a monastry\nwith exquisite gold mosaics, the\ntemple of Delphi (it was just as\nif we'd discovered it ourselves)\nand the site of the first Olympics,\nwhere Margaret joined the\nspirits of the early athletes and\nran around the stadium.\nThe Corinth Canal held them\nspellbound. \"When you look\n\"P. you can barely see the\nSalmo Party Line\nsky,\" she recalls of the six-\nmile-long cut, which Is only\none boat-width across and was\nhand-cut from limestone by\nArab prisoners under the Ottomans,\nBefore leaving Greece, the adventurers were taken through\nthe summer palace of the king\nand queen of Greece by the\nhousekeeper.\nTurkey was their next stop.\nArriving at Istanbul late in the\nevening, they found the city\nrather forbidding, \"We were\nsurrounded by very dirty little\nnatives and could find no one\nto speak English, There were no\nlights.\"\nAccommodation was found,\nfinally, but eating places were\ndeserted. The next day, when\nthey did find a cafe, they had\na hard time getting served because women are not allowed\nwith the men, who stopped eating while Margaret and Ruth\nwere in the restaurant. They\nwere fascinated by the mosques,\nparticularly the blue mosque and\na bridge built over about eight\ncafes; men smoking \"hubbly,\nbubbly pipes - with which the\nsmoke goes through water. They\nhad arrived In Istanbul on Turkish Independence Day.\nMargaret visited southern\nGreece and northern Greece on\ntwo different occasions.\nThey went through extensive\nnegotiations for permission to\nenter the country and at two\no'clock one morning found themselves on a long concrete platform behind the Iron Curtain,\nheaded for a communist youth\ncamp, having convinced the customs officials of their sincere\ninterest in the functioning of\ncommunism.\nHiey slept in the station in a\nroom with red velvet flowers for\ndecoration. The stationmaster\nbrought them each a blanket.\nThey had no money for food the\nnext day, so they went to the\nbank to get their money exchanged. Eventually they arrived at the top communist youth\ncamp where, by assuming the\nproper attitude, they were allowed to stay for four days.\nMargaret considers the young\npeople pampered; \"they keep\nthem'happy so there will be no\nrevolts.\"\nRuth and Margaret were\nadopted by the East German\nyouth group.\nWhen they left the camp, they\nstill had a week remaining on\ntheir permits to stay in Bulgaria.\nThey had found in their camp\ndiscussions great dissension in\nthe Soviet bloc, with Poles'\nagainst Germans, against Czechoslovakia, against East Germany, against Hungary.\n\"The streets in Bulgaria are\nso clean it's uncomfortable,\"\nMargaret recalls. \"Women who\nkeep the streets in this condition are exalted because they're\nworkers.\"\nThey found it difficult to communicate with the people. Everything was just as it had been\nafter the war, when the country\nwas cut off from communications.\nThis Is not the end ol Margaret's odyssey. She had some\nexciting times as she went on\nthrough Yugoslavia, Austria,\nSwitzerland and Germany and\nover to England before returning, after 20 months, to her western world, but the part recorded\nhere is what impressed her most\nand inspired her to continue her\nstudies so she could have a hand\nIn some of the problems with\nwhich the people of so many\nMiddle East countries are faced,\nsocially and politically. In her\nmemories of.that unique adventure, Egypt and the Middle East\nremain foremost.\nHints From Heloise\nBy HELOISE CRUSE\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Gongs\nand drums rang through Vancouver's Chinatown Sunday as\nthe Year of the Serpent was\ngreeted with a Chinese New\nYear parade. More than 5,000\npeople crowded into Chinatown\nto watch the serpent parade,\npostponed to Sunday to coincide\nwith the start of Vancouver's\nSpring Festival. Chinese New\nYear actually arrived some\nweeks ago.\nBy ALMA BURTON\nSALMO - We'll kick the column off this week by gratefully\nacknowledging all those fine\npeople who have phoned in bits\nof news or just phoned to say\nhow pleased they are to know\nthat a press representative is ln\naction in this area. If the grapevine continues to grow, yours\ntruly will need roller skates as\nwell as a vehicle to keep up with\ncommunity activities. A rapid\ncalculation roughly totals 27 different lodges, clubs and organizations. Each of these has at\nleast one and sometimes two\nmeetings a month. Hmmm, let's\nsee, 24 working days divided by\n27, plus Interviews, multiplied by\n\"hot news\", add a few every\nday happenings, equals... just\nhand this in to the mathematician.\n* *  *\nMr. and Mrs. W. J. Didier of\nVancouver are guests of Mr. and\nMrs. James Fair. Mrs. Didier is\nthe former Valerie Fair. The\nnewlyweds have recently returned from a honeymoon in Hawaii.\n\u00ab  *  *\nMr. and Mrs. Chris Hanson re-\ncently visited Cranbrook, where\nthey were guests of Mr. and\nMrs. D. W. Dow. Mrs. Hanson\nand Mrs. Dow are sisters.\n* \u2022  *\nWatch where you're stepping\nthese slick days. One ladyfair\nskidded to a heap on the sidewalk. Result: two cracked ribs\nand bruised dignity.\n* \u2022  *\nMiss Jennifer John spent a\nweekend in Vancouver visiting\nbrother Tom and sister Marilyn,\nboth of whom are students at\nUBC.\n* \u2022  *\nSorry to report that Nells West\nis a patient in Trail-Tadanac\nHospital. Mr. West teaches at\nsecondary school. Students snd\nfriends wish him a rapid recovery.\n* *  *\nMrs. James Dodd is in Vancouver to attend the wedding\nof her niece, Miss Gerry Dodds,\nwho is the daughter of Tilly\nDodds and the late Jack Dodds,\nformerly of Salmo. Mrs. Dodds\nwill be guest of her son-in-law\nand daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Hamilton. While at the\ncoast she will also visit her son\nRobert Dodds.\n* \u2022  .\nIt was convenient to be able to\npick up vehicle licence plates at\nthe village office. Otherwise it\nmeant a big rush to Nelson or\nTrail to keep the hotrod on the\nhighway. There are 891 people\nin Salmo and 2500 to 3000 in area\nbordering Salmo-Remac, Ymir\nand Ross Spur. Amazing, Isn't\nit? I'm sure there are twice that\nmany cars.\nSalmo only has about 100 dogs.\nThey are wearing their new licence plates. Guess we'd better\nget ours.\n\u2022 \u2022 t\nMrs. E. Hendriksen was honored guest at a \"going away\"\nparty at the home of Mrs. P. H.\nStensrud. Fourteen ladies gathered to bid their friend adieu\nand presented her with a gift\not linen. Contests were enjoyed\nas entertainment. The winners\nwere Mrs. Bruno Esposito, Mrs.\nFloyd Fleming, Mrs. G. Water-\nstreet and Mrs. B. Zakerdonski.\nMrs. Hendriksen was an active\nmember of Catholic Women's\nLeague. The couple departed for\nEndako during the weekend.\n\u2022 .  .\nThe Pentecostal Women's Missionary Council annually adopts\na foreign missionary family and\nprepares and ships a large package of clothing and household\narticles for the family's particular needs. Many of the items\nare made by the nimble fingers\nof WMC members. A year-round\nproject is the making of wall\nmottos.\nSpring will see the continuation of building and improving\nSunday School rooms. The council will provide paint for redecorating the manse.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nWord has been received that\nLynn Blackey of Princeton, formerly of Salmo, has won her\nGold Cord, the highest award a\nGirl Guide can earn. She sat for\nher Be Prepared challenge at\nMerritt and her Instructor said\nshe surpassed all expectations.\nLynne extends her thanks to all\nthose here who assisted in her\nearlier training and a special\nword of appreciation to Guide\nCaptain Mrs. P. Miller.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u00bb\nIt's time to put this column\nto bed for another week. Once\nagain, many thanks for the community cooperation in assisting\nme to keep Salmo tb the fore\nwith news galore.\nDear Heloise:\nI thought perhaps your readers\nmight be interested in hearing\nabout a handy helper I ran\nacross recently ln the form of\na one-inch putty knife.\nI cannot begin to explain the\nmany ways I have pressed this\ntool into service lately.\nIt's the perfect size for removing fudge squares, brownie,\nor cake squares from the pan\n... not to mention scraping\ncandy drippings from cabinets\nand table tops after a candy-\nmaking spree)\nAnd last night it scraped the\nmeat loaf pan beautifully and\nfit so nicely into the corners of\nthe pan.\nI bought another one of these\nhandy gadgets to remove the\ndark residue from the cracks\naround the edge oi my counter\ntop range and I have also used\nit to remove gum and raisins\nfrom the linoleum.\nThis little knife has no sharp\nedge, just a straight firm edge\nwhich scrapes beautifully without scratching, and it only costs\nabout 15 cents.\nI wonder how I ever did without it? E. W. Carbine.\nDear Heloise:\nI read in one of your columns\nabout dipping bacon in flour before frying to prevent spatters.\nThis is terrific, and really works.\nIt gives the bacon a different\nflavor, and the drippings are\nthicker and very good for making gravy.\nMy little experiment is also\nin the bacon family. Broil your\nbacon, and just before serving,\nbrush on bar-b-que sauce. Very\ntasty! Goes very well for patio\nbreakfasts and campers, too.\nEunice Treadway.\n\u2022  \u00ab \u00bb\nDear Heloise:\nHere is a hint to knitters:\nfor two strands of yarn, put the\nstrands through an empty spool,\nbefore casting on your needle.\nYou will have no more tangles\nor twists. It really works.\nBernice.\n\u2022 \u00ab \u00bb\nDear Heloise:\nBeing a working girl who also\nhas to maintain a home, I think\nyour column is priceless.\nThis is a simple hint, but one\nI have enjoyed a lot.\nWhenever I get a stack of ironing (and who doesn't?), I put\neverything to be ironed ln a\nlarge hamper with a lid. In this,\nI put a couple of unwrapped\nbars of my favorite soap.\nWhen I get' the time to Iron,\neverything comes out fresh and\nclean-smelling.   - L. H.\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nNow, who in this wide, wide\nworld would ever think of putting a bar of scented soap in\nwith their Ironing? We have\noften had complaints from\nmothers who have let Ironing\nstack up that it has an odor.\nWow! This is a hot idea.\nRemember, too, that the soap\nis getting hard, and the harder\na bar of soap gets, the longer it\nlasts when you begin to use lt.\nHeloise.\nDear Heloise:\nThe following method is a\ngood way to clean small-neck\nbud vases that have stubborn\nIf your knitting pattern calls I eatable.\nFill the container one-fourth\nfull of low-sudsing detergent solution put in a well-crushed egg\nshell and shake vigorously. The\nshell should be crushed finely\nenough to be poured out easily.\nI Elmer Egashira.\n\u2022 \u2022 \u00ab\nDear Heloise:\nWhen my raisins become dry\nand hard I put them in a bowl\nand pour boiling water over\nthem and let them set a while.\nThey soon become firm and\nplump again. Just pour off the\nwater and let them drain. Quite\nKay Kelly.\nSpring\nHATS\nSee\nFASHIONS\nFor Hats In Smart Sti-aws and Flowers\n$4.95 to $8.95\nWonderful Selection of\nSpring Coats, Suits and Dresses\nSixes 7 to 24}\n449 Baker St.    Nelson     Ph. 352-3833\n*\u00bb*\u25a0*.\n 6\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUES., MARCH 2, 1965\nRusnell, Lenardon, Peacosh Form Western\nInternational Hockey League All-Star Line\nSETH MARTIN\nBUD ANDREWS , TOM HODGES\nfirst string choices for WIHL All-Stars\nSickness, Injury Plague\nBaseball Spring Training\nBy The Associated Press\nBrooks Robinson, the American League's Most Valuable\nPlayer last year, already is hot\nthis year.\nExcept this time Baltimore\nOrioles hope he cools off\nquickly.\nRobinson, who won the\nleague's runs batted in title in\n1964, was in bed during the\nweekend with flu and a temperature ranging up to 104 degrees.\nThe slugging third baseman\nwas stricken during the opening\nround of the baseball players'\ngolf tournament Friday.\nRobinson, at his spring training residence near Miami, hopes\nhe can join his team-mates Wednesday when drills for the full\nsquad get under way.\nRobinson, 27, was the prime\nforce behind the Orioles' pennant drive last year, a drive\nthat fell just two games short.\nHe batted .317, drove in 118 runs\nand slammed 28 homers. He\nalso led regular third basemen\nwith a .972 fielding average.\nRobinson isn't the only sick\nstar. Roberto Clemente, the National League's batting champion, also has the flu and still\nis at his home in Puerto Rico.\nPittsburgh Pirates, who open\nworkouts today, still have not\nreceived a signed 1965 contract\nfrom the 30 \u2022 year - old right\nfielder, who hit .339 last season\nfor his second batting crown.\nBROKEN NOSES\nBroken noses were running\neven with the flu as far as major leaguers were concerned.\nOutfielder Willie Davis reported to Los Angeles Dodgers\nSunday with a broken nose suffered in a swimming pool mishap. The same day, rookie second baseman Gordon Lund of\nCleveland Indians was struck\nby a pitch from Dick Orsagh\nand suffered a broken nose and\na cheekbone fracture.\nLund is expected to be sidelined at least two weeks, but\nDavis was able to work out with\nthe Dodgers.\nLowering his sights this season is veteran Warren Spahn.\nHe doesn't expect to win 20 or\nmore games for the 14th time\nand says he'll be content with\n15 victories.\nTwo reasons behind his thinking-\nHe now is with New York\nMets and also is recuperating\nfrom his worst year in baseball.\nSpahn, 43, announced his goal\nSunday after signing his 1965\ncontract He took a cut of about\n10 per cent from his $80,000 sal.\nary last year\nTaking a less modest stance\nis slugger Dick Stuart, who\nthinks PhUadelphia Phillies\nmade a terrific deal \"when they\nacquired him from Boston Red\nSox in exchange for southpaw\npitcher Dennis Bennett last fall.\n\"Any time you can get an established home run hitter in exchange for a 500 pitcher, you've\nmade yourself a terrific deal,\"\nsaid the big first baseman.\nIn two years in a Red Sox\nuniform, Stuart hammered 75\nhome runs and drove in 232\nruns. As for the future, he.says:\n\"I expect to be one of the top\nhome run and runs batted in\nmen in the National League this\nyear.\"\nNelson Maple Leaf players were conspicuously\nabsent from the Western International Hockey League\nAll-Star teams picked by the sportswriters in the five\nWIHL centres.\nThe fourth-place Trail Smoke Eaters dominated\nthe selections, placing four members of the club on the\ntwo teams, Dave Rusnell, Norm Lenardon, George\nFerguson and Larry McLaren.\nKimberley Dynamiters, league-leaders in regular\nseason play, placed their entire \"Nitro Line,\" Kenny\nMcTeer, Walt Peacosh and Les Lilley on the two strings.\nThe Rossland Warriors also were given the nod\nfor three players on the club in Seth Martin, Billy Martin\nand Bud Andrews.\nSpokane lets' Dave Cox and Tom Hodges were\nvoted as American repres-\nentatives on the squads.\nNetminder Martin was a unanimous choice for the goaltending\nBy JOHN SHORT\nSASKATOON (CP) - Terry\nBraunstein of Winnipeg broke\nout for two big ends Monday-\nnight to lead his Manitoba rink\nto an 11-5 triumph over Harold\nWorth and Saskatchewan's representatives from Delisle in the\nsecond round of the 1965 Canadian curling championship.\nBraunstein, posting his second victory, scored four in the\nninth to break up a 4-3 game\nBILLY MARTIN\nleft wing, second team\n\"The CHANCE YOU'VE BEEN  WAITING  FOR!\"\nHURRY!\nFRED CARMICHAEL'S\n*$> PAINT SALE\nContinues\nKENNY   McTEER\n. second choice centre\nduties of the first team as was\nteammate Andrews for the rearguard line.\nC o n t r o versial defenceman\nHodges will form the other half\nof the first string's defensive\nunit.\nThe All-Star first line will be\ncentred by Rusnell, with Peacosh on left wing and Lenardon\non right. <\nJets' goalie Cox, second All-\nStar choice, finished the gruelling 48-game schedule with the\nlowest goals-against average\npasting four shutouts with the\nAmerican club.\nThe Spokane club is the only\nteam in the circuit that doesn't\ncarry a spare netminder.\nSmokie defencemen Ferguson\nand McLaren will back up Cox\non the second string.\nMcTeer of the Dynamiters will\ncentre teammate Lilley and\nWarrior Martin on left wing.\nMartin finished the regular\nseason by hitting the 59-goal\nmark with the last-place Rossland club.\nSpokane Spokesman - Review\npicked Jets' Playing-Coach Eddie Dorohoy to centre the first\nline with Peacosh and Lenardon\non the wings.\nHodges and McLaren were\npicked for rearguard duty.  *\nThe second string will be centred by Rusnell with Leaf winger\nMurray Owens on right and Billy\nMartin on left.\nNelson defenceman Bill\nSteinke and Bill Gallamore of the\nDynamiters were placed on defence.\nThough the two teams will\nnever be pitted against each\nother, it would be interesting to\nsee two such evenly-matched\nsquads clash in an exhibition\ngame.\nManitoba Rink Scores 11-5 Triumph\nOver Worth's Saskatchewan Foursome\nHe added three meaningless\ntallies on the 12th.\nTwo costly misses by Worth\non the ninth made the difference. He was a few inches wide\nwith his first rock and wrecked\non a guard with his second.\nBraunstein was joined in the\nundefeated bracket by Bill\nTracy of Bagotville. Tracy led\nhis Quebec rink to a 10-7 second-round triumph over George\nMacCharles    and   Newfound-\nNelson Players Top Field\nAt Doubles Bird Tourney\nCASTLEGAR \u2014 Nelson play,\ners topped a field of 70 entries\nfrom throughout the district over\nthe weekend at the annual\ndoubles tournament held in\nCastlegar.\nLinda Smallenberg of Nelson\nteamed up with Wendy Defoe of\nCastlegar to edge Rose Donaldson and Beryl Anderson in the\nladies doubles in the A flight.\nMinor Hockey\nScoring\nLeaders\nThe following is a list of the\nMinor Hockey scoring leaders at\nthe close of regular season play:\nMidget\nG A\nReg Cherenko   57  12\nJim Boyce   33    7\nLarry Black   17    5\nDoug Heslip     8  12\nBantams\nDenis Cherenko   65  20\nTerry Wikstrom   55  23\nDoug McMullin   36  23\nGary Frocklage   39    9\nPee Wees\nMark Severyn   34  18  52\nGreg Larsen   31  14  45\nTerry Severyn   25  17  42\nSteve Smith    26  14  40\nPups\nGreg Paul   24    3  27\nW. Naka   15    4  19\nA. Hyssop     3  12   15\nThe following are the scores in\nthe playoff games to date:\nTotems 3 Falcons 0\nCougars 4 Jets 4\nCollege 4 Warriors 2\nEagles 5 Jets 5\nSeals 5 Wings 1\nCanadiens 4 Flyers 3\nHawks 2 Pups 0\nIn the men's doubles, Marsh\nBertram and Ernie Smallenberg\ndefeated Bob Collinson and\nRoger Kerby to earn top honors.\nLinda and Ernie Smallenberg,\na Mr. and Mrs. entry, won the\nmixed doubles crown by defeating Charlotte Sharpies and Jack\nOsachoff of Castlegar.\nAll games in both the semifinal and final rounds were extremely close with all matches\ngoing down to the wire.\nIn the B flight, Anne Andersen\nand Grace McPherson of Castlegar defeated Jean Brady and\nLillias Polle in the ladies doubles\ncompetition.\nRichard Fairbank and Jim\nFrame captured the men's\ndoubles by narrowly beating\nGordon Brady and Marvin Leroy\nof Castlegar in the finals.\nIn the mixed doubles round,\nLorraine Black and Marsh Bert,\nram won over Janet Davis and\nKeith Muirhead.\nThe Nelson Badminton Club\nhosts the district tournament\nMarch 13 and 14 in the Civic\n85 Centre with entries coming from\n78 Castlegar, Trail, Salmo, Fruit-\n59 vale, Kinnaird, Riondei, Kaslo,\n48! Crawford Bay,  Creston,  Cran\nbrook and Nakusp.\nland's representatives from St\nJohn's.\nTracy used four points on the\nlast three ends to stop Mac\nCharles. Trailing 7-6 after nine,\nthe Quebec quartet tied the\nscore on the 10th and settled\nthe issue with two on the 11th\nand one on the 12th.\nIn other second-round games,\nDr Pete Lyons of Moncton\nskipped New Brunswick to an\n11-8 conquest of the Nova Scotia\nrink directed by Ron Franklin\nof Halifax; Alberta's Nick La-\nshuk quartet of Calgary\nstrapped Jack Arnet and his\nBritish Columbia mates from\nVancouver 10-5 and Jack Poly-\nblank of Kirkland Lake and his\nNorthern Ontario mates made\ntheir 1965 debut with a 8-7 victory over Ray Grant's Ontario\nstandard-bearers from Union-\nville.\nIn the third round today British Columbia was drawn\nagainst Northern Ontario, Saskatchewan against Quebec,\nNova Scotia against Manitoba,\nNew Brunswick against the\nDoug Cameron rink of Prince\nEdward Island, and Alberta\nagainst Newfoundland.\nIn first-round matches, Ontario downed Alberta 7-5, Manitoba held off Newfoundland\n10-7, Saskatchewan stopped\nNew Brunswick 12-6, Prince\nEdward Island bombarded\nNova Scotia 16-4 and Quebec\nneeded an extra end to nip British Columbia 10-9.\nCURLS BRILLIANTLY\nGrant curled brilliantly before about 3,000 fans and helped\nhis mates hold off Lashuk until\nOntario picked up three on the\nseventh. The Ontario surge was\naided when Lashuk threw a\ntakeout and drove a Grant stone\non to Alberta's counter.\nGrant needed a precise angle\ntakeout to preserve his margin\non the 12th end. Lashuk did not\nthrow his last rock. Curling\nofficials said Ontario, which\nhad one in the house when the\nrocks were kicked out of play,\nwould be credited with one.\nManitoba and Newfoundland\nengaged in a rugged test until\nBraunstein found his game in\nthe eighth end with three. New.\nfoundland led 3-2 after Braunstein missed an open takeout\nwith last rock and MacCharles\ndrew the eight-foot with his\nclosing stone.\nWorth scored three on the\nfirst and four on the 11th\nagainst Lyons. It was the opening burst that helped the favored Prairie rink hold off its\nEastern opponents as scoring\nalternated in singles from the\nsecond through the seventh end\nCameron picked up three on\nthe eighth, four un the ninth\nand five on the 11th against\nNova Scotia. The P.E.I, crew\nwas held to a 3-3 tie for seven\nends.\nSparwood Teams Collect\nFour Wins Over Weekend\nNATAL\u2014 Playing in exhibition\nbasketball at the Sparwood auditorium, Sparwood Junior teams\ntook both ends of a twin bill\nagainst Jaffray Seniors. In the\nfirst game Sparwood Junior girls\nedged Jaffray Senior girls 24-23\nin a closely-contested game. The\nvisitors led 15-13 at half time.\nBarbara Doratty with 17 points\nled the scoring attack  for  the\nAt Home Wednesday\nFamous\nSpred Satin\nStock Colors Only\nQuarts\nReg. $3.25\n$2.59\nGallons\nReg. $10.25\n$8.19\nEXTRA SPECIAL\nRoller\nand\nTray\nOnly\n98*\nLook\nAhead!\nBUY NOW\nPAINT NOW\nSAVE NOW\nAdd\nColor\nto Your\nLife!\nFamous\nSpred\nLustre\nSemi-Gloss\nStock Colors Only\nQuarts\nReg. $3.40\n$2.69\n1 Pints\nReg. $1.15\n89*.\nBeautiful\nGLID-\nTONE\n\u2022 Varnishes\n\u2022 Stain* and\nVarnish\nStains\n20% OFF\nFirst Class\nGlidden\nPAINTS\nSLASHED\nTO\nCLEAR!\nNew\nGlidden\nNo. 444\nFlat Latex\nQuarts\nReg. $1.95\n$1.69\nGallons\nReg. $6.95\n*5.99\nTinted or White\nJapalac\nEnamel\nQuarts\nReg. $3.60\n$2.89\n} Pints\nReg. $1.20\n99<\nEndurance\nExterior\nHOUSE  PAINT\nQuarts\nReg. $3.25\n*2.59\nGallon*\nReg. $10.33\n$8.29\nTop Quality\n_ Turpentine\nPoint Thinner and\nMethyl-Hydrate\n20% OFF\nGlidden\nRegular and Plastic\nFloor and Porch\nEnamel\n20% OFF\nLimited\nQuantities\nof Nelson's\nFinest Paint\nSupplies ...\nPRICED TO\nCLEAR!\n\u2022 See FRED!\nMaple Leafs, Spokane Jets Meet\nHead-On in First Game of Semis\nJaocL fainuckcurfL J-fJE\n407 Hall Street\nPlaying-Coach Eddie Dorohoy\nand the Spokane Jets invade the\nCivic Centre Wednesday night\nin the first game of the best-of-\nfive semi-final series, which\nshould provide the best action\nof the season.\nBy virtue of the Jets second\nplace finish in regular circuit\nplay, the American club gets\nthe extra home game, playing in\nthe Coliseum Sunday afternoon,\nMonday and Wednesday.\nThe Leafs take the first two\ngames here Wednesday night\nand Friday.\nPlaying-Coach Bobby Kromm\nand the Leafs appear up for the\nseries, especially in the light of\nthe fact that not one Nelson\nplayer was voted to the Western\nInternational Hockey League\nAll-Star teams.\nDoug Kilburn, who led the\nMaple Leafs scoring attack\nlast season with 37 goals, will\ndress for the \"Green and\nWhite\" as the extra forward to\nround the club's total to 15\nplayers,\n\"Kllburn's got a lot of\nhockey know-how and should\nprovide some real punch to\nour scoring line,\" Kromm\ncommented.\nVince Collins, absent from the\nAmerican club's lineup for about\na month with a torn ligament in\nhis knee, will be back for Wednesday's game.\nCollins was a key playmaker\nfor the Spokane team during\nregular season action, sparking\nmany of the Jets' early season\nwins.\nTom \"The Bomb\" Hodges\nmakes his return appearance in\nthe Nelson arena Wednesday,\nafter sitting out an eight-game\nsuspension as a result of the\nspitting incident involving\nreferee Jim Mailey.\nJim Moro, who suffered a\ngash over his right eye in Trail\nthree weeks ago, is on the injured list for the Jets, suffering\nfrom what a Spokane eye\nspecialist called a \"blister\" behind the eye ball.\nWinger Murray Owens breaks in on Spokane netminder Dave Cox as\nhe shakes oil Jets' defencemen in an earlier contest between the Maple\nLeafs and the lets, while \"Buck\" Crawiord waits ior a pass in the corner to\nthe leit oi the Spokane cage. The Leafs start their best-of-five semi-final series\nwith the lets here Wednesday night in what should prove to be the best\nseries to come to town in a long while. \u2014 Daily News photo.\nThe Leafs will be at full\nstrength with the exception of\nwinger Carl Chwachka, who will\nmiss the rest of the season as a\nresult of a BCAHA ruling on a\nmatch penalty.\nThe addition of Kilburn on the\nforward line will help to fill the\ngap left by the hustling Leaf\nwinger.\nMiles Desharnais, who's re.\nturn Saturday after being out\nwith a shoulder separation\nproved to be the highlight of the\ncontest, will add real speed to\nthe hard-skating third line.\nJet goaltender Dave Cox, who\nposted the lowest goals-against\naverage in the circuit during the\nschedule, will tend the cage for\nthe American club.\nMaple Leaf forwards seem\ndetermined'to blast the Spokane\nnet from every angle as they\nworked hard at practice Sunday\nmorning under Kromm.\n\"The team looks sharp; they\npass and shoot on the net like\nI've never seen them do before,\nthe Leaf mentor said.\n\"We plan on giving Spokane a\nrun for their money.\"\nNelson goaltender Jim Letcher\nlooked in top form at the practice session Sunday as he turned\naside almost every drive labelled\nat the cage.\nDave Stewart, who scored one\ngoal and figured in the other\ntwo when the Leafs edged the\nSmoke Eaters 3-2 here Saturday\nMINOR  HOCKEY\nSCHEDULE\nThe following is the schedule\nfor the Minor Hockey Playoff\ngames this week:\nTuesday, 7:30 \u2014 Cougars vs\nCollege.\nThursday, 7:30 - Warriors vs\nEagles.\nhas added a lot of rearguard\nstrength to the club since his\nreturn.\nHe remains one of the toughest\ndefencemen in the league to\nbeat.\nThe Spokane - Nelson\nshould prove to be the best,\nhardest-fought semi-final that\nthe Civic Centre has seen in a\nlong while.\nWITH  STANE\nAND  BESOM\nThe following are the scores of\nthe draws played at the Nelson\nCurling Club Monday night in\nthe final club competition:\nD. Benedetti 10, R. W. Koehle\n6.\nW. Wait 8, A. Ronmark 12.\nF. Koehle 10, E. Leeming 12.\nL. Bicknell 8, J. Sutherland 9.\nL. Maglio 12, L. J, Maurer. 6\nH. Ronmark 10, M. Gee 9.\nwinners while Judy Dwornik\nwith eight points was high scorer\nfor Jafray girls. In second game\nSparwood Junior boys had little\ndifficulty in defeating Jaffray Senior boys 56-30. Sparwood led\n35-18 at half time. Leading the\nscoring attack for the winning\nJuniors were Glenn Mullett, high\npointgetter with 17 points, followed by Brian Schmitz with 12\npoints and Fred Komenac with\n10 points. Hyggen with 13 points\nwas top scorer for Jaffray Seniors in a losing cause.\nIn three games played away\nfrom home at Kimberley over\nthe past weekend and completing\ntheir schedule in the East Kootenay High School Basketball League. Sparwood won two and lost\none in games played against Golden and Invermere. A fourth\ngame in the boys' division was\ndefaulted by Invermere to the\nleague winning Sparwood Spartans. Sparwood Spartanettes\ntook the measure of Invermere\ngirls by a 24-20 score with G.\nBeard the high scorer with eight\npoints for the winners.\nSparwood girls finished league\nplay with four wins and eight\nlosses, well down in the league\nstandings.\nIn the final game Sparwood\nSpartans had little difficulty in\ndisposing of Golden boys 62-45 to\nregister their 11th win against a\nsingle loss, and in the process\nwinning the East Kootenay High\nSchool (Boys) Basketball League championship for the first\ntime. Ron Venzie and Bobbie Mihalynuk spearheaded the scoring attack registering 17 points\napiece for Sparwood while in a\nlosing cause, H. Hogan was high\npoint-getter with 20 points.\nNew Denver\nSports\nReport\nNEW DENVER - New Denver All-Stars walloped the Nakusp Midgets 4-2 Wednesday in\nthe first game of a twin bill behind the two-goal performance\nof Bob Latto and Dougal Green-\nan.\nRoman Kozak and Bruce Ver-\nkerk scored singles for the Nakusp squad.\nIn the senior contest, the Nakusp squad outplayed the Combines to whip the New Denver\nteam 11-6.\nNakusp hit for three quick\ngoals before the Combines had a\nchance to retaliate and enjoyed\na comfortable 6-1 lead at the\nend of the first period.\nIn the second frame, the Nakusp team outscored the New\nDenver contingent, 3-1 before the\nCombines staged a third period\nrally which proved to be too\nlate.\nDick Roberts was the \"big\ngun\" for Nakusp with a hat-trick\nwhile Mike Rushton, Jackie\nJames and Barry Morrison add-\ned a pair apiece.\nBill Marks and Ed Desrochers\ncontributed singles in the lop-\nsided affair.\nCombines' marksmen were\nAndy Avison, Bob Steenhoff, Jack\nKelly, Mike McRory, Yasu Hashimoto and Jim Hicks.\nReferee Walt Thring handed\nout a total of five penalties, three\ngoing to the Combines and two to\nthe Nakusp crew.\nDusan Tadey\nRink Takes\nSelkirk Spiel\nCRANBROOK (CP) - Cran-\nbrook's Dusan Tadey rink captured the annual Selkirk bonspiel Sunday, defeating Kimberley's Al Hansen rink in an\nexciting grand aggregate playoff.\nHe led 8-6 after nine taut ends\nbut didn't throw his last rock\nin the 10th when it became impossible for Hansen's skip, Elgin Smith, to net a tie in the\nend. Hansen, husband of Inn\nHansen, Canadian women's\ncurling champion in 1962 and\n1964 and runner-up in 1963, was\nplaying third.\nOther event winners in the\nfive-day bonspiel were: A: Her-\nden Nodwell of Calgary; B:\nPaul Faynor of Creston; C:\nHansen; D: Bob Willis of Cranbrook; E: Jack Leask of Cranbrook.   %.\nCOFFEE COUNTRY\nHalf the world's total supply\nof coffee comes from Brazil.\nCUSTOM\nAUTO ACCESSORIES\nSTICK SHIFT CONVERSION KITS\n. Anson, Hurst, Fenton\nTACK'S and GAUGES\nDlxco, Sun, Bonneville\nKNOCKOFFS, WHEEL DISCS, EXHAUST\nEXTENSIONS, DUAL EXHAUST KITS,\nALL CALIFORNIA CUSTOM EQUIPMENT\nAvailable en Order\nSpeed Equipment Available on Order\nCarrying Name Brands such as\nEeleo, Offenhauer, Edelbroek, Hunt,\nMallory Ignition, Milky Thompson Parti.\nFor Information and Pricing write to\nRED'S ESSO SERVICE\nBox 281 Kimberley, B.C.\n'Tour One Stop Center\"\n NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUES., MARCH 2, 1C53\u20147\n\\ TOYS\nSKATE\nBOARDS\nONLY   \u00b0\n\u00bb3_-\n-aS_L__ve'to|)\nW*\n\u2022SO, I AM WITUBN\nSADIE ~ PU6AS6\nTAt\u00ab\u00bb Me TO XWB\nOOCTOBl\n7HBM IT 19 NOvVl\nTW6VUU PIX -\/oue\nSACK 90 you CAN\nv.  STAMP TRIALl\nNO,R-A.IY'     \\ SHE'S\nIT'S VERONICA'S I ON THIS\nPEWORE-D __\/  WEEK'S\nSIAMESE  T COVER OF\nCAT\/    _\u00a3*   CHIME\nMA6AZINE.'\n9HESS0\n. UNSOPHISTKATEtVj\n\u25ba SOUNWOR-Oiy, S\nIWORKV ABOUT HER..\nI'ttNOTSURE,\nHOWWO.IHAVC\nLiMrmo FUNDS\nANDAVOUNS\nDNJBHlf*.\nKIBPTTHEBS, I'M 4UHPRISED!\nHOW COME \u2022VteO*R6\nRCADINAAaooK\nLIKE THIS*\nVJ* COMNAtJO OF THE PANA-U.-AN\n'   C SECURITY POLICE EXAMINES t\nE   CERTAIN TELEPHONE BOOTH.\nri   nmymmm\nOKAY. I'M TAKINS\nHER TO OWNER THIS\nEVENING AT THE\nCAFE\" LA FLORIDA.\n1DU CAN LOOK HER\nOVER,    ^y\nI'M\nAFRAID\nitoU WERE\n<SMIV\nHAUF-\nLISTBMII08\nItUTBUMV BROTH-!-?\nBIMMV ABOUT IT- (30\nHEVWNTOOIN\nTHEM 8\/\nMISTAKE -.\nBIMMV-I WANTID\nWARN SOU ABOUT _\nSTEWVS CAFE- JT VEAH-\nrrteNar\nSAFE TO\n60 IN\nTHERE\nrf nlc-.'ic n. inm \u00ab\">\u25a0 Ban \u25a0 _ ai'tarr*wry\ntotiwitb\nBIRTHS\nBENNY - To Mr. and Mrs.\nNorman Benny (nee Pat Ozelle),\n844 McPherson Road, N.E., Calgary, at Calgary General Hospital, Feb. 28, a daughter.\nANDERSON-To Mr. and Mrs.\nRaymond R. Anderson, Kimberley, formerly of Nelson, Feb. 25,\na daughter, Tracy Lee.\nMOBILE HOMES\nTRAILERS\nHELP WANTED\u2014MALE\nWAITING FOR YOU. . . A\ngood job worth up to $1000 in\na month. Need man over 40\nto take short auto trips to contact customers in B.C. area.\nWrite Vice Pres., Dept DK,\nP.O. Box 70, Station R. Toronto\n17, Ontario. -50-55\nWAREHOUSE, DELIVERY\nman required for local firm.\nTop physical condiiton essential. Must hold valid licence to\noperate heavy truck. Apply\nBox 34, Nelson News. State\nage, weight, experience and\nreferences. \u201447-52\nWANTED - ENGINEER WITH\nClass A steam heating certificate or better. Employment\nfor 2-3 years. Immediately.\nApply: Administrator, St. Eugene Hospital, Cranbrook, B.C.\n-48-51\nHELP WANTED\nMALE   OR   FEMALE\nACCOUNTANT REQUIRED BY\nlocal commercial concern. \u2014\nGenerous employee benefits.\nApply Box 35, Nelson News.\nState age, experience, references, and salary requirements. \u201447-52\nHELP WANTED\u2014FEMALE\nOPENING FOR SALES LADY,\npermanent employment. Employee benefits, pension plan.\nApply to Mr. A. Peters, Singer Co. of Canada Ltd., 339\nBaker St. \u201450-55\nJUNIOR SECRETARY. SOME\ntyping, shorthand not necessary. Apply Box 33, Nelson\nDaily News. \u201446-tfn\nWANTED,   USHERETTE.   AP-\nply evenings, Civic Theatre.\n-47-tfn\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nPIANO TUNING AND REPAIR.\nG. Stenberg. Phone 352-6892.\n-287-tfn\nPAINTING AND CARPENTER\nwork. Free Estimates. Phone\n352-2363. '\u2022--.--    -44-69\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nWE, MRS. IRENE FEENEY\nand W. J. M. Feeney, will not\nbe responsible for debts contracted in our names,, on or\nafter this date, without our\nwritten signature. 51-53\nBEFORE YOU BUY A\nMOBILE HOME OR\nTRAVEL   TRAILER\nCONSULT US.\nWe own our business, have no\nmanager, saleman or office\nstaff expense. Our rent is low\nand we live on the premises.\nThe savings can be yours.\nNew and used 8' or 10' wides.\nKOOT-NEE\nMOBILE   HOMES   LTD.\nOn the Fernie Road\nNear the Overpass\nPh. 426-2513 Box 2470\nCranbrook,B.C.\nMACHINERY\n-50-tfn\nCRANBROOK\nTRAILERS LTD.\nYour Authorized Safeway Dealer\nFor the East and West\nKootenays.\nParts and Accessories\nFully Insured and Reliable\nTowing Anywhere.\nCRANBROOK\nPhone 426-4935 \u2022       Box 2217\nCASTLEGAR\nPhone 365-5047\nNext to Twin Rivera Hotel\n-35-tfn\nPROPERTY WANTED\nLISTINGS WANTED. BUILD-\ning lots, (arm land, city and\ncountry residential. Commercial property, timber lands.\nCall or write Wm. Kalyniuk\nAgencies, Nelson, Ph. 352-2425.\n\u2014231-tfn\nSMALL FENCE OF APPROX.\n20 to 40 acres. Slocan and\nNakusp area preferred; must\nbe reasonably priced. Reply\nDon KtacKay, Box 179, Ocean\nFalls, B.C. -51-62\nWOULD BUY EXISTING\nagreement for sale or mortgage. Give details. Post Office\nBox 374, Trail, B.C.     -49-74\nWANTED TO BUY, SUMMER\ncabin with beach frontage.\nPhone 352-7091. -50-52\nSMALL HOUSE FOR SALE OR\nrent. Creston. Ph. 352-5924\n-44-69\nBUSINESS\nOPPORTUNITIES\n1,000 HENS, POULTRY, FEED\nand flour business farm,\nSteady egg market. Last year\nnet profit around $10,000.\nTerms. Write Box 25, Nelson\nNews. \u201438-51\nBUSINESS   &   PROFESSIONAL\nDIRECTORY\nA handy 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-Un\nPARKVIEW MOTORS LTD.\n(Rambler - Volkswagen)\n323 Nelson Ave.    Pbone 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.      Phone 352-5571\nLots of free parking.\n-tfn\nContractors\nLaszlo Hus-ak, General Masonry\nStone - Brick \u2022 Cement - Stucco\nPlasterinR\n1323 Falls St.       Pbone 352-7692\n-239-tfn\nART RAVESTEIN\nRenovations,  Cement Work\nand General Carpentry\nPhone 352-7433\n-tfn\nGarages\nUpper Fairview Motors Ltd.\nCor. 7th at Davies    Ph. 352-2525\nTransistorized Ignition\n-tfn\nHealth Foods\nHEALTH FOOD CENTRE\nHealth Thru Nutrition\n'    458 Ward Street\n-22-Jn\nVitades for Nutrition\nVITALITY   HEALTH   FOODS\n564 Ward St Nelson, B C\n-288-tfn\nMonumental\nStones\nSee NELSON FLOWERS LTD.\nPhone for private interview.\n-230-tfn\nPhoto Copying\nPOWELL ENGRAVING\n460 Ward St. Nelson, B.C.\nPhone 352-7521\nContracts \u2014 Birth Certificates\nLegal Documents\nImportant Papers\n-tfn\nPrinting\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\nPrinters \u2014 Lithographers\nColor Printing\nPhone 352-3552\n-tfn\nRadio and TV\nService\nRadio \u2022 TV \u2022 Transistor \u2022 Service\nCOLUMBIA ELECTROCENTRE\nLTD.\n458 Ward St.     Phone 352-5581\n-218-tfn\nVIDEO ELECTRONICS\n405 Hall St - Phone 352-3355\n-tfn\nRefrigeration\nRefrigeration Sales and Service\nCARLSON  EQUIPMENT\n803 Anderson St.   Pb. 352-5455\n-186-tfn\nSporting Goods\nFred Whiteley's Sport Shop\n488 Baker St    Pbone 352-7741\n-tfn\nTopsoil\nLarry's Topsoil, Sand and Gravel\nPh 352-2355 Days   352-7576 eves\n-tfn\nPRICES\nREDUCED\nOn All\nUsed Chain Saws\nMACS WELDING\n& EQUIPMENT CO.\n514 RaUway St.    Ph. 352-5301\n-51-56\nMASTER CONVEYOR\nIVi H.P., 12\" Belt, Pulleys,\nTightener \u2014 (275.00.\nStevenson Machinery Ltd.\nPhone 352-3561\n-51-51\nVALLEY AUTOMOTIVE LTD.\nMassey-Ferguson, New Holland New and Used Farm\nEquipment. Parts, Sales and\nService. Phone 356-2254, Creston, B.C. -UO-tln\nFOR   SALE - GOOD   PONY\ntractor with hydraulic and all\nimplements. Phone 365-5343.\n-46-51\n671 GM DIESEL ENGINE WITH\nclutch. $1750. Crane carrier\nsuitable for log loader. Bayes\nLtd, Cranbrook, B.C.    \u201450-55\nRENTALS\nURGE APT., 3 B.R.S, CLOSE\nto downtown. Auto, heat; includes gas range; $65 monthly.\nWm. Kalyniuk Agencies, phone\n352-2425. \u201425-tfn\nAVAILABLE NOW - NICE 1-\nB.R. house, unfurnished. Gas\nfurnace. Convenient location.\nPh. 3524263. Apply 1011 Front\nStreet. -28-tfn\nCONSTRUCTION WORKERS -\nHskpg. and sleeping rooms,\nweekly, monthly rates. Dishes,\nlinen supplied, parking. Allen\nRooms, 171 Baker St.\n-87-tfn\n3-ROOM MODERN APT. UN-\nfurn. Self-contained; heat and\nhot water; central. Adults.\nPhone 352-5403. -23-tfn\nIN TRAIL-4 UNIT APART,\nblock. Ph. -57-9589 or write\nBox 182, Salmo, B.C. \u201447-tfn\nNEWLY DECORATED APT. 3\nrooms and bath. Partly turn\nPrivate entrance. Ph. 352.6511,\n\u201418-tfn\n3 BDRM. APT., KITCHEN AND\n, living room, Ph. 352-2943.\n1 51-58\nLARGE   2   BDRM.   MODERN\napt, downtown. Ph. 352-5401.\ni -51-tfn\n2-ROOM SUITE SUITABLE FOR\ncouple or 2 girls. 116 Vernon\nSt. Phone 352-5602.     \u201447-tfn\nHOUSE, 1 BDRM., UNFURN.,\nalso small furn. suite. Phone\n352-7195. -51-tfn\nRENTALS  AVAILABLE, WIN-\nter rates. Kencourt Motel.\n-49-54\nAPT., 3 ROOMS AND BATH,\nheated, unfurn., adults. Phone\n352-6376. -34-59\nLARGE 2-B.R. MODERN APT.,\ndowntown. Phone 352-5401.\n-51-tfn\nHALDANE   APARTMENTS   -\nFurn. or unfurn. Ph. 352-6721.\n-65-tfn\nNEAT, WARM, CENTRAL APT\nLady or couple. Ph. 352-5880.\n-30-tfn\nFOR RENT-LARGE, LOWER\nduplex. Phone 352-5071.-51-56\n3 ROOM HEATED FURNISHED\nSuite. Phone 352-2107. \u201450-tfn\n3-BEDROOM HOME FOR RENT\n- Phone 352-6488.        -51-53\nAUTOMOTIVE, BICYCLES\nMOTORCYCLES\nCOTTONWOOD WRECKAGE\nwrecking: '53 Studebaker, '56\nChev. Hardtop; auto, trans, for\n\u202253-'56 Chev., '52-'56 Ford, '56\nDodge. Good motors, '53 A40,\n'54 Zephyr, Phone 352-5815,\nBox 382, 24 Ymir Road.\n-221-tIn\n'64 2-DOOR HARDTOP IMPALA\nwith 327 cu. in. Fully equipped.\nOwner   leaving   town.   Best\noffer. Ph. 3524146 after 5 p.m.\n-31-tfn\n1956 HILLMAN HARDTOP, i\n1960 Renault, 1960 Simca, 1956\nMeteor   2-door,   1954   Austin.\nNorth  Shore Service.  Phone\n352-2929. -188-tfn\nCAR PARTS FOR SALE IN-\neluding new motor and transmission, '57 Chev. hardtop. Ph.\n365-5164 Castlegar.        \u201451-56\n1965   VALIANT    200,    4-DOOR\nsedan, standard, 6 cyl. Just\nlike new. Ph. 325-2724. Nelson.\n-50-51\n55  RANCHWACON,   $360.   FI-\nnancing avail. Ph. 352-2300.\n-46-51\nFOR SALft-'57 OLDS SUPER\n88; '59 Volkswagen bus. Phone\n352-2861. -33-tfn\n1954 DODGE 4-DOOR. GOOD\nrunning order. Phone 352-3760\nafter 6 \\>.m.  .. -49-54\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\nFOR SALE - FRUITVALE:\n1\u20143-bedroom modern home.\nCement block construction,\n1120 sq. ft. on main floor. Full\nbasement; recreation area tiled; oil furnace; double plumbing; drape, in dining room and\nliving room included. Detached garage. 2 blocks from shopping area. Price, $13,500. Can\nbe financed.\n2\u20143-yr.-old modern 3-bedroom\nhome. Full basement; oil furnace; double plumbing; recreation area; double carport.\n1188 sq. ft. on main floor. Aluminum siding and rock finish\non outside. 2 blocks from shopping area. Price, $18,000. Can\nbe financed.\n3\u2014Modern 3-bedroom house\njust completed. 5 blocks from\nshopping area. Full basement\nwith hobby shop and recreation area; oil furnace; double\nplumbing; carport. 1316 sq. ft.\non main floor. Price $22,000.\n' Can be financed.\n4\u20142-bedroom house. 1000 sq.\nft. Needs some renovation, li\nacre land. 2 blocks from shopping area. Price, $6500.\nPhone 367-9262 or write Box\n,189, Fruitvale, for appointment\nto Inspect, \u201446-tfn\nABSENTEE OWNER WILL\nsell or trade 40 acres of view\nproperty adjacent to water\ntank behind Ray's Machine\nShop at Beaver Falls, Fruitvale. Make me an offer. \u2014\nJames M. Kennedy, Dogwood\nAgencies Ltd., 1359 Kingsway,\nVancouver 10. Phone Trinity\n68841. -47-52\nHOUSE FOR SALE, KINNAIRD.\n127 Fourth Ave. and Third St.\nCorner lot 105'xl50'. 21. years\nold. Double plumbing. 3 or 5\nbedrooms. Phone owner, 368-\n5911, in Trail. -46-57\nFAIRVIEW 2 BDRM. HOME,\nlovely landscaped lots. Garage,\nworkshop. Phone 352-7457.\n-51-tfn\nMUST SELL! 3-B.R. REMOD-\nelled house on Vi acre. D. garage. Low price. 10 Ymir Rd.\n-33-58\nHOUSE AT SLOCAN CITY. AP-\nply Box 5, Nelson News. \u201414-65\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND  FARM  SUPPLIES\nFOR ARTIFICIAL BREEDING\ndairy and beef cattle, phone\n352-6874.. Nelson and District\nA.l. Centre, 709 Third St., Nel\nson. J. De Jong, Technician,\n-tin\nAPPROX. 1000 CHICKENS, 11\nmo. old, heavy layers'. Could\nbe bought for $1800 or $1.25 per\nbird. Ph. 359-7425. Bill Zeibin,\nGlade, B.C. -51-56\nWEANER PIGS, FEEDER PIGS\n\u2014Pork for sale. Rudolf Dam-\ngaard, Wynndel Hog Farm,\nBox 46, Wynndel, B.C. Phone\n356-4669. \u201426-51\nLAYING HENS, $1.25. FARM-\nfresh eggs, medium, 45c; large\n48c. Phone 352-3808.     -45-tfn\nWANTED\nMISCELLANEOUS\nSPOT CASH FOR USED FURNI-\nture, antiques, coins, old gold,\nguns and Jewels. Home Furniture Exchange. Ph. 352-6531.\n413 Hall St.. Nelson. B.C.\n-98-tl\nWANTED - USED ELECTRIC\nmotors. Coleman Electric, 502\nFront St., Nelson. Ph. 352-3175\n-29-tfn\nROOM AND BOARD\nCLEAN, PRIVATE ROOM FOR\ngentleman, near Legion. $25.00\na month. Phone 352-5030 or\n352-3644. -51-tfn\nROOM AND BOARD FOR GEN-\ntleman. Phone 352-2870,\u201451-tfn\nSfolamt\nEathj Sfatufi\nCirculation  Dept.,  Pn.   353-355*\nPrice per single copy   10 cents\nBy carrier per week, 40 cents\nIn advance.\nSubscription rates:\nBy mail in Canada\nOutside Nelson\nOne month $ 2.06\nThree months '.    5.00\nSix months    10.00\nOne year       18.00\nBy mail to United Kingdom\nor the Commonwealth\nOne month $ 2.on\nThree  months    6.00\nSix months   :.... 11.00\nOne year          20 00\nBy Mail to U.S.A. or\nForeign Countries\nOne month $ 2.50\nThree months    ..   7 00\nSix months           .   13 on\nOne vest 24 00\nWhere extra onstage is required\nabove rates plus pottage.\nFor delivery by carrier in Cran\nbrook,   phone   Mrs    Stan'ev\nWiliison;\nIn   Kimberley    Mrs    A    W\nBrown\nIn Trail  Mrs  W  E  Snn-ir.fr\nFOR SALE     :\u25a0\nMISCELLANEOUS\nPERMA CEMENT v\nWater troubles? Does your\nbasement leak? Use Perma Cement. Sets in 5 minutes even\nunder water. All sizes in stock.\nColumbia Trading Co.,. 901\nFront Street. -444-53\nREBUILT ENGINE? POR\nmost makes of cars'; and\ntrucks. New engine guarantee.\n3-day delivery; installation.arranged. Simpson-Sears fctd.,\nPhone 352-5531. -33-tfn\n\"WE TRADE ON ANYTHING\".\nThat old gun you are not using, trade it in as down payment on a HONDA. - NORM'S\nSPORT SHOP, 352-2015, Nelson. \u201451-tfn\nFUK THE BEST IN USED\nautomatic washers, dryers, refrigerators, television, etc. con.\ntact Nelson Electric Co. Ltd.,\n574 Baker St, Nelson, B.C.\n-27-tfn\nSIDES OF GRAIN FED BEEF,\n47c, cut and wrapped; Sides' of\npork, 29c; sides of pork, cut\nand wrapped, 33c. Newdan\nFarm, Creston. Ph. 356-9901 or\n356-9769. -171-tfn\nWATER HEATERS - GAS AND\nelectric. Complete line in stock\nto suit individual needs. Use\nyour credit. Simpson \u2022 Sears\nLtd. Phone 352-5531.    -33-tfn\nVEG-O-MATICS. CASH OR\nC.O.D. extra. Postpaid $14.95,\neach, plus a 5% B.C.. tax.\nPaul Evdokimoff, R.R. No. 1,\nWinlaw, B.C. -49-51\nSOCIAL INSURANCE CARDS,\nsealed In plastic, 60c each or\n3 for $1.00. P. Misan, R.R. 1,\nNelson. -51-76\nFOR SALE - SCALE, SAFE,\nwashing machine and TV. r-\nPhone 352-6010. -49-tfn\nAPPLES $1.00 A BOX - FRED\nFransen. Sunshine Bay; \u201450-51\nWANTED TO RENT\nWANTED-3-B.R. HOUSE FOR\nnewcomers to Nelson, arriving\nabout first of March. Write\nBox 18, Nelson Daily News.\n-35-tfn\nLARGE 5-B.R. HOUSE, CLOSE\nin. Box 37, Nelson Daily News.\n-48-53\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\nModem\nOFFICE v\nSPACE j.\nFor\nRENT  !\nApproximately 700 sq. ft. ot\nmodern, fully wired office'\nspace located on Baker. Street\nin Nelson.\nREASONABLE   RENT\nLong or Short Term  '\nLeases Arranged\nApply to:\nNelson Daily News\nPh. 352-3552\nWorld Briefs\nPRISONERS FREED\nSEOUL (AP) -.The South\nKorean government' freed 784\nprisoners Monday from 20 prisons. The amnesty commemorated the 46th anniversary of\nKorean uprisings against Japanese rule in 1919.\nOPPOSES COMMUNISM\nNAIROBI (AP)-Any attempt\nto introduce communism into\nKenya will be strongly opposed\nboth by the government and the\npeople, Finance Minister James\nGichuru said during a weekend\nrally. \"I want to make it quite\nclear to you here today that\ncommunism is not and will\nnever be our policy,\" Gichuru\nasserted.\nBUY ARMAMENTS\nCANBERRA (AP) - Army\nMinister Dr. Alexander J.\nForbes announced Monday that\nAustralia's army will buy the\nSwedish 84 - millimetre Carl-\nGustaf M-2 anti-tank weapon.\nHe ssid the recoilless weapon,\nfor use by infantry, will replace\nthe 3.5-inch rocket launcher\nused by the Australian army\nsince the Korean War.\nLION MAULS TRAINER\nTHOUSAND OAKS, Calif.\n(AP)\u2014An animal trainer prodding 12 lions onto pedestals in a\ncage was attacked and severely\nmauled by one of them Sunday\nduring an amusement park performance. Chet Juszyk, 36, the\ntrainer, was treated for lacerations over his torso, arms and\nlegs at hospital. He wa's\" lr_ted\nin satisfactory condition.\n 8\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUES., MARCH 2, 1965\nHIGH SCHOOL AND\nUNIVERSITY STUDENTS\nWe Have In Stock\nReview Notes and Study Guides\nIvanhoe Milton\nHertry V Steinbeck\nSpencer Jane Eyre\nChaucer H a mIet\n\u2022   and-Many Other Topics.\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nPrograms Aimed at Overcoming\nLanguage Barrier Called for    I\nOTTAWA (CP)-Four influential cultural organizations called\nMonday for a wide variety of\nprograms aimed at overcoming\nthe language and cultural barrier between English- and\nFrench-speaking Canadians.\nThe proposals were contained\nin separate briefs to the royal\ncommission on bilingualism and\nbiculturalism, which opened\npublic hearings at the Chateau\nLaurier Hotel after making public Thursday its outspoken preliminary report.\nThe groups appearing had different views on the current\nstate of French-English relations, but their recommendations were in the same general\nvein. ;'.-'.\u25a0'\u2022\nMARKET TRENDS\n\u2022   NEW-YORK (Ap)-The stock\nmarket Monday declined for the\ni-first .tone-in eight sessions.\n'\/jthfrbbw Jones industrial average slljpped 3.72 to 899.76.\nijDu.Pont was off SVi, Texaco\n; down -i%, -American Telephone\ndown''' ii 'and Sears,  Roebuck\nd\u00a3wn:%~ \u2022[ .\n;T\u00bb^ssociated Press average\nof 60 stocks dipped .9 to 335.2.\nradio .'Corp. was the volume\n' lesder:,;up \"4 at 32% on 102,700\nahares:         \u2022 \u25a0-\u25a0\n\u25a0  .CB$,Vdown  3 to  44>\/4,  was\n*mong; the volume leaders   It\n\u25a0WaJ sold heavily on news that\nJames T. Aubrey Jr. had been\n^replaced  as president oi  the\nCBS! television network.\n\u25a0 General Motors, up 1 at 100,\nwas third most active.\nAmong Canadian issues\ntraded,- Dome Mines and Hudson Bay Mining each rose Vt\nwihil'e\" Mclntyre Porcupine\ngained Vt. Canadian Pacific lost\nH and Aluminium Ltd. %.\nPrices were irregularly\nhigher on the American exchange. Scurry. Rainbow Oil\n\u2022rose \u2022% while losing Vs apiece\nwe're Brazilian Traction, Canadian. Javelin and Preston.\nTCJftONTO (CP) - Industrials decl ined fractionally in\nmoderate stock exchange trading Monday.    '\nMassey-Ferguson on a report\nof lower earnings, fell Wt to\nMVb.   .\nCanadian Westinghouse was\noff _a point to' 68 and Walker-\nGooderham H to 38.\nInco fell a point to 87% in\nsteady senior base metals trading. Cominco lost Vi at 43% but\nHudson Bay rose Vt to Wt and\nBrunswick Vi to 19.\nIn golds, Dome rose Vt to WA\nand Giant Veliowknife the same\namount to 15%.\nHome A gained Vt to 20! 2.\nOn index, industrials fell .52\nto 172.56 and the Toronto Stock\nExchange index .42 to 161.94.\nGolds rose 1.59 to 169.28, base\nmetals .01 to'81.7*1 and Western\noils .71 to 99.72. Volume was\n3,963,000 shares compared with\n3,913,000 Friday.\nMONTREAL. (CP) - Papers\nwere up ln moderate trading\nMonday on the Montreal and\nCanadian stock exchanges.\nIndustrial volume was 263,400\nshares and mines and oils a\nfairiy heavy 2,472,500.\nThe composite index dropped\n0.3. to 162.9.\nIndustrials   dropped   0.6   to\n168.1. Imperial Tobacco was off\n% at 15'\/2 and Asbestos h at\n26%.' Canada Cement added 'A\nto 51.\nPapers were up 0.5 to 146.2.\nGreat Lakes and MacMillan\nBloedel and Powell River each\nadded 'A to. 24% and 33% respectively. Price Bros, dropped\na point to 46. \t\nUtilities were unchanged at\n157.3. Inter \u25a0 Provincial Pipe\nLine added Vi to 94.\nMetals were also lower with\nDominion Steel off Vi to 16%\nand Aluminium Vi to Ws in the\nprimary section. Among base\nmetals Consolidated dropped Vt\nto 46.\nSenior oils were fairly bright\nwith Home adding a point to\n20% and B.A. Vt to 34'\/.. Im-\nperial dropped Vi to 57%.\n\u2014The Canada Council,1 which\nhas been seeking increased financial support from the federal government, said it would\nlike to be in a position to spend\nmore money on translations of\nCanadian books and exchanges\nbetween students and cultural\ngroups of both cultures. '\n\u2014The Canadian Library Association called for a $5,000,000\nfederal program to assist all\ntypes' of libraries to build up\nbook collections in the second\nlanguage and publish bilingual\npicture books for school children. It also advocated the\ncreation of a graduate school\nto train translators.\nThe Royal Society of Canada\nsaid the provincial school systems' should increase, instruction in the second language,\nFrench or English. It favored\nschools, for translators, exchanges of scientists, scholars\nand students and translation of\nmore textbooks'and works on\nCanadian social sciences and\nhumanities.\n\u2014The Dominion Drama Festival said its annual competition\nfor amateur theatre companies\nof both languages and various\nexchange visits by performing\ngroups help Canadians to open\n\"direct communication and sincere friendship which transcend political conflict.\"\nThe Canada Council, a public\nbody set up by Parliament to\nfoster the development. of arts,\nhumanities and social sciences,\nCOPENHAGEN (AP) - Two\n18-year-old East Germans escaped to Denmark Sunday in a\nblizzard in a stolen boat that\nalmost sank under the weight of\nthe ice that formed oh it.\nUnited Church Urges Better\nDeal for French Minorities\nOTTAWA (CP)-The United\nChurch of Canada went on record Monday in favor of a distinct and public system of primary and secondary schools for\nFrench - speaking minorities\noutside Quebec.\nThe country's largest Protestant church propose*) many\nchanges in education and the\npublic service to promote official bilingualism and \"the\ncross \u2022 fertilization of tbe English-Canadian and French-Canadian cultures,\" in a brief to\nthe royal commission on biling\nualism and biculturalism.\nThe United Church called on\nthe royal commission  to hold\nNew Cure for Alcoholics\nin State Hospital\nPONTIAC, Mich. (AP)-The\nalcoholic, wearing a strap with\ntwo wired metal rods around\nhis head, took a sip from his\nglass of wine.\nFor. the, next 30 seconds he\nquivered as 18 volts of electricity shot through his head. His\neyes bulged, his facial muscles\ntwitched.\nA patient at Pontiac State\nHospital, he.was taking a new\ntreatment for alcoholism devised by Dr, John J. Hsu, re-\nMarch director.\nAnnounce New\nHealing Substance:\nShrinks Piles\ntl^|ialiialjit|ii*hili\u00bbiapf<i*iiito-l*rink\nh\u2014mlnHi tadrepair daauf ed Hunt.\nA renowned research institute haa\nfound a unique healing substance , ....\nwith the:nbility to. shrink hemor-' associate the bar, as well as\nBeforehand, he had swallowed a glass of milk. Nothing\nhad happened.- Next, he downed\nwater and fruit juice. Again\nnothing.\nTwo other glasses placed on\na simulated bar contained\nwhisky and beer. The man\nknew what would happen when\nhe drank them. Each time, the\nunpleasant charge shot through\nhim.\n\"There was a painful throbbing,\" the man said afterward.\n\"It seemed to last a long time.\n\"I kept thinking: 'Oh, how\nlong, how long!' I was quite\nconscious of time, and that it\nwas passing very slowly.\"\nMIND IS CONDITIONED\nHsu explained that the patient, by connecting the alcohol\nwith the shock, is to be conditioned to avoid alcohol\nThe make-believe bar is used\nto  make  the  patient's   mind\n.... It relieves itching\nomfort in minutes and\nrhoids\nend- 'dl\nspeeds up healing of tbe injured,\ninflamed tissue.\nIn cue after case, while gently\nrelieving pain, actual reduction\n(**rii^li^).:tpok place.:\nMost .'important of all\u2014results\nwens so thorough that this improye-\nthe drinks, with the experience.\nHsu's treatment covers a five-\nday period.\nThe patient will return after\none month and again after six\nmonths to repeat the fourth and\nfifth days' treatment.\n\"The treatment is an unpleas-\nBi\u00abnt;i\u00abB'nulintained over a period ant experience and patients re\nef many months.\nThis was ^accomplished with a\nnew1 healing substance (Bio-Dyne)\nwhich'quickly helps heal injured\ncells and stimulstes growth of new\ntte\u00bb\u00a3Vl'rT\"T'  .\nNow Bio-Dyne is offered in ointment and suppository form .called\nPreparation H. Ask for it at all drug\nftor\u00ab\u00bb--money back guarantee.\nact to it with considerable\nanxiety,\" Hsu said. \"However,\nthere have been no untoward\nside effects.\"\nHsu said he had treated 57\npatients and all had been helped\nto varying degrees. He said the\namount of voltage is too small\nto cause harm.\ndiscussions with the nine provinces with an English-speaking\nmajority to suggest \"that there\nshould be better provision for\nFrench education.\"\n\"We see every reason to encourage children to complete\ntheir primary and secondary\nschool courses in either English\nor French, with the lurther opportunity of learning the second\nlanguage.\"\nLanguages other than English\nand French should also be\ntaught in high schools and universities, on an optional basis,\nto assist the preservation of the\nother cultures in Canada, the\nbrief said.\nFrench \u2022 language public\nschools adapted to local needs,\nwere desirable wherever there\nwas a sufficiently \u2022 large concentration of French-Canadians\noutside Quebec. French schools\nneed not be Roman Catholic\nseparate schools.\nWEAKEN UNITY'\n\"Such practices as these\nwould, we believe, strengthen\nrather than weaken national\nunity.\"\nAt the same time the United\nChurch called for a common,\nobjective approach to history,\nliterature and geography in\nschools of both languages. These\nsubjects often were taught in\na divisive way.\nThe brief said too many Canadians confuse official, public\nbilingualism in Canadian institutions with bilingualism in the\nindividual.\n\"There can be no question of\nforcing anyone to speak either\nEnglish or French, let alone\nboth.\"\nThe issue was the development of policies to ensure the\nsurvival and growth of all \"sub\ncultures\" found in Canada.\n\"Your report should make\nclear that the description of the\nBritish and French as the two\n'founding' peoples does not imply that Canadians of other origins are inferior.\"\n'SHARE CONTROL'\nThe brief said Canadians of\nboth   major  languages   should\nhave the same opportunities to\n\"share in running the country,\npolitically   and   economically'\nand  to deal with the federal\ngovernment   in   their   mother\ntongue.\nOther recommendations:\n\u2014That senior government officials in Ottawa and in bilingual areas of the country\nbe \"required as soon as pos\nsible to possess reasonable\ncompetence in both English\nand French.\"\n\u2014That better facilities be developed for students and\nadults to learn a second language if they wish,\n\u2014That  cultural  contacts  be\nmultiplied \"to make French\nCanada and English Canada\nbetter known to each other.\"\nThe brief came out against\nconstitutional  changes  that\nwould lead to two  \"associate\nstates\" or \"a league of 10 almost sovereign states.\" These\nconcepts were excluded by the\nroyal  commission's  terms  of\nreference.\nThe bilingual brief was\ndrafted last year by a 19-mem-\nber special commission appointed by the general council\nof the United Church. Eugene\nForsey, research director of the\nCanadian Labor Congress, was\nchairman of the commission.\nThe 1961 census listed 3,664,-\n000 Canadians belonging to the\nUnited Church, including 87,-\n500 of French origin.\nFOR CHAIN SAW USERS...\nOREGON'S\nPOWER PLUS\u00ae\nA PRECISION-MATCHED TEAM OF 8AW BAR.\nSAW CHAIN AND SPROCKET TO MAKE YOUR\nSAW CUT FASTER; SMOOTHER I\nby test to make your iw cut up\nto 37* (titer and do It smoother and\neasier. Now you can have precision-\nmatched replacement c\"mt>onent\u00bb to as-\naure you of maximum performance from\nysursaw.\nXing Urges\nPeace Talks\nWith Muslims\nNEW YORK (AP)-In the\nwake of the quiet funeral here\nfor the slain Malcolm X, Dr.\nMartin Luther King Jr. has\nurged that Malcolm's followers\nand those of Elijah Muhammad, leader of the Black Muslims, \"meet with us at the\npeace table '\u2022'\n\"I am concerned over the\nviolence and threats of violence\nacross the nation\u2014particularly\nta.the Negro community since\nthe assassination of Malcolm\nX,\" King said in'Lbs Angeles\nSunday.\nPeace has reigned in Harlem\nand other Negro; districts here\nsince Saturday's; Muslim funeral for Malcolm X, who brbke\nwith Muhammad more than a\nyear ago and formed a rival\nMuslim sect'.\nSeveral thousand persons\nstood in the bitter cold outside\na church in Harlem during the\nservice, and about 600 packed\nthe church. Thej-e was a heavy\npolice guard. \"Malcoltii was buried in a cemetery\" in suburban\nHartsdate, N.Y.\nThe peace conference proposal by King, Negro head of\nthe Southern Christian Leadership Conference, came after\nthreats against Muhammad and\nhis followers as revenge for the\nslaying of Malcolm. Muhammad and other leaders of his\nChicago-based sect has denied\nany connection with the slaying. .\nMUHAMMAD NOT SHAKY\nMuhammad, 67, strongly\nguarded by his followers and\npolice, told the closing session\nof the three-day Black Muslim\nconvention in Chicago Sunday\nsaid mutual sympathy between\nthe two language groups is enhanced by cultural exchanges\nand contacts\u2014translations of literature, television, radio, theatre, concerts, ballet ahd art exhibitions, The council's contribution to translations had been\nmodest and should be increased.\nSAYS MISUNDERSTOOD\nThe whole problem of bilingualism has been grossly\nmisunderstood throughout the\ncountry,\" the brief said.\n\"Surely there can be no serious thought that all Canadians\nshould be able, or in any sense\nrequired, to speak both languages.\"\nThe council said the promotion of bilingualism-means emphasizing the need for \"widespread recognition and cordial\nacceptance of the fact that\nthere are two official languages\nin this country, French and\nEnglish.\"\nThe council suggested that a\ncommittee of leading French-\nand English-speaking scholars\nbe set up to Inquire into the\npossibility ol producing a more\nobjective, common approach to\nCanadian history.\nSchool and college students\nwere being taught two different,\nprejudiced versions of Canadian\nhistory, according to their\nmother tongue,\nCITES FUND SHORTAGE\nThe library association, representing 1,900 librarians and 700\npublic libraries and book stores\nacross Canada, said libraries\nare short of funds and cannot\ndevelop bilingual programs without massive federal financial\naid. An \"initial amount\" of $5,-\n000,000 was suggested.\nThe group also said qualified\ntranslators were in short supply\nand a Canadian university\nshould be asked to set up a\nschool of translation.\nThe association recommended\nthat the selection of professional librarians should not be\nsubject to a bilingual requirement. \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0:'.\nThe Royal Society, a bilingual\ngroup of 627 writers and scientists founded in 1882 by then\ngovernor-general Lord Lome,\nurged the creation of a \"council of educational co-operation\"\ntb work toward standardization\nof education policies add school\ncurricula.\nThe council would be advisory\nonly and group representatives\nof the provincial education departments and national voluntary associations interested in\neducation.\nOK WORKING RULE\nThe society said the use of\nboth English and French in the\nfederal public service should be\na working rule, but the principle\nof equality of the two languages\nhad no practical or legal justification in seven provinces where\nFrench-speaking minorities are\nsmall.\nAn exception was made of\nQuebec, .Ontario and New\nBrunswick.    \u25a0.\nThe Dominion Drama Festival\nmade no specific recommendations but described its own experiment in bilingualism.\nThe group said a grant from\nthe Quebec government has\nhelped it considerably in expanding its work in French\nCanada.\nThe organization's experience\nhad shown, however, that an\nequal English-French partnership is impractical, \"Recognition of the rights of a minority\nas equal to those of a majority\nmay be contrary to the principles of democracy.\"\nIn other briefs, the Canadian\nIndustrial Editors Association,\ngrouping the editors of 157 company house organs, said most\nsuch publications make no efforts to promote better English-\nFrench relations.\nQUALITY POOR\nWhen French was used in\nbusiness periodicals, the quality\nwas quite poor and offensive to\nFrench-speaking readers.\nThe Canadian Nurses Association, with 78,000 members in\nall 10 provinces, said it adopted\nbilingual publications and si:\nmultaneous translation for its\nmeetings several years ago.\n..*.:.wwmw.st.: nwatmi\t\n! Yoiir Individual\nHoroscope;,;\t\n\u2022^z=.-\"j^ By Frances Drake \u25a0\u00ab\u00ab,\u00ab\u2014\u00ab\u00bb.,\nLook in the section in which\nyour birthday comes, and find\nwhat your outlook is according\nto the stars,\nFor Wednesday, March 3, 1965\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 20\n(Aires) \u2014 Mars now gives you\nextra vigor and aptitude for\nhandling difficult tasks. No one\nwill push you, but you will have\nto make most of your own grit\nand ambition.\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Aaurus)\n\u2014 Harness energies for work in\nthe most important areas in your\nlife. Be especially thoughtful in\nmatters which could affect your\nfuture.\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini)\n\u2014' Mixed influences. Sound out\nothers before acting in matters\nthat concern them, too. You\ncould go overboard in certain\nareas, be lackadiasical in others.\nEmphasize good judgment.\nJUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer)\n\u2014 Some dramatic changes possible, but take them in stride.\nEven if disconcerted at first, you\nwill find them to your betterment, Maintain your sense of\nbalance,\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leo)\n\u2014 There's a possibility, of difference of opinion where least\nexpected. Do not let this disquiet\nyou. Make it a healthy discussion and learn from it. Don't,\nhowever, deviate from a well-\nprescribed course without good\nreason. \t\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER\n23 (Virgo) \u2014 Step sure-footedly,\nwith good judgement andg deliberation. Conclude any pending\nproblems before launching new\nprograms.\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER\n23 (Libra) \u2014 Be concise and accurate to insure faster, surer\nprogress. Meetings and new. agreements could advance interests.\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER\n22 (Scorpio) \u2014 Take everything\ninto consideration, before you\nlaunch a new idea or make a\ndrastic change. Remain cool and\nunfliistered to combat irritations,\nstresses. \u25a0 \u25a0\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER 21 (Sagittarius) - This day\nwill be neither as dull nor as\ntedious as it may seem at first.\nBehind the \"clouds\" is that blue\nsky, and many sunny advantages. But you must LOOK UP!\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY\n20 (Capricorn) \u2014 Organize your\ntalents and faculties so as to\nwork as trimly and concisely as\npossible. Your enthusiasm and\nsturdy effort should be stressed\nall day.\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY\n19 (Aquarius) \u2014 You may finalize a long-awaited contract now\nor put over a good business deal.\nNegotiate from strength, backed\nby firm resolve.\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\n(Pisces) \u2014 Strive to further\nplans set in motion earlier. A\nshipshape performance can be\nyours now. Emphasize your innate dignity, understanding, discretion, self-confidence.\nYOU BORN TODAY are noted\nfor your carefulness, caution and\ncourteousness. You are adept at\nfulfilling assignments, willing to\nwork, and you get along with\nmost persons beautifully. Your\nonly trouble is that you sometimes doubt your own abilities,\nwonder whether associates appreciate you and if the job at\nhand will be too difficult to accomplish: Put these fears OUT\nof your mind completely. Assess\nyour talents for all they are\nworth (giving yourself the edge)\nand feel assured that you ARE\nwanted and appreciated, and you\nwill literally leap over obstacles.\nBirthdate of: Geo. M. Pullman,\ninventor; Alex. Graham Bell,\ntelephone inventor.   '-\"\u2022'\"'\nTrain Engineers Getting\nTired of Bloody Business\nthat the outbreak of violence\namong Negroes has not made\nhim shaky.\nNew York police have arrested two Negroes on homicide charges in the slaying of\nMalcolm, 39. They said one\nwas a Black Muslim. Police\nsay they believe five men were\ninvolved in the slaying as he\nstarted to address a rally in a\nManhattan ballroom a week\nago Sunday.\nThe convention's only disturbance, apparently unconnected\nwith Malcolm's death, came\nSunday.\nA Chicago man, Willie Greer,\n30, was taken to hospital after\nMuhammad's karate - trained\nguards attacked him for allegedly insulting the sect leader\nabout a year ago in the presence of some Black Muslims.\nBy DICK SODERLUND\nGAELLIVARE, Sweden (AP)\nThe most \u2022 used tool aboard\nSwedish northland trains at this\ntime of year is an axe\u2014not for\nchopping wood, but killing run-\nover reindeer.\nThe bloody business has gotten so out of hand that engineers on the Lapland Iron Ore\nRailway are asking for shorter\nworking hours.\nThey say they need rest from\nruns along the \"death lines,\"\nduring which .they have to work\nas butchers, killing maimed\nreindeer.\nA spokesman for the trainmen, engineer Knut Appelqvist,\nsaid recently:\nWe cannot stand it anymore.\nWe look like bloody butchers\nwhen we come back from the\nline. The ore line and the inland line at this time of year are\nnothing but large butchering\nplaces with bloody reindeer\ncarcasses strewn along the\ntracks.\n\"Many of the engine drivers\nhere show mental disturbances\nevery winter and early spring.\nThis problem must be solved\nsomehow.\"\nIS MAJOR PROBLEM\nEveryone agrees that the\nproblem of the reindeer massacres has become one of the\nchief difficulties f a c i n g the\nSwedish north where, as elsewhere in Lapland, huge herds\nof the domesticated, short-\ntailed, brown and white reindeer are kept. Normally ant-\nlered animals, the North American species of which is called\ncaribou, the reindeer lose their\nantlers before spring.\nLast year 3,694 animals were\nkilled by trains. The state railways paid out close to 300,000\nkroner ($60,000) in indemnities\nto Lapp reindeer \u25a0 owners. The\nper-head compensation is about\nhalf of what a Laplander gets if\na beast of prey kills one of his\nreindeer.\nWatchmen along the rail\nlines spend most of their time\nin the winter cutting off the\nbranded ears of dead reindeer,\nso that the owners will be paid.\nSome reindeer are run over\non practically every train trip.\nPASSENGERS OBJECT\nPassengers aboard the trains\noften assail the engineers for\nhaving run over the reindeer,\nsome passengers fainting dead\naway at the bloody sight.\nSome engineers said an upsetting feature is the pressure\nof schoolchildren aboard trains.\nAs the engineers go about their\nunwanted but necessary task\nof putting maimed reindeer out\nof their misery, the kids stand\nthere, pale and watching.\nThe railway men have turned\ndown proposals to equip them\nwith guns, saying' \"that would\nnot make\/the butchering less\nhorribler\nOne drastic measure added a\nhumorous note to a situation\nthat no one in the northland\nordinarily finds funny. Trains\nequipped with tape \u2022 recorded\nwolf howls' in an effort to scare\nthe reindeer out of the way.\nBut the scheme was abandoned when the reindeer did\nnot react.\nSWEATERS\nfor Spring\nKnow Style . . .\nComfort,    too,    when\nyou sport one of these\nfine sweaters!\n\u2022 Mohair Blend\n\u2022 Double Knit\n\u2022 Novelty Stripe\n\u2022 V-Neek Rouble Knit\n\u266614.95, *21.95\nEMORY'S LTD.\nTHE MAN'S STORE\nNews of the Day\nKATES: 30o due, 40c line bold face type; larger type rate*\non request. Minimum two lines.\nCOPY DEADLINE - PLEASE NOTE\nCopy tor this column accepted until 3 p.m. for Insertion\nIn next day's publication.\nClearout Sale\nEBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.\n-47-tfn\nBINGO\nLEGION HALL TONIGHT\n-29-h\nR.N.A.B.C. MEETING\nHospital Board Room, Tuesday,\nMarch 2nd, t p.m. Guest speaker, Mr. M. Scott-Kerr.    \u201451-51\nDiamonds, Watches, Gifts,\nRepairs, Engraving\nTED ALLEN'S JEWELLERY\n-305-h\nGood selection of 45\" drapery\non sale at $1.49 yard.\nSTERLING FURNISHERS\n-50-51\nBuy next year's skates now and\nsave. 1\/3 off on all CCM skate\noutfits. Limited stock \u2014 don't\ndelay!\nHIPPERSON HARDWARE\n-49-51\nYou are invited to a FREE\ndemonstration meeting of the\nDALE CARNEGIE COURSE,\nThursday, Mar. 4, 7:59 p.m.\nNelson Hotel, Nelson, B.C. No\nCost or Obligation. \u201449-53\nThe annual meeting of the\nCamp Busk Society will be held\nin the Scout Hall, Monday, 8th\nMarch at 9:00 p.m. All members\nare requested to attend.\n-51-51\nCARD OF THANKS\nWe wish to express our sincere thanks to all the C.P.R. em.\nployees for a wonderful and\nmemorable party given ln our\nhonor last Saturday.\nJohn and Alice McKay.\n-51-51\nATTENTION B.C. GOV'T\nEMPLOYEES  ASSOCIATION\nMEMBERS\nA general meeting will be held\nat the Canadian Legion Hall on\nTues., March 2nd, at 8 p.m. Following this, the Nelson P.G.E.\nCredit Union will hold a special\nmeeting. All members are urged\nto attend. \u201451-51\nWow! What a buy! Coronado\n23\" Console T.V.,  only $209.95\nwith approved trade-in.\nMACLEOD'S\nYour Family Shopping Centre\n-51-51\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nMcKIM \u2014 Funeral services for\nMrs. Svea Berhardina McKim,\nwill be held at St. Paul's-Trinity\nUnited Church, at Silica and Josephine Streets, Wednesday at\n2 p.m. The Rev. Peter W. Faris\nwill officiate and interment wUl\ntake place in Nelson Memorial\nPark. Thompson Funeral Service.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nTHOMSON \u2014 Funeral services\nfor Mr. Donald John Thomson\nwill be held at the Fairview United Church, corner of Elwyn and\nDavies Streets, Thursday at t\np.m. The Rev. J. Rae Allan will\nofficiate and interment will take\nplace in Nelson Memorial Park.\nThompson Funeral Service.\nHove the Job Done Right!\nV\/IC GRAVEC\n*        LIMITED       *J\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPhone 352-3315\nRexall\nCASTILE SOAP\nSHAMPOO\nExtra Gentle\nSparkling Clear\n16 on. for f 1.98\nSold Only at\nYour Rexall Pharmacy\nCITY DRUG\nBox 460\nPhone 352-3611\nTo its regular service over the shorter Polar Route\nCanadian Pacific Airlines\nadds the only\nto all Europe\nSTARTS APRIL 29\nMIGRATE DOWN UNDER\nIn 1964 Australia recorded\n135,469 immigrants\u2014an increase\nof 25 per cent oyer the previous\nyear and the highest level since\n1950.\n\u2022 NEW, NON-STOP FLIGHTS TO AMSTERDAM.\nFaster, just 9 hours over the shorter Polar Route.\n\u2022 AMSTERDAM IS THE GATEWAY TO THE\nU.K. AND ALL EUROPE. Canadian Pacific's\nPolar Route is the fastest, only one-stop way to\nBrussels, Stockholm, Copenhagen, other cities,\n1 JUST $50 DOWN (balance in 24 easy monthly\npayments) for 14 to 21-day jet economy round\ntrip Calgary-London including connecting carrier.\nOnly $55 down to Amsterdam and Paris.\n\u2022 SEE EXTRA CITIES AT NO EXTRA FARE.\nAmsterdam, Paris; Edinburgh, Glasgow, Brussels!\nLondon, Rotterdam.\n\u2022 See your Travel Agent or Canadian Pacific.\nFLY CANADIAN \u2014\nTWINS\/TRUCKS \/ SHIPS \/ PLANES \/ HOTELS \/ TELECOMMUNICATIONS\n.WORLD'S  MOST COMPLETE  TRANSPORTATION  SYSTEM\nAPPROVED BY\nMTMNATtONAU\nAIR TftAtWBWr\n-     ASSOCIATION\nFor Information ond Reservation\nBRADLEY TRAVEL AGENCIES\nPhone 352-3212 \u2014 Nelion\n7 K>R TICKETS and RESERVATIONS, CALL -\nVIPOND FOR TRAVEL\n.HUME  HOTEL, NELSON TRAIL\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1965_03_02","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0436022","@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 Nelson Museum, Archives and Gallery: https:\/\/nelsonmuseum.ca","@language":"en"}],"SortDate":[{"@value":"1965-03-02 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1965-03-02 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\/1.0436022"}