{"@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":"1965-04-19","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0436231\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" TEMPERATURES\nNELSON      33   64 -\nToronto   12 38 tr.\nCalgary   29  38 .01\nPenticton ....;  30 57 tr.\nVancouver  45 53 tr\n  31 51 -\nFORECAST\nKOOTENAY: Mainly eloudy.\nLittle change in temperature.\nWinds light. Low and high at\nCranbrook and Crescent Valley,\n35 and 50.\nPublished at Nelson, government, financial trading and educational centre of tht Kobienay-Columbia ared\nVol. 63\nNELSON, B. C, CANADA-MONDAY MORNING, APRIL 19, 1965\n10 Centt\nNo. 301\n_.     v.**.     -_. sw\nDIGGING IN AT DA NANG\u2014The newest U.S. Marines to arrive at the big Da Nang base\nIn South Viet Nam dig air raid and artillery, shelters near their tents.      (Badiophoto)\nRed River Flood Threat\nEased bv Good Weather\nWINNIPEG (CP) - The Red\nRiver will not crest as high as\nforecast because of excellent\nweather, Premier Duff Roblin\ntold a press conference Sunday.\nExpressing some optimism\nfollowing a tour of southern\nManitoba's Red River Valley\nand a meeting with his cabinet, the premier said the key\nto the situation now was the\nweather.\nMr. Roblin gave a few revised crest expectations and\n\u25a0aid these may be adjusted\nlower if dry weather continued.\nHowever, he said flooding\nwould still be close to 1948 pro-\nThe weather office said Sunday that a weak storm was\nmoving across the Prairies and\nmay leave a fractional amount\nof rain in the Red River region.\nMr. Roblin also announced\nthat a helicopter crew detonated charges of dynamite on\nthe Assiniboine River east of\nPortage la Prairie and loosened\nserious ice jams. The river was\nstill filled with ice but it was\nmoving more freely.\nThe Assiniboine, which meets\nthe Red River in Winnipeg, was\nnot expected to cause much\ntrouble this year but has been\nresponsible for most of the\nflooding in Manitoba so far.\nThe hardest hit area was a\nsection south of the Assiniboine\nabout 12 miles east of Portage\nwhere several families were\nevacuated from their homes.\nMr. Roblin said the Red\nwould crest to 23 feet above the\naverage winter ice level in\nWinnipeg. April 24. The previous\nestimate was for a 24 - foot\ncrest.\nThe Red was 20.6 feet above\naverage winter ice level at the\nJames Street pumping station\nat 4 p.m. Sunday, an increase\nof only six inches since midnight Friday.\nThousands Keep Vigil\nAlong Mississippi Dikes\nST. PAUL, Minn. (AAP) -\nThousands of workers sandbagged and kept a round-the-\nclock vigil at dikes along the\nMississippi River Sunday, as\nicy, high water menaced\nlevees.\nBut in some areas the flood\nthreat abated.\nThe U.S. weather bureau said\nthe Mississippi, north of St.\nLouis, Mo., and in the Quincy,\n111., and Hannibal, Mo. areas,\nhad fallen.\nThe bureau said pressure was\nlessened by a broken levee in\nthe Quinch area, which spread\nwater over 7,000 acres of farm\nland Saturday night. Three hundred flood workers were evacuated from the Indian Grave\nsection \u2014 the site of the levee\nbreak. Ten guard members\nmarooned at a farm behind the\nlevee made their way back to\nhigher ground Sunday when the\nwater level dropped.\nResidents of two East Moline,\n111., housing projects have been\nmoving out of their homes for\nthe last two days.\nRock Island, 111., was untouched behind a brand new\nseawall, but sandbagging and\nearth - moving on dikes continued as the river here inched\nupward to 1.1 feet above the\nflooding level.\nEVACUATE HOMES\nMore than 300 National Guard\nmembers patrolled river points\nin western Illinois Sunday as\nthe first of an expected 5,500\nevacuees began to leave their\nhomes.\nThe river was falling slowly\nat Minneapolis and St. P a u 1,\nalthough forecasters estimated\nthat it will not be back within\nits banks until the beginning of\nnext month. The forecasters\nsaid a steady vigil at the dikes\nmust continue.\nEx-Cop Charged in Theft\nOf Mutilated Currency\nEDMONTON (CP) - Joseph\nPercival, 37, a former Vancouver City policeman, and James\nMcDougall, 32, also of Vancouver, will appear in police court\nhere Tuesday morning, charged\nin connection with the theft of\n$1,250,000 in mutilated currency\nfrom a Vancouver railway\nwarehouse more than two\nmonths ago.\nThe men were arrested in\nEdmonton Saturday night and\ncharged with possession of\nstolen property\u2014the bills taken\nby four men from a Canadian\nPacific Railway warehouse\nFeb. 11.   .\nAn Edmonton police official\nsaid the two arrested men\nwould remain in custody at\nEdmonton at least until Tuesday's court appearance. A Vancouver City police detective\nflew to Edmonton Sunday afternoon to assist in investigations,\nwhich are continuing.\nEdmonton police have recovered about $12,000 in mutilated\nmoney.\nThey were, alerted Saturday\nwhen a hotel said mutilated\nmoney had been used on\nits premises. Police quickly\nwarned other hotels and liquor\noutlets in the city.\nPolice said the Caravan Motor Hotel called late Saturday\nto say two men had attempted\nto use mutilated money. Police\nwent there immediately.\nAfter a block-long chase on\nfoot, Percival and Mcdougall\nwere arrested together about\n9:30 p.m.\nPress Search for Killer\nAs RCMP Constable Buried\nKELOWNA, B.C. <CP)-\nRCMP Constable Neil Bruce\nwas buried Saturday as an intensive manhunt went on for\nthe man- charged with fatally\nshooting him.\nMore than 500 RCMP officers\u2014led by Assistant Commissioner D. O. Forrest, commanding officer of E division,\nVictoria \u2014 and civilians paid\ntheir respects to the New Brunswick-born constable who was fatally shot in the line of duty.\nMembers of the force in\nceremonial dress stood at stiff\nattention outside the chapel\nduring the service conducted\nby Rev. Cyril Clark.\nMore than 400 attended the\ngraveside ceremony.\nConstable Bruce was shot\nApril 10 In the chest from a\ncabin on the shore of Okanagan\nLake as he checked a report a\ngirl was being held there\nagainst her will. The girl, Beverley Charest, 17, of Lumby,\nfled from the cabin suffering\ngunshot wounds in the jaw.\nThe policeman died four days\nlater   in   hospital.   The   girl,\nthough she cannot yet talk, is\nrecovering.\nFACES TWO CHARGES\nCharged with capital murder\nin the death of Constable Bruce\nis Russell Spears, 59. He is also\ncharged with attempted murder\nin the wounding of the girl.\nSpears has been the object of\nan intensive manhunt since the\nshooting. Scores of heavily\narmed police, aided by police\ndogs, have scoured the area but\nhave found no trace of the\nwanted man.\nMore reported sightings of the\nfugitive were checked out as\nmistaken. Three tracking dogs\nand 15 officers scoured a five-\nmile area around Spears' cabin\nnear Westbank.\nAlthough no trace of Spears\nhas been found, an RCMP\nspokesman said Saturday:\n\"We aren't going to give him\na chance to make a break for\nit and we aren't going to let\nup until we get him.\"\nConstable Bruce left a wife\nand two small children.\nSOVIET VOLUNTEERS READY\nIF NEEDED IN VIET NAM\nRussian Offer Announced\nFollowing Secret Meeting\nMOSCOW (Reuters) \u2014 The Soviet g overnment warned Saturday night lt is\nready to send fighting volunteers to Viet Nam ii American attacks intensify, and if\nsuch help is requested by North Viet Nam.\nRussia's offer was announced\nPope Appeals\n'End Fighting'\nClear Plea Aimed\nAt Viet Nam War\nVATICAN CITY (AP) - Pope Paul VI appealed in\nhis Easter message Sunday ior a negotiated end to \"every\nwar and guerrilla operation\" \u2014 a plea clearly aimed at\nthe fighting in Viet Nam.\nThe 67-year-old pontiff also denounced racial strife and political and social oppression.\nA half-million people braved a cold wind and rain to hear\nthe pope's message delivered in Italian at an outdoor mass in St.\nPeter's Square.\nSpeaking in a firm voice, the\npointiff asked for rejoicing on\nthis Christian feast day commemorating the ressurection of\nChrist. He said it should be a\ntime of optimism, inspiring the\nworld toward peace and justice,\nand the desire \"of a new start\nin the history of man.\"\n\"And so, in the name and in\nthe spirit of the risen Christ,\nmay the day finally come on\nwhich men will put aside their\nfalse ideologies, urged on by\ntheir need for a new wisdom or\nbecause they have accepted this\nnew wisdom which reveals\nman's true nature as well as\n\u25a0his triier destiny; \u2022- -\u2022,--'t-- \u2022 \u2022\u25a0\u2022'-\nCALLS FOR NEGOTIATION\n\"May the day come on which\nthe discords among peoples will\nbe resolved, not with the force\nof arms but rather in the light\nof reasonable negotiations: and\nlet every war and guerrilla operation give way to constructive collaboration which is mutual and fraternal.\n\"And may the day come on\nwhich the prodigious energies\nof progress will be employed to\nsatisfy the world's hunger and\nto educate future generations,\nto bring remedies to the recurrent ills of mankind.\n\"And let there no longer be\non this earth any of those deliberately caused and unprofitable sufferings due to systematic political and social oppression, to racial strife, to the contempt and restriction of the just\nfreedom of conscience and expression.\"\nThe Pope began Easter by\ndriving 12 miles to St. Francis\nVillage where he celebrated the\nfirst of two outdoor Easter\nmasses.. About. 2,000~persons -attended the service at the village, a workers' housing project built with Vatican contributions.\nBack at the Vatican, he celebrated his second mass, a striking pontificial ceremony outdoors in St. Peter's Square.\nForeign tourists who came to\nItaly in the biggest Easter\ntravel rush since the end of the\nSecond World War swelled the\ncrowd.\nat the end of an eight \u25a0 day\nsecret visit to Moscow by Le\nHalt Air Strikes\nOpen Way to Peace\nWASHINGTON (AP) - Taking issue with State Secretary\nDean Rusk, Senator J. W. Fulbright said Sunday a temporary\nhalt in air strikes against North\nViet Nam might open the way to\npeace negotiations.\nRusk said in a statement Saturday the administration has\nconsidered and rejected the idea\nNorth Viet Nam because such action \"would only encourage the\ntion \"woul only encourage the\naggressor and dishearten our\nfriends who bear the brunt of\nbattle.\"\nFulbright, Arkansas Democrat\nwho heads the Senate foreign relations committee, said he does\nnot relish differing with the secretary but believes that bombings may cause the North Viet\nnamese to \"dig in\" and the Russians to decline to talk so long\nas they continue.\n\"Of course, I should tike to\nsee a cease-fire on both sides,\"\nhe said, \"But if that can't be ob-\ntsained, then I believe there\nmight be some value in stopping\nthe bombings temporarily. I\ndon't know if it would work, but\nit seems to me to be worth trying.\"\nIn addition to some senators\nand other Americans, several\nforeign leaders have suggested\nand end to or an interruption of\nbombings. The latter include\nPrime Minister Pearson, Indian\nPrime Minister Shastri and \"Pakistani Foreign Minister Ali\nBhutto.\nHuan, first secretary of the\nNorth Viet Nam Workers (Communist) party and chief aide to\nPresident Ho Chi Minh.\nA joint communique also contained the Kremlin's first formal rejection of President Johnson's offer of unconditional discussions on Viet Nam, made 10\ndays ago.\nIt accused the U.S. of failing\nto explore \"avenues leading to\na peaceful solution of the Vietnamese problem.\"\nRussia first threatened to\nsend volunteers to Viet Nam in\na speech by Communist party\nleader Leonid Brezhnev in Red\nSquare March 23.\nDiplomatic  observers  aaid\nthe repeated threat did not appear, to  take  the  possibility\nmuch! further.   .\nTO MAN MISSILES?\n, Observers doubted that Soviet\nfighting men would be sent to\nViet Nam for ground operations\nhut thought the announcement\nwas a prelude-to an official disclosure. '. s K o r 11 y that \"volunteers\" have .been sent to\nNorth Viet Nam to  man the\nBan Bomb Marchers\nIn Easter Parades\nSpecial services, \"ban - the -\nbomb\" marches and religious\npilgrimages marked Easter\nSunday in the Christian world.\nIn the Jordanian sector of\nJerusalem, more than 20,000\npersons, many of them foreign\ntourists and pilgrims, attended\nEaster Sunday mass at the\nChurch of the Holy Sepulchre.\nIn New York, thousands donned their finest and joined the\ncity's annual Easter parade up\nFifth Avenue under sunny skies.\nSome 17,000 gathered at\nReport Second\nLaotian Mutiny\nVIENTIANE, Laos (Reuters)\nA right-wing mutiny by 300\nLaotian government troops, the\nsecond revolt in three weeks,\nwas reported Sunday by military sources here.\nThe sources said the men deserted in the Mekon River town\nof Paksane, 100 miles east of\nhere.\nThe 300 mutineers, supporters\nof the exiled right-wing Gen.\nPhoumi Nosavan, were believed\nto be heading north.\nOne of the units involved was\npart of a pro - Phoumi force\nwhich attacked neutralist government troops in February.\nThat uprising was followed by\nthe general's flight to Thailand\nwhere he sought political asylum.\nHis son Phoumino, held as a\nhostage for his father's behavior, escaped last month from\ndetention in an army camp and\nwas reported to have reached\nThailand.\nTroops revolted three weeks\nago and seized the town of\nThakhek, 130 miles southeast of\nhere.\nHollywood Bowl in California\nfor the 45th annual sunrise\nservice there.\nIn West Berlin, tens of thousands of citizens of the divided\ncity celebrated Easter Sunday\nby visiting their relatives in\nEast Berlin, on the other side\nof the Communist wall. About\n100,000 West Berliners were expected to visit the Communist\nsector on day passes Easter\nSunday.\nEast Berlin's churches were\ncrowded for the Easter Sunday\nservice, though a congregation\nattending Berlin cathedral had\nto hold their service in the\ncrypt. The cathedral proper has\nbeen in ruins since the end of\nthe Second World War.\nPresident Johnson said Saturday that the window still is open\nto peace in Viet Nam and \"we\nare ready to begin discussions\nnext week, tomorrow or tonight.\"\nIn his Easter-time statement\nJohnson also said the U n i t e d\nStates will settle for no less than\na free, independent South Viet\nNam and that the U.S. never\nwill abandon the little Asian\ncountry.\n\"And let this also be clear,\"\nthe president said, \"until that\nindependence is guar anteed\nthere is no human power capable of forcing us from Viet\nNam. We will remain as long\nas necessary, with the might required, whatever the risk and\nIndian Princess\nWeds Sweetheart\nWHITEHORSE, Y.T. (CP) -\nIrene Seeseequasis, Canada's Indian princess, will marry her\nhigh school sweetheart Tuesday\nin a double ring ceremony in\nSacred Heart Cathedral in Whitehorse.\nMiss Seeseequasis, crowned\nIndian princess at a National Indian Council meeting last summer, will marry Gordon Tootoo-\nsis, 22, a fellow supervisor at the\nYukon hostel here.\nMiss Seeseequasis, 21, a native of Duck Lake, Sask., took a\nbusiness course at Saskatoon and\nworked for the Indian affairs department at Duck Lake. Her\nfiancee is a native of Cutknife,\nSask., and graduated in commercial art in Saskatoon.\nThe couple came to Whitehorse\nfor the Sourdough Rendezvous\nlast February and decided to\nstay. They were employed at the\nhostel, which cares for Indian\nchildren attending school in this\nterritorial capital.\nWindow Still O^en\nViet Nam Peace\nTo\nJOHNSON CITY, Tex.  (AP) whatever the cost.\"\nIn Washington, State Secretary\nDean Rusk ruled out any cessation of air strikes against North\nViet Nam at this time\u2014a course\nsuggested by some inside and\noutside the United States.\nSuch action has been carefully considered, Rusk said in a\nstatement, but to take it \"would\nonly encourage the aggressor\nand dishearten our friends who\nbear the brunt of battle.\"\nNOTES NO RESPONSE    .\nNaming no critics, Rusk noted\nthat some argue an end to\nbombings might halt aggression\nfrom the north \"but we have\ntried publicly and privately to\nfind out if this would be the\nresult and there has been no\nresponse.\"\n(Canada's Prime Minister\nPearson, India's Prime Minister Shastri; and Pakistani Foreign Minister Ali Bhutto, among\nothers, have in recent weeks\nproposed a pause in U.S. air\nstrikes against North Viet Nam.\nRusk's views\u2014obviously approved by the president\u2014were\nreleased while students demonstrated in Washington both\nagainst and for the U.S. policy\nin Viet Nam. Police estimated\nthe over-all number of 12,000 to\n15,000 and the antis far outnumbered the pros.\nStanding on a small patio of\nhis ranch house, Johnson read\nhis statement to reporters in\nsolemn tones.\nmissiles Russia ii reported to\nbe sending there.\nThe key paragraph in the\ncommunique, released by Tass\nnews agency said:\n\"If U.S. aggression. against\nthe Democratic Republic ef\n(North) Viet Nam is intensified,\nthe Soviet government, in case\nof necessity, given an appeal by\nthe government of the Democratic Republic of Viet Nam,\nwill consent to the departure\nfor Viet Nam of Soviet citizens\nwho, guided by sentiments of\nproletarian internationalism express a desire to fight ior the\njust cause of the Vietnamese\npeople, for the maintenance of\nthe socialist achievements tl\nthe Democratic Republic, of\nVietnam.\".  .\nMoscow observers noted that\nthe Russian offer was qualified\nby the phrase that volunteers\nwould be allowed to go \"in case\nof necessity.**'-\"\u25a0'\u25a0\nHOPE FOR TALKS SEEN\nDiplomats\" saw some hope ef\na backdoor move toward negotiations on Viet Nam in a call\nby Russia and North Viet Nam\nto reconvene the 14-nation international conferences dealing\nwith neighboring Laos and\nCambodia;     -\nRussia recently made a formal proposal for a new inters\nnational conference on Cambodia.\nSecretary-General U Thant of\nthe United Nations and British\nPrime Minister Wiiroii last\nweek hinted that a new conference on Cambodia might\nopen the way-for talks on Viet\nNam.\nBritish Prime Minister\nWarns Against Defeatism\nBy ARTHUR L. GAVSHON\nLONDON (APA)-Prime Minister Harold Wilson has suggested that \"we should not be\ntoo quickly discouraged or too\ndefeatist\" about first Communist reactions tending to discount\nPresident Johnson's overtures\nfor peace in Viet Nam .\n\"We have very warmly welcomed the speech of the president on the outlook in Southeast\nAsia,\" Wilson said. \"It showed\na clear and unequivocal willingness to enter into discussions\nwithout preconditions. We would\nstrongly support him in that, as\nwe have in other aspects of the\nstruggle in Southeast Asia . I\nparticularly welcome the stress\nhe has laid on economic reconstruction and rehabilitation.\n\"We have had many discouragements on this question over\nthe past few weeks and we\nshould not be too quickly discouraged or too defeatist about\nfirst reactions to the president's\nproposals.\"\nThe prime minister, in an interview with The Associated\nPress,   said   Britain   and   the\nUnited States must tighten their\nalliance to check rising dangers\nto   peace   from   Suez   to   the\nChina Sea.\nRELEASAE TRANSCRIPT\nThe interview took place last\nTuesday just before Wilson\nwent to Washington to see the\npresident. The transcript was\nreleased Sunday after Wilson's\noffice checked it, following the\nprime minister's return to Britain.\nWilson said \"the balance of\ndanger\" is spreading more and\nmore to Asia from Europe.\nConfront UN\nSukarno Urges\nJAKARTA (CP) - President\nSukarno urged countries of Asia\nand Africa Sunday to \"confront\" the United Nations, from\nwhich Indonesia withdrew in\nJanuary.\nConfrontation\" is the name\nSukarno gives to his militant\npolicy of opposition to neighboring Malaysia, against which he\nmakes the same charge as\nagainst the UN .-.. that it is\ndominated by imperialists.\nAt ceremonies marking the\nloth anniversary of the Afro-\nAsian conference at Bandung,\nIndonesia, Sukarno, launched an\nattack on the United States, the\nUN and imperialism.\nDe Gaulle Ousts\nU.S. From Tahiti\nPARIS (Reuters) .\u2014 President de Gaulle made the decision to ask the United States\nto close its consulate in Papeete, Tahiti, the newspaper\nParis Presse says.\nThe paper's political, reporter\nsays de Gaulle thought the\nbuilding of France^ Pacific nuclear base and experiments to\nbe conducted there should be\nout of reach of U.S. ..information services. \u2022\u2022- \u2022\u25a0\nAir Strikes Near Hanoi by U.S.\nSAIGON (AP) - Four propeller-driven U.S. Navy fighter-\nbombers flew within 60 miles\nbf Hanoi Easter Sunday. They\ndrew no opposition from Communist jets.\nAmerican planes flew a total\nof 32 air strikes in South Viet\nNam and three against the\nCommunist north, including the\nprobe shortly before midnight\nnear the North Vietnamese capital.\nA freak bomb explosion cost\nthe life of a U.S. Air Force\npilot during a strike against\nguerrilla targets within South\nViet Nam. No other losses in\nAmerican aircraft were reported\nin the raids.\nThe strikes against the north\ncame from navy fighter-bombers from the U.S. carriers Midway and Hancock. In the first\nraid. 14 navy planes sank a\nferry boat with cannon and\nrocket fire at Giap Tarn about\n60 miles north of the frontier,\nAmerican spokesmen said early\nSunday.\nEleven other navy planes followed up this raid later in the\nday, streaking northward along\nroute 101 and pounding the\nCommunists' Long Thanh army\nbarracks in the same general\narea.\nFOLLOW HIGHWAY\nIn the final sortie, the four\nSkyraiders followed route 15\nfrom Vinh, 100 miles north of\nthe border, to a point about 60\nmiles south of Hanoi.\nThey returned with all their\nammunition, apparently unsuccessful   in   their   attempt   to\nsearch out military targets in\nthe darkness.\nWithin South Viet Nam, the\nAmerican planes concentrated\non Communist positions in the\nMekong River Delta southwest\nof Saigon.\nU.S. officials said. the. American pilot was killed when a\nbomb he had just dropped at\na Viet Cong position 120 miles\nwest of Saigon exploded prematurely in the air. The\ncrippled Skyraider rolled into a\ndive and crashed in a burst of\nflame. \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-\u2022\n 2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, MON., APRIL 19,1965\nDURING MARCH\nKootenay Snow Packs Above Average\nLow-level snow packs in the\nKootenay River Basin on April 1\nwere above average while higher level packs ranged from average to slightly above, according to the snow survey bulletin\nissued by the Water Resources\nService of the Water Investigation Branch.\nMost of the Columbia snow\ncourses continued to record hea\nvier than usual April 1 water\nequivalents at the levels below\n5,000 feet. Exceptions are the\nSinclair Pass and Glacier courses where average mow water\nequivalents were recorded. At\nthe higher elevation sampling\nsites, snow packs are average.\nApril through September vol-\nume flow forecast* for the Kootenay River and its trlbutsrles\nvary from average to slightly\nabove average with tht predicted flow at Wardner (.4 million\nacre-feet. This ii IH per cent of\nits recorded mt-n average and\ncompares with the actual runoff\nof 4,\u00ab2s,0OO acre-feet In 18. and\n4,524,000 acre-feet in IMS.\nProviding \u00bb normal weather\nI pattern prevails In the following\nMontrose To Prosecute\nFor Dumping in Village\nBADMINTON CHAMPIONSHIP trio in Kootenay open tournament are,\nleft to right, Orval Fargaard, men's doubles winner, Bill Dalin, men'i single!, doubles and mixed doubles champ, and Marlene Davies, mixed doubles\nwinner. Finals were played yesterday at the Civic Centre.\nA COUPLE OF CHAMPS in the badminton finals\nwere, left to right, Wendy DeFoe, who won the women's singles trophy after being a runner-up in the\nevent .for the past two seasons, and Charlotte\nSharpies, who shared the women's doubles laurels\nwith Wendy.\u2014Daily News photos,\nDalin Topples Larson in Badminton Finals\nMONTROSE \u2014 The Montrose\nVillage Commission has served\nnotice that persons guilty of\ndumping refuse within the village\nlimits will face prosecution,\nThe Commission warning came\nafter complaints had been received that refuse was being\ndumped on Seventh Avenue.\nAn elght-lpch transite water\nmain was broken at the corner\nof Fifth Street and the highway,\nbecause of earth settling. It was\nrepaired   with   a   temporary\nBill Dalin ef Kamloops, a perennial contender in the Kootenay\nOpen Badminton Tournament,\ndethroned defending champion\nChes Larson of Kelowna to capture the men's singles title Sunday afternoon, capping a three-\nday competition that saw a near\nrecord 294 entries.\nDalin battled through two\ntough rounds against Jack New-\nstead ef Vancouver and Fred\nStevens et Kelowna to meet and\ndefeat Larsen 15-5 and 15-2 in\nthe final round.\nTop-seeded Bert Fergus knocked ever Dalin en the way to the\nfinals twe years age.\nSeven . titles were at stake\nagain this year with entrants\nfrom such far sway points as\nSeattle, Cowichan Lake and\nPouce Coupe.\nWendy DeFoe, women's singles champion, beat out Marlene\nDavies ot Salmon Arm IM end\nIH to regain the crown after\nbeing runner-up last year.\nMiss DeFoe defeated Dene\nBurris of Kamloops 11-4 and 11-4\nand Charlotte Sharpies of Castlegar 11-5 and 11-3 for a berth\nin the finals.\nDalin teamed up with Orval\nForgaard of Kamloops to edge\nLarsen and Ted Weys ef Kel- Ches Larson, Kelowna 13-5, 15-2\nowna 15-8, 6-15 and 15-8 in the Women's Singles Quarter Finals\nmen's doubles competition. Wendy DeFoe, Castlegar beat\nsYar light\"\nDRIVE - IN\nTonight, Tuesday, Wednesday\nTime 8:00 p.m.\n\"LOVE IS A BALL\"\nGlenn,  Ford, Hope Lange,\nChas. Beyer, Rlcardo Montalban\nRegular Admission Prices\nAUTO-VUE\nDRIVE-IN\nTrail, B.C.\nTonight and Tuesday\nTIME 7:30 P.M.\n\"GOOD NEIGHBOR SAM\"\nJaek Lemmoa and Ronny Snyder\n(SHORTS)\nCASTLE Theatre\nCastlegar, B.C.\nMatinee Today 1:30 p.m.\nTonight and Tuesday\n7:00 and 8:24 p.m.\n\"STAGE TO THUNDER ROCK'\n(Color)\nBarry Sullivan, Marilyn Maxwell\n\"Robinson Crusoe On Mars\"\nPaul Mattel, Nic Louden\nEarly round victories over\nJohn Mousser of Vancouver and\nErnie Smallengerg of Nelson\nand John Sutherland and Grant\nHazlewood of Vancouver gained\nDalin and Forgaard a chance at\nthe title.\nIn the women's doubles, Miss\nDeFoe and Miss Sharpies combined to narrowly defeat Marlene Davies of Salmon Arm and\nLinda Smallenberg of Nelson in\none of the most thrilling games\nof the tournament.\nThe Castlegar twosome fought\nback from a 5-15 loss in the first\ngame to squeeze by 15-10 and\n15-u In the second and third\nmatches.\nMiss Davies and Dalin defeated the highly-rated Rose\nDonaldson and Roger Kerby of\nthe Nelson club 15-5 and 15-7 for\nthe mixed doubles title.\nMrs. Donaldson and Kerby\nbeat out the husband and wife\nteam of Ev and Ches Larson\n18-17 and 15-10 to meet Miss\nDavies and Dalin for the championship.\nIn senior mixed doubles play,\nthe Larsons staved off a determined effort in the second match\nto defeat Gladys Mallory of Seattle and Reg Hoadley of Victoria\n15-2 and 15-12.\nFrank Gaylord and Jack Harvey of Spokane ousted Pat McAllister and Ches Larson of Kelowna 15-e and 15-3 to take the\nsenior men's crown.\nThe tournament is sponsored\neach year by the Nelson Badminton Club and attracts top-\nrated players from all parts ef\nCanada and the United States.\nResults follow:\n\"A\" FLIGHT\nMen's Singles Quarter-Finals\nChes Larson, Kelowna beat\nGrant Hazelwood, Vancouver 15-\n8, 1S-9, John Sutherland, Vancouver beat Eric Bodin, Kimberley 5-15, 15-5, 15-8.\nFred Stevens, Kelowna, beat\nErnie Smallenberg, Nelson 15-\n12, 15-4.\nBill Dalin, Kamloops beat Jack\nNewstead, Vancouver IM, 15-0.\nSemi Finals\nChes Larson beat John Sutherland 15-2, 15-9. Bill Dalin beat\nFred Stevens 15-5, 12-15,, 15-3.\nFinals\nBill   Dalin,   Kamloops   beat\nShirley Bodman, Kamloops 11-3\n11-3, Marlene Davies,   Salmon\nArm   beat   Edith   Hodgkinson,\nKimberley U-2, 11-0.\nSemi-Finals\nWendy DeFoe beat Charlotte\nSharpies 11-$, IM, Marlene Da\nvies beat Rose Donaldson 4-11,\n114, U-2. Finals-Wendy DeFoe,\nCastlegar beat Marlene Davies,\nSalmon Arm 114, in\nMen's Doubles\nQuarter Finals\nChes Larson and Ted Weys,\nKelowna beat Jack Osachoff and\nRon Smith, Castlegar 15-3, 18-7\nRoger Kerby and David Niven,\nNelson beat Jack Harvey, and\nFrank Gaylord, Spokane 18-18,\n15., 16-10.\nBUI Dalin and Orval Forgaard,\nKamloops beat John Meusser,\nVancouver and Ernie Smallenberg, Nelson 15-7, 6-16, IM.\nJohn  Sutherland  and   Grant\nHazelwood, Vancouver beat Jack\nNewstead and Harvey Bridges,\nVancouver 8-15,  16-12,  IM.\nSemi-Finals\nChes Larson and Ted Wey6\nbeat Roger Kerby and David\nNiven 1S4, 15-10. Bill Dalin and\nOrval Forgaard beat John Sutherland and Grant Hazelwood 15\n12, 6-15, 16..\nFinals-Bill Dalin and Orval\nForgaard, Kamloops, beat Ches\nLarson and Ted Weys, Kelowna\n15-8, MS, 18_-\nWomen's Doubles Quarter-Finals\nDene Burris and Shirley Bodman, Kamloops beat Pam Bry-\nden, Trail, and Edith Hodgkinson, Kimberley, 17-4, 15-4.\nWendy DeFoe and Charlotte\nSharpies, Castlegar beat Toni\nKytonen and Fern Ebernardt,\nLewiston 15-8,15-1,\nMarlene Davies, Salmon Arm,\nand Linda Smallenberg, Nelson\nbeat Terryl Milne, Edgewood\nand Myra Wight, Vancouver 15-8,\n15-12.\nRose Donaldson and Beryl Anderson, Nelson beat Marion Nixon and El'Louise Prlyor, Spokane 15.7,15-5.\nSemi-Finals\nWendy DeFoe and Charlotte\nSharpies beat Dene Burris and\nShirley Bodman 15-9, 15-U.\nMarlene Davies and Linda\nSmallenberg beat Rose Donaldson and Beryl Anderson 15-8,\n15-10.\nFinals \u2014 Wendy DeFoe and\nCharlotte Sharpies, Castlegar\nbeat Marlene Davies, Salmon\nArm and Linda Smallenberg,\nNelson 5-15, 15-10,15-U.\nMixed Doubles Quarter Finals\nMarlene Davies, Salmon Arm\nand Bill Dalin, Kamloops beat\nMarlon Nixon and Jack Harvey,\nSpokane 15-7,15-10.\nLinda and Ernie Smallenberg,\nNelson beat Myra Wight and\nJack Sutherland, Vancouver\n15-8, 7-15, 15-6.\nEv and Ches Larson, Kelowna\nbeat Wendy DeFoe   and   Ron\nhas been Instructed te repair the\npipe during the Easter holidays\nwhen the school Is closed to avoid\naffecting the school,\nThe council decided members\nshould attend the Association of\nKootenay Municipalities convention to be held In Creston, May 1,\nCommissioner J, G, Pontius\nwas appointed to investigate entering a float in Trail's Silver\nCity Fiesta parade May 29.\nA request was received from.|\nRobert Duncan to Install a street\ndamp.   The works department I light at the corner of Third and\nSmith, Castlegar 13-3, 15-5.\nRose  Donaldson  and  Roger\nKerby, Nelson beat Dene Burris |\nand Orval Forgaard, Kamloops,\n15-12, 12-15, 15-3.\nSemi-Finals\nMarlene Davies and Bill Dalin\nbeat Linda and Ernie Smallenberg 15-12, 15-10.\nRose Donaldson and Roger\nKerby beat Ev and Ches Larson\n18-17, 15-10.\nFinals - Marlene Davies,\nSalmon Arm and Bill Dalin,\nKamloops, beat Rose Donaldson\nand Roger Kerby, Nelson, 15-5,\n15-7.\nB FLIGHT FINALS\nMen's Singles\nRay St, Denis, Cowichan Lake\nbeat Norm Hester, North Vancouver 1H5, 15-2, 15-7.\nMen's Doubles\nFrank Emery and Dorn Speed,\nKamloops beat Gerry Shackle-\nford, Cowichan Lake and Bob\nLewis, Victoria 15-U, 17-15.\nWomen's Doubles\nPhyllis Hanson, Vernon   and\nGladys Mallory,   Seattle   beat\nDoreen Monty and Kay Thompson, Nelson 15-1,18-3.\nWomen's Singles\nPhyllis Hanson, Vernon beat\nFern Eberhardt, Lewiston 3-li,\n11-8, 11-0.\nMixed Doubles\nRay St. Dennis, Cowichan\nLake and Gladys Mallory,\nSeattle beat Frank Emery and\nShirley Bodman, Kamloops 15-9,\n12-15,15.11.\nBicknell Reports\nOn Hydro System\nHOLIDAY MATINEE TODAY AT 2:00 P.M.\nComplete Shows\n7:00 - 9:00\nJERRY LEWIS\n*THE\nPATSY\n(iJERK-UWISmmw)\n\u00bbp You may not\nfind it in your\ndictionary.\nBut you're sure\nto find it on\nyour funnybone.\n(Look under Fas\nin Fu-n-n-ee!)\nWartime RAF Pilot\nVisiting Nelson\nF-L Robin F. Hunter has spent\nthe past week In Nelson with\nMr. and Mrs. Reginald H. Dill,\nat Valhalla on the North Shore.\nF-L Hunter was an Instructor\nat the RAF base at Medicine\nHat from 1941 to 1943. During\nthat time, he spent three leaves\nin Nelson, many of whose residents became hosts to visiting\nmembers of the armed forces\nduring their time away from\ncamp.\nNow, although officially retired from the RAF, he is attached to a U.S. Air Force base\nin England (his home is at Uj:-\n'bridge, near London) in the\nflight following service. He had\nbeen with the air traffic control branch of the RAF for\nseven yean prior to his retirement.\nF-L Hunter finds Nelaon very\nmuch changed since the war\nyears, when the airmen were so\nroyally entertained, particularly\nin its expansion in the upper\nFairview area.\nHe has seen much of the world\nduring his service with the RAF,\nhaving been stationed in the\nnorthwest frontier province ol\nIndia from 1933 to 1936.\n\"We were supposed to be showing the flag and trying to keep\nout  Russian  infiltration  which\nwas coming down through Afghanistan. Some of the tribal\nchiefs showed some allegiance\nto Britain but others were in\nthe pay of the Russians. They\nlooked towards Afghanistan as\ntheir spiritual home and were\nmore rebellious against the British.\nHe became flying Instructor\nwhen it was decided to expand\nthe RAF and he was a member\nof the first instructors' course.\nHe came to Canada under the\nCommonwealth training plan because of limitations on flying in\nthe United Kingdom at that time.\nThere are about 800 personnel\non the Medicine Hat base, he\nrecalls and about 16 to 20 stations in Canada for the RAF\n.IIMMUI. EVERETT SUMNE\nMIL HARRIS \u2022 KHIMKI WVNN'PETER LOUR!\nJOHNCWRHDINE MD(_1\u00bbMN JEKfi.\u00bb\" .MMMJK-IK\nSUDDEN\nBEAUTY\nHolding and Styling\nHair Spray\nCrystal Clear , . .\nNo Lacquers . . .\n16 ei.\n'J.39\nat\nSAMPLE'S\nNELSON   PHARMACY\nLTD.\n'Your Fortress ol Health'\nPhone  .52-2313\n\"9 B.k. t St.   . Nelson\nKaslo Woman\nDies Saturday\nMrs. Cora Pearl Fyfe, form'\nerly of Kaslo, died in Nelson\nSaturday at the age of 73.\nBorn in Ontario, she came\nwest to the Calgary district, and\nlater resided in the Lethbridge\ndistrict. Her husband predeceas-\n?ed her in 1923, She moved to\nKaslo in 1930 where She resided\nuntil five years ago.\nMrs. Fyfe is survived by one\nson, Stewart, of Nelson, and one\ndaughter, Mrs. Jean Steffler of\nEdmonton, and four grandchild\nren.\nHydro service from the City\nof Nelson Power Plant was cut\noff in various sectors for a total\nof five hours and 50 minutes\nduring March, according te the\nmonthly report of electrical\nsuperintendent L. W, Bicknell.\nIn his report on electricity\ndepartment operations during\nthe month of March, Mr. Bicknell noted that 113 meters had\nbeen government tested, and\nthat 40 new meters had been\npurchased.\nNine new hydro poles were\nInstalled, three transformers\nwere changed, five overhauled,\nand seven new installations\nmade.\nA total of 13 new services\nwere installed, one existing service was changed from two-wire\nto three-wire, and one temporary Installation was made.\nThere were eight new street\nlight Installations during March,\nthree mercury vapor lamp units\nwere replaced, and 22 incandescent units replaced.\nHydro interruptions were kept\nto a minimum, There was one\ntwo-hour break in the city, and\na break of three hours and 60\nminutes on the North Shore.\nCity line extensions totalled\n2681 feet, and on the North Shore,\n112 feet. South Shore extension\ntotalled 307 feet, The system purchased 42 new hydro poles.\nThe report noted that there\nKennedy Rites\nHeld Saturday\nare now 8456 consumers in the\neity, 914 en tht North Shore, and\n404 on the South Shore.\nSeventh. The matter was referred to the works committee,\nA request to place a trailer on\na lot for an undetermined length\nof time was turned down by the\ncommission as trailers were not\nconsidered buildings and would\ncreate taxation difficulties.\nThe fire department was call\ned to a grass fire on Twelfth Ave,\nafter it got out of the control of\nworkmen clearing brush in the\narea. There was no damage reported.\nSeveral complaints were received from the people whose\nlots were damaged during snow\nremoval operations. The commission said damage was being\nrepaired as quickly as possible.\nTha village crew is removing\nextra earth Irom the drainage\nd|tch recently constructed on\nEleventh Ave and using the (ill in\nareas damaged by sewer construction.\nmonths, the forecast for the accumulated April through September flow of the combined\nColumbia and Kootenay Rivers\nat Birchbank near Trail li 44\nmlllion acre-feet, quite similar\nto the 1948-82 average.\nFor the tame period, clou to\naverage volume flowi art predicted at other key gauging iter\ntions along the mtin item o( the\nColumbia River,\nThe excessive runoffs ef the\nprevious month on tht skeena,\nFrater and Columbia Riven and\nthe above \u2022 normal temperatures\nearly this month were reflected\nIn the continued excessive runoff for these stations.\nThe maximum daily discharge\nof the Kootenay River at Wardner was 1,990 cubic feet per second during March, Hie highest\nrecorded discharge during\nMarch occurred in I960 when\n5,300 cfs were recorded, The\nminimum dally discharge was\n1,340 cfs as compared with the\nrecord low for March in 1914 of\n600 cfs.\nOur FIRST and MOST\nIMPORTANT\nRESPONSIBILITY II the\nDISPENSING of MEDICINE\nand PROVISION of\nPHARMACEUTICAL\nSERVICES\nMayo Pharmacy\nLtd.\nCorner Baker and Ward Stt,\nPh. IB-Mil      Nalsaa, B.C.\nFuneral services for William\n\u201e,.\u201e...  _.      George Kennedy, who died at\nThey used first the British Air I Mirror Lake April 13 at age ot\ni __.    \u2014_.._,__   _    __._.\nSpeed Oxford in their training\nprogram, then the Harvard.\nAfter leaving Canada for England in 1943, he became a student in a course for transport\nflyers and became attached to\nthe British Overseas Airways,\non loan from the RAF.\nF-L Hunter was based in Cairo\nfor 2_ years, operating through\nthe Middle East and India. He\nflew over Burma after Its release from the Japanese, to pave\nthe way for opening of a BOAC\nbase there.\nMany Attend\nEdmondson Rites\nFuneral services were held at\nSt. Saviour's Pro-Cathedral Wednesday for Mrs, Edith Ellen\nEdmondson who died April 10 at\nthe age of 83.. Many friends\nwere in attendance, including\nMembers and Officers Of Rose\nCity Chapter No. 28, O.E.S. of\nwhich deceased was a member.\nThe Very .Rev. ft. W. S.\nBrown officiated and the service wa. followed by cremation. Mrs. W. A. Manson was\nthe organist. Pallbearers were:\nRichard Brown, Charles H.\nHamilton, Stanley Hall.. T. C.\nLambert.. Gciiinn Ma. _ip.e.-\u00bbnd\nJack teetSnald.\nwere conducted from the\nThompson Funeral Home, on Saturday.\nVen. Archdeacon F. D. Wyatt\nof Church of the Redeemer officiated. The hymns, \"Unto the\nHills Around\" and \"Abide With\nMe\", were sung. Organist was\nMrs, W. A. Manson. Pallbearers\nwere J. C. Hopwood, N. McLean,\nG. Spiers, M. Martin, M. Burgess, and I. Butcher.\nBalfour Man\nDies Friday\nJohn Relhl of Balfour died at\nKootenay Lake General Hospital\non Friday, at the age of 76.\nBorn In Winnipeg In 18B8, he\nworked and lived ln Transcona\nfrom 1913 to 1945 where he was\nemployed as a plumbing contractor. He married the former\nCaroline Strobel at Winnipeg tn\nJune, 1923.\nHe and his wife moved to Balfour in 1945 where he purchased\nand operated the Lakefront Auto\nCourt until 1949 when he moved\nto Vancouver.\nHe owned and operated an\napartment block there until returning to Balfour in 1938.\nBesides his wife, he is survived by one daughter, Mrs. C.\nA. (Evelyn) Noakes of Balfour,\none brother, Jacob of Winnipeg,\nand five grandchildren.\nSouth Slocan\nWoman Dies\nMrs. Ethel Louise James, wife\nof Harry Harold James, former\nlong-time residents of South Slocan, and recent resident of 819\nUnion Street, Nelson, died at\nKootenay Lake General Hospital on Friday at the age of 71,\nBora in Worcestershire, England, in 1893, she married at\nBirmingham in 1921, and came\nte Peers, Alta., as a bride.\nThe family moved to Nelson\nin 1927, where they resided for\nshort time before going to\nSouth Slocan. She was a res!\ndent of South Slocan until last\nJuly. She was a member of Rose\nCity Chapter No. 28, Order Eas'\ntern Star, the Daughters of the\nNile, Zarah Temple 72 at Vancouver, and during World War\nII ehe wai active in Red Cross\nwork,\nWhile in South Slocan, she was\nalso a member of the WA of St.\nMatthews Anglican Church, also\nthe Women's Institute. She was\na member of the Ladiei' Shrine\nAuxiliary of Nelson,\nBesides her husband, the Is\nsurvived by two sons, Douglas\nof South Slocan and Roy of Trail,\none daughter, Mrs, Dorothy Mc-\nAlpine of Trail, three brothers,\nSid, John and Charles Ayres, and\ntwo sisters, Ada Ayres and Mrs.\nDollie Twinberow, all of Worcester, and seven grandchildren.\nKOOTINAY VALLEY HOSPITAL\nIMPROVEMENT  DISTRICT  NO. 4\nNOTICE OF . . .\nANNUAL MEETING\nZone Ne. 3\u2014Wast ef Beosley Bluffs, South\nSlocan, Crescent Volley, Slocan Park and Pom-\nmere.\nNotice it hereby given that the Annual General\nMeeting of the Property Owners of the above\nZone will be held in\nPariih Hall, South Slocan, on Monday, the 26th\nef April, 1965, at 8:00 p.m.\nTrustee: Mr. G. E. Penniket\nChairman of the Meeting.\nDated the 19th day of April. 1K\u00ab.\nBy Order of the Board,\nG. E. PENNIKET, Secretary-Treasurer\nDIES OF INJURIES\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Joseph\nMichel of the Nesklanllth Indian\nreserve near Chase died in hospital here Friday of injuries suffered in a highway crash six\ndays ago in the Chase area.\nCharge Parson\nYouth in Fatal\nGOLDEN \u2014 A Parson youth\nhas been charged with crimlna1\nnegligence following a car crash\nThursday that claimed the lives\nof four persons including the brother of a Salmo woman.\nBail was set at $1,000 for Gordon Hill, 19, of Parson after he\nwas charged with criminal negligence. He was remanded to appear on the charge April 26.\nDead in the crash were Michael Hook, 43, of Michel, who has\na sister In Salmo, Mr; and Mrs.\nAlfred Morrell of Parson, and\nJohn Adamski Of Vancouver,\nMrs. Adamski was rushed to\nhospital where her condition was\ndescribed as very critical.\nKOOTENAY VALLEY HOSPITAL\nIMPROVEMENT  DISTRICT  NO. 4\nNOTICE OF ...\nANNUAL MEETING\nZone No. 4\u2014Sproule Creek, Taghum, Blewett,\nGranite Road, Retemont, Uphill, South Nelsen,\nUpper Fairview, (all euttide city limit*) and\nSouth Shore te Atbara.\nNotice it hereby given that the Annual General\nMeeting of the Property Owners of the above\nZone will be held in\nShirley Hall, en Monday, the 26th of April,\n196S, at 8:00 p.m.\nTrustee: Mr. W. A. Anderson\nChairman of the Meeting,\nDated the 19th day of April, 1965.\nBy Order of the Board,\nG. E. PENNIKET, Secretary-Treasurer\nKOOTENAY VALLEY HOSPITAL\nIMPROVEMENT   DISTRICT   NO. 4\nNOTICE OF . . ,\nANNUAL MEETING\nZone No. 6\u2014Industrial Zone on Kootenay River.\nNotice it hereby given thet the Annual General\nMeeting of the Property Owners of the above\nZone will be held in\nWeit Kootenay Power & Light Co. Ltd. office,\nSouth Slocan, an Monday, the 26th of April,\n1965, at 4:00 p.m.\nTrustee: Mr. C. H, Bland\nChairman of the Meeting.\nDated the 19th day of April, 1965.\nBy Order of the Board,\nG. E, PENNIKET, Secretary-Treasurer\nATTENTION\nGolfers\nAND BEGINNERS\nDriving Range\nNOW\nOPEN\n8 a.m. to Dusk\nSHARPEN YOUR DRIVING\nTECHNIQUES\nCall 352-7344\nfor Details.\nNORTH SHORE DRIVING RANGE\n% MILE EAST OF QUESTION MARK\nLENO-WHIMSTER PRINTING LTD.\nSPECIALIZING IN\nSOCIAL and  BUSINESS  PRINTING\nMOORE BUSINESS FORMS\nWEDDING INVITATIONS\nPAPER AND CARDS OF ALL KINDS\nPlain er Printed\nNo Job Too large or Too Small\n459 WARD ST.\nPhone 352-2622\nJUST UP PROM CITY HALL\nServing the District for Over 40 Years.\n NELSON DAILY NEWS, MON., APRIL 19,1965 \u2014 3\n.     f\n'^p.\nNelson Boys' Choir are making their annual Easter tour this week, this\ntime to the Okanagan. This year there will be two choirs in the evening performances, one oi 18 boy sopranoes and one of the Choristers, numbering 22\nyoung people. Two concert will be given, on Tuesday in Kamloops and Wednesday in Vernon. Both choirs have been practising diligently for some months.\nTheir program promises to be one of special interest this year. The combined\nchoirs will be heard in several numbers. There will also be solos, a duet, male\nquartet, male chorus, girls' chorus and a burlesque number as well as special\nnumbers from the boy sopranos. As on their last tour to the coast, Mrs. Hugh\nHerbison oi Argenta will accompany the choristers. Beverley Morrison of Nelson accompanies the boys. Mrs. T. J. S. Ferguson is director oi both choirs and\norganizer oi the tour. Mr. and Mrs. George Stewart will travel with the group\nand assist in various details oi management of the tour and concerts. The young\npeople leave Nelson today and return Thursday morning. In Vernon the con\ncert is under the auspices of the High School Music and Drama Club and in\nKamloops, under the auspices of Knox United Church. The third concert of the\nseason will be held in Nelson April 25. The collection will be used to defray expenses of Ihe Okanagan tour. The Nelson Boys' choir won ihe shield for boys'\nchoirs for marks of 89 and 89, the 30th time they have won the shield, at the\nKootenay Music Festival. \u2014 Photos by Archie Henwick.\nGood Prospects For Better\nTelevision in Kaslo District\n1 KASLO \u2014 Prospects are good\nfor better television in Kaslo.\nA letter has been received by\nthe television subscribers committee from Charles P. Wright,\nexecutive assistant on behalf of\nCaptain Briggs.\nIt states that the plans the corporation has for the Kootenay\nLake area includes Kaslo as the\noverall planning Ls to serve the\narea stretching northward from\nbelow Creston to beyond Kaslo.\nThe following is an excerpt\nfrom the letter:\n\"Our engineers were in the\narea last summer investigating\nand carrying\"-out field strength\nmeasurements of a number of\ntransmitter sites. The information they obtained has been carefully analyzed and the technical\nbriefs Which must accompany\nour applications to the Department of Transport are being\nprepared.\n\"We expect to file these to\nmeet a June cutoff date and if\nthe proposals are satisfactory\nin their technical aspects they\nwill he passed to the Board of\nH.\nSi.  COKNWELL\nRoyNat Ltd. announces the appointment of H, S. Cornwell as\nmanager of its District Office\nin Vancouver which serves the\ncompany's clients in British\nColumbia and the Yukon. Mr.\nCornwell was formerly assistant manager of The Royal\nBank of Canada, Main & Hastings Branch, Vancouver.    \u2022**\nBroadcast Governors for a hearing likely in August.\nA letter has also been received from H. W. Herridge,\nM.P., stating he has contacted\nthe CBC on behalf of the Kaslo\nand district viewers as requested.\nSince the emergency commit\ntee meeting on April 1, the Kaslo\nTelevision company has sent letters to all subscribers describing\ntentative plans to improve their\nservice.\nAltogether it seems to be assured that conditions regarding\ntelevision will be much improved within the next year.\nTalent Night Draws\nCrowd at Procter\nPROCTER \u2014 A capacity audience viewed a Talent Night in\nthe Procter Hall, Thursday night\nsponsored by the Procter Mas\nqueraders.\nBert Fitchett acted as master\nof ceremonies on behalf of the\ndrama group.\n\"Music is Fun\" was presented\nby preschoolers and elementary\nschool children under the direction of Miss McCullum. A blackout play by members of the Mas-\nqueraders \"Stop, Look, and Listen\" was acted by Grant McKinnon, Janet Sokoloski and\nDavid Buerge. Kenneth Debbie\nand Cody Radcliffe sang\n\"There's a Bluebird on Your\nWindowsill\" and \"This Old Man\"\naccompanied on the piano by\nBeth Ogden.\n\"Serenade\", a blackout play,\nwas performed by Georgia Sokoloski, Beth Ogden and Moyna\nPaulhus, members of the Procter Masqueraders. A duet was\norski, with her accordian and\n_.__._, hi ...cNown ou tne ..laiw,\nplaying \"Marie's Hymn\", and\n\"Put Your Little Foot.\"\nAnother black-out play, also by\n<mem.bers of the Procter Mas^\nqueraders \"A La Carte\", was\npresented by Susan Bonacci\nJerry MacKinnon, Gordon Fitchett, Carol Wilbur, Doris Gret-\nchen, Hasi Lehnert, Greg Wilbur\nStewart Sokoloski and Dale Mc-\nMullin.\nA warm reception was accorded Eric Johnson and his guitar\nas he presented folk songs, with\nthe audience joining in the choruses. Miss McCullum did a monologue depicting a small boy\ngiving a recitation, \"I'm a Little\nTeapot\" and hindered by a loss\nSTIRLING PACIFIC pays 3%\nSterling Pacific offers the Investor a proven, non-\nspeculative investment assuring a return of 8%.\n\u2022 YOUR INVESTMENT IS FULLY SECURED.\n\u2022 YOU CAN OBTAIN CASH AT ANY TIME.\n\u2022 MINIMUM INVESTMENT: $500.\n8%   MAKES YOUR MONEY GROW FAST\nFor example: $1000 earns $80 yearly (q\"ua_eri. >\n$5000 earns $400 yearly $\u00a3&_,,,,\nLeft to compound, your investment DOUBLES in 9\nyears, TRIPLES in 14 years. There is no time limit.\nThe simplest, most profitable non-speculative investment\navailable  to the  private  investor.\nWrite, Phone or Call\nSTERLING PACIFIC Mortgage Corporation Ltd. |\nSterling Pacific Bldg., 591  Burrard, *\nVancouver 1, B.C. 682-6635 \u2022\nPlease provide further information respecting your\nsecurities offered and a copy of your brochure.\nNAME\nADDRESS\nCITY\n\/I Prospectus Is Available Upon Request    n-4-h\nof memory. Grant MacKinnon\nand Uli Lehnert acted out a\nblackout play, \"Doctor Come\nQuick\".\nThe Anderson family added\nmuch to the enjoyment of the\nevening with their violins and recorders. Lee, Pat, Mike, Deir-\ndre and Wendy played \"Bobby\nShafto\", \"The Mermaid,\" \"Sha-\nnandoh\" \"The Ash Grove\" and\n\"What Shall We Do With the\nDrunken Sailor?\" Lee and Pat\nAnderson played \"The Petit\nSymphony\", a concert duet for\ntwo violins. Carol Wilbur and\nGordon Fitchett followed with\ntheir presentation of the black\nout play \"It Won't Be Long\nNow\". Debbie Gunnlaugson sang\nthe popular song \"Downtown\",\naccompanied by Jean Munch on\nthe piano. Hallam MacKinnon\nplayed a medley of old-time favorites on his harmonica. Mr. and\nMrs. Kenneth Lamb entertained\nthe audience with folk songs.\n\" 'Arry and 'Arriet\" was acted\nby Janet Sokoloski, Mike Paulhus and Hasi Lehnert, members\nof the Masqueraders.\nEric Johnson came back for\nan encore, and the audience\nagain joined in and sang with!\nhim. The evening was finished!\noff with \"Gordon (Fitchett)) Sul-1\nlivan Presents\" and the \"Lady j\nBugs\" played by Janet Sokol-j\noski, Moyna Paulhus, Carol Wilbur, and Hasi Lennert. Jerry\nMacKinnon did the \"Sullivan\"\ncommercial at the end of the\nprogram.\nStudents Win\nDesign Prizes\nGRAY CREEK - Winners of\nthe Gray Creek Forest Products\nCompany contest for pupils of\nRiondei, Crawford Bay and Gray\nCreek Schools for an original design of a trade symbol to be used\nin stamping the Company's products have been named.\nAll the entries were sent to\nCalgary to be judged, marked\nonly by number and with no\nnames.\nBernard Ryon, on behalf of\nthe company, anounced the winners and presented the prizes at\nthe schools. First prize went to\nlames Hellman of La France\nj with a simple design showing the\nbutt end of a sawn log, with its\nrings and the Company's initials \"G C F P\" in diminishing\nsized letters.\nSecond prize was won by Kirk\nWirsig of Gray Creek School and\nthird by H. Collier of Riondei.\nGrade winners in Crawford Bay\nwere: 1. Alan Hills, 2. Greg\nStoilby, 3. Melvin McClure, 4.\nMendel Melanius, 5. Gerald Caston, 6. Lorraine Innes, 7. John\nRandall. In Gray Creek School,\n1. Kathie Casemore, 2. Elaine\nsyfehuck. 3. Maurice Lajeunesse, 4. Donald Simpson, 5. Ken\nWilson, 6. Ernie Bohnke.\nRELIGIOUS THEME is\nfeatured in two sculptures by\nJune DeGuglielmo of Salmo.\nUpper left, Christ and Mary,\nan asbestos and copper tubing\nwork in blue weighing about\n45 pounds. Upper right, Christ\nand the two thieves in wood\nand copper with asbestos finish weighing 40 pounds. At extreme left, the late Chief Mun-\ngo Martin, chief carver of the\nwood-carved totem poles at\nStanley Park in Vancouver, a\nportrait in oils. At immediate Ielt, a pioneer British Columbia sourdough, finished in bronze, oils of burnt\nsienna for a rustic finish,\nweighing 35 pounds, of asbestos and copper. Mrs. DeGuglielmo plans an exhibition in\nSalmo early in June.\nNew Denver\nCentennial\nGroup Listed\nNEW DENVER - Six names\nwere received at the village\ncommision meeting for the local\ncentennial project committee.\nSubmitted were F. Bohan, William Martin, S. Matsushita, Mrs.\nT. W. Clarke, Mrs. T. Steenhoff and Mrs. A. Thomas.\nThe resignation of civil defence co-ordinator, William Bud-\ndin, who has been transferred\nfrom New Denver, was received.\nChipman Kerr has been appointed to replace Mr. Buddin.\nGravel crushing is still proceeding under the winter works\nprogram.\nCommissioner Mori reported\nfor the Recreation Commission.\nDiscussed were the forthcoming\nKootenay and Boundary Municipal Association meeting to be\nheld May 1; the municipal officers' conference to be held\nMay 31 to June 2.\nThe water report showed no\ncontamination.\nPayment of accounts totalling\n$2086 was approved.\nGray Creek\nGRAY CREEK - Mrs. Hunter\nMcClure is visiting Kimberley,\nwhere her brother, Leslie Ord-\nway is seriously ill in hospital.\nHer elder brother, Harry, has\nbeen taken to Calgary by ambulance for an operation.\nMr. and Mrs. Oscar Wirsig\nhave returned   from   Innisfail,\nAlberta, where they attended the\nFour H Public Speaking contest.\nTheir eldest grand-daughter,\nTerry Oxtoby was second and\nwill compete again at the Regional level. Terry chose to speak on\n\"The New Canadian Flag\". The\nimnromptu speech was on \"Medicine.\"\nCONTRACT AAWARDED\nKAMLOOPS (CP)-Highways\nMinister Gaglardi announced\nFriday that a $4,789,783 contract\nfor reconstruction of a 31-mile\nsection of the North Thompson\nhighways has been let to Dawson Construction Limited of\nI Vancouver.\n0m\nOrdinary.\nWe took the body off this Volkswagen 1500 to show you.\nLet's start at. the back.\nWith the engine.\nWhat's out of Ihe ordinary about it? Everbody knows\nwe're famous for air-cooled engines in the rear.\nWe made the 1500's engine more powerful. And so flat\nit fits right into the back of the car and still leaves room for a\nluggage compartment.\n(And that leaves you with two trunks. There's no engine in\nthe front.)\nNow notice Ihe chassis. The floor is one solid piece of\nmetal. Covers the bottom of the VW 1500. So nothing hangs\ndown. And gets damaged. By rough weather. Or rough\n\u2022 roads.\nAnd even though we made the VW 1500 for families,\nOut of the ordinary.\nyou don't drive it like an ordinary family car. You sit on a\ncomfortable bucket seat and shift through four fully-\nsynchronized gears on the floor.\nTake a look at that suspension system up front. Inside that\nblack metal tubing there's a torsion bar connected lo each\nwheel. And it's the same idea at the back. Every wheel in\nthe VW 1500 is independently suspended. So a pothole for\ninstance, jars only the wheel that goes over it. Not the whole\ncar. And everybody in it.\nWe even put an anti-sway bar up front. With the result\nthat the 1500 tracks around a bend just about like a Porsche.\nWhy not visit a VW dealer and discover all Ihe 'out of Ihe\nordinary' things about the Volkswagen 1500? \/FX\nHe may not take a car apart for you. But he'll fys\/J\nlet you drive one. 'O''\nPARKVIEW MOTORS LTD.   323 Nei,on a^      pi, 352-5355\nSAFEWAY\nSaves You More!\nIce Cream\nSnow Star, Vanilla, Strawberry,\nChocolate, Neapolitan; 3 pt. etn.\n2 m 95<\nEvaporated Milk\n7W1\nLucerne;\n15 ox.\ntin \t\nOO\nFresh Oranges\nSunkiit Navels; Size 113 to 138\n8 ib, *100\nWhite Magic;\n128 oz. plastic\ncontainer \t\nBleach\neach 69'\nGround Beef\nSafeway guaranteed quality,\nground fresh daily.\nib 49\u00ab\nTaste\nTells;\n15 oz. tin\nPork & Beans\n4 'or 45\nPrices Effective Monday, Tuesday and Wed.\nApril 19, 20 and 21.\nWe Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities\nLl SAFEWAY\nCANADA     SAFIWAY    LIMITID\n Established April 22. 1902 Nelson,    B. C.\nPublished by the NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n266 Bake: Street, Nelson, British Columbia, mornings except\nSundays and holidays in the centra oi the Kootenays with\nthe largest daily circulation in the interior oi B.C.\nAuthorized a. Second Class  Mail.  Post  Office Department, Ottawa,\nand for Payment ol Postage in Cash.\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN DAILY NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION\nMEMBER OF THE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS\nThe Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news\ndispatches credited to it or to the Associated Press or Reuters in this\npaper and alsi the local news published herein.\nMonday, April 19, 1965\nBuild a Sewage Plant\nThe Nelson Advisory Planning\nCommission showed a keen sense of\nperception and foresight last week\nwhen it decided to ask City Council\nto once again press for the construction of a sewage disposal plant.\nIt also showed an awareness of\npublic ignorance of the necessity of\nsuch a plant when it recommended\nthat a program of education of the\nneed of proper sewage disposal be\ninstituted to ensure that a second\nplebiscite will be successful.\nFor the Planning Commission is\ndistinctly aware of the rising pollution in Kootenay Lake, and of the\nthreat this pollution imposes on the\nfuture development of this city.\nCommission members hit the nail\nright on the head during discussions\non the proposed multi-million dollar\ndevelopment of the Nelson waterfront, when they noted that no developer would be greatly interested\nin the project as long as the beaches\nare polluted.\nThe City of Nelson is standing on\nthe threshold of an era of development and prosperity that has been\nunequalled in its history.\nThe Columbia River development, and the construction of the\nDuncan and High Arrow dams with\nthe reservoirs they will create, will\ncreate in this general area the greatest tourist haven on the North American continent.\nNelson should, and can be, the\ncentre of this industry. Whether or\nnot she will depends on the preparations that are made to handle the\ntourist influx.\nConstruction of the dams will\ncause waters of Kootenay Lake to\nrise in temperature from five to eight\ndegrees, making them ideal for\nwater sports and attractions.\nThis will be a benefit lost, however, if our beaches and waterfront\nare quagmires of rotting sewage, if\nour beaches are strewn with the debris of pollution, and if our fish population is decimated by waters choked with raw sewage.\nLet us hope that Nelson City\nCouncil will put aside any political\npressures and strive to educate the\npopulation of the necessity of immediate pollution controls, paramount\nof which is the construction of a sewage disposal plant.\nLet us, once and for all, remove\nsources of this scourge of our beauti-\n'ful B.C. waters, Let us cause them to\nrevert to their natural state of unsullied purity, safe for all to use, and an\nattraction to our blossoming tourist\nIndustry.\nLet City Council waste not a minute in instituting the recommendations of the Planning Advisory Committee. Let us educate the general\npublic to the need and ensure that\napproval of a sewage disposal plant\nwill be forthcoming before the end\nof1S65!\nYOU HAD FAIR WARNING!\nFor a Dunkirk Spirit\nIf Canadians have a picture of\nBritain as a country of Beefeaters,\nheraldry, castles, cathedrals and\nthatched cottages, rather than as a\nmodern, technologically skilled nation thirsty for exports, the fault, if\nthere is one, rests with tourist ad-\nTertising which hammers these historic themes. At a meeting in London, whose purpose was to boost\nexports to Canada, it was admitted\nthat this kind of thing was all right\nior tourists, but it did not give an\nimpression of a vigorous Britain out\nafter business.\nAnglo-Canadian trade is rapidly\nreaching a crisis stage. Last year\nthis country sold in Britain more\nthan twice the amount Britain sold\nhere. Nor were our exports entirely\nraw materials; manufactured goods\nbit into Britain's home market, one\noutcome of the crusade inspired by\nGeorge Hees, former minister of\ntrade and commerce in the last Conservative government.\nNow Britain intends to send\nparties of businessmen to look over\nthe Canadian market and size-up the\nprospects.\nThis is no new idea. For years\nthese parlies have visited Canada,\nenjoying the scenery and entertainment and then returning home to\ncompose glossy reports which were\nsoon iorgotten. Most of these trips\nhave been, in a word, junkets.\nThe reason for the continued poor\nshowing of British exports to Canada\nyear after year lies deeper than this\ncountry's alleged discriminatory\ndumping laws and the proximity of\nits markets to U.S. mass production.\nIt lies in the fact that Britain has\nbecome inward-looking since the\nlast war. The Japanese soared out of\nthe trough oi defeat and went in\npursuit of exports, but an old magic\nwas lost irom the British heart.\nFor Britain, the post war years\nbrought loss, one by one, of the\npossessions of the old Empire and\nthe prestige that went with being an\naibitor of world affairs. This has\nproduced a secret  sickness of the\nWithout a Dunkirk\nsoul, a desire to look inward rather\nthan outward as was formerly, for\ncenturies, the case.\nThus it would seem that Britain's\ngreatest lack these days is a spiritual\nbelief in herself, which can come\nonly from a realization that she has\na moral message to give the world\nof today and tomorrow, as well as\ncommercial products to sell. If this\nidea can inspire the younger generation of Britons many of the gnawing\nproblems thai afflict ths country will\nbe solved ln a surge of the spirit and\na thirst for new adventures.\nPrime Minister Harold Wilson has\ncalled for \"the spirit of Dunkirk.\" But\nwhat can inspire It if there is no Dunkirk? \u2014 Hamilton Spectator.\nSay That A&ain?\nMaking new words from combinations of old ones and creating near-\nwords irom initials has become almost an international sport in the\nsixties.\nSome of the new words created\nlast year have been listed in a\nreview of 1964 done by The World\nYear Book a supplement to The\nWorld Book Encyclopedia.\n\"Antimovie\" is said to be a\nmotion picture using an old plot ln\nparody of the original, and \"cross-\nbussing\" is a plan of school integration in the United States in which\nwhite children are transported by\nbus to predominantly non - white\nschools, and vice-versa, to help\nachieve racial balance.\n\"Mooncraft,\" the word for a\nvehicle designed to reach the moon,\ndoes not seem to be a too tragic\nmisuse of the language, but using\n\"outness\" to describe a tendency to\nview things far differently than\nordinary persons do seems a little\nfar out itself,\nWe were nearly convinced the\nbook was kidding when we saw\n\"chimponaut\" defined as a chimpanzee used to explore the effects of\nconditions in space on man and\n\"smogration,\" the pollution oi an\narea by smog.\u2014HamiJfon Spectator.\nMemorial Month of April\nTHE MEMORIAL MONTH OF\nAPRIL, 48 YEARS AGO\n0 valiant hearts,, who to your\nglory came,\nThrough  dust of  conflict,   and\nthrough battle flame;\nTranquil you He, your knightly\nvirtue proved.\nYour memory hallowed in the\nland you loved;\nSplendid you passed, the great\nsurrender made,\nInto a light that never more shall\nfade,\nDeep ynur contentment in liiat\nblest abode,\nWho wait the last clear trumpet\ncall of God.\nSir F. Arkwrgiht, 1919.\nAs years slip by, the survivors\nof those who stormed the heights\nof Vimy Ridge on that fateful\nand memorable Easter Monday\nmorning 48 years ago are getting\nfewer in numbers, but those who\nare still with us still remember\nand recall the ancient vault and\nquarries w.iere the troops congregated before the attack, and\nremember their comrades who\nshared the assault and died in\nthe attempt.\nTlie Canadians, under lhe command of Sir Julian Byng. were\ngiven the task of driving lhe\nGermans from the stronghold,\nlt was an important part of tlie\ndefences of the Hindenberg Line.\nIt was in the hands of the enemy\nsince the third month of ihe\nwar, and was stron .ly defen'led\nby Ihe Germans, It was fl key\npoint and the Allies were determined lo lake it al all costs. Tills\nwas accomplished with great\ngallantry, but at the cost of\nover 10,000 casualties.\nAnd till this day Canada still\nholds the ridge at Vimy. The\nbeautiful and dignified memorial\nrises on a 250-acre site of the\nbattlefield which has been ceded\nto Canada by the French people.\nIt was dedicated in 1936 by King\nEdward VIII mow the Duke of\nWindsor). Here is the message\nof King Edward VIII at the unveiling of Vimy Ridge Memorial.\n\"Today, 3000 miles from the\nshore of Canada, we are assembled around this monument \u2014\nyet not on alien soil. For this\nglorious monument crowning the\nUofW Book Store\nWINDSOR, Ont. (CP)-The\nUniversity of Windsor book\nstore has been rated tops in\nCanada and fourth in North\nAmerica.\nBook distributors announced\ntheir ratings at a Chicago conference of the Mid-American\nPeriodical Distributors Association.\nUniversity of California at\nLos Angeles was listed No. 1,\nColumbia University, New\nYork, second, Bowling Green,\nOhio, third, and Windsor fourth.\nBUGS GROW FAT\nAnimal and insect pests destroyed 380,000 tons of wheat in\nArgentina last year\u2014enough to\nbake 650,000,000 pounds of\nbread.\nRatings were based on the efficiency and layout of the stores\nand the quality of service provided for students and the community.\nSet up three years ago, the\nWindsor campus store was designed by Lloyd M, Thompson,\nmanager, and his assistant,\nMrs. Lionel Tidridge.\nJUDOIST DIES\nLONDON (AP)-Gunji Koizumi, the Japanese who introduced the sport of judo to\nBritain in 1918, was found dead\nat his London home Thursday.\nHe was 79. Koizumi founded the\nworld-famous Budokwai Judo\nClub. He was the only black\nbelt, 8th dan in Europe.\nridge of Vimy is now and foi\nall time part of Canada. Thou .\nthe mortal remains of Canada\"'!\nsons lie far from home, yel n9r.\nwhere we now stand in Ancienl\nArtois, their immortal memo.)\nis hallowed upon soil that is -dl\nsurely Canada's as any aer<\nwithin her mine provinces. |k\na gesture which all can under.\nstand, but soldiers especially\nthe laws of France have decreed\nthat here Canada shall stand\nforever,\n\"We raise this memorial lo\nCanadian warrors. It is an in.\nspired expression in stone, ch:_\nelled by a skilfull Canadian\nhand, of Canada's salute to her\nfallen sons. It marks the scene\nof arms which history will long\nremember and. Canada can\nnever forget. And the ground it\ncovers is the gift of France lo\nCanada. It is one of the consolations which time brings that\ndeeds of valor done on battle-\nfields long survive the quarrel j\nwhich drove opposing host io\nconflict, Vimy will be one such\nname. Around us here today is\npeace and rebuilding of hope,\nAnd so also, in dedicating this\nmemorial to our fallen comrades, our thoughts turn rather\nto Ihe splendor of their sacrifice\nand to the consecration of our\nlove for them, than to cannonade\nwhich beat upon this ridge a\nscore of years ago. In that soirit,\nin a spirit of thankfulness lor\ntheir example, of reverence for\ntheir devotion, and of pride in\ntheir comradeship, I unveil this\nmemorial to Canada's dead.\"\nAnd let us speak for those who\nsurvived the battle in the beautiful words of Wilfred Wilson\nGibson:\n\"We who are left, shall we look\nagain\nHappily on the sun or feel lhe\nrain\nWithout remembering how they\nwho went\nUngrudgingly and spent\nTheir lives for us loved, too,\nthe sun and rain.\nRoyal Canadian Legion,\nBranch 51.\nToday in History Birmingham\u2014Workshop of World\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nApril 19, 1965 .. .\n. The French Constitutional\nAssembly voted 309 to 249 in\nfavor of the draft constitution setting up the Fourth\nRepublic 19 years ago today\nExchange Tours\nOTTAWA (CP)-Ninety members of Canadian 4-H Clubs will\ngo on two \u25a0 week educational\ntours July 12-26 in the third annual interprovincial 4-H exchange.\nMembers of the organization\nfor young people in rural areas\nwill be guests of farm families.\nThis will give them a chance to\nobserve local 4-H activities and\nagricultural practices and see\npoints of interest in provinces\nother than their own.\nThe travellers are chosen on\nthe basis of leadership ability\nand 4-H achievement records.\nAir travel expenses will be paid\nfor by the Royal Bank of Canada, a member of the Canadian\nCouncil on 4-H Clubs.\nThe peacetime roles of Civil\nDefence are to provide an organization able to assist in neutralizing the effects arising from\nNatural or Accidental causes,\nand to assist the Civil Authorities\nand other agencies in emergency\nmeasures  wherever  the   need\n\u2014in 1946. The Fourth Republic lasted until June 1,\n1958, when General de\nGaulle was given emergency\npowers to rule and reform\nthe constitution. It failed\nowing to post-war economic\nturmoil, followed by the\nemergence of six irreconcilable political groupings.\n1775-The first battles of\nthe American War of Independence were fought at\nLexington and Co n c o r d,\nMass.\n1862 \u2014 Simon Fraser, explorer of the Canadian West,\ndied.\nFirst World War\nFifty years ago today\u2014in\n1915\u2014the Germans withdrew\nfrom Ezelbruecke in the\nVosges mountains; South\nAfrican General Botha announced the capture of Keet-\nmenshop, key point on the\nroad to Windhoek, capital of\nGerman Southwest Africa.\nSecond World War\nTwenty-five years ago today\u2014in 1940 - The Netherlands was placed under martial law, as German invasion was feared; Yugoslav\nPremier Milan Stoyadino-\nvich was interned, charged\nwith plotting with Germany;\nand the British Air Ministry\nreported seven Canadian\ncasualties with the RAF.\nWord of Life\n... if I say the truth, why do\nye not believe me? He that is of\nGod heareth God's words: ye\ntherefore hear them not, because ye are not of God. John\n8:46,47.\nBy ROD CURRIE\nBIRMINGHAM, England (CP)\nBritain's second largest city,\nwhich picked up a sooty reputation in building its name as\n\"the workshop of the world.\" is\ntrying desperately to live down\nits past.\nIt's a long, slow process. People still say the name Birmingham with a shudder.\nThe harsh fact is that Birmingham was an ugly town that\ngrew into an ugly city, a product of the industrial revolution\nthat simply grew and grew,\nwith little thought of planning or\narchitectural beauty.\nIt still is one of the world's\ngreat industrial cities\u2014the area\nturns out more than 40 per cent\nof Britain's production and export. But since the war it has\nspent millions of pounds on an\nimaginative self - beautiflcation\nand redevelopment scheme and\nnow has the most modern, well-\nplanned downtown area in the\ncountry.\nPlans for parks, a theatre and\nan art centre put to shame most\nother big British cities.\nGRIM IMAGE PERSISTS\nNevertheless, the old idea of\nBirmingham the terrible sticks\nlike the grime to some of\nits frowning Victorian buildings\nand outsiders continue to think\nof it as its old,  grey self\u2014a\ncloth-cap society in a forest of\nsmokestacks.\nThat is not to say that Birmingham today, with a population of 1,105,000 in the heart of\nEngland, is a gay city of beauty.\nThere are no tourist attractions to speak of, the night life\nis practically non-existent above\nthe pub-and-cinema level and\nalthough it has one of the country's best symphony orchestras\nand a notable art gallery it so\nfar is generally typical of what\nsoutherners call the \"cultural\ndesert\" of the Midlands and the\nNorth.\nVisitors to the area bypass\nBirmingham by the millions, en\nroute to Coventry, with its magnificent neW cathedral, and to\nStratford, the birthplace of\nShakespeare\nBut those who do come to\nBirmingham\u2014it is a mecca for\ninternational businessmen\u2014are\nsurprised by its changing face\nand the deep conflict between\nwhat they had expected to find\nand the reality of its modern\nshopping centre, its excellent\nhotels and its almost futuristic\ndowntown traffic network of\noverpasses and underground\nhighways .\nIGNORE OUTSIDERS\nMany of the energetic people\nnow deeply concerned with improving   Birmingham's   reputa\ntion concede that part of the\nblame may rest with its citizens,\nthe dour, hard-working \"Brummies\" who show a rather calculated indifference to outside\nopinion.\n\"For the most part,\" a Londoner living here for years,\n\"the Birmingham chap wants a\npound's pay for a pound's work,\nhis beer and his football\u2014and\nafter that he doesn't give a\ndamn what anyone thinks of\nhim or his city.\"\nBut a growing legion of citizens, led by their fast-talking\nand outspoken lord mayor,\nFrank Price, himself a product\nof the city slums, do care passionately about what they invariably call Birmingham's \"image.\"     ..\nThey seem to be impatient\nwith the city's tendency to live\ndown to its reputation and they\nhave for years been trying to do\nsomething about it\u2014to boast a\nbit about its accomplishments\nand broadcast its plans for the\nfuture.\nAnd there is a lot of brag\nabout.\nSince the Second World War\nthe city has knocked down literally thousands of dilapidated\nbuildings and notorious slum\nfactories. Out of the rubble have\nrisen apartment buildings,\nglamorous office blocks and the\ncity's pride and joy, the Bull\nRing Shopping Centre    .\nSHOPPER'S HEAVEN\nThis 23-acre town within a\ncity has every possible shopping\nfacility under one roof, free\nfrom motor traffic and graced\nby plants, trees, fountains and\ntropical birds. There are department stores, supermarkets\nand some 100 smaller shops\nand elevator and escalator facilities to transport more than 150,-\n000 shoppers an hour.\nThe other major project was\nthe \u00a327,000,000 \"inner ring\nroad\" to circle the business\ndistrict and take the pressure\noff the downtown traffic. Its\ncreation involved the acquisition\nof 1,500 properties and the redevelopment of 80 acres.\nAside from all this, there is\nthe continuing slum clearance\nscheme now involving five \"new\ntowns\" within the city, each\ncomplete with schools, shopping\ncentres, community halls and\nopen spaces. Also under way is\nwork on another \u00a310,000,000\nshopping centre near the Bull\nRing and a \u00a35,000,000 repertory\ntheatre and exhibition hall.\nAnd there is lots more to\ncome. Birmingham's planning\nkeeps at least five years ahead\nof actual construction\u2014and the\nend is nowhere in sight.\nCanada Ultimate Water Resource\nHUBERT\nPORTLAND (AP) - Water\ndiversion to the thirsty Southwest cannot reach into Canada\nuntil that government is convinced its development will not\nbe hampered by it.\nArthur B. Laing, Canada's\nminister of Northern Affairs\nand Natural Resources, told the\nPacific Northwest Trade Association Monday that water is\nCanada's ultimate resource.\nHe said that country's biggest\nbusiness is exporting its resources in the raw state, but\nwater cannot be included until\nstudies currently under way\nestablish a fair price.\n\"We cannot accept the idea\nof continental ownership of our\nwater,\" he said.\nAt the moment, Laing said,\nCanada is looking toward exportation of its waterpower in electricity rather than as water\nitselft\nArthur Paget, British Columbia deputy minister of water\nresources, followed a similar\nline in an earlier talk to the\nopening session of the two-day\nconvention.\nHe noted talk that southwestern United States needs Pacific\nNorthwest water, but said Canada may have none to spare if\nthe  province  develops  as  expected.\nHe spoke of the possibility of\nusing lakes in northwestern\nBritish Columbia as storage\nreservoirs for a project that\ncould, by putting a tunnel\nthrough the Coast Range, develop on the Taku River 60 per\ncent as much power as the\nprojected Rampart Dam on theh\nYukon in Alaska with only 13\nper cent as much water.\nPaget added another note:\nThe Fraser could become the\nregion's greatest power producer. He said that by adding\nslightly to Mica Dam, the Columbia River could be diverted\ninto the Fraser, and the Skeena\ncould be diverted there too.\nLoyd A. Royal, director of the\nInternational Pacific Salmon\nFishers Commission, said that\ntaking water under the guise of\nexpanded regional and international development might prove\nfatal to the salmon industry.\n\"Salmon simply cannot adjust,\" he said, \"to major environmental changes caused by\ndams, water diversion and pollution.\"\nThe association elected Ralph\nC. Pybus, of Vancouver, B.C.,\npresident. John D. Cartano,\nSeattle, was put in line by\nelection as vice president.\n2,000 - Year - Old Problem Solved\n\"Two years ago her mother insisted we spend $320\non ballroom-dancing lessons for her.\"\nWATERLOO, Ont. (CP) -\nThree undergraduate students\nat the University of Waterloo\nclaim to have solved a mathematical problem that has\nbaffled man for more than 2,000\nyears.\nIt's the famous cattle problem posed in an epigram by\nthe Greek mathematician and\ninventor Archimedes (287-212\nBCi,\nThe students, all in third-\nyear honors math, are Hugh C.\nWilliams of Burlington, Ont., R.\nAngus German of Toronto and\nC. Robert Zarnke of Waterloo.\nThey say there are actually\neight answers to the problem\nand each is 206,545 digits long.\nIn simplified terms, the problem involves four herds of\ncattle, each herd a different\ncolor and with a majority of\nbulls. The problem is to determine how many cows and bulls\nthere are in each of four herds.\nWhat makes it complicated is\nthe nine mathematical conditions within which the problem\nmust be solved.\nThe   students   employed   the\nuniversity's $1,500,000 computer\nto work out the answer. It has\nbeen estimated it would take\n1,000 men a total of 1,000 years\nto figure it out by conventional\nmethods, but the computer took\nseven hours and 49 minutes\nThe students, on their own\ntime, thought about the problem for about a month, then\nused the computer at night to\nget the answer.\nProf. Wesley Graham, head of\nthe computer science department, said that in 1889 a civil\nengineer  in  the   United  States\nand two friends formed a Club\nto solve the problem but gave\nup after four years.\nThe solution found here has\nbeen accepted for publication\nin the respected technical journal, Mathematics of Computation, Washington. The full answer won't be published since\nit weighs several pounds and\nwould fill a 2,000-page volume.\nProf. Graham said others will\nundoubtedly work out the problem with a computer to sec if\nthe answer found at Waterloo\nis right.\n Go Easy With\nThat Vitamin D\nOTI'AWA (CP)\u2014It is possible\nfor Canadians to get too much\nvitamin D in their food, says a\ndoctor with the federal food and\ndrug directorate.\nDr. A. B. Morrison of the directorate's research laboratories writes in the current edition\no' the Consumers Association of\nCanada magazine Canadian\nConsumer:\n\"Relatively little excess vitamin D is needed to produce\ntoxic symptoms, particularly in\nchildren. Infants and growing\nchildren require 400 international units of vitamin D daily.\n\"It has been reported, however, that approximately 2,000\ninternational units a day may\nretard growth in infants. A survey taken recently indicated it\nis quite possible to take in as\nmuch as 4 0 00 international\nunits daily by consuming a\nvariety of foods containing\nadded   vitamin   D.   This   ob\nviously is most undesireable.\"\nDr. Morrison says that although vitamin D is required\nby infants and children and by\nwomen during pregnancy and\nlactation, \"indiscriminate and\nuncontrolled additions of vitamin D to foods may constitute\na hazard to health.\"\nThere appeared to be no\nharm in taking large amounts\nof the water-soluble vitamins\nvitamin C (ascorbic acid) and\nthe B vitamins thiamin, riboflavin, niacin and pyridoxine.\n\"Toxic symptoms from excess vitamin A have been reported, but the amount necessary to poison an individual is\nmuch higher than likely to be\nfound in any foods.\"\nFederal food and drug regulations permit addition of vitamins for nutritional purposes\nbut ban additions that have no\nnutritional merit .\nLilian Bland, 86 Years, Recalls Building,\nFlying Her Own Plane \"Mayfly\" in 1910\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MON., APRIL 19, 1965 \u2014 5\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS ISM ON THB DIAL\nPACIFIC STANDARD TIME\nMONDAY, APRIL 19, 1965\nN.B.: If fifth game of WIHL\nseries Is necessary it will\nbe broadcast at 6i30 p.m.\nS: 59\u2014Sign On\n6 00\u2014News and Reports\n6:10\u2014The Morning Program\n6 40\u2014Farm Fare\n6 43\u2014Chapel in the Sky\n7 00-News\ni 03-Wake Up Time\n7:25\u2014Sports News\n7:30\u2014News\n7 35- Wake Up Time\n8 00\u2014News\n8:10-Sports News\n8:15\u2014Wake Up rime\n8:30\u2014Preview Commentary\n8:35-Wake Up Time\n9 00\u2014News\n9:10\u2014Road and Weather Report\n9 15\u2014The Archers\n9:30\u2014Alan's A.M. Spot\n9:59 Time Signal\n10:00\u2014News\n10:05\u2014Music Fill\n10:15\u2014 Open Line\n11:00\u2014News\n11:05\u2014Women's Institue Talk\n11:10\u2014Morning Melodies\n11:40-Women's World\n12:00\u2014Tennessee, Ernie Ford\n12:15\u2014Sports News\n12:25\u2014Spotlight on Sports\n12:3l-B.C. Farm Broadcast\n12:54-News\n10:0\u2014Stories With John Drainie\n1:15\u2014Tommy Hunter Show\n1:45\u2014Sacred Heart Program\n2:0O-Holiday Time\n2:30\u2014News\n2:33\u2014 Trans Canada Matinee\n3:30\u2014Court of Opinion\n4:00\u2014News\n4:03\u2014Canadian Roundup\n4:10\u2014Sports Report\n4:15\u2014Pops Parade\n4:30\u2014Countdown\n5:00\u2014The Rolling Home Show\n5:05\u2014News\n5:35\u2014Closing Markets\n5:40\u2014Today's Editorial\n5:45\u2014Business Barometer\n5:50\u2014Sports Desk\n6:00\u2014Strikes and Spares\n6:05\u2014National News\n6:15\u2014Countrytime\n7:00 News and On Parliament\nHill\n7:20\u2014Speaking Personally\n7:30\u2014Science Review\n8:00\u2014Music for Listening\n9:00\u2014Drama Special\n9:30\u2014Distinguished Artists\n10'00\u2014News\n10:10\u2014B.C. News and Weather\n10:15\u2014Chapel in the Sky\n10:30\u2014Continental Holiday\nll:00-News\n11:03\u2014Monday Show\n12:00\u2014News\n12:03\u2014Sign Off\nCBC PROGRAMS\nTUESDAY, APRIL 20, 1965\n6:0O-The A.M. Show\n8:35 Max Ferguson Show\n9:00\u2014News and Report\n9:10\u2014Interlude\n9:15\u2014The Archers\n9-30\u2014Pacific Express\n9:59 Time Signal\n10:00\u2014Morning Visit\n10:10\u2014For Consumers\n10:15\u2014To Market With Music\n10:45\u2014Playroom\n11-00\u2014Off the Record\n12:00 Maurice Pearson Show\n1'. 15\u2014News\n1 _. 5\u2014Snotli-jht on Sports\n12:30 B.C. Farm Broadcast\n12:55 Five To One\n1:00 Stories With John Drainie\nt: 15\u2014What's on Tapp\nt:4__Pro2ram Resume\n2:00-Holiday Time\t\n2:30-News and Trans-Canada\nMatinee\n3:30\u2014Tempo\n4:00\u2014News\n4:03\u2014Canadian Roundup\n4:10\u2014Tempo-Part II\n4:30\u2014Countdown\n5:00\u2014NHL Finals\n7:30\u2014News and\nOn Parliament Hill\n7:50\u2014Speaking Personally\n8:00 Assignment\n8:30\u2014Bennv Hill Show\n9:00\u2014Leslie Bell Memorial\nChoir Competition Finals\n10:00 News\n10:15\u2014Talk\n10:30 The Music Scene\n11:00 Symphony Hall\n12:00\u2014News\nU:05\u2014After Hours\nBy JOSEPH MacSWEEN\nSENNEN, England (CP)-A\nsnug cottage tucked like an\neagle's nest in the fold of a\ntowering Cornish bluff is the\nhome of Lilian Bland, who\nplayed a gallant part in the\ndawn of the air age.\nThe slender, 86-year-old Mrs.\nBland, believed to be the first\nwoman to build and fly her own\nplane, greeted with reserve a\nCanadian reporter who came to\nask her about that adventure so\nlong ago.\n\"It's like being resurrected\nfrom the dead,\" she said, and\nsuddenly the years slipped away\nfrom the lined old face and she\nlaughed the spontaneous laugh\nof a carefree young woman.\nIt was in 1910 that Lilian\nBland, inspired by her observation of black seagulls riding the\nturbulent air currents over Scotland's Western Isles, fashioned\na gull-winged craft to fulfil her\ndream of emulating the great I\nsoaring birds.\nThat was only seven years\nafter history's first powered\nheavier - than - air hop by the\nWright brothers at Kitty Hawk,\nN.C, and one year after J. A.\nD. McCurdy's famed Canadian\nflight at Baddeck, N.S.\nIn Lilian Bland's little-remembered epic, she made several\nshort hops in her flimsy plane,\nwhimsically dubbed the Mayfly,\nat Car nmoney, near Belfast, before her father put his foot\ndown.\nHe was afraid I would break\nmy neck,\" said Mrs. Bland, recalling that in Ireland 55 years\nago it was considered a bit\nunusual\u2014e ven unladylike\u2014for\nwomen to drive automobiles, let\nalone to flit about in home-made\nkite-like flying machines.\nMOVED TO B.C.\nEventually the high-spirited\nLilian \u2014 pilot, horsewoman,\nmotor enthusiast, photographer,\nwriter, painter, gambler, gardener \u2014 emigrated to British\nColumbia in 1912 but not before\nadding a bit of pepper to Irish\nlife in various ways.\nTlie plain - spoken pioneer\nmaintains she was the first\nwoman to design, build and fly\nher own plane and there is nothing in the aeronautical records\nof London's science museum to\ncontradict the claim.\nThe records show, however,\nthat Baroness de Laroche of\nFrance became a qualified pilot\nin March, 1910. That was while\nLilian, without benefit of flying\nlessons, was still preparing\nMayfly for her first flight, which\ntook place before the unbelieving eyes of villagers in the\npasture of a terrified bull.\nAmazingly spry for her years,\nshe now lives alone in her home\noverlooking cliffs and sea in this\nstrikingly scenic area of Cornwall, near where the transatlantic cables head out toward Newfoundland.\nClad in her customary outdoor\ngarb of slacks and mackinaw-\ntype jacket, she strolled along\nher terrace, gesturing toward\nnearby Land's End and Cape\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\nPACIFIC STANDARD TIME\nKREM-TV - Channel _\n6:30 Huckleberry Hound\n7:00 Wyatt Earp\n7:30 Voyage to the Bottom\nof the Sea*\n6:30 No Time for Sergeants'\n9:00 Wendy and Me*\n9:30 Bing Crosby*\n10:00 Ben Casey*\n11:00 Nightbeat\n11:30 Late Movie\nKXLY-TV -\n- Channel 4\n7:00 The Rifleman\n7:30 To Tell the Truth*\n8:00 I've Got a Secret*\n8:30 Andy Griffith*\n9:00 The Lucy Show\n9:30 The Danny Thomas Show*\n10:00 Adventure Theatre*\n10:30 Joey Bishop*\n11:00 11 O'Clock News\n11:30 Big Four Movie\nKH\nJ-TV-\nChannel 1\nCornwall. Indoors she displayed\nher paintings, which follow the\nthemes of mountain and seascape, and her photos from the\npast, including ancient aircraft\nand Canadian forest scenes.\nHATES PEOPLE\n\"When I came back from Canada, I became a gardener,\" said\nMrs. Bland. \"I hate people. In\ngardening, outdoors, you get\naway from them.\n\"I gambled my wages on the\nstock market and was very\nlucky. I made enough to come\nhere 10 years ago. I've written\nthe story of my life, but I don't\nknow when it will be published.\"\nIn conversation the picture\nemerged not of an aviation fanatic\u2014as so often was the case\nwith flying pioneers\u2014but of a\nstrong-willed woman eager to\nsavor life to the full in various\nfields, unimpressed by male\nmonopoly.\n\"It was an experiment,\" she\nsaid of the flying episode.\n\"Other people seem more interested in it than 1 am. One tries\none thing, then moves on to\nother things.\n\"I was a very unusual person.\n\"I loved horses and was probably the first woman in Ireland\nto ride astride. I did that not\nto shock people but simply because I considered sidesaddle\nriding dangerous.\n\"I was top-of.he-t.ee as a\nrider and was the first woman\nto \u00bbpDly for a iockey's li'1 .nee.\n\u2014of course I didn't get it.\n\"I was one of the first women\npress photographers.\n\"My father bribed me to stop\nflying by buying me a motor\ncar. I was dribing it before we\ngot it home from the dealer. I\nhad the first car agency in\nIreland, in the north.\n\"Of course I didn't sell any\ncars. Everybody said they\nwould fall apart\u2014the English\npeople said that. They hang\nback from trying new things.\nThey're still like that.\"\nTREATED AS BOY\nMrs. Bland, her challenging\nblue eyes reflective, paused a\nmoment.\n\"I'm Irish, myself,\" she added cryptically. \"But I haven't\nbeen back since 1912. Everything is changed, split up.\"\nDaughter of an artist of \"moderate\" means, Lilian had an\nolder brother and sister and\nwas brought up \"like a younger\nbrother\u2014I always worked with\nmen.\"\nMrs. Bland's thin face softened as she turned to still-\nfresh photos of birds, taken by\nher more than a half-century\nago in solitary day-long vigils\non islands where the only\nsounds came from the sea and\nsea birds.\n\"I used to think how nice it\nwould be to fly like them,\" she\nmused.\n\"Then Louis Bler;iot flew in\nFrance and my Uncle Robert\nsent me the measurements of\nthe plane.\n\"I studied them carefully, but\ndidn't follow them. I followed\nthe shape of the gull wings. I\nthink my machine was very\nwonderful because it got off the\nground by itself. That's how we\ntested it\u2014we turned it into the\nwind and it rose by Itself.\"\nLilian, assisted by a garden-\nboy, Joe Blain, and others, built\nthe Mayfly first as a glider and\ndid many months of painstaking\nexperiment and repair. Lilian\nmade many glider flights with\nnumerous mishaps but no serious injuries.\nFinally, after negotiation by\nmail, Lilian travelled to England to pick up a 20-horsepower\ntwo-cylinder engine from A. V.\nRoe, a name famed in aviation\nfrom the beginning.\nLIFTED POLICEMEN\nLilian arrived home at night\nin pouring rain with the precious power plant and in her\neagerness could not wait until\nmorning to test it. The engine\nspluttered into life, gasoline being fed from a whisky bottle\nthrough an ear trumpet belonging to Lilian's deaf aunt.\nBefore this, we made sure\nthat the airframe was strong\nenough to carry the engine. We\ndid this in a funny way.\nFour big policemen and Joe\nheld on to the wings of Mayfly\nand turned it into the wind. It\nlifted all the policemen off their\nfeet, so we knew that if it could\ncarry four Irish policemen, it\ncould certainly carry one English engine.\n\"The police were great\nfriends of mine, incidentally.\nThey cleared people off the road\nso that I wouldn't kill somebody\nwith my motor car,\"\nPreparations, which began in\n1909, continued in 1910 and\nfollowing countless disappointments a day came in August\nwhen conditions were just right\nfor Mayfly, now complete with\nits engine.\nPerched on a canvas open-air\nseat, Lilian manipulated her\ncontrols and the plane left the\nground after running forward\nabout 30 feet.\n\"No one was more surprised\nthan me,\" said Mrs. Bland.\n\"The quaint thing is that I\ndidn't realize I had flown, I was\nso intent on my engine and\nlevers. I ran back and saw\nwhere the wheels tracks left the\nsoaking-wet, rough field.\n\"One hazard was the cattle.\nInstead of running away, they\nseemed to want to charge toward Mayfly. My longest flight\nafter the first was nearly one-\nquarter of a mile. Mayfly\nrocked and pitched exactly like\na boat on the sea. Fortunately\nI was a good sailor.\"\nWas she afraid?\n\"I've never been afraid in my\nlife.\" .\nMrs. Bland, interrupting her\nstory, produced a yellowed Dec.\n17, 1910, edition of Flight, British aviation magazine, containing an article by her stating:\n'The controls consist of a\nbicycle handle bar which rocks\nand turns. Turning the handle\nto the right raises the right\nhand elevator and depresses the\nleft. . . .\"\nEntitled The Mayfly - the\nFirst Irish Biplane, the article\ncontinues:\n'All these controls may sound\ncomplicated, but in practice\nthey are quite simple to work,\nand I think it is a great advantage to have the engine\nand airplane under complete\ncontrol. . . .\"\nThe story, accompanied by\ndrawings, is a professional-\nsou n d i n g description of the\nplane, which had a wingspan of\n26 feet, seven inches, tricycle\nundercarriage plus skid-runners\nand was made of ash, spruce,\nbamboo and elm, fashioned in\nsections in the well-equipped\nBland workshop.\nThe irrepressible Lilian, then\nin her early 30s, placed advertisements offering to build new\nMayflys for \u00a3250 apiece\u2014this at\na time when flying activity was\nscant in Ireland although hectic\nin England and France.\n\"As a glider this biplane has\nsuccessfully accomplished glides\nof over 90 yards,\" Lilian advertised. \"Very stable in gusty\nwinds. With the engine it can\nrise 30 feet in a dead calm.\"\nGAVE AIRFRAME AWAY\nBut Lilian realized the Mayfly couldn't take an engine\nstronger than 20 horsepower\nand by this time far more\npowerful machines were being\nproduced. The Mayfly airframe\nwas eventually given to a boy's\ngliding club and the engine was\nsold. A similar engine now is in\nthe London science museum.\nDaddy Bland had said \"no\"\nto further flying but Lilian's\nidea of settling down was to\nmarry her vagabond cousin,\nCharles Bland, and travel to\nnorthern Vancouver Island to\nhelp wrest a homestead out of\nvirgin wilderness.\nThis adventure, too, started in\nfull - blooded romance with\nDAILY  CROSSWORD\n7:00 Best of Groucho\n7:30 Monday Night at the\nMovies \u2014 \"Gun Battle\nof Monterey\"        \t\n9:00 Andy Williams' <C>\n10:00 Alfred Hitchcock*\n11:00 News and Weather\n11:30 Tonight with Carson* (C)\nCBC-TV - Nelson, Channel i; Trill, Channel 11\nS:0O-Moment of Truth\n3:30\u2014Take Thirty\n4:00\u2014As the World Turns\n4:30\u2014Razzle Dazzle\n5:00-The World of Nature\n5:30\u2014Let's Go\n6:00\u2014Wendy and Me\n6:30\u2014Karen\n7:00\u2014The 7 o'clock Show\n7:80\u2014Don Messer's Jubilee\n8:0O-Show of the Week\n9:00\u2014Danger Man\n10:00\u2014The Sixties\n10:30\u2014Bold Journey\nll:00-News\n11:14\u2014Viewpoint\nCJLH-TV - Channel 7, Lethbridge\nMOUNTAIN STANDARD TIME\n7:45\n8:00\n8:30\n9:45\n10:00\n10:30\n11:00\n11:15\n11:30\n11:50\n12:00\n12:30\n12:45\n1:00\n2:00\n3:00\n3:30\nTUESDAY\nTest Pattern 4:00 As the World Turns\nU of A Math 4:30 Razzle Dazzle\nSiEn off 5:00 Fireball XL 5\nTest Pattern **:00 Sports, Weather, News\nIvanhoe \"6:30 My Favorite Martian\nAcross Canada *7:00 How Does Your Garden\nFriendly Giant Grow\nChet Helene *7:S0 Let's Sing Out\nButternut Square *8:00 Jack Benny\nCBC News *\u00ab:M Danny Kaye\nAfrican Patrol *9:30 Front Page Challenge\nThe Story Lady '10:00 Newsmagazine\nFarm Digest '10:30 Other Voices\nTrailmaster 11:00 CBC News\nExploration 11:15 Nite Final\nMoment of Truth 11:20 Trailmaster\nTake Thirty\t\n(Programs subject to change by stations without notice.)\nOH MORE\n_tk\nACROSS\n1. Identical\n6. Persian\nruler\n9. Mid-East\nland\n10. Land of\ntheIncas\n11. Trap\n12. Greek\nUtter\n14. Belonging\nto him\n15. Thus\n16. Female\nPig\n17. Like\n18. Buckets\n21. Flights\nof steps\n23. Tents\nDOWN\nl.Evil\n2. Macaws\n3. Disfigure\n4. Augment\n5. Bobbin\n6. Garment\nborder\n7. Elder son\nof Zeus\n8. Author\nof \"Les\nMtserables\"\n11. Kind of\ndaisy\n13. Word of\ndisgust\n15. Little girl\n18. Pineapples\n19. Land\nmeasures\n20. Climb\n22. Biblical\nHon\n24. Constellation\n25. A high,\nway\ndriver\n28. A\nguaran.\n28. Metal\ncontainer\n30. Explosive\nsound\n32. Restores to\nhealth\n34. Verb form\n35. Brought\nInto\nexistence\n.WlKi  ___--.)\n_)___][_ Haan\n__________ _______\n\u25a1a nam   _____\n___  _)_______-____\n________ HHI0\n_______]__ ____in__-_\nlamia- hbhiih\n__e___-_____- ii----\n______    BHSl 09\n__________ _____\n\u25a1SDH   0E3H\n________ asm--\nS_t--__y'i Annrar\n36. Melancholy\n38. Patronage\n40. News,\npaper\nnotices\n41. Dawn\n42. Mineral\nsource\nAlways there with ready cash\nNIAGARA FINANCE\nCOMPANY LIMITED\nDAILY CR-PTOQUOTB \u2014 Here's how to work it:\nAXYDLBAAXR\nlt LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is used\nfor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apos-\ntrophies, the length and formation of the words are all hints,\nEach day the code letters are different.\nA C-yptognun Quotation\nYMPDHYQ      FHXQ      OK      DCNF,      MN\nNCKKHXG    OM    MVPXY,     CG      HYPMK-\nXNCYTX. \u2014OXXTDXN\nSaturday's Cryptoquote: WRITERS, LIKE TEETH, ARE\nDIVIDED INTO INCISORS AND GRINDERS.\u2014WALTER\nBAGEHOT\n(G 19-5, King Feature. Syndicate, Int.)\nHints From Heloise\nBy Heloise Cruse\nDear Heloise:\nFor those who make hot cakes\nin a skillet, here's a real tricky\nidea!\nGrease the pan for the first\nhot cakes only, and after that,\ncut a raw potato in half and\njust rub the cut side over the\nhot griddle before each new\nbatch of batter is put into the\nskillet.\nThe hot cakes will brown\nbeautifully, and there will be no\nsmoke whatsoever.\nAnne Baker\n* \u2666 *\nDear Heloise:\nLadies who like to hang their\nsweaters on plastic coat hangers,\nas I do, will find that if they\nbuy the smaller hangers used\nfor children's clothes, the end\nof the hanger comes only to the\nsleeve seam and not beyond\nwhere it will spoil the shoulder\nsection of the sweater.\nHelen Mack\n* .  \u2022\nTrue! Heloise\n* \u2022 \u2022\nDear Heloise:\nI guess about the greatest hint\nCharles, who had been a British Columbia lumberjack, coming back to Ireland to propose\nto Lilian.\n\"I asked him what we would\nlive on\u2014I knew he had no\nmoney.\"\n\"'Hope,' was his reply.\"\nBecause the marriage was\ndoomed to eventual separation,\nMrs. Bland refused to discuss\nin any detail her Canadian stay\nwhich extended over nearly 25\nyears except for a three-year\nperiod in California.\nWe had one child but she\ndied,\" she said sadly.\nThere was no telephone, no\ntelegraph in those days. I kept\ncows, pigs and chickens and\nworked outdoors. I don't regret\nmy life there at all.\n'It was very interesting and\nI learned a lot of things I\nwould never have learned otherwise. And there was excitement\n\u2014storms, blizzards, near-drown-\nings\u2014sometimes too much excitement.\n\"Now I'm all by myself, the\nfirst time I've been really\nhappy.\n\"The only time you're free is\nwhen you're alone.\"\nyou ever wrote was the one\nabout turning on an electric fan\nwhen you try to dry clothes in\nyour basement!\nWe don't happen to have a\nbasement, but we have a laundry room which is completely\nfilled with steam and condensation after running my washer\nand dryer.\nMy clothes never got completely dry until I put an inexpensive electric fan in the\nlaundry room tilted it at a 45\ndegree angle, and the clothes\ndried like magic.\nYou also said that you didn't\nknow why it worked. I don't\nknow either and still don't today.\nI have asked all of my neighbors, and they don't either.\nDoes somebody have the\nanswer to this?\nAll of us find that our clothes\ndry In no time at all when it\nused to take at least two days!\nThanks for your wonderful\nhints.\nMrs. R.I.C.\nWe tested this before we\nprinted it. It works but still nobody seems to know why!\nIt is little hints like this which\nthe housewife wants to know.\nSo, if you have a hint send it\nalong.\nIf you have the answer, write\nto Heloise in care of this paper.\nLetters do not have to be signed\n(o appear.\nHeloise\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nDear Heloise:\nFor those people who wear\nspectacles and have trouble\nkeeping them in place, try just\na little deodorant across the\nbridge of the .nose under the\nnosepiece of the spectacles.\nThe deodorant, of course,\nkeeps the skin drier,  thereby\nhelping to prevent constant sliding of the spectacles.\nSallie Dunn\n\u2022 \u2022  t\nDear Heloise:\nTired of looking at your old\nplastic floral arrangements?\nGather them all up, wash in\nwarm, soapy water, rinse, dry\nthoroughly, then spray with gold\npaint.\nWhen dry, arrange them in a\nbowl or plant which you have\nsprayed gold, and presto! A\nfloral centerpiece fit for King\nMidas!\nE.M.F.\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nDear Heloise:\nIf you have a puppy or a small\ndog, this is something you might\nlike to try.\nTake a belt (old or new) and\ncut it down to the size you need\nfor your dog. (The fancier the\nbelt the cuter the collar.) .\nEveryone thought this was a\ncute idea.\n\"Junior High Dog Lover.\"\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nI agree with them ... and I\nthink you're pretty cute to think\nof lt. Heloise.\nThe Nationalist Chinese government collected $183,200,000 in\ntaxes in the last fiscal year\u2014\n$22,100,000 more than expected.\nTHE MEDICAL ASSOCIATE\nCLINIC\nis pleased to announce the\nassociation in practice of\nIon F. Stewart, M.B.\nand\nPhilip L. Norris, M.B.\n(Dr. Stewart and Dr, Norris are In the Salmo office)\nSpotlight on Defence\n\"OtiidilNORAD photo.\"\nB.C.Tel communication systems\nhelp guard our continent\nagainst surprise attacks\nTo detect the approach of and defend against missiles,\nrockets or planes entering the territorial atmosphere\nof North America is the role of NORAD-North\nAmerican Air Defence Command\u2014with its Combat\nOperations Centre at Colorado Springs.\nJointly controlled by the United States and Canada\nfor defence against surprise nuclear attack, this complex nerve centre demonstrates vividly how B.C. Tel\nand a continent-wide network of telecommunications\nsystems is meeting the challenge of today's \"Cold\nWar\" conditions.\nB.C. Tel's variety of the very latest developments in\nthe communications systems are playing a key role in\nperhaps the most important of all public services\u2014\ndefence of North America against destruction. These\nelectronic marvels provide the connecting links for\ndata transmission devices between radar sites and\nstrategically located computer centres.\nSuch dramatic advances for military purposes are\neven now expanding our everyday communications.\nLong distance calling, radio-telephone coverage, TWX\nand other special data services are but a few.\nB.C.TEL \u00ae\nBRITISH COLUMBIA TCICPHONC COMPANY\nWORLDWIDE TELEPHONE CONNECTIONS \u25a0 INTERNATIONAL TWX AND TELETYPE SERVICE \u2022 RADIOTELEPHONES\nCLOSED CIRCUIT TV \u2022 INTERCOM AND PACING SYSTEMS \u2022 ELECTROWRITERS \u2022 DATAPHONES\nANSWERING AND ALARM UNITS \u2022 OVER 300 OTHER COMMUNICATION AIDS FOR MODERN HOMES AND BUSINESS\n____________\n 6 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, MON., APRIL 19, 1965\nLeafs Drop Pla-Mors 7-5 in Fourth\nWinger Carl Chwachka races in on Pla-Mor goaltender Ken Kuntz as\nprostrate Moose Jaw defenceman Daryll Lubiniecki watches, unable to help.\nThe Leafs recovered after tying the Pla-Mors 2-2 at the end of the first period\nto take the fourth game of best-of-five western Allan Cup semi-finals 7-5 and\nwin the right to meet the Warroad Lakers in the western final. First game of\nthat series will be played in Nelson Friday.\u2014Moose Jaw Times-Herald Photo.\nNew York Mets Drub Giants 7-1\nAs Kroll Allows Only Four Hits\nMeet Warroad Lakers\nIn Western Cup Final\nBy MIKE BENNETT\nDaily News Sports Editor\nMOOSE JAW, Sask, \u2014 \"If we plan on taking the\nPla-Mors tonight, we need at least a tie at the end of the\nfirst period,\"\nPlaying-Coach Bobby Kromm called the shots Saturday night in the dressing room just before the Nelson\nMaple Leafs were scheduled to go out on the ice and the\nLeafs played it according to the script as they dropped the\nMoose Jaw club 7-5 to advance to the western Allan Cup\nfinals against the Warroad Lakers.\nTied 2-2 with the Pla-Mors at the end of the first, the\nLeafs seemed to find their skating legs after being outplayed the night before as Walt Peacosh and Kenny McTeer each scored two goals to pace the way to victory.\nBill Steinke, Buck Crawford and Kromm rounded\nout the Leafs' scoring.\nJackie McLeod collected a pair for the Pla-Mors\nand Mike Zwyer, Ken Jestin and Reg Coles accounted for\nthe other goals.\nFirst game of the Lakers-\nLeafs is slated for the Civic\nCentre  Arena  Friday  Night,\nout shot the Pla-Mors 15-5 and\noutscored them 3-1.\nZwyer accounted for the only\n*Z\u00ab, 1:1*Th. I..,. M\u00b0\u00b0se Jaw g\u00b0al \u00b0f the frame'\n\"Tl.      P        i *\u00bb ^ golfed home a bouncing\nin Nelson Saturday. |      fc after u ^    ha(J b,ocked\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nRookie Gary Kroll pitched a\nfour-hitter and ignited a decisive four-run rally with a. single, leading New York Mets to\na 7-1 triumph over visiting San\nFrancisco in the second game\nof a rain-shortened double bill\nSunday.\nIn the first game of the National League contest, Jesus\nAlou rapped three hits, scored\ntwo runs and drove across one\nin the opener the Giants won\n4-1.\nIn other National League action, Pittsburgh Pirates scored\na 5-4 second-game victory over\nthe Houston Astros who took\nthe opener 3-1. The visiting Cincinnati Reds subdued St. Louis\n8-2 and the Milwaukee Braves\ntook a 9-6 victory over the Chicago Cubs. The Los Angeles\nDodgers, on a visit to Philadelphia, downed the Phillies 6-2.\nIn the AAmerican League, the\nDetroit Tigers whipped Los Angeles i_-l, the New York Yankees downed the Kansas City\nAthletics 10 - 4, the Senators\ndowned Baltimore 11 - 4 and\nMinnesota defeated Cleveland\n6-3.\nKroll, who pitched the first\nsix innings of an exhibition no-\nhitter this spring, allowed only\na run in the fourth inning. Alou\ndoubled and later scored on\nJim Hart's sacrifice fly, tying\nthe score 1-1.\nThe 23-year-old right-hander llected three hits in powering\nopened the fifth with a single, the Milwaukee Braves to their\nmoved around on Johnny | victory over Chicago Cubs.\nLewis' single and a walk to Roy ] Mathews drove in three runs\nMcMillan and came home with \\ while connecting for his second\nthe   tie-breaking   run   as   Ed  homer, a pair of   singles   and\nAIRLINE\n\u25a0     CAREERS\nJ   MEN AND WOMEN\nJ To train for Reservationists,\nI Passenger Agents, Hostesses,\nStation Agents, Communica-\nItionists, etc Good starting\nsalaries, pleasant working\nconditions, excellent chance\n3 for advancement. High school\n.raduates, 17 to 35, get full\nI information today about our\nir-iininc   programs.    Mail\ntraining\ncoupon.\n. Airlines Training Division\nI Atlantic School, Box AC7\nlc\/o.__Sleison Daily News\nI\nI\nI\n\u25a0 Education .....:. --.I\nName .:...:_\u25a0....:..\t\nAddress      \t\nCity and Province\nPhone    \t\nKranepool doubled.\nLewis also scored on the hit\nwhile McMillan raced across on\nJose Pagan's error. Joe Christopher then singled in Kranepool.\nKroll also singled and scored\nthe   Mets'   two-run   sixth.\nAgain  Kranepool,   with  a  fly\nball,  and  Christopher,  with  a\nsingle, drove in the runs.\nBob Bailey broke a tie with\nan eighth-inning single to give\nPittsburgh the 5-4 victory in\nthe second game.\nCatcher John Bateman drove\nin ali of the Astros' runs in the\nopener with a two-run homer in\nthe second inning and a solo\nshot in the ninth. The Pirates\nloaded the bases off Bob Bruce\nin the first inning but could get\nonly one run. Bruce held them\nat bay the rest of the way.\nFrank Robinson and Pete\nRose slugged homers, but Cincinnati needed Bill McCool's\nthree-strikeout relief pitching in\nthe ninth before subduing St.\nLouis.\nBASES WERE LOADED\nMcCool came on in the ninth\nwith the bases loaded and\nstruck out the heart of the St.\nLouis line-up\u2014Bill White, Ken\nBoyer and Dick Groat.\nEddie Mathews, Denny\nMenke and Ty Cline each col-\nwalking twice.\nNatal-Michel\nCurling Club\nSlate Elected\nNATAL \u2014 At the annual meeting of the Ladies' Curling Club\nto the Michel-Natal Curling Club\nheld in the Centennial Room recently, Mrs. Claire Johnston was\nelected president for the 1965-66\ncurling season. Other officers\nelected for the new term were\nMrs. Ben Mogielka as vice-president, Mrs. Mary Mitchell as secretary and Mrs.Jane Fleming as\ntreasurer. The draw committee\nwill consist of Miss Vallie Quarto, Mrs. Ernesta Volpatti' and\nMrs, Vallerie DePaoli while Mrs.\nBen Mogielka, Mrs. Marie Haigh\nand Mrs. Mary Mitchell were selected to the House Committee.\nPresentation of trophies to the\nfirst and second half schedule\nwinners were also made. The\nAlexandra Hotel trophy went tb\nthe Myrtle Cerny rink as first\nhalf draw winners with Nellie\nPodrasky, Jemma Jacino and\nClare Wilson, while the Cole trophy was won by the Molly Dorat-\nty rink. Other members of the\nDoratty rink were Emma Chala,\nJane Fleming and Marie Haigh.\nTickets are expected to go\non sale Thursday.\nAs the case in the first game\nin Drumheller, the Leafs appeared lethargic, but bounced\nback Saturday in what was almost an exact repeat of the\nWestern Allan Cup quarter final\nseries against the Miners.\nThe performance of the entire defensive corps was a reversal of Friday night's game.\nKromm  went with  five  defencemen, in Bill Steenson, Shorty   Malacko,   Frank   Carlson,\nDave Stewart and Steinke after\ngoing  with  four  in  the third\ngame. All five stood up well\nalong the blueline and came up\nwith some effective rushes as\nthe hard-skating forwards dropped back to fill their spots.\nStienke, making his first appearance after getting a well-\nearned rest Friday night, had\nhis hottest game of the series\nas he took oncoming forwards\nout of play and displayed some\nof the neatest poke-checking\nof his career.\nThe Leafs pressed the attack\nfrom the opening faceoff only to\nhave the Pla-Mors open the scoring when Coles tapped in line-\nmate Bill McLelland's passout\nfrom behind the Nelson cage at\n1:44 as the \"Green and White\"\nhad difficulty getting the puck\nout of their own zone.\nMinutes later, Steenson made\na key play as he took out McLeod when he broke two-on-one\nwith centre Jeff Powis.\nFine backchecking by McTeer and cool netminding by\nthree successive shots with the\nPla-Mors all around the cage.\nStewart, a strong man of the\nLeafs' blueline corps, and Hornby teamed up to break up a\nPla-Mor powerplay during Kil-\nburn's elbowing penalty at 4:46.\nContinual   forechecklng   by\nthe Leafs forced the Pla-Mors\nto make mistakes and the Nelson club were quick to capitalize on them.\nCrawford temporarily tied the\ncontest at 10:31 when he shovelled Owen's goalmouth pass into\nthe net after the faceoff in the\nPla-Mors end.\nPeacosh picked up his pair\nback-to-back in the space of 37\nseconds.\nRacing up the right wing\nboards, he trapped a pass from\nlinemate McTeer on a relay\nfrom Kilburn and caught the\nopen corner as the Moose Jaw\ndefence fell apart near centre\nice.\nBefore the Pla-Mors had a\nchance to recover, the Western\nInternational Hockey League's\nscoring leader was johnny-on-the\nspot again when he pushed in\na loose rebound after Kuntz had\nmade two stops in the goalmouth\nscramble.\nThe Leafs continued te push\nthe Moose Jaw club well back\ninto their own territory.\nKuntz was the only man holding the Pla-Mors in the game\nfrom the 14-minute mark on.\nPicking the puck off the stick\nof Peacosh as he attempted to\ndeflect McTeer's slapshot, Kuntz\nremained steady as he came 25\nCournoyer's Power Play\nGoal Gives Habs 32 Win\nKENNY McTEER\n, . . Two big goals\nkey League champs before the\nbuzzer sounded to end the game.\nJestin surprised the Leafs 13\nseconds after Kromm scored the\nseventh Leaf marker when he\nskirted the defence and connected with a waist-high shot that\ncaught just inside the post on\nthe short side.\nWith Chwachka serving a high\nsticking penalty, McLeod took\na pass from Gary Davidge at\nthe Leafs' blueline to click with\na drive that saw Letcher partial\nly screened.      \/\nKuntz left the cage with less\nthan a minute to play as coach\nJerry Bulitz went with six attackers only to have Hornby and\ncompany push the Pla-Mors back\nover centre ice.\nKromm was pleased with the\nperformance of the club, but\ncautioned that there should be\nno let-up now that the Leafs are\nwithin reach of their first Allan\nCup.\n\"We played well after a sluggish game Friday, but in view\nof the way the Lakers trounced\nTranscona in their semi-final\nseries, we'll have to continue to\nskate and check and skate some\nmore.\"   ,\nMONTREAL (CP) - Rookie\nYvan Cournoyer's power play\ngoal midway through the third\nperiod Saturday night carried\nMontreal Canadiens to a 3-2 victory over Chicago Black Hawks\nin the opening game of their\nStanley Cup hockey final.\nA Forum crowd of 14,737 saw\nthe 21-year-old first-year man\ntake a rebound at the edge of\nthe goal crease and flip the\npuck behind Glenn Hall to give\nCanadiens first blood in the\nbest-of-seven series.\nSecond game will be played\nin Montreal Tuesday night.\nHenri Richard and John Ferguson were the other Montreal\nmarksmen as the Habs twice\nblew one - goal leads, before\nmoving ahead for the third and\nfinal time.\nCamille Henry and Matt Ravlich scored Chicago's goals, both\non power plays.\nHULL SHADOWED\nBobby Hull, Chicago's Blonde\nbomber who scored eight goals\nin the semi-final series against\nDetroit, was held well in check\nby Montreal \"shadow\" Claude\nProvost and finished the game\nwith but one shot on goal.\nIt was his slapshot from the\nblueline, however, which Henry\ntipped in for his goal at 4:47\nof the second period. Montreal\nwas a man s h o r t at the time\nwith Jean Beliveau in the penalty box .\nHenry's goal tied it at 1-1, offsetting Richard's fifth goal of\nthe playoffs. The smooth-skating Canadiens centre opened\nthe scoring at 2:39 of the second by blasting a 45-foot slap\nshot under Hall's arm.\nJohn Ferguson put Montreal\nahead 2-1 at 5:26 of the second,\ncompleting a three - goals - in-\nthree-minutes splurge with a\nfine individual effort. He picked\noff a clearing pass by Hawks'\ndefenceman Doug Jarrett,\nskated around the rookie rearguard and deked Hall before depositing a backhander in the\nnet.\nTIE IT AGAIN\nThat held up until Richard\nwent off early in the third period and Hawks cashed in for\nthe second time in the night.\nChicago Maki got the puck back\nto Ravlich at the blueline and\nhis low shot sailed right through\na mass of players into the net\nbehind a startled Gump Worsley.\nThat set the stage for Cournoyer's winning marker.\nMaki went off at 7:12 and\nCanadiens, who scored eight\npower play goals in eliminating\nToronto, stormed to the attack.\nFinally the puck came back to\nTed Harris at the blueline and\nhe let fly with a screened shot.\nThe Hawks' defence stopped\nthat effort, but the puck rolled\nto Cournoyer standing at the\nleft corner of the net and he\nmade no mistake with a short\nshovel shot.\nCONTROLLED GAME\nIt was a well-earned victory\nfor Canadiens, who took control\nof the game after a scoreless\nfirst period and carried the play\nmost of the way. They out-shot\nthe Hawks, 31 to 24.\nChicago was hurt by the absence of two key veterans, de-\nfence'man-captain Pierre Pilote\nand left winger Ken Wharram,\nwho scored 10 goals against\nMontreal during the regular National Hockey League season,\nBoth dressed despite injuries,\nbut neither saw any ice time .\nJarrett, the goat on Ferguson's goal, was playing as\nPilote's replacement.\nReferee Art Skov called 16\nminor penalties, nine against\nCanadiens, in a game that had\na few chippy moments, but little really tough hitting.\nLINEUPS\nChicago: Goal \u2014 Hall. Defence\u2014Vasko, Pilote, MacNeil,\nRavlich, Jarrett, Forwards\u2014B,\nHull, Esposito, Maki, Mikita,\nMohns, Wharram, Hay, Stanfield, Nesterenko, D. Hull, McKenzie, Henry.\nMontreal: Goal\u2014Worsley, Defence \u2014 Tremblay, Talbot, Harris, Harper, Picard. Forwards-\nRichard, Provost, Balon, Backstrom, Larose, Ferguson, Beliveau, Duff, Rousseau, Roberts,\nBerenson, Cournoyer.\nReferee \u2014 Skov. Linesmen-\nArmstrong, Morrison.\nFirst period \u2014 No scoring.\nPenalties\u2014Mohns 1:17; Talbot\n3:23; Ferguson 7:20; Jarrett\n14:02; Tremblay 16:32.\nSecond period \u2014 1. Montreal,\nRichard 5 (Berenson) 2:39; 2.\nChicago, Henry 1 (B. Hull)\n4:47; 3. Montreal, Ferguson 2\n5:26. Penalties\u2014Beliveau 3:42;\nMikita, Rousseau 7:40; Harris\n8:07; Vasko 11:07; Talbot 17:00;\nMikita, Beliveau 19:55.\nThird period \u2014 4. Chicago,\nRavlich 1 (Maki, Mikita) 2:38;\n5. Montreal, Cournoyer 2 (Harris, Beliveau) 8:59. Penalties-\nRichard 1:34; Maki 7:12; MacNeil 12:02.\nSaves\nHall 7 15  6-2.\nWorsley 10 8  4\u201423\nllltllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nNDU Knights\nTake Three\n'B' Trophies\nThe Notre Dame basketball\nteam came up with a hat-trick\nin trophies Thursday night at\nthe Trail Amateur Basketball\nAssociation's Annual Awards\nBanquet.\nSilvano Duregon, representing the winning team, accepted\nthe triple awards which encompass League, Players and\nKootenay Championship Trophies .\nVoted most valuable player;\nwas Terry Koombs, with Dan\nPavan named most sportsmanlike player. Picked as all-star\nteam were Ron Pellegrin, Dan\nPavan, Tony Derosa, Noel Caputo and Gordon McDonald.\nCoach was Bill Hanlon.\niniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.iiiiiiiiimiiiD\nBACKACHEand\nRHEUMATISM Pain\nAfter 21 twice as many women as men\nare made miserable by common urinary\nIrritation caused by a germ, Escherichia\nColl. To quickly combat the secondary\naches, muscular pains and disturbed sleep\ncaused by Kidney and Bladder Irritations,\ntry taking _ little CYSTEX tablets with\na elass of water 3 times dally ior a lev\ndays. CYSTEX ls a cleaning urinary antiseptic, also an analgesic pain reliever for\nRheumatism, Sciatica Pains, Headache,\nBackache, and muscular pains. Get\nCYSTEX Irom druggist, reel 'better fait.\nSilent riding,total performing...\nThis is the way to drive into Summer!\nJim Letcher effectively killed j feet out in front to block Owens'\na slashing penalty to centre i breakaway attempt.\nBASEBALL LINESCORES\nBy  THE   ASSOCIATED   PRES\nNational League\nSan Fran      010 001 110\u2014 4   9 0\nNew York      000100 000\u2014 1 4 2\nSanford (1-0) Shaw (71 and\nHaller;   Jackson   (0-21   Fisher\n(8) McGraw (8), Bearnarth (9)\nand Cannizzaro.\nFirst Game\nHouston 020 000 001\u2014 3 10 1\nPittsburgh 100 000 000- 1 6 0\nBruce (1-1) and Bateman;\nLaw (0-1) Face (9) and Pagli-\naroni, Crandall (8). HR; Hous\u2014\nBateman 2 (2).\nLos Angeles 000 300 030\u2014 6 8 1\nPhila. 000 002 000\u2014 2 5 1\nKoufax (l-Oi and Rosebo.ro;\nBelinsky (0-1) Wagner (6) Bald-\nschun (81 Roebuck (8) and Tri-\nandos. HR: Phila\u2014Stuart (1).\nCincinnati       011110 301\u20148 14 0\nSt. Louis        000 000 110- 2 111\nEllis (2-0) Craig (8), McCool\n(9) and Edwards; Simons (0-2)\nTaylor (6), Carlton (71, Schultz\n(8) and Uecker. HRs: Cin\u2014\nRose (P, Robinson (1), Edwards (1).\nChicago 210 030 000- 6 12 1\nMilwaukee      140 012 Olx\u2014 913 0\nBuhl,   Abernathy    (2),   Bur-\n.dette (4), Humphreys (5), Bau-\nrhann   (M)   (5)  McDaniel  (6),\nWarner (8) and Bertell; Lemas-\nter, Fischer 15),\nand Torre. HRs:\n(2), Menke (1).\nO'Dell   (1-0)\nMil\u2014Mathews\nAmerican League\nFirst Game\nWashington     000 000 001\u2014 ISO\nChicago 021 020 OOx- 5 12 0\nKreutzer (0-1) Green (3),\nHannan (5>, Willhite (8) and\nMcCabe; Peters (2-0) Wills (9)\nand Romano.\nBaltimore       000 000 040\u2014 4 60\nBoston 004 104 20x\u20141114 2\nBunker 10-1) Starrette (3),\nKnowles (5), Miller (6) and Or-\nsino; Wilson (1-0) Ritchie (9)\nand Tillman. HRs: Bait-Powell\n(1). Bos-Conigliaro 12).\nCleveland 003 000 000\u2014 3 111\nMinnesota 002 200 0_x\u2014 6 9 1\nTerry (1-1) Kralick (4), Bell\n(6) Worthington (7) and Azcue;\nGrant, Boswell (1-0) (4), and\nBattey. Hits: Min-Kindall (1),\nHall (1).\nNew York      302 000 302-1010 0\nKansas City   300 010 000- 4 62\nBouton (1-0) and Blanchard;\nDrabowski (0-2) Dickson (4)\nStock (6), Talbot (8) and Bryan.\nHRs: NY-Mantle (2). KC-\nGentile (2), Hershberger (1).\nInternational League\nToronto at Toledo (2) ppd.\nDave Rusnell\nLetcher, back ln his regular\nslot between the posts for the\nLeafs, came up with a fine\nsave on winger Bill Kelly when\nPla-Mors   attempted   to   put\ntheir powerplay to work.\nThe   shorthanded   Leafs   put\nMoose   Jaw   goaltender   Ken\nKuntz on the spot seconds later\nwhen the former Spokane Jets'\nplayer came way out of his net\nto  block  Peacosh's  goalmouth\npass to McTeer standing to the\nright of the open goal.\nMcLeod sent the Pla-Mors\nahead 2-0, when he banged in a\npass from defenceman Larry\nHorning as Letcher was left unprotected while the Moose Jaw\nclub was,playing shorthanded.\nWith Jestin still in the penalty\nbox for the Pla-Mors, Stienke\ncapitalizing on the odd-man advantage from a long pass by\nSteenson to fake Kuntz and flipped the puck high into the cage.\nThe Leafs were foiled two minutes later on a similar attempt\nwhile Daryll Lubiniecki was off\nfor tripping as rearguard Ceo-\nrge Hunchuk and Powis handily\nkilled the two-minutes while the\nPla-Mors were shorthanded.\nMcTeer deadlocked the score\nat 16:10, when he caught a pass\nfrom Doug Kilburn at centre\nto break through the Moose Jaw\ndefence and beat Kuntz with a\nquick backhand,\nThe Pla-Mors duplicated their\nfirst period performance of Friday night's game, playing well\nup in bringing the play to the\nLeafs.\nHowie Hornby and Murray\nOwens proved to be two of the\nhardest working forwards for\nthe Leafs as they forechecked\nwell   In   the  Pla-Mors   zone,\ncompletely disorganizing any\nbid for a scoring attack in Ihe\ndying minutes of the period.\nOwens, in particular, was coming back strong to cover the defence and skated hard all the\nlime he was on the ice.\nLetcher's quick glove hand\nthwarted Coles' bid for his second goal of the period on a close-\nin screened drive.\nThe Leafs, haunted during\nregular season play by lax second periods,  came  out  strong\nCrawford, coming into his\nown as a puck carrier and\nplaymaker, never let up for\nthe \"Green and White\" as he\nrepeatedly backchecked to support the already stalwart rearguard line.\nMalacko, a standout along\nwith Carlson on defence, neatly\ntook the puck away from Powis\nat the Nelson blue as the former\nJunior Canuck player raced\ndown the left wing boards.\nKromm's line-juggling, with\nCarl Chwachka seeing action\nwith Hornby and Owens and\nCrawford alternating with Kilburn on the line with McTeer\nand Peacosh, had the Pla-Mors\nin a state of confusion.\nMcTeer and Peacosh, who\nskated miles for the Leafs, were\noutguessed early in the third\nperiod as Kuntz left the cage to\ncut off Peacosh's pass only to\nhave McTeer shoot wide of the\nopen corner.\nMalacko came through with\na big play on McLeod during the\ntwo minutes the Leafs were\nshorthanded as Laughton was\nserving an interference penalty\nand the regular season Junior\nCanuck coach was stymied\nagain from in front as Letcher\ngrabbed off a difficult drive moments later.\nWith Pla-Mors breaking in\nthree-on-one, Crawford nearly\nhooked the puck away from a\nMoose Jaw forward as the Saskatchewan club's powerplay was\ngetting on track.\nKilburn rapped one off the\npost on a pass from Peacosh\nas the Pla-Mors appeared dls\norganized   by   the   relentless\nchecking of the Leafs.\nWith Lome Humhpreys serving a minor for Kuntz, McTeer\nput new life in the Leaf powerplay when he faked Kuntz, who\nseemed to expect a pass across\nthe goalmouth and picked the\nopen corner on the short side\nKromm made it 7-3 at 14:51 on\na passout from Hornby about 15\nfeet out when he beat the Moose\nJaw  netminder  with   a   quick\ndrive about three inches off the\nice.\nWhether Leafs slackened off\nor Pla-Mors came on strong,\nMcLeod and Jestin retaliated for\nWe've put a whole lot of spirit Into the new\nFORDs. There's a new 240 cu. in. Big Six, standard\non all Custom, Custom 500 and Galaxie 500 models\n\u2014more powerful than any other Six in FORD's class.\n(And even more economical than last year's Six.)\nthe exciting 352 cu. in. V-8 is standard on sporty\nGalaxie 500 XL's and luxurious LTD Hardtops\u2014\noptional on other models. FORD's ride is right in\nthe thoroughbred class. Owners call it the\nsweetest-riding FORD ever. The 3-speed Cruise-\nO-Matic Is FORD's very own. The middle gear\ngives you better passing acceleration. The Second\nDriving Range starts you in middle gear for surer\ntake-off on slippery surfaces. We haven't forgotten your comfort. There's more room, softer\ncushioned seats and Silent-Flo ventilation on 4-door\nhardtops. Test drive a new FORD soon.\nTest drive\nand compare\nFord's new\nquietness\nIllustrated: Galaxie SOO XL Convertible-\nAnother Total Performance ford Built in Canada\nQuietly takes your breath away!\nMEL BUERGE MOTORS LTD.\n608 Vernon St.\nNelson, B.C.   Ph. 352-7202\nfor a sandwich session as they the Saskatchewan  Senior  Hoc-\n_>\n_\n \u25a0\nBIRTHS\nWOLFE - To Mr, end Mrs.\nS. J. Wolfe, Spruce Lake, Sask,,\n(nee Carolyn Paine of Nelson)\nApril 15, a daughter.\nLEAN - Mr. and Mrs. Pat\nLean are happy to announce the\narrival of a daughter, Debra\nRose, born Dec. 12, 1964, a chosen sister for Eddy and Doannie.\nHELP WANTED\u2014MALI\nFINANCIAL REPRESEN-\ntatlve. Opportunity for ambitious man, between ages of 30\nand 88, with car. Apply Mr.\nLetourneau, Hume Hotel.\n-90-92\nHELP WANTED\u2014FEMALi\nWOMEN EVERYWHERE\nwant our product*. There Is a\ntremendous demand for these\nfine Avon Cosmetics. We have\nattractive opening for capable\nwomen. Write Box 80, Nelson\nDaily News. \u201489-91\nWANTED FOR HAMBURGER\nstand, good reliable woman.\nPhone 3524941. -.86-93\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nANYONE INTERESTED IN\nhiring a mechanized rock\npicker, please write Box 85,\nNelson Daily News.     \u201490-95\nPIANO TUNING AND REPAIR.\nG. Stenberg. Phone 352-6892.\n\u2014287-tfn\nEXPERT PRUNING,\ntree. Ph. 352-2678.\nBY THE\n-88-91\nAUTOMOTIVE, BICYCLES\nMOTORCYCLES\nCOTTONWOOD WRECKAGE\nwrecking: '53 Studebaker, '58\nMerc, '56 Chev. Station Wgn.;\nauto, trans, for 'B3-'B8 Chev.,\n'52-'56 Ford, '58 Dodge. Good\nmotors, '53 A40, '84 Zephyr.\nPhone 352.5815, Box 382, 24\nYmir Road. -221-tfn\nFOR SALE - MAN'S GOLDEN\nglider bike. Equipped Willi all\naccessories. Practically new.\nOriginal priee; 180. now sell-\ning for |60 or highest oifer.\nContact Mr, J. D. Green of\nCrawford Bay, B.C.      -88-91\nPROPERTY, HOUSE5,\nFARMS,  ETC.  FOR  SALE\nNEAR ALL SCHOOLS\nRemodeled 3 B.R. home ol loving care. Youngstown kit. adjacent to D.R. L.R. I fireplace I\nUtility wired W\/D. Itt Bathroom, gas furnace. Garage and\nP\"\"0 $690(1\nWhat Price?     \u00abJ\u00bb0\u00bb\"U\nCORRECTION\nNORTH SHORE 6 MILE\n.053 Acres instead of 53 acres.\nNewer 2 B.R. home. L.R. 20' x\n12'. Rubber tile in kit. Full\nbasement, oil furnace. Separate 20W garage.  $8500\nFair Price       yoovv\n$2000 down,\n$65 per mo. Inc. 7% int.\nMOVE IN NORTH SHORE\nNewer built 2 B.R. home, well\nInsulated, with 1.26 acres cleared. Located 18!_  miles from\nNtfn; $6650\n$2000 down,\n$60 per mo. Inc. 1% int.\nNORTH SHORE LOTS\nLots 8-9, Blaylock Subdivision.\nSale Price\nEach \t\n17 Mile, lake front-\nage,76' x 102'. S.P.\n18 Mile. 2 acres\norchard. Sale Price\n6 Mile\nLot\t\nPHONE 392-6144\nSylvia Brashear, Res, 353-563S\nGordon Burgess \u2014 352-8887\nMcHARDY\nAGENCIES LTD,\nREAL ESTATE \u2022 INSURANCE\n654 Ward St. Nelson, B.C,\n$1500\n$2000\n$3000\n$1500\n-91-91\n56 PONTIAC DELUXE, fcCYL..\nstandard transmission, tinted\nglass, VG running gear. $300.\n'42 Norton motorcycle, 350 cc.\nGood condition. At ii, $60. See\nKen at Upper Fairview Motors. -69-91\n1960 INTERNATIONAL MODEL\nVF-190 tandem truck with\nPage-and-Page logging trailer;\nnew motor. Price, $8500. Ph.\n352-6826 or call at 387 Baker St.\n-90-95\n1964 FARGO WALK-IN UTILITY\nvan. 14,000 miles. Like new.\nIdeal (or deliveries, variety of\ncommercial uses, or can eon-\nvert to camper, Nelson Dally\nNews. -70-tfn\nFOR SALE-'HB CHEV. 4-DOOR\nStation Wagon. 6-cyl., ltd.\ntrans.; body good, mech. very\ngood. Phone 352-5361 days,\n352-5907 evenings.       -90-95\n'64 FORD tt-TON. 6-CYL,, 4-\nspd., pos, trac, custom cab,\nrear bumper, heavy duty\nsprings. Fresh air heater. 9000\nmiles. Phone 352-2042. -60-tfn\n3-BEDROOM HOME ON BEAU-\ntiful landscaped level property\non one acre, Full lawn, fruit\ntrees, loo feet beach frontage\nin sand, flower gardens, etc.\nHas separate garage, This is a\nmodern home design, in white\nwith blue trim, Automatic oil\nbeat, fireplace. Can be seen by\ncalling Mr, J, C. Weber,\n229-4686, Balfour, B.C. -72-97\nFOR SALE - 4-21 ACRES FER-\ntile land by Kettle River about\n2 miles from town. About itt\nacre* under sellable pine\ntimber and balance under\nsummer fallow. Private access to property. For information Write Mike S. Zlbin, Box\n23, Grand Forks, B.C.    \u201491-93\nFOR SALE AT PASSMORE,\nnew 3 bedroom home with\nbreezeway and garage; on 2\nacres of land, on main highway, Fruit trees, beautifully\nlandscaped. Write P.O. Box\n08, Grand Forks or Ph. 442-3072\n-91-96\n9 ACRE FARM, 7 ROOM\nhouse and buildings at Perry\nSiding, B.C, $1000 down, balance in payments. Inquire\nSteve Hecker, 820 Victoria St,\nNelson. Ph. 352-6730. -01-102\n1958 BUICK 2-DOOR HARDTOP.\nRed and white, l owner, low\nmileage. Phone 365-8203.\n-89-94\n1957 ONEflON FdRD TRUCK.\nFlat deck, dual wheels, A-l\nshape. Ph. 336-2463, or write\nP.O. Box 104, Creston. -69-94\nYOUR BEST BUY JN HONDAS,\nSales and Service. New and\nused machines. W. A. Taylor\nLtd., Salmo, B. C.      -84-\n1955 TR2,1956 HILLMAN HARD-\ntop, 1956 Meteor 2-door. North\nShore Service. Ph. 352-2929.\n-188-tfn\n1965 CHEV. 2-DR. H.T. FLOOR\n_hift. Good cond. Ph. 359-7409.\n-89-94\n2 BOYS' BICYCLES FOR SALE.\nCheap. Ph. 352-5892 evenings.\n-89-91\nFOR SALE-1969 STUDEBAK-\ner Lark. Pulmanized. Phone\n352.281, \u201482-tfn\nMUST SELL I960 M.G.A. ROAD-\nster. Ph. 352-3854 after 6 p.m\n87-92\n1956 DODGE STATION WAGON\n\u2014 trade for cow or steer. Write\nP.O. Box 202, Trail, B.C-90-96\nCAR FOR SALE-1963 CHEV.\n2-dr. Hdt, Impala. Day, pilone\n353-2342, night, 353-2337.-77-92\nFOR SALE-'58' STUDEBAKER\nScotsman 4-door sedan. Best\noffer. Phone 363.5119.   -89-94\nBOATS AND ENGINES\n26-FT. CABIN CRUISER, CHEV.\n6, equipped. 14-ft. runabout, 25\nh.p. Johnson with controls. -\nReasonable. Phone 229-4683.\n-90-95\n14-FOOT LITECRAFt RUN-\nabout, complete. Control.,\nwindshield, 25 h.p. Evinrude\n- Price, $535. H. D. Bargery,\nEdgewood, B.C. -88-93\n14 FT. PLYWOOD RUNABOUT;\nConvertible top, 40 h.p., electric start, and trailer. Ph. 352-\n.9651 -91-96\n14'4\" PLYWOOD BOAT. FIBRE-\nglassed; 40 h.p. electric start\noutboard; Otaco trailer. Phone\n352-2709.         -90-91\nFOR SALE - 25 H.P. EVEN\"\nrude motor, electric start. Ph.\n352-8427 -68-ttn\nPETS,   CANARIES,   BEES\n3 ONLY, TINY, WHITE REGIS-\ntered toy poodle puppies,\nready for Easter delivery.\nEasy terms can be arranged.\nCM. Kirkendall, Harrop. Ph.\n229-4653. -86-91\nNELSON - 3 B.R.S, DEN, DIN-\ning room, modern kitchen;\nfireplace ln living room, wall-\nto-wall carpeting. Close to\nPublic and Jr. High Schools,\nPhone 352-2725. -89-94\n2 BEDROOM HOUSE, UTILITY\nroom, propane heat, Partly\nfurnished, lanrge yard, garden, lawn. Terms. Ph. 357-9523\nSalmo, B.C. -91-96\nFOR SALE - 4 BDRM HOME\nsituated on a corner lot, For\ninformation ph. 352-2694, or\ncall at 1521 Ward St.    -86-91\nFARM, I MILES NORTH OF\nSalmo. 6-room house, barn,\n65 acres of land, easy terms,\nPhone  357-9682. 87-98.\n1 B.R. SUITE, 5-PCE. 2 BEDS, 1\nfuil size, one tt. Westinghouse\nstove. Connor wash, machine.\n413 Gore St. -91-96\nFOR SALE OR RENT - 2\nbdrm home, elec. atove, tome\nfurnishings. Ph. 229-4610.\n-91-96\nFOR SALE-2-BDRM. HOME.\nAutomatic oil furnace. 75 W.\nMain St., Fruitvale. Phone\n367-7353. -88-93\nWANTED TO BUY-2 OR 3-\nbedroom home. Box 63, Nelson Daily News. \u201469-91\nFARM WITH GOOD HOME, 2V,\nmiles South of Slocan City.\nPh. 226-7221. -84-109\nFOR SALE - 2 LOTS JUST\noff Johnson rd. Ph. 352-5915.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND   FARM   SUPPLIES\n1 REGISTERED PALOMINO\nQuarter, trained for cattle\nround-up and barrel; 5 years.\nOne Arabian gelding, 8 years,\n\u25a0 S,P.. $300 apiece. Miss Barbara Green, Crawford Bay.\n-89-94\nr'UK ARTIFICIAL BREEDING\ndairv and beef cattle, phone\n352-6874 Nelson and District\nA.I, Centre, 709 Third St.. Nelson J De Jong. Technician,\n-tfn\nFOR SALE - LAYING HENS\nand chicks. Ph. 352.808.\n87-tfn\nCOW  FOR   BUTCHERING.   -\nWill sell very cheap. A. Per-\n..versoff,-Shoreacres.     \u201490-95\nMILK COW AND CALF. JUST\nfreshened. Ph. 357-9678. -89-94\nPROPERTY  WANTED\nLISTINGS WANTED. BUILD-\ning lots farm land, city and\ncountry residential. Commercial property timber lands\nCall or write Wm. Kalyniuk\nAgencies. Kelson Ph. 352-2425\n-231-tfn\nClassified Ads Get Results\nMACHINERY\nAC 225 AMP\nSHOP WELDER\nNow Only\n$180\nMAC'S  WELDING\n&   EQUIPMENT   CO\n514 Railway St.     Ph 332-5301\n'^_--tftl\nCOMPLETE GRAVEL CRUSH-\ning and screening plant. Includes: double drum hoist with\nmotor; troughlng conveyor,\ncomplete with motor and gear\nreduction; Fan.ll io x 16\ncrusher, with motor and controller; double hammer\nscreens, 4x7, with motor,\ngenerator set and control\npanel. Dismantled and ready\nto ship. Columbia Trading, 901\nFront Street, -88-93\nNELSON DAIL NEWS, MON., APRIL 19, 1965 \u2014 7\nMOBILE HOMES\nTRAILERS\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 Box 2217\nCASTLEGAR\nPhone 365-5047\nNext to Twin Rivera Hotel\n-\u2022tfn\nHOUSE TRAILER FOR SALE,\n31 x 9. In good condition, Ph.\n442-8412 or write Mickey Post-\nnikoff, Gen. Del,, Grand Forks.\n-90.98\nKINTALS\nGAS WELDING RODS\nHercules Iron, Stainless, Bronze,\nFos-Flo, Silver Brazing Alloys,\nAluminum, Cast Iron, Brasteel,\nStevenson Machinery Ltd.\nPhone 352.3561\n-91-91\nVALLEY AUTOMOTIVE LTD.\nMaBsey-Ferguson, New Holland New and Used Farm\nEquipment, Parts, Sales and\nService. Phone 356-2254, Cres\nton, B.C. -UO-tfn\n'65 FORDSON TRACTOR WITH\nmower and 2 plows, 3-point\nbitch. Used only 250 hrs since\nnew. Make offer. Ph. 365-5836.\n-82-tfn\nFOR SALI\nMISCELLANEOUS\n\"WE TRADE ON ANYTHING\".\nThat old gun you are not us.\ning, trade it in as down payment on a HONDA. - NORM'S\nSPORT SHOP. 852-2015, Nel.\n-31-tfn\nSIDES OF GRAIN FED BEEF.\n47c, eut and wrapped; Sides of\npork, 28c; aides of pork, out\nand wrapped, 63c. Newdan\nFarm, Creston. Ph. 356-9901 or\n356-9769. -171-tfn\nWOOD STAVE TANKS, 2689\ngal., dismantled and marked\nfor reassembling. Guaranteed\nsound. Each $125 at Columbia\nTrading Co., 901 Front Street.\n-88-93\nFOR THE BEST IN USED\nautomatic washers, dryers, refrigerators, television, etc. con-\ntact Nelson Electric Co. Ltd.,\n174 Baker SL, Nelion, B.C.\n-_7-tfn\n\"COMBUSTiONEER AUTOMA-\ntic coal stoker, 1st class condition. See and make an offer.\nPhone 352-3046 after 4 p.m.\n-91-96\nG.E. AUTOMATIC STOVE, 1\nrocking chair, cast iron garbage burner, 7-pc. chrome set,\n4 pc. bdrm. suite and 1 fridge\nPhone 352-6472.\n87-tfn.\nWILLIS PIANO; BEDS, 2 FULL-\nsized, one .it Westinghouse\nelec. stove, Connor Washing\nmachine and oak desk. Ph.\n352-2452. -86-91\n10-YR. GUARANTEE ON GAS\nand electric hot water tanks.\nAll sizes in stock, at Simpsons-\nSears, Phone 332-5531, Nelson.\n-77-tfn\n120 BASS ACCORDIAN. REAS-\nonable.  Write John Conkin,\nSouth Slocan, or ph, 359-7384.\n-90-95\nAUTO WHEELS, 6.50x14,  1959\nOlds. Also boy's medium bicycle. Ph. 352-2796, evenings.\n-69-91\nAPPLES, $1 AND UP. ALL\nvarieties. 1 mile from ferry.\nPeter Evdoklmoff, Robson.\n-88-113\nPORK FOR SALE. HALF OR\nWhole. C. Bing. Ph. 332-3284\nevenings. 87-98.\nG.E. WRINGER WASHER. PH,\n352-3830 after 5. -81-93\nBUSINESS\nOPPORTUNITIES\nDAIRY QUEEN FRANCHISE,\nCranbrook and Kimberley,\nB.C. Well established location\nto serve both local and tourist\ntrade. Van and Scooter service\nto both cities and nearby resorts. All equipment in both\nice-cream and food lines. Operates 8-9 months each year.\nGoing business, unlimited possibilities. Owner other inter\nests. Apply F. J. Parker, Box\n2160, Cranbrook, B.C.    -83-94\nGENERAL STORE FOR SALE,\n4 room living quarters, gas\npumps. Close to High Arrow\ndam. Good turnover. Low interest and payments. Apply\nEast Robson Store or phone\nCastlegar 366-7314 after 6:30.\n-84-101\nMODERN GARAGE AND SER-\nvice station. On highway 3.\nGood location with a future.\nHousing no problem. Box 64,\nNelson Daily News.      \u201490-95\nFOR SALE-MEATS AND GRO-\ncery store. Priced to sell\n'cash). In poor health. P.O.\nBox 127, Creston.        \u201489-94\nGENERAL STORE WITH SER-\nvice station and good 3 bedrm.\nhome on Slocan highway. Ph.\n226-7221. -84-109\nROOM AND BOARD\nROOM   AND   BOARD   FOR\nyoung gentleman. Ph. S52-6351.\n-88-93\nVERNON STREET SHOP SUIT-\nable for office or service station. Also warehouse space\n50x100 ft. Ph. 352-7314 after 4\np.m. 87-92.\nROOMS AND SUITES-HSKPG.\nand sleeping rooms, weekly,\nmonthly rates. Dishes, linen\nsupplied, parking,. \u2014 Allen\nRooms, 171 Baker St. \u201427-tfn\nCENTRALLY LOCATED 2-B.R.\n\u2022uite. Heat and range provided. Phone 362-3315 or 352-2736.\n-90-95\nTRADE SCHOOL\nTRAIN FOR\nHEAVY\nEQUIPMENT\nOPERATOR OR\nMECHANIC\nWe train you on live equipment \u2014 Dozers, Scrapers,\nShovels, Trucks.\nWrite GREER TECH,\nBox 62, Nelson News.\n-85-h\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\nS-ROQM MODERN APT. UN\nturn, Self-contained; heat and\nhot water; central. Adult).\nPhone 331-5403. -23.tfn\nHSKPG. ROOM. WASHING MA\nchine and fridge. Private. Call\nat 71 High Street.        -B2-tfn\nSUITE, 1 B.R., HEATED, FUR,\nClose In. $60. Phone 332-56(18.\n-90416\nWM. APT., HEATED, ELEC,\ntrie itove ind fridge, adult!\nPhona S52-W76. {37-112.\nHALDANE   APARTMENTS   -\n-Din. er unfurn. Ph. 182-8721\n\u20224_.fR\n2-Bt.RM.   HOtJSE;   $65   PER\nmonth. Phone 152-1682. -88\n2-ROOM HOUSE WITH BATH.\nPhone 362-6271. -90-92\nWANTED\nMISCELLANEOUS\nSPOT CASH FOR USED FURNI-\nture, antiques, coins, eld gold,\ndim and Jewell, Heme Furniture Exchange. Ph, 352-6511.\n411 HaU SL, Nelion. B.C.\n-98-tl\nWANTED - CLEAN  COTTON\nrags. At least 12\" square. No\nbuttons. Nelson DaUy News.\n-88-tfn\nWANTED - USED ELECTRIC\nmotors. Coleman Electric, 503\nFront St., Nelson. Ph. 162-3175\n-29-tfn\nSO\" OEM TOP, 6tt' LONG WIDE\nbox, fuU side window!, G. W.\nErickson, Kimberley.   \u201491-91\nWANTID TO RENT\nFURNISHER 1 OR 1 BDRM\nsuite with privite bath. Family with one amill child. Fh.\n362-6116. -91-92\n2-BDRM. HOUSE OUTSIDE OF\ntown. Phone 162-5613.   -88-93\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST - IN VICINITY CIVIC\nCentre, Lidiei' blick shoulder\n\u2022trap pune. Plena Phone\n152-2677. -90-91\nLOST-YOUNG BLACK CAT,\nWith 4 white paws. Ph. 362-2478\nafter 6 p.m.         W-92.\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\nModern\nOFFICE\nSPACE\nFor\nRENT\nApproximately 700 iq. ft. el\nmodern, fully wired office\n\u2022pace located ea Baker Street\nio Nelion.\nREASONABLE   RENT\nLong or Short Ttrm\nLease! Arranged\nApply to:\nNelson Daily News\nPh. 352-3552\nSMsmt\nlatlij Sfouifi\nCirculation Dept., Ph, 352-3S52\nPrice per single copy, 10 cents\nBy carrier per week, 40 cents\nin advance.\nSubscription rates:\nBy mail in Canada\nOutside Nelson\nOne month  $ 2.00\nThree monthi... .    5.00\nSix monthi  10.00\nOne year    18.00\nBUILDERS\nTRY US\nFOR\nSERVICE\nQUALITY\nPRICE\nFIRPLY HARDWOODS\nDOORS ARBORITE\nFORMICA .... MOLDINGS\nNEW\nLOW PRICES\nDouglai Fir Waterproof\nSheathing 4' x 8'\nDegrade Std.   Select\n5\/16\"      $1.86 $2.19     $2.81\ntt\"         $2,39 $2.59     $3.21\n<A\"         $3.28 $3.66     $4.16\ntt\"         $3.99 $440     $5.02\nVt\"         $4.93 $5.36      $5.96\nTongue and Groove 4' % I'\nStandard Select\nVt\" $3.96 $4.61\n_\" (4.80 $5.42\n.\" $6.76 $6.37\nSanded Stock 4'x 8'\nGood 1 tide Good 1 side\/\nSolid Bk.\nV.\" 13.28 13.79\ntt\" $4.40 14.91\ntt\" $6.41 15.91\ntt\" 16.16 $6.76\ntt\". $7.11 17.71\nOrders fer MO iheeti er ever\nlubject to negotiation.\nFEDERAL TAX INCLUDED\nIN ALL OF OUR PRICES.\nCabinet Material\n4'x8'\ntt\" Ribbon 1\nMlhaf. Select 114.86\ntt\" Ash, lumber core .... $16.35\ntt\" African SapeU \u2014\nRibbon 1 HTM\ntt\" Am. Blk, Walnut,\n1 sides $11.11\ntt\" Satin Walnut 1 side $33.50\nMany Other Species Stocked -\nPricei en Request.\nWall Panelling\n\"Gun-Stock\" Finish\ntt\" 4'xl' \"V\" Walnut.... 116.19\ntt\" fut' \"V\" Cherry .... $11.16\ntt\" 4'x8' \"V\"\nIvory .Tone Sen _._|S.95\nSatin Finiih '\n\"Character Grade\"\ntt\" 4'x8' \"V\" Walnut.... $11.10\ntt\" 4'x8' \"V\" Teak  $11.10\ntt\" 4'xB'\"V\" Rosewood 111.10\nDOZENS AND DOZENS MORE\nPRICES ON REQUEST.\nBi-Fold Doors\nSolid Core Mahogany\n2.0 x 6.6  $9.00\n2.6 X 6.6  $10.45\n1.0 X 6.8 -  $11.85\n4.0 X 6.6 $16.85\n8.0 X 6.6  119,60\n6.0 X 6.6  $22.55\nLowered Mahogany\n1.0 X 6.6  ;..-... $16.65\n2.6 X 6.6 ..., . $17.30\n3.0 X 6.8 ....    $19.10 :\n4.0 X 6.6 W.60\n5.0 X 6.6 _,_;$__.10\n6.0 X 6.6 .$38.65\nARBORITE\nFORMICA\nNo. 1 Standard Colon\n4'x8' .... $16.50      2'x8' .... $8.50 .\nCONTACT\nCEMENT\n$6.75 Gal.\nFreight Rate.\nAre lower than yea think !\nSAVE $ $\nWith High Quality From\nPACIFIC\nYour Order WUl Be Processed\nQuickly\n30 DAY\nCHARGE ACCOUNTS\nArranged On Approved Credit\nPACIFIC  ':\nPLYWOOD SALES LTD. ;\n6542 Kingsway, Burnaby 1, B.C.'\n ,-\u201485-9-1\nIMPERIAL OIL LIMITED. ;\u25a0;;\nImperial OU invites lessee applications for service station in\nCastlegar, B.C. Outlet is suitable for car dealership or used\ncar sales, featuring show room, car lot and repair facilities.\nWrite, giving age, education, experience and capital available\nto: J. Darcovich, Box 100, TraU, B.C.   - ; ~\n\u201487-96\n 8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, MON., APRIL 19, 1965\nMONDAY, APRIL  19\nWe knew you knew it wot,\nHowever...\nDid You Know That We Are\nOPEN ALL DAY TODAY\nfor your ihopping convenience.\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nNotre Dame\nSports Report\nSens Bell came up ..with a\nhat trick for the Notre Dame\nUniversity Trojans which assisted them in winning the Intra-\nMural Hockey playoffs championship.\nThe Trojans were paced by\nthe Outlaws in the best of three\nseries which saw Trojans capture the last two games.\nOutlaws whipped the victors\nduring the first game with a\n10-8 score\" but Trojans bounced\nback winning the next two 5-3\nand 104 respectively.\nGoalgetters for the final game\nbesides Bell- were Jack Pausott\nsnd Tim Allen, 2s and Rick\nBeauchamp and Ken Ackect, 1.\n1 The e_bt-team spring Intra-\nMural basketball league wound\nup\" _ts~Khedole Monday night\nwith four teams sharing first\nplace.\nThe teams, Packers, Lakers,\nHawks and Tigers each came\nup with three wins and one\nloss for six points each,': ending\nthe league in tone close fought\nbasketball garnet. .-\nThe fencing team of J.. Lloyd\nCrowe Senior Secondary School\nfrom Trail won over the Notre\nDame University team with a\ntwo-point margin at a campus\nmatch.\nPREMIER RESIGNS\nADEN (AP)\u2014San'a radio announced Friday night that\nYemeni Premier: vHsssan al\nAmri had handed his resignation to President Sallal. Al\nAmri has been asked to stay in\noffice until a. successor is\nchosen, the broadcast-said.\nTrail student Alan Campbell\nwas high scoring man with 20\npoints and NDU team member\nMartin Conder topped the board\nwith 18 points. Final score was\nTrail 67, NDU, 65.\nThe match wound up the first\nyear <rf fencing instruction for\nNDU under coach Dick Bradshaw of Nelson.\nNDU players and their scores\nwere: Martin Conder, 18; George\nBowen, 17; George Whitley, 17\nand Bob Sonntag, 13.\nTrail's players and scores\nwere: \/to Campbell, 20; Grant\nBristow, 19; GarjTMonleiffi; 15\nand dairCa-dicor. 18. .\n'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0^\u25a0\u25a0--\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0>im>.n>imn.ii-i-gi\nYour Imdividiial\nHoroscope;;:\n***** By Frances Drake\nLook in the section in which\nyour birthday comes and find\nwhat your outlook is, according\nto the stars.\nFor Tuesdayy, April 20,1965\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 20\n(Aries) \u2014 Step up and be counted among the DOERS now. Put\nforth best efforts in regular endeavors, and don't magnify obstacles beyond all proportion.\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus)\n\u2014 There are always lessons to\nbe learned from your \u2014 and\nothers' \u2014 experiences. Study\nthem, even if from afar. Analyze\nall types and gradation of progress.\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini)\n\u2014 Mercury, favorable, gives you\nnew inspiration now; helps you\nto make correct calculations.\nYou can gain much by making\nthe best use of your talents and\nusing that fine mind of yours.\nJUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer)\n\u2014 Gain indicated in whatever\narea where you have been trying hard \u2014 and consistently. If\nyou've dallied or left a job half\nundone, however, you can expect\nlike returns.\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leo)\n\u2014 A good period for making the\nmost of new and unusual ideas.\nStep forward and present them,\nwithout fear of failure.\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER\n28 (Virgo) \u2014 Review briefly\n(more thoroughly where necessary) before you begin day's\nschedule. Then launch your endeavor with the will to win \u2014\nand commendable gains will be\nyours.\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER\nNews of ihe Day\nRATES. lOo line, Me line bold face type; larger type rates\n.on request. Minimum two lines.\n-  COPT DEADLINE - PLEASE NOTE\nCopy for this eolnmn accepted until 3 p.m. for Insertion\nla next day's publication.\nQueen City Rebekah. meeting\nTuesday, April 20,8 p.m. -01-91\nDuplicate -Bridge, Hume Hotel,\nMonday, April 19th.\n-90-91\nSingle flannelette sheets, colored\nborders,\"84 je 80,\" at $4.95 p\nSTERLING FURNISHERS\n-90-92\nLadies' and Children's Shoes\nreduced to-_ price and less at\nEberle's Close-Out \"Sale.- -.\n.        -89-tfn\nBINGO MONDAY, 8 PJK.\nUKRAINIAN CATH PARISH\nHALL, 1209 Hall Mines Road.\n.   -122-h\nLITTLE LEAGUE MEETING\nIn the Green Room; Civic Centre, 7:30 tonight. Everybody\nplease come. \u201491-91\nEverything you need for picture-hanging, hangers for pic\nhires, 1 lb. to 400_-bs._Hicture\nwire, -push-pu_^_____ w-eyes.\nHIPPERSON. HARDWARE\"\n\" -:\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0 -91-91\nCANADIAN  PACIFIC  AIRLINES\nANNOUNCES CHANGES\nIN  FLIGHT SCHEDULES\nEFFECTIVE APRIL 25\n* Flight No, 4 to Cranbrook and Calgary departs\nat 10:45 a.m. daily.\n* Flight No, 3 to Penticton and Vancouver departs\n3:30 p.m. Monday, Wednesday, Friday and\nSunday.\n+ Flight No. 3 to Kelowna and Vancouver departs\nat 3:30 p.m. Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday.\n* Flight No. 9 to Penticton and Vancouver departs\nat 10:25 a.m. Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday.\n* Flight No. 9 to Kelowna and Vancouver departs\nat 10:25 a.m. Monday, Wednesday, Friday and\nSunday.\nFor full details call your Travel Agent or any\nCanadian Pacific office;\nPHONE: 352-2913\nluit-icinnim     j\\\n&\n\u2022iTERNATIONAfi\nAIR TRANSPORT\nASSOCIATION\nFor Information and Reservation\nBRADLEY TRAVEL\nAGENCIES\nPhone 352-3212 \u2014 Nelson\nOR TICKETS and RESERVATIONS, CALL\t\nVIPOND FOR TRAVEL\nHume Hotel, Nelson \u2014 Trail\nFurniture for 8 rooms. Only\n$459, delivered. Terms to suit\nyour budget.\nMACLEOD'S\nYour Family Shopping Centre\n\u201431-91\n23 (Libra) \u2014 Check over the history of an enterprise before rushing into it. Note how others fared before you. Perhaps you\nshould be doing something else.\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER\n22 (Scorpio) \u2014 Before' agreeing\nto a proposed plan, study it carefully. But once having decided\non its feasibility, adopt a working\npattern for carrying it out and\npress forward without too much\nado.\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER 21 (Sagittarius) \u2014 Some\nvagueness as to procedures indicated. You could be tempted to\ndrift from your true course without recognizing it. Be alert!\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY\n20 (Capricorn) \u2014 After careful\nanalysis, do not hesitate to give\na good undertaking a hefty push.\nIf first efforts do not succeed,\ntry again later \u2014 perhaps with a\nnew approach.\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY\n19 (Aquarius) \u2014 A fine day for\ncapitalizing on your aptitudes;\nalso for holding discussions, negotiating agreements.\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\n(Pisces) \u2014 Determine if your\nregular procedure is the best possible. If this is not done occasionally, you may slip backwards.\nBe receptive to new ideas and\nmethods, but don't go in for fads.\nYOU BORN TODAY are always eager to be numbered\namong the front-runners in\nworthwhile and ambitious enterprises, even though you may, at\ntimes, become dispirited over\nyour life's' work or your means.\nYou usually rise above such\nmoods, however, because you are\nnot only ingenious, have a steady belief in \"better things possible\" and a willingness to work,\nbut have that important \"will to\nwin.\" You are a decisive person\nand, as you press forward, are\npractical, so that few real possibilities jet by you. Birthdate of:\nEmperor Napoleon -III, of\nFrance; Dinah M. Craik, Eng.\nnovelist.\nCARD OF THANKS\nWe wish to express our sincere gratitude and appreciation\nto friends and relatives for their\nkindness and help in our recent\nbereavement in the loss of our\nbeloved mother and grandmother, Elizabeth Chernenkoff.\nSpecial thanks to Drs. Yule and\nFowler, nurses and staff of Cas-\nlegar and District Hospital.\nThe Family\n-91-91\n. .   FUNERAL NOTICE\nRIEHL \u2014 Funeral services for\nMr. John Riehl of Balfour will\nbe held at St. Michael's and Ali\nAngels Anglican Church, Tuesday at 10:30 a.m. The Rev.\nJames R. Hearne will officiate\nand interment will take place in\nthe Balfour Cemetery. Thompson-Funeral Service.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nJAMES \u2014 Funeral services\nfor Mrs. Ethel Louise James,\nwill be held at the Church of the\nRedeemer, corner of Second and\nDavies Streets, Tuesday at 2\np.m. The Venerable Archdeacon\nF. D. Wyatt will officiate and\ninterment will take place in Nelson Memorial Park. Thompson\nFuneral Service.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nDE LESTEE \u2014 Harry Gordon De Lestee, suddenly, April\n15, a resident of Broadwater,\nFuneral services to be held Tuesday, April 20 at 2 p.m., from the\nChapel of the Castlegar Funeral\nHome. Rev. Frank Wiley officiating. Cremation to follow. Castlegar Funeral Home, Directors\nWickett and Ingham.      \u201491-91\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nFYFE \u2014 Funeral services for\nMrs. Cora Pearl Fyfe, formerly\nof Kaslo, will be held at St. Andrew's United Church, Kaslo,\nWednesday at 2 p.m. Rev. J.\nRae Allan will officiate and the\nservices will be followed by cremation. In lieu of flowers, the\nfamily would prefer that friends\nwishing to do so, make memorial donations to the Canadian\nCancer Society. Thompson Funeral Service\nB.C. Highlights\nTHREE ESCAPE\nCHILLIWACK (CP) - Three\nmen escaped from Oakalla\nPrison Farm's forestry camp\nnear here Thursday night. They\nwere identified as William Peters\n24, William Walter Cookum, 45,\nand Roy St. Clair Dunn, 27, all\nof Vancouver.\nFUND GROWS\nVANCOUVER (CP) - The\nThree Universities Capital Fund\nneared the halfway mark Friday. Officials said $12,087,303 of\nthe $28,-00,000 objective has been\ncollected for the University of\nB.C., Simon Fraser University\nand the University of Victoria.\nFLY TO RECORD\nLANGLEY, Va. (AAP) -Two\nRepublic F-105 Thunderchief jet\nfighters have flown 5,730 miles\nnonstop, apparently an operational flight distance record for\nthe craft. Headquarters of the\ntactical air command here announced Friday the two F-105s\nmade the flight April. 13 from\nHickham Air. Force Base, Hawaii, to Kadena Air Base, Okinawa in nine hours, 44 minutes.\nBritish Soccer\nLONDON (CP) - Results ot\nSaturday's Old Country soccer\nmatches: -\nENGLISH LEAGUE\nDivision I\nAston Villa 2 Sheffield U 1\nBlackpool 1 Stoke City 1\nChelsea 2 West Brom 2 -\nLeeds 0 Man United_fc:.-.;; ;\nLeicester 1 West Ham 0\nLiverpool 1 Burnley 1\nSheffield W. 1 Tottenham 0\nSunderland 2 Birmingham i\"\nWolverhampton 2 Everton 4\nBlackburn vs Notts F -ppd   ..\nDivision II\nBury 1 Northampton 4   \"\u25a0\"\u25a0\nCharlton 0 Huddersfield 0 . \u25a0\nCrystal P 1 Newcastle 1\nDerby 2 Ipswich 3\nLeyton Or 0 Southampton 0-\nMan City 1 Coventry 1 . ,.\nNorwich 2 Middlesbrough 0\nPortsmouth 1 Cardiff 0\nRotherham 0 Bolton 0   \u2022 -\nSwansea 3: Plymouth 0\nSwindqn 2.:Preston 2-     _\nDivision nf     \t\nBornemouth 4 Walsall 0\nBrentford 2 Reading 1\nDivision III\nBournemouth 4 Walsall 0 .\nBrentford 2 Reading 1\nBristol R 2 Southend 2 . .\nColchester 0 Shrewsbury 4\nGrimsby 0 Workington 1\nLuton 0 Gillingham 2\nMansfield 2 Hull City 1\nOldham 1 Barnsley 1\nPeterborough 2 Watford 1\nFort Vale 0 Queens PRO\nDivision IV\nAldershot 0 Millwall 0\nBradford 0 Rochdale 0\nChesterfield 1 Chester 3\nCrewe AAlev 5 Lincoln 0\nDarlington 2 Brighton 0\nHalifax 0 Stockport 1\nNewport 2 York City 0\nNotts C 0 Torquay 0\nSouthport 1 Hartlepools 1\nTranmere 2 Oxford 4\nWrexham 3 Barrow 3\nSCOTTISH LEAAGUF\nDivision I\nAberdeen 0 Hearts 3\nCeltic 1 Partick 2\nDundee 8 Thd Lanark 1\nDunfermline 1 St. Johnstone 1\nHibernian 5 Airdrieonians 1\nKilmarnock 3 Morton 0\nMotherwell 1 Falkirk 0\nRangers 0 Dundee U 1\nSt. Mirren 2 Clyde 3\nDivision II\nAlbion 0 Cowdenbeath 3\nDumbarton 2 Raith 1\nEast Fife 0 E Stirling 0\nForfar 0 Queen of S 3\nMontrose 2 Berwick 3\nQueens Pk 5 Alloa 0\nStenhousemuir 2 Ayr 1\nStirling 2 Hamilton 3\nStranraer 2 Arbroath 0\nIRISH LEAGUE\nBangor 1 Coleraine 3\nCliftonville 2 Ballymena .\nDerry City 5 Ards 1\nGlenavon 3 Distillery 1\nGlentoran 1 Portadown 1\nLinfield 2 Crusaders 2\nBUSINESS   &  PROFESSIONAL\nDIRECTORY\nA handy alphabetical guide to goods and services\navailable in Nelson.\nAutomobile Dealers\nBILLS' MOTOR-IN LTD.\n- (Studebaker Sales)\n213 Baker St.    Phone 352-3231\n\u2014tfn\nPARKVIEW MOTORS LTD,\n(Rambler \u2014 Volkswagen)\n323 Nelson Ave.    Phone 352-5355\n      \u25a0   \u2014tfn\nBuilding Supplies\nBEE BUILDING SUPPLY LTD.\nEverything in waterproof\nplywood.\n301 Baker St      Phone 352-3135\n\u2014tfn\nBURNS LUMBER CO. LTD.\n602 Baker St.      Phone 352-6661\n-tfn\nCOLUMBIA TRADING CO.\n901 _ ront St.      Phone 352-5571\nLots of free parking.\n.   ;_t_n\nContractors\nLaszlo Huszak, General Masonry\nStone \u2022 Brick \u2022 Cement \u2022 Stucco\nPlaster in 2\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\n458 Ward Street\n-22-tfn\nVitades for Nutrition\nVITALITY   HEALTH   FOODS\n564 Ward St. Nelson, B.C.\n-288-tfn\nLOW COST\nWANT ADS\nGET RESULTS!\nPhone 352-3552\nMonumental Stones\nSTONE and BRONZE\nPrivate Reception Room\nNELSON FLOWERS LTD.\n-84-tfn\nBRONZE or GRANITE\nR. M. Edwards.    Ph. 352-3\n-81-tfn\nPhoto Copying\nPOWELL ENGRAVING\n460 Ward St. Nelson, B.C.\nPhone 352-7521\nContracts \u2014 Birth Certificates\nLegal Documents\nImportant Papers\n-tfn\nRadio and TV\nService\nRadio\u2022 TV -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.   Ph. 352-5455\n\u2014186-tfn\nRug Cleaning\nWall-to-Wall   Carpet   Cleaning.\nSaniclean Services. Ph. 352-6841\n-80-105\nSporting Goods\nFred Whlteley's Sport Shop\n488 Baker SL    Phone 352-7741\n-tfn\nTopso\nLarry's Topsoil, Sand and Gravel\nPh. 352-2355 Days  352-7576 eves,\n-tfn\nVacuum  Cleaners\nELECTROLUX Sales It Service\n207 Houston St. Ph. 352-7341\n-77-tfn\nMan Dies. 47 Hurt\nAs \"Canadian\" Wrecked\nTERRACE BAY, Ont. (CP)-\nThe Canadian Pacific Railway's\ntop passenger train jumped the\ntracks in early-morning darkness Saturday, killing an employee and injuring 47 persons.\nThe Canadian, bound east\nfrom Winnipeg to Toronto and\nMontreal, hit what was believed\nto be a caved-in roadbed in the\nbush three miles east of this\nnorth shore Lake Superior community about 140 miles east of\nthe Lakehead.\nThe twin diesels and nine\ncars of the 14-car train left the\nrails, the diesels and six cars\nrolling down a 10-foot embankment.\nKilled was Charles Kannegies-\nser, 38, of Fort William, a baggage man.\nNone of the injured were hurt\nseverely. Ten were admitted to\nhospital here including a\nbrother of the dead man, W. R\nKannegiesser of Fort William.\n\"By the looks of the derailment we came out lucky,\" said\nCpl. W.'M. Duncan of the provincial pojice., \"It was very for-\nBRITISH RUGBY\nLONDON (Reuters) - Re\nsuits of Saturday's Rugby Union\nmatches:\nSouth African Tour\nScotland 8 South Africa 5\nClub Matches\nRosslyn Pk 8 Metro Police 15\nAberavon 29 London W 11\nAbertillery 13 Tredegar 3\nBallymena 14 Notts 3\nBath 6 Liverpool 19\nBedford 6 Saracens 15\nBirkenhead 14 Edinburgh 3\nBridgwater 10 Moseley 27\nBristol 18 Leicester 3\nCamborne 22 St. Thomas 12\nCardiff 11 Barbarians 14\nCheltenham 6 Sale 25\nEbbw Vale 3 Pontypool 10\nExeter 22 Old Cranleighans 8\nGloucester 25 New Brighton 5\nHeadingley 11 Rugby 9\nLlanelly 19 Wakefield 5\nMaesteg 0 Bridgend 14\nNearth 10 Oxford 0\nNewbridge 24 Old Blues 0\nNewport 11 Cross Keys 14\nNorthern 16 Manchester 3\nPercy Pk 8 Streatham 3\nPlymouth 15 O M Taylors 11\nSt. Ives 9 Old Paulines 5\nSwansea 24 Harlequins 21\nTorquay 8 Old Millhillians 19\nTruro 20 St. Mary's 3\nWaterloo 11 N Ireland 13\nWeston 15 Blackheath 3\nGlasgow H 6 Coventry 14\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014Results\nof Rugby Union matches Saturday:\nBarrow 17 Liverpool 10\nCastleford 17 Hull Kingston 12\nDewsbury 5 Hunlets 10\nDoncaster 3 Batlet 5\nFeatherstone 24 Keighley 0\nHuddersfield 0 Workington 2\nHull 16 Wakefield 13\nLeeds 2 Bradford 7\nRochdale 13 Blackpool 0\nLeigh 31 Bramley 5\nSwinton 6 Salford 0\nWarrington 3 Wigan 28\nWhitehaven 7 Oldham 4\nWidnes 2 St. Helens 14\nYork 11 Halifax 23\nOrders\nPart 1 orders by Lt. G. M.\nBennett, Troop Officer, Nelson\nTroop, 44th Field Squadron, RCE\nCA (M).\nOrderly NCO, Week ending\nApril 23, Cpl. B. Buttnor; week\nending April 30, Cpl. C. I. Price.\nParades, all ranks, Wednesday, 1952 hours; training, service equipment, boats and safety\nprecautions; administration,\nApril 23, 1925 hours. Dress, bat-\ntledress, boots, puttees and regi-\nm e n tal headdress. Summer\ndress effective May 3.\ntunate the injuries were as\nslight as they were.\"\nPassengers able to continue\ntheir journey were taken back\nto Red Rock, 70 miles west, to\njoin the Canadian National Railways line which swings to the\nnorth. CPR trains were to continue using the CNR line until\nthe damaged tracks could be repaired, probably by sometime\nSunday night.\nFirst reports from the scene\nindicated the roadbed had been\nweakened by melting snow but\na railway spokesman in Toronto\nsaid it is not certain a washout\ncaused the wreck.\nWashout patrols are made\ntwice daily, he said, and a 100-\ncar fast freight had passed the\nsame spot little more than an\nhour before with no problems.\nThe accident occurred about\n1:15 a.m. when most passengers were asleep in their berths.\nDoctors, nurses and ambulances were called from the\nnearby communities of Marathon and Schreiber. Deep snow\nremaining in the bush from a\nheavy winter fall hampered res-'\ncuers as they carried the injured up the banks on stretchers.\nUSED CUTTING TORCHES\nSome cars were so battered\nit was close to six hours before\nwork crews, using wrecking\nequipment and cutting torches,\nwere able to extricate the last\noccupants.\nThe train, an all \u2022 passenger\nunit which runs from Vancouver to Toronto and Montreal,\nleft Winnipeg at noon Friday\nand was due in Toronto at 5\np.m. Saturday.\nTelephone and telegraph communications into this pulp mill\ncentre were cut for about four\nhours when the wreck toppled\nwires running along the track.\nEngineer was Austin Cosgrove\nand Fireman Harold Mcpar-\nland, both of Schreiber. Neither\nwas hurt.\nIS IT A JACKET?\nShirtainly!\nSee Our Stock\nef New Stylet\nend Weevei in\nJAC-\nSHIRTS\n*5M te *8lW\nat\nEMORY'Q\nLTD.     V?\nTHE MAN'S STORE\nSAADISTS SOUGHT\nSYDNEY, Australia (AAP)-\nDetectives searched Sydney today for five youths who set fire\nto a man, burning him fatally.\nThe victim was dozing in a suburban bus shelter Friday when\nthe youths doused him with\nmethyl alcohol and set him\nablaze. A youth who told police\nhe saw the attack and knew tha\ngang by sight, toured Sydney\nwith the detectives.\nHove the Job Done Right!\nWIC GRAVEC\n*        LIMITED        *J\nMASTER  PLUMU-R\nPhona 352-331B\nRemember...\ntor\nDEVELOPMENT OF\nYOUR COLOR AND\nBLACK & WHITE\nFILM\nCITY DRUG\nBox 460       Phone 352-3611\nThink of all the small economy cars\nthat will cut your motoring costs.\nNow consider this:\nDoesn't it make sense\nto choose the one with looks\nyou'll be proud of?\nThat's the 1965 Vauxhall Viva by General Motors\nGold Medal winner at the 1964 London Motor Show.\nIt's one thing to be proud of the low price, economy,\nhandling and roadability you enjoy in art economy\ncar. It's another thing when you're forever\napologizing for its styling. But when you buy a Viva,\nyou can be proud of its looks.\nAnd consider how much more Viva gives you...\nlike a 50 hp engine, fully synchronized 4-speed\ntransmission, Roll-control suspension, up to 45 mpg\neconomy, Magic-Mirror finish, 10.76 cu. ft. oftrunk\nspace. And more.\nSo if you want a small, low price economy cat\nwith looks you can.be proud of, go see the man\nwho sells Viva. OK?\nVAUXHALL\nVIVA\n__\n* GENERA. MOTORS VALUE\nSee your local Vauxhall-Pontiac dealer\nduring his Success Car Sales Celebration\n'1892*\nNELSON\n!_______. >**<\u00ab *\u00bbni- in-lu n-llni\nSi'ffi.W \u2022\u00bb _E\"I\u00bb Urn.. rovhtlil\n\u2022nd lttil luu ind lltinu in no ln.tu.i--\nV.H5C\nBe sure to watch \"Telescope \"and \"The Rogues\" now showing on television. Check local listings for time and channe\nAUTHORIZED VAUXHALL \u25a0 PONTIAC DEALER IN NELSON-\nBEACON MOTORS LTD.\n701 Baker St.\nNELSON, B.C.\nPhone 352-6641\n..\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1965_04_19","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0436231","@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":"1965-04-19 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1965-04-19 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\/1.0436231"}