{"@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":"2024-02-20","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1967-06-16","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0440280\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" \u2022. * at*>.^   \u00bb^\u00bbr.\u00abK,t     t;-m,\u201em,n\n1867II1967\nPublished < '$$ 4^? 'a&Gtent, financi al, trading and educational centre of the Kootenay-Columbia area\nVol. 66\nFORECAST\nKootenay: Sunny and very warm.\nWinds light. Low and high at Cranbrook\n44 and 80, Nelson area 50 and 90.\nOutlook for Saturday: Sunny and\nvery warm.\nNELSON, B.C.,  CANADA \u2014 FRIDAY  MORNING,  JUNE   16,   1967\n10 Cents\nNo. 47\nLINDA SCHNEIDER LINDA DODMAN\nSUSAN HARVEY\nKAREN HEGLAND\nMAUREEN BRAGANOLO\nCentennial Queen\nEight young ladies, tonight, will vie for the honor\nof becoming the City ol Nelson's Centennial Year\nQueen. Judges in the Nelson Chamber of Commerce-\nsponsored pageant and competition will undoubtedly\nfind their choice will be a difficult one, for it is certainly questionable whether such an array oi beauty\nand talent has been gathered together in any similar\ncontest in this city's history.\nThe winner, whoever she may be, can look forward not only to the honors and prizes that will be\nheaped upon her, but to a year of intense activity as\nrepresentative of the Nelson Chamber of Commerce\n. . . and the city ... at the many public and civic\nfunctions that occur annually.\nThe responsibilities of this years queen will be\nmany and varied indeed, for she, probably better\nthan any other means, can publicize the amenities\nand advantages of the City of Nelson.\nHer honor will undoubtedly entail a great deal\nof travel for participation in events in other centres\nwhere this city desires publicity.\nStanding behind her and providing ample assistance will be the forces of the Nelson Chamber of\nCommerce.\nThe Chamber members deserve a great deal of\ncredit for their efforts this year to further the interests\nof the City of Nelson and of its residents and business\ncommunity.\nThe Nelso'n Centennial Queen Pageant Ball\nbeing sponsored by the Chamber is sure to be the\noutstanding social and Centennial event of 1967.\nIt is during this event that the citizens of Nelson\nwill pay homage to the new queen and her court,\nand when they may show their appreciation of the\nuntiring efforts of the Nelson Chamber by their attendance.\nFLAMES DESTROY\nBUILDING\nJACQUIE LUDLOW\nVALERIE WIGG\nPAT KEEGAN\nPeace Brings Problems\nBy LAWRENCE MALKIN\nJERUSALEM (AP)-For the\nJews of Israel, victory has\nbrought peace but more peacetime problems.\nThe exhilaration of swift\ntriumph over the Arabs in less\nthan a week of war is beginning\nto fade. Now the Israelis face\ntasks of reorganization not even\nimagined before the war erupted June 5.\nIsrael, a nation of 2,600,000,\nhas at least temporarily swallowed about 1,000,000 Arabs in\nthe Gaza Strip and on the west\nbank of the Jordan River. Toward the Jews of Israel, they\nhave only implacable hatred.\nIt is believed that rather than\ncutting down on military expenses after victory, Israel will\nbe obliged to increase its army\nto man occupation forces.\nHouse - to - house searches for\narms have been  ordered.  Re\ntreating Jordanians left wea-1 keep the west bank of the Jor-\npons in the hands of people | dan, they will have a land rich\nthirsting for vengeance. | in phosphates  and with plenty\nLi bye\n\/a Wants\nU.S. To Get Out\nTRIPOLI (Reuters) - Libya\nhas asked the United States and\nBritain to liquidate their bases\nhere and withdraw their troops\nas soon as possible, Premier\nHussein M a z i g h announced\nThursday night.\nIt is the latest Arab retaliation for what they alleged was\nAnglo-American support for Israel in last week's Middle East\nwar.\nThe main base affected is the\ngiant American Wheelus air\nbase. Britain has some armored\nunits in Libya.\nThe United States signed an\nagreement with Libya, governing the use of bases, in 1954.\nOne Israeli banx official has\nestimated that the annual cost\nof maintaining captured areas\nwould be about $50,000,000.\n'We can handle that, if we\nhave to,\" he said. \"1 am confident we can stay in the terri-\ntores for a long time if the\nArabs refuse to talk. If this\ngoes on long enough, perhaps\nwe shall develop the occupied\nareas ourselves.\"\nAs of now, the chief value of\nthe occupied areas appears to\nbe as bargaining pawns, if and\nwhen the Arabs decide to talk.\nThe fighting was not without\nits spoils for Israel.\nHoly sites in Jerusalem's Old\nCity, captured from the Jordanians, are expected to be developed into a tourist area attracting revenues large enough\nto pay for running the captured\nterritories.\nThe Israel harvest of enemy\nmilitary equipment was enormous.\nIf  the  Israelis  are  able   to\nof surplus space to make the\ndesert bloom with fruits and\nvegetables for export to Europe.\nBusiness Block Threatened\nAs Five-Hour Battle Waged\nBy DON KOLFAGE\nEditorial Director, The News\nFire raging through the old Palm Dairy building    Thursday   threatened    the\ncity's business section for more than an hour before firemen brought it under a measure of control.\nFlames caused by sparks from a cut ting torch raged virtually unhampered in\nthe cork, sawdust and tarpaper insulation of the wcllo and ceiling of an old cooling\nroom in the former dairy building.\nThick clouds of dense black smoke rolled from the building blanketing the\ncity's commercial section with a virtually impenetrable pall.\nOne fireman, J. Palesch,\nwas overcome by smoke.\nFiremen Thursday night were\nunable to assess the actual damage resulting from the fire which\ncompletely gutted the 31-year-old\nstructure, until recently the home\nof Palm Dairies Ltd.\nThe building was vacated and\nsold to Macleods Ltd. when the\ndairy moved to new premises.\nHeavy smoke caused the most\nsevere damage as it permeated\nstores in the 600 block of Baker\nStreet. \"The damage will amount\nThe flames quickly spread\nthrough the Insulation walls and\ninto the area between the false\nceiling of the building and the\nroof.\npoured thousands of gallons c'\nwater into the raging inferno.\nFor a time shortly after noon\nit appeared that the flames wen\nbeing brought under control, bu\nthick clouds of smoke again be\ngan pouring from the buildin-\nand it was not until late afternoon that Chief Owens said lumen had gained the upper hand.\nJoe Hingwing of the PurpL\nLantern kept a steady supply o(\nsandwiches going to the hungry\nand weary firemen during the\nSMOKE POURS FROM BUILDING\nElectrical Workers\nStrike Is Settled\nIAKE LEVEL\nKootenay Lake level at Nelson\nThursday, 13.93 feet above zero;\nWednesday, 14.03; 1900, 12.23;\n1948, 17.00. Queen's Bay, Thursday, 11.37 feet above zero; Wednesday, 11.47. Columbia River at\nTrail, Thursday, 39.18; Wednesday, 39.28.\nTEMPERATURES\nNELSON     SO\n82\nToronto      70\n86\nLethbridge      50\n76\nCalgary      48\n73\nVancouver      52\n73\nWhitehorse     46\n61\nSpokane     52\n83\nCamp To Meet\nDuff Roblin\nMONTREAL (CP) - Dalton\nCamp, national president of the\nProgressive Conservative party,\nsaid Thursday he plans a meeting in Winnipeg shortly with\nPremier Duff Roblin of Manitoba, but that he had no comment to make on reports that\nit will be a final attempt to\nget Mr. Roblin to stand for the\nparty leadership.\nThe Winnipeg Tribune said\nThursday Mr. Camp will see\nMr. Roblin in Winnipeg Monday in a \"last - ditch effort\" to\nconvince the Manitoba premier\nto let his name stand for the\nleadership of the party.\nThe newspaper said that If\nMr. Camp failed in his mission\n\"many local Conservatives believe he will himself become a\ncandidate.\"\nIn a telephone interview, Mr.\nCamp said:\n\"I expect to be in Winnipeg\nand I plan to be in Winnipeg.\nAnd I expect to see Premier\nRoblin.\n\"But I have no definite time\nn orplace in mind for such a\nmeeting.\"\nHe said he had no comment\nto make the Tribune's report\nthat he would make a final effort to get Mr. Roblin to stand\nnor that he was considering\nstanding himself.\nMr. Roblin was touring west-\n.11 ern Manitoba Thursday and was\n\u2014 unavailable for comment.\nAfter more than nine weeks at\nhome, electrical workers returned to their jobs with West\nKootenay Power and Light\nThursday afternoon and evening.\nEarlier in the day, a contract\nhad been signed between the\nstrikers' union Local 999 International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers and the power\nutility, which supplies consumers\nfrom Creston to Princeton.\nAnd although the two-year\nagreement doesn't include the\ncontroversial 37',-j - hour week\namong its clauses, the electrical\nworkers will be working the\nshorter week next year.\n\"We have letters here confirming that the 37ti-hour week will\nbe written as a supplement to\nthis contract after October 1968,\"\nsaid a union spokesman Thursday.\nFiremen were seriously hampered in their efforts for a time\nbecause of low water pressure\nin some of the hydrants. The\ndifficulty was overcome when\ntwo pumpers were brought into\nuse.\nChief Owens said that 32 fire-1\noueci.    mc uauiiagc win aiuuuin _,\u2122  ,.,,.i,n,i ,\u201e a.'- \u201e\u201e\u201e anu  weary  nremen  aunng  mc\nto thousands of dollars,\" deelar- Kn \u2122\u2122 \u2122*ed to the.scene. a[ternoony c   t  Ron  Bu8tch(n.\ned Fire Chief Elwyn Owens.      fn.d,that two pumpers, an aerialL, the SalvaJn A       k   t the\nThe  building  was being de- l^ff \u2122?   he emergency ve- men       m ^ _ot3CBil__ ancl\nmolished by the Renwick Hager mcle were m use' soft drinks.\nConstruction Company when the    Firemen cleared Baker Street    rn me jate afternoon all bu!\nfire broke out. of onfookers for more  than  a two of the main line hoses were\nMr. Renwick told the Daily nalf hour when it was learned removed from the fire. Chief\nNews \"The fire started when one 'hat ammonia from the old freez- owens said that four smaller\nof my men was cutting pipe in inS \"nes was present in the ijnes were 0Betated from the\nthe old cooling room. Sparks building and was creating gas. jw0 iarge noses m_ |nat f,-re.\nfrom his cutting torch set the\/ Nine main hose lines were men poured water into the build-\ninsulation on fire.\" brought  into play  as  firemen | ing interior throughout the night.\nTwo Explosions Rip\nExpo Amusement Area\nBuitrago Found\nOn Spanish Ship\nTwenty   four   hours   of   fear\nended last night for a Nelson\nKosygin Going\nTo UN Session\nMOSCOW (API-Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosygin will\nlead a 40-member Soviet delegation to the expected special\nsession of the UN General Assembly in New York where he\nwill plead the Arab cause for a\nMiddle East settlement.\nBoth the Soviet foreign ministry and the U.S. embassy\nhere confirmed Thursday that\nKosygin will head the delegation.\nA U.S. embassy spokesman\nsaid 40 visas were granted to\na delegation that includes Kosygin and Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko.\nThe embassy spokesman said\nthe Soviets would leave Friday\nmorning by special plane for\nNew York.\ndoctor, when a dangerous men\ntal patient was traced by police\nto an outward bound Spanish\nfreighter.\nJesus Yepes-Buitrago, 36, escaped from Riverview Mental\nHospital sometime Tuesday\nnight.\nHe had been taken there two\nmonths ago after he was charged\nwith attacking Dr. R. B. Shaw\nwith a butcher's knife in his\nsurgery.\nWhen Nelson police learned of\nBuilrago's disappearance a 24\nhour police guard was immediately put on the Nelson doctor.\nThe Spaniard was under an\norder of deportation when he\nescaped from the Vancouver\nmental hospital.\nAll police throughout the province were alerted to keep a look\nout for him as he was believed\nto be heading for Nelson.\nA police spokesman said in\nVancouver last night: \"I don't\nthink we will stop him from going back to Spain now.\"\nTlie union said that the company had adopted a \"face saving\ndevice\" in its reticence to agree\nto the 37',4-hour week.\n\"In November 1968, members\nwill either take a 6.6 per cent\nincrease or a 37'^-hour week.\n\"The company wants the members to vote on the issue, but we\nare sure that our members will\ntake the 37'A-hour week.\n\"This is one of the reasons a\nconsiderable number went on\nstrike,\" the spokesman said.\nHe added that papers ratifying\nthe 3714-hour week had been\nregistered and approved by the\nB.C. Labor Relations Board.\nUnder the contract, the power\ncompany linemen will get $3.91\nan hour immediately they are\nback at work.\nWhen they went on strike they\nwere earning $3.46 an hour. And\non November 1, they will get a\nfurther increase, pushing their\nwages to $4.98 an hour.\nAlso included in the contract is\na new overtime agreement, an\napprenticeship program and\nseniority clause.\nThe 221 power company workers who were on strike will also\nget $125 in a lump sum instead\nof retroactive pay.\nThe electrical workers will\nprobably find a big backlog of\nwork when they get back to their\njobs.\nAs soon as they get their first\npay packet, they will repay\nLocal 999, money that it spent\non their insurance during the\nstrike.\nThe strike started April 11,\nand for its duration Power Company staff manned power installations without one breakdown.\nMONTREAL (CP)-One person was injured when two explosions ripped through the La\nRonde amusement area at Expo\n67 Thursday.\nAn Expo operations control\nspokesman said the condition of\nthe injured person was not\nknown.\nHe said the explosion occurred\nnear the firing site of the fireworks used to put on shows during the day  and night time.\nThe   explosions   occurred\nshortly   after   a   water   show\nended on Dolphin Lake.\nSPECTATORS FLEE\nShow spectators sitting in the\nstand, which is directly across\nthe lake from the blast spot, ran\nall directions after the first\nblast.\nAn Expo site worker in a blue\nshirt reacted to the second blast\nby leaping into the lake.\nThe minirail, Expo's mass\ntransit system, stopped running\nin the area and all persons were\nevacuated.\nPierre Dupuy, Expo's commissioner - general, appeared\non the scene half an hour after\nthe blast and immediately ordered guards not to give any\ninformation to reporters at the\nsite.\n'TREMENDOUS  BLAST'\nPeter Hall, a Canadian Press\nphotographer who was under a\nwooden ski jump in the centre\nof the lake taking pictures of\nthe water show at the time,\nsaid:\n\"There    was   a   tremendous\nblast with a bright orange glare\nand I saw a man silhouetted\nagainst the light.\n\"The first blast was followed\nby a series of smaller ones as\nthe fire spread to other fireworks. Then came the smaller\nexplosion.\n\"Chunks of jagged sheet\nmetal measuring 12 to 15 feet\nacross went flying through the\nair, electrical wires were\nstrewn everywhere and part of\nthe lake's dock was blown out.\nIt sounded as if an artillery barrage was in progress. A strong\nsmell of gunpowder hung about\nthe lake.\"\nA spokesman for the water\nshow at the lake said electricians had been working on the\nfireworks' wiring for two weeks.\nTorture House Operator\n\u25a0\nCatered to Queer Whims\nNEWARK, N.J. (AP)-A psychiatrist alluded to blonde Mo-\nnique von Cleef on Thursday as\na \"super queen\" who treated an\neager client \"as a princess\nwould punish a stable boy after\ncatching him looking lustfully at\nher \"\nDr. Jack Chernus, director of\npsychiatry for St. Barnabas\nMedical Centre, Livingston,\nN.J., made the characterization\nin Essex County court after examining photographs of a\nwoman identified as Monique\nstanding triumphantly over a\ntrussed and suppliant man.\nMiss von Cleef, 42, and actor\nJames A. Beard, 38, are\ncharged with operating a \"house\nof torture\" that catered to the\nstrange whims of a well-heeled\nclientele.\nDutch-born Monique is accused of providing various\nforms of \"discipline \u2014 including\nwhipping\" for $50 an hour in\nher 18-room mansion.\nThe psychiatrist's testimony\nelicited rapt attention from Monique, a striking blonde in\nwhose house hundreds of torture\nitems were seized a few days\nbefore Christmas,  1965.\nCommenting on the sadomasochistic group that derives enjoyment from \"discipline.\" Dr.\nChernus said it all boils down\nto \"what side of the whip you're\non.\" The sadist used the whip\nand other items of torture, and\nthe masochist enjoyed them\nwith heated enthusiasm, he\nsaid.\nDr. Chernus has studied the\nsubject of sexual abberation in\nthe United States and Scotland.\nThe state has charged Miss\nvon Cleor and Beard with operating a house for lewd purposes\nand assignation, possession of\npornography with intent to show\nit to others, and conspiracy.\nCommenting about the magazine Flair, allegedly published\nby Monique and Beard, Dr.\nChernus testified it contained\nmaterial without socially redeeming qualities for anyone.\nHe contended the pictures of unusual poses by Monique and her\nmale clients patently offended\ncommunity standards, although\nhe conceded they would appeal\nonly to the prurient interest of\nthe sado-masochistic group.\nEarlier, Detective Arthur\nMagnusson \u2014 the undercover\nagent who risked a requited\nbeating to enter the \"hoir* of\ntorture\"\u2014described letters 'rom\nMiss von Cleef's faithful c'ients\nthat were addressed to \"dominant Monique.\" \"Superior Monique,\" and \"Dear Monique.\"\n 2\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JUNE 16, 1967\nSMOKE BLACKS\nBUSINESSES\nCapt. Ron Butcher of the Salva-\non   Army   was   a   busy   man\nhursday.\nCapt. Butcher's wife was expecting a baby, and Thursday\nmorning indications were thai\nthe child was due to arrive.\nHe rushed his wife to the\nKootenay Lake General Hospital\nand shortly thereafter received\nword that the old Palm Dairy\nbuilding was on fire.\nCapt. Butcher donned his fire-\nfighting attire and rushed to the\nscene (he is a member of the\nvolunteer brigade), and began a\nday-lonk trek carrying food and\ndrinks to the weary firemen.\nHe took time out from his\nduties to approach the driver of\na car parked near the fire who\nhad a radio-telephone and asked\nhim to contact tho hospital to\ndetermine his wifo's condition.\nIt was then that Capt. Butcher\nlearned he had just become the\nfather of an eight pound, ten and\nthree-quarter ounce baby boy.\nMrs. Butcher and the baby are\ndoing fine. Capt. Butcher seemed\na little the worse for wear.\nL. V. ROGERS AWARDS\nNearly $2,000 in scholarships\nand bursaries was awarded exceptional graduating students\nof L. V. Rogers High School,\nThursday night.\nIn all, 178 students were\nqualified for graduation.\nThree students, Russell Horner, Murray Lashmar, Bob\nAdderley won the $1,000 Allen\nScholarship Award, presented\nby Rev. D. A. Cline.\nThe Kinsmen Scholarship,\n$100, was presented to Don\nJohston by Al Dawson. Other\nwinners included Daryl Wong,\nRichard Shave, Maureen Levitt, Valerie Wigg, Assunta\nCampese, Janet Russel, Norma Ronmark, Maureen Mol-\nloy, Mike Deskln, Len Cher-\nnenkow, Gordon McAdams\nand Jessie Ward.\nCouncil Sits Amidst\nSea of Pollution\nWith sewage in the water, and\nlitter on the streets, Nelson City\nCouncil sits amidst a sea of pollution.\nLeila M. Nixon, secretary,\nSouth Slocan School and Community Club, wrote council objecting to the pollution of the\nKootenay River.\nShe states: \"The citizens of\nthis community used to enjoy\nthe beaches of this river, but\nhave been unable to for a number of years because of excessive pollution.\n\"It would not cost the individual taxpayer of Nelson, Investing in his share of a sewage\ndisposal plant, any more than it\ncosts the rural taxpayer to put\nin his own disposal system,\"\nShe concluded by stating, \"it\nshould have been done a long\ntime ago.\"\nJ. W. Steed, Nelson, complained to council: \"The streets of\nthe business district are a disgrace on Sundays after the week\nof business activity.\"\nMr. Steed recommended that\na \"daily sweep of the walks,\nstreets and gutters must be done\nin order to maintain a clean\ncity.\"\nCouncil handled both letters in\nthe same way, moving them received, with a suitable reply\nbeing returned.\nIt was pointed out during the\nmeeting by several aldermen\nthat new receptacles were being\ndesigned and built by the Kootenay School of Art.\nThe third group to become\nconcerned over Nelson's pollution problems was the Central\nKootenay Regional District\nBoard which has passed a resolution asking the provincial pollution board to order Nelson to\n\"clean It up,\"\nTruck Ruined\nSmashing down a 60-foot Nelson embankment, Thursday\nnight, a late model truck\ncareened across CPR tracks at\nthe railway depot.\nOwned by B.C., Forest Service, the truck was parked on\nVernon Street when it rolled\nacross the highway to the\ntracks below and was almost\ntotally destroyed.\nThere was no one ln the\ntruck at the time.\nTONIGHT\u2014Complete Shows 7:00 -9:20\nmWORUUCCUUMED REC0RD-BREAKIN6\nEXPLOSIVE FILM THAT HAS PROVOKED\nMOKE EXCITEMENT AND TRieOERED MORE\nTALK THAN ANY OTHER\nPICTURE IN YEARSI\nResponse Down\nFor Queen Ball\nAUTO-VUE\nDRIVE-IN \u2014Trail, B.C.\nLast Time Tonight\n'RIDE BEYOND VENGEANCE*\nChuck Conners, J. MacArthur\nStarting Time: 9:00 p.m.\nSHORTS\nDon't  M'lSSI\nDANNY HARRISON\nof the\nROYAL CANADIAN LEGION\nTONIGHT ONLY\nThis Is Danny's Last Appearance\nAt the  Legion\nCASTLE TheaCre\nLast Time Tonight\n(Adult Entertainment)\n\"A FINE MADNESS\"\nScan Connery, Joanne Woodward\n(Colour)\nStarting Time:  7 and 9 p.m.\niCARTOON)\nJULY 1st\nRAFT RACE\nYMIR to SALMO\nFor Details and Official Entry Forms Mail This Ad\nwith your name and address to\nSalmo Lions Club\nP.O. 353,\n-  Salmo, B.C.\nNAME   \t\nADDRESS       \t\n\/\u25a0   Eriry Closing Dale: 12:01 a.m. .lurr 20, 1017\nmmaammm. iawim-m\u00ab.*mimtimri*mm4<amxmmmrmawmmamm\nSiWtiimqhL\nDRIVE-IN THEATRE\nTonight and Saturday\n\"BORN\nFREE\"\nSam .laflc. Paul Radin\nShowtime 0:15 p.m.\nWe Are CLOSING\nTODAY at\n5:30 P.M.\nTo Attend\nPresidents' Reception\n\u2022\nFor  Emergency Service,\nyour Pharmacist can he\npaged at Mary Hall, N.D.U.\nSAMPLE'S\nNELSON  PHARMACY\nLTD.\n'Your Fortress ol  Ilc;illh\"\nH.T!) Baker SI Nelson\nPhone 352-8313\nBy 9 p.m. tonight, the tension\nand anxieties for eight pretty\nNelson girls will be over.\nAnd one of them will either be\ncrying with happiness, laughing\nwith joy, or too shocked to\nregister any emotion.\nShe will be Nelson's Centennial\nYear Queen.\nFor tonight is the climax of\nweeks of preparation, and grooming .. . tonight is the annual\nQueen Pageant.\nBut Chamber of Commerce\nexecutive member Fred Merriman who has been organizing\nthe event said Thursday: \"I\ndon't think the response has\nbeen as good as I would have\nliked to see it,\"\nThe dazzling event, to be held\nin the Civic Centre is being\norganized by the Nelson Chamber of Commerce.\n\"We want to make this an\nannual social affair and an\nexciting time for the Queen\ncandidates.\n\"I would have liked to have\nknown two weeks in advance\nthat we had a sell out.\"\nMr. Merriman said there had\nbeen some criticism levelled because the Queen ceremony is \"as\nformal as it is.\n\"But when it was held in the\nstreet it ran out of money.\"\nThe Chamber of Commerce is\nreviving the Pageant after a\nlapse of two years.\nCaptain Butcher, below, seeks information from radio car concerning\nhis wife and child, while above, Baker Street, Nelson, is fogged in with the\nsmoke from the Palm Dairies fire. On left of page, aerial ladder goes into action below plumes of billowing black smoke while volunteer members of Nelson's Fire Department play a high pressure hose through a window of the\ndairy. Still smouldering late Thursday night, the fire had burned most of the\nLate\nNews of\nThe Day\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nKOORBATOFF - Funeral\nservices for the late Mr. Alex A.\nKoorbatoff will be hold at Tog-\nhum Hall beginning Frldav, June\n10th at 5:30 p.m. Procession will\nleave Taghum Hall Sunday,\n.Iiine 10th at 2:00 p.m, for Interment In Krestova Cemetory.\nThompson Funeral Service.\nANNOUNCEMENT\nOut of respect for Mr. T. H.\nMnnsfleld the Shell Vue Service\nwill   be  closed  today  from   12\nnoon to S n.m.\nThank you.\nDesert Flower Special\nV4 Price\nNow S1.25\nBEAUTY BATH\nfor Dry Skin\nStore will be closed Today\nat 5:30 . . attending\nPharmaceutical Convention\nMayo  Pharmacy\nLtd.\nCorner Baker and Ward\nPh. 352-2013 Nelson\nCOFFEE\nHOUSE\nCorner of\nWord and Carbonate\nPresents . . .\nDANNY\nHARRISON\nSATURDAY,\nJUNE 17TH\n3  Biq Shows\n9:30, 10:30, 11:30\nTeens and Adults Welcome\nREFRESHMENTS\nAVAILABLE\nAdmission $1.00\nAt the Door\nNEW ISSUE\n3,000,000 Shares\nBank of British Columbia\nPrice $25.00 per share\nWater Reserves\nAn engineer's report recommends against one of the proposed reserves for the city's\nwater supply it was learned\nWednesday.\nThe Clearwater, Apex and\nSelous creeks wouldn't provide\nan adequte reserve said the report, tabled at a meeting of the\nNelson Advisory Planning Board.\nMembers of the commission\ndeferred making a recommendation to city council on the choice\nof an  accessory water supply.\n\"An investigation of two other\nalternatives \u2014 the West Arm of\nKootenay Lake and Cottonwood\nLake is underway,\" said Aid.\nTerry Wayling.\nCommission recommended the\nDepartment of Highways be approached for discussions on traffic congestion around the city\nliquor store.\n\"The number of cars making\nleft-hand turns into the parking\nlot is terrifying,\" said Don Por-\nteous.\nCity planner George Butling\nsaid he hoped the traffic problem\n\"would sort itself out\" with\ncompletion of construction in the\narea.\nMr   Mulling said il would be\n\"worthwhile\" however to discuss with the department, other\npossible patterns of traffic.\nCommission agreed to recommend to council that rezoning\nbe made in the case of two projected multiple dwellings in the\ncity.\nThe properties involved are\npresently zoned for smaller\ndwellings.\nDeMolay Show\nTlie internationally-known Northern California DeMolay Show\nand Band plans to play in Nelson\nand Trail, July 3 and 4.\nThe band, composed of 37\nyoung people from chapter of\nDeMolay and Jobs Daughters,\neach year, tours the northwest\nU.S. and Canada.\nIn a two and one-half hour\nperformance, the show features\na 20-plec\u00ab band, a dance line of\neight .vocal, instrumental, magic\nand comedy sets.\nThe band, which provides the\nbackground for the entire show\nhas been said to sound very\nmuch like the popular Tijuana\nBrass,. .   i, ...,.'.\nDate of Offering: June 15, 1967 to July 15, 1967.\nA copy of the Prospectus will be furnished on request.\nThe Directors of the Bank of British Columbia invite you to\nbecome an owner and original shareholder in the only Canadian\nchartered Bank with its head office in British Columbia.\nObjectives of the bank\nA To establish a financial centre in\n'British Columbia and advance\nthe economic interests of the\nwestern provinces.\nR To supply banking facilities and services\n' to fulfill the needs of residents of British\nColumbia and the western provinces,\nand to expand the Bank's facilities and\nservices across the rest of Canada.\nr To fulfill the banking needs of the\n'small and middle-sized businessman, and\nto develop the necessary facilities and\nexpertise to encourage industrial\ndevelopment within the western provinces.\nQ To supply banking facilities and\n' services designed to increase and encourage\nforeign trade, with particular emphasis on\nthe Pacific trading area.\nSummary\nThe principal objective of the Bank of British\nColumbia is to forward the economic\nambitions of all the people of British Columbia\nand the western provinces by providing\nknowledgeable, on-the-scene banking\nservices, Therefore, whether you are in the\nforest industry, in mining, fishing, agriculture\nor manufacturing, it is our intention to\ngear our objectives to your specific banking\nrequirements.\nThe Bank will channel the savings of\nthe people of this province and other\nwestern provinces into useful local\nenterprises which create capital and\nemployment for our residents. Our\ninvestment and credit decisions will be made\nin British Columbia by head office executives\nwho work and live in the province and\nwho are knowledgeable and aware\nof local needs and conditions.\nApplications for shares may be obtained from your Investment dealer, bank,\ntrust company, stockbroker or from:\nBank Of British Columbia   999 W. Pender Street, Vancouver 1, B.C.\n NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JUNE 16, 1967\u20143\n1890's Return With Opening of Typical Frontier Town\nFORT STEELE\nOPENS SOON\nFIRST NORTH WEST MOUNTED POLICE POST\nln British Columbia at Fort Steele, near Cranbrook,\nis the setting for creation of a typical Kootenay district town of the 1890's. In 1961 Fort Steele was desig\nnated a historic site, and is being developed by the\nFort Steele Foundation. Official opening will be held\nJune 24. Photo shows museum centre, although the\nwhole town is \"living museum.\"\nGreatest Ever\nNakusp Graduation ...\nLarge Commencement Exercises\nBreak School Graduation Record\nFort Steele Historic Park, at\nthe junction of Wild Horse Creek\nand the Kootenay River, about\n10 miles east of Cranbrook, will\nbe officially opened by Premier\nW. A. C Bennett June 24.\nDevelopment of the Park\nstarted in 1%1, under direction\nof the Fort Steele Foundation in\nco-operation with the British Columbia Government and is following a plan designed to\n\"create\" a typical Kootenay district town of the nineties. Some\nof the buildings of Fort Steele,\nfirst North West Mounted Police\npost in British Columbia, have\nbeen restored, and authentic\nreplicas are being built.\nThe composite village will be\na mixture of both restored and\nreconstructed authentic buildings\nfrom the original town, and also\nconstructed buildings which\nwould be typical of the area\nduring the years 1890-1905. In\naddition some structures have\nbeen moved in from other areas,\nsuch as the Roosville Customs\nHouse which sat for many years\nnear the U.S. border and the\nPerry Creek water wheel, a\nmining curiosity of East Kootenay. Each building will be\nfurnished, stocked and equipped\nas completely as possible and in\nthis respect the co-operation and\nassistance of interested people is\nwelcomed.\nFort Steele is an example of\nthe modern approach to history\nin that the whole village serves\nas a \"living\" museum. However\nincluded with the Park is a\nseparate museum building which\nfunctions as the interpretive\ncentre.\nA series of events are planned\nfor Fort Steele's opening weekend.\nOn June 23 the Centennial\nProject for Cranbrook, Confederation Park will be opened\nat 4 p.m. by L. J. Wallace, General Chairman of the British Columbia Centennial Committee,\nand at 6:30 p.m. Pioneer Recog\nnition Medals will be presented.\nJune 24 at 1 p.m. opening\nceremonies will be held for Fori\nSteele Bridge; at 2 p.m., Fort\nSteele Park will be opened; at\n3:15 p.m., the Premiere performance of the Fort Steele Gay\nNineties Follies; at 5 p.m., the\nofficial start of construction of\nthe Crestbrook Pulpmill at\nSkookumchuck.\nThe Fort Steele Gay Nineties\nFollies will be presented at 2:30\nand 7:30 p.m. daily except Sunday.\nOn June 25, at 2:30 p.m. an\noutdoor inter \u2022 denominational\nchurch service will be held at\nFort Steele. There will be e\nconcert by the Cranbrook Girls\nBugle Band at Fort Steele at\n7:30 p.m.\nNAKUSP (Staff) \u2014 Recent, program was called \"commence-\ncominencement exercises here! ment\" because not all students\nsmashed all previous records.    | would   graduate   but   all   were\nThe largest class In the history of the Nakusp Secondary\nSchool attended thi syear's graduation ceremonies.\nOver 25 graduates were honored at a banquet in the evening\nfollowed by a public presentation\nand dance.\nPrincipal of Selkirk College,\nCastlegar, A .E. Soles, gave the\nkeynote address at the affair.\nPrincipal John Verkerk, opened\nthe exercises with remarks\nthe transition between morning\nand evening. He said nobody\nwould believe that the young men\nand women sitting on the stage\nthat evening were the same\ngroup of children he had seen in\nclass that morning.\nHe thanked the grade 11 stud\nents for the excellent work done\nto make the exercises a success.\nThe gymnasium decorations were\nalong the Centennial theme as\nwas most of the program. Murals\nof life in early Canada as well as\n* montage of Expo '67 were accented by a marvelous display of\nlighting all done by grade 11\nstudents.\nstarting on something new in\nlife.\nMr. Verkerk then introduced\nG. C Bissell, superintendent of\nschools from Castlcgar who\nwished the students success in\nthe future and told them always\nto remember the fine school, fine\nteachers and the fine community\nwhich all helped to make them\nwhat they are.\nGlen Weatherhead, chairman\nof the Board of Trustees and who\nhad a son, David, among the\ngraduates, brought greetings\nfrom the board and remarked\nthat although more and more is\nspent each year on high education in the area, the products\nseem to get better and better,\nClass historian, Eleanor Jupp\ngave a humorous account of the\nclass from first grade until now\nHer presentation highlighted the\nexciting parts of the class history\nsuch as when they were on the\nsplit shifts and when they went to\nschool in the Celgar office, etc\nFollowing this, the graduates\ncombined to sing \"Vive La Com-\nMr. Verkerk remarked that the pagnie\" to follow a tradition uni\nWANTED TO LEASE\nRetail Store Space \u2014 approximately 1200\nsq. ft. \u2014 on Baker Street In main traffic areo\nwith adequate window display.\nApply Box 116,\nThe Nelson Daily News\nque to Nakusp Secondary School\nwhere the graduating class sings\nfor its certificates.\nThe Commencement address\nwas given by Mr. Soles and contained a series of questions which\nhe thought each student must\ndeal with as he enters the work\nworld. He hoped that the students\nwere prepared to meet the complexities of the modern world\nThe problems he foresaw for the\nstudents entering this complex\nworld included: individual identi\nfication, world without work,\nprosperity, lack of moral or\nethical values, and others.\nMr. Soles felt that to meet\nthese problems, the man of today\nmust be much more self dis-\nciplined and must develop s\nmuch deeper sense of service.\n\"Don't go out and expect so-\nciety to hand you everything.\nSociety doesn't owe you a damn\nthing. You owe it a great deal,\"\nhe warned the assembly.\nHe urged them to live up to\nthe rank of human beings who\nare different from the rest of the\nanimal world because they hove\na desire to seek the beautiful,\nwillingness to reach out and\nbeyond themselves and a capa.\ncity for love.\nThe presentations of certificates followed by Mr. Bissell\naided by Mr. Verkerk and assistant principal William Robison.\nMr. Robison then announced\nthe awards for the year. Class\nValedictorian Dan Maja was\nawarded the Alan Taylor Memorial trophy emblematic of the\nGrade 12 student adding the\nmost to the spirit and enthusiasm\nof the class. Rick Giles won the\ntrophy for the grade 12 student\nachieving the highest academic\nstanding.\nLarge \"N\" emblematic of outstanding citizenship and extracurricular work was presented\nto Eleanor Jupp, Sharon Fast\nand Sharon Reimer.\nOther athletic and scholarship\nKimberley...\nAir Cadets Honored\nDuring Awards Night\nawards will be made at a school\nassembly at a later date.\nDan Maja, valedictorian gave a\nshort speech on the ideals sought\nby each of the graduates and\npaid tribute to the hard work of\nparents, teachers, and leaders\nwho helped make them a broad\nfoundation for the future.\nRev. F. I. Richards then said\na graduation prayer.\nThe evening program concluded with the Nakusp Second,\nary school choir under direction\nof Mr. Verkerk singing \"This\nLand Is Your Land,\" \"Ca-na-da\"\nand \"The Lord's Prayer.\"\nA dance followed.\nStudents receiving certificates\nwere: Susan Bargery, Raymond\nBartlett, Donald Brown, Donna\nButt, Linda Canning, Linda Chernoff, Elaine Cowan, Bruce Cu-\nsick, Robert DuMont, Laura Ehl,\nSharon Fast, Richard Giles;\nRandy Harding, Arthur Heppner,\nEleanor Jupp, Leslie Maxfield,\nDaniel Maja, Ronald McCormack, Karen McPhee, Sharon\nReimer, Jerry Renneberg, Eleanor Santano, Sharon Tedesco,\nDavid Weatherhead, Edward\nZak, Phyllis Zeleznik.\nKIMBERLEY - The annual\nbanquet for 266 Kimberley\nSquadron, Royal Canadian Air\nCadets was held on June 7 in\nthe IOOF Hall with officers, civilian instructors and the sponsoring committee of Oddfellows\nand Rebekahs attending. Guests\nwere Maj. R. Lye, Mayor H.\nBuckle, Mr. Guy Williams and\nMr. C. Gover, with Maj. Lye and\nMayor Buckle each speaking\nbriefly.\nThe following Shooting Awards\nwere then presented \u2014 Dominion Marksmanship badges, presented by Mayor Buckle and\nMajor Lye:\nBronze: Cpl, G. Fitzpatrick,\nSgt. Bob Johnston, AC2 L. Rouleau. Cpl. A. Peitso, Cpl. J. Pin-\nchak, Sgt. G. Mclntyre, AC2 R.\nSchwindt, Cpl. J. Soden, AC2 K.\nLund, Sgt. D. Walker, Cpl. B.\nCleland, Cpl McElroy, Cpl. Les\nJohnson.\nSilver: Cpl. G. Fitzpatrick,\nSgt. G. Berkheim, AC2 D. Jardine. Sgt. D .Walker.\nGold: F\/S A. Heinemann,\nF\/S B. Daniel and Mr. E. A. McKay of the sponsoring committee .\nD.C.R.A. Crests, presented by\nRange Instructor A. Bennett \u2014\nHighest score, Cpl. B. Reid; 1st\nClass \u2014 Cpl. P. Morrow, F\/S B.\nDaniel, Sgt. G. Berkheim, F\/S\nA. Heinemann: 2nd class \u2014 AC2\nD. Jardine, Cpl. McElroy and\nSgt. D. Walker.\nTrail...\nGaglardi Prays\nAt Tadanac\nTRAIL \u2014 Honourable P. A.\nGaglardi will be guest speaker\nat a public meeting to be held in\nthe Tadanac Hall Sunday evening, June 25.\nThe Rev. Phil Gaglardi, Pastor\nof the Kamloops Calvary Temple,\nhas been invited to Trail by the\nEvangelical Pastors' Fellowship\nof Trail and District.\nAs a centennial project of the\nEvangelical Pastors' Fellowship,\nan offering will be received to\n| purchase books for the local\nlibrary as well as placing literature in other institutions.\nThe meeting will take the form\nof a united Gospel service, comprising churches from Trail,\nRossland. Castlegar, Kinnaird,\nSalmo, Fruitvale and Beaver\nFalls.\nRev. A. Walters, president of\nthe Fellowship, will be chairman\nfor the service.\nCanada Enters the Space Age;\nCommunications Lead the Way\nBy DON KOLFAGE\nEditorial Director, The News\nCanada's mighty communications industry, including the huge\nBritish Columbia Telephone Company, is preparing . . . literally\n. . to enter the space age.\nCanadian   telecommunications\ncommon carriers have proposed\nto Transport Minister Pickersgill the immediate construction\nREMPLOY\nHandicapped Society\n432 Stanley St.\nPhone 352-7812\n\u2022     \u2022\nOUR WOODWORKING SHOP NOW IN OPERATION\nOrders Now Being Accepted for the Following Items\nAnd Made To Your Specifications:\u2014\n\u2022 Coffee Tables \u2022  Chests of Drawers \u2022  Lawn Chairs\n\u2022 Lawn Tables \u2022 Writing Desks \u2022  Picnic Tables\n\u2022 End Tables \u2022 Step Tables \u2022  Night Tobies\n\u2022 Book Cases \u2022 Gun Racks \u2022  Benches and Stools\nCONSIGNMENT STOCK FOR SALE\n\u2022 Fishing Tackle \u2022\n\u2022 Bicycles \u2022 Tools\nUsed Clothing\n\u2022  Furniture\n\u2022  Books\n\u2022  Etc.\nRUMMAGE SALE   \u2022   SAT., JUNE 17TH\nWe Invite All Handicapped in Nelson and District To Participate in\nThis New Venture and Become An Active Member of This Cooperative\nEnterprise.\nof an $80 million Canadian-\nowned multi-purpose communications satellite system to serve all\nof Canada, and to be operational\nby 1970.\nParticipating in the proposed\nproject are the eight major companies comprising the Trans Canada Telephone System, B. C. Tel,\nAlberta Government Telephones,\nManitoba Telephone System,\nMaritime Telephone and Telegraph, Saskatchewan Government Telephones, Avalon Telephone, Bell and the New Brunswick Telephone Company, and\nCanadian National and Canadian\nPacific Telecommunications.\nThe proposal calls for the construction of three communications satellites, and the orbiting\nof two with the third held in reserve.\nThe two satellites would be orbited at an altitude of 22,300\nmiles above the earth, and would\nbe placed in \"stationary\" orbit\ndirectly over Canada where it\nwould be \"visible\" 24 hours per\nday.\nThese satellites in stationary\norbit above the country would\nenable direct telephone, telegraph and television Iransmis.\nsion to all parts of Canada, including the far north, from any\npoint within the country.\nThe proposal placed before the\ngovernment indicated that the\ncommunications satellite system\nwould handle all types of services\nwhich are now being carried by\nthe conventional micro-wave systems.\nTlie proposal noted \"The clarity and strength of transmission\nprovided over communications\nsatellite systems is comparable\nto that of existing micro-wave\nsystems.\n\"Only with respect to the time\nrequired for transmission from\nan originating earth station to a\nsatellite and back, to a receiving\nt\nstation is there a noticeable difference.\"\nThe report stated, \"Because\nof the 22,300 mile altitude of a\nsatellite in stationary orbit, the\ntwo-way transit time is about 600\nmilliseconds, or six-tenths of a\nsecond.\"\nThis is of no concern in the\none-way transmission of services\nsuch as television, \"but must be\ntaken into account in the case of\ntwo-way voice circuits.\"\nThe orbiting of two satellites Is\nmade necessary because of the\ninterference caused by the sun\nwhen the satellite is positioned in\na direct line between sun and\nearth.\nTo avoid this the two satellites\nare orbited and positioned in such\na way that when one is affected\nwith sun-caused interference the\nsecond can function interference-\nclear.\nAs tlie telecommunications carriers do not anticipate Canada\nhaving launching facilities for\ncommunications satellites or for\nguiding them into the required\norbit, nor for making necessary\nperiodic adjustments in the orbits, the services of the National\nAeronautics and Space Agency\n(NASA> will be utilized.\nThe common carriers proposed\na thrce-pronged program to implement the Canadian domestic\nsatellite system . . . with each\nof the three activities being carried out simultaneously.\nFull coverage of Canada by\n1970 would be achieved with a\nCanadian-owned and operated\nspace system to be fully integrated with the nation's existing telecommunications network. Costing approximately $80,000,000, the\nsystem\u2014carrying television, telephone calls, data, and other\ntelecommunications services \u2014\nwould  involve the  construction\nand equipping of 54 earth stations, the purchase of three com\nmunications satellites and the\nlaunching of two of them into stationary orbit.\nNetwork television service\nwould be provided to the Canadian north as soon as possible. If\nthis can be expedited sooner by\nrenting a channel in an existing\nsatellite, the common carriers\nwill do so.\nScientific and industrial research and development to produce a \"new generation\" of satellites for service beyond 1975\nwould be started immediately.\nThe common carriers are prepared to co-operate in producing\nsuch an advanced system to meet\nCanada's future needs.\nCommenting on Ihe proposal,\nMr. Krukski said: \"This carefully phased program will result\nin a satellite communications system covering the whole country,\nhandling all types of communications, integrated effectively\nwith existing facilities, operating\nat the earliest possible date and\nprovided at Ihe most reasonable\ncost. In addition, it will ensure\nCanada's place in space is not\nlost by default.\"\nThe proposed satellite system\nwould expand existing communications facilities\u2014particularly in\nthe Far North; it is designed to\naccommodate educational and\nall  other anticipated  television\nrequirements \u2014 including those\nfor the CBC - well into the 1970s.\nThe satellite system would\nhave 12 operating channels, each\ncapable of carrying either one\ncolor television program or 1200\nvoice circuits. Of these channels,\nthree would be allocated for telephone calls and other message\ntypes of service, and the remainder would be available to expand\nnational television coverage of\nall types.\nPARSLOW'S\nENTERPRISES LTD.\nGUNSMITHING\nLOCKSMITHING\nFISHING SUPPLIES\n1319 Bay Ave.        Ph, 368-5025\nTRAIL, B.C.\n\u00aeJnum,\nITu7\nlaV.HI.IMl\nFor\nComplete Insurance Service\n\u2022 AUTO \u2022 FIRE\n\u2022 LIFE + HEALTH\nCall 352-7956 Now\nALLEN MARKIN\nYour Local Agent\n273 Baker St., Nelson, B.C.\nMARIANNE\nAPARTMENTS\n\u2022 Suites for Rent\n* Immediate Occupancy\n\u2022k\nPhone 352-3217 or 352-6921\nPrices\nEffective:\nToday\nand\nSaturday\nCheck Our 4-Page Value-Packed\nFlyer for These and Many More\nOutstanding Values.\nBreakfast Gems\nLarge Eggs\n1 A'\nGrade   A\\   Dozen\n2 ^ 79'\nI\nPiedmont\nSalad Dressing\nFor Tastier Salads and Sandwiches;\n32 ox. jar\n49'\nHi-Country\nCharcoal\nBriquets\n20 \u00ab\u2022-bag 99\nAirway\nCoffee\nSpecial Offer\n1 lb. 2 Ib.\n69' *135\nLido Mix lOO\nSweet Biscuits\nTake Along on Picnics.\nPackage of 100\n89\nSwift's Prem\nLuncheon Meat\n12 oz. tin\n2 o 89\nNo. 7 Quality\nBananas\nPlump, Firm Fruit.\n8 1^. $1.00\nSuperb Beef\nStanding Rib\nRoast\n\"The King of Roasts.\" Top Quality,\nGovernment Inspected.\nCanada Choice, Canada Good\nib 79'\nManor House Frozen Fresh\nCut-Up Fryers\nCut-up in  Easy To Use Portions\nib. 49'\nWE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES\nLl SAFEWAYj\n(ANilA      I AfIWA\nMBM\n Sfolsmt iaily Nmih\nEstablished April 22, 1902 Nelson, B. C.\nPublished by the NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED, 266 Baker Street,\nNelson, British Columbia  mornings except Sundays and holidays, in the centre\nof the Kootenays, wilh the largest daily circulation in the Interior of B.C.\nAuthorized as Second Class Mail. Post Office Department, Ottawa,\nand for Payment of Postage in Cash\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS, THE CANADIAN DAILY NEWSPAPER\nPUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION AND THE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS.\nThe Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use fot republication of all news\ndispatches credited to it or to Ihe Associated Press or Reuters in this paper\nand also the local news published herein.\nMake the Protest\nConstructive\nThe hatemonger, the beat, the racist, the hippie, the separatist and\nother current varieties of protesters, all have one thing In common \u2014 complete revolt against the whole concept of authority in society and a deep-\nrooted cynicism about the possibility of genuine, reform through the traditional institutions of society. Today's protester is pessimistic and alienated.\nThe strain of nihilism running through protest today wasn't so prominent in decades recently past. In the 1930s the protester saw the poverty\nand degradation of the Depression around him, bul believed thai it could\nbe changed. Many who were appalled by World War II have worked hard\nto create a better and more sensible world.\nNowhere has the new mood of protest been more apparent than in\nthe U.S. and in the intensity of protests against President Lyndon Johnson.\nA broad attack of vituperation and hate has been directed against the president and his family, even to suggesting that the president is somehow\nresponsible for the death of the late President John Kennedy. Note the lapel pins which read \"Lee Harvey Oswald, where are you now?\" and the\noff-Broadway Bhowing of \"MacBird!\" Kennedy and particularly Roosevelt\ncame in for violent attack from far-Right cults, but the hate campaign\nagainst Johnson is more broadly based and even more virulent.\nMeniam Smith, United Press International correspondent at the White\nHouse, was recently moved to write: \"President Johnson these days is the\nobject of some of the worst vilification \u2014 even obscenity \u2014 that I've seen\nor heard in more than 25 years on the White House assignment. This is not\nenlightened social change, or legitimate dissent or revolution. It is anarchy,\nborn of the highly permissive attitude in this country.\"\nCynicism among highly educated young people in the West, according to Bertrand Russell, \"resultB from the combination of comfort with\npowerlessness.\" This is only partially an explanation for what is happening today. But it is true that the infatuation of the more extreme social protest\ngroups is with power for its own sake. Thus the growing concern, in a new\nage of mass media and television involvement, with power structures,\npower elites, power blocs.\nAlthough Canada so far has seen much less of the extreme social\nprotester than the U.S., it is not too soon for Canadian educators, politicians\nand corporate leaders to consider how they can develop new avenues of\nopportunity and protest within the boundaries of existing social authority.\nThis was one of the main Intentions when the government formed\nthe Company of Young Canadians, but CYC accomplishments so far probably don't excite even its founders.\nCanada has a flood of highly talented youngsters now setting out on\na career. It would be sheer waste not to give them the opportunity to exercise their energy and ideas for constructive change in business and in politics. \u2014 Financial Post.\nBusiness, Wars\nAnd Rumors\nThe long-range effects of the Israeli - Arab war are still guite imponderable. If the shock of another armed conflict in the Middle East serves to\nbring Ihe United States and the Soviet Union Into consultations at less Ihan\narm's length, it might even prove the catalyst for firmer settlements in bolh\nthe Middle Easl and the Far East.\nThat Is the extreme optimist's view. There will be a good deal of diplomatic fencing before we can expect a restoration of stability to the Middle\nEast, and any settlement In Viet Nam (which is still more potentially dangerous) is even farther off.\nBut the long-range hopes do at least justify the comparative calm\nwhich has been remarkably maintained in the short period of crisis. Perhaps the most gratifying thing about business behavior is the stability of\nthe pound, which might not have been expected.\nThis is also the most important thing lor Canada because (despite all\nthe efforts of Ihe seers) our vulnerability to international disturbances is\nusually indirect rather than direct. Canada's direct trading and financial\ninterests in the Middle East are not large \u2014 not as large as we should like\nto make them in conditions of stability. Bul If events there or anywhere else\nlead to a breakdown ol Ihe currency system, we would feel the effects immediately and on a wide scale.\nJn.the meantime, Canadian business is quite right to keep ils main\nattention on the old problems \u2014 costs, prices, manpower, productivity. The\nlatest consumer price index shows a welcome drop in the food index, but\nmore significant are the rising non-food items which suggest that higher\nwages and costs are already working through to retail prices.\nNeither wars nor rumors of wars will remove these accumulated\nproblems: nor so far is there much evidence that they will aggravate Ihem.\nII Ihere is one thing worse than being insensitive lo international developments, it is to get over-excited or over-nervous aboul them. Steady as we gol\n\u2014Financial Times'\nImpact on Culture\n\"Say, whatever became of that other  war in Viet-what's-its-name . . . ?\"\nFinnish Carpenter Bears Scars\nOf Nearly Freezing to Death\nBy JACK MORRIS\nVANCOUVER lCP>-\n\"Sometimes I wish I did die\nunder that snow.\"\nThe man called the Frozen\nCarpenter of Granduc rubbed\nhis head and paced the floor\nas he recalled painfully and\nreluctantly, his 70-hour ordeal\nburied beneath the snow more\nthan two years ago.\n\"I get terrible pains in my\njoints, all over,\" said Einar\nMyllyla. \"I get cold so easy,\nand I get the flu all the time.\n\"I can't work\u2014I can't hold\nmy balance, I can't climb a\nladder, I can't walk properly.\"\nThe 39 - year \u2022 old Finnish-\nborn carpenter held out his\nright hand. The fingers had\nbeen amputated close to the\nknuckles of his working hand.\n\"I hide il most of the time\nwhen I meet people or talk\nto somebody.\"\nHe paced across the room\nquickly but stiffly, demonstrating the heel stub on\nwhich he walks. Half his left\nfoot is gone and doctors talk\nof amputating the remainder.\nOver a glass of beer in a\nhotel across the street from\nMr. Myllyla's old but clean\neast-end apartment building,\nthe Frozen Carpenter mellowed and smiled.\n\"Yes, I'm lucky I guess. I\ndon't like to talk about\nGranduc and 1 still get letters\nfrom people I don't know\nasking me how I am but I\nnever answer them.\"\nWords of Life\nVerily I say unto you, Whosoever shall not receive the\nkingdom of God as a little child\nshall in no wise enter therein.\nLuke 18:17.\nCALCUTTA (API - This\n\"City of Dreadful Night\" and\nmyriad stenches ended a five-\nday-old strike of 14.000 garbage-\nmen with a pay increase of five\nrupees \u2014 about 65 cents \u2014 per\nmonth.\nWANTS TO FORGET\nHe stutters when asked\nabout the Feb. 18, 1965, avalanche that burried a copper\nmining camp at Granduc in\nnorthwestern British Columbia.\nHe admits his memory is\nnot good, and says he doesn't\nwant lo talk to reporters because \"I want to forget what\nI do remember about it.\"\nThe avalanche killed 23 of\nMr. Myllyla's fellow workers.\nThe bodies were pulled out.\nSeveral days w-ent by and\neveryone gave up hope of\nfinding anyone else alive.\nMr. Myllyla slept and\ndreamed in what he though!\nwas going to be his grave of\nsnow. A hole above his head\nprovided air, and the numbing cold choked off the pain.\nMore than 70 hours after\nthe avalanche a bulldozer accidentally uncovered him, severely frostbitten but still\nbreathing. His survival was\ncalled a miracle.\nMr. Myllyla was treated in\na hospital at Ketchikan,\nAlaska, then flown here in\nApril. 1965, for further surgery and rehabilitation.\nRECEIVES  PENSION\nHe has nol been under active medical care for more\nthan a year. He lives on a\npermanent disability pension\nof $175 a month\u2014he earned\nalmost $1,000 a month with\novertime at Granduc \u2014 and\nhas not worked since the\nslide.\nDoctors and friends say his\nproblem is not totally physical, and that the effects of\nhis ordeal are more lasting\nthan Mr. Myllyla will admit.\nThe carpenters union has\nbeen trying to find him a\nsupervisory job but, as one\nofficial said, \"though he\nwants and needs a job he\nfinds it difficult to think of\nwhat he can do instead of the\nthings he can't do.\"\nMr. Myllyla says his health\nhas improved lately. His\ncheeks   are   ruddy   and   his\nweight is back to normal,\nabout 160 pounds. But being\nburied in snow for 70 hours\nhas left a heavy imprint.\n\"I can't leave Vancouver;\nit's too cold anywhere else. I\nfeel the cold all the time. I\nneed heat. I used to take\nsteam baths all the time but\nI can't afford that now. A\nbeer helps when my joints\nache.\"\nMr. Myllyla, a bachelor\nfrom Tervola, Finland, says\nhe can never again be a\ncarpenter because of his amputations and \"I have to find\nsome sort of work I can do.\"\nDREAMED  ALL  THE   TIME\nA switch in conversation\nback to his ordeal brings back\nthe stuttering, the nervous\nhead scratching and the reticence.\n\"1 don't remember much. I\ndreamed all the time I was\nthere, I think.\"\nDid he think about being\nrescued? \"Well ... I could\nhear them walking in the\nsnow above me and the noise.\nBut I really think I dreamed\nthat.\"\nDoes he still dream about\nit? \"No . . . well, sometimes\u2014\nbut I forget. It's best to forget.\"\nThe Frozen Carpenter\nspends most of his time\nwatching a small portable\ntelevision set in his one-room\nhousekeeping suite. He drinks\na few glasses of beer and\ntakes frequent bus trips to the\nunion hall to talk about a job.\nHe grinned. \"And I keep\nwarm, too.\"\nPlastic Windows\nHUBERT\n_\t\nJ  NO-CAUYOU UMTIE US,\nPLEASEfAFTER THREE HOURS J^z~<t\nV    I'M KIKIP OF SICK OF J f >>\nIvIMyifciwc\nBy DONALD PHILLIPSON\nTORONTO (CP) - Plastic\nwindows may restore sight to\nhundreds of blind people.\nDr. Bernard B. Zucker of\nToronto is developing an artificial cornea\u2014the clear lens\nthrough which light enters\nthe eye\u2014made of teflon,a material best-known for its use\nin fat-free skillets.\nThere is a twofold need for\nplastic corneas. Not nearly\nenough human lenses are\navailable for eye surgery\nand, in some patients, transplanted corneas cause inflammation and have to be removed.\nTeflon is being used for the\nartificial corneas since it\nseems to be biologically neutral. There is every indication it does not react with the\nliving tissue of the eye and\nbring on the body's automatic effort lo get rid of the\nforeign substance.\nA second prbblem is a tendency of the living eye to\ngrow over the hack of an artificial lens and cause blindness by simply blocking off\nthe light. Dr. Zucker is refining the shape of a skirt or\nfrill at the rear of the lens to\nconlrol this.\nHe hus implanted 24 experimental corneas in animals\nand only two in humans in\nToronto because the new-\nmodel lens is still being improved. But he says he may\nsoon be able lo call in a\nnumber of patients for the\nsight-giving operation.\nIn Boston, where Dr. Zucker studied cornea replacements for Iwo years, 36 patients were given synthetic\nlenses in a crash program,\nwith better than 50-per-cent\nsuccess. Several had had one\nor two unsuccessful grafts of\nhuman lenses before.\nFALSE EYE BLINKS\nDr. Zucker showed off a\nwhite rabbit with an artificial cornea at an eye surgeon's convention at tthe University of Toronto's department of ophthalmology.\nAnother display was of a\nblinking eye mechanism ln a\nprosthetic worn to conceal\nfacial disfigurement.\nThis is the work of Stan\nBrazier, a technician who specialises In making replacement parts, such '.ft ears and\neye-sockets, for plastic surgeons.\nAn artificial eye-socket is\nusually held in place by spectacles\u2014clear glass if necessary\u2014and removed at night.\nIts artificiality might not be\ndetectable were it not for the\nglassy stare of the unblinking\neye.\nMr. Brazier's gadget controls lhe plastic eyelid with\nan electric motor. It can be\nclosed, as in sleep, or set to\nblink at rates from five to 50\ntimes a minute.\nThe next step, still being\ntested, is a sensing device\nwhich picks up the blinks of\nthe good eye and synchronizes the artificial eye with\nthem.\nMr. Brazier was brought to\nToronto's department of rehabilitation medicine from\nEngland about six years ago\nbecause of his special skills in\nthis line. Another new Canadian is Dr. Prasanta K. Basu,\nthe only director of ophthalmic research in the country,\nwho came from Calcutta 12\nyears ago.\nEYES STILL NEEDED\nAlthough synthetic replacements are being developed,\nthere is slill a need for human eyes in surgery. The eye\nbank in Dr. Basu's new laboratories gets about 30 eyes\na monlh, used mostly for cornea grafting.\nDr. R. K. MacDonald's\nglaucoma research project is\nanother demand on human\neyes, although he tries to use\nanimal eyes wherevere possible. The disease occurs in two\nper cent of lhe human population aged more than 40 and\ncan cause complete blindness\nif not alleviated.\nGlaucoma is excessive\npressure of water inside the\neyeball, which progressively\ndamages the optic nerve. Water flows In and out of the\neyeball all the time but In\nglaucoma the tiny ducts have\nbecome clogged and cannot\nhandle the outflow.\nProf. MacDonald is developing a fine glass tube which\ncan he permanently inserted\nin the sclera, the white of the\neve, lo drain off the water.\nThe hollow tube is only one-\nsovonlh me thickness of a human hair.\nBy DAVE BAZAY\nQUEBEC (CP)\u2014Quebec is\nconsidering measures to establish control over the impact of immigration on the\ncultural makeup of the province's population.\nThis is prompted by studies\nindicating that immigration\nhas tended to erode the majority position of Quebec's\nFrench-speaking community.\nAmong proposals is that immigrant children be required\nto attend French - language\nschools. Another is the creation of a special Quebec citizenship.\nBut Premier Daniel Johnson's Union Nationale government has Indicated It will try\nto avoid any restrictions that\nmight scare off newcomers.\n. The government plans to\ntry wooing immigrants into\nthe French-Canadian milieu\nwith a special integration program that includes free\nFrench courses.\nPoliticians have expressed\nconcern about the future of\nFrench Canada following studies which showed that:\n\u2014The birth rate among\nFrench \u2022 Canadians, traditionally Canada's highest,\nhas declined to a point just\nbelow the national level.\n\u2014 While Quebec receives\nmore immigrants than any\nprovince except Ontario,\nonly one in 10 becomes integrated into the French-\nspeaking community.\n\u2014Barely three per cent of\nthe more than 2,500,000 postwar immigrants have been\nFrench-speaking.\n\u2014Projections indicate the\nnumber of Canadians of neither British nor French origin will surpass the number of French-Canadians in\nthe 1970s.\n\u2014French - Canadians, who\nmade up 28.6 per cent of\nCanada's population in 1961,\ncould be down to between\n2011, based on current\ntrends.\nQUEBEC TAKES NOTICE\nSuccessive Quebec governments have viewed immigration with Indifference but this\nis no longer the case. Quebec\nnow is forming a provincial\npolicy on immigration arising\nfrom studies launched in 1965\nby the Liberal government of\nthe day.\nCultural Affairs Minister Jean-Noel Tremblay outlined the Union Nationale's\nattitude when he said:\n\"Quebec is the homeland of\nthe French-Canadian nation\nand . . . the safeguard of our\ncultural heritage; its development and its growth impose\non us the obligation to watch\nfor all factors that can\nthreaten or alter it.\"\nPremier Johnson has held\ntalks with Jean Marchand,\nthe federal minister of immigration, and says there is a\nchance of co-operation with\nOttawa.\nAlthough 1 m m i gration is\nconsidered a sphere of joint\njurisdiction under the British\nNorth America Act, there is\nno doubt the central government has priority powers.\nArticle 95 of the BNA Act\nsays provincial law on immigration is effective \"as long\nand as far only as it is not\nrepugnant to any act of the\nParliament of Canada.\"\nExperts say Ontario's success in the immigration field\nindicates the best way for a\nprovince to act is to exert influence on the selection of immigrants through co-operation\nwith Ottawa.\nPREFER ENGLISH\nQuebec's key problem is\nhow to persuade immigrants\nto become French-speaking.\nThis is difficult since English\nremains the dominant language of work in North America. This is so even in Montreal where most immigrants\nto  Quebec  settle.\nFrench is the maternal language of about 80 per cent of\nQuebec's people and provincial governments have been\npromoting the use of French\nas the language of priority.\nBut this campaign seems lo\nbog down in the face of this\nquestion:\nHow can people be discouraged from becoming members of the English-speaking\ncommunity in a province that\nrecognizes English as an official language?\nThe St. Jean Baptiste Society of Montreal recommended\nthat the province enforce the\nprinciple of French schooling\nfor non-British newcomers.\nThis appears to be within\nthe province's constitutional\npower since education is a\nprovincial domain, but the\ngovernment regards it as a\ndrastic move.\nMarcel Masse, minister\nwithout portfolio attached to\nthe education department,\nsaid French schooling would\nbe enforced only as a last resort.\nIt would require controversial changes in the traditional\ndenominational structure of\nthe education system. Neutral or non - denominational\npublic schools giving instruction in French would be required. This is because existing French-language schools\nbasically are available only\nfor Roman Catholics.\nOFFER  FREE  COURSES\nThe task of encouraging im-\nmigranls to become part of\nthe French-speaking community has been assigned to the\nadult education division\nof the education department.\nIts task seems formidable.\nSince 1946 Quebec has received more than 550,000 immigrants\u2014second only to the\nmore than 1,500,000 taken by\nOntario\u2014but statistics show\nnine of 10 align with the English-speaking community.\n\"Immigration has worked\nmassively against the French\ngroup, not only on a countrywide scale but even in Quebec,\" said Mr. Masse.\nStarting this fall the province will operate free French\ncourses for immigrants,\nteaching also about Quebec's\nlaws,  history and  aspirations.\nThe federal government has\nresponded to recent criticism\nfrom Quebec by launching a\nfresh drive for French-speaking immigrants. But they are,\nin fact, a bit scarce.\nFrance, where the government discourages emigration,\ncontributed 5,225 immigrants\nto Canada In 1965, only 3,5\nper cent of the total.\nCanada opened immigration\noffices at Marseille in 1964\nand Bordeaux in 1965 to help\nits main office in Paris recruit French-speaking immigrants.\nOperation French Immigration is under way in France\nthis year and Mr. Marchand\npredicts Canada will get about\n10,000 Frenchmen, an increase\nof about 20 per cent over 1966.\nYet the federal government\nhas been operating alone in\nthe French-speaking sphere,\nwithout the aid of the dogged\ndigging done by provinces\nsuch as Ontario in the English\nsphere.\nRegina Emergency Measures\nOrganization has organized a\nvoluntary motor toboggan\nsearch and rescue team that\nwill be used during severe blizzard conditions. The volunteer\nteam will provide emergency\ntransportation for doctors on\ncall, search for missing persons\nin the Regina area, assist\nstranded motorists in the Re,\nglna area, and assist where\never needed during extreml\nblizzard conditions.\nTRUDY\n\"Listen, Bob\u2014when you get here don't mention\nanything about not receivine an invitstioa ...\"\n mmm\nM\nSteak Barbecue To End Season\nThe Junior Ladies Auxiliary to\nKootenay Lake General Hospital\nare setting out plans for a repeat performance of its cheese\nand wine-tasting party in the\nfall.\nAt their meeting they also completed plans for the coffee party\nin the hospital cafeteria June 21.\nA wind-up dinner in the form\nof a steak barbecue is to mark\nthe termination of the year's projects and the start of summer\nholiday. The dinner is to be held\nat the home of Mrs. R. B. Wilson.\nThe group, in mapping out\nplans for the next year, decided\nto stage a harvest sale. Mrs. L\nSmith will head the project.\nAll money gathered through\nIhe year from the energetic group\nwill be used to purchase hospital\nsupplies.\nThe women also gave a vote\nof thanks to Mr. R. A. Carman\nand Mr. Charles Isahion for their\nassistance in making the Centennial Tea such a huge success.\nFollowing the business meeting, refreshments were served by\nMrs. E. R. Coyle.\nWet socks make good fire-\nswatters, says the Ontario lands\nand forests department.\nNew Home Recipe\nReducing Plan\nIt's simple how quickly one\nmay lose pounds of unsightly fat\nright in your own home. Make\nthis home recipe yourself. It's\neasy, no trouble at all and costs\nlittle. Just go to your drug store\nsnd ask for four ounceB of Naran\nConcentrate. Pour this into a\npint bottle and add enough\ngrapefruit juice to fill the bottle.\nTake two tablespoons full a day\nas needed and follow the Naran\nPlan.\nIf your first purchase does not\n\u25a0how you a simple easy way to\nlose bulky fat and help regain\nslender more graceful curves; if\nreducible pounds and inches of\nexcess fat don't disappear from\nneck, chin, arms, abdomen, hips,\ncalves and ankles just return the\nempty bottle for your money\nback. Follow this easy way endorsed by many who have tried\nthis plan and help bring back\nalluring curves and graceful\nslenderness. Note how quickly\nbloat disappears\u2014how much better you feel. More alive, youthful\nappearing and active.\nCouple, Wed at Balfour,\nTo Reside at Vancouver\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JUNE 16, 1967\u20145\nSt. Michael's Church at Balfour was the scene of a pretty\nspring wedding when Rev. J. R.\nHearne conducted the marriage\nceremony uniting Leah Claire\nStainton and Craig William Gray.\nPink tulips and white narcissus\nfrom the gardens of the bride's\ngrandmothers graced the church\nand white bows and lily of the\nvalley marked the family pews.\nThe traditional wedding music\nwas played by Mrs. J. S. Walden\nand during the signing of the\nregister members of the Balfour\nChurch choir sang \"0 Perfect\nLove.\"\nThe bride's parents are Mr.\nand Mrs. L. C. Stainton of Balfour and the groom is the son\nof Mr. and Mrs. George Gray of\nWest Vancouver.\nThe bride, given in marriage\nby her father, was lovely in a\nfloor-length bouffant gown of\nchiffon over slipper satin. Lace\naand seed pearls enhanced the\nscoop neckline and front panel\nof the gown and a graceful train\nfell  from  a bow at the  back\nwaistline. Her four-tiered scalloped veil of silk illusion was\nheld by a dainty rose of lace and\nseed pearls. She carried a\ncascade bouquet of pink sweetheart roses. She wore a 70-year-\nold ring of her great aunt and\nthe groom's gift, a crystal star\npendant.\nThe bride's sister, Miss Kathy\nSlainton was maid of honor and\nMiss Dale Gray, sister of the\ngroom was bridesmaid. They\nwere attired in floor-length empire style gowns with rose pink\nskirts and white lace bodices\nenhanced with tiny pink appliques. A satin bow with pink\nnet and sequins comprised their\nheadpieces and they carried\ncolonial bouquets of pink and\nwhite carnations. They wore the\nbride's gifts of pearl drop necklaces.\nTiny three - year - old Cindy\nDavidson the bride's niece, as\ntrainbearer, was a miniature of\nthe senior attendants.\nMr. Tim Stiles supported the\ngroom and Mr. Stewart Cole and\nFATHER'S DAY SPECIALS\n*'&au\nFROM\nMen's Casual Slacks\nPicture Father in smart, cool casual slacks that never need ironing\nand always look neat. Treat for mother too. Q QC -i* Q|\u00bb\nBeinge, brown, sage, loden, bronze. Priced    f.wD to   I I .VD\nMen's\nTerylene\/Wool Dress Slacks\nAn ideol Father's Day Gift for smart, cool, summer wear. Assorted\nshades to match his wardrobe. \"j r\\ QQ\nFashion styling. Sizes 30-38. Special \\JL.7 7\nMen's Dress Straws\nShade Father from the sun with a trim straw hat. Casual\nstyles for fun in the sun. Dress\nstyles for business. Priced \t\n1,98 to 3.98\nMen's Sport Shirts\nFashionably  styled  sportshirts  for  Father  by\nCanada's foremost manufacturers. Sizes: Small,\nMedium, Large.\nSpecial Father's Day Price\t\n4.89\nMen's Short Sleeve\nSport Shirts\nSee our wide, wide selection of men's short\nsleeve shirts in knits, iac-style and fancy\npatterns. Cj       11   nr\nPriced  *t to   it.7J\nMotor Barbecue\nFor Your Patio\nIdeal Father's Day special. Have him cook all your meals\noutdoors with this all purpose barbecue and give i _r QQ\nhim item that he can enjoy at anytime      10*77\nElectric Carving Knife\nHelp your Father or Husband in the big carving task by giving him an Electric Carving\nKnife. Cord or cordless type. ^Q  QC        A A   QC\nFather's Day Special   i.7 a7j   to \"\u2122a\/J\nPortable Barbecue\n24\" Round Type Barbecue with folding legs. Ideal for outings, f QQ\nSpecial Father's Day Price    ' .Jr *'\nPhilishave Razor\nCord type. Speed Flex Phllipshave Razor with Trimmer. Will make ? Q Q \u25a0%\nIdeal Father's Day gift and any man happy  afc^r.j'P\nTimex Watch  for  Father's Day\nSurprise your Father or husband by giving him Special Gift ... 1 9  QC\nTimex Watch for Father's Day. Each     '*i\/3\nMen's Cosmetics\nWe have now on hand largest ever supplies in men's cosmetics. Ideal Father's Day gift\nitems. Afler Shave Lotion, Shaving Cream, Hair Cream, etc\nMr. Tim Stainton were ushers.\nThe reception hall was decorated wilh pink and white bells and\nstreamers and spring flowers for\nthe occasion. An heirloom lace\ncloth covered the bride's table\ncentered by the three-tiered\nwedding cake. Rose pink tapers\nin crystal holders and pink tulips\nand white narcissus in crystal\nvases completed the table decor\nA sky blue linen suit with lace\nshell was worn by the mother of\nthe bride. White accessories, and\na corsage of bronze talisman\nroses completed her outfit.\nThe groom's mother wore a\nbeige lace suit and pink and\nbeige accessories with a corsage\nof pink rosebuds.\nMr, Fred Stainton, the bride's\nuncle, was master of ceremonies.\nThe toast to the bride was proposed by Mr. Walter Butler of\nKaslo.\nTea and coffee were poured by\nthe bride's aunts, Mrs. F. W\nStainton, Mrs. W. E. Lane and\nMrs. W. Butler and the groom's\naunt, Mrs. W. Ellis.\nOut-of-town guests included Mr.\nand Mrs. W. Ellis and David\nand Mrs. Evans of West Vancouver; Mr. and Mrs. H. Stewart,\nVancouver; Mr. and Mrs. Fred\nStainton, Trevis and Corey of\nCalgary; Mr. and Mrs. A.\nSwedish of Kimberley; Mr. C. J.\nStainton, Trail and numerous\nfriends and relatives from dis-\ntrict points.\nA rose-pink double knit suit\nwith acecnts of lace was chosen\nhy the bride for travelling. White\naccessories and white carnation\n.'orsage completed her ensemble.\nFollowing a honeymoon trip to\n'reston the young couple are\nnaking their home at 1621 St.\nieorge's Avenue, North Vancouver.\nPioneer\nWomen\nHonored\nINVERMERE \u2014 The Pioneer\nTea, sponsored here for women\nwho have lived in the Windermere Valley for 50 years or\nmore, was held Saturday in the\nChristian Education Centre here.\nThe event was a centennial project of the Windermere District\nWomen's Institute.\nInvitations had been sent to\n15 pioneer women but only 15\nitlended. Guests were welcomed\nby the Institute president, Mrs.\n.1. E. McNaught who pinned a\n'Uy-of-the-valley corsage on each.\nThe tea table was centred with\n\u25a0ed and white flowers surround-\nig red and white centennial\nlogs, with Mrs. H. S. Northcott\n\u25a0nd Mrs. F. E. Coy presiding.\n\"Moneer guests were introduced\n'>y Mrs. T. N. Weir.\nf j  PRINTED PATTERN\nAt92      SIZES tO-18\nTHE GREAT SHIRT LOOK REVIVAL\nCool. Clear-cut. Conscious of its evolution from the shirt.\nThis is the way we'd like to see you go city-hopping or vacation-\ntripping this summer. A precise band curves the neckline of\nPrinted Pattern A792 by Alison and zooms down the front. It\nsuggests the small-bodied look that's so young and appealing\nnow. Trim pockets pull the eye past the waist for a leaner line.\nThe Original is in crisp, embroidered linen. Dacron knit is a\npretty, practical choice. White pique with brass buttons sounds\na nautical note.\nPrinted Pattern A792 is available in Misses' Sizes IO, 12.\n14, 16, 18. Size 14 requires 23,i yards 35-inch fabric.\nSend ONE DOLLAR for Printed Pattern A792 to N.D.N.\nPattern Dept., 60 Front St. West, Toronto. Ont. Please print\nplainly YOUR NAME, ADDRESS with STYLE NUMBER and\nSIZE.\nNEW 1967 COUTURE PATTERN BOOK - sensational\ndresses, gowns, costumes, suits, coats for Misses, Half Sizes\nfor world-renowned designers, many photo'd in finest fabrics.\nPlus 50c Free Coupon \u2014 apply to any $1 pattern in Book.\nSend 50c now!\nViirte frw\nwise\nAinsworth\nAINSWORTH - Mr. and Mrs.\nI. L. Brothers entertained at a\nncheon  in  honor  of two ex-\nailites,   Mr.   and   Mrs.   Ray\nonard, now of Vancouver, who\nere celebrating their wedding\nnnlversary. Among those pres-\nnt were Mr. and Mrs. A. E.\nMlison of Robson, Mr. and Mrs.\nQ, G. Cumming, Mr. and Mrs.\nS. E. Angus and Mr. and Mrs.\nR. E. Walton, all of Trail.\nBill Hansen and his son Guy,\nalso Howard Craig of Vancouver, visited at the home of Mr.\nand Mrs. Hans Hansen over the\nweekend.\nMrs. Jack Hale took her\nmother, Mrs. A. Houston of Nelson, to Kimberley last week to\ncelebrate Mrs. Houston's 82nd\nbirthday at the home of Mrs.\nHale's daughter, Mrs. Lois McDonald.\nMr. and Mrs. Dick Forman\nhave returned home after spending ten days at the coast.\nEngagement\nAnnouncement\nMr. and Mrs. E. Holloway,\nRossland. are pleased to announce the engagement of their\neldest daughter. Janet Margaret\nAnn, to Mervin Leslie Fryer,\nonly son of Mr. and Mrs. L. H.\nFryer of Trail. The wedding to\ntake place on July 15th at 4 p.m.\nin St. Andrew's United Church,\nRossland, Rev. W. Morrison officiating. \u2014140-140\nTinactin\nAttacks\nAthlete^\nFoot\n'F.6a.I.M..Sclierir.g Corporation Limited\nDEAR FOLKS!\nLet's take today off . . .\nNow I know you are sitting there drinking that cup\nof coffee and thinking, \"My\ngoodness, we've just got so\nmuch to do today.\" And so\nyou  have.\nBut . .\nWhy don't you get a big\nsmile on your face, let those\ncute wrinkles come up around\nyour eyes and think, \"Now I\nam enthused and so help me,\nHannah, I'm going to clean at\nleast one closet today.\"\nLet's do just that.\nThe way to do It Is to open\nthat ONE closet door, take\neverything out and throw it\non the bed. Do It before you\nthink about it too long. Once\nIt's on the bed, you gotta\nfinish. As you pick up each\ngarment ask yourself . . .\ndoes this need a button, has\nbeing cleaned, laundered, etc.\nTake anything that needs\nrepairing, especially hand-\nsewing and drop It beside\nyour favorite chair. Leave it\nthere. Then while you are\nwatching television some\nnight get THAT mending\ndone!\nIt takes little effort to do\nIt when you are at ease sitting In your favorite chair.\nEffort Is when you make\nyourself take off a whole\nmorning to do the mending.\nWhy not do it while your\nhusband is there watching\nyou ? He'll think you're a\ngreater housewife.  (Ha!)\nNow for the other stuff:\nDon't ever put dirty clothes\nback in your closet. Remember that perspiration, body\noils and soil will deteriorate\nmost clothing. Especially if It\nhangs for months . . . which\nIt sometimes does. So, anything that hns been worn\nonce or twice, put on the rod\nIn the MIDDLE of your closet.\nThis way, when you really\nneed something to wear, but\ndon't want to wear anything\nreal nice, you will know tho\nclothes in the middle can be\nworn one more time before\nbeing cleaned, laundered, etc..\nAnd here's something else\nyou're gonna find along that\nrod In your closet . . . umpteen extra coat hangers! If\nyou get rid of those alone\nyou will have a great deal\nmore closet space.\nClothes should not be\ncrowded in a closet. You can\nbring something right back\n(tO 1967. Kius Featui'\n\\\nfrom the cleaners, hang it up\nln a jammed closet and lt\nwill get wrinkles.\nSo let's get up and clean\nONE closet. Don't try to do\ntwo closets In one day. This\nwill tire you out and make It\na chore. Chores are what we\ndo not like and can live without, eh?\nYou'll be so proud after\nhaving one closet thoroughly\ncleaned, that you'll want to\nkeep It this way!\nNever clean a closet without discarding your un wearables. There are lots of charity associations that will pick\nup your garments if you dial\ntheir telephone number . . .\nthe Salvation Army, Goodwill,\nyour church, etc. Most shopping centers have large metal\nboxes to leave things In for\ncharity.\nAnd remember this, If you\nhave not worn It within one\nyear you probably won't\nEVER.\nClutter Is confusion.\nGive it away or sell It, but\njust get rid of It.\nOh, how nice it Is to have\nclean closets. So put down\nthat paper now. Yank the\nstuff out of your favorite\ncloset and pile it on the bed.\nThen finish your cup of coffee and let's go start that\njob  this minute.\nHelolse\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nDEAR HELOISE:\nI cut down on washing pans\nwhen preparing baked apples\nby baking them in small foil\npans that frozen pies come in.\nThe apples bake evenly and\ncan be served right in the foil\npan.\nA Reader\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nLETTER OF LAUGHTER\nDEAR  HELOISE:\nMy    teen-agers'    bedrooms\nlook   like   the   martians   had\narrived, lived, and left . . .\nMama\n\u2022 \u2022   \u00bb\nKnow exactly what you\nmean . ..\nHelolse\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nDEAR HELOISE:\nI have the cleverest \"baby\ntender.\" It's a laundry cart\nwith pillows.\nWhen my four-month-old\ngrandchild visits I prop him\nUp with pillows and wheel\nhim around where I'm working. He loves it! And I get\nto love him.\nGrandmother of 11\nea Syndicate, iac.i .   ,\n\"\".gay\nST0REWIDE CLEARANCE\nContinues With These and Other\nOutstanding Items Today and Sat.\n20%    Off Moffat- 30\" Range\nOne only. Recessed top, 9 position infinite heat\nswitches and surface elements, automatic\noven and clock control, timed outlet, removable oven door, large storage jljQ\ndrawer. Was 299.50. Now \"*m\\ 3 7\n20%    Off R.C.A. Whirlpool Auto. Washer\n2 only. An outstanding sale of Whirlpool\nwashers and dryers. Washer has three cycle\naction, super soak, normal and gentle\nWashes up to 12 Ibs. of wash. Many othe<\nfine features.\nWasher: $?QC\nWas $379. Now _.\u201e  **\u2022 7 7\nMatching Dryer: CI f C\nWas $219. Now     * I I J\n25%    Off G.E. Dishwasher\n2 only demonstrator models, slightly marked.\nOne was $299. C f f Q\nNow    * \u00ab<\u25a0 I 7\nOne was $349. $2^Q\n20%    Off G.E. Dryer\nOne only. Deluxe hi-speed electric dryer with\nlarge 14 lb. capacity, automatic dry control.\nPerma press\/wash 'n' wear cycle \u2014 plus all\nthe other fine G.E. features. Si QO\nWas $259. Now   * I 77\n20%    Off G.E. 19\" Portable\nOne only. Wood grain finish portable T.V.\nwith easy carrying handle. S1 3 Q\nWas $199. Now   \u25bc I 3 >\n30%    Off 19\" Fleetwood Portable\nOne only. Beige color portable T.V. set, side\nmounted controls. An ideal second set for\nbedroom or den. Si 1 Q\nWas $169. Now    \u25bc I I O\n20%    Off G.E. Porto-Color T.V.\n11-inch color portable T.V. with front mounted\nspeaker and controls. Built in color purifier\npermits moving as often as you C j Q Q\nlike. 3 only. Were $399. Now   **''\n20%    Off Sklar Occasional Chairs\nFive only decorator chairs in fashion designs.\nHigh backs or swivel rockers in the group.\nWere $169 to $179. $1?Q\nNow       \"*tm\\7\n25%    Off 2-Pc. Tynan Chesterfield\nOne only. Gold nylon covers in modern design. Outstanding value and S34.Q\nconstruction. Was $479. Now      **'\n25%    Off 2-Pc. California Chesterfield\nOne only. Three cushion style, wide seat, low\nloose cushion back. A real winner in durable\nloose weave upholstery. Tan shade. J\") \/tq\nWas $369. Now     **V)'\n20%    Off 2-Pc. Modern Chesterfield\nOne only. Blue\/green cover in attractive\nmodern design. C f (L _\\\nWas $329. Now  *at02\n20%    Off 2-Pc. California Chesterfield\nLoose cushion style in modern Californi.\ndesign. One only, green. $1 QT\nWas $249. Now    \"*17 I\n2-Pc. Colonial Chesterfield\nSemi-detached pillow button back. Sem;\ndetached pillow arms on chesterfield, ful!\nbutton skirt. One only. Charcoal\/ J _\\ Q ft\nbrown shade. Was $450. Now ...       *3 05'\n2-Pc. Modern Chesterfield\nSemi-detached cushion back, four seater style\nwith walnut wood show on the arms, durable,\nattractive upholstery in multi $317\ncolor. Was $369. Now     *3 I \/\n20%    Off Reel Lawn Mower\n4-cycle 2 H.P. Briggs & Slratton operated\nself-propelled reel-type lawn mower. The\nbest kind of cutting action for lawn care. No\npushing or pulling or hard work with this\neasy to operate mower. QQ  Cfi\nWere 109.50. Now 07..f\\J\n20% Off 3 h.p. Johnson Outboard Motor\n1966 new model 3 H.P. Johnson motor. Ideal\ntrolling or emergency motor. Right size for\nsmall car top boat motor. tiro\nWere $198. Now   * ' J O\n20%    Off Air Beds\nRubberized cotton air mattresses, Deflated\nsize 76\" x 31\". Quality airmatress with \"1\"\nbeam construction. ff  QQ\nWere 8.98. Now .   W.77\n50%    Off Water Ski Belts\nAssortment of water ski bells for adults and\nchildren. Bolh canvas and polyfoam type\nto choose from. 1   J ft\nWere 2.78 each. Now, ea    I \u2022 \u2022\u00bb 7\n20%    Off Tent\n9 x 12 ropeless cabin tent. Complete with\nmetal poles. Large size windows and $QC\nheavy duly floor. Were 119.50. Now   \"*7mt\n33}% Off 9x12 Tent\nTourist umbrella. Tent size 9 x 12 with large\nsize windows and heavy-duty duck floor.\nComplete with mclal poles. S'n'n\nWere 79.50. Now      \"*J mt\n20%    Off Mixmoster\nTurquoise mixmaster complete with 2 bowls\nand stand. Af  QC\nWere 59.95. Now .    .tl.7j\n33]%  Off Water Ski Tow Rope\nAssortment of weight and length in water sk:\ntow ropes. Were 2.98 1 QQ 3 JC\nto 4.98. Now . I.J'Oto   JiJC\n20%    OH China Sets\nAssorted patterns and styles of china dinne\nsets.\n20-pcc. Starter Set: 1 |   AQ\nWere 14.98. Now            ' ' .t7\n52-pce. Dinner Set: 30  00\nWere 39.95. Now       \"tVi\/J\n57-pce. Dinner Set: JQ  qq\nWere 49.95. Now         3 0.73\n331%  Off Kitchen Ware\nAssortment of Dish Drainers, Drainer Trays\nSink Mais, Bathtub Mais, Stove Mais, Tiss'u\nDispensers, etc. Buy now and save at these\nlow, low prices. Were   QQr        3   QC\n1.49 to 5.95. Now \"\u2122 to   3.\/J\n331% Off Serving Troys\nCrystal-like  plastic serving trays  in clear.\nTwo sizes.\nSize 10 x 13\". QQC\nWere 1.50. Now  _    7**\nSize 12x19\". 1   QQ\nWere 2.98  Now       I.J'3'\n50%    Off Softball Bats\nLimited quantity of Official Softball bats.\nAn ideal gift item. QQC\nWere 1.98. Now        >>t1'\n50%    Off Coffee Mugs\nLarge size plain color coffee mug with\nheavy duty handles. | A(_\\\nWere 29c. Now. each '\n 6\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JUNE 16, 1967\nARTHUR EIDE'S STAY IN SIBERIA OF SHORT DURATION\n :      .\u25a0:..:.:v.:..!..SH.^W^^''':..>';-.-\u2014:..^.^:.-\".:.^:\nIn commercial and industrial tirms, institutions and governments, professional accountants hold responsible executive positions. Conversant with\ntax and financial problems, budgeting and accounting, they have skills lhal\nare essential lo the proper management ol every lype ot enlerprise.\nThe Certilied General Accountants' Association ol British Columbia,\nthrough ils affiliation with Ihe Universily of British Columbia, oilers young\nmen and women an opportunity to become professional accountants and\nfinancial executives.\nII you have completed Grade 12 in B.C. or the equivalent elsewhere, you\ncan enrol in a five-year course ol study leading to certification as a Certified\nGeneral Accountant (C.G.A.I. This course may be completed either al\nevening lectures or by correspondence while you remain permanently\nemployed and earn a regular income.\nApplications tor enrollment lor the 1967-68 term will be accepted by\nIhe Registrar up lo Septembc 8,1967.\nFor further inlormalion, prospectus and illustrated brochure, contact:\nCERTIFIED GENERAL ACCOUNTANTS'\nASSOCIATION OF BRITISH COLUMBIA\n470 Granville St., Vancouver 2\n1207 Douglas St., Victoria\nPhone 681-0531\nPhone 386-3408\nGive your family the home they deserve\nPride of ownership. Family happiness. Long-term financial benefits. Whichever way you look at\nit, owning your own home is the\nbest investment you can make.\nEspecially today.\nYou have only\nto look at, a component-built West-\nwood home to see how far homes\nhave come . . . kitchen cabinets\nlike fine furniture; beautifully\npanelled fireplace walls; hardwood floors and floor-to-ceiling\nclosets. But these are only the\nmore evident aspects. Unseen\nbut equally important are rigid,\nsqueak-resistant floors; strong\nplywood-sheathed walls and roof\ndecks; precision-made doors and\nwindows, and roofs of exceptional load-bearing strength.\nrWestwood homes\nare built by\nfactory pre-\n'assembled components, instead of old-fashioned\ncut-and-fit methods. Efficient,\nmove up to a WeStWOOd\nHome\nWESTWOOD HOMES LIMITED ... FORMERLY DUECK HOMES\neconomical and time-saving,\nthey bring home ownership well\nwithin the reach of the average\nfamily. It will\npay you to in-\nI vestigate this\nbetter way of\nbuilding. Phone or write:\nFred   Denver\n615  Hoover St. Nelson\nPhone 352-7661\nWestwood   Representative\nSend for a Plan Book today...\nWESTWOOD HOMES LIMITED\nP.O. BOX 97, ADBOT8F0RD, B.C.\n\u25a1 Enclosed 50^ for Book of Homes.\nQ Please hHve representative call.\nADDRESS...\nPHONE    an-.\nEIDE ENROUTE TO SIBERIA\nSecond of Two\nRusscvjap Fighting\nSees Twenty Seven Die\nnothing is too\nThe first day out of Nome\nEide said was spent in target\npractice. \"We started shooting\nat empty cans,\" he said. \"We\nwere going to he ready for any.\nemergency when we got to Anadyr.\"\nHe continued. \"Our first slop\nwas at Walen, where we noticed\nred survey flags all over the\ncoast. We took on a few Russians and their dog teams.\"\nTlie journey continued and the\nship finally arrived at its destination, Anadyr. \"As we came\nnear to the harbor,\" Eide said,\n'a Japanese gunboat came in\nsight. When they saw we were\n[lying Ihe English ensign we\nwere given the go ahead and\nentered the harbor.\"\n\"There was only one other\nship in Ihe harbor, a Japanese\nvessel. On the east shore was a\nfish cannery in full operation.\nand on the other side was a\nRussian cannery, idle.\"\n\"The village of Anadyr was\nstretched out along the sand-\nspit, its buildings weathered and\n'inpainted. On a hill overlooking\nhe village was the governor's\nmansion and two high radio\n'owers.\"\nEide said that Baychino discharged ils passengers, and tiic\nHudson's Bay Company manager went ashore. \"We were told\n'o stay on board, and we spent\nour time talking about the trip\nover from Nome.\"\nHe said, \"The captain of the\nBaychino was an Englishman\nand refused to eat at the table\nwith Americans. The crew was\nnade up nf men from Vancouver, and raised cain with the\ncap'.ain. From that time on we\nall sat together at mealtimes.\"\nEide and his companions wee\nconfined to Ihe ship for eight\ndays. \"Several schooners arrived bringing freight. We learned\nthat there was another Hudson's\nBay Company boat, the Lady\nKindersley, operating in the Hir-\nscl Island district, and later in\n1022 both of these vessels were\nlost.\nAfler our eight-day sojourn\nj aboard the Baychino. one mnrn-\nuu a boat pulled out from shore\naod a man came up the Jacob's i\nladder. Seeing me he exclaimed\n\"Why, Mr. Eide, are you here?\"\nThe new arrival was Alexan-!\nder Karrioff. brother of the gov- j\nernor of Siberia, whom Eide!\nhad met in Nome some years\nearlier when the two brothers\nwere trading in Siberia.\n\"He   informed   me   that   his,\nbrother was now the governor.\nHe also (old me why Americans\nwere not wanted in the country,!\nsaying   \"The   Americans   comej\nand take what they make along\nwilh them when Ihey leave. Ifj\nthey will stay here and develop j\nthe country we will give them\nthe right to work and live here,\nbut now with the Japanese and\nthe Hudson's Bay Company we\nfeel we have a better deal than\nwe had wilh the Americans.\"  |\nPTide said he asked for permis-'\nsion to go ashore and meet Kar- j\nrinff's hrother. This was arranged and Eirle met the governor |\nand council, who were interrogating a native, and the atmos-'\nphere was hostile.\n\"f learned that there had been\ntrouble al one of the Hudson's\nBay stores during the winter,\"\nEide continued. \"A company of\n40 Japanese surveyors had come j\noverland from the Coiyma River\nmissing Anadyr, and landing at\na station further lo the south run\nby eight Russians.\n\"The Japanese wanted sup-1\nplies anrl wanted to pay for them '\nwilh a check drawn on the Bank\nof Japan. The Russians refused\nto accept it, someone pulled a\ngun and fired wilh the result\nthai in the bntlle lhal followed\nID Japanese were killed before\nthe eighl  Russians died.\n\"The surviving Japs took what\nthey wanted and Ihen destroyed\nthe post \"\nEide said he learned also that\nthe While Guards were active\nand every now and then would\nraid the various villages on the\ncoast.\n\"Karrioff advised me to return home. What I had seen and\nheard made me more than willing to do so, and so on Aug. 4,\n1922. I was relieved of employ.\nment   with   the  Hudson's   Bay\nCompany Siberian fur trade.\"\nEide returned to Nome and\nlearned a few days later lhat\nSoviet officials had caused the\narrest of three Alaskans. The\nmotorship Nome was seized and\nits cargo confiscated.\nIn 1927 Eide learned more of\nthe Hudson's Bay Company's Siberian fur venture when he ran\ninto one of his companions who\nhad remained behind in Anadyr.\n\"He received $39,000 worth of\ntrade goods, and was taken to a\nvillage south of Anadyr. Here\nwas a company of 200 soldiers.\nHe received permission to build\na store, but when it was finished\nhe was fined for having one window too many in the building.\n\"He was asked one day by\nthe captain lo lake a picture of\nthe company of soldiers. He was\nwilling lo do anything to gain\nthe goodwill of Ihe residents and\nso agreed. When it was developed he was fined for each person\nin the picture.\nThis treatment continued for\nthe duration of his stay in the\nvillage. One day a company of\nthe White Guard arrived, took\nhim prisoner anrl marched him\nto a wall where he was made to\nstand all day while the White\nGuards killed men, women and\nchildren of the village.\"\nEide said his friend counted\nabout 300 dead. \"This was the\nfinish for him. He obtained passage to Petropovlis, and then\ndown to Chang Tung from where\nhe sailed to the United States.\n\"This also marked the end of\nIhe Hudson's Bay Siberian fur\ntrade. Exactly when the company pulled oul is nol known but\nI know Ihey losl millions of dollars In Ihe venture.\"\nEide said his efforts to obtain\nmore detailed information from\nthe company had gotten nowhere. Most company officials\nlhat he contacted were even unaware lhal there had been a\nSiberian fur trade venture by\nthe company. \"I do know.\" Eide\nConcluded, \"the! the Russians\nlook over everything there in\n1928.\"\nor too small\nto be sold in a\nwant ad\nThe capabilities of Want Ads are\nalmost limitless. You can buy (or\nsell) big things like houses or 10-ton\ntrucks or even mountains, if you\nwish. And, just as easily, you'll find\nbuyers for more modest sized items\nlike jeweleryor roller skates or baby\nbuggies. One thing that isn't big is\nthe cost of a Nelson Daily News\nWant Advertisement.\nD!AL 359 3552\nIF  YOU  HAVE SOMETHING  TO SELL\nNrismt ftuly Nmm<\n Ml\n\u25a0\u25a0\nmmm\nLong Time Coming for Brewer\nBy THE ASSOCIATED  PRESS\nHarmon   Killebrew   slammed\nWARSAW (AP)-A cache ol\nRoman silver coins, some bearing portraits of Emperors Trajan, Hadrian and Marcus Au-\nrelius, has been found by a\nschoolboy in a village near\nWarsaw, the Polish press\nagency reports. The boy found\nthe coins while digging in a\nmolehill and divided them\namong his friends. Afler an appeal from teachers in the village 638 coins were turned in.\nhis 17th homer wilh a man on in\nthe seventh inning, igniting a\nfour-run rally thai carried Minnesota from behind to a 6-4 victory over Detroit Thursday.\nKillebrew's blow erased a 3-2\nTiger lead and came off loser\nFred Gladding, who replaced\nJoe Sparma afler Rod Carew\nsingled. The defeat kept the second place Tigers from advancing in lhe American League.\nIn the only National League\nday game, Jim Brewer doubled\nhome a run with his firsl hit in\nthree years and first extra-base\nhit of his major league career\nand then helped pitch Los Angeles Dodgers lo a 5-0 victory\nover Chicago Cubs.\nBrewer's hit came in Ihe\nfourth inning and the Dodgers\nadded four unearned runs, three\nof them on homers by Wes\nParker and Ron Hunt, in the\nseventh off Ferguson Jenkins.\nBrewer   pitched   five  innings\nbefore an elbow injury shelved\nhim and Don Sutton blanked the\nCubs the rest of the way,\nBEAT 6-RUN DEFICIT\nKansas City came from five\nruns back and beat Baltimore\n6-5 in 11 innings. John Donaldson tripled in the llth and\nscored the winning run on Reggie Jackson's single.\nMickey   Mantle's   homer\nbacked up Mel Stoltlemyre's\nshutout pitching as the New\nYork Yankees blanked Washington 2-0. Mantle's double also\nled to the other Yankee run.\nAces, Nelson Split Games\nGRAND FORKS \u2014 In exhibition Softball pla\/ over the weekend, a Nelson tiam played the\nGrand Forks Sawmill Aces. The\ntwo teams played a doubleheader, the first game going to the\nNelson squad and the second\ngame to the Aces.\nBoth games were exceptionally well played. The first game\njaw the Nelson team take the\nlead late In the fifth inning on a\nlong triple by Phil Markoff. Up\nto that inning the Sawmill learn\nheld the Nelson team to a scoreless game. The final score re\nsulted wilh the Nelson squad\nwinning 6-3. The winning pitcher\nwas J. Markin, the losing pitcher Alex Verigin.\nThe second game of lhe double\nheader proved to be more enduring. This time the Nelson squad\ncould not seem to get their bat\non the ball. The winning pitcher,\nJim Semenoff, gave up only four\nhits as the Sawmill team came\nup with a close win by the score\nof 3-1. The losing pitcher was K.\nMurrey, who pitched   a   good\nthe only olher night action\nscheduled. The Phillies won the\nopener 4-1 and the Pirates took\nthe second game 5-2.\nAll  the  other  clubs  had  an\nopen dale.\nBy THE  ASSOCIATED PRESS\nAmerican League\nW  L   Pet. GBL\nChicago\nDetroit\nMinnesota\nBoston\nBaltimore\nKansas Cily\nCleveland\nNew York\nCalifornia\nWashington\nNational\nJIM BREWER\nJim Wynn hil three homers to\npace Houston over San Francisco 6-2 and Tony Conigliaro's\ntwo-run homer in the llth inning I\ngave Boston a 2-1 victory over,\nthe Chicago While Sox.\nPittsburgh and Philadelphia\nsplit a twi-night doubleheader In I\n33 23 .589 \u2014\n32 25 .561 IVi\n30 28 .517 4\n30 28 .517 4\n28 28 .500 5\n29 31 .4R3 6\n28  30 .483 8\n28   39 .483 6\n28  33 .459 t\\,\n25  35 .417 10\nLeague\nW  L Pet. GBL\n39 23 .629 \u2014\n34 21 .618 IVi\nCincinnati\nSt. Louis\nSan  Francisco  32 26  .552\nPittsburgh 39 26 .536\nMIMIIMIIIIIMIIIIMIMIIIMIMIIMIIMIMIIIMIIIMIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIItllllllllli\nPenticton Won't Come\nTRAIL \u2014 Penticton of the Okanagan Mainline\nBaseball League will not be appearing in Trail this\nweekend.\nThe Penticton club phoned Lou DeRosa in Trail\nThursday night and stated they would be unable to\nmake the trip because several of the players are\ntied up with exams.\nHowever, they are expected to return the visit\nTrail paid them last weekend, later In Ihe season.\niilliiillliilillliiiiilliillllllllllllllllllllllillllillllllllllllllilllilililllillilli\nBeavers Topple\nSmoke Eaters\nOn Two Errors\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JUNE 16, 1967\u20147\nChicago\nAtlanta\nPhiladelphia\nHouston\nLos Angeles\nNew York\n29 26 .527 6'*\n29 28 .509 TVS\n27 30  .474\n9Vi\n24 36 .400 14\n23 35 .397 14\n19  35  .352  16\nIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMMIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIMMIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIMMMIIMIIIII\nGRAHAM LEADS NELSON\nHOTEL TO 4-2 WIN\nNelson Hotel combined Ihe two-hit pitching of\nTom Graham with two runs in the seventh inning to\ndefeat Markin Equipment 4-2 Wednesday night in\nNelson Senior Men's Fastball League action.\nGraham gave up only three hits and two walks\nas he went all the way while Jack Markin took the\nloss, giving up seven hits.\nBuck Crawford, Graham and Bud Horkoff shared\nsix of the hils between them including Graham's\nclutch double in the seventh to drive in the two winning runs.\nWhile Brian Russill came up with a brilliant running catch in centre field earlier in the game, the\nNelson Hotel club displayed its defensive skill in the\nfinal inning, ending Ihe game with a doubleplay,\n|gam\u00ab\"aUowingronTy7lve\"hit8.\"\"\" \" \"\" innMiiiiiimiiiiiiitiii nil i nilllllll n\nDravo Rally  Falls Short,\nNelson Queens Win 10-9\nDravo pushed across five runs\nin Ihe seventh inning bul fell one\nshorl of Nelson Queens Thursday\nnight, dropping a 10-9 decision in\nKoolenay Ladies' Softball League play.\nKnnkin's in Ihe sixth inning\ndrove in two runs and was the\nmargin of victory. Thast hit hers\nin the third inning, a solo blast\ndown Ihe third-base line.\nQueens scored two runs in the\nAnne   Konkin   was   cruising fjrst in\u201eing> three In the third.\nalong with  a five-hitter and a  tw0 jn ,|,e fmh and tnree in the\n10-4 score for the Queens before  sixlh w)]i|e nrav0 scored two in\ntlie first, one in the fourth, one\n! in the sixlh and five in the seventh.\nErrors broke up a tight pitching duel between Denny Larsen\nand Dennis Zinio and gave Fruitvale Beavers a 1-0 victory over\nTrail Smoke Eaters Thursday\nnight.\nThe loss was the second\nstraight for Trail, the first victory of Ihe season for Fruitvale, ,  ,\nand dropped the Smoke Eaters fas\u2122',l\"ok f ^l\u2122\"\",7 a.s\n1 he hurled a  four-hitter, struck\nout   three and did not walk a\nDubasov to race home with the\nonly run of the game.\nZinio gave up only two hils in\nlosing the game, his first loss of\ntlie season, struck out nine and\ndid not issue a walk.\nLarsen, displaying   the   pin\ninto a first place tie with Rossland Capilanos. Both Trail and\nRossland have four wins and\ntwo losses while Fruitvale has\none win, five losses.\nThe game was scoreless until\nerrors gave Dravo their best opportunity of the night.\nF.laine   Stoochnnll led off Ihe\ninning with a single, her only hit\nof the game and Iwo consecutive\nerrors loaded the   bases.    Jill\nJohnson slammed   her   second\nstraight triple of the game, driving in three runs and she raced\nhome on Hazel Maloff's single.\nA  walk  and  two  ground  ouls\nsent Malofl home   and   moved\nPoulsen to third with the tying\nrun. But Konkin knocked down\nStoochnoff's hil and retired the\nside.\nCastlegar   travel   to   Dravo\nMonday night and Nelson is at I first game 10-2 behind the pitch\npoint conlrol he has shown all j Trail next Tuesday in the next inf of Jazz Rosa, who also led\nleague action. the team in hitting with two for\nHOME RUNS three, one being a double.\nTHE DIFFERENCE ]    Paterson   had   two for four,\nman. I    Home runs made the differ-, both doubles, while Rick Brown\nWayne Kew was the leading; ence for Ihe Queens as Konkin |la(j two for four, bolh siogles.\nOnly one Dravo batter \u2014 Jill\nJohnson \u2014 managed more than\none hit off Konkin. Johnson hit\ntwo triples in the sixth and seventh innings, going two for four\nat the plate.\nKonkin was the leading hitter\nfor the Queens collecting three\nhits, a homer, triple and single,\nin four trips lo the plate. An error put her on base the fourth\ntime.\nThast had a double to go with\nher homer in four times at b. t\nwhile first-baseman Helen Postnikoff had two hits in three trips\nlo Ihe plate.\nBoth clubs were missing players with Donna Rotter, Cheryl\nKnowler and Rose Smith absent\nfrom the Queens line-up.\nCASTLEGAR - Casllegar Ju-     One statistic the visitors did\nnlors split a pair of ball games; t0P tne Queens in was errors,\nwilh Trail Sunday at Kinnaird, Dravo committed only two, bolh\nPark. Trail beat Castlegar in the ; \"> the third inning, while  Ihe\nNelson club was guilty of seven,\nthree in the seventh inning.\nBelty Price pitched for Dravo,\ngiving up 10 hils, one walk and\nstriking out seven. Konkin gave\nCastlegar\nSplits With\nTrail News\nup eight hits in all, three walks\nand recorded four strke-outs.\nhitler with two singles and a | and Sue Thast bolh connected\nsacrifice in three times at bat I for round-trippers.\nthe sixth inning when Brian Du-1 'er Trail.\nbasov reached first on an error !    Trail threatened in the sixth\nlo shortstop Howie Brost. Lar-. inning when Bros! led off with\nsen's sacrifice bunt moved him   a single, Kew sacrificed him to |\nlo second. After Cull had flied i second and Smoke Eaters had a\nlo left, Bob Cox grounded to sec- \\ man in scoring positioo. But Lar-\nond.  But second baseman Roy j sen got Keith Healey to ground |\u00bb lf*L\nChrislianson bobbled Ihe boll and oul and Al Richards to line out   | O    VailQnC^e\nthen  overthrew  first,  allowing' tn short-to kill the Trail hopes.\nGirls Ball\n| League\nAmateur Shocks\nPros in Ooen\nE^gzEnmo\n3u\nBy WILL GRIMSLEY\nSPRINGFIELD, N.J. (API-\nMarty Fleckman, shy young\namateur from Porl Arthur,\nTex., unperturbed by his first\nU.S. Open, fired a poised three-\nunder-par 67 Thursday and left\nthe world's golfing giants gulping the opening round of the na-j\ntional golf championship, Interrupted late In the day by a tor-\nrential rainstorm.\nThe game's great and near-\ngreat charged after the 23-year-\nold U.S. .Walker Cup alternate\nand seven of them, including:\ndefending champion Billy Cas-1\nper and heavily favored Arnold\nPalmer, were bunched two\nshots back at 69.\nIn the list also were South\nAfrican Gary Player, winner of\nthe title two years ago; Art\nWall Jr,, fully recovered from\narthritic miseries; Juan (Chi\nChil Rodriguez, long hitting\nPuerto Rican; Don January,\nand former two-time amateur\nI champion, Deane Beman of\ni Bethesda, Md., two-time U.S.\namaleur champ who has been\na pro for two months.\nThey were the only players\nunder par after close to 12\nhours of wrangling with the\nmassive, 7,015-yard par-70 Bal-\ntusrol course.\nAl Balding of Toronto, who\nbacked into the championship\nafler failing to qualify, shot a\n38-37\u201475. He took the place of\na player who had to drop out\nfor personal reasons.\nFIVE TIED\nFive players were tied at\neven-par 70, including former\nBritish Open champion Kel Na-\nI gle of Australia and Dave\nMarr, 1955 Professional Golfers\nAssocialion champion hobbling\non a torn cartilege knee.\nAlso al par were Dutch Harrison, at 57 the oldest competitor in the tournament; Gardner\nDickinson and towering George\nArcher.\ni The downpour slruck t h e\ncourse just afler Jack Nicklaus\nfinished wilh a 71.\nAt that time, five groups were\nstill on the course, including the\nfabulous Ben Hogan, who was\none over par with two holes to\nplay.\nPlay was suspended temporarily.\nHogan was at the )7lh green,\none over par, when the downpour hit, accompanied by thunder and lighlning.\nHogan, winner of four opens,\nhad just finished Ihe 623-yard\n17th when the storm struck.\nAfter a 31-minute delay, he\ncompleted his round, finishing\nin a steady rain with a one-\nover-par 6 for a 72.\nRig Jack Nicklaus, who shook\nadvance   odds   with   an   eight-\nRosa slruck out 10 and walked\nfour.\nFor Castlegar Gene Shutek\nand Dennis Chernenkoff each\nhad one for two with Chernenkoff getting a double. Larry\nPopoff was losing pitcher striking out five and walking three.\nBill Carlson relieved Popoff in\nFaloney to\nB.C. Lions?\nMONTREAL (CP)-Kay Dalton, new coach of Montreal Al-\nthe sixth inning and struck out ] ouettes, said Thursday veteran\none and walked two. Rick Full- '\u25a0 quarterback Bernie Faloney\nGirls play-for-fun league In erton relieved Carlson in the has agreed to join British Co-\nNelson is about to undergo an- seventh and walked two. ; lumbia Lions if a trade can be\nother change. | The second game was a shut- arranged.\nRenice Townsend,  in  charge' out for Gene Shutek when Cas-1   Speaking in an interview, Dal-\nof the league, said the games for\nSaturday will remain the same,\nBlackfeet versus Sioux and Iroquois vs Shuswap.\nBut the previous games in the\nschedule   have   indicated that\nunder-par 62 in his final tune-up\nWednesday, cooled somewhat,\nsettling for a 71.\nFleckman unleashed a string\nof three birdies, starling at the\nsecond where he ran in a 20-foot bringing ahout tighter competi\nputt. i tion and thereby more fun for all\nHe went over par three limes.' concerned .\ntlegar beat Tral    1-0.    Shulek Ion did not elaborate but said\nstruck out 16 batters and walk- trade probably won't be made\ned only one. He also won his own \\ if it doesn't develop in the next\ngame by hitting a double send-! day or two.\ning Don Stoochnoff home, who!   He   said  Dave  Skrien,   Lion\nhad singled for the only run of ] coach,  may think that  \"we're\nsome teams are much stronger j the game. : trying  to unload  Faloney,  but\nthan others, making it necessary i    Chris Buccini was Ihe losing we aren't. If we can't get what\nto reorganize the teams.   This pitcher striking out six and walk-1 we   want,   there  won't   be   a\nmove will be taken this week- ing one. Neil Sanders got a triple ! trade.\"\nend    to    equalize   the  league, to lead (he Trail halters. '    After Joe Kapp, Lions' quar-\nCastlegar's next home game lerback until this season, was\nwill be on July 2 when Cran- j suspended, Skrien had called\nbrook visits here. him  asking ahout Faloney.\nJUNE ')\n18\nrATHfC\nmy\nIA great day to discover how little long distance costs\nTOKYO (AP) - Yoshiaki\nN ii m a la, young Japanese\ncontender, wrested the world\njunior lightweight boxing title\nfrom Flash Elorde, veteran Filipino, ln a 15-round bout Thursday  night.\nThe referee ruled it a draw\nbut both judges voted for Nu-\nmala. who look Ihe Orient lighl-\nweighl lille from Elorde a year\nago in an upset.\nOn this special day the voices of loved ones, perhaps from hundreds\nof miles away, have a special place in our hearts. Memories are\nsharpened, experiences recaptured. It is a day when togetherness\nmeans so much and-as always with B.C. TEL-costs so little.\n\u25a0i   *w i\ni \u2022 . . \u25a0MmJT-s v\nl\u00bbm \u25a0\nenjoy \"Ihe next best thing to being there.\" Here, for example\nare a few current charges:\nVANCOUVER-PRINCE GEORGE $1,35\nNEW WESTMINSTER-CALGARY $1,50\nVICTORIA-TORONTO $1.95\n(Evening, station-to-station calls, first 3 minutes)\nOn this important day of the year there's more reason than\never to use Long Distance for all it's worthl\nNow a student son or daughler away at college can afford a\nlong distance call homo (especially if they call \"collect\"!).\nLong distance rates are among the very few items of personal\nexpenditures which, over the years, have lagged far behind\nthe general rise in other living costs. In fact, many long distance\ncalls actually cost less in dollars and cenls today than 10 years\nago. Moreover, after 6 pm and all day Sunday they are cheaper\nby about one-fifth.\nCheck tbe rates yourself in your telephone book or dial \"O\"\nand ask the operator. You'll be surprised how little it costs to\nlOIB-a REV. 7-HLD\nB.c.m&\nBRITISH COLUMBIA TELEPHONE COMPANY\nWORLDWIDE TELEPHONE CONNECTIONS  \u25a0  INTERNATIONAL TWX AND TELETYPE SERVICE  \u25a0  RADIOTELEPHONES  \u25a0  CLOSED CIRCUIT TV \u2022   INTERCOM AND PAGING\n8VSTEMS \u25a0 ELECTROWRITERS \u2022 DATAPHONES * ANSWERING AND ALAflM UNITS \u2022 OVER 300 OTHER COMMUNICATION AIDS FOR MODERN HOMES AND BUSINESS\n '\nFinal\nin 9\u00a9nes\nof Th\nre\u00a9\n8\u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JUNE 16, 1967\nModern Game Missing Big Forward Lines\nBy W. R. WHEATLEY\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nWhen  hockey  old  -  timers\ngather, the talk often focuses\non  two developments  in  the\nmodem game\u2014the rapidity of\nsubstitutions and Ihe disappearance of the big forward\nlines.\ncurrent   !io!l-foi-leather,   fire- I relief man came scuttling on\nwagon hockey. lo Ihe ice  after a couple of\nBut the hard - bitten old-    minutes of play.\nUndoubtedly there has been     timer, thriving nn endurance.\nAs   for   forward   lines.\na speed-up in the game, will\nrule   changes   accenting   the\nwas   not   loafing.   He   would     coaches   loday   rarely   leave\nhave been flabbergasted if a ' Ihree   players   together   long\nFAMINE!\nn   \"   iji.ii mMM\\\nUJ\nU   IK15S\nmm                   Ja\n.^\nH 1\n*m\n'\u25a0'-'iM\n\u20221H i'\n*mW\nl.amW\niSf\n^.*>\n\u25a0 Am\\\n*\u25a0\npp\u2014*sl?\n'    I\ntB\n>;\n..;-\n...       J\n\u00a7\n1 r\nINDIA'S ANGUISH\nThe current famine crisis is one of fantastic proportions\neven for India. Millions upon millions are suffering the\nagonizing pang? of starvation as crops shrivel and shrink\ninto dust, forsaken by the life-giving monsoon rains. This\nweek in Weekend Magazine writer Nicholas 'Wollaston\ndescribes the anguish of India's famine and says that it is\nour problem too.\ni d^^V*?\u00ab\u20ac\\iJi*l *\u00bbiv-*>*5 \t\nCanadian Stars      Tri-Semester On\nAt Alcatraz\nRotting ruins are all that remain of\nwhat used to be the most haled and\nfeared of prisons. Recently Alcatraz,\ner The Rock as it was known among\ncriminals, became the setting for a\nnew motion picture. Canadian actors\nJohn Vernon (Wojeck) and Sharon\nAcker joined the cast headed by Lee\nMarvin and Angie Dickenson and tell\nBill Trent what it's like on The Rock\nin Weekend Magazine this week.\nTrial at Guelph\nThe University of Guelph is the first\nCanadian institution of higher learning east of B.C.'s Simon Fraser University lo establish the tri-semestcr\nsystem. Based on a basic unit of a\n15-week semester, students can be in\ntheir last lap of second year a scant\n14 months afler leaving high school.\nSlephen Franklin tells about Guclph's\nexperiment which began last year and\nhow it has worked so far.\nUnwinding On a Houseboat\nWant to get away from it all? Take a cruise on a houseboat! More\nand more families are doing just that and as one enthusiast says,\n\"We get out in the country, we meet people, we just swing easily\nfor two whole weeks.\" Photos by Bruce Moss show how enjoyable\na houseboat holiday through the Thousand Islands can be \u2014 this\nweek in Weekend Magazine.\nChicken: Meals for a Week\nFood Editor Margo Oliver says\nthat it's possible to have as\nmany as 14 servings from two\nbroiler chickens. Not only that,\nshe gives the recipes that show\nyou how to do it! They will\nstretch your food budget, cut\ndown on cooking time and give\nyou delicious chicken meals. Try\nthem this week!\nWt\\mw iatlg News\nenough for them to become\nan identifiable unit. True\n(here is Chicago Black\nHawks' Scooter Line ot Stan\nMikita, Doug Mohns and\nKenny Wharram. But how\nmany olhers can you name?\nOne of the greatest of all\ntime was the Detroit Red\nWings' Production Line of Sid\nAbel, Gordie Howe and Ted\nLindsay in the 1940s and '50s.\nAll were distinct scoring\nthreats but they worked as a\nunit, not just three stars on\nthe ice. Each knew to the\nsplit second where his males\nwere or would be.\nIn the same era was the\nMontreal Canadiens' Punch\nLine \u2014 Elmer Lach, Rocket\nRichard and Toe Blake. The\nRocket was the siege gun but\nLach and Blake were brilliant\nin supporting roles. It was a\nline the late Dick Irvin described as the greatest he\never coached.\nRANGERS WERE TOPS\nIt's perhaps significant that\non the only three occasions\non which New York Rangers\nwon the Stanley Cup they had\ngreat lines that worked together like clockwork.\nIn 1928 and 1933 they had\nFrank Boucher centring Bill\nand Bun Cook and in 1940\nMac and Neil Colville wilh\nAlex Shibicky.\nToronto Maple Leafs had\nthe famous Kid Line \u2014 Joe\nPrimeau. Charlie Conacher\nand Harvey (Busheri Jackson\n\u2014and fans talked about Con-\nacher's powerful shot much\nas Ihey discuss the booming\ndrives of Bobby Hull today.\nBoston Bruins had Iheir Illustrious Kraut Line \u2014 the\nKitchener trio nf Milt\nSchmidt, Bobby Bauer and\nWoody Dumait\u2014the last time\nthey won the Cup in 1941.\nJACQUES PLANTE\nAnd in Ihe same era was\nIhe Pony Express Line of Bill\nMosienko, Max and Doug\nBentley, all three of whom\nwon first- or second-team all-\nstar berths in 1940.\nMosienko, incidentally,\nholds an NHL record that\nprobably will never be broken\n\u2014three goals in 21 seconds\nagainst New York on March\n23, 1952. However, by then the\nline had been broken up and\nil was Gus Bodnar who set up\nthe three goals.\nRegardless of cold statistics it is difficult to rale one\nline against another. Perhaps\nit's enough to say all would\nhave been great in whatever\nperiod they played.\nSTARRED  ALONE\nThere were also outstanding\nindividualists not necessarily\nassociated with a particular\nline. You can go back to\nFrank Nighbor, the brilliant\npoke-check artist of the Ottawa Senators. Or to the brilliant Howie Morenz of Canadiens or to Syl Apps of the\nLeafs.\nWhere do you stop? There\nwere dozens of them. Cooney\nWeiland and Bill Cowley of\nBoston, for instance. Newsy\nLalonde and Jean Beliveau of\nCanadiens and Chicago's incomparable Bobby Hull.\nDefencemen? It's the same\nstory.\nEddie Shore and Dit Clapper of the Bruins, Ching Johnson of the Rangers, Red Horner of the Leafs, Red Kelly of\nDetroit, Doug Harvey who\nwon the Norris Trophy as the\n1 e a g u e's top defenceman\nseven times at Montreal.\nFrom the current crop, Pierre\nPilote of Chicago and the\nnewest sensation, Bobby Orr\nof Boston, this year's rookie\naward winner.\nJust for fun. pick your\ncoaches.\nConn   Smythe.  Lester  Pat-\nCanada Football   Leaaue\nam*\nTelevision  Schedule Set\nREGINA (CP'\u2014A 1967 Canadian TV schedule that provides\n35 televised games in the west\nand 31 in the east was issued\nThursday at the CFL's semi-\nmeeting.\nThe CBC network will provide\n12 games in the west and 12 in\nthe east, all on Saturdays, and\nthe CTV network 23 in Western\nCanada and 19 in the east.\nThe TV area of Ihe home\nteam will be blacked out.\nThe schedule:\nAugust\n2 Winnipeg at Edmonton, CTV\nwest\n9 Edmonton at Oitawa, CTV\neast-west\n11 Montreal at Toronto, CTV\neast; Vancouver at Regina, CTV\nwest\n12 Edmonton at Hamilton,\nCBC east-west\n16 Toronto at Vancouver, CTV\neast-west\n19 Toronto at Edmonton, CBC\neast-west\n23 Ottawa al Hamilton, CTV\neast; Edmonton at Calgary,\nCTV west\n26 Toronto at Montreal, CBC\neast-west\n27 Calgary at Vancouver, CTV\nwest\n30 Regina at Edmonton, CTV\nwest\nSeptember\n4 Montreal at Ottawa, CTV\neasl; Edmonton at Regina, CTV\nwest\nWills Must\nPay Taxes\nWASHINGTON 'API \u2014 The\nU.S. tax court ruled Wednesday\nthat shortstop Maury Wills of\nPittsburgh Pirates must pay\nfederal income tax on two\nprizes he won when he was with\nLos Angeles Dodgers\u2014the S.\nRae Hickok bell anrl a sport\ncar.\nThe court also ruled thai\nWills is not entitled lo deduct\nfrom his income lax living and\ntravel expenses for Ihe lime he\nwas in Los Angeles. Wills\nclaimed that his permanent\nhome was in Spokane, Wash.\nThe precise amount of taxes\nWills must pay was not delcr-\nmined by the court, hut the\ninlernal revenue service said he\nowes $1,475.76 for 1962 and\n$7,091.22 for 1963.\n9 Winnipeg at Montreal, CBC\neast-west\n10 Ottawa at Regina, CTV\neast-west\n16 Calgary at Montreal, CBC\neast-west\n17 Hamilton at Ottawa, CTV\neasl; Regina at Winnipeg, CTV\nwest\n20 Calgary at Toronto, CTV\neast-west\n23 Montreal al Hamillon, CBC\neasl; Edmonton at Winnipeg,\nCBC west\n24 Toronto at Ottawa, CTV\neast; Calgary at Regina, CTV\nwest\n27 Winnipeg at Vancouver,\nCTV west\n30 Regina at Toronto, CBC\ncast-west\nOctober\n1 Ottawa at Hamilton, CTV\neast; Vancouver at Winnipeg,\nCTV west\n4 Regina at Montreal, CTV\neast-west\n7 Hamilton at Calgary, CBC\ncast-west\n8 Winnipeg at Toronto, CTV\neast-west\n9 Hamilton at Regina, CTV\neast-west\n14 Toronto at Montreal, CBC\neast-west\n18 Vancouver at Hamillon,\nCTV east-west\n18 Vancouver at Ottawa, CTV\neast-west\n21 Montreal at Edmonton,\nCBC east-west\n22 Ottawa at Toronto, CTV\neast; Hamilton at Winnipeg,\nCTV west\n28 Toronto at Oitawa, CBC\neast; Edmonton at Calgary;\nCBC west\n29 Montreal at Hamillon, CTV\ncast; Vancouver at Regina. CTV\nwest\nNovember\n1 Winnipeg al Edmonlon. CTV\nwest\n4 Otlawa at Monlreal, CBC\neast; Calgary al Vancouver,\nCBC west\n5 Hamilton at Toronto, CTV\neast; Regina at Winnipeg CTV\ncast-west\nCTV also will carry Ihe Eastern semi-final nationally, probably Sunday, Nov. 12, the firstt\nWestern final, probably Saturday, Nov. 18, and the second\nEastern final, probably Nov. 25.\nCBC will carry the Western\nsemi-final, probably Saturday,\nNov. 11; the first Eastern final,\nprobably Sunday, Nov. 19, the\nsecond Western final, Nov. 22,\nand the third western final, if\nnecessary,  probably Nov. 26.\nThe Grey Cup game in Ottawa, probably Saturday, Dec.\n2, will be produced by CTV and\ncarried jointly by bolh CBC and\nCTV.\nCombines\nSnap Streak\nKASLO \u2014 New Denver-Silverton Combines snapped a 12-game\nKaslo winning streak by dropping the All-Stars 13-10 Sunday\nin the Kaslo-Slocan-Arrow Lakes\nSenior Baseball League.\nEach club used four pitchers\nin the contest, which saw 23\nerrors committed, with John\nNesbitt taking credit for Ihe win\nand George Benwell the loss.\nThe Combines' pitchers gave up\neight hils, six walks and recorded eight strikeouts. The All-\nStars' hurlers gave up 11 hits,\nseven walks and struck oul four\nbatters.\nIn the hitting department for\nthe Combines, Terry Minnis\nwent three-for-five including a\ntriple; Groenhousen had a triple\nand Doug Thring added a double. Mike Linn led Kaslo batters\nwith a triple and a single.\nKaslo made a desperate attempt in the bottom of the ninth\ninning, scoring four quick runs,\nbut the experience and strategic\nmoves by Combines coach Walt\nThring put oul Ihe fire to end\nthe game.\nln a morning game between\nthe Kaslo and New Denver Little\nLeaguers, Kaslo squeezed oul. a\nnarrow 3-2 win, scoring the winning run in the bottom of the\nsixth and final inning.\nKaslo All-Stars travel to Slocan City Sunday to meet the\npowerful Silver Kings.\nHal Brown Returns\nFor Players Pacific\nValley Tods\nSlocan 17-12\nSOUTH SLOCAN - Crescent\nValley Lillle Leaguers defeated\nSlocan Little Leaguers 17-12\nTuesday nighl m South Slocan.\nCrescenl Valley Pony League\nteam bullied Shoreacres to an\n8-8 tie Monday night.\nGraham Jones was Ihe winning pitcher in the Lillle League\ngame lor Crescent Valley.\nPAPER   FOB  SALE\nSweden will have 3.545,000\nIons of chemical pulp for sale\nthis  year.\nVANCOUVER \u2014 The man who\nlost the national driving championship on Ihe final day of Ihe\nracing season al Weslwond last\nyear, returns fnr the $6000 Pacific, June 25.\nHal Brown, the Lethbridge\nradio station owner, came lo tlie\nNalional Pro race last October 2\ntied with Winnipeg lawyer\nGeorge Chapman. Bolh men\ndriving identical Lotus 23b's, had\nfought a neck-and-neck battle\nall year. Bul in Ihe lasl national\npoints race al. the Coquitlam 1.8\nmile circuit. Brown devcloperl\ngear box trouble and, while\nfinishing, was well behind Chap\nman.\nIn lasl year's Pacific. Brown\nfinished third in the under Iwo-\nrick, Jack Adams, Dick Irvin,\nToe Blake, Punch Imlach.\nKeep going.\nWe're for Uncle Art Ross of\nBoston, a rugged player of the\nold days before the establishment of lhe NHL. Perhaps we\nhave been influenced by the\nway Ross once squelched a\nloud-mouthed fan in Boslon.\nIt was during the Second\nWorld War and the war-\nweakened Bruins were taking\na beating.\n\"Hey, Ross,\" the heckler\nyelled from behind the Boston\nbench, \"where's your power\nplay?\"\nJEAN BELIVEAU\n\"In   England,   France   and\nGermany,\" Ross retorted.\nA  BREED APART\nWhat about goalies? In the\nNHL Ihey are and always\nhave been a breed unto themselves. They are an esoteric\nlittle band who sort of keep\nIhe faith, something in the\ntradition of a sturdy little\nmarching society.\nYou don't rub goalies the\nwrong way. If you do they\nseem to backfire. Y'ou just put\nup with them and hope for the\nbest. And their best is usually\nbrilliance. They're sharp-eyed\nacrobats who take justifiable\npride in their work.\nFor a group who should be\nsusceptible to nerves and jitters, they wear remarkably\nwell.\nTake Johnny Bower of Toronto Maple Leafs. Bower was\nwrenched away from Cleveland Barons of the AHL at an\nage when many goalies are\nready to call it quits.\nNow admitting to 42 years,\nBower joined with 37-year-old\nTerry Sawchuk to give Toronto superb goaltending in\ntheir Stanley Cup victories\nover Chicago and Montreal\nthis spring.\nThe great goalies are easy\nto name. There was the fabulous Georges Vezina of Canadiens, for whom the Vezina\nTrophy is named. Vezina\ncalmly conlinued to play even\nwhile marked for death by\ntuberculosis.\nWON SIX VEZINAS\nThey march along \u2014 Clint\nBenedict of Ottawa Senators,\nJohn Ross Roach of Toronto,\nNew York and Detroit, Chuck\nGardiner of Chicago, Frank\nBrimsek of Boston, Turk\nBroda, the Leafs' fat man,\nBill D u r n a n and Jacques\nPlante of Canadiens, Glenn\nHall of Chicago.\nDurnan was a brilliant six-\ntime winner of the Vezina\nTrophy. Then along came\nPlante who also won the\ntrophy six times before moving to New York. Plante,\nwhose between-game activities included knitting and\npainting, was the man who\npioneered the mask and\nstarted the practice of a goalie\ngoing behind the net to stop\nshots along the boards.\nThe all-time shutout king Is\nTerry Sawchuk with an even\n100. But the most spectacular\nsingle season for shutouts was\nput together by the late\nGeorge Hainsworth.\nIn the 44-game 1928-29 season with Canadiens the cool\nnetminder from Kitchener allowed only 43 goals and had\nan amazing 22 shutouts. There\nhas been nothing approaching\nit since and today a mark of\n10 shutouts in a 70 - game\nschedule is about the best\nanyone can hope for.\nSawchuck Awarded\nJ. P. Bickell Trophy\nTORONTO 'CPi-Terry Sawchuk, shutout king of the National Hockey League, Thursday was awarded the J. P.\nBickell Memorial Trophy by\nToronto Maple Leafs\u2014the club\nwhich lost him to Los Angeles\nKings in the recent league\ndraft.\nThe trophy is awarded annually by the club for \"one tremendous feat, or one season of\nspectacular play or remarkable\nservice over a period of time.\"\nThe goalie gets an $800 replica of the $10,000 trophy. There\nis no cash award.\nLeafs declined lo say into\nwhich category the award to\nSawchuk fell, but a club spokesman said \"he kept us in there\nall season, right through to the\nStanley Cup.\"\nKings picked up Sawchuk as\ntheir first draft choice after\nLeafs left him unprotected in\nthe   draft.   The  veteran   goalie\nTERRY SAWCHUK\nhad indicated he would not re\nturn to the Leafs.\nMORE POWER PER POUND!\nNEW\nHomelite XL-701\nlitre class. However, he was well\nbehind overall winner Laurie\nCraig.\nBrown is slill having his\ntroubles Ihis year and after three\nnational points races isn't in a\ncontending posilion lor the under two-litre or overall championships.\nTlie 10-race championship\nseries carries $8000 in prize\nmoney and the Challenge Trophy.\nThis year's race will have a\nmuch stronger field featuring a\nnumber nf powerful Group Seven\nears headed by two-time national\ndriving champion Ludwig Ileim-\nrath in a McLaren, and Eppie\nWielzcs in Ford's GT-40. Bolh\nToronto drivers are contenders\nfor the title again Ihis year.\nHere's a great new saw\nfor professional cutters ...\na lightweight saw with new\ndesign, - new power, - and\nfaster speeds. Cuts 15\"\nhardwood in 12 seconds. Fells\ntrees up to 5' in diameter.\nDouble the fuel and oil capacity\nto save you time, let you cut\nlonger. And it has all the famous\nHomelite professional features\ntoo; straight bars up to 36\"j\nplunge-cut bow; clearing anc\nutility bars. See it.Try it. Buy it\nSo light It\ncan he balanced\non one handl\nALLIED\nEQUIPMENT LTD.\n901   Front St.\nNelson\nPh. 352-32H\n mme,\nBIRTHS\nYOUNG - To Mr. and Mrs.\nFrederick Young, R.R. l, at\nKoolenay Lake General Hospital,\nJune 14, a son.\nLAMMLE - To Mr. and Mrs.\nKeith Lammle, 1405 Vancouver\nStreet, al Kootenay Lake General Hospital, June 14, a daughter.\nMARSHALL\u2014To Mr. and Mrs.\nThomas Marshall, 105 Morgan\nStreet, at Kootenay Lake General Hospital, June 14, a son.\nBUTCHER - To Mr. and Mrs.\nRonald Butcher, 513 Victoria\nStreet, at Kootenay Lake General Hospital, June 15, a son.\nON THE AIR\nCKLN    PROGRAMS\nPACIFIC DAYLIGHT SAVING TIME\n1390 ON THE DIAL\n98 MC CABLE FM\nFRIDAY, JUNE 16,  1967\n6:00\u2014News\n6:10\u2014Morning Show\n6:30\u2014News\n6:33\u2014Morning Show\n7:00\u2014News\n7:05\u2014Sports\n7:10-Chapel in the Sky\n7:25\u2014News\n7:30-Morning Show\n7:45\u2014Sports\n7:47\u2014Morning Show\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Sports\n8:15\u2014Morning Show\n8:30\u2014Commentary\n8:35\u2014Music\n9:00\u2014News\n9:10\u2014Opening Stocks\n9:13\u2014Road Report\n9:15\u2014Open Line\n9:59-D.O.O.T.S.\n10:00-News\n10:05\u2014Summer Sounds\n10:45\u2014Sports\n10:47\u2014Summer Sounds\n11:00-News\n11:05\u2014Summer Sounds\n11:15\u2014Women's News\n11:20\u2014Music\n11:35\u2014Assignment\n11:40\u2014The   Areherr\n11:55\u2014Music\n12:30-News\n12:40\u2014Sports\n12:45\u2014Summer Sounds\n1:00-News\n1:03\u2014Summer Sounds\n1:45\u2014Sports\n1:47\u2014Summer Sounds\n2:00\u2014News\n11:40\u2014Music\n2:03\u2014Music\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n3:00\u2014News\n3:03\u2014Gordie Tapp\n3:33\u2014Summer Sounds\n4:00\u2014News\n4:03\u2014Canadian Roundup\n4:10\u2014Hit Parade\n5:00\u2014News\n5:05\u2014Sports\n5:10\u2014Rolling   Home\n5:30\u2014News\n2:15\u2014The Archers\n6:00\u2014News and Stocks\n6:10\u2014Closing Markets\n6:15\u2014Back to the Bible\n6:45\u2014Sacred Heart\n7:00\u2014News\n7:05\u2014Summer Sounds\n7:45\u2014Sports\n7:47\u2014Summer Sounds\n8:00\u2014News\n8:05\u2014Summer Sounds\n8:30\u2014News\n8:33\u2014Summer Sounds\n9:00\u2014News\n9:03-1967  and   All  That\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15-5 Nights a Week\n10:30\u2014Centennial Diary\n11:00\u2014News\n11:05\u2014Sports\n11:10\u2014Friday Frolic\n12:00\u2014News\nCBC PROGRAMS\nFRIDAY, JUNE\n6:00\u2014News\n6:10\u2014Music and News Show\n8 35\u2014Max Ferguson Show\n9:00\u2014News and Report\n9:15\u2014Gordie Tapp Show\n9:59\u2014DOO.T.S.\n10:00\u2014News\n10:03\u2014Along the Way\nll:40-The Archers\n12:00-Along the Way\n12:15\u2014News and Weather\n12:30\u2014B.C. Farm Report\n12:50\u201451st North\n1:00\u2014Sing Happy\n1:15\u2014Joyce Sullivan\n1:40\u2014Assignment\n1:45\u2014Program Resume\n2:00\u2014News\n2:03-Voices of the Past\n2:30\u2014T. Can. Matinee\n3:00\u2014News\n3:03\u2014T. Can. Matinee\n3:30\u2014Off the Record\n3:55\u2014Assignment\n4:00\u2014News\n16,  1967\n10\u2014Off the Aecord\n55\u2014Assignment\n00\u2014News\n05\u2014Sports Desk\n10\u2014Ted Reynolds' Sports\n15\u2014Music\n30\u2014News\n: 45\u2014Music\n00-The World at Six\n30\u2014Music\n:00\u2014News\n: 03\u2014Centennial Diary\n:30\u2014CBC Winnipeg Orch.\n: 00\u2014News\n:03\u2014Mystery Theatre\n30\u2014Court of Opinion\n:00\u2014News\n:03\u20141967 and All That\n:00\u2014News\n: 15\u2014Five Nights a Week\n30\u2014An Evening Concert\n00\u2014News\n03\u2014Music of Monteverdi\n00\u2014News\n08\u2014Midnight Jamboree\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JUNE 16, 1967\u20149\nHELP WANTED\nSATURDAY, JUNE 17, 1967\n8:00\u2014News and Reports\n6:10-The A.M. Show\n7:45\u2014Morning Devotional\n7:54-A-M. Show\n9 00\u2014News and Report\n9:10\u2014Interlude\n9:15\u2014Saturday A.M.\n9:59-DOOTS\n10:00\u2014News\n10:03\u2014Stamps\n10:15\u2014So What's New\n10:30\u2014Top Team\n11:00\u2014News\n11:03\u2014Action Set\n12:00\u2014News\n12:10\u2014Agenda\n12:30\u2014Sound of Sports\n3:00\u2014News\n3:03-Opera Time\n4:30\u2014Music on the Heather\n00\u2014News\n03\u2014Pacific Sports Final\n00\u2014News\n10\u2014In Canada This Week\n30\u2014Discourse\n00\u2014News\n03\u2014Metronome\n30\u2014Pratley   at   the   Movies\n00\u2014News\n03\u2014Now I Ask You\n30\u2014Chansonettes\n00\u2014News\n03\u2014Hermit's Choice\n00\u2014News\n03\u2014Jazz Canadiana\n00\u2014News\n03\u2014Cabaret\n30\u2014Dance Date\n00\u2014News\n08\u2014Midnight Jamboree\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\nPACIFIC DAYLIGHT SAVING TIME\n\u2022\u2014Live Program (O\u2014Color Program\nKREM-TV - Channel 2\n7:30-Green Hornet* (C)\n8:00-Time Tunnel* (C)\n9:00-Rango* (C)\n9:30\u2014Phyllis Diller* (Cl\n10:00\u2014Avengers* (C)\n11:00\u2014Nightbeat (C)\nll:30-Joey Bishop* (C)\nKXLY-TV - Channel 4\n(i:30\u2014Twilight Zone\n7:00-Family Affair* (C)\n7:30-The Wild Wild West* (C)\n8:30-Hogan's Heroes* (C)\n9:00\u2014CBS Friday Night Movie:\n\"Gidget Goes to\nRome\"* (C)\n11:00-11 o'Clock News (C)\n11:30\u2014Big Four Movie\nKHQ-TV - Channel 6\n7:00-Travelling With\nLowell Thomas (C)\n7:30-Tarzan* (C)\n8:30-Man From UNCLE* (C)\ni-T.H.E. Cat* (C)\n110:00\u2014National College\nQueen* (C>\n11:00\u2014News and Wealher IC)\n11:30\u2014Tonight With Carson* (C)\nCBC-TV \u2014 Nelson, Channel 9: Trail. Channel 11,\nCastlegar, Channel :,, Cranbrook. Channel 10\n10:30\u2014Friendly Giant\n11:00\u2014Mr. Dressup\nll:25-Bonnie Prudden Show\nll:56-News\n12:00\u2014Luncheon Dale\n12:30\u2014Search for Tomorrow\n12:45\u2014Guiding Light\n1:00\u2014Luncheon Date\n1:30-As the World Turns\n2:00\u2014Password\n2:30-About Town\n3:00-Take Thirty\n3:30-Edge of Night\n4:00\u2014Communicate\n4:30\u2014Forest Rangers\n5:00\u2014Adventure Time\n5:30\u2014Let's Sing Out\n6:00\u2014News\n6:15\u2014British Calendar\n6:30\u2014My Three Sons\n7:00\u2014Klahanle\n7:30\u2014Sportscene\n8:00-Get Smart\n8:30\u2014Tommy Hunter Show\n9:00\u2014Film:  \"The Leopard\"\n11:00\u2014News\n11:19\u2014Viewpoint\nCJLH-TV - Channel 7, Lethbridge\nMOUNTAIN STANDARD TIME\nSATURDAY\n00\u2014Focus\n30\u2014On the Scene\n00\u2014CBC Sports Presents:\nKaleidasport\n4:00-CBC Sports Presents:\nChampionship Series\n5:00\u2014Frankenstein Jr. (C)\n5:30\u2014Bugs Bunny (C)\n8:00\u2014Centennall 20\/20 (C)\n6:80-Sounds '67\n6:45\u2014Davy and Goliath\n7:00-Beverly Hillbillies (C)\n7:30\u2014Slattery's People\n8:30\u2014Great Movies\n10:30-In Person (C)\n11:00-CBC News\n11:15\u2014Final Edition\n11:25\u2014Goodyear Theatre \u2014\n\"Damn Yankees\"\nPROGRAMME DIRECTOR\nFor the Corporation of the City of Nelson\nSALARY:\nDUTIES: To plan,  organize and  supervise  a di\nversified Recreation programme in the\nCivic Centre and some school and City\nfacilities. Must be willing to work afternoons and evenings.\nQUALIFICATIONS: Candidates should have completed Grade\nXIII, supplemented by courses and field\nwork in Recreation, Physical Education\nor related fields. Must have a thorough\nknowledge of Arts, Crafts, Hobbies, Sports\nand Cultural activities. Applicant must be\ncapable of conducting some activities.\nSalary to start \u2014 $400.00 per month. There\nwill be a six-month probationary period.\nAfter successful completion of probation,\nsalary adjustments will be made upward.\nAPPLICANTS: To supply complete details of education\nand experience, and enclose three references.\nSubmission to be made to Superintendent\nof Parks, Civic Centre and Recreation,\nCity Hall, 502 Vernon Street, Nelson, B.C.,\nby June 26th, 1967.\nDuties to commence July 1st, 1967 or as\nsoon as possible thereafter.\nC, BELL,\nSuperintendent of Parks,\nCivic Centre, and Recreation.\nJune 7, 1967.\n\u2014140-141\nSAAN DEPARTMENT STORE -\nNelson's newest family clothing and department store is\naccepting applications for\nmale and female salesclerks.\nExperience not necessary but\nhelpful. Apply in person at\nSaan Dept. Store, Vernon St.,\nNelson. -138-143\nMEN, WOMEN-EARN UP TO\n$100 per week full time, up (0\n$5 per hour part time. Easy\nwork, product sells itself on\ndemonstration. Apply to Box\n117, Nelson Daily News.\n-140-145\nNEWSPAPER STUFFERS RE-\nquired for A.M. work. Part-\ntime work. 16 years or over.\nPhone 352-3532 stating name\nand address. \u2014139-144\nNELSON DAILY NEWS CAR-\nrlers wanted for routes in the\nFairview area. Nelson; Castlegar, Kinnaird, Salmo, Creston\nNelson Daily News.     \u201457-tfn\nBUSINESS\nOPPORTUNITIES\nUNUSUAL BUSINESS OPPOR.\ntunity ln Kootenay Bay, B.C.\nFor Sale: Coffee shop, service\nstation, small motel. Excel'\nlent highway position; great\npotential; next to proposed\ntourist centre. Contact Riondel\nand District Credit Union \u2014\nPhone 225-3217. \u2014140-145\nHELP WANTED\u2014FEMALE\nCLERK - TYPIST,\nphone 352-6446.\nPLEASE\n\u2014137-142\nPROPERTY WANTED\nLISTINGS WANTED. BUILD-\ning lots, farm land, city and\ncountry residential. Commercial property, timber lands\nCall or write Wm. Kalyniult\nAgencies. Nelson. Ph. 352-2425\n-231-tfn\nWANTED\nMISCELLANEOUS\nWANTED - CLEAN COTTON\nrags, not less than 12 inches\nsquare. Nelson Daily News.\n-99-tfn\nWANTED- SMALL   BOAT\ntrailer. Phone 352-6558.\n-140-145\nWANTED - GOOD   PIANO.\nPhone 825-4686. \u2014140-141\nHELP WANTED\u2014MALE\nSr.\nCANADIAN\nFORCES\nOPPORTUNITIES\nThe Canadian Forces needs\nyoung men NOW to serve as\nsoldiers, sailors and airmen.\nPlan your future \u2014 embark on\na challenging and adventurous\ncareer in the Canadian Forces.\nYou are eligible to serve if\nyou are single, male, age 17-29\nphysically fit, and have Grade\n8 education or better. For\ncomplete details on the many\nopportunities and benefits tha1\nare immediately available se\nyour\nCANADIAN FORCES\nCAREER COUNSELLOR\nat the\nNelson Royal Canadian Legion\nMonday, 19 June Noon until\n6:00 p.m.\nor write to\nCANADIAN FORCES\nRECRUITING CENTRE\n2908 32nd Street\nVernon, B.C.\n-140-142\nALL-CANADIAN LAMP COM-\npany offers outstanding commission opportunity to a direct\nsalesman in this area. Selling\nlong-life light bulbs and fluorescent tubes. Excellent sideline. Age no barrier, All direct\nand repeat orders fully credited. AH replies confidential.\nApply to A. Underwood, See-\nBee Enterprises, Box 123, Postal Station 'D', Hamilton, Ont.\n-139-141\nNELSON DAILY NEWS CAR-\nrier boys in Kimberley, Marysville and Chapman Camp.\nPhone Mrs. W. Morris, 355\nHannay St., Kimberley, B. C.\n\u2014123-tfn\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES\nFOR SALE-2 SEALPOINT SIA-\nmese kittens,  1 male and 1\nfemale. Phone 364-2976 (Trail).\n\u2014139-141\nFOR SALE- CHIHUAHUA\npups. Phone 352-5857.\u2014132-157\nClassified Ads Bring Results\nYour Horoscope\nBY  FRANCES DRAKE\nLook in the section in which are interested in your welfare.\n(Programs subject to change hy stations without notice.!\nFOR SALE-MONEY-MAKING\nrestaurant in busy dam construction area. \u2014 Tremendous\nfuture potential as tourist\narea. Fully equipped. Seats 40.\nIdeal for couple who can work\ntogether. Owner selling for\npersonal reasons only. Reply\nto Box 115, Nelson Daily News.\nFOR SALE - TWO-BAY SER-\nvice station, fully equipped\nwith propane refills. Bulk fuel\navailable. Good mixed farming area. Reason: ill health.\nWhat offers? Write Box 116,\nHolden, Alta. \u2014137-142\nBAKERY FOR SALE OR RENT\n\u2014 For   further   information\nwrite Box 195, Castlegar. B.C.\n-139-143\nyour birthday comes and find\nwhat your outlook is, according\nto the stars,\nFor Saturday, June 17, 1967.\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 20\n(Aries)\u2014A period of adjustment.\nProfit by experience and study\nthe methods of successful people. Make moves designed to enhance position, insure gains.\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus)\n\u2014 Mixed planetary influences.\nGood opportunities for advancement abound in your area but\nyou may have to search them\nout yourself. Personal interests\nhighly favored.\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemnii)\nWith an objective viewpoint in\nall situations and a determination to curb your Innate hypersensitivity, you can do well now.\nDespite your possible doubts,\nothers will be cooperative and\nDAILY  CR05SWORD\n6. Armadillo\n7. Girl's name\n8. To shut in.\n8. Thick\nslice\n11. Marsh\nplants\n15. The Netherlands\n17. Girl's\nname\n18. Children's\ngame\n21. Anglo-\nSaxon serf\n22. Like\n23. Babe Ruth\nspecialty\n24. Largest\nof\nthe\nRyukyu\nIslands\n25. Biblical\ncity\n26. Part of\n\"to be\"\n30. Capsizes\nU. Site\nof a\nNov. 1943\nconference\n32. Performer\n33. Bore\n35. Vista\n5 r & l eWs h i p SI\npiu r1|t e r r a'\nA D 1   TlS^EEKER'\nRE F 1   LLED|Prt\nR 11 N O 1   L | F  A \u25a0\nAP  1  BO T | T A <? Al\nLIGHTHEADED\nAC OR|EM|E35\n\u25a0 KR|G5i^T j| j\naw|teething\nPI   TI   ED|l   DEA\nICON SBl   N L E f\n5k a f EI&e t- U'5\nYesterday's Answer\n36. Little\nisland\n39. Edible\ntuber\n40. Dad's com-\npanton\nACROSS\nLFlsh\n5. Masculine\n9. Gaze\n10. Unrolls\n12. People\n13. Polka, for\none\n14. Islet in a\nriver\n15. Harbinger\n16. Seaport on\nthe Avon\nRiver\n19. King of\nBashan\n20. Indian\nmulberry\n21. Comfort\n23. Ancient\ntimepieces\n27. Gumbo\n28. Scotch\nalder\n29. Music note\n30. Patella\n34. Begrudged\n37. First-rate\n38. Lift\n39. Leaves out\n41. Distend\n42. French\nartist\n43. Fills with\nsolemn\nwonder\n44. Cupid\nDOWN\n1, Step\n2, Caribbean\ncountry\n3, SM11\nt. Pasha\n\u00bb. Twiggy,\nfor one\nb-ltt\nDAILY CRYPTOQUOTE \u2014 Hero's how to work lt:\nAXYDLBAAXB\nIs LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Is used\nfor tlie three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apos-\ntrophies, the length and formation of the words are all hint*\nEach day the code letters are different.\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nTJTHN    VFT     YKMY     MEPTYK     EI.\nITLJTYK,       MFR     KT     YKMY     ETTPTYK\nGLFRTYK, \u2014 FTB     YTEYM.STFY\nyesterday's Cryptoquotei talent is developed IN retirement: CHARACTER IS FORMED IN THE RUSH OF\nTHE WORLD.    GOETHE\n<<S IM7, King Feature* Syndicate. Inc.)\n\u25a0'\/\/.\n1\nz\ni\n4\n, \/\/\nb\n7\n6\n%\n\u20221\n4\n10\nII\n12\n%\nIS\n14\n%\nV\/t\n15\nIb\n17\n16\ny\/A\n^\n19\nt\n%\n%\n20\n%\nZl\na\na\nV,\nl!\n2b\n21\n^\n2ft\n%\n%\n%\na\ni\n%\n50\nsi\na\n\u00ab\nVi\nib\n\"A\n^,\n%\n*\u00bb\njd\nl\nV>\n-10\n\u25a0il\nI\nkt\n%\n\u00abv\u00bb\n>\n4+\n%\nJUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer)\nEmphasize your stability now.\nMany will look to you for support and guidance. Without overtaxing yourself, give help wherever you can.\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leo)\nAchievement will be largely up\nto yourself now. Y'ou won't have\nmuch planetary help, but you\ncan light up the fires of enthusiasm and good will.\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER\n23 (Virgo)\u2014You won't find any\nhiding place for your dilemmas,\nso you might just as well face\nup to them and work them out.\nBut do so in a relaxed manner\nand with no anxiety.\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER\n23 (Libra)\u2014You may be asked\nto do a little extra, to change\na plan. If it won't Interfere with\nmore urgent considerations, be\nagreeable. Good will is a fine\ninvestment.\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER\n22 (Scorpio)\u2014Stick to the tried-\nand-true now. You can advance\nyour status by putting forth best\nefforts in your own field. This\nis not a good period for starting\nnew ventures.\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER 21 (Sagittarius) \u2014 Stand\nfirm on principles and back good\nintentions with action! You have\na good chance now to profit by\nyour many talents and your fine\ngift of organization.\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY\n20 (Capricorn)\u2014A business-like,\nbut also an understanding approach to all matters will be\nneeded for best returns. Some\nfriction is possible, but don't\nadd fuel to the fire.\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY\n19 (Aquarius)\u2014It may be easier\nfor you to handle unusual or difficult tasks now than to make\nprogress in routine affairs. A\ntendency toward restlessness\ncould lead you off course. Avoid!\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\n(Pisces)\u2014Keep ideas fresh and\nsparkling, as the Piscean so well\ncan. Your goal now should be\nto capture the attention of thos'\nin a position to further you\naims, so polish up your ware\n\u2014 and your personality!\nYOU BORN TODAY have II.\nmind, and usually the inclin;\nlion, for intellectual pursuits\nalso have artistic leanings. In\nfact, you are extremely versatile and are able to cope quickly\nwith practically any situation,\neven though it be unfamiliar.\nYour efforts are never \"just\nfair\": you constantly strive for\nperfection \u2014 even to the point of\nwearing yourself out. Y'our courage in the face of difficulties is\noutstanding, as is your understanding and sensitivity to the\nneeds of others. A natural factfinder, you could become an\noutstanding journalist or researcher; could also succeed in\naviation. Curb tendencies toward\ntlie fields of music, diplomacy,\nrestlessness and\"exlravagahce.\nBlrthdate of: Igijr Stravinsky,\nRussian composer.\n 10\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JUNE 16, 1967\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nCOLUMBIA TRADING\nCO.\nFOR ROOFING\nHave that worn or leaking roof\nreplaced now before gardening\nand painting time. We use only\ntop quality Asphalt shingles or\nmetal roofing sheets. Our experienced applicators will do\nthe job quickly and efficiently.\nPlease phnne nr write for free\nApply   Circulation    Manager,\nestimates\nCOLUMBIA TRADING\nCO.\n609 Ward St.      Phone 352-5571\nNelson\nFOR SALE   \u2022\nMISCELLANEOUS\nSALE\nFOR SALE\nMISCELLANEOUS\n'Cont inued i\nSAT.\nJUNE\n1   P.M.\nI7TH\n-93-tfn\nHIGH SCHOOL GIRL, EXPER-\nienced babysitter, would like\nhousekeeping job for summer.\nAvailable June 24. Ph. 352-5982\n -139-143\nSCHOOL BOY WOULD LIKE\nto earn extra money by cutting lawns and doing odd jobs.\nPhone 352-2501. -140-142\nCARPETING & UPHOLSTERY\ncleaned expertlv in vour home.\nUp to 20% off. Phone 352-5909.\n-82-tfn\nPreview June   16th\n2 - 4 p.m.  7-9 p.m\nFurniture, appliances, tools,\nhousehold effects, many chesterfield suites. 2 bedroom\nsuites, many beds, spring and\nmattresses, 3 dressers, 3 chests\nof drawers, many odd tables,\nchairs, end tables, magazine\nracks, smoking stands, two\ngood fridges, several good\nwashers, two coal and wood\nstoves, small assortment hand\ntools, guitar, sleeping bag,\ndishes, books.\n26\" x 96\" Corrugated Plastic\nPanels: White, green or yellow.\nEach $2,19\nCorrugated Wood Closer Strip:\nPer ft. . 13c\nSpecial Galv. Nails wilh plastic\nwashers. Per bag $1.25\n210 lb. Asphalt   Shingles: Per\nhundred sq. ft      $10.95\n4 x 8 x  5.16    Fir   Plywood.\nEach $2.75\n5X Cedar Shingles\nNo. 1. Per sq $16.00\nNo. 2    $12.00\nNo. 3    $10.00\nNo. 4          $6.00\nCOLUMBIA\nTRADING\n609 Ward St. Ph. 352-5571\n-140-141\nYOUNG LADY WILL DO\nhousework by the hour. Phone i\n352-3832. \u2014138-140\nPIANO TUNING AND REPAIRS [\n- Gus Stenberg, Ph. 352-6802.\n-140-165\nWANTED TO RENT\nSUPT. OF PARKS AND REC-\nreation requires modern 3-bed-\nroom house by Sept. 1st. 1967\nUnfurnished or semi-furnished.\nLong-term lease. In or near\nNelson Phone 352-5078 weekends or evenings.      \u2014135-140\nR.C.M.P. CP. TRANSFERRED\nfrom Van. requires 3 bdrm.,\nbasement house in or near Nelson, garage or carport, commencing July. Aug. or Sept.\n1st. References. Please reply\nwith particulars to Box 106.\nNelson Daily News.      \u2014129-H\n8\" TABLE SAW\nwilh stand and 3i H.P. motor.\n212 Stanley St.\nBox 263       Ph. 352-6018\n-140-140\nBOATS AND  ENGINES\nFOR SALE-15'x5' PLYWOOD\nboat, part fibreglassed; 18-h.p.\nEvinrude motor and utility\ntrailer. Can be seen at Crossroads Service, Castlegar.\n -134-h\n9-FOOT ALUMINUM CAR-TOP\nboat, $85. Ph.  352-5404 eves.\n\u2014140-142\nSLUG KILLER PELLETS\nAttracts and kills pesky slugs.\nEARWIG BAIT\nJust scatter around garden\nand house foundation.\nMOSS KILLER\nKills moss on roofs of buildings\nand lawns.\nat\nELLISON'S\nWholesale - Retail\n523 Front St. Ph. 352-3187\n-134-h\n(Continued Next Column)\nSUNDAY  IS\nFATHER'S DAY\nShop for\nBarbecues and Supplies\nSPECIAL SI.99 Charcoal Bucket\nLawn and Garden Equipment\nLounge Chairs and Cols\nTransistor Radios, 10rr Off\nHorse Riding Equipment\nat\nELLISON'S\n523 Front St. Ph. 352-3181\n-139-141\nLarge   Selection   of   Plastic\nPlanters & Flower Pots.\nAll sizes, colors and shapes.\nNELSON\nFARMERS SUPPLY\n524 Railway St.      Ph. 352-5375\nFOR SALE\nMISCELLANEOUS\n(Continued'\nUSED SPECIALS - 2V.\" OD\ntubing. 7' lengths, suilable Ior\nfence posts, each $1.75; 2x2x\nCi\" angle irons. 8' lengths,\neach $1.75. Corrugated, galv.\n8' roofing sheets, each $2.40.\nColumbia Trading Co., 609\nWard St.,  phone 352-5571.\n-140-145\nFOR SALE\nMISCELLANEOUS\n(Continued)\n1 COOLER UNIT. 2-H.P., AIR-\ncooled; 1 waler cooled unit,\n5-h.p.  Ph. Trail, 364-1993.\n-131-157\nWe Can\nSAVE\nYou monev on Plumbing\nFREE\nPlan and layout service\nPlastic and copper in stock\nat our Nelson store\nSimpsons-Sears \u201481-tfn\nNEwHbED CHESTERFIELD.\n$79: used chesterield and\nchair, $65: Coleman oil heater,\n$31.50; 2 birdcages and slands,\n$9.95 each. Mac's Used Furniture, downstairs Nelson Flowers Ltd. -139-141\nBUNK   BEDS  WITH SPRINGS\nand mattresses. Ph. 352-2005.\n-140-141\nUSED 24-IN. 4-BURNER ELEC-\ntric ranges. - Call Coleman\nElectric, 352-3175.      -lll-tfn\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND  FARM SUPPLIES\nSADDLE HORSES; WELL\nbroken and gentle. Also 2 Shetland ponies, 1 new adult saddle. Contact Mary McGhie,\nFruitvale. 367-9910.    -140-145\nONE 4-YEAR-OLD PALOMINO\ngelding with a new saddle.\n$300. Phone 365-7605 or write\nBox 25. Robson, B.C. -140-142\nSYLVANIA CONSOLE 21\" TV,\nreconditioned. Real cheap for\ncash. 409 Howe St.     -140-145\nCOMBINATION 21\" T.V., REC-\nord player and radio. Ph.\n352-6916. -136-141\nWELL BROKEN SADDLE\nhorses for sale. Phone 359-7296,\nDave Burr, South Slocan.\n -140-141\natTtTficial BREEDING\ndairv and beef cattle. Phone\n352-6874. J.  DeJong, Nelson.\n-99-tfn\nRENTALS\nFOR RENT: SMALL, COM-\npact, furnished, as-new home.\nFull basement; automatic heat\n\u2014 ideal for school teacher,\nnurse or a connle. Reliable,\nhonest tenant only. Immediate\noccupancy. Phone 352-6543.\n-140-141\nPERSONAL\nCOMBINATION    TV,    RADIO,\nrecord   player.  Ph. 352-5784.\n-137-142\nFRIDGE, AS IS. $25: CARPET.\n9'xl2'. $5: garden tables, seals,\nchairs,  tools,  men's clothing.\nF. Baker, 1106-B Beattv Ave.\n-140-141\nPLASTIC PIPE - LOWEST\nPrices. Mac's Welding and\nEqiupmen! Co. Ltd.. 514 Railway Street. Nelson, B.C.\n-149-lfn\nM c C L A R Y COMBINATION\nwood and coal and propane\nstove. Phone 358-2439. -139-143\n39\" CONTINENTAL BED, LIKE\nnew,  $50.  Phone 352-5125.\n -140-142\nFOR SALE, HOUSEHOLD FUR-\nnishings. Phone 352-3446.\n -137-142\n30-INCH ELECTRIC RANGE -J\nPhone 352-2556. -135-140\nMEAT AND LAYING STRAIN\npullets. Phone 352-3808.\n-131-tfn\n2 BLACK WORKHORSES FOR\nsale. S. Conkin, Crescent Valley. -138-140\n1 SHETLAND PONY MARE\nvery gentle. Phone 359-7296,\nDave Burr, South Slocan, B.C.\n4 RM. SELF CONTAINED FUR\nnished apt. Elect, fridge, ga:\nrange, H.W. and space heater\nadults only, avail. July 1st\nInnes St. Ph. 352-5327 bus\nhours. \u2014138-1\nSUMMER COTTAGE, 2 MILES\nfrom City Centre. $75 per mo\nPhone Carl Smith 352-.\u2014\ndays, 352-3639 evenings\n-137\n2-3233\nM42\nFOR RENT: 600 BLK. BAKER\nSt. \u2014 Store, 14' x 48'. Please\ncontact Wm. Kalyniuk Agencies Ltd., phone 352-2425.\n-139-tfn\nGOOD MILK COW, MOSTLY\nJersey. Helen Breakwell. R.R.\nNo. 2, Nelson. -139-141\nROOM AND BOARD\nROOM   AND   BOARD   AVAIL-\nable. Phone 352-6805. -137-142\nBABY CRIB. BASINETTE. CAR\nseal, walker, car bed. lounge,\nhighchari, commode. Phone\n352-5068. -140-141\nCLASSIFIED  DISPLAY\n-74-h\nSIDES OF GRAIN FED BEEF\n57c. cut and wrapped. Sides\nof grain-led pork, 35c, cut and\nwrapped. 39c. Home cured\nHams and Bacon. Delivery\nweekly to Nelson, Castlegar,\nTrail and Salmo. Newdan\nFarms, Creston, B.C. Ph. 356-\n9901. \u201498-tfn\nCAMPER TO FIT ANY' PICK-\nup. Sleeps 6: gas stove, sink,\nclipboards, etc. All like new.\nPhone 352-7774. -139-143\nSTEREO    RECORD  PLAYER^\nportable, almost new; detach-,\nable speakers. Ph. 352-5821.\n-137-142\nCOAL OIL FRIDGE. ELECTRO-\nlux. 30\" sawdust blower, lumber splitter, pean tvpe. Phone\n352-6485. -140-142\n25 ACRES STANDING ALFAL-\nla hay for say. Wynndel Hog-\nfarm, Box 46, Wynndel, B.C.\nPhone 356-4869. -140-144\n4-UNIT SINGLE MILKING MA-\nchines and pump, 2 12-can\ncoolers and 70 milk cans. Complete stanchions and pipes Ior\n8(1 head and quota. Broadacres\nFarms, R.R. 1. Grand Forks.\nPhone 442-8878 or 442-8879.\n-140-145\nBRITISH INDIA RUG.. 10'xl4'.\nPhone 352-7437 weekends or\nafter 6 p.m. weekdays.\n-135-tfn\n200 FT. DOUBLE STRONG\nwire, 4 gal. white stove paint,\nbaby buggy. Ph. 352-2661 after\n5 p.m. -136-141\nSINGER TREADLE, $14.88;\nportable electric, $18.67. Singer\nCo. of Canada, 547 Baker St.,\nphone 352-3631. -140-140\n\u00a9 \/instate J\nBETTER VALUE INSURANCE\nAUTOMOBILE \u2014 FIRE \u2014 LIFE\nINCOME PROTECTION \u2014 BOAT OWNERS\nSee or Phone Your Local Agent\nAt the Simpsons-Sears Store\n556 Baker St.\nBus. 352-2477 \u2014 Res. 352-2993\nNelson, B.C.\n-140-140\nAUTOMOTIVE,  BICYCLES\nMOTORCYCLES\n(Continued Next Column'\nJOHN DEERE HAY RAKE -\nPhone 359-7356. -137-142\n(Continued Next Column)\nr\nITaTffPffTHI\nSTARTS TODAY - CONTINUES TO SAT., JUNE 17TH\nSave up to\n%\non all these\nquality paints\nBuy all your spring painting needs now\nINTERIOR LATEX\nGALLONS-Reg. $10.79\n$7.99\nQUARTS-Reg. $3.39\n$2.59\nMONAMEL\nSATIN & OUTSIDE\nHOUSE PAINT\nGALLONS-Reg. $11.98\n$8.99\nQUARTS - Reg. $3.40\n$2.69\nBREEZE\nOUTSIDE LATEX\nGALLONS-Reg. $11.98\n$8.99\nQUARTS-Reg. $3.49\n$2.69\nDECORA\nINTERIOR LATEX\nOUTSIDE LATEX\nGALLONS-Reg. $6.98\n$4.99\nBURNS\nBUILDING MATERIALS\n602 Baker St. Nelson\nPhone 352-6661\nWRECKING '57 RAMBLER, '53\nChev Pickup, '56-'59 Fords,\n'55-'61 Chevs, '60 Chev Pickup, '56-'58 Ford Station Wagon,\n'57 Volkswagen, '59-'60 Renault, '56-'57 Buick, '55-'56 Plymouth, '60 IHC 4x4. Good\nmotors: '56 Chev. 265 V8, '56-\n'57 V8 automatic Rambler.\n'57 Ford V8s and 6 cylinders;\nCottonwood Wrecking Service,\nBox 382, Nelson, Ph. 352-5815.\n -140-tfn\nSUMMER SPECIAL - $1575.\n1964 Chev. 'i-ton pickup. Largest 6-cyl. engine, 292 cu. in.,\nposi-traction non-slip rear, 4-\nspd. trans., heavy duty springs\n\u2014 only 35,000 miles. Complete\nwith Collins \"Gem Top\" covered  box.  Phone 365-5819.\n -139-141\nWRECKING '64 CHEV SUPER\nSports 327. '64 Pontiae Convert. '64 Pontiae 4 dr. '61\nChev Convert. '52-'59 Chev and\nFords. Ph. 365-5567 or write\nBox  1445i  Castlegar, B.C.\n-136-141\nAUTOMOTIVE,  BICYCLES\nMOTORCYCLES\n(Continued!\n1966   PLYMOUTH   SPORTS\nFury, loaded wilh options.\nPhone 365-8005. \u2014138-140\nTRAILERS,\nMOBILE HOMES\nSAFEWAY\n\u2014 1966 NEW 650 MARK 2\nB.S.A. $999, 1 - M.G. T.D.,\ngood body, radio, heater, $675,\n1 \u2014 1966 S. 600 Honda coupe,\ngood cond. Waldie Service\nCentre, Ph. 365-6767.   \u2014138-143\n1966 SATELLITE 2-DR. H.T.;\n383-325 h.p., 4-speed; many extras. '65 Plymouth Sport Fury,\n21,000 mi.; radio, V8, auto.,\nP.S. and P.B. 602 Stanley St.\nafter 6 p.m. \u2014138-143\n'63 PONTIAC PARISIENNE,\nbucket seats, air cond., P.S.\nand P.B., auto V-8, W.W., excellent cond. Good tires. Apply old Crawford Bay store or\nwrite Box 3. $1995.    -138-141\n'65 BARRACUDA 2-DR. H.T. -\nRadio, commando eng., 4-spd.\ntrans., good tires. Write Box\n110, Nelson Daily News.\n-135-140\n1964 TRIUMPH SPITFIRE, DU-\nal carbs, 4 speed trans., H.T\nconvt Also 1947 Jeep, excell.\nmech. cond. Ph. 352-5847 afler\n6 p.m. -122-147\n\u25a0\u25a0*l^^***r.\u25a0'^,*.J\u2022,*^,I ^^awmX^m=mi\n1967 REBEL. LOW MILEAGE.\nAvailable July 2. Phone Miss\nKilayko, Slocan Motel, Slocan\nCity. -138-143\n'49 DODGE PICKUP, 4-SPEED.\n'60 Zophyr sedan, good cond.\nCall 825-4319 after 6 p.m.\n -140-141\n'54  1-TON  FORD ON DUALS.\nVery    good   condition.   Tires\nfairly new. Ph. Trail 364-1993.\n-131-157\nFOR SALE - 1964 CHEVY II\nStation Wagon. $1550. Phone\n352-3058 after 5 p.m. -137-142\nWaiting for a bargain? Or are\nyou debating how to choose\nthe proper\nMobile Home\nfor your requirements, priced\nwithin your means. \u2014 You\ncan speak to Mobile Home\nOwners\nwho can give you good advice,\nbut be sure lo see an established dealer, who makes\nMobile Homes a business, not\na sideline.\nCranbrook Trailers now, for\nall your Mobile Home needs\nwhether it be for\nEmergenicy\nhousing, or your work requires\nmoving often, or a completely\nfurnished package for Newly-\nweds \u2014 Retiring, or want a\nsummer home the easy way!\nMobile Homes are\nMeeting\ntoday's tremendous demand for\nimmediate housing and are\npriced to fit your housing\nbudget,\nCRANBROOK\nTRAILERS LTD.\nBox 1458 Phone 365-5047\nCASTLEGAR, B.C.\nJohn and Nan Ruud\nWalt and Val Hill\nDoug Peterman\nNEAT 1-BDRM. FURN. APT.\nfor quiet adult only. 1103 Hall\nMines Rd\u201e opposite Tip-Top\nService. -140-145\nMODERN 2-BDRM. COTTAGE\nat 4-Mile, North Shore. Couple\npreferred. Available July 1st.\nPhone 352-5779. -139-143\n3-BEDROOM HOUSE, APPROX.\n8 miles from Castlegar on Nelson highway, by Tarrys school.\nPhone 359-7356. -137-tfn\nCENTRALLY LOCATED 5-RM.\nsuite. Heat and range provided. Adults only. Phone 352-\n3315 or 352-2736. -138-tfn\nHOUSEKEEPING ROOMS AND\nsuites: dishes, linen supplied;\nparking. 171 Baker St. -35-tfn\n2-BR. OLDER STYLE HOUSE,\n3 mi. West of Robson. $50.\nPhone 352-6093. -140-142\n2-BEDROOM APART.; LIVING\nroom, kitchen. 608 Front St.\n-137-142\n3 BDRM. HOME, PART FURN ,\navail. July 1. Lease. Box 99,\nNelson Daily News.    \u2014122-tfn\nHEATED, FURN. 2-BEDROOM\nsuite, close to hospital. Phone\n352-5712 or 352-3439 Sundays.\n-139-141\nLARGE 1-BDRM. APT. AVAIL-\nable. Clean, quiet, comfortable. Elderly, tidy man preferred. 1421 Front St. -139-141\n3-BDRM. HOUSE; GAS RANGE,\notherwise unfurnished. Phone\nevenings, 352-5059,     \u2014140-141\nOFFICE   SPACE   AVAILABLE\nfor rent W. Kalyniuk Agencies\n-206-tfn\nLOST AND FOUND\nFOUND, BLUE PLASTIC BAG\nof clothes on highway. T. D.\nRosling & Son Ltd., 568 Ward\nSt. \u2014140-140\nNewspaper Advertising\nPays Over and Over\nNEED\nA\nDIFFERENT\nSee\nNELSON\nDISTRICT\n507 Vernon St.\nPhone 352-7410\n-140-140\nALCOHOLICS A N O NYMOUS\nmeets Fri. in the Selkirk\nHealth Unit at 8 p.m. For Information Ph. 352-3458 or write\nBox 465. -102-tfn\nEVERYTHfNG FOR THE AMA\nteur wine maker at Rose's Delicatessen, 551 Ward St.\n-122-147\n\"UBLIC NOTICES\nNOTICE\nQuotations will be received by\nthe undersigned until 3:00 p.m.\nMonday, June 26, 1967, for purchase of a Cottage located at\nStanley Humphries Secondary\nSchool. Unit constructed by Senior Boys' Industrial Education\nclass and contains full plumbing.\nElectrical Service and Electrical\nHeating set in timber for easy\nmoving.\nSuccessful parly must arrange\nmoving of unit off school property within ten days after noti-\nficatioo. Inspection of unit during school hours or by appointment, phone 365-7735.\nQuotation must be sealed and\nclearly marked \"Quotation Cottage\" and contain a certified\ncheque in the amount of 10% of\nquotation.\nThe Board of School Trustees\nhas set a reserve of $3200.00 on\nthe unit and reserves the right\nto accept or reject any or all\nquotations.\nC. H. King.\nSecretary-Treasurer.\nSchool District No. 9,\nBox 820,\nCastlegar, B.C.\n-140-142\nCALL FOR TENDER\nTenders are invited for construction of Cinder Block Buildings 15 ft. x 32 ft. in new Edge-\nwood townsite. Interested\nparties please contact J. B. McLeod, Edgewood, B.C., or phone\n269-7325 or 269-7368. Closing date\nJune 23, 1967. \u2014138-140\nBUSINESS  & PROFESSIONAL\nDIRECTORY\nA handy alphabetical guide to goods and services\navailable in Nelson.\nAuctioneers       i Plumbing & Heating\nJUAL AUCTION SERVICES\nProfessional Sales Management.\nBi-monthly merchandise sales,\nCreston, Saturday, 1 p.m.;\nCastlegar, Thursday, 7 p.m.\nCreston, 356-2596,\nCastlegar. 365-6767.\n-118-143\nKOOTENAY   AUCTIONS\nBox 263        Nelson       352-6018\n-207-tta\n-140-tfn\n8'x40' 1-BDRM. TRAILER -\nNew; W.W. carpet, drapes,\nwashing machine. Exc. cond.\nPhone weekdays, 365-8343.\n-133-140\nAutomobile Dealers\nBILLS' MOTOR-IN LTD.\n(Datsun Sales)\n213 Baker St.   Phone 352-3231\n-tfn\nSHIELDS PONTIAC-BUICK Ltd.\nComplete Automobile Service\n701 Baker St.      Phone 352-5505\n-10-tfn\nBuilding Supplies\nBUILDING SUPPLY LTD.\nEverything In waterproof\nplywood.\n301 Baker St.     Phone 352-3135\n-tfn\nBURNS\nBUILDING MATERIALS LTD.\n602 Baker St.      Phone 352-6061\n-Un\n1. O. ROISTERER\nPlumbing and Heating\nPh. 352-5110     210 Robson St.\n-26-tfn\nPrinting\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\nPrinters \u2022 Lithographers\nColor Printing\nPhone 352-3552\n-lll-tfn\nRadio and TV\nService\nVIDEO ELECTRONICS\nZenith \u2022 Electrohome T.V.\nSales and Service\n394 Baker SL Ph. 352-3355\n-180-tfn\nRefrigeration\nCOLUMBIA TRADING CO.\n609 Ward St.      Phone 352-5571\n1 Block South of Woolworth's\n-tfn\n1954   FORD   CRESTLINE.   PH.\n825-4688.\n-136-141\nMUST SELL 1960 PONTIAC 2-\ndr.,  8-cyl. $450. Ph. 365-7142.\n-139-141\n'61 VOLKS. NEW MOTOR, 1\nyear. Good condition. $675. \u2014\nPhone 352-6788. \u2014137-142\n'57 METEOR, 4 DR. SEDAN,\nnice shape. Give us an offer.\nPh. 352-3787. -136-tfn\n'59 VOt.KS. NEW SHOCKS AND\nbrakes, year old molor. Phone\n352-6805. -135-140\n'55 CHEV STATION WAGON,\ngood hunting and fishing car.\nPh. 352-3787. -136-tfn\n1961 CORVAfR 4-DR. STATION\nwagon. Automatic, radio. Ph.\n352-3525. -135-tfn\n8'x36' GLENDALE WITH 8'xl2'\nfinished porch. 2-bdrm. Good\nshape. $2400. Ph. 365-3029 or\nNo. 10 Cedar Crescent Trailer\nCourt, Castlegar.        -138-140\nHOLIDAY TRAILER, 11 FT.\nKnight. Dual water and light\nsystems, stove .icebox, sink\nand closet; sleeps 4. Phone\n352-5853. -139-142\n1954 NASHUA HOUSE TRAILER\nfor sale. 8 x 35. Phone D.\nPfeiffer. Duncan Lake 721.\n-137-142\nFOR  SALE-10' x 45' MOBILE\nhome wilh 10' x 42' addition;\nalso garage. Phone 365-3093.\n-137-142\nKNIGHT AND SQUIRE Mobile homes are at Barrett\nTrailer Sales. Fruitvale.\n\u201414-tfn\nContractors\nLaszlo Huszak, General Masonry\nStone \u2022 Brick \u25a0 Cement \u25a0 Stucco\nPlastering\n1323 Falls St.        Phone 352-7692\n-239-tfn\nGarages\nUpper   Fairview  Motors  Ltd.\nCor. 7th at Davies   Ph. 352-2525\nTransistorized Ignition\n-tfn\nPhoto Copying\nPOWELL ENGRAVING\n266 Baker St.        Nelson, B.C.\nPhone 352-3552\nContracts - Birth Certificates\nLegal Documenls\nImportant Papers\n-tfn\nRefrigeration Sales and Service\nCARLSON EQUIPMENT\n803 Anderson St.     Ph. 352-5455\n-180-tfn\nCHUCK'S   REFRIGERATION\nAND APPLIANCES\nInstallation\u2014Servicing,   Repairs\n711 Stanley St. Nelson.\nPh. 352-7861.\n-143-tfn\nSporting Goods\nFred Whltclcy's Sport Shop\n\u00ab8 Baker St.      Phone 352-7741\n-tfn\nTopsoil\nLarry's Topsoil, Sand and Gravel\nPh. 352-2355 Days, 352-7576 eves.\n-tfn\nVacuum  Cleaners\nELECTROLUX Sales & Service\n711 Innes SL        Ph. 352-7341\n-77-tfn\nPhone 352-3552 for Classified\nPARKVIEW\nMOTORS\n1967 RAMBLER\nAMBASSADORS 2 DR. H.T.'s\nLoaded, 343 motors, 2 to\nchoose from. Demonstrators.\nSave  ..... $400\n1966 VOLKSWAGEN\nCAMPER: Complete.\nReady to go  $2995\n1966 CHEVROLET IMPALA\n2 DOOR H.T.\nWhite, 10,000 miles.\nLoaded  $3295\n'65 VOLKSWAGEN DELUXE\nOne owner $1595\n1965 RAMBLER\nAMBASSADOR SEDAN\nLow mileage.\nLoaded $2495\n1965 CHEVROLET\n6 cyl. standard shift.\nLow mileage. $2195\n1964 RAMBLER CLASSIC 6\nStandard Shift $1695\n1964 RAMBLER\nSTATION WAGON\nV-8, 327 CID motor.\nStandard shift.\nSpotless $1895\n1964 VOLKSWAGEN 1500\nSTATION WAGON\nOne owner. $1895\nSim HONDA and HELMET\nLow mileage. $295\n1963 FORD FAIRLANE\nV-8 Standard.\nRadio, etc. $1495\n1963 VOLKS. 6-PASS.\nPICKUP\nIdeal summer and winter car\nand truck. Red  $1695\nUSED FROM 1956 VOLKS\nTO 1962\nRead good transportation.\n$295 up to $1095\nI960 PONTIAC\n4-DOOR HARDTOP\nTop condition  $995\nI960 FRONTENAC\nPriced at. . $695\n1960 BUICK\nReal nice $895\n1960 VALIANT SEDAN\nSpecial $595\n1959 VOLVO 4 DR. SEDAN\nPriced at  $495\n1958 STUDEBAKER\nPriced at $395\n1958 CHEVROLET\nTransportation $395\n1957 MERCURY\nCream Puff  $475\n1956 ZEPHYR SEDAN\nPriced at $250\n19.W VANGUARD\nPriced at $295\n1951 INTERNATIONAL\n1 TON PICKUP\nReal work horse.\nSpecial         $495\nCENTURY CAMPER\n$795\n1\u201416' BOAT\nWindshield, controls.\nTake motor up to 60 H.P.\n$295\n1\u201413' BOAT, TRAILER and\nMOTOR\n\u2014 SPECIAL \u2014\nVolkswagen, New car equipment tires.\nWhitewalls:     $19.95\nBlackwall: $17.95\nAsk for Free Hoist Check\nand Estimate Tor Safe\nSummer Driving.\nRemember;\nWe have one of Ihe hesl\nequipped shops in Ihe district, factory Iraincd personnel and 2 parls men.\nopen for your convenience\nsix (6) days a week.\nPARKVIEW\nMOTORS\nMain Office:\n323 Nelson Ave.\nPhone  352-5355\nUsed Car Lot:\n722 Bnkcr St.\nPhone 352-2713\nJ.\n \u25a0MMnMMH\nPROPERTY HOUSES, FARMS, ETC. FOR SALE\nONE OF NELSON'S FINEST HOMES\nBeautiful lower Fairview corner location. Fully landscaped in\nlawn and shrubs. Rear one-half of property fenced. Dwelling\nLiving room with fireplace, large dining room, kitchen, sunroom,\nand four bedrooms. Full basement, oil H\/A furnace, 2-cnr\ncarport at rear. %,OA ^00\nFull Appraised Value ^4'JUU\n$9000 down balance by existing Mortgage at $127 per month.\nFor further Information and appointment to view, contact\nT. D. Rosling & Son Ltd.\n568 Ward Street                            Phone 352-3581\n-140-141\nWanted\nFISHERMAN'S   SPECIAL:   BY\nowner \u2014 3-bedroom home on\n2 acres in Mirror Lake. L.R.\nWi'h fireplace, oil heal. W.K.\npower. Ph. Mr. Mueller, 352-\n6681, or after 9 p.m., 352-5958.\n-135-140\nTo Rent\n2-3 Bedroom Home\n(No Children)\nPHONE 352-2815\nSuper-Valu Bakery\n-137-1)\n30 ACRES - 990 FEET KOOTE-\nnay Lake frontage. 1400 sq ft.\nhome About Vi miles south\nof Fletcher Creek Owner has\nplaced a reasonable price on\nthis very desirable property.\nEasy terms with $5000 down\npayment Please call William\nKalyniuk Agencies Ltd. \u2014\n352-2425. -117-tfn\nIMMEDIATE POSSESSION ON\nthis meticulous 2 bdrm home\nwhich is brand new construction. Drive by 210 Observatory\nSt., then phone for a private\nappointment to view Priced\nunder $20,000 William Kalyniuk Agencies Ltd. Ph 352-2425\n-75-tfn\nLARGE FAMILY HOME IN\nNelson. Orchard, farm buildings. One mile from city centre, uphill district. Phone 352-\n7546 or write Box 491, Nelson.\n-137-tfn\nUPHILL DISTRICT, 320 BEAS-\nley St., 2 bdrm, home on\nlevel landscaped lots. Covered backyard patio, gas furnace, basement garage. Ph.\n352-6039. -136-141\nMUST BE SOLD - THIS VAL-\nuable downtown corner with\ntwo-storey concrete building.\nPlease nhone Wm Kalyniuk\nAgencies Ltd.. 352-2425.\n-97-tfn\nLINDAL CEDAR HOMES, PA-\nnorama Model shown by appointment, IB mi. North Shore\nContact G. W. Harding, R.R\nNo. 1. Nelson. Ph. 229-4603.\n-125-151\n3-BDRM. HOUSE, 512 ANDER-\nson St. Beautiful view and\ncreek; situated on 6 city lots.\n5 min. walk from cily centre.\nFull basement, carport, gas\nfurnace. Occupancy Aug. 1st.\nPhone 352-5784. -137-150\nNEW 3 BDRM HOME. PHONE\nSouth Slocan 359-7275.\n-122-147\nLOTS FOR SALE, NEAR GOLF\ncourse. Ph. 352-2398. -131-142\nIF THE PAYMENTS ON THE\nhouse you sold don't come in\nfast enough to meet your need\nwe could buy the balance\nfrom you. We pay In cash.\nBox 374, Trail, B.C.    -115-tfn\nALONG ARROW ' LAKE^AT\nRobson: 18-unit trailer court\nwith older-type house. Good\ntourist potential. Trade or se\"\nPhone 365-5463. -138-149\nIN KASLO: 3-BDRM. HOUSE\non 12 acres land for sale or\nrent (reasonable!. Write or\ncontact Mrs. A. Garay, Box\n788, Castlegar, B.C.    -139-143\n2-BDRM. HOME ON 7 ACRES\nat   Longbeach.   Access  to\nbeach.   Phone 352-5215  mornings or 352-2155 after 3 p.m.\n-137-162\n6 ACRES, 5 BDRM. HOUSE,\ngood barn, hi block from\nschool Nelson City Center IVi\nmiles. Ph. owner, 352-2338.\n129-tfn\nFREE INSPECTION DO YOU\nrequire a business location\nwith 120 feet on highway and\nnear Baker St.? Call William\nKalyniuk Agencies Ltd.. phone\n362-2425 -285-tfn\n(Continued Next Column)\n* 1959 Olds. Super 88\n\u25a0\u00a3 1960 Envoy\nVr   1965 Ford Custom\nALL NEW B.M.C.   PRODUCTS  AVAILABLE\nDOWNTOWN\nTEXACO SERVICE\nPhone 352-2721\n206 Baker St.\nWEEKEND SALE\nup to 20^\u00b0 OFF\nWas Is\nNew   60 cc Yamaha:   $340.00 $299.00\nNew   50 cc Yamaha:       285.00 235.00\nNew 100 cc Yamaha Twin:     485.00 445.00\nNew 100 CO Ducati Trail:     400.00 349.00\nNew 125 cc Ducati:     579.00 479,00\nNew 750 cc Norton:   1350.00\nUsed 125 cc Honda:     475.00 375.00\nUsed 250 cc Ducati:    575.00 475.00\nNEW CHRYSLER OUTBOARDS\n35 H.P. Electric:                 950.00 850.00\n\u25a015 H.P. Electric:     849.00 740.00\n35 H.P. Electric:   755.00 695.00\n20 H.P  538.00 488.00\n9 H.P.     410.00 360.00\nCar Top Boats, Runahouti . . . Repair To All Makes\nMOTORCYCLE CENTRE\n;il2  Front St. Nelson, B.C.\nPhone 352-2414\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS,   ETC.,  FOR   SALE\n(Conlinued)\nREALTY CO, LTD.\nPhone 352-7252\nPHIL  ROBINSON\nRes. 352-2304\nGORDON BURGESS\nRes. 352-6087\nWANT ACT I ON!\nList wilh ua\nNOW\nRESULTS ARE WHAT\nCOUNT\nNORTH  SHORE\nPROPERTIES\nJUST ACROSS THE BRIDGE\nNew 3 B.R. home. Sunken L.R.\nwith fireplace, W. to W. carpet,\nlarge picture window overlooking lake, raised dining\narea with sliding doors on to\nsundeck; cabinet kitchen with\nbuilt-in range; family room.\nUnfinished Rec. Room with\nfireplace. Full basement, propane gas furnace. Carport.\nPatio Land- $25,000\nscaped grounds, '\nTerms.\nTWO MILES FROM BRIDGE\n3 B.R. modern home on 15\nacres with Sandy Beach. L.R.\nwith fireplace; D.R.; efficiently planned kitchen with lots of\nbuilt-ins. Elec. heat. Drive-in\ngarage. Landscaped grounds.\nBeautiful view $28,500\nof lake. '\n($10,000 down payment)\nM.L.S.\nSIX MILE ROAD\nApprox.   20   acres   farmland,\ncleared:  level; water; power\nTerms. $22,500\nSale Price\n(Multiple Listing)\nINVESTMENT PROPERTY\nHoliday Inn site at Procter,\napprox. 5 acres, 677 feet good\nbeach, 1 cabin, water and\npower. An ideal $35,000\nsite. Terms. .   .\nLONGBEACH\n3 lots, 100 x 200, level, trees,\naccess to beach.      $|500\nEach\n1 lot facing beach. $3000\nPrice   .   v\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS,  ETC.,  FOR SALE\n(Conlinued)\nLARDEAU\n75 Acres of which 65 are cleared; fruit trees; river frontage.\nDwelling   and    guest   house.\nFull line of power machinery.\n$16,500\nPrice\n$5000 down)\n867 FT. SANDY BEACH\nLocated   on   Southshore, approx. 58 acres   wooded   and\nmostly level.   Main   dwelling\nand   guest   house   furnished.\nPrice includes 17' boat and motor;  boot house;  \"Ampicar\";\njeep; lawn mowers, etc. Further particulars on request.\nM.L.S.\nBUSINESS\nOPPORTUNITIES\nRetail store with 1200 sq. ft.\nfloor space; across street from\nnew Super \u2022 Valu. Concrete\nblock wilh full basement Excellent location. $24 000\nTerms. '\nM.L.S.\nBUSINESS  RENTAL\n\\pprox. 1400 sq. ft. with store\ni'ont   and   basement   at   461\nlosephine St.  Heat supplied;\nlease    available.    Occupancy\nWANT A BOAT HOUSE?\nTwo   wells,   galvanized   iron\nsides,  good roof,  wired  for\nelectricity. $1200\nTerms.\nK.M.L.S.\nVIEW LOT\nMice building lot with 190' on\nView St., approx.    $2950\n:ooo sq. ft. Terms.   ^\n(Multiple Listing)\nApprox.  Vi  acres on  Silver\nKing Rd., partly     $4000\ncleared. Terms.\n\u2014140-140\nBUSINESS. 30-FT . ON BAKER\nSt.: building 2-storey frame\nAll this for under $25,000 -\nPlease contact Wm Kalyniuk\nAgencies Ltd. Ph 352-2425\n-97-tfn\n2-BDRM. HOME IN CASTLE-\ngar on 2nd Ave. near High\nSchool. Phone 365-5374.\n-140-151\nLAKESHORE  LOTS  AT   RED-\nfish Creek   William Kalyniuk\nAgencies Ltd.. phone 352-2425\n-285-tfn\nl-RDRM HOME ON U> ACRE\nFull basement and oil heat\nApprox I mile from city centre; 2 blocks from city bus.\nPhone 352-5991 -115-tfn\n2-BDRM. HOUSE IN FAIR-\nvlew: extra bedroom in basement. Gas heat. Ph. 852-2728\n(Continued Next Column)\nNewspaper  Advertising\ni'\" ft- Over and Over\nDO IT NOW!\nList Thruugh\nMctlardy Agencies Ltd.\nCASH for your home available\nthrough National Housing Act\non approved properties.\nWANTED\nFor cash buyer 3 B.R. hume,\nIn good condition, preferably\nFairview District. $14,000 to\n$16,000. Call 352-6144. We would\nlike to inspect for our qualified\nbuyer.\nTWO FAMILY DWELLING\nIn good location, with good\nincome. Family man can reconvert to five bedroom home.\nDrive-in garage $8500\non level. Terms.       \u00abP\u00b0\u00abJ\u00ab\u00bb\nCITY CENTRE\nVictoria St. 2-3 B.R.  kitchen\nand dining area. Gas furnace\nmvL    *6500\nOnly $1500 down.\n$75 per mo. incl. 7% int.\nCHATHAM ST.\nCompact 2 B.R. home. Functional kit., vanity bathroom\nglass enclosed front porch\nFenced lawn in the $\u00a7500\nrear. S.P.\n$2500 down.\n$40 per mo. plus 6\u2122\u00bb interest.\nPERRY SIDING FARM\n11 acres, 7 acres clear, 4 acres\nbush and wood. Neat tidy log\nhouse. Double garage and out-\nbuildings. $8100\nBest Buy. M.L.S.      fJlvv\nLIVE IN THE COUNTRY\n2 homes. One now ready, the\nother needs finishing. Hayshed\nand workshop. l',4 miles from\ncity limits south. Taxes $1.00\nper year net. $ J 0,000\nGood terms.\nIDEAL LOCATION\nHome and income for 8 student\nrentals or reconvert for family\n4 B.R. View L.R. Large kit-\nfffiflW-   $17,900\nFair Mkt. Value\nFinancing available.\nMULTIPLE LISTING\n20 acre farm on the Salmo-\nNelson Hwy, mostly cultivated,\nwater rights and irrigation\nsystem with barn and other\noutbuildings. Also 3 B.R.\nbungalow. Gas heat and H.W.,\n220 power. Taxes $8000\n$1.00. Amazing Price\n$2500 down, $57.60 per mo.\nincluding 7% Interest.\nNEAR CENTRAL SCHOOL\n3 blocks to Baker St. 2 B.R.\nup, 1 B.R. down. Large kitchen. Full basement, gas furnace. $7000\nSale Price\nTry N.H.A. 95% financing.\nGROCERY and\nCONFECTIONERY\nOld established location with\ngood net returns for couple or\nfamily. 3 B.R. living accommodation in same building.\nCarport attached. Very reasonable terms.\n10 MINUTE DRIVE WEST\n12 acres (approx.) Farm\nNewly remodelled 4 BR. home,\npropane heated, magnificent\nview location. Good barn on\nconcrete foundation, just right\nfor ponies and riding horses\n*\u00bb*. $12,500\nSale Price v     '\nSee us for details,\nNEAR DUNCAN DAM\nNewly  built,   nearly   finished\nAlpine   cottage.    Located   in\nLardeau with 120 acres, some\ntimber. Real hideaway home.\nPrice $4750\nRight *\n$2500 down. $50 per month\nincluding 7% interest.\nYes, We Have\n1000 FT. LAKE FRONTAGE\nWith 38 acres and  furnished\nlog house. View location near\nKaslo. Terms.\nIDEAL LOCATION\nHome and income for 8 student\nrentals or reconvert for family\n4 B.R. View L.R. Large kit-\nffSSW   $17,900\nFair Mkt. Value\nFinancing available.\nPROPERTY,  HOUSES,\nFARMS,  ETC.,  FOR SALE\n(Conlinued)\nN. SHORE LOCATION\nHome and Income. Commanding view of Kootenay\nLake. Excellent potential for\naggressive manager operator.\n$9000 down plus stock or lease\n$175 per month with purchase\nof stock and fixtures, also\nequiprpent, grocery store and\n3 BR. apt. above. Reduced\nfor quick sale.\nConfidential information\ngiven on request.\nYES . . . WE HAVE LOTS\n6 MILE LOT\n100 x 200. Basement excavated\nWater line hookup.   $2500\nApprox. Mi acre.      *^\n$1000 down. $50 per mo.\nMcHARDY\nAGENCIES   LTD.\nREAL ESTATE   INSURANCE\n554 Ward St Nelson   B C\nPHONE OFFICE. 352-6144\nSylvia Brashear, Res. 825-4643\nGeo,   Lambert,   Res.   352-39112\n-140-14(1\nT. D. ROSLING 4 SON LTD.\n\"NELSON'S ONLY\nEXCLUSIVE\nREAL  ESTATE  OFFICE\"\nWE BUY - wE SELL\nWE TRADE DWELLINGS\nLOW DOWN PAYMENT\nOlder style 3-4 bedroom home,\nUphill District. Full basement,\ngas furnace. ^\".(fllll\nAppraised Value \u2022I'31'\"\"\nWith $750 down, balance $72.70\nper month incl. Interest,\nUNION STREET\nTwo bedroom dwelling\u2014space\nfor 2 additional B.R.'s up. Full\nbasement   and   gas   furnace.\nAppraised $| 1,500\nValue '\nWith $1500 down, C.M.H.C.\nfinancing available.\nNORTH SHORE\n(Near Bridge)\nModernistic bungalow \u2014 three\nbedrooms. View windows in\nL.R., fireplace, oak floors,\nCathedral ceiling; modem\nkitchen. Full basement, gas\nfurnace. SI4.Q00\nAppraised Value ^'^\"V\nTerms.\nUPHILL DISTRICT\n(On Bus Route)\nLarge family dwelling \u2014 6\nrooms, ultra-modern kitchen,\nconnec. for auto, washer. Finished apartment down \u2014 L.R.,\nwall-to-wall carpet, 1 bedroom,\nkitchen-dinette. Gas H\/W heat.\nAppraised $15,900\nWith $2500 down.\nREDUCED FOR QUICK SALE\nOwner says 'sell for $1,000 below appraised value.' DUPLEX \u2014 each unit 2 bedrooms, separate entrances,\nheat. Double carport at rear.\n$15,900\nOnly\nWith $2000 down.\n(Multiple Listing)\nNINTH STREET\nModern four bedroom bungalow, landscaped lot. Large living room, fireplace. Full base-\nmenL rumpus room, laundry,\noil furnace. \u00abI 7 500\nAppraised Value * ' ' '0UU\nWith $5000 down.\nCHOICE FAIRVIEW\nLOCATION\nAttractive 3 bedroom bungalow\non beautifully landscaped corner lot. Fully improved basement, rumpus room, laundry,\nextra B.R., oil furnace\nFair Mkt. $20,900\nValue ... '\nWith $3000 down.\nMACHINERY\n(Conlinued Next Column)\ni\nTWO LARGE\nFAMILY HOMES\nLower Fairview\nBEHNSEN STREET \u2014 Large\nfamily home,  app.  140 foot\nfrontage, secluded site, level\ncorner location. Seven large\nrooms,   fireplace,   oil   heal.\ndouble plumbing. Immediate\nOccupancy.        $23,900\nPrice w      '\nWill consider Trade.\nFIRST STREET - Ideal family home \u2014 four bedrooms,\nfireplace, sunroom, oil heat.\nLarge   2   car   carport,   lm-\n\u00bb\u00ab\u2022        $24,500\nOccupancy.\nWith $9000 down.\nT. D. Rosling\n& Soe Ltd.\nOFFICE  PHONE 352-3581\nSalesman\nDON ROSLING\nRes   Phone 352-2698\nPHYLLIS TURNER\nRes. Phone 352-5694\n568 Ward St. Ph. 352-3581\nTRY   IT\nAND FEEL THE\nDIFFERENCE\nThe\nJOHN  DEERE\nJD440\nSKIDDER\nWill Prove Itself.\nAsk for domonslralion.\n514 Railway St.\nPhone 352-5301\n-138-140\nVALLEY AUTOMOTIVE LTD.\nMassey Ferguson, New Holland new and used (arm equip-\nment Parts soles ond service\nPhone 356-2254 Creslon, B C.\n-233-tfn\nFOR SALE-LOGGER, SKAGIT\njammer with heelboom attachment, on tandem truck. Excellent condition. Phone Fruit-\nvale, 367-9541, evenings.\n-131-142\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JUNE 16, 1967\u201411\nStarfighter Jet Scream\nReplaces Factory Whistle\n75*A MICHIGAN FRONT END\nloader, backhoe attachment\nfor TD-9. Phone 365-5611 or\nwrite Box 205, Castlcgar.\n-135-140\nOBDERS AID\nNORTH VANCOUVER (CP>-\nPrime Minister Pearson has instructed federal government departments to assist employees\nal Burrard Dry Dock Co. Ltd.,\nwhere 400 men are being laid\noff. President Jeff Powers of the\nMarine Workers and Boilermakers' Union said he was informed of the move by a telegram from Ottawa, but was not\ntold how assistance would be\nrendered.\nNewspaper Advertising\nPays Over and Over\nCOLD LAKE, Alta. (CP)-\nIn Marg O'Brien's town, Ihe\nscream of Starfighter jets\ntakes the place of a factory\nwhistle.\nWife of nn RCAF corporal\nand mother of a seven-year-\nold boy, Mrs. O'Brien is one\not 7,000 inhabitants of ono of\nCanada's largest mllllry installations.\nEdmonton is 200 miles\nsouthwest by road, through\npatchy woodlands and small\nfarm towns. North and oast\nthe roads dwindle out amid\nlake-filled bush.\nIf tho station were an Incorporated city, it would be\nAlberta's eighth In size. It\nhas a shopping centre,\nschools, 50-bed hospilal and\nsuburban homes for 1,100 families. They elect their own\ncommunity council and the\ncalendar is filled wilh activities.\nThey even have their own\nlanguage.\n\"You learn to speak In initials,\" Mrs. O'Brien said.\n\"C.Ad.O. for chief administrative officer, SMO fnr senior\nmedical officer, PMQs for\npermanent married quarters.\nIf a thing is broken it's u-s\u2014\nunserviceable.\"\nYou learn to make your own\nentertainment too. There are\nclubs for every sport from\nsailing to badminton and a\ncurling rink, swimming pool,\nbowling alley and gym.\nThere's a nine - hole golf\ncourse and skiing and flying\nlessons are available.\nVOLUNTEERS ON AIR\nResidents are building their\nown camp ground at a nearby\nlake. Their 24-hour-a-day radio station, CHCL, is staffed\nby 20 volunteers whose pay\nwas last calculated at 31 cents\nan hour.\nThe weekly newsletter carries advertisements for home\nbusinesses from Fred's Rubber Stamp Shop to driving lesions \"in English or French.\"\nDance bands abound: the\nNorther nalres, the Moon\nGlows, the Country Gentlemen, Ihe Marquis, the Spec-\ntrums, the People, the Panix\nand B.C. and the Cavemen.\nWives staff a play school;\nchurch auxiliaries run a thrift\nshop.\n\"We're actually self - sufficient,\" said Mrs. O'Brien.\n\"Y'ou need nover be bored or\nlonely. And it's tremendous\nfor the kids.\"\nHer own son is an altar boy\nat the chapel and helps at the\nlibrary. He skates every weekend in the winter and In the\nsummer moves with the family to a lakeside tent from\nwhich his falher can commute\nto the base,\nHe will have seen a lot\nof Canada by the time he\nreaches high school. Already\nthe O'Briens have lived in\nNewfoundland, Nova Scotia,\nQuebec and Ontario. This\nsummer they are moving\nagain, from Alberta to New\nBrunswick.\nBETWEEN TWO WORLDS\n\"In the air force you're continually picking up roots and\ngoing elsewhere. You have to\nlove to travel,\" Mrs. O'Brien\nsaid.\n\"Your furniture takes a bit\nof a beating, and unless you're\nin PMQs, every place you\nmove you have to buy new\ncurtains to fit different-sized\nwindows.\n\"And there is absolutely no\nunity In Canadian education.\nYou go to one province and\nyour child is a grade ahead\nand in another he's a grade\nbelow.\n\"There are some youngsters, too, who shouldn't be in\nair force life. Some just\nhaven't the stamina.\"\nMothers, loo, must be resil\nient, for dependents on a mi!\ntary base are people In th\nmiddle.\nyou civilians and the a-\nforce doesn't consider you a\nforce.\"\nYou learn to take the el\nquette of military rank fo\ngranted.\n\"Women are worse tha\nmen about it. We say som.\n'wear their husband's rank.\nBul then you (civilians) knov,\npeople who are jealous ol\ntheir friends too. It's the\nsame here.\"\nUSED CARS\n1957 Monarch  H.T.\n1949 Chevrolet 1-Ton\n1961  Chevrolet  i-Ton\n1966 Renault Major\nLow  mileage,  like new.\n1959 Chevrolet\nStation Wagon\n1956 Mercury H.T.\n1954 Austin\n1960 Meteor\nStd- Transmission.\n1957 Buick Sedan\n1961 Triumph\nHerald Coupe\n1962 Volkswagen\n5,000 miles on motor.\nNORTH\nSHORE\nSERVICE\nJust Across the Bridge\nPh. 352-2929\n-140-140\nBaiht iNVitftf\nCirculation Dept., Ph. 352-3552\nIn CRANBROOK. contact MRS. I\nC. CLOAREC, 501-S-5th St.\nto KIMBERLEY   contact MRS.\nW   MORRIS. 355 Haney St.    I\nPrice per single copy. 10 cents\nBy carrier per week  45 cents\nin advance\nSubscription rates:\nBy mail in Canada\nOutside Nelson\nOne month I 2.25\nThree months         5.50'\nSix months             11.00\nOne  year 20 00\nBy  mail  to  United  Kingdom\nor Ihe Commonwealth\nOne  month     $ 2.50\nThree months        6.75\nSix   Months           12.50'\nOne  Year 23.00\nBy mail to U S A or\nForeign Countries\nOne  month $ 3.00\nThree months           8.00\nSix  months       15 00\nOne  year 21100\nWhere extra postage is required\nabove rates plus postage\nKING SIZE\nBARGAINS\nFROM THE \"GOOD GUYS\" AT\nCITY AUTO\n1961 Olds Sedan\nV-8 Auto., P.S., P.B.,\nRadio, Green\n1962 Valiant Sedan\nStd. Slant Six Motor,\nRadio, Maroon\n1966 Pontiae 4-Door\nH.T. Parisienne\nAuto. V-8, P.S., P.B.,\nRadio, Maroon.\n1961 Buick Sedan\nAuto., V-8, P.S., P.B.,\nRadio, Blue.\n1960 Pontiae\n2-Door H.T.\nStd., Big 6 Motor, Radio,\nTwo Tone, Gold and White.\n1963 Plymouth\n2-Door\nStandard 8, Blue\n1960 Pontiae Sedan\nStandard, Eight,  Radio,\nSilver Gray.\n1958 Dodge Royal\nSedan\nAuto. V-8, P.S., P.B.,\nRadio, Green and White\nFATHER'S  DAY     |\nSPECIALS\n1961  Ford 2-Dr.:   $\"71 C\nStd. Six, Maroon       \/ 10\n1960 Chev. Sedan: <~ro C\nSt., Six, Blue   \/OD\n1957 Chev. Sedan\nAuto. Six,\n35,000 Original Miles,\nTurquoise and White\n1957 Olds\n2-Door H.T.\nV-8 Auto. P.S., P.B.,\nRadio, Silver Gray\n1966 Dodge Coronet\n2-Door H.T.\nV-8 Auto., Console,\nMauve Metallic.\n1966 Ford L.T.D.\n2-Door H.T.\nAll Power,  Black.\n1960 Olds.\n4-Door H.T.\nV-8 Auto., P.S., P.B.,\nRadio, Silver Gray.\n1966 Valiant\nConvertible\nV-8, Auto., Console,\nWhite\n1966 Chev. Sedan\nBig Std.  6 Motor,\nRadio, Green\n1960 Dodge Sedan\nAuto., Six, Radio,\nRust and White\nVERNON (CP)-The Vernon\nChamber of Commerca Tuesday\nset up a special agricultural\ncommittee to aid persons interested in moving lo the Okanogan to farm. The chamber appointed comniillce heads to of-\nfor advice to persons on voce\ntables, bees, sheep, hogs, dairy\ning, poultry and beef. I^\u00a3tl\nUSED CARS\nCITY AUTO\nSERVICE LTD.\nSales Lot Manager, TOM STACEY\nSalesmen, GIL GILBERT, BUD MAWER\nPhone 352-5346\nCITY AUTO CAR LOT\nCORNER VICTORIA AND  KOOTENAY STS.\nV^ Your Key to\nj   BETTER\n1   LIVING\nPURCHASE  CREDIT\n 12\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JUNE 16, 1967\nTHIS WEEK ONLY we are closing at 5:30 p.m. In\norder to allend B.C. Ph. A Provincial Convention.\nCheck the FOOT HEALTH SECTION for\nEverything That Can Make Your Summer\nMore Pleasant.\n\u2022 DR. SCHOLLS   \u2022 BLUE JAY  \u2022 TINACTIN\n\u2022 DESENEX \u2022 CRESS Products at\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nMARKET TRENDS!      Stock Quotations\nB.C Bank Launches\nBig Equity Offer\nBy ALLAN EATON\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Canada's youngest bank, headed by\nCanada's youngest bank president,, launched a drive to sell\n$75,000,000 worth of shares, biggest equity offer ever made in\nCanada.\nThe Bank of British Columbia,\nheaded by 39-year-old Frank D.\nTrebell, expects to reach its objective by mid-July, Tiave ~ its\nbanking certificate eight weeks\nlater and be operating in February, 1968.\nMr. Trebell, a native of Picton, Ont., who elected to move\nto the West two years ago, said\nthe Bank of B.C. does not want\neastern participation in its operations.\nThus, shares are being offered\nonly in -the four western provinces at $25 a share through investment dealers, stock brokers\nand banks throughout the West.\nMr. Trebell said he expects\n10 per cent of the $75,000,000\ncapital stock will be bought by\nforeign companies. Orders will\nbe confirmed as received, he\nanticipates.\nThe Bank of B.C. opened its\nfirst branch this week in downtown Vancouver, pot to accept\ndeposits or make loans but as\nan operational base. It will become a permanent branch next\nFebruary, when additional\nbranches also will be opened in\nVictoria and Toronto.\n\"Toronto is the head office of\nmost Canadian banks and we\nshould have a branch there to\nknow what our competition is\ndoing,\" he said.\nTO HAVE OTHERS\nThe bank expects to open six\nother branches in B.C. during\n1968. A Montreal branch is\nplanned later, he said.\nThe seven-year projection Is\nfor 120 branches, employing\n2,000 persons. Deposits are expected to total $1,000,000,000,\nabout $600,000,000 of it from\nB.C.\nMr. Trebell said the projected\ndeposit total for existing banks\nin seven years will be about\n$3,000,000,000 in the province. He\nestimated 25 per cent of his\nbank's deposits will be in for\neign currencies.\nThere is-little \"doubt the B.C.\nbank will have an effect on existing banks, financial observers\nsay, but the banks have offered\ntheir welcome. -\nOf the 120 branches the B.C.\nbank eventually expects to operate, 90 will be in B.C., 10 in\nAlberta, five in Manitoba and\nfive in Saskatchewan. Mr. Trebell said the remaining\nbranches will be in Toronto,\nMontreal and elsewhere.\nThe 6hare - sale campaign,\nwith its minimum offering of\nfour shares to customer, will at\ntract customers for two reasons, he said:\n'One, for the long-term interest, and secondly because people believe in B.C.\"\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\nWINNIPEG\n(CP)   -\n-   Grain\nquotes (basis Lakehead':\nHigh\nLow\nClose\nFlas\nJly      306\n302'i\n304%\nOct      312%\n309 ls\n311%-%\nDec      311%\n3094\n310%\nMay     320\n3183,i\n318%\nRapeseed\nJly      271H\n270\"*\n270V.\nNov     2694\n267%\n268\nJan      268\n267\n267\nMar      \u2014\n\u2014\n267%\nOats\nJly\n\u2014\n91V.\nOct       -\n\u2014\n93\nDec       \u2014\n\u2014\n91%\nMay      \u2014\n\u2014\n92%\nBarley\nJly      129\u00b0,\n129%\n129%\nOct      130?i\n130%\n130V,\nDec       \u2014\n\u2014\n128%\nMay      \u2014\n\u2014\n129\nRye\nJly       131%\n131\n131%\nOct      1323i\n132%\n132%\nDec     133ls\n132%\n133%\nMay      \u2014\n\u2014\n136\nRECEIVES PAYMENT\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Payment of $2,500 in damages to\nretired fire chief Charles Fitzpatrick, 62, who was badly in\njured by a jet of water from\na broken fire hose, was authorized Tuesday by city council. He\nwas watching a fire drill when\na practice hose- split and the\nwater knocked him to the\nground.  -\n: TORONTO (CP)-Western oils\npaced the market higher in\nmoderate trading Thursday at\nthe Toronto Stock Exchange.\nThe advance came after news\nthat Algeria and Kuwait resumed export activities halted\nlast week during the Middle\nEast war. However, most Arab\ncountries are maintaining an\nembargo against Britain and the\nUnited States.\nAnalysts said the recent rise\nin the price of oil issues resulted from speculators anticipating a larger market in the\nU.S. for Canadian oil if the Arab\npowers refuse to resume trading.\nB-A rose % to 37Vi, Imperial\nOil 34 to 61, Shell % to 28%,\nHudson's Bay and Pacific Petroleum % each to 35% and 15\nand Scurry-Rainbow 2 to 29's.\nDome Petroleum rose 3% to\n63%. Dome shareholders recently approved a proposal to\nacquire Provo Gas Producers\nLtd. on a share exchange basis.\nURANIUMS DOWN\nUranium issues closed fractionally lower. Preston and Rio\nAlgom lost % each to 21% and\n36% and Roman Corp. % to\n21%. Kerr-Addison gained % to\n15% and Denison closed unchanged at 76.\nAmong industrials, Maple\nLeaf Gardens rose 1 to 29% following the announcement of a\nthird - quarter dividend of 15\ncenls plus $1.50 extra. Bell Telephone losst % to 49% after the\nannouncement that the company's application to Parliament for a rewriting of its charter will be the occasion of an\ninquiry into the company's involvement in the communications industry.\nOn index, industrials gained\n01 to 165.97, golds .74 to 173.23,\nbase metals .21 to 101.70 and\nwestern oils 4.63. The oil index\nreached an all-time high of\n173.59 earlier in the session.\nVolume was 3,310.000 shares\ncompared with 3,140,000 traded\nWednesday.\nMONTREAL (CP) - After\nregistering moderate gains earlier in the session, stocks backtracked near the close Thursday on the Montreal Stock Exchange and at the final bell the\nmarket was mixed, with the\ncomposite index almost unchanged.\nAdvances outnumbered losers\n63 to 47 on the Montreal list and\n87 to 80 on the combined Montreal markets.\nSenior oils were the only section showing any degree of\nstrength, with Imperial up 3i\nat 61 and Husky % at 17%. Pacific Pete and Shell each gained\n% to 15 and 28% respectively.\nCPR advanced % to 70% and\nWalker-Gooderham % to 34%\namong the better industrials.\nCanada Cement and Dominion\nGlass each slid % to 41 and 11.\nUtilities were mixed. New\nBrunswick Telephone rose % to\n16 while Calgary Power dipped\nthe same amount to 22%.\nFALCONBRIDGE GAINS 1%\nAmong senior mines, Falconbridge Nickel climbed 1% to\n86% while Hudson Bay Mining\nlost 1% to 61%.\nAmong  banks,   Montreal   declined 1% to 62% and Canadi-\nenne Nationale % to 58%.\nAmong speculative mines and\noils on the Canadian Stock Ex\nchange, Provo won 20 cents to\n$6.90 and Chemalloy ten cents\nto $2.62. Matachewan Canadian\nwas up seven cents to $1.11 in\nsales of 330,400 shares.\nIndustrial volume was 195,715,\nand mines and oils 800,513 compared with 186.280 and 622,660\nWednesday.\nOn index, industrials rose .23\nat 165.30; utilities slid .04 at\n148.34; banks .78 at 124.47; papers .98 at 112.37. The composite index advanced .08 at\n158.17.\nNEW YORK (AP)-The stock\nmarket returned to the winning\ncolumn Thursday, posting its\nseventh advance in eight sessions. Trading was heavy.\nA feature was unusual\nstrength in aerospace  issues.\nVolume was 11,250,000 shares\ncompared with 10.960.000 Wednesday.\nThe Dow\" Jon\"es\" illcras1rial-aT=\nerage rose 2.65 to 883.26.\nOf 1,450 issues traded,. 660\nrose and 567 fell. Highs for the\nyear totalled 140\"a~nff\"Iows\"3u7\nThe Associated Press average\nof 60 stocks rose .6 to 327.1.\nMartin Marietta was the most\nactive stock, rising % to 22%\non 188,600 shares.\nBoeing rose 5%, United Aircraft 5, General Dynamics 13\u00ab\nand Lockheed 1%.\nGulf Oil reported that operations in Kuwait are being restored to normal, but .the stock\nwas off %. Among other international oils, Texaco sank 2%,\nRoyal Dutch rose % and Jersey\nStandard eased %.\nStandard and Poor's 500-stock\nindex rose .09 to 92.49.\nThe New Y'ork Stock Exchange index gained 8 cents at\n$51.14.\nAmong Canadians, Dome\nMines gained one point, Canadian Pacific and International\nNickel % each, and Walker\nGooderham %. Distillers Seagrams and Hudson Bay Mining\nwere down Vi.\nPrices rose on the American\nStock Exchange. Volume was\n5,620.000 shares compared with\n4,940,000 Wednesday. Scurry\nRainbow Oil advanced 1%, Brazilian Light and Power %, Ca-\nThe Daily News does not hold Itself responsible in the event of an error In the   following list.\nClosing prices supplied by Doherty, Roadhouse & McCuaig Bros., Trail, B.C.\nTORONTO  STOCKS\nnadian Marconi %\nand Preston\n%.\nWhat stocks did:\nThur.   Wed.\nAdvances\n660      565\nDeclines\n567     653\nUnchanged\n223      236\nTotal\n1,450   1,454\nDividends\nBy THE  CANADIAN  PRESS\nAngus Corp., $2.50 pref. series\nA 62% cents; $2.60 pref. series\nA 65 cents; class B pref. 67%\ncents, August 1, record July 14;\ncommon 14 cents; class C pref.\n14 cents, Sept. 1, record July\n31.\nB.C. Forest Products, common 25 cents: 6-per-cent pref.\n75 cents, August 1, record July\n7.\nBrooke Bond Canada Ltd., 26\ncents, July 14, record June 15.\nColumbia Cellulose Co. Ltd.,\n$1.20 pref. 30 cents, June 30,\nrecord June 16.\nSimpsons-Sears Ltd., 9 cents,\nincrease of 6 cents annually.\nSept. 15, record August 1R_\nINDUSTRIALS\nUnion Gas of C.\n12.25\n12.75\nAbitibi\n10.12\n10.25\nWalker \u2022 Gooder\n34.00\n34.25\nAsbestos\n21.50\n21.75\nWestcoast T.\n25.50\n25.75\nAlgoma Steel\n25.50\n25.75\nWeston Geo. A\n19.25\n19.50\nAlta. Gas Trunk 37.00\n37.50\nWoodwards A\n29.87\n30.37\nAluminum\n31.12\n31.25\nZenith Elect.\n1.75\n1.80\nArgus\nArgus C Pfd\n16.00\n10.50\n' 17.00\n10.75\nMINES AND OILS\nBank of Mont.\n62.25\n63.00\nAdvocate\n2.90\n2.95 '\nBank of N.S,\n14.25\n14.62\nAetna Inv.\n.60\n.65\nBathurst Power\n28.50\n31.50\nAgnico\n1.45\n1.53\nBell Telephone\n49.75\n49.87\nAng. Am. Moly.\n.15\n.16%\nB.A. Oil - -    -.\n-S7.12\n37.25\nAtlantic Coast\n.66\n.70\nB.C. Forest\n19.00\n19.25\nAunor\n2.41\n2.45\nB.C. Packers A\n18.00\n20.00\nBarnat\n.34\n.35\nB.C. Telephone\n67.50\n68.00\nBethlehem Cop.\n6.35\n6.40\nBurns & 'Co. \"\n15.25\n15.37\nBralorne\n1.65\n1.76\nCale. Power   .\n22.50\n22.75\nBrunswick\n6.40\n6.50\nCan\" & D. SuEar 23.00\n24.00\nCampbell Cliib\n7.50\n7.65\nCan, Cement\n40.50\n41.00\nCampbell R.L.\n18.50\n24.00\nCan. Iron\n19.00\n19.37\nCassiar Asb.\n16.62\n16.87\nCan.  Breweries\nCan. Canners\n-7.37\n12.00\n7.50\n13.00\nCoen. Will\nCons.   Halliwell\n1.30\n.60\n1.35\n.64\nCan. Industries\n22.50\n22.75\nCons. Mogul\n3.05\n3.10\nCan..lrnnjank\nCan. Pac. Rly.\nChemcell\n66.25\n70.62\n10.25\n66.50\n71.12\n10.37\nCons. Rambler\nConwesl\nCopperman\n1.28\n5.70\n.21\n1.35\n6.00\n.22%\nClairtone\nCnl   CollnloBO\n9.87\n5.12\n10.25\n5.25\nCopper Corp.\nCowichan Cop.\n.52\n.22\n.53\n.26\nCel. FftT            17.50\nCominco             31.75.\nCons. Paper       38.00\nCons. Paper Wis. 7.10\nCons. Gas         -18.25\nCrestbrk. Timber 6.50\nDist. Seagrams   38.87\nDome Pele        636.00\nDom. Bridge\"      19.25\nD. Electrohome  14.37\nDom. Foundries 23.25\nDom. Stores     - 17.75\nDom. Tar & C. -\u25a0 16.00\nDom. Textiles     19.75\nEddv Match Co. 33.25\n18.00\n32.25\n38.25\n7.25\n18.37\n6.75\n39.00\n63.75\n19.50\n14.50\n23.62\n18.00\n16.12\n20.00\n36.00\nCraigmont\nDenison\nDickenson\nEast Malartic\nEast Sullivan\nFirst Maritimes\nFrobex\nGiant Mascot\nGiant Yel.\nGranduc\nGunnar Mines\nHastings\nHighland Bell\nHollinger\nHudson Bay Mg\nHudson Bay Oil\nHydra Ex\n11.50\n76.00\n3.20\n1.39\n5.10\n1.61\n4.45\n1.35\n8.80\n5.20\n1.46\n1.40\n9.00\n26.00\n61.12\n35.25\n11.87\n76.50\n3.35\n1.42\n5.25\n1.80\n4.55\n1.40\n8.90\n5.35.\n1.50\n143\n9.50\n26.50\n63.75\n35.50\nEddy Paper\n16.50\n17.00\n.19\n.21\nFalconbridge\n85,00\n87.00\nIron Bay\n3.40\n3.50\nFamous Players 36.00\n36.50\nIso\n1.38\n1.40\nFanny Farmer\n\u2014\n49.87\nKerr Addison\n15.75\n15.87\nFord Motor Co.\n\u2014\n55.00\nKey. Anacon\n.75\n.85\nFord of Can.\n142.50\n144.00\nLabrador\n29.75\n30.25\nGen. Steel Wares 8.50\n9.00\nGoodyear\n205.00\n215.00\n\\i\u00a3\n.MO\nm iv\nGreyhound L.\n26.50\n27.00\nVA\nUNV-\nuuv\nGt. Lakes Power 22.12\n22.50\nHome Oil A\n19.37\n19.75\nINDUSTRIALS\nHome Oil B\n21.12\n22.00\nBurrard Mort\n3.25\n\u2014\nHudson Bay Co.\n18.25\n18.37\nGrowers A\n3.10\n\u2014\nHusky Oil\n17.25\n17.50\nGrowers B\n2.60\n\u2014\nIndustrial\n23.50\n23.87\nOkan. Helicopters 2.65\n2.70\nImperial Oil\n61.00\n61.25\nSun Pub. A\n29.75\n\u2014\nImp. Tobacco\n14.25\n14.50\nSun Pub. B\n29.75\n\u2014\nInd. Minerals\n13.25\n13.62\nInt. Brew. B\n9.25\n9.50\nIndusl. Wire\n6.62\n6.75\nPac. Western\n14.00\n14.25\nInland Nat. Gas\n11.00\n11.25\nMINES AND OILS\nIn. Nat. Gas Pgc\n16.50\n17.00\nAce Mining\n.33\n.35\nIntl. Utilities\n30.87\n31.25\nArctic Mining\n1.40\n1.42\nInt. Nickel\n105.25\n105.50\nArlington  Silver\n.34\n.35\nInterprov. Pipe\n22.50\n22.75\nBethex\n.69\n.71\nInter   Pipe Wts\n9.10\n9.15\nBlue Star Mines\n.10\n.11\nInterprov. Stee!\n4.60\n4.65\nBrenda\n5.60\n5.65\nJefferson Lake\n36.00\n36.12\nBuchanan  Mines\n.24\n.25\nLaurentide\n4.75\n4.85\nButtle Lake Mines .46\n.47\nLoblaw B\n7.62\n7.75\nCascade Moly\n1.26\n1.29\nLoab\n12.75\n12.87\nCoast   Copper\n\u2014\n10.00\nMassey Ferg.\n22.50\n22.62\nCons. Skeena\n.50\n.52\nMacM\" Powell R 27.50\n28.00\nCons. Standard\n.06\n.09\nMagna Elec.\n19.12\n19.50\nCont. Potash\n.17\n.18\nManagement\n2.60\n3.00\nCopper Soo\n.15\n.15%\nMolson Brew. A 23.50\n24.00\nCrown Silver\n.06%\n.08\nMont. Loco.\n15.50\n15.87\nCroyden\n.32\n.33\nMoore Corp.\n29.37\n29.50\nDolly Varden\n.45\n.46\nNoranda\n51.12\n51.25\nDundee\n.09%\n.10\nOgilvie Flour\n13.50\n13.75\nDynasty\n7.30\n7.40\nPacific Pete\n14.87\n15.00\nEarlcrest\n.11%\n.12\nPrice Bros.\n12.25\n12.37\nEndako\n10.50\n10.75\nPower Corp.\n11.62\n11.75\nFuturity  Oils\n.36\n.38\nQue. Nat. Gas\n9.87\n10.00\nGalaxy\n.32\n.35\nRoyal Bank\n76.12\n76.37\nGranisle\n5.65\n5.85\nRothmans\n26.00\n26.50\nHomestake Silver .26\n.27\nSalada Foods\n10.00\n10.12\nJericho\n.09%\n.10\nShell Wts.\n10.25\n10.50\nJersev Cons\n.15\n.16\nShell Oil\n28.25\n28.37\nKamloops Copper .15\n.16\nSimpsons\n28.00\n28.12\nLondon Pride\n.11\n\u2014\nSoutham\n44.00\n44.50\nLornex\n5.45\n5.55\nSteel of Can.\n23.00\n23.25\nLytton   Minerals\n.67\n.70\nTor. Dominion\n12.87\n13.00\nMadrona\n.48\n.50\nTrans Mtn. Pipe\n19.50\n19.62\nMagnum\n.67\n.68\nRank Org.\n6.62\n6.75\nMcKinney Gold\n.27\n\u2014\nTrans Can. Pipe\n30.62\n30.75\nMt. Washington\n.13\n.14\nTrans Pipe Wts\n8.25\n8.50\nNew Cronin\n.14\n.16\nUnion Carbide\n20.50\n20.87\nNew Imperial\n3.30\n3.35\nLake Dufault '  \"1025\nLeitch 6.10\nLittle Long Lac   LM\nLorado .83\nMadsen \u2022 \u25a0    1.34 .\nMalartic      \u25a0      :.M.\nMattagami Lake.13-87\nMclntyre\nMcWaters\nNorth Cal.\nNew Conex\n-Nova  Beaucage\nNew Hosco\nNew Jason\nNormetal\nNorthgate\nOpemiska\nOrchan   .   ..\nPickle Crow\nPC Explor\nPine Point\nPlacer\nPatino\nPreston\nQue. Lithium\nQue.  Manitou\nQuemont I\nRadiore\nRayrock\nReeves Mac\nR ioAlgom\nRoman Corp.\nSan Antonio\nSarimco\nSherritt  Gordon\nSilver Standard\nSiscoe\nSteep Rock\nSullivan Con.\nTeck Corp.\nTorbiit\nTribag\nUnion  Oil\nUn. Buff. Add.\nUnited Keno\nUpper Canada\nW. Beaver Lodge .08\nWeslern   Mines    3.15\nWright Harg. .85\nWilroy .77\nZulapa .5%\n87.00\n.53\n.23:\n5.90\n.85\n2.40\n.03%\n3,80\n4.80 .\nJ9.50\n2.27\n.22\n.1.10'\n46.87\n35.50\n8.15\n21:25\n- 1.50\n.22\n7.85..\n.53.\n1.30\n1.70\n36.50\n21.62\n.24%\n.10%\n4.15\n.90\n5.25\n5.80\n3.80\n4.80\n.55\n1.04\n38.50\n.33\n5.60\n1.51\n10.37\n6.20\n1.65\n.89\n:    1.36\n.51\n14.00\n89.00\n.54\n\"  .25\n5.95\n.90\n2.44\n.04\n3.90\n4.90\n9.60\n2.30\n.24\n1.11\n47.25\n36.00\n8.25\n21.50\n1.70\n.23\n8.05\n.54\n1.34\n1.95\n37.00\n21.75\n.25\n.11\n4.25\n.94\n5.35\n5.85\n3.85\n4.90\n.60\n1.09\n39.00\n.34\n5.90\n1.53\n.09\n3.20\n1.05\n.79\n.16\nREUBEN BUERGE  BECAUSE REU6EN BUERGE\nSsdlmA,       7HjD\/UL ^CK\u00b0mPRTARl\\TcUo\u00b0SUEBFRYOM:OVER200USED    a^^    ^^     ^^jbijL\n$OQC i'61 COMET SEDAN $7QC \"\nmmV7mJ   |  pnced   at  ..._ _ _ \/ VO\n'37 MERCURY HARDTOP\nPriced at  _ -\t\n'58 PONTIAC SEDAN\nPriced at \t\n'58 FORD FAIRLANE\n500 SEDAN\nV-8 Standard. Radio\t\n58 CHEVROLET 2-DR.\nV-8.   Radio\t\n'59 CHEVROLET SEDAN\nPriced at  \t\n'59 METEOR SEDAN\nPriced at \t\n'59 FORD 9-PASSENGER\nStation Wagon. V8\t\n'59 PLYMOUTH\nBELVEDERE HARDTOP\nV-8,   radio.   Only   40.000   one-\n'61  PONTIAC SEDAN\n\u00ab, Automatic\t\n$295i\n*295\n$295\n*395\n*395\n$495\n$495\n$1295\n'61 COMET SEDAN\nPriced at _ _.\n; '62 CHEVROLET 2-DOOR\nPriced at _\t\n'63 PONTIAC 2-DOOR\nSEDAN\nPriced at  \t\n*895\n*1295\n'64 RAMBLER CLASSIC\nSEDAN\nV-8. Automatic. As-New\t\n'64 VAUXHALL\nSTATION WAGON\nClean as a new pin\t\n'64 PONTIAC 2-DOOR\nI V8, Standard -\t\n*1895\n*895\n*1495\n*2650\nSee Our Lease Department ior Lowest Bates by the Day, Week, Month or Year\n'63 VALIANT SEDAN\nBig Slant 6\t\n'63 CHEVROLET SEDAN\n6, Automatic\t\n*1395\n$1475\n'63 IMPALA CONV.\nV-8  Automatic.   Power  brakes, ^IQQ')\npower steering, radio      \\*MaJ\n'65 IMPALA 2-DR.\nHARDTOP\nAll Power\t\n'65 CHEVROLET SEDAN\n6. Standard, Radio\t\n*2695\n$1995\n'64 VOLKSWAGEN\n\"1500\" Model\t\n$1295\nServing You Since 1923\n'63 PLYMOUTH 2-DR.        $]7QC\nBig V8, Standard Transmission.     I\/VD\n'65 VOLKS. DELUXE\nRadio\t\n$1295\n'65 IMPALA SEDAN\nV8 Automatic; Power. \t\n'66 IMPALA 2-DOOR\nHARDTOP tAA.,\n\"327\" V8, Automatic, Power *3z95\nBrakes, Power Steering, Radio. Wafc#\u00bb^\nOnly 12,000 miles. .\n'66 IMPALA 4-DOOR\nHARDTOP\nV8, Automatic. Power Brakes, $Q1Q>\">\nPower Steering, Radio      vJ7J\n'66 CHEVROLET\nSTATION WAGON\nV-8   Automatic.   Power   brakes\npower steering\t\nPatricia Silver .20\nPyramid               3.50\nRod.  Y'ellowknife .26\nRolling Hills .30\nQuatsino .20%\nSilver Ridge .15\nSlocan Ottawa .22\nTay River Mines .22%\n.25\n3.55\n.29\n.32\n.22\n.16\n.25\n.25\nTorwest\n.43\n.44\nTrojan\n.22\n.23\nVan. Metals\n.16\n.17\nVananda Expl.\n.10%\n.11\nUtica Mines\n2.83\n2.85\nFUNDS\nColl. Mutual\n6.39\n6.95\nDiv. Inc. A\n1.50\n1.66\nDiv. Inc. B\n5.20\n5.73\nGroup Income\n4.00\n4.38\nGrow. Equity\n6.04\n6.60\nInv. Int. Mutual\n7.43\n8.08\nInv. Growth.\n10.24\n11.13\nInv.   Mutual\n5.32\n5.78\nMutual Accum\n5.42\n5.93\nMutual Bond\n7.52\n8.90\nMutual Inc.\n6.28\n6.87\nProvident\n6.59\n7.17\nUnited Ace.\n10.58\n11.56\nTrans Can. Spec.  3.51\nTRUCKS\n'61 WILLYS JEEP\n4-Wheel Drive, Warren Hubs\nWinch\t\n'62 Chevrolet Half-Ton\nPickup\nBig 6. 4-Speed Trans\t\n'63 Volkswagen Pickup\n'65 CHEVROLET i-TON\nPICKUP\nLong wheelbase, wide box\t\n\u00ab3295\n\u26661495\n\u26661150\n*795\n*1895\n170 Baker St.\nPh. 352-3233\nREUBEN BUERGE\nCHEVROLET - OLDSMOBILE - CADILLAC\n323 Vernon St\nPh. 352-3121\nBANK ACT\nANALYSED\nOTTAWA (CPI - The new\nBank Act is helping to stand the\ntraditional process of Canadian\ncorporate borrowing on its head,\nsays R. M. Macintosh, the young\njoint general manager of the\nBank of Nova Scotia.\nDelivering a banker's analysis\nof the legislation to the Canadian Political Science Association lasl week, Mr. Macintosh\nsaid the big companies are departing from the habit of borrowing \"short from the banks\nand long from the open market.\"\nDisappearance of the six-percent limit on bank interest rates\nnext year will work a pronounced shift from working-capital to term loans, he predicted.\nLarge corporations with access to both the money and bond\nmarkets are restructuring their\nsources of funds.\n\"They can sometimes borrow\npart of their requiremenls more\ncheaply from the money market\nIhan from the banks for working capital purposes.\"\nBecause Ihey are retaining a\nhigh proportion of their profits\nfor cash flows, and because they\nenjoy accelerated depreciation\nbenefits, these companies now\nare able to retire the cost of\nfixed-capital investments in less\nthan 10 years.\nTo avoid open-market financ\ning that involves bonds with an\naverage life of 13 or more years,\nthey are going to banks for loans\nwith an average maturity of six\nor seven years, Mr. Macintosh\nsaid.\nThe corporate treasurer may\npay a premium rate of interest\nto his bank, but he is able to\nkeep his average borrowing\nterm short enough to meet his\nexpected cash flow.\nAt the same time, the smaller\ncorporations which cannot go to\nthe open market for long-term\nfunds, now can turn to banks for\nsecured loans to be used for\nplant and equipment.\nMr. Macintosh warned that it\nwill take time for banks to develop skills in this area of lending.\nDisappearance of the interest\nceiling will mean the end of\nsimple bankers' decisions between consumer credit and high-\nquality commercial loans at sn\nper cent, Mr. Macintosh predicted.\nGive Him\nA Gift\nHe Can\nWear\nFATHER'S\nDAY\nJUNE 18\nSomething to wear is the most popular\ngift you can give on Father's Day.\n\u2022 SHORT SLEEVE SHIRTS\n\u2022 JACSHIRTS\n\u2022  PYJAMAS\n\u2022  BERMUDA SHORTS\n\u2022 SLACKS\n\u2022 TIES \u2022 BELTS \u2022 SOCKS\nEMORY'S LTD.\nOUR 70TH YEAR \u2014 THE MAN'S STORE\nNews of the Day\nCOPY  DEADLINE - PLEASE NOTE\nCopy  for  this  column  accepted  until 3  p.m.  for  Insertion\nin next day's publication.\nRATES: 30c line, 40c line bold face type; larger type rates\non request. Minimum two lines.\nRotary luncheon Friday, 12:15\np.m., Hume Silver Room. \u201432-h\nBINGO\nEAGLE HALL, TONIGHT.\n-32-h\nTRAIL BUSINESS COLLEGE\nNEW TERM BEGINS SEPT. 5\n-136-tfn\nNene Pedersen Beautician\n32 Ymir Rd.. Ph. 352-2584\n-165-tfn\nFATHER'S DAY  GIFTS\nHOBBY SHOP \u2014 Open Mondays\n-137-141\nJob's Daughters Public Installation, Saturday. June 17th, 7:30\np.m., Masonic Hall.      -139-140\nTRAIL BUSINESS COLLEGE\nNEW TERM BEGINS SEPT. 5\n-136-tfn\nExtravaganza of youthful exuberance, DeMolay Show and\nBand. Coming July 3rd.\n-140-141\nFoam-backed    plastic   place\nmats at 59c each.\nSTERLING  FURNISHERS\n\u2014140-141\nLAST APPEARANCE\nDANNY HARRISON, ROYAL\nCANADIAN LEGION TONIGHT\n\u2014140-140\nFree Centennial films, presentation of pioneer medallions,\nProcter Hall Friday, June\n7:30 p.m. \u2014139-140\nCHESTER   BOBO   BARNETT,\nWORLD-FAMOUS  CLOWN,  AT\nNELSON SHRINE CIRCUS,\nJUNE 27TH.\n-140-140\nWOOLWORTH'S\nSUMMER SPECIAL\nORANGE AND LFMON SLICES\n37c LB.\n-140-141\nWOOLWORTH'S\nSUMMER  SPECIAL\nROPE JEWELLERY, HIGH\nFASHION  COLOR,  $1.44,  $2.50.\n-110-141\nPHONE 365-7978\nSINGER  REPRESENTATIVE\nLocated in Castlegar\nat Flamingo Motel.\n-275-h\nF.O.E. Hall rental\nPhone 352-5294.\nl-h\nAluminum ladders \u2014 make\nvour paint job safer and easier.\n5-ft. and 6-ft. stepladders; 16',\n20' and 24' extension ladders.\nHIPPERSON HARDWARE\n-140-140\nAuction, Rummage Sale, Memorial Hall, Carbonate St. entrance. Sponsored by Jubilee\nGroup of St. Paul's-Trinity, Fri.,\nJune 16th, 6:30-8:30 p.m. Rummage Sale only Sat., June 17th\n10:30 a.m. on. \u2014140-141\nVILLA DINING ROOM\nOpen 7:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. ami\n5 lo 9:30 p.m. Monday through\nThursday. Friday, Saturday and\nSunday, open 9 a.m. to 10 p.m\nFor reservations, phone 352-3546\n-102-h\nAll brethren of Nelson Lodge\nNo. 23 and all sojourning brethren are requested to attend al\nthe Masonic Temple, Nelson, on\nFriday, tbe 16th, at 1:15 p.m.\nto pay our last respects to our\nlate   Brother,   Thomas   Henry\nMansfield. The  church service\nwill be held in St. Saviour's Pro-\nCathedral at 2 p.m.\nBy Order,\nB. J. Hoskin, Wor. Master.\nW. H. Anderson, Sec.\n-139-140\nDollar Down\nNEW YORK ICPl-Canadian\ndollar down 1-64 at 92% in\nterms of U.S. funds. Week agi\n92 17-32. Pound sterling down\n1-32 at $2.79 3-16.\nMONTREAL (CP) - The\nUnited States dollar in terms o;\nCanadian funds up 1-32 al\n$1.08Vi. Pound sterling up Ml\nat $3.01's.\nSTONE   COINS  KEPT\nStone coins from 18 inches to\n12 feet in diameter are still\ntreasured on Yap island, South\nPacific,  as  ceremonial  specie\nKootenay Kiltie Pipe Band\nLadies' Auxiliary hamper draw\nwinners: Esther Neihaus, L.\nCanyers, Rev. J. L. Smith, N.\nWin. \u2014140-140\nCommencing Monday, June 26,\nMarg's Beauty Salon will be\nclosed ALL DAY MONDAY,\nopen Tuesday through Saturday.\n-135-140\nTHE BRAYTON TROUPE,\nACROBATIC WIZARDS,\nSHRINE CIRCUS, JUNE 27TII,\nNELSON ARENA.\n-140-140\nWOOLWORTH'S\nSUMMER SPECIAL\nLADIES' ITALIAN STYLED\nSANDALS \u2014 $4.1\n-140-141\nHave the Job Done Right1\nIf GRAVEC\nLIMITED        ml\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPhone 352-3315\nV\nNOTICE\nDue to the\nPharmaceutical\nConvention\nWe Will CLOSE\nFRIDAY NIGHT AT\n5:00 P.M.\nYour Rexall Pharmacy\nCITY DRUG\n156 Baker St.      Ph. 352-3611\nBox 460. Nelson, B.C.\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1967_06_16","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0440280","@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":"1967-06-16 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1967-06-16 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\/1.0440280"}