{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0429178":{"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider":[{"value":"CONTENTdm","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf":[{"value":"BC Historical Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued":[{"value":"2023-03-27","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1955-05-19","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0429178\/source.json","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format":[{"value":"application\/pdf","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note":[{"value":" Game Convention\nHere Next Week\nConservation Experts, Delegates To Join\nIn Tackling Problems at Four-Day Meet\nConservation men from all corners of this province, from\nthe Prairies, the Pacific Northwest and even the Yukon, will\nconverge on Nelson next week for the ninth annual B.C.\ngame convention.\nEyes of sportsmen in the entire West will turn on the\nWednesday to Saturday convention, as delegates debate the\nwisdom of B.C.'s game policies and plan for the future.\nThe agenda, just announced, promises a lively, interesting meeting, and the hosts, the Rod and> Gun Associations of\nEast and West Kootenay will be treating the visitors in royal\nPROVINCIAL\nLIBRARY\nVICT\n., \t\n\"\/ 333:\n0tn\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKootenay: Sunny with a few\ncloudy periods in afternoon. Few\nshowers along ridges. Light winds\noccasionally .south 15. Low-high at\nCranbrook 42 and 70, Crescent Valley and Revelstoke 43 and 65.\nstyle.\nAfter opening remarks by the\nchairman, commissioner F. R. But\nler of Vancouver and a welcome to\ndelegates by Mayor Joseph Kary\nWednesday morning, Hon. W. D.\nBlack, provincial secretary and\nNelson-Creston MLA will speak.\nReport oi the game commission,\npapers by Dr. Ian McTaggart Cowan, head of the UBC zoology department on \"Chemical Sprays and\ntheir Relation to Wildlife\" and by\nDr. W. A. Clemens, head of the Institute of Fisheries, UBC, and discussion of resolutions, also will take\nplace on opening day.\nTO TRAIL\nWives of delegates will attend a\nluncheon in Trail to be given by\nthe Trail Rod and Gun Club, and\nthen they will tour the impressive\nWaneta power project.\nIn the evening they will be joined\nby delegates for a reception and\ndinner arranged by the West Kootenay Power and Light Company.\nLater all will tour Cominco's giant\nWarfield plants.\nP. W. Schneider of Portland, Ore.,\ndirector of the Oregon State Game\nCommission, will lead off Thursday\nmorning's business with a paper on\nthe co-operative efforts of the Oregon, Washington and B. C. game\nadministrations. Eric Collier, president of the B. C. Registered Trappers' Association, will speak on latest studies of the Meldrum Lake\nmoose, a report on moose for 1955\nwill be given by P. W. Martin and\nL. G. Sugden, B. C. game management biologists, and the game harvest of 1954 and the outlook for\n1955 will be the topic of Dr. James\nHatter, chief game biologist.\nIn the  afternoon,   papers to  be\n\u25a0 heard will  be from  S.  B.  Smith,\nfisheries management biologist, on\n\"The   Value   of  Sport  Fishing   in\n\"B-C\".; E. L. Paynter, Saskatchewan\n1 Drivers of\n[Weekend Auto\n! Accident Danger\nVICTORIA (CP) \u2014 B. C. drivers are warned that the approaching weekend \"threatens to be the\nmost dangerous of any this year.\"\nGeorge Lindsay,  B.   C.  superin-\n! tendent of motor vehicles, said the\n[ long holiday  weekend will  see  a\nI record number of passenger cars on\nI the   rbads.   Highway   traffic   was\nI bound to be heavy and \"traffic ac-\n1 ddents may be plentiful, some of\n(them fatal.\"\nHe gave these eight precautions\n[for motorists:\nPlan to start the weekend trip\nI tarly after a good rest; pull over\nI and rest when you feel sleepy.\nDon't follow closely behind the\nI ear ahead.\nUse extra care in communities\n[keep within speed limits.\nDon't wear colored glasses at\n[night. Don't drink.\nBe generous and courteous.\ngame commissioner, on \"Farmer-\nHunter Relationship\"; G. W. Smith,\ngame management biologist, on \"Big\nGame Management in the East Kootenays\", and E. H. Vernon, fisheries\nmanagement biologist, on \"The\nCleveland Dam and Fish Protection.\" Presentation of resolutions\nwill continue.\nThis will also be \"East Kootenay Day,\" the East Kootenay Rod\nand Gun Association being host\n\u2022to delegates In entertainment.\nWives will be served tea at Balfour Beach Inn, and later they\nand delegates will take the scenic\nKootenay Lake boat trip to Kootenay Bay for a buffet supper-at\nKniksu Lodge, and showing of\noutstanding wildlife pictures by\nFernie game warden James Os-\nman.\nTalks on various subjects of con^\nversation interest are scheduled for\nthe morning of May 27. G. A. West,\nsupervisor of predator control, will\nspeak on \"Wolf Bounties in British\nColumbia\u2014Why?\". D. R. Hum, fishery officer, will tell of the \"Operation of a B, C. Trout Hatchery,\"\nand Dr. P. A. Larkin, chief fisheries biologist, will outline research\non future fish management. An address will be delivered by Ed Na-\nhanee of the Native Brotherhood of\nB. C.\nFriday afternoon will be devoted\nentirely to,consideration of resolutions, and much discussion is expected.\nThe women will be taken on a trip\nup the West Arm Friday afternoon\non the Kokanee, newly-refitted boat\nof Dick Spurway and W. C.  McDonald, j\nThe  convention   highlight,  thei\ngame   banquet,   will   attract   500!\npeople   to   Civic   Centre   Friday J\nnight. A cocktail party will pre-j\ncede the dinner, and a dance will;\nfollow   It.   Nelson   Rod   and   Gun)\nClub will be In the role of host.!\nVoting  on  resolutions  will  take;\nplace May 28, final day of the con-,\nvention.\n%>U\nNELSON. B. C, CANADA\u2014THURSDAY MORNING, MAY 19, 1955\nNo. 24 i\nBIG FOUR foreign minister! and Austrian\nForeign Minister Leopold Flgl, center, smile and\nwave from balcony of'Vienna's Belevedere Palace\nto thousands of people below after signing Austrian Independence treaty Sunday. Left to right are\nFrance's Antolne Pinay, Russia's V. M. Molotov,\nFlgl, United States's John Foster Dulles, and Britain's Harold MacMillan.\u2014Ap wlrephoto via radio\nfrom London.\n$8 Million Village\nFor Mentally Retarded\nMOOSE JAW (CP) \u2014 An entire\nvillage costing $8,000,000 to build\nand housing Saskatchewan's mentally retarded people was opened\nofficially Wednesday by Premier\nDouglas.\nA miniature city where a person\ncan attend school, church, be training in a trade and take part in all\nrecreational pursuits, the project is\na new training school. Patients\u2014\nthe youngest but a few weeks old,\nthe oldest 80\u2014wiJl be treated as\nnaturally as possible, with all allowances fpr handicaps.\nMore than 1100 persons will reside there.\nTAIPEI, Formosa (Reuters) -\nChinese Nationalist planes Wednesday bombed Communist vessels in j\nLoyuan bay, north of Matsu island,\nthe Nationalist defence * ministry\nannounced Wednesday night. Results could not be observed due to\npoor visibility.\nNURSE JIRAPON KARSEM8AK toldi twins Naplt, left and\nPrlssana Polplnyo at Chicago's Midway airport early as they departed\nfor their native Thailand. The Siamese twins came to Chicago Joined\nat the abdomen two months ago and were separated March 29 at the\nUniversity of Chicago Medical Center. They are expected to be home\nIn time to celebrate then- second birthday, May 25.\n\u2014AP Wlrephoto.\n$1 Million Robbery\nLAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) \u2014 A\npoliceman and four other persons\nwere in custody Wednesday after\na heavily-armed posse nipped an\nattempt to pull a million-dollar\nmail robbery.\nOfficers with riot guns and rifles\nambushed three of the men at the\npost office Tuesday night. They\ntrapped them with armored cars\nand on foot after receiving a tip\nabout an elaborate plan to take the\nmortey by force.\nThe robbery .attempt was one of\nthe largest on record in this country. Largest was the $2,400,000 stolen from a mail truck in New York\nin 1921, by the Gerald Chapman\ngang. Much of this, however, was\nin non-negotiable bonds.\nThe huge sum\u2014large bills in one\nmail sack\u2014^was being transported\nfrom the post office two blocks to\nthe railroad station to be shipped\nto the Federal Reserve Bank in San\nFrancisco. The money, from Las\nVegas banks, included large deposits from gambling casinos.\nNew Delay in Salk\nVaccine Releases\nWASHINGTON (AP)\u2014A new\ndelay In further releases of Salk\npolio vaccine was disclosed Wed*\nnesday night pending what a United States public health service\nspokesman called \"another \"look-\nsee at this whole very confused\npicture.\"\nThe  disclosure  cafe  when  a  re\nno report on the findings of a federal inspection team which has completed a visit to Wyeth Laboratories\nInc., at Marietta, Pa.\nWINTRY GALES\nSWEEP EUROPE\nSnow, Cold\nThreat To Fruit\nTrees, Crops\nBy EDWIN 8HANKE\nLONDON (AP) \u2014 Wintry gales\nwhistled across much of northern\nEurope    Wednesday,    bringing\nsnow and Ice and sending dozens\nof small ships scurrying to safety ,ln  English channel and  North\nsea ports.\nIce and snow drifts crippled road\ntraffic in parts of northern England and Wales. On the continent\ntemperatures tumbled as low as 35\ndegrees Fahrenheit.\nThe Ramsgate lifeboat rescued\n11 Dutch seamen from the 800-ton\ncoaster Urmajo, aground on the\nchannel's Goodwin sands and battered by raging seas. The Souther, ^ooth^laboratpnes and a?Prove(i\n...   . , .   -    j   ,       -\u25a0..,' ..i     \u2022        -j   \"|Tr\" fiw     tied   \u25a0'fn      fVio     n\/Min+f^j\u2014tiM\/lo      J1YI-\nlifeboat saved four passengers frrJm\na pleasure yacht.\nCR0P8 DAMAGED\nThe British collier Richmond\nQueen was standing by the badly\nlisting Turkish steamer Zor, caught\nin a North sea gale 40 miles off the\nNorfolk coast.\nSnowplows nosed through drifts\nblocking roads in the Pennine hills\nof northern England. In the peak\ndistrict of Derbyshire, two to three\nfeet of snow halted traffic and stalled a snowplow. Snow fell in the\nmountains of south Wales,\nRIVER8 SWELL\nMelting _ snow and heavy rain\nswelled rivers dangerously close\nto flood levels. In southern England, rain and biting wind tore at\nblossoming fruit trees, damaging\ncrops.\nMost of northern Europe reported unusually cold May weather.\nRain lashed southern Norway.\nWinds of more than 50 miles an\nhour swept northern Germany,\nwhile in the southwest strong winds,\nrain and 50-degree temperatures\nwere reported. Berlin's sidewalk\nsafes were deserted \u2014 except for\nthose with heating.\nIke Outlines Bold\nPolicy for Negotiation\ncine produced by these firms. Some\nof this already has been administered; some has not yet been distributed.\nSeventy-seven of more than 5,-\n000,000 children inoculated with\nthe vaccine have subsequently come\ndown with polio. Five of the cases\ninvolved  the  Wyeth   product,   the\nporter asked why there had been! public health service said, two of\nthem having been confirmed Wed.\nnesday.\nIn  Pittsburgh,   Dr.   Jonas   Salk,\ndeveloper  of   the  vaccine,  told  a\n\"There  will   be  no .further   re- group of  scientists  that  cases  of\nleases of vaccine from any man- polio reported  after  injections  of\nufacturer for several days,\" a spokesman said. He added the situation\ndid not affect the 7,850,000 cubic\ncentimetres of vacoine produced by\nfor use \"Tn the country-wide im-\nmunizatio nprogram. Much of this\nalready has been used and what is\nleft is still approved for use.\nAnother spokesman added \"Nothing has been found wrong with the\nvaccine,\" at Wyeth's.\nHe described the holdup as simply another precautionary measure.\nthe vaccine are \"clearly coincidental.\"\nIn Somona. Calif., a group of experimenters reported that tests show\na' vaccine made from live viruses\u2014\narid administered through' milk1\nshakes \u2014 produces immunity to\ntwo of the three kinds of polio in\n14 to 23 days.\nThese results are much faster\nthan with the Salk vaccine. The\nSalk product, however, made from\nkilled viruses,, gives protection against  all three  types  of  the  dis-\nFollowing   inspection   tours   of ease.\nParke, Davis and Co., Detroit, and I    It takes several months for im-\nEli Lilly Co., Indianapolis, the gov- j munity to develop fully after the\nernment has okayed almost eight j Salk   injections,   administered   by\nmillion cubic centimetres  of vac-' hypodermic needle.\nKILLS FORMER WIFE\nLA JOLLA, Calif. (AP)\u2014A night\nschool civics teacher shot and killed\nhis estranged wife, critically wounded another woman and then killed\nhimself early Wednesday, police\nsaid. Dead were Richard Vance\nMacKay^ 45, and his wife, Jane, 29.\nCritically wounded was Miss Marguerite M. Wood, 27, who was described as a friend of Mrs. Mac-\nKay. Police Sgt. Paul C. Walk said\nthe shooting was apparently \"a case\nof extreme jealousy.\"\n$5 Million for\nRail Crossings\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 A measure\nmaking a five-fold increase in federal contributions-to railway crossing safety was passed by the Commons Wednesday with Transport\nMinister Marler cautioning that it\nwill not be the final answer to ending rail crossing accidents.\nThe bill, still to be considered, by\nthe Senate, would increase the government's annual contribution to\nthe railway crossing fund to $5,000,-\n000 from $1,000,000. The money is\nused to help pay for highway underpasses -and overpasses and for\ninstalling safety devices at level\ncrossings.\nOpposition members made a series of suggestions for further safety\nmeasures during final study of the\nlegislation..\nUNIFY SIGNALS\nGeorge Hahn (SO\u2014New Westminster) and H, W. Herridge (CCF\n\u2014Kootenay West) proposed a uniform system across Canada of traffic regulations and signalling devices governing traffic at railway\ncrossings.\nMr. Hahn said the federal government should try to work out a\nformula acceptable to provincial\nand municipal governments.\nMr.    Herridge    suggested    the\nboard of transport commissioners\nset uniform regulations with the\nco-operation of authorities at all\nlevels.\nAttempt Fails\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 First attempts to fly two navy mine disposal experts to de-activate a 10-\nyear-old Japanese mine on Kunkhlt\nIsland have met with failure.\nThe navy officers left Tuesday\nfrom Sea Island aboard an air force\nCanso.\nThe nearest the plane could get\nto the Island, which is the most\nsoutherly of the Queen Charlottes,\nwas Port Hardy. The navy tug Clifton left Victoria early Wednesday\nto pick up- the two men and continue the search for the corroded\nwar relio.\nDefer Capital\nPunishment Decision\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Decision\non a request that the United Church\nin British Columbia conference condemn capital punishment has been\ndeferred pending a report from its\nsocial service committee.\nRev. Alan Dixon of Nelson asked\nat the closing session of the conference Tuesday that capital punishment be condemned.\nRev. Ernest Best on furlougri\nfrom Nagasaki, Japan, told the conference. Oriental Christians are\nmoving back and forth across the\nBamboo Curtain.\nHe said Japan must have a larger share of world markets.\n\"Handouts are not good enough,\nThis problem must either wake us\nup or blow us up.\"\nMr. Best, of the American Methodist church, was pastor of a church\ndestroyed by the world's second\natom bomb blast in August, 1945.\nBRANDON HAS\nFLOOD \"LICKED\"\nExpect'Raised Dikes\nTo Hold Agdinst\nOncoming Crest\nBRANDON  (CP)  \u2014 Greatly-improved conditions along Brandon's\ntwo-mile diking system Wednesday\nprompted   optimism   among   civic\nofficials    nad    workmen    to    say\nthey've got the flood \"licked.\"\nThe   high-running   Assiniboine\nriver has Jumped only three Inches since  midnight Tuesday,  and\nwith reports from upstream placing the oncoming crest a short distance  east  of  Virden,  about  3d\nmiles   west   of   here,  there   was\nhopes the  Brandon  dikes would\nhold.\nMayor James Creighton said Wednesday the immediate danger to\nresidents of Eome 80 homes behind\nthe dikes in the low-lying flats in\nthe northern outskirts of the city\nhas been lifted, and they now may\nexpect at least 12 hours' notice of\nanother dangerous situation.\nDike workers themselves expressed confidence the \"flood has been\nlicked\" as far as the Brandon zone\nis concerned. But they added a\nwarning that a break in the wall\nholding back about eight feet of\nwater still was not impossible, and\ncould be disastrous to property and\nlives if a collapse came suddenly.\nLevel of the river at the water\nworks pump station gauge Wednesday afternoon showed only a one-\nhalf Inch* rise since 8 a.m.\nRAISE DIKE LEVEL\nMost hopeful indication that the\ndikes would hold comes from reports that the top of the earthen\nwall,, which was on|y inches above\nthe swirling water early,. Wednesday, had been raised to a minimum\nclearance of \\Vz feet.\nGOVT  UNDECIDED\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Prime Minister St. Laurent'indicated today the\ngovernment has not yet decided\nwhether to give federal aid to victims . of Saskatchewan's recent\nstorm and flood.\nE. G. McCullough (CCF\u2014Moose\nMountain) asked in the Commons\nwhether the government considers\nthe damage severe enough to warrant giving disaster relief.\nMr. St. Laurent replied that\nbriefs and surveys of the damage\npresented here Monday by three\nSaskatchewan cabinet ministers are\nbeing analyzed in the light of previous Instances of federal aid for\nreparation of damage from disasters.\nOpens Door To Buffer of Neutral\nStates, Wants Flexible Trade Plan\nBy JOHN M. HIGHTOWER .\nWASHINGTON (AP) \u2014 President Eisenhower sketched,\nin broad outline Wednesday great issues for negotiation with\nRussia.\nHe indicated the United States will press Soviet rulers to\nof international communism as an instrument for making\nraise the Iron Curtain in'eastern Europe and abandon the use\ntrouble and extending Red\npower in free countries.\nHe held open the door to consideration ot the idea of building\nup a series of neutralized states\nfrom north to south through Europe.\nDiplomats have speculated Russia\nmay want such a protective buffer.\nEisenhower also told his weekly\npress conference that he believes\n\"certain sectors\" of the American\npublic \"unquestionably will have\nto make adjustments\" in thinking\nabout relations with Russia. Specific\ncally he declared that a policy of\nabsolute opposition to trade with\nthe Communist states is undesirable and that what the United\nStates requires is a flexible trade\npolicy.\nTRADE  KEY WEAPON\n\"Trade' is the greatest weapon\nin the hands of diplomat\nI would say as long as we are\nnot helping the war-making powers\nof other people, we should study\nthe question objectively and what\nIt means to us and not just go by\npreconception.\"\nHe emphatically rejected any\ncriticism that negotiating with the\nSoviets involves \"appeasement.\n'There is no appeasement in my\nheart that I know about,\" hetsaid.\nThe president's remarks about\nthe creation of a belt of neutral\nstates in eastern Europe and about\nthe adoption of a flexible U.S.\nattitude   toward   East-West   trade\nKitimat Tents May Go\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Elimination of tents and construction of\npermanent quarters for workers at\nKitimat is under discussion between\nprovincial health department officials and Aluminum Company of\nCanada.\nDr. G. F. Amyot, deputy minister of health said here Wednesday\nthe problem of living accommodation where you get a heavy influx\nof summer workers is \"a continuing\none.\" Situation has been under investigation at Kitimat for \"4 to 5\nmonths.\"\nUnion officials here recently\nscored \"deplorable living conditions\" and said their members will\nnot use temporary headquarters.\nCRICKET NOT CRUELTY\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 A divorce\ncourt ruled Wednesday that a husband's attendance at cricket matches instead of staying' home with\nhis wife did not constitute cruelty.\nIt refused a decree to Mrs. Loyce\nCopus, 31, after declaring that although her husband George was\n\"an almost fanatic cricket fan, these\nmatters are a very long way from\nbeing what the law recognizes as\ncruelty.\"\nCalgary Suspect\nHunfed at (oast\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Police\nthroughout the lower B.C. mainland today launched an intensive\nmanhunt for Calgary murder suspect Peter Morrison following a report he had been spotted ln Vancouver.\nMorrison is wanted in Calgary for\nthe slaying of Norman G. Yesny of\nNiagara Falls, N.Y. Yesny's body\nwas found last week in a ditch six\nmiles west of Calgary.\nPolice in Vancouver today said\nthey understood Morrison was an\nAmerican, but police in Calgary\nsaid he is a Canadian and spent\nmost of -his time around Windsor,\nOnt., and Winnipeg. His hometown\nis not known. A warrant charging\nhim with, murder was issued in\nCalgary May 12.\nYesny, a 23-year-old army veteran, was driving to Alaska from\nNew York state via Canada when\nhe was slain and robbed.\nMorrison, alias Bidnock and Stril-\nchuk, is described as five feet, 11\ninches tall, with dark hair, brown\neyes, a tatoo on the left forearm and\nmoles just above the jaw bone on\neach side of the chin.\nsuggested administration thinking\nalong the following line.\nIf Soviet rulers are prepared tOt\nmake extensive changes In their\nown basic policies with respect to'\nthe extent of Communist power la\nEastern Europe and with respect\nto international communism, then\nthe United States government will\nbe willing to make sweeping adjustments in its own policies to\nmeet legitimate Soviet interests in\ncommerce and security.\nOn other questions the president!\n1. Said the  United  States  still t\nstands ready to talk directly with\nRed China on a ceasefire in tho\nFormosa   strait   but   he   knew  of\nnothing new on this matter.\n2. Expressed the opinion that\nSoviet leaders, who plan to visit\npresident Tito of Yugoslavia shortly, hope for \"rapprochement oi\nsome kind\" between Russia and\nYugoslavia but the United States\ndoes not know the details of their\nmission.\n3. Rejected any idea that America\nmay have lost control of the air to\nRussia. It is \"just not true,\" Eisenhower said, to say that \"we hapt\nlost in a twinkling all of this great\ntechnical development and technical bnowledge as well as the numbers of our total aircraft.\" '\nSenator Stuart Symington (Dem,\nMo.),  former   air  force  secretary,\nTuesday told the Senate the U.S.   \u2022\nand the free world may have lost\ncontrol of the air to Russia.\nFULL SLATE FOR\nALTA. ELECTION\nEDMONTON (CP) \u2014 Officials\nof the Social Credit, Liberal and\nProgressive Conservative parties\nhave announced they Intend to\ncontest all 61 Legislative Assembly teats In the June 29 provincial\nelection,\nCCF head quarters Wednesday\nreported they have yet to hear\nfrom all constituencies but expect\nto run between 40 and 60 candidates.\nSince Premier Manning announced the election date late\nTuesday, 41 nominating conventions have been called and six\ncandidates have already been\nnamed. '\nTwo Coast Doctors\nWin Research Awards\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 The National\nResearch Council Wednesday announced the winners of 27 medical\nresearch fellowships amounting to\n$81,700.\nAmong those to whom senior fellowships, worth $4500 to $5000 depending on the winner's background\nand experience, were awarded are:\nDr. W. G. Bruce Casselman, Vancouver, to do research at the. University of Toronto; Dr. Philip C.\nFitz-James, Vancouver, to University of Western Ontario, London,\nOnt.; Dr. James W. Pearce, High\nRiver, Alta., to University of Western ^Ontario.\nDOLLAR UNCHANGED\nNEW YORK (CP) \u2014 The Canadian dollar was unchanged at a\npremium of 113-32 per cent in\nterms of U.S. funds Wednesday.\nPound sterling down 1-16 of a cent\nat $2.79 9-16.\nCominco Plans\nTo Drill for Gas\nTRAIL (CP) \u2014 The Consolidated Mining and Smelting Company\nof Canada Limited plans to drill\nfor gas in the area adjacent to its\noperations just South of the city\nof Calgary, the company announced\nhere Wednesday.\nThe company said drilling would\nbe done by Commonwealth Drilling\nCompany Limited, on land leased\nby Cominco from Burns Foundation Limited.\nCominco operates, a fertilizer\nplant at Calgary and utilizes natural gas as a raw material in the\nmanufacture of ammonia, the major\nchemical in its process. Present annual consumption is more than 3,-\n000,000,000 oubic feet.\nNanaimo Talks\nFluoridation\nNANAIMO, B.C. (CP) \u2014 Fluor-\nine content of Nanaimo water is only 20 per cent of the required protective level, representatives of Nanaimo doctors and dentists told\ngreater Nanaimo water district\nboard and city council representatives here Tuesday night.\nThe meeting had been called by\nthe board of the greater Nanaimo\nwater district to discuss fluoroda-\ntion of the public water supply.\nToday   1954 1948\nTrail        15.23   22.42 21.29\nRevelstoke     14.64   18.86 17.98\nWardner -      3.68     7.95 5.42\nNelson 2.00; Tuesday 1.80.\nAnd In This Corner ...\nOKLAHOMA CITY (AP) \u2014 Mrs. Loretto Bonner, a teacher at\nTaft Junior high school, noticed one of her students struggling with a\npiece of candy he was chewing,\n\"Either swallow the candy or toss It In the wastepaper basket,\" she\nadvised the youth.\n\"Can't,\" said the lad, \"The candy Is stuck between my teeth.\"\nJokingly, Mrs. Bonner told the youngster: \"Well, toss your teeth\nIn the basket with the candy.\"\nThe boy threw his teeth Into the basket, He had a complete upper plate,\nCalifornia\nWine For B.C.\nVICTORIA (CP) \u2014 First shipments of California wines will appear on the shelves of B.C. government liquor stores within two\nweeks, it was learned today.\nCalifornia wines have never before been carried by the B.C. liquor control board. An unofficial\nban on their import was put into\neffect as a measure aimed at protecting B.C.'s wine industry shortly after the end of prohibition.\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 A mah carried a door into a locksmith's shop\nhere Tuesday and said: \"Will you please hurry on this? It's a little\nchilly in the house.\" The unidentified customer said he had lost the\nkey. The locksmith made a new one and the man took his door home.\nELMIRA, N.Y. (AP) \u2014 TwO-day-old Maria Ann Green should have\na colorful future. She's the daughter of Howard and Myrtle Rose\nBrown Green, of 812 Sunset drive.\nDETROIT '(AP) \u2014 Two more baby gorillas are coming to the Detroit zoo after come fast red tape cutting.\nThe, zoo wants them to keep a gorilla it has just received from\ngetting lonely. But zoo officials here balked in getting export permits\n.from French Equatorial Africa.\nThe zoo went to Mayor Albert E. Cobo. Cobo went to Senator\nCharles Potter (Rep. Mich.). Potter went to State -Secretary Dulles.\nDulles went to the U.S. ambassador in Paris. The ambassador went to\nthe French government. And up came the permits.\n ;\n_\n^\u2014\n_\n ~\n^Nfpplpjs\npppippf\n'\"^\n2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, MAY 19,1955\nTONIGHT THROUGH  SATURDAY \u2014 CompleU Shown ot 7:00-9:00\nM-G-M PRESENTS THE FIRST MUSICAL\nIN\nI0S( MARK\nSONS OF THI\nMOUNTIIS\nINDIAN LOVE CAU\nMEE TO IE 'HI\nand Mon\nANN BLYTH \u2022 HOWARD KEEL* FERNANDO LAMAS\nr*IC[S...Tr!l$ [K6AEIMEHT ONIV\n7S< -^50< \u2022 25*\nSTART!\nTODAY\nExtra \u2014 Metro Symphony Orchestra - \"POET AND PEASANT\" \u2014 in Cinemascope\nComing Sunday Midnight \u2014 \"MANY RIVERS TO CROSS\" \u2022 Cinemascope, Technicolor\nTHE\nSTARLIGHT\nDRIVE-IN\nLAST COMPLETE SHOW 8:30 P.M\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\n\"PICKUP\" at 8:30 p.m.\n\"GOODBYE MY FANCY\" 10-.10 p.m.\nFHOUERT    I     FRANK\nffllll'ffll.\nGoodbye, My Fancy\nBffi AADEN VINCENT SHERMAN \u2022 HENW. BLANK? \u00a7\n\u00abMaaMtAW\u00abll\nJLJori-t be Scared- fp^\n^    ...I'm ji^agiVi.;., ?$&\nUmm, BtVERlY HICIUEIS \u2022 TOGO liAAS \u2022 AUAK NOXXI \u2022 HOMAH0CHA\u00a5BERtmi*ll\u00bb CAS801L OENWSOU\nIna Ikr \u00bb \u2022\u00bb *\u00bb \"< *\u25a0\u00bb fm \u2022 MM m MM * HUGO WW \u2022 MMn>-*lpr I Mia\nTrail's Budget\nPicture Given\nGatei Open 8:00 p.m.\nShow 8tart\u00bb 8:35 p.m.\nOne Complete Show Only\nJohn   Payne   -   Arlene   Dahl\n\"CARIBBEAN\" (Color)\nThe boldest story of piracy\nthe screen  has ever told\nPLUS:\nMark Stevens - Edmond O'Brien\n\"BETWEEN MIDNIGHT\nAND DAWN\"\nAdventure with the string of\nreality,  hot  from  police-files\nrealism:\ni The Weather\nJJELSON     48 67 -\njfcrescent Valley  46 68 \u25a0\nGrand Pbrks  40 68 \u25a0\nKimberley   33 69 \u2022\nSpokane   40 67 -\nCutler's\nJewellery\n511  BAKER ST.\nALL WORK\nGUARANTEED\nKitchens Planned at\n;\u25a0 The kitchen of your dreams may\n. become a reality sooner than you\na expect!\n\\ Let us help you with tho plan-\nj ning. When we know the size of\n\u25a0 Yonng?town Kitchens Cabinet\nj Sink and cabinets that best sxnt\ni your needs we may make quick.\n( delivery .., and at surprisingly\n* low prices! No charge ior thi\"'\n<\\ service! Come in today.\nFilm On Ancient\nCities To Be Shown\n\"The Stones Cry Out,\" a Moody\nInstitute of Science film on Jerusalem, Petrn. ancient Babylon and\nTyre, will be shown at Bethel\nTabernacle. Friday night.\nThe film is an eye-filling historical study in color filming the ruins\nof some of the most fabulous cities\nof all time, Babylon where King\nBelshazzar saw the handwriting on\nthe wall and site of the hanging\ngardens, the rose red city of Petra\nwhere temples were carved out of\ncliffs and mountain of the Arabian\ndesert, the once thriving seaport\nand commercial centre of Tyre.\nThe film points up the fact that,\nas these cities became great, they\nforgot moral and spiritual values,\nand their power and wealth dried\nup. \"We Canadians must not forget\nto keep God ln our lives if we\nwant to remain the great .nation\nwe are,\" is the obvious lesson.\nConsiderable Use\nMode of Glade Ferry\nDoukhobor settlement at Glade ls\nmaking \"considerable use\" of a new\nferry which has been operating for\nthe past month between the village\nand the West side of Kootenay Ri-\nver.\nThe ferry is on call service. It re-\nplaces a cabin cruiser which has\nbeen in operation since last Fall,\nA daily bath with lots of salt in\nthe water was common treatment\nfor babies in ancient Greece.\nwtwjfam\/u&netti\nConvenient Budget Terms\nAvailable\nMcKay and Station\nLtd.\n\"YOUR  HOME\nPLANNING CENTRE\"\nCJ2  Caktr 9t. Phone 1555\nNclso.l, B. C.\nARE YOU\nMOVING?\nIT'S SMOOTH\nGOING WHEN IT\nGOES WITH US .\nTOWLER\nPHONE 889\nFUEL AND TRANSFER\n\u2022tfrmtmmem w i.iumwi\nAUTO VUE\nDRIVE-IN\nTRAIL, B.C.\nLAST TIME  TONIGHT\n8how Time 8:30 p.m.\n\"THE GAY ADVENTURE\"\nwltfi Burgess Meredith\nand Jean Pierre Aumont\nPlu\u00bb TRAVELOGUE, CARTOON\n\u25a0 nd NEWS\nBrief on. New Hospital\nCapacity Is Planned\nKootenay Lake General Hospital\nSociety board ol directors will have\na brief prepared to submit to\nHealth end Welfare Minister Eric\nMartin to refute a Hospital Insurance Service contention that a 07-\nbed building will satisfy the new\nhospital needs of Nellon and Kootenay Valley Hoipltal Improve-\nment District.\nThe Service in a recent letter\nsuggested a 07-bed hospital would\nsatisfy 1035 wants on the basis of\nin average 73 per cent occupancy.\nHospital statistics show that last\nyear the 94 beds of the present\nbuilding were occupied far beyond\nthat average. Indeed, admissions at\ncertain instances were as high as\n104 and 106. -Moreover, the hospital\nhas a waiting Hat of patients requiring certain accommodation for\ntreatment almost constantly.\nDirectors further noted that the\nnew hospital would not be ready\nuntil 1097 so that 1093 estimates,\neven if correct, were unrealistic,\nfurther, taxpayers expected planning to take Into consideration as\nmuch as possible needs for the next\n20 years.\nNelson city, according to statistics\ncompiled by the hospital architect\nhad shown a continuous growth for\nthe past 40 years. District growth\nwas also consistently on an upward\ncurve, and there was nothing to indicate that this trend would not\ncontinue.\nCALL SYSTEM SEEN\nThe board also approved an account for $002 for test drilling on\nthe  site  for  the  new  city-district\nTRAIL - A break down of the ho   m ,bove Gyr0 Park Exp(.nd.\nTrail 1095 estimated budget, Pro- iturre, \u201e\u201e the projecUo date amount\nposed operations by the Department to ,40|S60,j including \u00bb37,808 for\nof Board of Works, and matters I purchM, 0, ,,nd\nconcerning health and relief, fire c H BUnd| ,ctlng cnairman of\nand water were discussed ln detail I the hospltal \u201e:annlng committee,\nbefore the Trail Property Owners, report8d on commute, interviews\nAssociation meeting Wednesday. | wlth dactrlcal and structural en\nAlderman G. G. Rennison, going\nover the budget item by item, said\nthat administration of justice by\nRCMP,   might  possibly   be  up  sol audio-visual    nurses    call    system\nglneers during the past month, and\nprogress of planning. The board also viewed  a demonstration  of an\nthe city had budgetted an extra\n$4000 or $34,000 for a possible increase in the policing of the city.\nHealth and relief was increased\nfrom $8200 to $8800. A partial increase was granted to the parks\nboard, but a good agreement had\nbeen entered into with the Municipality of Tadanac. Water workB\nwas up from $31,000 to $35,000 and\nboard of works from 4146,000 to\n$158,000. Administration and general\nwas down about $2500. Light department remained fairly steady.\nUnder the new provincial system\nof making grants Trail received\n$110,000. Formerly, under the SS\nand MA tax grant, revenue had\nbeen $175,000.\n\"What kind of Social Credit government is this?\" asked Jack\nNicholson of Sunningdale.. \"They\nare causing us to lose $65,000.\"\nIt was explained that under the\nnew method Trail was actually further ahead as considerably less\nschool tax was required by the\ngovernment.\nFruitvale Man,\nD. (. Mason, Dies\nDavid Charles Mason, 77, resident\nof Fruitvale for 46 years died Tuesday night in Trail-Tadanac hospital.\nBorn in Roden, Quebec, he came\nwest in 1000, and was a rancher\nand forest service worker for over\n40 years. In his forest service he\npatrolled the mountains and valleys\non horseback in the summer\nmonths.- He was a keen community\nworker and a member of St. John's\nAnglican Church, Fruitvale.\nHe is survived by his wife, Elizabeth Ida; four daughters, Mrs. G,\nGrieve, Mrs. A. Nelson and Mrs. J.\nWalgren of Fruitvale and Mrs. A.\nHanson of Robson; four sons, William George of Spokane, Harold\nJames and David Clarir of- Fruitvale and Gilbert Ivan of Port Al-\nberni, one sister in Montreal, 35\ngrandchildren and seven greatgrandchildren.\nFuneral service will be held Friday.\nThe new post office when built,\nalong with the Armouries would\nbring in additional tax revenue,\nMr. Rennison hoped.\nPRE-HOLIDAY\nMIDKITE\nFROLIC\nwhich it is planned  to include in\nplans for the new building.\nE. M. Stiles, planning committee\nchairman, who has been absent for\nthree months ln Europe,,was welcomed back to the board.\nNURSES' HOME\nPlans for a nurses' home were being prepared tor Separate tender,\nthe planning committee report\nnoted. Fifteen single rooms with a\ndual purpose lounge-meeting room\nwere being considered.\nHeating by use of coal fuel was\ngiven first choice by the committee\nas providing the greatest economy.\nConversion would be possible\nshould natural gas become available\nat a cheaper cost. Thermal unit production for coal was 12,079 for one\ncent, oil 6420, propane gas 9440 and\nnatural gas 14,000, according to consultants' advice. The figure was\nbased on the present price of coal\nto the hospital at $14.00 a ton.\nNegotiations had been entered into with the city electrical department to obtain cost figures on transformer Installation and power costs.\nSurvey of the present hospital\nproperty, required ln case a prospective purchaser became known,\nshowed that all buildings including\nthe nurses' home were within So\nclety lands except for one-eighth of\nan inch of a nurses' home fire es\ncape support.\nThe  brief to  be  prepared  for\nsubmission   to   Victoria   on   the\nproposed site of the new hospltal\nbuilding will be provided Hon. W.\nD.   Black,   member  for   Nelson-\nCreston. Mr. Black had been Interviewed on the matter by members of the executive, J. W. Graham, E. M. Stiles, A. K. McAdams,\nC. H,  Bland, H. D, Harrison and\nR.   ft.  Procter.\nMrs.   W.   R.   Jeffs   reported  the\nHospital Auxiliary planned purch\nase of $100 worth of sheeting for\nKI,GH. Hospital Day tea had netted\n$53 for the Auxiliary's new hospital\ntrust fund\nCopies of correspondence with\nfederal authorities concerning the\ngrant for the pronosed new hospital\nTrail Hospital\nMay Be forced\nto Reduce Staff'\nTRAIL \u2014 A curtailment of em-\n?loyces will bt necessary, Trail-\nadnnnc Hospltal Board agreed at a\nmeeting Tuesday, If the government's hold-the-llne budget is adhered to.\n\"It ls quite a situation we find\nourselves in,\" remarked acting\nchairman L. A. Read. \"The information has come six months too late.\nWage negotiations were conducted\nin November' and- we receive this\nword in May.\/'       \"   -\nThe board will send a representative to the B.C. Hospital Association\nto be held ln Vancouver.\nThe hospital deficit for April\nwas $7412 with an over all deficit\nfor 1054 of $47,000.\nAccording to figures compiled\nduring the first three months ot\nthe year, the hospital ls losing a\nlittle over $8000 a month ln following the policy of not charging\npatients placed in seml-prlvata and\nprivate wards due to lack of accommodation in public wards,\nA motion was approved to write\noff $1231.65 ln bad debts for the\npast three years.\nAs three board members were\nnot present, It was decided to call\na special meeting at a later date\nfor a full discussion on the matter\nof finance.\nJ. L. Kitchen, chairman of the\npersonnel committee, praised the\nhospital staff for a good showing\non hospital day. There was an exceptionally good turn out and the\nstaff did a very good Job', he said\nDr. J. S. Daly delivered a talk\non civil defence.\nWA Re-Elecls Mrs. A. T, Horswill\nMrs. A.. T. Horswill of Castlegai\nwas returned for her fifth term as\npresident of the Woman's Auxiliary\nof the Diocese of Kpotenay of the\nAnglican Church In Canada. The\nWA's two-day meeting elided at\nMemorial Hall Wednesday night.\n(See also story on page 5)\nMrs. S. Moore of Trail was elected vice-president for the Kootenay\nand Mrs. F. V. Harrison of Summer-\nland was elected Okanagan vice-\npresident. Mrs. N. O. Solly'of Sum-\nmerland was returned as recording\nsecretary with Mrs. J. W. Davis as\nTrail to serve as corresponding secretary. Treasurer is Mrs. Harrison.\nOther secretaries elected' were:\nMrs. D. L. Greene of Grand Forks,\ngirls' auxiliary; Mrs. C. S. Lutener\nof Oliver, Junior auxiliary; Mrs. D.\nCatchpole of Kelowna, little helpers; Mrs. H. Boone of Oliver, lone\nJA; Mrs. R. E. M. Yerburgh of Fernie, lone GA; Mrs. D. Spowart of\nGolden, education; Mrs. S. Moore\nof Trail, \"Living Message\"; Mrs. T.\nMitchell of Nakusp, St. Monica's\nand candidates; Mrs. B. S. Thurber\nof Trail Dorcas and social service;\nMrs. A. V. Laban, prayer partners\nand united thank offering.\nNEW PROJECT\nA new project was embarked upon by the WA, that of establishing\na WA home for older women in the\nDiocese. A committee to look into\nways and means was named; Mrs.\nB. S. Thurber, Mrs* S. Moore, Mrs,\nE. Atwood of Christina Lake and\nMrs. F. V. Harrison.\n\\\nMRS. A. T. HORSWILL\nalternate years in the Kootenay and\nOkanagan. The 1856 meeting will be\nin Kelowna. Mrs. Solly was named\nas delegate to. represent the diocese\nat the next annual dominion WA\nmeeting.\nWA monies were alloted at tht\nmeeting to the support of various\ncharities: Pender Harbor Home for\nAged, training of kindergarten teacher for work in Japan, Okanagan\nand Kootenay camps. Auracanlan\nln Chile, Deans' fund  and Youth\nWA annual meetings are held in I workers in the diocese.\nCareer Choice\nVital Decision\nScience Teacher, Son of Bonnington\nFamily, to Join Notre Dame Staff\nNotre Dame College has added a\nnew science teacher to its staff for\nnext year. Richard I. Greyson was\nsigned up this week and will assume teaching duties with the Fall\nterm ln September.\nGreyson is the son of Mr. and\nMrs. Ronald Greyson of Bonning-\n  Choosing a Career\" is one of the\nill  be provided H. W. Herridge, j most important and often the most! '<\">. where his father is superlntend-\nMP for Kootenay West, it was de-j difficult task confronting the young \u00abnt of the power plant. The new\ncided. There was no change in the; man or young woman Just leaving  'eacher received his Bachelor's degree in science from the University\nof British Columbia ln 1054, taking\na double honors course in biology\nbasis   on   which   grants   from   the school. It is a vital decision \"one\nfederal   government\u2014that   is   $1000 that will affect the whole course of\nper bed\u2014were available, it was in\ndicated.\nFreedomites Refuse to Tie Part\nIn Hearings; Say Appealing to UN\nSons of Freedom Wednesday morning refused \"to take part in any\naspect\" of the Doukhobor land -inquiry on the grounds it is contrary\nto their religious beliefs,\nyour life.\"\nThese were among opening remarks of A. R. Burnie, manager of\nthe Nelson branch of the Bank of\nMontreal, .to 50 students at Nelson\nhigh School. The address was onej\nof a series being presented by the\nlocal office of the National Employment Service. George Harvey, employment supervisor, introduced\n\"Why not?\" Mr. Burnie.\n\"Perhaps you wouldn't under- A banking career presented the\nstand. We are Doukhobors,\" said; opportunity \"to use all the skill\nthe Son. ; and ingenuity you can muster, one\nJudge Lord reminded him of thej that brings you into close persona\nWilliam Moojelsky of Shoreacres, j \"strong language\" In parts of the' relationship with many important]\nspokesman for the Christian Com-i resolution and.that he had affirmed! people of many different interests:]\nmunity of Universal Brotherhood of j to tell the truth before reading it. ,one which traverses the whole\nReformed Doukhobors (Sons of; Did he realize that? Judge Lord scope of business in its opportuni-\nFreedom), took the witness stand1 asked. Moojelsky said he did. \"No,! ties, and one which carries comas thai land hearings before His i I'm afraid I don't understand,\" said pensation in line with services\nHonor Judge Arthur Lord entered i the judge. '   . rendered.\"\ntheir third day. |    \"Do you not wish to help at this j    The energy and initiative of youth\nMoojelsky nervously read to court time?\" Judge Lord asked. could quickly bring the young man\nSUNDAY NITE\nTUNE8 OLD AND NEW\nFeaturing the\nMELO-A1RES\nKBAA THE  CLASSIFIED   DAILY\na resolution signed by the seven\nman Fraternal Council of the group.\n\"We cannot by reason or conscience\ntake part in any aspect of these proceedings,\" the resolution said. It\ncontends that Canadian courts have\nnot shown the Doukhobors proper\njustice and that their only alternative is to appeal to the United\nNations at New York which they\nhave already done. Until they hear\nfrom the UN they refuse to cooperate with the land inquiry commission.\nThe Orthodox Doukhobor group\nwas not soheduled to tootlfy until\nThursday morning. Court therefore adjourned after a half-hour\nuntil Thursday.\nIn the present inquiry, the Sons\nsay, \"a desecration is being made\nin present religious history similar\nto the casting of lots for Christ's\nRobe which was forcibly torn from\nHis boy before He  was crucified.\n\"PURP08ELY STOLEN\"\nThe resolution likens the Doukhobor lands to Christ's Robe and\nsays it is now being allotted by the\ncruclfiersi   Land   was   \"purposely\nstolen\" from the Doukhobors, they\nsay, once in Saskatchewan in 1007\nand a second time in British Columbia in 1038 \"ln order to- break\nup the Doukhobor community and\nstay the work of Christ in establishing His kingdom on earth.\"\n\"No Canadian court has shown\nus proper Justice In claims of our\nreligious pause on the basis of human rights and religious freedom\nand since we see the courts wish\nto make us unwilling receivers of\nstolen goods and confederates In\na giant swindle that shadows anything this country has ever seen,\"\nthe document says.\nThe resolution also refers to the\nDoukhobor   children   being   taken\nfrom   their   parents   and   sent   to\nschool. \"They are holding our children as hostages,\" Sons say.\nThe spokesman refused to answer\nfurther questions after reading the\nresolution, saying he had instructions from his group to read only It.\nOnly the seven signatories attended the Tuesday night meeting\nat which the resolution was drawn\nup, he told Judge Lord. There was\nno general meeting.\n\"Do you propose to give no cooperation to this commission?\"\nJudge Lord asked.\n\"We cannot with a clear conscience,\" said  Moojelsky.\nI\nNot till we hear from the United i to   a   senior   position.   With   new\nNotions,\" said Moojelsky. j branches opening continually, there\n\"Do you realize that by -refusing, were more and more jobs in bank-\nto co-operate with this commission, jngi    and    accelerated   'promotion! Victoria  Streetjjdied at Kootenay\nyou may be doing a dls-service to j a-waited those who  fit  themselves j Lake    General   Hospital   Monday\nyour people?\" Judge Lord asked.   1 for more responsible posts. ] night. She wasjgjj and had been a\nCommunity Chest\nFund Nils $4000\nNelson Community Chest received an additional $400 Wednesday, raising total receipts since\nthe residential campaign started\nMonday to $4000, Of the $400\nabout $50 was In pledges. The\ncampaign will continue until\nJune 4. Campaign objective Is\n$20,000. *\nand chemistry.. He was recently\nawarded his diploma upon completion of the Teacher Training course\nat the same institution. *\nHe will teach some of the Senior\nMatriculation science subjects, thus\nfreeing Mr. Edwin B. Harp to teach\nsecond  year  chemistry.  Mr.  Harp \\\nworked   on   a   National   Research\nCouncil project studying magnetic\nnuclear resonance while doing postgraduate studies at the University i\nof British Columbia, before coming J\nto Notre Dame last year. He will I\nteach  qualitative  and  quantitative |\ninorganic analysis next year.\nMrs. James Fisher\nDiesHe\u00a7al85\nMrs. Nettie Hjftnah Fisher of 614\nMoojelsky did not give a direct j There was perhaps no other busi-\nanswer but said: \"I have a child in;ness jn which so many senior exec-\nNew Denver, Your Honor.\" Judge' utive, had come up through the\nLord reminded him schools had' ranks. directly from high school,\nbeen provided at home but had not | \"While there is no easy road to\nbeen used. | the top in any career or profession,\nWhen he left the witness stand, ] that road ln banking is more easily\nMoojelsky beckoned six other col-1 defined than in most other busl-\nleagues, presumably the Fraternal j nesses You will find that road an\nCouncil ,and they left the court open M where you can go as far\nroom. 1 and as fast as your own capabili-\nThe   resolution   was   signed   by j ties wi|l carry you,\" concluded Mr.\nMoojelsky, John J. Perepelkin, WU-'\nHam Podovennlkoff, Nick H. Kan-\nigan, Alex Dutoff, John N. Zebor-\noff and Peter Demenoff.\nJohn J. Verigin, secretary of the\nOrthodox Doukhobrs, is expected\nto be the first witness at Thursday's\nhearing.\nEurnie.\nNelson residenWor the past four\nyears. _.\nPrior to coming to kelson. Mrs.\nFisher lived ag Hall Siding from\n1000 to 1051. She was born at Alma.\nWisconsin, an$ married James\nFisher in 1808 at Newport, Washington. They went to Rossland\nabout 1890 and moved to Hall's Siding in 1090.\nShe is survived by her husband,\nJames Fisher; and one sister, Mrs.\nMichael (Louisa),. Hunz of Spokane.\nTHE   EAGLES\npresent\nTommy Scott's\nHILLY\nOPRY\nSTARRING\nSTRING   BEAN\nNBC Radio Star\nCLARA BELLE\nRUBE ARNOLD\nThe Canadian Hillbilly\nTHE   OLD\nBARN DANCE GANG\nOf Nashville, Tenn.\nThey are all coming to Nelson.\nWatch for them\nSaturday, June 18th\nJr. High School Auditorium\nMatinee and Evening\nPerformance\nPAINT SALE\nNew Education\nFormula Told\nAbout 40 school trustees from\nschool districts throughout the Kootenay discussed the new finance\nformula for education at a meeting\nat Nelson Junior High Scnool Auditorium, Wednesday.\nThe conference was called by the\nDepartment of Education and chairman was District Schools Inspector\nJ. J. MoKenzle. Attending from\nthe department were S. E. Espley,\ndepartmental comptroller; and assistant D. Christian; W. Graham,\ndirector of administration, and Dr.\nPlenderleith, co-ordinator of services for the department,\nFuller details of the meeting were\nta be given Thursday, it was stated.\nWRwiiinWLum\nF\ntlENDLY\nAMILY\nINANCE\nPersonal Loans\nFor   Bills,  Fuel   Repairs,  Cart\nor any good reaion.\nMOUNTAIN\nFINANCE CO. LTD.\nSuite 212.    Medical  Arts  Bldg\nPHONE  178f?\nSALE\nREG. $7.60\nGAL.\n$ CIO\n5\nTake Advantage of the* Huge Savings in\nThis Clearance of Discontinued Lines\nof First Quality\nSHERWIN-WILLIAMS\nINTERIOR\nFLAT PAINTS\nWhite and Regular Colors.\nREG. $2.30\nQTS.\n$160\nSALE\n1\nSHERWIN-WILLIAMS\n\"HOUSE OF COLOR\"\n.    565 BAKER ST. PHONE 1713\n .-  \u25a0,  \u25a0-,,   .. '  - -'.\u25a0.        j  ; :\u2014~\u2014\"\"\"\"\nQSi\nLumber Firm Rolls Out\nMillion Feet a Month\nINVERMERE - One of the largest lumbering concerns in the\nWindermere district has' expanded\nits operations this year to a notable\nextent,\nWilder Brothers Lumber Company Ltd. is producing 1,000,000\nboard feet pf lumber monthly.\nThe planer mill and gang saw,\nboth new set-ups this year, have a\nstrategic location close by the Kootenay Central Railway at Radium\nstation and these with a stockpile\nSYLVANIA\nHalolight\nof lumber which Is moving at the\nrate of seven or eight carloads a\nweek, cover about 10 acres.\nPeak day at the mill was reached\nwhen 65,000 board feet went through\nthe -cant gang saw in an eight-hour\nshift. The gang mill is the only one\nof its kind in the district. Cant logs\nare hauled to the Wilder Brothers\noperations from nine local sawmills.\nThe Radium operations employ 18\nmen and an additional 30 are employed at the Wilder Brothers sawmill and tie mill located eight miles\noff the Banff-Windermere highway\ndown the Settlers' Road.\nHere, with a fine timber supply\nright at hand, tractor logging is being tried out with a 22-ton tractor-\nskidder purchased by Wilder Brothers this year being used to replace\nthree cats. Valued at $31,000, it can\nskid 15 to 17 trees at a time which\nis 30CO to 5000 board feet per load.\nThe sawmill in the Kootenay is\none   of   the   fastest   semi-portable\nmills in the area.\nNEW  PLANER\nThis year $150,000 worth of new\nequipment has been installed by\nWilder Brothers, including a new\nplaner which gives a satin finish\nto the lumber, the gang saw with\nits automatic feed and a forklift.\nThe saw file room is the special\nsanctum of millwright Adolphe\nSattmann.\nA power line is now being erected\nto electrify the planer and gang\nsaw presently run by diesel power.\nMost of the lumber produced is\nshipped to Prairie points through\nCalgary.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, MAY 19,195S \u2014 3\nBACHELOR OF science degree\nin chemical engineering has recently been received from University of B. C. by John Terrence\nO'Sullivan, above, son of Mr. and\nMrs. Paul L. O'Sullivan of Bos-\nwell. He has obtained a position\nas assistant field enqlneer with\ntho Alberta Conservation Board.\nCASTLEGAR PLANS\n$25,000 FIREWALL\nCASTLEGAR (CP) \u2014 The village\ncommission has agreed to instruct\nthe architect to draw up a preliminary plan for a one-storey firehall\nnot to exceed $25,000 in costs.\nPrevious plans called for a two-\nstorey structure to cost an estimated\n$75,000.\nSYLVAPLY Ht your local dealer\nIt Will Pay You\nTo consult us on your needs before\nyou order. We have all sizes and\nthicknesses in stock - including the\never handy \"TAKE HOME PANELS\"\nin V4\", Vi\" and Va\".\nNew House\nPLANS\n9 Interesting New Plan\nBooks With the Very\nLatest in House Designs.\nEnhance the Beauty ol\nYour Home With the\nFinest Panels of Them\nAll \u2014\n61ANT PANELS OF DOUGLAS FIR PUTWOOD\nSYLVAC0RD\nFACTORY EMBOSSED PANELS\nPHONE\n1180\nBURNS\nLumber Company\n602 Baker St.   Nelson, B. C.\nCominco Pays\n$150010 Workers\nFor Suggestions\nTRAIL \u2014 The Consolidated Mining and Smelting Company's latest\nsuggestion plan awards list shows\n$1500 paid to employees for on-the-\njob suggestions.\nHighest award on the list is $400.\nIt was shared by H. J. Beninger and\nC. S. Gris of the Sullivan Mine at\nKimberley. Their suggestion is for\nan improved type of eyebolt which\ncan be recovered after use. W. J.\nGlanville, also of the Sullivan Mine,\nwon $50 with a suggestion for heating cables along powerhouse eaves.\nOther Sullivan Mine employees receiving awards were J. Novak, E.\nH. Holt and W.^A. Worth.\nAt the Sullivan concentrator H.\nMajor received $30 for a suggestion\nwhich prevents choking of Dillon\nscreens in the sink float plant. R. N.\nBrenton and L. A. Mills shared $25\nfor a device which reduces spillage\nfrom feeder chutes. Other awards at\nthe Sullivan concentrator went to\nA. E. Chase, D. F. Lane, C. Beaton,\nS. G. Porter, R. C. Sleith, G: Price,\nR. M. Walsh, C. R. Young, T, P.\nHuppie, H. E. Hutton, J. H. Hatton,\nR. B. MacKay, M. Slobodian and C.\nE. Shannon.\nAn idea for a small portable slag\nblaster for cleaning structural steel\nand gas flues has earned $200 for T.\nBingham of the chemicals and fertilizers division at Trail.\nIn the zinc plant at Trail, I. Bu-\nchignani received $45 for suggested\nalterations to filter drums to reduce\nmaintenance. Mr. Buchignani has\nalready won $20 for this suggestion.\nThe further award was made because wider use of his idea has been\nfound possible.\nIdeas from engineering division\nemployees at Trail won several\nawards. The suggested use of snow\nshoes by employees working on the\noxide dust drag line gained $40 for\nD. A. Gilchrist. R. Nelson and T. W.\nHocking shared $40 for an improved\nmethod of drilling holes in corrugated plates. A suggestion for the\nuse of wooden pallets when moving\nmetal plates brought J. E. Taylor\n$35. A special lubrication tag for\nrepair jobs leaving shops won $25\nfor G. Brown.\nIn the metallurgical division at\nTrail, L. Maryko won $40 for suggested alterations to dust bin doors.\nRelocation of an air line earned $35\nfor G. L. Finlay. R. Emmery was\nawarded $30 for a warning device\non the slimes tank.\nOther awards at Trail went to\nJ. R. Goodwin, W. P. Haw, F. A.\nDay, V. Rella, J. C. McLim, J. Ma-\nzeppa, J. Mason, K. R. Walts, E. G.\nMorley, C. Chapala, D*V. Brown, G.\nNoble, M. R. J. Robinson, T. L. Neu-\nfeld, G. W. Grieser, T. W. Hocking,\nR. O. Ridenour, H. N. Redding, J.\nD. Cooper, W. W. Langille, J. R. Kil-\nlough, C. W. Joyce, M. Lypchuk, H.\nHundreds Expected To Attend Blossom Festival\nGala Weekend of\nFun, Spectacle,\nStarts Tonight\nCRESTON \u2014 Creston Valley expects to be host to hundreds of visitors to its 14th Annual Lions Blossom Festival this weekend. Everything is in readiness for the three-\nday fiesta sponsored by Creston\nLions Club which starts tonight and\ncarries on with a full program Friday and Saturday.\nCreston has declared a half-holiday Friday and with a statutory\nholiday on Monday, Creston Valley\ncitizens are looking forward to a\nglorious, long weekend.\nA feature of the festival will\nagain be the Queen Contest which\nthis year will be modelled after\nthat of the PNE. Vying for regal\nhonors are Evelyn Nelson, Carolyn\nMulholland, Sheila Andestad, Carole Hale and Crystal McDonald.\nDozens of Valley business and\nfraternal organizations are rushing\ncompletion of their floats for Friday's parade, which also will include six bands, and promises to be\nthe best ever.\nAmong new features of the broadened festival program this year are\nathletic events, a street band concert by the colorful RCAF Band of\nHighland pipers from Claresholm,\nAlta., and a mutt show for children,\nwith prises for a variety of categories of the canine species \u2014 shortest tail, longest ears, fastest eater,\nto name a few. Alice Buckna's Concert Party of dancers, instrumentalists and acrobats from Blairmore,\nAlta., is another added attraction,\nas is the freak show.\nFOLK FESTIVAL\nCreston is fast becoming the folk\ndance centre of the Kootenays and\na large number of entries have been\nreceived for the annual Folk Dancing Festival which highlights Saturday's program\nThe Royal Canadian Shows will\nprovide midway entertainment all\nthree days of the festival.\nFollowing is the full program:\nTONIGHT\n7 p.m.\u2014Bicycle marathon; 8 p.m.,\nBand Concert;   '9 p.m., Fireworks\nDisplay, Royal Canadian Shows.\nFRIDAY\n1:30 p.m. \u2014 Parade; 3 p.m.. Official opening, Sheriff's Posse Riding\nShow; 4 p.m., Royal Canadian\nShows; 8 p.m.. Queen judging and\ncrowning; 10 p.m. Horseshoe pitching, bands, jitney dancing; midnight, draws for door prizes.\nSATURDAY\n1 p.m., Street Band Concert;\n2 p.m., Royal Canadian Shows, Folk\nDancing Festival; 6 p.m., Mutt\nShow; 7 p.m. Folk Dancing; 8 p.m.,\nAlice Buckna's Concert Party, Log\nSawing and Horseshoe Pitching,\njitney dancing, freak show; midnight, draws for door prizes.\nWindermere Short\nOf Red Cross Goal\nINVERMERE \u2014 Final results of\nthe Red Cross campaign in the\nWindermere district have been released by the campaign manager H.\nR. Wannop of Windermere.\nTotals were Athalmer $67.35,\nRonacher's (Athalmer) $82, Brisco\n$36, Wilmer $41, Sheep Creek Mineral King $159.50, Fairmont $16.\nEdgewater $115.50, Radium $48.50,\nWindermere $59 and Inyermere\n$256.50, totalling $881.35. Quota for\nthe district was $1000 and while the\namount raised was under the quota\nit is felt that there are still a few\ndistrict residents who may wish to\ngive and have not yet sent in a\ndonation.\nKingsgale-Yahk\nWork Extended,\nChamber Learns\nCRANBROOK - Extension of\nthe Ryan-Yahk 3;4 miles of road\nconstruction scheduled for this year\nfurther southward to complete reconstruction of the unfinished parts\nof Kingsgate-Yahk 12 miles this\nyear was reported likely at the\nMay meeting of the Cranbrook\nChamber of Commerce.\nThere appeared no possibility of\nreconstruction this year of the\nworn-out four miles along Moyie\nLake, one of two sections between\nYahk and Cranbrook, not brought\nup to Southern-Transprovincial\nHighway minimum standard. Both\nthis and the Kingsgate-Radium\nhighway share the 40 miles from\nYahk to Cranbrook.'\nTO OPEN BUREAU\nChamber's tourist committee has\nplans to re-open the free tourist\ninformation booth on Van Home\nStreet arterial highway through the\ncity for the Summer months where\nIt will be staffed during daylight\nhours. A city grant of $300 will\nhelp finance this, .\nDuring the August 29-September\n5 Cranbrook Golden Jubilee the\nChamber will also have an information booth for the visitors to be\nlocated at the KP hall, offered by\nthe Knights of Pythias as a general\nand Informal meeting place for the\nmany guests expected.\nAlso as a tourist aid, the Chamber plans to have printed information cards briefly outlining for\nvisitors from   outside  the   province regulations concerning necessary   sealing   of  firearms  and\nfishing gear unless accompanied\nby a hunting or fishing licence,\nnecessity for a camp-fire permit,\nand \"pink slip\" regulations with\nregard  to   car   Insurance.  These\nwill be distributed to visitors entering the  district at   Klngsgate\nfor their convenience.\nFull   report   was   given   to   the\nmeeting by  W.  O. Atkinson  who\nwas  their delegate  to the  annual\nmeeting of the B. C. Chambers of\nCommerce   at   Vancouver   recently\nwhich dealt with many resolutions.\nA film called \"Courtesy Comes to\nTown,\" in connection with the tourist industry will be shown at the\nJune Chamber meeting, along with\n\"Canada's  Pathway   to  Plenty\"   if\nit is available. The Chamber is also sponsoring a public meeting at\nthe city  hall  here  tonight  to   be\naddressed by A. Kirkby, public relations officer for the  post office\ndepartment.\nAt La France Farm ...\n300 Young Qobhlers\nKeep Housewife Busy\nGRAY CREEK - Mrs. Tom Hos-\nkin of La France has 300 baby turkeys. After eight years of raising\nthe birds, she knows just how their\nfood and drink must be prepared.\nFor the first two weeks of their\nlives, members of the big peeping,\ncheeping family were babied along\nand encouraged to feed. When she\nleft them to feed alone they were\n\"roaring\". They missed their nurse.\nMrs. Hoskins keeps them In box\nbrooders, with a lamp underneath\nand a glass top.\nShe has her ear tuned to the tiny\nturkey voices and can detect the\nsmallest change in note. \"Someone\nls in trobule\", \"Now they^are feeding alone\". They love to be talked\nto. Perhaps their ears can also understand her voice.\nTV FAN8?\nMrs. Hoskins sleeps within earshot so that at no time are the\npoults untended. But do they understand that television set over there?\nShe doesn't think so as they show\nProcter Proud of\nFive Sea Cadets\nPROCTER \u2014 Among the proudest sea cadets of Hampton Gray\nVC Corps are five boys from the\nProcter-Harrop area who travel the\n20 miles weekly to attend, and\nwhose joint attendance has been\nalmost perfect.\nThe first to join was John MacLeod, son of ex-navy officer N. C.\nMacLeod. Next came Sydney Hut-\ncheson of Harrop and these two\nconvinced a third boy that the\nnavy was tops. This was Robert\nMaclean, who was previously set\non the RCAF in which his father\nhad been an officer and pilot. Next\ntwo to joih were Martin Mucha\nand Warren Garner.\nMr. MacLeod, who was respon\nslble for recruiting the young\nsailors, makes it his responsibility\nto drive them to Nelson. On the\nrare occasion when his car is un\navailable, another parent fills in.\nThe five are keenly interested\nand are making excellent progress.\nAnscomb in Drydock,\nSunshine Bay Activity\nRecalls Lake Boat Days\nMoon, E. J. Jensen, G. F. McNutl,\nJ. G. R. Bishop, C. K. Woolf, L. H.\nJohnson, G. W. Anderson, L. F. Davis, G. Paolini, D. A. Newcomb, E.\nEllis, A. R. Orton, L. Bailey, J. E.\nHalagaza, A. 'W. Thomlinson, C. R.\nField, C. P. Martin, P. J. L. Kennedy, J. L. Lawlis, A. Piccolo and\nM. E. Nixon.\nMore than $93,000 has been paid\nout to employees for practical suggestions since Cominco's suggestion\nplan started in 1942.\nSUNSHINE BAY \u2014 Sunshine\nBay harbor saw more activity\nwhen the Anscomb sailed into its\nnew drydock than it has seen since\nthe last paddle wheeler docked at\nthe wharf years ago.\nThe drydock, assembled at Nel\nson and cabled at Harrop since the\nbeginning of the month, was towed\nfrom there to Its permanent site at\nSunshine Bay by the tugs Glaco\nand Eleanore last week.\nThe drydock was sunk starting\nat 9:15, and took 45 minutes to submerge. Meanwhile the Anscomb left\nBalfour and came toward Sunshine\nBay. Eleanore met her and it was,\non the hour of 10 that the bow\nstarted to nose into the drydock.\nSix minutes later the ship was in\nplace. The drydock was a perfect\nfit\nIt takes one hour and five minutes to pump out the drydock and\nit was after lunch before the\nAnscomb stood high and dry before the spectators parked along the\nbeach, ln the orchard on the hillside overlooking the site, and along\nthe road.\nIn one car was Robert Inglls,\nformer chief engineer of the Moyie,\n60th ANNIVERSARY\nNEW DENVER\nMay 23, Victoria Day\nChildren's Sports 9 a.m.\nChildren's Parade, Adult Parade, Floats\nNelson Pipe Band, Adult Sports\nGames of Skill Throughout the Day\nSenior Baseball 11 a.m. and 5 p.m.\nCrowning of May Queen\nMay Pole Dance, Ukrainian Dance\nGIANT FIREWORKS DISPLAY\nMASTER DANCE \u2022 GOOD MUSIC, FLOOR SHOW\nAdmission:   $1.00 to Dance\nA\nwho lost both feet in a railway\naccident over a year ago in Nelson.\nHe is visiting Procter. While convalescing at Shaughnessy Military\nHospital in Vancouver Mr. Inglis\nwas visited and encouraged by\nGroup Captain Douglas Bader, l\u00abg-\nless hero of the Second World War\nMr. Inglis appeared in good health\nand spirits.\nIN FINE SHAPE\nAiter its last inspection the\nAnscomb was reported in excellent\ncondition after eight years of\nservice, with on appreciable wear\neven on the shaft bearings. The\nengine room, virtually unknown to\nthe public, is ln charge of chief\nengineer N. C. MacLeod. Here he\nIs a veritable Simon Legree and\nthe room gleams with clinical\ncleanliness. The huge diesels, parts,\nand copper tubing shine brightly\nand not a drop of oil or grease is\nto be seen.\nBut now the well-kept ship is due\nfor an overhaul which will take\nabout a week and then will be re-\ninspected. The hull has to be\nwashed and wire brushed before\nbeing given a coat of anti-corrosive\npaint followed by a coat of anti-\nfouling paint.\nThe propellers have to be sent to\nVancouver to be rebalanced. The\nship will be fitted with spare pro-\npellors during the interval.\nOf these propellors the chief\nengineer likes to tell a story concerning the tourist who enquired\nif there were many big fish in\nKootenay lake. He replied that\nthere were some very big ones that\ngive a lot of trouble. He added\nthat these fish bite at the 57 inch\nnropellors of highly polished steel\nand sometimes hang on until they\nstop the main engines.\nJ. Stachan ls foreman In charge\nof the overhaul and a watchman is\non duty nightly.\nB.C. Tourist Travel\nHigher In April\n, VICTORIA (CP) \u2014 B. C. tourist\ntravel during April increased six\nper cent over the same month last\nyear, despite cool spring weather.\nA travel bureau report says that\n15,885 U. S, cars entered the province last month compared to 14,958\nin April, 1954.\nTrade and Industry Minister\nRalph Chetwynd sa.id there is every\nindication that tourist accommodation operators \"should be able to\nlook forward to a good summer.\"\nno interest in it at all. It is there for\nthe entertainment of Mr. and Mrs.\nHoskin and Iheir friends.\nThe turkeys next move is to outside pens. These are built with\nwire floors. On no account must the\nbirds get their feet wet. Later on\nthey are moved to the big turkey\nhouses which are built on stilts\nwith open flooring half wire half\nwood slats.\nConstant care is needed, food has\nto be graduated and measured,\nweek after week, until Thanksgiving and Christmas. All plucking is\ndone by hand.\nMany a mouth-watering dinner\ncomes from the Hoskin turkey farm.\nWomen Golfers\nElect Officers\nNEW DENVER - Mrs. C. O.\nMeurling has been elected president of the Slocan Ladles' Golf\nClub.\nAlso elected at the annual meeting\nat the home of Mrs. Meurling in\nSilverton were Miss Erna Meinard\nus, vice-president; Mrs. R. E. .Crel-\nlin, secretary-treasurer, and Mrs.\nA. M. Ham, Mrs. J. W. Kelly and\nMrs. A. L. Harris, buying committee; Mrs. Q. A. Forsythe and Mrs.\nR. M. Ross, handicap and tournament committee, and Mrs. J. F.\nBowron, Monday night mixed golf\nget-together.\nThe club decided to hold t pot\nluck supper May 29 at the clubhouse, to officially open the season.\nThe West Kootenay ladles' golf\ntournament will be held in Nelson\nthis year on June 11 and 12.\nThe new British aircraft carrier\nArk Royal\u2014fourth of her name in\nthe Royal Navy \u2014 displaces 36,800\ntons.\nROOFING\nSHINGLES\nSPECIALLY PRICED\nTO CLEAR\n12 Only, Squares\nWeathermaster   Shingles\nTile Red\n$10.50 per sq.\n12 Only, Squares\n'JVoathermaater   Shlngleo\nSpruce Green\n$10.50 per tq.\n12 Only* Squares\nThick Butt Shingles\nMontrose Red\n$11.50 per sq.\n6 Only, Squares\nThick Butt Shingles\nTile Red\n$11.50 per sq.\n71\/2 Only, Squares\nHexagon Shingles\nMontrose Red\n$9.45 per sq.\nU'\/i Only, Squares\nHexagon 8hlngleo\nBlue-Black\n$9.45 per sq.\n61\/2 Only, Squares\nHexagon Shingles\nCharmaine Green\n$9.45 per sq.\nFIREPROOF\nSTONEBORD\nThe Ideal board for walls and\nceilings. Strong and permanent\nSheets 4' wide, 6', 7', 8' and 9'\nlengths.\n$65 per 100 sq. ft.\nPORTLAND CEMENT, by th\u00bb\nSack or Truckload\nNelson\nMachinery\nCompany Ltd.\nMining, Milling and Sawmill\nMachinery\nP.O. Box 230\nPhone 18 or 1139\nEvenings 792-Y\nThere Is No Better Feed at Any Price\nThan\n5HUHAIN\nGROWING MASH\n0 High levels of good quality animal PROTEINS.\nThere are many growth factors in animal proteins\nnot yet obtained through any other source.\n0 All known MINERALS for good pullet growth\npresent in correct amounts.\nO Optimum levels of all known VITAMINS required\nfor maximum utilization of feed.\n0   ANTIBIOTICS that give additional growth power.\n0 High level of ENERGY that means a minimum\nof waste.\n0 Backed by the biggest poultry feed concentrate\nmanufacturer in Canada.\nALWAYS FRESH \u2014 ALWAYS OBTAINABLE AT\nNelson Farmers' Supply Ltd.\n524 RAILWAY ST.\nPHONE 174\n(deehmd SfiedalA,\nPORK\nLean,\nROASTS s^ier-\nb 45\nPOT\nROASTS\nTop Quality\nSteer Beef.\nAll cuts.     ...\nit 45\nVEAL\nYoung, Tender\nSTEAKS ST\u2014\nib 49\n.lb.\n.lb.\n48'\n65'\nGRADE \"A\" FOWL:\n4 to 5 lb. .'.. \t\nB.B.B. FRYING CHICKEN:\nAverage 3V4 lb\t\nFAIRWAY\nm     FOODS LIMITED\nPhone 1177 Free Delivery\n \u25a0\u25a0\u2022 '\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0>\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.-\u25a0\u2014:\u2014'\u25a0\n^\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.\u25a0\u25a0;-- \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0:\u25a0..\u25a0      \u25a0:      \u2022.-:\u25a0   \u25a0   \u25a0;      \u25a0\u25a0       \u25a0...\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0,-,;',;.-,\u25a0\u25a0.\u25a0   .-.\u25a0..,   \u25a0\u25a0        \u25a0\u25a0 -7^\u2014T\n\u2014\n\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014I\u2014\u2014\u2014     I,,\nJfalamt lathi News      Without a Press       7 OlIOQtinnc ?\nEstablished April 22, 1903 A long time ago, when commercial radio        0    VJ^ Ll vTO I 1V.\/ 1 lO   \u2022\nmoo   tnalrlnff   ito   ftrcf   raal    iinr^ant     lira   uri-n-n     af ^\"\nANSWERS\nEstablished April 22, 1902\nBritish Columbia's\nMost interesting Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday by the\nNEWS.PUBUSHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n266 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia.\nAuthorized as Second Class Mall,\nPost Otfice Department, Ottawa.\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS.\nThursday, May 19, 19SS\nHelp Make\n\"Your Town\" Beautiful\nThe reams of eloquent verse written by poets each spring can hardly be\nattributed to inspiration from humans.\nThe muddy fields which, overnight,\n'become emerald carpets, are the magic\nhandiwork of Nature. The bursting\nbuds which make of every tree an admired debutante and the multi-hued\nflowers pushing through the sun-\nwarmed soil are Nature's creations.\nIn fact,-about the only unsightly\nthings we see about us in spring, sights\nthat would jar the creativeness of any\npoet, are man-made: Drab houses,\ngrey, weatherbeaten barns, broken-\ndown fences; weed-infested yards and\nroadways.\nWhile such eyesores are more evident in large urban centres where\nbuildings are tightly -concentrated,\nthey can also be seen in many rural\nareas\u2014but spread over more square\n(-.miles.\nMan, however, is trying to do something about eliminating them. In Can-\n..ada each spring an annual beautifica- -\ntion campaign is conducted urging citizens to clean up,and paint up their\nproperties.\nBut we shouldn't wait for special\nevents to stir us into cleaning our surroundings. Beautification should be\ncarried out when it is needed. However, if you must wait for an occasion,\n\u2022 then jump on your local \"clean up,\n^paint up\" campaign wagon with vigor.\n' Make your town a beautiful place, not\nonly for visitors but for Canadians.\n:      Unimproved Property\nExtra Tax Needed?\n> The holding of unimproved land\n.for higher prices has reached such a\n' stage in this nation, says the Canadian\nr.Home Builder, that it is hampering\n\u25a0many builders in their attempts to\nbuild more homes.\nWhat some people do not seem to\n'realize is that it also keeps municipal\ntaxation at unnecessarily high rates,\n\u25a0 for it stands to reason that a lot with a\n$10,000 home on it brings in more revenue than a lot that just lays there. In\nmany cities, some lots that were held\nfor high prices by grasping persons are\nIstill vacant. They ask such a high price\n'that they have to pay taxes on it for a\nyear or so which again raises the price\nto a new high making it more unattainable than ever by the ordinary man.\nThus, long after the district is built up\nthe lot still lays there, useless to everyone.\n\u2022 The time has arrived, therefore,\nwhen builders should suggest that\n.some municipalities create an \"unimproved property tax\" that would tend\nto make people more anxious to sell\nlots than they are now.\nIt might also generally lower the\nprice of lots so that an all round price\nreduction could be achieved.\nManagement is the art of getting\n1 things done through people.\nA long time ago, when commercial radio\nwas making its first real impact, we were, ay\nedltor of Maclean's Magazine, interviewed by\na newspaper reporter. He wanted our opinion\nas to the effect of this new, rapidly growing\nmedium of communication on periodicals and\nnewspapers.. We said with conviction, if not\noriginality, that nothing could ever take the\nplace of the printed word.\nYears later, when television came into\nbeing, another interviewer put the same question and we gave the same answer.\nDuring, the past week we have been going\nthrough the first issues of London newspapers\nto appear since the settlement of the strike\nwhich prevented their appearance for '27 days.\nThey provide evidence that no matter what\nhappens people do not get out of the habit of\nreading. In the case of the Daily Express alone,\nfor its first post-strike edition there were orders for 100,000 more copies than- were printed\non the last day of publication. Other papers\ncouldn't keep up with the demand.\nThe strike cost the newspaper publishers\nmillions of pounds. Nobody can estimate the\nlosses to businesses dependent on newspaper\nadvertising, losses few people would think of.\nFlorists, for Instance, suffered heavily because\nthere weren't any notices of births and deaths.\nTheatre receipts in most cases were halved. As\nactress Diana Wynyard said, \"Life without\nthe Press\u2014even at its unkindest\u2014is empty.\"\n\u2014Napier Moore.\nWhom-Who\nFrom J. R. Butler, of Toronto, we have\nreceived a stern rebuke. He encloses a clipping of an item which as it appeared In print,\nhad Mrs. We saying, \"and whom will you get\nto wash YOUR car?\" Mr. Butler's letter says,\n\"I was very surprised that Mrs. We (or was it\nyou who put the words in her mouth?) should\nuse the abomisably ungrammatical \"whom\"\n, . . The word in this case should be \"who.\"\nI feel that, so long as we use the English language, we should follow the rules of English\ngrammar, and not bastardize the language in\nslavish imitation of U.S. practice.\"\nWe share Mr. Butler's horror, but both\nWe's are blameless. The carbon of the original\ncopy is before us, and clearly typewritten is\nthe word \"who.'' How the \"m\" came to be\nadded is, at the moment, a mystery. Somebody will, of course, suggest that it may have\nbeen a printer's em.\nIncidentally, we've never seen any evidence that the erroneous use of \"whom\" instead of \"who\" is U.S, practice. We read quite\na lot of U.S. newspapers, and, apart from the\nsports pages, which we don't bother with, it\nis our opinion that they use good English.\n\u2014Napier Moore.\nHelp for the Ballet\nIt should be significant to all Canadians\nthat the Dance Teachers' Association and four\npartners of a single business have made up a\nmid-tour deficit which will permit the Canadian National Ballet Company to fill a New\nYork engagement. It took this company five\nyears to consolidate its position in Canada,\nAnd while it is still in course of development\ntoward the status of a major company, its level of performance in standard classics warrants its efforts to win United States audiences. It takes time and money merely to become known.\nThe company's mid-tour embarrassments\nwould not have occurred had its recently initiated campaign to raise $75,000 progressed a\nlittle faster. Such a small investment in the\nfuture of a serious body of \"Canadian artists\nshould present no difficulty. It is the only\ntouring group of its kind on this continent, and\nits market is not limited to Canada. A little\nhelp now means better ballet and more of it\nln the future.\nBasically, the present situation underscores the need of a National Arts Council\nwhich could assist meritorious effort until it\nbecomes self-supporting. In the meantime, the\nthanks due to the nation's ballet studios and\nto one small group of businessmen are not limited to the recipients. These donors stepped in\non behalf of the people of Canada, and the\nearly success of the $75,000 appeal should be\nour recognition of their generosity.\nToronto Globe and Mail.\nYour Horoscope\nGreat happiness should come in requited\nlove. However, avoid extravagance and speculation. Today's child will be of an ardent, ambitious temperament.\nIt's.Been Said\nOh, what a tangled web we weave, when\nfirst we practice to deceive\u2014Sir Walter Scott.\nThe trouble with music appreciation in\ngeneral is that people are taught to have too\nmuch respect for music; they should be taught\nto love it instead.\u2014Igor'Stravinsky.\nOpen to any reader. Names of persons\nasking questions will not be published.\nThere Ii no charge for this service.\nQuestions WILL NOT BE ANSWERED\nBY MAIL except where there la obvious\nnecessity for prlvaoy.\nReader, Nelson\u2014Can you give me some particulars about population, etc., and climate\n(such as minimum and maximum temperatures summer and winter) of Prince Rupert?\nPrince Rupert: Situated on small island\non the continental side of Hecate Strait and\nbetween the mouths of the Skeena River and\nPortland Canal. A bridge joins the island to\nthe mainland, it is served by the Canadian\nNational Railway, Canadian Pacific Railway\nand Union Steamships, also by Canadian Pacific and Canadian National steamships during\nthe summer months. Airlines serving the city\nare Canadian Pacific, Queen Charlotte, and\nother private lines. Corporate city population\n(1951 census) is 8546; city zone (local estimate), 17,774. (The city zone consists of corporate city of Prince Rupert in Division No. 9\nof British Columbia.) Minimum and maximum\ntemperatures: Spring, 29.5-50; summer, 42.3-\n73.5; fall, 32-62; winter, 5.2-50.\nMrs. D. H., Nelson\u2014Is there any way to clean\nold-fashioned steel knives, not the stainless variety?\nCut a solid potato in two, dip one of the\npieces in brick-dust, such as is used for knife-\ncleaning, and rub blade with it. All the old\nstains will come off quickly.\nCareful, Trail\u2014I have some very old black lace\nthat belonged to my great-grandmother,\nand would like to know a safe way to\nwash it at home.\nWe have been advised on the highest authority that the lace should be washed in some\ngood beer. Rinse and slush it about, then clap\nwell in dry, clean, soft cloths and proceed with\nIroning as usual, covered first with dry towel.\nDo not let the iron be too hot.\nS., R.R. 1\u2014Will you please tell me how to\nclean oil paintings? Also, how can one get\na water Stain off old water-color portraits\nand prints and etchings?\nTo begin with, if the oil painting is valuable it should go to a specialist. Professional\nartists, however, use a raw potato, cut in half,\nand apply that to the picture, renewing frequently. Then, when all dirt has been removed, wipe gently wirn tuft of cotton batting\n. damped with absolutely pure linseed oil, using\nvery little. Regarding water-colors, anything\nthat removed a water stain would remove the\npicture, as far as we can ascertain. By etching\ndo you mean a. print taken from steel or copper plate, or are you confusing that with a\npen and ink sketch? If the latter, there would\nbe' the same risk in removing stain as with\nthe water colors. If you have a print taken\nfrom copper or steel plate, age stains are\nsometimes removed by placing pictures in low\ntray containing filtered water and exposing to\nrays of sun until bleached, when they should\nbe allowed to dry naturally. When quite dry\nthey may be ironed under several folds of\nlinen to take out creases. We must warn you\nthat cleaning and restoring of old paintings,\netchings and engravings requires special\nknowledge, and damage is likely to result from\ninexperienced handling.\nResolutions for Nations\nWe'd like to see the nations resolve to stop\ncalling each other names. A minor matter, perhaps, but it always seemed to us that adults\nshould act like adults, and not like a bunch of\nschool kids hurling insults at each other across\nthe back fence. And that, we feel, should go\nfor nations, too.\nWe'd like to see the nations resolve to\nspend a little more time and effort in peaceful\npursuits, instead of sitting up nights trying to\ndevise more efficient ways of eliminating the\nhuman race altogether. It seems to us that if\nhalf the time spent in developing weapons of\nmass destruction were put to constructive use,\nthe world could be a much better place to live\nln.\nFinally, the nations might resolve to look\nat things from the other fellow's point of view\nonce in a while, to be a bit more tolerant of\neach other, and to realize that it's pretty hard,\neven for our side, to be right one hundred per\ncent of the time.\n\u2014Wingham (Ont.) Advance-Times.\nCANADIAN CULTURE\nWho now can say Canada lacks culture!\nHere's a Montreal provision shop advertising\nrattlesnake meat and octopus!\n\u2014Ottawa Journal.'\nTheyl Do It Every Time\nBrTimmyHaSol      Today's Bible Thouqhf\n\u2014L^i. 1 1 The power of an endless life.\u2014\nThe power of an endless life.\u2014\nHeb.  7:16.\nCountless good men and women\nlive again in the lives of those\nwhom they have profoundly influenced. The sequence will go on\nperpetually. What power we will\nenjoy In the after life is hidden\nfrom us, but we are certain about\ntoday.\ndunL MbL\ni. una fCAiuiM sntrncAta. ty^ world ^yiin assEn,vtD.\nSYMPArHIZIrteWlTrt\nTHE 6UEST SPEAKER\nWHOSE TROUBLESdRE\nJUST BESINnInS\"'\nTHAUIUUD\/JTiPoPtua\nH\/W1P MAT TO\nELMER MESSUER,\n}, MI1MWKEILWISC.\nI picked Pa's new office girl. The\nfirst man may 0' fell on account of\nan apple, but I ain't takin' no chances with a peach.\nBon\nVoyage\n. . F. B. Pearce\nIt seems a pity to leave this\n\"grand little city\" of ours just at\nthe moment when there are so many\ninteresting things to write about.\nThe weather for instance. Have you\nheard anyone lately say a good\nword about it. And yet it\nis the same kind of weather that\nthey have in England and which\nseems to have produced the hardiest race in Europe. It must be a\ndecline in our British Columbia\nstamina when its citizens cannot\ntake a little rain and cool weather\nwithout blaming it on the atom\nbomb tests. At a time when, back\nEast, they are suffering their usual\nhot weather we should take pride\nin the fact that \"a flow of cool\nmoist air is moving' in from the\nPacific\" and that \"a small storm\nis moving down from the Queen\nCharlottes.\" Not that most people\nknow where the Charlottes are. The\nradio that locates, day after day,\na garage at the bottom of Baker\nStreet for people' who know that\nquile well might occasionally tell\nus that they are at the top left hand\ncorner on the map of B. C.\nThen there is the' dam situation\nwhich has been a source of pleasure to me ever since the Hon. Bob\nbroached the subject of the Arrow\nLakes dam. One day, no doubt, the\nproud citizens of Castlegar will\nerect a monument to him on the\nbanks of the Columbia with something symbolic of David and\nGoliath, he being David and the\nDominion government Goliath. But\nif I know anything of the Hon. Bob\nhe is thoroughly enjoying himself.\nIt is not everyone who can send\nso many experts into a dither, and\nhe  never loved  experts.  For  that\nmatter do any of us unless, which\nrarely happens, they agree with us.\nTake* our friend General McNaughton. He says this is so and that\nis so but does he explain why. No.\nHe is just as clear as the mud kids\nmake dams of, but I wish he would\ncredit us with the wit ta understand simple explanations.\nTWO PLANT8 CROWDED\nNever mind. Spring Is with us,\nas you may have noticed, and the\nVernon Street Boulevard ll to be\nplanted. How? Well two plants\ntogether would be crowded so we\nshall wait and see. But this\nboulevard business Is worrying\nthe Veterans. It Is curious; you\ncannot offend the monled Interest\nbut It Is alright not to keep faith\nwith the dead. The council that\ncannot bind another council can\nacquire property without telling\nthe people why and the Veterans\nsuspect that John Houston and the\nMemorial are to be tucked away\nIn a corner of the defunct bandstand, most likely with a\" line of\nparked cars In front.\nThen there Is this matter of\namalgamation with Fairview\nHeights. I shall be sorry to be\naway when this fruit Is ripening,\nbut perhaps It will hang on the\ntree until I return.\nDown at the office I asked them\nwhat they wanted me to write\nabout when I am ln England. One\nromantic young thing wanted \u2022 to\nknow the truth of Princess Margaret's engagement. She must think\nI am a peer of the realm at least.\nAnother said she would be content\nif I brought her back some Plymouth Rock. It seems that that has\nbeen one of her delights of childhood which she has not outgrown.\nOne man said he would like some\npictures of thatched cottages to\nshow his children. The little sceptics won't believe that straw roofs\ndo not leak when it rains. And the\neditor put on his long suffering\nlook and said \"Oh your usual stuff.\"\nSo   you   will  get the   usual   stuff,\nabout England, which is not much\nto look forward to. -.\nSo we shall go by car to Montreal and embark on the Empress\nof France, the same old Empress\nwhich brought us back to Canada\nthirty years ago, and I hope she\ndoesn't roll like she used to. We\nhope to enjoy our trip but we are\nsure we shall miss the people of\nNelson. And know we shall be\nglad to come back again. In the\nmeantime we hope you will enjoy,\namong other blessings, a plerfsant\nsummer.\nP. S. Friends of Mr, Dithers will\nbe glad to know he is boarding out,\nwith people who ate very fond of\nhim. Lucky dog.\nGarbett's Condition\nStill Improving\nYORK, England (Reuters)\u2014The.\nArchbishop of York, Dr. Cyril Gar-\nbett, 80, was stated Wednesday to\nhave had \"a reasonable night\" and\nto be showing \"increasing strength\nand interest\" after a serious intestinal operation last weekend.\nFIT YOU TO NEW\nHEARING\nHAPPINESS!\n. . . says JAMES M. MALCOLM\nprofessional Audivox hearing specialist\nMy profession is helping deafened people hear again. My\nAudivox training and experience qualify me to help you\nsolve your hearing problem \u2014\njust as I have helped hundreds\nof your neighbors to hearing\nhappiness through the years.\nIf you don't hear all that you\nwant, \u2014 with or without a\nhearing aid \u2014 you should know\nthis vital hearing fact: no single hearing aid is right for every deafened person. To get\nthe clear, sharp hearing you\ndeserve, you must be fitted to\nthe one right hearing aid for\nyou.\nI am qualified to give you the\nprescription fitting you need \u2014\nwith famous Audivox, successor to Western Electric Hearing A-id Division. From over\n1,000 Audivox corrective fittings, I will scientifically determine exactly the right one\nfor you!\nLet me give you the facts\nabout your hearing problem.\nFor a revealing FREE private\nconsultation and scientific\nhearing test without obligation\njust telephone me at 787 today. Or stop in at the Hume\nHotel and ask for me.\nJAMES M. MALCOLM Will Be ot the HUME HOTEL\n,.     TODAY, May 19th FROM 9 A.M. TO 8 P.M.\nto demonstrate the new Audivox Hearing Aids, Demonstration In\nHotel or at your home. There is no obligation.\nOiFHWUZ\/\n\u00a9U UCHAA, &U>Vl, ?\nI\n1\nii\nBalk to us about a B of M Mortgage Loan under the National\nHousing Act.\nIf your proposition conforms to NHA requirements, there's\nmortgage money for you at the B of M... at the lowest rates\nand repayable over extended periods.\nCall on your local B of M manager. You will like his helpful approach to your building problem.\npill\nI \u2022\n[   i\nlB\naBM\u00bb\n^m\n\u25a0JSP*\nI\nM\nlll^gs&iS&8a\u00bbc\nill\nBank of Montreal\nBRANCHES in NELSON and DISTRICT to serve you\nto l mum ctmim\nNelson Branch;\nNew Denver (Sub-Agency) i\nRiondel (Sub-Agency) t\nCastlegar Branch:\nKaslo Branch:\nRossland Branch i\nTrail Branch:\nFruitvale (Sub-Agency):\nKimberley Branch;\nMamvllle (Sub-Agency) t \u201e,..._...,   ...\n1-3.00 p.m. and on Consolidated  Mining & Smelting Co.\n\u25a0emi-monthly payday! 1-3.00 p.m.\nARCHIE BURNIE, Manager\nOpen Monday and Thursday\nOpen Tuesday and Friday\nRICHARD ELLIOTT. Manager\nJOHN  WALKER,  Manager\nGOHDON T. GERMAN. Manager\nGORDON CAMPBELL, Manager\nOpen Tuesday and Friday\nE.'F. BARNES. Manager\nOpen every Thursday\n- \"   '      \"   Ltd.\nWORKING     WITH     CANADIANS\nN     EVERY      WALK      OP     LIFE      SINCE\n18 17\n .\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.-:'-\u2022\u2022\u25a0.\n\u2014\t\n\/3P7\nFor That Holiday\nFishing Trip\nMARSH KING\ndUfL\nWadsJtL\nBy B. F, Qoodrlch\nFlexible  and  lightweight, Mylth\ncleated sole. Your choice of laced\nor plain front. Marsh grey\nln color. Sizes 5 to 13.\n$18.95 a pair\nR. ANDREW\n& CO.  \\\nEstablished 1901  \u201e \\\nLEADERS   IN   FOOTFASHION\nInstitute Discusses\nRefreshment Sales\nDEER PARK \u2014 A supplementary\nmeeting of the Deer Park. Women's\nInstitute was held recently fco discuss the sale of soft drinks and ice\ncream at any activities sponsored\nby the Women's Institute. It was\ndecided that the local merchants\nwould handle these concessions,\neach taking a turn. A new member,\nMrs. N. Mottershead, Joined the\nranks of the Institute. .\nMrs. V. Coleman, Mrs. J. Kent,\nMrs. F. Brlggeman and Mrs. E. Williamson were recent guests at the\nhome of Mrs, R. W. Chalmers, Robson, where a meeting was held with\nMrs. S. E. Gummow, superintendent\nof B. C. Women's Institutes, Victoria, and Mrs. A. Shaw, president of\nthe Provincial board of the WI,\nVancouver.\nIF BABY IS\nCROSS if,\nFIND OUT WHY  fjfl\nHEALTHY BABIES art Dot crow. Your\nbaby should not be erosa. If he la, then\n\u2022omethlnir in hfs little ayitem may be \"out\nof order\". Probably mild Baby's Own\nTableta can promptly \"put it rignt\" Ont\nQuebec Mother write*: ''My Utile axrl was\nirritable, feverish and sometimes sick at her\nitomaeh \u2014 what a relief it wat, after giving\nksr Baby't Own Tablet!, to tee how mucA\nbetter ehe was.\"\nEuy to take, these sweet-tasting tnblata\n\u00bbr\u00bb promptly effective In simple fever,\nconstipation, restlessness wad fretfulnee*\nresulting from Irregularity at teething time,\nand other minor ills*. No \"sleepy,r \u00a7tuff, '\nno dulling effect! Never be without a Jul!\nbox of Baby's Own Tablet*, SIckneee $o\noften striken ln the night. Get a package today at your druggist. Money back u you\nare not satisfied.\nPHONE 1844 FOB CLASSIFIED\nRecipes ...\nTasty French Sauce\nTops Fillets Mornay\nBy   MARGABET  CARR\n'Fillets Mornay with Shrimp\nsounds elegant, tastes just as good\nas It looks on the table. Using the\nauthentic French sauce, it lends it\nself to beforehand preparation, a;\ndo most of the other Items on this\nSpring party menu. You can make\nthe sauce ahead of time, assembling\nthe fish and sauce about half an\nhour before serving time. While\nthe fish bakes to tender perfection\nand the sauce heats through to a\ndelicate browned and bubbly state,\nBride Comes From\nGermany for Riles\nGRAY CREEK \u2014. A very quiet\nwedding took place at the home of\nMr. and Mrs. Oscar Wirsig when\nAlbert Kassautzkl was married to\nRosel Narkus.\nThe bride recently arrived from\nGermany. The groom came to Canada in -1929 and has been employed\nby Mr. Wirsig for 25 years and has\nlately become a Canadian citizen.\nRev. Father E. Berrigan came\nfrom Nelson to conduct the double-\nring ceremony. The big living room\nwas decorated with pink streamers\nand white bells. The bride and\ngroom stood under an arch of periwinkle leaves twined with pink\nstreamers.\nThe bride made her charming\nbine satin dress with low neckline\nand full short skirt. Her bouquet\nwas pink carnations.\nShe was attended by Mrs. Horst\nWirsig ^who wore a pretty white\ndress patterned with soft blue\nflowers. She carried a gay bunch\nof Spring blossoms, daffodils, narcissus and tulips. The best man was\nMr. Horst Wirsig.\nFather Berrigan proposed the\nhealth' of the bride. A basket of\nwedding gifts was opened and then\na buffet dinner was served.\nThe three-tiered cake was decorated with bride and groom and\nbell. Mr. and Mrs. Kassautzkl are\nthe seventh married couple to use\nthe set of cups and saucers of\ntapestry rose design belonging to\nMrs. Horst Wirsig.\nMr. and Mrs. Cliff Oxterby from\nInnisfail, Alberta, and Miss Gertie\nWirsig were guests of Mr. and Mrs.\nOscar Wirsig for the wedding.\nMr. and Mrs. Kassautzkl will reside at Crawford Bay where they\nhave purchased the one-time Fisher\nranch.\nHoliday Specials\nat\nTMadifJL FASHIONS\nThe Store of  Courteous Service\nSLACKS and JACKETS:  10% OFF\nSPRING DRESSES: 10-20% OFF\nSKIRTS: 10% OFF\nBRADLEY'S\nMEAT   MARKET\nGood\nWe Specialize In\nQuality Fresh Meats\nFor Tenderness and Flavor\nHOLIDAY SPECIALS\nSmoked Picnics:                          3***\nTenderized,  lb                           *\u00bb J \u25a0\nWeiners:\nNo. 1 Visking\t\nVeal, Pork, Beef;\nMinced   \t\n2B,65*\n3 lb,'1.00\n 65'\n 45'\nVEAL STEAKS, ROASTS: AC*\nShoulder,  lb      *J\nROUND STEAK:\nlb\t\nPOT ROASTS:\nBoneless, Lean  lb.  ..'\t\nFRYING CHICKEN\nB.B.B.\nLb.\t\nSmal\nLb. .\nSPARERIBS\nI side.\n65*\nIS\n45'\nEGGS, A LARGE\nWe handle only local\nfresh. In ctns. EEt\nDoz.     J J\nBACON\n2,\u201e75'\nNo. 1.\nyou can play the role of the gracious, unflustered hostess, safe In the\nassurance that everything Is under\ncontrol.\nMENU\nPineapphvMint Cocktail\nBaked Fillets Mornay with Shrimp\nFresh  Green  Beans\nPoppy Seed Rolls\nAlmond,  Rice   and   Mushroom\nCasserole\nSpring Salad with Tarragon\nDressing\nMeringue Shells, with  Orange\nSherbet Topped with Toasted\nCoconut Whipped Cream\nBeverage\nBAKED FILLETS MORNAY\nWITH  SHRIMP.\n1    pound shrimp, fresh or frozen\n1 pound fish fillets  (haddock,\ncod or ocean perch)\nMornay Sauce\nClean shrimp, but do not cook,\nLet fillets thaw on refrigerator shelf\nor at room temperature. Cut fish\nin serving size pieces. Arrange the\nfish and shrimp in Individual baking dishes. Cover with Mornay\nSauce. Bake at 350 deg. F., 20 to 25\nminutes, or until fish flakes easily\nwhen tested with a fork, and sauce\nis bubbly and brown. Makes six\nservings.\nMORNAY 8AUCE\n4 tablespoons butter\n2 tablespoons finely chopped\nonion   \u25a0\nVt cup flour\n6    cups scalded milk\nVt teaspoon salt\n5 white peppercorns\n2    sprigs parsley\nPinch grated nutmeg\n(optional)\n4    egg yolks\nVi cup cream\n2     tablespoons grated Parmesan\nor dry Swiss cheese\nMelt butter In a two-quart saucepan. Add onion and cook until soft\nbut not brown. Add flour, blending well, and cook slowly until flour\njust starts to turn golden. Add milk,.\n2 cups at a time, stirring vigorously,\npreferably with a wire whip. Add\nsalt, peppercorns, parsley and nutmeg. Cook slowly, stirring frequently for about 30 minutes, or until\nreduced to two-thirds the original\nquantity and the sauce Ls the consistency of a very heavy cream.\nStrain through fine sieve. Beat egg\nyolks and blend in cream. Add to\nstrained sauce. Cook, stirring constantly until the boiling point Is\nreached. Do not let sauce boll. Add\ncheese. This sauce is used for foods\nthat are to be browned In the\noven. Usually a little grated cheese\nis sprinkled over the top before\nbrowning.\nGRAY CREEK \u2014 Barry Simpson\nhas come from Yellowknife for a\nshort holiday with his wife who is\nthe guest of her mother Mrs.\nStewart.\nMrs. C. C. Feenie ls a delegate\nto the annual meeting of the Koo<\ntenay Diocesan Board of the Anglican WA at Nelson. She is representing St. Monica's branch.\nPHONE 1844 FOB CLASSIFIED\n(Daua, Vift. With\n1454-24%\nHALF-8IZE FASHION\nNo frills to mar the smart good\nlooks of this new fashion \u2014 simple\nlines are all the flattery it needs!\nPerfect for the shorter, fuller- fig-,\nure \u2014 proportioned to fit without\nalteration. For pretty summer \"trim\n\u2014try contrast eyelet or lace. Sew\nIt right away!\nPattern 8307: Half Sizes 14W, 16%.\n18%, 20%, 22%, 24%. Size 18% -takes\n3%  yards 39-inch fabric.\nThis* easy-to-use pattern gives\nperfect fit Complete, illustrated\nsew chart shows you every step.\nSend THIRTY-FIVE CENT8 (35e)\nin coins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern. Print plainly SIZE,\nNAME, ADDRES8, STYLE, NUM.\nBER.\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN, NDN, 60 Front S. W.\nToronto, Ont\nDaffodils Admired at\nLegion Auxiliary Tea\nThe Ladle's Auxiliary to Nelson\nbranch, Canadian Legion, held a\nvery successful daffodil tea and\nsale of work ln the Legion lounge\nWednesday afternoon. The affair\nwas under the convenership of Mrs.\nFrank Day.\nIn charge of tea tables was Mrs.\nJ. C. Eckmier. Pouring tea at a table\ncentred with huge daffodils from\nMrs. Eckmicr's garden, were Mrs.\nH. H. Currie, Mrs. A. O. Allen and\nMrs. James Dawson. The daffodils\nwere flanked by pink tapers.\nServiteurs at the dainty tables,\ncentred with daffodils ln rosebowls,\nwere Mrs. Len Blcknell, Mrs. B.\nMcCreight and Mrs. J. Fukala. In\ncharge of the kitchen, dainty jellies\nand other refreshments, were Mrs.\n f\u2014\nNelson Social\nPHONE 1844\nThe Klngtte Club of Nelson attended a dinner at Armson's ln\ncelebration of their 16th anniver'\nsary, later an enjoyable evening\nwas spent at the home of Mrs. A.\nK. McAdams.\nWedding\nAnnouncement\nMr. and Mrs. W. L. Swain of\nKaslo wish to announce the marriage of their youngest daughter,\nMarie Elizabeth, to Frederick Douglas, son of Mrs. Sam Wood Sr., and\nthe late Mr. Sam Wood Sr\u201e of Glas-\nlyn, Sask. The wedding took place\nMay 10 at Coeur d'Alene, Idaho.\nKay Cameron, and helpers Mrs.\nSmythe, Mrs. W. R. Gibbon, and\nMrs. VanRuyskensvelde. Mrs. Ruth\nMcCreight, Mrs. C. .Short and Miss\nShort made tea.\nThe bake table and cake raffle\nwere in charge of Mrs. Mary De-\nFerro and Mrs. Peter Shrigley;\nsewing table, Mrs. Mabel Colman,\nMrs. G. Glowachuk; white elephants, Mrs. R. Keffer and Mrs. A.\nWilliams.\nReceiving the guests was Mrs. G.\nE. Thompson. Mrs. Peter Markln\nhad charge of tea tickets, and Mrs.\nC. O. Anderson had charge of the\nraffle.\nPrize winners were door, Mrs. H.\nE. Doelle, adjustment bridge lamp,\nMiss May Mears and cake,.Mrs. J.\nC. Livingston.\nSirdar Notes\nSIHDAR \u2014 Mr. and Mrs. W. G.\nArmstrong of Silver Falls Farm, are\nvisiting relatives in Spokane.\nLAC J. Gordon and Mrs. Gordon\nof Fort Nelson, RCAF base, were\nvisitors to Mr. and Mrs. Vince\nThompson.\nCharles Wilson is a business visitor to Kelowna and Vancouver.\nDiocesan Reports\nIndicate Progress\nProgress was indicated in report\ngiven at the 47th annual meeting\nof the Women's Auxiliary of Diocese of Kootenay of the Anglican\nChurch in Canada here Tuesday and\nWednesday.\nReports in general reflected the\ntheme of this year's meeting \"The\nFruit of the Spirit Is Joy\". Greetings from 19 other dioceses In other\nparts of Canada were also received\nby the meeting.\nPresident Mrs. A. T. Horswill of\nCastlegar reported various meetings\nheld through the year and of the\ncontributions made at conferences,\naddresses, influential thoughts and\npersonalities.\nHoliday Play Togs\nat IRENE'S\n\u2022 BLOUSES \u2022 SKIRTS\n\u2022 JACKETS\n\u2022 PEDAL PUSHERS\nStriped and Plain\nCO-ORDINATES\nSizes 10-18.\nSEE OUR WINDOW DISPLAY\nSmfioiind Jajdjtl Tftexlco\nHand Tooled\n.Hand Bags\nGenuine hand tooled\nleather bags handmade by the Aztec\nIndians at half the cost\nyou would expect to\npay. Two dozen different styles to choose\nfrom.\nPrices Range From\n5.95\n25\u00b000\nLadies' Apparel\n535 Baker St.\nPhone 775\nDavis reported that during the year\ntwo life membership pins were issued and 40 hew membership cards\nwere distributed.\nThe educational secretaries report mentioned a favorable financial year. Maps, study kits, slides,\ncalendars and pamphlets were distributed by this department.\n8UB8CRIPTION8 UP\nEditor of \"Living Message\", the\ndiocesan publication, said progress\nwas not as evident in this department but that the magazine had\ncarried a wide range of news from\nthe diocese and abroad this year as\nin others. Magazine secretary reported subscriptions had Increased\nln the past year.\nTwelve names were added to the\nBook' of Remembrance during; the\npast year. This is a book in which\naoe inserted names of WA members\nwho died during the year. A nominal amount is paid for entering a\nname, the monies going to the Book\nof Remembrance fund. One name\nadded this year was that of the late\nBishop F. P. Clark, who was patron\nof the WA.\nReport of Dorcas work for the\nyear said 42 of the 59 branches' in\nthe diocese contributed to this\nwhich consists of social service and\nwelfare work for Jndians and residential schools in Canada. Other\nsocial service work Included aid to\nKorean Relief, Columbia Coast Mission, Mission to Seamen, Kootenay\nHandicapped Children Society and\nothers. Participation was also taken in civil defence organizations.\nMembership in various diocesen\norganizations were given as Senior\nWomen's Auxiliary, 1075; Girls'\nAuxiliary, 92; Junior Auxiliary, 257;\nand Little Helpers, 1143.\nAt noon Wednesday, the WA delegates meeting at St. Saviour's Memorial Hall, were guests at a luncheon at Willow Point. St. Andrews-\nby-the-Lake church presented the\nluncheon.\nFalse Teeth Need\nA Special Cleanser\nDon't Brush Your Plates!\nSoak-Them In Polident\nAs Dentists Suggest\nPolident Is the recommended way to\nclean dentures, banish Denture Breath.\nJust follow these easy rules.\n1. Novor mo a brush on thoml Your dental plates are much softer than natural\nteeth. Brushing wears down fitting ridges\nso they get loose.\nJ, Novor uso soap or toothpaste! They\ncan leave film which collects bacteria\nand food particles, a major cause of\noffensive \"Denture Breath \\\nS. Us* a loalcirtg-lypo cloamor mad* for\nfait* tooth only . . . Polident I Polident\ncleanser is recommended by more dentists than any other. No brushing, no\nhandling of soapy plates. Polident gets\nwhere a brush can't reach.\nBest of all, Polident always leaves false\nteeth odor free. Get the world's largest\nselling denture cleanser, Polident, at\nyour drug counter. 0-133\nTlwtlucAaft.\n6tf. Xcmha. U)hsudsA,\nTWO FAVORITES! Pineapple\ndesign and spider-web crochet are\neasy, fun to do. Combined here ln\nluxurious new doily for your home!\nPattern 813 contains crochet directions for two dainty doilies; larger 21 inches, smaller 12 inches; ln\nNo. 30 mercerized cotton.\nSend TWENTY-FIVE CENTS ln\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern to LAURA WHEELER, NDN, 60 Front St W., Toronto,\nOnt Print plainly PATTERN NUMBER and SIZE, your NAME and\nADDRE88. .\nINSPIRED IDEAS \u2014 pages and\npages of novel designs in our NEW\nLaura Wheeler Needlecraft Catalog\nfor 1955! Completely different and\nso thrilling! Send 25 cents for your\ncopy now! You'll want to order\nmany of the patterns shown.\nBride-Elect Honored\nAt Deer Park Shower\nDEER PARK \u2014 Mrs. M. Law was\nhostess at a miscellaneous shower\nheld in honor of Miss Joyce Williamson of Castlegar, whose mar\nriage to Odd Aasland, also of Castlegar, is to take place in St Alban's\nAnglican Church, Castlegar, June\n4.\nThe bride-to-be received many\nlovely gifts which were presented\nin a gaily-decorated, pink and\nwhite covered basket. Refreshments\nwere served by the hostess, assisted\nby Mrs. E. Coleman and Miss Joyce\nCrockett.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, MAY 19,1935 \u2014 I\nCitizenship Topic\nOf MLA's Address\nNEW DENVER-Randolph Harding, MLA for Kaslo-Slocan, was\nguest speaker at citizenship night\nof the New Denver Women's Institute.\nRespect for the rights of others\nshould begin in the home, he said,\nand broaden to school, community\nand to provincial, national and international fields.\nLiving in an atomic age, people\nmust learn to co-operate, he said.\nCanada, a highly-respected member\nof the United Nations, is working\ntoward a lasting peace.\nMiss Diane Clever, ln Guide costume, presented the flag, which\nwas saluted by members. i\nReports showed that the total\namount subscribed in the Conquer\nCancer Campaign was $181.\nMiss M. H. Butlin was elected by\nacclamation to complete the executive term of the late Mrs. May\nCreUin.\nProgfam for the next-four months\nwill include a party in June, a garden afternoon meeting for July and\nAugust and a flower show In\nAugust.   '\nL. Todd, Lucerne high school\nprincipal, showed films on the work\nof the UN in the Philippines and\non immigration to Canada.\nChina's last emperor, Hsuan Tung,\nlost his throne when the Chinese\nrepublic  was  established  in   1912.\n1 Set of\nTV\nSNACK\nTRAYS\nFREE\nwith the purchase of\nevery TV set\nBeautiful Limed Oak\nand   Walnut\nBEDROOM SUITES\nReg. $239.00. $1Q\/I\nPrice      I y^\nSO\nJjumianl.\nCHILE  MILITIA\nThe army of Chile ls a national\nmilitia in which all able-bodied citizens 20 to 45 years old are obliged\nto serve.\nDUTCHERTERIA\nNELSON'S PREMIER MEAT MARKET\nPICNIC\nSHOULDERS\n_  35*\nTenderized. Top quality. Per lb.\nWEINERS: 1 Ib.    JT*\ncello pkg   3^\nCANADIAN    CHEESE:\nSL 55'\nRIB ROASTS: Choice\nBeef, English cut, Pfl^\nLb jy\nREGULAR HAMS: Tenderized, half or      PJ^\nwhole, Ib.\t\nHOMADE SAUSAGE and\nLEAN MINCED   $1.00\nBEEF: 3 Ibs     I\nBOLOGNA: First, nC#\nGrade, Ib JLj\nTURKEYS\nGrade A Alberta. Freshly dressed. Per lb.\n5V\n-EGGS: Grade A large, carton extra, CA^\nDoz   J\\J\nLOIN    PORK    ROASTS:\nAs cut,\nLb\t\nPEAS: Frosted       J(\\t\nSnowcap. Carton  Am\\J\n45*\nFRESH CODFISH: JCf\nFirst catch, Ib. ..  J J\nVEAL STEAK:      \u00a3C#\nDelicated, Ib. .... O^\nFreshly caught HALIBUT:\nFirst catch, AQt\nLb  *TO\nWe have a few lockers for rent at our\nplant. Rent one today and save 20%\non your food biil.\nPHONES 527-520\nFREE DELIVERY\nHOLIDAY\nWeek-End\nFun!!\nTAKE A COOL APPROACH TO -\n, The Summer Days\nAhead\nFollow the Trend \u2014 Relax in Comfort\nMake a Choice to Your Liking\n\u2022 Slacks \u2022 Jackets\n\u2022 Pedal Pushers        \u2022  Halters\n\u2022 Shorts *  Blouses\nNOW ON DISPLAY AT\nCharge Accounts Invited\nMB\n..;\u25a0'..; \u25a0\u25a0,..\u25a0\n Mil-pip\n.      \u25a0        \u25a0;    ..\u25a0    \u25a0v...::.j.:,l~;Vi|.\nP\u00abWWJ^P!IW!^ffP^|^^^^P^fW^^^^\n\u25a0 11\n\u2014up\n\u25a0\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, MAY 19, 1955\n1\nDEATHS\nto \\\\\/ The Canadian Preis\nI PHOENIXVILLE, Pa. \u2014 Owen\niosephus Roberts, 80, retired former\n^ynlted States Supreme Court justice, who earned the appelatlon\nJ'the great dissenter\" in his 18 years\n%a the high court bench.\n... NEW YORK \u2014 James Agee. 45,\npoet, critic, magazini and screen\n.'writer.\n~ CLEANS at It POLISHES!\nIcy Winds Keep\nU.K, Shivering\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014An icy blast\nof \"winter-ln-May\" howling out of\nthe north raked southwestern Europe with snow and sleet and\nbrought distress signals from at\nleast five ships overnight and Wednesday.\nMost of Britain shivered during\nthe night at temperatures near\nfreezing as snowflurrles struck a\ncountryside all In blossom after a\nwarm April.\nLONDON  8WEPT  BY WIND8\nSnowstorms which raged across\nBritain all day reached London at\nnight, and gale-force winds swept\nacross the centre of the city. Little\ndamage was reported, however.\nElsewhere in Britain, the merry\nmonth of May blocked roads,\nstripped orchards of blossoms, blew\ndown small buildings and forced\nmotorists to abandon cars on snowbound roads.\n5fo DISCOUNT\nWe were most pleased with the response our Introductory offer\nreceived with Canadians last year \u2014 We again extend this offer\nuntil 15 Sept 1955 \u2014 We have doubled our selling space and\nhave the greatest amount of government type goods in this\narea. Listed are some of our everyday low prices \u2014 Your 5%\nDI8COUNT brings these even lower. Remember we are located\nIn downtown Spokane.\nSURPLUS CIVILIAN\nUSAf One-Man Rubber Raft, ea  $1,80\nt'xT Blue-Gold Nylon Tarp, ea * _....   S.49\n8'xl? Tarpi, heavy whlta duck, ea. .      8.95\nO.I. Pick Mattock\u2014G.I. Folding Shovel, ea    1.49\nHalibut Anchor Rope, 300 ft.       1.98\nBOY SCOUT STUFF\u2014Canteen\u2014First Aid Kits .          97c\nPistol Belts 69c \u2014 Packboards 4.49-6.95 \u2014 tauekiacks     4.95\nPackaaeki 87e-2.98-3.98 \u2014 Can Heat Stove   89e\nLets ef Other Things\nSandpaper, 3 grits, 19c dozen \u2014 Flashlight Batteries 4 for 25c\nU8A Down-Feather Mummy Sleeping Bag, ea.        .....    . 12.95\nDaoron 2-lb. Sleeping'Bao, De Luxe Material, ea. 17.95\nPlastic Air Mattress, ea. 3.69 \u2014 Pillowed       4.95\nHodgman Cloth-Rubber Air Mattress, rcg. 14,95, now 11.95\nURANIUM HUNTERS\u2014See Us fur Complete CAMP OUTFITS\nGeiger Counters, Scintillators\nGypsy King Lures (This Week Only), ea '.., 17c\nHip Boots, \"Rod-Reel\"\u2014Reg. 14.95, Special   10.95\nB-9 Parka, with Fur Hood, ea  19.95\nWork Shoes. 6\", pr. 4.95. Engineer Boots, pr. 10.95\nFOAM   RUBBER  \u2014  All   Sizes \u2014 Thicknesses, Shapes \u2014 For\nHome \u2014 Boat \u2014 Truck \u2014 Tractor.\nRubberTzeTT^yloTMaterTaTrg'reen or camouflage, yd. 1,25\nPup Tents   6.95-7.95\"\n9x9 Umbrella Tents 29.95\u20149x11  _  37.50\n8un Tan Pants, ea. 2.98\u20148un Tan Shirts   1.98\nRain Jackets, used, ea. 1.98. Rain Pants, used, ea  2.98\nNylon Rain Parkas, ea. 6.95      Nylon Rain Pants, ea  3.95\nTarps, VxT, 2.98 \u2014 6'x8\\ 3.95 \u2014 8'xKr, 7,49 \u2014 10'x12\"   10.95\nGENERAL SURPLUS STORES\n224 Riverside 2nd Wall\nPH. RI72828 \u2014 SPOKANE, WASH.\nSAVE THIS  COUPON\nTITO SIGNS TRADE PACT\nBELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP) \u2014\nYugoslavia and Albania have signed\na nagre.ement, to expire Dec. 3i,\nfor exchange fo goods worth $1,-\n506,000 from each side. Albania is\nthe last among the Soviet satellite\ncountries to make such a trade\nagreement ln the course of so-called\nnormalization of relations between\nIndependent Yugoslavia arid the\nRussian-led Comlnform members\nsince Stalin's death in 1953.\nPearson Home in\nCheerful Mood\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014Diplomatically,\nthe World is \"out of the trenches\nnow and into the open,\" External\nAffairs Minister Pearson said Wednesday on his return from Europe.\n\"There is no doubt that recent\ndevelopments give us ground for\nsatisfaction and some optimism,\" he\ntold reporters at Rockclifie airport.\n\"But,\" he added, \"it wouldn't be\nwise to go overboard with exultation yet.\"\n\"There ls a danger that we might\njump to conclusions that more progress has been made than Is the\ncase.\n\"It would be tempting to relax\nour defence efforts, tfhich In themselves may be largely responsible\nfor , the advances that have been\nmade.\nRadio, TV Broadcasters Ask Full\nOverhaul of Copyright Monopoly\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 The Canadian\nAssociation of Radio and. Television\nBroadcasters said Wednesday copyright laws intended 103 years ago\nto protect composers. now tend to\nbenefit publishers.\nThe association, which claims to\nrepresent the majority of private\npublished for their Intrinsic worth.\nIn effect, a few large publishing\nhouses decided .what music will be\nheard. Their large-scale promotion\nmachinery could determine and no\none else, while allowing a \"reasonable return\" for publishers.\nThe monopoly fails of mitigating\nbroadcasters  in   Canada,-said   the characteristics  if lt  benefits  pub.\ncountry's copyright legislation,.basically unchanged since 1842, does\nnot meet the present day realities\nfacing users of music.\nIt said in a 13,000-word brief that\nthe legislation \"assists in rights,\ntrade marks and industrial designs.\"'\nThe three-man royal commission\nheaded by Chief Justice J. L. Ilsley\nof Nova Scotia resumed Its public\nhearings Wednesday.\nThe CARTB described what lt\nconsiders the normal procedure followed in the publication of musical\nworks, adding that they are seldom\nFine or Jail for\nParty-Line User\nPOUGHKEEPSIE, N.Y. (AP)-A\nhot-tempered housewife was convicted Tuesday nig)it of refusing to\nUshers rather than composers,\" the\nbroadcasters said.\nThe CARTB'recommended a complete overhaul of copyright laws on\nthe ground that \"the substance of\nCopyright law reflects the condition\nof an era which did not ,visuallze\nthe phonograph, let alone motion\npictures, radio and television broadcasting ...\"\n8\/^Y8 SYSTEM WRONG\nThe brief argued that music users\nshould  not be \u2022 required to pay\nDiesels, Economy\nCaused Layoffs\nAt CNR Depot\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Cbonge to\ndiesel power and other economies\nhas caused layoffs and cutbacks\nat Canadian National Railways depot at ForJrMjhTV,! it \u25a0top; CNR of.\nficial said Tuesday.   '\u25a0 ' '\u2022'\nJ. J. Behan, B! C, manager for\nthe CNRJ \".claimed tie ..cuts were\nmade \"without' affecting service\"\nas he replied' to a union charge\nthat layoffs had affected morale\nand had been ordered at a time\nwhen the company should have\nstimulated employment.\nEpidemic Polio\nDown in Canada\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014The number of\ncases of epidemic poliomyelitis In\nflat annual fee for\" the whole of a|Canada dropped  73  per cent last\n.? I\u2122llU\u2122\u201eS,e,lil)Upeacerget \u00b0\" \" C\u00b0Untry party.,ine when a dollars Instead of'a percentage of\nperforming rights society's reper-iy^r compared,with 1953, the bur-\nloire.; ' eau \u00b0' statistics .reported Wednes-\nNow, if a broadcaster wishes to, day.\nuse only one item ln a repertoire,\nhe must. purchase the rights to the\nentire repertoire. The CARTB asked\nthat fees be paid only for Items\nused.\nHowever, If the present system\nis retained, the broadcasters recommended a change in estimating the\nfee.   It  asked \u25a0 a  fee  in   terms  of\nvolunteer fireman tried to report a' broadcasters'  gross revenue  as  at\nfire. ; present\nany   premature   conclusion.\nis not assured  because   (Russian)\nForelng Minister Molotov has been;    A DutcheSB county court ]ury 0(\nthrowing kisses from a balcony In Mvm men an(, \u201eve wom(m ,oundj\nVienna.' ,Mrs. Mary L. Kayes, 43, guilty. The'\nMr. Pearon said he had conflden- loTemB^ Mr8 Su(, Case| \u201e h     I\ntial talks in Paris wrth Chancellor ^ g pai.,y.llne user |\nKonrad Adenauer of West Germany-\nHe had been impressed by the\nEuropean character of the chancellor's views.\nSpeed Takes Job\nFrom N.S. Ferry\nSays 33 Pilots\nDie in Trainers\nThe case was the first test of a\nnew state law covering use of party-\nline telephones in an emergency.\nMrs. Kayes could get a maximum\nof a year in Jail and a $500 fine.\nCounty   Judge   John   R.   Schartz hums.\"m<!rr.a?. acr.os* \"\"t n\u2122. \u2122ul'\nset May 24 for sentencing.\nSumming up for the state, district attorney Raymond Baratta ask-\nthe jury \"could anything be more Halifax and partmouth are slipping\nHALIFAX  (CP) \u2014 While traffic\nti-million dollar Angus L. Macdonald bridge the sturdy ferriea that\nonce formed the only link between\nwilful than to  say 'let the damn'\nOTTAWA (CP)-Thirty-three pi- ,hing burn. when a ,lre o((lclal was:\ntrying to report a fire?\"\ninto oblivion.\nWhile the Dartmouth ferry corn-\nlots of some 1100 men trained In tn-ing to report a fire'\" , mission reported a $14,000 loss in\nT-33 Jet aircraft have been killed Volunteer fireman Donald Town. April1 the bridge checked through\nin Canada in 39 crashes of the plane scnd nad testlfled Mrs, Kayes told> 157.000 verucles and an addit.onal\nsince it went into service as an ad- him that when ne trled t\u201e report a' 18.500 passengers\nvanced trainer late in 1953.               brush (ire that eventually burned     SPecd   is   sPelllnsr  doom   to  *'\nDefence Minister Campney tabled down a barn.\nthe information in the Commons to- \t\nday in reply to questions by MaJ.-\nGen. G. R. Pearkes, VC. the Pro- Frobisher RepOrt\ngresslve   Conservative   party's   de- *, v ,       \u2014      ,.\nfence spokesman. , ihOWS Net ITOtlt\nMr. Campney said that 13 of the     TORONTO  (CP)-Erobisher Ltd.\nOriginal Trade Union Thrives and\nWorks Hard oh Switzerland's Peaks\n'A total of 2381 cases were reported, the smallest number since\n1950 and.less than one-third 1953's\nrecord number of 8878.\nFewer polio cases were reported\nin 1954 in all provinces except\nPrince Edward- Island, Nova Scotia\nand Quebec.\nCanada's polio rate per 100,0.00\npersons tumbled to 15.7 cases last\nyear from 60.2 in 1953. The rate was\nhighest In Prince Edward Island at\n75.3 and lowest in Ontario at five.\nIn 1953, provincial polio rates ranged from 4.7 cases in Nova Scotia to\n286.4 in Manitoba.\nNumber of cases by provinces\nln 1954 (with 1953 figures in\nbrackets):\nNewfoundland 22 (233); Prince\nEdward Island 79 (11); Nova Scotia\n.137 (31); New Brunswick 61 (88);\nQuebec 786 (488); Ontario 250\n(2239); Manitoba 114 (2317); Saskatchewan 197 (1202); Alberta 518\n(1472), and British Columbia 217\n(797).\nBrannan School\nOvercrowded\nBy tfAVID JONE8 '\nSALZBURG, Austria (Reuters)\u2014\nSalzburg, city of \"Mozart, music and\nscenic beauty, is also the home of\nthe most remarkable trade union\nin the world, the Mountain Cleaners\nGuild.\nMembers of the guild, founded\nin 1669, literally clean mountains.\nThat fateful year the city was\nalmost buried by an avalanche of\nrocks'and earth from the Moench-\nberg, a mountain In whose shadow\nit stands.\nAccording to the records, on July\n16, 1669, \"amid a thunderous roar,\nrocks of great magnitude, some of\nthem more than a hundredweight,\nfell on to the city from the rock\nface of. the Moenchberg, crushing\n13 houses, the church of St. Marcus\nand a large part of the city walls\nand killing 220 of'its citizens.\"\nThe leading burghers of Salzburg, the records say; then decjded\nto found the guild, whose members\ngive the Moenchberg and the neighboring Kapuzlnerberg an annual\nspring cleaning to prevent a recurrence of the tragedy.\nCOMB CRAGS\n'The mountain cleaners are by\ntradition members of the same\nfamilies who supplied the first men\nfor the hazardous task of combing\nthe crags for loose rocks and earth.\nThey are clad in short, tight-\nfitting jackets and leather trousers,\nclimbing boots and knee-length\nstockings. Their equipment consists\nof a long mountaineering rope, a\nlong-handled hammer specially designed for \"tapping\" the rocks,-a\nlarge chisel and a rock drill.\nAt the brink of the rock face to\nbe cleaned, the rope operator who\naccompanies the cleaner takes up\nhis stand with one end of the rope\nfastened to a' large windlass, the\nother around the cleaner's waist.\nThe cleaner works his way down\nthe oliff face, kicking himself away\nfrom it and swinging from side to\nside, to cover a wider swathe, Inspecting the rocks, tapping here and\nthere and paring off a chunk now\nand then if it appears unsafe.\nWORK   8IDE-BY-8IDE\nUsually, three cleaners work side-\nby-side. When communicating with\nthe rope operator at the top, each\ncleaner uses a code word\u2014usually\nhis family name\u2014to preface his instructions.\nBrandauer\u2014hoist away,\" \"Hau-\nser\u2014down a little,\" and \"Jaeger-\nhold fast,\" are familiar calls which\nthe inhabitants of Salzburg have\ngot used to hearing every spring\nfor the last 256 years.\nCONFIDENTIALLY YOURS\n\u2014by Byrne Hope Sanders\nMONTREAL, May 19th \u2014 For you end your\ndaughter . . . there's no safer and gentler Ehampoo\nthan WOODBURY COCOANUT OIL CASTILLE\nSHAMPOO I I can make this strong claim\u2014because I've learned how important ifl the natural oil\nprotection which Woodbury gives\u2014in keeping your\nhair shining and pretty. This fine shampoo washes\nthe hair shining clean\u2014but does not dry out the\nnatural oils which give body and life to your hair. That's why you'll\nfind your hair so easy to manage\u2014right after a Woodbury shampoo!\nAnd because so many mothers and daughters have discovered for\nthemselves how true this is\u2014Woodbury Shampoo sells for much less\nthan any other quality shampoo.  Won't you try it yourseli?\nThai   Genius   Among   Make-up\nArtists .' . . Max\nFactor has brought\nus a new color\ndiscovery in skin\nloveliness, HI-FI\nFLUID MAKEUP. It's really thrilling\u2014a Fluid Makeup base with fl new\n33 men killed were pilot students had net profit of $179,245 for the 'ntri<:at\u00ab bus and \u00bb\">lrey system now\nfrom NATO countries. | fiscal year ended Dec. 31, 1954, its,tfikes tnem from nomes to \u00b0,,lces\nMore than  1000 pilots had  sue- annual report shows. In the previ.; minutes faster. It takes a ferry about\ncessfully  completed  training  with ous fiscal period, 14 months to Dec.' ',3 mmutes to eross thp harbor; it's\nthe plane, and another 86 had been 131, 1953, the company had a,net loss\nrejected from the training program of $278,819.\nafter starting in on the jet. i    Current assets at the fiscal year\nHe said there was an inquiry into! end were $660,925, excluding $22,-\nevery one of the 39 crashes. It was [ 064,689 interest in subsidiary, asso-\nfound the principal 'reason for the ciated and other companies. Current\ncrashes was pilot errors ln Judg- liabilities totalled $1,799,972.\nment.\nthree ferries that once were kept\non the more from dawn, until mid-!    VANCOUVER (CP) - The new\nnight. 'Beys Industrial School at Brannan\nWhere passengers in north Dart-' Lake near Nanaimo, which opened\nmouth once had to travel to thej just two months ago, ls already\ndowntown ferry dock, cross on the. \"seriously overcrowded,\" Magis-\nferry and walk to' t|ieir offices, an I trate    Lionel    Beevor-Potta    said\nThe Famlly'i Mating Out-Doors\n. . . and that means\nlota of e u t s and\n* .' scratches coming\ni^' up I It's a wise lady\nwho gets a goodly\nsupply of ever-useful Curad Plastic\nBandages and has\nthem ready for that\nsudden crisis I You'll\nfind that CURADS have that\nwonderful new \"Stick-Quick\" adhesive\u2014and a new polyethylene\nfacing that whisks off clean. And\nanother thing! . . . They're made\n' with an exclusive new medication\n. . . the germ-killer is right in the\n\u25a0pad\". Won't curl or fray either.\nCurads are completely waterproof\nao you can carry on your daily\nchores without affecting them a\nbit. They're such a eomlort\u2014do\nget some right now!\nlight texture that\nsmooths the skin and softens it\ntool Hi-Fi was cheated, in the\nfirst place, for color TV, a medium in which, under the glaring\nlights, ordinary make-up base\nlooks harsh and hard. Now we,\nthe lucky ones at home, can\nehare in this discovery . . . which\ngives an exquisite, natural look to\nthe skin\u2014with never fl \"made-up\"\nlook. At beauty counters everywhere, $2.00 ... in six flattering\nshades 1 Also, new Fluid Rouge in\nhigh fidelity colors, $1.50.\nIhree or four by bridge.\nBARE OF VEHICLES\nThe ferries still carry workers\nfrom central and eastern Dartmouth\nbut the decks often are almost bare\nof vehicles.\nThe ferry commission since the\nT.   Undsley,  president,  says  the,bridge \u00b0Pened  has  s;ashed ,sched-\nMr.   Campney  said   the   $200,000 company   is   carrying  on   negotia-|ules \"and  disml9sed    8  employees\n1 But it still expects  to lose about\n$9000 a month at the present rate\nplane has not been, in service long tions with some groups who have!\nenough to answer another of Gen.! shown interest in establishing a\nPearkes' questions\u2014the length of!northwest power industries project\nthe plane's average life span. 'in-British Columbia.\nJapanese Farmers\nViews of Canada's\nBy FORBES RHUDE\nCanadian  Preti  Staff Writer\nTOKYO ( C P ) \u2014 ' Seventy\nthousand colorful pamphlets, printed in Japanese and depicting Canadian industry in action, have been\ndistributed by Canada's booth at\nthe Japanese international trade\nfair which ended a two-week show\nhere Wednesday.\nCanadian delegates to the International Chamber of Commerce\ncongress under way here have been\ninterested visitors to the booth\nsince their arrival last Friday. R. C.\nBerkinshaw, president of the Canadian council of the ICC, visited\nthe booth as Canada's delegation\nhead and heard the story of the\nexhibit from M. J. Conacher of Win-\nExc'ttina iVcw\u00ab For Baby . . . For a limited time, every package of\n.   CHIX GAUZE DIAPERS \u2014Belling at $4.95 a dozen\niPicjHOFcifl) \u2014 has an extra bonus \u2014a FREE 35o tin of Johnson's\nBaby Powder 1 There's nothing more enchanting , . .\nthan a happy Baby! And basic to every baby's\nhappiness \u2014 is comfort . . . that means the comfy-\nsoftness of Chix Gauze Diapers, made by a Johnson\n& Johnson Company. They're extra-absorbent . . .\n'cos they're made from safer, surgical type gauze \u2014\nin the special Chix weave. That's what helps to\nkeep them wrinkle-free!\u2014That's what makes them\nwash to easily! And don't forget Baby's FREE\nbonus . . .*a 35c tin of Johnson's Baby Powder!\nTo Protect Your Investment ... in your precious home, it's important to keep it in first-class condition.   It's so\nfoolish to neglect the paint . . . the chimneys . . .\ncracks in the wall.  And there's no need to hold\nup repairs  or  improvements  to your home  for\nlack of ready cash.  You can pay for them with\na   B of M   Home  Improvement   Loan.   With   an\nH.I.L. you can even add an extra room or two ,\n. . . erect a garage ... or install a heating or\nelectrical system. The cost is low, too, only 5H%\ninterest per annum, and you can pay it back in\nmonthly  installments.   See your B of M  manager\ntoday.  He will be glad to discuss a Home Improvement Loan with\nyou and explain the easy repayment terms.\nThh U The Kind Of \/Vewi ... I like to bring you\u2014news of the\ntmooth, easy spreading you find with new, super-\nheflnogenized BLUE BONNET MARGARINE.\nNow you can take your new, super-homogenized,\nBlue Bonnet right jrom the rejrigerator--&nd spread\nita golden goodness on bread or toast.. It won't tear\neven the freshest bread. You can use it at any\ntemperature\u2014ice-box cold, or simmering in the pan\n\u2014and find the famous Blue Bonnet quality and\nnutrition, giving you everything you expect to find\nonly in higher-priced spreads. Get it, in all its\ngolden goodness, in the convenient De Luxe \/oil-\nwrapped quarters \u2014 the \"q\\jality-plus-convenience\"\nway of buying!\nFAST RELIEF FOR\nACHING\nMUSCLES\n!|KM:liUj\n[ffuiic pf tJr^j\niwiHiJJii\nAttracted by\nWheal Tracts\nnipeg as crowds of Japanese passed\nthrough.\nA feature of the exhibit Is a miniature grain elevator with a constant flow of wheat coming out of\nits spout. In addition, there are\npanoramic aerial pictures showing\nCanada's vast farmlands, grain\nelevators and wheat shipping ports.\nAMAZED AT 8IZE\n- Conacher, assistant chief inspector\nfor the board of-grain commissioners at Winnipeg, most questions\nfrom visitors centre around the size\nof Canadian farms and farm ma>\nchinery. Farmer visitors could\nscarcely comprehend one man farm\ning such huge tracts. They were\nfascinated by pictures of the 16\nfoot wide disk plow and of the\nSaskatchewan Wheat Pool elevator\nNo. 7 at Port Arthur, largest in the\nCommonwealth.\nJapan already has a substantial\nmarket for Canadian wheat and\ncould become a much greater\ncustomer.\nThe ICC Wednesday continued\nits discussion of Asian development\nin relation to the world economy\nand a variety of technical subjects.\nInternational commercial arbitration was discussed by M. Gordon\nBrodie of Vahcouver, D. S, Hart of\nMontreal and F. Homer Zwicker of\nLunenburg, N.S.\nCanadjan representatives at discussions on Asian development and\nworld economy included H. N. Walters of Vancouver.\nTuesday.\nThe Nanaimo magistrate, in Vancouver for the B.C. magistrates'\nconvention, said the school was\novercrowded the week after it\nopened.\nMagistrate Beevor-Potts said\nthere were 143 boys at the Institution last weekend and he estimated\nIts capacity at 120.\n\"I haven't sent a boy there since\nit opened,\" he said, \"I realize the\ngovernment is trying to find \u2022\nsolution. It will take some time to\nrectify the situation.\"\nTHE PARTY LINERS\n\u25a0* ', y l i\nGENTLEGERALDINE\nalways listens before she\ncalls. If the line's in use,\nshe hangs up ever so\ngently. Geraldine knowl\nparty line courtesy pays\n\u2014and is quickly repaid.\nBRITISH   COLUMBIA\nTEUStaONE COMPANY\nSeagram's V.O.     ir\n0T Seagrams\nThis advertisement It not published or displayed by\nto Uquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbli\n<\u00a3r BlRTHPAY CaKE QUALITY\nin evert\/ cake you bake with\nAmazing Discovery Tightens\nPlates Like 'living Tissue\"\nNot a paste t Not a powder I Not a cream or wax pad I\nBut a new, soft plastic that holds plates firm and tight!\nJust released \u2014 Amazing\n\u2022oft plastic SNUG\u00ae brand\nDenture Cushions! Grip\nloose fitting plutea tight And\nfirm\u2014yet feel and hold like\n\"Living Tissue.\" EaaeB sore\ngums due to loose fitting\nplates. You eat, talk, laugh\nwithout embarrassment.\nSNUG, stays cushion-soft-*-\ncan't harden and ruin plate.\nG. T. FULFORD CO. LTD..\nTasteless, odorless, cleaned\nin a jiffy \u2014 easily removed\nwhen replacement is needed.\nNo more daily bother with\n\"stickums.\" Get SNUG\u00ae\nbrand Denture Cushions\ntoday and do away with\nyour plate troubles. 2 liners\ntor upper or lower plates\n$1.50. Money back if not\nsatisfied. At al] druggists.\nBRQCKVILLE. ONT.\nRich, Home-made flavor-at NO EXTRA COST\nThere was a time^ when baking a birthday cake meant\nexpensive ingredients, extra fussing and worry. Now,\nthanks to furity Cake Mixes, you can have 'Birthday\nCake' quality in every cake you bake at no extra cost.\nBecause Purity Mixes are scientifically mixed,\nyou need never fear cake failure again. All you add\nis a fresh egg for real \"home-made\" flavor. So for\nfinest quality \u2014at no extra cost \u2014rely on Purity.\nAlso try Purity Chocoloto Cakm Mix, Purity\nSplcm Ca|ce Mix, Purity Gingerbread Mix\nand Purity Pi% Crust Mix\nA Predutl of\nPURITY FIOUR M0U\nLIMITED\nAlio miliar, of\nFUDITY FIOUK,\nPURITY OATS,\nPURITY PIP CRUST MIX\nend PIONEER FEEDS\nWATCH FOR THE\nVALUABLE COUPON\nIN THE\nPURITY ADVERTISEMENT\nIN THE NEWS ON\nMAY 26th\nALSO TRY PURITY OATS,    PURITY   FLOUR,    PURITY PIE-CRUST MIX\n\u00b0^r\n PPP..'   \u2022        \u25a0    !.-\"ip#l\nt\n-,.        __ . ,. __\n;\/53l\nNews of the Day\nRATES: SOo Una, 40c line black face type; larger type ratei en\nroquost Minimum two linen. 10% discount for prompt payment\nDANCE  AT  PROCTER,  SAT,\nMAY 21. BRING YOUR FRIENDS,\nFuller  Brush  Representative\nDon E. Sergent \u2014 Phono 1335\nFor tree-spraying needs, ph. 705-1*\n(500.00 Credit Note on new car.\nWill sell for $400.00 Ph. 816-L\/\nGood Potatoes, $3.50 per hundred.\nAt Markott'J, Slocan Park.\nDressmaking and Alterations.\nPhone 1787-R\nPackage insurance can save you\n10%. See McHardy Agency Ltd.\nShipments  of New Drapery,\n48\" wide, at\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS.\nLet your children take part In\nthe field events at Ymlr's Victoria\nDay celebration.\nGolfers! Spalding and Dunlop\ngolf ballsy Ace plastic practice golf\nballs. \u2014 HIPPERSON'S.\nBetter quality running shoes In\nall sizes, from $1.59.\nEBERLE'S   ON   BAKER   STREET.\nEverything in wagons for the\nyoungsters, $3.10 and up. Steel or\nwood models. \u2014 HIPPERSON'S.\nFor  a  good  lawn,  use  Uplands\nSpecial No. 1 Seed.\nCOVENTRY'S FLOWER SHOP\nPHONE 962\nIf you Intend to build a home add\na room or fix your roof. etc. call\nLakeview Builders, 1883-L. Free\nestimates.\n\u25a0Job's Daughters rummage sale at\nCapitol Theatre, Saturday, at 9\no'clock.\nON SPECIAL THIS WEEK\n4 used bedroom suites and several\nused chiffoniers and china cabinets\nat the Home Furniture Exchange,\n413 Hall St, Phone 1660. Sea our\n\u25a0election offered at all timet.\nFishing tackle \u2014 Spinning and\ncasting rods, plugs, lures, lines,\nhooks, leaders. See us for up-to-\ndate equipment.\nKOOTENAY   8TATIONER8\nAND 8PORTS 8HOP.\n8AVE MONEY\nINSURE  THE   MODERN  WAY\nall your home, household furniture.\nONE   PACKAGE   POLICY\nAPPLEYARD & CO.\nBox 26, Phone 269\nCARD OF THANKS\nWe want to thank all our friends\nfor their kind thoughts and floral\nexpressions in our recent bereavement and also Dr. G. R. Callbeck.\nThe Fields' Family\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nHORVATH \u2014 Funeral services\nfor the late Louis Horvath will be\nheld from the Thompson Funeral\nHome Thursday at 3:30' p.m. Mr.\nH. S. Chrishop will officiate and\ninterment will be in Nelson Memorial Park.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nSHWED \u2014 Funeral services for\nthe late Michael Pawlowych Shwed\nwill be held from the Thompson\nFuneral Home Thursday at 11 a.m.\nRev. Father Theofll Hurk'o will officiate and interment will be in\nNelson Memorial Park.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, MAY 19,1935 \u2014 7\nWitness Testifies...\nLattuce. Cabbage and Cauliflower\nPlants; Fertilizers and Seeds. For\nthe best PHONE 910 \u2014 MAC'S\nFLOWER SHOP.\nFLOWERS  FOR   EVERY\nOCCASION\nPHONE 187\n0RIZ2ELLES' FLORISTS\nGlass Tops for Furniture.  Cut to\nand shape. Edges polished.\nT. H. WATERS & CO. LTD.\nPhone 156 101 Hall St., Nelson\n.38\" Terry Cloth for the Beach\nWraps. Plain colors or gay marine\ndesigns. Yd. $1.75: $1.95.\nTAYLOR'S DRY GOODS\nFOR  ALL  YOUR  HOLIDAY\nSPORTING  REQUIREMENT,\nWRITE, PHONE, OR CALL\nWOOD   VALLANCE   HARDWARE\n\"Now Is the Time\" ... to prepare\nter that fly menace \u2014 Door and\nwindow screens made to order at\nNEL80N   WOODWORKING  CO.\nI7S BAKER  ST. PH. 1150\nALL MEMBERS OF CLAN  Mc\nLEARY  MEET AT  I.O.O.F. HALL\n1:30   TODAY,   TO   ATTEND   THt\nFUNERAL OF THE LATE CLANS\nMAN, D. J. ROBERT80N.\nEXPORT\nCANADA'S   FINEST\nCIGARETTE\nFUNERAL 8ERVICE\nMASON \u2014 Funeral services for\nthe late David Charles Mason will\nbe held Friday, May 20, 1955, at 2\np.m., from St. John's Anglican\nChurch, Fruitvale. Rev. William\nEddington will officiate assisted by\nArchdeacon B. A. Resker of Castlegar. Interment will be in the family section of Fruitvale Memorial\nCemetery. Clark's Funeral Chapel\nln charge.\nBacon Transfers\nTo Toronto\nNelson Hudson's Bay Company\nladies' wear and piece goods department manager R. D. C. Bacon j\nwill leave Nelson In June for To-\nronto, where he has been promoted j\nto manager of the dry goods department for two Canadian divisions.\nIn Nelson three years, Bacon has\nbeen employed by the Hudson's Bay\nCompany for six years. He was employed in the buying office in Montreal before taking the position in\nthe Nelson branch.\nMr. and Mrs\". Bacon and their\nthree children, Sarah, seven; Fiona\nJane, five; and Veronica, 22 months,\ncame to Canada from England in\n1949, where he was employed with\nthe Felonese Company.\n\u25a0Mr, Bacon f$**a member of the\nNelson Knightjj of Columbus, while\nMrs. Bacon is president of the\nAquila Club in the St. Saviour's\nWomen's Association,\nThree RCMP Transfers;\nThree RCMP members have re- j\nceived transfers to different posts in '\nthe Kootenay. j\nCpl. Alex Borodula has been\ntransferred from Greenwood detachment to Nelson detachment;\nConstable J. D. Flamank from Trail\nto Kaslo, and Cpl. P. B. Payne from\nKaslo to be in charge at Greenwood\ndetachment.\nN. T. Drewry of New Westminster, author of a report on\nDoukhobor lands, concluded evidence at the current Doukhobor land\nhearings being conducted here. His\nreport deals with the lands present\ncondition and suggested future\nutilization\" inJ 18 Kootenay and\nBoundary lands.\nBriefly Mr. Drewrys evidence at\nthe Tuesday morning session was:\nPass Creek, 2590 acres on the\nSlocan River, has a higher elevation\nand different climatic conditions\nthan Kootenay and Columbia River\nsettlements. Access is a problem.\nThere are roads ln from the North\nand South but the community is\ndistant from other centres of population and industry. Mr. Drewry\nsuggested it should be divided into\nthree or four larger than average\nfarms and the balance be made\ndistrict lots. Small holdings could\nbe created along the creek if desired. The area was not capable of\nsupporting its estimated 156 population from an agricultural point of\nview. The land was valued at\n$14,225. j\nKrestova also presented an access j\nproblem though less so than Pass\nCreek. Isolation problem could be\nremedied by improving existing\nroads. Water supply ls another\nproblem. The 2085 acre area could\nbe divided Into five small units\nfacing th Slocan River. Larger)\nareas could be used for grazing.'\nThe land is unsuited to residential;\nuse. i\nKoch Siding known also as Slocan!\nPark is 191 acres with about 57 per-\nsons living there. On an agrilultural\neconomic basis, Mr. Drewry felt itj\nshould be sold as one unit or more I\ngy a simple sub-division of lots\nnear tha highway. j\nLebahdo is meadow land with;\n.inadequate drainage. Only one\nfamily lives there and from an,\nagricultural economic fiewpolnt, |\nMr. Drewry felt this was the best'\narrangement. !\nWinlaw, across the Slocan from\nLebahdo, ls 223 acres showing a|\nlittle more attention and development than other lands. For this;\narea Mr. Drewry suggested full;\ntime farming units of 40 acres ap-i\nproximately. Population is estlmat-j\ned at 90. It ls not suitable for 22 j\nfamilies who now, live there. Claf-j\nbrick presents a similar situation i\nand here Mr. Drewry suggested!\nsale as district lots. It ls not suited1\nto sub-dividing. \\\nPerry Siding,\" most northerly Slo-j\ncan Doukhobor settlement, contains\n263 acres and estimated 68 people.\nThe area is going \"downhill,\" some\nof the soil is suited to agriculture\nwith irrigation but the topography\nis unsuited.\nAREA8 DIFFER\nKootenay and Boundary settlements present some differences as\nto the extent of Industrialization,\navailability of outside employment,\ntemperature and rainfall.\nFor South Grand Forks, a community of 4715 acres, Mr. Drewry\nhad mapped a proposed subdivision. Potential use of the area\ndepends on the availability of water\nfor irrigation. Proposed sub-division\ncalls for 198 homesites on the Kettle\nRiver from over 700 acres and\nsimilar homesites on 300 acres on\nthe Granby River section. Balance\nis pasture and wasteland.\nGilpin settlement was not discussed. This land Is ln a different\ncategory and does not come under\npresent hearings, but may be dealt\nwith at a further public hearing at\nGrand Fors at a later date.\nCasear, 175 acres known also as\nGraham!s Ranch, .on the Granby\nRiver, is suited to mixed farming.\nMr. Drewry recommended it be\nsold as one unit.\nNELSON LADS IN.\nWINNING PLAY\nNelson was well represented at\nthe Dominion Drama Festival held\nrecently in Regina when two former\nhigh school graduates appeared in\nthe prize-winning play, \"The Crucible\", presented by the UBC Players' Club Alumni. One of these ex-\nstudents was Thomas Shorthouse,\nson of T. S. Shorthouse; the other\nwas Ted Affleck, son .of the late W.\nLloyd Affleck, one-time Provincial\nPublic Works Department engineer,\nand brother of Boyd C. Affleck of\nNelson.\nMr. Affleck, who graduated from\nNelson High School, was picked for\nspecial mention by the adjudicator\nfor his study of the Rev. Samuel\nParris in the play. Always interested in dramatics, he joined the\nPlayers' Alumni Club when, with\nhis family, he moved to Vancouver\nand entered UBC.\n14 Nelson Donors\nAnswer (all for\nBlood al Hospital\nChief Laboratory Technician Miss\nKathleen Harris in her work at\nKootenay Lake General Hospital\nsees the dramatic role donated Red\nCross blood plays ln a hospital.\nShe recalls a maternity case in\nJanuary where haemhorrage resulted. The patient's blood type was\nGroup O, RH negative. Group O\nla common, with about 45 per cent\nof the white race having It, but RH\nnegative Is rare. Only 15 per cent\nhave it.\nShe recalls:\n\"The three pints stored in the\nhospital bank were given. More\nwas needed. Vancouver was contacted, but was short of supply.\nOnly other hope was local donors and they were urgently needed.\nThrough Mrs. Stanley Morris, Red\nCross blood donor clinic official,\npast Red Cross donoi* were contacted. They were asked point blank\n\"Do you want to give blood or\ndon't you\" for no time could be\nwasted.\n14 NEEDED\nFourteen were needed. They\nwere called to the hospital in the\nday time, at midnight, at 2 a.m. and\n4 a.m\u201e over a 38-hour period. Laboratory technicians Miss Harris and\nMiss Maureen O'Neil went on 24-\nhour call.\nThe patient responded and wasj\nwell within 10 days.\nSuch  emergencies  where  a life\ndepends on getting the right blood\nare frequent at Kootenay Lake General Hospital and outpost hospitals\nin the area, Miss Morris concluded.\nTo fill this endless need a Red\nCross blood donor clinic is being\nheld \u00bbt tha Canadian Legion June\n6-7. The  600-pint quota   Is only\nenough to supply Nelson and district's   Immediate   needs.   It  has\nbeen  reached only twice  In the\n10 years the clinic has been held\nat Nelson. This year officials hope\nto set a new record. .\nInvite Russ Pastors\nTo Visit Canada\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 A party of\nRussian clergymen has been in-\nvited to Canada as guests of the\nUnited Church of Canada.\nDr. E. E. Long of Toronto, secretary of the general council, said\nhere Tuesday the invitation was extended to the patriarch and half-a\ndozen associates of the Russian Orthodox Church. They were asked\nto visit Canada this fall. No reply\nhas been received from Russia.\nDr. Long told the annual conference of the B. C. sectfon of the\nrhuroh that the visit would be to\ndiscuss the role of the church in international affairs and the possibility of reaching churches behind\nthe Iron Curtain.\nFour Fined\nIn city court Tuesday. S. E. Morris pleaded guilty and was fined\n$25 by Magistrate William Brown i\nfor speeding on Front Street Satur- j\nday night. I\nFor speeding on Vernon Street!\nMay 13, D. R. Mealey was fined $25\nin court Monday. He pleaded guilty.\nNot having adequate brakes cost\nR. C. Kretlow a $15 fine. Offence\noccurred the night of May 11. He\npleaded guilty.\nW. McKinnon, for having a' dog\nrunning at large, May 3, was fined\n$10.\nJUNIOR  HIGH  PLANNED\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014Vancouver\nschool board plans to build a $1,-\n750,000 junior-senior high school on\nthe proposed Quilchena subdivision\nnow the site of a golf course.\nCollect $10,000\nTo Help Scouts\nOTTAWA (CP)^Boy Scout headquarters said Wednesday the organization has collected $42,500 from\nCanadians to help cover expenses\nof some of the 10,000 Scouts who\nwill attend a world jamboree at\nNiagara-on-the-Lake, Ont., Aug. 18\nto 28.\nAn official said the money will\nbe distributed among 850 young\nVisitors from soft- currency countries, who would have trouble getting dollars at home. Each will get\n$50, of which $30 will go for camp\nfees and $20 for spending money.\nVITAL ARTERY\nThe Suez canal joining the Mediterranean and the Red sea was\ncompleted In 1869.\nThis advertisement Is not published\nor displayed by The Liquor Control\nBoard or by the Government of\nBritish Columbia.\nThursday, Friday and Saturday\nAT LIBERTY centre\nYou'll Really Pack Out More Food For Your Picnic When You Shop and Save\nWith Liberty Low Prices.\n'1.69\nWhole Canned Chicken:\nGold\u2122 West, 3 lb. tin\t\nHalf Chicken:\nOol!li\"i West ... \t\nMilk:\nBorden's, Carnation or Pacific\nSweet Mixed Pickles:\nMcLaren's. Ifl oz\t\n99'\n1.93'\nCase $7.29\n39'\nSweet Mixed Pickles:\nRed Seal\t\nHot Dog Relish:\nHeinz, 12 oz \u201e\t\nMarshmallows:\nLowney's Angelus, lb \t\nRitz Biscuits:\n16 oz. Christie's pack \t\nPrepared,Mustard:\nHeinz, 6 oz ;\t\nOGILVIE ORANGE CAKE MIX \u25a0\u00bb\na cake for\npicnic. Pkg.\t\n28'\n39'\n39*\n35*\n.25*\n31c\nMIRACLE WHIP\nSALAD\nDRESSING\nA dressing you can trust that\nwill meet your approval, satisfying   your  appetite   buds.\n27*\nICE CREAM\nFrench    Brand,\nscotch, Pecan,\nVanilla. Brick .\nButter-\n45*\nFresh\nWeiner and\nHamburger\nBuns\ndo, 25c\n2 Dozen 430\nBarbecue\nSpecials\nUnion barbecue chefs en hand Saturday with delicious samples. Come in and hove yourself a treat.\nSAUSAGE:\nUnion Brown and Serve, lb.\nlbs.\n44'\n35'\n65'\n69'\n45'\n35'\n25'\n45'\nUNION GUARANTEED MEATS\nBACON:\nUnion, Home Brand,  % lb\t\nWEINERS:\nUnion    \t\nSIRLOIN STEAK:\nUnion, lb.\t\nSPARE RIBS:\nUnion, lb\t\nPICNICS:\nUnion, lb _\t\nBOLOGNA:\nUnion, by the piece, lb ,\nAYRSHIRE SAUSAGE\nUnion, lb\t\nWe Proudly Present\nTTUm. Mian. WWIia.\n\"MISS LIBERTY\"\nGOLDEN  DEW\nMargarine\n3 ib, 89*\nPicnic Plates\n8 in a pkg.\n2,CT27*\nPure Lard\nCalgary Packers\n4 \u00bb 65*\nHeinz\nTomato and\nVegetable Soup\n2fcr25*\nSee Contest in Store\nYour Dollar Will Buy More Dewy Fresh Produce\nAt LIBERTY\nNEW POTATOES: 9*\n\"\"\" \"\"\"\"' 19*\n49*\n6 In Handy Carton\n42C\nPlus Bottles\nFIRST 200\nCUSTOMERS\nOn Saturday\nA FREE Coke\n\u25a0,V^V\\v\\\\\\to\nGuMonDc\nCalifornia Shatter whites, lb.\nTOMATOES:\nField; 14 oz. tube\t\nTOMATOES:\n;        \\'^m--i:^\nWm\nfl\npg\nl\u00bb*?iK\u00ab|i\nylra^&l \u25a0?\u25a0]\u25a0\n1   1'\nHr^fe^\n' s\u00bb*      *\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0;\u00bb&\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'.\n'   \u00ab\"\u25a0\n>.i :\n'.\u00ab\u2022\u00a3&\n, J ^ :.,_,\njj\nW$:   3M\n\u25a0\u2022> r w>f.\n\u00a7W'r*JB\n&V>- ^H   .\u25a0\nrkW'^'Ih\nllm   'Urn\nm   M\njg,S<;H\nm  JM\n^^B*  .   ^'^Hzk:.\n:a\u00bb\nBRK\u00a3&&raB\n'B ^ jUpfr\n4flW?\u00bb^M|\nft' ' - \u25a0-M\n:      lB|ifSJS||lff  \\-     '\n\u00a5 \u25a0\u00bb>*\n11 '\"' K9\\\nB. C. Hothouse, first again, lb.  \u2014\nSPINACH:\nLocal, tender green bunches   \t\nBABY CARROTS:\nTender, young. 16 oz. pks.  \t\nBOK CHOY:\nChinese Swiss Chard, lb _\t\nAVOCADOS:\nLarge size  -\nCUCUMBERS:\nFirst again. Florida New Crop. Lb\t\nB.C. TURNIPS:\nFirst Again\u2014Tender Spring white bunches .\nSPRING BEET GREENS:\nFirst Again \u2014 B. C. bunches \t\nWATERMELON:\nA picnic favorite, lb.   \t\n2,.,29*\nS9M   ft,r  mm I\n19*\n2, 33*\n29*\n2,\u201e,33*\n2,..35*\n13*\nOur very special candidate in the Mid-Summer\nBonspiel Queen Contest. A vote for her, identified by the Blue Ticket you purchase, is a\nboost for the community.\nOur Complete Bedding Plants\nThis Is the Week We Recommend\nYou Plant All Outdoor Plants.\nYOUR CHOICE OF THE FINEST\u2014PLEASE SHOP EARLY\nBlue Ageratum, Royal Carpet, or Blue Alyssum, Dwarf Lobelia,\nTrailing Lobelia, American Beauty Asters, Globe Mix Phlox, Blue\nVerbenas, Double Nasturtiums, Tetra Snapdragons, Double Portul-\naca, Dwarf Marigold, Peppermint,. Zinnias, Schlzanthaa, Double\nStocks, Asters.     .\ndoz. 39c - 2 doz. 75c\nCauliflower or Early Cabbage     3 doz' Si.00\nTomatoes, Bonny Best, Stokesdale or Beefsteak  \u2022.   2 dor, Sgo\nHybrid Tomatoes. Plant now   6 for 594\nGiant Size Beefsteak Tomatoes Sat. only    doz. $}gc\nRhododendrons. Giant 8PECIAL    each  6.95\n\u00bb Pea Nettings Just Arrived.\nEVERGREENS\u2014Last shipment\u2014Less 35o each on prices as marked\nWHILE THEY LAST\nR08E BUSHES\u2014Friday and Saturday only.\nNamed varieties. Each '\t\n65*\np.s.\nMiss Liberty will be at the\nstore ALL DAY FRIDAY.\nCome on in and meet her.\nWe ara sure you'll agree\nshe is tops.\nLIBERT\nFOOD STORE\nStore Closed\nMonday, May 23\nFriday Evening\nFamily Shopping\nTill 9 p.m.\n_i^\n\u25a0\u25a0'-.\u25a0 \u25a0     '     \u25a0.    '\n ^ ,   J-HUPW\n.   sjos\n8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, MAY 19,1955\nSalk Reaction Rare in Canada\nTORONTO (CP)-An official at\nConnaught Research Laboratories,\nWhich manufactures Salk polio vaccine, Wednesday said  all of the\n\u2022vaccine contains minute quantities\nof antibiotics, to which some persons develop a reaction.\nThe official said all doctors are\n-(.ware of this because there is a\n; warning In writing on each bottle\nthat goes out.\n. 'He-aald that during the report on\nithe Salk tests carried out ln the\nUnited States last year, there were\n\"praclcally no reactions\" shown\namong the 440,000 children given\nthe vaccine.\nIn Sudbury, Ont., Dr. J. B. Cook,\nmedical officer of health, said there\nhas been only one reaction case ln\nhis area.\n\"We have frequently knowingly\ngiven the vaccine to children sensitive to the drugs and there have*\nbeen no reactions,\" he said. \"The\namount of the antibiotics ls so minute that the danger of a reaction\nis at a minimum,\"\nSPOKANE GUIDE\nFOR ACCOMMODATION\nAND ENTERTAINMENT\nWelcome Canadians to\nWESTERN\nMOTEL\n23 Deluxe Units \u2014 one and\ntwo bedrooms (all with\nKitchenettes)\nChildren's Playground\nON HIGHWAY 10\nE. 4706 Sprague Ave.\nSPOKANE, WASH.\nPhone KE. 9857\nWELCOME TO\nSPOKANE\n* CHOICE STEAKS\nif PAN   FRIED  CHICKEN\n* COCKTAIL LOUNGE\nJhsL\nSKYLARK\n518 W Sprague\nSpokane, Wn.\nWELCOME CANADIANS TO SPOKANE\nat\nALLEN'S TIN PAN ALLEY\nCOCKTAILS \u2014 ENTERTAINMENT NITELY\nTop Sirloin Steak Dinner Complete $1.00\nALLEN'S CAFE AND RECREATION\n412 W. RIVERSIDE 8P0KANE, WA8H.\nHotel, Spokane\nSPOKANE (API\u2014One of Spokane's largest hotels was hurriedly\nevacuated Tuesday evening after\npolice received an anonymous threat\nthat a bomb would explode in the\nbuilding at 7 p.m.\nAn estimated 1300 persona were\nremoved to the street.\nThe telephone threat came ln to\nthe police station switchboard about\n6:15 p.m.\nBy 0:40 more than SO policemen\nand several fire detachments were\nln the hotel evacuating guests and\nsearching the premises.'\nGUE8T8 MOVED QUIETLY\nPolice Capt William H. Cox said\nall guests were out before 7.\nNo explosion occurred, so police\nallowed guests to return, at 7:20 in\norder to prevent possible looting. \u2022\nCapt. Cox said police acted on\nthe theory that the bomb threat,\nwhether true or false, constituted a\ndanger to the guests.\nA department spokesman said he\nbelieved the bomb call had been\nmade by someone who had been\nreading about similar threats made\nrecently in Portland, Ore.\nTHE WHEELERS'\nSaratoga Motel\nOnly One Number to Remember\n9612\nPhone WA9612\nM12 East  Sprague,  Spokane\n10 Ultra-Modern Units\nTelevision Service\nHeat and Air Conditioning\n*      MEET THE WHEELERS\nHave spent the last 8 years in\nthe Kootenay Lake District.\nShamrock\nMOTEL\nE. 1629 Sprague\nPHONE KEY8TONE 9842\n14 Units at $5.00 and Up\n\\Vs Miles East of City Centre\non U.S. Highway 10\nMake your acquaintance a special\nene by bringing this ad with you,\n\u2014 Especially Canadians.\nMr. and Mrs. Allen Daniel (Props.)\nPINE LODGE\nMOTEL\nWest  2921   8th\nPHONE   RI-9272\nIn West City Limits\nOn Highways 2 -10 - 395\nI Minutes' Drive From City Centre\n14  MODERN   UNITS\n7 Kitchenettes - 7 Sleeping Units\nTelevision  Service\nBaby Cribs Available\nMr. and Mrs. Jay A. Winegar\n(Owners)\nPark Lane\nMOTOR COURT\n\"HOTEL COMFORT\"\n4412 East Sprague Ave., Spokane\nPHONE   LAKEVIEW  1421\n31 Units\u201412 With Kitchens\nMr. and Mrs. J. A. Upchurch\nand Anne Lunceford (Owners)\nMOTEL\nSTRICTLY MODERN\n4824  E.  SPRAGUE\nSPOKANE\n15  Units With   Kitchenettes\n10   Sleepers\n(One and Two  Bedrooms)\nRecommended by the American\nTravel Association\nPHONE   KE5810\nBye and Williams.(Props.)\nGarage, Restaurant Service\nand Tavern\nfASALOMA\nv   TTbU\nCLEAN,   MODERN   CABINS\nFOR  THE  TRAVELLER\n\u2022 KITCHENETTES\n\u2022 TELEVISION\nEverett and Gloria Darnell,\nManagers\nE. 11114 SPRAGUE  AVE., U.S. 10\nSeven Miles East of Spokane\nCity Centre\nPHONE   WALNUT  3253\nWelcome To\nSPOKANE\nOPEN 24 HOURS\n7 DAYS A WEEK\n\"Home of\nBARBEQUED  8PARERIBS\"\nT-BONE  8PECIAL\n97o\nTHE   FLAME\n2401 East Sprague Avenua\nKE. 6500\nWOODLAND PARK\nMOTEL\n8022 EAST 8PRAG.UE\nOn U.8. 10 \u20145!\/a Miles East of\nCity Centre\n\"MODERN   AS   TOMORROW\"\nOperated by\nMr. and Mrs. Richard Lentz\nFree Television in All Units\n21 Units, 16 With Kitchenettes\nWELCOME CANADIANS, TO\nRegina City\nHSlAUTO COURT\nTELEVISION   SERVICE\n1618 East Sprague on U.S, 10\n8pokane\n48 Units, Located Near the\nShopping Centre\nVery  Reasonable  Rates\nPHONE   KEYSTONE   9930\n\u2022'A Home Away From Home\"\n24 HOUR SERVICE\nMEET ME  AT\nPHIL'S\n\"THE   FINEST   IN   FOOD\nAND COCKTAILS\"\nIn Spokane or Post Falls, Idaho\n(Formerly B.O.F. Lodge)\n110 North Howard\n(2 doors south of Orpheum Theatre)\nSPOKANE, WASH.\nLIBERTY\nMOTEL\nNorth 6801 Division St.\nThree  Miles  North of City Centre\non   U.S. 395,  195, 2\nSPOKANE\nPhone  Glenwood  4112\nTelevision\nForced Air Heat\nfa&iwoojcL\nOn U.8. 10 \u2014 5502 East Sprnguo\nSpokano 63, Washington\n38 MODERN UNITS\nHot Water and Electric Heat\nSleeping   Rooms  and   Kitchenettes\n10 Minutes From City Centre\nPHONE   LAKEVIEW  2487\nA. E. Warsinski, Owner\nTELEVISION - PLAYGROUNDS\nCypriols Jailed\nFor Rioting\nPAPHOS, Cyprus (Reuters)\u2014\nSeven Cypriote Wednesday were\ngiven sentences of up to a year in\njail for rioting outside the courthouse March 16 when 13 men were\nbeing tried on charges of promoting\ncivil war In the island.\nSteel - helmeted police squads\nstood by on the barricaded court\nsquare during the trial following\ndemonstrations Tuesday when 23\nstudents were tried and four given\nprison sentences.\nThe trials followed recent demonstrations by the island's predominantly Greek population in support\nof demands for union with Greece.\nSuspect Battles\nRCMP Officers\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014Ed (Porky)\nBailey, mentioned prominently in\nthe drug trafficking trial of William\nSemenick five weeks ago, was free\non $1,000 bail Wednesday after\nbattling three RCMP officers in a\nWest Pender hotel.\nBailey, 33, no fixed address, has\nbeen charged with possession of\ndrugs and was remanded one week\nwhen he appeared before Magistrate\nOscar Orr in police court Wednesday.\nPolice said Bailey put up a fierce\nstruggle with a trio of RCMP drug\nsquad officers after they broke into\nhis hotel room.\nBailey was one of several persons\nmentioned in the Semenick trial as\nhaving visited \"Silent Bill\" when\nhe stayed, under RCMP observation, at a Kingsway motel. Semenick\nreceived 10 years on the conviction\nand Bailey is the first man mentioned in the trial to be charged\nwith a drug offence.\nAdmitted fo Bar\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 The little\nfellow was called to the bar here\nin a ceremony in the British Columbia Supreme Court.\n\u25a0 Terrence Kellj, 4-foot, 3-inch\nVancouver man, was among 35\nnew lawyers admitted to the bar.\nHe has been called the \"shortest\nlawyer\" in the history of B.C.\nThe new lawyers, who attended!\nthe ceremony Monday, included;\nAllan Farnsworth Campney, son'\nof Defence Minister Ralph Campney, and Michael Gratton McGeer,\nson of the late Senator G. G.\n(Gerry) McGeer.\nHOUSE NOT FUSSY\nABOUT HEARING\nFROM MINE, MILL\nOTTAWA (CP)- A Liberal Com.\nmons member got a chilly reception\nfrom the Liberal-dominated steer,\ning group of the Rouse's labor\ncommittee Tuesday when he sug'\ngested an audience for the Commun-\nlst-led.Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers' Union.\nInformants said after the closed\nmeeting that all the steering committee would do for James A. Byrne\n(L*-Kdbtenay East) .was to agree\ntacitly and,without a vote to consider any request for a hearing that\nthe left-wing-union might make.\nThe industrial relations committee, dealing,with a government bill\nto overhaul the Unemployment In.\nsurance Act, has decided to hear executives of the Trades and Labor\nCongress of Canada, the Canadian\nCong'res sof Labor and Quebec's\nCanadian and Catholic Confedera.\ntion of Labor.\nThe Mine-Mill union was kicked\nout of the CCL a few years ago for\nCommunist leadership.\nTe Hold Meeting\nMay 26,21,28 \u2022'\"\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 British\nColumbia arid Yukon Segments of\nthe Junior Chamber of Commerce\nwill invade' Vancouver Island to\nhold their regional convention May\n26, 27 and 28.\nAlter touring the Island starting\nMay 22, the mainland Jaycees will\nconvene ln Victoria.\nMail to Dead\nMan Said Phoney\nNIAGARA FALLS, N.Y. (API-\nPolice held a strong hunch Wednesday that two postcards received by\nfriend's of Norman G. Yesny were\nsent by Yesny's murderer.\nDetective Lieut. George Cruick-\nshank says the cards were postmarked May 14 from Draper, S.D.\nYesny's bullet-riddled body was\nfound May 7 in a ditch near Calgary.\nCruickshank said each postcard\nbore the crudely lettered message:\n\"Still going strong. Norman.\"\nHe said the murderer, possibly\nunaware that Yesny's body had\nbeen found, was using the postcards\nto delay inquiry by friends and relatives on Yesny's whereabouts.\nCruickshank said the murderer\nlikely obtained the names of the\nfriends from Yesnys personal effects.\nYesny, 23-year-old army veteran,\nwas driving to Alaska when he was\nrobbed and slain, apparently by a\nhitchhiker, police said.\nAt 40 Canadian\nLegion Branches\nKELOWNA, B. C. (CP)-Bylaws\nof provincial command, Canadian\nLegion, will be changed to permit\nbranches selling bottled beer for\nconsumption off the premises.\nThis was decided Tuesday after\nlengthy discussion on the second\nday of the British Columbia and\nNorth West States Command, Canadian Legion, convention.\nNew order will affect 40 of the\nLegion's 94 licensed branches. The\nremaining 54 \"lounge\" licensed\nclubs arenot permitted according\nto Liquor Control Board regulations\nto sell liquor for \"off-the-premlses\nconsumption\".\nRalph Gibson, MM, of Royston\nwas re-elected president for the\nsecond consecutive term. He won\nout in a two-way fight with William\nMartin of West Point Grey.\nELECT OFFICERS    \"\nE. W: Illott, Nanaimo, was chosen\nfirst vice-president; Jack Pothecary,\nArmstrong, second vice-president;\nMrs. Kay Cole of West Vancouver,\nthird vice-president; and Cecil A. R.\nPitt of Rossland, fourth vice-president. Mrs. Cole ls an ex-member of\nthe Women's Division, RCAF.\nAnother step taken by delegates\nwas to permit honorary club members, who number around 13,000, to\nintroduce guests into all licensed\nLegion clubs.,\nCopies of a resolution advocating\ninclusion of the Union Jack in any\nnew Canadian flag design will be\nforwarded to the Dominion Command of the Legion, the Parliamentary committee on the flig issue,\nand each B. C. member of Parliament.\nBank Staff Nabs\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 A man\nwho attempted a holdup here during the lunch hour was captured\nWednesday by bank employees. He\nwas not armed.\nHe entered a downtown branch\nof the Toronto-Dominion bank\nshortly after 1 p.m., and within\nminutes fled the building without\nloot when a girl teller ran from\na cage and sounded the alarm.\nPursued by bank workers, he\nwas captured in a parking lot a\nshort distance from the bank.\nThe bank is located on West\nHastings in the heart of Vancouver's\nfinancial district.\nCoast Girl Top\nEssay Winner\nLONDON (CP)\u2014Patricia Roy, 15-\nyear-old schoolgirl of New Westminster, B. C, Wednesday was named a top winner in the Royal Empire\nSocietys 1954 Empire essay competition.\nPatricia, who wins a bronze medal\nand three guineas worth of books,\nplaced first in Class B for students\nbetween 14 and 16. Her essay on the\neffect of the Second World War on\nCanada topped 112 other entries.\nPatricia is a pupil of St. Ann's Academy, New Westminster.\nSeven other Canadians were commended for their entries in the coifl-\npetitlon's three classes. They included Donna Low Pederson of Imperial\nSchool, Regina who will receive an\nengraved certificate.\nA total of 425 essays were entered\nfor the competition, sponsored annually by the Royal Empire Society\nfor almost 50 years. One of the entries was from Oasis School, Richmond, Sask.\nCanada Aware of\nI Underwater Test\nAntidotes For\nGerm Chemical\nWarfare Studied\nBy DAVE MolNTOSrl\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA (CP) - TJie fe\u00bbietice\nResearch' Board is j experimenting\nwith drugs as counter-measures\nagainst chemical and. bacteriological\nwarfare.-. -\u25a0\u2022.'\u25a0\u25a0 ..;\u25a0 \u25a0'.., h ' \u25a0'-.. fi.\nA DRB; officials: ajid Tuesday\n100 monkeys will bo shipped to the\nSuffield, experimental - Station in\nAlbertai \"for', use; in testing the\neffectiveness ot drugs and other\nprotective measure!-against bacteriological and chemical warfare.'\nThe official added that the ani-\nmals will not be used for tests\nrelating to radioactivity from\natomic explosions.\nA shipment of 200 monkeys is\ndue to arrive in Canada from India\nlate this month. Half the number\nwill be used by the federal health\ndepartment for medical research.\nBelieve Suspect\nConnected With\nAbandoned Autos\nHALIFAX (CP)\u2014The RCMP says\na man had been arrested at Red\nDeer, Alta., in connection with\nwhat may be \"a well-organized\nplan\" to disguise and resell stolen\ncars.\nRCMP officers say that Roland\nJoseph Nadeau of Alberta was arrested May 9 and charged with\nbeing in possession of a car stolen in\nSaint John, N.B., April 16.\nThe theft is believed linked with\nabandonment of two stolen cars ln\nNova'Scotia in mid-April and a police hunt for a man and his blonde\ncompanion in a heavily-wooded area\nnear here. No trace of the couple\nwas found.\nPolice said Nadeau used several\naliases.\nDEALERS WARNED\nMay 5 the RCMP said \"although\ninvestigation has pretty well established who the operators of this\nracket are, there is no suggestion\nthat the action of these individuals\nconstitutes part of a nationwide car-\ntheft ring.\"\nAt that time, the RCMP also said\none of the cars found abandoned in\nNova Scotia contained a set of dies\n'apparently used for the purpose\nof altering engine numbers.\"\nCar dealers in the province were\nwarned to be suspicious of unusually low offers to sell new automobiles.\nWoman CNE Director\nWants 4 Eskimos\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 Elsa Jenkins,\nwomen's director of the Canadian\nNational Exhibition, said Wednesday she is planning to spend two\nweeks \"living like an Eskimo\" 500\nmiles north of Aklavik so she can\nselect an Eskimo family of four to\nspend two weeks at this year's CNE\nArctic exhibit.\nShe is headed for Tuktoyaktuk,\nan outpost not marked on the map.\nShe hopes to reach there by plane\nor boat from Aklavik.\nOne wing of the Women's building at the CNE will be devoted to\nthe arts and handicrafts of the\nnorth and an igloo will be the\ncentre of the display, Miss Jenkins\nsaid .\nBritish Petroleum\nBoosts Canadian Oil\nLONDON (CP)\u2014The giant British Petroleum Company, formerly\nAnglo-Iranian, is boosting its stake\nin Canadian oil.\nThe chairman, Lord Strathal-\nmond, says in the annual report\npreceding the annual meeting June\n9 that his firm is boosting its interest in Triad Oil to 50 per cent,\nraising BP Investment to nearly\n$20,000,000.\nThe report gives no other details.\nAuthor Presents Site\nAs Education Centre\nBON ECHO, Ont. (CP)\u2014A 10\nsquare-mile tract of picturesque\ntirriberland, lying along the shore\nof Lake Mazinew and overlooked\nby the famed 400-foot-high Echo\nrock, was given in perpetuity to\nthe people of Canada.\nMerrill Denison, Canadian author\nand playwright whose family has\nowned the land for more than half\na century, presented it in trust to a\ncommittee of representatives of industrial, educational, agricultural,\ncharitable, citizenship and labor\norganizations.\nMr. Denison, whose writings have\nincluded several works on the Canadian outdoors, proposed that the\nland, half-way between Toronto\nand Ottawa, should become the site\nof a year-round education and recreational centre.\n\"I am thinking of a centre unique\nin Canada and of international significance,\" he said.\nI    OTTAWA   (CP)   \u2014  Canada  has(\ni made representations to the United!\ni States  government  about the  ex-!\n| plosion of a'nuclear device ln the;\nwestern Pacific ocean. j\nHealth Minister Martin disclosed!\nthat a representation had been\nmade,, but gave no details of it, ln\nreply to CCF leader Coldwell. ,\nMr. Coldwell had asked whether\nCanada was consulted in advance\non the recent test explosion.\nMr. Martin, who has been acting\nexternal^ffairs minister, said Canada was Informed and added that\n\"representations were made by the\nCanadian government in connection\ni with the matter.\"\nFind Skeleton on\nCoast Beach\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Twe boys\nmade a grisly find on a Marine\nDrive beach\u2014the skull and bones of\nan elderly man.\nFirst, they found the skull, and\nlater discovered bones, partly buried in dirt and sand.\nPolice today speculated that the\nskeleton may be that of a man reported missing some time ago. Identification files are being checked.\nThe skull Is-under examination of\nUBC scientists. It was found at the\nbase of a 200-foot cliff, over-looking\nthe Strait of Georgia off Marine\nDrive.\nSenate Witness Stales Criminal\nDrug Addicts Unknown in Britain\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014Seventy-two ot\nthe 317 known drug addicts in the\nUnited Kingdom in 1654 were mem\nbers of the medical and para-medl\ncal professions, the Senate narcotics\ncommittee was told.\nJohn H. Walker, British delegate\nto the United Nations narcotics\ncommission, said drug addiction has\nnever been a major problem in Brit.\naln. Of the 317- known addicts last\nyear, 169 were women.\nHe said the criminal addict\u2014the\naddict who is a confirmed criminal\napart from his drug addiction\u2014is\nvirtually unknown in the United\nKingdom.\nTreatment for drug addiction is\nleft in the hands of the medical\nprofession and there Is no compulsion of any kind, except that some,\ntimes a court attaches to a pro-\nbatlon order a condition that an offender addict should undergo treatment in an Institution.\nHowever, there was some concern\nAdvises Good Quality\nFruit For Britain\nPENTICTON, B. C. (CP)\u2014Confidence that the British fruit market,\nreopened last year, can be maintained in 1955 was expressed by P.\nW. Laird, member of the board of\ngovernors, in an address to members of Penticton local, B. C. Fruit\nGrowers Association.\nMr. Laird said, however, Britons\nmust \"be assured of a better pack\nand better quality.\"\nSays Teachers Lack\nCommunity Interest\nLANGLEY, B. C. (CP) - Sharp\ncriticism for their \"lack of- Interest\"\nIn community affairs was fired at\nB. C. school teachers by members\nof the Langley Board of Trade.\nTeachers are not taking their\npart as citizens ln the life of the\ncommunity,\" charged Maurice Mulligan, Trade Board president.\n\"Taxpayers pay the teachers' salaries, and they have a right to expect teachers to share in community\nactivities,\" he declared, after hearing a report that Langley school\nboard proposed a new money bylaw.\nSeveral members supported Mr.\nMulligan ln dealing critical blows\nat the teachers.\nNo one spoke in their favor.\nover an increase in ma,rlhuan\u00bb\nsmoking. This was practised by \u25a0\nsmall minority of persons in the\nentertainment business \"who art\nsometimes found in jazz clubs . . .\nwhere large numbers of young\npeople congregate in an atmosphere\nof excitement.\"\nIn reply to other questions, Mr.\nWalker said the figure of 317 does\nnot include marihuana and opium\nsmokers. He could not give their\nnumbers but they did not present\na serious problem.\nDrug addiction in itself was not\na crime in Britain. There was no\ndrug peddlers or \"pushers\" In the\nU.K.\nHOPE TO PREVENT\nU.K. DOCK STRIKE\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 The Con-\nservative government and union\ngroups supporting the opposition\nLabor party Wednesday made strong\nbids to avert a threatened dock\nstrike due to be called next Monday, three days before the general\nelection. \/\nLabor Minister Monckton cut\nshort campaign plans to confer with\nPrime Minister Eden on moves to\navert the stevedores strike which\nwould tie up the ports of London,\nLiverpool, Manchester and Hull.\nAt issue are demands by the U,-\n000-member National -Stevedore!\nUnion for the right- to negotiate on\nbehalf of dock workers In labor dli-\nputes. At present, most of the cdun-\ntry's 50,000 dock workers are represented in such disptues by the 1,-\n500,000-member Transoprt and General Workers Union.\nMeanwhile 1000 of 5000 coal workers on strike for higher pay ln mine!\nnear  Glasgow  returned  to  work.\nTeaches Horse Sense\nTo Prince Charles\nWINDSOR, England (AP) \u2014 Tht\nQueen led a Royal gathering to tht\nEuropean horse trials at Grear Park\nhere Wednesday.\nAn enthusiastic horsewoman, she\nsat with Prince Charles and pointed\nout to her son the complicated drill\nof dressage and other competition.\nAlso present were Queen Mothe*\nElizabeth, Princess, Margaret and\nPrincess Anne.\nNATO Journalists\nTo Tour Canada\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Journalists\nfrom 14 NATO countries will be^\ngin a two-week tour of Canada at\nHalifax Friday, the external affairs department said today.\nThe party will visit Edmonton,\nCalgary, Rivers, Man., Winnipeg,\nand Glmll, Man., in Western Canada. The tour is sponsored by the\ndefence and external affairs departments and is one of a series\narranged by the North Atlantic\nTreaty Organization in member\ncountries.\nAdjourn Secret\nDisarmament Talks\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 The five-\nnation disarmament conference\nWednesday adjourned its three-\nmonth old secret talks here and decided to meet again in New York\nJune 1.\nA British foreign office spokesman said the decision was taken\nby the Big Four foreign ministers\nat their meeting in Vienna last\nweekend.\nA joint announcement disclosed\nthe adjournment after a brief meeting today of the five countries\u2014\nCanada, Britain, the United States,\nRussia and France. The talks, under\nUnited Nations direction, began\nhere Feb. 25.\nSeek Runaway Girls\nFrom Private School\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 City\npolice are looking for two girls who\ndisappeared from Queen Margaret's\nSchool at Duncan May 11.\nLynne Johnson of Parksville and\nJanet Fulmer of Esquimau, both\n15, are known to have been in Vancouver because Lynne cashed a $6\ncheque here.\nQueen Margaret's ls > private\nboarding school.\nAdvise Fluoridation\nFor Vancouver Area\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014The Metropolitan Health Committee Wednesday recommended that municipalities in the Greater Vancouver area\n\"consider ways and means of having their water supply fluoridated.\"\nThe vote in favor of fluoridation\nended five years of debate on the\nquestion by the committee which\nrepresents Vancouver, Burnaby,\nRichmond, North Vancouver city,\nWest Vancouver city and Vancouver's university district. -\nThere was nd dissenting vote but\nthree members of the 11-member\ncommittee   abstained.\nFine whisky is\na Scottish art\nJOHNNIE WALKER\nis Scotch at its best\nAvailable in 26H oz. and 13H oz. bottles.\nThis advertisement Is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\nNat Park\n3200 Block West Boone St.\nSpokane, Wash.\nOur Big Opening\nTomorrow and\nSaturday\nDance To The Music of\nHarry James\n...  DANCE BAND\n\u2022 COMPLETE AMUSEMENT PARK\n\u2022 FREE PICNIC GROUNDS\n\u2022 ZOO \u2022 FREE PARKING\n\u2022 EXHIBITS \u2022 MERRY-GO-ROUND\n\u2022 DANCING \u2022 ROLLER COASTER\nDUKE ELLINGTON Will Be Our Gueit Band\nOn SATURDAY, JUNE 4th\nEASY\nSHAVING\nGillette\nONE-PIECE\nRAZOR\n\u2022 Here's the modern razor\nthat takes all the fuss out of\nshaving I You get clean, good-\nlooking shaves that make you\nfeel refreshed. This one-piece\nGillette Rocket Razor changes\nblades instantly, cleans instantly. Get real shaving comfort with a Gillette Rocket'\nGold-Plolod Glllolto DoIuko;\nItockot Ono-Ploco Raior, 10*\nBlado Dllpenttr And Handy)\nTravol CoU-lUt\nNlckol-plalod Glllolto Itocko!\nRazor, 10-Blado Dliponior\nAnd Travel Caio\u2014f1\u00bb29\n ^~~ ~~    !    ~~~\n133\nSPORTS\n(hound, ihn\nin\nSpM.\npractice, let alone provide the application it takes to make an\nathletic contender.\n....\nOne turnout for track and field\ncoaching who has given indication\nProfessional Bill Mawhinney, who will be one of three\nCoast golfers staging a clinic and exhibition here May 27 and\nat Trail the next day, is the chap who earlier this week carried off the B.C. men's match play.\nWatched by a gallery of 1500 at Victoria, the former Qan-\nadian champion defeated Bill McColl, Vancouver Island\nchamp, 5 and 4 in a 36-hole\nfinal.\nThere's considerable enthusiasm\namong golfers here over the proposed clinic and golf show. It's the\nfirst time the parent B.C, Golf\nAssociation has ventured this far\ninto the Interior in sponsoring! that he could be a real contender\nsuch appearances. j la Ken Peerless. On his first prac-\nInterior   golf   clubs   pay   a   pertice  jump   over  the   high   bar  he\ncapita $1 membership in the pro-1 came  within  three  inches  of  the\nvincial association which has a duty! high school record of 9 foot, three,\nto stimulate  existing  interest and j \"He's a natural,\" says Kelter.\npromote new attention in the great I *   \"'   * r\n' game. j    Hear lt said Mary Rose Thacker\nIncidentally, things seem to be j Is paying Victoria Curling Club\nbuzzing vigorously at the beauti- something up around the $6000\nfully situated links above Nelson'mark for use of facilities for her\nmore so than in many previous skating school in the capital. If\nyears. A vigorously-led executive'that's so, the skating whiz must\nseems bent on building as much ! have been more anxious for new\nnew talent into the club as possible I postures  than   was   thought.   Cer-\nThey also are listening to sugges-J tainly charges for the arena here\ntions for promotion of the golf and: were not near that figure,\ncountry club \u2014 one of their mostj\nimportant jobs,  we think.  If suf\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, MAY 19, 1955 \u2014 %\nENGLISH CHALLENGER Don Cockell falls Champion Rocky Marciano connected with a long\nover the ropes In the eighth round of their sched- right to the chin, scoring a TKO In 64 seconds of\nuled   15-round   fight   In   San   Francisco   May   16. \u2022   the ninth round^AP Wlrephoto.\nNelson Boxla Season OpensTonight\nficlent promotion is done it can be\npossible that there won't be many\nvisitors into the town who won't\nknow the course is there for their\nrecreation. And green fees are\ngravy.\n*   \u2022   \u2022\nThere's talent aplenty for track\nand field teams here, If the\nyoung people will only train,\nRecreation Director Ed Kelter\ncontends. But they can't expect to\nbecome competitive athletes without   training.   The   facilities   are\nBoxla opens hero tonight. We\nhave a real hope In this corner\nthat tho sport will go over big.\nThe arena Is available for the\nfull season, and there's a good\nbunch of boys wearing the Queen\nCity colors. Boxla's an exciting\nsport, and fans can be assured\nof more than Just a usual measure\nof thrills when Trail Golden\nBears face off against the Nelson-\nItes hero tonight\nThe home boxlaites are sporting\na new name \u2014 Kokanees. It's a\nthere, the coaching Is there, but j picturesque moniker and we hope\nthey mutt contribute something,! they climb as high tn the boxla\nsays Kelter. Too few, he says, are world as the mountain peaks for\neven   willing   to   give   time   to'which they're named.\n19-0 Splurge Gives\nIndians Firm Lead\nBritish Cricket\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Cricket\ndose-of-play scores in Britain Wednesday:\nSouth African Tourists 268 vs.\nCambridge University.\nEssex 126, Surrey 727, for 2.\nOxford University 71 for 3 vs.\nMiddlesex. Rain curtailed play.\nMCC 116 for 7, declared; Club\nCricket Conference 66 for 2. (Two-\ndayer.)\nLancashire 258,. Warwickshire 1,\nfor no wicket.\nSussex 43 for no wicket vs. Glamorgan. Rain curtailed play.\nKent 147, Derbyshire 30, for no\nwicket.\nGloucestershire 107, Leicestershire\n125 for 6.\nWorcestershire 95 for 6 vs. Hampshire. Rain restricted play.\nBy The Associated Press\nCleveland Indians awoke to the\nfact they were ln friendly Fenway\nPark Wednesday .and smacked Bos-,\nton Red Sox for 11 runs in one inning in a 19-0 romp that spread the\nTribe's American League lead to\nVti games.\nNew York Yankees took over\nsecond place from Chicago, beating\nthe White Sox in a slugging duel\n11-6. Fourth place Detroit got three\nruns in the 10th to beat Baltimore\n6-3 and Washington scored four in\nthe first to coast past Kansas City\n7-2.\nAfterrtton action in the National\nsaw Cincinnati spill Pittsburgh to\na seventh straight defeat 5-1. And\nChicago beat Philadelphia 3-2 in the\nfirst game of a doubleheader.\nThe Indians, whose record of 11\njtraight;, victories in Boston was\nhalted Tuesday, got back Into the\nswing of things behind the three-\nhit pitching of rookie Herb Score,\nwho fanned nine. A grand-slam\nhomer by Vic Wertz, Ralph Kiner's\npinch-hit home run and Dave Phil-\nley's two-run triple highlighted the\n11-run fifth that routed Williard\nNixon.\nWertz also singled home a fifth\nrun in the fatal fifth, falling just\none short of the modern major\nleague record for runs batted in for\na single Inning.\nAt   New   York,   Vern   Stephens\nSENIOR\n8 P.M. TONIGHT\na\u00ab .he CIVIC CENTRE\nTRAIL\nGOLDEN\nBEARS\nVS.\nNELSON\nKOKANEES\nAdults 50c\nStudents and Children\n25c\nSee the\n'STARS OF YESTERYEAR'\nIn the Opening Ceremony\n13-8 Favorite\nDUBLIN (CP) \u2014 Lady Ursula\nVernon's Hugh Lupus Wednesday\nwon the Irish Two Thousand Guineas by four lengths and emerged\nas a threat in next Wednesday's\nEpsom Derby.\nHugh Lupus, a 13-to-3 favorite,\nwas ridden by Rae Johnstone. Flying Story was second and Trou-\nville third in the one-milft event.\nhomered twice and Jim Rivera and\nClint Courtney once for the White\nSox, but a grand-slam by Mickey\nMantle and a solo shot by Eddie\nRobinson gave it to the Yankees.\nOutfielder Minnie Minoso, the\nWhite Sox' hard-luck guy so far\nthis season, was struck in the head\nby one of Bob Grim's pitches, but\nalthough carried from the field he\ndid not lose consciousness. X-rays\nproved negative and he's expected\nto be able to play today.\nWashington regained sixth place\nfrom the Athletics with Tommy\nUmphlett and Pete Runnels each\ndriving in a pair of runs in the\nfirst frame.\nThe up-and-coming St. Louis\nCardinals sent Brooklyn home with\na three-game losing streak Wednesday night, sweeping their two-\ngame series with a 3-2 victory that\nclosed a rocky western tour for the\nNational League leading Dodgers.\nNelson Senior Lacrosse Club,\nwith a new name and several new\nfaces, opens the 1955 season tonight at the Civic Centre Arena\nagainst Trail  Golden  Bears.\nCoach Merv Home's starting\nlineup announced Wednesday night\nincludes several veterans plus a\ngood sprinkling of newcomers.\nCoach Home has had 25 players in\ncamp regularly from which he must\nchoose 18 by July 15. He will try to\nbreak in some newcomers each\ngame. Saturday's game here will\nlikely show some lineup changes\nfrom the 15 who will see action\ntonight.\nBill Pearson, a newcomer, will\nbe in goal for tonight's contest. On\nthe defence veterans Bucko La-\npointe, Reni Masi and E. (Jake)\nJacobson will perform with Wallie\nHarvey and Bill Freno, two nev\/\nfaces to Nelson lacrosse fans.\nCentreman chosen for the opener\nare Jack Galllcano, Art Choquette\nand Keith (Hock) Harrison with\nother forwards to be Harold Mayo,\nBruce McLean, Harvey Mason, Bob\nMcNabb, Alex Koenig and Roy\nPeloso.\nThe lacrosse club, to be known\na3 the Kokanees, has been practising strenuously this week. Tonight's\ngame was to have been played in\nTrail but unavailability of the rink\nthere tonight caused re-scheduling\nto Nelson.\nGolden Bears have already\nplayed one game this season\ndropping a 12-8 verdict to the\nchampion Rossland Redmen Tuesday In the Golden City. Despite\nthe setback, the Trail team gave\nRossland a close run for much of\nthe game.\nCoach Home said Wednesday\nIthat several veteran performers\njwho have seen only limited prac\ntise are expected to be in shape for\nfuture action. Vic Lofvendahl, star\nsenior hockey defenceman last\nwinter, has been on the sick list\nlately but will likely be in action\nagain soon. He would be an asset\nto the club, Home believes. He\nhopes Mickey Maglio and Fred\nGraves will be able to strip in the\nnear future. Ev Kuhn, another\nveteran boxla player, has had an\noperation recently and will be out\nfor about six weeks.     \u00bb\nPredict 15,000\nFor Golfers'\nlational Day\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 Organizers of\nNational Golf Day, to be held June\n4, predict at least 15,000 Canadians\nwill tee off in the event this year.\n\"We raised $12,956 in 1954,\" Bill\nHamilton, manager of the Royal Ca\nnadian Golf Association, said at a\nluncheon Wednesday. \"Each year\nwe continue to show improvement\nin the financial department.\"\nGross receipts from the event are\ndivided evenly between the Cana\ndian Red Cross and a fund-for the\ndevelopment of junior goli.\nThis year women golfers will\nmatch their June 4 scores against\nBabe Zaharias, United States women's open champion. The men will\ndirect their skill at improving on\nIhe round shot by Ed Furgol, U.S.\nopen champion.\nThe Babe and Furgol will shoot\ntheir round at San Francisco's\nOlympic Club.\nWIHL To Tackle Knotty League\nProblems at Kimberley Meeting\nQuestions vital to hockey in the\n1955-56 Western International Hockey League, are expected to be\nanswered Saturday, May 28, in\nKimberley at the annual meeting of\nthe league. President of the league\nDr. Joe Vingo.will preside.\nIn all probability, the most important news will come from\nManager-Coach Roy McBride of the\nSpokane Flyers as to their status.\nRumor has it that A! Leader,\npresident of the Western Hockey\nLeague, stated Spokane intends to\njoin forces with the pros, thus\nmaking the WHL a ten-team league.\nThis move would make a convenient schedule for the second\nranking pro loop in Canada as the\nPrairie Provinces would have five\nteams and an equal number could\nbe registered on the West Coast\nand the Inland Empire.\nShould this happen, it would\nleave the WIHL with three teams,\nunless Rossland, fast becoming\nhockey minded as in past years,\ncame In. Rossland now has artificial\nice facilities and could, with a little\npromotion, become a contender foi\nhockey supremacy in the Kootenay\nThis will likely be the big question\nmark ln stabilizing of hockey in\nthe Kootenay.\nRepresentatives of the league,\nconsisting of the president, a vice\npresident (one from each team\nrepresentative) along with two voting members of each team who\nhave comprised the league in past\nyears, will attend the meeting.\nSecond in importance to the\norganizational problems of this\nmuch-talked-about league, is the\nquestion of the player limit. Player\nlimit (12 or 15-man hockey) for\nthis league will also be decided\nEach club is' hard pressed for\nfinancial aid to carry a team\nthroughout   a   season's   operation.\nProtests Rumors.\nRocky May Quit Ring\nSAN FRANCISCO (AP)\u2014Pained\nby, charges of \"dirty\" fighting in\nMonday's bout with Don Cockell,\nheavyweight champion Rocky Marciano protested Wednesday that he\nnever had done a deliberately\nwrong thing and hinted that he may\nretire after a September fight.\nIn an interview with Lester\nBomberg, New York World-Telegram and Sun boxing writer,\nMarciano went over the specific\ncharges of roughness and explained\nwhy he couldn't avoid butting,\nelbowing and hitting low.\n\"It's a tough spot to be on,\"\nRocky said. \"I want to have a\ngood reputation all over the world.\nSomething goes out of being the\nundefeated champion when you\n\"read and hear these things.\"\nLater   he   added:   \"I    know    I\nStrikes n Spares\nNelson Bowlers took all honors'\nwhen they travelled to Rossland to\nparticipate in the mixed doubles\n10-game roll-off. Lena Koehle and\nElio Zuccolo teamed up to sweep\nthe 10 games with a total of 5441\npins. This team also captured the\nhigh single game and three-game\nhonors. Nelson bowler3 also captured the runnerup spots.\nThe Singles League has commenced with Jean Symmonds and Bea\nMills sharing the women's honors\nwith a 293 single and 649 aggregate\nrespectively. Nels Schmidt had top\nmen's singles of 2f59 and Bill Lunn\ntop aggregate of 680 in first night\nplay.*\nDl\\] car comfort!\njmALL car economy!\nas low as $1795*00\nSEE THEM NOW ...\n'55 HILLMANS\nNow On Display At\nDEFOE SERVICE LTD.\n\"Your Studebaker - Hillman Dealer\"\n213  BAKER 8T. PHONE  1234\nBASEBALL SCORES\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nPittsburgh     001 000 000\u20141   6   3'\nCincinnati     203 000 OOx\u20145 11   1\nLittlefield, Friend (3), Law (8)\nand Shepard; Minarcln and Burgess. L \u2014 Littlefield. HR: Cin-Klus-\nzewski. \u2022\nPhiladelphia   .. 100 000 001\u20142   6   1\nChicago   000 012 OOx\u20143   6   1\nSimmons, Kipper (6), Lovenguth\n(7), Meyer (8) and Seminick; Jones,\nJeffcoat (9) and McCullough, Chiti\n(7). W \u2014 Jones. L \u2014 Simmons.\nPhiladelphia .. 010 301 000\u20145 10 0\nChicago   020 140 OOx\u20147   9   0\nDickson, Lovenguth (5), Kipper\n(6), and Lopata; Andre, Jeffcoat\n(4) and Chiti.. W\u2014Jeffcoat; L \u2014\nDickson; HRs; Pha. \u2014 Morgan,\nLopata, Dickson; Chi. \u2014 Tappe,\nBanks, Speake.\nBrooklyn  000 ITJO 001\u20142   7   2\nSt. Louis   210 000 OOx\u20143   4   0\nPodres, Labine (7) and Campanella; Haddix, Schultz (9) and\nSarni. W-Haddix. L\u2014Podres.\nNew York  000 003 010\u20144 11   1\nMilwaukee   010 010 000\u20142   6   2\nAntonelli and Katt, Westrum\n(8); Spahn, Jolly (8) and Crandall.\nL\u2014Spahn. HR: Mil-Adcock.\nAMERICAN  LEAGUE    '\nDetroit       001 002 000 3\u20146 11   4\nBaltimore .\u201e. 000 003 000 0\u20143   5   0\nLary and Wilson; Rogovin, Moore\n(7), Shallock (1), Johnson (10) and\nSmith. L\u2014Moore.\nCleveland .... 010 2110 500\u201419 19 0\nBoston    000 0 0 0 000\u2014 0   3 2\nScore and Foiles; Nixon, Kem\nmerer (5), Brodowski (5) and\nWhite. L-Nixon. HR: Cle.-Wertz,\nKiner, Majeski.\nChicago   100 210 200\u2014 6 10 2\nNew York   014 200 40x\u201411 12 0\nTrucks, Harshman (3), Martin\n(4), Fornieles (7), and Courtney;\nGrim, Morgan (7) and Berra. W \u2014\nGrim. L \u2014 Trucks. HR: Chi-Court-\nney, Stephens (2), Rivera. NY, Robinson. Mantle.\nDooley Adams\nInjured In Spill\nNEW YORK (AP) \u2014 Frank (Dooley) Adams, the leading steeplechase jockey ln the United States\nfor the last six years, suffered a\npossible brain concussion Wednes\nday and his mount was killed ln a\nspill during the jumping race at\nBelmont Park.\nErrolford, an eight-year-old gelding owned by Mrs. Clara E. Adams,\nmother of tha jockey and trainer\nof steeplechase horses, died almost\nInstantly of a broken neck.\nAdams, 28, was taken to hospital\nfor x-rays and observation.\nTOURERS TIE IT UP\nMADRID (Reuters) \u2014 England's\nsoccer team, outplayed for long\nperiods, tied 1-1 with Spain here\nWednesday in the second match of\na continental tour.\nA crowd of 125,000 in Bernabeau\nstadium saw Spain, playing a fast\nand well-organized game, control\nmost of the play.\nRoy Bentley scored for England\nafter 38 minutes. Inside left Rial\ntied it for Spain after 65 minutes.\nhaven't been going forward since\nthe first fight with (Ezzard)\nCharles, If I don't look the way\nI feel I should in the fall fight,\nI'll think about stepping out an a\nfighter. It's better to stop one\nfight too soon than too late,\"\nMarciano explained that he continued to punch after the bell because it wasn't loud enough; that\nhe bumped heads with Cockell because his short arms made it necessary for him to come in close to\npunch to the body and that\nCockell also got down low. Similarly, low punches were the result\nof Cockell's moving in fast after\nMarciano had started a blow to the\nbody.\nAs for elbowing, \"I get my power\nfrom my arm follow through. If I\nmiss a punch I can't stop in the\nmiddle.\" '\u25a0\nHe explained hitting the Briton\nwhile he was on the floor this\nway:\n\"Like here and in the first Wal-\ncott fight, I've started a series. I'm\nabove him. I know he's going down\nand I want to finish him. I don't\nstop to look and see If he's sitting\ndown.\"\nThe OSHL is on the verge of takjpjy\nup 12-man hockey, should the Caqar.^.\ndian Amateur Hockey  Association\ndecide to change the regulations^,v.,-\nAnother  controversial  item   wJLJV.\nbe salary limits. Salaries to playera^\nhave  become  one  of  the  leading\nproblems in amateur hockey. Tb^v\nWIHL, with the OSHL, this season\/\nis taking a definite stand to remedy-\nthis. \u00abu,..:\nI\nDr. VIngo, In an effort to bring:,\nthe league back to the position ItJ\nheld  during the  Allan  Cup  days|\nof the Kimberley Dynamiters andl\nthe    Trail    Smoke    Eaters    will!\nstrive to establish the feasibility*\nof   a   balanced   schedule,   along\nwith  neutral   referees for  league...\ngames.  The  question   of   how  to?\nfinance  the  payment  of  neutral -\nrefs will also be discussed, .,\nOf importance to the running off\nthe   WIHL   are   also   interlocking j\ngames with the OSHL, the possi-*\nbility of bonding teams to assure j!\ncontinuation of league play, -fines j.\"\nto   players   receiving   misconduct I\npenalties,   revision   of   constitution a\nand regulations, and financial sup*?\nport for teams entering the league. L\nDr. Vingo said Wednesday, \"Wa!;\nhave a strong executive, we havsj\ndone   much   to  further  the   sporj^l\nthroughout  the  country, we shall^\ncontinue to do our utmost to keep J\ncompetition   keen   and   sportsman-;'_\nship at the highest calibre of any\nprovince in Canada.\"\nThose attending from Nelson will;?\nbe the president vice-president Art;.\nGodfrey, league secretary Ray Metcalfe, league statistician James Wilson, a\/id members of the Nelson;\u25a0\nMaple Leafs Hockey Club execu- j\ntive.\nThe meeting although expected to\nlast one day, may possibly carry\nover to Sunday.\nSouth Slocan\nSPORTS\nEmpire Day\nMonday\ni for the Whole Family\nCLASSIFIED AD8 GET RESULTS I\nFREE DELIVERY\nSoix%dSs\u00a3M\nKOOTENAY   BREWERIES   LIMITED\nPHONE 24 ano 175\nBe Sure To Order by Brand Name\n> COLUMBIA   LAGER      \u2022 FERNIE LAGER\ni KOOTENAY \u2022 COLUMBIA\nPALE ALE CREAM STOUT\nEMPTY BOTTLES COLLECTED ON DELIVERY ONLY\n\u25a0Vt\n%\nThis advertisement 13 not published 01 displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\nFor Better Living\nPlanned as a positive contribution to\nbetter living for Canadians, the International\nCalvert House Architectural Competition\nfor the \"Canadian Home of Tomorrow\"\nattracted 661 entries from 17 different\ncountries, the largest response ever\naccorded a competition of this kind\nanywhere in the World.\nBndtville, Ont Awarded Honorablt Mention.\nA brochure illustrating the winning\nhome designs is available on reguest. Write to\nCalvert Distillers Ltd., Amherstburg, Out.\nCALVERT   HOUSE\n\"A contribution to better living\"\nCuvert Distillers Limited\nAmherstburg, Ont.\n^\u00bbiwSiS^^S^^;;;.V,;^^0.:^^^ffl^^ra^\nthis advertisement is net published or displayed by Ihe liquor Control Board ot by the Government ol British Columbia\nt   \u00abC\n -\u2014.\u2014__\n.    .       :\n\u2014\n10 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, MAY 19,1955\nA\nB\nN\nE\nR\nH\nE\nN\nR\nY\n\u00a3\no\n>N\nE\nR\nA'\nN\nG\nE\nR\nS\nL\nO\nN\nD\nI\nE\nR\nE\nT\nA\n,G\nE\nN\nT,\nD\nO\nN\nA\nL\nD\nD\nU\nC\nK\n\u2022V\n*B\nfU\nZ\ns\nA\nW\nY\nE\nR\nJ\nI\nG\nG\nS\n\"THE LONE L7WK5ER\nAND TONTO HAVE NO SUSPICION\nTHAT TUB TBNL OF THS OUTLAWS\nLEADS TO A PEATH TRAP\/\nTlii-ous)Vi Ute years, a section of brick flooring\nlias been wj)()in(i \u2014 noui,a* Jos step* on a\nloose f lactone \u25a0\nMeanmWIe, 'BiJFeetlblssn wades tHroujh\nmild maves to reach the tossinj) cabin awe*\"\n01HKIHS INTO HKOOIESS, PI FUMR15WTHHB\nSWiTY BELT, JETTISONS HIS SEAT, PULLS THE    ,\nRIP CORP. THE CHUTE BLOSSOMS gfflUCTWW SHOO!.\nMR. JIS6S, I'M HAVINS A\nPARTV AT MV HOUSE ANP I'M\nSHORT OF FURNITURE.'\nCOULD I BORROW\nSOMEOFM3URS?\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS\nThe Dally  Newt does not Hold  Itnclt reoponoltHo In lha ovent\not an'error In tha following lists.\nTORONTO STOCKS\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nAcadia Uranium  _      .13\nAkaitcho 55\nAlgom Uranium    16.50\nAmal Larder    19\nAnacon Lead           3.35\nAnglo\" Huronian :    13.25\nArea ..: 52\nArion       .13\nAlias Y K    12.00\nAubelle 10\nAumaque    12V4\nAunor       2.25\nBarymln        2.75\nBase Metals :   .   .75\nBevcourt 15\nBobjo .*    28\nBoymar Gold  HVi\nBralorne      2.80\nBroulan      1.34\nBrunswick       11.25\nBuffadison   .'. 11\nBuffalo Ank        .62\nBuff Can       22\nBuff Red Lake 11\nCallinan  '     .38\nCampbell R L     8.50\nCanalask Nickel 13\nCan Mai  50\nCanmet          2.05\nCentral Patricia  88\nCentremaque   11\nChimoG         1.08\nCochenour  78\nCoin Lake  11\nCons Denison      7.80\nCons M & S       34.00\nCons Sannorm  22\nConwest      6.05\nCons Discovery  \u201e     3.35\nDelnite       -87\nDetta R L  .\u2022     .37\nDome         15.25\nDonalda   39\nDuvex 22\nDyno           1-25\nEast Malartic       2.30\nEast Sullivan      6.00\nEastern Metals       130\nElder Gold 65\\4\nElsol  10\nEstella        .J*\nEureka         l.gg\nFalconbridge       27.00\nFed Kirk .       .13\nFrobisher      4.15\nGeco         13.50\nGiant Yel      6.60\nGod's Lake  _ 20\nGold Hawk  \u00abJ4\nGoldcrest  }6^\nGold Eagle              ,\u25a0\u00ab\nGolden Manitou       1.9J}\nGunnar Gold  W\u00ab\nHardrock    W\nNipisslng     2.34\nNoranda\nNorgold   .....\nNorth \"Inca .-....'....\nOgama  \t\nO'Leary\t\nOsisk   o\t\nPamour   \t\nPaymaster\nHasaga   \t\nHeadway        ]\nHollinger        22.65\nHomer Y K        -8\nHudson Bay     58.15\nInspiration       J-jJ\nInt Nickel    \u00ab3.?5\n.Toliet Que         \u2022\u00ab\nJonsmith \"'\nKayrand       \t\nKerr Addison         ,3,1\nKeyboycon       j\u00a3^\nKirkTowsite\t\nLabrador\nLake Dufault\t\nLake Wasa  \t\nLeitch\nLexindin\nLinEman (new) .\nLittle Long Lac .\nLouvicourt\nMacassa\nMacDonald\n48,50\n.60\n.10\n.18\n.30\n.39V4\n.58\n.35\nPickle Crop       1.42\nPioneer        108\nPlacer Develop .....'.    33.00\nPowell Rouyn ...,* 52\nPreston E D        7.30\nQuebec Lab            .11\nQuebec-Nickel      1.80\nQueenston  21\nQuemont      23.65\nRadiore         2.65\nRayrock       1.65\nRegcourt       .20\nRoche L L 42\nSan Antonio        1.56\nShawkey  11V4\nSherritt Gordon       5.75\nSllvermillcr        98\nSilanco  24\nSiscoe   46\nStadacona    28%\nStarratt Olsen  14\nSteeloy         12\nSteeo Rock          9.35\nSudbury Cont  36\nSurf Inlet  10\nSylvanite         1.45\nTeck Hughes       2.90\nThompson-Lund  58%\nTombill  28V4\nTowagamac    13%\nTrans Cont Res  36\nUnion Mining  28\nUnite dKeno          6.95\nUpper Canada       1.08\nValor       81\nVentures       30.00\nVicoiir      50\nViolamac       2.88\nWaite Amulet     13.65\nWright Hargreaves       2.15\nOILS\nAnglo Can           5.70\nA P Consolidated       .35\nB A Oil     26.50\nCalgary and Edmonton     14.50\nCdn Atlantic    19'A\nCdn Collieries       8.75\nCentral Leduc      1.76\nCentral Explorers       5.35\nChemical Research       4.25\nCommonwealth Pete      3.00\nDalhousie    18\nDecalta  63\nDel Rio             1.40\nFederated Pete       4.60\nHome      9.50\nImperial  Oil     36.25\nInter Pete >    27.75\nKroy      1.31\nLib Pete    ,.     1-56\nOkalta           1-35\nPacific Pete       10.50\nRoyalite     11.75\nCons Papera ..... HVs\nDist Seagram    37%\nDoni Foundries    22%\nDom Steel & Coal B   16%\nDom Stores                    31%\nDom Tar & Chemical   12ft\nDom Textiles  7%\nDom Magnesium   18\nEddy Paper          57%\nFamous Players   27ft\nFanny Farmer   27\nFord  A  115\nGatineau \u2022 .            30%\nGatineau 5%  pfd   113\nGreat Lakes      35%\nGypsum Lime   59\nHiram Walker   71\nImperial Oil   - 36ft\nImp Tobacco   11%\nInt Metals   36\nInt Nickel   63ft\nInt Utilities   38ft\nKelvinator     ,  20ft\nLaura Secord   19%\nLoblaw A   45%\nLoblaw B   76ft\nMasey Harris     9%\nMcColl Frontenac   36%\nMont   Loco  17ft\nMoore Corp      _\u25a0 39%\nNat Steel Car   28ft\nPage Hershey   573,(\nPowell River   49'\/i\nPower Corp       57\nRuss Industries   16\nShawinigan     ..  58%\nSimpsons A   18%\nSteel of Canada   50\nStandard Paving     34 ft\nUnio nGas of Can  f 45%\nUnited Corp B   19%\nUnited Fuel A  _ 61\nUnited Steel       15%\nWeston George   86\nWinnipeg Gas   13%\nMETAL8 PRICES\nNEW YORK (CP)-Spot prices:\nLead, N. Y., 15.\nZinc, East St. Louis, 12.\nDIVIDENDS\nVANCOUVER \u2014 Trans-Canada\nInvestment Corporation Ltd., Vancouver, announces that a 'semiannual dividend of 47.8c per share\nwill be paid on Trans-Canada\nshares, Series \"A\", on June 1, 1955,\nto shareholders of record May 13,\n1955.\nTOBACCO TRADE\nCommonwealth countries sent almost two-thirds of the 32,900,000\npounds of unmanufactured tobacco\nBritain imported in 1954.\n.15\n17.00\n1.23\n.??.\n.66\n.72\n.15%\n.77\n.43\n1.72\n.83\nMacLeod Cock        l.,s\nMadsen R L       175\nMasnet        M\nMalartic G F       l.'J\nMarcus  G                \u2022 y}\nMat McNpelv          ''%\nMclntyre Pore     72.ni\nMcKenzie R L 38\nMcMarmac    4\"\nMcWatters      - 33\nMining Corp    19.85\nRoxana\nUnited Oils    \t\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibl  \t\nAlgoma Steel \t\nAluminum\nAmer Tel  &  Tel\nArgus\n.11\n1.30\n31%\n68\n86%\n183\n23%\nMoneta\nNew Alger \t\nNew Bidlamaque \t\nNew Kelore     \t\nNew Laguerre\nNew Rouyn Merger .\nNew Mylamaque .. .\nNew Thurbois\n.57\n.18%\n.8\n.60\n.16\n.14\n.26\n.33%\nAtlas  Steel    16%\nBeattie Bros   7ft\nBell Telephone   47\nBrazilian               7%\nBC Electric 4%s   105%\nBC Forest   11%\nBC Packers A   14%\nBC Packers B   13%\nBC Power A  :..  29%\nBuilding Products   44%\nBurl Steel   29\nBurrard A  A  8\nCan Cement   38\nCan Packers A  39\nCan Packers B  ,  34%\nCan Bakeries  ' 27%\nCan Canners     34%\nCan Car & Fdy  t.  19 ft\nCan Car & Fdy A   22\nCan Celanese   22\nCan Oil     21ft\nCockshutt     7%\nC M & S   34\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\nKXLY TV  - Channel 4\n11:00\u2014Sign On\n10:\n11:30\u2014Houseparty\n10:\n11:45\u2014Secret Storm\n10:'\n12:00\u2014Big Payoff\n10:\n12:30\u2014Bob Crosby\n11:\n12:45\u2014Bob Crosby\n12:\n1:00\u2014Welcome  Traveler\n12:\n1:30\u2014Musical Interlude\n12:\n2:00\u2014On Your Account\n1:\n2:30\u2014Valiant Lady\n2:\n2:45\u2014Brighter Day\n3:\n3:00\u2014Old World Flavor\n3:\n3:30\u2014Search for Tomorrow\n3:\n3:45\u2014Guiding Light\n4:\n4:00\u2014Love of Life\n4:\n4:15\u2014Robert Q. Lewis\n4:\n4:30\u2014Garry Moore\n5:\n4:45\u2014Garry Moore\n5:\n5:00\u2014What's Cookin'\n6:\n5:30\u2014Strike It Rich\n8:\n6:00\u2014The Party Line\n6:\n8:30\u2014Doug Edwards\n7:\n6:45\u2014Jane Froman\n7:\n7:00\u2014Barker Bill Cartoons\n7:\n7:15\u2014News\n7:\n7:25\u2014Weather Vane\n8:\n7:30\u2014Range Rider\n8-\n8:00\u20141 Search for Adventure\n9:\n8:30\u2014Climax\n9:\n9:30\u2014Four Star Playhouse\n10:\n10:00\u2014Public Defender\n11:\n10:30\u2014Corliss Archer\n11:\n11:00\u2014International Police\n12:\n11:30\u2014Willie\n12:\n12:00\u2014Follow That Man\nKHQTV  - Channel 6\n1:10\u2014Test Pattern\n1:25\u2014Color Test Program\n1:40\u2014Bible Reading\n1:45\u2014Sheilah Graham\n1:00\u2014Home\n1:00\u2014Tenn. Ernie Fprd\n!:15\u2014Short Subjects\n2:30\u2014Feather Your Nest\n1:00\u2014Hot Off the Press\n2:00\u2014Elaine Gray Kitchen\n1:00\u2014Ted Mack's Matinee\n1:30\u2014The Greatest Gift\n1:45\u2014Concerning Miss Marlowe\n4:00\u2014Hawkins Falls\n1:15\u2014Lady Fair\n1:45\u2014Modern Romance:\ni:00\u2014Pinky Lee\ni:30\u2014Bar 6 Roundup\n1:00\u2014Howdy Doody\n1:30\u2014Mr. Engineer\n1:45\u2014 Garden Guide\n7:00\u2014Hopalong Cassidy\nM0\u2014 The Front Page\nf:40\u2014Newspaper of the Air\nf:45\u2014News Caravan\n!:00\u2014Cisco Kid\n5:30\u2014Waterfront\n9:00\u2014Dragnet\n1:30\u20149:30 Theatre\n):00\u2014Video Theatre  .\n1:00\u2014You Bet Your Life\n1:30\u2014The Falcon\n2:00\u2014 Racket Squad\n!:30\u2014News Headlines\nKREM TV - Channel 2\n3:45\u2014Test Pattern\n4:00\u2014My Sister and I\n5:10\u2014Health and Hanpiness Club\n6:15\u2014The Story Lady\n6:30\u2014Shadow Stumpers\n6:50\u2014Newsbeat Spokane\n6:55\u2014Johnnie's Flower Time\n7:00\u2014Western Movietime\n7:00\u2014What's the Weather?\n8:00\u2014Roller Derby\n8:30\u2014Ozark Jubilee\n9:00\u2014Crusade in Europe\n9:30\u2014Fashion and Beauty Digest\n10:00\u2014International Playhouse\n10:30\u2014Old Time Comedy\n10:50\u2014\"Women Must Dress\"\n12:30\u2014Layman's Call to Prayer   '\nIPrngrams subject to change by stations without notice.)\nTELEVISION SERVICE\n30 a.m. to 5 p.m.\u2014Phone  1300\nEvenings \u2014 Phone 1033R\nDaily Except Sundays\nand  Hnlldaya\nMc&Mc\nGeneral Electric\nTelevision\nNELSON ELECTRIC\nCO. LTD.\nS74 Baker St Phone 280\nIN   CRESTON   IT'S\nCreston Electric\nFOR   RCA    VICTOR   TV\nSALES  AND  SERVICE\nFor\nQ.E   ULTRA VI8I0N   TV\nIt's\nTHE BAY ELECTRIC\n1460. Bay Ave. Trail\nPHONE 939\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS .... 1240 on the dial\n(Pacific Daylight Time)\nTHURSDAY, MAY 19, 1955\n8:30\u2014Wake-Up Time\n7:00\u2014 News\n7:05\u2014Wake-Up Time\n7:10\u2014Farm Fare\n7:15\u2014Chapel in the Sky\n730\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Rise 'N' Shine\n7:50\u2014March of Truth\n7:55\u2014Wake-Up Time\n6:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014Serenade\n8:55\u2014Women Today\n9:00\u2014Homemakei   Harmonies\n10:00\u2014Carnation Entertains\n10:15\u2014News\n10:20\u2014Musicale\n10:30\u2014Story Parade\n10:45\u2014Musicale\n11:00\u2014News\n11:05\u2014Call One-Nine\n12:00\u20145 Minutes for Freedom\n12:05\u2014Notice Board\n12:15\u2014Sports News\n12:20--News\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Here's, Our Story\n1:00\u2014CKLN Reports\nt '5   Hollywood Catling\n1:30-Pacific NEWS\n1:40\u2014Lighter Side\n1:45\u2014Matinee\n2:00\u2014B. C. School Broadcast\nISO\u2014Trans Canada \"Matinea\n3:30\u2014Miscellany\n3:45\u2014Musicale\n4:00\u2014Concert Hall\n4:30\u2014Last of the Mohicans\n5:00\u2014Sacred Heart\n5:15\u2014Tops and Pops\n5:30\u2014Sports News\n5:35\u2014Spotlight on a Star\n5:45\u2014Bowling News\n1:50\u2014News\n6:00\u2014Rawhide\n6:15\u2014Hit Parade\n6:45\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n7:30\u2014Just for Kicks\n8:00\u2014Footloose\n8:30\u2014Winnipeg Drama\n9:00\u2014Chamber Orchestra\n9:30\u2014This Is My Story\nmoo\u2014 News\n10:15\u2014Scottish Ballad Talks\n10:30\u2014Parade of Choirs\n11:00\u2014NEWS Nightcap\n11:05\u2014Vespers\nCBC PROGRAMS\niMountain Standard Time!\nFRIDAY, MAY 20, 1955\n7:00\u2014Fisherman's Broadcast\n^:13\u2014Musical  Minutes\n1:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Musical   Minutes\n7:40\u2014Morning  Devotions\n7:55\u2014Musical  March  Past\n8:00\u2014News\n8 10\u2014 Here's Bill Good\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014Anything Goes\n9:00\u2014BBC News\n9:15\u2014Aunt Lucy\n9:30\u2014Laura Limited\n9:45\u2014Composer's Corner\n10:00\u2014Morning Visit\n10:15\u2014The Happy Gang\n10:45\u2014Musical Kitchen\n11:00\u2014Kate Aitken\ntl:15\u2014Kindergarten of the Air\n11:30\u2014A Man and His Music\n12:15\u2014News\n12:25- -Showcaes\n12:30\u2014 Farm   Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Five to One\n1:00\u2014Art Gallery Recital\n1:30\u2014Afternoon Concert\n2:00\u2014National School Broadcast\n2:3U\u2014Trans-Canada  Matinea\n1*30\u2014Programe Kesuma\n3:45\u2014B. C. Roundup\n4:30\u2014Smuggler's Run\n5:00\u2014Folk Song Time\n5:25\u2014Music\n5:30\u2014Question Box\n5:45\u2014News\n\u25a05:55\u2014Int. Commentary\n6:00\u2014Rawhide\n6:15\u2014Roving Reporter\n6:30\u2014Club Date\n6:45\u2014Bill Good\n(00\u2014News\n7:30\u2014London Prom Concert\n8:00\u2014The Dumbells\n8:30\u2014Vancouver Theatre\n9:00\u2014The Nation's Business\n9:15\u2014John Fisher\n9:30\u2014Sports Page\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014By Invitation\n10:30\u2014Curtain Melodies \u2022\nDAILY CROSSWORD\nACROSS\n1. A falsehood\n4. Common\nlevel\n7. Heap\n8. Regrets\n10. Cup-like\nspoon\n11. Mountain\nnymph\n(Myth.)\n13. Man's\nnickname\n14. A life saver\n15. Chum\n16. Exclamation\n17. Even (poet.)\n18. Perceiving-\nthrough the\nnose\n21. Having ears\n22. Sudden\nblasts\nof wind\n26. An absent\none\n28. Female\nsheep\n31. Help\n32. Keel-billed\ncuckoo\n33. The \"praying\" insect\n35. Boy's jacket\n36. Up to the\ntime of\n37. Dried plum\n38. Withered\n39. Islands in\nrivers\n(Eng.)\n40. Man's name\n41. Tiny\nDOWN\n1. One who\nplays a\nfiddle\n2. Badly\n3. Honey-\ngathering\ninsect\n4. Drawn out\n5. Subtle\nemanation\n6. To become\nrancid\n(dial. Eng.)\n7. Famous\nship canal\n9. Identical\n10. Let slide\n12. Man's name\n14. Greek letter\n16. Principal\ncriminal\ncourt of\nLondon\n(2 words)\n19. Marshy\nmeadow\n20. Firearm\n23. Leg.\nls-\nlative\nenactment\n24. Joins\nsecurely\n25. River\n(Fr.)\n27. Little\ngirl\n28. Ostrich-\nlike\nbird\n29. Grows pale\nHEfclte   UdEB\nEHiiElH   HHHIHH\nHnaiay ssinau\nanffliaHH    HHia\nUCifJ   HKBH   0@\n.   sanniiKHH\nKiGHHBI BHE1GB\nHHBrilEHHH\nas L4L1I3I3 nnra\nshe Hfianas\nEJWiMio hemeih\nwffimm\nTeste rtlny'n Asiwe*\n30. Come in\n34. Novice\n(var.)\n35. American\nIndian\n37. Animal'f\nfoot\n1\n%\n\\\ni.\ni\n%\n4-\n5\nt,\nft\n%\n%\n7\n%\nii\n9\n\"\/A\n10\n\"A\nf I\nIX\n13\nVt\n1+\n15\n%\n\\<b\nf\n\u25a0ci\n18\nIS\n20\n^\n%\n%\n21\n%\nIX\n21\n24\n25\n%\n^\nV4\n2<o\n27\n26\n29\n30\nf\ni\\\n%\n31-\n.33\n34\n%\n35^\n3to\n1\n37\n1\n36\n1\n33\n^\n%\n^,\n40\n%\n41\n%\nf\/A\n519\nDAILY CRYPTOQUOTE\u2014Here's how to work it:\nAXYDLBAAXR\nls LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this example A ls used\nfor Ihe three L's, X for Ihe two O's. etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all hints.\nEach day Ihe code letters are different\n,       A Cryptogram Quotation\nAXHD   UVJJATK   FHDD,   DHBA\nFVEATAL CTVKK, C T W F OK XATO\nMDAJEAWGKDO \u2014 MDVGEGK.\nYesterday's Cryptoquote: I AM HERE WHO HAVE DONB1\nIT; TURN YOUR SWORD AGAINST ME\u2014VIRGIL*\ndistributed by King Features Cyndicoto\n \u25a0   . )y'y:-:y.\n.;.::\u25a0\u25a0. \u25a0  \u25a0  ' : ^\u00bb\n\u25a0 . \u25a0  \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0 \u2022\t\nffm\nNO STORAGE SPACE AT HOME?\nUSE WANT ADS\nSIRTHS\nGALLICANO - To .Mr. and Mrs.\nJack Gallicano, 824 Sixth Street,\nat Kootenay Lake General Hospltal, May 17, a son.\nMETCALFE \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs.\nArthur Metcalfe, ,R.R. No. 1, \"at\nKootenay Lake General Hospital,\nMay 17, a son.\nWYLIE \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs. Roland Wylie. 216 Vernon Street, at\nKootenay Lake General Hospital,\nMay 18, a daughter.\nNOMLOND\u2014 To Mr. and Mrs.\nS. Nomlond of Greenwood at Grand\nForks Community Hospital, May 15.\na daughter.\nCARMICHAEL \u2014 To Mr. and\nMrs, Fraser Carmichael of Grand\nForks, at Grand Forks Community\nHospital, May 16, a son, Donald\nGrant.\nPUBLIC NOTICE\n. HELP WANTED\nOPPORTUNITY\nFOR YOUNG MEN\nThe Hudson's Bay Company has\nseveral openings with a good oo-\nportunity for advancement for\nalert young men between the ages\nof 18 to 30 in men's wear and related departments. Previous experience desirable but not essential. A planned training programme is available for those who\nshow a desire for advancement.\nWrite or apply in person to the\nHudson's Bay Company General\nOffice, Nelson.\nAPPLICATIONS FOR THE Positions of Vice-Principal of Hume\nElementary School and Salmo Junior-Senior High School will be\naccepted by Secretary-Treasurer\nof School District No. 7 (Nelson).\nNo applications will be considered\nafter May 31st, 1955. Address all\napplications to J. S. Livingstone, Secretary-Treasurer. Nelson School District No. 7, 554 Stan-\nlev Street, Nelson. B.C.\nMILL MECHANIC AND\nMACHINIST\nKootenay Mine requires first\nclass mechanic capable of handling all phases of mill repair\nwork. Also, an all-round machinist. Reply in writing to Box 3126,\nDaily'News, giving age, marital\nstatus,  exDeripncc.  etc.\nLOOK\nOpportunity to learn ware-housing. Do not pass this up. Apply\nat once. National Employment\noffice.\nWANTED: FULLY QUALIFIED\npartsman to handle automotive\nand industrial parts ln Nelson.\nGood salary. Apply National Employment Office, Nelson, B.C.\nWANTED: INTELLIGENT UNDER-\nground quarry man with blasting\ncertificate, to supply rock with\nminimum of muck. Box 3161, Nelson News.\nEXPERIENCED MECHANIC, GM\ndealership, East Kootenay district.\nTop wages, steady employment.\nGive full particulars, Box 3160.\nNelson Dailv News.\n\"APPLICATIONS WANTED BY\nJune 1, from skating pros interested in teaching Nelson Figure\nSkating Club. Particulars in first\nletter.\nWANTED FIRST CLASS ME\nchanic, specializing in tune-up.\nSullivan Motors, Ltd., Kimber\nley\", B. C.\nHELP WANTED\u2014FEMALE\nSTENOGRAPHER, RECEPTION\nist, professional office, capable\ntypist. Commence June 20th or\nearlier. State age, experience,\nmarital status. Write Box 3191\nNelson Daily News.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nFURNITURE SCARS\" PERMAN~-\n\u2022ently   removed:   floor   polishing,\npaint washing, window cleaning.\nReasonable, estimates free. J.\n-   Newman. Box 3007, Daily News.\nIF BUILDING A HOME OR RE-\nmodelling, for jeasonable est!\nmates, phone 1883-L.\nHAVE YOUR GARDEN PLOWED\nwith a rotary plow   Phone 808-L\nafter 6 p.m.\nWOMAN, AGE 30,  DESIRES HO-\ntel or farm work. Apply Box 4472\nDaily News.\nBANDY MAW WANTS ODD JOBS\nPhone 256-R.\nRELIABLE  PAINTERS, SPRAY\nbrush or roll. Bh. 1623-R-3.\n. VAN WANTS 6'DD JOBS' 6R dAR-\npenter work. Phone 599-X-3.\n\u00a3falamt lailii. Npms\nClassified     Advertising Rates\nPer line. 1 time .20\n2 consecutive Limes .33\n3 consecv tive times      '. .45\n4. 5 and 6 consecutive\ntimes .60\n26 consecutive times $1.82\nNon-consecutive insertions     .20\na line per time.\nBox numbers .11 extra\nPUBLIC    (LEGAL)    NOTICES\nTENDERS, etc - 20c per line\nfirst insertion 16c per line each\nsubsequent insertion.\nALL ABOVE RATES LES8 10%\nFOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nSubscription' Rates:\n(Not  More Than  Listed Here)\nBy carrier  per week\nin advance .30\nBy carrier per year $15.60\nUnited States, United Kingdom\nOne month             $ 1.29\nThree months      $ 3.75\nSix months          $ 7.80\nQne year $15.00\nMail in Canada outside Nelson\nOne month         $ 1.00\nThree months _...     $ 2 75\nSix months            $ 5.50\nOne vear $10.00\nWhere extra postage Ii required\nabove  rates  plus  postage\nNAVIGABLE WATERS\nPROTECTION   ACT\nR.S.C. 1952, CHAPTER IM\nPROPOSED MOORING FOR\nFLOATING   DRYDOCK\nON\nWEST ARM OF KOOTENAY\nLAKE. NEAR PROCTOR, B.C.\nThe Minister of Highways, Government of the Province of British\nColumbia, hereby gives, notice that\nhe has, under Section 7 of the above\nAct, deposited with the Minister of\nPublic Works at Ottawa, and in the\noffice of the Land Registry District\nat Nelson; B. C, a description of\nsite and plan of Mooring for Floating Drydock proposed to be, placed\nin the West Arm of Kootenay Lake\nnear Proctor, B.C., t()e centre of\nsuch Mooring being approximately\n995 feet east of Sunshine Bay, Wharf\nRoad.\nAnd take notice that after the expiration of one month from the date\nof the first publication of this notice,\nthe Minister of Highways, Government of the Province of British\nColumbia, will, under Section 7 of\nthe said Act, apply to the Minister\nof Public Works at his office In the\nCity of Ottawa, for approval of the\nsaid site and plan.\nDated the 22nd day of April, 1955.\nE. S. JONES,\n* Deputy Minister.\nDepartment of Highways,\nDouglas Building,\nVictoria, B. C.\nDEPARTMENT OF HIGHWAYS\nNelson-Creston District\nNOTICE\nSEALED TENDERS marked Garage, Provincial Gaol, Nelson, B.C.,\nwill be accepted hy Deputy Minister and Chief Architect, Department of Public Works, c\/p Divisional Engineer, Department of Highways, Nelson, B. C, up to noon,\nJune 1st, 1955.\nPLANS AND SPECIFICATIONS\nfor same may be seen at office of\nDivisional Engineer, Department of\nHighways, Court House, Nelson\nB.C.\nE. C. CLARKSON,\nfor C. D.  Campbell, Deputy\nMinister and Chief Architect.\nDepartment of Public Works,\nVictoria. B. C.\nDated\u2014May 10th, 1855.\nDEPARTMENT OF MINES\nMINERAL ACT\n(Form F)\nNOTICE OF APPLICATION  FOR\nCERTIFICATES   OF\nIMPROVEMENTS\nVictory. Last Chance, Lucky Jim.\nEd No. 2, Udiville, Udiville No. 1,\nUdiville No. 2. R.M.M. No. 2. R.M.M.\nNo. 3 and R.M.M. No. 4. Mineral\nClaim, S; and Victory, Lucky Jim,\nEd No. 1 and Ed No. 2 Fractional\nMineral Claims. Situate in the Nelson   Mining   Division.\nWhere located: On Bennett (Bear)\nCreek, about 8 miles South East of\nSalmo,\nLawful holder: Victory Tungsten\nLtd. (N.P.L.)\nNumber of the holder's free miner's certificate, 63826F.\nTake notice that Victory Tungsten Ltd. (N.P.L.), 404 Randall\nBuilding, 535 West Georgia Street,\nVancouver,  B.C.\nFree Miner's Certificate No.\n63826F, intends, at the end of sixty\ndays, but not later than one year,\nfrom the date hereof, to apply to\nthe Mining Recorder for Certificates\nof Improvements for the purpose of\nobtaining Crown grants of the\nabove claims.\nAnd further take notice that action, under section 85 of the \"Mineral Act,\" must be commenced before the issuance of such Certificates of Improvements.\nDated this 27th' day of April, 1955,\nVictory Tungsten Ltd. (N.P.L.), pf\nG.M. Christie, Agent.\nPUBLIC NOTICE\n(Continued)\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nETC., FOR SALE\nFOR SALE\nEXCLUSIVE  NEW  LISTINGS\n1\u2014THREE BEAUTIFUL HOMES\n$10,500 t0 $15,000\nGOOD TERMS\n2\u2014SEVERAL  OLDER   HOMES.\n$4200   $4950\n$5250\nVERY GOOD TERMS.\n3\u2014TWO GOOD GARDEN LOTS.\n.^Corner.\" $ , 2Q0\n$300 Cash, Balance $25 a Mon.\n4\u2014FAIRVIEW COTTAGE. Garden and flowers. Lot 60 x 90\nfeet. 2. bedrooms down and\n2 upstairs if neces- %495Q\nTerms: $1700 Cash, and\n\u2022   $65 Per Month.\n5\u2014BUNGALOW HOME, ONE\nLOT. 2 bedrooms and utility\nroom which could be used as\nbedroom. Dining room, living\nroom' PricV*6'   $5250\nSome Terms.\nplace\nHospital\n6\u2014SMALL     HOUSE,     2    bedrooms. Close to      $2600\n$800 Cash\nINSURE THE MODERN WAY\nONE   PACKAGE   POLICY\nCOVERS\nFire. Theft, Glass and Personal\nLiability, at a Considerable\nSaving to You.\nASK   ABOUT   THIS   TODAY\nC.WoAopleyard\n& CO. LTD.\nT, C. LA; LiSRT, OMicg Manager\n392 Baker St. Phone 269\nEstablished  1912\nReal Estate and Insurance Agents\nP.O. Box 26 Nelson, B.C.\n1844\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS!\n(Continued) I\nFor sale - double  bed,!\nspring and  mattress as good\nnew. ias.00. Phone 848-X.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS,\nETC., FOR- SALE\n(Contlnuad)\nFARM FOR SALE, 100 ACRES,\nsome cleared, house 16x24, lota of\nwater. Good chicken house. Low\ndown payment, balance as rent\nApply Box 3185, Dally News.\n\u25a0ro&'m HnK fUJiM-\nished optional. Six lots. Also undeveloped highway business property adjoining. Excellent location.\nR. Mosti. Ymir.\nFOR SALE: CASTLEGAR, 4-ROOM\nhouse on 2 lots, furnished or unfurnished. Choice location, reasonable for cash. Apply 463 Main\nSt., Castlegar.\nHOUSE AND GARAGE AT 606\nNelson Ave. Full price $10,000.\nHalf cash, balance $50 a month\nFor particulars write Ole Olson,\n13538 Nordsun Ave., Whalley, B.C.\n5-ROOMED HOUSE AND BATH,\n6 lots in Fairview. Close to school\nand bus, splendid view. $4500.\n$2000 down   Phone 792-X.\n7-ROOM HOUSE, GARAGE, 14\nlots, fruit trees, Kaslo, $5500 cash,\nor terms. $1500 will handle. Contact Bill Tyers. Kaslo. B.C.\nFOR SALE: 2 30X120 LOTS, 6TH\n, Street, $1100 each. Terms or discount for cash. Phone 1051, nighi\ncalls  1868-X-3.\nFOR SALE: 7-ROOM HOUSE ON\nAnderson St., Fairview. 4 B.R.,\npart basement. Lovely family\nhome for $5000. Ph. 1441-L.\nFOR SALE 4-ROOM HOUSE WITH\nbath   in   Ymir.  Box  3036,  Dally\nNews.     \t\nrevenue pr6pertY, nor'Th\nShore,   between  lake   and   high\nway. Annly Box 3107. Daily News.\nFOR SALE: 2 CORNER LOTS,\ncorner of Innis and Kootenay. Ph\n314-Y  after  5:30.\t\nFOR SALE: 2-ROOM HOUSE, $1000\nApply\nB.C.\nEric  Gavelln,  Ainsworth\n2-BEDROOM   HOUSE\n9n9 Latimer St.\nFOR SALE.\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\n   .'\u25a0 (Qpntlryutid)\n1963 MACK, LOGGING TRUCK,\nModel B60S, with Hayos Anderson\n16-ton' tandem trailer. 12' bunks.\nPriced at .$16,200 for quick sale.\nReply to Box 9112, Dally News.\nTRUCK FOR SALfc 1949 FORD\ntandem. Trade for light delivery\nor for cash. 140 Baker St., phone\n491-L.\nFOR SALE: 1950 2-DOOR CHEV.\nSmall down payment, take over\nsmall monthly instalments. Phone\n1194-Y evenings.\n$1800 CREDIT NOTE ON 1955 NEW\nAustin. What offers? Apply Box\n4468, Nelson Daily News.\n1949 FORD CUSTOM SEDAN\ncheap for cash. P.O. Box 262, Nelson.\nFOR  SALE:  SUN MOTOR BIKE,\n$75, Phone 967-R-2.\t\nHOUSE   TRAILER   Ixii.   SLEEP\nfour. 313 Mill St. Phone 1725.\nFOR SALE OR TRADE 1950 FORD\n\u25a0 and 1953 Austin. Ph. 461-X-3.\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nEasy  washing   machine,\ngood condition. Phone 656-X,\nFOR SALE  - GIRL'S BICYCLE,\nnearly new. Phone 1009-R.\nMACHINERY\n*\u2022\u25a0\u2022+*\u25a0-*\u00bb**->+\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\nMINERAL ACT\n(Form F)\nNOTICE OF APPLICATION\nFOR CERTIFICATE OF\nIMPROVEMENTS\nCaviar No. 1, Val No. 1, Va! No. 2.\nVa! No. 3. Val No. 4 Frac. Val No. 5.\nVal. No. 6 Frac, Val. No. 8 Frac\nMineral Claims. Situate in the Nelson Mining Division.\nWhere located: Russian Creek.\nLawful holder: Diem Mines, Ltd.\nNumber of the holder's free miner's certificate 54287F.\nTake notice that Diem Mines, Ltd..\nFree Miner's Certificate No. 54287F.\nintends, at the end of sixty days, but\nnot later than one year, fyom the\ndate hereof, to apply to the Mining\nRecorder for a Certificate of Improvements for the ourDose of obtaining a Crown grant of the above\nclaim.\nAnd further take notice that action, under section 85 of the \"Mineral Act,\" must be commenced before the issuance of such Certificate\nof Improvements.\nDated this 5th day of April, 1955.\nDIEM MINES. LTD.,\nGarth M. Crosby, Auth. Agent.\nMINERAL   ACT\n(Form  F)\nNOTICE OF APPLICATION\nFOR CERTIFICATE OF\nIMPROVEMENTS\nCaviar No. 2, Caviar No. 3. Caviar\nNo. 4, Caviar No. 5, Caviar No. 6\nFrac, Caviar No. 7 Frac, Larch No.\n3 Frac, Val No. 7 Frac Mineral\nClaims. Situate in the Nelson Mining Division.\nWhere located: Russian  Creek.\nLawful holder: Diem Mines, Ltd.\nNumber of the holder's free, min'\ner's certificate 54287F.\nTake notice that Diem Mines. Ltd.\nFree Miner's Certificate No. 54287F,\nintends, at the end'of sixty days, but\nnot later than one year, from the\ndate hereof, to apply to the Mining\nRecorder for a Certificate of Improvements for the purpose of obtaining a Crown grant of tha above\nclaim.\nAnd further take notice that action, under section 85 of the \"Mineral Act,\" must be commenced before the issuance of such Certifcate\nof Improvements.\nDated this 5th day of April, 1055\nDIEM MINES, LTD.,\nGarth M. Crosby, Auth. Agent\nSTANLEY ST., UPHILL\nOpportunity U.c someone. This\nnice 3 BR Home on 2 corner\nlots. Good as new with LR (fireplace) DR, Bathroom and very\nnice Kitchen. Basement and\nH-Air furnace. $700(1\nFor quick sale at \u2022P'*MJV\n611 KOOTENAY ST.\n3 BFvW.-s, LR and DH. Kitchen.\nBath and Pantry. S\u00bbJ^nO\nCash for quick sale .. *P**^\"V\nPhone  135\nOr Eves., 1065-X\nFOR SALE \u2014 14 ACRE FARM ON\npaved highway between Nelson\nand Trail. 7 room house, water,\nelectricity, barn, chicken house,\nlarge garage and workshop, 12x16\ngreenhouse, garden all in. Good\nmarkets in. Trail and Nelson for\nall produce. Good reason for selling. Cash deal. Apply Alec Chernoff, Thrums, B.C.\nSEE '\nREUBEN\nBUERGE\nTODAY\nand\nDeal With Confidence\nWith The Largest\nAutomotive Dealer\nIn the Interior of B.C.\nCLEARANCE\nOF USED\nAPPLIANCES\nUSED REFRIGERATORS\nIn Good Working Order,\nReconditioned\n3 Months Warranty\n6 Cubic Foot Frigidaire        C7S\nmodel        W\n3 Cubic Foot Domestic C7S\nmodel  \u00abP\/3\n6 Cubic Foot Norge tfirt\nmodel *PDU\n4 Cubic Foot General Electric 9.A ft\nmodel     -i'\u2122\nUSED AUTOMATIC WASHER -\nLike new, Bendix Economat. Reconditioned to perfect working order. 3 months tt1 \u00a3 ft\nguarantee       \u00abP I OU\nUSED KITCHEN TABLE with 4\nmatching chairs; wooden structure\npainted yellow, with S20\ncutlery  drawer   ^   u\nUSED   HOOVER  WASHING   MACHINE \u2014 Electric model, all white\nlike new. Small compact\ndesign\ni USED MANTEL RADIOS, wooden,\nWalnut finish. 5 to 6 tube models.\nNorthern\nElectric \t\nRodgers\nMajestic \t\nWestinghouse.\n.mers\nContractors\nLoggers\n1\u2014Ingersoll Rand Portable\nCompressor, on 2 wheels\nwith trailer hitch. 110 C.F.M.\nLike new.\n1\u2014110 C.F.M. Compressor on\nskids with 45 lb. Thor drill\nand Jackleg. 50 it hose and\nmaohine.oiler. C | AAA\n\u2022Alitor *  *\"\u00bbUU\nCash\n1\u201430\" Pacific Scraper. Roller\nbearing blocks.\nSee   H.  \"Fritz\"  Farenholtr,\n' C. Ross or Alex McDonald\nMAC'S\nWELDING & EQUIPMENT\nCO., LTD.\nPHONE 1402\n614 Railway St.      Nelson, B.C.\n$49\n1.954\n1953\n1952\n1952\n1952\n1951\n1950\n1949\nConsul\n2700 miles.\nAustin Sedan\nAustin Sedan\nHillman\nMorris Oxford\nMorris Minor\nAustin Sedan\nAustin\n3-BEDROOM MODERN HOUSE, 3\nlots, wood and coal furnace, kitcb\/\nen range at Moyie. B. C, near\nlake, 20 miles South of Cranbrook,\nB.C. Also included, garage, woodshed, 3-room house. Price $4000.\nApply Mrs. H. M. Pearson, Box\n795. Cranbrook, B C.\nDAIRY RANCH FOR SALE ON\nblack top highway Vt mile from\nYmir consisting of 60 acres, house,\nbarn, chicken house, milk house,\netc. 22 head of cattle (ten milk\ncows), Massey Harris tractor and\nother implements. If interested\napply to Mr. J. Tarron.\n2-YEAR-OLD 3-BEDROOM BUNG-\nalow with carport on corner lot,\n520 Gordon Road, overlooking\ncity flower gardens and lake. Fully landscaped. NHA monthly payments $69.77, Full price $11,500.\nTerms, Phone 13J6-X.\n(Continued In Next Column)\nFOR SALE IN CASTLEGAR, MO\ndern, newly - built, 2-bedroom\nbungalow on 2 lots, in good location. Oil furnace. Very reasonable.\nWrite Box 84, Rossland, or ph. 353.\nWILL PAY CASH FOR SUITABLE\nsecond mortgages or agreements\non Nelson properties Give details\nand    discount   you    will    allow\n' Reply Box 4024 Dally News,\n\u2022 \u2022     \u2022\n1955 Chevrolet Sedan 6\n1954 Chevrolet Sedan\n1953 Chevrolet Sedan\n1953  Ford Sedan\n1952  Dodge Sedan\n1952 Chevrolet Sedan\n1951 Chevrolet 2 Door\n1950 Chevrolet 4 Door\n1946 Chevrolet Sedan\n1941   Chevrolet Sedan\n1940 Plymouth Sedan\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\n1953 Ford Pickup\n1952 GMC Pickup\n1952 Dodge Pickup\n1951 Meteor Station Wagon\n1951   Thames Pickup\n1949 Willys Pickup\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nBSA Motor Bike\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nSPOT   CASH\nFOR LATE MODEL CARS\nAUSTIN\nSERVICE  AND SALES\nREUBEN\nBUERGE\nMotors Ltd.\n$15\n$20\n$20\nUSED 30\" METAL BAR BED complete with C f S\nspring                                     * ' \u00b0\nUSED ELECTRIC WASHER\u2014motor, 1-6 h.p. Ideal for bench power\ndrive in your work shop Q QC\nat   home i,,t,\u00b0\nUSED GAS (propane) RANGE \u2014\nFour burner cottage style, 4CQ\nMoffat make like new \"P\"*7\nHUDSON'S BAY\nCOMPANY\nNelson, B.C.\nTHE\nSELKIRK'S\nEQUIPMENT CO., LTD.\nAgents for:\n. Lincoln Electric\nCanadian Controllers\n\u2022 B. F. Goodrich\nBriggs and Stratlon      *\nSlmonds Canada Saw\nUsed Sawmill Equipment\nPHONE 1590\n820 Lake St. Nelson. B.C.\nFOR SALE \u2014 TD-14 INTERNA\ntional equipped with angle dozer,\nwinch, canopy and all guards. Can\nbe financed. Apply A. Katelnlkoff,\nBlewett. B.C.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, MAY 19,1953 \u2014 Tl\nFARM, GARDEN AND\nNURSERY\nFOR SALE - ASORTED WALNUT\nand fruit trees, rose bushes, raspberries, blackberries, gooseberries,\nblueberries, grapes, lilies of the\nvalley, bleeding hearts, peonies\nand silver bells. Mrs. C. Becker,\n1418 Vancouver Street.\nFOR SALE: STRAWBERRY\nplants: Sovereigns, Superfection.\nBrilliant, and Gem Ever-hearers.\nPhone 1577-L.\nPLANT NOW. DAFFODIL BULBS\nthat have bloomed In greenhouse.\n$2.00 per 400. Grlzzelle's Florists.\nNelson, B.C.\nFOR SALE - 1 GIBSON TRAC-\ntor. Shorty's Repair Shop, 714 Baker St.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL   DIRECTORY\nA88AYERS AND MINE\n'   REPRESENTATIVES\nWIDD0WS6N\n'\"K w  widdOWson S Co\nAssayera, 301 Josephine St.. Nelson\nrr\nELMES    ROSSLAND   B\nAssayer Chemist Mine Rep\nENGINEERS AND  SURVEYORS\n&6Vb c'affleck Hire;\nBC Land Surveyor P Eng  (Civili\n218 Gore St     Nelson     Phone 1238\nS   V   SHAYLER   PC   BOX   252\nKimberley.  Phone 84\nB C Land Surveyor. Engineer\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine Shop     Acetylene and\nelectric welding, motor rewinding   Phone 593. 324 Vernon St\nTIMBER   CRUISER\nTimber Cruiser  Anywhere In BC\nE   HIRD   SLOGAN-CITY,   BC\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\n2 COWS FOR SALE. SECOND AND\nthird calf freshened couple weeks.\nAnother June 4. Apply Blil Pooh-\nachoff, Winlaw.\nFOR SALE: INTERNATIONAL\nTD14 bulldozer, hydraulic hoist.\nD. McDonald, 929 Spokane St.,\nTrail. B.C. Phone 112.\nRENTALS\nHOUSEKEEPING OR SLEEPING\nrooms, dishes, linens and maid\nservice, .automatic heat Day,\nweek, or monthly rats. Allen\nHotel. 171 Baker St.\nWANTED BY JULY, 2 OR 3-BED-\nrbom, unfurnished house in city\nor Fairview. Could pay substantial rent in advance for suitable\nplace. Box 3114, Daily News.\nFOR RENT: UPPER DUPLEX, UN-\nfurnished, reasonable, close in.\nHas electric rangette and oil heater. Available June 1. No objection\nto children. Phone 811-R,\nONE ONLY, ZENITH PROPANE\nrange, excellent shape, $75; 1 only,\nold model electric range, high\noven, $10; used chesterfield, no\nchairs, excellent condition, $20; 1\n3-piece used chesterfield suite,\nslip covered, good condition, $45;\n1 3-piece suite, fair condition, $25;\n1 used single lounge with loose\nbolsters, fair condition, $10; 1\nused radio combination. $35; 1\nused floor lamp, $5; 1 used smoking cabinet, not a mark on finish $15. Ali goods may be seen\nat 'Freeman's, phone 115, Freeman's Furniture.\nUKALEHS IN AI.L TYPES OF\nused equipment, mill, mine and\nlogging supplies: new and used\nwire rope, pipe and fittings, Cham\nsteel plate and shapes Atlas lro&\n& Metals Ltd., 250 Prior St.,\nVancouver. BC Phone PAcIfic\n6357\nFOR SALE: COMPLETE ELEC-\ntToplatln'? set and Instruction\nbooks. Eternalize baby shoes in\nbronze. Reasonable price. Can be\ndone in spare time or full time\nbusiness. Cutler's New and Used\nFurniture  Store.\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP METALS,\ncopper, brass, lead, aluminum.\nHighest prices, prompt payment.\nActive Trading, 935 E. Cordova,\nVancouver\nGOOD USED FRIDGE, WASHER\ncoal and wood stove. Priced for\nquick sale. Phone 262-R or apply\n1221 Kootenay St.\nCUTLER'S NEW AND USED\nfurniture, basement, \u00a301 Baker St.\nPhone 47. \"We buy- used furniture.\"\nFOR RENT: 4-ROOM UNFURN\"\n' ished, heated suite with bathroom. Central location. Available\nJune 1. Write Box 4477, Nelson\nDaily News.\nAPARTMENT TO RENT, JOHN-\nstone Block, from June 1st. Six\nrooms, three bedrooms. T. D. Ros-\nling, Real,Estate and Insurance,\nph. 717.\nFOR RENT: NEWLY MODERN-\nized large office space, convenient entrance, good  parking fac-\niltes. Call 77 for details.\nSEMI-FURN, APT. FOR RENT.\nAdults. Near Baker, Petty Apts\nPhone 1184-Y.\nWANTED TO BUY: MILKING\ngoat, freshened recently. Write\nto Box 105, Salmo, B. C..\nFOR SALE: COW JUST FRESH-\nened, second calf. Eli Kooznetsoff,\nGlade, B.  C.\nCOW FOR SALE, FRESHENED\n1st of March. First calf. Apply\nMike Chernoff. Salmo. B.C.\n20 WEANER' PIGS. SEE ANDY\nTownsend, Parks, B.C.\nMarket Trends\nTORONTO (CP) - The stock\nmarket advanced strongly Wednesday, gathering momentum' along tht\nway, amid the lowest trading this\nyear. The rise ended a moderate\ndecline in the last two sessions...\nIndustrials led the forward mov*-'\nment with galns.-ranging to $% I\npoints. Scattered lpsBes. were con\u00bb\nfined to less,than one point. ThV\nincreased buying -boosted1 the ln\u00ab\ndustrial index two points to a record high of 395.71.   -\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 Prices wer\u00ab\nmixed at the close of moderately\nactive trading on the stock market\nWednesday.\nBase metals and steels were\nhigher, while miscellaneous industrials and papers were . mixed.\nThere was little change in the rsj- .\nmainder of the industrial market. ,\nMines were mixed in a lb to 8S-.\ncent range. Beaucage climbed \"38\ncents. New Fortune was off 20.\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Election\noptimism and good company statements produced generally favorable\nconditions on the stock market\nBuying expanded, especially in tha\nIndustrial market, where prices advanced on a broad front.\nVickers went ahead sharply In\nengineerings ort prospects of fur\nther orders for Viscount airliner*\nSteels, electrlcals, textiles, newsprints, stores and shippings ma'de,\ngood gains. -^\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST ON BAKER ST., LAST\nTues., 1 green jade earring in silver mounting. Box 4383, Daily\nNews.\n\u25a0nv\n2.75\n.72.\n.lltt\n.73\n.38.\n,S81\n.12\n4.50\n1.08\n-16VJ\n1.65-\n1.05\n.27\nw\n.11\n.54^\n3.65\n34;\nLOST: 2-TRUCK CHAINS BE-\ntween Harrop and Procter. Re^\nward. P. Iwanik, Procter. B.C.\nBOATS AND ENGINES\nFOR SALE: 16' CABIN CRUISER,\npowered wlthrl939 Plymouth motor, complete with boathouse,\n$495. Vernon Murphy, Kaslo, B.C.\nPhone 94-F.\nFOR SALE: 14-FT RUNABOUT.\n5Vi\" beam for outboard motor. T\nAllan, nh   58-W. Nakusp. B. C.\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nGROC\"\" AND CONFECTION\ntry : less for sale Good location        )lv 1103 Hall Mines Road\nBUSINESS   FOR   SALE:   APPLY\nPetite Dress Shop. Box 308. Salmo\nPROPERTY WANTED\nWANTED TO PURCHASE, SMALL\nhome in Nelson or outside bity\nlimits. Must have modern facilities. Also a trailer. D. W. Guy, 714\nHoover St.\nFOR RENT; SEMI-FURN. OR UN-\nfurn. 3-room apt., close in, heated.\n917 Edsewood Avenue.\n3-ROOM   APT.,   CLOSE   IN.   GAS\npiped  in.  Immediate  occupancy.\n$35 month. Phone 662 office hours.\nCENTRAL, LOVELY 4-ROOM, UN-\nfurnlshed apt., adults only. Phone\n590-Y.\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES, ETC.\nFOR &ALErG~ERMAN SHEPHERD\npups, purebred. Apply P.O. Box\n221, Nelson.\nWANTED    MISCELLANEOUS\nUSED\n1514.\nELECTRIC   IRONER.   PH.\n2 OR 3 CLEAN HOUSEKEEPING\nroom furn. hot water, heat and\nlight. Phone 335-X.\nFOR RENT: 4-ROOM SUITE, WAT-\ner and light included. Garden\nspace available. Phone 476-X-l.\n20'X20' SPACE AT 521 VERNON\nsuifable for office and\/or whse\nPhone 1709.\nHEATED MODERN APT. AVAIL-\nable 1st of June. Apply 406 Richards;\nMODERN  APT.  HEATED,  FURN-\nished. Available June 1st. Phone\n879-L.     *\t\nUNFURNISHED   2-ROOM   SUITE\nfor rent Phone 1652-X\t\n2-BEDROOM   APT.   FOR   RENT,\ncentral. Phone 423-Y.\nUNFURNISHED, 2-BEDROOM,\nheated apt., central. Phone 815.\nHOUSEKEEPING\nFOR   RENT:\nroom. Phone 405-L.\nAnaconda President\nRetires From Chair\nANACONDA, Ront. (AP)\u2014Cornelius F. Kelley Wednesday announced his retirement as chairman of the board of Anaconda\nCopper Mining Company.\nIn the same meeting, stockholders\nchanged the corporate name of the\nworldwide operation to the Anaconda Company.\nKelley, 80, is retiring after 15\nyears as chairman and 22 years as\npresident.\nVancouver Stocks\n(Closing Prices)\nMINE8 V\"\nBeaver Lodge ....!.....\t\nBrolorne        \u201e\t\nCariboo Gold   \u201e\t\nEstella   \u2022....\t\nGiant  Mascot  \t\nGrandview      \t\nHighland Bel!\t\nPac Eeastern Gold ....:\u201e. _\nPend Oreille .-.\t\nPioneer Gold  \u201e\nQuatsino \t\nReeves MacDonald \t\nSheep  Creek  \t\nSilver Ridge      \t\nSilver Standard       \t\nWestern Exploration  \t\nWestern Tungsten \t\nYale        \t\nOILS\nAnglo Canadian   \t\nA P Consolidated      \t\nCalgary & Edjnonton     14.00\nCanadian Anaconda  19!\nCommonwealth       3.58\"\nHome   .  .'      9.40\nMid West Gas       2.75,\nOkalta Com         1.40\"\nPacific Pete          10.50\nPeace River Gas _..     7.50\nRoyalite     11.00 .\nVanalta  22\nVulcan   .  42\nINDUSTRIALS\nCapital Estates       5.15\nInt Brew B             5.15.\nWestern Plywood     16.50\nJackson Basin Mines  30\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY (CP)\u2014Light offerings\nand brisk demand by U.S. buyers\npushed prices up slightly on tne\nlivestock market Wednesday. Trlda\nwas strong and active on offerings\nof 555 cattle and five calves urAto\n11 a.m. Bulk of receipts were medium to good butcher steers and heifers. , \"\u25a0'\" -n\nGood to choloa,butcher steers regained 25 cents or more of Tuesday's loss; fair to medium kiiidi\nfully Bteady;, butcher heifers firm;\nall classes of cows selling readily at\nMonday's advance; bulls strong to\n50 cents higher.\nChoice steers $18.50 to $19; go.od\n$17.50 to $18.25; medium $16 to\n$17.25; common $14.50 to $15.50.'\nHeifers $17.25 to $17.50; odd sales\nto $17.75; good $16 to $17; medium\n$15 to $15.75; common $13.50\"to\n$'14.50. J\nGood cows $12.50 to $13.75; odd\nsales to $14; medium $11.25 to $12.25;\ncommon $10 to $11; canners and cutters $6 to $9.50.\nGood bulls $13 to $14; common, to\nmedium $9 to $12.50.\nWINNIPEG   GRAIN\nWINNIPEG   (CP)  -\nprices:\nOats: 1 feed 81 \"j.\nBarley: 1 feed 1.05V(.\nCash grain\nPRIZED POSSESSION\nDE LUXE WHISKY\nIN SMART DECANTER\nThis advertisement is .not published or\ndisplayed by the Liquor Control Board\nor by the Government of British\n\u2022\".o'umbio '\nHOUSEKEEPING    ROOM    FOR\nrent. 606 Front St.\nPhone 1135    803 Baker\nNelson, B.C.\nSt,\n(Continued In Next Column)\nCHEV, SEDAN, GOOD TRANS-\nportation cheap for cash. Baker,\n1106 Beatty Avenue, ph. 743-L-3.\nFOR SALE 5 DAY-NIGHT COUCH-\nes, arm chairs, cream coal and\nwood range, standing lamps, and\nnadded benches. Ph. 717.\nBOMBER HOrSTS 1500 LBS CA-\npaclty $45 while they last Active\nTrading Co   935 E Cordova  Van\n1 BRIGGS STRATON AIR-COOL-\ned gas engine. Used 1 hour. $50\noff. 3V.-5'4 H.P. Ph. 702-R.\nAPARTMENT FOR RENT, CLOSE\nin. Ph. 853-L or 345 Baker St.\n4-ROOM   HOUSE,   YMIR   ROAD.\nBox 4388, Daily News.\n1   HOUSEKEEPING   ROOM   FOR\nrent Apply 614 Victoria St.\nmmm bedroom,\nutes wa'k from C.P.R.\nPh. 488-R.\nROOM AND BOARD\nCOAL AND WOOD STOVE WITH\nreservoir, used two weeks. Phone\n995-L or 240 High.\t\n780 FT. SYNTHETIC PIPE, 12c FT.\nG. L. Baker, Longbeach.\nHURRY, HURRY, HURRY! LIMIT-\ned supnly of top soli. Ph. 794-R-l.\n1 BABY BUGGY, $25. SEE ANDY\nTownsend. Parks. B. C\t\nFAWCETT OIL HEATER, LIKE\nnew. $35. Phone 678-L-2.\n(Continued in Next Column)\n(Continued in Next Column)\nWANTED ROOM AND BOARD\nfor 3 boys, ages 15, 13, 11. Mother\nworks. Box 4480, Nelson Daily\nNews.\nROOM AND BOARD FOR YOUNG\nbuslness man 501 Cedar St. Phone\n1392-X.  \t\nROOM AND BOARD FOR TWO\nsharing, private home Fairview.\nBOX 3203 Daily News.\nPERSONAL\nEXfCUTOItS   AND   TRUSTEES   FOK   OVER   HALF   A   CENTURY\nAlways\na saving in worry...\nOften\na saving in money...\nfor your heirs\nwhen you name an executor\nwith experience j\nROYAL TRUST\nCOMPANY\nAtk for copies\not our Succession\nDuly booklets.\nALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS BOX\n888. Phone 161-L-3 or 366-R.\n*U  WEST PENDER ST., VANCOUVER    .   MA.  8411\nGEORGE O. VALE, MANAGER\n  \u2014 \u2014r^.\n :\t\n\u2014\nIT'S HERE! \\\nfabulous new\nUse New fWffffl,V shampoo s\ntonight\u2014and tomorrow your\nhair will be sunshine bright.\nTHREE SIZES S-\n*1.25 \u2022 75\u00ab \u2022 45<   ^^j)\n\/\nMANN\nNELSON DAILY NEWS,\n12\u2014THURS., MAY, 19, 1955\nJhe. dtiqluvatyL\nNo. 3 Southern Trans-Provincial\u2014\nHope-Princeton , good, watch for\nrolling rock. Princeton-Osoyoos-\nCascade good, some rough sections\nGreenwood to Cascade. Cascade-\nRossland generally good. Rossland\nto Balfour normal. Kootenay Bay-\nCreston paving Kuskanook to\nWynndel, balance normal. Creston\nto Crows Nest normal.\nNo. 3A Trail-Salmo \u2014 Normal.\nNo. 6 Nelway-Vernon \u2014 Nelway-\nNelson-South Slocan normal. South\nSlocan-Nakusp-Needles fair, rough\nsections. Needles-Monashee-Cherry-\n'ville closed.\nNo. 95 Kingsgate - Cranbrook -\nGolden \u2014 Open to light traffic only\nParson to Splllamacheen.\nBanff-Windermere and Nelson-\nKaslo \u2014 Fair.\nKaslo-New Denver \u2014 Fair, rough\nsections.\nKaslo-Lardeau and Lardeau-Ger-\nrard \u2014 Fair..\nFor All   Your  Bakinq  Needs fry\nELLISON'S\nVITAMIN B FLOUR\nThe   flavor  is  right.  On   Sale  at\nYour Grocers or   Phone  238 '\nELLISON MILLING\n&  ELEVATOR  CO.  LTD.\nDon't Miss This\nA Clearance of\n3000 RECORDS\nCLASSICS, SEMI-CLASSICS, and MODERNS\nTo Suit Every Mood and Occasion by\nDecca, Columbia, RCA and Others\nGROUP 1.\n78 R.P.M. records, featuring popular selections. Popular artists and labels.\n10 inch. Each . 5 , ,\t\n9\nGROUP 2.\nYour favorite selections, 78 R.P.M., 10-\ninch. Familiar recording IO*\nartists and groups. Each __*_      I <F\nGROUP 4.\nPopular, semi-classical and standard favorites on long-play records, 33 1\/3 and\n78 R.P.M. Up to 8 selections \/| CV\non records. Each \t\n49*\nGROUP 3.\n10-inch, 78 R.P.M. records, featuring\nsuch artists as Mills Brothers, *iQi>\nElla Fitzgerald, etc. Each  dm*\nGROUP 5.\nChildren's records, stories, songs and\npopular music. 10-inch, extended play\n(up to 10 minutes), 33 1\/3. 3Qfc\nEach    _      3>\nBe Early and Select Your Favorites\nYour Best Buy in Appliances\nEATON'S Ojkmg.\nSold Only at EATON'S\nOikintj. 1955\nREFRIGERATOR\n.. . the deluxe refrigerator made and serviced in Canada! Its big, 9 cu. ft. interior is\nplanned for full-capacity food storage . . .\n\" has a full width freezer chest and porcelain\nenamelled crisper.\nEATON Price,\neach    \t\n29.00 Down, aa low aa 13.00 monthly\n7.6 Cu  Ft.\nVIKING.   \t\n279\nthly\n*239\nUikinip 15 Cu. Ft\nFREEZER\n.. . with storage capacity for about 525 Ibs.\nof frozen foods! Equipped with loading and\nstorage baskets . . . has automatic light on\ncontrol balance locking lid. Features 5 year\nwarranty en seal mechanism.\nRegular Price $369\nSALE\n$319\nT EATON C\u00b0\nCANADA\nNELSON\nr LIMITED\nBRANCH\nSTAR SAYINGS\nFEATURING\nBLUE BRAND BABY BEEF\nSteaks\nSIRLOIN, T-BONE, CLUB\nLb. 69'\nROUND BONE\nROAST\nBlue Beef\n  .  Lb. 39c\n'^^k&%0WMMF&fl     STANDING RIB\n:;y{ir^y Snort Cut' Blue Beef\nLb. 57c\nLEAN HAMBURGER Freshly ground   , , 3 .*. $1.00\nHOMADE SAUSAGE Fresh,H.c 3 it,. $ 1 00\nTASTY VEAL PATTIES Lb 45*\nFRICASEE FOWL S.tup' cell0.wraped:   ;  390\nFRESH HALIBUT SLICES iT\\ottheseason''I 45*\nProduce Department\nTomatoes\nFirm, Ripe, Field Grown, 14 oz. cello tube\n20C\nNew Cabbage   h^0Lf'solid 10*\nGreen Onions Local    2bchs  19*\nGOLDEN   RIPE\nBananas\n2 lbs 45c\nNew Potatoes ?Zl\u2122\u00a3 .34* Corn on Cob nom,2  cobs 25*\nAsparagus ~\u00a3b0D'tend\" 29* Watermelon *&?& Half \u00b0r 13*\nBroccoli \u00a3* green bunches'  25* \"Grapefruit \u00a3\u00b0nrkIda       2 its 29*\nCauliflower 1\u2122%\"\u00b0 25* Oranges   \u00a3\"->\u00bb\u2022 5 lbs 59^\nCarrots   ^..tCB% 2 tor 29* Apples l\u2122* \u00b0kan'   2 ,b, 33*\nSTRAWBERRIES . . . ARRIVING FRESH DAILY AT MARKET PRICE.\nGrocery Department\nCoffee T^l-  99*      Mozola OH?jf' 43*\nCoffee iX^r  59*      Shrimp ^t?.;  39*\nCoffee lCnhstanta4dozSainabr\u00b0rn        '1 .1 5 Sardines King Oscar    2 tins 49*\nTea Bags S\u2122 60's'        75* Corn Niblets %?.   2 tor 45*\nApricots ^t:ntLCh\u00b0ice 2 tor 49* Salmon \u2122s0cemKin8'      39*\nPeaches T^Sof\"^ 2 to 45* Pork and BeansL\u00b0z 2 tor 55*\nCorned Beef \u00a30nvdl; 490 Tomdro Juice L\u00b0z 2 to 37*\n* Star Grocery *\n488 BAKER ST. H. A. D. GREENWOOD PHONE 10\nNavy Announces\nNuclear Test\nWASHINGTON (AP) - The prospect that any atomic war will be\nfought partly in the ocean depths\nwas underlined Tuesday with word\nthat the navy has successfully tested a small nuclear device somewhere in the eastern Pacific*, The\nunderwater test presumably occurred some, hundreds of miles off the\nwest coast of the U. S. Officials indicated it was part of a drive to\n\u2022jerfect methods of killing submarines with atomic weapons.\nThe advent of a new dimension\nof atomic warfare was signalled in\na joint announcement from the defence department and the Atomic\nEnergy Commission:\n\"The underwater explosion of a\nsmall nuclear device in the eastern\nPacific Ocean has been successfully\ncompleted.\"\nThere have been numerous nuclear explosions on the land and\nin the air\u2014and one small underwater blast. However, the one now disclosed was clearly aimed at developing \u2022 a new pattern of combat\n:igainst submarines, scouVges in two\nworld wars.\nThe explosion took place against\niiie background of reports that Russia has builfup a fleet of about 375\nU-boats. While1 none of them is\nknown to be atomic powered\u2014the\nUSS Nautilus is believed to be\nalone in that field\u2014they constitute\nthe bulk of Red naval power. And\nfew doubt that sooner or later Russia will have A-subs.\nSIHIHIIIIIimillllllllllMIIIIUIMUnillE:\nLighter\nWORK\nSHIRTS\nSee these new work shirts.\nShort or long sleeves.\n\u2022 Seersuckers\n\u2022 Pinehecks\n\u2022 Bright Plaids\n$2,95\nUp\n= t>\nat\nI FMORY'C;  1\nI ^LTD. \u00b0 J\n|   \"THE MAN'S STORE\"    I\n7rimm1.mm1m.m11.m1m.iMi111.m7\nThe tapir, a sort of rhinoceros,\nis the largest land animal in South\nAmerican jungles.\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL  TRAINING\nMedical  Arts  Building\nSuite 206\nPhone 141\nKODAK CAMERAS\nHoliday Camera  3.60\nHoliday Flash Camera  6.90\nBrownie  Hawkeye   7.95\nBrownie   Six-20    9.40\nFlash Attachment! Available\nBring in Your\nDEVELOPING and\nPRINTING\nfor Finishing  Service\nCity Drug\n\"YOUR REXALL PHARMACY\"\n3 PIECE SUITE \u2014 WALNUT\n\u2022 Steel Slat Spring\n\u2022 Quality Spring-Filled\nMattress - .\n\u2022 2 Modern Lamps\n\u2022 2 Large Feather Pillowt\n\u2022 Chenille  Bedspread\n\u2022 Bedroom Rug\nRefurnish your bedroom with ttils smart group and Just\nfigure your savings! The bedroom suite Is modern In styling\nwith a handsome double dressed See this sensational buy\nnow!\n11 PIECES, ONLY\n_ $21950\nSterling\nHOME  FURNISHERS\n441  BAKER ST.\nPHONE 553\nTen foreign countries bought $61,-\n000 worth of Canadian paintings in\n1954.\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED and  REPAIRED\nRECORING\nJim's Radiator Shop\n616 FRONT ST. PHONE 63\nCAMPBELL, SHANKLAND\n& CO.\nChartered Accountants\n576 Baker St. Phone 286\nAuditors\n-        :  I\nHave the Jab Done Right\nVIC GRAVES\nLIMITED\nMASTER  PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nHAIGH\nTRU-ART\nBeauty   Salon\nPhone 327\nt>76 Baker Street\nTACKLE\nHOLIDAY\n> NEEDS\nSPINNING RODS \u2014 FLY RODS\nKIRBY JAP'D HOOKS \u2014 TREBLE HOOKS\nWET AND DRY FLYS TO GUT\nDOUBLE TAPER FLY LINES\nALL TYPES TROLLING LINES\nSPINNING REELS \u2014 FLY REELS\nLANDING NETS \u2014 GAFF HOOKS\nTtLESCOPE RODS \u2014 TROLLING RODS\nSNELLED GUT HOOKS \u2014 PERFECT GUT HOOKS\nQUALITY ENGLISH EYED DRY FLIES\nTORPEDO TAPER FLY LINES\nLEADERS AND LEADER MATERIAL\nAUTOMATIC REELS \u2014 TROLLING REELS\nFISH BASKETS \u2014 FLY BOOKS, ETC.\nCOLEMAN CAMP STOVES \u2014 COLEMAN PICNIC TABLE AND CHAIRS\nMAE WEST LIFE SAVERS \u2014 BOAT CUSHIONS \u2014 VEST TYPE LIFE JACKETS\nFor all your  holiday oportlno  needa\u2014Write,  phone  or call\nWood, Vallance Hardware Co. Ltd.\nPHONE 1530\nWHOLESALE - RETAIL\nNELSON, B. C\n\u25a0\u25a0. .\u25a0 .-. \u25a0. -   .\u25a0\u25a0;\u25a0 \u25a0\u2022'\u25a0;.\u25a0\u2022-)'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-.'.\nmmm\n","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"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.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType":[{"value":"Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial":[{"value":"Nelson (B.C.)","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier":[{"value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1955_05_19","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0429178","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language":[{"value":"English","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat":[{"value":"49.493333","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long":[{"value":"-117.295833","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider":[{"value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher":[{"value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Company, Limited","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights":[{"value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source":[{"value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title":[{"value":"Nelson Daily News","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type":[{"value":"Text","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description":[{"value":"","type":"literal","lang":"en"}]}}