{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0429288":{"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":"2023-03-28","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1956-04-24","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0429288\/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":" H-Bomb Warhead\nSay Trade Restrictions Won't Halt\nArms Manufacture; Urge Freer Trading\nBy RANALD MacLVRKIN\nBIRMINGHAM, Eng. (Reuters) \u2014 Nikita Khrushchev said Monday that although Russia could not buy\nstrategic materials from the West, she had built up her\nmilitary might to a point where she would be able to\ndrop guided missiles with hydrogen bomb warheads anywhere in the'world. \"   '\n\"The point I want to make is\nthat these restrictions of trade do\nnot prevent us in any way in making advances In our armaments,\"\nhe told a luncheon in Birmingham,\nwhere he and Russian Premier\nNikolai Bulganin had travelled by\nair from London. It was the sixth\nday of their 10-day tour.\n\"What is needed ls the development of real trade. It is only the\ndevelopment of wide-scale trade\nthat can really smooth the road\nto friendship \u2014 to real strong\nfriendship \u2014 between us.\"\nDiplomatic quarters, studying the\nspeech in the light of the Soviet\nleaders' current talks with Prime\nMinister Eden, though It indicated\nthat Britain is standing firmly by\n- the list of goods of potential military value which the West refuses to sell to the Communist\nworld.\nRESUME TALKS TODAY\nThe Britons are anxious to increase trade but take the line that\nit should start first in non-strategic\ngoods. The question will have a\nplace under the heading of \"Anglo-\nSoviet contacts\" when talks are returned here today, although the\nMiddle East still hopes tops the list\nef urgent problems.\nKhrushchev, speaking in Russian, claimed that so far Russia is\nthe only country to have exploded\nt hydrogen bomb from a plane.\nAll Not Well in\nSaudi Arabia\n\u2022 By William l. ryan\nLONDON (AP)\u2014There is a persistent report current In the Middle East that Saudi Arabia is\nbeading toward serious Internal\ntrouble.     -\nThe report ta^ordanj whose ruling Hashemfte^Hm'tly'*nas~*'beeri\nfeuding for many years with the\nSaudi rulers, is that the regime of\nKing Saud is beginning to fall\napart Some say Egypt's prime\nminister, Gamal Abdel Nasser, is\nextremely interested in the Saudi\nsituation and that Egypt has been\nencouraging dissident elements.\nAbout a month ago, these reports say, an underground group\ncalling itself the \"Free Saudis\"\nissued a manifesto of its intentions to fashion a social reform\nmovement in Saudi Arabia.\nPlans to undermine King Saud's\nregime would not have to be complicated because in his feudal\ncountry it would probably involve\nthe subversion of a relative handful of princes.\nHerridge Again\nAsks Pass Study\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014The Commons\npassed the government's Trans-\nCanada Highway bill after a CCF\nmember's final request for thorough study of an alternate route\nfor the highway through the Selkirk mountains in southeast British Columbia, Monday,\nH. W. Herridge, Kootenay West,\nurged a \"proper and adequate survey\" of the Jumbo Pass route. No\naction was taken on his request.\nThat .route is south of two other\nproposed routes between Golden\nand Revelstoke, B.C. \u2014 the Big\nBend, which follows the northward loop of the Columbia River,\nand the Rogers Pass which goes\nover mountains between the two\npoints.\nWorks Minister Winters indicat-J\ned last week that the B.C. government .likely will choose the Rogers\nPass route although it wants more\ntime to study the Jumbo route.\nMr. Herridge said the only study\nso far of the Jumbo route was a\nwalking reconnaissance by a provincial engineer.\nHe and other members asked\nlast week that a thorough survey\nbe made' of the route before a\nfinal decision is taken. ''_\"\n\"The minister of public works,\nHon, R. H. Winters, has Indicated\nthat a final decision on the route\nof the Trans-Canada Highway\nbetween Revelstoke and Mount\nElsenhower will not be made\nuntil the Jumbo Pass route has\nbeen thoroughly Investigated.\"\nThus stated H. W. Herridge,\nMP for kootenay West, In his\n\"report from Parliament Hill\"\ngiven over CKLN Monday night\n\"This Is the time for every\nInterested organization to press\nfor < thorough and' complete\nsurvey of this route,\" the member 'continued.\nNo Improvement in\nTot's Condition\nVICTORIA (CP) \u2014 Four-year-\nof Doreen Sanders, entered her\nsixth week of unconsciousness at\nhmospital here Monday.\nHospital authorities reported her\ncondition as \"unchanged.\"\nThe little girl was struck by a\ncar March 18. She underwent immediate brain surgery following\nthe accident and has never regained consciousness.\nNo RCAF Transport Planes on Hand\nFor Magnetometer Survey Work\nBy  DAVE  MclNTOSH\nCanadian Press 8taff Writer\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 The RCAF's\nbig shortage ol transport planes is\nshown no more clearly than in\nthe strange story of the airborne\nmagnetometer.\nThe department of mines and\ntechnical surveys spent five years\ndeveloping an airborne magnetometer, considered the best in the\nWestern world. Details of the device are still classed as secret.\nThe magnetometer would be\nused to improve magnetic sharts\nof Canada, thus aiding aerial nav\nIgatien, a matter of concern, of\ncourse, to the RCAF.\nBut the government now is in\nthe position of not having a single\nplane available in which to carry\nthe airborne magnetometer, which\ncan also indicate promising areas\nfor more detailed mining surveys\non the ground.\nCommercial operators haven't\nany planes available, either, because they're all tied up on the\nnorthern radar lines airlift.\nThe RCAF last summer and the\nsummer before loaned a' North\nStar transport to the mines department some magnetometer flights.\nThis plane was the former \"flying\nlaboratory\" used.by the National\nResearch Council for de-icing experiments.\nBut the air force told the mines\ndepartment it couldn't loan the\nplane this year because of heavy\ntransport commitments. After all\nthat, the plane was destroyed in\nthe recent 'RCAF hangar fire at\nDorval, Que.\nUsing the airborne magnetometer would be cheaper, officials\nsaid, than sending out field parties The magnetometer would also\nprovide better coverage.\nB.C. Prison Staffs\nGet Pay Hike\nVICTORIA (CP) \u2014 Salary increase for the staffs of B.C. prisons\nwere approved Monday, by the\nprovincial cabinet.\nIncreases ranging from five to*\n12 per cent were approved for all\nclassifications.\nThe boosts are retroactive to\nApril 1, They are in line with the\nrecent increasee granted in the\nCivil Service.\nPay of the average guard will be\nincreased about $12 a month by\nthe government action.\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKootenay: Sunny with a feijr'\".\ncloudy periods Tuesday; A little\ncooler. Windsf light, becoming-\nNorth 15 in afternoon. Low and \u25a0\nhigh at Cranbrook, 32 and 60;- \u25a0;\nCrescent Valley, 35 and 80.\nVol, 55\n* Why&. V ' NELSON\/ Bi C, CANADA-TUESDAY MORNING, APRIL 24, 1956\ni Costs Waaes\nNot More Then 6e Dally,  10c Saturday\nNo. 2\nRivers Steacjy But\nCrests Awaited\nWINNIPEG (CP) \u2014 The swollen Red River remained steady at\nWinnipeg Monday, but there was\nno let-up in emergency .construction to raise major dikes to meet\nthe threat of flood^waters expected to top present dike levels by\nMay 7. The Red's level late Mbn:\nday stood at 18.8 feet above the\nnormal winter ice level, unchanged since 11 p.m., Sunday night.\nDuring the disastrous 1950 flood,\nthe level on the Red-on April 23\nwas 20.5 feet.\nThe May 7 crest\u2014ranging from\n27 to 30 feet\u2014is expected to bring\na peak six inches above the top\nUnemployment\nFigures Lower\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Employment\nbetween mid-February and, mid-\nMarch rose modestly and unemployment showed its first decline\nsince last August, the government\nreported Monday.\nThe numHtr of persons with jobs\nrose 25,000 to 5,241,000 from the\nprevious month's 5,216,000. The\nfigure also was 242,000 above the\n4,899,000 with jobs a year ago.\nThe number of persons without\njobs and seeking work was an estimated 205,000, a decline ol 13,000\nfrom 308,000 a month earlier and\n106,000 below the March, 1955,\ntotal, a joint statement by the\nlabor .department and bureaii of\nstatisttcs\"showed; ' .\nCONSTITUTIONAL\nCASE BEFORE\nS. AFRICA COURTS\n*     By ASTLEY HAWK\u00bbNB\nCAPETOWN (Reuters) \u2014 South\nAfrica's courts today start considering a constitutional case vital\nenough to upset all the work of\nIhe present session of Parliament.\nTo be decided is the opposition\nUnited Party's challenge of the\nvalidity of the Nationalist govern\nment's recent Senate Act. This act\nIncreased the government's representation in the Senate to enable\nit to get a two-thirds majority in\nboth Houses pf Parliament combined,  .\nFollowing the new setup, the\ngovernment in February passed\nlegislation transferring colored\npeople of mixed race in Cape\nprovince from their traditional\nplace with whites on common\nvoters' lists to separate \"segregated\" lists which gives them only\n\"comniunal representation\" in Par\nliament by white members.\nDonates $1000 To\nLittle Theatre Group\nVICTORIA (CP) - The B.C.\nentry in the Dominion Drama\nFestival at Sherbrooke, Que. next\nmonth Monday received a $1000\ngift from the provincial cabinet.\nThe cabinet approved the grant\nto. assist the Vancouver Little\nTheatre Association's presentation\nof \"Darkness At Noon,\" following\na request from the Association and\nthe B.C. regional committee of the\nDominion Drama Festival.\nThree Sentenced on\nNarcotics Charges\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014Two men\narid rwoman were sentenced on\nMonday to a total of 37 years in\nprison after being found guilty by\nMagistrate Oscar Orr of possessing\nnarcotics for the purpose of trafficking.\nVictor Hansen, 25, was sentenced to 14 years. David Crnec, 25,\nwas given 13 years and 23-year-old\nMrs. Carol Talbot was sentenced\nto 10 years.\nHansen, who admitted trafficking in drugs had pleaded for the\nlash and a short sentence.\nDuring the trial, almost 20 RCMP Narcotics Squad officers testified about operations of the narcotics ring. Police found. 40 heroin\ncapsules ta, caches throughout\nSouth Vancouver.\nof the major dikes. In 1950, the\npeak on the Red river was 30.3\nfeet\nWeather 'forecasts of continued\ncool, dry nights across southern\nManitoba found favor with members of the m-ovlnclal flood forecasting committee, who tpured\nthe Assiniboine river route by air\nas far west as Brandon Monday.\nThey reported later there was\n\"substantial\"\" snow on fields west\nof Portage 'ia Prairie, 58 miles\nwest of here.\nA big ice jam eight miles east\nof Portage 1 which had backed\nwater over hundreds of acres of\nfarm lands, during the weekend\nbroke during the afternoon, sending new torrents over banks down\nstream.\nOne official said the present\ncool, dry weather was beneficial\nin the fight.'against high water.\nSudden high temperatures \"would\nbe bad,\" he said.\n'Residents of Portage la Prairie\nwere not relaxing either, despite\na two-inch drop in the Assiniboine at the city's pumping station. They felt the first still was\nto come.\nSingapore Fate\nUnderStudy\nBy ROBERT RICE\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nLONDON (CP)\u2014With the outcome in doubt,' Colonial Secretary\nAlan Lennox - Boyd Monday\nlaunched another round of constitutional talks with yet another\ncolony.\nThe.tricky future,of Singapore,\nwealthy island port and key British fortress in-'Southeast Asia, was\nthe subject. But a fear of possible\nfailure, and of the dangers this\nwould create in volatile Singapore,\nseemed more noticeable than a\nhope of success.\n' David Marshall, 48-year-old\nchief minister of Singapore's first\nministerial government, leads an\nall - party \"merdeka\" (freedom)\nmission that seeks independence\nfor the colony that received its\nfirst constitution only a year ago\nMonday. t\nThe conference, expected to run\ninto the second week of May,\nopened in Lancastef\"House, where\njust two months ago Caribbean\nleaders agreed on federation and\nMalayan leaders on independence.\nCouple Stop at\nPollensa Bay\nPOLLENSA, Majorca (Reuters)\n\u2014Prince Rainier of Monaco and\nhis American princess came ' a\nshore from their honeymoon\nyacht today and set off- to explore the craggy, pine-clad For-\nmentor peninsula in a horse-\ndrawn carriage.\nPrince Rainier said he and his\nbride might stay several days\nmore in Pollensa Bay on the\nyacht.\nThe 32-year-old prince said he\nplanned to build a house at Form\nentor because he and \u2022 his wife\nloved the peninsula, off Pollensa\nBay.\nMill Rate 38, 2 More Than 1955;\nCouncil Sets $IW Million Budget\nCity Council Monday night set the 1956 mill rate\nat 38 mills and brought down a $1,373,726 budget for the\nyear. At the present assessment structure the 38 mills is\nan increase of two mills over last year and a reflection of\nincreased costs for schools and higher wages for most\ncivic employees.\ni,. \"There is no other way to maintain our many excellent facilities and provide some funds for progress\nyear by year,\" Finance Chairman Alderman Arthur Foster\nsaid in announcing the increased mil] rate. \"Your council\nis as proud of Nelson as you are and we hope with' your\nhelp \"to uphold Nelson as a progressive community.\"\nMajor expenditures budgeted for are public works,\n$126,150; education, $165,557.20; electrical department,\n$332,265; hydro plant, $126,516.50.\nTwelve per cent of the tax dollar will go to debt\nreduction, 46 per cent to general purposes and 42 per cent\nto schools. Last year' 20 per cent went to debt, 46 per cent\nto general purposes and 34\nper cent to schools,\nAlderman Foster, in presenting\nthe balanced budget to council,\nexplained: \/\nFor 1965 the mill rate was set\nat 44. mills, being 8.769 mills, for\ndebt, 20.28 mills for general purposes and 14.951 mills for schools.\nSince then there has been a general re-assessment of the residential area for land and. improvements, and of the land in the business district.\n\"This was done under the Assessment Equalization Act of the\nprovincial government, by which\nsuch re-assessment -is to be done\nwithin four years, by all municipalities and by the government ln\nthe outside areas. There have been\nsome changes in the assessments,\ngenerally upwards, and with new\nproperties coming onto the tax roll\nthe'value of land and improvements has increased. To make a\ncomparison, 36 mills on the new\nassessment would bring approximately, the same amount' of rev-\n\"We have had to provide for an\nover-all wage increase of approximately five per cent across the\nboard for the Federation of Civic\nEmployees and members of the\nElectricians Union,\" Alderman\nFoster continued. \"This means a\nconsiderable increase in our labor\ncosts, as wages are a major portion of our expenditures,\"\nThe estimates In many respects\nclosely parallel last year's but\nthere are some the finance chairman felt should be mentioned especially.\nSAFETY BUDGET\n\"In the Electric Lrepartment we\nfeel that we can safely budget for\nan increase in the receipts, as\nthere has been a constant rise in\nelectric light revenue from month\nt.0 monthj as compared with the\nprevious year,\" he said. .\"The electric -department is a very active\none, and one in which equipment\nand supplies are costly. There is\na great need for'the replacement\nof \u2022poles,, changes in wiring and\nyear;\n\"The city's budget for 1956 is\nover 1 1\/3 million dollars, which\nis a great credit to the community\nand shows constant progress.'\nThe estimates on which the'work\nfor 1956 is planned are as follows;\nEstimated   Estimated\nRevenue Expenditures\nGeneral\n.government 300,505 75,905\nReal\n17,300\n62,291\n44,754\n126,150\n34,833\nJ,\n34,960\n16,070\n35,780\n56,7.6:\n32,938\n10,500\n27,705\n7,616\n3,200\n165,557\nproperty -..\n1,100\nFire dept\n5,500\nPolice dept\n23,837\nPublic\nworks ......\n13,350\nGarage\t\n18,000\nPlumbing ..\nk    170\nScavenging\n100\nCemetery .\n5,200\nHealth \t\nSocial\nWelfare ...\n33,700\nCivic Centre\nLibrary \t\n975\nParks \t\n915\nRecreation\nCouncil ...\nWeigh scales\n2,750\nDebt levy ..\n43,609\nEducation _\n165,557\nElectric   !\ndept\t\n591,058\nHydro plant\n2,250\nGas plant\n45,730\nTransit\nsystem \t\n37,120\nWater dept.\n75,300\nSurplus \t\n7,000\n12fJ,516\n50,05b\n45,400\n63,537\n$1,373,726        $1,873,726\nenue that 44 mills brought last^SK^V\"\"*   tramforniers.\nvMrv': . -   .;' - - JetbriMe equipment required for\nthe extensions at No. 2 substation\nand No. 3 substation slated for\nthis year will cost $91,000,\" the\nalderman explained. \"Last year\nthe estimated expenditure for the\ndepartment was $223,786 but this\nyear it has been set at $332,265,\nan increase of over $100,000. This\nwas agreed on as it was felt that\nwith all the department has t6\naccomplish we should provide\nmore out of the revenue of the department for its own maintenance.\nIt is felt that it is better to provide these monies out of revenue\nrather thap submit a bylaw, he\nsaid.\nBUSY YEAR\nA busy year was ' anticipated\nwith the public works projects of\nstreets and sidewalks provided\nfor by bylaw. An average maintenance program is also expected.\n\"We have cut the public works\nestimate by $88,000 from last\nyear's figure in view of the fact\nthat the streets and sidewalks\nwork lergely would be provided\nby the bylaws, Alderman Foster\nexplained,\nSchool costs have' advanced by\nabout $40,000, which would represent just about four mills under\nthe new assessment structure as\none mill for school purposes\nbrings $10,316.\n\"We have outlined the work of\nthe other departments in the estimates to carry a year's program\nsomewhat similar to last year, although' there are a few variations\nNEW YORK (CP) \u2014Canadian\ndollar was 3-32 higher at sr premium of 7-16 per cent in terms of\nU. S. funds Monday. Pound sterling up 3-32 of a cent at $2.81.\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014. The-U.S.\ndollar Monday closed at a discount\nof 7-16 per cent in terms of Canadian funds, down 3-32. It took 9!\n9-16, cents Canadian to buy $1\nAmerican. Pound sterling $2.79%,\ndown 3-16.\nEarth Links Man\nWith Death Scene\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 One of\ntwo men charged with murder in\nthe fatal 'shooting Dec. 7 of a city\npoliceman was linked with the\ndeath scene here Monday by\nspecimen of earth.\nCity analist Edwin 'Fennell testified soil from the spot where Constable Gordon Sinclair was shot\nwas \"very similar\"-to Vaa\\ found\non the shoes and pants of Joe\nGordon. \u25a0\nJames Carey, 26, and Gordon, 34,\nare charged jointly with the murder. The testimony -crime on the\n11th- day of the trail'and Fennell\nwas the crown's 37th witness.\nThe analyst also compared three\nsmall leaves taken from Gordon's\nshoes with leaves on the ground\nwhere the murder gun \u2014a ,\ncalibre pistol\u2014 was found.\nALDERMAN  ARTHUR  FOSTER\n. . . finance committee chairman brings in $1,373,726 balanced budget.\neither up or down for both estimated revenue and estimated expenditure,\" the \u2022 alderman said.\nThe tax levies for general purposes and for debt are based on a\nvaluation of $9,821,880, being 100\nper cent on land and 75 per cent\non improvements,' so tHatrone'jnlll\nWill bring-$9822. ,    -. - \u2022\nBanks|ais&^\nLoairlnfereif~\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 The Canadian chartered.. banks Monday\nraised Interestiirtej for morf'losrjs\nby\" oneJsaitof'tine'-pw eegtt   J,\nThe prime commercial rate, the\nminimum interest, was increased\nto five per cent from ift.. All\nother -rates up to six per cent\nwere Increased by. the, same\namount The chartered banks are\nprevented byi federal government\nlaw from chafging more than six-\nper cent interest.\nA spokesman \u25a0 for \u25a0 the poyal\nBank of, Canada here said the reason for the increases, was a series\nof increases in the'rate of the\nBank of Canada. The central bank\nhad been increasing its rate, to\nbanks for some time and recently\nraised it to a high of three per\ncent.\nHe' said the holders -of, demand\nloans, the bulk of loans, which\nhave no maturity date, will Receive notification that their interest rate has been increased. The\ninterest on time loans, loans'which\nhave a specified maturity.'date,\nwould remain the same until date\nof maturity.        \t\niHiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiii\nAnglers'Service\nHeld on Lake Shoi*\nEPHRATA, Wash. CAP) -;t\nWhen ihe Rev, Stlno Douglas\nReckoned * flock of fishermen v;\nwouldn't be oomlng to, church' ~\nSunday, he took church services to the fishermen. .\nThe pastor of Ephrata's first-- -.\nPresbyterian  Churoh  held 7'-'.V\na.m. services for opening Day\nAnglers on the shore pf Blue.\nLake, with some of the boats\nserving at floating pews.\nIncidentally, the lake provided the state's best opening\nday fishing with 7500 Anglert\ntaking about 90,000 trout from\nthe 540-aore lake,   .   4\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nScrap Mars\nLabor Meet\nTORONTO (OP)\u2014The weddinj\nof Canada's two largest labor con-\nguesses started off Monday with \u00bb\nstiff scrap.\nVeteran union chief A. R. Mosher had to threaten to walk out of\nthe founding convention of the\nCanadian Labor_ Congress before\nrebelling rank-and-file delegates\nsubsided and accepted leadership\nproposals on terms of the CLC's\nfirst convention.\nThe convention bringing\ntogether Mosher's Canadian Congress of Labor and the Trades end\nLabor Congress oUSmmia into a\n1,000,000-member body lost- nuleh\nof its amity for about 90 minutes\nof the opening day as delegates\nchallenged the leaders. But eventually harmony returned. ,\u25a0..\n..The tussle devekepesbo-ver a flat\ndeclaration from the TLC-CCL\nleaders\u2014now working jointly\u2014-\nthat the 1600-man eonvention mutt\naccept without question 22 sections\nof.\u00bb draft constitution . already\nspeed upon among the leaders, i\n,,;Elisor'; .dfljtfiaiilt'-Mesaeirmi\nstrongIj^-fbu(( \u2022 utislieeettsfully\u2014for\na chance to debate and possibly\nchange these clauses, already endorsed in general terms last year\nby, separate TOL and CCL convention.' ' '\u2022\u25a0 t...-.-. '...-.\n'\nOttawa Announces\nHealth Grants\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014Federal grants\ntotalling $94,543 were announced,\non Monday by the health department.\nThe Universities of Toronto and\nWestern Ontario will receive\ngrants totalling $61,543 for new\nmental health research projects.\nManitoba will receive $26,300 to\nassist In construction of a central\nlaboratory for the province to be\nbuilt as an addition to the existing medical college building adjoining the Winnipeg General\nHospital.\nA grant'of $6700 will be used to\nhelp provide for a uniform blood\ntransfusion service in Winnipeg\nfor babies suffering blood diseases of the newborn.\nDismiss Appeal\n' WINNIPEG (CP)' \u2014.Five judges\nof. the Manitoba Court;tff Appeal\nMonday unanimously dismissed\nthe appeal of three.Quebec youths,\nsentenced to be hanged for the\nmurder of a Roman Catholic priest\nnear Brandon in January 1955. ..-.\nThe youths\u2014Guy Ferragne, 19,\nof Riviere des Prairies, Que.; Gerard Yvon de Tonnancourt 18, and\nClaude Paquin, 18 both of Montreal\u2014were not in court when the\njudgment was delivered. They are\nbeing held in Headinglcy jail\nwhere they are scheduled to be\nhanged May 29.' -.v.:\nTh8 victim, Rev. Alfred Quirion,\n43, was known to his parishioners\nin St. Edouard, Alta., as the \"penniless priest\" because .they .said he\nwas in the habit of giving away\nmost of nis money. He -was shot\nand robbed of $90.The youths were\narrested in a Brandon railway station. \u2022\u25a0'.'.   :\nSalk Vaccine for\nOkanagan Children\nKELOWNA (CP) \u2014 More than\n1100 children starting school this\nFall will receive salk anti-polio\nshots during the next 10 days, Dr.\nD. A. Clarke, medical health officer for the South Okanagan Health\nUnit, announced today.\nThe salk vaccine arrived during\nthe week-end. and the first of the\nshots were given to Kelowna and\ndistrict pre-school children this\nmorning. \u2022,.\nwith SPRINQ RUNOFF, riven-.-an rising\nthroughout Kootenays- as muddy water tumbles\ndown creek courses, and low-lying lands become\nminiature lakes. This picture was taken at Fruit-\nvale, where Beaver Creek which flows through\nthe. village laps around this house, Legion hall\nIs also partially surrounded by water.\n\u2014Dally News photo.\nAnd in This Corner...\nMONTREAL (CP)\u2014Tony Amato, 29, remembered to bring a\nring Saturday and was married In a peaceful ceremony under the\nwatchful eyes of five brothers-in-law.\nThe wedding had been scheduled for last Tuesday but was\npostponed when the bridegroom fled minutes before the ceremony\nafter suffering a black eye and a bruised nose for forgetting the\nbride's ring. ,\nHowever, all was quiet at Notre Dame de la Ccnsolata Church\n.Saturday as Alberto de Petrlllo, 27, one of the bride's brothers, was\nheld on $300 bail on a charge of assaulting Amato, Trial was set\nfor. Thursday.\nLIVERPOOL (Reuters')\u2014The last five minutes of Private Bill\nSmith's two years'1 army service ticked away and he had all the\ndocuments and signatures needed to walk out into civilian life\nbut one. \u00bb\u00bb'\u25a0\u25a0.%\n\"Get your hair cut first,\" said an officer responsible for signing\nthe papers.\nNo camp barber was around. So Bill, a 26-year-old army cook,\nput his wavy brown hair at the mercy of a military policeman, who\nborrowed clippers and worked methodically\u2014four inches up the\nsides, three inches up the back, nothing off the top.-  -'\u25a0\u2022-   .  .\n. \"I looked like a bald man wearing a Davy Crockett cap,\" Smith\nexplained.\nNow he can't leave home to look for a job. He has ventured\nout once\u2014to meet his local .Labor member of Parliament, Mrs-\nBessie Braddock.\nMrs. Braddock, armed with photographs, will raise the issue in\nthe House of Cam..i\u201e.iu. ;> . '.*\"\u25a0\u25a0\n. .\u25a0\"'\u25a0' \u25a0 \u25a0. .'\u201e\u25a0 \u25a0..-.\u25a0\u2022.-.',. iK-tJ,-.'--.-',':''\nmmmmm\n\u2022-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0   '\t\n  ,\t\n.  \u2022\n^PP(   , ^  .^HJP^Pfl^p\n2\u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, APRIL 24, 1956\nSEVEN\nCITIES\nofGOLD\nCiNemaScoPE:\nCOLOR bt DELUXE \u25a0 StereoL '\u25a0omc bound\nRICHARD ANTHONY JEFFREY\nEGAN  QUINN HUNTER\n^mpjr\nTODAY\n7:00-9:00\n1^\ntkdt\nSTARLIGHT\nDrive-In\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\nShows at 7:30 p.m. and 9:00 p.m\n\"AMERICANO\"\n(TECHNICOLOR)\nGlenn Ford, Frank Lovejoy,.\nCaesar Romero, Abble Lalne\nAUTO-VUE\nTrall-Frultvale  Highway\nShows at 6:45 p.m. and 9:00 p.m\nSHOWING\nTONIGHT and WEDNE8DAY\nWalt Disney's\n\"Lady and the Tramp\"\n\"Switzerland\" and Cartoon\nLome McRory\nWins Roadeo\n.Lome MeRory, son of Mr. and\nMrs. K. McRory, North Shore, will\nrepresent Nelson in the British\nColumbia finals of the Junior\nChamber of Commerce Roadeo for\nteen-agers.\n' He won first place in trials conducted at Nelson Saturday, chairman Douglas Brown announced.\nPeter Relkoff was second and Don\nMoGilUvary third. It was late\nMonday night before the Jaycees\ncompleted tabulstion of marks.\n! The marking system is used\nacross Canada, the possible score\nbeing SOO. Marks are deducted for\neach demerit for wrong moves.\nScores of the 17 entrants were not\ngiven.\nThe Jaycees plan to set up the\ncourse used at the Civic grounds\nSaturday to enable the winner to\npractice before going to Vancouver. The Nelson drivers were trying out for the first time, while\nteen-age drivers In the bigger\ncities are accustomed to the tests,\nJaycees said. '\nThe event' was deemed quite\nsuccessful in its first year here\nand its sponsors felt the next one\nwould be \"bigger and better\" to\nhelp further the campaign to encourage safer driving among teenagers.\nPractice Shot Backfires\nOne of the shots a youth was\npractice-firing on the city airstrip\nSunday morning came back at him\non Monday.\nPolice charged 19-year-old Edward Bayoff of Nelson with firing\na 22-rifle inside city limits without\na' permit. He pleaded guilty before Magistrate R. S. Nelson and\npaid a $15 fine and costs.\nFOR WOMEN\nEarly American\nOLD SPICE\nStick Deodorant\nNew, Pleasant Protection (\nNow Selling at $1.25\nNelson\nPharmacy\n\"Your Fortress of Health\"\n433 Josephine St.\nPhone 1203       Nights: 394-L\nllllllllllillllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllll\nPhone 889\nFOR\nTOWLER\nFUEL & TRANSFER\niYntmilllllNllllllllil.lllllllllllllll.il\n**********************m\nCASTLE THEATRE\nCastiegar, B.C.\nLAST TIME8 TONIGHT\nShows at 7:00 p.m. and 9:00 p.m.\n\"Six Bridget to Cross\"\nGeorge  Nader  \u25a0 Tony Curtis\nJaycees Plan\nCars for Vole\nNelson Junior Chamber of Commerce will again \u25a0 provide transportation for voters in Nelson's\nmoney bylaw Friday, lt was announced Monday.\nThe Jaycees have taken on this\ntask in Nelson elections for some\nyears in efforts to promote more\npublic interest in civic affairs.\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIII\nNELSON GETS\nB.C. PUBLICITY\nNelson catches attention in\nthe B. C. Government Travel\nBureau's \"Calendar of Events\"\npublished recently.\nIn the 18-page folder, a page\nIs devoted to Nelson's Mid-\nSummer Bonspiel.   ,\nThe cslendar of events is a\nsmart color job, and lists major entertainments, scheduled\nin B. C. this summer* and fall.\n\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0I IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIII\nTrail Audience\nEnjoys Baritone\nTRAIL \u2014 Concluding presentation of the 1955-56 Trail Celebrity\nConcert series was enjoyed by a\ncapacity audience at Trail Junior\nHigh School Audftorium Monday\nnight.\nBaritone Norman Farrow, ac-\"\ncompanied by his wife, Dorthea\nDehm Farrow, was well received\nby an audience which was generous with their applause. The artists, ln turn, were generous with\nencores.\nThe Regina-born artist, who now\nlives.at London, Ontario, presented\nwith distinction Beethoven, Bach\nand Handel compositions as well\nas Schubert, Brahms and Wolfe.\nFour gambling songs were also\nwell received and demonstrated\nMr. Farrow's versatility.\nMany Questions\nAnswered on\nBylaw Forum\nQuestions of financing, program\nsetups and plans for the old post\noffice building were among the\nmany questions answered Monday\nnight as the Nelson Chamber of\nCommerce conducted its first of\ntwo radio forums on the six money\nbylaws to be voted on here Friday.\nRatepayers\u2014who will cast ballots on bylaws for funds to provide\nstreet paving, storm sewers, sidewalks, equipment and Civic Centre\nimprovements\u2014kept up a steady\nbarrage of questions. Answering\nwere Mayor Joseph Kary, Alderman Clare F. Blakeman and City\nEngineer C. Quentin Lake, while\nDr. T. H. Bourque, chairman of\nthe Chamber of Commerce's civic\naffairs committee, conducted the\nforum. He was assisted by M. B.\nRyalls and A. K. McAdams, while\nmaster of ceremonies was Earl\nWarren.\nSecond forum will be heard over\nCKL.N at 9 p.m. tonight, and the\nentire City Council will be present\nto answer queries.\nLetting of contracts, not for\nstorm sewers or streets, but for\nsidewalks and curbs, was described by Mr. Lake, while the financial structure of the city, affected\n\"not at all\" by passage of all six\nbylaws, was outlined by Aid,\nBlakeman.\nThe post office, if found by\narchitects unsuitable for use as a\ncity hall, would serve in many\ncapacities, Mayor Kary explained\nin answer'to another query. City\nmust provide for administration\noffices, police department, .and\nperhaps a public library, and had\nto take all these into consideration when going over the building.\nStreet equipment, which would\nbe purchased through an $80,000\nbyla,w. would both hasten and\nmake less expensive the extensive\nstreet and sidewalk programs, Mr.\nLake said. Tenders would probably be called for some sidewalk\nand curb work, but city crews,\n\"because of experience\" would do\nthe street and sewer jobs. He estimated four to six years for completion of the streets, two to three\nfor sidewalks and storm sewers.\nBylaws were to be voted 'on\nseparately, it was stressed, and\nvoting would go on Friday from\n8 a.m. to 8 p.m. at polls in the\nold  post office  building.\nFUNERAL HELD\nFOR W. WILDE\nFuneral services for the late\nWilliam Wilde, 84, of Salmo were\nconducted Saturday at Thompson\nFuneral Home by Very Rev. T. L.\nLeadbeater. Mr. Wilde died Monday at Pearson Hospital In Vancouver.\nHymns sung were \"Blest Be The\nTie That Binds\" and \"Abide With\nMe\". Mrs. W. A. Manson was organist. There were many floral\ntributes.\nPallbearers werev Douglas Gibbon, Ernest Stenvall, Victor Starn-\nberg, Christian Hansen, Frank\nRotter and Archie Gray, with interment in Nelson Memorial Park\nAccident\nHospitalizes\nPedestrian\nDoris Kalmakoff of Shoreacres\nwas taken to Kootenay Lake Gen-!\neral Hospital Monday after being\ninvolved in a car-pedestrian ac-i\ncident at Shoreacres. Her condition was \"fairly good\", but extent of her injuries had not yet\nbeen determined, her doctor said\nMonday night.\nThe young woman, who was\nplanning to board the Greyhound\nbus at Shoreacres, was going from\nthe bus to the store to purchase a\nticket, and was allegedly hit by a\npassing car driven by G. Goucher\nof Nelson. She was brought to\nNelson by ambulance,\nRCMP are continuing investigation.\nPTA fro Elecfr\nOfficers Wednesday\nElection of officers will take\nplace at April meeting of Nelson\nJunior-Senior High School Parent-Teacher Association Wednesday night.\nReport of the recent PTA provincial convention will'be heard\nand a social evening will follow.\nPays $200 Fine\nDriver of a car that struck Robert Leeming's parked car and\nbrushed a fence and a propane'\ngas tank at 1404 Front Street paid\na $200 fine and costs in city court\nMonday for driving while his\nability was impaired by alcohol.\nHe also took out a stop sign at the\nAnderson-Front .Street intersection.\nDale Charles VanRuyskensvelde\nof Nelson pleaded guilty to the\ncharge before Magistrate R. S.\nNelson. Both vehicles were extensively damaged. Offence qc-\ncurred on An'derson Street.\nOdds...\n\u25a0W Ends\n.... by M.D. B.\nDown to the teenagers roadeo\nSaturday and some of the comments from the stands gave'me\nquite a chuckle. One or two were\nheard to say \"he ought to do this\nor that\" then adding sheepishly,\n\"but I probably couldn't do as\nwell If I were down there.\" I\ndon't think there were many drivers among the crowd who weren't\njust itching to have a go*at that\nobstacle course. Someone suggested it would be a good thing to\nleave it set up so people could\npractice on it.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nForsythias are sapping forth in\ntheir yellow lace\u2014the one in\nChapman's yard on the corner of\nNelson Avenue and Behnsen is\nwell  advanced and pretty ,as a\npicture.\n*'   *   *\nSaw Ernie Steele up town the\nother day and It had been so long\nsince I'd seen him that I thought\nhe must surely have moved from\nNelson. However, he informed me\nhe was still very much at home in\nNelson at his home on Second\nStreet. Mr. Steele used to be a\nfamiliar figure on Nelson's highways and byways, it used to be\nthat wherever you saw the B. C.\nTelephone truck, you'd see Mr.\nSteele   nearby.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u00ab \u25a0\nThe words Federal Building\nhave been replaced by *'The Gray\nBuilding\" on the new post office.\n\u2022 *    *\n1 sometimes amuse myself trying to piece together the stories\nbehind some of the Classified ads\nand one the other day seemed to\nfell its story pretty plainly. It\nwent something like this: 'Car for\nsale\u2014so much down and take over\npayments.' There, I thought, was\nsome poor soul who bit off more\nthan he could chew.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nAfter watching the light-hearted young male population swinging and leap-frogging on the\nparking meters, have ' decided\nperhaps they're' worth it after\nall\u2014the parking meters, I mean.\n\u2022 *   *\nAs you must know, I live near\na school and here I find an endless source of material for this\ncolumn. Since we all went to\nschool at one time or another, I\nimagine what interests jne about\nschools must surely itriij \u00bbn answering chord in others.\nTbdaly, seeing a couple of the\nyoungsters out cleaning the chalk\nfrom brushes, was moved to remember what a privilege it was\nconsidered to be able to do things\nfor the teacher. To stay after\nschool and clean the boards water\nplants, or other little odd jobs.\nIf it was a teacher we particularly liked this nearness to the\nidol of our affection was sheer\nbliss. We would try our awkward\nwings of conversation, seek an,\nopportunity to share our deepest\nsecrets \u2014 anything that would ]\nmake her take an interest in us,,\nlonging the while*'to be interest-!\ning enough that she might beftay\nsome extra fancy for us especially.\nNo amorous young swain ever\ncourted his lady love with more\nawkward sincerity or such blind\ndevotion than did we pre-teeners\nwho had a crush on the teacher.\nTo her went the loveliest valentine, the choicest flowers we could\nsnitch on the way to school\u2014she\nwas worth it, the rosiest apple and\nthe daintiest handkerchief at\nChristmas, Don't you remember?\nBusinessman\nA. R Banks\nDies al 5|\nALD. FOSTER INDICATES . ..\nBylaw Program Takes Into\nAccount Loan Retirement\nA.  M. BANKS\nAnthony Malcolm Banks, 51,\nwell-known Nelson businessman\nand \/Jorth Shore \u2022 resident, died\nMonday morning in Kootenay\nLake General Hospital.\nBorn in Farnham, Quebec, Mr.\nBanks came to Nelson in 1927, and\nhad made his home at Willow\nPoint for the last eight years. He\nwas branch manager for Canadian\nIngersoll Rand, the company for\nwhich he had worked for the last\n30 years.\nHe was a member of the Canadian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy.\nA member of the board of directors of Kootenay Lake General\nHospital since 1952, he was elected\nto the executive committee late\nlast year. He was extremely active\nin organization of the Kootenay\nValley Hospital Improvement District in 1953-54.\nHe was also interested in advancing the work of Scouting, and\nwas chairman of the St. Saviour's\nGroup Committee in 1948-49. On\nthe North Shore, he was a member\nof the Ratepayers' Association. The\nfamily are supporters of St. Andrew's Anglican Church.\nIn his earlier years in Nelson,\nMr. Banks was active in sports.\nKeenly interested in Canadian\nfootball, he organized a team here,\nformed of senior hockey players\nand local gthletes. j v>     ..\nBesides his wife, the former\nMargaret Evelyn Fraser, he is\nsurvived by one son, Anthony\nFraser, 20, attending Queen's University; a daughter, Margaret\nJocelyn, 17; his father, Anthony,\ntwo brothers, Albert and George\nand a sister Hilda, all in Sherbrooke, Quebec.\nFuneral arrangements had not\nbeen completed Monday night.   .\nImprovements' as provided for\nin bylaws which will be presented\nto ratepayers Friday, afe considered essential to Nelson's progress,\n.Aid. Arthur Foster told Nelson\nRotafy Club at its Monday luncheon.\nThe finance committee chairman, in a straightforward, factual\ntalk, intimated that the proposed\nprograms amounting to more than\n$600,000 have been weighed carefully against the city's financial\nposition.\nAt least eight debenture loans\nof former years will be reaching\nfinality in the next five years, he\nsaid, Including the last major\nstreet paving and sidewalk program undertaken tin 1947.\nSince 1947, when much of the\npresent bus ?oute was hard-surfaced, a certain amount of paving\nand sidewalk construction has\nbeen paid for out of general rev-\nsnue, but present needs call for a\ngreater expenditure.\nThe 59 blocks which would be\npaved under the proposal, 33 of\nwhich are uptown and 26 in Fair-\nview, have been so chosen that\nthere would be paving at least\nwithin a two-block radius of every\npart of the city.\nTo the cost of $200,000, which\nwould be repayable over the next\n15 years, the city proposes a further expenditure of $80,000 repayable ^over 10 years, to buy equipment to do the work.\nWith as complete coverage as\npoasible aforethought, the city\nhit drawn up the sidewalk program with the Idea of endeavor\ning to provide sidewalks on at\nleast one side of streets where\ncement walks are feasible.\nNinety-nine blocks, 54 of them\nuptown and 45 In Fairview,\nwould be built under the $200,000\nbylaw, the foan being repayable\nover 15 years.\nThe $60,000 sewer expenditure,\nrepayable over 15 years, would\nprovide for installation of laterial\nlines needed to divert water into\nstorm sewers on Innes and Observatory Streets leading to Cottonwood Creek. These would take\ncare of a lot of surface water\nwhicb other sewers cannot carry.\nThe Civic Centre, which has\nbeen \"showing deterioration\",\nwould have a new heating plant.\nNorth wall repairs, ramp extension, concession and dressing room\nchanges and hall improvements\nunder the $100,000 bylaw, the loan\nalso repayable over 15 years.\nA \"MUST\"\nCity acquisition out of this year's\ngeneral revenue, of the old post\noffice building, is regarded as a\n\"must\" at the price of $16,000. Ratepayers will be asked to give consent to the purchase.\n\"Many people feel the city hall\nshould be housed in the' old post\noffice,\" Aid. Foster said. But, he\nadded, mentioning the various city\noffices, record storage space, police\ncourt and police offices and jail\nfacilities for which accommodation\nwould be needed, it was \"doubtful\" if all could be adequately\nfitted into the old post office. Also\nthe    Civic    Centre    Commission\nF. ( MacKay Takes Over Duties as\nTrade, Industry Representative\nFrederick Cameron MacKay\nMonday took Over his new duties\nas field representative f6r the\nDepartment of Trade and Industry, with offices in Nelson.\nHis predecessor D. H. T. Mollison, who became\" administrative\nassistant to the deputy minister\nof trade and industry at the beginning of this year, is in the district to introduce Mr, MacKay to\nGolfing Classes\nTomorrow, Saturday\n.The golfing classes which have\nbeen held for the past few weeks\non Wednesday evenings and Saturday afternons will continue this\nweek.\nIt was originally reported tha'.\nfor this week only\u2014final week of\nthe classes\u2014classes would be held\nat the Junior High School on Monday and Wednesday evenings.\nHowever, it was impossible to\nmake arrangements to use the\njunior high gymnasium last night.\nWALLPAPER\nCLEARANCE\n30 Patterns to Clear\n50?o to 60?o DISCOUNT\n%\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nSherwin Williams\n565 Baker St.\n\"HOUSE OF COLOR\"\n\u25a0_\nPhone  1713\nWORD RECEIVED\nOF DEATH OF\nMAROURSER\nNelson friends have received\nword of the death of a former resident of this city, Mark W. Purser,\n47, Eastman Kodak Company sales\nrepresentative in Rochester, N.Y.,\nwho was killed in a plane crash\nnear Springfield, Mo., March 20.\n1955.\nHe was one of 12 persons killed\nin the crash. Twenty-three persons, including the pilot, were\ninjured.\nBorn in Australia he studied\nengineering at universities there\nand in Glasgow and London. He\nwent from England to Canada in\n1933, and shortly after came to\nNelson where he was agent for\nthe Imperial Oil Company. He\nwent to the U. S. in 1939.\nHe joined Kodak in 1949, was a\nmember of the special product\nsales department. Prior to joining\nthe company he was with a firm\nin Springfield, Vt.\nMr. Purser is survived by his\nwife Edwina, and a daughter Marjorie Ann, student at Mt, Holyoke\nCollege, South Hadley, Mass.\nCadets Train   .\nFor Ceremonial\nParents attending \"open house\"\nstaged by Nelson Air Cadets\nSquadron 561 at the Armory on\nMonday night saw 50 cadets and\ncadettes rehearse for their, ceremonial march, May 17. Sgt. William Ross, 5th Air Division, Vancouver, put them through their\npaces at the Junior High School\nrounds then discussed the movements on a blackboard at the Armory.\nThe open house was to mark\nthe occasion of Air Cadet Week,\nSgt. Ross is training NCO for\nBritish Columbia.\nThe ceremonial march will take\nplace at the squadron's annual\ninspection. RCAF Band from Edmonton will participate. \u25a0\nvarious business leaders and persons closely associated with the\ndepartment's work.\nIn the week ahead they will\nvisit East and West Kootenay\ncentres.\nCalgary-born Mr. MacKay served In the Royal Canadian Navy\nfor four years during the Second\nWorld War. He has been employed by the provincial government\nfor the last six years, five of them\nin Victoria with the Hospital Insurance Service, and the last six\nmonths in Nelson with the finance\ndepartment.\n\"So I'm not exactly new to the\nKootenays,\" Mr. MacKay said on\nMonday. \"Also I was in Kimberley\ntor two years after the war, working in the Consolidated Mining\nand Smelting Company's retail\nstore.\"\nMr. MacKay's territory also includes the Okanagan, with which\nhe will become acquainted in the\nmonths to come.\nwould like to move the library.\nIn anticipation of bylaw passage, Council  has  reduced   this\nyear'i public works estimates to\naa low a> possible, he added, to\n\u25a0oma $88,000 leu than  In  1955.\nOther luncheon guests were Gordon Millican from California, Don\nMaxwell   of   Kelowna,   Maurice\nMacKay   of  Cranbrook,   Ed   Mc-\nGauley of Castiegar,' Fred Maxfield and Stafford Wells of Nakusp\nand F. C, MacKay of Nelson.\nNORTH SHORE FINES\nThree motorist* paid fines totalling $225 for driving infractions on\nthe North Shore ln provincial\ncourt Monday.\nMSrcel VanRuyskensvelde of\nNelson was fined $200 and costs\nwhen he pleaded guilty to driving\nwhile his ability was impaired by\nalcohol.\nThomas P. Bourque of New\nWestminster paid a $10 fine and\ncosts for exceeding the speed limit\nat Balfour'and Edward R. Johnson, North Shdre, paid a $15 fine\nand costs for driving without due\nconsideration of others. All pleaded guilty before Magistrate William Evans.\nElias Blake of Vancouver was\nfined $25 and costs when he pleaded guilty to; driving without a\n1956 licenca plats on his truck.\nChurch Filled for\nMacKinnon Rites\nCASTLEGAR \u2014 Funeral Services were held Saturday for the\nlate John MacKinnon of Castiegar\nfrom the Castiegar United Church,\nRev. C. L. Johnson officiating.\nThe Church was filled with\nthose who came to pay their last\nrespects to one of Castlegar's old-\ntimers and there were many\nbeautiful floral tributes. Organist\nwas Mrs. J. Thatcher and hymns\nsung were \"Peace, Perfect Peace\"\nand \"Abide With Me.\"\nPallbearers were J. Waldie. W.\nHouston, W. T. Waldie, B. Trussler,\nJ. Lawson and E. Wallner and\nhonorary pall bearers were A T.\nHorswill, A. E. Lampard, J. Hanson and W. Dams.\nAmong those attending were representatives of tl)e Power Engineer's Institute and Celgar Development Company, and Castiegar\nA.O.T.S. organization formed the\nhonor guard at the church door.\nInterment was in the family plot\nin the Robson Memorial Cemetery\nat Robson.\nURGES YOUNGER\nMEN TAKE PART\nIN PUBLIC AFFAIRS\nA belief thai younger mien\nshould more actively participate in\npublic affairs was expressed by F.\nH. Smith, speaking to Nelson Gyro\nClub Monday night.\nCertain responsibilities should\nbe accepted with the privileges of\ndemocracy, Mr. Smith told his\nclub. He warned against the \"leave\nit to others\" and lack of time excuses. \"You have more time now\nthan you'll ever have .later,'' he\ntold younger members.\n\"I don't expect you all to become\nprime ministers, but even they\nhave to start somewhere,\" he said.\nYoung men could start gaining experience in public affairs by activity in such groups-as Red Cross.\nCommunity Chest, Chamber\/ of\nCommerce, hospital board, churcn\nboards, Civic Centre Commission,\nSchool Board, City Council and\npolitical organizations, Mr. Smith\nsuggested.\nThese activities should not be\ncarried on to the exclusion of all\nother's but should be part of a\nwell-balanced program.\nBe felt it was not impossible for\nyoung men to get into these activities. Young men were vital in\ntimes of crisis (war) and should be\nin more normal tirpes too. The\nenthusiasm and drive of youth and\nthe experience and judgment of\ntheir elders would be a good combination, he believed.\nWorkmen's\nNeeds\nWhich seldom get talked about, but which we\nalways   have   in   stock.\n\u2022 Blue Bib Overalls\n\u2022 Smocks to Match,\neither short or long.\n\u2022 Striped Bib Overalls\n(2-way zipper)\n\u2022 Coveralls,   Blue   or\nStriped, button or\nzipper.\n\u2022 Dust Coats\n\u2022 White  Bib Overalls,\n(carpenters' or\npainters').\n\u2022 Aprons for carpenters, drivers or lumber handlers.\nALL BRANDED\nMERCHANDISE\nGodfreys'\n'    PHONE J*-!?\u00a9\"*! BOX   ]\n' I\nmm mmmm\u2014r*-*---T-*\u2014--\n\"IT IS DIFFERENCES\nOF OPINION\nTHAT   MAKES\nHORSE RACES\"\n\u2022 (Author's name below)\nIn a horse race differences\nof opinion only mean the\ngain or loss of money, but\nwhere medicines are concerned your health, even\nyour life Is at stake.\nIt Is the opinion, enforced\nby the laws of our province,\nthat a Pharmacist must gain\nthe necessary knowledge at\na college of pharmacy, and\npass an examination to prove\nthat knowledge before being\npermitted tt compound pre-\nacrlptlons. Only a Pharmacist hat this complete train-\nInq,\nTherefore there can be no\ndifferences of opinion as to\nwhere the safest place Is to\nobtain anv medicine. Always\nget any medicine In a pharmacy fr?m.\u00bb -'-armaclst,\nYOUR PHYSICIAN\nCAN PHONE\nNelson 1203\nWHEN YOU NEED\nA  MEDICINE\n\u2022\nPick up your prescription if shopping near\nus, or let us deliver\npromptly without extra\ncharge. A great many\npeople entrust us with\nthe responsibility ot filling their prescriptions.\nMay - we compound\nyours?\nNELSON\nPharmacy\n\"Your Portress of Health\"\n433 Josephine St.\nNelson\n\u2022 Quotation by Mark Twain\n1835-1910)\nCopyright 1956  (4W2)\nThe Weather\nNelson\t\nSt., Johns ......\nHalifax ;\u201e\t\nOttawa \t\n.... 41   59 \u2014\n.... 31   42 .51\n.... 31   42 .51\n.... 26   48 .05\nRegina     19 ,-42 .18\nCrescent Valley  39 ' 56 .06\nARE YOU MOVING?\nEii mm  !\nBf mm   H H     H\nHi?    Ilf      Hwaffij     fflMBjffl        I\nTOAN5FEH CO.\nPHONE\nLOCAL &L0N0\nDISTANCE PtOVIl\nNATION WIDE POOL VAN SERVIC\nSTORAGE-PACKING\n\u00ab\u00bb> North American Van Lines '\nNELSON, B.C.\n\t\n --* ; ,,,      .   \u25a0., ^^\nGov't Commission on Education\nOf Indians Visits East Kootenay\nCRANBROOK \u2014 The three-man\nfederal commission to Investigate\nmethods of improving educational\nfacilities for Indians In Canada\nmade Its official visit here, and\naccompanied by District Indian\nAgent James Dunn, provincial\nschools inspectors Eric Dunn or\nCranbrook and J. G. Kirk of\nKimberley, visited the Kootenay\nIndian Residential School at St.\nMary's Reserve. Commission chairman Is C. G. Brown, former inspector of schools at Burnaby,\nand members are Dr. B. O. Fil-\nteau, former deputy minister ol\neducation for Quebec, and Dr. C\nJ. Buck, director of correspondence instruction for Saskatchewan\nAccompanying t h e commission\nhere was A. L. Parminter, Inspector of Indian Schools for\nBritish Columbia-Yukon.\nRev.   Father   G.   P.   Dunlop,\nO.M.I.,  principal  of the  Kootenay   residential   school t which\nprovides   boarding   and   school\nfacilities for children of Interior\nBritish   Columbia   reserves   as\nfar as Grade 8 standings, presented  a  written  brief  on  his\nrecommendations for Improving\nthe educational conditions.\nWith enrolment of 148 children\nthis school Is used to capacity. In\nEast  Kootenay  approximately  30\nIndian children attend provincial\npublic schools under a dominion-\nprovincial     agreement    whereby\nfederal payment of tuition ls made.\nMore than half these youngsters\nare enrolled for high school work.\nThe commission li on a westward trans-Canada tour to Investigate existing facilities, particularly with reference .to school\nbuildings and equipment for Indians, across the dominion and\nprepare a report and recommendations for Improving living conditions and education facilities for\nthem. ,\nMinto (amp\nDales Set\nTRAIL \u2014 The camp committee\nhas set plans for this season's\nsummer camp at Rosebud Lake,\nSouth of Salmo. The area is being\nsurveyed, work parties have already been set up, and very\nshortly the sound of hammer and\nsaw will be heard as the necessary\nbuildings are erected for this summer's camp. It is expected that\nsix cabins, kitchen, and dining\nhall will be built, and the grounds\nand waterfront will be properly\nlaid out.\nOne of the great advantages ol\nthe new Camp Minto will be the\nwarm water for the carhp swimming program. There will be\nplenty of boats, and a complete\ncamp program of hikes, water\nsports, games, Indian lore, woodcraft, etc. The camp will be inspected and approved by the\nhealth authorities and will run\non the official licence of the Department of Health and Welfare,\nj: Camp dates this year are as\nfollows:\nGirls' Camp: First week\u2014July 1\nto July 8, second week \u2014 July 8\nto July 15.\nBoys' Camps: First week \u2014 July\n15 to July 22, second week\u2014July\n22 to July 29, third week\u2014July 29\nto August 5.\nBoys may attend for one, two\nor three weeks.\nGirls may attend for one or\ntwo weeks.\nHighland Bell\nProfit $4696\nHighland Bell Ltd. made a\nprofit of $4696 in 1955.\nThe firm's annual report shows\ngross revenue for the year\namounting to $484,994. Of this\n$427,839 came from silver, $27,483\nfrom lead, $21,684 from zinc, $6063\nfrom gold and $1922 from cadmium.\nTons milled totalled 13,228 as\nagainst 12,784 for the previous\nyear.\nAverage net prices paid by the\nsmelter were 81.20 cents for\nsilver, 10.45 for lead and 5.69 for\n^ilnc.\nManager O. S. Perry reported\nthat the \"extensive development\nprogram\" initiated In the Fall of\n1954 has been completed to a\npoint where the new workings\nare ready for production.\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY (CP) - The livestock market was moderately active with around 80 per cent of\nall moderate offerings being\nbutcher steers and heifers. Offerings included 864 cattle and\n20 calves.\nGood and choice butcher steers\nmet fair demand it about steady\nprices.\nChoice steers 18.75-17 25; good\n16-16.75;, medium 15-16; common\n13-14.50; choice heifers 15.75-\n16.25; good 14.50-15.50; medium\n13-14; contmon 10-12.50; cows\ngood 12.25-13; medium 11-12; common 10-10.75; canners and cutters\n7-9.50; bulls, good 11.50-12.25:\ncommon to medium 9-11.\nInsufficient stocker and feeder\nsteers sold early to give reliable\nquotation; indications generally\nsteady.\nGood   and   choice   veal  120-23:\ncommon to medium 13-19.\n.   Hogs steady Friday 16.25; live-\nweight for eastern shipment; sows\nSteady at 11 Hveweight.\n\u25a0'\u25a0 Last sales of good  lambs  18-\nFewer Grade I\nRegistrants at\nGrand Forks\nGRAND FORKS - Seventy-\nthree children are on the registration list for grade 1 entrants.\nThe survey shows a crrop Trom\nprevious years, which had between 85 to 90, and it is felt that\nsome of the parents may have\noverlooked registering children\nwho would be ready for school in\nthe Fall. This seems to be an Indication in other school districts,\nMan Promoted\nKIMBERLEY \u2014 Former employee of Kimberley branch of\nthe Bank of Montreal, Alan\nHickey has been appointed manager of the Westbank office in\nthe Okanagan.\nBorn and brought up In the\nOkanagan, he joined the bank in\nhis native Summerland in 1945,\nafter serving in Europe and India\nas a pilot with the RCAF. Lately\nhe has been accountant at the\nHotel Vancouver branch ln Vancouver. \u2022\nThere are over 100 children attending grade 1 at present, W. E.\nBrown, supervising principal, reports. ,\nArrow Lakes Organize\nDistrict Scout Council\nNAKUSP - Inaugural meeting\nof the proposed District Council\nfor Scouting in the Arrow Lakes\nhas been set for May 23.\nFormation was decided upon\nwhen representatives of the three\norganized groups of the district,\nthose of Edgewood, Arrow Park\nand Nakusp, met with Jack\nScrivener of Penticton, field man\nfor the Boy Scout movement,' at a\nmeeting at the home of Mr. and\nMrs. Nate Woldum.\nThose from out of' town were\nL Palesch, Scoutmaster from\nEdgewood; Mrs. Brunner, secretary; David Pearce, president of\nthe Arrow Park group, and Anton\nSlenseth and Austin Stanley, also\nol Arrow Park.\nAfter explaining the duties ot a\nDistrict'   Council,   Mr.   Scrivener\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY. APRIL 24.1956 \u2014 3\ngained the meeting's support for\nthe plan.\nCOMMISSIONER\nPresidents of the three groups,\nW. Haggart of Edgewood, Mr\nPearce and Bert. Gardner of\nNakusp, are automatically members of the executive council.\nPeter Hurry, cub leader, was\nrecommended for district commissioner. Mrs. Woldum, secretary\nof the Nakusp group, was nominated for secretary of the district\norganization, and Mrs, R. T. Blyth\nwas named to take her place on\nthe Nakusp group.\nA nominating committee of Mr.\nPalesch, Mr. Gardner, Mr. Pearce,\nAnglican Cleric for\nGrand Forks Named\nGRAND FORKS - Rqv. and\nMrs. D. L. Greene leave May 1 for\nVictoria where they will retire.\nMr. Greene is vicar of Holy Trinity\nChurch.\nHe will be succeeded by L.\nSomers who is at the Anglican\nTheological College at UBC and\nwho is to be ordained ln May. Mr.\nSomers is expected to arrive here\nin June.\nMr. Hurry and Mrs. Woldum was\nappointed to line up other district\nofficers.\nDownstairs Clothes\nEXTRA\nVALUES\nChildren's\nOVERALLS\nAs advertised in Life by Dan\nRiver. Sizes 3 to 6x. <f\u00bb *\\ yr*.\nPrice, each    *P~-> \u25a0 U\nBOYS' SHIRTS\nPrinted cotton plisse. Assorted\npatterns and colors. \u00a3 | r\" A\nSizes 3 to 8. Price   . ^I,J7\nBLOUSES\nSanforized cotton, sleeveless.\nWhite with colored binding.\nSizes 7 to 12. TQt^\nPrice, each     \/ V^\nMIDRIFFS\nFancy trim. Assorted colors.\nSizes 3 to 6x. EQit\nPrice, each   J\/r\nLadies'\nMIDRIFFS\nElasticized, In assorted colors.\nSizes small, medium, QQ(f\nand large. Price'_  \/Or\nDRILL PANTS\nKnee length. Sanforized in assorted colors. Sizes 3 E? f\\gr*\nto 6x. Price  J<7t\nPedal Pushers\nIn a variety of colors. Sanforized\nln denim and line cloth. Sizes 3\nto 6x, 7 to 12, 12 to 18. Price\n79*. $2.98\nTRICOT JALOT\nWith metal ring clip. \u00a3Qf\u00a3\nAssorted colors. Price ... Q\/V\nNylon Gloves\nIn colors of white, pink or\nblue. Sizes 4 to 8. CQf\u00a3\nPrice, pair   t...   \\j\\wr\nGirls' Sweater\nPullover style. Round neck, cap\nsleeves in assorted \"7 Off\ncolors. Sizes 4 to 8    \/ \\wr\nMen's Shirts\nIn rayon, tee, plaque front. Short\nsleeves, pocket. Sizes small,\nmedium and large. ri*| pA\nPrice, each   \u00abpl.\u00bb)V\nKkaki Pants\nStu! \". in sanforized twill with\n5 pockets and zipper fly. Sizes 30\nto 40. Reg. $3.19. <]\u00bb<% aa\nSpecial, pair ' \u00ab|)_\\.W\nBoys' Shirts\nTown name cotton in white or\nyellow. Sizes small, QCkih\nmedium, large. Price .... OV^\nBath Towels\nLarge size. Just right for the\nbeach. Asstd. colors. \u00a3 | \u2014i i-\nSize 43x23. Pair .    . *}> I . \/ J\nBoxer Shorts\nBroadcloth.   Sanforized   In * assorted colors and patterns. Sizes\nsmall, medium and\nlarge. Pair\nBEACH\nELECTRIC RANGE\nTwin Oven. Terrific Value.\nReg. $379. SALE\nHit.i. IO.     OJ\/;l-h\n$1.00\nBest Brand Names the Country Offers\nAre Available at LIBERTY. . .\nLIBERTY ii proud of the forrtoui brand n<\"\"?\u00bb you will find in our store ond second floor - names that stand for high qwljy and customer sat.sfoet.on ... You\ndon't have to look anywhere else to get the best You'll tad. ,t in your home-\nowned store. Prices ore low everyday , .. For brand name, that stand for quality.\nBrands That You Can Trust. . . You\nCan Always Do Better When You\nPatronize Home Business ... For Ali\nYour Shopping Needs!\nPAUSE AND REFRESH AT ...\nCOFFEE BAR Thurs. Only\nThursday Only.\nCoffee freshly made\n5c cup\nCherry Pies or Apple 104 a Cut. Donuts 5< Each,\nFRESH FROZEN FOOD SALE\nat Ztib&Jdtif\nFish & Chips sire1- pk. 55c\nOrange Juice \u00a3\u00a3\u2014.\u2022.,,_3 for 55c\nTurkey Dinner asrs- 89c\nFancy Peas !^XB,:F=_-2for43c\nDlAt?    By LIBBY'S- Y\u00b0u' ehoice< chicken, turkey,      ^ I- \u201e L7m\nf IC5   bee'\u00ab \"pple or cherry. Theyr'e super. 8 oz. _, TOl   0\/ V\nCREAM CORN\nPORK & BEANS\nFANCY PEAS\nTOMATOES\nDOG BISCUITS\nPRAIRIE MAID.\nStd. 15 oz\t\nBRODER'S.\n15 oz. tin\nBRODER'S, Choice, Fancy.\nSieve 4. 15 oz. tin\t\nSILVERDALE, Std.\nU.S. Peeled. 28 oz. tin\nDR. BALLARD'S\nVariety Square.  .\n2 for 29c\n3 for 39c\n3 for 44c\n 2 for 57C\n2 lb. pk. 34c\nGARDEN NEEDS\nADD NEW BEAUTY TO YOUR GARDEN!\n. 2 SWINGS AND 1 GLIDER\nClassified Adi Get Result.\nChoose from our wide variety of top-grade seeds, plants and shrubs.\nBedding Plants, Flower and Early Cabbage, Lettuce etc., Arriving Thursday,\nONION SETS: J      49*\nNo. I, For green onions  \u25a0*\u2022 lbs.     \" *\nSPANISH ONION PLANTS: J      43*\nApproximately 100 to bunch. Arrival Thurs \u201e -** for      \u25a0 ****\nSEED POTATOES: 1Q      OC*\nCertified government inspected. All varieties. Larger lots lower price.' \" lbs.  <* i*\nROSE BUSHES: 75*      J      $1 45\nWhile they last. Root wrapped       *  ** *** for    . ' *****\nROSE BUSHES:. *2 65\nClimbers, floribundas, and new patented bushes. Potted. Arrival Wed. Ea.     mm.*mr m*\nFruit Trees, Shrubs, Evergreens: $1 QC\nArrival Wednesday. Up from        ..**&\n' Rhodrodens, Azaleas . . . See these beautiful flowers.\nArrival Thursday . . . Supply Limited . . . Buy Early.\nStrawberry Plants and Raspberry Cane\n0BSIZ[T0EIHS[\nSUNBEAM ELECTRIC RAZOR: Model \"W\"    Mod 'WB' or 'WL'\nRegular Price        $30.75 $32.50\nTrade-In Allowance _        $ 8.50 $8 .50\nSALE PRICE           $21.88 $32.77\nThis allowance made for any electric shaver turned in regardless of age, make, condition.\nSUNBEAM STEAM ELECTRIC IRON: Model S4A\nRegular Price   $21.95\nTrade-In Allowance '. $ 3.00\niALfc  (\"KILE __,      $17.88\nThis allowance made for any electric iron turned in regardles of age, make, condition.\nSUNBEAM ELECTRIC FRY PANS: Model F.P. 10 (10\")\nRegular Price  .  -    $27.95\nTrade-In Allowance     $ 5.00\nbALt  PKILt _..   _.\u201e. $21.88\nThis allowance made for any fry pan, electric or non-electric regardless of age, condition.\nNo other item is so practical for your children.\nSturdily constructed 2\" tubular steel swings,\ntested 1000 Ibs, anti-tip heavy metal seats,\nglider 2\" diameter tubing, steel seats. Ladder\nand slider extra, $8.50. Compare our value\nagainst catalogue prices.   _\n30\n95\nAfrican Violet\nand House Plant\nINSECT\nBOMB\nBlack Flag.    $1  \/\\Q\nRAPID-GRO\nMiracle Plant Food\n65* 80' *\\M\n2-4DWEED\nKILLER\nBlack Leaf. 5 oz. \u00a3\u2022 **\u2022$\nmakes 15 gals.   03\nFISH\nFERTILIZER\nAlaska. Cone.  $1   IA\n16 oz _     I.IV\nVIGORO\nPlant Food\n10 ,*'1.09\nPEAT MOSS\nPlus organic.        QP(\nVa bushel. 9 Ibs. *J\nPlus organic.        $1.99\n21* bu. 25 Ibs.      I\nGLADIOLUS\n59'\nPkg. of\n1  dozen.\nPotatoes\nNetted Gems % f\\       Cml*1'\nNo. 1. lUlbs. D lr\n25 Ibs. $1.29\nNew Potatoes\nCalifornia.        *\\       \u00bb\\ (\"jf\nLong, white.     Albs. A.D''\n* PURITY FLOUR\nReg. $6.59.\n93 Ib. bog\t\n* MARGARINE\nAllsweet.   \t\n_'5.88\n2,b.63*\n2fc,73*\n* TOMATO JUICE\nYork, Fancy.\n48 oz. tin  \t\nic GRAPEFRUIT JUICE\nYork, Fancy. *}        <C*\n48 oz. tin dm for Oj\n* MODESS\nNew soft.\nPkg. of 12's.\t\n* TOMATO CATSUP\nAylmer.\n11 oz. bottle \t\n2 for 59*\n IV\n* WEINERS AND BEANS  '\nPuritan. *\\ COkC\n15 oz. tin *\u00a3* for J*\n* CARAMEL WAFERS\nGray Dunn.  Am for Tr V\n* SANDWICH BISCUITS\nFull pound\n35*\nBetter Eating Premium Quality Meats are yours when\nyou shop at LIBERTY . . . Only Government Inspected\nPre-Trimmed Quality Meats Are Sold.\nVeal Patties\nLb.\nShoulder Veal Steak\nLb.\nSirloin Beef Steak\nLb.\nBrisket Boil Beef\nLean.\nShort Ribs Beef\nThick ends.\n49c\n45c\n69c\n19c\n35c\nPrices Effective:\nTuesday, April 24th to Saturday, April 28th\nGREEN PEAS\nFresh. In pods. Lb. .\n29'\nTOMATOES\nFinest shipment of flavorful, red-ripe firm\ntomatoes. Here's good eating plus\nlow prices'you can afford.\nWhy pay more. 14 oz. tube.\nSalad week special.\t\nHM^_^\n_________\n_______\n_________\n \u2022mmr~ '\n_\nTT-^''v-; v.-   ---    \u2022\u25a0:\nSfolamt lailg !Npui0\nEstablished April 22. 1902\nInterior British Columbia's Largest Daily Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday and statutory\nholidays   by   the   NEWS  PUBLISHING   COMPANY\nLIMITED, 266 Baker Street, Nelson\/ British Columbia.\nAuthorized as Second Class Mail, Post Office Department, Ottawa.\nMEMBER THE AUDIT BUREAU  OF CIRCULATIONS\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS\nThe Canadian Piess is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of ail news\ndispatches credited to it or to The Associated Press or Reuters in this paper,\nand also the local news published therein.\nruesday) Aplji 24, J95S ~~\nAn Important Step in Education\nBritish Columbians have always\ntaken pride in their educational system and believed that it is the best\nin Canada. Recent events show that,\nwhether or not they are right in that\nbelief, her educational leaders are\ndoing all that is possible to justify it\nas progressive.\nThe College of Education which\nopens in September at the University\nof British Columbia is the first of its\nkind in Canada. It supersedes the\nold Normal School? at Vancouver and\nVictoria by giving teacher training\nwhile students are taking university\ncourses.\nThis has the advantage of making\nevery hour spent in learning to be\na teacher qualify towards a degree.\nPreviously the year spent at normal\nqualified only for a teaching certificate. As a result beginning elementary teachers will have two years\nof university and it is hoped that they\nwill be encouraged to complete the\ncourse for the degree of Bachelor of\nEducation and thus raise the standard\nof teacher certification throughout\nthe province.\nThis raising the standard of certification among teachers will have\nthe effect of increasing the prestige\nof the profession and should encourage more young.people to enter it.\nIt will be directly of benefit to the\npupils in the schools who will be receiving instruction from teachers of\nwider knowledge and maturity.\nAt the' same time the department\nof education is making it easier for\nthe less financially well-off to attend\nby granting loans which are repayable out of their later earnings.\nThe establishment of a college of\neducation has long been the aim of\nthe B.C. Teachers' Federation and\nthey have worked in co-operation\nwith the Trustees' Association and\nthe Department of Education to bring\nit into being. Its establishment is a\nlandmark in the long and cordial relations existing between these bodies.\nThat the progressive policy of the\nDepartment of Education, under the\nleadership of Minister of Education,\nMr. Williston, is paving off is shown\nby the fact that the shortage of elementary teachers is already in sight\nand it is hoped that it will not be\nlong before there will be sufficient\nfor the secondary schools. There is\nlittle doubt that the College of Education will prosper and will contribute\ngreatly to the advancement of education in the province. If there is any\ndisadvantage attendant upon its creation it is that it will make a university\nwhich is already overcrowded still\nlarger.\nIke vs Harry?\nEstes Kefauver's stunning defeat of\nAdlai Stevensoti in the Democratic party\nprimaries recently in Minnesota has thrown\na monkey wrench into the party gears In\nthe early stages of preparations for next\nsummer's national convention to choose a\ncandidate to oppose President Eisenhower\nIn next November's critical election in U.S.\nAnd now the knowing New York Times\ncomes up with the suggestion that former\nPresident Harry Truman may be conscripted\nto run against Ike.\nEvidently the party leaders have taken\nthe Minnesota primary vote as a warning\nthat Mr. Stevenson, defeated by President\nEisenhower in 1952, has not the kind of\npublic appeal that would bring the party\n\u25a0 victory in a second struggle at the polls\nnext   fall,   Whether   northern   Democrats\nPress Comment\nIt w\u00ab ire truly to find happiness we\nmust, consistent at all times with our duties\nto our neighbors and to society, learn to\nlive within ourselves, for we can never\nescape from ourselves. Respect for oneself,\nfor our separate individuality, for the dignity of man, is the most valuable of all the\nSchievementa of mankind. It ls the hallmark of the civilized man.\n\u2014Sir Percy Spender.\n\"Were lt left to me to decide whether\nwe should have a government without newspapers, or newspapers without a government, I should not hesitate a moment to\nprefer the latter ... the only security of\n\u202211 ls \u2022 free press. The force of public\nopinion cannot be resisted when permitted\nfreely to be expressed.\"\u2014Thomas Jefferson.\nOnt good' use of leisure, remarks the\nKitchener-Waterloo Record, \"would be to\nspend part of it in planning how It can be\nused most profitably to attain the end for\nwhich man was created.\"\nwould follow Senator Kefauver, a Southerner from Tennessee, colorful and all as\nhe is, seems to be the problem that is\ntroubling the party leaders now, and hence\nthe suggestion that Harry Truman be called\nup to fill. the gap. Mr. Truman came to\nthe presidency on the death of President\nRoosevelt early in the latter's fourth term\nand was re-elected to succeed himself in\nthe 1948 presidential fight.\nWhat a battle\u2014Ike vs Harry! The president in the White House at the end of\nWorld War II against the Allied commander-\nin-chief in Europe who led his forces to\nvictory, the hero who was named to the\nWhite House in 1952!\u2014Lethbridge Herald.\nRetire to Live\nj When a man reaches the age of retirement he doesn't always reach the pinnacle\nof contentment. The break from habita of\nwork to the \"what'll I do now\" state of\nmind is often fatal to ease and happiness.\nRetirement can shorten life, insurance statistics show.\nVancouver psychiatrists have been giving the problem a lot of thought. Best suggestion to meet the challenge of retirement\nis: prepare for lt before you're fifty. Get a\nhobby or a special interest\nHere we suggest books. No man who's\ndeveloped the habit' of reading need ever\nbe bored. When he's young there isn't half\nenough time to read all the books he wants\nto. The more he reads the more he finds\nthere is to read.\nThe habit of reading develops the habit\nof research. It also develops a craving for\nknowledge and a desire to find the springs\nof knowledge. The young man who reads\nusually ardently desires more leisure for\nhis hobby.\nAs he grows ,older he finds that he\n\u25a0wants more and more time to delve into\nthings\u2014one book shows how deeply he must\ndig into others.\nThe old reader, retired from business,\nremains young In mind. He has almost too\nmuch to live for. There is still not enough\ntime, he finds.\u2014The Vancouver Sun.\n? Questions?\nANSWERS\nOpen to any reader Names of\npersons asking questions wil) not be\npublished There is no charge fo: this\nservice QUESTIONS WILL NOT BE\nANSWERED BV .MAIL except where\nthere Is obvious necessity for privacy\nX. M., Nakusp\u2014Will you please print plots\nof \"The Yeoman of the Guard\" and \"The\nMikado\"?\n. Continuing \"The Yeoman of the Guard\":\nThe second-act opens with a low-spirited\nJack Point discussing the situation with\nequally depressed Wilfrid. Between them\nthey hatch up a plot, Point arranging with\nWilfrid to pretend to shoot Fairfax (whom\nthey think has escaped beyond hope of capture) and.say he saw him sink; this, they\nconsider, should be enough evidence to make\nElsie a widow. Soon after they have clinched\nthe agreement by singing and patter they\nexit and Colonel Fairfax, disguised, comes\non rejoicing at hip freedom. There are various scenes, alarms and discufsions, in which\nall take part. Phoebe tells Wilfrid that if\nhe can prove he did shoot Fairfax, then she\nwill marry him\u2014which puts him on the\nspot as the whole story is an invention. Then\nLeonard arrives with the delayed reprieve\nand in song and speech the muddle Is cleared\nup with Fairfax claiming Elsie as his bride\nPhoebe reluctantly marrying Wilfrid, and\nJack Point fainting as the final curtain falls.\n\"The Mikado\": Nanki-Poo, a wandering\nminstrel, arrives in Ko-Ko's courtyard in\nthe town of Titlpu. He tells the chorus he\nfinds there that he is looking for Yum-Yum.\na beautiful girl he saw only once and whom\nhe understands is betrothed to her guardian.\nKo-Ko. Having heard that Ko-Ko has been\ncondemned to death for flirting, Nanki-Poo\nhas come to Titipu to find Yum-Yum. He\nIs informed Ko-Ko was reprieved and raised\nto the rank of Lord High Executioner. Later\nYum-Yum and her bridesmaids arrive.\nNanki-Poo and Ko-Ko meet, and Nanki-Poo\ndeclares his love for Yum-Yum, which not\nunnaturally infuriates Ko-Ko who orders\nhis rival to die. There are other scenes between Ko-Ko and Nanki-Poo and in one\nNanki-Poo agrees to allow Ko-Ko to cut joff\nhis head (in order to get his fee as .Lord\nHigh Executioner) on condition he permits\nhim (Nanki-Poo) to marry Yum-Yum. When\nKo-Ko exclaims: \"How can I consent to your\nmarrying Yum-Yum when I am going to\nmarry her myself?\" Nanki-Poo replies:\n\"She'll be a widow in a month and you can\nmarry her then.\" Enters the usual unattractive middle-aged lady, this time called Ka-\ntisha. She ls looking for Nanki-Poo.\nIn the second act arrangements for the\nwedding of Nanki-Poo and Yum-Yum are\ngoing ahead, marred by the thought of what\nlies ahead of them at the month's end. Ko-\nKo, however, has discovered that a law decrees when a man is beheaded his wife must\nbe buried alive with him. Enters the Mikado,\naccompanied by Katisha. with a story that\nhis eldest son, heir to the throne, bolted from\ncourt and has not been seen Bince. It appears\nhe was to have married Katisha. And the\nMikado and Katisha have discovered that\nthe young man is hidin? in the town of\nTitipu. disguised as a Second Trombone.\nGeneral  excitement follows.\nThis opera ends up with The Mikado\nIdentifying his son and blessing the marriage to Yum-Yum; Ko-Ko (who has been\nsentenced to be boiled in oil, a sentence\nfrom which only marriage can save him),\ninstantly proposes to Katisha, who accents\nhim like a shot, and everyone is happy. We\nare afraid these plots hardly bear examination. Words and stories are gorgeous nonsense set to lovely music that keeps all\naudiences spellbound.\nHere's to Marty\nRarely has Hollywood done anything so\neminently sane and honest as to select the\nfilm Marty for major Academy Awards. It is\na movie with no glamor, no CinemaScope.\nno big-name actor, no big budget\u2014nothing,\nin fact, except a realization that life itself\nIs really a small-screen, small-budget, anonymous affair.\nThe selection is a credit to the integrity\nof the judges, who refused to be swayed\nby the splashier efforts with Technicolor and\nsterophonic sound. Marty was made In seventeen days on a budget of $340,000\u2014not much\nmore than the production costs of some\ntelevision shows and a fraction of the price\nof some celluloid extravaganzas.\nThe moral to this success story is not\nmerely that butchers are nicer people, than\ngoddesses who drink champagne from slippers. It really is that monev can't buy a\nsubstitute for art and talent We wish more\nmot ie producers would realize that.\n\u2014Toronto Globe and Mail\nTheyTl Do It Every Time\ntafUM.1 a i Nta- on*\nTW4T      ^\nGOOD, HUH?\nOK4y\u2122PUT IM\nA BUV ORDER-\nTWO HUNDRED\nAT THIRTY-\nONE\nBy Jimmy Harlo\nC0SM0,.THE WAIL ST. CUSTOMERS'\nM4N.SQ4PS HIS CLIENTS By TELLING EM\nTHEY'RE SO RICH AUO HE'S SO POOR-\nr-24 O MM, HiKC \u00bbArUHM SYNDICATE, lie, WOtlP MOOTS H\u00a33B1V>H\n&UT WHEN HIS TOUTED STOCKS TUMBLE,\nHE TELLS THE CUSTOMERS HOW E4Sy\nWEy ear off commred to him \u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\nTODAY'S BIBLE\nTHOUGHT\nHli mercy endureth forever.\n1 Chronicles 16:41.\nIf mercy has been extended to\nus by the Infinite we should follow His example and show mercy\nourselves. Charity Is the foremost\nvirtue.\nOunfML\nThrift; Doln' without something you want, so you can afford\nit when you no longer care for it.\nInglish as\nShe is Rit\nF. B. PEARCE\n\"The trouble with English spelling,\" says one writer, \"is that\nteachers always insist on correct\nspelling,' and he goes on to suggest that children should be taught\nphonics and then allowed to spell\nas they choose. In course of time\nhe believes that they would evolve\na new simplified spelling which\ncould be universally accepted.\nThis is a novel  Idea and reminds me of the celebrated experiment   where   two   very   young\nchildren were left to the care of\nmany goats on an island with the\nhope  that  they  would  give the\nclue to man's original language.\nAt the end of several years all\nthey  could  say   was  Ba-ba  and\nfrom that we get the word barbarian. At this risk of being considered a barbarian all I can say\nto this proposal is Bah! Bah!\nAlso at the risk of being professionally unethical I must submit that he Is not a good teacher, A good teacher loves spelling. There Is nothing more satisfying  than  teaching  a dozen\nwords  and  testing  the   pupil's\nability to write them from dictation.  One feels that a  good\nwork has been well performed\nIf all get them right. They seldom do, so that ever ahead Is the\nhope that for once there will be\na hundred per ceht perfect score.\nNo  we  must  not  deprive our\nteachers of this satisfying sub-\nJeot,\nNor is this business of phonics\nall that the writer thinks. We still\ntreasure a first essay at the age of\nseven headed \"Are Cats\". It is a\nnice little essay if you don't mind\n\"our' spelt that way. Of course\nwe shall have to standardize our\nphonics, or are the children to be\nallowed to make their own? If\nthey are that should give even\ngreater variety to their spelling.\nThe writer thinks that all this\nwould cause a great deal of confusion ln the adult world, but that\nwould probably be good for it. So\nfar adults have had it pretty easy.\nIt is a curious thing about adults,\nIn their school days they may\nhave been the world's worst spellers, but not now. I wonder what\nhappened? Of course, there might\nbe many frustrated persons but\nafter all they should learn to live\nwith their frustrations. No. We\nshould not have too much sym\npathy for adults. We must consider the children even if it means\nletting them spell as they like.\nWho says they don't?\nSPELL   IT  NIFE7\nIn accordance with the geneijal\nusage in such matters the writer\npicks out specific words to illus\ntrate his points. He takes the\nword \"knife\" and explains that the\n\"k\" has been entirely dropped in\nspeech so he feels that we should\nalso drop it in spelling. Leave lt\nto the children who drop the\n\"t's' in butter and we should have\n\"bu'er\" and how would you spell\nthat phonetically?\nThen he takes that beautiful\nword \"aisle\" and takes a slam at\nthat. As it is the word conjures up\na picture of the pillars of a\nchurch and a radiant bride moving between or a grove of stately\ntrees murmuring in a gentle\nbreeze. If we spell it \"lie' how\nshall we know if it means\nchurch, a grove of trees or one of\nthe lies of Greece? Then he tells\nus that the Spanish spelling of\nMississippi drops a couple of esses\nand a p. That is alright for them.\nThey can do as they like. Why the\nFrench even spell London \"Lon-\ndres\" and whoever saw anything\nso ridiculous.\nNor can we allow this thin edge\nof the wedge to enter. Suppose it\nspreads to arithmetic and the kids\ndecide that two and two make\nfive. They often do as a matter of\nfact, but what would happen if\nwe let them get away with it? If\nit is too horrible to contemplate\nthe confusion ln the business\nworld.\nNo. I don't think the Idea would\nwork though I liked the article\nvery much. It is a change to find\nsomeone who does take spelling\ntoo seriously, particularly a school\nteacher.\nYour Individual\nHOROSCOPE .\nFrances Drake \u2022\nBy\nLook in  the section In which\nyour   birthday   comes   and   find\nwhat your outlook  is, according\nto the stars,\nFor  Wednesday,  April  25,  1956\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 20 (Aries)\n\u2014This day could be a teaser if you\nyield to impatience and carelessness. On the other hand strong,\ngood influences are here to aid\nall worthwhile activities.\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus)\n\u2014Indications stress a need for incentive and initiative from within'\nYOURSELF, you will probably\nfind things pliable and responsive\nto smart management. Be attentive, alert.\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini)-\nMercury's aspect now suggests\ncalm judgment, checking carefully\nbefore signing papers, contracts,\netc. Be serene and accept your\nresponsibilities. You'll gain.        '\nJUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer)\u2014\nYour Moon and other planets are\ngoing to more auspicious positions\nafter today; plan carefully, smartly for action later. You can thus\nsave time, energy and . realize\ngreater gain.\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leo)-\nDo not make promises carelessly\nor sign your name to any document without knowing just what\nyou are doing. Much can be accomplished, however, in your\nwork and other interests.\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER 23\n(Virgo) \u2014 Familiar matters, activities for which you have training and talent should run smoothly, profitably, but don't be overconfident \u2014 especially about\nundertaking new duties.\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER\n23 (Libra) \u2014 A time* for forethought and being economy-wise\nMatters well planned, perhaps1\ntried, are more favored than risky\nones. Don't worry, just be careful.\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER 22\n(Scorpio) \u2014 Don't let tricksters\nlike over-confidence or flattery\nkeep you from the constructive\nand productive path now, You'll\nneed initiative, stick-to-it-iveness,\ngood humor.\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER\n21 (Sagittarius) \u2014 It's mostly up\nto your own cleverness and ambition how your credit side will\nregister today. Influences are\nneither too helpful nor too restrictive. Day needs push.\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY 20 i\n(Capricorn) \u2014 Even small ad-1\nvancement is gain, so strive for\nthat small gain and you will be\nsurprised at the achievement you\nwill have made at the. end of the\nweek. Have faith, enthusiasm.\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY 19\n(Aquarius) \u2014 You may have to\npush yourself more than usual to\nget daily tasks done but the effort\nwill be worth it. We must all show\ngreater Initiative these days. |\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20'\n(Pisces) \u2014 Some precautions sug- j\ngested: lt will be wise to plan\nyour schedule carefully in order\nto save time, money and energy\nThere's no need to crowd your-j\nself with extra tasks. |\nYOU BORN TODAY are sturdy, \\\nclever, ingenious, no doubt crea-'\ntive and inventive. You can take j\nanother's   creation   and   improve]\nHorrified Crowd\nSees Mole Bears\nDestroy Two Cubs\nPORTLAND, Ore. (AP) - Hundreds of spectators watched la\nhorror Sunday as five vlciou*\nmale bears attacked and killed\ntwo cubs brought out by their\nmother from a hidden den it\nWashington Park Zoo.\nZoo keepers were unable to\nsave the\" cubs because they could\nnot get Inside the enclosure for\nfear of being attacked themselves.\nThe mother bear tried to protect\nthe cubs, tucking them under her\nfore paws and slapping at the\nattackers.\nWhen one of the cubs was\nsnatched away and killed, th\u00ab\nmother grabbed the other one and\nplaced lt on a rock, pacing below\nto ward off the savage males.\nFinally the other cub was knocked\ndown and killed.\nThey were the first cubs born\nat the zoo here ln 10 years, and\nviet Premier Bulganin and Nikita1 had been hidden by their mother\nKhrushchev got within patting; to protect them. Sunday was the\nrange of a baby Monday foi  the first time attendants knew there\nupon it until it actually becomes\nyour own. Be careful not to per\nmit this God-given talent and\nability to dwarf others' Ideas or\nrights, however. Innately you are\nfair, generous, good, and need\nonly to remember your principles.\nCultivate your artistic and mechanical gifts. Confer with those\nqualified to help you, and heed\nsound suggestions. Birthdate: Gug-\nllelmo Marconi, Italian physicist,\ninventor of wireless telegraphy,\nKing Features\nRussians Pat Baby\nIn Mother's Arms\nMARHAM, England  (AP)\u2014So-\nfirst time on their British visit.\nThey made tha most of lt.\nThey patted away in traditional\npolitical manner and seemed delighted at the opportunity.\nOn a visit to this English airfield they walked right into the\nact with two-year-old David Raymond, son of RAF Cpl. John Raymond. With his mother and five-\nyear-old oroiher Ian, he was waiting at the door when Bulganin\nand Khrushchev were shown\naround the Raymond home\nSaid Khrushchev:\n\"It's a beautiful home. It's a\ngreat   pleasure   to   be   here\nwere cubs in the bear den. They\nwere about two months old.\nOkanagan 'Copters\nDouble Revenue\nVANCOUVER (CP)-Okanagan\nHelicopters had a net profit of\n$127,725 in 1955, oBard Chairman\nDouglas Dewar said in his annual\nreport. Gross revenue of $1,555,515\nwas double that of the previous\nyear.\nHe said the company's fleet now\nconsists of 20 Bell and five S-55\nWe! Sikorsky   helicopters.   Staff   had\nhave lovely houses just like this! grown from two in 1947 to 90 em-\nin Russia.\" I ployees at present.\nI Keep in\ndose contact with\ndistant customers\nDISTANCE\nso fast and convenient!\nI\nBRITISH COLUMBIA\nTELEPlfOKE COMPANY\nDEATHS\nBy The Canadian Press\nNew York \u2014 D.-Samuel Gottes-\nman, 70, a leading figure in the\nworld woodpulp and paper industry for more than 50 years.\nMontreal \u2014 Jean Pusie, 43,\ncolorful athlete of a score of years\nago who played with Montreal and\nNew York of the National Hockey\nLeague.\nNew York - Henry J. juller,\nB2, former board chairman of the\nGorham Manufacturing Company.\nProvidence, R.I., and for many\nyears an executive of industries In\nNew England and Canada.\nMontreal \u2014 Dr. Joseph W, A.\nHickson, 83, former professor at\nMcGill University and president of\nthe Canadian Alpine Club.\nLondon, Ont. \u2014 Lewis Menary,\n74, of Grand Valley, Progressive\nConservative member of Parliament for Wellington North from\n1945 to 1949.\nWhat a\nPICK-UP\nVet it\nRELAXES\nTea gives you such a refreshing lift... and leaves you feeling so good afterwards.\nTea Council\nk-    That's\nthe AWe\/Col\nTEA\n_\n__\n__^_^__^,^__\n.MMMHM\n ******\nBRIGHTENING STAY of veterans In Kootenay Lake General Hospital are members of\nthe Ladles' Auxiliary to Nelson branch of the\nCanadian    Legion,   who   distribute   cigarettes,\ncandy and other treata regularly. Here Mrs.\nC. 0. Anderson and Mrs. B. L. Gray have cheery\nWord with B. C. Affleck, veteran of the First\nWprld  War.\u2014Dally' News  photo.\n| ABOUT THE TOWN\nnllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll By Alice Stevens\nPHONE  1369 OR   1844\nGodparents were Mr. and Mrs. T.\nW. Smith of the North Shore. The\ninfant son of Mr. and Mrs. Denis\nColman; was given the names\nGrant Ernest, and godparents were\nMr and Mrs. Robert Beattie of\nCranbrook. A christening tea was\nheld afterward at-the home of Mr\nA surprise baby shower was held\nfor Mrs. Joe Vecchio in honor of\nher baby girl, Valerie Jo-Ann, at\nthe home of Mrs. Harry Miller,\n104 High Street. A number of\ndainty gifts were presented ln\nlovely pastel wrappings. Games\nand contests were enjoyed\nthroughout the evening with winners being Mrs. Vecchio, Mrs. L.\nVital, Mrs. M. Darwin and Miss\nAnne Darwin.\n\u2022 \u00bb   \u2022\nThe Senior Circle of Cathedral\nof Mary Immaculate met at the\nhome of Mrs. N. 0. Choquette, 1004\nStanley Street. A coming bazaar\nwas planned by the 13 members\npresent. Prizes were won by Mrs,\nJack Leslie and Mrs. C. Folsey.\n* *   * I\nTwo young children were Christ.\nened at a pretty ceremony during\nthe regular Sunday afternoon\nservice at St. Andrew's-by-the-\nLake with Dean T. L. Leadbeater\nofficiating. The daughter of Mr.\nand Mrs. Harry W. Wassick was\ngiven the names Juliette Yvonne.\n\"TUNE UP\"\nYOUR SYSTEM\nFOR SPRING\nTHIS\nWAY!\nWastes ln the system can slow\nyou down! Burdock Blood Bitters, a pure herbal remedy,\ncleanses the system and helps\nImprove the appetite. This\n\"Double Action\" helps relieve\nconstipation, headaches, dyspepsia and sour stomach quickly.\nGet Burdock Blood Bitters at\nyour drug store today.\nffariockjgk\nEngagements\nMr. and Mrs. Carl Hilbert Hanson of Salmo, formerly of Ross\nland, B. C, wish to announce the\nengagement of their second\ndaughter, Irene Katherine to Mr.\nDavid Ernest Campbell, only son\nof Mrs. Ernest Albert Campbell\nand the late Dr. Ernesti Albert\nCampbell of 1998 Matthews Ave.,\nVancouver, B. C: The marriage\nwill take place at 2:30 p.m., Saturday, June 2nd, at Shabghnessy\nUnited Church, Vancouver, B. C.\nBraille Recipe Book Being\nPrepared for Blind Housewives\nBy OLI DAUM\nCanadian Press Staff Write!1\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014A group of\n12 women, here, good cooks, all,\nare preparing to publish a book\nof elaborate recipes for blind\nhousewives.\nSince last summer the women,\nwho call themselves the Cuisine\nClub have been meeting once a\nweek to test new recipes. They\npla nto publish these unusual and\nattractive recipes ln the usual\nmanner for sale throughout Canada  to  sighted  cooks.\nWith the money so earned, they\nWant to put out a braille edition,\nto be aptly entitled. Light Jn the\n\u25a0Kitchen..\nFounder and president of the\nclub is Mrs. E. H. Dickinson,\nMissouri-born woman who reads\ncookbooks instead of novels at\nbedtime. A volunteer worker for\nmany years Mth the blind. Mrs.\nDickinson, a recipe-collector for\n19 years, conceived the idea for\nthe braille book when a blind\nhousewife remarked that her\nrecipes were always so dull.\nCHOICE FOR BLIND\nMrs. Dickinson said she real\nized then that fine recipes, which\nmagazine, are not available to the\nblind; 4-\"\n'\"I thought that if I could get a\ncollection in braille of delicious,\nInteresting .goods, they would\nthen have the same privilege we\nhave\u2014a choice of what to cook,\"\nshe said.\nAlthough Light in Ijie Kitchen\nls not yet ready for the press, the\nclub has composed the dedication.\nIt reads:\n\"This book ls lovingly dedicated\nto the bravest women ln the world\n\u2014those who, without their sight,\ngo into their kitchens and cook.'\nMrs. Dickinson, who tries never\nto .serve the same dish twice at\nparties,, had envisioned compiling\nthe recipes with a committee; then\ntaking them to a publisher,.\nBut a telephone call from\nBlair, Ont., woman encouraged\nher to make the book a nationwide effort with women in every\nprovince contributing1.\nThe Cuisine Club was born and\nto date has tested 2000 \u2022 recipes.\nOne, for sour dough, was sent\nfrom Alaska,\nWANT 8TILL MORE      ,\n\"We've selected 1000 but liaven't\nenough choice dishes and would\nlike more women in other provinces to send us their recipes,\" Mrs.\nEMERALD PTA       I\nENQUIRES INTO\nDENTAL SERVICE\nEMERALD MINE \u2014 The monthly meeting of the Parent-Teacher\nAssociation held ln the Harold\nLakes School discussed possibility\nof having a dentist this year to\nexamine children's teeth. Dr. H.\nT. Lowe,' director of the Selkirk\nHealth Unit, will be approached.\nNews clippings were read of\nthe PTA convention held at Kamloops, as the Emerald did not send\na delegate this year\nA projector and dfyllght screen\nare to be purchased with the aid\nof the church group.\nMrs. B'. Kipp and Mrs. Johnston\nwere selected as nominating committee to line up officers for the\nnext term.\n' Mrs H\u201e Copley, Mrs. ,D. John\nand M. Phillips are on the school\nawards committee.\nMrs. R. Rowe gave a report on\nthe PTA Tea, which made $36.34.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, APRIL 24,1956 \u2014 5\nthe average woman can find every Dick!nson sM It wlll cost $3000_\ntime she opens a  newspaper  or\nand   Mrs.  Harry  Wassick,  Nine-\nMile.\n\u2022 \u00ab   \u2022 \u2022\nMrs. Norman F a w c e 11 and\ndaughter, Jane, are visiting Mrs.\nFawcett's parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nW. Melneczuk, 212 Chatham Street.\n\u2022 *   *\nMr. and Mrs. Owen Tupper,\nformer Nelson residents now residing ln Vancouver, were guests\nof Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Burgess,\nRosemont.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. P. F. Mclntyre, Mr.\nand Mrs. J. M. Cooper and Mrs.\nMary Cooper of Trail were the\nSunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. E.\nC. Horton, 320 Beasley Street.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nRev. John Allan, Robson Street,\nis a patient in Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. A. G. Gelinas of\nVictoria have been visiting their\nson and daughter-in-law, Mr. and\nMrs. .George H. Gelinas, 417 Hoover Street. En route here they visited 'then! son-in-law and daughter,\nMr. and Mrs, B. Cornwall ln Hope,\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nA social evening celebrating the\n10th birthday of the LOBA was\nheld at the home of Mrs, L.'Case\nmore,. 904 Vernon Street. Three\nnew members were welcomed'into\ntheir midst, A lovely luncheon\nwas served by a number of the\nladles.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nForty Hours Devotion is being\nobserved at the Cathedral of Mary\nImmaculate in Nelson and is being\npreached by Rev. Father Regis,\nS.A., of Athalmer, It opened Sunday morning at high mass which\nwas celebrated by Father F. Mon-\naghan. Special services will be\nheld at the closing Tuesday evening.\nA fine T. MILBURN Co. Product\nSanca Notes\nSANCA\u2014Mrs. T. A. Thjssell of\nGerat Falls, Mont., and Mrs. B.\nMorder of Moscow, Ida., have returned home after visiting at the\nhome of their sister, Mrs. W. Til\nlotson. Mrs. E. Legg of Creston\nmade the happy reunion of the\nfour sisters complete\nMr and Mrs C A Koch were recent visitors to relatives In Calgary.\nMr. and Mrs. F. Holms have re-\nturned home from visiting Cowley, Alta.    '\ndfj^dCauAa. Whsslsh.\nBuy, Sell, Trade the Clafflfled Way\nCHARM Beauty Salon\nNOW OPEN\nSTE. 211\nPHONE  1922\nMEDICAL ARTS BLDG.\n\"IN ALL LINES OF BEAUTY CULTURE\"\nMrs, H. McCallum, Prop.\n(Djulaa. 'Up. With.\nmoAian. VnaAtitL\ntwice as much as the club has in\nthe bank\u2014to publish the first editions.\n\"The first thing contributors say\nto me is, \"Oh, you want simple\nrecipes,\" Mrs. Dickinson said.\"\n\"That's just what we don't want.\nBlind housewives are provided\nwith simple recipes. We want the\nscrumptious dishes including the\nones from foreign countries.\n\"We are no judges of what a\nblind housewife can cook. I have\na cookbook written by a blind\nMexican housewife. The dishes\nare delicious and certainly not\neasy to make. They can do a lot\nmore than we think.\nThe club requires only that recipes state the exact oven temperatures, measurements and size\nand shapes of pans to. be used.\nEverything must be exact and\nprecise for those who can only\nfeel what they are doing.\nMrs. Dickinson said that while\nthe printed edition will be sold the\nBraille copy will be donated to\nlibraries of all blind institutes and'\nto housewives who request them.\nSoirth-Slocan\nWoman Goes On\nTrip To Germany\nSOUTH SLOCAN - Mrs. Brewster, wife -of the South Slocan\nCPR station agent N. Brewster,\nhas left by train on a three-month\ntrip which will take her to Germany and a visit with her mother\nnear Munster, Germany. After 28\nyears in Canada she is looking\nforward to this first return to herj\nformer homeland.\nMay 4 she will board the Empress of Britain and sail -for Liverpool on the ship's maiden voyage.\nShe plans to visit London, whence\nshe will go to Germany, visitihg\nBerlin, Dusseldorf and Karlsruhe,\nas well as Munster. She will return in July via New York accompanied by her niece, who is\nemigrating to Canada.\nHer family of two sons, Steven,\nMichael and a daughter, Ann, will\nbe chief cooks under Mr. Brewster's direction.\nMrs, Brewster will visit her\nrelatives In\" Calgary for a few\ndays and then will Journey to\nLondon', Ont., where she will be a\nguest of Mr. Brewster's sister.\nEmerald Mine\nEMERALD MINE - A farewell\ncoffee party was held at the home\nof Mrs. R. Chenoweth, by Mrs. A.\nAdolphson and Mrs. O. Mathers,\nln honor of Mrs. J. Beaton, who is\nleaving to make her home at the\ncoast. Her many friends presented\nher with, a steam iron.\nThe home1 of Mrs. B, Webber\nwas the setting for a farewell\nparty In honor of Mrs. H. Kettle-\nson, who ls going to make her\nhome at Blind River, Ont. Mrs\nKettleson was presented with\" a\ntravelling bag, on behalf of her\nmany friends,\nV. Prior is a patient ln Kootenay Lake General Hospital.\nRandy Chenoweth was tfie recipient of many gifts at a party\nheld in honor of her fourfh birth\nday.\nMrs. D. Ash is a patient in\nKootenay Lake General Hospital\nThe Teen-Ager's of the Emerald\nheld a successful dance at the\nCommunity Hall, sponsored by\nthe PTA.\nA Pink Cloud Resting on\na Tree Trunk\nSMOKE\nBig.\nTREE\n$2.00\nI\nPostage paid on prepaid orders. C.o.D.'o\nwelcome. Complete\nPlanting Instructions\nenclosed. Special\nTransplanting Fertilizer TAKE HOLD\nthat gets all trees off\nto a fast start, sent\nFREE with your order. If, on delivery,\nnot completely satisfied, return for your\nmoney back.\nWell-\nbranched\n2-4 Foot\nTrees, Only\nthe other flowering trees on\nyour street have quit blooming, this\nbreathtaking Smoke Ttree bursts forth\nIn\" all Its glory. Gorge'ous panicles are\nso dense, you can't see the branches\neven from ten feet away. Looks like\none huge puff of pink smoke. And stays\nIn bloom for weeks and. weeks. So\nbeautiful, people WW come for blocks\naround to admire It. It turns a dazzling\nyellow In Fall. Magnificent when planted In pairs. Thrives In full sun or semi-\nshade. Grows In almost any soil. Mature\nheight 10 to 15 feet. Our stock Is the\nbest we've ever had. Heavy-rooted and\nwell branched. Quantities of this fine\nquality stock are low, so please order\npromptly.\njpamllv Gardens Nursery, Dept. 16P\n1244 Dufferln Street, Toronto 4, Ont.\nPrint Name\t\nIADDRE88  \t\n1   ( ) 1 for $2.00 ( ) 2 for $3.50\nI ( ) 4 for $6.00\n\"FLOWER\"   PILLOWS\nLounging pillows with a new\nidea\u2014they're shaped, like big,\nbeautiful flowers! Scatter them\nabout your home\u2014they'll provide\ncomfort and gay conversation!\nPattern 728: Embroidery transfer, directions for three \"flower\"\npillows, each about 16 inches.\nSend TWENTY-FIVE CENTS ln\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern to Laura Wheeler.\nNDN, 60 Front St., W\u201e Toronto,\nOnt. Print plainly PATTERN\nNUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS.\nLook for smartest ideas in\nneedlecraft in our Laura Wheeler\nCatalog for 1955. Crochet, knitting, embroidery and lovely things\nto wear, iron-ons, quilts, apronB,\nnovelties \u2014 easy, fun to makel\nSend 25 cents for your copy of\nthis book NOW! You wil] want to\norder every new design in It.\n12-20\nSIZES  30-\u00ab\nCLASSIC  FLATTERY\nClassic flattery \u2014 the smart,\nsimple lines of this newest daytime dress! It's a wonderfully\nwearable style; with graceful bib\neffect, convertible collar, slimming 6-gore skirt. Have it in\nstriped or gay print cotton \u2014 short\nsleeved, sleeveless, too!\nPattern 9241: Misses sizes 12, 14,\n16, 18, 20. 30, 32, 34, 36, 38, 40,\n42. Size 16 takes 3% yards, 35-\ninch.\nSend THIRTY:FIVE CENTS\n(35c) In coins (stamps cannot be\naccepted), for this pattern Print\nplainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS.\nSTYLE NUMBER.\nSend  your  order1 to  MARIAN\nMARTIN, NDN, 60 Front St., W\nToronto.- Ont\nWHEELER\nSocred WA Hold\nCard Parry\nThe Women's Auxiliary to tbe\nSocial Credit Association held a\nsuccessful card party in the Redeemer Hall Saturday evening.\nProgressive whist and bridge was\nenjoyed by a capacity attendance\nPrizes were won by the following:\nwomen's bridge, first, Mrs. D. Parrish; second, Mrs. C. Shannon;\nmen's bridge, Mr. R. C. Malcolm-\nson; women's whist, first, Miss K.\nTagami; second, Mrs. W. E. Somers; men's whist, T. S. West. Master of ceremonies for the evening\nwas J. G. James. The door prize\nwas won by Mrs. J. Ratowski. Refreshments were, served by members of the Women's Auxiliary.\nTwO Kootenay\nNurses Graduate\nTwo Kootenay girls are among\nstudent nurses taking part ln\nRoyal Columbian Hospital graduating exercises In New Westminster this week.\nAmong the 48 graduates are\nMaurine Calder of Trail and\nFlorence Labentsoff of Nelson.\nBUY\nON OUR BUDGET PLAN\n10% DOWN\nBALANCE 18 MONTHS\njmm0\nHarrop Church WA\nPlans Tea, Sale\nHARROP\u2014At the regular meeting of Women's Auxiliary to Harrop Church held this week at\nhome of Mrs. V. C. Rowley, plans\nwere made for a spring tea, rummage and bake sale to be held on\nMay 9th at home of Mrs. D. P,\nFairbank. \u25a0\nA novelty contest will be arranged.   Any   donations   for  the\nrummage table can be left with \u25a0\nMrs. J. Berry.\nSaint Rose of Lima, native ot\nPeru, who died In 1617, was the\nfirst person of New World faith\nto be declared a saint.\nBLACKHEADS\nDon't \u00abqueeze BUckheui ind lenvo ugly\nKnM-\u00abh\u00ablv8 them wilh PEROXINK\nPOWDER. Simple - Safe - Sure.\nCleanses the porei deep down, giving\nyour iWn vitality and charm. At your\nDniggi*t. ReiulU guaranteed. Price $1,98\nF. T. Mamchur Wins\nHarrop Whist Series\nHARROP \u2014 The much-enjoyed\nbi-monthly whist socials held by\nthe Harrop and.District Community Centre In the school wound up\ntheir festivities for the season and\nadded up the final scores last\nweek.\nTop scorer was F. T. Mamchur\nwith 1110 points,-followed by S.\nHutcheson with 1087 points. Leading the women were. Mrs. T. Si-\ncotte with 1057 and Mrs. C.McNown with 1055. The, prize won\nby F. Mamchur was re-donated to\nthe Centre, and raffled. Lucky\n'winner of this bronze statuette\nbank in form of a cowboy boot\nwas Lyle Paulhus.\nEmerald Curlers,\nWind Up Season,\nEMERALD MINE - The Ladies'\nCurling Club held its annual\nparty at the Community Hall,\nwhere skits were presented and\nbingo games enjoyed.\nThe party wound up with a cOld\nplate' supper.\n *\nClassified Ada Get Results\nHow To LIVE\n365 Days a Year\n\"60% of those seeking medical aid\ncan blame badly handled emotions,\" says Dr. John Schindlor.\nBut how can we lessen the nagging illnesses that plague our\ndaily lives?\nMay Reader's Digest, in a\ncondensation from this doctor's\nbest selling book, shows the\ndamage done by flare-ups, worry;\nand the healing power of good\nemotion. \u2014 7 rules for cultivating a happier disposition. Get\nyour May Reader's Digest today:\n41 articles of lasting interest\ncondensed to save your time.\nThe Modern Way to . \u2666 \u2666\nSpace Saving and Convenience\n\"CLOPAY\" ggg*\"\nBeauty Expert Reveals Why ...\nOlder Women\ns\nLook Younger\nBy Nancy Ann Stokes\nYesterday at the television studios I witnessed a miracle! Before my\nastonished eyes I saw a 45-year-old woman look ten years younger\nin Just minutes.\nI saw Ern Westmore, one of Hollywood's most celebrated makeup\nartists, select a middle-aged house- ( .\t\nwife from his studio audience. '\nThen, at Mr, Westmore watched,\nshe applied a hew beauty formula\nto her face and neck. Instantly I\nsaw wrinkles, dark Circlet under\ntbe eyes and \"age-lines\" disappear.\nI taw blemishes and birth marks\nvanish. I taw tired, old-looking\nskin turn satiny-smooth and young\nagain.\nNext, with'a few ttroket, tha reshaped her lips . . . changed her\neyebrows, touched up ber hair.\nWith each stroke I heard the audience gatp In awe and wonder at\nthe mlraculout transformation that\nwai taking place. Her face now\nglowed with the vitality of youthful freshnett and beauty. Flashing\ndevil-may-care eyet danced with\nfire. Tempting lips tparkled with\nenticing enchantment. Her tkin\nwat now to toft and Ivory-tmooth\nyou wanted to reach out and touch\nIt. And most amazing of all, what\nErn Westmore did for thlt woman,\nyou can do for yourtelf In your\nown home In Jutt mlnutet ... and\ndo It\nErn Westmore, Dean of\nHollywood Makeup Artists,\nTELLS   TRUTH   ABOUT\nMOVIE STARS\n\"Often people ask me, how ls it\nso many actreses who are \"older\"\ncan still play glamour-girl parts?\nIt's simple. It's not how old you\nare . . . but how old you lookl\nThese actresses just don't happen\nto stay young-looking . . . they've\ngot certain secrets.\nRUB\nI   AWAY\nTHROBBING\nPAIN\nArthritic and\nRheumatic Aches\nHere is how fo prove it yourself!\nJust massage the aching spots briskly\nwilh Buckley's White Rub. Right %way;\nyou feel a comforting, glowing, warmth\nwhich means the circulation is being\nstimulated, and local congestion broken\nup. Tortured muscles and joints respond\nquickly from lhe combined action of Ihe\npain relieving ingredients In every jar.\nWhy spend another minute of misery\u2014\ngel WHITE RUB today, and comfort\nright away. Only 59tf \u2014 but priceless\nclicn you get an ache or pain.\nF R F. E t GENEROUS SIZE TRIAL JAR\nSend I5tf to cover posfage and packing 1.\nW. K. 11UCKLEY LIMITED. TORONTO\nInstall t}iem yourself in\nminutes. You need only a\nscrew driver.\nAccordion folds have permanent PRE-PLEAT Panels\nfor lifetime use.\nNeutral grey, blends with\nall colors or, paint them in\nyour own color scheme.\nFolds away silently at a\ntouch.\nInstpll them In bedrooms,\nnursery, k i t c h e n, utility\nroom, cldsets, etc.\nNELSON HARDWARE CO.\nWITHOUT  RISKING  A  PENNYI\nA NEW C08METIC BEAUTY\nDISCOVERY\nIt Is no secret that the mott Im\nportant ttep to beauty Is the kind\nof makeup you ute. For yeart\ntelence hat known that'powdered\nmakeup clogs youY tkln porei \u2014\nenlargei your pores. That powdered makeup prevents the natural\ntkin Silt from functioning prop\nerly.\nFinally after thousands of tettt,\ntcienoe found a SUPER-LANOLIN\nLIQUID MAKE-UP that doet not\nrequire the use of harmful, pore-\nclogging powder. That doet not become flaky, caky, or blotchy. It\ndoet not harden your tkln\u2014dry\nout your skin. And thlt. wat Just\nthe beginning!\nTHE  SECOND  AND  GREATEST\nDISCOVERY OF ALL\nBut science was not satitfled with\na makeup that Jutt covered up\nblemlshet. They wanted to CORRECT BLEMISHESI After hundred! of additional tettt came the\ngreatett achievement of all. They\nfound by-blending a new wonder,\ndiscovery called Sorbitol Into this\nSuper Lanolin Liquid Make-up ,..\nthey combined a COVER-UP\nWITH A MIRACULOUS SKIN\nCONDITIONER! You can actually\nfeel thlt new Lanollrl-Sorbltol Ll\nquid Makeup penetrating Into your\ntkln. Feel the way It tmootht your\nskin, maket your tkin feel young\nand alive. Imagine! Jutt apply a\nfew drops to your face and neck.\nInttantly you cover-up shadows,\ndark circlet, blemishes, \"crow*\nfeet,\" wrinkles, frecklet, birthmark! . . . AND EVERY OTHER\nTYPE OF SKIN FLAWI Your\ncomplexion takes on that youthful,\nradiant look. It glvet you natural\ntkln texture with  toft, flattering\n\"FRIENDLY   SERVICE\"\nPhone 21\n446 Baker St.\nwarm tones. You're YOUNGER\nTHAN YOU'VE EVER LOOKED\nBEFORE! And remember! This revolutionary new makeup goet pn\nto tmoothly, to evenly, to naturally, you need no powder.\nHOLLYWOOD BEAUTY  KIT'\nFREEI\nAll we atk you to do It TRY .. .\nnot buy ... but TRY Charles A\"-\ntail's great new makeup at dur\nrisk. For your trouble we wlll be\nonly too happy to send you ABSOLUTELY FREE a complete Hollywood Beauty Kit worth $5.00 and\ncontaining: 6 Hollywood Eyebrow\noutlines; 6 Hollywood Lip outlines:\n3 Month's size of Charlet Antell's\n\"Pink' Blush\" Liquid Rouge; 1\n\"8llk Tone\" Lip Liner Pencil; 1\n\"Fine Point\" Eyebrow Pencil:\nCharlet \u00bb Antell's \"Morn-tll-Nlte\"\nlipstick In the beautifully ttyled\n\"Futura-Goldutt\" cate; the Ern\nWeitmore Hollywood Glamour\nGraph ... a completely Illustrated\nbeauty course that shows at- a\nglance how to ttyle your hair and\napply makeup . . . plui,101 other\nbeauty tricks.  ,\nIf after utlng Charlet Antell't\nnew Super Lanolin Makeup you\ncan't look Into your mirror and\nhonestly tay that you look ten\nyeart younger ... If even a tingle\nline, mark or blemish It still visible\n... If your frlendt and loved ones\ndon't thower you with compliments galore .on your new youthful appearance , . . limply return\nthe makeup for your full money\nback. It hat cost you absolutely\nnothing. But keep the Ern West-\nmore Hollywood Beauty Kit as a\nFREE GIFT1\nFor Free Gift you Mutt Act Now!\nCharles Antell's new Super Lanolin Makeup It priced to sell at $5.00\nfor a full 6 month't tupply. Your\nHollywood Beauty Kit It alto a\n$5.00 value. But If you act now on\nthlt Introductory offer you get the\n$5.00 Hollywood Beauty Kit ABSOLUTELY FREEI But thlt offer wlll\nnot be repeated. The sooner you\norder ... the tooner you will\npossess a new, flattering youthful\nappearance. So please tend your\nFREE  GIFT coupon  NOWI\nINTRODUCTORY OFFER\nEXPIRES\nMONDAY, MIDNIGHT, APRIL 30TH\n\u2014 CLIP THIS COUPON AND MAIL BY APRIL 30, 1956. \t\nCHARLES ANTELL (CANADA) LTD.,\n2 Charlet St. Wett, Dept. CD,\nToronto 5, Ontario.\nYes, I would like to try your newly-discovered Super Lanolin\nLiquid Makeup arid receive FREE your Hollywood Beauty Kit.\nWhen my eBauty Kit and 6J months' supply of makeup arrive\nI will pay Postman $5.00 plus C.O.D. charges and postage. I\nunderstand that if your makeup doesn't do all you promise, I\nmay return it for my full money back. BUT THE FREE HOLLYWOOD KIT is mine to keep as a GIFT.\nCheck Shade to Match Your Complexion:\nBrunette (Olive or Tan) Q    Medium Q\nFair\nD\nNAME \u00bb\t\n(please print)\nADDRESS   \t\nCITY. 1.:....  Zone  Province .\n 6 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, APRIL 24,1956\nGives Credit lo Reporters and\nRadio for Rescue From Cave-In\nBy RUSSELL  ELMAN\nCanadian Prett 8taff Writer\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 A ceaseless,\nthrobbing pain in the feet of a\nquiet, elderly Toronto department\nstore salesman is all that reminds\nhira'of an ordeal that 20 years ago\nMonday flashed his name across\nthe world.\nAt exactly 1 a.m., April 23, 1988,\nAlfred ' Scadding, begrimed and\nexhausted, stumbled out of a 10-\nday entombment in a dank,\ngloomy mineshaft, ending an epic\nwithout parallel in Canadian\nhistory.\nBy morning eye-witness accounts from radio and newspaper\n(Oabaa. lip. U)iik\nmcuiuw. WLudin.\nreporters who went to Moose\nRiver from many \u2022 parts of the\nUnited States and Canada had\nmade him a national figure, who\nfor weeks could keep even the\nprime minister off the front pages.\n\"If lt hadn't been for the press\nand radio, we may not have been\nsaved,\" says Mr. Scadding. \"The\nofficials, figuring we had been\nkilled, were ready' to call off the\nrescue.\"\n\"But the press and radio men\naroused the public to such a point,\nthe officials dared not give up.\"\nAt 64, and head' of the store's\nphilatelic department, he is the\nsole survivor of a cave-in that incarcerated three Toronto men 141-\nfeet down in the black pit. Dr.\nD. E. Robertson lwas rescued but\ndied in 1855, while Herman Magill,\nthe mine-owner, never lived to see\ndaylight again.\nThe three, on a routine inspection ot the abandoned mine they\nhoped to reopen, were in the skip\nwaiting to be pulled to the surface when the shaft fell in 40 feet\nabove them. For a week they lived\nwithout food and only a flashlight\nto illuminate the bleak cavern, not\nknowing even whether rescue\noperation's were in progress.\nOn the 10th day following the\nEaster Sunday accident, rescue\nworkers got through to the entombed men with a diamond drill,\nenabling cocoa and brandy to be\ndropped. A phone also was lowered and for the first time the men\ncould talk to the outside world.\nFor the next three days excitement mounted as 300 underground\nand surface rescuers prodded and\npicked their way down to the\ntrapped- men. Finally to the cheers\nof thousands gathered at the pithead and echoed by radio around\nthe world, the break-through was\nmade and the rescue completed.\nApart from the pain in his feet,\nresulting from an operation after\nthe rescue in which he lost all his\ntoes, Mr. Scadding rarely thinks\nabout the ordeal these days.\nRacial Segregation\nIn Buses Banned\nWASHINGTON (AP) - The\nU.S. Supreme Court banned racial segregation of buses operating within states.\nThe tribunal did' so by refusing\nto review a decision by the U.S.\ncircuit court ln Richmond, Va\u201e\nthat- segregation on- Intrastate\nbuses violates the federal constitution.\nThe high tribunal's action \u2014\nwhich thus left the circuit court\nruling stand \u2014 was announced In\na brief ordeu It said an appeal\nby South Carolina Electric and\nGas Co. from the circuit decision\nwas dismissed.\nTlssuUsjuuitfL\nby. ZtajuJuL U)h&ekh.\nII \"\nGIFT TO DOMINICANS-A statue of George\nWashington Is presented by Carl ). Larsgard, left, president ef\nthe American colony in Cludad Trujlllo, and accepted for hit\npeople by Dominican Republic's Gov, Vlrgllio Alvares Plna, right.\n9311\nit\u201420; 30\u2014\u00ab    vSA\nSNAP TO SEW!\nSEE this honey of a dress! Then\nstudy the diagram! Did you ever\nsee such an easy sew? FEW pattern parts, minimum details. Get\nthis on your sewing machine right\nnow!. Make it up in crisp cotton,\nprint silk, or shantung!\nPattern 9311: Misses' Siier 12,\n14, 16, 18, 20; 30, 32, 34, 38, 38,\n40, 42. Size 16 dress requires 3'\/\u00bb\nyards 35-inch fabric.\nThis easy-to-use pattern gives\nperfect fit Complete, illustrated\nSew Chart shows you every step\n.Send THIRTY-FIVE CENTS\n(35c) in coins - (stamps cannot be\naccepted), for this pattern Print\nplainly SIZE, NAME. ADDRESS.\nSTYLE NUMBER.\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN. NDN. 60 Front St.. W..\nToronto. Ont\nRecipes...\nAnnounce New Way\nTo Shrink Painful\nHemorrhoids\nScience Finds Healing Substance That\nRelieves Pain\u2014Shrinks Hemorrhoids\nToronto, Ont. (Special)\u2014For the\nfirst time science lias found a Dew\nhealing sube'tance with the astonishing ability to shrink hemorrhoids and\nto relieve pain. Thousands have been\nrelieved\u2014without resort to surgery.\nIn case after case, while gently relieving pain, actual reduction (shrinkage) took place.\nMost amazing of all\u2014results were\nbo thorough tnat sufferers made\nastonishing statements like \"Piles\nhave ceased to be a problem!\"\nThe Becret is a new healing substance (Bio-Dyne*) \u2014 discovery of\na famous scientific institute.\nNow you can get this new healing\nBubstance in suppository or ointment\nform called Preparation H*. Ask for\nH at all' drug stores. Satisfaction\nguaranteed or money refunded.\n\u2022Trnrto Murk HBf.\nNutril|onr\nFlavor Combine\nIn Almonds\nBy MARGARET CARR,\nIn Denmark, when I was there\nseveral years ago, one of the first\nthings we noticed about baked\ngoods was the use the Danes made\nOf almonds and almond flavoring.\nHowever, we didn't have to go\nto Denmark to know that almonds\nare among the tastiest and most\nwholesome of foods. They are\nsuch an enjoyable addition to confectionery, bakery goods and ice\ncream that they tend to be a\ndistinctive treat rather than a\nStaple and their high nutritive\nWorth overlooked. They are providers of muscle and energy food.\nYour family will come arun-\nning when they smell your \"Banana Almo'nd Cake\" baking and it\nwill be hard to make them wait\nuntil the delicious broiled almond\ntopping is cool enough to eat. As\nfor our almond cookies, we found\nthem a real treat. Crispy and\ncrunchy\u2014just the way we like\nthem.\nBANANA ALMOND CAKE\nVi cup shortening\nVi cup sugar\nft tsp vanilla\nl'egg\n1 cup sifted cake flour\nft tsp. salt\nft tsp baking powder\nVs tsp soda\nVs'cup mashed banana\n2 tbsps sour milk\nALMOND TOPPING\n3 tbsps butter or margarine\nft cup brown sugar\n1 tbsp. cream\nft cup chopped almonds\nCream shortening and sugar to-\nBEQINNtvK-aiMPLE!\nBEGINNER-SIMPLE, to crochet\nthis lovely new doily for your\nhome! It's all done in a Jiffy\u2014in\nyour favorite pineapple design!.\nPattern 738: Crocheted dolly\n19-lnches ln mercerized crochet\nand knitting cotton; smaller one\nto match. S-o-o easy; so pretty!\nSend TWENTY-riVE CENTS in\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted),\nfor this pattern to Laura Wheeler.\nNDN, 60 Front St., W., Toronto,\nOnt. Print plainly PATTERN\nNUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS.\n\u25a0 Look for smartest ideas ln\nneedlecraft in our Laura Wheeler\nCatalog for 1055. Crochet, knitting,\nembroidery and lovely things to\nwear. Iron-ons, quilts, aprons, novelties \u2014 easy, fun to makel Send\n25 cents.for your copy of this book\nNOWI You will want to order\nevery new design tn it.\nChurthill Does Neat\nBit of Bricklaying\nLONDON (AP) \u2014 Bricklayer\nSir Winston Churchill seized a\ntrowel Monday and did a neat job\nof laying a cornerstone.\nThe 81-year-old' former prime\nminister, who holds an honorary\nmembership in a bricklayers' union, officiated at the cornerstone\nlaying for a new building of the\nCassell Publishing Co.,\nThe old firm, which has published many of Churchill's books,\nbrought out his latest work Monday, the first volume of a four-\nvolume History of the English-\nspeaking Peoples.\nWearing a morning, coat\" striped\ntrousers and square black hat,\nChurchill leaned a gold-headed\ncane against a wall and proceeded with his masonry with little\ngether thoroughly. Blend in vanilla and lightly beaten egg. Sift\ntogether flour, salt, baking pow-,\nder and soda. Add to creamed\nmixture alternatively with banana and milk. Pour into greased\n8-inch square pan. Bake in moderate oven (350 deg. F.) about 30\nminutes. Spread topping over\ncake and place under broiler a\nminute or until mixture ls bubbly.\nTOPPING\nCream butter and brown sugar\ntogether. Blend in cream arid almonds.\nALMOND CAKES\n2 cups sifted pastry flour\n1 cup sugar\nVi tsp. baking powder\nVi tsp. salt\n2-3 cup shortening\n1 cup chopped, blanched almonds.\n1 egg, beaten\n2 tsps almond extract\n2 tbsps milk\nSplit blanched almonds.\nSift together flour, sugar, baking powder and salt. Cut or rub\nin shortening until mixture is\nlike cornmeal. Add chopped almonds. Mix egg, almond extraqt\nand milk. Add to flour mixture.\nMix well and knead gently half\nminute. Form into balls the size of\nmarbles. Place on ungreased bak'\ning dish. Flatten with fork.' Put\nalmond halfjon each. Bake in slow\noven (325 deg. F.) about ,20 minutes.\nmmmm\n\u00abmmm\nFor\nLow Cost\nLife\nInsurance\nm:a\n8';,:\u2122\nim\nftilffis\n0ms\n*    \u25a0       r A f* **\nII\n\u00a5?Jm*m\ns\u00abe your local Mutual Life of Canada representative:.\nBranch Office: 450 Bolter St., Nelson, B.C.\nBranch Manager: W. Lawrence Hall, C.L.U.\nCity Representative: Fraser Tees\nDistrict Representatives: Art Anderson, Castiegar; Ed. Dalolse, Trail; Rich Hood, Creston; Al, Mather,\nPenticton; Harley 8hookey, Vernon: Desmond Hood, Rowland; Alex Basaraba, Cranbrook; Earle Tabor, Natal; Ray Bostock, Kelowna; Gladys Young, Armstrong.\nMoscow Journal\nBlasts Vishinsky\nMOSCOW (AP) \u2014 The standard\nSoviet practice of trial by confession, which served Stalin so well\nin erasing his opponents, has been\ndenounced in Russia's leading\nlaw Journal.\nThe magazine Soviet State and\nLaw labels tha procedure a \"glaring violation .of . . . socialist legality.\" It roundly criticles the late\nAndrei Vishinsky, who prosecuted\nthe purge trials of the 1990s at\nwhich many veteran Bolsheviks\nwere convicted on their own confessions and put to death.\nSmoking Just\nVersion\nThumb-Sucking\nOKLAHOMA CITV (AP) -\u00bbthe\nman who enjoys puffing on that\nbig ,fat cigar merely ta indulging\nIn an adult version of thumb-\nsucking, \" '\u2022\u25a0',\nAnd the same goes tor the cigaret smoker and tha gum chewer,\nadda Dr. Maury Massler, head of\nthe children's department of the\nUniversity of Illinois' College of\nDentistry. ...'    \u25a0*>'\u2022>.\nMassler, speaking at the annual\nOklahoma State Dental Associa-\ntion convention, urged parents to\nuse more understanding in deal\ning with problems of thumb\nsucking and nail-biting In chil\ndren.'\nHe said every person needs\nsome habit to relieve tension and\ngive relaxation '\u2014 \"lt is a method\nof relieving the Inner tensions\nthat build up.\"\n\"Kids who bite nails, although\nlt is not socially acceptable, are\nreleasing the tension they live\nunder.\"\nThe man who puffs contentedly\non a cigar \"is sucking his thumb'\nand the man who chews Vigorously on his stogia \"is a nail biter\"\nMassler said.\nMassler claimed lt was no accident that people chew gum, citing research which he said shows\nthat gum-chewing started when\nthe typewriter was Invented. The\nneed to use both hands ruled out\nnail-biting or hair-twirling as a\nrelease for stenographers.\nceremony. After spreading the\nmortar and tapping tha stone into\nplace, he attended a literary luncheon in his honor.\nAdventurer Back\nFrom World Tour\nVANCOUVER (CP) - The 24,-\n000-ton liner' Orion has arrived\nhere from Australia1 with 1100\npassengers aboard, many of them\nyoung immigranta from the Antipodes.\nAlso aboard was 31-year-old\nadventurer Ted Bumlller of Cincinnati, returning home after\ndriving a Jeep around the world\nin a year and visiting 30 countries\nenro'ttte.\nA graduate in architecture, Mr.\nBumlller said in an interview he\nmade the trip with a movie\ncamera and J5000. His adventurea,\nIncluded a mountain - climbing\nexpedition on the Matterhorn,\nfilming the Big Four conference\nin Geneva and a tour along the\noil pipeline through Iran to\nAfghanistan, India and Pakistan.\nHis closest brush with death,\nSaid Mr. Bumlller, came when\nhe was charged by a water\nbuffalo in India. The animal's\nhorns left wide gashes ln the side\nof his Jeep but he escaped unharmed. \u00bb\nFor free full-color folder write\nCanadian Johns-Manville, Dept. N-51,      **\n565 lakeihore Rd. E\u201e Port Credit, Ont. Or.\nSEE YOUR NEAREST J-M DEALER\nJohns-\nManville\nASPHALT\nHINGLES\n\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\ns-\u00abw\nChicken Peck Fatal\nNANCY, France (Reuters) \u2014\nqerthe Collignon, 68, died m a\nhospital near here Sunday after\nhaving been pecked iiy the neck\nby a chicken Friday, hospital Officials reported. The wound had\nbecome poisonous.\nBuy, Sell, Trade thoClafflfled Way\nT. H: Waters Co. Ltd.\n101 Hall St.\nPhoni 156\nLazareff & Co. Ltd.\nROSSLAND, B. C.\n  '\u25a0'\u25a0\u2022' - \u25a0 -\n L ;\t\n !\t\n\u25a0  I \u25a0   .   ' \u25a0'\u00bb.'\u25a0 ..,-.' \u25a0        \u25a0\n : I i ; i ,\t\n Wif^\u00abV^fW\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, APJIL 24,1956 \u2014 7\n_\nMaroons\n\u2014^w\u2014\n\u2022\n\"\u25a0\" . .\t\n\\0i\nas Vernon Takes Lead in Set\ndtsMiA $ohn.\nSfwakinq. on.\ns\nHORT\nPORT\nBefore much longer, this reporter is going to start\ndedicating more space to Summer sports such as baseball, tennis, golf, swimming and such. But now I arn worried about the future of senior hockey in the Interior of\nBritish Columbia.\nOnly Spokane made money in the Western International during this past season, while Vernon, and perhaps Kelowna, made ends meet in the Okanagan Senior\nHockey League. Penticton and Kamloops, I feel sure,\nwound up with every member of the executive taking a\nthorough dunking in red ink.\nOver here, Kimberley lost $600 despite a sizeable\nleague subsidy, Trail wound up approximately $12,000 in\nthe hole and Nelson went into debt to the tune of $7000,\nor thereabouts,\nvoting) members (and voting members only) perhaps they would be\nless hesitant to make the step.\nMy knowledge of the financial\nsetup in the Okanagan loop is\nlimited, but I realize over here\nsomething must be done\u2014and\nsoon\u2014if hockey is to survive.\nSeveral authoritative hockey men\n(none of them executives or active\nbooster club members) have\nspoken to me about the advisability of forming a group of 100 men\nor so, each willing to put $100 into\na fund for the preservation of\nsenior hockey in Nelson.\nNaturally, many will say: \"I\nwouldn't put money into that club\nunless I knew what would come\nof it.\" I don't blame them for\nsaying it.\nBut, if each of those who put up\n$100 were put on an executive as\nTo Negotiate\nWith Archie\nVANCOUVER (CP) -> Fight\npromotor Earle Kalani said today\nhe will meet Tuesday with world\nlight-heavyweight champion Archie Moore to make final arrangements for a non-title bout at Vancouver's Capilano stadium late in\nJuly.\nKalani said Moore will fly to\nVancouver from Los Angeles for\na two-hour meeting. The champion's proposed opponent is Ed-\ngardo Romero, a South American\nheavyweight who drew a record\nVancouver crowd two years ago in\nan outdoor bout with Canadian\nheavyweight Earl Walls.\nCanadians Register Easy Triumph\nWith Spurt in Final 40 Minutes\nKELOWNA\u2014Running home seven consecutive goals in the second and third\nperiods here Monday night, Vernon Canadians romped to a 7-1 victory over Chatham\nMaroons and grabbed a 2-1 lead in the best-of-seven Allan Cup final series.\nFrank King and George Agar, with three and two goals, respectively, paced the\nCanadian attack, with Art Hart and Walt Trentini accounting for singles. Chick\nChalmers shattered Hal Gordon's shutout bid with a tally at 19:09 of the final frame.\nFour goals in the second period, two of which were\nscored by King, and three in the finale spelled finish to\nChatham's hopes of taking a one-game lead into the fourth\ngame, tomorrow night.\nMurph Chamberlain, Maroons' coach, promised before the game that it. would be a \"slaughter.\" He did not\nsay in whose favor, for which he now is thankful. After\nGordon had performed several fine stops in the first period\non assorted Maroon forwards, Agar scored on Vernon's\nfirst good chance, poking home a loose puck before four\nminutes had elapsed in the\nBaseball Standings\nBy The Associated Press\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nW L\nMilwaukee     4   2\nBrooklyn      4   2\nChicago .. _     3   2\nPhiladelphia       3   3\nNew York    3   3\nSt. Louis     3   3\nPittsburgh    2   4\nCincinnati       1   4\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nNew- York     5   1\nChicago    4\nKansas City    3\nBoston     3\nWashington    3\nCleveland  _   2\nDetroit     2\nBaltimore     2\nPet. GBL\n.867\n.667\n.600\n.500\n.500\n.500\n.333\n.200\n.833\n.800\n.600\n.500\n.429\n.333\n.333\nHow To Held\nFALSE TEETH\nMere Firmly in Place\nDo your false teeth annoy and em-\ntomes by sUpplns, dropping or wobbling when you eat, laugh ortalkf\nJust sprtnilo a Uttla FASTEETH on\njour plates. This alkaline (non-nola)\npowder holds falsa teeth more firmly\nand mon comfortably. No gummy,\ngooey, naoty taate or tooling. Doet not\ncour. Checks \"plate odor' (denture\nbreath). Get FASTEETH today at\nany drug counter.\nApparently, this idea is not\noriginal, but I believe it is workable. Because every person who\nhad his own money Invested ln\nthe club would also have to pay\nhis buck to see the game anyway.\nIn effect it would mean that a man\nwith a share in the club would\nbe protecting his own investment\nby paying out $25 tor 23 home\ngames. In would be like paying\n$25 to yourself, because, if this\nplan were carried out, shareholders would profit at the end of the\nseason, if any profits were made.\n* *   *\nThe plan would also make the\nteam a \"community project,\" instead of what it is now: a team in\nwhich few have interest and about\nwhich few care. Nothing can be\ndone, naturally, until the executive\nhas its annual meeting and announces what the total deficit ls,\nbut lt is a subject for thought.\n\u2022 *   *\nThere are numerous fans In\ntown interested in the Vernon-\nChatham Allan Cup final to the\ndegree that I am moved to suggest\nthat some group, (what about the\nBooster Club?) organize a trip\nover next weekend, if the sixth\nand seventh games of the, series\nare necessary.\nJust a suggestion. What does Joe\nFan think of the idea?\nBritish Rugby\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014Results of\ntonight's British rugby games:\nRUGBY UNION\nBridgwater and Albion 6 Cheltenham 0\nNuneaton 12 Llanelly 21\nPenry 0 Cross Keys 8\nPenzance and Newlyn 14 Gloucester 9\nLeicester 9 Northampton 16\nRUGBY LEAGUE\nHuddersfield 20 Batley 15\nHull Kingston Rovers 9 York 13\nBarrow 22 Whitehaven 5\nsecond period\nScant moments before Agar's\ntally, Gordon moved out to block\na breakaway attempt by Lloyd\nFerguson. On the next rush goal-\nward, Agar took a rebound off a\nshot from the point by Willie\nSchmidt and rifled the puck into\nthe right-hand corner.\nSchmidt was playing with seven\nstitches in his head, received during Saturday night's game when\nTed Power, starry Maroon centre,\nbelted him with a high stick just\nthree seconds before the game\nended. Power missed Monday's\ngame and will not return until the\nfifth game of the series.\nWithin 30 seconds after Agar's\ntally, Jim Connelly, who assisted\non Chalmer's marker, had Gordon\nbeaten but fired wide. After that\nthreat, Chatham's chances grew\nprogressively fewer and weaker\nuntil Vernon's scoring outburst\nhad moved the game beyond reach.\nKing, who is seldom noticed\nuntil he has popped a loose puck\ninto an open corner or set up a\nteam-mate for a scoring play, was\nhis old elusive self as he fired\nthree goals, including two in a\nrow which gave Vernon a 3-0 lead\nshortly after the midway mark in\nthe middle frame. His two tallies\ncame just 73 seconds apart.\nVernon's scoring throughout was\ndone in streaks. King's two goals\nand the three in the third were\nrapid fire deals. Agar, Trentini and\nKing scored within two minutes\nand six seconds in the third period\nstarting at 2:31 and winding up\nat 4:27.\nKing and Ron Halstead of Maroons were sent off together for\nroughing midway through the\nthird period and they were assess\ned match-misconducts, as well, for\ncontinuing their altercation after\nreaching the penalty box.\nOnly seven penalties were called, six to Maroons, Including all\nthree in the first period.\nChatham\u2014goal: Edwards; defence: Zorica, Blair, Kotanen, Baldwin; forwards: Unger, Dick, Busch,\nJoyce, Bendo, Connelly, Chalmers,\nFerguson, Viskelis, Halstead.\nVernon\u2014goal: Gordon; defence:\nStecyk, McLeod, Lavell, Schmidt;\nforwards: Kraiger, Bidoski, Roche,\nMacdonald Agar, Trentini, Hart,\nKing, Lowe, Harms.\nFirst period: Scoring\u2014none.\nPenalties: Harms :58 Macdonald\n3:14, Macdonald 10:49.\nSecond period: 1. Vernon, Agar\n(Schmidt) 3:30; 2. Vernon, King\n(Stecyk, Harms) 10:08; 3. Vernon,\nKing (Lav*ell) 11:21; 4. Vernon,\nHart (Trentini, Macdonald) 19:41.\nPenalties: Hart 14:48.\nThird period: 5. Vernon, Agar\n(McLeod) 2:31; 6. Vernon, Trentini\n(Macdonald, Lavell) 3:18; 7. Vernon, King (Lowe, Harms) 4:27; 8.\nChatham, Chalmers (Connelly,\nBendo) 19:09.\nPenalties: King (minor and\nmatch-misconduct) 9:13; Halstead\n(minor and match-misconduct)\n9:13, Lavell 12:27 .\nSonny Andrews\nTo Face Moore\nEDMONTON (CP) -Archie\nMoore, world light heavyweight\nboxing champion, will meet Sonny\nAndrews of Los Angeles instead of\nFrankie Daniels in a 10-round ex\nhibltion here Thursday night, the\nAlberta Boxing Club 'announced\nMonday night.\nThe club, which is sponsoring\nthe bout, said in a statement that\nword was received Monday from\nDaniels' manager that the fighter\nsuffered an injury during training\nSaturday and has been refused,\npermission by Los Angeles med.\nical authorities to keep his scheduled date with Moore.\nAndrews, a heavyweight weighing bout 190 pounds, has fought\nMoore once previously. The fight,\nabout a year ago, was stopped in\nthe eighth round when Andrews\nsuffered a cut near an eye.\nBaseball Scores\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nBrooklyn     000 030 012\u20146 8 0\nPhiladelphia      000 000 010\u20141 9 1\nDrysdale and Campanella; Dick\nson, Pillette (9) and Semlnlck.\nINTERNATIONAL LEAGUE\nMontreal 3 Richmond 7\nBuffalo 0 Havana 1\nRochester 2 Miami 1\nToronto at Columbus (postponed\ncold).\nREDLEGS RELEASE RUDY\nCHICAGO (AP) - Cincinnati\nRedfegs released pitcher Rudy\nMinarcin to their Havana farm\nclub of the International League.\nMinarcin, a 26-year-old righthander, won five and lost nine\ngames for the Redlegs last season.\nOutlaws\nBaseball\nNelson Outlaws have entered\nthe Washington-British Columbia\nBaseball League. They were formally accepted into the Beven-\nteam league Friday night in a\nmeeting at Kettle Falls, Wash.\nOther teams entered were Colville\nEagles, 760th Air Squadron, USAF;\nChewelah, Kettle Falls, Hunter\nand Inchelium, all Washington\nclubs.\nRon Nash, manager of the local\nbaseball squad, reported that he\nexpects a schedule with mimeographed copies of league rules to\nbe forwarded Immediately. Each\nteam, he said, will play a home-\nand-home series with every other\nclub ln the league.\nThat was by all and any odds\nthe biggest bit of baseball news\nas yet generated on the local summer sports scene. Outlaws held\ntheir first practice over the weekend and an estimated 25 to 30\nprospects showed up. At two\no'clock, they were joined by a\nhandful of candidates for Nelson\nEnter Organized\nLeague for '56\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiii\nAdmit Rochester\nInto Canadian\nFootball League\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 Rochester, N. Y., was officially admitted into the senior series\nof the Ontario Rugby Football\nUnion at a meeting here Sunday. It will be the first time\nAn American team has played in a Canadian football league.\nORFU officials announced\nat the meeting that the Canadian Rugby Union, governing\nbody of the sport, had approved Rochester's admittance.\nThe ORFU now ls a four-team\nleague with clifba from Toronto, Kitchener, Sarnia and\nRochester.\nill in mil I rn i \u25a0 in r 1111 \u25a0Tiiiimir 1111 in i ii\nRookie Sparks\nDodger Victory\nPHILADELPHIA (AP) - Shlv-\nering impatiently in 40 \u2022 degree\nweather, Brooklyn Dodgers hurried through to a 6-1 victory over\nPhiladelphia Phillies in a little\nover two hours Monday night behind the nine-hit pitching of rookie Don Drysdale.\nThe victory put the world champion Dodgers in a first-place tie\nIn the National League with Milwaukee Braves.\nAll other games in both leagues\nwere postponed because of cold\nweather or rain..\nLoser Murray Dickson started\nout strong, pitching four straight\ninnings of hitless ball.\nThen the Dodgers put the game\non Ice\u2014and it felt like It\u2014in the\nfifth inning with three runs on\nsingles by Drysdale, Junior Gilliam and Pee Wee Reese,\nBrooklyn added another in the\neighth on a single by Roy Campanella, scoring Duke Snider, and\ntwo more runs in the ninth on\nCarl Furillo's double and a single\nby Gino Cimoli.\nPhiladelphia's lone score came\nin the eighth when Frank Baum-\nhpltz scored on Gran Hamner's\nsacrifice fly.\nJUNIOR HAB VICTORY MAKES\nEIGHTH GAME NECESSARY\nMONTREAL (CP) - Montreal\nJunior Canadiens romped to a 4-1\nvictory over Toronto Marlboros\nMonday night to force an eighth\nand deciding game in the eastern\nCanada Memorial Cup hockey\nfinals.\nBoth teams have seven points\nout of the eight needed to wrap\nup the title. The final contest will\nbe in Toronto Wednesday. The\njunior Canadiens bounced into a\nthree-goal lead before the halfway mark ln the first period and\nshowed why they had been so\nhighly touted before the series\nbegan.\nRalph Backstrom, Claude La-\nforge, Forbes Kennedy and Bob\nCourcy counted for the Canadiens.\nJim Murchle scored the Toronto\ngoal.\nWinner of the series meets Regina Pata ln the Memorial Cup\nfinal series.\nA noisy crowd of 4905 saw off!\ncials Gord Pranskl and Chlng Macdonald hand out 13 penalties, Including one misconduct Canadiens\ndrew six minors. Marlies' goalie\nBob Senior stopped 22 ahota while\nEddie Johnston ot the Habs\nhandled 28.\nOPSAL WINS TRAP TITLI\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Frank\nOpsal ot Vancouver Sunday won\nthe Northwest Open Trapthootmg\nsingles title with a 99 score out\nof a possible 100, Dick Hornby ot\nCloverdale was second with 96.\nCompetitors had to contend with\na high wind.\nBatteries\n1       MINING \u2014 LOGQINQ\nAND AUTOMOTIVE\nRepairs to All Types\n609 Lake St, Phone 898\nARROW BATTERIES\nMaple Leafs and the two groups\ngot together for an interesting\nafternoon.\nIt is still too early for either\nNash or Frank Hufty, manager of\nLeafs, to make any predictions as\nto what the outcome of the season\nwill be. Nash, however, has been\ntold that the first Outlaw game\nwill be played May 13, but does\nnot know whether or not it will\nbe a home game.\nHufty, on the other hand, expects to learn something pertaining to the situation this afternoon,\nbut as yet his plans are uncertain.\nQUIET ELSEWHERE\nElsewhere, things are still quiet,\nThe minor baseball leagues\u2014Babe\nRuth and Little Leagues, particularly\u2014have released little of interest since a few weeks ago when\nthey sent out an appeal to parents\nfor assistance.\nThe news regarding the Outlaws' entrance into an organized\nleague should spark In local fans\na   greater   interest   In   baseball,\nsomething which has been steadily\nfading for the past few years.\nNash said Outlaws, represented\nalso by E. W. (Lefty) White, Ken\nWhite, Sam Siminoff and Charlie\nBurdette, asked that their games\nbe played on alternating Sundays.\nTwo requests were made to have\nthe Nelson aggregation on hand\nfor special ceremonies, Nash said.\nHe said Colville asked Nelson to\nbe on hand at the first game after\nlights have been installed in the\nColville Park. Outlaws were also\nasked to help Chewelah celebrate\ntheir annual Community Day\nJune 10.\nNash said Outlaws would\nsqueeze in numerous exhibition\ngames between league appointments and would also make a few\novernight trips.\nHufty said Monday afternoon\nthat his club, too, had received an\ninvitation to join the Washington\nB.C. League. He declined with\nthanks.\nBRITISH SOCCER\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014Results of\nsoccer   matches   played   hi   the\nUnited Kingdom today:\nDivision I\nCardjff C 1 Tottenham 0\nDivision II\nRotherham U 0 Leeds U 2\nDivision III, Southern\nBrentford 1 Coventry C 1\nShrewsbury T 1 Southend U 1\nDivision III, Northern\nBradford 1 Accrington 0\nYork C 1 Derby C 0\nSCOTTISH  LEAGUE\nDivision A\nDundee 3 Hibernian 2\nMotherwell 1 Hearts 0\nPartlck T 2 Celtic 0\nDivision B\nAlbion R 0 Morton 2\nNELSON CURLING CLUB\nCURLING\nBANQUET\nWEDNESDAY \u2014 APRIL 25\n6:00 p.m.\nTrinity Church Hall\n\"Your Skip Ha* Your Ticket\"\n-\n__\nImmmmm\n_\n\t\n \u201e    ^    . . _\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS\n1    Tho Dally,News doet not hold Itself responsible in tha event\nof an error In the following Hits.\nlllll Illll 11 IIIIIF\nQuotation llstt from the\nCanadian stock markets are\ncompiled and published bv the\nDally Newt as a service to\nsubscribers The Usti are added to or revised constantly.\nStocks In which there It par-\n' tlcular Interest, and not now\nquoted, can be added at the\nthe request of readers.\niiiiiiiiinmmmiiiimiMMimiHiiii'\nTORONTO STOCKS\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nAcadia Uranium  16\nAlgom Uranium     16.50\nAnacon Lead ;.     3.35\nAtlin Ruff 13\nAubelle           ,21\nAumacho   _ 5014\nAumaque 34\nBarnat      _ 82\nBase Metals  -.     1.17\nBaska Uranium  39\nBibis Yukon  wft\nBobjo _ : 40\nBrilund           1.94\nBrunswick     13.25\nBuff Can    \t\n.2114\n6.65\nBuff Red Lake    \t\nBulldog \t\n.16\n.27\n24.25\nCampbell C    _.....;\t\nCampbell R L\t\n6.65\nCan Met   \t\n2.20\nCassiar       \u201e...\n9.50\nCentral Patricia     \t\n1.38\nChimo             \t\n1.60\n.15\n.56\n9.60\nCons Denison \t\nCons Discovery\t\n9.60\n2.99\n4.40\n36.37%\n.16\n1.26\nCons M & S   \t\nCons Regcourt \t\n.17\n4.90\nCon Sub   \t\n7.65\n2.61\nCooper Man \t\n.42\n.93\nDetta M \t\n.17\n.55\n1.98\n1.10\nFast Amphi \t\n.13\nEast Malartic \t\n1.87\nEast Sullivan \t\n6.40\nElder Gold  \t\n.67\n37.50\nFalconbridge \t\nFaraday   \t\n1.69\nFrobisher      \t\n4.55\nGeco .             __\t\n21.25\nGeo Scientific Pros \t\n3 25\nGiant  Yel   \t\n5.65\nGod's Lake\t\n.52\nGoldale      \t\nAOft\n32\n4.40\nGrandines        \t\n.58\nGunnar Gold \t\n17.00\nHarminerals\t\n1.48\n.22\nHollinger   \t\n28.00\n69.00\nInspiration \t\n1.30\nInt Nickel\t\n91.00\n4.60\n1.18\nJonsmith   \t\n.41\nKenville   \t\n.41\nKenville  \t\n.10\nKerr Addison , \u201e  ' 17.87Vi\nKeyboycon    _ 13\nLabrador     23.00\nLake Lingman  _ 20V4\nLakeshore        5.10\nLexindin _ 23\nLittle Long Lac       2.05\nLorado   _      1.40\nLouvic't  30\nMacassa  _      2.25\nMacDonald       1.25\nMackeno ._       .43\nMadsen R L     2.48\nMalartic G F       1.90\nManeast      ; 28\nMcMarmac  _  '    .20\nMilliken            2.25\nMining  Corp       26.87t4\nMogul  _      3 85\nMulti Mins         1.26\nNew Alger  _      30ft\nNew Bidlamaque        .26%\nNew Delhi  _      1.01\nNew HIghridge  78\nNew Harricana  35\nNew Jason   37%\nNew Lund _ 95\nNew Thurbois  24\nNisto      31\nNoranda New     62.75\nNorgold   25\nNormetals  '.     7.50\nNoroax    92\nNorth Can _ 84\nOmnitrans    073\/i\nOoemiska     16'\/a\nPickle Crow          1.85\nPlacer Develop     12.75\nPurdv M        .40\nPreston E D        6.50\nQuebec Cooper       2.95\nQuebec Lab  ....  28\nQuebec Lithium     14.00\nQuebec Metallurgical      4.20\nQuemont     28.00\nRadiore         1.40\nRayrock  ._ _      1.83\nRainville           2.35\nSan Antonio            1.01\nSherritt Gordon      9.65\nSilver Miller          1.55\nStadacona       42\nSteep Rock     19.87%\nSlocan Van Roi  _,..      .30\nSullivan Con   _     6.35\nSylvanite            1.38\nTeck Hughes _      2.35\nTemagaml           7.55\nThomn-Lund  _      1.95\nTombill  42%\nTrans Cont Res  _ 50\nUnited Keno  .<      6.95\nIloper Can       1.00\nVentures    _    45.'5\nVicour    ..\u201e          .25\nWiate Amulet     14.87%\nWrinht Hargreaves       1.96\nYale  _       .45\nYellowknife Bear         2.85\nYakeno    _ 12\nOILS\nAmerican Leduc      1.34\nBata Petroleum .  17\nCal & Ed        :    25.37%\nCdn Atlantic        8.80\nCan Collieries     11.00\nCan Devonian _     6.35\nCan Decalta  _ 68\nCentral Explorers       5.85\nCentral Leduc        3.95\nCon East Crest  80\nCons Peak    _ 15\nDevon Leduc _      1.70\nDuvex       48\nGreat,Sweetgrass     4.55\nHighcrest   _ 43\nHome A _    14.00\nKroy       2.40\nLiberal Pete _     3.40\nMarigold  _ 35\nMidcon       1.05\nNat Pete        _      5.80\nNew Continental  77\nNew Gas Exp      2.05\nOkalta    \u201e      2.80\nPac Pete   _    17.50\nPathfinder       1.17\nPetrol    ..._ r      2.05\nPonder    '....      .75\nRoyalite       14.62%\nAtlai St.    25ti\nB A Oil    43\nBathurst Power   6314\nBell Telephone   V\u00bbft\nBrazilian           _  6'\/4\nB C Elec 494s ..._  102\nB C Forest      18%\nB C Power A   39V4\nBurrard A   8%\nCan. Breweries _ 33\nCan Canners     36%\nCan Celanese   !Wt\nCan Cement    32%\nCan Chem Co  _ __ . 10%\nCan Dredge  22\nCan Oil          .,  23%\nCan Pac Rly      '_  34%\nCan Packers A   41 Vi\nCan Packers B\nCockshutt.....    _\nCons Gas     _....\nDist Seagram\nDom Foundries\nDom Magnpslum .\n36%\n7\n21 ft\n37 v,\n33%\n16\ne\ngmooth\nchewing\ncleans\nm\nSpooner\n?pans Era   \nriad   \t\nUnited Oils   \t\nYank Canuck   ..\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi\nAlgoma Steel ....\nAluminum   \t\nAm Tel & Tel\t\nDom Steel Ord     21V4\nDom Stores      35\nDom Tar & Chem ...: _   16\nEddy Paper  _   65\nFamous Players      19%\nFanny Farmer      24\nFleet Air  _      1.35\nFord A    125\nGatineau     30\nGatineau 5% pfd  _ 111\nGoodyear    162\nGvpsum Lime          65%\nHiram Walker      71\nHoward Smith  _...    47\nImperial Oil       46%\nImp Tobacco      11%\nInt Metals        42%\nInt Pete     _     38V,\nLdblaw A     19%\nLoblaw B _,...   19%\n    48%\n    17%\n    46\n31%\nMassey Harrli \t\nMcColl Frontenac .\nMont Loco       \t\nMoore Corp     \t\nNat Steel Car\t\nPage Hershey  ;    90\nPowell River '.    62\nPower Corp _    58\nRuss Industries _    14\nShawinigan     79\nSicks Brew    25%\nSimpsons A _    21%\nSoutham     ... _    50\nStandard Paving     41\nSteel of Can\nTaylor Pearson\nUnion .Gas of Can\t\nUnited Steel     \t\nWestern Grocers A\nWinnipeg Gas\n72\n10\n47\n15%\n24%\n12'\/*\nDividends\nBy The Canadian Press\nOgilvie Flour Mills Co. Ltd.\npfd. $175. June 1, record April 30.\nThe Granby Cons. Mining,\nSmelting and Power Co. Ltd. 25\ncents (U. S. funds) June 1, record\nMay 14.\nNew Dickenson Mines Ltd. 3\ncents. May 28, record April 27.\nDome Mines Ltd. 17% cents.\nJuly 30, record June 29.\nHallnor Mines Ltd. 5 gents. June\n1, record May 4.\nThe village of Tadoussac in Sag-\nuenay county, Quebec, was founded in 1599 by Pierre de Chauvln.\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS\nMONDAY,\n30\u2014Wake Up Time\n:00\u2014News\n05\u2014March of Truth '\n10\u2014Farm -Fare\n15\u2014Chapel in the Sky\n30\u2014News\n35\u2014Sports News\n40\u2014Rise 'n' Shine\n00\u2014News\n10\u2014Sports News\n:15\u2014Musicale\n:30\u2014Home Gardening\n:35\u2014Musicale\n:45\u2014Serenade\n:55\u2014Entertainment World\n:00\u2014News\n:05\u2014Homemaker Harmonies\n00-^News\n05\u2014Homemaker   Harmonies\n15\u2014The Happy Gang\ni:45\u2014Story Parade\n:00\u2014News\n05\u2014Call One-Nine\n;00\u2014Novelty Time\n::15\u2014Sports News\n:20\u2014 News\n:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n:55\u2014News\n:00\u2014CKLN Reports\n:15\u2014Matinee\n1240 ON THE DIAL\nAPRIL 23, 1956\n1:30\u2014Pacific News\n1:45\u2014Sacred Heart\n2:00\u2014School  Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n3:30\u2014House of Commons Report\n3:35\u2014Music for Relaxing\n3:45\u2014Today's Music\n4:30\u2014Jubilee Road\n4:45\u2014Sleepytime Story Teller\n5:00\u2014Traffic Jamboree\n5:15\u2014By-Line\n5:20\u2014Supper Show\n5:40\u2014Sports News\n5:45\u2014Strikes and Spares\n5:50\u2014News\n6:00\u2014Rawhide\n6:15\u2014Dinner Music\n6:30\u2014Cavalcade of Melod*\n7:00\u2014News and Roundup\n7:30\u2014Leicester   Square\n8:00\u2014Anglican Angles\n8:15\u2014Canada at Work\n8:30\u2014 Marine Investigator\n9:00\u2014Let's Make Music\n9:30\u2014Anthology\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Critics at Large\n10:30\u2014Rendezvous\n11:00\u2014NEWS Nightcap\nCBC PROGRAMS\nPACIFIC   STANDARD   TIME\nTUESDAY, APRIL. 24, 1956\n.55\n.47\n10.12%\n2.R5\n.21\n1.41%\n... 112%\n... 121%\n... 180%\nyour teeth* adds sparkle to your\nsmile-helps keep you popular]\n\"wttlGtE^T\nSPEARMINT\nCHEWING 6U\u00a3\nEnjoy chewing Wrigley's Spearmint every day!\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\nKXLY TV - Channel 4\n10:00\u2014Sign On\n10:15\u2014Love of Life\n10-30\u2014Love Story\n11:00\u2014Cartoon Clown\nll:30^Houseparty\n12:00\u2014Big Payolf\n12:30\u2014TBA\n12:45\u2014 Bob Crosby\n1:00\u2014Brighter Day\n1:15\u2014Secret Storm\n1:30\u2014On Your Account\n2:00-:Variety Hour .\n2:30\u2014Search for Tomorrow\n2:45\u2014Guiding Light\n00-Vallant Lady\n3:15\u2014Beauty Tips\n3:30\u2014Gary Moore\n4:00-What's Cookin'\n4:30\u2014Strike It Rich\n5:00\u2014Western Roundup\n\"00\u2014News\n6:10\u2014Weather. Vane\n15\u2014Doug Edwards\n6:30\u2014Name Thai Tune\n7:00\u2014$64 000 Question\n7:30\u2014Confident File\n8:00\u2014Phil Silvers Shows\n:30\u2014Fabian of Scotland Yard\n9:00\u2014Guy Lombardo\n9:30\u2014Red Skelton\n10:00-Badge 714\n10:30\u2014Follow That Man\n11 \u25a0no\u2014 News\n10:00\u2014Tales Of Tomorrow\nKHQ TV - Channel 6\n8:40\u2014Test Pattern\n8:45\u2014Color Test Program\n8:55\u2014Bible Reading\n9:00\u2014Tenn. Ernie Ford\n9:30\u2014Feather Your Nest\n10:00\u2014Ding Dong School\n10:30\u2014Ernie Kovacs\nU:00^-Home\n12:00\u2014Matinee Theatre\n1:00\u2014Now The News\n1:10\u2014Weather Watcher\n1:15\u2014Modern Romances\n1:30\u2014Queen For A Day\n2:00\u2014Women\n3:00\u2014Trouble With Father\n3:30\u2014My Little Margie\n4:00\u2014Mr  Engineer\n4:30\u2014Bar 6 Roundup\n5:00\u2014Pinkie Lee\n5:30\u2014Howdy Doody\n6:00\u2014Landscape for Living\n6:30\u2014Little Rascals\n6:45\u2014 The Front Page\n6-55\u2014Newspaper of the Air\n7:00\u2014Curtain Time\n7:30\u2014Dinah Shore\n7:45\u2014News Caravan\n8:00\u2014Milton  Besle\n0:00\u2014Firesid* Theatre\n.9:30\u2014Playwright 56\n1030\u2014Big Town\n11:00\u2014Mr. and Mrs. North\n7:0O-i-Flsherman's  Broadcast\n7:15\u2014Musical Minutes\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Musical Minutes\n7:40\u2014Morning Devotions\n7:55\u2014Musical March Past\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Bill Good\n8:15\u2014Morning Music\n8:45\u2014Laura Limited\n9:00\u2014BBC News Commentary\n9:15\u2014Aunt Lucy\n9:30\u2014Morning Concert\n10:00\u2014Morning Visit\n10:15\u2014Happy Gang\n10:45\u2014Man Around the House\n11:00\u2014Your Good Neighbor\n11:15\u2014Kindergarten of the Air\n11:30\u2014Man and His Music\n12:15\u2014News\n12:25\u2014Showcase\n12:3Q\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Five to One\n1:00\u2014Afternoon Concert\n2:00\u2014B. C. School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada  Matinee\n3:30\u2014Program Resume\n3:45\u2014B. C. Roundup\n4:30\u2014Music for Young Musiciani\n4:45\u2014Legends of Italy\n5:00\u2014Neighborly News\n5:15\u2014Byline\n5:20\u2014News\n5:30\u2014Tumbleweed Trail\n5:45\u2014Presenting\n6:00\u2014Rawhide\n6:15\u2014In Pursuit of People\n6:30\u2014Divertimento\n6:45\u2014Introduction to Wed. Night\n7:00\u2014News\n7:30\u2014CBC Wednesday Night\n10:15\u2014Emerson Presents\n10:30\u2014Recital\nDAILY   CROSSWORD\n3. Constellation\n4. Varying\nweight\n(Ind. I\n5. Subordinate\n6. A catkin\n7. Delicate\nshade of\na color\n8. Genus of\nbirds of the\nauk family\n9. A Moslem,\nII. Lamprey\n15. Perish\n17. Decorated\nInitial letter\n18. Of the Joints\n20. Expire\n21. Know\n(Scot.)\n22. Largest\ndivision\nof\nthe\nUnited\nKing-\ndom\nI poss.)\n23. Classifiers\n26. Force\n29. Short\nsleep-\nSO. Wet,\nsticky\nmud\n32. Choking\nbit\nYeiterd\u00bby'l Answer\n33. Birds u\na class\n34. Cripplo\n35. To win\n37. Finnish\nseaport\n38. Wander\nabout Idly\noff\nKREM TV - Channel 2\n11:45\u2014Test Pattern\n12:00\u2014Afternoon Film Festival\n2:00\u2014Movie Time on Two\n3-30\u2014The Ruggles\n4:00\u2014Storvland\n4:15\u2014John Daly\n4:30\u2014Shadow Stumpers\n4:55\u2014Watch Hie Birdie\n500\u2014 Mickey Mouse Club\niOO\u2014Roy Rogers\n7:00\u2014Music Room\n7 25\u2014News\n7:3(f-Warner Brothers Present\n8:30\u2014Wyatt Earp\n9:00\u2014Make Room For Daddy\n10:00\u2014Overseas Adventure\n10-90 -News\n10:35\u2014Counterpoint\n11.45\u2014Layman s Call to Player\ni Program' sublect  to change by  stations without  notice I\nREAD AND USE\nThe Nelson News\nWANT ADS\nEXPERT   TELEVISION\nSERVICE\nOn All Makes ot Sets.\nPhone 1300 Days. 1033 R Nights\nExcept Sundays and Holidays.\nMc and Mc\nACROSS\n1. Exclamation of\nsorrow\n5. Information\n9. Breathe\nnoisily in\nsleep\n10. Man's name\n12. Oil of\nrose petals\n13. Plural of\npenny\n(Brit.)\n14. Property\n(L.)\n15. Of dentistry\n16. Account\n(abbr.)\n17. Swoon   '\n19. Having\ncertain trees\n21. Parrot\nIN. Z.)\n24. Public notice\n25. Makes level\n27. Born\n28. Rounds In\nwhich both\nteams bat\n(Baseball)\n30. Taxes\n31. Behold!\n32. U. S.\nstatistician\n35. Distant '\n36. Benefit\n37. Deputy\n39. Reproduc-   '\ntive bud\n(Biol.)\n40. Stripes\n41. Prophet\n42. Excess of\nchances\nDOWN\n1. African\nanimal\n2. Plots of land\nDAILYCRYPTOQUOTE \u2014 Here's how to work Itl\nAXYDLBAAXR\nIs LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this example A 1> usei\nfor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apoa\ntrophies, the length and formation of the words are all hintl\nEach day the code letters are different.\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nTM'B    DEVM    DC    WCN    ATC'B    DEVM\nDC      ZHJi      ATMEMYME      AECJW     PB\nNCJM-GCAMGG. '\nYesterday's Cryptoquote: SABBATHLESS SATAN-LAMB.\nDistributed by King Features Syndicate\n%\n1\n3\n4\nl\n5\nb\n7\nQ\n%\n9\n^\nIO\nII\nn\n'^\n13\n14\n%\n^\n'5\ntb,\nV\/\/f\nn\nIB\n^A\n%\n%\n19\nao\n^\n21\n22\n23\nJ4\n%\n25\n2fc>\n27\n%\n28\n29\n^\/A\nVA\n%\n3\u00b0\n%\n31\n32\n30\n3*\nfA\n%\n35\n3fc\n1\n37\n36\n39\n1\n40\n^\nAt\n%\n42\n^A\n1-24\n_____\n\u2014\n\t\n ,\t\nI _____________\n *q*yfl***$WT****9#*\n\u25a0:\nVchq\nSMALL INVESTMENT   -\nLARGE RETURNS\nThat's the Want Ad Story   -   PHONE   1844\nBIRTHS\nDONALDSON\u2014To Mr. and Mrs.\nStanley Donaldson, 87 High Street\nat Kootenay Lake Genera] Hospital.. April 23, a daughter.\nHILLE\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. William Hille, 517 Carbonate Street,\nat Kootenay Lake General Hospital, April 22. a son.\nHELP WANTED.\nJANITOR FOR1-LARGE APT.\nhouse. 18 suites. Duties to take\ncare of furnace and 3 corridors,\nthe grounds in the summer and\nother light duties. Married\ncouple preferred, living quarters supplied. Apply to Box 8072.\nDaily News.\nWANTED\u20142 YOUNG MEN TO\nassist sales manager for progressive company: Full training\ngiven Should be neat and have\ncar. Box 1796 Daily News.\nEXPERIENCED IBM KEYPUNCH\noperator required for Mining\nCo., in Salmo district. Box 1868.\nNelson Daily News.\nYOU'RE     N        e\nl |f YEAH. I\nLIMPINB.'*^\n'J\" STEPPED\n\u2022-_ r-^%  1\n)i   ONATIM\nJl  SOLDIER\n3#1\nMl    IN THS\n9k. PARK\ni   Mb LAST\nJsJ__;NieHT\nTTTmMsnHy\nm\nwm\nw\u00a7\nY GAD.' AND THEV ^\nk SAV FAMILY MEN  I      *_\nf  ARE.HEALTHIER  A.'   \u00ab\n3\nL THAN t>ACHi.ORS__a.V'\n&r%\n&* Y\\\\\njpH\nn-vt   jSsSS &^5*\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\nWANTED\u2014MAN TO WORK ON\ndairy farm, between 50 & 60.\npreferred. Phone 188-L-3.\nHELP   WANTED \u2014FEMALE\nWE REQUIRE A YOUNG WOM-\nan or girl for the business office of CKLN. Must be a good\ntypist. Apply CKLN office, Nelson Daily News.\nTAKE ADVANTAGE- OF THE\never increasing demand for\nAvon cosmetics. Become an\nAvon representative today.\nWrite Box 1670.\nWE REQUIRE A YOUNG LADY\nfor the business office of CKLN.\nMust be a good tyjnst. Apply\nCKLN office, Nelson Daily\nNews building.\nVAN TED - EXPERIENCED\nwaitress for night shift work.\nApply New Star Cafe.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nH ZYLSTRA\n1ST CLASS CEMENT WORK\nup-to-date methods, old country\nstyle. Specialty: Floors, walks,\ndriveways, wet basements and\nfireplaces  Phone 1364-Rt\nDOES YOUR ROOF LEAK? Expert advice on all roofing\ntroubles. Save up to 2\/3. Free\nestimates and roof surveys\nPh. 1655-L-4.\nSTENOGRAPHER, 7 YEARS EX\nperience, would like full-time\nposition, $200 to start. Phone\n1243-L eves.\nWANTED\u2014 WORK FOR D6 CAT\nContact George Webster at\nNorth Shore Motel, Nelson, B.C.\nFOR HANDY MAN AND ODD\njobs, phone 256-R\nFOR YOUR GARDEN WORK\nand odd jobs. Phone 1808-H-3.\nDO.YOU WANT YOUR GARDEN\nploughed? Phone 1968-R.\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nDEALERS IN ALL TYPES OF\nused equipment: mill, mine and\nlogging supplies, new and used\nwire rope, pipe and fittings,\nchain, steel plate and shapes\nAtlas Iron & Metals Ltd., 250\nPrior St., Vancouver. B C. Ph\n\"PAcific 6357\t\nLumber liquidation sale\n2x4, 2x6. 2x8, 1x6. 1x8 bds All\ndressed stock $30 per thousand\nB.M 4000 B.M. or more, immediate del. free S Kudra. Phone\n1787-R.\t\n-UMBER\u20142x4, 2x6, 8 AND 10,\nalso 1\", $45 per M. Farmer's\nmixed nails per 100 lb. keg.\n$7.50. Columbia Trading, 902\nFront Street,\nUSED COAL STOKERS, CANA-\ndian'Master, with all electrical\ncontrols, $175 each. Columbia\nTrading, 902 Front St.\nFIR AND LARCH CULL LUM\nber, good fire wood, limited supply I truck load equals 2 cords\nSpecial $15 delivered. Ph. 1757-R\nUSED TOILETS, HAND BASINS,\nkitchen sinks and bathtubs, in\ngood condition. Priced to sell,\nColumbia Trading. 902 Front St.\nFOR SALE: 16 GAUGE STEEL\nplate 4 ft by 12 ft sheets. Phone\n1200, Purchasing Agent. Kootenay Forest Products Ltd.\nREVERSE STITCH SINGER\nsewing machine, stool, button-\nholer, zigzag and blind stitch\nattachment, $135. Phone 1325-L.\nFOR SALE\u2014DRY WOOD $16 A\ncord, in stove length. P. Iwanik,\nProcter, B. C.\nHOUSE-TRAILER h LEAN-TO\nfor sale in Salmo. Apply Box\n1888, Nelson Daily News.\nCUTLER'S NEW AND USED\nfurniture. 301 Baker St Phone\n'47  We buy used furniture\nBLACK LOAM TOP SOIL OR\nmixed with manure..Ph 476-R-l\nFOR SALE\u2014BALED HAY. BILL\nMakortoff, Shoreacres.\nFOR SALE\u2014ROYAL PORTABLE\ntypewriter. Phone 1854-L.\nFOR SALE - MOZART PIANO\nPhone 214-R.\nJOHNSON FLOOR POLISHER,\nas new, $25. Write P. O. Box 324.\nFOR SALE\u2014GIRL'S BIKE, GOOD\ncondition. Phone 243-L.\nBOY'S    BICYCLE,    PLAY\nand pad. Phone 564-X,\nPEN\nBOY'S GOOD BICYCLE $20. PH.\n395-Y.     -\nBOATS AND ENGINES\nFOR SALE\u2014JOHNSON 5 H.P.\noutboard.^ motor, idling cutoff,\nhardly broken in, used no more\nthan two or three hours. Cost\n$248. Now $156. Write P. O.\nBox 324.\n1956 Oldsmobile Hardtop\nSedan\n1956 Oldsmobile Standard\nSedan\n1956 Oldsmobile Hardtop\nCoupe\n1956 Chevrolet Standard\nCoach\n1956 Chevrolet Vi-Ton\nPickup\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\n1955 Chevrolet Sedan\n1954 Ford Sedan .\n1954 Chevrolet Sedan\n1953 Chevrolet Sedan\n1953 Pontiac Sedan\n1953 Austin Sedan\n1953 Ford Sedan\n1951 Ford Convertible\n1,951 Chevrolet Coach\n1951 Pontiac Coach\n1951 Austin Sedan\n1950 Austin Sedan\n1950 Dodge Sedan\n1949 Dodge Sedan\n1948 Oldsmobile Coach\n1947 Monarch Sedan\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\n1953 Ford Pickup\n1951 Studebaker Pickup\n1949'Ford Panel\n1949 Austin Vi-Ton\n1947 Studebaker Pickup\n\u2022 \u2022  '\u2022\nTERMS AND TRADES\nYour  .\nCHEVROLET - OLDSMOBILE\nDealer\nRENTALS\n(Continued)\nFOR RENT\u2014 3 ROOM UNFURN-\nished apartment wired for\nrange. Large living room. Private bath. Ph. 766-X.\n.23 Veinon St. Phone 35\n    '\u2022\u25a0 r'clson Transfer)\nFOR SALE \u2014 1953 DYNAFLOW\ncustom Buick, all accessories,\nincluding custom radio, directional signals, white wall tires.\n13,000 miles, new condition inside and out. Can be financed.\n'PHone 1179-Y, after 6.\n2 FURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms, clean and comfortable,\nsuit quiet business couple. Ph\n335-X mornings.\nWANTED\u20142-BEDROOM HOUSE,\nyoung couple, 2 children. Phone\n1593-R.\nFOR RENT \u2014 HEATED, CLEAN\nunfurnished ground floor suite.\nPhone 798-L.\nFOR RENT-BASEMENT STOR-\nage space, central location Baker Si  Appiy Box 8142  D  News\nFURNISHED APT. 2 WORKING\ngirls preferred. Private entrance\nPhone 1633-X.\nMACHINERY\n(Continued)\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES, ETC\nWe Specialize in\nFOR RENT\u20142 BEDROOM FURN\nhouse. 4 to 3 months, from May\n1. Phone 754-X.\nWANTED \u20142 OR 3 BEDROOM\nhouse in or near Nelson. Phone\nFruitvale 2441.\n4-ROOM   APT.,   MAIN   FLOOR.\n71 High Street.\nFURN.   SUITE   FOR   COUPLE.\nMay to Sept. 'Phone 394-R.\nFOR RENT\u20143 ROOM MODERN\ncottage, Willow Point. 482-Y-l\nPROPERTY WANTED\nWANTED\u20141 OR 2 LOTS INSIDE\ncity or close In. Phone Nelson\n1179-Y after 6 or write D. W\nGuy, Shoreacres, B. C.\nMACHINERY\nMUST SELL 1949 MERCURY\nsedan, radio, heater, good motor\nand rubber. $150 down and take\nover payments. Phone 1049-R\nafter 5:30.   \u25a0\n\"CHEV. PICKUP 1953. Al CON-\ndition, low mileage, corner windows, aluminum cab. Write Box\n1601  Nelson  Daily  News.\nFOR SALE\u20141952 HUDSON, IN\ngood condition, cash $700. Apply\nA Sedar, 620 Victoria St., af-\nter 5 p.m.\t\nANGLIA IN GOOD CONDITION.\n$250  Phone 224.\nRENTALS\nFOR RENT- 3 ROOM COTTAGE\nand bath, semi-furnished. 3\nminute walk from Nelson Ferry, North Shore. Phone 1623-L-2.\nCon Cummins.\nFOR RENT\u20143 BEDROOM MOD-\nern house on four lovely lots.\nAutomatic oil furnace and garage. Available now. For further\ninformation Phone 751-X-3.\nFOR RENT\u20144  ROOMS,  FULLY\n' furnished,   gas   and   light,   $65\nmonth.   Ground   floor,   adults.\nPhone 217-Y.   .\nHOUSEKEEPING OR SLEEPING\nrooms, automatic heat fully\nfurnished Day. week or monthly rate  Allen Hotel   171  Baker\n1 BEDROOM SUITE AVAILABLE\nin new apt block. Apply Roy\nMathiesen, Suite 101, Bevanne\nApt., corner Silica and Stanley.\nFOR RENT-MODERN 3-ROOM\napartment, heat and hot waier\nsupplied. Available May 14, Ph.\n713-Y.\nLOGGER\nMINE OPERATOR\nGENERAL CONTRACTOR\nWould you like the following features for your next\ntractor?\nLow Initial Cost\nLow Upkeep\nTop Trade In Value\nServiceability\nHigh Speed Portability\nTorque Convertor Drive\nAutomatic Transmission\nNo Clutch\nPower-Steering\n\u2022 Pivot Turns\nAbility to purchase the following attachments for your\ntractor from the same manufacturer:\nBulldozer and Angledozer\nBlades,   Winches,   Front   End\nLoaders,   Backhoes,   Log\nLoaders,   Forklifts.\nIf you are interested ln obtaining a crawler type tractor\nwith these features, cut out\ncoupon and mail. Mark your\nspecial preference.\nBENNETTS LIMITED,\n324 Vernon Street,\nNelson, B C.\nPhone 593\nSend ln this coupon.\nDear Sir:\nWe are interested in the following: r-| Bulldozer. r-| Angledozer, PI Front End Loader,\nr] Backhoes, \\~\\ Log Loaders,\nrn Forklifts.\nMy address is\nIZZI\nL_\nOur representative  will  contact you  without delay.\nA   product  of the   American\nTractor  Corporation.\n\"TerVatrac\"\nLIMITED\nMACHINE SHOP\n324 Vernon St Ph\n593\nThese lines have been\ncarefully graded to assure\ncomplete  satisfaction.\nB.C. WIRE ROPE\n& Supply Co., Ltd.\n599 Taylor St.       Vancouver 3\nTelephone Tatlow 3818\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC. FOR SALE\nEXCLUSIVE\nNew stucco bungalow home,\nwith matching garage, located\non 7th St. Two level lots, nice\ngarden. Has 2 B.R.s, L.R. with\nH.W. floors; modernistic, large\nK. with built-in nook, overlooking the West Arm. Lovely\nbathroom. Full basement, hot\nair coal furnace.  Low taxes.\nX $12,500\n$5000 Down1 Payment and\nBalance on Terms!\nIMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY\nA nice little 2-B.R. home on\nInnes St., located on 3 level\ndeveloped lots. Has good-sized\nL.R,., lovely K. and bathroom,\nalso one B.R. on main floor.\nOne B.R. and also a hall B.R.\nupstairs. House has full basement and oil furnace. Property\nin good condition, tout has a\nlittle finishing still to be done.\n\u2122 $8500\nprice\nGood Terms!\nHerb Peacock\nREAL ESTATE AND\nINSURANCE AGENCY\nHerb  Peacock,  Agent\nWm.  ECalyniuk, Salesman\nPHONE 68\n532 Ward St.\n3 - BEDROOM HOUSE, LIVING\nroom, kitchen and bathroom.\nNorth Shore, close to Willow\n-Point school. Full price $6300.\n$1000 down. bal. $30 per month.\nPhone 1635-R-l, mornings after\n10 a.m.\nHIGH QUALITY CHICKS,. R.O.P\nbred Leghorns, also R.O.P sired\ngrades of Leghorns, New Hamp-\nshires. Hamp-Leghorn crosses\nBuy our chicks and follow our\ndirections how to raise them\nand keep them for complete success Over 30 years' experience\nwith chicks and poultry Apply\nour agent Nelson Farmers' Sud-\nply Ltd., Nelson, or write direct\nto New Siberia Farms. RR3,\nChilliwack, B  C.\nFOR. SALE-MILK COW, SEC-\nond calf 3 weeks old. Worth\n$200. Best offer. W. Abrossimoff,\nTriangle Farm, Thrums.\nFOR SALE: 2 JERSEY COWS,\none first calf, and 2 one-year-\nold heifers. W. A. Postnikoff.\nPerry Siding.\n1 COW WITH CALF, ALSO 1\nbull; Fred Maloff, Crescent Valley.\nFOR SALE\u2014BAY HORSE, 8 YRS.\nold. P. Patrick, Silver King Rd.\nFRESHENED  COW  FOR   SALE.\nPete Relkoff, Perry Siding.'\nFOR SALE\u2014TURKEY EGGS,\neach. Phone 678-L-2.        v\n40c\nFOR SALE\u2014QUIET MILK COW\nBill Jmalff, Appledale, B. C.\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\nWANTED TO BUY: CARS AND\nTrucks for wrecking Buyers ot\nscrap iron, batteries, brass, aluminum, copper Used parts for\ncars and trucks for sale. Western Auto Wrecking. Box 132.\nGranite Road. Nelson, E C\nPhone 189-R-4.\nCLEAN COTTON RAGS. MUST\nbe at least 12 inches, no wool\naccepted. WHl..naoul0^.jier.fllb-\nNelson Dally Neyirs.-\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\n(Continued)\nWILL BUY GREEN ROUGH\nlumber, fir. larch and hemlock.\nCan pay $56 per M. cut to specification on special heavy timber, can pay up to $65 per M\nCraig and \u25a0 Appleton, Phone\n1248-L or write 520 Victoria St.,\nNelson, B. G. \u2022 '\nPOLES WANTED\nCEDAR - FIR - LARCH\nBest Prices. Bell Pole Co. L'td.\nPhone  Nakusp  24,   or   Nelson\n997-Y, \t\nWANTED TO BUY\u2014SAWLOGS\nand cedar poles on Kootenay\nLake or rail. Kootenay Prod\nucts. Box 450. Nelson.\nWANTED TO BUY - TIMBER\nand bush land ln vicinity ol\nkootenay Lake. Apply.Box 2736.\nNelson Daily News\nFIR AND LARCH POLES.TPED\nAnderson, Silverton, B. C.\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\nBefore you buy\nTRY A\nMcCULLOCH\nNSW\nmodel 33-8\n10 fflo\/or improvements\nNo other saw cin beat a McCulloch\nModel 33B for high speed woodcutting, light-weight and\nprolesaional-quality feature*. Haa\nautomatic clutch, built-in chain\noiler, rewind starter, and noatless\ndiaphragm carbureter for full-\npower, starting in any positioa\nwitheut adjustment. Don't be\nfooled; before you buy, teat the\ncutting speed and easy handling\nof a McCulloch\nModel 33B\nAvailable with\n12,10 or 20-inch\nblades.\n\u00bb See\nH. \"Fritz\"- Farenholtz,\nC. Ross or Alex McDonald\nWELDING & EQUIPMENT\nCO. LTD.\n6H Railway St     \"   Nelson, B.C'\nPHONE 1MJ\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, APRIL 24, 1956 \u2014 9\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\n(Continued)\n'      Nelson\nREADY-MIX\n(CONCRETE LTD.\nPHONE 871\nRitchie Saw Service\nHAMMERING - GUMMING.'\nWELDING\nAgent for Spear & Jackson Saws\n205 Hall St. Nelson, B.C.\nPHONE 1910\nVancouver Stocks\n(Closing Prices)\nPERSONAL\nALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS\nBox 388 or Phone 386-R.\nTHE ALMER HOTEL OPP CPR\nDepot, Vancouver. B C 100%\nfireproof. 24-hour elevator service Clean, quiet and comfortable. Reasonable rates City\ncentre\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nASSAVERS AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nE W  W1DDOWSON & CO\nAssayers 301 Josephine St Nelson\nH   S   ELMES, ROSSLAND. B  C\nAssayer Chemist. Mine Rep\nENGINEERS   AND   SURVEYORS\nG  W  BAERG\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor\n373 Baker St     Nelson     Ph. 1118\nand Box 34, Fruitvale, B.C.\nSuccessor to the late A  L Purdy\nBOYD C. AFFLECK M.E.I.C.\nBC Land Surveyor, P Eng (Civil)\n218 Gore St     Nelson   Phone 1238\nS   V   SHAYLER PC   Box 252\nKimberley   Ludlow 2-2136.\nBC   Land Surveyor. Civil  Engr\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS   LIMITED\nMachine  Shop.   Acetylene  and\nelectric welding, motor rewinding Phone 593     324 Vernon St\nTIMBER  CRUISER\nEUGENE H   HIRD\nSlocan City, B   C\nConfidential Estimates.\nMarket Trends\nNEW YORK (AP).;-; Strength\nin a few key areas Monday kept\nthe stock market on a moderately\nhigher leveL\nRailroads, alumlnuma and a\nfew chemicals combined their\nstrength to bolster the market\nCanadian Issues were mixed.\nMclntyre added iVi, Hudson Bay\nMining was up Vi, Hiram Walker\ngained Vi and Canadian Pacific\nadvanced -%;\u00abIntemationaI Nickel\nfell % and Dome Mines lost ia. '\n(Continued in Next Column)\n_   PHONE 1844 FOR CLASSIFIED\nMINES\nBeaver Lodge\t\n.<8\nBeta Gamma \t\n.lift\n1.55\nBraloma ... ...: \t\nCan Lithium \t\n1.50\nCariboo Gold       \t\n.73\nFarwest Tungsten \t\n.31V,\n.92\nGiant Mascot ,:\t\nGranduc.    ...'\n7.15\nGrandview \t\n.18\nHamil Sil      _\t\n.05H\n.75\nHighland Bell  \t\n.48\nJaye J!x....    _ \t\n1.24\nSurf Inlet  \t\n.12\nTaylor             \t\n25\nTrojan                \t\n.65\nUnited Estella \t\n.25\nUtica    ,\t\n*>   .08\nWestern Ex\t\n.50\nYale               _\n.43\nOIL8\nAltex    _ .\n.26\nA P Cons  _\t\n.43 V;\nCal & Ed    \t\n25.00\nChamberlain  \t\n.40\nCharter   _\n2.25\nDel Rio      ...   \t\n3.00\nNational Ex         \t\n.72\nPac Eastern Gold \t\n.Kft\nPend Oreille      \t\n4.65\nPioneer Gold      ,\n1.90\nPremier Border \t\n.19\nQuatslno  \t\n.58\nS.65\nRexspar      \t\nRix-Athabaska Uran \t\n.40\n1.00\nSheep Creek  _. _\n1.99\nSherritt Gordon  \t\nS.40\n.21\nSilver Standard  _    _\n.60\nSlocan Van Roi    __._.\n..   .29\nSunshine Lardeau ....___\n.30\n13.50\nNew Gas Ex _ \t\n2,00\n2.70\nPacific Pete         \t\n17.374\nPeace River Gas  .\t\n9.25\nRoyalite      \u201e\t\n14.50\nRoyal Can       _\n.11*4\nSparmae       .-.\n.35\nVnlted   \u201e.   ._\n2.70\nVanalta _\n.23\n.23\n.73\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlberta Dist      ___\n1.75\nAlherfa T\u00bbkt Vt .  \u25a0\n1.85\nB C Forest<     -.-.     .\n19.12*4\nB C Pnw\u00bbr\n39.00\nB C Telephone\t\n49.00\n8.10\nInland Nat ftaj'f      ,.     \t\n5.20\n-T.lirlry   T^gstf\n4.50\nMacM k Bloedel B _.\n45.00\nMid Western  ...\/ \t\n4.00\nPowell River \t\n\u00ab1.50\nTrans Mtn        \u201e\n56.50\n26.60\nUNLI8TED\n.WH\n.03*4\nBluebird  \t\nPn*!laim<\n.   .08\nWestern Minae ....\n.89\n.14\nBANKS\nBank of Montreal \t\n84.00\nCan Bank of Com   ... ,\n95.50\nImperial Bank of Can\t\n58.00\nRoyal Bank of Can\t\n60.50\nFUNDS\nBalanced Mutual     .... \u201e\n9.43\nCan Inv Fund . . .\t\nCommonwealth In* _..\n8.20\nGrouped Tncorna      \t\n4.04\nInvestors Mutual _-,\n10.43\nLeverage               ,\n6.80\nTrans Can \"C\"  -\n6.40\nWinnipeg Grain\ngrain cash prices:\nOats, No. 1 feed, 78*4.\nBarley, No. 1 feed, 1.14*4.\nFULLY MODERN, 6 - ROOM\n^ house, 3 bedrooms, also small I\n'cottage, Vi acre, North Shore,!\n$8500. terms. Phone 66 or P. O.'\nBox 172. ;\nSEVEN ACRE FARM COMPRIS-1\ning 3 bedroom modern home, 3\narable acres, large outbuilding,\nand fruit trees. Cash or terms\nJ. Raine, Robson.\nFARM, TWO MILES FROM CAS-\ntlegar ferry, 8 acres under cultl-\nvation, fruit trees, 6-room house,\u25a0\nWil] sell half or all. Apply John\nHrooshkin, Robson, B. C. I\nFOR SALE\u201420-ACRE RANCH,\nbuildings, electricity, on No. 3\nHighway. Apply Postmaster,\nShoreacres, B. C*\n1.6 ACRES ON NORTH SHORE\noverlooking Nelson. 150 feet of\nroad frontage. Power and water\navailable. Phone 918-Y eves.\nSLOCAN CITY-5 ROOM HOUSE\n2 lots, fruit, garden, lights, water. $2000. Phone 217-Y. E. Maher\n914 Stanley Street.\nAT SALMO, ON HIGHWAY, 12\nlots and house. Write M. Wasil-\nenkoff, 1366 McQuarrle St.,\nTrail, B. C.\nFARM FOR SALE\u2014PERRY SID-\ning. Known as St. Thomas. Ap-\nply   Ted   Anderson,   Silverton.\nFOR SALE - 3 ROOM HOUSE\nwith bath; 2 lots. Phone 419-L.  j\n3-ROOM MODERN DWELLING,\nbathroom, automatic hot water\nheavy wiring, % acre lot Apply\nBox 1983, Nelson Daily News.\nFOR SALE: PLANET JR. MODEL\nHW, 5 h.p. equipped with culti:\nvator, spring harrow. 10 in\nplow, disc harrow and oil bath,\n. 46\" cutting bar. W. Zoabkoff.\nBlewett, B.C, |\n\"f\n(Continued in Next Column) (Continued in Next Column)\nNplfliut latlij NiMiiB\nCirculation Dept Pbone 1844.\nSubscription Rates\nPrice per single copy 6c Monday\nto Friday  10c on Saturday\nBy carrier, per week\nin advance .35\nBy Mail in Canada outside Nelson\nOne month $ 1 25\nThree montha            S 3 50\nSix months $ 6 50\nOne year $1200\nBy  Mail  to United  Kingdom\nor  th* United States\nOne month I. 1 75\nThree  months $5 00\nSix   months .   $ 9 50\nOne  vear JIHIKI\nWheif- extra, pustage Is reiiiiired\naoove tales plus postage.\n.;-,:3,...,.\nSelling\u2014Renting\nMAIL\nYour Classified Want Ad on ThJ\u00bb Handy\nORDER FORM\nfc\n'\n\u2022*;'\nHftfT UNI\nSICONB UM\nTMU UM\nFOURTH UNI\nWTM UNI\nSIXTH UNI\nHVINTH UNI\nKfiHTH UNI\nPut one word in each space.\ni bach group of numbers or letters count as on* ward.)\nPut your address or phone number in the ad.\nBox numbers count as four words.\n(Box 00 Nelson News.)\nTO CALCULATE RATK USE THIS TABLE\nPer Line\n1   Insertion\n2 Consecutive  Insertions\n3 Consecutive Insertions .\n6 Consecutive Insertion! .\n26 Consecutive Insertions\nf .20\n.33\n.45\n.80\n1.82\nw    AAtmniMfM AIMfyC H Its*\u00a9 IHMB\n\u2022 Add .icfor\u00bb<wNtHnfc*\u00bb\n\u2022 Deduct 10% from above roles (f ubthhii* b\nenclosed\n\u2022 Take advantage of the low ch thne rat*\nIon Consecutive Insertions 20c) a Una Per Time.\nYou Reach Over 36,000 Readers With Y6ur Nelson Daily News Classified Ad\n\u00ab No. of Days Ad Is To Run ______\n\u2014: \u2014' \u2014 \u2022 BiN Me '.\"'\u25a0\u25a0\nYOUR  NAME\nADDRESS\nPayment Enclosed\nNelson Daily News\nClassified Advertising Department, Nelson, BC.\nMHIMIII     tSjB.siaa^s.ilttl.illH  my^Ag^tt^AtammMtammm^^\n**\n________\n\t\n\u25a0  \u25a0\t\n\u25a0   -\n___________\n 10\u2014 NELSPN DAILY NEWS.TUESDAY,!APRIL24,1956\n;.J!KIDSNA\/raBEKIDS\"\nAnd when they cut, scratch, scrape or In any way\ncommit mayhem on themselves, you can    ,\nbe sure they will be proud to wear\nTHE AU NEW\nMedicated Plastic Bandage\n-..   ;.'-. In Kid;Colors. ;.:_ .\n(A good way to make them like wearing Bandaids.)\nFor Night and  Emergency Service    y\nr     PHONE 1875-R or 1228-Y\nC^vdX***,\nAflJmniL %\\*%*\\*)m\nNAU H\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 80o Una. 10c Una black face type; larger type ratea on\nrequest. Minimum two linos. 10% discount for prompt payment\nMarllte tile board for bathroom\nand kitchen wall. Beautiful colors.\nT. H. WATERS & CO. LTD.\nPhone 156    Nelson    101 Hall St.\nThe annual open house at Mt.\nSt. Francis, June 13.        \\\nSoft Ice CreamI!\nAny hour of day at Walt's News.\nBINGO\n'     LEQION HALL TONIGHT\n,     DON  ELDER  STUDIO\n(159 Biker St     -     Phone 1209\nSweaters for girls and boys, all\nsizes, good variety to choose from\nEBERLE'S  on   BAKER   8TREET\nJhadQqhwayA\nMo. I- \u2014'..Cascade, Rossland \u2014\nmostly bare, rough and muddy\nsections. Hossland, Trail, Castiegar,\nNelson, Balfour, Kootenay Bay,\nCresTon._Coatfell\u201e \u2014 frost heaves.\nGoatfali; Cranbrook, Fernie,\nCrowsnest \u2014 fair.\nNo. 3A \u2014 Trail, Salmo \u2014 mostly\nbare.\nNo. \u00ab \u2014 Nelway, Vernon; 'Nelway, Nalaon, South Slocan \u2014 bare.\nSouth Slocan, Nakusp, Needles \u2014\nmostly bare,' rough and muddy\nlections. Needles, Monashee \u2014\nbare, rough' lower levels. Mona-\u00bb\n\u2022nee, Vernon \u2014 fair, watch for\nslides.\nNo. 95 \u2014 Kingsgate, Cranbrook,\nGolden \u2014 fair, some rough section.\nNelson, Kaslo \u2014 rough and mud-\n*y Motions: Kaalo, Lardeau \u2014riafc\nrough lections. Lardeau, Gerrard\n\u2014\u25a0 fair, rough sections.\nMINES AND. FARMS\nMontana, along with great cattle arid sheep ranges, has the largest copper mines in the U. S.\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\n' VISUAL TRAINING\nMedical Arts Building\nSuita 206 Phone 141\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED-and REPAIRED\nRE CORING\nJim's Radiator Shop\nS1S Fro\/nt St, '\u2022 '_ Phone S3\n*=\u25a0=\nCAMPBELL,   SHANKLAND\n;   *CO.\nChartered Accountants\n;;; Auditors\n\u2022~ Baker St;   ' Phone Ms\nHave Tho Job Done Right\nV\u00bbC GRAVEC\n1     MMITED      **\nMASTER PLUMBER      \u25a0\nPHONE 81S\nKINNAIRD LITTLE THEATRE\nPRESENTS \"JANE STEPS OUT\"\nAPRIL 27-28. KINNAIRD HALL.\nCUTLER'S JEWELLERY\nGuaranteed Watch Repairs\nSil Baker Street. Phone 9.\nLadles' Nylon Plisse Uniforms.\nSizes 14 to 20-S8.95. At\nEBERLE'S on BAKER ST,\nSub-zero Roses, just arrived.\nLimited supply.\nMAC'S FLOWER SHOP\nChild Health Conference to .be\nheld today at the Selkirk Health\nUnit offices at 303 Baker Street.\nFUR STORAGE\nExpert repairB and alterations\nCustom Sewing Centre\n(Successors to Greenwood Furs)\nLESLIE'S  FIRE  EQUIPMENT\nNow equipped to re-charge C02\nextinguishers 536 Stanley Street.\n\u00bb.-:p.hoB(UBl5or\\Ml;_   \u25a0'\u2022:\u25a0\nREMEMBER  ,-.\nLA-\"toTc.ANA\u00aeAN LEGION>\nDaffodil' Tea, I*gion*BaU, Saturday, April 28 \u20142-3 p.m.\nWanted\u2014Male and female help,\nFor further details, contact Empire Cleaners, 321 Baker Street,\nPhone 288. '.'....    -.- .\nSEE THE   BARGAINS\nON   DI8PLA-Y   FOR     .\nHARDWARE WEEK.\nWOOD,   VALLANCE   HDWRE.\nNow Ready\u2014Extra early transplanted cabbage, cauliflower and\nhead lettuce plants at Grizzelles'\nFlorists\u2014Phone   187.\nCoast Handicapped\nGroups Combining\nVICTORIA (CP) - Ten Vic\ntoria groups concerned with care\nof physically disabled persons are\nconsidering banding together.\nA- preliminary meeting, called\nby the Victoria League of the\nHandicapped, was held during the\nweekend.\nChairman Fred Blakeney said\nMonday he is hopeful a larger,\nmore representative body will be\nformed to about five weeks.\nThe objective is to cut administration costs and increase efficiency, launch a wide program of\npublic education and give greater\nassistance to the individual in regaining a useful place in modern\nsociety.\n.The first meeting was attended\noy de'is'gatei from the: Cerebral\nPalsy'Association, Multiple (Sclerosis Society, Arthritis and Rheumatism Society, Arthritis BOard,\nHard at rlearlnit Club, CSnSdian\nWar Amputees, 0-reSter Victoria\nAssOciaUbh.fOr Retarded Children, Muscular Dystrophy Society,\nCanadian National Institute for\nthe Blind and the CNIB Women's\nAuxiliary, and The League for\nthe Handicapped.\nTOT-N-TEEN  8HOP\nBoys' and girls' Suntan Jeans,\nwith matching Jacket.\nChrome Suite \u2014 5-plece.\nChoice  of  Colors\u2014$79.50.\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nImprove car performance\u2014Save\nfuel, reduce carburetor flooding.\nGane-Master Fuel Pressure Regulator, all cars & trucks, $8.95.\nNELSON HARDWARE CO.\nSays Vicious Ring\nFakes Passports\nNEW YORK (AP) - U.S. attorney Paul Williams said Monday a \"viciqus ring\" specializing\nin faked passports has flooded\nthe country with thousands of\nLatin Americans with criminal\nrecords.\nThe illegal immigrants have'\nbecome \" \"abject\" slaves\"? 'of the\nring, William's said as' special\nfederal grand jury was set up\nto investigate the alleged conspiracy..'\n.. Assistant U.S. attorney. John A.\n.Keefe said the. ring has \"far-\nreaching tentacles' in Cuba. Haiti\nSanto Domingo, Venezuela and\nPeru. *\nCHARM\nBEAUTY SALON\nAil Beauty  Culture\nand Cold Waves\nMedical Arts. Bldg.\n'hone  1922 Ste. 211\nHelen McCallum, Prop.\nBulganin Invites\nEden To Russia\nLONDON (AP) \u2014 Premier Nikolai Bulganin has invited Prime\nMinister Eden to pay a return\nvisit to Russia as soon as he can\nfind the time, a diplomatic official reports. i\nThe informant declined to say\nwhether the British leader accepted. The invitation was de\nlivered informally by Bulganin.\nE.B.has\nanalysis\nThere's more effective, completely available\nplant food in every bag of Elephant Brand\nfertilizer\u2014for lower unit cost and higher profit!\n\/\nAmmonium Phosphate 11-48-0\nAmmonium Phosphate-Sulphate 16-20-0\nAmmonium Nitrate-Phosphate 27-14-0\nAmmonium Sulphate ...21-0.0\nNitraprllls (Ammonium Nitrate) 33.9-0-0\nComplete Fertilizer 13-16-10\n#\nELEPHANT\nBRAND\nFERTILIZERS\nmanufactured by\nTHE CONSOLIDATED MINING AND SMELTINQ COMPANY OF CANADA LIMITED\nTISAIL, UJC    .        '^^\n\u25a0ALES OFFICE\u2014*T* .MAFtlNi SWILDIWi. VANCOUVER. B.C.\nR. TARLING, TAILOR\nCleaning, alterations, pressing,\nhats cleaned and blocked. Room\n207 Johnstone Block, Phone 1256,\n576 Baker Street.\nEvergreens, shrubs',; fruit trees\nand bulbs. Get the best at\nCOVENTRY'S FLOWER SHOP\nPHONE 962.\nCURLERS ATTENTION\nAnnual dinner Trinity fhurch at\n6:00 p.m., Wednesday, April 25.\nYour Skip has your ticket.\nPrinted Terry Towels for Gifts.\nNice designs in colbr. Matching\nFacecloth. Set $1.69.\nTAYLOR'8  DRY  Q0008\n2   Four   Burner   Ob*   Ranges.\nLike new. $09.50. $124.50.\nWE PAY TOP PRICES\nFOR U8ED FURNITURE\nHOME FURNITURE EXCHANGE\nPHONE 1660  ,,       -\n. Engine oil. purifier' \u2014 Special\ncrankcase plug, magnesium alloy\nacid-neutralize^ with Alnico magnet All cars. & trucks, each $2.95.\nNELSON   HARDWARE   CO.\n8AVE MONEY\u2014INSURE THE\nMODERN WAY. All your home,\nhousehold furniture. One package\npolicy. .\nAPPLEYARD & CO.\nBox 26, Phone 269\n8PECIAL\u2014ONE  WEEK  ONLY\nSturdy Unpainted Furniture.\nChests of Drawers\u2014$10 to $18\nEnd Tables \u2014 $3.95.\nStep   Stools,   Lawn   Chairs.\nCedar Chests for. storing winter   blankets,   $5   to   $19.75.\nFetterley Wood Products\nOpp. new High School.   Ph. 1548\nAnnual Spring Tea April 25 at\n2:30 to 5:00. pjn. Ukrainian Parish\nHall. Hall Mines Road. Bingo in\nthe evening.\nWe are remodelling and 'it's\nnoisy, but our shoe quality, shoe\nvalues, and service are as good as\never, at ANDREW'S.\nUkrainian Catholic Youth Organization, first Bingo to be held\nWednesday eve., April 25th, at\n7:30. Sacred Heart Hall. Hall\nMines Road.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nDUBOIS \u2014 Requiem Mass will\nbe sung for the late Henry Joseph\nDubois at the Church of the\nBlessed Sacrament Wednesday at\n9:00 a.m. Rev. Father M. E. Ber-\nrigan will be the celebrant and\ninterment will take place in Nelson Memorial Park. Rosary will\nbe \\recited at the Thompson Funeral Home* Tuesday at 8:00 p.m.\nKeeping an Eye on\nFellow Citizens\nMOSCOW (AP)\u2014The Presidium of the Supreme Soviet has\nset up a special committee to keep\nwatch on the activities of Russia's\nsecurity organs including the secret police.\nPlan Plane to\nFly 150 People\nLONIJON (Reuters) \u2014Russia is\nbuilding a four-engined turboprop plane to carry 150 persons,\nand hopes'to have it flying -by, the\nspring of 1957, a Russian airplane\ndesigner said Monday.\nA. N. Tupolev was quoted by\nSir Miles Thomas, chairman of\nBritish Overseas Airways Corporation, after he had inspected Britain's new Britannia aircraft, which\ncarries 120 passengers.\nThomas said Tupolev had told\nhim the .Russians r\u00bbre building\nsomething bigger In the Soviet\nUnion which should be flying in\nthe spring next year ... A four-\nengined turbo-prop machine\nwhich will carry 150 people.\"\nFord Motor Earnings\nHighest In History\nDETROIT (AP) \u2014Ford;Motor\nCompany reported Sunday its\nearnings for the first quarter of\n1956 were $73,700,00(Kthe. second\nhighest first quarter earnings in\nthe .company's, histpry.   ..\nHenry Ford n, company president, said the 1956 first quarter\nearnings were exceeded only by\nearnings of $102,500,000 recorded\nin the like period of 1955.   ....'\nBasell on the average number\nof shares outstanding during' the\npast three years, earnings per\nshare of capital stock amounted\nto $1.37 in the first quarter of this\nyear, $1.93 in the first quarter of\n1955 and $1.32 in the first quarter\nof 1954.\nMake your own Home Made\nBread with ELLISON'S\nU-BAKE BREAD MIX\nFull Instructions on every package\nPhono 238 or cail\nELLISON MILLING\na ELEVATOR CO   LTD.\nPlant B.C. Firs\nIn British Park\nBICESTER, Oxfordshire (CP)\u2014\nSix tiny Douglas fir trees, grown\nIn England from British Columbia\nseeds, were planted Monday In the\nparkland estate of the Duke of\nMarlborough.\nCapt. W. J. Carswell of Vancouver, his Winnipeg-born wife,\nHelen, and their four children,\nAnne, 13, Lynne, 11, Patty, 4 and\nJean 2, presented the trees to the\nduke and duchess. The gift was\nin appreciation for being allowed\nto use the grounds and gardens of\nthe estate.\nCarswell officer commanding\nthe Royal Canadian Ordnance liaison detachment here-and his family have picnicked frequently on\nthe 2700-acre estate during their\nthree years here.\nFA8T RELIEF FOR\nACID INDIGESTION\nwith\nBISMA REX\n In a Few Minutes\nYou Feel Better\n60c, $1.00 ond $2.23\nSold Only at\nYour Rexall Pharmacy\nCity Drug\nCOMPANY\nBOX 460 PHONE 34\nShirts\nn\nfor Spring\nWe have our full line of\nBOXER SHORTS\nBy Forsyth\nIn  Plains or Fancies, or\nBRIEF STYLE\nBy WATSON'S, STANFIELD'S\nand MOODIE8  .     '\nShirts to Match '\"'\"\"\nCMORY'C\n\u25a0\"   Limited **\nTHE MAN'S STORE\nHAIGH\n\u25a0T'^ TRU-ART\nW \u00ab2; yew Beauty Salon\n\u25a0\"       *\u25a0? Phona 827\n~    <*r\"* 57S Baker Street\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Li-\nduor Control Board or by the GovemiT)entof British Columbia\n___,\nCanada's newest four-door hardtop!\n'\u2022\"^'tf*;^' .T*vM'\u00bb.t\\'   *\u00a3.\u00bb tfttjn;    ..'-4^. ..\nFORDOR\nVICTORIA\nthen you'll know it's for you!\nOpen-air beauty with four-door convenience\n. . . newest and smartest of all Ford's models!\nHere's the latest and loveliest of all Ford's Thunderbird-inspired beautiet...\nthe Fairlane Fordor Victoria! It brings you all the open-air enjoyment and\nbrilliant styling of Ford's famous Victoria with the added spaciousness\nand convenience of a sedan with four wide-opening doors!\nAs trim as a convertible, this newest Fairlane model offers a new degree of comfort\nand luxary for your passengers. You get an uninterrupted sweep of view all along the side\nwhen windows are rolled down completely out of sight! Colour-keyed interiors\nfeature two-toned upholsteries in richly grained vinyls and attractively patterned nylons,\nwith smart quilted vinyl door panels.\nThis eye-catching, compliment-winning beauty is the only four-door hardtop with\nThunderbird styling, Thunderbird V-8 performance and the reassuring safety of Lifeguard\nDesign. The Fordor Victoria represents everything that is newest and finest in modern\nmotoring . . . and you can enjoy this brilliant new model equipped with every modern\npower assist at moderate extra cost, to make all your driving easier\u2014famous\nFordomatic Drive, power steering, power brakes, 4-way power seat and power window lifts!\nKrrtcfr. fenmra trlmlra\/rd or menttotud or. -Stanaarf\nOS sons ootids, op'-tonal at extra u*t on etkm.)\nWE   INVITE   YOU   TO   VISIT   YOUR   FORD-MONARCH   DEALER'S ... DRIVE   FORD   AND   COMPARE!\nMEL BUERGE MOTORS LTD.\n608 VERNON ST.\nPHONE 1744\nm\nCOUNT ON THESE SIGNS I^JIflr FOR THE BEST VALUES IN USED CARS AND TRUCKS\n\t\n\u25a0 \u25a0\n; __. _\n__\nH\u00bbMiM_$\n\u25a0   '.'..' :  : \u25a0'  . ' :. \u25a0:\n_\n____^__\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_1956_04_24","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0429288","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"}]}}