{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0430088":{"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":"2022-04-04","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1957-06-01","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0430088\/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":" WEATHER   FORECAST\nKootenay\u2014Clear Saturday rrforn-\ntng* Variable clouds in the after-\nBoon with a few thunderstorms.\nWarm, Light winds. Low and high\nat Cranbrook and Crescent Valley,\n47 and 85. Sunday outlook: mostly\nsunny.\nVol. 56\nSATURDAY EDITION\nwith COMICS - 10c\n?>\/'   %\/lC; ^?_> , iSON, B.C., CANADA-SATURDAY MORNING, JUNE 1, 1957\n'HttT,.   \u25a0'f'OXt,    d   il\u2014 ! : : '\u25a0# \u2014:\t\nNot mors Than 60 Dally. 10o Saturday JJo.  35\n60\nThis Is Nelson's\nDiamond Jubilee Year\nYears of Progress    .\n302 Algerians\nDie in Massacre\nFanatic Rebels Swoop Down on,\nVillage to Slay Fellow Moslems\nALGIERS (AP)\u2014Fanatic Algerian nationalist rebels\nswooped down on a mud-hut village Wednesday and massacred 302 of their fellow Moslems in a vicious mass slaying.\nThe .slaughter created a storm of anger in French\nand Algerian newspapers. Mass - circulation Paris newspapers estimated the  death\ntoll as high as 500.\nIt appeared certain the massacre\nwill intensify French measures to\nsubdue the 21. year-old rebellion\nin France's last North African possession.\nThe horror came to light when\nbare-footed women refugeei from\nMelouza staggered; some crazed\nby what they had seen, into a\nFrench outpost and reported the\nslaying of their men.\nSTART VAST SEAECH\nFrench forces launched a vast\ncounter-operation by helicopter,\nplane and armored troops to find\nthe. killers. Melouza is a tiny village in barren land 80 miles\nsoutheast of here.\nOfficials of a French garrison\nsaid rebel killers slipped over the\nborder from neighboring Tunisia\nTuesday night arid killed five men\nin the village suspected of being\npro-French.\nAlgerian nationalists in Tunisia\nblamed the massacre on the\nFrench.   > I\nThe rest of the population protested arid, the next night, a horde\nof rebels swooped down and put\nTo See Khrushchev\nOn Canadian tV\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 Russian\nleader Nikita S. Khrushchev will\nappear on Canadian TV screens\nand be heard on a Trans-Canada\nRadio hookup Sunday night,- the\nCBC announced Friday.,  ?\nThree American reporters recorded the hour-long interview in\nHie Moscow Kremlin last week for\nthe Columbia Broadcasting System. 1\nPresbyterian\nAssembly at Coast\nVANCOUVER (CP - The 83rd\nannual assembly of the Presbyterian Church in Canada convenes\n,in .Vancouver June 5, and runs\nthrough for the following eight or\nnine days.\nIt will be the first gathering of\nPresbyterians to meet in Vancou-\n. ver since 1903, and indications\npoint to one of the largest assemblies ever heid.\nMADRID, Spain (CP)-A Canadian Pacific Airlines DC - 6B arrived from Montreal Friday in\nthe first, passenger flight of.'the\ncompany to Madrid. It flew by\nway of Lisbon-\nThe airliner landed at Barajas\nAirport under temporary permit\nfrom Spanish authorities while\nthe two countries negotiate an\nagreement to establish regular\nservice between Canada and\nSpain.\nthe entire male population to death.\nIt was the worst single blood-letting of the rebellion.\nWhen soldiers arrived at the site,\nhardened Legionnaires had their\nstomachs turned by theSiarnage.\nIn one hut, 35 bodies were .found\nstacked like cordwpod.\nAuthorities were unable to estimate the political effect of the extermination, apparently intended\nas a warning, to Algerians to have\nnothing to do with the French.\nFrench   authorities   said   that\nsince Wednesday they have killed\n91 rebels. During the first 15 days\nof May, 1026Tebe_ were slain,\nURGES BREAK\nCONTACT\nPARIS (AP) \u2014 President Rene\nCoty  ol  France  Friday  night\ncalled on all civilized peoples to\nbreak contact with-those,   who\nsupported the rebellion In Algeria.  He. spoke against a background of government crisis at\nhome and new and bloody outbursts in North Africa.\nIn an unprecedented midnight\nbroadcast to the French people\nand the world, the president said;\n\"I ask all civilized peoples if the\ntime has not come to signify that\nthey refuse to listen to the killers\nand the agents of this horrible terrorism which tramples all the laws\nof God and man.\"\nPointing to the massacre of Melouza in which more than 300 Algerians were reported slaughtered\nby rival Algerian nationalists, the\npresident said:\n\"These abominations are not\nonly the deed of a few bandits,\nThe .murderers continue to exec-\nute orders from their leaders who\nstill yesterday over a foreign radio\nclaimed the glory and honor of\nhaving assassinated in Paris one\nmore Moslem guilty of loving\nFrance\u2014as they have already assassinated 5000 defenseless Moslems, men and women, aged and\nchildren.\"\nNATO Group to\nTour Canada\nOTTAWA (CP) -A group of 17\njournalists from 11 European NATO\ncountries will make a 20-day tour\nof Canada beginning here Friday,\nthe external affairs department announced Friday.\nNEW SHIPS ON TRIP\nHALIFAX (CP) - The new Canadian destroyer escorts Ottawa\nand Assiniboine left here Friday\nto represent Canada at an International naval review at Hampton\nRoads, Va. Crews of the two atomic age warships will spend two\ndays in Saint John, N. B., on the\nway to the U. S.\nSelwyn Lloyd Feels...\nRemoved Friction by\nEasing Trade Barriers\n\u00b0   * hr.     e\nWINGLESS, TAILLESS French\nAtar Volant P2 takes to the air\nfor its first free flight recently at\nMelun-Villarochc airfield near,\nParis. The aluminum bodied\ncraft previously had been flown\nonly when secured by chains as\na safety measure. It is powered\nby a simple jet engine which is\ndlrectlonable for manoeuverabtl-\nlty.\u2014AP Wirephoto.\nH-Bonib Released\nIn High Air Burst\nABOARD FRIGATE! ALERT,\nSouth Pacific (CP)\u2014Britain's second hydrogen bomb test got under\nway Friday when a Royal'Air\nForce jet bomber dropped a bomb\nnear the southern Pacific Island\nof Maiden in- the v i c i n'i t y. of\nChristmas atoll. . ,,\nThe British taskforce scientific director, William Cook, said\nthere, would be \"no significant\nfall-out activity from the high\nair burst.\"\nHe said the fireball did not\ntouch the sea and the bomb remains were condensed into fine\nparticles that would be swept up\ninto the stratosphere amid the\nseething mushroom cloud.\nSLOW FALLOUT.\n\"These particles will take from\nmonths to many years to fall back\nto ground level,\" Cook added.\n\"This slow fall-out will not be\nconcentrated in any one area but\nwill be world-wide.\"\nHours before the blast scientific\nrecording instruments were\nprimed for action on dozens of islands of the central Pacific to\ncheck radioactivity levels. Readings  also  were being taken in\nBrisbane and Adelaide, Australia.\nInstruments to measure the effects of the. explosion had been installed on Molden Island previously\nevacuated for the . test. Maiden\nlies-some 400 miles off Christmas\nIsland, a tiny speck on the map\n1300 miles east of Japan and 4200\nfrom Hawaii.\nSmall groups of correspondents\nfrom British and Commonwealth\ncountries had been flown 'from\nChristmas to Maiden atoll and\nwent aboard the admiralty yacht\nAlert to witness the blast.\nJETS TEST\nSix Canberra jet bombers flew\ninto the white hell of the mushroom cloud to collect samples.\nScientists planned to assemble\nreadings from a wide area in an\nattempt to prove their claim that\nBritish H-bombs are \"clean\" by\ncomparison with American and\nRussian nuclear weapons.\nThe first bomb was fired May\n16.\nObservers said Friday's blast, a\nmulti - colored mushroom, was\nmuch bigger. It was estimated\nunofficially as having the power\nof 5,000,000 tons of TNT. .\nShriners Shatter\nVictoria Aplomb\nVICTORIA (CP) - The drowsy\nmid-afternoon calm Vt Victoria was\nshattered Friday al thousands of\nShriners and their.wives invaded\nthe' city for-a.spring cefemonja].\nTea-time in |ie ivy-covered Empress Hotel;' usually \"'a quiet-.\"and\nslightly stuffy affair,.was bedlam.\nFrail China teacups rattled in their\nsaucers as Shriners trooped in and\nout, getting organized, meeting,\nfriends or just trooping in and out.\nAn estimated 3000 members of\nthe top Masonic order are in town\nfor the ceremonial.\nCanadian Pacific Steamships\nfrom Vancouver and Seattle, loaded to the rails with fez-decked\ncelebrants, were dubbed \"Shrine\nSpecials\" by distraught CPR\nworkers.\nParades \"wound around streets,\noyer the carefully manicured Empress lawns and through the hotel.\nThe lobby resembled a department\nstore bargain basement on a Saturday.\n\u25a0 A horse-drawn carriage, preced:\ned by the Seattle Gizeh Temple\nBand and followed by a drill team,\nwas driven along the sidewalk and\nup to the arched front door of the\nhotel..\nExplosions from an ancient wagon startled citizens and sent pigeons and seagulls wheeling around\nin frantic disorder.\nThe inner harbor mooring basin,\njust clear of 25 sailing yachts entered in the Swiftsure ocean racing classic, was taken over\/ by\npower launches.\nTop man in the crowd is, Irvin\nMiller, illustrious potentate from\nVancouver.\nParades, dances, ceremonial\nrites, high-jinks and general merry\nmaking are planned for today.\nllllllllllllllllllllllltlMIIIIIIMIIIIimillllllllllllllllHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nDevelop Program for\nEarly Hospital Start\nVICTORIA\u2014Program, aimed at an early start on new hospital construction hap:peeri developed in conference with Hon.\nEric Martin and BIG. Hospital Insurance Service officials by a\nKootenay Lake General Hospital delegation at Victoria Thursday.\nNegotiations with cdn _ actors are being sought'seeking reduced construction costs. on a curtailed initial project while\nleaving the way open to continue later to achieve-the building\nas conceived. Substitutions and modifications have been outlined\n\u25a0in. discussion at Vancouver with engineers and at the capital.\nThe committee had a helpful reception at Victoria from the\nminister, provincial secretary W. D. Black and service officials,\naccording to a telephone report to J. W. Graham, board chairman. The board will consider the new steps on the plan at a\nspecial meeting Tuesday. '    ,\nVigorous steps on the project have been undertaken by the\nhospital group since tenders received May < 23 came in beyond\nthe finances available. ... \/\nIIIIMIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIimillllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIII\n\"Ernie\" To Run\nBritish Lottery\nLYTHAM ST. ANNE'S, England\n(Reuters) \u2014 A mechanical brain\nnamed \"Ernie\" will flash, grunt\nand spin out \u00a31,000,000 today in\nBritain's first state lottery in 130\nyears. \u2022\nThe lottery, first payoff of the\ngovernment's controversial \"savings with a thrill\" premium bond\ncampaign, will make 96 Britons\n\u00a31000 richer and scatter \u00a323,000\nin lesser prizes.\nErnie-'short for electronic random number indicator equipment\n\u25a0hild A press conference Friday\nin this Lancashire coast resort to\nshow how he will pick the winning\nbond serial numbers.\nHis \"eyes\" flashed, dials spun\nand radio tubes glowed as his\n\"body,\"-live silver-grey eight-by-\nten-foot cabinets, whirred into action. .\nDEFLATION MOVE\nA post office brainchild, Ernie\ngot his start last November when\nTreasury (Minister Harold Macmillan, now prime minister, inaugurated the premium bond drive\nto help Britain beat inflation.\nBaghdad Nations\nTo Consider\nMilitary Plan*'\nLONDON (AP\u2014The five Baghdad Pact nations will consider\nplans for creating a military organization at a meeting in Karachi next week, it was diclosed\nFriday.\nInformed diplomats said one\nplan being considered would set\nup a military staff headquarters\nand make the 38-year-old Shah of\nIran, Mohammed Reza. Pahlevi,\nthe supreme commander.\nThe biinisterial council of the\nalliance, meeting next Monday,\nalso will formally invite the\nUnited States to join its military\ncommittee. The United States already has announced it would become a committee member, and\nis expected to have senior U_.\narmy, navy and air force officers\npresent at the military committe.\nmeeting later in June.\nThe basic purpose of giving the\nalliance some form of military organization arise from the desire\nto put teeth into it..\nMembers of the pact are Iraq,\nIran, Pakistan, Turkey and Britain. ..    '-.'.\u25a0\u2022\nPresent Credentials\nBERN, Switzerland (Reuters)\u2014\nThe new ambassadors of Canada\nand the U. S., Edrhond Turcott\nand Henry Taylor, presented their\ncredentials to Swiss President\nfi(ans Streuli in separate ceremonies Friday.\nWon't Amend\nChafer'.      \t\nUNITED. NATIONS, N.Y. (Reu:\nters) \u2014 United :Natiens delegations\n.have generally agreed in.private\ntalks to. abandon | Any idea of\namending the charter until the\nworld situation improves, informed sources said Friday. The general assembly's- committee of the\nwhole has been called into seS'\nsion for next Monday to consider\nfixing a -time and place for a\nspecial charter. review conference.\nPhilip to Visit\nCanadian Regiment\nOTTAWA (CP) -Prince Philip\nis to visit_the 1st Battalion; the\nRoyal^Canadian Regiment, at Fort\nYork in Soest, Germany, June 11.\nThe prince, colonel-in-chief of\nthe RCR, has asked that the visit\nbe. informal. and that he see\nmany members of the battalion as\npossible, army headquarters said\nFriday.\nN_W DELHI (AP - Italian\nfilm director Roberto , Rossellini\nhas been given a three - month\nvisa extension beginning May 1,\na home ministry spokesman said\nFriday. His visa .expired at the\nend of April and his case was\nreviewed because of reports of an\nalleged romance with Indian\nbeauty Sonalini Gupta. Home\nministry^sources said the Italian\nembassy to New Delhi has given\na sort of surety that Rossellini\nwill keep away from Sonalini.\nPflimlin To Draft\n'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0:\u25a0\u25a0     .'    ' \u25a0.    - -     \u2022'.'-   \u2022 .;.'.,'\u2022'':'I .\nFour-Point Progi\nWins Over Socialist Leadership\nIn Step Toward Premier's Post;\nPlans Broad Coalition Government\nPARIS (AP)\u2014Pierre Pflimlin told a 2 a.m. press conference today he had convinced other middle-of-the-road\nparties of the need for a so-called National Union government for France. \u2022 -\nThe SO-year-old leader of the left-of-centre Popular\nRepublican Catholic party took a long step toward becoming premier in a broad coalition government, by apparently\nwinning over the Socialist\"\nparty leadership.    \u2022\nHe said he would begin drafting\na four-point \"save the franc and\n^ave Algeria\" program' today for\nsubmission- to all National ahd\nRepublican parties \u2014 that is, all\nbut the Communists and right-\nwing Poujadists. The parties probably will .make their decision on\nthe program Monday.\nGov't Dictates,\nSays Diefenbaker\nMONTREAL (CP)-John Dief-'\nenbaker accused the federal government Friday of trying to dominate and dictate to the provincial\ngovernments.\nOpening a drive to improve the\nConservative party's one - man\nCommons representation fro m\nthis thickly - populated area, the\nparty chief sgid that the cabinet\n\"handed a dish of crow\" to\" the\nVrortnces-initslstesf'tasj-shariiig'\noffer.\nSpeaking at a press conference,\nMr. Diefenbaker said the St.. Lau-.\nrent government' has adopted a\n\"domineering and dictatorial attitude\" towards the provinces.\nThis would be changed if the Conservatives were elected.        \u25a0 \\\n\"We are not going to do that\nwhen we are elected,\" he said.\n\"We intend ' to make Canadian\nunity something more than just a\nphrase in the political dictionary.\" .\nIn this second day of his third\nbrief swing through Quebec province areas, the party chief took\nissue with a recent quoted suggestion by Prime Minister St.\nLaurent that Conservatives in\nQuebec are supporting a man\nthey do not want.\nHe acknowledged that Leon\nBalcer \u2014 one of his party's head\nmen in this province \u2014 did not\nback him at the PC leadership\nconvention last December but\nsaid differences have been patched\nup.\nJet Explodes\n\u25a0HALIFAX (CP) -A twin-jet\nBanshee fighter plane exploded\nover nearby MacNab's Island Friday and a naval spokesman said\nFriday night the pilot's body had\nbeen recovered.\nHis name was withheld.\nThe jet exploded in the air while\non a training flight out of nearby\nShearwater naval air station.\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Foreign\nSecretary Selwyn Lloyd said. Friday night Britain has relaxed her\ntrade restrictions on Communist\nChina on \"a basis of common\nsense\" and in the \"long-term interests\" of the Anglo-American alliance. '\nHe denied in a radio interview\nthat the British move, announced\nThursday, might make relations\nwith the U. S. more difficult. To\nthe contrary he said, it has removed a source of friction.\nEarlier Friday, a . government\nspokesman said Britain's new policy automatically applies to. North\nKorea, North Vietnam and\" Tibet,\nall communist controlled\u2014and to\nthe Portuguese colony of. Macao,\noff the Chinese mainland.\nOTHERS MAY FOLLOW\n. Lloyd did not specifically name\nthese areas, Thursday when he announced Britain would expand her\ntrade with Communist China to the\nless-restricted level of trade with\nRussia.\nMeanwhile, it is predicted in\nmany world capitals that other\ncountries would soon follow Brit-\n\u25a0_\nain's \"go it alone\" decision despite opposition from Washington.\nU. S. Ambassador John Hay\nWhitney, called on Lloyd Friday\nfor a general talk believed to include the China trade decision and\nother major topics.\nIn a speech Friday night, government trade chief Sir David\nEccles said he thinks the British\ndecision will cause ill-feeling in\nthe U. S., but he is sure it will\nnot last.\nWASHINGTON (AP) - Senatorial leaders have signalled reluctant acceptance of Britain's decision to step up its trade with communist China as an accomplished\nfact.\nRepublican leader William Know-\nland of California told the senate\nFriday this decision eventually\nmay topple the British crown colony of Hong Kong into the hands\nof a strengthened China.\nBut Knowland, chief congressional defender of National China and\ncritic of the mainland regime, did\nnot criticize Britain strongly.\nPro-Wesf Gov't\nHolds Strong\nBEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - The\npro-western government of Premier Sami Solh, appeared Friday\nto have survived its severest\ncrisis and to be holding strong\ncontrol over Lebanon. \u2022   ,\u2022 \u00abi\nAt the same time Egyptian\nopposition forces seemed to have\nlost their -fight to overthrow the\ngovernment. ,\nWith the army in full control\nof the country, the opposition\nseemed to have little chance now\nof stirring up chaos that could\nbring down the government.\nEfforts Friday, to revive the\nbloody riots. that, rocked Beirut\nThursday collapsed, without serious trouble. \" f       \u25a0\nIn two small disturbances,', five\ndemonstrators .suffered . minor -injuries.  Eight persons: were kilted\n.Thursday.   >iI?,,u\u201eU..,.-... sfc_\nI1bririer premier Saeb Salam,\nwho was Injured and' arrested; in\nihe rioting) announced Friday a\npersonal hunger strike until the\ngovernment resigns. '\nPflimlin, an economic and agricultural export from Strasbourg,\npreviously had let it be known\nthat he would not attempt to form\na government unless the Socialists agreed to participate.\nA delegation of Independent-Republicans led by ex-premiers An-\ntoine Pinay and Paul Reynaud was\nthe first important group to call\non Pflimlin in his temporary headquarters on the'Qua! Branly. Pin-\nay's group, a right-of-centre party,\nat odds with the Socialists on fiscal\npolicy, declined comment on the\ntalk except to say the independents\nwould take a decision when Pflimlin unveils more of his program.\nPflimlin made it clear he wants\nto head a brdad coalition, extending from the.Spcialists to the Independents, which would join\nforces'on a four-point emergency\nprogram.\nT-\n'Oaisut ^twsh.   .\nKootenay- at. Nelson,. Monday,\n12.28; Tuesday, 12.10; Wednesday,\n12.00; Thursday, 11.90; Friday;\n11.88.\nSt. Laurent in\nNewfoundland\nGANDER, Nfld. (CP) - Prime\nMinister St. Laurent toured three\nsouth coast- outports and Gander\nairport and townsite Friday t\u00bb\nwind up a one-day campaign visit\nto, Newfoundland. .\n. Qn'each stop ttie1 prime'miiiister\njald 'special .atjention, to .ihe chil-\ndren,-;ffie.''future-of'the cojihtry\"\nand wangled them a half'holiday\nfrom' school,   .',',-\u201e '\nHe asked' for Votes lot James\nPower, Liberal candidate for the\nSt. John's West riding, which includes the Placeritia area.\nAnxious.to njake, up. lost time,\nthe.party met U.S. naval officers\nat Argenfia tilt skipped ah elaborate luncheon the 'Americans had\nplanned. '\nCanada's Second Radar\nFence in Operation\nA $17,942 REPAIR JOB, building of a retaining wtdl,\nis under way at Nelson curling rink. Williscroft Construction Company is doing the work for the Civic Centre\nCommission. The project includes building a retaining\nwall on the ribrth side of the rink and removing clay \u25a0\nunder ice sheets and replacing with gravel.\n\u2014Daily Newa photo.\nBy DAVE McINTOSH\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA (CP)-The second of\nthe three radar fences spanning\nCanada\u2014basic ingredient ih the\nNorth American defence system\n' against any air-atomic onslaught\n\u2014is in full operation.\n\"The mid - Canada radar warning line now is operating,\" said\na defence department spokesman\nFriday.\nOfficials declined to say when\nthe $200,000,000 chain began to\nfunction but it was understood it\nwent into full opeiationonly in the\nlast week or so.\nThe western section bf the line,\nrunning west along the'Mth parallel from Hudson Bay, began operation on schedule Jan. 1 this\nyear. But completion of the eastern section from Hudson Bay to\nthe Labrador coast was delayed\nnearly five months by bad\nweather and transportation difficulties.\nU.S.-BUILT\nThe mid - Canada line was financed entirely by Canada and\nbuilt in two years by the Trans-\nCatiada Telephone System under\nRCAF supervision.'\nIt will cost $18,000;000 to operate\nin its first year and will be manned by- 800 Canadian civilians under RCAF direction.\nTarget date for start of operation of the $400,000,000 DEW- ra^\ndarline is.July 1. TWs'fence,. be^ '\ning f i a n c e d . entirely by the\nUnited States, runs along the 70th\nparallel from Greenland to the\nAluetlan Islands; \u25a0 The Canadian\nsector will be manned mainly by\nCanadian civilians under U.S. military supervision.\nThe Pinetree radar chain, built\nroughly along the 50th parallel,\nhas been in operation for some\nthree years. The U:S. paid two-\nthirds the cost, Canada one third.\nIt is manned by the RCAF and\nU.S. Air Force.\nPLANES SUPPLEMENT\nThe U.S. is paying entirely for\ngap-filler stations in the Pinetree\nchain and for operation of picket\nradar planes and ships which patrol far out in the north Atlantic\nand north Pacific oceans.\nAnd in This Corner .v.\nLONDON (Renters)\u2014A conference devoted to Improving Britain's laundries broke into an uproar Friday when a housewife\ndemanded they replace missing shirt buttons.\nMrs. C, B. Curtis said laundries could \"do more\" than psychiatrists and marriage guidance bureaus to save marriages merely\nby replacing shirt buttons of enraged husbands.\nIn a tart reply, Mrs, K. M. Goodbody, laundry owner, declared;\n\"It Is the job of any devoted wife, to.see that her husband's shirts\nare ready the night before,\"    >\nPORTLAND, Maine (AP)\u2014Members of the Greater Portland\nMethodist men's group have found a way to unload their well-\n' meant but missent Christmas ties\u2014and all in a good cause.\nTies surrendered at the group's second annual meeting here\nnext week Will be shipped directly to African missionaries. There\nthey will be distributed to the beau brummels of the dark continent, who wear them sans shirt, and their ladies, who use them\nas skirt material. \u25a0...'.'' ;\nKANSAS CITY (AP)\u2014Two hours of monkeyshlnes took place\nThursday aboard a cargo plane en route from Detroit.to KanBas\nCity,\nRunning loose Inside the plane as It landed was a 75-pound\nchimpanzee on Its way to a pet shop at Santa Cruz, Calif.\nThe crew said' the chimp broke out of its cage when they were\n20 minutes out of Detroit. It sp'ent the rest of the flight investigating the plane, swinging from the radio racks and, for a time, sat '\nIn the co-pilot's seat,\nA relief crew and. freight handlers needed 20 minutes to catch\ntha monkey after th\u00bb piano landed.\n NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JUNE 1, 1957\nHey Kiddies ... Giant- All Cartoon Show\nTODAY AT 2:00 P.M. \u2014'Admission 150\nFREE POPCORN TO THE FIRST 100 CHILDREN    ,\n\u2014 Special On Stage ToVlght \u2014\nMEET THE NELSON JUBILEE QUEEN CONTESTANTS\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT \u2014 Shows at 7:00-9:13\nTHE PULITZER PRIZE PLAY IS Oil THE SMEEHU\nPrices: 85c, 60c, 25c\nSTARTS\nMONDAY\nThe story that\nHAD to win the\nPulitzer Prize!\nfiwn 20ft Ci\u00abium-'\u00ab l\u00bb\nCINEmaScoPE\nMILLAND\nERNEST\ntMWtt\u00ab|\nllllift\nIfHIf-flffl-Wffl.\nBRAVE MEM\nCIVIC\nSTARLIGHT DRIVE-IN\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\nTimes 9:00 p.m. and 9:30 p.m.\n%\u00a3diC6\nI\nTONIGHT ONLY ..:\nALL LADY DRIVERS ADMITTED . . . FREE ... If\nyour wife can't drive, put her behind the wheel at the\ngat* and push her toi' ...     ......   .. :\nCOMING J\nMONDAY, TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY |\n\"COME NEXT SPRING\"    I\n(Technicolor)\nAnne Sheridan, Steve CoDJiran, Walter Brennan\nThis is the story of a farmer with a weakness for drinking\nwho deserts his wife and family and then returns eight\nyears later to be regenerated through the faith and love\nof one of his children who Is a mute.\nThis is one of the best family pictures I have ever seen.\nYOUR SATISFACTION IS ABSOLUTELY GUARANTEED\nPremiere Theatre\nFRUITVALE, B. C.\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\n\"GLORY\" (Tech.-Super) '\nMargaret O'Brien,\nc Walter Brennan\nCASTLE THEATRE\nCASTLEGAR, B.C.\n.   Showing\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\nAt 6:45 and 8:45\n\"LOVE ME TENDER\" (Cine.)\nElvis Presley, Debra Paget\nNews and Short\nHOME ON RANCH\nFOUND FOR BOY\nWelfare authorities have located\na home on a ranch for a'13-year-\nold juvenile who earlier admitted\nthree breaking and enterings and\nthefts and one other theft charge\nsaid by RCMP to have occurred\nsince about February in the North\nShore and Bealby Point areas, also\na charge of taking a canoe and\ndamaging it beyond repair, said by\ncity police to have occurred last\nmonth.\nJuvenile Court Judge William\nEvans this week ordered the boy's\nparents to pay for his support.\nIn juvenile court Thursday, a juvenile was found to be delinquent,\nfined $10 and placed on six month's\nprobation by Judge Evans on\ncharges of creating a disturbance.\nDollar Lower\nNEW YORK (CP) - The Canadian dollar was 1-32 lower at a\npremium of 21-32 in terms of U. S.\nfunds Friday. The pound sterling\nwas 1-16 lower at $2.79.\nManufacturer's\nAnnual Oiler I\nDOROTHY GRAY\nHOT WEATHER\nCOLOGNES\nSweet Spice \u2014'Natural\nJune Bouquet \u2014 Lilac Time\nLarge 8 oz. Bottle $1.25\nNelson Pharmacy\n\"Your Fortress ol Hsiilth\"\n[ .Ses^p-hh\nAuto-Vue Drive-ln\nTRAIL, B.C.\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\nTime 8:45\n\"LITTLEST OUTLAW\"\nPedro Armendarlz\nCartoon: \"APPLESEED\"    ,\nelsoir's Centennial To Be\nDiscussed at June 8 Meeting\nA special meeting of the Nelson\nDiamond Jubilee and Centennial\nCelebrations Committee has been\nplanned for Saturday, June 8, ih\nthe office of Community Programs\nBranch regional consultant Robert\nStangroom, Medical Arts Building.\nChairman V. C. Owen, asked Friday that all members make a spc\ncial effort to attend.\nPurpose of the meeting is lo\ndraft plans to present June 19\nahd 20, when the S.C. Centennial\nCommittee will be In Nelson to\ndiscuss plans for observing B.C.'s\n100th birthday next year. It Is\nalso requested that anyone having Ideas for centennial projects\ncommunicate them to the committee before June 8.\nAt their regular meeting Friday\nin the Chamber of Commerce office, members thought it would be\nadvisable to have a dinner meeting\nwhen the B.C. committee is here.\nThere will be no meeting next\nFriday.\nA request from the Nelson Film\nCouncil for a contribution towards\nthe outdoor film showings to be\nheld twice weekly in Lakeside\nPark beginning the first Wednesday in July, was turned over to\nthe program committee. \u2022'\nThe Council's letter said a donation of $150, plus $50 given *y\nthe city, would enable it to present\nbetter, pictures. Committee members suggested donating $50, then\nwondered if this might not open\nthe door for other such requests.\nMrs. L. G. Catley said the Film\nCouncil was one of the few local\norganizations that continues operations in summer.\nSTAGECOACH TOR PARADE\nSecretary E. J. Leveque said\nKootenay Forest Products has ob-\n-tained en old stagecoach ence used\nby Peter Verigin, and it is intended\nto put it in the jubilee parade.\nProgram committee chairman\nArthur Foster reported \"nothing\nfurther\" on program arrangements\nand submitted a bill for $625 worth\nof fireworks from an Ontario company. It was hoped the Nelson\nFire Department will look after\nthese. Some of the money is refundable. . -..\nOne Trail band said it will be\nunable to come for the celebrations\nbut another might be able to enter\nthe parade.\nMr. Leveque was commended\nfor a letter written to Hon. W. D.\nBlack, MLA for Nelson-Creston,\nprovincial secretary, and minister\nof municipal affairs, requesting\ngovernment financial assistance.\nFurther help will also be asked\nfrom City Council,_who have given\n$2500 so far. Finance chairman T.\nC. Lambert was \"most anxious\"\nto learn the amount of any gift\nfrom the government, and is how\npreparing local canvass lists.\nPublicity chairman Aid. W. S.\nRamsay said Nelson Kinsmen Club\nhas undertaken to look after the\nchildren's parade and pet parade,\nincluding buying prizes, and wished advance publicity in order to\n\"drum up\" entries. It was felt\nsuch cou|d be incorporated with\ngeneral parade advertising. He\nalso submitted bills totalling $408.\nHATS'FOR SALE\nTeen Town members are now\nselling green and white 60th jubilee\nbuttons, and a new shipment of\ngreen and white hats arrived Friday at a local store. Mrs. Catley\nthought these were \"wonderful\"\nadvertising.\nNo action was taken on an offer\nby an Alberta pottery firm to buy\nsouvenir'plates. The plates, to be\nFive Divorces\nGranted Here\nFollowing divorces were granted\nby Mr, Justice J.. O. Wilson at;the\n^Jelson spring assizes:\nJ. H. Jerome from Catherine\nAnn Jerome, married July, 1935,\nat Nelson; Florence Mabel Allt\nMcAllister, frbm J. C. G. McAllister, married September, 1945, at\nHalifax, N. S.; Irene Sookrukoff\nfrom William Sookrukoft, married\nSeptember, 1951, at Coeur d'Alene,\nIdaho; Annie Russell from A. W.\nRussell, married, March, 1945, at\nVancouver; and J. F. Brinley from\nRina Joyce Mary Brinley, married\nNovember, 1946, at Willow Point.\nAll are from Nelson.\nNew Armaments Deal Before\nTax Change, Says Deachman\nNAKUSP \u2014 \"No government will lowing headings\ndo much to change the present tax\nstructure of the country. The only\nhope for a 'new deal' in taxes is\nfor a 'new deal' in armaments.\" .\nSo said Grant Deachman, executive secretary of the B. C. Liberal\nAssociation, speaking here Friday\nnight in support of W. J. McLoughlin, Liberal candidate for Koote-\nnay-West..\nMr. Deachman outlined the federal budget, giving the national\ndefence breakdown, and,-also explained the purpose and reason for\nthe $6 social security pension increase.\nMr. McLoughlin dealt.with national development under the foi-\n\u2022   Hi-Lite\nELK DRIVE-IN\nCA8T4.EGAR, B.C.\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\nOne Showing, 9:00 p.m,\n\"VICE SQUAD\"\nEdward G. Robinson \u2014 PLU8\n\"THEM\" \u2022 Edmund Gwenn\nBOATS FOUND\nRCMP are looking for the .owners of two boats found recently in\nthe Nine Mile Point and Sunshine\nBay areas.\nA 14-foot rowboat, white with\ngreen trim, was found by W. Rams-\nbottom at Nine Mile Point. This\nboat was said to be in \"pretty\ngood condition,\" and has a space\nfor a motor oh the back., Another\nrowboat, in \"poor contdition\", witlj\nwhite top, green bottom and interior was found by a Sunshine\nBay resident.\nA small cabin cruiser also found\nnear Sunshine Bay was- traced to\nWilliam Kapak at Balfour.\nKamloops Man\nTransferred Here\nJohn Jackson of Kamloops has\nbeen transferred to the land registry office in Nelson..\nMr. and Mrs.. Jackson will take\n;up residence at 616 Mill Street this\nSaturday. They-.haye three, children, Brian, and twins, Joy and Roy.\nMr. Jackson was District Cubmaster at Kamloops and has joined\nthe Baptist Scout Group. Both boys\nhave joined No. 4 Scout Troop and\nthe daughter will join a local Girl\nGuide troop shortly.\nThe Weather\nNELSON   54 79\ni Winnipeg    50 -63\nI Regina      41 66\nCalgary     35 70\nj Udmonton -\u25a0  39 71\n1 Kimberley    47 78\n! Victoria     51 63\n_ty TOM D'AQUINO\nNow that the big.election is over,\nI can get down to normal activities.\nThe highlight of last week, was of\ncourse, the election for prime minister. Bernie Monteleone, my, honorable opponent, was elected- to\nthe top post and will choose his\ncabinet next week. The campaigns\nwere the largest by far the school\nhas ever witnessed, and the election spirit was almost fanatical.\n' At the last parliament meeting,\nacting prime minister Pat Clark\nterminated this session of parliament and introduced the . partly-\nformed new parliament. Twenty-\nsix members from the divisions\nwill be elected in September. Congratulations to this year's cabinet\nand parliament for their splendid\nwork.\nIn athletics, house softball is progressing well, and a boys' soft-\nball rep team left for Trail this\nmorning to play in a Softball\ntournament.\nAll school clubs are being terminated as graduation time draws\nnear. Speaking ,of graduation,\nfeverish preparations are being\nmade by band, choir, students and\nstaff for the exercises and giant\ndance to be held next week.\nAwards Day will be Thursday following graduation,, and the public\nis cordially invited.\nLast night there was an exciting\ngame of Softball between students\nand staff. The staff won 8-7.\nunity, development of industry, trade, economic\nprogress, rourity, the home and\nthe individual, the unity of the\nCommonwealth, freedom, Canada's\nleadership in the recent Suez Cana!\ncrisis, its part in the UN and the\nNorth Atlantic Treaty Organization\nand all Commonwealth matters.\nThe candidate remarked that the\nfederal government places a 'great\nimportance' on the individual's\nrelation to the nation. Concerning\n\"Mica Dam. he reminded -his Me\ntellers of difficulty experienced\nby Ontario Hydro Commission\nthrough export.of power. Attempts\nare being made to try to prevent\nthat here, he' said, because the\nOttawa government recognizes the\nimportance of keeping all the Columbia river power for B, C, especially the Interior. Mr. McLoughlin explained the offer made\nby Ottawa on Mica Creek.\nThe Trail radio announcer said\nhe \"fully understood and sympathized with\" complaints from people in Slocan and Arrow Lakes districts about poor .radio reception,\nand hoped \"we will be able to improve the situation in the near future.\" '   _ ' .\nRussell Palmer was chairman of\nthe meeting, which brought about\n30 people from Edgewood, Burton,\nNew Denver, Silverton, and Nakusp to the Nakusp Parish Hall.\nCCF SPEAKERS\nHERE TONIGHT\nThe main campaign meeting of\nthe CCF party in Nelson takes\nplace tonight.\nThe public meeting in Legion\nHall- will be addressed by H. W.\nHerridge, the party's candidate for\nre-election to Ottawa, .and Robert\nStrachah, CGF provincial leader.\nThe provincial leader is arriving\nfrom a series' of campaign addresses in East,Kootenay-centres, and\nwill spend the weekend in Nelson.\nVecchio Condition\n.till Critical\nDoctors in Kootenay Lake General Hospital said Joseph VMchi6\nwas still in \"critical\" condition\nFriday night.\nSon of Mr. and Mrs. John Vecchio of Nelson, he wa6 seriously injured Monday night after a 1957\ncar was In collision with a truck\non  the  Melson-Salmo highway.\nCURIOUS BOY SETS\nOFF FALSE ALARM\nA four-year-old boy's curiosity\nsent Nelson firemen, scurrying to\nBox 41, Nelson Avenue and Elwyn\nStreet, shortly after noon Friday.\nMother of Brian MacCrimmon,\nCabin 24, Lakeside Auto Court,\nsaid he had never seen a fire\nalarm box before. Curious to find\nbut mote about it, he pulled open\nthe door and pulled, the switch.\n\u2022 Fire Chief E. S. Owens explained\nto him the function of the box.\nmade in the cross-section of a log,\nwould sell for about $1, and would\nbe on sale in other towns. An order\nof at least ,1000 would be needed,\nMrs Owen read a letter from the\nB.C. Centennial Committee summarizing activities of committees\nall over the province. Mrs. John\nErb-read part of.a-letter from the\nUniversity of. B.C. ih. Vancouver\nasking about accommodations for\ndramatic presentations and other\nshowj next year. .\nW.J. Williams\nPasses at 77\nA man who was well-known In\nearly day mining circles, William\nJoseph Williams, 77, of 405 Elwyn\nStreet, died Friday in Kootenay\nLake General Hospital.\nMr. Williams w^s born in 1879\nin St. Stephen's, Cornwall, England, coming to Canada and the\nKootenay in 1897. A short time later\nhe moved to the United States,\nreturning here in 1912. He was a\nminer and prospector most of his\nlife, until about 20 years ago. In\n1927, Mr. Williams bought a fruit\nranch opposite Nine Mile 'Point,\nwhere he lived until 1954, when he\nmoved back to Nelson,\nMrs. Williams, the former Bessie Jane Allen, predeceased him\nin 1944. Survivors are two sisters,\nMrs. Anne Watts and Mrs. Jane\nSnell; one brother, John Edgar\nWilliams, all of Cornwall, England;\nand. two nephews, Frederick J.\n.Williams of Nelson, and.F.J.\nWatts of Grass Valley, California.\nDEGREE of bachelor of arts In\nhumanities, magna cum laude,\nhas been awarded by Gonzaga\nUniversity, Spokane, to Denis C,\nEdgar, son of Mrs. Edith Edgar,\n908 Vernon Street. He Is a graduate of St. Joseph's high school\nand attended Notre Dame College and the University of Western Ontario prior to Gonzaga.\nBayonne-Sheep Creek\nRoad Link Planned by\nNew Timber Operation\nJUDGMENT ON\nSTREET CASE\nSTILL PENDING\nJudgment on an action by the\nNelson Oldtimers' Association to\nhalt the City of Nelson from moving monuments on the boulevard\nof the 400 block Vernon Street in\npreparation for provincial government highway work will not be\nmade by Mr. Justice J. O. Wilson\nuntil at least next week, according\nto court officials.\n' When the case opened Wednesday afternoon in Assize Court,\nCify counsel L. S. Gansner moved\nlo have the action dismissed since\nthe plaintiffs had not suffered any\ndamage additional to that suffered\nby other citizens. Decision on the\nmotion was reserved by His Lordship until R. B. Allan, counsel for\nthe plaintiffs, prepares an amendment charging the work to be \"illegal use of the taxpayers'money.\"\nTed Young\nTransferred\nC. E'. W. (Ted) Young has been\ntransferred to Inland Natural Gas\nCompany's accounting office in\nVancouver. A farmer City of Nelson employee, he switched to Inland when that company took over\nthe city gas plant last year.\nSASQUATCH\nJUNE 8\nStudent\nDance\n\u2022     NELSON CIVIC CENTRE\nFREE Hunting Licences\nommers Hits\n\"Liberal Record\"\nSOUTH SLOCAN - Friday night\nSocial Credit, candidate D. L.\nBrothers and MLA R. E. Sommers\naddressed a meeting at South Slocan.\n\"The Liberals say they are\nstanding on their record,\" said Mr.\nSommers. \"Well,, let me remind\nyou of the Liberal record. Don't\nforget Kitimat. It stands as a monument to them forever for a giveaway. Hundreds of acres flooded,\nmillions of cubic feet of timber\nlost, dams, tunnels, power installations and power lines, all stand\ntax free forever. Remember, tax\nfree forever. That is the record\nthey stand on. Just let them try\nto deny it.\"\nAdvocating the Social Credit's\nstand that old age pension should\nstart at $100 per month, Mr.\nBrothers drew a comparison of the\npresent $46 per month and the\npension in 1949. He showed the\npurchasing power of the present\npension to be worth only $38 and\ncited instances of where old age\npensioners in Vancouver could not\npossibly live on $46 per month.\nMr. Brothers said the Social\nCredit party advocated the, in-,\ncrease-of income tax exemptions\nto $3000 for married people and\n$2000 for single persons.\nReferring to the loss-of the apple,\nwheat and lumber markets, he\nstated that it was only natural to\nlose these markets if the Liberal\ngovernment persisted only in dealing with dollar countries.\nMr. Sommers announced tenders\nfor reconstruction of No. 3 highway through South Slocan would\nbe called around July 10. ,\nSeveral questions followed the\nmeeting in the WI Hall, chaired\nby James Street.\nA timber .development that will\ninvolve linking, of the Bayonne\nmine and Sheep Creek areas by\nlogging roads and construction of\na lumber mill at Tye, on Kootenay\nLake, was announced Friday by\nAnthony (Tony) Fernandez cl\nLongview, Wash.\nMr. Fernandez is president of\nthe Cowlitz Timber Company, Inc.,\nwhich has purchased a 144,000-acre\ntimber tract from the Kootenay\nLogging Company, a Portland,\nOre., group.\nHe said that the company also\nexpected to build a chipper and\nbarker plant in the future, with the\nproducts to be sold to pulp mills.\nHe thought' the entire operation\nwould eventually mean employment for about 200 men.   \"     ,\n\"Our first project,\" Mr. Fernandez stated, \"will be to tie in the\nSheep Creek area with the old\nBayonne mine road.\" This, would\nprovide a truck road through to\nTye, he explained. The road from\nTye to the Bayonne was a 12-mile\nlogging road and construction of\nanother six to eight miles of road\nwas required to link it up to the\nSheep Creek road. He said the\ncompany planned to build a road\ninto the' Porcupine Creek area\nwhere logging was also planned.\nEARLY START .ON ROAD\nRoad construction would start\nwithin a couple of weeks, he said\nConstruction of a band type sawmill with planer and gang mill\nwould follow.\nWith Mr. Fernandez is engineer\nforester Morris Woodward, who Is\nto be in charge of operations; and\nChauncey Pettybone of California\nrepresentative ot the Stetzinger\nLumber Company of Philadelphia,\nwho will install the sawmill.\nMr. Fernandez said estimater-\ncruiser L. McConkey of Tacoma\nand a crew of about 10 men had\nestimated the tract contained more\nthan a billion feet of board measure\ntimber and that there was also\nJ. TARASOFF IN\nAREA 45 YEARS\nJohn Dimitrios Tarasoff, 60, who\nwas killed early Friday morning\nby a treei about eight miles from\nPassmore, had lived in this district about 45 years. He was born\non the high seas, as his parents\nwere crossing from Russia to\nCanada. (See also story on Page\nThree.).\nThe family lived in Pelly, Saskatchewan, until 1912, when they\nwent to Glade. A year later, they\nwent to Crescent Valley, which has\nbeen their home ever since. Mr.\nTarasoff spent most of his life in\nlumber mills, mostly as a saw\nsetter, and was also a bush worker.\nHe is survived by his wife, the\nformer Florence Markin; three\nsons, John of Thrums, Fred and\nAndy of Crescent Valley; one\ndaughter, Miss Daria Tarasoff of\nCrescent Valley; two brothers,\nPaul and Mike of Crescent Valley;\nand three grandchildren. One brother, James, predeceased him.,\nA. FERNANDEZ\nmore than _ billion feet of pulp\ntimber. He said the cruise did not\ninclude any timber smaller than\n16 inches DBH (diameter breast\nhigh) and that there were thou*\nands of acres of timber ranginj\nfrom eight to 16 inches'. He said\nthe cruise had also located about\n600,000 lineal feet of cedar polei.\nTimber included spruce, hemlock,\nred cedar, balsam, fir, white and\npondero'sa pine and larch.\nTotal invested in the purchase\nwas not announced but a recent\nreport from 'Portland Indicated it\nwas in the neighborhood of $2,000,-\n000.\nLocal mills in the area, at Salmo\nand Creston, and including Kootenay Forest Products Of Nelson,\nWould be given the opportunity to\npurchase logs, Mr. Fernanda said.\nThe tract line runs slightly north\no\u00a3 the Creston-Salmo cutoff highway, ranging in distance from the\nhighway from a half-mile to three\nmiles.\nOur Clothing Is\nMade by\nFIT-REFORM\nSUITS, JACKETS and\nSLACKS, all perfectly\ntailored and In models\nthat really fit ...\nOur selection of JACKETS and SUITS is very\ncomplete and our feature material is.of\ncourse . ; .\nBRAMBLE\nTWIST\nGodfreys'\nPHONE S\u00bb*\u00bb70\"M BOX\nJUBILEE\nHATS\nAvailable\nNOW!\nGet Out and Support Your City. Wear the Colors.\nMake Our Jubilee a Huge Success!\nHats Can Be Purchased at the Cost Price of Only\n$\u00abV95\n2\nTHROUGH THE COURTESY OF THE FOLLOWING  MEN'S  WEAR   STORES:\n* Gilkers'Ltd. ,\n546 Baker St. Phone   87\n\u25a0jl; D'Arcy Hughes\nMen's Shop\n459 Ward St. Phone 425\n^r; Emory's Ltd.\n571 Baker St. Phone 31\n*k Frank's Boys' and Men's\nShop\n547 Baker St. Phone 1717\nir Godfreys' Ltd.\n378 Baker St. Phone 270\nTAr Hudson's Bay Company.\nNelson, B.C.\nGet Your Topper Today III\n Doukhobor Study...\nUnited Church Names\nThree New Ministers\nGRAND FORKS \u2014 Appointment\nof three new ministers in Kootenay\nPresbytery of the United Church\nhas been approved, it has been\nannounced by Rev. Donald Evans\nof Grand Forks, Press representative for Kootenay Presbytery.\nAt Fernie, Rev. Gilbert Johnson of Haney will replace Rev. Dr.\nNorah Hughes, who moves to Victoria West.\nRev. A. A. Burnett of Nakusp\nretires this year, and his successor is Rev. Rodney Booth of\nMontreal.\nAt Castlegar, Rev. A. 0. McNeil\nof Squamish replaces Rev. Clinton\nJohnson, who will serve at Hope.\nMr. McNeil, formerly at Creston,\nwitnessed the ordination of his son,\nAlbert M. McNeil, by the Moderator, Rt. Rev. J. S. Thomson, recently. .\nThe recent conference in Vancouver expressed its confidence\nIn Rev. T. M. Karpoff In his role\nas liaison between the United\nChurch an dthe Orthodox Doukhobor community. It also instructed Kootenay Presbytery to\nstudy the land question and\neducation of Doukhobor children\nand to report fully to the conference in 1958.\nA province-wide stewardship crusade will start in the fall, Mr.\nEvans also announced. The sum\nof $1,500,000 is needed for Union\nCollege, church extension, Naramata Training School and other\nconference projects, which will\nmake a united appeal. A central\ncommittee will provide support and\nguidance to local congregations requesting help in financial campaigns, and will distribute money\nraised for conference projects\naccording to need.\nIn answer to the question \"Are\nmoderate drinkers accepted in the\nfellowship of the United Church?\"'\nMr. Evans states that the United\nChurch in B.C. says \"yes,\" but\nurges all members to consider the\nChurch's official policy of voluntary total abstinence,\n\"The conference stressed the\nresponsibility.of moderate drinkers\nto join with abstainers in the rest\nof the Church's temperance program, especially in all efforts to\nreduce alcoholism.\"\nSportsmen Meet\nIn Trail June 23\nTRAIL \u2014 Preparations for the\nWest Kootenay zone Rod and Gun\nClubs' cohvention here June 23\nwere made at the monthly meeting of Trail Rod and Gun Club\nthis week.\nGame Warden Pete. Ewart said\nthe department had to place\npoisoned bait at Sheep Creek to\nkill bears which were molesting\ncattle. Notices had been placed in\nthe vicinity to this effect.\nThe Trail-Salmo gun range is\ndeveloping well. Both clubs have\ncleared timber and brush, and 300\nyards of timber have been cut\nready for clearing.   \u25a0\nThe trap range is expected to be\nin use before long. Work on construction has started.\nThree Fines Levied\nFines totalling $45 and costs\nwere imposed Thursday by provincial court Stipendiary Magistrate William Evans. Three cases\nwere heard, and all pleaded\nguilty.\nH. Stova of Ymir was fined $10\nand costs for allowing a minor to\ndrive without a licence, Expressway Truck Lines were fined $10\nand costs for doing business outside of their area without a permit, and J. L. Laughton of Nelson was fined $25 and costs for\nspeeding near Fruitvale.\nKOOTENAY COTTAGES\nRESORT\nReserve Your Holiday Cottage Now.\nFinest Accommodation, Attractive, Restful\nSurroundings, Dining Room, Private Beach,\nBoats, Tennis\n4**** and AAA Members\nEAST SHORE KOOTENAY LAKE\n10 Miles From Kootenay Bay Ferry\nPHONE 2. GRAY CREEK\n\"RECOGNITION NIGHT\" was held by St. Eugene Council,\nKnights of Columbus, in Cranbrook, in honor of Miss Joan Prov-\nenzano, who won the Father John; Althoff Memorial Oratorical\nTrophy In competition at Trail. Ed Zarowny, chairman of the\npublic speaking committee of Cranbrook Knights of Columbus\ncongratulates Joan, 14-year-old student of Mount Baker high\nschool and daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Provenzano. Representatives of all parish organizations also paid tribute to her, and\nRt. Rev. Msgr. A. L. Maclntyre quoted from the Book of Judith\nin reference to the occasion.        \u2022\n _____ i ,\t\nPlanned Economy Program\nOutlined by CCF Leader\nFERNIE (CP) \u2014 Robert Strachan, CCF opposition leader in the\nLegislature, told an election meeting Thursday night that the CCF\nbelieves jn public ownership of\nthose industries which exert the\ngreatest control over the country's economy.\nThe ownership could be municipal, provincial or federal.\nThe CCF believes chartered\nbanks should be taken over or subjugated by the Bank of Canada, he\nsaid.\nThe transportation system should\nbe unified, controls placed on the\nagricultural implement field, and\npublic utilities placed under public ownership.\nMr. Strachan was replying to a\nquestion whether the CCF, if elected, would nationalize industry.\nMr. Strachan said depression\nsigns were first shown in agriculture and later followed in the\nconstruction field.\nHe did not wish a recurrence of\nthe depression of the 30s. The CCF\nwas the only party which, with a\nplanned economy, could institute\na program providing full employment with rising living standards,\na satisfactory share pf national income for all,- a health insurance\nplan, a unified'labor legislation\nand \"brea,d, peace and freedom\nthroughout the world.\"\nThis could be done _y obtaining\ncontrol of the economy which he\nsaid now is held by and for the\nWedding\nAnnouncements\nand\nInvitations\n(Wj\n^n.\nvJ\/T^\nWEDDING ANNOUNCEMENTS or INVITATIONS require the correct wording, the choice\nof type, and the latest designs in stationery...\nWe guarantee all these essentials in regard to\nSocial Printing. Ask to see the various samples\nthat we carry in stock . . . Also \"Thank You\"\nCards, Wedding Cake Boxes. If out of town,\nwrite for samples and prices.\nCommercial Printers\nDIVISION OF\nt News Publishing Co. Ltd.\nPublishers of Nelson Daily News\nPHONE 1844   -   NELSON\nbenefit of a few, and by increasing productivity.\nTACKLES SOCREDS\nHe challenged the Social Credit-\ners to tell where they got their\nfunds for extensive newspaper and\nbillboard advertising, and claimed\nthey had got ttie funds from people\nfor whom they had done favors.\nHe ridiculed the -Liberal platform which promised \"five more\nyears of misgovernment,\" while\nTaber Man To Be\nBuried at Cranbrook\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Funeral \"and\nburial will take place here Tuesday\nfor Joseph Theodore Jahren of\nTaber, Alta., who died there. He\nwas born at Enderline, N.D., 59\nyears ago. He came to Canada and\nGull Lake, Sask., in 1910 and lived\nthere until 1927 when he moved to\nTaber where he had continued his\nhome since then. He was a member of the Taber Fire Department\nfor 25 .years. He was a veteran of\nthe First World War.   '\nThree brothers and four sisters\nsurvive him. in this district, Hel-\nmer, Sebastian, Mrs. Selma Murray, Carey, Lila and Bernice, all\nin Cranbrook, and Engman in\nKimberley.\nBook Lois To Go\nTo flk Centres\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Organization by\nEast Kootenay branch librarian\nHoward Overend of the Public library Commission for inception of\na new provinciaUy-sponsored -district service early in June is complete. Book consignments of provincial book stock wil lbe delivered to the public libraries at Kimberley, Cranbrook, Fernie Golden\nand Field. Creston public library\nwill join the circuit in August.\nConsignments will each number\napproximately 200 books of fiction,\nnon-fiction, teen age and children's\ntitles delivered frorn the East Kootenay Branch book depot here, and\nafter two months will be exchanged among the local libraries, putting an additional 1000 library volumes in circulation through the\ndistrict.\nFurther plans call for extension\nof service at a later date to communities of the area .without any\nlibrary facilities at present.\nMinstrel Show\nDelights Crowds\nNEW. DENVER - Capacity\ncrowds applauded two performances here of the New Denver-Silverton Kinsmen Club minstrel\nshow. ..\nRichard Bartlett, the producer,\nwas assisted by Mrs. Ruth MacDonald. The cast consisted of more\nthan 20 minstrels. Stanley Pedley\nwas interlocutor, and end men\nwere Stan Kary, L. R. Campbell.\nPaul Thederahn and A. L. Harris.\nSolor numbers were by Mrs. Bartlett, George Kent and Mel Ring-\nheim.\n\"Kentucky Babe\" was sung by\nquartette of Mrs.  Marguerite\nall the Conservatives had to often, Thring, Mrs. Harris, Mr. Kent and\nwas \"follow John.\" .; '\u25a0      ; Mr .Harris.\nMr. Strachan was speaking on\nbehalf of Howard Day, CCF candidate in Kootenay West. Tom Uphill MLA introduced Mr. Strachan\nand asked a large audience to\nrally in support of the CCF. '\nCranbrook Logger\nAlex Kozak Dies\nCRANBRbOK - A logger in this\ndistrict for more than 30 years,\nAlexander Kozak, 73, died at St.\nEugene Hospital Tuesday. Born in\nl Russia, he came to Canada in 1915\nand to this province in 1921. He had\nlogged in Cranbrook district since\nthen until retirement four years\nago. He had no relatives here.\nRev. F. D. Wyatt officiated at\nthe funeral service at McPherson\nFuneral Chapel Friday.\nPERMISSION GIVEN\nGIRL TO MARRY\nPermission was given by Mr.\nJustice J. O. \"Wilson in Assize\nCourt in Nelson for Miss Betty-'\nLou Deptford, 16, of Ashcroft, to\nmarry K. C. Yeast of Trail without\nthe consent of her parents. J. FF.\nMeagher of Trail appeared for\nMiss Deptford.\nMrs. Wolfe Elected\nTo Invermere Seat\nINVERMERE - Mrs. Charles\nWolfe was elected by acclamation\nThursday to replace Mrs. K. J.\nWilliams as commissioner for the\nvillage municipality of Invermere.\nMrs. Williams will be leaving district shortly.\nMrs. Wolfe is a co-owner operator of a shop here.\nHISTORIC AIRLIFT\nThe Berlin airlift, when Russians blocked routes <to the divider capital in 1948, mover 2,325,-\n500 tons of food and fuel.\nINQUEST OPENED\nIN HUGHES DEATH\nCRANBROOK - Funeral wiU\ntake place at Christ Church Monday for Harry Stockton Hughes,\nwhose death at St. Eugene Hospital followed a highway accident.\nInquest has opened and adjourned\nto an indefinite date.\nHe was born in Cranbrook 28\nyears ago and grew up at the\nfamily farm at Wycliffe. For the\npast eight years lie has lived at\nWycliffe and been employed as\nrepairman at the Sullivan concentrator at Chapman Camp. He was\na member of Key City Lodge,\nIOOF. Surviving him, are his parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. S. Hughes\n.at Wycliffe, two brothers, John\nwith the RCAF, and Alex at Wycliffe, and three sisters, Mrs. J.\nDixon and Mrs. R. Blackwell,\nWycliffe, and Mrs. James Neil,\nKimberley.\nShipyard Fire\nThreatened\nCoal Harbor\nVANCOUVER (CP) - The Coal\nHarbor industrial section in west\nend Vancouver was threatened late\nThursday night when fire roared\nthrough a shipyard, destroying\nthe building and five boats.\nDamage in the two-alarm blaze\nat A. C, Benson Boat Works was\nestimated at $750,000.   '\nAll available police rerouted\nsnarled traffic as '100-foot flames\nswept the industrial site. Five vessels, including two tugs, were\nburned to the waterline as fire-\n_ten from six stations slowlv\nbrought the blaze under control.\nNo one was injured.,\nSEINER LOST\nOne of the city's two fireboats\nprevented flames from spreading\nto nearby Burrard Boat Works\nand Queen Charlotte Cannery.\nLost in the fire was the Howe\nSound IV, a $75,000 seiner scheduled to be re-launched Friday after\na $20,000 refitting.\nA fleet of 10 purse seiners\nmoored in front of the yard were\ntowed from the scene before\nflames reached them.\nHerman Benson, nephew of the\nowner, said some 65 men probably will be without work when\nthe building season reaches its\npeak this summer. He estimated\ndamage to the shiqyard at $550,-\n000. Loss in boats was estimated\nat $200,000.  .\nPHONE   1844   FOR   CLASSIFIED\n\/ 3C\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JUNE 1, 1957 \u2014\nMORE ELIGIBLE VOTERS\nIN KOOTENAY RIDINGS\nIncreases have been recorded in\nthe total number of eligible voters\nin both Kootenay West and Kootenay East since the last general\nelection of August 10. 1953.\nIn Kootenay West, 27,426 persons are eligible to vote on June\n10, a considerable increase over the\n26,960 who were eligible to vote in\nthe last election. The new. total, after all revisions have beep made,\nwas announced Friday by.F. J.\nPlester of Trail, returning officer.\nFalling Tree\nKills Man\nPASSMORE \u2014 John Tarasoff,\n60, of Crescent Valley,.was killed\nabout 8:30 Friday morning by a\nfalling tree while clearing right-'\nof-way for the West Kootenay Power and Light Company near here.\nA coroner's inquest opened at 7\np.m. Friday in the Thompson Funeral Home at Nelson. |\nTarasoff worked for John Blood-\noff of Passmore.\nThere will be 168 polls in Koo-.;\ntenay West, plus one advance poll\nat Nelson,\nCourt of revision added 330'.\nnames to the voters' list in Koo-'\ntenay West. Figures show that el-\nigible voters in Trail number 6465,\nNelson 4262 and Rossland 2227, the j\nthree biggest centres. Eligible ur- i\nban voters total 12,954 and rural '\n14,472.\nIn Kootenay East, returning of-\nfleer Aaron Walde of Cranbrook;\nhas announced that there are 18.628\neligible voters. In the last general -\nelection there were 18,398. Polls\nwill number 120, with one advance\npoll.-\n\u25a0aw-flt, I u||t_t\nand Contractoft*\nEquipment\nH. W. HERRIDGE\nM.P. for the Past 12 Years\nCCF Candidate for Kootenay West\nand\nR. Strachan, M.L.A.\nCCF PROVINCIAL LEADER\nWill Address a Public Meeting at\nLegion Hall, Nelson\nTONIGHT, 8 p.m.\nThis Advertisement Inserted by CCF, Party\nSuit Dismissed\nA suit by Randolph Haigh of\nSalmo against Ernest Garrison of\nPrinceton was dismissed in Assize\nCourt by Mr. Justice, J. D. Wilson\nwith costs to the defendant.\nHaigh asked $1000 for buildings\nsold to Garrison, or, alternatively,\ndamages for breach of contract to\npay for them. He was represented\nby B. K. Arlidge, and Garrison's\ncounsel was G. B.- Arnesen.\nPORT AU PRINCE, Haiti (AP)\nThe army eased off this capital\ncity's curfew restrictions Friday as\nbusiness and essential services assumed a semblance of normality.\nThe curfew and martial law were\nimposed after last weekend's wild\noutburst of political feuding.\nThe curfew, at first effective\nfrom 9 p.'m. to 4 a. m\u201e now does\nnot begin until 11 p. m. Army officials said, that if calm continues\nthe curfew can be abolished in a\nweek. Cable communications are\nback to normal.\nATOMIC TEST SITE, Nev. (AP)\nFor the third day the second shot\nih ' the United States summer\natomic test series has been cancelled because of adverse weather.\nThe explosion was called off\nshortly before midnight after officials said winds could carry\nradioactive fallout over communities southeast of the site.\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nFa\nTRAIL KINSMEN CLUB\ny Presents   .\nGIANT TWO CAR BINGO\nSaturday, June 8th \u2014 8 p.m.\nIn\nTRAIL COMINCO ARENA\nTickets $3.00 Per Person Tax Included\n20 BIG GAMES\nPRIZES...\nir 1957 Dodge Crusader\n* 1957 Nash Metropolitan\n* 2 R.C.A. Victor 14\" Portable TV Sets\nMANY MORE GREAT  PRIZES\nTICKETS NOW AVAILABLE AT\nTRAIL*    L' J' Newstand, East Trail Motors, Joffey's Store, Motor Inn Service, Allen's Fruit Store,\nI l-AML.    Braemers Men's Wear, Moyne's, Lauener Bros., Speedway Service, Woolworths, Rollie Crowe\nAgencies, Le Rose Mercantile Ltd., Sun Valley Fruit Store, Cominco Arena Office.\nROSSLAND:   Bus Depot, Wise Hardware.\nSALMO:   Payless Store.\nNELSON:   Cutler's News, Wait's News Depot, Kootenay Stationers.\nCASTLEGAR:    Rigby's Coffee Shop.\nWIN A CAR!\nProceeds for Kinsmen Health Centre\nI\nl\nl\nl\nl\nl\nl\nl\nl\nI\nI\nl\nl\nl\ni\nl\nl\nI\nI\nl\nI\ni\nI\nl\nI\nl\nI.\nI\nm\n Nrlaitu Sattg Hpwa\nEstablished April -_   lull.\nInterior  British Columbia's Largest  Dally Newspaper\nPublished every  morning except Sunday and itahtfory\nholiduy.    by    the    NEWS    PUBLISHING    COMPANY\nLIMITED,   266  Bake.   Street  Nelson,   British  Columbia.\nAulhuru.d u Saoond Class Mail   Poll office  Dopnrtmont. Ottawa.'\nMEMBER   Ol'    1'Hli   AUUI'l   BUREAU   OI   C1HCULAT1ON0\nMl.M_.Erl Ot   IH- UANAUIAN  PRESS\n1'ho Canadian Pie., is exclusively entitled to the uso toi republication of all niwi\ndispatches credited to it ui to I'll- AitoDiatld l-i__ oi R.ut.rs in this paper.\nand also the local news published therein >\n,w- SPfKSSJ      ~ Saturday,\/una., 1957 . .   - '    \"*~\nCanadian?' Tax Bill Too High\nWith the general election only a    .lational   income   increased\nfew days away, this is distinctly a\ntime when the affairs of the nation\nshould be under consideration.\nIn particular, the matter of taxation\nshould be scrutinized. In. the past few\nyears the taxpayers have accepted it\nwith weary resignation, believing that\nthe government, like mother, knew\nbest. They realized that it was getting\nhigher and higher, but that there was\nlittle they could do about it. There\nwere some, too, who felt that the government had a subtle contempt for the\ncountry In their attitude towards their\nprotests.\nUnder the heading of \"Tall Story\",\nthe News Letter of the Canadian\nChamber of Commerce tells the story\nof the amazing growth of taxation in\nthis country.\nTwenty years ago, it says\u2014in 1937\n\u2014taxes paid by Canadians at all\nlevels of government amounted to\n23.66 per cent of a national income of\nlittle more than $4 billion. In that year\nthe total tax bill amounted tb $961\nmillion.\nThis percentage fluctuated a little\nuntil the war years. In those years our\nto   $9'\/\u00ab\nbillion in 1946, with a percentage of\nnational income of 31.61. In 1956, the\nlast year for which figures are available, the percentage of taxation as\nagainst net national income was 32.19,\nIt also should be remembered that the\nnational income has risen to the large\nfigure oi moro than $23 billion.\nTo the casual observer it would\nappear that the more money there is\nin the country the less in percentage\nthe taxpayer should be called upon to\npay. Quite obviously this is not the\nreasoning of the government, which\nappears to think the more we have as\na nation the greater percentage of our\nincome we should pay.\nThe fact that Canadians are paying\na tax bill which is two per cent greater\nthan was paid when Canada was\nfighting for survival In World War II\nsirongly indicates that there has been\nno effective effort to keep taxation\nwithin boundB.\nIf ever there was a time to protest\nthis state of affairs, it is at the present\nmomenl The next government should\nbe one which does not regard overtaxation lightly. -\nShut-in's Day Sunday\nNearly two thousand years ago the'visiting of the sick was included among the\nvirtues to be practiced by those who would\nbe the Lord's disciples. On June 2, International Shut-in's Day, many people will\ncarry out the Master's injunction by making\na special effort to help bring joy and fellowship to as many shut-in's as possible.\nUnless we have experienced illness ourselves, there is little realization of what it\nmeans to be deprived of the1 opportunity to,\nenjoy \"God's great out-of-doors\", or to be\nunable to come and go at will, even tho'\nable to walk a few yards unaided. In hospitals, homes and many out-of-the-way\nplaces, millions of people know all too significantly the meaning of the word \"shut-\nin\". To encourage more thought of these\nfolks the first Sunday of June is annually\nset aside to remind the public of its obligation of visiting or in other ways remembering those who are laid aside. Adjustment to- this frustrated way of living is not\neasy, but it is greatly helped by your consideration. None are more appreciative of\nremembrance and understanding, a visit,\ncard, letter 6r some token of your thought-\nfulness. Perhaps if you have a car, and they\nare able to go out a bit, they would like\nThis Game of Golf\n\"The clubs used to have such simple\nnames as driver, brassie, spoon, driving iron,\n.midiron, mashie. niblick, mashie niblick,\nand putter. Now they are numbered, presumably for the convenience of those who\ncannot read. The average golfer needs only\none club, but seven are usually carried.\n\"The No. 1 wood is used to top the ball\noff the first tee. The No. 2 wood is used\nwhen you need a good long slice over into\nthe next fairway. The No. 3 iron is used to\nhook the ball into the woods to your left,\nThe No. 5 is used for those safe and sane\ndribbles straight down the fairway into a\ntrap.- The No. 9 is used for long, low. screaming drives which land 100 feet beyond the\ngreen. The No .7 is used when you are in\ntrouble, which is every other shot. The putter\nis used for overshooting, undershooting, rimming the cup, and is ordinarily used to play\nthe last six shots on every hole.\"\n(Source unknown.)\nRequoted in West Kootenay Regional\nRecreation News.\nto attend church service (any Sunday!).\nOr, a car-ride in the country or city.\nThe Shut-in's Day Association was founded in 1942 by a young Canadian semi-invalid,\nErnest Barker of Goderich, Ont., who sent\nletters for publication in leading newspapers\nin Canada and the United States. As a\nresult of one of these letters be,ing pubiishetj\nin the Philadelphia Inquirer, Mrs. William\nFrancklin Paris, a bed-ridden invalid became interested and offered to organize a\nchapter in the United, States. In 1943 Winston\nChurchill and Eleanor Roosevelt endorsed\nthe day, the Utter devoting her entire syndicated column \"My Day\" to Shut-in's Day,\nRt. Hon. W. L. M. King, then prime minister of Canada, endorsed the movement,\nand the idea began to spread overseas. Leonard Inskift founder and editor of the National\nCripples' Journal, Leicester, became \"Representative of England\". The following year\nthe Association des Paralyses de France of\nParis, membership of more than 26,000 persons, joined S.I.D.A. There are now representatives also in Scotland and South America. Much indeed has been accomplished, but\nmuch remains to be done.\nThe Shut-in's Day Association, with\nheadquarters in Toronto, Is a non-denominational, non-racial, non-political and non-profit\nmaking organization. No one receives any\nfinancial remuneration for his or her services. Continuance of this humanitarian work\ndepends upon the generosity of interested\nfriends for support.\u2014Shut-in's Day Association.\nNorthern Lights\nAny of those among us who have believed that the Northern Lights are a reflection\nfrom the ice field in the Arctic-may revise\nhis belief. The Aurora Borealis is being studied intently as part of the program of. the\nInternational Geophysical Year. In a release\non the subject we are told:   , ,\n\"The Aurora consists of light emitted by\nthe air at heights about 60 miles above the\nearth's surface. Observations already made\nshow that the passage of material particles\n(emanating from the sun) cause, the,atmospheric gases of the upper air to emit light.\"\n\u2014Fort Williams Times-Journal.\nIs Research Senrin&\nFarmers Adequately\nfarmer, know that their Cost bf production is increasing particularly for livestock\nand field crops. They also know, in the light\nof experience, thati ti s unlikely their selling\nprices will Change to any beneficial extent.\nEconomists offer no particularly cheering\nprospects for the years immediately ahead.\nTo overcome this \"cost-price\" squeeze,\nfarmers are being told'they must be more\nefficient: they know this already. They know\ntoo that It their operation is to remain profitable they must know at once about all\nnew developments which may affect their\nparticular operation. New fertilizers and\nbetter methods of their application; new\n' grain varieties: the latest methods of achieving gain in weight of cattle; new Insecticides\nfor fruits and vegetables \u2014 all these offer\nmeans to the farmer to operate more efficiently. For obvious reasons they cannot\ncarry out suoh investigations* for themselves.\nResearch is striving for these and many\nother answers, but farmers wonder if it is\nalways searching out those most .urgent.\nThey .wonder if Capada is carrying out\n' enough agricultural research to keep abreast\nof developments in other countries, and if\nthere is proper corordinatoin between the\ndifferent' agencies .doing this work so that\nduplication of effort is avoided. Do we have\nan efficient system for collecting results and\ndistributing them'to farmers so'they can\nbenefit, right away? In short, is research\nserving Canadian farmers adequately?\nR. Alan Hay,\nAgriculture Committee,\n. Canadian Chamber'\nOf Commerce.\nTeenage Drivers\nThe sad thing about the teenage driver\nand hotrod problem is that a small minority of immature youngsters create a bad\nname for the rank and file of hotrodders\nwho are probably even better drivers than\ntheir elders.\nIn fairness the public should bear. in\nmind that most of the teenage drivers around\n.us are not only fun-loving but also serious\nabout their development as good citizens.\nAnd we're all for them.\nWhat many people fail to realize is that\nthe Wbreaking, reckless type of teenage\ndriver is in the minority. But they're the\nones that make the most noise and get into\ntrouble and therefore into public print. The\nrank and file good citizens among the hotrod set isn't heard of much because they're\nbehaving themselves.\nThey're solid future citizens. They're the\nkind who like to tinker with machinery and\nmake it run better\u2014the experimenters\u2014perhaps the discoverers and inventors of to-'\nmorrow. ,\nNext time you go for a drive take note\nof the hotrods you see. You'll notice that\nmost of them have ;a deep, muffled purr that\nsuggests power but doesn't create a disturbance. At the same time you'll notice that\nthe driver knows how to handle his car skill-\n\u25a0 fully.and in harmony with every traffic reg-\n.ulation. '.\nThese youngsters are the counterpart\nof the \"whoopee\" driver of a former generation\u2014only a lot more sensible.       ,\nLet's view each driver on his own merits\nregardless of the kind of car he drives.'Let's\nnot classify all hotrod drivers with the few\nwho have no use for the law. Let'S be fair\nto the good citizens of the younger set.\n\u2014The Outlook (Golden, Colo.)\nThey'll Do It Every Time\nBy Jimmy Hatlo\nTremblechin\nH4SMT SrMvED\nHIS P-4CH FUZZ\nON A S4TURMy\nSINCE HIS WEEKEND HONEyMOON.\nAHDTH4T WAS-\nLET'S SEE-\n1942-\nFarmer's Fringes\n\"Fringe benefits\" is a phrase that usually arises in discussion of conditions of work\nIn industry. It applies to pension plans, medical plans \"and the like, and it most commonly appears in reports \u00abf wage-settlements between large industries and large\nunions.\nIt's a surprise to realize that farmers\ntoo are now getting fringe benefits.\nFor example, since the first of this\nmonth, Manitoba Pool Elevators has provided accident insurance to all farmers who\nhave delivered 1500 or more bushels of\ngrain during the past three years and who\nare actively farming. Benefits of $1000 for\naccidental dismemberment or loss of sight,\nand medical expenses up to $500 with a $50\ndeductible provision are provided for all the\nfarmers-(\"patrons\"), and their dependents.\nEmployees can be covered as well, for an\nannual premium of $3.50.\nOn today's mechanized farms, accidents,\nwhen they occur, are apt to be serious. Today's businessman-farmer is aware of the\nhigh cost of sickness and accident for himself and his scarce help. This \"fringe benefit\" for farming is a good idea for the new-\nstyle Canadian farm.\n-   \u2014Toronto Financial Post.\nTODAY'S BIBLE\nTHOUGHT\nBlessed are they that hunger\nand thirst after righteousness, for\nthey shall be filled. Matt. 5:6.\nThere are too many people who\nare only casually interested in\nrighteousness. It is said that for\nthe joy that was held before Him\nChrist endured the cross.\nSpirit filled Christians are joyous people.\nOnntdbi.\nI wouldn't say that Jane always\nInterrupts, but I've, been talkin' to\nher for twehty years and I haven't\ngot to finish a sentence yet.\nDies of Radar Burns\nHuman Guinea Pig\nLOS ANGELES (A.) - Radar,\nbeams .can be extremely danger-,\nous, warns a California surgeon\nwho says they already have killed\none man and injured others.\nThe first'known case of death\nfrom radar is believed to have occurred in 1954 in the Los -Angeles\narea, Dr. John T. McLaughlin reports in the current Issue of the\nCalifornia Medical Association's\nmonthly publication.\nHe says the victim stood in front,\nof a radar transmitter for less\nthan a minute. In 10 seconds he\nSuggests (hairs\nEn Stores for\ntired Shoppers\nVANCOUVER (CP) - More\nprodding and constructive criti\ncism from informed housewives\nwould be helpful to businessmen,\nsays a well-known consumer leader.\nMme. Henri Vautelet of Montreal said here: \"Consumers who\nknow what they are talking about\noften have a better Idea of what\nis good for trade and industry\nthan businessmen themselves.\n\"What women want in the\nrealm of buying and selling is a\nfree and open competitive market, with a maximum of price\nfreedom and a minimum of protection, subsidization and restriction.\"\nWANT NO GIMMICKS\nMme. Vautelet retired as president of the Canadian Association\nof Consumers this year, but it\nstill active in the organization\nUnder her leadership, the CAC\nhas opposed such developments\nas resale price maintenance, loss-\nleaders, trading stamps, price\ncontrols 'and similar angles of the\ngeneral marketing industry.\n\"In each case we are fighting\nfor a free competitive system\nwith no strings and no gimmicks\nshe said. \"What women want is\nsimply high quality goods at fair\nprices.\n\"Merchants 'or business men\nwho find wonien getting under\ntheir skins now will find them\nmuch more irritating in future.\nWomen are beginning possibly the\ngreatest of all their emancipations\u2014the right to full economic\ncitizenship.\" '       .\nBut, she .said, women are not\ntrying to take over, business,\n\"Selling is1 the man's world, Buying is the women's. We just want\nto see we are'prepared to do our\npart in the economy properly\u2014\neven if it means stepping on. a\nfew toes.\"\nCOURTESY HELPS\nMme. Vautelet suggests, however, that merchants can increase\ngoodwill and profits among their\nwomen consumers by inexpensive\nand simple courtesies!\n\"Department . s t o r e s spend\nthousands of dollars getting women to shop downtown.\n\"Attracted by advertisements,\nthe housewife makes out her shopping list. But when she gets to\nthe store she very often finds the\nplace working against her rather\nthan for her comfort.\n\"Why don't merchants put\nfew chairs around the store. It's\nan inexpensive matter. Then they\ncould pay :more -attention to. the\nlayout, to service and special consideration and courtesies.\"\nShe said wome;i, are not attracted by price as much as men\nthink. The merchant who is also\na gallant will pull them in every\ntime.\nPolice Keep\nWatch On\nMining Town\nMtTRboCHVILLE, Que. (CP)~\nThe 110-man provincial' police detachment, charged with keeping\norder ih this strike-torn Gaspe\nmining town, kept a sharp watch\nto prevent further acts of vandalism. ' ..  '. \u25a0 '.\nLieut. Gerard Timlin, head of\nthe detachment, reported Thursday that \"six or seven\" lines\ncarrying propane gas from storage tanks into homes, had been\nsnapped and some loaded clotheslines cut.\nIn nearby Mont-Louis, shipping\nport of Gaspe copper mines 11m\nited\u2014against whom members of\nthe United Steelworkers of America- (CLC) are Striking \u2014 Police\nChief Isidore Boucher, said there\nhad been an explosion Thursday\nbeside a local garage. Damage\nwas slight and the cause was unknown. There were no arrests.\nLI6_RTYVILL\u00a3, 111. (API-\nScores of the.21000 persons who attended the annual picnic of the\nSerbian Orthodox monastery near\nLlbortyville, 'a Chicago suburb\nwere stricken Thursday with apparent food poisoning. At least 67\npersons were treated in hospitals\nbut none was considered critically\nill, authorities said. Roast lamb\njwas considered suspect.\nhad a sensation of heat in the abdomen. In less than a minute the\nheat became so intense that he\nha'd to move away.\nINSIDES COOKED\nThe man, a technician in a radar manufacturing plant, died\nwithin two weeks. There were no\nmarks on the surface of his body.\nDr. McLaughlin says, but \"his in-\nsides were cooked . . . There was\na hole as big as a silver dollar\nburned in his small bowel.\"\nThe case is just now being reported for security reasons, Dr\nMcLaughlin adds.\nHe says microwaves emitted by\na radar transmitter cause instant\nand intolerable temperature increases in tissues and cells Tissue\ntemperature even a few degrees\nabove the normal body temperature is dangerous. The higher the\ntemperature, the,shorter the time\nnecessary to cause cellular death.\nHe says it must be treated with\n\"the same respect as nuclear radiation.\"\nClients' Emotional Upset Social\nProblem In Hospitals Says Doctor\nNegro Pastor\nFinds Deep\nSouth Not Bad\nOLD MYSTIC, Conn. (APi-The\nNegro pastor of an all-white congregation has returned from a\nvi?lt to his hometown in rural\nSouth Carolina believing the e-\ngro is better off there than here.\nRev. Simon Peter Montgomery,\n34, pastor of the Old Mystic Methodist Church and chaplain of the\nstate legislature, said people in\nPinesville, S.C, look forward \"In\nthe long run\" to 'he end of segregation.\n\"But,\" he said, \"segregation is\nnot a real issue in Pinesville.\nOutside of the 'churches there\nreally is no place to go and there\nis no friction there. It is all\nreally very harmonious between\nthe white and colored.\"\nHe' said a large and prosperous professional class has\nemerged among Negroes near\nPinesville and that many own\nhomes as fine or better than\nnorthern egroes are able to buy\nor rent.\nArthur Miller\nConvicted In\nContempt Case\nWASHINGTON (AP) - Arthur\nMiller, playwright husband of actress Marilyn Monroe, was convicted Friday of contempt of Congress.\nJudge Charles McLaughlin announced the verdict in a 15-page\nwritten opinion. McLaughlin had\npresided without a jury at Miller's\nsix-day trial, which ended a week\nago Thursday.\nThe indictment was based on\nMiller's refusal to tell the House\nof Representatives committee on\nun-American activities the names\nof Communist writers with whom\nhe attended five or six meetings\nin New York in 1947.\nWhen he appeared before the\ncommittee last June, the 42-year-\nold playwright answered all questions concerning himself., But he\nsaid his conscience would not permit him to use the names of\nothers and bring trouble to them.\nMiller was not in court when\nthe decision was released to reporters. No,time was fixed for his\nsentencing.\nThe maximum punishment for\ncontempt of Congress is one year\nin jail and a $1,000 fine.\nBy BRUCE EASSON\nBy Canadian Press Staff Writer\nSASKATOON (CP)-A psychiatrist told the 12th annual Western\nCanada Hospital Institute here'\nthat most patients suffer emotional disturbances as a result of\nhospital confinement.\nDr. F E. Coburn, associate professor of psychiatry at the University of Saskatchewan, said such\nemotional disturbance is one of\nthe social problems hospitals must\nhandle.\n\"The patient's emqtional problem may result from the nature\nof his illness, concern for the welfare of his family and, most important, emotional reaction to the\nhospital itself.\"\nBecause the patient is confined\nto bed and dependent on the assistance of others, he was, in effect told to\" revert to a stage of\nemotional immaturity, Dr. Coburn\nadded. \u2022 ,\nPREVENTS REST\nSome patients regress to such\nimmaturity too easily and others\nrebel because they cannot become\ndependent on others.\nIn both cases, he said, the patient makes demands, and because\nthey seem excessive, the hospital\nstaff tends to reject him. As a\nresult an emotional situation Is\nbuilt up which destroys the reason\nthe patient was sent to bed\u2014complete rest.\nHe was one of four speakers at\nthe session who discussed various\naspects of the patients social problems and the hospital.\nOthers were Father Wilfrid Her-\ngott, chaplain at St. Elizabeth's\nHospital, Humboldt, Sask.; Edna\nOsborne of the medical social\nservice department, University\nHospital, Saskatoon; and Dr. A. L.\nSwanson, executive director of the\nUniversity Hospital.\nThe four-day institute, held for\nhospital directors and trustees\nfrom the four western provinces,\nends Saturday.\nDr. Coburn said, hospital staffs\nmust accept such regression to\nimmaturity. At the same time, to\noffset the emotional problem created, the patient should be encouraged to get out of bed as soon as\npossible and to help himself.\nINDIVIDUAL TREATMENT\nSickness is one of the great disrupters of modern life and may\nbring problems to anyone which\n\"medical science alone cannot\nsolve,\" said Miss Osborne.\n\"It should be the responsibility\nof the medical social worker, not\nonly to understand what the patients illness means, to him, but\nalso to gain insight into the patient's social and less tangible\npersonal problems.\"\nShe said patients should always\nbe helped to have confidence in\nthe hospital and the services being\nprovided.\n\"Social services used construc\ntively within the hospital and community can result In more humane and individualized treatment for patients in our hospitals.\"\nIndia Endorses\nNehru's Budget\nNEW DELHI (AP) - I n d I a's\nparliament Friday endorsed the\nposals, which include sweeping\ntax boosts. Finance Minister\nTatte T. -Krishnamachairi announced some concessions in\ntaxes affecting poorer classes.\nMembers of both Houses, belonging to the governing Congress\nparty!' had criticized the range of\nnew taxes proposed to keep the\nsecond five-year plan from being\ncrippled. The boosts had strong\nsupport from Prime Minister\nehru.\nConcessions granted included\nabolition of the excise on tea and\ncoffee and reduction of railroad\nfares for the first 50 miles, since\npeasants, who form 85 per cent\nof the population, ordinarily\ntravel short distances.\nGull Oil Adds\nHammer To\nDrilling Gear\nBy   FORBES  RHUDE\nCanadian  Press  Business  Editor\nHARMARVILLE, Pa. (CP)-A\n\"hammer\" is being added to oil-\ndrilling equipment for use in hard-\nrock formations.\nUnder present drilling methods\na roller-bit is rotated and grinds\nor chews away the underground \u25a0\nrock.\n\u2022An engine will drive a 200-pound\nhammer which will deliver from\n400 to 800 strokes a minute on the\nattached bit.\nThus, in addition to grinding the\nrock, the bit will chisel into it.\nThe device has been developed\nby Gulf Oil Corporation, which estimates that it will double or\nquadruple drilling speeds in hard-\nrock formations.\nModels of it are being shown\nhere in connection with week-long\nopening ceremonies for three new\nbuildings at Gulf's research\ncentre.\nThe process is called hammer or\npercussion drilling and the equipment is sometimes called a \"Mud\"\nengine.\nThe equipment is encased in a\n19-foot cylinder which is lowered\ninto the well-hole just above the\nbit.\nFLUID ENGINE\nIt includes a reciproactung-type\nfluid engine which is operated by\nthe normal mud fluid used in drilling, which is forced down the well\nbore under high pressure.\nIn conventional drilling the bit\nis rotated against the well bottom\nusually under heavy loads of 25,-\n000 to 55,000 pounds. Under the\n\"hammer\" method the bit is rotated under a lighter load of 6,-\n000 to 40,000 pounds, apart from\nthe added hammer action.\nGulf expects that the new tool\nwill save money, time and maintenance as a result of faster pene-'\ntration, that it will solve the\ncostly problem of maintaining\nstraight holes in hard slanting formations; and that, because of\nlighter loads, it will under some\nconditions Increase bit life. The\nlatter would reduce the frequency\nwith which the drill string-which\nmay bo two miles long-must be\npulled up for bit replacement. \u25a0\nField tests, indicate that the device can \u25a0 be operated 60 hours\nwithout withdrawal for servicing\nard Gulf expects that this will be\nincreased to 100 hours, so that the\ndevice would outlast three or four\nbits before servicing.\nUSE   IN   CANADA\nThe equipment was originally\ndesigned to punch holes through\nhaid brittle rock in West Texas.\nHecent tests, however, Gulf says,\nindicate that it should be equally\neffective in mid' - continent and\nRocky Mountain areas . of tha\nUnited States and in some areas\nof Western Canada.\nIt has been given 140 field tests \u2022\nin 33 wells in the United States\nand Canada and Gulf is satisfied\nthat it is ready, for manufacture.\nDate of \u25a0 manufacture, however,\nwill depend upon how soon licensing arrangements are made with\na tool or supply company. Spokesmen indicated that there may be\nan announcement in this regard\nin two or three months. A technical paper on the subject will be\nUsued in the fall.\nThe tool is covered by patents\nbut will be available to the entire\nindustry.\nTackle Needs !\nThe Dolly Run Is On!\n\u00bb\nCANADIAN WIGGLER\nThis Is a Proven Lure \u2014 $1.40\nDIAMOND JIM\nReal Hot \u2014 $1.65\n,We have a  complete  line of spinning  and\ntrolling outfits, priced to suit every budget.\nDon't Miss Out on the Best Fishing of the Year\nJack Boyce Men's Shop\nPHONE  160\nNELSON, B.C.\n532  BAKER ST.\n POSTPONED AGAW\nPOETRY QUARTERLY FOLDS\nMILWAUKEE (AP) - American Poetry, the second oldest\npoetry magazine in the country,\nhas suspended publication. Mrs.\nStar Powers, the quarterly's managing editor, said lack of support\n.IIWJ   IIIIIIUIIUI\n(5tZS\nwas the'main reason for discontinuing the magazine, founded 38\nyears ago. Poetry Magazine,\nfounded 44 years ago, continues to\npublish.\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILY\nPHONE   1844   FOR   CLASSIFIED\nloiiieioCiiUitl)\nREADY\nFor the Big Game!\nIs He Ready\nFor the Bigger Game\nof Life?\nBring Your\nChildren to\n11 a.m. \u2014 TOMORROW\nit. |a\u00abr0-\u00aeruttty\nIttittb fflijurtli\n\"THE   CHURCH   WITH   A   CHALLENGE\"-\nMinister:\nREV. ,E. DONOVAN  JONES,  B.A.,  B.D., Th.M.\nDirector ot Music:\nMERLIN  R.  BUNT.  Phone 278-L\nCorner of Stanley and SiUca\nRev. H. R. Whitmore, Minister.\nOrganist: Mr..Angus Fraser.\n10:00 a.m.\u2014Sunday School, Junior, Intermediate and\nSenior Departments.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Sunday School, Nursery, Primary and\n' Kindergarten Department.\n. 11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning Service.\n\"THE SEA, THE SHIP, AND GOD.\"\nNo Evening Service.\nP\nE\nN\nT\nE\nC\nO\ns\nT\nA\nL\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday School \u2022\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning Worship\n7:30,p.m.\u2014Evangelistic\nTUESDAY, 8:00 p.m.-Bible Study     -\nFRIDAY, 8:00 p.m.\u2014Young People's.\nSUNDAY, 5:45 p.m.\u2014Radio Broadcast.\nAn Invitation Is Extended To You.\"\nPastor: REV. REUBEN SWANSON\n',.,   Phone 886-Y\nIn Affiliation With Assemblies of God.\nStrut lapttist\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Welcome to Sunday ~ School\n11:00 a.m.\u2014God Lessens Anxiety\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Take Time to Pray\n(Communion Service)\nTHURSDAY:: '.\n8:00 p.m.\u2014Bible Study and Prayer\n9:00 p.m.\u2014Sunday School Teachers Meeting\nJune 11-14 - B.C. BAPTIST CONVENTION\nAnglican Church of Canada\nST. SAVIOUR'S PRO-CATHEDRAL\nRector:  REV. CANON GEORGE W. LANG, B.A., L.Th.\nSUNDAY,  JUNE 2,  1957\n(The Sunday After Ascension Day) .\n8:00 a.m.\u2014Holy Communion.\n9:15 a.m\u2014Holy Communion at St. Andrew's, Willow Point\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Choral Eucharist\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evensong\nMattins Dally at 9:00 a.m.\nWEDNESDAY, June 5: 10:00 a.m.\u2014Holy Communion,\nAbout the Town\nPHONE  13(19 OR  1844\nBy Alice Steven*\nLA to Canadian Travellers held\ntheir monthly meeting at the home\nof Mrs. W. Hoobanoff, 1216 Mc-\nQuarrie Avenue. The evening prize\nwas won by Mrs. Phil Shrigley.\n*  *  \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. 6. B. Harrison of\nDarlington, England, are spending\nan extended holiday with their\nson-in-law and daughter, Mr. and\nMrs. Eric G. Smith, Longbeach.\nOur\nFather's\nBusiness\nftaton\n803 Baker St.\nPastor! E., HANSON\nSUNDAY:\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday School\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning Worship\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evening Service\nTHURSDAY:\n7:15 p.m.\u2014Choir Practice.\n8:15 p.m.\u2014Prayer Meeting.\nFRIDAY:\n6:45 p.m.\u2014Junior League.\n8:00 p.m.\u2014Young Peoples.\nIStgljtljmtH.\n812 STANLEY ST. .\nI SUNDAY:\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Worship  Service\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evening   Service\nWEDNESDAY:\n8:00 p.m.\u2014Bible Study and\nPrayer\nGOOD NEWS CLUB\nALL Children Welcome\nAnglican Church\nof Canada\nChurch of\nOne Redeemer\nPalrview-\nCanon W. J. Silverwood,\nA.K.C., B.Sc, Vicar\n8:00 a.m.\u2014Holy   Communion\n9;45 a.m.\u2014Sunday School\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning Prayer\n- 7:30 p.m.\u2014Evening Prayer\nSOUTH SLOCAN\n11:00 a.m.\nMONDAY, June 3rd:\nRev. N. D. B. Larmonth, D.D.,\nwill address a meeting of ALL\nAnglicans. 8:00 p.m., Redeemer\nHall.\n\u00a7>aluatum JVrmij\n513 Victoria St.\nLieut and Mrs. G. Grlca\nSUNDAV\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday School\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Holiness Meeting\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evening Service\nThree Elements In True Faith:\nText: \"If ye know these things,\nhappy are ye if ye do them.\" John\n13:17.\nKnowledge: First true faith\nabides with knowledge. Ignorance\nis one form of misery'and a form\nof darkness in the mind\" and soul.\nTlfe text doesn't mean that we\nhave to know all things, but it does\nmean that,we should know ourselves. This includes knowing our\nsins before God, and that we as\npeople are helpless without Him.\nIt means also that we ought to\nknow that we have a true refuge\nand help in the saving grace of\nJesus Christ. God's mercy is found\nin Christ who bore us before God\nas the sacrifice for our sin. All\nknowledge comes of God in one\nway or another, and the beginning\nof wisdom is knowledge, especially\nknowledge in-and of Jesus Christ.\ninis...n eabtf Occ ue:e hieerodT\nuuedience: True faith comes to-\nbeing obedient to God's Will. \"If\nye do them\" says the text. Faith\nis practical and personal; knowing\nis not enough. \"Faith,\" says St.\nJames, \"without works is dead.\"\nOur doing are the clear result of\nthe faith we have in God. Doing\nGod's will is a supreme element of\nfaith.\nHappiness: Happy are ye _ ye\ndo them.\" True faith is never sad\nbut is joyful. This is one of the\ngreat gifts of God to His people\nwith true faith \u2014 that they are\nhappy. Happy that they see life\nwith new visions; happy that having been bound by sin they are\nnow free; happy that they have\nharmony of mind and- spirit\nthrough Jesus Christ.\nKnowledge, Obedience, Happi-,\nness. These are the facets of a true\nand shining faith that enables us\nall to be true men and women and\ntrue servants ot the Lord.\nREV. J. N. ALLAN.\nfirst .(Mptrrij of\nGUjrtat ^rt-ttttat\nA Branch ot the Mother Church\nThe First Church of Christ,\nScientist in Boston. Mass.\nSunday School 9:40 a.m.\nSunday Service: 11:00 a.m.\nSubject:\n\"Ancient and  Modern\nNecromancy, Alias  Mesmerism\nand  Hypnotism,  Denounced\"\nWednesday Testimonial\nMeeting\u20148:00 p.m.\nReading Room, 209 Baker St..\nOpen Daily from\"\n2:30 to 4:30 p.m.\nSunday and Thursday Eves.\n7:00 to 9 p.m. (\nALL  CORDIALLY\nWELCOME\nMiss Barbara Lea, who attends\nToronto Conservatory of Music, is\nspending the summer with her\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. S. T. Lea,\n616 Nelson Avenue.\n* *  *\nRev. H. R. Whitmore, Elwyn'\nStreet, and M. G. Jemson, Fifth\nStreet, have returned after 10 days\nin Vancouver where theywere attending a United Church conference.\nMrs. D. E. Mclvor, 307 Morgan\nStreet, is visiting relatives in Vancouver.\n* t  *\nMrs. Mabel Colman, 905 Edge-\nwood Avenue, is visiting her sons-\nin-law and daughters, Mr. and Mrs.\nJack Gardner in Vancouver and\nMr. and Mrs. Rowley Stephinson\nat Alberni.\nEngagements\nMr. and Mrs. J. H. Coventry announce the engagement of their\nyounger daughter, Carroll Joan, to\nHerbert Klein, son of Mr. and Mrs.\nDavid Klein. The Wedding to take\nplace Wednesday, July 10 at 2:3C\np.m. in Fairview United Church\n_. t. Snfjn'a\nffijtttfjeran GUjarfij\nCorner Stanley and Silica Sts.\nREV. CARL J.  HENNIG\nRes. 317 Silica St. \u2022 Phone 729-X\n10:00 a.m.\u2014Sunday School\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Examination of\nCatechumens and\nConfirmation.\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Bible Class\nfirst\nPreHbgtptfatt\nGtlfarrlj\nTHE   CONGREGATION\nWILL WORSHIP IN\nST. PAUL'S-TRINITY ,\nCHURCH.\nKaslelar-Linn\nWedding Held\nAl Cresfon\nCRAWFORD BAY - Creston and\nCrawford Bay families were linked\nby the marriage in Catholic church\nat Creston of the former Carol\nElizabeth Linn and Anthony Alexander Kastelan. .\nThe bride's parents are Mr. and\nMrs. Carl G. Linn of Crawford\nBay, and the groom is the son of\nMr. and Mrs. John Kastelan of\nCreston. Mr. Linn gave his daughter in marriage. Miss Daida Johnson was bridesmaid and Mr. A.\nWunderlick was best man.\nFor her wedding, the bride chose\na floor length white nylon gown\nwhich fell in tiers with lace inserts.\nShe carried a bouquet of red rosebuds and lily of the valley mounted in a white Bible, a gift from\nthe groom.  , i\nMiss Johnson was in pale green\nnylon chiffon in ankle-length style,\nHer bouquet was composed of yet-.,\nlow and white rosebuds.\nCrawford Bay hall was decorated with pink and white streamers,\nwhite bells and spring flowers fbr\nthe reception. The parents of the\nprincipals received the guests, the\nbride's mother wearing a blue suit\nwith pink accessories and a corsage of white rosebuds, and the\ngroom's mother, a green dress\nwith matching, accessories and a\nwhite carnation corsage. Tables\nwere set in a horseshoe pattern,\nand luncheon was served. Servi-\nteurs were Danny O'Connor, Paul\nDanielson, Teddy Piette and Girl\nGuides. '\nRev. William Edington proposed\nthe toast to the bride, and after\nthe reception Mrs. H. Haverstock\nsang, \"I Love You Truly\" -and\n\"Because.\"\nA three-tiered wedding cake centred the bride's table. It was made\nby the bride's mother and decorated- by Mrs. Clifton Derbyshire,\ncousin of the bride.\nThe couple, who will make their\nhome in Creston, left on a trip to\npoints in Washington,' Idaho and\nMontana. The bride travelled in a\nblue fitted suit with pink accessories. ,\nOut of town guests were Mr. and\nMrs. J. Hacking, Mr. and Mrs. J.\nWillis and Mr. and Mrs. A. Wastro-\ndowski of Kootenay Bay, Mr. and\nMrs. H. Hansen, Mrs. G. Craig and\nEleanor, Mr. and Mrs. F. Simpson,\nMiss Sieglinde Wirsig, Mr. and\nMrs. J, Oliver, Miss Beatrice Hell-\n\u2022 S A LMO\nHILLCREST\nPENTECOSTAL CHURCH\n10:00 a.m.\u2014Sunday School\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evening Service.\nPastor: Robert A. Delgatty\nPhone 82-F\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JUNE 1, 1957 \u2014 5\nBONNIE YOUNGSTER pictured here Is Terrence William,\nyoung son of Mr. and Mrs. Marvin McLeod of Vancouver. His\nmother is the former Enid Jane Holtom, youngest daughter of\nMr. and Mrs. W. G. Holtom, 1521 Ward Street.     \t\nCard Party Held\nA group of about 25 Oddfellows\nand Rebekahs met at the IOOF\nHall Wednesday night for a card\nparty.\nPrizes were won by Mrs. Gerda\nPickering, women's first; W. A.\nTriggs, men's first; and Mrs. E.\nBentham and Ed Boyce, for low\nscores.\nRefreshments and a dance followed.\nPHONE   1844   FOR   CLASSIFIED\nClassified Ads Get Results\nCash and Carry\nWeekend Special\n2 Folding Lawn\nChairs     ..$12.99\nSecond Annual Crawford Bay Day\nBig Boost fo Centennial Project\nRecipes... ,     '.'.; '\nSnappy Sauce Makes\nSuccessful Barbecue\nEating out of doors is fast becoming a national habit.\n' This year, more than ever before, the country will be on a picnic and backyard barbecue boom.\nChildren will be coaxing for picnics. And it's up to mother to have\na trick or two up her sleeve to\ngive a little unexpected touch to\noutdoor food.\nNo good horhemaker would\ncfream of interfering with the man\nof the house while he officiates\nat the grill. But\" it so happens she\nmight have a delicious barbecue\nsauce ready to heat in a coffee\ncan or any other hany container\nas a surprise and a bonus when\nserving .time comes. The one we\nhave for today is simple, can be\nmade ahead of time and refrigerated, and gives a real gourmet's,\ntaste to any meat from frankfurters to chicken. .   \u25a0\nOf course,, cake or cookies are\nnecessary to the success of any\npicnic. Just ask the youngsters.\nA new and different cake is m,ade\nin a loaf with the frosting baked\nright on so it goes to a picnic in\nits own pan. It's a high light cake,\nso it serves nine people generously\nor 12 people if you cut the squares\na trifle smaller.\nSNAPPY BARBECUE SAUCE\n1\/3 cup vegetable shortening\n1    bottle catsup ,\n1    teaspoon brown sugar\n1    teaspoon onion salt\n% teaspoon garlic salt\n1   teaspoon prepared mustard\n1    tablespoon Worcestershire\nsauce\n1 tablespoons vinegar\nMix all ingredients together in a saucepan.\nPlace over heat and stir until\nit comes to a boil. Then simmer\nfor about one minute, stirring\noften. This amount makes 1 _ cups\nof sauce, so double the recipe if\nyou need more.\nPICNIC CAKE\n2 cups sifted cake flour\n11\/3, cups sugar\n3   teaspoons baking powder\n% cup vegetable shortening\n1 teaspoon salt\ny. cup mijk\nBlend thoroughly by hand or\nmixer (medium speed) for two\nminutes. Then add:\n2 eggs\n1\/3 cup milk\n1 teaspoon vanilla extract\n\u25a0Blend by hand or mixer (medium speed) for two minutes. Pour\ninto nine-inch square pan that has\nbeen greased and lined with heavy\nwaxed paper. Bake in moderate\noven 40 minutes, until cake tests\ndone. Place 12 chocolate covered\nmin\u00a3 patties .(about 1. inch diameter) on top and return to oven\ntwo minutes, or until patties have\nmelted. '\nCRAWFORD BAY - The second\nannual \"prawford Bay Day\" proved to be a big day in every way.\nThe program began in the morning with a parade of Crawford Bay\nand Riondel Girl Guides and\nBrownies, Scouts and Cubs and\ntheir leaders. The flag was raised\nby Marjorie Wastrodowski of the\nCrawford Bay Guides. Ice Cream\ncones were given to each of the\nmarchers.\nThe opening speech was made by\nWilUam Fraser who remarked on\nthe large increase in Brownies,\nGuides and Scouts and Cubs since\nlast year.\nThere were many races for both\nyoung and-old alike which proved\nto be exciting an deptertaining.\nBingo was popular with the younger sets. Contests of rope climbing\nand rolling pin throwing were also\non the agenda. A local teen-ager\nwas the winner of the rolling pin\nthrow. One of the most exciting\ncontests, that of log sawing, was\nwon by Hank Howell and Eddie In-\ngam in 23 lt5 seconds, first; four-\nfifths of a second ahead of Weldon\nJones and Reginald Jameson. Both\nchain saw competitions were won\nby Reuben Johnson.\nA highlight for the youngsters\nwas a peanut scramble with the\npeanuts    being    distributed    by\n'clown\" Russell Sanders. He was\njoined later by Willard Foster and\nMlacolm Elmes as \"Ferdinand the\nbull\" and a Mexican bull fight ensued for the entertainment of onlookers.\nExhibition square dancing was\nperformed by the Crawford Bay\nJunior   and   Senior Bay Si Dos,\nman, Miss Adele McClure of Gray\nCreek, Mr. and Mrs. L. Clark of\nLillooet, Miss DaMa Johnson bf\nLa France, Elmer Hagen of Sirdar, Mr. and Mrs. Edington and\nson from Harrop, Mr. and Mrs.\nEinar Linn of Remac, Edward\nWhiffan, Mrs. R. H. Brown, Mr.\nand Mrs. C. Kipp and Janice ami\nArthur Wunderlick of Vancouver,\nMr. and Mrs. C. Linn, Mrs. S.\nLinn and Walter Ppmpu of Riondel, .and Mr. and Mrs. B. Bens,\nMrs. J. Bens and Marion, Miss\nBeverley Zorn, Andre Douville,\nPaul Douville,: Mr. and Mrs. J.\nLankhaar, Mr. and Mrs. J. Kastel-\nan, Mrs. A. Walker, Mrs. D. Hansen, Donna Walker, Maurice Henley, Mr. and Mrs. E. Gatzke, and\nMr. and Mrs. H. Schuler of Creston.\nSalmo Guides\nHold Spring Tea\nSALMO\u2014The Salmo Girl Guides\nheld their annual spring tea in the\nMasonic Hall .Thursday afternoon:\nThe table was covered with a lace\nclth with flowers at the center. Tall\ncandles in the Guide Colors were\nat either end, '\nMrs. Clara Thiel was in charge\nof the Guest book and more than\n60 guests registered.\nMrs. Tull of the Fruitvale Association and Mrs. Len Dixon, Guide\ncaptain, poured tea for the first\nhour. Miss Greta Curwen of Nelson,\nDistrict Commissioner, and Mrs. C,\nTreat, past-president of the Salmo\nAssociation, then took over.\nThe serving was done by the\nSalmo Girl Guides under the con-\nveenrship of Mrs. D. Fisher, Mrs.\nA. Harris, Mrs. Likus, Mrs. C. Hansen and Mjrs. Hemmingson made\nan efficient kitchen committee.\nThe Guide Association will hold\nits final meeting of the year at the\nhome of Mrs. C. Esche on Tuesday.\nThis will be in the form of a social\nevening.\nBluebell Guys and Gals. Caller\nwas J. G. James.\nSomething new in the way of entertainment for the children was\nadded in the form of pony rides\nunder the supervision of Herb Hansen1 assisted by Malcolm Elmes.\nSoftball games were also played.\nMen's winner was Riondel, and\ngirls' winner, Crawford Bay.\nThe day finished with a dance in\nthe community hall. This annual\ndance is a part of the \"Crawford\nBay Day festivities and all monies\nreceived during the day and evening are to help to buy land for\na park which is the Centennial\nproject.\nContest sponsored by the 4-H\nClub with proceeds donated to the\nParks Club was won by .Mrs. L.\nJollie, Riondel, first; Mrs. Jack\nHacking, Kootenay Bay, second,\nand Willard Foster, Crawford Bay,\nthird.\nOrganizations taking part in tha\nday were the W.I., Softball Club,\nCatholic Women's Guild, The\nGuild, the PTA, Badminton Club,\nand Square Dance Club.\n'Denver Group Plans\nPublic Card Party\nNEW DENVER - New Denver\nPythian Sisters' Past Chiefs' Club,\nmeeting at the home of Mrs.\nThomas Leask, advanced plans for\nits public whjst and bridge program to be held September 6.\nA letter was read from official\nMrs. James Draper thanking the\ngroup for its help during the Pythian Sisters' convention held here.\nKATE AITKEN\nTO LEAVE AIR\nTORONTO (CP) - One ;bf .Canada's busiest women, Kate Aitken\nmade her last broadcast Friday on\nthe CBC . trans-Canada network\nseries, Your Good Neighbor.\nMrs. Aitken will continue her\nprogram \u2022 on radio station CFRB,\nToronto, until the end of June\nwhen she will retire from broadcasting to become a full-time\nauthor.\nBorn in Beeton, Ont., Mrs. Ait-\nken's career started in 1923 at the\nCanadian National Exhibition\nwhere she conducted a cooking\nschool.\nKey To Piano Presented\nAt WA's Dinner Dance\nCHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST\nOF LATTER DAY 8AINT8\n(Mormon)\n10:00 a.m.\u2014Sunday School\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Sacrament Meeting\nEagles Hall. 641  Baker St.\nFor Auxiliary Meetings call\nBranch President Phone 2010-R\nA NELSON GIRL, Miss Joan\nJarbeau, above, was an award\nrecipient and class valedictorian\nat recent graduation exercises at\nSt. Joseph's Hospital school of\nnursing in Victoria. She received\nthe \"Non Nobis Solum\" (not for\nourselves alone) bursary for\nfaithful observance of the school\nmotto, presented by the Victoria\nWomen's Liberal Association.\nMiss Jarbeau, who attended St.\nJoseph's and Notre Dame College here; Is the daughter of\nMrs. Reginald Smith and the\nlate Nelson Jarbeau of Nelson.\nA successful dinner, dance was\nheld recently at the St. Andrew's-\nby-the-Lake church hall at Willow\nPoint. This, was sponsored by the\nEvening firanch of the Woman's\nAuxiliary.\nThe guests sat down to an enjoyable supper. Arrangements for\nthe food were made by Carl Linden, and Roy Kline and his electric\norgan and Bob Robinson and his\naccordion provided the dance\nmusic and a number' of novelty\ndances were enjoyed. Joe Mitchell\nwas master of ceremonies.\nThe piano which the WA had\nrecently purchased was pn display, and was . much admired.\nMrs. Howard, president qf the\nWA, presented the key of the\npiano to the church wardens, H.\nnankin and T. G. Ludgate, who\nexpressed  their  thanks  in  accepting the piano.\nMrs. J. Arichuk and Mrs. D.\nHaycroft  accompanied   by  Mrs.\nMcElroy at the piano sang an\namusing song about how the members raised the money to purchase\nthe piano. The number brought\nmuch laughter from the audience.\nThe  hall  was  decorated  with\nlawn   ornaments   made   by   the\nmembers and spring flowers.\nConvener of the supper was Mrs.\nLinden assisted by all members of\nthe WA.\nSaturday\n^Morning\nSPECIALS\nReg. .89 Lambswool Socks\nMen's. One size to fit any foot. 65% lambswool and\n35% nylon. Plains and fancies. CO\nLimited quantity    .J7\nReg. 1.98 Men's Sport Shirts\nSanforized cotton plains and checks. Short 1 \/|Q\nsleeve, sport shirts in sizes S, M, L, XL    I \u00bbi if\nChildren's Polo Pyjamas\nBoys' or girls', interlock cotton knit polo pyjamas with\ncrew neck, long sleeves and legs and elastic waist.\nYellow, blue, green and pink. 1   \/|Q\nSizes 2, 4 and 6. Reg. 1.98. Special    I \u2022T^'\nReg. $1 Sheer Gloves\nSheer nylon gloves in assorted styles and colors.\nPerma-tuck or 40 denier sheer nylon. \/CO\nSizes 6 to 8. _  \u2022W5'\nReg. 5.99 Men's Camp Shoes\nAn ideal shoe for summer wear. Sturdy leather oxfords with sewn sponge rubber soles. Moccasin\nvamp style. Brown only. J\\  QQ\nSizes 7 to 10*4  ^ta7*\nLOWEST PRICES!\nLicorice Allsorts \/     j\nA family favorite and just arrived from Dunhill's\nof England. Get yours'toddy. 2Q\nPacked in Mb. cello bags.'..'.;'.;\"-. '\u2022D5'\nReg. 1.29 Insulated Teapots\n4-cup, aluminum insulator, colored\nsemi-porcelain. \t\n.69\n'79\nReg. $119 3-Pce. Lounge Sets\nLeft and right sitting with curved centrepiece. 2 only, green or brown\t\nReg. 69.95 Bicycles\nGirls' or boys' 22\" imported sports AK\\ QQ\nmpdels. Shop early. Limited quantity.'    *4r air<?\nReg. 2.98 and 3.98 T-Shirts\nGrand selection of women's novelty cotton T-shirts;\nshort and push-up sleeve styles. Stripes 1 QO\nand plain colors. S-M-L \u25a0.la^r.f\n 6\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JUNE 1, 19S7\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS\nTn. Dally N-wi do_> not nold malt reipoml-l. In tnt ovont   ,\nv. af on orror in tho following Moto.\nTORONTO  STOCKS\nClosing Prices\nMINES\nAlgom Uranium  \u2022\nAnacon Lead \t\nAnglo Rouen \t\nAtlin Ruff  ,-.\nAubelle    .'\u2022 \u2022'\u2022\nAumacho  ,\t\nAumaque \t\nAunor   \t\nBarnat\nBase Metals  ~.\u2014.\nBaska Uranium -\t\nBriiund    \t\nBrunswick    -\nBuff Can\t\nBuff Red Lake\t\nCallinan    \t\nCampbell R L\t\nCentral Patricia \t\nCoin Lake\t\nCons Denison\t\nCom Discovery\t\nCons Halliwell   \t\nCons Mining and Smelting\nCons Red Pop \t\nCon Sanorm \t\nConwest      \t\nCopper Corp \t\nCopper Man \t\nD'Aragon \t\nDonald  \t\nEast Amphi   \t\nEast Malartic \t\nEast Sullivan\t\nElder Gold    \t\nFalconbfidge   \t\nFaraday \t\nFrobisber \t\nGeco    \u2022\t\nGlen Uranium :\t\nGoldcrest \t\nGold Eagle \t\nGolden Manitou  _\nGrandines     \t\nGunnar Gold\t\nHarminerals   \t\nHasaga \t\nHeadway \t\nHlllinger    _\t\nInt Nickel\t\nIron Bay \t\n\u25a0 Joliet Que  _\t\nJonsmlth\t\nR J Jowsey ....;\t\n1.50\n,70\n.60\n.11\n.22 '-\n.14\n.37\n.84\n8.50\n.16\n7.00\n.37\n5.40\n2.62\n' .12\n.21'\/.\n2185\n1.15\n23.-2.\n.21\n.10.\n6.60\n.37\n.19\n.27.\n.21\n.1314\n1.25\n3.00\n.31\n37.00\n2.96\n2.78\n.1514\n.45\n.14\n9.00\n.92\n.12\n.19%\n.36\n.20\n.fir,\n38.75\n106,75\n4.25\n.51\n.16\n.84\nAINSWORTH\nHOT SPRINGS\nOPEN\n10 A.M. TO 10 P.M.\nExcept Monday)\nClosed All Day\nDINING ROOM HOURS\n7 TO 9 A.M.\n11 TO 1 P.M.\n5 TO 7 P.M.\nFOR\nDiefenbaker\ngovernment I\nVOTE\nPROGRESSIVE\nCONSERVATIVE\nVOTE\nFor\nCharles H. Wright\nKerr Addison\t\nKenvllle\t\nLabrador \t\nLakeshore\t\nLexindin   \t\nLittle Long Lac .\n14.50\n.0914\n24,25\n6.10\n.36\n2.60\nLorado     1.31\nMacassa    ,    2.05\nMacDonald        .47\nMadsen R L t .-.    1.47\nMalartic G F ..\u201e\u201e     1.54\nManeast ....,....' , 25V4\nMaritime Mining  1.44\nMart McNeely ..- - .UVi\nMcKenzie R L :..:. 25\nMilliken  ....     3.35\nMining Corp  .....     46\nMogul  .-, :....    1.55\nMulti Mins   85\nNew Bidlamaque      ,10\nNew Delhi _....-   1.07\nNew Fortune    i.   - .1414\nNew Highridge  ,   .30\nNew Jason .MM.\nNew Lund 44\nNipissing .  ;....;     2.55\nNoranda New -   50.6214\nNorgold   .'.._       -21\nNormetals    4,50\nNorpax  - -    1.24\nNorth Can     1.45\nNorth Rankin  >.     1.58\nPickle Crow     1,25\nPreston E D  _     8.15\nQuebec Lab  1314\nQuebec Lithium     8.75\nQuemont _   13.50\nRadiore    96\nRainville    1.25\nRayrock-    1.60\nSherritt Gordon  .:    6.20\nSilver Miller * \u201e 70\nStadacona    _ 35\nSteep Rock    -   21.75\nSlocan Van Roi       .10\nSullivan Con-    2.95\nSylvanite  ...:     1.57\nTeck Hughes     1.75\nTemagami    3.59\nThomp . Lund 99\nTombill 55\nTrans Cont Res  .'. 25\nUnited Keho ...'.....,    4.60\nUpper Canada 1 66\nVentures-  40.8714\nViolamac  .'.     1.68\nWaite Amulet      8.00\nWright' Hargreaves      1.35\nYellowknife Bear      1,57\nOILS\nAmerican Leduc 35\nBanff Oils .,'     2.61\nBailey Selburn   34.75\nCalgary and Edmonton     32.8714\nCan Admiral  55\nCdn Atlantic '.     8.60\nCanadian Devonian     9.30\nCan Tlecalta     3.80\nCon East Crest  61\nDuvex 16\nHighcrest  :.     ,32\nHome   A       19.50\nJberal Pete      2.25\n^on'g Island Pete 12\nMidcon  ....\u201e...:     1.50 >\nNat Pete     4.00\nNew Gas Expl  :..    2.07\nOkalta  : \u2022\u201e    2.75\nPetrol '     i.uo\nPonder  60\nRoyalite   18.75\nSpooner  60\nStanwell Oil      1.35'\nTriad         7.60\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlgoma Steel'   155\nAluminum     43%\nArgus 2nd pfd 1    42\nAtlas St     2614\nB A Oil      56%\nBathurst Power      5414\nBeatty Bros            7\nBell Telephone        4314\nB C Packers A      16\nBC, Power A             5114\nCanadian Breweries      26\nCanadian Celanese       14%\nCan Cement      27%\nCanadian Dredge  ' 22\nCan Mailing  :     4814\nCan Oil      3514\nCan Peckers A      33\nCan Packers B       7 .\nDist Soprani          30%\nDom F.undr.'cs        3_li\nDom Magnesium      15'\/i\nDom Steel Ord           24%\nDom S'.ores  55\nDoiri Tar k Chemical    1014\n.''cm.us  Pla;_ers            1744\nFanny Farmsr     2014\nFord A    108\nGatineau     '31\nr!en Stool Wares       7\nGypsum Lime     2-1.\nInnerial oil       bo\ntrim Tobacco  12V*\nInt Pate   55\nLaura Secord      -'. 1914\nMassey  Harris            71a\nMcColl  Frontenac    77\nMont Loco   17.\nMoore' Corp        70%\nNat Steel Cap.   29\nPowell River      ' 43\nPage Hershey   140\nPower  Corp    1'Ak\nShawialgan.  :  95 '\nSjcks Brew   22\nSimpsons A   19H\nSoutham   52\n. Steel of Canada  7214\nTaylor Pearson     .:.      9%\nUnion Gas of Can  80\nUnited Steel   16\nFear Britain\nMay Lose\nHong Kong\nWASHINGTON (AP) - Senator\nWilliam Knowland (Rep. Calif.)\ntold the United State* Senate today Britain may be risking loss\nof Hong Kong by broadening its\ntrade with Communist China.\nKnowland, Senate Republican\nleader, said Britain Is taking a\n\"calculated risk\" in deciding to\nship what he called \"strategic\"\nmaterials to Red China.\n\"These materials in time may\nstrengthen Communist China to\nthe point where she dares risk\nthe responsibility of taking over\nthe crown colony of Hong Kong,\"\nKnowland said,\nOne of the severest of congressional critics of Communist china;\nKnowland said he finds it \"difficult to understand\" why Britain\nshould decide on a course Know-\nland said could only result in\nstrengthening \"our common enemy\" in Asia.\nThe. state department has expressed disappointment at tha\nBritish decision to adopt the same\nlist for shipments of goods to\nChina as to Russia. The U.S. carries on no trade with Red China.\nMove 11 quickly, safely, economically,\nwhen you choose from F-M't complete line\nof industrial power trucks. The'F-irbankt-\nMorie \"Mohlllft\" line include! 4 ill-down\nmodel! In 2,000, 3,000, '4,000, 5,000\nIbs. capacities, all on 24* load centres\n\"Moblllft\" itand-up-rlder trudsl are available In 8 models with 15\" load centre's\nranging from 2,000 to 3,500 Ibs.\nAsk for literature.\nIn Vancouver:\n798 Beatty St.\nTela, TA-0211\nProvince First\nMorning Issue\nTo Be June 17\nVANCOUVER (CP)-The Province announced Friday it will move\ninto the morning newspaper field\nJune 17 with \"at least six' editions.\"\nThe Province joined with The\nSun Thursday in announcing they\nhave formed a new company, Pacific Press Ltd., to pool their publishing resources while maintaining editorial, advertising and circulation autonomy.\nThe announcement said The\nProvince would become a morning daily and The Sun would remain in the evening field. The\nProvince now publishes seven editions covering the Greater Vancouver area, the Fraser Valley,\nthe British Columbia interior and\nVancouver Island.\nIts first morning edition will\ncome just two days after the Vancouver Herald ceases publication.\nThe-Herald, only morning paper\nnow- publishing here, announced\nTuesday that rising costs have\nforced it to stop publication June,\n15. That will also be the day The\nProvince puts out its last evening\nedition,- s\nThe Province's announcement\nFriday by Publisher A. W. Mos-\ncarella promised editions' of the\nnewspaper would be distributed\n\"before breakfast\" to Greater\nVancouver, the Fraser Valley and\nVancouver Island,\nThe weekend edition, including\nThe Province's B. C. magazine\nmid B. C. living supplements, will\nbe included in Saturday morning's paper.\nimmmMEmliSM\nAcquit White\nMen In Negro\nChurch Fire\nMONTGOMERY,'Ala. (AP)-De-\nspite a prosecutor's warning that\nfurther racial violence might result here from acquittal, a white\nmale jury Thursday cleared two\nwhile'men of charges of dynamiting a Negro church.\nTo Ihe cheering approval of a\npacked courtroom, the jury gave\na verdict of acquittal for Raymond\nC. Britt, 27, and Sonny Kyle Livingston, 19.\nAn acquittal would say \"it's all\nright\" to bomb Negro churches\nand homes\u2014and might lead to re\ntaliation\u2014the prosecutor had said.\nIt would serve notice \"that we\nare not going to yield another\ninch in lighting for our way ot\nlife,\" the defence had countered.\nPostponed from scheduled trial\nnow' was a capital case against\ntwo other white men charged with\nparticipating in the bombing Of\nfour Negro churches and the homes\nof two pro \u2022 integration ministers\nJan, 10,\nSHOTS FIRED\nThe charge carried from two to\n10 years' imprisonment on conviction. James D. York, 52, and Henry\nAlexander, 27, face possible death\nsentences on a charge of dynamiting a Negro minister's home,\nThe bombings came a few hours\nafter shots were fired for. the sixth\ntime at city buses since they were\nracially integrated Dec. 21 by a\nSupreme Court ruling.\nProsecutor 'William H. Thetford\ntold the jury:\n\"If you turn these men loose under the evidence the state has presented you say to the Ku Klux\nKlan, 'if you bomb a Negro church\nor home it's all right.'\"\nBaffle of fhe Budget in U.S. May\nWeaken Eisenhower's Popularity\nBy GEORGE KITCHEN\nCanadian Staff Press Writer\nWASHINGTON (CP)-The control of the United States government for the next 3Vi years, if, pot\nlonger, may be at stake in the\nbitter battle of fhe budget now being waged betwoen President Eisenhower and Congress.\nThe battle threatens to imperil\nthe president's legislative program\nand, because much of that program is international in scope, it\nthreatens also to undermine American leadership abroad.\nOn the surface, the problem is\nsimple. The, president's $71,800,-\n000,000 budget has run headlong\nInto a giant economy wave sweeping Congress and the country.\nSAYS NO .CUTS    '\nElsenhower says the budget,\nwhich includes {45,000,000,000 for\ndefence and foreign aid, can't be.\ncut to any great extent without\nserious Injury to national defence,\nYet, Congress seems bent on giving lt the axe.\nBut the issue goes far deeper\nthan that. At the forefront of the\neconomy drive is a band of right-\nwing Republicans, led by Eisenhower's Senate leader, William F,\nKnowland, who are openly defying the president on his budgetary\nprogram. They have been joined\nby Democrats who are only too\neager to seize this chance to embarrass the - Republican president\nand perhaps divide his party.\nIn the opinion of many Washington observers, the budget is only\nincidental. They see the clash as\nthe product of a spirited campaign\nby Knowland to seize Republican\nleadership from the president, capture the party's allegiance and become its presidential nominee in\nthe 1960 elections. Eisenhower is\nbarred by the Constitution from\nseeking another White House term\nin 1950.\nMAY LOSE\nShould Elsenhower lose the\nbattle, and some competent observers feel he is in danger of\ndoing just that, national leadership will slip from tin; president's\nhands into those of the party's old\nguard, made up of Conservative,\nisolationist - minded Republicans\nwho never have given Elsenhower\nwholehearted support.\nThe president has one big factor\nin his favor\u2014his tremendous personal popularity with the American voter. But even this may be\nslipping away. The latest Gallup\npoll Indicates his prestige has\ndropped by 12 percentage points\nsince he began his second term\nlast January. Today, 67 per cant\n-of the voters approve of the way\nHe is handling his job; compared\nwith 79 per cent five months ago.\nBLAME IKE ..\nMany politicians and a big segment of the American press blame\nthe president himself for the situation he now is in, They feel that\nEisenhower, with his great respect\nfor the separation of the powers of\nthe presidency and the Congress\nhas been to reluctant to wave a\nbig stick at his Republican followers in the national assembly.\nThey suggest, too, that he now\nIs handicapped> in his defence of\nthe budget by his previous lukewarm support of it, His failure to\ndefend the budget down the line\nfrom the beginning was a tactical\nerror. Once an economy-minded\nCongress sensed White House indecision, it pounced upon the budget without hesitation.\nAccuses Dulles\nOf Messing Up\nU.S. Relations\nVANCOUVER (CP)--A former\nProgressive Conservative cabinet\nminister accused the United\nStates secretary of state of making a \"mess\" of American foreign relations.\nH. H. Stevens, federal trade\nminister in the 1930 government\nof R, B.,Bennett, told an election rally Thursday night that\nJohn Foster, Dulles \"has made\nand is making a mess of .U.S.\nforeign affairs, and it is about\ntime Canada told himso,\"\nHe was speaking on behalf of\nVancouver - Centre candidate\nDouglas Jung, who himself urged\nCanada to join the British Commonwealth in setting up a \"third\nworld force\" to counter balance\nthe \"rather rash and impetuous\nactions of the United States and\nRussia.\"\nMr. Stevens said his successor\nas Trade Minister, C. D. Howe,\nhas been trying to Integrate the\neoonomy of Canada with that of\ntha U.S. .\"steadily since 1946.\"\nMarket Trends\nTORONTO (CP) - The stock\nmarket was still higher but many\nof the earlier gains had been reduced Friday near the close of\ntrading.\nInternational Paper, on a single\nsale, was up 7V4 points to 97V_.\nA. V. Roe ained 1 to touch\"a\nnew high of 25%. Dominion Steel,\nPage Hersey and Union Gas were\namong other strong industrials.\nInternational Nickel advanced 1-\nVi points to 106 among senior\nbase metals. Preston East Dome\nwas up 40 cents to $7.90 among\nother mining issues and Aconic\nadded 30 cents at lOY.. Campbell\nChibougamau and United Keno\nwere off 20 cents each.\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS 12*) ON THE'DIAL\n(PACIFIC DAYLIGHT SAVING TIME)\nSATURDAY, JUNE 1, 1957\n30-Wake-Up Time\n00\u2014News\n05\u2014Musicale\n10\u2014Farm Fare\n15\u2014Musicale\n30\u2014News\n35-Spo'rts News\n40\u2014Wake-Up Time\n00\u2014News\n10\u2014Sports News\n15\u2014Market Review\n20-Breakfast Varieties\n00\u2014News\n05\u2014Musicale\n15\u2014Story Parade\n30\u2014Stamp Club\n45\u2014Sounds Fun Club\n00\u2014Postmark UK\n30\u2014Juke Box\n00\u2014News,\n05\u2014Saturday Special\n00-Tha .Dinner Ball\n15\u2014Sports News\nSUNDAY, JUNE 2, 1957\n12:25\u2014News\n12:30-Saturday Special\n2:30\u2014Don Messer\n3:00\u2014News ,\n3:10\u2014Weekend Listening\n3:15\u2014Speaker's Choice\n3:30-^Canadian Symphoniei\n4:00\u2014Buff Estes Sextet\n4:15\u2014Old Country Sp.orts\n4:30\u2014This Week\n4:45\u2014Sports College\n5:00\u2014Drive-In\n5:30-r.onversations\n6:00\u2014Moods in Modern\n1:00\u2014News\n7:05\u2014Music by Hyslop\n7:30\u2014Hotel Downbeat\n8:00\u2014Halifax Theatre .\n8:30\u2014Prairie Schooner\n9:00\u2014Winnipeg Pops Concert\n10;00-i-News\n10:10\u2014Sports News\n10:15\u2014Canada at Work\n10:30\u2014Sign Off\n45\u2014British Israel Broadcast\n00\u2014Overseas News\n15\u2014Newt\n30\u2014Harmony Harbour\n00\u2014BC. Gardener\n15\u2014Just Mary\n30\u2014Musicale\nOO\u2014St Paul's-Trinity SSrvics\n00\u2014This Is My Story\n:30\u2014Capital Report\n:57\u2014BC   Weather\n:00\u2014Dominion Drama Festival\n:30\u2014Critically Speaking\n;00\u2014Wprld'Music Festivals\n.30\u2014Newa\n35\u2014Weatherman\n: 45\u2014Musical Program\n4:00\u2014UN on tha Record\n4:16\u2014The Commodores\n4:30\u2014Little Symphonies\n5:00\u2014Billy Graham\n5:30\u2014Musicale\n5:45--Bethel Tabernacle\n6:00\u2014Pacific Playhouse\na^o^MusIc Diary\n7:00\u2014News '\n7:10\u2014Weekend Review   .\n7:20\u2014Our Special Speaker\n7:80\u2014Sunday Chorilt\n8:00~Stage '56\n9:00\u2014Winnipeg Sunday Concert\n10:00\u2014News\n10:10\u2014Sports News\nS0:1B\u2014Poetry in Reality\n10:30\u2014Sign OH '   '\u2022\nCBC PROGRAMS\n(PACIFIC DAYLIGHT\nSUNDAY, JUN\noo\u2014News\n03\u2014Theme\u2014and Variations\n00\u2014News,\n15\u2014The Answer Man\n30\u2014Harmony Harbor\n00-B.C. Gardener 4 Weather\n15\u2014Just Mary\n30\u2014In His Service\n00\u2014Chamber Musio\n30\u2014Religious Period\n00\u2014Organ Music\n30\u2014Capital Report\n00\u2014Dominion Drama Festival\n30--Critically Speaking\n00\u2014World Musical Festival\n30\u2014News\nSAVING TIME)\nE 2, '1957\n35\u2014Ask the Weatherman\n42\u2014Weather Report\n45\u2014In Heply\n00\u2014UN on the Record\n15\u2014The Commodores\n30\u2014Little Symphonies\n00\u2014Music Program\n00\u2014Pacific Playhouse\n6:30\u2014Music Diary\n7:00\u2014News\n7:10\u2014Weekend Review\n7:20\u2014Our Special Speaker\n7:30\u2014Sunday Chorale\n8:00\u2014Stage Series    ,\n9:00\u2014Winnipeg Sunday Concert.\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Art of Translation\nMONDAY JUNE 3, 1957\nTIMM1NS, Ont. (CP) - Leslie\nCostello, former forward with Toronto Maple Leafs of the National\nHockey League, was ordained\nThursday into the priesthood of\nthe Roman-Catholic Church. He\nleft a promising hockey career to\nenter the.church,\n00\u2014B.C. Fisherman's Broadcast\n15\u2014Musical Minutes\n30\u2014News\n35\u2014Musical Mlnutei\n40\u2014Morning Devotions\n45--Musical March Past\n0O\u2014News\n10\u2014Sports News\n15\u2014Morning Music\n45\u2014Laura Limited\n00\u2014News\n15\u2014Your Good Neighbor\n30\u2014Morning Concert\n00\u2014Morning Visit\n15-_Iappy Gang\n45\u2014Invitation to the Waltz\n00\u2014Radio Theatre\n15\u2014Kindergarten of the Air\n30\u2014Through the Listening Glass\n15\u2014News\n25\u2014Showcase\n30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n55\u2014Five to One\n00\u2014Afternoon Concert'\n00\u2014Afternoon Concert\n30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinea\n30\u2014Footlight Favorites\n45\u2014B.C. Roundup\n30\u2014The Conqueror\n00\u2014News\n15\u2014By-Line ,\n20\u2014Sports\n30\u2014Roving Reporter\n45-Rawhide\n00\u2014Sons of the Saddle\n30\u2014Music for Strings\n00\u2014News\n80\u2014Recital \u00ab\n00\u2014Joshua Doan\n30-Electlon Talk\n00\u2014CBC Symphony\n00\u2014News\n15\u2014Provincial'Affairs\n30\u2014Reflections in Music\nVANCOUVER STOCKS\nClosing Prices\nMINES\nBeaver Lodge _\u25a0__       .25\nBralorne      4.35\nCariboo Gold   45\nGiant Mascot 11\nGranduc   .....  \u201e_    2.75\nHamil SII       .03%\nHighland Bell      '1.17\nNational Ex _.\u201e._ 36 .\nPioneer Gold        1.25\nPremier Border  ..  08\nQuatsino    \u201e..._..     .50\nSheep Creek         .70\nSilback Premier _..., 11\nSilver Standard ..\/.. _     .41\nSunshine Lardeau      .15\nTaylor   11\nTrojan  _     .38\nWestern Exploration ., 40\nOILS\nAltex 27\nA P Consolidated      .45\nCharter    ' 3.75\nHome       19.00\nNew Gas Ex     2.00\nOkalta Com  >..,.\u2022     2.65\nPacific Pete      30.25\nPeace River Gas 15.\nRoyalite    18.25\nRoya) Can  71\nSparmac : 27'\/4\nUnited  .-.     3.30\nVanalta  28 \u25a0\nVantor     2.75\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlberta Distillers ,.,     1.55\nAlberta Distillers Vt    1.45\nB C Forests   11.15\nB C Power        51.00\nB C Telephone    44,25\nCrown Zellar (Can)     18.25\nInland w\u00bbt Gni  ,,.\u201e.\t\n10.50\n4.05\n31.50         *.\nS.99         \u00ab_'.\n42.J-    -\n22.09  .    '\n15,09\n.08\n46.7S\n49.2J\n52.25\nKM\n9,21\n7.77\n4.19\nI.7J\n6.65\nMacM & Bloedel B .,\t\nMid Western  \t\nPowell River\nWestminster Paper .\u201e\t\nUNLISTED\nBANKS\nBank of Montreal \u201e\u201e\t\nCan Bank of Com\t\nImperial Bank of Canada\nRoyal Bank of Canada ...\nFUNDS\nCan Inv Fund ..'. \u201e\nCommonwealth Int\nGrouped Income \t\nLeverage \u201e,...\nTrans Canada \"C\" .\nBANCROFT, Ont. (CP) - Pre-\nmier Frost of Ontario Thursday\nofficially opened the operation,\nhere of Faraday Uranium Minat\nLtd. The mine, which started production -recently, has a contrast\nfor nearly $30,000,000 with the federal government's uranium crow-\npurchasing agency.\nGilchrist's Service\nAinsworth, B. C.\nIMPERIAL GAS AND OILS\nATLAS TIRE8\nOpen Sundays 8a.m. to 10 p.m.\nOn Nelson-Kaslo Highway\nThis Country's Got it!\nABLE, EXPERIENCED\nGOVERNMENT\nHOLD ON TO IT!\nUNITY, SECURITY, FREEDOM\nVOUFOMMM\n NELSON DAILY HEWS, SATURDAY, JUNE 1, 1957 \u2014 7\n^Survives 19 Days Ordeal\nAfter Light Plane Crash\nBy JOE McGOWAN\nRAWLINS, Wyo. (AP) - \"It's\ncertainly a blessing to be alive.\"\nThose were the first words Mrs,\nDa-ton LeMasurler spoke to rescuers who found her beside the\nbody of her husband late Thursday on a show-shrouded mountainside,\nThe 45-year-old Duluth, Minn.,\nwoman survived her ordeal of 19\ndays\u2014more than a week longer\nthan searchers sought the wreckage of the couple's plane.\nHer only nourishment was three\nsmall pieces of chocolate candy\nand a bottle of vitamin pills.\nCONSTANT STORMS\nWith only the remains of the\nburned-out wreckage and shrubs\nfor. protection Mrs. Lemasurler,\nlived through almost constant\nitormil        \u25a0\nShe shouted with joy when she\nspotted'the seven-man party. She\nwas (rushed' to hospital here suffering from shock, frostbite,, sun-\nbura, exposure and malnutrition.\nSaid Dr. Robert D. Paul, county\ncoioner:\n\"I thought it was an echo from\nwe of the fellows. Then we saw\ntlis woman\u2014she was wearing her\nJusband's pants and jacket but no\nshoes\u2014and calling for help.\"\n\"We were stunned. Not once did\nanyone think, even for a moment,\nthat one of them would be alive.\"\nSTRUCK MOUNTAIN\nThe couple's light plane, headed\nback to Duluth from Pasadena,\nCalif., smashed into 9,500-foot Ferris Mountain east of here May 11\nduring heavy overcast.\nThe gasoline tank exploded and\nburned for an hour. Then a rainstorm put out the fire.\nLeMasurier, 48, who was president of Duluth radio station KDAL\npresumably was injured fatally in\nthe crash.\nHis wife first told rescuers he\ndied four days after the crash,\nlater that he died seven days ago.\nAnd before going to sleep in her\nhospital bed Thursday night she\nsaid she knows he is still, living.\n\u25a0 She watched the skies for help\nand saw several planes obviously\ntaking part in the widespread aerial search.\n\"I waved a red sweater but nobody saw it,\" she said.\n\"A $2,500 reward offered by the\nDuluth station for information\nleading to discovery of the plane\nwill go to Jack Putnam, foreman\nof the Buzzard ranch who spotted\nthe wreckage early Thursday.\nDULUTH, Minn. (AP)-Dalton\nA. Lemasurier, whose wife was\nAccuse Labor\nOf Dodging\nExisting Laws\nWASHINGTON (AP)-Two Re-\npublican members of a Senate investigating committee, said Friday\nlabor unions are circumventing\nthe law against direct political\ncontributions.\nSenators Barry M. Goldwater\n(Rep. Ariz) and Styles Britiges\n(Rep. N. H.) said the practice is\n\"a serious threat to our two-party\nsystem and to our existing laws.'\nHe called for an investigation.\nThey listed activities during the\n1956 campaign of the United Auto\nWorkers , in Detroit and Flint,\nMich., as support for their\ncharges.\nGoldwater and Bridges said\n\"\u2022vidence has been presented\"\nshowing unions and .corporations\n\"do make contributions and expenditures; for political purposes,\nclassifying them under the all-in-\nelusive name pf 'education' or\n'dtizenship.'\"\nThe Taft-Hartley Act bars un-.\nIons from making political contributions in connection with any\nfederal election. Corporations also\n\u2022re barred from making such contributions.\nUniversity\nteachers\nSalaries Up\nOTTAWA (qp)-Canadian university teachers last year earned\nt.l-per-cent-higher salarle \u25a0 s than\nthey did during the academic\nyear 1954-55, the bureau of stati-\nflcs said Friday.\nTheir salaries were almost double what they were during the\nprewar academic year of 1937-38.\nIhe Bureau released preliminary\nresults of a survey based on 51\n\u25a0niversities and colleges in Canada, excluding religious teachers\npaid on a scale below that of lay\nteachers.\nThe survey showed an average\nef $9,400 yearly for faculty heads,\n$5,349 for teachers in the humanities, $5,589 in social sciences, $6,-\n166 in bilogical sciences, $5,715 in\nphysical sciences and $5,775 in\n\u2022ther fields,\nThe bureau said complete re-\nlults of the survey will be available by Aug. 30.\nrescued Thursday after 19 days in\nthe Wyoming wilderness, got into\nthe radio business early,\nLemasurier, 48, president of.\nstations KDAL and KDAL-TV In\nDuluth.     .\nlie became Interested in the radio business by Repairing custom-*\ncrs' radio sets along his newspaper route.\nLater he became licensee of\nKILO in Grand.Forks, N.D. In\n1948 he sold KILO to the Grand\nForks Herald and moved to Duluth.\nMeantime, he had formed the\nRed River Broadcasting Co. and\nbegan operation ol KDAL, which\nbears .his initials, in Duluth In\n1936, In 1953 KDAL-TV began op-\nertlon. Both are CBS outlets.\nNew Air Service\nlinks Canada\nWith Portugal\n' LISBON (Reuters) - Canadian\nPacific Airlines Friday Inaugurated a new transatlantic service\nlinking Portugal with Montreal\nand Toronto!\nSuper-DC-6B aircraft are being\nused on the newroute, which CPA\nhopes to extend to Madrid. They\nwill be replaced next year by Bristol Britannia jet transports.\nTwo round-trip flights a week\nwill be made between Canada and\ndays and Thursdays and returning\nPortugal, leaving Montreal Mon-\nWednesdays and Saturdays, ffhe\nservice links up with CPA flights\nlo Lat America.\nDiefenbaker Aims To\nPromote Canadian Unity\n\u201e By JOHN LeBLANC\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nMONTREAL (CP)-The federpl\ngovernment has \"handed a dish\nof crow\" to the provinces in its\nlast tax-sharing fiscal offer, John\nDiefenbaker satd Friday,\nThe Progressive Conservative\nleader said at a press conference\nthat the Liberal administration\nhas been using a \"domineering\nand a dictatorial attitude\" in its\nrelations with provincial governments.\n\"We are not going to do that\nwhen we are elected,\" he said\nWe intend to make 'Canadian\nunity' something.more than just a\nphrase in the political dictionary.\"\nMr. ^Diefenbaker repeated a\npromise to convene a conference\nwith the-provinces If he is elected\nheadl of the central government'. It\nwould deal mainly with financial\narrangements between Ottawa\nand the provinces.\nDISAGREED WITH BALCER\nMr. Diefenbaker arrived Friday\nfrom Quebec City following a tour\nof federal constituencies in that\narea,\nNewspaper men asked him to\ncomment on a statement attributed to Prime Minister St. 'Laurent that Conservative politicians\nin Quebec in working for Mr.\nDiefenbaker are supporting a man\nthey do not want.\nMr. Diefenbaker agreed that he\nand Leon Balcer, one. of his\nparty's four MP's In Quebec province, had not got along at the\nOttawa   Conservative   convention\nthat named him as party leader.\n\"Sure, he and others disagreed\nwith me at the convention,\" Mr.\nDiefenbaker said. \"That was their\nprivilege.\"\nBut, Mr. Diefenbaker added, he\nnow has the complete loyalty of\nMr. Balcer, who is national president of his party organization\nand a major figure in the provincial organization.\nSPIRIT OF UNITY\n\"We now have that spirit of\nunity in the Conservative party\nthat today is very disturbing to\nthe Liberals,\" he added.\nMr. Diefenbaker would not risk\na guess at the number of Conservatives that might be 'elected\nJune 10, but he said the \"situation in every part of,Canada Is\nmore favorable than at any time\nsince 1930.\" This was the year of\nthe last Conservative Win.-\n\"That applies to every province,\" the party leader said. He\nwas asked for a guess about PC\nSkin Diver May\nHave Found\nDace's Treasure\nMILAN, Italy (AP)-Two bags\nbelieved to contain a part of the\nMussolini treasure were sighted\nFriday in Lake Como by a skin\ndiver.\nThe location of the bags was\ngiven police by Capt. Otto Kisnat,\nMussolini's bodyguard. He told\npolice the bags contain gold bars,\njewels, gold coins and various\nfolders of Benito Mussolini's personal documents.\nAuthorization   to   salvage   the\ni^n\nprospects for Quebec's 75 seats.\n\"We will do better in Quebec\nthan we did the last time,\" he\nsaid.\nWATERTOWN, N. Y. (API-\nState .Secretary Dulles is spending the weekend at his summer\nhome on Main Duck Island In\nLake Ontario. Dulles and his wife\nflew here from Washington Wednesday afternoon. They plan to return early next week.\nbags was received from Padua's\ncourt of assizes which ia hearing\nthe 12-year-old case of the treasure that the former Fascist leader\ntried to take to Switzerland.\nPolice were informed that the\ntwo bags were thrown in the lake\nIn 1945 by Mussolini'a bodyguard,\nMussolini and the treasure ware\ncaptured by Communist partisans.\nMussolini and his mistress, Oar-\netta Petacci, were shot to death\nand the treasure, estimated to\nhave been worth $16,000,000, was\nseized by the partisans.\nPolice said they plan to haul\nthe bags ashore today.\nUniversal MOtor Gerat is its full name.\nGeriil is German fer \"implement\" and Webster defines an implement ac \"that\nwhich fulfills a want, an instrument used by man te accomplish a given work.\"\nWhich is a pretty good description of the Mercedes-Bom...\nAND UNIMOG S (3 TON GASOLINE VEHICLE)\nFrankly, we don't know how many uses Ihe Unlmog has \u2014 we're discovering now jobs for\nit all the time. Unlmog digs ditches, fights fires, drills rock, hauls logs, lays cable, cleans streets.\nWe've seen it pull a 60 ton load, climb a 60 degree gradient, cross rivers, desert and\ntrackless mountain country. Within reason, Unlmog can da just about anything you ask of\nIt, go anywhere you want it to go. \u2022   -\nTechnically speaking, Unlmog Is a 1 ton vehicle with a 4-wheel drive, differential leeks, a\nspeed of 0.7 to 40 mph, and a 35 hp diesel engine with power take-off shafts at front,\nrear and side. But we've come lo think of it as a mechanical monster with a lust far work where\nthe going is roughest \u2014 a robot with a dozen hands and an Iron will.\nWorking on Ihe move or from a standstill (but never lo a standstill), Unlmog uses\nits slout Mercedes-Don- engine to drive a host of attachments \u2014 compressors,\ngenerators, pumps, winches, drills, welding units, ploughs, augers . . . you name\nthem. And the most beOutful thing about this mechanical brute Is that It dees a full\nhour's work on little more than a gallon of low-cost diesel fuel.\nWe Ihink you can profit by putting Unlmog to work. For mobility, power, economy\nand versatility, there's no other \"implement\" quite like It.\nI. \u2022\nMERCEDES-\n1219  W.   68\nf\nBENZ,   DISTRIBUTORS\norgl*  St.,  Vancouver,   q\nWESTERN\nC.\nLTD-\nPlaa.e send\nfull   Infer\nmaUon  on\ntho\nUNIM03\n\\ -'\nMERCEDES-B\nDISTRIBUTORS   WESTERN   LIMITED\n1219 W. Georgia St. ,       Vancouver, B.C. Tolophono MArino 0406\n.<\u2022\n 8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JUNE1, 1957\nEskimos Have Only Two Holes; Holdover Dominates Camp Roster\nBy JIM PEACOCK\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nEdmonton Eskimos, Grey Cup\nchampions for the last three\nyears, could well be a stand-pat\nfootball team when the Western\nInterprovincial Football Union\nseason opens Aug. 15, but preseason indications are the other\nfour conference clubs will make\nwholesale changes.\nEskimos, with wily Frank Ivy\nback for a fourth season as head\ncoach, have lost only two of their\n.2 United States players and two\nof the 20 Canadians on the roster\nat the end of last season.\nOn the other side, Saskatchewan\nRoughriders, who lost four first-\nrate players in the crash of an\nairliner last Dec. 9 in British Columbia, expect no more than six of\ntheir imports back when training\nopens in July. Coach Frank Fil-\nchock is in Regina for a fifth\nstraight year.\nBritish Columbia Lions, who jn\nthree years in the conference have\nfailed to make the'three.- team\nplayoffs, will .have 31 Americans\nin ' training camp at Kelowna,\nwhen head coach Clem -Jrowe,\nback for a second year at the\nhelm after a year as assistant,\nopens workouts early in July.\nCalgary Stampeders, out of the\nWIFU playoffs since 1951 after\nsetting post-war football aflame\nwith a Grey Cup victory in 1948,\nhave signed 21 imports so far and\nmay have more before head coach\nOtis Douglas sets out in his'first\nfull conference season.\nDouglas joined the club late in\n1956, taking over from deposed\nJack Hennemier. .   ..\nWinnipeg Blue Bombers have\nthe only outright freshman coach\nin Harry (Bud) Grant, who came\nout of the* playing ranks to succeed Al Sherman at the end of\nlast season. Seven of the imports\nhe played with on' the Bomber\nroster last year will be back along\nwith at least 11 new ones.\nPOWER INTACT\nTaking the league from the top\nof last year's final standings,' the\nconference situation shapes up on\nthese lines as the training season\napproaches:\nEskimos have lost only centre\nJohnny Tatum, to the U. S. armed\nforces, and end-halfback Bill Rowe-\nkamp, to a coaching job, from last\nyear's powerful import roster. Ta-\ntum's shoes may well be filled by a\nformer Eskimo, Oklahoma Kurt\nBurris, who is returning after a\nyear out of the game.\nBack from last year are back-\nfielders Jackie Parker, Roilie\nMiles, Earl Lindley and Johnny\nBright; ends Bill Walker and Joe\nMobra; tackles Reed Henderson\nand Roger Nelson; and guards\nArt Walker and Frank Anderson,\nalthough   Anderson   hasn't   yet\nsigned.\nAs insurance against injury and\nother happenings, Ivy has lined\nup 10 new imports;\nQuarterback Don Flynn, Houston; back Ken Hall, Texas A and\nM; Leo Miles, New,\"York Giants\nand brother Roilie, and Wayne\nJohnson, Texas; ends Tommy\nPearson, California; tackles Ed-\nmon Gray and Dwaine Underwood,\nOklahoma; and centres Kurt Hat-.\nris and Bob Weber, Colorado A and\nM. ',\u25a0 .\" ' . \u25a0\nKWONG UNSIGNED  ;\nOutstanding Canadians returning\ninclude fullback Normie Kwong\nwho hasn't come to terms yet,\nquarterback Don Getty, who Ivy\nintends to. use as his first;String\nsignal caller this year and lineman Ted Tully. t\nHalfback Con Kelly, knocked out\nlate last year by in eye injury, is\nretiring to prevent further injury.\nSteven. Mendryk, who had been\nwith the club since its re-entry in\ntrie WIFU in 1949 is retiring.\n- Fllchock and the Riders face a\nrebuilding task brought on in good\npart by the plane tragedy that\ntook the lives of outstanding Canadians Gordon Sturtridge and Ray\nSyrnyk and Americans Mel Becket\nand Mario DeMarco.  .\nRiders also have lost veteran\ncentre - linebacker John Wozniak,\nwho has retired. Import halfback\nJon McWilliams is in the U.S.\nArmy, and half Alex Bravo is returning to Los Angeles Rams.\nTackle-Martin Ruby, halfback\nKen Carpenter, fullback Bobby\nMarlow, quarter Frank Tripucka\nand punter Larry Isbell are returning. End Stan Williarrts may\nbe back if a leg injury has healed\nsufficiently.\nNew imports signed are headed\nby guard Bill Glass of Baylor and,\ntackle John Witte of Oregon Stat-\nOthers among the 15 newcomers\nsigned are halfback Jack Hill,\nUtah, guard Galen Laack, College,\nof Pacific, centre Galen Whal-\nmeier, Kansas, and Sam Wesley,\nall-Pacific coast half from Oregon.\nGERRY JAMES RETURNS\nWinnipeg will have, halves Bob\nMcNamara, Buddy Leake and Leo\nLewis, fullback Bob Davenport,\ntackle Buddy Tir_ley and tackle-\nguards Herb Gray and Slav Can-\nakes back this year. Tinsley is\nreceiving his Canadian citizenship\npapers this year.\nNew imports include fullback Joe\nBrodsky, Florida; quarter Chuck\nCurtis, Texas Christian; end Dennis Shaw, North Texas' State; end\nDick Donlin, Hamilin College, St.\nPaul; centre Hal Whitley, Texas\nA and M; guard John Michels, Tennessee; guard Vern Uecker, Texas\nChristian, and tackle-guard Ivan\nKaminskif Baltimore Colts.\nBritish   Columbia  lost   all-star\nhalfback Ed Vereb to the U. S.\nforces, but have a number of prospects among their 31 imports signed. Tom Allman of West Virginia\nI jieads the list, with Don Vicic, Ohio\n'and Vernon Hallbeck, Texas Christian.\nEnd Dan Edwards, guards Bob\n\u25a0Hantla and Join: Jankans and\nbacks Paul Cameron, Tony Ter-'\nesa, Primo Vollanueva, By Bailey\nand Steve Palmer are imports returning.\nAmong newcomers are tackles\nEmery Barnes, Green Bay; Phil\nWright, West Texas State; Dick\nFoster, University of Idaho, and\nWalt Mazur, Penn State. Guards\ncoming are Pudue's Ed Voytek,\nMichigan's Chuck Frank, and Pittsburgh's Vince. Scorsone. Jerry\nJames of Louisiana State and 0'-\nDay Williams are among endsr\nTRY FOUR Q-BACKS\nLions are trying four quarter\nbacks\u2014Maury Duncan, San Francisco '49ers; Gerry Dunan, California Polytech; Toppy Vann,\nGeorgia Tech and another as yet\nunnamed player.\nTackle Chuck Quilter, now a Canadian citizen, will give Lions an\nextra boost along the line. Outstanding backs to try out include\nTom Allman of West Virginia, Don\nVicic of Ohio and Vernon Hallbeck\nof Texas Christian,\nCalgary Stampeders' returnees\ninclue end Jack Gotta, tackle Dick\nHuffman, half Dean Renfro, Harry\nLangford and Porky Brown.\nThe 21 imports signed so far include Jim Finks of Salem, 111.,\nquarterback and assistant coach;\nDon Caraway, Houston fullback;\nBob Stringer Tulsa half; quarter\nJim Stehlin, Brandeis; half Don\nWright, Ohio; half Jim Norris, Notre Dame and half Jim Harriman\nfrom Los Angeles.\nAf_K\ntf-\n'    ' '       ' _Q \u2022 4 1\nlyi VajUjJchcbll haJs deMve it c^M\/\nw-'i.     #i]    Q       & r\\    fit   f\\\u25a0\u25a0:   m   ,J mm        *llk tM\nwmmmmm &\nand mm\nSo cornp.ete.y new... so excitingly different!\nNever before has British car styling so faithfully echoed Canadian tastes. Never before\nhas there been a British car \u2014 even Vauxhall\n\u2014 so excitingly styled... so amazingly compact ... so thrttlingly the car you want to\nown. And wait till you see how little it costs!\nSee the Victor and Victor \"Super\" \u2014 today!\nAll new 4-cylinder economy\nThe Vauxhall Victor's famous \"square\" design engine is a triumph of operating economy \u2014 equipped\nw:th a brand-new Mileage-Miser carburetor. You\nsave gas in every mile you travel ... in town or\ncountry.\nLively new fast-stepping performance\nHere's the car that skips nimbly up hills\u2014holds tight'\nand steady on curves \u2014 with a bright, eager pick-up\nthat sets your spirits soaring.    '\u25a0\nBright new panoramic vision\nNew wraparound windshield \u2014 wraparound rear\nwindow . . . with plenty of glass area in the side\npanes. Greater safety every mile you drive.\nGay, new nature-bright colors\nImagine the glowing beauty of-colors like Gipsy Red\nor Laurel Green ... fresh as springtime itself. Altogether \u2014 your choice of 8 sprightly color-stylings in\nthe Victor 'Super*... 5 in the Victor.\nCome in and meet the new running mate to the famous 'Vetex' and 'Cresta*.\nYou must see it today!\nAUXHALL\non display today cub\nl\/OUr VAUXHALL DEALER'S\nTHE   BRITISH  CAR  BUILT  BY  GENERAL  MOTORS\nNELSON MOTOR PRODUCTS LTD\n (Itllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\n-Golden Bears Oppose Kokanees\nAfter 12-7 Win Over Rossland\nTRAIL\u2014Trail Golden Bears climbed into a second-\nplace tie in the West Kootenay Senior Lacrosse Association Thursday with a 12-7 triumph over Rossland\nJuniors, who lost twice last weekend to the league-\nleading Nelson Kokanees.\nKokanees have the opportunity at Civic Arena tonight to stretch their league lead as they oppose the\nGolden Bears in Nelson's second home game of the\nseason. With two victories over Rossland Juniors and\none over Trail's junior aggregation, Nelson is undefeated\nto this point.\nPro -Leduc and Einar Klit scored four and three\ngoals, respectively, for the winners, with Gord Robertson and Marcus Smith adding two each. Larry Ford\npicked up goal No. 12.\nJack Ling scored four times, with Bertoia tallying\ntwice and Bill Huitema, once, for Rossland.\nilllltlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli\nLITTLE LEAGUE\nROUNDUP\nKiwanis 13 Lions 5\nKiwanis won their first game of\nthe season at Queen Elizabeth\npark as they hammered out a 13-5\nwin over Lions. It was the first\nwin in four starts for Kiwanis and\nthe second loss tn a row for Lions.\nErrors played a big part in the\ngame as there were only 11 hits\nbetween the teams. Kinwanis collected six hits and Lions picked up\nfive.\nKiwanis scored three runs in the\nthird, four in the fourth and six\nIn the fifth. Lions scored one run\nin fourth and four in their final\nturn at bat, the sixth.\nErnie Moisey went the route for\nthe winners, giving up five hits,\nwalking four batters and striking\nout seven. The Lions used three\nhurlers, Jack McQuair, Earl Sept\nand Bill Beatty. They gave up\nsix hits, issued five free passes\nand struck out six batters. Big hits\nof the night were two homers \u2014\none by Donny Wah of Lions who\nalso smacked a double \u2014 and one\nby Johnny Sample of Kiwanis.\nBobby Rothery drove out a two\nbagger for the other Kiwanis extra\nbase blow.\nMc tt Mc 11 Firemen 10\nMc 4 Mc  handed   Firemen\nCity's Hopes\nGetting Dimmer\nNEW YORK (AF)-- New York\nCity's hopes of keeping the Dodgers and Giants from moving to\nCalifornia grew dimmer Friday.\nA survey by the New York Post\nshowed that members of the board\nof estimates, who will have to pass\non any financial measures to build\nstadiums, are overwhelmingly opposed to granting subsidies to keep\nthe two clubs.\nBoard members mostly would\nfollow the policy of Mayor Robert\nWagner, and he doesn't appear\ninclined to make an exception for\ntwo of the big town's three major\nleague clubs.\n\"If we began to subsidize baseball teams,\" the mayor said in\nan Interview, \"all sorts of business enterprises would demand\nthe same thing. Our feeling is that\nprofessional ball clubs class as private enterprise. They have to\ncarry their own weight.\"\nThe mayor has invited Walter\nO'Malley, Dodgers president, and\nHorace Stoneham, Giants president, to talk things over with him\non Tuesday. This is liable to be a\nshowdown session.\nFights\nBy The Associated Press\nDallas\u2014Art Swicen, 192, Pittsburgh, outpointed Bobby Spaeth,\n186, Topeka, 10.\nVANCOUVER' (CP) - British\nColumbia Lions announced they\nhave traded fullback Al Pollard\nto Calgary Stampeders of the Western Interprovincial Football Union.\nNo details of the trade were announced.\ntheir fourth loss at Queen Elizabeth Park Thursday with an 11-10\nvictory. The game was close all\nthe way with a number of errors\ncostly to each side. Mcs scored\nthree runs in the first, third and\nsixth innings and two in the fifth.\nFiremen had three in the first and\nthird and four runs in the iiftli.\nFiremen sent four hurlers to\nthe' hill in an effort to hold the Mcs\nand they gave up 11 hits. Ken\nAnderson started and was followed\nby Art Miner, then Billy Burdenie\nand finally Bruce Blakemen. Gary\nKilpatrick and Doug Florio shared\nmound work for the Mcs with\nFlorio the winning pitcher. In the\nhitting department Blakemen drove\na homer and a double, while Ken\nAnderson, Art Miner and Ron\nJohnston were good for a double\neach. Mike Ingledew hit the only\nextra base blow for the winners.\nRotary g Kiwanis (\nRotarians won their second game\nin a row Friday evening as they\nedged Kiwanis 8-6. It was the\nfourth loss in five games for Kiwanis. Rotary scored three runs in\nsecond and third innings and one\nin each of the fourth and fifth.\nKiwanis scored two runs In the\nfirst, one in each the second and\nthird and two more in the fifth'.\nStan Smith went the distance for\nKiwanis, striking out seven batters, giving up eight hits and one\nfree pass. Brian Lees and Frank\nSmith shared the hill work for the\nwinners, - surrendering four - hits\nwhile lie struck out five and gave\nfour passes to. first.\nBill Christie was the big hitter\nof the game for the Rotary as he\nhit a homer, a triple and a double\nin three times at bat. Johnny Berekoff and Tommy Clem were the\nother extra base hitters for the\nwinners, Berekoff getting a triple\nand Clem a double. Ernie Moisey\nhit a homer for Kiwanis and Daryl\nMacLachlan a double.\nBantamweight. Boxer\nStill Unconscious\nSHEFFIELD, England (AP) -\nBritish boxer Jack Tiller, remained unconscious Friday 60\nhours after he collapsed in his\ndressing room following a Tuesday bout.\nThe 24-year-old bantamweight\nunderwent an operation Wednesday for the removal of a blood\nclot in his head.\nTiller was stopped in the last\nround of an eight-round bout by\nEric Brett of England. The referee\nhalted the fight after Tiller was\nfloored for the third time in the\neighth round.\nRACE DRIVERS KILLED\nPIACENZA, Italy (AP) - Two\nItalian drivers were killed Thursday when their motorboat crashed\nagainst a pontoon near here. They\nwere competing in the Pavia-\nVenice race on the swollen Po\nRiver.\nThe dead were Dr. Adolfo Gattl,\n50, a notary, and Lorenzo Argua,\n25, a mechanic.\nDANCE\nto the MUSIC of the\n\"Kootenaires\"\nCIVIC\nCENTRE\nTONIGHT\n9 p.m.\nAdmission 50c\n\"Come in\u2014enjoy an evening of fun.\"\nNear-Brawl Between Players\nAs Chisox Increase Margin\nBy ED WIMCS\nAssociated Prose Staff Writer\nChicago's fast - stepping White\nSo,t pushed to a four-game lead\u2014\ntheir largest of the season\u2014in the\nAmerican League with some second division help Friday night-as\nveteran Bob Keegan four-hit Detroit for a 6-0 victory in his first\nshutout in three years and first\ncomplete game since.last August.\nThe White Sox, winning their\nfourth in the last five games on a\ngrand-slam home run by Walt\nDropo and a two-run homer by\nSherm Lollar, breezed in as Baltimore's seventh \u2022 place Orioles\nsmacked the New York Yankees\n3-1 and the sixth place Kansas\nCity Athletics tripped Cleveland\n3-1. Tho loss sent the third place\nIndians five games off the pace,\nCARDS WIN\nIn the National League, the\nleading Cincinnati Redlegs were\nIdled by rain, but gained a two-\ngame lead as Philadelphia and\nRobin Roberts knocked off the\nsecond - place Brooklyn Dodgers\n2-1. The victory drew the Phillies\nInto a third place tie, W, games\nback, with the Milwaukee Braves\nwho were beaten 4-3 by St. Louis\nCards\nThe New York Giants defeated\nPittsburgh 3-2 in the other NL\ngame.\nWashington rallied in the ninth\nto defeat Boston 3-2 in the other\nAmerican League contest.\nLollar's seventh home run\nheaded Frank Lary to his seventh\ndefeat and the White Sox to their\n15th victory in the last 19 games\nin the first inning. Dropo then became the first to belt two grand\nslammers this season in the ma\njors with his wrap-up clout In the\neighth. Keegan, winning his first\nsince last September, gave up\nonly singles, striking out two and\nWalking just one. The 35-year-old\nrighthander last had a shutout on\nMay 21, 1954\u2014also against tha Tigers, 8-0.\nFEUD ERUPTS\nThe White Sox' fourth victory\nover the Tigers in four meetings\nthis year saw a feud break out\nbetween Lary, a 21-game winner\nlast season, and the Sox' Dave\nPhilley. Philley was dusted in the\nfirst inning and his bat then\n\"slipped\" from- his grasp and\nspun' to within six feet of the\nmound. In the eighth, Philley was\npushed back by another' Lary\npitch and started for the mound,\nbat in hand, before plate umpire\nEd Rommel and catcher Frank\nHouse intervened,\nAl Pilarcik drove in two Oriole\nruns, one with his second home\nrun of the season\u2014and second in\ntwo days\u2014as the Yankees dropped\ntheir third decision ih the last\nfour, all against eighth \u2022 place\nWashington and the Birds. Ray\nMoore, 31 today, five - hit the\nchamps. Bob Turley lost it, forcing in the final Oriole run in the\nsixth with a third consecutive\nwalk.\nNed Garver held the Indians to\nfour singles and was backed up\nby. Billy Hunter's two-run homer\noff loser Cal McLish and three\ndouble playB by the A's. Garver.\nwho had a three-hitter in his last\nstart (against Detroit), now is 4-3.\nThe Senators made it five out of\nsix on Jim Lemon's two-out single\nin the ninth that scored Herbie\nPlews with the clinching run, an\nunearned marker, to hand Tom\nBrewer his fourth defeat.\nHAMNER HITS\nWillie Jonea delivered a two-run\ntriple in the fourth to win for the\nPhillies as Roberts won his fifth\nagainst six'defeats with a six-\nhitter. The Phils, who have won\nseven of their last. 10, got their\nfirst hit off loser Don Drysdale in\n10 2-3 innings 'when Gran Hamner\nsingled with one out in the winning fourth.\nEddie Kasko was 4-for-4 and\ndrove in two runs, bringing the\nwinning run home in the eighth\nwith his third single, as the Cards\nout-hit the Braves H-9 for Lindy\nMcDaniel's fourth victory. Wally\nMoon extended his hitting streak\nto 24 games with a sixth-inning\ndouble, and Kasko then doubled\nhim home to tie it three-all.\nWillie Mays stretched his hit\nstreak to 19 games with a leadoff\ndouble in the eighth fbr the\nGiants, then came around with the\nwinning run on a bunt single by\nHank Sauer and Ray Katt's sacrifice fly.\nLEFTY RECALLED\nCLEVELAND (AP) - Cleveland\nIndians recalled pitcher Hank\nAguirre Thursday from San Diego\nof the Pacific Coast League.\nNo decision has been made yet\non who will be removed from the\nroster to make room for Aguirre.\nSOALIES'S DAD DIES\nOTTAWA (CP)-James Bever-\nidge, Ottawa sports enthusiast and\nfather of former NHL goalie Bill\nBeveridge, died at his son's home\nhere Friday after a brief illness.\nHe was 87.\nJOHNNY KILBANE\nDIES OF CANCER\nCLEVELAND (AP) - Johnny\nKilbane, who held the world's\nfeatherweight boxing championship from 1912 to 1923, died -at his\nhome Friday of cancer. He was\n68.\nKilbane captured the featherweight crown from Abe Attall on\nWashington's birthday in 1912. He\nlost it in 1928 to Eugene OriqUi\nof France.\nOfficial Placings\nAccepted by Four\nINDIANAPOLIS (AP)-The Indianapolis Motor Speedway fnan-\nagement said Friday four car\nowners who protested the official\nstandings in Thursday's 500-mile\nrace, have signed a statement accepting the standings.\nAl E. Dean ,of Los Angeles,\nowner of the Dean Special driven\nby Jimmy Bryan of Phoenix,\nAriz., protested that Bryan should\nhave been given second place instead of third. He contended the\nscorers missed two laps on Bryan\nin giving the second place to Jim\nRathmann of Miami.\n\\SF\\\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JUNE 1, 1957 \u2014 \u00bb\nBaseball Scores\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nBrooklyn    000 000 100\u20141   6   0\nPhiladelphia ,. 000 200 00x-2   6   0\nDrysdale, Labine (8) and Campanella; Roberts and Lopata. L:\nDrysdale. HR: Brooklyn, Campanella.\nNew York  000 000 210-3   8   0\nPittsburgh   .... 000 200 000-2  9   1\nMargoneri, Worthington (7) and\nKatt; Arroyo, Face (7) and Rand,\nFoiles (8). W: Worthington; L:\nFace. '\nSt.. Louis  010 011 010-4 fl   2\nMilwaukee ..... 001 020 000-3   9   2\nMcDaniel and H. Smith; Pizarro\nand Crandall.\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nBaltimore    001 011 000-3   7   0\nNew York ..... 000 010 000-1   5  0\nMoore and Triandos; Turley,\nDitmar (6), Byrne (8) and Berra.\nL: Turley. HR; Baltimore, Pilarcik.\nDetroit    000 000 00O-O .4   1\nChicago   200 000 04x-6  9   0\nLary and House; Keegan and\nLollar. HRs: Chicago, Lollar and\nDropo.\nBoston  100 000 100-2   7  2\nWashington .... 010 000 011-3  8   1\nBrewer and White; Kemmerer,\nClevenger (8) and Berberet. W:\nClevenger.\nCleveland     001 000 000\u20141  4  2\nKansas City .. 003 000 OOx\u20143 7 1\nMcLish, Tomanek (3), Mossi (8)\nand Naragon, Hegan (8); Garver\nand Smith. L: McLish. HR: Kansas City, Hunter. t\nRECORD PURSE\nPAID IN \"500\"\nINDIANAPOLIS (AP)-The Indianapolis Motor Speedway and\nautomotive accessory companies\nFriday night paid a record $300,-\n252 purse for Thursday's 500-mile\nrace, of which winner Sam Hanks\nand his car owner received another record $103,844.\nThe previous records were the\n$282,052 total purse last year and\nwinner Pat Flaherty's $93,819\nshare of that total.\nSENIOR\n8:00 p.m.\nTonight\nAdults 50c\nStudents and\nChildren 25c\nNelson Civic Centre\n\u2022 TRAIL GOLDEN BEARS\n* NELSONKOKANEES\nDwleFQ@D~ i\/ov?\/Jwe a\nIts North America's fastest seller I\nRight from the start, Ford has set the 1957 tales pace. Since the new can\nwere first introduced Ford has consistently outsold every other car in North\nAmerica. Sales figures quoted in leading automotive newspapers and journals\n\u2022give conclusive evidence of Ford's leadership.\nNo wonder the new kind of Ford is setting new records. Ford leads in styling\u2014\nthe kind of styling that's designed to last, because its long, low, \"sculptured look\"\nexpresses elegance and good taste. Even standing still, the new kind of Ford looks\nas though it's going placet in s hurry. And while we're talking about CO, we'd\nlike to remind you that Ford set 458 speed and endurance records at Bonneville\nFlats\u2014a classic demonstration, unequalled in automotive history. Indeed, Ford\nleads in the kind of performance (SIX or V-8) that takes nothin' from nobody\nand the kind of ride (Even-Keel Ride) that makes every road feel airstrip smooth)\nYou owe it to yourself to take ten exciting minutes to experience the sheer fun of\ndriving the car that's new all the way through... the ear that's the undisputed.\nleader in style\u2014in performance\u2014in motorists' preference... the things Canadian\nmotorists want most... the winner... the new kind of Ford.\n\/\nOo\/ne ih, cfole a mwiet...\nFORD SIX<\n$hcf you'll take hoihtri ftt>m hobodif i\nVISIT OR PHONET____TYOUR FORD-MONARCH DEALER TODAY!\nBack the ATTACK against\nTRAFFIC ACCIDENTS\nMel Buerge Motors Ltd.\n608 Vernon St.\nPhone 1744\n NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JUNE 1, 1957\nifiliOS\nPERSON-TO \u25a0 PERSON WANTM\n\"        'RESULTS\/\nPhone 1844\nDeadline for Classified Ads\u20145 p.m.\nPhone 1844\nBIRTHS\nYOUNG\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. Roland Young of 823 Victoria Street\non May 31 at the Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital, a' daughter.\nVARNEY - To Mr. and Mrs.\nJames Varney of Vallican on May\n27 at the Kootenay Lake General\nHospital, a daughter.\t\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\n(Continued)\nHELP WANTED\nMAN AGED 20 TO 35 REQUIRED\nfor aggresive wholesale and retail firm. Steady employment,\nMSA coverage,_excellent future.\nApply in own h_nd writing stating education, previous experience and salary\" expected. AU\napplibations strictly confidential.\nApply Box 4343, Nelson News.\nFULLER BRUSH WILL HAVE\nopening in Rossland, Cranbrook\nand Nakusp for reliable married\nman. Car necessary. $85 week\nwhile training. Write Employment Manager .Fuller Brush Co.\nBox 1160, Creston, B.C.\nMESSENGER BOY WITH Bicycle to deliver telegrams. Day\nwork. Must be available for\nJune 7. Apply CPR Telegraph\nCo.\nHELP WANTED \u2014 FEMALE\nCLERK GRADE 1\nB.C. CIVIL SERVICE\nFOREST SERVICE - NELSON\nSalary: $173 \u2022 $210 per month.\nPreferably two years' experience.\nThe duties to be performed are of\nan interesting nature. Good opportunity for immediate, permanent employment. Liberal vacation and,sick leave; contributory\npension plan; annual increments.\nApplicants must be British Subjects. For further information and\napplication forms apply to the Government Agent, Nelson, not later\nthan June 19,. 1957.\nREGISTERED NURSE REQUIR-\ned for duties on afternoons only,\nstarting July 1. Written applications, giving details of training,\nexperience, marital status,. age\nand references, to the Business\nmanager of the Medical Associate Clinic, Nelson, B.C.\nWANTED AT ONCE, EXPERIEN-\nced waitress with clean living\nhabits. Summer employment,\n$32.00 per week and board. Riondel Cafe, Osoyoos, B.C.\nWOMAN  REQUIRED  TO  CARE\n' for children seven days a week.\nPhone  803-L  after 4 p.m.  or\n134 (Pauline) during day.\nWANT ED-TYPIST FOR INVOIC-\ning and general office work Ap-\nv ply Box 4215, Nelson Daily News.\nEXPERIENCED   WAITRESS\nwanted. Apply Edi's Food Bar.\nNELSON READY-\nMIX CONCRETE\nLtd.\nPhone 871\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\nPAciflc 6357\nNEW FLAT BOTTOM DUCK\nboat with trailer, new Vk h.p.\nEvenrude motor, .22 automatic\nrifle with scope, 150 ft. new picket fencing, new 6-inch planer.\nPriced low to sell quick. Call\n359-L or 580-X.\nPROPANE RANGE FOR LARGE\njobs, complete with canopy. 500\ngal. tank, also propane heater.\nWrite W. C. Alock or Phone\n2772, Fruitvale, evenings.\nREGISTERED QUARTERHORSE\nStallion, incubator, wagon,.mow-\ner, seperator. Phone 3136, Fruitvale.\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\n2HN. ELECTRIC RANGE, ALSO\ncoil-shaped elec. heater. Perfect\ncondition. 519 Silica.\nONE COMPLETE DUMP BOX 4\nyd. 2 ball bearing ore cars. 2 b.\n. b. hoists. Ph. 378-X-2.\nFOR SALE CHESTERFIELD AND\nchair. Good condition, $35.00. Ph.\n440-X between 11 and 1.\nCHEVROLET\nOLDSMOBILE\nCADILLAC\nNew 1957 Chevrolet Sedan-\nNew 1957 Oldsmobile Sedans\nNew 1957 Oldsmobile Hard'\ntops.\nNew 1957 Chevrolet Pickups\n1955 Chevrolet Coach\n1954 Austin Sedan\n1954 Oldsmobile Sedan\n1953 Mercury Sedan\n1952 Austin Sedan\n1952 Plymouth Sedan\n1952 Cadillac Sedan\n1956 Dodge Suburban\n1956 Chevrolet Station\nWagon\n1955 Pontiac Station\nWagon\n1954 Chevrolet Pickup\n1953 Pontiac Sedan Dely.\n1952 Chevrolet Panel\n1951 Chevrolet Sedan Dely\nTERMS \u2014 TRADES\nG.E. 32 - INCH RANGE. PHONE\n1071-R. _i___'\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nALL CARPENTER WORK, CON-\ncrete and cement floors, sanding,\nfloor laying, gyproc paint filling,\nchimneys and fire places. Guaranteed free estimate. H. Zylstra,\nPhone 136-4-R.\nWILL LOOK AFTER CHILDREN\nin my home by the day. Phone\n779-R. .\t\nFOR HANDYMAN, PHONE 256-R.\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST - 16-FT. WALTON ROW-\nboat, painted white and orange.\nGot adrift from Balfour. Reward.\nJ. R. Bailey, 416 Mill St. Phone\n950-R\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nGOOD MODEL TAPE RECORDER\nwith micraphone, 1 yr. old, _\nprice. Phone 1365-L after 5:30\np.m.\t\nHEALTH FOOD CENTRE OPEN\nday and evening, 924 Davies St.\nLOST, BLACK WALLET IN NEL-\nson Saturday night. Contains\ndrivers licence, papers, and sum\nof money. Reward. Contact\nHarold Command; Kaslo, V>.C.\nLOST - WALLET, BY CIVIC\nCentre Thursday night. Contains personal papers and driver's licence. Reward. Phone\n1918-X, Nelson.\t\nLOST-BUDGIE BIRD ON SUN-\nday in vicinity of 315 Observatory St. Ph. 720-Y.\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\nTimes Shown Are Pacific Standard Time\nKXLY TV - Channel 4\n.     SATURDAY\n:45 Good Morning\n:I5 Dizzy Dean Show *\n;25 Baseball Game of Week *\n:00 Theater .    ,\n:30 Lone Ranger\n:00 Bob Harris Show\n:00 TBA\n;30 Wild Bill Hickock\n;00 Cartoon Time\n;30 Tales of the Texas Rangers\n;00 Jackie Gleason Show *\n;00 Gale Storm Show *     w\n:30 SRO Theater *\n;00 Gunsmoke *\n:30 Two For-The Money *\n;00 The Buccaneers\n:30 The Lone Wolf\n:00 Man Called X\ni:30 Late Show\nSUNDAY        .\n1:00 Good Afternoon\n1:30 Oral Roberts\n2:00 Bowling Time\n3:00 This Is The Life\n3:30 Variety Time\n3:45 Christian Science\n4:00 See It Now\n5:00 Annie Oakley\n5:30 You Are There\n6:00 Lassie *\n6:30 Jack Benny *\n7:00 Ed Sullivan*\n8:00 G.E. Theater\n8:30 Alfred Hitchcock Presents\n9:00 $64,000 Challenge\n9:30 Our Miss Brooks\n10:00 News and Commentary\n10:30 What's My Line\n11:00 Errol Flynn Theater\nKHQ TV - Channel t\n.,.'.' SATURDAY\n8:10 Test Pattern\n8:15 Color Test Pattern\n8:25 Bible Reading\n8:30 Gumby *\n9:00 Fury *\n9:30 Short Subjects\n9:45 Leo Durocher's Warmup *\n9:55 Major League Baseball\n(Boston at Washington)\n12:00 Little Rascals\n12:30 Gangbusters\n1:00 Western Theatre\n3:00 True Story *\n3:30 Detective's Diary *\n4:00 Hopalong Cassidy\n5:00 John Wayne Theatre\n5:58 Local News'\n6:00 Trouble With Father\n6:30 People Are Funny \u00bb\n7:00 Perry Como (C) \u2022\n8:00 Five Stars For Spring *\n9:00 George Gobel *\n9:30 Hit Parade *\n10:00 Death Valley Days\n10:30 Late Movie\n\"Cry of the City\"\nSUNDAY\n12:00 16th Annual Palm Beach\nGolf Tournament\n1:30 Christopher Program\n2:00 This Is The Answer\n2:30 Airline 6534 .    '\n3:00 A City Decides\n4:00 I Led Three Lives\n4:30 Hopalong Cassidy\n5:00 Impact \"Crack-Up\".\n6:00 Tales of 77th Bengal\nLancers*\n6:30 Circus Boy *\n7:00 Steve Allen \u2022\n8:00 Chevy Show <C) \u2022\n9:00 Loretta Young *\n9:30 Front Page\n9:40 Molly\n10:05 Stars On Six \"Emergency'\n10:30 O. Henry Playhouse\n11:00 Cross Current\nKREM TV \u2014 Channel 2\nSATURDAY\n3:00 Roy Rogers Roundup\n4:00 Space Ranger\n4:30 KREM Cartoons   \u00bb\n5:00 Renfrew of the Mounted\nPolice\n5:30 Popsicle Party *\n6:00 Major Fights\n7:00 Billy Graham\n8:00 Lawrence Welk *\n9:00 Ozark Jubilee *\n9:30 Championship Bowling\n110:30 Million $ Theatre\n(Warner Bros. Features)\n'    SUNDAY\n12:55 News\n1:00 Cartoons\n1:30 Gene Autry\n2:30 John Hopkms File 7 *\n3:00 College Press *\n3:30 Medical Horizons \u2022\n4:00 Dean Pike *\n4:30 Open Hearing \u00bb\n5:00 Circus Time *\n6:00 You Asked For It\n6:30 Hollywood Film Theatre *\n8:00 Ted Mack *\n9:00 Sunday Spectacular\n(Warner Bros. Features)\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\nWE PAY MORE FOR SCRAP\niron and metals. Harris Junk\nCo. Ltd., 904 E. Cordova St.,\nVancouver, B.C. Phone TA\n9941.\nCOPY OF \"TALES OF THE\nKootenays\" by Fred J. Smyth\n.wanted. Quote price. Apply Box\n4348, Nelson News.\nWANTED TO BUY: CHILD'S\nplay, pen in good condition. Ap-\nply Box 4136 Nelson News.\nWANTED FRAME FOR '51 3-TON\nDodge truck. Apply Jim Sutcliffe\nRiondel.\nWANTED - CLEAN COTTON\nrags without buttons, 10c lib.\ndelivered to The Daily News.\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\n(Continued)\nMotors Ltd.\n323 Vernon St. Nelson, B. C.\nPhones 35 and 36\nCOTTONWOOD WRECKING SER-\nvice\u2014Used parts, batteries, tires\nfor '47 Olds, '47 Chev., '49 Meteor,\nMercury, '37 Ford, '46 Plymouth,\n'47-'49-\"50-'51 Austin, Hillman,\nPrefect, Vanguard, Morris Minor\ncars. For sale '48 Chev. Sedan\nDelivery. Phone 1363 L-2 or write\nBox 382, 24 Ymir Rd., Nelson,\nFINANCING A CAE? BEFORE\nyou buy your new or late model\ncar see us about our low cost\nfinancing service with complete\ninsurance coverage. New cars 3D\nmonths. Contact Wm. Kalyniuk\nAgencies at 1777 and save\nmoney.\nBARGAINS-1952 AUSTIN $450.00\n1948 Monarch $75.00; 1946 Mercury $75.00;. 1937 Plymouth\n$75.00; 1930 Model A $100.00. All\nin good running order. Apply H,\nJ. Sanders, Golf Course Gate,\nNelson. Phone 241-Y-l.\nMUST SELL '53 NASH STATES-\nmen. Clean. Good tires. Cheap\nfor cash. Ph. Salmo 66 Ext. 52\ndaytime,\n1957 Austin A-95\n1957 Austin A-55\n1957 Buick 4-dr. Sedan\n1957 Chev. 2-dr. hardtop\n1956 Buick 2-dr. hardtop\n1955 Chev. 4-door\n1955 Buick 4-door\n1954 Pontiac 4-door\n1953 Pontiac 4-door\n1953 Meteor 4-door\n1952 Ford 4-door\n1952 Meteor 4-door\n1952 Chev. 4-door\n1951  Chev. 4-door\n1951 Austin A-40\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\n1953 Chev. Pickup\n1952 Chev. Pickup\n1950 Mercury Pickup\n1950 Austin Station\nWagon\nWE PAY CASH FOR\nLATE MODEL USED CARS\nAUSTIN Sales and Servie*\n803 Baker St.     Nelson, B.C.\nPhone 2000\nFOR SALE BY OWNER 1954 HILL-\nman sedan. Excellent buy. $200\ndown. Phone 2137.\nFOR SALE 1949 PONTIAC, GOOD\ncondition. Phone 1037-Y after 5.\n(Continued In Next Column)\nDAILY-CROSSWORD!\nACROSS\nJ, Tissue\n(anat)\nt. A spice\n9. Termagant\n10. Together\n12. Stand up\n13. Old coin\n<It)\n1-4. Blast or\nwind\n19. Wandered\nabout\nabstractly\n16. Like\n17. Storage\nar<a\n18. Dancers'\ncymbals\n19. Garden too.\n22. Weird\n(var.)\n23. Column*\n25. Father\nJT.Am.\nInventor\n80. Fuss\n31. For\n32. Fiji Islands\n(abbr.)\n38. Armed\nbands\n35. Remove hat\n37. Girl's name\n38. To defeat\n39. A measure\n40. Narrow\nroadwai\n41. Stitches\n42. Let it stand\n(print.)\nDOWN\n1. Song bird\nI. Goddess of\ndiscord\n3. For fear H. By way J\nthat of\n4. Astonish, 23. Assam\nment (ilk\n3. Stone worn-\nworker 84. Fuss\n\u00ab. Small dog 25. Of the\n(trop. Am.)       Pope\n7. A peeress 26. Bean*\n8. Hold In love       tlf ul\n9. Legendary        young\ntales ma_        Hertwdit- Aim.\nll. Pious 28. Compensate 35. Stupid\n15. Moths 29. Very good fellow\n17. Chief deity        (slang)        38. Voided\n(Babyl.) 31. Fruits escutcheoa\n24. Facing 34. Boll slowly   38. Existed\n\u201e___   _______\n__     ___   ___\n______   _U_I_\n_______\n___D   ______\n__n ___    _n\n______ __:._\n______ Eirasaup.\n____   HEIIlf.\n\u201e___   ____\n%\n1\n2.\nTT\n+\nl\n5\n\u00ab\nT\nr-\n%\n1\nl\n10\nII\n12.\nm\nII\n14\n%\nIS\nlb\n^\/A\n%\n17\nm\n13\n19\n20\n21\n^\n21\nVA\n%\n-5\n24\n0\n^<\nas\n-.\n^\nVf\n28\nA\ni\u00b0\nl\n31\nI\nl\n3t\n31\n_v\n^\n35\nji\nii\n1\n38\n3.\nfa\n40\ni\n41\n%\n%\n*-i\nIt.\n(Programs subject to change by stations without notice.)\nDAILY CRYPIOQVOXE \u2014 Here's how to '\nAXYDLBAAXR\nIs LONGFELLOW '.'\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this sample a Is taut\nlor the three L _, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apoa_\ntrophes, the length and formation of the words are iB hinta\nEach day the code letters are different\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nY    CWWL    JVVA    EI    IVBlCAt    Iff\nPA    SNWKAJ    ENVJ    CTAVE    THSMAI\n-MTWXA.PK.     \u2022\nYesterday's Cryptoquote! WITH SKILL SHE VIBRATE*\nHER ETERNAL TONGUE . . . MOST DIVINELY IN TH_ ,\nWRONG\u2014EDWARD YOUNG.\nDl-tribule- by Kins Foot.... Syndi.cst.\n\u25a0i\n (5\u00a3\nSMALL INVESTMENT\nLARGE RETURNS\nThat's the Want Ad Story '-   PHONE   \u00a3844\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\n(Continued)\nLTD.\nYour Volkswagen-Ramble\"\n1  Dealer\nBe sure you have checked our\ntop quality used car bargains\nbefore you buy.\n1955 Chevrolet Deluxe\nSedan\nOne Owner.\n1953 Pontiac Deluxe\nSedan\nChieftain 0\n1952 Chevrolet 5-pass.\nNew Motor. Real Buy.   \/\nPerfect Throughout,\n1952 Austin A-70'\nA Roomy family Car tn\n. Flrst-Class Condition.\n1952 Vanguard Sedan\nFOR ONLY S275.00\n1950 Rover Sedan  .\nBeautiful Condition.\n1949 Studebaker Champion.\nA Steal at 1305.00.\n1949 Austin A-40\nYours for $225.00\nIf you are looking for a good,\nreliable pickup, cheap, we\nhave several to choose from.\nFOR SALE - 1952 2-TON CHEV.\ntruck, stake body, first class condition, low mileage, one owner.\nEnquire BOX 4110, Nelson Daily\nT.49 MERCURY SEDAN, - AW\nshape, customized. Will sell or\ntake '40 to '49 pickup truck, on\ntrade. Can be financed. Ph.\n1049-R after 5 p.m.\t\nMACHINERY\nSPEAR-JACKSON\nSupplies'\nAll popular makes inserted\ntooth saws made to your\nspecifications.\nSAWTEETH.\nSAW SHANKS   -\nBELTING\nBEARINGS\nBELT DRESSING\n\u2022PULLEYS \u2022\nBELT LACING\nSHAFT  COLLARS\nCHOKER HOOKS\nCABLE BLOCKS\n\"WIRE ROPE\nConsult Us For\nAll Your Mill Supplies\nson\nCompany Ltd.\nMining, Milling and Sawmill.\n-Machinery\nP.O. Box 230'\nPhone .18 or 1139\nEVENINGS: 792-Y\nChain Saws\nFROM $40 and UP\nat\nH_.wi.lS\nKJU DIAL\nAvHAT7.ll J\nnr^\nA PHONE\nI C__i-__^vS\nJ.\nNUMBER\nPI\nFOR ME V\n^ff'\nV \\ x_\u00a3\ni c\nSl\/^\/ ' \\\nwJC\n\\\\m\/)\\\n\\w%\nv^mmk\nRENTAIS\nSMALL OFFICE AND WARE-\nhouse with shelving conveniently located in T r u c k Terminus\nBldg. on ground floor Phone 77\njfor particulars.    .\nNELSCN DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JUNE 1, 1957 \u2014 11\nPROPERTY WANTED\nFOR RENT - SMALL UNFURN-\nIshed 1-bedroom house in Fair-\nview. Apply Personnel Manager,\nKootenay Forest Products, Nel-\n. son.\nTWO FURNISHED HOUSEKEEP-\ni ing rooms to suit respectable\nbusiness man, batchelor, or two\nquiet business girls. Apply Box\n4219, Nelsori Dally News\"\nROOM FOR RENT AVAILABLE\nJune 1st. Fridge and kitchen facilities, 576 Baker St., Apt. B.\nPh. 321-R.\nFURNISHED. 2 BEDROOM\nhouse 35 minutes from Nelson.\n$35.00 per month. Markoff's\nStore, Slocan Park.\nFOR JUNE, CABIN ON BEACH\naccomodates 4, 4 miles North\nShore. Ph. 782-R-L.\nMACHINERY\n.DO\nIT\nNOW!\nHurry in to Finning Tractor\nfor these A-l values In used\nequipment! 1'hey're ready to go\nand backed by Finning', exclusive warranty policy and\noutstanding service organization. Do It nowl\nOAT D3_ power unit, 210 HP\nmax., Y-ciutcn, steel base, safety\nshut-ul-E. _.._eil_nt condition,\nonly lluo hrs.!. Bonded _uy, _U-\nday warranty, to.bi *)_._-_____\nDawson Ck. PT-3530.  \u00abP\u00b0dV-\nCAT D315 puwer unit, only 1 yr.\nold! 90 HP, rad., hood ana dash,\nhood door, automatic stop-start.\nc_0od condition. Buy and '_ry, 3-\nday trial, f.o.b. Van- CQIRft\ncouver. C.B79. \u2022,........'.. *\u00abWDU\nCUMMINS HRCP 400 power unit,\noperated only 40 hrs.! Y-clutch,\nradiator, base, 110HP at 1600 rpm.\nPrice slashed $845! Buy and Try,\n3-day trial, f.o.b. Van- <J,\/Jn_.(.\ncouver. FT-2930  \u00abP-VVV\nGARDNER LW6A power Unit,\nCOUP, Y-clutoh, steel bane, rad.\nIn  good  condition.  As  is,  f.o.b.\n^\u00b0uver- $2700\nCHRYSLER T-120 powe'r unit,\nY-clutch, rad, steel base. 70HP.\nIn good shape, snap price on this\n>ne. As is, f.o.b. Van- $_AA\niouver...C-2344. '      *P4UU\nFINNING TRACTOR\n& EOUIPMENT\n-   CO., LTD.\nPhone 137 - Nelson\nPhone JU-62281 - Cranbrook\nAttention\nLOGGING\nOPERATORS\nIf you are looking for a 4-\nwheel drive lift truck, come\nin and see us obout the\nnew 4-wheel drive Patrick\n5-ton and 8-ton models.\u2014'\u25a0\nPrices start at $6950.\n86\" Wheelbase, Power Steering,\n.. Air Brakes.\nReversing Transmission  (Johnson\nBar),  Oscillating Rear Axle,\nDual Front Wheels.  .\nLTD \u00ab   \u2022\nMACHINE SHOP\n324 Vernon St Nelson. B.C.\nPHONE 593\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\n\u25a0 Continued)\nFAIRVIEW, NEW LOCATION\nNewly-built, 2-level, 3-B.R.\nhome. Carport for 2 cars;\ndouble plumbing: twin sinks;\ncabinet built-in kitchen; picture window In L.R.; mahogany coppertone doors, etc. \u2014\nFamily room and recreation\nroom, patio and sun-deck. 2\nl^te, landscaped. J j3(5qq\nLiberal Terms.\nHome and garden, located 3\nblocks from city centre. Well\nbuilt five bedrooms, living,\nroom with fireplace. Also fireplace in den. Well arranged\nkitchen and dining room. Full\nbasement; new oil furnace. \u2014\nLiberal Terms, til SAft\nFull price  ;. \u00abMJ\u00bbaW\nNorth sho_u_\n1-Mile. o ac.es wlui birch\ngrove. 2u_ it. ueaca _iuli.a_,_.\n_ilc_U_.es .-bed.ouin Hume and\n^e\"' $iu,uou\nDiscount for Cash.\nNORTH SHORE (4-MILE)\nLow  uown payment, iiea.ly\ntimshea 3-becuoom home. \u2014\nAmple cupuoards anu dining\narea, Fuit Dasemeni; new oil\nf\u2122ce;$12,500\nIncludes double garage and\ncottage now rented.\nFAIRVIEW\n'Excellent Fairview location.\u2014\n1_-storey stucco 3-B.R. home\noh 2 landscaped lots. Dull\nbasement, automatic oil furnace (approximately $68 per\nyear for oil). $9500\nTerms. Full price .. \u00abK\"*\"     ;\nFAIRVIEW\nLiveable, needs finishing. 2-\nB.R. home in choice Fairview\nlocation. Cement basement,\nDuroid roof. Natural gas connection. 50' x 120'    4___QOIi\nlot. FuU price    *<>\u00bb\"\u00bb\ni     Terms.\nNEWLY BUILT \u2022 -\nExcellent view. 2-B.R. home.\nConvenient kitchen with dining area. . Picture window.\nH.W. floors. Mahogany doors\nthroughout.' Cement patio. \u2014\nI*\u2122-.        $12,500\nFull price T\"~  \u25a0\nFAMILY- HOME\n4-B.R.s, attractive living room\nand dining room. Furnace. 2 _\nlots in fruit trees and berries.\nAlso greenhouse. S6000\nFull price   Jr \u2022\nOnly $2000 Down.\nWALKING DISTANCE\n3-B.R. home all on one floor.\nRebuilt kitchen. Attractively\ndecorated. 2 lots, landscaped.\nDrlve-in garage. $$250\nFull price\n-., With $2500 Down.\nOUTSTANDING VALUE\nOnly $500 down' on newly-\nbuilt 5-room stucco home. \u2014\nFourteen miles to city centre.\n6 lots and garage. S6500\n\u2022 Full price v\nTerms.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\n(Continued)\n$7500\n1\u2014If you are looking for a cute\nlittle 4-roomed house plus\nbathroom, you should see this\nOne. Good-Sized L.R., K., 2\nB.H.s   and   bathroom.   Base-\n\"ew: ?:!\u00b0?i_!\u00b0! Mooo\n2\u2014Close to Jr. H.S. An older type\nhome but in splendid condition. L.R. and gas fireplace,\nD.R., wonderful K., utility\nroom, plus toilet\u2014all on the\nground floor. Upstairs; 3 large\nB.R.s and bathroom. Basement\nand good furnace. Property\n50' x 100'. Reasonably close in.\nFull price\nis only   %.\nWith Only $3000 Cash\nRequired.\n3\u2014A very nice 4-roomed house\nplus modern bathroom, ,on 2\nacres on N.S. Lots of garden\nspace and on beach. House' is\nwinterized. Some outbuildings.\nFull price.       ..     $g75Q\n4\u2014A Bplendid home, quite dose\nin. Has L.R. plus fireplace,\nD.R., all H.W. flooring, and\nmodernistic K: also den, all on\nground floor. 3 large B.R.s and\nbathroom, plus a first-class\nsleeping porch. Garage on\nproperty. Full basement and\ncoal furnace. Located on cor-\nnerjlots. $ j 4,500\nReduction   for   substantial\ndown payment.\n5^-Two 25' x 120' lots, uphill. \u2014\nSdand .$>ooo\n6\u2014A choice of 4 fine bldg. sites\nin Fairview. Surrounded by\nsplendid homes. Each location\n90' x 120', and $2000\npriced at   \u2122- vv~\n7\u2014A 2-B.R. bungalow in Fair-\nview. L.R., D.R., K. and utility\nroom; also bathroom and basement with coal furnace. 2 level\ncorner lots. Owner must sell.\nAsking price\nis\nCash could make a big\nreduction,\n$7800\nHerb Peacock\nReal Estate and Insurance Agency\n532 WARD ST. PHONE 08\nPACKAGE\nINSURANCE\nOur Business Rates are'\nTHE LOWEST    -\nfor Safe, Dependable\nINSURANCE.\nExclusive\u2014'\nNORTH SHORE\n1\u2014West ol bridge. Ultra-modern\n5-room bungalow, view location. All luxuries: floor oil furnace, fireplace, dream kitchen,\ndinette, colored plumbing,\ndouble sink, wired for range.\nAbout 2 acres with 176' frontage, on quiet secondary high-\nway $11 500\nCash .price   *\u2022\" J-9VY.\nOr $11,800 on Terms.\n2\u2014Ranch style 8-7 rooms with\ndouble plumbing, on lake\nfrontage West of bridge ap-\n, proach. Attractive rooms,' modern kitchen, oil furnace. Low\ntaxes and easy to heat. Landscaped, lawns and garden.\u2014\nMost  convenient  lake  front-\nZc?.*l $14,500\nCOMPARE OUR VALUES\nBEFORE YOU BUY.\nT. D. Rosling\n& SON LTD.\nM. \"Trader\" Parker, Salesman\n508 WARD ST. - PHONE 717\nWELDING & EQUIPMENT\nCO., LTD.\nPHONE 1402\n614 Railway St.      Nelson, B.C.\nFOR SALE PLANER, BULLDO\nzer, 8x6 trucks. 713 Victoria St.\nflOR SALE - MODEftN ,-BDRM.\nhome. Spotless condition. Auto.\n611 heat in high full cement basement. Neatly landscaped\ngrounds. This tastefully decorated home will welcome you at\nonce..Apply 1816 Stanley Street.\nCOTTAGE OR HOUSE FOR SALE\nboth modern. V. Hoskin (Balfour) R.R. 1, Nelson.\n(Continued to Next Column'\nOfcCHAftD LOTS L6VELY VIEW.\nGordon Rd. and 8th St. Ph.\n1272-L.\nC. 'D.\n'Age-icy   \\\nREAL ESTATE AGENTS\nINSURE UNDER A\nCO_. jcsifl- POLICY AND\nSAVE 20% of Your. P\u2014nhim\nPhone 99 \u2014 Eves.-1821 -L\nList Your House\nFunds on Hand to Get the\n'        Deals Closed\nMANY BUYERS\nWAITING\nC. W. APPLEYARD\n& Co. Ltd.\nPhone 269\nPARTLY FURNISHED- SUMMER\ncottage at six mile point on the\nNorth Shore, water and electric\nlight, one hundred foot lake frontage. Apply Art Gill, 340 Schofield\nRoad, Trail, B.C.    .\nBUILDING LOTS IN CITY,\nlevel property, every convenience, schools, bus and utilities,\nvariety of fruit, 45 x 120 ft. Located 610 Gore Street. $800,\nterms. Phone 429-R,\nBUILDING LOT ON NORTH\nShore overlooking lake and city\nPhone 692-R-l.\nAgencies- Ltd.\n554 Ward St.\nPhone 135\nFARM FOR SALE, 13 ACRES, 3-\nbedroom modern house, orchard,\nirrigation. 5 miles south of Nelson. Lewis Robinson, Phone 93.\nSalmo after 5 p.m.\nPROPERTY. HOUSES,\nFARMS. ETC., FOR SALE\n(Continued)\nFOUR ROOM HOUSE AT WILLOW\nPoint. Phone 782-X-l.\nAPT. HOUSE FOR SALE 5 SELF-\ncontained apts. half . blk. off\nBaker. All in good condition.\nGrossing 15%. Full price $22,000.\nHalf cash will handle. 414 Fall\nSt. Phone 1184-Y.\nTWO-ROOM SUITE, FURNISHED.\nAdults. 823 Vernon St.\nFOR SALE ON NORTH SHORE\noverlooking bridge and park. 2\nbedroom modern home and\nlovely Iivingroom with open fire-\nplace. Phone 1071-R.\nFOR SALE, 2-BEDROOM HOUSE,\ndining, living room, kitchen,\n3-f iece bathroom, furnace, 3 lots.\nApply 2013 Stanley St. Ph. 1652-R.\nFOR SALE 6 SUITE APARTMENT\nHouse..Revenue per month. One\nblock from Baker St. Contact\nMike Ero, 614 Victoria St.\nFOR QUICK SALE, BLOCK OF\nlots (22 lots), nice'location. Apply Box 331, Salmo, B.C.\nTRA1J.ERS\nMUST BE SOLD\nWithin 30 days.\n30' Anderson Trailer\nPlumbing, Electric Brakes,\nFully Furnished.\nBest Offer Cash or Terms\nAPPLY\nCRESCENT BEACH\nA  AUTO COURT\nEvenings \u2014 Or Phone 1786\nBUILT FOR CANADIAN ROADS.\nInsulated for Canadian Climate.\nTerry & Aljo> Travel Trailers.\nAlso Flamingo Mobile Homes,\ndouble insulated. Trailers 15 to 50\nft. Prices fromV$l250.00. Barrett-\nTrailer Sales, 745 Kipling St.,\nTrail, B.C.\n33 FT. 8 MONTHS OLD TRAILER,\nyellow and grey.' Beautiful interior. Latest hitch, 4-wheel\nbrakes. Automatic oil heater.\nSell very reasonable. Sunnyside\nTrailer Court, North Shore. '\nWILL TRADE 12 BASE HOHNER\npiano accordian. Like new for\nrecord player. Ph. 1557-L.\nTRAILOMOBILE ' LOGGING\ntrailer. Top shape. Long or short\nlogs. $2800.00. Ph. 1359_t.\nBUSINESS' AND\n'ROFtSSIONAL DIRECTORY\nASSAYER8  AND  MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\n\u2022E  W  WIDDOWSON St CO.\nAssayers, 30! Josephine St., Nelson\nH   S   ELMES,  ROSSLAND.  B.C\nAssayei Chemist Mine Rep\nENGINEERS   AND   SURVEYORS\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, M EIC\nBC Land Surveyor. P Eng (Civil)\n218 Gor\u00ab St-   Nelson,   Phone 1238\nG. W.  B'AERG,  B.C.\nLand Surveyor\n373 Baker St, Nelson. Phone 1118\nFOR \u00a7ALE - 2-ROOM HOUSE,\ngarage, _ acre land. Upper\nBench, Kinnaird. Apply 34 Columbia Ave., Castlegar.\nM. E. McCORQUODALE, B.C.L.S.\nLand and Engineering Surveys.\n1234 Bay Ave., Trail, Ph. 2752. Office Mgr., Ray Johnson, B.A.Sc.\n1015-8th St., Nelson, Ph. 144-R.\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nMachine Shop Acetylene and\nelectric welding, motor rewinding .Phone 593      324 Vernon St\nI\nEACON'S\nETTER\nUYS\n'TFncoTn;;!\nWeteor ~\nGUARANTEED \"SAFE-BUY\"\nUSED CARS\nem\nNew Pick^Up Trucks.\nDeluxe Cabs, Heaters, Turn Signals\nFull Warranty and Factory Guarantee\nMany Late Models To Choose From\nLots of Good Deals\nw\n_ ll * \u2014o\nNelson, B  C.\n701 BAKER ST.\nHOUSEKEEPING OR SLEEPING\nrooms, furnished, weekly or\nmonthly rates. 171 Baker St.\nUNFURN. 3-RM. APT. FOR RENT\n423 Silica St. Phone 1011-L.\nHOUSEKEEPING   ROOM   FOR\nrent 606 Front Street.\nHOTELS and MOTELS\nTHE ALMER HOTEL, OPP. CPR\nDepot, Vancouver, B.C. 100%\nfireproof, 24-hour elevator service. Clean, quiet & comfortable.\nReasonable rates. City centre.\nWILL YOU STAY WITHvUS\nwhen in Spokane, Washington?\nCity 'center, parking 1 block.\nComfortable rooms w\/wo bath\nLow, low rates. Colonial Hotel.\nWANTED   TO   RENT\nWANTED TO RENT BY OIL CO.\nsales representative, 3-bedroom\nhouse, automatic heat, wired\nfor electric range. Apply P.O.\nBox 440, Nelson, B.C.\nURGENTLY NEEDED - FURN.\napartment or house by couple\nwith 1 child. Ph. Pauline at\n217-R.\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nFOR SALE - NELSON LADIES'\nWear. Snap for cash. Apply Bol\n4005 Nelson Daily News.\nPERSONAL\nALCHOLICS ANONYMOUS\nFridays, Box 493. Phone 366-R or\n483-R.\nPrice per singlo copy 6o Monday\nto Friday, 10c on Saturday\nBy carrier per wees;\nin advance - ,35c\nSubscription Rates.\nBy Mail in Canada outside Nelson:\nOne month       .'..   $ 1.25\nThree months      $ 3,50\nSix months   __.    $ 6.60\nOne year   .         $12.00\nBy mail to United Kingdom or\nthe United States\nOne month'    3 1.75\nThree months .  $5.00\nSix months _    $ 9.50\nOne year      $18.00\nWhere extra postage Is required\nabove rates plus postage\n. For Delivery by carrier in Cran.\norook phone Mrs. Wm. Stevelyj\nIn Kimberley Mr. G A Bate;\nIn Trail Mrs. Syd Spooner.\nand' ,     .\nIn Rossland Mrs. Ross Saundry:\nINTERESTED IN A REVENUE\napt. property. Give terms and\nfull particulars first letter to\nBox 4365 Daily News.\nBOATS AND ENGINES\nSEE YOUR FAVORITE 1957\nJohnson outboard on d I s p I a y.\nAH h.p. rating and some electric.\nThey're scarce, order early.\nCOLEMAN ELECTRIC, Phone\n2055, Nelson, B.C. Big trades\nEasy terms.\n(Continued In Next Column)\nBOATS AND ENGINES\n\u25a0 Continued'\n14-FT. WALTON BOAT, 5 HORSE\ntwin outboard. A-l shape. Accessories. $225.00. Terms. Can be\nseen at City wharf. Phone 1459\nsee W. McDonald.   \u25a0'\u2022\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG   (CP)  -  Winnipeg\ngrain cash prices:\nOats, No. 1 feed, 65 _.\nBarley, No. 1 feed, 84%.\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILY\nFamily Home, nine years old. 2 4R-s down and 2 B.R.s upstairs,\nliving room, dining room, modern kitchen, bathroom, main floor;\nFull basement,. economical automatic oil heat, located on lour\ncorner lots, assorted new fruit trees bearing, garden, near city\nbus stop. Separate garage. 4 I 4 ______\nPrice reduced Irom $14,500 to ...:; _',., v I 1.UUU\nWith $5500 down payment, balance iong terms.\nPhone for an appointment right now and see for youreelf.\nKOOTENAY LAKE FRONTAGE\n9.93 acres with 235.62 feet lake frontage. Good access road, near\nHarrop ferry. Level frontage, suitable for two or three summer\nhomes; good beach. Buy now and enjoy our beautiful    C 17CA\nlake this summer. Cash price *P * ' ou\nFOUR ROOMS\nLocated at 605 Richards, near bus stop. Full ba.ement, wired for\nelectric range, floor ,11 furnace, Insulated. Low f_0\u00a3.f_\ntaxes. Full price    \u00abPO_-OU'\nWith only $1000 cash down, balance as rent.\nSmall 2-bedroom home at 1416 Vancouver St. on 4.01 Al.\ntwo lots. Cash price  ' ip_IUU\nNORTH SHORE LOT\n70 by 210 feet .with water and electricity. Level, good    Cl Offn\naccess, near new church. Low cash price .: \u00abpi*\u00abIU\nN.H.A. APPROVED LOTS\n16 locations to choose from priced at $1600 to $1100 each. \u2014\nEasy  terms.\nROSEMONT\nNew, three bedrooms, full basement. Exceptionally well built,\neasy to heat. On two lota. CO?....\nFull price \u00abP3-UU\nWith only $2500 down payment\nHOME WITH A VIEW\nNew, 2 bedrooms; large kitchen with dining area, beautiful living\nroom, with picture window, overlooking the lake.   \u00ab-tn enft\nSeparate garage.'Good _!_ed lot Cash price \u25a0........:..:\u201e.. f \u2022 W,-JMU\nHOME AND BUSINESS '\nStore and Cafe on North Shore. Building is two\/ storey, with\nliving quarters above. S B.R.s, L.R., bathroom and good-sized\nkitchen. Business, building and equipment for only $7500 down.\nVendor says will accept a home for part of the down payment.\nWill listen .te- any p-opdsltlon you hive;\n'9 Till*       - TT\"       ll -._ ;'.\u2022'.'\n.gencies\nLow-Cost Auto Financing, Real Estate and Insurance\n534-JOSEPHINE ST. NELSON, B.C, PHONE 1777\nPEEBLES  [ PEEBLES  I  PEEBLES\n\u25a0 Stop and S\nCompare Our Prices\n1\nChevrolet.2-Door Sedan\nLow Mileage. , AC Unit, New Seat\n.    Covers,   New   Tires.\nLike New Inside and Out.\n,'!\u2022'    Only\nI H74i\nw\ni\n__&\nVanguard Sedan\nCustom Radio, Custom. Heater,\nSeat Covers, New Ti-res,\nRebuilt Motor. Very Clean.\nMercury 4-Dbor Deluxe Sedan\nNew Paint, Power Steering, Power\nBrakes; Custom Radio, Custom AC\nUnit, New Rubber. Very Clean.\nM\nChevrolet 2-Door Sedan\nNew  Paint,   Custom   Heater,\nOverhauled  Motor,  Good  Rubber.\nNice and Clean.     ,  .\nCASH \u2014\nTE.R.V.S\nMany More to Choose From\n\u2014       TRADES\n[HHYSE-1 ~ PLYMOUTH - FARjD^ BliHl\niB-KH\n 12 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, JUNE 1,1957\nPictures Are Forever\nAnd.Will Renew. Happy Memories\n'\"    as Nothing Else Can. \u2022'\u25a0'.\n* Cameras\n* Films of Ail Kinds\n* Developing Supplies\n* Film Developing\n\u00ab\nat...\nw\nI *\\\"'\"\"vvw^i\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nLONGEST RIVER\nThe Nile, flowing 4145 miles\nfrom Ethiopia to the Mediterranean, is the world's longest river.\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED and REPAIRED\nRE-CORING\nJim's Radiator Shop\nIIS Front St. Phone 63\nHAIGH\nTRli-ART\nBeauty  Salon\n570 Baker St.\nPhone 327\nfor  \u00ab\nComplete\nAutomotive\nService\nINCLUDING:\n\u2022k Body, Fender and\nPainting\n\u25a0jr Automatic Transmission (a specialty)\nif Front End Alignment\nir Tire Balancing\nir Frame Straightening\nif Wheel Straightening\nn*\nSEE\nMICKEY McEWEN\nBEACON\nMotors Ltd.\n701  Baker St.\nPHONES  578-579\nCAMPBELL,   SHANKLAND\n&  CO.\nChartered Accountants\nAuditors\nS76 Baker St. Phone 235\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL  TRAINING\nSuite 206 Phone 141\nMedical Arts Buildinc\nHave The Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVEC\n\u25a0        LIMITED        **\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nDtit-TE\n9-1 Tonight\nROCOTONES\nOn the Bandstand\nSaturday Night Is Dance Night\nAll Over Canada.\nJoin the Gala Weekend Crowd\nat the PLAYMOR ... The\nKootenay'. Favorite Dance\nRendezvous.\nDance Saturday\nJUNE 1st\nYmir Community Hall\nDancing 9 p.m.-l a.m.\nMUSIC BY, , - , , '\nDEAN CLARK AND BAND\nFrom Metaline, Washington ,\nAdmission: 75c per Person\nThe Corporation of the\nCity of Nelson\nApplications will, be received by the Corporation of\nthe City of Nelson for the position of    '.\nBUS DRIVER\ncommencing June 3, 1957.\nStarting salary $273 per month, per union agreement. Medical and pension plans in effect.\nApplications in writing may be forwarded to the\nundersigned by noon Monday, June 3rd, 1957.\nE.E. OLSON, BA, Sc,\n-Works Superintendent,\nCity Hall, Nelson, B. C.\nOdds...\nEnds\nand\nbyM.D.B.\nI.have four five.cent stamps, but\nfor goodness sake don't tell anyone, for I am trying to keep it a\ndark secret. Periodically I go to\nthe postoffice when I am feeling\nflush and buy five fives, .or if it\nis just after payday I might even\ngo so far as to get ten which T\ntuck carefully away in my wallet.\nNow, when I write a letter, I say,\nI shall have a stamj. and be able\nto mail it promptly instead of a\nweek or so later, when I come\nacross it still unmailed. \u2022\n*:-*\u25a0\u2022\nIn'theory this is an ideal way o\u00a3\nlooking after one's correspondence,\nbut for some reason or another it\nnever works out that way for me.\nAs I believe I have told you, I\nseem to run a little private dispensary \u2014 entirely by accident \u2014\nbut nevertheless that's what it\namounts to. Anyone in need bf\naspirin, blank cheques, envelopes?!\nbottleopener, bandaid, elastic\nbands, nail file (to borrow for a\nraggy nail) \u2014 and stamps comes\nto my desk in the full knowledge\nthey have but to ask and they will\nreceive (most of the time.)\n#  *  *\nTherein li_s_the root of my stamp\ndifficulties. By the time I get\naround to writing a letter I have\nsold all my stamps and since I\nseem to write letters at hours when\nstamps are difficult to come by, I\nend up a week later with the letter\nstill unposted. Somehow, having\nwritten it I feel no further obligation and thus forget to go and\npurchase that all important dash\nof color for the envelope.\nWell, as I said, I am now the\nproud possessor of four fives, for\nhow long remains to be seen. I\nmight add I am confronted with\nthe same difficulty with bandaids.\nThe other day I had raised a\ncouple of blisters, but did I have a\nbandaid left to apply? No sir, I had\nto go and borrow some.\n*' * *\nSashing along Carbonate Street\nThursday was aware of masses of\ncolor in the garden at 808 Carbonate \u2014 what a glorious display\nof rhododendrons was there, to say\nnothing of a variety of other\nblooms. Those shrubs certainly\nmake a wonderful show, these particular ones were inclined to a\nsalmon color. The more I see of\nthem the more I think I shall have\nto invest in one.\nOTTAWA (CP) - The\" Income\ntax appeal board, with some strong1\ncriticism of the revenue department, has allowed the appeal of a\ntaxpayer against the reopening of\nhis assessment more than six years\nafter his taxes had been settled.\nIn a judgment signed by board\nmember W. S. Fisher it was ruled\nthat the department' had no right\nto reassess Earle R. Hall of Vancouver for his 1947 and 1948 income taxes without alleging there\nhad been misrepresentation or\nfraud.\nMr. Fisher noted that under the\nincome tax law in force at, the\ntime the department could only\nreopen a tax case within six years\nof the original assessment except\nin .cases where misrepresentation\n\u2022or fraud was alleged. The act has\nMONTREAL (CP) - An eye\nhank set up in Montreal last\nyear now has 315 future \"depositors.\" That many persons have\npromised to donate their eyes to\nthe bank on death so they may\nAppeal Board Allows Taxpayer\nTo Appeal Assessment Reopening\nSecrecy Veils\nMissile Flight\nCOCOA, Fla. (AP)-The United\nStates defence department is emphasizing secrecy as the announced time for the firing of its\ninter-continental ballistics missile,\nthe Atlas, draws near.       .' \u25a0 .\nRepresentative James T, Patterson (Rep. Conn.), a member of\nthe House armed services committee, said Tuesday the Adas\nwould be fired Friday from the air\nforce missile test centre on Florida's Cape Canaveral.\n\"I hope that Russian observers\nwill have an opportunity to see\nthe great rocket in full flight,\"\nhe added.\n\u25a0 But the defence department\ndoesn't want the Russians, or anybody else, to know when or if the\nmissile is fired. -\nNOTHING TO SEE\nWhen the Atlas blasts off, a lot\nof people in this heavily populated\nvicinity will hear it, but by the\ntime they turn their heads toward\nthe sound, there's nothing to see\nbut a wisp of vapor across the\nsky, ,\nIt could have been the Atlas,\nthe Jupiter, the Snark-or one of\nseveral other missiles with which\nthe various branches of the armed\nservices are experimenting\/-\nAfter Patterson's announcement, a public information officer\nat the missile centre, said there\nwill be no official statements either before or after a firing.\nPatterson said the Atlas, if fired\nsuccessfully, will, reach an altitude of 700 miles and travel about\n2.200 miles in controlled flight,\nsince been changed to. reduce the\ni eopening period to four years;\nMr. Fisher told the government\ncounsel he was \"put of court\" unless his defence against MR. Hall's\nleal involved misrepresentation or fraud. The government's\ncounsel said it did\\ not but sug-\ng\u00bbsted the department could add\nthese allegations to Its defence\nbut Mr. Fisher ruled \"it is a,bit\ntoo late to do it now.\"\nWILL  OT  BE  PARTT -\nThe board member 'said if he\nproceeded and tried to determine\nhimself whether there had been\nmisrepresentation or fraud .\"then\nthis board would have been put\nin the position of making an original determination which in fact\nhas to be. made by the minister\n(of national revenue) before be is\nentitled to iqake a reassessment\nin any case where more than six\nyears have elapsed from the .date\nof an original assessment made'\nby him for the taxation peridd,\n\"And as a member of this\nboard, I, at any rate, will; hot be\na party to, putting the board in\nthat position, since, in my opinion, it is a position to which\nneither this board nor any other\ncourt should subscribe.\"\nMr. Fisher allowed the ?\"peal\nand ordered the department reassessments of Mr. Hall's 1947 and\n1948 taxes vacated. The amount\ninvolved in the reassessments\nwere not disclosed.\nbe  used  for  corneal  transplant\noperations   which   often   restore\nNews of tha Day\nRATES: 30c line. 10c line slack.acs type: larger type rate, on\nrogues- M'rlmum two lln__. 10% ill-count for prompt payment\nBabies, Weddings, Portraits.\nVOGUE STUDIO \u2014 PHONE 1552\nVOTE WRIGHT\nJUNE 10\nLamp Shade Paper\nHOBBY SHOP   -   PHONE 1703\nFor a Varied menu try\nTILLICUM INN \u2014 BALFOUR\nNew laid eggs, delivered weekly.\nAmsden Poultry Farm, Ph. 559-X-3\nFor better lawns use\nBuckerflelds, special fertilizer\nMAC'S FLOWER SHOP\nDry slab wood for sale. $11.50\nfor 4 ft; cord; $15.50 for 12-inch\ncord. Ph. 330-L.\nGordon Sutherland\nPainting, Paperhanging, R.R. 1\nPhone 1990, Nelson\nSave on Bamboo drapes\nNatural finish - ready to hang\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nHEAR DR. C. H. WRIGHT AND\nJOHN DIEFENBAKER ON CKLN\nTUESDAY, JUNE 4 AT 7:30 P.M.\nSprayers and Dust Guns\nLatest Models at\nCOVENTRY'S  FLOWER  SHOP\nPHONE 96.\nFur Storage, Cleaning and Glazing.\nExpert fur repairs. Remodelling\nat\nCUSTOM FURS - 580 BAKER ST.\nWall cleaning by machine.guaranteed, and at a reasonable cost.\nINTERIOR WALL CLEANERS\nPHONE 1122     .\nStandard  size  window glass,\nsingle and double weight.\nT. H. WATERS & CO. LTD.\n101 Hall St.     Nelson    Phone 156\nPhone 77 for\nall local moving, shipping and\ndistributing.\nSPEEDY   DELIVERY\nAstral Fridge, A-l, $55.00\nWE PAY CASH FOR USED\nFURNITURE\nBIRCH'S FURNITURE \u2022 PH. 47.\nSOCIAL CREDIT\nPUBLIC MEETING .\nSalmo, Saturday, Juno 1,8 p.m.\nGuest Speakers\nT-Shirts arid Sport Shirts\nfor girls and boys at'\nEBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.\nFOR YOUR NEW HAIR STYLING\n& permanents try, the Charm\nBeauty Salon, Medical Arts Bldg.\nSte 211. Phone 1922.\nDon't forget, Bob Camp, your\nALL STATE AUTO INSURANCE\nAGENT\nwill be at your Simpson Sears\nStore every Saturday. Phone 1490.\nLOOK BETTER, FEEL BETTER\nin individually designed Spencer\nfoundations and brassieres. Mrs.\nW. H. Naylor, Box 597, Castlegar.\nPhone 5133.\nVeterans welfare officer will be\nat the Canadian Legion No. 51\nNelson, on Monday morning, June'\n3. Please contact Legion Secretary\nat .546 for interviews.-\nBENEFIT   CONCERT\nBoys' Student Choir and Sr. vocal\nstudents presented by Mrs. T. J. S,\nFerguson, Capitol Theatre, June\n3, 8 p.m. Admission 75c.\nH. W. HERRIDGE\nCCF Candidate for Kootenay West\nand'\nR. STRACHAN, MLA\nCCF Provincial Leader, will address a public meeting Legion\nHall, Sat., June 1st, 8 p.m.\nBEVERAGE DISPENSERS\nUNION, LOCAL 707\nIMPORTANT NOTICE\nCOMBINED SPECIAL AND REGULAR MEETING SUNDAY JUNE\n2, CANADIAN LEGION, 8 P.M.\nURGENT THAT ALL MEMBERS\nATTEND.\nThe CNIB home classes conduc*\nted by Miss North will be held at\nthe home of Mrs. George Talbot,\n1817 Fall Street, commencing June\n3. Would anyone requiring transportation contact Mr. W. H. Cross-\nley at 1543-Y evenings, or 1160,\nlocal 15, days. \u00bb\nFUNERAL NOTICE ,\nWILLIAMS \u2014 Funeral services\nfor the late William Joseph Williams will be heid at the Thompson\nFuneral Home Monday at 2 p.m.\nRev. H. R. Whitmore will officiate, and interment will take place\nin Nelson Memorial Park.\nUnion Gas Company's\nNet Profits Higher\nCHATHAM, Ont. \u00ab*\u25a0) - Union\nGas Company of Canada Ltd. had\nnet profit of $2,359,836 or $3.34 a\nshare for. the year ended last\nMarch 31. This compared with $2,-\n,275 or $2.86 a share the previous year. .  \u2022'.\nThe company's annual report\nsays income.rose by $1,641,875 to\n$15,277,827 for the year, due mainly\nto an Improving gas supply position.\nUIC Manager\nTalks to Students\nThis week Grade XI and Grade\nXII students of the L.V. Rogers\nHigh School were given short talks\nby D. M. Disney, local manager\nof the Unemployment Insurance\nCommission.' .\nTo the Grade XI students ttie\ntheme of the talk was the road\nahead,.and pointed out tp the students upon graduating a year from\nnow they would be entering a new\nfield of endeavour. During their\n\"travels on this new highway they\nwould encounter many pot holes\nand detours before finally reaching' the pinnacle of success for\nwhich they all would be striving.\nIt was pointed out by the speaker that, planning was a main part\nof any'successful venture and that\nplans made now, if carried\nthrough, would eventually lead to\nsuccessful careers in their chosen\nfields.\nTo\/the graduating students Mr.\nDisney explained the workings of\nthe National Employment Service\nand the services that were available to the new job seekers. He\nemphasized that success did not\ncome easy and that those who\nhad .set goals \"for themselves\ncareerwise should bend every effort towards achievement.\nStudents will be visiting the local\noffice from 7 to 8 p.m. Monday to\nregister for employment or for\ncounselling.\nJUDITH ALLEN\nWINS $50\nSCHOLARSHIP\nJudith Elaine Allen has been\nawarded ' the Adele Eisenschimi\nScholarship.\nThe scholarship is tenable at the\npiano division of this year's session\nof the Banff School of Fine Arts.\nIt is worth $50.\nMiss Allen was notified of the\naward this week by Senator Donald\nCameron, director of the school.\nThe school is operated by the University of Alberta at Banff.\nMiss Allen is the daughter of Mr.\nand Mrs. Nelson Allen of Nelson.\nDiesel Inquiry\nTo Move West\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014The royal commission investigating the CPR\ndiesel dispute is going on the\nroad.\nIt was announced Friday that the\ncommission, headed by Supreme\nCourt Justice' Kellock, will adjourn its- Ottawa hearings about\nJune 14 and proceed westward to\nconduct further hearings at four\ncentres and view many of the\nrailway operations which have\ncome under discussion.\nThe commission was set up to\ninvestigate the dispute between\nthe CPR and the- Brotherhood of\nLocomotive Firemen and Engine-\nmen (CLC). The railway^proposes\nto eliminate firemen from freight\nand yard diesel locomotives but\nthe union maintains they are necessary.\nThe dispute brought a strike\nthat tied up the CPR for nine\ndays last January. The commission plans hearings in Toronto\nJune 18 to 20; Winnipeg\u00abJune 27\nand 28; Calgary July 3 to 5 and\nVancouver July 12.\nIt then will adjourn to reconvene in Ottawa on a September\ndate to'be announced later.\nCPR Policeman\nReturning to Coast\nConstable J. C Vincent, CPR\nPolice, was presented with a go-\ning-away gift by G.- L. Phillips,\ndistrict superintendent of the CPR,\non behalf of his fellow-employees\nThursday.\nMr. - Vincent' will return to the\nCoast to resume duties at Vancouver. He came to Nelson in April\n1956. Const. J. Matser of Vancouver will take over his duties at\nNelson.\nMr. Vincent served in the Navy\nduring the last war and joined\nthe CPR in 1953, He is an avid\nfly-fisherman who has fished over\nall .the province. He declares the\nSlocan pool compares \u2022 favorably\nwith the best fishing pools to be\nfound in B.C.\nSWIMMING\nTIME?\nEven if the water is too\ncold, enjoy the sunshine\nand relax in a\nJantzen or Carolina\nSWIM SUIT\nBoth Trunk and\n;  Boxer Style.\n$2.95-$5.95\nEMORY'$\nLimited\nTHE MAN'S STORE\nHOLLYWOOD (AP) - Chicken\npox almost knocked out Thursday\ni.-jht's Playhouse 90 production on\ntelevision. A Columbia Broadcasting System spokesman said Portland Mason, eight-year-old daughter of actor James Mason, went\non in her part although in the\nearly stages of the disease. Then\nshe was rushed home to bed by\nher mother, actress Pamela\nMason, also in the play.\nPRESCRIPTION\nSPECIALISTS\nCity Drug\nTour Rexall Pharmacy\nIt is only Common Sense.\na car that operates efficiently\ncosts less to run\nConsider your car for instance. When\nyou use the right gasoline and motor oil-\nwhen your car Is properly lubricated and\nserviced, the satisfaction you get from the\nperformance of your car Is greater and the cost\nof transportation Is less. At ROYALITE,\nmodern high compression ears, ears with\nhigh mileage and the smaller economy cars\ncan ali be serviced with the proper fuels and\nlubricants for greater efficiency\"and\neconomy. Stop at your nearest ROYALITE\nStation, the dealer will be glad to help you\nwith the right petroleum specification\nfor your car. There is econolny in using\nthe right petroleum product\nROYALITE\nPREMIER & REGULAR Gasolines\nROYALITE &\nROYAL TRITON Motor Oils\nThe Hallmark of Motoring  Satisfaction\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_1957_06_01","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0430088","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"}]}}