{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0430110":{"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":"1957-04-11","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0430110\/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":" 60\nThis Is Nelson's\nDiamond Jubilee Year\nYears of Progress\nCanada Threatens\nWithhold Security\nInformation to U.S.\nBy DAVE McINTOSH\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Canada threatened Wednesday\nto cut off the flow of security! information on Canadians\n\u25a0 to the United States.\nExternal Affairs Minister Pearson told an applauding Commons that such action will be taken unless the\nU. S. government gives assurance that the information\nwon't fall into the hands of any committees over which\nthe U. S. administration has\n<^4m Da*\nioe>\/\nWEATHER  FORECAST\nKootenay: Clear and cold with,\nfrost. A few clouds Thursday.\nLight winds. Low, high, Cranbrook 25 and 45, Crescent Valley\n28 and 52.\nNELSON, B.C., CANADA\u2014THURSDAY MORNING, APRIL 11,1957\nNot more Than Go Dally, 10c Saturday\nNo. 296\nno executive control.\nThe Canadian demand, couched\nin a formal note delivered to acting U. S. State Secretary Christian Herter by Canadian Ambassador Arnold Heeney in Wa-hington,\nstems for the suicide in Cairo\nlast week of Herbert Norman, Ca\nnadian Ambassador to Egypt,\nThe U. S. Senate internal security sub - committee last month\nrevived, without apparent reason,\n1951 allegations that Mr. Norman\nhad Communist associations. Mr.\nPearson  said then  that' these\nWill Forgery\nTrial Under Way\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Gilbert\nCampbell, 51-year-old fire department lieutenant, is on trial, charged with forgery, nine years after\nthe appearance ot a document\npurported to be a $936,000 will of\nhotel owner James Thomson, who\ndied in 1949.\nThe trial' opened Monday.\nCampbell is also charged with\ndealing with a forged document\nand attempting to defraud the\nrightful heirs of Mr. ^Thomson.\nCampbell pleaded not guilty to\nall three charges.\nSoon after the hotel owner's\ndeath, a document was found and\nconsidered to be his will. Campbell was named as chief beneficiary, also executor and trustee of\nthe $936,000 estate.    . <\nA year later,   the -will   was\ntermed _ forgery by the late Chief\nJustice Wendell B. Farris. ,\nEXPENSIVE COMMA\nThe chief item in the Thomson\nestate was the Iv'anhoe hotel, sold\nin 1952 fOir $450,000.\n\u2022 Other legacies listed in the disputed document were for W. F.\nYoung, A. Eldrige, Laura E. Cars-\ncadden, E. Sencabauga, Alfred\nSiegerstrom and Angelo Ferrari.\nMr. Siegerstrom, left $1000,\nclaimed a comma was misplaced\nand that Mr. Thomson had meant\nto leave him $100,000.\nThen followed a court battle between those named in the purported' will and the relatives, ot\nMr. Thomson. The Supreme Court\nof British Columbia ruled the\nlegal beneficiaries were Mrs.\nAnne Jane Wilson, also cousins'of\nMr. Thomson.'\nWITHDREW ACTION\nAfter the Ivanhoe hotel was sold\nMrs. Millen received $225,000 and\nthe other $225,000 was split among\nthe Wilson children.\nChief Justice Farris called the\nwill a forgery in December, 1950,\nwhen Campbell withdrew his\ncourt' action to prpve 'the authenticity of the will because he did\nnot \"have a proper case.\"\nBut the chief justice did not dismiss the case. He called for ,,a full\ninvestigation by police and the attorney - general's department and\nadjourned the case indefinitely.\nLast January the case was reopened with the preliminary hearing of f-omr forgery charges\nagainst Campbell.\nLegal argument over admissibility of Crown evidence, with the\njury absent, continued throughout\nthe third day of the trial Wednesday.\nMr. Justice J. G. Huttan is expected to rule today whether the\nevidence should be excluded from\nthe assize court hearing.\ncharges had been disposed of\nvyears ago and that the sub-committee's methods should be\ntreated with the1 contempt they\ndeserved.\nMr. Pearson said Wednesday\nthe information made public by\nthe Senate sub-committee was obtained from other than Canadian\nsources.\nHe said it was \"Intolerable\"\nthat Canadian citizens should be\nharassed by an agency of a for\neign government. The Canadian\ngovernment was perfectly capable\nof looking after its own security\nmatters. This was not the responsibility of any sub - committee of\nthe legislature of another country.\nThere has long been a reciprocal exchange of information\nbetween the appropriate security\nagencies of Canada and the U. S.\non matters important to the security tit either country.\nThe main security agency In\nCanada Is the Royal Canadian\nMounted Police, In the U.S. the\nFederal Bureau of Investigation.\nU. 8.  Senate sub-committees\ncan call for and examine FBI\nreports and make public Information  gleaned  from   them.   In\nCanada, however, RCMP reports\nnever are out of the firm control, of the government\nIt is conceivable that Canadian\nrefusal to supply the U. S. with\nsecurity information might be a\nhard blow to American security\nagencies because thousands of Canadian  citizens  journey   td  the\nO. S. every year.\nIt is possible if Canada is forced\nto stop.such information going to\nthe U. S., that the U. S. might\nfeel compelled to introduce more\nstringent regulations on entry of\nCanadian.citizens into the U.S.\nPresident Eisenhower said at\nhis Washington press conference\nWednesday he would not criticize\nanybody and that he was sure that\npart of the difficulty was \"inadvertence.\"\n\"I think all of us should do our\nvery best to restore... the fine,\nfirm character of our relationships' with Canada just as rapidly\nas we can.\nGREAT SORROW\n. Elsenhower hoped Canadians\nknew \"how deeply^ this entire\ngovernment wants to retain their\nrespect, their friendship.\" He\nthought it a \"great sorrow\" that\nsuch things should -ccur but said\nhe was \"sure part of this difficulty came from inadvertence.\"\n\"...It is my hope that the\nthing now can be dropped, is possible, even though I know that in\nCanada it has become a matter\nof far graver popular and public\nimportance than it probably has\nin this country.\"\nIke Applauds\nU.K. Announcement\nWASHINGTON (AP)\u2014Britain's\ndecision to reduce and streamline\nher far-flying armed forces was\napplauded by President Eisenhower as an example of \"courage\nand nerve.\"\nHe made clear he is not\nalarmed at the drastic defence\ncutbacks even though he acknowledged they have \"disturbed some\nof our NATO partners.\"\nEisenhower told a press conference British leaders in effect had\nno alternative but to slash defence\nspending in view of Britain's postwar economic problems.\n$1,500;000 Brewery To Be Built at Creston\nInterior Breweries To\nConsolidate Operations\nNew Warehouses Planned\nAt Nelson, Cranbrook, Trail\nLAYOUT FOR Interior Breweries Limited consolidated plant at Creston is.shown in this sketch.\nBuilding will start this summer on a 10-acre site ac\nquired by the company, and plant when completed\nthe following year, will have cost about one and a half\nmillion dollars.\nParliament\nWednesday\nBy The Canadian Press\nSwift final approval was given\nby the Commons to government\nlegislation giving provincial farm\nmarketing boards indirect taxing\npowers.\nDefence Minister Campney tabled a report warning Canada\nmust be able to defend itself\nagainst missile - launching Submarines.\nDefence Against\nSubs Stressed\nOTTAWA TCP) \u2014 Repeated\nwarnings that Canada must be\nable to ^.defend itself, against\nmissile-launching submarines are\ncontained in a report On national\ndefence> tabled' Wednesday in the\nCommons by Defence Minister\nCampney,  -\nIt is the first time In half a\ndozen years that such a theme has\ntaken precedence over the air defence of Canada in the government's annual defence report.\nAir, defence is dismissed in a\nfew paragraphs, including this\none:\n\"It is recognized that a sudden,\nferocious air attack on the NATO\ncountries would call forth immediate and .intensive retaliation.\nThere would be an interval of a\n\\yeek or two before retaliation is\nfull effective.\"\nCommons Okays Hospital\nInsurance Plan 165-0\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014To tumultuous applause, the\nCommons Wednesday night gave third and final reading to\nthe proposed national hos\npital insurance plan.\nCheers echoed through the\nChamber as the House voted formally 165 to 0 for the scheme\nwhich does not become operative\nuntil accepted by six provinces\nrepresenting at least half the Canadian population. So far, five have\naccepted.\nStanley Knowles (CCF\u2014Winni\npeg North Centre), long-time battler for a hospital insurance plan,\nrequested the formal division.'\nProlonged desk-thumping broke\nout as Prime Minister St. Laurent\nrose to vote^ More, applause\ngreeted Health Minister Martin,\nOpposition Leader Diefenbaker,\nMr. Knowles and Bev. E. G. Han-\nCHANNEL TUNNEL\nIDEA REVIVED\nBy GILBERT 8EDB0N\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 The British government is watching current moves aimed at restarting a\ncentury-old project to dig a tunnel under the English Channel\nlinking Britain and France.\nThe government, is considering\nwhether recent developments call\nfor any change in policy toward\nthe project, Transportation Minister Harold Watkinson told the\nHouse of Commons Wednesday.\nThe \"recent developments\" he\nreferred to mainly concern the\nactivities of some American interests here to investigate the possibility of putting up the money\nfor a new survey of the long-\nplanned project.\nThough nothing firm was announced and the Americans now\nhave left London, their visit at\nleast produced a notable rise on\nthe London Stock Exchange in the\nshares of the old tunnel company,\nlong almost valueless.\nJames Byrne\nRenominated\nCRANBROOK \u2014 James A.\nByrne, liBeral member of parliament for Kootenay East for the\npast eight.year's was unanimously\nnominated by the East Kootenay\nLiberal Association. Delegates\nfrom every section of the constituency overflowed the Masonic\nHall at the Wednesday night\nmeeting.\nDr. W. N. Fraser of Cresttfn put\nMr. Byrne's name before the convention who endorsed it in s\nmatter of minutes. K. N. Stewart\nof Fernie, Association\" president,\ntermed him the \"best representative the constituency has ever\nhad.\"\nMr. Byrne was obviously nonplussed at the spontaneous warmth\nand appreciation extended and the\nextraordinary attendance. He outlined national advances accomplished by the government during\nthe past four years.\nSpringhill Scare\nSPRINGHILL, N.S. (CP) \u2014'\nMiners at No. 2 colliery here were\nforced to the surf-Ce Wednesday\nwhen a minor bump halted operations in the Cumberland Railw-y\nand Coal Company's pit. The explosion of gases was not serious\nand there were no injuries. The\ncolliery is near the No. 4 pit in\nwhich 393 miners died last November following an explosion.\n\"Cavalcade to Calgary\" Rated Success\nBy Dally News Staff Writer\nPortions of the \"Cavalcade to\nCalgary\" that left. Nelson Monday\nmorning amid'honking horns and\nexploding pop - guns returned\nhome Wednesday evening, carrying with*them reports of a' successful and enjoyable excursion\nthrough'the southwestern part of\nAlberta.\nOne group \u2014 headed by Fire\nChief E. S. Owens, to whom must\ngo the credit for organizing the\nexpedition \u2014 left Calgary at about\nthe same time as the rest. But they\nheaded to Drumheller to continue\ntheir publicity campaign.\nSplitting up almost from the beginning of the return trip,, the\ncars congregated on the main lake\nferry at eight o'clock. Only car\nwhich didn't catch the ferry was\nthe one wheeled by Austin Moore.\nIt was late, by about 10 minutes,\npart of which was caused by a\ndelay in Cranbrook as we watched\nfour white-tailed deer cavort\nthrough the brush.\nFrom the viewpoint of the car\nwhich carried Mr. Moore, Jack\nBailey and John Short, the return trip was only slightly less\neventful than the outgoing jaunt;\nHighlight of the entire return\njourney was the sight of a two-\nseated Cessna' beside the road in\nthe exact middle of the famed\nFrank Slide.\nNasty weather Jiad apparently\nforced the pilot down as he tried\nto find cover. A group of high-\nschool students from Frank said\nthe plane had passed above the\nschool before setting down.\nThe return to Nelson was doubly\nrefreshing because it signified the\nreturn to decent weather. At 7\na.m. Wednesday morning, Calgary\ntemperature was 16 degrees,, and\nsnow had transformed the streets\ninto sheets of ice,\nThe 'going got worse.before it\ngot better. At Frank, where we\nhad lunch, an.estimated JO inches\nof snow had fallen in little less\nthan 12 hours.\nA summary of the. trip would\nbe impossible without congratulating once again the men who\nmade it possible \u2014 Chief Owens,\nE. T. Bodard, Mayor Joseph Kary,\nChamber of Commerce President\nM. B. Ryalls and Aldermen Clare\nBlakeman and Bill Ramsay.\nIndications of the success of\nthe venture will not be seen until\nthe Midsummer Bonspiel and Nelson Diamond Jubilee celebrations\nbegin July 9. But none of this\ncity's representatives feel anything tbut optimism about the\nprospects.of a happy Summer, indeed, for all concerned. '\u25a0'\u25a0\nNot only was it successful; it\nwas fun.\nsell (SC\u2014Macleod) as they voted\nin their turn.\nThe measure now goes to the\nsenate.\nEarlier, two last-ditch attempts\nto change terms of the plan were\nrejected by the government.\nThe CCF tried to have removed\nfrom the legislation the clause requiring participation of six provinces before the scheme can come\ninto operation.' ' '' ' '.\nThis move was defeated by a\nvote of 125 to 56. with the Liberals opposing the' combined opposition.\n,'\u25a0 The Progressive Conservatives\nproposed   reconsideration  of the\nbills    definition of a hospital\nThe definition excludes tuberculosis    sanatoria,    institutions\nfor the mentally III and nursing\nhomes.\nThis was defeated by a vote of\n111 to 54 with the Liberals again\nopposing the  Conservative,  CCF\nand Social Credit groups.   \u2022\nFIVE AGREED\nFive provinces \u2014- British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, On\ntario and Newfoundland \u2014' repre\nsenting 56.3 per cent of the popu\nlation, have agreed to enter into\nthe insurance plan.\nVoyagers Reach\nWenatchee\nWENATCHEE, Wash. (AP) \u2014\nTwo boats carrying eight men\nreached here Wednesday, having\ncompleted more than one-third o\u00a3\na 1500-mile trip up the Columbia\nRiver from Astoria, Ore. to the\nArrow Lakes of Canada. ;\nThey started . from the river\nmouth last Thursday on -a trip to\npublicize boating and navigation\non the Columbia. They had to\nportage past Priest Rapids and the\natomic reservation at Hanford.\nThe voyagers,*seven from-Wenatchee and one from . Ephrata!\nleaves this morning for Chief Joseph Dam, where a big sling will\nbe used \\o raise the boats over\nthe dam.\nThey are due tonight at Grand\nCoulee Dam, the last barrier requiring a portage.\nPossible in\nSommers Suit\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014The slander suit of Robert Sommers\nagafhst David Sturdy,, previously\nset for May 27, may be delayed\nagain.\nAlfred Bull, counsel for Mr.\nSommers, is engaged' in another\ncase set for May 21.\nMr. Justice Harry Sullivan will\nstudy the trial list to find whether\nhe can fit the case in before the\ncourts rise at the end of June for\ntheir long vacation. He will give\nhis decision Thursday.'.\nUNEF SOLDIERS KILLED\nCAIRO (Reuters)\u2014Two Indian\nsoldiers of the United Nations\nEmergency Force were killed\nWednesday by a land mine on the\ndemarcation line of the Gaza\nStrip.'\nU)attJL atevuLL\nKootenay   at   Nelson:   Tuesday\n.012; Wednesday .012.\nPlane Makes\nForced Landing\nBLAIRMORE, Alta. (CP) \u2014 A\nUnited States aircraft with'two\nmen aboard made an' emergency\nlanding In the rugged Frank slide\narea several miles east of here\nWednesday.\nThe aircraft, a 195-Cessna, was\npiloted by George Musser of Tacoma, Wash. Aboard was a passenger, Jerry Hedlund , also of\nTacoma:      \" \"\"\"\"'\nIt was forced down by snow and\npoor visibility.,There was no damage to the craft and the occupants\nwere uninjured.\nThe men, representatives of the\nI. W, Johnson Engineering Company of Tacoma, left Tacoma Tuesday on a flight to Fort Smith,\nN.W.T., where the company is installing a sawmill, plywood plant\nand steam power unit.\nThey spent the night at Cranbrook., |\nThe stranded pair said \"things\ndidn't look too good as the aircraft\nnosed through the mountainous\nterrain.\" _\nMusser spotted a view point on\nthe slide and brought his plane\ndown safely.\n\"That viewpoint makes a swell\nlanding strip \u2014 at least that's\nwhat we think,\" said Musser.\nThe pair will wait here for the\nweather to improve and then proceed to Fort Smith.\nKing Asks Jordan\nGov't Resignation\nAMMAN, Jordan ,(AP) \u2014 Premier Suleiman Nbulsi's government resigned Wednesday at the\nrequest of young King Hussein.\nThe development cast doubt on\nthe future of this little country.\nThe action came as a surprise,\nless than 24 hours after the premier publicly acknowledge a\ngovernment crisis but said that\nit had ended.\nSome foreign observers speculated that the 24-year-old king,\nwho only recently took a strong\nstand against increasing Communist influence in Jordan, may\nhave won a temporary victory in\na struggle which may mean the\nfuture of his throne. But these observers stressed the word temporary.\nMurder Charge\n'KAMLOOPS (CP) \u2014 Stanley\nManson, 55, was charged with\nmurder Wednesday and remanded\nto April, 18.\nManson was charged in connection with the shooting of Russell\nTierney, 68, in Manson's shack on\nMission Flats- near here. Tierney\nwas shot with a .22 calibre rifle\nabout 10 p.m. Tuesday night.\nPolice said Manson telephoned\nKamloops police following the\nshooting. They arrived at the\nshack to find Tierney's body inside. Manson was arrested immediately.\nPolice said Tierney was shot\nwhen he returned to the shack\nafter being ordered to leave. They\nsaid Manson told them he grabbed a rifle to frighten Tierney\naway when it discharged.\nAn inquest was to be held late\nWednesday.\nInterior Breweries Limited plans to consolidate\npresent brewing operations into one new plant at Creston.\nThis was announced Wednesday by directors of the\ncompany at a meeting held in Nelson. ,'\u25a0   '\u2022'\n\u25a0The company has bought 10 acres of land at Creston,-\nand proposes to complete grading, railday spur and footing\nfor the new building this Summer. The project .will be\ncompleted in the fall of 1958,\nThe new plant, designed by\nWhleb and Wohleb and Associates, outstanding brewery architects and engineers, will have\nan Initial capacity of 75,000 barrels and will cost approximately\n$1,500,000.\nA good portion of the total\ncost will go toward purchase of\nnew brewing machinery, C, B.\nDelbrldgo, president, stated.\nCapacity of the present plants\nat Fernie and Nelson is 60,000 bar.\nrels.\nNew warehouses will be constructed at Nelson, Cranbrook and\nTrail as distribution centres, and\nthe present service to customers\nwill be maintained. .Foremen will\nbe in charge at each warehouse.\nR. D. Barnes,-chairman of the\nBo'ard, said that everything will\nbe done in-providing the finest in\nbrewing equipment and control\nto ensure high quality products.\n\"When the new plant is completed the people of bc-th East and\nWest Kootenays will have every\nreason to be justly prdud of thl\nnew modern brewery in their\ndistrict\" Mr. Barnes said.\nEXHAUSTIVE  SEARCH\nMore than a year and a half\nwas.spent in a survey for possible\nlocations in East and West Kootenays.' ,,\nWhat  the, company required\nwere' a minimum \u2022 eight j acres of\nland, economical, distribution facilities,   high   quality    brewing\nwater.-ready means of waste disposal,, railway trackage and access to major highways,\n. Much time   and . money was\nspent Investigating areas In and\nadjacent to   Nelson,  Trail  and\nFernie,  The  company actually\nCouple Pleads\nGuilty to Spying\nNEW YORK (AP) \u2014 A refugee\ncouple, pale with anguish, pleaded\nguilty Wednesday to spying for\nRussia. Their plea erased the\nthreat of a death sentence.\nWithin minutes of their court'\nappearance, Jack Soble, 53, and\nhis wife, Myra, 52, went before\na grand jury to'tell what they\nknow of Soviet intrigue.\nThe charge which they have admitted carries a maximum prison\nsentence of 10 years. A third defendant, Jacob Albam, 64, still\nawaits trial. 'The Sobles will be\nsentenced May 3.\nThe couple's lawyer, George\nWolf, told reporters:\n\"They had a burden they wanted\nto get rid of. They told me they\nwanted to recapture their souls for\nthe first time since they, came to\nthis country. They were two anguished individuals, suffering intensely from experiences they had\ngone through before they emigrated to this-countoand since.\n\"They were very\\;'frank ah-' unfolded an amazing tale which\nborders on the fantastic .. ....      '\n\"The motivating'factor was the\nlong arm of Russia. Th.y were unwilling tools of the Soviets, forced\nto do their bidding.\"\ndrilled  at Taghum, but found\nwater unsuitable.\nNo suitable. property .could be\nfound which met the company's\nrequirements, except that at Creston.\nThe directors expressed appreciation of the assistance given by\nvarious local business interests in\ntheir efforts to locate somewhere\nin their areas.\nTHREE BODIES\nFOUND IN LAKE\nKamloops Men\nBelieved To\nHave Drowned\nKAMLOOPS (CP) \u2014 The\nbodies of three men who- left\nKamloops on a boating trip Tuesday were found Wednesday in\nKamloops Lake 25 miles from\nhere.   \u2022'.\nThe three men, .believed to have\ndrown-d Tuesday night, were H.\nKeary Debeck, assistant district\nagrologist with the British Columbia Forest i Service;' Wilbur! A.\nMinion, land inspector- with B.C.\nForest Service, and John' Marini,\noperator  of Marini Distributors.\nAll three were,from Kamlbops.\nThe bodies were, found about\nnoon washed up on the beach of\nKamloops Lake: RCMP,discovered\nthe three after an; aircraft had\nspotted their overturned launch\nnear the beach Wednesday morning.       \u25a0 >\nThe three left here, Tuesday\nmorning on a trip down the lake.\nForestry department officials gave\nno reason for the trip but said it\nprobably was a combination business and pleasure voyage. '\nAn inquest has: been set for\nThursday.\nSearch for Man\nBelieved Shot\nWINDSOR, .Ont, (CP) \u2014 Police'\nare searching for a man believed\nto have been shot after being\nchased by 10 others through., a\ntavern here Wednesda ynight.\nPolice said they learned through\nwitnesses at the Temple Tavern\nthat one of the patrons was shot\nfrom point blank range after\nbeing chased through' an empty\nwing of the building.\nThe police said the man being\nchased ducked out a side door after the shot was fired.\nOne man was held as the suspected gunman and at least six-\nothers have been picked up by\ndetectives.\nMP To Visit USSR\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Progressive\nConservative Roland Michener is\nplanning to make a trip to Russia\nthis summer. The member for Toronto St. Paul's, said Wednesday he\narid his wife likely will make *\nthree-week tour in August, taking\nin'Moscow, Leningrad and Kiev.\nThe Russians are \"very receptive,\"\nhe said. \"They are'very anxious\nto have visitors. \u2022\nAnd in This Corner ...\nVICTORIA (CP) \u2014 Good grief!, It's happened\u2014people here\nare trapping cats.\nIn some places that might not be too Important, but In Victoria\nit's enough to see the cats' protection league issue a call to arms.\nTuesday the league, through Mrs. Helen Kerswell, Issued\nwarnings to cat owners near the Royal Jubilee Hospital that three\ncat traps :are being, operated In the district.\nThe cats, after they're caught prowling neighborhood yards,\nare turned over to the pound. The pound loaned- the traps to\nresidents who complained of cats In the currant bushes.\n\"We think It Is a shame these traps are being put out,\" Mrs,\nKerswell said. The cats trapped aren't strayed, they are pets.\n\"We think trapping cats is a terrible thing to do.\" '\n.  STOCKHOLM (Reuters) \u2014 A maid can claim four bottles of\nbeer a day as part of her food lodgings, a court at Malmo has ruled.\nThe- court ordered her employer to refund the maid 16 crowns\n(about ?3.20)  he had deducted from her wages for drinking 40\nbottles of beer in 10 days.\n4\nHAMILTON (CP) \u2014 Albert the alligator was recovered two\nhours after he had been stolen fropi his tank In a King Street'store.\nPolice found Albert\u2014a two-foot toddler\u2014having the time of\nhis life at ,the home of a man who had'bought him In a beverage^\nroom for $2.\nThe man was busy hunting for flies and Insects when, police\narrived, as Albert, comfortably resting In a glass tank, had earlier\ndisdained more refined delicacies.\n'Albert was gingerly returned to the store by police who described the theft as a prank.\n I   2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, APRIL 11,1957\nFrom the best-selling novel of young love in war\n..comes the story of the foul-ups who became\nHELL FIGHTERS OF THE PACIFIC!\n_. count,(Eton   ^.\nQNBMASeoP_?\\T\u00bbRI\"N0\nCartoon in Color\nSport, Novelty\nAuto-Vue Drive-In\nTRAIL, B.C.\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\nShows at 6:45 p.m. and 9 p.m.\n\"BLACK TUESDAY\"\nEdward G. Robinson\nJean Parker\nSHORTS\n\u2022=\nPremiere Theatre\nFRUITVALE, B.C.\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\n\"23 PA-ES TO\nBAKER STREET\"\n(Cinemascope - Technicolor)\nVan Johnson \u25a0 Vera Miles\n$now Survey Planned\nFor May Skiing Event\n. j An investigation party may go\nto the Silver King hill this weekend to determine if snow conditions would be suitable for a giant\nslalom in May, members of the\nSilver King Ski Club learned at\na, meeting in the Civic Centre.\n'Acting secretary F. A. Whiteley\nsaid 12 invitations have gone out\nto various ski clubs. Two have\nbeen returned, from Cranbrook\na^id Penticton, where there no longer are ski groups.\n'The slalom was proposed last\nmonth as one step towards making\nijelson known as a skiing community. '\nI Development co-ordinator Dr.\nW. C. Murphy reported Hon. W.\nD. Black, MLA for Nelson-Creston,\nminister of municipal affairs, and\nprovincial secretary, thought a 21-\nyear lease would be sufficient on\nthe hill, rather than a 99-year\nlease. On its expiry, the Club\nwould get first chance to re-lease\nor buy the property.\nCTUDY CLEARING PLANS\n''Considerable discussion was\nheld on methods of clearing the\nhill and proceeding with various\nClj-b projects. Members agreed\nwork done by Club members last\nyear, including tree clearance, attracted complimentary remarks\nfrom the public.\n5 REASONS\nWhy You Should Take\nViterra-Plus Capsules\nHelps\n\u2014 to promote normal\nappetite, growth.\n\u2014 to relieve nervous tension\nand irritability.\n\u2014 to increase pep and\nvitality. \u2022\n\u2014 to relieve that tired run\ndown feeling.\nI \u2014 as a general tonic and\n2.    dietary supplement.\ni Nelson Pharmacy\n\" \"Your Fortress of Health\"\n433 Josephine SL\nPhone 1203 -\nA reminder was given that signs\non the Club's lift and other equipment telfing people how to behave\nwhile using it, or stating they use\nit at their own risk, do not entirely absolve the club from liability\nin case of injury. It was recommended the club investigate personal liability insurance policies.\nSeveral members thought this a\nsound idea.\nAbout 20 skiers attended the\nmeeting, chaired by-D. F. MacKay.\nCity Landmark\nBeing Removed\nA house at 1?9 Baker Street is\nbeing dismantled to allow extension of premises of Peebles\nMotors next door.\nH. D. Harrison, manager of\nPeebles Motors, said his firm plans\nto construct a modern car centre\non the property. Their present lot\nacross the street will be used for\ncommercial vehicle sales and cus-.\ntomer parking.\nNo one offered to buy the 12-\nroom house and remove it from\nthe property, so workmen are now.\ndismantling It, and usable materials are being offered for sale.\nPart til the original Central\nSchool, the house was bought by\na Canadian Pacific Railway employee, now dead, when the present school was built about 1909.\nThe house was moved 'to its present location and has served as a\nmulti-family1 dwelling during\nthe intervening years.\nDOLLAR LOWEP,\nNEW YORK (CP) \u2014 The Canadian dollar was 1-16 lower at a\npremium of 4 5-32 per cent in\nterms of U.S. funds; a week ago\n4 3-32 per cent premium.\nPound sterling Vi higher at $2.79\n1-18.\nGENERAL p ELECTRIC\n8.1 Cu. Ft.\nREFRIGERATOR\nMagnetic doors, roomy vegetable crisper, 27-lb. across-\nthe-top freezer, plastic ice cube trays, ctore-a-door shelves,\nSEE IT TODAY AT\nNelson Electric Co. Ltd.\nGENERAL\u00ae ELECTRIC\nAUTHORIZED DEALER\nS74 Baker St. .      Phone 260\nCASTLE   THEATRE\nCASTLEGAR, B.C.\nShowing Tonight Friday and Sat.\n\"BUS STOP\"\nMarilyn Monroe, Don Murray\nCinemascope \u2014 Color in Deluxe\nNEWS and CARTOON\nStudents Hear\nCoast Engineer\nJ. A. Merchant, P. Eng., registrar, Association of Professional\nEngineers of B.C.,, addressed a\nselect group of ' Grade XII students Wednesday at L, V. Rogers\nSenior High School on \"Professional Engineering as a Career.\"\nMr. Merchant surveyed the'main\nbranches of engineering, outlining the work done in each fieid.\nAverage earnings in each field\nat various stages of experience\nwere stated as an indication to the\nboys of the income they could expect to earn in the years ahead if\nthey selected an engineering career. \/.\nThe speaker emphasized the\ncontinuing demand for engineers\nby industry. He' was called upon\nto answer many questions, and\nadmitted that the first two years\nof the course were the hardest. It\nmeant a great deal of work, but\ncapable sudents. could succeed, he\nsaid.\nMr. Merchant said that only two\nout of three students starting a\ncourse in engineering graduated.\nPOST OFFICE\nTRANSACTIONS\nUP FROM 1956\nTotal business transacted at the\nNelson Post Office in March did\nnot quite reach the total recorded\nin January while remaining considerably greater than total business reported in February this\nyear.\nTotal transactions were $231,-\n652, compared to $212,721 in March\n1956, and $233,887 in January and\n$201,198 in February.\nRevenue received at the post\noffice increased considerably to\nreach the highest figure reported\nthis year. Sale- of postage stamps\nand supplies amounted to $9764,\nwith other revenue returning\n$1335, compared with January\nwhen stamp sales amounted to\n$10,064, and other revenue amounted to $434.\nTotal money orders issued was\n3938, with 5909 paid out. \u2022'.\n 1\t\nLicence Suspended,\nPbys $200 Fine\nFound guilty of impaired driving, John E. Brown of Ymir, 20,\nwas fined $200 and had his licence\nsuspended for\" three months in\ncity court' Wednesday. He pleaded\nguilty before Magistrate . R. S.\nNelson. Court was told he had\nobtained a bottle of rum, driven\nto Salmo and met a friend, then\ndrove back with the friend to\nNelson, where he was arrested by\ncity police about midnight on\nFront Street Tuesday night.\nSou.ham Co. Reports\nHigher Net Profits\nTORONTO (CP) - Southam\nCompany Ltd., had consolidated\nnet profit in 1956 of $3,198,772 or\n26 a share, compared with $2,-\n621,005. or $3.49 a share in 1955.\nRevenue- from operations was\n$36,458,377 compared with $32,-\n061,927.\nNORTHERN   INLET\nHamilton inlet on the Labrador\ncoast is more than 150 miles long,\nwith average breadth of 14 miles.\nBrewery Firm Host\nTo District Hotelmen\nInterior Breweries board of directors and., management played\nhost Friday evening to Boundary\nand West Kootenay hotel operators,-and their wives and some of\nthe private clubs representatives\nfrom Nelson and trail at a cocktail and dinner party in the Hume\nHotel Silver Room.\nThe   gathering   was, welcomed\nMayor To Open\nNew Fairview\nStore Tonight\nMayor Joseph Kary will cut a\nribbon to officially open Safeway's\nnew supermarket in Fairview tonight    '\nThe public has been invited to\ntour the store tonight and to witness the opening ceremony. Sales\nwill start Friday morning.\nCompany officials on hand for\nthe big event will be H. B. Crawford of Vancouver, zone public\nrelations officer; Thomas Milburn\nof New Westminster, formerly of\nNelson, who is district mariager in\ncharge of Interior stores, and Eric\nBrackman of Vancouver, advertising manager and price maker.\nAs part of the opening cere-\nmoney, store manager Wilfred\nMaynard will present a corsage to\nMrs. Kary.\nA preview will take place this\nafternoon for civic and business\nleaders, by, invitation only.\nFour Injured\nIn Car Crash\nFour persons were slightly injured about 6:30 p.m. Wednesday\nwhen their car crashed into a\nrock about three miles east of\nNelson on the North Shore. All\nwere taken to Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital and three were\nheld overnight.\nIn hospital are Mrs. Marcel\nFrechette of Prince Albert, Saskatchewan, and her brother-in-\nlaw and his wife, Mr. and Mrs.\nHenry Frechette of Nelson. Marcel Frechette was released after\ntreatment.\nAll Were said to be able to walk.\nThey were taken to hospital by a\ndoctor, a passerby and Thompson\nAmbulance.\nThe car is believed to have been\neastbound when the mishap occurred. Grill of the car was\npushed in.\nMRS. W. KIN AKIN\nOFVALLICANDIES\nMrs. William N. (Dora) Kina-\nkin, 51, of Vallican,, B.C., died\nTuesday in Kootenay Lake Gener-\nal Hospital.\nShe was born at Verigiri, Sask.,\nwhere she lived after her marriage. The Kinakins moved to Oliver, B.C, in 1942 and moved to\nVallican six years ago.\nShe is survived by her husband;\nthree sons, William W., Pete and\nHarry, all at home; and two grandchildren, Lorraine and Jackie.\nFuneral services will be held\nFriday at Slocan Park.\nTrail Rotarians\nHear Naval Man\nTRAIL \u2014 Lieutenant Gordon\nShirley of the Royal Canadian\nRecruiting Team gave a talk at\nthe Rotary luncheon Wednesday,\nHe also showed a film which was\ntaken by the navy at the coronation of Her Majesty Queen\nElizabeth\".\nHe told the Rotarians that Canadians did, not knoisfenough about\nCanada's navy and said that Canada had the most efficient submarine navy in the world.\nRotary President Miller' Mason\nannounced that the club will not\nsponsor a team in the Little League this year as they had in the\npast. The reason was that the\nLions Club wished to sponsor a\nworthwhile youth organization\nand so Rotary would give them\nthe opportunity to sponsor the\nteam they . had sponsored last\nyear.\nThe Weather\nNelson  '.'. 28 :59 \u2014\nWinnipeg    21   29 \u2014\nRegina ...:  10   17 ' .05\nCalgary  _...'.  15   24 .17\nLethbridge   17   24 .35\nSpokane   i... 40   61 \u2014\nFALCON MAY ANSWER\nORCHARDIST'S QUANDARY\nThe Natural History Society,\nwhich is establishing zoological\ngardens near RObson, hopes to\nhelp Queen's Bay fruit rancher\nKenneth Attree solve a problem.\nMigrating grosbeaks have been\nStopping at Mr. Attree's orchards,\npecking buds from his trees and\nthreatening ihis business.\nClifford Sherlock of the Society\nis training i falcon for Mr. Attree's\nuse   should   the  grosbeak  flocks\ndescend next spring. The falcon\nwould fly from its keeper's hand,\nscatter the birds, and return. .\nRadar has also been used successfully in England for diverting\nmigratory geese frbm their customary courses, Mr. Sherlock said.\nWhy the grosbeaks have come\noff their usual flyway North to\nsettle at Mr. Attree's orchard and\nnip his fruit trees in the bud has\nnot been explained.\nby C. B. Delbrldge, company\npresident, who also announced\nthat a new brewery is to be built\nat Creston. A. B. Swinerton, director of Fort Macleod, Alta., spoke\nto the hotelmen as president of\nthe Canadian Hotelmen's Associa-,\ntion. He showed to'..the gathering\na drawing of a proposed design\nfor the association's crest.\nThe importance of highways and\nthe importance of the promotion\nwork that can be done by hotel-\nmen and others in the catering\nbusiness was the thenieof a talk\nby E. R. McFarland, director of\nInterior Breweries, and well\nknown Lethbrigeite who has been\npresident of the Trans-Canada\nHighway Association, Crow's Nest\nroute for many years. Mr. McFarland urged the hotelmen to\nsupport their local chambers of\ncommerce and boards of trade.\nH. F. Puder, manager of Interior\nBreweries, spoke at length on the\nproblems and the factors that\nwent into the decision to build a\nnew brewery and the choice of\nthe site near Creston.\nOlivia D'Andrea and James\nMadden thanked the company officials for their hospitality. A\nquestion and answer period followed.\nFire Destroys\nTaghum Shack\nTAGHUM \u2014 Damage estimated\nat $700 was caused Wednesday\nmorning when a fire destroyed a\nshack owned by Katherine and\nAnthony Wapple, and occupied by\nGeorge White, pensioner.\nThe shack was worth an estimated $500, and contents were\nevaluated at $200. No insurance\nwas carried.\nMr. White escaped without injury when the flames broke out\nabout 9:30. Cause of the fire in\nthe shack, about 300 yards west\nof the Riverside Service Station\non Highway No. 3, was said by\nRCMP to be an overheated stovepipe which ignited roofing on the\nwest side of the shack.\nBANK HEAD\nTO VISIT TRAIL,\nSLOCAN, NELSON\nG. Arnold Hart, general manager of the Bank of Montreal, will\nhave a different schedule of appointments in the district than was\nannounced in Wednesday's issue\nof Tile Daily News.\nAccording to his correct itinerary, he will visit Trail area at\nthe beginning of next week.\nHe will then make his first official visit to the New Denver\noffice of the Bank on Wednesday.\nThursday he is due in Nelson for\nthe first official visit to the branch\nhere. He will attend a businessmen's luncheon here Thursday.\nOn his four week tour, of. B.C.\nbranches, he is accompanied by\nJ. M. Jackson, assistant general\nmanager of the B.C. division, and\nW. H. Raikes, who held this post\nformerly and is, retiring next\nmopth.\n90 New Light\nPoles Unloaded\nNinety new electric light poles\nhave been unloaded from a Can\nadian Pacific Railway freight car\nbehind City Hall.\nA. C. VanSacker, City electrical\nsuperintendent, said the poles will\nbe used for line maintenance purposes, and many of them will be\nused for rebuilding ,of the electric\npower line from Balfour to Ainsworth. This work is to be done\nlater in the year.\nMr. VanSacker explained the\nCity usually gets two or three carloads of poles each year.\nRotarians To Hear\nVancouver Speakers\nW. R. (Dick) Dowrey of Vancouver, president's representative,\npast director of Rotary International, and past district, governor\nof district 101, Dr. G. M. Shrum of\nthe University of British Columbia, and Rev. A. L. Anderson,\nformer Nelson minister now in\nVancouver, will be among speakers at the first annual conference\nof district 156, Rotary International, to be held here Sunday to\nTuesday.     \u00bb\nThame, of the conference is,\n\"Learn More About Each Other.\"\nHeadquarters have been established at the Hume Hotel.\nFollowing Nelson men will help\nwith the conference; H. D. Harrison, conference chairman; V. M.\nMoore, conference secretary; C.\nW. R. Harper, conference treasurer. Entertainment, Arthur Gil-\nKaslo Church\nOverflows\nAt Archer Rites\nKASLO \u2014 Many friends paid\nlast respects Wednesday to Fre\nderick Ebenezer Archer, who took\na large part In Kaslo civic affairs.\nMr. Archer, who died at his\nhome Sunday aged 97 years, was\nmayor of Kaslo 13 times, and\nalso served as alderman.\nIt was impossible for all to\ncrowd into St. Andrews' United\nChurch, where services were conducted by Rev. Dr.-oH. K. Johnston\nand many people stood outside the\nchurch. -   .\nPresiding at the organ was Miss\nElizabeth Giegerich. The large\ncongregation sang \"Lead Kindly\nLight,\" and \"The King of Love\nMy Shepherd Is.\" Interment took\nplace in Kaslo Cemetery.\nR. E. Green, present mayor of\nKaslo, was, one of the honorary\npallbearers. Others were S. J.\nReuter, G. D. Bowker, J. Mac-\npherson, J. Paterson, A. L. MacPhee, and R. Hewat. Active pallbearers were C. A. Adams, J.\nStrachan, J. C. Park, C. J. White,\nW H. Dunn and B. F Palmer.\nMany lovely floral tributes\nadorned the church.\nMr. Archer had lived in Kaslo\nsince 1892. Besides his civic interests, Mr. Archer was a Justice of\nthe Peace and an -active member\nof Kaslo Maple Leaf Orange\nLodge.    .\nThe City Hall flag was at half-\nmast during the service.\nker; reception, W. S. Ramsay; registration and information, L. A.\nMcPhail; transportation, T. G. C.\nFox; housing.'Fraser Tees; decorations, Jack Morrison; halls and\nmeeting places, W. C. Hancock;\ncatering, Jack McDonald; attendance and publicity, W. L. Clark;\nprinting, C. W. Ramsden; pioneers,\nC. B. Mutchler; Boy Scouts, R. H.\nProcter; women's activities, Mrs.\nD. P. Fairbank; sergeant-at-arms,\nK.  D.  McRae.\nSessions will be held ,Mon4ay\nand Tuesday in the Civic Theatre.\n351 SUPPORT\nKIMBERLEY\nARENA FUND    -\nKIMBERLEY \u2014 Completion of\nthe second day* of the Kimberley\nproject \"On the Job\" canvass to\nraise $180,000 found 500 contacts\ncompleted with 351 pledges made\nto donate $717.50 per month, There\nwere also 19 cash donations, totalling 750, while 130 people refused\nto support the plan. r\nThe $180,000 is to place the present arena in a condition acceptable\nto the' fire marshal, further improvements to be carried out over\nthe next 10! years, and also to\ninstall a chair iift for the North\nStar Ski Club's big hill.\nOHONE   1844   FOR   CLASSIFIED\nHILLESTAD RITES\nAT CASTLEGAR\nCASTLEGAR'\u2014 Double funeral\nservices will be held here Friday\nfor a husband -and wife who died\nwhen their late-model car was\nswept from the highway by\nmudslide Sunday afternoon near\nCorra Linn dam.\nRev. W. J. Krenz will conduct\nlast rites for Magnus Olaf and\nRagnhild Ovedia Hillestad of Renata.\nMr. and Mrs. Hillestad died en\nroute home from a vacation. Driver of the car, Morris. Hillestad,\n24, their son, was released Tuesday\nfrom Kootenay Lake General\nHospital.\nOnly other relatives of the dead\ncouple in this area are understood\nto be their daughter, Mrs. Jack\nHand, and her husband at Trail.\nSewer Break\nDamages Alley\nA portion of the alley between\nCarbonate and Mill Streets in the\n900 block was washed out Tuesday\nwhen a sewer broke. Works superintendent E. E. Olson said the\ndamage was not severe.\nKootenay Musical Festival\n(NELSON  DISTRICT)\nWinners Concert\nCAPITOL  THEATRE\nTOMORROW\nat 7:30\np.m.\nSee and Hear:        ,\n\u2022 NELSON CIVIC CHOIR\n\u2022 L. V. ROGERS HIGH SCHOOL BAND\nAND CHOIR\nST. PAUL'S-TRINITY JR. CHOIR\nNELSON STUDIO CHOIR (Mrs. Ferguson's)\nBELFORT JUNIOR CHOIR\nTARRY'S JUNIOR CHOIR ,\nMANY INDIVIDUAL WINNERS\nTickets at the Door\nAdults 50c Students 35c\nDoors Opfcn 7:00 p.m.\nNotes   got  \u00a3jOAh\/L\nm-QjlhDW\u2014*\nWhite Shirts\nThe latest in design ... the\nfirst in fashion ... ail perfectly cut and sanforized.\nOur stock is complete as to\ncollar style, sleeve length, and\nfeaturing button or French\ncuff . . . from fine Broadcloth\nto luxurious Terylene.\nSizes 14 to 18.\nPRICES\n$5.00 to $10.95\nGODFREYS'\nPHONE \u2014 270 \u2014 BOX\nLUGGAGE\nCLEARANCE\nLimited Quality\n20% Discount\nOn Discontinued\n\u2022 Patterns     \u2022 Colors\n\u2022 Sizes\nAH Popular Makes\nStrictly Cash and lug\nSEE OUR WINDOW\nWADES\n350   Baker\nNelson\nSee the most BEAUTIFUL Silverware chest\never presented by...\nCdiinson's Jewellery\nDR AWE RICHEST With\nBO PIECE SERVICE for 8\n8 FORKS     m\n8 KNIVES\n1 BUTTER KNIFE\n1 SUGAR SPOON\nAvailable in Canada's best-loved\npatterns by COMMUNITY\nCollinson's Jewellery\n\"NELSON'S DIAMOND HEADQUARTERS\"\n, . Established Since J897\nPhone 120 Nelson, B.J.\n ioo3\nMedical Science Working for\nRetarded Child, Doctor Says\nTRAIL \u2014 \"A display of the\nwork of the students of Maple\nSchool, under the Kootenay Society for Handicapped Children,\nwas viewed by 65 people Tuesday\nat. a special meeting- held in the\nSt, Andrew's Parish Hall.\nGuesti speakers at the meeting\nwere Dr. L. A. Kerwood, medical\nsuperintendent of Woodlands\nSchool who spoke on problems of\nmental retardation, and Mrs, W.\nA. Goepel, executive director,\nAssociation for Retarded Children\nof B.C. who spoke on the training\ncentres for retarded children.\nNEW FIELD\nDr. Kerwood started his address\nwith an historical outline of the\nproblems of retardation, pointing\nout that it is only very recently\nthat an attempt has been considered to integrate the retarded\nchild ino society.\nSpeaking of the tremendous advances in medical science and the\nobstacles to be overcome in helping the severely retarded child,\nhe said that what can be done on\nthe hospital level is to make certain that every child received i all\npossible help and that hope be\nnot given up until every possible\ninvestigation has been exhausted.\nInvestigation of the brain by\nscience was showing great hope\nof revealing new discoveries\ncould be of assistance in dealing\nwith the problem tit mental\nretardation,\nMrs. Goepei spoke of the work\nand plans of the provincial organization which has existed for\ntwo years.\nFAST RELIEF FOR\nCOMMON\nSORE\nTHROAT\n\"More training \u25a0 centres are\nneeded,\" she said, \"we want them\nto \u25a0 open in rooms . of public\nschools. Retarded children are\njust as much entitle- to free\neducation as any others.\" Residential care on a community level\nwas also necessary in some areas\nin a province this size, the\nspeaker said.' Establishing of recreational and social centres was\nalso another step to be considered.\nParent-counselling was an important part of the work. An effort is being made to have the\nfamily allowance continued until\n18 years for retarded children.\nSays B.C. Can Place\n40,000 New Settlers ,\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Immigration officials here say there\nwill be \"little or no trouble\" in\nplacing the more than 40,000 new\nsettlers expected in British Columbia this year.\n\"Present indications are that\nwe can take the expected number,\" said Alex LOckwood, district\nsuperintendent, immigration settlement service. \"However, cir-\nsumstances will control the flow,\nand if it must be cut off, it will\nbe cut off.\"\nHe said only a serious strike by\nInternational Woodworkers of\nAmerica might upset the handling\no'f immigrants.\n\" Mr. Lockwood added that B.C.\nmight get many more than the\nexpected 40,000.\nAbout 3000 Hungarians have arrived in the province in the last\nfour months, Mr. LOckwood said.\nEdgewood Gives\n$185 To Red Cross\nEDGEWOOD \u2014 The sum of\n$185.30 has been collected for the\nannual Red Cross Drive. The canvassing was done this year by\nmembers of the Inonoaklin Valley\nFarmer's Institute.    ,\nCANADIAN  FILM8\nThe National Film Board producing films \"designed to interpret Canada to Canadians and to\nother nations\" was established in\n1939.\nTHI8 BIG ONE that didn't get away was caught by Steve\nLiptak of Castlegar. To make sure that the catch was no fisherman's tale, Mr. Liptak visited The Dally News editorial department to have his _0\/pound, 8 ounce Dolly Varden photographed.\nHe landed the fish near the Harrop ferry Sunday.    '   \u2022\nPythians Take Prominent\nPart at Tattrie Funeral\nNEW DENVER \u2014 Many friends\nattended funeral service for Daniel M; Tattrie, well known district\nminer who died in Tranquille\nSanatorium after an illness lasting several years. He was 75.  .\nRev. D. A. MacKellar officiated\nin Knox Presbyterian Church.\nHymns sung were '\"All People\nThat on Earth Do Dwell,\" \"Abide\nWith Me,\" and \"Onward Christian\nSoldiers,\" Organist was Mrs.\nThomas Steenhoff.\nA Wonderful Holiday Begins With\nLUGGAGE\nFROM THE BAY\nTops\nIn\nValue\nTops\nIn\nStyling\nTake a tip from us... you'll find find we have a big\nselection of luggage to fit any budget. Make yours\na carefree vacation, knowing you have selected luggage from the finest on the market... styled right\nin fashion-true colors. If you need one piece or a\nfull set we have it at the Bay. Here are just a few\nof the pieces we have in stock.\nTRAVELGARD       SAMS\u00b0N'TE McBRINE\nLadies' Wardrobe\nLadies' Wardrobe $33 Ladies' Wardrobe\n..* Ladies' Overnite\nLadies'Overnite $25\n$12 Ladies' Cosmetic\n1   j'.\u00bbr        _\u2022 22.50\nLadies   Cosmetic\n\u2022jlQ Men's Journeyer\n$35\nNylon Travel Pak Men's 2-Suiter\n$27 $33\n$35\nLadies' Overnite\n22.50\n* '\nLadies' Cosmetic\n22.50\nMen's 2-Suiter\n49.50\nLuggage Section Now Located on the 2nd Floor.\nKnijht. of Pythias, of which\nMr. Tattrie was long a member,\nand Pythian Sisters attended the\nservice, The Pythians conducted\ngraveside rites.\nPallbearers were Charles Schmidt, L. R. Campbell, Roy Mc-\nLanders, Neil Tattrie, George\nTattrie and Walter Tattrie, the\nlast three being cousins.\nBorn in Nova Scotia, Mr. Tattrie\ncame to Nelson ahd district in\n1902. He worked in mines in the\nLardeau, Sandon, New Denver,\nSalmo and Ymir, and was shift\nboss at the Second Relief Mine\nnear Ymir,\nHe is survived by two sisters,\nMrs. Mary Douglas and Mrs.\nJessie Mattatall in Nova Scotia,\nnieces, nephews and his cousins.\nThree brothers, Jack, William and\nLawrence predeceased him.\nHe was laid to rest in the\nKnight- of Pythias plot beside his\nbrother, Lawrence^ in New Denver\ncemetery.\nNOT PROOF s\nof Sobriety\nLEEDS, England (CP)\u2014In the\nopen-mouthed presence of a police\nsurgeon and several constables,\nIan Hamilton Allison put five\nmatches on. the desk, then picked\nthem up with the tips of his fingers and thumbs.\nNot a man in the room was willing to try to do the trick.\nThat, Allison's counsel later told\nthe court, was conclusive proof\nthat his client, couldn't possibly\nhave been guilty of drunk driving.\nThe police surgeon agreed that\nAllison was flawless in executing\nthe match trick. But he insisted\nthat the defendant was nonetheless incapable of driving a car\nand that he had refused to undergo any of the more conventional\nsobriety tests.\nIn spite of his digital dexterity,\nAllison was .fined \u00a325 and banned\nfrom driving for a year.\nCLOSE,STATELY HOME\nKNOWSLEY, England (CP)\nKnowsley Hall, Lord Derby's\nstately, home in this Lancashire\nvillage, will be closed to the pub\nlie this summer \u2014 \"to rest it\"\nNearly 200;0O0 sightseers have vi\n_ited it in eight years.\nCranbrook Makes\nLast Payment\nTo Hungarians\n. CRANBROOK \u2014 City Council\nthis week authorized a further\n$350 contribution to the Cranbrook Hungarian Refugee committee for ite work 'of tiding over\nthe immigrants over until they\nare 'permanently employe- hut\nmade it clear to the committee\nthat this would be the final direct\ncity assistance. It brings to ,$1000\nthe total granted by the city\nsince the committee was established last -all.\nResolution was passed that the\nfederal government assume \u25a0 financial assistance responsibility\nsince these newcomers had arrived under federal auspices..\n' Also approved at, the meeting\nwas a basic grant of $850 for city\ncivil defence for the year starting\nApril 1, with Ernest Rowe, named\nchief officer again at a rate of\n$40 a month. The grant will also\ncover additional communication\nequipment for the civil defence\nunit. s\nApproval was given an application by Ed Sanderson, manager of\nCranbrook Fjiying Services, for\npermission to have a 12 by 16-foot\nbuilding at the city airport as\nground school for his class in\nflying. >\nW. A. Burton, permanent chairman of Cranbrook Centennial\nCelebration committee, reported\non details of plans for the 1958\nprogram July 1 to 6, and said\nthere are now six applications for\ndesignation as -the permanent\nrecognized Centennial project\neligible for provincial financial\ngrant.\nEXTENSION OKAYED\nApplication of seven residents\non extra-municipal Little Van\nHome Street for extension of\nwater service was considered and\napproved  with  financial stipula-\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, APRIL 11,1957 _ 3\nCreston Qolf Course Takes Shape\n.CRESTON \u2014A nine-hole golf\ncourse is under corstruction at\nCreston Golf Club property three\nmiles from Creston. A\nThe course being cleared is loc-\nsited on a llO-acr? property bought\nfrom the government for a nom-\ninal sum three years ago. Space\nis being left for another nine holes\nin the future.\nClub house, tennis court and\nplayground are also part of the\nplans.\nCreston Reclamation Company\nwith R. B. Staples as supervisor\nhave donated equipment for the\nclearing job. Three holes were\ncleared last year by Creston Sawmills and other firms.\nThe terrain is free of stones, and\nis expected to produce fine turf.\nThe site also has an excellent\nview. . .\nPony League To Be\nFormed at Riondel\nRIONDEL\u2014 At a recent meeting of the Bluebell Recreation\nClub, it was decided to organize\na Pony League Baseball Club for\nthe young potential ball players.\nThere will be a meeting called\nsoon to organize this club.\nRiondel People Pass\nFirst Aid Exams\n' RIONDEL \u2014 The St. John Am\nbulance Council of Riondel held\nfirst aid examinations recently\nwhen 49 persons were examined\nand passed. Barney Potter, supervisor of First Aid at Trail smelter,\nwas the examiner, assisted by Mrs.\nDdreen Harrison, Frank Shannon,\nT. Sweeney and John McGillivray.\ntion that each applicant pay $90\nas share in extension of the main\nfrom the city, with an additional\nrequirement of $100 each as connection fee payable in advance,\n$lr100r000 Profit Expected From\nNew Greenwood Copper Producer\nGREENWOOD \u2014 A \"first quarter\" report of milling operations\nat British Columbia's newest copper producer! Woodgreen Copper\nMines Limited, is expected at the\nend of April.     \u25a0\nThe mill, four miles from\nGreenwood, was started up in late\nJanuary. After a tuning-up period,\nshipment of concentrates by rail\nto the Tacoma smelter of the American Smelting and Refining\nCompany was commenced. First\nincome for this production was\nreceived in March.\nCurrently milling at the rate of\n1000 tons of ore daily, utilizing\nopen-pit mining methods, the mill\nis to be expanded to 1500 tons\ndaily capacity. Location is the\nfamous old Motherlode Copper\nproperty.\nStanley B. Landell, Toronto,\npresident of Woodgreen Copper,\nsaid the company expects to make\nTwins, Then\nFollowed Triplets\nCORNER BROOK, Nfld. (CP)\u2014\nExactly a year after she -had\ntwin boys, Mrs. Bert Pond has\ngiven birth to girl triplets. It\nmakes a total of 10 children\u2014six\nof them girls\u2014with the eldest being seven-year-old Evelyn.\n\"The triplets were quite, a\npleasant surprise,\" said the 26-\nyear - old native of Fort Blanford,\nNfld. Her 29-year-old husband is\na plumber.\nBut it's a problem finding room\nfor such a fast-growing family,\nMrs. Pond says. They bought, a\nfour-roomed house five years ago\nand now it's overflowing.\nThe Corner Brook Kinsmen's\nclub is launching* a drive for\nmerchandise and clothing for the\nfamily, and -secretary George\nBackworth said the response \"is1\nexcellent.\"\n\"Merchandise and 'foodstuffs is\nsomething we can contribute,\"\nhe said, \"but what Mrs. Pond\nneeds is another pair of hands.\"\nOutpost Hospital At\nEdgewood Nearly Burns\nEDGEWOOD- A bucket brigade is credited .with saving the\nRed Cross outpost hospital from\ndestruction by fire Saturday. '\n' About noon, Miss Gladys Rams-\nbottom, nurse in charge, discovered the roof fire after she\nbegan smelling smoke.\nBy ringing a( general alarm on\nthe local  telephone system, the\nvillage summoned a squad of\nvolunteers. By forming a bucket\nbrigade, they extinguished flames\nwhich were centered around the\n-himney.\nA large hole was burned in the\nroof, and some damage resulted to\nthe attic. Water damage, particularly soaking of plaster Walls, Was \u2022\nfairly extensive.\n''Captain Morgan's in Town!'\nCaptain Morgan\nRUM\nBLACK LABEL \u2022 DE LUXE\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the\nLiquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia\n$1,100,000 profit in Hie year from\ncopper production alone, based\nop copper at 30 cents a pound.\nWoodgreen is investigating the\neconomics of recovering the iron\nvalues in the ore.:\nDevelopment work is in progress at Woodgreen's other properties in Eastern Canada.\nPLASTIC\nWALL TILE\nByMatico\nRUBBER COVE BASE\nOnly Complete Stock of Plastic Tile\nand Accessories in the Kootenays.\nClAAticiatejcL\nEnterprises Ltd.\nPhone 1704 Nelson, B.C.\nYOURWATCH\nDeserves the Best of Care!\nEven the finest watch should be cleaned and oiled at least\nonce a year. Neglect today may mean costly repair bills\ntomorrow. Let us inspect your watch. It's worth a few moments of your time to find out whether all's well. There's\nno charge or obligation for this service.\nTIME-TESTED\n\u25a0#...;.\nwith precision on the\nVibrograf\nYour watch is recorded electrically on a\ngraph and will tell you within seconds how\nmuch time is lost or gained in a 24-hour\nspace of time.\n;\u2022\u25a0-\u2022\u201e;   DEPARTMENT OF HIGHWAYS\nNOTICE\nRegulations - Load and Speed\nRestrictions in the\nNelson-Creston Electoral District\nLoad and speed restrictions will be rescinded on all highways within- the\nNelson-Creston Electoral District effective Friday, April 12th, 1957 at\n12:01 a.m..\nA. L. FREEBAIRN,\nDistrict Engineer\nSee Us for All of Your\nWatch Repairs and Engravings\nMail Orders Handled Promptly\nMr. Fred Sehwindt\nWho is our.qualified watchmaker has taken his training\nin Germany and specializes in watch repairs. Therefore\nwith only one trade you get the best of workmanship\nand care for your treasured watch.\nOLSON'S \u00a3-B\nJEWELLERS\n\"NOT A PENNY MORE FOR CREDIT\"\nPhone 1149\n364 Baker St.\nNelson, B.C.\nM\n Nelson Satlg $?Ut0\n' Established  April  22.  1902\n. '\u25a0   Interior Srltf-h Columbia's largest Dally Newspaper    i\nPublished every morning except Sunday and statutory   \/\nholldaye   by- the   NEWS   PUBLISHING    COMPANY   \u00bb        \u2022\nLIMITED, 266 Baker Street, Nelson, Briti-h Columbia. \u25a0\nAuthorized u Second Class Mall, Post Office Department. Ottawa.   .\nMEMB-H OF THE AUDIT  BUBBAU  OF, CIBCULATIONS    '\nt*    MEMBER 0.  THE CANADIAN PRESS\nThe Canadian Press la exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all newt\ndispatches credited to it oi to The Associated Press or Router? in this paper,\n-. and also the local nswi published therein.\n~ Thursday, April 11,1957\n'  '   \" V\nTrust Fund Would Help Preserve Moyie\nMost of the citizens of Nelson will\n-agree with City Council when.it says\nthat the honor of preserving the Moyie should go to Kaslo. Quite apart\nfrom the fact that that city was intimately connected with the Moyie is .\n.. the need to spread all our attractions\nthroughout the Kootenays.\n','\u25a0 Tourist travel is not a matter of\ngoing from one large centre, but,\nparticularly in the Kootenays, of\nwandering from one beauty spot to\nanother. So far Kaslo has been very\nmuch off the line of tourist travel,\n,and despite the beauty of its location\nJ has not received the attention it deserves.. The Moyie should be a definite attraction to that city.\n[;    The preservation of the Moyie is\n! important to all the Kootenays, and\nwhen the city speaks of moral support to the City of Kaslo it speaks for\nall of the Kootenays.\nExactly how Kaslo expects to finance the removal and setting up of\nthe vessel is not yet entirely clear.\nIt may involve considerable expense,\nas will its annual upkeep, It is highly,\nimportant that the Moyie be preserved from the vandalism which has\nrobbed us of other sueh vessels, i\nIn view of all this, consideration\nshould be given to the formation of\na trust to deal with the matter. In the\nlarger sense its preservation is the\nresponsibility of all the lakeside communities. With such a trust it would\nbe possible for private organizations\nand others to contribute to the fund,\nLetters To The Editor\nLetters ts the Editor on any toplo of gonulno Interest-are wolcomo If they ara\nbrltf, acourata and fair. No latter will be Inserted In whole, or In part, except over the\nsignature and address of the writer.  Unsolicited correspondence cannot be  returned.\nAlcoholism Reaching \"Alarming\nProportions,\" States Writer\nTo the Editor:\n[\u2022' Sir \u2014 I wish to express my appreciation\not your paper for reprinting an article: \"New\nDrug Act\", which appeared in The Daily\n- News of March 19.\nTha article is very interesting and\nthqught provoking. There is one phrase in\nthe article which particularly caught my\nfancy, whpra> it says: \"the terrible practice\nof deliberately corrupting the youth of this\ncountry for rno.netary gains.\" This is a very\n-; expressive statement of a fact. I only wish\n[to add that thisepithet'may well be applied\nUo a good many more instances besides nar-\ni cotics, like alcoholism, for instace. It is perfectly clear that alcoholism constitutes a\ngrave menace to society. It is a deciding\nfactor behind many of our social ills, such\nas crime, juvenile delinquency, traffic accidents; prostitution, broken homes and\ndivdrces. The_effect of alcohol is always\n.'negative. I have yet to see a case where any-\n, body was actually benefitted by indulging in\nJalcohol, except, of course, the producers -\n-and distributors of liquor. Here is a clear\ngease of \"corruption for monetary gains.\"\n;\u25a0 The spread of alcoholism is gaining alarm-\nr'ing proportions during the last decade, It has\nbreached a point where something definitely\nifBhould be done soon, before the whole\nfcountry is drowned in liquor. Perhaps al-\n\u2022coholism cannot be abolished completely,\nchut surely it can be effectively curbed and\n^controlled. Possibly we need a long-range\nMan of action with a very wise but vigorous\n(approach to the problem. The present Liquor\nsControl Board is sorely inadequate. So the\n^present state of affairs is likely'to continue\nI ~\"       ~\nBoy Scouts Association\n1     Thanks Press, Radio\n\"To the Editor: \u25a0 *\n)| Sir \u2014 At the recent Annual Meeting of\nJThe Soy Scouts Association, British Colum-\njjsia Provincial Council, a very hearty vote\nof thanks was passed-to the press, radio and\n;TV outlets of information in British Columbia and the Yukon. Throughout another\nJyear, the Scout Movement has enjbyed much\n\u2022support and publicity resulting in a growirtg\nipublic interest in the work.\nOur entire all time high membership\nt'of 27,864 thanks you so much for your help.\nAs we celebratae this Jubilee Year of Scout-\nUng it is our hope to carry 6n in the finest\n^traditions of Scouting and we feel in that\neffort we will have your continued understanding and assistance.\nSTUART KEATE,\nPresident\nas long as profits from liquor comprise a\nsizeable portion of national revenue.\nAs an immediaite step towards curbing\nthe spread of alcoholism I suggest banning\nof all advertisements of liquor in newspapers, magazines, radio, T.V., and all other\nmedia of propaganda. The removal of colorful adds of liquor from magazines will\neliminate much of temptation for our young\npedple, who are particularly susceptible to\nsubtly misleading propaganda. Whether\nsuch banning should be effected by compulsory legislation, or by voluntary co-operation between liquor banufactures, distributors, the presss, radio, etc., is for the public\nto decide.\nIn the meantime I hope that the forthcoming new Drug Act will create a precedent whereby 'the same principle may be\napplied to other similar instances.\nW. J. KOOCHIN,\nBox 154, Brilliant, B.C.\n(Editor's note: We hardly think banning\nof advertising would solve the problem any\nmore than did prohibition.. A ban on advertising would only be possible at the federal\ngovernment level (which would1 breach the\nrights of the provinces) and would mean\nthe shutting out of all newspapers, magazines, television and radio programs from\noutside the borders o'f the nation. In other\nwords an iron curtain would have to be\nraised. Some provinces ban liquor advertising now in the press and radio of the province, but the advertising from neighbor\nprovinces comes; in with the magazines and\npapers, etc. There is the viewpoint also that\nif it Is legal to sell a product, it should be\nlegal to advertise it in the open press rather\nthan by other means. The real answer, of\ncourse, is education in the use of beverages.\nAfter all, it is possible to destroy one's self\nby pver-eating, too).     \u2022\nWatch Your Language\nOCCIDENT \u2014 (6K-si-dent) \u2014 noun; tha\nwest, opposed to Orient, specifically, Europe\nas opposed to Asia and the Orient; now,\nalso, the .Western hemisphere. Origin: Old\nFrench from Latin\u2014Occldens, from Occident present participle of Occidere, to fall,\ngo down.\nIt's Been Said\nIn adversity assume the cduntertance of\nprosperity, and in prosperity moderate the\ntemper and desires.\u2014Livy, Roman historian.\n1 Questions?\nANSWERS\nOpen   to   any   reader    Names   ot\n_. persons asking  questions  will  hot  be.\n' published   There is no charge foi this\nservice   QUESTIONS  WILL NO.   BE\nANSWERED BY  MAIL except  where\n.th-re Is obvious necessity  for privacy\n\"Loo\", Nelson \u25a0\u2014 Could you give me Fred\nAstaire's age and tell me if he ever aoted\nin silent'pictures?.\nFred Astaire was born in Omaha, Nebraska, 1898. As. far as we know Mr. Astaire\nbegan his screen career when sound ousted\nsilent pictures from public favor.\nSteady Reader, Salmo -.\u2014 Where can I get 'a\nbook of instructions on how to play\ncribbage?  '\nYou can order \"Hoyle Up-to-Date\", edited\nby Albert-H. Morehead, from Mann's Drug\nStore, 498 Baker Street, Nelson. The subtitle is \"The Official Rules of Card Games\"\nand the price should be not more than fifty-\ncents. You will find cribbage instructions\nin this book as. well as rules for playing\npractically every card game.\nB.W., Nelson \u2014 Would you please give me'\naddress of the nearest teamsters' union\noffice?'\nWe have not been able to trace this.\nWould the Teamsters' Joint Council be of\nany interest to you? Their address is 200-307\nBroadway, Vancouver.\nReader, Trail \u2014 Was the jazz musician\nCharles Parker, who died recently, a\ntrumpet player? l'\nCharles Parker was a saxophone player,\nE. M. H\u201e Kaslo \u2014 Please advise me If there\n\u25a0 is an agent in Nelson for the J. R. Wat-\nkins products?\nWe have no address at present of a\nWatkins' agent.\nLan^ua^e-Barrier\nSimplification of government business is\nundoubtedly behind the decision of the\nIsraeli government to seek authority to drop\nEnglish as an official language of Israel.\nThis will leave Arabic and Hebrew as the\ntwo languages of official status.\nIt is not surprising that English should\nhave had an official standing in Israel, when\nit \"is recalled that Britain had the mandate\nfor Palestine' between 1920 and 1948, when\n, Israel became independent. Civil servants,\nas well as others dealing with the government, had to have time to learn the revived\nHebrew  language, which was adopted  by\n.the new state as the natural language of the\nJewish people iti Israel, The abandonment\nof English suggests that a sufieient proportion of .the population has become proficient\nin this language to risk making it obligatory\nin official records and discussions. Arabic is\nspoken by a large enough number of people\nto-continue its use.\nThis action is far from implying that\nEnglish it to be eliminated from social or\nbusiness use in Israel. Such changes have\nbeen atempted by some other countries in\nthe grip at nationalitic fervor. It would, indeed, be very folish to atempt to prevent\npeople learning such a useful language as\nEnglish, considering the enormous increase\nin its use all over the world since the beginning of the war.\ni In Western Europe and in Russia, English is commonly a second language, and is\nwidely taught in secondary schools and universities. Such policies are rapidly increasing the number of people who can use. our\nlanguage. The more generally this becomes\nthe case, the sooner will English be accepted\nas the universal means of communicatibn between peoples.\nIt is, of course, more than improbably\nthat English will ever supplant all other\nlanguages. It might do so in certain countries\nshould boundary berries be eliminaed and\ncommercial and cultural inter-relationships\nbecome so close that the dominate influence\noverwhelms the racial background of a\nsmaller neighbor. But even this is not an\nabsolute certainty, as Europe's language\npatern proves.The Czechs lived for generations next to _ vastly more numerous German-speaking population, and retained their\n, own tongue most tenaciously. There are\nWelsh people in Wales, and French-Canadians in Quebec, who still do not speak English, in spite \"f the much greater number\naround them who cannot speak anything\nelse.\nThe mother tongue has a potent vitality\nwhich must be recognized. Idealists who\ndream that one day all men will speak the\nsame language forget reality and underestimate ethnic loyalties. English may one day\nbe universally understood, but it will continue t6 share its function with other languages, so 16ng as men remember their origins.\n\u2014Globe and Mail\nsin\nThe Bundle?\n'    '.. .\"F. B. PEARCE'\n,  'II\nII II   '   HI!     i   llll.JS\nYour, Individual\n-__By Frances Drake-\nAll my very charming friends\nwho are convinced that I should\nwrite a book are Invited to peruse\nthe following. After ^thi. I presume they will say'that I was\nright and that I cannot. There are\na great many who think I can't\neven write,\nWriting books is WORK and 1\ndon't'want to work. s After being\npensioned by a gwteful school\ndistrict why should I? -\nYou can see my tongue sticking out in my cheek very clearly\n'n the first paragraph but after\nthat-1 began to enjoy it. I got a\nlot\nLook in the .section In which\nyour birthday cornea and. find\nwhat yrfUr outlook is, according\nto the stars,\nFor.Friday, April 12, 1967\nMARCH, 21 to APRIL 20 (Aries)\nPlan your' day with an eye to requirements. ' Introduce a novel\ntwist to your work If feasible.\nConsider well the informative advice of those \"in the know.\" Move\nwith precision, clarity of purpose.\nAPRIL 21 to MAY' 21 (faurus)\n\u2014'If not making headway, change\ntempo, method; plan your day to\nstilt conditions. Be careful, how\n<}\u00a34l ol SsaotuL\not fun out of the people on ever, that you don't detour from\nthe bridge and what they were to\nsay and so forth. '\u25a0*\nMy wife says I should finish\nIhe story before Ilnflict It on the\npublic. As fat as I am concerned\nit Is finished now. I can't make\nup my.mlnd what is in the bundle.\nCan you?;- \\)\nDeath Comes Dally\nv Chapter 1 '.\nMush if? the Morning\nIt was-the beginning of a lovely\nEnglish Summer day. The sky was\nblue with fat white clouds scudding before.}ne gentle breeze\nwith blackbirds chasing each other\nfrom bush \"to bush, rooks laughing\" raucously in the immemorial\nvelmi, primroses, bluebells nodding cheerfully to one another, the\nrays of the sun tipping the weather cock on: the village church\nwith gold and slipping in the\n'open windows of the school whither two young boys should have\nbeen wending their way.\nThey were decidely not. Instead\nthey were sitting on the parapet\nof a bridge waiting for the 8:55\nto pass underneath. Tensely immobile, rock in hand they waited.\nA distant murmur swelling into\na louder sound, a rush and a\nroar and the train was gone. \"An\ninch more and it would have been\ndown the jolly old smokestack.\"\n\"I nearly, got the engineer,\" said\nthe other. \"Let's run. I hear the\nbell ringing.\" As they scrambled\ndown neither noticed the long\nknife which fell to land point in\nground beside a dark bundle\nin the corner of the bridge abutment.\nThe church clock struck nine.\nBOng\u2014nine times repeated. A\ngirl approached the bridge. Her\ngolden hair glinted in the sun\nlight, her damask cheeks were\nflushed with Indignation, her\nblue eyes were hoatlle and resentful. Across the bridge came\na young man. they met In the\nmiddle.\n\"Hullo,\" he said,\n\"I'm not speaking to you,\" she\nsaid. \"Not after what ybu done\nlast night.\"\n\"Oh? and what did I do last\nnight?\"   '*      ;'\n\"You know. YOu and that Ellen\nSimpson,\n\u2022a didn't do nothing with that\nEllen Simpson.\"\n\"Yes you did.\"\n\"I never did nothing, I tell you.\"\nThey parted in anger. Neither\nnoticed  the  vagrant  breeze  toss\nthe girl's handkerchief down beside the dark bundle lying by the\nbridge abutment.\nLooking like twin Queens Victoria in their black dresses and\nbonnets two old ladies came to\nthe centre of the bridge. They\npaused to rest.\n\"I'm sure dear Vicar should\nrtafry again,\" said one.\n\"Yes,\"   said  the   other.    \"Isn't\nthat a horrid blue hat that dear\nJane was wearing?\"\n\"He' must be very, uncomfbrt-\nreal  objectives.  Tact, diplomacy\nimportant.\nMAY 22 to JUNE 2i,\" (Gemini)\n\u2014Uncover new interests for yourself and your family. Also explore more thoroughly -those you\nalready .enjoy. The wit and wisdom of the past makes for good\nreading,  genial' conversation.  Be\nJUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer)\n\u2014 Keep pace with duties, Add\nzest'to your performance with\nnew invigorating action. Friends,\nfamily look to you for encouragement, assistance In solving problems. Give them that aid.\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leo)\n-The Influences are neither too\ngenerous.nor too restrictive now,\nso it i_ really up to you whether\nyou will piogress or \"stay put.\"\nMuch can be achieved, if you are\nalert and ACT!\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER\n(Virgo) \u2014 Vith your keen mentality you are well-equlped to\nhandle requirements, Give full\nexpression to your talents. Don't\nlet new opportunities slip by while\nyou are helping others.\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER\n23 (Libra) \u2014 Not an entirely encouraging day for all activities\nbut, with prudent conduct and patience, you can advance in familiar matters, your occupation,\nhousehold affairs, etc.\nOCTOBER   24  to  NOVEMBER\n22 (Scorpio* \u2014 History Is full ot\n\"its,\", but a well-planned day\nbacked up by conscientious effort\nwon't fall into this.classification,\nTeaching, office and secretarial\nwork, manual' labor* among top\nfavored activities,\nNOVEMBER \\i to DECEMBER\n21 (Sagittarius) \u2014 If progress Is\nslow, re-allocate activities and\nconcentrate on. essentials. Solicit\nthe aid of capable associates or\nothers to help solve difficulties.\nPrepare to expand interests.\n'JANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY\n19 (Aquarius) \u2014 Despite any opposition, get on with what you\nknow are YOUR duties and interests. Be systematic, don't dawdle\nover details, and DO use your Initiative.\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\n(Pisces) \u2014 Your indications similar to Aquarius' today. Don't fret\nover obstacles. Hurdle them instead,\nYOU BORN TODAY are mentally active, usually ' physically\n\"on the go,\" too. You can create,\nor capably carry on work laid out\nby others. You appreciate the artistic, usually like travel. You\nlike people, are a naturlaly good\nhost.\nBlrthdate of: Henry Clay, noted\nAmer. statesman, orator,\nKing  Features\nMiracle Cushion\nHolds False Teeth\nTight\nEases\nSore Gums'\nBnug \u00a9 brand\nDmituro Cu-Moiin\noro % triumph of\notiioaco, ft rseuna-\ntionril mm plasti-\n-ft-Liplng that gets rid at tto nnnoyanoD\nend irritation of loose, badly fitting fait*\ntcath. Bmig eases sore, Irritated gums duo\nto tooae fitting denture*, Applied in it few\nminutes, moke, the wol.blieat platen stay\nfirmly in place \u2014 gives perfect oomfort. Eat\nanytmng \u2014 talk, laugh \u2014 plates \"stay put,''\nHarmless to gums or dentures.\nBnug ra-linoro can last from 2 to 8\nmonths., Stays soft and pliable \u2014 docs no*\nharden and ruin plate. Peels right out\nwhen replacement is jieednd. No daily\nbother with adheslvee. Get Snug brand\nDenture Cushion, today I 2 liners for up-.\nper or lower plates $1,50. Money back tf\nMi satisfied. At all druggista.\na T, FULFORD Co., Ltd., Brookrille, OH\nComfortable Night\nBOSTON (AP) \u2014 Sir Anthony\nEden, who flew' hera Sunday\nfrom New Zealand for a medical\ncheck \".fad a comfortable night\nand slept very wall,\" his physician said Wednesday,.\nThe daily bulletin said Eden\n\"has been, able to get adequate\nrest.\"   .\nable\" in ^that big house all alone,\npoor dear.\"\n\"Blue never did' suit her and\ncertainly not with 'that faded puce\ndress she was wearing.\" '.\n. ,She fumbled with her \"reticule\nand brought out a handkerchief\nand mopped her eyes. Neither noticed the small piece of paper\nfloat down to come to rest beside'\nthe dark bundle lying by the\nabutment.\nFOR A\nLASTING\nSHINE I\nTheyTl Do It Every Time\nBy Jimmy Hatlo\nGuFFERTOrJ, THE\nNEW S4UESM4N,\nBR4GISED IT UP\nBIG WHEN HE'\nBROUGHT Ihl HIS\nPH?ST(P.S.,4ND\nONLY)-SALE\nSO R4(2\u00bb.\nTODAY'S BIBLE\nTHOUGHT\nRise, take up thy bed and walk.\nJoin-. 5:8.\nChrist told the man sick of the\np^lsey to use the power He had\ngiven him. God does not give more\npower to those who do not use the\npower they have.\nTh~nx aho i .TIP\nOF THE HS.TLO \\W\/H\ntoLuci-e \u2022\nQI5__NB4UM,\n\u25a0to W. 7Z ST,\nNEW Y.RK Z5,\nCfamL 3isL\nYou don't need a hook to tell you\nhow to make friends and influence\npeople. Just brag on their children.\n10.5 cu. ft.\nPAY ONLY $34 DOWN,\nBALANCE MONTHLY\n\u2022 Automatic push-button defrosting\n\u2022 23-quart crisper, 43-pound freezer\n\u2022 Egg row, butter opaco, 4 racks in door\n\u2022 Eye-level cold control\n\u2022 Two ice cube trpys\nFood storage convenience ot its best \u2014 ot o wonderful\nlow price thot makes it the best refrigerator buy in\nCanada. All-porcelain interior in Pink and Charcoal. <.\nAutomatic push-button defrosting. Three rust-proof\nshelves, crisper, freezer. Dairy products are stored in\ndoor. See it today \u2014 compare the value !\u2014 then buy\nthis super A.M.C. value. Make a small down payment\nand buy on Bay .easy terms.\n'AM.C. m-dtu\u2014Associated ilerchandislnt) Corporation ... a croup\no\/ Xmerlcait Retailers who produce top-guatlty nppU-nces to sell for\nless, The Bay is the only Catiadian member ... A.M.C. products are\nexclusive with BAY States In Canada, Coast to Coast.\n8 cu. ft. Standard Defrost\n8 cu. ft.- Deluxe ___\n8 cu. ft. Automatic Defrost and Crisper.\n' (Super Deluxe)\n$249\n$279\n$299\n1W#0$1W mW\u00a7^\nINCORPORATED  Sit MAY 1670.\n Abobt'the Town\nPHONE 136\nMiss Jan Maynard, eldest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C..W. Maynard, 207 High Street, was \"married March 31 in a quiet wedding\nceremony in Vancouver to Arthur\nLandor of Kelowna, Mr. and Mrs.\nPhillip Beall of Vancouver attended the couple who: will reside\nat 2506 W. Third Avenue in Vancouver.\n\u25a0  , *   *   \u2022 :'\u25a0'\nMr. and Mrs. Harry Wade, Kootenay Street, spent the weekend\nin Calgary.\n* \u00ab   *\nMrs. Bruce Clark and daughters,\nBarbera and Torii, Hall Mines\nHoad. have returned from a motor\ntrip through Penticton to Vancouver. In Penticton they were\nthe guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ron\nCooper, former Nelson residents.\nWhile in Vancouver they were\nguests at the home of Mr. and\nMrs. J. J. Harding.\n\u2022 *   *\nMrs. S. K. Yorke and children,\nSusan and Lorraine and Gary,\nformerly of Carbonate Street,\nhave joined Mr. Yorke in Vancouver where they have taken up\nresidence.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nFifty-six. Group of Fairview\nUnited Church met at the hom'e\nof Mrs. M. J. Varseveldt, 514 Front\nStreet. Miss Irene Ehmke and\nMrs. A. M. Ferguson were co-\nhostesses.\nt \u00ab   \u2022   .\nMrs. Al Larson, 501 Robson\nStreet, Mrs. Jacob Koenig, Observatory Street, and Mrs. Alfred\nAnderson of Salmo are spending\na few days in Spokane.\n* *   *\n.. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Ringrose and\nsons, Joe, Bobby and Billy, and\nJames Ringrose, Third Street,\nspent the 'weekend in Penticton\nand Kelowna. In the former city\nBy Alice Stevens\nPrince Philip's\nNiece To Be Married\nBADEN-BADEN, West Germany\n(Reuters) \u2014 Princess Margarita\nof Baden, 24, a niece of Britain's\nPrince Philip, will marry Prince\nTomislav of Yugoslavia June 8,\nher family announced here. Princess Margarita is the daughter o.\nMargrave Bethold von Baden and\nPrincess Theodora of Greece, a\nsister of Prince Philip. Margarita\ntrained as a nurse at a London\nhospital. Prince Tomislav, 29, is a\nbrother of ex-King Peter of Yugo<\nslayia.\nNearly 250 Nurses From Canada\nTo Attend Congress In Rome\nthey' visited' their cousin, *liss D.\nH. Orr.\n* \u2022   \u00bb        ',-',\u2022'\u25a0\nMrs. Roy Olson, Stirling Hotel,\nwas hostess to members of Harmony Group of St. Paul's-Trinity\nUnited Church. Co-hostesses were\nMrs. Clarence Mason and. Mrs.\nHelen Irvine. \",\n* *   *\nMr. and Mrs. E. F. Abrahamson,\n807 Third Street, have been visiting Vancouver.\n* *   *\nFifteen members and thr_e\nguests were present at the meeting of Good Companions group of\nSt. Paul's-Trinity at the home of\nMrs. E. Jones,, 315 Silica Street.\nCo-hostesses w\\ere Mrs. H. Mc-\nLelland, Mrs. G. Ball and Mrs. J.\nLudlow. Monthly auction of baking and plants was held. The members discussed plans to take charge\nof the clothing aid during July.\n* \u00bb   \u00ab\nFour young friends gathered at\nthe home of Mr. and Mrs. C. H.\nLindsay, 612 Sixth Street Tuesday afternoon to help Peggy\nLindsay celebrate her seventh\nbithday. Those present were Can-\ndice Kennedy, Dena Calbeck,\nBarbara Lindsay and Maeve Koe.\nEDGEIWOOD WI\nSALE BRINGS\nFINE PROFIT\nEDGEWOOD \u2014 When the meet\ning of the Edgewood-lonoaklin\nWomen's Institute was held at the\nhome of Mrs. John Ewings, it was\nreported that the St. Patrick's sale\nshowed a profit of $78.17.\n-Mrs. S. M. Murray was elected\ndelegate to attend the District\nRally in Fauquier on May 11.\nA donation of $5 was voted to\nthe Red Cross drive and $10 will\nbe sent to Mr. and Mrs. B. Gib-\nbert of Fauquier who lost their\nhome by fire recently.\nEntry for the fair was discussed\nand members volunteered to do\nthe sewing.\nThe neighboring Institutes of\nNeedles and Fauquier will be invited to attend a social evening\non May 17,\nMrs. P. A. Bateman of Rossland\nand Mrs. E. Hall were welcomed\nas visitors.\n.5\nFAMOUS BANK\nThe Bank of England? central\nbank for the United Kingdom,, was\nestablished in 1694.\nMrs. Gummow\nMead Wis'\nGroup to Ceylon\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Nineteen\nCanadian women are scheduled\nto leave here by air this summer\nto attend a conference in Colombo, Ceylon. Their trip will take\nthem around the world.\nThe delegates, representing women 's,organizations from Quebec\nto British Columbia, will attend\na 27-country conference of the\nAssociated Countrywomen of the\nWorld, July 3-13.\nMost of the Canadian delegates\nare representatives of the women's institutes acrbss the country.\nMrs. Stella Gummow of Victoria, superintendent, of the Women's Institutes of B.C., is organizing travel arrangements far the\nCanadian delegation. The round-\nthe-world tour, including the 10-\nday Ceylon conference, is expected to last more than a month,\nMrs. Gummow said it is the\nfirst time in the 28-year history\nof the Associated Countrywornen\nof the World that its conference\nhas been held in an Asian coun\ntry.\nThe   last   world   meeting   was\nheld in Toronto, in 1953.\nOVER-POPULATION\n\"Attention of the conference\nwill fo'cus on economic production\nand the problem of over-population,\" said Mrs. Gummow in an\ninterview here.\n\"the organization is non-denominational and non-sectarian,\nso there are few taboos to restrict\nour discussions.\"\nFor Mrs. Gummow, a widow\nwith a married daughter, It will\nbe her third world conference.\nShe has been associated with the\nWomen's Institute in B.C. for 20\nyears. .   '\nLEAVE JUNE 16\nAll but three. of the Canadian\ndelegates will leave Vancouver\nin a group, on a special flight,\nJune 16.\" The group will fly to\nColombo via Honolulu, Fiji, Auckland, N.Z., Sydney, Australia, and\nSingapore.\nReturning to. Canada, the entire\ndelegation will fly to London via\nBombay, Beirut, Rome, Geneva\nand Paris. From London, some of\nOTTAWA \u2014 Canada's delegation to the 11th International\nCouncil of Nurses' Congress in\nRome, May 27 to June 1, will be\nthe fourth largest of 60 participating nations^ Close to 250 delegates representing 43,355 members\nof the Canadian Nurses' Association will travel to the Congress\nby sea and air to join 3000 nurses\nfrom around the world. \\\nA Canadian nurse wJU speak at\none of the principal sessions being\nheld during the Congress. Miss\nHelen Carpenter, Assistant Professor, School of Nursing, University of Toronto, will team up,with\nspeakers from Sweden and Italy\nto discuss \"Responsibility for the\nEducation of Nurses.\" Miss Car-\nFashion Show\nHere Saturday\nSpring and summer styles will\n.be shown at a Children's Fashion\nShow and Tea to be held under\nthe auspices of the Junior Hospital\nAuxiliary on Saturday afternoon\nin the Silver Room, Hume Hotel.\nFashions are being arranged by\na Nelson firm.\nVarious committees were ap\npointed at the Auxiliary's last\nmeeting, and most of the ladles\nwill be helping out. President Miss\nFlorence Jefferys will be general\nconvener.\npentSr is second vice-president of\nthe Canadian Nurses' Association.\nCanada's full allotment of 250\nplaces at the Congress has been\ntaken up by members. The delegation will- be led by the president, Miss Trenna Hunter, Vancouver, and Miss Pearl Stiver, Ottawa, General Secretary.\nCanada is the fourth largest\nprofessional nurses' association in\nthe International CounciJ whose\ncombined individual membership\nnow totals approximately 450,000,\nOnly one- national association in\neach country may become ',i\nmember, ,    '\nGoing from Neljon to the Congress will be Miss Flora McLean,\nwho has been extremely active in\nnurses' work.\nOldest international association\nof professional women, the International Council was founded in\n1899. Its.aim is to maintain the\nhighest standards of nursing education, nursing service and professional ethics. At present,' 37\nnational' associations, including\nCanada,, have full membership,\nwhile a further 19 countries have\nassociate member status.\nTogether with its educational\ndivision, the Florence Nightingale\nInternational Foundation'; the\nCouncil acts as an international\nclearing-house of information on\nnursing and nursing education\nfrom all parts of the world.\n003\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, APRIL 11,1957 \u2014 5\nNew Dislricf Commissioner\nFor Guides Welcomed at Riondel\nCanadian Daughters\nMeet In Kamloops -\nKAMLOOPS (CP) \u2014 The 21st\nProvincial Assembly of the Canadian Daughters League opened\nhere Tuesday evening.\nMrs. G. E. Parker of Winnipeg,\nnational president, is attending\nthe meeting. The president of the\nProvincial Assembly^ which will\nconclude sessions Thursday evening, is Mrs. O. J. Knight of Cranbrook.      sj '\nNEW DENVER - A birthday\nparty was held at the home of\nMr. and Mrs. George'R. Stewart\nto mark the 12th birthday of their\nyoungest daughter, Georgina,\nRIONDEL \u2014 The local Association for the 'Girl Guides recently\nwelcomed Mrs. Irene' Jensen of\nRiondel as the new District Commissioner. Mrs. Jensen's territory will \u2022include Crawford Bay,\n--aslo, Riondel and possibly Willow Point.\nLocal Association plans to send\nseven representatives to the annual Provincial Conference in Trail.\nBrown Owl Jean Shannon, TJawny\nOwl Rita Holmes, Captain Possie\nMcDonald and Lieutenant Bertha\nRees will attend the leader's sessions. Mrs. Ethel Christensen, Mrs.\nElza Tod and Mrs, Winnifred Lin-\nville will attend the Local Association discussions. It is hoped that\nnew ideas will be brought from\nthe conference to further the progress of Guiding here.\nSPARKLING and BRILLIANT\nAre the new\nCHROME SETS\nWhich have just arrived\nBE SURE1 '\nSHOP AT\nJjduufnwiL\nBUILD OWN BOAT8\nUPWELL, England (CP)\u2014 Py-.\npils at the secondary school in this\nCambridgeshire village build their\nown boats. In the last four months\nthey have been building a sailing-\ndinghy in their spare time. Wood\nwork master C. M. Abbot is so\npleased that he's thinking of starting work on another.\nPHONE   1844  FOR  CLASSIFIED\nSoered Whist\nParty Successful\nHARROP \u2014 A Social Credit\nmilitary whist drive attended by\n30 people proved a huge success.\nThe social evening was held at\nthe home of , Mr. and Mrs. A.\nFeller of Longbeach.\nPlayers at the winning table\nwere J. Kieran, Mrs. Olson, Mr.\nand Mrs. J. Hobson, and players\nat the conoslation table were, Mr.\nand Mrs. A. Yaworski, Mrs. E.\nSerres and Mrs. J. Paulhus.\nthe party are expected to return\nvia the Lisbon route while others\nwill fly direct over the Polar\nroute.\nCanadian representatives from\nBritish Columbia are Mrs. Ada\nShaw, Vancouver; Mrs. Gummow,\nVictoria; Mrs. J. H. Blackey.\nWestbank; Miss Ethel Druce, Victoria.\nI've found effective\nhelp for baby's,\ntummy upsets\nOne delighted mother telle another... that's\nthe history of Baby'. Own Tablete' popularity. No wonder! Clinically Heated for\n-f_.c_.oy and safety, these sweet-tasting little\ntablete are truly baby's own \u2014made just\nfor tha relief,of baby's minor digestive\nupsets, goe, constipation, and the f_von.iln.c_3\nand .retfuTnoes of teething time due to irregularity. Gentle but thorough in action ...\neaay-to-take. Get. Baby's Own Tablete today\nI\u2014used by mil-lona of mothers,\n\u00ab0w\u00ab\nTABLETS\nSMOTHERI For Irregularity and minor dlgeitlve 1\nupieti of older chj!d,_3.to JS(, siye^cUnl- V\niupsoT. ot oiaer cnjia,  o  to   is,  give cum- ,\ncally.fetted CHILDREN'S OWN TABLETS \\\nFashion Favorites\nfor Easter\nYou're off.. . . to a wonderful start toward \u2022\nthe sun-seoson in the smart new fashions on\ndisplay. Each one represents a new silhouette trend. Look over our fine selection.\nCharge\naccounts\nINVITED\nSUITS\nFrom $35.00\nCOATS\nFrom $39.95\nDRESSES\nFrom $16.95\n'^WP_^\"^\nCONGRATULATIONS\nTO\nCan\n\u2022 tie\nON THE OPENING OF THEIR\nTREMENDOUS\nNEW OUTLET IN FAIRVIEW\nTo Oar Friends and Customers\u2014\nWe are 100% Nelson owned and operated, by Gordon Wake ham, Bill Wakeham and Don Sweet.\nWe sell only the very finest food products that money can buy.\nWe will not be undersold -  Every low, advertised price is yours at TCj>M-BOY.\nWE APPRECIATE YOUR SUPPORT\nSHOP TOM-BOY and SAVE\n. -jf Personal Service - Pleasant Surroundings\u2014Lowest Prices jr, \u2022\n 6 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, APRIL 11,1MT\nCompany Heads OK\nStock Option Plan\nFor Key Personnel\nj QUINCV, 111. \u2014 George Gute-\nkunst, General Sales Manager of\ntile Denver plant and Brice D.\nMaddox, General Manager of the\nKeller Tool Division of the Gardner-Denver Company in Grand\nHaven, Mich., were elected vice-\npresidents of the company at the\nannual meeting of stockholders\nheld in Quincy, Illinois.\nStockholders also approved a\nrestricted stock option plan for\nOfficers and other key personnel.\nUnder this plan 100,000 shares of\ncommon stock are available for\noption to be granted by the Board\nOt Directors during the next five\nyears.\n-. Directors re-elected by stockholders were Ralph G. Gardner,\nGilford V. Leece, Benjamin C.\nEssig, Howell W. Murray, Arthur\nE Johnson, Alexander G. Lind-\nqulst, John W. Gardner, E. Vincent Erickson and Bernath P.\nSherwood Jr.\nAt the annual directors' meeting, following the stockholders'\nmeeting, these officers were reelected:\nRalph G. Gardner, chairman of\nthe board; Gifford V. Leece, president; E. Vincent Erickson, executive vice-president; Alexander\nP. Lindijulst, vice-president and\ntreasurer; Burnham P. Spann,\nvice-president; Aubrey H. Jones,\nvice-president; Charles M. George,\nsecretary; William H, Miller, assistant treasurer, and , Lyle H.\nStout, assistant secretary.\nAppointed to the executive committee by the board of directors\nwere Benjamin C. Essig, E. Vincent Erickson, Ralph G. Gardner\nand Alexander G. Lindquist.\n| Mr. Leece also anounced that\nthe board of directors voted to\nIncrease the dividend on the common stock from an annual rate of\n$1.50 per share to $1.80.\nAGAIN USE REICHSTAG\nBONN (AP) \u2014 Eugen Gertsten-\nmaier, president of Parliament's\nlower house, is setting up an office in the burned - out Berlin\nReichstag. His move is part of a\nWest German-campaign to promote reunification of divided Germany.\nBatteries\nMINING - LOGGING\nAND AUTOMOTIVE\nRepairs to All  Types\n609 Lake St     ,        Phone I\nARROW BATTERIES\nQueen's Clothes Please\nStyle-Conscious Paris\nPARIS (Reuters)\u2014On the second day of her royal visit, Queen\nElizabeth drove with Prince Philip\nbeside her in an open car through\nthe streets of Paris to the city\nhall and ' later along a crowd-\npacked 12-mlle route to Versailles\nPalace. \u2022\nThere she dined off gold plate\nIn the great Hall of Mirrors where\nthe peace treaty was signed after\nthe First World War. In this palace, home of tha former kings of\nFrance, Queen Marie Antoinette\nwalked before the guillotine\nclaimed her.\n300 LUNCHEON GUEST8\nThe palace's inner courtyard\nwas lined by white-caped North\nAfrican spanis (cavalry) on the\nArab horses whose white manes\ngleamed in the brilliant sunshine.\nAs the 300 luncheon guests were\nserved by 120 waiters in, black\nbreeches and silk hose, the Queen\ngazed'out over the magnificent\ngardens with their 600 fountains?\nThe seven-course menu included\nlobster, rice pilaff, beefsteak, roast\nwoodcock, mushroom pie, salad\nand fresh fruit. There were six\ndifferent kinds, of wine.\nElizabeth was . visibly moved\nwhen she was presented flowers\nby a small French boy and girl,\nchosen because they were born\non the same days as their two\nchildren. Prince Charles and Princess Anne.\nGIFTS FOR-CHILDREN\nIn a smaller room Pierre Ruais,\npresident of the municipal council, presented Elizabeth with a\nminiature Paris subway train for\nCharles and a set of dolls for\nAnne.\nFor her morning visit the Queen\nWijre a dark \u25a0' blue two-piece suit\nwith dark blue ;accessories, a\nnecklace and a small white off-\n,the-face hat trimmed with pink\nflowers.\nHer. luncheon outfit was a short-\nsleeved,dress of light blue corded\nsilk, beigev gloves, Shoes and bag\nand a matching blue coat trimmed\nin mink,\nDECLINE8 COAT '\nThe Queen was determined that\nthe thousands cramming the pavements should see her new clothes\n\u2014despite a bitterly cold wind,\nAs she left the palace President\nRene Coty said: \"I invite Your\nMajesty to put on a coat.\"\nThe Queen smiled and said:\n\"No thanks, it will be quite all\nright.\"\nTile   Queen's   charm   and  gra-\n\\\nGift  Cigarettes  for  CANADA'S\nMIDDLE-EAST MILITARY PERSONNEL...\nAND OTHER IMPERIAL TOBACCO BRANDS\nCAN NOW BE SENT TO CANADA'S\nUNITED NATIONS EMERGENCY FORCE\n$1.60 sends 400\nftoip\nSweet Caporal, Matinee, Viceroy\nor Winchester.\nP.Ico Ind-das pottage.\nMail order and rem\/Hance tot\nOVERSEAS OFFICE\nIMPERIAL TOBACCO CO.\nP.O. Box 6500, Montreal\nThe J\/fcTTie &gOttfaut\u00a3 for'57\nwill be painted with\nciousnes's conquered Paris on the\nfirst day (of her visit and an excited, cheering' throng jammed the\narea around the vast Place de\nl'Qpera until the early hours Tuesday to catch a glimpse of her.\n~A mighty cheer went up from\nthe crowd when tha Queen and\nPrince Philip appeared briefly on\nthe balcony of the opera house\nafter a gala performance in the\nmonarch's honor.\nElizabeth, resplendent In a diamond and emerald tiara and a ball\ngown of ivory satin embroidered\nwith threads of gold.and silver,\nwaved to the crowd. The crowd\nwaved back and shouted \"Vive la\nReine.\"\nPremier Steel\nInterested In\nB.C.-Alfa. Area\nFORT ST. JOHN, B.C. (CP) -\nProspects of an iron ore develop,\nment in the northern Alberta-\nBritish Columbia area with a pro.\nduction potential matching that\nof the Ruhr Valley were outlined\nby B. A. Llndberg, director of the\nSchool of Commerce, University\nof Alberta, who visited Fort St.\nJohn with officials .of the B.C.\nPublic Works Department.\nMr. Llndberg named the Premier Steel Co. of Edmonton as\nprincipals in the project to develop irOn ore deposits 21 miles north\nof Hines Creek, near the- B.C.\nAlberta border.\nExtension of the Northern Alberta Railway from Hines Creek\nfor 90 miles, tp join with the Pa\ncific Great Eastern Railway would\nenable the Premier Steel Company and associates to embrace\niron and steel marketsjn the Pacific Ocean region with a product\neasily; competitive with other iron\nand steel competitors.\nMore Exercise\nUrged for\nYoungsters\nVICTORIA CCP) \u2014 Too many\nchildren ride to school In ears\nand buses, Health Board members\n\u2022and physical education leaders\nagreed at a meeting of the Vic-\ntoria-Esqulmalt Union ' Bbard- of\nHealth.   ,     .- ,\nGeorge Grant, physical education supervisor of the Greater\nVictoria School District, and Fred\nMartens reported to the board on\nresults of Kraus-Weber tests recently completed among Greater\nVictoria school children,     i\nOf the children tested, mostly\nat the junior Ljigh school level,\n39.? per cent failed one or more\nof the six tests of muscular ability\nneeded in normal living compared\nwith 56,3 per cent in the Eastern\nUnited States ,and only 8.2 per\ncent In Austria, Italy an'd.Switzer-\nland.\nThe results, Mr. Grant said,\ndidn't prove that. Victoria children hadn't endurance or werl\nnot generally fit.        ,    '\nMr. Grant said fitness of the\nEuropean children probably stemmed from \"running\/ walking,\nclimbing and playing without the\nmachines we have here.\"\nAs a-result of the report, the\nboard agreed that stress should\nbe laid, in the public health education program, on the need for\nexercise, and Mr. Grant indicated\nhe would consider recommending\nextension of calisthenics in schoolrooms.\nMenzies Raps\nU.S. Policy\nCANBERRA (Reuters) \u2014 Prime\nMinister Robert Menzies said\nTuesday that [allure of the United\nNations In the Middle East has\nbetrayed peace and international\njustice.\n' , Speaking in a\" foreign affairs debate in the House of Representatives, Menzies said the UN has\nbeen \"bowing to Col. Nasser,\"\nwhile Israel had been given no\nguarantee on the use of the Suez\nCanal or the Gulf of Aqaba.\nHe said Egyptian President Nas\nser sabotaged the Suez Canal by\nsinking 49 ships, in it when he did\nnot need \"to sink a canoe for any\nmilitary reason.\"\nBut now all nations \"had the\nprivilege\" of paying to clear the\ncanal, he added,\nIn the future, he said, problems\nshould be considered carefully before they reach the United Nations and the United States should\nponder recent events and see that\nmistakes made would not happen\nagain.\nSERMON STRESSES\nGOD'S SUPREMACY\nThe supremacy and allness of\nGod, Spirit, was emphasized at\nChristian Science services Sunday.\nScriptural selections read In the\nLesson-Sermon entitled \"Unreality\" included the following from\nExodus (20:2,3): \"I am the Lord\nthy Godr which have brought thee\nout of the land of Egypt, out of\nthe house of bondage. Thou shalt\nhave no other gods before me.\"\nFrom \"Science arid Health with\nKey to the Scriptures\" by Mary\nBaker Eddy the following passage .was read: \"Moses advanced\na nation to the worship of God in\nSpirit instead of matter, and illustrated the grand human capacities of being , bestowed by immortal Mind.\".\nThe Golden Text was from Ec-\nclesiastes (5:7): \"In the multitude\nof dreams and many words there\nare also diverse vanities: but-fear\nthou God.\"\nFierce Gander\nKills Buck Deer\n- .     \u2022\u2022   \/\nVICTORIA (CP) \u2014 A 60-pound\nbuck recently was attacked and\nkilled by a gander with a killer\ninstinct.\"\nThe Canada Goose, whose mate\nis nesting On an island in nearby\nLangford Lake, Intercepted and\nattacked the deer as it was swimming across the lake.\nA witness to the strange encounter, Mrs. Robin Woolcock,\nsaid the bird \"swam around the\ndeer\" and pecked at it until the\nbuck tired and sank under the\nwater.\n\"When we realized what was.\nhappening we rushed and borrowed a boat and . . . rowed out.\nWe got to the. deer as It was\ndrowned.\"\nMrs. Woolcock gave the Buck\nartificial respiration during the\ntrip back to the shore.\nThe-deer was swimming towards\nland, not the island, when the\ngander attacked, Mrs. Woolcock\nsaid. '\"\u25a0;\nB.C. Electric To Issue\nFurther Debentures\nVICTORIA (CP) \u2014 B.C. Electric Co. has been given Cabinet\napproval for the issue of $40,000,-\n000 in sinking fund debentures\nand 560,000 common shares,\nThe proposal had previously\nbeen authorized by the Public\nUtilities Commission. \\\nThe common share issue Is to\nbe allotted entirely to the B.C.\nPower Corporation, parent firm\nof the BCE. Price of each share\ncan not exceed $30.\nSTRIKE PAID OFF\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Mrs. Ann\nSam's sitdown strike patd.off.\nShe appeared at last week's\nmeeting of the suburban Richmond municipal council demanding\nreturn of $75 in water rates she\noverpaid during a three-year period.\nShe refused to leave the council chambers-without a promise\nthat her claim would be checked.\nThe council passed a resolution\nMonday giving Mrs. Sam and her\nson Tom a $60 credit against future\nwaler payments.\nReeve Ray Parsons said the rebate was reduced to $60 because\n\"the discount is not applicable.\"\nBIG FLEET\nBritain has the world's largest\nactive merchant marine, totalling\nmore than 19,000,000 tons.   '\nd&MjdahcL Enterprise Ltd.\nPhono 1704\n.Nelson, B.C.\n301 Baker St.\nBurns Lumber Co.\n602 BAKER ST.\nPHONE 1180\nWhole, Half or Quartered.\nStore Demonstration April 12th and 13th\nSWIFT'S PREMIUM RINDLESS.\nSLICED SIDE.\nBACON\" ib\nGrade \"A\" Red Steer\nRUMP ROASTS\n1st and\n2nd curs.\nib. 55c\nGrade \"A\" Red Steer\nCROSS RIB ROASTS\nlb.\nOverwaitea Homemade\nSAUSAGE .<\n4 ib. 99c\nThick Jumbo Size\nSMOKED FILLETS\nib. 39c\nCHECK\nand\nCOMPARE\nQUALITY\nand  PRICE\nthen you too will\nsee that OVERWAITEA is tops\nin  Nelson for,\nproduce.\n^flOS\nand GROWING\nand GROWING!\nJuicy Sweet Sunkist\n.ORANGES\n5 lb. bag .\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nFresh, Tender\nASPARAGUS    Ib. 15c\nWhite, Jumbo 36's\nGrapefruit    6f<>r49c\nCalifornia New\nCARROTS  2 <\u25a0\u2014 19c\nFresh\nPineapple\nA Dessert Treat.\n19'\n ibcn-\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, APRIL It, 1957 \u2014 .\n-MM\nAT YOUR HANDY\nOVERWAITEA\n*-tqmm   * Hum\nSavings Such as You Have\nNever Had Before.\nPrices Effective To\nAPRIL 20\nINCLUSIVE    .\nJOHNSON'S     .\nSUPER HARD GLOSS\nGLO-COAT    Q?-\nQuart size .       Jf  kmW \\a\\\n\u2022STRAWBERRY CREAM\n'   BANANA CREAM\nx and\nCARAMEL\n_-S-~-_~-~-___i__\nNALLEY'S\nSYRUP.\nLUMBER3JACK 3 7C\nSpaghetti Dinners\n45c\n39c\nLIPTONS'\nChicken Noodle\nSoup 3 pkgs. 32c\nGAINES'\nDOG MEAL\n10lb.\nsack\t\n$\n| .19\nSPRATT'S\nMixed Ovals:\n3v2 ibs. 49c\nFREE   PARKING\nAT   OVERWAITEA\nClorox.\n32 o_.\nPuritan.\n15 oz. _\nBLEACH\nMeat Balls\nBABY CLAMS\nCooking Oil\nCHEESE\nSea Haul.\n10V- oz.\nSt. Lawrence.\n16 oz.\t\n\u2014\u25a0 27c\n2tins69c\n2 tin$ 45c\n\u2014 39c\nBurn's\nSpreadeasy.\nKEILLER'S \u2014 6 oz. assorted      >\nJAMS AND MARMALADES\nOVERWAITEA \u2014 24 ounce    .\u00bb\nPEANUT BUTTER\nOnly __ _____ __\n-lib. 45c\n2ia\u00ab37c\n45c\n__n\n mwaurnm\n8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, APRIL 11,1957\nShaky Coast Baseball\nLeague Opens Today\nBy The Associated Press\n\\ The Pacific Coast League, once\nhealthy and wealthy but flow be-,\nset by the threat of seriqus dam:\nage if not utter extinction, launches its 54th season of baseball\nThursday. I\nThe 1956 pennant winners Los\nAngeles Angels play host to the\nnewest member of the. far-flung\nPCL family, Vancouver, while\njSeattle is at Sacramento, Portland\nat San Francisco and Hollywood\n8t San Diego. ,\n.. This is a brave and brand new\nyear. And if a close race will Restore fan interest that has gradually\ndwindled since the peak years\nthat followed the second world\nwar, the club owners have a right\nto feel optimistic.\nNo one predicts a runaway such\nNakusp Shuttlt-rs\nWin Three Cups\nEDGEWOOD . \u2014 The Slocan-\nArrow Lakes badminton tournament was played in .Edgewood\nwith Nakusp. taking home three\ncups and the home club winning\ntwo. No other clubs competed this\nyear,\nMrs. Marlon Smith, Nakusp,\nwon the ladies' singles, Mrs. M.\nSmith and M. Wilson, Nakusp,\nmixed doubles; M. Smith and 0.\nCoats, Nakusp, men's doubles; R.\nMilne, Edgewood, men's singles,\nand Mrs. Violet Milne and Mrs.\nMargaret Stark, Edgewood, ladies'\ndoubles.\nSeveral mixed games were enjoyed before the annual meeting\nwas held. Next year's tournament\nwill be held In Nakusp1.    \"\nPHONE  1844  FOR  CLASSIFIED\nas Lo- Angeles staged last season,\nand most critics look for a ding1\naong. battle between.seven clubs.\n'Only Vancouver seems destined\nfor rough sledding.\nThe managerial picture presents\nthree new faces, ,Clay Bryant at\nLos Angeles, \u2022 Clyde King at Hoi.\nlywood and Charlie Metro at Van.\ncouver. - ,\nThe other pilots include Lefty\nO'Doul, the dean of the corps, at\nSeattle; Tommy Heath at Sacramento,1 Bill Sweeney at Portland,\nBob Elliott at San Diego and Joe\nGordon at San Francisco.    .\nThe order of finish last season:\nLos Angeles, Seattle, Portland,\nHollywood, Sacramento, San\nFrancisco, San Diego and Vancouver.\n, Ahead is a long haul of 166\ngames. -\nIgnored, for the time beng, at\nleast, is the danger Of invasion of\ncoast league territory by one or\nmore major league teams. For\n1957, at least, the PCL is safe, if\nnot too sound. .        .\n' But even the blindest PCL patron ' realizes the damage at resulted in the last few years when\nmoves were afoot to transfer St.\nLouis Browns, and later Philadelphia Athletics, to Los Angeles.\nNow, the Brooklyn Dodgers own\nthe Los Angeles Franchise, cornerstone of the league, and the\nonce very valuable San Francisco\nSeals are owned by the Boston\nRed Sox,\nOnce POL owners thumbed\ntheir noses at the major league\nclubs. They even barred working\nagreements-with the majors.\nNow every club but Sacramento\nis either Owned or has' a close\nworking agreement with a big\nleague club.\nRfiTALDTV\npeas\nFernie Falcons\nReorganize\n\u2022 FERNIE \u2014 Fernie Falcons\nBaseball Club reorganized for the\n1957 season at the. annual meeting\nheld in the Legion Hall. The.financial report'showed that the\nteam had operated at a slight profit in 1956.\nThe officers elected were as\nfollows;\nPresident, Norman Polnton;\nvice-.president, Joe Weber;'secretary-treasurer, Jack Buchanan.\nExecutive \\ Committee, Orlando\nCarolei, Bill Komarevich, Pete\nCaufield, and Wilfred Ashmore;\ncoaches, Edward M. Rushcall and\nBill Cole.      J'\nThe Falcons have been invited\nto attend a meeting at Cranbrook\nApril 14, when representatives\nfrom Fernie, Michel, Kimberley\nCreston, Cranbrook and Bonners\nFerry will meet to discuss the formation of a baseball league, Named Fernie delegates were Orlando\nCarolei, Joe Weber, Jack Buchanan, \"Wilf Ashmore and Norman\nPointon.\nLadner, Young, tender\npeas - the best that B.C. grows.\nThat means the best anywhere\/\nhis doctor recommended Carnation\nYou can trust Carnation. It's the\nsafest, most nourishing and digestible form of milk. More mothers\nfeed Carnation to their babies than\nany other brand. Ask your doctor\nabout Carnation \u2014 the milk every\ndoctor knows.\n\"from.\nContented\nCows\"\nNo Unanimity\nIn Recreation\nSay Delegates\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 What\nCanadian recreation needs is a\nnational association to promote\nit, but the people directly involved\ndon't seem to be able to get together.\nThis view was expressed several\ntimes by delgates to the 1957 Pacific Northwest Conference hare.\nIt was also explicitly demonstrated.\nMost of the 500 delegates to the\nthree-day conference \u2014 which\nwound up Wednesday\u2014were frofn\nIdaho, Montana, Oregon, Washington, Alberta and British Columbia.\nBut there also were .epresen-\ntatives from th\u00ab recreation divisions of the Canadian. Armed Services, the Federal Welfare Department and other Canadian recreation groups.\nDuring the conference the Canadians got together in an attempt\nto set up the Canadian equivalent\nof the U.S. National Recreation\nAssociation, which sponsored the\nPacific northwest meeting.\nIt was pretty welkthe same\nstory as of previous attempts. No\nunanimity.\n\"We are not ready for a national\nrecreation association,\" said Elsie\nMcFarland, community .recreation\nsupervisor from Edmonton, \"We\nshould start _ .provincially. Then\nperhaps in three western provinces and from there on into the\nnational field.\"\nRepresentatives from th? welfare department thought a national organization with possible\nwelfare department assistance is\nthe answer.\nWing Cmdr. John Tett, head of\nRCAF. recreation, said there are\ntoo many agencies in Canada and\nall are apparently, working at opposite ends.\nL. J. Wallace, director of ttie\ncommunity program's branch of\nB.C.'s education department finally moved that a committee meet\nin an attempt to.set up a conference next year to get all professional recreation groups together.\n\"The recreation professionals\nare doing a poor job of selling rec-\nVancouver Parks Board commissioner,    .\nThe former leader of the opposition in the B.C. Legislature said\nduring his four years, 1952-56, in\nVictoria not one request had been\nmade to the government for an\nincrease in its provincial recreation grants.\nRecreation officials said after\nthe meeting they are anxious to\nset up a national recreation association so member groups across\nthe country will get a piece of the\nCanada Council money.\nThey said there was a better\nchance of the Canada Council \u2014\nwhose aim is to develop Canada's\nculture \u2014 accepting recreation as\nculture than there was of forming a unified Canadian recreation\ngroup. i.,     ,\nHow They JLook in Ball Camps\nFights\nBy The Associated Prass\nLondon\u2014Dave Charnley, 133%,\nLondon, outpointed Joe Lucy,\n1J1%, London, 15. (For British\nlightweight title).\nLondon \u2014 Terry Spinks, 113%,\nEngland, stopped Jimmy Loughrey, 112, Belfast, 4.\nHollywood, Calif. \u2014 Carlos Or-\ntib, 137Y4, New York, stopped Lou\nFilippo, 139, Los Angeles, 7.  ,.\nPortland, Ore. \u2014 Johnny Holman,- 203, Chicago, outpointed\nEwart Potgieter, 325, South Africa,\n10. ;-\nRichmond, Calif. \u2014 Kid Castro,\n_10_ Stockton, outpointed Luke\nEaster, 135%, San Francisco, 10.\nSIGNS WITH LIONS\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 British\nColumbia Lions announced the\nsigning of Philip Wright, 21, All-\nBorder Conference tackle with\nWest Texas State College in 1956,\nTuesday. He is the 11th import\nand the fourth import tackle the\nWestern Intel-provincial Football\nUnion club has- signed.\nBy   JOE   REICEHLER\nNEW YORK (AP) \u2014 Observations of a baseball, camp follower\nreturned home after a seven-week\ntour of the 12 major league, spring\ntraining camps in Florida:\nBest looking team\u2014Milwaukee\nBraves.\nMost improved team\u2014St. Louis\nCardinals.\n\u2022 Most confident club\u2014New York\nYankees. >   '\nMost spectacular hitter \u2014 Stan\nMusial, Cardinals (24 hits in 51\ntimes at bat for .471).\nMost spectacular pitcher -r.\nJohnny Kucks, Yankees ' (one\nearned run in 25 innings).       ,\nMost spectacular hitting feat-\nHarvey Kuenn, Detroit .Tigers\n(five for five with two doubles, a\nhome run and five runs batted in\nagainst Cincinnati Redlegs, March\n26).\nMost spectacular pitching feat-\nJohnny Podres, Brooklyn Dodgers (faced only 18 batters in pitching six hitless and runless innings\nagainst Yankees, March -5).\nMost disappointing hitter\u2014Hank\nBauer, Yankees (went 0 for 21 until he finally snapped slump with\na single).\nMost   disappointing   pitchers\u2014\nWilmer (Vinegar Bend) Mizell,\nCardinals and Don Larsen, Yankees, Mizell' turned in five straight\npoor mound performances, striking out only two batters; Larsen\nturned in only one good performance-in four outings.\nMost improved hitters\u2014Johnny\nTemple, Redlegs; Gino Cimoli,\nDodgers and Bubba Phillips, Chicago White Sox.\nMost improved pitchers \u2014 Red\nMurff, Braves; Don Drysdale,\nDodgers and Duke Maas, Tigers.\nMost spectacular relief stint \u2014\nRene Valdez, Brooklyn rookie, relieved' Drysdale with bases full\nand nobody Out in the eighth and\nBrooklyn leading, 3-2. Valdez disposed of the next'three Tigers op.\ndinky pop flies leaving all three\nrunners stranded and duplicated\nthe stunt in the ninth.\nMQSt promising rookies \u2014 In-\nfielder - outfielder Tony Kubek,\nYankees; and pitchers Juan Piz-\nzaro, Braves; Don Cardwell, Phillies and Tom Cheney, Cardinals,\nMost optimistic manager \u2014\nBobby Bragan, who predicted his\nPirates will finish in the first division.\nFrankest manager \u2014 Lou Boud-\nreau, who declared the strongest\nfeature of his Athletics are their\nloyal fans. V. -\nMost pathetic 'sight \u2014 Carl Er-\nskine, one of. the most spectacular\nof all Dodgers pitohefs, grimacing with pain every time he.tried\nto put something on a pitch\/\nSunderland Pays [\u2022\nHeavy Football Fine\nLONDON (CP) \u2014 The Sunderland football club,Wednesday was\nfined \u00a35000 for allegedly making\nunauthorized payments to players\n\u2014 .the heaviest fine imposed in\nnearly 100 years of English League\nfootball. ,  -\nThe Football Association and\nthe' Football League also ordered\nthe indefinite* suspension of Bill\nDitchburn, chairman of the First\nDivision Sunderland Club, and\nWilliam Martin, a club director.\nIn addition, the joint commission\nannounced it will question several\nplayers about alleged illegal payments. , -\nThe action followed an invest!-,\ngation that started six weeks ago\nafter the league, received coiri-\npl aints of violation of league rules\nspecifyig that First Division clubs\nare not to pay players more than\n\u00a315 a week.\nPenticton Vs Trim\n$16,000 Debt $5000\n, PENTICTON, B.C. \u2014 Penticton\nVs of the Okanagan Senior Hockey\nLeague have cut their detjj to\n$11,000 from $16,000.\nThe executive reported at the\nclub's annual. meeting that the\nyear's operation wound up in the\nblack and paid off nearly $5000 in\nback debts.\nOutgoing president Bill Nicholson, however, warned against too\nmuch*\" optimism. Television will\ncut game attendance next season,\nhe said, and the club will not be\nable to operate on gate proceeds\nalone.\n\"The booster club's target of\nraising $4000 to $5000 a season will\nbe most a essential,\" he said.\nMr. Nicholson called for a reduction in rentals, contending that\narenas are public institutions and\nnot profit makig private enterprises.\nThe practice-of increasing arena\nrent for playoff games is \"unfair,\"\nMr. Nicholson said, as teams depended on playoffs to pull them\nout of the red. He commended the\nPenticton arena for giving the\nclub considerable help during the\nseason.\nGlady Parker was elected president, succeeding Mr. Nicholson.\nTony Biolla is'vice-president.\nMr. Nicholson said a professional hockey club may cdme to\nPenticton for training next fall.\nThe financial report showed a\nprofit of $300 on gates plus $900\nfrom, program sales. Pre-seastm\ndonations and cancelling of debts\nhelped the club to the extent of\n$4485.\nPlayers salaries and equipment\nexpenses were held- to a strict\namount.\nNew! Dellciousfy di1\nMonarch Date Square Mix\nThe only mix with moist dates\nin the package,ready to spread!\nEASIEST-Mixed in 5 minutes!\nTASTIEST- Real dates, richer ingredients!\nIWhat an idea for a Date Square Mix\u2014your filling completely\nprepared! What could be easier\u2014or,tastier!\nYou get a tin of luscious date filling ready to be spread-\nsave time and work, and get a better date square!\n3   Everybody will love the flavour of the crust\u2014a delightful\nblending of coconut, rolled oats and pure gulden honey!\nMonarch's famed'research division was challenged\/to produce\na different and better-lasting' date square. They succeeded,\nbrilliantly, with this new Monarch Date Square Mix. Now you can\nmake wonderful new date squares, easily, in minutes. With this\n. superb new Monarch Mix, all your ingredients are right in the\npackage. Directions are simple, results are deliciouc Try the new\nMonarch Date Square Mix right away.\n4  Monarch Date Squares taste even better the second day.\nSo moist\u2014rich with the flavour of real dates!\nDaily Tests Show Monarch Mixes are Canada's Finest\nMonarch Test Kitchens are continuously testing Monarch\nMixeB for you against all others. Not one Monarch Mix\nis passed till we're sure it is the finest mix you can buy,\npositively Canada's Finest. \u2022\nCanada's\nFinest-\npi i |\\\ns^Hsl\nonarch\nmixes\nCake Mixes \u2022 Sponge Puddings \u2022 Tea-Bisk \u2022 Pie Crust Mix \u2022 Ice Box Pie \u2022 Frufc Cobbler \u2022 Date Square Mis\n Kimberley Takes 2-1 Lead\nIn Intermediate\nMEDICINE HAT - Kimberley\nDynamiters took a 2-1 lead In\nthe Western Canada Interme.\nIdate hockey \u00bb_ml-flnal series\nwith a 7-2 victory over .Gravel-\nbourg Hornets.\nDynamiters took a commanding 4-0 lead after 16 mlnutei-of\nplay before the Hornets replied\nwith their only two goals of the\ncontest, Kimberley added two In\nthe second and one In the third.\nVeteran Buzz Mellor paced\nDynamiters with two , goals.\nSingles went to Barry Craig,\nKen McTeer, George Kershaw,\nRonquiot   and   Robertson   with\nFankow and Chuck McCullough\nreplying for Gravelbourg,\nLINEUPS\nKimberley\u2014goal: B-tker; defence: Jones,' Kershaw, Paolone,\nAndre; forwards: Nash, Craig,\nBarre, Mathews, Mellor, McTeer,\nBell, McNiven, Ronquist, Robertson, Palnonl. ,\nGravelbourg \u2014 goal:,Anshelm;\ndefence: Donahue, Duperault,\nHunchuk; forwards: Zwyer, Smith,\nBlalsdell, tiche, Forcler, HeHand,\nMcCullough, Papps, Hretchka,\nFankow.\nReferees: Chandler and Lawson.\nSUMMARY\nFirst  period  \u2014  1.  Kimberley,\nCan't Hold Bruins Down\nLong Says Coach Schmidt\nBy BOB HOOBING\nBOSTON (API\u2014Montreal Canadiens moved into Boston Wednesday for the third game of the\nStanley Cup hockey finals but the\nfighting made Bruins refuse to\nwince.\nLes Canadiens, winners of Lord\nStanley's cup twice in the previous four years, edged Boston\n1-0 Tuesday night to take a 2-0\nlead in the best-of-seven series.\nThe third game will be at Boston Garden tonight with the\nfourth here Sunday.\nBoston coach Milt Schmidt \u2014\nformer battling centre for the\nBruines famed Kraut line\u2014points\nto his team's one goal In the two\ncontests  at Montreal. .\n\"You can't hold down a club\nlike ours for long,\" Schmidt said.\n\"Montreal never was in the ball\ngame, even if they did get that\none goal,\" added Schmidt, still\nburning over Tuesday night's\ntoss. \"We had plenty of chances.\nThey threw their best at us, and\ngot only one goal.\"\n. Schmidt refused to shudder at\nthe task of trying to win four of\nthe next five games in order to\nbeat Montreal.\n\"If this team was going to\ncrack it would have done so after\nthat first game,\" Schmidt said.\n\"But they outplayed Canadiens\nby a country mile last night. If\nwe don't beat them here I'll be\nvery surprised.\"\nSTUDENT\nDANCE\nCIVIC CENTRE\nMiWl.\nApril 12\nMusic by\nTRAIL r\nSERENADERS\nAdmission\nCraig (McNiven) 1:33; _, Kimberley, McTeer (McNiven) 2:07; 3.\nKimberley, Kershaw (Craig)\n11:05; 4, Kimberley; \u25a0 Mellor\n(Barre) 15:47; 5, \u25a0 Gravelbourg,\nFankow (McCullough) 16:00; 6,\nGravelbourg, McCullough (Papps)\n16:30.\nPenalty - Nash 7:28.    .\nSecond period \u2014 7, Kimberley,\nMellor (Bell) 10:52; 8, Kimberley,\nRonquist (Robertson) 14:03.\nPenalties - Bell :21; Craig 3:23;\nBlalsdell .IOiIO; Jones 14:22; Mellor\n15:27; Bell 16:50; Blalsdell (two\nminors) 16:50.\nThird Period \u2014 9, Kimberley,\nRobertson 18:31.\nPenalties \u2014 Ronquist' 4:32;\nHretchka 10:11 and 17:51 (major);\nMcTeer 17:52; Hunchuk 17:82;\nJones (major) 17:52.\nPine Falls Leads\nIntermediate- Series\nFORT FRANCES, Ont. (CP) -\nPine Falls Paper Kings downed\nKenora Thistles 7-3 before 1139\nfans here .Wednesday night to\nmove within one game of taking\ntheir best-of-five Western Inter,\nmediate Hockey semi-final series.\nPine Falls won the first game\nMonday 2-1. The third game will\nbe played here Friday. Paper\nKings scored all their goals before the Thistles hit the net late\nin the game.\nGolden Gloves\nAt Nanaimo\nNANAIMO (CP) \u2014 Nanaimo\nRecreation Commission received\nits official sanction from the B.C.\nAmateur Boxing Commisjlion\nWednesday to stage the B.C. Junior Golden Gloves April 26 and 27.\nLieutenant - Governor Frank\nRoss last week made a donation to\npermit the purchase of the top\naward for the \"Golden Boy.\"\nAbout 125 boys from all parts\nol the province will be taking\npart.\nOutlaws Plan Season\nPlans for the coming baseball\nseason will be discussed when the\nOutlaw Baseball Club meets tonight at Civic Centre. An executive may be set up. A radio will\nbe in the room for those who\nwant to follow the NHL hockey\ngame between Boston and Cana\ndiens.\nHockey Scores\nBy The Canadian Press\nE. CANADA JUNIOR A\nGuelph 2 Ottawa^ 8\nOttawa leads best-of-seven final\n2-1\nINDUSTRIAL L0AN8\nThe Industrial Development\nBank, a subsidiary of the Bank\nof Canada, was formed in 1944\nto provide loans to Industrial enterprises.\nSMOKES\nFOR CANADIAN\nMILITARY PERSONNEL\nserving with the\nUnited Nation* Emergency\nForce in Ihe Middle East\n*1.\u00b0 sends 400\nexport\nCIGARETTES\nor any other Macdonald Brand\nPostage included\"\nMall order and remittance loi\nOVERSEAS DEPARTMENT\nMACDONALD TOBACCO INC.\nP.O. Box 490, Place d'Armei,\nMontreal, Que.\nThis offer Is iti.|\u00abi te any chanoo\nIn Government Regulations.\nCarlos\n#oyaI Reserve\nQUALITY WHISKY AT A PRICE\nYOU'LL APPRECIATE\n&W\nm\nSPORTS\nPirates Boost Citrus\nLeague Leadership\nBy The Assoolated Preit\nPittsburgh Pirates, rallying In\nthe late going, defeated Detroit\nTigers 3-2 in 10 Innings Wednesday to booBt their Citrus League\nleadership to 37 percentage points\nover Milwaukee Braves,\nPittsburgh now is 18-8 compared\nto 10-10 for the. Braves, who were\nbeated fo rthe second straight day\nby Brooklyn Dodgers, this time 3-0\nat Wichita, Kan.\nIn other games, Baltimore defeated Chicago Cubs 7-3, Cincinnati beat Washington 8-2, Boston\nwhipped Philadelphia 6-3, and\nChicago White Sox showed good\npower In whipping St. Louis Cardinals 9-7,\nNew York Yankees and Kansas\nCity Athletics cleaned up on minor\nleague foes, the Yanks defeating\nSavannah of Ihe Sally League 8-4,\nand the Athletics, levelling Little\nHock of the Southern Association\n4-2 at Fort Smith, Ark.\nBob Friend, likely opening-day\npitcher for the Pirates, pitched\neight innings against Detroit but\ntrailed 2-0 until the Pirates went\nto work. Lee Walls cracked a\nhomer in the bottom of the eighth,\nDetroit's Pete Wojey' walked In\nthe tying run in the ninth and\nrookie \"Johnny Powers won it for\nthe Pirates with a homer off Steve\nGromek In the 10th.\nYoung Don Drysdale, bidding\nfor a starting assignment with the\nDodgers, allowed Milwaukee only\nfour hits and'permitted only one\nBrave to reach second base.\nOrioles cracked 15 hits, off five\nChicago pitchers ,ln walloping\nChicago, scoring four runs in the\nsix innings Cub ace Bob Rush was\none the mound.\nEx-Dodger.and Cub Don Hoak\npaced the Redlegs,., who for a\nchange failed to hit a homer.\nHoak had three' hits, scored two\nruns and stole two bases. Bud\nFreeman gave up a leadoff honjer\nto Whitey Herzog, then combined\nwith Johny Klipps'tein and,Russ\nMeyer In holding the Senators in\ncheck.\nTed Williams and Dick Gernert\nhit home runs in Boston's defeat of\nPhiladelphia.   .\nA three-run homer by Sherm\nLollar plus solo clouts by Ron\nNorthey and Larry Doby featured\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, APRIL 11,1957 \u2014 .\nAllan Cup Semi-Final Tied 14\nSymthe Discusses\n\"Luegue Matters\"\nWith Lynn Patrick\nTORONTO (CP) -. President\nConn Smythe of Maple Leaf Gardens said1 Monday he had\ntalked to general manager Lynn\nPatrick of Boston Bruins of the\nNational Hookey League, \"but\nonly at the managerial level\u2014on\nmatters that have to do with the\nleague.\"\nCommenting on. a report by Baz\nO'Meara, Montreal Star .spofts\ncolumnist, that Smythe tried to induce Patrick to -become Leaf general manager at a four-hour conference In Montreal Tuesday,\nSmythe said:\n\"At no time did I confer or talk\nwith Lynn about becoming general mnaager of the Leafs. I have\nto deny that report.\"\nThe Leaf president added: \"Remember, there's a $1000 fine for\ntampering and the way things are\ngoing I can't afford to tamper.'J\nOLDER PROPORTION\nThe    average\nUnited\nStates\nfarmer today is 50 years old, com\npared  with -48\nIn   1940,\ncensus\nfigures show.\n,Whlte   Sox'   attack   against   St.\nLouis.\n' TORONTO (CP) \u2014 N\u00abrth Bay\nTrappers exploded for five third-\nJerled goals Wednesday night to\nsubdue Whitby Dunlops 7-4 and\ntie the Allan Cup hbekey semi-,\nfinal at one game each. Series\nwinner will meet Spokane Flyers\nIn the' senior hockey final.\nTrappers were a complete reversal of the team that lost the\nopening game of the best-of-seven\nseries Monday to Dunlops 4-2.\nThey took the lead three times\nonly to have Whitby come back\nand tie the score before pulling\naway in the final period.\nLeftwinger Bob Barlow and-cen-\ntre Art Stratton each scored twice\nfor the winners. Rightwingers\nWalt Atanas and Ches Koneczny\nand defenceman Frank Arnett\nscored the other North. Bay goals.\nLeftwinger Bus Gagnc-n, right-\nwinger Tom O'Connor, centre Bob\nAttersley and defenceman Don\nMcBeth were the Whitby marksmen.\nThe series moves to ljTorth Bay\nfor the next three games\u2014Friday,\nSaturday and Monday.\nColder Series\nDeadlocked\n-ROCHESTER (AP)\u2014Rochester\nAmericans scored three times in\nless than four minutes in overtime\nplBjy Wednesday night to down\nCleveland Barons 5-2 and avenge\nan overtime loss Tuesday night.\nThe best - of - seven American\nHockey League Calder Cup final\nnow is tied 1-1.\nPHONE  1844  FOR  CLASSIFIED\n\"Captain Morgan's in Town!\"\nCaptain Morgan\nRUM\nBLACK LABEL \u2022 DC LUXE\n,   This.-dvortisomant Is not published or displayed by the\nliquor Control Board or by the Government of British Colnmbll.\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board\nor by the Government of British Columbia.\n 10\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, APRIL 11,1957\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS\nThe Dally Newt does not nold Itself responsible in the event\nof an error In tho following lists.\nTORONTO  STOCKS\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nAlgom Uranium\t\nAnacon Lead \u201e._..__\nAtlin Ruff _ '..\nAubelle\t\nAumacho _.\nAumaque   ..._.\t\nAunor __\u00ab._.\u201e\nBarnat .: _...._\nBase Metals ........'_.-\nBaska Uranium .................\nBrilund  .; _\nBrunhurst..-..\" __. \u201e\nBrunswick _ \u201e\t\nBuff Can .-\t\nBuff Red Lake\t\nCan Met  _\u201e....\nCassiar .._ ..! \t\nCentral Patricia _\nChimo .'.\t\nChromium .....'.\t\n\u25a0Coin Lake  s\t\nConiaurum  \u201e..\t\nCons Denison \t\nCons Discovery\t\nCons Halliwell  \t\nSons Howe \t\nCons M & S -\t\nCons Red Pop\t\nCon Sanorm  . \t\nCon Sub \t\nConwest\t\nCopper Corp  ;,\nCopper Man  :\t\nD'Aragon  \t\nDonalda   \t\nEast Malartic\t\nEast Sullivan\t\nElder Gold  _\t\nFaraday \t\nFalconbridge  \t\nFrobisher\t\nGeco \u201e.\u201e\u201e..._ \t\nGiant Yel \t\nGlen Uranium _\t\nGoldale,\t\nGoldcrest    \t\nGold Ea&le \t\nGolden Maniotu\t\nGunnar Gold\t\nHarminerals \t\nHeadway\t\nHollinger  \t\n.Hudson Bay* \t\nInspiration ....\nInt Nickel\t\nIron Bay\t\nJoliet Que\t\nJonsmith \t\nR J Jowsey ..\nKenville    \t\nKerr Addison\nLabrador \t\nLakeshore \t\nLexindin\n23.60\n1.77\n.88\n.10\n.23\n.16\n1.80\n.34\n.75\n.35\n.48\n.11\n12.00\n.13\n.07\n5.45\n7.55\n2.35\n1.30\n3.50\n.13\n.35\n25.00\n2.95\n.84\n3.50\n25.36\n.25\n.15\n2.37\n7.25\n.65\n'    .25\n.29\n.23%\n1.14\n' 4.55\n.31\n2.70\n35.25\n3.00\n17.75\n4.85\n.49\n.._....\nLittle' Long Lac _\nLorado\t\nLouvic't   \t\nMacassa    \t\nMadsen R L \t\nMalartic G F \t\nManeast\t\nMaritime Mining _\t\nMcMarmac  ...\nMllliken   \t\nMining Corp \t\nMogul '. .-\t\nNew -Alger\t\nNew Bidlamaque\t\nNew Delhi\t\nNew Fortune\t\nNew Highridge \t\nNew Harricana\t\nNew J\u00abson \t\nNew Lund  _\t\nNipissing   \t\nNisto \t\nNoranda New \t\nNorgold ._ _.._..\u201e\nNormetals\t\nNorpax \u25a0 \t\nNorth Rankin \t\nPickle Crow \t\nPlacer Develop\t\nPreston E D\t\nQuebec Copper\t\nQuebec Lab \t\nQuebec Lithium\t\nQuebec Metallurgical.\nQuemont _\t\nRadiore\t\nRayrock\t\nSan Antonio\t\nSherritt Gordon '..\nSilver Miler\t\nStadacona \t\nSteep Rock\t\nSullivan Con \t\nSylvanite :\nTeck Hughes\t\nThomp-Lund \t\nTrans Cont Res\t\nUnited Keno __\t\nUpper Canada\t\nVentures \t\nViolamac _\t\nWaite Amulet\t\nWiltsey Goglin ..:\t\nWright Hargreaves .....\nYellowknife Bear \t\nOILS\nAmerican Ledue  _\nBanff Oils\t\nBata Petroleum \t\nCal & Ed  .._.....\nCan Admiral .-..,\u201e.\nCdn Atlantic \t\nCan Collieries\t\nCan Devonian\t\n\u25a0Can Decalta \t\nCentral Explorers \t\nCentral Leduc \t\nC6n East Crest -\nCons Peak ..,\nDuvex .:\t\nGreat SweetgrasS\t\nHighcrest     \t\n.12\n.99\n1.45\n20.01\n.40\n.77\n27.25\n85.25\n'      .78\n104.50\n4.40\n.52\n.      .17\n.77\n.11\n15.60 o\n\u25a0 19.75\n4.70\n.35\n2.50\n.    1.55\n.      .16\n1.90\n1.69\n1.59\n.28\n1.85\n,.14\n3.90\n17.36\n1.45\n.13%\n.08\n.     1.09\n.15%\n.33\n.30\n.12\n\u25a0 .39\ni   2.90\n.11\n54.00\n.26\n5.00\n.     1.40\n1.44\n1.25\n12.50\n8.55\n.      .85\n.17\n9.60\n.     2.04\n.   16.00\n1.24\n1.69\n.60\n.     6.50\n.82\n.33\n:\u25a0\u25a0 20.50\n3.30\n1.42\n1.66\n.95\n'   .26\n5.75\n.72\n35.36\n1.79\n11.25\n.16\n1.26\n1.73\n\/\u2022   .40'\n2.82\n.09%\n30,50\n.52\n7.20\n6.50\n7.95\n1.55\n6.70\n9.50\n.46\n.13\n.20\n1.20\n.33\nHome A .\nKroy\nLiberal Pete  \t\nMarigold ... __...._.\nMidcon _ i_\nNat Pete      4.15\n18.75\n1.87.\n2.68\n.25'\n1.26\nNew Gas Expl   1.1\nAkalta   2.80\nPacific Pete .....'  22.60\nPetrol    :. .   1.08\nPonder  .60\nProv Gas ...:  3.15\nRoyalite  16.50\nSpooner    .64\nStanwell Oil  86\nTrans Era   2.68\nTriad   :  8.25\nUnited Oils  3.30\nYank Canuck  14\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitimi  33.84\nAlgoma Steel   127.00\nAluminum   122.25\nArgus 2nd pfd :.  42.36\nAtlas St *  27.75\nB A Oil  _ .'. .... 50.25\nBeatty Bros  5.50\nBell Telephone _  43.75\nB C Electric 4s   42.25\nB C Electric 4%s   94.00\nB'C Forest ._ 12.12.\nB C Packers B   15.25\nB C Power A   43.50\nBurns A _  11.00\nCanadian Breweries  _. 24.00\nCanadian Canners   13.75\nCanadian  Celanese   28.50\nCan Chem Co     7.75\nCanadian Dredge  18.12\nCan Oil   31.50\nCanadian Pacific Rly 1  33.36\nCan Packers B    35.50\nCockshutt     7.75\nCons Gas   34.50\nDist Seagram   29.25\nDom Foundries   29.50\nDom Magnesium  14.50\nDom Steel Ord  21.84\nDom   Stores    49.50\nDom Tar & Chemical  11.50\n-Dom Textiles   8.12\nFamous Players  16.50\nFanny Farmer   20.00\nFord A   100.50\nGatineau \u2014  28.50\nGatineau 5% pfd  101.00\nGoodyear   167.00\nGypsum Lime   22.75\nHoward  Smith    43.00\nImperial Oil   54.25\nImp  Tobacco  12.25,\nInt Pete _  53.00\nLaura Secord  18.50\nLoblaw A   29.00\nLoblaw B  42.25\nMassey Harris   6.84\nMarket Trends\nNEW YORK (AP) \u2014 The stock\nmarket surged further ahead in\nthe heaviest trading of 1957.\nSteels took early leadership, re-\npeating Tuesday's role. Motors\ncame to life later. Shortly before\nthe close, laggard rails climbed\naboard  the  bandwagon.\nAmong Canadian stocks moving\nupward were Aluminium Ltd., up\n% on.sales of 2700 shares, Hudson Bay Mining %, Distillers -Sea.\ngrams Vi and Canadian Pacific %.\nInternational Nickel dropped %\non 2000 shares.\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 Industrials\nled the stock market to its eighth\nstraight advance during moderate\ntrading.\nThe industrial index climbed\nmore than 1% points and at the\nclose was less than,five points\naway from the 1957 high of 471,13,\nreached Jan. 11.\nMeanwhile, base metals and\nwestern oils, fought off light flur.\nries of profit . taking to post\nsmaller index gains. Golds closed\nat almost the same level as Tuesday.\n' MONTREAL (CP) \u2014 The Montreal and Canadian stock exchanges closed in a firm tone\nWednesday with industrial price\nmovements ranging to two points.\nIn the base metals International\nNickel added % at 104% and Hud\nson Bay firmed Vi at 85V4.,\nInter - Provincial Pipe Lines\ngrained % to 58% while Trans-\nMountain slipped Vi to 131.\nIn refining oils, McColl at 11Vi\nand Imperial at 54% each advanced % while Canadian Oil\nfirmed % at ilVz-\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG   CP) \u2014 Winnipeg\ngrain cash prices:\nOats, No. 1 feed, 65%.\nBarley, No. lfeed, 87%.\nTELEVISION FOR TODAY\nTimes Shown Are Pacific Standard Time\nKXLY TV - Channel 4\n8:30 Good Morning\n8:45 Cartoon Time\n9:00 Romper Room\n9:30 Search For Tomorrow \u2022\n9:45 Guiding Light *\n10:00 Valiant Lady *\n10:15 Love of Life\n10:30 As The World Turns \u2022\n11:00 Our Miss Brooks *\n11:30 Houseparty \u00bb\n12:00 Big Payoff \u00bb\n12:30 Bob Crosby Show *\n' 1:00 Brighter 'Day. *\n1:15 Secret Storm \u2022\n1:30 Edge of Night\"\u00bb\n2:00 Industry on Parade\n,2:15 What's. Cookin'\n3:00 Gary Moore *\n3:45 Movie Man Matinee\n4:30 Strike It Rich \u2022\n5:00 Klixy The Klown\n5:30 Judge Roy Bean\n6:00 Regional News and Weather\n6:15 Doug Edwards News *\n6:30 Name That Tune \u2022\n7:00 I Search For Adventure\n73:0 Crusader\n8:00 Bob Cummings Show *\n8:30 Shower of Stars \u2022\n9:30 Playhouse 90 *\n11:00 The Movie Man\nKHQ TV - Channel 6\n40 Test Pattern\n:45 Color. Test Pattern\n:55 Bible Reading\n:00 Tic Tac Dough \u2022\n30 It Could Be You *\n00 Home *\n35 Local News\n40 Home *\n00 Price Is Right *\n30 Tenn. Ernie Ford *\n00 Matinee Theatre (C) *\n00 Queen For a Day \u00bb\n:45 Modern Romances *\n:00 It's a Great Life *\n:30 Elaine Gray Kitchen\n:00 Matinee On Six\n'.'That Other Woman\"\n:30 Mr. Engineer\n:00 Hopalong Cassidy\n:30 Five Thirty Movie\n:45 Weatherwise\nThe Front Page\n:55 Newspaper of the Air *\n:00 Studio 57\n:30 Decorating Ideas * \u2022\n:45 NBC News \u2022\n:00 You Bet Your Life *\n:30 Dragnet *\n:00 Jack London Stories\n:30 Ford Show \u2022    .\n:00 Lux Video Theatre (C)\n:00 News Desk\n:05 I Led Three live*\nKREM TV \u2014 Channel 2\n11:45\n12:00\n12:30\n1:00\n2:25\n2:30\n3:00\n4:15\n5:00\n6:00\nTest Pattern\nFrankie Laine\nPride of the Family\nFeaturama\nNews\nRay Milland\nFeaturama\nPopeye\nMickey Mouse Club\nWild Bill Hickok\n6:30 Newsroom\n6:40 Weather Sketch\n6:45 John Daly \u2022\n7:00 Kit Carson\n7:30 Lone Ranger \u2022\n8:00 Circus Time *\n9:00 Wire Service *\n10:00 Treasure Hunt\n10:30 Channel 1 Theatre\n(Programs subject to change by stations without notice.)\nVANCOUVER STOCKS\nClosing Prices\nMINES\nBeaver Lodge\t\nBralorne    , :.\nCanusa\t\nFarwest Tungsten \t\nGiant Mascot \t\nGranduc    \t\nGrandvlew   ....\nHamil Sil   :\t\nHighland Bell \t\nJackson Mines  \t\nPend  Oreille  \t\nNational Ex _\t\nPend Oreille \t\nPioneer Gold \t\nPremier Border \t\nQuatsino\t\nReeves MacDonald  \t\nSheep Creek    i\t\nSilback Premier \t\nSilver Ridge   _\t\nSilver Standard  \t\nSunshine Lardeau\t\nTaylor  .,\t\nTrojan .'..\t\n.26\n4.60\n. .07\n.17\n.16\n3.75\n.12\n.04\n1.06\n.07%\n2.50\n.45\n2.50\n1.35\n.06%\n.52\n1.70\n1.15\n.15%\n.06\n.53\n.25\n.11\n.17\nMcColl Frontenae .\nMont Loco  \t\nMoore Corp \t\nNat Steel Car  .-..\nPage Hershey \t\nPowell River \t\nPower Corp\t\nRuss Industries\t\nShav.-inigan\t\nSicks Brew \t\nSimpsons A\t\nSoutham\t\nUnion Gas of Can ...\nUnited Steel \t\nWestern Grocers A .\nWinnipeg Gas \t\n71.50\n16.00\n62.50\n26.50\n114.00\n' 41.75\n66.00\n11.12\n85.00\n22.00\n18.00\n55.00\n73.75\n16.75\n22.60\n15.50\nUtica    _       .14\nWestern Exploration        .36\nOILS\nAltex    i 26\nA P Consolidate  __ 46\nCharter       3.40    \u25a0\nDel Rio      6.60\nHome    18.50\nNew Gas Ex  _.-.      1.00\nOkalta Com _      2.75\nPacific Pete     16.75\nRoyalite  \u201e.    16.75\nRoyal'Can ; 13%\nSparmac  .'. _      .23\nUnited        3.20\nVanalta      33\nVantor   :      1.90\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlberta Distillers ,'.     1.50\nAlberta Distillers Vt -     1.50\nB C Telephone       44.00\nCrown Zellar (Can)     18.50\nLucky Lager    \u2014      4.00\nMacM & Bloedel B    31.50\nMid Western     3.70\nPowell River    ._    41.00\nWestminster Paper     24.50\nWestern Plywoods     15.60\nUNLISTED\nTrans Canada Pipe Units   2.06\nTranscana Unit _-.   28.00\nTrariscana  Pipe Units   ..-   2.06\nWoodbury    05\nBANKS\nBank of Montreal     49.00\nCan Bank of Com t    49.00\nImperial Bank of Canada 50.00\nRoyan Bank of Canada .... 70.00\nFUNDS\nCan Inv- Fund      6.63\nGrouped  Income        3.86\nInvestors Mutual      10.33\nTrans Canada \"C\"      6.10\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS      ' ' 1240 ON THE DIAL\n(PACIFIC STANDARD TIME)\nTHURSDAY.APRIUl, 1957\n,':00\u2014News\nr:05\u2014Morning Devotions\nr:10\u2014Farm Fare\n':15\u2014Chapel in the Sky\n':30\u2014News\n35\u2014Morning Sports Review\n40\u2014Wake-Up Time\n:50\u2014Rise 'n' Shine\n;:00\u2014News\n1:10\u2014Sports News\n::15\u2014Opening Markets\n1:20\u2014Breakfast Varieties\n1:55\u2014Entertainment World\n):00\u2014News.\n1:05\u2014Shoppers' Guide\ni:00\u2014News\nlOS-^-Shoppers' Guide\n:15\u2014Happy Gang\n:45\u2014Musicale\n;00\u2014News\n;05\u2014Story Parade\n: 15\u2014Woman's World\n:30\u2014Western Roundup\n!:00\u2014Novelty Time\n!:10\u2014Sports News\n:20\u2014News\n:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n1:55\u2014Prairie News\n1:00\u2014CKLN Report! t\n1:15\u2014Matinee\n1:45\u2014Pacific News\n2:00\u2014School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n3:30\u2014Sacred Heart\n3:45\u2014Footlight Favorites\n4:00\u2014Today's Music\n4:30\u2014\"The Bronze Boat\"\n5:00\u2014Barn Dance\n5:15\u2014By-Line\n5:20\u2014Closing Markets\n5:25\u2014Musicale .'.'-,\n5:45\u2014Strikes Spare*\n5:50\u2014News\n6:00\u2014Rawhide .-\"\u25a0:.\n6:15\u2014Hit Parade\n6:45\u2014Parliamentary Roundup\n6:50\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n7:00\u2014News\n7:30\u2014Marine Investigator\n8:00\u2014Winnipeg' Drama\n8:30-i<!itizens' Forum\n9:15\u2014Vancouver Chamber O-ch.\n10:00\u2014News\n10:10\u2014Sports News\n10:15\u2014Way word Journeys in BvG.\n10:30\u2014Sign Off\nCBC PROGRAMS\n(PACIFIC STANDARD TIME),\nFRIDAY, APRK. 12, 1957\n00\u2014Fisherman's Broadcast\n15\u2014Musical Minutes\n:30\u2014News\n:35\u2014Musical Minutes\n:40\u2014Morning Devotions\n:55\u2014Musical March Past\n:00\u2014News and Weather\n:10\u2014Sports News >\u25a0'\n15\u2014Morning Musie\n:45\u2014Laura Limited\n: 00\u2014News\n:15\u2014Your Good Neighbor\n:30\u2014Morning Concert\n:00-^Morning Visit\n:15\u2014Happy Gang\n:45\u2014Invitation to the\"Walt_\n:00\u2014Radio Theatre\n:15\u2014Kindergarten of the Air\n:30\u2014The Listening Glass\n:15\u2014News\n:25\u2014Showcase\n:30\u2014Farm .Broadcast\n55\u2014Five to One\n;00\u2014Afternoon Concert\nOO\u2014School Broadcast\n30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n30\u2014Closed Circuit\n45\u2014B.C. Roundup\n30\u2014Towards the Light\n00\u2014News\n15\u2014By-Line\n20\u2014Sports\n30\u2014Boon Companions\n00\u2014Rawhide\n:15\u2014Roving Reporter\n30\u2014Music for the Keyboard\n;00\u2014National News\n30\u2014The Goon Show\n00\u2014Vancouver Theatre\n:30\u2014The Nation's Business\n:45\u2014Piano\u20144 Hands\n:00\u2014-Songs of My People\n30\u2014Serenade for Strings\n00\u2014News\n:15\u2014Recital\n30\u2014Parade of Choir*\nDAILY  CROSSWORD,\nACROSS\nCupllko\nspoon\nBilliard shot\nDirectional\nfigure\nHawaiian\ngreeting\nMole-akin\ncolor\nKindled\nagain\nShade tree\nCompass\npoint (abbr.)\nGoddess of\ndawn\nConfectiont\nMonth   \u25a0\n(abbr.)\nCounty\n(Scot.)\nCorn cover.\nIng\nSilk scarf\n(eccl.)\nPrance\nA fertilizer\nTree\nRiver (Let.)\nColor\nGoddess of\nharvest*\n(It.)\nFish\nIn whet\nmanner\nWell\ngrounded\nPlatform\nSwiftly\nRhee's land\nMore crip,\npled\nSurmise\nDOWN\nTardy\nInland tea\n(Asia)\nUlllal-   .IHI-Hlll-\naa Hur-HB he\n31\no|w|e\nln>\npe|\nCjHl\n3. Band Instru- .6. Over-\nment* head\n4. Cut off 27. The\n5. Female ocean\nsheep 26. Isthmus\n6.In-ertlon (Asia)\nmark SO. Argent\n7. Malt drink (abbr.)\nS. Part 31. Prest-\n9. Buckeye dent's\nState   << nick-\n10. Cushion* name\nUS. Weight 33. Not\n(Ind.) young\nIS. Man's nick- 36. Kind of duck      a smile\nname 37. Pier 4_. Frozen\n20..Observe 38. Egg-shapod\n21. Military tap 39. Father\n22. Mother 40. Bang\n23. Openings 43. S-shaped\n(anat.) molding\nnrjnror-iB r-imui-\nnnunrj Hasi-ft\nanon hhbh.i\nni.aa HHnHE\n-esterd-Vi A~\u00ab\u00abt\u00bb\n44. Display,\nas\nwater\n47. Norwegian\n. snow shot\n48. Heavy\nweight\n1\n%\nJ-\nA\n5\n^\n_\n7\na\n9\nCO\nIt\n1\n11\nli\n%\npt\n\\i\n%\n^\n\\b\n^A\nTf\n1.\nIV\n20\n11\n%\ni\n%\n21\n23\ni\n34\n%\nif\n%h\n17\nw\n*t\n^\/>\n31\n3.\ni\n%\nu\nl\nl\ni\n3\u00bb\n3*\n37\n1\n1\n3a\nJ.\n*vT\n'4\nvr\n^A\n^A\nar\n43\n44\n46\"\n4b\nl\nV\n4S\n*\u00bb\n^\n50\n.1\n|\n4^1\nDAILY CRYPTOQUOTE \u2014 Here> how to wot* itt|\nAXYDLBAAXR\n-LONOFELLOW\nOne letter (Imply stands for another. In this sample A is use<|\ntor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc   Single letters, apoc.-i\ntrophes, the length and formation of the words ore *fl hintcj\nEach day the code letters are different\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nTOM ,-WFK    BNIQX    SKSRI\/T    YD*\nCALPV   RJ   g    VDALAFKP   8IACPNUKM\njAB    RV \u2014 PAQZN.\nYesterday's Cryptoquoto: IK THE EARL. DAYS OF HIS\nPOWER ... HE SALVTES EVERY ONE WHOM HS\nMEETS \u2014 PLATO.    .\n \\.o\\\nSMALL INVESTMENT   -\nLARGE RETURNS\nThat's the Want Ad Story        PHONE   1844\nBIRlHS\nMcDOUGALD-To Mr. and Mrs.\nKeith McDougald, 410 Richards\nStreet, April 9, at Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital, a daughter.\nHELP WANTED\nBOOKKEEPER - STENOGRAPH-\ner required at Home Furniture\n(Nelson) Ltd., to start May 1st.\nWorking  knowledge  of  book-\n;,'keeping sufficient and previous\nexperience desirable, Books\nsupervised by chartered accountant. Original applications by\nletter only.\nWANTED - SECOND CLASS\nsteam engineer for shift work.\nApply Master Mechanic, Crow's\nNest Pass Coal Company Limited, Michel, B.C.    .\t\nto\ni\nA\nN\nWANTED \u2014 RELIEF AND PER-\nmanent carriers for Nelson Daily\nNews   Apply Circulation Dept.\nHELP WANTED - FEMALE\nWANTED \u2014 EXPERIENCED\nwaitresses. Apply in person\nMarlane Grill, Castlegar.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nALL CARPENTER\" WORK, CON-\ncrete and cement floors, sanding,\nfloor laying, gyproc, joint filling,\nchimneys and fireplaces. Guaranteed, free estimate. Ph. 1437-R.\nMARRIED COUPLE WOULD\nlike position cooking in camp.\nOwn transportation, Will go\nanywhere. References if\nquired, Box 112, Montrose.\nWANTED - PART TIME JOB,\ndelivery work preferred. Phone\n934-R,\nFREE ESTIMATES ON EXCA-\nvating and loading, Ph. 476-R-l\nor 1363-L-4.\nAH\/<5LAP1_S_EN\nyou; NE.P SOMEONE\nTO.LISHTMyPIPE^\/\nYOU NEEP HELP TO'}\nLIGHT YOLK PIPEjy\n\\\u00bb<_i7\njVTl-il\n__Mr_?A\\\n_ __V<^ 11\n\/4r_^M\nPr- -P5N\nr                f    V^s\n1   -   r\nW OH, SUKE.' THIS OLIJ PIPE   ^|\n\u25a0A AWE IN CHINA 500 YEARS J\ni'iSr A&O. BUT STILL .___\u00ab!\u00bb\nr VERy MOPEKN.Jp\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0 :    I \/\n--* W-L '\nWmSm\\\n\"Y'-vF.^f\nj     ?^H|\nP^\n(r-O    ll\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nFOR SALE - TEAM OF LOG-\nging horses with all necessary\nlogging equipment. Apply C. E.\nCampbell. Salmo.\nLJW FOR SALE -\n, freshened,   Alex\nGlade, B.C.\nRECENTLY\nKoorbatoff,\nFOR SALE\u2014SHORTHORN BULL\n29 months, old, registered. D,\nBeauchamp, Winlaw, B.C.\nROOM AND BOARD\nROOM AND BOARD - $70 PER\n'month. 210 Vernon St.\nROOM    AND    BOARD    FOR\nvouna gentleman  Phone II79-X\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nTRUCK AND TRAILER AVAIL-\nable for pole hauling. Phone\n476-R-l or write Box 382, Nelson.\nSPECIALIZE IN REMODELLING\nold houses. Apply P.O. Box 269,\nNelson, B.C.\nREASONABLE GARDEN PLOW-\ning. M. Kotyk, phone 364-Y-l.\nDO YOU WANT YOUR GARDEN\nploughed? Phone 1966-R.\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\n1957 Buick ,4-Dr. Sedan\n1957 Buick 2-Dr. Hardtop\n1957 Chev. 2-Dr. Hardtop\n1956 Ford Fairlane 4-Dr.\n1956 Plymouth 4-Dr.\nSedan\n1956 Buick 4-Dr. Hardtop\n1956 Austin Sedan\n1956 Hillman\n1955 Chev. Bdair\n1955 Pontiac Sedan\n1954 Chev. Belair\n1954 Pontiac Sedan\n1954 Austin Sedan\n1953 Meteor Sedan\n1953 Pontiac Sedan\n1953 Austin Sedan\n1953 Ford Sedan\n1952 Austin Sedan\n\u2022    \u2022    *\n1956 Chev. St. Wagon\n1954 Ford Pickup\n1953 Chev. Pickup\n1952 Austin Pickup\n1951 Willy's Jeep\n1950 Mercury Pickup\nTIMBER FOR SALE\nB.C. Power Commission, P.O.\nBox 500, Victoria, B.C., will receive bids until 12 o'clock noon,\nApril 20th, 1957, for scattered\ntimber lying along its 60 k.v.\ntransmission line right-of-way\nbetween Nakusp and New Denver.\nThe timber in question is felled and lies in the following areas\nalong the said right-of-way:\n(1) Between the North Boundary of Lot STL 10027P and the\nNorth boundary of Lot 11417,\nKootenay District.\n(2) Between West boundary of\nLot 11120' and West boundary\nof,Lot 6260, Kootenay District.\n(3) Between East boundary of\nLot 388 and North boundary of\nLot 8422, Kootenay District.\nBids to be on basis of so much\nper thousand foot board measure. The lowest or any bid will\n-not necessarily be accepted.\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nNELSON READY-\nMIX CONCRETE\nLtd.\nPhone 871\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\nDEALERS IN'ALL TYPES OF\nused equipment, mill, mine andj\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., Pb\nPAciflc 6357,\n1 USED \"WARMSHAFT\" ELEC-\ntric battery; storage' brooder\nwith fan, will handle approx.\n600 chicks, complete, in good\ncondition, $125. Apply Columbia\"\nTrading Co., 902 Front St.\nFOR SALE \u2014 1956 REMINGTON\nQuiet Writer, portable typewriter, used 2fj hours. Suitable\nfor ' graduation' gift. Phone\n1543-Y.\n3 Blocks-From Baker St.\nNewly decorated, compact, 3-\nbedroom   home.   Smartly  appointed kitchen. 2 half lots;\nberries and $6500\nroses.  ^\nOnly $1100 Down, Monthly\nPayments at $35 Plus 6% Int.\nCelestial View\nFairview location. 3-B.R. older\nhome in the process of renovation (needs finishing). Full\nbasement. 2 lots, fruit trees\nand berries. Excel- %7900\nlent buy at *P   OVv\nLiberal Terms.\nSilica St. View Location\n4-B.R. family home. Large L.R.\nRebuilt kitchen and D.R. Tile\nB.R. and utility. Full basement\n\u2014new oil furnace. (Would\nlend to duplex conversion). 2\nbte.-landscaped. \u00a3 10,000\nLiberal Terms    (\nKootenay Lake View\nNewly built 3-B.R. home. L.R.\nwith picture window. Convenient kitchen. Full basement,\nnew oil furnace. <tl O tfin\nFull'price * \u00ab *\u00bb9\"U\nIncludes .-Car Garage and\nCottage Rental. App. 2V4 Acres.\n6 Mile\n1.7 acres, landscaped. Newly-\nbuilt 2-B.R. home.   $gQQ0\nOnly $2000 Down.\nIncome Property\nRebuilt 2-B.R. duplex (new\nwiring) and' cozy 1-B.R.' cottage. Income $162 per month.\nOnly $5000 down; assumption\nof $6800 mortgage, 5% Interest.\nBaker Street\n3-Unit brick  apt.   block.  Income $170 per month. Confidential  information  of sacrifice price given on request.\nS.P.\nCD.\nSIMPSON SEARS\nDon't forget  our-Pre-Season\nHeating Sale. Save 10%, no payments  until  October   1st.   Sale\nends June 30th.\nAUSTIN Sales and Service\n803 Baker St.     Nelson, B.C\nPhone 2000\n_- fZ.\t\nUNUSUAL LINO BARGAIN \u2014\nFrom Scotland, W- thickness inlaid marble tiles at 10% cents;\ny\u00bb\":at 14% cents; \"La Salle' 945\nGranville, Vancouver, B.C.\n1 USED VIKING JR. 4-SECTION\nNo. 290 hot water boiler, pressure tested, condition as new,\n$150. Apply Columbia Trading\nCo., 902. Front,St.\nFOR SALE \u2014 6 GOLF CLUBS, 4\nMcGregor, 2 Prd-made, golf bag,\nall new. Daveniter, Kroehler\nmake, good condition. Phone'\n1892-L after 5 p.m.\nELECTRIC\" RANGETTE WITH\noven control. Suitable for small\nfamily or summer home. Phone\n674-R.\nFOR SALE r- COMBINATION 3-\nspeed radio and records, dresser,\nstroller, crib and mattress, etc.\nPhone 1905-X.\n1 THIRTY FT. EXTENSION LAD-\nder, 1 ten ft. step ladder. $10.\n715 Josephine St.\nAPPROXIMATELY 90,0 FT. OF\ngalvanized water pipe, 1\", H.\"\nand 2\". Glenone Dairy, Glenn'\nmerry. Trail.\nREAL ESTATE AGENTS\nPhone 99 Eves. 1821-L\n$8900\nCOTTONWOOD WRECKING\nService \u2014 Used parts, batteries,\ntires-for '47 Olds, '47 Chev and\n'49 Meteor and Mercury, and '37\nFord and '46 Plymouth, '47-49-\n50-51 Austin, Hillman, Prefect,\nVanguard, Morris Minor cars.\nFor sale, '48 Desoto, licensed; '51\nFord; '47 Dodge sedan. Phone\n1363-L-2 or write Box 382, 24\nYmir Road, Nelson.\nTWO-BURNER ELECTRIC, HOT-\nplate, studio couch, coffee table,\nwardrobe trunk, frig. Ph. 321-R.\nFOR QUICK SALE - 1947 CUS-\nton deluxe Mercury, four door,\nA-l condition, all around good\nrubber, complete with custom\nradio, heater and slip covers.\nMay be seen any. time. Phone\n1071-R. ,*\n1951 AUSTIN, RECONDITIONED\nmotor, steering and starter over'\nhauled. New ring gear, good\nrubber. E. A. Calbick. Phone\n1522-Y.\nFOR SALE - 1952 2-TON CHEV.\ndump truck, stake body, first\nclass condition, low mileage, one\nowner. Enquire B.ox 3453, Nelson\nDaily News.\nFOR SALE \u2014 '49 PLYMOUTH\nSuburban. Phone 4741, Robson,\nB.C.\nFOR   SALE   -   TURNIPS,   $2.25\n\/ sack unwashed. V. C. Rowley,\nHarrop.\nFULLER BRUSH AGENT\u2014GER-\nry Kohnke, Phone 782-L-3.\nPOWERFUL HEARING AID AS\nnew. Rhone 665-R mornings.\nFOR SALE \u2014 BABY CARRIAGE\nexcellent condition. Ph. 1230-L.\nHEALTH FOOD CENTRE OPEN\nday and evening. 924 Davies St.\n1\u2014KOOTENAY BAX Acreage\nand beach frontage. Some\nbeautiful parcels available.\u2014\nWooded sites, etc.\n2\u2014A REAL BEAUTY OF A\nHOME (2 bedrooms) with\nneat apartment in basement.\nAll spanking new.\n3\u2014JUST OFF GYRO PARK.,A\ntough location to get at, but\na beautiful spot and-a first-\nclass home; 3-4 bedrooms;\nlovely condition.\nGood Terms\t\n4\u2014Several Building Sites in\ntown and at 6-Mile.\n5-tNEEDS A LITTLE FINISHING. Just outside city; new\nbungalow on 2 lots. 2 bedrooms, bright kitchen, lots of\ncupboards; living room with\npicture window. Coal hot air\nj!,.\u2122\"\/\"\"      $6500\n' $1500 Cash Will Handle.\n~-vW'.'ce and established 2-pump Service Station, close to Nelson on main\nhighway.\n7\u2014FOR RENT. Large Baker St.\nStorage basement. %\/i(\\\nPer month **\"\nOr % for $25.00 a Month.\nWe have at least fifteen\ngood clients- anxious to\npurchase a nice home. \u2014\nHowever, they need financial assistance, which we\nare fn a position to give.\nSuggest you list your\nproperty with us today.\nCOMBINATION GAS AND COAL\nstove. Ph. 779-L.\nPIANO, ROLL-AWAY BED AND\nfridge. Phone 1321-Y.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nASSAYER8 AND  MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nE. W  WIDDOWSON & CO.\nAssayers, 301 Josephine St.. Nelson\nH  S   ELMES,  ROSSLAND.  BC\n' Assayer Chemist Mine Rep\nENGINEERS   AND   SURVEYORS\nHOTELS and MOTELS\nMORE AND MORE PEOPLE\nfind the Colonial Hotel suits\ntheir needs when In Spokane.\nClean, comfortable rooms w\/wo\nbath. Sensible rates. Parking\nnearby.'Opp. Payless Store.\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, M EI C\nBC Land Surveyor, P Eng (Civill\n218 Gore St \u25a0 Nelson,   Phone 1238\nG. W.  BAERG,  B.C.\nLand Surveyor\n373 Baker St.., Nelson, Phone 1118\n&  CO.   LTD.\nREAL ESTATE AND\nINSURANCE AGENTS\nPhorte 269\nNelson, B.C.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\nNew  Priced Right Exclusive\nOne  acre  of land  with lake\n. frontage. Four rooms, two\nbedrooms, large living room\nand kitchen with built-in cupboards'. 120 feet of lake frontage with a sandy beach. Suitable for summer home or : a\npermanent residence for re-\ntired-couple.   '       $5500\nSome Terms.\nPrice\nT. D. Rosling\n& Sou Ltd.'\nM. (Trader) Parker, Salesman\n568 WARD ST.      PHONE 717\nList Your House\n.Funds on Hand to Get the\nDeals Closed\nMANY BUYERS\nWAITING\nC. W. APPLEYARD\n& Co. Ltd:  -\nPhone 269\nMACHINERY\nSAVE\nWe Have Three\nSKAGIT\n2-DRUM\nAll  Roller-Bearing  Units\nin Stock in First-Class\nCondition.\nSEE\nH.. \"Fritz\"  Farenholtz \u25a0\nC. Ross or Alex McDonald\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\nWANTED - CLEAN COTTON\nrags without buttons, 10c Ib\ndelivered to The Daily News\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, APRIL 11,1957\u201411\nWednesday Most Common (losing\nDay lor District Retail Stores\nWednesday seems to be the most piling the folder was furnished by\nPROPERTY WANTED\nWANTED - 2 OR 3 BEDROOM\nhouse with acreage, to purchase\nthrough VLA. Apply Box 3463,\nNelson Daily News.\nPERSONAL\nALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS -\nFridays. Box 493, phone 366-R\nor 483-R.\nFvl\nWELDING & EQUIPMENT\nCO, LTD\n614 Railway St.     Nelson, B.C.\nFOR IMMEDIATE SALE - 1954\nInternational TD 14A Cat with\nor without Garrett \"C\" logging\narch. Apply Box 3424, Nelson\nDaily News.\nFOR SALE BY OWNER\u2014HOUSE,\n3 bedrooms, L.R., D.R., modern\nkitchen, all one floor, all large\nrooms, 1200 sq. ft. Full basement, coal stoker, garage, rewired, 2 blocks from public and\nJr. High schools, immediate possession. 610 Mill St., phone 1882.\nPrice $8500. Terms can be arranged.\nFOR SALE \u2014 TD 6  CAT \"55\"\n. model; fully equipped for logging. Apply C. E. Campbell, Salmo, B.C.\nCOTTAGE.\u2014 ONE OF QUEEN'S\nBay's finest summer homes, 2\nbedrooms and furnished, 50 ft.\nbeach frontage, ideally located.\nLow price, $2700. P. E. Poulin,\nReal Estate Agent, 582 Ward\nSt., Phone 70.\nQUICK SALE \u2014 ACREAGE\nnear Crescent Valley, house\nneeds repairs. Apply Henery\nKnowles, Crescent Valley.\nFOR SALE \u2014 OLD 3-RM. COT\ntage, good location, $1200. Some\nterms. Apply Box 3465, Nelson\nDaily News.\nHOUSE, COTTAGE AND CABIN\nat Balfour, no reasonable cash\noffer refused, terms If desired,\nV. Hoskin, R.R. 1, Nelson.     \u00abv\nFOR SALE - GRAND FORKS4-\n7 rm. mod. home, $4000, less for\ncash. Apply Box 3487, Nelson'\nDaily News.\nFOR SALE \u2014 4-ROOM HOUSE\nin Ymir, Apply Box 3451, Nelson Daily News.\nPLANER, CAP. 40-60 M;-HD 7\ncat with hydraulic blade and\nwinch, 6x6 trucks  713 Victoria.\nRENTALS\nSMALL OFFICE AND WARE-\nhouse with shelving conveniently located in T r u c k Terminus\nBldg. on ground floor. Phone 77\nfor particulars.\nASKS CANADIAN\nRESIDENCE\nFOR HANNA\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Lawyer\nJohn Taylor said Wednesday he\nhas filed an application with Inv\nmigration \u25a0 Minister Pickersgill to\nhave former stowaway George\nChristian Hanna admitted into\nCanada permanently,\n\"I've asked the minister to give\nHannah official status,\" said Mr.\nTaylor,- counsel in Hanna. legal\nbattle to enter this country after\nlanding here a virtual prisoner\naboard a Norwegian freighter.\nMeanwhile, J. Arthur MacLen-\nnan, counsel for the immigration\ndepartment, said he has been advised by the department not to\nappeal a judgment allowing Hanna\nto stay here.\nMr. Justice Harry Sullivan on\nMarch 28 quashed a deportation\norder against the 23-year-old migrant who claimed he had no\ncountry or identification documents.     . ,-\nMr. Taylor said Hanna now is\nemployed on a coastwise towboat\nand likes his job.\nHis employer and the crew\nlike him, but his employer is puzzled because Hanna has no status. It is neither fair to Hanna,\nnor to the employer,\" said Mr.\nTaylor.\nMr. Pickersgill said here recently that if Hanna \"does good\"\nhe will personally recommend him\nas a landed immigrant.\ncommon day forv retail stores In\nB.C. to -give their, staff time off.\nSeventeen cities out of 36 listed\nin a survey prepared by the B.C,\nDepartment of Trade and Industry give Wednesday afternoons oft\nand another eight take the. whole\nday off.\nAnother three give all- day\nThursday off and four give Thurs-\nday afternoons off. Three cities\ngive Monday off so clerks at Fernie, Port Coquitlam and Port\nMoody get a \"long week-end\" off\nfrom Saturday to Tuesday morn\ning each week.\nMunicipalities in the Kootenays\ntaking Wednesday afternoon off\ninclude Nelson, Castlegar, Cran.\nbrook, Kimberley, New Denver\nOsoyoos and Trail. Salmo and\nGrand Forks take all day Wed\nnesday off, and Kaslo and Slocan\nThursday afternoons.\nClosing days for wholesale es-\ntablishments provide another pat\ntern. Nelson takes Saturday after\nnoon, and Cranbrook and Fernie\ntake all day Saturday off. Castlegar, Creston and Trail wholesale\nstores take Wednesday afternpons\noff, while Salmo and Grand Forks\ntake all day Wednesday off.\nKaslo and Slocan City,-different\nagain, take Thursday afternoons\noff. There are no wholesale establishments in either Kimberley or\nNew Denver, the survey report\nstates.\nThe booklet notes \"there may be\na few exceptions to the general\nclosing pattern in the individual\ncentres\" which are indicated by\nfootnotes on the card published\nby the B.C. Department of Trade\nand Industry. Data used in com\nmunicipal clerks, and was col-\nected in response to requests by\nsalesmen, businessmen and tourists.\nCLASSIFIED    DISPLAY\nGive You\nMore for\nYour Money\nSMALL, SELF - CONTAINED\nsuite for rent, near ferry landing on North Shore. Phone 122\nor 1095-L.\nlOUSK -OR RENT - ROBSON\nSt. 2 bedrooms, living room,\nbath and kitchen. 2 lots. Phone\n492-R.\nSMALL, FURNISHED, HEATED\napartment, fridge, gas stove, private entrance and parking. 171\nBaker.\nTheatre Group\nGoes to England\nLONDON (CP) - Canada will\nnose out Australia for the distinction of being the first Commonwealth drama group to appear on\nthe West End stage.\nThe Crest Theatre group P- Toronto is to 'present J. B. Priestley's The Glass Cage at Piccadilly\nTheatre starting April 26. Four\ndays later, an Australian company opens at the .new theatre in\na play, that has taken Australia\nby storm, The Summer of the\nSeventeenth Doll.\nOUTSTANDING FEATURES\nl.The   only   sheave   blocks\nwith manganese steel sheaves\nand side frames for toughness, shock resistance and\nlong life.\n2. Sheave rims ore recessed\ninto side frames to prevent\nrope fouling.\n3. Efficient grease seals retain lubricant and exclude\nforeign material.\n4. Tapered roller bearings are\nload-rated with extra-high\nsafety factor*.\n5. Wide throat passes square\nknots. Available in popular\nsizes and models.\ns\nCOMPANY LTD.\nP.O. Box 230        Phone 1.8\n_...:.-.-.   Neison, B. C.\nCLOSE IN, BRIGHT, CLEAN 3-\nroomed apt., ground floor, reasonable rent. Phone 1219-Y\nmornings before 10.\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nor sleeping room. Heated, frig.,\n1 *\" gas stove. Week or month. Rates.\n171 Baker St.    .\nFOR SALE - 50 ACRES RANCH\n\u2014A. A. Hoodicoff, Winlaw.\n3 ROOM HOUSE WITH BATH-\n2 lots  Phone 419-L.    \u25a0>\nBOATS AND ENGINES\nSEE YOUR FAVORITE 1957\nJohnson outboard on display.\nAll h.p rating and some electric.\nThey're scarce, order early.\nCOLEMAN ELECTRIC, Phone\n2055, Nelson, B.C. Big trades,\nEasy^Terms.\nFOR SALE - 15' OUTBOARD,\nglass bottom, centre deck, wheel\nand remote controls, fully\nequipped, canvas cover, 15 h.p.\nEvinrude (40 hrs.), new condition. Mastercraft trailer. Phone\n1418 after 5:30 p.m.\n21      FT.      INBOARD      CABIN\ni, criuser. Used 50 hours, new condition; very reasonably priced.\nPhone 1409-L.\nFOR SALE - 20' RUNABOUT-\nlike new, suitable for big inboard, price $400. Phone. 593-L,\nTrail. B.C. .    f\n3 BEDROOM APT., FURNISHED;\n1 Jive-room apt,, partly furnish-\ned. Phone 1905-X.\nFOR RENT\u2014FURNISHED SUITE\nAdults. May-Sept. Phone 394-R\nevenings.\nSLEEPING ROOM. SUIT QUIET\nworking man. Close In. Phone\n488-R.\nFOR RENT - FURNISHED RMS.\n213 Victoria. Call between 3 and\n5 p.m.\nThe Highways\nNo. 3 \u2014 Grand Forks, Cascade,\nRossland, Trail, Castlegar, Nelson,\nBalfour, Kootenay Bay, Creston,\nGoatfell \u2014 generally good. Goatfell, Cranbrook, Fernie, Crowsnest\n\u2014 fair to good, rough over construction area at Moyie north for\nsix miles \u2014 road closures.\nNo. 3A \u2014 Trail, Salmo \u2014 good\nNo. 99\u2014King George Highway-\nrough sections.\nRossland, Paterson\u2014good. Cres\nton, Porthill \u2014 good. %\nNo. 6 \u2014 Nelway, Nelson, South\nSlocan, Nakusp, Needles, Monashee, Vernon \u2014 fair to good.\n,- No. 95 \u2014 Kingsgate, Cranbrook,\nGolden \u2014 muddy sections, heaves,\nsome sections of blackto breaking,\nup, rough construction area at\nMoyie north for six miles, road\nclosures.\nNelson, Kaslo \u2014 good. Kaslo,\nNew Denyer \u2014 good. Kaslo, Lardeau \u2014 good. Lardeau, Gerrard\n\u2014fair to Poplar, Poplar to Gerrard rough sections, narrow.\nAlaska Highway \u2014 generally\ngood, dusty.\nClearapce Sale\nLakeside cottage for two\n-Phone 1703 or 1604--R.\nFOR RENT \u2014\n608 Front St.\n4-ROOM SUITE.\nSELF - CONTAINED 3-ROOMED\napt. Phone 1542.     \t\nFOR RENT \u2014 3 ROOM , FUHN..\napt., central, for one. Ph. 839-R.\n3-RM. MODERN COTTAGE \u2014 1\nmile North Shore. Ph. 1627-R-l.\nATTRACTIVE,   MODERN   3-RM.\napt. phone 130, noon or after 5.\nTRAINING   SCHOOLS\nAND INSTRUCTION\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nMachine   Shop Acetylene and\nelectric welding, motor rewinding. Phone 593      324 Vernon St\nFOR SALE \u2014 IN ROSSLAND,\nrecently constructed apartment\nblock, consisting of 4 modern\nself-contained suites. Each suite\nhas its own electric range and\nelectric hot water tank. Auto', oil\nhot water heating system. Provisions for additional suite in\nbasement. Full concrete basement. Located near centre of\ntown. 'Always rented, high revenue. Phone or write William\nBaker Limited, Rossland, B.C.\n(Continued In Next Column)\nJMarm lathi Itas\nCirculation  Dept. Phone 1844\nPrice per single copy 6c Monday\nto Friday. 10c on  Saturday\nSubscription Rates\nBy carrier per week\nin advance . -  35c\nBy Mail in Canada outside Nelson\n^One month           $ 1.25\n\" Three months . :..-     $ 3.50\nSix months    _       $ 6.50\nOne year $12.00\nBy mail to United Kingdom or\nthe United States\nOne month       $ 1.75\nThree months  ...    $ 5.00\nSix months      _      $ 9.50\nOne year           $18.00\nWhere extra postage Is required\nabove' rates plus postage\nFor Delivery by carrier in Cran\nDrook phone Mrs Wm Stevely;\nIn Kimberley Mr G A Bate;\nand\nlii) Rossland Mrs  Ross Saundry.\nIn Trail Mrs. Syd Spooner.\nDIESEL\nHEAVY EQUIPMENT\nTrained men are needed for all\ntypes of jobs in the Tractor and\nEquipment industry. If you are\nmechanically inclined and are\nnot making better than $90.00\nper week, or you don't have job\nsecurity, you owe it yourself to\nwrite for free facts, without\nobligation, about this training.\nTRACTOR TRAINING SERVICE, Box 7305 Nelson Daily\nNews..\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST - SATURDAY NOON ON\nBaker St., pocket watch, 'dial\nmark-A. ^D. Papazian. Reward,\nL. Janssen, P.O. Box 404, Nelson.\nLOST - 1 PR. GLASSES IN\npink case, near Junior High. Ph,\n801-L.\nDIVIDENDS\nBy The Canadian Press\nNorthwestern Utilities Ltd. pfd.\n$1 May 1, record April 23.\nA. J. Freiman Ltd, pfd. $1.12%\nMay 1, record April 18.\nCalgary Livestocks\nCALGARY (CP) - The cattle\nmarket was only moderately active and some prices were lower\nat the stockyards Wednesday.\nBulk of the day's receipts of 700\ncattle and 25 calves were good to\nchoice butcher steers and heifers.\nThe balance of the run was mostly\ncows.\nChoice steers 18-18.50; good 17-\n17.75; medium 15.50-16.50; common\n13-15; choice heifers 17 - 17.50;\ngood 16-17; medium 14-14.50; common 12-13.50; good cows 12.50-13.50\nand medium 11.25-12.25; common\n10-11 j tanners and cutters 6-9.50;\ngood bujls 12.50-13.25; common to\nmedium 9-12.\nGood, feeder steers 17-18; good\nstock steers 17-18; common to\nmedium 14-16.50; good butcher-\nweight heifer calves 17.50 - 19.50;\ngood to choice veal 20-22.50; com\nmon to medium 14-19.\nHogs 25 lower 25.75 A grade;\nsows steady  1S.75 liveweight.\nGood lambs steady to strong\n18.50-19.50,\ne\n1952 I.H.C.L180; 172\" W.B. Chassis and\nCab ~ \u2014- $1925\n1951 Ford 3-Ton; 4-5 yd. Brantford dump\nbody  -  $1675\n1950 Ford 3-Ton 4-5 yd.  dump body\nOnly  ._.__._1..__. . $1100\n1953 Chevrolet 1-Ton. 9-fr. pickup, box\nOnly ___. $950\n1950 Mercury Pickup .__ $450\n1949 Fargo 3-Ton flat deck  $560\n1950 G.M.C 3-Ton, 179\" W\u00bbB., cab and\nchassis  $1400\n\u20221948 Dodge Pickup !  $350\n1951 Ford 1-Ton flat deck.__ $775\nWB22 White, with trailer & bunks $4500\n\u2014 TRADES and TERMS \u2014   I\nSpecial discounts on no trade deals\nTIE\nAND EQUIPMENT CO.\n702 Front St.\nPhone 1400\nNelson, B.C\nTRAILERS\nHOUSE TRAILER FOR SALE -\nAt Shoreacres bridge. What offers?\nNEV7 YORK (CP)-Spot prices;\nLead. N.Y., .16.\nZinc. E-sl St. T nuis, .13',..  \"\nSilver, N.Y-., .91\"..        '\nFREE DELIVERY\nCool Sioilkd fim\/tiu\nPHONE\nNelson 24 and 175\nTrail 26 and 192\nWhen Ordering Specify Brand Name\no 'Columbia   Luger \u2022  Fernie Lager\n\u2022   Kootenay \u00b0   Columbia\nPale Ale\nCream  Stout\nEMPTY    BOrTLES    CO-.-<:T_0   ON    DELIVERY    ONLY\nINTERIOR   BREWERIES   LIMITED\ni nis aavertisement is-'.m'it published tir aiSDlnvefl hv rn\u00ab li\niliui L.rntiol Buutdo! bv trssj Guvernmenl ol BrilKb Coli\/rri&iO\n ;I2\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, APRIL 11,1957\nSave-Save-Save\nOn Garden Pest\nDestroyers\nCHLORDANE DUST Was 84c Now 69c\n(Kills ants, grubs, etc. in gardens and lawns)\nGARDEN GUARD Was 78c Now 65c\n(To control insects in vegetable crops)\nROSE DUST Was $1  Now 75c\n(Controls damage on roses or ornamentals)\nBORDEAUX MIXTURE Was 70c Now 67e\n(Now is the time to think of using it)\nARSENATE OF LEAD Was 60c Now 47e\nDRY LIME SULPHUR Was 75c Now 52e\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nJMAIN EXPORTS\np.\nJ Jute and cotton are the biggest\nlectors in export of raw material\nfrom Pakistan.\nCHARM\nBEAUTY SALON\nAll Beauty Culture\nand Cold Waves\nand Marcelling.\nMedical Arts Bldg.\nPhone 1922  Ste. 211\nHelen McCallum, Prop.\nRELIGIOUS CENTRE\nThe first church at Centerbury,\nEngland, Was being built when St.\nAugustine reached there in AD\n507. ,\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED and REPAIRED\nRE-CORING\nJim's Radiator Shop\n516 Front St. Phone 63\nA New Conception in Make-Up\nBy MAX FACTOR\nBe sure you ask about the new HI-FI Creme Mascara, $1.25,-\nin S exciting new colors: blue, blue-green, brown,\nblack,  browniahrblack.\n\u2022fa    Dramatic Eye Shadow\t\n\u25a0jr    Eyebrow Pencil   .\t\n\u25a0jc    Roman Pink and Pink Capri\n$1.00\n$1.00\nLipstick\n$1.00 and $1.50\nFLEURY'S PHARMACY\nCorner of Ward and Baker Streets\nPHONE 26    ,..-,* . ;   NELSON, B.C.\nasss. Whether it's a package of flower seeds or a\npower lawn mower you fieed, you'll find it in\nour complete slocks of lawn and garden supplies\n...brands you know and trust...at thrifty prices!\nBeauty Wheelbarrow . , $18.45\nNo. 4.\nLight weight, sturdy construction. Rubber1 tire.\nBeauty Wheelbarrow . . $14.25\nNo. 3. Smaller construction. Rubber tire,\nBeauty Wheelbarrow . . $22.05\n2 WHEELS.\nSturdy construction, light weight. Rubber tires.\nSpading Forks: Long handle,\n\"D\" Handle. As low as $4.05\n\"D\" Handle Turf Edgers:...    3.15\nPotato Forks: Long handle,\n\"D\" Handle            4.40\nField Hoes, Garden Hoes. Up from 1.95\nBamboo Lawn Rakes: ._.._.         .45\nSteel Lawn Rakes: As low as ....   1.05\nSteel Garden Rakes: Up from __\u2022 1.85\nFOR THE LADIES\nSMOOTH,  COLORFUL  SMALL GARDEN  TOOLS\nCultivators, 40c Forks, 35e\nTrowels, 35c\nWe Hove a Complete Stock of\nGarden and Lawn Seed, also Fertilizers\nLong Handle Round Point Shovel\n: *2.70\nO.K. A real buy\nPriced at \t\nWood, Vallance Hdwre.\nCompany Limited\nPhone 1530    WHOLESALE-RETAIL    Nelson, B.C.\n41 BIRTHS\nHERE IN MARCH\nMore births were recorded in\nMarch this year than in the two\nprevious months whereas the\nnumber of deaths remained the\nsame.as for February and marriages equalled the number in\nJanuary and considerably lower\nthan February.\nThere were 41 births in 'the city\nand one in the district to make\na quarterly total of 115 births in\nthe city and three in the, district\nthis year.\nThere were 11 deaths in the city\nand five in the district to make.\na quarterly total of 34-deaths in\nthe city, and 17. in the district this\nyear. There were three marriages\nin Nelson to make a quarterly total of-14 for the city. No marriages\nhave been recorded this year in\nthe district.\nQueen's Uncle\nFavors Royal\nVisilloB-C.\nVICTORIA,(CP) \u2014 British Columbia's Centennial next year\nwould be a \"jolly good reason\"\nfor the Queen to visit the province, her uncle, Hon. David Bowes-\nLyon, said here.\nMr. Bowes-Lyon, brother of the\nQueen Mother, said he had \"no\ndoubt\" Queen Elizabeth \"would\nlike to come.\"\n\"She loves it here,\" he said.\nMr. Bowes-Lyon, a director of\nCunard Lines, is staying at Government House here during a\npause in a three-week business\ntour ' across Canada and the\nUnited States.\nOf the Queen's visit, he said he\ncould not say if such a trip would\nbe made.\n\"I would certainly tell you if I\nknew,\" he said. \"I would like to\nsee her come, She could fly and\nbe here ih 24 hours.\"\nMr. Bowes-Lyon is 'travelling\nwith his wife.\nVictoria Increases\nGas Installations\nVICTORIA (CP) - Gas installations are increasing steadily\nand can be expected to Continue\nto increase, City Gas Inspector E.\nFredin says in a report to City\nCouncil.\nMr. Fredin says there is a trend\ntoward gas heating of downtown\nstores and commercial buildings,\nand that with natural gas expected\nto. be piped to the island within\nthe next year and a half, a sub\nstantial increase -in use of gas\ncan be anticipated.\nCAMPBELL,   SHANKLAND\n&   CO.\nChartered Accountants\nAuditors\n576 Baker St. Phone 235\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL  TRAINING\nSuite 206 Phone 141\nMedical Arts Building\nHAIGH\nTRU-ART\nBeauty  Salon     ,jj\u00ab*r*\nPhone 327\n576 Baker St. >\nHqve The Job Done Right\nWIC GRAVEC\n\u25a0        LIMITED   ,    \u2022*\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nonncE\nPLAYMOR\nSATURDAY\nMotor Vehicle Branch To Step Up\n.i-fenrlewSr Re-Examinafion Test\nVICTORIA (CP)' - Tlie program of requiring persons whose\ndriver's licences have been suspended- to .appear for personal\ninterview and re-examination is\nbeing stepped up this year by the\nB.C. Motor Vehicle Branch.\nIn 1956, the branch said, some\n3,007 -motorists were warned of\nthe need of more care ih'vehicle\noperation if they were to stay\n.clear of future convictions and\naccidents, and warned that failure\n'Copiers Turned\nOver for DEW\nLine Service\nOTTAWA (CP) - Ten RCAF-\nhelicopters have been turned over\nto Okanagan Helicopters \u25a0 Ltd. of\nVancouver for use in servicing\nand maintaining the mid - Canada\nradar line, thejair force said Wednesday.\nThe aircraft, Sikorsky H - 19S\nfrom the RCAF's 108 communications flight here, will be flown by\nOkanagan but will remain the\nproperty of the Crown, - ,\nOkanagan was selected by the\ndefence production department to\ntransport maintenance personel,\nsupplies and equipment along the\nwestern sector of the radar line.\nWould Exempt\nHandicapped\nFrom Gas Tax\n' VANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 The provincial government has been asked\nto waive gasoline tax and auto\nlicence fees for physically handicapped persons.\nThe Community Chest and\nCouncil seeks the relief for persons \"who axe required to buy\nand use an automobile as a sub\nstitute for lost mobility.\"\nIn a statement to the govern\nment the Council notes that the\nMotor Vehicle Act and Gasoline\nTax Act give special licence and\ngas rates to war veterans who\nhave lost limbs or received a 100-\nper-cent disability pension. Similar benefits are extended to civilian amputees.\nThe Council urges that the exemption be extended to \"all persons who by reason, bf a major\ndisability are prevented from getting about on foot normally.\"\nStorage Buildings\nTaking Shape\nConstruction of steel frames for\ntwo buildings on the city's new\nlakeshore storage yard started on\nTuesday morning and was nearly\ncomplete by 3 p.m. Aluminum\nroofing and siding will be applied\nnext and the job should take at\nleast two weeks.  '\u25a0\nCrews from Permasteel Engineering Ltd., Vancouver suppliers\nOf the buildings, are erecting\nthem on concrete foundations laid\nby City works crews; The buildings, a public works equipment\nstorage building and a smaller\npublic works utility build'ihg, are\nworth about $30,000. Value of the\nentire project which will replace\nthe present city storage facilities\nne^r the gas plant, is about $40,000,\nTwo men were fined a total of\n$45 and costs when they pleaded\nguilty before Stipendiary Magistrate William Evans in provincial\ncourt Tuesday on traffic charges.\nHerbert G. Sandford of Calgary\nwas assessed $25 and costs    for\nweeks in West and East Kootenay. He is currently in Nelson,\ncense.\n4 fine of $20 and costs was levied against Mickey Murakami of\nSlocan City for crossing a double\nline on the Taghum road.\nmm i u m\nOiis advertisement is not published or displayed bv the Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia\nto take more care could result in\nlicence suspension.\n\"In the same year, 2009 motorists lost their licences for periods\nvarying from 15 days to three\nyears under the program, and 682\nof this total had been previously\nwarned.\n\"The motor vehicle branch this\nyeat is' stepping up its plan\nwhereby a large percentage of\nthose suspended will have to\nappear for a personal interview\nand a driver re-examination before re-instatement will be decided upon. Those found through\nthis means to be still unsuitable\n. , .will not be re-instated.\"\nThe branch reported a 14.6 per\ncent increase in road accidents in\nB.C. in the1 first two months of\n1957 as compared with the similar\nperiod in 1656, but a 2.1 per cent\ndecrease in injuries and a 6.7 per\ncent decrease in the number of\npersons. killed.\nChurchill Gives\nAway Secrets\nLONDON (AP) \u2014 Sir Winston\nChurchill Wednesday gave the\nsecret of his good health at 81 after severe illness and a momentous life:   s\n. \"A lot of drinking, a lot of eating, and eight- or nine hours of\nsleep, most of it in the daytime.\"\nThe former prime minister told\nthis to Dr, Masatoshl Matsushita\nof Japan who called on him.\nThe Japanese university president, said he found Churchill\n\"looking' good, although a little\nhard of hearing.\"\nLyle Wicks Fills\nChetwynd's Place\nVICTORIA (CP) \u2014 Labor\nMlnliter Lyle Wicks Wednesday\nwas appointed acting minister\nof agriculture, filling In the vacancy caused by the death of\nRalph Chetwynd.\nMr. Chetwynd died last week\nfollowing a heart attack.\nIt was believed the governments move In appointing Mr.\nWicks minister was only a stopgap measure.\nOdds...\n<\"><? Ends\n.   : byHD.B.\nFOUND DEAD\nKAMLOOPS (CP) \u2014 Kelly\nPage, 22, was found dead from a\nrifle bullet Monday in the Heffley\nCreek bush. He was believed to\nhave accidentally shot himself\nwhen he fell with his rifle.\nWhile prowling around the fish\nhatchery the other day I stopped\nto .take a look at the 'Falls. Under\nquite an overhang of rock in the\ncentre of the Falls close to the\ntop water ousels are nesting. Mr,\nHunter said when the Falls are\nreally high the birds .hover for a\nmoment ,iri tald-aii* then dive\nstraight through them to feed the\nyoungsters. Ju.t another example\nof what parents will go through\nfor their offspring, in this case\nit's high water. '..\n* *   *'.;'.'\u25a0\nLast   Spring's   flood   waters\ngouged quite a hole in the bank\non the opposite side to the hatchery close to the foot of the Falls,\nin fact it almost pushed a whole\nisland of trees and rocks out in\nmid-stream. Heaven only knows\nwhat will happen- at this particular spot during this year's freshet.\nIt looked to me as though a bit' of\nbulldozing was in order in those\nparts, though.\n* *   *\nA good deal of slashing for the\nhospital access road has been done\njust above Park Street and all\naround in that quarter are white\nmarkers to indicate something big\nis afoot.\n* *   *\nStopped to pass the time of day\nwith Mr. Young in his garden at\nthe corner of Cedar and Carbonate. Have always admired the dis\nplay of crocuses around his fruit\ntrees every Spring and his tidy\ngarden. He showed me his new\nbegonia plants which he has set\nout in neat tiers on his sun porch.\nBy the look of things, he ought to\nhave quite a display when they\nall are .in bloom. As I recall it\nI've seen his name on a good many\nentries in the Fall exhibition.\n\u00bb   \u2666   \u2022\nThe other night at 11 p.m. on\nBaker Street I was cussing at the\nstop lights that were directing the\nfour winds, there being no traffic\non the streets, when what did I\nsee? A police car came down Ward\nStreet, paused for a moment and\nthen sailed on through the red\nlight. That did it, all the way back\nto the News I walked through the\nred' lights, when there were no\ncars approaching the intersection.\nI know, I am asking for a ticket,\nbut they only have my word for\nit, and what good is that?\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILY\nCENTENNIAL PROJECT      ,\nOKANAGAN CENTRE (CP) \u2014\nThis fruit growing settlement is\nthe first Okanagan centre to decide upon its -centennial project\nand have it commended by the\nB.C. Centennial Commitjee. Okanagan Centre will build a diving\nand swim float, plus a safe enclosure for a wading pool, at a\ncost of $400. Its grant from the\nCentennial Committee amounts to\n$.147.\nn\nDEVELOPING\nHelpful Snapshot Advka\nAt Your Rexall Pharmacy\nCity Drug\nBox 460 \u2014 Phone.34\nT\nSHIRTS\nfor  Relaxing\nComfort\nRelax in one of thess\nT-Shirts   made   with\ncollars or round-neck\nstyle.\n\u2022  Terry Cloth\n%  Interlock Stitch\n0  Cool Rayons\nAlso in plain white with\nthe non-sag neckband.\nE\nMORY'5\nLimited\n\"THE MAN'S STORE\"\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c lino  40o line black face type: .larger type ratet em\nrequest  Minimum two lli>-\u00ab   '0% discount for prompt payment\nGardens Ploughed.\nPhone 1968-R.\nClay paints, instructions.\nHOBBY SHOP, PHONE 1730.\nSoft Ice Cream in cones or bulk\nat Wait's News.\nBabies, Weddings, Portraits.\nVOGUE STUDIO \u2014 PHONE 1552\nSJilb Linen Weaves in the best\nshades, 45\" yd. 98c.\n\u25a0I TAYLOR'S DRY GOODS\nLadies' seamless nylons, 15 denier. $1.25 per pair.\nEBERLE'S ON BAKER STREET.\nAll variety of fruit trees, evergreen, etc. Orders over $10, one\nfree. Taghum Hill Nursery, Nelson.\nGordon Sutherland\nPainting,. Paperhanging. R.R. 1,\n' Phone 1990, Nelson.\nUsed   chesterfields  and  davenports. $25 up.\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nLet's  talk  about  gardening  \u2014\nWe have the stock. *'\nCOVENTRY'S  FLOWER  SHOP\nFor meals that are different, try\nTHE BALFOUR BEACH INN\nDining Room. Phone 18.\nLight, study garden wheelbarrows\nFrom $11.95 and up.\nWOOD, VALLANCE HARDWARE\nCO., LTD.\nREMEMBER\nLegion Auxiliary spring tea and\nbake sale. Legion Hall, Saturday,\nApril 13th. Door prize.\nParkerfield special fertilizer.\nNew improved formula for your\n\u25a0 garden.\nMAC8   FLOWER   SHOP\nPhone 77 for\nall local moving, shipping and\ndistributing.\nSPEEDY  DELIVERY\nStandard size doors and framed\nSpecial sizes made to order.\nT. H. WATERS & CO. LTD.\nPhone 156     101 Hall St.     Nelson\nVETERAN WELFARE OFFICER\nwill be at Can. Legion, Nelson,\nmorning of Fri\u201e April 12. Please\ncontact Secretary.\nClearance of All Electric -Ranges.\nWE PAY TOP PRICES FOR\nUSED   FURNITURE\nHOME FURNITURE\nEXCHANGE, PH. 1560\n*. '\nTop Wool Brands for Indian\nSweaters, your choice of Mary\nMaxim or Polar yarn.\nAll your knitting needs at\nEBERLE'S ON BAKER 8T.\nCHILDREN'S SPRING FASHION\nSHOW AND TEA, HUME HOTEL,\nSAT., APRIL 13, 2 P.M. SPONSORED BY JR. LADIES' HOSPITAL   AUXILIARY.\nFor your small plants, ferto pots,\n\u2022no disturbing plants, pot and. all.\nMade from well rotted cow. manure, price 95c and $1.05 per doz.\nMAC'S  FLOWER  SHOP\nTeenagers, we have white, pink\nand blue bucks.\"\n$5.25,' $5.95, $6;50,.-$7.95\nSee Our Windows\nANDREW'S\u2014LEADERS   IN\nFOOTFASHIDN.  EST. 1902.\nSee our big display of Carpenter\nTools. 1 portable Singer sewing\nmachine,  electric,  special  $49.50.\nWE PAY CASH FOR USEb\nFURNITURE  AND  ANTIQUES\nBIRCH'S FURNITURE\n307 BAKER ST. \u2014 PH. 47     .\nRotary Conference Entertainment, Sunday evening concert,\nApril 14th. Monday evening, Governor's Ball. A limited number\nof inviations available for non-\nRotarians. Admission by invitation\nonly. Contact any Rotarian or\nphone 1090, 962, 1786 or 106.\nCARD OF THANK8\n' I wish to thank Dr. Shaw,\nnurses and staff of the K.L.G. Hospital, for the kindnesses shown\nto my husband and myself during\nhis long illness. Would also like\nto extend my grateful thanks to\nthe many friends who helped me\nbefore and since the passing of\nmy beloved husband.\n.   Nellie Sherradin,\nAinsworth, B.C.\nFUNERAL   NOTICE\nHILLESTAD \u2014 Funeral services\nwill be held jointly for the late\nMagnus Olaf Hillestad and his\nwife, Rijgnhild Ovedia Hillestad of\nRenata on Friday, April 12, at 2\np.m. from the chapel of theCastle-\ngar Funeral Home, Rev. W. J.\nKranz officiating. Interment family plot, Park Memorial Cemetery,\nKinnaird. Arrangements entrusted\nto the Castlegar Funeral Home.\nTATTERSHALL, England (CP)\n\u2014Angler John Harvey caught five\npike in the River Witham here\nranging from 10 to 25% pounds.\nHe kept the biggest and three the\nothers back\u2014\"just small fry,\" he\nexplained.\nSTAR SPECIALS\nWhaL (DapaMmsunL\nROASTING\nCHICKEN\nGrade A.\n5 to 6 lbs. average.\nLb. 59*\nBOILING   FOWl ,W_\u00a3.m_\u00abU_47<\nHOMADE SAUSAGE    3,., $100\nBACON \u00bb^akfast! 98*\nSALMON TROUT _*,,,_. a..., _-\u201e.49*\nReady To Serve\nHAMS\nSwifts Premium\nFully Cooked\nLb. 67*\nTl IDItfEVC   0rder Your Turkey NOW far Easter.\nI UK-VE 13    io to .2 lb. Grade A, Eviscerated... _-.\n\/        (pJwduxji (Dspcvdmsnt\nCelery Hearts: Cello pkts... 25*\nsTADDOTC  California, Clip-Top; -\u00bb'     qn_\nV.MK!\\V_* I d  i6 oz. cello pkts., & for _-7 f\nDANISH SQUASH Lb 19*\nCAULIFLOWER SX^SfS 25*\nSWEET POTATOES NQ\u00b0uaW; 2lbs 39*\nTURNIPS    GoodrCookers; Lb 5*\nBROCCOLI    Fresh, Green Bunches; Lb 25*\nTOMATOES\nImported Field\n ,   ., . 14 oz. Cello Tube\n25*\n\u00a3.D A DEED I NT  Indian River, Pink   n       OOjrf\nVSTtMrCrrcUl I    or Wte.; Lg. Size 40s -- lbs. --T0\nORANGES   Nave\u21223  5 lb. poly bag 59*\n,     'ShocsMj. (Dsfuvdtmnt\nPEAS  Fresh Frozen; ....:. .2 pkts. 39*\nFRENCH   FRIES FresTFrozen; .2 pkts. 35*\nBRUSSEL SPROUTS Drt\u00b0ern;Fpkth 29*\nmtxed VEGETABLES DFeta_?o,:2plrt,49*\nSTRAWBERRIES SS^e* m 39*\n\u00ab\u2122 DRUMSTICKS &,mk, 85*\nORANGE JUICE JffifeiS \u201enS55*\nSALAD DRESSING 3^.%^ 79*\nNABOB COFFEE Lb 99*\nPEANUT BUTTER#g$    :    49*\nJELLO  All Flavors;  6 pkts. 59*\nSPECIAL   K   Kellogg's;  2 pkts. 55*\nSTAR GROCERY\nHA D,. GREENWOOD\nPHONE lOrll   . NELSON, B.C.\n 1\u2014SECTION 2- NELSON DAILY NEWS, APRIL 11, 1957\nICM3\nDELUXE NEW\nSAFEWAY!\nNow Ready for the Residents of\nNelson and District\nLocated at\nAnderson and First Streets in Fairview\nNELSON, BRITISH COLUMBIA\nOPEN FOR BUSINESS  ;\nFRIDAY APRIL 12th at 9:00 a.m.\n* Huge135 Car Parking\n* 5 Speedy Check-Outs\n* Self-Service Meats\n* Refrigerated Produce\n\u2022\nYour Store Manager\nWiIf Maynard\n. . . started with Canada Safeway in Vancouver in 1940. He managed the large unit\nin Chllliwac- for ten years before coming to\nNelson just over one year ago. He is married\nand has three \"c-ildrtjn. Mr. Maynard to very\nwell versed in the food business and to at\n.your service at all timet.\nOpen\nFriday Night\nApril 12th\nTill\n9:00 p.m.\nFree Gifts and Favors\nWhen the Store Opens April 12th and 13th\nFRIDAY MORNING:\n500 loaves Silhouette Bread, 500 fresh Hawaiian orchids and 500\nhooks of needles.\nFRIDAY NIGHT:\n500  vials  of  French   perfume  for  the  ladies \u2014  500  packages\nof cigarettes,for the men of the   family.\nSATURDAY MORNING:\n500 loaves Silhouette bread, 500 fresh Hawaiian orchids and 500\nbooks of needles plus ...\nBALLOONS- SUCKERS and BANKS FOR THE CHILDREN\nmmaat\n_      Everyone Is Cordially Invited To Attend the Big- Big ,\nPUBLIC PREVIEW and OFFICIAL CEREMONIES\nWith Mayor Joe Kary Officiating on Thursday Night. 7:30 p.m.\n(No Merchandise Will Be Sold at the Preview)\n 2\u2014SECTION 2, NELSON DAILY NEWS, APRIL 11, 1957\nCLIP THESE VALUABLE\nCOUPONS AND SAVE\nThis Coupon Is Worth\non the purchase of a\n2-lb. tin of EDWARDS'\nCOFFEE\nTHIS COUPON VOID AFTER APRIL 20, 1957\nThis Coupon honored in the Nelson Safeway Stores only.\nThis Coupon Is Worth\non the purchase of 2 pkgs.\nof SHERIFF'S\nInstant Puddings\nTHIS COUPON VOID AFTER APRIL 20, 1957\nThis Coupon honored in the Nelson Safeway Stores only.\nThis Coupon Is Worth\non the purchase of a\n10-lb. bag of Kitchen Craft\nFLOUR\nTHIS COUPON vVOID AFTER APRIL 20, 1957\nThis Coupon honored in the Nelson Safeway Stores only.\nThis Coupon Is Worth\non the purchase of a 16-oz.\npkg. of Captain's Choice\nSOLE FILLETS\nTHIS COUPON VOID AFTER APRIL 20, 1957\nThis Coupon honored in the Nelson Safeway Stores only.\nThis Coupon Is Worth\non the purchase of 2 lbs.\nof SOLO\nMARGARINE\nTHIS COUPON VOID AFTER APRIL 20, 1957\n-' This Coupon honored In the Nelson Safeway Stores only,\nThis Coupon Is Worth\non the purchase of a\nGiant Package of\nFAB DETERGENT\nTHIS COUPON VOID AFTER APRIL 20,  1957\nThis Coupon honored in the Nelson Safeway Stores only,\nThis Coupon Is Worth\non the purchase of a\nHalf 'Gallon of Party Pride\nThis Coupon Is Worth\non. the purchase of a ?\n25-lb. bag of Kitchen Craft\nFLOUR\n1m\nTHIS COUPON VOID AFTER APRIL 20, 1957\nThis Coupon honored in the Nelson Safeway Stores only.\nI This Coupon Is Worth\nI      on the purchase of a\nJ 120 bag pkg. of Canterbury\nI\nI\nI\nI\n.1.\nOrange Pekoe and Pekoe\nTEA BAGS\nTHIS COUPON VOID AFTER APRIL 20, 1957\nThis Coupon honored in the Nelson Safeway Stores only.\nNow SAFEWAY can offer\nthe finest display of\nguaraiiteed-fresh top quality\nFRUITS and VEGETABLES\nin the Kootenay area...\n_^ \u2022   '   Sjunkist.\nCSSiM\n5 ibs. 65c\n252V\nGrapefruit\nFlorida\nIndian\nRiver. _\nlb. 11c\nCalifornia\nFinest.\nQuality. L\n2 ibs 23c\ni\naragus\nFancy\nGreen\nTipped.\nlb18c\nICE CREAM\nTHIS COUPON VOID AFTER APRIL 20, 1957\nThis Coupon honored in the Nelson Safeway Stores only,\nThis Coupon Is Worth\non the purchase of 2 pkgs.\nof LITTLE DIPPER\nCAKE MIXES\nL.HIS COUPON VOID AFTER APRIL 20, 1957\nThis Coupon honored in the Nelson Safeway Stores only..\nAll Produce Prices\nSubject To Market Change.\nRemember... we meet all competitive\nprices... item by item ... day by day.\nIn addition we offer the widest variety of PRODUCE it is,\npossible to buy. Items such as Fresh Strawberries,\nCorn - on - Cob, Remains and Red Lettuce, Artichokes,\nYellow Peppers, Savoy Cabbage, Watermelon, Cantaloupes,\nGreen Beans, Green Peas, Papayas, Pineapples, and Zuccini\nSquash. Every produce item guaranteed in every respect.\nI This Coupon Is Worth\nI on the purchase of 6 pkgs.\nI of LUSHUS\nI JELLY POWDERS\nI THIS COUPON VOID AFTER APRIL 20, 1957\nI This Coupon honored in the Nelson Safeway Stores only.\nCanada iSSAFEWAY\nI Your Produce Dept.\nManager\nRON WYLIE\n... started with Safeway in 1951 at the Nelson\nstore. Ron Is married and has two fine-children.\nHis favorite hobbles are fishing and hunting.\nRon is well qualified to give our customers the\nvery\" best to produce satisfactory. Originally'\ncame from Swift Current, Saskatchewan.\nWE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES\n..GLCON DAILY NEWS\n \\0\\b\nSECTION 2, NELSON DAILY NEWS, APRIL 11, 1957\u20143\nNew Fairview food Market Opens This Week\nAudubon Park\nHopes lor\nBaby Crane\nBy GEORGE KITCHEN\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nWASHINGTON (CP) \u2014 The\nworld's whooping crane population soon may be'increased\u2014if all\ngoes well at the Audubon Park\nZoo in New, Orleans within the\nnext few weeks.\nCrip, one of three whooping\ncranes in captivity and 27 known\nto be in existence, is staging an\noccasional mating dance.\nHis mate, Josephine, still is coy,\nbut in past. years she has been\ncongenial.\nThe report on Crip and Josephine was made by Frederick C.\nLincoln, of the United States fish\nand wildlife service, at a meeting\nhere of the whooping crane advisory group, made up of Canadian and American conservation\nand government officials whose\naim is to save the few remaining\ncranes from extinction.\nHOPEFUL SIGNS\nLincoln reported that he visited\nthe cranes two weeks ago and\nfound them in \"excellent condition.\" He was encouraged at the\nprospects for progeny.   .\n\"We are going to get an avicul-\nturist to help the cranes through\nthe critical nesting period,\" Lincoln said. Last year, Josephine\nhatched two young whoopers but\nboth died.\nThe group also considered the\nproblem of a mate for \u2022 another\ncaptive whooping crane, of undetermined sex, in the zoo at San\nAntonio, Tex, Suggested as a possible partner was an errant crane\nwhich stayed in Texas last summer when the rest of the world's\nonly known flock migrated to\nNorthern Canada.\nAnother proposal to transfer the\nSan Antonio crane to the New Or-\n. leans zoo to join the two already\nthere was quickly vetoed.\n\"It's a mistake to put three\nbirds together,\" suggested Clarence Cottam, former assistant di-\n\u2022rector of the wildlife service.\n\"Two's a company and three's a\ncrowd in the breeding season.\"\nResidential Nelson's\nFirst Big-Time Grocery\nlf?r^*~*>T3.\n:..:^\u00ab*w?5~;(V8~~\nA supermarket with a cost\nlabel nudging a quarter of a\nmillion dollars opens Friday\nIn Fairview.\nThe new store of Canada\nSafeway Limited Is the first big-\ntime grocery business In residential Nelson.\nIt's directed at the Fairview\nand North Shore shopper, but\nno one doubts for a moment that\npeople all over Nelson and the\nout-of-towner will buy there.\nEven Company officials believe Its cash registers will\nJingle three times faster than\nthose of the Baker Street store\nwhich will continue In operation.\nElbow room \u2014 that's what Safe-\nway's supermarket has. The big\nflat rose-hued building centres the\nmajor part of an entire city block,\nand is bounded on three sides by\nstreets.\nAsphalt will be rolled out this\nspring on the whole area surrounding the building \u2014 the surface for a parking lot which will\naccommodate up to 135 cars. Mercury vapor lamps for night parking make almost as bright a scene\nas daylight.\nUpon entering the store, you'll\nbe .impressed by space and light,\nand color. The walls are greens,\nblues, yellows, pinks that would\nriot mixed up, but wisely separated give a totally pleasing effect.\nEYE APPEAL\nUnder the great laminated\nbeams of the dome, everything\nfrom the bold lettering over departments to red and white decorative' umbrellas has been done\nwith an eye for eye appeal.\nProdigious planning went into\nthe Safeway's supermarket. The\ncompany took a long time selecting and preparing the site. So\nwhen Frank Tearoe Construction\nof North Vancouver, the general\ncontractor, started erecting the\nbuilding last fall, it was no time\nbefore the job was nearly finished.\nManager Wilfred Maynard will\nhave a large staff under his supervision. Jack Kenzie is assistant\nmanager, Ron Wylie produce department manager and Angelo De-\nmeo meat department manager.\nThe store features some marvellous equipment new to the retail\ngrocery side of Nelson's commercial life. These installations indicate how carefully the company\nplanned its store and, incidentally,\naccount for a whopping share of\nthe total cost.\nCALL SYSTEM\nOne of these features is a call\nsystem of intercommunication\ntelephones and loudspeakers. Each\ncheck stand is equipped- with a\npunchboard telephone by which\nmessages can be conveyed privately to any department, or publicly.\nIn a store the size of Safeway's,\nthis communication network saves\nemployees an incalculable amount\nof walking.\nBy means of teletype service\ncommon to all of the company's\nB.C. interior stores, management\ncan readily check prices, availa-\nbility of goods and shipping details.\nNor have the shopper's communication wants been forgotten.\nOutside the store's long glass front\nentrance, a public telephone booth\nhas been provided.\nThe mechanized meat department, where handling is eut to the\nbarest minimum, stands out among\nthe supermarket's departments.\nFrom the meat department's\nporcelain cooler chamber bristling\nwith hooks, the sides of beef, etc.,\ngo directly to blocks for cutting\nand processing. Then, on the top\nrollers of a conveyer system, the\nvarious cuts of meat are borne\nalong to three wrapping stations.\nThe wrapping personnel deposit\nthem' on lower rollers for their\nmove to scales.-\nA   multi-purpose   scale,   five\ntimes the size of an ordinary\nscale, not only weighs each package of meat but alto labels It\nwith   brand, type,  weight and\nprice. It does In a few moments\nwhat It took precious time to do\nby hand pricing formerly.\nFronting this temperature controlled   (50-55  degrees)   handling\nroom  is  a   72-foot  long  display\ncounter where the meat is placed\nbefore the shopper.\nThe supermarket has no fewer\nthan    three    porcelain    coolers,\nCONGRATULATIONS\nand\nSincere Good Wishes\nto Canada Safeway Ltd., ancTto Mr. Maynard, manager,\non the opening of their new deluxe store.\nWE ARE PROUD...\nto have been General Contractors for the construction\nand for the installation of fixtures.\nFrank Tearoe Construction\nCo. Ltd.\nWest Vancouver \u2014 British Columbia.\nMANAGER of new Fairview\nsupermarket store of Canada\nSafeway Limited, Wilfred\nMaynard, above, has been In\ncharge of the company's Baker\nStreet store since coming tp Nelson In 1955, He joined Safeway\nIn 1940 and prior to coming here\nwas in Chllllwack for ten years,\nCharles Banner of Penticton la\nnew manager of the uptown\nstore.\ngleaming white rooms of below\nceiling height,, with interior storage fixtures.\nThe dairy cooler opens onto the\ndisplay racks, assuring constant\nflow of goods. As the milk, butter,\neggs and cheese are popped into\nshopper's baskets, the staff restocks from inside the cooler.\nTemperature of this room is kept\naround 48 degrees.\nThe third cooler room for produce gives egress to sinks for\ncleaning and trimming, and cello\nwrapping and weighing of those\nfruits and vegetables thus retailed.\nIn addition to the three coolers,\nthe supermarket \"behind the\nscenes\" equipment includes a big\nfreezer chamber where ice cream\nand frozen foods are stored at 10\ndegrees below zero.\nUpon arrival at the store by\ntruck, groceries are unloaded directly onto a conveyer system\nwhere the staff unpack the stream\nof boxes and cartons.\nCOUNTER  ISLAND\nThe canned and bottled goods,\nthe dry goods, the thousand and\none articles of daily household use\ngo to stock shelves of the store's\nfour, central \"gondolas\" or counter\nislands.   \u25a0\nA special department takes the\nbaked goods \u2014 the breads, pastries, rolls, cakes and partly treat\nfare.\nThe frozen food and produce\ndepartments locus on long, brightly illumined counters where the\nshopper can select -with ease the\nfamily ehoice of produet.\nSafeway distributee its -own\nbrands in canned foods, tea, coffee, ice cream and bread. In this\nmanner, manager Maynard explains, the company \"controls the\nquality.\"\n.\u2022 Shoppers take their purchases\ntq any one of five check stands.\nClerks tot up sales at compact, two\ndrawer cash registers, surmounted\nwith loose leaf price lists. You\ncould buy a new ear for what it\ncost to install each of these Swedish-manufactured cash registers.\nCheques are cashed at the office,\na glass encased room' from which\na'view of the entire main floor\narea can be obtained.\nFor children aeeomp-nstag their\nparent, on.shoping trips,, there is\na \"little library\" corner with an\nassortment of comic books.\nThat's the : deparhnent-by-der\npartment picture. Looked at from\nan overall aspect, Safeway's supermarket holds the palm te the best\nmarketerias of big Canadian and\nAmerican, cities.\nFORMER NELSON boy, Thomas Mllburn, above, Is district\nmanager for Canada Safeway\nLtd., with headquarters at New\nWestminster and Interior locations. Mr, Mllburn was born and\nraised within a block of Safe-\nway's new food market In Fair-\nview. He entered the grocery\nbusiness here, first with Ross\nFleming In Fairview and later\nwith Safeway. He went to the\nTrail store In 1937 and later to\nKelowna.\nPenticton Man New\nUptown Store Manager\nShip B.C. Sockeye\nEggs To Japan\nVANCOUVER (CP) - About\n9B.000 British Columbia sockeye\nsalmon will be swimming soon in\nJapan's Lake Chuzenji.\nThe department of fisheries was\nadvised recently {hat a shipment\nof sockeye salmon eggs, dispatched\nin mid-January, had arrived safely at the Nikko national hatchery\nnear Tokyo, where they will be\nretained until ready for planting.\nThe gift arose from meetings\nbetween Canadian and Japanese\nscientists working on fishery surveys in the Pacific Ocean under\nthe International North Pacific\nFisheries Commission.\nSTEADY FLOW\nThe Kakabeka waterfall, which\nproduces hydro power near Port\nArthur, Ont., Is 130 feet high and\nmore than 400 feet wide.\nNew manager of Canada Safeway Ltd. store on Baker Street,\nCharles F. Banner, joined the company in 1940. He. succeeds Wilfred\nMaynard, who will be manager of\nthe new Safeway food market in\nFairview.\nBorn in Victoria, he moved to\nVancouver as a young man and\njoined the Safeway organization\nthere. From 1941 to 1945 he served\nin the Royal Canadian Air Force,\nand returned to Safew,ay in Vancouver following the 'war's end.\nHe was transferred to Penticton\nin 1948 and was assistant manager\nthere when his promotion to Nel\nson came.\nMr. and Mrs. Banner have four\nchildren\u2014two daughters and two\nsons. One girl attends Junior High\nSchool, the other Hume School.\nThe family has taken up residence\nat 514 Elwyn Street.\nSays Delinquents\nMade in the Home\nBy JACK VAN DUSEN\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014The best weapon against juvenile delinquency\nis parental love, says William Mc-\nG-rath.\n\"Delinquents are made, not\nborn,\" the secretary of the delinquency and crime division of the\nCanadian Welfare Council said in\nan interview. And Mr. McGrath,\n39-year-old father of three, said\nthat home is where most delinquents are \"made\".\n\"The incidence of juvenile delinquency in Canada has dropped,\" he said, \"and we can be\nmildly satisfied with the statistics\n\u2014but we cannot be complacent.\"\nChildren need guidance at home\nand at school, he said, and he offered parents a four-point rule to\nfollow in raising their children:\n\"Give your children lots of love;\nmake sure your, rulings are .un\u00ab.\nderstood; be consistent; and try\nto see the child's side of a situation.\nMUST UNDERSTAND\n\"H a child understands why he\ncan't do certain things it makes\nit easier for him. to integrate parents' rulings into his own scheme\nof values.\nFlop Now Success\nLONDON (CP)\u2014Some time ago,\na student at Cambridge, Peter\nHall wrote French playwright\nJean Anouilh, asking permission\nto produce his play, Waltz of the\nToreadors, which had been a flop\nin Paris.\nHall, now married to French\nfilm actress Leslie Caron, suggested that the only reason the\nplay had failed was that the production was bad.\nAnottilh wrote back, eonsejrimg\nto Hall's taking over the play,\nwhich has been running In London\nfor mare than a year and recently\nopened in New York. The playwright also agreed with Hall's\nParis  post-mortem, adding:\n\"1 produced the play myself.\"\n1\nHi Neighbor!\nWe wish to take this opportunity to greet our new Fairview\nneighbor.\nCanada Safeway\nLtd.\nParkview Motors\nYOUR HUDSON, VOLKSWAGEN DEALER\nPhone 1454\n*   \u25a0\nNELSON, B.C.\n323 Nelson Ave.\n\"He shouldn't do n thing just\nbecause Pop says so.\n\"And be consistent. Don't let a\nchild do what he wants one day,\nand then whack him all over the\nplace the next day just because\nyour stomach is bothering you.\"\nAs for spanking, Mr. McGrath\nsays that as a child gets older\nyou can rely on reason more than\ncompulsion to get him to do' the\nright tilings.\n\"But if you live on a busy street\nspanking will probably be neoes.\nsary to keep a youngster away\nfrom traffic. Otherwise, hell be\nrun over before he gets old enough\nto reason with,\n\"Discipline should be constant\nand loving, but firm.\"\nSCHOOLS' PART\nMr. McGrath says schools could\ncut down the delinquency rate by\nnipping the problem in the bud.\n\"In the ordinary school system\na teacher should be sensitive to\nany emotional disturbance in her\npupils \u2014 children who cant get\nalong with friends, oonstant tru.\nants, youngsters who are too shy,\nand even children not working up\nto their mental capacity.\n\"These are all signs of mental\ndisturbances.\"\nMaladjusted children could be\npassed on to social workers for\nhelp before it is too late.\n\"After all, schools see children\nmore than any other agency and\ncan get to'them while they are\nstill young.\"\nB.C. Chemical\nPlant for\nN. Vancouver\nNORTH VANCOUVER, B.C\n(CP)\u2014A $12,000,000 chemical plan:\nbeing built here will attract \"sat'\nellite\" industries on the 100-acrc\nsite, the head of the company saif\nhere,\nRobert Llndley Murray; chair\nman of the board of Hooker Elec .\ntrol-Chemical Company, said thai\none such plant, the Electric Deduction Company, had already\nbeen built.\nPulp mills use both products oi\nthe new plant\u2014chlorine and caustic soda.\n\"The plant will be finished this\nsummer and we will employ about\n100 men,\" Mr. Murray said.\nANCIENT CUSTOM\nBallads were popular among the\nancient Greeks and Romans to\nrecord stirring events and heroic\ndeeds.\nCongratulations\nCanada Safeway Ltd.\nOn the Completion and Opening\nOf Your New Deluxe Safeway Store.\nLaurence Simpson\nExcavating Trenching\nCrane and Shovel Work.\nPhone 282 Nelson, B.C.\nWe Would Like To\nExtend Our Compliments\nto the\nCANADA SAFEWAY LTD.\non the opening\nof theif\nNew Fairview Store\nBURNS\n'   Lumber Company\nPHONE       \"Everything for the Builder\"\n1180 602 Baker St.    Nelson, B. C.\nWe Would Like To Take This Opportunity   \u25a0\nTO CONGRATULATE\nOUR FUTURE NEIGHBOR\nCanada Safeway Ltd.\nOn the Opening of\nTHEIR NEW SUPERMARKET\nIN FAIRVIEW\nTHE BRITISH AMERICAN OIL CO. LTD.\n 4\u2014SECTION 2, NELSON DAILY NEWS, APRIL 11, 1957\nTbiw StoJuL 0ommcdbiL tf&nJMJL Jm\/wwv\nTelephoto shot from the hillside shows the new\nSafeway modern food market as it neared completion.\nThe picture gives a graphic picture of the expansiven-\ness of the store itself and the immense parking area.\nThe building, constructed by Frank Tearoe Construction Company Ltd. of Vancouver, is 80 by 135 feet.\nDaily News photo\nMERCURY VAPOR LIGHTS and the large green space surrounding the ultra-modern building. Rose in\nSafeway sign atop the new quarter-million-dollar super- color, the building and parking lot take up the major\nmarket give effective lighting on the spacious parking   part of a city block. \u2014Daily News Photo.\nNew Zealand's Antarctic Efforts\nImpress U.S. Expedition Leader\nBy J. C. GRAHAM\nCHRISTCHURCH, N.Z. (CP) -\nSir Edmund Hillary, conqueror of\nMount Everest, and his New Zea-\nlanders are ending a fine first season in the Antarctic.\nWith the departure of the summer party by the expedition ship,\nling down to the southern winter\nSir Edmund and his man are sett-\nwith a great record of achievement behind them.\nThey so Imprened Rear-Admiral Qeorge Dufck, commander of the United States Ant.\narctlo expedition, that he declared on returning to New Zealand that the Hillary party, In\nproportion to numbon and resources, was making a greater\neffort than any of the 11 nation! In the Antarctic.\nCLAIMS SOVEREIGNTY\n\"We watched the New Zealand,\nera work under Sir Edmund Hillary and Dr, Trevor Hatherton\nsecond in command,\" he said.\n\"I don't think you could have\npicked two better leaders\u2014they\nare In there pitching all the time.\"\nNew Zealand claims sovereignty\nover a big slice of the Antarctic\nextending to the pole and named\nthe Ross Dependency, but this is\nthe first full expedition the coun\ntry has ever sent there.\nBest Wishes Safeway\non the opening of another fine store and Congratulations\non your choice of\nMATICO PLASTIC FORTIFIED ASPHALT TILE\nfor your floors\nSee This Fine Quality, Economical  Floor Covering\nat Your Dealer\nASSOCIATED ENTERPRISES LTD. and\nCOLUMBIA TRADING CO.\nin Nelson\nFLOOR CRAFT LTD.\nVANCOUVER, B. C.\nCongratulations and\nBest Wishes to\nCanada Safeway Stores\nLtd.\non the opening of their     \"    ':\nFairview District Store\nIN NELSON\nWe ore proud to hove participated in the construction of this building by installing the plumbing,\nheating, ventilation and air conditioning.\nFERGUSON BROS.\n1293-R\n2003-R\nWe wish to take this opportunity to\nCongratulate.\nCANADA\nSAFEWAY\nLTD.\non the opening of their ultra-modern\nin Fairview\nIT WAS- OUR PLEASURE TO COMPLETELY\nWIRE THIS NEW STORE.\nCOLEMAN\nELECTRIC\nPhone 2055 Nelson, B.C.\nARAB DOCTOR\nSWITCHES\nPRACTICE\nBy niOHARD ANCO\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\n. CALGARY (CP)\u2014An eye doctor in Saudi Arabia for more than\nnine years has switched hil practice to Calgary after \"two lifetime, of eye work\" In a country\nteeming with eye disease and\nhampered by religious resistance\nto medical pMgress.\nDr. Michael B. Longlnotto of\nLondon was the first qualified\neye physician in the Middle Ea6t\ndesert-land of 7,000,000 nomads,\nruled by oil-rich King Saud.\nYet he found the wealth no\ndriving influence on education\nVid \u2022 health, each cramped by a\nbackward economy and a religion\nwhich accepts physical defects as\nsupernatural omens.\nORGANIZED HOSPITAL\nDr. Longlnotto left for Saudi\nArabia In 1947 at the invitation of\nKing Saud to organise one of the\nfirst hospitals there.\nNow, he says, he has had his\nfill of sand dust from the sweltering land.\nEgyptians have been brought in\nto man hospitals, but the barrier\nof religion still hamperi medical\nadvances. \u2022\nDr. Longlnotto \u00abay\u00bb moat Saudi\nArabians are Moslems, possessed\nwith a \"fatalism\" antagonistic to\nphysical healing. An Egyptian\nphysician was once rebuked pub-\nlickly for an article on epilepsy\nbecause it challenged the religion.\nBefore settllhg on Calgary last\nDecember' he travelled across\nCanada from Victoria to Montreal.\nHe chose Calgary because of\n\"Its drive, lack of resentment to\npeople who are starting out from\nscratch, its optimistic attitude td\nlife and its sophisticated flavor,\"\nhe says.\nCARRIER BOY\nRIDES HORSE\nWINNIPEG (CP)-Three years\nago some 30 subscribers to the\nWinnipeg Tribune were startled\nwhen their new paper boy started\nmaking his round on horseback.\nBut since that time, the pony\nexpress has become a familiar\npart of the daily lives of market\ngardeners On Winnipeg's south\nwestern outskirts.\nThe young carrier Is Lloyd\nPritchard, 13, who covers his\nroute in lVz hours. The route Is\napproximately six miles long.\nAfter the initial shock, the subscribers quickly accepted Lloyd\nand Flicker, his horse. Few complain, for they are about \"the\nOnly people here who get their\nnews straight from the horse's\nmouth,\" says George Porth, the\nnewspaper's district manager.\nTries New Method\nTo Teach Grammar\nEDMONTON (CP) \u2014 A professor of English at the University of\nAlberta says that use of a new\nway of teaching grammar\u2014by the\n\"descriptive\" analysis of sounds,\nwords'and sentences\u2014could lead\nto better English In less time in\nschools and universities.\nDr. W. H. Scarglll told a meeting of the Philosophical Society of\nAlberta   that  the   \"descriptlvlst\"\nOld Friends Get\nTogether Again\n' AUCKLAND, N. Z.' (CP) - A\nCanadian Airman recently met\ntwo wartime comrades for the\nfirst time in 40 years. It was tlieir,\nfirst meeting since all three served in the same squadron of the\nRoyal Flying Corps in France in\n1919.\nIn the reunion were A. D. Bell-\nIrving of Vancouver and John\nSeabrook- and Keith Caldwell of\nAuckland- All three have retained\na close interest in aviation and\nhave played a part in the development of their countries' air\nforces.\nBell-Irving flew In both world\nwars and rose to the rank of air\ncommodore. During tha Second\nWorld War he flew HurricaneB as\nan instructor,\nADVOCATED STRONG.\nFORCE\nSeabrook, now chairman of one\nof- New Zealand's largest motor\nfirms, has been a tireless advocate of aviation progress and air\nforoe interests. He rose to the\nrank of group captain In the last\nwa<r.\nCaldwell was one of the most\nnotable 'fighter squadron commanders frcrrn New Zealand during the First World War, and later\nwas an expert in airfield development He rejoined the air force\nin the Second World War and at'\ntalned the rank of air commodore.\nDuring hiB visit to New Zealand\nBell-Irving has studied closely the\ndevelopment of agricultural aviation here. This has become a major Industry and is rapidly becoming the main method of spreading fertilizer on pastures.\nBell-Irving believes that aerial\nfarming equipment could be economically exchanged between Canada and New Zealand to take advantage of the reversal of seasons.\nThe off-season for agricultural\nflying in Canada is the peak period In New Zealand and vice-\nCongratulations\nAnd Best Wishes\nCanada Safeway Ltd.\nAnd to Your Nelson Management and Staff.\nWe ore proud to have taken part In the\ncompletion of your New Deluxe Safeway Store.\nA. MATHISEN\nPainter and Decorator\nPhone 917-R\n607 Kokanee Ave.\nNelson\/ B.C.\n#\nmethod gives a \"more accurate\nand truthful view\" of language\nthan the traditional system, based\non study of the eight parta of\nspeech, and employed with few\nalterations for the last 700 years,\nThe \"descriptlvlst\" method, he\nsaid, involves a study of 13 lesser\npatterns of language, and four\nmajor patterns.\nSEEN AS SUPPLEMENT\nThe method worked well In\nUnited Statea army foreign language schools during the Second\nWorld War, where It was known\nas the \"mlm - mem\" technique,\nmeaning to \"mimic and memorize\", Dr. Scarglll said. He said\nthe method had been used to\nteach several languages other\nthan English.\nBasically, the idea is to investigate recognized patterns In English, such as the sentence \"John\nkicked the dog,\" make a list of\nthese patterns and drill students\nin the formation of variations on\neach basic pattern.\nMIGHT ADD INTEREST\nIn a question period, Dr. Bear,\ngill conceded it would perhapj be\nbetter to utilize the best parts of\nthe traditionalist and \"descrlptt\nvlst\" (chools.    ,\nHe aaid that adding the newer\nmethod to the old could provide\n\"an interesting supplement to the\nordinary teaching of grammar,\nand could add Interest to the sub'\nJed\"\nBritain Readies\nFor Emigration\nLONDON (CP)-H Mike Han\ndall applies for a job felling trees\nor digging ditches when he arrives in Canada, he won't be turned down for lack of experience.\nThe 25 - year - old British ex-\nguardsman sails for Canada April\n18 but ia still working against'tlme\nto earn tha cash for hil fare.'\nKnown as the \"odd Job king\" of\nWhltstable, Kent, Randall decided\nto emigrate two years ago and\nvolunteered to take on unpopular\nchorei to raise some money.\nSince then, aside from working\nIn a coal' office, Randall haa lopped and felled trees, rough-dug\nground for new houses, tended\nbabies, cleaned cars, clipped\nlawns, and taken in typing., \u25a0\n\"I had no previous experience\nat all for aome of the jobs I took\non, and often had. to read things\nup in the local library before do\ning a chore the same evening,\"\nsays Randall.\nMINE WITHOUT\nSTRIKE HOLDS\nBRITISH RECORD\nTHORESBY, England (CP) -\nThe coal mine in this Nottinghamshire town may be Brltain'i best\npit. Many miners call It that.\nIn 81 years, it linn not had\nsingle .strike. It produces more\nsalable coal than any other pit\nand last year broke Its own record by bringing more than 1,200,-\n000 tons to the surface.\nPit manager 6. Thorneycroft\nsays labor harmony may Be partly\ndue to the policy ot Investigating\nevery grievance before it has time\nto fester.\n\"But we. never-buy peace.\" he\naaid, \"That would, only lead to\ntrouble later on.\"\nAntagonism to new machinery is\nlargely avoided by a union-management team which inspects the\nequipment before it ia introduced.\nThere are 1788 miners at Thor-\nesby, 324 of them surface workers. Many earn \u00a320 a week, live\nin rent-controlled houses and have\nfree coal.\nPlans Longest\nBus Route\nKINGSTON, England (CP)-Os-\nwald Garrow-Flsher, a 40-year-old\nsale, representative, hopes to establish the longest motor - coach\nroute in the world\u2014from London\nto India. And 200 people would\nlike to \"go east\" with him on the\nfirst trip.\nOswald can take only 20 of the\n200 applicants on an overland\ncoach trip- to Bombay this month,\nIt will be Ms \"final survey\" of\nthe route: Some passengers will be\nemigrating to Australia; From India they will go via Singapore to\nFremantle, Western. Australia.\nThe marathon coach route has\nbeen a pet project of Oswald's for\nseveral years, \"I think it Is high\ntime we had a British tourist service of this kind between London\nand India.\"\nHe has planned the trip like an\narmy manoeuvre, with five alternative routes taking into account\nweather, road conditions and\nchanging political situations. Fare\nfor the 10,000-mile trip: about\n\u00a3125 ($350),\nMUSICAL DOUBLE-TAKE?\nLONDON (CP) - Arnold\nSchoenberg's Atonal Chamber\nSymphony In E will be played\ntwice in one evening at a Royal\nFestival Hall recital. John Carewe,\nwho will conduct the ultra-modern work, said: \"The audience\ncan't possibly appreciate the music fully at a single hearing.\"\nCongratulations To\nSAFEWAY LTD.\nOn Their Foresight and Faith .\nIn Our Growing' City\n\u2022 \\$r    building Supplies\nAjJP Construction\n\"We Move the Earth\"\nDivisions of\nAssociated Enterprises Ltd.\nPhones 1704-2301\n301 Baker St.\nFAVERSHAM, England (CP)\u2014\nThe Brent'Church in this Kent\ntown will be the first In the Can\nterbury diocese to be heated by\nInfra-red radiators. The system is\nbeing Installed at a cost of \u00a3240,\nWelcome to Fairview\nCongratulations and Good'Luck\nCANADA SAFEWAY Ltd.\nClarkson Motors\nPhone 205\n924 Nelson Ave.\nCongratulations\nTo\nCanada Safeway Ltd.\non your opening, from your\nfuture Fairview neighbor.\nJhsL0jttUiJt^QjUjm.\nA\n\"THE CONE\n&i\nW\/TH THE\nif\nCURL ON\nTOF\"\nWatch for\nour opening\nlater this\nweek.\nI\nCongratulations .. .\nSAFEWAY\nOn the opening of another SAFEWAY\nFood Centre\nWe are happy to have aided in this construction. v\nLAMINATED BEAMS\nSupplied by ' \u2022;\nCanada's largest producers of\nGlued Laminated Timber Construction\nLAMINATED STRUCTURES LTD.\nHead Office: Montreal, Que.\nPlants \u2014 Surrey,  B.C., and  Loulsevllle,  Que.\nWestern Canadian Sales Office\n1089   WEST   BROADWAY,    VANCOUVER   9,\nBA4974. .    ' BA4975\nB.C.\nWe Are Pleased\nTo Take This Opportunity\nIn Congratulating \u2022\nCANADA SAFEWAY LTD.\non the opening of\nTheir New Fairview Store\nwhere we will proudly display\nOur Quality Baking\nHood's Bakery\n \u2022\u25a0 ion\nSECTION 2, NELSON DAILY NEWS, APRIL 11, 1957\u20145\nNEW SAFEWAY\nDavid's Sweet\n\u2022 mm\n^^^^_^y__i\nThe store designed\nwith\n*k Self Service\nMeats\n* Refrigerated\nProduce\n* Big Displays of\nFrozen Foods\n* Refrigerated Dairy Cases\nJr Check-a-matic Checkouts\n* Kiddies' Corner        * Soft Music\nPLENTY OF FREE PARKING\nAssorted.\n13 Varieties.\n16 oz. pkg.\n2\nfor\nProctor and Gamble\nCRISCO\n31_ si. 99c\nIn Special Kitchen Cannister\nCanterbury\nTea Bags\ne and Pekoe\n$1.14\nOrange Pekoe and Pekoe\nPkg. of 120\/\nReg. $1.39.\nWith 25c coupon\nOnly .*__ .\nRobin Hood\nCAKE MIXES\niVhite,\nChocolate\nand Spice.\n15 oz. pkg.\n2f\u00ab57(\n6RANDOPEf,,N0\nc\u20aclebrat\u00bbom\nTaste Tells\nPork and Beans\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nBE SURE\nSHOP SAFEWAY\nPrices Effective April 12th\nThrough April 17th Inclusive - Both Nelson Stores\nMARGARINE\nQuartet brand.\nOutstanding\nValue ... .\n2*49\nEdward's Fine\nCOFFEE\nDrip or Regular\n2 Ib. tin. Reg. $2.07.\nWith 25c Coupon.\nONLY\nSTRAWBERRY JAM\nEmpress Pure.\n48 oz. can .\nPEAS\nTownhouse.\nSieve 4.\n15 oz. can .\n6 99\nCream Style Corn\nTownhouse.\nFancy.\n15 oz. can .\n6 89\nParty Pride\nICE CREAM\nAll Flavors.     \u25a0\nHalf Gallon,\nWith 10c Coupon.\n79c\n(REG. PRICE 89c)\nTOMATO JUICE\nSunny Dawn.\nFancy.\n48 oz. can .\n399'\nFANCY PEACHES\nTownhouse.\nFancy.\n15 oz. can .\n4<\u00b095\nFANCY SALMON\nSockeye.\nCourt brand.\n71 oz. can .\n289\nKitchen Craft\nFLOUR\nWith 10c Coupon\n10 lb. bag 65*\n(REG. PRICE 75c)\nBEL-AIR\nFROZEN FOODS\nORANGE JUICE   6 oz can 4 for 59<\nGREEN PEAS n*, ?*.;:. 4f\u201er69tf\nSTRAWBERRIES15 \u00ab.\u25a0 P_g.  2 for 69?!\nMIXED VEGETBLES12 oz2 tor43f\nGREEN BEANS u \u201e._*,: 2 _* 47*\nCORN ON COB fopS8 2pks39*!\nCampbell's\nTomato Soup\n10 oz. cans\n4.-49'\nMr. Jack  ,\nKenzie\nYour Assistant\nStore Manager\ncame from Swift Current, Sask. and started\nIlls career with Safeway\nin Nelson in 1953. He is\nmarried and has two\ntine young boys. Takes\na great Interest in fishing, hunting, bowling,\nswimming etc.\nSAFEWAY HAS A HUGE 135 CAR PARKING LOT\n ;\u00abS\u2014SECTION 2, NELSON DAILY NEWS, APRIL 11,1957\nIs Proud To Present the\nFinest Display of Top Quality Meats It Is Possible\nTo Offer to Nelson and District Food Shoppers...\n.Every item is displayed in  gleaming white, stainless steel sanitary refrigerated cases\n- properly packaged and sealed in air-conditioned rooms closed off from the rest\nof store.\nEvery cut or roast of meaf purchased from Safeway is guaranteed to cook tender\nand he delicious in every respect or your money cheerfully refunded without return\nof the meat.   ,\nBE SURE - SHOP SAFEWAY\nOF BEEF-A REAL BEEF VALUE!\n\u2022     \u2022     \u2022     \u2022     \u2022\nGRADE\nPRIME RIB ROAST ft\nFINEST FLAVOR, GUARANTEED TENDER   .  . .  . GRADE   ^|\nCUT UP AND PACKED IN CELLO TRAYS TENDER. FINEST QUALITY\nGROUND BEEF\nLEAN. TOP-QUALITY GUARANTEED 85% LEAN   . .\nPORK SAUSAGE\nFAMOUS ECONOMY BRAND. SKINLESS    .\nSIDE BACON\nCAMPFIRE. MILD, SUGAR-CURED\nSIDE SPARE RIBS\nFRESH MEATY, DELICIOUS WHEN SERVED STUFFED .... ,\nBuy a Turkey for Easter Now... Store In Your Deep-Freezer\nGrade 'A' Oven-Ready <-* 10 lbs. and Up\nTURKEYS\nALL SAFEWAY MEATS ARE GUARANTEED TO SATISFY IN EVERY RESPECT\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_04_11","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0430110","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"}]}}